Bell, G as Co. Press City Council for Higher Rates By SCOTT MONTGOMERY and DAWN TURNHAM T exan Staff W riters “ Ma B ell” will approach City Council Feb. 5 in a public hearing on a $6.7 m illion in crease the is requesting in ra te and franchise com pany changes. If granted toe revenue hike, phone com pany of­ ficials a re considering installing a 20-cent service charge for d ire c to ry assistan ce calls, Jo e Rior- dan, phone com pany official, said. In City C ouncil’s T hursday m eeting, officials also considered a Southern Union Co. re q u e st for a security deposit and increased serv ice charges. GAS COMPANY officials, attem p tin g to am end Southern Union’s franchise, m et with c ritic ism from City Atty. Don Butler. B utler advised the council th a t the proposed am endm ent would enable the com pany to include a lte rn a te or supplem ental fuels under the te rm “ g a s .” If it is allowed, A ustinites would have to pay for higher priced fuels instead of low er p riced n a tu ra l gas, he explained. A nonrefundable serv ice c h a rg e of $10 also w as requested by Southern Union G eneral M anager Bob Laczka re-establishing, tra n sfe rrin g or relocating a se rv ic e if the serv ice required m ore than ho u r’s tim e of gas com pany work. for establishing, LACZKO SAID this c h arg e also would be tow ard cu stom ers who only change directed nam es on accounts. C ollecting a security deposit from “ bad c re d it” cu sto m ers, consisting of two tim e s an e stim ated m axim um m onthly bill or a m inim um of $10, w as an additional gas com pany proposal. Although Laczko said the deposit would be only a “ hedge ag a in st bad d e b ts ,” th e proposed am end­ m ent does not lim it who th e deposit will be placed on, B utler said. Since both p a rtie s m u st a g re e to th e proposed changes, the council w ithheld a decision on all am endm ents for fu rth e r study. to file for a reh earin g The council did a g re e , though, for th e city a t­ torney the T exas R a ilro a d C o m m is s io n c a s e w h ic h g r a n te d Southern Union $1.5 m illion in annual revenue Dec. 19. This w as passed on to th e co n su m er in a 5.74 p er cen t in c re a se in th e m onthly bill. in C IT Y C O U N C IL d r o p p e d t h e P o l i c e D ep artm en t’s re q u e st for 3,000 rounds of m achine gun am m unition. M ayor Je ff F rie d m a n explained th a t the guns a re 25 y e a rs old and had nev er been used. In other action, th e council approved an in­ c re a se in tax i fa re s fro m 60 to 70 cen ts for the first one-quarter m ile and from IO cen ts every one-fifth m ile to 20 c en ts ev ery one-third m ile. The vote w as 5-2, w ith F rie d m a n and Coun­ cilw om an E m m a Lou Linn dissenting. P a ssa g e of th e ch a rg e fo r e x tra p e rm it fee from $25-35 p er q u a rte r. ordinance also elim in a te s the p assen g ers and ra ise s the city . oS BAILEY PARK has becom e s e n i ^ ^ O first choice a s a site for the senior c iti which th e city plans to build. A city m i re p o rt sta te d the group w ants to use pc for the building site. p a rk ’s open a re a City Council opted to study o th er recom n. datio n s of th e F ir s t P re sb y te ria n Church and , s ite a t W est 29th S tr e e t an d N o rth L a m a r B oulevard b efore approving th e loss of the park a re a . B ailey P a rk is on L a m a r and is of special in­ te r e s t to the senior citizen s b ecau se of its easy a c c e ss to the Shoal C reek hike and bike tra ils. A NEW SIGN ordinance w as passed a fte r first reading by a vote of 5-2 w ith Councilm an Lowell L eberm ann and Cqup/' :,'> objecting^,. et Hofm ann sizes to 4 ign is not c ■< "L ~c L * * O , vtU iance if . . a covered by - t-vJ a lte r the sign w ithout „ m e alteratio n was in the process ^ 4 1 r . . c e p . David W hitehill questioned the o rd in an ce’s lim itations w ith reg ard to the m u ra l on 23rd S tre e t in the D rag vendors area. Although the m u ral could not be forcefully rem oved, changes in it would have to be approved before any alterin g , B utler said. At the next council m eeting, Ja n . 23, council th e o r d in a n c e ’s second m e m b e rs w ill hold reading. Grand Jury To Hear UT Relay Volunteers T h e Da il y T e x a n Student N e w sp a p e r at The University of Texas at Austin Vol. 75, No. 138 Fifteen Cents Austin, T e x a s , F r i d a y , J a n u a r y 16, 1976 Twenty Pages 471-4591 Carrillo Counsel W alks Out Mitchell Objects to Presentation of Evidence By DANNY HOLLAND Texan Staff Writer D efense a tto rn e y A rthur M itchell, angered by re m a rk s from Lt. Gov. Bill H obby, w a lk e d o u t of J u d g e O .P . C a rrillo ’s im p each m en t tria l m o m en ­ ta rily T hursday. M itchell objected to sta te p ro secu to r T erry D oyle’s introduction of ph o to static copies of evidence from th e Ju d icial Q u a lific a tio n s C o m m issio n (JQ C ) tra n sc rip ts. M itchell had sought to ob­ tain the original evidence. Hobby overruled Mitchell’s objection, calling it “ frivolous and insulting,” and told M itchell to “ sit down ” M itchell took exception w ith Hobby’s decision and prom ptly left th e Senate ch am b er. C arrillo, flab b erg asted by the event, beseeched the Senate for a sh o rt recess. “ I don’t know w hat ju st happened, but I ’m w ithout an a tto rn e y ,” th e 229th D istrict C ourt judge said. “ I would like to speak w ith Mr. M itchell and see if I can get him b a c k ,” he added. “ The re c o rd ’s (JQC tra n s c rip ts ) use, as he (M itchell) announced, w as for the purpose of speeding up th e im p each m en t trial p ro c e ss,” Hobby ex p lain ed .“ F o r him to o b ject to th e use of th e d ocum ent on the grounds th a t it is not th e best evidence is poor ju d g m en t on his p art. SEN. BOB GAMMAGE of Houston m oved to have M itchell held in con­ tem p t, but w ithdrew the m otion as a se rg e a n t-a t-a rm s esco rted th e atto rn e y into the Senate cham b er. A rticle seven of the im p each m en t in­ d ictm en t, now under rev iew , c h arg es from C arrillo w ith receiving m oney Students Brave Adds and Drops Today Although p re re g istra tio n in N ovem ber drew the la r­ gest num ber of stu d en ts ever, "ad d s and drops will be about the sa m e ” a s it h a s been in the past, said D eborah Aim e, a ssista n t re g istra tio n supervisor. “ The en tire procedure - from the tim e the student e n te rs until he s out the door - should take about 30 m in u te s,” Aime said. The problem w ith a larg e crow d is not th a t the lines outside a re so long, but th a t stu d en ts p e rsist in w aiting for closed c la s s e s ,” Aim e said. She feels th at the lines would go m uch fa ste r if stu d en ts wouldn t “ hang around” the d e p a rtm e n t tables. AIME SAID she hopes all students will a t least get the courses they need, if not a t the p re fe rre d tim e. th a t g raduating E specially seniors get the n e c e ssa ry courses. “ We have m ade every effort to ask d e p a rtm e n ts to give enough sp a c e s,” every effort to ask d e p a rtm e n ts to give enough spaces, im p o rtan t, she said, is A im e said. Students should re m e m b e r not to red u ce th e ir course loads below 12 hours w ithout th e ir d e a n ’s appro v al. Also re m e m b e r not to sleep la te and send your ro o m m ate, for stu d en ts cannot d ro p /a d d by proxy. A dd/drops will continue in d e p a rtm e n ts until T h u rs­ th ro u g h d a y b u t “ c h a n c e s o f g e ttin g c o u r s e s d e p a rtm e n ts a re n ’t a s good,” A im e w arned. Schedule for entering B e llm o n t H all. 8:30 9 OO 9:30 10:00 10:30 11:00 G O S -J U Y A A A - B E R B E S -D A G M C J - N IE D A H -F A Q F A R -G O R 1:00 1:30 2:00 2:30 3:00 3:30 4:00 S T B - V A R V A S -Z Z Z J U Z - L E W LEX-MCI N IF - Q U I G U J - S A X S A Y -S T A ............................... ................................................ ...................... .............. •• ........................ ........................... ........... .......y ....u ..m ^ n m y m . ............llillllimi4|Pllllllll ...mi............ - - ••• § f S to the Center of Bellmont By FORD FE SSE N D E N Texan Staff W riter A sta te em ploye who allegedly worked for six m onths for the T exas R elays in through T exas 1974 while being paid Senate payroll accounts will testify before the T rav is County grand ju ry F ri­ day, The Texan has learned. investigation Deborah Denny is am ong IO w itnesses subpoenaed to testify in the grand ju r y ’s the a c ­ continuing tivities of S enate S ecretary C harles Schnabel, who has alread y been indicted on three counts of th eft and official m is­ conduct. into U n iv ersity T ra c k C oach C leb u rn e P rice, who is in ch arg e of staging the relays, also w as subpoenaed but only to confirm th at Denny w as the person who worked In v estigators into possible have no plans crim inal culpability on P ric e ’s p art, even though Denny worked fulltim e un­ d e r him for six m onths relays. look the for to PR IC E R E F U S E D Thursday to talk of the extent of his involvem ent in the a f­ fair. Asked if he knew anything about D enny’s working for the relays while be­ ing paid by the S enate, he said, “ I don’t I s h o u ld c o m m e n t on m y th in k testim ony.” F rid a y ’s testim o n y follows allegations la s t M onday th a t S chnabel o rd e re d bonuses paid for “ v o lu n teer” work a t the annual tra c k m eet, a t which he served a s a tim ekeeper. Four persons em ployed in the S e n a te ’s enrolling and enqrossing room — Linda Willis, Shirley H earn, G ayle E vans and Joslyn Diskin — received $50 to $92 each for working one night on th eir own tim e com piling h e a t sh eets for the relays. Unlike them , D enny’s work was on s ta te tim e and for an extended period. the c ase, In another fa c e t of two m aintenance w orkers, Louis Jackson, a p o rter, and E ddie H arris, supervisor of the S en ate’s night m aintenance crew , also have been ordered to appear. Jackson received $140 in bonuses in late 1974. He said he put in ex tra w ork to earn m oney needed for hospital bills, but H arris said he could find no reco rd of Jack so n ’s o v ertim e. ALEX M ARTINEZ, form er sup erv iso r of the Senate p rin t shop whose testim o n y initiated the investigation of Schnabel, and R ichard M oreno, a salesm an for a private printing com pany, also w ere sub­ poenaed. fro m th e s ta te . He M artinez w as fired by the Senate in S eptem ber and charged with stealing in ­ p a p e r v e s t i g a t o r s S c h n a b e l h a d S e n a t e em ployes p re p a re p ro g ram s for ra c e s a t The U niversity which w ere printed a t the com pany w here M oreno is em ployed told By PE G G Y W EH M EY ER Texan Staff W riter The sem iannual adds/drops m arath o n will begin a t 8 30 a rn F rid ay a t Bellm ont Hall All students m u st p re se n t th eir paid fee re c e ip ts and photo IDs upon en terin g Add c a rd s m ay be picked up and filled in a t d e p a rtm e n t tables on the fifth floor. No. 2 pencils m ust be used on all cards. R e p re s e n ta tiv e s a t each d e p a rtm e n t ta b le will validate the ca rd with the re g is tra r’s stam p, indicating the d e p a rtm e n t’s approval NO ONE WILL be adm itted into B ellm ont betw een 11:30 a m. and I p m or a fte r 4.30 p.m . When checking out. students m ust p resent their approved add drop card s to the final checker who will note all final tra n sa c tio n s on the paid fee receip t. Bills and refunds will be m ailed Feb 3 and refunds will be m ailed F eb .3 SI(I(I Journey By DAVID ROSE T exan Staff W riter The line stre tc h e d up and down the dank, gloomy c o rrid o r as fa r as the eye could see All the people w ere eith er sitting ag ain st the wall or lying down, having tire d of standing long ago. Most w ere q u iet; th ere w as very little sound, except for som e un­ intelligible m u tterin g s, and m aybe a cough or two th a t echoed off the con­ c re te walls. The a ir w as heavy with c ig a re tte sm oke and the odor of hum an persp iratio n , although the hall w asn’t really w a rm enough to m ake one perspire. Even in the sem idarkness, I could tell the young, apple-cheeked lad on my left was a freshm an I knew by the way he kept glancing nervously a t his w atch and clutching his paid fee receipt tightly in both fists. “ F irs t tim e, k id ? ” He sta rte d and tow ard me. “ H uh?” jerk ed his head “ F irst a d d s/d ro p s? ” He exhaled and let his head lean back against the wall. “ Yeah. . . . I guess I ’m a little nervous.” “ Everybody is a t first. I re m e m b e r my first tim e — I w as scared stiff I gotta adm it, even now I get a few b u tte rflie s.” I leaned close to him , as if taking him into my confidence. “ And I ’m a second se m e ste r ju n io r.” He His eyes widened. “ G eeee. . . I paused a m om ent, then ventured, guess you’ve been through this a lot, h u h ? ” . , _ .. “ E very se m e ste r, son. I kept te ll­ ing m yself: ‘M aybe next se m e ste r I ll for. I the courses get Maybe next se m e ste r. .’ But I never do.” reg istered . . “ I wonder if anyone ev er does he I quavered. I I SNORTED a short laugh. ‘ I ve heard of people that do. My room ­ m ate said he knew a guy th a t did once. Why, I ve even heard tell of one student th a t’s never had to go thiough adds and d ro p s !” “ W owwwww!” - I let him m ull th at over for a while, I and he sta re d a t the ground dejected- I ly, chin on ch est, probably thinking, § ‘Why c a n 't I he th at lucky’' ” I “ Why c a n ’t I be th a t lucky?” I it w as his first tim e and all — so I said. “ I t ’s b e tte r to go through it, though. It will m ake a student out of you.” He seem ed to brighten at this and raised his chin a little. A few m inutes had passed w hen he turned to m e and blurted, "W hat s it like. . . in th e re ? ” nodding his head up the corridor. I KNEW th a t w as com ing, and I decided to give it to him stra ig h t. No use sugar-coating it; he m ight a s well know w hat to expect. I took out a pack of c ig a re tte s and offered one to him , but he shook his head. I lit one for m yself and took a long pull, expelling the sm oke w ith a long sigh. “ W hat’s it like? I ’ll tell you w hat it’s like, kid - he!!. Pure-D hell. You’ve gotta fight your way in, claw your way into line, then when vou finally get to your table and find out all the sections a re closed, you gotta scratch your w ay outa line, and find the next b est course. S om etim es you gotta tak e any course th a t’s open, ju st to get som e hours. Why, I know peo­ ple who have changed th eir m a jo rs, r i g h t th e m i d d l e o f ad d s/drops, ju s t so they could g et into an open co u rse ” t h e r e in “ No?” “ Yep. And so m etim es it w orked out tor the b e tte r. I knew this m ath m a jo r once. All he could get into w as a business co u rse B ecam e a ric h e x ­ ecutive down in Seguin. I heard about this biology m a jo r. Found him self in a m usic class. P la y in ’ bass fiddle in the D a lla s S ym phony O rc h e s tra now. Then th e re w as this jo u rnalism m a ­ jo r. A c c id e n ta lly got into p h a r ­ m a c y ...” “ And now h e ’s a big p h a rm a c is t? ” “ Nope... ju n k ie .” The lad looked puzzled. “ It do esn ’t alw ays tu rn out for the b e tte r ,” I shrugged. I let my head back against th e w all, and w atched the sm oke from m y c ig a re tte w rithing its way tow ard the ceiling. “ Y eah, destinies have been altered in th a t very ro o m .” WE BOTH SAT silently for se v e ra l m ore m inutes. The guy on m y rig h t had been s l e e p i n g , but suddenly began had been sleeping, but suddenly began adm itted her allegations w ere only h e a r­ say evidence. th re e m ore w itnesses, TH E TRIAL, which w as originally expected to end F rid a y , w ill d ra g into next w eek, M itchell said. He intends to call including sta te Rep. T e rry C anales, who firs t had into C arrillo s inquiry called for dealings. C arrillo has accused C anales of being the P a r r influence in the H ouse of R e p re se n ta tiv e s responsible for the im ­ peachm ent proceedings. the C arrillo, who w as set to te stify T hurs­ day, said he is still re a d y to tak e the stand. today Fair Skies . . . F r i d a y ' s skies will be f a i r with c o n tin u e d t e m p e r a t u r e s c o o l F r i d a y n i g h t . T h e high F r i d a y will be in the mid-60s and the in low F r i d a y night the upper 30s. W i n d s will be northerly f r o m 8 to 15 m.p.h. S un r is e will be at 7:28 a.m., sunset at 5:51 p.m. — UPI T elephoto A rthur Mitchell Duval County fo r the re n ta l of nonexis­ te n t e q u ip m e n t — sp e c ific a lly tw o bulldozers. H o w ev er, le d g e r s h e e ts fro m th e B enavides Im o lem en t and H ard w are S to re re v e a le d n o ta tio n s fo r r e n ta l paym ents for “ O .P .’s two d o zers.” The sto re w as owned by Rudolfo Coulino, C a rrillo ’s alleged fo rm e r p a rtn e r who aided in illegally m ilking funds from Duval County. Donald L ee, th e D ep artm en t of P ublic Safety ag en t who com piled the ledger sheets, said he a sc e rta in ed C a rrillo ’s o w n e rs h ip of th e e q u ip m e n t f r o m sta te m e n ts by a T exas R an g er who aided in th e in v estig atio n ; C a rrillo ’s fo rm e r se c re ta ry , M rs. Zenaida M ontem ayor, and Coulin. Lee added his o riginal in­ vestigation had concerned Coulin and not C arrillo. M ontem ayor told the Senate C arrillo did own th e equipm ent. But she said she had not actu a lly seen th e bulldozers and a cro ss th e hall from us took a h a r­ m onica out of his sh irt pocket and knocked it a g a in s t his shoe. He brought it to his lips, cupping his hands. H is left hand flu tte re d on the in stru m e n t, allow ing the stra in s of “ The S tre e ts of L ared o ” to ooze out. The lad w hispered in m y e a r, “ Isn t he k ’nd of o ld ? ” I nodded. “ B een try in g to g e t into fresh m an E nglish for seventeen y e a rs now .” I SMILED a t the vet. He saw m e and winked back. “ How a b o u t th e ‘ R ed R iv e r V alley’, pal. F o r old tim e ’s sa k e ? ” He nodded and played it sw eetly. I closed m y eyes and let th e m usic lull m e to sleep. I w as aw akened by a kick on the sole of m y shoe, and opened m y eyes rig h t into the b eam of a flashlight. “ T im e to m o v e ,” a voice said. “ G et out your paid fee re c e ip t and a photo ID. H ave it re a d y a t th e d o o r.” It w as an Alpha Phi Om ega. HE MOVED to the dozing stu d ent on m y rig h t and kicked him in the butt. “ On your feet, J a c k .” “ O w w ?” He got up on his knees, rubbing his re a r. ” W hat’s the big id e a ? ” “ T im e to go. G et out your — ” “ I know, I know. G et out m y fee photo re c e ip t and have m y door ready a t the ID ,” he m u tte re d , groggily standing up. The APO shook his head in disgust and m oved on down the line. I got up and found th e fresh m an alread y standing. this is it, h uh?” HE SWALLOWED hard “ G uess "T h is is i t ,” I said, yawning. He fo rced a yaw n, trying to a c t non­ ch alan t, but he couldn’t stop shifting his w eight from one foot to the other. W ithin m in u tes the line began m ov­ ing. T h e p a c e w as slow and w e p r o c e e d e d b y b a b y s t e p s . T h e fre sh m a n c ra n e d his neck left and rig h t try in g to see w hat lay ahead. He tu rn ed to m e. “ I don’t think I ’m ready. M aybe I b e tte r w a it.” “ Y ou’re re a d y ,” I said, turning him back around. “ J u s t keep those elbows up. And re m e m b e r th e unique n u m b e r . Don’t put down the w ro n g -" “ WHAT IF I chicken o u t? ” he in- | terru p ted . Son, F ranklin said: We have fe a r itse lf.’ ” D. R oosevelt once nothing to fe a r but t h r o u g h a d d s/d ro p s? ” D id h e e v e r g o “ The freshm an again turned. “ Say, m aybe I will have som e of th a t s tu ff.” - | = As we neared the room , the cor- I ridor becam e progressively b rig h ter, § s showing the fre sh m a n ’s light green | com plexion. The in creasin g light w as | accom panied by a grow ing din, and | soon individual sc re a m s and shouts I could be h e a rd .” | | I sm iled and handed him the flask | He took it h esitantly, uncorked it, and 5 | gingerly brought it under his nose. | | | = | z | | | I | f The re s t of the line w atched in em - | b a rra sse d silence. C ow ardice is not a 5 | p re tty sight. I I We w ere within sight of the door now, when suddenly, som eone n e a r the head of the line broke aw ay and bolted down the co rrid o r, shouting, “ No, I won t go! You c a n ’t m ake m e! Yaaa! ” H E TOOK a little sniff and je rk e d his head back violently. Plugging the cork back in quickly, he h anJed the flask back to m e. The fresh m an g ritte d his teeth w ith new found d eterm in atio n a fte r th a t incident, hitching up his p ants, se ttin g his jaw and trudging onw ard. I knew he w ouldn’t cra p out now. “ T h anks,” he said hoarsely, “ I needed th a t.” One by one, students w ere sucked into the sw irling m ob inside the door. We approached steadily, and the hub­ bub w as becom ing deafening. TH EN TH E FRESHM AN stood at th e th r e s h o ld , h e a d h e ld h ig h , shoulders squared, paid fee re c e ip t and photo ID in hand. The APO a t the door exam ined the re c e ip t, squinted at the ID, looked a t its holder and nodded. “ Y ou’re c le a n .” The freshm an turned one la st tim e and gave m e the old thum bs-up sign. I retu rn ed it. He took a deep b re a th and stepped into the crowd. I d never considered m yself a sen­ tim en tal individual, but I m u st ad m it, at th a t m om ent a te a r did com e to m y eve. “ Spanish 407? Spanish 407?” I g ra b ­ bed both shoulders and shook him . “ T ake it easy , buddy, w e ’re not in y e t,” I said. “ T ake it e a sy .” He p ro p p e d h im se lf up on h is elbows and bobbed his head around, looking a t m e through half-open eyes. “ Huh? W hat’s going on?” he d em an d ­ ed. “ You w ere having a n ig h tm are. Go back to sle e p .” He grum bled som ething a t m e, and turned back over on his sto m ach . The fre sh m a n w as w atching the whole thing w ith saucer-eyes. I think it kind of unnerved him He leaned back a g a in st th e w all and sighed loud­ ly I TOOK a m e ta l flask fro m m y hip pocket and held it out to him . He sm il­ ed w eakly. “ No th an k s.” “ D on’t drink eith e r, h u h ?” I un­ corked the flask and took a big swig, wiping m y m outh on my sleeve a fte r. “ You will a fte r to d ay ,” I thought to m yself, replacin g the flask. “ Say, uh, did you ever g et - e r, uh, I m ean, have you ev er been, uh — ” I m ean, hav e you ev e r been, un —Sketch bv David Rom wounded? Oh, I ’ve got m y sh a re of b a ttle s c a rs, I g u ess.” I rolled up m y sh irt and pointed to a s c a r on my stom ach. “ See this? Took an IBM pencil in th e gut. Spring of ‘74. And this o ver h e re ? ” I showed him a place on m y fo re a rm devoid of h air. “ Sliced open by the edge of a m ark -sen se card . F a ll of ‘73.” HE WHISTLED long and low. “ And how did you break your n o se ? ” he asked. I looked aw ay and rolled down my shirt. “ I t ’s not b ro k en .” A pause. “ S o rry .” “ F o rg e t it.” M ore m inutes. “ How m uch longer do you think it will b e ? ” he asked. “ When w as this line scheduled to go in ? ” “ 9:00 th is m orn in g .” “ WHAT TIME” is it n o w ?” “ 4:30.” I stre tc h e d out both a rm s w ith m y in te rlo c k e d , c ra c k in g m y fin g e rs knuckles. “ I t ’ll be a w hile y e t.” . Knuckles. u i i i m a m m e y — j s s s ii s s A s a J E :— ^ " • • B a s s a n . ---------------------------------------------------- * ---------- 1 Ah. so young, so young. J KLUN Attorneys Fight Unionizing By BILL KRULL Texan Staff Writer In the first day of a National L a b o r R e l a t i o n s B o a r d (N LR B) hearing to decide if KLRN-TV production workers can unionize, attorneys for the station attempted to prove RLRN is essentially a public agency, consequently not un­ jurisdiction of the der the NLRB Robert Schenkkan, head of RLRN, testified that RLRN serves The University and receives funding from it. T h e s t a t i o n p r o d u c e s educational program s for the State of Texas for 51 school d is tr ic t s , and the statio n receiv es funding from the Department of Health, Educa­ tion and Welfare, he said. Under the law, if RLRN is a the N LR B public agency, would have no jurisdiction over unionization attem pts. H ow ever, the production employes could still form a union but as public employes, lim ited they would have b a r g a i n i n g p o w e r , B e n Foster, attorney for RLRN, said. Schenkkan also testified that 75 per cent of his salary comes from The University. for Under cross-exam ination from Carol Oppenheimer, at­ the production torney w orkers, Schenkkan said em ployes a re paid by the Southw est P u b lic B ro ad ­ casting Commission. He also said that R L R N ’s license is in the name of the commission and that the commission sets R LR N ’s programing policies. The issue at stake is whether or not the commission is a public agency. The hearing was recessed twice to allow attorneys for the workers and the station to try to reach an agreement, and both tim es they failed. The hearing will resume at 8:30 a.m. Friday and is ex­ pected to end during the day. However, a decision will not be reached for another two weeks. B P K Texan Staff Photo by M ik e Sm ith Bob D o w n in g , Randy Edwards, a n d Ron Peters in 95-degree pool w ater. Extension Division Officials Linked With Pleico Probe By RON HUTCHESON Texan Staff Writer Two top adm inistrators in the Division of Extension are m a­ jor stockholders in a company being investigated in the audit of alleged irregularities within the division. Dr. William Barron, dean of the division, and Dr. Charles Relso, director of the division’s Industrial and Business Train­ ing Bureau, confirmed Thursday that they are stockholders of Pleico, Inc. Pleico, a local engineering firm, is one of the businesses out­ side the University System under investigation, Dist. Atty. Robert O. Smith, said. He added that at least one other firm is being investigated. “ HELL, I’VE BEEN a stockholder in Pleico for about four years, there s nothing illegal about it, Kelso said. K W. Sheppard, president of Pleico, could not be reached for comment. Kelso and Barron said Pleico is a pipeline inspection company. No one would comment on possible connections between the training bureau and Pleico. One aspect of the bureau is the Petroleum Extension Service, Petex. A brochure from the division said Petex provides educa- tion and specialized train in g for Texans employed in oil and gas .production. T H E SERVICE o p e ra te s training centers in Odessa, Kilgore and Baytown. C ourses taught include drilling, production, pipeline and natural g a s . “ Most instruction is given by industry experts drawn from the petroleum field,” the brochure said. Petex also produces and distributes petroleum training books, manuals, films and slide-tape educational aid s. Kelso and Barron re fe rre d inquiries concerning the audit to Ja m e s Colvin, U niversity vice-president for business affairs. Colvin said he would deny a Daily Texan request for vouchers from the Petex serv ice. “ T H E COURTS w ould never let you have those records,’ Colvin said. The T e x a s Open Records Law is not applicable because the records a r e part of the University’s investigation, he said. Kelso said he has retain ed Austin attorney Roy Minton to represent him. ‘‘I ju st sim ply can't talk to you about the facts of the case,” Minton sa id . Well Water Heats Dips Winter Swim s Warmed at Stacey Pool If T exas winters are more than the body can take, the Austin P arks and Recreation Department has a solution to warm even the coldest. Stacey Pool in Stacey Park, 801 E. Live Oak St., offers Austinites a chance for a dip in warm artesian well water. The pool remains a warm 96 degrees and is surrounded by wind screens to protect winter swimmers. The well — 2,246 feet deep — has fill­ ed Stacey Pool for the last three years, L . V . B e n o i t , s w i m m i n g p o o l maintenance supervisor, said. The depth of its source explains the water’s warmth, Mueller of the Texas Water Development Board said. The temperature increases one degree cen­ tigrade for each 90 feet of depth. Drilled in 1932, the well was original­ ly a water source for Austin. The pool and dressing rooms are free and open to the public. Stacey Pool hours are ll a.m. to 6 p.m. Sunday through Friday. The pool is closed Saturday. A lifeguard is on duty. For those with tamer tastes and who want to stay closer to home, both Anna Hiss and Gregory Gym are open to students and staff members for heated swimming. The University’s Gregory Gym is open noon to I p.m. and 5 to 7:30 p.m. Monday through Friday. Weekend hours are 2 to 4 p.m. The H iss Gym hours are noon to I p.m . Monday through Friday and 7 to 8 p.m. Monday, Wednesday and Friday for lap swim­ ming only. Regular swimming is 5:15 p.m. to 9 p.m. Monday through Friday and 11:15 a m. to 5 p.m. on weekends. University students are admitted with a student ID while University staff must have a gym card. Texan Issue Trans-Plonted Neither rain nor sleet nor hail nor a burned out ink transform er will prevent the Texan from its daily printing. T hursday’s Texan had a d iffe re n t look, with wide m a r g i n s a nd n a r r o w e r columns, but this was not an i n t e n t i o n a l c h a n g e in g ra p h ic s. The Texan w as p r i n t e d on T h e A u s t i n American-Statesman presses Thursday morning because of a failure in the system that im m ediately could not be repaired. “ We were fortunate to get the paper out at a ll,” Loyd Edmonds, general manager of S t u d e n t T e x a s t h e Publications Board, said. “ We want to thank everyone at The Statesman for getting us out of a bad situation,” he continued. “ If The Statesm an hadn’t come through, we would have had to try San Antonio or Temple. It would have cost much more, and we might not UNIVERSITY REFRIGERATORS APPROVED FOR USE IN UT DORMITORIES • 2 S IZ E S TO C H O O S E FRO M • FREE DELIVERY TO D O R M R O O M S • FREE M A IN T E N A N C E CALL 478-3471 SU P P LY IS LIM ITED. CALL TODAY I have gotten the paper out at all,” Edmonds added. Three thousand dollars worth of spare parts are in storage for cases like this, he said, but an ink transformer was not available. “ You can’t print much of a paper without ink," he said “ As far as I know this is the first time The Texan has not printed on its own presses, but it has never failed to meet its printing schedule,” Edmonds said. As of midnight Thursday the in working _____ TSP press was order. ONE CENT SHOE ■ m j«9 v ^ 1FIRST PAIR-ORIGINAL PRICE SECOND PAIR OF EQUAL VALUE Entire Stock Not Included ^ C a rg o s fa rfCoc/e HIGHLAND MALL ONLY! J OR LESS...ONE CENT YOU CAN LEAD YOUR CAR TO CAMPUS BUT YOU CAN'T MAKE IT PARK Our suggestion for the relief of your car’s citation paranoia Get what you pay for. When you need a parking space, you’ ve got one. Day or night. We offer daily rates (75' for three hours, for instance) or full semester parking for only $55. COVERED-SAFE-CONVENIENT And only 2lA blocks from campus. Hot H eavenly Pizza. Thick C r u s t New York Style. FREE DELIVERY in our Se r v ic e Area. 476-7181 d o m in o 's p i z z a Page 2 Friday, January 16, 1976 THE D A IL Y TEXAN G A R A G E 23rd & Pearl Under New Law Moore Sentenced To Life in Prison SAN FRANCISCO — Sara Jane Moore, who attempted to assassinate President Ford, was sentenced to life in prison Thursday by a judge who said she was a product of a permissive society and never would have pulled the trigger if she could have been sentenced to death. U.S. District Court Judge Samuel Con­ ti, in passing the maximum sentence upon the 45-year-old former F B I infor­ mant, said: “ If you thought at the moment that you were going to press that trigger and fire that shot that you would be subjected to capital punishment, you wouldn’t be pull­ ing this trigger. “ WHY IS IT that we went for almost two decades without kidnapings in this country? For one single reason , if people do it, then they got the gallows, they got shot or they got the gas chamber Moore, who fired at the President and missed last Sept. 22, heard the sentence with no show of emotion. She was wear­ ing her usual court attire of beige blouse, Navy blue vest and red. white and blue pinstriped pants. She will be eligible for parole in 15 years. The U.S. Bureau of Prisons will decide within the next few days where she will serve her sentence. Before the sentencing she told the judge she felt no remorse and added that she still considers assassination a “ valid political tool." A F T E R M AKIN G her statement in a firm voice without hesitation, the matronly woman listened intently as the judge ..aid: “ The thing that concerns me listening to Miss Moore’s statement ... is how calloused we have become to crime and to violence, and we have accepted it as an ingredient of our daily life. And we are tolerating it The judge said there is a big segment of society “ that does not care about their mothers, they don t care about their fathers, they don’t even care about going to jail " • There’s only one thing they care about, and that is their skin," he said “ YOU SAY that the other countries are better than this country. I think anyone who lives in this country should pray to God each night that we continue on with the type of government we have in this country If we let down the im­ migration laws in this country, and any other country would let people migrate to this country, we would have so many people in this country the country would probably sink to the bottom of the ocean. That’s how bad this country is.” Moore said that while she was working as an informant the F B I directed her into the radical world. She said she started out looking for kidnap-fugitive Patricia Hearst and became a staunch supporter of socialism who “ finally un­ derstood and joined those who have only destruction and violence for a means of making change — and came to unders­ tand that violence can sometimes be con­ structive. ’ ’ MOORE P L E A D E D guilty Dec 16 to firing a shot at Ford from across the street as he walked out of the St. Francis Hotel after giving a speech. The shot missed him by five feet, and Moore was immediately taken into custody. It was the first shot fired at a president since John F. Kennedy was killed in Dallas 12 years ago. Her sentence was the second life prison term handed down within a month to women in California who had tried to assassinate Ford. Last month Lynette Fromme, a follower of mass murderer Charles Manson, received the same sentence for pointing a gun at the Presi­ dent in Sacramento, Calif., on Sept. 5. Moore said she was asked by probation officers whether she felt sorry for trying to kill Ford, and she replied, “ Yes and no.” NO, B EC A U SE it accomplished little except to throw away the rest of my life,’’ she said. “ It seemed a correct ex­ pression of my anger, and it might have triggered the kind of chaos that results in change.” During her period as an informant for the FBI. “ Whose tool I was,” she said, agents told her that her infiltration of Bay Area radical groups was part of “ a war.” But after her relationship with the F B I was revealed in an underground newspaper article, she said, “ I felt a sense of freedom and joined with those who must use violence and destruction as a weapon.’’ JU D G E CONTI questioned Moore’s motives of trying to kill Ford. “ You take it upon yourself to be a judge, jury and executioner," he said. “ I had the probation department ask you if you believed in capital punishment and you said no. Yet you were going to take a life. “ You are a product of the permissive society but you are a product we cannot afford.” -news capsules---- C h o u Ashes Scattered in Funeral Service HONG KONG (U P I) — The ashes of Prem ier Chou En-lai were scattered Thursday afternoon “ In the rivers and on the land” of the China he fought to create and built into a world power. Earlier, China’s leaders paid him final tribute in an emotional memorial service at Peking’s Great Hall of the People, where Chou had some of his finest hours. The solemn ceremony, attended by more than 5,000 persons, climaxed a week of national mourning that saw the greatest outpouring of grief for any Chinese leader in modern history. Chou died of cancer Jan. 8 at the age of 78. Priest Defends Church Sex Docum ent VATICAN C ITY (U P I) — The Roman Catholic Church said Thursday its new candid code of sexual ethics will not take the pleasure out of sex although the document condemned premarital sex, masturbation and homosexuality. “ The church has nothing against pleasure,” the Rev. Roberto Tucci said Thursday at a news conference called to explain the Vatican’s 20- page “ Declaration on Certain Questions Concerning Sexual Ethics.” Tucci, director general of Vatican Radio, said the church “ is fully in favor of sexual pleasure so long as it is exercised in a legitimate way in marriage.” Tucci said the document reaffirmed traditional Catholic dogma con­ demning sexual activity outside marriage, particularly trial marriages, homosexual relations and masturbation. Former S p y Leaked C I A Identities P A R IS (U P I) — Former CIA spy Philip Agee said Thursday he has helped news organizations throughout the world identify U.S. intelligence agents but denied unmasking Richard Welch as CIA chief in Greece. Welch was shot to death as he returned home from an Athens Christmas party Dec. 23, a month after a local newspaper disclosed his CIA function. But Agee, whose book “ CIA D iary” exposed U.S. agents in South America, said, “ I didn’t even know he (Welch) was in Athens until I heard that his name was published.” Stock E x c h a n g e Sees Frenzied Trading DOW JONES AVERAGE 30 Industrials Cloud at 924 .51 IU N EW Y O R K (U P I) - The New York Stock Exchange Thursday set a record for trading volume in the fourth con­ secutive day of frenized buying and selling on the nation’s largest stock market. Prices fell. The volume record was broken at 3:23 p.m. EST, 27 minutes before the market closed when 35,220.000 issues had been trad­ ed. The previous high in the 184- year history of the exchange was the 35,158,000 traded Feb. 13, 1975. FFC Gives $1 Million to Candidates WASHINGTON (U P I) — The Federal Election Commission pumped / l f c i v T I T O C i H P T I 1 1 3 1 e a n - / . n r v i n n i n n r > r \ f f o r e I i i : i i ~ I A 1 didates Thursday, and President Ford tried to resolve a new campaign controversy with the F E C . Sen. Henry Jackson, D-Wash., got the lion’s share of the new money — $806,585. Ford got $118,485; Rep Morris Udall, D-Ariz., $72,442; former Gov. Jim m y Carter of Georgia, $53,936; former Gov. Terry Sanford of North Carolina, $30,019; and Sen. Lloyd Bentsen, D-Tex., $18,992. Ford’s lawyers and F E C officials arranged a meeting Thursday after­ noon to discuss charges that it was illegal to appoint Rogers C.B. Morton as a White House political adviser. Philip W. Buchen, Ford’s White House counsel, arranged the meeting after F E C Chairman Thomas B. Curtis said Morton being on the public payroll “ is a possible violation” of the federal election law. Curtis suggested that Morton should go off the public payroll and his salary should be paid by the Ford campaign committee. He said the federal election law requires that campaign expenses be reported by the committee, and count toward Ford’s $10 million preconvention spending limit. Kissinger Submits A rm s Limit to Russia 1976 N Y Times News Service WASHINGTON — The United States has submitted to the Soviet Union a new proposal on limiting strategic nuclear arms that attempts to resolve a deadlock over how to deal with a controversial Soviet bomber and an American missile. The proposal, which was handed by Secretary of State Henry Kissinger to the Soviet ambassador, Anotoly F. Dobrynin, W’ednesday night, would require the Soviet Union to count some of its new Backfire bombers as be­ ing among the 2,400 missile launchers and bombers that it would be allow­ ed under any new agreement. The ceiling of 2.400 offensive nuclear weapons was agreed upon in prin­ ciple by President Ford and the Soviet leader, Leonid Brezhnev, during their meeting at Vladivostok in 1974. Kissinger Plans Trip to Black Africa WASHINGTON (U P I) — Secretary of State Henry Kissinger disclosed Thursday he will pay his first official visit to black Africa — now suffering the tm moil of Angola’s civil war — in March or April. Botswana’s Ambassador Amos Dambe told reporters Kissinger in­ formed members of the African diplomatic corps in Washington “ he would visit Africa in March or April.” Kissinger met with 37 African ambassadors for one hour Thursday to discuss the Angolan strife, where the United States and the Soviet Union are backing rival factions in a confrontation that threatens to damage the over-all strength of detente. G I A sh e s Return From Vietnam T R A V IS A FB, Calif. (U P I ) — The first five of possible hundreds of flag- draped caskets containing the ashes of U.S. war dead, flown from Southeast Asia after special negotiations, have arrived on home soil. The caskets were taken off the ramp of a C141 Starlifter Wednesday as a seven-man color guard snapped to attention. The quiet ceremony was attended by some of the dead airmen’s relatives and by Rep. Robert Robert McCloskey, R-Calif., who helped obtain release of the remains. “ We hope these are only the first five of perhaps as many as 400” war dead who will be returned home from Communist territory, he told the welcoming party. A il A An n I M i l r* * i ON T e x a s In s t r u m e n t s I N C O R P O R A T E D AT NORTEX > BJ IBSB /BSB-a t M I r i , I s s r n t MISTS 9 @ O i - s « - 3 1 Ca g ( U ( p f (jty & rn ta ^ r n r n rn m & j £> r a r n m i » em c b ■ ■ ■ i r a © SR-51A . Performs logarithms, trigonometries, hvperbolics. powers, roots, reciprocals, factorials, powers, roots, reciprocals, linear regression, mean, variance and standard deviation • Three user accessible memories permit storage, recall, sum, produce operations. w a s 14995 SR-50A • Performs all classical slide-rule functions simple arithmetic, reciprocals, factorials, ex- ponentation. roots, trigonometric and logarith­ mic functions, all in free floating decimal point or in scientific notation. • Features an alge­ braic keyboard • Converts automatically to scientific notation • Performs operations in the order problem is stated w a s 9995 7 4 9 5 NOW 1 1 4 95 NORTEX. 1800-B LAVACA NOW OPEN 10-6 MON-SAT 4 7 7 - 1 8 8 4 OTHER GREAT VALUES FROM KINGSPOINT AT N O RTEX D O N 'T START CLASSES WITHOUT A CALCULATOR FROM NORTEX F rid a y , Ja n u a r y 16, 1976 THE DAILY TEXAN Page 3 editorials A unionizing must While National Education Association organizer Richard Le Francois’ appearance here Wednesday was supposed to be an encouraging note to those faculty m embers urging unionization, it turned out to be a letdown in many ways. Le Francois, the last of a group of professional organization represen­ tatives to address the faculty members, seemed to center more on what the faculty could not do to solve its academic governance problem rather than eliminate it. CRITICAL TO Le F ran co is’ plan to unionize the faculty at public un­ iversities is the amending of several parts of the Clay-Perkins Act, which presently forbids public employes from benefiting from federal labor relations acts. “ Every single private (school) faculty member in the state of Texas currently enjoys the protection of the NLRA (National Labor Relations A ct), entitling them to bargain with their adm inistrations,’’ Le Francois explained, “Whereas you are relatively unprotected as a faculty member on this cam pus.” At least IO if not more faculty mem bers learned just exactly how un­ protected they are when without warning last year University President Lorene Rogers slashed their salary recommendations $500 to as much as $2,000. Those faculty mem bers are now in the legal process of trying to recover some of that money. SHOULD THE NEA-SPONSORED legislation, which would amend the Clay-Perkins Act, be passed by Congress, “the faculty would have the ability to file an unfair labor practice suit with the National Labor Relations Board. Thus, the law would provide an avenue of redress for grievances,” Le Francois explained. What is obviously missing from Le Francois’ rhetoric is exactly what the faculty can do now to achieve either unionization or form some sort of organization with clout to deal with the University administration. This University has borne more injustices by its administration in the last two years then most institutions do in 20 years. And the administration will continue to abuse its faculty until some sort of faculty organization with power can force the administration to adhere to its demands. Even though Le Francois did not elaborate on it, the chances of amen­ ding the Clay-Perkins Act are slim. If it were to be amended, it would create literally thousands of new unions all over the country. Therefore, what Le Francois should have discussed with the faculty is not what might happen i f the NEA bill passes, but what to do i f it d o e sn t and furthermore what to do in the meantime. Other faculties around the country have faced this same problem, and they have come to only one solution — if a situation (such as the Rogers appointment) arises call an illegal strike and then challenge the legality of the law in the courts. Only then can the obviously unjust restrictions against public employes in the Clay-Perkins Act be challenged and hopefully thrown out. THE CHRONICLE of Higher Education in September reported a number of states which still have laws barring faculty unions, but which nevertheless had increases in union activity. In one instance, similar to the University, “faculty members in the board-of-governors system, which includes Eastern, Western and Northwestern Illinois and Chicago and Governors State Universities, have been attempting to have an elec­ tion, despite the absence of a state labor law ,’ the Chronicle reported. A board committee recommended holding an election, but the board has not yet acted on it.” In all, the Chronicle reported that union organizing was going on in between IO to 20 states so far. And, yes, the number is growing. What this means is that faculty members should maintain a note of op­ timism about organizing a faculty union, despite Le Francois not-so- optimistic report. Faculty unions are fast becoming the rule rather than the exception in many states, and Texas, as antiunion as it is, will soon get its chance. X 6 G A U T TO WORK I M P O S T S £ V , W TSS. THG c m & tmuLT. 6SS&)nA6. services ewx pcttto. i - a THS e m s AR5 IU F R X AMERICA hX..... (tim /fOPP5TRV PR O PER S ■me MANUFACTURE o f Fences aup ARMAMENT'S AWP sw v im s adp etfCTROOIC SeiOSORS TO S W S OFF PARK AMERICA. A L*'** 'B e t h a n k f u l yer in a 1correctional in s titu tio n ,' in s te a d of so m e o I' p r i s o n / _______ ____________ firing line Promoting rotten Allmans To the editor: the In fu tu re, p lease don’t allow m usically ignorant staff w riters to do concert reviews for The Texan. Obvious­ ly, Buchholz and Unger a re quite im­ pressionable and awed by the once super group, the Allman B rothers. How could they expect to give an o b jectiv e review of the San Antonio concert when they constantly referred to past effo rts with B e r r y O a k ley and D u ane A llm a n ? F orget about them — they had nothing to do with the unprofessional, disastrous, despicable perform ance Monday night. Duane died over four y ears ago — rem em ber? I saw the Allman Bros, th ree y ears ago in D allas, and they w ere excellent. E very solo was clean , tight, interesting, and Dicky B e tts w asn’t even in the sam e condition a s he was in San Antonio. is usually quiet onstage, B etts, who spouted and sputtered o bscenities in a friendly redneck fashion to what he must have hoped was a redneck audience. (I won’t pass judgm ent on the audience.) T here was apparently som e co n flict between G regg and B etts, for a t one point, B etts slurred out to G regg, “ 1 11 do the goddam countdown.” He did m anage to count down and that was about all. Your w riters m ust have been tone deaf if they couldn’t tell that B e tts was a half note flat all night long. As a m atter of fact, on his “ am azing solo” on “ One Way O u t,” he stopped playing a f te r ap­ proxim ately five seconds and tried to retune (and this is absolutely tr u e ) his G- string, to no avail. Gregg promised to “ boogie our anuses o ff” Monday night. I can only speak for my own anus, and it was thoroughly bored and disappointed by the sad spec- table onstage. The Allmans perform ed like rank am ateurs playing their first gig at Mother E arth and should have been (T ick ets w ere $6 75 paid accordingly. each — and that actually burns my anus!) Don’t allow The Texan to prom ote m H P w m jr soars. C R I M E S C A R S . HIPPIE im C U S S m cm es. mm F m r . THC BF ceuiewtu PREAM. Has education the dogs? pense and boredom of four years in an in- s t a t i o n of higher learning can tell you of required courses any normally in­ telligent French poodle could conduct, not only with competence, but with what passes for distinction in those circles. gone to By NICHOLAS VON HOFFMAN *1976 King F e a tu re s S y n d ic ate WASHINGTON in - Among the 6,662 the 1975 edition o nam es listed “ Outstanding Educators of Am erica is Oliver D. Birnbaum who, in addition to being a teach er of national repute, is ®ls® a standard-size French poodle. Oliver D. (fo r Dog) p re fe rs the n atu ral, Ivy League shaggy look in hair styling to the chic lamb chop cut favored by Park Avenue and Bel Air poodles. Currently Oliver resides in the home of Robert Birnbaum , chancellor of the University of Wisconsin’s Oshkosh cam ­ pus. When R obert received a form letter fro m p u b lis h e r s of “ O u ts ta n d in g E d ucators” inviting him to list him self, he respon ded w ith a m o d esty un­ ch a ra cte ristic of American university educators and sent in the nam e of his i l l u s t r a t e how to d og. He did m eaningless those who’s who-type books it are. ALL YOU N EED to do to get listed is throw a brick through a store window. Even the m ost prestigious of them, the original “ Who’s Who,’ allows its listees to w rite th eir own entries, and when you look at the worst of this sort of thing, like Roue m agazine’s list of A m erica’s 50 most-promising young leaders, guys uke Oliver are clearly at the head of that pack of dogs. The sam e company that m anufactures “ Outstanding E d u cators” also peddles “ Outstanding Teenagers of A m erica, but shabby, overblown ideas a re n ’t con­ fined to co m m erce and politics. There s plenty of it in the world Oliver and his la n d lo rd R o b e r t th a t of c o lle g ia te and u niversity education. Anyone who has suffered the pain, ex- in h a b it, to understand such trash as the Allman B rothers are now. possibly at the expense of many Texan readers. G et som e w riters who know about m usic. Buchholz and Unger didn t see m that the Allman B ros. w ere not doing us a favor by playing for two (lours; they were ju st hoping that eventually something would com e together, but it never did We paid big cash to hear a bad rehearsal Monday night, and I believe that everyone should hear the truth about it. Willie Nelson and the Allman Brothers Band ... r e a lly , n o w !! Stephen Haire, Becky Haire, Social Welfare Studies Police the police To the editor: Som etim e next month the 20-year reign of Police Chief Bob Miles comes to an end with the naming of a successor A fter y ears of m istrust between police and large segm ents of the public, notably E a s t A u s t i n an d t h e s t u d e n t s , widespread community participation in this decision is all-im portant. However, the city manager and the City Council have virtually walled out citizen input into the selection process. The city m anager will review all applications for the job, conduct all interview s and com e up with one applicant for confirm ation by the council If the council turns down the first nom inee, the m anager com es up with one m ore name, and so one and so on, until the m anager com es up with a the council. candidate accep table In fact, citizen input is lim ited to sen­ ding in to the m anager ideas for criteria for applicant interview s which may or may not be used But even this is better than nothing, so I urge all students to w rite, ca ll, or candygram the City Coun­ cil and city m anager to tell them what you want in a new chief. It is important to let the council know how important this decision is. Lyn Breeland Vice-President Student Government to AT TH E GRAMMER school and t som e extent the high school level parent and taxpayers are not yet so intimidat that they won t complain when Johnni and J ill ca n ’t read and figure. Not so a the college level and above. Billions ar e xp e n d e d with no serious public scrutin of what, if anything, transpires in these classroom s. is suing In Bridgeport, Conn., however, Bene Ianniello the U niversity of Bridgeport for the return of her $150 in tuition for a required course for m ajors in high school education because she con­ tends it was “ w orthless.” Her position is that it was one of those autom atic A courses in which the only thing she was taught was how to operate a movie pro­ je c to r. Without prejudging a case still in litigation, Ianniello’s charges must have a fam iliar smell for anyone who’s had in a the misfortune of m atriculating th ey s c h o o l of e d u c a t io n w h e r e specialize in offering courses in textbook selection, blackboard control and the fundamentals of patrol boy deployment If you want to know why your kid doesn’t learn anything in school, check out the school in which his teach er learned to teach SCHOOLS OF education are notorious for feeding their students em pty intellec­ tual calories, but social work, business, public ad m in istratio n , in tern atio n al relations, black studies and urbanology ca n ’t be far behind Traditionally in the tonier universities, these have been regarded as low-class fields for gimps, cripples and those too clubfooted to know that you never call a person with a PhD doctor Truth is, though, that the higher- full of prestige disciplines are shot vigorous-seeming Mickey Mouse, in ac­ cordance with inviolate principle that the first duty of a university is to en­ sure full professorial em ploym ent by ja ck in g up the num ber of required courses and making sure that the re­ quirements have no rational relationship to the body of knowledge necessary for the m astery of the su bject. the industry, In the Ianniello case, the University of B r i d g e p o r t ’ s v i c e - p r e s i d e n t fo r academ ic affairs may have given away the game when he was reported as say­ ing that if Ianniello wants her money back she should return her three hours of credit and her A To the people who run the higher education th at’s what you buy when you m atriculate, credits, not knowledge You pay us so much vigorish every sem ester and at the end of a stated tim e we will give you a ticket entitling you to one job Their manners are better, but from the point of view of functional econom ic analysis there this is no difference between racket and a gangster labor union local that shakes down its m em bers through the use of a hiring hall YOU WOULD think that in this period when state legislatures have had to stop in c r e a s in g h ig h e r e d c u a tio n a p ­ propriations, the colleges would consider clearing up their acts by lopping off the thousands of fraudulen courses students are made to take. Not so The racket goes on and is even m ore unfair when you consider the thousands of young peo­ into schools because they ple driven ca n ’t find work College enrollm ent is up alm ost IO per cent this year, the largest increase since 1965 and the height of the postwar baby boom The lucky students will get Oliver for an instructor. He may not teach you anything, but at lick your hand. least h e’ll T h e Da il y T exa n Sfw d a ftt N t w t p o p i r a t T h * U n i v e r s it y a f F t i a i a f A u s t in E D I T O R ...........................................................................................................S c o tt T a g lia r in o M A N A G IN G E D I T O R ....................................................................................N ick C u c c ia A S S IS T A N T M A N A G IN G E D I T O R ...............................................S a lly C a r p e n te r N E W S E D I T O R .................................................................................................. P a t t i K ild a y S P O R T S E D I T O R ................................................................................................ E d E n g lis h E N T E R T A IN M E N T E D I T O R ............................................................ C h ico C o le m a n F E A T U R E S E D I T O R .................................................................................Ann W h ee lo ck G E N E R A L R E P O R T E R S ...........................F o rd F e s s e n d e n , D an n y H o llan d , R on H u tch eso n , Todd K a tz , B e th M a ck , D aw n T u rn h a m A ssistant News E d ito r..................................................................................... Lynne Messina News A ss ista n ts......................................... M ichael Livingston, Rosanne Mogavero, Suzanne M ajors, Clio Dunn, Olive Talley, Susan Levine, Robert Armour, John Fredlund, Kathy Fahy, Kathy Spitz, Diane Thompson, O scar G arza, Peggy Wehmeyer, Karen B arn ett, Carol Thom as, Rosalind Ja c k le g J e f f Helton, Ursula Weigold Dinah Acord, Robert Hughes, Mark Weal, David Money, B ill Krull Editorial A ssistants........................................................... Catherine Sim s, Steve Olafson A ssociate E ntertainm ent E d ito r................................................................. M ichael Toison A ssistant E ntertainm ent E d it o r .......................................................................John Henley A ssistant F eatu res E d it o r ..................................................................................... G ail Burris Assistant Featu res A ssistant........................................................................Karen Hastings Sports A ssistant.............................................................................................................. Ken Gray Make-up E d it o r ......................................................................................................Je r r y Styrsky Wire E d it o r .................................................................................................................. Jo y Howell Copy E d ito rs............................................................................. Anne Garvey, Ja n ie Frank, Bill Cockerill, Jon M. Hazel, Susan Levine P hotograp hers................................................................................ Mike Sm ith, Paul L ester O p in io n s e x p r e s s e d in T h e D o i l y T e x a n a r e t h o s e o f th e B u ild in g A 4 1 3 6 ) I n q u i r i e s c o n c e r n i n g d e l i v e r y a n d e d i t o r o r t h e w r i t e r o f th e a r t i c l e a n d a r e n o t n e c e s s a r i l y c l a s s i f i e d a d v e r t i s i n g s h o u ld b e m a d e in T S P B u ild in g 3 2 0 0 t h o s e of t h e U n i v e r s i t y a d m i n i s t r a t i o n o r th e B o ;> rd of (4 7 1 5 2 4 4 ) a n d d i s p l a y a d v e r t i s i n g in T S P B u ild in g 3 2 1 0 R e g e n t s (4 7 1 1 8 6 5 ) T h e D a i l y T e x a n a s tu d e n t n e w s p a p e r a t T h e U n i v e r s i t y T h e n a t i o n a l a d v e r t i s i n g r e p r e s e n t a t i v e of T h e D a ily o f T e x a s a t A u s t i n , is p u b l i s h e d b y T e x a s S t u d e n t T e x a n is N a t i o n a l e d u c a t i o n a l A d v e r t i s i n g S e r v i c e . I n c P u b l i c a t i o n s . D r a w e r I ) . U n i v e r s i t y S t a t i o n , A u s tin , T e x 3 6 0 L e x i n g t o n A v o . N e w Y o r k , N Y . 10017 7 8 7 1 2 T h e D a i l y T e x a n is p u b lis h e d M o n d a y , T u e s d a y , T h e D a ily T e x a n s u b s c r i b e s t o U n i t e d P r e s s I n t e r W e d n e s d a y . T h u r s d a y , a n d F r i d a y , e x c e p t h o l i d a y an d n a t i o n a l a n d N e w Y o r k T i m e s N e w s S e r v i c e T h e T e x a n is e x a m p e r i o d s S e c o n d c l a s s p o s t a g e p a i d a t A u s tin T e x a m e m b e r of t h e A s s o c i a t e d C o l l e g i a t e P r e s s , ( h e N e w s c o n t r i b u t i o n s w ill b e a c c e p t e d b y t e l e p h o n e (471 S o u t h w e s t J o u r n a l i s m C o n g r e s s , t h e T e x a s D a i l y 4 5 9 1 1 a t t h e e d i t o r i a l o f f i c e ( T e x a s S t u d e n t P u b l i c a t i o n s N e w s p a p e r A s s o c i a t i o n , a n d A m e r i c a n N e w s p a p e r B u ild in g 2 1 2 2 ) o r a t t h e n e w s l a b o r a t o r y ( C o m m u n i c a t i o n P u b l i s h e r s A s s o c i a t i o n Candidates' California dreaming By JA M ES R. DICKENSON 1976 W ash in g to n S tar SACRAMENTO - California is a big ite w here people dream big, of making n show business or discovering gold or latever. rhe biggest political dream right now, lich is occasionally indulged because lifornians enjoy a healthy amount of auvinisrn and consider them selves to in the cen ter of the universe, is a litica l version of a freew ay World rie s form er Gov. Ronald Reagan run- ig against current Gov. Edmund G. e rry ) Brown for president in the fall. T H E R E A R E m ore re a listic sm aller earns, however. Republican politicians, leth er they p refer P resid ent Ford or *agan as their candidate, hope prim ari- th at the m atter is settled one way or other before the California prim ary in ne. D em o cratic politicians dream that own, who is enormously popular with e e le c to ra te (about 85 per cent ap- oval in the polls) but not with the iliticos, will turn out to be the perfect ight young face for the No. 2 spot on e national is pcted they would be double winners, le ir party would gain the White House, id B row n’s unorthodox political per­ ticket. ticket the If s o n a lity and v e r s io n of th e new liberalism would be transferred all the way to the E a s t Coast, which would suit most of them ju st fine. A MONTH AGO there was talk that Brown might run as a favorite son in California if no c le a r leader em erges in the next six weeks. Now the feeling has shifted, however. On Monday night one of le ad in g D e m o c r a tic politicians here bet $100 at 3-to-2 odds that Brown wouldn’t do it. the s t a t e ’s “ A lot of his advisers are telling him that the opportunity will never be so golden, that h e’ll never again be so pop­ u lar,” the bettor explained. “ But i f s a long shot, and he could lose a lo t.” The orthodox wisdom is that Brow n’s best bet is to retain his knight-in-shining- arm or im age by rem aining aloof and hoping something nice happens to him, which is the Hubert Humphrey strategy. There is little doubt here that he has presidential am bitions, but he wouldn’t adm it it if his co at was on fire. “ I ’ll decide by M arch or A pril,” he said Wednesday. “ I t ’s prem ature now. I c a n ’t see the consequences right now.” TH E R EPU B LIC A N S’ problem is ob­ vious: How does a professional choose between an incum bent P resident of his own party and the popular R eagan, who Page 4 F rid ay, January 16, 1976 THE D A ILY TEXAN by most testam en ts would beat Ford here. Most Republican officeholders and party professionals are backing Ford, but they have the uneasy feeling that the voters p refer Reagan. “ I t ’ s a r e a l d i l e m m a , ” s a y s Assem blym an Paul Poillo of M alibu, the new m inority leader. He didn’t get to the leadership by being stupid. However, he has a solution to the dilem m a that is pure party selflessness. 2 5 jo b ( o f 8 0 ) “ W e o n l y h a v e to get is assem blym en, and my Republicans elected next fa ll,” he says with an a ir of relief. “ I could not serve this goal by being involved in one of the cam paign s.” S o m e o f his f e l l o w R e p u b l i c a n legislators who signed on with Ford d e m o n s tra te d a few d a y s ag o the R epublicans’ difficulty. They balked at a plan to dispatch them to New Ham pshire to aid F o rd ’s cam paign there, and the play may well have to be abandoned. TH E P R O BLEM is that none want to do what wil l h elp m o s t: c r i t i c i z e R e a g a n ’s p e rfo rm an ce as governor. Assemblym an Dixon Arnett of Redwood City, possibly with m em ories of the Nix­ on “ Truth Squad” in mind, said it wasn’t his kind of gam e and he wouldn’t play. State Sen. Dennis Capenter of Newport B each, cochairm an of F o rd ’s s ta te co m ­ m ittee, also declined. “ I ’m not about to say what a bad fellow Ronald R eagan is. I don’t think he is .” This follows reports from Illinois that som e of the IO Republican congressm en who early endorsed Ford are backing away. The R eagan cam paign contends that at least six have passed word to the supporters not to work in the P resid en t’s behalf. th e A R N E T T H O P E S in tr a p a r ty bitterness won’t be g reat if there is a California prim ary battle. “ We won t s p l i t a s ba d a s G o l d w a t e r a n d R ockefeller did in 1964. There s not the s a m e p e r s o n a l a n i m o s i t y o r philosophical split. The loyalty is to the individual and his style. Everyone should com e into line im m ediately. The two candidates are gentlem en, and they ve both made their peace with the idea of losing. I ’m sure Ford has told his fam ily that it will ju st m ean m ore tim e at Vail and Reagan has told Nancy it w ill mean m ore tim e horseback riding ” Another Republican agreed but added — thinking of M rs. R eag an ’s unswerving conservative ideology which her sw eet, sm iling dem eanor conceals from the public - “ the question is whether Nancy has made a peace with losing.” wJmiMc®** SWS. 'Golly gee, Julie — I knew we were boring, but not that boring. ----------------- -- ~ ~ _ • r n got your health, you ve got lust , . . . U M H * ) Door sleep, waking up around problems with his urinary McCarthy D • • • ' * Sen. Frank Church, D-Idaho — Walter Reed Hospital found him in excellent health but ad­ vised him to pay “continued to weight control attention and avoidance of high car­ bohydrate foods.” He suffers from diverticulosis, a com­ mon chronic condition affec­ ting the lower tract. Ex-Sen. Fred H arris, D- Okla. — Except for a “ signifi­ cant weight problem,” he is in fine condition. His medical h isto ry includes an u lce r developed while he was in law school, a gunshot wound from a hunting accident as a youth and a brief but severe ear in­ fection in 1972. All are com­ pletely cured. S E N . H U B E R T HUMPHREY, D-Minn. - He is five pounds overweight but “ does not lack for energy,” his doctor told our associate Bob Owens. Humphrey’s last physical in October showed ‘no evidence of the (bladder) tumor th at was X-rayed.” Since the the rem oval of cancer trace, according to his doctor, Humphrey’s bladder is “no different now than it was eight years ago.” Sen. Henry Jackson, D- Wash. — He suffers from “chronic nasal stuffiness,” is also allergic to “ adhesive tape, stra w b e rrie s, eggs, plated gold and wool.” His only serious medical problem was solved by a kidney stone operation a year ago. Sen. George McGovern, D- S.D. — Because of an insuf­ ficiency in his heart, his doc­ tors have advised him to take preventive antibiotics to avoid i nfect i ons f r om s ur gi cal procedures. Otherwise, his heart m urm ur doesn’t affect him. MCGOVERN PLAYS tennis two or three times a week without any evidence of heart trouble. Occasionally he has poor sleep, waking up around 4 a m. He “ uses Dalmane once or twice a week” to help him sleep. Gov. Milton Shapp of Penn­ sylvania - A kidney stone recently gave him trouble, but it apparently has been passed. All his other medical tests show him to be in good health. Rep. Mo Udall, D-Ariz. — A h e a rt m u r m u r has been detected but only_ “at max­ imal stress.” His physician, therefore, views this as a fin- di ng ‘‘of q u e s t i o n a b l e significance.” NEVERTHELESS, Udall has been advised to take an­ tib io tics as a precaution before even m inor dental work. Gov. George Wallace of Alabama — He has astounded his doctors by the comeback he has made from the 1972 attempt on his life. Although paralyzed from the waist down, he has overcome early DANNON YOGURT! ANDERSON & COMPANY Whole Wheat Sandwiches Fresh Daily (Mon. - Fri.) Look for us in your D O C A. coupon book Balanced Way Health Foods 504 W. 24th Open 0:45-5:45 COFFEE TEA • SPICES TWO JHFFEllSON SQUAWS 45S-1533 1601 West 38th KKR! problems with his urinary tract, has avoided the bed so re s that pl ague many paraplegics and has attained general good health. Wallace is also partially deaf and wears a hearing aid in his right ear. Footnote: Ex-Sen. Eugene D O O N E S B U R Y ALAM , JONAS, iv e HAP IT.1 I'M HOT LOOKING AT ONB- M IB BIBB­ ING BILBI I you poHthavb TO, LU KE- you'r e F/N/SHBP. \ McCarthy, D-Minn., refused to provide his medical records for reasons of “ privacy. Sargent Shriver and ex-Gov. Te r r y Sanf or d of N o r t h t o C a r o l i n a al s o f a i l e d produce their records. San­ ford, m eanwhile, was ad ­ mitted to the hospital with chest p a i n s . _______ I A M ? PIP I FASS MY PA C. APTITUPB TBST?\ WSH, PUKE, YOU'PB BN OLP BRIENO, ANO I K NOU) W H r n HARP, SO U/&RE OVERLOOKING YOUR SCORE. IN C H IN E S E A B B A /R S , y o u t e s t e p o u t a t A IH I R P G R A P E B Q U IV A L E N C Y . TH1RP GRAPE? I YOU GOT THE CAPITAL RIGHT. DOWN TO THE To kill or not to kill? • But Congress did not declare war, any more than it did in Korea, or in Vietnam, and for m uch th e s a me reason. War suggests the c o m m itm en t of a ll your resources; and our resources, in a nuclear age, are sufficient to make the island of Cuba dis­ appear from the earth. to rem ove • Under the circumstances, that which is traditionally un­ thinkable arises as a possible alternative. If it becomes necessary the threat posed by a single leader who has a handle on nuclear weapons, does one prefer the s n i p e r , o r a m a s s i v e a m p h i b i o u s m i l i t a r y operation? During the Japanese war we took great pride in tracking the a i r pl a ne of Admi r al Yamamoto and blasting it out th e a i r . T h a t wa s t h e equivalent of an assassina­ tion, of sorts; though he was not the leader. If we had been able to track the building in which Hitler squatted, we’d have gleefully sent a bomber zeroed in on those august coordinates. T he e t h i c a l q u e s t i o n becomes: it is hypothetically possible that the sniper can avoid a nuclear devastation? And the answer is not so much that, viewed in retrospect, such a situation didn’t obtain in Cuba in 1962 and 1963; but that ethical men might have considered that it obtained; and might therefore, in good conscience, have recommend­ ed the elimination of a single individual. I HAVE USED the image before, but it is enduringly useful because practically everybody agrees that Gen. Amin is quite mad. Moreover, everyone a g re e s th at the is of atom looming t h e h a n d s of b o mb s threat in madmen: science is making the atom bomb a bargain basement item. Most people agree that the fanatical op­ position of Amin to Israel could bring him, if he had the necessary equipment, to load an atom bomb into one of his wheezy airplanes and sent it over to Israel with instruc­ tions to drop in over Tel Aviv. Our CIA finds out about it. Tipping off Israel is one thing; but Isreal has no ABM system that is proof against that kind of thing. Does the Israeli version of the CIA have the right to send a sniper down to Uganda? The point is that it is all much more difficult than we make it out to be in routine denunciations of assassina­ tion. Murder is a terrible in­ strument. And tyrannicide is, traditionally, held to be the exclusive prerogative of the indigenously oppressed. indigenously oppressed. By WILLIAM F. BUCKLEY •1976 W ashington S ta r Syndicate Have you n o ticed th a t although there is a great deal of talk about a new morality that issues from the arrival of a nuclear age, some of the conclusions one would expect from the acceptance of that proposition are resisted? It is easy enough to find a politi­ cian or a poet who will tell you that war has become un­ thinkable in a nuclear age; but almost to find impossible anyone who will suggest that from it follows that any extraconven- tional step necessary to pre­ vent nuclear war is admissi­ ble. th a t proposition, THE CIA is in general dis­ repute primarily because — or so the Senate report in­ forms us — a division of the CIA t he r e c o m m e n d e d assassination of two heads of state, Patrice Lumumba and Fidel C astro. Concerning Lumumba, I cannot conceive of the reasoning behind the a n d r e c o m m e n d a t i o n , therefore tend to join the c ritic s. Concerning Fidel Castro, one would think that ce rtain points should be m editated: • Except for the fact of the nuclear age, the United States would certainly have declared war against Castro’s Cuba. The provocations far exceed­ ed those that conventionally precede a declaration of war. Castro had invited our prin­ cipal enemy into his country, to arm that country with destructive weapons aimed at American population centers ; Castro had confiscated the p r o p e r t y of A m e r i c a n citizens; Castro was sending out platoons of revolutionaries to disturb the peace of the continent. I M W I i s A t t HOU THE CRA# LITTLE KIP IVE HEARD ABOUT lt)H0 TALKS TO SCHOOL BUILDINGS? 66T AidAV FROM ME, MUSCLE HEAD OF I LL .PUNCH WDR LIGHTS OUT\\j I T C ANVUlAV, HE UJAS A FOO? SCHOOL, AND HE ALLAYS SPOKE yew HIGHLY OF VOu n r W hen you've By JACK ANDERSON With LES WHITTEN •1976 United Feature* Syndicate, Inc. WASHINGTON — Except for a frequent weakness for f a t t e r n i n g t h e Democratic presidential can­ didates seem to be physically fit for the job. f o o d s , We have examined their inter­ medical records and viewed their doctors. Her e is a r undown, alphabetical order, of h e a l t h of Democratic candidates: t h e in the l e a d i n g Sen. Birch Bayh, D-Ind. - His latest m edical report describes him as a “vigorous person with a regular exercise h a b i t . ” His only a c t i v e medical problem appears to be a “solitary nodule in his right lung since 1967.’’ This is “no threat to (Bayh’s) health at this tim e” but needs “ con­ tinued monitoring,’’ states the doctor. D-Tex. — His only problem, according to a medical ex­ amination last October, was “ a more or less rhythmic twitch of the cheek, right cor­ ner of his mouth associated with blinking of his eyes.” The twitch “ ceased to occur” after it was pointed out to R pn tsen Sen. Robert Byrd, D-W.Va. — He is plagued by “ a number of minor, active problems” which require medical atten­ tion. To relieve a nervous s e n a t o r t r e m o r , t h e s o me t i me s u se s “s herr y before m eals and before stressful situations such as speech making.” His doctor also prescribed Inderal to help reduce the tension. EX-GOV. JIMMY CARTER of G eorgia — His doctor states that C arter is “able to carry on at an amazing pace with no evident fatigue.” The doctor found “ no indication of any diabetic tendency or any in the blood fat tendency” SEN. LLOYD BENTSEN, Crossword Puzzler 2 P addle 3 Jail 4 B a rra cu d a 5 P o s s e s s e s 6 P reposition 7 B ird s h om e s 8 High m o u n ­ tain 9 N egative 10 Form er R u s ­ sian ruler 11 Sicilian vo lca n o 16 C h u rch bench 18 P ronoun 21 Set in order 2 2 Goal 2 3 R e so rts 2 4 Trial 2 5 Lam prey 2 6 Se e d c o n ­ tainer Iv 2 8 Cut 2 9 Sp id e r s trap 3 0 Arabian r " 7 3 rr I T ” ~ rT 24 2 < r — ____ a c r o s s 1 Jum p 4 Part of lea 8 P oker sta xe 12 S w is s river 13 Sheet of g la ss 14 M isp la c e d 15 C o m p la in s (slang) 17 Drink slow ly 19 Article 2 0 Deposit 21 Unit of Sia m e se curre ncy 2 2 M a c a w 2 3 P ac k aw ay 2 5 Bitter vetch 2 6 Greek letter 27 W riting im- P lenient ronoun 2 9 F e m ale s 3 2 Conjunction 3 3 Told 3 5 P ron o u n 3 6 Scatter 3 8 Penpoint 3 9 Evergreen tree 4 0 P aid notice 41 M ature 4 2 C o u ra g e o u s person 4 3 O b stru ct 4 5 D evoured 4 6 Lair 4 7 Hebrew month 4 9 O p e n in g in mal wall 5 2 Wild plum 5 4 W ord of s o r­ row 5 6 Fem ale sheep 5 7 P ay atten­ tion 5 8 D an ge r 5 9 S o a k D O W N 1 Ugly. old wom an 4 8 Flying m am ­ r T Answer to Thursday s Puzzle n r a ra im r.i a n a a n a n Q O a Q f l M U S ^ WSM i i a u i 1 3 3 0 3 3 1 3 3 3 0 3 3 ^ WOE o d d w a n l i e d ! w a g g a g 31 Rom an tyrant rative plate 4 8 Article of furniture 3 3 C om m unist 34 Cravat 37 M ale sh ee p 3 9 Part of a uto­ mobile 41 E s s e n c e 4 2 C hicken 4 3 Sprint 4 4 C o m p e t e n t 4 5 C olled lava 4 9 E xiste d 5 0 B e in debt 51 Dam p 5 3 Faroe Is ­ la n d s w hirl­ wind 5 5 C h in e se distance m easure r n 4 r “ b 7 I 9 IO 111 _ - r? 16 1 V T VT I 7 IT V 7 V T T ' ■JTT W ifs Iii 26 W ?9 n r n r 30 J I 19 5 5 HH T i 35 P yX Y4 ___ J M 49 r n VT 46^ 33" sr T i " M sp rr —H TH I TS i i rr aT44 TBT VV48 sr sr 53 45 I i JO 31 H _ _ sr sr 56 •>:• rn e SP s : e : e a mmmmm_ 0 .... j i . . l 5 ll. / /Z- Express your love w ith a ring from C a rl M aye r Jewelers 5517 Balcones 813 Congress Southwood Mall (And Carl Mayer offers it at a 20% student discount.) LAST DAYS! PAY FOR THE HIGHEST PRICE PAIR — 2ND PAIR ONLY ONE CENT L a te st style s, q u a lity b ra n d s, d o lla r -s a v in g v a lu e s. ( A ll stock not in clu d e d .) ALL SALES FINAL PLEASE c o lo rs Friday, Jan u ary 16, 1976 T H E D A IL Y T E X A N P a g e 5 I Approximation Theory Topic of Talks from all over the world will be le c tu r in g an d p r e s e n tin g papers. Eight m ajor one-hour addresses, 41 half-hour lec­ tures and 50 papers will be presented. TOPICS include finite ele­ m ent methods and spline func­ tions which are subheadings under approxim ation theory. “ This is a classical branch of m ath em atica l re searc h . The Russians pioneered the field as early as the 1800’s ,” Schum aker said. “ Approximation “ However, it is a very ac­ tive research area and has practical applications in the en g in e e rin g , p h y sic s, and chem istry fields,” he said. theory is o n e of th e f r o n t i e r s of research. The invitees to the s y m p o s iu m a r e a c t i v e researchers in both labs and a t U n iv e r s itie s ,” he con­ tinued. A BOOK containing all the lectures and papers presented a t this conference will be published later this year. T w enty m a th e m a tic ia n s from West Germ any will a t­ tend. Also represented will be Israel, Brazil, New Zealand, th e N e th e rla n d s , C an ad a, F ra n c e , Belgium , Sweden, H u n g a r y , R u m a n ia and U.S.S.R. A G. V itu sk in , a b lind re search er from Russia, will be the first speaker. “ It is very ra re to have someone from R u ssia . They d o n ’t usually let them com e,” said George Lorentz, professor of math and another organizer for the conference. Other m ajor speakers in­ clude C.K. Chui from Texas A&M U niversity; C. de Boor, U n iv ersity of W isconsin; S c h u m a k e r, R . de V o re , O a k la n d U n i v e r s i t y ; D. Braess, Ruhr University of Germany, and J. B ram ble of Cornell. M otor-Assisted Bikes Vehicles Reclassified By SUZANNE MAJORS Texan Staff W riter M otor-assisted bicycles will be classified now as m otor­ cycles by the University Traf­ fic and Parking Division, thus req u irin g ow ners of these vehicles to buy motorcycle parking perm its to park on campus. The University Parking and Traffic Policy Com m ittee was prom pted to the interim rul­ ing b e c a u se of p ro b lem s w hich a ro s e from m o to r- assisted bikes being parked in racks provided for human- powered bicycles. Bicycle owners complained that the m otor-assisted bikes being parked in racks took up too much space and leaked fluids, posing safety hazards. Since the University traffic and p a r k i n g r e g u l a t i o n s booklet does not ment i on motor-assisted bikes, owners of the new bikes were con­ fused about where they should be parked. Owners began parking them in the bike racks to avoid having them stolen on the street because of their light weight. When Univer­ sity police began ticketing the motor vehicles parked in the bike racks, owners of the vehicles complained, and the new rule classifying them as m o to rcy c le s was f or med R obert Lockwood, c h a ir­ man of the Parking and T raf­ fic Policy Committee, said the recommendation for classify­ in g t h e m o t o r - a s s i s t e d bicycles as m otorcycles was adopted as an interim policy Dec. 20, when the University president’s office approved tne mi nut e s of t he c o m ­ m ittee’s November m eeting. Students who own motor- assisted bikes should buy m otorcycle perm its to park them on campus. The Parking and Traffic Policy Com mittee will discuss the issue further at its next meeting at 1:30 p.m. Tuesday in M a i n B u i l d i n g 400. By KAREN BARNETT Texan Staff Writer How to p re d ic t possible heart difficulties and where oil can be found m ay be resolved at the International Symposium on Approximation Theory. The symposium will be sponsored by the Universi­ ty m ath departm ent in con­ junction with the National Science Foundation and the Air Force Office of Scientific through R e se a rc h Sunday Wednesday. The symposium will be held in th e Jo e C. T h o m p so n Conference C enter and lasts from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. each day. Approximation theory deals w ith solving c o m p lic a te d functions by replacing them with simplified ones. P artial data is used to approxim ate an unknown function with the aid of a com puter, explained Larry Schumaker, professor of m a th e m a tic s an d c o ­ organizer of the conference. “ IN PRACTICAL applica­ tion, contour m aps of the heart can be used as data to make predictions of possible heart difficulties. This is a helpful d ia g n o stic to o l,” Schumaker said. The theory can likewise be used to help locate oil and is adaptable for other practical applications. Research m athem aticians Silent Silhouettes — T e x a n S t a f f P h o to b y P a u l M. L e tte r Sitting contemplatively on the ledge of tbs East M all fountain, Mob Beoman (I) and Steve Rhodes watch the night light play on the rising w ater. ________________ Hill Gives Vet Opinion No M inim um W W II Service Required arm ed forces of the United S tates who serv ed during World War II. V eterans not eligible for tui­ tion exemption are those who w ere discharged from service because they w ere over the age of 38 or because they re­ quested a discharge. tw o r e f e r r e d previous cases to determ ine what constitutes “ service” . His conclusion is that a person H ill to SANYO COMPACT REFRIGERATOR $24-50 RENT for semester 2.2 CU. FT. CAPACITY WE DELIVER S2.00 D eliv ery/ $2.00 Pick Up RENT IT, THEN IF YOU LIKE IT, YOU CAN RENT-BUY IT BERKIfMfl'S C h s s t e r e o s t o r e 2 2 3 4 G U A D A L U P E • 4 7 6 - 3 5 2 5 5 1 3 4 B U R N E T R O A D • 4 5 4 6 7 3 1 th e a rm e d in has se rv e d forces during World War II if he was a m em ber for any length of tim e, beginning at the m om ent he was sworn in. The statute specifically states that a person discharged by his own request is not eligible for tuition exemption and does not require that a person have ever been eligible for GI benefits. CENTRALIZED DROPS/ADDS TO ENTER BELLMONT: A PHOTO ID AND YOUR PAID SPRING '76 FEE RECEIPT WILL BE REQUIRED DUPLICATE FEE FECEIPTS: PREREGISTERED STUDENTS GO TO BURSAR, MAIN BLDG. 8. DUPUCATES ARE NOT AVAILABLE FOR THOSE WHO REGISTERED THIS WEEK. N O PROXIES!! d o y o u r o w n d r o p s / a d d s PASS/FAIL CHANGES: u s e o n e c a r d t o d r o p & R E A D D C O U R S E W I T H D E S I R E D G R A D E S T A T U S ADMISSION TIMETABLE NO ADMISSION 11:30am - 1:00pm OR AFTER 4:30 pm 8:30 GOS-JUY 9:00 AAA-BER 9:30 BES-DAG 10:00 MCJ-NIE 10:30 DAH-FAO 11:00 FAR-GOR I M STB-VAR 1:30 V A S-Z ZZ 2 KH) JUZ-LEW 2:30 LEX-MCI 3M NIF-QUI 3:30 QUJ-SAX 4.-00 SAY-STA R e g is tra tio n S u p e rv is io n M a in B ld g. 16 4 71 -r>86o * E A R T H is t h e r e g i s t e r e d t r a d e m a r k o f N o is e S y s t e m e t . Inc © 1 9 7 5 K o U e S y s t e m e t In Earth Shoe ■ SaleHS ty le 150 Sand suede Sale Price $ 2 5 .5 0 KARA-VEL SHOES Vl PRICE SALE MENS WOMENS Cherokee Baretrap S.R.O. Pappagallo Beruardo Lamica (Darmi) Golo Nina Bort Carlton Carber Shoe Strings Dexter Adidas SL-76 Wyenburg Harbor KARA-VEL SHOES Northcross Mall Sad lo /haok REALISTIC6 RECEIVERS... FOR THE MUSIC-MINDED YOUR C H O I C E ^ ^ M S ty le 180. Russet smooth strap only. Sale Price $ 1 7 .5 0 S ty le 110. Bark suede only. Sale Price $ 2 4 .9 0 . . . and you can CHARI! IT A t Radio Shack • • • e ® . To help you take your first step in the shoe that revo­ lutionized walking, we’re having a sale. From January 13th to January 31st. Choose from a selected group of Earth brand shoe styles and sizes for men and women. Save from $7.50 to $14.00. EARTH SHOE STORE 1610 LAVACA OPEN THURSDAYS UNTIL 8 PM 4 7 4 - 1 8 9 5 SENSATIO NAL 43% D ISC O U N T ON A M -F M 2/4-C H A N N E L RECEIVER! A dual perform er! Our QTA-720 delivers superb stereo and opens the world of 4-channel when you add a second pair of speakers. Exclusive Glide-Path R volum e/balance controls, tape inputs/ outputs, tuning meter and much more A terrific audio value! Reg 229 95 OUR M O S T POPULAR A M -F M STEREO RECEIVER AT 35% OFF! Mesic lovers appreciate our STA-47 with such outstanding features as m ain/rem ote speaker switch, tape inputs/outputs with monitor, magnetic phono input Plus 4-speaker capability, tuning meter, headphone jack An ideal receiver at a great low price! Reg 199 95 2414 Guadalupe • 477-4471 Radio /hack M o tt it atma a lto availatxa at Radio SftacM O tM t ft Look for thim in your naighborhcxxl OTHER SELECTED STYLES, COLORS, M A TE R IA LS AND SIZES ALSO ON SALE! g A TANDY CORPORATION COMPANY P R IC E S M A Y VARY AT IN D IV ID U A L S T O R E S By DINAH ACORD Texan Staff W riter t h a t t h e r e Att. Gen. John Hill held this w e e k is no m inim um re q u irem en t for tim e served during World W ar II established to q u a l i f y f o r e d u c a t i o n a l benefits. in o rd e r A p p r o x i m a t e l y 2200 veterans on campus receive educational benefits and of these the largest percentage of them are Vietnam veterans and IO per cent are World W ar II veterans. Rep. Bill Presnal, chairm an of the House Appropriations Committee, requested the opi­ nion because a subsequent portion of the s ta tu te e s ­ tablishes a m inim um require­ ment of 180 days. Hill in ter­ r e ­ p r e t s quirem ents to mean that the Legislature did not intend a m inimum requirem ent of se r­ vice tim e be the basis of eligibility for tuition exem p­ t i o n II veterans. f o r W o r l d W a r t h e d i f f e r e n t P re s n a l a lso q u estio n ed what constitutes “ service,” in the arm ed forces, if a p er­ sonal request for discharge disqualifies a person for tui­ tion e x e m p t i o n and if a veteran m ust have been eligi­ ble for GI educational benefits to qualify for tuition exem p­ tion. The Education Code states t h a t p e r s o n s wh o w e r e citizens of Texas who enter the service and have resided in T e x a s f or 12 m o n t h s previously will be exempted from paying of tuition and other fees by the governing board of each university. This includes all nurses, m em bers of the Women’s Army Aux­ iliary Corps, and all honorably discharged m em bers of the J.R.'s Coffee Shop 4811 Burnet Rd. W elcome Students FREE D R IN K w ith purchase of h am b u rg er Open 6 am • 453-1459 pre-law? pre-pare. Phone 4 7 2 -7 8 0 0 now for inform a hon on h o w to improve your score on the Feb. 7 LSAT. Our 24 hour prep course can give you the extra points ^ you need! LSAT ■review COURSE P a g e 6 F r id a y , J a n u a r y 16, 1976 THE DAILY TEXAN — Texan Staff Photo by Paul M. Lester Luminous Phantom An eerie incandescent apparition produced by Jester Center lamp fixtures floats through the dorm's vaulted halls. _________Mi ■■■■■■■I ..... n g=aagg= _ Three CRC Members Deny Charges Austin Citizens League Claims Conflict of Interest RENT TV Terrazas Library Serves Chicanos O t h e r f a c i l i t i e s i n ­ clude study carrels, reading tables, and a browsing area with lounge chairs. A multipurpose room seats 30 com fortably. The book capacity is 15,000 volumes. The library, at 1105 E. F irst St., is open IO a.m . to 9 p.m. Monday through Thursday, IO a m. to 6 p.m. Friday, IO a m. to 2 p.m. Saturday. The Terrazas Branch is the lith branch library within the A u s t i n P u b l i c L i b r a r y System. It is the second built u n d e r t he Aus t i n P u b l i c Library Development Plan, presented to the City Council in 1972, a n d p a s s e d a September 9, 1972 bond elec­ in tion. Since its opening w j / v i i i i i f , u n i v v v a v s i i . IV O February, the library has c ir­ c u l a t e d 38,000 b o o k s, an average of 3,000 per week. The branch is nam ed in honor of the m em ory of Henry S. Terrazas, who grew up and lived near the library site. The m em bers of the T erraz as family were guests a t the of­ ficial dedication Thursday. in Also participating the cerem ony w ere J a m e s W. the H arm an, presid en t of L ib ra ry C om m ission, and David E arl Holt, D irector of the Austin Public Library. The City Council attended, and Mayor Pro Tem Jim m y Snell and Councilman John t h e T r e v i n o a d d r e s s e d audience expressing th eir pride in the new b ra n c h ’s success. ^ — By CAROL THOMAS Texan Staff Writer R epresenting and assisting the s u rro u n d in g M exican- A m erican com m unity, the Henry S. T erra z a s Branch Library contains the largest collection of Spanish books, m agazines, newspapers and phonographs in the Austin Public L ibrary System. T hroughout Lana Wong, who heads the six-person, bilingual staff, es­ tim ates that 80 per cent of the library’s patrons are Mexican Americans, and the library tries to reflect that heritage. its 11-month operation — in close coopera­ the neighborhood tion with sc h o o ls — l i b r a r y ’s program s have emphasized the needs of children. While activities such as story times, quiet recreational games and f i l m s t o w a r d g e a r e d youngsters will continue, the staff hopes to create more op­ portunities for adult involve­ ment also. th e “ IF ADULTS don’t support the library and use it, we won’t succeed here,” Wong said. The University Extension Division sponsors Adult Basic Education ABE - classes that deal with teaching English to non-native speakers. Since the instruction is individualized, the enthusiastic demand for the courses is exceeding the teaching supply, Wong said. She pointed out that one “ i n r o a d t o s u c c e s s f u l t he adul t c o m ­ r e a c h i n g m u n i t y ’’ the advanced is class, taught by Ginny Nyer. At this level, students study e d u c a t i o n c o n s u m e r p r o b l e m s , jo b applications, rental forms and banking. i ncl udi ng By MICHAEL LIVINGSTON Texan Staff Writer Three m em bers of Austin’s City C harter Revision Com­ m ittee denied Thursday that they were using their com ­ m ittee positions in violation of the City Charter. to seek The Austin Citizens League has called on M ayor Jeff Friedm an and m em bers of the City C ouncil the resignation of Steve Gutow, staff coordinator and has ask­ ed that Charles Miles, com ­ m ittee chairm an, and com­ m ittee m em ber Ed Wendler s t e p d o w n t h e i r positions. f r o m In a letter dated Wednes­ day, the ACL stated that the th ree men w ere acting in violation of Article 12, Section 4, of the City C harter. The a r­ ticle states that no elected of- fical may use his office to in­ fluence directly or indirectly any other officer or employe of the city in favor of any par­ ticular person or candidate for office in the city. The le tte r w as signed by ACL President Jay Johnson, J r., a fo rm er candidate for City Council. THE ACL charged Gutow m aintains “ a high political profile by his involvement in n u m e r o u s p o l i t i c a l o r ­ ganizations and issues,” such as late drinking hours referendum and a m eeting in which the dism issal of City Manager Dan Davidson was discussed. the Gutow said the ACL’s ac­ cusations cam e as quite a sur­ prise to him. “ The article in question per­ tains specifically to candidate elections and not other issues. It is not even applicable in this case. “ Besides, I have tried to k e e p a l ow p r o f i l e u n ­ questionably as staff coor­ dinator and have been es­ pecially careful not to take any political liberties during working hours. Outside of that I feel I have as much right to voice my opinion as anyone does,” Gutow said. WENDLER, a candidate for county tax assessor said, “ In regard to myself I feel that when a city employe is on his job he should dedicate his tim e to that job; but in his own tim e and on his own hours he should be able to p a r­ ticipate in politics to any ex­ Shoe Shop l a r g e s e l e c t i o n o f C R A F T E D r L E A T H E R We ma k e a n d repair boots shoes belts leather goods B I L L F O L D S N O W A V A I L A B L E G R E A T V A R I E T Y O F Q U A L I T Y L E A T H E R A V A IL A B LE A T $1.00 PER FO O T A N D UP T O Y O T A D a ts u n V o lk s w a g o n V o lv o with this coupon Volkswagen Major Tune-Up $ 1 2 . 5 0 OHmr Good thru July H i t Capitol Saddlery 1614 L a v a c a A u s t i n T e x a s 478-9309 Engine Repair O v e n t a i E n g in e Brakes 1003 Sagebrush, 836-3 Electric CLASSICAL BUDGET SALE M u* U IV.vkkN t> .IW h U n u m . ' J f | IJ 11 I ! ‘ ’ J A TTprjjinH^ ' A ll B u d g e ts 2.29 F e a tu rin g th e L o n d o n S te re o T r e a s u r y S e rie s. Ava/m l n j ll m r o u E HC r b a h o e rzmrrrzwrs^M sis Friday & S atu rd ay ONLY Jan. 16 6 17 Mayor, Two on Council, Urge Disbanding Board _ _____ - By ROSALIND JACKLER Texan Staff Writer — To coordinate city growth better, two city council m em bers and Mayor Jeff Friedm an favor elim inating the Zoning Board of Adjust­ m ent and having the Planning Commission hear zoning variance appeals. “ The is is a very progressive step,” F ried­ m an said. “ The zoning board has never taken an over-all view of city planning.” The com­ mission will have tighter control and will be able to see how a change will “ fit into neighborhood integrity,” Friedm an said. T here is a problem having zoning variances approved by the board and not with the Plan­ ning Commission, Linda Cangelosi, Coun­ cilwoman Em m a Lou Linn’s aide, said. “ The board of adjustm ent has been very liberal in granting variances. (The board) has granted alm ost every variance. I don’t know if the Planning Commission would have granted them ,” Cangelosi said. C ouncilwom an B etty H im m elblau also favors the change but was unavailable for comment. The board hears appeals from the Building Inspection D epartm ent for exceptions to city mi___ inn! zoning ordinances. These variances include accessory parking areas and setbacks (the distance a com m ercial building is set back from the stree t). It is a legal way around zon­ ing ordinances, Cangelosi said. No city body has authority over the ad ju st­ ment board’s decisions, and appeals m ust go through state district court. “ I haven’t really looked into it, C.W. Hetherly, Planning Commission chairm an, said. “ We have some problems w ith (the zon­ ing board). It causes some problem s w ith the Planning Commission. I agree it ought to be under the Planning Com mission.” Approval may take longer to go through the commission than the zoning board, H etherly added. Councilwoman M argret Hofmann agrees that the council should look at disbanding the board of adjustm ent. “ The appeal process will be w herever council wants it,” Lonnie Davis, director of the Building Inspection D epartm ent, said. Davis said the tim e elem ent for variance ap­ proval would probably be the sam e w herever the appeals are handled. “ I ’m interested that the zoning ordinance is enforced,’ Davis said. tent he w ants.” Miles, who is running for c o u n t y c o m m i s s i o n of Precinct I, said, “ I have done nothing illegal, nothing in violation of the city charter and have no in ten tio n of resigning my position on the committee. “ We have all put in a lot of tim e and work on this ch arter and feel we are doing a good job. I plan to see it through,” Miles said. Friedm an said he had not seen the letter yet but had heard about it. “ Any city employe after hours should be free to voice his opinion without fear of th e City c e n so rsh ip f r om Council o r anyone e l s e ,” Friedm an said. Register N ow For Adult Pottery Classes at Westbank Pottery First Session Jon. 20-Feb. 19 Second Session March 2-Apnl I For More Information Call 4 7 6 - 3 1 3 7 *30 PER SEMESTER RENT IT...THEN IF YOU UKE IT YO U C A N RENT— BUY IT COLOR TV 4 MONTHS FOR $75 Rent Calculators, electric typewriters, stereo r e c o r d e r s , a d d e r s , s y s t e m s , refrigerators, telephone answerers. Rent by the week, month or semester. t a p e WE SERVICE TV's B E R K m n n s the stereo store 2 2 3 4 G U A D A L U P E • 4 7 6 - 3 5 2 5 5 1 3 4 B U R N E T RO AD • 4 5 4 - 6 7 31 What g „ a check If you cant cash it? Like at three Saturday morning. Most checking accounts won t do you much good then. Well, if you’re banking with Texas Bank, you can cash a check twenty-four hours a day, six days a week. And wit i real people, too. At WINDOW 624. WINDOW 624 offers a host of other services too. Like paying your water and light bill, making deposits and withdrawals, buying travelers checks, opening new accounts, and paying on loans. In tact, every banking service except making loans. , , ,.,IVTnnw Come do business at Texas State Bank s WINDOW 624. ■ V r e c o r d s h o p 2268 GUADALUPE Friday, January 16, 1976 TH E DAILY TEX A N Page 7 TEXASiBANK Northwest Corner Congress at Ninth / Window 624 Drive-Thru Bank, Ninth and Colorado Like we say, we Vc ready to do banking. Anytime you are # M em ber F.D.I.C. Classes by Mail Spice Up Routine By ROBERT ARMOUR Texan Staff Writer Those disenchanted with climbing over dozens of people to get to a seat and lengthy lectures apparently designed for insomniacs might find a University cor­ respondence course to their liking. Students obtaining permission from the dean of their college may register for cor­ respondence courses offered through the University Extension Teaching and Field Service Bureau. The cost is high, $20 per semester hour, but more than IOO upper and lower division courses from six University colleges and one school are available. Business m ajors who find the stairs of the Business-Economics Building too steep to face early in the day might post­ pone their on-campus excursions until the afternoon and spend the morning wrestl­ ing with Accounting 311 in the safety of their own room. Scholars interested in a little Plato after hours could facilitate their pursuit of the classics at their leisure by selecting Greek 506. Most correspondence courses available carry undergraduate credit at the Univer­ sity. Persons hoping to complete their education via the post office will be disap­ pointed to learn that no more than 30 per cent of hours required for a degree may be com pleted by correspondence. The College of Fine Arts allows a maximum of IO per cent. There are no entrance requirements; however, students on disciplinary suspen­ sion from the University are not eligible. Students forced to withdraw from the University for academic reasons may enroll. Anyone interested in correspondence study may visit room 203 at the Extension B uilding, M artin L u th e r King J r . Boulevard at IH 35. House Committee To Study Public Employe Bargaining Public employe collective bargaining will be studied by a recently appointed subcom­ mittee of the Texas House Intergovernmental Affairs Committee. According The subcommittee, formed at request of House Speaker Bill Clayton, will conduct public hearings in several parts of the state. to George Works, Clayton's press secretary, there is a good possibility the subcommittee will hold a hearing in Austin, “ given the num ber of public employes here.” The subcommittee, to be chaired by Rep. Kay Bailey of Houston, will examine “ the potential of and advisability of” collective bargaining, particularly in relation to local Teaching Award governments. Clayton cited recent events in New York, “coupled with public employe problems in other areas” as motivating factors behind the subcommittee's formation. “ We need to know collective bargaining’s effects on local government operations, economic ramifications and suggestions for legislation, if any, that might be needed,” Clayton said. Members of the subcommittee include Representatives Joe Allen of Baytown, Al Korioth of Dallas, E. L. Short of Tahoka, Ruben Torres of Brownsville and Doyle Willis of Fort Worth. Nominations Open hum anities, will serve as chairman. Faculty members include Associate Profs. Joseph Knip­ pa of English and H ubert of G e r m a n i c H e i n e n languages and Asst. Profs. Dina S herzer of F rench- Italian and Yolanda Sole of Spanish-Portuguese. Any stu d e n t or faculty member at the University may submit a nomination. F o rm s a re a v a ila b le a t departm ental offices. The award will be presented at the humanities spring convoca­ tion in Mav. Nominations for the 1975-76 Harry H. Ransom Award for Teaching Excellence are be­ ing accepted until Feb 20. The annual award provides a $1,500 stipend for a faculty member selected from the College of Humanities. The selection committee, appointed by H um anities Dean Stanley Werbow, con­ sists of four faculty members of the college and three stu- d e n t m e m b e r s of t he Humanities Council. Carter Wheelock, associate dean of WHO NEEDS A GOOD HAIRCUT? YOU DO. Good Haircuts B y Appointm ent 4 7 8 -6 7 6 4 2408 3 Z I R S an Gabriel I f t C O R N ER You are invited to the GRAND RE-OPENING of PINK FLAMINGOS n o w nesting at 2405 Nueces Come by Saturday for free beer and bargains M on.-Sat. 11:0 0 - 6:00 N e w phone no. 4 7 2 -2 7 6 5 1 5% off clothing with this coupon G o o d Jan. 17 only in F R ID A Y 7, 9, a n d 1 1 p.m. Film: B L A Z IN G SADDLES. M <1 Brooks parodies the th is recent co m e d y w e ste rn classic. Stars C ie avon Uttle, G ene W ilder a n d M a d e lin e K ah n . Friday a n d Saturday in Jester Auditorium . A dm ission : $1 for UT ID holders; $1.50 for others. Sponsored b y the Theatre Committee. 9 p.m. to 2 a.m. M A R C IA BALL & THE M IS E R Y BRO THERS. M arcia Ball, form erly of Freda & the Firedogs, will perform her o w n version of Austin m usic in the Texas Tavern. Adm ission: $.50 for UT ID holders, $1.00 for guests. Sponsored by M u sical Events Committee. s a t u r d a y 9 p.m. to 2 a.m. M A R C IA BALL & THE M IS E R Y BRO TH ERS. See Friday. In the Texas Tavern. A d ­ m ission: $.50 for UT ID holders, $1.00 for guests. Sponsored by the M u sical Events Com m ittee. S U N D A Y 7 a n d 9 p.m. Film: E A SY RIDER. Dennis Hopper s rebellious film of the 1960s w ith Peter Fonda an d Jack Nicholson. Jester Auditorium . Adm ission: $1 .OO for UT ID holders, $1.50 for m em bers. Sponsored by the Theatre Com m ittee. 8 p.m. to midnight. " O P E N M IK E " in The J©xas Tavern. This program for non-professional m usicians in the University area w ill replace our au d itio n s by g iv in g each act 30 m inutes of p lay in g time. S p o n ­ sored by the M u sica l Events Com m ittee. P a g e 8 F r i d a y , J a n u a r y 16, 1976 T H E D A IL Y T E X A N U.S. Student Literacy Declines Schools Fail To Teach Basic English Skills, Surveys Say By DAVID MONEY and URSULA WEIGOLD Texan Staff Writers " W h y c a n ' t t h e English learn to set a good example for people whose English is painful to your ear8? The Scots and the Irish leave you close to tears. There even are places where English h a s c o m p l e t e l y d i s - appeared. In A m erica, they haven't used it for years? " — “My Fair Lady” Nationwide surveys have revealed recently upsetting statistics concerning literacy among young people in the United States. Figures show that basic writing ability is regressing on all levels of the educational system. Newsweek Magazine (Dec. 8 1975) reports that studies done by the College Entrance E x a m in a tio n B o a rd , the Department of Health, Educa­ tion, and Welfare, and the N a tio n a l A sse ssm e n t of Educational Progress all in­ t h e U. S. d i c a t e is not educational system adequately teaching basic English skills. t h a t Problems faced by most students include: no mastery of basic writing mechanics; d e fic ie n c ie s in sp e llin g , vocabulary and syntax and an increase in run-on sentences, awkwardness, and incoherent paragraphs. THE UNIVERSITY is no exception. Opinions varied as to the cause of this dilemma. One English professor feels that the fault lies specifically with the instructors. When asked about the pop­ ular contention that the decay of the written word is a direct result of a compromising e d u c a tio n a l sy ste m , Dr. J a m e s H. Sledd re p lie d , “That’s a lot of university '. . . M o s f E n g lis h p ro fe sso rs h e re w o u ld rather die t h a n t e a c h E n g l i s h c o m ­ position/ professors’ crap. Of course they’re going to blame anyone them selves. The high but schools of this country model themselves after colleges, and most English professors here would rather die than teach English composition.” He feels that the English faculty just wants to be left alone to do research and as lit­ tle teaching as possible. To them, undergraduate teaching is a bore, and “ expecting these professors to enjoy teaching is like asking the to stop blowing.” He wind added that each professor wants to teach only his own specialty in literature. According to Jess Airaudi, veteran instructor of English 306, too much emphasis is placed on literature as op­ posed to mechanics in begin­ ning college level English courses. “ LANGUAGE IS the main tool of thought, so students usually don’t even have the basic tools needed to plunge into lite r a tu r e .” Airaudi views learning to write as a pretty painful process. As in any discipline, one must con­ stantly practice to m aster it finally, he said. The language of most in­ coming freshmen is very im­ p recise, c h a ra c te riz e d by frequent “ You knows” and “ Uhs,” he said. Sledd feels that teenagers today have no function. “They no longer work around the house or on the farm or sup­ port themselves at an early age. Their only purpose is to be teenagers They have their own lingo. Suddenly they have to get their thoughts straight and use logic.” The transformation from high school to college English courses to them seems like “ radical surgery,” as Airaudi puts it. They resent being told they are wrong and are not in­ terested in learning “proper” writing skills. S T U D E N T S MUS T be taught to gather and logically organize their thoughts to ex­ press themselves on paper, professors say. One professor rep o rts that even honors students, who are supposed to be exceptionally gifted, have horrible problems putting their thoughts on paper. Many critics argue that in today’s society there is really no reason to learn to write standard English. But, as es­ sayist George Orwell wrote, “writing coherently is syn­ t h i n k i n g t o o n y m o u s coherently.” Thus, learning to write is learning to think. Also, writing is an intricate p a rt of all facets of the business and political world. Em ployers complain even college graduates often can ’t spell and punctuate. This is one reason the journalism department has begun requir­ ing a spelling, punctuation and gram m ar test as a p re re ­ quisite for becoming a jour­ nalism major. Another reason is simply that enrollment is o u t r u n n i n g t h e departmental budget and the job m arket. b o t h What can be done to im ­ prove the statistics? Norris Davis, chairman of the jour­ nalism d e p a rtm e n t, feels what is needed is discipline and some good old-fashioned memorization. “Something as totally illogical as English spelling can only be learned one way — by memorizing it. THE HEBREW UNIVERSITY OF JERUSALEM 1976/77 PROGRAMS FOR AMERICAN STUDENTS ■ O N E Y E A R P R O G R A M - f o r college sophomores and juniors. ■ R E G U L A R S T U D IE S - tor college transfer students toward B A. and B.Sc. degrees. ■ G R A D U A T E S T U D IE S - Master’s. Doctoral and Visiting Graduate programs. • S U M M E R C O U R S E S - given in English. ^ tN W b % For A p p l ic a t io n a n d In f o r m a t i o n . w r /f * Office o f Academic Affairs. American Friends o f The Hebrew University. 11 East 69 St. New York. N. Y. 10021 (212) 4729813 i H b T I I "5 x * * ^ \ ' • M T X ° v ^ Name Address. EXTENSION EVENING AT THE UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS AT AUSTIN REGISTRATION 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. January 19, 20 6 to 8 p.m. January 12, 13, 14, 15 Joe C. Thompson Conference Center 24th and Red River (North of LBJ Library) CLASSES BEGIN JANUARY 26 and 27 (Final e xam s scheduled for M a y 3-6) COURSE OFFERINGS IN Accounting Am erican Studies A n throp ology Art Astronom y Biology Botany Business Com m unications Business Law Chem istry Classical Civilization Com puter Sciences Educational Psychology English Finance French G e o gra p h y G e rm a n G overnm ent Health Education History H om e Economics International Business Linguistics M a n a g e m e n t M a rk e tin g M ath e m atics M id dle Eastern Stu dies M usic Office Adm inistration (Shorthand) Philosophy Physics Psychology Real Estate Sociology Spanish Speech Statistics BULLETINS AND TENTATIVE SCHEDULES AVAILABLE AT R o o m 301, Extension Building, Martin Luther King, Jr. Blvd. and Sabine Street (Between Red River and IH 35) 471-7335 LATE R E G IS T R A T IO N ($5.00 penalty per course) 10:00 a.m . to 4 :0 0 p.m. Jan u ary 21, 22, 23, 26, 27 Thom pson Conference Center Students w h o attend The University of Texas at Austin m a y not register in Extension Even­ in g C lasses w ithout signed ap pro val of their dean OTHER OFFERINGS BY THE EXTENSION TEACHING AND FIELD SERVICE BUREAU Correspondence Study Courses H igh school a n d college level. Call 4 7 1 -5 6 1 6 Courses by Newspaper C lass b e gin s Janu ary 18th. C a ll 4 71 -5 61 6 Typewriting Courses Beginning, intermediate, a n d advanced. C all 4 7 1 -7 3 3 5 Librarians Solve Mysteries and talks and orientations for new and not-so-new students. Blow regrets the fact that many students never attempt to use the library or are un­ aw are that any student, graduate or undergraduate, can use the Main Library. •‘ ‘E v e r y student should come and make himself ac­ quainted with the libraries on campus,” Blow said. Solving a whodunit can be “ quite an adventure,” she added. “ Sometimes it takes a lot of nitty-gritty work.” “ Sometimes it takes a lot of luck,” Hester added. “ And sometimes it’s a lot of dull, boring work. But that’s what we’re here for.” By C LA U D E PAG E Where does Ann Landers go when she has a problem? To a referen ce lib ra ria n . The librarian is the person to ask about anything from famous quotations to population statistics — it’s his business to know the answer. The lib r a r ia n s at the reference desk in the Main Library know their business — they answered almost 37,- 000 reference questions and referrals in the last academic year. “ Our job is to assist readers in the use of reference sources and the use of the library — any way we can,’’ Kathleen Blow, reference librarian, said. People walk in, call and write in wanting to know things like how to write a resume; who said “ Quick, the n ee d le ;” a Watson, c u r r e n t a r c h a e o lo g ic a l development. “ You never know what’s going to come up when you’re at the desk,” Blow said. “ We will help search any inquiries except those concerning law or medicine,” she added. The University’s resources are so extensive that people from all over the country and even from other countries use the service, Blow said. “ We have over 6,000 titles in the reference collection alone, and then, we have the entire University library to search from. Any book can become a reference book.” The librarians are available to help students use the library’s resources, like find­ ing research material for themes, in addition to just looking up things. I supplied a reference ques­ tion of my own: Why do out­ house doors have crescent moons? Librarian Goldia Hester found a magazine arti­ cle explaining the reason: when rustic homes first had outhouses, they had two — one with a sun on the door, for men, and a moon, the sign for women, on the other. Even­ tually nearby bushes became more convenient for the men, and their privy disappeared, leaving one outhouse with a crescent moon on the door. The reference library also educates students about the library and its uses, Blow said. Librarians give tours Elementary, m y dear ..._____ — Sketch by David Rose Exes Nam e N e w Editor Roy Vaughn, acting ex­ ecu tive d ire cto r of The U n iv e rsity Ex -Stu d en ts’ A sso ciatio n , announced Thursday the appointment of Sarah Jane English as editor of the Alcalde, the alumni magazine. During the last three years English served as associate director of communication for the association and assistant e d it o r o f the a lu m n i magazine. E n g lis h succeeds P a t Maguire, who has been named publications consultant to the UT San Antonio’s Institute of Texan Cultures. E n g l i s h ’ s jo u rn a lis m background includes a B J and MA in communications from the University. She is a member of Kappa Tau Alpha national honorary journalism in Com­ society, Women munication, Inc., and the International Association of Business Communicators. The Dallas native also has been a research consultant to writer and former Reader’s Digest editor Charles W. Ferguson. TYC Spokesman Says Budget Cut Not Crisis By J E F F HELTON Texan Staff Writer After a Texas Youth Council Board meeting Thursday, spokesman Steve Parrino said a recent financing holdback would not impose a crisis on the state’s juvenile probation programs. Gov. Dolph Briscoe an­ nounced Tuesday that the Tex­ as Youth Council ( T Y C ) would receive only half of its 1976 budget of $4 million for community service programs. “ We will just go with the programs which show the best chance of success,” Parrino said. T Y C programs consist l a r g e l y of c o m m u n i t y local assistance grants to The poisonous mushrooms known as Destroying Angel are fatal in more than half the known cases where they have been eaten by mistake. The first detective story, Ed g ar Allan P o e ’s “ The Murders in the Rue Morgue,” was first published in April, 1841, in Graham’s Magazine, Philadelphia. p r o b a t i o n j u v e n i l e departments to keep youths off state juven ile rolls, halfway houses for rein ­ troduction of youths into society, and regional offices for decentralization of T Y C ’s authority. TYC recently opened Travis House in Austin, a halfway house at 4100 Ave. D. This facility will be accepting youths from TYC ’s five train­ ing schools and from local Texas probation systems through a statewide reception center. Travis House is the first TYC halfway house. Pa ri ng in T Y C ’s plans because of the budget hold­ back will keep the number of halfway houses to two and the number of regional offices to In addition, TYC will one f i n a n c e 24 c o m m u n i t y assistance programs. STUDY AND TRAVEL IN MEXICO M O N T ER R EY TEC 29th Summer Session June 27 - August 6, 1976 • Accredited courses for graduate, college and high school students. • M A. Degree in the Spanish Language. • Mem ber of the Southern Association of C o lle ge s and Schools. • Cost: $650.00 for tuition, room, board, and cultural and social activities. • Trips at extra cost (optional) at mid-term recess. For illustrated catalogue write to: Programas Internacionales - Subdireccion Institute Tecnologico de Monterrey Sucursal de Correos " J " - Monterrey. N.L. M e xico campus ne i d s In brief Internship Filing Deadline Today ll I Students Students JlJ JL \ f I V JLlf JL A M * Ii ^1 O interested interested i n t e r n s h i p s in in s u m m e r in Washington must file for the C i v i l S e r v i c e S u m m e r Employment Exam by F ri­ day. Forms are available at the Lila B. Etter Alumni C e n t e r on San J a c i n t o Boulevard. ing graduate program in ing graduate program in motor control. The course, Sensorimotor Function of the Nervous System, is being taught by Dr. Larry Abraham i ncl ude b a s i c and w i l l neurophysiology and neuro­ psychology as applicable to human performance. Financial Aid Students receiving financial aid through the Office of Stu­ dent Financial Aid and who pre­ registered may pick up their financial aid check release in Bellmont Hall 302 Friday, M o n d a y and T u e s d a y . Students must present a copy of their paid or deferred preregistration bill and a photo identification to obtain their aid checks. Students who have had their preregistration bills deferred must pay them by T u e s d a y , or t h e i r preregistration and financial aid will be canceled. Courses Added The Ameri can Studies department is offering 13 new courses for spring not listed in the course schedule. Informa­ tion about these courses can be obtained by calling the American Studies office at 471-7277. The Department of Physical Education is offering a new course as part of its develop­ Center Relocates The Center for Mexican American Studies has moved to a new office in Speech Build ing 307. The phone numbers are 471-4557 and 471- 4558. RA Applicants Jester Center and Men s Residence Halls will hold an orientation session for anyone interested in a resident assis­ tant position in Jester Center or Men s Residence Halls at 7.30 p m. Tuesday in the se­ cond floor lounge of Jester Interested students West. must turn in applications, available at the Jester Center Business office, by 4:30 p.m. Thursday. A N N O U N C 8 M IN T S Rf ACX N G A N D STUDY SK IU S L A I I RASSI) w ill hold registration for its first session program s in Je ste r A332 from 9 a rn to 5 p m M W F and from 11 a rn. to 5 p m T T H Contact Jean Brashear at 471-3614 for details T I X A S U N IO N M U SICAL IV IN T S CO M M IT TR* will sponsor music by M a rcia B a ll and the M ise ry Brothers from 9 p m to 2 a rn F rid a y and Saturday in the Texas Tavern. Admission is 50 cents New designs for tire new brides. Wedding sets of striking beauty and classic good taste from our com prehensive collection. In 14 karat yellow gold with diamonds: A $350. B. $600. C. $475. In 14 karat white and yellow gold with diam onds: D. $450. Jewelers CS Since 1914 a r c ? B Master Charge • BankAmencard for U T ID holders, S I for all others T IX A S U N IO N MUSICAL I V i N T S C O M M IT T H w ill sponsor an 'O p e n M ik e " program from 8 p m. to midnight Sunday in the T exas T ave rn This p rog ram is fo r no n p ro fe ssio n al musicians in the U n iv e rs ity area Ea c h act will be g iven 30 minutes of playing time Adm ission is free M f fT IN O S M U S U M STUDCNT O R G A N IZ A T IO N will meet at 12:30 p m. in the U n ive rs ity " Y " for Frid ay prayer. F o r information call Suleiman Abbadi, 474-7832 TAUCTOR G IN IR A L S w ill meet at I p m. Sunday in Calhoun H all 422 to play Diplom acy and A valon-H ill board games YO U N G SOCIALIST ALLIANCE w ill meet at 12:30 p m . Saturday in Batts Hall 202 for th e ir reg ular meeting. Topics to be d iscussed are recent work a t re g istratio n , an upcoming forum on Angola and a discussion of T ro tsk y 's " T h e P e rm a n e n t Revolution" w i l l be s ta rte d All interested persons m ay atte n d COLLOQUIA A ST R O N O M Y D U A R T M IN T will conduct a co lloq uium by Dr. Joesph Duthie of the U n iv e rs ity of Rochester at 4 p .m . F r id a y in Robert Lee Moore H a l l 15.216B Duthie wil talk about " R ap id S te lla r Photometry." N ote the m e e tin g to discuss plans for 82- inch modernization and a lte rn a tive code layo u ts has been moved up to IO a.m . F r id a y ADVERTISEMENT "WHY DO THE HEATHEN RAGE? Psalm 2 and Acts 4:25 In the second Psalm God asks th is question, and th e n l l answers it. H e tells w h o the heathen a r e , w h y they rage, an d the consequences. W ebster says “ a h e a t h e n is one who does not believe in th e G o d of The B ib le . T h is definition fits in w ith what G o d says in this Psalm. T h e consequences are th a t God laughs at m an 's rebellion, speaks in H is wrath, holds them in d erisio n and vexes in H is so re displeasure— is n o t n early the w h o le earth and the in h a b ita n ts in a state of vex a­ tion and fe a r? “ T h o u shalt break th e m w ith a rod of iro n . T h o u shalt dash th em in pieces like a p o tte r's vessel!' T h in k o f the broken pieces o f the Jewish p e o p le scattered about o v e r the face of th e e a rth , the nation to w h o m this message first cam e! About six m illio n of them have b e e n broken and perish­ ed w ithin re c e n t years. Instead of ra g in g and railing at p o o r old H itle r it m ig h t be wise for us all to c o n s id e r how much o u r rage against G o d ’s L aw s may have been a cause, remembering what Christ said to P ila te : “ Thou c o u ld e s t have no power a t al! against m e, except it were given th e e fro m above." “ N o t one sparrow falls to the ground w it h o u t your H e av e n ly F a th e r.” “ T h e cu rse causeless shall n o t c o m e !" It is the dev ii in m en that eause th e m to rage against G o d ’s M oral L a w , H is T e n C om m andm ents! T h e devil, God an d m an’s enem y. T h is statement is based o n the experience o f T h e Apostle P e t e r whom Christ d e c la re d “ Blessed" because G od had g iven a re ve la tio n as to w h o m C h r is t was, but then in the context o f the same passage Jesu s said to Peter: “ Get th e e behind me S a ta n : th o u art an o ffe n se u n to Me: for th o u savorest not o f th e things that be of G o d , bu t those that be o f m en.” M at. 16:13-28. Peter was saved th ro u g h the interces­ sion of C h rist w h o a fte r telling him o f S a ta n 's desire to possess him said: “ I h av e prayed for thee T h e devil gained e n ­ trance into P e t e r because of his ig n o ra n c e and unbelief o f G od s ju d g m en t th at was to come u p o n C h ris t for the sins o f m ankind, th e ir substitute. Peter w as n o t seeking his o w n selfish ends w h e n he left all to fo llo w C h r is t. H e had gotten a vision of h im se lf and had said to H im : “ D e p a rt from me; fo r I am a sinful m a n , O L o r d ! " He was s e e k in g salvation, but e v e n then he was in great danger w hen th e d e v il got in him. (Today th e c h u r c h is lousy w ith th o se “ w ho savorest not o f the things o f G o d , but those that be o f m en ,” rejecting th e plain teaching an d tru th of I he B ib le th a t G o d s wrath fell o n Christ to a to n e fo r th e sins of all m a n k in d , provided they so accept H im , an d it is to be feared th a t th e y have no spiritu al kinship at all w ith P e te r. “ H e that despised Moses' law d ie d w ithout m e rc y u n d e r two or three w itnesses; of how m u c h sorer p u n ish m en t, suppose ye, shall h e be thought worthy o f, who hath tro d d en under foot the S o n o f God, and h a th counted the blood o f the covenant, w h e re w ith he was sa n c ­ tified, an u n h o ly th in g, and hath d o n e desp ite to the Spirit o f grace? F o r w e know H im that hath sa id . Vengeance belongeth unto me, I w ill recom pense, saith T h e L o r d . And again. T h e Lo rd shall ju d g e H is people. It is a fe a r f u l th in g to fall into t h e hands of th e L iv in g God for o u r G o d is a consuming fir e .” H ere is a suggestion to those w hose e y e s are open and a r e horrified at th e a w fu l apostasy in h ig h c h u r c h circles: if y o u are not in a po sition to make an “ o v e r t u r e " somewhere o r other, th en h asten and make a “ d e to u r” to your prayer clo set, shut the d o o r, and in secret lay the m a tt e r before your F a t h e r which sees in secret, and wait on T h e L o r d patiently. H e is m ore co n cern ed th an we are, and H e h a s m ade oath “ That t h e earth shall be fille d w ith the k now ledge o f the glory of God as the waters c o v e r th e sea. ) T he d evil also entered into a n o th e r o f Christ's disciples, held his g ro u n d , and finally c a rrie d h im o ff to perdition a traitor and su icid e ! H e got into Ju d a s because he was self- seeking, co ve to u s , a hog. a th ief s te a lin g from the m eager means of th e little “ splinter hand” o f C h r is t and His disciples. (H a v e you sto len something, w ith o u t repen tin g and m ak in g restitution to th e uttermost of y o u r a b ility , and yet passing yourself o ff as a C h ris tia n ?) The d e v il k n o w s he has a buddy, a friend and p a rtn e r in a covetous, h o g ish thief. That may a t - count for th e fact that the legion o f d e v ils about to be cast o u t of one poor m an prayed Christ to let th e m go into the herd o f hogs. B e w a re o f co vetin g that w h ic h is a n o th e r , for C h r is t gave the d e v ils permission to en te r th e hogs! However, t h e devils may h a v e been disappointed in those four-legged h o g s w hen they ra n w ild and drowned in th e sea. and seemed to s a y by th eir a c tio n “ we had rather be d e ad than red' devils! “ B L E S S E D I S T H E M A N ( W H O S E ) D E L I G H T IS IN T H E L A W O F T H E L O R D ; A N I) IN H I S L A W D O T H H E M E D I T A T E D A Y A N D N IG H T .” P s a lm 1:1 and 2. P.O. Box 405, Decatur, Ga. 30031 SPRING SALE LISTEN LEARN S i v mm & & •• 901.... 501.... 301.... EACH $299 $168 $ 96 EACH EACH FREE PAIR OF BOSE T- SHIRTS WITH EACH PAIR OF SPEAKERS SOLD U.S.A.: e/e High Fidelity — “The Bose 901 speaker system delivers the most natural stereo sound, creating the illusion of being in a con­ cert hall, with a uniformity of frequency re­ sponse and freedom from distortion that is unbelievable... It is our opinion that this is the speaker system to own, regardless of price, if one wants the ultimate in listening pleasure.” M O DEL 301 NOW IN STOCK The finest stereo receiver the world has ever known. P IO N E E R POW ER VE R SA T ILIT Y P E R F O R M A N C E r B O SE 901 S E R IE S ll SX-939 REG. $500 SALE*495OO II \» 8 a 0 4 4 4 1 4$ 0 * SX-838 REG. $600 $395°° SALE COMPLETE SERVICE FACILITIES FOR ALL PIONEER C11PER SPRING SPECIALS T e x a s I n s t r u m e n t s I N C O R P O R AT E D Texas Instruments slide rule calculator SR-51A Texas Instruments slide rule calcubtor SR-50A B O SE 501 SX-737 REG.$400 :*36000 SALE >**<■> J . SX-636 REG. $350 $ 2 9 5 ° ° SALE Texas Instruments electronic calculator with memory TV-2550 REG. $49.95 SALE *44” • TRIG AND LOG FUNCTIONS • MEMC..Y • 13 DIGIT READOUT • HYPERBOLICS • REGRESSIONS • ONE YEAR WARRANTY • TRIG AND LOG FUNCTIONS • MEMORY • 13 DIGIT READOUT • HYPERBOLICS • ONE YEAR WARRANTY LIVE MEMORY SYSTEM FLOATING DECIMAL PLUS 2 OR 4 PLACE DECIMAL % FOR TAXES PLUS, MINUS, MULTIPLY, DIVIDE ONE YEAR WARRANTY SALES • Cfi PIO N EER SERVICE KP-212 COMPACT CASSETTE WITH AUTO EJECT AND EAST FORW ARD . Past fo r w a r d . R e w in d . Automatic 4 Manual Elect . | C Amplifier REG. $94.95 95 NOW $74 ALL OTHER MODELS AVAILABLE KP-301 D O L B Y ' AUTO REVERSE C A SSETT E P IT H FM STEREO • Automatic Tape Tightener • Direction and Stereo Indicators • Tuning Volume Balance and Tone Controls • Dolby In/Out Switch • FM Stereo Mono Switch . F I T and I C front End • Ceramic I f Amplifier • Special Permalloy Head tor C hrom ium Dioxide Tape rf REG 'O V .V5 n c ^ I 2 3 95 2234 GUADALUPE 5134 BURNET RD. 476-3525 454-6731 KP-345 AUTO REVERSE CASSETTE • Automatic Reverse • Automatic Tape Tightener • Manual Direction Changer • Elect Button • Volume Tone and Balance Controls REG. $104.95 n o w *84” TP-7000 IM 0A SH ST R A C K WITH PRESET PUSH BUTTON A M /PM STEREO • AM FM/FM Stereo Track Indicators . Adjustable Shafts • Auto/Manual Track Change • FM Stereo/Mono Switch . • Ceram ic I F Amplifier I C Amplifier REG. $189.95 n o w $ 14995 COMPLETE SERVICE FACILITIES RENT PURCHASE AVAILABLE ON MOST PRODUCTS i a 107A T U R n A i i. v T F X AN P a a e 9 Stone-Age Stones Diver. Bob M .i.frell end W ayne Baldwin examine ..v .r a l m y.t.riou. donut-.haped boulder, .hey found off .he .cathern California coo... Th. boulder, a r. anchor. u ..d by ancien. A den .oiler.. T h . find .fir. . p e c u la t e about contact between pre-Columbian O riental w om en and the coart of Am enca. ------------ --- — UPI T e le p h o to O sw ald-CfA Tie Studied r p n n p n e d b e c a u s e C should be reopened because of new evidence th a t has been discovered since the W arren C o m m i s s i o n p u b l i s h e d i t s re p o rt «1976 N Y. T im e s News Service W ASHINGTON - S e n a te in v e stig a to rs a re try in g to un­ ta n g l e a p e rp le x in g c o in ­ c id en ce th a t links Lee H arvey O sw ald w ith a longtim e C en­ tra l Intelligence Agency ag en t w h o p u b l i s h e d a L a t i n A m e ric a n n e w s le tte r a s a “ c o v e r” for his in telligence w ork. T he fo rm e r agent, W illiam G eorge G audet, re ceiv ed a M exican to u rist p e rm it w ith a se ria l num ber ju st p receding one issued to Oswald on Sept. 17, 1963, about two m onths b e fo re the a ssassin atio n of P re s id e n t John F. K ennedy. In a telephone interv iew this w eek, G audet, who is living in r e t i r e m e n t in W a v e l a n d , M iss., said he knew O sw ald by sig h t a t the tim e, although he I j cannot re c a ll if Oswald was with him in th e M exican Con­ sulate in N ew O rleans. Asked if h e w as sent by the CIA to th e co n su late to keep tr a c k of O s w a ld , G a u d e t responded, “ I w as n ot.” The G a u d e t m a tte r is under s t u d y b y S e n . R i c h a r d Schw eiker, R -P a ., a m em ber of a tw o-m an subcom m ittee of the S enate S elect C om m ittee on In te llig e n c e , which is in­ v estigating relationship th e betw een th e W arren C om m is­ sion and th e CIA and F e d e ra l B ureau of Investigation The com m ission, headed by the la te C hief Ju stice E a rl t h a t W a r r e n , c o n c l u d e d O s w a l d a l o n e m u r d e r e d Kennedy on Nov. 22, 1963. S c h w e ik e r h a s sa id th e in v e stig a tio n a s s a s s in a tio n Angola To Begin Mercenary Hiring a i - SILV A P O R T O , A n g o la (U P I) - Pro-W est Angolan they le a d e rs said T hursday w ill begin larg e-scale re c ru it­ m e n t of m e r c e n a r i e s to co u n ter d ev astating losses a t the hands of Soviet-backed forces. T he lead ers said they would fro m a c c e p t m e r c e n a r i e s the U nited every w h ere but S t a t e s s o u r i n g to a v o id relatio n s betw een W ashington a n d th e a n ti - C o m m u n i s t m ovem ents. The recru itin g plan w as d is­ r o n n r t s o f a I ~ m i / i c lo se d am id r e p o r t s of a _ i se c re t cable fro m S e c re ta ry of S tate H enry K issin g e r say­ tw o U .S .- ing one of th e s u p p o r te d g r o u p s th e in Angolan civil w a r h a s collaps­ ed. T he cable, a c c o rd in g to the W ashington b u reau of Scripps- H o w a rd n e w s p a p e r s , s a id troops of the 2 0,000-m em b er w e s t e r n - b a c k e d N a ti o n a l F ro n t for the L ib e ra tio n of Angola a re fleeing for th eir lives into neighboring Z aire. the string shop 1716 Son Antonio 476-8421 Off 20% accessories C o m p lete q u alified guitar repair s e r v ic e Used in stru m en ts so ld on c o n s ig n m e n t strin g s an d on SPECIAL JANUARY SALE 3 0 % off list price on Martin and D 'Angelico strings W e're se llin g our sole for 15-25% off. And w e ll throw in the rest of the shoe, too You get the benefit of Roots recessed heel, fine C a n a d ia n leather and craftsmanship; comfort a n d design. Now availab le in selected styles & colors at 25% off. Get your feet together a n d c o m e sole se arch in g at Roots 2200 GUADALUPE * 2700 W. ANDERSON LANE the roots sale Labor Violence M e n Raid Factory tackers. The a tta c k w a s believed the re su lt of th e u se of m ulticraft union w orkers h ire d by a con­ tra c to r and belonging to a local of the A m e ric a n F ed era­ tion of Independent Unions, a group not a ffilia te d w ith the AFL-CIO. The c o n tra c to r, Payne & K eller, and th e union, which allows its m e m b e rs to per­ form a v a rie ty of construction tasks, w ere ta r g e ts Wednes­ day of sim ila r violence in the le ss than 150 Houston a re a m i l e s t h e w e s t . T h e Houston violence included 17 f i r e s c a u s i n g $1 m illio n dam age a t th e C h a rte r In ter­ national Oil Co. to The H ouston incident led to a federal c o u rt o rd e r directing m em b ers of o th e r construc­ tion unions n ot to in terfere w ith the independents. Police rin g e d th e p la n t T hursday with 1,000 o ffic e rs to prevent fu rth e r violence. H.P. WEDERSTRANDT, of Baton Rouge, business agent for the independent local, said other labor gro u p s w anted to destroy his union. “ I f s p a rt of a continuing cam paign by th e AFL-CIO to run our org an izatio n out of the s ta te ,” W e d e rstra n d t said. “ I f s obvious th a t there is a th e c o n n e c t i o n b e t w e e n Houston and L ak e C harles in­ c id e n ts b e c a u s e th e san16 com pany w as involved,” said H a r la n D u h o n , b u s in e s s m anager for th e L ake Charles local of In te rn a tio n a l B ro th erh o o d of E le c tric a l W orkers. th e Sheriff R eid said the Lake C harles a tta c k began when an earth-m oving m ach in e ripped through a g a te m inutes a fte r workm en re p o rte d to the site. The m achine ra m m e d a n e a r­ by tra ile r occupied by eight or nine m en, and gunm en on the m a c h in e a n d then opened fire. in c a rs Enjoy crepes, quiche, European steaks in our historic building and courtyard. Open l l a.m . to 12 p.m. daily. The Old Pecan st C a f e " OU Lost 6th Sr. J ^ L A K E C H A R L E S , L a . (U P I) — M ore than IOO m en w ith guns blazing raided a chem ical p la n t construction site T hu rsd ay in an ap p aren t spillover of union violence in Texas. One w orker was killed and four o th e rs wounded. W itnesses told au thorities the ra id e rs a ttack ed co n struc­ tion w o rk e rs a t the Ju p ite r C hem ical Co., firing pistols, rifles and shotguns, o v e rtu r­ n in g c a r s a n d d a m a g i n g tra ile rs. Jo e Hooper, 26, w as shot to d e a th inside a tra ile r. A nother w o rk er who w as injured said h e h e a r d H o o p e r s h o u t , s h o o t i n g m e ! “ T h e y ’r e T hey’re shooting m e ! ” “ T his is m u r d e r , ” P a rish Sheriff H enry R eid. te rrib le ; is s a id C a lc a s ie u th is REID SAID h ad not id e n tifie d in v e stig a to rs th e a t- College Names 'Sissy' Head ( U P I ) H O U S T O N ra n e e s “ S issy ” F arenthold, T exas L eg islature re fo rm lader during the 1960s who iter ra n for governor and nished second in the voting >r G eorge M cG overn’s 1972 inning m a te , Thursday said tie w as leaving Texas to be resid en t of a w om en’s lib eral rts college in New York. She will be the 13th p re sl­ e y and firs t woman to head he 500-student Wells College n A urora, N.Y. Her election vas announced by the college loard of tru ste e s. “ I DID NOT se e k th e tosition,” she said. It has >een a re la tiv e ly recent thing, w as asked to com e up in ear- y D ecem ber. “ I f s a h e a rt-w r e n c h in g hing to leave your own sta te . B ut t r e m e n d o u s challenge. It w as just tim e to Hove o n .” i f s a F aren th o ld , who has m ost recently been on the faculty of r e x a s S o u th ern U n iv e rsity School of Law, said the m ove into fulltim e college work did not m e a n an end to h e r political life. “ I see it all as one cloth m y se lf,” she said. ‘‘As I have said, I nev er program ed m y political life, and I have not program ed m y academ ic life. This is ju st one m ore exam ple of going from the political to the p riv a te sector. In m aking the announce- — UPI T e le p h o to Farenthold in New Y ork, W ells m e n t ch airm an and ac tin g board presid en t Ralph H. Poole J r ., said the school w as a ttra c te d by F a r e n th o ld ’s e x te n s iv e background in public a ffa irs. “ She is a splendid e x a m p le th e h u m a n e , e d u c a te d of w om an w ith the co u ra g e to a c t on h er convictions in the public a re n a ,” Poole said. FARENTHOLD, 49, se rv e d two te rm s as the only w om an in the T exas House fro m 1968 to 1972. She ran for g o v ern o r in 1972, finishing second in a th e s ix -c a n d id a te ra c e fo r D em ocratic nom ination. She w as the first w om an to be placed in nom ination for the vice-presidency, winning 400 the 1972 d elegate votes a t D em ocratic national conven­ tion. EARN CASH WEEKLY Blood Plasma Donors Needed Men & Women C A S H P A Y M EN T FOR D O N A T IO N Austin Blood Components, Inc. OP EN: M O N . & T H URS. 8 A M to 7 P M TUES. & FRI. 8 A M to 3 P M C L O S E D WED. - SAT. 409 W. 6th 477-3735 GIRLS GIRLS GIRLS C o m e to L i7 A b n e r's Am ateur Dance Contest $95 in Cash Prizes every Sunday night Contestants must enter by 10:30 p.m. and be 18 years of age ID Required 4412 N. Lamar 451-3285 or 453-9463 6TH ST. DELI Austin's O n ly N e w York K o s h e r S ty le Deli DAILY LUNCH SPECIALS Homemade Corned Beef Lox & Bagels Pastrami Blintzes Reubens Knockwurst Motza Ball Soup SUNDAY BRUNCH Orders to go 208 E. 6th St. M o n -T h u r* I l a m - 1 2 p m 10am - 2 p m Catering available 477-2859 Fri-Sat I la m -1 am Fat to Your H ea rt’s B J . Content! I *, M E X I C A N B U F F E T C o o k e d F R E S H C o n tin u a lly ! T a m a l e s . ChilesB e lie n o saG u a ca m o le Salad Chile t o n Q ueso • R e d C h,ie S t e * .G r e e n Chili Stew . S o u r C re am E n c h ila d a s • Greer. Ench iladas • Red E n c h i l a d a s • Tostados B e e f T a c o s e S p a n ish R ic e • Refried Be ans Red Taco Sauce • C h ile s Ja ia p e n o s • Relish T r a y . Spanish S a u ce • Sop a ip .lla s 4 Honey All You Can Eat * 4 O O $ 1 .09 PLUS DR IN K 4 TAX LUNCHEON SPECIALS‘ $129 Child’s Plate-Half Price 5800 B u rn e t R o a d • P h on e : 451-2296 LOOKING FOR NEW LIVING ACCOMMODATIONS? TRY US! W e w ill have a few select vacancies for m en end w om en for the 2 nd semester. January 76. • Private R o o m s A vaila b le • Su n d e ck • 5 D a y M a id Se rvice • H e ate d S w im m in g Pool * M e a l Contracts A v aM a b le a t M a d is o n H o u se D in in g R oom H U R R Y ! A P P L Y N O W ! DEXTER HOUSE A A rn * Housing Office 709 W. 22nd St. Page IO Friday, January 16, 1976 TH E DAILY T E X A N 478-9891 478-8914 a unique women’s boutique at Up and Down C o u gars Host UT ■HHSBHIHHHH I By BILL SULLIVAN Texan Staff Writer Nursing an 0 4 record and virtually eliminated from the Southwest Conference cham­ pionship race, the T exas Longhorns journey to Houston Satu rd ay to tak e on the Houston Cougars at Hofheinz Pavilion in a 7:30 p.m. tipoff. T h e U n i v e r s i t y o f Houston/Texas basketball game will be broadcast at 7:30 p.m. Saturday on KLBJ — AM 590. For the Cougars, coached by Guy Lewis, the first season of SWC competition has been a mixed bag, illustrated by the 2-2 record they will bring into the contest. In its first conference game, UH received a rude introduc­ tion to the ways of the SWC, absorbing a 9247 beating at the hands of Arkansas. After d e f e a t i n g R i ce , H ouston avenged the Razorback rout by overcom ing a 20-point deficit in the last five minutes to nip the Hogs by one. But the big surprise was yet “This is th eir first year in “This is their first year conference play,” he noteJ*- “They were used to playing 20 games a y ea r a t home, and winning m ost of them . Now they have to get used to play- in on the road. “ B esides,’’ he added, they weren’t the preseason pick to win the title, anyway. They were picked to finish about fourth, and I think th a t’s about right.” ADAMS POINTED to B ird­ song and M arrs as possible keys to the outcom e. “ M a rrs “ Birdsong is an outstanding plaver,” he noted. “ He played in the Pan Am gam es, and you’re no slouch if you can do , that. re a l good is a player, a g reat leap e r,” he added. “ H e’s a big key for them, and h e ’s awfully quick. If he plays well, Houston plays , well. to do, , “ What w e h av e A d a m s c o n c l u d e d , i s rebound, run and stop their penetration. If we can do that, and take c a re of our business at the other end, we can win. We haven’t been playing that badly, and we’re due for a win.” On the last count, at least, no one is likely to argue. Birdsong to come as Houston went up to Fort Worth Wednesday night and was ambushed by the lightly regarded TCU Horned Frogs, 88-70. FO R L E O N B L A C K ’S Longhorns, there have been fewer ups and downs. In fact, it has been almost all downs. But Black saw some en­ couraging signs in the wake of Wednesday’s 67-61 loss to Tex­ as Tech and is optimistic that his club is coming around. “I thought that was the best game w e’ve played in con­ ference,” he said. “We played well defensively and held them to a score where we had a good chance to win.” Particularly encouraging to is the play of his forw ards, Carl Black freshm en Belcher and Ovie Dotson. “ I ’ve been very pleased with so m e of our young people,” he noted. “Ovie and Carl have been playing real w ell.” Lewis “Their ups and downs seem to always come on the road. They never seem to be down at home. “ Also, they’ve com e up against teams having good nights,” he added “ Arkansas was hot and TCU probably played their best game of the year. They (the Frogs) had a super game against Houston.” HOUSTON WILL probably start Otis Birdsong and Cecile Rose as guards, David Marrs and Charles Thompson as forwards and Al Winder as the pivot. Texas, in turn, is ex­ pected to counter with John Moore and Dan Krueger as M arrs guards, Belcher and Dotson as forwards and Gary Goodner in the middle. A big concern for Texas is Houston’s over-all height ad­ vantage, a factor that is p ar­ tic u la rly a c u te a t g u ard . Moore, a t 6-1, and Krueger, at 5-11, will have to handle the 6- 4 Birdsong and 6-5 Rose. “ Those m atchups are a big problem ,” Black emphasized. “ We’re badly outsized, but we’ll have to rebound with them .” Asst. Coach Skip Adams, who scouted the Cougars, also had an opinion on Houston’s inconsistent play. THE RACKET SHOP in D o b ie M a ll B A C K T O S C H O O L SALE Jan. 12-23 • specializing in tennis, handball, racquetbai* • featuring m e n 's & w o m e n s clothing, shoes and accessories providing 1 day service on stringing • Store hours M -F 10-6 Sat 9-7 4 7 7 -8 8 7 1 Get more done time College is m ore than pulling all-nighters and sweating out exams. Or should be. But too often you're left with the books while your c lassm a te s are out enjoying themselves. We want to help you change that. G ive us 3V2 hours of your time, and we'll show you how to accelerate achievement in all areas. H ow ? FREE EXPLORATION SESSION Saturday -10:30 A M At the Texas Theater It costs nothing. And gives you the opportunity to find out just what D y n a M e tric s is all a b o u t a n d t a k e potshots at the m an who developed it before layingj down a penny. Through DynaMetrics 3 - The Catalyst. For a cost of $35.00, D y n a M e tric s procedures can increase productivity by showing you how to: • Reduce stress and relax instantly. • Renew your energy levels in only 20 minutes regardless of the pressure you may be under. • Recognize the seven key elements of success. • Read faster and remember more. lf after takin g the course, you don't think the results are what we promised, we ll refund your money. Pick up a registration blank at the Texas Theater before Saturday. Only 150 will be admitted. lf you decide to enroll, classes will begin J an u ary 19 and run from M o n d a y through F rid ay fro m 7:00 p.m. to 10:30 p.m. at C a m b rid ge Tower, 1801 Lavaca. lf you decide it's all a lot of bunk, we'll thank you for com ing and send you on your w ay without an y further sales job. Unconvinced? We expect you to be. After all, you'll probably need the afternoon to study. wuiM (tries F rid ay, J an u ary 16, 1976 T H E D A IL Y T E X A N P a g e l l H orns' Dan Krueger drives a g a in st Texas Tech. T exan S to tt Photo Rogers Rejects S M U Head Job T h e Da ily T ex a n sports entertainment features the coach was no dication longer c o n sid erin g SMU s offer. Davis denied Rogers may have been angered that news of SMU’s offer becam e public prem aturely. Women San Jacinto JC Humbles Texas, 61-48 Commenting on Houston’s erratic play, Black said, 's Basketball Steile and freshman Retha Swindell with 14 points each. San Jacinto lead 30-21 at the half and never trailed. Texas women’s basketball te a m w i l l s e e act ion in Houston at 7:00 p.m. Friday against Rice and with the University of Houston at 5:15 p.m. Saturday. The “ Mean G reen” from San Jacinto Junior College gave Texas wom en’s basket­ ball team its first loss of the n ew y e a r T h u r s d a y in Houston, 61-48. San Jacin to ’s K aren B allard and C heryl Dayton led the scoring for San Jacinto with 14 points each. San Jacinto shot a blazing 78 per cent from the floor, which accounted for the difference in the final score. San Jacinto also shot 73 per cent from the free throw line while Texas women had 53 per cent from the field and 57 per cent from the free throw line. Leading the scoring for Tex­ as w ere junior Cathy Self DALLAS (U P I) - San Jose State Coach D arryl Rogers announced Thursday he would not Uke a head coaching job offered him th is week by Southern M ethodist Universi- ty. Rogers, speaking from the NCAA’s 70th an n u al con­ in St. Louis, said ference simply: “ I have an obligation to San Jose that I m ust fulfill.” Rogers, who led San Jose SUte to a Pacific Athletic A ssociation ch am p io n sh ip last season with a 9-2 record, was offered the job as head coach to replace Dave Smith, who resigned last month un­ der pressure. SMU officials said as late as Wednesday they expected to announce R ogers hiring by the weekend. “ I can’t really explain why I ever becam e involved with SMU,” said Rogers, praised by SMU officials as a great coach and a gentleman. I knew I had this oligation. I know I have to fulfill it. “ I never even talked finan­ cial arrangem ents with SMU, but I know it would have been far m ore a t t r a c t i v e than anything a t San Jose State. But I m ust com plete what I set out to do. “ I ’m e m b a r r a s s e d fo r myself. I ’m em barrassed for any situation I put SMU in. R o g e rs h a s b een on a rebuilding program at San Jose that in three years has seen him com pile a 22-9-3 record. in E arlier the day, SMU Athletic D irector Dick Davis ta lk e d w ith said he h a d Rogers and was given no in­ SEAHORSE CAR WASH 1 A u to m atic 8 Self Service I OEMIG 1 2 0 6 W Koenig 454-3922 CHILI & New Bill of Fare - Specials . ALAM O BURGER w ith Chili (S a n ta A n a Special) I. CHIU BURGER (Se rv e d w ith Turns) I. THE WORKS (D a y tim e in Boy's Town w ith C heese) I. P A R A G A U O BURGER (N o Buns) Free Sam ple of Chili to Everyone! Y o w Favorite Beer Available GAME PARLOR FOOSBALL PLAYER'S PARADISE with PINBALL and POOL TABLES 725 W . 23rd N e x t to the Bucket 1600 L A V A C A dSO-8689 I 15 3 5 3 B U R N E T N L _ ^ y _4 % / ) S A / { K I ) A V ilh6 .4 9 ,*4.59 ,*5.99 O P E N I O A M TIL 9 P M JOHNNIE WALKER RED 8 * Proof Scotch W h iih y ..................................................................... ................................................................... 8 6 Proof Scotch W h it k y HARVEYS TEACHERS PASSPORT 8 6 Proof Scotch W h it k y ..................................................................... QUART 4 .9 9 8 6 Proof Scotch W h it k y ......................................... BO Proof Scotch W h it k y ......................................... WHITE TAVERN CUTTY SARK 3 .9 9 QUART ft GAL. 1 4 .9 9 8 6 Proof Scotch W h it k y ........................................ WALKERS VODKA ft GAL. 7 .1 9 SO Proof V o d k a ................................................... GORDONS GIN ft G A L 8 .6 9 8 6 Proof G in ................................................... 9 0 Proof S tra ig h t B o u rb o n W h is k e y ..................... OLD CROW EZRA BROOKS Decanter ft G A l. 9 0 Proof S tra ig h t B o u r b o n W h it k o y ................................................... KENTUCKY TAVERN 8 6 Proof S tra ig h t B o u rb o n W h it k o y ................................................ 8 0 Proof S t r a ir St B o u r b o n W h i t k o y .................................................... GLENMORE GEORGE DICKEL 8 6 Proof T o n n o tto o W h it k o y .............................................. ROYAL CANADIAN SO Proof C a n a d ia n W h it k y ........................................................ ANTIQUE 8 6 Proof S tra ig h t B o u r b o n W h ia k o y ................................................ BO P roof P ue rto R ica n R u m .......................................................... BACARDI RUM SOMBRERO TEQUILA SO Proof from M e x ic o ............................................................... RELSKA VODKA BO P roof V o d k a ................................................................ b u r n e t s g i n 8 6 P roof G in ............................................................ CASTILLO RUM BO P roof P ue rto R ico n R u m ................................... 8 .9 9 5th4 .2 9 ,*3 .9 9 ,*3 .1 9 ,*4.7 9 ,*3 .4 9 ,*3.5 9 ,*3.98 ,*3 .5 9 ,*2.99 ,*3.69 QUART 3 .9 9 12 C o n t .............................................. ........... PABST CANS FALSTAFF 12 PACK 2 .3 8 6 pACK 1.09 6 N R Bottle! ......................................................... LONE STAR CANS 6PA CK 1.19 6 N R Bottle! ......................................................... PEARL 6 N R B ottlat ......................................................... 6 PACK 1.19 Division Changes Discussed ST. LOUIS (U PI) - The NCAA Council Thursday call­ ed on the 70th annual NCAA to a p p r o v e c o n v e n ti o n reorganization of Division I football and prom ised support for a championship playoff in Division I-A. The opening day of the ses­ sion was spent on round-table discussions of the m ore than 200 proposals which will be put before the delegates in the next two days. Voting on the issues wTas to begin Friday morning. The council, a 16-member body elected by the conven­ tion. also called on delegates to work for g re ater control of le g a l c h a lle n g e s a g a in s t NCAA rules. J. Neils Thompson, faculty athletic representative of the Unviersity of Texas and a m em ber of the council, said th e re had been only one significant decision against the NCAA and the association had spent $351,511 for legal fees during last y e a r alone. the Thompson said the need for reorganization was dram atiz­ ed by the difference of views w ithin D ivision II of th e num ber of financial aid com ­ m itm en ts which should be perm itted in football. "There is a group which feels that approxim ately 15 m o re fin a n c ia l aid c o m ­ m itm ents than the present 45 allowed in Dvision II should be available.” he said "A goodly num ber of other Divi­ sion II m em bers believe the num ber should be in the low 40s.” NBA totter'' Afton*** Onrt**«r C*nnto CV viwon 5 4 I to 25 12 26 13 23 18 20 23 I MI 22 17 21 20 ta Act an 66? 56' *65 act 56* 512 500 ASt 4S9 Bcston Ph sae'Pf s Sulfate Ne** Yor* Was* ->5*0* C f t f a -ta Atlanta HO. S’O*- Ne** Orleans Mt*»*#e*> Cento-nnc# Owi*«op- I M ll 2‘ 21 15 la 2t " 27 I MI 2s ; 8 X 23 T 16 2' M 2t t k u t o e t • 6e*vrtv* A»c»f»c Dtv****" V -»*auk.ee Detroit ka-sasCt* m o m Dc ae- State le a -ie -os 4nge es Phoenix °o" a~C a* a-*a 9$ Cleve and : Sutta*c i2t Pt»oen * 1 : Ad 462 417 ase rn Ad 7 65 52* 523 432 35C Iv 4 a 58 12 J 16 Swimmers To Use Youth Longhorns Visit Beaumont, Houston By KEN GRAY Texan Staff Writer The Texas swim team expects smooth sailing this weekend when the Horns invade Houston and Beaumont for two dual m eets against Rice and Lam ar. So smooth, in fact, the m ajority of the team will be composed of freshmen. Texas battles Rice Friday, and at 2 p.m .Saturday the Longhorns tangle with L am ar in Beaumont. “ We’ll mainly be taking freshm en on this trip to fam iliarize the sw im m ers with the longer distances that they weren t ac­ customed to in high school,” Swimming Coach Pat P atterson said. "We should win both m eets pretty easily. L am ar has a decent program, though. I'd com pare them to a good sm all college team .” he said. P atterson didn t even bother to mention Rice, o r the Owl team , and apparently with good reason... L am ar walked on the Owls 77-30 earlier in the year. Patterson mentioned Lance Gordon. John McMahan. Richard Reeves. Jim m y Hughes, Duncan Hawthorn. David P atterson and Tiger Fell as the freshm en he intends to take this weekend "I would say we need to sprint a little better than we have and we need a little confidence.” P atterson said in reference to the Rookie Leads Open PHOENIX (U PI) - Roger Maltbie. professional golf’s 1975 rookie-of-the-vear from San Jose. Calif., shot a six- under-part 65 early in the day Thursday, then saw it stand up for a one-stroke lead over Lee Trevino and Rik M assengale in the opening round of the $200,000 Phoenix Open. The 24-year-old Maltbie won back-to-back tournam ents last year and finished with m ere than $80,000 to rank 23rd on the money list. It was one of rookie p e r fo r­ th e b e tte r m ances in a few vears SKI RUIDOSO • 3 Days of Skiing • Round-Trip Transportation • Lift Tickets all for only $ 1 5 9 per person ^ c *0 j Sleeper Buses leave Austin 9 p.m. each Thursday and return 5 a rn. on Monday. Trips now thru March 25 Contact your Travel Agent at J Rich Trove Wholesale Travel & Tours Longhorns weak spots "A super conference m eet would definitely boost our confidence. And t h a t s exactly what it would tak e for us to win the m e e t... a super output.” The conference meet will be held the first week in March, and at this point it doesn t look a s if Texas has too promising a Chainn U ie m a j o r i ^ o T t h e events. SMU has had much better tim es than we have As alw ays, SMU will definitely be the favorite again, though we do have a chance, P atterson said. We've had a good session of training so far. and everyone is looking forw ard to the dual m e e ts Of course the biggie is next the coach F riday night w ith Alabama, th a t ll be really good, S3The Alabam a meet will be in Gregory Gym pool, and the Longhorns should have m ore than th eir hands full a s Alabama is the num ber tw o ranked team in the nation. The w om en's team will also sw im against the Owls and L am ar with the men and wom en alternating events. All in all. the Horns should have a breeze in Houston, though things could get a bit m ore com plicated when they reach Beau­ m ont But don t bet on it f k . : ^** * i.1. •*•• Aal* Color TV $25 Mo. 4 mo*, for $75 $12 week CO(TYp°Ct S te re© FM 4>T S e m « * ,e r 5 * 6 WE GIVE YOU FREE VO DAY OPTION TO BUY J P A * T I SYSTEMS I t a p e RECORDERS ^3^ A M P S 1 Speakers Turn- $12 M o n th $7 W e e k 4 m ot. for $ 3 6 tab le s. ] J FEATURING THE LARGEST SELECTION OF BASIC AND ADVANCED CALCULATORS IN AUSTIN Electric Part. Typewriter Or with Carriage Return Adding Machines Telephone Answerer Manual Typewriters Electronic Calculators IEM Typewriters $ 6 .0 0 W K $ 7 .50 W K $ 7 .5 0 W K $ 9 .0 0 W K $ 5 .00 W K $ 4 OO W K $ 1 0 .0 0 W K 1 2 .5 0 M O 1 5 .0 0 M O 15 .0 0 M O 15 .0 0 M O 8 .0 0 M O 1 0 .0 0 M O 2 2 .5 0 M O B E R K m n n s the s t e r e o s t o r e Lr •>7 2 2 3 4 G U A D A L U P E • 4 7 6 - 3 5 2 5 5 1 3 4 B U R N E T ROAD • 4 54- 6 7 31 REUBEN'S Now No. I in Austin! Reg. 27.95 WOODEN WINE RACK Vt Price - Now 13.98 Perfect tit* tar your apt. or room ALL O T H E R WINE RACKS 25% OFF Stock it up D u ring our a fte r-in v e n to ry WINE SALE - N O W G O IN G ON! TRADER VIC'S HOT BUTTERED RUM BATTER 1.69 shi 3*69 TRADER VIC'S RUM Light or Dork Puerto Rican Run; from th* world's largest seller of Rum drinks Re-stock your bar with g re a t brand s from R e u b e n CHIVAS REGAL SCOTCH i?y r.»4 pr CUTTY SARK ab pc . Scotch OLD CROW Str. Abn. AO pr. ’■? gal GILBEY VO DKA Mpi -,.i ARTURO's TEQUILA to*. GORDONS GIN •* p. W.L. WELLER to pi i*. ,,.i 151 pr. R U M Carioca fun ai SCHWEPPS TONIC to., op..* BUDWEISER BEER ti*. ..iou FRAN ZIA C H A M P A G N E ^* IOO pf. Canadian Liqueur YUKON JACK 5th 5.99 8.99 sh 6.49 8.99 7.29 3.59 si* 3.69 11.99 7.39 1.49 1.45 1.59 Why pay m ar. cfi Iv . oui lo REUBENS E 8311 Research— About 4 bibs west of N. Lamar at Hwy 183 W & Research. 836-8311 S " • GAG GIFTS • ADULT HUMOR NOVELTIES T Hovering Hawk A tla n ta * Tom H e n d r o n (14) drivo* in for a layu p a g a in st C le ve lan d * Dick Snyder /I O) in the second quarter of their g a m e . A tlan ta w on the gam e , 98-91. —UPI Telephoto SKYLINE CLUB TONIGHT THE TEXAS SWING BOYS Coming Saturday BERT RIVERA and th* NIGHT RIDERS 836-9915 11304 N. Lomor s t a n d i n g s Areae* * Coma* p - aae pf* a a* Sosto* Go aer sta ’e at Houston Sea** e a* Washington °ort a-’d at Detroit Ne** v o - * a* N a -sa s Cit> Butts c at Chicago Ne** Or.eans a* NA «%a.*ee Soturaov t 5 d - 'e i Sea** e a* Sutta o Go Pe- 5ta*e a* a * a~*a sh o e - x a* C e*e ana Ne** Dr ea-s a* Houlton p * a ae 1 on a a* W a s* -{♦on Bo- cs*o~ a* C " capo D e n * e - Ne** Y o r k San A rto n iO k e n t u c k y In a larva S* L o u is V ir g in ia ABA Mf 29 24 22 21 2 1 19 22 5 32 I Ad 9 765 '2 66' ’ 6 579 ’ 8 538 19 525 *o3 135 TKvir**JOV t I m u M S a r A n *o n io 129 * ' J i r a 93 k e n t u c t * 123 S* L o . s 115 A-idoy » Oom*t Virgin,a at N e * v or*. Den*e* a* na ana LOS TACOS THIS SA T U R D A Y & S U N D A Y Reg. Beef Tacos N a c h o s I ------------------------------------- 2 5 * I 7 2 7 E. Riverside O n l y 4 4 7 - 7 2 5 6 BEVERAGE CITY ENFIELD CENTER 12th at Lamar “ GRAND OPENING” Fri. & Sat., Jan. 16 & 17 I $ $ $ SAVE ON $ $ $ S AUTO PARTS FOREIGN AND AMERICAN CARS S p e c i a l D i s c o u n t o n AM P a r t s for A m e r i c a n C a r s T u n e -u p s — P a rts — A lte rn a to rs — S ta rte rs G e n e rato rs — Filters — O ils — B ra k e s BE ER OLD MILWAUKEE TEXAS PRIDE FALSTAFF LONE STAR SCHLITZ case, warm, one-way case, uarm , one-way case, warm, one way case, warm, one-way case, warm, one-way 3.99 3.99 4.39 4.69 5.39 IN T ER N A T IO N A L C A R PARTS " I n the UT a r e a " 4 7 4 - 6 4 5 1 / S S ^ ' -vV ' ' * & WINES at every-day low prices — Too many to advertise! P E R R Y C H A S T A I N invites all his friends to com e see him at Beverage City \ X / / J ? ' / - a * «, j V & *v 3 0 2 5 G u a d a l u p e C OUPON TES A SONY” COOL IT THIS SEMESTER! w in the f i t n e s s b a t t l e at the N orthcross Ice Skating C enter Classes starting this week. ICE SKATING — it's the only w inter game in town. Perfect for Matches and Mixers! CALL 451-5103 A pplications now being taken for the N orth cross Ice Queen t curtest P age 12 Frida>\ J a n u a r y 16, 1976 T H E D A I L Y T E X A N SONY CASH PRICES COLOR T.V. KV 5000 ... ...... $346.25 KV 9200... ...... $350.00 KV 1203... ...... $315.00 KV 1214... ...... $325.00 KV 1511 ... ...... $370.00 KV 1520R ....... $420.00 KV 1711 ... ...... $417.00 KV 1723... ...... $430.00 KV 1733R ....... $485.00 KV 1910... ...... $458.00 KV 1920... ...... $475.00 KV 1930R ....... $546.95 B & W T.V. TV-520............ $129.95 TV-760............ $129.95 T V-770............$139.95 T V -960............$139.95 T V-115............$144.00 • mr ■ror Features . ~ screen -neasured d>ogooa y . * -.ft*O' Co o- Sysrerr one gun one tens • ' TC so g Tsrant-oo • One tv r a n coniTo *or Automatic r ne Tuning svvrcK Coior 6 Hue • Ne... ' o w fdeongle deflection pierce ‘- De s ~n pro* e co b*'^ All PRICES INCLUDE (N STORE AUTHORIZED SERVICE - I J E GI V E P H O I S Q I O T B E R KIT! R n S !!!* GumiuP! SI34 BURNET ROAD 454-6731 the s t e r e o s t o r e S teelers' Harris (I) and Bradshaw break for some golf. — UPI T e le p h o to Ticket Counterfeiters Arrested ~ , _____________________ 1ft tickets for $540. but the tickets were later d isc o v e r 18 tickets for $540, but the tickets w ere later discovered to be counterfeit when the printing ink smudged when rubbed. MIAMI (UPI) — Two Providence, R I , men were arrested early Thursday at a Miami Beach hotel trying to sell counterfeit tickets to the Super Bowl, police reported. Police said Pierre LaPointe, 47, and David Sakkinen. 32, both of whom have long arrest records - were caught with 38 tickets on them by two detectives at the Marco Polo Hotel in Miami Beach. Police said som e tickets the two men w e r e allegedly selling „ for $20 to $200 w ere for rows of seats that do not exist n Orange Bowl only goes up 26 rows, but some tickets w ere mark- ed for row 27 or h ig h er , “ I would say w e apparently c a u g h t it b e fo r e it got out o hand,” said Jim Kensil. executive d ir e c to r of th e N a tio n a l Foot­ ball League, after the arrests. A police spokesman said LaPointe has an arrest recor go g back to 1949, including an arrest for counterfeiting. Sakkinen has had 20 arrests, mostly for narcotics, since 196 The two men w ere charged with forgery and possession of '" ir a rle u l .d i n o f d ^ t l New Yo^k m a n W ed n esd ay purchased z a c h a r y s c o t t W a t r e c e n t e r I iliu m H e ilm a n 's . THE CHILDRENS HOUR RUNS THROUGH JA N . 31 TH U RS., FRI., SA T. 8:1 S , SUN. 2:1 S .RESERVATIONS 4 7 6 0 5 4 1 ---------------- — “ Best Film of the Year" French S cie r Jury Chairman ? Fiction & Horn Roman Pblanski ’ Festival "Phantom of the Paradise* is one of the very jew horror movies which is an instant classic, a new standard" Bill Warren Cmematantastique “Stylish, sophisticated and finely crafted. -JudithCrist N ew York Magazine ★ ★ ★ FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. (UPI) — Golden Richards has a problem a lot of American men would love to hav e- The Dallas Cowboys’ wide reciever was publicized as a sex symbol last year, and h e’s spending quite a bit of tim e trying to avoid the tag. His w ife isn’t too thrilled with the idea of gir s following him home, and he says he’s trying to get rid of the tag. “ I really don’t know how it all started,” he said before a prac­ tice session for Sunday’s Super Bowl gam e against the Pittsburgh Steelers. “ If I’m a sex symbol, then the men of the United States have nothing to worry about.” Richards is a 6-0, 183-pounder who becam e a hit with the Dallas fem ale population mainly because of a flowing mane-of blond hair which reached nearly shoulder length. He cut hair a bit but the im age continued. {JANUARY SPECIAL! Super A r b y ’ s *1.50 Offer good every Sunday and Monday in January. Now you can enjoy famous Arby's tender roast beef piled high on a giant 5 inch hot toasted bun with lettuce, tomatos, and our own special sauce at great savings. Regular $2.38 Value S a v e 8 8 * 4411 Sooth Lamar 1715 Guadalupe 5400 Burnet Road 892-2Q58 472-1582 451-3760 No Limit. No Coupon Necessary QBs P re p a re for Super Bowl X .„ n r n o A M _ By D A V E A N D E R SO N ®1976 N Y. Times MIAMI — For the first tim e in the Super Bowl decade, the rival quarterbacks have not only both been there before, but both also have been on a winner. Except for their ability as passers, that’s about where the sim ila rity ends. Terry Bradshaw is big and blond, a r u n n e r t h a n a r a t h e r scrambler, a Li’I Abner from Louisiana Tech, a first choice in the N a tio n a l F o o tb a ll League draft but doubted by s o m e a n d t e a m m a t e s followers of the Pittsburgh Steelers until he established his stature in the 16-6 victory over the Minnesota Vikings last year. His coach, Chuck Noll, lets him call the plays. Roger Staubach is lean with dark, wavy hair, a scram bler r a th e r than a r u n n e r , a Heisman Trophy winner from Navy, a lOth-round choice who then spent four seasons in ser­ vice but the Dallas Cowboys’ m ost popular player even before he guided their 24-3 the M iam i trium ph o v er n^inhinc fnur vears ago. His Dolphins four years ago. His coach, Tom Landry, sends in the plays. And today, awaiting Super Bowl X, they reflected on their role and on each other. Strangely, they have never m et each other. Following a Vietnam hitch, Staubach was stationed at Pensacola (Fla.) Naval Air S ta tio n that 1968 se a so n , Bradshaw’s junior year. “They (Staubach s service t e a m ) p la y ed S o u th w e s t Louisiana, and that had to be toyland for him ,” Bradshaw said. “ I saw the film of the gam e because we were going to play Southwest Louisiana next, we were in the sam e Gulf States Conference.” W ith o n ly 38 s e c o n d s rem aining, B radshaw ’s 21- yard touchdown pass to John Stallworth produced a 24-17 victory that kept the Steelers tie d w ith the C in c in n a ti Bengals for first place in their division. “ WE HAD TO WIN that ga m e,” Bradshaw recalled. the huddle I changed “ In John’s pass pattern. I told him, ‘Instead of a post-in, give m e a Q’ and we scored on it. Anytime you im provise and win. it helps to create even more respect from your team ­ m ates. I’m not a vocal leader. I don’t have tim e to be a cheerleader. You can t talk into a good gam e. yourself The only way to be a leader is to do a good job.” to do a good job.” Jack H am , the S te e le r linebacker, walked by. “ How’m I doing, H am ?” the quarterback asked. “Staubach,” said Ham dri­ ly, “ is a lot better.” tw o h o u r s BRADSHAW laughed. And l a t e r , a b o u t in the em pty Staubach sat Rum House bar of the Galt Ocean M ile H otel in F ort Lauderdale where the Cow­ boys are quartered. Staubach will drink an occasional beer. but that’s about all. H e’s the antithesis of Joe Namath, the quarterback who often visited this bar when the Jets w ere here eight years ago. And now Staubach was perched on a red chair next to a piano in front of an empty bandstand p h r a s e t h e w h e r e “ Slingerland” identified the group that would be playing there tonight. “ DOES IT still bother you the that Landry sends plays?” in Staubach “You sure can’t argue wTith s u c c e s s , sa id . “ And he feels that the trend is for coaches to call the plays. “ I was calling my own plays during the 1973 season until we lost to the Dolphins on Thanksgiving Day at a tim e when my mother was dying of cancer. The next day he took me aside and told me that he thought that if he called the plays, it Nvould make it easier Ion. AC Aud - .8:00 & 9:40 Friday, Saturday, Jan. 17................ .Bom Aud..................... 8:00 & 9:40 Sunday, Jan. 18................... Bam Aud............ .....7 : 0 0 & 8.45 Modern Cinema SI.25 Adm It sam, BHK C A M ■ AM B BRODERICK in CHARLES DURNING FRANK PtoXH • t a u ® ) 0 . MARIN BRIGMAN art M W N WANO ■ DEHM D, .IMT a L 4 TCL P R E S I D I O T H E A T R E S sending on me. H e's been sending on me. He s been them in ever since. Personally I would rather control the game. I think it’s important for a quarterback to call his own plays, but execution is more important. Our defense has been the key in our big games If the defense holds the other team , we ll even­ tually m ake things happen. But i t s hard to catch up.” “ AREN’T you,” somebody asked, “ L an d ry's type of quarterback?”_______________ / ’ - miarterback “ Not really,” he said. “ If he had a mold for a quarterback, it wouldn’t be m ine. H e’s not c r a z y a b o u t s c r a m b l i n g quarterbacks. I think I go against his grain but I ve always been that way with coaches. In baseball in high school, I used to steal hom e without a signal. “ But has Landry convinced you, or have you accepted it? “ I ’ve accep ted i t , ” R oger Staubach said with a slow sm ile. __________ abc) INTERSTATE '//tcafrcx V A R S I T Y 474-4351 2 4 0 0 G U A D A L U P E S T R E E T exclusive! Nobody could dream him up. His incredible bank robbery is all the more bizarre... because it’s true. I J mmmA L M N O 0 W E E K "S u p erio r Entertain­ ment! . . . alm ost too in ­ cred ib le to be a matter of record PA T TAGG A P Amusements Editor American-Statesman I I FEATURES 7:25-9:45 IS jpyp HELD OVER WOODY ALLEX DIANE KEATON “LOVE a i m ! DEATH r nl l :?xvx"x':*:*: rex*: P L U S “ EVERYTHING YOU ALWAYS WANTED TO KNOW ABOUT SEX' RUT W ERE AFRAID TO ASK” LOVE— 6 : 5 5 - 1 0 : 0 0 K S E X — 5 : 2 0 - 8 : 3 0 R IV E R S ID E 1930 RIVERSIDE • 44I56B9 m a r l o t t . ‘g & n d o J (pails Dustin Hoffman “Lenny” PLUS! LENNY — T A N G O — 5 : 2 0 - 9 : 4 0 7 : 2 5 E V E R Y F R I D A Y - U f J d - M I- l Y a JM f l B S BM B H B A N D S A T U R D A Y MIDNIGHTERS $1.25 A N AM ER IC AN D R EA M , PEACHES A N D C R E A M ... Elliott Gould Donald Sutherland M A S H V I L L A G E A 2700 ANDERSON • 451-8352 ALBERT FINNEY LAUREN BACALL MARTIN BALSAM INGRID BERGMAN JACQUELINE BISSET JEAN PIERRE CASSEL SEAN CONNERY JOHN GIELGUD WENDY HILLER ANTHONY PERKINS VANESSA REDGRAVE RACHEL ROBERTS RICHARD WIDMARK MICHAEL YORK AGATHA CHRISTirS MURDER ON THI ORIENT EXPRESS F E A T U R E S— 5 : 1 0 - 7 : 2 5 - 9 : 4 0 rn I I I I I I 4 < : Y a JACK R O LLIN S C H AR LES H JO FFE pwj^ I woody alien’s in “bananas” I F r id a y , J o n . 1 6 ...................................... 8 :0 0 & 9 :3 0 I S a t ., J o n . 1 7 ............................................... 8 :0 0 & 9 :3 0 ■ S u n ., J a n . 1 8 ............................................7 :0 0 & 8 :3 5 B u rd in e $ 1 .2 5 A u d . Diana Ross Mahogany Ai. IPG) FE A T U R E S— 6 : 0 0 - 8 : 0 0 - 1 0 :0 0 W here m ere you in ’62? TH E H O ST HIGHLY i A C C LA IM E R H O R R O R P H A N T A S Y OF OUR TIME I | | L A T E S H O W B u rd in e A u d . 1 1 :0 5 O n ly F rid a y & S a t. $ 1 .2 5 J a n . 16 & 1 7 S tu d e n t G o v 't PGI WEIHL MMR S8SKSUI «. . . . . . . . 7:00 & 8:45 9 Sunday, Jan. 1 8 . . . . . . . . •••Batts Aud M odern Cinema ▼ SI.25 ■ l h . M O T O N I PICTURE I WIIK SOM EIK! OIC J ID OFFEND ! EVERYONE! LATE SHOW Friday, Jan. 16................... Saturday, Jon. 17. AC ll ................Ba,t$ Au<1 11:15 0NlY ALAN BA I t h in k This Dicky, beautiful film Ins nwkened, become a giant, and kirned the movie norfil upside down. There it one reason lot thin phenomenon: W o * tow tho tong , , Mf iro Ookl»»a M i iff tad FiIb.iii^... M in i! R in o M t > Prudtnuon fiv e J B ROBERT MORSE JONATHAN WINTERS ANJANETTE COMER I Dim Alfin*.* M,lur Aff. Junf. f ahint Win GiftH Tifi Hunan MmudWMm « . L,hfr„f Ka*1> M< I Did xii Rotrrt Mart) fcrtwl WW • Urn* SUndfr i c. n i. i f.L 1J...IM M.retral letfhLM ROD STEIGER . - - ~.*n Tnt, so.ii.re - i«kfr»«i A .* | rw u f ii Tm) Rf-hintoni r u r a l . Join I ilk y H ukfll W tik, HEY KIDS fStWARN YOUR FRIENDS THS KMM WHO MAI* I -TOM jofllil » o G FEATURES— 6:00-7:40-9:20 IS ON THE LOOSE AND H E S WILD REDUCED PRICES TIL 6:00 MON.— FRI. ||||| • - J ___ I I I r* w I A I A T / ITI I , XT' n i l l V T ' l T V A XI D a n e HORIE SCREENS F R E E PARKING IN D O B IE GAR AG E D O B IE M A LL 4 7 7 1324 "...sensitive, explicit, and sensual." Michael Ventura, Austin Sun 1:00-2:20-3:65 5:30-7:05-8:40-10:15 FEATURES: $125 til 6:00 — $150 after MIDNIGHTERS: $1.25 (Fri. & Sat. $150) w R a d iffe re n t set o f jaws. [ £ | MIDNIGHTER C A N N E S I^7 I — W inne r o f the Special G r a n d Prix F A N T A S T IC P L A N E T 1:30-2:55 4:20-5:45-7:10 8:35-10:00 I T h is is th e w e e k e n d th e y d id n 't p la y g o lf. n m n irriiir * * 1 XTN VOIGHT BURT REYNOLDS MIDNIGHTER T R A N S * TEXAS DUARIUS Theatres IV "THE FOUR THEATRE SHOW CASE" ROY SCHEIDER ROBERT SHAW RICHARD DREYFUSS (F o r y o u r f u lle s t e n jo y m e n t — b e s u re to se e “ J A W S " fr o m th e b e g in n in g .) FEA. 3 20-6:40-10:00 $1.50 Iii 6 |>.m. KA. 1:55-500-0:20 ^^JJSosewapiiier t S I R S O I I ^ mtechwcolor ^ texas MASSACRE’ ‘ THE OTHER SIDE OF THE MOUNTAIN’ TH E O T H E R SIDE O F TH E M O U N T A IN Starring M A R IL Y N HA SS ETT as till Kinmont and BEAU BRIDGES as Dick Buek $1.50 tit 6 p.m. FEATURE TIMES 1:45-3:25-5:00-6:40-8:20-l 0:00 Naked Came The Stranger (X)- M ANN THEATRES _____ fox imTX b m AIRPORT BIVD J. 1454-2711— M g , 4 T H F U N W E E K TONIGHT AT 6:35-8:20-10:10 PM MATINEES SATURDAY AND SUNDAY OPEN 1:00 PM - FEATURES: 1:20-3:05-4:50 PM v T- y- rn ... si [George Segafe bird? he’s Sam Spade, Jr.... and his falcon’s worth a fortune! FISTFUL FLIGHT OF FORTUNE, FOUL-UPS, AND FOUL PLAY OUTRAGEOUS NEW COM EDY SPOOF! O J I IJM BIA P I I 11 J K I Presents a KA !, IAK PICTURE G I W 1 SI GAI .n i m B I A G K B IR l H o Ja r r ir * STEPHANE A I M A N - I ION! I 'JA N O E R and L f E PAULICK Screenplay by DAVID G ILE R * Story by DON M MANK 11 W IG/ anc GOR DO N C O IL E R • Music by JE R R Y E IEL DING I xecutive Producer Ii! ORGf GE GAI • Producers M IL,HAI 11 f VI f Ami I (JU I (JMBARDtJ Directed by DAVID GII fR | F ( f p *F f hiai cu iu anci S U G G E S T IO N S - ISOME MAIER A. WA' h 'J HE ',U” Ahll I OR •'RE f f I NAU R a g e 14 F r i d a y / J a n u a r y 16, 1976 TH E D A ILY T E X A N STARTS TODAY SHERLOCK HOLMES DOUBLE FEATURE WITH BASIL RATHBONE AND NIGEL BRUCE PEARL OF DEATH 6:00 & 8:40 AND SHERLOCK HOLMES FACES DEATH 7:20 & 10:00 SUNDAY MATINEES 12:40-3:20 2:00-4:40 $ 1.00 CHILDREN $1.50 ADULTS o fcM °LM T 472-5412 _________ 713_ffiNGRESS E T R A N S *T E X A S ■ 2^HincockDrWi^453MM 5TH AND FINAL WEEK OPEN 1:15 FEATURES 1:30-3:35-5:40 7:45-9:50 REDUCED PRICES TH 6:00 MON-SAT BEST ENTERTAINMENT VALUE HAPPY HOUR 8-9 PM AUSTIN'S ONLY TRUE LIVE ROCK A ROLL NIGHTCLUB OPEN 7 NITES HAPPY HOUR 8-9 PM TONITE UVE ROCK 'N ROLL BY GANGSTERS OPEN 8 TIU 2 AM 914 ISI. LAMAR 477-3783 M P T H t i t E A R T H G E N E R A L C I N E M A C O R P O R A T I O N | A L L C I N E M A ^ i v E R Y D A Y ’ T I L 1:30 f*.M .-$T 25] CAPITAL P LA ZA * I H 35 N O R T H 4 5 2 -7 6 4 6 FINAL BIG WEEK! They’re hoi. She’s the call SIH. L £ he’s the c o p . They both taKe their Jobs seriously, w \ Param ount P kjIu'W P m w R l BURT REYNOLDS CATHERINE DENEUVE IN HUSTUS^ b e n j o h n s o n PAUL WINFIELD EILEEN BRENNAN EDDIE ALBERT ..ERNEST BORGNINE -.JACK C A R T O ! - r-M U W M O - • ■ SitVI SU*GAN »« O.V CX H I A l [IAH H . ' - H . « - * • » — h i g h l a n d m a l l 43T-7326 • IH 3S AT KOENIG IN . 4TH BIG WEEKI SEEI TTODAYl An ARTHUR LEWIS - BAUM / DANTINE Production • co-stamng ARTHUR HILL- BO HOPKINS MAKO • and GIG YOUNG • Directed by SAM PECKINPAH • Screenplay by MARC NORMAN and STIRLING SILLIPHANT • From the novel by ROBERT ROSTAND • Produced by MARTIN BAUM and ARTHUR LEWIS Ptoducw Servces OY Double Oee S e w Com p a-, U f l l t B l J A r l l t t t S T R A N S ★ TE X A S 2224 Guadalupe St. — 477 1964 DOORS OPEN 1:45 $1.50 until 6:00 FEATURE TIMES 2:00-3:30-5:00 6:30-8:00-9:30 MORE! MOREI MORE! OF WHAT YOU UKE BEST... ONLY WE'VE MAOE IT WILDER. SEXIER,G R O O V IE R AND BOOBIER! " T h e G roo ve T u b e " m odo you la u g h . " The Boob T u be" w il excite yo u. Starring JOHN ALDERMAN SHARON KELLY LYLLAH TORENA LOIS LAINE and PAXTON QUIGLEY in EASTMAN COLOR a ^ /u \ P r o d u c t io n a n I I F r e l e a s e TV SOAP OPERAS GO WILD and gel an “X ” Rating Q U OTES F R O M A RECENT N U W A W J S f l l ARTICLE D I S C U S S I N G \ "THE N E W SEX T H E R A P Y ” "An increasing number of American couples are willing to confront sexual inadequacy''..."Am I OK?"...''Am I normal?".. "It's like learning to ride a bicycle'.. Once you get the hang of it you never forget.'' 1 2 : 3 0 2 : 5 0 5 : 1 0 7 : 3 0 9 : 5 0 George C. Scott A R O B ER T W ISE P R O D U C T IO N The Hindenburg By aotno m ir a c le , 62 people but wived. A ls o S M " i m Anne Bancroft is rn* Couni»$$ Co-Sunmg WILL 1AM A I H ER IO N HIGHLAND M ALL 491-7326 -JR 35 AT KOENIG IN . 4TH LAFF-FILLED WEEK! * If the Feds don’t stop them... If the Coast Guard doesn't catch them... If the Syndicate doesn’t get them.~ THEY’RE GOING TO MAKE - ; — —----- ENE MINNELIl BURT — ~FORTUNE! t 20lh CanturyJoH A STANLEY DQNEN FILM THERAPISTS AHD QUALIFIED COUNSELORS MAY ARRANGE SPECIAL AND PRIVATE SHOWINGS ADMITTED p rod u ce d by. d ire c te d b y MICHAEL GRUSKOFF STANLEY DOH □ O B I E I B S DOBIE M A H 4 77-1324 . STARTS WEDNESDAY! a t 1 :0 0 -3 :1 5 -5 :3 0 -7 :4 5 -1 0 :0 0 PG SORRY, N O PASSES dam in town Tavern Show Marcia Ball and the Misery Brothers will play their Austin music from 9 p.m. to midnight Friday and from 8:30 p.m. to I a.m. Saturday at the Texas Tavern. Admis­ sion is 50 cents for UT ID holders and $1 for guests. The show is sponsored by the Texas Union Musical Events Committee. Am ateur Hour “ Open Mike,” a program for nonprofessional musicians in the University area, will be from 8 p.m. to midnight Sunday and again Jan. 25, at the Texas Tavern. Each act will be given 30 minutes performing tim e; admission is free. Event is sponsored by the Musical Events Com­ mittee. Anim ation Festival "The International Animation Festival,” a 13-part series of the world’s best animated films, begins its se­ cond season at IO p.m. Saturday on KURN, channel 9. Award-winning short cartoons, examples of European animation (including Yugoslavia’s Zagreb Studios) and work by Terry Gilliam of Monty Python are among the films presented in the series. __ wmr t t By JOHN HENLEY Texan Staff Writer te le v is io n , P u b lic long known as "educational TV,” increasingly being con­ is s id e r e d fo r u s e th e traditional educational setting s c h o o l — classroom. t h e p u b lic in ‘‘T h e y o u n g s te r s a r e already turned on to TV as an entertainment medium,” but they can and will be shown in­ structional television (ITV) can teach them new things in exciting ways, Carol Haseloff, Pearce Junior High librarian, said. U sing a c lo s e d -c irc u it videotape recording/playback system, 15 receiver sets spac­ ed throughout the school and KLRN’s daytime program ­ ming, students get instruction in science, language arts, math and English composi­ tion. During this bicentennial y e a r, social stu d ie s and history are being heavily emphasized, Haseloff added. A videotape cam era gives the school capability to devise its own productions, she con­ tinued. Tapings at the school have included speech class plays, a teacher in-service in- s tr u c tio n on d is c ip lin e problem s, and a talk by Kaarlo Tuomi, an ex-KGB spy who is the relative of a Pearce speech instructor. The increased use of ITV in Austin schools resulted from a joint project during the 1974- Schools, TV Join in Teaching Effort ming schedules, and finally a RLRN instructional specialist demonstrated teaching methods and gave the teachers tips on creating a desirable learning at­ mosphere. ONE YEAR LATER, the number of teachers employ­ ing ITV in the classroom has increased threefold. Each month the teachers check the RLRN schedule and check off those programs they wish taped or piped from the library to the classroom. In 1975, 427 program s w ere played back. A superintendent’s com­ mittee and an advisory com­ mittee meet periodically to d e c id e on p r o g r a m i n g choices, and RLRN tries to fulfill their requests for time slots. All programing between 7:30 a.m. and 4:30 p.m. is designed for schools, and the station gives the schools what they want. Hurst characterized teacher response as "incredible.” PEARCE JUNIOR HIGH acquired its videocassette r e c o r d e r/p la y e r and TV monitor in 1973. At that time reception was supplied by an antenna on the library roof. Now alm ost all rooms at Pearce are equipped with c a b le TV; th e re a re 15 receivers, two in color. Other equipment includes an additional videocassette playback unit, a videotape camera and a library of 50 taped cassettes. The cam era and cable setup allows live broadcast to the classrooms. The ITV project is financed half by the state, and half by the Austin school district. M embers of one eighth grade social studies class, which had ju st viewed an episode of the "A m erican Heritage” series, commented that the ITV is not always ex­ citing. "A lot of times i f s bor­ ing — we like to see more ac­ tion than just speeches,” said one student. Others feel that in th e in s ta lla tio n cable classroom had robbed them of the change-of-scene refresh­ ment of library trips for view­ ing (p re v io u sly th e only receiver was located there). "We watch too much stuff for e d u c a tio n ,” c o m m e n te d another. GENERALLY, how ever, the class was in agreement that use of ITV was more in­ teresting than constant read­ ing and lectures. Haseloff said that not all teachers have accepted the new d e v ic e , c i t i n g i n ­ convenient classroom location and skepticism as reasons. She feels, however, that ITV will not becom e a m ere babysitter; neither will it take over from the teacher. " It’s a tool of the teacher,” she said; "like any tool it can be used well or misused.” T e xan S ta ff Photo by M a rlo n Taylor Students w atch new televised teaching program 75 school year among RLRN and three schools — Pearce, Austin High and Anderson Hiqh. At that time schools w e re b e g in n in g to buy videocassette recorders, but television broadcasting was seen as a tool for elementary education only, said Tim Hurst, utilization consultant in the instructional television department of RLRN. The Austin school board felt that small utilization in the upper levels did not warrant its cost, Hurst said. This situation gave birth to the 1974-75 Model Schools Plan. RLRN selected the to begin a th ree schools program of effective use of the medium in a way to which students had not been expos­ ed. R LR N g a v e t e a c h e r s program schedules and in- service training in the use of television as a classroom teaching tool. Suggestions in­ cluded maintaining an infor­ mal atmosphere capitalizing on stu d e n ts’ spontaneous reactions to what they see and t e a c h i n g c o o r d i n a t i o n between the abstractions of books and the concrete audio­ visual experience. A list of don’ts discouraged ipost-show testing cr insisting on silence during the show. Neither procedure is used at Pearce. involved The plan three phases: first, the teachers were instructed in equipment use; se­ cond, utilization plans were developed and teachers were in­ troduced to RLRN program­ films In review 'L u c k y Lei c iv ' — F u n n y b u t S c h i z o p h r e n i c They were, the audience im­ mediately recognizes, the no­ f o r e r u n n e r s of our ble present-day dope runners who transport Colombian instead of Johnnie Walker Red. But Claire is driven by a fear of “dyin' on third” in the money gam e, and so she relentlessly stim ulates her men to continue in a business they instinctively feel is too dangerous. AND HEREIN lies the most fundamental problem with the last- "Lucky L ady” : minute transformation of its conclusion from unhappy to happy resulted in the produc­ tion of a schizophrenic movie. "If you want to sail into this business serious, it could get Liza M innelli real serious,” Rippy warns Claire in response to her nag g i°g - Yet all the dark (and ob­ H o n l r ! o r! a O t _________I______ n t vious) foreshadowings of a tragic conclusion (“She’s go­ ing to drive us to our grave,” Walker remarks at one point) go all for naught. The ending was changed after all filming was completed, and the three unhappy s ta rs w ere sum ­ moned from activities around the world to shoot a new, hap­ py and rather hastily conceiv­ ed end. HACKMAN has insisted that the alterations, which eliminated Claire’s hysterical reaction to the deaths of her l o v e r s , m ay h a v e c o s t Minnelli an Academy Award, but director Stanley Donen film WOUl( the film would be decided t h o m ore su c c e ssfu l w ith o u t burdening the audience with bad vibes. Essentially,“ Lucky Lady” is a contemporary Depression film. Like its glossy 1930s counterparts, it seeks to pre­ sent only those facets of life which will soothe and enter­ tain an economically and spiritually depressed society. The "Lady’s ” humor is so rich, however, and the gags are so faithful to the tradition of great and innovative com­ edy, i m- its s t r u c t u r a l percetions are easily lost to the laughter. V t 'Gorilla Hospital' Austin Favorites Augie Meyers and the Western Head Band will make their first Austin appearance of 1976 a t 9 p.m. Friday and Sa^rday at Soap Creek Saloon, 707 E. Bee Caves Road. Greezy Wheels completes the weekend at Soap Creek with a performance at 9 p m. Sunday. Double Sleuth A Sherlock Holmes dou­ ble feature starring Basil Rathbone and Nigel Bruce th e o p e n s F r i d a y a t P a r a m o u n t T h e a te r . Featured films are “The P e a r l of D e a th ” and "Sherlock Holmes Faces Death,” both from the pop- ular 1940s series about the great detective. Showtimes for "P earl of Daeth” are 6 and 8:40 p.m. on weekdays with Sunday matinees at 12:40 and 3:20 p m. "Sherlock Holmes Faces Death” will be shown at 7:20 and IO p m. weekdays with matinee showings at 2 and 4:40 p.m. Sundays. Admission to the double feature is $1.50. ________ Bruco, Rathbone Laguna Gloria This is the final week for registration for spring semester art classes at Laguna Gloria Art Museum, 3809 W 35th St. 1116 Museum’s School of Art will offer 36 classes running from Monday through March 28, presen- tmg a wide range of courses for beginning and advanced students Gasses include four photography courses print­ making. drawing, life drawing, weaving for adults and children, choreography, filmmaking, pottery, jewelry, painting, sculpture and two experimental classes called Color Action and Structural Relativity. Classes are not designed for formal credit, and there are no entrance re­ in form al quirements. workshops, and enrollment is limited to maintain a high level of student-facuity interaction. Most classes meet once a week for IO weeks The emphasis of all classes is on the creative individual gaining awareness and fulfill­ ment For further information call 452-9447. is presented Instruction Antone's Barbara Lynn and her eight-piece revue w ill^ r fo n n a t 9 30 p m. Friday and Saturday at Antone s, 141 E. Sixth St An R&B singer for more than 20 years, Lynn is noted for her powerful vocals and left-handed guitar playing; she is managed by Huey Meaux(who has managed Doug Sahm T-Bone Walker and Clifton Chenier) and has record ed the hit singles "YOU'D U s e a Good Thing •You Left the Water Running, Playboy.” I Dont Want a and television O Iv p.m 24 Bew itched 36 Adam-12 I The Price I* 9 This Week ^ 9 Washington Week in Review IO p.m. 24 M ovie "Volcano" 36 Sanford and Son 7 A m e ric a n Ice Spectacular 7 30 a m 6 O k * and Th# M an 9 Walt Sheaf Weak I p m t p m. 9 A t Issue 7 M ovie: "Class of '44 36 Rockford Files 9 Austin C ity Lim its 36 Police Story 9 M onty Python 24 7 36 News 10:30 p.m. 36 Tonight Show 7 M ovie: "Spinout" 24 The Rookies dM f— —R P 1 T.G.I.F. 3:30-7 * By MARY WALSH Texan Staff Writer Although it is a ra th e r gracelessly manipulated fan­ tasy scarred by a doctored and therefore controversial ending "Lucky Lady” is one freaking funny movie. Flaws can be found easily in the film. Its determination to see the world through those r o s e - c o lo r e d p r o v e r b ia l glasses, for instance, throws a gauze-like filte r over the cam era lens, coating every scene with something akin to an early morning haze. The effect, unfortunately, is like watching the movie through a nylon stocking. YET, FOR LIZA Minnelli fans," Lucky Lady’s ” missing link is not in the film ’s content per se, but rather it becomes im p lic it by th e s trik in g this s im ila ritie s betw een movie and her smash hit, "Cabaret.” "Lucky Lady's” Claire shares too many of Sal­ ly Bowles’ character traits for one to resist comparing the the tw o. In m any w ays character is the same: the basically lonely, always hor­ ny, outrageous woman with a decided affinity for multiple lovers, constantly shocking e v e ry o n e w ith h e r ju x ­ tapositions. "That’s real French cook­ ing. What ya don't eat you can take with y a,” bootlegger C la ire te lls a g litte rin g assemblage of upper crust diners as her machine gun- toting employes rush by head- ed for an emergency. But the real issue — why this bawdy, hip sw aying bottom -of-the-heap gal is driven to spend a lot of dough feeding rich folks — is never discussed. Money, love and greed, supplemented by a streak of good old American individualism and loyalty, suf­ fice as motives for this sim­ ple, yet potentially complex tale. "I want to spend as much time being rich as I did being poor,” says Claire, and so she d e v o t e s m o s t of h e r v o lu m in o u s e n e r g ie s to motivating her two partners and lovers in crime. Living in Tijuana in 1930 and rid in g on re m o rs e le s s ly m oney soaked from im ­ poverished Mexican wetbacks for transportation across the California border, the triad, with Gene Hackman as Rippy Womak and Burt Reynolds as Walker Ellis, sails off for the t h i r s t y w a t e r s o ff th e A m e ric a n c o a s t w ith a boatload of Scotch. The National Institute of Mental Health estimates that eight million persons each year may suffer depression se v ere enough to req u ire medical treatment. More than 100,000 were hospitalized for it last year. EL HUNGRY HORSE CLUB Friday Musica Mextcana on tho Drag by TIM TORRES Y SU ORQUESTRA DANCE 9-1 OPEN 6:30-2AM 2610 Guadalupe 472-007 8 Cover 1.50 CASTLE CREES Tonite A Sat. GUY CLARK and Band "L A . Freeway” "Desperados W aitin' for the Train” also B ill Reynolds C arl Nelson 1411 Lavaca 472-7315 50* Highballs 15* Beer f WELCOME BACK TO AUSTIN START THE WEEKEND EARLY T.G.I.F. 3:30 - 7 15* Beer — 50" Highballs Dance to the Best Disco Music in Town WATCH STAR TREK ON A 7 FT. TELEVISION 23rd and Pearl ^ ^ 3 Hrs. Free Parking - Across from Tri-Towers P°°rr* ° P en at 3:30 p m T h )'m u s ic s [ivp ail week at The Parrot. W e'll put Sundays through Thursdays on your calendar with Bobby s jazz piano and Trio W e'll move you to the beat of a different drum Fridays and Saturdays, when Peggy Lauren and Carnival change keys. And we ll pull the w hole week together Tuesdays and W ednesdays. W ith Peggy and Bobby together. |l|ll|J || || ||j||| ] U "p SL "DOUBLE AGENT 73" F rid a y , J a n u a r y 1 4 1976 THE DAILY T E X A N .P a 9 e 15 Benefit Scheduled for Burned Wagonyard -A J.IC hnan aclopn Parlier ill thf By ROSANNE MOGAVERO Texan Staff Writer With B.W. Stevenson and th e M ilto n C arroll B a n d scheduled to perform, A r­ m adillo World Headquarters is hosting a benefit c o n c e rt Sunday. This time it’s fo r what’s le ft of a com petitive club in town - the recen tly burned Alliance Wagonyard. T h e W agonyard a t 505 N ech e s S t., popular w ith U n iv e rs ity students, w a s destroyed Jan. 5 by a fire originating in the upstairs of­ fice. BOTH BENEFIT cou ntry t h e b a n d s h ad p la y e d f r e ­ W agonyard and often quented the club on n ig h ts they did not perform. S te v e n ­ son would sometimes stop in and “ get up and play w ith w h oev er was th ere,” c o - owner Bruce Robbins said . Hardly a year and one-half old, the Wagonyard had ju s t begun to attract those elbow - to-elbow, standing-room-only crowds that elate club ow n ers and band members. E x p a n ­ sion plans had been in the m aking before the blaze. We had planned to rip out the back wall to give us so m e m ore room for seating,” R o b ­ bins explained. “We figu red we could seat 75 to IOO m ore people if we did it right.” P a r t of the plan called for m oving the o ffic e downstairs and placing it where the m e n ’s restroom was located. “ V E R Y L I T T L E w a s salv a g e a b le after predaw n flam es almost consumed the roof, approximately $10,000 worth of sound equipment, and melted non-flam m able item s, R ob b in s sa id . No damage estimate is available yet, but the owners were in­ sured. Some of the ruined equipment, a drum set includ­ ed, was owned by the Milton Carroll Band and was unin­ sured. Other equipment was owned by Tin E a r Sound and the Wagonyard. Robbins es­ timated their loss in equip­ ment at $1,000. Milton Carroll “ used his sound equipment whenever he played there. He had left it for Rick Stein to use Sunday night (before the fir e ),” Robbins co m m e n te d . C a r r o ll was scheduled to play Monday night. F I R E MAR SHAL L Jim Laughlin said the office was burned so badly a cause could not be determined but the fire is believed to have been acciden­ tal. ' Logan's Run' Utilizes Laser Beam Holograms HOLLYWOOD (U P I) — One day last spring Michael York climbed atop a large round platform in a barn-like studio in San Francisco’s Mission D istrict and made movie history. Two hours later York had become the first actor ever to per­ form in a hologram, a revolutionary type of photography that uses laser beams to make three-dimensional pictures equally visible from all sides. Producer Saul David, who is using York’s hologramed head in a futuristic adventure movie called “ Logan’s Run,” compares the English actor to “ Muybridge’s horse,” a reference to the photographer whose projected photos of a trotting horse made a century ago inspired the invention of motion pictures. nSoap Creek Saloon TONITE A SATURDAY AUGIE MEYER & THE WESTERN HEADBAND SUNDAY GREEZY WHEELS 0 7 B a * C a v e s Rd. 3 2 7 - 9 0 1 6 The fire, reported at 4:16 a.m ., was spotted by an ac­ quaintance of Robbins’ who happened to be driving past the Wagonyard when he saw smoke and called the Fire Department. “ Half of the roof is le ft,” said B a r M anager P aula Messer, one of the last per­ sons to leave the office at 2:45 the morning of the fire. “The f i r e t r a p , o f f i c e wa s a e v e r y t h i n g it wa s a in firetrap. We always knew that if it caught on fire it would go up quickly.” M E S S E R ’ S 7 - y e a r - o l d daughter left with her and had been asleep earlier in the of­ fice. “ I found out later she sai d s h e c o u l d n ’t s l e e p because of the smoke,” Messer added. “So it probably was on fire even then.” Rebuilding is the option of the owners of the brick struc­ ture, Robbins explained, and “they ju st may decide not to do it.” Proceeds from the benefit will go to pay salaries of the club’s 15 employes and immediate expenses, he said, leaving Wagonyard’s future uncertain. Armadillo World doors open at 7:30 p.m. amd tickets are $3.50. MANN I HE AYRES DAYS NitUiyi HtaHtMM S«fwA«Y ">* ^—6 r| Uluru' I ^A-3^O-5^A-7TO-4'A0 M « . r i m W I. J U S H i * A * W ait D isney Is a n d d ie S e o e f iU u T e d * BUENA VISTA O lS T R iB U llO N CO 'N C © W i l t D u n e , P rod uctions T e c h n i c o l o r SP ECIA L ADOt D ATTA ACTION N O R T H C R O S S M A L L A N D E R S O N LA N E & B U R N E T RD . The fire-ravaged rem ains of Alliance W agonyard _______ — Photo b y N a n c y u o ia ra ro Medical Study Reveals Physical Dangers of Ballet • 1976 N .Y .Tim es New s Service NEW YORK — Ballet dancers who execute graceful leaps, lift partners through floating arcs and perform many other polished but strenuous manuevers often accomplish them despite the searing pain of tom ligaments, in­ fected callouses and fractured and broken bones. A study directed by Dr. Edward Miller, an orthopedic surgeon at the University of Cin­ cinnati, has indicated that — like football players — dancers are subject to a wide range of “athletic injuries,” but that many of them go on dancing, injured or not, never giv­ ing themselves a chance to heal. For example, Edward V illein , who was ex­ amined by the Cincinnati team because he was suffering from muscle cramps and back pain, was found — incidentally — to have nine broken bones in his feet. Villella, a principal dancer in the New York City B allet, says he rem em bers when some of the breaks occurred, although he never bothered to have X-rays. Even now, he does not intend to stop dancing long enough for the breaks to heal. During an examination fo r a sprained ankle, a ballerina from the Cincinnati Ballet Company told the doctors that she had also been bothered by “ shin splin ts” for the previous two months. X-rays showed that the so-called shin splints, which are really painful swellings in the muscles, were in her c a se nine fatigue fractures in the tibia, or large calf bone, of both legs. They had been caused by the stress of repeated landings on hard floors. “ Fatigue fractures are not uncommon, but nine in one person is extraordinary. I didn’t believe a single person could have so manv.” M iller remarked in an interview. QUARIUS 4 PORNO BEAUTIFUL!!! STARTS TODAY $1.50 HI 4 p.m. FEATURE TIMES 1:45-3:25-5:00-6:40-l:20-10HIO IM O P LE A S A N T V A H E Y * 0 A D 4 4 4 - 3 2 2 ? sophisticatedly amusing and wildly erotic, will set porno film standards for years to come." — Al Goldstein 454-5147 nonhero// Adventure in all its glory! Rudyard Kipling’s epic of splendor, spectacle and high adventure Iihe masterpiece of bizarre love that stunned France. A portrait of love and submission to disorder the senses. TheStvryOff\ 0 “All-out, unzippered sex comedy, it sets a new high in sophistication and even makes explicit screens look sexier.” I Bruce Williamson -P L A Y B O Y Emanuel L Wdl presents Scan Connell! J I M C a ln e p S ip Ig IMI opiici Plummet "One of the year's ten best” — JOHN B U ST IN THE A UST/N CIT IZEN T R A N S See 0 JOO Pit ASAN U U U RULO 444 U lt, CHAINSAW 1:55-5:10-8:25 TORSO 3:30-6:45-10 OO T R A N S T E X A S In Ut john Huston-John Foreman fir 16400 Burnet Road — 465-6933 BOX OFFICE OPENS 6 P.M. SHOW STARTS AT 6:30 SONN MATfStAl MAT NOT f sunset! fpi m TltNAqi Man Who Wiuld Be King 5:00-7:35-10:15 Twi-Lite Hr. 4:30-5:00, $1.50 DOUBLE FEATURE HELD OVER AT BOTH THEATRES N0WL.Y0U CAN SEE BOTH TOGETHER FOR THE FIRST TIME! INO ONE UNDER 17 ADMITTED 6:15-8:30-10:30 Twi-Lite Hr. 5:45-6:15, $1.50 HIS CIA CODE NAME IS CONDOR. IN THE NEXT SEVENTY-TWO HOURS| ALMOST EVERYONE HE TRUSTS WILL TRY TO KILL HIM. They were professionals who killed for hire. O U T O F F ­ S E A S O N “A film of strong characterizations, subtle but unrelenting tensions,unblushing eroticism." ■ Son Frandaco C h ro nkfe starring SUZY KENDALL Distributed by Joseph Brenner Associate s Inc IN T tC H N IC O L O R and what win be left of hem? D IN O DE tA U R E N T IIS PRESENTS RO BERT R E D F O R D /F A Y E DUNAWAY I CU FF R O B ER T SO N / M A X VON SYDOW CLIFF ROBERTSON V A N E S S A REDGRAVE and SUSAN GEORGE OF THE v CO N D O R 5:45-7:45-9:45 Twi-Lite Hr. 5:15-5:45, $1.50 5:30-8:10-10:30 Twi-Lite Hr. 5:00-5:30, $1.50 W h a t h a p p e n e d is true Now the motion picture that* just as real p o ] A BRYANSTON PICTURES RELEASE P a g e 16 Friday, ja n u a r y 16, 1976 T H E D A IL Y T E X A N But the man who hunted them killed for pleasure! ______________ TELLYSAVALASTETER FONDA • HUGH OBRIAN 0. J.SIMPSON - MAUD ADAMSlCHRISTOPHER LEE J iU rn -4 i H iL L m n fQ m w c e i 6 : 0 0 - 8 : 1 0 Twi-Lite Hr. 5:30, $1.50 S P E C IA L ATTRACTION! T h e L ife a n d T im e s OS GRIZZLY ADAMS No passos or discounts 5 -1 5 -7 : 1 5 - 9 :1 5 Sorry, No Twi-Uto Hr. : f - w * * Arbors in the Making Today ADDITIONAL CLASSIFIEDS --------------------------------------------------------- - I MISCELLANEOUS I UNF. DUPLEXES FOR H E L P with an unwed pregnancy call Edna Gladney Home, Fort Worth, Texas, toll free. 1-800-792-1104. B U S IN E S S SCHOOL Graduates! Stay in Austin with the dynamic Red Carpet Realtors. Bud Mounce, 837-4970. F R E E L A N C E W R IT IN G , the perfect home business, even if you've never been published. $2.00. Guaranteed satisfaction. Davis, Dept. C, Box 14300, Austin, TX 78761. LOST & FOUND REW A R D . Lost white cat with a bls A collar $15 reward. Please call 475-1828. LOST: M A L E P U P P Y , 12 weeks. Great Dane mix. Tan, black face, white front leg. Vicinity Duval & 35th, since Xmas. Reward. 476-9539. R E W A R D : Lost cat, black/gray striped adult female. Clear flea collar. 472-1301 after 6 p.m. O V ER LO O K IN G Z IL K E R PA R K . 2 BR, carpeted, draped, built-in appliances. $165/month. 1300-C Hollow Creek. 258- 2264, 442-9467. N E W L Y D EC O RA TED , one bedroom, carpeted, stove, fridg., no pets, $150, water paid, garage. 451-8249 a.m., 452- 8575 p.m. r UNCLASSIFIED Afghan pups, all colors. 837-3954 Clock radios, hair dryers fixed. 452-4406. T IN K E R 'S DAM Fixit Shop. 452-4406 Belly dance instruction. 472-3344. SCI-FI calculator, $50. 478-2042. Men's 10-spd. $80. 478-2042. '62 Mere 69,000 mi. $250. 476-9299 Motorless Motion. 477-3002. Guaranteed bicycle repair. 477-3002 FOR RENT Cash for used bicycles. 477-3002. Lge rebuilt fridge $110. 476-1186. ------------- CB41A hrnnri now. $100. 451-4251 REN T OR P U R C H A S E 1972 Town 8. Country mobile home. 14 x 60 unfurn. 2 BR, I BA, CA/CH, washer, dryer, and other appliances Included. Fully enclos­ ed 9 x 19 porch, and carport. Quiet and comfortable. Call after 5. 442-4074, 459- 9345. UNF. HOUSES Sell refrigerator, $65. 474-4176. FemHousemate.Bath/$80.13th, Rio. Portable stereo, $25. Mike, 477-8944. '68 Dodge Pickup L W B 4spd 476-6635 Les Paul, amp, etc. 454-7234. 2—3spd bikes. $20, $30. John, 476-6635. Marvel-DC cornix tor sale 443-8108 SPECIAL Mexican Brunch (Sun llam-2:30pm) • Huevos Rancheros • Huevos revueltos a la Mexicana con chorizo con nopales con migas • C h ilaq u iles • Mexican hot chocolate Lunch: TUES-FRI 11:30am to 2:30pm, $1.50 & up Dinner: TUES-FRI 5:30pm to 10:00pm, $2.50 & up Sunday Brunch: I lam -2:30pm CLOSED M O N D A Y S The only classical Mexican Restaurant in the Southwest ct ^ “ Mexican food is earthy food, festive food, happy food, celebration food.” “ Craig Claiborne c M i g u e l 2330 West North Loop 459-4121 By GAIL BURRIS and KAREN HASTINGS Texan Staff W riters Friday is Arbor Day, and what better occasion to nominate your favorite tree friend for Austin’s “ Tree Registry.” As a bicentennial gift to the nation, the Think Trees Week organization is sponsoring the tre e c o n te s t fo r old, historical, unusually shaped or sized and other unique trees. The nominees will be judged by a special committee of City Councilwoman Margret Hoff­ man, who originated Think Trees Week two years ago, and m em bers from the Citizens Board of Natural Resources and Environmental Quality and the Parks and Recreation Board. Winning trees will be eligi­ ble to wear a bronze plaque proclaim ing them special Austin trees. The six-inch medallion sports the national bicentennial seal, and must be purchased by the tre e ’s owner. Friday is the deadline for nominating trees at the Parks and Recreation Department, 477-6511, ext. 2725. A planting ceremony in celebration of Arbor Day will begin at 1:30 p.m. on Town Lake near Congress Avenue. Lady Bird Johnson and other dignitaries will be present for the planting. Republic Square, one of the original town squares at F o u rth and Guadalupe Streets, will be the location of another planting ceremony at ll a m. The first land in Austin was auctioned off un­ der old oak trees that still stand there. Hoffman said similar tree planting ceremonies have been going on all week in observance of Think Trees Week. She initiated the program several years ago to get people “ tree-minded .” Traditionally celebrated the week before Arbor Day, Think Trees Week began with poster and poetry contests in the schools and a "tree tour of Austin’s largest trees Every year, Texas’ gover­ nor sets aside the third Friday George Atgelt, 2, in January as Arbor Day. Chick Morris, an aide in Gov. Dolph Briscoe’s office, said the Forest Service at Texas A&M University requests the proclamation every year. In 1889, Washington’s birth­ day (Feb. 22) was set aside for Arbor Day, but the 51st Legislature changed it to the January date. Hoffman said January is an appropriate time for Arbor Day because trees are dor­ mant and are more easily planted. The biggest tree in Austin is a cypress on Town Lake near Barton Creek, Hoffman noted. The second largest is a cot­ tonwood in a cemetery at 46th Street and Avenue D, which Hoffman said is dying as a result of recent fire damage. To compensate for the dying tree, the city is “ resurrec­ ting” a 500-year-old tree in a park between Brykerwood School and Shoal Creek. That tree has been buried for more than IO years by land fill that was to be used in constructing MoPac. “ I think it s nice that we’re reviving one (tree) for one says Arbor Day is for that died,’’ Hoffman said. Each public elementary school in Austin will celebrate Arbor Day by planting fruit trees at the Heritage Farm on Dessau Road, a dilapidated farm recently donated to the Austin Independent School District for revamping and outdoor educational ex­ perience for elem entary school children. The fruit trees will be the beginning of an orchard. Many Austin nurseries will promote Arbor Day by en­ couraging the planting of trees. Arbor Day was f ir s t proclaimed in Nebraska in 1872, sponsored by J. Sterling Morton. On that occasion more than one million trees were planted throughout the state. Texan Staff Photo by M ike Smith the young at heart. breaks and to conserve moisture in the soil. Within 16 years 600 million trees had been planted in Nebraska, and within 20 years more than 100,000 acres of wasteland had been turned into forest. The Nebraska Legislature passed a resolution in 1885 es­ tablishing Arbor Day on April 22, Morton’s birthday. The date varies from state to state depending on climate and local traditions. Arbor Day became national­ ly recognized in 1822 when President Warren G. Harding urged the governors of all states to set aside April 22 in honor of Morton. In recent times Arbor Day has been observed with special exercises in schools and with the planting of trees and beautification of grounds. Rhode Island is the only state besides Nebraska where Ar- SM A LL HOUSE with nice largei yard with a garden. $85/monthly plus bills 8. deposit. Available now. 1700 Salina (off M LK Blvd.) O N E BED RO O M , large Kitchen, near bus. 26 blocks from University. Adults. No dogs. $125. 476-0009. TRAVEL c a m p i n g TOUR. Minibuses, I month Europe, 2 months U SSR, Hungary, Czechoslovakia, Poland, Balkan states. 6/1/76 - 9/7/76. 458-1095. FURN. HOUSES I BEDROOM , large kitchen, near bus. 26 blocks from University. Adults, no dogs. $155 476-0009 WANTED W A N TED TO B U Y : 6-volt VW w/o tune tioning engine. Bug, Ghia, or Van. 472- 7468, 7-10 p.m. FURN. DUPLEXES C L E A N O L D E R D U P L E X La r ge rooms, quiet, fenced yard. 18 blocks to UT One block to bus, stores. 710-A Lydia St. $165. Morton launched the tree planting because the state lacked trees and he thought they would be useful as wind- bor Day is a legal holiday ^ M C O W V W V THE TEXAS TAVERN Celebrate the Texas Tavern's First Birthday All Week With Unadvertised Specials on Food and Drink Free Entertainment During the Week M A R C IA BALL & THE MISERY BROTHERS Hear M ercia's (formerly of Freda & the Firedogs) special brand of progressive country Friday: 9pm - 2am Saturday: 8:30pm - la m Admission: $.50 for UT ID holders $1.00 for Guests SU NDAY: Open Mike (auditions) FREE HAPPY HOUR ALL NIGHT LO NG If it’s 11:43 p.m. where can you get homemade lasagna? (Homemade spinach pasta filled Ricotta cheese and covered w ith an Italian and tom ato sauce. Served w ith fresh homemade French bread for (J. 65) 707 East Sixth Street Open 6 p.m. until IO p.m. Thursday through Saturday for Dinner Open from IO p.m. tmlll 4 a m. Friday and Saturday for Late Brunch Open Sunday from l l a.m . until 2 p.m. for Brunch and. of course, there s lunch Monday through Friday. at Waller Creek Catering Co. THE CHARLEY PRIDE SHOW * * * * s t a r r in g CHARLEY PRIDE * * * of RCA Records IN PERSON!.. ONE NIGHT ONLY! Btu ring These Special Guest Artists!! G A R Y STEW ART DAVE and SU G A R s p e c i a l lig h ts a n d S o u n d Sy ste m O N L Y O N E P E R F O R M A N C E ------ stin Municipal Auditorium day Night, Jan. 18, 8 p.iti. erved Tickets $6.50, $5.50 A P re s e n ta tio n of KVET Radio Ticket Locations: _ m in tk a 's • Lariat R a n c h w e a r mi<,.Up’h .n .9 47*.10»0 A JAM PRODUCTION Prpscntiflg the most irreverent, irrelevant father and son team rU since the Frankensteins. ii / R A T T IX rW JfK ? pr— n o s t r o I The Beetles YeNav Submarine Rated G B H ^ t e c h n i c o l o r 1 Commonwealth United Presents a Grand Film Starring cPbterSdkrs^cRingoStarr in ^ M a g k Christian A N D Graham Chapm an and John Cleese of Monty Features Animation by Monty Python's Terry Gilliam O C o t-W I SSS I* , n ssru U n * * * * (K o , (M W W JI" . * * 1 O m s**) rn* U . M IM.UA All _ * * * * * Academy Award Winning Short: Mel Brooks' "The Critic ^ „ Saturday, January 17 Magic Christian & ''Critic ' Yellow Submarine & "Critic 7:30 CENTER AUDITORIUM (AC) $1.25 Magic Christian & "Critic" Yellow Submarine & "Critic 7:30 *:30 Sponsored by University Students for N ix o n / Agnew Friday, J a n u a ry 16* 1976 T H E D A IL Y v T E X A N P a ge 17 FURN. APARTS. ■ FURN. APARTS. I FURN. APARTS. I FURN. APARTS, I FURN. APARTS. ■ FURN. APA RTS. ■ FURN. APARTS. C L A S S IF I E D A D V E R T I S I N G R A T E S 15 w o r d m in im u m S 12 E a c h w o r d one t im e S I I E a c h w o r d 2-4 tim e s S 09 E a c h w o r d 5-9 tim e s E a c h w o r d IO o r m o re tim e s S 08 S 90 S tu d e n t r a te e a c h t im e I c o l x I in c h one t im e S3 58 S3 22 I c o l x I in c h 2-9 tim e s I c o l x I in c h te n o r m o re tim e s S 2 90 DEADLINE SCHEDULE M o n d a y T e xan F rida y T u esd a y T e xan M o n d a y 2 0 0 p m ..........1 1 :0 0 a rn. W e d n e s d a y T exan T u esd a y ... 1 1 :0 0 a .m . T h u rs d a y T e xan W e d n e s d a y .. 1 1 :0 0 a rn. ...........1 1 :0 0 a .m . F rida y T e xa n T h u rsd a y In th e e v e n t o f erro rs m a d e in an a d v e rtis e m e n t, im m e d ia te notice m u st be g iv e n os th e p u b lis h e rs o re resp on sib le tor o n ly O N E in corre ct in s e rtio n A ll c la im s for a d ju s tm e n ts sh o u ld be m a d e n ot la te r th o n 3 0 d a y s a fte r p u b lic a tio n L O W S T U D E N T R A T E S 15 w o rd m in im u m e a c h d a y S 90 E a c h a d d it io n a l w o rd e a c h d a y s 06 I c o l. x I in c h e a c h d a y S2 90 " U n c la s s i f i e d * " I lin e 3 d a y s SI OO ( P r e p a id , N o R e fu n d s ) S t u d e n t s m u s t s h o w A u d i t o r 's r e c e ip ts a n d p a y in a d v a n c e in T S P B ld g 3 200 (25th & W h it is ) f r o m 8 a m to 4 30 p rn M o n d a y th ro u g h F r id a y . FOR SALE Auto-For Sale 969 M E R C U R Y M o n te r re y . N ew p ain t, ires PS, PB , A T , rad io , h e a te r, AC. .tan , 451-2027. 442-1111. / I C E 1970 V o lk s w a g e n m o to r hom e $2,- 95. G M C S e ar cy T ru c k s Inc. 4400 So. IH - 5 444-6635 75 V W V A N Som e c u s to m izin g und er v a r r a n ty . C a ll T r a c y a fte r 6 452-7845 972 C O R V E T T E . E x c e lle n t con dition. ,5,300 S e rious o ffe rs in v ite d A le x , 385- 1100, e x t. 2555 836-5296 a fte r 5 72 V W F A S T B A C K AC, rad io . Good $1,800. 454-6308 a f te r 5pm o n d itio n ve e kd ays Z E G A '71, new p ain t, e x c e lle n t co n d i­ g n , lo w m ile a g e . M u s t sell this w eek ____________ 56-2027, 477-9294 969 V W E x c e lle n t con dition, only 33,000 n i le * A ir , ra d io . $1,200. 345-4037 57 V W B U S A M / F M w ith cassette, ra d ia ls , 20 m ile s per a r p e te d , new _ la llo n $995 443-5340. 967 F A I R L A N E . C le a n , d e p e n d a b le r a n s p o rta tio n , a u to m a tic tra n s m is s io n , lir , ra d io . $550 443-7944 66 V O L V O 122 S. E x c e lle n t m e c h a n ic a l :o n d itio n . C a ll 476-0736 a fte r 5. 948 C H E V R O L E T '/j-to n , 4-speed, 5 w in - low, 216, cle a n , runs e x c e lle n tly $400, iffe r. 454-1159 __________________ 72 H O N D A 600 Sedan. 22,000 m ile s . Stan- la r d , R A H , fro n t w heel d riv e 32 M P G . O rig in al o w n e r. $1,400 or best o f f e r 971 V Y / S u p e rb u g . A u to m a tic , A C , a d io , new tire s . R uns g re a t. $1395. 458- 444 84 P L Y M O U T H B E L V E D E R E in good o n d itio n . AC, h ea t, rad io , 5 good tire s . 250 C a ll 477-1933. 973 " D O D G E P O L A R A C u s to m , e x - e lle n t c o n d itio n , f u ll y lo a d e d , PS, P B , 2200, n e g o tia b le 474-1715, 453-4286 970 O P E L G T . 50,000 m ile s , 35.8 M P G , e w c lu tc h , b a t te r y , s h o c k s , hoses, e x - a u s t s y s te m & p a in t, r a d ia ls . $1795 472- 189__________ ___________________________ Motorcyde-For Sale 973 H A R L E Y - D A V I D S O N S p o rts te r .o w m ile a g e C u s to m p a in t . E x t r a h r o m e E l e c t r i c i a n . 452-9008 _______ JO I N G T O G E R M A N Y . M u s t s e ll 1972 H onda S L 350 L o w m ile a g e , a d u lt o w n ­ 'd C a ll 458-2385 _____________ 73 H O N D A CL175 2200 m ile s O r ig in a l iw n e r $575 o r b e s t o ffe r . 451-4617 974 T X 5 0 0 Y a m a h a $999 D is c b ra k e s , ■ le c tric s t a r t e r , ju s t tu n e d , u p -to -d a te . tic k e r F a s t, d e p e n d a b le , a n d b e a u tifu l. 141-1840 Musical-For Sale M E W G U IT A R S , s te e l a n d c la s s ic a l A ll iiz e s . 443-6088 B R A N D N E W G u iT a r P a n by G ib s o n . Red, d e c o ra te d p ic k p la te . $90. A f t e r 5, 152-2341. FOR S A L E . E p ip h o n e T r u b a d o u r g u ita r . S oft s h e ll case, n e w s trin g s , s tr a p $ '5 0 C a ll J im a t^ 837-0870 _________________ _________ Pets-For Sale A K C R E G I S T E R E D L h a s a A p sos^ F i r s t sh o t a n d w o r m in g . 251-4706 o r 454-9601 A s k f o r P a u l. C U D D L Y K E E S H O N D P u p p ie s ( c h a r ­ c o a l g r e y , s im ila r to E s k im o d o g ), u n ­ r e g is te r e d $20 478-4941. K eep t r y in g . Homes-For Sale V O W N E R , 3-2-2 C A /C H , d is h w a s h e r, a s h e r d r y e r c o n n e c tio n s O w n e r c a n e lp w it h fin a n c in g A d a m s , 836-0664 O P E N HOUSE 5902 M a r i l y n Dr. Sunday 2-6 p.m. Id e a l, b e a u tifu l lo c a tio n 3 B R , 2 BA F o r m a l L iv in g R o om C a ll H e le n F e ll M a c b e th 477-2614 H e le n F e ll M a c b e th , R E A L T O R For Sale-Garage I F T E E N P R E O W N E D B I C Y C L E S , IOO d a y s f r e e u c t io n in g S a tu rd a y , 17th e r v ic e w ith e a c h 12-4 p m . o n ly . 506 W 7th 477-3002 ____________________ __ ATU RDA Y 9-6 S o uth L a m a r to B a r to n k y w a y R ig h t to 3201 W e s th ill. S m a ll e s k , m u c h m is c e lla n e o u s . $10 C L A R K S O N . ( E a s t o f 38/2, IH -3 5 ) a t u r d a y H o u s e h o l d , g e e g a w s , y p e w r ite r , f u r n it u r e , o ld s tu ff, e tc . Misc.-For Sale r e s e r v a tio n lE L S O N 'S G IF T S . E s ta b lis h e d 1945 a r g e s t s e le c tio n In d ia n e w e lr y 4502 S o u th C o n g re s s . 444-3814 __________ - do se d M o n d a y s . IOOK L O O K I N G 9 N o o b lig a tio n s e a rc h u t - o f- p r in t b oo ks A r ja y B o o k S e a rc h . 63-5335 _____________ W O 2 4 " M e n 's b ic y c le s : P e u g e o t UO -8, .c h w in n V a r s ity A ls o h e a v y fo o tlo c k e r , - t r a c k ta p e c la y e r 837-6613 : O R S A L E C itiz e n s b a n d m te n n a 443-5653 4 FOOT S T A R D A N C E R S a ilb o a t ( l i k e a lu n fis h ) , w ith t r a i le r E x c e lle n t c o n d i­ g n 451-7847 r a d io a n d A N A B L E P S - A N A B L E P S I n d ia n 50 T ib e t a n iv o r y T ib e ta n a r t 8. is r e c e iv e d an a d d itio n a l s h ip m e n t ot r it u a l ;m s T ib e ta n b lo c k p r in ts a t $5 OO a n d t u r q u o is e , c o r a l, a n d n b e r je w e lr y S c rin s h a w , C o lu m b ia n a ll h a n g in g s & a n y th in g else w e d e e m p e r b P lu s a la rg e g r o u p o f o u r P re - jl u m b ari b e a d n e c k la c e s 40% o ft 2222 u a d a lu p e , a b o v e th e T a p e Shop on th e ra g D o n 't c ro s s th e H im a la y a s , lu s t im e u p o u r s t a ir ', 377-7115 FURN. APARTS. : F I C I E N C Y $1 IO, a ll b ills p a id W a lk U T 306 E a s t 30th 472-5134 = F I C I ! N C Y , $125 p lu s E C a rp e t, p a n p o o l O n s h u ttle 46th a n d A v e A 454 S U B L E A S E : L u x u r y a p a r t m e n t . 2/2, 2810 R io G ra n d e . 1235 per m o n th , A B P . C a ll 474-5626 a n y tim e ._______ ___________ T R A N S F E R C A S E . Sublease. L a r g e tw o tw o b a th . S o uth , s h u ttle . b e d ro o m , A v a ila b le F e b r u a r y - M a y . $255. 444- 475 3 - O N E B E D R O O M fu rn is h e d a p a r t m e n t co n v e n ie n t c am p u s. Sublet to M a y . C a ll Stan, 453-4883 f u r n i s h e d a p a r t m e n t s We’ll find you an apartment free. IIM*. O ffic e * th r o u g h o u t T e \a » O p e n < d a w a w e ek 3507 Interregional 474-6357 O ne b ed ro o m a p t. I b lock eas t of U T L a w School. $13 0 /m o n th plus e le c tr ic ity . W e . fu rn is h w a te r, gas, c a b le . C A /C H F e b . I . C O M A N C H E A P A R T M E N T S 2800 Swisher 472-5369 ______ M A R K X X APTS P R E L E A S E F O R J A N . I 1 BR Furn. $160 2 BR Furn. $200 Shuttle 2 Blks 38th & Guadalupe 453-4039 FURNISHED A P A R TM E N TS 99 0 O D B I D I apts ! 8v v v - f c 7 s t e EFF - 4 BR SHUTTLE BUS 2 2 0 0 WILLOW CR. A U BILLS PAID 5 Blks f r o m C a m p u s CAMINO REAL 2810 Salado I and 2 BR apts, furnished. From $197 and $257 ABP. F u lly e q u ip p ed k itc h e n C a b le T V S w im m in g Pool P a r ty ro o m L a u n d r y fa c ility C o vered p a r k in g a v a ila b le F u lltim e m a in te n a n c e s e rv ic e P ro fe s s io n a lly m a n a g e d by L in c o ln P r o p e r ty Co. 472-3816________ _ RIVERSIDE DRIVE AREA On th e sh u ttle , b e a u tifu lly d e c o ra te d e f ­ fic ie n c y , I b e d ro o m and 2 b ed ro o m lu x ­ u r y a p a r t m e n t s . E n jo y c a b a n a /p o o l a re a , outdoo r B a r-B -Q and p r iv a te c lu b ro o m . R a te s fr o m $154.50, a ll b ills p a id . C a ll 444-7880 or c o m e by a n y tim e fro m 9 a rn - 9 p .m . d a ily . 2124 B u rto n a t O lt o r f . A R R A N G E M E N T T H E A P T S . 2222 A P A R T M E N T S I & 2 BR F u r n is h e d , D W , Dis, pool, shuttle bus, sm all f r i e n d ­ ly c o m p l e x f r o m $140 plus elec. C a ll o r co m e by 2222 T O W N L A K E C I R C L E 444-2070 M A N A G E D B Y H A R R IS O N P E A R S O N A S S O C IA T E S H ID D E N C R E E K 1220 E . 38V2 St. Phone: 459-1361 All Bills Paid R E D U C E D Spring Sem ester Rates. U n d e r new m a n a g e ­ m e nt. Pro fes sio na lly m a n a g ­ ed b y S h i n d l e r / C u m m i n s Pro p. M n g t . Inc. K E N R A Y A P A R T M E N T S 2122 H ancock D riv e N e x t to A m e r ic a n a T h e a tre , w a lk in g d is ­ ta n c e to N o rth Loop Shopping C e n te r and L u b y 's . N e a r sh u ttle and A u stin tra n s it T w o b ed ro o m fla ts , one and tw o baths A v a ila b le tow nhouse w ith p atio , I tu r n C A /C H , d is h w a s h e r, u n fu rn & d isposal, door to door g a rb a g e picku p , pool, m a id s e rv ic e if d esired, w a s h a te n a in c o m p le x See ow ners, A p t. 113 or c a ll 451-4848 __________________ O N L Y 2 L E F T I B d r m Fu rn . $160 ASPENWOOD APTS. CASTLE ARMS 3121 Sp eedw ay I and 2 B e d ro o m A pts. On S h u ttle 477-3210 PONCE DE LEON APTS. N E A R C A M P U S I BR 8. 2 BR A V A I L A B L E A L L B IL L S P A I D D is h w a s h e r D isposal Pool F u rn is h e d W a ll to w a ll shag S e m e s te r lease CASA ROCA P R E L E A S E F O R J A N . I 1 BR $145 2 BR $190 S H U T T L E O N C O R N E R M O V E IN T O D A Y 441-0951 474-1768 472-8253_________ 475-0334 E S T A B L I S H M E N T A P A R T M E N T S F u r n i s h e d e f f i c i e n c ie s $135 ( S e c o n d s e m e s t e r p lu s E . fu lly special) L a r g e lu x u ry, c arp eted, w a lk to shuttle. 4400 Ave. B 451-4584 454-1289 ^ T b b Tt * ♦ T H E BEST B A R G A I N IN T O W N 1 BR Only $170 2 BR Only $225 A L L B IL L S P A ID F urnished or U n furnished P R I V A T E SHOW ING PLEASANT V A L L E Y ESTATES 443-5341 1300 P le a s a n t V a lle y S h u ttle Side D oor _ o _ _ _ F R E E S E R V I CE HABITAT HUNTERS is a FREE a p a rtm e n t finders service sp ec ia lizin g in complexes around campus & alo n g shuttle^ N bus lines. DOBIE MALL 8-A LOWER LEVELGU You'll choose English Aire Studios, 1-2-3 bedrooms 2 saunas All bills paid 3 tennis courts 5 pools racketball putting greens SR Shuttle w a te r volleyball Leasing n o w for the spring 2 1 0 1 B urton D r. 4 4 4 - 1 8 4 6 UT UNIVERSITY APARTMENTS Brackenridge— Deep Eddy— Colorado Gateway— Trailer Park rate per month $53 to $73 $99 to $110 $110 to $121 $114 to $125 $125 to $136 $23 Brackenridge Deep Eddy Colorado Gateway (all unfurnished) I to 4 bedroom I to 2 bedroom, unfurnished I to 2 bedroom, furnished I to 2 bedroom, unfurnished I to 2 bedroom, furnished Maximum BO feet Trailer Park Some unit$ available for occupancy NOW including Trailer Pork spaces. For more information on unit availability and eligibility requirements, please come in or contact: Division of Housing and Food Service Resolving Dormitory, 26th St. Entrance Box 7666 Austin, Tx. 78712 471-3136 • Shuttle Corner • I n t r a m u r a l F ie ld across street • C o vered p arking • M o v e in today 4 5 2 -4 4 4 7 NO S H U T T L E BUS T H I S Y E A R R E N T C U T $40 P E R MO. W ATERLOO FLATS 2 BR F U R N $210 A L L B IL L S P A ID 478-7661 41 W a lle r •FU R N IS H E D A P A R T M E N TS A P O S i t AnP-A-HA«.F F o r EmsT a e rtoTtFtPD CO d a y s .. > * * a t F X P C ^ / t c a n .. ft U S T B f • * . . o ft c a n c e l l e d a t a a (rd. SLr - . . tTr/V C i- • . > _ —^ OF F U S T p ar t y YOU JUST WANT AN APARTMENT, NOT A MAJOR BUSINESS DEAL. Y o u 're lo o kin g tor a co m fo rta b le , w o rry-fre e place to live, and w e 're lo o k in g to r f V c o m fo rta b le w o rry -fre e plat e. These apartm ents are large, fu lly carpeted and fu lly IU right o n a UT sh u ttle bus rou te and a t tty bus I,ne. next lr, ( a p ita l Plaza, C am eron V „ age, andlhi.n d y to H ighland M a ll ( )f c nurse, there s also a sw im m ing p o o l and laundrom at. Best o f a Ya need finiani ial consultants o r legal counsel to figure o u t o ur leases They re a ou ! lV*rh "v*^- y * w ant, in clu d in g d u ra tio n , pets, children, and all the o th e r usual p ro b le m are,is Cameron Apts 1200 E ast 52nd at Cameron R d . 453-6239 459- $ 1 1 9 . 1 Bdrm . $ 1 3 6 * 2 Bdrm. O U R O T H E R H A P P Y R E S I D E N T S ! I BR $185 2 BR - $235 A L L B IL L S P A ID Shuttle Route WILLOW C R E E K APTS. 444-0010 1911 W illo w Creek LA C A N A D A APTS. All Bills Paid P R E L E A S E FOR JA N . I I BR Furn. $190 W a l k to C a m p u s Shuttle I block 24th & L on g view 472-1598 EL CAMPO LA PAZ APTS. 1 BR - $165 2 BR - $200 S H U T T L E I B L K . 454-0360 452-7498 T IM B E R S APTS. I BR Furn. $ 1 3 5 - $ 1 6 0 Shuttle on Corner 1307 Norwal k Ln. 474-1836 Page 18 Friday, January 16, 1976 THE DAILY TEXAN T H R E E E L M S 400 West 35th 1 BR - I BA F u rn . - U n fu rn . 2 BR - 2 BA F u rn . - U n fu rn . 451-3941 L E A S I N G F O R S P R I N G 108 PL ACE E F F I C I E N C Y & 1 -B D R M A P T S • D is h w a s h e r & D ispo sal • S w im m in g Pool • P a tio & B a rb ecu e • V i block to sh u ttle bus • in d iv id u a l S torage • Bookshelves • C a b le T V • R e s id e n t M a n a g e r E f f i c : $130-'mo. plus E I B d rm S l6 7 /m o . plus E . 108 W 45th 452-1419 or 453-2771 L A R G E O N E B E D R O O M $170 A L L B IL L S P A ID C O N V E N I E N T C o n v e n ie n t to cam p u s on l i t h . L a u n d r y , f u r n i t u r e . c o v e r e d p a r k i n g , n ic e A v a ila b le now. 472-0515 SERI O US S T U D E N T I Va b locks to U T 2 B R , each w ith p r iv a t e o u tsid e door. $170 w ith gas and w a te r p a id . 2802 W h itis 478-5191, 451 1462 $ 13 5 - $ 15 0 F O U N T A I N T E R R A C E l a r g e A P T S . I B R o r e f f i c i e n c y L e a s e C a rp e te d , cab le, gas, w a te r, disp o sa l. W a lk in g d is ta n c e to U T N o c h ild re n or pets N ice, q u ie t. C o m e by 610 W 30th or c a ll 477 8858 _____________ S P R I N G L E A S I N G E F F I C I E N C I E S U T an d c ity bus ro u te HA NCO CK I I I APTS 4100 A v e A, ap t 106 459-9279 V IL L A ORLEANS 206 W . 3 8th I or 2 BR F u r n or Unfurnis hed M a n a g e d by o w n er A ll bills paid 452-3314 453-4545 459-9977 LONDON SQUARE APTS. 1 BR $ 185-SI 90 2 BR, 2 BA $255 2 BR, I Va BA S T U D IO $265 AL L BI LLS PA I D Shuttle at F ro n t Door 2400 T ow n L a k e C irc le 442-8340 SU ROCA APTS. Only 3 L e ft P R E L E A S E FOR JA N . I I BR F u r n . $170 W a l k to c a m p u s Shuttle I block 474-8019 1-1. $145 P L U S E L a u n d ry , T V cab le, c le a n P a rc o P la z a , 711 W 32nd 453- 4991 F U R N I S H E D A P A R T M E N T S fro m $ 1 4 9 E ffic ie n c ie s and 2 B e d ro o m , 2 B a th A ll B ills P a id No lease, s w im m in g pool r e c r e a tio n ro o m A d u lt liv in g , no pets. W A R R E N HOUSE 2439 To w n L a k e C ircle 442-4738 O n s h u ttle bus Morgana & Morgan M anor Apts. 1907 Robbins Plac e Eft., I and 2 Bedrooms A B P 478-1841 ____ E N F I E L D RD. Q uiet c o m p le x e s on sh u ttle 2505 E n fie ld , la u n d ry , pool, c o u rty a rd , a b v I br, Si59 50 478-2775 1717 E n fie ld I br lu x u ry studio, $164 OO plus E 478-9767. F R E E S E R V I C E P A R K I N G T R A N S P O R T A T I O N HA BITAT HUNTERS A fre e ap t lo c a to r s e rv ic e sp e c ia lizin g In co m p le x e s w ith access to shu ttle NOW L E A S IN G FOR S U M M E R & F A L L D o b ie M a ll S u ite BA 474-1532 C A M E R O N A P A R T M E N T S C O M F O R T A B L E L I K E O L D S H O E S ( 2 ) A N D L E V I S P L U S ca rp e te d (3 ) U T s h u ttle b u t (4 ) c ity bus line (5 ) 3 m a jo r shopping cen ters (6) fle x ib le lease ( 7 ) eve n pets and c h ild re n a re ok W h a t m o re can you ask f o r 7 I to u c h w ith b d r m , 2 b d r m G e t m a n a g e r at 1200 E 52nd St , A pt 102-A 453 6239 la r g e ( I ) in AVALON APTS. Eft. Furn. $ 1 2 7 Walk to Shuttle Small Complex HOO E. 32nd 477-0010 477-0784 W A L K T O U T R o om s $90 A B P , etfs I B R $150 A B P C am p us SHO A B P , Colony, 300 E 30th 476 1700 1616 R oyal S A X O N Y A P A R T M E N T S C res t S h uttle, c a b le T V C o m p le te ly e q u ip p e d k i t c h e n le a s e a v a ila b le 443 0 0 5 1 ___________________ 6 m o n th s tu rm s h o d a p a rtm e n t, I 2 B E D R O O M N e a r n e w S e to n H o s p i t a l b a t h Spacious. $170 plus e le c tr ic ity Phone 458-2426.__________________________________ L U X U R IO U S O N E B ed ro o m s and e f ­ ficien cies N e a r U T S m a ll co m plex 2907 W est A v e n u e 474-1712, 476-3467 C L O S E T O U T C A M P U S Shuttle or w a lk L a r g e I b ed ro o m s and efficien cies fro m i l l 7 50 A B P 2408 Leon 476-3467 S M A L L F U R N IS H E D A p a rtm e n t SHO A B P F e m a le o n ly No pets F e b ru a r y 20th 474 2029 a fte r 5 30.________________ 2 B L O C K S T O U T N ic e one bedroom S h ag c a r p e t, AC, pool a p a r t m e n t SI37 50 W a te r and gas paid 474-5385, 258 3385, 258-5555 S P A C IO U S , C O N V E N I E N T E f f ic i e n ­ c ie s D W ., d is p o s a l, C A /C H , shag c a rp e tin g , la u n d r y fa c ilitie s on c ity and s h u ttle bus W a te r , gas, g a rb a g e and cab le T V p aid 46th and A ir p o r t 459-1045 or it no a n s w e r, 454-3161.____________ E F F I C I E N C Y A P A R T M E N T 220 Bon me V ie w A B P , AC , on s e p a ra te m e te r Q u iet liv in g only $130 R e p ly to B e v e rly , 476-9101L__ T A K E O V E R C O N T R A C T for p riv a te room , p r iv a te b a th w ith k itc h en . C A /C H New c a ro e t B lo ck fro m cam pu s $123 A B P 451 6144.___________________________ F U R N / U N F U R N . A p t w ith u tilitie s . 454 9434 n ig h ts $150 $175 Close U T shu ttle bus Q U I E T A R E A n e a r cam pu s. I B R , $185. 911 B la n c o . 474-2555._________________ m__ L A R G E E F F I C I E N C Y , $145 A B P . 5 m in u te s fr o m L a w School. C a ll 478-0855 a f te r IO p m . UNF. APARTS. R IV E R S ID E D R IV E A R E A O n the s h u ttle , b e a u tifu lly d e c o ra te d e f ­ fic ie n c y , I b ed ro o m and 2 b ed ro o m lu x ­ u r y a p a r t m e n t s . E n jo y c a b a n a pool a r e a , o u tdoo r B a r B-Q and p r iv a te c lu b ro o m R a te s fro m $154 50, a ll b ills p aid C a ll 444-7880 or com e by a n y tim e fro m 9 a m - 9p m d a ily 2124 B urton a t O lto rf T H E A R R A N G E M E N T A P T S .____________ 7-1 $140 P L U S E . L a u n d ry , T V c a b le , c le a n P a rc o P la z a , 711 W 32nd 453- 4991 N IC E I B E D R O O M . O nly $145 plus e le c ­ t r ic it y N e a r shu ttle Loaded O a k K n o ll, 620 South F ir s t 444-1269. E F F I C I E N C Y A P A R T M E N T S fo r re n t S tu d e n ts o n ly $80 and $90 A B P 474-5296 . s _____________ _ 2810 N u e c e S P A C IO U S , C O N V E N I E N T E f f i c i e n ­ c ie s D W , d is p o s a l. C A /C H , s h a g c a rp e tin g , la u n d ry fa c ilitie s on c ity and s h u ttle bus W a te r, gas. g a rb a g e and c a b le T V p aid 46th and A ir p o r t 459-1045 or if no a n s w e r 454-316 1 . ___________ _ I BR u n fu rn is h e d 6 G A R A G E A P T m o n th s lease $135 a ll b ills p aid M a le g r a d u a te studen t or w o rk in g C a ll 452 1427 a fte r 5 p n e a r U T O ne bedroom d u p le x , $110 See E f f ic i e n c y $95 plus e le c t r ic i t y 29th, g a r a g e a p t m a n a g e r , 908 W B a r h a m P ro p e rtie s , 926-9365 o n & BOARD W O M E N : C O N T R O L YOU R L I V I N G E N V I R O N M E N T ! C o-op hou sin g o ffe rs g en u in e re s p o n ­ s ib ilit y a n d d e c is io n m a k in g p o w e r M a k e frie n d s and save m o n ey , too C o n­ t a c t S u zan n e K e lly , in te r Co-O p C o uncil, 510 W est 23rd, 476-1957, 10am to 5pm T L O K C O -O P Room B o ard $130 m o n th W a s h e r d r y e r , fu ll-tim e cook 1903 R io G ra n d e 478 0450 C O N T E S S A A N D C O N T E S S A W E S T W o m e n 's doubles a v a ila b le for sub lease fo r S p r i n g C a ll 477 9766, 476 4648 L O W C O S T L I V I N G for peo ple who can to c r e a te a h o m e w o rk w ith o thers R o om a n d b o a rd fro m $520 s e m e s te r i n t e r -C o-O p C ouncil, SIO W est 23rd 476 1957 B E L L S O N D O R M E x c e lle n t h o m e cooked m e a ls AC, m a id , s w im m in g pool 2610 R io G ra n d e 476-6579, 476-4552 __________ _______________ ____________ 8-5 D O B IE S u blease double suite m eals, m a id s e rv ic e w a lk to class c o n v e n ie n t c o m fo r ta b le Can P ie r r e 345 0785 S E B A S T IA N S 105 W 20th has 9 room s ♦or r e n t $75 $90 Phone 478-5846 D O B IE M e n s corner su ite to r sp rin g I opening 19 m e a ls C a ll B ra d su b lease a t 476 7760 TUTORING PSY 317 T U T O R I N G 5th y e a r psychology g r a d u a te studen t s e e k s 8-10 students who w a n t help w ith P sy 317 - S a tis f ie s for P sych o lo g y H a v e p r e v io u s ly T A ed for 317. 358 and a m c u r r e n t ly w o rk in g as T A fo r Psy 384K ■ A d v a n c e d in fe re n tia l Stat R a tes $4 per h ou r, re d u c e d ra te s for cou ples 454 4496, D a n E X P E R I E N C E D P IA N O T E A C H E R B e g in n e rs , ad v anced U T m usic U T a r e a B e g in n er g u ita r also 474-5514 SERVICES te a c h in g m e th o d s P R O F E S S IO N A L V io lin , g u ita r Ages 7 • a d u lt. BS d e g re e M o n te W a lla c e 443 6088 fo r yo u r E X C E L L E N T a ll day c a r e c h ild D e g re e teach e rs C o n g re g a tio n a l C h ild D e v e lo p m e n t C e n te r 408 W 23rd V is ito r s w e lc o m e 472-2370, 454-3962 O N T H E R O A D O R IN Y O U R D R IV E W A Y W I L L NOT R I P YOU O F F Mobile Car Repair W e c h a rg e 70% of g a ra g e r a te by c o m in g to you D o n 't tow it C a ll us, 443-2719 SERVICES University Student Day Care Center Spring Registration Frid ay, Jan. 16. 1 0 a m - 2 p m c h ild re n , 3 m e n th i - 3 ye orx o ld 7 0 ” p ot h o u r 3 3 0 3 S on A n to n io 4 7 6 -6 9 9 4 SERVICES SERVICES SERVICES Fo o d s h o p p in g g et t in g t o be a d r a g ? TIRED OF COOKING AND WASHING DISHES? ON A LIMITED FOOD BUDGET? INTERESTED IN A BARGAIN? The solution is conveniently available now. in For $ 3 .0 6 per day, students not living University Residence Halls may purchase a Jester Center Halls 20 meal per week con­ tract for the Spring 1976 Semester. Inform ation and contracts are available a t the— Division of Housing and Food Service Office Kinsolving Dormitory, 26th Street Entrance Phone 471-3136 JESTER CENTER HALLS HAS A SPACE FOR YOU! SPRING 1976 CONTRACTS AVAILABLE IMMEDIATELY APPLICATIONS FOR 1976 SUMMER SESSION AND THE 1976-77 LONG SESSION NOW BEING ACCEPTED Come on over now to the Division of Housing and Food Ser­ vice in Kinsolving Dormitory - 26th Street Entrance — and find out more about our — • convenient on-campus location • reasonable rates which include: — 2 0 great meals per week — furnished bed linens — efficient maid service — telephone in each room — varied activities and programs • laundry facilities on each floor • games room for your enjoyment • comfortable lounge areas for relaxing and studying • staff that cares about YOU! lf you can't stop by, call us at (512) 471-3136, or write P.O. Box 7666, Austin, Texas 78712. W e'll be happy to send you additional information and an application. TY P IN G HELP WANTED Just North of 27th at Guadalupe 2707 H em phill P a rk MBA, T Y P I N G , P R I N T I N G . B I N D I N G T H E C O M P L E T E P R O F E S S I O N A L F U L L T IM E t y p i n g SERVICE 472-3210 and 472-7677 T H E S E S , D IS S E R T A T IO N S & P R O F E S S IO N A L R EP O R TS IO years typing experience, knowledge of graduate school requirements. C all for appointment after 4 836-2055 ask for Lee ROY W. HOLLEY T Y P I N G & T Y P E S E T T I N G C O P Y I N G & P R I N T I N G B I N D I N G 1401 M o h le Dr. 476-3018 TYPING E R • R Y SERVICE Reports, Resumes, Theses, Letters All University and business work Last M inute Service Open 9-8 Mon-Th 8. 9-5 Fri-Sat 472-8936 Dobie M a ll Just North of 77th at Guadalupe 2707 Hem phill Park APARTMENT MANAGER IMMEDIATE OPENING Need m ature young couple to m anage small complex in UT area. I must be home most of day. No children or pets. Call Jim Solt, 472-6715 L IV E -IN H E L P W A N TE D . Room and board plus small salary for part-tim e work. Call M rs. M artin at office, 477- 2500 __ __________________ _ PROFESSO RS Need Babysitter 10-12 or I M o n d a y -F rid a y on campus. 1-5:30 W estlake Hills. Car required. 327-2574, 471-1778 E X P E R I E N C E D B A R T E N D E R . 20 Including weekend hours per week work Call Malcolm , 345-4700 The Cour­ tyard. _____________ B A B Y S IT T E R M W F 1-5on campus. Call 478-5327 after 6 00 _ D R IV E R N E E D E D for child develop­ insurance m ent center. Vehicle and p r o v id e d M u s t o b ta in r e s t r ic t e d chauffeur's license. Mornings 6 30- 9:00, afternoons .3:30 - 6:00 . 472-4384. 14 STU DE NTS for telephone solicitation work. Full time, part tim e, paid daily. No exp erien ce necessary. E x c e lle n t working conditions. *2 .10/per hour plus commission. Call 474-9323 or 474-9304 B A B Y S IT T E R . Pick up child a fte r school M W F 2-4 p.m . $2/hour. C ar, references necessary. 345-4999 or 471- 4352 S E C R E T A R Y 20 hours a week, a fte r­ noons. Good typing. Neat appearance required 472-7739 ROOMS UNIVERSITY VILLAG E 478-7411 Available E ft. S55-S90 A B P TEXAN DORM Doubles $199 Singles $359 per semester 1905 Nueces Daily maid service, central air Refrigerators, hot plates allowed. ffonn P arking available Two blocks campus Co-ed. Resident m anagers 477- 1760 GOODALL WOOTEN DORMITORY 2112 G uadalu pe (across street from cam pus) 472-1343 P riv a te rooms with private baths, dou­ ble rooms, suite rooms, balconies, porter service N E E D S E R IO U S -M IN D E D F e m a le companion live on Lake Austin with our mother No chores Only obligation even­ ing assistance if needed Own transpor­ tation, reasonable credentials 327-0135 after 5 _______________________ F U R N IS H E D , all bills paid. Quiet, walk to UT 306 East 30th 472-5134 U N IV E R S IT Y GIRLS, M E N P rivate rooms M ake reservations for January . 2 laundry, blocks west campus M aid CA CH, S69, $79 2411 Rio G rande M anager, 476-255L _______ _______ S U B L E A SE C A S T ILIA N contract First month's rent free You keep deposit TV, maid service 478 9811. Leave word that this contract is for M ic hael Cook.______ furnished rooms l e a * . CA /C M , lf TH E BROWNLJEEL $104 50 ABP 3 month walk to school 2502 Nueces 478-1704 no answer, 454-3857^ F U R N IS H E D ROOMS and efficiencies only 2 blocks from UT $85/up 477-7558, 2800 Whitis __________ F U R N IS H E D ROOMS within walking distance to c a m p u s . C A /C H carpet kitchen privileges S*7 50 double, $85 single 477 9388 2710 Nueces.__________ M D D O R M for Men 2602 Guadalupe AC, kitchen Single $85, double $50 477- 0045. _ ..... .. ....... ............................... W A N T a Q U IE T , com fortable single room in small residence? I block cam ­ pus $80 ABP, maid twice weekly. 205 West 20th 453 4082 for appo in tm e n t.__ _ In C L E A N , C O M F OR TAB L E Room la rg e old-fashioned house, k itc h e n privileges $60 monthly 1700 Salina (off ____ E M L K BlvdJ_Mrs RoHins N E E D F E M A L E student to take over spring contract at Contessa West. Call 472 2442 for Info Yes, we do type F r e s h m a n themes 472-3210 and 472-7677 t im e r e p o r t s , T H E S E S , Dissertations, books typed a c c u ra te ly , reasonably Printing, binding Off 24th Street Mrs Bodour, 471-8113. _ V IR G IN IA S C H N E ID E R Typing Ser­ vice G raduate and undergraduate typ­ ing printing, binding 1515 Koenig Lane 459 7205 T Y P IN G A LL P A P E R S Experienced ty p is t A c c u r a te , neat t o ll Reasonable rates Bobbie Burden, 413-B East 30th 477-8376 ___________ E X P E R IE N C E D A N D FAST Typist Theses, d is s e rta tio n s , professional reports, law, etc Printing, binding Bar- bsra Tullos 453-5124 M A B Y X SMALLWOOD TYPIN G Last m in u te , o v e rn ig h t a v a ila b le Te rm letters papers, theses, dissertations, M a s te rC h a rg e , B an kA m e rica rd 892 0727 ___________ J u s t N o r t h of 27th a f Guadalupe 2707 H em phill ParkrnR E S U M E S w ith o r w ith o u t pictures 2 Day Service 472 3710 and 472-7677 HELP WANTED H ELP W ANTED at Mother Earth 10th and L a m a r A pply in person, I M , Monday thro ugh F r id a y . P A R T T I M E R E S E A R C H A N A L Y S T ndividual with at 'east 3 years college vork m statistics, finance or math need^ •d to aid and corporate planning and ontroi M u s t be interested In at least I 'ear e m p lo y m e n t E x c e lle n t salary 136 0836. tn t 262 for ap p o in tm en t C L A S T RON BO AT CO. 9108 Reid Drive G C M 30 D A NC E R S 1225 ■ 1475 a w eek take borne tip s No s ittin g w ith v plus sers, no experience preferred nts w elcom e D a y and night r n a v a ila b le Call 451-9138 4910 __________ t Road TA's, G R A D E R S , G R A D U A T E S T U D E N T S Lecture Notes Service will pay lake notes In any course offered at (versify provided that we can sei m um o* 20 sets of notes and can mission from the p ro fM M r Call ie by 901 W 24th 477-3641 A D U LTS OR COUPLE lo live in eated, air-conditioned garage ant with cooking facilities. Be ,ibte for large residence, limited id domestic duties for owner and M-time available for other job or to University Location close id University Rent, utilities, *ood led plus reason ab le s a la ry nces re q u ire d W rite Brown Suite 918. 708 Colorado, Austin D U A T E S T U D E N T S : s are still available for part tim e m en! as a n o teta k er In 20 I departments Must type Come II i d A Lecture Notes Service, 4th 477-3641 E T T E R S N E E D E D to jt leaflets in classes we this semester. jditing 3y I D A Lecture Notes IS a 901 W. 24th. p a y er class. The job is p art nd tem p o ra ry . y o u n g e p u b l i c a n OLUNTEERS N E E D E D ra y fo r Congress C o m m itte e n. • » « " « T s s r r -w s ll be trained in mc our only pay* ,i Bm ted persons shookI ca" BM or C o m m itte e C h a irm a n , V .L . 453-3224. 22 - ONE BR APTS. led couple to manage Stab­ le, or student husband. Free a la ry Near North Loop & Call 345-4257, after 5:00 p m ________ 9-5 Sat & Sun lig h t tor i n i F P E R S O N I * bours/m'dday na duties •idav $25/week Must nay k k tat ion 441-3366, evenings. R O O M M A TES C L E A N . CO N S E RYA J I V E~ fl r a d u e t. fe m a le share apt $115 A B P Own bedroom Block from UT 477-3941 M A L E R O O M M A TE wanted, 18-25 yrs. Share Ca ' I bdrm apt R l* * r collect - Wharton, Tx 713-532-4948 to share nice F P m a l e S T U D E N T a (fe rm e n t on IF shuttle A vailable Im ­ ______ m ediately 476- 2 3 0 1 . N E E D H O U S E M A TE Own roo-rv F e n c ed yard S65 m onthly, '/a b ills ^ HOO H illcrest 451 8688 Evenings. G a ry . __ tor spring R O O M M A T E S N E E D E D semester 4 blocks from UT $ 6 /.5 u *B P TIO G raham Place Call Jim Fulton, 472- 2789 _ _ _ _ _ ----------------------- — A V E N U E S Need fem ale housemate tor two (2 ) bedroom yard, enclosed porch $ 1 0 0 p iu s bills Neat and clean Sandy^4S4 790r . ______ S T R A IG H T STUDIOUS F E M M J j T O i j room Student complex on shuttle no deposit S M A B P . 451-2149. Lane. to s h a re n ic e one n p a m M A L E bedroom apt Shuttle $87.50 plus Vi bills. Craig, 459 9480.________ ______________ N E E D E D 2 F E M A L E S to share 3-2 house near campus $85 <77-3944.______ M A L E R O O M M A T E s h a r e o n e . B M ABP V V J IK .o c .m w . Call Sunil a n y tlm t. 478-133*.__________ _ _ ---------------------- -- m a l e TO I M A M 2 / 2 1 M I . on Rio Grande $ 2 3 5 ABP 474-1958.__________ F S M A L E H O U S E M A TE Spacious 3/2 house on 4 5 th St No pets. $75 and /J bdls. 451 3539 N O N -S M O K IN G R O O M M A TE S wanted tor 3 BR townhouse $ 5 3 7 5 plus share o electricity 928-3750 Keep tr y in g ......... to share N E E D L IB E R A L F E M A L E lake* root a p a rtm e n tO w n b e d ro o m . On _______ shuttle $116 ABP 447-6036 MALI S E M A TES N E E D E D . M ellow old house own room Quiet neighborhood, fenced yard W asher/dryer. $90/month plus bills. 451-4768, Susan. ______ ; V i l l i a h i F N O W : N o n -s m o k in g ‘“ .re I.™ lurn^Sf "°U” $120, 1 2 bills 478-5302, 474-4804 m o u S E M A T S W A N T E D . F e m a le preferred $55 p l u s * bills Nonsmoker 911 W 26th 477-7547 _____ _____ R O O M M A TE W A N T S D Quiet female ... ................. ty 478 1130,452-9074. S H AR E ! BR .p l C A ,C H . .p u t t i. . " 5 ABP James, 447-9223 ___________ M u .lV .t u d .n l M a ry . . l i e r 5 OO p m . 476-6049, 452-7488 u n i i SP M A T E W A N T E D S erio u s , sssinsaa!?w*"1' Dike' tie UT Kyle, 477 2961._______________ _ ssrworShS. s s . 0521. Keep trying. ____________ «>■ « M ° i n 6N. W 'T « ___ ____ ABP Jim, 441-3301 M A I f R O O M M A TE wanted to share 2 shuttle. Call m a l l k u u on pvenjngs OK. bedroom house. Close Phil, afternoons and late eve g 452 3952 N E E D 2 M O R E guy s to share four bdr. R iver Hills Apts jSrE* L.4*bm4»«^ a r n O f AC . . ™ n l ”lS I K ABP SR .H P " 1' C .II Ann, 4753. _________________ rn R O O M M A T E (S ) wanted to h « 9 bedroom apartm ent 4 blocks chuttie corner 4H-3021. Am y. O M V X , e dT„‘,h W 2 ^ ” *V 451-3441, K W K ? 8* * s Alford, 453-1234_ Steven r FriHav. January 16, 1976 THE DAILY TEX;VN Page 19 ECI 1253 W 3 w ay speaker 12" woofer 5" midrange 3 " tweeter W alnut cabinet Adjustable crossover LIQUIDATION SALE Friday 10-6 Saturday 10-6 617 W. 29th 472-5471 SCOTCH 0-90 CRO-2 CUSTOM HI-FI 90 minute Chromium Dioxide Cassette App. Not. Adv. Value 5.60 TWO DAYS ONLY M A R A N TZ 1030 S tereo amplifier 16 w atts par channal 3 yr. warranty BSR 2260 Fully autom atic changar w / bass, dust cover and Shura cartridge ULTRA SOUND V SANSUI 221 A M / F M Stereo Receiver 8 w atts per channel 2 yr. warranty BSR 2260 Fully autom atic changer, with base, dust cover, and Shura cartridge AMPEX 801 T w o way speaker 8 " w oofer I " tweeter App. Na!. Adv. Value 329.65 TW O D A Y S O N L Y 5189’ 5 App. Not. Adv. Value 419.65 TW O D A YS O N LY *269” App. N o t Adv. Value 539.95 SANSUI 331 A M / F M Stereo Receiver 12 w atts per channel 2 yr. warranty BSR 2520 Fully autom atic turntable w/ base, dust cover, and A D C cartridge ECI Super 8 T w o w ay speaker 8 " w oof ar 3 ” tweeter W alnut cabinet 5 yr. warranty SANSUI 331 A M / F M Stereo Receiver 12 w atts per channel 2 yr. warranty BSR 2520 Fully autom atic turntable w/ base. dust cover and A D C cartridge RLH 1053 3 w ay speaker 10" w oofer 6 " midrange 3 " tweeter TW O DAYS O N LY *329” App. Not. Adv. Value 579.95 TW O D A YS O N LY *36995 PIONEER SX 535 A M / F M S t .r .o Raceiver 20 watts per channel W ood cabinet 2 yr. warranty BSR 2620 Fully autom atic turntable, heavy platter, com plete w / base, dust cover and A D C cartridge ECI 1253V 3 way speaker 12'' w oofer 6" m idrange 3" tw eeter 6 yr. w arranty PIONEER SX 636 A M / F M stereo receiver 26 w atts per channel High filter W ood cabinet DUAL 1225 A utom atic or single play Com plete w base, dust cover, and Shura M 9 1 E D cartridge ECI 1254H 4 speaker 3 way system 12” w oofer 6 " m idrange 3 ” tweeter Piezo tw eeter 6 yr. warranty M AR AN TZ 2230 A M / F M stereo receiver 30 w atts per channel 0.3% T H D 3 yr. warranty PE 3060 A utom atic or single play, com plete w/ base, dust cover and Shure M 91 ED cartridge M ARANTZ Imp. 7 3 w ay speaker 12" woofer 6 ” midrange 3 " tweeter 6 yr. warranty PIONEER SX 131 A M / F M stereo receiver 60 watts per channel DUAL 1228 Autom atic or single play, with pitch control and strobe C om p lete with base, dust cover, and Shure M 9 1 E D ECI Trend IOO 3 w ay speaker 12" woofer 6 " midrange 1" dom e radiator 6 yr. warranty TW O D A Y S O N L Y $44995 App. Not. Adv. Value 1007.70 TW O D A Y S O N L Y *619” App. Not. Adv. Value 1083.00 T W O D AYS O N LY App. Not. Adv. Value 1427.65 TW O D AYS O N LY B O W M A N CB-755 SUPER BU YS r i u n u n w a i j v v AM/FM Car Radio 95.00 79.95 MURA SP 402 Stereo Headphones 34.95 18.95 SUPERSCOPE A-235 Stereo Amplifier 89.95 59.95 PIONEER GX 2020 AM/FM Stereo Car Radio 115.00 89.95 PIONEER TS-25 Car Speakers 32.95 27.95 HEMISPHERE FC 101 FM Converter 39.95 24.95 MEDALLION 6S-562 69.95 24.95 PIONEER QX-747 4-Channel Receiver BSR 2260 Automatic turntable M ARAN TZ 2230 AM/FM Receiver 650.00 425.00 95.00 49.95 399.95 299.95 PIONEER KF 250 FM Cassette Car Stereo 144.95 119.95 MEDALLION 65-554 AM/FM I Track Car Deck 139.95 79.95 PIONEER CT 6161 Cassette Deck 299.95 249.95 The Stacked Deck • 8 - t r a c k r e c o r d a n d p la y b a c k d e c k 23 channel Squelch control SW R and S W R / C A L switch RF-S meter Delta tune A N L Removable mic PA SUPEREX 930 Stereo Headphones 19.95 12.95 RADATRON SUPEREX PRO B-6 Stereo Headphones 60.00 34.95 SHURE M91ED 49.95 54.95 32.95 21.95 TW O D A Y S O N L Y SENNHEISER HD414 Stereo Headphones ECI Trend IV 199.95 99.95 AUDIO TECHNICA A T -I O Cartridge 49.95 24.95 ECI 1253-V 3 way speaker ^199.95 149.95 SCOTCH RB 7M 7" Metal Reel 119.95 59.95 t h r o u g h a n y s y s t e m • r e c o r d s fr o m a n y s o u r c e a n d p la y s b a c k 7.95 2.99 29.95 15.95 • T w in V U m e t e r s • A u t o m a t ic a n d m a n u a l le v e l controls • T a p e / t im e c o u n t e r • P a u s e b u tto n • F a s t fo r w a rd App. Not. Adv. Value 199.95 TWO DAYS ONLY *149” App. Not. Adv. Value 189.95 SUPER TAPE SPECIALS X T A L-X C B 7 S C O T C H 2 0 7 S H A M R O C K 041 S C O T C H 8T-90 M A X E L L 8 T -90 ESS A M T -4 ESS A M T - 1 ESS AM T-1 T o w e r ESS A M T -3 App. Not. Adv. Valva Sat. Only 2 6 9 . 0 0 3 4 9 . 0 0 3 9 9 . 0 0 4 6 9 . 0 0 *215 * 250 *315 * 350 1800 ft. reel to reel High output - low noise Professional quality. 1800 ft. reel to reel High output - low noise Budget priced 90 minute 8 track Low noise Dynarange 90 minute 8-track Low noise App. Not. Adv. Value 8.75 99 App. Hat. Adv. Value 2.50 $ 1 2 5 App. Mat. Adv. Value 3.75 $2OO App. Hat. Adv. Value 4.05 J2* App. Not. Adv. Value 199.95 90 0 2 3 c h a n n e l S q u e lc h c o n t r o l D e lt a t u n e A N L P A s w it c h R em ovable m icrophone Friday 10-6 Saturday 10-6 *169” 617 W. 29th 472-5471 CUSTOM HI-FI Page 20 Friday, January 16, 1976 THE DAILY T E X A N