T h e D a ily T e x a n Student N ew sp ap er at The University of Texas at Austin Please Recycle This Newspaper Vol. 74, No. 5 Fourteen P ages Ten Cents Austin, Texas, Tuesday, June ll, 1974 471-4591 Nixon Off on Tour First Day Rest Stop in Salzburg, Austria P re sid e n t N ixon an d party are greeted by A ustrian Chancellor Bruno President A ga in Refuses 'Subpoenas for Evidence SA LZBU RG . Austria (UPI>—President Nixon arrived in this cold and rainy Austrian city Monday night on the first leg of his five-nation “ new journey for peace” to the Middle East. The President and his party were to spend 34 hours resting in the pink Klesheim Palace near Salzburg before leaving Wednesday for a week of goodwill summit meetings in Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Syria, Israel and Jordan. B E F O R E L E A V IN G Washington earlier in the day, Nixon called his 15.000-mile trek a new journey for peace. “ We realize that one trip w ill not solve differences that go back centuries (but) we believe a beginning has to be made, he said in a brief speech on the White House lawn. “ We believe this trip, like the other journeys we have taken, w ill contribute to that lasting peace to which we as A m erican s are so deeply dedicated.” This was Nixon’s fourth visit to Salz­ burg and his second as President. Violent demonstrations marred his stopover here in 1972 en route to Russia, and more than 1,200 armed policemen ringed Salz­ burg airport Monday to block any repeti­ tion x But no demonstrations materialized Police kept everyone without an official pass away from the airport. About 150 middle-aged Austrians watched from —W I T>kpheto beneath umbrellas outside the gates. “ I had nothing to do today,” said Kreisky. carpenter Rupert Seicht-Mueller 45, “ and I wanted to see the President before he loses his job. When the plane came to a halt before Austrian Chancellor Bruno Kreisky, a local band of the Groedig Uniformed Marksm en Company struck up an Austrian march. IN A B R IE F airport statement, Nixon tapes because because the; they would damage him. ...... within a week and “ could lav tapes lay the basis’5 basis’ W ASHINGTON ( U P I ) - Defying war­ Nixon replied such conclusions were of a House vote to hold the President in nings that he risked both impeachment unjustified; he said he was lighting to contempt of Congress, McClory said. and contempt of court, President Nixon protect executive privilege. Rep Edward Hutchison of Michigan. refused Monday to comply with sub­ “ U n le ss the lin e w ere draw n Senior Republican on the committee and poenas issued by a House committee for somewhere, by someone,’ Nixon told the only member to vote against the sub­ tapes and by a judge for crim inal Rodino. there would be no end to the pan­ poena, told reporters regarding Nixon s evidence el’s demands. “ Since it is clear the com­ message, “ I think it s a good letter Acting through aides while a plane mittee w ill not draw such a line, I have AT A CAUCUS, Republican members earned him abroad on a mission he done so." of the panel decided to write committee hoped would offset his deepening ★ ★ ★ Chairman Peter W. Rodmo a letter in­ troubles at home, the President. WASHINGTON (U P I) - President sisting that John W Dean III. H R. • Refused to surrender 45 subpoenaed Nixon argued Monday that his claims of Haldeman, Ehrlichm an. Charles W tapes on posi-Watergate conversations executive privilege in the impeachment Colson and others be called as witnesses despite the House Ju d ic ia ry Com­ inquiry “ must be accepted without before the committee ends it impeach mittee's warnings that further del lance adverse inference if the basic concept ment inquiry The Republicans said (if its subpoenas “ might constitute of separation of powers in government is Rodino appeared reluctan t to ca ll rounds for impeachment. to survive. witnesses Told U.S. D ist Judge Gerhard Nixon maintained that the judicial and In the courtroom, Gesell was expected Gesell that he would not turn over all legislative branches of government long to act soon on a motion by Ehrlichm an’s documents subpoenaed by the judge on ago established their determination to attorney to begin contempt proceedings behalf of John D Ehrlichm an, who keep some of their business confidential against Nixon. wanted them for his defense in the and that “ equal firmness by the ex­ Ehrlichm an, former chief domestic forthcoming conspiracy trial which grew ecutive is no less essential’ for preser­ adviser to Nixon, and four other persons out of the Ellsberg break in. ving balance in the government. are scheduled to go on trial next Monday Nixon also told U.S. Dist. Judge John “ IF T H E institution of an impeach­ for conspiring to violate the civil rights J Sirica that a portion of a Sept 15,1972 ment inquiry against a President were of Daniel Ellsberg’s Psychiatrist by tape should not be turned over to a grand permitted to override all restraints of raiding his office. jury investigating alleged White House separation of powers, this would spell Ehrlichm an contends he needs the attempts to use the Internal Revenue the end of the doctrine of separation of memos for his defense. At his request, Service for political purposes powers: it would be an open invitation to Gesell subpoenaed them. Through Jam es SIR IC A originally said 17‘ a minutes of future Congresses to use an impeach­ D. St. Clair, his attorney, Nixon said he the tape, which was first subpoenaed by ment inquiry, however frivolously, as a still might not surrender them. Archibald Cox and surrendered last device to assert their own supremacy In his letter to Rodino. Nixon said he November, was unrelated to Watergate. over the executive, and to reduce ex did not want to make the presidency But on Friday Sirica said he was mis­ ecjtive confidentiality to a nullity. Nix “ henceforth and forevermore subser­ taken and he would give the prosecutors on said. vient” to the other branches of govern­ that portion of the tape. The President defended his position in ment — the courts and Congress. a letter sent to Chairman Peter W. In each case, Nixon invoked executive T H E SU B P O EN A sought 45 postRodino Jr. of the House Judiciary Com privilege, the doctrine that a President Watergate taped conversations. It was mittee to explain why he had decided not has an unalterable right to keep certain approved May 30 by a vote of 37 I. to comply with any further subpoenas by confidential documents secret. Also approved at that meeting was a the panel In the House. Rep. Robert McClory. R Nixon acknowledged that an impeach­ strongly worded letter warning Nixon III , a member of the judiciary com­ ment proceeding “ places a great strain that his continued defiance of subpoenas mittee, said he was “ expecting to” in­ on our constitutional system.” but he for impeachment evidence “ might con­ troduce a resolution on the floor Tuesday urged the Congress to recognize a need stitute grounds for impeachment. that would direct Nixon to surrender all for self-restraint on its part to preserve The committee warned it might draw 98 tapes subpoenaed by the committee so I he traditional balance of power among “ adverse inferences' from Nixon s far the three branches of government behavior and conclude he was hiding the ♦Such a resolution could be voted upon acre Wilding tract, precipitating the By K EN MCHAM city's study. Texan Staff W riter Davidson said there are a “ multitude Austin is considering the annexation of of questions” dealing with the conflicting the 4,000-acre Wilding tract in response jurisdictions of the city and the water to new plans of the project's developers district and that the study should resolve The developers. Southern Living and those questions. Leisure Inc . Friday announced plans to ANNEXATIO N by the water district include the project's land within the may enable Wilding to finance construc­ boundaries of adjoining Travis ( ounty tion of its water and wastewater utilities Water Control and Improvement D istrict at a final estimated cost of $14 million. No. 17. They termed the move “ a very Under the agreement with the district, positive step toward completion of the utilities construction for Wilding would project be financed by “ benefit bonds sup­ (T T Y M A N A G ER Dan Davidson said ported by taxes on Wilding residents onthe comments of a number of city coun­ ly. cilmen “ led to a study on our part as to Wilding's developers have also agreed what the options of the city are. that special benefit bonds will be issued Davidson said the study would be to retire the $820,000 outstanding bonded prepared as soon as possible and indebtedness of the district. presented to City Council. In other words, the residents of Donald D. Reynolds, vice-president Wilding w ill pay the current taxes of all and project manager for Southern Living the residents in the district plus taxes to and Leisure, said he could not comment finance their own utilities. adequately on the possibility of annexa­ A special election of district residents tion until after talking with city officials must be held to authorize the annexation Tuesday. and bonds. No date has been set for the However, Reynolds said he anticipated election. the city "could not move fast enough Asked about the possible city annexa (three years) to meet Wilding's needs lion, Councilman Bob Binder said he had for utility construction. talked about it with other council “ We need municipal financing, and the members “ after the first Wilding vote only way is through some kind of dis­ and before the second ” trict," said Reynolds “ Annexation has its advantages and Travis County Water Control and Im disadvantages,” said Binder. He cited provement District No. 17 approved the advantages of citv zoning control of Thursday the annexation of the 4,146- Wilding Options Under Study today Correction ... Tuesday will be part­ ly cloudy with w arm ­ er t e m p e r a t u r e s through W ednesday. Southeasterly winds are expected at 8 to 18 m.p.h. The high tem ­ peratures for Tues­ day should reach the upper 80s with a low Tuesday night in the low 70s. The high for Wednesday should be in the 90s. when he meets with Kreisky Tuesday morning at Schloss Klesheim. Kreisky recently visited the Soviet Union. During the flight. Ziegler told the press pool that this trip gives Nixon the mileage record for foreign travel of U.S. chief executives. By the time he returns to Washington he w ill have traveled more than 137,000 miles on flights to 30 countries. ALTHOUGH A ID ES said Monday mor­ ning that Nixon would be in daily touch with his chief Watergate lawyer, Jam es D. St. Clair, throughout the trip, both Haig and Ziegler said auring the trip that there would be no reactions from the Presidential party to developments while he is abroad. Salzburg's reaction to the presidential visit was low-key. Local newspapers barely mentioned it, and although the arrival was shown live on television few persons turned out at the airport or on the streets. F o rm e r Pre sid e n t F ra n k lin D Roosevelt visited Cairo for a summit conference in 1943. Nixon noted that no other American president has visited the four other countries on his schedule, and said the trip would “ take us to a part of the world that has known nothing but war over the past 30 to 40 years.” “ W E R E A L IZ E that one trip is not go­ ing to solve differences that are very deep, that go back in some case, many years, and in some cases centuries,’ he said. “ But we also realize that a begin­ ning must be made.” Nixon’s remarks were addressed to a group of diplomats and officials gathered at the White House to wish him well before he boarded the helicopter which ferried him and his party to his “ Spirit of ’76” jet liner. Air Force I. at nearby An­ drews A ir Force Base. L a w Office ... T h u r s d a y 's T e x a n s to ry on " D e e p T h ro a t" incorrectly id e n t i f i e d N e! son Wells as owner of the My-O-My Club. The s to ry should h ave id e n tifie d N o rm a n Wells as owner of the c lu b . T h e T e x a n regrets the error and apologizes for any in­ convenience to either party. W a rm e r tho u/nriH said every nation lr, in the world has has a a stake stake in maintaining peace in the Middle East. “ We trust that this journey w ill con­ tribute not only to peace in that area but to peace for all nations of the world, he said. After the stop in Salzburg, Nixon w ill head for Cairo where an anticipated tum ultuous w elcom e aw aits him Wednesday morning. He also will visit jiddah, Saudi Arabia; Damascus, Syria. Tel Aviv, Israel; and Amman. Jordan, before returning to Washington next w^okK reisk y greeted Nixon with the recollection that the President's visit to Moscow in 1972 ‘‘promoted so successful­ ly a lessening of tensions throughout the world,” and said “ we hope you w ill be a pacemaker for peace in that part of the world” - the Middle East - on this trip. A brother and sister, Matthias, 14 and Christine Schmidhuber, 13, presented the traditional “ bouquet of herbs.” They had played the same role when the Nixons arrived two years ago. A F T E R SH AKIN G hands all around, and tossing off a glass of enzian. a li­ queur made of the gentian alpine flower, Nixon climbed into the presidential limousine for the drive to Kleisheim Police also guarded the walls of the baroque 18th Century palace, a former guest house for Adolf Hitler when the Nazis ruled Austria. Aides said Nixon worked in his cabin throughout the flight from Washington Gen. Alexander Haig, White House chief of staff, said Nixon studied his briefing papers “ to prepare himself intensively for discussions with Middle Eastern leaders and with Kreisky. Press secretary Ronald Ziegler said Nixon plans a discussion on a range of subjects including East-West relations Opinion Sought O n Land Records B y RIC H A RD F L Y and D A V E R IS H E R Texan Staff Writers The University System law office decided Saturday to request an opinion from Atty. Gen John H ill on whether the University must grant access to land lease information. A week of discussion between Univer­ sity officials and the attorney general s office preceded the opinion request, which may be submitted Tuesday. T H E LAW O F F IC E is asking H ill to decide the validity of information re­ quested by Houston Rep. Joe Pentony. On May 21, Pentony requested access to all information relating rn the lease of University-owned lands to private firms. The U niversity denied the request, prompting Pentony to ask H ill to seek court action under the Open Records Law. The issues raised by the University, according to Mike Quinn, assistant to the chancellor, are whether Pentony sub­ mitted a valid request under the open records law and whether the law gives the right to examine University files. Uncertain in the University's request is whether it w ill provide the attorney general’s staff with the information for review. Although University officials refused comment. Colin Carl, staff legislative assistant to H ill, said a conversation with law office director R.C. Gibson in dicated the University “ would request an amnion Dersuant to Section 7 of the the project and additional tax revenues but pointed out the city must supply the area with utilities service and police and tire protection within three years after annexation, U N D ER E X IS T IN G city policy, the city would also pay refund contracts to the developers for the consotruction of utility lines. “ To my mind that’s one thing that would have to cleared up. said Binder “ lf we give them a refund contract we're right back where we started from we’re financing their utilities for them The City Council May 9 denied Wilding authorization to create a Municipal U tili­ ty District (M U D ), which would have enabled the development to issue its own utility construction bonds. If incorporated into the water district, control would be in the hands of the dis trict. D istrict General Manager Ernest Stewart said the development would “ really be more controlled than had the city allowed the MUD. TH E D ISTRIC T is one of several such local governmental bodies within Travis County It has authority to build dams and reservoirs, water treatment, dis­ tribution and collection systems, create a police force and tax its residents, said Stewart The w ater d istrict, adjacent to Wilding, lies on the Lake Travis side of State Highway of 620 from Lohinan’s Crossing to just past Comanche Trail Open Records Law ’ T H E S E C T IO N deals w ith the procedure for submitting materia! to the attorney general for a ruling on whether it is included in the scope of the law. Carl said the attorney general s office would rule on the information before tak­ ing further action. The information was denied to Pen­ tony after he asked for more information on University leases when he was provid­ ed with an essential list of facts on 39 leases. Regent Frank C. Erw in said last week the University would not provide further information to Pentony. saying it would take a truck to deliver it. Pentonv then sought H ill to obtain a writ of mandamus in court to obtain the data. AT THAT T IM E , discussions began between the law office and the attorney general to determine the University s response. The University Monday ended the dis­ cussions with the decision to submit at least the two questions for an attorney general’s ruling Pentonv and Erw in Tuesday could not be reached for comment on the new developments. However, B ill Aleshire, a part-time aid to P tony, said the University essentially is following the procedure that they should have followed two weeks ago. Erw in has criticized Aleshire in the past as “ harassing the University in his work on the, requests Temporary Home In Old RTF Building The Texas Union has found a new home — at least temporarily. Since its decision to close the building wrhile remodeling and renovation are in progress, possibly as long as 18 months, the I nion Board of Direc­ tors has conducted an extensive search for available space on campus to house the various activities. The board hoped to maintain as many offices and services as possible, ideally in a centralized spot During a Friday meeting, Frank Fleming, co chairperson of the I mon Building Advisory Committee and student body president announced that the old Radio-Television-Film Building on Speedway Street w ill be available for Union use The building, which once served as the University Physical I lant, was vacated when the Department of Radio-Television-Film moved to the new Communication complex. Demolition of the structure was scheduled this summer to make way for a $15 million addition to the Chemistry Building. “ With rising costs of construction and a depleting construction budget, the building will not be demolished” as expected. Fleming said. Should the demolition be rescheduled and the building addition project readied, the Union would be forced to find new space, f leming added. Relocation of facilities should begin at the end of the summer. Briscoe Pledges Texas' First Donation W e e k e n d Telethon to Raise Funds for State a n d National' Party By re s p o n s e s r e c o r d e d la s t 16 Texas cities with CBS af­ month from Texans giving filiates. th eir views on the telethon B riscoe said he hopes this and this type of political fund w ill p ro m o te g r e a t e r raising. g rassroots p articipation in the " It w as proven la st y ear sta te. th at these special segm ents G o rdon W ynne J r . . c o ­ w ere a great a sse t to the fund c h a ir m a n fo r th e T e x a s ra is in g e ff o rt in T e x a s ,’ T elethon C o m m itte e , said Wvnne said. T exas would be allotted tim e C a lv in G u e s t, s t a t e to present nine special Texas D em ocratic P a rty chairm an, segm ents which will be broad­ said. “ The past two telethons c a st live statew ide from the F airm o n t Hotel in D allas, site o f T e x a s t e l e th o n h e a d ­ q u arters. Wynne explained th a t the T exas segm ents will be IO m inutes long and fe atu re state A 23-vear-old U n iv e rsity D e m o c ra tic le a d e rs , student is being held in T ravis c e le b ritie s and D e m o c ra ts County Jail in connection with from throughout the sta te urg­ th e a lleg ed kidnaping and ing v iew ers to m a k e co n ­ a s s a u l t of a 2 1 -y e a r-o ld tributions. U niversity coed Friday. Also included in the T exas Roy Lee Johnson w as chargsegm ents, Wynne said, will be P a rty of Texas. The teleth o n ’s them e this year is “ Answer. A m erica and will be broadcast live from Los Angeles over the CBS netw ork beginning at 9 p m Saturday and ending a t 6 p.m . Sunday (CDTI. B riscoe called the program “ th e longest political fund raising telethon in television h istory ." Produced by E rie Lieber. the national broadcast will feature such Hollywood stars a t Paul N ewm an. Helen Red­ dy. K ris K ristofferson. Jack L em m o n . G ro u c h o M arx . Trim Lopez and others. Unlike previous telethons, this year th ere will be phone banks w here donors can call in their pledges. These a re in RO DO LFO R E S E N D E Z JR. Texan Staff W rite r Gov. Dolph B riscoe pledged M onday th a t T exas D em ocrats will “ m ake an allout effort to guarantee the s u c c e s s o f th e N a tio n a l D e m o c ra tic T e le th o n ’ scheduled for broadcast June 29 and 30. “ Its purpose will be to raise funds for the D em ocratic P a r­ ty both nationally and here in Texas and to give A m ericans a stake in th eir governm ent byinvolving them , through their contributions, in the political sy stem ." B riscoe said B risco e added th a t twothirds of the funds raised in Texas by the telethon will be turned over to the D em ocratic C ity Officials Blast Gas Cut p resident of Lo-Vaca, said th e By W IL L IA M Z E IS C e n tr a l T e x a s u t i l i t i e s large in d u strial users, such a s would be deprived of natural refin eries, would have a m ore gas in favor of larg e industrial difficult tim e with conversion concerns if the c u rtailm en t to fuel oil than the utilities. San Antonio officials also proposal by Lo-V aca G ath er­ ing Co. is approved, an a t­ objected to the cu rtailm en t torney for the L ow er Colorado plan, citin g the burgeoning R iver Authority (LCRA ) said costs of providing electricity. San Antonio Mayor C harles Monday. Clint Sm all J r ., law yer for B ecker said the costs of co al LCRA, said in h ea rin g s before and fuel oil, the 19 percent in­ the R ailroad C om m ission that crease in utility rates and a Texas utilities, w hich would severe inflation have o v e r­ be placed in a low priority burdened the city Tom B erg, chairperson of ca te g o ry u n d e r L o-V aca s proposal, would need an ad­ the City P ublic Service B oard ditional 2.5 m illion b a rre ls of of S a n A ntonio, said the c ity fuel oil per m onth a fte r con­ had a lre a d y spent $100 m illion version of g e n e ra to rs from for conversion from n a tu ra l Monday. gas to alte rn a tiv e fuels. n atural gas. The kidnaping victim said B E R G R EC O M M E N D E D S M A L L Q U E S T I O N E D h er abductor was her fo rm er rejectio n of the plan in fa v o r w hether firm s such as Shell boyfriend but declined to com ­ of an a lte rn a te proposal w ith O il Co. a n d C h a n n e l In m ent on his m otives. m ore co n tro ls and a re q u ire ­ d u s tr ie s , a s u b s id ia r y of The m an abducted h er from m ent th a t C oastal S tates G as Tenneco, would find it easier th e A lm e tris C o-op. 2610 than utility co m p an ies to ac­ Co. give Lo-Vaca, its su b ­ W hitis Ave., a t 8 p.m . F rid ay , quire natural g as from other sidiary, the gas it needs to d r o v e h e r to a n A u s ti n m eet dem ands. sources. residence and held her until H K. H oward, an official of Clinton B. F a w c e tt, a vicel a t e S a tu rd a y n ig h t. C en tral Lighting and P o w e r, and this y e a r's have helped us Telethon C om m ittee G eorge build a sound base of financial L. B ristol said m ore than 500.and volunteer support for the 000 pledge card s have been d i s t r i b u t e d to m e e t th e D em ocratic P a rty of Texas. pretelethon goal of $110,000. “ T hey have h e lp e d re v ita liz e th e D e m o c ra tic B riscoe led off the list of P a rty on a national level, and to reaffirm the p a rty 's com ­ pledges by personally signing m itm ent in T exas to financial a pledge card for $100. " I urge all D em ocrats to do re f o r m of th e p o litic a l the sa m e ,” he said. p ro cess,” G uest said. Locally, the telethon will be C o - c h a ir m a n fo r th e D em ocratic P a rty of Texas aired by KTBC, channel 7. Suspect J a iled UT Coed K idnap Victim Co-Op Consumer Action Line ed wiLh kidnaping, a felony, and assaulL w ith bodily injury, a m is d e m e a n o r, b e fo re AssociaLe M unicipal C ourl Judge S arah P hillips late Sun­ day night. Judge Phillips set bond of $1,000 on the kidnaping ch arge and $750 on the m is­ d em eanor com plaint J o h n s o n s u r r e n d e r e d to U niversity police a t IO p.m . 478-4436 The Stereo Shop is having a Special Close Out Sale Monday thro Friday 8:30-5:30 T he C on su m er A ction Line is a * a y for y ou to voice your o p in io n o f the Co-Op to us d irectly. W e want to hear to u r com plain ts, suggestions, ideas and anyth in g els*- that you want to say. W e ll listen . All you have to do is dial 4 7 8 -4 4 3 6 and speak to a guv nam ed M ichael and tell him w hat io u feel. And you can c a ll anytim e during the store hours. W e're here to serve you. Vnd if y o u d on 't feel like giv ing us a call th en you can drop us a lin e . Mail them to Co-O p A ction Line, 2216 G uadalupe. P .O . D raper 7520. T h e Co-Op doesn t mind if i o u c om p lain , that's how we try to im prove service tai Ultralinear for y ou . Out Hem fre e Pmkmg wr9k § J? PwdMM •* nitre U N IVERSITY C O -O P I chart* ( • ■ k * i» r U * r d Call anytime during store hours. ■ .(far W atcaaw i Stereo Shop The University Co-Op 23rd & Guadalupe 2 5 0 W A TTS OF POWER A M -F M STEREO TUNER IC 'P E T CIRCUITRY 3 W AY 12-SPEAKER SYSTEM GARRARD PRO TURNTABLE A * V ld Nobody makes turntables like GARRARD and there 5 never been a stereo system like the A X 7 0 0 0 /G A R RARD Full range AIR S U S PE N SIO N speakers driving w ith the power of a 2 5 0 W A T T am plifier The quality is m atched by an outstanding ONE YEAR PARTS & LABOR GUARANTEE HURRY , because our stock is lim ited The manufacturer's suggested list is $529 and at our price of lust $ 2 9 9. cash or terms available, they w on t be here long GARRARD n ONE YEAR PAR TS & LA B O R G UARANTEE I F o r a p e r io d o f one 11 > y e a r fr o m d a te o f p u r c h a s e te e m a n u I 1 fa c to re t w it ! g u a ra n te e a ll th e e le c tr o n ic c o m p o n e n ts rn th is s te re o I * f * s y s te m to b e fre e o f a ny a n d ah d e fe c tiv e p a rts S h o u ld a d e fe c t o f m a te r ia l a n d or w o r k m a n s h ip rn th e a m p lif ie r tu n e r, sp e a k e r, o r t u r n t a b le s e c tio n s o f ih 'S s te re o o c c u r w i t h i n o n e (1 ) ye a r fr o m date o f purchase d wvdf b e re p la c e d o r r e p a ir e d fr e e o f a n y p a rts | co st or service charge sale $ 46.95 $ 51.95 $ 59.95 $ 89.95 Open till 9 :3 0 p.m. Thursday & Friday 4 7 6 -7 2 1 0 (after 5:30) BankAmericard & Waster Charge Welcomed. C onsider the quiet p riv a c y under th e spreading oak trees o f our one b edroo m a p a rtm e n ts for $ 1 6 5 A ff B ills P a id Palo Blanco 911 Blanco 472-1031 AND I t I HE SAD, .SIGN W RE MY DEAR’.’’ SA V E $ 2 0 0 O N T H IS S T E R E O . . . I T 'S W O R T H IT! A X7D O O * 199 9 5 You're looking for a new apartment... ii BUT W H E N Y OU CAN rA 1 °°0 One hour free parking with $2.00 purchase or more. THIS STEREO COULD GET YOU EVICTED A X ~7 0 D 0 / ^ a A Ultralinear reg. $ 99.95 IOO $ 129.95 150 200 $ 159.95 476-7211 CAUTION! • • • • • W hile th e supply lasts, t h e S tereo Shop is o ffer in g you a fantastic sale o n t h e ir U ltra linea r speakers. You w o u ld n 't w ant to miss o u t o n this bargain. asked w h eth er Lo- Vaca w ould o b ject to an interim period to allow e le c tric a l utilities tim e for conversion to a lte rn a te fuels. Lo-V aca officials responded th at th ey would be w illing to accep t an em ergency tim e -la g proposal. I I j COMPONENT SALE Speakers, What a line! It ranks right up there with the clas­ sic scenes of the mustachioed villain abandoning the [sweet young damsel tied to the tracks and cackling, “Just sign, e t c . ... The difference is, one is a classic, the other a reality. You know how it goes. You find a place you like but the landlord shoves a ^o-sem ester con­ tract in your face. So i f s ‘sign the deed and suffer or move on. Oh, the ag f it sill 011But fear not Tri-Towers North has a little something we invented called the One Semester Contract. You aren’t trapped into staying or losing your deposit if you move on after one semester. Ana we haven t raised our a • I Q £ Q ^Tri-Towers North is two and a half blocks west of campus. 801 West 24th - 476-7636. Turntables, 8 Tracks N O R T H 653 5 N. Lamar Mon.-Fri. 9 to 9, Sat. 9-6 Page 2>.Tuesdav» June l l . 1974 TMF, DAILY TEXAN r N o rth Danger Moves Storm 3 States Weekend Tornadoes, Floods Kill 25 in •vt A LU rxn A llittle i tt l e n rnm riaht O k la .. at Okla., and Drumright, Okla., a slow ly swing into upper New York State By United Press International and New England. The National Severe Storm s Center in The National Weather Service issued a Kansas City said Monday the next five tornado watch Monday for portions of days should end the danger of more killer w estern and north central Pennsylvania tornadoes for battered Oklahoma, Kan­ and m ost of New York State. sas and Arkansas but that the danger will Pearson warned that the Tornado then shift to the upper M idwest, Great Alley states, from Kansas southward Lakes and New England areas. into Texas, should not relax i t ’s a long way from being certain, “ Nature repeats h erself,” he said, but this is the period w e are worrying “and by the end of the week nature could 'about m ost (for the traditional Tornado have the system recharged Alley sta te s),” said center director Allen The cities hardest hit by the tornadoes Pearson. “ But if we can get by about Saturday were Em poria, Ran.; Tulsa, June 15 in this area of the country, we should be off the hook.” Pearson said Saturday’s storm system which produced at least two dozen tor­ nadoes and flash floods which killed 25, injured over 350 and left m ore than 2,000 homeless in three sta tes w as a classic pattern” that began developing Friday. ™ Killer tornadoes chewed through Ohio a WASHINGTON (A P) - The Supreme month before, well north of traditional Court has broadened the power of areas. prosecutors to use evidence indirectly “ Nature is now flip-flopping on us and obtained from defendants who were not going back to more conventional late fullv informed of their rights. spring patterns,” Pearson said. That The court’s 8-1 decision stem m ed from spelled trouble for northerners the conviction of Thomas Tucker. Pon­ The grea test likelih ood of severe tiac. M ich., on a rape charge. Tucker weather will shift to the upper Midwest appealed on ground that the prosecution and Great Lakes area through July, and town of 3,000 located midway between Tulsa and Oklahoma City. However, m ore tornadoes struck sm all towns and rural a rea s throughout cen tral and eastern Oklahoma and rain of more than a foot produced flash flooding in Arkan­ sa s, p articu larly along its southern border in the city of El Dorado. Fifteen people died in Oklahoma, six died at Emporia and four were drowned in Arkansas. In Oklahoma, Red Cross disaster ser­ v ices director Jim Monahan said 1.617 rneuus capsules Police G uard 'Collaborator' LOS ANGELES (U FI) — P olice Monday kept under observation for her safety a woman named by the remnants of the Symbionese Liberation Army as a collaborator who gave away the location of the hideout where six SLA members died. Mary Carr, mother of the woman who rented a house to Donald Cin­ que” D eFreeze and other m em bers of the terrorist cult, protested that she had not informed authorities. In a tape recording to a Los Angeles radio station last k riday, William Harris - along with Patricia Hearst and his wife, Em ily, the three SLA survivors — said ‘‘The pigs would not have located our comrades if a collaborator named Mary Carr had not snitched to the enemies. persons w ere left hom eless, m ore than 350 persons w ere injured and dam age was in ex cess of $40 million President Nixon declared the three states national disaster areas, making them eligible for federal aid for cleanup and rebuilding. The first tornado ripped the roof from a crowded nursing home in Drumright, and then cut a mile-long, three-blockwide path through the sm all town. The next bad one struck Emporia, destroying all but five of 103 trailer hom es and wrecking 22 businesses. M arket Rally Continues S u p r e m e C ourt Actions Evidence Use Broadened A ISD Votes Pay Raise, Nam es Athletic Head By DAVID SHARPE The Austin School Board named a new athletic director and assistan t director Monday night and approved an acrosst he board 16 84 p e rc e n t pay raise for school adm inistrative officials Charlie Munson w as named replace­ m en t for form er A th letic D irector Travis Raven, who resigned a ller being convicted of a m isdem eanor charge in May I , A The board also named the first woman to the position of assistan t athletic direc­ tor E lbe Noack, form er instructor-coordinator of physical education, has served in Austin for 12 years The salary increase, one of the Austin - schools’ largest, includes principals, assistant principals, deans and classified personnel such as bus drivers and secretaries. Significantly, this increase excludes the superintendent of schools, Dr Jack Davidson, and about 40 central office administrators. The su p e rin ten d en t and the a d ­ ministrators will be considered in a different category THIS SALARY increase follows a sim ilar increase last week for teachers, librarians and counselors. The pay increase w ill cost the school district $600,070 As a ssistan t athletic director since 1961 Munson said he has tried to provide a well-rounded athletic program and hopes to keep Austin at the top in school athletics . Munson graduated from the University in 1949 and began his career by coaching one year at Cuero, T exas, and one veal iii Lockhart Munson cam e to Austin in 1951 and he coached for two years at Baker Junior High. In 1953, he moved to McCallum High School to becom e assistant football coach and head coach of the baseball team. , N oack has been a leader in the developm ent of a girls athletic program in Austin Except for tennis, Noack said. girls have had no real athletic program the way bovs have had. IN THE LAST two years, however, Austin has picked up two sports for girls — track-and-field and volleyball — and is preparing to add a third, basketball. Along with in tercity com p etition , Austin girls also are involved with the Interscholastic League. Reared in Port Arthur. Noack is a graduate of the Lniversity. Involved in athletics most of her life. Noack taught physical education before she was appointed as the co-ordinator of physical education. .As assistant athletic director Noack said she hopes to continue working toward a greater athletic program for girls. ,learned _____ ^ of a w itness nniv stateonly thrmieh through aa state ment which Tucker gave police POLICE HAD not told Tucker that he had the right to have a lawyer provided free. Such a statem ent to suspects is re­ quired by a 1966 decision of the Supreme Court known as the Miranda ruling Tucker was arrested and questioned before the Miranda decision, but his trial cam e after it. In other cases, the court: • Ruled 8-1 that sta te s need not provide teachers to private, churchrelated schools to qualify for federal aid for teachers’ salaries. • Upheld price ceiling regulations of the F ed eral P ow er C om m ission on natural gas from southern Louisiana, a decision the government said was impor­ tant to a continued natural gas supply. The regulations contained incentives to funnel new gas reserves into interstate pipelines. • Ruled that a 20 percent tax on gross receipts of private parking lots and gar­ ages is not an unconstitutional infringe­ ment on private property, even when com peting, publicly operated lots enjoy tax exem ptions and other advantages. That case arose in Pittsburgh. Justice W illiam Relinquish speaking for the majority of the • ourt in the Michigan rape case, said Tucker's in­ terrogations showed “ inadvertent dis­ regard” of the procedural rules es­ tablished under the Miranda decision. But Rehnquist said it did not violate Tucker’s constitutional right not to be required to incrim inate him self. “ JUST AS the law does not require that a defendant receive a perfect trial, only a fair one, it cannot realistically require that policemen investigating serious crim es make no errors what­ soever,” Rehnquist wrote. Justice William O. Douglas, dissen­ ting, said the circum stances did not m eet constitutional standards for protec­ ting Tucker's privilege against selfincrimination. J u s t ic e s W illia m B ren n a n and Thurgood Marshall said a ruling that the ti testim ony w as inadm issible, coming years after the crim e was com m itted, “ would severely handicap any attem pt to retry the defendant. Scout Leader Pledges End Of Cheating NORTH BRUNSWICK, N .J. (U P I) The chief executive of the Boy Scouts of America announced a program Monday to end cheating by local scouting of­ ficials to m eet membership quotas. The announcement followed a report in the Chicago Tribune that widespread c h e a tin g had b een c o n d u c te d by professional scouting staff m em bers to inflate membership rolls. The Tribune said its investigation also disclosed cheating of federally funded scouting p n gram s. The newspaper quoted an unidentified scouting official as saying padding of scouting membership lists is national in scope. T h e c h e a t i n g o c c u r r e d d u r in g scouting s Boypower ‘76 program , the Tribune said. The program w as launched in 1968 with the goal of increasing Boy Scout mem bership by two m illion boys by 1976. However, a scouting spokesm an said the BS A had been concerned “ for a year or m ore” about the apparent cheating practices. Alden F. Barber, ch ief Scout ex ­ ecutive. stated: “ The national office of the Boy Scouts of A m erica, has never condoned nor en­ couraged false mem bership reports and in fact takes im m ediate steps to in­ vestigate reported instances. “ In som e cases disciplinary action has been taken and in others the investiga­ tion has not been concluded NEW YORK ( AP) - The stock market weathered a mild early setback to carry its June rally through a sixth consecutive session Monday. The Dow Jones average of 30 industrials, which had backed down about 4 points during the morning, finished with a 5.95 gain at 859.67. That left the Dow with a gain of m ore than 65 points over the last eight trading days and at its highest close in a little more than a month. New York Stock Exchange closing index: M arket............ .... ........ up 18 cents Index..................... ...... . 48 99 up 0.28 Industrial ............. .........54.54 up 0.36 .........35.51 up 0.41 Transportation U tility ....... ............ .........30.45 up 0.04 F inance................. .........54.84 up 0.11 Autopsy Aw aited in Burney Death DALLAS (UPI) — D ist. Atty. Henry Wade said Monday his office will w ait until completion of an autopsy on LTV executive Virgil Dan Burney before deciding whether murder charges should be made against a Dallas ex-convict. “ We won’t know whether it’s murder or not until after the autopsy. Wade said. “ Burney could have very likely died of natural causes. We don t want to m ake accusations until we re sure how he died, he said. Hoarding Delays Plan To Give Indians Wheat NEW DELHI (AP) - Indian Prim e M inister Indira Gandhi s new plan to get wheat to the hungry poor has fallen drastically behind schedule because of h o ard in g and shady o p e r a tio n s by private traders. The result is expected to be large-scale im ports, which the country can ill afford, to fill m ore empty stom achs. To head off black m arket storage and transport, authorities in som e wheatproducing states have launched intensive cam paigns including farm search es and round-the-clock roadblocks to flush out undeclared wheat. AUTHORITIES in U ttar Pradesh also are offering fertiliser and tractor tires ai bargain prices to entice farm ers to bring their crops straight to governm ent procurem ent agencies. N evertheless, purchases for govern­ ment-subsidized fair price shops have * ■ * i _t 1 nno th ic yielded only about 1.7 million ttons this year compared to about three m illion at the sam e tim e last year. The new procurement project revers­ ed an unsuccessful year-old policy that had g iven G an d h i’s g o v ern m en t a monopoly in w holesale wheat dealings. Her takeover failed largely because of private d ea lers who connived with farm ers to keep wheat off the legitim ate fixed-pricd m arket and sell it under the table. , , SO THE GOVERNMENT raised its procurement price IO weeks ago and an­ nounced that the private traders would be allowed back into the m arket places for this sum m er’s wheat crop But the new policy also forced the wholesalers to sell half their turnover to the governm ent at the fixed price, in theory ensuring supplies for the sub­ sidized shops. YOUR BEST INVESTMENT IN STEREO EQUIPMENT FROM A U D IO CONCEPTS HAVE WE GOT A MEAL FOR YOU! ADVENT at Dobie Center select from a full line salad bar. Three different entrees. 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C o m e into A u d io C o n ce p ts and listen to w h at w e think is the best value in h o m e m usic syste m s. o o b x k \ ' 21 st & G U A D A L U P E ■■ : 478-8880 472-8411 Park Free in Dobie Oarage udio (incepts 19 Dobie M ail Open 11 A.M. to 7 P.M. Tuesday, June HI, 1974 T H E D A ILY T E X A N Page Liberal machines, political rapists EDITORIALS P a g e 4 Tuesday, June l l , 1974 Secret police “ W e h a v e m o v e d a n d w ill c o n tin u e to p r o m o t e in c r e a s e d s e c u r i t y s u r ­ v e illa n c e in th e d i s c h a r g e o f o u r r e s p o n s ib ilit y to p r o te c t th e s t u d e n t s f r o m the d a n g e r s o f d r u g a b u s e an d f r o m o t h e r c r i m e s on o u r c a m p u s e s . Chancellor Charles A. LeM aistre. Feb 18. 1971. A Daily Texan request for a detailed budget breakdown to show exac . how the University seeks to halt "th e dangers of drug.abuse an doth er crim es” was denied by the attorney general last week The Texan un­ derstands the ruling which defines information regarding 'the investiga­ tion and detection of crim es,” as being withheld from public inspection under the open records law. We understand the University police s determination to halt the flow oi m arijuana, especially in sm all quantities and in dormitories, for m anjuana is a dangerous, evil drug , We understand the concern with other c r i m e s on campus. We undeistand the expenditure of $49.85 for two tear gas guns and five cans of Dermi-Medic and the purchase of four polyguard not shields for the U IEi Paso gang at a cost of $155.96 to fight the o th e r c r im e s ^ Funding for these expenditures com es from the citizens of Texas*, either through their Available University Fund, tax payments to the state or tui­ tion. We don’t know all of what is done with this money and cannot lega y find out. And we don t understand this. Austin's choice Old Wilding developers never die and don’t fade away very easily, either. Austinites jubilant over the City Council’s recent disapproval o the Wilding Project were stunned by news that the full-size deveiopmen may vet be built. That city officials are studying possible annexation ot Wilding m akes the issue more serious, but wise use of city;powers over land use could m ake annexation more desirable than a 30 ,000 -person su ^ I f Wilding were annexed, the city could zone the land as it chooses but would also be required to provide utility services within three years of annexation. However, limited annexation would give the ^ z o n i n g powers without an obligation to furnish utilities. Some desirable types zoning would include: „ • A - R e s id e n t ia l: Only s in g le - fa m ily u n its w ould b e avowed no apartments or condominiums. . . , , .. • L-Town Lake: By extending the boundaries of this zone to include the Wilding area, no building would be allowed there without a special permit from the City Council. • Create a new zone: This zone might be restricted to one house every five acres, for m stance, or to a population density of one person every five acres. The annexation device can be looked a t two ways. Perhaps it is a means for the city to use its police power to prevent devastation of the Lake Austin area. But it could also be a ploy to allow the Wilding rapistsi t e profits they have unreasonably anticipated, to the detriment of us all. this turns out to be the case, we should enshrine a vial of relatively un­ polluted Lake Austin water in concrete and zone it historical. If history is to be learned from, the lesson Wilding and of u p p er Barton Creek and of countless clean and beautiful places before is this. t e developers will never stop as long a s there is another dime of profit to be wrung out of the good earth. We can organize politically to stop them or we can kiss off the Hill Country and all the good things that differentiate Austin from Houston and Dallas. Texas loses In the past, the University has lost its quality professors to theI quality schools - the Boston Universities, the Y ales, the C olum bus When that it doesn t hurt so badly. . But when the University loses a leading professor to the University of California at Santa Cruz, that is going too far The reasons why Dr. Elliot Aronson, one of the nation s leading socia p sy c h o lo g ists, left- Texas for good ole UCSC are in ic.ear A r o n ^ aid I was because ” 1 really like the place I ’m going to. Others say it was because this place didn’t excite him too much Still others say it was haD Dens b e c a u s e “ A r o n so n lik e s to m o v e a r o u n d . But whatever the reason, the University has lost one of its top sch olar^ A student of Leon Festinger, Aronson was vital in the d e v e lo p m e n t of cognitive dissonance theory, and he also did valuable research in the fie ld of interpersonal attraction. . _ He received the 1973 National Media Award for Books with his publica­ tion ’The S ocial A nim al,” and in 1970 he received the SoeioPsyetiological Prize from the American Association for the A d v a n c e m e n t of Science. He is, as one member of the psychology department said, e difficult, but not im possible, to blame the University for his departure. ‘‘We haven’t had tremendous raises or benefits said D r . Robert Helmreich, another outstanding professor ct p s\( o ogy seriously considered leaving m yself, but I decided T exas was the bes alter all Fortunately, we can’t find much to bitch about. The bitching m ay not yet be in excess by the psychology faculty, but students m ay supply it in large quantities if an adequate replacement is not found. R eplacing Aronson with a professor of comparable stature vvi ^ iT w o u ld b e be difficult, but it seem s essential. “ The departm ent may be starting to slip.” said one psychology .. graduate student. " I t ’s hard to tell now. But if they don t get another big name to fill Aronson’s place, then the department is getting tooled around. It just w ont be the desired place a n y m o r e j \ n ^ Th. U n iv e rsity e l T . * « . e t A . . t i . Buck Harvey EDITOR.................................................................................... B J Hefner MANAGING E D IT O R ......................................................... ASSISTANT MANAGING E D IT O R ..........................................Ly ?ne B r °< * NEWS E D IT O R ............................ ASSISTANT TO THE EDITOR................................................... Dave SPORTS E D IT O R ...................................................................... r Larry Smith AMUSEMENTS ED IT O R ........................................................ Debra “ lplf w PHOTOGRAPHERS.....................................Stanley F a rra r, Marlon Taylor r it v F(litnr M arth a J P M cQuade General R e p o r t e r s ............................. Anne M a n e Kilday, R ich ard F1Y. Ken M cH am News A s s is t a n t s ...............................................Gwen Spain, Jo s e F lo r e s C h arle s Dean C o n trib u to rs......................................... Sa lly C arpen ter, W illard H all, B ry an E ditorial A s s is ta n ts .................................................................... Sleve R u s s e b ' D P ........................................... Copy E d ito rs.?.?....................................................... •>“ >« Alebrando Doug Burton J e f f Newm an, Ja n P h ipps, Su san S tarn es Opinions e x p re sse d rn The Daily Texan are those ot the editor or the w riter of the a r tic le and are not n ece ssarily those of the U n iv e rsity ad m in istratio n or the B oard ot Regents The D ally T ex an , a stud en t n ew sp aper a t The U n iv e r s ity o f T e x a s a t A u stin , i s p u b lish e d by T e x a s S tu d e n t P ublications. D raw e r D , U niversity Station. Austin T ex 7*712 The D aily T e x *, ii published Monday T uesd ay Wednesday T h u rsd ay , and F rid ay Septem ber through May and T u esd ay . W ednesday. Thursday, and F rid ay Ju n e throu gh A u g u st e x c e p t holiday and exam perio ds Secon d ­ class postage paid at Austin T ex. News con tributions will be accep ted by telephone <47149*1 1. a t the e d ito rial o ffice (T e x a s Student P u b lica tio n s Building basem en t B o o r ' or ai the news labo rato ry (C on i cestuous g a m e of cutth roat tac tic s. When S ta te R ep. L a r ry B a le s decided to m a k e a lunge for control of the m ach in e le ad e rsh ip , only two elected of­ fic e s w ere open to h im ; m ayor of Austin and U .S. co n g re ssm a n . H is friend — J e f f F r ie d m a n w a s one of the f ir s t m ach in e-elected o fficeh o ld ers and had a lre ad y sta k e d out a c la im to M ayor Roy B u tle r’s throne. T hat left B a le s to funnel his am bitions into a ra c e a g a in st fo rm e r Lyndon John son y es-m an . Ja k e P ick le. A ra c e he ch o se to m ak e d e sp ite a public opinion poll he co m m issio n ed la s t fall which sup­ p o s e d ly sh o w e d P i c k l e a l m o s t u n ­ b e atab le in voter iden tification. ^ B a le s thought he could be a ssu re d of nothing le ss than N ixonian loyalty fro m the lib e ral m ach in e — a coalition c o m ­ p o se d of s tu d e n ts , b la c k s , D row ns, lab o rite s and young atto rn ey s. It w as a m a c h i n e w h ic h h a d a c c u m u l a t e d phenom enal s u c c e ss in ju s t two y e a rs, electin g two m e m b e rs of the City Coun­ c il, th re e s t a t e l e g i s l a t o r s , a s t a t e se n ato r, a m e m b e r of the S tate B o ard of E d u catio n , the sh e riff and num erous low er echelon o fficeh olders. But B a le s w as too am b itio u s for som e m e m b e rs of the m ach in e. Many women in the coalition loathed h is reputed Sex­ ism . While two fe m a le officeh old ers a lle g ed ly w anted B a le s b eaten , so they could run a g a in st P ic k le in two y e a rs, the m o st im p ortan t re a so n for his d e fe at w as th at B a le s w as perceived a s a oneissu e can d id ate by v o te rs tired of im ­ p each m en t d e m ago g u e ry . IS IP The en d orsem en t of P ick le by the Austin W om ens P o litic a l C au cu s w as one of the truly low points in the B a le s c a m ­ Senate halts military use of be agle s in chemical warpaign. To put it su ccin ctly , so m e B a le s c a m p a ig n e rs c la im “ the wom en screw ed fa re ^ y p e n m e n f s . (N e w s itemJ u s .” T h is com m en t is in itself poten tially s e x ist sin ce it is a perversion of the E n g lish lan g u ag e. Such a form of in ter­ c o u rse betw een h um an s is intended to be I I w . ______ . u/hv w a s the White H ouse so ct Why con cern­ p le asu rab le , except possibly for the in­ M exican bank. When the F B I b egan to B y JA C K A N D E R SO N ed ab out the F B I in vestigation of cash stin c tiv e p u ritan s am o n gst us P e rh a p s a check into th is, it seem ed to upset the U nited F e a tu r e s S y n d icate lau nd ering in M exico C ity ’1 In light of the m ore a c c u r a te and w ord fulfilling s e le c ­ White H ouse m ore than any oth er phase WASHINGTON — F o r six m onths, we oth er W atergate re v e la tio n s, this would tion would h ave been "r a p e d in stead of of the W a te rgate in vestigation . h ave been in vestigatin g the stran g e se e m to be a fairly in sign ifican t detail “ sc re w e d .’ ’ relation sh ip betw een P re sid e n t Nixon And why did H elm s a g re e to tell the F B I T h e P r e s id e n t s tw o m o s t tru ste d A c a s e can b e m ad e that P ick le su p ­ and the shah of Iran. T h ere have been th at the M exican in v estigatio n could a i d e s , H R . H a ld e m a n an d Jo h n p o rte rs packed the c au c u s m eetin g at w h isp ers, all veh em ently denied, that w hich th e e n d o r se m e n t w a s m a d e . je o p a rd iz e a CIA o p e ratio n 1? E h rlich m an , tried to u se tihe C en tral the shah funneled m oney into the Nixon We c h e c k e d w ith W a t e r g a t e in ­ In telligen ce Agency to head off the r b i. H ow ever, it is known that m any hard c am p aig n by w ay of M exico. v e s tig a to r s who sa id they had detected CIA D ire c to r R ich ard H e lm s and his c o re Faren th o ld w om en voted for P ick le, Our in quiries, including o v e r se a s calls no t r a c e of Iranian m oney in th eir probe deputy. L t. Gen. Vernon W alters, w ere including the lib eral-elected Ja n e Wells to T eh ran , G en eva, Bonn, M exico City of the M exican connection. But they had su m m on ed to the White H ouse_ T ^ e> of th e S t a t e B o a r d of E d u c a t io n . and oth er faraw ay p la c e s, h ave got the picked up hints that som eth in g is still w ere in stru cted to inform the r BI that Iro n ically , her B o a rd of E d u cation d is­ lurking in the background which has yet Ira n ia n s in a dither. the M exican probe w as in te rfe rin g with tric t c o m p rise s the sa m e ge ograp h ical Suddenly, we found Iran ian o ffic ia ls to b e r e v e a l e d . “ It i s a l l v e r y a r e a a s the 10th Congressional D istric t. the C IA ’ s operation s in M exico. w ere expectin g our c a lls b e fo re we m ade m y s t e r i o u s , ’ s a i d o n e S e n a t e in­ As m o st people a w a re of their surroun­ N ot lon g a t te r w a r d s , H e lm s w as them . Then the distin gu ish ed and decent d in gs know, B a le s lo st to P ick le by v e stig a to r. suddenly n am ed a m b a ssa d o r to Iran. Yet fo r m e r s e c r e ta r y of s t a t e , W illiam N one of this p roves, of c o u rse , that the a lm o st three-to-one. It w as the fir s t ma­ h is p r e d e c e s s o r in T e h ra n . Jo se p n R o g e rs, telephoned us in the sh ah ’s sh ah ’ s m oney e v e r re a c h e d the Nixon jo r d e fe at for the lib e ral m ach in e and the F a rla n d , had sc a rc e ly se ttle d down in c a m p a ig n ' B u t th e in tr ig u in g tnsiiciilf fir s t tim e the coalitio n failed to c o a le sc e the jo b C le arly , the P re sid e n t w asn ’t He cautioned us kindly that we w ere relation sh ip betw een the P re sid en t and around the so-called lib e ral can didate. d isp le a se d with F arlan d s p e rfo rm an ce . c h asin g wild ru m o rs. H e calle d back the shah d e se rv e s c lo se r exam in ation . The m o st in terestin g split in the ran ks F or the P re sid en t tried to p la c a te him by tw ice, with m ore c a te g o r ic a l den ials. F o o tn o te: As another p ie ce of the puz­ of the m ach in e occu rred in the T e rry o fferin g him his choice of four oth er a m ­ Then his law firm follow ed up with a zle, the shah announced la s t Ju ly 25 a fte r W e e k s-H u b e rt G ill- M ik e R e n fr o b a ssa d o rsh ip s. te le g ra m to United F e a tu r e Syn dicate co n ferrin g with the P re sid e n t at the splin terizatio n of the lib eral vote in the Although F a rlan d re fu se d to sp e ak to which d istrib u te s our colum n. White H ouse that Iran had stru ck an oil county ju d g e s ra c e . us fo r the record, so u rc e s c lo se to him The sto ry we w ere in v e stig a tin g w as d e al w ith Ashland Oil. A shland s p re si­ W eeks and G ill cut th eir political told u s he w as “ gre atly a m aze d and “ im p lau sib le and to tally b a s e le ss ..., dent, Orin Atkins, h as c o n fe sse d that his w isdom teeth togeth er a s lieuten an ts in • g r ie f-str ic k e n ’ ’ at being rem oved. He the te le g ra m ch arged . “ We strongly firm illeg ally contributed $100,000 in co r­ the D o gg ett S e n ate ra c e . Both a r e d e v o u t ^ not only felt it m ight be m isin terp reted u rge th at this sto ry not be p u b lish ed.’ p o rate funds to the N ixon c am p aign . The w orshipping lib e r a ls and g r a d u a te s of 'M a s a blot on his c a r e e r but he w as begin­ We can hardly r e s is t publishin g a story donation, all in $100 b ills, w as routed the M cG overn School. R um or h as it that ning to en joy the new assig n m e n t His th at the shah is so an xiou s to su p p re ss. It through an A frican su b sid ia ry election w inner R en fro is ju s t a s liberal d e p a rtu re w as so ‘em otio n al, said our all sta rte d six m onths a g o when a form er Spo kesm en for both the White House but a little m ore euph orically m inded. so u r c e s, th at he w as m oved to te a rs. high Iran ian o ffic ial c a m e to us with the and the oil com pany deny re p o rts that R e n fro ’s runoff c am p aign a ttra c te d a lle g atio n that the shah had routed hun­ the P re sid en t perso n ally put Atkins and su ch d iv e r s e s u p p o r te r s a s fo rm e r I f H e lm s a p p o in tm e n t a m a z e d d re d s of thousan ds of d o lla r s to the N ix­ the shah togeth er a t the B lah H ouse, U n iversity student body p resid en t J e f f F a rla n d , it a lso took the S ta te D ep art­ w here v isitin g d ig n ita rie s a r e quartered. on cam p aign . J o n e s a n d Y o u n g A m e r i c a n s fo r m en t by su rp rise . The handling of the T h e A s h la n d s p o k e s m a n to ld m y F re ed o m (Y A F ) board m e m b e r Ja c k turned m ove, sa y S tate D ep artm en t so u rce s, The sou rce ad m itted he had a s s o c ia t e Jo e S p e a r only th at Atkins w as G ullahorn. Jo n e s, who w e a rs h is radicals u g g e st that the P re sid e n t had som e a g a in s t the sh ah . H is in fo rm a tio n , in W ashington during the sh a h ’s visit. le ft c re d e n tia ls like a to p le ss bikini, is co m p e llin g reason to send H e lm s to Iran. th erefo re, m ust be re g a rd e d with sk e p ­ also a fo rm e r m e m b e r of the right-w ing tic is m T h e Ira n ia n e m b a s s y fla tly YA F. denied the sto ry ; the W hite H ouse denied The W eeks-Gill a d v e rsa r y relation sh ip it; B ill R o g ers denied it. And we c e rtain ­ w a s one of p e rso n a litie s. T h ere w ere no ly c a n ’t prove it. re a l issu e s se p a ra tin g the two. They But we have u n covered so m e curious sim ply turned on each other with m e at circ u m sta n c e s that a r e w orth relatin g. c le a v e r s, each thinking it w as h is turn to F ir s t, we con tacted an oth er prom inent m ove up in the ran k s of the m achine. Iran ian who, quite independently told us How ironic that to b e at the e sta b lish ­ ment co n se rv a tiv e political m ach in e, the the sa m e story. The m oney had been routed, he said, through M exico. But he, lib e ra ls w ere forced to fuse a coalition of too, adm itted he w as opposed to the their own togeth er. It is a s one of those Wild W est m ovies, when the m u rd e r v ic ­ shah. tim s band togeth er to kill the m u rd e re rs. Then we learned fro m S w iss banking In a ritual a s old a s itse lf, the pow er so u rce s that the shah had tran sfe rre d stru g g le for con trol of hum an lab or and m ore than $1 m illion from h is personal, can n ib alistic d e sire gone ram p an t will numbered accounts in th e continue unabated. Which m e an s the Sch w eizerisch e Bank G e se lsh a ft to the open m inded lib e r a ls had b e st ge t their B an co de Londres y M exico in M exico Ci­ m an u re togeth er b e fo re the co n se rv ativ e ty b ogey m an c o m e s and ta k e s th eir power It a lso struck us a s an in terestin g coin­ re e fe rs aw ay. c id e n c e that o th er N ixon c a m p a ig n Amateur!' THE DAILY TEXAN S h i r f .n f N e w , p ip e r et By F . TRU M A N R A N D A L L M a c h ia v e llia n u r g e s to m a x im iz e pow er g a in s a re ra re ly r e p re sse d in p o l i t ic s . A nd w hen t h is p o w e r n ym ph om an ia strik e s down p e rso n s of a like id e o lo g ica l sp e c ie s, a so p h isticated form of c an n ib alism is likely to re su lt. D esp ite sq u e a ls of virgin innocence, the T r a v is County liberal m a c h in e , in a m an n er m o re abrupt than its b u sin e ss e s ­ tab lish m en t p r e d e c e s s o r , fe ll prey to the u n fettered p o litic a l id. A u stin ’s young am bitio u s lib e r a ls se iz­ ed upon th eir newly ac q u ire d political clout like le a d e r le ss b a r b a ria n s bringing down the w alls of R om e, looting and plundering th e m se lv e s into a s ta te of su ic id al bloodletting. A ta k e o v e r of the pow er p la n ts in this city of sem i-open m in d ed n ess h as been evolvin g sin ce 1972. But it took last y e a r ’s sp e c ia l S tate S e n ate election trium ph of a 27-year-old m ach in e-back ed p o litical unknown nam ed L loyd D oggett to in sp ire a pow er stru g g le fo r con trol of the fr a g ile coalition It is in one se n se , the old sp o ils sy ste m at w ork ag ain . Only th ere is no cen­ tralize d au th ority around to dish out the p o litical go odies. T h ere is no M ayor D aley to anoint can d id a te s an d sm ite by p erp etu ation in o ffice the e n e m ie s of “ the p e o p le .’ A s a r e s u l t , th e p o w e r s t r u g g l e b e co m e s a c lash of p e rso n a litie s and e g o s , n o t o f i s s u e s o r in h e r e n t p h ilo s o p h ic a l d i f f e r e n c e s . It is a d e ge n e ra tio n into an ideologically in- mum eation Building A4136 In qu iries c oncerning ^ l iv e r y ami < la s s o e d ad vertisin g should be m ad e rn T SI Building 3 2lX) '47152441 and d isp lay a d v e rtisin g in T SI Building 3 216 1471-18651 x , _ The national ad v ertisin g re p r e se n ta tiv e o! T h e D aily Texan is N ational E d u cation al A d v ertisin g Se rv ice . Int 360 Lexington Ave . New Y o rk. N Y , 10017. The Dailv T ex an su b sc rib e s to The A sso ciate d P re ss. United P r e s * Intern ation al an d P a c ific N ew s S e rv ice The Texan is a m em b er of tile A s s o c i a t e d C ollegiate P r e s s the Southwest Jo u rn alism C o n g re ss and the T e x a s Daily N ew spaper A ssociation Recycling S u tto n s for the n ew sp aper are at 24th A Seton S tre e ts. 8106 N Burnet R o ad L ak e Austin Boulevard A Red Bud T rail and 1800 S L ak e sh o re Blvd Shah's cash to Nixon? m oney had been lau n d ered through a Will plugs an honest liberal By G E O R G E F . W ILL ©1974, The W ashington P o st Com pany L A S V EG A S, Nev. ~ S o m e tim e s it is still dark when M aya M iller, 58, tak es her icy morning sw im at her northern N evad a ranch. Then th is w om an with the tanned, w eath ered w estern look, the crin kly crow ’s-feet around h er e y es, goes cam paign in g. The M arlboro L a d y is seekin g the D em ocratic S en ate nom ination. the L a s V e gas and R en o a r e a s . That is why M iller is touring the kitchen s of the L a s V e g a s “ str ip ” h otels. T h is is the N e v a d a equivalent of sh ak in g hands out­ sid e the g a te of the s a u s a g e facto ry in W isconsin. T h e r e a r e a b o u t 120,000 N e v a d a D e m o c ra ts. L e s s than 70,000 w ill vote in the S ep t. 3 prim ary . If she g e ts 35,000 v o te s, she probably w ill b eco m e the only w om an in the Senate. T h is m orning she is fa r fro m home, in a c o ffe e shop in a c asin o hotel on the L as V e g a s “ s t r i p ” A ll a r o u n d h e r , b re a k fa ste r s a r e con tentedly shoveling down silver-dollar p a n c a k e s and playing H e r v ie w s c o n fo r m to b a s ic D e m o c r a t ic lib e r a lis m . Sh e d o e sn ’ t know why she m ad e the White House “ e n e m ie s lis t,” but sh e thanks you, John D ean , w herever vou a r e . keno. Asked what se n a to rs she ad m ire s, she n a m e s W illiam P ro x m ire , D-W is„ and sh e glow s with ad m iratio n fo r his c a m ­ paign a g ain st the p ra c tic e of providing ch au ffeu red lim ou sin es for senior e x ­ e cu tiv e branch o ffic ia ls. G am blin g p ro v id es m o st of the jo b s and tax reven ues in this v a st, em pty, oddly urban sta te . The fed eral go vern m en t owns 85 per­ cen t of the N evad a lan d, which it u ses for bom bing p ra c tic e and n u clear tests. (T he Atom ic E n e rg y C om m ission is the s t a t e ’s third la r g e s t e m p lo y e r.) But the c ru c ia l a c r e s a r e th o se on which casin os I am not su re w hat e ls e she w ants to do to m ak e the U nited S t a t e s a land fit for h eroes, but taking th ose c a r s aw ay would be a sta rt. sit. M ost of the c a sin o s (and m ost of the N evad an s — 80 p e rce n t of them ) are in The lieutenant go vern or is her prin ­ c ip a l, but no longer her only, opponent R ecen tly a re c rea tio n d ire cto r a t a c a s in o s u ffe r e d a su d d e n s p a s m of p u b lic-sp irited n ess and en tered the ra c e . H is la st n am e is M iller, and M s. M ille r’s su p p o rte rs b e lie v e his sole pur­ pose is to sow con fusion about n am es. They think Ms. M iller is being taken s e r i o u s l y , in a t r a d it i o n a l N e v a d a m anner. (Sh e also m u st av oid being confused with another D e m o c ratic w om an politi­ c ian , the o p erator of a brothel, who is running for the s ta te le g isla tu re .) If nom inated M s. M iller probably will win, not ju st b e ca u se sh e is an ag re e ab le and intelligent w om an , but b e cau se N e v ad a R ep u b lican s se e m to think this is a good y e a r to a p p e a r in differen t to c o r­ ruption They p rob ab ly will give their Se n ate nom ination to fo rm e r Gov. P au l L a x a lt. A few w eeks a g o L a x a lt ad m itted that w hen he w a s g o v e rn o r , L a s V e g a s o d d sm ak e r Jim m y “ the G reek Snyder o ffere d him h alf a m illion d o llars if he would use his in fluence to get a gam bling lic en se for som eb ody with underw orld connections. Sn y der a g r e e s that L ax a lt re fu se d the bribe. Sh ucks, s a y s Sn yder, “ It w as ju st a 30second co n v e rsa tio n .’ They clock such things in N evad a. Indeed, Sn yder, an e th icist of N ixoniar su b tlety, in sists no bribe w as attem pted “ I ju s t told him he could m ak e $500,000 ii he could help m e with a licen se. There w as no o ffe r of a bribe. (Sou nd f a m i li a r ? “ We a g re e d t< stonew all. T h ere w as no Cover-up ” ) P e rh a p s in N evad a the feeling is that i politician h as shown e x em p lary for titude, beyond the c all of public duty, i h e j u s t r e f u s e s a b r ib e . P e r h a p N evad an s think it would be unreasonabl to ex p e ct him to en force the little la> that m a k e s atte m p te d b rib ery a crime On the other hand, m ayb e candidat L a x a lt will be indicted a t le a st in th court of public opinion, for not reportin the b rib e a tte m p t to the authorities. (( co u rse , L a x a lt m ay invoke the Nixc D octrin e: I reported the c rim e to a hie public o ffic ial — m e.) L a x a lt would feel right at home in ti am b ien ce of to d ay ’s W ashington. Y< can not fairly sa y anything that dam a ing about M s. M iller. Convention Completes G eneral Provisions Delegates Kill Initiative Move 'Right To W ork' Proposal S u b m itte d to Voters In ra re weekend sessions, d elegates to the Constitutional By ANNE M A R IE KILDA Y Convention com pleted debate Texan S ta ff W riter on the G en eral Provisions Ar­ D elegates to the Constitutional Convention defeated Mon­ ticle and began consideration day an amendment which would have given citizens o f s e p a r a t e a m e n d m e n ts ’‘initiative power.” offered as new sections to the The amendm ent, offered by Rep. Richard G eiger of a rticle . D allas, was proposed to give citizens the right to initiate Working F rid ay afternoon, laws bv petition and enact the laws at the polls, independent­ d elegates decided to let voters ly of the Legislature. d ete rm in e the futu re co n ­ BU T S E V E R A L A M EN D M EN TS to the G eiger proposal stitutional statu s of a “ right to convinced delegates it had been changed substantially, and work” in T exas. thev defeated the am endm ent on the vote to adopt. TH E DECISION on right to Rep. Ben Bynum of A m arillo introduced an am endm ent work cam e when Rep. Hilary requiring initiative petitions be signed by 20 percent of the Doran J r . of Del R io in­ registered voters in the la st general election before subm is­ tr o d u c e d an a m e n d m e n t sion in an initiative election . The Bynum am endm ent was which subm its the question to adopted, 91-61 voters. Sen. B ill M eier of E u less sponsored an am endm ent to T h e D o ra n a m e n d m e n t, m ake it unlawful for signature gatherers to perform sue which sta te s “ No person shall service for com pensation be denied em ploym ent on a c ­ M E IE R ALSO A UTH O RED an amendm ent establishing a count of m em bership or nontim e lim it on the resubm ission of initiative proposals. The m e m b e r s h ip in a l a b o r amendm ent, adopted 94-54. said, “ No shade or phrase of the organization,” was approved sam e proposition may be again submitted for four years. 94-65 by d elegates. Rep Mickey Leland of Houston convinced d elegates that The am endm ent will en ter the right to health c a re in T e x as was a ‘ n ecessary and fun­ the new constitution if both dam ental right.” Leland offered an am endm ent which a re adopted by voters. If the stated , “ every resident of T exas shall have a c ce ss to ade­ proposed s ta te ch arter fails, quate. com prehensive health ca re ” D elegates adopted the the am endm ent, if adopted, Leland am endm ent, and accepted it as a new section , 91-61 w i ll e n t e r t h e p r e s e n t Leland s am endm ent received support from G eneral Constitution. Provisions chairm an. Sen. Bob Gam m age of Houston GamIn o th er a c tio n s on the m age said , “ T h is am en d m en t does not re q u ire the G e n eral P ro v isio n s A rticle Legislature to do one single thing, hut it establish es a conFrid ay, d elegates: V cept of human rights as fa r as health ca re is concerned. • Voted 132-22 to adopt the AN AM EN DM EN T PRO V ID IN G guidelines for con­ gressional red istricting was introduced by Rep Jo e Pentony ' of Houston. The Pentony am endm ent, which requires the division of counties into d istricts equalling the number of congressional seats, would apply following the 1980 census D elegates adopted the Pentony amendm ent and will con­ sider its addition as a new section Tuesday. In other action, the convention voted down an am endm ent proposed by Sen. W alter Mengden of Houston. The Mengden ; am endm ent sought to put an $11 billion ceiling on s ta te spen- ' T The convention also defeated proposals to give a c ce ss to public inform ation” constitutional status and declined to adopt an am endm ent to disqualify form er lobbyists for ap­ i a “ in terest section .” The s e c ­ tion defines the authority of the Legislature to classify loans, to regulate lenders and to fix maxim um ra te s of in­ te re st. Rep. L arry B a le s of Austin said in a press release Frid ay that the adoption of the s e c t i o n g iv e s l e g i s l a t i v e “ sanction” to loan sharks by giving the L egislatu re power to authorizes “ any ra te of in­ te r e s t.” • Adopted a s e c t i o n guaranteeing “ rights of the han d icap p ed .” Sen. Lloyd Doggett of Austin, speaking in favor of the section, said, “ It grants no special rights or p riv ile g e s but g u a r a n te e s equal rights and treatm en t for Texans who exp erience som e m ental or physical handicap.” The section was adopted 134-8. • T a b l e d a “ r i g h t to p riv acy” section, 100-58. Sen. A R “ B a b e ” S ch w artz of Galveston spoke against the section, which recognized the “ absolute necessity of a right of p r iv a c y .” T h e s e c tio n would allow the sta te and its p o l it i c a l s u b d iv is io n s to “ collect, m aintain and dis­ s e m in a te in fo rm a tio n fo r legitim ate governm ental pur­ poses.” Schw artz claim ed the R I E G adoption of the section would encroach on freedom of the press and freedom of speech. • Tabled a section to grant the L egislatu re authority to o b lig a te s t a t e c r e d it fo r providing housing fo r the elderly, 105-49. • B eg an co n sid eratio n of the “ c o m p e titiv e bidding” casio n by singing “ happy birthday” to convention p resi­ dent P rice Daniel J r . , who celebrated his 33rd birthday Saturday. But the festiv e mood of the Saturday session was broken when delegates began work on am endm ents to the General Provisions A rticle, including Weekend Roundup section, voting to keep the sectio n a liv e until d eb ate Saturday. The section, which allowed for the establishm ent of a c e n tr a l p ro cu rem en t system to provide supplies and equipm ent, was defeated. ★ ★ ★ M eeting for the first tim e on a Saturday morning, conven­ tion d elegates m arked the oc an antibusing am endm ent in­ troduced by Rep. L arry \ tck of Houston. T H E V IC K a m e n d m e n t, which stated , “ the right of students to attend the public school nearest th eir place of re s id e n c y ,” w as narrow ly defeated, 61-60. when Daniel voted “ y e s” on a m otion to table. Vick, m et with hisses when not to “ lay a hand on m e.” IN O T H E R action Saturday, he introduced the controver­ the d elegates. sial am endm ent, was denied • T ab led a “ newsperson v erification on the vote. He l a t e r told r e p o r t e r s th a t s h i e l d ” a m e n d m e n t , i n­ Daniel had ignored his re ­ tro d u ce d by R e p . J a m e s E a s t e r of E l P a so . T he quests V i ck a lso said a m e n d m e n t a tte m p te d to delegates John Wilson of La pro tect newspersons from be­ Grange. Tom Sh ieffer of Fort Worth and Lyndon Olson of ing required to reveal sources Waco had “ th re a te n e d m e of inform ation • Adopted 121-12. a motion p h y sically, cu rse d m e and to add a new s ec t i on to called m e n a m e s.” G eneral Provisions entitled While Vick was conferring “ Continuation in O ffice.” The with rep orters, Daniel was section , introduced by Sen trying to resto re order to the B ill M eier of Euless, allows convention floor He ordered ap p o in tive o ffic e rs of the the sergeants a t arm s to seat sta te to continue their duties R e p . Wi l l i a m H e a tle y of in o ffic e until their successors Paducah, who was yelling into a re qualified. a microphone for an adjourn­ • Tabled a section to grant ment of the convention. The the L egislature authority to sergeants unplugged o b l i g a t e s t a t e c r e d i t to H e a tle y ’s m icrop hone and provide a deepw ater port. brought his ch a ir to him, afte r -A M K H eatley warned the sergeants i _____________________________ pointive offices._____________ PEA N UTS Kitten Kaboodle was a Ido ugly, stupid and Kitten Kaboodle w as a lazy c a t. Actually, ail c a ts are lazy. THE FUTURE OF THE W ATCH completely useless. O m ega d ig ita l. A synthetic rubs screen covers che d i a l . . . press a b u tto n to show the lu m in o u s ho ur and m inu tes, c o n tin u e pressing b u tto n to sho w seconds. T o m o rro w he re to d a y . . n this 14K g o ld -fille d , w a te r­ resistant case and m a tch in g b racelet B u t, let's face it, aren’t all c a ts ugly, stu p id and completely useless? $495 LUNDAK VHUGt ON TM 0**6" SH* tUKMH RD 73H 6W9MW DOONESBURY f u n ever fo rg et IH E M Y HE BOUGHT CZARS HIS FIRST TW SHARES FATHER., OF COMMON STOCK. tT ALBERT MMS IN A STRU&>Lm NBW COMPONY CALLEO J BNI s m e ll, PENNSYLVANIA POPULATION >,733 THIS IS w here the boy c z a r s p e n t I HIS W T H -M A K IN 6 TRES rn ;m s , PLA®* OCK THE CAN, SUHPNS UPHts RRSTPORTFOLIO. I I HANE TD ADMIT THATAT THE VMC I DISAPPROVED. I TOLOHIM THE INVESTMENTRMS CHANCEY PUZEY-T H A T I WOULDN'T PUT A PENNY INTO A COMPANY UKE THAT.f THAT PROBABLE EXPLAINS WHY I'M STILL U V tN 6lN A MOBUS HOME • Yellow • Green • Blue/ White Check & Crossword Puzzler ACROSS Communist Was aware of C ubic meter Symbol tor tantalum Note of scale Anger Incline Simpler Commonplace Alights Take a vote Chemical dye Bound Consumed At no time P recipitous i Less cooked 1 Muse of poetry I Title I .Perch G reek aveng- I Recreation areas 6 Commonplace 11 Instantly im­ portant 12 Antenna 14 Compass point 15 Profound 17 Heroine of “ Lohengrin" 18 Employ .1 20 Penned 23 Metal * 24 Solar disk 26 Man s name 28 Man s nickname ' “ 29 One defeat* ed < <31 Missives 33 Man s name ’ 35 Antlered animal 36 Restoration ’ 39 Approaches 42 Conjunction 43 Forgive 45 Chief god of Memphis 46 Lubricate * •, 48 Happen ' again 50 Number -<‘ 51 Break sud­ denly 53 Man s name 37 55 Symbol tor gadolinium ’56 Wealthy business­ man (colloq) *. 59 Loops 51 ‘ <61 Hebrew festival *>6 62 Remained erect Answer to Yesterday s Puzzle A M ■aas m an U U M il m tm m y ilB H B S • @G5nU feHSQB J BGDQE!@B O S g g l Hana rang saga B U E S S SEQ laos □ s h q s q b a a l Q S H B S S GQQDQii iSaay 38 40 41 44 49 annas 52 Seed conS tainer 54 Cry like dove 57 Faroe Islands whirlwind 58 Near (abbr.) 60 Conjunction mg spirit Insects Roamed Lean-tos Twists Intertwine Disturbance i n? Ta * DOWN 1 I Quickly 2 Symbol for silver IO 13 12 16 5! IT 20 28 IL 'r:,nliseffea»fc 32 31 Save 3.10 35 40 39 43 47 41 45 49 48 54 52 'A 55 59 All o v e r town 61 IMxtr. by U nited F e n tu re Syn d icate, Inc Tupiriav. limp II. 1974 THE DAILY TEXAN Page 5 SWC Winless in NCAA Track Benny Brown and a fantastic finals. His 182-0 toss in the 9 2. By JU A N CAMPOS prelims, however, held up The most points Tennessee 45.3 anchor lap from Maxie enough for him to finish Texan Staff Writer Parks, A second place finish by won in an event, however, Other members of the Tex­ seventh, just six inches shy of Texas shot putter Dana Le Due came in the 3,000-meter as mile relay team were Glen sixth place. was the best any Southwest steeplechase, in which Doug Goss <48 0). Ed Wright (46.8) Adranko Pecar of Brigham Conference school could do in Brow n and Ron Addison finished first and second, and Craig Brooks (47.5). Young, who has a throw of last week s NCAA track Rudolph G riffith won a respectively This gave the championships in Memorial 199-3 to his credit, won the dis­ point for Texas by finishing Volunteers 18 points, but a Stadium. sixth in the 880-vard run with cus with a throw of 190-2. Texas also was the highest first place finish in the 880a time of 1:49.5. Texas sprinter Nate Robin­ ranking team from the SWC, yard run by Willie Thomas Even though not all the was needed to insure them of son finished eighth in an eightfinishing in a tie for 14th with Longhorns won points for Tex­ man field in the 120-yard high a total of 14 points - just 46 a team championship Texas also picked up most as, a few turned in some per­ hurdles. Charles Foster of points shy of cham pion formances that just missed North Carolina Central won Tennessee, which dethroned of its points in one event by the top j>ix places the high hurdles in a windUCLA for the first time in virtue of LeDuc s and Bishop Miler Paul Craig finished aided 13.4. Robinson was tim­ four years. The I CLA Bruins Dolegiewicz's second and seventh in the strong 12-man finished the meet with 56 fourth place finishes in the event with a time of 4:04.0. ed in 13.9. points while the Volunteers shot put. John Berry placed lith in LeDuc managed to heave Paul Cummings of Brigham had 60. Young won the event in 4 QI.I, the long jump with a jump of the shot 65-71 4 more than IO The Bruins won the mile upsetting fa v o rite Tony 25-1'a. His jump in the finals relay for the sixth year in a inches farther than his best Waldrop of North Carolina was far short of his seasonrow and had a chance to win previous throw this year. Dolegiewicz used a toss of 64- Central, who finished third in best 26-0. the meet if triple jumper 4 02.3 behind Cummings and S ' » for his fourth place finish. SMI s Glen Derwin placed Clarence Taylor could finish However, he could only better Wilson Waigwa of Texas-El third in the javelin wife a: second or better in his event Paso. heave of 247-3 to give t h e | M He could only manage fifth his previous best by 4'4 in­ Sturgal ran a 46.8 in the 440its second highest finish i«|he with a jump of 52-10' 2 — more ches. vard dash, but he was also The Texas mile relay team meet. Derwin’s throw was than two feet short of his best s e v e n t h in his specialty Larry could only manage fifth place almost IO feet better than any jump this year in the strong field, which in­ Jones of Northeast Missouri of his previous throws, but T E N N E S S E E s p rin te r State won the event in a time winner Jim Judd of Oregon Reggie Jones, voted the cluded Southern California, of 45.5, just edging out North Carolina Central. Texas State tossed the javelin 271-3 meet s outstanding performer Tennessee’s Oar won Bond by — improving his previous best by the track writers, was one Southern and winner UCLA. .1 seconds. Texas anchorman Don by almost 17 feet. of the main reasons for the — Texan 5taff Phato by Phil Huh#; Weightman Jim McGoldric Sturgal ran a respectable 46 6 The TCU 440-yard relay Volunteers’ first track title. leg but that was not enough to went into the discus finals in team finished fifth with a time Paul C u m m in g s sprints for m ils w in. Jones upset Steve Williams of catch the UCLA Bruins, who fourth place, but could only of 39.9. San Diego State Friday in the had a 4 5 .5 -second leg from manage a throw of 171-8 in the C L A S S I F I E DS 100-yard dash, winning with a wind-aided 9 2 seconds. T H E Y WORK! Williams also was timed in t ile S a m W ltc h s h o p P o b o T S jiw ia l I w it s /* i i i t » * S o ir W H c h «hop i^ r ir a rs * ^ - * » • * ■•*■*«■■ri* Special Good Thu Month t h e S a r n W it c h s h o p s Shop No. 1— 282 1 San Jacinto Sh«p No. 2 2604 Guadalupe Shop Na. 3— Debit* Mall, # 3 DORM SIZE REFRIGERATORS Shoe Sh o p (PENGUIN JR S.) This s u m m e r you can enjoy the convenience of our large 3 cubic foot] w h ich normally rents for $25/sem ester. for the low pnce| r e fr ig e r a t o r , of s9/ S H E E P S K IN 17/ 6 w e e k s or 12 weeks. These low prices include free delivery a nd pick-up. rep air boots I sh o es RUGS Many $C00 B e a u t if u l Colors belts leath er 50 $7 ★ LEATHER SALE A V a r i o u s k in d s , colors - 7 5 ‘ p«r H . go ods C ap itol Sa d d le ry CREATIVE C O N V EN IEN C E S 1614 L a v a c a 441-6706 478-9309 Austin, Texas Texas sophomore pitcher Jm Gideon (19-2) headed the list of Southwest Conference players to make the NCAA Division One All-America team selected Saturday by the Am erican Association of College Baseball Coaches. Joining Gideon on the first team is Jim Hacker of Texas A&M Hacker, who batted .406 this year, was picked as the second baseman on the elite squad. v a ga b o n d ^ t by GITANE Longhorn third baseman Keith Moreland (.395) was given an honorable mention to the All-America team. Other players from Texas teams to be named to the Hacker won the SWC bat­ ting title this year by edging out Bradley by .005 percen­ tage points. Moreland, who was the first team third baseman last year, was the defending champion th * sto w : G>*k».y 5Wts Macon* b»Hx«k»eW*j H a n J u i earth. I c a lk e r BMX* n. one eel Va*-*, who wanders from place to place, a '■ CLOTHING JCG, BICYCLE CLOSEOUT SALE >quad are Paul Miller. Texas A&M outfielder, to the third team, and Ricky Brockway, Pan American shortstop, who also made the third team * Rick Bradley ( 401), the Longhorn catcher, was named to that position on the second team along with Texas Chris­ tian first baseman Tommy Crain pp vag a-bond, & Gideon Picked All-America — T jm We m a k e a n d J —T jb Iftirn « Fkki-fLh ' importX <1 ( n a i f . c lh k c * UjeJ cjdkos iH-”*S t fwijywM, t iJvw* jewelry s4 scam p adj. To w ander with no fixed i address. COME TO SEBRIN G BY ROY ii ... irs a i vag a-bond, d NATURAL . 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AUSTIN ARMY AND NAVY 412 CONGRESS P a g e 6 Tuesday, June ll, 1974 T H E D A IL Y T E X A N ROLL ME BABY Join our Thursday Night mixed b o w lin g leag ue at the U N I O N B O W L I N G l a n e s It's a Thursday Niqht Fun Club. Just for fun. And for friends. W e'll help you find teammates. Or make your own 4 per­ son team . Two men. Two women. Come to the organizational meeting. Wednesday Night in U N I O N 300. 7 3 0 P . M C all 451-5008 for ad­ ditional info. CWS fourth round will be on Thurs­ By LARRY SMITH day, and Richard W ortham Texan Staff Writer (10-3) is expected to pitch for OMAHA - T ex as A llAmerica righthander Jim Gi­ Texas. Monday’s gam e w as T exas’ deon tied the NCAA record for most wins in a season set by from the first inning. LeftArizona S tate’s Larry Gura in fielder Terry Pyka led off 1969 by winning his 19th game with a single and a fte r an out, basem an K e ith of the year, as the Horns t h i r d Moreland then moved Pyka to defeated Seton Hall, 12-2, M o n d a y a f t e r n o o n a t second with another hit. After an out by f ir s t b a s e m a n Rosenblatt Stadium. Since Texas had lost, 9-2, to Burley and a walk to catcher the University of Southern R ick B ra d le y , f r e s h m e n M ic k e y California Saturday night, the c e n t e r f i e l d e r win kept the Horns in the dou­ Reichenbach hit the first pitch ble elimination College World from Pirate pitcher Charles Series. Seton Hall, however, Puleo (7-2) over the 370 sign in was elim inated from the tour­ rightfield. After Reichenbach’s grand nament as it was defeated, 5slam, the game was never in 1, M o n d a y m o r n in g by Southern Illinois. Texas now doubt. TEXAS ADDED three runs will face Oklahoma, which suffered its first loss of the in the fourth on bad plays and to u r n a m e n t a g a in s t th e se v e ra l m e n tal e r r o r s by University of Miami Monday. Seton Hall (33-10-1). With one out and Bradley on The gam e will begin at 5 p m Tuesday. Horn Coach Cliff firs t w ith a w alk , T ex as G u stafso n plans to s t a r t centerfielder David Reeves lefthander Rick Burley (12-0). h it a p la y a b le pop fo u l. IN D E F E A T IN G S eto n However, the P ir a te third Hall, Gideon had more trouble baseman lost the ball in the with his control than with the sun, giving Reeves another P irate batters. In the seven chance at the plate. Reeves innings he worked, he allowed then hit a deep drive to center only one hit but walked seven, which the centerfielder Ted including four consecutive S c h o e n h a u s m i s j u d g e d . batters in the fifth inning. The Schoenhaus first cam e in and walks produced the only runs then went back, but by the Seton Hall of South Orange, tim e he caught up with the N J., scored until the ninth in­ ball. Reeves had doubled. Bradley attem pted to score ning when they produced a run on two walks and a single off on the play but appeared to be out when the relay to the plate Horn reliever Jim m y Brown “ Gideon had good stuff," arrived several steps ahead of Gustafson said “ But his ball him. THE CATCHER, however, was moving so well that some missed the tag and Texas took of the pitches that looked like strikes ended up as balls. He a 5-0 lead. Rightfielder Tom Ball then had a couple of wild streaks ‘ singled in Reeves afte r second If Texas continues to win. Gideon will be available for baseman Bobby Clark flew the fifth round on Friday. The out. The final run was scored Jo in the C o -O p for all your autom otive needs - also m otorcycle parts, stereo, tires, batteries - everything but g a s! 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Dr.Shafleriy’s Secret Sniffing Snuff —U M Talaphoio "I really didn't know he m issed th ir d ,” Seton Hall Coach Mike Sheppard said after the gam e, “ Our team m a n a g e r s a id so m e th in g about it, but he was the only one who caught it ” c h a m p io n s h ip s , g av e th e sophomore his second loss of the year when he faced them Saturday night. Gideon lasted only twothirds of an inning, as USC managed five hits and five runs off him. After the first inning, the Horns’ only hope was that the game would be rained out. And. it alm ost was. In the fourth inning with Texas at bat, the rain, which had delayed the s ta rt of the gam e 15 m inutes, began to T h e T e x a s -O k la h o m a come down extrem ely hard, gam e can be heard at 5 accompanying wind gusts of p.m. Tuesday on KOKE40 and 50 m .p .h . and a AM (1370). tem perature in the low 60s. reco rd ,” he continued. "But THE GAME was postponed I’d like to break it in the for 27 m inutes but was con­ championship gam e.' tinued after the rains let up If he is to break the record, The winds, however, rem ain­ Gideon may have to face USC ed a problem as they blew in again The Trojans, who have from Centerfield. USC and Texas managed to won four consecutive national While Sheppard m issed the play, he saw all of Gideon he wanted to. “ He’s the best pitcher we’ve seen all year. he said “ He threw 90 percent fast balls according to our c h a rts.” GIDEON, however, was not happy with his perform ance. "W hatever my best pitch was, it wasn't a strik e .” Gi­ deon said. “ My timing is way off. “ I ’m happy about tying the NEW HOUSING POLICY!! DEXTER HOUSE Luxurious Private Rooms • Maid Service MOO USC 9 T exas 2 S o u t h e r n Illin o is 5, Seton H a n I S I CO N D ROUND N o r t h e r n C o lo ra d o 4. H a r v a r d 2 T e x a s 12, Se to n H a ll 2 M iam i 5 O klahom a I U S C 5 So u th e rn illin o is 3 E l i m i n a t e d f r o m to u rn a m e n t a n d S e to n H a il SO IR M R IR Gideon 60 M ia m i 4 H a rv a rd I O k la h o m a IO, Northern Colorado I BITCHING Toot M Thursday, June 20*h: T ^ 1103 W. 24th OCCUPANCY ONLY p er m o. p er mo. Heated S w im m in g Pool • Refrigerators • Intercom • Lau nd ry Facilities • Vending M a c h in e s • Study A re a s • 24 Hr. D e sk Service • T V in Lobby • Off Street P a rk in g • Close to C a m p u s Special Package D e a l s (R o o m a t D e x te r-B o a r d at M a d iso n ) available as low as $145 “ S M NnML B R A Z IL IA N MOSAIC: Port III af a foar port series dealing with Brawl. Dr. Tuesday, June 25th: Norm Potter. T U .. MOVIE: MEMORIAS DE UN MEXICANO. A documentary made with actual fw>toge ^ mexican Revolution. The Mexican government has 0 7 *L Thursday, Ju n e 2/th: declared this film a "national monument.” T u esd ay july 2nd ... j , I I o u W e dn e sd ay, July 3rd: Tuesday, July 9th: , Thursday, J u ly BRAZILIAN MOSAIC: The final presentation in a four part series dealing with Brawl. Dr. Norm Potter. PREHISPANIC ARCHITECTURE OF MIDDLE AMERICA. Professor Hugh prestni a slide show and lecture. The Guerilla Movement in latin America: A Dramatization, presented by Dr. Michael Conroy. I I »U. A special presentation on opportunities in latin America for teachers and s t w j e n t s in c h a n g e and travel programs. Representatives from AMIGOS; EXP IN INTERNATIONA LIVING; and LONGHORN TRAVELERS will be atten­ in n . ding. T IM E A N D P U C E : ALL O F THE A B O V E W ILL T A K E P U C E AT 3 : 3 0 p.m . in BEB (B u sin e ss a n d Econom ics B ld g .) 151. N o w accepting Fall '74 Contracts for U J . M e n a n d W o m e n H O U S I N G OFFICE 709 West 22nd St. 478-9891 - 478-8914 DEXTER HOUSE Come See Available in original Olde English and W ild Strawberry flavours at drugstores, headshops and the like. In n T L 11« J . U Semi-Private Rooms as Low as WAST ROUND Statistics D a v id Reeves scores for Texas a g a in st Seton Hall. when the second basem an made an erro r on an easy ground ball by shortstop Blair Stouffer. Seton H all’s w orst error oc­ curred in the sixth when Burley flew out to deep leftfield. Pyka, who had been on second base when the ball was hit. was between third and home when it was caught. To avoid the double play, Pyka cut across the infield. Rules require a player to touch third before going back to second. But, the P irates failed to appeal the play which would have given them the third out. P y k a l a t e r s c o r e d on Moreland's two RBI single. Results S c h o e n h a u *, cf K ob er, d b Bellini, s i H einie;. lb H e rrisw o rth , p C oste llo TOTALS finish their game, but the Seton Hall-Southern Illinois gam e at 8 p.m. had to be post­ poned until Sunday, but it rained Sunday and the two played at IO a.m . Monday. “ I don’t think they had any choice but to play the gam e. Gustafson said. "T he field was playable, and you can’t call a game if the field is in good shape.” Every player in the USG lineup had at least one of the te a m ’s 15 hits. The th ree hits by Rich D auer s e t a new NCAA one-season hit total of 103. USC had come into the tour­ nam ent with m ore losses than any other team, 19, but follow­ ing the Texas victory a re con­ sidered by many to be the favorites. “ I think USC is ahead of all the te a m s ,” Seton Hall second b asem an Ted Blankmeyer said. "T hey've got a lot of sticks.” - Come L ive GET MORE FOR YOUR M O NEY $ $ ATTENTION Orientation Students Another word for your UT vocabulary: ca ctu s (kak'tus), n.; pl. cacti (-ti) (I) A comprehensive yearbook of The Univer­ sity of Texas at Austin featuring issues of the year involving the total student ex­ perience. Requires onlv a mark on the Optional Fee Card at Freshman registra­ tion. (2) Any plant having fleshy stems and/or branches with thorns instead ot leaves. Requires little moisture and heavy direct sunlight. Start Your Cactus Garden Now! Reserve Your Copy of the 1975 CACTUS YEARBOOK by Marking Your OPTIONAL FEE CARD When You Preregister You w ill be billed with your fees for the fall! V only $8.40 Tuesday/ June IU 1974 T H E D A IL Y T E X A N P a g e I U S C s Davis Lives Sports Texas Fish Abundant ■ ■ B y M A R IL Y N M A R S H A L L , The Colorado R iver lakes in c lu d e L a k e A u stin , th e low est of th e la k e s; Lake T ravis. 15 m iles northw est of Austin, and Lake Buchanan, largest of the lakes. Catfish, crappie, and largem outh bass are com m on in the lakes. T exas fishing received a boost w hen 10.000 rainbow trout w ere released into the G u ad alu p e in 1966 T exas b u s in e s s m e n R ic h a r d L White and H arry Jersig saw to it the trout received the cold w ater and sufficient oxygen needed to survive Texan Staff W riter T he s u b je c t of a g re a t A m erican novel "M oby Dick and recently the ca u se of con­ servationists, fishing is the oldest industry in the world T here are m ore than 25.000 species of fish w ith a variety available to C en tral Texas fisherm en. Texas stre a m s and rivers a re abundant w ith bass, carp, suckers, eels, sunfish, crap ­ p ies, b lu eg ills and ca tfish w h ic h c a n b e s p e a r e d , trapped, netted and baited. le rsig r s i? had p re vio u Je previously been displaying tanks full of trout a t fairs across the s ta te to prom ote his brew ery Like a new born b a b y , a recently caught fish needs to be pam pered. During rainy W6 3 th 6 r s t low a ltitu d es, fish perish easilv and should be put on ice as soon as possible. In higher altitudes, the cool drv air reduces hum idity and th erefo re lessens th e chance of d ecay . In hot and dr> w eather, fish keep longer if they a re wiped dry and hung in the shade They m ay be sprinkled with black pepper to keep aw ay flies. Ju st as fisherm an clean fish differently they also p rep are them differently H owever, as a rule, herring, m ack erels. pa rn pa no. s a lm o n , s m e lt, trout and whitefish, the fatty or oily fishes, a re best when baked, boiled or planked m n u _ 1616 Royal C rest 4 4 4 -6 6 3 1 ** A le a d i n g c h o i c e o f t h e R.vers.de Dr. apartm ents becau se we offer extra s p a c io u s liv in g a n d direct access to the shuttle bus. Bass, crappies, sunfishes and o th er w hite-fleshed dried fish es can be baked w ith sauces, fried o r sauteed 1-1 $165 2-1 185 2 -2 a ir bills p a i d 195 Rutherford W ins Rex M a y s For those who a re not the o u td o o rs ty p e , th e T exas P a rk s and W ildlife D ep art­ m ent suggests w ays of selec­ ting fresh fish. The ta stie st fish have bright, c le a r bulging eves and firm , unfaded flesh Father's Day Shopping? M I R A N D A STUDIO PASSPO R TS RESUME' W e have the gifts. C h o o se from our selection of elegant w ood w ritin g PORTRAIT I DAY SERVICE instruments, masculine stationery, Hallmark books and playing card s. , A A rn A 4 7 6 -0 0 4 0 Add a Hallmark Fathers D ay card and you will be sure to please on Sunday, June 16. EARN CASH WEEKLY Blood Plasm a Donors Needed Men & Women: The Crown Shops W look aa tt tthe money . . v ,;„ a <1 •) CPA “ I won tied the No, 3 ranked team , both. both. IITI ll look H owever, he has regained his m ajo r w ith a 3.2 GPA. " I won and also th e longevity. In By LARRY SMITH O klahoma. th e s t a t e ch am p ion sh ip in 9.7 second speed in the 100Texan S taff W riter E ven though N otre D am e longevity, baseball has tho w r e s t l i n g in tw o w e ig h t OMAHA — When one con­ yard dash and w as able to cate g o ries, ran track, w as w as picked No. I in m ost edge, but I w on’t decide until siders that the U niversity of rush for m ore than 1.000 yards q u a rterb ack on the football sp o rts polls, D avis d isag rees a fte r football season. S o u th e r n C a lif o r n ia h a s in 1973 although the USC foot­ team and w as on the baseball w ith th e p o llste rs. “ N o tre While D avis w ants to work a t h l e t e s li k e o u t f i e l d e r ball team had an inexperienc­ team . I w a s the only one to be D am e w asn’t even in the pic­ with the Los Angeles Urban ed offensive line. .Anthony D avis, it is easy to tu re as fa r as being the best. League w hen he graduates, he All-City (Los A ngeles! in both u n derstand why the T rojans T hey d id n ’t h ave th e p e r­ considers sp o rts as an im por­ "T he injury has no effect on baseball and footb all.” have won four consecutive m e physically.” D avis, who s o n n e l of O hio S t a t e o r tant p a rt of his future plans national cham pionships and did not get to play against "A thletics is som ething I can D avis w as good enough in O klahoma. OU had the fastest have taken a step toward their T exas Saturday because of d o ,” D avis said . “ A psy­ baseball to be drafted in the d e fe n s iv e te a m I ve e v e r fifth title by beating Texas, 9- back spasm s, said. “ It has ch iatrist told m e once th at I first round by the B altim ore played a g ain st,” said D avis. 2, S aturday night. B e in g good a t s e v e r a l m ade m e a b e tte r person play because I hate sports. He O rioles. H ow ever, he chose in­ •When you com e to th e though. It told m e to slow said it w as a scapegoat for m e stead to attend USC. “ USC d if f e r e n t s p o r ts p r e s e n ts tournam ent (College World down and quit trying to spread and I w as trying to prove had th e b e st p ro g ra m for D a v i s w ith o n e m a j o r S eries), having been here a lot m yself too thin. I had to quit p ro b lem . U nlike th e days som ething, but I don’t think m e , " D a v is s a id . ‘T h e help s.” Davis, a junior, said when Jim T horpe w as on the th a t’s true. w orrying about pleasing other coaches know their ath letics The m ost im portant thing, people and s ta r t thinking v ery well and are fundam en­ payroll of several te a m s in Sports to m e is pure com ­ though, is poise. You have to about Anthony D av is.” talists. I also think the w in­ different sports, overlapping p e t i t i o n , ’’ h e c o n tin u e d . play under p ressu re and be schedules allow a th letes to "A thletics is an exam ple of Along w ith his poise and ning trad itio n helps. If w e 're relaxed. You have to have play only one sport a t a tim e. the w ay society is run In confidence. D avis h as trem en ­ 9-2, people say w e’ve had a confidence in your ab ility .’ So. Davis m ust decide which bad vear. T h at’s w hat happen­ A m erica, everything is based Throughout his c a re e r a t dous natural ability as he is a s p o r t h e w a n t s to p la y ed la st season when we w ere on com petition. I'm trying to CSC. D avis has shown the s ta r for USC in both baseball professionally. 9-2-1.’’ USC’s lo sses c a m e p o i s e t h a t w in s c h a m ­ and football. "W hen I w as in “ I haven’t decided on which excel in this asp ect of my life against the top two ranked high school, I w as a four-sport p ionships. In a n atio n ally sport to play,” D avis, a D allas like I hope to succeed in te a m s in the nation, N otre te le v is e d fo o tb a ll a g a in s t m an ." said the speech com ­ native, said. “ I like to play everything e ls e .” State. and urban studies D am e and Ohio M ale. USC u se - N o tre D am e in 1972. he scored m unication and urban studies six to u c h d o w n s He a ls o batted 336 in P acific E ight com petition, but his over-all .* ..I .. J ,. C h n tteam oon av erag e for the y ear w as only reduced the Tvrell lead a f t e r h a v in g won th e I n ­ from spins in the early stages MILWAUKEE (A P) - F ort from nine seconds to th ree .269. of the race to finish m ore than D avis probably showed his Worth d river Johnny R u th er­ dianapolis 500 on M em orial one lap ahead of the 24-car seconds w ith only four laps g re a te st confidence when he ford m ade it two stra ig h t Sun­ D ay . G a ry B e tte n h a u s e n . left until he c ro sse d the finish driving a M cLaren-Offy iden­ field. o v ercam e leg and foot injuries day when he survived early line. tical to R utherford's, w as an he sustained in a ca r accident. troubles and eventually won The Texan, who won close ex trem ely close second in this Som e said the w reck would the 25th Rex M ays C lassic 150F o rm e r w orld ch am p io n ra c e which ended w ith rain to a q u a rte r of a m illion m ile race for U nited S tates e n d h is a t h l e t i c c a r e e r . E m erson F ittipaldi drove his dollars a t “ The B rickyard s ta rtin g to fall on the track . Auto Club Indy-tvpe cars. Texaco M cLaren to a fourth Rutherford a n d last month, earned $17,259 for The win w as R u th erfo rd 's place finish, which increased this win. B ettehnausen both recovered second in less than a m onth his lead in the world c h a m ­ ★ ★ ★ pionship race to 27 points h it it A N D E R S T O R P , S w eden (AP) — South A frican Jody Scheckter led from s ta rt to R IV ER SID E Calif. ( AP) finish Sunday to ta k e the South C arolina d riv er Cale Swedish G rand P rix for F o r­ Y arborough set a new record m ula One cars. The win was speed of 102.442 m .p.h in w in­ the first grand prix win for ning the T urborg 400 stock c a r Scheckter. who finished just r a c e S u n d ay . Y a rb o ro u g h CORNER OF a h e a d of h is T y r e ll- F o r d finished a m ere three seconds SAN ANTONIO team m ate, P atrick D epailler a h e a d of B obby A lliso n s | A N D 24TH of F rance. C hevrolet The win put Y a r­ borough in the lead in the E nglishm an Ja m e s Hunt, NASCAR s t a n d i n g s for piloting the only unsponsored d riv ers and the first and s e ­ c a r on the circu it, drove his cond places finishes for Chevy Hesketh-Ford to third place in put th em a t the top of the a d ram atic finish w here he m a n u fa c tu re r’s race. EARN $10 WEEKLY CASH PAYMENT FOR DONATION ' Plaza Balcones 2900 Guadalupe Highland Mall Austin Blood Components, Inc. A OP EN: MO N . & T H U R S . 8 A M to 7 P.M. TUES. & FRI. 8 A . M. to 3 P.M. C L O S E D WED. & SAT. 4 7 7 -3 7 3 5 409 W. 6th SIRLOIN STEAK (JSDA Choice Heavy Hash-Harry Beef *1 .3 9 Photo Service 222 W. Cudahy's ler-S I Pound Sliced ONE 6 9 BLOCK UNION 1 9 th & 53 24 Cam eron Rd. RESUME' & IDENTIFICATION TYPE PICTURES I-Day Quick, Reliable Service SUMMER PARKING BACON I I I I I I I I days I S tu d tm a n 's I I dollar J The RENTALS Boardboats C atam arans • Sloops • Canoes •Paddleboats FROM Daily Texan SAVE 2 5 % $10 for 6 weeks REGISTER NOW! 25 FRIE GRAD! n u t pec ney AT EVERY STORE JUNE 18 THRU Un a. O N D IS C O U N T P A SS B O O K S 03 SNO PURCHASE NECESSARY - YOU NEED NOT SE PRESENT AT DRAWING happy ho u r $20 for 12 weeks FRANKS i i» BAR-S HAMS L19 BUTTERMILK E T 39‘ CE CREAM S E . {J LARGE EGGS S T * ? . . 1 49‘ MAYONNAISE VIENNA SAUSAGE - “ ^, 3-0.1,00 HOLE FRESH DUIS 52T 49 V IV A 39 TRASH BAGS 0Count ............ Call 474-1429 or (2 for I Sailin g) 2-4 W e e k d ays 10-12 W eeken ds Haircuts for people Mon.-Fri. IO a.m . - 6 p.m . com e to 2204 San Antonio 4 0 9 $1.00 discount w ith this ad Expires June 25 W. 14th 4 7 6 -4 8 9 0 M e lis s a , M ae, M a ry , J a m e s T o w n L ake S a il A w a y 1800 S. Lakeshore 4 4 2 -9 2 2 0 FROZEN FOODS POUND CAKE S S L .u_|uBREADED SHRIMP ttS-X 83 1.49 rn H EA LT H & B E A U T Y A ID S 69‘ TOOTHBRUSHES ST 53' VANQUISH 2™49‘ ‘ V a PABST BLUE RIBBON BEER Convenient 12-Pack Cans LB. 1 9 ' 1221 W est L y n n 2401 San G a b r ie l 2.10 218 S. U m a r 3415 N orth lan d Dr. Page • Pay no commissions or middleman IU ' • Choose from a huge selection 'V I WHO ARE THOSE GUYS, ANY W AY ? THE UNIVERSITY * 3101 G u ad alu p e TSP Bldg. Room 3.200 and place I I I I I your Unclassified Ad I I I I students only p re p a id I I no refunds 2 5 th & W h i t i s __________ I bm - I 4476-8284 76 nm 8 T u esd ay , Jun e l l . 1974 THE DAILY TEXAN TAE KWON D0 KARATE CLUB SELLERS BUYERS Buy direct bom the owner Select Quality Com e by NOW THERE S A BETTER WAY! rn South Texas I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I thinking of buying or selling a car, boat or camper? T H E SE P R IC E S GOOD AT ALL ST O R ES T U E SD A Y , W E D N E SD A Y , A N D T H U R SD AY CANTALOUPES | Unclassifieds I I I is£ ll Price it yourself. . . (we can advise you) Display it on our lot— go home Relax— we find you a buyer 1 Simply rent the space (or $15 a week- we show it— all you do is close the deal 7545 BURNET ROA 2 B lo c k s S o u th of A n de rso n Lan e 459-6700 Open l l a m to 7 p m every day WHERE BUYER MEETS S E LLE R !! Masseuse Convicted Hill Opinion Exempts Portion of M a n u a l By RICHARD F L Y Texan Staff Writer A major portion of the manual used by the University System police is exampted from public disclosure under the Texas Open Records Act, Atty. Gen. John Hill said in an opinion released Friday. University officials asked for the opinion last October after The Daily Texan requested infor­ mation on the operation of the Special Services — Security Division, known as the System police, for an inquiry into undercover police activity “ T H E B U LK of the information contained in the manual is clearly within the exception provided (in a section of the law) for a record maintained for internal use in matters relating to law enforcement,” Hill stated Information in the manual of an ad­ ministrative nature should be disclosed, the at­ torney general added, if it is not available for public inspection separate from the manual. T H E T EXA N also asked for various reports and evaluations of police at component in­ stitutions by System police H ill said, however, that publicity of “ Specific capabilities and deficiencies of police might endanger law enforcement. In ruling on the request for budget and voucher information, the attorney general said that Information tn a i “ lnio rm d u uK i which w h ic h would reveal specific C o n s titu tio n a lity of Laws Tested By JOSE M. FLORES Texan Staff Writer While a verdict of guilty was issued Monday by Judge Rob R. Robertson against Austin masseuse P a u la “ S u m m e r ” B r e e z e in Municipal Court No. 3, a chance of testing the con­ stitutionality of the laws against prostitution was af­ forded the defendant. A packed courtroom, its oc­ cupants sometimes snigger­ ing, listened to the prosecu­ tion charge the defendant was guilty because a sexual act for money had been performed. Undercover agent Steve Hall described the act as handmanipulation of his penis by the defendant. Defense attorneys Carol Oppenheimer and Bobbie operations or specialized equipment directly related to investigation or detection of crime is excepted from disclosure.” Such information on an administrative level might not be excepted, he said. Details of specialized equipment as well as travel information which might reveal the procedures or patterns of undercover agents also would be excepted from disclosure. Information concerning office equipment and normal travel for administrative, training and visible field assignments should be disclos­ ed, the attorney general said. The information The Texan requested was turned over to Hill for review. A F U L L DECISION was postponed in late January while the attorney general’s office reviewed an opinion on the release of informa­ tion by law enforcement agencies. At that time, however, the attorney general said the basic administrative data he had reviewed could be released, including the an­ nual report of the System police, the law en­ forcement code of ethics, administrative per­ sonnel and their salaries and job descriptions. UH Telephoto A I M Director Resigns The inquiry into University undercover ac­ tivity was prompted by the discovery last fall that an undercover narcotics agent who had made several arrests on campus was still on the University payroll as a patrolman Dennis Banks, national executive director of the American Indian Movement (AIM ) told a general AIM assembly Monday he has resignedjiisjaost^ r I I I ■ tablishments on 14 other oc­ casions for the same purpose. Upon returning the guilty verdict. Judge Robertson pointed out that the un­ constitutionality of laws was not u s u a l l y t e s te d in municipal courts where in cases such as this one the crime was considered petty. " I ' m going to find you guilty.’ With a fine of up­ wards of IOO dollars you may appeal. I fine you hereby, the sum of 102 dollars and fifty cents.” he said. I — 2 5 % D ISCO UNT I ON j DRY C LEA N IN G & SHIRTS | WITH THIS C O U P O N (Good thru 6 /2 5 ) lf I I Use I Classified I L Ads DICKENS CLEANERS AND LAUNDRY! 2918 G U A D A LU PE 25 Years In I T h e S a m e L o c a tio n .J ^11 Shortage May Not Exist A llU ^ C hidden pennies out of the shoe shoe I boxes, pickle jars and wine bottles and put them back in the cash registers where they belong. Otherwise, someone might ask you to give you a coupon for your thoughts. n x u u m f iu t u *> shortage. «hr»rt.»pp do to onH end th the By KAT CUNNINGHAM The Treasury had con­ Shortages are a way of life for Americans these days, but sidered minting an aluminum the D ep artm ent of the penny, but that idea is Treasury recently announced “ dead,” the spokesperson said. the first unshortage. So let’s get those 30 billion Mary Brooks, director of the San Francisco Mint, said penny hoarders have caused what seems to be a shortage, but a penny shortage does not really exist. Austin banks, however, do 3 months not agree with Brooks. Austin N a tio n a l Bank reports the lowest inventory (in clud e s delivery, pick-up, of pennies in the bank s history, and City National Bank now rations pennies to its customers. 1624 Lavaca Jo e George, a s sista n t cashier at City National, said Austin is not affected as much by the penny shortage as larger cities like Houston and Dallas because “ all the bigcity banks are getting as many pennies as we are from the Federal Reserve System, and their demand is greater." Some stores in the larger cities have recently begun giv­ ing coupons or bubble gum in­ stead of pennies for change. The Department of the Treasury wants Americans to take all of their hoarded pen­ nies to the banks to get more pennies in circulation. A spokesperson at the San Fra n c is c o Mint said the response to the appeal to br­ ing out the hidden pennies has been good, but if the appeal fails to produce enough pen­ nies to cover the shortage, the Department of the Treasury has no idea as to what it might Nelson argued that while the act may have been com­ mitted, it was at the request of agent Hall, who should have been likewise charged. “ Charging one party and not the other denies equal protec­ tion under the law to the defendant Since there is no way that the laws whose viola­ tion my client is charged with can be fairly enforced, the laws themselves are un­ constitutional,” said Nelson. Hall said that he had in­ f ilt r a t e d m assage e s ­ ORAND FDM (kink in Light It xii Suntkiwn The Edgar Winter Group Shock Treatment 0 S h m in 'O n t i* bides l h ' HH Siiitlle‘SiL t*k »vn " Som e *■■ ■ '-., Amma - -**■■ V a , !* - Som e D a . 'too ll Cat* *** Nam*. Rock & R d ! W o r n - 4n im # Ms.> Midland Dry (aMrae Highway s mewtiere I IS.V SPECIAL PIANO RENTAL *8 5 .0 0 a n d tu n in g ) “ Sundow n Reprise "S h in in ' O n ” Capitol 3 ^ Edgar W in ter Paul M cC artney G ran d Funk Gordon Ughtfoot “ Band O n The R u n ” 097 “ Shock Treatm ent'* Epic **9 7 Apple 0 97 w * * AMSTER MUSIC & @ 478-7331 MOTT THE HOOPLE mduamg The G o M to A g * CM Rock ’N fte * R o* A w e *T h * S tone Craeh Street X x *)* Through The i-ootowg G te & s T n x *» Song a cc** -ec orris Capitol GREAT LP'S & TAPES FROM THE MUSIC PEOPLE hoUObs MsATcan & * o rv e fk itM fiO ju & i* Ry Cooder “ P a ra d ise And Lunch' Reprise ! 39 IE 6 .9 8 UST LPs 5.98 LIST LPs BEGINNINGS ALLMAN BROTHERS BAND ImU*fcvOo»'t Won, tee NoMont tfcyiwl Mkl-Wt^n Rwky Hoot tot Crawlei Man— 3 3 39 97 Herb Alpert Allm an Brothers Beginnings” "Y o u Sm ile” AAM Also A v a ila b le in 8 Ttack & C a s s e t t e Capricorn 0 97 Boutique Fashions' For M e n r-xjcr n and W orn* 7.98 LIST 6.98 LIST 97 4 4 39 Brow nsville Station “ School Punks” Big T ree Quincy Jones “ Body H e a t” A&M 0 97 0 97 * rns. i ? B IL L W Y M A N M O N K EY G R IP /L L 7 A . It ll LAVACA r n S27! I C A L IC O P R O D U C T IO N S A N O KOK E PR ES E N T S “ M o n ke y G rip ” Rolling Stone Records C ap tain Beefh ea d D iana Ross Bill W ym a n 0 97 w “ Live” M o to w n P J 97 “ U nconditionally G u a ra n te e d ” Plus Special Guest HOT SAUCE Sat., Ju n e 22nd Texas Opry House T h e M u sic P e o p le ^ ^ ™ Two Performances 7:30 & 10:30 P.M. if Tickets $4.50 in advance for each show $5.00 at the door Available at: Pants South (Down town & Riverside), Inner Sanc­ tum, Budget Tapes, & Texas Opry House. - &!t(ocUu ---------- Large Selections of Rock, Country, Blues, Classics, And Popular A sift certificate from the Music People can be used at any of our 66 stores coast to coast! O ur expert salespeople can help you find exactly the right record or tape . .. we’re the Music People y 2316 GUADALUPE • 9 :00-5 :30 PARK IN OUR LOT ON SAN ANTONIO DIRECTLY BEHIND T H I CADEAU 0 97 J CUT-OUTS T h e L a s t R eso rt The Cadeau has clothes fo r the way you live ... Indian cottons, T-shirt dressing, long w ra p skirts, shorts, pants and tops. Shown, an e m ­ broidered halter of cotton fro m In­ dia, 8.00; a knit tan k top, 9.00; a striped tunic, also Indian cotton, th a t's great over a s w im s u it or pan­ ts, 16.00. And that's just fo r sta rte rs! Come seea w hole s u m m e r f u l of great looks at the Cadeau. Rita Coolidge "F a ll Into Spring” A&M 0 39 ■ discount# recordso 2310 GUADALUPE MON.-THURS. 10-9 FRI. & SAT. 10-10 478-1674 Tuesday, June \1, 1974 THE DAILEY TEXAN Page 9 Coo derin Concert Lacks U U h ,, I H HIS. rn By M IC H A EL ETCHISON Texan Staff Writer For S3 50 vou could have bought a ticket to see Ry Cooder at Castle Creek. Add a couple of bucks for drinks and a tip. You’d have saved a buck or two if you had bought one of his albums and a six-pack, gone home and stretched out on the sofa You probably would have had a better time. It s not that he’s not a fine musician. Any of his albums would prove otherwise Even playing by himself, as he did last Friday and Saturday, he makes more music than your average band, and good music at that. It s just well, some performers bring something special to a live performance, and some don’t. IT DIDN’T help that the audience at both shows r rtday night were typical of the Austin audiences I ve been in recently: rude. They know better than any peiformer what songs should be done, and they re unloathe to let the world know it. Often, often. All that aside, there was much to enjoy in the man s work He played guitar (both straight and slide) and mandolin with a skill and intensity that any musician should envy. Every­ one of his mandolin instrumentals was applauded, in fact. FREE NITE LIVE NEW YORK ROCK CRACKIN DOORS OPEN : 8 HAPPY HOUR: 8-9 , •T H E A fcARTI p i A Kl LAMAR 4 7 7 -3 7 8 3 ___ ✓ not just because there aren’tt man, many solo solo mandolin. mandolinists «and 4 not tost because there aren SEE Riverside P A IN T IN G O F T H E Twin "T H R E E M U S K E T E E R S " Cinema W O R L D ! ! ! the LARGEST IN the 1 2 :3 0 M A T IN E E O N L Y $ 1 .0 0 M O N . -FRI. PG S I so 2 4 0-4 50 I 52 SO 7 C0-V !5 :00 W A l i n K / $ \.o o r v ^ N J T ' ’ M O N -FRI. I o nly GET LPST t His harsh, almost vicious attack (aided by the club s esDeciallv tinny sound system during the first set) kept the pulse going through the most intricate lines. That s not easyon a plunky instrument like a mandolin „ na, This didn’t always work. On a rawhide song like Billy the Kid ’ it is perfect; the song is direct, cynical, almost brutal behind its seeming detachment On other songs, such as several Sleepy John Estes tunes, it worked less well. I he Estes records I ’ve heard are much more easy-going than a mandolin could ever be. even without Gooder s intensity. AS A slide guitarist, Cooder is unequalled in my ex­ perience. Technically he’s as good as anyone [ j e heard, keeping all his left fingers working, leading with the bulbus red slide on his little finger, It s the emotional quality that sets him apart. For the futile rage of ‘ V >gdante Man or the resigned despair of “ How Can a Poor Man Stand Sue h Times and Live,” Cooder’s keening slide is perfect It was appropriate also for a song which drew hisses from some folks in the back of the room, a merciless attack on preachers called "You Shall.” as in “ you shall have pie in the sky, now don’t notice when I steal your food or bed you. wife.” When was the last time you heard a serious an­ tichurch song in a night club.: On all his instruments, Cooder, making things more in­ teresting for everyone, didn t strum, in fact, didn t do any of the usual folky things. When he picked, and he didjjtek. he had lines against lines, top and bottom, with a clear har­ monic direction. ,, Probably the easiest to hear this on was an old calypso song, Roosevelt in Trinidad.” Watching was even more fun, as the fingers running bass and treble strings seemed to be leading different lives. I N FO RTU N A TELY, he's not much of a singer I can believe that he is emotionally involved in much of what he does, but none of it comes across. (It didn t help tha. the audiences Friday night were sending nothing back tohim :but applause.' He sounds more or less authentic, which is good for the mostly older songs he does. but his voice is blam . Then there was poor Doug Gittmgs, second-billed He is a marvelous guitarist who has obviously invested a ot ofIm ­ agination. care and love in his performance. He dido t stand a chance against the boors in the audience He looked as it he were about to cry. and I was with him. If s unprofessional to let crummy audiences get you down, I suppose, but as he said. " I ve got feelings, too lf you see him in a sympathetic crowd, do so Like Castle Cree^ J wouldn't hesitate to put hun on the same stage with .he two performers I ve seen him supporting. David Bromberg and Rv Cooder. Texan Staff Photo by Stoney P a w Ry Cooder Benefit Scheduled A guitar-totmg tmef would never suspect that his heist would result in a Jerry Je ff Walker concert. W alker and friends w ill assemble at Castle Creek Tuesday night in an effort to raise money for a member of the B illy C. band whose hard­ earned guitar was stolen recently The J vs Gallagher Benefit, named for the stolen guitar, will feature in addition to Walker the Gonzo Band, Milton C arroll, Country Sunshine, Billy C.. Billy Jim Baker and Frank Ziegel. Tickets for the 7 p.m. benefit will be sold at the door. There are no advance ticket sales. television 24 M a r c u s W e l b y , AA D . 6 30 p m 36 Police Story 7 H e e H aw 9 30 p m 9 News 24 I Dream ai Jeatinie 9 B y lin e 10pm 36 E y e w itn e s s News 7 pm 7 24 9 The Best of Drums and Bugle*. 24 H a p p y D a y s 36 N e w s 9 I n ig h t 10:30 p m -’The 7 M o v ie }6 Adam 12 7 JO p rn s t a r r in g 7 H a w a i i F iv e - 0 24 A B C Tneater " Ju d g m e n t: The C o u r t m a r t i a l of th e T id e / Of M a la y a , G eneral Y a m a sh ita 3* T u e sd a y M ystery M o vie B la c k D a y ‘or Bluebeard ‘ A n n iv e rs a r y , B e tte D a v is 9 f - in n g L i n e 24 W i d e W o r l d of M y s t e r y N ig h t T r a in tc T e r r o r . " 36 Tonight Show a pm 'UNCLASSIFIED" CLASSIFIEDS 9 A Decade ct Change 8 30 p .m . 9 v u u O w e It to Yo u rse'f FEATURES 7:00-3:30-10:00 WALT ll __ DISNEY!! CARTOON C LA SSIC PETER BOGDANOVICH’S BRILLIANT PICTURE SHOW THAT INTRODUCED AMERICA TO THE FORGOTTEN 50’S LAST DAY! bm AUSTIN PREMIER Meet The Girls Who Take The Bedside M anner One Step Further! arm •;n A B B S P R O D U C T tG N T H E A R C LAST PICTURE SHOW E i n W O N DBRfeflN D PETER BOGDANOVICH TEXAS MELD •« OVER HURRY ORIN 7:45 first Ilk, PARAMOUNT hmm 713 C O N G R E S S AT THREE THEATRES 'TAST OAT" Burnet Road — 465-6933 NURSES REPORT a q u a r iu s VARSITY THEATRE VILLAGE CINEMA FOUR 12 :3 0 THEATER FOUR A V E N U E n th in CIR. OB SMASH I WEEK - I FOR ADULTS ONLY] BA R G A IN MATINEE AND P A S S E S SUSPENDED Under 12 yrs. not admitted I FEATURES 2-5-8 G REDUCED /\ MER Showt o w TODAY at S o u T h sid E From Warner Bros 12:30-2:45-5:00-7:25*9:40 JC BOX OFFICE OPENS 7 00 SHOW STARTS DUSK l ‘MADHOUSE.’ , VINCENT PRICE PETER CUSHING l irs notnicetomoi wttti AT 8.05 O N L Y ~ I trktrff presents Mother nature ______ MANN T H EA T BtS* FOX TWIN t7 St U lS fO ft SIVO M i I COLOR wD« Urn (G j * 2 IU -Nfcwf kl TWEKnETVI CENTURT-BOK it can he HQBRimj l} |tl!iTATM»§g rn 1iimiwrft, I 4S4 27111 H O BERT Q U A R R Y / 'N , 710 I .Ban Whit* a 444-2236 w PG ** LAST DAY USA / G U lt t>t ATI S D R IV I IN 0*ith a cou­ Saturday with matinees at ple oi successful films under your belt, it becomes easier to 2:30 p.m. Friday and Satur­ raise money for subsequent, more serious ones, he explained. day. Tickets are $4 for even­ ‘The Creep will be a psychological suspense film As worn-out as the skin-flick genre has become. Todd was ing performances and $3 for matinees. The play will run clever enough never to let “ Fantasies” take itself seriously (the first deadly sin among skin-flicks), and the movie does contain through June 29 The Mary Moody Northen some originally funny moments. “ Fantasies" best gimmick, and the one which has made it Theatre box office is open from IO a m. to 9 p.m. daily. sell (the film broke attendance records in Lubbock — and I sup­ Reservations can be made by pose that says something — although I m not sure what), is the Erotic Sensory Profile” test which the audience takes at the calling 444-2621, extension 260, beginning of the movie. or 444-8398. To explain the test would be to spoil the fun. Suffice it to say that if you take the whole thing as the put-on it s meant to be. this little test can be a real howler. (Blue books, incidentally, are not necessary Roberts at St Ed's “ Three Men on a Horse” opens June 17, kicking off the St. E d w a r d ’s U n iv e rs ity summer season with a twoweek run. Pernell Roberts, who first gained fame on the “ Bonanza" television series, will star in the role of Patsy, the brawny and somewhat dull-witted gang leader. Performances for the open­ ing production will be at 8:30 p.m. nightly Monday through SSY „ JJ.' - — Texon Staff Photo by WWwton ioy»Of B a r g a in in g on the D rag Laguna Gloria Art Museum will present a series of films for children to be shown free this summer. The films have been selected to provide the children of Austin the oppor­ tunity to view films presen­ ting an unlimited range of cultural experiences The films selected for the THE PUB Presents ACE IN THE HOLE FREE BEER 9-10 V l OFF 2nd S te a k Dinner N T R U HELD OVER! HTH WEEK! M ICQtoftl N0W SH0WING This fine, sensitive adaptation of the Larry McMurtry novel concerning small-town Texas, 1951. placed director Peter Bogdanovich in the public eye. Academy Awards went to Cloris Beachman and Ben Johnson for their supporting roles in the 1971 film. At 7 and 9:15 p.m. Wednesday in the Union Theatre. 'Lady Sings the Blues' Diana Ross’ portrayal of the late Billie Holiday earned her a 1972 Oscar nomination. (She lost to Liza Minnelli of Cabaret.” ) Director Sidney J. Furie takes all the cliches ol the show biz heartbreak drama and whips them up into an enjoyable, emotional wallow. At 7 and 9:30 p.m. Thursday in the Union Theatre. —P.B. Riverside Tw in C inem a H A N K 'S G R IL L 2532 GUADALUPE 2 pcs. Meat, French Fries, Cole Slaw, Hot Rolls & Butter 5-9 p.m. only SI.45 Reg. $1.85 THEM HERE! RO A ST B EEF • C O R N E D BEEF S W IS S C H E ESE P A S T R A M I • SA L A M I ”1haven't hod such a good time at a new movie in years." jut And THE F A M O U S “ H E R O ” • Pere* Oogdonovtch. 12:30-$l .OO 2:40 $1 50 7:00 52 50 4:5 0 5 9:15 REDUCED PRICES MON-FRI TU 5 P.M DUBIK SCREEN I & 2 OR ... ENJOY BA K ED H A M THE THREE MUSKETEERS VILLAGE C,J ^ A FOUR FOODS TO GO! SA N D W IC H E S H ank's Fam ous Chicken Fried Steak QUICHES New Yod*. Mogazme FEATURES 1:30-3:05-4:40-6:15-7:50-9:25 A Q U A R IU S THEATRES FOUR 'The Last Picture Show' 7700 W IST A N D E S O N L A N I 4 S )-8 3 S 3 U F o rm E six programs include fantasy, animation, adventure, com­ edy and contemporary life study. Several early films of Charlie Chaplin also are in­ cluded. The programs will be shown Thursday. June 20 and 27; also. July ll. 18 and 25. Each program will be ap­ proximately 90 minutes long. V illag e Cinem a Four With This A d IH 35 & 38th HYING SAUCERS- ARI IWY RIAL? HHD OUT... ■IC Pauline Kael terms this farce concerning the perennial war of enlisted men and officers” one oi the “ handful of films worth seeing ... from the entire Hollywood output in 1957.” Directed by Richard Quine, the movie stars Jack Lemmon. Ernie Kovacs and Mickey Rooney. At 9 p.m. Tues­ day on the Union Patio; free admission. Film Program at Museum Local artists a n d craftsm en resum e sales as University students return for classes. 452-2306 'Operation M adball' HAM • CRAB LIVE! IN CONCERT' M USH RO O M JIL L . e . 'U i LYNYRD SKYNYRD S lit & G u a d a lu p e Second Level Dobie M al! 477-1324 Screen ll TI C A B B A G E ROLLS • B A R B E C U E D P O R K RIBS Monday - June 1 7 - 8 p.m. AUSTIN MUNICIPAL AUDITORIUM Reserved B A R B E C U E D C H IC K E N B A R B E C U E D B EEF TICKETS N O W ON SALE R A Y M O N D ' S D R U G S No. I & 2 from C o ncerts W e s t J A M Productions W IT H PO T A T O SALAD • B E A N S • AVO CAD O SO UP P I CH EESECAKES B R O W N IE S AND “ BA KLA VA” fof NS fellow officers considered Nm] the m ost dangerous man alive -an honest cop. [ 1-------- 1 • ALSO ftSTRM*HATPU*2AAALACL A P A R A M O U N T R ELEA SE D IN O DE LAURENTIUS presents PEOPLE PLEASIN' PIZZA' A l- PACINO r SERPICO” FA BULO US S A N D W IC H T R A Y S 7:30-10:00^K 50 Screen I FOR LAST D A Y ALL O C C A S IO N S 2 -4 -6 - *1.25 8- 1 0 - FOR *1.50 Where were you in’62? rn (KH •CON A LUCAS H IK LTO -COPPOt A CO Pfotluchon • A UNIV! RSA! PIOTHRL • HCHNICOlOR Midnight Movies 7 Days A Week n ll R I * - 1® Kung Fu killers on the loose LAST D A Y 12:15 1m e Dragon "S ta rts $1.25 WITH BRUCE LEE TOMdkkbvf DOUBLE FEATURE GLENDA JACKSON IN HER ACADEMY ,/LW ARD ^WINNING ROLES! PLUS I '• i'J jj A “lfwe miss OPERATIONMAURA L L with E r n ie K o v a c s and J a c k L e m m o n to n ig h t at 9 on t h e I nion Patio, it s all o v e r betw ee n us. " C in e m a Under the Stars Every Tuesd ay night at 9, for free, on the Union Patio. June l l OPERATION MADBALL June IS DUMBO June 25 TNE MUMMY July 2 ABBOTT AND COSTELLO MEET DR. JEKYLL AND MR. HYDE July f THE HUNCHBACK OF NOTRE DAME July 16 HORSEFEATHERS July 23 TOPPER July 30 SAHARA August 6 THE GLORY STOMPERS August 13 WHAT'S UP, TIGER LILY? B u y A Pizza G e t O n e Free! CUP A N D SAVE WORTH O N E FREE PIZZA W ith Purchase of Another of S a m e Size an d Price. N o t V alid O n T ake-O u t O rders THE C O M M O N MARKET m um m EXPIRES JU NE 17, 1974 O tter g o o d e t att p a rtic ip a tin g I 6619 AIRPORT BLVD. 5849 BERKMAN 1000 S. LAMAR PERICLES CRISS, PROPRIETOR 304 WEST THIRTEENTH CALL 472-1900 TOUCH OE CLASSI T uesday , J u n e I t, 1974 THE DAILY TEXAN P a g e ll S ' FURN APARTS. ■ WMSEESMr C L A S S IF IE D A D V E R T IS IN G RATES IS w ord m in im u m Each word one tim ® * E a c * w o rd 2-4 tim e s * E a ch weed 5-9 tim e s * ESCH w o rd IO o r m o re tim e s S S tu d e n t ra te e a ch t im e $ C la s s ifie d D is p la y S2 96 I co ' * I in c ti erne tim e S2 66 J col * I in c h 2-9 t.m e s i co* x I inch te n or m o re tim e s 12 32 Misc. - For Sale U S E D 3 S P E E D Ross girl s bicycle. C a ll 477-4020 M A M I v a SE KO R IOO O T I . 50m m Lens 200 m m Telephoto 2X C onvertor, (lash case S2S0 R ic k , 476-1752 GOOD FOOD STORES THE d c a o u n c s c u t O UI f tuMotay Tex on Mondoy tOOC o rn. Wednesday I l i o n Tuewfoy 'O OO a rn Thvixloy Town Wednewloy 'O OO o rn friday I Oxon Thursday 1 0 :0 0 a m . 4 th S. S a y e r - 53rd 6 Ave F 29111 s P ea rl A e eau it our m im -d o rm , you can call » hom e G re a t fo r bud g e t-m in d e d students w ho w a n t privacy Y our choice of bu- n orange chocolate bro w n or g r w n shag w ith b rig h w allc o ve rin g s. Patios. POO v caba na On s h u ttle ro u te , m inute s frorn the u n iv e r s ity a nd d o w n to w n c ,es i 2. and 3 b d rs , a ls o a v a ila b le S u m m e r ra tes WOODSIDE G I NSENG CONSUL LOW S T U D E N T r a t e s 15 w o rd m in im u m e a c h d a y S 75 E a ch a d d itio n a l w o rd e a c h d a y ! 05 I col. * I in c h e a c n d a y $2 37 U n c la s s ifie d ? I lin e 3 d a y s SI OO I P re p a id No R e fu n d s ’ S tu d e n ts m u s t s h o w A u d it o r s re c e ip ts and p a y n a d v a n c e rn TSP B ld g 3 200 (2 5 th & W h it is ) fro m 8 a rn to 4 30 p .m . M o n d a y th ro u g h F r.d a y G o tu k o f r ' s . r t T s ^ ' r i ll a ^ M an d r a k e . H aw thorne B e r ry H y s s o p , M y r r - G u m a " a C a p s ic u m a re c o m b in e d w ith one n a tu ra l V ita m in s and M in e ra ls c a r e fu lly B a la n ce d fo r m u la A lso . a c o m ­ p i l e P r o te in f o r tifie d w ith V 't a m jn E P r o d u c t o r spon sored d is trib u to rs h .p s D a*«d S te w a rt 478-2618 ON TOWN LAKE 2 a nd 3 bedroom tow nhouse and fia ts fro m SISO all bills paid S u m m er from S165. On shuttle bus route dishw asher, disp o sa l, cen tral a ir , pool, g a m e room . Call 444-3411. or com e by 1201 Tinnin F o rd Road Apt 113 T u rn E a s t o ff IH35 on E R iv e rs id e D r iv e . 1974 VW D A S H E R A u to m a tic , A M E M , 454-6197, 476-3691 F O R D C U S TO M , 1967, Six cylinders m anual trans. S40C G ood condition. Call 472 3349 10&8 V O L K S W A G O N , $900 476-9101 good A L L P R O O F 1OW50 lu b ric a n t protects g a s o lin e e n g in e s f o r 5 0,000 m ile s between oil changes 441-5174 1970 VW a m F M , ra d ia ls , clean, engine per'ect, o rig in a l o w n e r SUSQ. Phone 447 4849 H u g e I A 2 bedrooms tu rn or u n fu rn . w ith la r g e w alk-ins beautiful land sc ap­ ing F r o m $154 ABP HOO R etnli. 4523202, 472-4162 B a rry G illin g w a te r C om ­ pany e x c e lle n t c o n d itio n , t ir e s good 20 mpg $350 441-3582 A M F M , a ir , 427, 1969 C O R V E T T E clean, $2975 or older ca" in trade. Take up balance. 474-4444, 474-1041. V E G A 71 H a tc h b a c k standard, radio, new tires, inspected 9A W 0 mHas, 2S mpg tune up, b a tte r y . $1300. 477-1403. Motorcycles - For Sale 1972 N O R T O N IN T E R S T A T E condition $1150 442-8171. E xce lle n t 3121 Speedway - 477-3210 S u m m e r Rates, co ve re d p a rk ­ ing, S h u ttle bus, C able te le v i­ sion 1972 J AW A C A L I F O R N IA N 350cC, 4500 miles. E x c e lle n t ru n n in g condition $450 or best offer 471-7412. 451-4643 $100 1 B E D R O O M $135.00 2 B E D R O O M $175.OO D ishw asher, d isp o sa l, 6 blocks ca m p u s, e x tr a n ice lu x u ry a p a rtm e n ts . e f f ic ie n c ie s 4 7 4 -1 7 1 2 2919 West Ave. N IK O N F B 5 c o m p a rtm e n t case, black leather m in t condition. $75 Cal! 4711182 SONY HP-155, fu r n ta b le -a m p iifier com ­ b in a tio n u s e d t h r e e m o n th s , i m ­ m a cula te $85 474-4117 M us t sell. O U T S T A N D IN G S Y S T E M ; P io n e e r receiver SX 1000. J B L IOO speakers, G a rra rd Zero IOO tu rn ta b le . A ll yours tor reasonable $900. C a ll 478-1009 U T A H S P E A K E R S , like new, 3-way system, list $140 each, asking $175 for paid or best o ffe r. 451-3823 a fte r 5 AM FM S T E R E O b u ilt-in 8 -tr a c k , phono C om plete w ith 4 speakers. F irst $125 454-9123 472-2627 $110 I B e d ro om ii Cid Apts. I BR F U R N Dorado Apts. $150 I B r F u rn A ll B ills P a id 472-1598 S h u ttle B us C o rn e r $105 FOR S A L E ! P ioneer SR-202 R e v e rb e ra tio n a m p lifie r, S65, new lis t is SUO. CSC M o n ito r speakers, 3 fe e t high, 2-12 inch w o o fe rs , 2 tw e e te rs and a m id ra n g e , trem e n d ou s power and c la r it y of sound, $90 each. 476-7111 e x t 281. Pets - For Sale S M O O TH F O X T E R R IE R pupjtfes. Sire 8. D am both A K C C ham pions 385-4839 Homes - For Sale S T U D E N T S - N E E D a nice furnished house w ith lots of trees, windows, 8. a fire p la c e'’ 441-359! G arag e Sale - For Sale C A L IF O R N IA O R BUST G arage Sale M ond ay u n til e v e r y th .n g goes F u r ­ niture, « .itth e n -w a re , plants m any un­ usual .terns 3100 Funston 4 blks west of Jefferson. 454-1117. Misc. - For Sale TO P C A S H P R IC E S paid for diam onds, old go’d C a p ito l D ia m ond Shop, 4018 n La m a r. 454-6877 Good shape H P ^ 3 5 ~ C A L C U L A T 0 R , S190 1968 C le v e ite , $700 S chw inn Varsity' 10-speed bike, $50 B rie fc a s e , $5 Cai! 477-8107 J. 476-9312 SALE A N T IQ U E Queen Anne ta b le, cha.rs, m a s s iv e m ahogany b ® °*c a * ei sofa, c h a ir, o th e r item s 255-2369 a fte r 5 p.m. U S E D T Y P E W R I T E R S M a n u a ls fro m $30 e le c tric s fr o m $95, a ll g u aranteed D A N S T Y P E W R I T E R S . 2408 S a n G abriel 474-6396. A p a rtm e n t liv in g j Diock fr o m C a m p us in d iv id u a l a p p lic a n ts m a tc h e d w it h c o m p a tib le ro o m m a te s 2910 Red R iv e r 476-5631 a PARAGON P R O P E R T Y S U M M E R R A T E S ! New efficiencies Double oed, shag c arpet, dishwasher, disposal, stove, r e fr ig e r a to r . 451-7937. C A V A L IE R A P T S 307 E a s t 31$t. 2 bedrooms, fu rn is h ed , pool AC, w alking distance to U T A ll B ills P aid S um m er rates - $140 and up. C a ll 472-7611. PEPPER TREE $120 I BR Furn Cal! Our O f f i c e ................ ................................. 472-8253 M A R K IV APTS. PdL I, 2207 Leon ............. ............................... 472-8941 PdL ll, 2200 Leon ............................................ 472-8941 S H U T T L E BUS C O R N E R PT ll, 408 W. 37th ........................................... 454-0824 PT I I I , 2704 Salado .......................................... 477-2752 PT IV, 502 W. 35th .......................................... 472-8941 PT V, 404 W. 35th ............................................ 472-8253 TH E BEST V A L U E IN TOWN H E Y , L E A R N T O p l a y G u ita r B eginner and advanced D re w Thom ason 478-2079. N E W E X E C U T IV E D E S K , w aln u t w ith s!a Page 12, Tuesday, June l l , 1974 THE DAILY TEXAN B IL L S O N D O R M E x c e lle n t h o m e cooked m e als M eats by week or m onth 2610 R io G ra n d e . C a ll 474-5680 or 4766579 L A R G E Q U I E T F U R N I S H E D 2-1, CA CH, w asher, d ry e r, sun deck, shuttle stop P erfec t for 4 students. $175 mo No hassle 2708 a S alado C a ll John, 4767791. LOST & FOUND re w a rd M a le ir is h S e tte r South A u s tin 471-1833 E venings 444o rs ! A n s w e rs to B ir k u i. CASH LO S T C A T L a r g e m a te, m o s tly g ra y , w h ite p a w s , n e c k 33rd and G u a d a lu p e . 452-5803 $25 R e w a rd H E R M IT 'S H U T IN A Z A L E A G A R D E N 8. H O U S E ON G O D S G R E E N A C R E FO R R E F I N E D C O U P L E TW O E X C E P T IO N A L H O U S E S I for single m a n o r w o m a n d e sirin g p riv a c y and I fo r n ice c o u p le A v a ila b le .n most e lite a re a s ( E n fie ld R o ad a nd Alpine H eights) w here b e a u ty d o m in a te s the scene E a c h p la c e is a ir c o n d itio n e d bv r e f r i g e r a t i o n a n d h a s a n th e c o n ­ ve nie n ce s and a w tsy fr o m 'h e M a d d in g C ro w d B est of fu r n is h in g s , The E n fie ld G a rd e n s p la ce fo r I is $75 p lu s e le c tr ic ity w h ile the A lp in e house to r co u p le is $125 plus u tilit ie s D I A L 477 3276 F R E E TO J U N E F IR S T O n ly $25 d e p o se 3 B EDRO O M HOUSE s u m m er only or perm an e n t. 3218 Funston. 454-7132, 4720917. $155 A ir-conditioned W A L K TO S CHO O L, n e w ly re m o d ele d efficiencies, St 19.50 plus e le c tr ic ity and w a te r 709 W est 26th, 478-9170. N O R T H O F H IG H L A N D M A L L . 3-1 Va, C e ntra l AC, dish w a s her, carp e t, fenced and m a in tain e d y a rd . F u lly furnished. 459-5210 453-5778, LOST G old w .r e rim tinted pre sc ription eyeglasses be tw ee n San G a b rie i-L a v a c e and t i t " ?3rc SIO re w a rd 476-3987 L E I T E M P T Y G R E E N Sam sonite s u it­ case BOI E a s t 30th S treet opposite Dobbs House $5.00 R ew ard M a r y , 4 *69403 F O U N D . F E M A L E B E A G L E puppy A bout fo u r m onths old T rico lo r F o u n d near U n iv e r s ity Can G eoff. 477 5557. FO UND G la sse s w ith s q u a ris h bro w n p la s tic f r a m e s n e a r R T F See S tu d e n t U n io n REWARD LOST S m a ll S p r in g e r ags S p a n ie l. B la c k w h ite F e m a le . Tag N a m e C h e lse a Can 476-7397 (8 -5 ), 459 6093 W A L K IN G D IS T A N C E TO U T P a v e d fro n t and back C a rp o rt, patios, fenced y ard , Plus bills. F o r a p p o in tm e n t, 4723485. O ve rb y . C O L O R F U L I B E D R O O M Shag, dis­ hw asher, cozy c o m m u n ity . N e a r s h u ttle F ro m $115 plus e le c tric ity 1211 W est 8th (o ff B lanco) 474-1107 472 4162. B a rry G illin g w a te r C om pany. SERVICES HELP WANTED E X C E L L E N T S U M M E R R A T E S on s p a c io u s o n e a n d tw o b e d r o o m a p a rtm e n ts F a ll ra tes re as o n a b le . C a ll 454 9475 TRAVEL D R IV IN G T H R O U G H P H O E N IX to L.A_ W ish som eone to sh are d riv in g and tra v e lin g expenses. C an be m a le or fe m a le 837-1528 I Bedroom HALLMARK APTS. 708 W. 34th 454-6294 W A L K IN G D IS T A N C E U T , b i l l s p a id , A C , p a n e le d , c a r p e te d , p o o l, no p e ts . 2 b e d ro o m , $190. I b e d ro o m , $145-5150. 3011 W h itis , No. 105, a fte r 5 M o n .-F rid a y . A fte r IO a .m . w eekends. M20 42 D o b ie M a i l 476-9171 F r e e P a rk in g 7 a m. 9 a rn B U I L D Y O U R O W N in d e p e n d e n t b usiness w ith th e se con d la rg e s t n a tio n a l c o rp o ra tio n in d ir e c t sa les. 441-5174 B A B Y S IT T E R W A N T E D fo r g ir l 5, boy 8, M F P r e fe r h o u rs 9-4, b u t fle x ib le 478 2404 SUMM ER EM PLO YM ENT B ic yc le S ecurity Co S eeking people interested in .sale by com m ission M e e tin g to be held Business A d m in is tra tio n Bldg Room 364, Thursday 6 13 74 fro m 3:00-4:00 471-1739 W A N T E D S H O E S A L E S M A N to work fu ll tim e at H a l's B ootery on the D rag Apply in person. P L E N T Y OF R O O M for fa m ily w ith teenagers and or horses and dogs For lease a ttr a c tiv e unfu rn ished hom e out side c ity and 20 m inutes fro m U n iv e r s i­ ty l ! , acres w ith trees, w iid fio w e rs , m ostly fenced House has c e n tra l heat and a ir, three bedroom s, tw o baths, study, panelled livin g room w ith g re a t stone fire p la c e m odern k itchen, u tility ro o m , s cre en e d b a c k p o rc h M o d e rn , fu lly equipped, tw o bedroom a ir co n ­ ditioned m obile home on back of lot You m a y sublet m obile hom e if you w ish A v a ila b le August I. A p p o in tm e n t only C a ll 454 9901 F u ll and p a rt tim e w a itre s s /w a ite rs . Bus help, k itche n help, b artenders, bar help A pply in person S at 6 8 74 10 30 till 5:00. Sun 6 9 74 12 OO til 5:00 $2.00 per hour — V W R E P A IR Q u a lity w o rk at re a s o n a b le p ric e s W e ca n g iv e yo u b e tte r s e rv ic e f r o m o u r n e w shop at 1003 Sage B ru s h F re e d ia g n o s e , c o m p r e s s io n c h e c k s , a nd e s tim a te s . T u n e -u p o n 'a n d a rd V W $10 50 p iu s p a rts . 836 3171 P lease t r y us O v e r s e w E n g in e & S u p p ly . A B O R T IO N A L T E R N A T IV E ! P re g n a n t and distressed? Help is as near as your telepho ne P ro -L ife Advocates S lo w e s t 26th, 472-4198 C A T E R IN G for E xotic Tastes S erv e guests th e finest in P ersian C uisin e E x ­ perie n c ed i e f-w a iters 476 3031 UNCLASSIFIED The G re a t G atsby 2700 West A nderson L a n e rn The V illa g e S hopping C enter IO p m M -F - 5 p m . Sat W e ig h t liftin g set, cheap. 453-8014 6 6 R a m b lerG o o d B es tO ffer 476-8946 F r e e K itten s . 476-9312. $3.05 A fg h a n pups. AKC Reg 452-8308 PER HOUR M o rn in g , a fte rn o o n or evening w o rk . A d v . - P e rsonnel - Sales. 444-7222 Room-S50 A B P F r a t 477-4981, 478-5890 G ir l s IO speed bike $50. 454-5598 It S ailb o a t 8, tra ile r, $600 472-4672 Sherw ood 8900A Rec, 447 4076 Nts S U M M E R S U B L E T 2804 F re n c h P l , 3 bedroom s, 2 baths, unfu rn is he d, June IO - Sept 1st Y a rd , q u ie t neighborhood $225 442-8171, L A R G E H O U S E near L a k e T ra v is , on RR 620 Stove and r e fr ig e r a to r . W ill a c ­ com odate four a dults. C a ll 444-9557. UNF. DUPLEXES King Size Bedrooms Pool - Dishwasher S H U T T L E BUS I BLK. 2 B d r m /2 B a th . C A / C H , f ir e p la c e , v aulte d c eilings, shag c a rp e t, ail e le c tric appl., shuttle bus s erv ice Tow n L a k e A re a . (F u rn is h e d $30 e x t r a ). G R E G O R Y A P T S . L a r g e s p a c io u s a p a rtm e n ts W a lk to cam pus, s w im m in g pool, lots storage, kitchen appliances. One bedroom $125, e ffic ie n c y $115. 702 W est 95th 478-2301, 451-8101. S E L L F L O W E R S M a k e S30-S60 working 4 peaceful d ays a w eek T hursday F r i ­ day afternoons S a tu rd a y Sunday al! day Top com m ission. P a id d a ily . 4763060, 453-1508 453 2761. FACULTY, STAFF NEW L U X U R Y D U PLEX F L E U R D E L IS 404 E a s t 30th M a tu re students. L o v ely one bedroom s W alk to cam pus S huttle S um m er ra tes . 477 5282 E X C E L L E N T T Y P IS T M u s t type 70 w pm . F le x ib le hours A p p ly 1-5, 30-A Dobie M a lt. 472 8936. UNF. HOUSES I BR F U R N I S H E D MARK V APTS.453-1084 3914 A V E . D. GINNY'S COPYING SERVICE INC. F L O R A L D E S IG N E R E x p e rie n c e d only need a p p ly P a y com m ensurate w ith a b ility 477-5717 fo r appointm ent. L A R G E I & 2 Bedroom furnished and un­ furnished Shag, w et bar, p riv a te club ro o m s , on s h u ttle I b e d ro o m fr o m Si49 SO A B P 2 bedroom st69 50 a b p 454-3885, 476 2633, B a rry G illin g w a te r C om pany. $110 'n R E W A R D fo r S e a rs F o r e c a s t l l typew r ite r Take n from 2103 Nueces on M e m o r ia l D a y No questions asked C a ll 476-9902 O N E B E D R O O M fu rn is h e d c o tta g e , w a lk in g distance to U T c am p u s . $105 m o n t h 476-0153 a fte r six. PdL I I I , 2200 San Gabriel ............................ 472-8941 PT I, 304 E. 34th .............................................. 476-9279 fu r n . duplexes S U B L E A S E F U R N IS H E D A p a rtm e n t June 15-August 20 478-1562. $106 re n t Y ou p ay u tilitie s Close to c am p u s . 711 W. 32nd 454-4917 3100 Speedway 477-1685 R O O M A N D B O A R D $137. 6 w e eks F e m a le s e s p e c ia lly needed. R a m s h o rn Co-O p 710 W e s t l i s t 478-6586. SAN J A C IN T O A R M S , 1709 San J ac in to . W a lk in g distance U n iv e rs ity C apitol O n e -tw o D e d ro o m s . o n e -tw o b a th s , CA C H , c arp e te d , w a te r, O **- cable paid No pets $135 up 472-0706, 476-0920, 472 4838 B u c k i n g h a m Squ are Efficiencies, I Br, XLar ge 2 Br TO S A IL B O A T . N e w 17 fo o t V e n t u r e C ru is e r. A s s u m e note Dow e q u tty . A v a ila b le now . 475-5851, 477-1209 (J o e ; G OOD S T U D Y D E S K steel w ith woodgrain fo r m ic a top. F iv e d ra w e rs O n ly $45 472-9955. A lt B ills P aid IOO00 *265°° M O V E IN T O D A Y ! N E A R C A M P U S E ffic ie n c y a p a rtm e n t $99 50 ABP, 2907-D San G a b rie l $100 a b p 908-G West 29th. B a r h a m P roper ties 926 9365 472-9614 ROOM & BOARD H O U S E M A T E needed, tw o bedrooms. Above Pease P a r . Q u iet neighborhood Shuttle Dogs OK $75. 478-6113. Sue. UT S H U T T L E R O U T E , nice e ffic ie n c y , furnished, carp e te d s ep a rate k itche n. AC. sum m er ra te $115 plus e l e c t r i f y F a r m o re in fo rm a tio n - 453-4952 or com # by No 103 CASA F E L IC E A P T S . 4204 Speedw ay. F IV E G R E A T B U IL D IN G S 4400 AVE. A E N F I E L D A R E A Tw o bedroom with e v e ry e xtra Furnished or unfurnished fr o m $152 plus e le c tric ity 807 West Ly n n B a rry G illin g w a te r C om pany. 4777794 472 4162 I BR Furn Tanglewood West I Bedroom PONCE de LEON APTS.459-0058 U p p e r Classm en choice selection I and 2 bedroom units, nicely furnished, w alk to c am pus, ‘ rom $130 to $165 plus e le c tric i­ ty ’907 San GaO riel 3, 2802 W hitis. M a id , p a rkin g , sum m er rates, not shown 4533235 tor appointm ent. $120 $115 T H R E E G R E A T B U IL D IN G S SUM M ER - F A L L RESER V A T IO N 5 2204 E n fie ld Rd 472-5320 474-4322 S huttle Bus Corner with us in eight great University complexes RETREAT A L L B IL L S P A ID Antilles Apts. R O O M 3 B L O C K S from cam pus B d ls paid SSO m onth Deposit required 2809 H e m p h ill P a r k 174 4101 Q U IE T N E IG H B O R H O O D Fenced y a r d Furnished D a rk ro o m space N ear shuttle, shopping $65, u tilitie s deposit. M ic h a e l, 453-9793 FR E E JUNE RENT N o d e p o s it . Sublease I bedroom June-A ugust. $160 A B P C a ll R iv e rW H t A p a rtm e n ts . 4447797 $140 B O v S N ic e ro o m s I b lo c k s fro m c a m ­ pus 2109 R io G ra n d e S hare k itc h e n liv in g ro o m wast*©** a nd d ry e r 477-2285, 453*5530 B E L L S O N D O R M for Men E x c e lle n t h o m e -c o c k e d m e als A ir conditioned, m aid. s w im m in g pool W ill ta k e c o u p le s fo r the s u m m e r 2610 R io G ra n d e , 4745680 C a ll 476-3340 b etw e en S a m -5 30pm FURN. HOUSES 2 BR Furn 675 R O O M A V A I L A B L E Im m e d ia te ly . P tiv a t e bath kitchen privileges. A ll B d ls P a id 477-7524, 453-3537 F E M A L E R O O M M A T E SSS, own room , m a n y w in d o w s y a rd G ra d u a te p re fe rre d Dorothy 478-1068 or leave m essage w ith Sharon, 471-1868 L A R G E 2 B E D R O O M , 2 bath. a ll bills paid On shuttle la rg e pool, IV * blocks fro m U T L a w School. 3212 Red R iv e r. 477-2104 S h u ttle Bus C orn e r W A L K C A M P U S burnished room , AC re frig e ra to r, p r iv a te bath, p riv a te en­ trance. cove red p a rkin g , no "assies $70. 2402 Rio G ra n d e ( r e a r ) . Call John, 4 /a7791 F E M A L E R O O M M A T E needed R iver H ills Apts $6 2 50 m o. 451-5346, D ia n a. W a lk to disposal, la u n d ry , sum m er i^ 7 1V s h o r t w a l k T O W E R Large room s, old building $95 up U tilitie s paid. 4763462 476-8683 1902 1904 Hue: es R O O M M A T E Share ' i duplex CA CH, big fenced yard B ik e to cam pus $70 C a ll M ic h a e l 459-0456 F A R N O R T H I b e d ro o m CA C H , fenced y a rd $135 b ills p a id 452-4012. E F F IC IE N C IE S N O R T H W E S T A U S T IN 5119 50 All Bdls P aid. (urns .bed 68116 81 3 G r e a t N o r t h e r n . C a b l e T V , w asher d ry er fa c ilitie s. CA C H , m a tu re students, no pets or c h ild re n Q u iet tor those who a re serious and w a n t to study^ Pnone 472-6201, John L u d lu m b efore 5 w eekdays. Resident m a n a g e r 452-4944 a fte r 5 and weekends C O U P L E OR G R A D U A T E S T U D E N T to share large house n e a r H ancock Center Accessible to shu ttle bus. C a ll 453-5135. a B L O C K S C A M P U S . 1-2 bedroom s. 702 W est 24 jth , m a n a g e r apt B 2406 R io G ran d e . Telephone GR8-6938 S h u ffle Bus F ro n t Door SUMMER Colorful Shag Carpet Centra! Air Pool Shuttle Bus 3 Blks. l a d i e s R O O M w ith kJ ,c. h,e ;;tPr^ All bins paid AC. on bus line $105 - SHS. I B edroom a p a rtm e n t, pool, very near U T carp e te d , paneled, AC. w a te r 8. gas paid See a t 2711 H e m p h ill, a p a rtm e n t J, or c all 472-4408 478 3885, 327 1355 1020 E 45th 452-0060 N IC E H O U S E v e ry close near H em p W I P a rk k itch e n privile ges , s e m ip r iv a te bath $65 202 W est 31st 478 3671 K eep try in g . M A L E S H A R E 3 b e d ro o m I t b a th house 2 gra d u ate students, $72.50, no lease, deposit. 837-0304. J U N E F R E E s u m m er sublet L a r g e o n e bedroom a p a rtm e n t, shuttle, C A C H , dish w asher, pool. $150 A B P . 442-0815 evenings. Tanglewood North 1906 SAN G A B R I E L Furnished ro o m *. P r iv a te e n tra n c e , bath / otI'|9e ra *°£' w a te r cooled ta n $75 to $80 Open. 4778168 ; P R IV A T E R O O M 2 blocks cam pus, cen­ tra l a ir, m a id s e r v c e , kitchen, c o e d . s u m m e r ra te s 472-3684. 476-2551 L O C A T IO N L O C A T IO N -L O C A T IO N L uxurious 2-2 Block L a w School. L B,J L ib r a r y , St D a v id s. Pool- sundeck shag, cable. $200, bills paid G r e a t O ak A p a rtm e n ts . 477-3388. I Bedroom P a r k Your Car and W a lk To School! 108 plus E LARGE ONE BEDRO O M school, study a re a , carp e te d , c able T V , sun deck C A 'C H , shuttle, g re a t location, A B P , ra tes 2812 N ueces. 472-6497 c p c Cl A l S U M M E R R A T E S ! B est you ii find I block cam pus Quiet, C0*l, c le a n , c o m f o r t a b le S in g le ro o m s , $7 5 ’* m onth A B P m a id > be d ro o m a p a r t m e n t $!.:> m ot.th 205 W est 20th 453-4082 tot appointm ent. F E M A L E R O O M M A T E now th ru August L a rg e I bedroom ap t On shuttle route $60 plus e le c tr ic ity . Jeanne, 4517127 R O O M M A T E N E E D E D , p re fe r h u m a n being Share 2 bedroom , l a bath w ith m e E n field a rea on s huttle a bids or best offer ie.00 E n fie ld N o. 103. C a ll Susan, 478-0898 $100 S64.5 0 /m o n th Special Student Rate BR $120 2 BR $140 ★ Dishwasher ★ Central Air ★ Carpeting it Large Pool 3815 Guadalupe Shuttle 4 Blks. 454-3953 452-5093 h a p p y F E M A L E R O O M M A T E w anted to share beau tifu l 2 1 u n it in fourplex Unique a p a rtm e n t w ith p riv a te te rra c e fir e p la c e O w n ro o m te n t $90 C a ll Ch a u s se 6 8 p rn 472 9308 S U M M E R R A T E S N O W ! Six blocks fr o m L a w School; S h u ttla bus. O ne b e d ro o m $ 130 E ffic ie n c y SHO AC, carp e t, dish w asher, disposal, w a lk -in closets 32nd and In te rre g io n a l 477-0010 or GL3-2228 La Canada Apts. THE BLACKSTONE S H A R E L U X U R IO U S secluded house, own room S90 plus b ills N e a r 2222 and Balcones. T o m Y v o n n e 451-6137, T A R R Y T O W N I B e d ro o m M a tu re single S huttle, pool, trees la k e b ills paid S135. R ecorded description. 4728682 453 4883 E L C A M P O 1912 Nueces. Boys p riv a te ro o m s $35 D o u b le $27 50 K itc h e n privile ges 459-7436 477-8486 R E N T on unique South Austin hom e Secluded back y a rd creek v au lte d den pe rfe ct for e n te r ta in in g ’ Responsible fem ales only S 7 5 -S i5 0 4 4 5691, 172 8920 G R A D U A T E s t u d e n t w ants m a tu re person to sh a re 2 b e d ro o m a p a rtm e n t, $89 a ll bills paid C a ll B ill 5-6 p rn. 4725174 V T E X A N D O R M 1905 Nueces Doubles $52 SO 6 wks session. Singles $95 OO 6 wks session D a i l y m a id s e r v i c e , cen ­ tra l a ir R e frig e ra to rs , hot plates allow ­ ed Tw o blocks fro m cam pos. Co-Ed. Resident M a n a g e rs 447-1760 SHARE THE 2 B LO C K S U T I L a rg e bedroom a p a r t­ m ent, CA C H , c arpeted, dish w a s her cable, la u n d ry c overed p a rk in g $128 ABP 2101 Rio G ra n d e 477-8146 S h u ttle B us C o rn e r Efficiency, I, 2, and 3 bed ro o m a p a r t m e n t s . O f f e r the s o lu tio n to your housing. F u rn is h ed E ffic ie n c y S u m m e r Rates %i 30 A B P C e n t r a l A ir a n d h e a l , w asher d ryer fa c ilitie s, s w im m in g pool, c a d ie T V , n o p e ts Res. den I ^ a h a^*T 474-534 7 300’ D u v a l, A p a r tm e n t No M A L E R O O M M A T E to S hare g r e a t a p a rtm e n t. C all 441-7111, 6 1 0 p m SHO RT W ALK TO W ER O ld 2 i 3 b e d ro o m a p a r t m e n t W in d o w s fo r plants 5240. 476 3462, 476-8683 1902-1904 Nueces SOUTH SHORE APARTMENTS 3001 - 3007 DUVAL C O LLEG E CO URT A P A R T M E N T S R O O M M A T E N E E D E D , 2 b e d ro o m a p a rtm e n t. 6 blocks c am p u s , a ll bills paid , SSO. 476-3467. S h u ttle B us C o rn e r F rom $145 - all bills paid 300 East Riverside Drive 444-3337 O L D M A IN APARTM ENTS R O O M M A T E N E E D E D , I b e d ro o m a p a rtm e n t, 6 blocks c am p u s . A ll bills paid $65 476-3467 S w im m in g pool, b e a u tifu lly fu rn is h e d d o u b le o r s tu d io bed, a il have d is h w a s h e r, d is ­ posal, c e n tra l a ir and heat, shag c a rp e t, e x tr a s to ra g e roo m . 305 W est 35th (6 blo cks fro m c a m p u s ) M a n a g e r A p t. 106 453-4364 472-4893 T h e S outh S hore's c e n tr a l lo c a tio n provid es easy access to U T. Com e by and see our new e ffic ie n c y and I bedroom a p a rtm e n ts on the banks Of Tow n Lake C o m p le te w i t h s h a g c a r p e tin g , acc en t w a ll, m o d e rn f u r ­ niture. pius an In d ivid u a l deck o v e rlo o k ­ ing the w ater place ROOMS ROOMMATES NEW E F F IC IE N C IE S C L O SE TO C A M P U S S H U T T L E BUS S h u ttle Bus C orner W h y w a ste t im e on a city bus7 W a lk to c la s s U n . q u e e f f ic i e n c y , a n d o ne Furnished. Ail b ed ro om a p a r tm e n ts B ills P a.o $125 and up, 2503 P e a r: C a l' 4773264 MARK XX APTS. Stereo - For Sale SC H W I N N Super Sport 24' Must sell $95 478-5995 N ext to A m e ric a n a T h e a tre , w alk in g dis­ tance to N orth Loop Shopping Center and Luby's One h a lf block fro m shuttle a n d A u s tin t r a n s i t 2 b e d ro o m townhouses, e x tra la rg e Tw o bedroom fla ts one and tw o oaths, CA CH, dis­ hwasher, disposal, door to door garbage pickup, pool, m a id s erv ice if desired, w as ha te ria in c o m p le x See owners Apt H3 or can 451-4848. CASTLE ARMS APTS $375 or aes* o ffe r. C a ll 441-2534. Leave message Timbers Apts. A F R E E a p a rtm e n t locaters s erv ice ideated in the low er level of D ottle M a ll H a b ita t H unters has listings on o v er 15,000 re n te d units, fo r sum m er and fa ll Com e by o r phone now and ta k e a d v a n ­ tage of the only no hassle m ethod of a p a r tm e n t hunting. L ow er le v e l Dobte M a il, S uite S A Phone 474-1532 2122 Hancock D r. Shag - P aneling G ia n t w alk-ins - B alconies Spanish furnishings 2423 Town L a ke C irc le 444-8118 472-4162 B a r r y G illin g w a te r C o m p a n y 63 VW, body ru ff, ru n s good Good tires $100 I BR F U R N H A B IT A T H U N T E R S KENRAY APARTMENTS $139 I B edroom s 64 R A M B L E R S T A N D A R D , a ir , ra d io , S huttle Bus C orner P O O L. S H U T T L E S U S R O U T E IF ROOM M ATE F U R N IS H E D NEEDED 476-3467 7408 Leon w eekdays 478-9125. H IG H L A N D M A L L A R E A ON S H U TT LE 478-1874 A L L B IL L S P A ID 472-4171 472-4175 WALK UNIVERSITY. 2 Large b e d ro o m s , s tu d y s e p a ra te k it c h e n fa b u lo u s b a th . AC paneled, c arp e te d , drapes, frostless re frig , new stove, p a rk ­ ing No c h ild re n . No pets No m o re than 2 o c c u p a n ts . S eniors, g ra d u a te s , or ( a c u i­ ty w a t e r , gas furnished $150 m o n th ly . condition Tanglewood Annex E F F IC IE N C IE S - 5100.00 1 B E D R O O M - $130.00 2 B E D R O O M - $190.00 PARAGON PROPERTIES 477-5662 Shuttle Bus Corner 1968 D O D G E V A N . N e w pa in t and tires. Very good m e c h a n ic s ! condition. $1400. Weekdays 471-1784, M a r ily n . if N o A n s w e r A t A b o v e C a ll 451-7901 h ar tfo rd HOS H a r tfo r d Road. 263-2390. L a rg e tu rm shed one b e d ro o m and e ffic ie n c y a p a rtm e n ts CA CH, shag c a rp e t fu ll kitchen q u ie t a tm osphere just oft E n ­ fie ld Rd. C onvenient to U T C apitol S hut­ tle bus SUMM ER RATES. FA LL L E A S IN G . $100 I BR F U R N 4306 A V E N U E A A ll B ills P a id I 8. 2 BR F u r n is h e d AC, C o v e re d P a r k in g , L a r g e r T h a n M o st. I BR - $160, 2 BR * $165. 452-1801 Y our tim e is va lu a b le O ur s e rv ic e is fre e APTS. 4 door sedan v a lid w a r r a n ty . 1400 m iles One bed ro o m , la rg e closets, f u lly c a rp e te d , c a b le , d is ­ posal, w a te r, gas, s w im m in g pool, fu rn is h e d . W a lk in g d is ­ tance to U T No c h ild re n o r pets 610 W est 30th. 477-8858. 6 BLO C K S C A M P U S lo ng haven 1960 VW w indow van R e ce n tly overhaul­ ed, P orsche c o o le r, m e c h a n ic a l dis­ tributor. F M s tereo 472-1697 471-4523, $650 2108 S A N G A B R IE L P r iv a te and L a rg e I BR A p t F u n K itc h e n , AC, Furnished, W a te r a n d G as P a id , S u m m e r R a te * SITO 476-H72 WE R E N T AUSTIN ■ Bedroom Furnished W A L K TO CLASS For Sale SUMMER RATES 2408 L O N G V IE W . I a n d 2 BR A p a rtm e n ts Furnished, AC. -.overed $160. p y n in g . Pool. I BR -$135 2 BR 472-5316 144 6757 Si 25.00 sioo - $110 N ew s e m i-e ffic ie n c ie s Snag c a rp e t, cable gas w a te r furnished R E D O A K 2104 San G a b rie l $121 S um m er R ates. 4775514 476-7916 2 2 2 0 W >itowcreeK D riv e FURN. APARTS. FURN. A P A R IS . ■ T U R N . A P A R IS . ■ 5 BLOCKS W E S T OF C A M P U S BEDROOMS? J u ic y sw e e t w a te rm e lo n , 18-22 IO. SAY* 99 ea H o m e g ro w n tom atoes 25 >b F re s h p ea che s 25 IO A ll item s subiect to re a s o n a b le lim it s "In th* event ef error* made in on adverttenvent immediate native mutt be given ot th* pubJnhen or* retpon.iW* for only O N I incorrect intercom Ak dam n for odjuttmentt »houW be -wad* net kiter then 30 day* after puboeotian Auto FURN. APARTS. ■ $230.00 W a te r P a id 477-1616 UNF. APARTS. 3 2 S T U D IO a p a rtm e n t for lease N e ar U T M a r r ie d couples only No P * '$ ; I y ea r m in im u m . $ 2 l5 /m o n th . 397-2587 before 5pm w eekdays L A R G E I B E D R O O M , w a lk to cam pus, a v a ila b le now, $125. A ll b ills . C a ll 4772832 Keep try in g . Y O U R A I R F O R C E h a s o p e n in g s a va ila b le In the O ffic e r s 1 P ro g ra m f l y ­ ing and n on-flying lf you a re a college senior or p re p a rin g to s ta rt your senior y e a r , c h e c k w ith y o u r A ir F o r c e re p res en tativ e , 5SG T E d Hudgms, tor inform a tion w ithout o bligation. Just call 454 0606 or w r ite S ta ff Sargent Hudgins, 2115 A nde rs on L a n e , A u s tin , T e xa s . 78757 N eed double size w aterbed 441-1146 65 R a m b le r 6 AC A M heat 454-2475 N eed fe m a le rm m a te . Cheap. 476-7831 P ia n o need tuning? 441-4492. M a n u a l e lite ty p e w rite r. 472 8711. D in e tte B d rm set Dresser M isc 442-8082 HELP WANTED WANTED Mature graduate student or person to be an assistant housemother. Apply in own handwriting. Your reply w ill be kept con­ fidential, and you will be contacted for an interview. Send resume to P.O. Box D-4. Austin, Texas 78712. Skepticism Voiced Union Scheduled for Renovation By BYRAN B R U M L E Y Texan Staff W riter The tem porary loss of the Union Building as a m eeting and eating place has produced a sense of reg ret among many m em bers of the U niver­ sity com m unity. Although m ost students expressed some degree of bitterness at the d eci­ sion to clo se the building for 16 to 20 months, m ost critic ism was m ild, and few seem ed inclined to take action. MANY QUESTIONED the need tor renovation. R obert George, a junior botany m ajo r, said. ‘‘I don't think it needs all th a t; th at’s an awful long tim e to clo se it. If it s going to take that much tim e, they’re probably go­ ing to spend too much money on it. Ja n e t B ro o k s, q u e s t io n e d th e program s an a r t s e n io r , f a t e of U n io n “ I t ’s going to be kind of scattered . A lot of people use this building. The closing of the c ra ft cen ter will a ffe ct a lot of people,” she said MUCH OF the work will involve structural rehabilitation. ‘‘A lot of the m oney w ill be in v is ib le to th e student.” H agler said. “ I know a lot of people who eat th e re ,” said G ail P loetz, an education senior. “ I don’t think it needs that much renovation. I think they need another Union on cam pus. It should have been built a long tim e ago. Frank Flem ing , student body presi­ dent and a m em b er of the building use advisory com m ittee involved in the decision to clo se, bemoaned the tim ­ ing but stressed the necessity of the renovations. “ I think it’s a com plim ent that th e re ’s so much concern over the Union Building closing, said Corky H agler, executive assistan t to the d irector of the Union. She indicated that the occupants of the building regretted the closing m ost of all “ The whole thing com es as a surprise. No one is so rrier than the Union itself. It becam e a much bigger p ro ject becau se the building is in a lo t w o rs e s h a p e th a n w e thought " b f i © f S * f,rsf • i The T e x as Union will offer its first “ day trip ’ to the Stonewall P each Jam b o ree Saturday. The festiv al will begin with a rodeo Friday n igh t and w ill fe a tu r e a parade, a beauty contest, a peach show, auction, street MISCELLANEOUS G E T H IG H ON HOT A IR N E L S O N S G IF T S Z u n . in d ia n le w e iry , A f r ic a n a n d M t x ic a r t i m p c - s 4612 S o u th C o n g r e s s 444 3814 C lo se d M ondays T h e R e a d in g and Study Skills L ab ( RASSLE has begun classe s for the sum m er ses­ sio n . S h o rt c o u r s e s (o n e session discussion groups) are B U Y W E L L P L A Y B O Y . P e n t h o u se etc B o o ks, r e c o r d s g u it a rs , je w elry, r a d io s , s te re o s A a r o n 's . 320 C o n g r e s s D o w n ­ tow n T E N N I S A N Y O N E '’ G re a t tea ch er, lo w rate s G ro u p -1 n d iv id u a i- B e g in n in g • H ig h -in t e r m e d ia f e . M i k e Ste w a rt. 4411757 F R E E K I T T E N S need g o o d h o m e s. O n e C a lic o , o n e f lu f f y o r a n g e P le a s e c a ll 4773175 TYPING J u st C n t . iv A a t r C lasse s B e gu n M O V I N G ? M Y P I C K U P c a n m a k e the g o in g a lot e a s ie r T o m 's D o R ite T r u c k ­ in g 258-1891. “ I would be the last one to want the president’s o ffice closed during the year I ’m president. We think we have the money and the opportunity now. We think we ll have a first cla ss union when w e’re finished ,’ Flem ing said. The cam pu s p opu lace appeared resigned to the closing, but generally skeptical. “ I guess they have to do it som etim e,” Dennis H ickey, a senior governm ent m a jo r, said. "I can t take the bowling cou rse I wanted to i l ab h le lp lp h at avt aJ aila eP Jach week 111 in 3a v ariety of topics including study reading, concentration, cre a tiv e tim e use and listen­ ing and notetaking. RA SSL also offers walk-in hours and self-paced instruc­ tion from IO a m. through 4 p.m . Monday, Wednesday and Frid ay and I through 4 p.m. Tuesday and Thursday. F o r m ore inform ation call 471-3614 or go by J e s te r A332. T y p in g 2 D a y S e r v ic e 472-3210 and 472-7677 2707 H e m p h ill P a r k C H R IS T E N S O N & A S S O C IA T E S A T Y P IN G S E R V IC E Specializing in — Theses and dissertation s — L a w briefs - T e r m papers and reports Prom pt, Professional Service 453-8101 P ick-u p Service A va ila b le T Y P IN G E R S E R V IC E 472-8936 R e p o rts, R e s u m e s T h e se s, L e t te r s A ll U n iv e r s it y a n d b u s in e s s w o r k I a st M in u t e Se • :e O p e n 9-9 M o n T h K 9 5 F r i- S a t Like to learn m ore about your Texas heritage? S ig n up for G 0NZ0 BAND BILLY C COUNTRY SUNSHINE BILLY JIM BAKER state's varied cultures a nd traditions through a series of one-day b us excursions to special events and festivals in Central Texas To register, c o m e to Texas U n io n 3 4 2 from 8 a m. to 5 p.m. any weekday. S p a c e s are available on a first-come, first-served basis and you m u st com plete an application form and pay the total fee to be guaranteed a place. M o n e y cannot be refunded unless the trip is cancelled or the m in im u m enrollm ent is not reached. You do not need to be a student to register. DOORS OPEN AT 6:00 S2.00 COVER AT THE DOOR For more information, call 47 1-472 1 or pick up a brochure in U nion Presents KENNETH THREADGILL T O N IG H T T H R U S A T U R D A Y Serving your favorite Beer and Wine Coolers, Sangria, and 2 J varieties of Pin os. D aily S p e c ia ls 2 915 G u a d a lu p e TU ESDAY ONLY! CHRISTMAS PARTY SUPPORT THE PRESCHOOL LEARNING PROGRAM RIVER CITY Ij M m i THE BUCKET 23rd and PEAR! ACROSS FROW HARDIN NORTH - 3 HRS. FREE PARKING a survival program of We the People Organization m ss Anthony Spears, Chairperson by C a m p u s Friends Youth Institute of the sass PARKING PROBLEM ? RENT A V. SUM M ER M A B Y L S M A L L W O O D T y p in g Last m in u te o v e r n ig h t a v a ila b le T e rm p a p e rs theses, d is s e r ta tio n s , le tte rs. M a s t e r C h a r g e . B a n k A m e r t c a r d . 8920727 or 442-8545. typ in g, p rin tin g , b in d in g . l a n e 459 7205 Just N orth 1515 K o e n ig of 27th & Guadalupe SSS® A SOLUTION. P AR K AT D O B IE M A LL S G ARAGE. 2 H R S F R E E W IT H A N Y P U R C H A S E FOR NON SHO PPER S, THE RATE IS ONLY 35' THE F IR S T H O U R A N D 15* FOR E A C H ' j H O U R THEREAFTER OR ... TO R E A L LY SAV E, B U Y A P A R K IN G P E R M IT 6 W EEKS $40.00 12 W EEKS $55.00 O N S A L E M O N .-F R I. D O B IE G A R A G E 9-5 P M. Manuals $9 mo. 3 mos. for $20 PORTABLES $8 mo 3 mos. for $19 ELECTRIC PORTABLES $12.50 mo. 3 mos. for $30 ELECTRIC COMPACTS $15 mo. 3 mo. for $35 OFFICE ELECTRICS $22.50 mo. OR 3 MONTHS FOR $52.50 ADDERS - CALCULATORS we Give YOU FREE 90 DAY OPTION D E D i r i n o v i 'f i K S IE K n 111 M I 1 1 9 the s te re o store GARAGE SWOP DOBIE 472-3210 and 472-7677 TYPEWRITERS8 •SS:*. Y E S , we do type F r e s h m a n themes. W h y not start out with good grades! and The 1974 R A N C E S W O O D S T Y P IN G S E R V IC E x p e r ie n c e d , L a w T h eses, O p e r ­ a tio n s M a n u s c r ip t s . 453-6090 V IR G IN IA S C H N E I D E R D iv e r s if ie d S e r v i c e s G ra d u a te and u n d e rg ra d u a te ...in the United States h igh w a y system East-West roads are m arked by EVEN numbers and North-South by O DD num bers? tBSDaBmGMSf S E R V IC E A c om ­ p lete s e r v ic e fr o m t y p in g t h r o u g h b in ­ d in g A v a il a b le u n til IO p.rn E x p e r ie n c ­ ed in a ll lip id s N e a r c a m p u s . K O I M o h le D r i v e 476-3018 B O B B Y E D E L A F I E L D I B M S e le c t e e , p ica/ elite. 25 y e a r s e x p e rie n c e , b o o ks, d is s e r ta tio n s , th e se s, re p o rts, m im e o g r a p h in g 442 7184 D ay Trips une 15: Sto n e w all Peach Jam boree & Rodeo une 16: D allas Su m m e r M u sical I Do! I Do! une 29: Luling W aterm elo n Thum p uly 4: Kerrville R a g tim e Festival uly 4: Round Top Independence D ay Celebration uly 13: Tom bstone R u b b in g Trip uly 20: A N ig h t in O ld Fredericksburg uly 21: D a llas Su m m e r M u sical " M a n of La M a n c h a ' uly 27: Fossil Collecting Trip A u gu st 2: Sa n A n to n io 's Fiesta Noche del Rio A u gu st IO : W in e d ale a n d Shakespeare A u g u st l l : D allas Su m m e r M usical No, No, N an ette LIV E ENTERTAINM ENT F E A T U R IN G 1501 East 12th Street 474-1031 S p o n so re d day trip- I p in g ”, a n e w Texas U n io n progra m d esigned to acquaint you with the H O L L E Y S T Y P IN G M IN N IE L. H A M M E T T T y p i n g Si D u p lic a tin g S e r v ic e Th eses, d is s e r ­ tatio n s, p a p e r s o f a ll kin d s, r e s u m e s , F r e e r e f r e s h m e n t s 442-7008, 442-2225 472-3034 342. T h e s e s 75 c e n ts C a ll S R K T Y P IN G E x p e r ie n c e d the se s, v e n a tio n s , P R s. etc P r in t in g a n d d in g, S p e c ia lt y T e c h n ic a l. C h a r le n e rk. 453-5218 Fri- & Sa*’* 11:00 am to 2:00 am 2801 G U ADALU PE 2915 G u a d a lu p e A C C U R A T E and P rom p t typing D I S S E R T A T I O N S , the se s, re p o rts, a n d la w b r ie f s E x p e r ie n c e d t y p is t . T a r r y t o w n 2507 B r id le P a t h L o r r a in e B r a d y 472-4715. Sun.-Thurs. 11:00 am to I am JERRY JEFF WALKER v .v .y NEAT Featuring 13 varieties of hot sa nd w iches served on 12 inches of hot , French Bread. A ls o , the best in Pizza , Italian food , a n d Shish Kabob. “ I find two y ears a little hard to take, but right now I ’m concerned with where Student Governm ent will be in the interim , and what reaction the students will have in term s of our program s, in te rm s of accessibility to our o f f i c e s , ” R a c h e l B o h m fa lk , sen ior s e c r e ta r y a t the Student Governm ent o ffice s, said. featuring 30A Dobie Center 40 c e n ts p er p a g e 447 2737 Michelob Beer 20‘ a mug $1.00 pitcher with the purchase of any sandwich, pizza, or mea! live Folk Guitarist, Jorge Palomarez, on Friday and Saturday nights SHAKEY'S A n t lr j c v f f i t The Com plete Professional F U L L - T I M E Typing Service RESU M ES with or without pictures. LINDA MAY, a P lan II senior, also lamented the loss of a gathering place. “ I t ’s a good m eeting place, not only for clubs but friends. I guess you could m eet people in the library. BENEFIT m e r in o s STUDENTS OLDER THAN AVERAGE SOTA) w ill m e et at n oon T u e s d a y in U n io n B u ild in g 213 to h e a r L o r e n a G ig u e ! a n d M ik e C r a v e y ta lk a b o u t c h a n g ­ in g r o le s o f m e n a n d w o m e n N E W M A N C LU E w ill m e e t a * 9 p . rn W e d n e s d a y in the C a t h o lic Stu d e n t C e n t e r to p la n s u m m e r a c t iv it ie s a n d w e lc o m e n e w m e m b e r s UT S A R IN O CLUE w ill m eet at 7 p m T u e s d a y in A c a d e m ic C e n te r A u d it o r iu m fo r the f ir s t g e n e r a l m e e t in g a n d n e w m e m b e r s u m m e r o r ie n t a t io n UNIVERSITY VETERANS ASSOCIATIO N w ill m e et at 7:30 p .m . T u e s d a y in U n io n B u i ld in g 334 fo r a g e n e r a l m e e tin g . 476-4394 ft, Ba . .A. Sr W M u lt ilit h in g b in d ng restau ran t! J.W. GALLAGHER N o rt h of 27th & G uadalupe m p A lJ iA I Saturday I dance and barbecue Saturday. The trip will begin at I p m and return about I a m. The cost, $6.50 for students, facul­ ty and staff and $8.50 for others, includes bus fare. R e g i s t r a t i o n for the Stonewall trip is 8 a.m . to 5 p.m. through Frid ay in Union B u ild in g 342. S p a c e s a re a v a ila b le on a first-c o m e , first-se rv e d b a s is , and an ap p licatio n fo rm m u st be com pleted. F o r m ore infor­ m ation. call 471-4721 or go by U nion B u ild in g 342 fo r a brochure. Le arn to fly a balloon. In ­ troductory lesson SS G round school c la sse s now form in g 472-8805. re a o r ii-s next fall. I think they could do it much faster. Why don’t they build the new one first? T h ey 're building all these new buildings like ‘R u sty ’ down the street. T h e re ’re a lot of people you don’t see anyw here else. I com e for coffee between c la s s e s ,” he said. PARK FREE 2234 G U A D A LU P E - 476 3525 iii STUDENT DIRECTORY will be published this month! It w ill contain th ou san ds of nam es, local a d ­ dresses a n d phone numbers, plus the school or college a n d classification of each student. The Directory w ill be inserted into the full circula­ tion of The D a ily Texan on the d a y of publication. NOW That You Know w a t c h for it l a t e r th is m o n th ! anoth er publication o f Texas Student Publications Wtutis & 20th Street 2707 H e m p h ill P a r k Tuesday June I ) - 1974 T H E DAILY* T E X AN P a n e l l Every prospective track star needs a cool place to warm up. NCAA Emotion In an age of team sports, track and field athletes are an oddity. While the emphasis in football, basket­ ball, baseball and hockey is on coordination between team m embers, the spotlight at the 53rd NCAA Track and Field Cham­ pionship at Memorial Stadium was on toe individual. Even in the 440- and mile-relay races, not winning depends on one person. A dropped baton or a poor leg of a race will defeat the entire team. In the shorter ra c e s, the difference between a winning and a m ediocre time is only a fraction of a second. The strain of competition showed on the a th le te s’ faces. In longer races, the runners’ looks were also distorted by the pain of asking their bodies to do more than they were intended. The athletes who competed at the NCAA m eet are the best the nation's colleges have to offer. Some, such as North Carolina m iler Tony W aldrop, a re the best in the world. The meet is a proving ground tor par­ ticipants, as it, along with the AAL (Amateur Athletic Union) meet, is the biggest track and field competition in the United States during a non-Olympic year By LARRY SMITH photos by PAUL CALAPA PHIL HUBER Even when you've cleared 17-3 like pole v a u lt w in n e r Ed L ip s c o m b (fro n t ), sometimes you still only take second place like Jeff Taylor (rear). Mile w inner Paul Cummings passes oui, passing up a national television interview. Ta Pete Fa rm e r exhibits his own kind of grace on the way to a win in the ham m er throw. James Gilkes (c) of F isk University doesn't mind his 19.9 time in the 220-yard dash not being counted as a world record — he's still the best in the nation. The judges' tower of power at the fin ish line decides who w.ns - but the cam era P age 14 Tuesday, J,une ll , 1974 THE DAIL\ TEXAN I