T h e Da ily Student New spaper at The University of Texas c. .. J I I t S E 2 S Z X X ' s e x i n g ’ o u i 9 C V S 9 x ° 8 * 0 “ ti ‘ J a r j u a o u i t ; o j d i k t Vol. 72, No. 134 Ten Cents A U ST IN , T EXA S, T H U R SD A Y , F EB R U A R Y 22, 1973 Sixteen Pages 471-4401 Eakin W in s Texan Editor Post 4 , 0 0 3 Students Go to Pods in Drizzly Weather B r JO H N SUTTON Texan Staff Writer Eakin said his thanks go to Steve Wisch for running a campaign based on the issues. filed within 72 hours of the election seek to disqualify a candidate. to rold, Despite rainy weather, 4nn3 students voted Wednesday, e l e c t i n g Michael Eakin as Daily Texan editor and Sally Armstrong to the at-large position on the Texas Student Publications (T S P ) Board. Eakin receiver! 2.070 vores, defeating Steve Wisch, whose total was I.SIP Ms. Armstrong received 1.701 votes to Eddie Elm ore’s 1,659. thanks PA T M A C K EN , chairman of the Election Commission, said. “ I'm gratified for the good turn-out considering the bad weather.” In a statement, Eakin said, “ I have only grateful the hundreds of for dedicated friends and supporters who made this victory possible. Without their loving support and encouragement this event could not have happened. I want to particular!'/ thank Cicely Wynne, Clemmie Cummins and Ken McHam. Their help and support I will never forget were invaluable, and them for it.” A N T IC IP A T IN G the coming year, lie said. “ I have full confidence in the Texan staff and hope that we can together produce a quality Texan. As for any future changes on Tile Texan. T first hope we can improve the qualify and depth of our news reporting. I want to bring the Texan editorial page home to issues that relate to our day-to-day lives as students and citizens.” “ I appreciate his gracious acceptance of defeat and will actively call upon his advice during the upcoming months which will he so important for me and the entire staff in the upcoming move to the new Com­ munication Building,” hp said. Ballots uere tabulated 45 minutes afmr the polls closed, but certification was not made until 6:30 pm , M A C K E Y ca;:! 33 ballots from the Srhor ! of Nursing had boon lost during the ballot t h p collection. totals to be sure the lost bal cts wouldn't make a difference in the outcome of the very close at-large race,” he said. “ We had recheck to “ Even if all of the ballots had gone to there still would have been a for Sally Arm ­ Elmore, plurality of nine \otes strong,” he said. “ We regret the loss of the 33 hallo's and will prevent such a thing from hap­ pening again. It was a chance occurence. The loss was not really negligence on the part of tile individual. The votes wouldn't have made any difference in either race, anyway.” he said. BOB B I U K E . a menthe! of the Election “ noninterested third informal complaint leaflets allegedly stuck on Commission, said a party' had about Eakin some of the shuttle buses, filed an Burke said a formal complaint must be “ The Election Commission would then rule on the oomplaint.” he said. “ An appeal could then be made to the Student Court if a candidate were dissatisfied with the decision.” W ISCH, senior journalism and g o v e r n ment major, said he had not yet determined whether to file a complaint against Eakin. “ Right now the best I can sav ‘qualified maybe','' he said. it wouldn't allow something happen, and we tried to go by the rules like this is a ‘T E I said 'o “ I want to thank all of the people who helped me.” Wisch said. “ Their dedication was perceived as unique and undying— h e r o ic almost. They worked hard for three and a half weeks, and I would have liker! to win for their sake. too. “ I was somewhat tainted with a con­ than " I servative liberal political stance,” Wisch said. probably lost some votes because of thai. label, or somewhat less “ I W AN T to wish Michael a lot of good luck with The Texan. I'll be glad to help in any way T can wi'h opinions or advice, but Michael has some strong ideas, and h e ll probably he able to carry them out himself." Wisch said. Ms. Armstrong, a senior in the College of Natural Sciences, said. “ I ’m very excited about winning. I think my ele-tion shows that students want an active Daily Texan.” “ A lot of interest w as gene; T ed bv this election because the election was one of issues, not personalties," she said. Ms. Armstrong said the outcome in­ dicated a voter [‘attern “ A lot of po the myself as would make ch; said. r> regarded Eakin and irk J candidates’ who es n T r Tex en,” she E L M O R E , inn r Plan IT nu- or, said, ''Naturally Pm extremely disappointed in U sing?, but I'm glad so many po »p,o turned out to v ole “ Since the vote for the at-large race was so close. I'll probably check with Macken about a recount. But I w ill abide with the Election Commission's decision,” he sa id. la P I lf, tx sui AI ch: Aril Kris 21 1 a iiprat aru 150. Wisch. ‘Ct s I ", tmpar a C.ra.luate, Tv. kin I.'1:’ V . Hi inanities E a k in SOI w E a k in . tie Wisch, 2 Natural Sciences F.akin vet.es. IR. N ir s ir £ E a k in Pharmacy E ak r 27 W Social an a P.phavieral A It W . > Wisch. 2 6 5 , nu votes, 19, Total i otes cast., 4.001 \ Ups I. no V O ! C'S, .lev na cotes L rn. 478: iv Wet But S p e n d in g flip day c a ssin o oui leaflets in Eakin knows it paid o ff H p captured the n e sd a y in the TSP ru n o ff elections. Ti Mn Staff Ph to* by JIH MKHKITT. IV inning th© ram +o strangers im t fun, but Michael Texan editorship b y about 200 votes Wed- Israeli Attack Forces Crash O f Straying' Libyan Jetliner to raise again an insistent voice in the Arab East for a more warlike stance against Israel, the sort of thing the Syrians long have been pleading for. It all would seem to leave Sadat m 'he middle That lie Egyptian leaders freedom could limit of choice looking f iture moves toward casing tension. in arn- K A D A F I, A deeply devout Moslem who long has nursed dreams of uniting the Arab umrld and driving Israel into the sea, has a new' rallying cry for his cause if he it, and his record would chooses to use Indicate he is the sort of leader who will use it to the utmost. to Perhaps now there well be renewed Libyan vigor behind the Kadafi vow, v Diced the Americans “ fight repeatedly, wherever they a re " because of U.S. support for Israel. This philosophy moved Kadafi to donate money to support of Black Muslims in the United States. T E L A V IV (A P )—Israeli warplanes fired on a Libyan jetliner that refused to heed warnings Wednesday and forced it to crash­ the land on m ilitary command reported. the occupied Sinai Desert, The official casualty toll was given as at least 74 persons dead and nine seriously injured T H E COM M AN D said th o airline pilot acknowledged repea'od warnings that he w’as violating Isreali held territory hut did not comply. T h e governn en; said the plane had intruded into a “ highly-sonsitive milita­ ry a re a " and in a way that "behaved aroused suspicion and concern regarding it* intentions.'' An Israeli spokesman said the airliner flew over Israeli installations on the Suez I ne Canal, which acts as a between Israeli and Egyptian ti cops before Israeli air fo rc e fighter'- were sent to in­ tercept it. r^as-Mire A spokesman tor the Libya go < inr; nt asserted the plane overshot Cairo's airport and then. because of bad weather, strawed He into described the pi..ne as shot down territory held by Israelis the n pl ne L I B Y AN R MHO said was brought down in “ an aggressive attack by the Zionist enemy." and Cairo radio vowed that Israel will “ pay dearly at the hand of the Arabs for this crim e ’ Prem ier Colda Meir expressed the Israeli government’s “ deep sorrow at tho loss of life resulting from the Libyan cr; sh in Sinai and regrets that the pilot did nut heed the repeated warnings which were given him international procedures. accordance with in A IR F R A N C E aid two members of the crew survived. In Cairo, Libyan A ir lin e s identified the plane as Flight 114 ii and >r Cairo from Tripoli, the capital of Lib ya, and said it apparently overflew the Cairo airport. The Suez Canal is seven minutes' flying time from the airport. An airline spokesman said 116 persons, including six babies, were ab Mfd. There 'he discrepancy was no explanation for between this fig u re and the Israeli count of dead and injured. An Israeli source said the pilot was warned three tim es to land the plane, but he refused. Another soiree said the pilot a r e p ly was, from Israel.” takp orders “ I don t The Israelis opened fire and hit the plane, but a highly placed source contended that the damage w as not enough to cause the crash. Tile crash cam e Just 12 hours after Israeli commandos struck seven Arab guerrilla bases deep in northern lebanon in a drive to break up terro rist centers. The raiders killed 50 Arab guerrillas, an official report said. Arab guerrilla sources put the death , toll at 15 to 26. ★ * ★ An VI* News Analysis An incident such as 'he downing of Libyan passenger plane by the Israelis with a loss of many live s can do more for the cause of militant \ rab unity than the Arabs harp been able to do for themselves—and af the same tim e severely set hack efforts to bring about som e sort of Middle East settlement. Col. Muammer Kadafi, the fiery young prime minister of Libya, is the sort of leader who is lik e ly to feel it his duty now to arouse the w hole Arab area to a sense of outrage. which supposedly L IB ) A IS tied to Egypt in a loose sort of confederation, has included Syria a s well. The federation has seemed less than a howling success, hut this type of incident can add a good deal of cement w here been little before, there had if mainly interested Kadafi had seem ed lately to have turned a bit inward, as in exploiting L ib ya 's unique position as a big oil producer close to a West Pampean market, intent on squeezing every bit of union with advantage ou’ of President A nw ar Egypt had seemed, in fact, to be languishing. that. His Sadat of Now Kadafi is likely, for a time, anyway, A1 Bat tor Faculty R e g e n t Frank C Erw in (cen ter), b acke d Dy C h a n c e llo r C h a rle s L e M a is t r e (left) and U n iv e rs ity P re s id e n t S te p h e n H . Sp u rr (back, right), u rged th e S e n a t e Fin a n ce C o m ­ m itte e W e d n e s d a y to a p p r o v e a p a y increase fo r U n iv e rs ity f a c u lt y m em bers. T on n S t a f f P h o t o by J I H M F R U I T T . Erwin Presents $ 2 4 3 Million System Budget Faculty Pay Hike Requested By M K H A E L F R E S Q l E S Texan Staff Writer Frank C. I Diversity Regent Erw in presented $243 million in University System budget requests for the next two years to the Senate Finance Committee Wed­ nesday. Erwin asked for faculty pay raises 3.4 percent for the next two years an additional 1.7 percent merit increase “ The 1.7 percent increase would help to make up ground lost during the biennium.” Erw in said. of and is last The regent testified the faculty got pay increase in 1972 and only a percent increase in 1973. no o I or Erw in also asked the oonmii'tee to make funds in some inroads tor programs expected President Nixon's proposed budget. in replacing federal to be cut Erw in estimated that the Austin campus would in federal funds next year if Nixon's proposals are approved by the Congress. lose $6.5 million University President Stephen Spurr said the areas that will be most affected by the possible cutbacks will be the Center for Latin American fellowships, the School of Pharmacy', social work intern programs, special education programs for the handicapped and scientific research. Studies, graduate Erw in asked the finance committee to appropriate about $42 million Systemwide above Legislative Budget Board. recommendations of the the For the Austin campus in 1974. $500,000 for tho funds were requested $500,000 for in additional academic library, $350,000 counseling. for custodial services $200,000 for graduate fellowships, $60,000 for undergraduate fellowships and $60,000 additional for the Lyndon Baines Johnson School of Public Affairs The additional undergraduate scholar­ ships and fellowships funds would be distributed by need, more proportionally to black and brown minority available students. Erw in said, “ The University of Texas at Austin does not have the accumulation of blacks and browns it should. We are losing the best of our black brains and brown brains to out-of-state schools.” NPI KR SVU ) funds totakng $2 million were being sought fr,im private sources to help implement the program that would include 500 students. In the past. a regents* rule forbidding discrimination for or against am race stalled the University from allocating funds to a minority program. The new program would not be defined ’he for minorities but specifically pconom icaily di sa d van ta god. for ERW IN ' ALSO announced at the ■ - that UT San Antonio, puttee meeting scheduled an in 1974 with enrollment of 10,000, would not begin classes until 1975. to open The delay results from failure to meet construction deadlines. Only undergraduate students will be affected in the detox; graduate programs will begin as scheduled. Board Alters Residency Requisites Regulations governing residency status of students in state-supported schools have been loosened, a University official said Wednesday Sal Leva!inn, special rssistant to flip president, said The regulation regarding residence classification of vetei ms upon separation from m ilitary service h a s been modified so the wording includes consideration of female veterans \ clause also has bern inserted ascertaining he received a memo from the Texas College and that nonresident classification of m ilitary personnel aud University System Coordinating Beard which changed veterans is a presumption which can be overcome ac­ rules affecting cost of tuition, effective Ja n . 20. A C C O R D IN G TO the memo, a minor no longer needs th a t he is in­ to be wholly self-suporting to establish cording to the guidelines and standards for establishing Texas residence. The coordinating board also has recommended dependent from his parents Hp ‘ an now receive up to two other changes to tho Legislature concerning the $600 a year from his parents and he classed as financially independent, provider! the parents do not cla im him as a dependent for income tax. establishment of residence for persons ov«*r 21 veals of age as well as residency of minors whose parents have movpd to another state or country. A student must prove Hp is financially independent of His parents if they are nonresidents and if he wants to be considered a resident Presently, a resident student pays $4 per semester hour, a nonresident pays $40 per hour and foreign student* pay $14 per hour. lf these proposals are enacted by the Legislature the Coordinating Board would possible adopt changes in its mile and regulations making it unnecessary for an in­ dividual over 21 to drop out of school and york to prove he is "gainfully employed.” The proposals would make it easier for persons 21 or under whose parents were formerly residents of Texas to continue to pay the resident tuition foe. Another rule revision enables resident females who marry' nonresidents to maintain their resident status. Previously they were classified as nonresidents tot all enrollment periods after marriage, while a male resident marrying a nonresident was able to keep his residency status. AS IN I H E past, a nonresident mal or fen .lie who marines a resident of Texas is entitled to the resilient tuition at the registration period foil own ng the marttage. 'Die legal residence of a married female minor is also no longer determined bv the leg ii residence of her husband Minor female1- as minor males who are married now have the power of a single person of fill] ago and are entitled to select their own place of legal residence B y Wednesday, no legislative action had been taken regarding the two recommendations. weather Weather will warm up but remain wet Thursday and Frida; Chance of rain is about 50 percent The High Thursday will be near 50, with the low Thursday night In the mid 40« Tile high Fridav will hit 60, Senate Aids Project Info Recruiting B t NANCY C A L L and M A R T H A M C Q U A D E •TI AN The Student Senate opened up * ne" »rea of minority recruitment Wednesday night by voting unanimously to allot $96' to Project Info to sponsor six campus visits by high school students. \Ql IL E R \, senator who proposed the action, explained that Projec Info already sponsors visits bv University students to high .schools, but that first-hanr1 observation of the University bv these high the’! school students decision-making. important the In is Trad:® Preriphs, coordinator of Project Info. explained that the SJO.OOO alloted ti­ the organization was used for trips to mort than IOO high schools, but no money for s campus visitation program had beer allotted, Aquilera said $150 would go for meal? for each of the six groups of 35 student* and their sponsors and for salaries for sn persons to help with the campus tours 1 ' e remainder would go for admimstratior costs. The high schools would be selected frorr the Houston, Dallas and Rio Grande Valley areas according to minority enrollment figures, Aquilera said. IN O T H E R action, the Senate rejecter a proposed byelaw revision to establish tout studen committees: housing, standing services community affairs and minorih affairs Tile vote was 13 to $ with ftvf abstentions Mike Hutchison proposed the measun and asked the Senate to go on record at supporting standing committees Hutch isnt explained that only four of the possibli 12 heinj proposed in the bylaw amendment, leavinj it open for the new Senate to set up more committees were standing Sandy Kress, University Reform Coalitioi c a n d i d a t e for Student Govemmen president, said he saw- no eonflict amonj the committees which would hi established and any already established. four Many senators opposing the me; sure salt they were in favor of j» but felt that non was net the right "m e because the presen Senate has only if) days to rema n in office Tile Senate also allocated '250 to a housi tor runaways maintained by Communih Switchboard, a University area reform service, Tn Other action, tie Senate passed ? resolution supporting University Student ti for Self-Determination change the presen- University regulation: concerning visitation in dormitories T H E R U S O ! I HON s- ted 'h it in the n effort 'N, .1 toe right C'-wh living unit, the resident.; of that uni responsibility t, to and have formulate, im plorer- and enforce a Ii vin' the democrat* unit plan by use of pr H-ess.” \ motion hy Joanne R Uhland T e x P B U representative, asking permission to hob Ihe group s election March 14. the day 0 the Senate runoff elect 1 in, passed with n opposition. I he Senate also voted riot to r\fp nd th filing deadline for Senate positions whir- ended at 5 p m Tuesday Dick Bonser Student Government president, report? only nt 0 graduate position remained ope after the deadline A total of 164 student filed for available ,36 seam, hp ^ jd Finally -1 committee wa-? established f determine referendum question*; to he vote on March 7 along with Student Senat •lections. Federal Agents Investigate Public Corruption IG FOHN T R IP I. K IT Trvan Staff W riter It was shadows of Sharps town at 4 hp Capitol Wednesday a? federal investigation of cv>mipt:on among public officials was confirm ed. With many legislators saying they had boon quest ii mod by federal agents on the broad subjects of Tri ben and corrup­ tion Sot. ( k ar Mau/v of Ball.is said he was Questioned for two and one-half hours Wednesday afternoon bs a -atonal agent of t e " S Treasury IV>paimnont. H IK Treasury \(»FAT, him f ed es agent sp ecia l P. R. Caldwell, 'U p Department assigned to a special task force on c o m p 'ion of public officials, two first oonta'-ted him had weeks ago. said Mauzy, and told I im lie had Itoen in Louisiana invi'stigating corruption. Mauzv added Colwell explained in- that he w as not under \esngatu»n but wanted to know if Mau/y knew of any member of the Legislature who had ac* cepter! rumored bribe a bribe, nr anyone to have accepted a " I ve never heard any bribery rumors," Mauzv said. Tile agent also wanted to know lf Mauzv had heard of bribers’ or corruption with respect; to; the In­ Railroad Commission, surance Corn minion ifs operation, how state-supported Institutions of higher learning go about acquiring land and giving contracts for campus buildings, the and water districts, Board of Control compo*;rive birls and the issuance cf hank charters. "Is it necessary to pay a foe to get a bank charter," Mauzv quo’, cl Colwell as sav ing. Mau/y said he interpreted that to mean paving a public official to veto for a bank charter. Mauzy said, Colwe]! questioned him about the Sharptown State si vandal, with particular Rank emphasis on whv the trial of flus former House Speaker Mutscher had been moved from Austin to Abilene. " I THRX explained Texas' change cf venue laws to him,'' Mauzy said. to the ColwclJ also asked Mauzy about c o r r u p t i o n concerning ap­ pointments Railroad Commission, at which point Mauzy said he explained to the agent that in Texas the com- mission >;s are elected and not appointed. Truthfully, I Suggested ne WINE SPECIALS at ll your p l a c e I ll Thurs., Fri., Sat. Only Lancers V in Rose .— W F d r d in n c rw in e Riunite Lambrusco Yaqo C a n c ’ G ria Budweisor (cans) $3.09 4 5 qt. $2.19 a fifth $ 1.69 a fifth $1.19 six pack " y o u r p l a c e " af CO-OP EAST 2 6 th & R e d R iv er HIGHLIGHTS FROM THE MINUTES OF THE MEETING OF THE UNIVERSITY CO-OP BOARD OF DIRECTORS February 15, 1973 1. M in u te of the last meeting of the board were ap­ proved as circulated. 2. General M anager C . W . W a lk e r noted that gross sates for the first three weeks of school opening were up 7.8° , and traffic was up 1.4 % although the number of customers in the textbook d epart­ ment was down. H e cited the work of the em ploy­ ees during this rush period. 3. Sterling Swift, Director of Faculty Relations, re- pomeo that there had been fewer complaints about out-ot-stocks +-Mn ast fall. The delay of school one week provided time well spent in better prep­ arations for the rush. 4. Theresa Precise, M anager of Co-O p East, reported on activities at the 26th Street branch store. 5. G w en VZat son. Buyer Merchandiser of the A p a rt­ information about new ment Shop, presented merchandise and Denned promotions. 6. David M cDaniel Traffic M anager, explained his vaned duties and resoonsibilites in expediting the moving o* merchandise from the vendor’s ware­ houses to the selling floors of the C o-O p. 7. Chairman K. W Olm reported on planned changes in job responsibilities to be implemented during the coming year and on the status of various pro­ jects both planned and underway. 8. Data Processing and Finance Manager, Ted W illi­ ford gave a brm * financial and operating report tor the month of Janu ary and the fiscal year to date. 9. Board member, Ken Smith, reported on requests to paint the north green wall of the Stereo Shop — an idea which is to be explored. 10. A fte r lengthy discussion, several revisions to a memorandum proposing the addition of two em­ ployees as members on the board were presented. A revised memorandum incorporating all changes will be circulated among the board members for vote at the next regular meeting on March 1973. 5, L a n g u a g e R e q u ire m e n t Faculty Defeats Proposals By W I VM» \ F R E D E R IC K Proposals to reduce or replace foreign language requirements for RA degrees were defeated Wednesday in a meeting of tho combined arts and sciences faculties. The proposal which did win a majority vote of the 300 present differs from present policies only rn recommending that students receive credit in the language area for beginning language courses. Presently, students must c o m p l e t e five semesters of foreign languages if they had two in that language. Under the High school units proposal, submitted by chairmen of foreign language departments, only four semesters would be required. Any change must be approved by University President Stephen H. Spurr and the Board of Regents. If the modification is formalized, students who phi ce. out of any beginning Foreign Language (F L ) bi" will be advised to take a .special F L -408 course or the equivalent. Students scoring beyond a level of F L 10k will receive credit for F L 406. FI. 408 and any other course they place beyond. Students who complete F L 406 with a minimum grade of "C ” will go on to take F L 407. 16 portable SUPER Cl AGONAL Th® LYNDALE • D3721L Now even brighter and sharper than the famous original Zenith Chromacolor. Two-tone cabinet in Beige with contrasting Dark Brown front accented with Gold color metallic trim. Super Chromacolor Picture Tube. High performance chassis. Super Video Range Tuner. $283.00 MUSIC ROOM ON 23rd & Guadalupe On* hour free parking with purchase of $2.00 or more *■> b a y ; • - • ard • • O - O p A - CLASSICAL RECORD HOP I ocLi\ through Satu rd ay a o l i can invest in most classical i ccoi tis aa ( I L l a i in s t < K Iv and jjct S 1.00 of f the rc^u I a r price. Ib is d oc sn ( include Philips, I) I ) (j.^ im port or econom y labels but it does include C olu m bia, I ondon, R G A R e d Seal and A m ie I. SI.OO off c a e n disc, and that ‘joes for b o x e d sets. P lu s your dividend. Y o u can ’t beat that w ith a stick. violation of the on bribery. federal statute “ I don’t intend to bp a part of a rumor mill,” Mauzy stated. Mauzy added that he felt the thrust of the investigation con­ cerned the bribery or corruption of public officials by nonpublic officials. legislators, The overall tone of the In­ interpreter! by vestigation, as was s e v o r a l represen­ characin izod by one tative Who said, you imagine a federal agency making a delicate investigation with the agent w .iring a Richard Nixon tie clasp?” "Can Convicted Student Bound for England brief himself as to fhp operation of state government in Texas,” Mauzy said. "The thing lie asked about most often was how water districts are formed in Harris County,” Mauzy said. Another source confirmed that the Internal Revenue Service has been investigating water district operations in Harris County for the last several months. With rumors abounding at the Capitol, several representatives objected to the tone of the in­ vestigation. calling it a "fishing expedition for rumors and coffee shop talk.” Most representatives who had been questioned by agents said they were first contacted about two weeks ago. “ I've never been scared of ‘hig brother'—not until two weeks ago." remarked one represen­ tative. Another source eon firmed that “ bugs” had been planted in certain Capitol offices, but have since been removed. MAUZY E X P L A IN E D that federal agents could have entered the picture because of some tvpe of tax evasion or a suspected A foreign student convicted of the January campus shootings of two graduate students has been given permission to return to his native England, a district court clerk said Wednesday. Alan B. Blaxland, 25, pleaded guilty Tuesday afternoon before in 167th Judge Tom Blackwell District Court to a lesser charge of assault with a prohibited weapon, The original charge of assault with intent to murder was changed, and Blaxland was or­ dered to undergo psychiatric treatment. He received a five- year B i l i o H I Z A l l K l 501B W , 24th at San Antonio 476-94 IO T U E S .- S A T . I I *6 Shampoos are v e ry Indh idusl products A ny shampoo w ill be perfect for someone, even dmugh it appears to be weak or harsh lo you. p.- the game token no shampoo is right for everyone nor w ilt any shampoo alw a ys he right. H a ir changes with changes In ph\ sio|op> diet, mood, and r\ « n w eath er conditions. W e m ake three shampoos each formulated for different t\ pi s of hair. 1. H E R B A L S H A M P O O 2. X-DUTY S H A M P O O 3. P R O T E IN S H A M P O O 30c/oz. l5c/oz. l5c/oz F R E E T R IA L S IZ E A M I N O A C ID C O N D IT IO N E R W IT H A N Y P U R C H A S E ! sentence with probated stipuKli 'n psychiatric care in England. that he the continue Blaxland sh t Erie Swanson. 26, and Paul Keizer, 25, both of 1311 Exposition Bhd., on Jan. 12. University police said Blaxland entered the Geology Building office where Swanson and Keizer were sitting and said, "W e’ve got something to settle right now.” Keizer r id Swanson replied ‘ You better gm cut. of this office right now.” Police i lid Blaxland fired two ts, and enc built* hit Swanson s in the chest. He t en fired three more shots in a struggle with Keizer, who was wounded in his right hand. Swans n and Keizer were both released from a hospital after treatment. Blaxland graduated with honors from british schools and came to die University in 1370 as a doctoral student in geology. YSA To Discuss Life of Malcolm X The Young Socialist Alliance v ill present a discussion and film on the lasr years of black activist Malcolm X at 8 p m. Thursday in Union Building 202. film, tape, T h e "Struggle for Freedom," and a "The Revolutionary Chicken,” deals ideas about with Malcolm X ’s society. Martin polices Luther King and the Republican and Democratic parties. and Stover Fuchs. Socialist Workers Party candidate for City Council, incidents will speak en s u r r o u n d i n g Malcolm X a assassination. Tile e will I*1 no admission the charge. laTjiaraianjujraainTiflriJtofotDrauinjifl/au/ian by hair the/clip, join?; i 78-17 k,'! nj Raj Qi m dmisiQi§)cj mu rn rn Balfour Forever ''t our Balfour (.lass R in £ is guaranteed for life. J here is no deposit upon order and we w ill have it tor von within four weeks. You can pay over a period of six months without losing your d ivi­ dend (pay 10r c down and the rest in installments over six months). Come in and try one on for size. U N I V E R S I T Y C O O P J E W E L R Y Street Floor DRUG SP ..__ Feb. 22, 23, 24 ARR® AEROSOL POWDER NORWICH ASPIRIN Reg. $1.79 Reg. 98c .05 69 CREST TOOTHPASTE Reg. or M int Reg. 89c LONG * SILKY 8 oz. Reg. $2.39 j & j BARY POWDER 9 oz. Rea. 95c LEGS Reg. $1.49 Page 2 Thursday, February 22, 197„ THE DAILY TEXAN CO OP RECORD SHOP S E C O N D F L O O R m lcAmericard & M aster C h arg e W elcom e rtfnjp parking with purchase of $2.00 or m er* UNIVERSITY CO OP SUPPLY DEPT. - STREET O n e hour free parking with purchase of $2.00 or more BankAmericard & Master Charge W elcom e . * St Marijuana Effects, Disposition Examined Grass Undergoes Guarded Journey By MA i n BARN KS t e x a n S t a f f \ \ tite r recovery by TI 10 story of drugs does not end with their Instead, n arco tics and m a riju a n a have a long and carefully guarded w ait before they a re finally disposed of by the authorities. the police. The journey which often begins with a policem an’s suspicious nose or a U niversity g a rd e n e r’s unsuspecting trowel ends finally w ith the dru e s' destruction either by an acid treatm en t or by burning. B etw een those two events, how ever, the through d rugs m ust survive an ordeal bureaucracy. U niversity Police Copt. Jam es: Reed re p o rted th a t most of w hat passes through his office is m ariju an a . R ECOVERED BY in sm all quantities, it is held in a sm all, g ra y safe until several “ b a g g ies” have accum ulated. the police is the “ B aggies” the sm all, p lastic b ag used by the nonpolice world to store m ariju an a. A baggie holds about one ounce of the weed. term for into If narcotics o r m ariju an a is found bv police a t night, the evidence is placed in revolves that a cylinder scoop the locked safe. into police han d s Its e n try Is duly note i in a notebook nearby. When enough has accumulated the safe, the evidence is r>ors molly c a rrie d bv an officer the T exas D ep artm en t of Public Safety COPS) la b o r a to r y on N orth L a m a r B oulevard for analysis. to In FACH TIME ti e evidence changes hands or is moved, a ffid av its m ust be filled out and signed, assu rin g that none h as been “ lost.” Lt. B rian Stevens of the Austin Police th at Austin police th a t of D epartm ent confirm ed p rocedure is m u^h the U niversity police, the sam e as The only d i f f e r e n c e betw een the tw o of­ fices Is the g re a te r volum e of drugs that p asses dirough the A-us fin police "lo c k e r.” T he evidence the D PS on a sem i re g u la r basis of at lea st once or tw ice a week. taken to is Soon, however, th e Aus‘in polit e will have th e ir own lab o rato ry for analysis, m aking the trip across town unnecessary. F o r the present, though, all confiscated Austin drugs a r e sent to the DPS. Within th at laboratory, ch em ists test the suspected n arco tics or m a riju a n a . Tile ch e m ist's report is se c ' back to the po lice. la b are stored ALI. N ARI (PTH S and m arijuana sent to the in a concrete-w alled room . E n try is g uarded by a m e tal door w ith a com bination look. The 12-foot sq u a re room shelves extending E v idence fills the shelves. to is lined with the 9 foot ceiling. the chem ist, If a case concerning confirmed n arco tics the the drugv a re or m ariju an a Is disposed of w ithout testim ony of destroyed, “ Some, like hallucinogens, heroin or b a rb itu ra te s, a re tre ate d with acid and flushed down ti p e< e u r o ie," explained J.D . Chastain, m a n a g e r of the DPS laboratory. “ The m a riju a n a is taken out of town to various places and tre a te d with a com ­ bination of gas and oil and b urned,” he continued. He noted that, both open-air sites and in c in erato rs a r e used the burning, though he refused to specify any of the locations. for CHASTAIN E X PLA IN ED the DPS is not required to h ave w itnesses present during th e disposals, though they choose to have two or three of the an aly sts there for insurance. th at If the d ru g s a re evidence for a court case. the DPS is- notified to send both the evidence and the involved chem ist to the court. While te s tifie s the chem ist the suspected narcotics or m ariju an a a re real, the evidence is taken into the custody of the case the court, w here is finally disposed of. it sta y s until th a t involved EACH DISTRICT COURT m aintains its own sto ra g e depot for d rugs in b s cases. Tile large n u m b er of cases in­ volving d rugs has posed a s to ra g e problem for som e of the courts. Tile 3-by-5-foot com bination safe originally provided by the 147th D istrict Court soon proved inadequate. “ B ack in the days when the court w as built, w e only had heroin case s,” Mrs. M arie King. 147th D istrict Court rep o rte r, explained. to overflow. “ P re tty sta rte d soon It “ F or exam ple.” she added, “ for one case we had IOO pounds of m ariju an a. It ju s t w ouldn’t fit in the safe.’’ So, an e x tra room w as requisitioned by the co u rt for the excesses. Th it. 8-bylO-foot room is filled with boxes labeled according to the c ase with which th e ir contents a re concerned. The court m ust retain the drugs until the c a se is com pletely resolved. A fter the evidence h as survived this fa r judge determ ines t hat it will no to and th e lo n g er be n.'eded. be o rd e rs tile DPS for disposal. it back “ The judge has to be su re he releases the rig h t thing,” M rs. King noted. “ A fter all. they m ight destroy som ething th a t will be needed la te r.” At p resent, M rs. King is review ing the if m ore of in storage can be sent back to d eterm in e co u rt’s records the d ru g s to the DPS. tile TH E DRI GS that h av e lasted tic , long legal world probably h a v e spent in several y e a rs In th e b u re a u c ra c y being hand-carried from th e police station to the DPS lab o rato ry ; from the lab to the DPS concrete storage block; from that guarded space the district c o u rt; and finally, when the dust has been brushed aw ay, from the court back to the secret DPS disposal grounds. to a box guarded by When the drugs finally have woven their com plex frail back to the DPS, m ore af­ fidavits will be signed until the m a riju a n a last m ove or n arco tics can m ake through bureaucracy the to m ingle with gasoline-filled a ir or the sew age w ater. th e ir M a riju a n a relea se d fo r disposal by the Texas D e p a rtm e n t of Public S a fe ty is destroyed b y b u rn in g ie fie ld s o r incinerators near Austin. M ost o f w hat comes into police hands is processed o r m a n ic u re d " m arijuana, though fro m 5 to IO p erc e n t handled by th e DPS is in th e w h ole p la n t fo rm . Christie Assigned Senate OK A w a ite d Bv \LISO N SMITH T exan Staff W riter F o rm er S tate Sen. Jo e C hristie of E l the In su ran ce B oard by Gov. Dot pix P aso was nom inated as chairm an of S ta te B riscoe W ednesday. Bi s? oo m ade it c le a r he had “ personally the the position on sought” C hristie for three-m an board. L ast week, onetim e board m em ber R ay K irkpatrick, lam e d uck appointee of fo rm er Gov. Preston Sm ith, w as turned down by th e Senate with B riscoe's encouragem ent. K IRKE A TRICK’S R E J E ( ’ T I O N w as two sim ilarly unsuccessful ti e controversial position, preceded by for nom inees L a rry T ra v e r and Bob Bullock. Another vacancy on the board arose w hen N ed P ric e's term 4 xpired Jan. 31. H ow ever, P ric e m ay be reappointed to the post. B riscoe said P ric e w as ‘ certainly being th a t he w asn’t “ ruling considered,” but anyone out.” The governor im m ediately requested a th e In- thorough study by specific s u r a n c e D epartm ent, with recom m endations for the “ lowest possible r a b s consistent w ith a healthy industry'.” the board of ( ALLING CHRISTIE a “ highly resp ected civil serv an t,” B riscoe said he would “ bring a fresh approach to old problem s.” that two w ays C hristie noted to low er in surance ra te s cire to give a IO p ercent c red it to d riv e rs who p a ss defensive driving courses and bv putting p re ssu re on D etroit to build sa fe r c a rs—not ones “ that cost an arm and a leg to repair. the “ I don’t knox* w hether Insurance Industry is m aking ra te s higher than they should,” 39-yea.r-oM politician, an unsuccessful candidate for lieutenant governor in 1972. com m ented the BRISCOE ADDED his own rate-low ering suggestion by noting a proposed Senate bill that would rem ove re p e a ted driving of­ fenders f rom the highw ay. insurance ra te s by C liristie hedged his sta te m e n t on com ­ petitive saying he favored them only if “ they would red u ce p rem iu m s’’ and “ if solvency of the com ­ pany could be insured” so that the com pany could p ay off claim s. T urning to job qualifications, Briscoe had nothing but praise for C hristie, noting th a t, in addition to being a tw o-term sen ato r, he had also served on the Senate Insurance C om m ittee. “ He w a s the ch a irm a n of die Sales T ax Study C om m ittee.” B riscoe said, “ of win 1 if the ro^-ommendnbo n s...a re adopted, som e $18 to $80 million will be collected for te e s ta te w hich a re now being lost.” House Passes Speaker Fund Bill Measure on A d o p tio n Race Restriction A ls o A ffir m e d die House te n ­ to re g u la te T aking another ste p tow ard reform , tativ ely passed W ednesday, 129 to I, a bill cam p a ig n spending by sp eak er candidates. Tile m easure, sponsored bv Rep. .lop '-lien of Baytown, is p a rt of Speaker P ric e D aniel’s nine-bill reform package. A lien’s bill would am end the present law' by requiring sp e a k e r candidates to rep o rt their contributions and ex­ p e n d itu re s-,: p ra c tic e which sp e a k e r candidates a re c u rren tly not req u ired to follow. “ Although the office of speaker is unique in that we, the m em bers of the ll >use, are the voters, both we and tho people of Tex as have a right to know' the source's, am ounts and expenditures of all candidates for 'h is office,” com ­ mon! cd Alien. Aftei 23 am endm ents several hour- debate, th e bill em erged with the nu ■ t serious of which would reduce the penalty for violation from a felony to a m isdem eanor. A nother am endm ent, would prohibit m em b ers of the executive o r judicial b ra n ch from contributing lim e or m oney to the cam paign. On a m on- controversial m a tte r, the House tentatively okayed 130 to 7, a bill th at would m ake it possible for a ccident victim s gtalty of negligence to receive court dam ages. Rep. Ben Bynum of A m arillo tried to stop th e bill’s repeal of a “ guest sta tu te ” —o n e th a t pr 'b ib b s a voluntary p a ssen g er in a c a r from suing the d riv e r In c a se of an accident. “ Half of all A m erican s ta te s h ave guest s ta tu te s ,” he said. “ In those th a t repealed it, in su ran ce ra te s did go up.” H owever, Rep. Jim N ugent o f K errville asserted that any increase would not exceed 3 percent, or about $1 ’A a m onth. Bynum further objected to the bill, claim ing it. would m a k e people afraid their c a ts , “ T h e re a re going to b e m ore law suits und er this b ill,” he said. to have passengers in N evertheless, m em b e rs repeatedly voted down all a t­ tem pts to am end the m easure, and m an y Indicated th a t the lobby for he bill had been quite extensive. Idle House also tentatively passed, on voice vote, a “ house-cleaning” hill to rem ove all r a c e restrictions from the adoption of children. A c u rre n t T exas statute, no longer constitutional, allow s adoption only by m em b ers of the sam e ra c e. All th re e proposals now aw ait final H ouse passage. —A JL Laotian Cease-fire Takes Effect Pathet Loo Given Strong P o litica l H and Scientists, Users Disagree High-ly (E ditor’s Note: This is P art II in a serif's on the medical effects of marijuana by D r. Sanchez, a former practicing Internist now a U niversity journalism student.) By S .A. SANCHEZ, M D. P leasure. T h a t is the reason people sm oke m ariju an a. But re s e a rc h e rs a re not content to leave the pot sm oker alone with his delight. Scientists w ant to know precisely w hat the sm oker fee's when he is “ h ig h .” They Insist on c arefu lly recording his actions and co’lecting his responses to psychological and physical oerform m ce tests. A SMALL SA M PLE of students who use m ariju a n a claim it is a p le a su ra b le habit, com parable to a predinner drink by their parents. One stu d en t noted. “ Report's of adverse or dangerous reactions obviously com e from the over-45 establishm ent re s e a rc h e rs who w ant to shackle the youth of this co untry." a t the p sy c h ia trist But this is not alw ays so. Dr. A braham W id er, Stanford University C enter for Advanced Study in B ehavioral Sciences, poinle.i out in a study that his b ia s w as th a t of a psych o p h ar­ m acologist in his 30s who has le arn e d from experience th a t changes in feelings v e r­ subject do not alw ays balized by corresnond to observed behavior. the MOST MEDICAL lite ra tu re on m in i ma na reports a v a riab ility in effect and a failure to achieve a high consistently. V ariance depends on th e potency of the m ariju a n a , the expectation of the a se r and his en­ vironm ent. is itself. elem ent v a ria b le Tim m ost is th e active ingredient the T etrahydrocannabm ol m ariju a n a in hem p, (THC) which is cut up whole into m a riju a n a . THC content in the hem p plant depends on the amount of sunlight. M arijuana produced from hem p grown tropical eb m ates contains about 10 tim es m ore THC than dom estic m a riju a n a . In SEVERAL PRED ISPO SIN G factors— personality of the sm oker, his expectations the from im ­ presence or ab sence of friends—a re po rtan t v ariab les. environm ent, sm oking, his As the potency o r num ber of c ig arettes I n c r e a s e s , (or under experim ental laboratory conditions, with la rg e doses of THC), the predisposing factors becom e less im portant com plete achieving “mari juana sy n d ro m e” o r high. ap p ears linger several days in the bloodstream , causing som e pot sm okers progressively to be m ore sensitive (re v e rse tolerance) to the weed. THC by injection the in to R EPR ESEN TA TIV E STI D IES, such as W. B ro m b erg 's classic work. “ M arijuana Intoxication,” and John A. T alb o tt's. “ How to Recognize and T re a t ‘Bad T rip s’ on the F e b ru a ry M ariju an a .” published “ Texas M edicine,” describe the feelings of pot sm okers w hen high. in A djectives recorded reach poetic l e v e ls : pleasurable, m ystical, a feeling of well­ being. contentm ent, relaxation, euphoria, exhilaration or a feeling of floating on air. re p o rt heightened p e r­ M,-.ny sm okers im agery, flashes of c e p t i o n s such vivid colored lights, g eom etric shapes, m u sical s m ids. I ’n a w aren ess of and unconcern fo r p a ssa g e of tim e is com m on. O bservations by re se a rc h e rs add o th er dim ensions not d escrib ed by the pot u se r. Irre le v a n t thoughts, disturbed associations, flightiness, dif­ d ecrea se d concentration, ficulty with sequential thoughts and ra p id ly - changing em otions w ere recorded. PHYSIOLOGICAL ( HANGES noted a r e d ry m outh, rapid pulse, " r e d " eyes, u rin a ry th irst and frequency, hunger for sweets, change in alpha w ave brain w ave activ ity . Alpha w iv es a p p e a r on brain w ave re c o rd s during oom ple'o relaxation. \ m arked contrast w as noted betw een p it sm oking in a group and alone. In n grout), persons a re talkative, and a g ra s s sm o k e r m ay .suddenly gel up and dance. thev a re G roup m em bers m a y fee] in a deep. profound discussion, while the in­ th e ir v est gato r in te rp re ts the content of conversation as “ shallow .” U ncontrollable b u rs ts of at m ildly hum orous anecdotes are com m on. I lighter W HEN L E FT alone, a pot sm oker w ill gel sleepy, seem to be d ay d ream in g and be g enerally calm . Psychologic I te sts obtained during a hUh in show slight but m ensurable changes com parison to presm oking tests. F lorence H alpem . in her study included in th e “ M arijuana P a c e r s ,” edited b y D a rts Solomon, gave IO psycho! laical tests to N ew York City jai! rn to n e rs before an d a fte r sm oking pot. The te sts w ere designed to re v e a l fife goals, level of frustration, ab ility to bandle situations and other social skills. shoved ra th e r a preoccupation w ith R esults m in u tiae im ­ p o rta n t aspects of situations. Thi« effect the neophyte than on the w as g re a te r experienced sm oker. than concern w ith Ms. Hnlnom r ted that a high person has lese ability to handle situations, te n d s t o w ithout d ’s c rim ’nation or control and is less a b le to sneak directly and clearly. continue activity' an NO CHANGE IN basic outlook o r p e r­ sonality or in to lerance to frustration w as evident. One unexpected finding in the New Y ork study w as the sh a rp increase in ag itatio n aroused and “ H eath” during a m a riju a n a high. the words “ su icid e" by tests P hysical perfo rm an ce d u rin g m arijuana .smoking show prolonged r e a c t i o n tim e, im paired a bility to perform ta s k s th a t r e q u i r e a series of steps and decisions to re a c h a goal and te s t num bers. floorer recall of sm okers Is th e re a m ariju an a-p ro n e p e rso n a lity ? Inhibited a re P o t em otionally, m ore Introspective and less a t e a se in social situ atio n s They tend to be m ore poorly a d ju sted , lonely and insecure. m ore (N ext: Dart III—The Adverse E ffo rts til M art jnana) news capsules French Recover Petain a Body PARIS (AP)—The rem ains of Marshal Philippe Petain. stolen from his traitor’s grave Sunday night, have been found by French police and w ill be returned Thursday, police sources reported. At least five persons w ere under detention in c o n n e c t io n with th* attempt to move Fetain\s coffin, from the bleak Atlantic island where he died to the national war cemetery at Verdun. Petain. a hero in World War I, died in 1951 while serving a life sentence for heading th e collaborationist V ic h y government in World War TI. Britain Claims Soviets Building Up LONDON (AP)—Britain claimed on W ednesday that the Soviet Union L ofed up its ail, land, sea and m issile power in lfL2 despite beginning talks with the western allies on lessening tensions in Europe. A government White Paper, or policy document, on the nation’s 1973-74 defense program insisted as a consequence of the Soviet buildup that the allies must recognize: “Only negotiation from strength agreem ents. T h e r e m u s h defense capabilities in the W est.” t h e r e f o r e , be n o u n i l a t e r a l likely to produce equitable in r e d u c t io n iv That w as advice seem ingly aimed at the United States, where President Nixon is facing congressional demands for a cutback of the 300,000 U.S. garrison in Europe. Stock M a r k e t Takes Slide V IENTIA NE. Laos (A P)—A nationw ide cease-fire went into effect throughout Laos at noon T hursday, or ll p.m . CST. U.S. bombing ended several hours before, sources said. Tilt cease-fire bogan 25 hours a lte r the signing of a p eace accord be:w een the w a n in g governm ent of P re m ie r Souvanna Phoum a and the C om m unist P ath et Lno rebel*. whose titular le a d e r is P rin ce S ouvanna’s half b rother, P rin ce Soupharumvong The effectiveness of the cease-fire is not expected to be known for hours, even days. M ilitary com m unieati us throughout Laos, w here battle a re a s a re sep ara te d by a s m uch as 1,000 m iles, a re often prim itive, and b a ttle re p o rts frequently a rriv e in V ientiane 24 hours late. D E F E N S E M I N IS T E R Sisouk Na Champa&sak flew to the C eniral Intelligence Agency base a t Long Cheng to observe the cease-fire there. Long Cheng has l>een die targ et of num erous North V ietnam ese offensives in the p a st three y ears. Sisouk, w ho also Is finance m inister, has m ade no sec ret of the fact that he thinks the cease fire agreem ent m akes too m any concessions to the P ath et Lno. The pact leaves the Path* t L ao and their 65,000 N orth V ietnam ese allies rn control of an estim ated th ree -q u a rte rs of the country. A senior officer of Ute D efense M inistry expressed pessim ism that the C om m unists would honor th e cease­ fire. T he signing of tile cease-fire meant, that Cambodia is die only country still officially at w ar on the In doehinese peninsula, which has known off-m d-on conflict since W orld W ar IT. T H E AGREEM ENT provided for w ithdraw al of til fo r eign 1 ITX)fcs. release of w ar prisoners within 90 days and in end to U.S. bom bing against the Pathet L u and their e stim ate d 65.000 N orth V ietnam ese allies in die e >untr\ It b a rs introduction of oth er foreign troops and a rm s and calls for a governm ent of national unity to be se t up w ithin 30 days. S e c re ta ry of S tate W illiam P. Rogers in W ashington nailed the cease-fire as an im portant step 'w a r d general peace in Indochina. Hp confirm ed that LAS. a ir a ttack s were halting. Tile accord should help in getting com plete accounting and return of U.S. prisoners held in Laos, R ogers said. Tho U nited S tates lists a! jot it 300 of its rn mon mr.-ang a fte r being shot down over Laos. North V ietnam has provided the nam es of only seven A m erican servicem en and two civilians held in Laos. T he P a th e t Lao official w’ho signed th o V ientiane agreem ent talked with new sm en afterw ard I"*1 decline! to discuss prisoner rele a se. Tile cease-fire W'as greeted with th e sam e public in­ difference that has prevailed through most of the decad e of w a r in tins cap ita l city of 200,000. No street crow ds g ath ere d outside residence of P re m ie r Souvanna P h o u m a for the cerem ony, attended only by diplom ats and new sm en. the NEW N O R K ( A P ) —T h e s t o c k m a r k e t lo s t its g r i p W e d n e s d a v on it had engendered Tuesday and l a s t Friday and took the weak rally a s l id e into lower territory. Put analysts were quick to point out that in all three session® trading w as comparatively slow. * * * Blue-chip issues and those with high priee-earnings ratios w ere WASHINGTON (A P )—S ecretary of State W illiam P. R ogers W ednesday refused to rule out; reconstruction aid to North Vietnam by presidenti.il o rd e r if C ongress fa i s to appropriate the funds. Ile told the Senate F oreign R elations C om m ittee th a t no firm com m itm ents have been m ade, and none will be. “ without the support of C ongress.” But he avoided a d ire c t answ er to an inquiry by Sen. Clifford P. Case, R N .J ., w hether he “ re je c te d ” th*" idea of a fund transfer from oth er program s. “ EVE NEA ER talk ed to the P resident about it. and I d o n 't know what he intends." R ogers said. “ I’m not prepared to say now if we had money available and it was ap p ro p ria te to use it. th a t we would not use it a fte r full congressional consultation,” he said. C ase said he personally supports th e concept of re co n ­ struction assistance b u t said: “ You arc m aking it necessary for us to m ake it im ­ possible for you to do it (by fund transfer),” in the forefront of the m arket's retreat. The I iou Jones average of 30 industrials, up 2.20 points after the first half-hour, closed at 974.34, down 9.25 for the d a y . I! had a plus of 4.36 Tuesday and a gain of 6.10 last Friday. I )• * lining issu* s on the New 5 ork Stock Exchange outpointed gainers 985 to 4.10, although the gainers had a sm all lead at the start. Com m unist Ships l e a v e H a ip h o n g W ASHINGTON (A P )—Ten Communist ships trapped since May by the American mining of Haiphong steam ed out of tho North Vietnam ese harbor after the United States provided navigational charts locating the m ine fields, the Pentagon said Wednesday. D efense Department spokesman Jerry W. Friedheim said the ships “left at their own risk without any U.S. assistance or guidance” other than th. general information contained in the m aps gi\ en the Nor Hi Vietnamese. The tirst left Feb. 9. and tho last departure w as Tuesday T h e D A IL Y T e x a n bhursday, February 22, 1973 P age \ . . So, d ear uncle S u g a r , I w ill need m o re dollars to k e e p m e in the m a n n e r to w h ic h I h a v e b e c o m e accustom ed . . / No such overnight learning m usical becoming c h e e rle a d e r critics. ta le n t a r e not p re re q u isite s for like to h a v e something to look at during half-tim e. THe DaIly Texan S taff editorials and opinions____________ Protecting consumers Austin is Ui*' largest city in te x a s without a co n su m er protection pro g ram . T h u rsd ay night, th e City Council has the opportunity to rectify th at situation when it I olds a hearing on a proposed co n su m er protection o rd in an ce which would protect co n su m ers in Austin from unscrupulous business p ractices w ithout h a rm in g a bove-board businesses. reputable and Tile proposed ordinance, which has the support of the Texas Con­ su m ers A ssedation and the T exas Public In terest R esearch Group, delineates “ unfair, deceptive cr unconscionable acta or p ra c tic e s ” in the m nrketpla<•* F u rth erm o re, crim in al sanctions a re inclosed ag ain st th e s e a c t s . and a Cdy-County Office of C onsum er A ffairs is authorized to enforce the ordinance. Iii*- third prong of tile proposal is a professional con su m er counseling and inform ation serv ice to be retain ed by th e city and the creation of a C itiz e n s A dvisory Council on C onsum er Affairs. Both a re designed to serve as valuable w atchdogs on consum er affairs in Austin. E lem en ts of the proposal h av e alread y d raw n fire from notable Austin citizens, such as M ayor Roy B utler, who opposes criminal sanctions ag ain st unscrupulous businessm en. Still oth ers, such as Councilm an I )iek Nichols, have indicated In the past a d esire to protect businesses from unscrupulous consum ers. No doubt the m ore m ossback elem en ts in tho city will p arad e before the ro u n d ! to d ecry this leg itim ate d e s i r e to pro tect consum ers. The co n su m er ordinance m ay be on a rocky road. C ouncilm an Jeff F ried m an , however, will m ove adoption of the ordinance, and the council could m ake no w iser m ove than to im- plem ent the proposal in its entirety. Rem oving any one of the clem ents in this ordinance would effectively gut it. T h at would be a trav esty . And with City Council elections com ing up, we would all know w here to point the finger. The consumer protection ordinance should be adopted in its complete form. Boycott myth The Union Board of Directors displayed a clear ease of cold feet this w eek by their decision to postpone the boycott of iceberg lettuce in Union dining facilities. H ie boycott had Ix'en supported by vote of the tx>ard at a m eeting Fob. 6. The reason behind tho indefinite postponement, ac I nion Director Jack Siecle front Ronald Brown, vice-president for student affairs, concerns the question of whether the University can support a secondary boycott. Tt is highly doubtful that the Union’s boycott of scab lettuce is indeed a secondary boycott. Tile Union’s preferential buying of union lettuce constitutes a primary boycott. a secondary' boycott would involve a boycott of tile ( ’huck Wagon or other Union facilities were they to sell scab lettuce. C learly, no such boycott Is taking place. Moreover, the Texas law against secondary boycotts was found unconstitutional by a unanimous three-judge federal panel in 1971. University administrators have proved them selves time and again adept at erecting a smokescreen of what they refer to as “ legal and policy issues” to University adm tSents • ' r< vip; per st A-.-tm, Is p f . Th* w- IIshed cr Ti I lurers sty S’-.' • ,*:t8 V w m y I es The P a d ' r* day iv and FrId y .ds Auk -t th-- sh •'■, • r > eta - Press, the Southwest Jouma- , c. • ....... e ar.-J the Tears Daily New a • • -a to J. nirnHsn R iHdin* 107 *471 521-4) I •ublioation* lev \ 'Shed M da> paper Association. N f ’-s c, ntrtbut \\< - n r f t. ■ " n jam? 'lh l r , P a g e 4 T h u r s d a y , F e b r u a r y 2 2, LTL] T h e a m a r T K A * The firing line To the editor: Y our editorial in W ednesday's T exan Im plies th a t th e foreign language d e p a rt­ m en ts h av e failed. You used a lot of w ords like ‘‘a ss u re ,” “ g u a ra n te e " and “ produce.” a ssu m in g th a t som eone can m agically in­ still in an o th er person w onderful abilities and talents. Would th a t th e re w ere such fairy godm others around. form er to read th a t you learn ed a leaching a ssistan t in a As a language d ep a rtm en t, let m e say foreign th e th a t som e of m y stu d en ts did learn it. w rite la n g u ag e—they learned it and also be interested in the culture. They w ere well m otivated and d id n 't believe language by sitting for an hour a d ay in a classi-oom. Most of the students I had couldn’t h av e c a red less about anything th a t cost th em m ore than five m inutes a week in thought. Tile sa m e goos for the E nglish d ep a rtm e n t’s w riting req u irem en t. le a r n in g to ex p ress oneself c le a rly dem ands a little m ore than atten d in g class. Are you going to s ta rt on th e science req u irem en ts n ex t? the rid of Why doesn’t The T exan and everyone else Idea that learning and get know ledge can be obtained overnight; they a re n ’t purchasable, a f ju s t about everything else in this culture is. N am e w ithheld by req u est O n e interpretation To file editor: With re g a rd to your editorial en titled “ Stalling refo rm ” in the W ednesday, F e b . 14 issue, the need for enactm ent of reform legislation Is acknow ledged and desired by Inform ed citizens. An equal need of citizens tren ch an t In terp retatio n by new s for is editors of legislators and their leaders. the actions of W riters for Houston. D allas and Austin new spapers noter! lobbyists behaver! th a t passively, according to Hou.se m em bers, as passag e of the lobby control bill proceeded through in their a rtic le s that lobbyists probably w ere concentrating their efforts to d is tra c t the bill in the m ore conservative, less reform ed Senate. th e House. It w as m entioned I*: the only interpre tation of tho lieutenant governor’s announced p lan to hold a citizens conference on reform legislation that the lobby w ins by the delay in introduction of the bills to the S enate? other thri and Might not one in te rp re tatio n be th a t p re ssu re plays by the lobby have a lre a d y had th e ir effect on se n a to rs; th a t Hobby knows it; and th a t he fe e ’s this effect can best be negated by a re a ffirm atio n by the citizenry in a public forum of its desire and dem and for refo rm ? Crippling am en d m en ts offered a fte r a citizens conference w anting reform could spell political doom for a sen ato r w hose authorship w as not based on the view point of his constituents. Tire citizens conference m ay be H obby's only hope to oversee p assa g e of the refo rm bills, to escape the ignom iny of being the presiding officer of a legislative body not yet respectful of tho d eterm in atio n by the citizens of this sta te to hav e good govern­ m ent, and to m aintain a foothold in his climb to the governor's job. Guy E x-student 407 \1 . J 8th St. C o o r d i n a t i o n To th** editor: Ti*' article in T u e sd ay 's Texan con­ een! in g ch eerleaders w as a bit one-sided. In the a rticle . Scott Harmon, president of the Longhorn Band, made som e sw eeping the p resen t s t a t e m e n t s ch eerleaders. H arm on the traditional T exas student a p ath y and lack of enthusiasm can somehow be blam ed on fired-up and energetic IO of lo n g h o rn fans—the c h eerlead ers. (C ertainly the band could not be a? fault.) the most criticizing feels that the ones to select Tile band h as proclaimed th a t they should the cheerleaders, be because the hand m e m b e rs are the m ost the dedicated Longhorn farts. Aside from fact is the b a n d ’s spirit to in­ g enerated from desire to hold on the dividual m usical (forgive hum or) th a t school sp irit It (intangible a t best) an d , for dial m a tte r, th a t m uch of Is obvious ch airs, Senate target By Jack A n d e rs o n (c) 1973 U nited F e a tu re S yndicate, Tne. top WASHINGTON—The ta rg e t th® Senate th e W atergate scandal will be P resident N ixon's chief of staff, Bob H aldern an. Investigation of in S enate sleuths, we h av e le arn e d , h av e track ed W atergate clues to the bright young is solid m en around H aldem an. Til e tc evidence th a t a t least two o f H ald em an’* proteges, Dwight Chapin and Gordon S trachan, knew of the W a te rg a te opera;; a. Tile Investigators will b e a b ’e to show th a t H aldem an and C hapin w ore p a r­ ticu larly close. On his w ay to the W hite House in th e m orning", H aldem an used to route his lim ousine past C hapin's house and pick him up. to rn de CHAPIN HAS ADMITTED lie ord ered p aym ents t i e FPT th a t for espionage and Sabotage against Den e rra tic presidential candidates duri ng I 1972. W hite House insiders s a y that Chapin took his o rd ers from H aldem an a d could never have issued these inst r u e i ms • n his own. I Ti Senate S trachan also operated u n d e r the direct supervision in­ of H aldem an vestigators will he able to establish th a t S trachan w as touch with G. in direct Gordon Llddy and E. H ow ard Hunt. J r ., who directed operation espionage ag ain st the D em ocrats Both Biddy and H unt w ere convicted a t the W ito rg a te lr the W hite House press spokesm an Ro- ‘ I Ziegler h a s denied that H a ld e rc m knew anything about the W atergate in ted ieee.r e ­ g athering activities. But Z iegler, too, w U s d irectly u n d e r H aldem nn’s control. And the tight little circle around H akE m rn ste rn s determ ined to protect him a t ail c o -us. a ffa ir brings D I E SLIGHTEST SUGGESTION any knowled e of how ls of H aldem an had W atergate dignation. B ut a t investigators told Issued th e R e p u b l i c a n espionage ara! sabot operation. least one wk ness h a s that H aldem an him." lf the re fr a t t i e it organize orders to H aldem an Is the most pow erful m an In ti o the W hite House, P resid en t. T up D em ocrats in *' e Senate would d e a rly like to entangle E m in t! <* W atergate scandal. second only to 4 4 ♦ M edical officials have c h u rn e d the lid In New on a m a jo r m ethadone Scandal Y ork City. Tile scandal c md * scrod it ti e nation's only widely acc ep ted method of tre a tin g heroin addicts. lf New-' York City, hom e of m o re than I the heroin addicts in the nation, now t r e s in m ethadone propram s. 30.000 a d d icts so M e t h a d o n e d eath s h a v e ti t m ete o rica lly during int Gordon C hase, ch arg e of health services, h a s * tight to quiet the c riticism . the city com m issioner the p a rt y e a r risen In “ drag CO M PETEN T SOURCES the list re la te d ” te ll n e ft ? city m edical C hase h a s ordered th e 'm eth ad o n e to e x a m in e r’s office d eath s a s ‘v a n e unknow n” ti a an attem pt, m ethadone accidents. Those sources say th a t 500 ad d icts died of m ethadone overdose last y ear. On at least one occasion, a young P u erto R ican w as I overdose by a physician in a New Y rk hospital. r n - a a to hide a d m i n fat c r M any of the licensed m ethadone el in E s a re ran for profit, som etim es i v persor i w ith th** m edical profession, a rest aura n-feui and a building co n tracto r, for exam ple, o p e ra te m ethadone clinics. experience no in At som e m ethadone c en te rs do Hora dish out. the d ra g like short-erder ex bs, over- p rescrib in g m ethadone if the p a t i e n t h re the m oney to pay. C lin k s Do od for tire tak e hom e w eekends p e rm it patients to until Monday. e x tra F requently ti e m ethadone addicts. Many heroin ad d icts supplem ent fi m r “ big'-'" with other drugs. E x p erts conf b ie r t ■> dor «•» p artic u la rly dangerous w hen m ixed with oth er drugs. last p atien ts to untreated dosages resell the to justified A spokesm an for New York Ci y’s health services the p ra c tic e of not m entioning m ethadone in all death s th a t involve m ethadone. He explained th a t other d ru g s a re also involved, so the exam iners c a n 't be su re th a t m ethadone caused die deaths. T he acknow ledged, spokesm an how ever, th a t the m ethadone program in New York C ity is “ looser th an w e would lik e.” th a t HARMON C RITICIZES the c h e e rle a d e rs’ coordination. H as he noticed the p resen t ch e e rle a d e rs do m ore s tu n ts and acrobatic m a n e u v e rs than any group in the la st five y e a rs (an observation fro m m y lim ited ex p erien ce)? H as he noticed own th a t this y e a r’s cheerleaders a re in b e tte r physical sh ap e and m ake a b e tte r physical appearan ce th a n any recent group w e have had? (P le a se note the am ount of tim e the our A B C thus ypar.) Does H arm on ch eerleaders team advocate m ak in g the g y m n a stic s autom atic ex­ perience, poise, sp irit and e n th u siasm count som ew here? ch eerlead ers, or ca m e ra m e n devoted should to H arm on d e sc rib es the present c h e e rs as to w rite a th a n once th e m asses seem “ too long.” T he present ch eerlea d e rs have to e sta b lish new tried m ore to have cheers, but trouble learn in g cheers w ritten a f te r the tu rn of the cen tu ry . P erhaps th e b a n d could be original enough few new fight songs o r m usical cheers. T h e band should m ake an effort to work m o re closely with the c h e e rle ad e rs who a re supporting Hie team s voluntarily, without tra v e l ex­ penses, w ithout class credit an d w ithout p ractice for th e ir chosen profession. (T here a re even few er professional ch e e rle a d e rs than there a re professional m u sic ia n s.) Tile ch eerle a d e rs a re not perfect, b u t then neither is th e band, the fo Shall te r m or the B oard of R egents. M aybe som e things need to be changed, but change w ill come w ith cooperation betw een the hand and the cheerleaders, unfounded criticism . through not G ravely B a r rh *2100 P e a rt St. N o t bo red To the editor: Texan sta ff w rite r C harles C lubb’s review of “ Tobacco R o a d ” indicates th at he did a prodigious am ount of research . T h a t ;s v ery seem s d i s a p p o i n t th a t C enter S ta g e 's production did not follow exactly the slow, hopeless pace of the novel. ad m irab le. However, h e This play w a s first produced 37 y ea rs ago, and I a m su re that countless d ire c to rs and acto rs h a v e been m ore or less tru e to the im age th e author wished to convey, after their own fashion. However, audiences do not re m a in sta tic ; and n e ith e r should plays. To su b je c t today’s audiences to slow­ paced drivel would bore th e b ejee zu s out of them . I w as not bored last w eekend at C enter Stage. “ T obacco R oad," under the sensitive direction of Ken Johnson, provided m e with an evening of th e a te r that w as both unique and e n tertain in g . But don’t take m y word for it. Go to se e it for yourself. M a rg a re t A. Cox l i b r a r y Staff S p o r t s fans To the editor: We understand that this com plaint is late in coming, b u t we feel we m u st ex p ress it in hopes th a t next y ear will be different. Being avid s p o rts fans, we have a tte n d e d m ost of the hom e basketball g a m e s and being w om en, w e feel we m ust ask; for equal tim e. T ile fem ale c h e e rlea d ers have their special routine during h alf-tim e In which they b u m p and grind to th e content of the m ale sp ectato rs. Now w e a r e not exactly a sking to do a burlesque hut we fem ales would al o the m ale c h e e rle a d e rs th e I know most will say w e only attend jocks and we the g a m e s to lode at m ust a d m it John Wilson is nice to look at. but th a t is not why w e a tte n d the games. We a r e not your re g u lar “ du m b broads” for w e know ail the ra le s a n d play's of the g a m e s. T h e re fo re , if the m ale sp e c ta to rs get a show for half-time then w e dem and an equal chan ce. We are sick of w atching the bum p and grind show—w e w a n t to see the th e Silver m ales do something. M aybe Spurs o r Cowboys will a g r e e to comply w ith o u r complaint. G lo ria A gu ilar Senior C hristine Bobadilla Junior Refu ae To the e d ito r: to T he responses th e T e x a n editorial a tta c k in g T S P ’s policy a g a in s t sexist ad­ vertising adequately exposed the fallacies of th e e d it o r s argum ents. B u t th e guest from The D allas Tim es-H erald e d ito rial invites fu rth e r com m ent, it does th e hypocrisy of T he T e x a n 's entire position on this Issue. M ust th e crusading lib eral e d ito r (who dared to endorse George M cG overn the day a fte r th e election) run to Hie chief organ of th e D a lla s business feminist o ligarchy to rm e n to rs? re v ealin g as fro m his refuge for T ile D alla s press w a x e s eloquent in rig h ts—not. of defense of constitutional course, to sp e a k against U S . th e right f reign policy, or the right not to be subject to state-prescribed p ra y e r in public school, or th e rig h t to due p ro c e ss in police in­ te rro g a tio n , etc., etc. R ut th e right to ad­ v e rtise ! Now th a t’s different! T h a t involves m aking m oney! is b e SO and AXD th e re applied lab e llin g to poll lira !, LIBERALISM con­ stitu tio n a lity a re subordinated to m onetary the flaw considerations. Bul in the reasonin g. A dvertising is but an in­ r d com m erce is stru m e n t of com m erce, su b ject to all .sorts of re s tric tio n s that m ay not religious, philosophical, artistic, a c a d e m ic , literary or ed ito rial expression. W itness th e banning television, of c ig a r e tte com m ercials fro m the forbidding of certain exorbitant claim s for food and drug products, a n d restrictions (certainly a form of ad­ on v e rtisin g ). F u rth e r. It Is not only negligent but dishonest fo r the editorial w rite rs to ignore th is particular facts in som e situation, self­ p ra c tic e d already censorship prior to the po licy in question. to review ads re je c te d by TSP A b o a rd a lre a d y existed. 'FSP had a lr e a d y indicated its a p p ro v al of a clau se excluding a d ­ v e rtise m e n ts reflecting r a c ia l, religious or personal prejudice. TPP w a s asked m erely include sexism, to e x te n d w hich (A pparently D ie to do. T im es-!lo rald would not e v e n have racism p ro scrib ed from Texan a d v e rtisin g —how dor's th e fearless editor re sp o n d to that?) re le v a n t TSP th a t policy if voted to A p o licy like TSP’s should he adopted by e v e ry new spaper. But a t th e very least it is not unreasonable to e x p e c t from the n ew sp a p er of a cam pus w h e re attitudes are m o re enlightened th a n those of other com m unities, a respect fo r hum an beings to be a s deg rad ed for profit. No one se ek s to Impose such a stan d a rd on the e d ito ria l page but in sphere, w here fre e expression is no; properly an issue. individuals with d ig n ity not a d v e rtisin g com m ercial th e C arolyn A. Todd James ('. Todd Letters to the editor Firing Line letters should: G u e s t viewpoints The Texan welcom es c on tribu tion s to the editorial p a g e s which delve de ep er To th e e d ito r: In jest into an issue than will a letter to the edi­ tor. Before w riting or subm itting § G u e st Viewpoint, secure c le a ra n c e from the edi­ tor or the assistant to the ed itor either by phone (471-4401), by c o m in g to The Texan offices (Journalism Building 103), or by writing (P. O . Drawer D, U niversity Station 78712]. K afka G am bit D eclined: If Then Johnson is a serious sort, then I’m that h e doesn't understand his own plicity any m ure than K a fk a 's chose can understand guilt. T h e re ’s r “ r a th e r ra d ic a l” about th e K afka < Tis th e d re a m that inspires authority if M r. Johnson ii jests. th e n M r. jests, D a v id \. lls 405 E . J • B s ty p e d triple-spaced. • Be 25 lines or less. • Include name, address, and phone num ber o f contributor. M a il letters to The F irin g Line. Th® D a ily Texan, Draw er D, U T Station, Austin, Tex.; or brin g letters to the Texan offices, Journalism Building 103. George Washington: One of the Great M inds of the 18th Century c o n s i d e r special admission credentials and economics sanc­ tions. Everyone should be allowed to enter the country—everyone, that is, except the Scotch. I ’m all for equality, but I can't stand Scotch.” As Washington sees the women's liberation movement is also a high priority issue. It, “ Our laws and policies must be updated to guarantee sexual equality," Washington said. “ B y the way, you’re not going to mention that all nine members of the new court are male, are you? And did you or did you not cut that line out about the punks?” insists he Washington Is not pursuing such noble causes for purely selfish reasons. Instead. he feels he is only doing his job, and if his work can improve the reputation of the government, he is all the more happy. Just don't suggcs* is an run by a that the incompetent small government organization clique. Is not “ Our government In­ competent. and it certainly is not c liq u e !!!” small mn by Washington screamed. a and Neil W a s h i n g t o n . P a t W a t h ! A g t o n Rachel Washington all agreed with the President. S a n d y however, Adams, disagreed with the statement but mysteriously disappeared before further he comment. could make any And so with a heavy heart and a furrowed brow and all that other good stuff that fathers of countries are supposed to have, George Washington performs his the utmost of his duties abilities. he's And whether wishing himself happy birthday in his Union Building office or standing guard over the South M all, people can always agree on one thing: to Our President has one of the truly great minds of the 18th Century. B y TOM H L F TMV O R TTI Texan Staff Writer Onm upon a time . . . two or throe or four days ago, to bp exact . . . George Washington in his relaxed for a moment Union and Building congratulated himself on what he had accomplished. office First of all, the w ar was over. N ever again would his con­ stituents have to go “ over there.” (Hmmm, nice idea for a song, t h e industrious Washington t h o u g h t . ) Mc re importantly, never again would he have to go into battle. Not that he was afraid of battle, mind you. On the con­ trary—Washington had bravely carried the megaphone of honor into battle on a warm April day the year before. And the mere fact that no one followed him to do with his had nothing m ilitary record. by the people were just ‘ ‘ T h e electric frightened megaphone,” Washington in­ sisted. “ After all, the little devil isn't going to he invented for another hundred years.” But the war wasn’t the only thing “ the father of the country'-’ was proud of. Xo-sirree bob, that was just the beginning of it. For instance, “ father” had instituted what history’ books were later to call (among other things) “ The Supreme Court.” And don’t think this was just any ol’ court, either, Mr. Smarty Pants Tory. No, Washington made sure the court would get lots of exposure fast. First, he showed g reat wisdom in p ick in g Ins justice. Not many countries can say they're under “ Marshall Law .” (Ha, ha.' chief But pointing out the successes the i<5 one reason behind the successes is another. thing. Explaining And as usual, Washington said he had all the answers. “ I attribute all the success to m y new look,'1 he said. “ You soc, I used to be what you might call a revolutionary. But not any more. I ’ve learned that all that stuff is fine as long y m’re getting elected or playing politics or something like that—you know, like one cf tho people—but now that I'm elected, I realize I have to do business with Hie real world. And to get the business, you have to dress to please them. Besides, who needs the punks . who vol od for me anyway . . uhh, wait, you didn’t take that down, did you? But with all the success and all the changes. Washington just can’t understand how the Senate could treat him so callously. “ They vote,] to have my bir­ thday moved to Monday just so everyone could have a party. Now, I like parties as much as a common person, but I don’t see what gives them the right to move my birthday. TI at's inst plain silly. Why, it’s even sillier the a r­ than madillo last year.” that stuff about Washington the Senate felt could learn a lot by following the example of the Department of Botany. that Department “ Now that’s a nice bunch of people, of Botany,” he said. “ They came up with a now breed of bush, and they decided to name it after me. of smile “ You’ve them, heard h a v e n ’ t you— the Benison Hedges?” But ho must, Washington goes on with his plans for the country. One of his main priorities is work ii g with m i n o r i t y liberation movements in the country. and as “ You need to realize the United States cannot stay segregated and has to meet tile fast changing pace of society'. Certainly with the minorities, ti e country si ,uld C r o s s w o r d P u z z l e 6 latin c or,junction Answer to Ye per :-en 5 At 9 re I ? w 13 Ni P 14 Bi 15 Teacher 17 Greek letter 18 Cravat 19 City in Iowa 21 Trio 23 Games 27 F^roe Island* whirlwind 23 Badgerlike mammal 29 Things, in law 31 Tennis stroke 3 4 Conjunction 35 Chooses 3 3 Barth goddess 3 9 Greek letter 41 Main lace 42 Muscat drama 44 Spanish for 45 Instructed 43 Droops 51 Stop 52 Man's new# 53 Conjunction 55 Fiber plants 59 Hurried 60 Female 62 ireland 63 Goal 64 Periods of time 65 Antlered animal 1 A: onquian Indian 2 Anglo Saxon money 3 Males 4 Landed property (pl.) 5 teases I: .'.od/: 3nt 16 I cg dish 20 tx tend 22 Exclamation 23 Harvest 24 Paddles 25 2 rn bol for Piton 26 Cry, as win* 30 Backless seats 32 Monster 33 Trinket 36 Spanish plural article 37 Speckled 40 I and surrounded by water I 2 3 4 43 '‘ p arish article 45 Pronoun 47 Calls 48 Metal strand 49 Country of Asia 5 6 13 50 W's# porso 54 Title ( 6/ E' 61 Sun god 7 “ ' a c-x-19 WA 11 I cf n o I , J 14 18 16 17 j : ” 1 ' / / ' < TTT ' kVv* 19 20 : Y 24 25 n YA* * 2 1 ! 26 *v .;l I b'xx 37 29 30 v w 31 ■ii 35 35 36 38 40 41 42 4 3 44 45 Z V V 46 V I K 47 50 51 53 54 55 G Vit .< > 5 6 157 58 6 0 61 VV* 62 12 15 28 34 39 52 59 63 N e w G e o rg e W a sh in g to n has changed his a p p e a r­ ance since winning the land s highest o ffice I I months ago. Left: H e cam paigned wearing a pow dered wig and frilly w nite shirt. Right: L o ok R ecen tly, he took off the wig and shirt, show­ ing naturally red hair and donning a conser­ v a tive sweater to lobby before state legis­ lators and city officials. ■—T e x a ji S t a f f P h o to Y W C A Schedules Classes A new session of craft classes will begin the second week in March at the Austin YWCA, Mrs. Diana Rutt, YW C A program Classes will be held two hours a week for six to eight weeks, depending upon the course. Persons interested in enrolling in any of the courses m ay go by the Y W C A at 105 W. 18th St. or call Mrs. Rutt at 478-9873 l>efore March 19. director, said Wednesday. P E A N U T S ‘‘A PiNCH-HITTER MAY BE P K iS N A T E P ID DAT KIR THE STARTING Pitcher anc all twmnj P itc h y IN An-' 6AME UJiTHOUT Q7H£R;DAc AFFECTING THE 5TATJY OF THE PITCHERS IN THE ©AME.. “ FAILURE TO DESIGNATE A fiNCH-H TIER PRiOR TO TH£ 6AME fSEOUPK THE UGE Of A DESIGNATE? PiNCK-HITTER FOR TRE GAME... PtNCH-HiTTERS FOR A DESIGNATE? PINCH-RITTER MAY DE USEP..M quilting, While m any of the classes— p a i n i i n g , cake decorating, ballet and tap dance, Eastern and Middle crochet dancing—have been offered in the past, several new' courses have now' been added. Ore o f needlepoint. the new classes Another new course being of­ fered is chair caning, the art cf making and repairing the seats of cane-bottomed chairs. To the dance courses previously offered, modern dance has been added. ‘AMY5055TnVTE PiNCH-HHTER FOR A DESIGNATED PiNCH-HiTTEJx himself becomes a ? esig n a~'cP PlNCK-HlTTES.-A REPLA C E? DESIGNATED PlNCU-H ITT E S M A IL NOT R E -BITES THE G A M E ' I P R O S IL Y DON1! GST TO BAT TAE DHOLE GEASON _ Civilized thatchy cot+o that you’li ju< rib VZ son paste: a refined ribbed knit of it makes for one of the find anywhere. S'zes 5 Primitive iTripe is a cor st have to see! beige polyester nbmatlon '“■f R a x ed with and c o tto n , most nat ra! party looks you'll to 12, 32.00. Taring's On-the-Drag, 2406 Guadalupe Happy Birthday, Mr. President. Cost range? from SIO to $20. GARRARD SONY SHURE DYNACO KIH PANASONIC DISCOUNT CENTER GRAND OPENING CUSTOM WE MEET OR BEAT ANY STEREO PRICE: ALL PRICES ARE SUBJECT TO CHANGE WITHOUT NOTICE. REPLACEMENT OF INVENTORIES WILL BE HIGHER PRICED. IF YOU PURCHASE NOW. YOU WILL SAVE MONEY. CUSTOM HI FI OFFERS YOU PRICE PROTECT ADN — THE BEST PRICES ON ALMOST EVERY BRAND MADE1 WHEN YOU BUY FROM US WE MAKE A GUARANTEE TO YOU THAT IF YOU POSSIBLY FIND A LOWER ADVERTISED PRICE WITHIN 30 DAYS WE WILL REFUND TMF DIFFERENCE TO YOU M A R A N T Z MARANTZ 2010 COMPLETE GARRARD 65B STEREO SYSTEM H I Reg. 199.95 Reg. 141.80 COMPLETE SYSTEM Reg. $581.60 NOW 3 9 9 OO Reg. 39.95 STEREO HEADPHONES GIBBS FM 8 TRACK CAR TAPE PLAYER DOKORDER 6020 STEREO CAR SPEAKER Fo r c o m p le te fid e lity b u y a p a ir o f G ib b s SK-20 with a 4 speaker. These make your ca r sound C a rn e g ie H a il in yo it ca r i the b e n e fit Fo r fo r the p e o p le who missed our sellout, the C o m ­ m odore H R 5 5 are a t p riced 2.88 again. C o m # litten in and to head pho nes our tak* a p air and home. e you ever w a n te d to be ab le to hear H t r i p ? Then come continuous music on a listen to our 8 T r a d into our store and TM car player. W h e n yo u g e t tire d of !'S- to rin q to continuous 8 tra c k m usic you lie ten to th# un distorted F M m usic from air car ta p e deck now on sale fo r $59 95. E l g i n r m 4 ? o o F o r a co m p le te system we he<-% a d d e d the E lg in R M 4 7 0 0 8 tra c k P ny -. This little d e c k h e i e x ce l­ lent heads and w ill p la y contin- i o s m .s 'c a ' 1 d a y a n d all n ig h t a d you m ust h e ar it to b e lie v e .. it. ^ 2 AMPEX 710 lo u n d n o..r F o r the u ltim a te in ly ite m w e are in tro d u c in g to A u s ­ tin the A m p ex 710. A tw o w a y speaker system . E xcellent en the highs, lows you must com e in and h e ar our A m ­ pex speakers and you w ill b e co m e an Am pex b e lie v e r and b u yer. — R e g u la rly p ric e d a t $99 95 e a ch . te r r if ic on the Reg. 99 95 each COILED 25 FOOT EXTENSION CORD Reg. $4.98 Now $1.88 ECT 2 W A Y SPEAKER SYSTEM FOR THE CAR OR HOME R A B C Q A K A I ! E M P I R E E GI J E N S E N U T A H Reg. $9.88 Now $2.88 Reg. $119.95 Now $59.95 AIKO AM/FM CASSETTE CAR PLAYER APOLLO 8 TRACK PLAYER Reg. $9.88 Now $3.88 8 TRACK PLAYER RECORDER have for under $500. W h e n we say P B S J * | WE HAYE BEEH REQUESTED TO REPEAT OUR Dokorder sellout. This Dokorder has feature* that othef brands do not the Dokorder has features, we mean features, such as autom atic reverse, bidirectional record and play, 4 heads, 3 motors and a I year guar- ante labor and parts. L IM IT E D Q U A N T IT IE S » M a r a n t i 2010 i i o n * o f M a r a n t i new a d d itio n s to th e ir line W i t h th ii unit, M a r a n t i h a t m ad e it e c o n o m ic a lly possible to get la b o r and th# M a r a n t i m arket. p a r ti, and m o lt im p o rta n t, M a r a n t i c a r e s t sound on th looki, d e p e n d a b ility , 3 ye a r* w a rra n ty To co m p le m e n t the M a r a n ti 2010 w e a r* ad d in g the G a r r a r d 65B. R a te d as one of th e best b u y! on th e tu rn ta b le m arket this G a r ­ rard has a d ju sta b le ant skating, cu ein g , an alum inum p 'a tte r, a low-mass tu b u la r aluminum to neerm and o f co u rt* the u n b e a ta b le looks W i t h bate dust ro v e r, and an E m p ire 9 9 9 / P E X G a r r a r d C a r t r id g e this p a ca g e c a r n e t a reta il of $141.80 Foreman Would Like Degree To Complement Boxing Title By K IR K BOHLS Texan Staff \ \ Titer T h e lioavyweigl * box.ag not git *Je» t t* hut T i wan , ’nr ire. Ti o new championship i f tie v.*-r:d a bad a cl.x-Y .vt, em fey- ,,L school dropout Y TO- c an p v . a college ti : e. " H i Uke to get a dcg- >e in that ring, th,-* boxing keep busy working people over— is. Foreman, whose stay in Austin in Tu led an address to a joint the 63rd Texas *• -T ,rt of Leg! kit lire rn tho House chamber af 11 a 'n, and a luncheon *,t > " Governor's Mansion, said It* v ad probably defend his title , '-J J J 0 , y J ie. edit e a pa:ae c liege s ar.eday,” I ' rem .;n sud before '■ * long before "Fighting is my only way of Holist rn Wednesday 7- omoon making a living. I need to got f some moue-, in my p >cket. I have to reap a portion of the fruits in of my labor," said the modest, it '-sinning Texan who easily filled oui his navy blue pinstripe tile footsteps of his v ife, •' ho Is purr:; : I a dog? at a school in Minneapolis Mu n. or iv \ni>Trent!y «'! ut-non!es iii ' I, ., ] f ,1 . * Asked what fie !: he xxas - former Olympic gold Hie .. F o rrren n nnx• prod, medalist, who danced around the ring at Mexico City.’ in 1968 and wived an American flag to the audience, left for his hometown e presetit, ti e rkir.g However for I year-i' -I w or I f umpioin WI ’ I Of I lolls ton with J•v ' 7 Tile champioiI did more run- ning around the Capital City than he ever did in the ring against Joe Frazier, who he TKO’d in less than five minutes in K.ngston, Jam aica, on Jan. 22. Signing autographs, posing for pictures, addressing a jirnior high school audience kept the polite star on his feet. In an interndew that lasted about ag long ;as the title fight, Foreman said the Frazier bout "wasn’t easy, I worked so hard, I just made it lfx>k easy. Foreman trea is Muhammad All as just any othcr fighter. Asked if he had a rlame comparable to A ll’s "D ie People's Champ" tag, Foreman replied, "A ll I c m do is say *powi t to the people.’ If he s not the ‘People’s Champ,’ then it’s a false statement, I have to fight all the ccontenders to keep the championship. the rule?.” I ’ll Just go by Tile one time street fighter said it was "hard to te ll" if he has reached his peak yet as a boxer. "W ho knows when a boxer reaches his peak?” Foreman said Frazier might be the guy with the answer. At the ceremony at the Capitol, Gin'. Dolph Briscoe said, "George Foreman has met m ore than his s ;.a re of adversity. But like the champ he is, he ov ercam e it with courage and with dignity. Since ie was a high school dropout, his odds of making it were such that h° had to be rated a long­ shot. City Councilman Bori Handeox and George made declared Wednesday Foreman Day. speech short a I .oohing ahead to the future, Foreman Laid, "You can't be a double triple-heavyweight champion of the world. Being world F-hampion Is the highest goal you can set for yourself." or But then there’s the matter of the college degree for Foreman, who earned his high school diploma through the G ary Job Corps. For teeing, the though, Foreman w ill have to be content with boxing lessons VO willing challengers. giving time M ODEL 46-1300 399.75 t n r r KmmA immLmotI r I I F P U R C H A S E D S E P A R A T E L Y THE STERES PERFORMER *40 watt (IH F at 4 ohms) A M /F M /M P X re- cetver with superior reception and versatility *SE 3103 speakers with 10" woofer, 6 " mid-range, and 3- tweeter for a 35-18,000Hz frequency response *46- 1 1300 total changer with all controls for precision play, in­ cluding magnetic cartridge, base, and dust cover *16-4000B stereo headphones for the best in private listening. A top performance system with a budget price tag. S P E A K E R S IN C L U D E D 34.95 M FG . L IS T M OD! 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' i AFTER SALE 34.95 3 - C60 C A S S E T T E S A 3 .7 5 V A L U E N O C H A R G E W IT H P U R C H A S E O F A B O V E STERLING. ELECTRONICS 9-6 Mon.-Sat. 9-9Thurs. 1712 Lavaca Street 477-5866 Pass 0 Thursday February 22, 1j 7 3 THE DAILY TEXAN Texas Swimmers Trounce Houston In Final Dual M eet By AL CARTER Texan Staff Writer University “ Tired” swims in mostly off events did not keep the Longhorn swimming team from rolling over the Houston swimmers, 85-28, Wednesday afternoon in the Gregory Gym pool. It was the 'Horns' final dual meet of the year. of Texas won all but two of the 13 events and capped off the meet by swimming their best time of the year in 400-yard freestyle relay. The team of Fred LeMaistre, B ill Burns, Dick Worrel and Bob Blodgett clacked in at 3:13.91. more than a one second drop from their previous best. “ I was real pleased, for us being as physically tired as we were,” 'Horn Coach Pat Pat­ terson said. “ We worked out real hard yesterday and then again today before the meet, so we swam ‘tired.* We also swam most of our kids in a lot of their off events.” The Cougars’ only two wins cam e in the 1.000-yard freestyle the behind Bob Supple an i Joe 500-yard Hale. freestyle behind in F or T exas, familiar names won the unfamiliar events. Worrel, ’Horns’ distance froestyler. won the 50-yard freestyle, while LeMaistre, a sprint freostyler, won the 200-yard event. Bob Rachner, better known for his breaststroke, won the IOO-va rd freestyle, while Doug Nibouar took top hon,')rs in the breast­ stroke. Jam ie Baird stuck with his own the 200-yard backstroke event, and won it with a time of 2:00.22. Felipe Munoz and Ricardo Marmalejo stayed with their stronger events. Munoz won the 200-yard individual medley and Marmalejo tho 200-' ard butterfly. In diving, Texas All-America Donnie Vick won both the one and three-m eter events. Longhorn Chuck Ma ch ell finished second in the one-meter and teammate D a v i d finished second in tho three-meter. Youngblood Patterson also was pleased with tile perform ances of Dick Shanks the vic­ and Brian Vance on torious 400-yard medley relay team. Both Shanks and Vance their best relay legs turned in ever. Tho Longhorns, with the victory over Houston, finish with a 5-5 dual meet record and now awalt the Southwest Conference Meet in Dallas March I to 3. m m T e x a n S t a f f Phot. 0> I K K B A R I CH. From G h e t t o to G lory W o rld heavyweight boxing champion George Foreman awaits his appearance Wednesday before a joint session of the Texas Legislature. Foreman, who pulled off one of boxing's great upsets last month when he defeated former champion Jo e Frazier, told the lawmakers, "This is the state, in deep honesty, I really love." C B S M IT H V W I USED CAUS ........................ 1695 1071 AAV S u p e r Huff, >td., 1(172 f h f V M l f i V . f f a , S id .. ’ H r f i r , R ndio . . . . . ... 1895 1971 Opal S M . . A ir I OOO, 2 r>r .............................. 1595 1968 V W B u s . 7 P a s * ., N e w E n c i n a ................ ... 1550 l i t . , 1971 M e r c u r y fu m e t . 4 H r ., A u to ., A ir , 1’oyy e r .......... 1995 1969 AAV SqiiarpTutCk. A u to ., A ir , R a d io . . . 1295 1971 T o y o ta < o ro n a M k. A u to ., A ir , R a d io l f , . . . . . . 1895 1968 X VV V a m p e r 1969 V o lv o 144S, 4 D r ., A u to ., R a d io 1695 1968 X XV S e d a n , S i d ................ .. ... 1795 ... 850 1971 XAV Sedan. S id .. A ir , Vices ................ 1495 196? f u r y a ir , S td ., 2 D r . . . . . . . . . . . 450 "CB" SMITH C orn er of Fifth and Lamar VOLKSWAGEN © Austin, Texas 476-9181 HERE IN FORCE SUPER CUFF BELL BOGART BAGGIES with ELEPHANT LEG CUT ’Mural Ro undup Akala Catches FEM , 5 4 -4 9 The first big showdown of the intramural basketball season left the two top-ranked teams in the same positions they occupied before the game began. A d a m s O ffers Giliman Post HOUSTON (AP)-Houston Oiler owner K.S. “ Bud” Adams said Wednesday he had offered Dallas coach Cow-boy Sid Giliman job of general manager of the Oilers. assistant the “ He came in last Saturday and we got everything pretty well covered,” Adams said. “ It ’s down to a matter of having the lawyers getting it all in black and white.” the decision was made to seek Giliman after "several high level conferences to see how wre could turn the Oilers around.” The Oiler owner said Att. Volkswagen Owners Outstanding Complete Automotive Service Across from G ulf M art G L 2-0205 C L O S E D S A T U R D A Y The Only Indepedent V W G arage in Austin to Guarantee Volkswagen Repairs M id i's Automotive Service 7951 BU R N ET R O A D S E R V IC IN G V O L K S W A G E N V E H IC L E S IS O U R S P E C IA L T Y Akala, the No. I ranked team In the top ll , rode the hot hand of Ralph Cotton to top second ranked P EM , 34-49 Tuesday night. Cotton sank 16 {>oints in the second half to help Akala overcome a 24-20 deficit at the half. Cotton finished the night with 22 points take high scoring honors. to Other standouts for Akala were Steve K rier and Julian Cano. The lending scorer for P F M was Kenneth Franks, who popped in 20 points to keep P EM in the game all the way. Robert Kallina also sparkled for P EM . There is a good chance for a return battle between Alka P EM later in the playoffs. As time divisional playoff draws n ear for v/aterbasketbal!, the team s to beat, appear to be the Stars, Akala, Acacia and D el'a Upsilon, Akala nipped Alpha Phi Omega last Thursday in a close one. Things will tighten up in the waterbasketball race as the top team s begin to play each other. Other intramural activities now' in progress include table tennis doubles, wrestling and handbag singles. In the handball singles, two former champs seem to be on the way to facirg each other for the championship. Unless an upset occurs, Terry Hankins of Delta Tau Delta and Alpha Ep ­ silon P i’s Je ff Barnes should meet in what could be the feature match of the tournament at 7 p.m. next Wednesday. Softball entries closed Tuesday, and bracket schedules are posted in 'he hall outside Gregory Gvm 33. There will ho a softball of­ ficials’ clinic at the intramural fields at 5 p.m. Thursday. Those interested in officiating softball for $2 per game should attend. For further information, contact Dennis Corrington in Gregory Gym 33 or call 471-1155. Mural Scores BA'-K I I BAI L *1 \KS \ CT Pniicp 31. c ■> N Underdog* 32 " B " Team 32, Roughnecks 27 Kxeelsor 62, Pruins 34 76 ors 23, Lead i < i ass n kets 12 T h ! D e l t a C h ! 4. ' us C h ih 3 HAMBURGER HAPPY HOUR! 2 FOR s 1 00! 2 No. I H amburgers W ITH LETTUCE, TOM ATO, M A Y O N A ISE & PICKLES. ONLY $1 00 Reg. 75c ea. S A V E 50c 411 W . 24th 472-5032 S P E C IA L G O O D 5 P.M. T O IO P.M. D A ILY TH RU SAT. THE HIG H -W A ISTED STYLING IN H.I.S., LEVI’S, PRIMO, AND H A G G E R C A S U A L AND DRESS B A G G IE S SZO UNIVERSITY FEAR! DEATH! MYSTICISM! FILMS AND DISCUSSION THURS., FEB. 22 JESTER CENTER BASEMENT 8 P.M. PANEL DISCUSSION ON MYSTICISM featuring Rev. Magister J. Lynn Powell co-ordinator of the Nexalist Collegium William F. McCown, Director Nexus Research Foundation Ltd. Bishop Robert Williams, Liberal Catholic Church 2304 G U A D A LU PE 477-7812 P.S. Shop Thursday Nites till 9 P.M. Jester Center & Texas Union Special Programs Committee Sponsored by m SHERATON F1U 8LE CASSETTE RECORDER W e have a wide selection of solid and patterned baggies pleated and non-pleated. Pre-cut with 2^2" or 2" cuffs. Also un-cut with complete altering available to please. 4 P.M. FILM S FREE A D M ISSIO N "DEATH" and "THE MERCY KILLERS" W A IS T SIZES 29-38 followed by discussion on Death B.G. Brosterhous: 'Basketball has become a business. Ifs another job' fact that Texas Un’t The winning is .something ti.at has bothered Brosterhous, since bn s a senior and a captain on a team that was suppose! to bo one of tho SW C ’s finest but has instead recently fallen to a 1-7 c o n f e r e n c e record. “ THIS S E A S O N lose L a rry has been tough,” Brosterhous said. “ First we (Robinson) two days before tho season starts, and then we start falling apart at tho end of games. After we were eliminated from contention, it has been hard getting up for games. the ’Horns upset “ I think you always want to do more in your last year, to have the highlight of your career come at the end. Mine Tim e against Houston last year (when favored the Cougars, 85-74. the NCAA playoffs). I didn’t think we had a Chinaman’s chanco, but we did it. But I wouldn't w’ant to play Houston this year down there in Hofheinz They wouldn’t let us out of there alive this year.” in Houston. in But take Brosteihous away from the subject of basketball, and he really isn't that different. H e’s your average new breed of athlete, the type that goen to class, doesn’t read comic books a majority of the time and looks toward a future. “ When I first came down here I was more concerned with being an athlete, with developing my skills.” Brosterhous said. "Now I ’m more concerned with my engineering degree. Basketball business. h a s a into school. Basketball got me become U N IV E R S IT Y O M BU D SM A N Students w ith U n ive rs ity ad m inis­ trative or other U n ive rs ity related problems should eonOu t Hec tor De Leon Ombudsm an. Union Buildin g 344. 471-3825. 1-5 p m, It has kept me here. I f s and anc:her job. “ VOL DON’T win for the ole orange and white,” he said. “ You win because that's the most fun and that’s the w'ay if s supposed to be. Winning is the goal.” But Brosterhous Isn’t ignoring the Rebounders Club or the th-a; ands of students that follow' the Horns. As far as basketball is doing football state, Brose chous has seen progress, and he is pleased. in a fall, and a “ My freshman year we got almost no support during the overlapping time of football in the winter was the e n sn a re d before! break baseball,” Brosterhous said. “ Our fan increased greatly. From 2 fans to 22. Naw, not really. It ’s gotten pretty good the last two years. Playing in Gregory else means IO points to us.” or somewhere support has But Brosterhous appreciates the changing in the role of the athlete on campu* more than the change is probably worth much more than IO points in the game of life. spirit, which in SNOW SKI! AT SAN D YLAN D 40 mi. on H w y . 71 W . SKI R EN T A L, LIFT, M O T EL, R E S T A U R A N T 1915) 388-4521 "Athletes used to never have to go to class, and the big fcotbail players used to get the girls and such. An athlete doesn't get the unfair advantage he once got. Few athletes go through school on a ride, using their athletic reputation. Sports is just sports now.” That is not I f s only the voice of American youth that has lost its competitiveness. the sound of a man who has put its proper per­ athletics spective, the sound of a man with a wife, a child and a future in Texas. into The sound of just another 6 9 University student. VW OWNERS W e maintain a complete stock of Volkswagen replacement p a rti made to original equipment specification!. Pick up ttie p arti you need at money saving price!. Bring this ad for 30 % off list price. I Over-the-counter sale! only) ALLANDALE BUG PARTS 5700 Burnet Rd. 451-5156 — 453-5567 By B K K HARVEY Texan Staff W riter B.G . Brosterhous, the best in the whole three left before he becomes University initialed postman basketball world, games just student. another has 6-9 He has seen a lot of things change in his four years at the University: antiwar sentiment, eh a m p i o n s h i p s , football b a s k e t b a l l championships, preregistration, freak vs. Greek. Texas is a different University to Brosterhous. R IT THEN', Brosterhous is a different type himself. What other kind of person would leave Klamath Falls, Ore., to attend Texas instead of entering the University of Oregon as his two brothers and father did? You would also have to call Brosterhous’ play different. He is a big man, the largest Texas has had in a number of years, and he plays about 15 feet away from the basket on offense. said Gibson. “If he’s never shot before, we’ll teach him. “ To handle the 22-caliber rifles you’ve got to be in good physical c o n d i t i o n , have good con­ centration and trigger control,” said Gibson. When the final match of the season ends late March, In Gibson will start out on a recruiting uncover promising shooting material. trip to “ I PREFER SHOOTERS with some kind of previous experience. but I ’ll take a beginner because they can make good shooters,” said Gibson. But more interest and support is needed if shooting is to indeed become what Gibson intends to make it—a recognized varsity sport. “ W e’re going to have to help each other to have a good team,” Gibson said. take time.” “ It ’ll just UNIVERSITY BICYCLE SHOP try to “ B .G .’s different from most in that he lines more postmen Leon finesse,” Texas Coach Black said. fade “ We advantage of his great ability— good hands, good eyes, good quickness, good shooting. As a center, he does more for our success than any other center could in the conference. “ PEO PLE -II DGE differently what a center should do. Some think he has to be physical, big and burly. B.G. won’t be the leading rebounder or the leading scorer. But he will do things that help us win.” for In his three years with the ’Horns, Brosterhous has done just that. But, surprisingly, he is also gaining a his reputation statistics. He has set the career Texas rebound record, is about to seasonal set rebounding record, has scored more than 300 points this year and has started all but two games in his three varsity years. He is probably the best center in the Southwest Conference. Texas the Bu t he probably won’t win that distinction, mainly because the critics that select the teams like their centers to be physical and burly, like Black said... And mainly because tho critics like their centers to be on winning teams. 'Horns Sign Two Recruits By The Associated Press All-state Pat Rockett of San Antonio I>eo and M arty Vick, an all-city defensive halfback from San Antonio Churchill, have signed scholarships to play for the Texas Longhorns. Rockett, 5-11 and 170 pounds, made the Class 4A all-state team as a defensive halfback and split receiver. He also punted and returned punts for the Volunteers, state champions in 1971 and semi­ finalists last year. A N N O U N C IN G H U N D R ED S O F F O R E IG N A N D D O M E S T IC B IC Y C L E S IN S T O C K . • S C H W IN N • G IT A N E • V O L K S C Y C L E • D A W E S 4225 Guadalupe 453-1049 T H E A D D I T I O N O F M E N ’S F D O r W E A R ” R O S S E T T I o f it a l y B y G e o r g e ! \XTe're C h o p p i n " P r i c e s ! for D E S I G N E D F O R B R I T T O N S T D C O M P L I M E N T T H E E L E G A N T N E W L O O K I N C L O T H I N G Brosterhous W aits, P a s s e s . . . a n d Talks M I K E E L I IT T . Rifle Team Seeking Support Bv DANNA' DOUGLAS Texan Staff Writer the to teams.” said Gibson. level of these other turning shooting into an accepted varsity sport, as a number of other schools have done. 15 “ I need about good shooters,” said Gibson “ I ’d like to have both men and women on the team because many of the schools we compete against have both on their teams.” Although men usually out­ number women on most varsity shooting teams, Gibson said that this need not be the case for the University’s team. “ If a woman can outshoot one of the men, then she’ll be on the varsity. There won’t he any prejudice because of sex.” said fact, Trinity G i b s o n . University’s is shooter female.” best “ In TD M \K E THE TEAM Gibson said the shooter must be able to hit on 245 of a possible 300 points. Three shots must be taken, one each from a prone, kneeling and standing position. Tile shooters, said Gibson, come from all branches of the ROTO program as well as the re^r of the student body. “ Any in shooting is eligible to try out,” interested student SAM WANTS YOU! i The Sam W itch shop ‘ y 2604-A Guadalupe J p P ' O N THE DRAG 478-1972 P O R F O O D TO G O 18 Varieties of Delicious Delicatessen-style Sandwiches Attempting to mold a reputable collegiate team without sufficient interest and support is not the easiest thing in the world. The coach of rifle team. Sgt. 1-C Richard Gibson, Is faced with such a problem. the University Tine University rifle team has been in existence for three years, with Gibson as its coach for thp last two semesters. Inuring his tenure Gibson has been disap­ pointed in the small number of shooters that have turned out for the team, to say nothing of the number of people who know there is a rifle team. “ With as large a student body as we have here, it’s a shame we don’t have a real good team,’’ said Gibson. “ Without the people, we can’t have one. of lark “ WE CAN’T the invitational a lamented. “ We ,i year from ti the University gets around $1 their shooters weapons. G O T O a lot of meets because of funds,” Gibson receive about $500 ie University, but of Houston team 5,000, and most of their own have is also ham “ The U T team dirapped because the Army, which provides the Model 40-X rifles, prohibits the shooters from modifying the weapons. Many of thp othpr tpams, however, havp a d d p d handle grips, specially-made stocks and ad­ improve justable rifle butts to their shooting. front “ If we only had the specially- made stocks we could come up Shoe Shop We make and repair boots and shoes is rifle them T h e present team, however, has some good shooters. One of junior Pat Reynolds, who has been shooting for about five years. He has been on the University team for two is considered by years Gibs in to be the team's ace. Reynolds’ top performance so far has been hitting thp small c ir­ cular target 265 times on 300 attempts from a distance of 50 feet. and ALSO AMONG THE team’s top gunners are sophomore John Tittle, another two-year man, and Leroy Thompson, a sophomore, who has been a member for one year. the Gibson referred to Reynolds and Tittle as possible Olympic nig eria] in “ about three or four years.” I^i st University fall in eight shooters participated meets, winning two and dropping four, with official results of the other two matches yet to arrive. The team has six or seven out-of- town events slated for the spring. I n c l u d i n g invitational meets sponsored by the University of Houston, U T E l Paso and U T Arlington. riflemen AMONG THE SCHOOLS the face are University Houston, St. M ary's, Texas A&M, Prairie \ iew A&M , Nichols, McNeese and Stephen F , Austin. Trinity, Rice, At present, though, Gibson's problems are getting enough in shooting, people and improving the weapons interested ★ S A L E * SHEEP SKIN RUGS Many Beautiful Colors 5 C 0 0 J $ ^ 5 0 f ★ LEATHER SALE * Various kinds, rotors - 75c per It. Capitol Saddlery ^ 1614 Lavaca Austin, Texas 478-9309 REPAIRS- E N G IN E & T R A N S M IS S IO N S P E C IA L IS T BR A K ES — TU N E-UPS — E L E C T R IC A L — C L U T C H N E W — REBU ILT — USED PA RTS JlljlS - JJ.il J SIJ u; SERVICE H I.P F R F O R M A N C E PARTS GILBERTS AUTOMOTIVE Open Sat. 477-6797 1621 East 6 E A R N C A S H W E E K L Y Blood Plasma Donors N eed e d NOW ACCEPTING MALE & FEMALE DONORS C A S H B O N U S P R O G R A M S FO R REPEA T D O N O R S Austin Blood Components, Inc. O P E N : 8 -3 p.m. Tues., Thur., brl. & Sat. 12:00 N O O N - 7 p.m. W e d . 409 W. 6TH 477-3735 SUITS W e have 83 suits in woven fabrics that have to be sold! ALTERATIONS EXTRA Reg. t o 1 1 0 . 0 0 34 8 8 SPORT COATS DOUBLE KNITS - Limited Group 30 88 M a n y Giber Items Drastically R educed SHOP & SAVE lh r f S ten ry A 9 yatwtoMi* SORRY ALL SALES FINAL R:\nk.\m erirard M aster C harge A m e rican E x p re ss N EXT T O THE T EX A S T H EA T R E Brittons Th e Da il y T e x a n Thursday, February 22, IDI ■■■■ 0+ ■ m J0*** I 0 ^ I ............... TSP OKs Graduate Students Ordinance Due Hearing beek A m e n d m e n t to Trust A g r e e m e n t Doara l o * B y R O B B I E V H R S I I V IJ , T p tj u i S t a f f \ \ r t £«■ r a TH® Texas Studo; • 11. • i* of r.‘s rn - ■ • >n board. t ^ 7 ■ ■< ' n ' ‘ in ' The pro r^tv i ,•>■■ * >nt • pass arnjrir.v bv 'h* n and final a p p roval i rd of Rrgents. moving. v tnt* Hon; Tivo nrr-j it IO sals to change th? (largo and journal ism ''rani member < worn aid a I; » referred tho SP Handbook version ;if T ex,rn Hficafbas f.»r Ifr-rna* i af tho f. OPEN 24 HOURS A S Y O U I S K E B O O K S T O R E IT A V A I A 4 77.0363 M A G A Z IN E S N O V E L T IE S X X X RATED ------ P A P E R B A C K S 8mm DHM E R O T IC B O T IQ U E 25c PEEP S H O W S ") our Pleasure Is Our Business a Chris Harte. graduate L i o n e s s s t u d e n t w h o w a s r u l e d inohgible to run fir tho at-larg'* :• -si" ion because o f his burd standing appeared l: ■ lu ' • before tho hnard and asked that f > <>-k be roused to allow gradu ito s’udon’s h> sp; ve. Student ( D i c k B amr,wimr,n* comp sill"! for inurn a I lovornmont President an tisnn pi .posed mgr* the student of the* board from ’n students and two Injured Student Listed 'Serious' in Iii . ml Carter. 20, a Dand the freshman University - of F Hp Arts, remained C is condition Wednesday in ' in R c a r k e n r i d g p Hospital foi • • mg accident a one-car M inday afternoon. ( ' i f r suffered head and in- te: ’ al nm: un when his car ran off State Highway 71. about ?1 nu 'es 'a'-st of Oak Hill near Austin. A passenger in the car. Lind ti ( lone Troxell, v as treated and released from the hospital. jour­ at-large students nalism students and four at-large students. two to The motion failed by a ftve-to- two vote. ratio to and Benson then moved to change journalism three the students at-large representatives. Til at m o t i o n faller] by a four-to-two vote, with one abstention. three at-large, Harte, who a d v o c a t e d six board places having all elected "The said. vanity of the journalism students on that the board, who think about 2 percent of the students paving mandatory fees for The Texan should have 87 percent of the student representation on the board, is rather astounding.” TTie In other action, t h e board heard and accepted suggestions from Martin Gibson, assistant j o u r n a l i s m professor and chairman of The Daily Texan Format Committee. for called suggestions type designation of available it faces its new facilities, a moves to the change possibility the designation “ Summer Texan” bv Texan printing regularly the year, beginning in .Tune. 1974. The throughout for The Texan when in page size and changing Daily of lf You Need Help or Just Someone Who Will Listen Telephone 176-7073 At Any Time The Tpipphone Counseling and Referral Serv ice NUCLEAR PROPULSION - THE ULTIMATE CHALLENGE JL By ll VRHIKT III BBARD Texan Staff Writer City Council will conduct a public hearing on the proposed consumer affairs ordinance at 7 pm . Thursday at the Electric Building, 301 West Ave. Cary' .Tones representative of Save the University' Neighborhoods (SU N ), will request a public hearing on the proposed street construction plans for 24th and 25th Streets in the University area. The consumer protection ordinance has three main features, dealing with enforcement, criminal sanctions and counseling and referral services. The ordinance would create a City- County Office of Consumer Affairs headed by a director of consumer af­ fairs and would negotiate a contract for professional counseling and in­ formation services with a private, nonprofit group or groups experienced in consumer protection activities. Duties of the counseling and include in­ in­ formation service would dividual in­ vestigation and referral services for counseling, consumer public information all citizens off the city and county, and preparing education on consumer problems of widespread concern, gathering and evaluating data relating to recurring consumer complaints, and reporting to further the measures necessary to the scheme of consumer protection. county on Improve city and A Citizens Advisory Council on Consumer Affairs would be created by It would contain 15 the ordinance. members, at least 8 members chosen from persons recommended by Tex- P JR G . Consumer Counseling, Inc., Association of Retired Persons, Texas Better Consumer Association Business Bureau. and “ Unfair, deceptive or unconscionable in the conduct of trade or commerce” would be tv ts or practices any unlawful under the ordinance. Such practices include “ representing that goods or sendees have spon­ s o r s h i p , approval, characteristics, ingredient, uses, benefits or qualities they do not have” and “ representing th at goods arc original or new if they are deteriorated, altered, reconditioned, reclaimed, used or secondhand.” Lloyd Dogged, president of Texas Consumer Association, helped for­ mulate this ordinance as well as a similar proposal the Legislature. introduced in is still needed Even if the consumer protection bill legislature, “ local Is passed by the enforcement to sup- p’emenf state” measures. Daggett said. David Dillard, editor of Right-On, opposes ordinance, proposed maintaining that the “ consumer is his ©avn best protector.” the Councilman Je ff Friedman said SU N members indicated to him that they “ want to bp in on the initial planning stages” of the 24th and 25th streets programs. that City Manager Den Davidson an­ funds n o u n c e d Wednesday available to Austin from the Depart­ ment of Housing and Urban Develop­ ment (H U D ) for Model Cities will be on’v $989,000 this year. In each of the last (avo years, Austin has received 13,454,000 for the program. ^ I'imr’jiimnnmRiitiimiTmnjTntmmimtnimiiiimminmnfnniniriiitHtt'fnnfnwMiiiiif'fififnninmfinrmjiiiiml'imiiiiimffniiftimm'm YSA Candidate for Reform face.” Kahn s'-ted. By M XKK H EC K M A N N Texan Staff W rifer Brad “ Bucky” Kahn, Young S o c i a l i s t Alliance endorsed candidate for Student Govern­ ment president, -aid Wednesday his overall goal is to reform the Student Government. “ My reason for running for president is to m ak ° tho Student Government responsive to and interest of thft serving student body—to make it a real tool for social change and bet­ terment of the conditions students in the THE FIRST O R G A N IZ A T IO N A L M EET IN G O F RO UNDUP '73 W IL L BE HELD THURSDAY FEB. 22, 8 p.m. at the DELTA UPSILON FRATERNITY HOUSE 2510 Leon. Information concerning Round-Up will be given and questions will be answered. For more info. Call 476-8616 Tile main goal of his campaign, Kahn said, is to end the election O''de restrictions. He supports an end to grade-point averages and hours restrictions for candidates. he I estrictions said, “ Campaign are and unnecessary,” “ allow candidates to hide behind an attractive brochure instead of having debates and discussing the issues.” Other concerns of his cam­ paign, the candidate said, will he to replace administration control with chicano control of chicano education and black control of black education. Kahn said he also supports women’s liberation, including free abortion facilities and free birth control information and devices NELSON'S GIFTS 4612 So. CONGRESS Phone: 444-3814 • ZUNI AND NAVAHO INDIAN JEW ELR Y • MEXICAN IMPORTS OPEN IO a.m. to 6 p.m. ‘ G IF T S TH A T IN C REASE IN VALL I-:" in (hp Student Health Center. He the Health Center should said women recruit preferentially doctors for female patients. In his campaign, Kahn also will stress complete student-faculty control of the University and the opening of all University facilities to the taxpayers. Kahn will focus on building the student movement, supporting the lettuce boycott and demanding from all of U.S. withdrawal Southeast Asia. A s e n i o r R-T-F major, Kahn has hem af the University since t h e fa ll o f 1939 He left for a y e a r to participate in the antiwar m o v e m e n t in Fort Worth and D a l l a s . Texas Union Offers 2 Sailing Sessions The Texas Union Recreation Committee is sponsoring a spring sailing school in two sessions this semester. University students, faculty and staff m ay register for both sessions in Union Building 342 through Friday. Designed for students with iittle or no sailing experience, each course consists of three hours of sailing theory and about seven hours of actual sailing on Town Lake, The f est session will begin Monday, and the second will start March 19. A $15 fee covers the cost of texfb ok, materials, instruction and the use of boats during the course. C l a s s r o o m instruction trill include study of virid force, sailing positions, sailing in ad­ verse conditions and a few pointers on racing. Special em phasis w ill b* given to .safety instruction. The class v ill lie held week the Union Building. nights at During the first two weeks, two students will accompany each instructor for one and a half-hour lessons on Town Lake. Solo those who sailing qualify, The course v, ii] conclude regatta-free sail per rid with a when students may their skills in a short race. follows test for ■ % i*£s its.->* mSmL' Tse* A PROUD NEW WORLD C O M E FLY W IT H ME! FREE T-34 FLIGHTS tm*** mmi i B A G Gwith PLEATS & C U F F S AT Bob Elli . . . t h e b u ll fa te s m ix e rs ... oben THUR till pool IM A G E S FOR C H IC K S AND DUDES O N THE DRAG THE W O R L D S REST T R A IN IN G M A K ES T H E W O RLD 'S BEST PILO TS r ,,^*0 i ^ / ** UA »/#*%. PS. YO U C A N FLY WITH G LA SSES AS A N A V A L FLIGHT OFFICER! PA TRO L BO A TS — IN TI IE FIN EST T R A D IT IO N OF JO H N PA U L JO N E S ' S M TRANSCENDENTAL MEDITATION Transcendental m editation is a natural spontaneous technique of d eep relaxation which allows each individual to expand his conscious mind and im prove all aspects of his life. Introductory Lectures As Taught By Maharishi Mahesh Yogi T H U R S D A Y FEB. 22 — 7:30 P.M. Jester 3 I 5A AD M ISSIO N FREE FOR M O RE IN FO RM ATIO N C A L L 474-4236 Students' International Meditation So cie ty- non-profit educational organization—• SPEED READING COURSE SET TO BEGIN AT U.T. National Speed Reading Schools announces the for­ mation of speed reading classes this spring at U.T. to be held The stills taught in this course will enable a person to read any average length book in less than an hour and understand it better. In addition to rapid read­ ing the course also empha­ sizes improved study tech­ niques, better test taking skills, and increased con­ centration and retention abilities. For those who would like more informalion, without obligation to enroll, a series of free one hour orienta­ tion lectures have been scheduled. Attend the one most convenient for you. MON., FEB. 26 6:30 - 8:30 p.m. TUES., FEB. 27 6:30 - 8:30 p.m. WED., FEB. 28 6:30 - 8:30 p.m. Classes are limited to 12 THUR., M A R C H I 6:30 - 8:30 p.m. students. Graduates of the course are guaranteed a All meetings will be con- reading speed over 1,000 words per minute with a ducted in Barcelona Room definite increase in com- of the Castilian, 24th and prehension. I San Antonio. * IT IS BY NO M E A N S ENOUGH T H A T A N OFFICER O F THE NAVY SH O U LD BE A CAPABLE M ARIN ER HE M UST PE THAT OF C O U R S E BU’ ALSO A G R EA T DEAL M O C - SHOULD BE AS W ELL, A G EN T LE M A N OF LIBERA L ED UC A TIO N REFINED M A N N ERS PU N C TILIO U S C O U RTESY, AND THE N IC EST SENSE O F PERSONAL H O N O R . HE SHOULD BE THE SOUL OF TA CT PATIENCE. JUSTICE, FIRMNESS A N D CHARITY." F O R FREE T-34 FLIGHTS S E E Y O U R N AVY O FF IC E R IN FO R M A T IO N TEAM TAYLOR H A LL BEB M AIN FOYER FEB. 20-2 I FEB. 22-23 N D ERC -R a.D S c a m P ly in g - YO R N A V Y e a r n L O N G W A Y w h i l e c o m . ! EGE ENROUTE t o A COMMISSION IN t e a m — THE BOLO ONES! Page 8 Thursrhy, February HT T H E D A IL Y T E X A N S u p e r Bu ll. Vodka and Schlitz Man Liquor on-the-rocks with a lemon twist. Bull Cooler. Schlitz Malt l ;quor and any dry whde wine. g Spanish Bull. Strafe up some Schlitz Malt Liquor, tomato juice, a i dash of Worcestershire sauce and two drops of Tabasco sauce. Look out for the Bull i I’ Nobody m akes malt liquor like Schlitz. Nobody. W M T LIQ UOR J —ITW-' I' - ©1973 Jos Schlitz Brewing C o , Mi Waukee and other great cities. T H E H O E F G E N C O M P A N Y Tremor Rocks S. California LOS A N G E LE S (A P )- A rolling earthquake shook the Southern C a l i f o r n i a wast Wednesday m o r n i n g , cracking plaster, starting shattering windows, several inflicting and property damage. fires The structural damage, mainly to older buildings, was heaviest in Oxnard, a coastal city of 70,000 persons, 50 miles northwest of I-os Angeles. Estimates by the State Office Emergency Preparedness placed damage there at up to $1 million, mostly in cracked walls, broken windows and collapsed roofs. Several minor injuries were of reported. the Institute of C a l i f o r n i a seismologists T c c h n o l o g y intensity of the measured quake at roughly 5.75 on the Richter scale and said it was centered in the ocean off Pt. Mugu, near Oxnard. JO LT IN G S L E E P IN G residents at 6:46 a.m. and lasting about 20 seconds, the quake recalled the 6.5 temblor of Feb. 9, 1971, in which 64 persons died. Thaf quake, the San Fernando Valley north of here, struck at 6:01 a.m. centered in “ It felt like the end of the world,’’ said Richard Rodriguez, 32. manager of a Mayfair market estimated in Oxnard, who damage at $10,000. Outside of Oxnard and the rest southern Ventura County’, of residents reported mostly falling plaster and broken dishes, along whit tattered nerves. I ROM R E S ID E N T S Santa Barbara on the north and San Diego to the south said they felt the jolt, and shocks were noticed as far inland as San Bernardino. “ Oh, Lord, did I feel it,’’ ex­ claimed admitting clerk Sarah at Ventura County Squirrel! Hospital just in Ventura. nilled. I ’ was terrible. It seemed to last, a long time.’’ “ It “ It was like ■ slap in the face,” exclaimed one housewife. “ The deeper we get into this thing, the more damage we’re finding,” said Oxnard Police Lt. Max' Inson. T H R E E RO( K S L ID E S were reported in Ventura County and lanes; of the one blocked all Pacific Coast Highway for a time hut the way was open to traffic again by S:30 a.m. though The quake occurred along the Malibu coastal fault, reported the state Division of Mines and Geology. Even it ap- parently was centered close to the shoreline, authorities at the Naval Air Missile Test Center in nearby P L Mugu said 'here were no signs of high wave action. resembled a “ thunderous explosion” to Larry Jenkins, an employe of the Mayfair market in Oxnard. The front window's disintegrated and merchandise was thrown to the floor. quake The Nixon Predicts Price Relief W A S H I N G T O N (A P )- Prcsident Nixon said Wednesday his effort to halt tho food-pr:'e spiral will have a powerful effect in the sewnd half of the year and bring the American o. n sumer relief without cutting farm income. In a nationwide rad:o message, tho President also defended his cuts in the federal budge*, saving they' will “ do more than anything family else budget.’’ to protect your Borrowing a phrase from Franklin D. Roosevelt, Nixon wound up his address with the “ we could be warning wrecked on the rocks of loose fiscal policy” federal budget gets out of control. that tim if In a prelude to his economic State of th# Union report to be sent to Congress Thursday, Nixon said h# wanted to tell Americans how the economy affects them and their family budgets. T R E P R E S ID E N T focused o- the most difficult problem facing his eeonomic policymakers—food prices. are The cost of living figure^ for January and February', when published. will t h e y in­ sharp show' “ inevitably large of because creases'’ wholesale food-pt ice increases in recent months, he said. “ In fact, w# will probably see increases in food prices for some months to come,’’ Nixon sold. adding that the underlying cause is 'hat food supplies have failed to keep up with tho demand. Recounting m e a s ii r e s through supplies expand the Agriculture Department. Nixon said they would stop the rise of wholesale and eventually retail fowl prices. food prices “ I N I D R H N \TELY, they can­ ner do much about priers n the next few months, but they will have a powerful effect in the sec­ ond half of tho year.” he said. “ They will bring relief to the Arn-''ii can housewife with,rut dam­ aging the prosper;ty of tho farm­ e r . ’ ’ Ho said farm income is “ higher than ever, and it will go even higher as we farm production.” increase In his radio address, die Presider* said he devalued the dollar to correct a “ serious trade imbalance which could threaten your pros {verity.” He said that step must Ive followed bv mere basic reforms, such as revamping the world monetary system to make It more flexible. I I I I I s i s o rn i rn NI O N \ Ii I i i vi moi I R \ N I nit i r \i i \\ " M I P S il l < T ra v e l l h * l l I <) I i'fr i - I Harwood 2' 8 AUSTIN, TU K A S A ' •> .U P L T I ? A \ / C l I K A Y CL China, U.S. To Issue Report Improved Trade Relations Expected WASHINGTON ( A P ) — T h e United States and Communist issue a joint com­ China will is ex­ munique Thursday that perted to report new' strides in The relations betw*een the two nations. the communique o u t g r o w t h of Henry A. talks with lengthy Kissinger's in- Chinese leaders in Peking, is eluding Chairman Mao Tse-tung The White House said it will be mad** public in Peking and lf) a.m. CST Washington at Thursday. Guidelines Eased O n Redistricting said for the majority that e* en in 1964 when the court first ap­ plied “ one-man, one-vote” the standard to state districts legislative allowed greater it flexibility from perfect equality t h a n U.S. congressional lines. drawing in w a sh TNI I TON ( A P ) - T h e Supreme Court Wednesday gave state legislatures considerable leeway in reapportioning them­ selves. The five-to-three ruling said strict population equality bs not constitutionally required w’hen the to maintain s t a t e s want c ry traditional b ‘Undaries. county- and The court specifically approved a Virginia plan with a range of af least 16.4 percent from the 'largest to the smallest district in the House of Delegates. four-judge The plan had been upset by in a federal court Richmond which went on to substitute for it one that broke in­ political boundaries s t a n c e s but the p-pulation variance to a little more than lh percent. reduced in 12 Acting on an appeal by state officials, the high court reinstated tire General Assembly's scheme with tho exception of a Senate district in Norfolk. Justice William H. Rehnqur-t for trade possibly improved relations, the establishment ct trade missions in tile two coun­ tries, 'Iller# also have been reports that Kissinger may have made s me headway in negotiating the lelease of three Americans brid prisoner rn Communist China. lr was learned Vririesday that Communist Party chief Lewi id letter to Nixna Brezhnev sent haling th*-' peace agreement in Vietnam as having a “ positive effect” on U.S.-Soviet relations. Brezhnev told Nixon tho war’s cud could open new possibler .es “ development and for deepening'’ of such relations “ and we stand for such a course c f p o l i c y future ' ' Kissinger, who has reported to President Nixon nine© his return from Asia Tuesday, w ill hold a newg conference at the White House to discuss the communiqu^ and details of his visit to both Pekin.’ and Hanoi talk* Kissinger’s in Hanoi in establishment of a resulted joint economic commission to consider pos:war reconstruction aid fen North Vietnam. While the White House has declined to give any details on the forthcoming China com­ munique. it is exper ted to provide A TRIBUTE TO A REVOLUTIONIST: THE LAST YEAR OF MALCOLM X film: Malcolm X in: Struggle for Freedom Speaker: Steven Fuchs, Socialist Workers Party C andi­ date for C ity Council, will speak on "The Last Year of Malcolm X: the Evolution of a Revolutionary." Thurs., Feb. 22, 8:00 p.m., Union 202 Sponsored by: Young Socialist Alliance, 1801 Nueces K n O B S E C E N T E R D O B I E C E N T E R R O B K E C E N T E R R O R K E C E N T E R SS U Honeywell Suddenly, HONEYWELL PENTAX is 30% O FF LIST PRICE! HONEYWELL PENTAX SPOTMATIC Ila in Strobo-Lye takes the uueswvork out of flash! ith bt PACKAKGE DEAL! YOU MAY MYER SEF THESE LOW PRICES AGAIN! 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H ig h ly accu rate tbrou g h -fh e-len s e x p o su re m e te rin g sxstem , shutter sp e ed s u p to t/500th o f a s e c o n d , I P an d X sy n c h ro n iz a tio n . YOU'LL (.ET THE MOST FOR YOUR M ONEY IN THE PENTAX SP500 0 a S H3CX&1&2 & K BLO O GREAT FOR COLOR OR EJ & W W O R K WHERE ARE THESE GREAT BUYS? P CAPITOL CAMERA HONEYWELL NIKOR S T A IN LESS STEEL R O C K IN G PRINT T RAYS Mxl 4 Size UST PR IC E 37.50 16x20 size LIST PR IC E $59.50 v' NOW! I SOQ97 im J I J POR BOTH TOTAL 97.00 O F C O U R SE. 14 DOBIE M A LL 476-3581 3H 810IX H O tX JN S O 3CXEKQIX l& 3 U ljN 2 0 31X010011 THE DAIEY TEXAN Thursday, February -J, 1373 Page £3 a § n sta I a a n a « rn R H L l D % a a a ’r f Ia ii» T I I S : 9 a I M rn i n 89 8 JKI M C l M 8 O a & n a p H , — 51T S t ?"*~w ® r r &*■ hi mm I ?& • ***** * d * 1 «*C/ _____ $ I. „ J Close Coll An 'mrfhqufltto that rocked Southern California Wednesday knocked bricks from the building next to the phone booth where en unidentified n-mn squeezes in to make a call. UPI Telephoto. SANDWICH SEMINAR Friday-Noon 25c 25c Student Christian fellowship 1909 University Ave. John Allen Clark will discuss Baptism and Fullness of the Holy Spirit IS A N X IE T Y IN T E R F E R IN G W IT H Y O U R P E R F O R M A N C E O N TESTS? Investigate the Test Anxiety Program at the Counseling-Psychological Services Center. W.M.O.B. 303 M-F 9-5 ' . o : . - O ' ' jC\? j~\r i v c ^ ' r ' E V - ' Vs, ‘A" N ' V \ A t# n i i KW ‘ V, f c c s ulteifl\ ! cl ce 506 W 1/th live Oriel!al Cldhirq fem ti e B O D MCS BRIDALA m D S H O P P E AND FOR][ALS , r .jR y 4016 N. L A M A R "/ FT/:, / t . ' r?’o / fd A - - .N .,. t - y> I ; y \ s *. v ~ T . v % * v- * it Sd u Sd X 5 0 a aSd H St Sd u aM 8 a a a a H SS a a a a B a a h a se a a** a a a a a a i* vt a aMa a u a a a * vt a aM y a aa a a se a a aM • . L O W STUD ENT RATES t S VLK Lab rad o r red G A R A G E S A L E nd m ;x. S e vt ii v * - ks t. 4 76 i 1 6 I t.c S t t I i i rf ha i; n e a r 6 th. I ... T V . F I id i> if bi a. , Sun R A U S T A I R E A S H , - ’■ adar p. '-IHit ■ 's i! 147-3731, t h u k. F O R B A L I ! I S 1*17(1 ll. CI- \ S S II I ! I) M n R H T ! SI N O ti \ I I " K n e ll N ord 15 word m inim um $ ....... $ ........... S J ? Id iitto iia l Tim # ........... i 06 .55 .05 E » ' h Student rill- on# time I u h additum ii word ? Texan F rid a J Texan th u rsd ay, IVednesdnj, ti OO a rn. It OO ii hi “ In the ex en! of erro rs m ade In an advertisem ent. Im m ediate ttotire m ost he ris e n as the publisher* are tesponsltde tor .Mill im o rre rt Insertion MI ( Ulnas for adjustments should be m ade not tater than 30 daxs alle r p ub licatio n ." IIN I 15 word* or lev* *or 75c th# first I ’ro#, 5 c each ad d'Ho"#! word. "tu­ dor* mu*! *how A uditor1* receipt Journalism and pay Bldg 107 from 8 a.m. to 4:30 p m M on day through Friday. in advance in W e hax *b <■ rise c. I. t 4t. ; $• : ’A. •non p ip of ; • IV* ks Bonks i t ors i , I P * ' G U I 1 V R S S tr,: ii Du 1972 V U F o r S a l e F o r S a l ! A p a r t m e n t s , FubmTM A p a r t m e n t s . F u r n . — A p a r t m e n t s , F u r n . ■ ■ a p a r t m e n t s , T u r n . n V H US self,...nt;, -nod. See Texaco ' v Holiday A P O R T A ! I ne by in I •it PONCE DE LEON iv \ . i " A ' K . G ° . j V 11 ’ '• si at. i ll •! es lan ­ : err -rex n i u o i i c ” e S S i ” ~ S , S P A N K IN G N E W efficiencies and one L ALI P L l , , r,b m a ! L f “ ,Ct , There I . l f ' 1. i,«A-a T e L* * Colorful apartm ent homes are n e a r, Innsbrook. bedrooms at , c v s * stnjsust % s » IN V I-: I: n N’i t ti I!' SC I • I 4 t-t.x to or SOUNDEX e s te r e o e .'i: - es i . od <52 4031. 11 ii l l ) KUO N il.l! dy ro ug h: 1225 Van, runt V U B r8 7( th ISM BS V U is ac ■as. A I tee en bi *'d !-:. .m vs, dials, one MV. aftei 'I n o m i l t : rebuilt b: I I til" ’ of tm ■ nod IX 13 A -1 Le-n St. 4 6 5618 •x re - 'xx ■ T W O BLOCKS UT $ 142.50, a!I bills p a N I b- i rn •••• x x ■■ a C A C H , carpel ■ er C' e-. -i n y , nr eg, ' cc 3 2101 F o O r d gel© 477-8146 * 820 r '. ' e- f ♦-) rj 444 I re ?. I 'd; at I.A R G H S E F ! . I ) ’.N CI HS. S II ', plus e lec tricity, p. cl, a ir < >2. p lu s h c a r p i t. T W i j B H I >R( x )M a1 hills paid < hie Idock f; un law S e ll ml 'a . C A /i 2 11 I! 3212 I ted R i v e r 478 0672 F * r C 1808 W cst A v e n u e MI N Spring v.u aneles - Larg e do ibk A /C l I C a r p * ted rooms n :!e F1 REPLACES E f ■ " 'ii a ry Ai irtn lei Is in front of your Apt. in M rri 1.ounge I new aijarl- I and v these < oral merits. A I' bills ' pal'd, Me \*i can Hie I nicely model ‘ Dors cabin* blo, on the shuttle bus rte de. Read y ta sh owe move in C all 47* -1382 AC, n ! I11 E a u 37'til 61 - 172-15(1 After 5 (fe w eekcnds fire'wood furnished. flee T V a i les, m aid T W I I P H I dUC KYM furnished Wa ah f; c di- I B I K E U r n , , ' • si r\ ices, sw im m ing pool, shutth at front door. 1 'ava W alking distance to University Her Apartm ents, 397 E a st 31st.’ 472-7611. jan ’ >r and ments, 2425 Elmont, 442-2736. W A H , A R L E N O W B E S T D E A L IN T O W N I. R D I Ex p ...sition n e a r shuttle ‘ .'OB H IL L A P T S , overlooking Pease '-'.'J bedroom ; Furnished, Park. cn» a-d p ie -sally $100/month. G as Lei s pa d. ind.- dual A C , d how i t . vented gas heat 15.000 B T U • pels covered p arking Show n by owner 478-4356. 5 mirier and F f / " P r 'g 2520 Lo ng vlev No. 302 477-8’ 4l M O D E R N , Q U IE T , L A R G E 3 room - j B O B B Y E D E I A IT E L D , I B M S e le c te e — , a ■ ricr, e. 413- utilities paid. p riva te entrance. $100. pica/clite. 2,5 y ea: l.ast side Lak e Austin. M ale adult. Bo at 71M dock - $15. 472-38.58. _____................. ... .. .................... $1 2 . route. E F F I C I E N C Y O N «hag shuttle bus full carpet, kitchen, central AU and h e a t Casa Felice, 4204 Speedw ay, 453-0060. Includes T A R R Y T O W N M INT-efficiency, m ature laundry, trees, patio, p e r s o n , shuttle, pool, bills paid. $95. 465-7950. T r( CROCKETT Co. FasU themes, d sse typ ng of ;se* ply*! FA ST X E R O X 40'. M U L T I1 U h . BINDI!* 453-7987 SS30 Burnet R-sd N I C E E F F I C I E N C Y A P A R T M E N T . $75 per month w h ich includes all utilities, 6th and W est L y n n 476-9079, ROY W . HOLLEY: w a rran ty. R ut > 3 p! ase lifte r 6 r rn. •ne week- 6,) C H I V Y Pa n e l Trot k 11 lei P S A , I err.: ::, f: wk .o ... 1970 $9)0 Jo e 172 5302 S T K ! ; F O ( O' • Pl N (• N I S M u L O N D A CH ,90 \ \ rn tarring at 8' 3.170783 runs. 452 6943. ann n I rn rn rv739 C l BSC ry stereo price Dual, c.arrnrd ITI I- ■'!( Hi 'N! * A i d I < S IU L B Y ; ,u ii. en Pine it id mn. ■VTI R FI E F M A R E RD C anaunter: ectni :fy. W eek days af bedroom ATP: share S'-. b p.m. X) r:,Y! ii: E l M V E E R O O M ' bedroom, two I 472-2147. ■ii > T' C n rr'e books. M arve's, D C . K <' RADE Ider, dard, good ' l l W IN N V A R S IT Y !, with car i cassette I ' a/irr to V tnn and sh it'ie $'.(* p,> . !■ E M V L K R I X IM M VT lu si' ittle, 39*hi and bp bedroom one PEPPERTREE 4 54- re v 70 F \’ ipped ? r - dab ! \ S M il I* E N T AN SPC IT M A' f 1-1: also 13.5mrn f 3-5 ■ OO p (I Pl- F F E M A L E R O O M . amex a p ,in n < T O P C A SH P R I 1 ’ i'.s pa!4 for diam old g< id. * a pi ml I ".a mood Sim p r# P e r r y . 476-0178 Comm PANTS (ESH P A R 4 W 24 J T m 1 I n,mdA ; •T>liiVol*rx'-U,tUTe G ops apartm ents, spacious V ' u A, . I W O and (unfurnished t h r o e bedroom available* A p a r t m e n t s , F u r n . coe u : <»c.i T - - I Ar, t.- ris n , ’ ' ~ P a W - B e l ont. pool, laun dry, carpeted, U A /CH. kitchen built in. Fro m $159.50. Im p e ria l N orth­ west Apartm ents. 315-2056. 476-4655. W A L K T W O Blocks to cam pus. L a rg e | L A R G E E F F I C I E N C Y , close to cam- E ffie ie n c y and 2 bedroom apart- ’ E ffic ie n c y and 2 bedroom apart- ’ Dus> wood paneled. ‘ CA-CH. shag I O N E B L O C K L a w ' f m ud- A fully carpet*-'! pool. study ‘ arpet. nu b u ilt in kitchen, pool, sm all V I E W room, p a rty room. Priced from $135 00. ■ in i F. 1, 405 i , 31-t bd ; P -I SH ,,* apartm ents. 4200 Avenue A. 454- orated G a s w a te r- T V • -«4. ' __________________________ $122..Vt. J96.33.Vt School T O W E R ­ Apartm ents. L a rg e n icely dec- cable paid also a va - u b k ^ jw c .bede, mi, two bath j | 900 Bu rf On Drive , I --------------------- M V F : ROY' im J I cdr i’m . able pud I! i (iii • | est J T.Y'! Right on clubm eni. pud, fri Pl $1 1.5 VMI!! I I Cit The Saxony, and and ■val L A R G E N K W A P A R T M E N T S N E V E R L I V E D IN F U R N I S H IID O re b. drooin, with lease ? 142 E fficie n t es w ith lease $'22 one bedroom, one bath THI-: A V A LO N 32nd St In te rre g io n al 478-496.7 153-2228 I)(.»',W T t JWN are T W D Ji ’ m in ­ us . a w a y La rg e me and two bed- >■ oix w ith I: n kuchens, carpeting in a furnished i pool. S m all complex Fro m $175 location living re-' H West A ve 177-3915. I' THE BLACKSTONE 7 A A e n A p a r t m e n t s , F u r n . HILLTOP APARTMENTS $ 129.00 — up EFFICIENCIES ONE AND TW O BEDROOM APTS. FURNISHED AND UNFURNISHED Beautiful decor, large pool, party room hills of South Austin off Riverside Drive Shuttle bus route 5 M I N U T E S from c-unn In b eauti­ fu lly shaded Fre n ch P la c e R eal b ar­ gain. Must sell. C all owner 472-5902 after 5 OO p rn. R o o m s B o a r d G R A D U A T E W O M E N 'S Co-Op, (o ver 21) has room-bcard vacan cies - $90.67- (one) boarder - $30 00- month. Also rnonth. 2309 Nuci es, 477-0225. W O M E N : S M IT H Co-op. roont-board, air conditioned, $74 TO month. 47$ 7216, 2619 W hltis. T r a v e l 442-9612 RUSS:A-SCANDINAVIA 5 weeks, $387 He ■' e Lcrd o a d * p e r Ira <■ * . res. Sme r.terne'ional q ro:.p acc-- J 9 3' A lo f re , A • ca 3-11 weeks. W rite : d a 'A - ■ e F a 1' T r a . e , Ltd., E :< 1497, K .C ., M o . 64 4 i. LA FIESTA APARTMENTS 400 E. 30til 477-1800 rnished, pool, laundry room, TY cab’e, maid service Two blocks from campus 2 Bedrooms, 2 Baths $64.50, person Bills Paid IO R< A P i V , A ’ i speed. se i I, bes: 3 '.l h i: 3 bed! MM Ad'17 V. \ N T E D t< i m o biIe h one. i call 385 5201 I !• E M A L E w ith one : (K IM M A T E V TNT bedroom, two bath h s c a r Ben W hite. 117 A I E M A L K IV n IM M \ S hare two bedroom three girls, Shuttle. 451 i i m a l i : r o o m m a t largo 2 to droom, 2 I p in , 471-2834 \T r o o m : A L E a p a i tm* ut re ie r quiet I die: I bills paul 477-v re s t T W I I . bi 417 , F ; M A L E iii KYM M I! week M arch. IO .3 13 plus bills M A L E R O O M M A T E N E E D E D *! M a y), com fort blo i-nvirimmi n n. >nth plus hills, > "all 177 105! E l M M.F! R( K im M A TH N E E I v 2 -J ; p ••• tment, f > ir blot k s fret A ll bills F . b ru a iy rent free $> d, c a ll 41 ii i v m VT D W N b ii l f 6769 M ke i EL. CAPITAN APARTMENTS 1500 Reagan Hills Drive Large party room, large pool, shag carpet, G, E, kitchens 2 bedroom - 2 bafh I bedroom - I bath $ 134 up 465-8668 Newly c .ag#, p ale, and ref: gerator a ow ad. hew V I R G I N I A S C H N H o t I - 'D E R T Y P I N G G rad uate and Un- typing, printing, binding. : 151.) Koenig Lan e. Telephone: 465-7205, dergraduate • Free narking on# bleck from C am p 477-5777 476-9265 A p a r t m e n t s , F u r n . dOOM luxury apart- tIe Student nu ' aged. s paid 15-t 9-175. - c: “ • j 453-7961 J-., .l N , NF IT E F F R 'I !■ N Y a pa rt- $125, ail bills cr ii ra id . sn Lake J • - O N E P l K U n iversity. 3 room mod- all paid. rooms $60 up Al- ■ .se Mt Bunnell GRO.1700 M ! Bt * H tic I R I S H Y A M A H A F : M U 65 G A L M ' • k h CIRCLE STEREO S I RA : A S T I -a nee ' G I. Biont I I I MI $399 HOUSE P! ANTS re C - *- Q h ir e l f ) ' 4 7 6 - 0 9 4 7 : r \ r P F R E P L A ! A d ' ? 4 7 1 icney: dish .ttir, $129.00 O A P T S 'a TV I 4 7.6 4 C ? 5 LA FO NTAN A $ 124.00 One and two bedrooms. Furnished & Unfurnished C !ose to Hancock and Capital Plaza Shopping centers, Easy access to IH 35. Students and families welcome. 1220 and 1230 East 38UA Street 454-6738 small deposit THE FRENCH FLAGE I UT MARRIED STUDENT APARTMENTS G A T E W A Y — C O L O R A D O $ 40 B i:, P a d . GREAT O AK APARTMENTS AVAILABLE N O W : G A T EW A Y $112 plus Electricity G A TEW A Y 2 Bedroom Unfurnished $112 plus Electricity CO LO RAD O 2 Bedroom Unfurnished $ 96 plus Electricity I Bedroom Furnished J ADC I IONA G A T EW A Y APARTMENTS AVAILABLE ON APRIL I AND MAY I .A N O R T H a-d I -1 IS On# Apply: Hoyina and Food Service Office KH- vlng Dormitory — 26th St. Entrance P a n a s o n i c SG999i> t * re.tabu- >. t ■ aw sty - W ,y systems f t . A c r best offer 477 .vc, a c o u s tic peakf A*'! F M St* r*"> susp ensio n 4 . i v ' : 454-1753 472-5129 P. O. Box 7666 Tel. 471-3136 434 - 3 Austin 787 i 2 Pas,e IO Fe biliary _j, jjT T H E D A IL Y T E X A N F U R N I S H E D H O U S E for rent, 3120 per month, w a te r paid 3Sth and Pe ck. C all 476-9361. Just North cr 27th & Guadalupe M R A. Typing. M ultilithing, Binding Tbs Complete, Pro* ess ion a I FULL-TIM E Typing Service to tailored the needs of U n ive rs ity students. Sp e cial keyboard equipm ent language. science, and engineer­ for ing theses and dissertations. Fhone G R 2-3210 and G R 2-7677 2707 H em p hill P a r k A to Z S E C R E T A R IA L S E R V IC E IO? E a u IO- 472 0149 St. Theses, D - ■- tat vs, P.P. r Bw Reports ti *'■ - M B re -- ! theme*, resume* Everything From A to Z Dissertations, theses, anil reports 2597 Brid le Pa th , L o rra in e B ra d y . 472-4715. M A R Y E S M A L L W O O D Typing S e rvi- e last minute and overnight a va ilab le. 892-0727 - 509i Sunset T ra il c r 442 8545 - 2005 A rthu r L a n e T erm papers, theses, ( harg# letters. M dissert t ms, honored. r B E A U T I F U L T Y P I N G , theses, d isser­ tations, misc. F o rm e r legal se cretary. Mrs. Anthony, 454-3079. PRINTER 476-3018 Typesetting. Typing. Printing. Binding T h e s e s . EXPFIRT TYPIST S e le c te e reports, briefs. professional rep: i ts Printing, binding. Mrs. I ullos, 453 5121 I B M B C . W O O D S T Y P I N G S E R V I C E , IO y e ars thesis bi— c r t a ’ i d i s experience. I .aw etc. Prin tin g, bindings 453 6090 Just N th T 7 -'"' * G a ad , m y RESUMES with or w thou! picture* 2-DAY S E R V IC E Pl. ne G R 2 3210 and G R 2-7677 2707 H em p hill P a rk dissertations M . A. D E L A F I E L D — Reports, theses, re s u m e s, printing B le a icard / M a ste r or Charge, 442-7O0s 442-0170 I m k A elite V IV IA N B R O W N Professional T yp ist, IH fields. N rth f;ist area, n e a r All 35. 928-0991. E X ' I B L E N T T Y P I S T -- form er seer*- ‘"'11 l T P a P ° rs 50?/page 83ft. M - *0, “ T Y PIN G E , E " r> '■ J ‘ CX -; Y SERVICE $ I J ■ '9 I CCT cr: •/ pacer* act min Ae service 42 DOBIE C E N T E R 472 8936 TH E M FLS, R E P O R T S and law notes. Reasonable. M rs. Fra st r, 176-1317. TY P IN G pus Tci"! papers, fixe blocks wt vt of cam* d i s s e r t a ­ theses tions. legal other. 476-2407, 327 2 0 4 ! j B E A U T I F U L P E R S O N A L typing - all Prin tin g - binding Close to UT. L a u ra Bodour. your U n iv e rs ity work. I -478-8113. ( E X P E R I E N C E D T Y P IN G , dissert research papers, M rs i _ tations, tin rn Peterson, 836-4818. E X C E L L E N T S E C R E T A R Y T Y P I S T faculty m em bers producing fine-! q u ality typing for stu­ in e ve ry dents and tor I • yi t w ill take nu I ealous care to type law briefs, research pnp- ers, Bu reports, theses, and d isserta­ tions ac< u ra te ly • observing proper form composition and spelling Latest model IR M Ex ecu tive carbon ribbon typ ew rit­ 478-0762. er, All work proofread, S T A R K T Y P I N G Experienced theses dissertations, P . R . 's etc. Prin tin g am Binding. S p e c ia lty : technical. Charlent Stark. 453-5218. Just North of 27Lh & S u a d a U p jkw 'ji’vftuy YES, we do type Freshman themes. W h y not start cut with good grades! Phone G R 2-3210 and G R 2-7671 2707 Hem phill P a rk R O A D R U N N E R T Y P I N G S e rvic e I B M electric economical specialty. 327-1534 neat. fast, L:,>t m inute dependable, a typing TO F L A G E A T EX A N C L A S S IF IE D A D C A L L 471-5244 R o o m s TEXAN DORM 1905 - 1907 Nueces Fa ll. Spring Sem esters, $46 50 per mo. D a ily m aid service, cen tral air. com ­ pletely remodeled. Also ava ilab le — single rooms, parking, refrigerator, hot plates. Two blocks from i ampus. Co-ed. RESID EN T M A N A G E R S 478-SI 13 THE PHOENIX 1930 San Antonio Singles $99.50 Doubles $54.50 r<=n°cor^i°d, da / ma d cc ler TV, w a s ''"-dryer, PR !V A T E R O O M S for University I men and women. $75.00 a month, ! ; two blocks west of campus, 241 I I R;o Grande. Central heat and a :r I conditioning, kitchen facilit:er>, maid service, rent or 'ease, abo j double rooms availab'e for $55 a I month. Private rooms a v a ila b e : north of campus. Call Manager I 477-3671 or 4 72-2368. lf no an- iwer, call 258-1902. R O O M S F O R R E N T , singles $65. dou­ Stop by a fte r 7.00 bles $45 naeh p m 2801 R io G rande N E E D SO M E O N E to last three months of lease on single room and board M arch 1-May 31. discount rate. three blocks from campus 471-4474 ask for Bob Mi M lllan, take ov e r V A C A N C IE S THELEME Co-op. $9 5 / Includes board. Co-ed house friendly. Com e by 1909 Nueces, 476-0219 month TO PLACE A TEXAN CLASSIFIED AD CALL 471-5244 S e r v i c e s H e l p W a n t e d Hearing Sought V W E n Kine parts anti service. En gine w o rk of ell kinds at. reasonable prices O u r aim is to do b elter work for less m oney. And we sell original equipment engine parts at discount p rice s: cranks bearings, valves, piston and cylind er sets, and rings, m ufflers, extractors Clutches. A Com m unity Autom otive Cooperative Supplier. O verseas En gines *36 3171 XEROXING 4c sinq'e copy rats on bonded paper I.D.A. COPY SERVICE Reductions & B :-d q Sdme Day Service A t 90! W . 24th I O p en One Day Service A t 477-3641 7 Mon.-TH r*.; Fe -Sat. til 5 4007 Duval 451-1727 Student owned St operated I.D.A. PRESS Fast Panting Qualify Work Typing 901 W . 24-h Typesetting 477-3641 I.D.A. LECTURE NOTES Over 40 Courses Available Quality Class Notes 90! W . 2 4 0 477-3641 T Y P E W R I T E R R E P A m ’and clearungT Sales Rentals. Ex perienced service. N o rip-off prices, 481-1971; nights 345- 1297 T H E R E G IN N Volksw agen Shop, M a jo r engine work, general repairs. Good prices. F re e E stim ates 307 R ed R iv e r. 478-4553, ( o n e bv. A l T O M O R I L E R O D Y W O R K - Volks­ w agen and Foreign e a r specialist. V e r y reasonable prices. F re e estimates. Sco tt 477-7747. Xerox or IBM 4c COPIES ReducDcn Capab' tv to 24 x 36 Pictures, Mult’lith, Printing, Banding T O P L E S S D A N V E R S , Zone. Personable and attractive. J .'(IO On pl >s p e r w e e k . A pp ly bi pet.- ti 4112 North L a m a r. E N D C E N T E R , W I M B E R L Y residential re n te r Iii- ado!* -cen*.-, p rivate is taking for <-tuns* ■>, cooks, nightw atchm en. F o r Inform ation call 512-847-2787 applications A enjoy dancing, G I R L S l A T L E A S T those of you who is looking for talented g irls with an ibility to handle people. Interestin g work, good p ay and libs C all D an - 4> t IRS the D u ly s h ip P A R T T I M E - E l L I, T I M E r in vt opportunities w ith intorr iii- na! fin; D eterm in e own hours-iin me 477 - a fte r 5 pm. M ENTAL H EA LTH W O R K ER S ti is not busy w ork. b it The B ro w n School has openings for men as m ental health w orkers to w o rk with and train profoundly retarded buys .- d men. Applicants must have a know- . Ii- 1 ledge of behavior modiiit ..Hon it pique. T his w ill offer a challenge and valu able I learning experience for the Indiv d a1 I planning a c a re e r In ti e n antal health field. This w o rk w ill be the 8 :0 0 j. m. - 11 OO p m . shit* and w ill start at J I 95/ hour. F o r fu rther inform ation, ca ll 47S- i 6662. S A L E S M A N , R e ta il clothing. 9 a . m . - long hair, we]] 476 54 Ti 2 p.m., medium experience need dressed, N urlt. ( E A R N $500-$ I .VK)) *• is spi ne as cr : pus coordinator. W rite to P O. Box 21,>88, San Jo se, CA. 95151, Im m ed iate ­ ly. M O S T A T T R A C T IV E , charm I cg. nrd fem ale needed. Ex ce lle n t appealing w orking conditions P a r t tim e overtop C all {or appointment or y I a rn. - 2 p.m. 412-0526. H O L ID A Y H O E S E NO. I. 1003 Barton Springs Road. P a r t tim e in d o o r to w ork noon runs. S ta rtin g p ay SI 60-hour. A pply at JOO:! B arto n Springs R- id $300 M O N T H , 15 H O U R S per w in k , 7524 N orth I.a m a r No 207, T h u rsd ay • v l l a.rn -2 p.rn -6:30 p rn. sharp* A T T R A C T IV E T A B L E A T T E N D A N T S m ust be 21, m ust be expert ort. C all or come b y W aterloo Social 'dub, 7th and R e d R iv e r. 4 72-713': S O P H O M O R E S , JU N I O R S : 4-6 p.r-i five clays, e v e ry e ther S atu rd ay L a D r ' a p ­ Cleaners, 4-12-1T I Casa pointments. M ulti-m illion d o llar co m p any rel calin executive offices in A stln. O pen’ne f* ambitious, culturr I, a ttra c tiv e g irl f P u b lic R e la tio n s; and G irl F rid a y f . if 1 ice, with ab ility t,» im p:ess ti front pub! ie. Send resum e’ and Texas Student Publications. c r I M , Austin. T o 1 TG H L O S T M A L E CoUto t r i- -r .R I im le ' ca". -r. w h ite) 2-12-73 I LO ST S IL V E R Intl En I r.rc •' T. around Jester Reward. 411-07; 5. j LOST. Black cat. Female. Whi'o ma j far-.g. P :-.- I tipped tall. 478-7031 on c h e f M issing one I eadband Sa*- I L O S T — red knitted I d ay night In Je s t e r Aud-P'raim . S I tlm ental s a l ,e. C a ll N a n c y 477-3: ; R ew ard. F O U N D ; H U S H setter. 4-47-2005 I-CJST I K A T H E R cowboy hat v *h ra I hide tie string $25 rew ard No cue ; tlons C all 477-2272 „ , ... , LO S T : L A D IE S G O L D b race k t war- Saturdny-vicinltv Gregory* ; parking lot. Reward-$15 4723728 fly rn T-OST: I R I S H S E T T I*: Iii rn a ie', 9 m~ - • old. gold chain on n- k lr- - near - 53rd streets Rew ard --’all cm - - 474 2771. Ansu . rx to " TO PLACE A TI C l A SSIF EC C A L L A 7|.52 Lobby Opposes Traffic Plan By EVELYN SIMPSON The Student Government Committee to Lobby City Council announced support of Save the University Neighborhoods (SUN) at a Wednesday morning press conference. The lobby will join SUN Thursday in asking City Council for a public hearing: on the University Area Street Plan, Pam Mayo, a lobbyist, said. SUN and the Student Government com- mittee oppose the street plans, which in­ clude widening: 24th, 25th, Nueces and Rio Grande Streets. The plans were approved by voters in September as part of the Capital Im ­ provements Program (C IF ) bond election. Most of the construction will take p’nre this summer. “ Implementation of these plans will require the removal of many horner and small businesses the neigh­ borhood," said Carey Jones, SI X acting committee chairman. throughout “ Fam iliar and substantial buildings such as Wooldridge Hall w ill be destroyed and the pollution in the atea w ill increase proportionately to Die number of cars, as w ill traffic congestion,” Jones said. The lobby committee endorsed SUN’s efforts because many students w< old be adversely affected by the implementation rn the University Arca Street IL an, ex­ plained Ms. Mayo. The lobby committee, consisting of 14 students appointed by Student Government President Dick Benson, was organized last fall to monitor City Council activities that relate to students and to keep the council in touch with student views. SUN originated as a research-oriented branch of the lobby, but quickly grew into a separate organization, said Stefan! Cohen, press secretary for the lobby. SUN includes representatives from tho the PanheUenic In ^ fra tern ity Council, Council, co-ops, on-campus dormitories, small property miners, renters and mer­ chants. Bill Attacks Impoundment B y G A RY S B E E T Texan Staff Writer U.S. Rep. challenging Jake Pickle of Alipin, con­ the stitutionality of President Nixon's imp mndment of funds, has in­ troduced legislation in the House calling for greater control of federal money by Congress. Pickle legislation said his touches both sides of the im­ poundment issue, when he calls “ a two-sided sword." “ It gives the Congree—not the President—the constitutional right to make the final decision on where federal funds shall be sp^nt or cut," he said. “ It also forces the Congress to take a more responsible' view toward spending. The bill would make Congress ‘clean house,’ and force it to adhere strictly to its budget,” he continued. Nixon, main target of the bill, was quoted in a Washington press conference as saying that he does, in fact, “ have the authority Candidate Pledges Salary to NORML S t u d e n t G o v e r n m e n t presidential candidate Dana Copp said Wednesday that any wages paid to him as president would immediately be donated to He the National Organization Laws Reform of Marijuana (N O RM L), his favorite charity. for In a written statement, Copp said he is challenging all other presidential candidates to make the same proposal. is two Copp declined comment °n issues in his campaign saying, “ The election "weeks away. ’ ’ Copp, senior a 22-year-old architecture major, grew up in Trenton, N .J., but is now an Austin resident. German Professor I o Speak Thursday at literature) of Munich Prof. Kurt von Fritz, professor emeritus of classical philology the (study of and University currently a visiting professor at the University, will speak Thurs­ day on the “ Principles of Ancient S -rial and Political Philosophy and Their Importance for Our Time.” The lecture w ill be at 4 p.m. Thursday in Business-Economics Buiklir g 166. “ Prof. von Fritz is one of the most distinguished men in the field of Greek science an Alexander p h i l o s o p h y , ’ ’ M auro I ates, University professor of philosophy, said Wednesday. Von Fritz, who is teaching in tho Departments of Philosophy and Classics, has written books on Greek history, science and philosophy, and has taught at Columbia University and tho Free University in Berlin. to impound funds if the spending by Congress would mean higher taxes for the American public." of the fiscal year) and still give the budget the close consider atle,n it needs,” he added. Nixon told newsmen his con­ stitutional right to impound, or to refuse to spand money ap­ propriated bv Congress, is clear. Pickle’s proposal would give 45 days after Congress the President submits bis budget in which to establish over-all limits on expenditures. Tho Office of M anagement and Budget (0MB) p e r i o d i c a 11 y would inform its own guidelines Congress if were being observed. THE FIRST of the bill’s three sections proposes a change in the fiscal year so th at it coincides with Hie calendar year, giving Congress 12 months to write its appropriations bills instead of five “ The fiscal year for 1974 begins in just five months," Pickle said. “ I don't sen how ive can be ex­ piated to enact all appropriations before die first of July (beginning Pickle said he considers the second part of his bill to be the “ heart of it.” It places some restrictions on Congress b y setting limits on spending and the advisory role of the OM B. Pickle said he feels the res*dr of his bill would allow the Congress to consider the budget as a unified plan of action rather than many separate spending requests. includes T H E THIRD part of Pickle’s b ill ratification a procedure that must be followed before the President can Impound funds. “ Tile action taken on this bill may be the most crucial issue in the 93rd Congress,’’ Pickle the s a i d . legislature’s continued existence as a branch of government co­ equal to the executive and the judicial." stake “ At is THC CLINTON Breakfatt Served W e e k d a y * 7 - l l a.m. BREAKFAST SPECIAL T W O EG G S, T W O PA N C A K ES C O FFEE, TO AST & JE L LY O PEN M-F 7-7, SUN. 12-9 P.M. 105 W . 20TH O N E BLO C K SOUTH O F LITTLEFIELD FO U N TA IN WSB FILM CASTING SESSIO N THUR., FEB. 22 and MON., FEB. 26 7:00 P.M. MOTION PICTURE CENTER 2621 SPEED W A Y Ada Feinberg-Sereni Kibbutz & Israeli Parliament member will speak at the Hillel Foundation THURSDAY, FEB. 22 7:30 P.M. ADMISSION FREE! 2105 Sun Antonio St, at th* University of Texo* G IN N Y’S COPYING SERVICE 42 Dobis Ma’! 476-9171 Free Parking Open 75 hours a week Hummingbird Mechanics Tuna ups and Raps -« on most Am ar can a-d Fore ga Car* Low R a ’ es G ja r a 't e e d W ork W o r k Perfo rm ed in Y o , r D riv e w a y C A C M e m b e r Marc Crichton 478-4766 S E W I N G m ens’ and W om ens’ clothes like you want, design yo u r own. ( all K a re n W y ly 472-4304 "'a c- - a r r - r FREE Type*- tar or add -q w it ) a ry reps I r e e d used me* --I* ty p e A rd er* a n d a d d eg r n : t. H r a t pr -es c a 'a . TYPEWRITER E X C H A N G E 1708 San J a c Mo 4-2-3223 Saturday IC 2 W a n t e d W A N T E D : Volunteer Ist grade teneher aides. 1-5 hr-wk. P le ase ca ll M a ry Bezan, 476-6861, ext, 46. D IP L O M A C Y Begtonpr* looking for p lay­ ers or game. C all R e x 478 9381 after 6 , W A N T E D : Y O U N G W O M E N to train a* masseuses. Ex p e rie n ced personnel s so wanted for first class steam spa. C a ll E d ie 's of Hollywood, 478 0411 or 453-3268 Mon - Tri M i s c e l l a n e o u s Zuni N E L S O N 'S G IF T 'S ; com plete selection Je w e lry ; A frican and M ex ican Imports, 4612 South Congress. 444-3814. Indian P A R K I N G R Y M O N T H . $17 50 . 2418 San Antonio, one block from Campus. 476 3720. EAPvN $'s W E E K L Y Bleed p a s - a donor* reeded . Cash pa'd for in attendance. O r * * 8 a.m. 3 pm . Tues., Thurs., Fri., & Sat. Open 12 roon-7 p.m. W e d . lervices. Physician A U S T IN B L O O D C O M P O N E N T S . IN C ., 40? W e st 6 th. 477-3735. S K Y D I V E ! Austin Parachute Center For nformation please cell 272 57| I anytime A N IM A L L O V E R S ’ F R E E kittens, Persian Siam ese, 465-9079. 452-1787, I lite r trained kittens, month old. W A N T E D : S IA M E S E S T U D for fem ale Siam ese. W ill pay a kitten. Pa p e rs unnecessary. C all 454-8335. V I D E O : I F Y O U have portable video idea let's discuss craz y equipment, I have. 474 5296, Syn e rg y. W A N T E D R E G U L A R O L E boy** one speed bicycle, good condition. The funkier the better. 474-5296. T u t o r i n g S T A T T U T O R IN G . A il business math. C R K preparation. 451-4557. C H E M IS T R Y : In tro or Organic. Call 441-2170 after 6 p rn. tance by F R E N C H C A N be e a sy ! Selected assis­ from F ra n c e . Switzerland. A lg eria, Quebec. 327-1780. Internationa! T exan G E R M A N N A T I V E speaker w ill assist (A lso L A T IN . ) M .A. you efficiently. U n iv e rs ity of Munich. 451-2351. S P A N IS H T U T O R by En g lish speaker w ith M .A . In Spanish. 478-7077. F o r R e n t E L E C T R O N IC typew riters. W eekly-m onthly and rates. R e n ta !-purchase availab le. D a j s 454- 1971, nights, weekends 34.V1297. C A L C U L A T O R S CHARTER FLIGHTS TO EUROPE DALLAS-BRUSSELS-D ALLAS M iy 28-August 18 — 83 days 'ou re on our own in Europe! W e arrange your jet elf transportation from Dallas to Brussels and return. You h w e all the fun of planning! UT students, facul­ ty, staff members, and their immediate families are eligible. Write (or cal!) today for free flight info. ■MI air f-ir-'c nr* ti pro-rata -’’ a r c <-f the total a irp la n e cost and are bases ri roo tor of * a 240 ne is allotted to Oils group. The price p er un * *i Cr J -* '■ ill of tho goat* on C ap ito l International A ins S S!r"< h J e t ans n o t frie d . P a rtic ip a n t* m u st be students at I >s 1 r.ts th e y m a' a a p p l! it on fo r the charter and s till retain their M a­ rt ■ : Mqt s w V n tho < n irri r a ir c r a ft departs the U S A. Mem bers ol the y " M y also ta k e advantage of the frig h t. :rnnv ■ " L o t to Increase •/. te f * lys Beverly Braley Tours Travel P . O Kox 7999 rSinne 476 7231 30j IV. 15th — Suite IOO lo cate d In I.O ' a r a Sn. — Fre e -Parkin* 3 f l H M U l M H S © arm va 7 sun spent days aboard t.s.s. M ardi Gras . . . meals includeed San Juan St. Thomas St. Maarten Nassau During Spring Break April 7 - April 14 Spec ai Youth Fare plus IO % tax and service: ^ I BEVERLEY BRALEY TOURS TRAVEL P. O. Box 7999 Phone 476-7231 302 W . 15th — Suite IOO Located in Lavaca Sg. Free Parking DALLAS or HOUSTON EUROPE Id Different Flights from 2 - 6 weeks in length 9 v Aeronautic* " i- a r j (C A B ) Bg* p a t t e d a paw req* on m:n ag ck artar f ghts available to general pub* Now you and your friend* can fly to Eu rop e at rock- dom charier rates without joining a clu b and without mg stranded. ’ der these r e * rule* w a can provide th e safari, most mforlable je ll ’ -.a air. in E ’ oy com pote fin a n cial security through a bonding and escrow proaram, *i to tours and cruises w h ile overseas. Le a v e On c c v e - ie n t departure dates. October. re n te s, Euraii passes, J u n e thro no H P./ non-;-sp from Da b s or Houston b y C a p ito l Interna­ tional Airways — a fu lly certified Supple*” e r 'a l Carr sr. Deal with charter so e rie sis. W e have ch artered over last 12 50,000 scats from th e U .S . to Eu ro p e th e in ie c o o p e r a t io n with D *bry * H lio n Travel Inc. •— T in Trave! Group C h a rte r Operator. b o -I g* m u tt b e made a m in:m urn o f 9 5 days in Brainy Trave Serves* A adv acce. No- ie: Ti s ac! d e e * n o t constitute a t a , e t c o n tra ct. A flig h t brochure m ust b e com pleted. BEVERLEY BRALEY TOURS TRAVEL P.O. Box 7999 Phone 476-7231 302 W . 15th — Suite IOO Locked In Lavaca Sq. — Free Parking A L L Y O U C A N E AT M ex ican Buffet per person, plus drink and tax Serving continuously from 11 AM ON SALE TH U R.-FRI.-SA T. $4.95 List A L B U M S ............................ 3.39 5.93 " 6.98 9.98 " " " " " 3.69 4.69 6 .69 S TRACK STEREO TAPES $ 3 " O PEN IO - IO M O N .-SAT. Next fo the Bani, 1507 Lavaca (corner of Lavaca & 16th) HES EKC Co m e G U A D A L U P E , P M 7 2 4 4 3 7 , : ---- T-*-' ----- E E E DAILY TEXAN Thursday, february 22,1273 Lags H Boycott Delay Questioned I J J M A U I HA K IN A R D arui II VI L L \ I MIRT KR legal f* >r student affairs, said issues must be to determine if the University can support a se* and ary boycott resolv'd Men ' " , • • • ' t.vi r ir.- : , ; sv|.-.>p. sri s W-mm Vi vk< v Vi. wrim Jett' rs T i ’ iiv( P f esi-.tant issues whir i legal aud policy s: ;>r K* c< nsidered be; re the Spurr prpsidont can make a n boyratt),” Brown wn*te T ies■ («• C#r* r “ *'4 C*f. ‘ii >«mo»«tr*H4 k*. it t* U « U A €*•**««***♦ w i r i { « « , . . AND WE W ILL ALSO HELP YOU WITH: s -259 s279 ** 4 **«W */• J fW.* I m m.> J >«*• (H I MAK) A - L ySf* Ajf C**u*f Swp *-!*«»•» k-l L**t mi * • tv(f w mf ’M*p« ,*» w» g f***» ket# km lyiyc >tt had been p slponed. She said the boycott is primary, not se taiary, A prima:v boycott is against a product and a second­ ary boy, at is against a retail S is r e . M r re? said she intends to W rite Brown, inquiring a b o u t h is decision. !* avn s i tlie (postion had nothing to do with the typo ,.f Israeli Lecturer To Speak in Union the A member of Israeli par- lament will lecture publicly F: ii, in Amlin on education, rh Rib! :*?. and social reform in Israel Mrs. Ada Sirond-Feinberg, a member of ti rn Ma’arach Labor Party, will speak at 11:30 a.m. in Union Building L’02 and at 7: if) p ’n. at the Hillel Foundation, 2100 San Antonio St. She arrived in Austin Wed- m sd ay as a guest of the L B J S rh o' of Public Affairs, the Student M i d d I e Organization Israeli Studet ’ ( 're uiizati -n. and the Eastern Jerusalem, Mrs. A graduate of the University of Sireni- Foinborg was a member of the H a g g a n a h Free* State un* b t v -.round army before it ended in BJW. bi adbiti n to her government work. Mrs. Siixmi-Feinberg is a high v bool te ichf r. boycott but whether a public agency can support such a b «ycotr. the question He said it is a legal and policy question, and the Union should not accept resp ai.‘ability for a b >yrott until is answered. Tho matter has been referred to attorneys, and Brawn experts an opinion in a few days. Members of IT W said they will write to Spurr asking clarification of his postponement of the boycott. letters At a meeting Wednesday U P W members were urged to write letters .Tsking the reason for the P -stponement and requesting a rn»te ire with Hie president i'm the man cr. “ After a meeting with the president we wiLl decide on action to take. We plan to dc everything the Union pas; able to convince services of buying anything but iceburg lettuce,” said Ms. Perez. At the meeting, times were divided for picketing Safeway st res on Thursday, Friday and Saturday. Effective picketing methods were also discussed. “ If we stand in front of the people and reach out to them th the leaflets and say ‘Would >ou please consider shopping elsewhere for these reasons?’ is the best effort we can give,” the UPW member said. “ We are following a national boycott of Safeway, and it will continue until the stores desist offering lettuce,” Ms. Perez said. iceberg D O E S Y O U R LAST NAME START WITH I , or L , l l / — ;/ H T " it If Inn* Ii I*- SI v> I hen \ • ii in' I'ntltlrd lo tiny our Mpvlcan Knoll Buffo!, \v l iil( OMA T.'.r— ami our evening buffet, ohio retjulnrlj $1 75. LOK OMA 38e '-o eat all this ueek for hii h at h in ONE-HALF PRICE O F F E R G O O D FEB. 16 T H R O U G H REB. 22 M U ST S H O W Y O U R STUD EN T O R ST A FF ID . O F F E R G O O D F O R IN D IV ID U A L O N L Y iSuCasa 504 E. 5th St. 2330 NORTH LO O P R E S T A U R A N T S 476-4841 465-5449 W a tc h This Ad Each W e ek For C h a rq a ot Initials Abortion Policy Explained Health Center Director Responds to Protest Move University Health Center Director Paul Trickett said Wednesday that as long as current laws exist, the center will not perform abortions. Trickett was replying to a plea Tuesday by Ms. Bobby Nelson for a mass protest of the health center's no abortion policy. The “ laws” referred to by Trickett is a policy set up by 1he University Board of Regents stating surgery net required reasons for major health cannot be performed in University System hospitals. “ The health center does not perform abortions,'’ Trickett said, “ and will probably never perform abortions. We are staffed to perform emergency surgery, and abortions do not fall into this category.” Ms. Nelson made the plea in a speech Tuesday at a meeting co-sponsored by S t u d e n t Government Women'3 Liberation Committee and Women's Ai -olion Action Committee. Trickett further clarified the center's po thin in relation to existing state s'at ut s concerning dispensation of contra* eptives and sterilization. "T illu'p is no standardized health t h e question o f center poi ic) on us will contra! option. prescribe contraceptives for under-age ( Is, and s nip. of us won’t,” said Trickett. “ It’s just that simple.” Some of When asked to explain the position of staff members who dispense birth control pills to legally ineligible coeds, Trickett said, “ The needs of all the students on this campus should be Served by tile center.” Presently, the health center staff dispenses bi:th control pills and the so-called “ morning after” pall. In ad­ dition. the staff gives contraceptive advice, diagnose pregnancy, provides counseling service f r s udents With problem pregnancies and handles other routine gynecological problems. “ The Univ? > ity Student Health Center bas had a rccblem pregnancy unit since October, 1970,” said Trickett. “ That year there were over TOO d o c ii rn e n t e d car cs of unwanted pregnane)-. Something h ut to be dene.” The pregnancy unit hrs a double function: to inform til- v, un an of her gynecological to alternatives preserve her mental health. and Trickett also testified Tuesday before the House Human Re. arces Com­ mittee on behalf) cf Austin Bop. Sarah Weddington^ ll use Bill UH) which would allow minors to receive con­ traceptives and prenatal care without obtaining parental consent. Realtors O ppose Impact Statements By MARTHA KINARD Texan Staff ll rifer Opposition Is building among l o c a l the toward proposed Austin environmental policy'' ordinance. realtors The proposed ordinance states that every city department must impact file an environmental Statement before it may un­ dertake any project or legislation. Tho impact statements would information concerning include alternative projects and long­ term costs to the taxpayer and the environment. Some realtors and real estate developers may try to make a “ false issue” out of one provision in the ordinance, said Don Elmer, second-year law student. The provision would allow citizens to institute suits com polling city departments to write the or impact statements dinance the departments have not submitted a statement. requires it and if Citizens may also file suits to force a department to resubmit a statement if it can be shown that such a statement does not meet the requirements of the ordinance. Realtors fear that citizens will cause stagnation of subdivision ( l e v e l o p rn e n t by submitting c o rn ill a i n t s on evtBfy new development, Elm er said. A public hearing is scheduled for 7 p.m. Tuesday in the Electric Department Building. YOU COULD BE A UT 1973-1974 Marriage Ceremony VARSITY CHEERLEADER A n O rientation Session for A pplicants will be held F E B R U A R Y 22 - 7:30 P.M. in the Longhorn Band Hah in Music Bldg. East • A ny UT student eligible • Must have completed one semester at UT 9 Final selection will be m ade by Longhorn Band on M arch 15. All applicants must attend o r ie n t a t io n . <1 M u s t have 2.125 O P A For Info. CALL SCOTT HARM ON — 465-0353 H eld in County Jail A man and woman awaiting trial on burglary end drug charges were married Wednesday afternoon in a private ceremony at the Travis County Jail. Charles R. Scott, 29. and Kathleen Freeman, 30, were married by County Judge J.H . Watson. They had sent individual n o t e s , written during the weekend, to Sheriff Raymond Frank asking permission to wed. Scott is charged with two burglaries and has been in the jail since November Mrs. Scott has been Jail since Jan. 20, charged with the illegal possession of marijuana and narcotic paraphernalia. in Ja il personnel “ pitched in” and bought the couple a cake and served hot chocolate the guests—jai! trust ie*, jail officials and inmate friends of the couple. to “ No one seriously brought up the idea of a honeymoon,” Chief Sheriff’s Deputy S.B Wilson said. “ They were allowed to spend 30 they minutes returned to the r separate tanks.” together before IHTERHATiOHAl to, B o l 7040 A .I Ka, T«m * 7*7 12 2327 S . . Ajtfofiio Sf. IN T H E C A S T IL IA N LOIir — 'E N O F-Q* A P R I!- A T O N T O D A Y - 478-347! mum mm 1 % - . m k ||T p I & Id f i M % Xt J; -uKGE WASHINGTON 3L0W-0 UT SALE b u o rcg Washington saw his shadow today, so it looks like we’re in tor another ALL SALES ALL SALES v . - g> cs V V ' 'c of unprecedented - io - unheard - of bargains in a'most every dept, of the Co-Op. Feb. 19 - 24 'M A L R F R L-’- fir rf » . : T h,. IJS fmwb* 4 * Vc- rn,I heck P f / " Novelties Dept. - Street Floor ct WH ■ SPC cs for Bevo Barbeque Aprons: W ere $6.95 Are $3.95 Letter Openers: Have Been Si.50 Are Now 75c Ashtrays: From $3.95 to 50c Steerhorns: Redoosed from $30.00 to $15.00 Toilet Tissue: Past $1.00 Present 5c A\ J artment Shop — 2nd rloor: S:llv Sculpts: Was SI.59 Is- Pc -.units Statues: Form erly S3. OO Presently SI.50 Candle Holders: Then SI.SO N o w 80c Candle Holders: Then S3*00 X rm S1.()0 Candle Holders: I hen S5.80 N o w S1.80 Sm all Stuffed Creatures: Before SI.19 A fte r 69c Record Shop — 2nd Floor: Spue tai Group', of Rev urds tor 22c, $1.22 and 5 Pi us your t.imous Co-Op dividend, ;et to a golden future free of Cither unadverti^ec Your IK fin a rn la spcviais. Also gargantuo-cosmic savings on Baby Blankets, TAT. Rugs, Fxpresso Coffee, C offee Makers, Nacho Thins, Sesame Thins, Fruit Jars Filled W ith Candy. Jew elry Dept. — Street Floor: Crested Sorority Stationary. Reg. S6.50 box Now $3.95 C O - O P E A S T 26th & Red River: Law Distributor Cassette 'Tapes 30% off One hour free parking with purchase of $2.00 or more BankAmericard & Master Charge W elcom e UNIVERSITY CO OP Page 12 Th urb lay, February 22. I rn X H E DAILY TEXAN Budget Guts To Affect Grants By CAROL THI TESTON proposed President Nixon’s budget would mean severely reduced dollars for students in and the f e l l o w s h i p s , University ad­ ministrators said Wednesday. stipends form of Feeling the major brunt of the cuts would be training grants for students in zoology, pharmacy and the language area studies cen­ ters. The programs face losses both undergraduate in and graduate student stipend#? as well as program in development. funds for Under the proposed budget cuts, the College of Social and Behavioral Sciences would be hardest hit in psychology, Dean loss of J.W. McKie said, with support student and auxiliary from training grants. “Over-all, the college could be hurt badly lf research budgets were cut, but we’re not quite .sure w hich programs will be af­ fected,” Dean Earnest Gloyna of the College of Engineering said. W ale all training grants ap­ pear to bo on the chopping block, small nits are expected in total support, r e s ea r c h ex­ president Stephen Spurr plained. T h e department zoology project Wafer Treatment To Despite Shortage Double Funds training grants, totalling $345,000, provide stipends and tuition for 42 graduate students and 20 post­ doctoral trainees. Eldon Sutton, chairman of the zoology department, said it was confirmed Tuesday the Institutes of Health National (NTH) in that training grants zoology were being phased out. by IN ADDITION to these grants, transferred the department has c a r e e r awards in the amount of $122,000 per year. This amount has been released from the salary budget and teaching assistantships, which has meant a d d i t i o n a l appointments for students, Sutton said. With the loss of thaw funds, It also means fewer dollars for students. to The College of Pharmacy has a capitation grant of $352,000, "a substantial portion of the phar­ macy budget,” Spurr said. Acting Dean William J. Sheffield said the college has been Informed there will be at least a 50 percent cut In this grant in 1973, and complete loss of these funds in 1974. In addition, the college receive'! $67,000 in 1973 from the Depart­ ment of Health. Education and Welfare (HEW), also to be lost under the present proposals. This money was used entirely f o r student the scholarships professional sequence. In renovation Tile capitation grants have been used for equipment, faculty sa I a r I e s , of laboratories, library acquisitions, travel to professional meetings and the start of an experimental program in professional training at the UT Medical School In San Antonio. requires The accreditation board of the American Council on Pharmacy Education now that students get clinical training In a medical or hospital setting. la s t year, college used the $65,000 from the grant to send six seniors to the San Antonio Medical School for the year to obtain tills clinical training. IN AUSTIN, STUDENTS spend some time at Brackenridge, Seton and St. David’s hospitals, and the grant the salaries of one person at each hospital. supplement funds The three language and area studies centers presently receive $300,000 per year federal money, of which $102,000 is In student fellowships. in Robert Femea, director of the Middle Eastern Studies Center, said the fellowship funds have widespread effect because they allow students to major in dif­ (anthropology, f e r e n t areas history, geography, government, art) and also continue work in a middle eastern language. RPlTtR SAID there is also a phasing out of Institutional and construction grants In nursing, but the student assistance grants will be continued. “It is possible we will make up some of our loss through the Basic Opportunity Grants. These are grants for disadvantaged students based entirely on nw*!,” Spurr said. A student could get up to $1,400 from these grants, the amount his depending on family was able to contribute, the S u t t o n zoology said department has approximately $2 million in research grants from federal sources, and the number of students employed on these grants at least equals the number presently on the affected training grants. S u t to n said he believes Con cress will have to modify the budget proposals or “private schools, particularly medical schools, will be devastated by the budget cuts.” “Therefore, we are working on a total Improvements budget for the entire year which we will submit to HUD at the end of March,” he said. It Is this Important that water treatment plant improvements be summer said started by Reed. Otherwise, “ two summers from now we will be running short of water, especially for fire fighting and industrial use,” he explained. HASSLED BY SPEEDING TICKETS? W e have a cheap, but high quality Radar Detector— it will tell you when you are approaching a speed trap. WRITE STUDENT C A R E P. O. Bo* 8424 Austin 78712 Tor information N O W UNDER NEW M ANAGEM ENT WATERLOO SOCIAL CLUB yiuuuij firejemI D A V U / I I C V U M D D A D O RAY WILEY HUBBARD TUES.-SAT. 20-24 TUES.-SAT. FEB. 20-24 FEB. proudly present! ^ • © ■ 600 £ E . 7f h C om?r o f 7tfi 8 Red River (Behind Snooper’* Paradise) 472-7136 & J O H N THURS. — SAT, MATEUS WHISKEY ORE FRIDAY 4:00 FREE KEG GIVEN A W A Y EVERY FRIDAY RUSTY, LAYTON & JOHN Lunches Served Daily 11:30-3 Dinner 5-10 p.m. Daily 441-3359 Serving ® Steaks * Sandwiches • Seafood • Mixed Drinks The City of Austin is going ahead with plans to double the capacity of the Davis Water Treatment Plant, despite the fact that Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) funds are not available to fund the project at present An engineering firm has been hired, and work will begin about three months from now, Homer Reed, deputy city manager, said Wednesday. f o r “We will use city f u n d s t h e originally budgeted Capital Improvements Program (CTP) water projects but which are not to finance the improvements,” Reed said. so badly needed The city had applied for ap­ proximately $4 million in HUD funds. More than S3 million was to have been used to improve the water treatment plant, about $200,000 to construct a water main across Northwest Austin and about $200,000 for park im­ provements. The city applied for the money more than a year ago and was advised that HUD funds have been curtailed for the foreseeable future, Reed said. two months ago He said that federal funds liave been frozen until the new federal budget is approved. At that time, a new program, the* Community Development Revenue Sharing to be Program, program will adopted. Tills provide im­ city for funds provements. is expected “From now on, HUD will not make funds available to cities for Individual projects, but Instead for packages of Improvements,” Reed said. F a l s e Fi r e A l a r m S o u n d e d at C o - O p Three city fire trucks were called to tim University OoOp Wed­ nesday afternoon to put out a powersaw. Jack Dailey, assistant manager of the Co-Op, said the fire was a false alarm and that the trucks had already left the station by the time he called them. The fire originated on the third floor of the Co-Op in a stockroom where employes had been working on construction, Dailey said. “Apparently, some fumes or soot from the powersaw caused the ■moke alarm to go off,” Dailey said. “They always send at least three trucks to the University area tor just about any alarm,” he said. c a m p u s n e w s i n b r i e f I m eet I* A in VI I NT v the Mot! T hursday at Center, 2621 Speedw ay film ca stin g session. T E L is < Ll It v IO Th si p m G rande St G John T revino, City Council. S T I I) I, N T ll host a c o ffe e at -day at 2600 R io •st speaker w ill be andldate for A ustin I I. A I* D M A N * S ASSOCIATION will m eet at 7 30 p . m . B u sin ess- T hursday E co n o m ics Building 454 H m onthly m eeting Robert R am on w ill speak on "The B andm an and ■ F oreign le a s in g ," Color slid es o f 1 Id* a c tiv ities w ill ’>* shown. for a ; In U M VERS! T I OF T I N A S AIK VERT! SING CL CB w ill m eet at 8 p rn. T hursday In Union Building 2 1 3 ad x ertlsln g discuss cu rricu lum with advertising fa cu lty ! m em b ers to WOMEN IN LUMMI NICATION- w ill m e e t a t 6:30 p rn. Thursday In D obie C onference R oom for a general bu sin e*s m eeting, brown bag supper and Job sem in ar Guest sp ea k ers w ill be Dr. Barbara B ailey and Dr. F ra n ces F u ller, who w ill d iscu ss ‘ P o ten tia l.. W hat’s Y ours?" T D I N O SOCIALIST ALLIANCE n n p i e r r e lennd, K ila Markham and Slue* Tenderer; directed b i I ‘raneois Truffaut. a j*®emrd the least eulogistic 'n style, and perhaps this !s why tile ribs of bin intentions slaw so boldly. t in* m a hi p r« ’s e n ta 1 ir * n . IU M IR K S P I KS T e x a n Staff H r i f e r Francs*is T ru ffau t whop The m irthless dissipation of Truffaut's style m akes the movie persuasively depressing, but the bark fi'eluigq have no refinance In the characters, e earlv tc! od oui burls of d gr.ieiy, prat- rs to the side nf bis direction cf ’ ’s." !’: J f nit’s ikied e gen'ess are throughout but Truffaut has co English G irls '1 ife.” Of ail f tc has alw avs T ra ci’s of the w ay be is alee to imprint excitem ent into actors appear, and yet the cast seems to have understood only faintly spon- what Truffaut w as trying to piece together. Tile whole picture is emotionally if Truffaut had deserted his actors and his talent, stym ied, as R $ T^eaud C A STIN O in a kfv Jean-Pierre role, Truffaut firm s are ti' melancholy ti en fly J .urn melancholy "T w o Knell* Keh O''n t taneous, fl alluringly : this new m< referred to as “ a oui* directors TONITE 9:30-12:00 Jim m y Johnson (NO C O V ER C H A R G E) 5:30 - 9:00 FRESH FRIED CATFISH AII you can eat JL $ 0 2 5 person SAXON PUB 38th & LH . 35 XXX Movies •• Wide Screen XXX Live Stage Shows XXX Book Store - Novelties PARAMOUNT 4/2 -Ult /13 CONGRESS AVENUE T S B K ah JOO TIL 2:30 T 00 - * TO ■ R 3 UMOHS ' f e n t S ! Unit*'ii Artist* C S t a r t s T O I V S O S i i l O W j M SU M M ER O F ' 4 2 I T h e n Y o u s h o u ld e n jo y t h i h W v o f | ■ ■ " * s ONE WOMAN and 3 LONGING INEXPERIENCED BOIS ROBART r e nrmm m j e r e m ia h m u m m av: ? * [p g ] i t NOMINATED FOR 3 ACADEMY AWARDS . . INCLUDING . BEST PICTURE HELD OVER! 10+h WEEK a W h a t did happen on V *§ tho Cabulla w a * app River? : ,'N: e i i i f e r a n JOBMAN FILM ( ' s t a r t s t a m o r r o w ) # • * * * # » « ■ * e * e * * # e e » e e e e s * e o * o » o o o o e ♦ ♦ tfr* ** * * « * ■* * *>• ♦ n*"* a A ♦ ♦ ** IM O W ! I JS IA X B O F O R A C A D H I V i Y A W A R D S B E S T P I C T U R E B E S T a c t r e s s S U P P O R T I N G A C T O R i JO L L GREY B E S T Bk S U P P O R T IN G TI * A C T R E S S MARISA J M BERENSON ^ J I # ' ! D IR E C T O R <> BO B 1 FO SSE B E S T SOUND A R T D IR E C T IO N M U S IC A L S C O R E C O S T U M E D E S IG N 0* B E S T F IL M E D IT IN G J S C R E E N P L A Y J, C IN E M A T O G R A P H Y <’ j j | T R A M S '* 'T E X A S T N O W OPEN 2:15 Feature* 2:30 5:15-9:50 (Sneak 8) It’s The “SOUNDER” Nominated for A A cadem y Awards— Best Picture — Best Actress— Best A ctor — Best Screenplay PLUS _ R EG U LA R FEATURE "YOUNG WINSTON" l4Tavs with ROBERT S H A W • AN N E BA N C R O FT nest.-! T H A N S + T T X A <3 m r j T T I ^ V n rn O PEN 5:15 • $1.00 TIL & P.M. i n i s , I . J i j i j i * Feature Tim*'* 5:30-7:45-10:00 MCQUEEN / MacGRAW THE GETAWAY A ■ M Pi OKIN PAH RIM • FROM FIRST ARTISTS T R A M S -f r T E X A S ■ 3 3 uo#St*-47MiW Z224 O P E N 17:45 • $ t .50 T IL 4 P.M. Feature* 1:00-3:45-6:30-9:15 4 A c d e n y A w a rd s N om inations — ★ E rst Picture A Best Actress ★ Best Screenplay ★ Best Director M a x v o n S y d o w L lv U llfn a n n T h e E m i g r a n t s r n A 5 PMMR TIL A it* . - • Techr«cdoi*Ffom Warner Bros.•jw*] TRA N S ★ TEXA S L4 Gusdiiijpe ut — 4J7-IS64 MIDNIGHT SHOW FRIDAY & SATURDAY ALL SEA T S $1.00 a p im , JOSEPH I LFVINE P a g e i t T h u rs d a y , F e b ru a ry 22, D V , T U Jfc D A I L Y T k X A N An Embassy IH«m*bofval PktvMi* Pp EASTMAN COLOR the today.” It may be faut’s brooding, and by no mean! an abnormal one, is implied in la,4. Claude' i last words, words in the pi ct nee, “ I feel very old that Truffaut merely has a case of t h o s e here-com esm iddle- a ga heet4e-ieebies brought on by a few aching muscles, in which case he will undoubtedly weather the storm and be back on the course soon. While waiting for Truffaut’s condition of being hung up en. the shoals to vanish, there still remain bits of his masterful signature to R ep tin audience content. Chief among these are the early scenes in Wales showing Claude and the two sis ors hi their frolicsome reverence for each other, the only hint of the crippling emotions to come seen In the icy blue of the sea, the background to rho powdery cod r photography by Nestor Almon dros. TH EN , before such scenes: as the complexly disturbing one where Anne tells Muriel she has slept with Claude—a scene where Truffaut bums into the contrast he uses nowhere else—there t* long tracking shot of Anne a walking along the bank of a lake, the trees shivering around her. For a shot such as this, or the one where Anne and Claude leave an island in two rowboat going opposite directions, one can put up with almost any amount of Truffaut’s bleakness. English G irls” was last weekend V “ Two presented Cinema 40 which has schedule! repeat campus showings on Friday and Saturday. a t r e n g t h e n s lites impression t<>. Leant! meant whether I n IToinel Antoine staned a: T ru ffau t'.4 rst full length film lows,” a study of “ The -MHI f.>1 which Truffaut delinquent? b o r r o w his own i adoleseene from Fe< 11 leis and the s in the «i context. ig. bul char equals. of ti w as cancel vo< w as a reform down in his ti lowed using I /‘aud ie I),in el character ie autobiographical den Kisses” was the most recent “ Bed and B* ard,” I flim sily and Leaud family man, tied noughts. Now Truffaut has cast Leaud in a t’On-Doinel role at the apex of a love triangle, In love with two women who each love him. Leaud hasn’t the power to step from the shadow of these past quiet, associations. obliging aetor, but almost as remote as Truffaut's evocation of thf* period tura-of the-oentury during which this m ovie is set. H e's a The two English girls (who actually live in Wales) who are loved by the Frenchman ('lau d ', (Kb \ are the sisters Anne Markham) and Muriel (Stacy Tendeter). The script de fin,'s them in contrasting juxtaposition. to b e c o m i n g .an emancipated woman, auld her progressive ideas draw her toward Claude. This much is unobjectionably presented. is cm her way Anne M uriel, however, is rigid, prim and suffering. Truffaut's spirit must have truly been chilled by her ascetic self-persecution. She strikes a dull spot in the movie s e e m i n g l y because’ Truffaut recoiled from her grating effect oil flip story. Intimidated by her, Truffaut formalizes the affair between M uriel and Claude, a one-night of after stand preliminaries. years six This scene, unusual for Truf­ faut in its explicit sexual details, letter Muriel writes and the Claude to confess masturbating regularly, arn not at all accented by Truffaut. This is a perilous flowery tiling to do when th** scenes sentences the susceptibly to giggles. leave M uriel's character is harshly unsatisfying because it's evident Truffaut was caught between regarding her unsympathetically and objectively. have “ Two English G irls” vaults right over tile material Truffaut could contender! with * -spy—even the echoes of his own great “ Jules and Jim ’’— though tins movie Is based on “ Les Deux Anglaises et Le C o n t i n e n t ’ ’ by Henri-Plorre Roche, whose only other book was die one which inspired “ Jules and Jim .” S O M E T H I N G extremely troublesome must have been plied loose in Truffaut for him to be so solemn but this feeling stays behind the curtains. A possible source of Truf- r- TECHNICOLOR* A U N I Q U E S O U N D Believe it or not, M ike Nichols’ film version of E ch turd Albee's “ W ho's Virginia W o o lf?” comes to television at 8 p.m. Thursday on channels 7 and IO. Afraid of lust decade, A part from getting to see one of tlie best Am erican film s of it should be the interesting—hopefully too not frustrating- -to see just how much of the frank language’ is cut. CBS has announced the film would ESWHKBBgrr TM— rH V F iB X 'T U lH N l C I • Id—LLiliJ H C M * O V E R Mirthlui1 M a g ic a l'- ^ Musical! '■/ ---- / - r n ) - ' W A L T D I S N E Y ^ ALL-CARTOONI L J I TURL -' y — ~ - - M l ’ RUN, APPALOOSA, RUN’ W IF H K T W IN 2 6757 AIRPORT BLVD. * Q .ft I a* . ,'11 ACADEMY AWARDS S K T A NORMAN JEW ISON FILM fit* IiI *v4f lf "Tlddfer^ff o?i the NORMAN1 JEW ISO N COLOR BY DELUXE Unitp.d Artists SHOWTIMES---- F a m in g * O n ly I*,,rn. Din'll ; **o F**;.itli r*- IV 15 t v t o n i g h t receive only minor editing Tile stars Elizabeth Taylor, film Richard Burton, Sandy Dennis and George Segal. 7 p.m . 8 TIO p rn. 9 p rn. l l B e v e r l y H lllb tlU e * 4 V36 P e a n M artin 10 12,24 S tre e ts of S a n F r a n c U c e 9 S a n A n to n io F o r u m 11 Movie -Tell T h em W illie Bo y is H e re ” ? .'IO p 111 10 nu p in. 9.36 30 Minutes w ith... 12.: I D irk Cavett 7.in N ews 9 Firing l ine 5 T h is is Y o u r L if e 4.6.36 T o n ig h t Show 11 lam . 11 no p m Midnight 9 I ranch Chef ■ ‘.IO M ovie "T l,e S w im m e r'’ 9 Midn .:ht Sm ack# Movie "L o v e from a S tran g e r” :l'l!ll!!l!lM!llilll!ll!llltlll!lllllllfnilll|[|UIIHIIillllllll^ 10.12.24 M od S q u a d 4.6,38 F l i p W ils o n 9.46 A d v o c a te s 1 1 I t T a k e s a T h ie f 7 30 p.m. 8 p.rn 9,48 A n A m e ric an F a m i l y 12.24 K u n g F u 5 M o v ie : “ M is te r M o s e s ” 7.10 M o v ie Virginia W o o lf ? ” t.6.36 Ironsides -W ho’S A fra id of G U L F S T A T E S T H E A T I 710 E. Ben W h ite SOUTH SIDE NX I R T H I',nil I Mint “'I,TIV I C O M M I N F . ” ‘ •TM K l 1,1. Mn n I ( l i m N ” f i „ l > . M R e d f o r d * I l l I C A M M I ) A I I ” ( ii rd \le\ ‘ M H F IM \l> V H I X F H I b rn ti m sm m sii C l, i' mn-run Rd .ii 183 I SHOWTOWN U.S.A. l\ E A S T Goldie llv\(*i v i n “ 111 I T I R I I l l > I I U I ’ R ill Mum.* I I I F I M V ^ I - A N D “ U F I S > < I I H , M K I X • I M M tmmmmmmmmmm®mum W E S T Paul M liid §,) I “ F O X I « I I M U I N I " “ T O M I I . A ( F OX X V * T F K l X Fin Alda LONGHORN Pu tm an at 183 N. ‘'S A % IIR X” pin*.: I K I M M ) ” iv ,, lin e I nder IM Admitted, \ ‘ M M V D O V i “,048 W.18TH 47« oatofl^ RAT CREEK thur. 9-12 ARAPAHOE fri, 9 - 1 2 *at. 9 - I ■ ira ‘i itmuauHiiHiiiuiRn miwiS WHEELS , J? To ni g M a i (/~>evoA W ESTSID E TAP RO O M 24th and Rio Grand* M IXED DRINKS NG STREET TIMES ALL WEEK D OBIE C E N T E R 472-5392 T U I ? ER WH PLACE PARKING BM ADULT THEATRE a t —* I I I I I I I I jif f N*w I GMM nim Ivwy Tuesday HAPPY HOUR 9-10 p.m. $1 JO 12? f : '041 tth LADIES FREE WITH ESCORT Rated XXX 471-0190 %ilk M T tm , m j » r n ‘ ■ r n oon BARBRA THS STREISAND I ? 30- 3:05 - 5:20 -7:30 - 9 45 $1.00 'TIL 1.30 T H E A T R E 521 E a s t 6tti 472-0442 rn i»§ ] ► t FEATU RIN G . ''H im T I I I . B I S T i n X M . F * T X I RA’ I K i n VT IN AHT I M I TFI VIN M I A T ‘THE DOCTOR’S DISCIPLES” ‘ A FEW BUCKS A HEAD” B O X O P E N S D A IL Y : 12:00 TO IO OO I : 0 0 O N S I N I I A X $1.00 O FF W IT H THIS AD to; iv 222 East 6th- - 472-0436 ' : - WSM TITLES CENSORED B lk k i : # , v i t:/ A r t s Tin* B-sf and Biggest I i Iiiin in Town. Slag X X X Rated No One Under 18 Admitted. 320 E. Sixth , 478-0475 Show Changes Every W ed. L A M K S X V I ) r O L ' P L E S VX K F ! O M I S T I D E N T S - 1 j P r i c e W e d n e s d a y # 16mm Feature IN P E R S O N O N S T A G E FROM 4 TO 12 MIDNIGHT IN O U R PENTHOUSE ALL GIRL REVUE Ice Cold Suds, Etc. 100% Air Conditioned F U A T I R IN G TIGER and JO Y V OX X O P E N A ll THE LATEST GOODIES. R O O K S ! M V I , X 71 V I ) N O X I I l l I > IN THE REA D IN G R O O M A D U L T B O O K S T O R E I l fi i i "SIX WAYWARD GIRLS” Southwestern Premiere W ant to see some new faces? You will see them in this ex­ traordinary good film with a cast of seven lovely young girls! and 16mm Feature rn ROMP AROUND' 1st Run Also! iii Open D aily at 12:00 Noon $1.00 Off Admission Price — Sun., Mon., Tues. With this Add Plus Student LD. Escorted Ladies Free With Membership Coneen To Feature Pianist appeared with P ia n is t Jo y Pottle Sm ith, who such or­ has chestras as the Boston Symphony and Los Angelos Philharm onic, w ill perform with tho Austin Sym phony at 8 p.m. Thursday in M unicipal Auditorium to Miss Smith has chosen perform Brahm s' Concerto No. I in D m inor, Op. 15. Tho pianist is the recipient of the Coleman Such hoi,ors as in Nos Cham ber Music Award Angeles, tho Kosciusko Chopin Prize m d an award for Out- s t a n d : n g Achievement .n Cham ber Music at Tanglewood. She also was a finalist in the M ich a e l's Award in Chicago and a I /n im rid and Van C iliium finalist. M iss Sm ith's orchestral ap pearances include perform arn os with the San Diego Symphony, the M arlboro Festival O rchestra, tho the Baltim ore Symphony, Phoenix the and Boston Pops. Symphony Two seasons ago, at the in vitation of Zuhin Mehta, she was re-engaged by thp Los Angeles P h i l h a r m o n i c to play ti e Schumann Concerto. A form er faculty member of the Curtis Institute of M usic in Philadelphia, Miss Smith has played solo recitals in Camogie H all and Town Hall. the Brahm s to in addition Concerto No. I, the orchestra, conducted b y Lawrence Sm ith, w ill play Bach’s Brandenburg Concerto No, 3 rn G and Brahm s’ ; Arrpzis arroz is arroz is it? Howmany Mexican restaur ant shave rice that is mEm'k really flavorful and interesting to eat? It may sound funny la p p ti) consider rice interesting, but at Del Prado we consider Mp-G- carefully how each part of your meal contributes to your .dining experience. We care as much about our rice es our chile con queso, which is to say quite a lot. Next time p flp 1-4 you’re dining out, consider us. The Mexican restaurant .> with a difference: Del Pride, v ■j ''• ,,v > ' DEL PRADO Tickets Avai labia Friday Roberta Flack To Perform for .•■kef* the performance he purchased at Hogg iforium Box Office, 50 cents blanket tax holders and $1 other students. General ad­ tickets, priced at $2, on ), 81 VI and $5.50 m ay be ■r ed at the symphony office, they stumble over a Students shouldn’t be surprised if few' hundred bodies camped out near Hogg Auditorium F rid a y mor­ ning. The ticket drawing for tho M arch I concert of Roberta Flack starts Frid ay. A fter concert, canceling earlier the singer has agreed an T e r r y Gallaway, Luther Sperberg, Stephen H arrigan, R o y G riffin and Others at 8 p.m . Frid a y at the Homestead Co-op. THEATRE The Afro American P la y e rs will h ave a meeting for persons in acting, w riting, interested stage and set design, lighting, m akeup and costuming from (1 to in the IO p.m. Thursday M ethodist Student Center. ART The University Art Museum presents a new exhibit, prints by artists of the C alifornia School. MI SIC Nancy Burton Garrett, faculty a rtist who has been piano soloist with the D allas Sym phony, w ilj perform at 8 pm F rid a y in the Music Building R e c ita l Hall. The U niversity Symphony Or­ c h e s t r a , featuring soloists Sa ra h Westkaemper and Denise by Brooks Law ren ce Smith, w ill perform at 4 p m . Sunday in the Union M ain Ballroom . conducted and S U B S (18 VARIETIES) to app ear for one performance, sponsored by the Cultural E n ­ tertainm ent Committee. M iss F l a r k ' f i phenomenal success came shortly after her hit .song “ The First Tim e E v e r” from the movie “ Play M isty for M e,” A llow ed by her current song, ‘‘I Can See Clearly Now .” M iss F la ck comes from a m usical fam ily, a mother who played a church organ, a father who p layed piano and a younger b ro th y who also played piano. B y tho timo she was four, M iss Fla ck w as able to pick out tunes on the piano bv ear. At the age or. lo, she received a scholarship to H ow ard University wrhere she graduated with a BA in music education. After six months of graduate, study, she accepted a teaching job. But teaching wras not for he-. She began singing in local clubs in North Carolina but didn't get her big break until Les McCann took her to Atlantic Records. H er first album, “ F irs t T ake,” w’as on the pop charts almost a year before the release cf “ Chapter Two” which becam e a m ajor seller. Tickets are priced at S I and $2 with blanket tax receiDts. LIBRARY FINES Notices from the U niversity L ib ra ry or any of its branches are official U niversity com­ munications requiring immed- ‘ i 800 Lydia S t/ / 476-4427 Open daily (except Monday) 6:30 A M -Midnight / ’til 3 A M Fri & Sat ._____ ^ io ^ o p ji: sun - $ ; CTC presents THE AUSTIN SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA BACH - BRAHMS TONIGHT M UNICIPAL AUDITORIUM 8:00 P.M. presents TONIGHT Jester Auditorium 7 and 9 p.m. 50c FOR BLANKET TAX HOLDERS: OTHER STUDENTS $1 TICKETS AT H O G G BOX OFFICE 10-6 DAILY BUS SCHEDULE FOR THOSE W H O NEED A RIDE, A BUS WILL RUN AT 7:15. JESTER, KINSOLVING, CO-OP. 25c ROUND TRIP TIGHT LITTLE ISLAND (1949) also known as WHISKEY GALORE • e ' = by A " , an-in' M a cire orb! ck, with Jo a n & r*»n w 9 ed and Paxil ford; plux short — T H U R S D A Y S C H ILD R EN and Lindsay Anderson. (1956) by Guy Benton IW K Spring 1973 UFPC M O N EY S A V IN S SEA SO N TICKETS A LSO A V A ILA BLE AT THE BOX O FFIC E. SHADOWS OF OUR FORGOTTEN ANCESTORS (U SS R 1964) © PfWB t t o u Eu j . r n a hm AL l l l f a rn rn rn rn rn rn © rn rn rn G 9 rn rn © rn % rn rn rn a rn rn rn • rn Directed by SERGEI PARADJHANOV with IVAN NIKOLAICHUK a-d Ju lia! o* th- artic camera work . Am es Voge 0 rn TONIGHT ONLY 7:00 and 9:30 BATTS AUDITORIUM ADMISSION 75' *. show woody aliens bananas LOUISE LASSER COLOR pre'ented by 7 Can See Clearly Now' Ticlret drawing for tho March begins Friday at Hogg Auditorium. I concert of Roberta Flack as you like it p.m. Thursday in Batts. M O V IE S "T he Scalphunters, starring Burt Lancaster and Woody Strode, w ill be shown free at the Union Theater Saturday Morning Fun Club at IO a.m. and 1 p.m. Free tickets m ay be picked up at 9 a.m. “ Shadows An­ cestors,“ Russ in director Sergei Paradjhanov, w ill be shown at 7 and 9 ;30 i molten tin by of “ Tight Little Island,” also known as “ Whiskey G alore,” .starring and Basil Jo a n Greenwood Radford, w ill bo shown at 7 and 9 p.m. Thursday in Jester Auditorium. P O E T R Y The Red Bean Re\ irvr, a live feature poetry local poets John Ram ington, Je ff Woodruff, D avid Moorman, leading, w ill daily horoscope A R I I S : A yr arr. s rterMandirte o? y.-. p o rtio n in life m a y tori in This is a ii tn : t- -nix ft q lestionS TAI Kl ' Lock in • : t r y »o plan and direct ions G F M I M : The temp promise snme a<-o-: , for personal gain the i make I f the friend. j C A M I R : Don’t he wide ranee of a d v you m a y hear ted av to search yourself lr I FO This - an hr . letter days! T ake th j or staff, and sh- -v c a n r o a r 1 V l R i . i t : A t Investm ent now ca: rec..h i a little la te r ii small J I R R X F I forces somewhat today Y o u need tim e to s;t down and thin k things over S ( i IR F IO You m a y that dom estic ties are p ric in g a strong b e rrie r on your own sphere of ar- Isn * it worth t c itie s Consider this find D on't be afraid today Y o u are to in an un jsually strong position C A P R IC O R N ; Someone m a y be in ri.re reed of your aid. assistance and ad vine today'. I f so. ro m e out o ’ y ir shell and do y o u r best to help. A Q I A R I I S i An old fr ie n d m a y m ak e co n tact with unexpeetedly you today. T ry to decide q u ic k ly if jeu this to w a n t friendship fan or extinguish P in t i s : lf you've been fighting a re a r guard action re ce n tly , tM * may be the day to throw In the towel. - N U K I XXX R FY< Pl i :i rd d to earned a big 472-7315 1411 L A V A C A CASTLE CREES FREDAAND THE FIREDOGS O NLY $1.00 t h e SarriW T tch sh o p 2604-A G U A D A L U P E 478-1972 ARTS AND THEATRE C O M M IT T EE Fri., Set. 7, 9, ll 1.00 Students, Pac., Staff S u n . 7, 9 1.50 Members TRUFFAUT'S N EW FILM MASTERPIECE The tush scene alone is worth the price of admission. A Triumph! ”• NEWSWEEK Janus F ilms presents ^ T h a t p a rt of th e a n a to m y r e v e r e d b y th e stam p . Ftish Scene O O C O O C O O O O O o A Commemorative Stamp N° OOOOO GEORGE SEGAL " W h e r e s P o p p a ? Shows — 2 -4-6 | RUTH G O R D O N JI SI ■ AD VAN C E TICKETS ON SA LE AFTER 2:00 P.M. I C OI o t • # ' W D * “A Gem From Truffaut” NEW YORK TIMES TONIGHT ONLY :45 Friday and Saturday Feb. 23 and 24 Fri. in Burdine Aud. Sat. in Batts Aud. ^ 7:00, 9:05, I 1:05 ( /„ R o b e rta Flack Thursday/Match Ist/Municipal Auditorium/8:00 pm Presented by The Cultural Entertainment Committee of the Texas Union Ticket drawings February 23-March I Hogg Auditorium Box Office/lO-6 daily $2 and $1 with Blanket Tax T H E D A ILY TEXAN Thursday, February 22, 1973 Page IS Page 16 Thursday, February 22 , IDT THE DAILY TF.XAH Sequence by Karen Wiles