V ^iiipii > ~V43V' "~" fhStudent Newspaper at the University of Texas at MS VP ^<"X # •'AfMt0ay < • ' "Austin &b$8B 2$&>:t Ten .Cents iictiI ^Austin, Texas, Thursday, January ^, 1975 , '>V " .' -. J---15 Sixteen Pages i-WiOT--ii « , f f , wirf, * t.l-S kt Kalmbach WASHINGTON (Uf»I) -John VK. formed in advance of Sirica's decision on ing of profound relief in the context of- Dean III, Jeb Stuart Magruder and behalf of the three. what, of course, is a most unfortunateHerbert W. Kalmbach — three men who three had routinely asked . All men episode in our nation's history. I feel no :• , confessed their Watergate crimes and Sirica for a reduction of their sentences bitterness toward anyone, and hope thatthen helped convict others — were , last fall. His terse orders gave no reason my actions have served to strengthen the" ordered released from prisonTuesday by why he had granted the requests or ex­pillars of justice." V-S. Dist. Judge John J. Sirica. planation of the timing. fW It was believed, however, that Sirica's Sirica's surprise.order, signed just six Wearing an expensive gray suit with I' !>? ] days after four other top lleiitenants to action was in recognition of their full red figured tie, Kalmbach turned aside I'.-:**-1 Richard M. Nixon were found guilty of all questions during the three-minute cooperatioh with the government after the Watergate cover-up, reduced the news conference except to repeat his l®> - pleading guilty to their own crimes — stiff sentences he imposed on each of the Dean and Magruder to conspiracy in the "great appreciation for the compassion >;^"i S* three men last year to timealready serv-cover-up and Kalmbach to corrupt cam­of Judge Sirica." ssafeed.'-: paign financing. Kalmbach said he would leave for his ki« In recent weeks, all iiave been held at All three were star witnesses at the home in California Thursday and that Ft-Holabird, Md., near Baltimore, to be cover-up trial that ended New Year's "my hope is to be reinstated" -in the­ir on tap as government witnesses for Day in the convictions of John N. practice of law. ! * jfe^WatemtejirowCTfaira. ( ? Mitchell, H.R.;' Haldeman, John D. "I have learned today of the action ofp|| Dean and Magruder were reported by EhrUchman and Robert C. Mardian. Judge Sirica in reducing my sentence In ;V f|>'"prison officials to have been sent to a Sirica will sentence them later, possibly the Watergate matter, which will permit|^V"safe house" in the Washington-next month. my return to my family," he said In his g ; Baltimore area to be picked up by their "Upon consideration of the defen­ usual soft-spoken manner. "My reaction .-(•V-J families. They were said to have declin-dant's motion, for reduction of is one of profound gratitude for the ram-•g.;: ed to hold a news conference, sentence...,"Sirica paid in-near-identical passion of Judge Sirica and renewed ap­ fe: ,. KALMBACH, onfce Nixon's personal orders for Dean; Magruder and Kalm­ preciation and confidence in the essen­H attorney, accepted his release with bach, "it is ordered that (he unexecuted tial fairness of American justice. II'' bitterness toward none and with and-or remaining portion of the sentence I VXv^l If?-"profoiund gratitude for the compassion ... is reduced to 'time already served." "There is also no doubt in my mind '••.'.V:j| JS*• of Judge Sirica." He told reporters here THE ORDER pertaining to Kalmbach that the former President (Nixon) and # . he would return to his home in Newport his intimates did everything possible to differed slightly^ reducing his sentence 3 Beach, Calif., on Thursday. destroy this man, his family and "only insofar as it pertains to im­associates," Weicker said in a'state­A White House spokesman said Presi­prisonment" — indicating that the 510,-WoffHii* ^%oWwfci ment. • " • 'Goodbye cruel worldVlt'.% ion computer for me/ dent'Ford had no comment on the 000 fine levied on him still stands. not in- Dean, man release orders and had been Dean, the former White House counsel the who-enabled prosecutors to crack the cover-up case,­who became Nixon's chief accuser, serv­after lengthy plea bargaining entered aed just four months of his one-to-four­guilty plea to one count of conspiracy to year sentence, -Magruder, a-former obstruct justice and defraud the-UnitedWhite House aide and deputy director-of ister States on Oct. 19,1973— the last achieve*-­Nixon's 1972 campaign, served seven months of his 10-month-to-four-year ment of original special prosecutor' ' /7 >y4-iArchibald Cox, who was fired the next term. Kalmbach, sentenced to six-to-18 day in the "Saturday night massacre." -' months, had served six months. It was not until last Aug. 2 that Sirica,Their release left just two of the 19 sentenced Dean, and Dean's term began' ­ '^O^TBy-JOSE-Mi'-FLORES-; former White House, Administration or ited that more than—priority.-but most-students should.have.are_required for admission. Fifteen-• Sept. 3; Texan Staff Writer - Nixon campaign, aides convicted for * With an estimated 3,900 -students little trouble, piddnig up a needed course thousand persons areexp^ttf to "attend. -'Watergate crimes still. in-prison. — MAGRUDER; one of the first to con-»­ 250 students were•e working at the piddne thousand npr«insarp<>Tn^fMiniiH "It really didn't seem like that many Students enrolled in the fall who did night he will call a strike if there is no contracts covered in the current Rlchfield,.Phillips, Continental, Texaco, million congressional campaign fond £ people passed through. The count isonly 'contract settlement with the nation's oil negotiations ended at Tuesday midnight, not preregister. may obtain registration the several Standards and smaller com­ controlled by the White House in1970and i a rough estimate. We expect a heavier companies within the next 24.hours. and Grospiron, by. notcalling a strike,, materials in the departmental office of panies. Exxon, -the nation's largest the other a misdemeanor of pmmiiring -":;.fe day Thursday^ Most of the day has been A.F. Grospiron of the Oil,^'Chemical their major; After consulting an adviser extended the negotiations. refiner, has only one refinery covered by an ambassadorship to a 1972 Nixon cam-: spent hy many of the students seeingad­ in the departmental office of their ma­and Atomic Workers Internatibriai . Contract talks wjth the oil companies the union. ^, paign contributor. visers and getting their dean's course Union, told a news conference:that he jor, students must then report to Bell­ were .under way Wednesday at the 430 ' ' • • •record cardschecked. If Thursday islike mont With,their materials accordmg-tdi'; was still optimistic that a. settlement local bargaining sites across the nation, stoday, -we'll;1 be fine! Everything is • * •: could be reached covering the 60,000 un­a union spokesman said. The union's the "••y-W^MIVUfirst letter of.their >'dustriesi .v ' standby at headquarters in Denver on period; with people preTcgisterlng in the w another fiance-forstudents' to rain ad-'^ Wildcat waUtouts hit, two gasolitte Wednesday to review new contract fall, and fewer entering freshmen There mittance to courses they need or simply refineries and as asphalt plant in Texas offers. Thecommittee mustapprove any is, however, a Heavier add-drop. All prefer at adds and drops next week. X? \ «n. We^es offer, accepted by local bargainers ­ day,^despite Grospiroh's refusalTuesday before the members of those people having been billed and who • V^There..;; Will? b'e -soihe a nrfloiis®' the local may , have paid their fees will be coming night toicall a strike when the contracts vote on It. rab^entej.|rmcsure,-for studfinfe who. ByMIKE-MORRISON mittee of HRC will present the idea to around in-a.last-minute: change flurry; With the oil companies expired. n^;;ccirata:coili$es. SehioK and.' per-i- The ; union's oil worker members Texan Staff Writer the council Thursday, Friedman explain-//-' We expect that, though, so there's no sohsii^ot^' ih the'de^rtmait undw c Grospiron indicated that any strike produce 60 percent to 70 percent of the The proposed local equal employment ed, and will decide then whether to press-^' ptoblemj"'he continued.' Which • |he:^i^ i?-listed .will haye ;v.' would be against selected companies. nation's 14^2 million barreldaily gasoline opportunity ordli^uice is In for stormy for a vote. .-M; >-However, he added tHat it would be production. "Both union and. industry ° • sailing at "RiunRiay's public hearing "nationwide within short orde^." At the vortex of the controversy Is the^fe; spokesmen' said it was unlikely con­ although several; Austin groups have cost of such a program. Pointing-to ai-^hThe walkouts, which the union : said sumers would feel any immediate effect recently decided to back the proposal. , were illegal because Grospiron had call­if there Is a strike. ' similar program in Corpus Christl, ad-iijji' Maxine Friedman, a member of the vocates estimate the first year's cost to ; workers at the refineries and asphalt * _ * *-' v {,7 ed no strike, affected about 8,000 . . The union is. seeking $1.20 an hour Human Relations Commission, said be about $39,999, with the entire tab be-; wage hike in each of the three years of a Wednesday ''there is serious considera­ing picked up by the federalgovernment,1" '^ plant 4n Port Arthur, Tex., and several' proposed contract and an immediate 50- tion whether we;should push for a vote" Opponents fear that either these- Casiialties hundred workers in California. t SAlGOri ,(AP):— Soiitii Vietnafti sent Grospiron said no effort would Jbe made cent per hour hike to offset rising infla­at this time. Nevertheless, the public federal funds will eventually dry up, or rwi­ north' o('Saigon. Loc Ninli is 3Q miles- tion. •hearing will proceed Thursday, Fried­ waves of.U,S.TSUppIied fighter-bombers west? of Phuoc Binh City. -gg -.-to forcethe*umon members back towork the program, even with federal aid, will %>­ man said, "if only to heighten the in­have to be substantiallysubsidized by the ^v against Viet Cong headquarters', and and added that they had walked out over . The union sliced SO cents an hour from terest and consciousness among Austin city. ' |,, .'©jii". • Communist positions north of Saigon on • Wietdeseribed thestrikes asaV'deferi^i local issues, not the~national-bargaining its wage.,demand-On Monday, reducing it whites for blacks,,the minoritiies and the Wednesday, and the Viet Cong claimed •stve action," claiming the North Viel#; > issues. -• from $1:50. The'companies have general­Councilman Bud Dryden said Wednes­heavy civilian, casualties namesg and^vietCong usedLoCNinhdnd ^ Grosplron said the oil companies had ly offered 60cents hourlyin thefirst year day the proposal "is not as good as'some.i If approved, the ordinance will enable other^asesln the regimasstaging areas made no formal offers for consideration-and SO cents per hour in the second year people say." Pointing to the city's ,4? .In.Cambodiay.field.reportSi'said the dty to obtain federal funding,allow­ for attacks on Phuoc Binh City. but "as I said yesterday, we felt-there of a two-year proposal, Grospiron said. limited budget, Dryden said there•'« . governmentforces retook astrategic hill ing;the local Human RelationsCommis­ ^ money to be offered? by/the "comes a point where the well runs-^ ­ outside^linonji'Peqb, And theCaml)odian The average hourly wage in the in­sion (HRC) to handlejob discrimination Wie raids triggeredsecondary -l -oil companies. dry." ' .command said.'16": Buddhist nuns:were • .explosions;-^nding%oltimns ^'smokel,-::• dustry now is $5.95. complaintSii'nie^ordinance', Wjiij^i close-found in a nearby pagoda taped and J ly paraUel; lltle^yM (rf.the^l^ civil THE DAVIDSON memo also poses the I «»« ,?0Q yards Into the sky;;He said all'of the .5i«^ question, "Is it a proper city function1 to regulate fair labor standards andRights Act, isscheduled~for public hear­ ing at 1 p.m.-Thursday,at the Municipal Annex, 301 W. Second St.-< employment practices" when there has . Critical Of-the proposal Is va memo been a general deferral to the states and dated l)ec. 12 from City Manager Dan the federal government In such matters?t-•%* -'^•SrSfeffSrs sSLfTSLSl'£5H!L BiF ^ , Saigon \descrlbed the raids ?s\a f l 'Davidson to council ri members. The Presently, the Austin HRC attempts to% siid the strikes set off explosions that tent smoke curling more than 3,000 feet lhto the air. " • ' « " ^ , , 'S Associate^-Press,newsmen ywfchetf waVes of supersonic FS lighter-bombers­ anxHllait Ku 4hs tTikltail -if' supplied by ihe United States'tiie off Iroro thfe BM Hoa^alr,baie.$lQ'Jnllea ftoriheastjdf Sai^ij^to^attadc'what the, 1^escribed as Nortt^vui- ss 'icrlmlnal act" apd sdld they;inf}icted:'St trol find SupetvW^ * " ^$0 --X y," "£ s*? — , Heldf^porto said^flOO . 80^v?tjment twops spearheaded\byvaiMg| enh-co Spring . . ; $pring-like weather. ; will continue"with jpartly clpudy skies 'and a ~Hlgh Thursday, „ ^ in the mid-70s, with a low.Thursday!night in ""the mid,-40s. Friday's (h|gt* shouid ¥ memo basically consists' of a series of questions, piercing into some of the -areas which -opponents consider -'the weak points, of the proposal: :_• "Is It good policy planning to impose, additional regulations' on private business and industry^ at a tlme -of national and local economic distress7" Davidson'asked, v --, /.' THEPROPOSALdeclaresit unlawful for-an employer of 15or moreemployes, • a labor unliqt-or an employment agency to discriminate In hiring, salary, promo­tion or retraining on the basis of race, religion, Sex, national origin,,age and physical disability, ; 4 JThe HRCjinanimously approved with: , one abstenlion thl^ proposed ordinance ­ifiT3ecember; Tlie employment subcom-^ "H »'A' reconcile employe complaints by-volun-! ^ tary measures, or refers the complaint ^ to the,federal EEOC San Antonio office. " •However, the backlog of ca^es in theSatf v Antonio office force some complainants -'1^­ .to wait two ormore years fora decision,'^. Friedmanexplained, '• , " , The ordinance would "give thei HRC < more power todeal effectively withcom-;'^ . plaintson a:l«il level instead 6fdeferr-l^ rng them to San Antonio. Also, Prledmari"||5 , said, the additional-funds would-pt%lde^ for an enlarged HRC staff .capable ,of ^ handling the cases and cutting down oa r the backlog ^ > . f Mayor Pro Tem Dan Love saidTues-^ll day -he does not-favor the proposed or--• <3 diqance». It will require tour counril-l^ * votes for approval "23 ! ***" "•--"j"'* — "* f School Superintendent Criticized for Discriminatory Action . By C. JUSTUS LOHRMANN w their supporjt of .Harriot ®"5Vardlaw's <•> i v, .< -ttxi -Spring 1975 ymea?ures w? tehU ^DHP^i^KW^^re,r/?nciJth81 ^ve the\courage to rdease § up. 24900 * MES 301L Introduction to the Middk fcai fustmantam n^cin . r >ould1include-an '|8p million "'our 'grip on the*comfort ahd" '*? Modern TintM. MWF 2-3, BEB 154. Bezirgan. ?ncrease 1n fmi*{or Ad"/ . famlSari^ of the systems of t 24905 MES 331 Male and Female RoUti Tradition andChanga inMlddla'Eattam y pi,ri~n!i ' current school year and an in--the past," Briscoe, told-a-S Call the University Co-SodetlM. MWF 1-2, BUR 224. E. Femea. ?P consumer action* 24910 MES 360 Conference Court*. Independent Study. Consent of;instructor S^^IAARS^ four" 1 . , : must be obtained. Manners Tn charge. ^nblfc. school H E^chanctag local contol of. • % Line with your com-? 24912 MES 361 Music of the Middle East and N6rth Africa. MWF 11-12, HEB fmance proposals, ^Briscoe '{''school finances, protecting • A series of 32 group,work-j» plaints or suggestions. 127. Q-Din. lauded the Weighted-pupil ap--'^the automatic financing of sessiiceinAncMnf and Modern Middlelastern Soeietiet.M educational needs', an in­educational programs „ Mauzy ^l11 discuss, tHe ? programs, were 3-6, BEB 466. Young, crease in salary for Qthermeasures-calledforby Senate committee'-s research <3.8:30-5:30 43.122 AfOS 642b MMkalCulture of Nubia and theOud.MW 4-5.-30, BTL 113. El-professionals, a;6han£e to' the ' Briscoe. in'specialized areas of publiic Din. school finance at 3:15:p.m.Middle EasternStudies coursesmay be used tofulfill AreaD requirements for theB.A. School Board Member's Son Also scheduled to^speak :is ' ffc**'•;'Wn»oy oho be taktn ln /hu of the foreign language requirement 9 ,*yttuaents enrolled In the.School.of-Communications. • Found Dead in Room at Home Alton O. Bowen, TexasEduca­ tion Agency .deputy.: com­ M.K. Hage n,22,University No immediate cause of missioner for administrativesophomore in education and death was known. Hage lived services, who will open the son of Austin^ School Board with his parentsat 2613Spring Thursday session witfi an member MiK. Hage: Jr., was --Lane. An autopsy wasordered ; analysis of the State Board of, foudd dea-d -in his room .:>to .determine tfeie : cause of .. "Education approach -to public. Wednesday afternoon by his death, Justice of .the.Peace ,school finance. Bowen will •Ev^ mother, a policeojficUd, said.^ Jim McMurtry saidli > * J " 60eak at 8:45 a.m. Or. Richard L.. Hooker, ESTUDENT !'A UNIVERSITY REFRIGERATORS special assistant to the gpvef-. APWOVED FOR USE IN U T DORMITORIES nor for educational research I rt r* ^ J >­ iSWji TJie street s.Guadalupe and the answer's simple: because he was looking for a place to live and had heard.some good things about the Castilian but wanted ;to see it for himself So away he went-;; : 1^ When he arrived he found a. total environment featuring an indoor swimming pool, a game room (with billiards, foosball, ping pong, pinball etc.); sauna baths, a mini-gym, covered parking, a typing room with IBM electrics, maid service; a^reference libraryand more.^ ^ ^ : ( , He also liked the^idea of getting all the good, home-fcooked foodVe could eat. .. like P'" sirloin tips,.roast beef, chef salads, breaded veal, shrimp, and beef stroganoff. . , foods mf * 3j t.re ,?ec?min8to° expensive to buy except in large quantities,'v And he liked our pride (which isn't really hard to believe)! , 5 ' LA III s'f' Compared to the costs of living in an apartment, it's chicken feed^J J>o visit us before you make your decision-Just cross the •> --N street, and..hop amelevator4o the fUh flnrtft. 4 'I* • li s s^S ^"• r - uastilian 'San 'Antpnii>478-98ft t |i|k ii&tL|p' fei|f -i-ii . ti -v4 i J*, m _ ; , and planning, will present the second session from-lOiJO; a m, to noon.' "A Time for' 6hifiger • Toward Quality and Equality" is the tiUe of a report to be given by Rep. Dan Kublak o! Rockdale, chairman to' the Hquse Education Committee, at 1 30 p m # • ih\l£S to CHOOSE FROJ . f FREE DEUVERY TO YOUR ROOM NELSON'S • FREE MAINTENANCE ­GIFTS-. BECAUSE OIF T LIMITED SUPPLY IT IS ?'•. ,44I>S#. NECESSARY,TO RESERVE YOUR 'MnMt'.4444ai4,^^^ REFRIGERATOR AS SOON AS YOU i ZUJNI AND NAVjiil^ ARRIVE ON CAMPUS. INDIAN. JEWEUty., MEXICAN CAIl: 478-3471 IMPORTS PRWRifEr UNIVERSITYJH£FHIGEKATORS ?I0 tunli* i.pjiuiiM |#/ m^m'mwERV <] Hi CLOSEDMONDAY I & 1; Arrid Extra |||Barnes and jf S IC D'V '°2, Af sWetting Solution' ' Retail 1. Retail 2.39,1 "Lift SHrNow^f =... now;1.U5; S 1.40 iiiiiHiimiiiiiiimiiiieiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii iliiiiiiiiiiililiiiiiliiill r* SH A\ Baby Fowder^ = ClearasilTube Shampoo ra>w}< New Energy Plan Expected Ford May Announce Oil Taxes, Tariffs • ^WASHINGTON (AP) -President horsepower tax. But the sourcesaid auto The purpose would be to guarantee a shaping its policies for presentation inflord. is Expected to announce soon a makers have agreed to improve vehicle stable income to insure development of Ford's first State of the Union address national energy policy relying on oil tax­mileage 40 percent, so their 1980 models new oil sources while keeping up current later this month and probably in a es and tariffs to cut demand, and on would average about20 miles pergallon. production levels. .* separate energy message to Congress, opening new federal oilfields to increase Ford's energy policy was expected, Developers of alternate sources of whose cooperation would be needeasupply. , however, to propose federal standardsor energy would be guaranteed a price Ford has set a goalof reducing U.S. oil An informed Administration source tax credits to improve building insula­equal to that now paid for oil. demand one million barrels a day by the said Tuesday the President accepted tion. Preparation of the national energy end of this year. recommendations centered, on In conjunction with the $3 excise tax, policy began last January when former The source said his policy would add adeliberately increasing oil prices $3 per Administration sources said Ford will President Nixon ordered a "Project longer-range goal of limiting oil imports barrel but was still pondering how to outline a plan to set a guaranteed Independence Blueprint." It was by 1985 to somewhere between 10 and 20compensate for the resulting economic minimum on the price paid for imported delivered to Ford in November. percent of total U.S. demand, a substan­impact. oil. Since then the Administration has been tial cut from the present 36 percent. ' The oil price increase could raise gas­ oline prices 7V4 cents a gallon and draw |18.6 billion a year from the economy at Utilities Commission present demand levels. The source said this would be offset by a proposal for general tax reductions. The energy policy would reject direct Preliminary Report Axed limits on oil imports, reduction of fuel allocations and gasoline rationing. By DAVID HENDRICKS fairs defeated its staff report by a 2-2 mission during the 1975 session. •. Massive stockpiling of oil foremergen­Texan Staff Writer vote. Voting against the report were Andujar said she was against the H» cies would not be proposed, the source report the A preliminary to state Fort Worth Sens. Betty Andujar and Bill ;report because of "insulting" remarks in said, but would be studied by the senate favoring creation of a utilities Meier. In favor of the report wereAustin it referring to utility industry heads. She National Petroleum Councilman industry regulatory commission was disapproved Sen. Lloyd Doggett and Garland Sen. also said a regulatory commission would advisory group. Wednesday by the Senate subcommittee Ron Clower. be the state government's way of ignor­. Nor was Ford expected to propose for which it was prepared. The report favored a three-member ing the hard work of city councils across automobile efficiency standards or a on af- The subcommittee consumer elected commission to regulate rates for the state in getting their rates duringelectric, telephone, gas, private water past years. •; and sewage services. Following the subcommittee meeting,The vote means the subcommittee will Dr. Mike Abel of the Texas Coalition for not recommend legislation to the Senate Utility Regulation said he favored Strikes during the 64th Legislature, but in­ passage of Clower's bill. He pointed out dividual senators may introduce legisla­that a "monopoly situation"-exists tion on their own. among public utilities which city.'coun­Clower, who chairs thesubcommittee, cils have difficulty dealing with. prefiled his own bill calling for a public He said a state regulatory commission utilities commission Wednesday after­is needed to be able to say to the utility noon after the subcommittee meeting. companies "if you don't improve ser­ WASHINGTON (AP) -Five major weeks on contracts that becameopen for The bill, co-sponsored by Doggett, in­vice, you don't get your rate increase." railroads were targeted for-strikes revision Jan. .1: However, only the sheet cludes a local option clause, which would Abel said there is a tremendous beginning Jan. 24 as contract 'talks metal union is legally free to strike as it allow individuat citycouncils to set their volume of material and evidence of poor resumed Wednesday for 560,000 railway technically still is negotiating issues own rafes in their cities if they wish. service to prove the need for a strong workers. settled with the other unions in 1973. The subcommittee resultswere not un­ regulatory commission. He also agreed m The SheetMetal Workers Unionserved O'Brien acknowledged that the threat expected, Clower observed afterward, with Clower that the subcommittee'sac­formal strike notices with the required of selected' strikes will put added adding he did not view the vote as a set­tion Wednesday will not significantlywarning of at least 14 days on theUnion pressure on the industry to make an back. He set the Menominees . A spokesman for the National Railway 'Woman Governor president, said picket lines wilTgo up as Labor Conference, the industry's scheduled if the contract disputewith the bargaining arm, declined Gov., Ella T, Gratto, Connecticut's first woman chief executive, arrives in comment on industry is not settled. HarHord Wednesday :for her. inauguration. with her husband, Thomas., the.strike notices but.expressed hope for To Wbntinue Talks a landslide, Democrat Grasso pledged a "heroic effort" to deal Seventeen rail unions have been a peaceful settlement. GRESHAM, Wis. (UPI) -Talks representatives of Indians Wednesday, ~4( with the state's fiscal crisis. " >- negotiating with the industry for several The strike notices were served as un­between a group of militant Indians and but no talks were held with the Indiana 4S ion and industry representatives resum­representatives of a religious order will holding the novitiate. ed joint bargaining talks for the first resume Thursday, in efforts to end the One of the Indians in the talks was i time since mid-December. armed occupation of the order's Dennis Banks, a leader of the American With 5,300 members employed by the monastery by the militants, it was an­Indian Movement occupation of Wound-3$ railroad industry, the sheet metal union nounced Wednesday. ed Knee, S.D., in 1973. Banks said talks'* is one of the smallest among the 17. But Col. Hugh Simonsbn, commander of "so far have been meaningful andinthe >f;i O'Brien said he-has commitments from System Officials To Probe UTPB : right direction" but said the federal'®National Guard troops activated follow­ the other unions to honor his'picketlines, By FORD FESSENDEN participation of University employes in long the Investigation may take. ing weekend exchanges of gunfire government — either the Bureau of In-' Texan Staff ^Writer a traditional practice within the in­dian or the Department'of Faculty, and Staff Enterprises, Inc., an .."As far as.the chancellor's office is between the .Indians and lawmen,.said Affairs "S1 dustry. • Two University; System staff persons ' ,, j Health, Education and Welfare — must , ^ external organization art-UT Permian concerned, this is only part of a con­ the form^ talks would be held Thursday O'Brien said he isprepared to work out will be sent to investigatematters qiUT step in with some financing to help aid t Basin," I^^lsi^T^d in a statement. tinuing-investigation into the matter," an agreement with the five targeted -morning. in:a "C£imper" several hundred Permian Basin, University Chancellor ' -MixeJGrady., assistants tortile-comp­QUinn said. feet from the abbey. He expressed con­the situation. . railroads to permit continued service of Charles LeMaistre said Wednesday troller; will investigate "several B.H. Amstead resigned last month as fidence that an end to the ordeal may be The armed Indians, members of a Amtrak passenger trains operated by The two officials Will make inquiries matters, including the development fund president of the school duringan in­ near. Brother Maurice Wilson of the group calling itself the "Menominee , those carriers during the strike. into different areasof controversy. John and golf scholarship contributions." vestigation into whether he ha — Police and Navydivers Wednesday found WASHINGTON (UPI) r-In a significant advance in cancer research, wrist when he fell 25. feet to the floor of the arena during a practice ses- J a third auto coiitainliig bodies in the mud at the bottom of the fcierwent two National Cancer Institute scientists reported Wednesday they have sion Tuesday aftertioon. -River, bringing to.at least 10 the death toll In the TasmanBridge disaster. * isolated a human leukemia virus. Police said .they, are looking for another two bodies and possibly five" If confirmed by additional research, the discovery would be the first Stock Market Weakens ,-j ?lor® waJerSOfeetdeep below where two spans of the bridge collapsed ; , time a virus associated with a form of Cancer has been foOtld in humans. NEW YORK (AP) -The stock :,Sunday wheh the 10,000-tonore carrier Lake Dlawarrahita supportpylon. The Virus particles were isolated by Drs. Robert C. Gallo and Robert E. M.S.E. DMJMKSHEMtt market turned weak and uneven IltlM Mil* 3IMtttiMs W ""<2/Gallagher in cells of a 61-year-old Woman stricken with acute Wednesday under the pressure of lloeky'Appoints Aide 1 ^ '<>%' 1 iflT* ,l myelogenous leukemia, arelatively rareform of blood malignancy that profit-taking after several sessions &e WASHINGTONWASHINGTON; ^^iW^Ivice-PresldenttVice-Presidents Nelson^Nelson A.X. Rockefeller s generally strikes adults. OA 1 of broad'gains, Ro^efellfer V, 635.40 ^Wednesday announced the appointment of Roger W. HookerUr. as his ' The Dow Jones average of 30 in­dustrials dropped.5.7fr to 635.40 in its PETEMBURGjElfti <(tJ[pp Wire walker Philippe- first riegative showing of 1975! Who star,tlpdNew YoA€!rs,lastyear by waiking a wire li500 feet in Declines barely ,outlegged ad­ jit.,i,mi |pHooker",'^lawyer', lM(ib*e^h serylng since^Februtbty^W^as dirfcctGtxtf f8*injured Tuissday whehhfc fell fefeet1; bjit pro^ablywill beable' !, vances, 728 to 687, among the 1,792 H 01(8 clrcus to M|om^[c studiesfor the (WmtBsfontoit CritiC^l'Choitierfor ^eric'ans, el8W we«tsf.doctolrs ^id Wednesday.' issues traded 6n the New York Stock drgarfeed by^Rockefeller. ^ ^> -h ty ^ 1 '•'-The doctors sMd Petitewould be out of the hospital In 10 to 14 dS^s. .Exchange.: hi WW, Mt& January 9, 1975 THE DAILY TEXAN P^ge SCrte 8? -£*/ "", Wi/ •C<^*?'U*d 'wi. t *>* 4afl&%; «** .?r» "t Page 4 Thursday/ January 9, 1975 SMW^Mp gpi| ', -f -• » „ -4| 11 -q • • 9 The presidential selection committeefarc ' N r%4* ' „ ''ii •*><- ' (.L % -r $$! There are only two things wrong with the committee that'will select ourM •> "C? &< i 'ito ...-^ ~ next University president. One, thecommittee itself, And two, the membersfe| of the committee. That is all that is wrong. , *I?" When Dr. Stephen H. Spurr of Michigan was asked to be president of this % 4^4 University in 19?1, he; was first selected by a 16-member faculty-student^ committee, and he was then approved by the Board of Regents. This separa­tion of powers allowed satisfaction for both sides. -• giptiM But that system of selection was changed followingSpurr's selection. Now 'I the next president will be selected by the people whose pictures surround ' this editorial. And you may notice that two members of the 14-person com­ mittee are not pictured: the student and the faiculty representative. That is appropriate; students and faculty have also been left out of the selection S3 process. t >"Jt. ^ Each group does have one vote on the committee. Jane Strauss,'the stu­dent representative, will have difficulties expressing theviews of the.entire student body. As the daughter of a Dallas banker and niece of the chairman of the Democratic National Committee, she comes from the same social Tl> jy Shivers LeMaistre strata as most of the Board of Regents. As chairwoman of the Texas Union /v •& 4u Board of Directors, she has followed the complacent politics of Student Government President Frank Fleming. Strauss certainly represents one sector of the student population, albeit that group destined toinherit the rul­ing mantle from-theu-parents. Butstill, Strauss will bea springbreeze corn-pared to other members on. the committee. " -. J -The faculty member is Et^gene Nelson, professor of business law, who is well known and respected among the faculty after serving as secretary to ' the General Faculty from 1954 tQ 1970. However, he,likeStrauss, will findit f difficult to represent his constituency, although it is unlikely one person could adequately represent the divergent views of the faculty. He is con-J sidered, by most faculty leaders, a safe choice for the administration. The rest of the committee,except forHarry Ransom, represents thechain. of command in the UT System. None other than Chancellor Charles LeMaistre chairs the committee, and Regents A.G. McNeese (wl\o selected the committee), Allan Shivers, Ed Clark and Lady Bird Johnson are on it., > Going down through the chain of command, we find Dr. William H. Knise-. Johnson ly, assistant to LeMaistre for health affairs, and Deputy Chancellor E.D. -"T7?' Walker Walker. From :^j%^^haw^ejn«skieiitsof the Universities of Texas at * FlaWIt| Jordan San Antonio and Dallas, Dr. Peter Flawn and Dr. Bryce Jordan. These last *'— two committee members aren't all bad, if only for the reason that they might be potential UT-Austin presidents and now are out of the running. The ottier two committee members do not distinguish themselves in any different ways: Wales Madden, an Amarillo attorney, is president of the University Ex-Students' Association and is a former regent, and Frank Harrison is thefohner presidentof UT Arlington and iscurrently the head of the San Antonio Health-Science Center. All in all,the selectioncommittee isa farce.To savetime, LeMaistre—or whichever;regent{s) is behind him ^ should go ahead and pick our next president. That system would be the same as'this one. ^ Alternatives Jor' the campus are few. There will be a campus-advisory committee (composed of eiectedfaculty members and StudentGovernment-chosen students), but that committee has no power, except that granted by LeMaistre and the selection coiiimittee. And there is always the General ' Faculty resolution — printed on this page—that couldinsure us thatthenew-: 4 president will be satisfactory to all sides. But whatever, this new presiden­ tinsgi tial selection plan is inferior. And anyone but an administration-affiliated Harrison Ransom person would know it. Madden wmm Knisely $%mr< m*ce HEY.U)f&£ ma tee w •nw 'NJU5S. The faculty m m -W * v me<5Rtw Tff v 1WIFT (Editor's note: the following is the I realize, of course, 'that the in the faceDf Certain kn'owledgelhat the General Faculty: resolution that con' . ^ chancellor's president would have'legal General. Faculty will not accept.him as cents -the canfyns faculty-student ad-..authority in budget matters, but we their leader <-, vlsory committee's role in the selection ushould notyield to him ih thoseacademic -It is imperative that we approve thls i A2T of the University's next president. The : areas where the authority clearly lies resolution now, by an: overwhelming j 11*1 hrf^«lir»f-nrttt*rit4ftitK< -with the General Faculty. resolution was introdaced by Dr. David; majority, to make it crystal/dearto the>| feftirjitts ist&tz- Gavenda, professorof physics andedaca-'1 Obviously, such a system of dual chancellor and to the Board of Regents j CAwm,x)i^ , Holl and was.passed overwhelmingly at ^.'presidents would soon become in-that we are preparedJo take whatever]mALHusr, TO**#7 A-• ,tbe General Facultymeetingof Nov. l9.)-j stolerable in an academic community; I 'steps are necessary to maintain somel PA/17.' <' r RMJqef Resolved that the General Faculty of -^desperately pray that it will never come semblance of facuIty/self?governance In j yppiu •i t-." Xo the University of Texas at AUstin will to pass Surely no one would accept ap-theacademic affairsof the University of ^ accept as presidentonly a candidate apis pointment unilaterally by the chancellor ^ "Texas ' ^f&STER ' proved by the campus faculfy-stud^nt rr ca? . -advisory committee «62 m. As the events which haveunfolded dur­w* •JHftr ir THE DAILY TEXAN ing the past two months have madepain­fully evident, the University of Texas is NtwtplHifl Tit VmhnnHr »f run ml AmtH* at a critical tunfing point in its develop­ ment. Since mystudent daysin the early EDITOR . Buck Harvey Fifties I have been witness to slow, but MANAGING EDITOR . ..Lynne Brock steady, progress toward the kind of in­ ASSISTANT MANAGING EDITORS ,.. Eddf« Fisher stitutional -autonomy and self­ . ClauderSimpson governance that are hallmarks of great NEWS EDITOR the law universities. Now this progress is Kathy Kelly mm threatened because the legalauthority to • SPORTS EDITOR Richard Justice |By NICHOLAS VONHOFFMAN control the destiny of the University has AMUSEMENTS EDITOR ... Vicky Bowles -.three — tax, criminal and workmen's & J, ®1975, The Washington Posfe-w there and play ball, who ;have proven fallen into the handsof people who donot FEATURES EDITOR compensation law — but Norma Levy, in Janice rTomlin Khjg FeatureiSyndieate i f their ability to play ball, and they want understand the purpose and function of 'the December issue of the legal CAPITOL BUREAU CHIEF Davi^Hendrjicks to narrow thefield in which the restof us faculty selfrgovernancex in;a; first-class i WASHINGTON -It's hard to un&t^r ^magazine Juris Doctors, writes that we can play ball —' thope of us who want to university -Vs^rttand how so ravenously dishonest a *may soon-besaddled with as manyas100 be straight with our consciences," Dick ,-group at most of the legal profession different legal specialties. ' The attitude which prevails in the Eiden, president rqf the National 2?" j*00*so longtoglom on to an old gimmick 'This newest try at^ making simple System office is exposed in a letter ' i B^JIike specialization The doctors have Lawyers Guild for Southern California, written to the Board of Regents by ^things difficultisdefended on the ground is quoted as saying. ­, Chancellor LeMaistre: (quoted in On I m using it tor years to bilk their;-that It^ will':upgrade -the-standards of -- ISSUE STAFF ^patients, hut it's only been recently that-pracUce. Thereis reasonenough for that, The last thing needed JUst now Is the -Campus Oct 7, 1974). the chancellor Issue Editor .. ...;Barry Boesch • &)*wyen have realized they can make -..with :.an occupation. that enjoys the enhancement of the power of the refers to the president as"a subordinate vGeniral Reporters ..;^.....,..';,,...;MikeMorriBoh1DaVid;Heiidrtck8 Iff? /i 'stiU more money if they "specialize." > reputation for snuffling larceny and judiciary. Judges are already sufficient­to the chancellor, and as hisagent in the News Assistants Jose Flores, Charles Lohrmann, David;Moddy; | *, ? *n medicine, specialization takes the Shuffling incompetence, but Wstory ly arbitrary and capriciously secretive conductof the affairs of the Institution."' < t , 1 Ford Fessenden, Jay Jorden, Sylvia Teagueijf .^form' of-coy, little ads which read; teaches ns-thatevery line of work which without being given another tool to use ' : 1 call upon this body to reject this no-Jt t i »-\ , (. Mary Helnecke, Joy Howell, Steve Olafsori ^ I w ''Sharply P, Rjpthroat/ M.D,; pracUce seeks (o raise prices by restricting the on aggressive, politically controversial v tion of ynlversity presidencyby refusingi -Editorial Assistants " t Bryan Brumley, David WWttert ^diseases oi the left eyeball, nqmber of people it letsin claimsIt'sUo--lawyers with a proclivity for defending. in advance, to accept a president ap­Assistant SportsvEditor i . / . •., , Bill Jordan ing-jtito raise standards. 1 , > . T'l unpopular clients: _ pointed under these conditions:The word Associate Amusements Editor William A.' Stone Jr. A "VfEyeball Surgeons,*' Years of advanced ; Law 'clerking pr apprenticeship Was,," '—1 r^.' •'—w ^ .-o r "accept" has practical as well as Make-up Editor ... „ J„<. Anp Wheelock !\ /'^raining permit Dr. Ripthroat to charee knocked out in^order to raise standards."! ^•• YPU do have to admirethe'organized ?, , philosophical implications^'There is nd. Wire Editor . , Scott Bobb », .j,. ­ feg, ...— . bar for its brass, however. With as the 11iKrger;JhaI!"!!8Ha! Prices f«".confining. The lawJustice of the peace wasabolish' reason why we should accept Copy Eiditors... C, Russell Leijkon, Sally Carpenter] Jan PhlppS ^ Wilding y°u In the left eye.In ed because, substituting trained Watergate, essentially a lawyers' scan­presiding officer at General Faculty Photographers ^ * "V ' ^y Godwin, Carol Jean Simmons dal, still on theirbacks, with people ris^ f meetings an ''agent" of the chancellor, \ <• dfy* before scientific research * members'of tHe^bajr would raise Stan­ ly> had brought the healingarl*to their pre-' ' ~ ing up to them conspiring to to usehis terminology; Asadeliberatlvef dards, But the only thine thafever'^ts ^ 1 UP » sue tnem Tor conspiring to fix; * s „ ^^fsent pitch of perfection, thp. Same"man c raised is prices -t ^ fees ,n vlolatloii of tije antitrust laws,,>^ body we can select our own presiding of «, permitted to put out vpur right (Sye , It's argued that encouraeine lawvers '• ^ the P"blic fSr,0«s over-the bar's ficer, Tfter? is also.no ftason why we h If fy* we"> but then lie usually chafed less ' to'adverUse thatthev arehoffiprHff™ "^e of no-fault insurance ^egisla. cannot hav# an eiedutlye officer of our and sometimes threw in *1# free lessoni^ tion, thejr try tp sneak this o,ne through.-ti# oWn choice sl^n the letters of Jippolnt­ for your seeing-eye-dog.' rneys more kndwledgiably. the more ^ -n,. „.JP3 1 7ir.z<>rT*.v??r?w.r«vir iwvHBHinix. i tbt UnlvtnJtjr idmlnlitmloo ontfw tytrd q( With apclogiesto the^ri General ethical ha.'br*m«r jwh9 knows hgw niany olhdr statei the , legislature that wo&ld stop-uncertified e appoint-WIVflu D»liywiferT«nn S'pSSS&f Mtnnby Ml Unlnilon An N»w Ysrfe N,V .10017 e agent of MJftfgwUy THund^f, uv) " tmmg capital ouai.1 nMpUwinibolUay t 'Th# Dtlly JobwIbM U> ttt'AiodJtwl PmtJJ iAW/i^ Gener^IFaciilty llf hefactually no uttwiftld h^Wipual^«i!d^eifloN fjtf*'*' ^ J *' ?"• ---•; ,> nr if&t u l~j ** u possible By JACK ANDERSON If the allies hadstood up to Adolf Hitler at the Rhineland. they wtth_ _: say, citing a lesson from history, he would have backed down»4k ' LES WHITEN and World War n might have been avoided. In an economic °1975, United Feature Syndicate sense, they suggest, the oil powers have alreadv occupied the WASHINGTON — In the backrooms of Washington, alarmed Rhineland. policymakers arecalling fora showdown with the oil-producing The strategists are now preparing their arguments topresentcountries before it is too late. to President Ford. They also have the ear of powerful con­ They want President Fofd to serve notice upon the oil poten­gressional leaders, who have agreed to join them in urging Ford tates that present oil prices areruining the western world and, to press forcefully for an oil price reduction. therefore, constitute hostile action. From sources privy to the backroom discussions, here arethe They point outthat the llnited Stateshas befriended the prin­arguments that will be laid before the President: :f cipal oil rulers in the past and has helped them develop their I • The western nations simply cannot afford to pay the riggedfields. The policymakers advocate, therefore, that the Presi­prices that the oil cartel is now charging. These nations becarqe dent drawupon thisgoodwill toseek anoil-price settlement that dependent upon oil because it cheap source of energy. was a will avert the economic collapse of the West. • They cannot get along without the 30 million barrels a day that ?*• IF A PEACEFUL settlementcannot be reached, they believe the oil cartel sells them. If they must pay $11 and $12 for;a & military intervention will become inevitable. They don't see barrel of oil that costs 11 and 12 cents to produce, the western how the United States can standby helplessly while thewestern nations, one by one, will go bankrupt. world is plungied into economic and political chaos. • Western leaders, staggered by the sudden quadruplingof oil They contend that the United States must take the lead in prices, haven't come to grips with the problem. They have pushing down world oil prices. The other consuming countries offered only peripheral solutions, which cannot possibly work. apparently are toodivided and disorganized to unite against the The consuming countries cannot reduce consumption enough fo oil-producing bloc. They are also paralyzed with fear that their pay the soaring oil deficit without paralyzing their economies. oil might be cut off completely. * Recycling the massive oil profits, most experts-now agree, will ^ * v ; ,-;—;-7" \ ' The backroom strategists urge, therefore, that the United break down the world monetary system. Meanwhile, it will take 7 hove my boys looking into your case if you have nothing to worry aboutI' States should prepare to act on its own. An early showdown, more than.a decade to develop new sources of energy., f they believe, will reduce the risk of military action. • Exorbitant oil prices," like bombs, are killing people. In iiS­ ' • •' '•• '•' '.:' •. ff'-'.-i.-'.: -iJl i&ftSA'. vvL' '.*• 'V', • ''• • • 1 •: *. Cr • • •. /"v'.-,-'-." •'. L\. i':' _'• '•. '• -•_ -.-'.i ".V, '.'. -•.._ poverished lands like India and Bangladesh, oil costs have reduced the funds available for food and fertilizer. This lias already brought starvation to people who otherwise would have survived. One confidential analysis estimates that hundreds of By DAVID S. BRODER his bestand perhaps last— to try to write theState of the President, for it suits neither be sustained over, time. thousands of people will die as a direct result of high oil bills it e1875,' The Washington Post opportunity to set his agenda Union as a And then he needs to come Some strategists speak of the oil cartel's price gouging, address the times nor the man. What is needed, in short, is back on television, every cou­ Company and program'.before the na­blockbuster. The comparison Everyone in Aniedca now therefore, as economic warfare against the West, with suffer- a continuous, low-keyed dis­ple weeks or so, to update his - WASHINGTON -At a re­tion. If he fails in that period, one hears at the White House understands what only a few cussion of government report to the people on ing every bit as real as military warfare would bring. cent White House staff adverse events'and an opposlr is the dramatic Sunday night • The oil squeeze has thrown the Atlantic alliance into dis­ people knew in1971 —thatour policies, led by the President progress—or lackof progress' meeting, President Ford oral­ array. America's allies suddenly are more eager to cooperate tion Congressmay overwhelm speech in mid-August of 1971 economic and etiergy through frequent talkb, in-? , — on his goals. . ly-summarized, three option him. ; , , in which-Mr. Nixon announced wi$h their Arab oil suppliers than with Washington. There has problems will not besolved by viting responses : from con­THE TEST of these talks I paperson the energy situa­v There areencouraging signs his. "npw economic policy," quick-fix solutions, 'and that; been muttering inside the NATO: policy councils agaiiist U S gressional leaders, aiid mark­will be, not their eloquence, tion, each involving policies that the sojourn in Vail with a wage-price freeze, the any policies worth adopting ed less by rhetoric than by moves in the Middle East. If the United States should side with but their honesty. Where the with' serious coi t to produced some-tough policy floating Of the dollarand other Israel in a new Middle East convict, the allies likely would will have to' be carried for clear exposition of where we question of Policy A or PolicyAmerican consumers. At the decisions the President's high-voltage-measures. on months and years to have any close their bases to the United States and the 30-year, postwar IT­ stand and where we are head­B is a close one, Mr." Ford end, according to the.recollec­part. But even if his policies western alliance would break apart. Mr. Ford will not echo those hope of success. V ed. must acknowledge the dif­ tion of one listener, he asked: are beginning to jell, he still particular policies, but there That that' they • The United Nations also is coming under heavy Arab' in­ implies the choice. Where S' "How would you like to tell needs to improvehis weapons MR. FORD needs to signal ficulty of fluence, as nervous nations seek to placate the oil sheikhs Is a yearning on his staff for a should be introduced, not with his desire for such a dialogue all options have some inherent I theAmerican people thoseare of persuasion, which have not similarly sensational effect. Already, the Arabs have been able to use the U.N. to pnnteh a a staccato blast of trumpets, in his State of the Union talk disadvantages, he must face the alternatives?" been impressive these last Israel. For example, the U.N.'s cultural arm, UNESCO, ar­ But that approach is almost but on a well-modulated note and to follow up by doing what those costs at the same time. r-"Maybe/you should," this five months. Not since the certain to provewrong for this of logic and restraint that can nb President since Harry recommends his chosen bitrarily cut off aid to Israel and barred Israel from par­ he staffer replied, thereby giving first two speeches he made on ticipating in its meetings. Intelligence reports warn that the PI \M I S Truman has done — presen­course of action. Mr. Ford what may well be taking over as President, in his to the Arab statesare preparing to play a leading role, both financial, ting budget By launching such a sensi­ the most useful advice he the melddrama of Richard ly and politically, in the world organization. !•, American people himself at ble, sustained dialogue ,with could receive as he faces a Nixon's fall, has-Mr. Ford By their control of the oil valves, in other words, the the sametirae.hesubmits itto the people/hecan serviehis in- critical period inhis youngbut been able to capture the petroleum powers have begun the peaceful conquest of the Congress. - terests and the country's. . vulnerable presidency. public's imagination or atten­ western world. The backroom strategists will tell President BETWEEN JAN. 20, the tion. Ford this is intolerable. scheduled datefor theState of GIVEN THIS factand given the UnionaddreSs, and about the importance of the occa-EARN CASH WEEKLY March 1, Mr. Fori will have sion, there will be a tendency in ii|l Blood Plasma Donors Studtman's Crossword Puzzler Answer tovesterday's Puzzle ACROSS S Moccasins Needed PHOTO SERVICE nreii^ new 8 Unit of 1 Girl's noma OI1W SflHHQ 33I31 CD O 222 W. 19th & 5324 CAMERON RD. Siamese cur­9 Surgical rency aaiiOEH! 476-4326 453-1958 S Couple Men & Women threads 7 Pronoun sicraw so EARN $14 WEEKLY 11 Substance 8 Amend 3^33 aaqa "QUALITY SPECIALISTS" . 9 Pierce CASH PAYMENT FOR DONATION .'13 .Symbol for.•ft lO fleel animal - COMPETITIVE PRICES tantalum ­ • ;UfTltleof " 3151 3iut2 HH!S HE (via 14 Lura saaTu.amss sni Austin NIKKORMAT RN CHROME 28853 •333 3!3Q REH'=! WITH5MMF/2IENS 17 inmusic. 15 Soak. . •Jim (3!3 UHKS Blood Components, Inc; • Mad-18 Abounding - $32.50 NIKON CASE NO. 487 0Bfaasf3 20 Guided OPEN: MON. & THURS. 8 AM to . 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QlMS AMERICAN 36 Devoured 38 Encounter STUDIES AND RESEARCH CENTER 40 Urge on 41 Regions 43 River in announces Scotland *4 44 Symbol for A NEW COURSE AVAILABLE AT SPRING silver v 45. Mixed 47 Parent (col- REGISTRATION :lQq.). 48-Slumbers 50 Breathes THE RACIAL EXPERIMENT: loudly In sleep OKAY, 52 Finishes ' ioou6H!-mm pah-nee.mei iaufr MODERN SOUTH AFRICA 53 Rip OOWN HE£..iSNU¥!* fee.. mrr mmt Mez­ jH:.Hse,m! me... ioesa m,uee, sm>rr.. Taught by DENNIS BRUTUS, South African "1 Closed securely *9 mef — 1 l -,i\ / Poet, Visiting Professor 2 Near 3 Brown kiwi ETS320 (23587) 4 Emmets IMntr. Fwiturt J Inc, Monday evenings, 7:60-10:00p.m. JES A303A Plan to ADD during Adds/Drops or '5^ REGISTER during Spring Registration 1 "i'Wfci.-Y. this '.' J EXTENSION EVENING CLASSES / .is a t EXTENSION TEACHING AND FIELD SERVICE BUREAU UPLUG" -THE UNIVERSITY"OF TEXAS AT AUSTIN "for the / SPRING SEMESTER REGISTRATION-1975 6:00 to 9:00 P;M.—JANUARY 6, 7, 8, 9 8:30AM. to 4:30P.M.—JANUARY 13,14 1975" JOE C.THOMPSON CONFERENCE CENTER -; 24th AND RED RIVER (NORTH OF LBJ LIBRARY) cAqrJUS&L . CLASSES BSQIN JANUARY 20 and 21 . -: . (FINAL EXAMS SCHEDULED FOR APRIL 28,29.30, ANDMAY 1) COURSE OFFERINGS IN -Accounting Classical Civilization. Graduate Language Courses Physical Education American Studies Computer Sciences '' * H Health Education Physics^ c Anthropology v Cultural Foundations of Education History :v: r Psychology I order one Art Economics * J, ( Home Economics Radio-Televlsion-Flim ^Astronomy Educational Psychology ;" '" international Business Real Estate '"i%, >'> Bible Enollsh Linguistics Russian *4# 0-' this week ' "> -Biology -»•> "!rv European Studies ^ w ^ Management:; Sociology Botany It finance^ .^,Matlr m si* l&'.s \fj * * -1 K h ^ ">Js* ."> i ^ It's Notnj&f.->|«;4•-.» _ ^tes gjr Quite a Pastime No Border v•;* vH-•*•"*f:'??1 • • • • .-• ;.':.; • ,"* . .•_ -v.•. • j. j.-t -~i.• •>; . . --: -..>'• ,..v •..--jVf.s,; • ~-i f-''-•V"-' • <>•'"»'"'' Invitation The Only Game in Town Is Excessive Fotf By RICHARD JUSTICE that the University athletics depart­ JUST AT THE time he was talcing Texas Stall Writer ment is spending its time and dollars . more time with reporters, he kicked .. LAREDO (AP) — Powetful The 1974 Texas football season was producing football , players, with un­ them out of Longhorn practices, an ac--Texas Southern. University,considerably more enjoyable for The completed majors in business, physical tion which will prove better in the long i which has won IS Border Daily Texan sportsstaff than it was for education and communication; instead -run for everyone concerned.He offered' Olympics team titles, will not most of you, average students at this of academicians. to rescind the lockout later if reporters .be invited tothe meetschedul­average American university. would write only; what he told them. • ed Feb 28 to March 1,'it was -As one teacher critical of the- announced Wednesday. > About half the Texan sports staff : program said lastyear, "I'vegot.toad-The problem is rooted where wehave , ^.Carroll Summersj iBorderattended about half the football games-mit; they do a helluva PR job." And, all suspected. Men yrho are holding on Olympics president,'said TSUHalf you average students didn't .what he could-also have said, it is a to their youths by coaching a kids' Is now afullfledged universityprogram powerful enough to sway game take themselves too seriously. ­ Maybe it was the fact the Longhoras division school and cfn 'no students' minds as well as richalumni. Penn State'Coach 'Joe Patemo ad­ have won only three important games longer compete in the college dressed the problem last week in the last three seasons. Maybe it was ONE UNIVERSITY student politico, division which the Tigershave' Dallas. -a member of the Tex^s Student dominated. . . A Texan InlnpMaHw ­ the fact Texas has played only two Reasonably close games the last three seasons. I am not foolish enough to believe mahy of yon have taken our ad­ vice that Texa? football is a vicarious, wasteful venture which consumes thousands of hours and millions of dollars. AT THE SAME time University . women's coaches are uncertain of their 1975 budget, and soccer goes complete­ly unnoticed. Perhaps the most troubling point b Publications Board, was-swayed *• enough to send me a not-too-subtle-hlnt that he was less than pleased with a column I had written in which I called Darrell Royal a "terse,sarcastic man'.' when he dealt with reporters. , But (here was a positive result from those three words. I was invited into Royal's office for almost an hour, and he apologized for his actions. "You know I've dealt with so many Texan reporters who, if they couldn't write a negative story,wrote nothingat all," he said."If yoi| hadbeena writer I was more familiar with,{might have . taken more time." ­ fcr I. li fc/ I? ii 1 Si, "j-*'* le' '* 'J « "&• is] SKIPPER'S IMPORTED AUTO PARTS 452-0244 •AVJUWWO (BrltUiJ •AOSIM •Hit •AOSntMAUY •JAMJAR •Mvn -•CAMPlUntoln/Mmreury)•CIIIODI *UI.V.(Chtvnltt)•MAISA •MUOMS-MIIZ •COtf(Dodg») •tomuUiM)•WCKIT(Mymouthi•DATStJM •M.C. • TOYOTA > VOLVO •FIAT •VOUUMAGIN •• .«PMTO(fordUJJk.) Regional 5209 NORTH LAMAR Dtetrtbutor f it p Buy any pair of slacks or jeans in the store at our regular low 'price in­cluding Levis and get a second pair for 1* more %*?Buy any sleepingbag ­V^:1n our store at our' ;• fregular low price and ^ffWHhsecbndl one for "<-Ur 7-v^f •Mg -SAVEDOUARSI— If k ^ Buy an fnsulated un­derwoar Top at our regular low price and get the Pants for 1* fefmore. ^ ft... ... tisJMlii ­ V—SAVE POLLARSI— 1 'S4T ' Urn Buy any pair of Huih Pup­ "let'sface itrfootballis not themost important thing in ths country," he said. "If football suddenly disappeared from the scene we wouldnever miss it. "I want my players to enjoy the ex-perience of going jto college. It should be the fourgreatest yearsof their lives. There is so much besides football. Art, historyt literature, music, politics, the changing. society. I consider fpotball just another extra-curricular activity, like debating or the band or anything else on campus." ­ At the University,.priorities were , „ „ -• . . ,.. misplaced long ago.They are notlikely Montreal:1 Yvon Cournoyer (12) and Detroit's Blair Stewart (25) watch the puck to change. bounce off the back ofthe net during the second pefiod of actlon. * \i NCAA Kills Women's^Programs WASHINGTON (AP)-The National Collegiate Athletic Association killed a proposal that would have created national championships for women in track and tennis this spring. , Wednesday's action camea day after t^ie Association for Intercollegiate Athletics for-Women, meeting in Houston, accused the NCAA of athletic piracy for itsplans to set up a national championships program for women. t "It was because of a lack of gover­' ning body for women's athletics that the AIAW. waS formed," Margot Shoe Shop W» makeand ^'repair boots shoes belts - • wt wis Pucky.Flight Polivy, the association's attorney said :|:k< moved on"' to another, institution! A Tuesday In Houston. "Now that women's athletics are getting atteh-'> tion, the.NCAA sees itasanother place to set up shop, and it happens to be in our home." In other action, the NCAA tooksteps to crack down on coaches who violate its rules. V Delegates to the NCAA's 69th annual 'Convention approved a proposal spon-•£; sored byLong Beach Statewhich would 4 enable a school to take disciplinary ac-^ tion against a former coach who has " *§ALE* SHEEPSKIN RUGS *500. Many $750 Beautiful Colors leather •LEATHER SALE • goods Various klndi, co(an.-73' p«r ft. Capitol Saddlery 1614'Lavaca Austin, Texas 478-9309 ii -% **• spokesman said the rule was intended to prevent the coach from committing violationsat one-collegeand later going • to another school where hecould not be 'punished. . > Hie first school may now impose sanctions against such a coach which cottld result in his being barred from coaching for up to two years, although 'he could maintain his connection with his new schoolin another capacity.The NCAA must approve such institutional sanctions On Campw Qualifying Tdurnamutt of th» 27th ANNUAL INTERCOLLEGIATE DUPUCATE CONTRACT BRIDGE CHAMPIONSHIPS Tues.&Thurs> „ Jan. 14 A 16 7-11p.m. -T' S Uh B< Bfer AlumniCmter Sign up: TexasUnion South No..M4 ' We Make Cents And Save YoufDollars! Buy one child's Buy any shirt in the Goodyear. v store at our regular Rubber-' Rain- low price and get a coat-sizes 8 to second one for 1* 20 at our more. regular low price of $3.88 —SAVE DOLLARS!— and get a se­ i cond one fpr ;1*. -SAVE DOHARSl— Buy one full size -comforter at our regular low , BtfyiM any Jacket in our stor9> at our price qnd get a secondbeautiful comforter for 1* regular law price and get second more. " • " * -• /'• jacket for'.1' rSAVE DOLLARSI— more. r-SAVt, DOLURSI— Biiy any pair of boots or shoes in |the'store andget 4 pair of eox for 1* "p, Buy any pair ^of Panty Ho#e more. ^f-SAVtDOUARSI­ at our regular $'4 low price and. get ,a, secc|nii; I i, 'T —SAVE DOLLARSI— pair for .H* ?.A:more, ' : ' V V -,t H t*- ,~M4] ;-/£-• ?i:si* , •r' '* 1 i i > }i Buy one man'8 um­brella at our regular |ow price of $3.88 laladies' unrl-' pies or Ked's shoes at our 1' more* regular low price and get a *econd pair for V more. ? IAVE DOLURSI­ *jnj \ I *' vX-^ " SA!^DOUARSlk| x~r ** •>V* It// ' I -*4 Buy a viftyl Poncho at bur regular low price of $2;8S -get the second one for 1' more.' % >V ... .M--'.---.' «. —SAVE DOLLARS!— i 'cS • Buy any pair of sOx at our regular low price and get a second pair for 1* more. ^ -SAVE DOLLARS!— x., +U? GIFTS Buy air^y Gift from our specjal lot'at our regular-low-price and get a se­ cond Gift for V'more. ' —SAVE DOLLARS!— Buy a tpy at our' regular low price and get,the second toy —SAVE DOLLARS!-­ alive in,f75&Helpiight inflation irt«ih#«rebtest hation with bu& like th««« "We're limiting1 ourselves to nine teamsin the university division;^ said Summerset' was a hellqva decision'to make." AU Southwest Conference teams will be invited to the ' first,major outdoor meet of the track season except Arkansas. Summers^ said more university teams cannot be added to the field because tliat would necessitate preliminaries in the->relay events. ' r-.- Shiriey Field, site of the Border Olympics; has only nine running lanes. Border Olympics officials * also had to make a choice between Lamar University or North TexasState asthe ninth and only non-SWCteam. "We picked Lamar because they've been with ub the ionRest," Summers said. Texas Southern captured 10 straight college crowns from 1960 through 1969 arid wdn tyie last three in a row. TSU athletes own seven overall Border Olympics records and 10 divisional marics. . '' Among the most noted TSU athletes to compete at the Border Olympics are Olym­pians. Jimmy Hines. Robert „ Taylor, and Tommy Fulton and 7-foot high jumper John. Haitfidd.'-» •• ji The Border Olympics in­cludes two other track and field-divisions — junior college and hi^ischool. Italso has a golf tournament' Wm ^So5­ Buy-any pair of tennis or basketiiall sho^s at our regular low prlpe and get a second pair for 1* more. • W-sSsPBr.v: —SAVE DOLLARS!— ,iv J-> t -'s-% W$A NTERESTING STORES1 iSCOUrttTO ALl RETIRED SENIOR CitftElsR Sore Arm y . ^'iS-w I'• NEW ORLEANS (AP) -. The injury didn't prevent Friday, we'd probably be able be missed considerably," andthe problem was diagnos­ ' Minnesota's starring quarter- Tarkenton from finishing to use him," said Grant. Grant said. ed as a viral infection, but ; back forSunday'sSuper Bowl fourth among National Pittsburgh Coach Chuck The Vikings would probably White has been scheduled to game against Pittsburgh Conference passers this Noll, still hopes to use White use 15-year veteran Grady be released from the hospitalremains Fran : Tarkenton, season with more than 2,500 but agreed, that stamina could . Alderman as fiis replacement twice before. . despite, a-sore arm which yards and 17 touchdown be a problem. "We'll have to Ironically Goodrum's "The extra day in the , could prove.a blessing-in dis-passes. "I think most players keep a close watch on him match-up across the line of hospital won't have that muchguise for the NFlAeteran. At play best when they have a during the game," he said. scrimmage would normally affect on him," said Noll. "He'least Minnesota ;Coach Bud minor ailment, I don't know Goodrum, a second-year be White, but this has not been wasn't going to practice • Grant acts that way. why. Possibly you concentrate man, pulled the plantaris a normal week for the big Wednesday anyhow. Iexpect . Tarkenton, who. has passed more or there's a little extra muscle in his right leg during defender from East Texas him to be released in time forAor more than 2,000 yards in13 adrenalin flowing." the Vikings' Tuesday prac­State. He went to the hospital our meeting Thursday and ex­ consecutive seasons, came up Tarkenton his tice. rested arm Sunday night after complain­pect him to practice with the :. with a twinge in his arm Tues­during the Vikings' workout The leg was packed in ice ing of pain in his back and chib Thursday, Friday andday, and Grant was positively Wednesday, but two other key Tuesday, and Goodrum con­ stomach following the team's Saturday."glowing over the develop­players — Minnesota offen-tinued to undergo treatment arrival. Steve Fumess is White'sment ' . • . sive tackle Charles Good rum from Viking team physicians Tests have been negative. replacement. f / "Every time he gets a sore and Pittsburgh defensive end on Wednesday. "It's not as arm, he hasa great day,"said Dwight White — still were un­severe as a hamstring but it's Grant "It's a good omen for able to practice. Goodrum painful, and I must say he , us. I think he worriesabout it, was treated for a pulled right remains doubtful. He would UNIVERSITY CYCLERY andhe alwaysseemstothrow leg muscle and remained a littlebetterwith it-I'm sure doubtful for "Sunday's game. E i I I if { it's still sore oh Sunday, White remained in Baptisthe'll have a great day." Hospital, at-least until "liiurs- BIKES "I hope he's right," said day, for treatment of back fill Tarkenton. "It's a little Sore, spasms and stomach cramps. can be registered with the 1111 —UP1T«Uphoto but it's okay. I was hit on the With only three .days.of University Police Monday, shoulder in the first game of work left before the game, Tuesday, and Friday from the -season, and it has time becomes a factor for the Noon to 4 P.M. at the bicy­« « V •,Th« Champaign BolHa!Eoat, f*aKir« craft o{ lh« 33rcI annual San Francisco Sporti bothered me off-and on:since two linemen. cle rack on the north end of and Boat Show, is launchcd by Margot law and Mike Riegor. Tho thaw ha* othor then." "If (joodrum can work Jby ' Bellmont Hall. ...... , : / . . . iim* « ieqa^ JESTER CENTER ,7NEW ORLEANS (4P> =-Super Bowl op-** iTheUghiwwered offensive unit was head­ponentsMinnesota and Pittsburgh{daimed'^l en by Oakland quarterback JCen Stabler,,who fivepla<^opTheAjKO<&ted PriessjAll-Prols| completed 57.4 percent of his passes for 2,469 football team announced Wednesday.' jrardis during the regular season. >2i * "Minnesota; tte.National,Conference cham-;. j-^ Buffalo's O.J. Simpson, who set analltime pion, was represented by offensive tackle. ^rushing record of 2,003 yards two years ago Ron Vary. who-was named to the' team for %«nd gained 1,125 yards this season, also was the fourth consecutive season, and defensive*' i jnamed to the backfield along with Denver's Yoyr ON CAMPUS Student Store tackle Alan . Page, elected -for the fifth Jg. Otis Armstrong, .die NFL rushing championstraigit year. with 1,407 yards. Weekdays BiOO 'til 6:00 .Pittsburgh's representatives were defen­'5.' Riley Odoms of Denver was named-the ANNOUNCING sive tackle Joe Greene, named for a third tight end with Pearson and Cliff Branch of straight year, and defensive end L.C. -Oaktand.as the wide receivers. Saturdays 9:00 /til 1:00 FREEDOM OF CHOICE! Greenwood and linebacker Jack Ham, both of Besides Yary, the:offensive line!included . from France from the U.S. whom made it for the first time. ~ Oakland tackle Art Shell, guards Gene lie*American Conference dominated both' Upshaw of Oakland andLarry Littleof Miami • BLUEBOOKS •COSMETICS GITANE SCHWINN offensive and.defensive teams named by a--and center Jim Langer of Miami. Two of the best! The finest European bicycle or the national panel of sports writers and broad On defense, besides the front four of •SPIRALS •RECORDS American favorite — the choice is yours. The casters. » • ^ • Greenwood, Greene, Youngblood and Page, Schwinn's are here, the Gitanes are comingI Only three National Conference players —; the AP panel chose Ham, Green Bay's Ted •SNACKS • MAGAZINES Repair on aft makes -Fully guaranteed Yary, Dallas wide receiver Drew. Pearson^ Hendricks and Philadelphia's Bergey as Complete tine of accessories and place, kicker Chester Marctn of Grera $f.: iinebadcers. Bay — were named to the offensive unit. On , -The defensive secondary showedJake Scott 29th at Lamar 474-6696 1912 Anderson Ln. 451-6567 defense, the NFC placed just four players — ;. ofMiami and Tony Greene of Buffalo as CONVENIENT FOR SHUTTLE BUS RIDERS! Page. Los Angeles end Jack YOungblood. safeties with Kansas City's Eimmitt Thomas linebacker Ted Hendricks of Green Bay and $**y and Robert James of Buffalo at raimerbacks. Philadelphia linebacker Bill Bergey. ,f_ " , . Sports SHorfsjf W'*r? • le t A' 11 * lit , : Creighton Rolls Past Tech OMAHA, Neb. (UPI) -Creighton went out in frontto . : back Mike Pereira of EI Paso, Creighton University, led by stay when Bob 'Scrutchens . a freshman who. played on the Doug Brookins' 18 pointy;' ^connected with a Jpng1 jumper .Southern • Methodist juniorstopped Texas Tech;51-45 at. to put the Jays in^front 4443. varsity^ is planningto transfer the Omaha Civfc Auditorium to the University of New Mex- And nekt week's. And the week after;that: Our price, $29.4D Wednesday night; > ^DALLAS (AP) —^Quarter-ico; . a week, comes to about $117.50 a month. A paltry sum if vlt wasthe third'straight vic­ tory for the Jays,, who now you've been living elsewhere. begin a three-game road trip I Granted, we're not the Hilton of college housing, but what with a 10-4 record. The loss ARBY'S HAM do you want .for'a little pver a hundred bucks? You get a dropped Texas Tech to 5-5. I furnished room with AC and carpeting,,maid service, and Creighton held,a 26-23 half-' SANDWICH SPECIAt time lead and at one time, t BUY ONE, GET ONE FREE I all the good home-cooked food you can eat. stretched its lead tdrlO points; I $1.98 VAUJB FOR but midway through the je*/ : SAVE 99' 99< The New Barrone. Two and a haltblocks from campus. cond half, .the Red Raiders,* I behind . the shooting of Bill. Good thru Jan. 15 I Johnson, overtook Creighton CaoMapc 472-15121andheld several one-point -'^-.5400 RmmI ltd. 451-5740 P .2700 Nueces 472-7850 leads -~ Jr :_With 4:14 left to play,' r W ^ i-. t- sm i'C '.j-v mm IWiaMniH m r mkd" #«wa«s . 4, &}M.$k, vAi^si' US SBSS8 .. , „ JM • •••.••••• SBS # ^ team^emaimngWh tacfej <• * > -fn ~ fj-y-— „ j, i * • >? t a t /», 7*. • U ,, < By BILL JORDAN posted a 19-2 Tecord last 'wasn't expecting tq get much -?forwar^ to getltogBclrafted.t,I> after thei^junior'year.Jff this "Well be in pro untformSTjefore t Texan Staff Writer season, would have benefited of an offer because of my leg probably wouldn't havesigned new rule evergoes into effect the season is over^^'1;­'Three names will be miss­ the most* fronia new drafting injury (in anelevator accident -a contract I just panted to itcould feaflywipe out agood *r *' 7® ing from Thursday's pro ; date, ' last fall).But if I had gotteria, , see ;what they would hare college"baseball team. _ ^ , • • •1^7/baseball draft; and noone will "I'm just reverting back to good contract I might have offered me" < # ' "J hope we can present a % «*«« «Aob­be happier 'than Texas Coach what I'd planned to do since1 changed my mind ' -tS Gustafson is certain Texas good argument to the owners o» rw YO™i j™> *""* V*e Cliff Gustafson got out of high school," Gi-''I think U wiUhelpme noWA-l will be in bett^r shape with at their next meeting and > „ If ,eg0 , 5esr --Less-than a -week ago.it; >..r„ i. _ n,.«in._«rauud,!.u. u <1.1. 1.1.. , •fe narrowiv'missed stsrilrtff : -deon said, speaking fromhis that the ^ew rule has been., the three pro progpectsjn his -avoid this problem." " jrawowly missed signingappeared Thursday's draft Houston home. "I just looked '.'ifana-'AwfiirMirMh':-ts-nan'2/])npim-.iaffniii»,thltt snHno .;Wliftf;v-.*:Sl?a a-•x*I•.1 i!?i?sil,fit?fnsive done away with I cap come lineup again this spring..What Tor the timi belftif^was going to bea sad occasion at itas anopportunitytostart back this season and show the heis more interestedin atthe ,however,' Gustafson'sfor the Longhorn coach.Three my pro careera littlequicker. pro scouts that my injur^ moment.is.how the ftaaj -out--problems over. But when iuwu umi inj uijiujr TO ua«i vuv-invu>«uB are over, out wnen twi»=^«.. .• 7 «i of his prize pupils were eligi­ ' MM ' at Naturally I'm disappointed it hasn't hurt me any, and come of the'rulet^an^e will the Junedraft datearrives the JfLt ble for the professional draft didn't work out that way " maybe I can get a better deal . affect college baseball. Tejfys coach's^.worries will . .'5draft, The under a new amendment "lnnM * iia --L,,.....r,.-.r. ,.w» Associated-Press'learted Wortham and Stouffer, the III June. •. A : .....v.<...i^uuiiiig Liw^U' 'JllUiU^Jljr, • 1.: . . -,• , ^ written by pro owners attheir ^ne 1 i -®ciif other. Texas players who Stouffer was unaware Kuhn > point we already give Up a lot Not only will Gideon, y" i&J'' winter meeting in October. J .would have been eligible for had changed the new rule the way the draft is set up," Wortham and Stouffer be 'C^Rlchards. 64 -M^Do^ds In the past; college baseball the draft,, expressed less dis­"I was getting ready to sit said Gustafson.' "Vl(hen we eligible for the draft,but Rick played summer league players could only be selected appointment around the house and wait for recruit most'of thes6 boys Bradley, Keith Moreland and baseball in the amateur during the June draft follow­ "ACTUALLY I tad planned a phone call tomorrow," said wrtxo ar? good^roprospectein .Mickey Reichenbach will be S^nmdoah VaUey League, ing thfir. 21st birthday. - ...... on coming iiaek tp school Stouffer "It's a gOod thing high school, we know that we^1 added to the list of Texas where he hatted • The new -rule would have I, ,was Jooking anyway," Wortham said "I, yoU called " * * will pt9bably1bei^»lng thetii taseball players who .could 52 bases. . allowed' pro teahis to draft h^5J; ifu-r -y -i V Vjt " fii- college playerswho were 21in. January, drwould turn 21. Within 45 days of the draft • t ••:••{•'',;>'•. • —UPI Telephoto" I'M. BUT. LATE last week.' I^l Baseball > Commissioner. : .;n Fits Like $3 Million h m 1^; Bo.wie Kuhn axed the new 14'Iw%&\il I In full* N«w Yc*k Yankee uniform for th« fint time, rale, sending down a rescin­J&p liBlllii p m it *•?•%*»• v.vl ; Catfish Hunter plays with a baseballin SheaStadium ding order totable the amend­ m w p jli! Wf&:\ ii mm ^1 m > Wednesday. v , ment until the ownersdiscuss­ I*M-! issi 'Ml AV.I ed the new rule in greater P, ml SSA detail ' • 1^ t m As a result fexas All- Jenkins Reportedly 1ls«™ 1 'llliii M America pitcher Jim Gideon,: shortstop Blair Stouffer and pitcher Bichard Wortham; Asking $200,000 missed. their chance to turn.; Texas Insir TRUMENT professional sixmonths ahead j|gg=] STt-BLINCf*^ •­.. ARLINGTON fAP) -Tex-go the New York Yankees for of schedule. • ;• BBil *S:r' as '25-game winner Ferguson : £.7 million. Had the commissioner not' 5^ass SANVo Jenkins was expected to hud­..Jenkins was edged in the Cy tampered with the owners' t.)pin\cci) 'WHdle with officials of ,the Yotmg. balloting by Hunter. amendment-, Gideon, who ­ cJLjrJBCO BH • #r H American League team • ^KENwoap Thursday morning to discuss -sports capsules- his 1975 contract % I «i NHL " WHA SO N Y i M Pfl I w 11 n> ar a* : Jenkins was reportedly un-' v 1 * » 1 New Eng.. 21 15 1 43 135 132. r 1 happy with a money package > »iih«« Clvlnd ....14 20 2 X 99 117 I -^1 that would have offered him PMiphia.—.—. is I& a i« «i Chicago. —14 21 1 29 111,137 " lnd»B0U...__.... _.7 31 lit It 172 M estimated *140,000 this jSg.rZ^Sis f t IS IS year. nyum*^ ~uis 941)35 its Houston 26 11 0 52 120 104 Phoenix...: 19 14 4 42 127 1|T ' J * Vancvr.-.^.. .22 13 5 49 114 122 Minn— ............19 17 0.31 154 129 • Jenkins was due in the a>fca®0*i^-—•• ••••17 4 J?J33 San Diego.... 17 1 37 117 Ml Mich..... 17 25 3 27 99 161 ViVJ Sanger offices Wednesday JUT^ZZZllta IS Cuto HiMin afternoon but telephoned-in: 27 M H IM Quebec.... ...._.....22 15 0 44 151 126 Toronto 21 16 1 43 160 139 that he -would not be in Montreal.......... 22 6 U 34 179 III Edmonton nil 1 37 113 M. Arlington until shortfy before, I-Angeles,...'._ 20 6 12 52 117 73 Winnipeg 17 14 2 36 132 105. Pith i... -.14 It 8 34 152 1U v»ncvr :.16 17 .2 34 106*109 . midnight because he had been Detroit 10 22 5 25 104 147 Wiit»nil./« Ocim fogged in at Montreal. WajtiW...-.-3 33 511 D 219 Quebec 4, Vancouver 3 •V-'-i" .• . •'•VmintmftQmmm S Winnipeg at Michigan. -^Jenkins was reportedly ask­BuHalo.„_.Ji 25 A 56 173 125 Bo»t«ii:..U.i;_™._.22"io 7 si m 121 Mlnneiota at EitmOntM ing for $200,000 although he Ton*ltbi.....:.....„....13 U 7 33 127 144 New England at Phoenix would not ,make public his CalW.' ......11 a >30 113 166 WadnasdoV* Pro Basketball- money , demands on the New York Rengtrs 6, Kansas City 1 NU Boston 104k Atlanta 96 * Rangers, who recentlyOffered Chicago 7, PlttsburQh 5 . Los Angeles,106, phlladelptila 91.. Lok Angeles % MJnnestta l:. Catfish-Hunter *2.5 million,' Milwaukee 102, Detroit 92 Atlanta X California 2 >>. Washington IK. Phoenix 95 , Hiknter.rejected the offer and-: Modtrcal 4, Detroit 4 New York at Siaftle, late^ tS: ?r STEREO OR I 'USE TEXAN WANT ADS , Los Angeles at Buffalo Vancouver at.Boston " wnnnauiw, 4-CHANNEJL START RIGHT *rnm. . ? ^;c IN Yi OME AT I hd PLEASANT VALLEY 'mm' , mm ESTATES 'i ' Move in now -get .two-weeks FREE Rent •"f-. g~V«­3(L lira mm Four Apt. Styles to Choose From We Pay All Utilities 8EMB TURNTABLES , We Have Semester Leases IPR/CES AT AN ALL TIME LOWt 'DEALERS mUSOM0i i% OFF! " 'jLL-L " ; ^ VAME BRANDS ON SALE$ Pleasant Valley Estates *500,000 IN iti ii§./.1 -ISfftiXh. 1300 S. Pleasant -Valley Rd. -., Tel:447-1890 ; must BE S Next to faUANXITYjblSCpONfSr y i|Aquarius Theater \Li-DlSPLA YS ON SAL& t-Al s 1$ GUCUUTORS \ . IK'_5 0ISPLAYS & CL0SE0UTS! 1% 1# IsS, 6 W -mm n .."•am: mm Bf' ^ i c m IFF! JEACE ' , If WB considar violence as a kind of diseasm.:, peace theoty and research Is similar to medlcal activlty. Like"diseases Such as cancar and heart disease the cure tor r viblenca has not bean found. Yet there has been end % . continues to be fmporutnt miork done vyhicf} will hopefuttf CM SIBEO i CEMEUT 2B%-48% mmm atjon al ^, P IFF! Annou^fts^new Spri^Cou^e: r -> INTElTNATIONAt STUDIES fl ?ft 1 DEVELOPMENT OF PEACE THEORY & RESEARCH mmm ;sj <• v3 m ¥£ mvEKBt INSlTSUqOR:P«f4^tlihtinft WM OFF! Visitiri0professor r -Univel^fy of^|Ml~ m « We stiff have room <-i for yofi ^ ^; a^4 ^ , f "tHs Jt k -s -„ I'W'' A>»s , i '4 "e lssue t^frontingyou is this: should you or.'/. Naturallyv weljdieve theanswer isclear. And in your vSINOliS AND DOUBLES AVAILABLE ^ Sh°u'c'??'t y°u sign aTri-Towers contract' fi' , heart you know we're right . •w*.P'^with or without board t } -^Tor afteralhfie promises.gplden onelinons andfenrytallr So standup andbecounted at Tri-Towers North, 801 W ^c'Wj you miist otamincyburconscienceanddecide 24th, in themiddleofthe's&ident neighborhood •. s t . -'A- fpryourselfi WouQd^au rat^spendth^%ringSonesteri| < < , ' -ft f ' , fS ciau^rophobia ma<^orm'room? 1 ^ f 5-/ m mm '1•'* , L iijyjij 1^ II ji , . [ I I ' • — • IMBIli MS "V^e •* «-Vr :-w * rlVjK *r? J%wlBa jfA & iS^&^s®SR?S® Pivl " SITU _ I "r , ration Main Bldg. 16 •5 VT ...S&r* •• iHVM. 471-5865 \tt -•-«« ,! Jf ',-*«», Y ­ &Ss2yt< -1 v Spring Registrattoii Timetable *h V",>H MONDAY 6 T UESDAY 7 WEDNESDAY 8PHURSDAY9 FRIDAY 10 . 11 i ? REGISTRATION -BELLMONT . L 3 ' ~ k-• SSUED IN ACADEMIC CENTER MONDAY 13 CENTRALIZED ADDS/DROPS mkt ' BELLMONT HALL PHOTO ID & -w PAID FEE RE­ CEIPT RE­ Iff,-•; I1*1. K>v QUIRED TO ADD f« * OR DROP |vJ ,F !: ­ ^EGISTRATK)N MATERIALS •• *.W tlpAY FEES FOR / if;WEDNESDAY '|f^G|SWT!W TUESDAY 14 WEDNESDAY IsTTHURSDAY 16 H <• IIHIDDS AND DROPS IN DEPARTMENTS & n-A LATE REGISTRATION * „ PAY FEES FOR THURSDAY REGISTRATION X •* . i .,> -A. .. •: i- •r.-j i. > FRIDAY 17 DROPS^BEGIN IN DEAN'S OFFICES F>. .'O.Aafti-: <£&£.tj$.­ m % $iM§? &$<•> PAY LATE' REGISTRATION BILLS //» "* If.;, TODAY'S SCHEDULE IKBCsa, 'fflji® 1 t «•" "• •* i\ THURSDAY, JANUARY 9TH ' itti _~r_ ^ BELIMONT ADMISSION SCHEDULE: NO ONEADMITTED PRIOR TO SCHEDULED TIMES 8:30AA-ASH 9:00 ASI-BEC 9:30 WIM-ZZ 10:00 VAM-WIL 10:30 TUR-VAL 11:OOREF-ROP WL2 Mo one will be admitted between 11:30 a.m. and ,1:00 p.m. ] ^ / v >• +(• -"i' * • NO ONE WILL BE ADMITTED AFTER 4:00 P.M. M^Sr»­ 1:00 TAHiTUQ 1:30 KUM-LEf­2:00 JAC-KUL 2:30 HAS-JA& 3:00 MUL-OBQ 3;30 GOS-HAR r *%,<•. TO ALL STUDENTS RECEIVING FINANCIAL AID ... EVEN IF NOT PAYING YOUR OWN FEES, YOU MUST GO TO BELLMONT HALL AND HAVE YOUR FEE BILL PROCESSED AT YOUR SCHEDULED TIME. m TIME-SAVERS fir .1-4 Y«^W -i#glww»ji«'!iwnREGISTRATION'MATGRIALSr m#tisi^inu SWM W'. %' n 1. REGISTRATION MATERIALS MAYBE PICKED UP IN THE ACADEMIC CENTER BETWEEN 8:00 5^U*R?I^PH>W'*NDv8:0">.A'J*-™3=00 P.M. ON THURSDAY^ < •«V- 2. STUMNIS WHO WEBE tffiRE LASt S£MESIER, but did nM pn-ngblet may pltk up th«ir materials in their ma{or departmental offices. > 3-N^W..SJ|JD^NTS, m»«t obtain a HEALTH COMPLIANCE SUP from the STUDENT HEALTH i ;-,wV..' CCENTEReNTER beforebAtfirA HllillAbeing admitted to* Bellmont Hall for registration. ' i«%-i »A (UliiHAM# UmII tk. 1 i ' * M\ J Si'-» # ADVISING •&&$| w ""l eeie>?nwit??.^n ^ClADEjUIC ADVISOR before entering registration. If your department bllows SEIF-ADVISING, you must have your Dean's Course Card stamped by them before entering Bellmont. Advisors may not make major—11 • * • "~ k^4I MUST'BE ADVISED IN'YOUR NEW ~~~ * A ' r FEES AND BILLING vm-. Register Today -Pay Tomorrow .., A payment schedule will be Issued when Wti comblete tfy registration. REMEMBER TO KEEP YOUR FEE RECEIPT. You will need It later. FEES MUST BE PAID BY 5:00 P.M. FRIDAY, JANUARY 10TH. <>, . L 1&P-4. % Hjir® OPTIONAL FEES:. Use the OPTIONAL FEE REQUEST CARD tojrequest optional services^ IF YOU 4* t _ , WERE HERE LAST SEMESTER, THE ONLY OPTIONAL FEE THAT HAS TO BE r * PAID AGAIN IS THE FEE FOR LOCKER AND SHOWER USE, ! U ' PARKING PERMITS: Permits for the Spring Semester can be picked up irfBellmont Half, Room 242, after fees havebeen paid. REMEMBER THAT A PERMIT OBTAINED IN THE FALL.IS STILL VAUD FOR THIS SEMESTER. . ^ ^ 1 ifW ID'S for STUDENTS WHO WERE NOT HERE LAST FALL will be made in Bellmont Hall after you feW# ff-A. ^fflfrXrU.n^:,.,lBr05NJN? 5JHEJ*TS maY »heir fall ID's yalidated^fhere. REPLACEMENT ID's Will be made in GREGORY.GYM BANNING JANUARY 13TH.$ Miw ; ^.SCHOXSUpRMAjORIlHA^EfV^ I wmps >«s djCvr»»r ti- VJ ft ft ,f,vsn-,^ ftr iir\« *vl. :00 AAA-BER-# Wf:00 LE :30 BES-CAQ .STUDENT WILL BEoAD 12:00 NOON TO 1:00 PJVl. llf^f^ppCAR-B^ 2:OONIF-QUI ^H2S 10;00 FAR-GO J RECEIPT #^ 30 STB-VAR W,1:0&.HID^UY ^1|REQ(JIRED TO BE AOMirt w St1:30 ^ MBEAUMONT HALL ­ 1:30 JUZ-LEW - tsm/stm wL / f ' »7 i.i-^. %" * ji' v" * ~T«xenSoNby Faculty and staff relax^n dne of three dining rooms at the new clut!' f» .Wttf t ---- -6 y> , v „ i Mpt;:, 'Monday Opening Deemed a Success _ t By DAVID MOdDY 1 " The large dining room seats 234 people7 Beathard saik^WtK < , Texan Staff Writer -*0' all.the tables'and chairs removed about 275 people can be serv­ . Attendance.at the University Faculty. Center*has-doubled ed for any receptions or meetings that mightheld in thedin­every day since its opening Monday, maitre d"Gary Beathard ing room, Peathard explained. ­said Wednesday. -« ^ The kitchen hasall new stainlesssteel steamand gaspowered "We're booked for lots of parties already," 4aid Fred Han-equipment that "is like working in a dream," Beathard said, nah, assistant manager. The center has facilities for several "'The building itself is about 99 percent complete," Beathard .hundred people, Beathard said. -.* > > v"'-* said. "The dining room still lacks eight massive chandeliers The Faculty Center can accommodate every iort of-activity and three large Persian rugs to be complete.", > ­with abilliards room,a smalllibrary and reading 'rbom.several The initial membership feeIs $50 until March in AftAr Mo^ph meeting rooms, a large dining area'and thrte sma]U dining" 10, it will cost$70 to becomea member. Monthlydues are$6.50, rooms and a well-stocked bar. Furnished with modern fur-or $9.50 for members desiring bar privileges. t >~ niture, the center has padded walls and carpeting,t& help keep » 'i^SvV'-iV the noise of the street below out, Beathard said. -' > . ' "V '.'{•IS. The center, at Guadalupe and 25th Streets,-'Is;open from ll'? "" " a^n. to11 p.m. Mondaythrough Fridayand from Ua.m. tomid­ Funding Denied night on Saturdays. A buffet luncheon, featuring sandwiches sold by the inch, is served from 11:30 a.m to 1:30 p.m. every T ! n ^ ^ day.except Sunday, pinner is from 6 to 8:30.p.m. dailyand 7 to i'FQIFlinQ • •ffOOlO'ffl^ >1--"°'^ 9:30 p m. on Saturdays Beginning Feb. 2, the Faculty Center ' ~ > .. .. will beopen from noon to 3 p.m. Sundays.,. -' , < Mter their'third funding ly'The executive r,„ Beathard explained, the new, facility is ^versatile. -Each , nronosat failed Wednesday u/ -meeting room has facilities to servefood, tea and coffee': Also, Sa^te Employment and was rejected b^thf"J?n^ SJiTnT^8 it?n™^bU^ microphone Redevelopment (SEE) of-tium members y^' u wa aC^ates ?c ? ^tem.Lighting- ficials announced they would SER then submltted'a $102 ­ every^oom controlled' prov,du,B vanaWe tor ' ' -'. t;' fer^ WftCOME BACK ve­ra. ^ rM >1 it#*, ; TACO FLATS SOUTH' INSIDE r&'' THE RUSTY NAflg 24»h and Rio Grande ;* WEEKLY SPECIALS " 3 Meat Burritos oar*99« Hobo Plates HAPPY HOUR PRICES ON BEER* 'Highballs with every food purchase a SPARK yourinterest » We a federal suit: . 000 proposed budg^S s'^sra'SfE Js-rsssisrt deny SER's $127,253 funding the Austin City Council for proposal.. It was SER's third $127,000.tWV. TheA lie councilLUUIIV.UIreferredCtClICvl *V, r r"T T4"' attempt to obtain funding SER back to the ra»fi«ni4ii>«^, • since the Department of -recommending Itv^econsider Labor curtailed its funds last the funding proposal. July-" "SER has the supporlof ttie Gabriel Gutierrez, legal Ctfy of Austin and Travis (Counsel for SER, claims the County," County Com-consortium violates^tte con-missioner Richard Moya said, stitutional ngMs of the "If local people decide we citizens of Austin. If this posi-should fund SER, X think we tion should be upheld in a should do it Here-we liave federal court,any decisions of people from other areas the consortium would be ^deciding whether people^ declared unconstitutional, this area get funded " - Gutier^ said. ' Moya voted against the,ll, Annabelle Valle, director of tion to deny funding V< ^™man?™irtem.™f1!,n„5ni! In response tocriticism that SrfSwv Iht mow . fc; SER duplicates the efforts of definitely the next move. ,J^ other manpower programs in v"We will file a federal siat the community, Valle said the as^ soori~«s possible. This; '"other organizations are bogg­^should become an election ed down . , --, 'Issue, though Austin's elected "We want to servellB pe^ officials have given up their pi^but wecan only train 15at P°wer- , present," Valle said. '->• SER's previous funding Currently the organizatipa attempts inclpded an applies-is existing on donations a»d • tion to the consortium last Ju-.• contrlbutions. Valle said. (GUADALUPE:10CATI0M^ OHltj THURSDAY & SUNDAY SPECIALS OIICKEH FeilD STEAK ci'lAH ICkEN'FRlEO^' ^fireAkpyrWftv vmwd* P^pTATOlOlliFAeNtiHffiRlEa, § HOT THXA8 tOAST, AND P CrtOR STEAICOlHyERf$1.49, -, -* <***&. MpHlfAWWj­ '"'wii mmmm m worn mmmm w^Kys-cfv-v li|l^V-Y;f'il^l4|,i'iJps ^ TT 1 '•^5^M^BR , • ..* -> ,'«V'Sisr Laguna Gloria Art Museum —^.^—Begistratlojris'open for a Dancer's^ Workshop Series at the Image Artswlll begin Jan. 21 for 6-year-oldsand for Pulse Arts Artists To Exhibit Works — ' Interart Works. Classes include'modern"3irfcetecBniq5eana" .WP8-~through 12-year-olds. Pulse Arts,wilH>eoffered Janr23for­, . expression, basic movement impulse and development, of the;younger group. Image Arts will be offered Jan; 23 for the Three artists wiHTjeteatured in exhibitionsat Laguna Gloria low-temperature, brightly colored ceramic airplanes. Most of , ^modern dance styles, The orientation is towards developing older'children. The fee for six weeks is $13.50. Art Museum, beginning Friday and running through Feb. 2. The the pieces combine both pottery-making techniques, such as --movement as an expressive and exploratory art experience. A Saturday Studio Series (11:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m.) will begin artists featured are Ralph White, painter; David Pond-Smith, wheel throwing and sculptural processes. The ceramic sculp­ The Dancer's Workshop Series, taught by professional Jam 18, for, participants 10 years or older; the series will in-photographer and Stan Irvin, potter. tures are not intended to be illustrative examples of airplanes,dancers including Lee Barbee, Grace Broussard, Betty Fain, ..... vglve exposure and instruction in variousart formsin studiosof There is no admission charge tothe museum. Its hours are10 but rather expressionsof both the absurdity and harmony which Sallie Holland,.Helen Mayfield and Carlos Rodriguez,is open to a.m. to 5 p.m. Tuesday through Saturday, Thursdays until 9 . Austin artists. The fee is $18 per six-week session. exist between the object and the material-AH of Irvin's work inexperienced persons interested in dance; italsols opento'ex-.'Individualized tutorial workshops for persons 12 years and p.m., and Sunday 1 to 5p.m. Conducted tours of all exhibitions will be for sale. , perienced dancers. . -----colder will be arranged by appointment;.. , are available to groups of fiveor more persons.Information can Irvin received his training tn Arkansas and Texas. He receiv­ • Interart Works, a nonprofit organizationof artistsin different .• Families, will/be eligible for fee discounts and applications be obtained by calling Laguna Gloria at 452-9447. ed his MFA from the University in 1974, where he served aslabdisciplines, also is offering workshops for children and young accepted for-tuition assistance. White, a professor of art at the University, has exhibited bis and teaching assistant for two years under Texas potter people — workshops which began,this month. , , Furthermore, the Video Workshop — Electric Circuitry as paintings regionallyand nationally since1946. Major exhibitions Ishmael Soto. He initiated the ceramics program at LagunaAn alternative preschool for.3-and 5*yearrOlds .will utilize a Image — is conducting registration for the.spring, session at include the annual Exhibition of American Art, the Butler Gloria, where he will teach in the springbroad spectrum of artistic resources in anIntegrated program Interart Works. Seminar and laboratory topics include Institute, Youngstown; Ohio; the Mid-America Annual, the The photography of Pong-Smith will be featured in Gallery B coordinated by a< male;and female..teacher;;:f both stoneware and low temperature ceraniic sculptures, .For more information After-school sessions (3:30.to 5p.m.) in thelmage Arts (film,, concerning Interart Works, lts^ Greater emphasis will be placed on recent works, especially his video and photography) and in Pulse and Body Arts (dance, programs, registration and scheduling, contact 472-0718. ^ H y r 1 COUPON COUPON creative dramatics) will be offered for 6-through 12-year-olds. Interart Studios are at 1907 Whitis Ave. i I AC To Host Upcoming C MO Worst-Dressed List' Released Brando Movie Festival i i LOS TACOS I I LOS ANGELES (AP) -"When I., think .someone years he has been making his Valentine and Sonia Rykiel, A Marlon Brando film festival, sponsored by the University O 705 W. 24th Singer Helen Reddy heads the looks rottenr it doesn't mean selections public. Young Democrats, will be held Friday, Saturday and Sunday in iU I the^first fashion designer to list of 10worst dressed women they don't have a good soul or x"make the list. the Academic Center Auditorium. Each ticket stub will be good iP Bean Taco Iof 1974. that they aren't great enter­"There's just too many for one free beer or.oneslice of pizza at Texas Pizza, 205 E 19th O Blackwell; the designer who tainers,'' the/designer said of yards'of flesh with too fewin-Blackwell's best dressed St., through Monday. I iN -20* has been making .the selec­i his choice , of -Reddy for the ches of fabric," h^^said of list includes actresses Ann-. "The Wild One," costarring Lee Marvin, Mary Murphy and tions annually for 15 years, dubious distinction. Taylor. • Margret, Faye Dunaway and Robert Keith, will be shown at 6:10 p.m. atid midnight each i \Limit 2 I Natalie Wood; Rose Kennedy, also unveiled Tuesday his list • Blackwell picked-actress night. "The Chase," co-starring Jane Fonda, Robert Redford, of the 10 best dressed women Blizabeth Tayloras'tfie worst E.G. Marshall and Angle Dickinson, will be shown at 7:40 p.m. The designer's 10 worst Princess Grace of Monaco, LmmmmSmmSmwm^^mmCOUPON J of the year. of the worst dressed in the 15 each night. "On the Waterfront," co-starring Karl Maiden, Lee dressed/people were Reddy; and Mrs. Ronald Reagan, wife lillllilllllllllllll ™ Prjjrt:ess Elizabeth of of the former California J. Cobb, Eva Marie Saint and Rod Steiger will be shown at 10 Yugoslavia, fiancee of actor governor. . p.m. Admission for each Showing is $1.50. New Spanish Graphics Richard Burton, Fanne Foxe, stripper friend of Rep. Wilbur; B p orecjoru To Appear at St. Ed's O j Mills; Rep. Bella Abzug, D- O Y ' Fifty-seven contemporary stating that it has "liberated N.Y., described as dressing/ Ingmar S I restaurant! prints by Spanish artists are itself from the^ired old image for the 1940s, Cher Bono, who featured in "Graphics '74 — of darknesjifcd despair." Blackwell said looks like a A Greg Yamtn Enterprtje Bergman's Spain," an exhibit which will Galtejynours. are from 9 ''Hawaiian bar mitzvah,": continue through Jan.27 at the a.m.-''to09 p.m. Monday singer Charo, described as JAN. BEER BUST Moody Hall Atrium-Gallery of through Friday and1to 5p.m. "Carmen Miranda with A wards: St. Edward's University. • ,, -J-—J •«••—>-» »J—=-cleavage,"-the Mug Pitcher Saturday and-Sunday; Admis­ Pointer Berlin Shiner The exhibit, sponsored ,by sion is free. sisters, Raquel Welch, Karen -Film Festival: .20 the University of Kentucky, Michelob .30 Grand Prize Lexington, has been rated by Venice Film Festival: Serving 14 varieties of hot sandwiches. the University ofKentucky as "possibly the'best in the 16-Critics' PrizeAward pizzas, salads STUDENTS year history .of our annual 11-1 a.m. weekdays 1T -2 a.m. Sat. i graphics shows." PICK UP YOUR SPRING i 2801 Guadalupe 472.3034! . 'Artists featured . in the traveling exhibition' include 1975 UT |"the unique sandwichSt pizza Restaurant' Antoni Taples, Joan Miro, Rafael Conagar, Joan Pone FREE STUDENT COUPON and Antonio Saura. ^ BOOK WiUiam Dyckes, New York BRANDO art critic and author, •'says at our specially marked table ''Graphics '74" introduces: & . what is 'fin effect a new art, in the University Co-Op This FESTIVAL • v.-. .. -neto not only to the American _•/"? • public but.to theworld." _• Week!! *4 in* IL According to Dyckes, "an SPONSORED BY UNIVERSITY YOUNG DEMOCRATS appetite;for.experimentation 4' characterizes the' Spanish 'f? graphics more:than any other single thing. Given this rate freedom from the yoke of 8 ACADEMY AWARDS tradition,, the.artists have not even bothered to look abroad for ideas or examples but On the have spun off. innumerable ideas of their own, ap­ proaching the paper, the ink, Waterfront the mechanisms and the whole, concept of graphics with Karl Maiden, Eva Marie Saint, Rod Steiger,with the freshness and facina-et&sy&r ,.v* Lee J. Cobb . tion of:blind men, who have Friday;Saturday,'Sunday 7:30-9:20Ohly iisfe.,. • suddenly had their sight. Distribution On Gamput Ag»ncy January 10,11,12 Batt.Hall Aud.$1.25 . «°0' tdl out to wmtu/imob controlovtrtiuNtw YoHt restored/to them." P.O. Box 5004 waterfront... and of a on articpiat* tonf*hor*man who tlowty ftttonm mumt£ what Ac couldamounl toin tht worUL Jam-pacMtd with a ifaUstieand«modoAM' Austin,'T«xat 78763 Modern Cinema Committee Dyckes describes theSpanish appeal #*Wom aehieped in a motion picture, it thotsm the lotunhorewum lUft • 5 fratn an "I'm looking pat for mo" attitude to a wQUngnese to rtek hie lift graphic art as"adventurous,".' what he btliet** u right. Thi* lea remarkable pteture..^ an itdtWgekUeuperitr piece of entertainment. Winner of S Acddemy Awarde.< IHIHIWHH Fri., Sat., Sun. A.C. Auditorium: JAN. 10, 11, 12 10:00 p.m. $1.50 m WHEN YOUREGISTERT > LSWEEK! Just mark your OPTIONAL FEE^CARD in the space for The Cactus, and then make out m vil with Jarife Fonda, Robert Redford, E.G. Marshall, Angie Dickinson Brando atart at a modern day sherHftn a tmall Ttxat town which goo* bereerk,­when art escaped convict rtturnt. Thethiriff alone • bcUtrfruT the boy ia aoictiwi to cover your registration of ciraunetance• created by the town Ittelf < fight* to return eome eembhmce of eariUy and rvfptcC for the law itself.Thie i* not timply a modern-day"Wettern, : It ie an emotionally gripping »tory with euperb characterization*, portrayed by:outctandbur performer* (/tat boldly probe at the many grievance» which beeet • fees and the $8.40 Cactus • American life -Injtutice, bigotry, adultery, apathy, the over-privileged rich and the undeeerving poor. Fri., Sat., Sun. A.C. Auditorium dollar! and you have ordered JAN. 10, 11, 12 7:40 p.m. $1.50 your The Daily lexan, tfith Lee Marvin . :t'A and Mary Murphy |XJnclassifieds m I WILD ONE, bated on an actual event, u*ot a prototype1 of the inoUih^cUI sCom« by fibn genre, ai well a* an important movie in Marlon Bra/tdo'e eariy career* Brando play* the leader of a leather.jacketed motorcyclegang, which oandalUee TSPBMg. . and temrixe* a email toum. Mary Murphy portray* a nice girl to uthom UU , hoodlum ie attracted; Lee Marvin playe the peychollc leader of a rival gang,Th« tocm molortydiid tafc* over the totm. until oiUnurtd citizen* fight back. Brando'* ,. eftaracttrit pretented at moody and vielou*. out at the end we feel that there ie I pfat* nw /w Aim. 77«# fUm it extremely powerful. In both it* mood and It* lm­ n Fri., Sat., Sun. . A.C. Auditorium JAN. 10, 11, 12 6:10 & 12:00 $1.50^ F SAVE YOUR TICKET STUB FOR: * i , ONE FREE ^ SLICE OF PIZZA OR BEER j mm 'AT / -, , TEXAS PIZZA < . is feii ,205 E.I9th ("across/romJester) •>>• r : \­one per personokly, please (valid thruJwu 13) ; .'. ^hursiday^nu&ry DAILY TEXAN -v«ai : SsKSaS Ht&Si l-ifisKML' 7t?i 6-fi */• "tU Miyie's Solemn foVi¥l^ad4Si StMi/'(^^11ili^t^^f ••***'-. hiM. hv>'1nrinv 4nM*^^£Atnin .flo .iHliwtnr ^hnf A1lM.1tlivicalf rilwt^. fta''iinHnn;iHL'r.;; : itn -'. _ _ .. . .. "The Towering -Inferno," produced by-Irwin -Allen; min as director, but Allen himself directed the action se­ f-:;There aresome somegenuinely thrilling sequences, too,par. ;there'svirtually no comlo re© in the entire m^e-,> directed by John Gulllermln; screenplay by Stirling?'< quences, more than likely to guarantee nothing less than a bcularly a heUcpptw rescue victims trapped to a scenic From all the hypfe the "Inferno" publicistshave be&T^iirinjr' ' iv •• SUIlphant; starringPaul Newman, Steve McQueen, Faye reverent approach. While certainly the most lavishly produced elevator on the building s exterior. " on the public since last summer, it's been cleir thatAllenln-' r Dnnaway and William Holden; at the Highland Mitfl of the disaster movies^ "Inferno" pushes thegenre further:than < .BUTIT'Sthesolemntoneof thehighly-predictablenarraUve tended to make this the disaster epic supreme — the ., Cinema. , it really needed to go. which ultimately harms "Inferno." We know Richard "Cleopatra" of the genre. But like that spectacle of aBy PAUL BEUTEL, -Every sequence of this movie practically screams "EPIC!" -Chamberiam is going to get itas soon aswe learn he shaved$2 ago, "Inferno" becomes sojself-conscious of ltsawtf-auest forTexan Staff .Writer . « • at the audience. Admittedly, the set designs and the special million off the electrical subcontracting by installing inferior classic stature that It suffers>;mder the weight "Everjrscene is*"The Towering Inferno'*;begins smugly enough with an unex­effects arefrequently breathtaking in their studio recreation of wiring. When Robert Wagner and Susan Ftannexy m#ke illicit programed for specific "ooos 'and "aahs" from the audience,? ,plained shot of a helicopter flying .over, water — practically a l3S:sto,iy building rapidly burning from the 81st floor on up to love while Maureen McGovern sings"We Miy Never LoveLike and the tollhouse I attended reacted just as Allen wanted them£2l . identical to the final shot of producer Irwin Allen's last smash the grand opening party atop. The all-star cast Is a treat, too, This Again" on thesoundtrack, we know that they, too* willpay to. . > r spectacular, "The Poseidon Adventure." IsAllen poking fun at particularly incasting Paul Newman asthearchitect andSteve for such shameful immorality These-can be playful T DON'T mind being manipulated for the sakeof artorenter-; "Poseidon" or is he reverently saluting it? . McQueen as the fire chief. Indeed, when these two superstars' stereotypes, but Allen and Guilleraita ludicrouslyask to accept tainment, but when a movie takes such pretentious pridein its^l4 suspected for. a moment that -"Wei™" possibly would appear in the-same frame for the first time, even the .wide them as tragic figures audience puppeteeruig, it's frequently offensive * s " emerge as a tongue-in-cheek disaster epic, but a scant 15 or 20 screen seems too small to contain them both. But they work ' We ve also got Fred Astaire and Jennifer JoneS in sym-"The Towering Inferno" may be the most spectacular and "Iminutes into this two-and-three-quarter-hour, $15 million movie well together in a refreshing, nonbuddy relationship. And Faye1 *-— *"= —n,! =- pathetic roles like Jack Albertson's and Shelley Winters' in star-laden'of the current disaster epics, but'I still prefer the revealed a tone of deadly earp&tness. Dunaway, as Newman's lover, has little to do once the fire "Poseidon," but there's no humor in the. Astaire/Jones ^ less-expensive. less-pretenUous chaos of OVP? got together the other day to with Mitzi in the middle. ShoW' stood next to one yelled from the top of a . 24 Bewitched • 9 Ulla/Yoga ar»d Ybii'fe^-x >• help provide the most expen­36 News lOtJOpjn;'/;:;,-. • r.. " }nl WEOQ Bob Hope was the another. "We don't do any of ladder. He was:promptly ,7 p.m. 7 Movie: /'Machine dun M&aln," EXCLUSIVE AUSTIN SHOWING-lfs Temfid sive chorus line extant for cheerleader: "I never knew this weird stuff on our shouted down. , 7 Rlkkl>Tikkl>Tavl — .animated starring Peter . f-alk/. john Starring Mitzi Gaynor's special "Mitzi you could have this much fun series," Asner said, his hand version of Rudyard KlpHn9i story Cassavetes, Brltt* Bkliihd.' "I hope they let me retouch of a young mongoose who protects a • Captioned ABC News • DH0RES TAT10R and 100 Guys." with fellasi" he quipped when placed effeminately on his myself on the proofs," Hope family from -deadly cobras. • 24 Wide World "Special-f:>Aliton •The Trial "Hie: CBS rehearsal stage the photographers: asked the hip. \ said. * Narrated by Orson Welles -Berle tokes a'look et comedy wlttiTOM UUGHUN . was brimming with famous crowd. to get closer to one 9 Canada; Not for Sale.— Report film clips and chati with comics. Mike Connors gave Mitzi a • Dan Rowanjvwondered oo Canadian concernover foreign In­36 Tonight Show : -'•.T;'.'­ faces, -i "K , fluence. another-v big ki& while Chris George, aloud, "Do you think they're 24 Advefifure lr> America — A looks ; Students' B Billy Jack Bob Crane; Steve-Allen; Jade going through all this trouble at the Inhabitantsof small CaUforr Albertson, Dean-Jones; and just to get a close-up of me?" nlatown wherAflresarea constant „ ^ now on* isi5 <& ADULT MOVIES SOAPGBEEE? mm "This ' ' -songs.-^ lhi> tludmlf' attaniayi; Frank Ivy Ann C Baw«r, br* Uf ^ HI) TUBES -"i RATED X v/^Hollywood;ViW^'Mweum^,^'--v^ NBctrtws'speciaTt-'^'wo^^fe^yyr.'and ••-f 1JMJQ-SJ0-7:«.lfc00 Hnne v . ctvotti ;^^>Mted by Tom .Snyder oVattabl* by appolnjimht from , 453-6641 531 East Sixth ' 7?™^® / «nd Barbara Walters. Viveca ,Und-. 8•; a.m.d.i CSllUDUCHI PRICES TIl S^S lo S-p.m. Mafieedly.Nightshade appear. lhroughFtIdaylnS|i**cK r-FraiKsi Tayfar, Nf wfcous* Nowspapws ta 2:00 a.tn. TONIGHT •I «4«M, anifat James Farentino. Greg 7tM pjn. ' Building, fioom 3.-Tal«pKan« Sun. 12 noon-midnight •MiiIiImhiii. 471-7796 Th* at- Morrisi Strother Martin, Ken • 7 Th? Wallons^ ; li i AdultBookstore << ' John Bvstin Berry and .BUI: Bixby ' were IPJR., wit:handUlenfllMtl- THE N6GHT -25' Arcade ROACHO Austin CMsfn . 9 The japanese FlIm: "San|uro/' Mnonl,contumw protection, quiet members-of the troupe, directed byj Aklra Kurosawa' and-impioym'righlt,: taxation and 2 AdultShows W««Uy FRIDAY and broke up wben Hope was starring Toshlro'Mifune. ;-buuranc* caws; Criminal cam PORTER 03 ^ Can for THIn 477-0291 24 Streets of S«rf Francfsco ' $1 Off with this od JMfGKMCYIM asked tohold Mite'sleg inone •iMpjn-v-k" and domottk problems. -.f DirkBogard* \Charhft9 Rampfing ocStudontID ftmieif i of the shots' * * v Nat aultablt.for!young penam "My golf bag doesn't weigh Mmc It yts^to warn OPIN ZJO FU.2A5-4M this much,". Hope complain S2i0 AU DAT THiFRONT "You -want part? 5&S-fcS0-l:15 ed. my NO PASSES IlkOO There's lots for eveiylxxfy." F1ESH GORDON' is the movkt of the moment. Go SEASON^SGREETIMBSJOEyERT juit far the Hell of it. —Naw York Sohq News Peter Locke & Jim Btpkty HIGHLAND MALL 0KNI2.-45 451-7326 • IH35 AT KOEN1G LN. IEQKCQ Present A Mammott FlimVR^nse r 1tlft-3£9-S35 nWlVQON* A IHNttSttfiefiH '7-JO-WS wBKDATS OPEN SMS PJL fUTUU M-it PJL Rsfccsd Prfct UM fcl# PJL Alan pao* &fM OUTMGBMISMRODV Affcin OF YESTERYEARS SJfEB HEROES ft. t theBe$ft R»>»rton» Ted«cofcir»fiotiiWyr4fkx© HXTA .andlook Who's playing Consuelo. WAtTaSNEYpraMnU MdHQGER.TOO TECHMCOUJR* A WSKDAYS SNOWS Rikrifrict Show Km% USA l ILl.AU: ! RtDUCBKfRICB! - WfDUCtOPtlCB m M86ain~ matins TtttPJL ' •ox omci okn feso mtfjL •0N;nm S*T ^ SHOW STARTS 7:00 MOM TNtO SAT. FUTURES Ifjoa don't understonc CSITUty-FflKM Anal NEW ^ INTERSTATE THEATRES Ml fJKL CRM&BNMt them when they tell * WRPORT jou their story $1.25 Ifl 7 7 STATE FEATURES M0420-1IHM , Vi ^ they'll »«»««<«»>»»»»«««»•»>. THE DEVIL TOOK HER FOR HIS LOVER! shonr MK6AIN MAIUBS AND PASSBAItSUSKNMa Ml * c SIJD RATUttS 1:10-Birtji of'a Legend B -ja»­ •5-M­ t^-PLUS STARTS TOMORROW •COLOR ByTECHNtCOlOR TODAY 1HKMM-7-00-1 A PARAMOUNTPICTURE "UFO The ultimate in Martial Aits adventure and excitement! Today at Presidio Theatres CAPITAL PLAZA 452-7646 • IH 35 NORTH VILLAGE 4 i|) >]' f 4k "BIRTH OF A 'Wmr. ' GOLDEN GUM LEGEND" RANAVISKDNfrJMNICOUiR*:Cetetjratmg WarnefBfcs.50th Anrwersay? Oiauuft uvpifm.,, •'fo'BOTl * -f 1 AVl/^&mnun«tionsJ3OTgav In COLOR fA T KATHB-IdMdl"''' Ua^CTIONI EXOTiMEN^W^" IEARN THE SECRET OF THE. A dai*i« THEYUAW9HED;,t !•(•€• of «Hk... »«h6ul»wt»—p«r«1«np«n* '' 10tpMnMai4iMp«kinirtfo« ;N e Man With the Golden Gun' Steady Deterioration ' ""The Man With the;-ft crippled the more, recent successfully Bond's macho- circles of the nouvean riche, Golden Gun;" directed ', •productions. must be seen to be believed), freaks are getting.sick of it. oriented, diamond-hard he was quite unsuccessful in and the stunts in general by Gny Hamilton;. ' . In "On Her Majesty's characterization. Why don't they try trying to make Gatsby -produced by Albert •Secret Service,"Connerywas almost redeem the rest of the something different? I would "mysterious.") movie — almost Broccoli and Harry ;7 • gone, so. producers Albert ; As Simon Templar in "The love, for instance, to see Mel -Saltzman; screenplay v 'Broccoli and Hairy Saltzman Saint," Moore was a pretty I'M PLACING such an Another aspect of the 007 Brooks asdirector — orif he's by_ Richard Maibanm < dug up actor Geoi^e Lazenby boy; he was silver-tongued, emphasis on Moore because, series contributing to its too wild, how about Richard quite obviously,the successof decline is that it's such a bla­ and Tom Manldewtat; and crossed their collective verbally acidic and gloriously Lester? Clearly, someone the 007 seriesdepends largely starring Roger Moore; fingers — with disastrous superficial. Templar was tant, formulated exercise: it needs to inject some life into (if not entirely) on the rarely creates any new sur­ at the ; Paramount, • results. Now they'regambling most comfortable with a $300 the series, and making it an character of Bond himself — prises show s just Village Cinema lV and on actor Roger Moore suit, a dainty'damsel in dis­in plot The all-out parody might he is, after all, the one we " Sontiwood Theaters. ("Maverick," "The Saint"); tress and a' glass of cham­writers in "Golden Gun." in work. At the least, it would cheer for. Conneiy was about fact, so desperate for were By WILLIAM A. STONE JR. and they're againdestined for pagne mbne hand. Moore was provide a refreshing depar­Texan Staff Writer failure. _ an unbeatable choice for this the most ideal Bond im­ideas that they brought back ture from the rut the series aginable. however, and trying 7 It could weU be that James WHEN I SAW Moore in kind of role, which explains actor Clifton James to play-has fallen into. to construct a satisfying 007 Officer J.W. Pepper, who Bond is dying — figuratively "Live and Let Die," I didn't Moore's ability to capture Above all. it is to be hoped flick without him islike trying in speaking; that is. Having seen think be was half -bad; in •Bond's wit and cool with such appeared "Live and Let that Connery, like most men, to continue "Colombo" all nine 007 flicks, I have.con­truth, however,' ANYONE near-perfection. Unlike Die," and whose presence has his price and can be without Peter Falk, or "All in here' is not only superfluous cluded that the series has however. Bond seduced into returning as 007 would have been preferable to Templar, the Family" without Carroll but banal as well. been' gradually deteriorating Lazenby. Moreover, Moore ;—° 7 world of O'COnnor. (He returned once before, in more to a : since therelease of "Thunder-played the Bond character's^ yiolent, quick-fisted enemies, GUY HAMILTON directed "Diamonds Are Forever," On the other hand,'.there is ball" and that actor Sean new way (wisely deciding not international masterminds "Golden Gun," which is.Jn a only to leave again.) If Broc-. nothing that says the special way, unfortunate, because Conqery's desertion from the to attempt a cartxm duplicate and virile sex-play, and quite coli and Saltzman are smart, effects and tbe stunts can'tbe. Moore in TGolden Gun' title role has. damn near of Connery's Bond), and frankly, Moore is pathetic in as satisfying, and he's been a 007 director they'll suffer any cost to get just in be always sub­back. Moore's face am) style.were his attempts to capture .before, and him Otherwise, their "Golden Gun," they're as stitutes the tried-and-true for- so different from Connery's Bond's athletic ruggedness precious golden egg, now they were. In Union Schedules Spring Films good as ever . mula for innovation and fragile, may just crumble. 007 that it took me a while to get and earthy, sexual attrac­there's an used to them. Isupposel was tiveness. (Moore as Bond has fact, automobile originality; the problem is may be invincible on screen, A Woody Allen festival will stunt in this one which ab­that tbe formula is so old now Paris," "The Last Detail," latter being the inspiration for hoping that once Mdore settl­the same problem thatRobert but at the box office, toe's con­ me (it launch the Texan Unlon: film "Cinderella .Liberty," "The the musical '.'Sweet Charity," ed into the role, and Ibecame Bedford bad as.Jay Gatsby: solutely astonished that even die-hard Bond spicuously mortal. program'for the spring Sugarland Express" and highlight the foreign films familiar with him, he might both men are ideally suited to semester. "Take the Money "Cabaret." scheduled. pull the whole thing off. one facet of their role while BEST EBTEBTimMEBT VALUE and Run," '.'Bananas,". being positively ridiculous ati-American classics will in­Others to be shown include After viewing-"The Man "Everything: You Always ­ clude John Ford's "'The Ttuffaut s Tbe 400 Blows," With:the Golden Gun," another. While Redford bad a NO,COVER CHARGE TONITE Wanted .to Know About Sex. Pasolini's "Teorema" and' however, I've decided that knack for portraying Gatsby's Grapes of Wrath" and Frank• But Were Afraid to Ask" and Rossellmi's "Open City." ' uneasiness in -the social­ Capra's "Lost Horizon." Also Moore hasn't a chance.I AM "Sleeper" will be shown dur-­ slate'd' are 'three Charlie . Weekend films are shown in used to him now, and.I still ma tag Jan. 14 to 19. Chaplin movfcs — "City Jester Auditorium, unless don't like him. For one, he's Otherwise, the Union will Lights," "The Great Dic­otherwise.noted in TheTexan. too awkward physically (quite UVE MUSIC : best in five rock aridcontinue its policy of offering Admission if $1for students, unlike Conneiy,: -who moved tator" and ""Thfe Kid." BY films of recent vintage for its roll 7 nights a week. Musicals to be shown include faculty and staff; $1.50 for like a cat), and for another, weekend programs, with Open at 8:00 p.m. members. Feature times will "Sjngin' .in the Rain," Moore looks : too--much American aikiforeign classics be published in The Texan. -, Music begins 8:30 "Anchors' Aweigh," VTbe society's darling to cairy off LYNX filling, out tbe weekday Sound of -Music," "The Happy Hour from 8to 9. schedule. "."•i SUNDAY-FOOLS Wizard of Oz" and"WestSide Weekend films will include Story." • -, NO COVER "Deliverance," "American Graffiti,'.'" "A Clockwork Two eariytiliiisbyFederico 1411 Lavaca 472-7315 4 914.N.LAMAR Orange," "The Great Fellini,--"La Strada" and 477-3783 1 TONIGHT ONLY Gatsby." "Last Tango In "Nights of Cabiria." th'e iiTHII bAlTI J. GATSBY'S DANCER'S Restaurant.&.Bar ^ CHOICE Under New Management DANCING CJexus Union Sprinq Clas$eWl97­ Presents $1 Cover SHRIMP, SHRIMP, SHRIMP SUN. & MON. AAAAAA% t ALi THE SHRIMP YOU CAN EAT -•; L? SALAD INCLUDED This semester $^25 per person 6-10 p.m. 60 Nights of Fi/m .270P W. Anderson Ln. -In The Village ^ With directoK like.. {Acrvis from Village ~ * +Alfred Hitchcock, Basfer Xett\m,FrahkCapra, Howard Hawks, * .»George Stevens, Jean Renoir. Orson Welles, Preston Sturges, * Ernst Lubitsch. Charlie ChapUn, tilty Wilder, John Ford. * * Nicholas Jfay, Goerges Melies, D.W.Griffith, Jean-Luc Godard, 3 •Robert Aldrith, Luchino Visconti. JK.ing Vidor, Busby Berkeley, J +Gene Kelly and Stanley Donen. David Lean, YasuHro Ozu, * ma ID— li ±--J Mj _ ' W''•<"^ : • m mm M w S4 HAPPY HOUR '^i: ;PRICES GOOD ALL NIGHT r" „ %Porter. Robert Flaherty, Alain Resnais, Raoui Walsh. Victor * ; xj LIVE ENTERTAINMENT FEATURING >< VE > tiSiostrom. II. Inre. Mnnrintt Tn„rno„r W 5" tf: Sjostrom, Thomas H. Ince, MauriceTourneur, and Andrzej Wa-J 'da. ' " iliflr: ; ' I LOONY TUNES I * 60 Nights of'Film fromCirfemaTexas *• $1 admission for guys *• :!,jChicfo;Freel Beginning Monday, January 13 j * , ....... mg THE BUCKET 1 .^Season Ticket Good for All 60 Different Programs — $16 -J '41 9'wA Aoou from m-TOWeRS NORTH-3Hn.Free Forking * MontTays Texan for Season Schedule i ­ A AWA AAA A A A A TODAY THRU %S Austin BMIESCKEeeB 1&2 21tanning) Geodesies Non­ ^ MFHT MEN, WOMEN AND COUPLES £OR ^TheGreatGatsby.' Thecast ' Technical Design ABC's of the A.C. and Other UT Librar­isSi)lendid.y|&-./ve^8lw^ Magaztna * 'W ies .. ..Travel Planning Through the University Library System .Ti ,fvl • r r Ma*hercnrft.,;;..Weedfeed Workshops (Austin, Padre "STAVISKY It Alain Resnais* Island, Big Thicket, and Big Bend Areas) Self-Confidence, best6lmu\w/iiia^PaV/;y/i/ag& V6i^ SfSNs*. Trust in Interpersonal Relationships .....Life Experi-' ence Groups (friendship initiating^and developing, marital en­richment, parenting, self-assertion skills, and women's aware^ PrBSertSJE^PAUL 88JMNOO -•???» '.i • "A bouquet for'^ariaoldiL' mmmm ...-rHf'jfi.' Powwrful and .... achle •/ • • -"over 80separateflais offerings|are available"in the Spring' 3:20 •" program. A-complete, listing of the classes and their meeting 5:30 A schedules will be^available at registration.' -' -jfjy. flOVER '^5° 3. /'Mi.-.. Distributed byCIHEMATK)N IHDUSTWES t • ,1 / ' 1 1 r r ^ , ,11 r f Thursday, January ^ 1975 THE DAILY'TEXAN Page l3A JA'-U * p i i i at-rt t / * ? -•" ^;,- Snfif CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING FURN. APARTS. M FURN. APARTS. fl FURN. APARTS.iHELP WANTED SERVICES RATES UNF. HOUSES TYPING 15 word minimum • Eacnword one tlma S .11 SECRETARY 20 hours per week: S2.7T Each word 2*4 timw $ .10 1 BEOROQMS140 plus E.Near, campus EPFICIENCI.ES per hbur. Apply Pariln 25. 4 p.m.: : ONvSHUTTLEI Nice 3 bedroom hocne7^1vV' Each wont £9 tlmt* % .00 Vshuttie. ConvenJent to downtown. New $125 -$140 ' GINNY'S Just North of 27ttptvi Den. AC/CH;;fenced yard. Call,45l«7TOfe^'V . January>10a1>l4. Student rate each tlma s JO 477-4162. Barry Gilllngwater Co. (COPYING Guadalupe ' •«;;: Each word 10 or mora times..* .07 ,furniture-and pool. 407 W."wm. 451-3127, CLOSE TO CAMPUS FOUNTAIN Rental Bureau Fee. ° SHUTTLE BUS . CREATIVE DRAMATICS Instruct^ Classified Display TERRACE", .UNIVERSITY AREA, on shuttle. Nice 5 2707 Hemphill Pa/k7 1 col. x 1 Inch ona time S3.2S 2 BEDROOM* 2 BATH. $210 ABP. Full Swimming pool, beautifully furnished, part time. Pan Am Recreation Center.-ERVICE room home. Garage;-Students. *150; 1 col. x 1 inch 24 times 12.W <. kitchen, laundry and pool. Next to cam-double or studio bed. all' have dls-• APARTMENTS ' ! Call 476-9193. :Rental Bureau. Fee. 45I-7433. 1 coL.x 11nch tenor more timesS2.64 . pus.Le Font,Ka West 2tth. 4724410,472-hwaiher, disposal, central air and Heat. LarQe 1 bedrooms & efficiencies large INC , (vx 41ttv Barry G.nilngwatef Co. closets, fully carpeted cable* disposal, RELIABLE BABYSITTER with car. 3 • 305 WEST 35TH "Water, gas,-swlmrfUhg; pool furnished. afternoons/week, 1 child. 452-9616.. . . /47*W1 ? COUNTRY. LIVING,: fant\ bouse. ... neighbors) SM. Rental Bireau. Fee. 451 SHORT WALK TOTOWER. Large, old 2 (6 BLOCKSFROM CAMPUS) Walking distance to UT; no children or Prfee Parking. 4 Si OfAOUNf tO«JUU bedroom apartment. Furnished tor four. MANAGER APT. lot. 4S4-91M ptts. 610 West 30th » 477-8858. j v STEADY: BABYSITTER with car, 11:45 . • 1a.m> •10 p.m.M-F S240.-1902 Nueces. 47*3461 47646*3. * 3:30 p.m;-5 days/week, 3 year boy4441-9 a.m. -S.p^n; Sat. too* hidmj ItOO pjn. APARTMENT NORTH. 2 -13?3after6p.m. : • GOOD TWO BEDROOM Home) Study: v RESUMES BUce to campus. HOO. Rental Bureau; Tmn Mmd»T .....11tOO«JW. S144JO. ONE BEOROOM, Sao-Paulo bedi-oom/l & l'A bath. 4-plex AVNdw'LEASING CONFIDENTIAL CARE *or pregnant Fee 45V7«p; withorwlthoutpictures Apartmtnts. sh&Oi pool, balconies, unfurn., carpet, CA/CH, GRADUATE STUDENTS, audit a class. unmarried mothers.;'Edna Gladney 2 Day Servtce;« r..11:00 «J». $3J0/per hour. Cellor come by 1OA Lec­Home. 2306 Hemphni, Fort Worth. Toll mahogany panelled, one block park. private fenced patio, extra THE HUGE 4 bedroom home 2 blocks to UTl TMM W«dnwd«y .11:00 un. Tavgty shuttle, 15th street. 476-5072, ture Notes. 901 West 24th. <77*3641. free number Hurry. Rental Bureau: Fee. 451*743). 472-3210 and472-7677-: storage; 8617 Fireside, ESTABLISHMENT ...llsOO «J«. .LEAFLETTEf& NEEDED;-$2.00 per-, SlSS/month plus E or dass. Call or come by IDA Lecture HYPE PARK. 5 room home, fenced • . Reports*: Resumes. WALK,TO CLASS. Old Main 1190/month ABP. Flexible on $129 PLUS E. Sard,-appliances, ,ng leas*.' Only 1195. -TYPING ApartmeMs. 1bedroom end efficiencies. lease duration. Add$15/month 451-4584 Notes; 901 Wat 34ttv 477-3641.L v FOR RENT ental Bureau. Fee. 451*7433. . , . Theses. Letters, Apartments available for next semester. >4400 Ave. B. s All 0n!ver»lfy and "h riw n«M «l mm mod* hi an furn, 836-2448 PRE-SCHOOL TEACHER needed. Call 47742*4. . -»;•« business workSenior or -CHANGE YOUR LIFESTYLE V stories-Good-home.:S205; Rental ; Last Minute'Servlce e**niwflwit. Iwnm<«l« —«k» imw* h>' grad student. considered. .V TRAVIS HEIGHTS; 4 bedrooms, it . |)VIA Miht^vbilihivi wf MMMfviUelit 'LARGE 1 jnd 2 bedroom apartments, Luxury Apartments Hours 12:30 -5:30. 472-2370.'. •• Profe*sors,Gfads»ttdents.Rent uly OK tacwfd Iwiwrtm. AB tM«w If : . Bureau. Fee. 451-7433. v Open 94 MofhTh & fiat *145. C1ose to shuttle bus and UT. with all the Goodies MODELS. Male and female. TV; fabulous house: et; fabOlous Lakewav. SERVICE MFrf-Sat " • , 45411531 nilafter 5 p.m. weekdays. $115 -$150 Fashion Magazine. Call 451-63tt; :\f, Furn., unfunw low winter'rates. 261-CLOSE IN south 2 bedroom home, fenc-' IS 5315. after 5 p.m. 26T-50<3. . ed, S100. Rental Bureau. Fee. 451-7433.. 902 WEST 22ND.. Attractive large one 1 BR FURN. 1 BR. $155 Eff. $130 STUDENT WANTED to Cieen faculty 472-9936 'S ,'DobleMall bedroomCarpet, AC. Perfect for couple FEMALE -STUDENT «; lovelyJ)rIvate TARRYTOWN. Spadoos J-M. Loti of LOW STUOENT RATES ' or roommates. S175/month. Come by '• TIMBERS APTS. home one day a peek. Transportation bedroom. Clote to school. 500 E. 32nd.. tr«». CA/CH,carpeted. Won'tlast. Ren­THE CROCKETT COMPANY provided. 12/hour,5 hours.377-0477 after 15 word minimum each day ..IM see owner. Available now. 47*5439 after 5:00. tal Bureau: Fee. 491-7433. :47MM• the complete secretariat service ­ Each additional word each days .OS 29th West of Guadalupe TYPING -thesei mainusfrlpts; reports, Icol. x f Inch each d«y,.;...vS2.M CLEAN, well-lighted place near 2907 West Ave. 474-1712. Shuttle.Qus Corner LAKg LIVING.'3 bedroom cottage lust . papers, retutrtes • "Unclassified*" 1 tine T days '.SUA Cameron shuttle; 8 to yaird, trees, pets < S125. Call 451*7431 Fee. Rental Bureau, ;AUT0MATICTYP1NG -letters end . (Prepaid. No Refunds) yticoma. 1125 plus etectrlIclty. 474-2582. mutti-cppied'orfgineis^ Students must show'Auditor's QUIET, largefenced yard.BusandshuK.XEftOXCOPIE ALL BILLS TO PLACE A •*IES'•• S3.00W*-S3.00 for 100 copies receipts and pay In advance in TSP ONLY S11S PLUS ELECTRICITY. Nice NOW LEASING . tie, Cwpl«sonly^3/l. Children or-peHty---' (per originals) BWg. 3.300 <25th & Whltls) from! efficiencies-hear shuttle-bus. No pets. . 454-7419. -.v.-. • : ^ PRINTING-;oHjet and letterpress a.nvto 4:30 p.m. Monday through' • 3105 Ave. B; .'4594564.'.-'-' PAID , PART TIME. Frldav. Two BR $245 One BR TARRYTOWN* >2 brick, CA/CR Shut-i if:' cdmplete'llnes of office products , NEAR CAMPUS AND SHUTTLEBUSn 'WalMrs/waltmses wahted. Experience * $159.50 Effi $135 tie bos, new carpets,'fenced yent caN 453-79W;:v -r . ss» Burnet Rd. $160 Bdrm furnished apartment. stlO, Sl2i not necessary.<-Transportation-grt. «2I0. Beth Allendt ,454-4677, 477­ Water/gas, and cablepaid. 478-4118,477-Mlnl-Eff.5112.50 necessary. Cell 192-1949 af fer 3 p.nx > 604S. No children. No pets. 1 Bedroom PROFESSIONAL TYPlST.IBMCorrec­. FOR SALE 4 Blks. West on Drag ; AllBills Paid ; tlng Selectrlc It.Ttwsls,.dlss4«iit(0ns. 2 BEDROOM TOWNHOUSE near Han-2406 Leon ' ' 476-3467 CLASSIFIED Shident papers; t3W635."^-v;" „ :• • cock Center.^185. CA/CH. 453-4253 or Walk';to Campus RESTAURANT 476-0575.'^7 . STAR K TYPING. SpecialtytTechnlcaT Auto ~ For Sale CHOICE Buckingham Square ROOMMATES .Experienced theses,dlseemtloi* PR's, EFFICIENCY . 7n w.32nd UTILITY MEN AD • . manuscripts; etc. Printing,. binding. VW SQUAREBACK, 197a blue, good General clean-up & Dlshmachlne Opera­Charl6ne Stark, 45342ll^v^:;:^/, ; ­condition. Automatic 5a000 miies. S130Q KENRAY APTS. ' .4 454~4917 tion. RESPONSIBLE, llberal/iousemate.Stw dent prefer red. 3-1 house hear catnpus*­ or best offer, 452-3676, Walk to campus or shuttle. New 1 bedfpom,sdrooi full kitchen 8. bath 8i_ nicely $2.00 PER HOUR Yard, garden, CA/CH. Al DuPreew452-Just Nocth of 27th at ; _ v NOW LEASING REBUILT 1600 VW Engine. 6 month, V 'APARTMENTS furnished. Parking, maid & launditry. From 15-40 hours per week. -t\ CALL: 5161. 471-3322. Guadalupe ' .SVv I7S Installed. 836­ 000 mile warranty. S275 " — ' 2122 Hancock Dr. Only si25/mo. plus electricity. Move! in 452-5510 MALE, South 2 bedroom 2 bath apart-' 2707 Hemphill Par|j;v: 4635. now. Call 453-3235. Next to Ameflcana Theatre, walkingdls* $125 PLUS E rhent. $U7J0/monthly, ABP^ Jerry, 476-• M' • "i • tance to North Loop Shopping Center 4611 before 5:30 p.m. 1970 CHRYSLER El Dorado. Gold, 4-and Luby's.Near shuttle and Austin • Colorful Shag Carpet 471-5244 door, very clean. AC AM radio. Assume transit. Two.bedroom flats, one and two • Central Air ROOMMATE NEEDED. Own room in 2 loan with approved credit or purchase baths. Available one 3 bdrm, .2 ba. with •Pool : MAKE$5d0 bedroom house. Sf7.50/morith plus half .outright. WA6-5911 before 1 or affer 3. nej* shag/carpet. CA/CH, dishwasher. On each commission. Campus arid local-' bills. John. 475-6446. • Shuttle Bus 3 Blks. : disposatrdoor to door garbage pickup, I fV ClIO representatives are needed for YES> we do: type nationwide employee search. ForfullI . UNF. DUPLEXES FEMALE TO SHARE three-bedroom Moforcvdes -For JSoleq Ef!L5SSl!l^2S!v?JIi^^01,161Quiet 1 ^room.apartments,. Central RETREAT Sumner Advertising -• Freshman th^nnes: i^'ex.See 'owners, A pt. In desk, shag carpeting. Individual cen­Co:, P.O. Box 643, Peoria, Hl^' 4160?iv^-N . Mils paid. 836-6936. .• Why not startout With Vj myigreyHW "'XSJJP'•?-S« owners. Apt. 113 or call Westwell Austin./ Large bedroom.wlth built-formation Write house, need own transportation. S125 all •SOLEX MOPED. (Motor assisted APTS. WESTLAKE HILL$.2Bdnm; BullMns, 'bicycle.) Less than one year old. $175. tral AC dishwasher, laundry facilities. fireplace, carped water, get paid. S210. good gradest^:rSrS • Water & TV cable paid.Shuttle busnear-SUNNY APARTMENT needs second by. 1145 pl^ielect.,807 Blanco. 476-6190. female occupant. Serious student* 451-2464. im Coronado Hills. JERRICK APTS. 3Z7-0064, alter s 472-3210and Northwest. 2V* miles. City bus. $75.453­ 1112. Stereo For Sale -$135 FURN. DUPLEXES VIRGINIA. SCHNEIDERr-DIVertlded NEED A GREAT SeTvices.-Graduate-and underoradUate . v OneBR Luxury NOW LEASING ROOMMATE WANTED, furnished OUAU 1119 TURNTABLE, dust cover. UNF. APARTS. apartment. Two bedroorrv typing, printing, Wndlnfl;Vl5)S Koenlg two bath. b«M.^Mllt^ cartridge. Top of the line/ 104 E: 32nd PLACE TO LIVE? Lane. 459-7205. • * <92J07mo. ^Walk er Shuttle to UT • • male, mid-twenties. -447-6220, shuttle bus. 476-5940,452-2442 TRY THE PRETTY DUPLEX 1134.50. 1 BEDROOM.SaOPaulO BOBBYE DELAFIELD. IBM S6lectrlC Apartments.' .Stiajgi.' aoat. balainies,' pica^eilte> 25-years experience, books, 345-4555 2 bedroom duplex for rent,in a quiet HOUSEMATE WANTED for unfur­ • Musical -For Sale BLACKSTONE mahogany panelled, one block park. dissertations, theses;, .reports, 1 BR Furn. Northeast Austin-' residential Tavern, shuttle, IStti Street. 47t-Sim nished room,3 bdrm house. Shuttle,city mimeographing. 442*71^7• v f \ CROWN OC-SOOA, one year old, mint APARTMENTS neighborhood. Each duplex offers targe tfum. bus. $60 plus w utilities. Come by 4504 condition. Weld's best superamp, 200 THREE ELMS tra storage room. Plus washer, dryer DISSERTATIONS, theses, reports and AAARK IV APTS. fenced backyard, covered parking, ex-Red River betwaeo 4-6 pjn. Klaus. watts per channel. S739. New only 1575. 400 West 35th •Share a larae room for $64.50/mo. or 3100 Speedway .connections. Kitchen, appliances. fur­QUIET 1AND 2 Bedroomapartments on -law briefs.^Experlencea^ typist. Call Bill;453-7461 after 7k.. ,r.--. a take ah entire room for S112.50 fur- West 22nd for. sedate graduate students FEMALE. Upper division or graduate Tarrytown: 2S07 BrldJe Path. Lorraina 47M736 nished. *160 plus bWS. CaU 926-2296, ; -2 Bdrm.-2 Ba. olihed, alt bjlls paid; Maidservice once 478-4096 or staff. $140 -S220 plus electricity. student. House, furnished. S67J0 plus V* .•^B^edy. ^472-4711.^:;;. . — Furn;-Unfurn^v—~— -SHUTTLE; BUS CORNER PJI). Only, 454-3124. bills. North: 4S»726 after 3:Mp^n. > TEAp 4010-S deck .and. Sansui 2000-A -aweefc'^^-^~^•-:^l__i.•^••••',-:;-/­ ^~E*tra large, shag carpet, .'distiwasher; Wmer*rnp.;perfect condition. Call 459* Bring your, own roommate"or^w6"Wl|lr '.• MRS. BODOUR'S TYPING SERVICE. range, disposal,.refrta^-private patio, • 20tt after 4:00 p.m. . A; • match you with a compatible one.' Reports, theses* dtUMtetlons andbooks ' . storage^ .close to shuttle, and campus, cable, pool. * — This Is etmnomy & convenience at Its v NOW LEASING' •wed ecewaWy, »«stji|)d,re«softable. ­ . 200 WATT PA SYSTEM, -amplifier, .2 bat.. prlMind and binding oa.re<)uest. Clote 451*3941 speakers, mixer, 2microphones for 1200. ONLY 200 YARDS FROM UT CAMPUS. In. 4794113. ' nr-Come by 45M Red River between* 4-6 2910 Red River 476-5631 a paragon property ENFIELD ROAD On Shuttle Just North of 27th:at ! BEAT -Efficiency & 1 Bdrm. iwwknt / " V: v Poo courtyard, maid, bills paid Guadalupe ' INFLATION 1127.50 -J149.50 WE RENT Somewhere 7i \ 2707 Hemphill Park-; 2505 Enfield GUITAR STRINGSETS Save 20% • -..478-2775 HOHNER HARMONICAS Save 10% Large new 1. bdrm. stuolos, shag, dls» . AUSTIN VAAUHA GUITARS . Save-10% hwasher ^ • 'SIM plus E. 1717 Enlleld AMSTERMUSIC • • •• • . m*ia ... ve. Your.tlnie Is valuable there's:someone 1624'Lavaca • Our service Is free 1 BR -$170<,3 BR -$325 1..T.uL-...r.J1'it'f.-.-J. ;• • •" LARGE POOL -ALL BILLS PAID TYPING.-PRINTINO/eiNlJiNG:, NOW LEASING PARAGON MOVE IN| TODAY *'' Homes -For Sale 1 BR -$155 .PROPERTIES Best Rate on the Lake •'= -TH Shuttle Bus Front Door PROFESSIONAL 10x55 HENSLEE Americana Mobile . . -2400To*nL*ke,Circle. Home* Two bedroom, IV* bath. CA/CH. MARK XX ,472-4171 .^.;:r;A;.yA442-jP40,: ' waiting to buy 1 S3.1Q0.1364171. ' . FULLTIME 454-3953 _ 452-5093 • ' . ^weekdays' . „ 3815.6uadalupe TYPING SERVICE •{ Milt -For Sale L 472-4175 472-3210 and 472-7677 -'.weekends '. .. • .: ;.-Je -;r*l|)e recoFcfe.. Congress. 444-38rT Closed Mondays ^ELDORADO * 1BDRM , . 2BDRM 453-4883 * 472-4893 HOME GALLERY SALE Of or|< Beautiful apartment complex on Town $175 • $220 'SHUTTLE BUS CORNER modem palntlngs.:Saturday, Jan. ui».Extei»iv#.iaKe fronfaoe. Spadoio BARTON HEIGHTS. RtmttllneMr aar­ ^ CHECK OUR SUMMER RATES ­ .9:00 a.m. -5:00 p.m. 1500 W, 46th. . efficiencies. >'bedrodm, 2:bedroom«, 3 ALL BILLLIS PAID W.JOMiq, M,CA/CH.Only«JIS. ISn­ bedrooms. .Oucks. CA/CH. Swlmmlno ;Dishwashers *2Large Pools Tal BUTMU. Fm. 451*7433. ' ,$130 UP : Sool .overlooking: Town; Lake. stereo •' v'-.v::.Security -• ­ 1 BR Furn. Iihwajher:-disposal, taundry • ZltKER PARK: Roomy 2 b#^raom facilities. Allbills paid.Shuttlebus. Ren-MOVE:IN:TODAY ^CASUALLY YOU^ ''jfgf, "ting belowmark»t,Discounts oncertaln 1901 Willow Creek- J? ^ Rtnfil B|irMV.;4S1-7<33 -. « .Crfaflve Outdoor Por1ral^-.',^N|^ .1 ­ Tanglewood? , .. .apartments. . ^ :Save \6 Now^i^fr Annex TOWN,LAKE'. 444-0010 ' JOWM LAKEI. lov»ly 1 bKfroom, no MfaiM --- -imm p^k fjncM yard.1140. Rmtal ,.Bur«u FM.4SI-1W, _ ^ mgtpi:cycle^-. SM'ii7® at.-Valemine's Day C^lSlSNorwalk -APARTMENTS. 1500 E. RIverslde Dr. W " fROYCE PORTRAITS f 476-0948 lC UT NORTH. Nleo »nd rooniy: 3 , "SHUTTLE BUS CORNER. , „ 444-1458 iwaroom, f*ncM. Studtnti.tin.'Rthlil 2420Guadalupe c -472-4219 Burnu. Ftt.451*7433 ^ 'K,, NOW LEASING >444-3750 NOW-LEASING -ENFIELD, tAKE AUSTIN, « IMraom JOB WANTED ' ASPEN WOOD -NOW LEASING 1 BR-$145 Up bicycle...•JsfSK . brlckr.hom,. CA/CH. .:«1S0.. R«n(il Bur«»u. FM. 4J1-7433. LONGVIEW ^FORMER COLLEGE English instructor : Spacious Contemporary 2.BR^180 UP BV (>MPUS OR |N THB COUNTRY. , ;Meki eoltorlal work. 441-2363 evenings pw.Rtnttl Bur«»u hii h#iTi»»:ioiv.«ll. ^r writ* 5)6 Academy, Austin, 78704 " Living! APTS. v^:;r-'':":|;s^lPaid •"-> *"»• n« oMwl, UrB«t «n. %•, automobilef.. • 2 Pools1-Covered Parking ;• i SHUTTLE • CITY BUS ROUTES 1 & 2 BR : TangleWood ' • < HUGE TWO «TORY, >av*,:ii":' i:•i'^:i020 4Sth" * $4539 Guadalupe' 452-4447 furniture.^5 CHEZ JACQUES Don't tie, .• -.' Come Live With Us! ^Jy-J'?^Shiiftle'iBuf: CoVner .LA CANADA ROOMS 1300-1302 West 24th BROWNSTONE 47M0M <-'"'4IMSN:­^PRIVATE_RopM-tliart battvUtcMn.. up your PARK APARTMENTS 1BR, $165Plus E Htmphlll Park arw. JK W. JHijWS* :1114. SS-s television^ 1 BR, $175 ABP Are conveniently located t,priced right. WALK PEDAL SHUTTLE cash in APARTMENT i'. '..M.bedrdom.. apartment* locate/on MO. DORM FOR MEN ahultle but route. • -• .Guatfalupa. Slngl, or doublt. kll^Sn From 1142 JO ENFIELD AREA 1 & 2 bedroom with HUNTING • prlvlltflfi. Bllll paid, 477-C045. . *LL BILLS PAlO every, extra. Furnished or unfurnished. unused 5106 N. Lamar: . -454*3496 rlclty; 907 West Is a pain In the go f clubs.;'/ PRIVATE ROOM* th.r.bath,ktctwn From $141.90 plus electric • e^erigon property -Lynn. 477-7794, 472•4162. Berry' Part: O.K. Gardan tpaca. 'Raaionabla. lilt Gilllngwater Co. 1 cv ...***-« --* •Famala pfaltrrad.,«oTwa»t MndfjNiw xv m items fc 4rxP But Habitat;Hunters can NEAR UT. Room* MS, all blllt Dald we Help, with a FREE -ItT B*rh*m PniptrHu. vJTX 1 5% * * .m-nu. .Locator Service 6TC..; i v around the " 'J ft ^ A RESIDENT specializing. In student complexes with access house. . mSFACTION •An R A 1 r— ,.R«I Rlvar batwHn 44 pm, Ki«ut u SA- to shuttle, ? is one gfood reason .for living at ih Tell them it'sJFOR SALE " Come by or Call , • Sell them MISCELLANEOUS Habitat | South Shore in with a classified ad iri»­ Hunters!® DoBleMall/Sulte.8a:!The 2021 Guadaluper'i'SI fiRE^Uuxury-moblle hbme park^Ki®! > star ^itrett, "7" w"""> r4t)no..-Cdn6rete, pitlos/ paved : r:"*2%Large one, twoand threebedroom pats.,withplerfty THE DAIt TEXAN & -V-^'JOf storage. Frortt$135 all bills palSf. ; BEDROOMFORNISHED / \ C \ f t Jj* cimpletet-^gj-| oyenooWng the water I * ^OOM & BOARD 4# AM' ^ SO '»^.vjew. From $149,5C &a\Come by 4no vlilhwith iELLSOlVDQIIMlfpjr eRfiiiwlxefiiiS' ^eawjn^^t.S hom*-V-«v By NANCY CALL '? ^ ^fll|#p?Texfas Staff Writer v™ ;/ rf-VV%\t'V i members of the TravisCounty delegation to the64th-A-. , Legislative agree there has never before .been such a united -.-?•• By SYLVIA TEAGUE ' group concerning issues rtvhicft they will face during the' *" state aid for transportation total local district taxes now t. ltfelslatlyesession. '•• ^ , *• < Texan Staff Writer and maintenance and opera­raise. A proposal to provide a $10,-tion of schools. |StateS«i; Lloyd Doggett told members of-the Austin Lfeagu^" Poorer school districts 000 starting salary for Texas The TSTA proposal calls for 01 Women Voters Tuesday that each mejfnber of the delegation" >*,' would be guaranteed an equal : teachers will be presented to the commitment of local isan.iadividual, however, and would vote that,way onall iasuesi&f'; school program with school , the new legislature by the ^ ;^;^aWsIGpunty~*'blocZ** •>;,/?, m*"- funds to help pay for the ex­aid because of a provision for .Texas.State Teachers We prad of flvie tobk 10 minuteseach to exprau their vtewB^'^ panded program, but less than equal tax effort. .Association. on lssues facifig the upcoming legislativeseSsion and topresent?:# ";~*Traxel Stevens, director of their own priorities for legislative action.v -• '" Doggett began the forum bystating that he plans tointroduce^ TSTA publications division, Problem Pregnancy Counseling Service , ,said Wednesday the organiza-1 between25 andSd bills during thesession. Hesaid hedoesn'texfj!:|-i Student Health Center ^ tion was going to try to "get it, p^ct to pass many of them but feels it isimportant to raise th$y/f£ 105 W. 26th St. (4th Floor-South) ' in the hopper early." The bill issues aihd present possible solutions. Confidential counseling with all alternatives discuss­ . probably will be filed this ' High on Domett's.list of priorities are public employe com-I;, ^ ed and referrals made to appropriate resources. Call i 'month when a sponsor is l>ensatidn, long-range ^lvirontaental issues, historic preserve* 478-5711, Ext. 26, for an appointment. Individual ' found,' he added. tion, utility regulation, revision of antitrust laws, child carei'^'r appointments Tuesday 1-5 p.m., Thursday 1-5 p.m., 1 4 1 The proposal represents a poison control andprison reform.." , Friday 9-noon. .' ..>$2.7 -billion increase over what Doggett said he hopes to seeaft emergency pay raise for^v-s 'is currently spent over a two-' public employees in effect by February or March. He said the •;illB tolaw violators would bea^morenarrow*-;^ in 1975-76, above the national but stronger approach, he -Said 1i «* ^ " average. Texas teachers'rankThe most important consumerissue isthe"^bi1>Iishpent of a ?^' :37th in the nation in averageutilities commission, tioggett said. "This session will be the - pay with a $6,600 starting . best chance ever," he said.-Doggettalso said.he willJntroduce^k­ ...salary. bills to remove Southwestern Bell Telephone Company's ex-^0' The average Texas ;* emption from city zoningordinances1andtolimitsrates'cttarged&i; /-teacher's salary last year was' for late payments. ^. < "i-> L, $8,967, $1,760 below the-Weddington said themain thing to,consider duringthesession*®.] national average. The 10-step is money. The legislators' prioritiesinspent^ngtheaddltloikl;t-;%: salary proposal includes a |1.5 billion intheState Treasurywill be theke^ tothe'successbf yearly 6 percent increase. the session, she said. The measure also attempts • She-siid liiglr on her list of priorities are ^tate employe;® to update the public school benefits and salaries, Mental Health and Mental:Retardation';.,€ program and revise Texasresidential treatment centers, alteraativpservices for theTex-;;3l' school finance. as Youth-' Council, community services^for--parolees>".'and''>®?? A FRIENDLY REMINDER... educational reforms.-• ^ \>,* ^ The proposal provides for ~ to order your _ _ Weddington also will introduce a rape bill'to keep victims\0 • tw* — Uxon Slaff Photo by Zbch Ryaft state-financed compensatory education for educationally-: ' identities confidential rand past experiences out of considera-, ' tion. She.also supports a bill to allow countywide'ordinance Earthquake'75? disadvantaged children, funds . . 1975 CACTUS for reduction of class sizes,' powers on astatewide-basis where theresldents so vjote. If not • A window pane in the Gradual* School of Bos!n«ls reflects Jester Center, giving the more specialized education' on a statewide-basis,:Weddington said at leastTravis County' . illusion that the Balcone* Fault had com* unglued to torment the forty Acres. "Sen­ personnel such as librarians-­could pioneer the.field as a model.' surround" anyone, or ,a,new Magritte masterpiece? , YEARBOOK and counselors, increased E^rle said manyof his interestsin thissession have to dowith ''hou^ekeepinglegislation/' relating tostate agencies housedin when you register at Austin. A bill to create astate personnel board toestablish ana' Representatives Elected EUROPEAN STUDIES ANNOUNCES: t Bellmont Hall this week, implement policies formanagement of stateagenciesishigh on Two new and higlUy promising courses for Spring 1976 by Dr. Wolf Lepenies, a visiting professor from the Free University January 8-10 To Housing Council 3 -" of Berlin. A bill calling fora new constitutional revision convention will be co-pponsored byEarle, also; The bill probably willallow for Twenty-three voting representatives were elected -at six EUROPEAN STUDIES 361 -"MELANCHOLY three elected delegates from each congressional district; .. however, he said an alternative which he favors allows for a serve-on the Married Student Housing Council. >v . . AND SOCIETY" small number of appointed representatives and a . .. The Married Student Housing Council gives residents of Mondays, 3:00-6:00, Calhoun 323 s840 tax preponderance of electedoii^ university-owned marned studenthousing achance to improve only included t I EUROPEAN STUDIES 361 • "CURRENT He also supports a utilities -Regulatory commission, a state-, conditions," Teresa Williams, one of four •» EUROPEAN THOUGHT" i>v. wideiprobation system, a rigit;toi>rivacy biU and a bill allow-. Bra«enridge.A^rtaente representaUves, said.. .ingthfe attorneygeneral'io suepollution violators withoutprior permission from the Water Quality Boani, as is presently re-—qiiired^;—-' . _ ^ ' ^Pr^sentauvK.froni semesterelections become voting ™enVbers at Housing CojincU biweekly meetings,at GatewayApartments,"' she said. : . . • '* Wednesdays, 3:00-6:00;Calhoun 323 ; ­European Studies.-West Mall Office Bldg. 206 471-4626 TexasStudent Publications I" Barrientos said healso wasconcerned with utility regulation, state.personnel administration and public employe compensa-" • '** " J* ----" ^ In thnsppmplnypMmale- , ®Jlr ®as^ issue, th^MarriMStudent Housingpet poUcy, w'" be a continuing topic in thespring. Also, we plan to forih a J g theincreases andsaid he proposed 10 percentraise. „ . .. _, . - „ ientos also said he was interested in the ttniversity "rac'cenn(lgei Colorado, Deep Eddy, Brackenridge Trailer . .System and willsupport a proposal to establish aninterim istiidy ^Par'tnents); Married Student Duplexes and Gateway committee on University government "before -it gets worse." , ApartmentS residents held elections at 7:30 p.m.i Wednesday. He said, "We have tokeep what good peoplewe haveand draw VIE ALWAYS USE in other good people." , , 1 Don't Make A Move . Barrientos strongly supports single-member districting andl Without Calling revlsed school financing under which children In districts withS THEDAILY TEXAN CLASSI­ . little money won'tsuffer more thanin other areas.of the state.4 TIVIjENT -Delco saidshe feels the'"bottomline"or money issuewill be§ an important'one and that the key issue will be^school finam^; ' M-^w Reapportionment into suigle-member district was-also high FIED ADS.THEY REACHTHE on her prioritylist:Shesaid diehas alreadysetup acommunity ,v SERVICE dfficC a^17l7 E.12thSt. which will beopen weekdays from1to8 =; pim. ad: a means-,to begin serving a single district. ' ' ,?! aFree Service UT MARKET FIRST... -Delco;said she strongly supports the'Equal Bights Amend-" 24 Hours e Day ment already on the books and willoppose themovement to res­ 47» cind the present ERA legislation. ;';t v' >t ; ••0 FAST RESU LTS It 3 AND'.WORK ALL DAY/ u * iSf* & Student N»wtpap»r at Thm UnhmnHy of Texas at Auafln i fffi-in riff " J .•"••I X * < bi'l CUP AND MAIL TODAY! 5,*­ —WRITE YOUR AD HERE­ s&tsC4 •5, PT* € IK t 4, J i''4 Y > r it -...Viiiti Amount Enclosed eharito-quld^lyarrh t9t'& Number of bays. «,* Wk rd minimum) ' . --x MailTdi &&&*' 1 -w- Tim,, tlmti Time* Tlm«» J a P.O. BOX D -UJ STATION j. ixvWorits->»»%(4iit&.KS?.'-,1 .10 J£M AMSTIN. IEXAS 78712 J^O " 1^40 r >'thh"L \X % & too 6;oo JOJO5^ 21.00 « • kiaosf, ,^0: f$4W °ii;90 23.10 r • CM*- 11M asao^­ii? 13,30 2«.«9 i'lV.iB.Vw ' -m 's, f4mms§M HBHH m vw t, NiP ^3f%W Vr $? s c awj-* B>-"*^. YkV » 5>"*c•-*-<• ^ ,/«~7*I2 ?1 ^>!wV ' *U ,*V8l vV-L *S ri» £? •^.yk y f. «€«•' f -Xl^'i'-V -rtf t* ^ wl^si/Ay" To Close Pool Until*Summer g^lBy STEVE OLAFSON -.. c Eldridge, director of Austin's summer. With good working' can "be reopened, Efdrldge " Texan Staff Writer Construction Management conditions the pool will be said. -Many people will have to Department, said Wednesday. reopened sometime in July, The city estimated the cost JackRobinson, directorof the;^ "of the project $250,000. this ™prj!nj»S'whentawahrm flparde The Cactus received marks i Of distinction in four INVITES YOU TO COME CELEBRATE OUR REOPENING categories: photography, dis­play, coverage and concept. The Associated Collegtate PARTY Press, judges a majoirity 'of —Taxon Staff Hm*o by: Joy Godwin' -•the nation's-college' yeay- FRIDAY, JANUARY 10TH m: Word Smithy/: • -^Kwessa® books. Thirteen percent of the books judged by the organiza--;t ,?'< vt Half price drinks between 5-9 oc" tivlty to padMtnani. Famitiar sight* are the vender* with *ity Co-Op. "Paradise U»t" it'* not for this Drag poet. Ji!l?J,.nlV!!3i,VJ)r09 2?* lt?,?id<>*eo^evari«»y student*are accustomed toSMfng in front of theUnhreriiw "°"^ceived*" All-Americah >Live enteijtainment by tiie toil Ray Band tflMF tinifllt* . aKa m |I?| I • • i • _ ~ _ _t _ £ I A -•-• # _« 'ft. • • .-. • Edited by Liz Daily, the " ' No Cover Charge Hi.ir unique wares, musicians with th»lr diverse sbunds * but he lsT assured of a captive audience. Unlikemost and Ihe panhandlers with their familiar stretched-out things here his work is free. ^ * yearbook was awarded a total 2700 W. Anderson Ln. -InThe Village V Of 6,830 points, compared to hands. Jim Ryan is not one, of the common sights ft i v last year's 6,755. -(Across fromVillage Cinema) «i .t. * -«H' i' / Union Changes Mnfo' Number The Texas Union's "ihfo­fone" is played 24 hoursa day, ... seven days a week. The recor-;! '-'J? ding is changed each weekday tfiimmsjz between 8 and 9a.m. to reflect tbat day's events. t|T Typing istrdtidh Begin Registration for typing classes at beginning, in­tehnediate° and advanced levels has begun in Room 301;~i of the Extension Building.­Classeswill bepnJanuary 13. • Beginning classes will be . taught by an . electronic naethod developed by the' WIlHalp YoaMaka It classes' supervisor, A. i Dr. at the Texas Tivara. Tfarongh the Night. Fa born Etier, associate professor of general business. And through theentireday,for In this system, a lighted elec­ Talk abouta onee-m-a-lifetime that matter.With entertainment^' tronic keyboard : is coor­ dinated with tape cassettes ;opportunily!lb theyears tocome like Kenneth Threadgill and the which studentslisten to. Etier your children and^andchildren ; Velvet Cowpasture, Jim said' the method allows. will marvdatyour talesand stories Cullum's HappyJazz students to learn much faster­ ,aboutour (filingweek...imagine, |;.Bandfromthe than conventional methods * Classes are scheduled for theTexasTavern, thefirstof its inSan Antonio,JoAhn both 'daytime and evening land tob&sanctioned foroperation Holtzmanand Ernie Tuition is |17 for beginning * r«maStateUniversity campus. classes. and f30 for in­ MaeMiller on the termediate and advanced piano, theLosTres classes. Beginning' classes rtr*J> ..ia AmigosManachi last 15 days and intermediate and advanced classes last Band; MariaLarson through the semester, ^ 1 and others.Plus, there'll It is not necessary to be enrolled in the University to Aake the classes. For morein-^ 5formation, call 471-7335, FrankErwin,Dr.JohnWarfield, Dr. Ronald M> BrownandK^i Student*' •r.vv-t.'ifs.: Ed Clark.And exhibitionsan and Attorney M performances bythelikes of t-The shidwils' Bttenwy*, emagician '.. Ivy and Ann .Baw.r, . availabl* byappaintnwflt and BunnyMartin, world 8 a.m. It 5, p.m. Monday, , Em&MSI champion Yo-Yoer thraugh Friday, in SpMefr'-^ ^ Building, Boom 3. T»Uphon*%-' Adiversity of programming 1471-7796. Th* fludanH1 at-*­ •*ss A't*nanl, • camuawr -pcot»c«ooj) .;Ji Indeed, a toughact tofoUow! (• ,'ify •otntyi will. hand)* landtonM ;w . with nocover charge. ' •mpleyn' righlt, haatlan and l" •& l'v * 1 Jnwianc* oMi. Criminal cam and damntjc pfoUtim. Happy Boor and li. PS Paifclng% a Problam, Bat What Do Von Itant?^ ;T Happv Hour isfrom 4:00-7:00pm daily... e«s» The neiwTexasTavern offersgreatentertainment, ; It'swhen welower our priceseven lowerso diverse programming,specialsandwiches, plenty you canraise.theroof; WI>*• of brew.(wine, mixeddnnks,beer) andawarm, ^ Lat the GoodTimas RolL i --.••*71*. v *"!' •">--v .-j^. y-.-> *-,• >J,-r * r\';' f j. '' comfortableatmosphere.Butthere'sahitch.,,1 ^ " i Serving •• fulchei: orpet. ,J\ theparking'slousy.Yousee, theTexasTavernis , UTstudents,faculty,staff and '' •: rorxrly of toupt, -Jtladt, end : patlrie>. Imported coffcet : located justeast of Gregory Gym'atTexasUnion ,i,« guestsarecordially invited toour ff| -.and teas.Brerttind wine*. Ali Southywhichmeans parkingspacesareata min-w Grand OpeniiigWeek beginning9:00pm|if: *• mt reasonable pnrei. • •. v ... imum. But then,"good times" areata maximiun thisSunday, January12th...seating W V Tyi soeverythingsort(rfbalanc«souf capacity islimited (about ISOseats) and LDl cards i'. ..yj SS( ; NOW! it. rSPRING AR1 >Vr , V-, CLASSES 1ratm! SDN.}'JAN V I C Noon -1pJTly j" 'Noon -1 (j p».4 A -# 30 pJn, -CknowtrSlnon/ ^BasUmenanc GuilariBtDtMrfe g ^vgn!i^lttS5o3es? by RicklUwrtaee. Eek»e^[. im' t" 4 -5pjacn r.' Counfry«tyletm>eif tjjwk iwss^^i lMSm '.J }2 "*<»»' SKV**-l ammmmm v j.