T h e D a ily T e x a n Student N ew spaper at The University of Texas at Austin V o l. 74, NO. 29 P l e a s e R e c y c l e T h is N e w s p a p e r A u s t in , T e x a s , T h u r s d a y , J u ly 25, 1974 Ten C e n ts T w elv e P a g es 471-4591 Nixon Will Com ply '/ ... Accept the Court's Decision' LAGUNA BEACH, Calif. (A P ) - A disappointed P resid en t Nixon announced W ednesday he w ill co m p ly ‘‘in all re s p e c ts ” w ith a unanim ous S uprem e C ourt ruling th a t he m u st su rre n d e r docum ents and tapes of 64 conv ersatio n s for th e W aterg ate cover-up tria l. E ig h t hours a fte r the c o u rt announced its 8-0 opinion in W ashington, Nixon sent his ch ief W atergate defense law yer. Ja m e s D. St. C lair, before national television c a m e ra s in a hotel n e a r the W estern W hite House to disclose his ____________ decision. (R elated Storie* & Photo , Page 3.) UPI Telephoto The House Judiciary Com m ittee opens d ebate on im peachm ent. House Committee Begins Impeachment Argum ents THE P R E S ID E N T , w ho h ad co nsistently declined to say in advance w h eth er he would abide by an ad v erse co u rt ruling, said through St. C lair: “ My challenge in the c o u rts to the subpoena of the special p ro se c u to r w as b a s e d oln th e b e li e f t h a t i t w a s unconstitutionally issued, and on my strong d e sire to p ro tect the p rinciple of p resid en tial confidentiality in a sy stem of se p a ratio n of pow ers. “ W hile I am of course disappointed in the re s u lt, I resp ect and a c c e p t the c o u rt's decision, and I have in stru cted Mr. St. C lair to take w h atev er m e a su re s a r e n e c e s s a ry to co m p ly w ith th a t decision in all respects. St. C lair took exactly tw o m in u tes to read N ixon's sta te m e n t to re p o rte rs in the packed and steam y p re s s room . N ew sm en pursued him from th e room a fte rw a rd , but he brushed asid e all inquiries. IN HIS sta te m e n t, Nixon m aintained th at the c o u rt’s ruling su p p o rted the principle of executive p riv ile g e , often cited by the W hite House a s g ro u n d s for not releasin g the tapes The decision, w ritten by C hief J u s tic e W arren E . B urger, noted th a t p riv a c y of p r e s i d e n t i a l c o m m u n ic a t io n s w a s “ f u n d a m e n ta l to th e o p e r a t io n of govern m en t” but said the p rin cip le w as outw eighed by the needs of crim in a l justice. Nixon said : “ F or tho fu tu re, it w ill be essential th a t the special c irc u m sta n c e s of this c ase not be p erm itted to cloud the rights of presiden ts to m ain tain th e basic confidentiality w ithout which th is office c a n n o t fu n c tio n . I w as g r a t i f i e d , t h e r e f o r e , to n o te t h a t th e c o u r t reaffirm ed both the validity and the im portance of the principle of ex ecu tiv e privilege — th e principle I had sought to m aintain. “ BY C O M PLY IN G fully w ith the co u rt’s ru lin g in this case. I hope and t r u s t t h a t I w ill c o n t r i b u t e to strengthening ra th e r than w eakening this p rin cip le for the future — so th at this w ill p rove to be not the precedent that d estro y ed the principle, but the action th a t p reserved it .” St. C lair said he would im m ed iately begin p rep arin g the tapes to be turned o ver to th e U.S. D is tric t C o u rt in W ashington. The tap es w ere subpoenaed by Leon J a w o r s k i , th e W a te r g a te s p e c i a l pro secu to r, for the tria l of som e of Nixon’s fo rm e r top aides. St. C lair gave no tim e ta b le for the turnover b u t spoke of “ tim e-consum ing process of analyzing and indexing the tapes Tribunal Orders Tapes' Delivery . —. a : and H th e ao un fthl i oA rr iittyvt and d itu ttyv uU On dd Ge fr th e WASHINGTON (A P) — A unanim ous C onstitution to decide his co n stitu tio n al Suprem e C ourt said W ednesday th at role and should have final say over P re sid e n t Nixon m ust yield W hite House w h e t h e r h e s h o u ld g iv e u p a n y ta p e s a n d p a p e r s w a n te d b y th e confidential com m unications. W ate rg ate prosecutor, and th e P re sid e n t AS L A T E AS M o n d a y n i g h t , said he w ould com ply in all re s p e c ts w ith p resid en tial law yer J a m e s D. St C lair the o rd er. said Nixon had not y et decided w hether By an 8-0 vote, the high c o u rt said he w o u ld follow a S u p r e m e C o u rt N ixon's c la im to executive p riv ile g e w as COM M ITTEE R epublicans considered w a s h t n c jt I n i AP) Th House E ach of th the committee COMMITTEE^Repuhl.caos considered e 38 co m m ittee members m e m b ers d em and to tu rn over the ta p e s. WASHINGTON (A P) - Th House valid in principle but m u st give w ay to moving to d elay c o m m itte e deb ate on received d ra fts of two proposed a rtic le s As St. C lair had argued b efo re the high Ju d iciary C om m ittee opened h isto ric the n e c e ssitie s of crim in al ju s tic e which th e p o s s i b i l i t y t h a t f u r t h e r ta p e of im p e a c h m e n t a s th e n a tio n a lly c o u rt on Ju ly 8, th e q u e s tio n s h as deb ate W ednesday night on a m otion had a stro n g e r constitutional c laim . recordings m ig h t b eco m e av ailable, but b ro ad cast session opened. i m p o r t a n t i m p l i c a t i o n s f o r th e declaring P resid en t Nixon’s conduct E ig h t hou rs a fte r the high court s decided ag ain st such a m ove shortly One of th e proposed a rtic le s charged im p each m en t proceedings in C ongress, w a rra n ts im p e a c h m e n t... and rem o v al decision, presidential la w y e r J a m e s D. before the session began. Nixon w ith obstru ctio n of ju stic e in the since se v e ra l congressm en have said from o ffic e ” - then suddenly re cessed St. C lair said in a nationally b ro ad cast S e v e ra l c o m m itte e m e m b e rs W aterg ate investigation; the second defiance of the court would co n stitu te because of a bom b th re at. announcem ent from the W estern White circu lated te x ts of th e ir re m a rk s in with abusing th e pow ers of his office. strong im p each m en t grounds. R epublicans suggested the c o m m itte e House in C alifornia th a t N ixon had advance. In a last-m in u te change, a third a rtic le delay the d eb ate because of W ednesday’s o r d e r e d t h a t ‘‘c o m p l i a n c e b e g in The H ouse Judiciary C o m m ittee w ants R ep. J a c k B rooks of T e x a s, the charging th e P re sid e n t w ith contem pt of Suprem e C ourt o rd er th a t Nixon turn som e of th e tapes for its own inquiry but c o m m itte e ’s th ird -ran k in g D em ocrat, fo rth w ith .” Congress — fo r his refusal to com ply over fu rth e r W hite House tap e reco rd ed Ja w o rsk i h as no authority to turn th em did not say in his p re p a re d com m ents Som e R epublican m e m b e rs of the w ith c o m m it te e su b p o e n a s — w a s conversations for the W aterg ate co v e r­ over. C h airm an P e te r W. R odino J r . said w h eth er he would vote for im peachm ent House Ju d ic ia ry C o m m ittee, w hich ss m erged into th e second a rtic le th e d ecision would not postpone the up tria l. but d eclared : “ N ev er in o u r 198 years d eb ating im peachm ent a rtic le s against Rodino opened the d eb ate by d eclaring As m illions of A m ericans w atch ed on have we had evidence of such ram p an t c o m m itte e ’s debate. the P re s id e n t, called im m e d ia te ly for a th a t th e question before the c o m m ittee t e l e v i s i o n a n d li s t e n e d on r a d i o , co rruption in g o v ern m en t ” postponem ent of any final v ote until the w as w h e th e r Nixon h as c o m m itte d Ja w o rsk i indicated o u tsid e the co u rt C hairm an P e te r W. Rodino J r ., D -N .J., The question, he said, is w h ether Nixon new m a te ria ls a re m ade a v a ila b le to the “ g rave and sy ste m a tic violation of the th at he felt the decision w as definitive, gaveled th e co m m itte e to o rd e r and told him self “ by his actio n o r in actio n ” failed co m m itte e . enough to require obedience, saying he C onstitution. its 38 m e m b e rs th a t the nation ‘d em an d s in his constitu tio n al responsibility. B u t t h e D e m o c r a t ic c o m m i t t e e “ M ake no m istak e about it. T his is a w a s p a r t i c u l a r l y p l e a s e d it w as th at w e m ak e up our m in d s.” Brooks spoke, too, of th e political lead e rsh ip announced it in ten d ed to go unanim ous “ because th a t doesn t leave turning point, w h atev er we d e c id e ,” the BUT THU proceedings w ere ab ru p tly im plications of th e case. ahead w ith the hearings. any doubt in anybody's m ind as to w hat ch airm an said. recessed one hour and six m in u tes la te r “ T here would be no D em o cratic gain ALTHOUGH PAST ta p e s d eliv ered to FOR MONTHS, th e 3 8 -m e m b e r the law is .” a fte r C apitol police rep o rted receiv in g a from rem oving a R epublican P resid en t co m m ittee had considered im p each m en t the special W atergate p ro s e c u to r have telephoned bom b th rea t. O fficers began and having him re p la c ed by another b e e n f o r w a r d e d to t h e J u d i c i a r y evidence behind closed and b a rre d doors. im m e d ia te s e a rc h a s m e m b e rs R epublican who could re q u est and m ight C o m m ittee a t the re q u e st of a federal Now. Rodino said, it is ‘tim e we m ake f a t t e d nearb y to resum e. w ell re c e iv e a g r e a t o u tflow ing of grand ju ry , th ere is no g u a ra n te e the new up our m inds. T he im p e a c h m e n t re s o lu tio n w as Clear skies are pro­ support from our p eo p le,” he said “ We have been d elib erativ e, we have m a te ria ls also would be tu rn e d over. offered by Rep. H arold D. Donohue of Rep. Don E d w ard s, D -Calif., said in been p a tie n t, we have been fa ir. Rodino jected for T hursday In one of the m ost im p o rta n t decisions M a s s a c h u s e tts , th e s e c o n d - ra n k in g his p rep ared re m a rk s th a t Nixon “ has of its tw o-century h isto ry , the court said in re m a rk s opening the m eeting. m o r n i n g , t u r n i n g D em o crat on the co m m ittee. consciously and intentionally engaged in “ In sh o rt, th e co m m ittee h as to decide d e cla red firm ly th at it is its duty to D onohue’s m otion followed form al serious m isd eed s; he h as co rrupted and partly cloudy in the d e c id e th e law and d is a g r e e d w ith w hether ... the P resid en t w as telling the opening sta te m e n ts by Rodino and Rep. s u b v e r te d o u r p o litic a l and N ixon's claim of ab so lu te co n tro l over tru th to th e A m erican people,” said the afternoon. The high E dw ard H utchinson of M ichigan, the g overnm ental p ro cesses to the extent A d m in is tra tio n p a p e rs and ch airm an . ranking R epublican. will be in the upper 90s th a t he should be im peached by the E ig h t h o u rs e a r lie r , a u n an im o u s com m unications H u tc h in s o n s u g g e s te d t h a t th e House of R e p re sen tativ e s. ..” witn a low F r i d a y “ N eith er the doctrine of sep a ra tio n of Suprem e C ourt ruled Nixon m ust tu rn LOS A NG ELES (A P) - P olice raided c o m m ittee delay its d eb ate b ecau se of E dw ards p red icted th a t a m ajo rity of pow ers nor the need for confidentiality o v er 64 ta p e -re c o rd e d c o n v e rs a tio n s an a p a rtm e n t W ednesday night a fte r a morning in the midthe S uprem e C ourt decision e a rlie r in the th e co m m ittee w as read y “ to p resen t of high-level co m m u n icatio n s ... can subpoenaed as evidence in th e W aterg ate h o a x ste r tricked police into believing she day ord erin g the P re sid e n t to tu rn over w hat we think is overw helm ing evidence 70s. South winds are s u s t a i n a n a b s o l u t e , u n q u a li f i e d w as fugitive new spaper h e ire ss P a tric ia cover-up tria l. tap es of 64 conversations subpoenaed as to support this conclusion. I am willing p re sid e n tia l privilege of im m u n ity from And a half-hour before Rodino gaveled expected at 5 to 15 H earst evidence in the W atergate cover-up tria l to face m y co n stitu e n ts, m y fam ily, ju d ic ia l p ro c e ss under a ll th e c o m m itte e into se ssio n , Nixon P o lice Lt. Dan Cook d escribed the HUTCHINSON did not, how ever, p ress m.p.h. _________ m y se lf and h is to ry w ith th is so b er pledged through his law yer to com ply c irc u m sta n c e s,'' the c o u rt said. incident as “ a p ra c tic e in futility. We his recom m end atio n , and Donohue w as conviction.’’ T he c o u rt recognized th e constitutional “ in all re s p e c ts " with the c o u rt decision. have no evidence th a t H e a rst or any SLA recognized by the ch airm an rig h t of Nixon or any p re s id e n t, to the m e m b e r w as ever th ere p riv acy necessary for m ak in g impoi tam The hoax was taken so seriously that decisions. But it said th e s e rig h ts m ust H e a r s e s p a r e n t s , M r. a n d M rs. be w eighed against o th e r constitutional R andolph A. H earst flew h ere from San co m m an d s and ex ercised w ithin ? W aterg ate break-in, to J u n e 4, 1973, the action is w a rra n te d ,” F ran k said We offenses in the a re a , F ra n k said. He said H earld -E x am in er Hollow to tak e it upon th em selv es to W ebb, who h as ta k e n no p a r t in day Nixon listened to se v e ra l earlier feel th e nud ity p ro b le m should be The telephone call c a m e afte r m ore offenders had alw ays been cooperative. police the a re a to avoid trouble planning the raid, will have to d ecid e any handled on a low p ro file .” tap es. than IOO officers surrou nded the two“ If the nudity and so fo rth w ere kept “ As long a s th e y sta y on LC RA cases resulting from it, as th e Hippie Special W atergate p ro se c u to r Leon Webb, how ever, said th e raid w as storv ap a rtm e n t building in suburban aw ay from the hom eow ners, it w ouldn't property and leave o th e r people alone, H ollow a re a is in h is ju r is d ic tio n . Ja w o rsk i, whose petitio n to the high m o tiv ated by le tte rs from hom eow ners be n ecessary to take actio n of this sort, N orth Hollywood. we will tak e no action. We don t want to c o u rt had brought the la n d m a rk ruling, in the a re a com plaining of nude b ath ers P re c in c t 2. O fficers moved in a fte r th re e persons Webb said. g e t into th e b u sin e ss of h a ra s sin g o u tsid e th e hollow , tre s p a s s in g on said he expected the W hite House to Ille g a l p a rk in g t h a t c o u ld block c alled and said a w om an fittin g H e a rse s “ J u s t because Sheriff R aym ond F ran k people,” F ran k said . c o m p ly a n d b e g in d e l i v e r i n g the p riv a te w a te r a re a s , n arc o tics, weaponfire tru c k s and litte rin g w ere serious d escrip tio n entered the building w ith two w on’t enforce the law in th e a re a , it F ran k stre sse d th a t none of his officers m a te ria ls in the next few days. c a rry in g and illegal parking. problem s, although the situ atio n has black m en, one ca rry in g a rifle doesn ’t m ean th ere a r e n 't o th e rs who will take p a rt in any raid s in the area The P resident has in sisted th a t he has C o n c e rn w ill be d ir e c te d to w a rd im proved recently, Webb said O fficers found the a p a rtm e n t vacant w ill.” he said. A raid w as planned for th is w eekend. ebb T he five T rav is county le s, ““aa b u s i v e ” s k in i n nnyv d i p p e r s , W ebD A raid w as p ian n ea uu* e x cep t for two rifles and a cat. P olice The five T ravis county co co nn sta sta bb le s, the the said thev had no idea who the th ree p erso n s m ight have been o r w here they m ig h t have gone. ste last I I ■ w W .in *m a te s , not C a rra s c o h an d cu ffed him W hen intent to c o m m it m urder. He w as a rre s te d las an d cuutffed h im . W hen „ csealed caicH O f f the in m a te s , not tCaarrraa ss cc oo ,, hbande tea nim v nen A n t o n i o iin n aa violent battle off the ee nn tire tire orison, prison, and and every every possible possible sum m er in San Antonio violent shoot-out shoot-out battle By SUSAN LINDEE C arrasco objected the o th e r inm ated pointed a gun a t with 30 San Antonio policemen. He also is w anted in avenue of escap e w as blocked. Texan Staff W riter O 'B rien. C arrasco la te r req u ested 15 handcuffs and a Mexico for 40 killings believed to be re la te d to drug H UNTSVILLE An a rm e d F re d Gomez C arrasco , “ F red tried to ta k e the handcuffs o ff,” 0 B rien television se t w h ich 'p riso n officials quickly handed trafficking. im prisoned narcotics ring lea d e r, took ll p ersons said. Then O’B rien w as released with the le tte r of He w as ja ile d in G u ad alajara but escaped in over, h ostage a t the H untsville S ta te P rison W ednesday T H E NEXT REQ U EST w as a dem and d eliv ered by dem ands. Jan u ary . 1973. through a $100,000 b rib e. When he was afternoon. , ... , F a th e r Joseph O’B rien, prison chaplain, in the form finally am bushed in San Antonio in a m otel room he K irkpatrick said th e item s C arrasco d em anded C a rra sc o seized the l l in th e prison s lib rary and of a typed, unsigned le tte r. The le tte r asked prison w ere not en route to H untsville. The re q u e st would w as shot four tim es. classro o m area. He fired a shot at one of the g u a n s officials to supply C arra sc o w ith th re e w alkieH E WAS JA IL E D in San Antonio u n d er $1 million have to be clea red through the atto rn ey g en eral and w hen the I p.m . bell ran g . T he guard su ffered a talkies, all on th e sam e frequency, th ree bullet-proof bond and then tra n sfe rre d to the s ta te penitentiary th e governor, and th ese people had not been reach ed . m in o r gunshot in the foot. vests and visors and th re e M-16 rifles w ith five and placed in an isolated cell. he reported. CARRASCO THEN re le a se d 42 inm ate stu d en ts SEVERAL W EEK S ago C a rrasco w as returned to m agazines. who had been in the lib rary and blockaded him self in O 'B rien said C a rra s c o is serious in his th re a ts He San Antonio to face a federal in d ictm en t charging A ssistant D irecto r of S erv ices Don K irk p atric k the red brick building w ith IO in stru c to rs and a single said he believes C a rra s c o would kill the h o stages. him with try in g to operate a d ru g ring while in said prison policy is th a t th re a ts on hostages lives “ The hostages a re ju s t sitting there. They a re se c u rity officer. , , will not be considered sufficient to supply d em an d s prison. He w as arm ed w ith four hand guns and an being treated w ell, b u t he m eans w hat he s a y s .” T he h e a r in g w as p o stp o n e d , h o w e v e r, and u n d e te rm in e d am o u n t of a m m u n itio n . P ris o n The dem and for th re e of each item w as thought to O 'B rien said. C arrasco re tu rn e d to H untsville to w ork tor the officials did not know how he got the fire a rm s CARRASCO DID NOT req u est an autom obile, so indicate th a t C arrasco is planning to escape w ith tw o chaplain. C a rra s c o would be eligible for parole in 15 C a rra s c o ’s first req u est w as th a t fellow in m a te prison officials do not know exactly how he plan s to o th er in m ates. B esides th e l l hostages, C a rra sc o has years, but M exican authorities w an t him when he is /V avid R obles be allowed to join him , but Robles w as four in m ates w ith him . It is not known which of these escape. —UM Telephoto released from T exas prisons When asked w here C a rrasco m ight go. 0 m ie n not in terested in getting involved ( a re in on the plot. H ostage G lenn Johnson, 51, su ffered a h e a rt attack “ He didn’t w ant any p a rt of it, prison public said, “ I don't know. Surely not Mexico. Fred Carrasco O’B R IEN SAID when he w ent into the lib ra ry during the o rd eal and was rele a se d by C a n asco. C arrasco. 34. is serv in g a life term for a ss a u lt w ith a ffa irs officer Ron T aylor said. w here the ho stag es a re being held, one of the rtodoy Clear, H o t . . . O ne Attempt Thwarted Constables Might Raid Hippie Hollow Carrasco Takes Hostages, W ounds Prison Guard Immediately aller the incident prison ord ea ls Hearst 'Surrender' A Hoax Coastal States G as Cited On Back-Payment Charge Rv J E F F NEWMAN By J E F F NEWMAN The head of the City Public Service Board of San .Antonio has charged Coastal States Gas Corp. is not meeting a provision of a Texas Railroad Commission (TRC) order — th e sa m e o r d e r th e gas company cites in demanding the city pay $3.2 million in back bills. Company officials deny the charge Tom Berg, chairman of the CPS Board of Trustees, told The Daily Texan that Coastal h as n ot b een m a k i n g a monthly $2.5 million contribution to the assets of records show the records show the payments have not been made ‘ for several months running.” An order of the TRC dated Sept. 27.1973, provides for the contributions “ upon demand or request of the supervisorm anager of Lo-Vaca. Lo-Vaca has filed a motion wi t h T R C c l a i m i n g t he pavments San Antonio, Austin and the Lower Colorado River Aut hor i t y ( L C R A ! have withheld since the order was issued defeat its purpose of a s s u r i n g L o - V a c a the financial ability to augment its natural gas supply The custom ers claim their its fin an cially-troubled con tracts allow the deduction subsidiary, Lo-Yaca of additional costs incurred in Gathering Co. B e r g s a i d hi s s t a f f s generating electricity when investigation of Lo-V aca s the supplier fails to deliver fin ancial financial BRIDAL SHOPPE FORMALS amount contracted. the .m ou n t of gas contractedTheir alternative heating source, liquid fuel, is several times as expensive as natural gas for generating electricity. The lawyer who filed the motion for Lo-Vaca said the withheld payments have put the company in the red. so it is having trouble buying new gas supplies. If they need money so desperately, why have they not called for the contributions? Berg said. James Hargrove, sup ervisor-m an ager of LoVaca, said Coastal has made the payments, although the total has not always amounted to a full $2 5 million per month. Coastal States has never refused (to pay), and Lo-Vaca has asked for all it is entitled to .” Further, the contributions are cumulative and the total be called called on on at at aany ssum u m ccan a n be n, time, he said Present plans call for all the money not used so far to go into a pipeline in the Rio Grande Valley, a substantial item of about $13 million which H argrove said will i n c r e a s e th e g a s supply available to Central Texas. Although one of the uses the TRC order allows for the money is “ working capital for a d v a n c e p a y m e n t s for p u r c h a s e of n e w g a s , Hargrove explained this does not m e a n the on- goi ng purchase of new gas supplies He said the phrase instead r e f e r s to c a p i t a l i t e ms c o n t r a c t e d to “ pot e nt i a l producers of gas” for their exploration and drilling. Such “ advance paym ents” are later recovered when the company purchases gas the p rodu cer has lo c at ed , Hargrove said. rnaxell TAPE SPECIALS W ilding Golf Course Law Violation Possible Possible violations of Austin's Creek Ordinance bv the developers of Wilding are being considered by the city legal department. . The developers. Southern Living and Leisure (S L& L ), have not applied for a creek development permit for construction of a golf course along Panther Hollow, a m ajor tributary of Lake Austin which drains the Wilding area I nder the Creek Ordinance, designed " to p rotect the natural and traditional ch a ra cte r of the w aterw ay s,” all development on land adjacent to or crossing a w aterw ay requires a creek development perm it approved by the City Engineering Department. Deputy City Manager H om er Reed said that after a Wednesday meeting between city officials and Wilding representatives, the city would consider whether the Panther Hollow portion of the 3.500-acre Wilding tra c t falls under the scope of the ordinance. A letter asking SL&L to apply for a permit for the I anther By BRYAN B R U M LEY Texan Staff Writer D a v i d A, N a n c a r r o w . associate dean of the College of Fine Arts, said Wednesday he w a s disappointed the Board of Regents m ay give priority to the addition to the chemistry building over the completion of the fine a rts center He hoped the college could attain its long-held dream of centralizing and improving fine a rts facilities. R egen t F ran k C. E rw in d i s c l o s e d Tu e s d a y that because of rising construction costs, parts of the University building program m ay have to be postponed. Barwin, ch airm an of the r e g e n t s ’ C o m m i t t e e on Bu i l d i n g s and G r o u n d s , p re d icte d the b oard will choose to postpone construction on four of the buildings of the $37 million tine arts center in favor of the $20 million addition to Welch Hall, the chem istry building. He estim ated the co sts of the unbuilt art buildings would reach $30 million. D r. J o h n E . B r e e n . COME FOR TEA (O ne block w e st of Lam ar) item s on Sale Low Noise C-90 Low Noise C-60 Ultra Dynamic C-46 Ultra Dynamic C-120 8T-200 8 - T r a c k 8T-400 8 -Track UD-3 5 / 7 Open Reel List 3.35 2.20 3.00 6.55 2.95 3.60 8.40 S a le 2.19 1.49 2.19 4.49 1.95 2.40 5.69 BUY 12 - GET ONE FREE LIFETIME GUARANTEE Camomile, Rose Hip and other rare and delightful blends from Twinings, the connoisseurs' choice since 1704. 4-oi. tin, 1.50. For p eriod brewing, stainless tea bell, 2.00. From the Cadeou s collection things for the w ay you live. City Atty. Don Butler, told The Texan Tuesday that the golf course was, in his opinion, subdivided, and anything subdivided is under the control ot the city. The other question, said Reed, is whether the ordinance can be applied retroactively to construction begun before the ordinance was passed r IL . + n n t rl i c h a i r ma n of the B’ a c u lty was not discussed The Union was to be moved Building Advisory Committee (F B A C ) said he did not view to the old Radio-Televisionthe choice as strictly between Film Building on Speedway Street, lf construction of the c h e m is try and fine ar t s . There are many important chem istry addition begins in December, as contemplated, a c a d e m i c faci l i t i es that should be built but may be the Union m ay move into postponed because of lack of a l t e r n a t e f a c i l i t i e s in B ellm o n t and M oore-H ill finances. Breen said. The FBAC met Wednesday Halls. Frank Flem ing, a member with the ad hoc Union West advisory com m ittee to review o f th e a d h o c U n i o n details of a 16 to 20 month com m ittee, said the priority Union Building renovation to d i s c l o s u r e c a m e a s no begin this fall. Breen said the surprise to him, though he had relocation of Union activities be e n g i v e n no s p e c i f i c warni ng. The Union was aware, he said, that the KTF Building might be unavailable. He mentioned Be an In- Si der . . . the possibility of renting offcampus office and program space. Dr A R. Schrank. acting dean of the College of Natural Sciences, thought it was too e a r l y to s p e c u la te on a regental decision. The c h e m i s t r y building woul d be a n i m p o r t a n t addition to the academ ic life of the University because of . in our Boat Moo. The hottest shoe in the U S Brown leather its lecture halls, with a total with white rubber sole Sizes seating c a p a c ity of nearly 6-9 517 2.500. and the Center for Teaching Effectiveness to be placed in a corn er of one of a • Je ffe r s o n S q u a re ih e f i ve pl a nne d f l oor s , Schrank said.____________ 'hop Oen/iy. B Ethe RK m nns stereo store 22 3 4 G U A D A L U P E • 476 35 25 5 1 3A B U R N E T R O A D • 4 5 4 - 6 7 31 Riddell said “ the essence of it is that they a re proceeding with work without a perm it.' The questions on the applicability of the (’reek Ordinance to Panther Hollow are whether the construction of a golf course along the creek constitutes a “ subdivision and whether the ordinance was passed atter construction was Building Delays 'D isappoint' Treat yourself to Darjeeling, 4013 Marathon Hollow construction reportedly was sent by the City Engineering Department to SL&L in June. Jo e Ridden, m em ber of the city’s Citizens Board of Natural Resources and Environmental Quality, said he saw a copy of the letter. 2314 GUADALUPE • 9:00-5:30 PARK IN OUR LOT ON SAN ANTONIO BEHIND THE CADEAU RE-WSCWER ALMIGHTY DOLLAR Five or six years ago the dollar was really worth something. Old George was the hallmark of buying power . . . good for relatively respec­ table quantities of food, gasoline and clothing. But not any more. Today, the dollar’s barely worth the paper ifs printed on. Except at Tri-Towers North. . Because unlike everyone and everything else, we haven t raised our prices since 1969. Whicn means your dollar is worth the same today as it was then. . 1 So visit us before you decide where to live this Fall. We re only two and a half blocks West of campus at 801 West 24th Street in the heart of the student neighborhood, 476-7636. Tri-Towers North. . . now accepting One Semester contracts WALK TO UT. ALL BILLS PAID COVERED PARKING POOL ie * HUGE CLOSETS I SHW ASHER/DISPOSAL 2810 RIO GRANDE El PATIO 476-4095 WTI a There is a time tor love. There is a time for peace. There is a time for joy. A n d for you the time is now. C o m e in and try on Orange B lo sso m 's “Soft Touch' w edding bands, the m ost comfortable w edding rings in America. ' ON THE DRAG' 2234 GUADALUPE ALL ANDALE VILLAGE S724 BURNET RD. MLMUKK LMKHll VIN GKM SOC,im Page 2 Thursday, July 25, 1974 TH E D A IL Y T E X A N Cyprus Truce Marred Fighting Erupts During Cease-Fire By United P re ss International Fresh fighting m arred a two-day-old United N ations cease-fire on C yprus Wednesday, even a s Turkey and the new governm ents of G reece and C y p ru s moved on the diplom atic front to end the crisis and “ bury the bitter m em ories of the p ast.” Secretary G eneral Kurt W aldheim called the U N. Security Council into emergency session. A U.N. spokesm an said W aldheim called the session in New York “ to discuss the situation at Nicosia A irp ort,” a focal point o f contention between U N. peacekeeping troo ps in the C yp riot capital and sold iers from both w arring sides. CANADA, W HOSE troops make up the bulk of the tiny U.N. force, disclosed earlier that it h a s warned T u rk ish leaders any a tta c k on the contingent a t the airport would be considered an attack on the en tire United Nations. UPI co rresp o n d en t M ichael K e a t s reported from N icosia Turkish troops b a t t le d G r e e k C y p r i o t N a t io n a l Guardsmen elsew h ere on the island Wednesday in w hat a U N. o ffic e r described a s an attem p t by the Turks to widen their a r e a of control. The U.N. o ffic e r reported numerous cease-fire violation s throughout the day. The sh arpest fighting was at B ellap ais, three m iles so u th east of Kyrenia on the 18-mile mountain road from the northern coast to the c a p ita l. M EA N W H ILE, T H E new c iv ilia n governm ents o f G reece and C y p ru s offered conciliatory gestures to e a s e the crisis. The two govern m ents agreed to m e e t with B ritain begin ning Thursday in Geneva to open talk s on the d isp u te which in nine c lim a c tic days resulted in a military coup deposing A rchbishop Makarios, a T u rk ish invasion of the island, and the fa ll of military re g im es in both Greece and Cyprus. G reek P r e m i e r C o n s ta n tin e Karam anlis, sw orn into office sligh tly more than an hour after returning fro m exile, sw iftly appointed an all-civilian cabinet, ordered all political p riso n ers re le a s e d a n d an n o u n ced t h a t h i s government recognized Makarios a s the legitimate p resid en t of Cyprus. Turkish P r e m ie r Bulent Ecevit sa id the new G reek governm ent “ strengthens our hope for Greek-Turkish frien dsh ip ” after seven y e a r s of military ru le on Greece and the long dispute over C yp ru s. Acting C y p rio t President G la fk o s d e rid e s, 55, who took over for re b el president N ic o s Sampson T u e s d a y , promised new elections “ within the n ext few months” and said Makarios w as fr e e to run for presid en t. K aram an lis’ recognition of M a k ario s was a stunning reversal of the antiMakarios policy espoused by the G reek military ju n ta, which relinquished its p ow er T u e s d a y a m id w id e s p r e a d discontent over its handling of the c r is is . IN NEW Y O R K , where M akarios w a s pressing the U .N . to help restore him to power, a sp o k esm an for the arch bishop said: “ The sta tem en t made by the G reek foreign m in ister ... with regard to the status of A chbishop Makarios on bein g the president o f the Republic of C yp ru s, proves that K aram an lis governm ent in G re e ce f u lly su p ports th e r e ­ establishm ent of a constitutional o rd er in C yprus in a c c o rd a n c e w ith th e relevant resolution of the United N atio n s Security C oun cil.” Athenians d an ced in the stre e ts to celebrate the restoration of c iv ilia n government fro m the military ju n ta which seized pow er in April, 1967, and later exiled K in g Constantine. — Turkish arm y unit moves along a country road near Kyrenia, Cyprus. _•_ .• I C onstitutional Convention M f* Jaworski Cheered After Court Ruling W ASH IN GTO N (U P I) - S p e c ia l p ro se c u to r Leon Ja w o rsk i ste p p e d through the huge doors of the Suprem e Court W ednesday to thunderous app lause from a crowd that lined the building s marble ste p s in a *'U ” and spilled out onto the sidew alks. “ I f e e l r i g h t goo d o v e r w h a t happened,” said the Houston law yer, who had ju st won a m ajor victory over President Nixon in his battle to obtain W atergate tapes. “ Now we can m ove ahead.” (R d a ts d Photo, Pogo 12.) C o lle a g u e s in sid e the c o u rtro o m shouted th eir co n gratu lation s even b e fo r e J a w o r s k i le ft th e p il l a r supported, drapery-lined ch am ber where the high tribun al delivered its 8-0 decision that Nixon must yield 64 tap es for use in the W atergate cover-up trial. YOUNG AND old alike surrounded J a w o r s k i, a p a s t p re sid e n t of the A m eric an B a r and T r ia l L a w y e r s A ssociation, a s he signed autograph s with a red felt pen on a pillar in the great hall. Then the silver-haired law yer m ade his way into the wedge-shaped crowd with Philip A. Lacovara, who helped him argue the c a s e before the court 16 days ago; J a m e s F. Neal, his chief W atergate trial law y er; and Jill Wine Volner, an assistan t prosecutor, holding his elbows. There w a s n ear pandemonium. lr it it WASHINGTON (U P I) - E v e r m o r e Chief Ju stic e W arren E . Burger finished reading the Suprem e Court’s historic ruling W ednesday, the official rad io voice of the U.S. government w as telling the world P resid en t Nixon had been ordered to su rren d er more tapes related to the W atergate affair. Records a t the Voice of A m erica (VOA) show the news was beam ed on an urgent b a sis to the Middle E a st, South Asia and Southeast Asia at 11:08 a .m . E D T . B u r g e r fin ish ed re a d in g th e court’s decision about 12 minutes later. At 1 1 :2 5 a m . the VOA, w h ich broadcasts in 35 different langu ages, began transm ittin g a fuller report on its m ajo r w orldw ide English b ro a d c a st circuit. Ja m e s K eogh, director of the U .S. Information Agency, outlined the VOA policy on W atergate news this w ay W ednesday: " I decided a t the outset that ... we would report the essential story fairly and factually. We should not deal in ru m or, h e a r s a y or sp e c u la tio n or anonymous accusation s. “ While the story is often reported in extrem e te rm s in som e countries, we try to place it in perspective. In explaining what is happening in the United S ta te s, we try to m ak e the point to others that what they a r e seeing is a free p ress and a free society working out a problem . Strip M in in g Limits Approved by House WASHINGTON (U PI) - The House voted W ednesday to prohibit strip mining of coal where it would adversely affect ancient western seab ed s which now a re arid a re as but put off final action on the broad regulatory bill until Thursday. Rep. Frank E . Evans, D-Colo., p ressed for the seabed amendment, arguing preservation of the so-called alluvial valley floors w as “ critical to the future economic stability of the mountainous W est” b e c a u s e of r a n c h in g and agriculture. The am endm ent, adopted 64-2 on a division vote, would require guaranteed protection for such are as before mining perm its were issued. B efore a vote on final p a ssa g e , m ajo r a tte m p ts w ere expected to am end provisions regarding rights of su rface owners, imposition of a severan ce tax to reclaim abandoned lands and a m ove to exempt anth racite mining from the bill. The Sen ate overwhelmingly p asse d its version of the bill in October. Strip mining, a process of scrap in g off the topsoil to expose coal se a m s for easy extraction by giant shovels, h as been prevalent m ostly in Appalachia and Midwest sta te s , but recently has m oved to the coal-rich G reat Plains. In 1972, the House passed a strip mining bill by a vote of 265-75. but the m easure died when the Senate adjourned without takin g action. The e n e r g y crisis blunted congressional support, and a su bstitute bill to p h ase out all strip mining w as defeated la s t week Opponents of a strong bill, aided by a m assive co al and oil industry lobbying effort, T u e sd a y weakened a m a jo r provision requiring that disturbed lands be re sto re d to their “ a p p ro x im a te original con tou r.” By a 213-193 vote, the House perm itted a p p ro p ria te regulatory a g e n c ie s to waive that restoration provision. In the co m m ittee bill, such exceptions were lim ited to industrial, co m m ercial, r e s i d e n t i a l or publ i c f a c i l i t y d e v e lo p m e n t. An am en d m en t w a s approved, however, adding agricu ltu ral and recreation al uses to the list. C o -c h a irp e rso n s of the M e x ic a n A m erican L e g i s l a t i v e C a u c u s a r e seeking a reconsideration by Atty. G en. John Hill of h is Friday opinion re la x in g state a g e n c ie s’ affirm ative action p lan s concerning em ploym ent discrim ination. Reps. C arlo s Truan of Corpus C h risti and R L. V ale of San Antonio dem an ded Wednesday th at Gov. Dolph B risco e tak e “ strong and im m ediate action to re so lv e the im p a c t o f the op in ion .” T h e legislators recom mended cutting off state funds to agencies practicing any kind of discrim ination. The opinion had the effect of strik in g from the A ppropriation Act for 1974 and 1975 a rider requiring state a g e n c ie s to have a ffirm a tiv e action plans to p rovide equal em ploym ent opportunity. H ill left in t a c t th e s e c t i o n s t a t i n g “ no app rop riated fun ds be exp en ded by agencies th at practice discrim ination based on r a c e , creed, sex or n ation al origin,” T ruan said. “ The govern or needs to exert bold and dynamic lead ersh ip to see that sta te agencies do not relax their a ffirm a tiv e action p la n s,” Truan said. The gov ern or should issu e a m em o to all state a g e n c ie s rn • Resolution Unchanged The Constitutional Convention m et for 15 minutes Wednesday before recessing to allow the C om m ittee on Submission and Transition to m eet. The co m m ittee is resp o n sib le for preparing resolu tion s to su bm it the proposed state ch arter to voters for ap p ro v a l. In the l a s t w eek , th re e resolutions of the com m ittee have been rejected by the convention. Two of the resolutions, which require a two-thirds affirm ative vote to p ass, have received less than m ajo rity support of the delegates. The third resolution, voted Chicano Solons Urge Revision of Opinion A mon w earing a Nixon m otk is escorted by police d o w n the steps in front of the Supreme Court Building just before the court's decision Wednesday. UPI Telephoto i urging that they ca rry a program of nondiscrimination, he said. There have been 26 com plaints of alleged discrim ination in T exas agencies to th e U .S . E q u a l E m p l o y m e n t Opportunity C om m ission, and in 22 c a se s the complaints have been found valid, T ru an s a id . T h e r e h a v e been 21 complaints to the G overnor’s Equal Employment Opportunity Office, but the only action that can be taken at that level now is conciliatory, Truan said. There must be regulation at the state level, Vale added. “ People are fru strated because the m atters are not taken to court,” Truan said. “ We m ust do what needs to be done,” he said. David Kendall, opinions com m ittee c h a ir m a n of th e a tto rn e y general’s office, said Wednesday no re co n sid e ra tio n r e q u e s t had been received, but the opinion would be re co n sid e red when a re q u e st w a s received. Robert H a rd esty , B r is c o e ’s p re ss secretary, w as not prepared Wednesday to comment on action the governor might take. on Tuesday, received 96 a y es and 78 noes. 25 votes aw ay from the n ecessary two-thirds. Com m ittee Chairm an Nelson Wolff of S a n A n ton io to ld th e c o n v e n tio n W ednesday the co m m itte e had m et following T u esday’s defeat. “ We still feel the resolution is the best we could offer to the convention,” Wolff said. By a vote of 8-4, the co m m itte e d e c i d e d T u e s d a y to i n f o r m th e convention that T u esday 's proposal was the best it could offer but that it would be willing to continue seeking com prom ise D e l e g a t e s t e s t i f y in g b e f o r e th e com m ittee Wednesday afternoon offered s u g g e s t io n s c o n c e r n in g fu tu r e resolutions, and many directed their rem ark s to the right to work proposal contained in the resolution a s a sep arate proposal. Rep. Jo e Salem of Corpus Christi said, “ I don’t believe right to work belongs in the constitution. I’ll vote again st any resolution containing right to work until hell freezes over.” Rep. M att G arcia of San Antonio su gge sted the co m m itte e su bm it a resolution with “ the basic document and the sep arate proposals on limited county home rule and a prohibition on p ari­ mutuel enterprises. •There are enough supporters of these other sep arate proposals to guarantee p assage of such a resolution.” G arcia said. Rep. Ben Bynum of A m arillo , a m em ber of the com m ittee, said he w as going to m ake two motions to the panel. “ I am going to m ake a motion to subm it only the b asic document to the convention, and a motion to subm it the third resolution, without right to w ork,’ ’ Bynum said. But the com m ittee recessed until 7:30 p.m ., before Bynum offered the m otions. in an effort to hear m ore testim ony before deciding on another resolution. Nixon Decision Praised WASHINGTON (A P) — Sen. Barry C o ld w a te r , who had w arn ed that presidential defiance of the Suprem e Court might increase the chances of im peachm ent, said W ednesday night President Nixon's decision to comply “ should be reassu ring to people But the Arizona Republican declined to speculate on whether the P resid en t's com pliance would stem im peachm ent sentim ent in Congress. “ Th ere’s no way of knowing,” he told a reporter. “ I think the fact that he has decided to comply m eans he believes that no man can be above the law, and that fact sh ould be r e a s s u r in g to p e o p le ,” Coldw ater said. V ice-President G erald R . Ford said Nixon “ has dem onstrated his respect for the law " in his com pliance and noted, “ I had repeatedly urged that the President abide by the Suprem e Court decision.” Senate Republican Leader Hugh Scott said: “ I’m glad that the President has complied with the Suprem e Court, a ju d g m e n t th a t I lon g h a v e b ee n advocating.’ ’ Rep. Ogden R. Reid. D-N.Y., called for sp e e d y p r e s id e n t ia l c o m p lia n c e , declaring: “ I am very disturbed by the very clear im plication in i Presidential law yer) Mr. J a m e s St. C la ir's statem ent that this m ay take an inordinate length of tim e.” Reid added that the decision should in no c a s e ” d e la y the im p e a c h m e n t p roceed in gs of the House Ju d ic ia ry Com m ittee. Nixon’s decision to comply with the historic court ruling cam e after a chorus of D e m o c r a ts an d R e p u b lic a n s rn C ongress had warned Nixon would face c e r t a i n im p e a c h m e n t u n l e s s he complied. news capsules Reinecke Refused Defense Witnesses N ix o n 's resignation “ at this tim e.” WASHINGTON (UPI) — The trial judge Wednesday denied California Lt. Gov. E d Reinecke’s re q u est for two special defense w itnesses in his perjury trial and repeatedly reprimanded R einecke's la w y e r in the process. But in a critical review of Nixon’s alleged m aneuvering fo r su p p o rt in his im peachm ent struggle, McClure said Senate conservatives w ill have “ no altern ative” but to demand resignation if the p a tte r n o f giv in g in to liberal dem ands continues. “ Do not interrupt the court when the court is talkin g.” U .S . D ist. J u d g e Barrington Parker shouted a t defense counsel Ja m e s E . C ox w hen f ox rose to challenge P arker’s ruling. The sim m erin g hostility between Parker and Cox burst into the op en in the ninth day of Reinecke’s trial when Parker denied Cox’ request to call a physician and a sem an ticist — an expert in the m eaning of words to testify in Reinecke’s behalf. R einecke is charged with lying to the Senate Ju d iciary Committee in 1972 when he told Sen. H ira m Fong, R-Hawaii, he had not told form er Atty. G en. John Mitchell about an offer by ITT to help finance the prospective Republican n ation al convention in San Diego until Septem ber, 1971. Senate Approves Education Bill WASHINGTON (UPI) — The Senate Wednesday passed and sent to the House a compromise education bill over objections that it did not go far enough to curb court-ordered school busing. An e ffo rt by Sen. Ja m e s D. Allen, D-Ala., to return the m easure to a conference committee w ith orders to include tough House-passed antibusing language w as defeated 55-42. The m easu re then w as p a ssed on a roll call vote. He said Nixon’s “ ability to govern effectively and to lea d a t a l l ” h a s c o m e “ into sharp question.” At a news conference, McClure said he has learned th at N ixon w ill sig n a bill creating the Legal Services Corporation, b itte rly o p p o sed by c o n s e r v a tiv e s . Oil Dem and Pushes M arket Up NEW YORK (U PI) — Demand for oils, sparked by s p e c t a c u la r se c o n d quarter earnings, highlighted a m odest advance on th e N ew \ ork S to c k Exchange Wednesday. The Dow Jo nes industrial average gained 8 05 to 805.77. the first t im e sin c e July I the widely followed index closed a b o v e the 800 lev e l. S ta n d a r d & Poor’s 500-stock index clim bed 0.34 to 84.99. The a v e r a g e p ric e o f an N Y S E common share advanced 12 cents. A d v a n c e s to p p ed d e c lin e s, 798 to 574, among the 1,755 issues traded. Volume totaled 12,870,000 shares, com pared with 12. 190.000 T u e s d a y P rices closed higher in m oderate trading on th e A m e ric a n S to c k Exchange. The average AM EX share gained 6 c e n ts . V o lu m e to ta le d 1,570,000 shares, com pared with 1,390,000 T u e sd a y . Mutscher Ruling Delayed Until Fall The m easu re would authorize $25 billion over four y e ars through June 30. 1978, in aid to grade and high schools. A U S T IN ( U P I ) — The appeal of form er H o u se S p e a k e r G u s F . Mutscher from his conviction for bribery conspiracy in the S h a rp sto w n scandal will not be ruled upon until this fall. G O P Senator M a y A sk Nixon To Quit The Court of Crim inal Appeals Wednesday r e c e s s e d until S e p t. 18 without issuing a decision on the M utscher case. WASHINGTON (U PI) — Sen. Ja m es A. M cClure, R-ldaho. said W ednesday that Senate con servatives like him self m ay have to demand P residen t Nixon’s resignation if Nixon keeps playing “ impeachment p olitics” by currying fa v o r with liberals. M cClure, a longtime Nixon supporter, stressed he w as not calling for Mutscher, form er aide S. Rush McGinty an d ex-Rep. T o m m y Sh an n on of Fort Worth were convicted by an Abilene jury on March 14. 1972. o f conspiring to accept a bribe from Houston financier F ra n k W. S h a r p in connection with p assage of two banking bills in 1969. Thursday, July 25, 1974 THE D A ILY TEXAN Page 3 guest viewpoint EDITORIALS 'Right to work 1 issue abused by Randall P age 4 Thursday, July 25, 1974 Raiding: for f u n a n d profit If you happen to go to H ippie Hollow soon and if you happen to be d ressed in n a tu re ’s splendor and if you happen to be eu p h o rically su p p lied , you m ight p eer over your sh o u ld er once in a w hile. Som e s tra n g e people m ay be joining your p a rty . . .. C ertain county o fficials h av e been thinking ab o u t a good-ole ra id for th e Cornrnanche T ra il a re a on L ak e T rav is. T h ese fine. G od -fearin g people say they w ant to stop th e n u d ity and the d ru g tr a f f ic th e re , not to m en tio n the possible fire a rm s c a rry in g and c a r b u rg lariz in g . E v ery o n e know s these th in g s only happen a t H ippie Hollow. With the c r im e r a te risin g h ig h e r ev ery d ay in T ra v is County, you m u st w onder w hy th e county is w o rry in g about p ro te c tin g us from th o se aw ful skinny-dippers. S heriff R aym ond F ran k didn t used to w orry ab o u t such things. Is he now ? „ . Well, th e re ss an in te re stin g point ab o u t th is raidin g notion: th e plans dido t involve F ra n k , He w a s n ’t even told ab o u t the raid u ntil re p o rte rs asked him about it. *1 c e rta in ly do not feel th is is n ec essary , F ra n k said, w hen he le arn ed of the proposed raid. ‘T h e re w ill be no actio n fro m m y d e p a rtm e n t u n less w e rec eiv e d is tre s s sig n als (fro m county o fficials, not b a th e rs ). I feel th is raid plan w as prom pted to e m b a rra s s m e The raid plan can only e m b a r ra s s its p la n n ers, those c o n sta b le s w ho a re going behind F ra n k s back T he m ain c u lp rit is G ene C o llier. P re c in c t 2 co n stab le, and he is doing th is for one of tw o rea so n s. E ith e r h e fee ls the situ atio n is so m o rally d isg u stin g th a t so m eth in g m u st be done. o r he is taking a p o litical m ove so th a t he can run a g a in st F rank in th e next election. . The ra id , a s F ran k know s and C ollier doesn t, is u seless. No m a tte r how m any d e p u tie s ro am the hills of C ornrnanche T ra il, they ca n n e v e r stop people from doing the p erso n al vices they enjoy. But th e ra id w ill com e about, and it will be by p la in clo th es o ffic e rs (you m u st w onder w h eth er they w ill be in slack s, cut-offs o r d re ss as ev ery o n e else w ill b e ). The raid m ay not happen th is w eekend b e c a u s e of the publicity. B ut it w ill happen so m e tim e To q u o te new ly-appointed P re c in c t 2 J u s tic e of the P e a c e C h a rles Webb, “J u s t b ecau se F ra n k won t enforce th e law , it doesn t m e a n o th e rs won t. A ra id w ill d efin itely happen W atch out Fiesta funds A fter a p p ro v a l of th e N inth S tre e t extension by City Council la s t w eek. it would a p p e a r th a t neighborhood groups a r e not e ffectiv e. B u t now th e re is an o th er m ilitia fighting city hall, and th is tim e it d ea ls w ith h o m elan d in stead of p ark lan d . This p ro b lem is the F ie s ta G arden expan sio n p ro je c t T h e c ity w an ts m ore room behind its sp e c ia l ev e n ts p a rk la n d on Town L ake to r p arking and picnic ta b les. It w ould be fine if th e re didn t h ap p en to be a co m m unity a lre a d y th e re . It a p p e a re d th e e n tire c o m m u n ity would h av e to m ove, and so th e E a st Town L ak e C itizens C o m m itte e w as fo rm e d to q u estion th e city s p rio ritie s S aid J e s s e S egom a, th e p re sid e n t of the c itiz e n s’ g ro u p , We u n d erstan d th e city h as th e pow er of e m in e n t dom ain. We ju s t w a n t the city to show us th a t th e re w ill be a m a jo r b e n e fit to th e e n tire co m m u n ity if F ie sta G a rd e n s is en la rg e d , . It is doubted w h eth e r th e c ity can ju stify rem oving th e h o m es for ad v a n ta g e of the m a jo rity . M ost people n e v e r se e F ie sta G a rd e n s. But ag ain , so m e of th e h o m es a r e in the b a c k y a rd of F ie sta G ard en s. So a c o m p ro m ise se e m s to be in o rd e r And C ouncilm an Jeff F rie d m a n ev er rea d y w ith his m ay o ra l-co n n e cte d p lan s, se e m s to have co m e up w ith som ething th a t should sa tisfy both sid e s. A fter m e etin g w ith the neighborhood group and view ing th e h o m e site s, he has a rriv e d w ith a solution th a t he plans to p re se n t to the council T h u rsd ay I > ex p an sio n of F iesta G a rd e n s only to th e south side of B e rg m a n Avenue (w hich m ean s the re lo c a tio n of m aybe six o r seven h o u ses), and 2) a relo c atio n p lan th at will pro v id e a d e q u ate funds for tho se a ffe c te d people to m ove. Q uestions m u st a ris e co n cern in g th e ac q u isitio n of even one s tr e e t. The south sid e of the road ca n n o t be used for p icn ic ta b les, only fo r p ark in g So you h ave to d ecide w h e th e r seven hom es a r e w orth 30 p a rk in g places. But th e relo c atio n sug g estio n se em s to be th e m o st im p o rta n t p a rt of F rie d m a n ’s plan. R ight now, the re lo c a te d re sid e n ts would g et bottom m oney fo r th e ir houses, sin ce th e p ric e of th e hom es a re b ased on m a rk e t p rice In th is ca se , th e h o m e s a re co n sid ered ghetto level, w hich m ean s the re s id e n ts would re c e iv e too little m o n ey to find a s im ila r hom e e lse w h e re in A ustin. U nder F rie d m a n 's p ro p o sal, th e re lo c a te d re sid e n ts would be paid the d iffe re n c e of th e m a rk e t p ric e and w h at it w ould co st to m ove to an o th er p a rt of A ustin It w ould be s e t up as a city relo catio n fund, m uch like the fe d e ra l sy s te m for th e s a m e problem . “ S om e people out th e re a re being o ffe re d $6,000 to $8,500 to r hom es w hich th e y c a n ’t find an y w h ere else in A ustin for the sa m e p rice, r i e d m a n said. “ T he m a r k e t p rice is u nder w h at i rea so n ab le And if the :ifty is going to m ove th e re sid e n ts, we should m ak e up th e d iffe ren ce . F rie d m a n s plan sound Much fa ir e r th a n o th e rs by th e council. Still before th is proposal is p assed , th e city should ju stify d e s tro y in g th e seven hom es in th e firs t p la ce But - a f te r seein g ex am p les of c ity ju stific a tio n in th e N inth S tre e t c a se - th e citizen s Aculei be lucky to get F ried m an i c o m p ro m ise. T h e Da ily T e x a n — Air Force O n e can't land in Sikkim. H o w about visiting Liechtenstein?' calendar committee and it never came By LARRY BALES to a floor vote. In the second place, to (E ditor’s note: Bales is a Travis suggest that labor not attem pt to obtain County state representative and is a union security (through the agency shop) d e le g a te to th e C o n s titu tio n a l is to suggest that labor ought to be Convention.) s a t i s f i e d to b a r g a in a g a in s t th e It is one thing to sta te and defend a tr e m e n d o u s p o w e r of c o r p o r a te position in a forthright m anner, even an management with one hand tied behind unpopular or unreasonable one. It is its back Union security agreements quite another to play into the hands of have proven to be powerful weapons the opposition through sheer ineptitude. against giant co rp o rate bargaining An example of the latter was the strength in more progressive states colum n of Mr. F. T rum an Randall where they are allowed en titled “ Right to Work and Other In addition to his m istake about the F ab les.” From the title of the column fate of the agency shop bill, Mr. Randall; one would expect to be told what a bogus was seriously mistaken in his com ments issue “ right to work really is. That it is on my legislative record. He reported lls nothing more than a falsely paternalistic conversation which I never had with an a tte m p t by big business Republican unknown “ asso cia te ." In it I was interests to ham string the collective accused of being insincere in my attack bargaining power of working people on the document that some people hopfcV T h a t it is an a tte m p t to prevent to pass off as a new constitution. e m p lo y e s from v o tin g to a s se ss Perhaps Mr. Randall would need more themselves a fee to pay the cost of than the highway fund, so called “ righip bargaining for higher wages and other to work,” a negative environmental benefits. By the title, one might expect statem ent and tax loopholes for timber to be told of the hypocrisy of employers barons, to be able to sincerely attack the who arbitrarily deprive people of the document. But that was enough for me. “ rig h t to w ork” b e c a u se of th e ir In addition, relying on Jake Pickle's grooming habits and who turn around to campaign propaganda, he accused me of “ defend" the "right to work" of some sponsoring House Bill 569. Had he emploves against other employes. bothered to check or to report the facts, B u t M r. R a n d a l l ’s t i t l e w as he would have reported that I had no part misleading. In addition, much of what he of that bill’s sponsorship. thought was fact, or passed off as fact, It is not ordinarily my custom to risk was in fact pure fabrication. His article strengthening weak com m entary by was an attem pt to chastise the cause of repeating it. But in addition to my T exas’ working people and some of us personal stake in the truth, it is essential who support them. He blames labor for that the cause of Texas working people bringing this onslaught of big business and for that m a tte r, the continued upon itself by attem pting to pass an credibility of The Daily Texan, not be agency shop bill in the last session He further jeopardized by Mr. Randall s says the bill lost on the floor. In the first abuse. place, the bill was kept bottled up in I V Urie firin g ___ M ovie review falls short of objectivity To the editor: Mr. Daniel Saez, you have done it again!! Once again you have failed to o b j e c t i v e l y r e v i e w a f o rm of entertainm ent. While trying to avoid categ o rizin g th e m o v ie, “ Uptown Saturday Night” as a black movie, you beat around the bush just to say it was a black cultural movie. It appears that you analyzed this movie as a good black movie instead of an hilarious com edy perform ed by talented black entertainers. If the movie had been performed by talented white e n t e r ta i n e r s w ould it have been categorized as “ ... simply very, very funny?” O b je c tiv e ly s p e a k in g , “ U ptow n Saturday Night” is an hilarious comedy that offers clean entertainm ent for ail ages It is void of profane language, sex and drugs, and is a box office success. In my estim ation,Mr. Saez, it is more than ju st a "...sim p ly very, very funny movie.” !!! Larry Newman 1632-M W. Sixth St. of emergency m edical treatm ent in Austin His answer has, I believe, proved my case. By attem pting to blur essential distinctions which the public m ust understand in order to evaluate the proposals for the new service, Mr. Albrecht has given force to my original concern; that for political and business r e a s o n s t h e p u b l i c w o u l d be systematically misled. In S a n A n t o n i o t h e f i r e m e n paramedics receive 400 hours of medical training by physicians, as opposed to 72 hours in Austin. They operate under the direct supervision of a physician linked to them by radio so that they are able to administer drugs, transmit electrocardiogram s and other vital signs by radio telem etry, carry out cardiac d e f i l b r i l l a t i o n ( e l e c t r i c shoc k*, adm inister replacem ents for lost body fluids and many other techniques which Mr. Albrecht’s crews may not legally do and which they are not presently doing The question is not w hether the present service is b etter than the old, but whether it needs to be even better and m ore sophisticated than it is. The net cost to operate the new service will not exceed two to three dollars per capita with allowances for inflation. I for one will gladly suffer a tax increase for the purpose I am also informed that some of the am bulance crew s have much more training and experience than is required for certification under the present state program. I regret any personal hurt my original letter may have caused these individuals, but I stand by my assertion that the 72-hour course amounts to little m ore than advanced first aid R obert J. Macdonald LBJ School of Public Affairs regarding the impending impeachment? We are not rid of Him yet, not by any means. A strong bipartisan vote is need­ ed in the House Judiciary Committee to insure a substantial m argin of safety in the House of Representatives' impeach­ m ent balloting. Votes for impeachment from Judiciary Com mittee Republicans could go a long way in legitimizing the impeachment campaign in the eyes of other House m em bers. Thus, strong p r e s s u r e is n e e d e d im m e d ia te ly . Concerned persons should write, call, or te le g ra p h the follow ing ju d ic ia ry Republican swing votes: Hamilton Fish, J r (N Y.), Henry P. Smith (N Y.), Lawrence Hogan (Md ), William Cohen ( Mai ne) , T hom as R ailsb ack (111 ), Robert McClory (111.), Harold Froehlich (Wis.) and Caldwell Butler (Va.). Impeach w ho? To the editor: Has this campus become complacent George H. Pazdral 1205 Lorrain St. Impressed by Frank To the editor: On a recent visit to Austin, where we went to visit our son who happens to be in the Travis County jail as a result of a family dispute, we had occasion to m eet Sher i f f R a y m o n d F r a n k and a paramedic, Robert Hirsch. We are most grateful and appreciative of the understanding and consideration shown us by Sheriff Frank and very much relieved to learn of the work of the paramedic for the inm ates’ welfare. It is encouraging to know th at a helping hand is extended to the inmate and his family. To these gentlemen we are very grateful The community is fortunate to have such high caliber people in such sensitive positions. Mr. and Mrs. Edward Ulatowski Franklin Park, III. Austin Am bulance To the editor: I am grateful to Mr. Kenneth Albrecht of Austin A m bulance S ervice for (ring to lo my letter ieu.e« «iuuui mc jwmuanw replying about the standards The G O P m em bers are ready to continue the im peachm ent investigation... _ _ _____------------------------ ,—--------- •—-------- — --------------- Thrift hears siren song of profit By NICHOLAS VON HOFFMAN ©1974, King Features Syndicate •* TI.. U..I»er«Wy r « “ ‘ •* — With something like FDTTOR B uck H WASHINGTON a rv e y $650 billion sittings in savings and loan BJHefner MANAGING'EDITOR .'.:................................... associations and savings banks — the ASSISTANT MANAGING E D IT O R ...............................................L ynne B rock “ thrift institutions” —it was a m atter of NEW S E D IT O R .................................................................................... Richard Fly time before the glass and stainless steel ASSISTANT TO T H E E D IT O R ...................................................... H ave lu s h e r dinosaurs would rem em ber all that dough was there and try and vamp it. SPO RTS E D IT O R ..................................................................................L a rry S m ith With their custom ary greenback swamps AMUSEMENTS EDITOR............................................................ Paul Beutel drying up and their need for cash never P H O T O G R A P H E R S ............................... Stanley F a r r a r , M arlon T aylor so ur gent , t hey woul d i ne vi t a bl y recollect that other needs could be ISSUE STAFF satisfied if they could get at the billions ............................................................ Gail Burris City Editor deposited in the thrift institutions at Z Z Z Z Z . ..................... Bryan Brumley, David Hendricks, Reporters g o v ern m e n t-re g u lated low in te re s t Ken McHam, Anne M arie Kilday . Susan Lindee, Wade Wilcox, Tom Snidow, rates. News Assistants Seven-and-a-half percent is the most Charles Lohrmann, Nancy Mills .........................................................................Dale Napier you can get at a savings and loan Editorial Assistant ’ ............ ................................ .....................Roe Traugott association, and then only if your Make-Up E ditor........ promise to leave your dough there for ........................................... Sally Carpenter, David Rose Wire Editors four years With money losing its value Jan Phipps, Curtis Leister. Ted Vobejda. Copy E ditors............ at the rate of 12 percent a year or higher, Rebecca Stephenson, Anne Morris, Elizabeth Echols. William Zeis people who see the purchasing power of mum* i'ion Building A4!'K InquiriM i R egent The national advertising rep resen tativ e of The Dally and promises to help their savings retain Th* I tally T exan . a student newxpaper al Ch* I m v*f»itv Texan I- National Educational Advertising Senile#. Inc value. T * « tt a t A nilin IS publish*.) by T in a * Student WO lo x in g ton Av* New York N Y 10017 P ublications, lira w e f ii U niversity Station Austin. Ten The g reat com m ercial banks are The Daily Texan subsc ribes to Th* Assoc iated Press, 18712 The D aily !*»«n » published Munday. Tuesday I Tilted P ress international and P acific News Service Th* limited to a somewhat lower amount of Wednesday Thursday and Friday Septem ber through Texan tv a m em ber of the Associated Collegiate Press, the May and T uesday Wednesday Thursday and Friday June interest that they can pay you on savings Southwest Journalism Congress and the Texas Daily through August, excep t holiday and exam periods Second New spaper Assoc iatkm accounts, but the banks have a way to i t a m (w xlag* paid a t Austin T m Bec wTing 'ta ll UM tor lh*- newspaper ar* at PMA evade this restriction Giants like F irst Building I alulet ie Id Fountain 24th and Npeedwav tester N*W* runt* ibtilMUi* Will b* .1" sp ied by telephone (471National City Bank of New York have 2 lnt and Npeed*.r. Townes Halt. University Co-op 24th m t t , -ii sh* editorial office ‘T ex** Student Publication* ,i„i Whitts. Tilt Ii and Whit!* and tin- Academic Center Banditti! baxewtMW limn I rn st Hi* new* laboratory ti urn tran sferred ow nership into holding companies which are not subject to banking regulations. Citicorp, As F irst National’s holding company is called, not only owns the bank but a number of other finance-type businesses. It is Citicorp which is leading the charge to get depositors to evacuate the thrift institutions. Its method is to sell notes, redeemable every six months, that would pay a fluctuating interest rate. For the first period, the proposed rate would be 9.7 percent, which should bring a lot of money out of people’s piggy banks. Chase Manhattan has jumped in with $250 million it wants to peddle while other outfits, like the Firstm ark Corp in B u f f a l o a n d San F r a n c i s c o ’s Transam erica Corp, are on the scene with variants of the sam e basic scheme. The idea has something to recommend it. For years big savers have been able to get much higher interest rates than little savers. Did you know if you have a $100,000 deposit in a bank, you can go in and negotiate an interest rate? The guy with $5,000 either has to invest where there is great risk or accept the low rates offered by savings institutions Or, if he is a com plete sucker, he can buy those Series E governm ent savings bonds Now for the first time the money brokers are bidding in a quasi-open m arket situation for his money. „ . . .. . : So large is the dem andi tfor investment capital that g entlem en like W alter Wr i st on, C i tic o r p ’s c h a i r ma n , is defending his plan with words of a populist, Naderesque hue: “ It is difficult to believe that in today’s value system, with Congress constantly concerned about the treatm en t of consumers, that responsible people would seriously advance the thesis th at large investors are somehow entitled to a higher return on their money than the consumer.” As convincing as this new Wall Street champion of the little man may be, there are a few catches. Rightly or wrongly, we have built an enormous system of savings in s titu tio n s by maki ng it lawfully im p o ssib le for W risto n 's consumers to get the same return as Wriston's large investors. This was okay with places like Citicorp as long as they had plenty of money to play with. Now they don’t, so they’ve gone a-vamping. But massive disintermediation, which, by God, is th e b a n k e r’s word for withdrawing your money and putting it elsewhere, could put the young families of America in pup tents in the park even if it doesn’t bankrupt some of our savings institutions. The low in terest savings of working people have been providing the mortgage money for housing. It is this two-tier system which neo-populist W riston d n H H i m l * decries f W r i o s tthat hat n p rm its people neonlt to suddenly permits borrow money to buy a house at interest rates well under “ the prime rate” for corporate and industrial borrowers they mention un TV every so often. The Citicorp notes would suck that money out of low interest housing and into high interest bank loans. You can argue that might not be a bad idea. The money would go to increase in d u stria l c a p a c ity w hile low ering consumer demand, all of which would be anti-inflationary and therefore healthy, but the people who argue this way usually are the people who already have all they need, so they can afford to tell others to w ait while be build new factories that will eventually bring the prices down. The Citicorp idea has caught the government w ith no policy on the question. The bank has been asked to delay and modify its plan while the biggies huddle. Unfortunately, most of their huddling about something that will directly affect the lives of millions of us has been in private. Not that it would make any difference if they were m ore candid in public. When men like Sen. William Proxm ire of Wisconsin and Rep, Wright Patm an of Texas have tried to get a public debate going, the media have been too obsessively hypnotized by political trivia to hear. Setting presidential standards _ e o n i) « e e id Is IS IR ?s Vp The am bassadon ie ill is _ . . , , By D A V ID S. BR O D ER ®!974, The Washington Post Company W A SH IN G T O N - Rep. Charles E . Wiggins, R-Calif., the e x ce p tio n a lly gifted lawyer who has emerged as P re s id e n t N ix o n 's m ost effective defender on the House Jud iciary Committee, was rehearsing some of his arguments one day last week with a group of reporters who had interrupted his newspaper reading in the speaker’s lobby off the floor of the House. One of the points he made went right to the heart of the issue that the committee, the Zieglerism s: lying on the job a ac as ck pe Tkach added that he had warned the President not to go to the Middle East last month, because the blood clot in his leg might become dislodged and endanger his life By JA C K AN DERSO N ®1974, United Feature Syndicate Despite a ll the Watergate lies that have backfired, presidential press secretary Ronald Ziegler still seems incapable of telling the truth about the most minor matters. rn. ■re ;ht tai >er he ie. c's of he ts, art This substantiates our report while the President was in the Middle East that a special medical team had been sent to the Mediterranean as an unprecedented precaution. From time to time, we publish a catalogue of "Zieglerism s, as we call his official falsehoods. Here is the latest edition. “The five-man team ,” we reported on June 14. “ is led by 1) A year ago. we reported that the White House kept a secret Capt. William J. Fouty, chief of surgery at the Bethesda Naval blacklist of Republican senators who had displeased President Hospital, and Dr. M yer Rosenthal, head of the hospital's Nixon and who. forthwith, were denied White House invitations Intensive Care Unit and other courtesies. 3) We broadcast over the Mutual radio network on June 18 The White House put out an indignant denial that any such list that the United States was preparing to sell police equipment to existed. Now our story has been confirmed by none other than the Soviet secret police, of all people. the former W hite House impresario of dirty tricks. Charles Among the crime-fighting equipment American companies Colson. would offer to the K G B , we reported, were mobile crime labs, On a tape made without his knowledge. Colson said: “ A lovely metal detectors, voice identification systems, detection devices g irl... worked for me and maintained all those lists which were to locate explosives and narcotics, electric arcs, anticarknown as the ‘opponents lists, people who would not be invited stealing devices, chem icals and gas, equipm ent for tracing fingerprints and equipment to protect personnel against to the White House.” Those on the ‘‘opponents lists,” said Colson, were “ some guys firearm s Our report was echoed a month later by Sen. Henry Jackson, in the Senate” who had annoyed the White House. 2) Earlier this month, Ziegler twice assured reporters that D-Wash Ziegler immediately denied it. He had spent an entire the phlebitis in President Nixon’s left leg had resolved itself and morning, he said, trying in vain to find out what Jackson was talking about. Perhaps American companies want to sell the that the President was “ fine.” Soviets “ walkie-talkies or something. ’ suggested Ziegler. This was contradicted later by both the President s physician, Next day, the story was confirmed, and Ziegler was caught in Dr. Walter Tkach, and staff chief Gen. Alexander Haig, who another lie. acknowledged that the phlebitis condition is continuing. isk by my tial •pie aed be ars P l A N I IS ... ic m*Aa Congress and the nation must whatever judgment is made judge this week, as the public on Mr. Nixon w ill become the standard by which future impeachment debate begins. The c o n v e rs a tio n had presidents are guided, and proceeded for some time, this is something equally with the Californian calmly important to keep in mind. Any kind of action that rebutting each of the major charges against Mr. Nixon, Congress sanctions on Mr. when a re p o rte r asked N i x o n ' s p a r t w i l l be W iggins if he w ere not considered legitimate by his somewhat troubled by the successors in office — who over-all pattern of ethical will, of a certainty, wish to practice represented by the employ the full powers of that Nixon presidency. ‘‘Is that office to cope with the crises w h at y o u ’d te a c h yo u r of their days. Any kind of action for which Mr. Nixon is children?” he was asked. That, said Wiggins firm ly, impeached will be avoided by is precisely what is not — and later presidents. This is, in short, a time should not be — at issue in the im peachm ent proceeding. when it is both essential and in “ The C o n stitu tio n set a p r o p e r to d e f i n e , standard,” he said, “ when it contemporary circumstances, directed that the president the meaning of that phrase crimes and could be im peached and “ hi gh removed from office only for misdemeanors.” not just to ‘treason, bribery or other high see that Mr. Nixon is judged fairly but Chat his successors crimes and misdemeanors.’ ” What Wiggins was saying, in are guided right. e f f e c t , wa s t h a t those To do so is not to violate the defending the Pre sid e n t Constitution, but to carry out against impeachment do not the exact intent of its have to prove that he was fram ers. In the Ju d icia ry wise, discreet, prudent or in Committee's little handbook, any way adm irable in his “ Constitutional Grounds for exercise of the powers of his Presidential Impeachment,’' office. All they have to do is show that he was not guilty of “ treason, bribery, or other hi gh crimes and GIFTS misdemeanors. ” 4612 Se Gang'*" The notion that Mr. Nixon n » m 444-3614 should not be judged by a * ZUNI AND N A V A H O higher standard than the INDIAN JEWELRY Constitution lays down or that • M EXICAN p as t P r e s i d e n t s w e r e IMPORTS expected to meet is so fairO F F N I O o . m to * P ™ minded on its face — so much "G IF T S T H A T IN C R E A S E in keeping with the basic IN V A L V E " American believe that you don’t change rules in the CLO SED M O N D A Y middle of the game — that it is likely to be the mainstay of the Nixon defense. But it is also true that rvnhli^hfvi published last February February, and in the new p a p e r b a c k . “ Impeachment.” by Charles L. Black J r of the Yale Law School, the point is made repeatedly that the phrase “ high c rim e s and misdemeanors” was chosen to protect constitutional government against gross abuse of power in whatever ways were seen as dangerous by contemporary legislators. That is what the language meant when it first appeared in 1386, in the impeachment of the Earl of Suffolk, a royal chancellor, for failing to keep his promises to Parliam ent or to carry out its ordinances. It is because of that long history that Prof. Black can conclude, with some confidence, that the three tests of an impeachable offense are that it must be “ extremely serious,’ that it must tend to “corrupt or subvert the p o litica l and governmental process' and that it must be “ plainly wrong in itself to a person of honor, o r to a good c i t i z e n , regardless of words on the statute books ' No s u c h c a ta lo g u e of alleg atio n s has ever been m ad e a g a in st a p rev io u s P re s id e n t as now sta n d s ag ain st Mr. Nixon; those charged ag ain st P re sid en t Andrew Johnson were of a very different, and simpler, c h a ra c te r. But we cannot prove the negative proposition that no such case could ever have been constructed against a previous President. R ath er than pursue th at futile debate, we can ask ourselves the more im portant question: Are these actions the kind we are willing to accept from future presidents? For the judgment on Mr Nixon will set "the floor” on the behavior we can expect from his successors. The question for Congress and the country is whether the use of the presidential office detailed in the voluminous evidence now assembled is a standard of behavior we can condone as a precedent for future occupants of that o f f i c e , or w h e t h e r it fundamentally corrupts the political and governm ental process. N ELSO N S DENVER W. LACKORN, D.D.S. a n n o u n ce s the opening of his office for the practice of general dentistry at 6 0 S East Bee Caves Road Hours: 8-5 Mon. thru Fri. PHONE: 327-3184 NEW HOUSING POLICY!! DHY WOULD SOME S IR I WHO LIVE5 IN A NICE HOUSE LIKE THAT (JANT IU A8XU6IZE TD A NOTHIN6-PEKSON UKE .VIE ? DEXTER HOUSE 1103 W. 24th O CCUPANCY ONLY THE PACESETTER. The THE MAXI-1. A new concept in one ultimate apartment. Split-level bedroom split levels Large bedroom living in a two bedroom studio and bath with a full study upstairs Downstairs, a fully electric kitchen with walk-rn Downstairs, a spacious living area, en­ pantry and spacious living room for entert tmg. Upstairs, two large bedrooms and bath with tertaining area and all electric kitchen See it to believe it. walk-ins Free living at its finest HER VOCE ON THE TELEPHONE UMPED VER* NICE...SHE'S ORALLY REAL CUTE ...WELL, THAT MEANS THERES ONLY ONE THINS FOR ME TO OO, Semi-Private Rooms as Low as 444-7880J V Zf s60 p er m o. Luxurious Private Rooms MOO p er m o. • Maid Service Heated Swimming Pool • Refrigerators • Intercom • Laundry Facilities • Vending Machines • Study Areas • 24 Hr. Desk Service • TV in Lobby • Off Street Parking • Close to Campus DO O N E S B U R Y ___ NOU, A Z HALDEM AN, BEFORE J T m M O V E R TO M R ST C LA IR , I W ONDER. IE YOU I COULD R E M M ? THE COMMITTEE WHAT THE P R E SID E N T S LA ST W ORD M A S O N THE IS S U E ! O F H U SH V MONEY O N Pacesetter Apartments for Free-Living People. 2124 Burton Drive M ARCH Z I JESTER CENTER STORE BUT NO FAIR. PRAM N6 APVBRS5 s j« e ! H O U S IN G OFFICE 709 West 22nd St. 478-9891 - 4 7 8 -8914 DEXTER HOUSE Come See - Come Live IjaNFtuj'A COSMETICS RECORDS M A G A ZIN ES • BLUEBOOKS • SPIRALS • SNACKS W O K N o w accepting Fall '74 Contracts for U J . M e n and W om en GET MORE FOR YOUR M O N EY $ $ Your ON CAM PU S Student Store Weekdays 8:00 'til 6:00 Saturdays 9:00 'til 1:00 /m & N ces! Special Package Deals (Room at Ooxtor - Board at Madison) available as low as $145 O N - T H E - D R A G , 2406 G U A D A L U P E C ro ssw o rd Puzzler lople to nterest te” for >rs they n. The mey out to high I 2 3 ■ m an a n sa rn n r ju s n a a a a 1973 O P E L GT 4 speed, 8 track am/fm, 16 500 miles 47950 471-5717 a ller 4. king 47 Girl s name 6 34 Shakespearian49 Periods of lime character 52 Baby's napkin 36 Man s name 54 Mountains 37 Parent (abbr.) 38 Force 57 Cooled lava 40 Son of 58 Army officer Daedalus (abbr.) 41 Bar legally 44 Female rela­ 60 Compass point tive 4 6 3 7 8 9 IO I i 12 14 VV* 13 17 16 15 21 20 19 18 24 X\ 25 V \ N 26 29 30 FBI 23 22 27 31 ii 35 A1 51 44 43 Ss: r : 52 • 56 6! I 41 Si; SO SSS 45 rn 54 53 58 159 ane IVv>/ . H; v u Ri o k Hl eP tT paneled KAD# IAd truck, truck Dad bodyv ■v e ry good Motor and trans S700 472-3064 after I p m •ing , kthi baby bol |m l ad but col d jill nand drive drive, [Superb, cl, It restoi atioi Bs♦i 11 being ,a jt la y This is an in 'w o rth more in 6 t i 1777 after 5 Special. Canvas Bags shed and Unf One and twB Tappan A pl Dishwasher, dispos Individually cr ’trolled CA CH, pool, TV i Me SEV EN TO W ERS r V C l IJT S tudor, tuOur, bt. hi, ac ps good goop I i T Ll A a SSS tires, clean buy Call Joe La Fico, Days 444-6172 ; P le a s e lea ve m essage I Evenings atte' 8, 444-1087. Ja id to. diamond*. Rf>v kL portable typewriter .Of Rf used car “ 68 Ford A ?B L E 'used ta r 1 !°S8 Fo rd. 55 "I 453-76 *5« Call F R E T T E D inlo t r e a s o n a b le . OULCikkyuJ ai scour! on aTi i A m t ti- Mush U-ynmers ami -ntem ted ates S'.O0 per lesson. 452-755i after 6. E L E C T R I C •[vewiiter. *200 * * ever *14 Mg sty is se e r $3.49 9 No Lease Furnished and Unfurnished One Bedroom Apartments Tappan Appliances T isher. disposal gas stove v controlled CA CH, T v cebid I,db Q U IN T A N A 43.6 454-13 43:6 bun Bun -eek Road _ A N D THEY SEEL .strobe 49 48 5? 40 39 H Fur THEYRE SEEN, Sf96 Ln. merit F re e case S A lu E Free li t e r Music, 1624 32 38 37 46 MFV $ H W I N N~Ka r|ity Green ;•>? 1Xy< 3 i 42 SAN5UI 70OO receiver 70 TO rms Vet y powerful1 Also IOO watt speakers. *550. Takes AU 47t-7902 THE BLACKSTON! S64 50 {m g nth TEXAN CLASSIFIED NXN 28 $ 36 SO E Issaga). 1969 O P E L , GT, 35 mpg, 4 speed, just tutted, good tires. *1200 476 8189 after S. 11 rn ight the on the asked to bile the most of that w ill ons of us it would ;re more like Sen. and Rep. tried to ie media otized by I CONVENIENT FOR SHUTTLE BUS RIDERS! rn >e a bad ncrease wering yould be healthy, us way dy have d to tell Id new ring the gold 3 Resort 4 Temporary shelter 5 Iroquoian In­ dians 6 Spanish tor ’’yes' 7 Part of "to be" 8 Young boy 9 Matures 10 Loss 11 Temporary halt 13 Declare 16 Tardy 19 Growing out of 21 Identical 22 Puff up 25 Former Rus­ sian rulers 27 Go In 30 King of birds 32 Home-run r n ACROSS 1 Experience 6 Dinner course 11 Poor person 12 Likenesses 14 Man s nickname 15 Dye plant 17 Clever 18 Rubber tree 20 Plague 23 Ocean 24 Dispatched 26 Vapid 28 Near 29 Wipe out 31 Send forth 33 South African Dutch 35 Girl s name 36 Came Into view 39 Weird 42 Behold! 43 Killed 45 Fabulous birds 46 Possessive pronoun 48 Man s nickname 50 Man s nickname 51 One of Israel's greatest kings 53 Fixed period of time 55 Artificial language 56 Continued story 59 Condiment 61 Clerical col­ lar 62 Worms DOWN 1 Higher 2 Symbol for I 2910 Red R ive r Regular 6.00. Two groat looking styles. One, a Hat envelope with shoulder strap and twa outside packets. The other, a pouch with two-tone adjustable shoulder strap and twa outside pockets. In a variety of colors. Accessories. 471 A Paragon Proper, >.w a" runs gov-J body aam aue STOO. Can atter 5 476-lVOb N I ic K O R 7*m n f 2 coated tens One y fa r J 1’' * ' USt S * 4 1 7 V.ult sell tor S.'SO ! ? ! ■.venienTHo pvenieotiy 60 rn h D istr, by U n ite d F e a t u r e S y n d ic a te, Inc X\ Thursday, July 25, 1974 T H E D A IL Y T E X A N P age 5 A strolurf Installation Proceeds on Schedule WPL Roundup Florida Defeats Houston Texans Reamon scored on a run around right end two pla>s afte r Taliafero fumbled in the third quarter. t The victory was Florida’s th ir d in a ro w , fir m ly entrenching the Blazers in the f ir s t p la ce in th e WFL Eastern Division Houston is now 1-2. A crowd announced by the Blazers at 15,729 saw the game. ★ ★ ★ JACK SO NVILLE. F la . (Apy — Rookie quarterback Tony Adams arched a 40-yard touchdow n pass to D ave Williams on the last play of the game to give the Southern California Sun a comeback 2219 v i c t o r y o v e r th e Jacksonville Sharks Wednesday night in a World Football League game. ORLANDO, Fla. (AP) Rookie running back Tommy Reamon scored on a 15-yard run and caught an action-point pass Wednesday night to boost the Florida Blazers to a 15-3 World Football League win over the Houston Texans. T ight en d G reg L a tta another Florida rookie, also scored on a 28-yard pass from v eteran q u a rte rb a c k Bob Davis. Charlie Durkee kicked a 41vard field goal for Houston in the fourth quarter, capping Houston's only sustained drive. Both Florida scores were set up bv Houston fumbles. Q u a rt e r b a c k Mike Taliafero fumbled on the Houston 49 in the first quarter, and Davis connected with Latta for the touchdown eight plays later Shoe Shop — * SA LET SHEEPSKIN We make and repair boots shoes belts RUGS OO $5 leather go o d s Many B e a u tifu l Colors s750 ★ LEATHER SALE ★ Texans' Ed Mooney tackles Blazers' Tommy Reamon. V a rle t** hind*, colors - 7 5 * Capitol Saddlery 1614 L a v a c a The C a xonu 478-9309 Au stin , T e x a s 1616 Royal Crest 444-6631 I ATO 1 9 /3 VW SPORT BUG SH. *t«rw in warranty 1972 T 1972 1A TV 1971 B y PHILIP BELL Texan Staff Writer The r e s u r fa c in g of Memorial Stadium playing field and the practice field with AstroTurf is “right on schedule,” sports business manager Al Lundstedt said Wednesday. “The practice field (now called Clark Field) is already f in is h e d and M e m o r ia l Stadium should be ready anywhere between Aug. IO and Aug. 15,” Lundstedt said. This would have the fields ready before the football team begins practicing in la te August. The AstroTurf, or carpet as it is sometimes called, is only a small part of the whole operation. “ Initially there is a gravel base comparable to any ordinary h ig h w a y ,” Lundstedt said. “Then on top of that there is an asphalt cover that is quite similar to a parking lot. Placed on top of the asphalt is glue that keeps the foam, which is placed on next, intact. On top of all of that is the actual carpet.” THE ONLY hitch in the operation so far is that the asphalt has Jituck to the S . " ............ 2395 1-1 $165 2-1 185 2-2 195 2495 VW 411 STH. WAG. 9 0 < K auto air radio like new ................ L r I J 1972 2195 1972 2 3 ?!*. - ...........1895 1972 S S !S r ............... 2095 1972 1995 K H 1971 m r ,UG.............. 1795 1972 2250 1969 a n - ............... H95 Blood Plasma Donors Needed Men & Women: EARN SIO WEEKLY CASH PAYMENT FOR DONATION Austin Blood Components, Inc. O P E N : M O N . & T H U R S . 8 A M to 7 P .M . T U E S . & F R I. 8 A . M . to 3 P .M . CLO SE D WED. & SAT. S t u d lm a n 's Photo Service 222 W. 19th & 5324 Cameron Rd. RESUME' & IDENTIFICATION TYPE PICTURES I-Day Quick, Reliable Service Miller Skipping Canadian O pen 305 W. 19TH OF Jeans 2 p« . Meat, French Fries, Cole Slaw, Hot Ralls & Butter 5-9 p.m. only $1.45 Reg. $1.85 477-3735 409 W. 6th W Hank's Famous Chicken Fried Steak all bills p a id EARN CASH WEEKLY HOUSE 2532 GUADALUPE ** A leading choice of the Riverside Dr. apartm e nts because w e offer ex tra-spaciou s living and direct a c c e ss to d ie shuttle bus. OL OC ............... £ .9 1 J HAHK'S CRILL somewhat lower.” L U N D S T E D T sa id he originally felt the first surface would last more than five years. “We are not pleased at all with having to pull it out in five years, but we did it for a reason. That was to avoid the rising costs in the future. Most of the products in the turf are petroleum base. We felt that the petroleum products would be much cheaper now than in the future. Also the new baseball field is being carpeted, and we could get both done cheaper now than getting them done separately.” Some of the money is being regained by reselling the turf. “We are selling practice field carpet for IO cents a square foot and 90 cents a square yard, and we have sold nearly half of that. For Memorial Stadium turf we are selling at 15 cents a square foot.” Lundstedt added there are 29 actual full rolls of carpet. There are ten more rolls, but some of them are from the curved end zone and from the side, with those on the side PORT CREDIT, Ont. (AP) being separated with drainage — Expectant father Johnny holes. Miller, the top winner in “ WE TOOK bids on the professional golf this season, carpet and they ranged from withdrew from the $200,000 25 cents to 2.5 cents a square Candian Open Wednesday. foot. Therefore, we set a Miller, winner of five titles standard price of 15 cents for and more than $204,000 this the turf,” Lundstedt said. season, had entered this The field itself, Lundstedt national championship with reported, is pretty worn down the understanding he could "The football team, the band pull out at any time. and the ROTC all use it from The 150-man field will play end to end for practice. The th e 6 ,7 8 8 - y a r d , p a r-7 0 w h o l e t h i n g i s us e d M ississa u g u a G olf course constantly.” Painting the stripes is now and a l w a y s has been a problem. “ We constantly have to repaint the entire group of lines. The striping itself is our biggest problem. There is enough line distinction for the football players when on the field, but the lines cannot be s e e n f r o m t he s t a nds . Therefore we are constantly repainting the field.” R esta u ra n t t A rca de Lundstedt said that Sport2 5 3 0 G u a d a lu p e i n s t a l l , a d i v i s i o n of LUNCH SPfCIAL DAILY Monsanto, was responsible for $ 1 .3 9 U V I MU MC I M T U the resurfacing. No Cover “The group is composed of M ix e d D rin k s • Beer between six and eight men W in e • Food • A m u se m o n ts I Ladies K ite s Tu. A Thur. 2 0 * who do the work. Sometimes g Beer they hire local labor, but in Tequila 5 0 */shot W e d . A Sat. our case they did not have to H a p p y H o u r 4 -6 at this tim e.” padding in some places, and t h is h a s c a u s e d so m e problems. “ The heat has melted the plastic padding and therefore there has been some stickage of the two surfaces,” Lundstedt said. The heat has caused other problems as well, Lundstedt said. “The men have been working at nights a lot. usually from IO p.m. until 6 in the morning. The field itself can get pretty hot down there.” R e in s t a lla t io n of the surface is costing $300,000 That figure includes both fields. “We could have gone on for a few more years,“ Lundstedt said. The turf la sted fiv e y e a r s. ‘‘The original turf cost us $525,000 and that included everything, drainage, digging and the Tartan track. As a matter of fact, the Tartan track was far and away the most expensive item. We are not replacing that so therefore this cost is AND I " HIGHLAND MALL Old Generals Never Die; They Just Fade Away THESE SPECIAL REDUCTIONS GOOD THUR. FRI. SAT ___________ ONLY! Short Sleeve [ G u y s & “CA M PU S” The Texas Union General Store will fade away in early August (at least temporarily) because of the Union’s remodelling plans. To cope with its untimely departure, the Store will be selling most of its stock at a 20-50% dis­ count July 15-31. So com e make your final good buys. In General, we still have a lot in Store for you. 8 a.m . • 5 p.m. Monday-Friday First floor, Texas Union Gals LOW_R|SE ILANDLUBBER SPORT SHIRTS VALUES TO NOW ONLY $4 GUYS & GALS Brush Denim Big Bell Bottoms Assorted Colors REG. $1 3 00 NOW *5 Famous Brand NEAREST YOU AND PITCH IT IN! LO C A T IO N S: ENTIRE STOCK • TOWNES HALL • UNIVERSITY CO-OP • 24TH AND WHITIS • 26TH AND WHITIS • ACADEMIC CENTER CUFFED BELL BOTTOMS ASSORTED COLORS AND PLAIDS mSSBSA jlM X M K M C M I! GREEN RECYCLING BOX NOW $ ONLY M ESI P a g e 6 Thursday, July 25, 1974 T H E D A ILY TEX AIS 6 OO • ROBERT LEE M O O RE HALL (Formerly P M A Bldg.) • LITTLEFIELD FOUNTAIN • 24TH AND SPEEDWAY • JESTER W O M EN 'S DORM • 21 ST AND SPEEDWAY sp o n so red by TEXAS STUDENT PUBLICATIONS and STI DENT GOVT. ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECT. COMM. What you want, is „ what we'll get! University Co-Op Consume Action Lin 4 7 8 -4 4 3 6 L Mon. thru Fri. 8:30 to 5*30 N A tla n ta Picks Clyde King Over Aaron Unitas Retires SAN D IE G O (A P ) Quarterback Johnny Unitas, who completed more passes and g ain ed m o re yards passing th a n anybody in football history, stepped out of the sport Wednesday on gimpy legs “I’m taking up time on the field that could be used for younger fellows,” he told a news conference. He said he has arthritis in his legs. THE 41-YEAR-OLD Unitas said he offered to stay on as a coach but said the San Diego Chargers declined. The Chargers picked up Unitas a year ago when the Baltimore Colts benched him as a starter after 17 years. San Diego paid $150,000 for the rights to negotiate with him, and he was signed to a twoyear contract paying $500,000. Unitas said Eugene Klein, owner of the Chargers, agreed to pay off the contract. In a statement, Klein made no mention of this but called Unitas "the best quarterback in the history of the game." THE NATIONAL Football League, on the occasion of its 50th a n n iv e rsa ry in 1969, named the ex-University of Pittsburgh player the greatest quarterback ever. The records set by Unitas which still stand include the most passes attmepted by a pro quarterback, 5,186; the most completed. 2,830; the most yards gained passing, 40,239, a n d th e mo s t touchdowns through the air, 290 . Carroll Rosenbloom, owner of the Los Angeles Rams since selling the Colts, expressed sorrow over Unitas' announcement "because I would have liked to see him go out on one more great year." Riders Win WTT Match Cubs Acquire N e w M a n a g e r . CHICAGO (AP) - Whitey L o c k m a n q u i t as f i e l d manager of the Chicago Cubs Wednesday and was replaced by h is ow n c h o i c e a s successor, third base coach Jim Marshall. Lockm an, continuing as vice-president in charge of player development, said he started the current season with the wish that Marshall be groomed to become manager. In selecting Marshall as manager, the Cub hierarchy passed over club career man Ernie Banks, longtime "M r. Cub” and now a r ovi ng instructor in the organization. "As far as I know, Ernie doesn’t care about being a manager," said John Holland, executive vice-president. "H e wants to do exactly what he is doing — working with young players." Lockman was in his second full season as Cubs manager after succeeding dismissed Leo Durocher in the middle of UPI Telephoto ...leaving Colts (1 972 ) John Unitas (1 9 5 7 )... No Meetings Scheduled To Discuss NFL Strike WASHINGTON (AP) - No m e e t i n g s b e t w e e n th e Nat i onal Football League o wn e r s and the st r i ki ng players appear on the horizon. it was learned Wednesday. T h e pl a y e r s , h o we v e r reportedly met with Jam es S c e a r c e , t he f e d e r a l mediator, for about an hour Tuesday night, but neither the union nor the government official would comment on what took place, It was understood, however, t h a t t he purpose of th e meeting was to fill in W.J. Usery, head of the Federal Mediation Service, on details of what had taken place to d a te and on the p la y e rs ’ position. A p p a r e n t l y , no s u c h meeting with the owners has H O U S T ON ( AP) Houston’s Helen Gourlay and John N e w c o m e won 6-2 decisions against Boston s Janet Newberry and Raz Reid to lead the Riders to a 30-19 victory Wednesday night. Gourlay, making her second appearance since injuring her ankle at Wimbledon, had little t r o u b l e a g a i n s t Mi s s Newberry who gave way to Kerry' Melville late in the set. (***> ■!*0™ been scheduled. Negotiations between the warring parties broke off Monday, and Scearce said at the time that no fur t her sessions would be scheduled until it appeared a possible settlement could be reached The players union struck July I after r e a c hi ng an impasse with the owners over a new contract. The strength of the players’ strike may be determ ined in the Baltimore Colts camp Thursday, the first day of scheduled two-a-day workouts for veterans. Linebacker Mike Curtis, the only NFL name player to cross picket lines in the 1970, is certain to re p o r t. He already has undergone his physical examination. Running back Joe Orduna and second year defensive lineman Joe Ehrmann have indicated they would come to camp. . r .tin ,i the 1972 season. After a disappointing first full season in 1973, he fielded almost a brand new club this year after angered owner Phil Wrigley ordered wholesale trading of a flock of "old guard” Cubs. ic ★ ★ ATLANTA ( AP) - As expected, Clyde King was named Wednesday to manage the faltering Atlanta Braves, but Henry Aaron’s surprise revelation that he would have taken the job if asked turned a routine announcement into a simmering controversy. Aaron, the 40-year-old, alltime baseball home run king who had continually said he never wanted to manager, changed his stand Tuesday night at the All-Star Game in Pittsburgh. "If the Braves offered me the job W ednesday,” said Aaron. “I’d feel compelled to take it simply because there are no black managers in the n n rn • T c o ir! major Ileagues. I have said previously that I w asn’t interested in managing the Braves or any other team. But since my name was injected into the conversation by Atlanta Vice-President Eddie Robinson. I’ve changed my mind.” Robinson, who expressed surprise at Aaron s statement, said: “ In all of our talks with Hank, he has said that he wanted a front office job after he retired and not a position on the field. I don’t think there’s anything to straighten out. I’ll talk to Henry about it.” Meanwhile, King, a special assistant to Robinson for the last two years and a former m a n a g e r wi t h t h e San Francisco Giants, was named interim manager. He had been the leading candidate not revealed. I have gotten to know Hank fairly well and know that Hank Aaron would not do anything to harm the Atlanta Braves,” said King. Robinson, who stressed that King was taking over only for the rem ainder of the year, said King possibly would be rehired for next year if the Braves showed improvement. He also left the door open for Aaron, saying that if a change in managers had to be m ade next year, "Aar on would be considered.” Baker's Special Open Face Hamburger, Salad and Baked Potato or French Fries. O U Mf KST ATMOSPHKM Reg. $1.75 While Schnel l enber ger drills h is squad of draft choices and free agents, the striking p l a y e r s are c o n d u c t i n g t h e i r own workouts e v e ry morning. They picket only briefly in the afternoon. I NOW 505 NECHES I Block W. of Red River 15 472-0061 Thurs. - Sat. D E N IM Thurs. is Margarita Nite SA VE 60* 411 W . 24th St. W W W IST A T M O S P H IM Sun. C arl A dd ing ton No Cover Beer $1 .5 0 Pitcher Next Week - Possum Delight 4 7 8 -0 3 9 5 No Coupon Necessary A Technicolored dream th a t takes on the aspects of a Dali drawing in motion. You’ve never seen anything q u ite like it. Surpasses ail other Busby Berkeley musical com edy achievements. It ’s colossal, it’s stupendous. •!.OK>•<&,**** ' 'FUNNY AND MARVELOUS. - W a n d * M al*. H . T. D *ly t**M , 0 « - I S , ISAS h to + [ recommend this picture lighly to everyone who is limited to the belief hat sex is a religious rite." , ■♦Whole E arth Provision Co. 504 w e st 24 th any problem with Hank," said King after Robinson read a prepared statement, naming the 50-year-old former major league pitcher to head the Braves. Contract term s were ARMAND'S At least th ree other players who were on the squad last season also a re expected, but Coach Ho wa r d Schnellenberger preferred not to specualate. Travel Tools vsi \m*~. H H if * M t h P W Ss w a s since PEddie Maathew was fired Sunday. “ I certainly don’t expect c in n o -Archer Winsten, New York Post 478-1577 I K tijxctrtrrr* --ywrrk .QeofiTTBJPw*# e*±+ ■Onaga ■i w i » . mom TOO wa AC A M M Y P re s e n ts BILLY RAY REYNOLDS I WITH A L V IN C R O I V ^ nh Jx j. C C LLtG t C f E l NE A C T S T IT H SE C IE S BATTS AUDITORIUM 7 A 9:30 p.m. R U ASANI VALLEY ROYS THURS,, JULY 25 8 P.M. ANNEX: TONIGHT You're looking for a new apartment... 472-1030 'DEIICATESSEN J * «HW ^ ' I Grunt* iupe I I COOL OFF Ithis summer wfHi ! U ST 1Have a free Jof beer or (drink with W\\* ICoupon and p u r|Chd&CL cfi a sand* twic.Vi o r meal. Hour a f f t /’ ' DELI ^ £ - 8 so SHO? F R ID A Y , SATURDAY JULY 26-27 7:30-9:20-11:05 Buntine Aud. KL...-IT#?: $ 1 .2 5 Student G o v ’t. LCNG DW I JO U R N E Y INTG NIGHT THE MARX BROTHERS I I I I I I I M O N D A Y ONLY! (England, 1986). M argo t Fonteyn, Rudolf Nureyev, David Blair, Desm ond Doyle, Juda Ferron. Directed and produced by Paul Dzinner. A tribute to the 1 9 6 5 London premiere of Prokofiev's ballet after Shakespeare, choreographed by Kenneth McMillan, played by the Orchestra of the Royal Opera House, C o ve n t G a rd e n , conducted by Joh n lanchbery. Performances of genius and a first-rate sound-track. "The genius is Nureyev. who brilliantly reasserts his reputation as the finest mala dancer since N ijinsky In one incredible capriole he soars to his own h eig ht and hangs there Uke a flam e in the wind. Flam e is the es­ sence of his Romeo, a thing of melded fire and sinew. a tiger in tights " — Tim e -G e n e Shalit, W NBC-TV I I "No Ona who has ever demanded serious, m ature entertainment on the screen can afford to m iss i t ... Sustained intensity the like of which has seldom been seen en the screen. '* --A rth u r Knight. Saturday Review. "Generally stunning motion picture. The actors ... charge the p la c e w ith e le c tric ity ." —-B o s le y Crowther, New York Times. ECALEC & JULIET Shop’ is not for children, but it is for adults who can smile through a nude, but never dirty lampoon of pornographic movies.” in DUCK SOUP .. .... ........ "LA U G H S all over the place. ‘Le Sex TO NIG H T ONLY! Eugene O ' N e i l l ' s classic, and l a r g e l y autobiographical, play about the illusions people live by. The four perform ers shared the Best Acting Award at the 1 9 6 2 Cannes Film Festival. - rn JUNIOR H IG H SCHOOL ADMISSION FREE TO SEASON TICKET HOlDERS| a p a rtm e n ts Bills Paid. 911 Blanco IN TECHNICOLOR' A 20TMCtNTUf*Y FOX PICTURE • A SLIK ER S t RELEASE 75‘ FOR ADULTS 50‘ THRO UG H (U.S., 1962). Katharine Hepburn. Ralph Richardson, Jason Robards, J r., Dean Stockwell. D irected by Sidney Lumet. Palo Blanco rn THE GANG’S ALL HERE STAMPS! Consider the quiet privacy u n d e r th e spreading oak trees o f o u r one bedroom fo r S i6 5 A ll ALICE FAYE-CARMEN MIRANDA'" BUSBY BERKELEY’S WI SOL WAR BONDS T ic k e t* t i «* th * <*<** W ILD BILL andth. B U FFA LO VANNESS rn WM p |ip M I I I I F rid a y & S aturday July 26 & 2 7 1 6 :0 0 , 7:30 , 9 :0 0 , 10:30, 12:00 I A.C. A u d ito riu m J FRIDAY-SATURDAY JULY 26-27 I I I $1.00 Rated G 7:30-9:20-11:00 BATTS AUD. Mod. Cinema I I I Sponsored b y U T Y o u n g Democrats Rata Md by PappafCorn-WormMr, inc. $ 1.50 J Subtitles tM T Ut , /4 w i i tut a v o y t July 25,>,1974 THE DAILY,TEXAN P a g e 7 27 Courses in 'Project C B -f' Com puter Instruction Increasing ♦• / t r i l l a n d c o n s u m in g “ d r i l l a n d By ROSALIND YOUNG p r a c t i c e " w o rk , le a v in g A m ajo r student com plaint on the U niversity cam pus is in s tr u c t o r s m o re tim e to the feeling of being lost in the devote to individual student crowd and being isolated from needs P ro jec t C-BE is a four-year a closer relationship with an instructor who sim ply hasn ’t p r o j e c t w h ic h b e g a n in S e p te m b e r, 1971. u n d e r a got enough tune. T h e p r o b l e m m a y be g ra n t by the N ational Science a lle v ia te d w ith the use of F o u n d a t i o n . I t i n v o l v e s com puters to supplem ent the co m p u ter program s authored traditional textbook method of by the in structor of the course “ conversing" w ith students instruction. S e v e r a l c o u r s e s u n d e r v ia a c o m p u te r te r m in a l P ro je c t C-BE (C om puter- (e ith er a teletype or cathode Based In stru c tio n ) are solving ra y tu b e t e r m i n a l) , J o a n Jern ig an , research a ssociate th e p r o b le m s of tim e U n B M l M ■■ ■■ ■■ ■■■■ ■■ r m "Im ibik sciih k n "W L 2 I 21 st & Guadalupe Second Levi Dobte Moll 477-1324 2-4 51.25 6.8-10$).50 Screen I for for P P ro ro ject ject C-BE, C BE. said. said. T he c o m p u te r p ro g r a m ch an n els th e stu d e n t into a p p r o p r ia te p ro f ic ie n c y levels. T hat is, the com puter sends the student to m ore ad v an ced p ro g ra m s or suggests review program s. In th at w ay, this m ethod relieves the tedium of classroom drills and e n c o u ra g e s a m o re personal teaching approach for the student. T here a re ap p roxim ately 27 courses using P ro je ct C-BE One of the la test to join the project is “ English Com position.’’ m onitored by D r. Susan W ittig, a ssista n t p ro fe sso r of E n g lish , and Anne Dunn. Dunn, E nglish teaching assistant With the use of com puters, Wittig and Dunn are e x p e rim e n tin g w ith b a sic g r a m m a r le s so n s and instructional com puting. This sum m er, the course is being taught with four cathode ra y tu b e te r m i n a ls to 21 students in the engineering laboratories. W ittig said stu d en t response h as been o v e rw h e lm in g ly p o s itiv e . " T h e y a r e v e ry ex cite d .’’ she said, “ because they enjoy the activ ity and ‘p e r s o n a l i t y ’ of the c o m p u t e r ." S tu d e n ts a lso becom e less discouraged with ■ I E N D S TOMORROW | MINNER 1972 CANNES FILMFESTIVAL] JURYPRIZE AWARD | Only American tem to be to Honored_______ He survived the in ss tru tru cc tio tio nn th an cco om m pp uu te te rr in than with r e g u l a r c l a s s r o o m instruction. One of the m ajo r draw backs of th e c o m p u te r s y s te m , W ittig said, is the cost. When the p ro je c t’s gran t expires next year, individual d ep artm en ts will be left w ith the expensive m aintenance and operating costs. She also explained th a t the i n n o v a t i v e t e c h n i q u e of com puter instruction is “ open to m ususe. We a re lim ited by our im aginations.’’ she said, ‘ because we c an ’t foresee all the possibilities of its use ” T he m e th o d c a n b e c o m e stifling and m ediocre b ecause of th e lim ita tio n s of th e program author, she explained. D r. George Culp. Com putation C enter rese a rc h a s s o c ia te and c u r r ic u lu m coordinator, agreed. “The com puter p ro g ram is no b e tte r or w orse than the person behind the p ro g ra m ,’’ he s a i d . I t a ls o is “ not dehum anizing because th ere is a hum an behind e v e ry p ro g ram ,” he said. D ia na Y o u n g er operates co m p u te r term in g L_____ J| N e w at St. Ed's S y s t e m In d iv id u a liz e d — The acad em ic stru c tu re at St. E d w ard ’s U niversity in A ustin is m o v in g to w a rd activism this fall. “ Students today are p assive, and w e w ant our VI&tBOND deadliest day IT’S A on earth — Texan Staff Phot* by Stanley M u FEATURES 7:00-8:45 BRAND NEW TRIP with that DIFFERENT BREED OF CAT! to enjoy the sexiest night Held Over outer space WYJflZ VS* Jffprrt IME NINE1 * UtUnuC GEOUGEnu RO*I H A nA mLTPA WUL I MOLASH•PftOOUCTKJR ^ L A U B H T E R H O U g E -E jy E f JIVES a 5IM KRANIZpockier podded br SIM KRANTZ•deeded br KOflifRIWOR Jkn bf KOBER! WOR, FREDHALIM6 ERKMONIE.» mwmn m m c m ALLEN K( l Ein p ro e m s ; (Lf.,-?' a I-* * "’ , jaf^noitoundtio i Aw n .*o k k k on O d e Rgcad) bm- M r n Pita* Flanw>gO' is (he sr.Kest n.kje And one of sn>funniest - /rite*wen* •The.nearest Americas MmtoBemete AncfctfiSian&X? - Vpw It s * Magazine 4 I■> T I I ii 4 -~i PO O RS OPEN 7:15 FlATURES*7:45-9:50 PARAWIOUNT A FILM BY ALEXANDRO JO DOROW SKY An abfccfl him een 2 ____ FRITZ th e CAT SA T U R D A Y TH RU T U E SD A Y 71 3 C O N G R E S S AVF N.UF. CLINT E A ST W O O D 'THU NDERBO LT and LIGHTFOOT’’ $1 25 for one film ( nn ac antitTO AlhflT ideas irfPJlS HreSentCCi t IlC presented ID in the stu d en ts Im to l,l,n take an tiv e PaIa role other in t h e i r c l a s s e s ," H e n ry classroom , he said. A ltm iller, academ ic dean at A student would be taught to S t. E d w a r d ’s, said fo rm in te llig e n t o p in io n s W ednesday. rath e r than take notes, he St. E d w ard 's c lasses are said. b asically like those a t the “R ight now, our program is U niversity, he said. in the developing sta g e s,” he “ U nder our new sy stem , we said Its success depends on hope to move stu d en ts into faculty adaptation. Faculty individualized, sem inar-type m em bers will have to learn to p ro g ra m s,” A ltim iller said. be m ore of a cata ly st in the “ We wouldn’t be ab le to classroom and they will have c o v er as much inform ation, to fo rm ulate new teaching b ut stu d en ts should be able to m ethods. A ltm iller said. pick up skills they could use The new program will be a fte r g raduation," he added. Students would be able to im p le m e n te d t h o r u g h an eig h t-p erso n ta sk force of locate and evaluate inform ation for th eir classes, a d m in is tra tio n and facu lty m em bers, he said. p re se n t ideas and criticize STARTS TO M ORROW C in e m a F our € Features 1:30-3:30-5:30-7:30-9:30 UFE..LOVE...SURV 1VAL.. TH K CRF ATFST A D VEN TU RES O f A L L Stem DIVINE DpndLocfx* taWyVwwnfW* M.4. Slofc *nd««TO.«i to JAMES HOWTON Mw HMYAW W Ni SowxpWh JAME) HOWTON ,ndTHOMA) M CKMAH MARTIN RAJOOMOPf ;R l« n m n i h MART*RAMOND* IWdtePWUPHAUSMAN A fv.mount Retem ZI IbCou BILLY JACK" became one of the most popular pictures ‘ of our time. rn V illage C inem a Four 2700 W ! Aederte* L "WALKING TALL" ee VILL M I LU am 451-1352 thrilled audiences across the nation. MR.MAJESTYK SM fUMMff UUIt N M «**•J im W OTRNURSONUN< 4VI-MJ7 a Now the movie everyone’s talking about is and Al ENEV POITIER OUI MOOI SS « MARRYAEEiAFONTE s Geechie Dan They get k funny when & you mess Kit and Holly... in she watched while he killed alot of pcof with their money. Staring CHARLES BRONSON “MR. MAJESTYK" MIDNITE MOVIES *1” I 12:10 TODAY THRU TUIS The Beatles in H E LP ! THE MIRISCH CORPORATION Presents CHARLES BRONSON in A WALTER M IR ISC H -RICHARD FLEISCHER PRODUCTION "MR.MAJESTYK" 2 12:00 “ THE ‘DOCTOR STRANGELOVE’ OF HE 1970’s. AMASTERPIECE OF COMI HORROR! EXCRUCIATINGLY FUNNY APOCALYPTIC CHILLER! SEE IT!” mmmL %r;.aa.T jin n COLOR BY OC LUXE* 4:15-8:15-10:15 1:00, 2:45, 4:35 R{Dyef0 prices til t;00 6:20,8:10,10:00 PASSES SUSPENDED REDUCED PRICES TIL 12:15 MON-FRI. _ _ _ _ _ _ NINE IfViES O f FRITZ ™ £CAT 1: 15^ ^ w U PTOW N S A T U R D A Y NBO N T W W 1:15-2,45-4:15-5.45-7:15-8:45-10:15 AL LETTIERI mmw* 12:15-2:15-4:15 SISSY SPACEK WARREN OATES 0 A* R0/G1A*.Kl M ATINEE ATINEE M M ON-FRI ON-FRI BEFORE B IN M BEFORE Also Starring LINDA CRISTAL LEE PURCELL Written toy ELMORE LEONARD Music by CHARLES BERNSTEIN Produced by WALTER M IRISCH Directed by RICHARD FLEISCHER yw m iff MARTIN SHEEN United Artists csm \\\\\\\ M ID N IT E * FLICK Over 2nd SAT Weeki I ^ STAT E 719 CONC.Rf -JOSEPH GELMIS, NEWSOAY $1.25 til 7.00 p m. 6:40-8:20-10:00 AVI NUE T' I •MANULI. WOI.F “T H R E E E H A R D W AY’ Cheerleaders X _ ColorbvDeEuutr’AtxAlb**!AjrtWt*R*l«««^ $1 25 HH 3.00 p m 2:30-3:55-5:20 6 45-8:10-9:35 A Km SbapMn FNm o Held (■VERY EHI AMI $1.00 -$1.50 12:15 2:40 ...all it takes is a little Confidence. 5:05 7 35 1060 Reduced PHtet Men-Fri. $2.00 PG at 4th W eek rr Ladies Vi Price Ticket All Times Passes Susp«nd«d Reduced Prices til 12:50 Mon-Fri 12:50-2:35-4:00-8:05-7:50-9:3S (C) \\ Zachariah with Doug Kershaw ii life...Love...Survival...The Greatest Adventure Of All. THE WHITE DAWN Passes Suspended (R) M f ^ Reduced Prices til 1:30 Mon-Fri » m T 1:30-3:30-5:30-7:30-9:30 I™ Page 8 Thursday, July 25/ 1974 THE DAILY TEXAN em Kerrville To Host Bluegrass |'Nine Lives' Uninspired Sequel guitarist Norman Blake, Lefty Frizzell and Bill G rant of the Oklahoma B lu e g r a s s Festival in Hugo Appearing with these stars will be several bands and p e r f o r m e r s fr o m T e x a s , Oklahoma, Louisiana and Arkansas. Austin artists performing at Kerrville will include Kenneth T h re ad g ill, Allen D am ro n and possibly Ram blin’ J a c k Elliot. Other bluegra*ss performers scheduled to perform a re Holly Bond and the Bluegrass T exan s, Johnny M a r t i n s B lu e g ra s s R a m b l e r s , T h e W atkins F a m i l y , T he Arbuckle Mountain Boys and Kenny Cantrell and the Green Valley Boys. Tickets for the three-day, six-event festival i n c lu d i n g t h e T e x a s B l u e g r a s s B and Championship, are $10 available by mail from Rod Kennedy, Box 5309. Austin, 78763 Information on free camping is available with orders K E R R V I L L E (Spl ) ~ Austin promoter Rod Kennedy will stage the first annual K errv ille B lu e g ra s s and Country Music Festival at his Quiet Valley Ranch here Labor Day weekend The lineup for the Aug. 30 to 31 and Sept. I fest at the outdoor theater on the ranch will be the largest gathering of bluegrass and country music artists in Texas held on the Labor Day weekend. Bluegrass has been sweeping the country, having its beginning in the hillbilly music of the 1930s and 40s and being formalized by greats Bill Monroe and the duo of E a r l Scruggs and L ester Flatt in the 1950s The lineup for the three-day festival will include Flatt and his Nashville Grass, the Country Gentlemen of Virginia, Country Gazzette. xMac Wiseman and the teaming of fiddlers Chubby Wise. Byron Berline and Howdy F o r r e s t e r . Also on the bill a r e Faculty Artists To Give Concert The Department of Music w ill pr e s e n t F a cu lt v Consortia, a concert for voice, horn and piano, at 8 p m T h u r s d a y in t h e M u s i c Building R e c ita l Hall. Perfo rmers will be Gregory A lle n , p ia n o ; W ayne B arrington, horn; Richard B lair, oboe; Arturo Sergi. te n o r; and J e s s W a l t e r s , baritone Guest instrumentalists will join Barrington and Blair to perform "Quintet in E-flat by B e e t h o v e n , “ a r r a n g e d by Willy Hess They are Stephen Pugh, graduate student in the m u sic d e p a r t m e n t , h o r n ; J a m e s B a k e r , f o rm er UT student now with the Austin Symphony Orchestra, horn; Kenneth Wolfson, m em b er of the San Antonio Symphony O r c h e s t r a , b a s s o o n ; and L eon ore S e rg i, fa c u lty member at Southwest T e x a s State University, soprano, Ms. Sergi will join Sergi in an aria from Verdi s " A i d a ." 7 M o v ie The f a m ily K ovack 9 E v e n in g a* Pops 24 Tem peratures R is in g 36 The M a c D a v is Show 24 T h e S t r e e ts of S a n F r a n c i s c o 36 D e a n M a r t i n 's C o m e d y w o rld 9 JO p m 9 Speaking F reely 7 30 p m 24 Firehou se I pm 9 The O ld M a i d a n d the Thiet 24 K u n g F u 36 Ir o n sid e 8 30 p m ? M o v ie Se cre t W o r ld " 9 pm 9 v il la A le g r e 10 p m 7,24,36 N e w s IO 30 p m. 7 M o v ie S u m m e rtre e " 9 P e t e r P a u l a nd M a r y T h e S o n g is L o v e 24 W id e W o r ld Sp ecia l, D i c k C a v e t t QUARIU5 Theatres IV 1500 S PLEASAN T VALLEY RD JUST OEF EAST R IV E R SID E D R IV E $2.00 WILLIAMPETERBLATTVS 2:50 5:10 7:35 9.55 THE EXORCIST Mf 6 p .m . FEATURES USA W AYNE O N W H EELS! * 1:00 2:50 4:35 6:25 8:10 10:00 W arren Oate*, T im o th y Bottom * and L o u Goaaett a* W haler* !B L A Z IN G SA D D LES B O X O F F I C E O M E N S 8:00 SH O W STARTS AT D U SK SILVER CITY SADDLE TRAMPS LIBRARY FINES Notices from the University L ib r a r y or a n y o f its branches are official Univer­ sity communications requir­ in g immediate attention. $ 1.50 t il 6 p . m . FEATURES Mel Brooks' Show Tow N *\Hwy.1«*C«ni«ron«W SO F A R , Bakshi is the only At the end, Fritz realizes his animator of adult films who dreams or fantasies are better has displayed a d esirab le than his real life, which can be degree of artistic taste. depressing It is not really It must be remembered thai satisfactory , because just as animated films like Fritz makes no effort to uplift “ Fantasia” ( D i s n e y ’s his life, the movie makes no m asterpiece) and " F a n t a s t ic e f f o r t to t r a n s c e n d t h e P lan et.” too, are examples alienation it depicts. N S * TEXAS television 7 pm Sergi and Walters will sing a variety of arias and songs byM o z a rt, A B u z z i - P e c c i a . V e rd i, J a c q u e s H a lev y , Moussorgsky and Ja c q u e s Wolfe. Allen will play “ Fantasia B a e tic a ’’ by Manuel de Falla. The concert, sponsored by the C o lleg e of F i n e A rts Sum m er E n te rta in m e n t Series, is free to season ticket holders. Single admission is $1 for adults and 50 cents for children. T r a f f i c ” is the one adult a n im a t e d m o v ie w h ich u tiliz e s th e p o te n tia l animation has. The problems with “ Nine L iv es” are the same as those of “ Fritz the C a t.” Both are effe ctive at only one level — sex A ttem p ts at social criticism are made in each but f a i l b e c a u s e of a preoccupation with sex and sexual humor. T H E SOCIAL c r i t i c i s m becomes banal because too little time is spent on a theme before the plot rushes back to sex. And so many topics are touched on, that the result is frag m en tation . B esid es, to p ic s such as b ig o try , religion and violence need ridicule about as much as Washington needs another s c a n d a l . T h e r e ' s a point w h e r e it j u s t isn t funny anymore. Even the level of sex is weak, for in the two Fritz films, sex is seen as a release or e s c a p e from s o c ia l alienation. Bakshi’s “ Heavy T r a f f i c " w ent beyond th is. Realistically , it showed that s e x in a s ex-crazed world becom es only a frustration, and “ H eav y T r a f f i c ’ “ The Nine Lives of Fritz the C a t ; ” produced by Steve K rantz; directed by Robert T aylor; written by Taylor, F red Halliday and E r i e M o n t e ; a t the R iversid e Twin Cinema and Showtown USA. By DAVID HENDRICKS Texan Staff W riter Perhaps it is ju st as well that Walt Disney is dead. I f s likely the c re a to r of “ Snow White,” “ B a m b i” and Mickey Mouse would shudder if he saw the direction animated movies are taking. The c a s e in point is “ The Nine Lives of F r itz the Cat,” sequel to the X-rated “ Fritz the C a t.” TH E ORIGINAL “ Fritz the Cat” was a landmark of sorts. It as the first animated full­ length a d u lt m o v ie . Two similar films have since been r e le a s e d , e a c h taking a different direction from their precedent. It is important to know that R alp h B a k s h i , c r e a t o r of “ F r i t z th e C a t , ” did not produce “ Nine L iv e s." Steve K ran tz of A m e ric a n International did. And Bakshi should be e x c u s e d f r o m having prod uced “ F r i j 4 ” because his next film, “ Hiavy H From W W W ere. PFN t W w C w m n W im C M fA W I $ 1.50 t il 6 F e a tu re * 1:30 3:30 5:30 7:30 THEWHITE o DAWN 9:30 ACRES OF FREE LIGHTED PARKING M ID-SU M M ER SCH O O L BLUES BEER SPECIAL Tonight Thro Friday Boor, Wino, i - y a n d Pizza 3 r e c & £ R E S T A < I I V n a c J r i THIS WEEK ONLY! TUES.-THURS. SH IN E R BEER - .1 5 /M u g .90/Pitcher FRI.-MON. M ICH ELO B BEER - .25/M u g 1.50 Pitcher G o o d till 11 p.m . S u n d a y -F rid a y 12 p.m . S a tu r d a y 'T h e pizza S U N .-TH IH IS. 1 1 : 0 0 a . m . I e I a . m . 1 8 0 1 The Texas Union presents A Chamber Theatre Production Special good w/copy of ad 1 pitcher or 1 m ug good w /each copy of ad. different sandwich, and Italian dinners restaurant." FRI. & S A T . 1 1 : 0 0 a . m . t o 2 : 0 0 a . m . 4 7 2 - 3 0 3 4 C f q d q i M p e ___________ THE TROJAN WOMEN KATHARINE HEPBURN - VAN ESSA REDGRAVE of George Bernard Shaw "KATHARINE HEPBURN July 27 and 28 at 8:00 p.m. The M a in Ballroom in The Texas Union as Hecuba, reaches moments of tragic splendor and simple magnificence.” Tickets $1.50 U.T. Students, Faculty, Staff $2.00 Others For Reservations Call 441-0067 Buster loved her and no one understood. — Judith CHat, N tw York M agazine BVSTERand BILLIE imam 'V A N E SSA REDGRAVE as Andromache seems to act with her whole soul.The tension she creates has its own kind of excitement.” presents TONIGHT! . ASSSM’ I 22OOHanrnrk Hi iv Southside IT IS BOTH DEEPLY ROMANTIC, FUN, MYSTERIOUS, CYNICAL, AND BRILLIANT!" — Bridget Byrne. Los Angeles Herald-txommer Tty • -------------— “ lamwK U N IO N THEATRE rn— H C H N tcao R * IE E E 16400 Burn*! Road 465 693 7 ACADEMY AWARDS Friday & Saturday 6:00, 8:00, 10:00, 12:00 Jester Auditorium Rated PG Sponsored by Student Committee fo r Voter Registration o -J* w t Held O ve r Hurry! S I SO til S h o w tim e JKS. PAUL /R O B E R T EW M A N R ED FO R D R O B ER T SH A W July 26 & 27 n.oo m re APARAMOUNTPRtS^UTK^ ^ T R A N S* TEXAS O P E N AT 8 :0 0 R R ST FEA. AT 9 :0 0 — W I L H A M W O L F , C U I M A C A / 1N I *1 .0 0 $1.50 M em bers rn * /•r TONIGHT 7 & 8:30 p.m. $1 UT S tu d e n ts, P l a y b o y '"THE TROJAN W OMEN' SUCCEEDS IN BEING A CLASSICAL FILM." XJGfc 'TOT HIU I H M 2: 30- 5. 00- 7: 30-9 45 R E D U C E D P R I C E S T I L 5:15 Magazine W O N DERLAND This bizarre rendition of the Lewis Carroll classic, patterned after the Tenniel drawings, features such in­ triguing casting as Gary Cooper as the White Knight, Cary Grant as the M ock Turtle, Edward Everett Hor­ ton as the M ad Hatter, and Jack Oakia and Roscoe Karns as Tweedledum and Tweedledea. W.C. Fields plays HumptyDumpty, and delivers soma superb in­ character readings of the author's nonsense verse. • A I T E X A S*" Theatrical Tour-De- IN Faculty & Staff K S ii T h e N tw Y orke r F o r c e . ' R O BERT SH A W C O L U M B I A P I C T U R E S . A DIVIS ION Of C O L U M B I A ’ C T U R E S I N O U S I R i E S INC — P a u lin e Keel, ALICE PRUE N EW M A N R O B ER T R ED FO R D Sr A Gf ORGf ROT HIH f SLM “T H E STIN G " TEI M N K X X o h * A iiN iVt { PIUS! 4 eTE t x U 1W P O & 111111" of 11:30 [ u m u e t I A rh o lf p re se n ts i Mat Batt production el (M a c o n C o u n t y L in e , olm by CFI SIV* anAmencan International idea 'Anottiet Place Another Time composed and sung by Bobbie Gently nilllUfiFD k llL U n O C al OATES BEN .MICHELLE . JOHNSON’ PHILLIPS r “ CLORISLEACHMAN:? ... Thursday, July 25, 1974 TH E DAILY TEXAN Page 9 * ■*7 r T M W ADS JR! rn ■■H IP IM P PHONE 471aB 844 MON. THRU FRI. SlOO"SsOO Pets - For Sale N E E D G O O D H O M E fo r IO ween old fe m a le W e im a r a n tr puppy *25 Can 9280848 AKC D O B E R M A N “ u p s , black and rust. c ham pion bloodline 926-7192 Homes - For Sale otADUN* s cn e o u u tw eedy T t i . l i Mondoy (HOO t i W t.n M ito i Trion Tuetxtoy 11 Od o ( BLOCKS WEST CAMPUS E X C E L L E N T IN V E S T M E N T Plush 2 I CA C H carpeted Huge trees * : 50C down, u nder $154-month O w ner ag en t 288-2299 I 1 OO a i S O U T H E R N ESE APTS. given cr* lh * p a b lit h e n o re rv»p«" i b i r l#r only ON* lucerne*, .nterhon Ail detrti* for adiviimynn .bouto be made net later than 30 days ofter publication M O B IL E H O M E in UT T ra ile r P a rk , No 38 C heap but d e a n C om e see. a n extras 477-0844 LO W S T U D E N T R A I F 5 IS word m in im u m cacti day 5 75 E a t " add itio n al nor * each days OS I cot <1 m ch each day S2 37 Un .ossified*. I line 3 days SlOO P 'e p j.d . No Refunds) S tu d e n ts m u l l s h o w Aud: ‘ o r s receipts and bay in advance in TSP Bldg 3 200 25th S. W h it!*) fro m 8 a .m to 4:30 p m M ond ay through F r idav UT T R A IL E R P A R K 12 x SO AC CH, p a r t i a l l y fu rn is h e d , w a s h e r d r y e r Carpet, porch 478-6844 1007 West 26th N e x t to A m e r ic a n a T h e atre, w alk in g d is ­ tance to N o rth ,_oop Shopping Center ana Luby s O ne ha ll block fro m s huttle a n d A u s tin t r a n s it 2 b e d ro o m townhouses e x tra large Tw o bedroom fia ts one and two baths. CA CH, dis­ hw asher disposal door to door g a rb ag e p ick u p pool m a id service if desired, w a s h a fe ria in com pte« See owners. Apt 113 o r can 45! 4848 1 BR - $145 up 2 B R -$1 8 0 u p A ll B ills Paid Eft. STOS & up I, 2 BR, S152.50 & up AC Paid Tan g le w o od N orth 1020 E.45th 452 0060 Roommates furnished 6 blocks to campus 476-3467 2408 Leon Huge fenced 1-3333 E L C ID & EL DORADO 453-4883 472-4893 S H U T T L E BUS C O R N E R C HE CK O U R S U M M E R R A T ES N O W L E A S IN G FO R SEPT 1 BR -$155 2 BR - $184 M A R K XX 452-5093 A K C R E G IS T E R E D G e rm a n S h o r t ly . r P o in te r p u p p ie s 8 w e e k s , s h o ts , w o rm e d P o in t e r s , R e t r i e v e r s , Companions 459-6684 evenings IR IS H S E T T E R S B ea u ty, c h a ra c te r, < o m p e m o n s h ip , absolutely the finest In c h a m p io n s h ip b r e e d in g i ! 50, p u p in c lu d e s sh ots, w orm ing r e g is tra tio n , pedigree 476Q U9 i r i s h S E T T E R P uppies A K C . fin e c h a m p io n b lo o d lin e s ( p e d i g r e e s a va ila b le ) Born July I4 1974. deposits now accepted M ales *100, fe m a le * *90 837 4724 T R T ? . P U P P I E S ! s e tte r m ix A ll s h a p e *and sues C a lix ? / 6252 days 452 8637 evenings C ra ig T H R E E B LO C K S to cam pus Rooms, 2 a n d 3 b e d r o o m , s p a c io u s o ld e r a p a rtm e n t b u ild in g SUO A B P to S240 plus bills 1902 - 1904 Nueces, 476-3462, 476-8*83 J E R R IC K APTS. F A L L LEASES F r o m $128 I B R L u x u ry IO* E 32 476 5940 4105 S peedw ay *51 2832 M a n a g e r Apt 103 W a lk or Shuttle ■ B R A N D N E W E F F IC IE N C IE S 1700 N u e c e s ARENA 1414 Arena D riv e Close to c am pus B e a u tifu lly furnished a h w in big balconies for your plants St50 S u m m e r plus e le c t r ic it y and d ep osit M anager 201 478-905 I BR F u rn M A R K IV AP T S . 3100 Speedway 477-1685 A V A IL A B L E S E P T I A ttr a c tiv e 3 room a p t . c o m f o r t a b ly fu rn is h e d Controlled heat and a ir . W a lk to classes 704 W 25th 477-5654 S H U T T L E BUS C O R N E R $110 I Bedroom HALLMARK APTS. 708 W. 34th 454-6294 W A L K IN G D IS T A N C E U T, b i l l s p a i d , AC, p a n e l e d , c a rp e te d , pool, no p ets. 2 bedroom , .190. I bedroom , S145-Sl50 3011 Whitis, No. 105, a fte r 5 M on.-Friday. A tte r IO a .m . weaken i- TH E BLACKSTONE $50.00/month A p a rtm e n t living '■» block (ro m c a m p u s . I n d i v i d u a l a p p l ic a n t s m a tc h e d w ith c o m p a tib le roornm a te * 2910 Red R iv e r 476-5631 M g r . 442-4124 WALK TO CLASS O LD M A IN A P A R T M E N T S N e w one bedroom and e ffic ie n c y apt'. N...a le a s m y to r s u p m e r a n d fa t! sem ester P ric e range fr o m SUO - sis-) see a! 2503 P ea r;. A pl 4 477*3264 SOUTH SHO RE APARTMENTS NEW E F F IC IE N C IE S C LOSE TO C A M P U S S H U T T L E BUS S w im m ing pool. b e a u tifu lly furnU hed, double or s tu d io bed, a ll h a ve dis hwasher. disp osal, c e n tra l a ir and heat, shag carpet, e x tra storage room , F ro m s i n pius a le c , 305 West 35th (6 blocks fro m cam pus) M an a g e r Apt. 106 451-4364 lf No Answer Call 454 5869 Efficiency, I, 2, and 3 bedroom a p a r t m e n t s . O f f e r the s o lu tio n to your housing, T h e S ou th S ho re s c e n t r a l loca tio n p ro v id e s easy access to U T r o m e by and see our new e ffic ie n c y end i b e d ro o m a p e r im a m s on th e b a n k s of Tow n Lake C o m p le te w i t h shag c a r p e t in g , a c c e n t w a n , m o d e rn fu r r titu r e p iu s an In d iv id u a l d e ck o v e rlo o k m g th e w a te r From $145 - all bills paid 300 East Riverside Drive 444-3337 WE RENT A U S TIN Your tim e is valuable Our service is free PARAGON P R O P E R T IE S 472-4171 472-4175 w eekdays Page IO Thursday, J u ly 25, 1974 T H E D AILY TEXAN N E A R H A N C O C K C E N T E R , 2 bedroom town house, *160 CA C H 4708 Depew (block east of R ed R iv e r ). 453-4253. 2 I ' n TO W N H O U S E oft R iv e rs id e Sublease live Aug only W itt pay ' J rent 1*90) A B P 471-5454. 447-6109 FO R F A L L very n e ar UT SI29 50, one bedroom a p a rtm e n t, a ir conditioned, shag carpet, p a n elin g , and pool. W ater and gas paid, 472 4408. 4 78 3885, 327-1355, 454 3164 ROOMS T E X A N D O R M 1905 Nueces Doubles *52 50 6 w ks. se ssion S in g le s *95 OO 6 w ks session D a l ly m a id s e rv ic e , central a ir R e frig e ra to rs , hot plates a llo w e d Two b lo - ks fr o m c a m p u s CoE d R e sid en t M a n a g e r s 477-1760. PR a t e R O O M S *5 0 'm o n th Alt bills paid. 6 blks fro m cam pus. F ra te rn ity House 477-0355 177-4981 P A N E L E D E F F IC IE N C Y S h a re re frig e ra to r and bath *65 Bitts paid. 345 1460 P R I V A T E R O O M Two bl ocks campus, c en tral a ir, m a id s ervice, kitchen, coed, sum m er ra tes 2411 Rio G rande 368.) 4/6 2551 O N E R O O M in hou se fo r re n t s mo. plus Ty bills F ult use of house 477-6025 A IR C O N D IT IO N E D , furnished room, a ll b iti* paid, *55. 3310 Red R iv er. 4763634 472-8936 S W IM M IN G LE SS O N S E xp e rien c e d . C e r tifie d in s tr u c to r A l l a b il i t i e s (B eg in n e r - Senior L ife ). M y pool or yours. G roups, p riv a te . 478-5401. ROOMMATES R O O M M A T E N E E D E D , 2 be d ro o m a p a rtm e n t, 6 blocks cam pus, a ll biti* paid, 550 476-3467 H O U S E M A T E W A N T E D : S hare two bedroom larg e house, 503 T e xa s Couples considered. C eiling fans, fire p la c e . 472098* R O O M M A T E N E E D E O , 2 bedroom a p a rtm e n t 6 blocks cam pus, a ll bills paid, 550 476-3467 R O O M , B O A R D for long session 1974-75 in e x c h a n g e fo r h e lp in g d is a b le d student A ny one w elcom e to a pply. C a ll M r John F lo w e rs , 476-7374 F E M A L E R O O M M A T E needed Own room 2-2 duplex *90 plus 1J bills. V e ry near cam pus 471-4324, 476-1182 S A L E S P E R S O N for ladies sportsw ear shop 25-35 hours experience A pply in person. Th e C ric k e t! Shop, H ig h la n d M att WSI P E R S O N w anted Three m ornings w ee k ly for 2 o r 3 weeks. 136-1609 S P E C IA L P E R S O N needed p a rt tim e to serve A u s tin s Fin e st Tavern c lie n te le. M u s t be a v a ila b le through Fa n See M r s O verton betw een 4 30-6 30. The D ro u g h t House. 4112 M e d ic a l P a rk w a y . N IG H T T Y P IS T , downtown. M a g c a rd and legal e x p e rien c e Sharp in d iv id u a l. Send re s u m e to 815 Brazos, No 903. F U L L T IM E P a rt tim e applic a tions now bein g ta k en a l Hang It On, in H ig h la n d M a ll A pply IO a rn. - 9 p .m ., M o n d ay - F r id a y N E E D IN S T R U C T O R S in e x e rc is e , dance, pre-schoolers sports, a rt, c ra fts , g y m n a s tic s . C a ll P a m , A u s tin R e c re a tio n C enter. 476 5662 A S S O C IA T E TEACHER (a fte rn o o n ), aide (m o r n in g ) for church d a y -c a re center 453 1657 or 472-9400 D R U M M E R fo r v e r s a tile g ro u p , p ro g re s s iv e c o u n try -w e s te rn dance No hard ro c k M u s t be dependable. B re i L im in g , 454 6821 S T U D E N T TO L IV E in hom e help ing w ith c h ild re n and light housework N eed s o m e o n e h e re m ost w e e k e n d s . R e fe re n c e s re q u ire d . Please c e ll 4764703 B e fo re IO OO a rn W A N T E D S E R V IC E A tten dant tor local R e n t-A -C a r operation. S ta rt *2 .0 0 /h o u r 478 6439 MISCELLANEOUS N E L S O N 'S G I F T S : Z u n i I n d i a n je w e lry , fric a n and M exican Im p o rts 1612 ith Congress. 444-3814 Closed M o n d ay s E N F IE L D AND W EST LYNN S65/m onth L a rg e 2 bedroom , nicely furnished Jeff. 451-7421 days F E M A L E H O U S E M A T E . 550 deposit, *60 rent plus half bills . P r e fe r m a tu re person. C arolyn, 472-1657, 476-4819. M A L E . 23, seeks neat ro o m m a te to share very good duplex, 2 bedroom near cam pus. 2513-A San G a b rie l. *75 plus W bills 472-7854 , 476-1154 Ted M A L E R O O M M A T E needed Share 2 bedroom , 2 bath apt w ith 2-3 others. S huttle 447-6158 F E M A L E Sh R iv er H ills V 2pm _ Y SERVICE 7 a rn - IO p m M -F 9 a .m . - 5 p .m . Sat. W A NTED APARTM EN T M ANAGER P ra te r m a rr ie d . Send resum es to B o * 1668. A ustin, Texas. N E E D T E C H N IC IA N w ith at lea s t 2 years e xp e rie n c e in re p a ir of h i-fi. A p p ly in person a t S terling E lectronics. 17)2 L a v a c a 477-5866 cute one bedroom *94 A B P . 451-6389. 8am - a re N E E D TW O R O O M M A T E S to share 3 bedroom house B edroom shag, sunken d e n a n d k it c h e n in S p a n is h t ile F irep la ce , fenced y a rd w ith fountain. 454 8173. 1402 G lencrest. RO O M M ATE W A N TE D O w n room , P a r k near *45 plus b ill* M ik e . 459-6937 UNF. APARTS. FACULTY ONLY 1906 Pearl 2 Bedroom s, 2 bathroom s. A B P Cable laun dry pool, fro s t-fre e f r i g , g arage p a rk in g e le v a to r. In v o lv e m e n t w ith la rg e Student co Op optional R ent is negotiable. Call 478-7833 P rom pt, Professional Service 453-8101 Pick-up Service A vailable N E A T , A C C U R A T E and P ro m p t typing 60 cents per page. Theses 75 cents C all 447-2737 D IS S E R T A T IO N S , theses reports, and la w b r ie f s E x p e r ie n c e d ty p is t, T a rryto w n 2507 B rid le P ath. Lorra ine B rady 472-4715 S T A R K T Y P IN G E xp e rien c e d theses, d issertations, P R 's , etc. P rinting and Binding, s p e c ia lty Technical. Charlene S ta rk, 453-5218 H O L L E Y 'S T Y P I N G S E R V IC E A c om plete s e rv ic e fro m typing through b in d in g . A v a i l a b l e u n t il IO p . rn E xp e rien c e d in a ll fields N e a r campus 1401 M otile D r iv e 476-3018. F R A N C E S W O O D S T Y P IN G S E R V IC E E x p e r ie n c e d , Law, Theses, D issertations. M a n u s c r ip t* 4S3-6090. M A B Y L S M A L L W O O D Typing Last m in u te , o v e r n ig h t a v a i la b l e T e rm papers, theses, dissertations, letters M a s te r C h a r g e B a n k A m e r ic a r d . 8920727 or 442-8545 M IN N IE L H A M M E T T T y p in g 8* D u p lic a tin g S e r v ic e Theses, d is s e r ta tio n s , p a p a r s of a il k in d s, resum es, F r e e refres h m e n ts . 442-7008, 442 1616 V IR G I N I A S C H N E ID E R D iv e rs ifie d Services G ra d u a te and undergradu ate typing, p rin tin g , binding 1515 Koenig Lane 459-7205 E X P E R IE N C E D SECRETARY. P a p e r s , l e t t e r s , e n v e lo p e s , p ro o f r e a d in g , g r a m m a t i c a l c o r r e c tio n s , R a p id , a c c u r a t e 50 c e n t s / p a g e . G retchen 452-3469. 451-2332 T Y P IN G - P R IN T IN G B IN D IN G Theses. D is s e rta tio n s . P ro fe s s io n a l R eports, la w , r e p o r ts S e lt- c o r r e c t in g IB M . B a rb a ra T u llo s 453-5124 A U S T IN S E C R E T A R IA L S E R V IC E . 1807 T re a d w e ll S treet Typing dictation by shorthand or your m achine, them es, business, leg a l, a rc h ite c tu ra l, notary public. 442-4620. B E A U T IF U L P E R S O N A L T Y P IN G Ail your U n iv e rs ity w o rk. Fa st, accurate, re a s o n a b le P r in t in g B in d in g M r s . Bodour. 478-8113. M ID N IG H T S P E C IA L Typing Service. E xperien c e d , a ll kinds of typing. Low r a te s . F A S T S E R V I C E C o r r e c tin g S electric P ic a /E lite 837-2421 E X P E R T T H E S IS and d is s e rta tio n ty p in g L o w r a t e s . C o n v e n ie n t to cam pus. C a ll Lois B y rd . 453-7187 D U P L E X S O U T H , c o n te m p o rary , 3-2, C A /C H , carpeted, sundeck, wooded lot. 441 2211, A v a ila b le Aug. I S U B L E T 21-j m onth unfu rn ished duplex 2-1, shag carp e t, dishw asher iposat, range, w asher, d ry e r conner bons 2 la r g e w k in c lo s e ts , w a t e r p a id . 1150/m onth 442-9547 M E . A L P A T IE N T S B E I- 'T IO N pro • been "tu rn e d o ff" by th e ra p y ? C ontac t S h a ri 474-1470 WANTED B U Y W E L L P L A Y B O Y , P en th o u s e, E tc . Books, records, g u lt a r s .je w e lr y , radios, stereos Aaron7*, 320 Congress, D ow nto w n, A P T M A N A G E R for 20 unit com plex U n iv ers ity a rea A p p ly by m a il to6Q05-A Shadow V a lle y Cove. Austin, Texas. Shag • P aneling G ia n t w a lk -in * - Balconies Spanish furnishings 2423 Tow n L a ke C irc le 444-8118 472-4162 B a r r y G lll'n g w a te r C om pany COMANCHE APTS. f u rn is h e d I b e d ro o m 8, E ft. A p ts Ha b l o c k s f r o m L a w S c h o o l. * 1 1 0 *135 m onth plus e le c tric ity , G as, W a te r, C a b le fu rn is h e d CA C H , b oo l a n d la u n ­ dry 2800 Swisher 472 5369 A V A IL A B L E NO W *1 IO • * u r n m * r . fa ll r a te *129 50 V e ry near U T . One bedroom a p t , a ir conditioned, c a rp e l, paneling, pool W a te r, g a * paid 472-4408 478 3885, 327-1355, 454 3164 IV p a z Aa fir m \rJ c ¥ U U ^ Y E S , w e do t y p e F r e s h m a n th e m e s . Why not start out with good grades! 472-3210 and 472-7677 2707 H e m p h ill P a rk UNCLASSIFIED B elly D ane m g In s tru c t ion 472-3344 For sa Ie 63Dodge440 *150 477 1695 '14 S ailb o a t 8. tr a ile r . 477-6677. BW 7' p o rta b le Sony T V *35 441-3540 SENIO RS A N D G R A D U A T E STU D E N TS In M a t h , E n g in e e r in g , C o m p u te r Science lf you are interested in c o m p u te r systems and p r o g r a m ­ m ing ... lf you are looking fo r a ca re e r w ith a leading so ftw a re d e v e lo p m e n t co m p an y... . lf you lik e the c re a tiv e challenge of p a rtic ip a tin g w ith , and e v e n tu a lly leading, professional te a m s in the c re a tio n of ad^ , 7 , . ’ » ' ,, vanced a p p lic a tio n s s o ftw a re ... And if you like the idea of co n tin u in g to live and w o rk in A u stin ... TCC Insurance Services would lik e to ta lk to you. We are a g ro w in g c o m p an y of 130 c o m p u tin g professionals who develop so ftw a re system s fo r the life insurance in d u s try . We o ffe r e x­ c e lle n t c o m p e n s a tio n and b e n e fits in an e n v ir o n m e n t of professional g ro w th. Send y o u r resum e to Personnel M g r ., TCC, inc 3429 Ex Center D r. Austin, Texas 78731 The in su ra n ce people in c o m p u tin g A T T R A C T IV E a p a r tm e n t n e a r new Seton M e d ic a l Center 7 m inute s to UT 900 sq ft I bedroom unit. 1200 sq f* 2 bedroom unit 452-5631 tor app o in tm e n t L A R G E C A R P E T E D E ffic ie n c y 2700 S w is h e r b lock L a w S chool ABP *125 m onth 479 6550 Guadalupe 64 Chev. C o rv a lr *300 441-3540 H IG H L A N D M A L L ARE A ON SHU TTLE $119 I Bedrooms JusT FJorTFT of 27th & E le c tric r e p a ir 8. re m o d el. 447-5680. WANTED H uge I & 2 b e d ro o m s tu rn o r unfu rn w ith la rg e w alk ms, beautiful land sc ap ­ in g F r o m * ’ 54 A B P HOO R e m li 4523202 472 4162 B a rry G illin g w a te r C om ­ pany T B O B B Y E D E L A F I E L D IB M Selectric, pica e lite , 25 y e a rs experience, books, d is s e r ta tio n s , th e s e s , re p o rts , m im e o g ra p h in g . 442-7184 UNF. DUPLEXES iU B L E A S E Tw o b e d ro o m ' Te x, south V a lle v rid g e D riv e , u n fu rr bed, CA CH, *135 Plus bills 444-4296. Keep fry in g 30A Dobie C e n te r. -Theses and dissertations -L a w briefs -T e rm papers and reports T O W N H O U S E F O R R E N T . Two bedrooms, one bath, fire p la c e , fenced back y ard . 2909 E . Bist No 4 928-0868 L E A R N TO P L A Y G u ita r B eginner and ■dvaneed D re w Thomason 478 2079 Reports, Resumes Theses, Letters All U n iv e rs ity and business w ork L a s t M in u te S ervice Open 9*9 M o n -T h & 9-5 F n Sat C H R IS T E N S O N & A S S O C IA T E S A T Y P I N G S E R V IC E Specializing in A PARAGON P R O P E R T Y 18.2 Bedroom • F r o m *160 Furn. - A ll B H I* - B u * S E L L F L O W E R S . M a k e *30-*60 w o rk in g 4 p e a c e fu l d a y s a w eek T h u r s d a y , F r id a y a fternoons. Saturday, Sunday a ll day Top com m ission P aid d a ily . 4763060, 453 1508, 453 276! F A L L L E A S IN G 2 b lo c k s U T Eastwoods P a rk I bedroom . *145 Rm SBO AC, A B P , c a rp e te d 472-2081 ll 42 Dobie M a ll 476-9171 Free P a rk in g Catfish Barn Restaurant 288-2899. P A R T T I M E C O U N T E R . 7-9:30 a .m . M o n d a y -F rid a y 8-5 on Sat. C a ll A s tre C le an e rs 442-4354 E -■ G IN N V S C O P Y IN G S E R V IC E INC. 5:00 p m - IO 30 p m F rid a y and S aturday I i 30 a rn 10:30 p m Sunday O N E B E D R O O M pius study R iver Hills y Take lease on Sept I 521* AB P 4443790 3815 Guadalupe G IB S O N G U IT A R , SISO 472 1982 Pets - For Sale B est R a te on the La ke S huttle Bus Fro n t Door 7400 Town Lake C irc le 442-8340 I BLOCK fro m L a w School Tow er View A partm ents, L a rg e, n ice ly decorated, gas w ater, cable T V p a id Si35 No pets 472-0191 I Bedroom APARTMENTS COST PLUS STEREO 476-0948 N O W L E A S IN G F O R S EP T FURN. APARTS. Top D o lla r Paid For N ice Used Cars M O V E IN TODAY 472-9614 A T T E N T IO N STUDENTS! 49930 D A R L IN G E F F I C I E N C I E S - full kitchen, quiet r e s id e n tia l neighborhood, Shuttle, w alk in g distanc e downtown a k o leasing tor (a tt. t i l t W est 10th, Apt 106 476 2155 L A R G E P O O L - A L L B IL L S P A ID Overseas Engine & Supply A A R D V A R K A D V E N T U R E School and D a y -C a re Center, I Vt to IO y ea rs. Open 7* a rn - 6 p m M o n d ay - F r id a y . 8203 San R a yb u rn N o rth A ustin 837-6001. SAN J A C IN T O A R M S . 1709 San Jacinto, W a lkin g distance U n iv e rs ity - C apitol 12 bedroom 1 2 bath, CA C H , carp e te d , w ater gas cable pa id N o pets. *115 up. 476-0920, 472-4838 S u m m e r R a te * S ta rt Today I B R , I BA 2 BR. 2 BA 3 B R , 3 BA NOW L E A S IN G F O R S E P T Q u a lity w ork at reas o n a b le prices We can g ive you better s e rv ic e fr o m o ur new shop a t 1003 Sage B rush. F re e diagnosis, co m pression checks and e s tim a te s Tune-up on s tandard V W *10.50 plus parts 834-3171 P lease T ry Us P A R T -T IM E HELP W aitresses. W a ile rs , B u s 8, K itchen E F F IC IE N C IE S 595 plus e le c tric ity , pool, ac, c a r p e t, p a n e lin g , no pets H untin gton V illa , 46tn and Ave. A 4548903 S q u a re 711 W 32nd 454-4917 SEE O U R S U M M E R RA TES S L E E P IN G BAG - goose down, super w ar nr exc elle n t condition, c le a n , used, *75 477-7449 6.’ F O R D G A I.A X 'E 500 Good. clean ' a ' AC radio, n e w tire s . C a ll P a m *500 478-4029 London I B e d roo m N E W P E N T A X ES, E le c tro n ic $huf*er w ith T a k u m a r senses. 3 5m m , 5 0m m , I 35m m strobe, exten s io n , te ie p iy s , other accessories. Only ten rolls film used s i. OOO value Quick Sale *400 4516876 S M A L L RE F R IG 535, G o ld 9x l2_ ru ^S lO . G old floor-lengfh drapes *10. 452-78 N O W L E A S IN G FO R S E P T 2707 H e m p h ill P a rk TYPING A B O R T IO N A L T E R N A T IV E ! P reg n a n t and distressed? H e lp is as near as your telephone P ro -L ife A dvocates S lo w e s t 26th. 472-4198 R io H O U S E one b edroom a p a rtm e n t fro m SITO • 5140. fu rn is h ed 3 blocks from cam pus L a rg e pool in b e a u tifu l s a tin g . Cal! 472 1238 or c o m e by 606 W 17th at R io G ran d e binding 2 D a y Service VW R E P A IR WE ARE NOW f ak in g a p p lic a tio n s fo r p a r t-tim e em ploym ent. We ofter m any excellent benefits including a scholarship program . Apply H o lid a y H ouse No. 4 5325 A irport Blvd. CO M PLETE LU X U R Y Tw o bedroom and efficiencies. F a it R a te s 24 F la ts A p a rtm e n ts 1515 P a lm a P la z a . 474-4322, 474 2163 S huttle bus c o rn er MBA M u ititith in g The Complete Professional F U L L -T IM E Typing Service RESUMES with or without pictures. 452-5846 452-7747 451-6231 LARGE ONE B E D R O O M W a lk to school, study a rea . c arp e te d , disposal, cable TV, sun d e c * C A ‘C H , laundry, shuttle, g re at location, A B P Summer rates F a il Leasing ?812 Nueces 4726497 Typing 472-3210 and 472-7677 N a tion s la rg e s t d ive rs ifie d fin a n cia l in ­ stitution is now expanding operations in th e ir m a n a g e m e n t and fina ncia l s e r­ vices d ivis io n U n d e r a new m a rk e tin g concept, a n e xc ep tional opportunity exs's for an ag g res s iv e self-confident in ­ d ivid u a l who can operate professionally at any lev e l of business A re p res en ­ ta tiv e w ill be in te rv ie w in g on cam pus J uly 25 C o n tac t Th e P la c em e n t O ffic e o r M ik e M ills a p - A re a R ecru iter E N F IE L D A R E A Tw o bedroom with e ve ry e x tra . F u rn is h e d or unfurnished fro m SIS? plus e le c tr ic ity 807 West Lynn B a rry G illin g w a te r C o m pany 4777794 472-4162 JflpAlhiL finn Jcvbj,, S E R V IC E ThesisDissertationReports 22 Years E xperience Handcase-KonydonM arb le b o ard Bindings D ay or Night E X E C U T IV E CONSULTANT E X C E L L E N T S U M M E R RATES 5 s p a c io u s o n e a n d tw o b e d r o o m a p artm e n ts F a ll ra te s reas o n a b le C all 454 9475 of 27th & BOOKBINDING - Be happy doing th e thing you like best, ta lk in g to people on the telephone -N ew offices, fiv e d ays a week, free parking, frie n d ly atm o s p h ere , full or p a rt tim e , bonuses p lu s s a la r ie s C a ll 451-2357 betw een 9 a. rn and I p rn or betw een 5 p m and 9 p rn E xp e rien c e pays m o re but not necessary L A R G E I & 2 B edroom furnished and unfurnished Shag. w et ba r, p riv a te club •oom s, on s h u ttle I b e d ro o m (ro m 5!49 50 A B P 2 bedroom *169 50 ABP 1200 B ro a d m o o r 454-3885, 476-2633, B a rry G illin g w a te r C om pany, 444-0010 nurse N o rth G u a d a lu p e F R O G S D O N 'T F L Y BUT C R A Z Y CAPTIO NS DO C A TC H T H E E Y E COLORFUL I BEDRO O M Shag, d ish w a s h er, c o ly c o m m u n ity N ear S h u ttle F ro m *115 plus e le c tric ity . 1211 W>sf 8th (off B la n c o ' 474-! 107. 472-4162 B a rry G illin g w a te r C om pany 1901 W illow Creek $160 C O U C H FO R SA LE Good condition, back drops *o m ake into bed *15 926 3 4U a lt e r 5 OO $220 v o c a t io n a l TYPING SERVICES Just SS 17 per month A T T E N D A N T I 5397 per month Tskin g a p p lic a tio n s for full tim e work, m a in ly 1:45 p m to IO p.m . shift D uties include the c are , tra in in g and treatnrtent of m e n ta lly re ta rd e d residents F O O D SE R V IC E W O R K E R S P a rt tim e shift m os tly J198 50 per month *20 hour w eek! T a kin g a p p lic a tio n s at the Personnel O f­ fice, T r a v is S ta te School, 2 m iles E a s to f Austin on F M 969 {E a s t I9 th |, 8 to l l a rn or I to 4 p rn. M ond ay thru F rid a y An E q u a l O pportunity E m p lo ye r F L E U R DE L IS 404 E a s t 30th M a tu re students Lovely one bedroom s W a lk to cam pus Shuttle. S u m m e r rates 4775282 M O V E IN TODAY bus co rner NO W L E A S IN G FO R S E P T STO N L A G E L A P ID A R Y and J E W E L R Y C R A F T . Unusual g ifts and s u p p ’ es G ood s e le c tio n o f s e m i­ precious stones and m ountings »oog rock, fu m b le rs books Open 9 30 - 5 3 59t 5 B urnet R ead in N orthw e s t Shopping C enter 459 6531 2 BDRM $175 l ic e n s e d S w im m in g pool, b e a u tifu lly furnished d o u b le or s tu d io b e d , a t! h a v e iishw asher disposal c e n tra l a ir and heat ii ag c arp e l, e x t r a s torage room 305 W E S T M T H it> blot ks fr o m c a m p u s ) M a n a g er Apt t06 454 9108 ii No A nsw er C a ll 454-5869 D is hw a s hers - 2 L a rg e Pools S ecurity C lu b ro o m . V o lle y b all C ourt LONGHAVEN 477-5662 SHUTTLE I BDRM NEW E F F IC IE N C IE S CLOSE TO C A M P U S S H U T T L E BUS A L L BILLS P A ID W alk to Class E L E V E N -F O O T Sea Snark s ailb o a t w ith a il acc es s o rie s 5125 T o m , 477-9926 betw een 8.30 and 5 30. 19*7 F O R D V A N , 6 cylinder, standard, runs good, in te rio r and e x te rio r redone. 595*3 47 s 1253 W IL L O W CREEK NOW L E A S IN G FOR S E P T . BACKYARD PLANT SALE B r a m e I ia d s O r c h id s a n d s o m e tro p ic a l* 4407 Ave H. E a s t of E lis a b e t Ney M useum 1971 T O Y O T A C O R O L L A 1600 wagon 11300 or best O ffe r. 477-7260 ZIO N L a m a r 476-5556 TO P C A S H P R IC E S paid for diam on ds old goto C apitol Diam ond Shop, 4018 N L a m a r 454-6877 70 J W runs good n e * s ta rter ra d ia tires, needs c lutch a d ju s tm e n t *875 *474849 , U tilitie s paid 7 B D R M - 2 B ath Shag c a rp e t paneled, w alk in g distance to U T and C apitol 5270 5280 Also, p riv a te B D R M S. B ath. (no cook­ ing for one person SSO mo Study ro o m *, lau n d ry room b e au tifu l c o u rty a rd and plenty of p a rk in g . 1802 W est A ve , Suite IOO RETREAT apts. Call 478-7833 mimam T R A V I S S T A T E SCHOOL PE R M A N E N T STATE EM PLOYM ENT S U M M E R R A T E S N O W ! Six blocks fr o m L a w School; S h u ttle bus. One bedroom 5)30 E ffic ie n c y 5110 AC, c a rp e t dishw asher, disposal, w alk-in closets 32nd and in te rre g io n a l 477 0010 or G L3 2228 $160 Easy living 6 blocks campus 1315 N O R W A L K L A N E 476-0948 Lee Phillips, R e a lto r . FO R S A L E : 1973 Pontiac G ran d v ille Convertible p a in ted special O range and White at fac to ry E le c tric w idcw s and seat pow er door locks. A M F M stereo tape R a lly .sheets, steel belt radial tires Only 76,QUO m iles, owner out of country Bueites. inc E l Cam po Texas 774,37 I 713-54 3 2729 • 1906 P e a r ! Too OI J s to r y b u i l d i n g 4225 2 bedroom s 2 baths, A B I' short 'ease C able pool e le v ato r, g a ' age pa rkin g Now Leasing for Sept. 459-0007 O N L Y T H E BEST Auto - For Sole FACULTY ONLY 2122 Hancock Dr. F ait Rates 3-112 -Cul-de-sac FOR SALE K E N RAY APARTMENTS ■ im FURN. APARTS. Lots of 'rees p o o l AC. beam ceilings and paneling I B e d ro o m *100 plus e lec­ tr ic ity F O R M E R U N iV E R S iT Y Professors 4 bedroom 2 bath. I b ra ry sound proof N e ar c a r pus S35.000 SS.OOO dow n O w n e r c a r r y b a la n c e , r e a s o n a b le interest No agents P O . Box D - 1 Hi the event ef e m it mode ie an advertiM ni.nl immediate m i x . mv*t be FURN. APARTS. ■ OF arge e ft ic enc ie s. livin g room. New onset bedroom 4 k itche n, cable w ater Gas tut pished S u m m e r - *121 OC 477 551* <^916 R E D O A K AP TS 2104 S A N G A B R IE L S r OW NER 2826 S a la d o s o lid 3 be d ro o m , '^ a p la c e fenced g a r a g e w o rk s h o p E x c e l l e n t c o n d . t to rt. A ppointm ent 474-5417. Thvrtdot Tenon Wednesday 11 OO o i Today l i m n Thyiyday FURN. APARTS. ■ FOR SALE P IE D A D V E R T IS IN G R A ’ ES IS mord m tn tm u m C ac h word on* • r n * > E ach * o rd 2-4 ’ »m e* * E ac h word 5-9 tim e s I E ach word IO or m o re lim es s Student ra te each '.m e , % Class I . od D is pla y *2 94 I col • I inch one ' i m * VI sr I col * I inch 2-9 t im e s leis o r m o re lim e s S3 37 CLH An E q u a l Opportunity E m p lo y e r Juenet 25" lOspeed bike 385-5102. B a r 'd o r m r e fr lg . ISO. 478-4151 L a rg e b ra id e d rug. D en 472-0424 Found k n ife . C a ll/d e s c rib e . 476-7660. H i-fi eq 20% -40% Off 476-7067, nt E n g ag em e n t ring, U c ara t, 451 .1584 G er Strep pups SIO 926 SUO newbike-own* « * * * BW 2 3"Z e n ith T V . *40 472 8512 CinclH R o llers L ik e new. 478-4062 New *100 Swiss w atch. *80. 478-4062 Scuba g e a r 8, w et tu it 441-2231. Apt m o v in g 8> h auling 441 0059 26 M e n s bike. *2 0 ’ 476-0713 Housepaintlng 8. re p a irs 453-0847 ROOM & BOARD B IL L S O N D O R M fo r M en E x c e lle n t h om e co o ke d m e a ls Air-conditioned m a id , s w im m in g p ool 2610 R io G ra n d e C a i! 476 4552 454 5087 C O -O P V A C A N C IE S S um m er F a il M a le /F e m a le A I*o V egetarian C heap' Contact In te r-C o o o e ra tive Council 476 1957 4 U.S. House A w aits Fair Election Law By WADE WILCOX Texan Staff W riter T e x a s P u b lic I n t e r e s t Research Group (TexPIRG) and the League of Women V o te rs of T e x a s u n ite d W ednesday in a c a ll for stronger election regulation at the congressional level. Appalled by the “ inevitable dependence of all elected candidates on big moneyed in te r e s ts ,” L ee P earso n , U n iv ersity T e x P IR G co­ ch airp erso n , sa id 'T h i s results in sp e cia l interest g ro u p s h a v in g a disproportionate am ount of FURN. DUPLEX! TOW NHOUSE l u x u r y at apartment prices 2-l^>, fire p la c e , they, en appliances, private patios, cable Tv Pets O X. $23$ bdls paid 474-779) John Pendleton. A49-9593 evenings. FURN."HOUSES S H A R E R EN T. Luxurious, fountain, palms, meditation garden. Washer, dryer stereo, Tv. etc $125 Bills paid Call 451-5559 TUTORING N A T IV E S P A N IS H S P E A K E R Four y e a r s e x p e rie n c e a s T A R e a so n a b le r a te s , any lev a t. C a ll 477-1403. M A T H T O T O IM N ©“ T h a t u n d e rs ta n d . 474-0757 you c a n TO P LA C E A CLASSIFIED AD C A LL 4 7 1 -5 2 4 4 influence and the average voter losing out.’’ More than 90 percent of the money contributed to political cam paigns comes from less t h a n I p e r c e n t of th e p o p u la tio n , a c c o rd in g to Pearson. “S u c h p ra c tic e s significantly compromise the f u n d a m e n ta l d e m o c ra tic process of one man-one vote. S trong ca m p a ig n finance r e f o r m s w ould open th e political process to a larger number of candidates.” Recently, the U.S. Senate passed a strong campaign bill calling for lim its on campaign expenditures, limits on the s iz e of d o n a tio n s f ro m o r g a n i z a t i o n s , a s tr o n g in d e p e n d e n t r e g u la to r y com mission and a system of p a r ti a l f e d e r a l fu n d in g , Pearson said. However, the bill has m et strong opposition in the House from congressmen concerned about cost of the proposal, he said. Another possible reason for opposition, Pearson said, is that “ som e congressmen have a fe a r of losing their r e ­ election bids.” The House version of the election regulation bill is in the House Rules Committee and is expected to be reported out soon, said Jean Bizzel, p r e s id e n t of th e A u stin ch a p te r of the League of Women Voters of Texas. Both groups indicated they s u p p o r te d th e A n d erso n U dall-Foley am endm ent to the House bill, which provides lim ited matching system of p u b lic fin a n c in g fo r congressional elections. P u b lic funds would be provided by the amendment Students Play the Stock Market fo r can d id ates who sh o w public support by raising a t le a s t $25,000 from s m a ll contributors. O nce this was done th e candidate would receive eq u al am ounts of federal m oney to m atch all future contributions of $50 or less. The proposal would c o s t th e a v e r a g e taxpayer $2 p e r congressional election. Enforcement of the H ouse b ill would be left to th e D epartm ent of Justice, w hich has not prosecuted an electio n violation case in more th a n 50 years. A nother am endm ent, th e Frenzel-Fascell am endm ent, w o u ld give e n f o r c e m e n t po w ers to an in d ep en d en t co m m issio n , co m p o sed of th re e members from e a c h political party, having civil su it and subpoena pow ers. Brizzel and P earson both a s k e d Texans to s u p p o r t strong campaign reg u latio n legislation. Polls of Texas congressm an co n d u c te d by the g r o u p s indicate that IO oppose public c a m p a ig n financing, tw o favor it and the rest a r e not com m itted. Seven members su p p o rt the e n fo rc e m e n t c o m m is s io n proposal, eight oppose it and IO have not yet made up th e ir minds. U .S. Rep, J .J . “ J a k e ” Pickle of Austin has not taken a public stand on the public financing provision, though in his renomination cam p aig n . he did say that he does n ot yet feel the time is ripe for public financing of co n g re ssio n a l elections. Pickle did indicate he does f a v o r th e e n f o r c e m e n t commission am endm ent. Estimates as to how many University students invest money in the stock m arket range from "very few ” to "more than you would think,” b u t o ne f a c t r e m a i n s : University students do get involved with stock m arket investments. How many students invest in th e m a rk e t is a lm o s t impossible to determ ine. Dr. C harles H ack ett, asso ciate professor of finance, said " a t a graduate level in the School of Business, alm ost one-half of tho students invest in a wide range of stocks.” H ackett e s tim a te d about one-third of the students in his finance classes invest in the stock m arket. A spokesman for the E F. Hutton & Co. Inc, in Austin said in his opinion student investm ent was light, dealing mainly in speculative stocks. 4 Bids Given on Repairs For Damaged UT Plant The U niversity received four base bids W ednesday morning for extensive repairs to the cooling tow er of the Physical Plant, which was swept by fire July IO. The d a m a g e to w e r is operating at IO to 15 percent capacity, W illiam Willcox, Physical Plant director, said. Since the fire, the University has been buying 40 percent of its power form the Austin E clectic D e p a rtm e n t, considerably increasing the cost of University electric consumption. The lowest bid was from Pritchard Products Divison for $149,765. The others were f ro m th e E codyne Corporation for $180,795; Air C o n d itio n in g , I n c fo r $193,966.92; a n d L illie Hoffman, Inc. for $218,453. Willcox said the lowest base bid m ight not be chosen because of hidden factors, such as d e l iv e r y c o s ts . Willcox and Jam es H. Colvin, University vice-president for business affairs, will discuss the bids this week and may award the contract next week. C o n s t r u c t i o n m a y be completed w ithin 12 to 15 weeks, Willcox said. B e f o r e t h e f i r e , th e University bought 5 percent of its daily 624.000 kilowatt hour consumption from the city at the rate of 7 cents per kilowatt hour. The University is paying * f i_____ _„: _ — a lower fee now by purchasing in great volume. C u r t Von B i e b e r s t e i n , a s s o c ia te d ir e c to r of th e P h y sica l P la n t, said th e tow er’s redwood supporting structure and trays were not badly dam aged by the blaze. The rotary m otor drives are intact but m ust be rewound. When the tow er is operating at full capacity, w ater drips over the tray s as air is drawn through by motor fans. The structure now is used as an atm ospheric tower, without the fans, to cool steam from the turbine generator in the a d ja c e n t H al C. W e a v e r Heating and Power Plant. Willcox could not say what mi _ ___: i . . ___________ :« The m aijo rity opinion is students buy lower prices and more speculative stocks. Sam Hadaway. assistant instructor of finance, said the younger s to c k h o ld e rs , not ju s t students, tend to be more in v o lv e d w ith o v e r - th e counter stocks. from t h e c i t y h a d c o s t th e University to date. He did say th e e l e c tr i c it y fro m th e University plant was sold to a u x ilia ry e n t e r p r i s e s on campus, such as the Texas Union and the dorm itories, at the rate of I cent per kilowatt hour. T he B o ard of R e g e n ts appointed an engineering firm in June to consider possible e x p a n sio n of g e n e r a tin g f a c ilitie s . The firm recommended construction of a $4.5 million steam turbine generator to m eet increased demand through 1982-84. The p r o je c t a w a its r e g e n ta l approval. Student in te re sts in the stock m ark et usually sta rt with g ifts and funds from p aren ts and relativ es, Dr. Andrew Senchack. assistant p rofessor of finance, said. Others develop an interest through finance courses. M any s tu d e n ts tak e an SIT NP go od for o n e it RESTAURANT 2 G a m e Room s o o o o 11 P o o l* F o o s b a ll* P in b a ll, > O 11 3 5 0 0 G u a d a lu p e <) GDo t Tonite Thru Saturday This cou p o n ti o o o 0 BULL ••••••• TA STATION o 11 11 11 O PE N 24 HOURS i i of beer any afternoon | from I 2:30 - 7 :3 0 I POOt-PINBAU-FOOSBALl | 1903 L Riverside 451-9151 River HiHs Shopping Center Fri. July 26 & Sat. July 27 Adv. Tickets $5 a t In n e r S a n c t u m . D is c o u n t R e c o r d * T e x a s I J S e n sa tio n s WAYLON JENNINGS 8 p.m . in tn rlf in cstock m a rk e t investments only on a small scale basis for experience, the E F. Hutton spokesman said. With the stock m arket in its p resen t position th e re has been little growth in student involvement in recent years. H ackett said. There has been an interest in mutual fund shares and in r e a l e s t a t e by s t u d e n t s r e c e n t l y with th e sto c k m arket being so unstable, said Hadaway. Although most students do not get involved with day-byd a y buying and tr a d in g . H a c k e t t sa id t h e r e a r e University students who buy and sell regularly He said th a t many s tu d e n ts from Dallas and Houston regularly u se th e ir h o m e to w n stockbrokers. It is difficult to pinpoint the prim ary type of stocks bought by students. There is a wide range of in terest by students just as th ere is by regular investors H ackett said. i the L n in w fA n o n rl rldem m on rl increased and '.OO A C A D E M Y PRESEN TS iin n tte o rroecstt Wild Second Level Dobte Moll 2 Hr G G u a d a lu p e free parking in the re a r T O N IG H T S A T U R D A Y SoapGreekSaloon NO COVER PLUM NELLY WEREWOLVES This Weekend GREEZY WHEELS laTHbit bAXTH 3 2 7 -9 0 1 6 JU. N O A D V A N C E D TICKETS (ALI BEER STILL AT OLO PRICES) D O O R S OPEN*. 8 H A P P Y H O U R : 8 -9 Tequila N it© ... Still 4 0 e a shot. 707 Bee C a v e * Rd. UNCLE WALT'S BAND U V E FRO M DALLAS 914 N. L A M A R - aA — 4 7 7 -3 7 8 3 ________ | SMYLIE S 19TH & NUECES N ex t to Bert's Lei Dr. Shatlerly open your head. 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BOX D - UT STATION AUSTIN, TEXAS 78712 Times Times Times Times Times I 2 5 IO 20 IO 18 35 60 1.20 15 1.50 2.70 5.25 9.00 18.00 16 1.60 2.88 5.60 9.60 19.20 17 1.70 3.06 5.95 10.20 20.40 18 1.80 3.24 6.30 10.80 21.60 CITY___ 19 1.90 3.42 6.65 11.40 22.80 PHONE— No. Words Cost per word N A M E __ ADDRESS I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I Available rn original Olde English and Wild Strawberry flavours at drugstores, headshops and the like. APPY HOUR !ALL NIGHT! GIRLS FREE LIVE EN T ER TA IN M E N T F E A T U R IN G TEXAS FRI. SAT. SUN. - DANIEL Paramount Recording Artist We w ill trade you a m u g of beer for your old Fraterni­ ty or Sorority composites, p a ddles or usable decoration. THE BUCKET CHOP SIRLOIN DINNER 8 OZ C H O P S IR L O IN , BUTTERY B A K E D POTATO OR F R E N C H FRIES. HOT T E X A S TOAST, A N D C R IS P T O SSED SA L A D BOHMER S M H PIT 2815 GUADALUPE i_478-3560 N O T IP PIN G 23rd and Pearl Hi! C O M E A S YOU A R E " % sa Across from Hardin North - 3 Hours Free Parking Thursday, Ju ly 25, 1974 THE DAILY TEXAN P a g e l l Davidson Proposes Vendor Restrictions Jaworski Wins W ate rgate Special Prosecutor a hotel-office complex on 1H 35 south of Leon Jaw orski leaves the court­ Austin N eigh borh ood r e sid e n ts have room W ed n e sd a y after the Su ­ protested the planned development since prem e Court ruled that Presi­ January because of contem plated piping of dent Nixon m ust surrender the the creek and T eagu e-B u d a’s su rp rise rem ainin g subpoenaed W a ­ Saturday morning bulldozing of a large tergate tapes. wooded area last winter. • A decision to allow- Columbia Scientific Industries (CSD to develop 25.5 acres of suburban residential area along old U S. Highway 183 northwest of Austin. Residents of an adjacen t subdivision have protested the _________ _ d e v e lo p m e n t, c la im in g th e re a r e no guarantees CSI will maintain a promised buffer zone of natural woods around the industrial plant. After the Planning Com m ission was told treated to m ake the antibodies July 15 the wooded buffer would be preserved By TONI SNIDOW fluorescent so they can be in its natural state, workmen with bulldozers Texan Staff Writer under a and chain saw s cleared the area of cedar and A blood test which could i d e n t i f i e d underbrush Ju ly 17. CSI representatives revolutionize the detection of microscope. Miles Kaltenbaugh. termed the clearing a “ m istake " th e v e n e r e a l d i s e a s e Residents claim CSI could com m ercially or gonorrhea in persons with no supervisor for the venereal residentially develop 15 a cre s of the site not * o u t w a r d s y m p t o m s o f disease control program at planned for the industrial plant, including the infection is undergoing study th e C i t y - C o u n t y H e a l t h wooded buffer strip. at the T ex as Department of D e p a r t m e n t , s a i d h i s departm ent has provided the Davidson will report on an A ffirm ative Health laboratories in Austin Action Policy Statem ent regarding racial or Blood te s ts for syp h ilis, state laboratories with about sexual discrim ination in city hiring and another form of VD, have 1,000 blood sa m p le s taken employment practices. been available for som e time, from patients at city-operated b u t t h e r e h a s b e e n no health clinics. “ Most women with a c c e p t e d b lo o d t e s t fo r gonorrhea, said a State Health g o n o r r h e a d o not h a v e sy m p to m s.” he explained, D epartm ent official. The p re se n t m ethod of “ and, since 1970, we have detecting gonorrhea is slow f ound t hat a s u b s t a n t i a l number of infected m ales also and com plicated, he said. The T ra v is County F a ir m ajo rity of the m em b ers The new test consists of have no sym ptom s.” Pl a y and P r o g r e s s i v e voted not to delay. The conventional method placing a blood sam ple on a “ The failure of the SD EC to D em ocratic Party Caucuses m icroscopic slide which holds for determ ining gonorrhea is resch ed ule the convention resolved Ju ly 18 not to accept a p a r t i c u l a r s t r a i n of to take a bacteria specim en forces Jew ish delegates to the S D E C ’ s d e cisio n and g o n o c o c c u s b a c t e r ia , the from the genital tract of a eith e r v io la te a re lig io u s asked the ACLU to file a suit pat i ent and to pl a c e the official said belief where the constitutional if it was “ legally feasible to If a person has gonorrhea, rig h t to p r a c t ic e a f r e e do so.” his blood sam ple will contain Duncan said the ACLU had exercise of religion is well antibodies for the disease. established, or to forego a been p r e p a r i n g t he s ui t When the blood is placed on quietly even before the two co n stitu tio n a lly p ro tec te d the slid e , the a n tib o d ie s right to participate in the lo ca l g ro u p s issu e d th eir a t t a c h th e m se lv e s to the p olitical p ro c e ss,” Duncan statem ent. bacteria. The slide is then said. “ It’s ju st like any other THE choice on any other calendar d a t e , ” C o n n a ly s a i d in O f THE BLAZING reference to the charge that the SD EC was forcing Jew ish delegates to choose between a n n o u n c e m e n t s two constitutionally protected EATING CONTEST CO N C fNTHATtON w ill be discussed at rights ? 30 p.m. T h ursd ay in Jester Center T h e d a t e of the s t a t e A332 by re p re se n ta tiv e s of the CalI or Come by R e a d in g a n d Stu d y S k ills L a b convention, set by the T exas for Details IRA SSO Election Code, must be on the third Tuesday of Septem ber in TEXAS U N IO N W IL L S P O N S O R A F IL M , A lic e in W o n d e r la n d , " at 7 a n d 8 30 each even-numbered year. p m T h u rs d a y in *he U n io n T h e a te r 521J N. UMAR 454-4242 However, Atty. Gen. John A d m is s io n is ss for students, fa c u lty a n d sta ff. St SO for m e m b e rs. Hill issued an opinion that the SD EC could put t h e t e x a s u n i o n w ill sp o n s o r a tree c o n c e rt w ith the U T B r a s s E n s e m b le at noon convention into im m ediate T h u r s d a y o n the U n io n P atio. recess until Sept. 19. New restrictions on University area street vendors will be considered by City Council at a public hearing at I p m. Thursday in the Electric Building Auditorium. Changes in the street vending ordinance contemplated by the council were proposed bv City Manager Dan Davidson June 13 Davidson proposed to limit to 200 the number of perm its sold to vendors for the 23rd Street m arket area Y early p erm its now a re required for vending in the area but there is no limit on the number of perm its sold D a v id s o n also proposed selling the perm its on a q u a rt e rly basis, requiring purchase of a new permit every three months, and doubling the permit fee from the current $10 per year to $5 per quarter. The proposal also recommends allowing Saturday m arket use of the north side of San Antonio Street from Guadalupe Street to the mid-block alley University street vendors have declared their opposition to the proposed changes and plan to present their argum ents to the council Thursday. Also scheduled for public hearing a re ; • An appeal of the Planning Commission s decision to grant a creek development perm it to T e a g u e - B u d a . Inc. for a lte ra tio n s to H arper's Creek anticipated in construction of Convention Delay Sought T h e A m e r ic a n C iv il L i b e r t i e s U n ion (A C L U ) announced Wednesday it will file suit in U.S. D istrict Court to delay the Sept. 17 state Dem ocratic convention until a fte r the Je w ish holy day Rosh Hashanah. John Duncan. ACLU state director said the suit would be filed the week of Aug. 5 on beh alf of s e v e r a l Je w ish delegates who would be forced to v io late th e ir re lig io u s principles if they attended the convention on their holy day. State D em o cratic E x e c ­ utive C om m itteee o ffic ia ls reacted with surprise at the news of a possible suit. Jo e Connaly, chairm an of the SD E C s le g a l a f f a ir s subcommittee, said such a c a s e w o u ld be “ a r e a l interesting law su it, but a c o u r t w o u ld n o t fin d a violation of the constitutional righ ts of a person of the Jew ish faith.” C o n n a ly a l s o s a i d th e D e m o c ra tic P a r t y would welcome such a suit by the ACLU. ‘ The party would not want to v io la te anyone’s constitutional righ ts while attempting to obey the laws of the sta te ," he continued. T h e S D E C c o n s id e r e d postponing the convention to avoid a conflict for the Jew ish delegates,but voted July 16 to keep the Sept. 17 meeting date T exas D em o cratic Party o f f i c e m a n a g e r C le m a Sanders said the SD EC vote cam e nowhere near the threefourths m argin needed to c h a n g e th e d a t e o f th e c o n m i t i o n ^ ^ in fact, the ...... Gonorrhea Test Offers Detection Hope Suit ACLU Prepares m specim en in a sp ecial cultural medium. The specim en must then be checked over a period of tim e to see whether it contains growing gonococcus bacteria. “ C u ltu re s a r e t im e ­ consuming and difficult. This blood test might solve the problem of screening patients inexpensively,” Kaltenbaugh said. The test would be especially beneficial to sm a ll public health clinics which handle large numbers of gonorrhea case s, he added. However, he said, the blood test cannot be used to detect gon orrh ea In its e a r lie s t stages. The test depends upon antibodies which m ay not develop until th ree w eeks after a person con tracts the disease, he explained. In the first six months of 1974. K a lte n b a u g h s a id , T ravis County ryeported 1.840 c a s e s o f g o n o r r h e a , an increase of 40 percent over the com parable period last year. State Health Department officials said they are hopeful the blood test will prove successful and that it will lead to a decline in the incidence of gonorrhea in Texas. One o f f i c i a l s a i d th a t research on the blood test is expected to la st “ se v e ra l more months,” adding that approximately 4,000 specim en s m ust be tested b e fo r e the v a l u e of t he experiment can be determined. Recreation Committee sponsors A BIKE TRIP TO BUDA G uide July 27, 8 a.m. Tom C a n b Littlefield Fountain Bring A Snack See Complete Live Coverage Of campus news In brief 2ND COMINGI JALAPENO The Judiciary Committee Impeachment Debate at 6:30 p.m. presents U niversity of Texas BRASS ENSEMBLE FREE CONCERT KIRN Channel 9 TACO FLATS TEXAN ADVER you are There's Gold in Them Thor Goodies! Especially On (5:30 - 8:00 p.m.) DRESSES Special Offering on SHORTS OO Regular to 19.98 One Night • • • looking for the right DIRECTION for all your ADVERTISING DOLLARS... THURSDAY NIGHT Soft Little U N IO N PATIO TODAY AT N O O N $100 Only Doing business |every single day in the line I Old Fashioned Way then point them toward the 2322 Guadalupe Open till 8:00 p.m. Tonight! days annual NEW STUDENTS' EDITION of dollar The Daily Texan Come by TSP Bldg. Room 3.200 and place your Unclassified Ad i ! L students only prepaid no refunds 25th & Whitis T he I I I I I I I I to be published FRIDAY, AUGUST 9, 1974 Wtfv* extended ZilkerRu-k right up to your front door. | | I i T exan Student Newspaper et The University of Texes et Austin Thats right You can’t tell where the park ends and Wind Ridge begins. So, if you’ve always had a yen to do a nature bit and live in a park, well here’s your chance Utilities, clubhouse, two tennis courts, swimming pool and parking complete the setting Another natural by Jagger Associates. Page 12 Thursday, July 25, 1974 T H E D A ILY T EX A N Y our a d v e r tis in g d o lla rs w ill be d ire c te d to so m e 1 0 ,0 0 0 N E W STUDENTS entering The University this Fall! It's the BEST direction to reach an over-all potential of some $45,000,000 to be spent this '74-'75 school year by some 47,000 students, faculty and staff. • 5 SECTIONS, 70 OR M O R E PAGES! H “ *8® • M A IL E D TO O V E R 10,000 N E W STUDENTS' H O M E ADDRESSES! CALL 471-1865 TODAY for com plete inform ation or to reserve your a d v e r t i s i n g s p a c e ! I t ' s t he O N L Y D IR E C T IO N to g o to reach this vast U.T. student market!