T h e Da il y T e x a n Student N e w sp a p e r at The University of Texas at Austin Vol. 75, No. 148 Fifteen Cents Twenty-Eight Pages Austin, Texas, F rid ay, J a n u a ry 30, 1976 B u s5' nents: 471-4591 Official's Son Reportedly Paid From Federal Money Nepotism Charge Surfaces in Extension Probe By EON HUTCHESON Texan Staff Writer Federal funds were used to pay the salary of a Divi­ sion of Extension administrator’s son, a source familiar with the division told The Daily Texan Thursday. Charles Kelso, director of the Industrial and Business Training Bureau, used money appropriated for a meeting that was never held and federal grant money to pay his son $1,500 for working at the Joe C. Thompson Center in the summer of 1974 and 1975, the source said. Kelso was not available for comment. Kelso’s bureau and the Thompson Center are part of the division. Other adm inistrators’ children worked at the division during the summer, prompting an employe to complain of nepotism. Norman Minter, director of the University Office of Personnel Services said his office conducted an inquiry into charges of nepotism at the division in 1974. “There was no violation of the regents rule (concerning nepotism),” be said. Minter said the nepotism charges involved Kelso’s son and the son of Hubert Overfield, Thompson Center coor­ dinator. HOWEVER, THE SOURCE said Kelso’s daughter and Extension Dean William Barron’s son also worked at the division. Barron’s son worked during the summer of 1973 and 1974; Kelso’s daughter in the summer of 1974; and Kelso’s and Overfield’s sons worked during the summers of 1974 and 1975, the source said. “The Thompson Center didn’t really need to hire anybody, but Kelso was so anxious for his kids to work that he was willing to pay their salaries out of his own bureau’s funds,” the source said. “After the second summer somebody got tired of it and complained,” the source added. Investigators probing alleged irregularities within the division subpoenaed records pertaining to Barron’s son Thursday. The subpoenas request attendance and payroll records for Michael Barron from two public schools in Houston, the High School of Performing and Visual Arts and Alex Hamilton Junior High. Barron worked a t the arts school last year and currently works at Hamilton, principals at the schools said. THE PRINCIPALS ARE asked to produce teacher time sheets “ that reflect the attendance for the teacher, Michael Barron” and “all records of substitute teachers used to teach” Barron’s classes. The subpoenas ask specifically for records from dates in the fall and spring of 1975. Division vouchers show Barron has worked as a con­ sultant to the University, Jam es Colvin, University vice-president for business affairs, said. COLVIN SAID he did not know if Barron was paid con­ sultant fees for the dates mentioned in the subpoenas. Both principals said Barron never asked for time off to do consultant work for the University. If Barron worked for the University, “he would have to work on Saturday and Sunday or after 5 o’clock at night to get paid for it,” the principal at the arts school said. “He couldn’t get paid by the state for two things at the same tim e,” she added. Barron refused to comment; Dean Barron was not available. A SPOKESMAN for the federal Health, Education and Welfare (HEW) office in Dallas confirmed that federal auditors have been briefed on the alleged irregularities. The Division of Extension receives more than $800,000 in grants from HEW. Most of the money supports programs involving public schools or undereducated adults. The investigation of alleged irregularities began ip, Kelso’s office, but has since been expanded. ROBERT ROSS, head of a catering firm frequently used by the University, talked with investigators Thurs-, day, his lawyer, Waggoner Carr, confirmed. Ross, who has business and personal contact with divi­ sion administrators, intends to “ fully cooperate” with investigators, Carr said. ‘‘I don’t think we got through everything today,” he added. Soviet-Backed Forces Push Southward to Capital City Kissinger Asks More Angolan Aid N .V*T !m #* New* Service WASHINGTON - Secretory of State Henry Kissinger said Thursday that the Ford administration “ is now seriously considering" open financial aid to two Angolan factions fighting a Soviet- supported nationalist movement. Testifying before the Senate foreign relations subcommittee on Africa, he said the overt assistance would have to be considerably larger" than the $32 million sent to the two groups covertly by the United States last year. Kissinger said it was not in the national interest “to have another public confrontation" over military assistance to the Angolan factions such as occurred i a a_ a rn the congressional votes to cut off further secret aid. THEREFORE, HE SAID, “ we will soon be consulting with the Congress" before making an aid request. Later Sen. Dick Clark, D-Iowa, the subcommittee chairman who had called the hearing, said that ” no proposal of any kind of continuing Aiperican involve­ ment is going to be accepted by the vast majority of Republicans or Democratic members of Congress.” Clark added that he detected a revul­ sion in Congress against a United States role as “ world policeman" and that, besides, fresh aid to Angola would be of such a magnitude as to be unacceptable. today------- Women's Sports . . . The T e x a s w o m e n 's in te rc o lle g ia te ath le tic is m a k in g slow but sure progress. p ro gram Director Donna Lopiano has m ade a few changes in the last six months, but she's looking for a whole lot more. Story, Photo*, Pogo 14. Warmer... Austin skies will be partly cloudy Friday, and a w a rm in g trend will result in a high in the low 70s. The low F rid a y night will be in the low 40s. W ind s will be from the south at 5 to IO m.p.h. Sunrise will be at 7:23 a.m., sunset at 6:06 p.m. texan Staff Photo by Paul BlankonmoUtor trtonvkTnnn c a i n KISSINGER SAID his rationale for continuing aid was to encourage the Soviet Union and Cuba to exercise restraint in international affairs and not to seek u n ila te r a l a d v a n ta g e by “ massive” military actions. He said: “ Our principal objective has been to respond to an unprecedented application of Soviet power achieved in part through the expeditionary force of a client state.” He said that the Soviet Union had supplied $179 million arm s to the Popular Movement ami had enabled 11,000 Cuban soldiers to fight on its behalf. “ANGOLA REPRESENTS the first time since the afterm ath of World War II that the Soviets have moved militarily at long distances to impose a regime of their choice,” he said. “ It is the first time that the United States has failed to respond to Soviet m ilitary moves outside their immediate orbit, and it is the first time that Congress has halted the ex­ ecutive’s action while it was in the process of meeting that kind of threat." Asked later by Sen. Jacob Javits, R- N.Y., to expand on this aspect of his statement, Kissinger said: “The Soviet Union must not be given any opportunity to use military forces for aggressive purposes without running the risk of conflict with us." SEN.JOSEPH BIDEN JR, R-Del, in­ quired whether this was the enunciation of “a global Monroe Doctrine” — a reference to the declaration of President Jam es Monroe in 1823 that the United States would view as hostile any attem pt by any European power to dominate a Latin American country. Kissinger replied that this was not die case, but to indicate that the United States was uninterested in protecting “anything outside rTurope and Japan leaves the rest of the world open to Soviet attack.” This, he said, was “not a doctrine, but a reality.” anthArivino t r a n o m i c s i n n o f 1300 ODO t i authorizing transmission of $300,000 to the Front for the National Liberation of Angola in January, 1975. That money, he said, was spent for “ bicycle and office equipm ent, not arms*” and he did not see how it could have “ triggered" a Soviet supply escala­ tion. Earlier he had said that die Soviet Union began heavy weapons shipments to the Popular Movement “in the fall of 1974.” ★ Ar Ar LUSAKA, Zambia (UPI) - Soviet- backed troops have battled to the out­ skirts of Huambo, the pro-West forces capital in Angola and sent strike forces to take the vital coastal towns of Lobito and Benguela, the Soviet news agency Tass said Thursday. In a dispatch from Luanda, the Soviet news agency said the pro-M arxist Popular Movement for the Liberation of Angola had overrun the town of Alto Hama and controlled all roads leading to Huambo, the capital of the pro-West forces. TASS SAID the advancing Soviet- backed columns had routed the pro-West N a t i o n a l U n io n f o r t h e T o t a l Independence of Angola, driving them southward. On Wednesday, pro-West commanders ordered their troops into the bush to launch guerrilla war against the pro-Communist forces. Both Tass and South African radio said Popular Movement forces, supported by tanks and Cuban troops, launched spearhead attacks against the ports of Lobito and Benguela. The new attacks came a day after pro­ communist radio Luanda ordered fifth- columnists in Huambo to begin guerrilla action in the city and boasted the “hour of the final blow is near.” troops The United States charged the Soviet Union was stepping up its military aid to pro-C om m unist in Angola, possibly with MIG je t fighters. The Soviet Union said it favors a political settlement of the Angolan war but also pledged continuing support to the Popular Movement. Dr. Shapero displays one of his T-shirts. — Texan Staff Photo by Paul Blankenmei»tei learn Shirts' Are the Answer, Says Shapero By BILL LOONEY Texan Staff Writer Have you ever sat in an exam and stared vacantly at the person in front of you, wishing that the conjugation of ir r e g u la r S panish v e rb s would appear? If so, your wish may soon be granted. A lb e rt S h ap ero , p ro fe s s o r of management, has formed a company to print and m arket “ learn shirts" — T -shirts printed with the basic knowledge needed for a course. POSSIBLE SUBJECTS for the shirts are statistics, calculus, accoun­ ting, the m etric system, the diagram­ ing of English sentences and the basics of individual languages. Holding up a prototype, a T-shirt with the endings of Spanish verbs in the present tense, Shapero explained, “ By the way, the back is the past tense, naturally. “ I wanted to do an Italian one," said the professor, who named his company A ventura, for “adventure". “ But they don’t have a big market for that — we’re going to start out with Spanish and German. Ita lia n “ WE’VE GOT ONE in preparation in Hebrew, for all the Hebrew schools in the country.” R ather than printing answers, Shapero said that he plans to display shirts with the structure of subjects — basic infofmation which is easily iorgotten. “These are the things we want everybody to know," he said. “ What if you saw it all week round? What if it was on a pretty girl? Then it would really sink into your head.” “ YOU CAN ONLY do it in subjects where the knowledge is structured,” he said. “ I can’t figure out a philosophy T-shirt." Aventura, Shapero’s company, is a family firm, including his wife Gitiei,' daughter Kenan and son Jonathan. Both children a re a rc h ite c tu re students at the University. The shirts will be printed in Austin and distributed by mail order. Spanish shirts are being printed now, Shapero said. Shapero thought of the shirts while drinking coffee, he said. He and the people he was with discussed it half- jolingly. HIS FEELING about learning, the professor said, is that, “I ’m con­ vinced it all happens in informal places.” Learn shirt learning will of necessi­ ty be cooperative, Shapero said. “You have to buy one for your friend — you see, you can’t read it on yourself.” He visualizes a class coming into an exam with all the students wearing shirts for that subject. “Now what’s a professor going to do — going to say — ‘Take off your shirts?’ ” Kissinger was also asked whether the United States might have provoked larg e-scale Soviet in tervention by J ? Student Court Chief Justice To Arrange Closed Meeting on Recall Procedures 3 ^ o r By MICHAEL CARDENAZ Ron Cook, chief justice of the Student Court, will try to arrange a closed meeting of student officials Friday afternoon to discuss procedures for the recall of Student Government President Carol Crabtree. Student Sen. Susan Krute called for the recall at Wednesday’s Senate meeting, charging Crabtree has not “been totally open with the Senate.” Cook wants Senate Parliamentarian Larry Bartosek, Vice-President Lyn Breeland, Crabtree and Krute to at­ tend the meeting. “It is very important to work out a procedure that is acceptable to all parties involved,” Cook said. He said the Student Government constitution left him unclear as to the proper recall procedure. ARTICLE VI, Section 6.3 states: “ Any officer of the Students’ Association (Student Government) or any member of the Student Senate may be removed from of­ fice for due cause by a three-fourths vote of the total voting membership of the Student Senate. The chief justice shall preside at such proceedings, and all proceedings shall be open to the public.” Possible procedures include an adversary process similar to a jury trial and a legislative-type investiga­ tion. Bartosek said he expected some kind of procedural decision to be made before the next Student Senate meeting Wednesday. A recall of C rabtree would be the first such proceeding ever in the history of The University. Amo Nowotny, dean of students from 1942 to 1965, said there “ never has been anything that paralled impeachment since 1918.” MARGARET BERRY, author of a dissertation on stu­ dent life at The University during the first 50 years of the school’s existence, is positive that students never removed a president in that time period, although one was dismissed from school for disciplinary reasons. The only president in recent history to be removed from office was Clif Drummond, now employed at the Center for Energy Studies. On April 25,1967, a law stu­ dent filed a petition with the Student Court alleging Drummond was on scholastic probation and in violation of a regulation requiring a nine-hour minimum course load. The petition asked for Drummond’s ouster. The Student Court ruled Drummond could remain in office for the three weeks remaining in his term, but that ruling was overturned on appeal to the Faculty Appellate Court. He left office with only five days remaining in his term. Contacted by The Texan Thursday, Drummond main­ tained his removal was “politically motivated.” Asked about the current controversy, he said, “ Based on the story in the paper, this situation is different from mine, since specific allegations were made; whereas, none were made against Crabtree. " Attorney Permitted Access to UT Salary Records By TODD KATZ Texan Staff Writer An attorney for seven professors who filed suit in October alleging University President Lorene Rogers had discriminated against them by denying them salary increases has been granted access to requested University files. According to David Richards, attorney for the professors, The University has agreed to allow him to inspect and copy documents related to the salary recommendations made by department chairmen and deans regarding U niversity professors. Richards apparently w ill be permitted to investigate the salary recommendations for any University professor or in­ structor, not just those whose salary recommendations were changed by Rogers. The documents were sought in an attempt to show that Rogers’ denial of salary increases to specific professors was based on their anti-University political activities, rather than their work as University professors. PARTICIPATING in the suit are Profs. Forest H ill, David Gavenda, Philip White, Edward Allaire, Standish Meacham, Thomas Philpott and David Edwards. Each suffered salary in­ crease cuts ranging from $500 to $1,500. In public statements several have charged that the action was an attempt to inhibit their academic freedom. Rogers has said she altered salary recommendations on the basis of teaching load, current salary and beginning salary at The University. She claim s she made efforts to bring salaries of women and “ homegrown” professors into line with salaries of better known professors recruited from out of state. She further claims that she altered more than 115 salary recommendations made by deans, lowering 78 recommen­ dations and raising 37. Rogers must answer under oath within the next few days 22 questions submitted by Richards. These include: • Did you ever tell the seven professors participating in the suit why the salary recommendations of the deans were not followed? • What factors and/or criteria were used by you in deter­ mining to reduce their recommended salaries? • What specific evidence, either documentary or other, did you utilize in your determination to reduce the recommended salaries of each professor? • What personal knowledge did you have at the time you made your salary determinations with respect to the in­ dividuals with regard to their activities as members of the faculty? • With respect to each of the plaintiffs, please describe what specific documents, records, memoranda or writings of any kind or character whatsoever that you consulted before making your decision. THE PRESIDENT is also required to produce substantial documentation of the salary determination process and to fur­ nish information regarding rank, department, years of service and original salary level of persons whose salaries were cut. Rogers must also supply recommendations for that individual from his department’s budget council, department chairman and dean. Richards said he doubted that the names of the individuals w ill become public information. However, the statistical data and Rogers’ answers to the interrogatories w ill eventually be made public, he said. Attorney for Rogers, W illiam C. Bednar Jr . of the attorney general’s office, was unavailable for comment Thursday. Donner Stresses Need for Purpose in Life Professor Expounds 'Beliefs* By HOLLY HUNTER Beliefs are gossamer things, they can be tem down, but are strong and can be regained, Dr. Stanley Donner said Thursday night in a talk on the fabric of belief. Donner, U niversity professor of radio-television-film, was the second speaker in the 1975-76 Great Lecture Series sponsored by the Texas Union University Interaction Committee. “ In bad times in general we really need something we can hold on to, and these have been d ifficu lt tim es,’’ Donner said. “ Students now ask questions we never asked about what goes on in the classrooms, required subjects and departments,” he said. “ Students are becoming more aware of things that would open The University to learning, and that’s what the whole purpose is.” Belief can be rebuilt, Donner said. “ We should begin with ourselves. Each person has the inescapable respon­ sibility to himself to make himself a person of integrity, a trustworthy per­ son others can believe in.” He suggested that some ways to regain this lost belief might be to search for a purpose in life; to develop a sensitivity and awareness of the needs of others; to end m aterialistic habits, such as buying useless junk or to take a different view of time, living for tomorrow rather than today. Ending on an optimistic note, Donner said, “ There are still things of ex­ cellence in this place, and if one wants to believe then he must invest himself; he must consider himself a citizen of this University and work toward con­ structive things.” Donner has taught at The University since 1965 and was chairman of the Department of Radio-Television-Film from 1965 until 1972. He received a Fulbright grant for research in France and instruction at the University of London. He also taught at Stanford University from 1948 to 1965. He was a recipient of a 1971 Teaching Excellence Award from the Cactus and of the 1975 Teaching Excellence Award of the School of Communication Foundation. 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D i l l a r d ' s , 4 % 4 OCH M O P P I M . raw est S H O P D I L L A R D ' S M O N D A Y - S A T U R D A Y 10-9, P H O N E : 452-0!$ 11 ” YARING'S BRIDAL SALON, DOWNTOWN ONLY 506 Congress Avenue Page 2 Friday, January 30, 1976 T H E D A IL Y T EX A N — Texan Staff Photo by Zach Rya ll Stanley Donner Manager To Select Chief, Council Says By DAWN TURNHAM Texan Staff Writer City Council made clear Thursday that the c ity manager w ill conduct the police chief selection strictly on his own as dictated by the City Charter. In an attempt to allow the Human R e la tio n s Com­ mission's subcommittee on police-community relations a voice in the selection process, a chicano group went before the council with four requests. Representing 18 city groups, Paul Velez, spokesman for the Alianza de Organizaciones Chicanas de Austin, asked both the council and city manager to allow the subcom- m itte e in t e r v ie w applicants. to But City Manager Dan D a vid so n and c o u n c il members all emphasized that it was both illegal and un­ ethical for anyone but David­ son to conduct interviews. If applicants knew they were to be interviewed by a committee, the number of applicants would have been greatly reduced, Davidson said. One-hundred and sixty letters were sent to groups for citizen input. The letters w ill be placed on file for anyone to see. and copies w ill be available for the Human R e la tio n s Com m ission, Davidson said. P A U L H E R N A N D E Z , Alianza vice-chairman, said the group did not want token input from the letters but wanted to set a precedent to help decide the city’s destiny. Councilwoman Dr. Emma Lou Linn said the council’s hands were tied by the City Charter, and she did not want to lose her council place by violating it. Action on approving a con­ tract with the county on Emergency Medical Service was postponed by the council because of questions by coun­ cilwoman Betty Himmelblau. SHE SAID some of the con­ tract provisions needed clarifying. These included the requirement that the am­ bulance be dispatched within one minute or no charge would be levied on the county; the 61 cent charge per mile on patient pick-up and the coun­ ty's option to cancel the con­ tract with only six months notice. Himmelblau indicated she may not support the contract because of the extra cost that might be placed on the city from these provisions. Use of Housing and Com­ munity Develoment Program Funds (HCF) were approved for numerous projects by the c o u n c il im ­ provements for Clarksville. in c lu d in g R U ST IN IN D E P E N D E N T C O M M U N IT Y C H U R C H *A u s t i n ’s O n l y G a y Church** % ecumenical friendly versatile At : T H E C O N G R E G A T I O N A L C H U R C H 408 West 23rd S u n d a y s 2: 00 p.m. I nfo: 4 7 7- 6699 SU M M ER JOBS We're Looking for Counselors Camp Olympia is looking for summer counselors, lf you enjoy the outdoors end the rewarding experience of working with children, visit the employment center and sign up for an interview with an Olympia representative. MONDAY, FEB. 2 - business Placement Center THURSDAY, FEB. 5 • ub..ai A *. Placement Center I I I I is Ford Granted Censorship Power Over Final House C IA Document WASHINGTON (UPI) - The House Thursday voted to block publication of a 338-page intelligence committee report until the White House clears it of material regarded as still secret or classified and harmful to U.S. agencies. Rep. Otis Pike, D-N.Y., chairman of the panel that produced the report, has said he will not file the document if it is subject to White House censorship. The vote was 246-124 to have the report “sanitized” by the White House. Earlier Thursday, Pike cancelled a meeting of the House In telligen ce C om m ittee awaiting the vote. The House Rules Com­ mittee Wednesday approved, 9-7, to send the motion to block the report to the House floor. THE VOTE CAME after more than an hour of impassioned debate. Pike argued on the House floor the committee’s report was kept “hostage” by the rules committee amendment that the document must be scrutinized by the executive branch before publication. “There is not the slightest fear that we are giving away dangerous secrets,” he said. “We are giving away some em ­ barrassing information. Intelligence has been used to cover assassinations. Intelligence has been used to cover secret wars.” Rep. Robert McClory, R -Ill., a member of the intelligence committee, opposed issuing the report in its present form , “ in v io la tio n of a so lem n agreement.” “What agency will provide us with secret information in the future?” he said. “ What agency will ever trust us?” HE SAID after October’s impasse with the CIA and White House in getting Reagan Charges Dirty Tricks Accusations Leveled at Ford Cam paign Staff secret documents, the committee agreed to receiving such material “on loan” and not to make it public without approval. Pike and nine other members of the 13- man intelligence panel voted last Friday the agreement covered only the hearings and not the final report. Pike said earlier in the day publishing the report after the White House had reviewed it would be tantamount to let­ ting the CIA censor it. “I’m going to be no part of a report on the CIA written by the CIA or censored by the CIA,” Pike said. “That’s the bot­ tom line. SPEAKER CARL ALBERT sided with Pike, saying the idea of giving the Presi­ dent power to determine what should or should not go into a congressional com­ m ittee report “ doesn’t sound very appetizing to m e.” “I don’t like it personally,” Albert said. "It would be self defeating to have this kind of a resolution approved. The purpose of this whole thing is to keep congressional control.” On the other side of the Capitol, Sen. Frank Church, D-Idaho, chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee, in­ troduced legislation to create a perma­ nent committee of nine senators to review in advance any planned covert activities by the CIA and other in­ telligence agencies. The bill also would, for the first time, empower Congress and the special com­ m ittee to pass sp ecifica lly on in­ t e llig e n c e a g e n c y b ud gets," now camouflaged in the spending proposals of other departments of government. n _______________________________________f A i m m n t h / Reagan’s proposal to revamp the ailing Social Security system, leaving it to sup­ porters toi insert local names as the sources of criticism. “I f s a little bit dishonest,” Reagan said. “It comes under the heading of dir­ ty tricks.” The Ford campaign denied it used fill- in-the-blank news releases to attack Reagan. JOHN BREEN, spokesman for the Ford operation, called Reagan’s charge a “despicable tactic,” and John Michels, director of Ford’s campaign, said he was “ leaning over backwards to avoid anything that even gives the slightest appearance of it (dirty tricks).” news capsules ATT Suggests N e w Interstate Call Rates WASHINGTON (UPI) — The American Telephone and Telegraph Co. Thursday proposed new rates for interstate telephone calls it said would add an average IO cents monthly to residential bills and $2 to business bills. In some cases the cost of long-distance calls would be reduced. ATT filed the proposal with the Federal Communications Commission in response to an FCC order Jan. 19 which granted the firm a $225 million rate hike. The company asked that most of the new rates become effective Feb. 1 2 - Stocks Soar to 27-Month High NEW YORK (UPI) — The new year rally, stalled for two sessions by profit taking, regained its power Thursday as prices soared to their highest level in 27 months in heavy trading on the New York Stock Ex­ change The Dow Jones industrial average rose 17.40 points to 968.75, the highest since it closed at 984.80 on Oct. 29, 1973. It was the biggest gain since it rose 19.12 points Jan. 5. The blue-chip average, a 10-point loser the By United Pre ss International Ronald Reagan, his election purse 1208,000 thicker, Thursday fired the first major “dirty tricks” charge of the elec­ tion year at cam paigners for his Republican opponent, President Ford. Reagan said Frod’s campagin opera­ tion included activities that were a “lit­ tle bit dishonest” and come “under the heading of dirty tricks.” The form er California governor launched the charge during his third c a m p a ig n s w in g th r o u g h N ew * ll _ Hampshire for the state’s first-in-the na­ tion primary Feb. 24. ma Ford, preparing to turn to active am- paigning next month, planned his first political forav into the state Feb. 7 and 8. His campaign aides, refusing sweeping claim s about his prospects in New Hampshire, predict “he will do well” or that he “can win.” REAGAN TOLD about 180 insurance workers in Concord, N.H., the Ford cam­ paign distributed prepared attacks on White House Orders HEW Budget Cut (UPI) -T h e White WASHINGTON House, stung by the congressional override of President Ford’s veto of a $45 billion appropriations bill, has ordered HEW officials to seek spending cuts in 50 health and welfare programs, sources said Thursday. These sources said the White House Office of Management and Budget had the Department of Health, directed Education and Welfare to prepare resci- sion requests to reduce spending in programs for which Congress approved funding Wednesday. However, a top HEW budget official said “We do not know if a rescision re­ quest will be going up” to Capitol Hill. While presidents previously could im­ pound appropriated funds, a 1974 law says they must be spent unless the presi­ dent gets congressional permission not to spend them. The permission comes through a som ew hat com plicated governmental process. The Senate and House voted almost three-to-one earlier this week to override Ford s veto of a 1976 appropriations bill for the Departments of Labor and HEW. Ford complained that the bill provided nearly $1 billion more than he requested. Faced with a spending appropriation larger than it requested, the Administra­ tion now may ask Congress, in effect, to impound at least some of the funds it just approved. Exact details of the amounts and specific programs that would be affected could not be determined. “These details haven’t been decided yet,” said Lloyd Thomas, of HEW S budget office. Final decisions still must be made at the White House, he said. Likely targets for rescision requests are services for crippled children, cancer research and the training of com­ munity mental health workers — all program s for which Congress ap­ propriated more than the President re­ quested. Last year the President proposed withholding 61.48 billion in health funds, but none of the rescisions was approved. T E X A S U N I O N During the first half of February the Texas Union's P rogram Com m ittees will present symposia, sem inars and special evenings of music and dance. The T heatre and Ideas & Issues Com m ittees will sponsor a symposium on dance; Ute Afro-American Culture and Ideas & Issues Com m ittees will present The Black History Week Symposium in obser­ vance of one aspect of American heritage; and the Musical Events Com m ittee will spon­ sor a symposium on bluegrass music, an a r ­ tistic heritage of different origin The Texas Tavern will host evenings of soul, salsa, disco and Brazilian music while the Cultural E n ter­ tainm ent Com mittee will present the Dance Theatre of Harlem for a two-day residency. During this period the T heatre Com mittee will screen a number of award-winning film s such as “ Scenes from a M arriage,” “ West Side Story” and “ The Autobiography of Miss Jane P ittm an ." I D E A S A N D I S S U E S „ The Ideas and Issues C om m ittee is co sponsoring two symposia during the first half of February. Events in the symposium on dance are listed below and are sponsored with the T heatre Committee. The Black History Week Symposium is co-sponsored with the Afro-American Culture Com mittee and listed there, Monday, February 9. Sandwich Seminar: WHY DANCE? Steve Hogner, of the A u stin A m e ric a n S ta te sm a n s S h o w World, will discuss the a rt of dance from a critic’s point of view. Noon in the Dobie ( enter Conference Room, 2021 Guadalupe Tuesday, February IO. Sandwich Seminar: DANCE IN FILM. Dr. George Wead, Assis­ tant Professor of Radio/TV /Film, will dis­ cuss the a rt in film. I p m. in the Dobie Center Conference Room. Wednesday, February l l . Sandwich Seminar BLACK DANCE. Gregory Williams of the D epartm ent of Ethnic Studies will discuss the work of the Dance T h ea tre of H arlem (appearing Tuesday and W ednesday-see “ Special Events” ) and other black dance troupes Noon in the Dobie Center Conference Room. Thursday, February 12. Sandwich Seminar: CHOREOGRAPHY IN THE TH EA TRE. La than Sanford, Professor of Dance in the D ram a D epartm ent, will discuss this special­ ty Noon in the Dobie Center Conference ,, , Friday February 13. Sandwich Seminar: D IR E C T IN G A D A NCE E N S E M B L E Professor Michael Sokoloff of the D ram a D e p a rtm e n t w ill lead a d iscu ssio n on theatrical dance and choreography. Noon in the Dobie Center Conference Room SPECIAL E V E N T S February 3. RECEPTION FOR iS LAW M embers of the University nity are invited to m eet and talk with Thomas Law of Ft. Worth. 3-4 p m. in Room. 4th floor, Academic^ by f o l l o w e d Center. Sponsored by UT Interaction T hursday, F eb ru ary 5. B L U E G R A SS SYMPOSIUM The symposium will consist of three parts; a presentation on the history of b l u e g r a s s m u s i c a workshop/demonstration of its music from 2- 4:30 p m (place to be announced); and a per­ formance of bluegrass from 8:30 p m to Mid­ night in The Texas Tavern Sponsored by the Musical Events Committee. Sunday, February 8. BIKE RID E TO BUDA This bicycling tour covers 35 miles of hilly terrain to a quaint ham let south of Austin Br­ ing a swim suit to swim the hot springs. Tour departs at IO a m. from Littlefield Fountain. The ride is sponsored by the Recreation Com­ m ittee which also hosts a num ber of events during the week in The Texas Tavern. M o n d a y , F e b r u a r y 9. L e c t u r e / D em onstration: DANCE TH EA TRE OF HARLEM Members of the dance troupe will dem onstrate some of the techniques they use. 7:30 p.m. in Municipal Auditorium. Admission is free. Sponsored by the Cultural E ntertain­ ment Committee. Tuesday and Wednesday, February 10-11. DANCE THEATRE OF HARLEM Tickets to this popular ensemble go on sale January 30 and cost $.50, 1.00 and 1.50 for UT students, faculty and staff. Tickets for the general public cost $4.50, 5.00 and 5.50 and go on sale February 6. Show tim e is 8 p.m. in Municipal Auditorium. Sponsored by the Cultural E n ter­ tainm ent Committee. Friday, February 13. MICHAEL SOKOLOFF DANCE ENSEMBLE. The Austin Dance Ensemble will perform a selection of their favorite dances. 8 p.m. Hogg Auditorium. Ad­ mission; $1.00 for UT ID holders; $1.50 for others. Sponsored by the T heatre Committee. A M E R I C AN E X P E R I E N C E S E R I E S The American Experience Series sponsors program s to m ark the U.S. Bicentennial. Friday, February 6. RECEPTION FUR THE CAST OF YANKEE DOODLE. This informal reception will honor the cast of “ Yankee Doodle,” the D ram a D epartm ent’s Bicenten­ nial staging which will tour the state in the spring. The reception, which is sponsored jointly with UT Interaction, will be held in the Foyer of Hogg Auditorium following the production Friday evening. Friday, February 13. Film : TH E DAYBOOKS OF EDWARD WESTON: HOW YOUNG I WAS. Thi s f i l m a b o u t t h e A m e r i c a n photographer covers his “ soft-focus period as well as work in Mexico. Noon in the Tinker Room. 4th floor of the Academic Center. THE TEXAS TAVERN The Texas Tavern hosts a variety of events in­ cluding live perform ances, discotheque nights and afternoon gam e sessions Open every night. The Texas T avern’s hours are 9 a m. - midnight Monday through Thursday; 9 a.m . - 2 a.rn on Friday; 7 p.m. - 2 a m. on Saturday; and 7 p.m. - midnight on Sunday. Sunday, February I. BRAZILIAN DISCO NIGHT Be prepared to dance if you check out this hot sound from tropical America. 9 p.m. - midnight. F R E E . Monday, February 2. TURK PIPKIN Enjoy this local juggler and m im e artist from 4-6 p.m. FR E E . Sponsored by the Musical Events Com mittee. Monday, February 2, 9 and 16. SOUL NIGHT. DJ Dan Bailey III spins the wax so you can do it till you’re satisfied. 8:30 p.m. - midnight. Sponsored by the Afro-American Culture Committee. Tuesday, February 3. BINGO. 4-6 p.m. Spon­ sored by the Recreation Committee. Tuesday, February 3. RESIDENCE HALL TALENT SHOW. Residents of University dorm s will display their talents. 8 p.m. - mid­ night. Sponsored by the Musical Events Com- m ittee. Wednesday, February 4. “ TOP 40 HITS DISCO NIGHT. Dance to the music that made Wolfman Jack famous. 8:30 p.m. - midnight. Sponsored by Students Older Than Average. T h u r sd a y s, F e b r u a r y 5, 12 and 19. BACKGAMMON SESSIONS. Play the gam e of kings from 7-8:30 p.m. on Thursdays. BYOB (Bring Your Own Board). Sponsored by the Recreation Committee. Thursday, February 5. BLUEGRASS in he Tavern is p art of the symposium sponsored by the Musical E vents Com mittee 8:30 p.m. - midnight. FR E E . F rid ay and S atu rd ay, F eb ru ary 6-7. BALCONES FAULT. One of the hottest bands in Texas. 9 p.m. - 2 a m. UT ID holders: $.50; guests: $1.00. Sponsored by the Musical Events Committee. Sunday, February 8. OPEN MIKE. This even­ ing offers the opportunity for student per­ form ers to gain public exposure. 8 p.m. - m id­ night. Sponsored by the Musical Events Com­ ____ mittee. Monday, February 9. CHUCK BRANDT. Listen to this singer/guitarist play his own the compositions. 4-6 p.m. Sponsored by Musical Events Committee. T u e s d a y , R I S K F e b r u a r y TOURNAMENT. An opportunity to vent your jingoism . 7-8:30 p.m. Sponsored by the Recreation Committee. Tuesday, February IO. SALSA! Another great night of Latin-American disco. 9 p.m. - mid­ night. W e d n e s d a y , F e b r u a r y l l . D A R T TOURNAMENT. This is what taverns were m ade for. 4-6 p.m. Sponsored by the R ecrea­ tion Committee. Wednesday, February l l . DISCO NIGHT. A perennial favorite with partners warming up for the weekend. 9 p m - m idnight________ IO. Thursday, February 12. GENE LONG. This solo acoustic guitarist perform s a wide varie­ ty of both popular and original music. 8 p.m. - midnight. Sponsored by the Musical Events Com mittee. Friday and Saturday, February 13-14. RICK STEIN AND THE ALLEY CAT BAND. Progressive country. 9 p.m. - 2 a.m . UT ID holders: $.50; guests: $1.00. Sponsored by the Musical Events Com mittee. AFRO-AM ERICAN CULTURE The Afro-American Culture Com m ittee spon­ sors program s which explore cultural aspects of the black American experience. The Com­ m ittee will present a symposium of program s in honor of Black History Week. BLACK HISTORY WEEK SYMPOSIUM During this three-day symposium topics con­ cerning blacks in history, politics and com ­ munications will be presented. Guests and speakers will include Congresswoman Bar­ bara Jordan, Representative Paul Ragsdale and other leaders. The symposium is spon­ sored jointly with the Ideas and Issues Com­ m ittee. Sunday, February 8. BLACK PEO PL E IN PERSPECTIVE. An introduction to Black History Week. 7-9 p.m. in Calhoun IOO. Tuesday, February IO. Sandwich Seminar: AN HI S TORI CAL P E R S P E C T I V E OF BLACK CULTURE. Drs. Howard Miller and Douglas Daniels of the History D epartm ent and Dr. Donn Davis of the Government D epartm ent will lead a panel discussion. Noon in the Texas Culture Room (Afro- A m erican), Methodist Student Center. Tuesday, February IO. Panel: THE BLACK POLITICAL STRUGGLE. R ep resen tativ e Paul Ragsdale and other community leaders will discuss the black in politics. 8 p.m. Place to be announced. Wednesday, February l l . Panel: BLACKS IN THE MASS MEDIA. The role of Afro- Americans in com munications will be dis­ cussed by L arry Coleman of the Speech D epartm ent, G regory Williams of Ethnic Studies and C urtis Williams, graduate student in dram a and author of “ Ghetto Vampire. Noon in the Tinker Room, 4th floor of the Academic Center. T h u r s d a y , F e b r u a r y 12. L e c t u r e : CONGRESSWOMAN BARBARA JORDAN. This outspoken representative, the third guest Issu e s C o m m itte e ’s of Distinguished L ecturer Series, will speak at 8 p m. in LBJ Auditorium. UT students, faculty and staff will be given priority in admission, but IOO seats will be reserved for the general public. Admission is free. FILMS Id eas and th e The T heatre Com m ittee sponsors sem inars, nightly films, and occasional plays produced by its repertory theatre. Admission to all films is $1.00 for UT students, faculty and staff; and $1.50 for others. Film s in the American Focus Film Series, which is spon­ sored in conjunction with the Bicentennial, are m arked with an asterisk * S u n d a y , I. A L I C E S RESTAURANT. A rthur Penn s lyrical film­ ing of the popular Arlo G uthrie song. 7 & 9 p.m. in Je ster Auditorium Monday, February 2. PAISAN. Rossellini takes us on a painful journey up the peninsula as we follow the allied troops in their libera­ tion of Italy. 7 p.m. in Burdine Auditorium. Monday, February 2. LES VISITEURS DE SOIR. In Marcel C arne’s rom antic fantasy F e b r u a r y Burning Church Firem en fig h t fla m e s r a v a g in g th e P re sb y te ria n N e w E n g la n d Congregational Church, at Sarasota Springs, N.Y., landm ark built in 1856. —UPI Telephoto previous two sessions, has gained 116.34 points in the new year rally. The rally was broad-based. Standard & Poor’s 500-stock index gained 1.58 to 100.11, a 1975-76 high, and the average price of an NYSE common share increased by 54 cents. Volume climbed to 20,800,000 shares from the 27,370,000 traded Wednes­ day and brought the volume for the month to approximately 597,733,950 shares, a record. Texas Higher Education Executive N am ed AUSTIN (UPI) — The Texas College Coordinating Board Thursday named Dr. William Webb acting commissioner of higher education for Texas. Webb will serve as chief executive officer of the Coordinating Board staff awaiting appointment of a successor to Commissioner Bevington Reed, whose resignation becomes effective Saturday, according to board chairman Harry Provence. Webb, 44, served as head of the division of financial planning for the Coordinating Board since 1973. He previously held administrative positions with the Kentucky Council on Public Higher Education for six . years. m ade during the occupation, the “ visitors of the night” try to w reak anarchy on hapless m ortals but eventually succumb to the powers of love. 8:45 p.m. in Burdine Auditorium. •Tuesday, February 3. DINNER AT EIGHT. John B arry m o re, Je a n H arlow , W allace Beery, M arie D ressier and Lionel B arrym ore highlight this 1933 MGM George Cukor spec­ tacular. 7 & 9 p.m. in Burdine Auditorium. Wednesday, February 4. RAISIN IN THE SUN. Lorraine H ansberry’s perceptive dram a about a black Chicago family. With Sidney P oitier, Ruby Dee and Diana Sands. 7 p.m. in B atts Auditorium. Wednesday, February 4. AUTOBIOGRAPHY OF MISS JANE PITTMAN. The award- winning television dram a following a black wom an’s life from early youth to old age. Starring Cicely Tyson. 8:45 p.m. in Batts Auditorium. Thursday, February 5. TH E T WE L V E CHAIRS Only Mel Brooks can m ake a com ­ edy out of the Russian Revolution. Starring Ron Moody., Dom deLouise and, of course, Brooks himself. 7 & 8:45 p.m. in Batts Auditorium. Friday and Saturday, February 6-7. YOUNG FRANKENSTEIN. Brooks’ recent parody of the Frankenstein films. Gene Wilder plays the scientist; P eter Boyle, the m onster; and M ar­ ty Feldm an, the im m ortal Igor. 7, 9 & l l p m. in Je ste r Auditorium. Sunday, February 8. THE PRODUCERS. Two would-be Broadway im pressarios set out to produce a flop in this farce by Mel Brooks, starring Zero Mostel, Gene Wilder and Dick Shawn. 7 & 8:45 p.m. in Je ste r Auditorium. Monday, February 9. ORPHEUS Je an Cocteau’s rem arkable film depicts the love of the poet Orpheus for the princess who travels constantly between this world and the next. 8:45 p.m. in Burdine Auditorium. Monday, February 9. THE BICYCLE THIEF. The post-war phase of neorealism finds its highest expression in this pathetic tale of a m an and his child, caught in an impossible m aze of frustration and loss. Directed by Vit­ torio de Sica. 7 p.m. in Burdine Auditorium. •Tuesday, February IO. AN AMERICAN IN PARIS. MGM’s favorite musical com plete w i t h G e n e K e l l y ’s d a n c i n g , G e o r g e G ershw in’s music and Vincente Minnelli's colorful direction. 7 & 9 p.m. in Burdine Auditorium. Wednesday, February l l . THE RED SHOES. The quintessential ballet film following the rise of a young ballerina. 7 & 9:30 p.m. in B atts Auditorium. Thursday, February 12. WEST SIDE STORY. The m odern R om eo-and-Juliet ren d erin g about love in a tough New York ghetto The Academy Award-winning film displays the in­ ventive stre e t dancing of ch o reo g rap h er Jero m e Robbins. 8 p.m. in Batts Auditorium. Friday and Saturday, February 13-14. SCENES FROM A MARRIAGE. Ingm ar B ergm an’s alm ost too real dram a about the tribulations of couple Liv Ullmann and Erland Joseph son IO p.m. on Friday and 7 p.m. on Saturday in Je ster Auditorium. S u n d a y , S W E E T SWEETBACK’S BAADASSSS SONG. Melvin Van Peeble s story about a revolutionary black 7 & 8:45 p m in Jester Auditorium. F e b r u a r y 15. S O T A Fridays, February 6 and 13. HAPP^ HOUR. Every Friday students are welcome to an evening of cocktails and informal conversa- tion. 5-7 p.m. in the Club Caravan of the Villa Capri Motor Hotel. Wednesday, February ll. Sandwich Seminar: MID-CAREER CHANGE. Dr. Victor Appel. A s s o c i a t e P r o f e s s o r of E d u c a t i o n a l Psychology, will lead the discussion on one of the traum as of adulthood. Noon in Texas Union South 110. A R T I S T I C During the month of F ebruary the Fine Arts Com m ittee will present two exhibits in the Foyer of the Academic Center. The C enter’s hours are 8 a.m. - Midnight, Monday - F rid a y , and noon to Midnight on Saturday and Sunday. Sunday, February I - Sunday, February 15. AN B I C E N T E N N I A L CELEBRATION. The Hoblitzelle Theatre Library is displaying the Joe C. Ward collec­ tion of Barnum & Bailey Circus memorabilia Sunday, February I - Sunday, February 15. Exhibit : CAROL COHEN. The jew elry, photography and paintings of Carol Cohen, UT alum na, achieve an abstractiv e quality utiliz­ ing differences in shapes, color and form in te rest its im pact on M EXICAN-AM ERICAN CULTURE The Mexican-American Culture Committee p rese n ts events of c u ltu ral to m em bers of the U niversity community Dur­ ing the first half of F ebruary the com m ittee will co-sponsor—w ith the Ideas and Issues C om m ittee—The Chicano Movement Sym­ posium The sem inars listed below will be held in the Texas C ulture Room (Mexican- A m erican) of the M ethodist Student Center, 2434 Guadalupe. Tuesday, February 3. CHICANO HISTORY: A PERSPECTIVE ON CHICANOS TODAY. An­ dres T ijerina will lead a panel discussion on the Chicano H istory and development of the Chicano Movement, l l a m . Tuesday, February 3. TH E ILLUSIONS Oh PROGRESS. Emilio Zam ora will lead the dis­ cussion. Noon. Tuesday, February 3. CHICANA FEMINISM. Ino Alvarez will discuss the development of Chica na feminism and its role in the move­ m ent. 7:30 p.m. W e d n e s d a y , F e b r u a r y 4. A N G L O L I B E R A L I S M A N D T H E CHI CANO MOVEMENT. A governm ent professor will lead the discussion on the effects of anglo liberals on the m ovem ent, ll a m. We d n e s d a y , F e b r u a r y 4. CHI CANO POLITICIANS TODAY. Participants will take a critical look a t contem porary Chicano public servants. Noon. Wednesday, February 4. CHICANO HEROES OF TODAY. P articip an ts will examine ad­ m ired leaders of this culture. 7 30 p m. Thursday, February 5. CHICANOS AND P UBLI C EDUCATI ON. This sandwi ch sem inar will focus on the effects ol public education on Chicanos and their culture, ll __ a m . Thursday, February 5. AN ANALYSIS Oh THE CHICANO MOVEMENT. The activism on campuses and in the fields will be examin­ ed Noon. T hursday, F eb ru ary 5. THE CHICANO MOVEMENT: A REVOLUTION? This even­ ing sem inar will view the movement s poten­ tial as a revolution. 7:30 p.m. Call 471-4747 for a daily listing of campus events. Friday, January 30, 1976 THE DA ILY TEXAN Page 3 Opening the spybusters' closets By WILLIAM SAFIRE •1976 N.Y. Times News Service WASHINGTON — Mafia mobsters and Kennedy mythkeepers can heave sighs of relief: as predicted here, Sen. Frank Church’s cover-up committee has decid­ ed not to question Frank Sinatra on his role in making possible the first penetra­ tion of the White House by organized crime. Nor will Church ask the FBI to in­ vestigate the first murder of a prospec­ tive Senate witness. The reason why reveals itself in the way the committee staff was organized. Church first asked John Doar, fresh from impeachment triumphs, for advice. After peopling the committee staff with members of the Kennedy protective society, Doar recommended Burke Marshall (the lawyer Ted Kennedy call­ ed in his panic from Chappequiddick), who told Church he would serve as a con­ sultant recruiting suitable lawyers, and who recommended F.H.D. “ F ritz ” Schwartz, Jr. to be staff chief. COUNT THE connections. Schwartz is a partner of Cravath, Swaine and Moore, the New York law firm that represents IBM. Marshall, a Kennedy assistant at­ torney general, was IBM general counsel from 1965 to 1970; Nicholas Katzenbach, Kennedy deputy a tto rn ey general, followed him as IBM general counsel, working closely w ith Schw artz at Cravath: Roswell Gilpatrick, Kennedy deputy defense, Cravath. Now count the cover-ups. is the top man at 1) The Ram sey Clark-John Doar cover-up. As the Church committee blamed J. Edgar Hoover for abuses un­ der Kennedy and Johnson, no spotlight was focused on the infamous Sept. 27, 1967, memo from Asst. Atty. Gen. Doar to his boss, Ramsey Clark. IN THE DOAR plan, approved by Clark, snooping on dissident groups was raised to a fine art; Doar urged that the IRS be used, especially its alcohol unit in ghetto areas, and went on: “The Nar­ cotics Bureau is another possibility, and ’finally, my experience in D etroit suggests that the Post Office Depart­ ment might be helpful,” Doar was never called; Clark was never asked to ex­ plain. But CIA men are facing grand juries now about their postal “ ex­ periences.” 2) The Katzenbach cover-up. Robert Kennedy’s deputy and successor angrily demanded a retraction when I suggested he condoned the scandalous wiretapping and bugging of Martin Luther King Jr., but he professed to amazement when later confronted with his initials and handwriting on scurrilous eavesdropping reports. An ag g ressiv e co m m ittee lawyer could have forced out more of the truth about the worst abuse of police power in our time — but Katzenbach th e c o m m it t e e ’s e a s ily d u c k e d marshmallows. 3) The Rosell P. (“ Dearest Ros” ) Gilpatrick cover-up. In the cases of his partner, Gilpatrick, and his client, Katzenbach, Church counsel Schwartz scrupulously “ rescued” himself, but the staffers who worked with him got the picture. ALTHOUGH GILPATRICK was the highest-ranking Kennedy aide working on “ Operation Mongoose,” the un­ declared war on Cuba, the Church in­ terim cover-up plays down his role. And a “ Mongoose” plan for “ incapacitating” Cuban su g ar w orkers by spraying chemicals on is dismissed by Church staffers with “after a study showed the plan to be unfeasible, it was cancelled ...” them The Church staff chose not to make public the memorandum in its possession that casts a different light on the m atter. “In the office of the attorney general,” to use a recently favored term , a plan was seriously discussed to launch a chemical attack on Cuban workers (the chemical had a mortality rate of “only 3 per cent” ) and it was postponed for two specific reasons: I) Harvest time was past, and 2) the Kennedys could not get their hands on enough of the chemical at that time. Candidate Church’s Kennedy- protectors spared us the shocking details and mildly called the plan “ unfeasible.” tainting-of- 4) THE KENNEDY evidence cover-up. Church has touched gently on wiretaps approved by Atty. Gen. Robert Kennedy on “at least” six American citizens, making taps seem legitimate: “ An investigation of efforts by foreign interests to influence U.S. economic policies.” the This has not been revealed: one of those taps — and the reason for Church’s “at least six” fuzziness — was on a Washington law firm. One imagines that a firm of lawyers has more than one client; those lawyers sometimes work on more than one case. Presumably these niceties — including the notion that a citizen has a right to talk to his lawyer without the government listening in — did not trouble the Kennedys. AS WE HAVE seen, even inadvertent intrusion taints evidence, and Kennedy Justice Department lawyers were duty- bound to tell every court on every case handled that tapped law firm has re­ quested that the Church com m ittee withhold its name, as I have done to protect a victim ’s privacy, but the Churchmen went on from there to con­ ceal the fact of the tapping of a law firm e n tirely , which only p ro te c ts the perpetrator’s privacy. Perhaps the tap was so surgical it in­ volved no other clients, and never picked up legal advice — th a t’s for the American Bar Association to demand to know. But of one thing we can be sure: any lawyers overheard talking to their clients in 1962 did not belong to that well- -connected, all-in-the-family firm of Cravath, Swaine and Moore. By TERRY QUIST Some yahoo congressman (the name escapes me) once proposed curing the ills of our nation by flying several planes about the land and dumping bales of th e m o n e y o u t hatches. The princi­ ple is simple: print a million dollars for everyone, you make a e v e r y o n e millionaire. Presto! The scheme is sil­ ly, of course. But som etim es events compel one to believe that the intellec­ tual heirs of that congressman sway the h ig h est c o u n cils of g o v e rn m e n t, academe and the press. For instance, the deficit for fiscal ’75 is running over $44 billion; the deficit for fiscal ’76 may (op­ timistically) settle around $80 billion. C O N G R E S S IS NOT w i t h o u t 'Boo!' guest viewpoint choose, you just might lose Every man a millionaire (D ifc c r k ,c » * o N e w trend THE TIMES, IN fact, apologists. The intellectualoids of The New York Times pooh-pooh anxieties about the deficits and deride the “ reac­ tionary” economics of the F o rt ad­ ministration (F o rt was only progressive enough to propose a $52 billion deficit). invokes a mysterious force called “ cost-push’ to explain inflation. The Times admits that “ th ere is no a ssu ra n c e th at cost- push... will not intensify when and if de­ mand strengthens.” But the editorial writers place fundamental responsibility for inflation on “cost-push” , just as enlightened scientists used to place responsibly for fire on phlogiston. Un­ fortunately, however, neither “cost- push” nor phlogiston exist. there There are several critical problems with “ cost-push” , both in theory and in empirical reality. Theoretically speak­ ing, is no logical distinction between costs and prices What we nor­ mally consider costs are prices which are formed relatively early in the process of production. Therefore expan­ sion in the money supply apparently a ffe c ts “ c o s ts ” ( p ric e s of b a sic materials, wholesale prices, etc.) first because “ co sts” are closer to the sources of credit than are the retail prices which directly affect the con­ sumer (before whom the inflated buck ultimately stops). There is, however, no substantive difference between costs and prices which would distinguish “ cost- push” and “demand” inflation. ALSO, COST-PUSH does nothing to ex­ plain a general price rise. An “ ad­ ministered” price could explain the rise of prices within one industry; but, given a constant money supply, this price should be reflected by a long-term ad­ justment in relative prices, not a general price rise. A general price rise occurs logically, and in practice, only when too many dollars are chasing too few goods. Objections of logic aside, cost-push fails to describe reality in the critical empirical question of “administered prices.” Cost-push theory generally industries assumes that concentrated raise prices arbitrarily to maximize profits. As The Tim es com m ents, “ ...tight money is no cure for persistent inflation because many cost-push product and labor markets are anything but models of free competition.” But this hypothesis is confuted by experience. Among other studies, the work of Steven Lustgarten with the American Enter­ prise Institute demonstrates that prices and labor costs have risen more slowly in concentrated industries than in other markets. There is no inherent connection between market concentration and price acceleration. Alcoa was a monopoly before World War II; Alcoa continually produced cheap, quality aluminum; large financial interests were discourag­ ed from competing with Alcoa by the ef­ ficiency of the firm. SOME HAVE OBSERVED that cer­ tain large firms have increased prices they despite falling demand. This, charge, is a sign of “ adm inistered prices.” But the devaluation of the dollar has merely surpassed in effect the devaluation of the product. As National Review comments, the rate of inflation has not changed greatly since the early Sixties. “ What has chang­ ed is federal fiscal and monetary In the four years from 1961 policies through 1964, federal budget deficits totaled less than $10 billion, and the average annual rate of increase in the money supply was 3.3 per cent. Now, when we face deficits of perhaps 20 times those of the Kennedy years, and double the rate of monetary expansion, the new policies are widely condemned as ‘miserly,’ ‘tight-fisted,’ and ‘hyper- conservative.’ Something strange has happened to the language.” Some deficit-advocates realize the connection between deficits and inflation and assert that inflation is a less onerous burden than unemployment. One can make several objections. First, one must note that inflation is a “ dishonest tax." allowing politicians to fund their pet projects without revealing the true cost. Second, inflation is particularly vicious towards those living on fixed incomes. Third, inflation discourages savings and the co rn ersto n es of a investm ent, healthy economy. PERHAPS MOST important, there is no proven lasting connection between in­ flation and increased employment, as 1974 illustrated. Inflation may serve as a temporary fix for the economy, but the high is never permanent, and ever-larger doses are required to obtain the same il­ lusory effect. Finally the m arket OD’s. Inflation hurts employment by forcing Treasury borrowing to compete on the private money market with businesses (for commercial loans) and individuals loans). (for mortgages and personal Interest rates soar in anticipation of double-digit in general is crippled, and housing starts are discouraged. Arbitrarily lowering in­ terest rates by law merely increases reluctance to make any loans what­ soever. inflation. B usiness Switzerland increased its money supp­ ly by 19 per cent per year from 1970 through 1972. Since then the supply has rem ained frozen. D uring the five quarters ending last March wholesale in­ flation decreased from 27 per cent to minus 9.2 per cent and Swiss interest rates are among the world’s lowest. have to bow out if there is to be any chance of victory. Personally, I believe that uncommitted with strong delegate choices has a better chance of beating Bentsen in the 14th Senatorial District than a Harris strategy. This senatorial district includes five counties (rural counties except for Travis and some of Hayes County). Travis County is 80 per cent of the vote, but Austin is only 80 per cent of that and the student boxes are 12 of the city’s 70 precincts. In a propor­ tional voting situation, then, any voter can back any candidate he chooses and be counted, but in winner-take-all the winner does just that — takes all. So if Bentsen gets 30 per cent of the vote in the district (a minimum) and Wallace gets 25 per cent (he’s done it before) and Carter gets 15 per cent (with support like Rev. O’Chester, who knows?) and Harris gets 29.99 per cent of the vote, then Bentsen walks off with all four delegates to the national convention. With uncom­ mitted, the scenario looks brighter, in my view, if we can get good delegates. The crux of the uncommitted strategy at this stage, however, is merely to provide an option for the contingency that the other candidates get knocked off. The uncommitted strategy in this county is supporting Udall, Shriver, San­ ford, Shapp, Church, Harris, Carter or Bayh. If you are interested in any of these campaigns, then you are wholly welcome to attend the liberal caucus at I p.m. Saturday at the City Coliseum and support the cause. firing line It's getting kind of lonely here To the editor: As the lone participating student member of the University Council, I would like to agree with Todd Katz’ arti­ cle in Wednesday’s Texan advising students and faculty to end the long boycott against Dr. Rogers. Since her ap­ pointment in September I have attended every meeting of the University Council except one, not because I do or don’t ap­ prove of her presidency, but more impor­ tantly because I do believe the Universi­ ty Council has a very serious function and obligation to the students and faculty of this campus. Matters before the coun­ cil at this time include proposed changes in the pass/fall grading system to a credit/no credit process and changes in the delay of grade procedure used by fac u lty m e m b e rs. P e rh a p s m any students are not aware of the impact these changes can have upon them, but by remaining on the agenda for months at a time and never being acted upon, they are meaningless. I urge the other five student members of the University Council, as well as those numerous facul­ ty members, to end this boycott and once again give their efforts to the operation of this important legislative body. David Fuhrman Chairman, Senior Cabinet (Editor’s note: Senior Cabinet is the organization of the 16 College Council presidents.) Insensitive To the editor: The insensitivity with which your reviewer responded to Satyajit Ray’s subtle evocation of the hidden human cost of the Second World War (“Uneven ‘Thunder’ ...” ) would seem to indicate his own inadequate awareness of that momentous event. It does not take battle scenes to keep Ray’s tale from being “ tim eless;” that his scrap of a village could be so utterly devastated by the indifferent eddies of our “ju st” war — and those of us whose sense of history is more than Texan-deep need no bombers or visions of Churchill to remind us of his setting — that makes Ray’s vision so timely and so strong. We need no comparison with “high-pressure American film s;” nor is Ray’s message “spiritual.” Perhaps Mike Spies might benefit from seeing more of Ray’s films, and fewer of those “ fashionable” flicks which flood the Drag. Michael Meister Assistant Chairman, Art History Paying the fee To the editor: As a graduate student, I was able to late register through my department this semester. Although I was interested in paying the voluntary Daily Texan fee, I was never given the opportunity. To alleviate this problem, I suggest the fee cards be given out with the registration (or preregistration) material. In the past I have rebuked students who announced proudly, “ I just pick up The Texas when I want it. No need to pay the voluntary fee!” To save my con­ science a burden, where can I pay it now? Charlie Campbell Chemistry graduate student BS, Chemical Engineering (Editor’s note: the fee can be paid in the Bursar’s Office.) EDITOR........................................................................................Scott Tagliarino MANAGING ED IT O R .....................................................................Nick Cuccia ASSISTANT MANAGING EDITOR...................................... Sally Carpenter NEWS EDITOR.................................................................................Patti Kilday SPORTS EDITOR............................................................................... Ed English Chico Coleman ENTERTAINMENT EDITOR FEATURES EDITOR Ann Wheelock GENERAL REPORTERS...................... Ford Fessenden, Danny Holland, Ron Hutcheson, Todd Katz, Beth Mack, Dawn Turnham Assistant News E ditor Lynne Messina News A ssistants........................................ Frank Coats, Keri Guten, Bill Looney, Robert Armour, Tom Tipton, Suzanne Majors, Wendi Webb, Janet Vaughan, Robert E. Jones, John Fredlund, P e g g y Wehmeyer, Oscar Garza, Sue Sivley Daun Eierdam Editorial A ssistant Assistant Entertainm ent E d ito r............................................................John Henley Assistant Sports E ditor Bill Sullivan Sports Assistant.............................................................................................Lin Lofley Make-up E d ito r....................................................................................... Jerry Styrsky Wire E d ito r................................................................................................ Joy Howell Copy E ditors......................................Anne Garvey, Debbie Harper, Janie Frank. John Borgman, Jr., Ann McKay Artist............................................................................................................ David Rose Photographers.......................................................Paul Blankenmeister, Zach Ryall lf you By ERWIN McGEE (Editor’s note: McGee is a member of he Student Action Committee.) A supreme lack of thought permeated he letter of Ed Mclntress concerning he “power politics” motive supposedly iehind the uncommitted strategy. Ed’s ontention was that if the voter does not ote for anyone, then the v o te r’s (reference is not made. That’s true. If he voter does not vote for anyone, then ie does not vote for anyone. How does >ne battle such a tautology? Simple. The roter will vote for candidate delegates to he uncommitted slate. These candidate lelegates will represent a certain ►olitical philosophy which will differ rom the candidate delegates for say ientsen or Wallace. It is the duty of the roter to discern what that philosophy is vhich will not be difficult to do. THE CONCLUSION that Ed draws is hat if the people vote for the uncom- nitted slate then the voters will have nade no preference and the convention vill be brokered. The chances of a irokered convention are good to best. Vith 15 candidates heading for the con­ a t i o n with anywhere from 40 per cent George Wallace) to 5 per cent (Udall, Jentsen, Bayh, etc.), and all candidates Hiles away from the magical 1,500, then teals will be cut in the backroom. It will ie the Udall, Bentsen, Harris and Bayh leleg ates heading for the closed the u n co m m itted l a m b e r s , not ‘leadership.” Uncommitted delegates vill vary from radical to reactionary lepending on the candidate options in heir home states on election day. There vill be no leaders and, ipso facto, no eader speaking for the delegation in lo se d c h a m b e r s . H o w e v e r, th e (residential candidates will have their ^legations committed to them on the irst several ballots and since most of the andidates will be in a weak delegate osition to shoot for the nomination, they vill shuffle the deck of delegates com- nitted to them and deal them to utthroat opportunists. My point is, the lore uncommitted delegates there are t the convention, the more open the con- ention will be. But, Ed retorts, if the delegates are ncommitted, then why vote? Easy. The voter will know the philosophy of the un­ com m itted delegate candidate. For in­ stance, in Travis County, the uncom­ m itted strateg ists will probably try to get Em m a Lou Linn, Gonzalo B arrien­ tos, Ralph Yarborough, Lloyd Doggett, etc., to run on the slate. No one will speak for these people behind closed doors. They will speak for them selves on the convention floor. However, if one votes for the candidate of their choice, then the chances are by the second ballot that candidate is already out of the run­ ning but s till re ta in s h u n d re d s of delegates com m itted to him — a ready made deal. In effect, in voting for a fat chance candidate with so many loophole prim aries, favorite sons and weird can­ didates in the offing, one is voting to have his preference bargained away out of sight and out of sound. NOTICE, THAT up to this point, the Bentsen prim ary stringencies have not even been addressed, which is the more compelling reason for an uncom m itted strategy in this state. At present, Austin will be facing a ballot with the nam es of Fred H arris, Jim m y C arter (possibly), Lloyd Bentsen and uncommitted. C arter has sunk his entire campaign in these firs t th ree or four p rim arie s. With success in these prim aries he was going to m arch to victory on the good press. That good press has not been coming in very well, and in the next few prim aries C arter may take a dive as he encounters stiffer competition less developed sta te s , C a rte r cam paignw ise. F red H arris is operating on a shoestring budget and will possibly be able to hang on until the Texas prim ary, but may have to fold before then. Wallace and Bentsen are not worth discussing. If between Feb. 2 (the filing deadline) and the May election, C arter and H arris take a dive, then uncom m itted will be the only way to express a leftist intention a t the poll and send that voice to the national convention. in NOT ONLY THAT, but the Bentsen prim ary is a winner-take-all prim ary. It is here that the uncom m itted strategy is less appealing. If H arris is still in the race by May as he may well be, then C arter and uncom m itted are going to T h e Da il y T e x a n Stud**# N ew spaper rn* Th* U niversity e l Teees rn* Austin T e x a s a t A u stin , Opinions expressed in The D a ily T exan a r e those of the Ii tor o r th e w r ite r o f the a r tic le and a r e not n e ce ssa r ily lose of the U n iv e r s ity a d m in istra tio n or the Board of e g e n ts T he D a ily T ex a n , a stu dent n e w sp a p er at The U n iversity is p u b lish e d by T e x a s S tu d en t u b lic a lio n s D r a w e r D, U n iv e r sity S tation , Austin. Tex 1712 T h e D a ily T exan is p u b lish ed M onday, T u esday, e d n e sd a y , T h ursd ay, and F r id a y , e x c e p t holiday and tam p e r io d s Second c la s s p o s ta g e paid a t A ustin, Tex N e w s con trib u tio n s w ill be a c c e p te d by telep h on e <471* HD, at th e e d ito r ia l o ffic e (T e x a s Student P u b lication s Hiding 2 122) or a t th e n ew s la b oratory (C om m u nication Inquiries concerning d elivery and Building A 4 136) classified advertising should be made in TSP Building 3 200 (471-5244) and display advertising in TSI' Building 3 210 (471-1865). The national advertising representative of The Daily Texan is National Educational Advertising Service, Inc . 360 Lexington Ave New York. N Y 10017 The D a ily T exan s u b sc r ib e s to U n ited P r e s s In ter ­ nation al and N e w York T im e s N ew s S e r v ic e T h e T exan is a m e m b e r o f th e th e T e x a s D a ily S o u t h w e s t J o u r n a l is m C o n g r e s s , and A m e r ic a n N e w sp a p e r N e w s p a p e r A s s o c ia t io n th e A s s o c ia t e d C o lle g ia t e P r e s s , P u b lish er s A sso c ia tio n P a g e 4 F r i d a y , J a n u a r y 30, 1976 THE DAILY TEXAN Ford stumbles along right path By NICHOLAS VON HOFFMAN *1976 King Features Syndicate WASHINGTON - By all published reports it took days of the introspection before only Harvard professor in Mr. F o r d ’s C ab in et q u it. On n a tio n a l te le v isio n E rie Sevareid called John Dunlop’s resignation as secretary of labor a principled act. The professor, it seems, felt that Ford had welched on a deal to sign the “common situs” bill which would have permitted a single, small union to picket and close down a large con­ struction site at which other unions are also employed. Since then the fall-out has continued heavy. L am en­ tations over the fact that, with Jam es Schlesinger fired from the Pentagon, Ford is down to one Cabinet-level egghead. But then Dr. Kissinger is thought to have brains enough in his own, single skull for a whole university or a un­ iverse. More lam entations over this capitulation to the Reagan Right followed by assurances that the old pot walloper, George Meany, will smote Jerry a good one next November. THERE HAS been more in­ te r e s t in F o r d ’s double- crossing Dunlop than in why the President agreed to sup­ port the Harvard professor’s bill to begin with. It is a poor piece of work which reflects what have been the ascendant ideas of political economy at that overly influential institu- t i o n t h e p a s t s e v e r a l generations. In addition to the picketing provision, which is its least objectionable feature, the bill would have created a com­ mittee of IO national union l i ke r e p r e s e n t a t i v e s , a n u m b e r of m a n a g e m e n t representatives and three public members. This com­ mittee would have been em­ powered to stop any strike for 30 days. It could also have brought international unions and large regional contractor associations into small dis­ putes between one local and one employer. ALL JAZZY THI S governmental machinery was sold to Congress as a way of preventing exorbitant union demands and of administering stability and continuity in a chaotic and upsy-downsy in­ dustry. Unhappily, what the p ro fesso rial perceives as chaos is often the workings of a free market. % Construction is still an in­ dustry dominated by small, competitive businesses. To match this, the unions which contractors must deal with c h a r a c t e r i s t i c a l l y a r e their local dominated by inter­ their chapters with national headquarters having relatively little influence over negotiations as compared to highly central i zed organ­ izations like the United Steel Workers. is THIS CONSTRUCTION in­ dustry, which did $130 billion worth of business in the bad year of 1975, has been imper­ vious to every effort to bring it into the large-organization, corporational structure. The reason technology that hasn’t been able to get around the necessity of putting up a structure much the way it was done in the Middle Ages. Even with air conditioning and plastic pipe, to put up a house you still have to assemble a gang of craftsmen on a lot to put together 100,000 separate parts. With little money but lots of know-how, anybody can get into the building business,- and thousands have. Dunlop’s law would have done what neither technology nor economics has been able to do. It would have cen­ tralized the industry via the creation of a governm ent bureau. All of this to keep wage increases reasonable, whatever that figure is. BUT LABOR COSTS in the industry a re n ’t so terribly high everywhere. Much of the work force isn t unionized, and even where it is members of the construction trades have been known to cut wage rates. Intolerably high labor costs are found in towns like New York and Chicago as a result of prior government in­ tervention. The culprit is the licensing, apprenticeship and building code laws that allow the unions to limit the number of people entering a craft and make it illegal to put up so much as an outhouse without union labor. Leaving aside the truth that holding labor costs down still won t bring back the $25,000 house, who is to believe that the professor’s system will keep wages in check? A -similar arrangement hasn’t worked t he th a t way railroad industry. in WHAT DUNLOP wanted Ford to sign is a highly an­ ticompetitive measure. It im­ munizes against the antitrust laws and begs the m aterial supplier corporations, the un­ ions and the contractors to engage in all manner of collu­ sion. True, it will help the un­ ions force unorganized labor into their membership or into another line of work, but most of all it will break the power of local unions as it will enhance the power of contrac­ tor trade associations. Dunlop’s idea is an old one so, though he may be gone, his plan isn’t. Sooner or later, it will be written into the statute books along with a lot of other bad economic legislation. For the present we can thank Jerry for doing the right thing for die wrong reason. and deception which many people hoped had passed. It would do nothing to restore confidence in a system which ma ny a r e c u r r e n t l y di s ­ illusioned with. SI HAS BEEN condemned by the ACLU, The New York Times, The Wall Street Jour­ nal, The Chicago Tribune, The Miami News and The Los Angeles Times, to name a few. If you feel as I do, that this bill is a threat to civil liberties and should not become law, please write your U.S. senator and urge him to work to defeat SI and return it to com­ mittee for total redrafting. Write your U.S. represen­ tative and warn him or her of SI and its consequences. I f s important you do so. Problem Pregnancy Counseling Service Student Health Center 105 W. 26th St. (4th Floor-South) DANN0N YOGURTI CONTINENTAL, ALTA DENA and KEFIR, too! W hole W h e a t Sandwiches Fresh Daily (M on-Fri) Look f o r us in yo u r D.O .C ..4. coupon book BALANCED WAY HEALTH FOODS 9:45-5:45 504 W. 24th F R O M T H E R E G IS T R A R : A R E M IN D E R ! SPRING SCHEDULE INSERTS WERE MAILED ON: TUESDAY, JAN. 27th IM M E D IA T E L Y C O N T A C T Y O U R A C A D E M IC D E A N IF Y O U H A V E N O T R E C E IV E D Y O U R S 2. To m ake corrections to your m ajor codo or class schedule, contact your ACADEM IC DEAN. 2. To correct your address or Social Security num ber, con­ ta c t R eg istratio n S u pervisio n. R eg istra tio n S u p e r v is io n M ain Bldg. 16 4 7 1 - 5 8 6 5 i BOOT guest viewpoint And...in this corner ...Nixon's Revenge! By AMIE RODNICK (Editor’s note: Rodnick is a law student and a member of the Domocratic Socialist Organising Committee.) For those of you who think th a t W atergate days are bygone days, I hate to inform you, but the ghost of Tricky Dick Nixon is still alive and kicking in the form of a bill currently in congressional committee called Senate Bill I, or SI . Originally intended to be a revision of the archaic U.S. Criminal Code, the bill is the product of the Nixon ad­ m inistration, prepared by former Attys. Gen. Mitchell and Kliendienst and a group of lawyers from Nixon’s Justice Department.lt is being spon­ sored by such powerful “ law and order” senators as John Tower, Roman Hruska and James Eastland. (Sen. Birch Bayh was among the original l a t e r s p o n s o r s , bu t he withdrew his support.) Couched within the 753 pages of SI are measures so rep ressiv e as to make a mockery of First Amendment guarantees of free speech. These measures, if introduced individual bills, would as i *i \ \ i i s OO 6 0 OO, CHUCK, IF MAH'SE WE'LL 66T A C0Ll£Se SCHOLARSHIP... OO HOU THINK UJB’O MAKE IT IN THE l W l _ £ A 6 U e ? _ probably never be passed as law. Yet SI stands a fairly good chance of passage. It is being sponsored by some of the most influential men in the Senate and has been en­ dorsed by President Ford. The bill is so long and rambling that much of it is unreadable, less understandable. much Former U.S. Sen. Sam Ervin called it “a hideous proposal which merits the condemna­ tion of everyone who believes in due process of law and a free society ... SI is simply atrocious and would establish what is essentially a police state.’’ AMONG TH E MORE frightening provisions of SI is the Officials Secrets Act. Intended to be a curb on the press, it would prevent such exposures as the Pentagon papers incident, My Lai, CIA i l l e g a l a c t i v i t i e s a n d Watergate from ever happen­ ing again. Under Sections 1122-3 of this act, disclosures of “national defense infor­ m a t i o n ” to a n y o n e not authorized to receive it is a crime carrying a penalty of 30 years in prison. This is aimed at potential Daniel Ellsbergs and his kind. Any person or publication receiving such in­ formation must deliver it im­ mediately the “proper’ government official or face up to seven years’ imprisonment. In the section prohibiting es­ pionage it is made a crime to publish any information which to to might be ‘‘useful the enemy” (how vague can you get?). It is not necessary to in­ tend to use the information against the United States, nor must the government show that it has suffered substan­ tial harm. The penalty: life imprisonment in time of war or “national emergency” ; 30 years otherwise. These laws would cover all classified documents. The American Civil Liberties Union has es­ timated that 99.5 per cent of all classifications are un­ necessary, and disclosure of such documents would not jeopardize national security. If you think the Official Secrets Act sounds bad, you ain’t seen nothing yet. Among the other repressive measures in SI are the following: WIRETAPPING: SI ex ­ pands the police jurisdiction where wiretapping is per­ m i t t e d . L a n d l o r d s a n d telephone com panies a re directed to cooperate with government wiertappers and may be compensated for their services. Leading a riot: A “ riot” is defined as IO or more persons demonstrating in a manner so as to create “ a grave danger i m m e d i a t e l y c a u s i n g of damage to property,” and if a person moves across a state line in its course or execution, he or she would be subject to up to three years in jail and a $100,000 fine. Under this inter- pretation, a barroom brawl Crossw ord Puzzler A C R O S S I M oc c a s in 4 S te e p le 9 G re e k letter 12 Tim e gone by 13 M an s nam e 14 Sw iss river 15 Alloy of tin a nd copper 17 Sw oop down on 19 D ined 21 N ahoor s heep 22 D am ag e ?4 C onjunction ?6 Dem ons 2 9 B itter vetch 3 0 Am use 3 2 T h ree -to e d sloth 3 3 C apu chin m o nkey 3 4 P lu ral e n d ­ ing 3 5 N e g a tiv e 3 6 C h ec k s 3 9 Pronoun 4 0 Form er R u s ­ sian ruler 4 1 Spanish p lu ra l a rti­ cle 4 2 Foundation 4 3 Young boy 4 5 B eef anim al 4 7 M elte d 5 0 R each 5 3 Land m easure 5 4 M u s ic slow 5 6 M u s ic as w ritten 5 7 Affirm ative 5 8 City in G e r­ m any 5 9 Deposit D O W N 1 Soft food 2 M a tu re 3 C ringes 4 B a rra c u d a 5 L as tin g for years 6 Pronoun 7 C o rd ed cloth 8 G od of love 9 C o u n try of C e n tra l A m erica IO Algonquian Indian I 1 Anger 16 S co ttish cap 18 S in gle item s 2 0 N e g a tiv e 2 2 Vital organ AZ 2 3 Sign of zodiac 2 5 P la c e again in form er position 2 7 Evergreen trees 2 8 B rea th e loudly in sleep 3 0 O rgan of onnra rasisisH h e e U lnaI O I2IH O B H i l o w s a a tm r a a r a a a a Mi aa mnnnn Bans nnci agog atm aas.' suaga an awa wee! na sans® nan Ran M iM lB R E IS C E S S B o s n i a r a a a „ uunnMB rananaia pap bmeksjb ana aaa sacuaa asg mg) 4 6 Short ja c k e t 4 7 Attem pt 4 8 G a rd e n tool 4 9 F rench of the 51 S uffix follow er of 5 2 M an s n ic k n a m e 5 5 N ova Scotia ( a b b r ! 9 IO 11 14 $ 18 [■iv h earing 31 Things, in I a va/ 3 3 Trifle 3 7 D in ner c ou rse (pl ) 3 8 Island in A egean Sea 3 9 Bait 4 2 W ager 4 4 E ra s e (print 13 I -■ V i ’s 30 "vT5 \ v i 33 17 . . 20 v X 21 31 54 <8 24 $5 26 2> 28 HS 39 42 56 59 45 46 56 i i * v . 51 Vi- 52 41 • i 49 ■■ 44 54 58 r v* : v . ’ 19 :::::: W TTI 23 KS? 37 43 47 48 i? i s 2« 32 56 40 53 57 i 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 WE DELIVER would be considered a riot. DEATH PENALTY: SI would impose mandatory ex­ ecutions for certain crimes under certain conditions. Rape: Rape would still be a crim e against “ pro perty,” with antiquated notions of penalties and sexual conduct. Males are not protected from rape, and only actual inter­ (penetration) of a course f e m a l e is c o n s i d e r e d a criminal offense. ENTRAPMENT: D efen­ dants can be convicted for com m itting c rim es which they were induced to commit through improper pressures or tactics by police agents. The burden of proof is on defendants to show that they were not “predisposed” and were subject to unlawful en­ trapment. M arijuana: Possession of even the slightest amount of marijuana would subject the user to 30 days in jail and a $10,000 fine. Penalties would increase with each successive conviction. SEDITION: The Smith Act, enacted in 1940, used during th e N i x o n - M c C a r t h y witchhunts of the 1950s and m a d e i n o p e r a b l e by a in Supreme Court decision 1957, would be redrafted. Mere words that could be in­ terpreted as advocating the “overthrow or destruction of the government” would be sufficient to land the speaker a jail sentence. This section is DOONESBURY one of the scariest attacks on the First Amendment. Under it, words alone can be penaliz­ ed and would be all the evidence needed to jail dis­ senters. Official conduct: Public of­ ficials would be virtually im­ mune from prosecution for wrongdoing if they could show that their illegal conduct was e i t h e r t h e r e s u l t of a “ mistaken belief” that it was required or authorized based on written interpretation that was issued by the head of a governm ent agency. This would prevent participants in crimes like Watergate from e v e r be i ng s u c c e s s f u l l y prosecuted. It was also the defense used by the Nazis at Nuremburg. THESE ARE BY no means the only oppressive aspects of SI. There are more, including stricter penalties for vaguely worded definitions of such a c t s a s s a b o t a g e , p a r ­ ticipating in a demonstration, o b s c e n i t y , c o n t e m p t of Congress and obstructing a government function. A bi l l s u c h a s SI is dangerous. It is an attem pt to tackle crime by repression, t h a n by m a k i n g r a t h e r in our meaningful change system of government. It will stifle a free press which, along with an informed public, is vital to the functioning of a democracy. The passage of SI would signal a return to a dark era of governmental secrecy WHATS HIS HAMS, BLOHM? \ ANDY. ANW LIPPINCOTT/ AND THIS TIMS. HE GINNY, I CAN'T TELL YOU HOU MUCH EUN I HAD AT DINNER LAST NI6HT! THIS IS ONE TERRIFIC MAN - FROM OUT OF NOWHERE, A TERRIFIC MAN/ (F THERES ANYTHING WRONG WITH HIM, ITS THAT HES TOO GOOD TD BELIEVE! I WENT DOWN THE MAGIC CHECK UST AND IT S ALL THERE - {TIV /TY, BRILLIANCE, AWARE­ NESS.. / The Round Diamond. The traditional, classic diamond. In many minds, the shape of a diamond. The brilliant-cut solitaire presented here is flanked by two baguettes and set in platinum. You are invited to view our very complete collection of fine diamonds of every shape and size. Priced from $500. To Love Is to Give. Do Something Beautiful.® Hot Heavenly Pizza. Thick Crust New York Style. FREE DELIVERY in our Service Area. 476-7181 DOMINO'S PIZZA 404 W. 26th Jewelers i f Since 1914 Hancock Center • Highland Mall Also Houston • Dallas • Ft. Worth • Tyler • El Paso Master Charge • BankAmericard Friday, January 30, 1976 THE DAILY TEXAN Page 5 Teachers is supporting and advi s i ng UGSW on legal m atters. “ We are essentially their consultants,” June Karp of TFT said. Rush described the working graduates as a “ hidden junior college faculty within a un­ i v e r s i t y ” who gi ve u n ­ dergraduates important basic skills. The formation of a un­ ion will give working graduate students power to improve their conditions, Rush said. “We are an essential service to The University and feel we will win support from the public.” P r o p o s e d s t r u c t u r e of UGSW includes an executive com m ittee of officers and area representatives and a of s t e w a r d s ’ d e p a r t m e n t a l r e p r e s e n ­ tatives. Decisions on union policies will be made entirely by th e m e m b e r s h i p , Grasmuck said. c o u n c i l Graduate students wanting i n f o r ma t i o n about mor e UGSW may call 474-1424. — Texan Staff Photo by M a nue l Ramirez Bleach Street This student was caught in the middle of an un­ c o n v e n tio n a l stre e t-cle a n in g T h u rs d a y , w h en washing machines in the nearby Castilian over­ flowed, sending soapy water out into the street. Animal 'Dorm' Going Up The University is building a new dorm on campus, an animal dorm. The building, expected to be finished in April, 1977, will house all research animals used in University projects. “ Presently, the animals are housed in 17 different, inade­ q u a t e , poor l y d e s i g n e d facilities,” said Jerry Fineg, professor of physiology and pharmacology. The new quarters will com­ ply with the standards of the federal government and also will free areas that weren’t meant to house animals, said William L. Wilcox, physical plant director. “ The building is specially designed for this purpose. The building has a $4 million budget allocated by the Board of Regents, but competition for construction of the site was such that we were able to come in under the budget with $3.3 million, said Fineg. Construction on the building that will occupy 50,000 square f e e t a nd will h a ve a p ­ proximately 30,000 square feet of functional space, began last Sept. I, Fineg said. ENGLISH MEMORIAL BRASS-RUBBING WORKSHOP Methodist Student Center 2434 Guadalupe From the Sessions Collection $5 OO and up Instructions & Materials Furnished 10 a.m . - 8 p.m. Every Sat. & Sun. No admission charge Commencing Jan. 31st As seen in TIME Magazine Teaching Assistants Form Workers Union By LIZ CAMPBELL Graduate students at The University have formed the Union of Graduate Student Workers (UGSW), designed to better working conditions for graduate students. Members of the UGSW are a g e n e r a l o r g a n i z i n g membership drive. The new union emerged from the Teaching Assistant G raduate Student Caucus (TAGSC), an ad hoc group organized to protest the ap­ pointment of Lorene Rogers as University president last fall. M E MB E R S of TAGSC proposed the formation of a union and wrote a temporary constitution in December. A general assembly to organize the union will be held Feb. 16. One issue UGSW will raise is the need for a reasonable w o r k l o a d . T e a c h i n g assistants work beyond the 20 hours they are assigned to work, Mike Rush, member of the temporary executive com­ m ittee for UGSW, said. Other issues the UGSW will c o n s i d e r t h e obligatory teacher retirem ent system and class sizes. i n c l u d e T H E R E T I R E M E N T system takes 5 to 6 per cent of each month’s salary. “ We’ve never heard of a TA who’s retiring,” Sherri Grasmuck, member of the temporary ex­ ecutive committee, said. Class size has “gotten out of hand,” Grasmuck said. Some discussion groups have 50 students which is “not really a discussion group,” she added. • Reducing class sizes is not the i n t e r e s t of only in teaching assistants but also woul d be e d u c a t i o n a l l y beneficial to undergraduate students, she explained. THE ROLE of the TAS in planning the curriculum for the classes they teach also will be raised. TAS need a “more meaningful voice in what they teach,” Rush said. The Texas Federation of Subcommittee Hears Experts on Parks By ROBERT E. JONES Texan Staff Writer The House subcommittee on parks, at t empt i ng to for­ mulate legislation concerning urban parks, heard testimony from planning experts and from federal, state and local officials Thursday. Chairman Ron Bird said the hearing was intended to in­ dicate directions for future in es­ long-term planning” tablishing parks near urban areas. Testimony described problems of establishing and maintaining numerous types of parks. Among testifying those were officials from river authorities, who outlined their t he p a r k p r o j e c t s a n d problems confronting them, p a r t i c u l a r l y funding. Arthur Anderson of the Lower Colorado Ri ver Authority (LCRA) cited problem s in access to LCRA parks and in maintaining parks. in HE SAID, “ You’re looking a t an iceberg when you build a park. The m aintenance is what’s under the water. You to scrap e might be able together enough nickels to the park, but to get build enough to maintain it is the problem.” Several methods are used to fund parks: user fees, park land leases or revenue bond sales. Ty P ro b asco, from the Al a mo Ar e a Counc i l of G overnm ents, sugested a nominal tax be placed on recreation and sports equip­ ment and the funds be devoted to developing the facilities where that equipment would be used. COL. CHARLES Tr a cy d escribed Army Corps of Engineers activity involving recreation facilities. Since 1962 recreation has been equal with all other pur­ poses of the Corps,” whose projects have extended into the Colorado, Guadalupe and Trinity River basins, as well as numerous other places, he said. Under present law, Corps recreation projects are fund­ ed by cooperation of the federal government and local sponsors, who advance 50 per cent of the capital to build the projects and IOO per cent to maintain them. In turn, the sponsor collects all revenue from the facility. TRACY ALSO mentioned zoning practices as perhaps being useful to the subcom­ mittee. Thursday’s testimony will be followed by what Bird calls a “ round-table discussion” on Friday. All persons testifying Thursday, as well as guests, may bring suggestions freely. The subcommittee convenes at IO a.m. SKI RUIDOSO • 3 Days of Skiing • Round-Trip Transportation • Lift Tickets all for only $ 1 5 9 per person Sleeper Buses leave Austin 9 p.m. each Thursday and return 5 a.m. on Monday. Trips now thru March 25. Contact your Travel Agent at J. Rich Travel Wholesale Travel & Tours H APPY HOUR 6-9 Lone S tar .......... $1.25pitcher Schlitz......................... $ 1.50pitcher M ichelob................... $1.75 pitcher Watney’s and Lowenbrau.................. $2.50pitch er Bowl of Chili B eans................... 55c F U L L FOOD SE R V IC E 11am - 2am TEXAS LADY 411 W. 24th 477-0172 Harris Supporters Dislike Uncommitted Delegates By BILL OTT Texan Staff Writer Supporters of presidential candidate Fred H arris ex­ pressed th e ir disapproval Thursday of a plan to elect ‘‘u n c o m m i t t e d ” l iberal , delegates from Texas to the Democratic national conven­ tion. Anne C. McAfee, state coor­ dinator for the Fred Harris for president campaign in Texas, said running the n- jm m itted delegates will split [he l i b e r a l T e x a s v o t e a tw e e n the uncommitted .delegates and the two liberal c a n d i d a t e s , H a r r i s a nd Sargent Shriver. A g r o u p of l i b e r a l Democrats will meet Satur­ day to discuss voting for un­ committed delegates in the May I Texas primary, instead of for any one presidental can­ didate. PROPONENTS of uncom­ mitted delegates say only by a coalition of votes in Texas can liberals win a substantial n u m b e r of T e x a s ' 31 senatorial districts and thus send liberal delegates to the Democratic national conven­ tion. But Bob Barton, Hays Coun­ ty Democratic chairman for San Marcos and rural coor­ dinator for the Harris cam­ paign, said “we have already qualified to get Fred Harris delegates on the ballot in five senatorial districts, and we are very close to qualifying in another five districts.” Also, Texas voters “just don’t get very excited about going out to the polls to vote for uncommitted delegates,” McAfee said. HARRIS and Shriver will not be on the same ballot in any Texas district. Last December Harris and Shriver agreed not to run against each other in Texas, McAfee said. According the agree­ to ment, Shriver got San Antonio and South Texas, including Corpus Christi. Harris would run unopposed by a liberal candidate in Houston, Dallas, Galveston, A u s t i n , B e a u m o n t - P o r t Arthur and one district in Fort Worth, McAfee said. THE BASIC reason for the agreement was the so-called Bentsen bill which favors presidential candidate Lloyd Bentsen, McAfee said. Running Harris and Shriver against each other would split up the liberal vote, while the agreement allows campaign workers in each district of Texas to concentrate on one liberal candidate, McAfee said. It “ seem s n a tu ra l” that Shriver would get South Tex­ as, because of his association with the Kennedy family, and w i t h ‘ ‘Vi v a t h e Kennedy” movement having been so popular there, McAfee said. “ As far as I know,” McAfee said, Texas is the only state where H arris and Shriver have made such an agree­ ment. TO P L A C E A T E X A N C L A S S I F I E D C A L L 471-5244 £|IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII>IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIItllUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII«IIIIIIIUIIIIIHIIIIIfllllllllllllllllllllHIIIH Everybody who likes & enjoys fine Pizzas & Sandwiches goes to M O R T Y' S P I Z Z A KING No. 3 Serving over 53,BOO v a r i e t i e s o f pitta'* 8816 Research Blvd. We don't say we make the finest pizza in Austin. We just prove it. Ask anyone who's eaten our pizza. They're our best advertise- meat. Salads, Sandwiches, Spaghetti, plus strictly Kosher-deli Sandwiches “Come eat with us” I ^ lllllllllllllllllllllin illllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllN lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllltlllllllllllllllllllllllU IH IU M Iti OPEN FRI. & SAT. till 1:00 451-4470 \S OU* mmO L D y A S H X O J M E X > HAMBURGERS Martin Luther King, Jr. Blvd. at Guadalupe r I Buy One - Get One FREE * MENU * THE SINGLE .............$ .79 a quarter p o u n d of the freshest beef THE DOUBLE .......... 1.39 twice the g oodn ess, a full half p o u n d THE TRIPLE.............. 1.B9 the three quarter p o u n d meal o n a bun C H E E S E E X T R A FRENCH FRIES...............39 crisp, fresh a n d g olden g o o d WENDY’S CHILI.............69 thick with quality, lo a d ed with meat FROSTY.............................. 39 the dessert treat that s s p o o n in ’ thick DRINKS 20 Sm all Soft D r in k s 30 Large Soft D r in k s .25 T e a ..................................... M ilk ................................... .25 H ot C h o c o la te .25 C o ffe e .............................. .is I p i c k " U P -* H E R E r P resent this coupon when ordering and buy one ham burger, fren ch fry , and drin k at regular p ric e, and receive an order o f equal value free. Expires February 8, 1976 Page 6 Friday, January 30, 1976 T H E DAILY T E X A N t Flowers Explores Poetry In Terms of Motivations, phrase) comes through only it the poem is a structured thing, she said. Flowers encouraged hones- ty in poetry, saying dishonesty is synonomous to her with bad poetry. She cited as an exam­ ple poems which start, “thou art as lovely as ...” Dishonesty is a form of protection for many poets, a response to the fear of having their true feelings known, she said. Flowers said poets should get together in small groups and read their poetry. “ Read it aloud, not particularly at poetry readings, but wRh small groups of friends.” COOL IT THIS SEMESTER! win the fitness battle at the Northcross Ice Skating Center Classes starting this week. By FRANK COATS Texan Staff Writer The reason s p oetry is written and the motivations that cause writers to use this particular means of expres­ sion over prose were the first top ics of discussion of a poetry workshop seminar put on by the Fine Arts Com­ m ittee Thursday. Discovering early that those present at the seminar had written poetry before, Dr. B e t t y Sue F l o w e r s had everyone complete the phrase “ I write poetry because ...” and pass the answers around the room. “The word that came up most often here is necessity,” F l o w e r s , an a s s i s t a n t professor of English, said. She then proceeded to tie this in with her general thesis that poems should have authentici­ ty Poem s are written from three points of view, she said, that of the poet, for the image of being a poet; that of the poem, for the art and craft of w riting; and that of the reader. S o m e t i m e s one w r i t e s poetry because one wants to be known as a poet. This protects “what is inside from the pressures of the outside world, he said. “ Poetry in words that is an actual object, like a craft,” she said. When the emphasis is on the craft, the point of view is from the poem’s. is one thing Poetry also is written as a dialogue, she said. “Dialogues are written to yourself or another person, she said, adding that most beginning poets do their first writing when they are in love. “ This can becom e con­ taminated,” she said. There are three steps to this type of writing. First of all, there is a “vague discomfort, som etim es even total suf­ fering,” she said. Sometimes the poems are written quickly. The writer should come back later as a critic and be objective about the poem, she said. “This is very important.” Many will fight the idea of structure in poetry, believing that any type of structure limits creativity. Flow ers talked of T.S. Elliot’s view that in working with structure, unconscious impulses arrive. She called i m p u l s e s the “ un­ th ese conscious censor.” “Structure in itself allows discovery, ” she said. “Art is a matter of correcting percep­ tions, looking out and looking back.” “The real poetry” (Elliot’s Student Held Hostage A man who fired a .38 caliber pistol and held a student hostage at the Castalian Thursday night was taken into custody. Sources said the man was intoxicated. Several o t h e r s t u d e n t s w e r e threatened, but no one was j hurt. The man was arrested, \ and th e h o s t a g e and j several witnesses were all j taken to Austin police | headquarters for question- j ing. m m M . F R O M THE R E G I S T R A R A R E M I N D E R ! SPRING SCHEDULE INSERTS WERE MAILED OH: TUESDAY, JAN. 27th C O N T A C T Y O U R A C A D E M I C D E A N I M M E D I A T E L Y IF Y O U H A V E N O T R E C E I V E D Y O U R S 2 To m a k e c o r r e c t io n * to y o u r m a j o r c o d e or c i a * * » c h e d u l e , c o n t a c t y o u r A C A D E M I C D E A N . 2 To corre ct y o u r a d d r e * * or Soc ia l S e c u r it y n u m b e r , c o n ­ t a c t R e g u l a t i o n S u p e r v i s i o n . R e g i s t r a t i o n S u p e r v i s i o n M a i n B l d ? . 1 6 4 7 1 - 5 8 6 5 ICE SKATING — it’s the only w in ter gam e in town. P erfect for M atches and M ixers! CALL 451-5103 Applications now being taken for the Northcross Ice Queen Contest — Texan Staff Photo by Paul Blankenmeistor Betty Sue Flowers KENWOOD $ KENWOOD KR-6400 A M / F M - S T E R E O R E C E I V E R 45 Watts Par Channel, Minimum RMS at 8 ohms, 20-20k Hz with no more than 0.3% Total Harmonic Distortion $ KENWOOD KR-5400 A M / F M - S T E R E O R E C E I V E R 35 Watts Per Channel, Minimum RMS at 8 ohms, 20-20k Hz with no more than 0.5% Total Harmonic Distortion SALE *299 16 Watts Per Channel, Minimum RMS at 8 ohms, 20 20k Hz with no more than 1.0% Total Harmonic Distortion Is Bigger Better? — UPI Tolophoto It look* Ilk# tho orang#* ar# gotting roady to tako ovor tho world. That thing crawling up tho arm of Homy Martial of Harward, Cal., is an oight-lnch long orang# ho grow on his 30-yoar old troa. Bonds Up for Election Wilding Voters Face $63 Million Issue Water District 17 may give Wilding the water and sewer facilities it needs if voters ap- p r o v e $63.5 m illio n in “designated area” tax bonds Saturday in a special election. Wilding, a proposed 3,500- a cr e com m unity on Lake Travis and Lake Austin, is a Ranch Work For Writer Available Applications from writers are being accepted by the Dobie Paisano Project for a fellowship to live and work at the ranch of the late J. Frank Dobie Deadline is March 23. in the fellowship should write Dr. Audrey Slate, coordinator of the Dobie Paisano Project, Main Building 101. interested Writers “The idea is to give a person an opportunity to be complete­ ly isolated,” Slate said. Either a one-year or two six-month awards will be made for 1976-77, beginning Aug I, 1976. Each six-month award carries a stipend of $3,- 000. project of Southern Living and Leisure (SLD to accomodate 30,000 people in 15 to 20 years. It was denied water and sewer facilities by the City Council May 9, 1974, but annexed into Water District 17 30 days later. Taxes from the election will be levied on property owners of Wilding, not property owners throughout the dis­ trict, Warren Smith, SLL developer, said. There are no residents at Wilding but the developers, E ast Ranch L im ited and D i v e r s i f i e d M o r t g a g e Investors, will pay the taxes, Smith said. As part of the agreement between the water district and SLL, developers of the project (SLL) will pay off the in water district’s $870,000 outstanding bonded debts. Smith said if the bond elec­ t h e t i o n w a s d e f e a t e d d evelop ers would ask for deannexation from the water district and try to attain the facilities elsewhere. “ We have worked since June of 1974 for this election, but I am not too optimistic about the outcome. Scare tac­ tics are being employed by the opposition and there are already anti-Wilding signs on Highway 620,” Smith said. Approximately 600 voters live in the district, and a low voter turnout is expected, he said. Though opponents scream about uncontrolled growth, 30,000 people cannot move into Wilding in less than 15 to 20 years, Smith said. ANDERSON & COMPANY COFFEE TEA • SPICES TWO JEFFERSON SQUARE 453-1533 1601 West 38th T h e American Gem Society of the United States and Canada takes pleasure in announcing the appointment for 1976 of CLYDE W. NEAL, JR., m gr. CHARLES LEUTWYLER JEWELERS as REGISTERED JEWELER AMERICAN GEM SOCIETY The R EG ISTER ED JE W EL ER has met the ethical and gemologi­ cal standards established by his fellow jewelers in the American Gem Society. An AGS title is by annual appointm ent and must be rewon by yearly examination. T h e American Gem Society of the United States and Canada takes pleasure in announcing the reappointment for 1976 of CHARLES LEUTWYLER JEWELERS AND REGISTERED JEWELERS: ERNA LEUTWYLER CHARLES LEUTWYLER MEMBER AMERICAN GEM SOCIETY „ coveled appointm ent is awarded to com paratively f e w jew elers in America. i i ., only after strict exam ination o f their gem ological proficiency and u n q u e s t i o n a b l e business ethics and practice, ll must be rew on each year. Koenig Lane at Guadalupe in Commerce Park rn a ai F riday, Jan u a ry 30, 1976 THE DAILY TEXAN Page 7 Discount Cross Country Skiing- A Step Beyond Hiking By PEGGY WEHMEYER Texan Staff Writer It wasn’t until about two years ago that Americans caught on to the excite­ ment and thrill of a long­ time European sport, cross country skiing. George Splawn and Will Brown from Whole Earth Provi­ sion Co. described this un­ ique sport in a sandwich seminar Thursday. Cross country skiing originated in Scandinavia and has been a favorite sport of Europeans for years. “Vermont and other E a s te rn r e s o r t a re a s caught on first and now ifs all over the country,” Splawn said . “The best way to learn how to cross-country ski is to just get out and do it, ” Splawn said. “ There are lots of books that can help you to prepare, but there’s nothing like the experience of doing it yourself. “THE WHOLE POINT of cross-country skiing is that you have to go up in­ stead of down. Ifs not a like downhill free ride skiing,” Splawn said. The skis are thinner, longer and arched in the middle for spring and for “flowing travel.” Body rhythm is impor­ tant, he said, and a skier’s equipment should feel just like any other part of the body. “The actual difference between an expert and a novice is not technique, but the way he moves.” Brown said. An expert doesn’t waste energy and thus can trav e l fa s te r and get farther. One of the most impor­ tant aspects of cross­ country skiing the process of “waxing your skis,” Brown said. “Wax­ ing is in fact the key to good skiing.” is Waxing helps a skier glide forward when going uphill and stick when sliding backwards. Poles and boots also differ from those used in downhill skiing. Poles are lighter, longer and made of cane. Boots look almost like leather tennis shoes and allow much m ore freedom of movement in the foot and ankle. Weather conditions can be hazardous unless the skier plans ahead and is aware of “what his body will do in cold weather,” Splawn said. He advised taking an experienced per­ son along on the first trip. OTHER PRECAUTIONS for cold weather are to drink plenty of liquids and to wear wool and down clothing which stays warm even when wet. Liquids are a must because of the amount of water loss while hiking, Splawn explained. The s k ie r ’s c lo th e s should fit loosely so that free movement is allowed and dead a ir can be trapped for warmth. “Junk food is one of the handiest things to take along with you on your t r i p , ” S p l a w n s a i d . P eanuts, granola and raisins provide instant energy. “Keep M&M’s by your head at night and when you wake up cold, eat t h e m , ” Splawn said. Crosscountry skiiers con­ sume 50 per cent more food than they would under nor- m a l c i r c u m s t a n c e s b e c a u s e an e x t r e m e amount of energy and body heat are lost, he said. Tents are usually used w hen c a m p i n g o u t, although many prefer to travel light and simply sleep in down bags in the snow. Some build caves in snow d r i f t s t r a p warmth. to Cross country skiing is a much less expensive sport than down-hill skiing. Skis, boots, poles and bindings can be bought for as little as $110. And unlike downhill skiing, this equipment can be used year after year, for it never goes out of style. “ IF YOU BACKPACK, you have most of the stuff needed for the t r i p , ” Brown said. A compass and a topography map are probably the skiier’s best friends. Food, utensils, stove, extra clothing and f i r s t ai d a r e o t h e r necessary items to carry along. The average weight of a pack for a week-long trip is 25 pounds. Splawn said the most im­ portant asset to the cross­ country skiier is his com­ mon sense. “Without it, you’d better forget your hike!” Italian General Paid By U.S. Ambassador a. • - .t n a m a tn M a r t in o r M ippli. wh _ 4a1«i Im n of the CIA in Italy is told in a name to Martin or Miceli, who report by the House Select is described only as “ very Committee on Intelligence, high figure of the defense m- The report does not refer by formation service. •1976 N .Y . T im es News Service ROME — Over the strong ibjections of the Central ntelligence Agency in 1972, Graham A. Martin, then the J.S. ambassador to Italy, won ipproval to pay $800,000 to a irominent rightest general vho headed Italy’s military ntelligence agency. The Italian, who received he money without conditions is to its use is Gen. Vito diceli, who until 1974 was lead of the Defense Informa- ion Service. Miceli is now facing trial on barges of involvement in dots in 1970 to overflow the talian government. The ;eneral’s alleged involvement n the plots became publicly uiown in 1974, when he was :harged. He has denied the charges, and Wednesday he railed for an early trial so that ie could prove his loyalty. The American payments to Miceli stopped after Martin was replaced in 1973 by the present ambassador, John A. Volpe. Tne story of the conflict between Martin and the chief HRST BAPTIST CHURCH Downtown 9th at Trinity invites you to hoar THE A.D. PLAYERS Sunday Morning they will present t i THE MESSAGE" A Four-Minute Presentation at the 11:00 Service Sunday Evening they will present "PARAGRAPH" A Fourty-Five Minute Presentation at 6:00 p.m. FELLOWSHIP HALL The secret is DynametricsJ —The Catalyst. It’s not just a speed read­ ing course. It’s not just a memory course. It’s not just a meditation course. DMJ is all of these and more! Through Dynametrics you can ac­ tually accelerate your achieve­ ment in all areas by learning how to reduce stress, concentrate thought and activity on specific objectives, and read faster while remembering more. H o w c a n you do a ll t h a t in on e 35 h o u r s e s s io n ? I t o n ly ta k e s 40 m in u te s to fin d /A o u t . 0 E x p lo r e D M A A A . Page 8 Friday/ January 30, 1976 THE DAILY TEXAN Used Car Sale Rules Proposed By NICHOLAS HOELSCHER Texan Staff Writer G e t t i n g s t u c k w it h a “lemon” from the local used car lot may become less of a threat if the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) adopts a to protect proposed rule p u r c h a s e r s u s e d of automobiles and trucks. State Sen. Lloyd Doggett, in support of proposals before the FTC for consideration, has suggested that interested in­ dividuals write the FTC con­ cerning the regulations. “We have received a con­ tinued flow of consumer com­ plaints about automobiles and automobile servicing, and Texas law is inadequate to handle these problems,” he said. “WE’RE SEIZING on the opportunity to encourage the FTC to have citizen input con­ sidered,” said Mills Boon, le g is la t iv e a s s i s t a n t to Doggett. Proposals under considera­ tion by the FTC would require disclosures to purchasers of a used c a r r e g a r d i n g the vehicle’s history, including major accidents, extended use for law enforcement or as a taxi or other activity that might diminish its value. As presently drafted, the regulations would require that a sticker be placed (rn the rear window of a car or truck being sold. The required sticker would be an at te m p t at protection for buyers from misrepresentation by dealers. It would contain the name of any firm or government agen­ cy which may have operated the vehicle, thus ensuring a buyer is aware if the vehicle has been used for commercial or fleet purposes. THE STICKER, moreover, would list all repair work done by the dealer on any damaged or defective part or condition, as well as any warranty or service contract. Any dealer disclaim ing responsibility for future repairs would be required to state in plain language that the vehicle was being sold “as is” with the buyer having all for any r e s p o n s i b i l i t y necessary repairs. s a i d While the provisions as presently drafted would in­ transactions between clude automobile dealerships, the regulations would not apply to sales between private in­ dividuals. Boon t h e FTC proposals are similar to the defeated “lemon” bill (SB 262) with one substantial d i f f e r e n c e : u n d e r th e defeated bill, if a customer p u r c h a s e d a p i e c e of machinery inherently defec­ tive beyond repair, it could be returned for replacement by an article free of defect. BOON ADDED t h a t Doggett plans to reintroduce in the next Legislature similar the bills giving consumers Public Budget Hearing Today in A final chance for public participation the 1976 Travis County budget process will be given at 2 p.m. Friday in a public hearing in Room 204 of the Courthouse Annex, lith and San Antonio Streets. County residents or heads of county depar tm ent s can propose last-minute changes in the budget to county com­ missioners at the hearing, but P recinct 4 Commissioner Richard Moya said he expects few surprises or major changes at the meeting. Moya said more public input had gone into the proposed budget than in past years and commissioners had been “more aware” of items going into the budget, making any last-minute surprises doubt­ ful. right to return defective products and to invalidate fine print found on the back of some form contracts which attempt to Uke away all the rights a salesperson has pledged. “One significant weakness of Texas law currently is that the attorney general, criminal district attorney and county attorney are the only persons who can sue for antitrust violation under state law,” said Boon. “ There is no statutory provision for private enforcement through treble damage lawsuits such as those allowed by the Clayton Act and statutes of states neighboring Texas.” If the FTC adopts proposed regulations, however, much can be accomplished in resolving consumer problems, he said. Complexities such as dif­ ficulty involved in the seller having full knowledge of a vehicle’s history and the fact that some dealers might fail to repair hidden damage rather than have to disclose it are problems remaining to be considered during the FTC hearings. USE T E X A N CLASSI F I E D S S C H L O IZ S K Y 'S 116 W. 5th St. B y d a y a b u s t l i n g , r e a s o n a b l y businesslike sandwich shop. By n ig h t... come and see. Now opon 'til IO p.m. Pitcher of Schlitz for a buck with purchase of a sandwich after 5:00 Only at 5th St. location 474-6808 THE HOPPE SHOPPE 2120 E. Riverside Dr. Nostalgia 50's & 60's Disco Mon. St Wed. H ap p y Hour 6-10 2 drinks for tho price of I ■ like w cedi M fre u It's simple, give Ann Clark ■ ■ ■ ■ you about her new classes In Wrench French Party Foods and just ■ B asics. Hurry, classes begin February f § § LA HI ;VjV w I NCWI c o ils HTU T T * W L Wm FROM THE PEOPl£ HI ■ W H O BROUGHT T O U B FANTASTIC I AT THE OLD SPAGHETTI WAREHOUSE A classic Italian recipe, now deliciously yours from us! A combination starring tender veal, breaded with our spices, topped with aromatic cheeses; spaghetU and red sauce. Try it! 117 W. 4th St. at Colorado 476-4059 R e a d F a s t e r R e m e m b e r B e t t e r u n d e r P r e s s u r e . •Be M o r e • F e e t B e t t e r . ■Have M o r e T i m e f o r Fun T h i n g s . E Money-back guarantee DM3 costs $35.00 for the 31/2 hour course. During the course, you have an opportunity to pick up your money and leave, privately. And at the end of the course, if you haven’t attained the results we promised, we’ll in s is tongiving your money back. THE NEWEST SPRING HAIRCUTS AND HAIRSTYLES FROM EUROPE By SHAWN NAIL BUILDING AND REPAIR By Rene European Coiffures 12th at Nueces — 477-4419 SLM 1.1^ S ,ii*-..' I* » ( A R T H 11 t h . ** g i t t . r . d n a d . m i k o * K o l * . $ , » ! • « • « I i * Earth Shoe Style 150 Sand suede Sale Price $25.50 Style 110. Bark suede only. Sale Price $24.90 Style 180. Russet smooth strap only. Sale Price $17.50 I F R E E ! , E X P L O R E D M '* T O D A Y A T 1:20 o r 3 :2 0 . 18 0 1 L av aca - 477- You have nothing to lose. And everything to gain, lf after you’ve listened to what DM3 can do for you, you decide it’s all a lot of bunk, we’ll thank you for coming and send you on your way without any further sales job. After all, you’ll probably need the afternoon to study! To help you take your first step in the shoe that revcF lutionized walking, we’re having a sale. From January 13th to January 31st. Choose from a selected group of Earth brand shoe styles and sizes for men and women. Save from $7.50 to $14.00. EARTH SHOE STORE IBIO LAVACA OPEN THURSDAYS UNTIL • PM 474-1 895 O TH ER SELECTED STYLES, COLORS, M A T E R IA L S A N D SIZES ALSO ON SALE! Floor Insurance Available For Travis Residents Travis County residents can buy federally subsidized flood insurance, county engineer Dave Treble, said Thursday. The Federal Insurance Ad­ ministration recently notified the county that its flood in­ surance application has been accepted and that structures in unincorporated areas of the county may be insured, Treble said. An em ergency insurance program will be in effect until a rate study can be com­ pleted, probably in 18 to 24 months, Treble estimated. the During interim , the maximum coverage will be $35,000 fo r sin g le -fa m ily homes and $100,000 for multi­ ple-family and nonresidential buildings, he said. Contents of residential properties may be insured up to $10,000, and contents of non­ residential properties may be insured up to $100,000, Treble said. Flood insurance policies may be purchased from any licensed property insurance agent or broker, he said. Coverage will be available upon application during the 30 days following Jan. 29, Treble said. A fter th a t perio d , coverage begins 15 days after application, he added. The Travis County Com­ m issioners Court adopted flood plain m an a g e m e n t regulations Dec. 15 to qualify for the national flood in­ surance. Treble said the county would begin the flood plain management program about April 5. Under the program, most types of construction in unincorporated areas of the county will require an applica­ tion to the county to deter­ mine if there is a flood hazard, Treble said. County regulations will con­ trol construction only in flood hazard areas, Treble said. Guidelines and procedures for im plem entation of the r e g u l a t i o n s a r e b e i n g prepared and will be publish­ ed about March 8, he added. A nd They Paved Paradise... Alteration of the sign behind Patterson Laboratories at 24th and Speedway Streets il­ lustrates dissatisfaction with the endless University construction.__________________ — Texan Staff Photo by M an u el Ramirez Objections to Study on Carrillo Filed By DAN HOLLAND Texan Staff Writer Defense and prosecution objections were filed Wednes­ t h e J u d i c i a l day w i t h Qualifications Commission (JQC) on evidence presented and conclusions reached in a preliminary study on the ac­ tions of Judge O.P. Carrillo, Asst. Atty. Gen. John Odam said. Die Masters Report, a con­ fidential study conducted last Nov. 23 to Dec. 30, in Corpus C hristi, by 126th D istrict Court Judge Jam es Meyers, the evidence reviewed all c o n c e r n i n g p r e s e n t e d C a r r i l l o ’s a l l e g e d wrongdoings. The factual con­ clusions reached by Meyers served to assist the JQC in determ ining the germ ane facts the Carrillo case, Odam said. This orocedure is in mandatory because the per­ son in question (Carrillo) was a district judge. Carrillo was convicted F ri­ day by a Senate High Court of Impeachment of conspiring to rent non-existent equipment to Duval County and for con­ spiring to rent equipment to the county which was never used. The Senate decision removed the 229th District Court judge from office and disqualified him from holding future public office. The M asters Report has been viewed only by JQC members and prosecuting and defense attorneys. Wednesday marked the deadline for filing any objections. I can’t say what the objec­ tions specifically were about, for it would violate the con- f i d e n t i a l i t y t h e proceedings, Odam said. of USE TEXAN CLASSIFIEDS O H U yyn » n '?'?n M Enjoy a Relaxing Evening H Sunday, February 1st ll ■ H IO p.m . "The World of Jewish Music art international program sponsored by KUT-FM .' ? > n ^C aryos fa fffocfe He said the objections would concern the factual con- cusions reached by Meyers — sp e c ific a lly w h e th e r the evidence presented supported the findings. He added that the objections also may deal with evidence which was not used to support Meyers’ fin­ dings but which should have been considered in the eyes of the prosecution or defense counsel Arthur Mitchell. Mitchell could not be reach­ ed for comment. JQC members will convene in no less than IO days to es­ tablish procedure for discuss­ ing the objections. The com­ mission may consider the ob­ jections in light of the original l i s t e n evidence or may schedule a h e a r i n g a n d to a r g u m e n t s p re s e n te d by p ro se c u tio n and d e fe n se counsels. Odam would not speculate which procedure would be used. After consideration of all th e o b j e c t i o n s a nd and evidence, the commission has th ree a lte rn a tiv e actions, Odam said. The JQC may reprimand Carrillo privately through a letter stating the commission found his conduct as 229th District Court judge improper o r Ca rri l l o m a y a lso be reprimanded publicly for his improper actions through a formal announcem ent. In eith e r case, punishm ents wo ul d no t w a r r a n t his removal as judge. Harsher action would in­ clude a recommendation from the JQC to the Texas Supreme Court to remove the judge from his office. However, the Senate has to rem ove already voted Carrillo from office, and that judgement is binding, Odam said. “The two proceedings are e n t i re l y s e p a r a t e , ” Max Flusche, assistant attorney general, said. “ The outcome of one proceeding has no effect on the other.” Flusche said the Masters Report was strictly a fact­ finding procedure while the impeachment trial passed judgement on Carrillo’s guilt or innocence in taking money from Duval County. The final conclusion of the JQC would not be a likely basis for an impeachm ent appeal, Flusche said. “There is no appeal to an trial,” Odam impeachment said. Carrillo may file a federal suit that would present a con­ stitu tio n al question about wh e t he r his r i g h t s we re violated in the impeachment procdure, but such action would not be considered an appeal of the impeachment verdict, Odam said MEXICO ACAPULCO or COZUMEL March 13-18 March 13-19 $235 $209 & $259 SMbmfc a M erit Tour 2 0 2 W. 7TH ST. 4 7 6 -4 8 6 6 3 0 -5 0 % OFF CLEARANCE SALE' 'Exceptional values in men and w o­ men’s fine apparel, especially se­ lected to com plem ent the student’s way of life. F i r e f 901 West 24th str'eet Qpen 10_6 M-Sat. I l l ^ t On your w ay to and /in su la r "om Radio /haekl REALISTIC:.. FOR THE MUSIC-MINDED A N D GET A FA M O U S REALISTIC HOME STEREO M U S IC SYSTEM Realistic S TA -90 A M -F M Stereo R eceiver w ith Two Tape M o n ito rs ! Two Optim us-JB W alnut Veneer Floor I S h e lf S peaker Systems Realistic LA B -100 M a n u a l Turntable w ith Base a n d $ 3 9 .9 5 Realistic I A D C E lliptical Cartridge t o d r e s s . . . The n a t u r a l way H i g h l i g h t e d w i t h b u t t e r f l i e s , f l o w e r s and lemmon a p p l i q u e s . N a t u r a l p o l y e s t e r and c o t t o n w i t h or ange wrap b e l t . . . s i z e d 6 - 1 4 . . . a t j u s t 5 6 . 0 0 . 2414 Guadalupe 1102 Highland Mall 234 Hancock Cantar g A TANDY CORPORATION COMPANY PRICES MAY VARY AT INDIVIDUAL STORES Party Recovers Right to Primary in The Raza Unida party has regained the right to p ar­ t i c i p a t e sta t e -fu nd ed primaries, county chairman Paul Velez announced in a pre ss c o nfe r e n c e on the University campus Thursdav. A Justice Department rul­ ing has revoked a 1973 state law which required a party to obtain 20 per cent of the vote in gubernatorial elections to quali fy for sta t e -fun ded primaries, Velez said. The Justice D epartm ent action reactivated the original law which stated a party need only 2 per cent of the gubernatorial votes. Since Raza Unida candidate Ramsey Muniz received 6 per cent of the total vote in 1972, the party is eligible. Stating that the 1973 law was directed against Raza Unida party, Velez said, “Texas again has been proven to be notorious for blocking political p ar­ ... of any party ticipation other than the Democratic or R e p u b l i c a n . ” A r m a n d o Guiterrez, University govern­ ment professor, added that Democrats in the Legislature were scared after the 1972 election, when Muniz’ percen­ tage of the vote nearly threw the election to Republican Hank Grover. Although primary options will be open for 1976, the two men don’t foresee much Raza campaigning during the year, nor does the party plan to en­ dorse any m ajor party can­ didates. Velez and Gutierrez expect two years of local and statewide building in the organization, with a m ajor ef­ fort from the party coming in 1978. Evidence of this building process is that no local can­ didates have filed with Velez fo r 1976, and he has no kn owl e dge of a n y s t a t e hopefuls. N O W O PEN 10am-2am Mr. P eeper’s Bookstore "your full service newsstand" 2 1 3 E. 6th St. Books • Magazines • Paperbacks Also a C om plete A d u lt Section 25* Peep Show s ADVERTISEMENT "WHY DO THE HEATHEN RAGE?" Psalm 2 and Acts 4:25 “ The Bible is the Word of God.” Mid John Wesley. “ I beg leave to propose a short, clear and strong argument to prove divine inspiration of the H oly Scriptures. The Bible must be the in­ vention of good men or angels, bad men or devils, or of God. 1. It could not be the invention of good men or angels, for they neither would nor could make a book and tell lies ail the time they were writing it, saying “ Thus saith the Lord,’ when it was their own invention. 2. It could not be the invention o f bad men or devils, for they could not make a book which commends all duty, forbids all sins, and con­ demns their own souls to “ hell” for all “ eternity!” 3. Therefore, draw the conclusion that the Bible must be given by divine inspiration!” That is mighty strong reasoning and logic. Over 1700 times in the Old Testament appear the words “ Thus saith the Lord, or similar phrases that state or indicate God H im self is speaking; and in the New Testament there are 850, or more, quotations from, or references to passages in The Old Testament, and also Christ’s words of approval such as “ Man shall not live by bread alone, but by every word that proceedeth out of the mouth of God — Search the Scriptures, for they testify of Me — The Scriptures cannot be broken.” (This count was sparked by the statement to the writer of two young men who were studying for the Protestant Christian ministry in one o f Atlan­ ta's prominent Theological Schools to the effect that one of the Professors told his class that the Prophet Ezekiel was “ neurotic,” or in other words a “ nut,” more or less “ cracked.” The New Testament says he was “ a holy man of God, moved by The H oly Spirit.' The above count was never checked, so if you find we are in error please advise in order that we might check and correct.) Consider the ages of history, and behold The Bible standing, “ The Rock of Ages, the great “ Anvil” on which the hammers have worn themselves out, the “ Mighty Fortress” towering over the wrecks of nations, generations of men, evil angels and devils, as they have battered themselves to pieces and passed into oblivion after raging against this Rock which God has given for a refuge for the sons of men that “ Fear God and keep His Commandments, which is the whole duty o f man! Over 400 years ago Martin Luther wrote; “ Infinite potentates have raged against this Book, and sought to destroy and uproot it — King Alex­ ander the Great, the princes of Egypt and Babylon, the monarchs of Persia, Greece, and of Rome, the emperors Julius and Augustus — but then nothing prevailed; they are all gone and vanished, while The Book remains, and will remain forever and ever, perfect and entire, as it was declared at first. Who has helped it, — who thus protected it against such mighty forces? No one, surely, but God Himself, who is Master of all things.” Consider another quote from Luther: “ I Ad­ monish every pious Christian that he take not offense at the plain un­ varnished manner of speech of the Bible. Let him reflect that what may seem trivial and vulgar to him, emanates from The High Majesty, Power, and Wisdom of God. The Bible is the Book that makes fools o f the wise of this world; it is only understood by the plain and simple hearted. Esteem this Book as the precious fountain that can never be exhausted. In it thou findest the swaddling-clothes and the manger whither the angels directed the poor, simple shepherds; they seem poor and mean, but dear and precious is the treasure that lies within.' One night about 200 years after the time of Luther, John W'esley listened as one read some comments o f Luther on The Bible, from the Book of Romans, and his heart became “ strangely warmed” and he went forth to be a mighty instrument in the hands of God to greatly bless mankind and the world, and was especially used to save England from such experiences as France had at the time of her revolution when the streets of Paris ran with blood, which revolution was greatly aided and abetted by mobs whose hearts had been “ violently warmed and heated” by Voltaire and his cohorts as they attacked The Bible, and Teh God of the Bible. John Bunyan was another man whom God greatly used to bless mankind whose heart also was “ strangely warmed” by reading the writings of Luther. Elisha the Prophet, who was present when Elijah was taken to heaven without death, in a chariot of fire, and horses o f fire, and who at the time received a dou­ ble portion of God’s Spirit, the account of his death and burial is in 2nd Kinds, chapter 13. Later, another man was being buried near his grave when a band o f the invading enemy appeared. They threw the body in Elisha's grave and ran. On coming in contact with Elisha s bones the dead man came back to life! It is interesting, instructive, and inspiring to consider the large numbers o f men o f God who great­ ly blessed mankind whom it appears came to life by coming in contact with the “ spiritual bones” o f Luther — Bunyan and Wesley were two o f them! Why not set yourself to get in the way to let God “ touch your heart” by getting familiar with every word o f God. If you think you are too old to start, would ask do you not hope to live throughout all eternity? Do you think it too big a job? Did you ever hear the story of the clock that at the close of the year figured out how many “ ticks” it would have to make in the new year, and on facing the enormous sum said: “ It is too much, I can’t make it?” But on further thought Mid: “ It is only one ‘tick’ at a tim e,” so got on the job and ticked the year off without a strain. Thirty minutes a day out o f the 1440 in every 24 hours — 60 minutes would not be too much time to spend with God — given to reading The Bible consecutively, would in a few years cause you to know “ what God hath Mid,” and if you purpose to “ do He His Will” — without which purpose no one can enter Heaven will give you what understanding is necesMry as you may have need to make application of it in your life and testimony. Adam failed. Christ, the Second Adam, came down and kept God’s W ord perfectly, and imputes that perfect righteousness to all who believe in their hearts. Those men who have best known and obeyed God's Word have been the greatest benefactors in the Mlvation o f their fellow men, and in blessing the world. P.O. BOX 405, DECATUR, GA. 30031 in 107a t h e d a i l y T E X A N P a g e 9 Bra niff Denies Check-In Delay By ING FREDLUND Texan Staff Writer Airports will not have a three-hour delay for baggage check-in, a Braniff Inter­ n atio n al A irlin es v ic e ­ president said Thursday. the “ The spokesman for Federal Aviation Administra­ tion (FAA) who released that information to the press was very irresponsible,” said Tom Robertson, a Braniff vice­ p re s id e n t of re g u la to ry proceedings and a University graduate. S p eak in g to b u s in e s s students on campus, Robert­ son said the forecast “delay,” which made news earlier this week, was only one of many safety suggestions given the FAA following the LaGuardia Airport bombing. The question is “security,” he said, “and we can shake people down (for security reasons) in no time at all.” ROBERTSON did make a positive prediction, however, saying supersonic passenger planes will be used in the United States in the future. He also addressed questions about Braniff’s competition with Southwest Airlines, the deregulation of the airline in­ dustry and Braniff’s political donations to the White House. Robertson said Southwest arrived on the scene at a “for­ tuitous time, when the new Dallas airport was put in. They had no controls and were nonunion,’’ he said, and therefore its fares were lower. “They had cheap landing fees, girls in hot pants and all that hoop-dee-doo,” he said. “One of these days the cost of doing business will catch up with them.” MANY AIRLINE studies have been conducted since the 1950s, Robertson said, in­ cluding studies by the Civil Aeronautics Board, Ralph (a fte r Nader was Nader bumped from a flight) and a recent committee headed by Sen. Ted Kennedy. He said the issues of deregulation of the industry and passenger fares are always scrutinized. When the questions of deregulation and passenger fares are resolved, Robertson said, there may “possibly be a different Congress, a different president and a different econom ic philosophy in Washington.” Regardless of in p o l i t i c a l c h a n g e Washington, he foresees no conclusion on deregulation. “There is no way one could come up with meaningful guidelines,” he said. “I just cannot see such an important segment of our transportation totally deregulated.” The failure of government to regulate airlines would result in a “battle of the giants,” where only the larger airlines would survive and smaller towns would lose service, he added. BOTH BRANIFF and Texas International Airlines are fighting a Justice Department antitrust suit. The department charges the airlines with “ crim in al conspiracy in restraint of trade,” saying the airlines exchanged informa­ tion on passenger fares and scheduling. “Every action we took was in accordance with the law, as our attorneys informed us,” Robertson said. R o b e r ts o n d e fe n d e d B ra n iff’s cam paign con­ tributions of $40,000 to former President Nixon by saying the White House decides which airline can fly where, and Braniff has long sought ad­ d itional routes to South America. In the latest revolution in Peru, Braniff lost $8 million, Robertson said. He said near­ ly IOO per cent of Braniff’s employes there were Peru­ vian, but the new government “would not reason.” “They wanted to promote their own airlines, so they cut b a c k f li g h t B r a n i f f schedules,” he said. Buenos Aires was always a favorite spot for Robertson when he traveled, but the last time he was there, he attend­ ed a soccer game and doesn’t think the climate is right for a return. “I was spit upon,” the 30- year veteran of Braniff said, “my feet were stamped on and people glared at me. Later on in the day a bomb went off close to where I was staying. I don’t know if they’re trying to get me or not.” CASTINE I RTF Adv. film for production. Nood actors, make-up and costumars. Fab. 4 & 6, Wad. and Thurs., 7-9 p.m. C M A 3.128. Information 478-2686 -UPI Telephoto Master Restoration Workers in Amsterdam attempt to repair the Rem­ brandt painting, "Nightw atch," which w as slashed last year.____________________________________ Hill Enters Race Gerald Hill, 28-year-old appliances store manager, has announced he will run as a Democratic candidate for in s ta te re p r e s e n ta tiv e District 37-C. C h a m b e r A national director of the J u n i o r of Commerce, Hill has been county chairm an of the Democratic telethon in Austin for the last two years. Hill said he decided to run for the House seat after Rep. Ronald Earle decided to be a candidate for d istrict a t­ torney. He has described himself as an “ independent” Democratic candidate. Mrs. Billie Coopwood has already filed for the House seat. Mam a Eleni's is upstairs at 304 W est 13th St. M om o is preparing her M ousaka, Dolmathes, Chicken Rolls, and all her other m em orable dishes you com e to devour of her other place. She is waiting to serve you the Greek delights that m o d e O d ysse u s return to Penelope. As o concession to Texans just getting into the delights of beautiful Greek cooking, she prepares steaks, roost duck and soft shell crab with just o touch of Levantine flavor. Over the Common Market at 304 West 13th St. I M o m o Eleni's Open Mon. thru Sat. Restaurant 6 P M to 10:30 P M Call: 478-0653 Annual Winter today thru Saturday Mahogany Barstool Kits - rag. 7.95 Now 4.50 OO. m m r Corning Ware - entire stock 25% Off Kitchen Linens - 20% Off Posters, special group - 25' Figurines - special group 50% Off SPECIAL. SHIPMENTS Curling Irons - reg. 12.00... Now 8.95 Electric Heaters Toastmaster 1300 Watt - reg. 19.95... Now 15.95 Heatwave Fan Forced 1000 Watt - reg. 24.95... Now 19.95 1500 Watt - reg. 29.95.. Now 23.95 Cristelle Dinnerware - reg. 10.99... Now 9.50 Gro Ute Bulbs OO Watt • reg. 1.99... Now 1.69 Art Prints, varied selection... 3.00 Fluorescent Desk Lamps - reg. 16.00 Now 12.88 RUISI Drastic Reductions on these Special Groups Bm * Olina BwgiMts Playboy Gift Items Cack# Pats Garman Baar Stains Wooden Toys Odds and Ends, Slightly defective items, etc. at bargain prices l l n i v a r s i t y C o - O p Page IO Friday, January 30, 1976 THE D A IL Y T EXA N IH 35 Project Criticized By KATHY FISHER Texan Staff Writer Designed to accommodate traffic in the next 20 years, the proposed five-level in­ terchange at IH 35 and US 290 East has been approved by the Austin Transporttion Study (ATS), but Councilwoman Margret Hofmann questions its effect on North Austin. Hofmann is concerned the 2 Board Members Leave Union Posts Two members of the Texas Union Board of Directors have left their positions. “Jim Pennington and Huey Johnson have withdrawn from school for personal reasons, therefore forfeiting th eir places on the board,” Nancy Mowry, board chairman, said. Pennington’s term still has a year and a half left to run, and Jo h n so n ’s has th ree months remaining. Both were selected for two-year terms. Student Government Presi­ dent Carol Crabtree will make appointments to fill the two vacancies with the Student Senate’s confirmation as soon as possible, a staff member said. “ Despite the fact that these two positions are unfilled, the students still have a voting the board,” m ajority on Mowry said. i I Daffodils, stock narcissus, tulips iris, ranunculus Long stem roses red, pink, yellow Daisies 20 to a bunch yellow, white Mixed bouquets Arthurium The board of directors is composed of nine voting members, six students and three faculty members. There also a re two nonvoting members, Shirley Bird Perry, director, and James Duncan, Dean of Students, and vice­ president for student affairs. Students' Attorney The students' attorneys ara available by appointment from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. M o n day th ro u gh Friday in Spooch Building, Room 3. Talophono 471-7796. Tho students' at­ torneys will handle landlord- tenant, consumer protection, employes' rights, taxation and insurance cases. In matters in­ volving criminal or domestic legal explanation problems, and advice is available., but representation is not afforded. all at 26* each $2.50/doz. 60* each $6.60/doz $1.60/bunch $2.26/bunch $1.00 each R E SH CU T FLOWERS *Jke p la n t Shop Inside H E B. Food Sto re on For West Blvd. 345-6693 Take M o -P a c north, turn Open M o n -Sa t laft at Far W ast 10-6 Course list Sp rin g 1976 CICDGA cLecture Ngtes Service 901 West 24th St. 477-3641 The Established Note Service Serving U T. Students for 6 Years Study N otes $3. * 6 . I D A. studv notes are complete sets of notes taken by graduate students in a previous semester. These sets allow you to review material even before the lecture. You may merely add your own notes when new material is covered or use the notes as another viewpoint to compare to your own notes. You can examine the entire set before you buy, get all the notes in one trip. All sales are final. A n i 301 R e id A n i 301 K u lk a r n i A n i 3 0 3 O liv e r A n i 3 0 3 S u c h lo r A n i 3 3 3 K B r a m b le ! ! A r i 3 0 3 P h illip t A r! 3 0 5 R o o to A tt 3 0 1 B a t h A tt 3 0 8 E d m o n d t A t ! 3 0 8 V a n d e n B o u ! Bio 3 0 3 B r a n d Bio 3 0 3 B r o w n Bio 3 0 3 R o in a rx Bio 303 W y n n e Bio 3 0 4 L a w le r Bio 3 0 4 P ia n k a B e l 3 1 7 A le x o u p o u lo t B o l 3 4 9 Bloch B L aw 3 3 3 A llit o n B l a w 3 3 3 D u g g a n B L aw 3 3 3 J o n t i B L aw 3 3 3 S h a w C h 3 0 3 M o r g a n C h 3 0 3 P ick# !! C h 3 0 3 S w a n t o n C h 3 0 3 W o b b o r C h 3 0 3 W y a i l C h 3 0 5 L C o w le y C h 3 0 5 M K in e C h 3 0 S M C . W a d e C h 3 3 9 R a v e l D rm 3 1 4 W y m a n i c e 3 0 3 G a r a c i ic e 3 0 3 P r o w o fee 3 0 3 V r o a m a n E n g 331 C r o n K II G a o 3 0 6 Y o u n g G o v 3 1 0 1 G u lio r r o i G o v 3 1 3 1 H irtch G o v 3 1 3 L W a g n e r G o v 3 3 4 M T a b o rtk y G o v 3 3 3 K T a b o rtk y G r g 3 0 5 D o u g h t y H E 311 H u t c h in t o n C C 3 0 3 3 5 3 A r m t lr o n g C C 3 0 3 / 3 5 3 C a ld w e ll C h 301 B o g g t C h 301 W a d e H E 3 3 2 H a ll M a n 3 3 6 K n ig h t /M c D a n ie l M a n 3 3 6 K n ig h t M k t 3 3 7 A n d o r te n M u t 30 71 B a llio r M u t 3 0 21 R u d o lp h M u t 6 0 5 B D e a n P ty 301 Bruoll Pty 301 C o h e n Pty 301 C o h e n P ty 301 G a b rie l Pty 301 M o r g a n P ty 3 0 B G a b r ie l P ty 3 2 3 G u m m o r m a n Pty 3 2 8 K Pot! Pty 3 3 7 M c N e ila g e Pty 3 4 5 H orn P ty 3 5 3 H a w k in t P ty 3 5 5 H o k o t Pty 3 70 J Bieri Pty 3 7 B C o op er Soc 3 0 2 Roth Soc 3 0 2 S u lliv a n Soc 3 7 9 M Piroy S la t 3 1 0 S lu t* Zoo 3 1 6 K Parrot! Zoo 331 J a co b to n Zoo 3 3 5 R ic h a rd to n Zoo 3 2 5 W he e le r M i. J U W yss -Limited supply Most of these courses are also available as current nates at $10.00 per semester interchange will move the c e n te r of Austin to the northeast part of town in the future and plans to gather sup­ port for her opinion from City Council colleagues. “I have not been able to sit down with my colleagues to talk about the proposed in­ terchange, but we are certain­ ly going to work on it. Sen. Lloyd Doggett and I are going to explore every avenue of it,” Hofmann said. “I have an open mind about the project, but I am concern­ ed, as is Hofmann, about the impact the interchange will th e A lla n d a le h ave on neighborhood. I think City Council should participate in these issues to determine if changes should be made to better serve the people of Austin,” Doggett said. “As far as physical status of the project is concerned, right of way has been purchased and construction will probably begin in May,” John Conrado, Federal Highway Administra­ tion division administrator, explained. “The project has met all of our requirements. However, some confusion seems to lie in the fact that if the project is not authorized for construc­ tion before Oct. I, new regulations will take effect, and ATS will have to recon­ sider the project,” Conrado added. After Oct. I, all state pro­ jects will be considered as a group and approved initially by ATS and then by Conrado’s office. Conrado said he did not foresee any delay in the final authorization but said he would have to reconsider if overw helm ing opposition developed. The interchange is designed to alleviate peak-hour traffic until 1995, but its construction will make driving during off- hours easier and also will relieve congestion during foot­ ball games, Conrado said. 2CC2 ’ n * . ' / nVaiutaA ''food vxfrettenc* SA tea Afft t i • AuntAt ft n •After ta At fit. ut nitA(J in i na iff Att ta /'P u tti''faire (o r Ain i i //Sat m e n /A m Jam tt/im f n t a i Jam H / t n t i n n H u n t W Am B a n k A m r r lc o r d * M a *l« rrh a rg t> W elcom e 2 0 0 2 teA tifit n r x i it. f if .iir n m A i 4J4-6C>IJ sl. C U R R E N T NOTE S $10.00 Current notes are taken during the semester in progress. Graduate students are hired to take notes in class and type them for printing. Once at I.D A. we print them and keep them on file until you pick up your subscription. A d v . 3 1 IJ V a n e * A d v 3 7 1 J C u n n in g h a m A n t. 3 0 3 Sue M a r A n t. 3 0 3 K u lk a rn i A n t 3 0 3 O liv e r A tt 3 0 8 V a n d a n S a u t Bio 3 0 3 R a in a r t Bio 3 0 3 W y n n * Bi*. 3 0 4 L a w le r Bio. 3 0 4 S im o n Bio 3 0 4 S im p to n Bot. 3 1 7 A le io p o u lo t Ch. 301 B o g g I Ch . 301 J o tp o rto n C h 301 W . W a d * Ch. 3 0 3 Pickett C h 3 0 3 S w a n t o n C h 3 0 3 W o b b o r C h 3 0 3 W y a tt C h 3 0 S K H o t o h C h 3 0 51 C o w le y C h 3 0 5 M K itto C h . 3 0 5 M C . W a d * Ch. 31 S N R o b e rt! Ch. 3 3 9 R a v e l C C 3 0 3 / 3 5 3 C a ld w e ll C S. 301 D u g g a n G ov. 31 0L G u tiorrox G o v 3 1 0 L Lutt G o v 3 1 21 M G a lt to n G o v 31 31 MJrtch G o v . 31 31 P rindle G o v . 3 1 3 L R k h o lt a n G o v 3 1 31 J. Sm ith G o v . 3 1 31 W a g n e r G o v 31 31 Y a n k e e G o v . 31 31 M ih a lk o H E 3 3 3 H a ll J 3 6 0 T aylor M a n 3 3 6 M c D a n ie l M k t 3 3 7 M o n n Phr. S I O K Baliti# Pod 3 1 9 P o g o H O U RS: M -F 9-5 S. 10-1 n , Pty. P ly Pty Pty Pty. Pty. P ty Pty P ty P ty P ty P ty 301 C o h e n 301 D iehl 301 G a b rie l 301 M o r g a n SO B G o b f lei 3 0 9 C o w d e n 3 1 9 K Archer 3 3 B K W a tt 3 3 3 S in g h 3 3 7 M a c N e ila g e 3 4 3 lo n g la it 3 4 3 U n d e rw o o d 3 4 3 K S a w in Pty. 3 5 3 B a tte l Pty. 3 5 3 H a w k in t Pty 3 6 5 W ille rm a n S W S 3 1 0 A d o rm Soc 3 0 3 Roth Sac. 3 0 3 S u lliv a n Ste 3 1 0 S t u ti Zoo 331 Jacobean Zoo 3 3 S R ich ard to n Zoo 3 3 S Te m pleto n •Pty 3 4 5 H orn P ty 3 5 0 K B u r n h a m / S te p h a n J FINDING IDA Guadalupe Ria Grande N T R I-T O W ER S N O R T H□ 901 West 24th St 0) 8) ♦— co JZ +- CM ID A □ I H O U R Parking! N A U * S P H A R M A C Y N A U ’ M A R T IN IZ IN G Foerl K it h Kerry□ San Gebriol Lh Lamar W om en’s A ffairs Com­ mittee is seeking campus in­ put in identifying University- connected women’s groups throughout Texas. This infor­ mation will be used to form a Texas University Women’s Coalition. The coalition will link com­ munications between women students, staffers and faculty on a state-wide basis. Infor­ mative exchange between the different groups will be es­ pecially beneficial during legislative sessions dealing with women’s topics and con­ cerns. Anyone with knowledge of other University groups that deal with women’s problems should contact Sue Ann Ray, chairwoman of Women's Af­ fairs Committee, at 471-3721 or go by Student Government office, Union South 112. ★ ★ * Friday is the last day to sign a g a i n s t th e p e t i t i o n Students' Attorney The students' attorneys are a va ila ble by appointm ent from to S p.m . M o n d a y I a rn. in S p e e ch th r o u g h F r id a y Building, Room 3. Telephone 471-7796. The st-dents' at­ torneys w ill handle landlord- consumer protection, tenant, em ployes' rights, taxation and insurance cases. In matters in­ volving crim inal or domestic le g a l ex p la n a tion p roblem s, and advice is available but representation is not afforded. Southwestern Bell’s proposed directory assistance charge. Anyone wishing to protest the charge should go by the West Mall booth. Names wil be collected all day. City Lobby Committee members also will continue private lobbying ef­ forts until Feb. 5, when all petitions will be presented to the City Council. ★ ★ ★ Like beer? Like politics? Then here s your chance to enjoy the two together. Stu­ dent Senate will host a happy hour in the Texas Tavern from to 6 p.m . W ednesday. 4 Senators, chairmen and aspir­ ing p oliticos w ill a ll be available for informal discus­ sion ... no strings attached! WHO NEEDS A GOOD HAIRCUT? YOU DO. Good H aircuts By A ppointm ent 4 7 8 6 7 6 4 San Gabriel A Wilson Enters Sheriffs Race Placement Office Has Open Records Woes By KATHY KNOWLES The Education Placement Service, which helps students find jobs in the areas of teaching and administration, has been hav­ ing headaches lately concerning students’ right to review their files. On Jan. I, 1975, the U. S. Buckley-Pell Amendment and the Texas Open Records Act were put into effect at the education placement office. The laws said that a student’s records could not be withheld from the student by institutions in case he wanted to inspect the file. Dr. L. A. Rutledge, director of the Educa­ tion Placement Service, said the files in­ c lu d e l e t t e r s of re c o m m e n d a tio n , transcripts, the student’s performance in class and teaching evaluations. “ONE OF THE provisions of the open records law is to provide a student recourse to statements on file which may be false or in erro r,” said Rutledge. Before 1975 all records were closed to stu­ dent inspection. Now students have the op­ tion of keeping their records open or closed. This has caused a slight problem in the placement office. Dr. Bob Kline, assistant professor of curriculum and instruction, said some students often think open and closed pertains only to whether a job inter­ viewer can see the student’s record. It real­ ly refers to student access to the records. Since the Open Records Act went into effect many students have complained that they thought they were doing the right thing by keeping their records open, said Kline. They have been finding out that employers prefer closed records because they seem more confidential, he said. IN A STUDY by William Voorhies on faculty and employer opinion concerning letters of recommendation, more than half preferred using confidential letters and stated that they would not like to dispense with these letters. The study also indicated that 62 per cent of the faculty would write a different kind of letter if they knew the record was open. To improve student understanding of the law, steps are being taken “to get informa­ tion to the student prior to the time they register in the placement office when they make the decision between open and closed,” Rutledge said. student government All UT students are invited and encouraged to attend. / : By OSCAR GARZA Texan Staff Writer Claiming and promising “knowledge, courage and in­ teg rity ,” Sam Wilson an­ nounced at a Thursday mor­ ning press conference his can­ didacy for sheriff. Wilson was dismissed from the Travis County Sheriff’s Department last March IO by S h eriff R aym ond F ra n k . Wilson attempted to resign from his position three weeks before the dismissal citing un­ professional procedures and political games as his reasons for leaving, he said. At the press conference Wilson pointed out what he felt were faults with Frank and his system. WILSON DISPLAYED a that commemorative pistol Frank had given him and claimed it had been paid for with profits from the County Jail commissary, a supposed­ ly nonprofit service. Wilson said the profits can be at­ tributed to what he called “outrageous prices” charged to prisoners for supplies. Wilson added that the com­ m issa ry w as m o re of a “concession” that flourishes because of no overhead or competition. Wilson also charged the sheriff’s department with two in sta n c e s of c iv il rig h ts violations c a rrie d out by sheriff’s officers, one of which was bugging the cell of a murder suspect. Wilson said he walked into Frank’s office while the sheriff was listening to the transmittance. The other incident concern­ ed the arrest of an Austin citizen outside county limits. The arrest was carried out without the legal permission and aid of the entered county which is required for such ac­ tion, Wilson said. WILSON BEGAN working as a deputy constable dis­ patcher under Deputy Gene Collier in June. In July, Wilson’s wife, Ann, who had been working in the sheriff’s office as a dispatcher for a year and a half, was fired by Frank. Wilson said he quit his position as d isp atch er in September to complete his teaching degree at the Univer­ sity. Wilson’s wife took over his job as dispatcher on Sep. 15. One week later Wilson an- nouced his intention to run for sheriff. In November, Deputy Collier fired Wilson’s wife for alleged conflict of interests. incidents, these Wilson said he is not waging a personal vendetta or a smear campaign against Frank. Despite WILSON SAID he is running fam ilies, which include the hiring of a social worker to act as a go­ between for prisoners and their im proved increased visiting facilities, access to prisoners for their attorneys, and added security measures to prevent smuggl­ ing of weapons into the jail. s u g g e s t e d because he is confident he can make the sheriff’s d ep art­ m en t m o re p ro fe s s io n a l. W i l s o n t h e regeneration of the volunteer law enfo rcem en t re se rv e force whose membership, he said, has dwindled from about 60 to less than 20. Wilson also suggested the creation of a volunteer reac­ tion team that would monitor a channel on citizen band radios and aid peace officers when necessary. Traffic Fatalities Increase, Also on Wilson’s list of priorities are jail reforms, Speeding, DWIs Cited Estimated 1975 traffic deaths show a slight increase over 1974’s, Richard Grimmett, Department of Public Safety spokesman, said Thursday. “ We have only preliminary figures for 1975 now, but we expect 3,400 persons to have been involved in traffic accidents, 2,920 of those in fatal accidents,” Grimmett said. Speeding and drunk driving are two of the primary factors in fatal accidents in Texas. Speeding contributes to 33 per cent, while driving while intoxicated was involved in 21 per cent. In 1974, 18 per cent of fatal accidents were caused by DWL “This doesn’t tell the whole story, though. Texas doesn’t have a state law that requires a chemical test on drivers in fatal accidents,” Grimmett added. Accidents involving DWI occur mainly between the hours of 6 p.m. and midnight, with 11,113 recorded in 1974. The second largest number of accidents, 6,963, occurred between the hours of midnight and 6 a.m. The traffic death rate for 1974 was 3.9 per cent for each IOO million vehicle miles travelled, the lowest total ever recorded in Texas. “We only expect our traffic death rate to increase to 4.0 per cent for 1975,” Grimmett said, “while the vehicle miles travelled is ex­ pected to rise to 84.3 billion.” LAST CALL!... BRING YOUR MONEY Monday, 9:30 a.m. Twice each year Rae Ann has a cash closeout unlike any other in town. Because of the unusually low prices, we cannot accept charges, phone orders or layaways. A ll sales are final ... no returns, no exchanges, no alterations. So bring your money and come earlyI SALE ENDS SATURDAY, 5:30 P.M. MEXICAN FOOD RESTAURANT OPEN FOR LUNCH AND SUPPER TILL THE WEE HOURS OF THE MORN l & f » > v d [ B l DE LA NOCHE 2405 NUECES 2404 Guadalupe 9:30 - 5:30 daily Free Parking in the Rear C O R N E R MUSK FOR EVERY TASTE Jams IanjAftert ones including: I Would Like To Dance Roses/Belle Of The Blues Hymn/Boy I Really Tied One On Michael Murphey S w an s A gain st T he Su n including: A Mansion On The Hill/Renegade Rhythm Of The Road/Buffalo Gun/Pink Lady & • 4 n : i rn Loggias & Messina Native Sons including: Fox Fire/Boogie Man Sweet Marie/Peacemaker/Wasting Our Time TV 11" ■1 ■" 1 1 ** ■ 1W gr >■ PC 33919 A stunning new collection of sensitive and intro­ spective songs from Ja n is tan. each LP $399 IflF including: I Love Music /Livin' For The Weekend Unity/You And Me She s Only A Woman/Stairway To Heaven TheO'Jays Fam ily Reunion PZ 3 3 8 0 7 2310 GUADALUPE 478-1674 HOURS M-T 10-9, F-S 10-10 P E 3 3 8 5 1 ONE WEEK ONLY! BOB DYLAN DESIBE including: Hurricane/ Mozambique Isis/Romance In Durango One More Cup Of Coffee/Sara PC 33893 “ D esire,” nine m asterfully c la s s ic songs from Bob Dylan. P C 33578 A rocking new album from A m e rica ’s fa­ vorite concert and recording duo, Loggins and M essina! *399 each LP Phoebe Snow Second Childhood including: Cash In/Two Fisted Love/All Over Sweet Disposition/Pre-Dawn Imagination P C 3 3 9 5 2 ON COLUMBIA, EPIC AND PHILADELPHIA INTERNATIONAL RECORDS Friday, January 30, 1976 THE DAILY TEXAN Page ll End of the Year Sale 60% off Beads and Jewelry Silver Heishi Tubing Silver Heishi Choker with fly bird Silver Heishi w/l-3 turquoise nuggets Olive Shell Heishi w/15 nuggets Pinshell Heishi w/5 nuggets *6” , 2 » * 2 ° sgti v j * t THE BEAD SHAMAN 2200 Guadalupe 477-3478 Retiring Head Electrician Receives 'Glowing' Praise said. Working with the lights, H arty designed a control the system which allow s orange glow to be switched on at the utilities department building. “It used to be a manual operation, you had to go up to the Main Building to turn on the sw itches,” Williamson said. At certain times, when the entire Tower turns orange in­ stead of just the uppermost part, it is not quite that easy. At these times orange shields are placed over the normally white lights that illuminate the remaining shaft. The full Tower glows orange after an A&M Thanksgiving Day vic­ tory, a Southwest Conference or national championship. B efo re com ing to The University, Harty worked a t the Houston shipyard wiring warships during World War II. “There were times when we would go to the picture show and he would see some of the ships he worked on,” Mrs. r e c a l l e d . H a r t y H a r t y recognized the ships by their identification numbers, she explained. A reception is planned for Harty between 2:30 and 4 p.m. Friday in Room 302 of the Ser­ vice Building. By ROSANNE MOGAVERO Texan Staff Writer Every time the Tower turn­ ed its celebrated orange color during the last years one man has been responsibe. the man is Dan Harty, electrician supervisor of the utilities department, and he retires today. Harty has been employed by The University for 30 years, and one of his responsibilities has been to turn on and main­ tain the orange Tower lights which signal a University teams win. “ He’s on 24-hour call,” said T . E . W i l l i a m s o n , who replaces Harty. “He’s been called out at all hours of the night.” H a r t y ’s e l e c t r i c a l maintenance responsibilities include more than just Tower lights, though. He often has had to work on malfunctioning presses for The Daily Texan. This often involves more 2 and 3 a.m. calls. Once, when the Texan press was at the Little Campus, Harty wound up babysitting a defunct motor which ran the old letter press for two days while it was rep a ire d in Houston. Harty had taken it to Houston himself in a pickup truck. Operating the orange lights requires that Harty be well­ informed on the status of the U n iv e rs ity ’s c o m p e titiv e sports, primarily of course, football. “He’s an ardent fan, he h a s n ’t m issed one hom e game,” his wife confirmed. The practice, more than just job loyalty, will continue, she Dan Harty Rents Rise as Utilities Spiral By KAREN BARNETT Texan Staff Writer said. S t u d e n t s l o o k i n g f o r apartments with all bills paid may have a futile search ahead. to “ I p r e d i c t t h a t a n y apartments that can be chang­ ed t e n a n t i n d i v i d u a l payments will do so by the fall of ‘76,” said Jim Solt, the in­ com ing p r e s i d e n t of th e Austin Apartment Associa­ tion. Not all a pa r t me n t s can change, however. Wiring com­ plications make it impossible to change to individual m eters in some instances, especially the two-pipe system where the air conditioning and heating are on the same pipe, Solt “ WE CAN’T AFFORD to stay in the utility business any longer. Gas bills are up 50 per cent, electricity is up 30 to 35 per cent over last year and water is up about 50 per cent. Last year, 85 apartm ent com­ plexes were foreclosed and 95 per cent of those closed were ABP,” he said. living in ABP “ People apartments just don’t con­ serve. Lights are left on, ther­ mostats turned up to 75 in the winter and down to 65 in the summer, and no one is in the apartment all day,” he con­ tinued. “Gas, water and electricity for an average one-bedroom apartment runs us $60 per month, but our statistics show a 20 to 30 per cent reduction in utility rates when turned over to the individuals,” he said. “There is no profit in us paying the bills. Apartment complexes don’t get a break for quantity consumption. We t h e s a m e r a t e a s p a y everybody else,” Solt said. NEXT FALL, an average one-bedroom apartm ent will run $165 plus electricity, and an average two-bedroom will be $195 plus electricity. Currently, a one-bedroom rents for $195 ABP. Next year it will cost an average of $225 a month to rent a one bedroom apartm ent — $165 for room and $60 for utilities. That is at least $270 more per long ses­ sion than this year. About 25,000 students live in area apartments, and rates will continue to rise through the summer. “ Air conditioners make those m eters go around so fast you can’t even see them ,” Solt said. The fading away of ABP apartments seems to be a national rather than state or citywide trend. Utilities are increasing all over the coun­ try, but the situation is es­ pecially critical in Austin. “In the last 12 to 18 months Austin has received several m ajor in­ creases,” said Arles Mason, president of the Texas Apart­ ment Association. Craig Leaves DA Race Asst. Dist. Atty. Charles Craig Thursday withdrew his name from the list of can­ didates running for Travis County district attorney. Events have occurred that h a v e c h a n g e d t h e c i r ­ c u m s t a n c e s of my c a n ­ didacy,” Craig said in a letter addressed to the citizens of oavis County. “ I feel that it’s in my best interest and the best interest of my family to rem ove m yself from this race.” Craig also stressed that the integrity of the candidates and of the district attorney’s of­ fice should be of utmost im­ portance to Travis County citizens in the race as well as “ the importance of equality of justice for all citizens.” Craig decided to run for the office when Dist. Atty. Bob Smith filed to run for district judge. County Atty. Ned Granger, attorney Ron Weddington and State Rep. Ronnie Earl are still in the race. R EFR IGER A T O R RENTALS 2 cubic feet Spring Semester 22.50 U-Pickup a nd Return f 27.50 We Deliver a n d Pickup J I 5.00 Deposit Contract Ends M a y 20 I (Fa-Of! I ' A P A R T M E N T S H O P 2 N D FLOOR S iip jcirvb Men and Women's Hairstyles from $10 607 W. 28th and Rio Grande Mon. - Sat. 9:00 - 5:30 478-8724 SUN FRI — SAT — FANTASTIC TROPICAL PLANT SALE PONYTAIL PALM SEEDLINGS Excellent for large terrarium or sm all pots WAX-LEAF BEGONIA clay pots AIRPLANE PLANTS 5 ” clay pots, 3 plants HAWORTHIA “Arm adillo ta il” succulent NORFOLK PIN E SEEDLINGS GALLON POT JADE TREES M ulti-Stalk, m ulti-headed ARECA PALMS 6 ” pot, 2 plants ARALIA ELEGANTISSMA or “False A ralia,” 2Vi’-3' tall 2 plants .35 .70 * 2 . 0 0 .OO .95 .25 .50 .OO *3 *4 $4 $5 The home of Amazon Basin Potting Soil THE JUNGLE STORE NURSERY 705 W. 29th 474-1088 sem i-annual CLEARANCE SALE shoes DRESS • C A SU A LS SA N D ALS • PUMPS LAST C H A N C E TO S A V E O N Q UALITY B R A N D N A M E S SUCH A S M A D EM O ISELLE • TED S A V A L • C A R E SS A • S.R.O. A N D OTHERS. SA V IN G S UP TO ORIG. $16. TO $36. 7 0 % off *5. >7. $9. *11.ODDS AND ENDS Available GGuarantee Student Charge ORIG. TO $20 $3. WHILE THE TABLE LASTS! BankAmericard nvfr/nnr H ig h la n d M a ll P a g e 12 F r id a y , J a n u a r y 30, 1976 THE DAILY TEXAN Bicentennial 'Freedom Fares" To Offer 3 0 % Air Discount Airlines are joining in the celeb ratio n of A m e ric a ’s 200th birthday by offering t r a v e l e r s a y e a r - r o u n d “Freedom F a re ” — an ap­ proximate 30 per cent dis­ count on all flights within the United States. “ Freedom F a re ” begins Sunday, and there are strict qualifications for the offer, according to Texan interviews with various airline atten­ dants. To qualify for the offer a traveler must make reser­ vations for a round-trip 14 days in advance, and the ex­ cursion must range from 7 to 30 days. If reservations are made more than 14 days in ad- v a n c e , t i c k e t s m u s t be purchased within IO days from the tim e were made. the reservations Reservations can be post­ poned up to 14 days before the first departure. 'The return flight reservation, however, can be changed on arrival at the destination. Elevator Accident Victim Files Suit Against UT A personal injury suit has been filed this week against The University by a senior prelaw student injured in an elevator ac­ cident Nov. 6, 1974. Garland Benton Woodward of Lubbock alleges that he frac­ tured his leg in the accident at Gregory Gym. Woodward and six other students were injured when a hoist cable broke and dropped 18 feet to the gym floor. The elevator was loaded with musical sound equipment for a Temptations concert. Woodward also contends in the suit that he was forced to withdraw from school for one sem ester because of his injuries. Woodward’s petition, filed in 53rd District Court, cites no dollar amount in the plea for damages. U S E T E X A N C L A S S I F I E D S FIX YOUR YOLKS, FOLKS FRIDAY 12 noon to I p.m. Sandwich Seminar: O RIG INS OF BLUEGRASS MUSIC. Dr. Jerry Instructor of Music Theory, will Dean, speak on the origins and the rise of bluegrass music, notably in the south. Dobie Room, 4th floor Academic Center. Ideas and Issues Committee. I p.m. San dw ich Sem inar: THE UT 12 noon to OMBUDSPERSON. Linda Perine, University Ombudsperson, will speak on "The Office of the Ombudsperson and the Older Students." Texas Union South Room 108. Students Older Than Average. 7 and 9 p.m. Him: THE THREE MUSKETEERS. The most re­ cent version of the Dumas classic, with comic swashbuckl­ ing provided by Michael York, Oliver Reed and Raquel Welch. Directed by Richard Lester. Friday and Saturday in Jester Auditorium. Admission: $1 for UT ID holders; $1.50 for members. Theatre Committee. 8 p.m. DANCE A N D TALENT SHOW. CANCELLED 9 p.m. to midnight. SILVER CITY SADDLE TRAMPS. An evening with a local Country and Western band. Friday and Saturday, 9 p.m. - 2 a.m. In the Texas Tavern. Ad- misison: 50* for UT ID holders; $1 for guests. Ideas and Issues and Musical Events Committees. 11 p.m. Him: FLESH GORDON. The soft-core rendition of the famous Hash Gordon adventure serials. Friday and Saturday in Jester Auditorium. Admission: $1 with UT ID; $1.50 for members. Theatre Committee. SATURDAY 11 a.m. Saturday Morning Fun Club Film: THE SEVENTH VO YAG E OF SINBAD. Excellent special effects by Ray Harryhausen make this adventure-fantasy a classic. Jester Auditorium. Admission is free. Theatre Committee. 6:30 p.m. SOTA COVERED DISH SUPPER. Meet and eat with students older than average. It is requested that all interested participants call Francis Plotsky at 471-1201 or Carol Seideman at 447-1160. The dinner will be held at the home of Ms. Seideman, 1817 E. Oltorf No. 2042. Students Older Than Average. 8 p.m. MARCEL MARCEAU. Tickets to the performance of the world's foremost pantomimist will go on sale January 22 and cost $.50, 1.00 and 1.50 for CEC optional fee holders. Tickets for the general public will go on sale January 29 and will cost $4.50, 5.00 and 5.50. Municipal Auditorium. Cultural Entertainment Committee. SUNDAY All Day. AN ARTISTIC BICENTENNIAL CELEBRATION. The Hoblitzelle Theatre Library is allowing the Joe C. Ward Collection of Barnum and Bailey Circus Memorabilia to be displayed. Academic Center Foyer February 1-15. Rne Arts Committee. All Day. PAINTINGS BY CAROL COHEN. Carol Cohen received her BFA from UT in 1976. In the past Mrs. Cohen has m ostly concentrated exhibiting jewelry and photography. Her paintings achieve an abstract nature in shapes, color and form. that utilizes differences Academic Center Foyer February 1-15. Fine Arts Com­ mittee. 9 p.n 7 and 9 p.m. Film: ALICE'S RESTAURANT. Arthur Penn directed this serene film based on Ado Guthrie's popular song. Jester Auditorium. Admission: $1 with UT ID; $1.50 for members. Theatre Committee. _____ _____ w. Auditorium. Admissior _ - ..... - popul 9 to midnight. BRAZILIAN MUSIC. An evening of Brazilian music. The Texas Tavern. Admission is free. Tavern Program. Hurdles Arise ll Schnabel, Paycheck For Bentsen Linked by Records a rter Enters Texas anybody Who expects! anybody who expects someone to outline a com­ plete solution to the nation’s economic woes is asking an impossible thing. Gram rn Files Gripe Carter Enters Texas G R A PEV IN E (U P I) - Former Georgia Gov. Jim ­ my Carter signed a can­ didacy form Thursday to enter the Texas presidential primary. He predicted Sen. {Lloyd Bentsen Jr., D-Tex., will not be considered a ma­ jor candidate by the May I I primary. B y United P re ss International Federal campaign funds obtained for a presidential campaign are being illegally used by Sen. Lloyd Bentsen Jr., D-Tex., in his bid for re­ election to the Senate, a challenger said Thursday. Carter, who won the Iowa Democratic caucus last week, predicted Bentsen will not do w e ll in most primaries and may drop out of the running for their party nomination and concentrate on his re-election to the 'Senate. “ It is my prediction that by May, Bentsen will not be considered a viab le presidential candidate,” 'Carter said at a 30-minute news conference at the Dallas-Fort Worth Regional Airport. C a rte r said he and Alabama Gov. George Wallace will be the major candidates in the Texas Democratic primary. “ That’s my presumption,” Carter said, “ but I ’m not trying to predict what will happen. I don’t know.” Carter was second behind Wallace in the Mississippi caucus. Bentsen did not campaign in Iowa, where 37 per cent of the delegates were not committed. Bentsen received only 2 per cent of the Mississippi I pledges. Carter criticized Texas’ so-called Bentsen Bill which set up the state primary. “ It’s a horrible primary i law obviously contrived to keep other candidates, ex­ cept Bentsen, out of the Tex­ as primary,” Carter said. Responding to allegations that he has been vague about issues, Carter said, “ I think my plans are specific as anyone^. But I think Phil Gramm, a Texas A&M University economics Professor on leave to oppose Bentsen in the Democratic primary, filed a complaint against the senator with the Federal Election Commis­ sion. Bentsen He asked Bentsen be prohibited from spending the federal matching funds in Texas. That such funds be spent on a proportionate basis among all areas of the country and that any political ads purchased with funds be so federal designated. “ Sen. is simultaneously seeking nomination for election to the presidency and the office of United States senator. As a presidential candidate Sen. Bentsen has qualified for federal matching funds which are being used to il­ legally benefit his senatorial campaign in T ex as,” Gramm said in a letter to the election commission. “ If Sen. Bentsen may spend federal matching monies in Texas, while I am required to raise IOO per cent of my campaign funds on my own, the financial advantage thus gained by Sen. Bentsen will violate the federal elec­ tion campaign laws as well as my constitutional rights.” Gramm said any political advertising purchased by Bentsen affects both cam­ paigns. INFO FONE Tho Texas Union "info fone” — 471-4747 — lists campus and Texas Union •vents, 24 hours a day, seven days a week. A new recording of each d ay's events is m ade between 9 and IO a.m. weekdays. J.R.'s Coffee Shop 4811 Burnet Ref. W elcome Students FREE DRINK with purchase of hamburger Open tam • 453-1459 J « SfST‘ B y United P re ss International P ro se cu to rs have documents linking Senate Secretary Charles Schnabel to a loan company transaction in which a state paycheck was cashed without the authoriza­ tion of the employe named on the check. Dist. Atty. Robert Smith told reporters Thursday the grand jury has agreed to give Schnabel a chance to tell his side before taking any action. Records obtained from the Texas Warrant Co. show someone other than Marcela Atkinson Martinez endorsed forms signing, her state paycheck for July, 1971, over to the loan company in return for an advance of about $300. Schnabel apparently sent a messenger to the loan com­ pany office to pick up the ad­ vance. Prosecutors found a note signed by Schnabel stapl­ ed to the loan records order­ ing the messenger to pick up- ,an envelope for Marcela Atkinson. Mrs. Martinez says she did not borrow the money and was not aware she was on Senate payrolls for that month. Her maiden name is mis­ spelled in the signatures and printed rather than written in longhand. In June, 1971, however, she was told she was being ter­ minated. Later that summer another employe notified her she could come back to work in August. Hearst Trial Jury Possible by Monday *1976 N.Y. T im e s News Service SAN FRANCISCO - U.S. Atty. James L. Browning Jr. predicted Thursday that Patricia Hearst’s trial jury would not be finally chosen until Monday. Jury selection began Tues­ day morning, and Wednesday moved into a closed cour­ troom as U.S. District Court Judge Oliver Carter question­ ed prospective jurors in­ dividually. The courtroom is empty ex- cept for Miss Hearst, court at­ taches, lawyers and her father. Randolph Hearst, president of the San Francisco Examiner and chairman of the board of directors of the Hearst Corporation. Down the hall, held there by U.S. marshals providing security for the tria l, reporters waited for attorneys to give them status reports on the jury selection. At the end of Thursday’s session, nine prospective jurors had been found legally qualified and free of pre­ judice. Carter will reopen court when he has 36 such potential jurors, from whom the 12 jurors and four alter­ nates will be selected. The questioning of jurors in a closed courtroom is called the “ Silverthorne Plan” of jury selection. IS A LE! 2 5 % OFF REG U LA R PRICE ENTIRE S T O C K OF S K IR T S A N D D R E S S E S _ _ _ OFF REG U LA R P R IC E A N V TOP IN C L U D IN G [NEW S P R IN G M E R C H A N D I S E Thawing Relations -UPI T elep h o to Prime Minister of Cuba Fidel Castro (r) applauds C anadian Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau (second from left) after he spoke to more than 25,000 people at a rally at Ceinfuegos, Cuba. Flanking Trudeau is Arnaldo M ilian, secretary of the Com m unist party in Las Villas province, and the prime minister's w ife, Margaret. N O T I C E S t h e G eneral Libraries or a n y f r o m of the branches are of­ ficia l U n iv e r s ity co m ­ m u n ica tio n s re q u irin g im m ediate attention. EA R N C A SH WEEKLY Blood Plasma Donors Needed Men & Women CASH PAYMENT FOR DONATION Austin Blood Components, Inc. OPEN: MON. & THURS. 8 AM to 7 PM TUES. & FRI. 8 AM to 3 PM CLOSED WED. — SAT. 409 W. 6th 477-3735 E t t a . - F o o d s 158 Hancock Center 452-9742 Offering you nature's own — VITAMINS hem teas c o B o o k s Come in and browse CU/TOm hi-fi END OF THE MONTH SALE Friday 10-6 Saturday 10-6 SANSUI-BSR-AMPEX Stereo System MARANTZ-DUAl-ECI Best Buy ALL S W E A T E R S 50% OFF Shoe Shop ★ sale^ W e make and repair boots S H E E P S K I N R U G S F RIDAY A N O S A T U R D A Y ONLY NO LA Y A W A Y S 7N i T O E S O C K S Reg. 4 OO Now # 1 99 .hoe. belt. 7 50 m I T cL , M O " A i leather ★ L E A T H E R S A L E * Various Kinds, Colors - $1.00 pot ft. up B E E M 8**aAftl|*iU*Q goods Capitol Saddlery Austin, Texas 1614 Lavaca 478-9309 lunars some on 1 9 18 E^ R ive rsid e No. 27 D o bie M all 2 9 0 0 -C Anderson Lane I What Roots has you can’t patent. You can patent a sole, as Earth Shoe has. You can copy it and sell it for less as others have. But you can't patent comfort, and quality and beautiful which is what you get in a pair of Roots* Beautiful top-grain Canadian leather. Beautiful stitching and workmanship and detail. A sole that cradles your heel and supports your arch. And above all, caring. The people who make and sell Roots really do give a damn about comfortable and handsome and you. And it shows. Compare us with Earth Shoes or Nature Shoes or Exersoles or anybody and you’ll get the picture. You’ll pay a bit more for Roots. Because Roots are more. Buy a pair and you’ll love them Roots _ Be kind to feet They outnumber people two to one' u i L x e r s o ie s c ^ ciiu ie vji for a long time. C 1975. Duo Co 2200 Guadalupe 472-9433 2700 Anderson Lane 459-1303 “ Before you buy your next pair of shoes, try Roots on for sighs! Stereo System 8 SANSUI 221 • A M /F M stereo receiver • I w on* per channel • 2 yr. warranty BSR 2520X • Folly automatic changer • Complete with base, cover, and Share cartridge AMPCX 801 • 2 way speaker • I " woofer • I " tweeter MARANTZ 2230 DUAL 1225 TREND IV • 3 way spanker ' A M /F M stereo • 12" woofer • 5 " midrange 1 Fully automatic • 30 Watts per turntable receiver channel • 3 yr. warranty Complete with base, cover, and Share M f lE D App. Not. Adv. Two Days Value $419.65 Only s289*5 App. Hat. Adv. Iw, D Value $1,017.65 O n ly $599« Pioneer SE-L401 TI-1200 Bowman 657 Stereo Headphone Open A ir D esign App. Not. Adv. V a lu e 39.95 * 2 1 95 Radar Sentry 8 digit capacity % key Scotch C-90cro2 M4** 8-track/FM C ar Deck Under dash m ount App. Not. Adv. V a lu e 129.95 *699S ESS A M M P D Electronic radar detection Fits on sun visor 9 0 minute chrom e Cassette Super H ighs A pp. Not. Adv. V a lu e 49.95 *24” App. Mat. A d v. V a lu e 5.60 Sony Color TV's 2 w a y speaker 1 0 " w oofer Heil air motion App. Not. Adv. V a lu e 269.00 *205 Ultrasound V .............. 1 * 4 A M / F M Stereo Receiver 32 w atts per channel 0.5% distortion ONE ONLY Full range stereo speaker Ported D e sign Close out prices N o phone quotes App. Not. Adv. V a lu e 429.95 *269” App. Not. Adv. V a lu e 29.95 *14” Friday, January 30, 1976 THE D A ILY T EX A N Page 13 campus noms In brief IM N O U M f f M l M W BANA1! ASSOCIATION w ill sponsor a con­ tinuing workshop In th* p rin ciple s of the B aha 'i F a ith fro m IO a.m . to noon eve ry Sunday at 3710 Tom G reen St. The p ub lic Is invited. F o r Information c a ll 478-0232. ORAOUATI SCHOOL OF UBRARY SCIINCI Will sponsor a lecture by Llo yd Reynolds at 3 p.m. F rid a y In H a rry Ransom Center 3.206. Reynolds, professor em eritus of Reed College, w ill ta lk on "T h e A r t of H an dw riting and the Develoment of the A lp h ab e t." LANOUAOS ANO STUDY TIK SOB fOBIION STUOCNTS w ill be the subject of a RASSI, course at noon F rid a y in jester Center A332. TEXAS UNION ANIO-AMMICAN COMMITTEE has cancelled the talent show and dance. TEXAS UNION CULTURAL ENTERTAINMENT COMMITTEE w ill sp on so r M a r c e l M a rc e a u at 8 p.m. S a tu rd a y in M u n icip a l A uditorium . TEXAS UNION IDEAS AND ISSUES COMMITTEE w ill sponsor a sandw ich sem inar at noon F rid a y in the Doble Room on the fourth flo or of the A cad em ic Center. Dr. Je rry Dean w ill talk Special Bus Considered Shuttle for Handicapped Possible By MELANIE HENGST Texan Staff Writer A minishuttle bus service for handicapped University students is being considered by the Student Services Com- m itte e , S h elley F rie n d , chairwoman of that organiza­ tion said Thursday. Friend explained that the first step would be to find out if such a plan would even be feasible, but so far the com­ mittee was at a standstill on the idea. The committee had discuss­ ed the possibility of trying to get pledges from various civic organizatio n s in A ustin, Friend said. “Then we would take these pledges to the University and ask them to match them to keep the pro­ ject running, she added.” Friend said that the plan would probably include one bus which would run on an in­ ner campus route. The bus would have a special lift to ac­ comodate students confined to wheelchairs. Since no definite action had been taken on the plan, Friend said that she did not have any cost estimates or any idea of when the plan might go into effect. Susan Foster, chairwoman of the proposed project, could not be reached for comment. Summer Internships for Credit Offered to UT Law Students First- and second-year law students will have an oppor­ tunity to gain practical ex­ perience through legal work with the poor. Fifteen to 20 summer in­ ternships will be offered by the Human Rights Research Council (HRRC), a law stu­ dent organization, Roger Reed, program head, has an­ nounced. The interns may travel across the country to receive two to four ungraded credit hours, unless they work for p riv ate a tto rn ey s in the Austin area. “The law school does not give credit to those interns because many law students work as clerks for private firms, during the summer and pretty soon everyone would want credit,” Reed said. The reason the credit can be offered at all is because “the intern will receive faculty supervision throughout the in­ ternship,” Reed said. The interns’ salaries will Consumer Protection Sought United Press International The attorney general’s of­ fice Thursday asked a Florida bankruptcy court to protect Texas consumers who have items held by Kennedy & Cohen, a chain of appliance stores which recently filed bankruptcy proceedings. A member of Atty. Gen. Hill’s consumer protection staff filed a formal motion on the request with Southern District of Florida Bankrupt­ cy Court Judge Tom Britton in Miami. T he a p p l i a n c e c h a i n operates stores in Dallas, Fort Worth and Houston. The motion asks the court- appointed receiver to return items placed with the Texas stores for repair and items which had been bought and paid for but not delivered. consist of funds from the employer and the HRRC with the HRRC supplying up to $500 per intern. However, the employer may pay more than $500. The HRRC funds are from the Law School Founda­ tion. interested “ Everyone in applying is encouraged to go by the HRRC desk in Room 109 of Townes Hall for an application,’’ Reed said. In most cases first-year law students are eligible and are given equal consideration with second-year applicants. Applicants must sign up for interviews at the HRRC desk. Interviews are expected to last 20 minutes and will be conducted from 3 to 5 p.m. beginning Monday at the HRRC desk in Townes Hall 109. I SEAHORSE CAR WASH* j ROMIG 1 Automatic 6 Self Service < 1 2 0 6 W. ! Koenig 454-3922 : about "O rig in s of B luegrass M u s ic ." TEXAS UNION IDEAS AND ISSUES ANO MUSICAL EVENTS COMMITTEES w ill sp o n so r th e S liv e r C ity S a d d le T ram p s In the Texas Tavern fro m 9 p.m. to 2 a.m . F rid a y and Saturday. A dm ission Is 50 cents fo r U T ID holders, Si for others. TEXAS UNION RECREATION COMMITTEE In association w ith the Austin P a rk s and Recreation Departm ent is spon­ soring a backpacking workshop and fie ld trip to Pedernales State P a rk F rid a y and Saturday. Sign up in the Texas Union P rog ram O ffice from 8 a.m . to 5 p.m. F rid a y . Cost is S3 for U T ID holders, S3.50 for others. TEXAS UNION STUDENTS OLDER THAN AVERAGE w ill sponsor a sandwich sem inar on "T h e O ffice of the O m ­ budsperson and O lder Students," at noon F rid a y In Texas Union South 108. TEXAS UNION STUDENTS OLDER THAN AVERAGE w ill sp o n so r an S O T A covered dish supper at 6:30 p.m. Satuday at the home of Carol S e l ­ man. Interested students c a ll F ra n ­ c is P lo tsk y at 471-1201 or M s. S e l ­ man at 447-1160 fo r confirm ation. TEXAS TAVERN w ill sponsor B ra zilia n m u sic fro m 9 p.m. to m idnight Sun­ day. A dm ission Is free. TEXAS UNION THEATRE COMMITTEE w ill sp o n so r th e f ilm s " T h e T h re e M u ske te ers" and "F le s h G ord o n" F r id a y and S a tu rd a y in J e s te r Center A uditorium . "M u sk e e te e rs" w ill be featured at 7 and 9 p.m. and " F le s h G ord o n" at l l p.m. both nights. Adm ission is SI with U T ID, $1.50 for others. TEXAS UNION THEATRE COMMITTEE w ill sponsor the Saturday M o rning Fun C lub film "T h e Seventh Voyage of Sinbad " at l l a.m. Saturday in Jester Center A uditorium . A d m is­ sion is free. t h e TEXAS UNION THEATRE COMMITTEE w ill s p o n s o r " A l i c e ' s R e stau ran t" at 7 and 9 p.m. Sunday in Jester Center Auditorium . A d m is ­ sion is $ I fo r U T ID holders, SI .50 for others. f i l m UNITARIAN CHURCH OE AUSTIN w ill hold a tw o-part "S u n flo w e r" se rie s on m ale sexuality beginning at I p.m. S u n d a y a t the F ir s t U n it a r ia n Church of Austin, 4700 G rov er A v. Adm ission is Si, and babysitting Is av ailab le at a sm all charge. UNIVERSITY UNDERWATER SOCIETY is o ffer­ ing basic and advanced NAU I scuba instruction for beginners or certified divers. C a ll 451-4364 or 452-3918 for in fo r m a tio n . T he f ir s t r e g u la r meeting of the society w ill be T h u rs­ day. MEET INGS AlCHE w ill meet at 4 p.m. F rid a y In Geology Building IOO to hear Dr. C h a rle s A rn o ld of E x x o n Corp. s p e a k o n " O i l R e c c v e r y A n Engineering C h alleng e." There w ill be a happy hour after the meeting at Hansel and G retel's. AUSTIN GUITAR SOCIETY w ill meet at 2 p.m. Sunday at the Catho lic Student Center for a regu lar meeting. CHABAD HOUSE w ill meet at 5:45 p.m. F r i­ day at 2101 Nueces St. for shabbat services, at IO a.m. Saturday fo r ser­ vices and Torah reading and at IO a.m. Sunday for a class in beginning Talm ud. GAY COMMUNITY SERVICES w ill m eet at 7:30 p.m. F rid a y at the U n iversity " Y " for an inform al discussion of gay life. GDE-WOMENS SERVICE ORGANIZATION w ill meet at 6 p.m. Sunday In Robert Lee M oore H a ll 5.102 for prospective m embers. A ll women interested In service to the com m unity are In­ vited. INTER VARSITY CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP w ill meet at 6:30 p.m. F rid a y in the Norden Lounge of the U n ive rsity C h ris tia n C h urch fo r a pot luck supper and fellowship. MUSLIM STUDENT ASSOCIATION w ill meet at noon F rid a y at the U n iversity " Y " fo r p rayer and at 7 p.m. F rid a y In the International O ffice on 26th Street for a welcom ing party for new M u slim students. PEOPLE'S BICENTENNIAL COMMISSION W ill meet at 7 p.m. F rid a y at the F riend s M e e tin g H ou se to d is c u s s th e Freedom Train. STUDENT SERVICES COMMITTEE STUDENT GOVERNMENT w ill meet at 8 p.m. Su nd a y in B u s in e s s -E c o n o m ic s - B uildin g 51 to meet new m em bers and plan activities. TABLETOP OENRERALS w ill meet at I p.m. Sunday in Calhoun H all 422 to play D iplom acy and A valon -H ill board games . UNIVERSITY PRE-AW ASSOCIATION w ill hold a mock L S A T exam ination at 8 a.m. Saturday in Townes H a ll 123. ) for The cost of the exam Is S n o n - m e m b e r s a n d f o r members. f r e e WATERLOO HISTORICAL SIMULATION SOCIETY w ill meet at I p.m. Saturday In C a lh o u n H a l l 422 to p la y Napoleonic minatures. SEMINARS DEPARTMENT OE ASTRONOMY w ill sponsor a spectroscopy sem inar at noon F r i­ d ay in R o b e rt Le e M o o re H a ll 15.216B. M r. Fred B ru hw eller w ill talk on "C h lo rin e Abundances In E a r ly Type S ta rs." 2 ARBY’S HOT ROAST BEEF SANDWICHES ONLY 1.15 Reg. 1.90 Value Save 75* Beginning Sunday, Pub. J BUY O N E CHICKEN FRIED STEAK SANDWICH GET ONE FREEH Tender Roast Beef diced thin and piled so high both buns could never touchl Now you can enjoy Arby's famous Roast Beef and great savingsl Mils' Featuring; A rbyV-Roust Beef Sandwlrh 4411 South La m a r................................. 892-2058 1715 G u a d a lu p e ....................................472-1582 5400 Burnet Road...................................451-3760 No Limit • No Coupon Necessary Southwestern Clark To Get Award be h o n o r e d University Regent Ed Clark wi l l by Southwestern University at Georgetown Friday with its Di s t i n g u i s h e d Al u mn u s Award. Clark, a University of Texas law school graduate, has long supported S outhw estern, which he attended in the early 1920s. In 1966, Southwestern a wa r de d Cl ark an LLD degree. He also holds an honorary doctorate from Cleary College in Michigan. The awards luncheon will be at noon in the university com­ mons, following an ll a.m. r e c e p t i o n t h e Cody in Memorial Library. Special note will be made of the Edward A. Clark Collection of Texana which Clark has con­ tributed to almost weekly over the last IO years. Clark served as ambassador to Australia in 1965-1969 and also as Texas assistant at­ torney general in 1932-1935 and Secretary of State in 1937- 1939. He is senior partner in the law firm of Clark, Thomas, Winters & Shapiro of Austin and is senior chairman of the board of Capital National Bank in Austin. Clark serves as a trustee for Southwestern University and also for The University of Texas Law School Founda­ tion. He has been a member of the Board of Regents of the University since 1973. The key speaker for the ceremonies will be restora­ tion historian Dr. William Seale, also an alumnus of Southwestern. Seale is direc­ tor of the White House Film Project. Others participating in the program honoring Clark will be Dr. F. Warren Roberts, president of the Southwestern Al u mn i A s s o c i a t i o n , Sout hwes t er n P r e s i d e n t D u r w o o d F l e m i n g a n d Chaplain Farley Snell. KARA-VEL SHOES Northcro88 Mall $5 - $7 -* 9 - $ 1 1 Baretraps Pappagallo Darmi Carber Beruardo Nina SEO Dexter (for men) Cherokee Bort Carlton All Sales Final Rara-Vet Shoes S te re o C en ter's P re * * •* 3 **?■ «■« . $ KENWOOD ^KENWOOD 1516 L A V A C A 476-6733 Kenwood KR-1400 A M / F M Stereo Receiver. IO watts per channel with no m ore than 1.0% Total H arm onic D istor­ tion. SALE PRICE $ 138 OO App. Not. Adv. Valuo $180.00 ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ *★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ *************£ J Our equipment is arriving and the first load features J if these great models from Kenwood. And to help in- * J Produce you to Kenwood's fine quality, we're making J J some extra special deals — not only on these models but J J on systems, too. It's been our experience that if you own J * Kenwood, you're sure to own quality because very few * * * Kenwoods come back for repairs. * ? Kenwood KR-5400 A M / F M Stereo Receiver. 35 watts per channel with no more than 0.5% Total H arm onic Distor- Adv. Valuo $380.00 . ^ PRICE * 2 8 8 0 0 Kenwood LS-403 2 Way Speakers App. Not. Adv. Value SALE PRICE Kenwood KR-7400 A M / F M Stereo R eceiver. 63 watts per channel with no m ore than 0.3% Total H a rm on ic D istor­ tion. A p p . N o t. A d v . V a lu e *520.00 SALE PRICE $388 0 0 KENWOOD KX-710 Stereo Cassette Deck with Dolby noise reduction unit. App. Not. Adv. Value *250.00 ^ SALE $ PRICE 195 OO *170 /p air $135 /pair STEREO CENTER 1516 We also have other Kenwood receivers in stock as well as several tape decks for cars. We invite you to come in and judge Kenwood’s quality for yourself. LAVACA Kenwood KR-1022 Belt-driven turntable App. Not. Adv. Value *110.00 SALE PRICE *88 476-6733 Page 14 F rid a y , Ja n u a ry 30, 1976 TH E D A ILY T E X A N T h e Da il y T e x a n sports . , •otortolnment features Beckie Wright performs on the balance beam. Longhorn junior Tori Mathews freestyles at practice in the Gregory Gym pool. Women's Athletics: Dr. Donna Lopiano and the Seven Dwarfs Perhaps the most popular college foot­ ball coach in the nation is Texas’ Darrell Royal. Royal emerged from the rags of the Oklahoma Dust Bowl to riches of inter­ collegiate football. And unlike many coaches, Woody Hayes of Ohio State for example, Royal did so without stepping on too many toes. He was won two and a half national championships at Texas, and Longhorn fans everywhere will swear by him. So when Title IX came about calling for equality in intercolleqiate athletics, Royal was quoted as saying that it would be “the death of intercollegiate athletics as we know it today.” And this produced widespread fear. But a talk with women’s athletics direc­ tor Dr. Donna Lopiano will relieve that fear. Quickly. “We’re not out to toke anything away from the men,” Lopiano said. “ We’re all for them. An im portant point to remember is that we don’t want to merge with the men without a financial solution so we won’t drain off the men. The Department of Health, Education and Welfare said in 1972 that universities across the nation must end sex dis­ crimination in intercollegiate athletics or face the loss of federal funding. At The University the loss of federal fun­ ding would amount to $20 or $30 million. TITLE IX, part of the 1972 Education Amendments Act, didn’t really stir up any controversy until summer, 1975, when HEW began to pressure univer­ sities with the loss of their funds. The University responded in July, 1975, with the appointment of Lopiano to put women’s intercollegiate athletics on an equal level and do this within the three- year time span given by HEW. Lopiano took over an a th letics program which was equal to men in only one area, the number of funded sports. Both had seven funded varsity sports, although men had one funded junior var­ sity sport (junior varsity basketball). The women have been discriminated against in numerous areas such as travel, equipment, coaching, administra­ tion, medical treatment, scholarships and public relations. The men’s budget is a whopping 14 times greater than the women’s. The men spend $2,113,030 to the women’s $157,485. LOPIANO AND HER seven sports have progressed in the seven months she has been in power, enough that she isn’t criticizing the efforts of the men’s athletics department. UT Athletics Budgets Equipment ............................. $351,600 ^ 7,400 T r a v e l.................................... 360,656 Coaches ................................. Administration ........................ 465,364 Medical Services....................... 105,9S6 Scholarships............................ 612,000 50,024 Public R e la tio n s....................... TOTAH Men'* Wonton'* *2*-595 16,209 14,911 **>*33 12,955 2,245 $2,113,030 $137,ASS Two recent actions by University President Lorene Rogers have pleased Lopiano greatly. First, Rogers allocated $23,000 for scholarships for 1976-77 before the budget was even drawn up. This was an $8,000 increase over last year, and the early announcement will allow Texas to do some high school recruiting as op­ posed to giving scholarships to athletes already enrolled. The other action was a move by Rogers to make University Vice- President Ron Brown the person with whom Lopiano deals instead of Rogers. “ I’m really enthusiastic about this re­ cent support,’’ Lopiano said. “I can’t make any estimate about continued sup­ port for our budget, but we’re making progress.” THE WOMEN have gained equality in another area since Lopiano has been here. Women now have equal access to all facilities for intercollegiate sports ex­ cept tennis. Because of the limited size of Penick Courts, the women’s team has had to play mostly at the intramural fields. The progress that Lopiano is eventual­ ly aiming for is a total merger with men’s athletics. Within the next few months, the women’s athletics depart­ ment will petition The University for a m erger with the men. The move probably won’t come about until women’s athletics can pull most of its weight. R ig h t now, th e w om en a r e n ’t anywhere near pulling their weight. Last fall, Lopiano came up with a list of several alternate funding sources, which included special fund raising events (such as the Battle of the Sexes softball game), mandatory student funding and alumni contributions. Presently, only the alum ni con­ tributions are being pursued. But the paperwork for soliciting contributions is bogged down because of the lack of office help. THE REASON for a m erger is twofold. First, the women would be split­ ting contributions. Second, and most im­ portant, is that needless duplication of work could be eliminated. “With one department, we’d only need one athletic director with an assistant,” Lopiano said. “That would be cheaper than paying two separate directors like we are now.” Lopiano said that if a merger plan is worked out, the women woald be willing to delay for a few years what the HEW would define as equality. THE NCAA may provide the answer for the source of some of the needed in­ come for the women. The $612,000 spent on men’s scholarships this year will be cut to $386,984 for the 1978-79 year, free­ ing $239,015 for use elsewhere. If nothing else, the money should be used for women’s travel ami coaching. Texas does not have the money to send any women athletes to regional or national competition. Texas also does not have the money to pay for fulltime women’s coaches. The present seven women’s coaches draw pay from Tile University for teaching full loads and receive an average of $2,- 000 for their coaching services. The total comes to less than Lew Hewlett makes for being a brain coach for the men’s athletes. Although there weren’t many rags in Connecticut where Lopiano grew up, she, too, may find intercollegiate riches at Texas. Texas' forward Sarah Foster fights to control the ball against SMU. Compare . . . An example of the difference in treatment of men and women in intercollegiate athletics at Texas is equipment. To the left is Tom Nichols, a men s varsity basketball player. Nichols is equipped with two uniforms (home-white and a way- orange), several pairs of socks, warmups, tennis shoes, a spacious locker, towels, socks and a sweatsuit. To the right is Jan Davis, a varsity basketball player on the women s basketball team. Davis is equipped with one uniform and warmups. Nichols’ equipment costs $300 as opposed to the $100 Davis’ equipment costs. But the equipment differences are only the tip of the iceberg. Men are able to enjoy full scholarships as opposed to the partial scholarships split by the women. Men travel extensively, are promoted by a large sports information department, and have an exclusive dining hall. With the implementation of Title IX, these things may change. • • • rn Tom Nichols displays $300 worth of mon s gear. Jon Davis displays $100 worth of woman's gear. Friday, January 30, 1976 TH E D A ILY T EXA N Page 15 ken gray Rangers Hit Austin, N ew Faces ... N ew Act? Sneaking in as loudly as a cockroach on tile, the Texas Ranger baseball caravan passed through Austin Tuesday. The purpose of the caravan (which will include most of the state and parts of Oklahoma before its ends) was an attempt to gain publicity and, it was hoped, draw fans to Arlington in the course of the season. Representing the Rangers were Dick Risenhoover, voice of the Rangers; Kip Horsburgh, director of marketing; Hal Keller, farm club director, along with Steve Foucault, David Clyde, Austin residents Tommy Boggs (Lanier High), Jim Gideon and Frank Lucchesi, manager. Bicentennial The year 1976 finds the Rangers out on a thin limb as a result of some questionable trades, particularly the Ferguson Jenkins trade that brought outfielder Juan Beniquez and Steve Barr plus an estimated $200,000 from the Red Sox for what two years ago was considered to be the best pitcher in baseball. True, Jenkins didn’t set the world on fire last year, but you can’t ignore the fact that he is a proven winner. “Beniquez played in a couple of games in the World Series for Boston,” Risenhoover said. “If he can perform well the trade will be good for the Rangers no matter how Jenkins does over there. Centerfield has always been a big problem for the Rangers, and Juan looks like the guy who could end all the miseries. He just has a great deal of talent, and he would probably lead off.” Defense for the Rangers can certainly be no worse considering they statistically had the worst defense in the American League last year. Texas also picked up Bill Singer and Nelson Briles, both familiar names from the past, but whether they will continue to be familiar is another question. SINGER, 31, is one of few players to have won 20 games in both leagues when he played with the LA Dodgers and the California Angels. Singer has just undergone an elbow operation, and for the first time in five years can fully extend his arm, according to Risenhoover. Briles, meanwhile, has appeared in two World Series but has been bothered by numerous injuries the last two years. Heading up the pitching will be Gaylord Perry, whom the Rangers are counting on heavily. Perry looked good in spurts after an erratic start with the Rangers. “Gaylord has to have another good year for us. If we can stabilize our pitching, we ll be in great shape,” Foucault said. Foucault, a Florida native, will have to have a good year himself, especially if the pitching falls on its collective face as it could. “I THINK we’ll improve quite a bit over last year,” the bearded Foucault said. “I was never really bothered mentally by the fact our defense was the worst. You know when you’ve done a good job, so you just go out and give it your best.” Clyde had mixed feelings about the trade. “Fergy is at a stage in his career where he could get a lot of money. I’m a starting pitcher looking for a spot, so I have to look at it from both sides,” he said. Clyde spent time in Sarasota, Fla., in the instructional league to work on his pitching during the off-season. Ex-Longhorn Gideon will be competing with Clyde for the fifth spot in the rotation, and they both get along surprisingly well. “It’s just great to be back in Austin. I feel like I’ve been playing baseball for ll straight months, but I feel a lot stronger,” Gideon said. “The chances of making the team are there, I just have to stay healthy and get off to a fast start.” Gideon will certainly need to get a faster start than last year when he was shelled in his first appearance after an outstanding career with the Longhorns. “Frank (Lucchesi) just gives you the go­ ahead He doesn’t scold you like a little kid,” Foucault said in reference to Lucchesi and ex-manager Billy Martin “Frank just takes it easy and tells you to pitch, just do the best you can,” Foucault said. In r e a lity , L u c c h e si seems to be a levelheaded, everyday so rt of guy. Not one for g re a t philosophical thoughts, something m ost coaches will “ bless you with ” “I think we’ll be a contender. I want to make this clear, we’re not going to be patsies for anyone. I also don’t think I have anything to prove to anyone, I just thank God we won when I was around last year,” Lucchesi said. There are those who would have you believe that as a result of the off-season trades the Rangers have “provided the butt for the butt-kicking” during the coming season. Personally, I wouldn’t bet a used Bic pen on ___________________ that statement. ■Fill up that em pty! Sunday night feeling. Rockets Lose; Spurs Triumph KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UPI) — Nate Archibald scored 21 points and nine assists to pace seven Kansas City players in double figures and lead the Kings to a 119-86 victory Thursday night over Houston. Also in double figures for Kansas City, were Jimmie Walker with 18, Scott Wedman with 16, Larry McNeill with 15, Glenn Hansen and Sam Lacey with 12 and Ollie John­ son with ll. Ags Host UT Golf Coach George Hannon has high hopes for the Texas golf team this year, and its first test comes this weekend when the squad travels to College Station for the Aggie In­ vitational Golf Tournament. Teams scheduled to com­ pete are SMU, defending co- Southwest Conference cham­ pion Houston and the host Texas Aggies. Texas has tied Houston for SWC championship the last two years. And this, coupled with Texas beating Houston three out of four times last fall, makes for a grudge the H orns and betw een Cougars. Texas sends a veteran squad to Aggieland with sophomore Lance Ten Broeck, last year’s SWC medalist, leading the way. Senior Tim Wilson, who finished second in the SWC championships last year, one stroke back of Ten Broeck, gives the Longhorns a nucleus for what could be a nationally ranked team. Lacey added 12 rebounds and six assists for the Kings, who outrebounded their op­ ponents 72-44. Rudy Tom janovich led Houston with 21, and Calvin Murphy had 18. ★ ★ ★ SAN ANTONIO (UPI) - The San Antonio Spurs explod­ ed for a season high 41 first quarter points and went on to down the Indiana Pacers 136- 112 Thursday night in an American Basketball Associa­ tion contest. James Silas hit ll points to spark the Spurs to a 41-17 first quarter lead and wound up as the game’s high scorer with 32 points. Silas also dealt off 15 assists, and the Spurs set a franchise record with 47 assists and outrebounded In­ diana 61-46. ★ ★ ★ NORFOLK (UPI) - Newly acquired Swen Nater and veteran forward Willie Wise each scored 21 points Thurs­ day night to lead the Virginia Squires to a 108-104 American Basketball Association vic­ tory over the K entucky Colonels. Track Team To Organize Any woman interested in joining the Texas women’s track team should contact Coach Jack Daniels by Satur­ day. Daniels can be reached from 3 to 4:30 p.m. weekdays at the University track or in his office, 922 Bellmont Hall (472-1273). standings ABA NBA (W att C oati G am a Mat Indudad) f a t ta r n Confaranca Atlantic Division PCT .711 .630 .612 490 PCT .574 .553 .489 .489 .442 PCT .426 .386 .362 .311 PCT .733 .500 .458 .426 .400 Of 3'/j 4 IO OR I 4 4 6 OR I Vt 3 5 OR 1 0 '/2 12 Vi 14 15 W I B o s to n .......................... 32 13 P h ila d e lp h ia 29 17 B u f f a lo ........................ 30 19 New Y o r k .................... 24 25 I 20 21 24 23 24 W W a s h in g to n .............. 27 C le v e la n d .................. 26 A t la n t a ...................... 23 Houston .................... 22 19 New O r le a n s Central Division Western Conference Midwett Division I M ilw a u k e e ................ 20 27 D etro it ...................... 17 27 Kansas C it y 17 30 C h ic a g o ...................... 14 31 W Pacific Division W I Golden S ta te 33 12 Los A n g e le s .............. 24 24 S e a ttle ........................ 22 26 P o r tla n d .................... 20 27 Phoenix .................... 18 27 Thursday's Results A tlanta 112 New York 109 Kansas C ity 119 Houston 86 M ilw a u k ee 105 Phoenix 96 Philadelphia a t Golden State Friday's Go m et New Y o rk a t New Orleans C leveland a t Chicago Kansas City at D etroit Portland a t Los Angeles Washington a t Seattle W D e n v e r ...................... 32 New Y o r k .................. 29 San A n to n io .............. 25 K e n tu c k y .................. 26 In d ia n a ...................... 25 St. L o u is .................... 20 8 V irg in ia .................... I l l 15 19 21 22 27 37 OR FCT .744 — .659 3Vi .568 7'/i .553 8 .532 9 .426 14 .178 25 I Saturday Night : I WHEATFIELD j • : • We offer 75* highballs and : • 40* draft beers. Our game : ; parlour has 9 new pool • : tables and 6 competition- J I size foos tables. I • • I BOON DOCKSI CLUB 4th & Brazos J (behind Greyhound Bus j : : Co.) • • 478-0380 BAN’S ...................................................................... 478-54231 ............................................................... 459-8689 1600 LAVACA 5353 BURNET RD. S PECI ALS GO OD F R I D A Y A N D S A T C R D A Y _________ OPEN IO A.M. TIL 9 P.M. _ _ _ _ _ a 4 0 CUTTY SARK 86 Proof Scotch Whitley ......................................................................................Sift W O ^w W OLD SMUGGLER 86 Proof Scotch Whisky ...................................................................................... 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Sunday nights are a drag. So come by McDonald’s® for a delicious Quarter Pounder,®* a large order of world famous french fries and a soft drink. We can’t do anything about Sunday nights, except make ’em a little easier to stomach. "(Weight Vt, lb. before cooking) r n J Mc Don a id s Wfc do it all for you 2021 GUADLAUPE • DOBIE MALL 2818 GUADALUPE © 1975 McDonald’s Corp. Page 16 Friday, January 30, 1976 THE DAILY TEXAN Texas Women Host Weekend Tournament By RONNIE ZAMORA Texan Staff Writer It will take “ tanks and jeeps and rigs of every size” to stop the Texas women’s basketball team when the squad hosts the U n iv e rsity of T ex as In ­ vitational Friday night and Saturday. The Longhorns are riding a six-game winning streak after stopping a talented Texas A&M team, 55-49, Tuesday night at Gregory Gym. Southwest Texas State and the University of Houston will open the four-team affair at 6 p.m. Friday in the tourney opener. Host Texas will take on Trinity at 7:30 p.m. in the nightcap. The respective losers tangle at 3 p.m. Saturday for con­ solation honors. The winners meet at 4:30 p.m. Saturday for th e t o u r n a m e n t c h a m ­ pionship. TEXAS is the hottest of the four teams with a 7-3 mark but the remaining three are no pushovers. Texas has played all three this season, and each game was close. Texas defeated Southwest Texas State by a 57- 47 score and the University of Houston by a 58-52 count but lost to Trinity early in the season by a narrow 67-66 margin. “ Our players rem em ber that one,” stated Texas Coach Rodney Page. However, Texas has im ­ proved vastly since that loss seven weeks ago. P a g e ’s squad has gotten its a c t together in the last two weeks in running up its string of six consecutive victories. What has been the reason for Texas’ sudden rise to success? “ We improve with every gam e,” noted Page. “ But everybody is still aware that we need to improve m ore.” In Tuesday’s nip-and-tuck game with Texas A&M, the Longhorns committed 28 tur­ novers and still came away with the victory. However, T e x a s w e n t f o r h i g h - percentage shots in outplaying the Aggies. “ When we made baskets on offense, they were up close,” said Page, who stresses fun­ damentals as his basic in­ stru ctio n . ‘‘We w ere ju st better disciplined than they were.” T e x a s s t a r t e r s R e t h a Swindell and senior captain Kathy Self Steinle each had Former Players Challenge Owls HOUSTON ( UP I ) - A group of six form er Rice University basketball players who are still on scholarship but not playing have challeng­ ed the present 2-16 squad to a “ wi n n e r t he schedule” game. t a k e o v e r The challenge was issued in a 12-page brochure distributed at Wednesday night s game while the Owls were losing to the SMU Mustangs 90-67, their 14th straight defeat. The group called itself the Rice “alternative” team and challenged Coach Bob Polk and the current squad to a game. The winner would take over the remainder of the schedule beginning Sunday, the challenge said. “ If Bob Polk hesitates to take the challenge, the reason is obvious,” the former Owls contended “ He knows that we will win and, like virtually every other opponent he has met this season, he will be overwhelmed by our m an­ power. “ This challenge is serious, and we hope it will be justly considered by all those that can assist our program. The challenging players were guards Chuck Saus, Jeff Tunnel and Doug N alley, forward Charles Daniels and f o r w a r d - c e n t e r s S t e v e Lukingbeal and Dwight Whit­ son. Daniel, Saus and Lukingbeal are seniors, Tennell and Whit­ son are juniors and Nalley is a sophomore. Nalley, who was recruited by Polk, and Daniels were members of the 1975 squad at the beginning of the season but quit because of dis­ putes with Polk. The others were not allowed to report for the squad this year. TEXAS LADY 411 W. 24th TON ITE CARL NELSON SAT-STEVE HART Home Cooked Food S erved H am - 2am EGG ROLL STAND Chinese Food to Go 2717 Guadalupe at Hemphill SPECIAL THIS WEE 3 EGG RO LLS for $1 Open 7 days a week VC tllHM NNM IIIIIIIIIIIItUIIM Stop aying E igh prices for Brakes. Get Quality and Economy with I.P.E. remanufactured Brake Shoes or new Disc Pads. r " 'f h! s “m o n t h' s p e c Fa l" ~ I 2 0 % Discount on All I J SHOES A N D PADS Coupon tx. 2-29-76 I j I ^ I nternational ca r parts 474-6451 3025 Guadalupe Austin, Tx Kentucky Loses Forward Robey LEXINGTON, Ky. (UPI) - Kentucky’s hopes of win­ ning another Southeastern Conference basketball cham ­ pionship were dealt a severe blow Thursday when the Wildcats lost forward Rick Robey for the season. Robey, a 6-10 sophomore from New Orleans, La., rein­ jured his right knee in practice, and the team physician advised against his playing again this season for fear of permanent damage to the knee. Robey was the team ’s leading scorer and rebounder before he injured his knee the first time, missing three SEC games. Returning to action last Saturday, Robey sparked Ken­ tucky to an 89-82 road-game victory over Florida with 19 points and 9 rebounds. He scored l l points Monday night when Kentucky lost to Auburn 91-84 in overtime. Without Robey, Coach Joe Hall has only one player on his squad taller than 6-5. That is 6-10 center Mike Phillips. Ironically, Kentucky started the season well fixed for height with Robey, Phillips and 6-10 Danny Hall, who dropped out of school this month and transferred to Marshall University. t Swimmers Face A & M Leland Doubtful for Meet Both Texas’ men’s and women’s swimming teams will be in action at 7:30 p.m. Friday in Gregory Gym pool in a dual m eet with Texas A&M. Although neither Texas coach is overly concerned about the outcome of the meet, both are counting on this performance for future reference. “ I’ll be looking a t what people will run for their second event in the conference meet, so most of our top swimmers will be competing in their second events,” men’s coach Pat Patterson said. PATTERSON is hoping the Horns can jump out to an early lead over the Aggies by win­ ning the diving competition and relay races. ‘If we can take both the relays and the div­ ing, then we will be ahead 30-2 and we can af­ ford not to swim all of our boys,” he explain­ ed. Patterson will go with his best when he has to, and he was quick to point out that the Aggies will not be a pushover. “They’ve got some good kids in the 200 freestyle and one really good breaststroker in Bobby Leland, although I’m not sure if he ll come down here with them,” Patterson said. PATTERSON said that Leland went on a swimming trip to Czechoslovakia recently, and that is the reason he is doubtful for Friday’s meet. “ If he does show up, I ’ll probably send John McMahon against him the 200-yard breaststroke. If not, I don’t know what I ’ll do,” Patterson said, mentioning Brent Barker and Ralph Watson as possible replacements. in ‘They’ve got a junior college transfer nam­ ed Erie Rasmussen in the 200-yard freestyle who is really good,” he added. Although neither Texas coach is overly heavily on a victory over the Aggies, that is not the primary consideration of Women's Coach Keith Bell. “We’d like to win, but the big thing is to qualify more people for the nationals,” Bell said. outstanding defensive games for Texas. in stopping S WI N D E L L , th e 6-2 freshman from Center, and S t e i n l e “ w o r k e d w e l l together” the Aggies underneath. Swindell connected on the last seven points for Texas with three buckets coming on feeds from Steinle. Guard R ita E gger, the “quarterback” of the team, added l l points in the game Swindell had 21 and Steinle 16. D ebbie Tur nbough and Lorene McClellan are the other likely starters on the Texas squad which has only eight healthy players. TEXAS STEREO'S WAREHOUSE CLEARANCE FINAL 2 DAYS FOR CLEARANCE — ITEM REDUCED EVERY SUPER SPECIALS ON QUANTITIES LIMITED — D I S C O N T I N U E D A N D D E M O N S T R A T O R MERCHANDISE SAVE *86.95 SAVE *41.00 SAVE *55.95 o o o c c c c •X <**«««• A'** A , Sony TA 1066 15 R M S Watt per channel integrated stereo amplifier. 0.8% distortion, hi filter, 2 tape in puts, 2 year warranty. Bowman 1335 A M / F M Stereo Cassette Player for your car, 24 watts, fast forward, in dash mount, installa­ tion available. Pioneer PL-15 2 Speed Belt Drive Manual Turntable with base, cover, Shure 400E cartridge. One year warranty. SALE SAVE *50.95 SALE SALE SAVE *70.95 SAVE *85.95 ERC 344T 2 W ay Tower speakers with dual 8 " extended range woofer, 3“ tweeter, dampened walls, tuned port, 5 year warranty. KLH 23 ; w ay acoustic suspended loudspeaker with 12“ driver, 2“ tweeter, walnut enclosure, 5 year warranty. Sony PS 5520 2 speed belt drive automatic turntable, precision tracking, in­ cluding base, cover, Shure 400E. SALE each SALE SALE TEXAS STEREO NORTH STORE 104 E. Huntland Drive Near Highland Mall 454-8053 HOURS Tues-Fri 12:00-9:00 Saturday 10:00-6:00 SOUTH STORE 1914 E. Riverside Drive Town Lake Shopping Center 447-8764 FREE Use of our Sw ap Shop Bulletin Board Put up your notice and get results ( Krueger Reviews UT Career Senior Star Lends M aturity to Young Texas Team next year to be a graduate a s s i s t a n t t h e T e x a s in program , a one-year post cu rren tly held by fo rm er Longhorn Tyrone Johnson. DURING HIS c areer at Texas, Krueger has observed numerous changes and im­ provements in the Southwest C o n f e r e n c e b a s k e t b a l l programs. “ Right now, th ere is a b e tte r c a lib e r of p lay ers overall than when I cam e,” he noted. “ When I came here, each team had one good player, but now each one has five, six, maybe even seven good ones. “ T h e c o n f e r e n c e h a s definitely improved,” he con­ cluded. “The teams are play­ ing b e tte r nonconference schedules and doing well.” Krueger attributes the pre- s e n t p r o b l e m s of t h e Longhorns to youth and the subsequent inexperience. “ INEXPERIENCE has been the big problem,” he said. “ We’ve been starting s e v e r a l f r e s h m e n , and sometimes we don’t realize what we have to do out there.” Krueger insists the trouble with the team is not at the coaching level. “The coaches have done all they can,” he stressed. “The scouting reports we’ve gotten have been perfect, but we simply haven’t been able to do what we needed to in order to _ win. “Coach Black doesn t get on us as long as we play hard and do the best we can,” he added. “He has been patient, and I think he has done a good job. “ We’re just making too many mist akes,” he said “ We haven’t played hard enough in all our games, in particular against Baylor and TCU. And we played badly against SMU.” B E IN G the only senior starter puts Krueger in the position of being in the midst of a rebuilding program in which he has no playing future, but he views his place philosophically. “I try to help the young players gain in experience and confidence,” he noted. “And I also want to do what I can. I want to see the team improve, get better after I leave.” Krueger points to the first Southwest Conference tourna­ ment, which will determine the rep re se n ta tiv e to the NCAA p l a y o f f s , as a motivational factor for Texas. “ If we can turn things around and play hard, we can improve more quickly,” he said. “The tournament gives you something to look forward to even if you don’t do well in the standings. With that situa­ tion, anybody can still win ” BEVERAGE CITY ENFIELD CENTER BEER 12th at Lamar OLD MILWAUKEE...., .................. case, warm , one-way TEXAS PR ID E ........................... •case, w arm , o n e-w a y.... 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Jan. 30-Jan. 31, 1976 s ix pack NR By BILL SULLIVAN Texan Staff Writer I t’s a long trek from Stevens Point, Wise., to Austin, but Texas guard Dan Krueger is one man who is happy to have made the trip. in Krueger, a senior and the stabilizing the influence Longhorn floor game, has known the excitement of win­ ning a Southwest Conference championship and the dif­ ficulties of a young and inex­ perienced team. Out of high school, the 5-11 Krueger received offers from Arizona State, Duke and Kan­ sas among others, but the presence of another sm all guard at Texas convinced him to come here. “I came down for a visit and liked the p lace,” he said. “ And ( H a r r y ) s a w Larrabee, a sm all guard, playing. I figured I could play here, too.” I THE PEOPLE here were real friendly,” he added. “Wherever I went, it was go­ ing to be far from home. I wanted to get out of the snow.” As an to coaching, Krueger would like i n t r o d u c t i o n J™ alterations" ! I I JEANS, SHIRTS, I ■ DRESSES ! We ore now doing I | OUTSIDE ALTERATIONS ■ Expertly a n d Promptly ■ ■ | BOB ELLIOTT'S ! ! 2426 Guadalupe I | On-tho-Drag 2900 Rio Grand# 476-6111 " SU! RT 3 1976 CALENDARS •SIERRA CLUB WILDERNESS •T O L K IE N •MOUSE PLA NT 5 FOR TUE PURPLE THUMB 4 SS •NATIONAL LAMPOON > 9 5 P E O U LAR. 4 9S A SS GLOVES • LEATHER GLOVES , PILE OR FUR LINED ES % OFF •W O O L DRESS S H IR T CHAMOIS CLOTH (M -S ^ w -io iiz ) W O O L TURTLENECK c o t t o n t u r t l e n e c k s 12 OO ISOO 17 50 9 75 1175 IO TS 9 0 0 * 9 3 0 6 rs T y v T t w r c K . N I V L 5 IO to25 7# OFF SOME VERY GO O D BRAND NAME FOLDING , SHEATH, AND KrTCHEN KNIVES DOWN B o o m s WUUAA 6PE.CIAU D O W N C L O T H I N G K I T S (ALL MATERIALS AND COMPLETE SEWING YOUR OWN1* INSTRUCTIONS FO R REGULAR SPECIAL • p a r k a (N y lo n ) •PA RK A ( 6 5 / 3 5 ) VEST •CHILDRENS PARKA (NYLON) •CHILDRENS PARKA ( 6 5 /3 5 ) 6 5 /3 5 SHELL PARKA K IT 31.00 36.00 MOO 24.00 29.00 2 6 0 0 21.75 27.75 1200 16 75 2 0 0 0 19.75 B O O K S •NATIVE FUNK 6 FLASH •HANDMADE HOUSES •SOUTH AMERICAN HANDBOOK • 25 t o 6 0 % O FF SELEC TIO N S OF CHILDRENS, GI F T . MOUNTAINEERING , A N D OTHER GOOD BOOKS 7 5 0 1296 1495 3 2 5 6 60 9 50 SHANGHAI CHINESE RESTAURANT (Shanghai, Hunan, Szechuan, Cantonese Style) 5555 N. Lamar, E-125 K oanig Lon* o f G u a d a lu p e Sun.-Thurs. Fri. & Sat. 11:30-9:30 11:30-10:00 Closed Mon. 459-3000 •A N D OTHER GOOD DEALS ON GOOD T H IN G S THROUGHOUT T H E STORE WHOLE EARTH PROVISION CO . *2410 SAN ANTONIO ST . AUSTIN - 478*1577- .. _ ___ - 478*1577 AUSTIN . . W ILL YOUR FIRST JOB OFFER YOU *11,275? THINK ABOUT FLYING NAVY Flying a Navy jet is one of the greatest challenges a man can face. lf you qualify, the Navy is willing to give you $300,000 worth of flight training Training that enables you to work with some of the most sophisticated tools ever developed. It's a demanding job. The qualifications are high. And the training is tough Take the challenge! See your Naval Officer Information team TODAY! FLY MAHY For complot# detail* so# your office recruiter a t tho BEB M onday thru Thursday 9 till 2 a t Cockroll Hall on Friday 9 til 2, or call collect (512) 341-0224 Krueger drives against Texas Tech in early season action. —Texan Staff Photo Two Nations Quit Games (U P I) INNSBRUCK - Argentina and Denmark have withdrawn from the Olympic Winter Games, reducing the total entry from 39 to 37 n a tio n s, o rg a n iz e rs said Thursday. The two nations gave no reason for their withdrawal, the organizers said. “Argentina canceled earlier this month, later revoked the c a n c e l l a t i o n a n d no w withdrew definitely without giving reasons,” one official said. The team of Chile, schedul­ ed to arrive Tuesday, still had not arrived Thursday, and its sports shorts whereabouts were unknown, organizers said. ★ ★ ★ INNSBRUCK (UPI) - The vanguard of the U.S. Winter Olympics Team moved into the Olympic Village Thursday and found t he pe r va s i ve security checks “annoying” but otherwise praised the $21 million complex. “ We are really quite pleas­ ed with it,” ; said chief Alpine Coach Hans-Peter Rohr. “The strict security is a bit an­ noying, but it is understan­ dable.” ★ ★ ★ WASHINGTON (UPI) - Rep. Robert McEwen, R- N.Y., said Thursday that progress has been made in preliminary moves to obtain $50 million in federal funds to hold the 1980 Winter Olympics at Lake Placid, N.Y. WE'RE M OVING PARADIGM LECTURE NOTES IS MOVING ACROSS THE STREET TO 4 0 7 W . 2 4 T H (Next Door to Texas Lady) Open in our new location Monday, Feb. 2 4 7 2 -7 9 8 6 ANNIVERSARY SALE 10-50% OFF Women's Dresses & Separates Sergio Tacchini Men's Wear Men's and Ladies Sweaters Fisher Matchmater Rackets Reg. $85 Yonex Aluminum Rackets Garcia 360 Wood Rackets 2 7.95 Rag. Yamaha Closed Throat Composite 50% OFF 50% OFF 25% OFF 25% OFF Now 1 9 .9 5 Reg. 110.00 Now * 7 5 NORTHCROSS MALL (Next to Frost Brothers) JO-8 Mon-Sat 45 3 -0 6 0 1 CATCH US WITH OUR CLOTHES OFF SALE. GUYS & GALS JEANS. SHIRTS & JACKETS 25-50% OFF HIS A huge assortment of sweaters, sport - shirts, knit shirts, jackets, blue jeans, bush jeans, knit jeans and coordinates by such famous makers as Levi's®, Landlubber ’ and M ale " At savings of 25-50% Off! HERS Every gals shirt in stock is Vi Price! Plus a fantastic selection of knit tops, collage sweaters, gauze tops, jeans, jumpers and coordinates by such fam­ ous makers as Levi's For Gals®, H appy L e g s and Landlubber® All at savings up to 50% Off! THEIRS All Levi's A ccessories (tote bags, ten­ nis bags, belts, the works") are VS Off! Professional model O cean Pacific® Skateboards. Reg. $34.95, Sale Price only $26.18! And other items, too numerous to mention, at once-a- year savings. Sorry, no returns, no refunds. All sales are final. H0VJS6 Of WESTGATE M AU/HIGHLAND MALL/CAMPUS STORE 2100 GUADALUPE/DOWNTOWN STORE 412 CONGRESS Page 18 Friday, January 30, 1976 THE DAILY TEXAN The Duke: His Last Picture Show ? ®1976 N .Y . T im e s N e w s Service CARSON CITY, Nev. — A man sits on horseback by the stream in J a c k s’ V alley, silhouetted against the snow­ capped Sierra Nevadas, a gray stetson on his head, a red bandana around his neck, a ri­ fle jutting out from under his saddle. His shoulders seem as wide as Monument Valley, his eyes are as steely blue as the Mo­ jave sky. He looks just like John Wayne. As two cameras roll, the man on horseback speaks. "Watch yourself with that cannon, Mister,” he says in the still-se x y baritone growl moviegoers have heard in 200 films. By gum, he is John Wayne. Now celebrating half a cen­ tury in the business, the man whose name is synonymous with the Western has begun filming what could be his last picture show. CALLED "The Shootist,” it has a sp e c ia l p oign an cy because it tells of the most celebrated gunslinger in the West who finds himself dying of cancer — the same disease John Wayne, in his inimitable fashion, announced he had "licked” 12 years ago. What’s more, the film as currently planned will unfold as an homage to John Wayne himself as well as to the fic­ tional character he plays. Before the titles, a series of still photos will show the progression of Wayne in Westerns over the years. "What we see in his brief retrospective is both fact and legend,” reads the script; “so is John Wayne.” In the winter of his years, is feisty, for­ John Wayne midable, funny — and a wee bit fed up with being a legend in his own time. “I COULD SAY it’s a pain in th e n e c k or a p a in in something else,” he said of the "legend” tag the other day. "But actually it was originally said as a compli­ ment. The average actor has a career of about 20 years. Well, 50 years ago this summer I did my first scene, doubling Fran­ cis X- Bushman Jr. in a foot­ ball picture. I can’t believe that at 68 I’m still finding things where I can really be im p o r t a n t th e m o s t character!” This will also mark the first time Wayne has worked with Don Siegel, the director who is himself a hero to many movie buffs (he has such pic­ tures as "Invasion of the Body Snatchers,” "Riot in Cell Block l l ” and “Dirty Harry” to his credit.) "We’re at opposite poles ” ^esrel noted. flashing a peace symbol ring, “but I respect and admire him. It’s kind of thrilling — working with a legend.” SPENDING TIME with Wayne on location is like step­ ping into the pages of “Life Goes to the M o v ies.’’ At dinner one night, the star was reunited with Lauren Bacall, w h o p l a y s a w id o w e d boarding-house operator in the film. They were costars once 20 ‘ ‘R e m e m b e r y e a r s a g o . ‘Blood A lley,’ Duke?” she asked with a smile. “That was 195 — whoops! Don’t tell anyone. We haven’t changed a bit.” The dinner talk drifted to reminiscences of Humphrey Bogart and John Ford and K a th a r in e H epburn and Spencer Tracy. When Wayne sheepishly mentioned he was on a salt-free d iet, M iss Bacall snatched the olives out of his martini. One almost ex­ pected Siegel to shout, “Print it.” In Jacks’ Valley the next morning, Wayne bantered with the crew, groused about his age (“I don’t mind being old. I just mind not being able to move,” ) advised Siegel on camera angles and laughed louder than anyone at John Wayne jokes. ONE JOKE about his patriotism tickled him so much he went about repeating it. “Have you heard the one about John Wayne smoking pot?” he asked. Then, he dragged on an im aginary joint, rolling his eyes and whispered lazily, “I don’t care if the flag is orange!” A minute later he shook his head. “I just wish you didn’t have to use the flag in that joke,” he said. At 68, his voice is huskier than the R ingo Kid s in “Stagecoach.” the gait slower than Captain B r ittle s ’ in “She Wore a Yellow Ribbon,” the waistline slimmer than Rooster Cogburn’s. Last spring, he spent three in the hospital with weeks viral pneumonia. His doctors have forbidden him to do loca­ tion shooting high in the mountains, fearing the effects of altitude on his heart. Yet despite rumors of ill health and retirement, Wayne in­ sisted “The Shootist” won’t be his farewell film ride into the sunset. “ H e l l , t h e y ’v e b e e n rumoring that about me for 20 years, and I hope the rumors go on for another 20,” he remarked. I ALL C IN E M A S - EVERY DA Y’TIL 1:30 P.M .- $1.25 C A P IT A L . P L A Z A 4 5 2 -7 6 4 6 • I H 35 NORTH Can't Hold It Forever) ?NDS NEXT THURS. g& K b ■ J R She’s the call AIN. He’s the cop. They both take their lobs seriously, Param ount Picture* Preterit* BURT REYNOLDS CATHERINE DENEUVE " it (Futz) is a witty, harsh, farcical, and touching dramatic pcem about tho lova — romantic, domestic, and sexual — of a farm er for his pig. a love that dem oralize! his am oral, brainleae neighbors, driving them, variously, to incest, and murder. Tom lunacy, O'Horgan, tha director, has made of the play a rustic bacchanalia in which acting. words, movement, and mueic become a vital whole that stimulates tha sexual frenzy of tha community. ...I'd suggest that you watch out for 'Futz'..." —THE NEW YORKER MIDNIGHTER flfarlpiu t o n a l I , T O M 0 H O U G A S • t ■n-ii-ir»i I t. STN SHAPIRO SIAN SINON JOSEPH S’ ! (ANO 1:16 3 :0 0 4 4 6 6 :3 0 -8 1 6 -1 0 :0 0 H I G H L A N D M A L L 4 5 1 -7 3 2 6 • IH 3 5 AT KOENIG LN. th E xcitin g WEEK! TMF TRUTH AT L A S T ? W H A T REALLY H A P P E N E D T O THE HINDENBURG? The Streets of Austin Jerry Jeff Walker and hit band outside Cattle Creek, 1972, are part of the photographic exhibition "Little Nashville," on display In Cemmunication Building A World Tour Brings Marceau F r e n c h m im e M a r c e l Marceau will once more don the white face and pathos of his silent alter-ego "Bip” in his Austin appearance Satur­ day at Municipal Auditorium. The Cultural Entertainment Committee of the Texas Union will sponsor the 8 p.m. perfor­ mance. CEC ID holders may still get tickets for 50 cents, $1 and $1.50 a t th e H ogg Auditorium Box Office. Op­ tional fee holders must show identification at the door. Tickets will be available to the public for $4.50, $5 and $5.50 at Hogg Auditorium. Box office hours are from IO a.m. to 6 p.m. Marceau’s Austin perfor­ mance is part of his lith world tour featuring famous pan­ tomimes of "Bip" and style exercises, an integral part of the art of mime. Although famous for other pantomimes such as "The Box,” none of the Marceau’s other characters have gained the popularity of the bedraggled and struggling "Bip.” Bus service will be provided for the p erfo rm a n ce for students, staff and faculty, from with buses Jester Center, Kinsolving and the University Co-Op con­ tinuously starting at 6:45 p.m. leaving HORIE SCREENS FREE PUKING IN DOWE GU SGI DOBIE MALI 477 1324 television 7 p.m. 9 W ashington Week 24 Conny and M a r ie 36 Sanford and Son 7 C ircu s of the Lions 7:90 p.m. • p.m. 36 P ractice (D e b u t) 9 G reat Pe rfo rm an ce s 24 M o vie : " D e liv e r a n c e " 7 M o v ie : " B o b and Carol and Ted and A lic e " 36 Rockford File s 9 p.m. 36 Police Story 9 Austin City L im its 10 p m 10:30 p.m. 24 7 36 New s 36 Tonight Show 9 M o n ty Python 24 The Rookies TE HILD OVER 2ND 4535W WEEK Ills IlMlcl OPEN 2:15 F U 2:30-4:15 4:00-7:45-9:30 Reduced Prices NI 4:15 (Men-Sot) ...h is horse* bb b o t rimy couldn’t take Chino! F E A T U R E S : $ 1 2 5 til BKK) — $ 1 5 0 artar M IDNIGHTERS: $1.25 (Fri. & Sat. $1.5 SUNDANCE 1:20-4:454:15 BOOTHIU 3:05-4 :30- 10:001 T R A N S ★ T E X A S OPEN OJO [SHOW AT 7 PM starring CHARIES BRONSON costarring Jill Irdond «.»ti MARCEL B0Z2UFFI, VINCENT VAN PATTIN *m) FAUSTO IOZZI V W I M , a , C U M HUM M U * M M o r a hc*l» t>* LLL HOMMAN A B M O M L A U M N T 1I S A M produced and directed by JOHN STURGIS am it, in ■ tr, WTISCONIINLNIAl WL LASING COUTO** t ION p t M s n t a l h r S A N D Y C O » l r o d D A V ID B A U G H N IM O P LE ASAN T V A H E Y N O AD 4 4 4 - M Z J 6400 Burnet Road — 465-6933 BOOZE, BANKS & BROADS! They Had Their H ands in Everything!!! T E X A S Fun and games on t h e F r e n c h c o u n ■ i ns ide . DOORS OPEN 1:30 $ 1.50 HI 4:00 FEATURES 1:45-3:25-5.-05 4:45-1 :25- 10:05 A. fRench schoolqiRl starring CARINE FRANCOIS-MARIE-CHRISTINE CARLIEZ YVES COLIGNON Executive Producer LIONEL WALLMANN Directed by PIERRE UNI A RATED * EASTMANCOLOR Also Stamno Rime Bancroft a s the C o u n t e ss C o -S ta rrin g W ILLIAM ATHERTON H I G H L A N D M A L I . 4 51-7326 • IH 3 5 AT KOENIG IN . T H E Y ’R E G O IN G TO M A K E A FO R T U N E ! If the Feds don't stop them... I f the Coast Guard doesn’t catch I f the Syndicate doesn’t get them... J I ."I.... " LIZA GENE MINNELLI BURT HACKMAN ^ R E Y N O L D S • M IDNIGHT SHOW TONIGHT! DOORS OPEN 11:30 ALL SEATS $1.25 Cuidilup* SI MI l% 4 Hildegarde Neff Donald Wolfit Terence Morgan * SV EN G A LI * cruel and I am ugly, I wind jp and you say you love me.” In Color jSundaqee C a ssid y * -B ilith Tlje 4KI«£’ (DON’T CONFUSE THEM WITH THOSE OTHER GUYS!) S U N D A N C E C A S S ID Y & BUTCH THE KID STARRIN G J O H N ’W ADE ;AREN BLAKE, and R O B ER T NEUM AN. D IR EC T E D BY A RTH U R PITT Plus 2nd Feature "BOOTHILL” Terence Hill* CoiQr lljj| LUCKY LADY Friday, Jan u ary 30, 1976 THE DAILY TEXAN Page 19 entertainment iS B B M S U j • • » » » lNS + TEX A S Q U A S IU S Theatres IV 1500 S. PLEASANT VALLEY ROAD JUST OFF EAST RIVERSIDE DRIVE $1.50 til 6 • FEA. 1:00-3:15-5:30-7:40-9:55 THE FOUR THEATRE 3227 SHO W CASE $1.50 tH A p.m. PETERSEN 1:00-4:35-1; 15 CARNAL 2:454:25-10:00 "There Has Never Been An Adventure Thriller Quite As Terrifying, Yet Enjoyable As "JAWS!’ G o r y A rn o ld — TheWashington Post HELD OVER! HELD OVER! “T H E P IC T U R E T O B E A T F O R T i l t * R I C H T O C T IH c N E X T S E T O F O S C A R S ” — G ary A rn old, W A S H IN G T O N P O S T "'DOG DAY’ WILL BE ONE OF THE MOST TALKED ABOUT MOVIES OF THE YEAR. It is a tough, hard-hitting, uncompromising film... another Oscar nomination for Pacino.’’ — Regis Phiibm, K A B C -T V “...PACINO, LUMET AND THE FILM ITSELF WILL DEFINITELY BE UP FOR ACADEMY AWARDS.” — R o b e rt Q Le w is, K F I "IF ANYONE DOESN'T THINK AL PACINO IS A SUPERB ACTOR... JUST LET HIM BUY A TICKET TO A WARNER BROS. MOVIE CALLED DOG DAY AFTERNOON! It could mean a fourth consecutive best actor nomination for Al Pacino.’” —Steve A rv in , K M P C UN THEATRE 11 weeks of drama classes For information call 476-0541 REGISTRATION NOW THRU JANUARY 31 • Classes for young people— weekday afternoons and Saturday mornings • Classes for adults— Monday and Tuesday evenings ZACHARY SCOTT THEATRE CENTER HILD OYER 2ND WEEK wnimsiiar p r e s e n t s W C H B B U O f S ■ G H O S T * USTINOV JONES PLESHETTE PETER SUZANN! OLAN a.C M M * ar aute. anta BHtaiaunoa co © Walt Disney Productions T e c h n i c o l o r M A N N T H E A T R E S TONIGHT AT 7:00-9:15 SAT. I SUN. 12:15-2:35-4:40 HELD OVER 6TH W EEK bird?. Because he’s Sam Spade, Jr.... and his falcon’s worth a fortune! Plus 2hd Feature ”CornaM(nowJ«dge^ FEATURES IH)5-3:l5-5:25-7:40-9:50 Jacqueline Susann’s bold best seller that explored all the avenues and darkest alleys of love among the international set. 'Once Is Not Enough". ISranmni l’irtufe<-|uwi<‘ A Howard ^ Kwh Production *MarqiiHiiM‘ Susan n's Hint I s .VR Enough’ Kirk Douglas Aim is S a ith DnMiuwira liffr^H iM illN NrliMNrrm ri RrrabW ran M tn k R iffia . AU SEATS S ilo TIL 4 PM Based on the sensal tonal bestseller. SNEAK \ j P R E V I E W * ^ TONIGHT 9:00 P.M. •••••• ••••••• , A - V R REST1NCTID*» - •— vest Caum at 7:15 ar 940 and to . - • balli faaturas ... ’If Tau Goa l <7 y Stof It . Yav ll Ga BIM" md y 'Oaf af Soso" Ar Anas Emertarmert Comae inc ftodudcr Also Stain; CHN CAZAU ' jAMES BORICK arc CHARES DURNING asMorefi. yowncByDy V A R S IT Y 4744351 2 4 0 0 G U A D A L U P E S T R E E T g f r f P G ] GtORGE SEGAL rn IHE BLACK BIRO-co staring STEPHANE AUOfiAN-LIONEL STANDER and LLL PATRICK COLUMBIA PICTURES Presents a RASTAR P O U K MATINEES SAT.— SUN. AT 1:20-3:03 4:50 M A N N T H E A T R E S FOX TWIN 67S7 AIRPORT SIVO 454-2711 TONIGHT AND WEEKDAYS AT 6:33-E:20 IO : I O p m PRESIDIO THEATRES nor*hero// A h — theatre/ LONG UVE ADVENTURE 454-5147 NO R T H C R O SS M A L L A N D E MSON L A N E H> BUHNE T H D AN AMERICAN MUL TI CINEMA THEA TRE Carm en F. Zollo presents In g m a r B e rg m a n ’s v.v.v.% wmmM WAVAVIVA' V I L L A G E A 2700 A N D E R S O N -451 8352 JA C K LEM M ON A N D W ALTER MATTHAU J y i* * V THE * * . O D D * " C O U P L E F E A T U R E S — 6 :0 0 -8 :0 0 -1 0 :0 0 S D R I V E R S I D E 1930 R IV ER SID E • 441 5689 W ait d isn e y UfoCHBEHKtiS HHS G h o s t V M E H M a h au n tin g he W M go ! K gM M H C 'V EU T E'- T he Magic of Bergman. T he Magnificence of Mozart. GI F E A T U R E S — 5 :0 0 -7 :2 5 -9 :5 0 * W/ Lmanuet I Id present: Sui Comm J I M Cline C M o p i e i Plummer kl ti* Jofr Huston Un Loreman tin "On* of the year's ten be»f" —TIME M in M e ld Ie IM I ^ 4:45-7:20-10:00 Twi-Lite Hr. 4:15-4:45, $1.50 I I fA CLIFF ROBERTSON VANESSA REDGRAVE and SUSAN GEORGE OUT OFF­ SEASON 5:15-7:15-10:30 Twi-lite Hr. 4.45-5:15, $1.50 Seeek: 940 anlyl ) wait Dun*, Productions — F E A T U R E S — 5 : 1 0 -7 :3 0 -9 :5 0 G ^ w e cnre w w k soc HXXfyf JBbh HU*. * * $P/C ’ E I ™ T i > L y O » f l I L F E A T U R E S —6:15-8:00-9:45 IFO) R I V E R S I D E I 930 RIVERSIDE • 441 5689 EVERY FRIDAY AND SATURDAY MIDNIGHTERS $1.25 bananas’ mm m m Pill IIIhmm* W O O D Y A L L E N BURT REYNOLDS THE LONGEST YARD EDDIE ALBERT m m m m R a different set of jaws F E A T U R E S — 6 : 2 0 - 8 :10 -1 0 :0 0 | % v ! v v ! w ry fM iy f iLij) P'jl'if f W f m T T Y T l'T V T T T IIl HTV r J 'r f T M V ll IP IP L JI U HI P til O' I J WH J I . I , a I , I J , , R E D U C E D P R IC E S T IL 6:00 M O N .— FRI. B M I P a g e 20 F rid ay, Jan u ary 30, 1976 T H E D A IL Y T E X A N HEPBVftj* A MAI WALI IS P„hIw i,™ _ j i C (...md EM Lad y) 5:45-0:00-10: IO Twi-lite Hr. 5:15-5:45 a}> Feature times u n - r n dab paper for correct times. Mitchell with special guest Bob Dylan Joni Mitchell Magnificent By MICHAEL TOLSON Texan Staff Writer Of all those female folkies who paraded to public attention in the ’60s, Joni Mitchell has stuck with us the longest. SUH creative in a way most of the others are not, she has weathered the eroding winds of popular musical taste and never allowed her innate talent to stagnate. True, her music today has evolved away from that appeal­ ing style that made her famous, but every musical move she’s made has been a progressive one. Despite the shifts in her music over the years, her popularity remains undeniable. And it s a pop­ ularity well deserved. As she demonstrated Wednesday night in an SRO Municipal Auditorium concert, she’s one of the rare per­ formers who can captivate an audience and hold it firmly for two and a half hours. In a word, she was magnificent. CRUISING INTO AUSTIN on the heels of a highly acclaimed new album, Mitchell and The L A Express displayed a musical versatility as wide as the tonal spectrum. Spanning her entire repertoire, the concert was a model of craftsmanship, carefully balanced between solo and ensemble, soft and loud, reflective and lighthearted. Occasionally a bit slow, but never lagging, her performance left little to be desired. L A. Express opened the show with a brief jazz set and after a short intermission, returned with its star. Shunning all introductory formalities, they immediately broke into “Help Me.’ A cheer went up as Mitchell approached the microphone em Up a s M liu iieu a p p iv a w u w « ... and began the first cascading verse. AS ON HER LAST few albums, her work with the band was cool a n d well-integrated throughout the evening. With L A. Express, she has found a group that suits her perfectly. Subtle, never over­ powering, they accent her music instead of dominating it. Several songs later, following “A Free Man in Paris,” the band retired for a while, abandoning Mitchell for a 40-minute solo. Here Mitchell real­ ly shined, eclipsing even the quality of her best recordings. Seldom have I seen an artist who can strike such a rich, romantic ambience through music and nothing else. Saying almost nothing during the entire section, she mesmerized the audience in a straight-through performance of some of her finest songs, including “For Free” and ‘‘Rainy Night House.” Her soothing, lux­ uriant voice and quiet instrumentation made these generally melancholy songs affective in a way her spritely, upbeat numbers never can be. THE EXPRESS returned once more to accom­ pany Mitchell on several new songs and remain­ ed, though not always in full force, for the rest of the concert. As good as they were, and as ready as the crowd was for relief from the intensity of her solo set, the magic created earlier becme in­ creasingly diminished as the concert bore on. Their music was fine, but simply not as moving or inspired as she alone can be. ★ WW With the concert proper plus one encore done, the audience began reaching for their coats. A few headed for the door. Although everyone still i i _ i -4 1 %a 4 4 a I v a was clapping, most probably expected that to be the end. Suddenly a shriek went up from those in front. A second later everyone was screaming. Mitchell had re-emerged on stage, this time dragging a scruffy, curly haired guy in sunglasses along with her. It was, of course, Bob Dylan. THE CROWD LITERALLY went mad. They jammed the aisles and clambered over seats in a frantic rush to the front of the auditorium. The front section became so crowded people began standing on chairs and shoulders to see. Those remaining in the areas behind began a relentless cry of ‘‘sit down,” to no avail. Mitchell somehow persuaded Dylan to do a cou­ ple of songs with her. After a few very long minutes of tuning, she sang “Both Sides Now while he played a rambling accompaniment. Following “Both Sides Now,” which one could barely hear for the crowd noise, a scratchy- voiced Dylan stumbled through “Girl From the North Country,” forgetting the lyrics at several intervals. Despite the loud appeals of the crowd, this song was the last. AS IN APP ROP RIATE as the Dylan appearance was, it nevertheless charged the con­ cert with an unexpected excitement. Since almost any Dylan performance is a rare treat, it capped off perfectly an evening of extraordinary enter­ tainment. Still, in the end, it was Mitchell’s show. Looking back, maybe she did have the stage presence of a dishrag, perhaps she was a poor showman. But I don’t care; she proved to me talent alone can sometimes suffice. Critic Simon: 'Beast of B'way Perceptive Writer Wields Poison Pen By RICHARD CHRISTIANSEN •197* C h ic a g o D a lly N t w t John Simon, who is not an actor but a critic, has become one of the most entertaining shows in New York theater. Writing with imperial snobbery in the hip and trendy New York magazine, he has carefully cultivated a “Beast of Broadway” persona by dip­ ping and often drowning his pen in vitriol. TWO YEARS AGO, in a real-life party scene that scans like a bad imitation of “All About Eve,” Simon was further immortalized by Sylvia Miles, an actress whose work he had not ad­ mired. Miss Miles, who has specialized in portraying ag­ ing drunks and tarts in her re­ cent films, dumped a plate of food on Simon’s head, which prompted him to shout such crudities as “Baggage!” at her as he followed her through the restaurant where the inci­ dent occurred. MEANWHILE, Simon had been producing a steady flow of criticism for New York and other publications, and now that many of these reviews and occasional essays have been collected in two new volumes, "Singularities,’’ and “Uneasy Stages” (Random House, $12.95 and $15, respec­ tively), we have a chance to judge his work as a whole. # . * I . - To state the obvious first, he is (and is proud of being) an extremely well-versed critic. In the concluding paragraph of his excellent commentary on Ibsen’s “The Wild Duck,” for example, he manages the considerable feat of bringing in references to Henry James, Erie Bentley, F.L. Lucas and Bertolt Brecht. And all this in only ll lines of type! He also is a critic who is not afraid to make his position clear, an admirable attribute when he is not hitting the reader over the head with endless and unnecessary postilion papers. A VISIT to “Julius Caesar” at the American Shakespeare Festival gives him “ the dry I H ! 1 7 A 4 A k i n r r t h o r o v i v D heaves.” Watching the revival of “No, No, Nanette,” he feels like “reaching for the nearest plywood gun and rushing to the first street corner to enroll in the g u e r r il l a theater.” “Show Me Where the Good Times Are” is “a faggoty, Jewish, collegiate musical.” And besides that, “It is no good.” In a statement on “The Aesthetics of the Actor’s in “Singulari­ Appearance” ties,” he makes the valid point that Maureen Stapleton was miscast in a revival of Clifford Odets’ “The Country Girl.” “Georgic, the wife in the play, is supposed to have been a beauty, and Miss Stapleton does not qualify in that area.’ TRUE ENOUGH, but then Simon goes on and on: “ For the actress (Miss is one of the Stapleton) homeliest — perhaps, in fact, the homeliest — on Broadway. She p r e s e n t s a l a r g e , amorphous body out of which protrude flipperlike limbs and a face without a single redeeming feature ... Add to this the posture of a Michel Simon, a gait more suited to the bowling alley than to the stage, a gin-soaked voice whose range may not exceed a cricket’s and an accent that m i g h t w a i t on you a t Woolworth^, and you have the portrait of one of America’s leading stage actresses.” 2100-A Guadalupe 474-2321 .— Pizza-Sandwiches Spaghetti-Beer- Wine BJW A OLD TIMS FUCKS Game Room ^ • ONE DOLLAR OFF "j A ny Larga Pizza of your J I choice J Offer expiree Feb. 8,1976 OruT Dollar o ff on Good thru Sunday, Fob. I I ! Any Pitcher of beer at the Bar ] Bar Hours j J I_7:30-I2______________ 1 ' live ENTERTAINMENT Thursday thru Sunday This Thursday A Friday Hartline & Richardson j SPRING RUSH for CAMPUS FRATERNITIES IS N O W BEGINNING REGISTER AT THE INTERFRATERNITY COUNCIL OFFICE 818 W. 23rd Between 1-5 p.m. OR CALL 476-8616 I I Mitchell: a very special performer — Photo by Watt Cafoy In town The Divine Waters John Waters will make a personal appearance at each showing of his film “Female Trouble,” at 7 and 9:15 Friday and Saturday in Burdine Auditorium. The film stars Divine, who along with Waters c r e a t e d the ( i n ) f a m o u s “ Pink Flamingos.” Admission to “ Female Trouble,” sponsored by Student Govern­ ment, is $2. K IR N Weekend Doug Sahm performs on this week’s edi­ tion of “Austin City Limits,” at 9 p.m. Fri­ day on RLRN, channel 9. The program is reshown at ll p.m. Monday. Drama critic Walter Kerr discusses his book “The Silent Clowns” with host Bob Cromie on “Book Beat,” at 8:30 p.m. Saturday on channel 9. Kerr’s book is an il­ lustrated look at Chaplin, Keaton, Sennett and other masters of silent screen com­ edy. Soap Creek Doug Sahm and the Texas Tornados per­ form at Soap Creek Saloon at ap­ proximately 9 p.m. Friday and Saturday. One-Act “The Hurricane,” an original one-act play by senior playwriting major Howard Casner, will be presented at 8 p.m. Friday and Saturday in the Drama Building Laboratory Theater. The production is part of the drama department’s one-act play workshop. Admission is free. Armadillo Late ’60s favorites Spanky and Our Gang and Noel Redding with his band will play Saturday night at Armadillo World Head­ quarters. Redding is former bass player for the Jimi Hendrix Experience. Tickets are available at the door for $2. David Bromberg will perform along with Rick Casual and the Kitchen Band Sunday at the Armadillo. THE INTERFRATERNITY COUNCIL is now accepting applications for Round-Up Carnival, Round-Up Parade & UT Sweetheart NOMINEES Call 476-8616 FOR FURTHER INFORMATION DEADLINE FOR APPLICATIONS IS MARCH 19 r — • _i I ____________o r t "Ir i t z t u p n ATT V T P Y A W D a n * By BRAD BUCHHOLZ Texan Staff Writer “Microwaves;” written and directed by Steve Saugey; musical direction by Noel Alford; starring Michael Nesline and Nancy Biggers; at the Creek Theatre. Examining a bicentennial year adorned with impressive trappings of national pride, Steve Saugey has produced “Microwaves,” a biting satire as explosive as a blast from a minuteman’s musket. Parody­ ing the life styles and at­ ti tu d es of A m eri ca and Americans, the show is as ex­ intim ate pressive as building in which it is played. HUMOROUSLY analyzing everything from the Exxon t i g e r to S t r o n t i u m 90, “Microwaves” is successful because of the madcap way it rips apart everthing the 20th Century American takes seriously, including himself. Television, the phone com­ pany, football, technology, the Pope: all are fair game in Saugey’s satire. the With its two-act format sub- N O T I C E S f r o m t h o General Libraries or any of the branches are of­ ficial U n iv e rsity com ­ m u n ica tio n s re q u irin g immediate attention. Enjoy crepes, quiche, European steaks in our historic building and courtyard. Open l l a.m. to 12 p.m. daily. Cafe \ 314 Eos? 6th Si. Local Poetry Magazine Debuts Youthful Bards By ANNE GARVEY Texan Staff Writer The latest issue of Lucille magazine, a local poetry publication, was made up completely of poetry written by children from 7 to 12 years old. Lucille is printed twice a year by Steve Harrigan and Gunner Hansen, coeditors. The children’s issue was a onetime experi­ ment that turned out better than expected, Harrigan said. The magazine has been in existence for three years. In the past it was partially funded by the Texas Commission on Arts and Humanities, but Harrigan said he didn’t expect another grant this year. “They don’t give the grants on a con­ tinuing basis,’’ he said. Although new and still relatively small, the magazine has grown steadily . A thou­ sand copies of the current edition were printed, and virtually all were circulated. This was more than any previous edition, Harrigan said. The increased circulation could have been because of the nature of the children’s issue, but it may just have been rising interest in the magazine in general, he said. Lucille is supported primarily by adver­ tising. The sale price of the 120-page publication is 50 cents a copy, which Harrigan cited as a main reason for its success. However, he and Hansen make almost no profit from the enterprise. “We’re lucky if we break even,’’ he said. At present Lucille prints only poetry because the typesetting costs of prose fic­ tion are too expensive, Harrigan said. In the future they may expand. Hansen is in Maine and might not be back in time to help with the next edition, Harrigan said. Hansen achieved a certain notoriety for his acting role as the masked killer in the movie, “The Texas Chainsaw Massacre,” but he apparently was appear­ ing out of character. Harrigan welcomes all contributors to the magazine and estimates they print about 20 to 30 per cent of the unsolicited material they receive. “We pay attention to anybody who sends us their work and a stamped, addressed envelope,” he said. “We want to get as wide a contributorship as possible.” Anyone who wants to submit a poem can send it to Lucille magazine at 1008 Mariposa Drive, Austin, Tex 78704. Club Owners Eye Reopening paid admissions. Proceeds a m o u n t e d to $630. A p­ proximately $25,000 is needed, Robins said. “B.W.Stevenson has a new album out and hadn’t played at Armadillo in three years. It might be that the Armadillo’s clientele is different from the Wagonyard’s,” Robins said. a t According to Paula Messer, b a r m a n a g e r t h e Wagonyard, many of the Wagonyard’s employes, un­ employed since the fire, will be rehired when a new loca­ tion is established. “Some of our people had day work to fall back on. Once we relocate, their jobs will be waiting,” Messer said. “ Everyone has a different reason for the benefit’s small turnout. There was a big crowd for the Charley Pride c o n c e r t a t M u n i c i p a l STARTS TODAY. Auditorium across the street, and that was a major factor. We scheduled the benefit for the most convenient time available,” Messer said. The fire, which destroyed a major part of the Alliance Wagonyard’s old location at 505 Neches St., caused an es­ timated $60,000 damage to the building and contents. ★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★ J SPLIT RAIL J it I IN N J PRIDAY N IG H T * B luegrass with * J J Dennis McDaniels A J J B alcones Backyard * B lu egrass Band J * SAT U R DA Y N IG H T I J J I . G o u ty 4- J ^ Thornton Band 4217 S. Lamar 472-1314$- ★★★★★★★★★★★★★★A SUSPENSE AT ITS GREATEST! Owners of the Alliance Wagonyard, destroyed by fire Jan.5, hope to reopen despite the small turnout for a benefit concert held for the club at A rm ad illo W orld H ead­ quarters. “We have at least three potential new locations for the W agonyard and hope to reopen in somewhere between three to six months. There is a i n ­ lo t of n e g o t i a t i n g volved,’’Bruce Robins, co- owner of the Wagonyard, said. “ The money from the benefit will be used to clear up t h e th e Wagonyard’s 15 employes and take care of our taxes for the quarter,” Robins said. s a l a r i e s of B.W. Stevenson and the Milton Carroll Band headlined the benefit but drew only 266 Health authorities say ex­ cessive smoking probably is the major risk factor for men who suffer a heart attack before the age of 50. : Tu«s., Fab. 3 : FOOS TOURNAMENT (DOUBLES) • 1st Prize $100, 2nd $50, 3rd $25 : $5 Entry Wad., Fab. 4 J POOL TOURNAMENT• I (BAR ROOM 8 BALL) 1st Prize $100, 2nd $50, 3rd $25 I SS Entry : : BOON DOCKS CLUB - 4th I Brats (behind Grayhawk Ie*) J DAILY 5:10-7:30-9:50 SU N D A Y MAT. 12:30-2:50 $1.50 ADULTS$1.00 CHILDREN 472-5412 713 CO N G R E SS Winner 6 Golden Globe Awords including ★BEST PICTURE ★BEST DIRECTOR A rr no a ★BEST ACTOR ★BEST ACTRESS "Brilliantly understated movie about the human spirit an anthem really. — Rolling Stone Madcap 'Microwaves' Parodies U.S. U w M M * M m MA M m WW rn w m u ^ m ■ divided into numerous skits and songs, “ Microwaves” reaches its peak at “ Evening Services.” As in the rest of the play, the humor in this long parody of the church is blatantly abrupt. Sparked by “ inspirational” hymms such as “ Amazing Space” and readings from both the old and new telephone directories, the talented Michael Nesline leads his zany congregation through a thorough self-examination. AT TIMES, the humor is so outrageous that it becomes hard to relate it back to the sketch’s particular theme. Although “ Spud, the Dancing Potato” helped enrich the preposterous premise of the “ W h a t e v e r A m e r i c a Contest,” his Irish, au gratin and mashed potato dances were simply funny, un­ tr a c e a b l e to a specific message. Ordinarily, Spud would be “Captain Kangaroo on a bad morning” humor; but Saugey thrives on the absurd and makes the audience laugh at anything. “ M ic ro w a v e s ” music, directed by Noel Alford, con­ veys Saugey’s wit with the same sharpness as the skits. . The solos were not loud th* Dancing The solos were not loua enough for the audience to capture all the lyrics at times, but Nancy Biggers’ excellent solo near the play’s conclusion made up for any previous in­ consistencies. THE CAST WAS easy to relate to, not only because of their physical closeness in the theater, but because of the all- too familiar traits displayed in the characters. Intimacy worked in favor of the cast to an extent, although the cramped conditions inside the tiny theater led to a lot of pushing, shoving and blocked views every time a waitress views every time a waitress masses to delivei tackled the masses to deliver drinks. Saugey’s play theorizes that Americans are disjointed and uprooted, groping in an un­ realistic world and frying in a stagnant microwave society. By approaching this serious theme in an uproariously silly manner, Saugey is able to make people laugh and think simultaneously, achieving an admirable dramatic effect. “Microwaves” will play 8 and IO p.m. Sunday at the Creek Theatre. Admission is free. T H E C L A S S I C ZANIES s r iit s s m s . ~— — — _ nui . rh M D horror flick*, and Dad*. movi*, cn*ap non — San francisco Phoenix ' y fi* x(Ae< p3V*_\j°'cC % MONKEY BUSINESS LATE SHOW Friday & Saturday Jan. 30 & 31 $1.25, Burdina Aud. 11:45 Only SUNDAY, EEB. I Student G ov t Films TM A 1:15 Burdin* And. $1.25 DIVINE RETURNS !| “VULGAR AND GROSS AS THE PORNO GENRE CAN GET— yet can’t be dismissed. DIVINE IS MARVELOUSLY FUNNY!” - cr,st, ai y. Mag “A MOVIE THAT CELEBRATES TACKINESS!” -Canby, N. Y. Times the whole “Pink Flamingos" gang in JOHN W ATERS’ The Film Y o u Will Remember All Y o u r Life! TICHMCOtOA’ [ w M - a ] A H o w a r d M aM ar F i l m , In c A a la a ia r l l PLUS CO-HIT IH flflfflH M U FACT: TO O *Y TNI DEVIL IS POWERFUL (MOUCH TO POSSESS TNI MAN, WOMAN OR (N H O OF HIS C H O K!’ S H E W A S P O S S E S S E D T O S A T IS F Y H IS - O N L Y H U M A N Sh6 has a lot of problems ABOUT T H I S ® ! Preview audiences have indicated th a t “ Fem ale T rouble" includes scenes of ex trao rd in a ry perversity. T h e d is trib u to r therefore w ishes to caution th e p o tential viewer th a t “ Fem ale T ro u b le " may be seen as sexually and m orally offensive. ''im WM m3mMmwmrnm i b m ^ — -------- J A C K H IC H O tfO H I O N E F I B K OW ER! I DEVILS GARDE I Mf MISCHE Af FHCTUWS A F lf A tt n _ T T / V — , COLO* Sa - I mm S T A R R I N C DIVINE • DAVID LOCHARY • MARY VIVIAN PEARCE • MINK STOLE • EDITH MASSEY A DREAMLAND PRODUCTION from SALIVA LILMS, INC. a division of newline cinema corp. raft;mem w A N D A S IOA PIUS JOHN WATIRS UVE AND IN PERSON FOLLOWING EACH SHOWING OF FEMALE TROUBLE jFantasy "films presents , it )ij\i ah PUM I ACK NICHOLSON in'ONE PLW OVER THE CLK KOOS NESI Summit IL R ISI I LUCI I IK and WILLIAM REDEIELD Screenplay toledo* tim noeel fry KEN KESEY ■ Director of PUfftfh HASKELL Produced!*,SAVLlMNTlmd MICHAEL IX VI ILAS V MIU IS El IRM _ T h e Legend of M c C u llo u g h s M ountain f i l l R E S T R I C T E D Y~~Set* i r mt tm Atte i AtCOM*** I J *o u w ™ ~ S c ir " t c o " ° s AW°- L A^ C C O STARTS WEDNESDAY 4th P a g e 22 Frid ay, J an u ary 30, 1976 T H E D A IL Y T E X A N p i nLSO Bg SWAMP ■ GIRL ■ Friday and Saturday Jan. 31 and 31 7:00 & 9:15 Burdina Aud. Adm. $2.00 Student Gov't Films Kicking the Habit: Wide Range of Cures Offered Harry Ransom Center Displays Robert Lee Moore Memorabilia An ex h ib it of p erso n a l papers' and memorabilia of la te Dr. R obert Lee the Moore, renowned mathemati­ cian and professor at The University, is on display at the Harry Ransom Center. Moore, who taught at The University from 1920 to 1969, gained world recognition for his “point set theory,” which is regarded as one of the most im p ortan t m a th e m a tic a l d ev elo p m en ts of m odern times. The theory deals with three areas of point set topology: theory of continuous curves, topology of the plane and two- sphere, and upper semicon- tin u o u s c o lle c t io n s and decompositions. The exhibit is in the first and fifth floor lobbies of the HRC and may be seen 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Fri­ day and 9 a.m. to noon Satur­ days through Feb. 28. A lon g w i t h h is m a t h ­ e m a t i c a l c o n t r i b u t i o n s , Moore also was known for his Socratic style of teaching, which became known as the “Texas” method of training mathematicians. Moore wrote theorems on the board and required the students to prove them on their own. Dr. Albert Lewis, who prepared the exhibit, said “ Dr. M oore’s method of teaching was one which gave the most freedom for a stu­ dent to prove theorems and construct concepts on his own. He once said, “ That student is best taught who is told the least.’ ” Moore, for wh om the p h y s i c s - m a t h e m a t i c s - astronomy building is named, was born in Dallas in 1882 and received his BS and MA from The University in 1901. He r e c e i v e d h i s P h D in t h e m a t h e m a t i c s University of Chicago in 1905. f r o m Among the item s in the collection are a calculus book Moore used before coming to The University in 1898, a selection of notebooks he used in r o u t i n e mathematical problems and a working draft of his book “ Foundations of Point Set Theory.” s o l v i n g but at least three weeks of sessions are devoted to solv­ ing the problems of the new nonsmoker. Austin’s Smoke-No-More program, a private firm, also in­ str e sse s changing the dividual psychologically. “To become a nonsmoker is not an e v e n t. T h e r e ’s a process involved whereby the p e r s o n b r in g s a b o u t a behavioral change within h im self,” Dick Cooper of Smoke-No-More said. A fte r s e v e n w e e k s of counseling that stresses group support, peer pressure and a “buddy system ,” Cooper said that the temptation to smoke is lost because the smoker realizes that his habit is a liability and not an asset. “We don’t use the rapid- smoke or aversion therapy or hypnosis or medication,” he added, “we just get them (sm ok ers) in touch with reality.” I * Texan Staff Photo by Paul M. Lester WHAT Job Shortage? There's opportunity — for the distaff side of the un­ employment line at least — at this local estabhsh- ment, which also offers the convenience of Master Charge and Bankamericard for customers By A M Y K ID D A smoker who wants to quit no longer has only the “cold turkey” option. He can pick a variety of ways to conquer the habit — tame group therapy sessions, acupuncture or psy­ chological terror tactics. Dr. Richard Van Steenkiste, assistant professor of jour­ nalism and 15-year cigarette v e t e r a n , w a s c u r e d by acupuncture. For $5 (and all of it is refun­ dable except $1), anybody can enroll in an “ interpersonal relationships” course spon­ sored by A u stin ’s Health Department to support the budding nonsmoker. Or, if one thinks he can live through it, he can pay $400 to $500 to be locked in a room w ith a s ix - f o o t p ile of cigarette butts, five other patients (or inmates) and an instructor w earing a gas mask, who forces patients to smoke until they are physical­ ly ill. Van S t e e n k i s t e lik e d acupuncture. Needles about one-eighth of an inch long were inserted into his outer ears, and, he says, he stopped smoking im­ mediate! v. “As ^understand it, what the pins are supposed to do is block the neural impulses from your lungs and stomach to your brain,” he explained. Although the body may still crave nicotine, he continued, the signal does not reach the brain, and the smoker must overcome only the habit of for a cig a re tte reaching without thinking. For about tne first week after the needles were in­ serted, Van Steenkiste said he had a w e a k d e s i r e fo r nicotine, but he overcame it. The process, he explained, is simple: the needles go in, and after IO days to two weeks and $25, the cigarettes go out. Acupuncture still is being used primarily on an ex­ perimental basis, but the treatments have so far had a success rate of 75 to 80 per cent. A less pleasant smoking cure is called the “ rapid- smoking m ethod,” part of “ aversion th erap y,” that makes the smoker literally and fig u r a tiv e ly sick of cigarettes. The smoker must puff on a cigarette every five to six seconds — usually between fits of nausea — until he cannot or will not continue. The two major smoking cessation programs in Austin, h ow ever, rely on group therapy and psychological counseling for treatment. T e x a s ’ D e p a r tm e n t of Health Resources developed a program about two years ago fo r in im p le m e n t a t io n hospitals and other public health facilities, and the idea has been successful locally. Although it is no longer used by the University Student Health Center, students can p a r tic ip a te in a sim ila r program conducted by the Austin Health Department. The program involves group “ talk s e s s io n s ,” Carolyn Northington, assistant health educator, explained. Sixteen sem iw eek ly m e e tin g s of “interpersonal relationship” sessions are designed to give the smoker the psychological support he needs to stop smok­ ing. “We let them taper off and break their habit,” she said. After a week, smokers are ex­ pected to be partially cured, lf You Need Help or Just Someone Who Will Li*ten Telephone 476-7073 At Any Time The Telephone Counseling and Referral Service HECTOR’S TACO FLATS FRIDAY & SATURDAY 6 TO 8 PM ONLY Chalupas...69‘ Bowl of Chili w /cheese and onion ... 69' 69' Order of Nachos Both Stores 5213 N. Lamar 2716 Guadalupe It's a better movie than 'Blazing Saddles' or 'Young Frankenstein'. R ollin g Stone SPRING PERFORMANCE THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 1976 8:00 P.M. MUNICIPAL AUDITORIUM ^ 2*® Program Helios Music by Carl Nielsen Minkus Variations Music by Leon Minkus Bolero Music by Maurice Ravel Cherkeska Music by Aram Khachaturian Choreography by Eugene Slauin Reserved Seats: $2.00 — $3.00 — $4.00 $5.00 Mall Orders: Austin Civic Ballet, P.O. Box 5093, Austin, TX 78763 (Please enclose self-addressed, stamped envelope.) ADVANCE TICKETS ON SALE: January 26 — February 2 Scarbroughs Downtown and Highland Mall Symphony Square, l it h & Red River • Hogg Auditorium Box Office Tickets at Municipal Auditorium Box Office: February 3, 4, 5 AUSTIN CIVIC BALLET Directed by Eugene Slauin and Alexandra Nodal “The simplicity of a fable, the impact of an epic. The sweep of the film is so vast that you feel as if you’d witnessed the events from a satellite. You’ve somehow been able to see simultaneously the curvature of the earth and the insects on the blades of field grass .,!l — Vincent Canby, The New York Tim es “DISTANT THUNDER provides a rare opportunity to watch a great artist as he spins visions of lasting majesty and importance. It is a truly heroic f i l m . ” - F r a n k Rich New York post “DISTANT THUNDER is a thing of beauty. It pulsates with life rhythms, it illuminates the human condition.”— josephGeimis,Newsday “No films are great. Not anymore. But DISTANT THUNDER is truly a great film.”— Nick Cohn, New Tim es Sherlock Holmes and The Spider Woman Basil Rathbone as Holmes Nigel Bruce as Dr. Watson PO -it ii n u c u A A FROM CINEMA 5 * Friday, Jan. 30 Saturday, Jan. 31 10:10 & 11:45 each night Academic Cantar Aud. Batts Aud. $1.25 Sunday, Fab. L. Batts Aud. 7:004:30-10:00 Adm. $1.25 A new film by Satyajit Ray Friday, Jan. 30 Saturday, Jan. 31 6:30 & 8:15 tach nite Academic Cantar Aud. Batts Aud. Adm. $1 JO Friday, January 30, 1976 THE DA ILY TEXA N Page 23 Nobel Prize-Winning Chemists To Visit University theoretical work has been es­ sential for solving practical chemical problems. Wade compared the study of chemistry to various com­ plexities of molecules — from theoretical to biochemistry — small to l arge or giant molecules. The work of Bar­ ton, 1969 l aureate, falls between these extremes. Barton is a professor of organic chemistry at Imperial College, London. Studying the structure and properties of complex organic molecules, he is widely recognized for his work on steroids. These in­ clude hormones contained in birth control pills and other medicine. Not all speakers in the series are so widely recogniz­ ed as Flory and Barton. Other speakers represent other dis­ ciplines of chemistry. Some of them are as follows: ample, is the subject of lec­ tures by Professor R. Mem- ming, from the P hi l i ps Forschungslaboratorium, Hamburg, now on campus. Prof. George Primentel, University of California at B e r k e l e y , wi l l d i s c u s s “Chemical Lasers” from Feb. 9 to 13. He will also give a the p u b l i c “Mariner Probes of Mars.” l e c t u r e on “Electrodes and Processes in Electrochemistry,” for ex­ “Computer Interfacing” will be the topic of lectures by — Sketch by David Rose Purdue University Prof. S.P. Perone from March I to 5. Nobel Laureate Flory will lec­ ture the following week. B a r t o n ’s l e c t u r e s on “Properties of Steroids” will be given from April 12-16. Lectures will be given in Welch Hall, Room 104W, at 4 p.m. Each speaker will deliver a series of five lectures, most of which are part of a graduate course in chemistry, Wade said. texas union presents “IT CAN BE SAID, SIMPLY AND WITH THANKS, THAT IT IS AN ABSOLUTELY TERRIFIC MOVIE7 Jay Cocks Time Magazine THE THREE g MUSKETEERS OLIVER REED- RAQUEL WELCH ■ RICHARD CHAMBERLAIN -^ M IC H A EL YORK»DA*oy>or FRANK FINLAY CHRISTOPHER LEE GERALDINE CHAPLIN j j s g with SIMON WARD And FAYE DUNAWAY os M*x>r CHARITON HESTON « co.o« * * * * * * J p k '-------------------- g o d teow LEONI) - fc fw a h rit K M B MKC MDU) IW S * ■ iM atM t.M M 'l* N IU ® !I BOAS I# S*.«B OWW ti ro w umi • Iicwcaoe* • mrs It * lei* 5W & W - Friday and Saturday 7 and 9 p.m. Jester Auditorium FLESH G O R D O N - A broad, breasty, sexy spoof, cam ping it up w ith heroes, m onsters and SciFi is surety one o f its kind, theoniyone. - Archer W inston, N e w York Poet Pater Locke and Jim Buckley Presont A Mam m oth Films Release^ By ROBERT THOMPSON JR. Texan Staff Writer Chemistry students, faculty and professionals will be able to hear lectures by two Nobel Laureates who will visit The University this semester. Sir Derek Barton and Dr. Paul Flory are among l l widely-known chemists who will speak in the Department of Chemistry’s Distinguished Visiting Lecturer Series this semester. A March visitor will be Flory, a Stanford professor who won the Nobel Prize for chemistry in 1974. He has studied the structural and thermodynamic properties of polymers and plastics. Long chains of complex organic molecules, polymers are essential parts of plastics, p a in ts, tir e s and other products essential for the in­ dustry of today. Since the first production of nylon in 1930, polym er chemistry has been an impor­ tant field of ch em istry, William Wade, chem istry department chairman, said, adding that a majority of the industrial members of the American Chemical Society list their occupations as polymer chemists. is “ He ‘s u p e r ­ fundamentalist,’ ” Wade said laureate’s of Flory. The a LOS TACOS THIS SATURDAY & SUNDAY Reg. Beef Tacos Nachos 2 5 * 2 5 * 1727 E. Riverside Only 447-7256 Tonight through Saturday from C h icago Jimmy Dawkins Coming Next Week Albert King Advance tickets available at Antone's j A n t one’8 6th and Brazos 478*0547 NUDE MALE DANCERS AMATEUR NITE! *50 CASH PRIZE TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 7:00 p.m. BYOB - Plenty of Set-Ups 2 Free Set-U p s With A d Discounted Adm ission To Ladies SUN THEATRE & LOUNGE 521 E. 6th St. B S K B E D 33X B D iii! The Chamber Music Celebration St. Paul Chamber Orchestra “O n e of th e most im p o rta n t music g roups in th e c o u n try "— New York Times SATURDAY/JANUARY 31 Hogg Auditorium/4:00 P.M. A dm ission free w ith O p tio n al Services Fee Ticket d ra w in g begins T hursday, Ja n u ary 22 Hogg Box Office/10-6 w eekdays Sponsored by The C ultural E n tertain m en t C o m m ittee of the Texas U nion & T h e D e p a rtm e n t of M usic ALICE'S RESTAURANT Sunday 7 and 9 p.m. Jester Auditorium $1 .OO UT Students, Faculty, Staff $1.50 Members Page 24 Friday/ January 30, 1976 THE D A IL Y T EXA N L ** ti — . He noted that the purpose* of the Distinguished Visiting Lecturer Series is five-fold: . 1) This program helps in tryi ng to ge t graduate chemistry students to attend The University rather than another school. 2) The department looks for good ways of evaluating itself. This is a good way to get speakers to evaluate the department, he continued. 3) “De Facto Reciprocity,” : aam!*! meaning that invitations could be gi ven to Uni ve r si ty professors to speak at other institutions. 4) The East and West Coasts have the be st graduat e schools of chemistry, Wade said. “Geographically, this helps us to keep in touch with other schools, and vice- versa,” Wade asserted. 5) Because the chemistry faculty here is spread over several buildings, Wade noted th a t “ e v e n ts like this help br- that “events like this help br­ ing faculty members closer together.” Wade has no favorite lec­ turers, since the enthusiasm generated by each speaker’s presence is greater than the speaker preceding him. “The series is good for the department. It has generated than mo re e n t h u s i a s m anything we’ve done for a long time. The lectures are damn­ ed enthusiastically received. I R M r n T h e C u ltu ral E n te r ta in m e n t C o m m ittee of th e T ex a s U n io n p r e se n ts Dance Theatre Of Harlem A rthur M itchell, K arel S h ook — D irecto rs T u e s d a y , F e b r u a r y IO W e d n e sd a y , F e b r u a r y l l M u n ic ip a l A u d ito r iu m 8:00 P.M . T icket sales b e g in Friday, January 30 H ogg Box O ffice 10-6 w eekdays $.50, 1.00, I 50 with O p tio n al S erv ices Fee G e n e ra l sales b e g in Friday, February 6 $4 50, 5.00, 5.50 N o c h e c k s a c c e p t e d Bus sc h ed u le : Jester, K insolvm g, C o -O p 6:45 P M C ontinuous S ervice C E C ID s must b e p re s e n te d at do o r for C E C tickets N o c a m e r a s or t a p e r e c o r d e r s L e c t u r e - D e m o n s t r a t io n : M o n d a y , F e b r u a r y 9 M u n ic ip a l A u d it o r iu m , 7:30 P.M . A d m i s s io n F r e e Sponsored with support from the Texas Commission on the Arts and Humanities THE CULTURAL ENTERTAINMENT COMMITTEE OF THE TEXAS UNION PRESENTS BflLRLKCEX* m m c E m s Saturday, January 31 Municipal Auditorium, 8 :0 0 P.M. Ticket sales begin Thursday, January 22 Hogg Box Office, 10-6 weekdays $.50,1 .OO, 1.50 with Optional Services Fee General sales begin Thursday, January 29/84.50,5.00,5.50 No checks accepted Bus schedule.- Jester, Kinsolving, Co-Op/6=45 P.M. Continuous Service CEC ID’i mutt be presented at door for CEC Ticket* No camera* or tape recorders Familiar Woe: By STEVEN MCBREARTY Texan Staff Writer The parking situation at the new Nursing Building, a modernistic, pink-stone, five- story structure overlooking Waller Creek at 17th Street, is bad — so bad, says nursing student Donna Barnes, “ I just drive around until I find a field where the holes aren’t too big.” At Brackenridge Hospital, two blocks south on winding Red River Street, parking slots are equally scant. Recently an Austin family drove to the East Avenue en­ trance and asked a policeman for permission to park while a relative was brought down. While they were inside the hospital, their automobile was to w ed a w a y , a n u r se employed at the hospital said. Across Red River Street from the nursing school is the unfinished Special Events Sports Center, with its dusty clutter of cranes and trucks and hoisting devices where a parking lot might have been placed. To the west stand the cluster of shining, new dark- glassed office towers con­ structed by the state. Cars are Professionals To Outline Women's Career Options New Building's Skimpy Parking Facilities Plague Nursing Students . ..................... __________________i jammed for blocks into a welter of narrow streets, on bridges and over curbs on bare soil. At Brackenridge, employes reportedly must arrive at 6:30 a.m. to secure parking spaces which in the afternoon are nonexistent; but the city is planning a three-story parking garage for Brackenridge workers, visitors and “per­ sons who have business at the hospital,” William Brown, chief hospital administrator, said this week. University Vice-President James H. Colvin said “there are no plans” for any Univer­ sity-built lots in the area. Students and nursing school officials complained that the skimpy parking facil iti es produced d an gerou s and irritating conditions. “A lot of us have to park il­ legally, on the bridge over Waller Creek, and we get tick ets,” Bridget Garland, another nursing student, said. “ I ’ve gotten 15 m illion tickets,” an unidentified nur­ sing student said. More than one nursing stu­ dent had heard of attempted rapes when women returned f o r w o m e n Feb. 23, will discuss oppor­ t u n i t i e s in traditional and nontraditional areas of the health and educa­ tion fields. Panelists will be Martha I r e l a n d , h e a l t h professions adviser; Carol Case, health educator; Dr. Joanne Ravel, chemist; and Carolyn Williams, counselor. Additional i nf orma ti on about “Women in Professions and Careers” is available from Frances Plotsky at 471- 1201. Soap Creek Saloon Tonight A Saturday SIR DOUG A THE TEXAS TORNADOS 7 0 7 B g * C o v e t Rd. 3 2 7 -9 0 1 6 THE TEXAS TAVERN SILVER CITY SADDLE TRAMPS Country Friday & Saturday 9 p.m. - 2 a.m. UT ID holders: $.50 Guests: $1.00 Sunday: OPEN MIKE Free Auditions 8 p.m. - Midnight HAPPY HOUR AU HIGHT LONG tho nara ihav alone at night to the cars they had parked blocks away dur­ ing the daytime. “Late at night, you go out and your car is parked way down the street,” Garland said. “It’s dangerous. They can’t escort everyone.” One nursing student, who did not wish to be identified, said, “Construction workers at the Special Events Center take all our places.” Other nursing students said they often drive around for a quarter of an hour hunting for parking spaces, or walk from the main University campus. “A lot of students have been late for c la sse s,” Garland said. Night labs at Brackenridge were eliminated because of the danger to women walking blocks to their cars at night. Mitzi Dreher, assistant to SUN THEATER & LOUNGE TOTALLY NUDE D AN C ER S B Y O B X RATED M O V IE S NOVELTIES BOOKSTORE 25c ARCADE 52 I E. 6th 477-0291 N o t t u it o b l o for y o u n g p o r t e n t M u l l b o 18 y o a r t t o o n t o r H L CASTLE lenses 1411 L a va ca 472-7315 TONITE-SAT JAZZ- M A N IAN DEVILS thp Hpan of thp nursing school, the dean of the nursing school, t e r m e d s i t u a t i o n t h e “horrible” and said she hoped a shuttle bus route would be instituted for nursing students traveling from campus and to Brackenridge. Barnes said that a shuttle system, while excellent for transporting students from the main campus to the nur­ sing school, would not be en­ tirely effective because “nur­ sing school is just part of your day.” She said that many nursing students SDecialize in a par- students specialize in a par­ ticular aspect of their field and need cars to journey to places of employment and training. Chief of police Bob Miles said there had been “a couple of assaults in the area and several robberies.” P olice homicide depart­ ment head Lt. Colan Jordan said two cases of attempted assault had been reported to and solved by his office in September and October. “It’s a target area just like the campus,” Jordan said. the campus, Jordan said. “A lot of no-good people can blend into the scenery there,” he said. “But it’s no more dangerous than the Capitol area or the campus.” He said the Brackenridge area is somewhat protected by police security guards stationed at the hospital en­ trance to obtain information in new criminal cases. System Deputy Chancellor Everett Walker said he would talk to Colvin about the nur­ sing school parking problem. Justin s only nightclub Jeaiming entertainment by Joined Jemaie direct Jim ay east coast m r including MIAMI t 03CSJCJ JTLANTIC CUT Jhe imbeM abie GREASE SISTERS Him (fief - JVMm • tjou appealing at — your JUSTIN C O U N fffl \m rDcrUse RatyVMJkH i.Jiss (jEJustiti Sat. open at 8 CC p.m. Shdm ti SUR. lo! Shoes ti (msrc(lkuulng • VREE W R before 9=CC 9:3Cti H CC • 4 • THE MOST TECHNICALLY POLISHED EROTIC MOVIE. BIZARRE, EXPLICIT, IMAGINATIVE ARTISTRY.” —Kevin Sanders/ WABC-TV “THE SEX FILM HAS AT LAST COME OF AGE.” — Norma McLain Stoop/AFTER D A RK “Women in Professions and Careers,” a symposium for women planning a career, will be held during the month of February at The University. “We hope to present options for women to consider when thinking about their futures,” said Frances Plotsky, coor­ dinator of Services for Retur­ ning Students in the Dean of Students O ffice, which is cosponsoring the symposium with Continuing Orientation and Jester Center. “One of the options is to be a professional woman or to enter a career. We hope to give information related to the professional woman and about various professions and careers she may be interested in,” Plotsky said. The free sym posium is g e a r e d to y o u n g u n ­ d erg ra d u a te w om en, but w om en of a ll a g e s and backgrounds are invited to at­ tend, Plotsky said. The four programs in the symposium will be at 7:30 p m on Monday nights during February in the Al kiva of the College of Education building. The first, “The Professional Woman,” will be Monday. At each program, a panel of professionals will make a brief presentation and then participants will form small discussion groups to be led by the panel members. “The Professional Woman” will discuss the psychological s o c i o l o g i c a l c o n ­ and siderations of professional women. Panel members will be Dr. Linda MacNeilage, clinical psychologist; Dr. Shirley Menaker, educational psychologist; Dr. Barbara Chance, so c io lo g is t; and Adrian F ow ler, ex ecu tive assistant. “Women in Arms,” the Feb. 9 program , w ill d isc u ss careers and opportunities available for women in the f o r c e s . P a n e l a r m e d members will be Army Lt. Col. Mildred Hedburg; Navy Lt. Kaye Roberts and Air Force Maj. Patricia Birch. “ Women in Engineering, Business, Architecture and Regional Planning” on Feb. 16, will explore the oppor­ tunities for women in non­ traditional fields. Dr. Sandra Rosenbloom, a s s i s t a n t p r o f e s s o r of architecture and community and regional planning; Leslie Gallery, assistant professor of architecture and planning; Dr. Linda Golden, assistant p rofessor of ma rke ti ng; Dorothy Carol Edwards, ac­ count executive; and Joanne Aldridge, engineer, will be panelists. The last program, “ Women in Health and Education,” on Q V V N & The Hungry Horse Club Tonight P A C O RODRIGUEZ Cover $1.50 6:30 - 2 a.m. Sat. DOMINGO REYES and the Dynamics Cover $1.50 2610 Guadalupe 472-0078 ZACHARY SCOTT THEATRE CENTER L illian Heilman'S , THE CHILDREN’S HOUR RUNS THROUGH IAH. 3t THURS.. TRI.. SAT. S:IS, SUN. 2:1 S MSSRV ATIONS 476-0*41 INEXT ATTRA MICHAEL SOKOLOFF DANCE ENSEMBLE FEB. 4, 5, 6 8:15 p.m. Reservation* 476-0541 t J l f l f l f THE WEEKEND WITH T.G.I.F. 3:30 - 7 TODAY 15C Beer and 50* Highballs Meef your Friends af the Bucket and Dance to the Best Disco Music in Town J Watch Star Trek on a 7 ti. television 23rd and Pearl Dw*o*n«tM0pi» * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * 3 Hr*. Free Parking - Across from Tri-Tower* ^ The Austin Symphony [(centennial All-Americana Concert Circus Overture, Toch Lake and Giggling Rapids, Ellington Grand Canyon Suite, Grofe Concerto Elektra, Hyman Dick Hyman, Piano Id prem iere of e n original com p osition celebrating the erican B icentennial in Austin. Taxes, c o m m is s io n e d by A u st in S y m p h o n y Orchestra Society. Friday, January 30 unicipal Auditorium 8:00 p.m. Ticket sale, bagio Wednesday. January 21 Hogg Box Office 10-6 weekdays $ 60 with Optional Services Fee Schtdul.: J e s t e r . K l n s o M n g Co-Op p m. Continuous Service Sponsored by The Cultural Entertainment Com m ittee of the Texas Union TONIGHT BALCO N ES FAULT with Chastity Fox Sat. f panky and Our Gang with Noel Redding Sun. David Bromberg < ‘V M issJoqes