T h e Da il y T exan Student Newspaper at The University at Texas at Austin Austin, Texas, F rid ay, F e b ru ary 18, 1977 c e r e 3 I b a *■ * t q fV S b x° t 0 J ;,U I « j a j u a O m H J OJ . TV , X I ents • 1865 •5244 Council votes 4-3 boat What w as the d ifferen ce between last week and this w eek. -N O T H IN G ,” Snell told the Texan, adding that he had con­ sidered the im pact losing the national ra c e would have on By KAREN TUMULTY and D E E STEER Texan Staff Writer* a lo. of people.’’ sa,,! Mayor P ro X - n ' w h o is running uncontested for re-election sa.d the vote probably will have a negative effect on his cam paign, but I S T t w ' T o o re 5 * m inim um n otice allow able on an Tsfassr 's s & “tasjs. rm ^ m T o b " r i u d 0 E m m :0L ^ U „n L d M .y o rV tf Fr^ s T I u VS0™ r l s ! S e n u " T v M r a d m o n ^ l y opposed the Town ‘ ra fltc and l.U er l ^ k e ra ce s ^claim in g they c re a te “arsis arar af Austin, supposedly ending the w u r r ng ™ ‘ ™ v" ^ tv e r ask . Cham ber of C o m m erce P resid en t R u sh E v a n s Jto w e v e r. asjt^ ed to have the item placed on the agenda asA n em g becau se the city was in danger of lo s in g t held here every year during A q u aF est. T he boat y ^ "V T a N N IN G c S G abe G u tierrez was .he o n w " t o speak against the ra c e s before^the-council voted Tho ra c e s would dam age “ neighborhood integrity, k S S S S ^ P au l Hernandez who had M the a n t,r a c e faction , did not a rriv e at the m eeting until it w as too la te t • W e’ve been sold o u t,” he said, re fe rrin g to Snell s v ironically it was the sam e com m ent som e m em b ers of the A u s t i n B o a t Club had voiced about S n e ll’s vote against the ra ce s S t He'asser'|,ed t h « h f h K t been pressured by anyone from the C h am ber of C o m m erce to change his vote Councilwom an Linn said holding the vote with only a two-hour n o t i c e was “ a terrib le thing to do to these people Hernandez warned the cou ncil, “ I am com m itted to keeping l h " ™ , , of South Austin regard less of w ha, it u k e s T ^ E n V k E D U the T exa n w ha, he m eant by O ut stale- said. "T h a t m eans if I have to g e t rn from of a J S h L S S 'C a l 'T l u b ^ o k e a m a n 0Oanny H ^ V r m e d ° t h e council vote ’a *— rei,l| S t The ".uh 'know What changed th eir minds. ” he said Tri with the Austin P o lice D epartm ent to relieve traffic congestion created by the rat es. < B o at ra c e rs a re p ro jected to spend $250,000 while they are In Austin for the three ra c e s , R eed said. FR O M 1974 to 1976, r a c e rs and s p e c t a t o r s poured an es Unrated $ 1 2 m illion into the Austin econom y, he added In further business, the council voted to allow Rom e Inn to ( The bu^inesi^had te e n in danger of losing its mg because it was selling m ore alcoholic b ev era ^ es . * rounc» R om e Inn attorney J Winston I hapm an told the council R om e Inn now does 54 51 per cent of its b u s h e l j r t U j l f o o l The council also voted to set up a task fo rc e to study cab television service in Austin following a public hearing on how much a cc e ss the public should have to the c a b le system Vol. 76, No. IOO T w e n ty -F o u r P a g e s N e w s and E d ito ria l: 471-4591 Dean Garvie to relinquish job A u g . 37 P e te r M .G arvie, dean of the College of Fine A rts, announced Thursdsay he will resign his position as of Aug. 31 le tte r G arv ie sent a to U niversity President Lorene R ogers inform ing her he did not wish to continue as dean beyond the cu rren t acad em ic y e a r G arv ie, 49. succeeded D r. E . W illiam Doty as dean of the U niversity s College of F in e Arts in 1972. He was invited to the U niversity by fo rm er U niversity P resid en t Stephen Spurr. G a rv ie said a p p ro x im a te ly IU e x ­ p e rien ce d U n iv ersity a d m in is tra to rs have resigned sin ce R og ers took office “ My jo b has been to defend the college (F in e A rts) and facu lty , and th a t’s what I ’ve done but it has becom e im possible under ce rta in c irc u m sta n c e s .’’ G arvie (resigned ad­ them up said to sa y m i n i s t r a t o r s ) I d o n ’ t n eed “ Count anything m ore , “ T h e U n iversity a s an institution has been very good indeed,’ ’he said. “ I have no argum ent with the U niversity a t aU. He said he was esp ecially gratefu l to the Board of R egents for the new perform ing a rts cen ter. Work has ju s t begun on a la rg e College of F in e Arts and P e rfo r­ ming A rts Center a t the U niversity G arv ie said he has no future em ploy­ m ent plans, but “ th ere a re oth er things I want to do in life ” He is a native of Lon­ don and has a BA and MA from C am ­ bridge U niversity. R o g ers, contacted a t hom e Thursday night, said she had received the letter tht, said sne nau ic tx .v c u — t had “ no com m ent on it. but had “ no com m ent on i t .” - ------------- -— - "" D ean Peter G arvie ------------------------------------- ------------- — last week ■ TSP S ta ff Photo b y tarry Kolvoord :ull n a tu ra l g a s in v e stiga tjo n jw d e re a ___ c m . , .n m . fa s t since 1974. fa st since 1974. th e y c o u ld , WASHINGTON (U P I) - Saying som e the 'o d u c e rs a r e n ’t providing a ll a t u r a l g a s I n t e r i o r screta ry C ecil Andrus ordered a full in- estigation Thursday and said he would on any com e down very, very hard ho d eliberately withholds fuel. Andrus said a prelim inary survey of ve gas fields off the Louisiana coast Mind “ shut-in” re serv o irs containing lm ost a trillion cu bic fe e t of gas It also Bund the flow of gas from a ctiv e wells rn bree fields had fallen off surprisingly Saying he will tak e steps a fte r the new investigation to fo rce stepped up produc­ tion where n e cessa ry , Andrus estim ated full production from the shut-in wells in ju s t those five fields could supply 98 ‘ his billion cubic fe e t of gas a year w inter s gas shortage is estim ated a t I trillion cubic feet. T h e 5 2 -p a g e p r e lim in a r y r e p o r t covered four gas fields in detail and one ‘eld s in m o re g e n e ra l te rm s . T he IO per cen t of all Gull representing Railroad Commission authorizes rate study T h e T e x a s R a ilr o a d C o m m is sio n lursday gave its G as U tilitie s Division e green light to study the feasib ility of iplem enting tla t ra te s fo r natu ral gas T he com m ission also hiked the sta te s ii production a i d a b l e back to IOO per ent for M arch The allow able had been st a t 98 per cen t for the la st two months^ The division probably w ill study first om panies tran sm ittin g natural gas to th e p r a c t i c a l i t y of e s - e te r m in e abhshing fiat ra te s for a ll cu stom ers. C a rle s Rowton of the com m ission s in­ form ation s erv ices said Instituting fla t ra te s would m ean all cu stom ers would pay the sam e d ollar amount per thousand cu bic fe e t o gas regard less of any sp ecial c ircim sta n ce s. finds d iscrep an cies betw een the " g a t e ra te s ” tran sm issio n com panies ch a rg e d ifferen t c itie s fo r the it m ay order show ca u se sam e gas, the division II hearings. . A fter tra n sm is s io n co m p a n ie s a re studied, the division will look at burner tip ’’ ra tes distribution com panies are charging consum ers. production, a re operated by IO oil com ­ f ' J ’^ L l . n e s ' panies and feed pipelines serving the a reas hardest hit by the w inter gas serving the crisis ONE M EM BER OF THE independent team that m ade the prelim inary survey - the suggested “ econom ic in cen tives (R elated story, P og« 3 •) hope for gas p rice decontrol - might lie behind the recen t reduced gas flow and failure to put re serv o irs into procurtson into But the report itself did not go reasons. It “ raised m ore questions than it answ ered ,” Andrus said He said he would launch a fu ll-scale probe of all producers holding f e ^ a l leases in the Gulf of M exico to find out if natural gas has been held off the m ark et d eliberately and how m uch the United S tates can boost production in lOT-TO. Tenneco, T e x a co and Continental Oil Co. said they would cooperate with the probe and denied they held back gas. F e d e r a l law r e q u ir e s h o ld e rs ct federal oil and gas leases to sta rt produc­ tion within five y ears unless an extension is granted. Sixtv*two Gulf Coast tra cts have run over the fiv e-year lim it, Andrus said. ★ * ★ national energy policy and extends d rill­ ing to the A tlantic Coast. ing to the A tlantic I.o ast “ We a re running out of gas and have run out of p a tie n ce,” Edw ards said in a telegram to In terior S e creto ry C ecil An­ drus, "and th erefore will toke every step legally and e n g in e e rin g ^ possible to slow down ra te s of recovery until the long standing inequities betw een produc­ ing and nonproducing sta te s have been rem oved O h io governor w an ts Texas g a s HOUSTON (U P I) — Ohio Gov. Ja m e s A Rhodes led a delegation of Ohioans to T exa s in search of fuel Thursday and found about IOO rep resen tativ es of the oil and gas industry ready to talk -W e need oil, gas, propane and fuel oil in the s ta te of O h io ,” R hod es told petroleum rep resen tativ es who accepted his invitation to m e e t at a downtown ^ “I'k n o w it s unusual for a governor to go around But we do get a little a tte n ­ tion. This is a new concept Rhodes, who said Ohio needs 2.5 billion cu bic fe e t of gas per day for the next 40 days, was accom panied by sta te eI]e r By’ developm ent and education o fficia ls and rep resen tativ es of u tilities, labor and in­ BATON R O U G E , L a. (U F I) - Gov. Edwin Edw ards threatened Thursday to reduce Louisiana oil and gas production until the fed eral governm ent adopts a dustry H ouse committee passes $50 rebate b asic W itt C a r te r . W ™ , ” [lscal 1977, e .O. Goldbeck, a p a n o s e T » o n Staff W iota by Slo v an Pum phrey Say cheese T h . WASHINGTON (U P I) - The House toys and M eans C o m m ittee Thursday pproved an econom ic stim ulus plan m- luding $50 tax re b a tes and paym ents for lm ost everyone in the country and a m all tax cut for both individuals and usiness. The co m m ittee also voted to extend a e rie s of individual and corp orate tax pts passed la st y ear that would have e x ­ ile d a t the end of this y ear. . re q u e sted The plan was alm ost exactly * h a t ^ resid en t C a r te r in- lividuals excep t for changes designed to ieny the re b a te to those m aking m ore Jian $30,000 and to be c e rta in that $ ° c ™1 Security recip ien ts do not get two $51 fo r payments. B U T T H E C O M M IT T E E m ade BUT THE COMMITTEE m ade b asic stru ctu ral changes in C a r te r’s proposed business tax cu ts, d irecting them toward those th e ir th a t em ploym ent. The m axim um tax saving that could go to any industry was lim ited in d u stries in c r e a s e 10The vote on final passage was 26-8^but the com m ittee e a rlie r c a m e ^ m t h r e e votes of killing the proposed $50 per per­ son rebate. u A move by R ep. Andy Ja c o b s , D-IndL, to kill the reb ate was defeated by only 20- l ? The final co m m ittee bill would provide $13 billion in tax cuts and re b a te s rn fisca l 1977. $9.3 billion in fisca l 19.8 and $8.7 billion in fisca l 1979 as com pared Friday Clear . . . Clear, w a r m d ays and n i g h t s w i l l c o o l F r i d a y and p r e v a i S a t u r d a y . The hi gh t e m p e r a t u r e F r i d a y will be in the upper 70s with the low in the up- with southerly per 40s 12 to 18 m.p.h./ winds at 7:09 a.m. sunrise and s u n s e t at 6:21 h i g h p . m . T h e t e m p e r a t u r e S a t u r ­ day will be in the low 70s. with C a r te r’s program , which would have provided $13.8 billion in fisca l 1977, $8 I billion in 1978 and $8 8 billion in 1979. IN ADDITION, extension of expiring tax cu ts would co st the Treasury $7.8 billion in fis c a l 1978 and $6 6 billion in 1979. It was assum ed all along that these cuts would be extended in som e bill The bill goes to the House late next week, and probably will be acted on either la te next week or early the follow ­ ing week ta x r e b a te s tax , although IN ITS FINAL fo rm , the b ill: • G iv e s $50 to e v e ry m em ber of each fam ily if at least that much was paid the in rebate phases out betw een $25,000 and $30 000 ad justed gross incom e. No one m aking m ore than $30,000 would receiv e any r e b a te . F a m ilie s with ch ild ren would get the full $50 per person reb ate even if they paid less than that in tax. . Special $50 paym ents would go to i n c l u d i n g railroad a l m o s t e v e r y o n e e l s e recip ients of Social S e c u r i t y re tirem en t, aid to fa m ilies with epe dent child ren, fed eral w elfare program s black lung benefits and veterans and v eteran s’ widows on pensions • Sm all tax cu ts would go to m ost of those who use the standard deduction. The cu rren t graduated standard deduc non would be abolished and es nenwonit P E P E L O P E Z T ^ ^ A ^ " " " f - I a I t a a i a H H K ) »*OOM» »*•»-» ‘ » r n (VIS UMH) I s n tte v llh e ’•"Ji?*!1**1 t ts w ttr tth y O J A V*T (£l • % 11*1 em ll ........ I »n ii•«**!I I l * t * ( I *«»< » 1 OW»"»#V‘ Heme Ai tit ( * m r t r * t ilt t t a a * w r lv < " » » * * r t i M i « * » v w w „ i „ i , a t t y w * * « * t « - A U * eat •** »««*> • » hw rtwttvlMV I I I A ‘ it «»«* School board head announces for mayor A. a«A ill/ said, but added she did not mean to judge the T p u itn g a ^ r e s s 1 cord er e n t ^ M d ' Ie 11 a n said she favored single-member d j ^ c ^ revis- ing the City Charter and putting the the voters She added that a c0™ ™ ^ directly responsible to the people would be needed to align district boundaries A C O L U M N in the Texan Wednesday nuoted a reliable source saying, The w has been passed that Allan Sh .yens h « got ^ lim ited (in a n e ,ng a v a ila b ly . t o C i r ole McClellan Th.s time the sonallv involved in the mayor s race^ Me wants Friedm an out McClellan denied the » ^ connection saying. contact with Gov Allan Shivers I have not even McClellan said she would have run even if Mayor Je ff Friedm an had announced would seek re-election •Austin deserves a city government and a City Council led by a mayor who w ill listen to the citizens, examine the (acts and act without loot-dragging or temporizing. or temponz""<' '*l'houl prS en‘ A b l a t e " * the daughter o( former Keeton, who also T eIa n column University Law D e a le r * The candida ttetSdte"w i l d not have time to involve daughters campaign h‘ « r r i . F L L A N HAS served on the Austin ^ w a r t f n i e h e ^ e s i g n a L n with the hoard late Thursday^ Dresicjent of Austin Com- She r ° Uppp Board of Trustees M cClellan mUHl y .p°ri from the U n iversity w ith a ,dpffre€ in government in 1961 graduate i an4**enr«l secretary of the Students ^ j ^ n n i n g (o r m ayor a re W I, son F orem an. Ben Blond and Chris Crow. im an well Lebermann and Fried- m an^lready have announced that they w ill not seek re-election to the council. Filing deadline (or the April 2 election is March 2 Taaon Sto« by bovid Clellon Carole M c C le lla n A University w student was arrested in Je ste r ( enter at a p p ro x im a te ly 4 15 a rn Thursday and charged with criminal trespassing University police arrested Dennis Hubert O 'D ocb arty after several Je s te r coeds reported a male knocking on their doors University and Austin P o lice Departm ent report* said O'Docbarty IS a 1 9-year-old freshman General and I om parative Studies student and a Jester ( enter resident According to the reports, Jester security guard Dary Luzewski spotted a man who matched a description given by the women O ’Docharty was arrested after University police observed him coming out of a women’s restroom O 'D o c b a rty , charg ed in M u n ic ip a l C o u rt p lead ed not guilty to the (Tass misdemeanor complaint He was released on $27 50 bond “C Senate unofficially vetoes Bank Act l o c i , . i E S S V i 1 Goverment s status as a l ' 3 5 « — nights lacking The Senate met oz action on the act which entails enough members “ ^ o m Studen, Government s University e bank account The ac. ^ M W W Hang, S l i n g dead,in . (or Cee- lions has passed ,nai,.at*d it would take no ac- or rescind it. HaulI added Government stands to lose ,Ptr ^ r L « r , e e ac o i , r , o n Bim program, recyciing pro­ ject and tax exempt s u m s „ aug said he (e ll the nonhmd.ng vote w „ l let the issue .Bank student G overnm ent President Skip SlyfieW >l» iu h ^ d k ln s stating "w e we have now" in support of " ^ . ^ . ^ “ ■tr a c ? Sly,.eld spoke for the act, claiming the N o r t h w e s t C h i r o p r a c t i c Clinic Dr. Thomas R. Fedesna, D.C. Dr. Thomas A. Fraus, D.C. Saturday, Feb. 19, 1977 I p.m. to 5 p.m. STUDENT DISCOUNT AVAILABLE No date was scheduled tor another try necessary tor a binding vote. UT junior charged with coed assault ^ A University student was released on bond Wednesday in a f t e r b e in g c h a rg e d Municipal Court with simple assault. C harles Bernstein J r . , a junior business major, was fe m a le a r r e s t e d a f t e r a University student, who re­ U niversity student, who re quested her name be with e , said a man grabbed her in t Business-Economics Building^ The com plainant told police wpot asking her name. W kept asking her name. When she refused to tell hl7 \ he grabbed her and demanded to know her name, she said. A cco rd in g to the police report, she pulled aw ay from him and escap ed in to a classroom. . The m an a lle g e d ly ap- ’ — „c e the nroacheci her again after the ^ wa§ w arned by P Shepherd, a senior and C o m p a ra tiv e to stop stu d e n t, g g fn T a n bothering her. thereportsaid. Th*- Daily Texan a student t pub!,shert bv Texas Student 78712 The Daily Texan ,s pub!,shed M ^ d ^ ^ a y . day, except holiday and exam pern* •• ■ , . q " S t L v ^ U U o t .Austin. Tex Wednesday. Thursday. and En- ^ gt Austin. Tex (471-4591). at the editorial office in TSP Building I . . . S T ! 471-1*16 n e n a tio n a l a d v e r t is in g r e p r e s e n t a tiv e of T h e D a ily ^ e x a ^ ^ ^ , Th. DalW TeXan is National Educational Adverlising Service. Inc 360 Lexington ^A ^ The Darts Texan subscribes to News Service The Texan is a me Southwest Journalism ( ongress. the Texas uauy A m e ric a n N ewspaper Pub lishers Association ruled ternatlonal and New York Times AM0Clated ('ollegiate Press, the Newspaper Association, and v v* THE D AILY TEXAN SUBSCRIPTION RATES ONE S EM ES T ER F A IX OR S P l W G n W 77 I. vox J . — Picked up on campus Picked up on campus picked up on campus basic student lee U T faculty staff general public I WO SEM ES T ER S (F A L L ANO SPR IN G , 1976-77 PK-k^i up on campus - U T faculty sUff Picked up on campus - general public Bv mail in U S A I 75 I 65 6 75 11 50 I 330 12 OO 21 OO public invited Research 458-4283 Picked up on campus general public Bv mail in U S A W J S S T - vt r r l" “w,u" Send orders and address changes to TEXAS Si I UE..X A ustin Texas 787 1 2. or to TS* Huiiding. C3 200 , ~ . „ STi nKNT PUBLICATIONS. P O Box D. _________________________ inc a f f o r d a b l e p o r t a b l e SHARP'S EL-500 16’5 ■* 7 S H A B I ’ Sharp'* El-500 P « rt?m * a m a z in g %peed a n d sim plicity, at a v y “ ^ " a« ^ d a b U °p ric * rth • Add, subtract, multiply, divid# • Change sign key • Wtmory-in Ray • Recall memory key e Memory pkis key • Power calculation key e Reciprocal kay • Square root extraction key Degree/Minute/Second - Decimal Degree Conversion Key • Trigonometric functions key • Arc Key • Pi Key • Natural anti-logarithm key • Natural logarithm key • Inter exponent key N Q R T E X - 1 8 0 0 - B L A V A C A Sana.Ant pica* t OPEN 10-6 M 454-9675 Friday, - - - - - ■■ i m n THE PA1LV TEXAN □ Fade 3 i - r i u a y , r e m u p i y ■ — — — Carter cancels sale of bombs_____ • I Sadat praises decision WASHINGTON (U P I) - * * * * * C a rte r h as c a n c e le d th e F o rd a m in istra tio n decision devastating concussion bom bs and review ing w h eth er even States should have House announced Thursday them , the to se ll Isra e l th * U nited The decision has been m ade bv the President not to sell concussion bombs to Israel or any o th e r n atio n , secretary Jody P o w e l l said Israel is the only known country to have a s k e d for P ^ • w T a r e at this tim e reassessing the need to retain the weapons in our own in­ ventory.” Powell said Israel Pow ell said, how ever, th e I m ted the p ro m ^ed States will sell tan k s and 1 5 5 -mm p ackage of M60 howitzers S of the sale are s e c r e t Each p art of the package is v r o r th a t least $7 million and therefore is subjec to congressional review. t a l s l Powell said the sale to isra e l o f e night-vision infrared ra d a r system der “ very active consideration, p rim ar Iv of a technical nature C arter s decision on the concussion bomb. he said. ‘related to a genera desire to lim it and reduce the sale of sophisticated and highly weapons ... and his feeling tha a dei sion not to sell these weapons is not in any way in co n sisten t w ith his oft repeated com m itm ent to the security o ____ (U PI) CAIRO Egypt - President Anwar Sadat told Secretary oM K at* Cyrus Vance Thursday the United Stat* s re fu s a l of a c o n tr o v e r s ia l Is r a e li a very posi ive weapons request was step ” toward Middle E ast peace. “ With the help of the United States in everv step and stage, we can establish peace in the a re a ,” Sadat said after a three-hour evening m eeting with V a n a at the B arrages guest house on the Nile outside Cairo. S adat p raised their talks and san the harm onious a t ­ m osphere at e accepted an invitation to visit I resident Carter in Washington in April, a month after a visit by Israeli P rim e M inister Yitzhak Habin exploding firestorm s over huge a re w . The effect is an instant depletion ot ox vgen that collapses vital organs ' President Ford m ade the decision to a modernize* sell Israel the bombs version - during the election cam pa gn Powell said C arter, in revoking that ‘forego our decision, did not want to responsibility to review this salt C arter m ade the Israel decision early this week, Powell said, but delayed a £ nouncem ent until Secretary of State Cyrus Vance personally informed Israe and Vance, in a brief appea . Sadat and Vance, in a brief BPI**™ between their m eeting and dinner aid not reveal the details of their talks on the timing, form at and palrticipation of a Middle E ast peace conference, but badat said “ Egypt is ready now for a p e n n a nent soluiion and global peace. In an apparent reference to the Soviet Union, he said. “ somebody may be angry about this, but we will seek U S. help m every form ” Sadat said Jordan and the Palestine Liberation Organization should decide how they will represent the Palestinians. Such a decision could break the deadlock over Palestinian and Israeli participa­ tion at peace talks in Geneva. and added. “ I certainly w ant to make it c lear the decision was m ade on its own He also announced th a t C arter has sent a p riv a te note to Soviet d issident Andrei S akharov and said the P resW ent ’Wery lik e ly ” w o u ld m e e t w ith V la d m ir B ukovsky, the expelled Soviet d,s*‘d*" C a rte r’s letter to Sakharov I owed said replied to a letter th e I* * * * received from the Nobel I eace I rize- winning dissident and basically real- firm ed his com m itm ent to the individual rights and liberties and freedom of this nation in that re g a rd .’ He said the White House would not release its text. — .— ^ C a r te r has said frequently he w ants to reduce a rm s sales. Last week. he e t pressed •■concern' about the sale of concussion bombs, which kill y press secretary denied that the decision was m ade “ as some sort of a bargaining chip' with (he SovietUm om ae ■^-■^jszsxs r - r - r — 7 e s c i n d s o f f s h o r e l e a s e s •’uus c .......... ......... ..... n e w YORK (U PI) - A day'voided ^ e ^ l d billion sale of opened a new energy fron tier on the ^ form er Interior becreia y which requires the g o ^ m m ern tVorc°onnTdne r th e environm ental im pact of m ajo r ^ u S Canyon^ Region which oil com panies had called a g e ^ S leases'fo r 93 >racts ,n the B alt,m ore new h0[N WASHINGTON11 I n l e r n rS Cecil Andrus said he w ouU S e ™ quickly as p o s s i b l e " w hether to appeal the ruling a fte r dPParU" “ lJ “ * ^ e e r n he sa,d, when ask- J Uh K V h e T l a T w o u l d put a dent in Adm inistration hopes for new ene.gy Jring'abUut desS uc- showing of mogul a d s by . V ^ e T y " . T a l l o w ” they m ust suffer because of the secretary s lauu sidered by the court. F R A N K IKARD, pres d e n t of t h e A m e r i c a n ^ American Petroleum institute, said tho decision drilling was scheduled to com m ence s e t b a c k for the entire nation. „ ;md pyiieU u " a severe Ill(loAustin said nominations will be d ealt w.m T hunaiaT We’re going to give it another week m ore consideration,” he said The Senate adjourned a h ttle arte a rn The expected explosion did rwt oc a Panitoi security officials an cur and cap ito l „ u a r a » nounced that the a re a was all clear ai T t o * rn N either the House nor the Senate reconvened T h u rs d a y ^ te m o o n . They will m eet again on Monday. J m Congratulations UPI T*l« p h o to P r e s id e n t C r i e r k is s .. Hi, w « . . ch airw om an a* a new to^ m,“ 'on creating the com m istion Thursday. c h a i r w o m a n , but she said the Justice not appoint a close relative to tho ,ob, so ho d e s i g n a C a r ) # t par < a p e r i e d to be nom ed i n f o r m e d Carter he could ^ her honorary • ch airw om an instead. M a y o r b o w s out U o M like we w on't have Je ll b e d m a n to kick around ‘ "nrw lthdraw al (rom the mayor', rare c a ll. for a tew hurrah* coupled With beck.l.pfrtng thank, for a job don conscientiously, » naclenttou.tr. if no' particularly well. C l i well-olaced i f s hard to r e s i i t p lan tin g a fe w w e n p w ™ > . D ESPITE prediction, of r e v o l u t . - m no no * m ? 1 7 L y“ ” e v ,’. l o n . held th e p o le n .la l f o r . l t e r l n * J „f Cliv government, but th e y d ie d a .lo w th e h r ,i d ,n u n a d m m i.tr a tio n F la tte n e d . 0 r e le c tr ic r a t e . a . u b .U n l .a l p lan k In th e F r ie d m a n p la b T 7 n n e v e r c l e a r e d th e p o litic a l m ill a f te r th e m a y o r . U r n * rc o u rt w a , b u n g le d by a lm o s t e v e ry o n e In volved sr ' % £ ...A'- w - w •£!££?£ S T U S S E aa, rssim s? u —.» «>«« —• and during the Friedman term Birr FOR all these failures, and for all oersonal I sh o rtc o m in g s , Friedman w a., in his own way, Tjne of us ” His tenure in office boosted Austin in to the ne pf,lines of tolerance for previously unorthodox ideas The city now requires financial disclosure for both elected and appointed officials And it stopper! sub sid lin g urban sprawl with refund contracts Efforts to end discrimination In city hiring and an equal e m p y ment opportunity ordinance broke new ground for the working people of Austin T M F M A Y O R ’S g r e a t e s t influence, however, was ex erted on Austin’s student population Only the registrar know. how many G F A . plummeted the s p r i n g he was e le c te d . Student v o lu n te e r , cam p aigned for progressive Au.tin" that year harder than they had ever r*ThH net effect of UU. Influence is still uncert*J?' it will be carefully scrutinized during this although spring’s campaigns. For Friedman inspired students to vote, in enough numbers that their vote actually made difference in city politics Whether the student, will ^ tam that inspiration with Friedman out of the ran remains to be seen S p e n d in g student fees It I your money, but you can I spend it m Z, situation m ight change if Hep S ara W £ Hinfftnn h is her way She has i n t r o d u c e d a bill to allow ftuS enU an advisory role in .he alloration of money not yet collected for student services M Presently, Hie U niversity c h a rg e , each student $2 12 Der hour or »2f> « for 12 hours or m ore. to (man. e all portions of such s e rv ic e , a , the .Indents A tto rn * ■. k K L the healUi confer, shuttle b u , service and th * Daily Ti ,a n Once that m oney is handed over, .tu d en ts n ,,ui.h control of its forever O TH FR universities a e r o * the .U te have a d o p te d ^ Cir m ore progressive altitude Al Ult Houston, I portion of the sludent fees And at Texan AS.M, students have com plete control .a m p le , the students control .» The Board of R e g e n ts has historically op p o sed anything that would underm ine its absolute control of the I n e Mtv s Hinds That opposition baa worked to deny students (tower over their own money ■ The fees represent ».7M .77« raise.) from students with no student control It is I. m a tte r of taxation Without at orient services fees" Do the regents know b e s t. We d o n ’t think so The o n - a g a i n - o f f - a g a m man- s t s r s a s a s K r 2 > « • " W W The U n i v e r s i t y '.present life-or-death struggle wi l t t e I l u r e H e r the future of the P e rm an en t U niversity I t v Fund s t i o u I d sen s 11 1 re the regents to student dem ands T h ™ a d m in is tra tio n should r e . l t * the unfairness c not allowing -student representation on budgetary m atters, understand the consequence, of con- S T S S i tinuing to deny students their rights i i n t YFAR President Lorane Rogers rejected a student Government V ic e president 1 KS1. V : \ kJ e s ta b lis h an advisory c o m m itte e to facilitate i admi ni st rat i SSJSHSS - H . r h . t e already poor student- a d m in is tr a tio n re la tio n s . The Weddington bill for s,udent n ro h le m s With the a d m in is tr a tio n Nor is it a com plot solution to th e lack of s tu d e n t r e p r e s e n ta tio n in allocation of s e r v ic e s le e s But it is a s u n isn t a l ^ n a , e a reoreseWiUon WHY ( AN’T students exercise some authority *» * . And one long overdue T he n aivete of the A nglo-A m or man never c e a se s to a m a ze Uke They g« «*w up hea tin g see inf. sm elling amt ea tin g that the U nited Stale* I* the g r ea te st COO* ' «»> Amor..-.™ i n in lh.- world bv a lle g a tio n s of " I , “ " t" s u p e r io r ity as .a Hilo which righ fully b a lo n * to all Inhabitant, ol tho three Amar le a . I. and they ,.r» assure* I™ "' birth to death that the* conslituw bt F ree World the Lam! of Opportunity, the lug Ruddies Of the rest of the world yet they are horrified when anyone dares to suggest th* practice of brainwashing in the United Sui** ,t . _ OK COURSE, it bi alow ashing is go ma IO ho (M ined a . a radical move (rom ona and ol » lino id thought to tho other. bv forceful m ean t, then Anglo. ..re not they just gel to hear .ate bratn w u h ed r n , “ when I — ho,na i m * I the basic m echanics of tree enterprise and how ..Hid ll sounded lh .! one person could create job* tor a lot of one business Bul they forgot to add tha only the white people have the capital necessary to initiate such an action, and consequently llw‘> i r t ‘ th0 unly 0MS ,n * (HISH ion to hire to make as much Shut the goal I* money as possible, the best way of doing mi is by paying low wages, which only the most needy would agree to take, the most needy, rn this case, a re the m inori­ ty g ro u p So obviously, opportunity is mn for m i n o r i t i e s N e ith e r f r e e d o m , freedom constitutional protection of the is . j a n u s p a l m a & individuals rights, high standards of liv­ ing ami power in general a re controlled by- those who have econom ic resources the w hite Anglo Saxon P ro te sta n t Therefore these will be geared toward the benefit of this group TBF MYTH OF the F re e World is crum bling betorn our eyes yetI sliU there are people who come from abroad with the s a m e b lin d n e ss th a t has been propagated in this part of the continent Their naivete am ate* m e even m ore T0 those people who have not yet opened their eves to what Is really happening rn ^cenes you see .... Cl**.*"** 1*00 *§82? large a Money talks * backroom si dering we can I do anything about ii Bv BILL CHRISS I was bemused initially, listening to the b n eht young man on the go give me lo gH d reasons why he and his friend, should establish a tacit understanding. as it were with the United Front Opera- initials It just won The fraternities a re just not going to I PO buy anything with the beside it on the ballot talk you ap in our happen houses and openly support you a fte r you win when Ihe offered, slyly assum ing that the dust had not already cleared the dust has cleared , so we ll POOR FELLOW, I thought to myself; he obviously doesn't realize who he s dealing with i ’m sorry Mike, but I rn not running for any office this year and Mitcham has publicly informed people that he is not going to appoint me to anything when he's elected. I have no real personal stake in this election Why don’t these guys see this scam for what it is a visceral and genuine m ove­ m ent for positive change in the way things are run on this cam pus Then, after a few drinks, it hit me There is a conspiracy of silence afoot, and nobody in a position to know wants to let students in on just what kind of crap ,s occurring in student politics these days, There is an appalling reluctance among politicians to tell the truth Well. I ’m not running for anything, so this tim e, folks, we play it straight up. And as Daniel P atrick Moynihan says. •Let them fear us for the truths we tell. IT ALL STARTED when I cam e to _i. f ap 1 ai? AH work for Jay Adkins. His original ad­ m inistrative aides were Steve Smith, a sharp young politico who jum ped on the Art and Sausages bandwagon during the runoff last vear, and UFO presidential candidate. David M itcham , a law stu­ dent who was an Adkins cam paign worker until the runoff. Smith dropped out of school in oc­ tober M itcham was fired on the day a fte r the funding d riv e because he wanted to spend Student Government s guest viewpoint lik e raised money doing serious recently th in g s the lobbying down a t Legislature They needed somebody to keep the office running until Smith got back in school, and. to m ake a long story short, this tired old politico got the job, . adm inistrative aide Then all sorts of weird things started , a . happening , . M itcham was now working with the State Lobby Com m ittee, drafting and lobbying for a student services fee bill. He told me he was having problem s get­ ting things moving because Mark Ad d ic k s , lobby c h a ir m a n , and Lvn B re e la n d , fo rm e r lobby c h a irm a n , thought that fighting for good regents was of m ore m om ent than student se r­ vices, fees ” I said I'd look into it ADKINS told me in October, Addicks and I already know who the new regents will be. and th ey ’re not all that bad, con- “ A m erika.” go take a ride through the F ast and South Side of this city - the barrios which you have probably Ignored as if they did not exist Go talk to a m igrant w orker, find oui what the Land of Opportunity means for him or her Ask the parents of the chicano WIK died in Waco because they could not af ford to pay the hospital for treatm ent of the child's wounds What is freedom to a black kid whi cannot get the sam e education as white kids can get. because one has to live in the ghetto, while the other can live in the su b u rb s’ WHAT DOES fretxlom m ean for tnt in dian woman who becam e sterilized bv a federal program , without being given an alternative ’ . , To be the m ost powerful nation m eans that the United States has the to steal the land from the Panam anians, the chicanos, the Africans, and to exploit their natural resources as well as the people the P uerto Ricans right The human nature which leads to such distortion of reality, making com petition look enjoyable, is certainly not among the m inorities who m ust live under the strangling power of cap ita ism Iirea racism , classism , sexism , etc I F or us com petition is a vicious cycle th at (if you ll pardon the cliche* m akes th* rich richer and the poor poorer ARF YOU GOING to tell m e that the people in the barrios are there because Or because they are they want to be lazy' These have been the excuses Anglos have been the excuses have form ulated to justify their oppres­ sion of m inorities which prevents them from reaching the sam e s 'f ndar^ ot ' ‘v. mg as whites And because the oppressed m inorities see the white well, some m ay even want to be like the WlB uTthe white system has nothing for humanity except a voracious a p ^ U te fo r m aterial possessions and the accum ula non of wealth for its own sake. the F ree World ” is only for those The afford it We as m inorities have who can long in h eren t d e stru c realized liveness of capitalism the ^ e e enle r- p rise ,” the ‘ good, clean and healthy ’ com petition.'’ so as not to *an ct‘° n Moreno, in as m any ways as we can. we will help it in its im m im ent collapse. firing line criticizes TA plan S/edd how the power of the S tu d en t Govern­ m ent has eroded over the past few y ears Bul have we asked o u rs e lf-. why an irrespons.ble agency of the U n iv e r s ity sh o u ld h a v e Po w e r Perhaps this question is intentional ignored bv much of the Student Senate rn o r d e r ' for it to proceed with its various frivolities Because if it did consider whether or not a group of its U ) 0,1 AfUC/4 - PHoJBi r, en ^ oescRtoe to »>l 7*£a> rn PT Auh n] thai T> To the editor: SHK* IWS I have* directed freahm an English for two years, waged a partial tw o-year cam paign to Iv successful prevent the butchery of that program , taken a m ajor part t o p tanning a new freshm an course (EW D . taught lh. course in the autum n of 1974, conducted of s tu d e n t a c a m p u sw id e su rv e y t h e E n g l i s h w r i t i n g , c h a i r e d departm ent s com m ittee on its appet division course in expository writing tor one sem ester, taught that course tor one sem ester without the usual reduction of its first tim e load for teachers, requested m ore assignm ents to lower-diviston courses that I have been given once refused an offered reduction of my teaching load, oiue in listed that m> load be increased with tw o fre s h m a n se c tio n s and once volunteered three course* teach each sem ester - or m ore than three it other professors would do the sam e (com plete docum entation on request to For th* pxxt five >f *rs have thus voluntarily taught 25 pei cen m ore than I would have been required to. and at the m om ent I am team te a c h in g tw o S u tto n s a t t * " freshm an couse h Ate with a colleague i . __ But m \ personal r e p u ta tio n s of no it im portance to the citizens of Texas i t essential, however, that and citizens should recognize the ele­ ment of sim ple falsehood in presen defenses of the abused TA system at UT for the resort to falsehvxxMs^the best proof that c riticism has been the situ a tio n false that I have generalized the E nglish in from departm ent without investigating the situation elsew here I have WPP®™* mv charges with num erous docum ents, including the reports of three carn pus wide surveys Not one of my op­ p o n en ts has d a re d hose docum ents The assertion that m> statem ents a re * unsubstantiated and m isleading is m ade by a m an who hasn t even tried to find out what my statem ents have been or what evidence I have provided Typical to fa c e . Ms docum ents prove conclusively that abuses ol the TA system M w been widespread To reply th at abuses are not universal is irrelevant, for no one has ever said they are lf I say there are lots of whores in the world, no virgin need be offended • For seven years I appealed against abuses to every academ ic superior an every cam pus group that I had access to I got nowhere Now faculty and adm inistration are angrv not al the proved abuses^ which were happily tolerated, but at their ex posure lf the innocent don t want to be the guilty, they can lum ped w ith protect them selves bv helping to cor­ rect what s wrong ^ ^ Student Senate To the editor We ve heard much recently about anyway." U "less Adkl" 5 " aS ym g' I dicks apparently continued to spin the state lobby’s wheels, with Adkins ap­ proval. supposedly searching for good recental nominees. Why? you may ask. Answer: money talks, and hype sells For instance, M itcham s firing What did Adkins. Smith and Co. w ant to do with the money from the optional fun­ ding campaign? Their first budget re­ quest of the Senate in the fa11 was to raise Sm ith’s salary from $125 to $300 per month because in Sm ith’s own words before the Senate. “ The president and vice-president won t be doing their jobs this y e a r.’’ T H F R E F O R E , Sm ith would need a s a l a r y com parable to Adkins’ Well. to put it briefly, the Senate refused to go along with the deal. This setback only m om entarily stopped Smith before he quietly resorted to m ultiple payrolls to accomplish his goals. _irtCO I recently asked a senator close Adkins. “ What has Student Governm ent done this year?’’ Her response: “ Well we survived.” It seem s that thousands of dollars in salaries and ex­ penses is a mighty high price.to-pay for •survival.” Money m ay not talk, but it certainly whispers, a t least in the ears of superficial absurdist crusaders^ to me I MUST ADD here that V ice-President Skip Slyfield, at least, is an absurdist through and through. When he figured out that the money (that ta lk s) was going to be nickeled and dim ed away bv a fac­ tion and apathy-ridden Senate, he wanted to “ give it back to the students. Skip has his own drum m er, but he is true to his beliefs. Adkins is a different m atter. He’s a nice guy but as student bodv president he has proved to be just as incompetent as those he criticized. Allow me one m ore exam ple. In Oc­ tober or November, Adkins ordered me to withhold from M itcham a letter offer­ ing support for the student services fee bill from a UT D allas bureaucrat. “ I don’t want M itcham to get too tar with this bill,” Adkins said. As if this w ere not enough he and his pals now spend their tim e badmouthing my organization, presum ably because if we win the upcoming elections, they will no longer be afforded the luxury of su r­ vival.’’ The UFO intends to earn its keep. Sorry, Jay, but I ’m tired of rum ors, and i f s tim e som eone told the turth. B ill C hriss is f o r m e r stu d e n t se n a to r at-large, fo rm e r a d m in istra tiv e aide to J a y A d k in s, T S P B oard m em b er, a n d p a rty ch a irm a n o f the I n ite d Front O peration. lose Student G overnm ent esteem and accom plishm ent should be given power or m onetary control, it would have quickly rejected Sen. David Haug's banking bill — the one th at would its campus privileges down the line, lf passage of this resolution w ere not enough, even a fte r being advised of the consequences, Haug and others stil support it What irresponsibility! Not only was the idea badly researched in the first place, but even after knowing of the deathly results to the Student Government, our Senate gave it the green reason for this, but the excuse was that it would serve as a test of the Student Senate’s position with the a d m in istra ­ tion Guess who passed the test" light anyway. There was no I Ed Newby Falks Philpott's bravado To the editor: I would like to commend Dr. lorn Philpott for his efforts in trying to make this U niversity just a little better bv testifying against the new regents. He actually cared enough to speak up even when he knew Lorene R ogers would cut his salary , even w h e n he knew he w ould n e v e r get a full professorship He has overlooked the apathy so m any students and faculty feel and has tried, recently and in the past, to change the way this I niversify is run Thank you. Dr Philpott. V ickie Mann Com m unications A n g l o m y t h s a n d naivete Minorities do not have resources to compete VOT \fou n 'dsM L a f i r e . CIA strikeout . The unstated (..auntinn nf function of HA co v e rt o p eration s is, simply, to prevent unfriendly n d i v i d u a l s . g r o u p s or from gaining or ideologies holding p ow er in n a tio n s deem ed strategic to the in­ terests of America In this area, the agency s batting average is som ething less than Joe Morgan’s. IN CHILE, not only did the agency strike out, but it has been ducking the beanballs of international opinion and con­ gressional investigations ever since. Now t h e CI A, an d by association, all Am ericans, are held accountable for every dochina and head for home dochina and head for hon the Laotian government ten .. Q anyway So what did it profit I S. ‘ national interests’ to keep that regime in power a few more years? Did the CIA tactical military success rn Laos halt or even hinder the stream of supplies and North troops nerving Vietnam ese down the Ho Ch, Mink Trail? to What has h ap p en ed A n g o l a s i n c e t h e CHA withdrew” Surprise, the war is continuing and the tide running against the Com- that mDespfte the facts that the Cuban mercenary force now these numbers 20.000. t r o o p s a r e e m p l o y i n g genocidal tactics, that their a i r augm ented by even m ore planes and Russian Pi o c h e Communist powers sH llcan not subdue about half of the s u p p o r t h a s b e e air harmed on a Chilean dis- ident’s head - often even nore than the generals who t h e a f t e r o v e r ook Jeptember 1973 coup. Even if, as many assert Marxist President Salvador Allende and his leftist clique were planning to establish a dictatorship there, would not this have better served U.S. national interests’’ f i n g e r IF THEY HAD succeeded America could again point its r i g h t e o u s of democratic indignation and other F ree World *]atl0f}*’ such as France and Italy, twice might have about allowing Communist t h e i p a r t i c i p a t i o n thought in 8T f"h™ takeover had fatted, the effect abroad would have been roughly the same and the United States would remain just an innocent bystander, as it was in Indonesia where a sim ilar Communist threat had been turned back in 1964. IN LAOS, the agency had run an effective, quiet war against the Reds for years but when the United States decided to pack it up in n ' c o n t r a r y t o w h a t Fidel Castro tells the gullible Swedish press (in ai recent in­ terview). the only Cubans be­ ing “ rotated out' of Angola ^ have bullet holes in them. Angola is the Communists Vietnam. There will be no vic­ tory parades down the siree s of Havana or Moscow. And the last Cuban and Russian will have to shoot their way out of the country. Angola is also the proof the proof that it is not the way the CIA has handled its covert a id a n d p a r a m i l i t a r y operations, but that it per­ forms these operations at all which makes it unsuccessful i s arguably anti-American, it is u n d o u b t e d l y a n t ‘ * interventionist, whatever the ideological or skin hue of the t h e w o r l d T h o u g h “ t h e i n t e r v e n t i o n i s m of the CIA, then, is contrary to the interests of the United States — interventionism is also contrary to the interests of the Soviets, but they seem determined to learn the bar­ way just as we have learned. It s time to send the agency back to the dugout. F rid a y , F e b ru a ry r r i u a y / • ' D THE PA1LY TE* AN ° -------- Glossy inserts war^campus Bv TOM SWINNEA As the wind blows, so blows the insert. University students were treated to an all too familiar sight Tuesday. Glossy inserts from the Texan were blowing the cam pus Many across students question * het^ these inserts are beneficial or lust a contributing facto, to more garbage on cam pus. Like most questions, there ar more than two sides back page of the Texan would still cost nearly $850 L o y d E d m o n d s . T b r general manager, is in favor of keeping the inserts Ed­ monds spoke up for inserts at th e J a n Sh TSP Bo a r d meeting In this context. Ed­ monds was speaking of all in- texas ombudsman in be manually placed Texan the . The advertising department is between the proverbial rock and the hard place. On the one hand, their business is to get advertising for the Texan On the other hand, they see u e slick inserts as potentially do­ ing more harm than good In a letter to National Education Advertising Services, one of the TSP’s national advertising r e p r e s e n t a t i v e s . M i k e Harvey, advertising director the for TSP. spelled out advertisers make use of inside Some pages of the Texan real creativity there will in the long run. pay much higher t e r m s of d i v i d e n d s in r e a d e r s h i p a n d l o w e r c o sts wi t hout of f endi ng potential customers Texan editor Mary VNalsh called the inserts a plague on the campus grounds She sees some inserts, like course schedules for Texas Union to classe s, as beneficial s t u d e n t s Ot h e r * , l i ke Hu d we i s e r ’s Budman, ^ appeal to a college m entality , fee l a d v ertisers h ave of students that I don’t think e x ­ ists. ’ she said. The TSP Board voted at its January meeting to take no action concerning advertising inserts A motion to plat e a referendum on the spring TSP election ballot concerning in­ sert advertising was voted down bv the board. f o r a r e s t -of-the semester preview, readers can expect it least three more t quila ads. a tire ad and possibly a beer ad TSP also plans 19 supplem ents between now and MAs one student said. The question isn t whether inserts are good or bad. but v[helh® litter is good or bad I won buy tiny product if itsadver- tising m e sse s up vironment ’ , Hopefully for students and advertiser* alike, future in­ sert days will not be wmdjr While a m ess will SUH bu created wtth the slicks, at least it can be contained. the s a i d E d m o n d s th e y a re s e r t s . w h e th e r glossies, tabloids or special supplem ents (Uke the Dining and E n tertain m en t Supple­ ment in W ednesday’s Texan). t n e superintendent of Buildings and Grounds reported he had not received complaints about litter from the inserts F man eiallv. Edmonds reported that TSP’ m ade $9,500 revenue from inserts in 1975-76, with $8,600 expected for 1976-77 As an added bonus. c re a te em ploym ent TSI hires someone to go around to Texan boxes on insert mor- nings and pick up the ones that fall out of Texans Student o r g a n i z a t i o n s a r e a l s o rewarded They earn around $100 whenever an insert has to ^ H a rv e y told NEAS that while “ the impact of glossy inserts is strong, what about the readers you are missing. or even worse, offending with this tvpe of promotion” HARVEY ALSO said that a litter problem does exist despite our efforts to police the area On windy days the problem is c o m p o u n d e d , and a large number of them wind up on classroom floors “ We want and appreciate the business,’ Harvey said, “but feel perhaps there are b e t t e r wa vs to a c h i e v e national advertising goals The advertising director recommended that nationa Firing line Firing line /•» * •« shooM . Be ty p e d a n d Sri p ie tp a ctd . I f ^ L ' inn o m " '‘a d d r ., , a n d .............. bar af can- ............ i i n s e r t Since most inserts less than tabloid size are of national o r i g i n , an T u e s d a y s for El Toro tequila passes through the hands of one of the two nationa adver­ tising representatives for Tex as Student Publications, the TSP general m anager and tnt a d v ertisin g d epartm ent o TSP T he TSP B o a rd of Operating T rustees has final a u th o r ity on a c c e p t a b le advertising. National advertisers Uke slick inserts because they give realistic color at very low costs The El Toro campaign is being run in other carJ*Pu* newspapers with a combined circulation of close to one m illion. The ads can be produced at a central plan and the advertisers control all aspects of the ad campaign except final distribution WITH THE central plant production system. ads are produced at a lower rate than a regular newspaper ad would cost The El Toro ad cost $474 50 to run as an insert, r or a four color process (full color) of the same ad size in the Texan, the cost would have been almost $700. with no guarantee of where the ad would run in the paper and less realistic color. Without color, a full page ad on the O n l y a t MOHAN'S Shirts o , India G a u l* with •m broidorod work. Savored attortod color* a t $ 4 . 9 5 MOHAN'S I N D I A I M P O R T S 2 lo catio ns on the D ra g 2200 G u a d a lu p e 1906 G u a d a lu p e O pen 10-7 M o n .-Sat 478-1456 O S S I ? / ? * f r a m e s & C m * , f l e c t i o n s M S . ONE TIME PROMOTION SALE h a n d c r a f t e d c e d a r a b a r n w o o d f r a m e s s t a n d a r d siz e s. t i 7 0 STARTING M J I * ' * AU FRACIS UNDIR # l u . l - : 4 DAYS ONLY HS. » •» . t h e D a il y T e x a n «■ *- Marv Walsh ..... * *' T*',0‘ " A“‘ ISSUE STAFF Managing Editor Gene Ashlock Anne Percher News Editor . . . . • ‘ , -arterin. Danny Cunningham • ■ ■ X"” , f r n " ^ Joey w e,n b o r'! T b i°p scor: ........ Hay Ebeling. t , Stephen Pate. Monty Jones ^ '•Kmerta.mmeCn T E d t r r ’ " “ colin Hunter Assistant Entertainm ent Editor — — A s s o c Entertainm ent Editor — A ssistant Sports E d itor Brad B g b M t Entertainm ent Reporter. Brad Stnbhng Features Editor Sports Editoi Photo Editor ........ ^ B r i g g s Mike Smith Ehrlich - t nriNtv General ReP°rte" rt^ ' Hoppe. Dan Malone. Hosanne Mogavero, Michellei O Leary, Garv Fendler, Soma I erez, w rpn Tumultv Karen Tumulty Karen I umul l u y r » rn - L _ l l « A ' ! n o P V ' Opinions exp ressed in Tht Oaf w r ite r of the a r tic le and a re a d m in is tr a tio n o r (he B o a r t of R e g e n t. , . Tht. r ,illv Texan are those of the editor or the those of the I niversitv h o r a d v e rtis in g and sui) ' - _ Sporl, A ssistants — no L a u r a Tuma. Joey Lozano Carole Chiles E d ito r........................... Carole Chiles Make up E d ito r.................... "steve McAdoo J E I t f lt o r s ................ .'. .L e slie Thordarson. Copy L efo rs. . B erger, Judy M arilane Nattier, Ginger n t r K “ _ , ........................... photographer ........................................ Randy Stiefer, Hurt Siegfried Breslauer { ^ s c n p tio n d o o n e s b u r y RF VO C'Th --------- T op english ( V U U * * Levi* ^ . Faded Glory • Bicycle Shirt* • Sheep*kin Coat* • Denim W e*tern Shirts Lr ^ • Levi Cord* ENTIRE STOCK Friday and Saturday HAT " W F VOL' 6 0 1 Ne” TC DO AFTER THE t LE MO . CRUSADE I JUNCTION 2 9 J J t g „ d o llie s store f o r the college budget 2 9 0 9 G u a d a lu p e o , t h e c o rn er . f Y 9 th a n d G v a d a t u p . , n . « , to ’ t*® ' J ^ J J ^ W i HBY, BOB1 BOW'D c a r jb k o b ts o BIO ON WUK MUSIC ANYWAY* « & cs (2t /' / yT-— r w t, . . . i u _ _ <,V ' ' * > d I DUNNO, MAN ONO PA Y SOME REPORTED f i r i> JUST CALLEO TO TCH MB ^ CHAT JC S SAY IN IM ONB OF HIS MAIN MCN, I THAT MB AND JAMBS A PIC HBY AHB AUTHBNT1C / AMBA] CAN VOICES, IX r know 7 — ‘ - - 5 ( a c r o s s 1 S to ra g e box 6 A c tre s s ........ Baker 1 "W h a t'll - 4 For this re a s o n 5 Of the soul 6 D e s p ic a b le person Slang I 7 In s id e of Prefix 1 8 O n e w ho is th e re 2 0 S o u n d like thunder 2 2 Ago 2 3 Food Slang 2 5 U tte rs som ething printed 2 8 V e rtic a l structure 2 9 -- Alamos 3 0 C o n ta in e rs 3 2 F arth e r from the c e n te r 3 4 T ra n s p o rta tio n ro u te s 2 w ords 3 9 M e a s u re by pacing 2 words 4 2 D is e a s e of gram 2 w ords 4 3 C rim e a g a in s t the s ta te 4 5 H e a th g e n u s 4 6 C o n g e n ita l fa c ia l d e fe c t 4 9 E x p re s s rn w o rd s 5 0 Mouth tissue 5 4 M o d e ra te ly w a rm 5 5 Planet 5 6 P a rtic le s 5 8 C a m b e re d 2 w o rd s 6 0 M il fu n eral c a n n o n 2 w ords 6 3 P a re n t's b rother 6 6 --- du Diable 6 7 M a k e re p a ra tio n 6 8 Y o un g ox 6 9 N a p o le on ic m arsh a l 7 0 Asian c a r­ nivorous m am m al 71 M a k e an a t­ tem pt at D O W N j — M m h Trail 2 — party 3 In v e s ted with re s p o n ­ sibility 4 W a s h by rubbing 5 D o d g ers or Expos 6 Ph on e user 7 C ryin g 2 w ords 8 P ism ire 9 O rig in a lly nam ed 10 B irds 1 1 M id e a s t lang uag e I 2 Bob up and dow n 1 3 A quatic m am m al 19 Sw im 21 Info rm al g arm en t 2 3 S u rfa c e shin iness 2 4 S en d along 2 6 G a m e anim al 27 Put to d eath 3 0 Soup 31 H ib e rn a te 3 3 Upon C om b form 3 5 T im e ta b le abbr 3 6 S o urces of vexation 3 7 G la c ia l ridge Var 3 8 W aits 4 0 S anction 41 Anterior 4 4 Rom an god 4 7 O ne of an a c tin g fa m ily 4 8 C y p n n o id fish 5 0 W aif 51 P ra c tic a l 5 2 C u rren c y 5 3 D a lla s univ 5 5 C om s 5 7 5 9 Italian of D avid a c tre s s 61 Z eta follower 6 2 S ecu red 6 4 G ra s s la n d 6 5 Noun suffix BECOME A bOLPlEPN OF FORTUNE. I'M 6 0 1nl.J T I * / A L S O . r / \ |>F AN U I S L KITE SEASON 13 0OIN6 TO BE HERE BEFORE {JJS KNOW IT AN AUTHBNTIC AMWCAN VOiCB I 1 CANYOUBSAT THAI JIM * - A T jj f 4P / * ^ — L f- Ii HAVE SOU SEEN AW KITE ANHlOHcRE? IT'S PR0BABLV COWERINS IN THE C L 0 5 6 T ! " ' I MOAN. I JUST WANT J ^ TO WYMS, MAN. I ^ NOW BB TBUS US J ^ 4 V S F . / C _ ^ - J * I ^ Michael Fahey DDS announces the opening of his office fo r the p ra c tic e of General Dentistry 1500 VV. 38th S u ite 32 (S h o al C re e k P ro fessio n a l C e n te r) Office hours by a pp oin tm ent only r-> v ( ' Office 452-7345 R « idenCe 45’'2° 96 0 * 1 . NUN 262' O u .d .lu p . 0 p .n Mon S ., 10 0 C O U P O N S P E C IA L ! C E R A M IC POT S E T S 4 pot* to th# aet with saucers R e g 5 OO S o t 2.98 Coupon good thru f oh 75 only B R A S S M I S T E R S R a g 3 0 0 99* C oupon g o o d thru Fob 2 5 only B E D S P R E A D S Every ln *nrfl,n • P ™ ds 2.00 o h C o u p o n g o o d thtu Fo b * 5 only Any Jewelry Gold. silver, copper, etc 25% off C o u p o n go*ut thru f o b 2 b only Any Onyx Pipe Large Se le ctio n 50% OH C o u p o n g o o d thtu f o b 2b only Pants Entire stock 2 0 % off C o u p o n goo*! thru f o b 2 5 only ALL W IC K E R 25% off Commentary I P a g e 6 □ T HE DAILY T E X A N fJ F r i d a y , F e b r u a r y 18, 1977 C u ttin g industrial energy instead of consumer use the American Rut In stitu te of budget But the American Institute of Architects says 25 to 50 per cent of all ener*> used in older buildings - and up to Ut) per ent in newer buildings — is wasted The mammoth World Trade Center in Ne York perhaps the worst excess of the all electric binge uses as much electric ny as ' !?.V R e e d in g , which if employed on an in dustnal scale could save billions of dollars worth of energy Aluminum According to th* R eynold, A lu m iu m the largest such firm in the Rec vc I int Co nation, the production of requires only 5 per cent of nec essary to produce an equal amount the f()THKh' sTUDIES indicate that the annual in the use of throwawav energy wasted beverage containers - bottles and cans could provide residential power for a city of How much would all these conservation measures cost in the way of installation and conversion 1 That's difficult to gauge But ac­ th e F ed era l E nergy Ad cord in g ti r»*« Un0t>r Sant ' A J50U billion in- ministration s Roger Nam, a vernier,! in energy conservation would gave ala,ut iw .ee a , much energy as a comparable investment in new supplies could produc e to THE arrival B> N A V Y JACOBS I Pacific News Service . . . WASHINGTON Prodded by .cute shortage of natural gas, President ( arter has promised to make conservation the cornerstone of his energy program To most of us, that conjures up images of tower thermostats less gasoline and life without dishwashers or electric toothbrushes But the bulk of America s energy actually is consarned by industry And some rtperi* believe there is enough waste there that strict industrial conservation measures could e ft U S energy consumption by 25 to 5b per rent without altering our standard of living FOH EVIDENCE, they point to nations use Sweden and West Germany, which maintain standards of living comparable to our own on lens than IO per cent of the energy we con­ sume per c s pit* A Ford Foundation study. A Tim* to lim e u C h o o s e noted that the top 15 energy tntens.vt l i a n e s those in which conservatmn w o u ld he most Im p o rta n t cent of a ll energy used by U S industry, but a n o u n t for o n ly 8 per cent of our jobs ;*’Mnsurm ‘ \ Energy The ( ase for Conservation DENNIS HAVES, former director of the Illinois State Energy Office and author of es- 11 m ates that the United suites could meet all its new energy needs for the next 2j years lim ply by turn,„K It. w a il-en ergy to produc- ti vt* uses Hayes points out that when the McDonnell I Hiuglas Aircraft Corp installed a computer system IO m a n a g e its use of power, its energy c o n s u m p t io n dropped 40 per cent During the Arab oil embar go, the city of I»» Angeles and the state of Oregon registered sim ilar savings AMONG THE AREAS they pinpoint as con­ servation gold mines are the following • ‘Cogeneration” of power for industrial 1 'Nearly half of all industrial fuel in America is burned to produce steam for one indust^ a use or another But little of that steam is then reused to generate electricity called cogeneration Instead most plants buy their electricity separately from utilities a PriH But in a June, 1975, report for the National Science Foundation. Dow ( hemica Is In due trial Energy Tenter estimated that by 19H5 l ! S industry could meet half itsI alec tricity needs by cogeneration, compared to U ( iwr cent today • More energy-efficient construction of of­ fice buildings and homes Commercial and residential consume 32 per cent of the U.S. energy FLIPSIDE RECORDS Norfhcross Moll 452-2916 TUR Of THI CAT A l Sto w o rt IUXIRY UNIS t m tny Lo u Hotrts NRC SAT HIGHT IIVI ROCK N ROU Al IIRN ATI VI A P onte R h y th m Soctton CHAMOIS IN IATITUDIS (MANGIS IN ATT1TUMS J im m y B uffo! Thn W ook Tho*o $6.98 UST LP S NOW $3 * L - awl *(* a*' I « It m ode Qa By JAMES RESTON c \e w York Times WASHI NGTON - The cynical view of American p o litics, widely expressed during the recent presidential campaign, was that it really didn't.make much difference who won With every passing day of his first month in the White House, however, Presi­ dent Carter is demonstrating t h a t it d o e * m a k e a difference On basic policies at home and abroad, the sim ilarities are greater so far than the differences, but even on policy the priorities are different The energy crisis is finally getting more attention and sense of urgency than at any tim e since the oil embargo SIMILARLY, the problems of this hemisphere have been lifted to the top of the agenda It is no accident that the first two state visits to Washington have been by the president of Mexico and. later this month, by the prime m inister of Canada The long postponed negotiations on the future of the Panama Canal finally got under way this week and when Sol Lmowitz finishes ex­ ploring that problem, he has the told to r e v i e w been stalem ate in U S, relations with Cuba The work habits of this ad­ m inistration are strikingly different It may be the same old game, but the difference is .lAvainwn under between the slow-down under President Ford and a full- court press under President Carter Always it is the Presi­ dent himself who sets the pace and tone of any administra­ tion. and Carter, up at 5.30 in the morning, has this town jumping before 8. Carter is more available not only to the leaders of the Congress but to the ordinary members, who note that all c o m m u n ic a tio n s with the White House and the depart­ ment heads are more punctual and responsive than at any time in recent memory the M eanwhile, lines of communication to the gover­ nors and the mayors have been opened up It is not only that Carter has an energetic and trusted aide, Jack Wat­ son. keeping in touch with the state and urban problems, but ( arter himself finds time to talk personally to the gover­ nors and mayors whenever they have difficulties, which seems to be most of the time. The nominating process is also different - highly per­ sonal in the White House and much more representative of the nation at large at the sub- Cabinet level. He has not n e g l e c t e d hi s p o l i t i c a l obligations. The names of his principal aides in the cam ­ paign and transition teams h a v e b e e n s e n t t he departments and agencies for consideration, but he has not to imposed them, maybe on the imposed them. maybe oi reasonable assumption that he didn’t have to. PERHAPS the most visible change now is lr. the formula­ tion, negotiation and expres­ sion of foreign policy This in­ volved much discussion and s o m e f r i c t i o n b e t w e e n Secretary of State Kissinger and Secretary of the Treasury Simon under President Ford Now is m ore regular and more organized involving not only State and Treasury, but on a continuing basis, Bert Lance at the Of­ fice of M anagem ent and Budget. Charles L. Schultze at the Council of Economic Ad- a n d Z b i g n i e w v i s e r s B r z e z in s k i, head of the National Security Council the debate f or R e s p o n s i b i l i t y is also negotiating abroad mo r e w i d e l y d i s p e r s e d . Carter is relying much more than Ford on a team of “ s pec i al e n v o y s ” — e x ­ perienced men who have to concentrate on particular problems. Th e s e a r e not m e r e l y d i f f e r e n c e s of “ s t y l e . ” Younger and fresher minds are in place at the heads of departments, analyzing the old problems with a vigor and optimism not seen around here in years. It is an infec­ tious spirit already revitaliz­ ing th e m u c h - c r i t i c i z e d “ b u rea u cra cy ,” and even Carter didn’t promise that. eeee EARN CASH WEEKLY Blood Plasma Donors Needed Man & Woman CASH PAYMENT FOR DONATION - C a ll tor Details Tree Transportation ' Austin Blood Components, Inc. Open Mon. A Thure. Ham to 7pm Tues. A Fri. Ham to 3pm d o t e d Wed. ■ S a t. 409 W."6th 477-3735 C an 't go to MARDI GRAS? Celebrate CARN AV AL MARAVILHA with the Brazilians February 19, 1977 information and limited tickets available at the '"ta m -t io n -l Office, Portuguese Dept., Jester East, Dexter House, Willies. *5 OO Tickets Include Beer & Setups S T U D E N BOARD MEMBERS ELECTION in­ University Students for in running terested The U n ive rsity C o -O p Board of Directors may pick up application forms information packets and necessary for filing from C.W. W alker or Grace Howard (office at top of stairs past the c a n d y counter). FILING DEADLINE 5 P . M . , TUESDAY, K B B U A R Y li t h . TEXAS UNION FINI ARTS COMMITTEE p re se n ts EXHIBITION AND SALE OF FINE ART PRINTS fcaiP S iV1 , fW^ell --------- FULL-COLOR REPRODUCTIONS OF MASTERPIECES! featuring the Breughel Cezanne. Picasso. Rem brandt. works o f Chagal!. Dab. Crank',,thaler.H o m e r * k l " . Mira. Monet. Ionia,oe l Renoir. over I 200 different prints and MASTER DRAWINGS. Feb. 14-18 9 a.rn.-6 p.m. Texas Union South 110 Ga,,gnu, Gogh. Space colonies urged Peaceful purposes advocated s p a c e C o lo n iz in g fo r peaceful purposes is the main concern of the Austin branch of the L-5 society The society is named after a 17th Century French-ltalian mathematican and physicist, Joseph Lagrange. His theory states that there is a point in space where the gravitational pulls of the earth, moon and sun are equal This point would be the optimal place to establish a space colony, ac­ cording to Lagrange The m ajor goals of the society are to inform the public’ of the possibility of space colonization and to ex inform ation among change members, according to Dee Hadley, an organizer of the Austin chapter She believes that current technology is ca p a b le of e sta b lish in g a space colony in the next few decades The society m aintains that the other planets are hostile for man and environments Engineer defends park 'devastation construction of Loop 3b0 is justit ea y ^ for lhe Texas Dep*rtmen™of Highways and Public Transportation said T h o r, * every nv- ing work done bv devastation...com plete afn^ d" ™ J J complcteiy destroyed that ing thing, every'J M g * 1 * R the loop will cross I f s a h section of the creek I Bee f r e e s iwne the n g h said y k , tF P O A G E S A ID tha.3^ e T r e k Shad ^ n r e d u c e d t o a muddy little d U d iA tw ee n tw ohills of ' there won t be a creek there - • ^ k where all the of destroying that pool. “ ,J?ghway department would J S X S t f S J T . W f e slopes to P ^ v en t eros.on' * - »• •"* - creek is approximate W K C a n d ' f u k e s ga lot of width in order to have that Bioral that w ill be going down into the creek . The fill i I. r0Ch i ^ m at U t a k e " a lot of width at the bottom to have that slope come up and have a four lane roadway at the top,' he “ J i g said Poage w as concerned about ^ - o s .o n from tbe mud hills because she thought it would be two ye anything w as done to put any ™*jk d ..,{ i t was going t0 ••THAT’S NOT correct at.all, Long " ith , ■ * > % , be that long before we d do it (fin in me cree*. WC ' ^ Cta ™ n tra c m rw o ruM start filling the creek bed with rock within the next month or two_ The fill will be put in on «P » ’ ' he 360 can one side , ' a^HSSS?iSSttW= E S £ £ in U. There won’t be j ^ r o c k there, there'll be grass that will grow .” A it calf rn' that space itself would be the id e al p la c e to co lo n ize M aterials needed to construct the colonies could be acquired from the moon and other sources in the solar system , Hadley said The first colonists would be sc ie n tists and engineers, she added. One of the benefits of the colonies would be the e s ­ tablishment of solar power collectors that could beam down energy to the earth The so lar en ergy c a p a b ilitie s would not be affected by the varving weather patterns on e arth . H adley explain ed However, space shuttles must first be developed before any hopes of exploration can be entertained The colonies would be sen- supporting units in which peo­ ple would live in large open- a ir h a b ita ts. The so ciety hopes these colonies would help offset overcrowding on e a rth and e s t a b lis h new resources that could sustain m ankind. Hadley acknowledged that m a n y s o c i o l o g i c a l , philosophical and politica differences must be resolved b e fo r e any r e a l hope of colonization can be realized “ There will be no more of a utopia up there than there is here because we’re going to bring our prejudices with us But hopefully we will be able she to alter our opinions, said. The Austin chapter now has 12 m em bers and hopes to receive University approval as a cam pus organization. The first m ajor organizational meeting will be March 9. Identity clarified A speaker in a noon rally on the West Mall Wednes­ day was mistakenly iden­ tified in a photo as belong ing to the Catholic Youth F e r m in O rg a n iz a tio n . Calderon is a mem ber of the C o m m u n ist Y outh Organization. The Texan regrets the error. Rock that is soft and comfortable. F r id a y , F e b ru a ry 18, 1977 □ T H E D A IL Y T E X A N □ Page 7 Students to hit beeches over breck, survey shows Men looking for female companions!! p over spring break will have the ^ t luck in Port Aransas according to a recent P| of University Students by t ampus Horizons Women looking for male companionship will have the best luck at Port .IsabelI where the poll showed that there will be three or four men to each woman The ratio a Aransas will be three men to evtry tout ‘ W At Corpus Christi the ratio will be almost I I, the survey released by Campus Hor non. Three out of every four men tend to stay in To get tents while on vacation, but two out of eve three women prefer motets, l h e w y "d d these groups together, t ampu. Horizons will sponsor a nonprofit m essage renter at the Beach lod ge in I Anyone may register and obtain in fo r m a l at the center The group also is working on a Pony r.x- n i W ’ service to get m essages to itudentsno p ress’’ service to get m essages to ^ e n U n o m atter where they may be in the I ort Aran The poll predicted that 13 per cent or 5^070 of the U niversity’s students will be in I ort A ransas The figures do not ‘nclude the from other T e x a s number of . colleges and universities that About 3.900 or IO per cent of the I niver students S i t e s students will be somewhere on 1 ^ Island Five per cent or 1,950 studnet. specified South Padre Island. Corpus Christi will get 3.120 or 8 per cent the U n iv e r s it y ’ s stud en t p o p u la tio n , Galveston and Port Isabel. 1.950or 5 p ercen t each and other coastal cities will get a total of 780 or 2 per cent. About 3,900 or IO per cent of the students will go to Mexico and an equal number will go to their parents’ home for vacation. Colorado, California and Florida each are slated to get 6 pet cent or 2,340 students. JA N S C H /*£ o x u o f a s h i o n e d ^ ^ ^ H p i m f f i M m s w m a r t i n U . T H E R , K I N G B L V D . A T e JS S S S P R I V t - T H R W H N D O w B Must Bring Coupon F R E E F R I E S Buy any size burger anti any size drink. rtH cive any "order of fries F R E E J * V a lv a untid any day Good anv time offer expires March 6 Ch too pan roe-'* Must Bring Coupon 2 0 * O f f I BOWL OF CHIU R egular Value 69“ N O W 4 9 *; • J..., Good any day Good anv time I I I I 1 I I I I Must Bring Coupon F R E E F R O S T Y lin y liny * l » r b u rg e r And un o r d e r til trit'n r e c e iv e line F r e e ly F R E E I . - 39* Value Good any day G(mh1 any time offer expires Maroh 6 offsr expires Msrch 8 ( • e h . S u p . " r e s t * * * • » fo e ti . S u p e * ra g w e e d ta. I J JCaryo’s fa Kode Final Shoe Clearance I Pair rd OO 2 Pair re 16°” 2 2 ° ° /coot 3 P a i r e a c h a d d i t i o n a l p a i r V 7 • • o r i g i n a l l y 14.00 t o 4 8 . 00 Broken sizes • hn tire slock hoi included • All sales final HIGHLAND M A L L • H A N C O C K CENTER Photo by Guy Lorton It's land,captain Roberto G onzale* ta k e . h i. turn .u rv e y in g for h i . e n g in e e rin g c ia .. T h u rsd a y a e ro ., the .tre e ! brri the Art B u ild in g a l S a n Jacinto B ou levard a n d 2 3rd S te e ls. -..............— ---- - UT graphics artist wins 'Addio' prize Tom Curry usually doesn t rely on the first thing that pops into his head, but it was that quick flash of brillante which won him the Austin Ad Club’s “ Addie” Award for . 1977. J Curry a graphics designer who works for the University publications department, won the “ Addie" in the points of purchase category for his sum m er, 1977. Texas Union film poster The award was p r e s e n te d a t a r e g i o n a l meeting of the Association of College Unions-International. Curry’s poster shows a cow­ boy shooting a pistol with a wisp of smoke com ing up from the barrel of the gum Behind the cowboy is a pair of butterfly wings on a yellow background In four columns at the top of the poster is the list of films shown in the spring sem ester Of 1977 “ It was really the first thing At AU, that cam e to my m ind, Curry, a North T exas State University graduate who has been working for the Universi­ ty for nine months, said id ea and “ T h a t d o e s n ’ t u s u a lly happen,” Curry said. “ I usual­ ly get an then eliminate a lot of stuff and try to come up with something d iffe r e n t fro m an yth in g anyone has ever seen before. “ I have alw ays been in­ terested in old Western serials and film s, so I tried to tie that in with spring,” Curry con­ tinued. “ I am very thrilled to win such an award. H A T H A Y O G A I: Wednesdays 6 - 7; 30 C o n g re g a tio n a l Church 408 W 23rd MEDITATION/PRANAY AMA: Wednesdays 7:30-9 OO 606 W. 12th (upstairs) February 23-April 20 $15 donation Call 474-4849 or 472-2325 Integral Yoga Teaching (.enter Chinese Food to Go No. I 2 7 1 7 G u o d o lu p * 1 1 :3 0 A M -10:30 P» No 2 1 5 1 0 G u a d a lu p e 1 1 :3 0 A M - 9 3 0 PM z Z l a* § 5 Denim plays the Kind of rock and roll that teels soft and comfortable. Maybe you've heard th e m , because they've been playing around Texas for a couple of years now, refining their music until they were ready to record . their first album. That album is nowavailable, so give Denim a good, long listen. Denim's debut album: Denim. On Epic Records andTapes. | Egg Rolls ............. | Beef fried Rite i IM • •51 55 I S h rim p fried Rice i I M R#l151 75 | S w ee t i Sour P e r k S t * 5 Open 7 days a week inr PO Rox 4 9 4 5 Austin,Texos, 7 8 7 6 5 Available at Zebra Records Disc Records Record Town University Co-Op Discovery Records Sunshine Records 3300 Main St. Houston, Texas 77002 713-626-8911 lf you are looking for a ch«lle"9® 8 J stem8 development group. You must Bu»ino»« Degree with a train you for our Houston * ealt' ™ > have at least a degree rn Computer Science 360/370 strong C o m p o t., 8 c i.n o . b s^ ' “ ^ . . ° l J J h° assembler language experience. Exc Pleasant working condition, with excellent benefits. Also Interviewing Computer Operators w.tn u . rtr,orators with D O S experience for Systems 360,370 t o t a l systems, in c. A Leader in Realtime Financial Systems Call or send resume AU information kept confidential No Personnel Agencies n. Campus Interviews february 25th Cockrell Hall Engineering Placement Center 471-1915 Et 15028 Beltway Drive Dallas. Texas 76240 214-387-3106 e b r u a r y 18, 1977 P a g e 8 O THE DAILY TEXAN □ F rid a y , F eb ru a ry 18, 1977 , § f _ | O N -T H E -D R A G ■ .............. t / s ~ Pm M agazines available to bima Texas Monthly on tape through State Library By ROBERT THOMPSON Tnt*8 SUH Writer B lind T e x a n * r a n read| T * * a M o n th ly m a ^ a V n e . lib r a r y oroifram of the Texas State Library ' rvt , v o lu m e s wpm* o r^ n .IlU o c . I airman W m iffy, d .rw lo r-lib ra n a n (h.- Tara* Stair Ubrnrj V ' f " , prcsrn tw l Ted Sift with the (Irat r a ia e tte copy of the m a«aiine Ihura^ i» asaociate publisher and day SIH directo r of c irc ula tion Monthly for present at the ceremony were State Sen W E - P e t e Snelson, D-Midland, and A M Alkin, D-Pari* The Texas SUte Library * Division for the Blind and Physically Han dicapped. Winfrey explained makes reading m aterials available to blind throughout and handicapped person* Texas The Texas facility is in the tex ax Archives and Library Building at 1201 Brazos St and is one of near > regional libraries throughout the na- j r n r r - : * "These libraries, operated with the Library of Congress Division *o r ^ e Blind and Physically Handicapped makes large type, Braille, open rec and cassette tapes and disc r^ or^ of books available fret? of charge iii*Af who are prevented from reading normal printed m aterials by a visualo r library a. physical handicap The talking boo provides m a g n ifie rs, phonographs, ' tape playersJ and page turners bi those who need them. Win '" i n addition to reproductions of best- selling novels and other w ork. the L ib r a r y of C o n g re s s a so ^ *urrent periodicals available to library ^M agazines currently Prf^ ure^ an^ distributed by the Library of Congress i n c l u d e N e w s w e e k , N a t i o n a l (.eoKr„pbic Ellery Magazine Headers Digest, The Writer and many others Library officials have been en eouraged by patrons interest in Texas Monthly, but this publication has not been available to readers in recorded T h e form until now. Division f o r the Blind and Physically Handicapped Director Don Bailey said t a p i n g v o lu n te e rs of Library, an organization recording m aterials residents library spokesman, said is b e i n g d o n e by the M idland Tape that began in 1963, Millme-’ Huff, a for Midlan For e a c h th re e hou rs of t a Pe ^ material advertisements are not taped b e c a u s e doing so w ou ld v io la te coovnght laws Three volunteers work approximately 20 man-hours This in­ cludes work by a reader, a machine operator and a monitor, she said The magazine will be mailed to the Midland organization about two weeks before the month of publication, bitt said Taping for the March issue, for example, would begin in mid-F ebruary The m aster copies will then be sent to the lh vision for the Blind and P h y s i c ly Handicapped of the Library here, and workers will make copies and dis­ tribute them to patrons as needed Com m unication School m a y raise course ceiling " t h e If a p p r o v e d by University Council, the School of Communication catalogue changes for 1977- -79 will be the most exten­ sive since 1973. The 30-hour ceiling on courses a m ajor can take w ithin the school was lifted, and some hour re­ quirements in major sub jects were increased on the recommendationn of the Communication U nde _ g r a d u a t e S t u d i e s ill a general Committee faculty meeting Feb. 8. Hours lim its for each d e p a r t m e n t a r e v a rie d now, with speech and jour­ nalism at 42 hours, radio- television-film at 39 and advertising at 36 A s s t . P r o f . G e n e B u r d , C o m m u n i c a t i o n U n d e r g r a d u a te S tud ies Committee chairman, said th a t faculty v-- thp move to in- he thought the move to in­ c r e a s e c o m m u n i c a t i o n hours a student may take was a recognition by the d e p a r t m e n t s they were no longer autonomous .. bodies A drop in the school s f r e e d e n r o l l m e n t h a s facilities and to handle a greater number of nonmajors in communica­ tion classes. Griff Sin8e r * the acting c h a irm a n of journalism d e p a rtm e n t, said He added that an in­ crease in registered com­ munication m ajors without in teaching an the hours g en erated by department was the result of the old limit. increase Students’ rep e a te d r e ­ quests for waivers of re­ t a k e a q u i r e m e n t s greater number of jour­ n a l i s m c l a s s e s a l s o t h e c h a n g e . p r o m p t e d to ( u n d u la te s have announced for the 1977 Student Govern men! election March 2 All students are eligible to vote for the president, vice president and four Student Senate at large seats Thirty three other seals representing 14 different schools will be d e c i d e d by th e s t u d e n t s registered In those schools C a n d id a te s for president this year are Jim Boone Ken H ueche. H obble H offm an, j e r r y Hunt, David Mitcham and Judy Spalding Bunning for vice-president a r e M a rc L uzzatto . E r ie Samuelson and Judy Shifrin Senate at-large candidates S c o t t C a m p b e l l . are Newby F alks, David Haug awl Peg»y PadttU for Pl*®* \ I aul Cirnoch, John Dickerson and Taylor Ford for Place 2 Ned F a r m e r , Fiddle G o ld b e rg , P ete r Greulich. Kick Nash and Jim Stokes for Place 3, Diane Drake. Velma Gaines G a r y P e a r s o n an d B e th Skelton for Place 4 Architecture candidates are K ay K r a m e r a n d T K Richter Business candidates are Mike Elliot, Charles Goldberg and Allan Night for Place I. Mark lien ee* , David Jourdan and Fred McGinnis for P la it1 COME HOME TO RICE THIS SUMMER RIC! UNIVERSITY SUMMER PROGRAM M.U..C, T. 77001 (71*1 » « W itt A ...ae , J lf* mtf »* «#|f Of ~ rm nanfpresident t r v r u r e 2, Mike B r o c k , B e n n e tt Hunter, Terry Keel, Lindy P u r v i s a n d R a y m o n d Wetegrove for Place 3; Gary Hill and Fiddle Tonkon for Place 4 and Thomas Dickin­ son, Kent Gordon and William Samuels for Place 5 Communication candidates include J e f f C a se Danny Green and Allison Kerr f al Place I and Abbe Garfinkel, Ka t h y T a l l e y and G r e g g Weinberg for Place 2 F^dueation candidates are Nancy Davidson for Place I and Joh n A rm s tr o n g and Cynthia Vyvjala for Place 2 Fi ne Ar t s c a n d id a te s a r e Kathleen Ash and Jean Anne ( r o w I a n d f o r P l a c e Margaret Adams and Becky Fadely for Place 2. Bunning for Engineering seats are Scott McEwen and Christopher Thomas for Place I Brian Boles. Rudy Prince and John Traylor for Place 2 and Joe Glazner and Gary Polansky for Place 3 Graduate seats are sought by Keenan 0 . Carstens tor Place I, Ed E dm inster for Place 2, Harvey Johnson for Place 3, Shep Barnum for Place 4 and Dennis Milam and Leonard Childress for Place 5. General and Comparative Studies candidates are Mac PEACE CORPS * VISTA NEED PEOPLE WITH BRIGHT IDEAS WEST M ALL INFO TABLE FEB. 22-24 S tS S S ' S Allen, Nancy Garrison and Wayne Lampert. Running for the H u m a n itie s s e a t a r e K a th e r in e C h a ta s , D avid M o y n i h a n a n d F r a n c e s Schneider. Law School seats are being sought by Michael Bromberg for Place I and Ron Kirk. Karen Kunz, Jam es Niemann and David Smith for Place 2. For Natural Sciences, the candidates are David Levin, Rick P a r m a and Sol Alan Stern for Place I, Laurie Ed- m i s t o n , D o u g l a s A l a n McGookey and Lenny Patton for P l a c e 2; J a n i e Bell, George Buckley and Jay Hen- 3 FINE JEWELRY AT REASONABLE PRICES UNIVERSITY KEEPSAKE DIAMOND DOBIE MALL drickson for P lace 3; and Sarah Avant, Major Blair J r ., Tricia Heil and Greg Paul for Place 4. Other candidates include Karen Getz for Nursing and Javier E. De La Garza and Patti Miller for Pharmacy. Runni ng for Social and Behavioral Sciences are Louis P a u l s , N o r a M u l l a r k e y , J a m e s R e c o r d s an d Lee Walthal for Place I; Charles Chambers, Hunter Farrell, G e o rg e Hill and D e b o ra h Smith for Place 2 and Mary Lu Cowan, Carl Friedrichs and Ross Nathanson for Place EUROPE via PanAm 707 U M thou 'J Economy Fore. Coll toll Ira* (4-» pm) (IOO) 325-4447 or too your trovtl ogont. 60-4oy odvonco payment required. Unit ravel Chorten SIGN UP NOW FOR YOUR INTERVIEW IN THESE PLACEMENT OFFICES: BU SINESS, G S B 2-114 FEB. 28 LIBERAL ARTS, A l 15 JESTER, FEB 28 & M AR . I E D U C A T IO N , ED. BLDG. 294 M AR . 2 Do yourself a favor - Try on a good haircut. 2401 San Gabrial 471-4754 2312 S. Lamar 442-4102 C O JOIN! Low Cost I joans • Higher Rates on Passbook Savings than Banks or Savings °^ SUPER TV SALE SONY KV-1541R 15° Screen m easured diagonally Sony Triple Emo tion R em ote I ontrol - M i a j r o r - s s s tpeeiacalar aet* IHnttrun m vIb i n v>ti» Tripe .,U v o lu m e , on u fl» . Valorous Hnr Tuning sad T V iii a I walnut xrnerr on wooU National acUrrlUrd value* fSJO SS p i| - I i rlr,tro*t,' .r lr .llu . C o lo r H ad H u p M e** K Sale ‘439.99 [ ■ bood [ S O N Y KV-1920D JO" Screen m easured diagona lU0‘7c Solid State Trinitron plus L'olor System. I WV Solid s w i e . KconoMUloA I » u »*r Savi ng S y s t e m. ^ I®) Walnut V eneer CablneF No Set i l n - A d J u s t m e o t , E a r p h o n e Included National! A d v e c t e d Value IWO SALE *479.99 Stereo Shop 2nd F loor SONY KV-17Z3D 17” Screen m easured Diagonally too ; Solid State Trinitron plus Color System . 1W ; Solid S U te. AFT. and Auto Color Adjustment, Econoquick \ lay I P ow er Savi ng S y s t e m. W a l n u t V e n e e r C a b i n e t . Nationall Advertised Value I54«. SALE *429.99 SONY KY 12IM I t” Screen m easured diagonally lUO'V Solid S U te Trinitron plus Color System. IOO't Solid State. Econoquick Power Saving System . Charcoal Cabi net wi th Met al l i c Gray Trim. No Set-lp*A djustm ent. Earphone included. N ationally Advertised Value 54H0 SALE *339.99 • u M HoNMM st a ' aaa 0o« Mi,.5 Oft* 0 * - i s s a Friday, February 18, IOT □ TH E D A IL Y T E X A N □ P W > W orkload cost disclaimed Report says more teaching, same price BY DAN MALONE Texan SUff Writer Fulltime faculty members can teach more classes, an teaching assisitants can teach fewer without costing the state a single cent more. ac- cording to a report prepared by the L egislative Budget Board. The report concerned House Bill 833, sponsored by Hep. J i l l ( K W . ------ ' J , i i atnnhoiih n-Oripssa John Hoestenbach. D-Odessa His bill would prohibit U niver­ sity d epartm ents from hiring m ore TAS than fulltim e facul ty and require 75 per cent of all contect hours to be taught by fulltim e faculty m em bers “ F a c u l t y s a l a r y a p ­ propriations to public senior colleges and universities have traditionally been by form ula (funding*, so this bill would Women's workshop scheduled Saturday . - s a k is m u » The free day-long workshop, entitled 'Through the Maze will be at Jester Center Auditorium, is open to women gradua students at the University. The Spooks, a University spirit and serv.ee group, w.ll provide free day care for children The purpose of the program is to gi Videotaped highlights of toe 19T6 Conference ^ portunity to meet■ Pr ° fesslfolJ? g conference on Women in ^ ^ women an op- careers. Public Life, held on camp - • a(jVantages and disad- ER America. .IWS — of working in psychology, not create anv additional cost not create any additional cost noi credit mil *■ to the state. • T H E B IL L w o u ld necessitate ce rta in workload re q u ire m e n t c h a n g e s for some institutions.' the report states. to In practice, Hoestenbach s re q u ire faculty bill would m em bers teach at least three courses per sem ester in­ stead of two. Irw in Lieb. vice­ p r e s i d e n t f o r g r a d u a t e studies, said. H o e ste n b a c h sa id sin ce professors a re funded on for­ the m u la s e s ta b lis h e d by C oordinating B oard, Texas C o lle g e a n d U n i v e r s t y System, the professors would simply teach m ore for the sam e am ount of money “TAS COULD still teach 25 p e r c e n t of th e c o n ta c t hours,” if HB 833 is passed. Hoestenbach said. “ T his b ill w ould allow young people to see fulltime professors. We also hope that deans and ad m in istrato rs will not figure som e devious way to get out of a legislative m an­ d a te ,” he testified Wednesday b e fo re th e H ouse H igher Education C om m ittee However, Lieb said there is no question about it,” that while the bill m ight not cost the sta te m o re m oney, it would defintely increase the U niversity’s budget. THE UNIVERSITY would probably have to hire m ore in­ stru cto rs or assistant in stru c­ s tr u tte r s or assist u h irh a i tors i Al >. which are c o n s id e r full-tim e faculty, to teach the courses which TAS would not be able to teach if the bill is passed, Lieb said Since Als and ^ ruct°Fs are paid m ore than TAS. the U n iv e rsity ’s budget would have to be increased. Lieb ex ­ plained. . T E C H N I C A L L Y , Lieb said not enough taculty to m e m b e rs a re a v a ila b le com ply with the bill and the U niversity would have to hire assistant instructors and in­ stru cto rs to take up the slack t h e L egislature could prevent the bill from costing the U niversi­ Ja m e s ty m ore money. Dr to F o n k e n , an a s s i s t a n t U niversity President Lorene R ogers, said •If the L eg islatu re sa y s thev a re going to give us a c e r­ tain sum of money, then we c a n 't spend m ore than that c e r t a i n su m of m o n e y , Fonken said. is f in ite , tim e slots is finite.” and •THE NUMBER of room s the on c a m p u s (for num ber of classes) to teach three classes instead of two some faculty m em ber s could teach at night, Fonken said t h a t F o n k e n a d d e d in ­ num erable hidden costs ac­ crue when classes a re taught at night, heating, lighting and m aintenance, for exam ple A m M , ‘S n S X t A ' » »"■“ " - .I I I W I woman. dSSbtSSn ^ N a tio n a l foundation Students act to save 'lemmings' Lemmings, furry little rodents who ommit mass suicide rather than I ve n overcrowded conditions, have a lot in ■ommon with humans, psychology stu- lent Preston Hardison said. Hardison, a junior, is the founder and resident of the National Save the Lem­ mings Foundation. L e m m in g s a r e h a m s t e r ;* liv e in n o rth ern c r e a tu r e s th a t climates. During explosions they will relocate, and hke stampeding buffalo, die by the millions during their frenzied flight. “ At a certain threshold a biological ‘trigger’ sensitive to density related factors activates hormonal and other .k.mtninoipfll chances, which make t physiological changes, which m ake the norm ally am iable little c r e a t u r e in­ tolerable to one another, Hardison said. During this period the lem m ing will e become aggressive and susceptible S parallels between human d ilem m a,” Hardison sal and stress “ There a re many lem m ing and the “ The foundation is concerned with the broad concept of soc*alu through individual change, Hardison said. “ Hum ans, like the lem m ing, are tow ad a c lift pushing through overpopulation, te c h n ic a l regulation and un- change without th e m se lv e s lion chapter in Austin two y e a rs ago but f o u n d so little student in te re st he did not try again until this y e a r The cam pus chapter, w h i c h frequently sets up a booth on the University s W e.t Mall, has between BO and IOO m em bers, Hardison said. The chapter is interested in startin g a journal to define and expand the lem ­ ming philosophy and plans to organize occasional sem inars. More inform ation on the Save the I pm m ings Foundation m ay be un­ tamed by contacting Preston Hardison at 443-7460. I i wk *» *.«< * # 4 .-"*«* . > S . A f JO J* r n I , preparation for th . WSO O ly m p ic ? f-obably noL T o w a r d w h it. Take the high road ££ -Photo by G uy Lawton Fraud legislation postponed Would put w elfare violations under penal code a a i \ a ihp Grievance Committee, to I ■ D efrauding welfare agen­ The Senate Committee on Human R esources Thursday p o stp o n e d a n y a c tio n on legislation concerning welfare and m edical assistance fraud until Monday. The bills, sponsored by Sen. Bill M eier, D-Euless, would make w elfare and medical assistance fraud subject to prosecution under the penal code, instead of the special provisions it is under now Under presen t provisions. the m a x im u m penalty for these types of fraud is $H* and two m onths in county Jail. testified Howard D ivision, before that welfare frau d often involved a lot of m oney and cited a case of $34,000. the com m ittee “ If som eone steals $2w ne should be punished for steal­ ing $200,” T exas District and C ounty A tto rn ey s’ County A ssociation member Mike MacCormick said c ie s is stealing, he said. “ Do you think w e lfa re recip ien ts should be in the s a m e class with white collar crim e? ” Sen Carlos Iruan, D-Corpus Christi, asked ex­ plaining he was concerned for “ illite ra te s who do not know th e form ality or legality of w elfare respon­ recipients’ sibilities. MacCormick testified a per­ son m ust knowingly and inten- t t o n a l l y b e prosecuted “ If the act is a i- cidental, im ­ m une from prosecution the person s t e a l t o is A fter lengthy discussion, to the com m ittee continue the hearing at 4 p m Monday resolved In other action, the com ­ m ittee approved two bills of Sen. Lloyd Doggett, D-Austin o ne am ending th e D e n ta l P ractice Act on the dispensing of narcotic drugs to add the ~ t n e e n n t > < t i ) 3 ( 1 ( 1 1 0 6 phrase “ dangerous drugs or any controlled substance because of controversy over of the term “narcotic.” Also, legislation was heard to lower the minimum age for qualifying one to be a dental hygienist from 20 to 18. Another of D o g g e r s bills w o u l d s e t up a D e n ta l Grievance Committee, to be V j l l C V a i l V V V elected from area dental societies or organizations as approved. The com m ittee also heard and sent to the Senate floor a bill to increase the penalty for not following orders of a co*m* ty fire marshal from $200 to $500 and make the offense a Class “ B” misdemeanor. House passes bill to change land fax A bill to tax agricultural open space land on a produc­ tivity basis instead of m arket v a l u e w a s p a s s e d by an overwhelm ing m ajority of the House Thursday. The m easure was am ended so that “ a family corporation can take advantage (of it) but a large corporation like Tim e, Inc., cannot,” said Rep. Bill Sullivan!, D-Gainesville, the proposal’s author. The bil defines a large corporation as one having m ore than IO stockholders. The House bill probably will go to the Senate Economic D e v e lo p m e n t C om m ittee Monday. Sullivan said. 24th ST. 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I I 2 4 th Str«KU K»fl a n d K a u M.W.F 11-6 T.Thur. 11-9 Sat. 10-5 y 477-6846 lbs Never Too Lobe I U niversity S tudents for over 6i y e a r * W e ’ve m o nitored hundreds of c la s s e s . . the p erm issio n of the m s t r u c t o s. nntPQ are a com prehensive s u p p le m e n t and study aid th at allow you to lis te n and learn instead of w orrying about ta k in g good notes. And you can 'sign up anytime during semester... well provide you with tne oom plete set. The price is lower than m o s tly books and you can pick you^s up^ co n ven ien t locations .. _ 901 W. and downstairs a. The today, qqyft cLccture Sgtes Service 901 W EST 24TH ST. AND AT T H E U N IVE R S ITY CO OP String Instrumtnt Rtpair and Sales • Strings and Things • Gurian Guitars . Discount on Accouorios We Hove Moved: 911 W. 24tti • 4764421 H O U I M XEROX 4 OFFSET PRINTING WHILE YOU WAIT QUALITY WORK AT A FAIR PR'cE po yfvr>*H 0 k t w Try on a 9®*^ h a w *1- V 7401 San Gabriel 471-47 S4 7312 S. Lamar 442-4102 :| Q 0 Z ZN y j (J o a: X iu oc Little M att'* Cl R a n c h o Af a new convenient location serving UT students 7 2 5 A 2 3 r d coordinated the cirl!palate team with lh* help of the March oI lump" ani) loot doctors Thp trim include. a pl*»tlc surgeon. a pediatrician, « * P « « * lh .r*P l«t. »n iiid lo lo flitt, a so cial w orker specialist! tor ear and ,hr" at' , hildrm s dpntl»UyhrarP ,.r.d d O T t^ In the [last, parent* have had to seek h lip ,n each field individually or find a cleft palate team in another city With the new concept, announ< et Wednesday by members of the te^m the doctor of a child bom with a cleft m Central Texas t ails the Social Department at Seton (459 2121. ext 3204 to enroll the child in the cleft palate team program The child is assigned to a par titular pediatrician and plastic surgeon When the patient is a year to old he will be examined by the other specialist* The team will meet event three months, and treatment will continue through the patient s adulthood until he is nmipTe!i*ly I y chologicaily and aesthetically in »octety This treatm ent costs the P*/*1] 1* nothing Many patients will qualify for help from the Crippled Children * Service of Texas, and either that s e r v i c e or private insurance will absorb the medical hills The c l e f t palate team c o n f e r e n c e s coit nothing b e r ause the member* donate functional physu ally, ,hA cleM palate or lip occurs In Iibm*1<** in I.OOO births, team member I*. Richard , « t ir 0f*on P X O la ir Parker a plaaUc exP1811**1 Mn..- lh. IIH ,,unty a n tra l Texas area to ­ ny*) births ,wr year an average of eight or mw children a a rt born with hr defect Tho learn already has evaluated I,mr children. (rom 4 month, to 7 year* old. to determine proper treatment* Mrs Fred Hinton of Austin, whoa* 21 month old son ( hr.Gopher was bom with a Heft palate, said the local learn is just great M Mer son was treated initially in Co* Angeles ber aute of the lack o a v a il a b le help in Austin when he was bom Now Chn* can be treated in Austin ' The neat step ho Chria w ho* Up Md a,.,, ire scarred by the completed pl. a ti. D i e " win he orthodontia! work. Parker said ‘ We may do tome touch-up on the nose or lip but mainly if* really a tenia problem," Parker aah! We usually to n ! Uke to do anything with the nose until the patient is about l l years old A Heft palate is an opening in the roof of the mouth which connects the mouth arui nasal cavity Chris has had inner ear trou­ ble since the age of 6 weeks because of UM connection, Cohn explained When < hr is was ll months old. plastic tubes were put into his inner ear to allow air In without in­ fection . . Cohn said the exact cause of Cleft palates is not yet known, hut contributing factor, can bd* ••anything from tranquilizers to infections during the first *ix months of pregnancy A p ^ 7 treated Heft palate will be Hosed within 1H months, a repair essential for speech The overall purpose of treatment is o make the patient normal in speech and appearance ■ S I I ® ■ ■ ■ I I ■ I t ■ ■ ■ T E K A S U N I O N * m SO T A H A P P Y H O U R . Jo in other m em b er* of <«' • s^ J., o” : “ Ii ! c o n v o c a tio n . Tho Rod Tom ato, 1 6 th a n d G u a d a lu p e ! 8 a n d I O p . m . Film : M IS S O U R I B R E A K S . Frid ay S a tu rd a y . p . " . •"'» ««*■*> * I „ d J 9.30 „ . m . •" 1.30-a". S O S B Y “ '“ “ ^ V s , J S a tu rd a y In tho T a x a . Tavo rn . Cavort $2 . 5 0 w ith U i iu , a | for g u o ttt. *”t"T ! M o n . ! . , F e " C lu b Film . FIHSX M F N O N I T H E M O O N . Jo tto r A u d ito riu m . I 9 p . m . t o I P . m . D ance: M A N N Y A N D TH E C O S. po>* I .a re d b y tho Jo .to r M u lticu ltu ra l C o m m ittee an d ^ h,c" n ° I C u T tvr. C o m m itte e. J e . t . r C a fe te ria Second Floor. Ad | m ission: $1 w ith UT ID, ! y j T m ^ O A D T H E M IM E . Sponsored by th e C u ltu ra l En ter I “ a i n ^ n . C o m m itte e. Hogg A u d ito riu m . A d m ,...o n : $ 1 5 0 | w ith C EC ID, $ 5 . 5 0 for o th e r.. ■ y U ^ U c u M l o n : TH E SH A P E O F T H IN G S TO C O M E. G a ry I M a n g a .,E r e c t o r of Public . n f o r m a l i o n on L ^ r ^ w il. d , I CU., tho now library on cam p us Academic Cente I Soon.ored b y the UT Interaction Committee. I FO R ADDITIONAL INFORMATION CALL 4 7 1 - 5 6 5 3 I . . . . . Dem onstrators march against death penalty In protest of the death penalty, the People United for Justice for Prisoners PU JP* will march to the Capitol at noon Saturday. University stu­ dent Fermm Calderon, coali­ tion member of P U JP , said Thursday. P U J P was formerly the Ad- Hoc Committee for Jan 29 in which picket lines were set up at the Governor s Mansion to protest the execution of Gary Gilmore “ We split from that coalition, (.aldeeron explain­ ed. “ We had all united around the point to where we were go­ ing to have a big demonstra­ tion and a march “ We are trying to protest the death penalty used only against a certain class of peo­ ple - that happens to be the working class As long as this system stands, it will never be used a g a in s t ‘ be r e a l criminals - the rich No per­ son on death row is rich. none at all All come f r o m the working class background. One m ain focus of the march concerns the trial of Gary Tyler, a 17 year-old black sentenced to electrocu­ tion for killing a white student in a Klu Klux Klan demonstra- tion in D e s t r a h a n , La^, Calderon said “ We see it (the trial) as a frame-up, he add­ ed citing that the one main witness to testify against Tyler later repudiated the testimony In July. 1976. 2.000 people from all regions of the South protested Tyler’s sentence in New Orleans The death penalty was replaced with life imprisonment at hard labor. Gary Tyler is like a sym­ bol of the oppression that faces minority people year after year. His case is the result of the kind of system that we have. Calderon said. “ Our main goal is trying to educate people about the death penalty,” Calderon con­ tinued He said that the rich are the criminals allowing people to work under unsafe working conditions •It s the system that forces people to commit violent .■rimes. It is the rich peep e that control everything while the poor people control nothing .. Four main organizations constitute the coalition in the march The Houston Fight- Back Organization, the Oc­ tober League, the Communist Youth Organization and the Mexican American Youth Organization. campus news in brief- Graduate women's program set “ Through the Maze, a graduate women's program to explore professional and per­ sonal issues, will be held from 9 a rn to 3 p rn Saturday Ut Jester ( enter Auditorium Dr Linda MaoNeilage will be the keynote speaker Additional faculty and staff women and community professional women will lead small group d iscu ssion s to explore professional and persona issues All graduate women are welcome to attend For more in fo rm a tio n c a ll Frances IMotsky. 471-1201, or Diane Saxe, 471-1652 ANNOUF4CRMRNTI 9.091* UN111D * 0 A IN U TM8 OSA t M M N A U Y AND C O S K U N ,.. TOOTH O . O A N l I A t l O N A n n o t i n e * . • (f«t«w ld« march *nd damon.tratton * •* W H IM bol* lh* t o tn it of nth and Chlcon Str#*t» twhind Hu.ton Tliiotwn Coutgo 5p*ak#f* T»‘" ‘ Omo from How.ton O aiiat and Au.tm Ivary o n # I. In vita* to *t'*n d and frtH 'pat* In th* mar. h l l at aul n o smcmoCT a in ho di*cu.»o __ S f U M N t S O I O M T H A N A V M A O S w i l l i | » n »or h a p p y h o u r f r o m 5 to 7 p rn d a y a t T h . B l d T o m a t o !* th a n d G u a o o lu p o S t r * * t » ____ _____ ____ T I X At U N IO N C U lT U S A l • N l M T A I N M I N t th * C O M M if t i l w in p r * » e n t T o a d M i m e a t I P r n S u n d a y In H o g g A u d it o r iu m Admnlon i. Si » for C E C IO h o ld « r * . *5 W for O t h * r i T I X A t U N IO N M U SIC A t I V t N T S C O M M IT T H W ill p fO M H it B o b b y B r i d g e f r o m v IO p m to I JO a m F r i d a y a n d S a t u r d a y In t h * T * < . » T i v e r n C o v * r c h a r g * I . S 2 50 w i t h U T ID . S3 T i x i i U N « n' T M I A t l l C O M A .IT T H w ill p r a . m t th * U lm M l t . o u r l B r * * x t a t I a n d IO p m F r i d a y a n d S a t u r d a y .net I P m S u n d a y In J ” * ' C * " * ' A u d it o r iu m A d m i . H o n i t $1 IS t o f U T I D h o ld a r * . SI 75 f o r m a m D a r t •NOIA it U O M t t S A S S O C IA T IO N w ill tp o n \ o r th * m o v i * • J o o v a n M r i t y u , b a . »d o n a t a m o u . B e n g a l i n o v a ! , a* 7 JO p m F r i d a y In R o b a r t L a a M o o r a H a ll 4 102 MHTHNOS CHA DAD MOUM * » ' af Satu rd ay at 2101 Nuecat St for Saturday morning iervica* followed bv a ma# I AUSTIN CYCUNO COMMITTH will SROn.o r a oaglnnar*' rxde at IO a rn maattng at Campo. P a r., 74»h a d Soeodway Streett T h . thort ride t o u r N o r t h w e s t A u s t i n B^ n g w i n mach*, lunch and water Everyo ne , , It invited y o u n g SOC!A lis t A U !ANCI w ill meet a’ I p m Saturday 'n Baft. Had d l.c u * . and " P r o p e c t . for S o c i a l l y the ttetlw orxer. oWction in lOCIItT^OF OiAOUATI ANO POOH* VON At stuofNTS will meet at noon F rid a y In the Viefhodi.t Student Center. 2434 Guadalupe Guest .peeler I. Meiene „ Dodton H S AMIS DU aa ANC AIS w i n meet at 6 J O l" PT F rid a y at L e t Amit S id e w a y to speak S04 W 24th St __ INT.. VA.S.TT C H ilt ti AN MUOWSHIF WU ma«t at 6 p m Friday at Caro hart Dorm itory Recreation Room tor a pot IucA .upper (bring your own g oodie.) and talent .how following Cate Fren ch . d in n tr „ ____ hi i d i FOUNDATION will maet at / IS P F rid a y at 2105 San Antonio St for .habbot .ervlce t ■AHA I ASSOCIATION will tpontor an im troduction to the Baha'i faith at b p m F rid a y at 1414 A E v a St The public I. invltad For mora Inform a hon ca ll 443-3206 SUNH-OWea, F lr . t Unitarian Church will hold program and workshop group. at 7 p m Sunday at 4700 Grover Ave. Guest speaker Jim Fogieman w>. talk on "M a le Con»clOu*nett «ai*- Ing W ork .h o p " for men and women The Sunflower program I. open to people of all raligiout affidation*. A d m it.io n I. SI, and babysitting it availab le at a tmaii extra charge For more Information call Diana Latham , 452 3498 UNIVtBSITV UNO!SWATH SOC18TY wd meet at IO a m S a t u r d a y u ^ ' e ,, „4 BoOeft LH Le* lo t n o r t h o t R o b e r t L e e p a r k in g P a c i n g lot north of M o o r e H a l l t o r a t n o r k e i s c u b a d iv e a t C o m a l R i v e r . N e w B r a u n t e l t m o « t A * B O A R D w i l l m e e t a* 4 p rn S u n ­ d a y a t 2101 P e c o s D r i v e to r e v ie w p r o s p e c t iv e m e m b e r a p p H c a t on». li g h t v o t in g p r o c e d u r e s a n d e a t s n a c k s __ V C ItN C I FICTION A N O F A N T A S Y S O O I T Y w ill m e e t a t J p m S a t u r d a y in B u r - d m e H a l l A u dito rium f o r a g e n e r a l m e e t in g a n d s li d e s h o w o f s c ie n c e - f . c t lo n m o v ie s auca O R A D U A t l STU O R N T ASSO CIATIO N w i l l m e e t a t 5 p m F r i d a y a t th e T e x a s T a v e r n f o r h a p p y h o u r O A Y C O M M U N IT Y S R t v t C lS w i l l m e e t a t I 45 p m F r i d a y a t 2330 G u a d a lu p e S t , u n i v e r s i t y " Y " , f o r a r ® P^ r ° u ^ U N IV«*SIT Y C H IS S a u l W ill m e e t a 6 JO F r i d a y in B u r d l n e 228 to p la y c h e s s U N I V M S I T Y TM8 0 S0 FH IS T S w ilt m e e t a t J P rn i n A r c h i t e c t u r e B u i ld in g 105 f o r a d is c u s s io n , G o o d S u n d a y W i l l In th e N e w A g e ' a n a n d a M A R O A w i l l m e e t a t ^ 30 p m A N A N D A M A R O A W ill m e * ' a . - ~ k M o n d a y at 4510 Ave F Mond.y •» «5>° Av* » , lon d a n e s Fo r m ed ita tio n classes F o r m o re info fo r tre e m o tio n ca ll 452 4910 UN.VIRWTY FRMWHMUNO 0 *0 **™ ** w i ll s p o n so r a 30-mlle rid e M c K in n e y F a lls at IO a m S a tu rd a y , m e e tin g at Cam pus P a rk , 24th and S p e e d w a y Stre ets lu n c lr sn a ck s and w ater A dm ission to the I* f a i l s is 50 c e n ts E v e r y o n e B r in g AUSUN CVCUNO COMMITTH w ill tour the H ill C o u n try west of Austin at 9_ a .rn Sa tu rd a y , meeting at C am pus P a r k , 24th and Speedway Stre ets B rin g lunch, w ater, snacks and, ,f b ike pum p and tire re p a ir k it fo r the 80-miie trip s e m i n a r s u t CO UfO R OF PHARMACY w ill sponsor a speech by L a r r y E re s h e s k y at J a m F r id a y at 2601 U n iv e r s ity A v e , C o n fe ren ce Room E re s h e s k y is ca n d id a te for a p sy ch ia tric P h* r. m a c y fa cu lty position in U T H e a lth S c ie n c e Center In San Antonio EMS tries new uraency number When A r s o n s life is at stake the time saved by nothavxng to look up a phone I ' rf the Texas and lives through a single em 8 total response time to W™ ? e,lElMSYST EM involves a single emergency telephone n u ™ (‘or S use in reaching police, fire departments, although 13 cities are toked to the system. stage for Austin, ■ w . . g e n u i n e SHEEP s k i n RUGS Natural & S 1 A 0 0 W« mak« and I Shoe Shop r * P a , r b o o t * . h o . . b a l l * Natural i $ ' A ( B . o - t . l u l C l o , , ^ Loth., I * S ADDLES^ ^ g o o d * C apitol Saddlery H A L F _ t=*a 1 6 1 4 l o v o c o A u . t i n , T . x o i , p j y c t t 4 7 8 - 9 3 0 9 E xf& N oeo V o w ', /) , 'V e a r ly i m r k i t e : s e l e c t i o m ] I C F L P s , 4 5 s , a n d rf$ $ Cl) c p o u F h e b c ^ p n o z s W d i>5 C 5 |5 1 4 L a v a c a . c1^ 00r Sale Cowl neck Sweaters - •6.99 reg. to $ Id.OO Jumpsuits - Vi off T-Shirts- f6.99 l u n a r s w in e o n 1 9 1 8 R iverside No. 2 7 Dobie Moll W 0 0 -c Anderson lane H ere’s looking at me, Kid. That s right, Swt*etheart. for only three bucks you Clit look at a life-size blae k and white studio photo of me all you want —- or a gorgeous dame like Jean Harlow Or a hot shot like Robert Redford Or nine other stars Swell, huh (“ mon, shell out the dough and take me home It would bs’ the beginning of a beautiful friendship Unicorn Gallery and Gift Shop in IX iln e W a ll KIK! RESTAURANT at. CHINESE AND j% POLYNESIAN f e a t u r i n g CUISINE EXOTIC COCKTAILS iimck — froes f.t5 (Haoof— from NUo. — fri- lf-2 5-10 Sot. emd Sm. \I a.m. — IO*.**- 8 2 0 5 B U R N E T R O A D ^ 4S2-*% :& -Bm CHINA PALACE invites you to share with them this weekend your choice of 225 Chinese culinary delights. Treat yourself. You will be pleased. • Owner/chef Ming Cheng rated ★★★★ by N.Y. Times 6605 Airport Blvd. at Huntalnd 451-7104 OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK 11:30 AM-10 PM Without breoklng -C I your budget^H i 7 A r b y ' s Super Roast Boof Sandwiches 2 A r b y ' * Hot Roast Boof Sandwiches • 1 . 5 0 expires March M expires March 14 ■___- - - - - - J • 1 . 8 5 expins March 14 1 7 o ” - T " 6 " 7 w , c h . , p * c _ c o u p o n ^ M 1715 Guadaluf 4411 S. Lamar 5400 Burnet Bd. F r id a y , F e b r u a r y 18, 1977 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ P a g e J I this form of price control aimed at the runaway rate of inflation in the $139 3 billion health industry. IF ENACTED, the plan could save $793 million of the th e fe d e ra l $40 3 b illion governm ent w ill pay for Medicaid and Medicare next year, according to sources in the A d m in istra tio n , and similar savings could be ex­ pected in nongovernm ent health insurance plans The hospital cost control plan com es at a tim e of stepped-up health policy ac­ tivity within the new ad­ ministration HEW Secretary Joseph Califano Jr. was said to favor Dr Charles Sanders, general director of the Massachusetts General Hospital, for the key job as assistant secretary for health The A dm in istration ’s desire to control hospital costs first and produce a national health later steins insurance plan from the difficulty that past administrations have had try­ ing to expand health insurance benefits in the face of un­ paralleled inflation HEALTH COSTS, up 14 per cent in the last year. have been rising about 50 per cent the Consumer faster Price Index for goods and ser­ vices. than Hospitals are the biggest target in an anti-inflation package because 40 per cent of all health dollars are spent in them, making them the largest single expenditure in the health economy. While Carter has said he would not ask for wage and there price controls, is a w idespread belief among those who have studied health inflation that almost nothing short of a new insurance program bringing all health insurers and deliverers under a single plan would work in holding down costs CARTER IS being pushed into action now by his budget deadline He is expected next week to m ake known his changes in the I* Ord budget for the 1978 fiscal year, and that budget includes a plan to hold to 7 per cent the increases in Medicare and Medicaid ex­ p e n d itu re s The sav in g s realized from the Ford plan would be $1 8 billion, and the F ord a d m in is tra tio n has already cut that amount from the HEW budget HEW S proposed solution to the problem expands a con­ cept that has been gaining acceptance in the hospital field It is called prospective rate review because it re­ to agree, quires hospitals before the fact, to their costs for the year Currently, most hospitals have to justify their increased costs at the end of the year to receive payment from public and private in­ surance programs to Such activity is part of a t r e a t g r o w i n g mo v e hospitals like public utilities, whose charges are subject to official scrutiny. Twenty-five states now have such rate review commissions, although they vary in their authority to hold down costs. R A T H E R T H A N se t a fix ed level of increase, the HEW look at each plan would hospital individually. THE PRUDENTIAL INSURANCE CO. will ba on c a m p it* Fabnnry 24 19T 7. intor- viewing May and *umm*r Butin.** School Graduata* for position* in Houlton. Confort th* Butin#** School pbc.rn.nt ,#r details. A n E qual O pportu n ity Em p k tya r M F •It i, m il to rem em ber that freedom thro a th apr M ,, tho th,up that comes first Most of us couldn't be free without newspapers, and that is reason we want newspapers lo be ,r" ward R burrow Good Food Storey N a t u r a l F o o d s WEEKLY SPECIALS We GUkMv Accept U S D A . Fond Stum p* (attecry Specials Got*! t eh 14 .’(> Hi*n nm p i I I'e MN* M T WT, ! . ii, M. *.<•«*» M” 1 >a c r, ,. S a t t o la Eggless Mayonnaise 1 . 0 5 . Meal in itself! Pemmican » a r 5 9 $ -Produce Specials Good heb. 18-20 Snow White Button Dark Skin Hass Mushrooms Avocados Lettuce Tangerines Crisp Iceberg Texas Sweet $ ^ I S ^ «>. I «• AU $ 'I 0 0 A O Q t Mtm ‘Hit 1 123 I N orth lx«P I } : * * * 2 9 0 0 W « t Z 9 t h 3 . H O I We*. 5th 4 2 7 2 0 t l A ^ y ? arith J u e OO 6 :3 0 8 30 8 W J .30 i c u i a ' i i n 12 OO 6 .^ l2 OO H OO P h « H * e I n y o u * o r d e r 12:00 6 .30 Good Food Store* t h a n J u s . HEW w ants limit on medical costs ♦New York Times W A SHINGTON - The Department of Health. Educa­ tion and Welfare has proposed creating a new agency with authority to set limits on ris­ ing health care costs for the country The plan would require all hospitals to begin operating on budgets, with price increases agreed to in advance by the new HEW agency C o n g re ssio n a l ap p ro v al would be required to establish UNIQUE CLOTHING FOR UNIQUE PEOPLE We're going to give you one emphatic statement about the future of the computer industry and the future of your career. APPLY! lt you have a d eq re e rn E lectrics lr, c io r tr ir a l E n gin eering , C om p uter S t i ­ ^ ment offjce for further d e ^ i , 0 DiB9^ E q u l p Cmen- C o rp o ratio n is an eoua, opportunity em ployer, m /t sndigital eq u ip m e n t corporation sri UMI i •MUM**** • No. 2 3 D obie Mall 472-2731 F ree P a r k in g A i ii r nUVU ^ / a s s V ■ Sacred Place R evisited Annette Weiner spent ten m onths in the Trobriand Islands. Papua Mew Guinea, studying women men, and exchanges of wealth. Though previous studies have focused on men, dism issing ‘w om en’s work as unimportant, Weiner shows that wom en play a vital role in Trobriand society. Hers is the first major published study of the islanders since Bronislaw Malinowski's classic Argonauts of the Western Pacific, \922 Weiner writes: “Because of Malinowski, there exists a mys­ tique about the Trobriands, the power of which I only gradually becam e aware. It is not my pur­ pose to analyze this mystique; I speak only as an informant having experienced the effects of doing field work in what must be on e of the m ost sacred places in anthropology.’ f While Women of Value, Men of Renown is not intended as a critique of Malinowski, the c o m ­ parison between the work of the pioneer male ethnographer and the young female anthropologist is fascinating. Weiner is assistant professor of anthropology at the University of Texas at Austin. Women of Value, Men of Renown Mew Perspectives in Trobriand Exchange By Annette B. Weiner 320 pages, illustrated, $14.95 available from bookstores or from University of Texas Press Post Office Box 7819 Austin 7 8 7 1 2 Put on a p re tty face Amid the dead of w inter, y o u can bloom th at can on ly co m e like a fresh spring flow er. A vibrant, fr from gre* look cosm etics. Flashing eyes glow .ng cheeks, and shining lips will push that w.nter look from your face. Bonne Bell, Helena Rubenstem , and Almay cosm etics are reduced 50% lo help you get a head start on spring. Great cosmetics at a great price. 50% OFF February 14 to IVth A p p arel Ut Ftopt D is re g a rd " for a re a geology led to this collapse behind an H.E.B. store retaining w a ll. reeled as I saw the m ig h ty w alls rushing asu n d er — there was a long tu m u ltu o u s lik e th e s h o u tin g so u n d voice o f a thousand w aters — and the deep dank ta rn at m y feet closed sullenly and silently over the fragm ents of the ‘House of U s h e r /" — E dgar Allan Poe " F a ll o f th e H ouse o f Usher. ” P a g e 12 □ T H E DAILY TEXAN □ F r i d a y , February 18, 1977 More Riverslide Poor planning plagues apartments (E d ito r's no ir; THI* I* lb** final part two-part in a te r ira.) By KEVON ANOEIUEN Texan Staff W riter Th** flay bluffs south of K ilt Riverside Drive and east of IU 35 are the home turf for m o rt than 5,000 person* at the University Mu I the fla y when wet becom e* soft and c a u m * problems the apartm ent foundation* and re ta in in g walla that are built on the floor* of the bluff* to Thursday. The Dally Texan looked at problems with the the A rbor slope b etw een the Hiver A p a r tm e n t* and M ills s h o p p in g r e n t e r Because of a mudslide in W a and current movem ent in the cone ret e-covered slope The Arbor had to abandon a 24 unit building above the ilope last fa ll, fe a rin g th e b u ild in g might fall onto the shopping ren ter below Hut the Arbor Is not the only the a re a with in complex problems CARRIAGE h o u s e Residents of the Carriage House Apartm ents, 2304 Plea sant Valley Road, received a the Feaster surprise during holiday* last spring. After three days of heavy the rains a slope between C a r r ia g e H o u se and th e King s G ate Apartments, 200b Willow ( reek, gave way and tent 2,000 tons of clay, rock and asphalt Into the Carriage House re a r parking lot The slope was covered with railroad ties, a popular form of slop* covering in Austin, said Dr Roy Olson, a Univer a t t y c i v i l e n g i n e e r i n g professor, because when the slope fails, It I* easier and cheaper to replace the ties rather than a concrete rip-rap structure The two com plexes were two fo r e c lo se d years Harry Gilllngwater Co i» the professional m anage ment company that I* handl* mg the apartm ents for the lenders in the last G lllingwater in su lted a new J t o w n t A K c f J * - O ' N foundations and soil before construction begins BURTON DRIVE SLUMP testing A fi nal p o t e n t i a l sl i de problem is the bluff adjacent to a retaining wall behind an H E B food sto re on R iver­ side Drive. H E B built an elaborate retaining wall behind its store to stop erosion on Burton Drive, which curves above and behind the store. But im­ m ediately east of the store H E B constructed a shorter retaining wall (about IO feet high on a 40-foot slope). They cut the toe of the slope to flatten the bottom area. As a result, the slope-top has slumped The distance from the eroding cliff to Bur­ ton Drive is approxim ately 20 feet at present, and a five-foot wide chunk of e a rth has fallen since last spring. Given the visual evidence, and the findings of geologists and engineers, it is possible that a student the E ast Riverside area m ight witness a panoram a resem bling the final scene in E dgar Allan Poe’s "F all of the House of U sher;” in “ W h ile I g a z e d , th e fu tu r e rapidly w idened — there came a fierce breath of a w h ir lw in d ...m y b ra in th # d r a i n a g e s y s t e m a t th e C arriage House and did other needed m aintenance When th e c o n t r a c t o r s b e g a n groundwork for the drainage system , they discovered that because of erosion and im* proper the gas in s u la tio n , and w ater lines were six te­ ehee from the surface, instead of the required one and one half feet Because of construction the gas or water was turned off at (me building or another for at least 30 d ay s, said Steve (o le lla , v ice-p resid en t for Gilllngwater Co • We found the drainage im ­ proper," ('olella said The s to rm s e w e r s could h a v e drained the area properly lf they would have been con­ structed right " The ('a rria g e House was built by Jarnail Construction Co of Austin Coielia estim ated the repair cosU on the C arriage House alone will hit 1500,000 plus the Several University student re sid e n ts at ( a rria g e House were angered over the lengthy construction and the in c o n v e n ie n c e s, and they registered com plaints with the students attorney Asst S tu d e n t Atty Joe Crews said he received com plaints from between 30 to 40 s tu d e n ts a t th e C a r r ia g e House last fall His office has drafted a petition, ready to file, that would be in essence a lawsuit against class action the ap a rtm e n t’s owners Crews said he doubts that the suit will be filed, because G lllingwater Co. has "done just about every conceivable thing to placate the te n a n ts.” • They did 300 per cent m ore than any other landlord would do." ('raw s said. KING'S GATE G i l l l n g w a t e r h a s h a d problems with the clay under the King s G ate Apartm ents, also, Colella said To keep the clay from becoming wet and swelling (which crack s veneer and foundations!, the com ­ p a n y h a d i n s t a l l a n to e la b o ra te d ra in a g e sy ste m there, also Colella said the drainage system and other drainage system and ol im provem ents coat 1350,000. T he re ta in in g w all th a t re p la c e d th e fa lle n slo p e between the ap artm en ts cost an additional 1100,000 Work is continuing at the King * Gate After seeing a Daily Texan th e c ra c k e d photograph of veneer on one wall of the King s G ate, officials in the I n s p e c tio n c ity B u ild in g Idepartm ent sent an inspector to look at the com plex After the com plex for exam ining th r e e d ay s, in s p e c to r reported that the only action against the complex was lo advise them to re p a ir the cracked veneer on the one building The inspector also reported that lim e stabiliza­ tion work was going on under the two buildings closest to the new retaining wall. POINT SOUTH th e point South, 2200 Willow c r e e k , a n o th e r fo re c lo s e d apartm ent com plex, is now m anaged by G lllin g w a te r Last fall three foundations of th e 12 buildings w ere d is­ covered moving because of the swelling wet clay A con­ tracto r dug out the clay from in­ under jected a lime slurry under the foundations, w aterp ro o fin g the foundations and sealing them from the clay VILLAGE GLEN the building and Village Glen, 2101 Burton Drive, is curren tly having a new drainage system installed in order to rem ove excess w ater from the clay The com ­ p l e x by G illlngwater OTHER COMPLEXES Is m a n a g e d Vantage Point, 1835 Burton D rive, had d ra in a g e work done last week The forem an of the project said he was con structing drains surrounded by gravel to stop the wet clay f r om sw elling aro u n d the foundations The com plex is owned by Hawaii P roperties of Dallas (Tiimney Hill A partm ents, 2201 Willow Creek, has had work done on its underground w ater lines for the past week, The complex also has large cracks rn the retaining walls around its pool and on the ten n il courts th at were built last sum m er Does the evidence add up to a record of inadequate plan­ ning, too-rapid developm ent and careless construction9 t h e One person who is saddled w i t h “ R i v e r s l i d e p roblem " thinks the answ er is yes. Those people did not U ke the proper precautions during the c o n stru c tio n ’ C olella said Olson, who teaches r e u s ­ ing wall and foundation design classes, said the developers obviously did not consult a geotechnical engineer on how the clay soil. to deal with the Previous dealings with c ity ’s B uilding Inspectio n D epartm ent have shown him that d ep artm en t does not deal with inspecting foundations, he said One inspector even told him a few years ago th at the city had never inspected a foundation. Ed G a m e r, a U niversity geologist, said that a pad of soil about five feet thick can be put betw een the foundation and the clay to stop any m ove­ m ent, Developers seldom do this because of the expense, he said. City regulations have had little effect on where or w hat in the the developers build area. The planning d e p a rt­ m ent m erely zones the a re a s residential or com m ercial T h e B uild in g In s p e c tio n D epartm ent does not have the money to hire a fulltim e soils inspector. But an official in the d ep artm en t said they have asked an ad hoc com m ittee of the m ayor pro tem , which is review ing the needs of city agencies, to budget the funds for a soils inspector and a fulltim e apartm ent housing inspector. Arm and Ablanedo, an a ssis­ tan t city building inspector, said his departm ent is now t h e n e w . w o r k i n g u n d e r stric te r 1973 city code Most of the ap artm en ts on R iverside w ere built under the 1964 or 1971 city codes, he said The new code requires approved 0 Safew ay (2) Tx# Ar bo* •rr .Aq # Howie (5) Kin* % i eat# (J) F W I'**th (jj) VMI#*# Glen CT r {jr ' J&Z Cf) H E H ® u/ Cee* X (Tj) Cb*rt*r»eirf btl ll "J (-**y ,, 1 1 1 4 ? northero//(nal SUNDAE PALACE NorthcroM Mall ft 4 2 3 0 Duval Cool Salads Exotic Sundaes Scrumptious Sandwlchai Old-fashionod sodas 4 phosphate* Try our new taste sensation Frozen Yogurt / Buy one of our sensational banana splits (Na. 2b) and gat ana froa gffgr mspkms Mo re A I, H D I I d* T’’ ! I V KI - 4 5 4 - 6 1 8 2 20% off w ith Student or Staff ID I Itlttll I here s nothing bashful about the b o ld H u sh P u p p ie s * campus sport casu als Exciting earthy leathers heavy on unusual sole treatm en ts down to earth on prices And it comfort is your bag H u s h P u p p ie s * casuals are where it s at Sports Austin’s Largest Selection of HUSH PUPPIES W orkm en build new d rain ag e system a t Village G len apartm ents. Texan Staff Photat by Larry Prie* SIDEWALK SALE Monday Feb. 21 2525 Anderson Ln. T ’s Antiques Northcross Mall 451 -7405 2314 Rutland Dr. 837-3424 Tables, Chairs, China Cabinets French Furniture Roll Top Desks, Clocks Glassware & (Mina TENNIS ANYONE Serving up all yo u r tennis needs Bold! Head W hite Stag Loom tog's WARM-UPS 50% off N N I S A N M en's & W o m e n ' s Ladies Adidas Sweaters Tennis Shoes Reg 27.95 50%.« Now 22” AUSTIN SankAmisicasq >^i » Irv M on. thru Sat. IO A M -9 PM Open Sunday 1-6 TROPICAL RSH SAU 20% OFF All Angelfish fab. 1 3 -1 9 Other Specials too! Largo Selection of Livo Plant* WE KNOW OUR BUSINESS HANCOCK SHOPPING CENTER 4 5 9 -7 0 0 0 N either—i Mall 4 5 9 - 3 1 1 3 Are you a Famolare girl? Come to KARAVEL, Northcross Mall Ti a t x r c a u f OHOOUCTS Arkansas leading Horns to slaughter? DAMOND B EN N IN G FIE LD Texan SUH Writer A Sherlock Holmes story it s not With the Southwest Conference championship already decided and the likelihood of an Arkansas win conceded by almost everyone, including Texas Coach Abe Lemons, the only mystery to be solved in Saturday s 3 IO p m game is the size of the regional television audience orts t h e Da i l y T e x a n Frid ay, February 18, 1977 □ PaQe 13 Arkansas, to be sure, has the incentive, with a 15-game winning streak and Top IO rating on the line, but Lemons is looking more at next week s Rice game than at the weekend encounter in the Ozarks ■ This is a nothing game for us." an unusually quiet Lemons said Thursday “ We gotta beat Rice (next week!. We ll play as hard as we can and try to beat them if we can. but we have to beat Rice to be on our home base in the playoffs ’’ The Horns, 12-11 for the season, 7-7 in the SWC, are fighting with SMC and Texas A&M for fifth place in the SWC standings. The Nos 2-5 teams play at home in the first round of the SWC tourna­ ment Feb 26 Arkansas, however, has few playoff worries-at least until the tournament finals March 5 in Houston By pounding TCC 79-64 Tuesday night, the Razorbacks earned their first outright title since 1941. and after next week s season finale against Texas A&M will not play again until the last game of the tournament Saturday's performance will be more tor the record books than anything else for Arkansas, 23 I. as the team could tie school marks for most consecutive wins and most wins in a single season, while taking the next to-last step to an undefeated SWI season That hasn t been done since SMU went 12-0 in 1956 “ We’ve been fortunate, Arkansas Coach Eddie Sutton said Thursday. "We ve played well, but we've had some lucky bounces, too Perhaps the luckiest break of all came when juniors Ron Brewer and Marvin Delph and sophomore Sidney Moncrief bounced into Barnhill Arena to play for Sutton The three are averaging over 50 points per game for the season, with Delph, a 6-4 forward, the top scorer. He is averaging 19 9 points per game, with Brewer hitting 16 5 and Moncrief, who has made 65 per cent of his field goal attempts, adding 15 6 “ T h e y’re three fine athletes," Sutton said. They carry the biggest part of our offensive attack They re capable of playing anywhere in the country, and I ll be dis­ appointed if they all three don’t make all-conference." Moncrief injured an ankle in Tuesday’s conference-winning game and was not able to practice Wednesday or Thurs­ day Although “ he certainly won t be full speed, Sutton said he should be able to start the game Texas has only one injured player Jan Handley, a guard who will not make the trip with the team-but instead has been bothered by illness. Lemons said Rich Parson, John Hanks and Ovie Dotson were the three sick members of a “ depleted" Texas team Thursday Other starters for Texas are sophomore guards Jim Krivacs (17.7 points per game, 17.0 in SWC games) and John Moore (16 7 and 17.1). and Hon Baxter a freshman forward who has a 16 J scor­ ing average and leads the team in rebounding with an 8 5 mark. R a z o rb a c k s surround Rich Parson. -------- K a z o r o u v n s Texan Staff Photo by Hon inn!* UPI ratings neglect Cougars; Hogs' Sutton ranks UH 8 or 9 ■ ■ J ® & first four 0r five the way I think they should be and first four or five the way I think they should be and loam* in mv reeion. They ought tc then rank the top teams in my region They ought to let you rank 20, so vou wouldn t have to do that u . ___ When the Arkansas Razorbacks reached U PI s Top IO Monday night, not only was it the first.time in the school’s and Eddie Sutton’s coaching history but also the first time for an SWC team to mane since SMU in 1957. Truthfully, there probably was not a team that deserved it during that 1 9 - y e a r span But when there is a team that does deserve it (like this year the odds seem to be stacked against its joining elite. Unlike The Associated Press, which polls sportswriters, U PI takes its survey from 42 coaches around the country. UPI divides the country into seven regions with six coaches in each. The Southwest iregion ."eludes only Houston's Guy Lewis and the Hogs Sutton from the SWC. Others voting in this reg10" ore coaches from Arizona State. West Texas State, Arizona and Tulane. By comparison, the Big Eight and Pacific Eight have four coaches while the Atlantic Coast Conference, the Missouri Valley Conference and the Western Athletic Conference have three. “ That is a sore spot with me," UPI sportswriter Mike Rabun said. “ I ’ve fought bitterly to get more “ from Texas on the polk I've £ — "£ d (Texas' Abel Lemons and (North Texas State Bill) Blakely.” But while the Hogs are ranked anothe^ deserving a top 20 ranking that remains unlisted the Houston Cougars. tim cow lishaw So far, the only time they have been rated was by NBC’s Grandstand farce called the Fifteen .” That was the day they were on NBL s nationally televised Sunday game against I LA Houston’s record is currently 21-6, with those losses coming to the 10th ranked Hogs (twice), the & University of San Francisco (twtceh third-ranked UCLA and Texas Tech. Only one loss (82-80) came at home. S Although the voting of the coaches is confidential and subject to re vie w only by UPI, Sutton spoke up, saying he. too. feels the Cougars deserve recogm- hon. "I ranked Houston eight or nine this week, Sue ton said. I ranked us fifth. Now I don t think we have the fifth best team in the country, but they only let you rank IO teams. “ I think I do what ail coaches do and rank the •Most people try to be pretty honestlthink" Sutton continued. "Early in the year I dldn t vote for anyone around here We were already ranked before I ever voted for us Some coaches are apparently not so honest with their power to vote. "About the only way a coach gets removed from the voting,’ Rabun said, is if he retires or doesn’t turn in his ballot or if he doesn’t turn in a representative ballot. The latter case happened last year. ‘There was a coach last year whose team was fourth or fifth in his own league and he had his leam ranked th'rd or fourth in the country." Rabun said The New York people talked to him, there was a and he was kicked off But ifs a rare occurrence. It can be said that the ratings are just for the fans (that is what a lot of coaches say, anyway they also influence the NCAA when it comes time to invite second-place teams and independents to the tournament in March Should Houston defeat Arkansas in the SWC tour- nament March 5., it is certain that both teams will be invited Houston would have to go being the con- ference winner and Arkansas would have the best record of any second-place team in the coun ry But if the Hogs win and Houston fails to receive an invitation, a faulty rating system may be partly to blame. Texas sw im m e rs to face SM U, Tennessee K r u m w i e d e , Fiek shootfor national times in weekend meets ST rn J) > > 4* rtC r « *m Q U - -Texan StaH Photo by Stovon Pumphrey infii ■- - * Coach Cliff G ustafson loads foam drills. UT picked to win SWC; Starters battle injuries (Editor’s Note: This is the third In a series on SWC baseball teams.) By JIM LEFKO Texan Staff Writer Handicapped by numerous '"junes^ the Texas baseball team still is exPfct®jJ the Southwest Conference race handily The Longhorns open the l ^ »eaaon a nm Friday at Disch-Falk bield in doubleheader action against Texas Wesleyan^ • This is the most rash injury *ituatic^..1fnf preseason we’ve had," Head Coach if Gustafson said. “ You can anticipate pulled muscles, tendonitis and sprained ankles, but we’ve never had anything like this before^ What Gustafson was refern"« * fractured right hand suffered by Andre Robertson Rocky Thompsons broken left hand, Bill Dunnigan * tom ligaments w h ic h may sideline him all year' Mueller's pulled groin “ nd *lnal‘y' surgery on catcher Bobby Kearney in ,, . J It EARNEY AND M UELLER, both junior cottage transfers. are Texas' only two “ -’inexperience behind the plate is going to be our biggest weakness, Gustafson Heavily recruited Robertson, who will be Gutter at least three weeks will miss some vital games, Gustafson said Being a freshman he ll need all ^ T I T o m wouM get and those 16 games he ll be out would have given him that. Normally he would be r e a d y to play after that period of time, but now he ll just have to Uke longer. Two positions vacated by injuries have been replaced with lefthanders, and Texas could sUrt six lefties on any given day. We also thought we had speed, but w e v c replay cd them with slower people. We re loaded with slow folks now,” GusUfson said “ OUR HITTING is a little bit below par, too but Charlie Proske’s hitting real welf- Proske’s .335 batting average last year led the Horns and was second in the SWU. "Thompson (injured third our leading hitter this spring, Gustafson m Despite GusUfson pessimism. Texasi Islthe defending SWC champion, compiling a 48 16 overall record last year A preseason pol conducted by the Lubbock AvalancheJournal picked Texas to win aga.n this season "There s no added pressure in being the defending champion.'' Gustalson said no different this year than it s heen n qu awhile. If you have to pick them, Tews A&M, Baylor and Houston will be good, and Arkan­ sas and Texas Tech will be the dark horses T EX A S’ MOUND CREW should be strong this season with Don Kainer (8-3) and Bob SfTuck sUrttng the first two game, against Texas Wesleyan. They ■“ * * * "* “ looking real good this spring. GusUfson Sa|lowever, Ramer was hit on the head by a pitched ball in Thursday's practice and is a q " " h u C a n d Robert Shafter (0-D are slated to pitch Saturday in the d o u b le h e a d e r against Texas Lutheran GusUfson said that Tony Brizzolara and Mickey Reichenbach will also pitch. Longhorn quarterback Mike Cordaro, switching to the warm weather sport, abo might pitch The tenUtive batting order for the first game is sieve Day, shortstop, leading off, Jerry Jones, right field; Proske. cenler,'eld' R e ic h e n b a c h . first base or designated hit er Wendell Hibbett, iefttield; Dan Moody. >£« base or Bobby Stevens, d««if f ^ d “ tle£ , Bobby Kearney, catcher , Ted W wdla cond base and Pete Ferguson, third base. "Our lineup is going to change the firstJew games It won t even be set by the Texas (Feb. 251," Gustafson M d. Tech game Reichenbach, Day, Hibbett and Proske ar* the only starters in their positions from a year ago. ly DEBORAH K. MANN “ exas’’rnertrswirn team travels this weekend for the SMU nvitational and Tennessee dual meet, as swimmers will have belfast* hot at qualifying for the SWC meet March S toi 5. Coach Pat Patterson said the SMU Invitational in Italia ,ay°aandhSaatlurPda.v will be mainly a ‘- L ^ " c e for swimmers to nullify for the last two positions on Texas SWC «*«"• 1 ■•We're not going to Dallas to compete . Most o the team WHI >e at the Tennessee meet," P a t t e r s o n s a id referring to he f a c t hat only six Longhorn swimmers will a t t e n d ^MUm „ The invitational is more a chance for six of the swimmers to m" a y Sr?ennmeSee meet will be a different story. Pa.ter- SO" Tennessee is ranked second in the nation We want to see ‘‘‘°|l4tteri0n how we do swimming against some good Asked about how well he thought Texas w o u ld fare J alters© replied "Well. we might be an easy » » split a total of 113 points so many ways. There were Z a Cl°Tt was” good’dual meet last y e a r but sometimes we don I to make national times Patterson said he expected Krumwiede and « ob^ ” m T k w.l? ^ trying for national . ^rUn’thY S*#v*n Pu™P*"*7 Page 14 O TH E DAILY TEXAN □ Friday, February 18, 1977 Massengale hot, leads LA Open w 11 t o t i m v A N G ELU S (U P I! Kik IlMW Sifel* sta rtin g whet left off in the Bob H o p e l e a d over ^ C - of the 1200 OOO u . Angeles open Ihursday w e a k e r over the demanding Riviera < S c » * P b ird ie ' on I ' (W * 11,4 ro,1- un« (l” ' ! ? “c a rn a tru r c Iw m pum who h a* b ern baUl- mg to r e ta in hi* J " ™ 1 M e n tio n . r a r f c d M M All G ild * ., .i n n e r „ M I IK. I07f, PhtnTllI O pen, while th ere *.»* a 'O lit s : S " S . . . » I . I. P . l « - M assen gale, who - o n w ire -to w ire In .'.I m S p r i n t ., C a lli , of JS7. 23 under par finish with a five d ay Hop* , k1 h o round with seven birdies and a single bogey ^ (h r f r ’ petition B y M O M A ('H U I * C H A V E Z I r u n S u i ! W itte r T exas" m en s ten nis team slam m ed its w ay to v icto ry rh u rsday as it d e fe a te d the Mean G reen of N orth T e ia s S tate 1M> . "W e had m o re talen t than they d id,” Head T ennis C o ach H ave Snyder said I w as real |y im p ressed with N orth Ie * t s ‘ G a ry O lsen and I h a v e to lot of give G la ry I I l o c h a c r e d i t ( o r h a n d l i n g It s o w ell Although ad m itted ly slow in the first few s e ts, learn ca p lain G a ry PloOk "d e c id e d to be a little m o re a g g re s siv e and defeated Olsen 5 7, 6 4, 6 2 in the opening round of co m th e I w as c o n s e r v a t iv e first few se ts I thought I d just little w eaken him down a I d ecid ed H o ck co m m e n te d to b r a little m o re a g g re s siv e after he won a few sets In the seco n d round. K evin < u rren d e fe a te d R ick I1 ra n t* 6 2 while B ra d N ailer* downed Hill Canon 18*2 M in the third round S tev e D enton d e f e a t s David Cody M . b l and Mike K u tchin brought in th e a n o t h e r v i c t o r y fu r Jim U m gh orn s by d e fe a tin g W right 6-2, 6 2 D oubles a c tio n brought v ic ­ te a m of F lock * tory K eller when they d e fe a te d the the to M ean G re e n lo a m "I FrnO tt* M ean G re e n te a m of P r i n t * C anon <82. 7-5 The te a m of d e f e a t e d N a b e r s D e n to n O lsen W right <81. <83 in the se t h e c o n d r o u n d w h i l e L o n g h o rn s a ls o w e re vie* th ird round to r lo n * th e when M ike K u trh in and Eddie B la n to n d e f e a te d M urphy- in Cody 6-3, 7-6 • E d d ie B la n to n did re a l said well th e doubles, Snyder W e put him in a fte r in we won the singles l a k i n g to F rid a y , co m p e l! lion a g a in st E a s t T e x a s S tate at w hich begins a t 2 p m B e n n * - Allison C o u rts. Snyder t h i n k s it m i g h t ha- s o m e t h i n g to the N orth Texas s im ila r L A M A R VOLKSW AGEN We’ve Moved to Ilth & Lamar E v e ry th in g is at o u r new easy to g e t to location; new ca r sales, used c a r sales, serv ice and parts. IVe a re looking forw ard to h elp in g you with y o u r V olksw agen. R e m e m b e r w e're at lith and L a m a r and that ’« e a sy . p h o n e is still 4 76-91HI. C om e by soon. M urphy sparks Houston in win over San Antonio 1 , 1 W W § t W ( L P L - SAN ANTONIO C alvin Murphy grabbed th re e s te a ls and Houston c o n v e rte d e a c h of them for points in a tigh t fourth q u a rte r T h u rsd a y night to spark the R o ck e ts to a 113-99 NBA win o v e r th e San A ntonio spurs T h e win g av e the R o c k e ts a cushion in th e ir lead o v e r San Antonio and C leveland for s e ­ cond p la ce in th e N BA C e n tra l D ivision L ead in g 82-31 with 9 31 le ft, H ouston hit 14 rn a row l a r g e ­ ly through to M urphy's s te a ls . lo put the g a m e a w a y T h e R o ck e ts set the te m p o throughout the g a m e , leading bv seven at the end of the first q u a r te r, ll at the half and ll a t th e end of the third M oses M alone sco re d 22 points and grab b ed 19 rebounds and Rudy T o m jan o v ich had a g am e-h ig h 24 points to lead H ouston B u ck s 99, W a rrio rs 97 ( U P I ) M I L W A U K E E - Sw en N a te r hit a b a se line ju m p shot a t the buzzer to give the M ilw aukee B u ck s a the G olden 99-^7 win ov er S t a t e W a r r i o r s T h u r s d a y night in a g a m e in w hich the lead changed hands ll tim e s rn the last five m in u tes * u I , and 16 ami M eyers added 15 and t e a m s w i t h 15 le d b o th rebounds N a te r finished with 12 points J a m a a l W ilkes had 19 for Golden S ta te , which played w ithout R ick B a rr y , s e c o n d w h o m i s s e d h i s straigh t g a m e sin ce injuring his left hip in S u n d ay’s NBA All-Star g a m e B ra v e s 112, C a v a lie rs 103 B U F F A L O ( U P I ! - Adrian lead in g D an tley . B u ffa lo s s c o r e r .'tallied 17 of his gam e- high 28 points in the second half and the B ra v e s broke a tw o-gam e losing s tre a k with a 112-103 NBA v ic to ry o v e r the Cleveland C a v a lie rs Th ursd ay night R a n d y S m i t h a d d e d 21 points. B ird A v e rill 16 and t he J o h n S h u m a t e 12 a s B ra v e s p re se n te d new Head Coach Jo e M ullaney with his firs t B u ffa lo win D a n tle y grabbed ll rebounds, nine in the second h alf, as th e fast- con trolled breaking B ra v e s the boards Austin C a r r s b ask et with in a th re e 4 59 left in the third q u a rte r ♦ 59 le ft in the th ird q u a rte r gav e C leveland a 73-71 lead but B u ffalo w ent on an 11- tw o -m in u te poin t rip s tre tch and w e re in co m m a n d . 92-81. a fte r th ree q u a rte rs . C e ltics 126, K ings 111 KANSAS C IT Y , Mo. ( U P I ) D a v e C o w e n * s c o r e d - in B o sto n 's final six points regulation tim e and added six rebounds and points, tw o a s sis ts in o v e rtim e T h u rs­ day night to ra lly the C e ltic s to a 126-125 win o v er the K a n ­ sas City Kings giving Boston its fifth v ic to ry in six g a m e s. T he 6-8 c e n te r , playing his 12th g a m e sin ce a short-lived r e tir e m e n t, sco red a season- high 33 points and grabb ed 21 rebounds. John H avlicek add­ ed 22 points, Sidney W icks had 16 and C u rtis R ow e sco re d 15 th e ir a s seaso n re c o rd a t 28-28 the C e ltic s evened G u a r d s R o n B o o n e an d B ria n T a y lo r led K an sas C ity w ith 26 points a p ie ce w hile S co tt W edm an sco re d 22 and R ich a rd W ashington had 12 points and 12 rebounds. UT, A & M to meet in track 'tune-up' P hil Sm ith, who led both in s c o rin g wi t h 28 t e a m s p oints, had a ch a n ce to win the g a m e for Golden S ta te when throw he had a bonus fre e t w o s i t u a t i o n w i t h s e c o n d s re m a in in g but hit only one of th re e fre e th row s to tie the g am e a t 97-97 j u s t D ave M eyers inbounded the b all a t m id -co u rt w ith a long p ass to N a te r to th e rig h t of th e basket and his ju m p shot sw ished through a t th e buzzer. M ilw aukee held a 70-62 lead w ith four m in u tes left in the third q u a rte r but Phil Sm ith the s c o r e d nine p o in ts a s W a rrio rs ran off l l in a row to ta k e a 73-70 lead W inters led M ilw auk ee with 24 points. Bob D an d rid ge add­ ed 18, Ju n ior B rid g e m a n had ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ * * * * * $ By RIC K E S P IT IA 1 When th e T e x a s w om en face A&M a t C ollege in a dual tr a c k m e e t, the com p etition will be m o re than ju st con frontation b etw een the two sch ools The K yle F ie ld a ff a ir will be a tune-up fo r both squads, but fo it also will help estab lish the h ie ra rc h y the T e x a s w om en withm c e r ta m e v e n ts, as the w om en a tte m p t to d e m o n s tra te ^ h e ^ e a r ^ h a s not been able to w ork out a s m uch as C oach Ja c k D aniels would have liked, but the w om en still p ossess th e caDabilitv to put on a strong show ing. , . L ast y e a r ’s tw o-m ile relay te a m w as ranked second in the n a ­ tion and w ith Susan A bernath y. C a ro l Sheffield and SusaIj D avis this y e a r ’s relay te a m should p rov e eq ually f e r ­ all retu rn in g t i l e L onghorn w om en will be co m p e tin g in all even ts e x c e p t the shot put and d iscu s and should be s tro n g e s t in the d ista n ce in the hu r d l e s . ___________ — ^ — — n KEG BEER SERVICE 10300 Metropolitan Dr. iChold- AMERICAS HIK UGH! KER p a r t y k e g s e t -u p s — 7*4 Gal. Keg 18.00 IOO IO oz. cups 1.75 Ice 2.25 Tax 1.10 Total 23.10 15'? Gal. Ken 28.25 IOO IO oz. (ups 1*75 ice 2.25 Tax 1.61 Total 33.86 Complete with C O ‘ gas 8 3 7 - 6 5 5 0 O P E N SATU RDAY 10:00-4:00 M O N -F R I 8 0 0 /6 00 F RE E D E L I V E R Y O N 3 K E G S O R M O R E COORS OF AUSTIN -10300 Metropolitan Dr. DAN’S 4 7 8 -5 4 2 3 4 5 9 -8 6 8 9 I 600 I AV ACA ___ Whtthey " skoalsc o o l ) 5353 SMIRNOFF VODKA »0 Pieef Vodbe OLD TAYLOR SO Pre#* Stro>$h, *ovrttee Whtthey K E N T U C K Y T AVERN to Pre#* STreHt*'' EVAN WILLIAMS tt 0. 90 Preet $t»®«#ht teurben Whitey ......... KENTUCKY BEAU Ie Bro** Strath, tev»ben Whiney j.W. DANT IO YR. M Proof OW Sryte Wh..*ey ANTIQUE to B-eet S»ro«fh* tewrben wmwiey SOUTHERN COMFORT t O O B r B o fU jv e w . t m o a y a n y QUART 4 . 9 9 QUART 5 . 1 9 QUART 4 . 9 9 ,* 3 .8 9 ia,3 .6 9 ,,4 .1 9 ,» 3 .8 9 ,* 5 .5 9 OLD CROW to Bree* $tw#h« tew .ben Whitey g i l b e y s g i n teBreefO* GILBEYS VODKA a/) E fiaf V arf he * CUTTY SARK t o Breof Scotch W h « k y ft GAL. 8 . 9 9 ft g a l . 8 . 6 9 _ _ ft GAL. 6 . 8 8 ft GAL. 1 4 .6 9 USHERS t« Br»et Scotch WHtoby CHRISTY & BROOKS IC B»eef Sweet. Wtw*ky CUTTY SARK t o B ro ** Scorch Wtoohy HARVEYS t o Bu m * Scotch ttftweky KAMCHATKA VO DKA tO Proof Vee.o NUMERO UNO TEQUILA to Breef ho* Wo. ko J. CARDIN BRANDY t o Proof Brooch trmWy b lu e n u n Go«on liobf«o»".4»h COORS CANS ........ ............. ,* 4 .9 9 ,„ 3 .5 9 ,* 6 .4 8 ,* 4 .6 9 ,. 2 . 9 9 ,.3 .6 9 ,. 3 . 9 9 * .2 .9 9 6 RACK 1 .4 9 6 PACK 1 .2 9 6 PACK 1 . 1 9 6 PACK 1 .0 9 S ta te m a tc h S t a t e :m a t t * m a tc h T h e E a s t T e x a s m a tc h m ight be sim ila r to this one J ' D r o o e r t y on Lake Austin. It looks like a M axfield P a rrish Dream Place. This is the chance of a lifetime to own p ro p o e rty y o u ' v e a* way * dreamed of. The price is $43,000. Call Sat Sun. or Mon. The early bird gets it all. Better H urry! 327-1312 1829 West la k e Dr. I f i r x m m I m t o r Y o u r D r e a m // on * * * •At a lot of this type of meets, you shift your per­ sonnel around.” he stated “ W e’re going to try to double up (two events! as many peo­ ple as we can ” Freshman sprint sensation Johnny “ Lam " Jones will be running the quarter-mile in­ stead of the IOO and 220-yard dashes, so as not to “ get him into the sprints too early Jones will also anchor the sprint and mile relays Price is “ very anxious to s e e " how both his new recruits and his veterans who’ve been plagued by in­ juries in their careers fare Jamaican sprinter Maurice Beecher, Fosbury flopping high-jumper Bob Keith from Oregon and University of Hawaii transfer Mark Mason in distance events will be get­ ting their first taste of com­ petition as Longhorns Satur day Texas will also welcome the addition of sprinter and pro football prospect Raymond C la y b o r n to the team Field events are scheduled to start at I p.m. and running events commence at 3 p m at College Station Saturday. Track team meets Ags UT outdoor season opens By J E F F WALKER Texan Staff Writer No one is looking forward to pleasant weather and the great outdoors more than Head Track Coach Cleburne Price and the remainder of the Longhorn track squad T e x a s , the d e fe n d in g Southwest Conference outdoor track champion, has not com­ in­ peted outdoors yet but augurates its outdoor season Saturday with a dual meet in College Station against SWC nemesis Texas A&M. The Horns have competed only once this year, electing to concentrate on conditioning. Texas managed a fourth place finish at the SWC Indoor C h a m p io n s h ip w on bv Houston two weeks ago. The Aggies were third in a tight finish in which five points separated the Cougars from the Steers But Texas needs to discover where some of its individuals belong and the only way to find out is by competition. Price said “ We need a meet. The only test for conditioning is com petition,’’ he said “ We’re just going to have to get our feet wet a little bit and see where some of our people are.” Price lauded the Aggies, calling them “ the best bunch they’ve had in several years But A& M Coach C h a rlie Thomas forewarned that his team won’t be as strong against the Horns. “ We won t be as strong Saturday as I hoped we’d be.” Thomas said. “ W e’ve got a lot of nagging injuries.” Inju ries to several key Aggies could determine the Johnny Jones meet early. Shifton Baker, the Aggies’ ace hurdler, has been bothered by a mild case of the flu but may run anyway Half- -miler Tony Wheeler pulled a muscle at the SWC indoor championship prelims and won t compete The combination of middle- C h a r l i e d is t a n c e m a n Taliaferro and distancemen Andy Ja ck so n and M ark Klonower remain hurt for Texas and none will compete Saturday. Other than that, “ we’re pretty whole” Price said. Price will be doing a certain amount of juggling of events among his 28-member team keg beer for parties He I***";'/I “ '' * P 'N £,* £ * t 'Yev,. ^ **l(> Gymnosts 'heolthy/ for bizone ' By CHRIS DAHL Texan Staff Writer As Texas’ women gymnasts travel to San Marcos this weekend to compete in a bizone qualifying gymnastics meet, they will be taking a team that is “ finally getting over injuries.” “ We still don’t have enough for a team, but we’ll give it our best,” Longhorn Coach B i l l H ig h t o w e r s a id . “ Everyone who is going looks pretty strong.” Hightower expects four or five Longhorn gymnasts to compete in the meet in Hines Gym in San Marcos. game. The compulsory exercises will begin at 6 45 p.m. F riday while optionals start at 2 p.m. Saturday. G ym nasts who reach the qualifying score in TANK MCNAMARA ... to the each event can advance to the state meet in March. “ I ’m p re tty o p tim istic about everyone’s chances for s t a t e ," H igh to w er said “ There will be some good competition there but not too severe.” Other teams participating in the meet are Southwest Texas, Texas A & M , Pan A m e r i c a n and UT E l Paso. American and UT E l Paso. The I,onfihoro team receiv- The Longhorn team receiv­ ed a boost to its morale with the new s th a t p r e m ie r Longhorn gymnast Beckie W rig h t had undergone a successful back operation Tuesday. “ She is doing better than they expected,” Hightower said. “ It wasn’t as seious as the doctors thought.” the doctors uiuu*nv. Wright had ruptured a disc W r i g h t had ruptured I during a January meet at E l Paso The doctors only had to remove a soft part of the disc w ithout fusing anything, though “ The surgery has relieved a lot of the pain,” Hightower said “ You can just walk in her room and see that she is doing so much better.” # Jones, Swanson pace A&M win _ I a Woiiv HOUSTON (UPI) — Steve Jones and Wally Swanson led a 15-point Texas A&M assault on the basket in the second half Thursday night and moved the Aggies to a 79-61 victory o v e r Rice in a Southwest Conference basketball with 6 48 to go before Jones and Swanson shot with 6:48 to go before Jones and Swanson shot the Aggies out of trouble. In the first half 17 Owl turnovers forced by the Aggies’ full court press accounted for the 19-point lead at intermission But guard Albert Darden fired a furious Owl rally and finished with 21 points for the night. But once they got close, Rice hit just one basket and two free throws and the Aggies counted 15 The young Owls gave the Aggies all they could handle in the second half, closing the 4- 22 halftime score to just seven points at 64-57 points. by Jeff Millar & Bill Hinds SJL. CONVENTION CENTER BUD '/« BARRUS NOW AVAIIABLI COMPLETE PARTY KEG SET-UP 478-9353 BROWN DISTRIBUTING CO M PAN Y 411 Chicon SATURDAY 1 0 -4 p .m . 8-6 Mon.-Fri. March 1 1 » □ Thursday Mirth J 8 P-m- * □ Friday Marth 4 I p.m. * □ Saturday March 5 7 p.m. * □ Saturday Marth 5 I p.m. * □ Sunday Marth 4 7 p.m. Your V trr fhRTYMYito He v. Amidas! Mf rr Mr ft* pRflrwf« JUARtTlOTf ubb LtntTo COMR To G e e a t M ixers “ \0!L PRICES: Tax Included *6#0- $50#- s40# M a il w in , S elf-a dd,M e e d B u m p e d Envelope glue 2» hand! ORDER BY MAIL ing charge to: HOLIDAY ON ICE P.O. Box BBBB Ben Antonio. TX. 7 8 2 0 9 Ut Choke 2nd Choko s. j M ite The J uarez Brothers! 1 Juarez 80'i Juarez lot ” MAKE The Perfect Pair, satisfying Everyone Iron MUCH ACH A Tty MUCHACHO! ThEYRe At A Hearty FkCKAGE Store Just waiting TOSE PIC rev UP VY HY DONT YOU? WRO Else Can Turn Your Party into A In s i a ? N u m b e r of tkkott a t $----- •<* Total amount of (hock / monoy ardor ( p le a s e print) B E L I E V E M E , g u y TfJlJ ALU/AY? HAPPEN BEFORE llM H A N P if'5 ONLY YOUR STOMACH NOT K M ? h a ir. imfyjrttd < som*D lr rioutu jw vash sr louis, mo • Seizor* < tot PFM* for into phone 2 5 5 -6 3 5 | ^ "W H Y D O T H E H E A T H E N R A G E ? Psalms 2 and Acts 4:25 • Aw n T H O U S H A L T R E M E M B E R A LL T H E WAY T H E imagine a vain thing, their Kings and r u le r s ^ and that their rage is against G o d Him self, and His A n o i n t e d and for the LO R D T H Y G O D H A TH LED T H E E T H E S E FO R TY Y E A ” ^ ^ D e u te ro n o m y 8.2 F e , you , c o n ,,deration The a am . Lord purpose of getting rid of His Laws and Com m andm ents Le us break their bands asunder, and cast away their c o r d . from has led our nation these 150 odd years. 1777-1930. nation and her God has led ou Generally •pertdnfl. h w a. ^ government b e g a n o rum a l^ ^ ^ y ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ H|> ln9 s^’h i* La w s°and HI. C o m m a n d m e n t, However, we kepi cnH We Trust ’ and stilt do, in ways, H is L 0, ,he Lord ^ _ 0 w , , , , „ g on ou- m on .y n O r * , ,p ,le c l t h . tact that we na concerning Idolatry. 01 ( a n e le s . Sabbath desecration, di.honorlng ol father T d mother, m u rd er..d u l. e r y , . . . . h n ^ . e the Sabbath D a y " Have we no, taken away HI. Lordship id . - h e £ it over to the Kings o spo , w ehave nearly done d" “ T Ar .w ay with the death p e n . y r ^ C ^ c r ^ r b y r ’h . ( J i g h , , ^ murde[er, r>p„ „ , and are “ V,B* lt and others whom G o d com- manded Hi* peop a k l p J " op„ to put to death and send their spirit, back t0 ,p « ,k of our L C a ^ i l s T r o p " : . crim e. t b , . e , bars, c o ..,e c u s . " - B E N O T D EC EIV ED ; 0 0 0 J S " “ J s h a l l H E A L S O IkEM^^FO^HE TH^T^ OW ETH^ C^ H^S FLESH^ H^ LT^ O F us.” In this Psalm G o d also reveals to us the fruit » n d h a ^ e ,, of this anarchy will bring the contempt of the that sitteth in the heavens shall laugh. T h ^ d ^ l ^ h . v . them in derision. T hen shall He speak unto them In His wrath, and vex them In His sore displeasure. During the past thirty years or more have we not been ve y successful and made a good job of “breaking G o d s and Christ s bands asunder, and casting away their cords from “ no’ t h . rise bi e l m . , rape. H o ... p h i.* . « - burning 0, our cities good evidence .ha, G o d m e .n l * h .t He . . d about “holding in derision and vexing with a I adversity those who reject His Laws and C o ^ ^ and^ e" * ; _ . _ The tha, wicked shall be turned into hell. and ail the N A TIO N S tha “And G o d is angry with the * lcked ev< tnraet God! - Psalm 7:11 and Psalm 9:15. T h . . . no. sen, these prophets, ye, they ran. I M W . no, spoken to them, ye, they prophesied B u , ti th e , counsel end had caused My people to hee, My *r°rOs.the th e , should have turned them horn their evilI w .y , the evil of their doings." - Jeremiah 23 2 ,2 L ^ ^ “OI making many books there is no end the conclusion of the whole manor \» r A n d keeo H is C o m m a n d m e n t s , tor t h i s is the whole fluty ni thp whole matter (of life and death): Fear of m a n For G o d shall bring every work into iud9*™ ent WITH EV ER Y S E C R E T TH IN G , whether it be good or and truth - - And ^ ^ T ^ t L m e T n d S S S . Him in sincerity E V E R L A S T I N G .” Galatians 6:7, 8. Since this colum n began over 800 times it has presented G o d s question to man « Secon d Psalm -Why D o T h e H e ^ n R a g ^ together His statement as to who are the heathen. People w P. O. BOX 405, D ECA TU R , G A 30031 Page 16 □ T H E DAILY TEXAN □ Friday, February 18, 1977 n s union 1 ¥ 5 * * * k { 8 p m ' * ★ ★ ★ ★ FRIDAY AND SATURDAY J S a n d 1 0 p . m . SUNDAY $1.25 with UT ID A u d . t { Jester Aud.^ J ALL C IN E M A S - IVERY DAY 3 0 P M H IG H L A N D m a l l ■ U U A T K O E N IG I N . 4 S W 3 7 6 The B est E n t e r t a in m e n t P i c t u r e O f 1 9 7 7 K I C l M JOHN BUSTIN Amu»*ment* A DELIGHT! A SUPERB ENTERTAINMENT! " * *u,"n CH*"" i? > 0 ^ t i s o TuMh, AimeemeMs A m eno m SAjievPQn i , *. S I L V E R S T R E H h C A P I T A L P L A Z A I H 35 NORTH 453-7646 A great *00 H H H H ia riy show sat I SUN \\ o. COMEDY SWITCH! Iadov •' IMJ-IllMtlJ *••» •“« n* 'r-5* t*,-,«» '"N £ ,N *.’ 'T N I' THO» 111 v Ifii-i* H IG H L A N D I H 35 AT KOENIG IN 451-7336 nd Eiplosivt W#ekl — a t — t h . T n n w o a t t o m t a l ExpraM . C r d e d U u i t l o i i w ith ilm o e t on e th ou san d P®°Pl* Amistordaiti. C-op«n*%*g*n and 94ochhnlM^ N o o n e a rriv ed l i t f c H Cassandra Crossing I Weekend Movie List Fun with Dick & Jane — N o rth cro ss Silver Streak — Highland King Kong - Fox Star Is B om — Fox N etw ork - Fox, Southwood F elicia — T exas Paramount Rocky - Am ericana Frrol Flynn Double Feature — 1 aram ouni The Sentinel - N orthcross, Aquarius Wild Bunch — Dobie Carnal K nowledge — Dome N n rth cro ss Seven B eauties - N o rthcross. R iverside Cousin Cousine — Village Wizards - R iversid e w,lla „ S even -P er-C en t Solution — \ illage Bugsv Malone — Village Black O rpheus — Village Sm ail Town in Texas - Showtown Marathon Man — Showtown. Southside Three D ays of the Condor - Showtown. Souths Other Side of the Mountain — Southsidt Rooster Cogburn — Southside Freaky — C apital Plaza 0hl.in(j The Cassandra Crossing — Highland Nickelodeon - N orthcross Car Wash — N orthcross . . . Pink P an th er Strikes Again — Aquarius On Campus Student G ov’t Film s Jovs of a Woman Jonah Who Will Be 2a in the Year 2000 All Screwed Up Marquise of O What’s Up Tiger Lily No Man of Her Own Rocky Horror Picture Show Man “Who Fell to Earth Texas Union M issouri Breaks M idnighters Day of the Locust — Dobie Owl & the Pussycat - Dobie Rocky Horror Picture Show ~ R 'v^ ‘de Naked Came the Stranger - R iv ersid e . . n o m i n a t e d f o r - 4 — a c a d e m y A W A R D S ! . BE ST F O R E I G N F I L M • BEST S C R E E N P L A Y • BEST D I R E C T O R - LINA W E R T M U L L E R - • BE ST A C T O R - G IA N CARL O Gl A N N I N I R Seven Lina Wertmullcrs B eauties See Direttory Ads ♦or Showtimes 5:25-7:30-9:35 (Sot. & Sun. Matinees - 1:15-3:201 Mr* Prsslctent.** We have invaded Silo 3. We are prepared to launch nine nuclear missiles. We demand ten million dollars, Afer Force One... Academy Award Nominations For— | • Best Foreign F ilm || J L • Best Screenplay • lk>st Actrt>ss M a r ie -C h r is tin e B a r r a u lt T1 An epic fantasy of peace and magic. \ K\l 1*11 HAKSlil 1 II WIZARDS in; FEATURES 5:30- 7:00-8.30-10:00 “-golden entertainm ent.’ PATRICK TAGGART AUSTIN AMERICAN STA TESM A N r* " f ,th turous K 1 - the day they took on The RaU Power! 1 0 RIMAR BAVARIA p.r-rm agiwahwwctkjh T t TW IL IG H T S LAST GLEAMING s«». BURT lA NCASTfR _ vjem» »»’ **..*•• * *** 1:55-4 25-7 00-9 30 FRIDAY: 5^>0-7:4S-10:30 IN 1946 THIS MAN KILLEO FIVE PEOPLE! TODAY HE STILL LURKS THE STREETS OF TEXARKANA, ARKANSAS! FEATURES - 6 30-8:20-10:10 \ . .a spec ial little m ovie, w h ic h kids sh ou ld p o sitiv ely adore. p g u i i W t f t . -1 A m # fte * m S t« r * * m * r t I I V f t l l G f i Y M A L O N L p * eA«r k NfcvnjK jrvi -v - t> flA LYIrtU.LAMS 1-- . f e a t u r e s 5:40-7:30-9:20 K Seven B eauties « Academy Award N o m i n a t i o n s • Best Forvign Film • Best Screenplay • Best Director • Best Aclojr_ f e a t u r e s - 5 :2 5 -7 3 0 -9 : 3 5 t r o m t h e - 1 l i e s t S e l h n q N o v e l THE SEVEN-KR-CENT SOLUTION pg Al AN ARKIN V ANE RF LXiRAV E RO H 1 K 1 D C V A IL and N IC O I WIL I IAM SON F E A T U R E S - 5:30-7:40-9:50 N O R E D U C E D P R IC E S JANUS HLM FESTIVAL NOW SHOWING bI a c I * o n p h t u s s t s m s e c t i o n o t « * o d e Janeiro O R P H E U S s e n h a n c e d b y s o m e o t th e m o s t m a g n if i c e n t m u s ic a n d c o lo r p h g r a t if y e v e r p u t o n film r M tc STARTS SUNDAY F a n c y to o t t a p p in g b> o n e o f A m e r ic a s m o s t f a m o u s d a n c e te a m s F r e d A s ta ire v - j G » n g e r R o g e r s a n d t u n e s Dy irv m g B e r lin m a k e tn *s a s u p e r la t iv e s o n g a n d d a n c e c o m e d y w n ic h is to d a y c o n s id e r e d th e c la s s i c A m e r ic a n m u s ic a l MlDWl6HT£RS $1.25 " 1225* erCTVSC F E A T U R E S - 6:10-8:05-10:00 C fa /t& d & ft& ia e ji T H E T O W N T i l 111' D R E I I D E D S U N D O W N Starring BENJOHNSON ANDREW PRINE ■ DAWN WELLS showtown uso NWV 163 A CAMiMM R0 *36 161* Box OHite open* 4:30 Show starts at 7:00 „ „ | S MIU» UJ *<**•*»'> UVVSH W W _ ------- FRIDAY: 4:15-1:15 1 0 Frid a y, F e b ru a ry 18, 1977 □ T H E » * » ■ ' 1 0 7 7 n THF* D A IL Y T E X A N O P8QG 17 — M ANN 'XI A ' Hf v psBMHMWB I t o x t r Ip l e x MSJ AIRPORT HYO 14S4 271 11- I S I S m (Both THeofret) 5 | 3 0 ^ ^ ^ ^ 0 SCHOLES SEAFOOD SPECIAL All the fish, hu*hpuppie», col. .law, & french frie. you can eat for $3.50. Drink, extra. W e're tired of high prices so w e decided to do som ething about it. We're b rin gin g fish straight from the coast • you. J 6 0 7 San Jacinto Closed ERROL FLYNN | I d o u b l e f e a t u r e Captain BlooD 1 W ilt. Olivio de H avilan d A Boid Rathbon. J** Se' / / I BEST ACTRESS • F A Y E D U N A W A Y BEST ACTOR B P E T E R F IN C H 9 BEST DIRECTOR b est screen p lay S ID N E Y LU M ET P A D D Y C H A Y E F S K Y - M KTRO GOLDW YN M A Y K B p r ....nt« n n n * . n > P FAYE W ILLA M PETER ROBERT DUNAWAY HOLDEN FINCH muumuu n e t w o r k b y PADDY CHAYEFSKY Uiraded by SIDNEY LUMET R iR E S T H IC T tO 2 br] METROCOUm PAN AVISION* P r o d u c t by HOWARD GOTTFRIED Released thro Unite A Tr,tns.»tiH»nr.» C o m o a n y AUSTIN PREMIER A WHALE OF A COMEDY! h ig h l y c o m ic A terrifically intelligent, witty comedy The entire cost is splendid MY FAVORITE FILM OF THIS YEAR a» nom 0*0 feather and as spry os a squirrel and sometimes just as nuity A ROMANTIC, MYSTIC, UTOPIAN COMEDY.. a b o u t the seventies lunatic fringe of people In melt twenties and thirties This (lim stays suspended In me air, spinning- A MARVELOUS TOY. ... »»**,.»«• Kl* T» e »' ★ ★ ★ ■ A 1 A UNIQUE FILM EXPERIENCE J h e stars or# eight manfelous characters." A l AIN TaNN*MS _ _ _ _ JoNAh who will bt 25 in d e y* ab 2 0 0 0 B M W I a v * « s ^ I Friday & Saturday ... 7:00 I 7:00 I Sunday at 7:00 PW Bam Aud, I M French with subtitle* a e J D a v i d B o w l e T O . m a n * * ♦ » W I t o * a r t h — ■ BARBRA SftttSANO ■ « « S I 0 H N S * « * JUN l l R R S PROOUUIWL j « » IPN Pf lf RS - Unpiled bv FRANK P I M ■ txecuiive Producer BARBRA blKtloANl) S a e e n p l S S S S o R Y OUHNt S JUAN DIDION R R E S T R IC T E D iT R IC T E D J j YI {‘ lA 't l A t T S i T I 'r'ir lCr.Tel.CM~ r.on. Weare* B'os A Warr»«t Communications Company J *»1 " * NN ..fn j o y . d b y . . . . 4 5 . 0 0 0 A u e tin it.tl S r . . I. F O X T R I P L E X i4A54P2Vur“ B o rn i t s e t t i n g n e w r e c o r d * . N o m i n a t e r A c a d e m y A w a r d * . W i n n e r o f 3 G o l d e n G l o b . A w a r d * . M a t i n e e * S a t . & S U* V Weekday* a1 5:10-7^g2l2il2-£^L WOODY ALLEN STRIKES BACK IN THE WILDEST COMEDY OF THE YEAR! Friday & Saturday Sunday (9 AM! RICAN iNTlRNATtONAl / ' s r woody alien's whatstip tiger Friday & Saturday 6:30 & 8:45 Academic Center Aud. 1.50 Sun. at 7:00 PW l i l y *C O L0R 6:30 & SKK) 1.25 .7:00 OHLY Burdina Aud. ✓ t J I* Gable and Lombard in No Man of Her Own n . e e l , « l m i e w k M C a ro le L o m b a r d a p p e a r e d l o g e . her. « " friday I S a tu r d a y ....... s I u il*‘nl (tin lurdrne Aud. f:30 ONLY 1.25 -r V ^ 'r tW . I It LATE s h e w , 1 1 :1 5 friday I Saturday Burdin# Aud. * 1 e fpAVi . A i I ti I J S P ' V v W v w l IHI A ll NI W I j M N N A u H k n u * eh»!pf n i n a l v i a C x U N A W H m j U U H f S a l l s c r e w e d u h L A T E S h o w Friday & S a tu rd aj Sunday ONLY 9 : 0 0 Batts Aud. 1.50 'm o d e r n Q I N E M 1 1 : 1 5 1.50 Batts Aud. W IT T Y . J O Y O U S A N D B E A U T IF U L ’ -MAONIPICINT CRArtSMANSHIP ANO INTlLLtOtMCt - iou d And it IMME NSI.LY SATISFYING ' yr -• J . ' ' M T V -tNOlARINGLY PUNNY ANO gently moving ‘ ll Ii J _ I rn KtihmvY v THE MA RQI ISI I A I ! Sh.*. 11^0 PM friday ^ pM 0M ly| X CASABIANCA a n d • O r i g i n a l N e w s r e e l # C o lo r C a r t o o n o 1 . 0 0 D i s c o u n t C o u p o n t o P a r a m o u n t F ilm * T im e* 5 :4 0 -7 :5 0 -10 :0 0 END S [ t o m o r r o w ] STARTS SUNDAY d a r k Goble & Spencer Tracy in SAN FRANCISCO 12:10-2:35-5:00-7:25-9:50 v a r s i t y t h e a t r e 474-4351 2 4 0 2 G u a d a l u p e m 1946 THIb w a n m l l c j #* ..... - - 1 0 DAY HE S T IL L LU R KS THE ST R E E TS OF T E X A R K A N A ARKANbA T H E T O W N t w i t n n E iin h U S U N D O W N . T R U E S T O R Y t f j n n m , SECOND HIT TIMOTHY . SUS** . J J L , BOTTOMS GEORGE HOPKIN. cmo* ti* P G ®Er showtown usa M W Y 1 8 3 i C A M E R O N RO / 8 3 6 8 5 8 4 /"DUSTIN 'H O F F M A N ROY SCHEIDER s h o w t o w n u s o h w y 183 A C A M E R O N AO 836 I S M r S b« R T R E D F O R D S & S S tS S S m S o u t h s i d e t w i n d r iv e - in 7 10 E BEN W HITE S IV O 444 2296 | * i *H«* U M I 8:3® i Skew stort* 7KW | — I 3 DAYS OF THE CO NDOR, J T h o t r u e s t o r y o t ju t m u .n u . , - O ly m p ic ski c o n te n d e r w h o s e trag . _ e v e ry th in g but her lite. A n d w h o fou n d th e OTHER SIDE c o u ra g e to live th ro u g h Q p J I U t J J E t h C d a l m l n ^ M O U N T A I N " [M A R IL Y N H ASSETT BEAU B R ID G E S CRERT CO HIT S o u t h s i d e t w in d r iv e - in I t a W HIT! S IV O 444 2296 J O H N W A Y N E "Rooster Cogburn' P a g e 18 □ T H E D A IL Y T E X A N □ F r id a y , F e b r u a r y 18, 1977 rn rn rn ^ O l h e C H d ^ P e c a n s t C a f e J I A to v 6'*- V A .if • Te*a$ 4 7 8 2 4 9 1 i I f t u m O N M O T H K M A p p e a r i n g S a t u r d a y DAN A D A V I App»o,mg Sundog BLIND G IO R G I A f A " - t 4 T € Emm m-p*t f Aa1 i #n?F*twn if*#* t a.,. Aer/**# -»*4 it * ~ to it r m I*'1' IAI 4 Hi - N e v e r a cover $ 1 0 0 F O O S B A ll T O U R N E Y IV E R Y M O N D A Y N IG H T inurn: S C R K K N S r«i .»».«* WW ■•***' jy,*t BMA Oh UN ( amal only th ree or fou r m o v ie s that I w as I ha ve e x p e rie n c e d g e n u in e ly sorry to se e e n d I w a s sorry to se e C a r n a l K n o w le d g e e n d ' es** **f '' to * c h *4 M .n g d .H ic u ln * * O u h Ow * joi.y etal**" Ko* boon r*plo<*d (•rn Onion* i» •» •**•* F®P W illia m H o ld e n Robert R y a n | rn *tt B o r g n m * in WILD BUNCH A SAM PECKINPAH FILM t 5 0 -4 2 5 -7 0 0 -9 :3 5 R STT* i% M il * N a ta its la c k \ * h o h o i U a u d i u I k t y t i i V I I * * ( N if lu n k t i M in a n d I l k s H iik T Carnal Knowledge I 0 0 - 2 - 5 0 -4 4 0 -6 3 0 - 8 : 2 0 - 1 0 IO X T F E A T U R E S s i 25 til 6 OO M ID N lG H T E R S $ 1.25 (Err A S a l — S I 5 0) J V - S I SO a lle r h x KAREN SIACK DONALD SUTHERLAND TNI DAY OR THI LOCUST K MIDNIGHT!! Barbra ' M Streisand rte Owl George aHtfcr Segal MIDNIGHTt* « FRIO A Y L U C K Y R O A C H S S I B l s a t u r d a y « - “ lur,/ N T * A N T O a n d H I. R ro « e ..e r. S U N D A Y 2 6 1 0 G u a d a lu p e $ 1 .0 0 H ig h b a ll* 8 P m 4 7 4 -1 6 2 7 S h a n g h a i C h in e se Restaurant Special lu n c h e o n $ 1 .9 5 to $ 2 . 2 5 ( ,g 9 d ro p .o u p 1- i.d H e ., . g f l '= "• w o n to n . A c h o ic e of entree) ,M*d Special Dinner $ 4 . 0 0 lo $ 4 . 5 0 - , 0 j m rice A c h o ic e of entree) d , o p . o u p . g g - o l l . f n ^ l w o M o n . f n * ! Koeiuq lone at Guodolupe in C om m 0rt#^ OrJ 11 -.30-2:00 5 4 0 - 80.00 4 S9-3000 a u st in SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA F 'r i d a y , F e b r u a r y 1 8 M u n i c i p a l A u r o r i u m 8 :0 0 O . . T ic k e t S a le s O W e d n e s d a y , F f b r u p Box < * 10-b weekdays. MY wittft^^^' optional fee I.D. Bus Schedule 6:45 p.m. ontinuous Service Jester, Kinsolving, Co-Op ( Sponsored by the Cultural En terta inmen t C o m m ittee o f the T e x a s I ai on T R A N b * r E X A S H owl Open 2;00 foe 2:15- 3:45- 5:15 4:45-1:15-9:55 R*4u<*4 Frit#* Til 4:30 p m. 454-5147 NOM I Mi MOSS M A i I there must f o r e v e r de a g u a r d ia n at the gate f r o m hell. P K H I w r 64» I I m a m Mm IWW. * » ' « • »»» «e*ft mt-V A* *1 'MI **r% AMM *8*‘ 0 TODAY AT 6 30-8:30-10 30 t ~ ; . , i t e S h o w T i c H e t s b O O -* JO *1 5 0 IfiScV I J (MAI AI A IVA II IAU |K * J I WH t a t W e e !» • * » * ( A l * I t t i • — --------UAH I M H U E SHOW TICKETS B S I I \ Q u a l i t y A d u l t F i l m T m PHm iM , ojjQwMQ Plm uM IN COLOR Starring BEATRICE HARNO IS e M AR Y M IN I < , P * E \ 2900 Rio Grand# 476-6111 Fri. a n d Sat. ALVIN CROW a n d the PLEASANT VALLEY BOYS Lunch and Dinner Specials: Fri: FISH CHOWDER - $2.25 Sal: BEEF STEW - $2.25 Sun: 3 (pedals to choose from $1.69 or undar w e e k ly special - Feb. 14-Feb. 20 Sausage Plate - $1.59 Down Home Cookin' at Popular Prices cover Btu. mr-' I I in Ona 0 * L.jftAiM'i** Corge m m O x y De U u r v r t if e p n - ^ n ls aJDhiGuAenitnFfci! ^ S tk E X C IT IN G WEER K k T g K o n g Je« Bridges GrartesGncxiin hrodn « Jessica Lange ■s’ r f f i s a s a a s g ® S r ' " — = ^ * * T S = ? f i S . A t l i AV-**’ ; jmt Up** on 1 V | , TVCmikin ..6* >t.u*e KINGKlKTleanRnAnBt*An . FOX TRIPLEX I *»>> *erwn te*t nr m r 5 : 10-7 :25 -9 :4 0 Matinees Sat. A San. Steamboat Springs^; ___ • • • . The Original Fever Tree St The Howlers Fri. Feb. 18 St Sat. Feb. 19 Johnny Dee & The Rocket 88 s (no cover) Su n d a y Feb. 20 T i c k e t ! s o l d i n q d v o o £ g _ C all 459-431 • lot Inform ation L a P ro m e n a d e Center / 7115 B urnet Rd. CHEF SALAD D IN N E R SALAD * 5 5 65 65 55 1 ' ^ ■ * *7 5 AU ham burgers . BASKE TS < f-rvteb Tnt A CHEESEBURGER CHEDDAR BURGER RADON CHEDDAR MUSHROOM BURGER CHIL / BU RG ER CHICKEN FRIED STEAK (with rn// .Wk 1 v Dp* > ■ • PO RK C H O PS , nth roll -vkl Hrcj*fxh* I *1.99 '2 0 5 CLUB SA N D W IC H (wrfh Htneh Erne) BOWL OF C H ILI .SPICY/’ ^ .......... ...r .w * 7 f 25 VE G E TABLE P L A T E ................... * t -SS TURTL E OML U TIE 'when ann Lehi* ^ sparseas a ngogffltroo® I 9 5 and con qu#*o 65‘ A l Ai H O S i " L r > c BEA N A CHEESE 'H O T S A U C E ' chi A /'t/ -TPAV TOST A D D S P IE T S * BA N A N A PUDDING 65< ICECREAM THE BEST DRINKS IN AUSTIN R e g u l a r B a r P ric e * H i b a l l s 8 5 D r a f t 5 0 c H° m ON -SAT. H i b a l l s 5 0 * D raft 2 5 ‘ 24th a n d Rio G ran d e T » * ~ i" ~ The bv-now well-known story of how “ Rocky” cam e to be is in itself m ovie m a te ria l The son of an Italian im m igrant, Stallone conceiv­ ed the plot while bouncing around on the fringes of show business, having acted in three film s, w ritten for television and failed on the New York stage Arriving in Hollywood with the script. Stallone held out to play the lead role him self despite the fact that producers wanted a nam e actor Convinced it was his last shot at m aking a nam e for himself as an actor. Stallone with only HOO left in the bank, a pregnant wife and an im patient landlord has said he was willing to act the title role unpaid Stallone wa* paid for acting in the film which took only 28 days to film at a budget less than $1 million And now he’s predicting that “ Rocky will gross HOO million, m ore than last y e a r’s top grossing film, “ Dne Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest •R O C K Y ” IS NOT p e r f e c t Stallone definitely earned his Oscar nominations for the script and ac­ ting, as did Burt Y oungs (who catapulted from supporting roles and $2,000 fees to costarring status with Kris Kristofferson in the up coming “ Convoy” ) and Shire, but the film is blatantly m anipulative in a way surpassing any m ajor film in recent m em ory M anip u lativ en ess alone is not , quite a deadly sin. “ Cuckoo s Nest was m anipulative; but it was so polished you tended to drift into its black and white universe without too much resistence to having your , strings pulled “ Rocky,” however, trie s too hard and occasio n ally stu m b les over itself Avildsen, for exam ple, after spending half the film establishing a realist visual style, launches into some fancy, self-conscious editing during “ Rocky’s ” two most ex hilerating scenes. The abrupt lapse into this inconsistent style is jolting ALSO, ALTHOUGH the score is som etim es highly effective, it is a hopeless hodge-podge; at one point sounding as though taken from a daytim e soap opera and later soun­ ding ripped off from AM radio (with soul/rock brassiness and lyrics like “ Flying high now. feeling good now, long trying hard now, won t be , now ...” ) ... . to be Despite these problem s, the film s near m anic d e sire loved succeeds at snaring the audience You care for the people in the film you want to see them succeed, or at least get a crack a t success That s why the ending m akes you want to stand up and cheer. Rocky' packs a wallop Improbable success story parallels reality Entertainment heroes and a clear set of values Stallone seem s to think so. he has already contracted to w rite and star the in two sequels, each using formula “ heart, energy and hum or that worked for the first ■ Stallone seem s to thin! THE DAILY TEXAN F r id a y , F e b r u a r y 18, 1977 LJ P a g e 19 By ERIC HARRISON Text* Staff Writer “ R o ck y ,” screen p lay by Sylvester Stallone; starring Stallone, Talia Shire, Burt Yonng; directed by John Avildsen; at the Americana Below a picture of Christ in co m ­ m u n io n , th e o p e n in g sh o t of “ R ock y,” sw eat and blood and fists fly. Two brutish men grapple and jab each other on a perspiration- soaked canvas floor. We watch from the shadows at ringside, through the ropes; but now and then w e slip into the ring to sm ell their stench and to see their sw ollen faces. There are no heroes here, no fancy footwork, tasseled boots or clever taunts* just uncontrolled exp letives and grunts and the glassy eyes - like those of dogs or of gam e cocks _ of m en who fight to live. Blood and s w e a t m in g le ; is a kinship. th e re THIS IS a film about losers and the contenders who walk among them , about loneliness and urban frustration and transcendence — m ost of all, transcendence. “ R ocky” is a “Taxi Driver for people who w eren’t quite happy with the Martin Scorsese-Paul Schrader film A “ Taxi D river” in which guy gets girl, in which frustration and tension are not relieved through s o m e c a t h a r t i c rem edy, but in which purpose is found, b attles won and ideals realiz­ t e m p o r a r ily ed. S y lv e s t e r S ta llo n e is R ock y Balboa, a dumb punk two-bit boxer who m oonlights as a strong-armed debt collector for a loan shark, r or the fight fans in the dingy church arenas and gym s. Rocky and his ilk are slabs of m eat, fodder to be laid upon the alter in their recurrent entertainm ent rituals. HE IS a GENTLE MAN, violence does not com e easy. He is too gentle to break thumbs unprovoked and so isn ’t even a good debt collector. But w h e n v i o l e n c e c o m e s h e is transform ed by it: he vacates his body and lets it take over One fan m ocks him after a bout, but Rocky is benumbed and does not hear. Som ehow, he is far from all this. The film is fraught with trains en route to Som ewhere. Rocky is going nowhere and he knows it Like his friends in this Philadelphia slum , he is a loser. At one point he stops in m id -sen ten ce for a sp lit-secon d glance at a train snaking from left to right in the distance. It is a J™mite gesture which — seen in the light o director A vildsen’s codic-play with trains — reverberates w ith mean- m ROCKY HAS no idea as he passes like a sw aggering shadow throulj? his low life haunts, alw ays just a bit detached, that he will be caught up Rocky, the underdog, in battle w ith champ and carried away from those m ythic American rags to a certain type of riches, that he will become a con- tender. id e a , but R ocky h a s no th e audience does. There are no su r­ prises here; Stallone’s script draw s so heavily and skillfully from the c l a s s i c s c h m a l t z a n d w is h - fulfillment of film s m ade in less th at we anxiously cynical tim es just want terior m otives for pushing her at to Rocky. He doesn t m arry off the old m aid. she s b a rte r to buy a favor from Rocky - help in landing a lu crative but unsavory job with hoods. In a superb perform ance, Burl Young as the brother slowly opens the c h aracter to us. finally erupting in an u n c o n tro lla b le b u rst of the in- bitterness and indignation 'Stallone's script draw s so heavily and from the classic schmaltz and skillfully w ishfulfillm ent of films m a de in less cynical times that w e anxiously aw ait the miracle to happen.' ___ th e m ira c le to h a p p e n . a w a it Sim ilarly, we know Rocky is going to win the incredibly shy Adrian, his b e st f r ie n d ’s s is te r , w in n in g ly played by Talia Shire. Sure we know, but predictability in a film as sin cere, h u m a n istic and g rittily r e a lis tic w ith in ta le fram ew ork as this one does not faze us We actually feel Mood when the gargantuan Rocky corners Adrian and tenderly rem oves her glasses and h at; and few people giggle when - the frail flower having m agically blossomed - the couple sink to the floor in an em brace. fa iry its What we don’t know early in the film is th at A drian's brother has ul- effectual but inevitable release of inner-city-bred frustrations. Stallone said in a recent interview in Variety th at the scrip t’s com bina­ tion of “ h eart, energy and hum or draws on the old Hollywood form ula from the late '30s and '40s, and it does. N evertheless, the film has a decidedly '70s am bience. Indeed, the fatalistic tone of much of the film and Bill C o n ti’s e c lectic sco re which at tim es is rem iniscent of “ Last Tango in P a ris,' is striking as particularly indicative of the 1970s mood » P E R H A P S “ ROCKY’S” huge financial success heralds a retu rn to id e n tifia b le u p b e a t film s w ith P S K O B O B K 11 I F H A A S T A V E R N Fri. & Sat. BOBBY BRIDGER balladeer With former m em bers of the Lost G o n io B a n d ________ 4 4 4 * 3 2 2 ” t h e f o u r THEATRE S H O W C A S E I T PAUL BIUTU Amusements Start A u m M e y e r s U T » p ro bab ly th e »e4t- *».i A x 05-6 00-8:w«-T :;,J___ I t l l NEWEST, PINKEST PANTHER OF A U ! BESTACTOR ^ ^ „ e BEST ACTRESS TALIA SH IRE b e s t d ir ecto r! b e s t s c r e e n p l a y , ^ b e s t o rig in a l s c o r e BEST SUPPORTING™ A C T O R ^ ^ ^ ^ h B U R G E SS MEREDITH B U R T YOUNG . . a v M H M w g - a i n i a H STARRING H B B n n i - n i M - n K H H ! - * * * ® e x e c u t iv e PRODUCER MUSIC b y d ir e c t e d b y H i i L f f l B I M iff- ll G I M * I IE E ran .G tN A L M O T IO N P IO T U M S O U N D T R A C K A l B U M A N O j S S S 1a C a N a b l e ! O N U N IT E D A R T I S T S i j j M C O R D S MERICANA 4538641 E X C LU SIV E A U S T IN S H O W IN G Opmn 1:00 p m. Feature. 1:10-3:20-5:30 7:40-9:50 I MI 9 : 3 0 p . m . t o 1 : 3 0 a . m . $ 2 . 5 0 w i t h U T I D , $ 3 f o r g u e s t s ’MT t o v . * ** t ^ a c a d e m y a w a r d Page 20 O THE DAILY TEXAN □ Friday, February 18, 1977 r a g e i v l j i n c - u a i l i * * - — — * w | / ^ * Taco* 4 5 *.....................23 I W iZ O' ** Burrito*.............. 23' C h a lu p a s ..................... 3 0 * I Sopor N a ch o *.............. 3 0 ' { P ric o Schliti or Shinor..........7 5 * ZZ ® S o lo Friday 6 to B p m only Flats V T I * Taco w o * * * A A A A A A * ★★★ ............ rn 11111 H I S te a m b o a t S p rin g s wantti to thank Halconcs boult (of all the good times that they have given us. We at Steamboat wish them good luck & success in San Francisco. Grammy presentation set I * * Bv ALAN VAN Z ELFD K N Willie Nelson Asleep at the Wheel and Way Ion Jennings three Austin-based groups are nominees for the W h annual Grammy A w a r d s to be aired at 8 30 p rn Saturday by CBS Nelson, who won last year's award for Best Country Male Vocalist for his “ Blue Eyes Crying in the Rain will battle Jennings and others for that same award This year, Nelson is up for his song I d Have To Be Crazy," and Jennings for “ Are You Ready for the C ountry ** Other nominations in the category inc lude Larry Gatlin for “ Broken I .ady," Mac Davis for “ Forever Lovers. and Bonnie Miliap for " l i m a) Stand by My Woman Man Asleep at the Wheel s “ Boule 86 is up for the Best Country Vocal Performance by a duo or group Competition Includes the Amaz­ ing Rhythm A< es’ “ The End Is Not In Sight, George Jones and Tammy Wynette i Loretta Lynn and < onway Twiny** ‘ The Letter” and The Slatier Brothers* “ Your Picture in the Paper Golden Bing “ Frankton Comes Alive, which made a star of Peter Frarnpton, is up for Best Album of the Year Frarnpton seems to have the edge over his competitors George Benson s ’ Breezin g* Chicago’s “ Chicago X. Boz Braggs* “ Silk Iiegrees” and Stevie Wonder s . f u t . ’• - Songs in the Key of Life Paul Simon who won awards last year for Best Pop Male Vocalist and Best Alburnett 1975 is up again this year for his single, 50 Ways to Leave Your Lover Other nominees for best singles are Barry Mam low's “ I Write the Songs Starland Vocal Bands After- noon Delight." Chicago’s “ lf Y o u l* av* Me Now* and George Bensons This Ma ^FHonJohn. who failed to make last year s winners’ list, will try once again with Kiki Dee with their song Don t Go Breaking My Heart," nominated for the Best lop Vocal Performance by a duo or group Others in the c ategory are Queen s Bohemian Rapsody, Chicago"s “ If You U a v e Me Now," England Dan and John Ford Coley s “ Id ReaUy Love to See You Tonight” and Starland Vocal Band s Afternoon Delight Natalie Cole, the daughter of the late Nat King Cole and winner of two awards last year, is running neck-in-neck with Linda Konstadt, Emmylou Harris, (who will per form at Austin s Paramount Theater at 8 and ll P rn Friday* Jon) Mitchell and Vicki Sue Robinson for the Best Pop Vocal Female Per­ formance ............ .. Cole was nominated for Natalie, Harris for Here, There and Everywhere, Mitchell for * The Hissing of Summer Lawns and Robinson for “ Turn the Beat Around, Robinson for Turn the ft Chicago, Stevie Wonder, George Benson and Boz Scaggs received the most Grammy nominations with three each Some of last year’s top winners include Hie Captain and Tennille for “ Love Will Keep us Together," which won Record of the Year. Jams Ian. the young smger-song writer, was named Best Pop Female Vocalist for “ At Seventeen.’ Her album Between the Lines won an engineering Grammy The Grammy Awards, presented for out­ standing artistic and technical achievements in the recording world, was founded in 1957 as an outgrowth of a promotion campaign by the Hollywood Chamber of Commerce The idea developed from the chamber s request for record-industry executives to provide names of artists for honorary sidewalk plaques to be placed in the In June of 1957. Hollywood and Vine area that idea became an organization known as the National Academy of Recording Arts and w a d av a Sciences (NAHAS). During the early stages of the IN AnA-u, a split developed between Academy members and the dominant rock-oriented part of the record-industry. Academy members were criticized for favoring the older, more con­ servative, white, middle-of-the-road artists over youthful performers Cl a . Saturday a h a m I Emmylou Harris However over the last few years, rock 'n roll has made slight advances in breaking the ice This year’s rock ’n roll nominations feature Frarnpton, Scaggs and Queen. The only hard rock’ band to receive a nomination IS Boston, which IS among four othe' s gr0“ P trying for Best New Artist of the Year. i f i^ rTn^ T^ aca THUNDERCLOUD SUBS ; 201 E. W V H U O I V . ^ 4 7 8 -3 2 8 1 441-5331 r n T H U N D E R C L O U D S U B S a t 201 e RIVERSIDE 1 IS NOW OPEN TO SERVE THE RIVERSIDE AND TRAVIS HEIGHTS AREAS I J* ..........1 3 8 Cold Roast B e e f . 1 8 0 Turkey............. 1*80 1 .8 0 H am . ................... 1 .7 6 M ixed Cold Cuts 1 .6 0 T u n a ...................... 1 .4 6 S a la m a ................. C h e e s e c a k e ............... 7 6 Egg Salad .................................. ........ GOT THE SUB BLUES? GIVE US A TRY! B o lo g n a ................... 1 -3B C h e e s e H o t M e a t b a ll Avocado ......... P o tato Salad.. Chocolate Pie D ra ft Beer 1-76 1 ........ Hours M-F l l am -IO pm Saf 1 7 pm to 7 pm Ctosod Sundays Riverside THur*ewe*«K*4 Boh*' Wiver »t Ae r “ 2 block* oast of Congress 201 E. R I V E R S I D E ^ ^ 4 4 U 5331______ 6% on SAVINGS I VIN I KS l l A From R alp h B ak sh i, m aster of anim ation, com es an epic fantasy in w ondrous color. A visio n o f the w orld, IO m illio n years in th e fu tu re, w here W iz a rd s ru le the earth . A nd the pow ers of m agic p revail over th e forces o f technology in th e fin a l b attle fo r world suprem acy. You’ll find it at flanigans j b i a ^ r j i a i aaaqvs bungee LIVE BAND A DISCO with th# m o lt d a n c e a b l e D J th to w n A Outraged!* Light Show Lighted Dance Floor > Super Sound System A 3 levels of Ptea»ure th# r# * n o th in g Ilk# it *h th# wortd r* b i g d a c h a s ^ k * * " ? * flanigans » JOO> I Btvwwl* °"v* m ma Brvertown# Man e W EEKEND kf»K>«MAMCI • A* part ot rh* 4»«me .apartment » Mater W e . three member* ot the U n iven ity dance faculty wilt pce*#nt a Fettival of Dance Frid ay through Sunday and Feb 72 to 26 E a c h jecttoh ot the program wui represent a d iffe re n t approach to choreography, reflecting the working p h .io to p h .e i of the three fa c u lty d a n c e r * M ic h a e l * • * • * • # M r W e ta c k e r end few Yeu.kev.tch All performances Wilt br af 8 p m iden Payne Theatre Admit*ion It S2 50 for non- students and U 50 tor students Phone 471 1444 tor reservations in the B • The UmverWty Opera Theatre, conducted by W aiter Duclou* will present th'ee successive evenings of opera beginning at I p m Saturday In U T O P IA Theatre Excerpts of Marriage el Wfore wiver el Wlndre* end Anne Boleyn WI 11 be presented es w ell as G ilb e rt and Sullivan's Trial By Jury *n Ifs entirety Admission it free . Immylev Marrlr. popular folk and In the country singer w ill perform Paramount Theatre at 8 and t ' p na r- day Guy Clark and the Her Send will appear also Tickets *6 50 and 55 50, are available at the Param ount Theatre. inner Sanctum and Disc Records . s>ebomb May will appear in her sixth solo dance performance af 8 p rn Satur­ day at Studio D. 50 E Sixth St Admi*- ' • toad'the Mime alia* Antoinette Atte!I. will perform at 8 p rn Sunday in Hogg A u d i t o r i u m The mime, actres*. singer, dancer, choreographer, writer and lec­ t u r e was discovered by Mike Douglas and Invited ,o be in Francis Ford Cop poia's "Conversation C EC holders can discover Toad for Si 50. and general public tickets are *5 50, purchasable af Hogg Auditorium Box Office . The s e c o n d h a l f of the A u . t m S y m p h o n y O r c h e s t r a • I 9 7 A - 7 7 S u b s c r i p t i o n season will beg o with a concert featur­ T H I r\mr- . . . - ing guest artist Carfax aorWeo-Umo per­ forming two concertos for the classical guitar at I P m. Frid ay Th# concert will consist of works composed by Mozart, Ravel Handel, Castemouvo-Tedesco, Penderecki and Resighi • An avenine af cobaea* .fyta anfartelnmant Interart works will be presented at Studio IOO W Eighth St Saturday at 8 30 p rn and Sunday at 2 p m The featured theater piece of the evening will tye a performance by Grace Broussard of " Ju n k G arden'1 and "Quite Still Ghosts and Restless Spaces " The matinee per­ formance win be oriented more toward f a m i l i e s an d w i l l n o t in c lu d e refreshments Tickets for the Saturday performance are 12 and $1 50 for the Sun day Matinee For further Information can 472 TOW TH8ATM * "Stamp," a rock musical originally named Now the Revolution, banned at the U n iv e rs ity in 1969, will play a* 8 p.m. through Sunday at the P e rig rin e Tickets, $3 in advance and 54 at the door, will be sold at Liberty Lunch and Phillies Cafe | TC * Th* Avtlm Civil Ballet Will sponsor a garage sal# on Saturday and Sunday at the old AMC Showroom, 5501 N Lam ar 8 .^Brazilian Carnival gets under way at 9 p rn Saturday on the third level of Dobie Mali Tickets which cover an the beer you can drink and setups, are available at the Department of Spanish and Portuguese (Batts Hall I'2 ai d 317.) Tickets also are available at NIMS door • Friday #th CaK'fut* y roe L I N.. I R D A S I I P G «*81M BOMB WUU1 L- ’ na mmm rn- rn rn w*W •* * vmm* O O o o Come Celebrate the Chinese New Year with Us! The Sister’s Restaurant F eb . 1 7 ,1 8 ,1 9 (Free glass of Champagne with a n y food purchase) Two new chefs with many years of experience serving Chinese Presidential Party. Hours: l l am-10 pm Seven Days a Week 4708 Burnet Road 451-2690 First Prize Award of Egg Rolls* •The Daily Texan. Feb 16.197T The Year of the Serpent (g ) o o O f l o -------------------- IO O Involvem ent Day inspires ecologists Cousteau hosts Houston symposium F rid ay , F e b ru ary 18, 1977 □ T H E D A IL Y T E X A N □ the d isruption. He urged crowd to consider seriously these uncalculated risks and suggested many alternative sources of energy including conversion of sea kelp and other ocean-oriented energy sources Cousteau easily con­ vinced his audience of the need to develop these un­ conventional sources. told a n d m o r e . ' ■ M o r e C ousteau the crow d, • people submit to decisions that come down from above with little reaction We have to stop Involvement Day seems an effective means to this end this ’’ S P O N S O R E D BY t h e Cousteau Society and the local C itiz e n s ’ E n v iro n m e n ta l Coalition. Houston's Involve­ ment Day was designed “ to give information and build opinions'' which citizens could world. Citing historical examples of unforeseen natural dis­ asters, Cousteau emphasized that any nuclear plant is con­ stantly subject to geological Bv BOBBY CHEEK and KERI OUTEN Texan Staff Writers “I f the life syeterne of our W ater P lanet are to be e a v ­ ed, the w ork m u st be done b y o r d i n a r y c i t i z e n s . P o litician s are concerned about being re-elected. We m o th e rs an d fa th e r s a re concerned about the w orld w e w ill leave behind for our progeny. We m u st save th a t w orld, and w e m ust inspire o u r c h ild r e n to b e c o m e p la n eta ry ca reta k ers. B ut w e cannot do it alone. We m ust sit dow n and incor­ p o ra te im m ense into this und erta k in g the rep resen ­ ta tiv e s of in d u stry and labor and govern m en t. We m ust a l l i n v o l v e d to g eth er in preservin g the fu tu r e ." b e c o m e —Jaeques-Yves Cousteau m o b b ed th e 6 6 -y e a r-o ld French oceanographer and film producer wherever he w e n t , m a n y c l u t c h i n g Cousteau books in hopes of securing an autograph, which he graciously, yet firm ly, denied COUSTEAU, seem in g ly frail and haggard earlier in the day. responded warmly to his many admirers. Perhaps he was storing energy for his evening address in which he condemned nuclear research With surprising candor and a sense of purpose. Cousteau spoke not of his sea adven­ tures, but instead concen­ tra te d on the “ folly' of nuclear energy. Seemingly filled with uncharacteristic venom and passion, the cap­ tain soundly denounced the construction of more nuclear Dower plants throughout the in Houston In this spirit of unity and the fourth en­ dedication, vironmental symposium, In­ volvement Day, began and concluded last Saturday. Hosted by ocean ex- t e l e v i s i o n p l o r e r a n d “ celebrity” Capt. Jacques- Yves Cousteau, the program i n c l u d e d o p e n f o r u m s , demonstrations, exhibits and slide shows on topics such as coastal management, marine mammals, etc., and conclude ed with a benefit concert by Jam es Taylor. Including Lt. Gov. Bill Hob­ by. Land Commissioner Bob Armstrong, State Sen. A R. “ B a b e ” S c h w a r t z , D- G a l v e s t o n , and o t h e r s , Cousteau inspired an already cheering crowd to “ spread the word” about environmental consciousness. And although each speaker attempted to rally the crowd around his respective ecological interest, Cousteau was undoubtedly the “ sta r” of the day. Youngsters and adults alike 4 ^ An an im ated Cousteau strolls through a 'se a' of children. T ex an S taff P h o to , by la r ry Prico low CAR LOAN RATES Compare finance charges. . . you’ll tinoose i N.i\ t t calling for the protection of the air and water, bayous, coastal zones and threatened resources in Texas Hut perhaps the greatest show of ent husi asm was d em o n strate d by the ap ­ proximately 500 youngsters who. crowded like sardines, questioned the captain about sharks, dolphins, whales and his various underwater ex­ periences O ne l i t t l e boy a s k e d Cousteau if a shark had ever ripper! up his anti-shark cage Cousteau exclaim ed. Ah, you’ve seen Jaw s,’ then ex plained that sharks have soft teeth incapable of breaking the steel bars of a cage During this questioning ses­ sion Cousteau posed for a pie ture with a group of seventh graders who had ridden a bus all night from Arkansas to at tend the event Such dedica­ tion was not unusual, and Cousteau seemed to sense this. * Organizers of Involvement Day succeeded in providing smoothly run, wide ranging programs keyed to various en vironm ental interests. The enthusiastic participation o the “ ordinary citizens" made this symposium unique Each participant seemed to adopt Cousteau’s plea to “ express your opinion loud and clear, become an apostle ” VEGETARIAN OR CARNIVORE W e c e n a c c o m m o d a t e y o u r ta ste w ith m e a t or w ith o u t U f o r e d o Cousteau co m m a n d .' the attention of a n e c o l o g y - m i n d e d audience. X W I ' J/*. zm m FEO. 17-16-19 B o o t S a l e V A S Q U E . U l k £ R . H < b lZ £ S 5 - / 3 K B j U L A K W C £ . ‘ t o t o J Vasque Whitney IL I M O K ETV S T O C X a j0 S € O (7 T -^ H }6 /L A R L Y - I V I e >r a m W a l k i n g S u o e . i REG U LAR S P E C t W - P R I C E S o w S W O - S c A L , V J l C K . 'O t t V , AMCP VMOOC. S O C K S WHOLE. LARTH PROVISION COMPANY M i o S A N A N T O N IO A N T O N I O S I PAB KING. THURSDAY NIGHTS j ^ T U F O ^ Y, - A U S T I N - 4 7 6 * 1 5 7 — ' M U J ' PLS NTT 9 f . _ j f I—AW— It’s a pain to come lip with ti ult 84 C deposit on your first case of Lone Star Long Necks But you’re home free on every other case you buy. You can cornu let them a hedge against inflation. (In­ stead of putting your money silver, you into gold or ^ rJK k into shrewdly glass­ ware.) You c a n return them if you want to rub your nickels together again. But you’ll probably want to bring them hack to the place you bought them. This way you can end up with something even more valuable than a case i i Long Necks. A case of Long Necks full of Lone Star Beer. l o n g h o rn s an d L o n g N e c k s - N o p l a c e . * » P age 22 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Friday, February 18. 1*77 ------------------ ----------------------- - Exhibition lets you find your b ag Little Matt's — / 'S O ittd b u . El R a n c h o At a new convenient location carving UT students 725A23rd (next to tho Bucket) i n ae 7 day* a week Open I1 am-10 pm S e r v i n g delicious M exican food in their fine tradition, now w ith quicker service 3 HRS. FREE P A R K IN G T R I - T O W E R S G A R A G E ^ a-r-r m a o F O O D T O G O 4 7 7 - 0 1 8 2 r FREE MARGARITA w i t h any M w i c o n d i n n e r (and this coupon) I I NINK BAGS m a d . from N IN E BAGS m ade from burlap and stenciled, "Bag burlap and trenched Bag No I," "Bag No 2. etc are all filled with different sur- priM*s Hag No I" is filled with cotton, ‘ Bag No 3 with styrofoam , "Bag No 7 con­ tains pine cones while Bag looks very sensual with No 9 If you its fur lined interior i f s because start sneezing, Hag No 6" bolds feathers Don’t try to pick up * Bag No 8 because it is overflowing with sand A m ong th e b ags in the historic section of the exhibi Hon are delicate woven and em b ro id ered bags from Bur ma ribet and China Elegant and c la ssic bags from France and Belgium reflect the in­ fluence of the Art Nouveau and A rt I>eco periods From mid- 19th Century America is a m o h air and leather carpet­ bag, and from Scotland an e la b o ra te sporran PC. WOK S K I rf. Includes /?" flat bot tom wok. s t e a m i n g rack, c h o p s t i c k s c o r e r a n d w o k u'ok s h e e t . E s p e c i a l l y d e s i g n e d i n s t r u c t i o n for electric stoves* I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I 10.00 s m a l le r se ts ai'ailable at • 12.75 U s e this h a n d y chart to q u ic k ly a r r iv e a t cost. 15 w o r d m i n i m u m ) A m o u n t Enclosed N u m b e r of Days -------------------------------- — M a i l To: DAILY T E X A N CLASSIFIEDS P.O. B O X D - UT STATIO N AUSTIN, T EX AS 78712 NAME _ ---------------- A D D R E SS _________ ^ . /O fx, ~ (Jfl I T i - -------- I I I „ " 2.34 2.47 4.n . 4.5* too , l * - » _ L ” j” —. CITY , 930 „ 17.1,0 . j 4 » — J ' ■ ■ ■ » ' "Sizzler” Steak I Platter52.49 A steak so good we gave it our name! This platter includes baked iHitato or french trios anchSizzler toast. Clip this coupon and hurry to Sizzler! Good only a t: 5 0 1 S. C O N G R E SS AUSTIN, T EXAS HOURS SU N-TH U RS l l A M -9 PM FRI & SAT 11 A M -9 :3 0 PM LAST DAY: Mon. Feb. 2 1 ,1 9 7 7 ■ ■ 1 1 1 1 Friday, February 18, 1977 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Page 23 UT library theft rate increasing Bv KAREN KOCH Texan Staff Writer Library theft is rising at University branch libraries because many do not have securitv guards checking books and because none have electric theft detection systems, said \ irgtnia Phillips, assistant director for branch services. "Our inventory loss rate has been going up e a c h v e a r . ” Phillips said. adding that although a c c u r a t e records are not kept, accumulative figures from the summer. 1976, inventory in­ d i c a t e more than 10.000 books are missing from t h e 14 branch libraries. "We've made some effort to replace the stolen is the m a t e r ia l b ooks, b u t m uch of i r r e p l a c e a b l e , ' she said. Unlike strict security at the Harry Ransom *• I l h r a r v k f n m • a. a1 Moore Hall, the Art Building and Ernest Cockrell Jr. Hall have only limited security checks "FO R OVER a year we have requested money for electronic security systems from the I wver- sity administration, but we have not received any response. Phillips said james Colvin, vice-president for business af­ fairs. said he did not know of any such requests Everybody has an idea as to how money should be spent, and they ask for more money than we're able to provide.'' he added An electronic security system for one branch library would cost $17,000. Phillips estimated. adding that in the long run. this would be less ex^ pensive than hiring fulltime security guards and would provide better protection for the books. With this system even* book in the library has a book detection strip in it. To be deactivated the at the circulation desk EVER YO N E entering and leaving the library locking gates would have to pass through If the sensing equipped with sensing devices device detects a book that has not been properly checked out an alarm goes off. Missing books and periodicals cause frustra­ tion for students and faculty who need research is a cost that cannot be materials. measured. ‘ Phillips said ‘ This According to an article in The ( hronicle of Higher Education, students rationalize book theft by believing that if they do not steal it someone else will Phillips said she wants the branch libraries to remain open stack facilities as in the Academic Center Undergraduate Library "We want the electronic security systems not only to keep the material, but to keep it in un- ■ . , jjcpjic ’1 she said Alumni to sponsor information sessions The Ex-Students' Associa­ tion will sponsor its first infor­ mational sessions Monday on scholarships, grants and fo re ig n study p ro g ra m s offered at the University. The sessions will be from 3 to 5 p m. and from 6 30 to 8.30 p m at the Alumni Center, 2110 San Jacinto. The format will be more like a pick-up open house type of information service, referr­ ing students to the various University programs.' Lynn McGee, member of the Stu­ dent Involvement Committee of the Ex-Students’ Associa­ tion, said. from Representatives the School of Law. LBJ School of Public Affairs, the Office of Student Financial Aid and the Measurement and Evaluation Center will be at the sessions to advise students. i H ■ a i l l M i l J — •; ,N f S 4 7 1 - 5 8 4 4 M O N . TI I sip 0 4 : CLASSIE I E D A D V E R T IS IN G RATES s 13 15 w ord m in im u m E ach w ord one tim e E ach w ord 2-4 tim e * Each w ord 5-9 tim es E ach w ord >0 or m ore tim es Student ra te each tim e S3 80 I col * I inch one tim e S3 41 I col. x I inch 2-9 tim es I col X I inch ten or more tim e s S3 07 DI ADUNC SCHIDUUE Monday Toxan Fndoy Tuesday Texan Monday Wodnotday Texan Tu#*doy Thursday Ta«an Wednesday , Friday Texan Thur*doy I OO pm l l OO am 1 1 :0 0 a rn 11 OO a m l l OO o rn ■In tho ovont of error. mod# in on odvor»i»omont, immediot# notice m ull bo given at th# publithart ar# r.tpont.blo tor only O N I incorrect intarfion All ctaimt to- od|ut*m#ntt thould bo mod# not lot#r than 30 doyt aHor publication S T U D E N T /F A C U L T Y STAFF RATES 15 w ord m in im u m , each day $ 9. E ach a d d itio n a l w o rd each d ay* 07 I col x I inch each day « £/ "U n c la s s ifie d *' I *,ne 3 days ( P re pa id , No Refunds) Students fa c u lty and sta ff m ust pre W h itis ) M onday th ro u gh F rid a y fro m 8 a m to FOR SALE 1976 Skyhawk Call B ill at 476-46/6 9 : 0 0 - 5 0 0 . ____________ FOR S A L E 'T w C hrysler New Y o rk e r Call B ill at 476-4676 9 : 00-5 0(7________ FOR SALE 1970 C hevrolet. C all B ill at _ 476-4676 9 00-5 00 FCJR SALE 1967 Ford G a laxy C all B ill a t 476-4676 9 00-5 OO . ___________ FOR SALE 1974 Jeep W agoneer. C all B ill at 476-4676 9:00-5 OO-________ 1965 FO R D G A L A X Y o ^ d tra n s p o rta l Hon, $200 Cai! L a rry 474-9631 6.00-10 OO pm . 72 P IN T O SQU I RE Wagon. AT, AC, runs good, ro ya l blue e xte rio r and In te rio r. *1000 282-2769 1974 T R IU M P H S P IT F IR E 1500, soft and hard tops; A M -FM cassette, e x­ ce lle n t co nd itio n 451 6003 a fte r 8 p m .__ 1071 v w V AN New m otor. 1971 Station ^9I U n N - m otor w ith H olley. Six m onth w a r ra n ty . ( I) 696-586v ____ — _ 7969 F I AT 124 A M -F M Sport Coupe, disc, five-speed, s lig h t transm issio n defect, *550 453-2018 a fte r 5 :0 0 ._____________ runs 69 K A R M A N G H IA new p ain t g rea t, in te rio r good, *1195. 385-0741 ___ 1974 C O N V E R T IB L E MG M idg e t M ust sell in tw o weeks, best possible shape Can 474-6140 _____ 1973 V O LK S W A G E N super-beetlei. Good co ndition, *1500 or best o ffe r. C all 47, — 9002 64 VW c o n v ! re b u ilt RT I B L E ,n ic e 1300, te m p gauge, *695 385-0741. 1975 H O N D A CVCO yellow hatchback Im m a c u la te condition. *2500 451 8726 _____-------------- a n y tim e 1970 C H E V Y CWB pickup w ith ca m pe r shell. Runs good. *700 441-8X2. ______ 1972 D A TS U N 1200 tapedeck, *1200 Call D oro th y 837-1110, 471-7522 (12-4 pm ). ___ c h a l l e n g e r c o n v e r t i b l e 1971 340 c.l engine *500 478-112 1973 M O N T 'i T ^ L O . E xce lle n t condi- radio, AC, a u to m a tic, I a fte r 4 pm tion, loaded, • ‘ r e ® ^ ° n in g ' A M F 'V' ’ ________ radio, *2450. Call 385-5394 - T 9 7 4 ~ F 0 R D C O U R IE R , lb e r g l® !$ c a m p e r^ new b ^ / y - n a g . some body w o rk *2200 or best 4 5 4 -7 S M --------------- 72 T R IU M P H S P lT F iR E , 1 5 W c c ,OOd co ndition, good gas m ile a ge B a rg a in fir s t *1695 442-0537, 442-2922 ________ 7? ’ v F r iA COULD be a classic. GT *1050 472 8709 1970 D A T S U N 2000 r o a d s te r _ _ 0 ^ _____________—— - C h r i s io tV PORSCHE 914, orange and black w in “ .c id "hr4j « “ cr ' « 5 S ‘BSS suspensionjsnd more_ CaH 47j / n j _ X VW PO PTO P cam per New tire s, ex­ R eb u ilt engine A ll s e " haust b a tte ry R e b u ilt ■ *1750 or m ake vice recepts since new o ffe r 453-3269.------------ ---------------------— — ta p e deck, ra d io , com pression. Recent une now! *2100 fir m 443-0384 447-6574 Tor# rn K T E R AT PS, radio, exce^ent ________ _______ ____ — (M ic h a e l H o lm ). 1973 L E M A N S p S o ^ d e d , 30,000 m iles. p erfe ct co ndition, 454-7265, —— m P M K H ID APARTMENTS ■ FURNISHED APARTMENTS. I B R $ 1 5 9 plus e l e c t r ic i t y to ca m pu s and sh u ttle , V e ry close b e a u tifu lly paneled fu lly carpeted ail b u ilt in kitch en CA CH, b u ilt in desk, large closet, w ater gas a nd cable paid 4307 Ave A 459 1053, 451-6533 C e n t r a l P r o p e r t i e s , Inc. BE M EED TO S A V E A N D S T IL L CLOSE TO C AM PUS Blackstone Apts. 2910 Red R i v e r 476-5631 We w ill help you to fin d a ro om m a te to share expenses A P aragon P ro p e rty T ANG L EW O O D WEST A N N E X I B R t u r n $145-5160 W a t e r , gas, T V c a b le p aid by o w n e r S h uttle bus c o r n e r . 1315 N o r w a l k Ln. 474-2967 ABP E fficie n cie s fro m , *138 SC, 5 m g j - J» downtown and M opac w a in T H E C H A P A R R a£ u 67 2408 L e o n T ANG L EW O O D WEST I B R t u r n $185 V ery large, fu lly carpeted, w a te r gas paid S huttle bus corner 1403 N o r w a l k Ln. 472-9614 IBR *145 plus E W a lkin g d istance to D e lw o o d a n d H a n c o c k S h o p p in g Centers Close to c ity and sh utt e bus, la u n d ry fa c ilitie s pools and s e c u rity * * ^ vice Gas heater and range, TV cable paid, p le n ty of closet and cabinet space. D ishw ashers and disposals RAMPART APTS. 1230 E 38Va 454-0202 NOB H IL L APTS. I & 2 B edroom s $195 to $285 All Bills P a id L u x u ry I 8. 2 Bedrooms Furn ish e d W a lkin g distance to cam pus 2520 L o n g v i e w 477-8741 a p a r t m e n t s d u p l e x e s HOUSES C A L L US 443-2212 The People of R ealty W orld F R E E LO C A TIN G S E R V IC E APARTMENTS DUPLEXES HOUSES C A L L US 443-2212 The People of R ea ltyW o rld F R E E L O C A TIN G S E R V IC F r e n t I and 2 F U R N IS H E D OR unfurnished on sh u t­ tle larg e bedroom s c a p ita V illa , 1008 R e ln ll, 453-5764 r e a s o n a b l e I a. 2B R apartm ents, SUO A *160 pius • '• c tr lc .and gas C A/C H, s h u ttle s^o P P in g ce n te r, 1200 E 52nd. A pt 102 A, 45j~623v d I s4 f u r n i s h e d e F f I c I e N C V hwasher, disposal, C A C H 478 4090 e le c tric ity 615 Upson, apt 201 478-4090 SU N N Y O N E b e d ro o m to w n h o u se Large w indow s, closets, C A /C K *145 plus e le c tric ity 5815 M anor, 926-6994. 327-2817. N IC E L Y f u r n i s h e d IB R a pa rtm e n t, 1149 pius e le c tric ity 3405 H elm *, 472- ..._________ 6994 7RR IB A *200 plus e le ctric, near shuttle, IF H ighland M a ll Sm all quiet com plex 453-4910. ________ _________ • lxc L A R G E E F F IC IE N C Y p riv a te patio *165 V e ry 'a rg e IBR d ry 3 blo ck* to cam pus 807 W 25th No 30 477-2082. .................. F U R N IS H E D ' E F F IC IE N C Y *115 plus fights Lease u n til M ay 30th 4712 Depew Ngo 203 454-4439 8 OO am-11 OO pm F U R N IS H E D E F F IC IE N C Y , ve ry nice fu rn itu re kin g -su e bed, W d M - X J , J " ’ jasssyaRSP-«sftia* Randy He fte r P IO N E E R a m F M indash s te r w - tru n k-m o u n t aJlte/V*a- 7^^ 4 (.4 0 7 2 a fte r- tra c k indash stereo *75 44 noon* take* alt 476-09n . c A u v b F e l~ TO reel re co rd e r w ith a S u F M n w e iv e r E x c e lle n t co n d .-o n asking * 1 7 5 Also A M c a r r a d i o 4 7 -5685 ? T t u n r a is e tte P LA 45D tu rn ta b le , T .m o n TSSOOO 80 w 3- 4S,^ 4 3 0 $X7J2 ,67 S A ILB O A T, fiberglass, 2 years oidL e xcellent cond itio n w ith tr a ile r , svuc fir m 385-3591 a fte r 5 OO a J. c *85 8 -lr ack 2 year w a rra n ty 2 fh Bornan AM F M 8 -tra c * with Pioneer speaker* *t|t»f $nfl C o lo n a e le c t r ic Penney* 8-treck F 30th No 305 t o r S X d o T O S » » U , . » J condition, lik e naut, *300 CnH w a g ; in q u ire a fte r 6 OO, 3W ------------ --------- ^ qq YP sgjs#r.Aift«ci»« -"«» 385-5308 F U RN ITU R E P O R T A L E * P O I ttT - D iAM O N D “ .t is e ll *600 or best oter C all a fte r 5 * *53 2014 , t u i 7 h B W * L P IN K d r e s t o r l0 _12 s e m i F O R M A L ,-n .egos b rid e s m a id * J once P erfec t cond itio n 4Z f . y S T A IN E D GLASS w indow, p e rfe ct cen- S S i ? . J T , O '. « • » « * " • * ' Bastrop, *125 45J 003? rn T Y P E S E T ~ L r * T R A Y S , r ^ r t ^ r t I le rg e I fo r m in ia tu re s y T la rge *>» 453d°37_ f u r n is h e d d u p l e x e s b r F U R N IS H E D q u a d r a p te x ^ T r e r J H eights on sh uttle r o u h ^ tlSO^mo pm * e le c tric ity Lynne 441-8203 a tte r « w I l ■ l A p M m i F . n l . S c h 'fln r . 3507 N. 1-35 474-6357 O f f i c e * th r» > u g h t> u t T e x a » Free Service Parking Tran»portation HABITAT HUNTERS 4 / " . . a p r l o c a t o r s e r v i c e spmcimltziog >0 C o m p to n ** w ith Becost to s h u tt lo N o w Loosing For S u m m o r & F o il Dot** * •** Sufi* BA 474-1532 • • # e e e e e e e e e e e e e e S IR V IC IS TYPING H ' B r ' ' _ ' - f v \ M | h H m m I --— - HILF WANTED line 'i v v •* w I 30 2 OO or 5 OO 5 30 Neat clean p a r t T IM E N IG H T c o o k T he J **3 Tom ato 1601 G uadalupe Apply In per SOn and a m b ltlo u * only p a r t t i m e counter c le « J *f» »uj- s ta tio n 2 6 pm A p p ly M a s te r V a le t Cleaners, 2701 M anor Rd t y p i s t W A N T E D 75 w pm m in im u m Pay F le x ib le hou r*. 8 JO am 9 OO pm i# t : depend* on »peed 3701 Guadalupe, 453 5452 N I ED JOB A N D OR place to liv e 7 G rad student in wheel! h a ir now In te rvie w in g for helper m a le or fem ale References re q u ite d C h a rlo tte 478 0777 n o w ACCE P T IN G a pp licatio n s tor part A b u s e r s , door h o s f and experienced wa it per son A p p ly 2 4 pm Toe*. Wed, Thurs Lock, Slot x A B a rre l R estaurant, 2700 W Anderson Ln D U N K IN D ONUTS need help, several shifts open A p p ly 614 Congress TY P IS T W A N T E D 9-12 M F . 75 w pm m in im u m , s ta rt at Si 75 per hour 3701 Guadalupe, 453 5452 PART T IM E pho tog !a p h ers ^ aad.®d V77” ca nd id p h o to g ra p h y N eat and per sortable ca m e ra necessary. 472 736/ tor in te rvie w t u t o r i n g t o r f o r e i g n s tu d e n t s . H e l p E n g lis h a second la n g u a g e . P o l i s h y o u r s p e e c h . E x ­ JU p e r i e n c e d s u c c e s s i v e y e a r s J « ® c£ i n Q p ro fe s s ion a ls in B a n k of M e x leo, M e x i c o C it y . R u th R a n d a l le i. 477-1623 No c h a r y e for in ­ t e r v i e w T u t o r i n g Spanish. t e a c h e r , W A N T E D AR T stu d e n t to g iv e m e p riv a te lessons m m y home Once or tw ice a week 442 5170 f o r m e r BIG 8 " accountant. M B A , CPA w ill tu to r in bookkeeping or ®c* counting Ona, 453 2382 UNCLASSIFIID Wedding P ho to gra p h y la v e 474 6977 L ig h t h au ling have p icku p 452 8387 Stereo TV re pa ir fre e est 459 1098 Cash tor u*ad b icycle s 47 7 3002 R evox,*600, Thorens *275,476 0947 TV ra d lo re p a ir save' 836 5411 M in o lta SRT 101 f 14 case *150 476 7952 Foxy 1937"Chubby "fur 472 3608 nts C h a rity ca t *how M u nlA u d F#b!9 20 W om ensVasqueBoot*LlkeN ew 83/ 0676 4 good VW tire s 478 4253 *60 P o rt BW TV 18" 3 yr old 447 2253 74 Audi 100LS loaded' 447 278> Pentax SPH 5 0 m m /1 * 451 5443 TV Igood cond) fo r *ale 451 4288 F re e (*m )p u p p ie s , Into ca ll 451 4288 3‘ COPIES on uncollated loose sheets left 48 hours. Also g r a d u a te school w o r k g u a ra n te e d G I N N Y ' S C O P Y I N G S E R V I C E 7 am IO pm weekdays 9 5 Saturday 44 Dobie M an '<» t in g re s s 476 9171 W 7 W HY W AIT IN L IN E 7 COME W H I R f I H I F A R K IN t. S t ASY 4« COPIES to r 50 or more c opies only 5' tor less than M) E d r O N O i O P Y M Th 8 30 9 OO, F 8 30 6 30, Sat 9 5 Open Sunday 1-5 37th at Guadalupe 453 5452 COPIES 3‘ u ncoilatad loose sheafs 41 hrs S E L F - S E R V 4* C O P I E S a n y t i m e B I N D I N G * T Y P I N G I N T E R C O N T I N E N T A L CO PY ING S ERV I CE HOO Lavaca 476 6662 F ree p a rkin g on top leva! of Greenwood T o w e r P a r k in g G a r a g e , 1 8th A G uadalupe J am 11 pm M F 8 a rn-6 pm sat O P E N : I pm -6 p m S u nd a y s NEED COPIES 4‘ THE COPY SHOP urn Dilated ioo*«? sheets 48 hrs 476 8648 3209 Red River 2 blocks fro m the law school P ark at our fro n t door ART S M O V IN G and H a u lin g any area 24 hour*, 7 day* 477 J)49 W H Y U H A U L C H E A P E R ? C all Don at 472-3074 (th e n a * ca n h a u l M O V IN G ? U N B E A T A B L E r X t 8 i w je li i r e f u l service c r o **to w n or a ero ** Tex t i l l M ichael 345 8781 a n y tim e H O U S E K E E P IN G A N D o r cooking ispeed b ike good *35 454 0064 E x a m in e r,2200 Guedalupe, 477 7876 '7rx*"" M IS C IU A N fO y S FOR H E L P W IT H an u n w e d preg n a ncy, can E dna G ladnev Hom a F o rt W orth, Texas, to ll free I 800 792 1104._________ L O D E S T O N E J E W E L E R S , q u a lity design m a n u fa c tu rin g and re p a ir* Wa buy gold 309 E 4th, 472 1256 T IR E D OF P A Y IN G re nt and not liv in g th e re 7 W ill fu rn is h answ ering *# rv ic * ' m a ilin g a d d re ** and storage to r »ma tee 452 3 X 4. ____________ — - p h o t o g r a p h i c e q u i p m e n t r«n fv on c a m a ra *, P H U I U V U . re p a ir 6 m onth w a rra n ty OU c a m a ra *. 4410 (45th >1” - V 4 5 S T A M R o te d a te J f f V 8 DE SPE R A I E HOBOPS fe e d dates to r F rid a y nig h t P ro m u e a good tim e We re a lly m ean It.' ___________ __ q u a c k ? z z z z z z 9? i l o v e y o u ? ? ? - N U T S T R A V f l Home of the H oly in fa n cy, 510 W 26th C R E A T IV E l A N O S C A P . N G a n q , . , d 443 0628 o . » . » w o r * ROOMMATES h o u s e m a t e e »r e pl. c a rp*t«a, 3 & . s w s 3 w s r t t Texas 472 4740 W O R K IN G G IR L ro om m a te ! *97 50 plus a tte r 5 OO pm. weekends 444 4669------- , . x i c r n s h a r e 2BR hou*e, fenced P , % . H o k HA49th B urner *87 50 plus b ills M ichael. 459-7737. looking J f f W m f'9 Ca" — . larg e F E M A L E , SHARE nished a p a rtm e n t - pool lu x u ry fu r o f HOO p lu * VS I blk north S ^ m c r o Y * M a * ' C all M a ria 452 2265, __________ ___T 471-5775. _________ w o m a n w i t h d a u g h te r 4'/j w * " ’ * home w ith w oman Rent, u tilltle * ceiling *100 476 3550 ----- — - SHARE LARG E 2 b * d r o o ^ ^ Y T b P R iv e te d * a re a ,, **0 P *r m onth ABP - Paul or Doug 443 6949 c y i S P R I N G B R E A K r e d r i v e r n e w m e x i c o M a r, h 14 19 6 days/5 night*; ' ^ " 0 , Sckat* only lio n R ocky M ountain Skier, u a r y oI??cIim' m in g * - 447-7967 F L IG H T S t o M a rd i G ras For intisrm a lio n c a ll Southern Star A viatio n , 272 5025 LOST a FOUND r e g a r d FOR THE re tu rn or inform a_ lio n leading to the " t u r n of a b[ ° ^ n w h ite S p r in g e r 5 p a n la ' w l» h eyebrow s lost In the west ca m po * area C all 472 7309 a n y time. ------ --- I T r t V ^ r T m JA D E swan pendant R E W A R D UT G re g o ry G ym fa cu lty locker room 6637 LOST Speedw ay, or V e w ^ q value Please c a ll 474 SJ/0 R ew ard l o s t P E B 15 ir CMA. a m a ro o n ; Wh.te 4 5 > l$ i0 a th le tic le tte r lacket Reward a fte r 5 pm Ask for B ill M A L E t o s h a r e JBR • f a ; ’ X w - *107 50, '7 e le ctric 474-7423 P et* alto _______ cd, non sm oker p re fe rre d. RAI F E M A L E needs housemate BER AL ^ X Y o u t h , *125 Claudette LU ih a re JBR 447 8975 RE S P O N S lfL f share 2 sto ry IOU* fu rn is h e d S p a d o u * G rande 453-8/4 F E M A L E needed to JBR house Beautiful y 28th and R io I 478-2894.___ ________ T O SH A R E laroe tw o p ic ^ r , . '* b ilf i C ar­ HO U SEM ATE bedroom home p ort and *to rag e 459 wot- F E M A L E R O O M M A T E SHARE 2BR a p a rtm e n t on ca m pu *. *82 option to lease e n tire a p a rtm e n t June 478 /OM _ H E L P n e e d p l a c e to crash Steady paycheck C all J e rry 477-0764 day*. 345! a tte r 6:00. PE RSON15) NE E D E O 'm r n e d i. t e ^ to help fin d house Please c a ll M a r y , 477-1745 to Share Own pe — C O M P A T IB L E HOO' * Af A J £ ja J a f t e r own room, *60 p lu * V* b ill* 837-3954 after 6 p m . W A N T E D F E M A L E M R bedroom , *90 ABP, RC *h u ttle ca n a#/ 9163 a fte r 5 OO pm f w o T H O U S E M A T E S needed t Z u , D uva l *43 30 p lu * 452-1581 a n ytim e JBR b iil* c a ll ........ ....... — HELP WANTED W A N T E D h e lp w a n t e d RESEARCH ASSISTANTS Students needed to A p p lie d R e se a rch L a b o r a to r ie s ^ a d e p a rtm e n t of UT supported by 9<>y e r" to r DoD Should be m e n t c o n tra c ts lu m o r s , s e n io r s , o r s o p h o m o re s , grad u a te students and c u rre n t m a io rs in E le c t r ic a l E n g in e e rin g , C o m p u te r Science, Physics or M a th (Seniors are a c c e p ta b le it c o n tin u in g g ra d u a te studies at U T) M ust be U nited States c itize n * and able to q u a lify for *e c u rity clearance For a dd itio na l in fo rm a tio n c a ll G ra i e T e rre ll at 836 1351 or apply at 10 000 B u r n e t R oad F re e b u * >* a v a ila b le Rates of pay w ill depend on students c la ssifica tio n UT is an Euua O p p o rtu n ity and A tt ir m a tlv e A c tio n E m p lo ye r RESEARCH ASSOCIATE The U n iv e rs ity ot Texas at A ustin has an im m e d ia te opening fo r a R esearch Associate l l B achelor's degree and one is re years re la te d w ork experience is desira b le q u ire d G raduate w ork M u s t have kn o w le dg e of s ta tis tic a l research methods in vo lvin g com puter usage D em onstrated a b ility to develop^ analyze and present data B ackground and or dem onstrated intere st in areas of personnel m anagem ent and or equal op p o rtu n ity p rog ra m s I* p re fe rre d D uties invo lve extensive analysis and presenta t,on ot data Assist in Im p le m e n ta tio n of equal e m plo ym e nt o p p o rtu n ity a fflr m a tive action p ro g ra m by Involvem ent rn E EO tra in in g sessions, c o m p la in t in vestigation, and response to general in ­ is fo rm a tio n requests S a la ry ra n g e fro m 19 648 to *13.008 per annum Star tin g date is 3-1-77 To apply confact O f fi c e of Pe rs o n n e l S e rv ic e s & E m p l o y e e R e la tio n s 2613 W i c h i t a Au stin, T e x a s 78712 An Equal O p p o rtu n ity S. A ffirm a tiv e A ction E m p lo y e r_______ _____ re w a rd in g c a r te r w ith f a n t a s t i c o p p o r t u n i t y B o re d as a s e c r e t a r y , c l e r k , o r sa le scle rk7 F a n ta stic o p p o rtu n ity for a new and the w orld s largest fig u re control an E lain e Powers m anager, assis an m anager, or in s tru c to r No experience necessary WHI tra m a m u s t’ A ttra c tiv e and tr im fta u re an asset E xce lle n t sa la ry and w o rk ,n 9 ,f° '’ ' d itio n s F u ll tim e and p a rt tim e positions a va ila b le at fo llo w ln g lO cetltm i A u itlB Balcones and A ustin South Please can for a ppointm ent, 451 6417 I M M E D I A T E e m p l o y m e n t t i m e o p e n in g s F u l l o r p a r t 'o r bartenders, w aitpersons. cooks, bu* help and dishw ashers H w y 71 at Bee Caves Rd 263-2114 Call a fte r 3 00 C H E L S E A S T R E E T P U B SS.-JSTi.piS'w'' M a ll o r N o r t h c r o * * M a ll between 11-12 am or 3 5 pm lo c a tio n N E E D M O N E Y ? The F lo w e r People need Deople to te ll flo w e rs Thursday, F rid a y , Saturday, Sunday H ighest co m ­ m ission paid d a ily 212-1102 p a r t t i m e h e l p e v e n in g *A g r e i n g J, 3, or 4 shifts a week A p p ly 2805 Rogge Lane or nearest Stop N Go Store l a b ___________________________ — c l i n i c a l te c h n ic ia n 2,**d * de m ic ro e x p e rie n c e re q u ire d . P riv a te physicians o ffice 4/w eek, viron m e n t, *5 0 0 m o nth plus benet it* 451 2361 d a ily . 267-1298 e v e n in g * and weekends A P A R T M E N T M A N A G E RS m ature, e ffic ie n t, honest, h a r d w o r k in g, naff encum bered couple 2308 H a rtfo rd Rd, A so tin 78703 R O O M M A T E N E E D E D f o r h a iv dicapped S tu d e n t W ill pay room and board at Jester plus *70 a m o j t ^ Ex- p e n e n c e in w o r k in g w it h d ib b l e d p re fe rre d C ontact John F lo w e r*. 476- _____________ _____________— _ 7374 SHARP SALESPERSONS needed fo r p a rt tim e fashion clothin g ta le * * P P '/ in person at House of Jeans a t Westga e M a ll R E C E P T IO N IS T D O C TO R S M e dica l experience p e s s a r y , typ in g , dictaphone R otation s h ift 2 w k* 7 30 am- 4 >0 pm, 2 w k* I pm-IO pm M a ry Beard, 458-2291 8-5 pm.________ ________ _— . HOU SE C L E A N I NG F-C U tty * hour* F rid a y *, m ust have ca r 327 0 4 // a fte r 4 OO ... N M D TWO GOOD re g iste re d E M T * W ork 24 hr sh ifts s ta rtin g now C ap ita l EMS, 837 2350 ________ ___ E X P E R IE N C E D C O C K T A IL and toad w aitpersons M adi*©n Square G arden s n o w h ir i n g e x p e r . n e e d coe*H aH waitresses and w a ite rs C al 472 7000 between H-5 pm Ask fo r D ick JE W IS H C O M M U N IT Y C en te r Day in te rvie w in g Cam p staff, counselors and sp e cia list* th ru e E d ucational P lacem ent Service M onday Feb 21 8 30-5 OO Can to r appointm ent 471-1511 _________ ________ __ C O U NTER H E L P , clea n e r*, R ly ^ * ' d * a re a p a rt tim e . 7 10 am w e e kd a y* p o ssib ility of a d d itio n a l tim e lf needed Call 444 in D a llas w ill be 7063 m anager t» m <■ HELP WANTED SALES HELP WANTED a n d / o r . . I M « . . n i n 9 o p p o r t u n e , w r * H . t i q u e s e t t i n g 2 4 7 -3 8 1 4 G r a p h ic * l r O t h o . C W . . . M i n r m u m w a g . y o u r c l . . . w h . d u l . , P r o b . b l . l u l l d m . C M . » . o b u p o n g r a d u a t i o n . M u d m c p u b l i c M I . w i l l i n g t o g o o d c i a * , r a c o r d a n d p r a f x u p p * f d . t . m x i “ o r . W . ' f l o o k i n g f o r p x , p l . w h o e n ^ a s . o c i a t a . in a g r o w i n g A u s t i n b u # in a * a . C a l l M r t . P 4 6 4 - 4 7 6 1 f o r a p p o i n t m a n t . A N E Q U A L O P P O R T U N IT Y E M P L O Y E R f l a m i n g o s b o y * u s a b l e b l u e p i n k S U ? s a t u r d a y * 1 0 -1 2 2 4 0 5 N u e c e s , u p - __________ ____________ __— — s f a i r t J O N I R W I N w r i t e r p h o t o g r a p h e r l u x u r y t o r p l C f d f t ! o n a p a r t m e n t w a n t e d r ^ s s a g e p a r l o r a r t i c l e , m o d e r n o r a n TYPING p a p e r s ; T H E S E S d » » x rta J jJ R 9 . ^ s s ^ B a r a 452 3693, Randy H ester _____ ________ F A S T T Y P IN G P tr*o n aH z# d service tor these*, te rm p ap e r*, d in e r ta t ion*, etc M rs B e tty J a c k s o n , 642-1X5 T Y P IN G , TH E M E S , d .» *e rta tlo n * etc SO w pm 60* pa?e M ag 459 S672 a tta r t pm ju s t North of 27th at Guadalupe 2707 H em p h ill P ark 6.7 M B A T Y P IN G . P R IN T IN G . B IN D IN 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 i m e T Y P I N G S E R V I C E 472-3210 and 472-7677 T Y P I N G E R r n R :, m y S E R V IC E 477 8936 R eport* Resumes I etter s t heses AH u n iv e rs ity and business work Last M m ute Setv u ♦ O p tn 9 8 Mon I h A 9 5 t r . Sat Dobie M a l l HOLLEY'S TYPING SERVICE Typesetting Typing Copying Printin g Binding D r a t t i n g / Art Work 1401 M o h l e D r i v e 476-3018 ~ WOODS T Y P I N G S E R V I C E n e a r c a m p u s 472-6302 Theme* these* dissertation*, law 14 years e x p # "# n ie e ll w ork guaranteed Free P a rkin g _____ _ you can affo rd E0 6 30, Sat 9-5 Open Sunday 15 37th at guadalupe 453 5452 typ e d a c c u ra te ly , R E P O R T S T H E S E S , d is t e n t i o n * . book* I M I0 ,n ab'* P rin tin g , bin d ing O ft 24th Street M r* Bodour, 478-9111) — CROC K E T T CO Typing, copying, w ord oroce»»lng IB M m ag card ll. m em ory tv o e w rlte r to r auto m atic typing TTP® l e u m g p r in tin g and b in d in g 5530 B urnet Rd 453 *385. BO BBYE D E L A P l f L D p ic a /e lite 30 y e a r* • * P * r ‘,n ca . nBn0?, *' d ! * s e r t a t i o n », r e p o r t * , m im eo g rap h ing , 442 7184 t h a t e * , IS M ju s t N o rth of 27th at G u ad alu p e 2707 H e m p h ill P a rk F o r b e a u tifu l typing in Spanish F re n c h Portuguese L a tin G r e e k M ath em atics and E nglish, of course 472-3210 and 472-7677 re po rt*, DISSE R T A T IONS. THESES, «nd l a w b r ie f* E xp e rie n ced ty p is t T a rry to w n , 2SB7 B rid ie Path L o r a in e — Brady. 472-4715 ty p is t F VPF W lE N C E D AN O FAST T h e * . » d l * * a r t a t l o n » , Pro t# » » lo n a l re p o rt*, law. etc P rin tin g , binding B a r­ bara T uito*, 453-5124 ___ ______ ■•J i RGI NI A S C H N E ID E R Typing S er­ vice G ra d u ate and undergraduate typ- ISIS Koenig Lane mg p rin tin g , b inding 459 7205 __________________ pptO F E S S lO N A L T Y P IN G te rv lc e . d)* s e ria tio n *, m a n u K rlp t* , resum e*, etc Call a n ytim e , 444-1134____________ — E X P E R IE N C E D d i s s e r t a t i o n , r I e g 8 l , / p ' " i i , ^ m a n u s c r i p t , r e p o r t s . Deep E dby C * 11 J0,* n# 47**3372 a ,,e r — 1 .0 0 pm P R O F E S S IO N A L Q U A L IT Y T y p in g S a m e d a y « " d o y e r lg h t » 8 f v ic e ^ Reasonable IB M C o rre ctin g S electrlc It Helen 451-3661_____________________ C R E M E DE L A C R E M E ty p is t* E x- r e p o r t* , n a rie n c e d r e p o r t* , th e * e * , d l* * e r - legal 601 TOV page Roxie 474- tations, ____ _ ^ jl. 60‘ -70‘ / 6037 R osem ary 454-Ml H A LF D A Y S E R V IC E on papers R easonable, expert, M a rge 345 52)8 HW Austin. 10-15 page interested Just N o r th of 27th a t G u a d a lu p e 2707 H e m p h i ll P a r k J )\n h lJ U f i y w j ' r e s u m e s w i th or w ithout pictures 2 D a y Service 472-3210 and 472-7677 a 8 8D Page 24 □ T H E DAILY TEXAN □ F rid ay, February 18,1977 THIS IS I THI BIG OHt L A S T I Marathon : c u /T o m h i-n 36 J H* &5 T h ,, m a r a t h o n . t r t i m 71 IO * r a . a l . a r w » h t10 " " nu<>u|,°)i, J O J O OOO M t w it h no - o , . .K cn r 7 ^ H ...I h w ^ ^ ^ 1 1 6 0 . X ADC magnetic c « r , r ^ 1 “ 3 9 i9S M a r a t h o n • " S S M ! i S S i N S s' H O U R S S T E R E O S A L E A U S T W J i A * < ;t e r e o d e a l , _________________ , H O U R S M I S S ^ T H I S C H A N C E T O g e t a G R E A T S T E R E O D E A U S X - 9 3 9 S ' ; * It] j JJfpr4 ' P I O N E E R This S T f T R M include* tho H o * — ' s x -s s o r#<#Jv* r with continuous pow or output o 20 w o r n pot chonnol at S o hm . m inim um ^ I*nm 20-20 OOO Ms w ith no mere than .3 ^ if distort.on two ICI 1333V 3-way spo o lers with o"d Ha San.ul SSS M R W U w " with Audio Tachnko ATT )0 «rtrld«. .... "W»sS ,1 • . n rt ft f t o • a * f t . . . n i l i T H O N S V S T S M include* *h* So"* u' 5050 mf ^ J0 w o „ , p . , T h .. M A R A T H O N » » 20-10 OOO H i with r . c i v . r w ith contmuou p no moro than J% total hor »' • ^ •* ™ pt-1 I I D bolt- j s r s x * « — « « » A M / FM rocoivor with con­ tinuous powor output of 70 w a tts par chonnol at 8 ohms, minimum, from 20 - 20,000 Hs with no moro .3 % total harmonic than distortion. Dual bass and troblo controls. State-of-the- art porform anco. Limitod IHepiithon i9S M a r a t h o n • 4 9 9 |9S quantities. jjqrqtH ow 4 ^ 4 ML ^ 9 S R f l l p m CRESTMARK Deluxe 4000 )-«r«r im***' * 4 9 * * l l p m -tf pm MterHfh* PIONEER SX-1250 • 6 2 9 ” ti 0*T* t RIH 12 I am fa t PIONEER TP-9005 AM m I fro** Cat Dark • 1 2 9 I a rn-1 am IO Hourly Spacial* for Fri. 6 pm-Sat. 6 am C U S T O M H I - F I M A R A T H O N Their prlcoi only during rh* houri ipocihod. rn* im ^ 9 pm BIO / \ / I Formula 6 4 Way Speaker \ *189” >I ■ I ■ f pm-to pm J I a I U q I f T g r l l I 11 \ [ I pm MARANTZ 2240B Sfaraa » • * • » * • * • 2 9 9 ” I pm * pm A M HACa.*.". I pm PIONEER KP-4000 Car Dock •119” 7 pm I pm 4 pm Md ay SCOTCH f.fro c k Top#* 90 Min • | 4 9 6 pm-7 pm I am PIONEER SX 430 Stereo Receiver • 1 4 9 ” I a rn-6 am 4 am PIONEER RT 10201 Re*/ Roc or dor • 4 8 9 ” 4 a rn- 5 am t o a m KOSS Pro-4 AA Staroo Moodphono* • 3 7 ” IO a m - 11 am 9 a m SANSUI 5050 Stereo Racer vet • 2 2 9 ” 9 a m -IO a m r • a m SENNHEISER HD-400 Stereo H ead p h o n e • 2 4 ” I a rn- 9 am 1 1 am r SHERWOOD S-7110 $ far «o !« < *< y * ' • 1 6 9 ” 11 a r n - t i noon *■ t i N oo n _ SUPERSCOPE CC-1580 PM Convertor • 1 9 ” l l a m - t pm 12 l l t pm MARANTZ 2215B Stereo leteive, • 1 1 9 ” t pm-2 pm IO Hourly bpecials for Sat. 6 am -Sat. 6 pm C U S T O M H I - F I M A R A T H O N .8 These prices g o o d o n ly d u r in g th e h o u r s s p e c ifie d. 7 am BASF C-90 9 0 M in . C a sso tto • 2* * 7 am-l am 5 pm ECI 253V I 3-way Speaker 5 9 ” 5 pm-6 pm 6 am Sat. MARANTZ 2275 Stereo Rocoivor • 4 6 9 ” 6 am-7 am 2 pm r I pm c m s t m a w ^ Speaker |9S •2 9 I pm3 pm 3 pm JAX 313 25' Headphone Extension Cord • |9 9 3 pm-4 pm 4 pm PIONEER CT-4141 Stereo C ossotto Dock • 1 5 9 ” 4 pm-5 pm Sherwood S-7210 DOKORDER 7100 Hoot to Reef Reorder t& ttZ Z Z IZ **T tS S iS m PIONEER HR-1 OO 8 Track R e c o rd /P la y Deck 1 0 6 0 M A R A N T Z S E - 1 S * * * • * A Att* Itndtom l«n«tww he lot A ll th o fo o tu ro B yo u n o o d c a n y o n Minco a n d p ro o f t o lo n o id d i n g * O a p o n d o b la t r a n s p o r t S e p a r a ta c o n tro lle d to r re c o rd a n d p lo y h o o d s m o n ito r in g fr o m fo p # Bu l i t -m le v e l c o n tro l • c h o a ffe c t w it h a n d m u c h , m u c h m o re Now record your own 8 track tape* for car or homo Built-in Dolby noise reduction reduces bis* Twin VU meter and tape counter Great styling com- plimants any stereo system. loud".*. Ie"'"! — , "d 9 \ 0 9 . - . I 48 hour special • 2 S 9 ” 4 $ h o u r special CHANNELMASTER M odel H D -6 0 0 5 SCOTCH Chrem* CVO P I O N E E R C T F - 6 1 6 1 , ,™ .k p i " ! d«k W it h alt th . t~ tw ~ V m « . . p a n . . . . d**k*. tw o VU rn ...™ , I » — . . l u m . . o n l . a i . a n d fro c k « * « ! « ' 48 hour I patio) • 7 9 PIONEER Mod*l TH-30 la w you con alay your I track ►opes of home too, s h r i f t s ! ! ! ; — Comet w ith wooden • 4 4 ” 44 hour tpetlel PIONEER Modal TP-7000 M W I ««•> Pb-Y- A.. r— * r h,.iy '•tu rn ., H ." . a«d bolon<« » " « * » . g - A R I I I S h o u t special 90 min chromium dioxide cassette • I ” 44 bovripecrai JIL 6 0 4 Cor Stereo a m m cassette In dash meant Local OX switch s7 4*B 48 hew speaei s h a m r o c k 041 R * * i ta Baal t m - 1900 Men* tope itommkol to tm 41 tteurspoem* 191 ED Stylus R e p la c e m e n t by P e o to n e for Shure M 91ED quantities limitod *21 • 1 0 M a ra th o n M A R A N T Z 4 2 3 0 / V tj " t i l Stereo fracit-lood Cassette deck Dolby noise reduction O u tp u t level control W a ln u t cabinet e q u a lis a tio n bias li m i t e d q u a n t i t i e s M ereM iee *199” PIONEER C S - 9 9 A F iv e -w a y speaker 1 5 " weofsK Sound g re a t Decorator la ttic e grill Frequency ra n g e 2 0 -2 0 ,0 0 0 H i M a x im u m In p u t p o w e r: IO O w a tts 189e s An exceptional fowr-channol quodraaial AM HA rocoivor w ith provisions ter M q o n t* logic p lu g -in C O -4 , S O modules, lo w diitortton, nill c o m p l e m o n t a r y circut design. *w ta^nvi**» i l q rq t^iow •349” 1 6 9 Shute M91ED Th* m oil widely glad com ida* 95 I n l . g r o t . d a m p w ith con tin u o u . p o w ., o u tp u t of 30 ‘ h an n ., l J ,7 0 w a t t , p a t o h m ., m in im u m , from I U 20 OOO H i w ith no more total harm onic th a n .5 % distortion. 95 1 6 9 CRESTMARK FIDELITY I Electrostatic Headphone System L im it e d q u a n t i t i e s M q r q t h o n •6 9 ” In-dash AM /FM stereo radio w ith 8-track tape player lo c a l/D is ta n c e switch C han n el indicator V o lu m e /to n e /b a la n c e Repeat pro gram button W a ln u t-g ra in front panel M q r q t h e n •64” 305“ 2 - w a y s p e a k e r I " w o o fe r G o t h g rill 48 Hour Specie/ 14 ee — e n j o y m e n t . T C . - Stereo Headphone* Ralax in your ow n privaf* world olf itoroo Padded earcushions provide hours of listening comfort. Ear- cups are adjustable to any position. At this price, you can even afford to buy a poir for a W and. $ £ 9 9 48 hour iporiol K l > . • OB O r- i t -g n 5 5 ma -n 2 S o t > ? C - o Z O -n ^ 4 ■ ■HMR > = r - • TT ^ r - *JF - g > S S I O c p W TO O > -< *