D aily T e x a n THE Student N e w s p a p e r at The University of Texas at Ausf.n Fourteen Pages V o l. 74, No. 9 Please Recycle This New spaper Senator Blocks Tax Cut Nixon Arrives At Final Stop _ . . . I____ _on a n o aar.i n.VPar b asis. been year-to-year basis AMMAN, Jordan (A P) — President LIKE ITS neighbor across the Jordan Nixon got a red carpet w elcom e Monday R iver Jordan has received extensive in Jordan, the last stop of his Middle supplies of U.S. m ilitary hardware in the E ast tour. He flew in from Jerusalem past. Much of it was at Amman airport in after announcing a nuclear reactor sales the tightest security shield Nixon has program for the Israelis to match a seen in the four Arab nations that formed sim ilar pledge to Egypt last week. the greater part of his Middle E ast tour. “ It is only the beginning of the journey As the presidential jet Spirit of 76 for p eace,” Nixon told Jordan s King touched down, armored cars with light Hussein of his travels in the Mideast m achine guns stood about the tarm ac, AS HE HAS in other Arab capitals, and ta n k s and h ea v y m a ch in e-g u n N ix o n r e c e i v e d fr o m H u s s e in a em placem ents were standing watch on catalogue of conditions for permanent hills overlooking the airport. peace between the Arabs and Israelis. After the airport cerem onies, Nixon Hussein told Nixon at a state dinner he and Hussein, with their w ives Pat and w ants Israeli withdrawal from the Jor­ Queen Alia, rode in a m otorcade to Am­ dan Valley, the return of Jerusalem to man to be hailed by thousands of Arab sovereignty, restoration of the rhythm ically chanting and applauding legitim ate rights of the Palestinians and Jord an ian s, repeating on a sm aller scale an end to Israeli occupation of Arab the greetings Nixon received earlier in lands. Isra el and three Arab cou n tries — Nixon gave the sam e form of response Egypt, Saudi Arabia and Syria. he has given at other stops in his week oi The heads of state planned talks Tues­ diplom atic hopscotch. . day morning before Nixon leaves for the I wish I could have brought a brielUnited States via a rest stop in the case full of solutions,” he told Husseim A zores J o rd a n ’s m ilitary desires are on He said he didn’t, although he spoke of ihe agenda, but two others reportedly top unspecified “ new developm ents that th e list. have reason to give us hope. ONE IS the Palestinian issue, which "War is not a solution, Nixon said at the other three Arab leaders urged Nixon the dinner after receiving cheers of to solve. Amman sources said the other w elcom e from tens of thousands of Jor­ is a request from Hussein that Nixon d is­ danians and P a lestin ia n s along his patch Secretary of State Henry A. motorcade route. “ We must try another Kissinger back to the Middle h ast to way, we must try the path of peace. m ediate talks between Israel and Jordan HUSSEIN LAID down his conditions to create a dem ilitarized zone along the for a permanent Middle E ast settlem ent . . . - i i t .1 C in itia tiv e Jordan River Valley cease-fire line. after warning that if the IT U.S. initiative loses momentum “ the days of no peace, Jordan is Nixon’s first stop without the no war, will be with us again in a poten­ sec r eta r y of state. J u st before the tially more dangerous and explosive presidential jet took off from Jerusalem , Kissinger left Israel for Ottawa where he situation.” The nuclear p ro g ram for Israel was will attend a foreign m in isters’ meeting announced by Nixon and Israeli Premier of the North Atlantic Treaty Organiza­ Yitzhak Rabin in Jerusalem U.S. of­ tion (NATO). ficials insisted that safeguards built into Nixon s response to the reported Hus­ the agreement to be negotiated would sein plan was uncertain, but American prevent the conversion of the nuclear sources said Kissinger is reluctant to m aterial or technology to m ilitary use. begin extensive new travels in the Mid­ T hey m ade the sa m e prom ise in dle East so soon after his successful response to Israeli criticism of the Egyp­ Syria-Israel peace m ission tian plan. Nixon and Kissinger are known to con­ The com m unique issued by Nixon and sider Jordan essential to a solution to the Rabin in Jerusalem also disclosed plans p ro b le m of estim a ted th ree m illion for a long-term m ilitary sa les program Palestinians made h om eless by the crea­ with Israel, rep o rted ly totaling $ 5 '2 tion of Israel, More than one-third of the million over five y e a rs P rev io u s I S P alestin ia n s live in Jordan m ilitary sales to the Jew ish sta te have WASHINGTON ( UP I ) - Sen. Jam es B. Allen. D-Ala.. refused Monday to yield the Senate floor for consideration of a liberal tax reform package, threatening a filibuster to kill the measure. Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, D-Mass., and other liberals w ere prepared to offer their tax program as amendments to a debt ceiling bill which m ust become law dv June 30. but Allen said debt ceiling legislation is not the place for tax ^ K E N N E D Y , in a lengthy dialogue with Allen, said it w as “ an extraordinary irony" that tax reform , a 1972 campaign them e of A labam a Gov. George C. Wallace, should be blocked by a senator from W allace’s own state. Allen said he w as not opposed to tax reform and in fact had introduced tax cut measures him self, but it was not in the interest of sound finances or good government” to pass tax bills quickly without full com m ittee cor sideration. Allen appeared to hold the upper hand because the debt ceiling bill - in­ creasing the national debt limit to billion — must be passed by midnight June 30 or the government will be —u n TaU ph e*t> technically unable to pay its bills or m eet —— President Nixon is greeted by King Hussetn an d O u e e n ^ U a j n A m m a_^---------- l t Sen' Robert C. Byrd, D-W _Va., said the Senate would continue work on other legislation under a “ two-track system with debate on the debt ceiling lasting only part of the legislative day. THIS WOULD relieve pressure on Allen who would not have to talk for long hours each day, but pressure would increase on the liberals as the debt ceil­ training programj w e reim burse people into an on-the-job training program, we reimburse his ing deadline neared. The liberal reform package would employer. We put our people into jobs that pay in the area o lower taxes for individuals slightly while $2.90 an hour, not like som e of the other programs where peop e hitting oil com panies with a $2 billion tax are lucky to s ta r t out a t minimum w age, she continued. increase by ending the oil depletion “ I ’M TOLD that one of the accusations against us is that we allowance. pav our people higher wages. We have one Even if the S en ate p asses a tax about $10 OOO a year tor instance, as compared to an lnstructo, package it fa ces many more obstacles arcom m u n ity A lle g e who m akes about $3,000 less At com before it could becom e law. The Ad­ lm “ ege a BA degree isn’t required. Our instructor not ministration is opposed to a tax cut on onlv holds a m asters’, but teaches, counsels and ^ ^ ad­ the grounds that it would be inflationary. m inistrative work 12 months out of the year as opposed to nine. and any Senate bill would be subject to a She d o esn 't deserv e the higher salary? she added. conference with the House, which has Valle said th e re would be a decline in effective service to the p a s s e d a d e b t b ill w ith no ta x chicano com m unity if the SER w ere discontinued.^ “THE PEO PLE who make use of our services regard u. a amendments. The House Ways and Means c o m ­ their organization. We serve anyone who asks us. but the fact m ittee is working on its own tax reform that chicanos hold m ost of the positions enables us to.serve the measure and has already approved an oil akine people on a m ore persona! level. I he industry tax bill. But both m easures are r e l a t t a S a re very close. While a person who is thusly more ease can accom plish more, any language barrier I ta l would becoming bogged down, and the debt bul be an obstacle anywhere else is virtually nonexistent, could becom e this year's tax reform In regard to the efficiency of SER. Valle referred to its No. vehicle. national rating for programs of its type last year as evaiua THE TAX package proposed by Sens. by the Departm ent of Labor Kennedy, W alter Mondale, D-Minn., and other liberals basically would cut in­ LAST WEEK, copies of correspondence between the City of dividual taxes by increasing the personal Austin and various branches of the Department of LaborJerked exemption from $750 to $825 per in­ out. revealing probable probes of SER by the federal governdividual with an alternate $190 credit for lower bracket taxpayers. mThe city has charged SER with violation of the Hatch Act, The loss in revenue to the Treasury which forbids political activity by federal employes. There a would be m ade up by ending the oil will be a regional audit of Austin SE R ’s books. depletion allow ance, by increasing the VALLE SAID she accidently perm itted 16 invitations to a par­ minimum tax on preferential income and ty in h er hom e for Texas House candidate Gonzalo Barrientos to by repealing tw o other corporate tax be run through a federal postage m eter. She said she has replac­ breaks, accelerated depreciation for ed the $1.60 cost. plant and equipm ent under the asset ‘ The w hole incident has been blown out of proportion by the depreciation range system and the newspapers. When we take our case before the City Council dom estic international sales corporation T hursday afternoon at 2 p.m .. they w ill probably charge us with system of tax incentives for exports. g raft and co rru p tio n ,” she said Officials Discuss Agency cC hh ir n n a Director Refutes Criticism of Job Service i c a n o U ir e C r O r n e r v i e r By JOSE M. FLORES Texan Staff Writer Citv officials have contended that bringing the predominantly chicago Service Employment Redevelopment (SER) under die S S h of city control would bo £e According to SER D irector Annabelle Valle, how ever, me S panish-speaking community feels that has^ervrem ove from community control an organization that ha. ed them w ell and would lend to their alien^ * “ V reauiring JIM MILLER, caretaker of any ^ t r j W a m L ^ U‘s ™ f federal funding, and City Manpower Planner Tom Beck have c h arg ed that SER a local m anpower organization, d u p licate. other ^ o g r a m s being offered in Austin and Travis County They a L h a v ^ « l Hilt tho adm inistrative and operational costs nr noosed bv SER are at lea st untenable. T S S (XKI budget submitted by SER was turned down by the ,9 m e m b T S p it a l Area Manpower C o n s o r t i u m , whose un­ anim ous approval is required to appropnate fun s. e Regents Disagree O n Bus Fuel Plan By RICHARD FLY Texan Staff Writer A proposed am endm ent to the I myersity-T ransportation E J te^Prises "I', shuttle bus contract, which a ows TE! eonpensation for increased fuel costs drew sharp discussion at Friday s rege m eeting, with R egent Ed Clark calling the amendment unconstitutional. Discussion prim arily revolved around Clark and form er T exas Gov Allan Shivers, although Frank C. Erwin who was content to sit back and listen to them banter the issue around, was finally drawn in 471-4591 tium's rural membership termed the requested budget b ,THE CONSORTIUM. Miller said. detenm ned that job train­ ing. counseling and other serv ices provided by SER over the last two years were overlaps of services provided by the city un der the comprehensive m anpower plan The community college is the prime provider of m uch o [the train in g, be it a licen sed vocational nurse or an auto University is setting a bad, bad piecedent (with all the construction con­ tracts) in approving this amendment. The choices available, Erwin explain­ ed, a re w hether the U niversity continues business with TEI or takes over the bus system itself. “ I’d really rather have a lawsuit than get in the bus business," he said. C lark cast the only dissenting vote as the amendment w as approved. m U wasCup ^o^Uie'consortium , then, to recom m end a com ­ prehensive program to the Department of Labor excluding S *Va 11(^sTid*tha t char ges against SE R ’s im plementing ^ p e r ­ cent of their funding for adm inistrative purposess. « s bthe consortium, were founded on that organization s mampu tion of submitted figures. to the “ THEY THINK that any money that doesn t go d ir e c ts tne trainees is autom atically spent on adm inistrative expenses, and th-V u n d ssp en to n — tVa“ ^ o S m o re Uke in Hie area of 16 percent Other expenditures include tuition paid foi trainees, o n - ^ f o b training salaries and the like, If w e get one of our T bree A sk Access CLARK subm itted a law brief in which he outlined why an amendment to a Rxed-rate contract w as unconstitutional At the tim e the contract was entered into, Clark wrote, “ all parties assumed that the price of gasoline would remain relatively stable ... the parties, however contracted for a fixed price The risk of price increase w as, therefore, placed T l e T d d e d , “ It lo g ic a lly fo llo w s, therefore, that since the University could not be forced to pay more than its contract price for the bus se rv ice rendered, the U niversity’s entering into an agreement to make additional com ­ pensation would be an unconstitutional gift or payment to T E I.” AN OPINION from Mike Hudson, University lawyer and assistant to p-PU' tv Chancellor E D Walker, concluded. " however, that the State Constitution does not preclude am endm ent of the contract for additional compensation Clark said at the m eeting he was of the opinion that “ w e m ade a mistake when we went into the shuttle bus business. The amendment would set a precedent for others who have contracts with the University, he said. • The shuttle bus system is a way ot life around the U niversity,” Shivers Opinion Sought on Files By DAVE RISHER Texan Staff Writer The University System law office has requested an attorney general’s opinion on three professors’ request to inspect their personnel files. The Texan learned Monday. The law office asked for the opinion after refusing to allow the professors a ccess to the files. U N IV E R S IT Y o f f i c i a l s r e fu s e d further com m ent on the m atter except to say the law o ffice “ suggested” Atty Gen. John Hill rule on the three together because of the sim ilar nature of the re­ quests. Other sources told The Texan the faculty m em bers m ade inquiries under the Open Records Act to see material in all personnel files relating to them in­ dividually. According to V ice-Provost Gerhard Fonkin, only certain data in files is ope to inspection. He sa id a f i l e w h ic h c o n ta in s “ recommendations' is not open to the faculty. S8‘T think it ith e issue) gets down to the question of whether you’re going to have shuttle bus service or not, he added “ WHETHER Mr. Clark is right about t or whether our legal department is 7 right about it. even if it goes fo co u rC w e need the shuttle bus system . Shivers ^ “The University is in a position to hav­ ing to subsidize the buses to this extent, he concluded. Chirk said, however, he thinks the University President Stephen Spurr told the Faculty Senate May IO the evaluations were confidential and are not being made available. Vice-President and Provost Stanley R o ss told th e S e n a te in fo rm a tio n relating to the perform ance of an in­ dividual was not in the normal personnel file. At least two of the three faculty members they sent requests to Austin cam pus officials asking to se e their tiles under the Open Records Act. THE LAW states in part that ail in­ formation in personnel files of an in­ dividual employe within a governmental body is to be made available to that in­ dividual employe Different sources said the University is claim ing the files should remain con^ fidential under an exception in the act which allows withholding “ inter-agency or intra-agency m em orandum s.” David Kendall, chairperson of the at­ torney general’s opinions com m ittee, said the matter is under consideration. The staff member in charge of the re­ quest was out of town Monday and un­ available for com m ent. Apparently the com m ittee has receiv­ ed only two of the three University re­ quests for opinions based on faculty re­ quests to see their files in late May. A request made last w eek and, accor­ ding to a U n iv ersity spokesperson, forwarded to the attorney general’s of­ fice apparently has not reached the opinions com m ittee staff. A UNIVERSITY spokesperson told The Texas last week the law office was preparing another request to Hill lei clarification of an open records request by Rep Joe Pen tony of Houston. ed Hill to seek a court o rd e r t enforce the Open Records Act Although the University officials said they w ere subm itting a re q u e st for an opinion w hich would seek to define the validity of Pentony’s request, it has not been forwarded to Hill yet, and its status is uncertain, according to various sources. T u e sd ay 's weather will be partly clo udy with the high in the mid-90's and the low in the mid-70's. YD President Files Complaints Against Alleged Illegal Voters n u a d d iu v n By MIKE MORRISON Texan Staff Writer suey L. Suits president of the U niver^ty Y ^ D ™ o e r a t s (Y D ’s) filed criminal com plaints Monday against 23 Ita a m Soled illegally in (ho June I D em ocrat.c pnm ary T h e com plaints were tiled after representatives o fth e T r a v is County Y D ’s and the U niversity YD s m et with county^attcr officers to discuss the findings of an investigation b> Palp Rash, assistant county attorney. TMF COMPLAINTS, filed before Justice of the P eace Jam es M c M u r U y ^ a re c b s s iiie d cross-over voters. IT WOULD be illegal to have voted in the Republican prim ary sr™ J2fYid'ay,'the Travis County YD S and U niversity YI) s said the county attorney’s office w as reluctant to prosecute the alleged violators. However, John Augustine, first assistant county attorney. X c e w iU p r o s e c u t e t h is c a se jU sk e d the°only party filing t h e complaints because there was space on the legal form s for his name only. Mc Mur try said Monday that the county attorney s oft ice will CERTIFIED letters will be sen t to the persons named in the com plaints McMurtry said They will be told to appear before h isT ou riat i p rn July 9. lf they plead innocent, a trial date w ill Pentony asked the U niversity for When the U niversity denied Pentony’s request, the Houston representative ask­ ^ T r a v i s County YD’s and the University YD ’s said Friday they w ere considering filing the com plaints to bring to ju stice those who have damaged our party and discourage future violations of the Texas E lection Code. The investigation began when defeated county com m issioner candidate D are Dorsett and his staff uncovered the alleged a , Class C misdemeanors, carrying a access to data relating to Universityleased lands. large number of the alleged violations cam e from (rom the nort^ f J section of Austin, with a large concentration in a single la rw ^STEVIE MCGUIRE, T ravis County >’D vice-president, said a be set. * I Closed Session Approval System Budget Up 1 0 % Bv RICHARD FLY Texan Staff Writer The U n iv e r s ity S y stem Board of Regents Friday ap­ proved a $408 million 1974-1975 b u d g e t fo r S y s t e m a d ­ ministration and 12 compo­ nent institutions, almost a IO percent increase over last year. Included in that amount is $142,242,651 for the Austin campus, an increase of almost 12 percent. MOST ITEMS ir. the Austin budget increased both in the amount of estim ated income and estim ated expenditures. The larger percentage in­ creases generally occurred in the lesser dollar item s. One of the m ost significant increases w as in fellowships and scholarships, which rose 88.7 percent to $500,000. Part of the increase results from the addition of $100,000 ap­ propriated to the minority scholarship fund. E x p en d itu re on facu lty salaries increased by almost $1.8 m illion, or 5.3 percent. Approximately $300,000 of the in crease is a 3.4 percent across the board faculty pay raise approved by the 63rd Legislature. Organized research expen­ ditures jumped 19 percent to almost $4.4 million. The A v a ila b le Fund in­ creased by slightly more than $4 million to $36,358,000. R egent Frank C. Erwin justified consideration of the budget in closed session by saying that the few questions which were raised related to personnel matters. F E W . IF A NY , of th e regents actually read the en­ tire itemized budget. Erwin s a id , but concerned th e m s e lv e s w ith th e in ­ stitutions or item s in which they were most interested. In construction b u sin ess, the board ratified contract aw ard s for the College of Fine Arts, the Performing Arts Center and the Special Events Center THE TOTAL project cost for the arts center is $7,948,500 and the special events center, $28,809,000. As is becoming more and m o re common, the arts center p r ic e w as above o r ig in a l U n iv ersity e s t im a t e s , but within the total project cost. Regents also considered a report on possible expansion of the University power plant a n d a p p o in te d a p r o je c t engineer. Pow er System s of Houston. THE CONSULTANTS who p e r fo r m e d th e stu d y recommended the University purchase a 30 m egaw att (Mw) steam turbine generator for o p e r a tio n by e a r ly 1976, although a slowdown in pre­ sent electrical consumption might allow the University to wait until 1978-1979. Cost of the generator is $4.5 million. H owever, the U niversity would have to m ake som e ad­ ditions to its present equip­ ment by 1979 at a cost of $20 000 and purchase two ad­ ditional 30 Mw transformer ties with the City of Austin by 1980-1981, at an estim ated cost of $2.1 million. In c r e a se d g e n e r a tin g capacity is necessary because of present construction pro­ jects. The new generator should m e e t e l e c t r i c a l d em a n d through 1982-1983. P A R K IN G PROBLEM ? Co-Op Consumer Action Line 478-4436 M onday thru Friday 8:30-5:30 A S O L U T IO N — P A R K AT DO BIE M A L L 'S G A R A G E . 2 HRS. F R E E W ITH A N Y P U R C H A SE . FOR N O N - S H O P P E R S , THE R A T E IS O N LY 36“ THE F IR S T H O U R A N D 15’ FOR E A C H J HOUR THEREAFTER OR ... TO R E A L L Y S A V E , B U Y A P A R K IN G P E R M IT 6 WEEKS $ 4 0 .0 0 12 WEEKS $ 5 5 .0 0 O N S A L E M O N . - F R I . D O B I E G A R A G E 9 -5 P.M. n O B X E T he C onsum er A c tio n L ine is a way for you to voice your op in ion o f th e Co-O p to us d irectly. W e w ant to hear your co m p la in ts, suggestions, ideas and an yth in g else that you w ant to say. W e'll listen . AH you have to do is dial 4 7 8 -1 4 3 6 and speak to a guy nam ed M ichael and tell him w hat you feel. And you can call anytim e during th e store hou rs. W e're here to serve you. And if you d o n 't fe el like giving us a call th en you can drop us a lin e. M ail them to Co-Op A ctio n L in e, 2 2 4 6 G uadalupe. P .O . D raw er 7520. T he Co-O p d oesn 't m ind if you com p lain , th at’s how we try to im p rove service for you. gSHa rage OPDOW* - PARK Call anytime during store hours. M a s te r Wafca—art- The University Co-Op Whilis & 2tJth Street rehabilitation course is its alcoholism which had serious­ By TOM KNUTSEN By CHARLES DEAN m em bers’ belief in curing not ly deteriorated your capabili­ Narconon is either a major Texan Staff Writer For the first tim e in 15 ty of sa tisfa cto ry perfor­ breakthrough in drug abuse just drug addiction but in help­ y e a r s, U n iv e r sity reg en ts mance as a faculty m em ber.'’ r e h a b ilit a tio n or it is a ing the addict resolve the • "Coming to class in a con- remarkable piece of public problem s that led him to have officially terminated the ■Irugs. To do this, the program tenure of a University System d it io n d e s c r ib e d a s i n ­ relations. toxicated." Deriving its name from the tries to build the patient s faculty mem ber. • “ F a ilu r e to m e e t term "non-narcosis” meaning self-confidence. The unanimous action up­ Communication techniques absence of stupor, the Nar­ held a faculty review com ­ classes." • “ Failure to give final ex­ conon program plans to open play a large part in the treat­ m ittee’s recommendation on ment. In the workshop held D r . R o n a ld C . E n g l e , ams as scheduled." an office in Austin. • “ Other general conduct in BY ITS own adm ission, Monday afternoon for Austin’s a s s o c ia t e p r o fe s s o r of the classroom which has con­ Narconon uses unorthodox drug treatment groups, Maren sociology at UT-Arlington. At a regents’ m eeting Fri­ s is t e d a dereliction of duty methods to cure drug addicts. had participants pair off a w la day, Regent Frank C. Erwin and a source of em barrass­ Its techniques derive from stare at each other tor a m o v ed to te r m in a te th e ment to your students and Scientology, emphasizing con­ minute. Simply sitting still centration and comm unica­ and looking at another person professor’s tenure after the your colleagu es.” A fter the testim o n y of tion to end narcotics addic­ is the first step in the long board considered a transcript series of exercises leading to of the review com m ittee's sev era l students and UTA tion. In a series of m eetings with cure. hearing, a brief from E ngle’s faculty m em bers, the com ­ ANOTHER PART of .Mar attorney and a brief from the m ittee recommended to the the Austin press and represen­ Board of Regents that tenure tatives of local drug treat­ conon’s work is instruction in University System attorney. ment program’s Narconon of­ drug prevention. In several Tile seven-m em ber faculty be term inated. E n gle had been at UTA fic ia ls announced Monday California school sy stem s review co m m ittee at UTtheir intention to open a facili­ Narconon clinics work to dis Arlington m et May 9 and IO to since 1968 and acquired tenure suade school children from investigate com plaints made in 1970 when he was promoted ty in Austin. The program advertises an trying drugs. by s t u d e n ts and fa c u lty to a ss o c ia te professor. He Even though the impression astoundingly high 85 percent m e m b e r s a b o u t E n g l e ’s is also an ordained minister Narconon made w as one of and has worked with several cure rate among its patients. behavior in the classroom . E ngle received a letter youth programs in Arlington This figure has raised som e slick public relations, it did a ro u se c u r io s ity am on g A pril 5 fr o m D r. W. H. churches. doubts. Marvin Collins, attorney for Jerry “ Gandalf” Burrus, A u stin ’s drug tr e a t m e n t N ed d erm an , p resid en t of director of Freedom Connec­ groups. U T A , w h ic h l i s t e d s i x E n gle, said in his closin g statem ent at the hearing that tion , A u stin ’s m eth adone charges: “ In co m p eten t p erfor­ E ngle has already recognized treatment center, said federal OFFICIAL AGENCY mance and behavior in the his problem of alcoholism and drug projects report a 9 per­ classroom and on cam pus had attended two clinics as cent cure rate. Members of A u stin ’s M en ta l H e a lth which is detrim ental to your p a rt o f a r e h a b ilit a tio n Mental Retardation offices department and to the Univer­ program. C o llin s r e c o m m e n d e d were as skeptical as Burrus. sity.” ARTIE MAREN of Nar­ “ The p r o b le m o f several alternatives, among them leave of absence until conon said the project counts a u t h o r iz e d rehabilitation was completed only those who com plete the satisfactorily. SA L E S & REPA IRS first stages of its course. M aren e m p h a s iz e d N a r ­ conon s success by pointing out it has 35 programs in the United States and others in N ew Z e a la n d , A u s tr a lia , Great Britain and in continen­ tal Europe U n d e r ly in g N a r c o n o n ’s Q OMEGA You're looking for a new apartment... 'N Consider the quiet privacy under the spreading oak trees of our one bedroom apartments for S I 6 5 All Bills Paid (•■ U n tru e r t O m H m t F tm N r iu n f w it a t t I Regents Vote Narconon To Cut Tenure! Plans Office C h a ffs Palo Blanco 911 Blanco 472-1030 OMEGA ORIENTATION STUDENTS When You Preregister For Fall, '74 ... O m e g a w atch e s are universally re c o g n iz e d as be ing a m o n g the finest h ig h -p re c isio n w atche s in the world. In fact O m e g a Ele ctro nics are the only electronics with a chronom eter rating. O m e g a Ele ctronic Constellation C hronom eter in sta in le ss steel waterresistant c a se and m atching integral bracelet. D atetelling dial. $426 DON'T CHECK OFF "O M T M M V O " I A U LiM DAl! V H I AOS im iotas! ta. nu GumtuH ‘ Lie Bulova & Pat. E S A T h e Da il y T ex a IT'S YOUR STUDENT N E W SP A P E R AT THE UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS AT A U S T I N You know that good camera you’ve always wanted but never quite had the money to buy? Mamiya has the one y o u ’re look­ ing for at affordable prices. The amazing creative switch of this widely accalimed 35mm SLH camera gives you a choice of two separate thru-the-lens meters for perfect exposures in any set­ ting. Its universal thread mount provides total lens in­ terchangeability and the lens is ideal for low lighl level shooting. The University Co-Op Camera Shop has these models in stock now: 5 0 0 DTL When you receive your Optional Student Services Fee Card, read your instructions carefully! Fill in your name and Social Security number — BUT DONT MARK THE TEXAN SLOT — leave it blankT This way you will be subscribing to The Texan for next year! *134.95 $159.95 M 74.95 with 50m m f2.0 lens I OOO DTL with 55m m f 1.8 lens 1000 DTL with 55m m f 1.4 lens University Co-Op QMER4 Shop Second Floor One Hour free parking w ith purchase of $2 or more ^ BarkAm ericard and MasterCharge Welcome warn Power Plant Site in Doubt A a e n cVv M O ^ © f l y mw 9 U t By KEN MCHAM Texan Staff Writer A federal agency is in vestigatin g government land in Bastrop County as an alternate site for Austin’s proposed coalpower plant. The Lower Colorado River Authority ‘ 1 (LCRA) and the City of Austin plan to k build the plant in F ayette County near La Grange and are under suit by landowners there to determ ine why alternate sites cannot be used. t W W M ay / J ^ n o o a H m p n t o f D efense. Interior and the Department of Defense. “ We’re getting in position to be able to do that in the Camp Swift case but haven’t had the opportunity, Wheat said “ We would be very responsive to a request from LCRA or the City of Austin.” .. Wheat said definitive action would reauire “ an overture from LCRA and Austin, so that we can say ‘If y ° u’[ e J1); terested, the process teresteci, this tnis is uie pi «available. - tion. WHEAT SAID the council is “trying to establish a working relationship among the various governmental a g en a es who might have an interest m the Camp Swift area ” These include the Federal Energy Administration, the General Services Administration, the of m e Department u ep d .u ..c » ............ LORA a n a g er Charles Herr­ Herr* LCRA General M Manager ing said Monday he was not aware of the council’s investigation of the Camp Swift ^LC R A ’S SITE study for the project, by B e c h te l P o w er Corp. of H ou ston, eliminated the Camp Swift site in their review of three earlier site selection reports by other consultants. Herring said engineering reports conm Marshall said the markets estim ated that they would handle 13,900 s augh tar steers this Monday, compared to 26,iou By The Associated P ress L iv e sto c k s u p p lie s a t M id * £ s t markets were way below normal Mon­ day as some cattle feeders and hog farmers held out for higher prices. Bill Marshall, supervisor of the Kan­ sas City livestock market, said a check of l l Midwest operations, indicated the number of cattle was alm ost 50 percent below the total last week^ “ Farm ers are holding their cattle am hogs off the market," he said. I Bom b Start* Blaze at W estm inster H all A bomb LONDON (U P I) presum ed planted by the Irish Republican Army exploded a few yards from the cham ber of the House of Com m ons Monday, settin g fire to 90 0 -year-old Westm i n s t e r H a ll , o n e of th e k in g d o m ’ s m o s t h a llo w e d buildings. Scotland Yard said l l persons w ere injured, although only one — a cleaning wom an — was hospitalized with a broken leg. A lthough p o lice w ould not definitely say the bom ber who b reached the tig h t se c u r ity around P arliam ent w a s an IRA m em ber, a ca ller w ith an Irish accen t who warned of the bomb used a code word em ployed prior to previous b lasts attributed to the organization. The bomb, which shattered a gas m ain, setting off a fire, caus­ ed c o n s id e r a b le d a m a g e to various room s of W estm inster Hail, but only ligh t dam age in -UPI Telephoto the G reat Hall itse lf with its ce n tu ries-o ld h a m m er beam C h in a a France Conduct Nuclear Tests officia ls out below the 20.000-ton range, probably a m issile w arneaa. N eith er F rance nor China announced the tests, but they w ere confirmee m S r s said China s e r o s i o n took p lace rn the ^ Nor testin g arca rn S in to n * p r o v id e , abouce 1,500 m .le s w est of Peking. Su o re m a Court U p h o ld s Kerner Conviction w a chum p TON i U P I I — T h e Suprem e Court le t stand Monday the four* c o m d crim in al^ on vieHon o, formed Illinois Gov, Otto Kerner dr the fr a t f e d e r a l judge found guilty of a felony w hile still on the bench ^ n a b r i e f order and w ithout com m en t, the court refused to h e a r th e a r g u m e n t s Of t o n e r s attorneys that a judge m ust have been im peached by th e H ouse and rem oved by the Senate before he can be convicted in a " t o n e r w a s r found guilty last year of m ail fraud, conspiracy, tax evasm n and perjury in connection with his dealings in race track^stock. » h iIe w as governor He w as given a three-yea. jail sen ten ce and a OOO fim s In h s anneal Kerner argued that under the Constitution, only Cengross c l i t o r a l ju d ges who serv e for life if they m aintain good b e h a v io r ” in The Dow Jones a verage ol JO industrials closed down 9.86 at 833 23. D eclin es sw am ped ad­ v an ces by 1,037 to 336 am ong 1,744 issu es traded on the New York Stock Exchange. Big Board volum e w as an ex ­ trem ely light total of 9.68 m illion sh ares, the sm a lle st sin ce May K alm b ach le ave s federal court after sentencing. Kalmbach Given 6 to 18 Months WASHINGTON (U P I) - H erbert W Kalmbach, President N ixon s fornner personal law yer, was sentenced Monday to six to 18 months in prison and fined $10,000 for his part in W atergate-related matters. . U.S. Dist. Judge John J. Sirica gavt Kalmbach six to 18 months and the fine on one count, and six months on a second , a u I d m rd ho Hni Kt nn SSchool ch o o l BBoard oard tv ____ m emubers Af of tthe Houston of Trustees as well as presiding judges on the court of appeals. Mrs. Weber and others contended that the Houston Independent School District was effectively establishing a secular religion by teaching the D ar*;in‘ar) theory of evolution They asked that either no evolution theories he taught at all or that the Bible version be required j. as well. .. Seals based his original ruling_on a I * * Supreme Court decision stem m ing from ft. c tm r ti an Arkansas ,law prohibiting in instruction of evolution as unconstitutional He said since neither Houston nor T exas had statutes either mandating or forbidding evolution instruction, there w ere no legal grounds to bring the suit. • Teachers of science in the public schools should not be expected to avoid the discussion of every scien tific issue on which som e religion claim s expertise. Seals said. count, the sentences to run concurrently. The penalty could have been as much as three years and $11,000. “I want to say how deeply I am em ­ barrassed and how much I regret stan­ ding here this afternoon. Kalmbach said in his only words to Sirica. He stood erect, his hands at his Slde_ His usually tanned face was lined and pale. Later, he refused comm ent for reporters. , .. __ SIRICA SAID Kalmbach should serve the sentence in a federal minimum security institution, such as Danbury. Conn., or Allenwood. Pa., or a sim ilar in­ stitution on the West Coast where kaim bach lives. He was ordered to surrender two weeks from Monday. Jam es H. O'Connor. Phoenix. A m his attorney and friend of 25 years, read a sentence from a letter given to the probation o fficer in explaining why K a lm b a c h b e c a m e in v o l v e d in W“ H efts6 a man who accepts without hesitation the truth of statem ents from those he has accepted as friends. In explaining Kalmbach’s involvement 1 in raising hush funds for the original Watergate defendants shortly after the 1972 break-in at Democratic O’Connor told Sirica, “ When he realjMjjJ his trust was m isplaced, he turned oft his C°O Tcm nor d iffe r e n tia te d b etw een Kalmbach's “ blind spot" in allowing his trust to be m isplaced and a man acting out of loyalty to do a w rong when he knew it was wrong.” KALMBACH PLEADED guilty F e E 25 to two violations of the old lo r r u p B ractlet ; Act. soliciting $3.9 million in funds for an illegally organized cam ­ paign co m m ittee and offering a E uro­ pean am bassadorship in return for a $ 10.000 c o n tr ib u tio n f r o m J t i l Symington Jr. One was a felony, the other a misdemeanor Svmington. a Maryland politician, who was ambassador to Trinidad and I obago at the tim e, did not receive an am ­ bassadorship in Europe. • She said the suit will also name m inon- NEW YORK (A P ) - New York Stock Exchange closing index M arket............................................cents In d ex.............................. 47.33 off 0,65 lndus ............................. 52.86 off 0.70 Trans •• • 34.01 off 0.35 UtUitv ".*-* • •• • 2911 0{f 0 43 F in a n c e ........................... 51.86 off 0 91 6. Bullock W a n ts Funds Used Locally ( UPI) — The $250,000 the T exas D em ocratic Party exp ects to ™ P a r t i c i p a t i o n in a national party teleth on June 29 and 30 should be used for local voter registration and geU o u U h e-v o te d rives, orrmtroller candidate Bob Bullock said in Austin Monday. B u llo c k said the poor turnout in the May 4 prim ary the funds are needed for grassroots work to build up the pal tv a u s t in N° S UPI Tai*photo S3id* “The stings them selves are irritating, and a person scratching them can cause infections that often become a serious m edical problem, he said. Vinson said som e people are sensitive to the sting, and death has resulted in rare cases. “ The ants are not only a problem to the farm er.” he said. “ They’re also in D allas, San Antonio and Houston and mav invade other metropolitan areas where people water their lawns and create islands of damp ground.’ he said. . ,i states r a te s H erald the problem is not the destruc­ tion of vegetables, but “ where the fire ants have taken over, the stings o he ants would keep the pickers out of the fields,” and the vegetables would be left to die and rot. “The ants swarm rapidly on a person who disturbs their mound, and before he knows it he can be stung by large numbers of them at one tim e. \m so n HOUSTON (UPI) - The head of the Solid Rock League of Women said Mon­ day her group planned to fil* a $W million lawsuit against a federal judge and other public officials over handling of a petition opposing the teaching oi evolution in public schools Mrs. Leona Weber said U.S. Dist. Judge Woodrow Seals denied her an­ tievolution group due process in handling of a suit asking that public schools use texts giving equal tim e to the Genesis theory of creation when discu ssin g evolution. , The U.S. Supreme Court refused Mon­ day to hear the challenge. Seals had ruled earlier that Mrs. Weber, mother of a school child, had no constitutional grounds on which to bring her case. The Fifth U.S. C iieuit t our o Appeals in New Orleans agreed “They denied us protection under the regress of grievances and all the Bill ol Rights was denied to us in this case. Mrs Weber said “ We can prove our case We hav< found out that evolution is involved in the Marxist philosophy and ii has been kept secret by public school officials.” . ... Mrs Weber said the suit which will be filed later in the sum m er, will ask $1 million in dam ages for each of the w In te re s t H o p e s D w in d le NEW YORK ( AP ) The stock m arket continued to d igest r e c e n t g ain s M onday a s in­ v e s t o r s saw h o p e s d w in d le further for a falloff in interest COLLEGE STATION (UPI) “ F ir* ants are marching through the state s metropolitan areas, apparently headed for the soft and damp vegetable-growing areas of South Texas. “ They’re moving rapidly down the Gulf Coast of T exas,” saic entom ologist Bradleigh Vinson of Texas A&M U niver­ sity. “ It would cause serious problems in the Rio Grande Valley if it got into the vegetable-growing areas. The ants like plowed areas where the soil is soft and Antievolution Group Plans Suit ceiling. ‘“ he O t t e e ^b lis t drep to t h e A s^ n d esert w a s described by the Indian " Ant Sw arm Threatens South Texas Hearing Denied NEW YORK (U P I) - China and F ran ce exploded nuclear bombs in ie t m o s p h e r e o n ,; hours apar. Monday, the first tim e ,n h .story two such b^ cluded eluded the Camp Swift site would “ re­ o o lin g lake so large large it quire a ccooling lake so it we would flood out the lignite deposits in the area.” LCRA is testing Camp Swift land to determ ine the extent of its lignite reserves. The Federal Property Council ad­ m i n is t e r s th e P r o p e r t y R e v ie w Program * w h ich id e n tifie s su rp lu s government land and turns it over to state and local governments for certain uses ALTHOUGH ENERGY sites are not among the uses statutorily established for the program, they have been made a high priority by President Nixon In April, Nixon instructed all govern­ m ent agen cies and departm ents to review their real property policies to in­ sure their consistency with the country s energy objectives. They were ordered to make surplus lands available for eneigy sites, Wheat said. “ We’ve made no judgm ert. Wheat said. “ We’re just trying to pull together all the information.’’ la Hog1receipts also were down, Marshall said wHh a'n estim ated total of 39,700 hogs at the l l m arkets compared to 55,100 last week. The withholding action — which did not have the support of all the cattlem en - c arne as food industry experts m et in Washington to try to do som ething about the problem. , Kenneth Rush, President N ixons top econom ic adviser, said after the meeting that “ the Administration is exploring w ays for benefiting the m eat industry. Rush and Agriculture Secretary Earl L. Butz said telegram s would be sent to retailers and w holesalers asking them to review their costs and retail prices with the aim of reducing them. To help the markets, the government is expected to announce two steps con­ clusion of an agreem ent with Canada to reopen its markets to U.S. beef, to help r e lie v e a gutted p ip e lin e , and an accelerated purchase of m eat for next fa ll’s school lunch program. whlch an' nuallv buys $360 million worth of food. The secretary said the purchases have to be made som etim e, and he is definite­ ly in favor of them now. W holesale prices have been declining in recent months and the cattlem en — particularly the feedlot operators who fatten the cattle for market say they’re selling their anim als tor less than they paid for them. At the sam e tim e. however, retail prices are above last year's levels, causing consum ers to complain. The m a rk et institute director at the South St. Paul, Minn., livestock market, Steve Loeding, said the cattlem en were playing a waiting game. “ 1”dlcJ tM)"sIf ^ that help is coming from Washington n the form of loans for th ese ca ttle feeders. .. They have the attitude that they can t lose any m ore money by holding back their stock for a few days. /-news capsules W estm inster Fire telfe T s h I .u td T tT u y in Austin. ’ he said. ITS com ing from the D em ocrats out in the cou n ties, and it should go back there. i Aid Austin; Landowners Threaten Suit Holdouts Reduce Supplies of Meat T H E IN V E S T IG A T IO N , by th e Federal Property Council in Washington, will examine the possibility of turning over the inactive Camp Swift military reservation to LCRA and Austin for the plant’s site. . David Wheat, staff coordinator for the council, said he instructed the staff to look into the Camp Swift site in response to letters from the mayor of Bastrop and an attorney representing the F ayette County Landowners Protective Associa­ m Energy Czar To Refuse Industry Job P ' WASHINGTON ( AP) — John C. Sawhill, nominated to head the new Federal Energy Administration, pledged Monday not to take a job in the energy in­ dustries when he eventually leaves the government. , The Senate confirmed Sawhill for the job in a voice vote Monday but then rescinded its approval temporarily after Democratic Leader Robert C. Byrd of West Virginia explained he had forgotten a promise to let Sen. James Abourezk, S D., speak against Sawhill's confirmaAfter the first Senate action, Sawhill issued a statem ent rejecting in advance a future energy industry job and volun­ tarily revealing his persona! finances. The statem ent showed Sawbill s net worth to be about $132,800 On May 7, legislation was signed to es­ tablish in its place a Federal Energy Ad­ ministration. but the legislation was not to take effect for 60 days unless the President ordered it into effect sooner. 747 To Fly Spacecraft To Florida '■ rn UPI Going U p? A balloon v .n d ., o P P . o i . i.o d y to J I * . orbit a, h . . i t . w a i t * , for c o , ..m er, at a .scent Boy Scout exhibition In Kansas C. y. SPACE CENTER, Houston (AP) - A modified Boeing 747 will be used to transport the space shuttle orbiter and other hardware a cross country, the National Aeronautics and Space Ad­ ministration announced Monday. The space shuttle program, scheduled to become operational about 1980, is be­ ing designed to launch an orbiter capable of remaining in earth orbit a week or more and then re-enter the atm osphere and make runway landings sim ilar lo conventional aircraft Original plans had called tor six engines to be installed on the delta­ winged, 123-foot orbiter for flight testing and ferrying equipment from the West Coast to the Kennedy Space Center. F la.. launch site. Monday’s announcement said a used 747-100 aircraft will be acquired (rom American Airlines at an estim ated cost of $16 million * guest viewpoint EDITORIALS For sale or rent: second-hand canards Page 4 Tuesday, June 18, 1974 Explaining ourselves Tho term "no-crow lh” is a troublesome phrase. Politicians don't know when to use it businessmen are afraid of it and conservative b e p a p e r editors laugh at it And no one - with few people excluded - understands “ Talk about no-growth. and you will hear of what it means Protein food will be stricken from our diets. Pouceme wiN be stationed on IH 35 to turn back immigrants. Soma will be d.stributed And as the Amencan-SUtesman was punted in last A u s t i n “ S T T rerm r no-growthr™ a" misnomer' It was a global that turned into a political slogan. And in the world of Austin p h ilosophy tave^oplace'in catling for a blanket halt ♦hot overtaken the city. We are too much a part of it. Austin Champer of Commerce portfolios advertise the manpowertheUnwersity provides as an incentive for business to locate here Austin offers, and we here. And when that happens, that is growth. onHrPiv it The Texan cannot ask the Austin City Council to s ° ^ g™ _ tried is illegal. A small community outside San Francisco federal to limit the number of houses that could be built each year . And a federal judge ruled Ute plan unconstitutional, saying "it was in mo a ion > ^ S t u d e n t s r ‘ YetlVeraoaen enum erate the harmful effects of growth We could point o u I m e HunnLutt Houses that are being destroyed for parking tote We can printout the Wildings that ravage the Hill Country We can point out His last landslide y ii* * drome on a local scale. . checkine the Ideally, governments serve people in a limited na tare, checking me abuses of private individuals. Throughout the two centuries of this^coun­ try's development, this role of government has become grossly distorted. Government now plays a role of promotion. It promotesMhe special ita teres Is of those special people who run the governments. The values of the leaders are translated into the values of the people. Never mind if y don't believe what the used-car-dealer-mayor believes. You are going to get what is best for his business. It has been the manifest destiny - as some president once said - of Americans to grow. No one minded when the rall^ a t the people moved to the West just as Horace Greeley told them, But when he boundless expansion was bound, Americans began inner-grow . S H K waste, over-population - and the no-growth philosophy. Now, Austin is seeking IU manifest destiny. City Projections say that this city will grow to twice its size by the year 2000. I ar be it from The Texan to attempt to stop this. For if people want to move to Austin, they should move to Austin. It’s quite nice here, thank you. Yet this niceness disappears every day. with each new Daniel B o o n e construction firm carving out a suburbia. is seeking out its manifest destiny; in the same way America as a whole did - through asthetic and environmental exploitation. A u s t i n And The Texan will attempt to stop this. Not the growth which is deter­ mined bv the people, but the tools of the local government which provide the incentives for this excessive growth to exist. Even multipliers such as Dallas and Houston have stopped paying utili­ r e b a t a s to developers. Austin continues to do so. These rebates sub­ sidize builders in their activities by providing city tax money for private development. ty The local utility rates are regressive. The more electricity one uses, t e less per unit that person pays. Large users are given Urge dlscou" s which doesn’t make a lot of sense considering the city is about to build a nuclear and a coal plant because of the lack of power. Austin is building a new freeway, roads through parks and has plans for expansion for nearly every existing thoroughfare to keep up w. growth predictions. These roads are the means to the end. And right now, the end is Dallas or Houston. This is what The Texan will attack, not growth altogether. Though we are indeed scared by the scare tactics of “Limit* to Growth" (Potomac Associates, $1.25), these ideas are moral. No one knows right now whether these restrictions are necessary But what is necessary is to stop Austin from subsidizing business. If Austin’s commercial enterprises are indeed this area’s manifest deslin> let them show us their entrepreneurship without the aid of the city government the D a il y T e x a n U » tvr* l**r S h«U »t M r t v,w w$ i fp WmKp”,r mf »■ rh ‘ * —-------------- •# *rfA » t H * va late? Probably not. Tr^ [ei{ # J Martha J P McQuade Ken McHam. Anne M arie News A ssistants............................................ Owen Spain. Jose F f o r e « . ^ r e ( t o t o Contributors...................................... Bryan Bromley, Sally Carpenter. S u sa n Lindee Editorial A ssistant........................................................................................ . Associate Amusements E d ito r ................................................................... Camoos “ tsS E ditor.............................................. Make-Up E ditor............................... Uodv Ed itors ..'.......*' -• Mae Beth Palone, Debbie Turner. Shannon Wilson, Jeff Newman, G. Lynn Hufford, Jo Ann Tower. Doug Burton Opinions expressed in The Daily Texan are those of the editor or the writer of ‘he article and are not Necessarily •.hose of the University administration or the Board of Regents The- Daily Texan, a student newspaper at The University of Texas at Aasun, is published by Texas Student Publications, Drawer D, University Station Austin. Tex 78712 Toe Danv Texan is published Monday. Tu-sday, Wednesday, Thursday, and Friday September through Mac, and Tuesday. Wednesday Thursday, and Friday June through August, except holiday and exam periods Second­ class postage paid al Austin. Tex New s contributions will be accepted by telephone >471 459l> at the editorial office (Texas Student Publications I .john Fuller B u H d m j^ « n J A tf l ^ ^ o r a U U w e ^ j^ mumcation Building A4136) Inquiries concerning delivery and classified advertising should be made in TSP Bunding 3 200 ( 471-5244' and display advertising in TSP Building 3.219 (471-18651 The national a d v ersin g representative of ihe Daily Texan is National Educational Advertising Service, Inc HIO Lexington Ave New York N Y . 10017 The Daily Texan subscribes to The Associated Presa, United Press International and Pacific News Service The Texan is a member of the Associated Collegiate Press the Southwest Journalism Congress and the Texas Daily Newspaper Association Recycling stations for the newspaper are at 24th & beton Streets 8100 N Burnet Road U k e Austin Boulevard 4 Red Bud Tmfl and i W S Lakeshore Blvd sider the recent raid upon Bevo’s in which local police clubbed, beat and Maced a large number of people who. by most accounts, posed no threat what­ soever to anyone or anything ... No of­ ficer has been suspended or fired from the police departm ent as a result of the com plaints.” What “ accounts” is Derek referring to? If he had talked to any of the people arrested at Bevo’s or to Papa Max or to the owner or workers at Bevo's he would have discovered that no Mace was used and only one person was clubbed That person never filed a com plaint In fact, the only complaints the police heard were from Papa Max, The Texan and The Rag. Were the police supposed to fire or suspend a policeman on the basis of those complaints? The police didn t even bother with an investigation other than reviewing each officer s report, after which the one policeman who had clubbed a handcuffed prisoner got nothing more than a chewing out from his superiors. Austin needs a Citizens Review Board to ‘oversee police discipline. We aren t '--'n* firing line Police brutality facts ISSUE STAFF ca th tions and all the other financial wizardry you and I can only read about could buy up effective control of the American economy. , T h a n k s to M e s s r s . F o r d a n d Rockefeller, it was possible for us to build a way of life to which automotive transportation and petroleum are essen­ tial. At least, we act as if they were, which amounts to much the sam e thing. At the same time, with an ingenuity and resourcefulness which is a credit to our species, we have constructed a socie­ ty which is so interrelated economically that everything is a part of everything Interlocking directorates and overlap­ ping corporations and The Power E lite and the M ilitary-Industrial Complex (and, for those so minded, the inter­ national bankers’ conspiracy, I suppose). Take your pick. Wherever you sta rt, you can end up wherever you want to. As m egalom aniacal as Ford and Rockefeller were, I doubt thai th05^?liNMg in m ind making it possible to sell America. In fact, no one had it in m iM . But Hardin’s Law operates You can’t do just one thing. You can t, for ixantple, put all your eggs in one basket and hot tem pt the fox. In all this there is some sour satisfac­ tion. We can all snigger at the Rotariafcs and Legionnaires who kept our e y e f u l the wrong ball. But can we anything, even now that it’s probably too because he did .. . nutrient* fripnrishinfor forthe thepremeditated premeditated down down around around his his ears ea cultivate friendship what he saw as his duty. The government “ I’m as sorry as you are. but the Bap­ purpose of backstabbing. He did not use By STEVE RUSSELL doesn’t want to reim burse him under the tists are raising hell again and the a position of confidence, like a resident Oklahoma was dry when I grew up mayor’s up for re-election. I can t take Tort Claims Act because no government assistant in a dorm, to make cases there, and one of the town bootleggers agent was negligent, and the DEA won t M r. can I? ” against people who w ere supposed to lived half a block up the red dirt street pay up because he wasn t their employe* “ No, I guess you can t. How long will it rely on him for counsel. It was strictly a from my house. His two sons were Having been shafted by the finest be?” among the few white kids I knew when I business deal. bureaucracies — the Air Force, tilt“ Can’t say....” w as v e ry s m a ll, For $10,000, Black was to fly to Lima, V eterans Administration, the University because the rutted, They let him say goodbye to his wife Peru, and bring three pounds of cocaine — I can say with authority that this man unpaved s tr e e t and kids and then we didn t see him back through customs. The two people is getting the royal shaft. signified the dividing again for a long time. His wife took over who hired him to do this were both G eorge Black is in this position line between very the business, and his sons stayed home a University students, and obviously both because, through no fault of his own, he lot The neighborhood wasn’t the sam e p o o r w h ite s an d idiots; the bust went off like clockwork. lives in that insane get-the-pusher fan­ even when he got out, because all his “ niggertow n.” Too They were both convicted tasy world that has supported so many customers felt a little guilty about the young to understand political careers and destroyed so many Subsequently, Black’s apartm ent was the prerogatives of whole thing. His prison term was on lives He actually believes that there are vandalized, with virtually all of his per­ everyone’s mind but no one would talk my skin, I mostly “ pushers” who account for a significant sonal belongings destroyed and damage played with black kids until segregation about it, so people just picked up their p art of drug traffic and actually touch totaling $30,000. When his insurance sent them off to another school and we bottles and went quickly home the stuff and therefore can be caught. He carriers heard of his peril, they did their drifted apart like classm ates past that This was one of my ea rliest ex ­ actually believes that a crackdown does bit by cancelling his insurance on Ice graduation fork in the road, somehow periences with police, and it s one reason something besides raise the price. ^ Boxes. And te m p o rarily without in­ sensing that things are no longer the why I have a hard time feeling sorry for I think I would probably like George surance, he nearly lost his leases. George Black. According to a very well same. Black, partially because he considers the Because of death threats, agents of the The other bootlegger served the done story by Mike Kelley in the June 16 g re a te st loss among his destroyed Drug Enforcement Administration mov­ “ private clubs” in the better part of American-Statesman. George Black is belongings to be his books. Perhaps if I ed Black into the Sheraton-Crest. advan­ town. I never saw him, but sometim es an Austin businessman currently on the could show him comparisons between cing him $300 on expenses. When he we would run up his driveway, crouching verge of bankruptcy and suffering the the effects of drugs and the effects of checked out, he had to pay about $900 of behind the tall green hedge the way Roy tortures only a bureaucracy can inflict drug laws, perhaps if I could convince the bill from his own pocket. The DEA Rogers would do it, to see what the new because he followed his conception of him that he was only cutting competition boys also suggested th at he carry a gun Oldsmobile looked like. Later, when I civic duty and became a narc. for the Mafia - maybe he would unders­ but could get him no authorization to do was old enough to have a paper route, I Black, owner of the Ice Box ice cream tand why I find it so very, very hard ti He carries one illegally. so. found that he had hired one of my ex­ parlors, did not engage in the clearly sympathize with a narc. coming This businessman’s life playm ates to answ er his door. We odious forms of narcing. He did not averted our eyes and played our roles. I always told him it was $1.95. he always gave me $2 and said “ Keep the nickel.’ And I always shuffled silently down the marble steps, ashamed to recognize him or to ask what the house looked like in­ side. Our bootlegger, the one with red dust in his hair and a body broken from work in the oilfields, was a decent sort. He served white and black at the same prices — a rarity in those days, he ex­ tended credit just before the welfare checks came, and he always tossed in long green when the hat cam e around for a neighborhood family struck by illness or accident. His sons taught me to play basketball, but I was too fat to be much good as a result of the high carbohydrate diet my sociology professor told me is one of the indicia of poverty. One day, the chief of police came barreling up our street, raising great red clouds and terrorizing chickens. We could tell he was on business because another officer was with him. The town’s only police car thumped to a halt with one last spray of gravel from our b o o tle g g e r's driveway s k itte rin g against its fenders “ Hi Chief, come on in and have a ...” ‘I have a w arrant for you 'A written apology in triplicate will suffice!' What9” EDITOR................................................................................... BUBJHerfner MANAGING EDITOR.......................................................................“ f ne^ ASSISTANT MANAGING EDITOR............................ Ly™eBrock NEWS EDITOR........................................................................^Pam Clark ASSISTANT TO THE EDITOR...............................................Dave KlsheJ SPORTS EDITOR.................................................................. ^ arrySnJlt*J To the editor: In a Guest Viewpoint last Thursday, AMUSEMENTS EDITOR............................................. Dfbra Derek Howard asked readers to “ con­ PHOTOGRAPHERS................................ Stanley Farrar, Marion Taylor , r ,. General Reporters ch Okie bootleggers; Texan narcs tHAnd w e c a n point"™! the cause of growth as being fundamentally the root of this country's decaying nature. This r“ ‘ ‘s ,he relationship between government and business. It is the Watergate II ------------------------------ ------------------------- _ _ By MICHAEL ETCHISON (Editor’s note: Etchison is a Texan amusements w riter and is a Universi­ ty law student.) We’ve been w atch in g th e wrong revolution. AU of us properly-raised Americans know who the enemy is: the Marxists, the Communists, the godless Reds, the destroyers of property and liberty and apple pie. The international conspiracy. The subverters and overthrowers. But the real revolutionaries, the ones who made it possible for America to lose its freedom not some tim e in the vague future, not a fte r som e spectacular bloodshed, but any day now and quietly, in a dignified well-dressed way, were Henry Ford and John D. Rockefeller. Now, I’ve tried to get excited about Marx and Nixon and all the usual bogeymen, but I ve never managed to become suitably frightened. Until now Those nice folks in the Middle East, those good ol’ boys who are producing crude at IO cents the barrel and scraping up a profit of only 14 or 15,000 percent or whatever, are going to have some spen­ ding money this year. I read in the paper that Chase M anhattan and the like figure that there’ll be an extra $60 billion in Arab hands by the end of the year. I can’t really imagine what $60 billion is like. I do have a hunch, though My hunch is that with $60 billion a prudent investor, one who m akes maximum use ofl dadvice leverage U U V i u c and a n i v » v » « g j v and loans and op­ toi going to get it unless we convince people, and th a t m ean s g ettin g th e fa c ts straight. Danny Schweers Computer P rogram m er Fusion Research Center Nude local To the editor: While my words will no doubt fail to convey the sense of pure outrage I feel at the ludicrous conviction of Ms. Paula “ Sum m er” Breeze for prostitution, this sam e anger dictates that I at least make my feelings known. I am certain, far from incidentally, that many m ore sane citizens of this community share my opi­ nion. It is my view that Mr. Hall — you will rem em ber him as the unfortunate fellow who suffered at the hands of Ms. Breeze — as well as the authorities which condoned his activities, are guilty of entrapm ent in its most loathsome, devious form, As I perceive the current law, moreover, Mr. Hall, who has ad­ mitted transporting his penis to massage establishm ents on 14 other occasions so that it might receive the “ crim inal benefit of hand manipulation (one hopes he’s finally got it right now, after all of this exhausting, tax-supported prac­ one is a d m in is tra tiv e r a th e r than academic. Quite the opposite is true Since adoption of the new calendar, fall sem ester has been short of class days in comparison with spring sem ester SIMI with respect to the Coordinating Board recommendation of 15 weeks of classes. Because the starting and ending dates of fall sem ester are determ ined with respect to the end of sum m er session and Christmas respectively, only a limited number of days are available for classes, no-class days and exams. The Calendar Com m ittee carefully considered the trade-off between more class days and more no-class days. Increasing the number of class days gives students more tim e for completion of homework, lab work and reports which are due by the end of classes. Although three no-class days are helpful to the student who prefers to do much of his studying at the end of the semester, the proposed schedule of one no-class^ day and seven exam days should provide adequate tim e for review for those students who have kept up with their To the editor: work during the sem ester. The article on the proposed calendar C.H. Roth which appeared in F'riday s Texan im­ Chairman, plies that the reason for reducing the University Calendar Committee number of no-class days From three to tice!!), as I understand the law, he too, is guilty of prostitution. As must be the execrable chap who dream t up this repugnant assignment. I say “ repugnant” because I know very well that Mr. Hall must have found this sort of work rather distasteful And to have to subm it to this not once, but 14 separate times! On behalf of thousands of taxpaying citizens of this (very) fair community, I would like to thank you, Mr. Hall,, for w hat must have been, all in all, an exceedingly painful 20 to 25 UUUutco minutes of self-sacrifice. I rest very comfortably in the knowledge that you — a modern Minuteman are making Austin a safer place in which to live When my children are grown, I shall pass on to them your saga. Of this you may be sure! Ms. Breeze, do yourself a large favor: don’t cast your beautiful pearls... Robert T. Rovinsky Assistant Professor Eat more books J e r e m ia h J o h n s o n e s c a p e s Los A n g e le s ■ By JACK ANDERSON U nited F e a tu re Syndicate WASHINGTON - With a c ­ to r R o b ert R edford as the c h ie f p a l l b e a r e r a n d TV c a m e ra s deployed to record th e te n d e r sc en e, th e la s t sta tu re in our sight. ■ the dividual senators. the case case could could se se tt aa bad bad preceprece Most se n a to rs agreed with R u f u s W il s o n , t h e VA .bones w ere low ered into intn th th eeir . _con R arrv C o ld w ater, RSen. B arry C o ld w ater, Rir dent. “ U nder (W ilson’s) in te r­ S enate R e p u b lic a n L eader cem e tery boss, explained to p retatio n of the ru les, said A riz., acknow ledged th a t he new grave. Hugh S c o tt w ho said the us th a t the decision w as “ a T h e re w as one p ro b le m , one aide, “ th e next thing we d could be h u rt by the re le a se of r e le a s e of p r e s id e n tia l r e a l h i s t o r i c t h i n g . h is p riv a te ta lk s w ith the w hich w as never m entioned in senatorial ta p e s “ would push A lle g a tio n s of c o m m e r ­ e x p e c t th e C h a m b e r of P r e s i d e n t , b e c a u s e h e all th e publicity. The rem o v al C om m erce of Gen. P ershing s sen ato rs o v er to the other cialism , he said, w ere un­ probably used “ th e m ost e m ­ of Johnson’s bones fro m a less h o m e to w n a sk in g fo r h is side.” founded. b a rrassin g language of any g lam o ro u s v eteran s grav e, bones to be dug up W A SH IN G T O N W H IR L: The ce le b ra te d reb u rial was ap p a re n tly w as quite illegal. F o o tn o te: A spokesm an for sen ato r on the W hite House The House im p each m en t staff challenged, nev erth eless, by The idea of relo catin g his W arner B ros, denied th a t the tapes. still is relyin g upon the in­ Rep. John M elcher, D-Mont., If his conversations w ere m o r ta l re m a in s o rig in a te d m o v ie m a k e r s p r o m o te d vestigations of o th ers to build w ho to ld u s th e J u s t i c e w ith som e stu d en ts a t the Jo hnson’s reb u rial, calling the r e le a s e d , sa id th e c a n d id the case a g a in s t President D ep artm en t had inform ally C oldw ater, “ I would be sorely P ark v iew Junior High School e v e n t a “ flu k y p u b lic ity Nixon. H ouse investigators advised him th a t the p ro ject tem pted although I would in L an c a ste r, C alif., w hich is b re a k .” As for R edford, he h a v e n ’t y e t g o tte n around a p p e a re d to v io la te 50 m iles by freew ay fro m the lives in the m ountains and has tr y to re s ist — to vote (ag ain st them selves to interviewing regulations. the W hite House) on th a t basis W arn er Bros. lot. a g en u in e in te r e s t in th e som e of th e key W atergate alone.” T h ey d is c o v e re d th a t T he n a tio n a l c e m e te ry m ountain m an he portrayed. figures. T he s ta ff has placed ‘iMCAintinn Sen. R ussell Long, D-La., “ reso lu tio n ."" Trtn Too m any oeoDle people — S som e iden­ J e re m ia h , whose re a l nam e regu lations s ta te th a t burials S E N A T E W H IS P E R S : g reat s tre s s upon the White said he rem em b ered the ‘high tif ie d , som e id e n tif ia b le d is p u te a re deem ed to be "p e rm an en t w as John Johnston, h ad been T h ere have been w hispers in House ta p e s , including those K issin g er’s sw orn testim o n y th a t he did not bu ried around the tu rn of the and fin a l.” D isin term en t is th e S enate cloakroom th a t, if points but not the low points Nixon is still refusing to hand in itia te , and w as a re lu c ta n t p a rtic ip a n t in, c e n tu ry in a Los A ngeles a llo w e d o n ly fo r “ c o g e n t too m any e m b arrassin g tap es of his m eetings w ith the P re s i­ o v e r . S o m e c o m m i t t e e dent. If e m b arrassin g co n v er­ th e w iretapping. reaso n s,” including a court v e te ra n ’s plot. They decided a r e su b p o en aed a t an im ­ m em b ers contend the staff is In Salzburg, a t his version of M r Nixon s th a t th e old “ liv e r e a te r ," a s o rd er or the w ritten consent of p each m en t tria l, the P re s i­ sa tio n s w ere m ad e p u b lic, cou n tin g , fo o lish ly , on the said the sen ato r, “ w e’d have 1962 " la s t p ress co n feren ce, K issinger he w as known in th e Wild all close living relativ es. d en t m ay re lease som e of his P resid en t to hang him self ... resem b le d a duke ad d ressin g very m inor W est, would be h ap p ie r buried taped co nversations w ith in­ to say he (the P re s id e n t) lost A fter M elcher raised his b aro n s as he d ecreed to the S enate: A ffirm a m o n g th e m o u n t a in s of objections. Wilson agreed to m y v eracity , o r I will tak e m y b a t and ball Wyoming than th e fre ew ay s of put a hold on the project. But and stru c tu re of p eace and leave town. Los Angeles the following day, he changed H is m essage w as not o rig in al: A p re s m oi T h e s tu d e n ts p r e s e n te d his m ind and authorized the Ie d e lu g e . T h e s e n a t o r s to u c h e d th e ir th e ir proposal to th e V eteran s d is in te rm e n t. H e said the forelocks and scra m b le d to sign an affirm ing Administration, w hich ag reed r e g u la tio n s h a d b een in ­ to th e transfer of Jerem iah’s resolution. . c o rrectly in terp re ted . A ctually, w ere C ongress to follow the rem ains to the locale of his C ongressional e x p erts fear e v id e n c e a b o u t K i s s i n g e r 's v e r a c i t y legendary exploits. w h erev er it leads, cro p s would still grow and d q o n esbu r y songs would still be w ritte n . B ut the Senate would ra th e r d e c la re K issin g e r ’above , 60TTA absolutely re p ro a c h ” before g ettin g bogged down in ' HAND it TD SC H W ** YOU, H D — T evidence. . you su & m aze a re n ’t cow l**. So w e a r e p ro b a b ly in fo r a n o th e r you w ant STANDUP MANT PEOPLE &A desp iritin g episode of unresolved accusations 10 60 A N W POPNJS % (R H O STILL DBFEND PRIVILEGE. with this BOOP and suspicions. J u s t for the reco rd , anc W NIXON PUBLICLY. debate? po ints. b efore confusion becom es to ta l, let us De c le a r about w hat th e issue is. K issinger and sp ecial p ro secu to r Leon Jaw o rsk i think th at w iretap p in g w as legal P e r h a p s It w a s. B u t a p e n d in g c o u r t challenge will decide th a t. Anyway, the legality of the w iretapping is not the issue. K issinger says th a t m uch of the in fo rm a­ • ee ^ -rtion th at is e m b a rra ssin g and infuriating him is com ing from leaks. T hat is tru e but not the issue. ** The issue is : W as K issinger so asham ed of his role in the w iretapping th a t he - as we ALRIGHT, sav in W ashington th ese days - ’ did fail and yoi/ reo n , then. and a ch a rm in g and HE'SMY ft* refu se to answ er a c c u ra te ly and i Ul l y BY THE WAY, SECOND HW! questions asked a t his S enate confirm ation romantic way to go WHATS BERNIE W DOING HERE ? in our new flower hG^rin^s? J The words quoted a re those of the charge to / printed gowns of soft which fo rm er Atty. G en. R ich ard K leindienst nylon acetate ... flu id pleaded guilty ■ rn rn . . ford m ovie about Johnson, rem ain s of legendary m oun­ h a p p ily p ro v id e d th e TV tain m an and Indian fighter n etw o rk s w ith film clip s. Je rem ia h Johnson w ere laid Thus, a nationw ide television to re s t the o th e r day a t Old audience w as tre a te d to a T ra il Town, Wyo. W a rn e r B ro s ., w h ic h is R edford p o rtra y a l of the old m assively prom oting the R ed­ Indian k iller, a s his moldy Alas, poor Henry the taps w o n 't sell PfU ntil now som e people actu a lly have enjoyed W atergate. But now they a re faced w ith the possibility th a t h e re m ay be som e evidence dam aging to K issinger, and sudden Iv W atergate ju s t isn t fun anym ore. U n f o r t u n a te l y , th e c h a r g e s a g a i n s t K issinger a re num erous and specific. I hey c a n n o t be ACROSS 1 Tennis strokes 5 Paper measure 9 Rotating part of machine 12 Sea in Asia 13 ireland 14 Man s nickname 15 Nobleman 17 Baby's play things 19 Harvest 21 Trades for money 22 Also 24 H aving no feeling 27 28 30 32 34 37 Sun god Metal Rent Chinese mile Manifestation Spanish arti- cid 38 Solem nly vow 39 Slave 40 Greek letter 41 Winter vehi- li)OOD$T0CK MAPE A QUILT FOR m e out o f all REJECTION SLIPS aw Wl A Garden Party Summer Nights a nuwar room (colloq) 2 Anglo-Saxon money 3 Tavern 4 Plumlike fruit 5 Note of scale 6 Goddess of healing 7 Macaw 8 New York baseball team 9 Kind of lily 10 Son of Adam 11 Army meal 16 Girt s nickname 18 Cylindrical 20 Throbs 22 Rise and fall u, of ocean 23 City in Russia 25 Substance 26 Prohibited 29 More inquisilive (colloq.) i mP EU n ill T O r n ; ti EA ■npi-J I0 £> o ra ra sa H B o a a o H raraESEJ R O SSE ! ■ iHEillBBB laflaad p m a a s s ra a o a n | H 3 k ]H banga U 42 Click beetle D ;lo o sS S 9 ---- . 4 It 23 29 rn Round Trip Plus To* FL Soorch Chg Departure July 14 Return Aug. 23 SS ii 31 30 Y A R IN G 'S O N -T H E -D R A G 2406 G U A D A L U P E HARWOOD TRAVE! 242 8 GUADALUPE STREET 33 $8 36 39 38 40 SS 46 45 $55 & ^56 & Vi *. 42 41 50 ■ *490.* -DEPARTURESJUNE 21, 29 JULY 4, 14, 25 AUGUST 23, 31 TTT rn ‘i i 26 35 SS•'> DOWN 21 25 OR Round Trip Plus To* It Search Chg. Austin /Luxem bourg via Braniff on our Icelandic J e ts For UT Students/Foculty A Families FOR INFORMATION CALL 4 78 -9 3 43 ___t 20 SS I a in­ Europe Group Flight 4 W 24 I 8 7 19 151. $ $ 43 Confederate ll general 44 Cornered is 47 Girl s name 49 Fail back 34 52 Wash lightly 55 Tierra dei 37 FueganIn­ dian 56 Desert UA dweller 58 River in Ger­ 44 many 49 59 Hindu cym­ bals SS 60 Crippled 61 Former Rus­ 59 sian ruler Leave with group/ Return dependently 45 Rockfish 46 Transaction 48 Disturbance 50 Macaw 51 Scottish cap 53 Ocean 54 8® mistaken 57 Exist 3 16 N e w York G roup Flights 44 Jog I0 IB I -4 P SAVE A BUNDLE ON OUR M 31 A continent (abbr.) 32 Solitary 33 Arrow poison 35 Compass point 36 Landeurrounded by water (pi.) 40 Part oHlower 12 IS young, fr e e -s p ir ite d and gay in a water-colored melange of pretty prints... you’ ll wear it again and again a.id love it. Sizes 5 to 13. $ 3 4 .0 0 to Yesterday s Puzzle r n __ By G EO R G E F . WILL (cl 1974, The W ashington P o st Company WASHINGTON - Things got a bit hectic in W orld's G re a te st D eliberativ e Body the other day. Senators tum bled o ver each other, spraining ankles and strain in g ligam ents in th e ir rush to endorse a resolution declaring th a t H enry K issinger’s “ in teg rity and v e ra c i­ ty a re above reproach. . N ever let it be said th a t our governm ent is full of H am lets who allow th e native hue of th e ir resolutions to be sick b ed o 'e r with the pale c a s t of thought. Why even the se c re ta ry of co m m erce, a gentlem an nam ed F red D ent, ra th e r grandly announced th a t he has “ confidence in M r K issinger’s integrity. You ask What doe the se c re ta ry of co m m erc e know about the com plicated issues involved in the cu rre n t controversy? Don t ask. Ask instead about the significance of the rem ark ab le governm entw ide reflex to rally round K issinger. T his reflex involves m o re than a pro p er re sp e c t for K issinger’s ex em p lary p atrio tism and m om entous achievem en ts. It also in­ volves palpable panic, esp ecially in Congress^ Until now the spoor of th e W aterg ate b ea st h as led directly tow ard M r. Nixon and those u n p le a s a n t f r ie n d s of h is ” H aldem an, E hrlichm an. Colson. MitcheU. e a1 But now th ere is evidence th a t the m ost ad m ired m an in A m erica, Mr. K issinger, h as done som e dishonorable things, like m is­ leading a Senate c o m m itte e about his role in a s e c r e t and d is h o n o ra b le w ire ta p p in g |B|| rrrr 48 47 $ 43 $ vvs 53 52 51 58 57 I 54 $ JOO 61 NEW HOUSING POLICY!! DEXTER HOUSE A 1103 W . 24th te r r ific OCCUPANCY ONLY ° f i ‘e d s60 Luxurious P rivate Rooms ‘IOO ISemi-Private Rooms as Low as io ' e»t ys fr o r n ° o f V o o U t, ° UP o r sh ° e s f0 per mo. u sty [JVery«eco*7o! * * " ■ » > « . per mo. c OO AVV) • Maid Service H eated S w im m in g Pool • R e fr ig e r a t o r s • In te rc o m • L a u n d r y F a c ilit ie s • V e n d in g M a c h in e s • S tu d y A rea s • 24 H r. Desk S e rv ic e • T V in L o b b y • O ff Street P a r k in g • Close to C a m p u s Special Package Deals (Room at Dexter - Board at Madison) available as low as $145 N o w accepting Fall 74 Contracts fS )n ts ss. til of jr. de (se eir nth an, for U.T. M e n a n d Women HOUSING OFFICE 709 West 22nd St. 478-989? - 478-8914 DEXTER HOUSE Come See - Come L ive Not all s to c k in c lu d e d All over town GET MORE FOR YOUR MONEY $ $ T uesday, Ju n e 16, 1974 THE DAILY TEXAN P a g e 5 Tennis Team Begins Nationals vou have four guys who you think are good enough, you can send them if you want Some schools don’t even send their top players because they want their younger players to get experience in the tourna­ ment for later years. ‘ Because there a re so many players,’’ Woods continued, ■‘seeding is very im portant. If a school’s players hit com­ petitors from the top five or six team s in the first round, then you don’t have a chance of making the top IO. Making the top IO is our goal this year as it was last season.” In 1973, Texas ju st missed reaching their goal when they finished in an lith place tie with the University of Colum­ bia. It generally takes about IO points for a team to make the top IO. Each individual or doubles win counts as a team point. TWO TEAMS from the Southwest Conference, however, did well last year. The University of Houston and SUMMER SALE MUNTZ CARTRIDGE CITY _ F O R N E W OR U S E D C A R S W E C A R R Y A M / F M 8-TRACK OR CASSETTE STEREO S Y S T E M S FOR IN - D A S H IN ST A L L A TIO N . W IT H U S YOU SAVE U P W A R D S OF $ 100.00 Sports Shorts FOREIGN AUTO PARTS REPLACE PARTS FOR IMPORTS INCLUDING PINTOS AND VEGAS EXCESS MUST G O ON CAR STEREOS, CASSETTES, SPEA KER S, AM/FM RADIO W H A T EVER YOU NEED. WE INSTALL WE REPAIR Houston, Rangers Lose P HI LADELP I A ( API Pinch h itte r Tony T aylor slammed a two-run homer with two out in the eighth in­ ning, giving the Philadelphia Phillies a 7-5 triumph over the Houston Astros Monday night. With two out. Bob Boone singled off reliever Claude Os­ teen, 5-7, and Taylor, batting WE CARRY ACCESSORIES LIMITED! HOT E 8-TRACK CAR STEREO IN S T A L L E D W IT H 2 S P E A K E R S TOTAL P A C K A G E P R IC E OUR SPECIALTY W e m ake and V.W. TOYOTA DATSUN VOLVO FIAT M G B repair boots shoes belts leather O N LY ‘T U S A V E $35.00 C A S S E T T E C A R S T E R E O FOR $20.00 M O R E Montz Cartridge City 1601 San Jacinto INTERNATIONAL CAR PARTS 2828 GUADALUPE goods 8>K»to;»tCJWD Capitol Saddlery 4?4:j EARN CASH WEEKLY Blood Plasma Donors Needed Men & Women: EARN $10 WEEKLY CASH PAYMENT FOR DONATION Austin Blood Components, Inc. OPEN: MON. & THURS. 8 A M to 7 P.M. TUES. & FRI . 8 A.M. to 3 P.M. CLOSED WED. & SAT. 409 W. 6th 477-3735 $4 .OO a case plus deposit w ith this ad SHINER, PABST, LONE STAR, PEARL Beer Sn return bottles is fresher, cheaper. & better for the court* ” ■ PLEASURE TIME 5425 N. Lamar 9-6 Mon.-Sat. C oupon g o o d through J u n o 2 2 ... the ground squirrel's heartbeat slow s down to as little a s five b e a ts per minute when hibernating? That w ay he doesn't use energy that he doesn't need. „d. W H If you’re going to be in Austin this summer, we think you should compare our environment with others before you decide where you’re going to live. We’re just a half block from campus on 24th Street featuring covered parking, maid service, all the good home cooked food you can eat, a game room com­ plete w ith pool tables, foosball and pinball machines, w an indoor heated swimming pool, a sundeck, a small gymnasium, progressive management, competitive prices and more. So visit us at 2323 San Antonio or call (512) 478-9811, and let your eyes decide. Castilian m The 1974 SUMMER STUDENT DIRECTORY will be published this m onth! It will contain thousands of names, local ad­ dresses and phone numbers, plus the school or college and classification of each student. The Directory will be inserted into the full circula­ tion of The Daily Texan on the day of publication. w a tc h fo r i t l a t e r th is m o n th ! another publication of Texas Student Publications Boating Costs Limit Skiing in Austin Area Frazier TKO's Q uarry in Fifth ________ .the-mill L - .m .L u * it skier. It focuses on on By E D ENGLISH com petitive skiing. Texan Staff Writer Despite the great boating “ We try to train skiers for facilities at the Austin area tournam ent com petition — lakes, many students are un­ s l a l o m a n d j u m p i n g , m ember Floyd McCright said. able to enjoy them. T he 6 5 -m ile lo n g L ake “The dues are $17 the first Travis and 20-mile long Lake year for a single and $12 every Asutin in the Highland Lake year after. We have IO Univer­ chain form one of the best ski­ sity students in the club now .” ing areas in the country. But BOATS ARE supplied by in­ because of the m oney in­ dividual m em bers. Requests volved, m ost students have to for applications may be ob­ settle for the local beaches. t a i n e d by w r i t i n g Di a n a “ Students from Austin have Williamson at 2728 Trail of an a d v a n ta g e o v e r m o st Madrones, Austin 78746. s tu d e n ts ,” S en ior R ick ey Some out-of-town students, Wheeler of Austin said. “ I like however, are not overly disap­ skiing, but being a student and pointed by the skiing situa­ financially lim ited, I don t tion. have a ready a ccess to a boat. “The lack of a boat hasn t “ L uckily, being from Austin, I know a few people really changed m y situation m uch,” Houston senior John who have boats that I use, he Kamp said. “ It’s just changed 3ci(icd KNOWING som eone or be­ my problem from where to ski ing wealthy is the key for prospective skiers. Even the sm allest skiing boats requires an investm ent of around $2,000 The only a ltern ative for skiers to having friends or wealth is that of a ski club. One exam ple is the Austin Water Ski Club, which was founded in 1954 and has 35 m em bers. in the fifth round of a scheduled 12-round heavyw g at Madison Square Garden Monday night. Frazier the 30-year-old former heavyweight champion, appeared'every bit as devastating as he did when he stopped Ouarrv in seven rounds five years ago. In the fifth round, he sim ply S d him with hooks, jabs and even right-hand leads as he sliced thW henQ uarry3 b e g a n 't o ^ le e d . F r a se r bached off and m S e d t referee* Joe Louis to stop it. But U " - ™ * Fazier in again, and he finished the job in a matter seconds. , It was a bitter defeat for Quarry, who went into the fight with a reputation that he couldn't winI thei big: ones. The loss was the seventh against 48 victor es aM our draws for the 29-year-old C a l i f o r n i a n who has fought out New York since beginning a comeback 17 monin. g Frazier was guaranteed $400,000 against 40 P e r c e n o f a l income Quarry was guaranteed $225,000 against 2 2 * per C™ n estim ated crowd of 15.000 showed up at the Garden, n was the Smokin’ Joe of old from the opening bell until at 1:37 of the fifth round with Quarry MIRANDA STUDIO PASSPORTS ht h e Sk n « kd o i r c a m e ,n the fourth r e d * I w h e n Frazier landed a tremendous left hand to the pi Q stomach The bell rang as Quarry s ding to the rules, Louis continued the count and it reacn five before Quarry struggled to his feet. m aior The fifth round w as all Frazier asi he r e m a in ^ D, 0T a Uforce in boxing's S 'a m o u r division and s e U .m s tin iP fo r a t tic shot against the winner of the September g e o rg e F o rem a n -M u h a m m a d M i bout. R F S I ME* _ . c/x HOUSTON (AP) — A $150. OOO com petition to select the Woman Sports Champion of 1974 w as announced Monday by the Astrodomain Corp. The winner of the event ten­ tatively scheduled for the w eekend of D ec. 21 w ill receive $50,000. “ T h e p ro g r a m w ill be sim ilar to that of the men s Superstar competition and we feel this annual event will be r big step forward for women s sports,” said Sidney Schlenker, Astrodomain ex­ ecutive vice-president. Joining Schlenker in making the announcement was Larry King, co-publisher of WomenSport Magazine C..Klanlror Schlenker caid said Kind's King’s Wif< w ife, tennis star Billie Jean King, golfer Janie Blalock, bowling champion Paula Sperber. and sprinting m edalist Wyomia Tyus are among the early en­ tries. He said some of the events, such as golf, possibly w ill be played outside the Astrodome. PORTR A IT I DAY SERVICE . _ , W o m e n Athletes O btain 'Superstar' Tournam ent to what to ski behind. Kamp then added a wishful note. I d like to see someone com e up with a cheap boat rental for students ' B ut until som e un­ foreseeable inexpensive m ea n s of ski ing appears, m a n y s t u d e n t s w i l l be relegated to the beaches. Like good skiing areas, pub l i c b e a c h e s a l s o are available to students. The only drawback might be transpor­ tation. CI T Y P A R K , on L a ke Austin, is 15 m iles w est of Au s t i n . The park has a bathhouse, picnic area, water supply and restroom s, boat launches and picnic facilities. A lso on Lake Austin is Quinlan-Travis County Park It is 20 m iles away and has restroom s, boat launches and picnic facilities. —UH Telephoto Joe Frazier lands a hard right in the first round. The Austin chapter of the Red Cross is seekm g, volunteer drivers to transport disabled persons. Drivers m ay use Red Cross cars or their private vehicles. Interested? C all 47 8 Tir in g B o q jsL ■ .. - t L u K t.M * < flu m .H * » fy w c 4 g M B o r t s m HAMBURGERS 2 19 - M SAVE 59 59' SAVE Coupon valid until Sept. I, 1974 ■J 452-4447 2 H K K ^S IJO K ID HAMBURGERS HAMBURGERS V , lh. meat, with chaa**, onion* ■ I I I I JBTHighest Qu<iy B oo ts _ £!4 Fit B y E xp erien ced People J P W * * - —- | I I I I $1 ll 2 for for$l SAVE 4 9 c a Coupon valid until Sept. I, 1974 I ■ ■ ^Hi H H BB HH BHI H H B H I® A R M A N D 'S Whole Earth Provision C o 504 w e s t 24th 478-1577 • .. . . rn. ■ BROILED n n o i i e n Ll A KARI CHARCOAL HAMBURGERS^ CO M BIN ATIO N SPECIAL! I " c " « e n ”f r ie d i I STEAK SANDW ICHES j ■ J and hickory sauce - 4 1 1 W est 2 4 th St. « 3 9 Guadalupe X>Y" und^ w ith lettuce, tomato A m ayonnaise i Low *. • F&blMVO -Vasque -GaiUMert C O RNER OF S A N A N T O N IO A N D 24TH *1 ; walk. bike, or bus anywhere in Central Austin UNIVERSITY 1 u ao ter” f 1601. new modem furnishings convenient to _____ downtown & the 476-0040 The only drawback is that the the run-of.he club is not for tne run-oi- f " ffliimumtmttiiiiMHtMniMHUiiitmi A A w ith le ttu c e , to m a to A m a y o n n a is e I 2 i»sl ” for I ' SAVE 41 Coupon valid until Sept. I1.1974 , 1974 | Our No. I H a m b u rg e r • w ith fren c h fries & sm all cold drink I ™ A C o m p le te M e a l! Hi I I s l°5 SAVE 39 unlii4 until Sept. Sent I, I 1974 19 • 4 Coupon valid — I I | I B i SUMMER CLASSIS STill OPEN auto mechoniis oil pew tirn ballot kerele guitar hotba togo electronics rep a^ \ \ 472-9246 V UNBELIEVABLE DISCOUNTS on all H E A V Y -D U T Y MUFFLERS COUPON SALE" ALL THREE STORES COUPON S 5 $1 OFF FACTORY WARRANTED! ANY PAIR BLUE JEANS COUPONS GOOD TUES. 18 THROUGH SAT. 22 YOU CAN'T BUY A BETTER MUFFLER AT A N Y PRICE! WITH S S >.SK S3BSSSK *~SS SSS?™-; Iris:K ® s 2 Sisnwss,“~’- $1 OFF SIM IL A R D IS C O U N T S ON ALL FACTO RY N U M B E R S ON WORK SHIRTS FOREIGN CARS CUSTOM DUALS COUPON Open Saturday 8-6 AUSTIN ARMY I NAVY STORE AND iVnV 111111111111' 1 DISCOUNT MUFFLERS 7941 (Near BURNET ROAD Anderson lane) A Phone: 451-7359 • 3 0 5 W.19TH • HIGHLAND MALL •412 CONGRESS Tuesday, June 18, 1974 T H E D A ILY T E X A N Page 7 Lives Saved, Time Lost White Asks For Price Cot A request for significant lets are restricting U S. meat price cuts and concentrated exports, causing domestic prices to drop, White explainsales efforts to sell meat has been directed to super­ Although the price of cattle markets and meat packers by Texas A g ricultu re Com ­ to producers went down 37 percent since I* ebruary, the missioner John C. White. In a telegram sent to 44 superm arket p rices only major national meat packers dropped 5 percent during that and grocery chains Friday. tim e, acco rd in g to Bob White urged retailers to sell Williams of the Texas Depart­ domestic livestock and dress­ ment of Agriculture Williams said retailers are ed meats at prices more in trying to make up profits lost line with the realities of pre­ earlier in the year. sent market conditions. “ This is not the time to White said he thinks foreign meat imports are a major make up these loses, W illiam s explained “ Our cause for the drop in livestock beef industry is in a distressed prices and is in Vrashington appealing to U.S. Secretary of situation now.” Cattlemen are losing from Agriculture E a rl Butz to $50 to $250 per head because restrict meat imports. Meat imports are projected high supermarket prices kept to be 30 percent above last the demand for beef low. ac­ year, and many foreign out- cording to William s. e ^xonu 1616 Royal Crest 444-6631 texans Weigh 55 Limit By DAVID SH A R PE Texan Staff W riter The billboard reads “ Don’t Be Fuelish - keep your speed to 55 m p h.’’ But are drivers driving slower? Within Travis County they are. according to Sherif! Ray­ mond Frank “ Bv and large people are trying to conserve fuel and obey the law, he said. . BUT ON the highways in the rest of the state the picture looks different. Capt. W illiam McLean of the Department of Public Safety (D P S ' said the depart­ ment has “ received an indica­ tion that the people are dis­ satisfied with the 55 m p h. speed lim it." -Texan Skiff Wrote by Marion Tayfer Drivers 'disillusioned' w ith speed limit. In the four months since the new speed law was put into effect, speeding violations have increased IOO to 120 per­ cent. McLean said. This means about 50.000 speeding citations are given ‘"disillusioned’’ "disillusioned with the gas­ oline shortage and reflect this in th e ir driving habits. The DPS is not adequatelystaffed to enforce the law ful­ ly, McLean said. For seven million Texas motorists, the department has one patrol car for e v e ry 140 m ile s of highway. #» added. outt each mAnth month, h he added. When the new speed law was initiated, it was the patriotic thing to obey it, because drivers thought there really was a gas shortage.’ McLean said. Now, the traffic law en­ fo rcem en t o ffic e r said , d r iv e r s a re m o s tly Tutors N ee d e d i-j Volunteer tutors are needed a t the So u th A u s tin Neighborhood Center (2414 Oak Crest) to help prepare e le m e n ta ry school-age children for the next school ma m rtrn in 0 or o r afternoon sesthe morning ses­ sion. Interested persons may call Deborah Morrison, 444-3528. Service Begins year The Texas Union has begun The sum m er tu to rin g a telephone service that program stresses reading and describes Union activities for math. Hours are 9 to IO a rn. and 4:30 to 5:30 p.m., Monday the day. By dialing 471-3618. a caller can obtain information through Friday. Volunteers are asked to work two days a on times and places of Union week and may choose either events on campus. th e S am W itch sh o p Pointy S p ecial 1-1 $i65 2-1 185 2-2 195 Tour La G ra n g e The Austin Cham ber of Commerce is sponsoring a tour to La Grange-Winedale. The tour w ill return via Gid­ dings, W e llb a rg e r Bend, Hornsby Bend and Coleman’s Fort. June 29. For further information call Karen Ramming, Tourism Department, Austin ( hamber of Commerce, 478-9383 Both tours are $11.50 per person, j Funds Offered The M exican-Am eriean Youth Organization is offering $1,500 in scholarship funds. The scholarships are being offered to chicano students from Austin who are planning to attend UT. Applications can be ob­ tained from counselors in Austin high schools or from Robert Soto, 4610-B Ave. F, J telephone 454-3385. A leading choice of the Riverside Dr. apartm ents b ecau se w e oner extra specious living and a c ce ss to the shuttle bus. “ TH E LAW is good as far as we can tell, McLean said. “ It saves lives and gasoline,” and its only drawback is lost time. The 400 lives he said nave been saved represent a 28 per­ cent drop in the number of fatalities in the first six months of this year. direct ail bills paid Union M e e tin gs f k ic d w 2100 G u ad alu p e Next to Luigi's 476-5905 c r lc ^ iu UT students, faculty and rn staff can look over renovation plans for the Union Building at two informal sessions Tues­ day and W ednesday. The sessions will be held from noon to I p.m . in Union Building 104. Opan 10-7 M-F 11-7 Sat First Anniversary Party — Storewide Sale - All Week Long A NNOUNCEM ENTS X K I ARTS ANO CRAFTS CENTER OF THE TEXAS U N IO N N i l l sp o n so r a f r e e dem onstration of m a cra m e at noon T u e sd ay in U n io n B u ild in g 333. TEXAS U N IO N w ill spo nso r a free n im D u m b o " at sundo w n 9 p.m., T u e s­ day on the U n ion P atio MEETINGS “ STUOY R E A D IN G : C O F IN O W ITH THE CPUCH' w ill b a t h e topic at a R e ad in g and Stud y S k ills L a b ( R A S S O ses­ sion at * p.m . T uesd ay in Je s te r J Hundreds of cotton prints, outlandish Hawaiian prints. Indian gauze. jorsays single knits, yarns all notions From food - com a in A brows*. D raw ing far Fraa Hand m a d * Quilt A 332 N e w m a n C lu e wit! m e e ' at 7 30 p m Vvedcesday in ’ he C a th o lic Student Center to hold a ge n e ra l m ee ting and to attend the L o n g h o rn B and C O tv I cert N e w m e m b e r s are w elcom ed "TES t w e e n e s s * w ill he the topic at a R e a d in g a n d S tu d y S k ills L a b ( R A S S L ) session at 4 p.m . Thursday in Je s te r A M I Boutique For M e n f a s h ions’ a n d W orn* I /A AYA Itll, LAVACA “t71, n u REGISTER HOW 25 FREE GRADE A PLANTATION TURRIT HENS. nut PER DAY AT EVERY STORE JUNE 18 THRU 22nd. ,.0 S A M E R I C A 'S F A V O R IT E P IZ Z A NfCtSSkRY • YOU KHO HOT i i H M IN ! ST DRAWING TO WIN.! .......................... I Rwmd SUWA69BACON Style*light Moot MC TUNA Stir-Kist, 6*d ex. Cen ....... •••••................ 23‘ Shoestring Potatoes l“w >-‘0- -a2 w >-*ITALIAN DRESSING KSSu 43 90OTO Strawberry Preserves l l oi. Tumbler 75rv rresi Skippy. 59' PEANUT BBUTTER 39BARBECUE SAUCE MARGARINE « •Heavy Doty_Akee 43' CA ALUMINUM FOIL S K H • | m i | Ant A Rooch Killer 89 REAL KILL ««.*«~i SC0TT0WELS & 39' CUSTRED ADVERTISING ORDER BLANK D a il y T e x a n FROZEN FOODS COOL WHIP •Franks A leans ‘ Macaroni A Cheese et ■i i t i m r DINNERS •Spoghetti A Meet •Macoreni A Beet Mortons, l l ai. Tray CLIP AND MAIL TODAY! 39‘ ................. 39- — WRITE YOUR AD HERE- HEALTH & BEAUTY AIDS 47CUTEX InS*""”" . 29Z I I . i v n i n i r r Toothpaste Boggler or Mint I Q ( 93* ULTRA BRITE Twosomes OV Texas Grown CANTALOUPES 17 PEARL BEER 6-Pack Cans s 1.05 Use this handy chart to quickly arrive at cost. (15 word minimum No. Words Cost per word Times Times Times Times Times I 2 5 IO 20 IO 18 35 60 1.20 18.00 15 1.50 2.70 5.251 9.00 16 1.60 2.88 5.60 9.60 19.20 1221 West Lynn 3101 G uadalupe San Gabriel 218 S. I am ar 17 1.70 18 3415 N orthland Dr. 19 lb. 2316 GUADALUPE • 9:00 - 5:30 PARK IN OUR IOT ON SAN ANTONIO BEHIND TNI CADEAU Page 8 T uesday, June 18, 1974 THE DAILY TEXAN I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I g THESE PRICES GO O D AT ALLSTORf S TUESDAY, WEDNESDAY, A N D THURSDAY Ona of the nicest tilings you could do for a summer ton is ease into one of our bore-topped little pant sets. Here. crisp white polyester/rayon teamed with red calico! Tho long pants and halter, 40.00; shorts with midriff-tio shirt topping, 40.00. From our collection of summer casuals. I 3.06 5.95 10.20 20.40 1.80 3.24 6.30 10.80 21.60 1.90 I 3.42 6.65 11.40 22.80 DA N Y TEXAN CLASSIFIEDS P.O. BOX D - UT STATION AUSTIN, TEXAS 78712 NAME ADDRESS CITY___ PHONE i i i i i i i i i i i i Codeine A bu sed in A ustin Drug Easily Bought in Cough Syrup Form an nhvinim w ill se ll a b o ttle of sy ru... p to an obvious aa d dd d ict ict ra r a t! t h e r th an se e By DAVID HENDRICKS Texan Staff Writer With the leniency of existin g law s, so m e Austin p h a rm a cie s a r e unw ittingly supporting the h ab its of n a rc o tic s a d d .cts w .th the sale of cod ein e cough syrup. A num ber of a r e s c i n o t by the fr a n c h is e but by th e p h a rm a c is t w ho o p e ra te s By R O D O LFO R E S E N D E Z J R . T e x a n Staff W riter D e sp ite a re c e n t D e p a rtm e n t of L a b o r re p o rt showing a $1 200 ris e in th e c o s t o f living in m a jo r U .S c itie s it re v e a ls A ustin r e m a in s th e le a s t e x p e n siv e m etro p o litan eam e d A c e D r ? B M m ht p h a r m a c is t said his s t o r e s p o licy is to have a rime cu sto m e r iill out a card w hile the p h a rm a c is t com ta c ts the c u s to m e r ’s d o cto r, lf the d octor^ o k a y s UK th e c u s to m e r ca n m a k e th e p u rch ase Any la te r p u rcn a ses y c ity to liv e in in th e n ation . . . . . .t, T h e su rv ey , w hich h a s been co m p iled by the d ep art­ m e n t sin ce 1966, sh ow s th a t a ty p ica l A m e ric a n fam ily of four pays $12,600 a n n u a lly to m a in ta in a m o d e ra te sta n ­ d a rd of living w hile in A ustin a fa m ily of fo u r p ay s $10,902 ^ W hcT sets ^ h ^ p o T ic y *oifd T el ling co d eine c o u g h s y m p i n e a c h TT„ :„ or(.;tv n h arm a cv P h a rm a cy ^ B o a rd . th a t cough syrup ab use e x is ts in Aus“ n C o S e I N E COUGH S Y R U P can be p u r c h a s e d o v ^ he cou nter in so m e Austin p h a rm a c.e s w ithout a d ^ t o ^ p r e s c r . P lion The syrup is sold in four-ounce b o ttles with p rices ran g g o w r m ^ ^ n ^ A c e ' D ^ ^ a r t ^ a n ' c h i s M ^ a r r M c y sm d p o licie s from $1.19 to n h a rm a cie s w hich sell codeine w ithout A rn ette exp lained th a t p h a rm a cie s w n.en se h a s e rs ’ a p rescrip tion a r e required to keep r e c o r a s ui y " X ' rltu o n s S u b stan ce A ct. also re q u ire ^ b a t no m o re than four o u n ces be soid to n n e person “^ a ^ a f s o 0' “ he syrup only to those 18 y e a rs and o ld er a m ) to a f f i x a b o ttle id en tify in g th e p u r c h a s e r and th e pha rmaA M r! vin F ra n k Mo, I I I I I I I flg qsg) I wrtjylf —Vincent Canby, New York Times 21st & G uadalupe Second level Dobie Mall 477-1324 LAST DAY! A /Musical Adaptation “‘PLAYTIM E’ IS JACQUES TA T I’S MOST BRILLIANT FILM.” 76-5066 AVENUE VILLAGE 7700 West Anderson Ieee it KEN RUSSELLS mn rn C H . LAWRENCE'S WOMEN IN LOVE' TOUCH OF CLASS" 1:45-6:00-10:15 'WOMEN IN LOVE" 3:45-0:00 I FEATURES 12:30 4 :50 2:40 7 :00 Screen 2 Om O Ends Today! Where mere you in 'I DC LAURENT) 18 prearms r- . I AL PACINO "SERPICO’ K m ilUUrnW ON*OMAN1Otctad WONKY ProducedIbt WWmNWee****1 Dr. Cledby bv W O#4«YLUMET LUMET andNORMAN WftXLia Baaed on the book by M IW MAA* . S S S _«sesuEti**2 2:30-5:00**1.25 7:30-10:00 -*1 . 5 0 $ LAST DAY! PG 12:00 Screen I I I I I I I I I I I I ,V illage Cinema Four MT SUPPORTING a-,. ,nr^r.T»iA ACTOR A / - . T -. BEST DCCT Cl IDDy-tOTIKlGACTRESS] AGTQCGG ^— BEST SUPPORTING Ends Tuesday! THE LAST '1CTURE SHO’ 1:30-3:35 -5:40 -7:45-9:50 with Dennis Hopper LAST DAY! $2.00 6:00 8 : 00 - 10:00 ACADEMYAWARDWINNER! THE LAST MOVIE Screen 2 1.00 - 2:00 $ 1 .5 0 -4 OO 12:15 451-4357 KENRU,; i l l S i D. H. LAWRENCE'S "WOMEN IN LOVE" ; , Del iJ B ru t P rod u ctio n s George Segal Glenda Jackson A Touch Of Class PG sa See individual ads for feature times R M e lv in F ra n k M *,, * M n ria M urdo ur H a s Variety, Lacks Voice By MICHAEL ETCHISON Texan Staff Writer o t t h i r d of th e audience had left, and m any of the r e s t w e re too ^ R n f f o r one d eta il it would have been a m arvelous show She has g re a t fasteT n songs', songs g a th e re d from a l U M s of w r . ^ f r o m ie r * H er h a s , rHrn n ism mrf screechy and h e r intonation is dubious. Silt ha. th re e 'lr leks a ^ ro w I a upw ard squeeze and a break as she changes I* G utcheon (and the title track of the last Geoff and M aria M uldair G uteheon (and the n t to tter­ album before she w ent by herself ^and hhef wweent to PI aul aul B B uutter field) I f s a quiet, a lm o st saloon-type song, and Gutcheon got a c h a n t* to do a S atie-like w altz break in the m iddle. re siste rs. Those m ight ight be she w e re s in g in g dram atically reg isters. Those m be enough enough if if she ’were (L otte Lenya doesn’t have m any trick s, e ith e r), but they ( 's h e * SOUNDED best when she sounded m ost like som eone else Sh^ did ^ r e s p e c ta b le B illie Holiday one of th e to rch iest of songs. L nlike Lady D ay, aminded as if she really w anted to sing like her. she did a “ Honey Babe B lues” th a t she attrib u te d to la rem e AsWey and c am e close to Buffy Sainte-M arie^s lonely I n t e r n , ^ Her im itation of M avis S taples on the Staple Singers Nobody . F au lt But Mine * w a sn 't so hot. bu, I v e never h eard anyone The suDDorting a c t w as O dessa and N ashville’s L arry Gatlin. MC Sam m y .Mired told us th a t E lvis has reco rd ed a G atlin song and that didn t g et the au d ien c e’s in terest. G atlin s strong, rich. almost sw eet v o ic f d id n ’t, e ith e r (although they m ig h t have listened to M ickey Newbury o r M ac D avis, w hose voices his recalls. '’^ e s p e c ia lly 0 liked'tw o n um bers. One w as T he Work Song. the K ale M cG arrigle w ork th a t's full of nostalgic (and possible MS r w -IWO by Michq#•*Brot | MANNTMEAtBIS IT S ABOUT ALL THOSE GAMES YOU NEVER FO X TWIN tnt adroit iivp m e r e y o u in * 6 2 ? BUT WISH YOU HAD! JEFF PLUS CO-HIT "DEVILS EIGHT” RED SKY AT MORNING Riverside T w in C inem a • RATED X EASTM AN ”1haven't had such a good time at a new movie in years." em* Perer Oogdcrtovtch New YaUMood*"Tie IF PLUS CO-HIT SUPER FLY” S o u T h s id c b ig IMfrnctrt *| HOIUM«MMW*11WUMS "RIO LOBO" t h r e e A D M IS SIO N 12:30-$! OO A Pf ill>«** MHM m Moi— R«nn«t Nw tatoo** 2:40 $1 50 4:50 * SEE 7:00 $2 50 9:15 ADULTS .... $2.25 .. 5100 CHILDREN REDUCED PRICES MON.-FRI. TU S P M the LA RG EST R iv e r s id e P A IN T IN G OF THE T............ w in “THREE M USKETEERS” IN C in e m a THEw O R L D l!i The Professional Company of The E. P. Conkle Workshop for Playwrights 12:30 M A TIN EE § ONLY $1 OO M O N .-FRI. technicolor* 4S r- BUEN*VISTAD .TU.BUT.ONCO john W AYNE “ BIG JAKE” m u s k e t e e r s S h rift K A O SNARR • THU W U U I • Alf U W N H U S T U S ^ j W J H W S e g MUIAHW•JOI UWM• Techncolor* jj(j -25.- THE CO LO R I the! W M K G RM BX ShowT O W N USA 1950east riverside drive 44: sees [PG AN ALL-COMEDY WALT DISNEY PROGRAM Showt o w n USA BURT REYNOLDS .W HITE LIGHTNING 200 A C A D E M Y HELD OVER! 12TH WEEK! PLAYED... 1454 2711 C h a n arvd Colorful l e t 3760 I H VonSS • I® 1705 G u a d a lu p e 5400 Burnet Rd. 4411 W. Ben White BOX OFFICE OPEN 8:00 SHOW STARTS DUSK W h ere V i l la g e C in e m a Four see m evil BUT TRT e v e r y t h in g ONCE! awKW CommuoicaWon*COHU*! Ptonant Atm«*pH«,» I I .-OO A D V TICKETS $4.50 $5 AT THE DOO R A D V TICKETS AT: Oat Willits, Inner Sanctum, Riggins, t Tanas Opry House hear ne evil! OFFER GOOD UNTIL SEPT 11, 1974 Must Present Coupon with Purchase S n ap p y Sprvtea SAT., JU N E 22 7:3 0 & 10:30 HILARIOUSLY OUTRAGEOUS!! Mel Brooks' WEST SIDE TAP M IX E D D RIN KS 24th and Rio Grande WALKER AUSTIN PREMIER ' S A V E 33* S o u T h s ia E 9:00 1E1# W „ . M 45 I P jE S n e Z 5 E E 3 E H I » Times AT JERRY FEATURES 7:004:30-KMX) The warmest, most human comedy in a long time masterfully executed . profoundly affecting sensationally funny b arie s CharnpHn 2 BE VO’S i6400 Burnet Road — 165-6933 show goes on. W h e th e r Foxx r e tu r n s Mayo, 43, will remain. After his f irs t ap p e a ra n c e la s t season he became almost a regular and to date has been on about 20 shows. ARBYS HOT ROAST BEEF SAN DW ICHES Reg. $1.78 . lo h bis. te ....r SmAMey c ~ ..ii,.. Frank CUjlwmo & OWalt Diyrwv PtoductKws « JP G ________ T r io SI SO2 40-4 50 I 7 OC Hi I 5 fRI - . Arni!!, Directors Directors Artistic t . p r esen ts Th re e New Plays in R e p e rto r y B A R G A IN M A T IN E E M 0 N -F R I Out of Gas by Michael Robert David 8J Junr 30 8 pm A lin it GLENDA JACKSON i GREATS 4 i rn • 2*pm I The Htghchairs by’Kl a me Den holt/. July 7 O F CLASS] 8 pm | ' S A N D UBI ^ H R f O M E N IN L O V E MANNTHEAIRES T O U C H - 1 :0 0 -5 :1 0 -9 (3 0 W O M E N - 3 : 5 5 -7 :1 0 FO Xaipropt TWiivB IN ors? atatsm u Buy A Pizza mun 1454 ?7llr“ KEI >(TED MUCEs TU. « I’ M MON thru SAT ■ O U A B IU S T h e a tre s 1500 5 PLEASANT VAHEY RD bee 2 2 7 7 „ , c t rr» F/KT RIVERSIDE DRIVE m m ACADEM Y AW ARD S CCMUMB'Ar'K.lllUfS ■’•.••I"':* I I T H E L A S T P 1 C T U H E SH O W AFimBy * AGtOSGd BCHUU. FAM f t PETER BOGDANOVICH r n T iff W IN G g TfCMNKXA.Cea A UNIVERSAL PICTUfC JACK NICHOLSON T O K L A S ! ' S M f T A IL f f ij j ™ r n {oio* ® 1 1 .5 0 til h p.m. EK. VT I HES I RONALD NIAME him FMWSIOH* COLORBfYDQlfiff 3 W ith Purchase of Another of S a m e Size a n d Price. Not V a lid O n Take-O ut O rders / M e-A. rr^ m iM l. ll * FHzza P a la c e P O S E ID O N DAYS MORE. CLIP AN O SAVE WORTH O N E FREE PIZZA 2 :3 0 1:5 5 7 :2 5 9 :5 0 _ IRWIN ALIENS production o« CCH UIWBIa P IC TU RC S A * * * . . (a a lii P A W N tW M A N ROBERT RED FO RD 1 J -- ™ $ 1.5 0 til 6 p.m. KEAT I RES a BOS PROOUCriON as ACW M T K IM • A M Get One Free! IL J IA N S 4r T E X A S ** 1 :2 0 3 :3 0 5 : HI 7 :5 0 10 :0 0 EXPIRES JUNE 24, 1974 o n * good al •* |»ilie>paA ln« I ! ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ UNIVERSIiy o f TF NAS • d t pARlMfcNI o f (I r AMA h e a tre R oom S tu d e n ts $ 1 2 5 ^ f“ N o n s t u d e n t s $ 2 .0 0 6619 AIRPORT BLVD. 5849 BERKMAN 1000 S. LAMAR / T D h e •• ' • \ •• ;• ' T a il y w v • e x ap* v ' \\\ "*' .N • ‘ ^ v • C - A l a s s i f ie d - ds * ;>,Vv PHONE 471-5844 MON. THRU FRI. Ss00“S:00 CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING RATES IS word minimum Each word one tim e ............. * !“ each word 2-4 times J Each word 5-9 times J O' Each word IO or more times . I 96 Student rate each time .... 4 ” Classified Display ! cd « I inch one time sz ye I col * I inch 2-9 times *2 66 I col * Iinch tenor more times *2.37 ■B33EQSB1 TKurKto, Texan Wednexdey I0 00e.m. 10-0 0 9 .m . 472-1598 Shuttle Bus Corner LOW STUDENT RATES IS word m inim um each day * 75 Each additional word each day* 05 t col * I inch each day *237 Unclassified*" I tine 3 days Si OO 'Prepaid, No Refunds) S tudents m ust show A u d ito r s receipts and pay in advance in TSP Bldg 3 200 ( 25th & Whitis) from 8 a rn to 4:30 p m Monday through Friday 453-4883 1020 E . 4 5 th 454-3953 452-0060 S h u ttle Bus F r o n t D o o r A FREE apartment locator* located In the lower level of Dobie mail. Habitat Hunters has listings on over 15.300 rented units, for summer and tan. Come by or phone now and take advan­ tage of the only no hassle method of apartment hunting. Lower level Dobie M all, Suile S-A. __ Phone 474-1532 ALL PROOF I OW50 lubricant protects gaso line engines fo r SC,OOO m ile s between oil changes 441-5174 PA R A G O N P R O P E R T IE S ON TO W N L A K E I BR F urn Tanglewood West CUTLASS gold w hit* vinyl top, a ir cond $2,125. Cai! 478-6168 Next to Americana Theatre, walking dis­ tance to North Loop Shopping Center and Lucy s One half block from shuttle and A u s tin t r a n s it . 2 B e d ro o m townhouses, extra large Two bedroom fiats, one and two baths, CA/CH, dis­ hwasher, disposal door to door garbage pickup, pool, maid service if desired, washateria in complex. See owners, Apt 113 or call 451-4848 68 CAMARO. V-8, I door, automatic, AM /FM . a ir Best otter 454-6520, 4521141, ext 427 1974 VW DASHER Autom atic AM /FM , 4-door sedan, valid warranty. 1400 miles. 454-6297, 476-3691, VEGA I97i~ w ith new 1973 engine. AM, FM, AC *1400 327-2730, or 476-4638 711W 32nd 454-4917 1970 YAMAHA 200, 5500 mile*. New tires, two helmets, etc *400or best otter. Call Barry, 447-5674 Stereo - For Sale IM M ED IATE SALE. Kenwood stereo receiver/ duel turntable, base and cover F r a ile r s p e a k e rs . C a ll 476-6151, Virginia. I BR Furn M ARK IV APTS. Why waste tim * on a city bus'’ Walk to class Unique e fficie n cy, and one pedroom apartments. Furnished, AU Bills Paid. $125 and up. 2503 Pearl Call 4773264 THE BLA C K STO N E S64.50 month Apartment living Vt block from Campus individual applicants matched w ith compatible roommates 2910 Red River 476-5631 Musical - For Sale FENDER JAZZMASTER electric guitar with hard case *140 Yamaha FG-300 acoustic w ith hard case, $175. Both have perfect neck* 447-4849 and 2 BR *'60 4306 AVENUE A All Bills Paid. I i 2 BR F u rn i shed. AC. Covered P arking, Larger Than Most, I BR - *160, 2 BR *165. 452-1801 retreat s m o o t h f"o x t e r r i e r puppie*. Sire 8. Dam both AKC Champions 385-4839. APTS. 4400 A V E . A AKC (RISH SETTER pups. 6 weeks, m a l e * 110. female $90 /Vormed, shots rn Austin only June 21st, 22nd, 23rd 4526059 Homes - For Sale BV O W N E R W e s t u n I v # r »11y neighborhood Comfortable 3 bedroom fram e Brick fireplace, fenced, garage workshop Exceiient condition. Good in­ vestment. 474-5617. $125.00 I Bedroom Furnished WALK TO CLASS LONGHAVEN APTS. 477-5662 Shuttle Bus Corner 1969 MOBILE HOME, 12x41, 2 b ^ro o m , AC'CH washer, dryer, carpeted. *3,2uu University lot; 476-5224 SHORT W ALK TO W ER O ld 2 /3 bedroom ap a rtm e n t Windows for plants *240 476-3462, 47^ 8683 1902-1904 Nueces. SA VE GAS r id e t h e b u s We have five homes that a r* 2 J®10* * * ,0 bus, that w ill *»ke you to U T bt- Down­ town Price **7,950 to *41,250 Call Feather Home* 451-7697 P dL I, 2207 Leon ........................................... P dL ll, 2200 Leon ......................................... P dL III, 2200 San G a b rie l .......................... PT I, 304 E. 34th ........................................... PT ll, 408 W. 37th ........................................ PT III, 2704 Salado ....................................... PT IV, 502 W. 35th ....................................... PT V, 404 W. 35th ........................... I BR. F U R N . Misc. - For Sale TOP CASH PR IC E S p a id lo r diamonds, old gold Capitol Diamond Shop, 40)8 N. Lam ar, *54-6877. H E Y , ‘1 2 0 a l l b ills po. USED T Y P E W R IT E R S ' Manuals from *30. electrics from *95, all guaranteed D A N S T Y P E W R I T E R S 2408 San Gabriel. *74-639* LE A R N TO P LA Y Guitar Beginner and advanced Drew Thomason. 478-2079 (00mm Telephoto, 2X Convertor, flesh, /ase. *250 Rick, 476-1752 12 FIB E R G LA S S SA ILB O A T, tra iler, two vests, three cushions. Economics sport S3Q0 cath, 4*1-6275 atte r 6 M IN O LTA SRT 101 cam era, I M ™ " J .28 Rokker lens, 35mm t2.8 P ° k |t* ’' * ' .j KAKO 2*00 rechargeable (la th unit. am items less then one year old Lenses un used M u‘..I take best offer Call 8 W * 12:00 a rn., *4* 3868 PORT ABL E KE NMO R E~ dishwasher one year o ld . Excellent condition. USO L O O K ! 444-0010 W IL L O W C R E E K 1901 W IL L O W C R E E K DR. ‘1 6 0 2 BR F U R N . 442-8340 LONDON S Q U A R E 2400 TOWN L A K E C IR C L E 474-2101, *71 4086 EAST IS'/? M IL E S 5.1 acres, trees, fer­ tile soli, scenic *53-3192. *52-4205. NE ED TO S E L L 'n e a rly IO acre* In beautiful hill country outside Austin. *523082, or 472 6*66 ★Shag carpeting and a swimming pool don't make an apartment a home. YOU get service after you lease with us.^ Typing, Printing I Binding SHARE LARGE three bedroom apart­ ment Yj block campus, SSO Ail Bills Paid. Graduate student/Upperdassman preferred 2002 Whit)* 472 6729. Robert DISSERTATIONS, these*, report*, and law b r ie fs E x p e rie n c e d ty p is t. Tarrytow n. 2507 Bridla Path. Lorraine Brady 472-4715. FEMALE ROOMMATE $55 Own room, m a n y w in d o w s , y a rd . G ra d u a te preferred Dorothy, 478-1068 or leave message with Sharon, 471-1868 STAR i f TYPING Experienced theses, dissertations. PR’s, etc Printing^ MW Binding, Specialty Technical. Chari* Stark 453-5218 "T H U ROOMMATE NEEDED Share large2/2 townhouse through Aygul*. Shuttle. All conveniences S pecial r a t* C all tate early, 442 7473 HOL LE Y S T Y P l NG SE RVICE A com­ plete service from typing through bin­ ding. Available ding ie until IO p.m. Experience -c r ed in all fields Near campus. 1401 Mottle Drive. 476-3018 FRANCES WOODSTYPING SE R V IC E. Experienced, Law, Theses, D isser­ tations, Manuscripts 453-6090 LOSTt CAT. to Large male, ™ 4,,V UVJJ ' ljr - ^* w h iff paws, neck 33rd and Guadalupe 452 5803, S25 Reward LOST Male Beagle Stocky, Brown, Black, White Wearing collar engraved " S e b a s tia n ." C a ll G 'o f f r e y Leavenworth. 477-5557. M A B Y L SMALLWOOD Typing. L a it m inu te o ve rn ig h t a v a ila b le . T f f j i papers, theses, dissertations, l e t t f f MasterCharge. BankAm arlcard. 892* 0727 or 442 8545 LOST Female Siamese cat in Town Lake area. Large reward. Phone 4428594 FOUND Young female Collie mix trac­ ed to M L . Donald, Pasadena, Texas Call Human* Society, Austin. M IN N IE L . H A M M E TT T yp ing t D uplicating Service These*, dissimu­ lations, papers ol •!> Free refreshments. 442-7008, 442-2225. UNF. A P ARTS , 3-2 STUDIO apartment for lease Near UT. Married couple* only. No pets. I year minim um *215/monfh 397-2587 before 5pm weekday*. T E N N IS LESSONS l a r g e I BEDROOM walk to campus, available now. *125. A ll bills. Cell 4772832 Keep trying. individual or group Club experience Call Mike Blum 478-0983 or 477-0690 (Leave Message) ABORTION ALTER NATIVE! Pregnant and distressed’ Help is as near as yuuT telephone Pro-Life Advocates. 510 West 26th, 472-4198. FURN. HOUSES FURNISHED HOUSE to sublet mid-July thru Dec Many nice features. Rent negotiable References required. 4514488 FREE RENT - HousesUter for July You pay bills, take care of dogs, house 4723094 T IR E D OF P A Y IN G high prices (or clothes that fall apart? Call Am y - ex­ cellent seamstress 453-1869 4446757 UNF. HOUSES E X P E R I E N C E D R E SE A R C H E R. L ib r a r y , c o m p u te r , s t a t , and Huge I 4 2 bedrooms torn. or unfurn. with large walk-ins. beautiful landscap­ ing From $154 ABP HOO Reinll, 4523202 , 472-4162 Barry Gillingw ater Com­ pany, $139 I Bedrooms Shag - Paneling Giant walk-ins Balconies Spanish furnishings 2423 Town Lake Circle 444-8118 472-4162 Barry Gillingwater Company C ASTLE A R M S APTS 3121 Speedway - 477-3210 Sum m er Rates, covered p ark ­ ing, Shuttle bus, Cable televi­ sion C A V A L IE R APTS. 307 East 31 st _ 2 bedrooms, furnished, pool, AC, w a,ll|h9 distance to UT Ail Bills P 'W - Summer rales *1*0 and up Call 472-7611. F L E U R DE LIS. KU E is t » ! ? ^ • . 'kurt* Hudents Lovely one bedroom*. Weik to campus Shuttle Summer retes. *775282 G R E G O R Y A P TS. L a rg e spacious aoartments Walk to campus, swimming pool, lots storage, kitchen appliances^ One bedroom $125, efficiency IH S . 702 West 25th. 478-2301, *51-8101 SU M M ER “RATES NOW! Six block* fro m Law School; Shuttle bus. One bedroom *130 E fficiency »H0- AC, carpet, dishwasher, disposal, closets, 32nd and In te rre g io n a l *77-0010 or OL3-2228 W alk to disposal, laundry, summer econom etric. In te rp re ta tio n and w r it e ­ up M A Sociology N egotiable. 7ogel, 476 4381 L e a v e m essage. Services -- iversified -jv n .sNEI fc .iw u - "D SCH DER G ra d u a te and _un^ * r £ r * ^ * £ typing, printing, binding. Lane 459 7205 F O R M E R O W N E R larg e ty p in g s e r v ile . — * professional — —'- - a i work on IBM Experienced, self-correcting typewriter. Theses, bls. s e rta tio ns, m a th e m a tica l. 444-8716 between 9-4 NEAT, ACCURATE TYPING el cheap prices! Located near campus, 4P*C|»' rates tor immediate service Cal! Citwy at 474-22)2 Just North "of 2 7 t O : Guadalupe IfyujJlA Y E S , we do type Freshm an themes, W hy n o t s ta r t o u t w it h 472-3210 and 472-7677 2707 Hemphill Perk LARGE HOUSE near Lake Travis on RR 620 Stove and refrigerator. W ill accomodato four adults. Call 444*9557 S W IM M IN G LESSONS Deep E ddy Pool Competent experldnced *n*triuctor. Children all ages Ann M offit. 472*1943 H IG H L A N D M A L L A R E A ON SHUTTLE V IR G IN IA g o od g ra d e s ! CATERING for Exotic T* * ,* * ;„ ^ * p V.* guests the finest in Persian C uW "*. Ex­ p erience chef-waiters 476-3031 SWIMMING LESSONS Experienced, C e r t i f i e d in s tru c to r AH a b ilit ie s (Beginner P00' or yours Groups, private. 478-5 % BOBBYE D E LA F IE LD IBM Selectee, p ic a /elite. 25 years experience, boottt, d is s e r ta t io n s , th e s e s , r e p o r t * , mimeographing. 442-7184 VW R E P A IR WOODSIDE 2220 Wuiowcreek Drive LAR G E O N E BE D R OOM school, study area, carpeted, cable TV, sun dees, CA/CH. shuttle, great location, ABP, rates 7812 Nuece*. 472-6497 Interregional 444-0816 NEAT. ACCURATE end Prompt ty pin#. 60 cents per page. Theses 75 cent* Cwt 447 2737 Quality w o rk a t re a s o n a b le prices Ae can give y o u better service from o u . new shop at 1003 Sage Brush Free ^agno*}*. compression checks, and estimates^ Tune-up on standard VW - S’ ®-50 P,u* parts 836 3171 Please try us. Overseas Engine 8. Supply. We call it our mini-dorm, you can call it home Great for budget-minded students who want privacy. Your choice of burnt orange, chocolate brown or green shag with brugh wallcoverings. WMW. POW) cabana On shuttle route, m in u te from th* jnive rsity and downtown. EM c i ­ ties, I 2, and 3 bdrs also available Summer rates T H E BEST V A L U E IN TOWN ABACUS B U S IN E SS s e r v i c e s 200, 1301 S o u th R rn LOST RED Guatemalan purse between Mf Connell - South F irst Street. *10 Reward Call 476-2772. BEDROOMS? 472-8941 472-8941 472-8941 476-9279 454-0824 477-2752 472-8941 472-8253 Pick-up Service A vailable M A LE SHARE 3 bedroom HS bath house, 2 graduate student*. *72.50, no lease, deposit. 837-0304. 7 a m. - IO p m. M F 9 a.m. - 5 p m. Sat. Annex Call Our O f f ic e ............................................... 472-8253 P ro m p t, Professional Service 453-8101 M ALE ROOMMATE to share great apartment Ceil 441-7111. 6-10 p.m. Ta ngle w ood Efficiencies, I Br, X Large 2 Br M O V E IN TOD AY I ROOMMATE NEEDED , 2 bedroom blocks campus, all bills paid, SSO 476-3467 42 Dobie M a ll 476-9171 Free P a rkin g Shuttle Bus Corner I OOIOO 00to s26500 459-0058 —Theses and dissertations —Law briefs - T e r m papers and reports a p a rtm e n t, 6 G IN N Y 'S C O P Y IN G S E R V IC E INC. 478-1874 F IV E G R E A T B U IL D IN G S C H R ISTEN SO N & ASSOCIATES A T Y P IN G S E R V IC E S pecializing in SERVICES $100 T H R E E G R E A T B U IL D IN G S 30A Dobie Center SERVICE ROOMMATE N EEDED. I bedroom apartment. 6 blocks campus. All bill* paid *65 476-3467. n e a r UT Walk Downtown, shuttle route, attractive efficiency, upstairs, u tilities paid. S80 477-8549. I BR F U R N PONCE de LEON PEPPER TREE 472-8936 ROOMMATES F R E E JU N E R E N T L a rg e one bedroom $135/plus electricity at Che* Jacques 477-7186 after six. Table TV , no pets Resident manager, 474-5347 3001 Duval, A p a rtm e n t No 203 lf No Answer At Above Call 451-7901 W ill T ra in 444-7222 6 Furnished Efficiency. ***** $130 A B P C e n tra l A ir and heat, washer dryer (acuities, swimming pool. w ith us in eight g re a t U n iv e rs ity com plexes • Shuttle Bus 3 Blks. B E D R O O M , p r iv a te p a t i o , carpeted, dishw asher, disposal, cable, pool, shuttle or w a lk to UT. *1129 50 Plus electricity 330 1 S peedw ay. 476-9033 after 3001 - 3007 DUVAL CO LLEGE COURT A PA R TM EN TS F “ f 2 '* h^ ; „ A 9 ' B ROVf [ M SUMM ER • Pool OLO ENGLISH SHEEPDOGS, AKC male, tamale $75 444-8465 I ¥WM TAP AND BALLET TEACHER tor pre­ school 8, school age children, 2 mornings or afternoons weekly 836-1609 ONE NORTHWEST AUSTIN *119 50 Ail Bills Paid, furnsihed 68116813 G re a t N o rth e rn . C able TV, washer/dryer facilities, CA/CH. mature students, no pets or children Quiet for those who are serious and want to study. Phone 472-6201, John Ludlum before 5 weekdays Resident manager 452-4944 after 5 and weekends. P ark Y our Car and W alk To School! • C o lo rfu l Shag C arpet • C e n tra l A ir Pets * For Sale LONGVIEW Parking, Pool. I BR - *135 2 BR 472-5316 W A L K IN G D IS T A N C E U T , b ills p a id , A C , p a n e le d , c a rp e te d / pool/ no pets. 2 bedroom , S190. I bedroom , S145-S150 . 3011 WhitiS, No. 105, after 5 M on .-F rid ay. A fter IO a.m . weekends. 108 plus E WU RLI TZE R BABY GRANO Piano Good condition, $500 or best otter. 4513111 2408 476-1172 A p a rtm e n ts 708 W. 34th 454-6294 A PAR AG O N P R O P E R T Y GUITAR M ARTIN D I* W ith case. Ex­ cellent condition, 2 years o l£ $450 Serious inquiries only. 476*3201. 478-6 Iv *120 4 P a rt-tim e NIGHT a u d it I lpm ■7am. Front desk experience requested Apply In person Holiday Inn South 20 Interregional. EFFICIENCY *107 50 plus electricity, near UT, Shuttle route, very nice, AC. Available now 459-9044, 454-76*1 1209 Winsor, No 6. Sw im m ing pool, b eau ti.u tly furnished double or studio bed, all have dishwasher, disoosal, central a ir and heat, shag c a rp e t, e x tra storage room. 305 West 35th (6 blocks fro m campus) M an ager Apt. 106 453-4364 2108 SAN GABRIEL P rivate and Large I BR Apt , Full Kitchen, AC, Furnished. Water and Gas Paid, Summer Rate - 2707 Hemphill Park B U IL D YOUR OWN in d e p e n d e n t business with the second largest national corporation in direct sales 441-5174. TARRYTOWN one bedroom Mature single Shull'.e, pool, trees, lake, bills paid $135. Recorded description - 4728682 NEW E F F IC IE N C IE S CLOSE TO CAM PU S S H U T T L E BUS 2 Day Service 472-3210 and 472-7677 SELL FLOWERS Make $30-$60 working * * days * - a--------** *— cFrP r»4 peaceful week ’*'*■ Thursday, day afternoons, Saturday, Sunday alt day. Top commission Paid daily. 4/63060. 453-1508, 453-2761 ONE BEDROOM apartment North of campus *128 m o, AC, 3311 Speedway. Contact T E Wiley Co , 107 West 5th *729228 E F F IC IE N C IE S HALLMARK APTS. O LD M A IN APA RTM ENTS S TE R E O - H I-F I c a b in e t, s o lid Teakwood House all your component*. *250 Call 345-2675 SHUTTLE BUSCORNER I Bedroom 2919 W est Ave. WE BOOR 8-TRACK, A M /F M multiplex. 2 speakers *49 Good buy Call 477-4319. 5 BLOCKS WEST OF C A M P U S Ne/, semi-efficiencies Shag carpet, cable gas, water furnished, RED OAK 2104 San Gabriel *121 Summer Rates. 477 5514 476-7916 E FF IC IE N C Y - furnished, modern^ $119 month Located 1115 W*st 10th Street Confact T E. Wiley Co. 107 West 5th 472-9228 H A R T F O R D P LA C E SHO 474-1712 PANASONIC 8 -track re ceive r speakers. 2 years otd. 453-0362. 3100 Speedway 477-1685 ONE BEDROOM T u p le * apeT *"™ "! near campus. See Manager elI 104 Eas 32nd. Apt 103 476-5940, 451-2832 1405 H artford Road. 263-2390. Large fu r­ nished one bedroom and efficiency apartments CA/CH, shag carpet, full kitchen, quiet atmosphere, just off En­ field Rd Convenient to UT, Capitol Shut­ tle bus SUMMER RATES, F A L L LEASING. Come By and see our new efficiency and I bedroom apartments on the banks of Town Lake. C om plete w ith shag carpeting accent w all, modern fu r­ niture, plus an individual deck overlook­ in g the water F ro m $145 - a ll b ills paid 300 East R iv e rs id e D riv e 444-3337 $120 e f f i c i e n c i e s $100 1 B E D R O O M 5135.00 2 B E D R O O M $175.00 Dishwasher, disposal, 6 blocks cam pus, e x tra nice luxu ry apartm ents. Motorcycle* - For Sale location p ro v id e s easy access to U .T . 2122 H a n c o c k D r. 1972 G REM LIN IN H E R IT E D CAR Selling '6 8 F o rd Gaiaxie 390 AC, radio, good condition. Few dent*. $500. 478-4029 The South Shore s central B uckingham Square KENRAY APARTMENTS 1968 CAM ARO SPORT, 2 Or. V-» autom atic AM /FM , air. *850 454-6520. 452-8141 ext *27 day*. SOUTH SHORE A PARTM ENTS y o u r h o u s in g . All Bills Paid W alk to Campus weekend* 10x16.5 TIRES and wheel* fit* Jeep*, scoot* $200 451-2242 or 452-8948 PONTIAC TEMPEST W85 Pull IV O * * . air good tires, automatic. *495 442-8795. Very clean. M u tt sell. $ 115 2 and 3 bedroom townhouse and flats from $180 all bill* paid. Summer from $165 On shuttle bus route, dishwasher, disposal, central air, pool, game room. Call 444-341). or come by 1201 Tintjln Ford Road. Apt 113 Turn East oft IH35 on E Riverside Drive. E fficie n cy/ 1/ 2, and 3 bedroom a p a r t m e n t s . O ffe r th e s o l u t i o n to I Bedroom weekday* •71 " X " . AC. 3-ip Excellent m ileage, e xcelle nt cond itio n Low m ile a g e E x tra s *2295 477-3388, anytime Shuttle Bus Corner 472-4171 472-4175 1969 CORVETTE, A M /F M , a ir, 427. clean, $2975 or oider car In trade Take up balance. 474-4444. 474-1041. SUMMER RATES. I bedroom apertment on shuttle bus route No tease re­ quired *195/month. 477-7080 LfV L The Com plete Professional F U L L -T IM E Typing Service RESUMES w ith or without pictures. FLORAL DESIGNER. Experienced only need apply Pay commensurate with ability. 477-5717 for appointment. LARGE o n e BEDROOM, carpeted, paneled, C A ’CH, disposal, dishwasher. $135 plus electricity. The Conquistador, 2101 San Gabriel 472-7746. j i v MBA Typing, M ultitithing, binding Reports Resume* Theses, Letters All University and business work Last Minute Service Open 9-9 Mon-Th a 9-5 F ri Sat $3.05 per Hour CAMPUS. Efficiency apartm ent $99 50 ABP 2907-D San Gabriel. *100 ABP, 908-G West 29th Barham Proper­ ties 926-9365. of 27th 8. M TYPIN G 14 JOBS NEAR CONSUL v 2700 West Anderson Lane in The Village Shopping Center E N FIELD AREA. Two bedroom with every extra Furnished or unfurnished V S H $152 pius electricity 807 West Lynn Barry Gillingwater Company. 4777794. 472-41*2 NO LEA SE t y The Great Gatsby EXC ELLEN T SUMMER RATES on s p a c io u s one a nd tw o b e d ro o m apartments. Fall rates reasonable Call 454-9475 Built-in bookshelves, welk in closets Kitchen cabinets galore. All Bills Paid 444-1931 *U 7 0 n Rod Singleton Properties N o rth G u a d a lu p e Full and part tim e waitress/waiters. Bus help, kitchen help, bartenders, bar help. Apply In person Sat 6/8 74 IO 30 till 5 OO Sun 6/9 74 12 OO ti! 5:00. *2 OO per hour. l a r g e I & 2 Bedroom furnished and un­ furnished. Shag, wet bar, private club rooms, on shuttle. I bedrwim from S149 50 ABP I bedroom *169.50 ABP. 454 3885, 476-2633, Barry Gillingwater Company. Apartment* shown till 9 30 p m South Cute I bedroom apartments Directly on Shuttle. Seven minutes from Bergstrom. H A B IT A T H U N T E R S 2204 Enfield Rd 472-5320 474-4322 1931 COLORFUL r iE O R O O M Shag, dis­ hwasher, coly community. Near shuttle From $U5 plus electricity 1211 West 8th ion Bianco). 474-1107, 472-4162 Barry Gillingwater Company. W O R K IN G OR BUSY Antilles Apts. 472-9614 Very good mechanical condition. SI400 weekdays, 471-1784, M arilyn. 836-4629i Rod Singleton Properties $120 472-3349 Your tim e is valuable O ur service is free Colonial North Apartments ALL BILLS PAIO 6 BLOCKS CAMPUS POOL. SHUTTLE BUS ROUTE ROOM M ATE F U R N IS H E D IF NEEDEO 476-3467 2 * * Leon 2 BR F u rn ALL B IL L $ p a i d R E N T 7961 DODGE VAN New paint and tji es. 452-5093 E F F IC IE N C IE S - $100.00 1 B ED R O O M - $130.00 2 B E D R O O M - $190.00 $140 A U S T IN FORD CUSTOM, 1967, Six cylinders, m a n u a l tra n s *400 Good condition. Call MARK XX Shuttle Bus Corner FURN. A P A R T S . W E Come see our huge 3 J 4 bedroom apartments. Now available for summer or fall leasing. Roommates $**.50 each o r *81.50 e a c h . A ll B ills P a id . A p artm ents shown till dark everyday 2 Bedroom Tanglewood North valerian, Comfrey, , ^ M'2 I 2 d r a t ie K n i* S a r s a s p a rllla , M a n d ra k e . Hawthorne Berry, and Capsicum are com bined w itn natural Vitamins and Minerals In on* carefully balanced formula. Also, a co • pfete Protein fortif.ed w ith Vitam in E product or sponsored distributorships David Stewart 478-2618. A u te - For Sale ju s t RESPONSIBLE SPANISH-SPEAKING person to love and care tor ?year-old girl in our home. 11-5, M-F. Light housekeep­ ing Private room, bath, meals, S40 week Or part-time, $1 *0 hour. Near Hancock Center 478-6935 before 10.30 a m. or after 5 OO p m. WALKING DISTANCE TO UT Paved front and back Carport, patios lanced yard. Plus bills. For appointment, 4723485, Overby. Attention Students! $140 I B edroom g in s e n g FOR SALE 472-4893 $105 - *115 I Bedroom apartment, pool, very near UT, carpeted, paneled. AC, water & yay gas paid. See -r at 2711• H T-aSoar e m p h ill, Ter a* apartment J, or call 472-4408, 478-3885, 327-1355 sh u ttle bu sc o r n er $ 10 5 10% OFF „ th this ad on antique and recycled and new shirts blouses, leans, bes, hats. lewelrv q u i l t s , austmtatious T-sh tis, 40 s s u m m e r dresses, pottery, collec­ tables and more 2405 Nueces 476-0986 I or 2 Bedroom furnished Convenient to UT B e a u tifu l, pool and patio. Managed by owner Shuttle ’ 5 block. 452 3314 *59-9927 453-4545 E L C ID & E L DORADO La Canada Apts, 6701 N LAMAR Opening Friday June 21 Fr; sa* a. Sun Ea WK. See us for buying 8. selling For reservations call INK Days - 258-1511 Wk Ends - 452-850* V IN T A G E T H R E A D S TYPING FURN. A P A R TS . ONa Luxurious 2-2. Block Law School, L.B.J. Library, St O avids. Pool, sunback, shag, cable. 1200, bills paid. Great Oak Apartments. 477-3388 V IL L A O R LE A N S 206 W. 38th I Bedroom I Br. Furn All Bills Paid W E L C O M E UT S T U D E N T S TEXAN F L E A M K T in Mw n « l et xwen mod. in on a4in ti n n . iit. tmnadW. n.lie. a m i be m a.n iiM . ter only ONE mtorre* ime/henh. AN dean. for adjustment* »hovW ha mod. na* tatar than JO day* attar pubkcenen ‘ TORN. A P A R TS . ■ $100-5110 $150 Misc. - For Sale OCADUNE SCHROM! FU R N. A P A R T S . ■ l o c a t io n - l o c a t io n -l o c a t LARGE I NN ERTUBES tor sw im m ily or tubing Al! sites to choose from up 2201 Airport Blvd. T w w to y T . » . n M e n d e r ........1 * 0 0 a.m . W ^ n M d o r T exan T uesday 10:00 ..rn. f n t a y t x x e n T h ursd ay FU R N. AP A R TS . ■ FURN. DUPLEXE FAR NO RTH I bedroom. CA/CH, fenced yard. $135 b ill* paid. 452-4012. ROOM S T E X A N DO RM . 1905 Nueces Double* • *52 50/6 w k* session. Singles - *95.00/6 wk*, session Daily maid serv'ce, canira! air Refrigerators, hot plates allow ­ ed Two blocks from campus Co-Ed. Resident M anager*. 447-1760 TUTORING SPANISH TUTOR any level. Native speaker Four years experience as T A Reasonable rate*. Call 477-1*03. P R IV A T E ROOM 2 blocks campus, cen­ tral air, maid service, kitchen, co-*d, s u m m e r rates. 472-368*, 476-2551. SHORT W ALK TOW ER. Large rooms. Old building *95 up Utilities paid. *763*62, *76-8683 1902 1904 Nueces. t w o ROOMS available In tine Old house *67.50 bills, shuttle 802 East *7th $67 50 plus pH *53-9779 O NE ROOM located In house a* 606 West 35fh *65/ month, plus VS bills. F u ll use of house. W ALK CAMPUS Furnished room AC, refrigerator, private bath, private en­ trance, covered parking, no hassles 2*02 Rio Grande (R ear). *70. *76 7791, John F U R N IS H E D ROOM, ac, abp, *55/m o. Contact manager at 3310 Red River or phone *76-363* L O V E L Y FRONT BEDROOM, private e n tra n c e , sem iprivate bat h, refrigerator, ideal location. HO East 30th. 477 7079 P R I V A T E ROOMS *50/month. All bills paid 6 blk* (rom campus Fratern ity House *77 0355 or 477 498! W ANTED B U Y IN G U S ST AMPS Collectlone, ac­ c u m u la tio n s , sheets, b lo c k s , et c. Im m ediate payment. PAX 29J0, *52-5*42 evenings. M ISCELLANEOU S N E L S O N S G IF T S : Z u n i In d ia n jewelry; African and Mexican Im port*. 4612 South Congress. 444-3814. Closed Monday*. M O V IN G ? M Y PIC K U P can make the going a lot easier. Tom** Do Rite Truck­ ing. 258-1891. M O N T E R R E Y . M E X IC O fam ily seek* "cultural exchange": 15-year-old son w ant* to learn English 478-6935. F R IE N D L Y , A F F E C T IO N A T E pup needs home - Our other doas are feeling crowded. Please call 836-1373. UNCLASSIFIED D o n 't tie up yo u r cash in unused ite m s around the house. Sell them in The D a ily T e xa n ! Sherwood 8900A Rec. 4*7-4076 Nts. Piano need tuning? *41-4*92. For Sale Couch-bed *25 477-1B*B~ G reat location 7-2 1200 *77-3388 K LH I! amp 8. tnbl nos work *51-2832 1972 Gremlin all extras 477 3388 Free kittens I blk. I gry. 474-5565 Home built Sailfish $95 *51-22*2. Stereo 8-track deck *75. 385-7013. Sensu! QR4500 amp, 2 speak. 478-3590 Afghan pup*. AKC reg. 452-8308 *64 Corvefr, reliable. *300. 478-2993 1970 Renault R-10. $900 472-6406 16 Fbrgls canoe *175 836 6178 Sony itereo Dual changer 1912 Karen Seam iness needed Deb. *74-5532. BellyDancinglnstruction 472-33*4 72' , Husky 250 *650 451-23*0 ’64 Chevy Pickup *500 453-7736. Stereo radio, cassette & RP 385- Athletes Council Takes Action On Calendar Changes end Dec. 9, followed by three Dr. Joel Stutz, a m em ber of By RICHARD FLY no-class days. Finals would the Calendar Com mittee, said Texan Staff W riter begin Dec. 13. The U n iv e rsity Council such a plan ‘‘reduced the W ith sev en exam d a y s, number of class days, getting Monday amended the propos­ finals would end Dec. 20. farther and farther from the ed 1975-1976 c a le n d a r to Werbow’s amendment was provide three no-class days (Texas College and Universi­ approved overwhelmingly. prior to final examinations in ty) Co-ordinating B o ard ,” which recom m ends 15 full An attem p t by Fleming to December, 1975. change the spring, 1976, calen­ THE COUNCIL refused to weeks of class. FLEMING’S PLAN would d ar fa ile d since s tu d e n ts approve an am endm ent to the s p r in g . 1976, c a l e n d a r , reduce the total number of technically have three days b e f o r e f i n a l s , wi t h t h e however, since the one no­ class days from 73 to 69. “ The main object here is to weekend included. class day provided is preceded get more classroom work, TH E COUNCIL al so by a weekend. The original fall calendar Stutz said. defeated an amendment to He also argued th a t the sta rt classes on the Tuesday included one no-class day on Dec. 12. with exam s starting weekend preceding the no­ after registration rather than class days would actually sta rt on Monday, Labor Day. Dec. 13. An am endm ent submitted make five off-days. In other business, the coun­ Dr. Stanley Werbow, dean by Student Government P resi­ cil continued debate for the of the College of Humanities, dent Frank Fleming would third stra ig h t m eeting on have had classes ending on submitted a substitute am end­ r e c o m m e n d a t i o n s on Dec. 5, rather than Dec ll, ment which would cut only budgetary procedures, with two c la s s d ay s and still Dec. 8, 9 and IO would have further discussion postponed been no-class days, with finals provide three no-class days. until the July meeting. He proposed that classes starting Dec. l l Research Granted For Heart Disease research* ro cky m o u n t a in P R O D U C T IO N S P R t S f N T S DOUG KERSHAW ami the UST MIU RAMBUR? at [ h f um JerTuron"™™ e f f i c i e T I t o i of Study Seeks Volunteers T **■ T lr Cheep Rooms The University is looking for women between the ages of 18 and 22 to volunteer for a research project about fem a le athletes. The project is designed to te st the female nonathlete and co m pare her with the fem ale a t h l e t e , ” Ca r l P o s t e r , g rad u ate student in health and physical education, said. FOSTER ADDED th a t in a previous study on the m ale ath lete and nonathlete, they found the male a th le te is usually bigger, stronger, uses l e s s oxygen on a h e a v y w orkload and has b etter re a c ­ tion tim e than the m ale non­ athlete. ar rn In O a k la n d , M a in e , the o n ly a p a rtm e n t house blu es are jays. W aterville school cus­ todian G le n Timoney hasn't fo u n d a n y ten­ ants yet becau se the paint's not dry. One mans s t a r l i n g is another m a n 's crow. ¥ -e JL . CHECP RENT BIROS ere v ie w y BIRDS 0N£ . UPI Telephoto Travel Services Expand , i U n iv ersity stu d e n ts jo u rn e y in g hom e between sem esters will be able to purchase combination rail-bus tickets beginning this fall. Amtrak will be able to ticket its passengers straight through to cities not served by rail service. “ If a person’s destination is not served by Amtrak, then he can use his A m trak ticket to •j a 11 ride Greyhound hue bus to his final destinatioi destination,’' Jam es K errigan, Greyhound president, said. K errigan also said Greyhound will be able to take a passenger from his origin to an Amtrak city to board a train to his final destination. He added that A mtrak’s trav e l agents will sell tick ets to ride the bus, and Greyhound will sell tick ets for Amtrak’s train s. same c h a ra c te ristic s as the male ath le te , P oster ex­ plained. “We need w o m en who have never been on a varsity team and are p re se n tly inactive, Foster said. FOSTER E X PL A IN E D that those who v o lu n teer will be given a bicycle w ork capacity test, which t e s ts how much oxygen one u se s when under a maximum w o rk lo ad ; a tread­ mill work c a p a c ity test, which measures h e a r t rate ; a reac­ t i on t i m e t e s t , wh i c h m easures m o to r output in reaction to a stim u lu s; and a personality su rv e y . Foster added th at tests are given in five sessions, three in June and two in August before finals. V o lu n teers must be able to attend a ll five one-hour sessions for th e data to be complete. V olunteers should have no l i m i t a t i o n s on physical a c tiv ity “ A fter this project, w hich will last about two y ea rs, we hope to find out how w ell the fem ale athlete can p articip a te in many traditional all-m ale sp o rts,” Foster said. F o s te r stated th e m a le ath lete is more aggressive, d o m in an t and show s m o re le a d e rs h ip c h a r a c t e r is ti c s than the nonathletic m ale. For fu rth e r information or to v o lu n teer contact Toby Tate at 471-1273 (office) or 474-5587 (h o m e ). “ WE WANT to find out if the fem ale athlete ex h ib its the medication for heart disease patients nharm acv Dr Gerald J. Yakatan, assistant professor of p h arm a cy has received a $6,000 grant from the American H eart A s L S n . Texas Affiliate. Inc., to study diuretic drugs. THE RESEARCH will be done on drugs already on the m arket, Y akatan said. Drugs to be investigated inc u e furosemide. ethacrynic acid and triam terene. . ri;uretic Yakatan w ants to m easure the rates at which tht d drugs are absorbed into and eliminated from dlfff rent b^ y Darts The study will determ ine how the drugs affect hlood levels in the body. Once the dress are in the blood levels, tho ^ c e n tr a tio n of the medication in the blood and urine can be 200 A C A D E M Y IKE & TINA TURNER 1After a*study of blood levels has been made, the resulting d-,t will be run through a com puter to find out model dosages The model dosages will be given to dogs to study the J U N E 24 7 p m & 9 pm TICKETS $5 ADV. $6 AT THE DOOR ^ Y a k a ta n said if the work with animals finds an efficient m e a n s of m easuring the rate that diuretic drugs travel through the body, the research will be extended to include Inntr Sanctum, Discount Records Texas Hatters, River City Inn Texas Opry House ADV. T IC K E T S AT FRIDAY, JUNE 21 TEXAS OPRY HOUSE 2 PERFORMANCES 7 & IO P.M. WITH THE research results, Yakatan hopes to find w^ys to give heart disease patients dosages of diuretic drugs are more exact to avoid adverse reactions. ‘ The grant will begin in July, but Yakatan and two docmra students in pharm acy, B arb ara Benton and Jim m ie A D V A N C I TKKttS IN N IS SA N C T U M D IS C O U N T R E C O R D S TEX AS O PRY H O U SE T IC K ET S SA A D V A N C E S S AT THE D O O R ^ S e a r c h S S S w t K t u r or five years to complete, Y akatan said MESSAGE IN A BOTTLE? SH A K EY 'S 2 9 1 5 G u a d a lu p e ... we ve got a better way Presents ALLEN DAM RON TONIGHT THRU SATURDAY Serving your favorite Beer and Wine Coolers, Sangria, and 2 J varieties of P in o s. 2 9 1 5 G u a d la u p e • Daily Specials • IF you have ... som ething to S E L L FIESTA NITE , an apartment to R E N T FREE TAMALES TEQUILA 50e A SHOT . to B U Y a stereo . a house to L E A S E UVE ENTERTAINMENT By The Only Band The Bucket Has Ever Held Over . to find a JO B need to H IR E som eone RIVER CITY iLIlr HELD OVER BY POPULAR D E M A N D THE BUCKET • tuonimn CALL ACROSS FROM HARDIN NORTH - 3 HRS. FREI PA R KIN ^ GRAND OPENING - 471-5244 F I N A L WEEK and place your C L A S S IF IE D A D in THE D A IL Y T E X A N req o ru s I RESTAURAN M V * THE DAILY TEXAN BEER SPECIAL THRU SUNDAY Michelob Beer 20‘ a mug SI OO pitcher with the purchase of any sandwich, piixa, or meal M. a .LOO a , I . I on, 2801 GUADALUPE « • * , * They'll G e t Your » '* 472-3034 of Texas a f A u s t in Student N e w s p a p e r at The U niversity o m S u rv -T h u rt. I K I Nominees Chosen Wo men ! Home Rule Snagged ! Town To * * * * * * 2,000 Finks OK'd forAthleticsCouncil By SUSAN LINDEE Texan Staff Writer The names of five women were approved by the Faculty Senate in a special meeting Monday afternoon to be con­ sidered for a single position on the Athletics Council The five were chosen by an Athletics Council com mittee, c h a ire d by Wi 11 i a rn L iv in g sto n , p ro fe s s o r of government. Livingston .said he thought it was a “ very fine group of people THE WOMEN are Maxine Hairston, associate professor of E n g l i s h ; E l i z a b e t h L a n h a m , p r o f e s s o r of management, Joanne Ravel, a s s o c i a t e p r o f e s s o r of ch e m is try ; J a n e t Spence, professor of psychology and educational psychology and Betty Thompson, professor of health, education and recrea­ tion. A motion was made that four men who had originally been recommended be added to the list, but Senate by-laws lim it th e S e n a te to fiv e names. By-laws can be chang­ ed at any m eeting of the Senate, but no one was in favor of doing so. The five recommendations will go to University P resi­ dent Stephen Spurr, who will make the final decision. Ravel said she had mixed emotions about the limited choice of five women. “ I would like to see a woman on the Athletics Coun­ cil, she said, but I wish it could have happened without such specific limitations ’ RAVEL SAID she is in favor of blending education and athletics, since athletics are "an important part of life. Spence, a member of the Faculty Senate, said she had voted for sending an all­ female list. • M em b ersh ip should be open to all individuals, and no woman has yet been on the Athletics Council,” she said. “ O u r p u r p o s e w as to suggest the need for a woman on the council unambiguously to Stephen Spurr,” Spence added. Lanham had received no of­ fic ia l n o tific atio n of h er nomination, and she declined to comment. T he c o m m itte e had originally submitted a list of four men and one woman, but the Senate decided a woman definitely should serve on the Athletics Council. Project Hearing Lacks Q uorum Low attendance at a Monday noon meeting of the Austin Parks and Recreation Board forced postponement of a hear­ ing on the proposed Ninth and 10th Streets improvements project. . _ » Jack W. Robinson, departm ent director, said the hearing would be rescheduled at a tim e when the greatest number of board m em bers could attend. The board plans to conduct a tour of the 10th Street ana Shoal Creek park area prior to the hearing. Robinson term ed the absences “ unusual” and attributed them to illness, conflicting schedules and the recent resignations of 4 of the board s ll members. The Mondav meeting was not listed in this week s calendar of cit v events published by Austin’s D epartm ent of Public In­ formation. V. Glenn Cootes, director of the department, said the omission was “ due to a breakdown in communications. Over Style Revision The Austin Telephone Directory list ll Finks, and * vhen a reporter needed them, none of the tne Finks ru in s were ^ * when * available. ♦ + THIS WEEK has been proclaimed National Fink Week, * * and festivities are under way in the sm all Northeast Tex- J * More than 2,000 'persons are J v rn d e r town of v * Fink, * » * • * * ' where else? — ----* as 4* expected to descend on h ink for the 10th annual celebra- By ANNE MARIE KILDAY Texan Staff Writer D e le g a te s *o th e C o n stitu tio n al C onvention failed to resolve a “ conflict” in the Local Government Arti­ 1 t>on , . 2 cle during its reading Monday. 2 This year Finks can participate in the first annual Fink J The third reading, which is J Rodeo or else hit the green for the fifth annual Fink Golf J the final report of the Style At Tournament. and Drafting Committee, had * IN FINK alone, there are three fam ilies who have par- ^ been postponed T h u rsd ay J ticipated in National Fink Week for the last IO years. * when the com m ittee ruled .to Finks as far away as Nebraska and Michigan are ex- ♦ that a separate submission for At petted to attend the Fink meeting this week. J county home rule was “ incon­ At Willard Albright, husband of Fink Mayor P at Albright, J s i s t e n t ” w ith th e L o ca l * said that last year there were only about 50 original Government Article. { Finks, but they tend to attract crowds. * THE COUNTY home rule ★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★ proposal, which will be sub­ mitted to voters on the con­ stitution ballot, would allow local options on home rule charters which do not violate other sections of the constitu­ tion. University police officers will dropped 29 percent. But the Local Government By JACK KING 'We’ve done so well for the be sent to two-week training Article m aintains the present Crime on University proper­ sessio n s a t th e N atio n al ty is up 22 percent over the last two years in bringing the Crime Prevention Institute in form of county commission comparable period last year, crim e rate down that I think San Antonio. and to deal with it University we’ve had a bit of apathy this The officers will be trained police are forming a special year on the p art of the Univer­ sity c o m m u n ity ,” Cannon in developments in university Crime Prevention Unit. U n iv ersity Police C hief s a id . “ I th in k t h a t th e security codes, assessm ent of Donald Cannon said Monday e c o n o m ic s i t u a t i o n h a s available security hardware c rim e s of rap e , ro b b ery , something to do with rise in and security arrangem ents in in th e v a rio u s aggravated assault, car theft theft. Things a re getting more u s e departm ents, he said. and larceny are up 22 percent expensive." To deal with the crim e rise on p ro p e rty p atro lled by Cannon said the largest in­ University police. He com ­ the U niversity police will crease has been in larceny, pared this figure to those of form the sp e c ia l unit in theft of anything but a motor the 1972-73 year when crim e September. Beginning June 24 eight vehicle. on U n iv e r s ity p r o p e r ty v v v t m Police Blame Apathy Campus Crime Up 2 2 % government and requires that c o u n ty o f fic ia ls su c h as sheriffs and tax assessors be elected. The sty le and d ra ftin g rep o rt of “ inconsistency" would allow the delegates to c h a n g e th e h o m e r u le proposal by a sim ple m ajority vote instead of the two-thirds v o te r e q u ir e d on th ir d reading. However, delegates refused to change the proposal Mon­ day, killing an amendment offered by Rep. Jam es Easter of El Paso. R a ste r’s amend­ ment was an attem p t to clear up the inconsistency in the proposal. It included the provision “ A charter is not to be considered inconsistent with the Constitu­ tion by virtue of the assign­ ment of duties and functions of county government, the choice of titles of county of- fleers, their method of selec­ tion, or their term s of office.” THE KASTER amendment, tabled 80-71, was described by Sen Lloyd Doggett of Austin as ‘‘an e x a m p le of allA m e ric a n pure home rule.” Rep Craig Washington of Houston, chairm an of the L ocal G o v e rn m e n t C om ­ m ittee, spoke against the R aster amendment “ We wanted limited home rule, and it was adopted." Washington said. "Voting to change the proposal would be adm itting th at you didn’t know what you were doing on the second reading of the arti­ cle. Additional amendments to the Local Government Arti­ cle, specifically the home rule provision, will be considered w hen th e t h i r d r e a d i n g resum es at IO a m. Tuesday. The event you've been ivaitinft for! SemiAnnual Shoe Sale Studtm cm 's Photo Service & 222 W . 19th 5324 C a m e ro n Rd. Famous Nam es ... Low Prices RESUME' & IDENTIFICATION TYPE PICTURES Select groups Capezio Front Row Lujan Buskens Sandler I-D ay Quick, Reliable Service Reg. to $22 Reg. to $20 Reg. to $19 Reg. to $14 Reg. to $15 Reg. to $22 Reg. to $18 Reg. to $25 Reg. to $25 Reg. to $27 Reg. to $28 Reg. to $33 Sunshine of California Carter Bort Carlton Caressa Daybreaks Patinos THIS W EEK TRY A Roy Rogefr Now Now Now Now Now Now Now Now Now Now Now Now $5.90 to $11.90 $6.90 to $13.90 $9.90 to $13.90 $9.90 $10.90 to $11.90 $12.90 $12.90 $12.90 to $16.90 $14.90 $14.90 to $16.90 $14.90 to $18.90 $19.90 HAL S BOOTERY RESTAURANT HAMBURGER 2300 G uadalupe, On-The-Drag W IT H ALL THE T R I M M I N G S £ ATTENTION FORTT Reg. $1.50 Save 51c Orientation Students NOW THROUGH SUNDAY BEER FOOSBALL • PONG Open till 4 a.m. Another word for your UT vocabulary: 477-6829 Corner 19th & Guadalupe A $200 Music System is not an appliance. carefully e v a lu a t in g go o d stereo equipment gives us the ability to carefully choose the best v a lu e s ic* lo w -p rice d equipment. Each component in our two hundred dollar system h as proved its v a lu e a n d reliability in a series of tests. Each component is guaranteed by our service department for one year, parts and labor. The receiver is a Sherwood S7050. There are controls for lf you are looking around for a music system in the $200 price range you can either go to an audio specialist (like us), or to a large home appliance center or deportment store. F earin g that at a n a u d io specialty store you w on't be able to buy anything for the amount of money you have to spend, you m ay well go first to talk to the nice m an w ho sold you your refrigerator. Following him past the air conditioners, all-in-one-stereotheatres, a nd (reeler*, you come to the corner devoted to stereo equipment. “Here's a nice one/' he says, pointing at a few nameless boxes. * M a rk ­ ed down from $400 to $200 just this week. Buy it. You'll like it. lf there is any problem, just ship it back to the factory. We at Audio Concepts have an a lte rn a tiv e : our $219 S her wood BSR Creative System. Our experience as specialists in listening to, and I t ■> IPT The system price is $24 0 which is $100.80 less than the price at which we would sell th e c o m p o n e n t s to y o u separately. It is a great starter system; it will get yeu into quality stereo music, at a price which will leave you some money to buy records with. Come buy and talk to us about it. We're specialists; but w e don't bite. You may. Thank M AK E YOUR M ARK! Reserve Your Copy of the 1975 CACTUS YEARBOOK by Marking Your OPTIONAL FEE CARD When You io {incepts O pen 11 A.M. to 7 P.M. Page 14 Tuesday, XAN .UrnJune 18, 1974 T H E D A I L Y T EU, A A . i . The record changer w e ar# re c o m m e n d in g is the BSR M o d e l 3 I OX, a q u a l i t y automatic turntable. It can be operated either m anually or automatically, there is a con­ venient cueing control. It comes complete with a cartridge and w alnut grained base. you. Park Fro* in Dobio G arage . balance, loudness, bass, and treble. There is a speaker selec­ tor switch. It doesn't have the power to shatter goblets but it reproduces music with a clarity that is hard to find in an inex­ pensive receiver. The speakers are Creative 22 and are of a bookshelf design. There is an 6 " woofer and a 3 " tweeter. The bass is firm and dean, without any jukebox boominess. No. 2 PENCIL (pen’eel), n. I A narrow cylindrical tool for writing, drawing or marking, usually consisting of a thin rod of graphite encased in wood. 2. The only writing instrum ent to be used on the Op­ tional Fee Selection card when ordering the 1975 CACTUS Yearbook during pre­ registration. IU. I✓#«* i m , U f l l U I 4 7 8 -7 4 2 1 4 7 8 -8 8 0 0 19 Dobie P re re g iste r You will be billed with your fees for the fall! only $8.40