i,' '• Vol. 74, . ®»awiSSta, „ !#Hg T&V If--By RICHARD FLY J| Texan Staff: Writer 'w>' • A special Faculty Senate committee;J invesUgating the firing of University "1­, President Stephen Spurr released a. .statement Wednesday from the former'•'• ~ "president.*which' included 11 reasori§4hat he said Chancellor Charles LeMaistre; • p gave him verbally,for his dismissal LeMalstee, -Who-fir&lJSpurr Sept. 24" Rafter he refused to resign, has steadfast­ly, refused todrvulgepubHcljLhis reasons.; %Mqr the action. „ " Listed -to the "best of my recolletf-, njswithhts management ofpregame foot-: iVball receptions-in fill, 1971; his failure to ,'S|relieYe. one of .his1 executive officers ii-*.;(unidfentifiedJ "from a major portion of "v^hisadministrative responsibilities;" and ­j-p.his alleged failure "jofDrce the elimina-K jition of discriminatory institutional • ?J'.weighIs' in theTexas Index used.by the. .. isLaw School Admissions Committee.'' *'H| LeMAISTRE ALSO CHARGED hlm"r~ -••Spurr said, withnotmovijig the Univer­sity fast enough into the field of energy research, riot adequately justifyihg the uses of. the Available Fund 'and not "; cooperating on revised policres"for~guest~: campus speakers. —The former president added, staff an­tagonism to the Ex-Students'Association ("including ,our unresponsiveness to association offers to assist-in minority recruiting)", program development at' \e''Port Aransas Marine-Science .te, staff unhappiness with the fsity's McDonald -Observatory, medical -advisfri'g, "and" a poor tation of this-institutio'n's'budget before Legislative; Budget Board • ••••• -V'• ' -­ -staff. iSpurr said a few additionalissues were raised, but he could not recall tifem. < r "At no point in ourconversation (Sept: 23) .did either Dr. LeMaistre or Mr. (E D.) Walker cite 'a generally un­cooperative attitude; or 'an effortto discredit the chancellor and;System ad' ministration through direct contact with members oftbe Board ofRegents' asthe chancellor specified the following day in his news release.on the subject," Spurr said. ^Expounding upon the budget presents-allegation, the fqrester-ecologist he was told it "was the weakest, 1asked for higher faculty and staff pay will approach University vice-presidents' raises than were in the original budget under Spurr ior.their viewpoints. • submission," he said,"and thai I made a LeMaistre alsq will be made n',fully spirited defense of both faculty develop­awareV of the poissible one-sidedness of ment leavesand of organized research — the committee's report if the regent and !K^ neither topic particularly popular down­System version of the dismissal is not isk.i town." -v'i known. Job Discrimifiatibn EEOCSymposium By MIKE ULLMANN v'^T; i4^ Texan Staff Writer: . .JopjoiscrimiHattoH, iialled .''one of Ute most.:, devastating ^nd • pervasive problems confronting our nation today," by John H. Powell Jr., Ekjual Employ­ment Opportunity Commission (EEOC)' chairperson, is beiqg tackled in a sym­posium sponsored by the EEOC at the Lyndon B. Jdhnsota Auditorium. JThe two-day meeting began Wednes­day morningas one of seven symposiums . . discrimination regardless of race or sex. "There are no rights under Title VII • are none that are exclusively women's rights. There are only rights," he said. • Title-VII-of the Civil RightsAct of 1964 recreated the EEOC and charged it with:, pNtarmffiW & warm after-. *£ Mnoons and cool nights, ^Iskies witl be clear, to partly cloudy through mi Friday. Winds will'be 4l^vai;iable from 5 to.}2 i^mph, becomfhg south 'l^erly through';Friday" MT^peraturerwTttinp .^into tlie mld-Ws, and lf|clinib to the mid-§0s. h Is'ho chance Wk*< beheld a^ 3L-3jb •ss^slt £©*&?$ •'*$*!*ste»2 -" ftudent Newspaper at The University of Texas at Austin Please Recycle This Newspaper wwsssw tfWSfelStes 'WW'W j^-%% - Spurr said he'continues to view the allegations as "false and misleading" and aksv not justifying:his summary .dis-v missab Healso cited a-lack-of opportune ty to jdefend his positions. ."Nor do I -believe that the reasons'' cited by. Chancellor LeMaistre &• his statementtoineor-the differing charges made in his press statement are the real reasons formy dismissal;"Spurr added;­. "What these are, I can-only surmise." : 'The. point where he angered the chancellor'beyond.-tfce^ijoint <•of • no return^' he. said, waswfaenhe opposed LeMaistrels proposed appointment of the vice-chancellor for academic affairs (unidentified) in the presence of' the other University institutional presidents. At the" time, Spfcrj?* added., he was "attempting to voice the consensus of that group." •* EMPHASIZING HI& "If again I were to-identify the single point ­ when Mr. Erwin turned against me, it was wheBTUean (Page) Keeton refused to admit a friend of Mr: Erwin to thelaw school, and I supported the action." "In; my judgment,' the underlying Teasdns for-my dismissal lay.first in.my j independence and vigor in pressing for ilieved to bj right in. the inner councils of .the System,1' Sporr^saii. '•'.and, second, in my uncompromising in-. sisten.ee: that the fundamental decisions on academic matters^should be made primarily by the faculty and-academic administrators at the campus,level," • ^ * m • The SenateCommittee also received a -. • -fefc: possibility-and desirability of a meeting : Pacific is under consideration. .by any institutional;head:; . with the regents." -He continues tooppose forced busingV OWN INTERPRETATION 5s In addition, the committee will ask. to achieve racial balance in schools but' .that they were tanhappy with the'fact that 'Spurr to elaborate on his statement and|$^thinks it of "maximum importance that _ «%, T^>-«&8Sfc3t '^ » >; »«®s& ^Vtjs^W «;J h « Austin, Texas, Thursday/ October10, 1974 Ten Cents Twenty Pages 471-4591 •if Yields By SUSIE STOLER . • f -^develop; a comprehensive public state-Texan Staff Writer lament concerning the situation sucroun-University System Chancellor Charles-''ding my decision to remove Dr. Spurr A. LeMaistre"ahnounced Wednesday. hes 59m his admirastrative responsibilities' is preparing, a "comprehensive. publTc^ps presidentof the'Unive¥«tyofjleiasrat: statement" concerning his decision to" * -Austin.!' • ^3 . fire Stephen Spurr as University^presl-No specific date has been given for '"dent. . _ " -^release ,of._the. chancellor's statement, tm' ( Previously, LeMaistre staunchly dis-jg^although l^Maistre ^idit will"-be mSde. IbJP I v missed the suggestion of releasing%f .public after being ^cleared by legal •' reasons behind the Spurr. removal; He'^coiinsel. --..gaxejloJijintWeHtoesday for the apparentir'.-;; Student Government President Frank m change of mind. — Fleming Tuesday_asked„the, govenior to T'r The'chancellor's announcement.came .-^use^auttoritj^ontained in Article 47Sec­m response to.a statement from Gov. tion 24 of the fexas Constitution tfc'de-Dolph Briscoe ' Wednesday th^t the |l|mand an explanation bf LeMaistre's fir- governor will use constitutional authori-, :rfi'ng of Spurr. . -"• ty, if necessary, to obtain information'; The section states* the governort may from the chancellor about Spurr's dis-u •';• "require inforrnation in writing from-missal. v.'.any arii all' officers and managers;.of. fggi - . Briscoe'sstatement said hisoffice was' stated institutions: upqh any subject'^^p informed last* week that LeMaistre had related to ... their respective offices and changed stances and.decided to divulge institutions:" •', .•" \ •information the.governor had requested •-'-7T^'&:view'.^^]Qii$-)eiqie(^ed public .statedlipSept. 27. ' • -Sis ment by Chancellor LeMaistre, I hope it Reporters compete for Ford's attention. -7 ."v* T3". _StZc&^Se-,Vi5).i*t3#TS^ya^i-•: ". "several days ago-of my intention to msm Question-Answer Session short statement from LeMaistre, who," jr-WASHINGTON (AP) — President said he could-not .comply with the' re-told,a sun-drenched Rose Garden quest for a descriptive' statement of the t>"ews conferenceWednesday hehopes for : firing-episode on legal groundSr--• iki-somf .nieaningful reduction in the rate Regents Allan Shivers, Ed Clark and •,.>nnnftlofl" by earfy next year and does Mra l.vminh U .inhnsnn fttgn-T-ppKpri-^^Qt-bglieye the country is sufferingfrom j they would make no statement. Shivers, a recession. however, expressed his willingness to In the first outdoor question-and­ meet with ^committee, and Clark said p^answer session with reporters since &e I he. would meet with the. g^oup if the is#administrafi6n of Lyndon 'B. Johnsons­ whole board does.' Ford^also declared.that-5 ' JOHNSOti REITERATED she still is ij-• Despitehis wife'sjecentcancetsu^*'1" "not aware of the reasons for Spurr's dis-5 ,, _ |ge'ry', ""I; have Seen nothing to change " missa], She abstained from the board's&lfhis inclination"to run.foreiectioabi l976. vote ratifying the chancellor's actions. "If there is a re'ason" for him to In an effort to get the regents' side of meet with Soviet leader Leonid I. the story, committee Chairperson Ed-Brezhnev before' a planned .1975s mund'Pincoffs,jprofessor.of philosophy, Washington summit, "I .will certainly will contact fiegerit GBafiperson A;G.* consider it." White House officials3^y a McNeese to '.'discuss wit^j him the November 'meeting somewhere fa the the citizens of Boston respect the law" and that it will not be necessary to send federal troops'there to deal with . racial disturbances. -' N • He still hopes to find a constitutional way to provide federal aid to private.and : parochial schools although • the courts •3# ' ••-• ••••-. ' ....... -" • »•> 1 »ns "The door ot the executive suiteis still' •" closed-(to blacks),-" he said. Powell praised former President Lyn-onB.jonnson tori ing the 1964 Civil Rights Act.i • He acknowledged the commission has ' a backlogo Qf>98;000 cases and listed steps prohibiting employment discrimination-.fi he is taWng tb'redice based on race, color, religion, sex or " If A program has been started to provide national origin ^ more thorough training for EEOC per­ ; However, Powell said, thecommission ^sonnei, and 300 new invesUgators and had no real power until amendments in' " conciliatoVs were hired. being held across the country in obser-• 1972 gave it the right to take an employer Oth^r additions include a new ap­vance of the 10th anniversary of the to court. • ./ >i& proach planned to reduce the average EEOC. -. —The symposium is focused on pastr'; ' time for processing a charge from 26 aT"i~ press Speaking at a-press conference }•'progress and future goals of the EEOCi-months to about-13,-and plans to process Wednesday afternooh,?Powellemphasiz­sand Powell said a lot of work remains to" * " v! charges as they are received. ed the EEOC.will help any victim of,job-, .-v,be done done. y t i Powell said he.believes the commis­sion is catching up with its back cases. V6" M1? Delegates and",interested observers heard speeches .on fob discrimination. Wednesday, including a speech on •"Lefcal-Aspects of Employment "I don't think we have .to put a tax ojil%| gasoline users .to achieve our objective;sea! "It we can conserve,energy by volun-£;J'1 Appeals Court lary action, I think it is far preferable',,^ and more in the tradition of the American system," Jie said. Only two questions were asked that related to resigned President Richard Nixon. ; :. To .one. Ford declined to discuss further the unconditional pardon he granted his predecessor, saying,"I think it.is most: appropriate-that I defer any comment on .that SiT . testimony he is scheduled to give to a House judiciary subecommittee Oct. 17. -JTOi ANOTHER,: (Ford defended his. recommendation/'sharply -assailed in Congress, that .Nixon , be provided with $85Qi000 for a transition-period. . JHe economy dominated the session,-', with Ford arguing that his proposed.sur-i^ tax would affect only 28 percent of alii taxpayers and would produce income '; that would; stimulate the slumping hous-ii ing industry'and assist those hardest hitii by inflation. . In his.Tuesday address on the*";­ economy. Ford endorsed a:tax revision bill before the. House Ways %and Means Committee .but' acknowledged Wednes-> day. he does not .necessarily embraceall ;s.its features.* , r., .Discrimination" by'George Schatzki, University law professor. "• I V? In an apparent difference of opinion# with Treasury Secretary William E.. ~Wednesday afternoon, the symposium Simon, Ford said flatly the controversial ­ ; split'into seven groups for workshops on ~ «<6rfeS>i ; • sex discrimination; native: Americans,:• , race discrimination, arid national.oVigin­ {1 and employment discrimination. 1 Compliance Jaws and regulations, In­ state and local'agencies and educational institutions,'and-merit system were other workshop topics. ' fa ^ ^ The sjnmposlumTstartsitsJmaHay at 9 THE CHANCELLOR'S statement coniJS- UPI Telcphalo firmed he had told the governor's office" have frowned upon the tax creditidea he oil depletion allowance should be phased: long had favored. out. -• He-will meet Mexican. President Regarding Rockefeller's gifi to Luis Echeverria on the border between , ^Kissinger, Ford said: * Arizona and Mexico on Oct. 21 "I HAVE BEEN assured that every • A $50,000 gift "by Vice-President' lax that could be applied has been paid, -Designate-^elson~A,~RGekefeHer-to —andJhat„aU legalproblems involving that Henry A. Kissinger before he joined the particular case were solved saEsTac-~ government was free of impropriety, torily " and the secretary of state-.'-'d.esepves fa Responding to another question, he whatever good and appropriate things I C '.said he did plan to inquire into /*an S9V nhnitt him •» ' ^ can say about him. Rockefeller gifts toothers in public life. Ford fielded-questions jwth ease dur­ The President was alsoasked if he was ing the • half-hour session, Tnaking a upset by recent criticism directed at departure from the customary news con­'. Kissinger for his roles in Cyprus, Chile ference format to entouragereporters to •; and elsewhere. ask follow-up questions. The session was .,.v\: "I am very fond of Dr. Kissingeton a carried live by television and radio. personal basis," said Ford; "I fiave Responding to the first question of the ^ tremendous respect and admiration for afternoon, Ford said, the superb job,tiiat he has done:" DO NOT think the United States is Asked if his wife's illness had had anyin a recession. We do have economic j|ieffect on his 1S76 plans, Ford said: problems, but it is a very 'mixed "THE WORDS THAT I used, if I recall situation.". • ? > accurately, were that I would probably Asked to explain why he rejected?. "be a candidate in 1976. I have seen proposals for a higher gasoline.tax or;-;;nothing to change that decision and if fuel rationing, the President said he '^'-'and when there is, I will promptly notify • r decided a surtax would be more vou." , , equitable. Staff OblePitf.Ui# .:a.m.-.Thursday Avith a speechon organiz-'CHARLB§TQN i -(APUrL""** tiniiiwl 'at thp Midway srhnnl edJabor followed at 10 a.m. ,by a talk ^"Violence returned to Kanawha Caunty on*equal employment in thrprivate-sec*^—^^e^aesday as one school' was _-tOr.~ " " 7 .'rivnamitpd firp wn ^e0^le» ^^5^'one was hurt in elffier. The Wet Branch cft zen ^ Latln American •^-'-'jchool wasclosed for theday andpupils but classes con­ .CLojintv School Supt. Underwood said damage was about yi,-^ will be unnecessary to invoke the Rcocedure provided by Article 4, Section 24, bul l stand ready to use this authori­ty, should the expected statement be in­adequate," Briscoe said Wednesday. FLEMING WAS "quite pleased with the governor's response. I think he put it; real well. I'm anxious to see what LeMaistre's officFcomes"dp"withr Although the student government , president was unaware of the forthcom­ing statement from the chancellor; he credited pressure from ranking state ot^:0§.' ficials for LeMaistre's turnaround. . , .'5K® :. In addition to the-governor, Lt. Gov.': m Bill Hobby and Texa's Speaker'of the Hou^e Price Daniel Jr. have'call^d fora "£|gf public explanation of the chancellor's -.v r Jismissaliof:Spurr. . ' Last week, LeMaistre reiterated"Ms original policy that "legal counsel ad­vises 1 go no further in discussing the issues involvedthan my statementtothe Board of Regents." i ' LEMAISTRE'S remarksto the regents "in a special meeting a day after.Spurr's removal ,mentioned only a general "declining... confidence in • his (Spurr's) administrative ability." .'. Regent Franfe C. Erwin hinted soon , ' •" kfter Spurr was removed that release of :«-/» • specifics behind the action could provide-'.^ material for a damage suit against the "'" University,in federal court "As long as in the course of his • - removal nothing is said or done to adversely affect his career or future,"ipii ' , the University is safe from court action, Erwin .said. By MIKE McDANIEL A new and more limited interpretation of state obscenity laws was issued Wednesday • by the Tesas Court of Criminal Appeals. Favorea oy a 3-2 margin, the decision prohibits only matters which are. "patently offensive representations of ' ultimate sexual acts, normal or . .perverted, actual or simulated." The new rulin|g_also prohibits "patent­t}, ly offensive representations of descrip­ktions of masturbation, excretory func­tions a-nd lewd-exhibition of the' genitals."— ?! The decision, made in the caseof Alton k_A. West of Lubbock, who was convicted • g im971~o,fiexhibiting obscene-materials,­ revises the state law in the definition of the term "sexual matters." s The old law provided that material is' v obscene if ..it affronts.commupity starts 1 dards. relating to WTddsertjSOran or representation of sexual matters. ij: The courtmajority jsaid'the term"sex-' •U ual matters" could encompass evenkiss-* : ing, petting, birth and birth control, and •Wl i -em' ­ at '~X ~ •+' « I therefore the more 'restrictlve"'*definiU6h:v ??» was necessary. • ^ j Judge Wendell Odom and Truman Roberts contended that the new ruling should not have been made. -/ "To so limit the statute to lessTKah" ' wlial il ull its XdCB includes, tn lrai than what was. clearly inteiided, and to less, than what theSupreme Courtsaysisconft^ stitutionally permissible, isnot statutory •' interpretation and construction; it is judicial legislation," Odom said.' % '! Another dissenting opinion was raised"''^ in Defense.Atty. Hugh Lowe, one of the • attorneys inthe My-Oh-MyClub hearings , concerning the Austin showing of the controversial Jnovie "Deep Tliroat." ^ r ;'K f -am interpreting it correctly, tht-"^ -new law ris. -no.t.,jetr.oactive., and . therefore does not apply to people who~T^ jnay be subject to appeal," Lowe said'.':!! "If this is true. the hew law could prove* S unconstitutional.'' -."• ; ' £ The Texas pourt of Criminal Appeals was handed the responsibility of revising tjie state obscenity law as a result of a ­U-S. Supreme Court ruling in the West case­ 1 j m'm • m# Mines, •lS-V t.iM­ yea inister-whoi^has. ,the loosely organized protest, was jailecF TOO ai each school. L .for violating a.court injunction. ' The Kanawha Coal Operators Associationestimated that 80 percent of'" -•>-Graley was one of 19 persons arrested' the county's mines; plus at least two in -during-picketing Monday. Kanawha Cir­^Boene-^CountjL;. werf shut down by icuit Court >JiA)ge John iGoad .sentenced ^ picketing; idling 3,100 iftlinei»:-.him to 60 daysin jail and fined him SU500 Scho61s~ln-tte countyTiaVe"" beeh the" Uoir violating-atl Injuiicliun li •••*—'C. J.. .'.J;*-'; 'fir ' '. v , ^ ji . tViUS, rihrtftrran ft-•2*533 u-rv*, & LfV*T'' V/ «S j1 jT -»X ' •* tVV>vW^«-£;~ ** :,0M" ww-t • ' sjwk Drainage Pipe Opposed\|Campaian ition ifS -SfV-J v • 'tfskdi-D jspi mvsrfr*• By Allandale Citizens Briscoe $ Lawyer Unable To Attend Ldwsutt Hearing TJts .By CAROL BARNES Gov Dolph Briscoe's oral -deposi---The Houston lawyer had & previous Bri&coe last February charging he, notice they want to look-at Briscoe's tion because "we feel the citv is violating the* •. .tion inFrantes Farenthold's lawsuit commitment to appear in the Fifth had acted illegally by accepting cam­ Texan Staff "Writer letter and intent of its own Creek Or-, income-tax returns'for '1968-1973 m ­' nMUV WUVU ''i-v ot''4 The Allandale 11Neighborhoodwgiuyryiuwu Association1-dinance," Dr. PhilipLowell said Wednesday : against him-for alleged illegal cam-Circuit.Court ofAppealsm.Alabama paign contributions before he had ac­;-connection with the lawsuit. iii^will appeal the city's issuance of a construc-One section of.thecity's ordinance provides paign practices: was rescheduled "in some other lawsuit;" Jones said. tually named his campaign-manager, They also are seeking a Wide range fyQ­> i^sti6n permitTor a flood water drainagepipe in for "preserving^the natural and thditional Wednesday from nextTuesday to OcL ; Farenthold's attorneys requested former University Regent Joe •i-of-recowis dating back to 1968* that ?0|the Allandale.area before City CouncilThurs-; character of the land and waterway to the 22 _ . the Oct. IS datefor the deposition but Kilgore. -* > might Ijeal jvith political con-i sT-day. greatest extent feasible." -i,.4 " " • ' "they just happened to hit a day when The 1973Texas campaign reporting • tributions , • -%$$" Also at the1p.m.meeting at301 WestAve;, "Such consideration will definitely alter £Judge HeTmanJonesof-53rd he:(BeynoldsVhadthata>rnmilment," •and-disclosure act: requires that a< ••^Briscoe has: denied the con­~-@.cotincilmen \villberequeste5 million , rate hikg ^ ~ " l— **" -appear.. j natorial nomination. 4-UA h-.-'t. -r mi..:-. • ~d«uia®e^iU greatly incHtaseJhe._already :vx*!$4 , The construction permit appfeal involves a critical flooding problem along Shoal CreeK,­ • proposed 60-inch flood water drainage pipe. causedevastating erosioikon botfrsidesof the Inmates' Suit Successful >ii itm leading from th£ MoPaC Expressway through waterway and pose a dangerous human safe­ • GullgtU Elementary School grounds, down ty situation," Lowell said. wm BuMard Street to Shoal Creek West Boulevard IN-ADDITION to the erosion problem; the' lfeiS r --'."-IS then to Shoal Creek. ~ ; city will .have to remove. 11 trees between B6''® <25» v*. m J_ ,, r-, From TreadwellStreet to Shoal Creek, the Allandale Terrace and Lafayette Place, he , ^ proposed pipe-will parallelan existing48-inch said. . ^3 drain pipe, so two pipes will be dumping By MELINDA MILLS ' The sheriff said there are that will be forwarded; to . At the council.meeting, the Allandalegroup-Procedure -• • And"a plan to guarantee sC ir* storm water at one point in the 30-foot wide -will recommend alternatives to the proposed ^(TravisCounty officialsiwere many inadequacies. With the Roberts after examination byT •A: plan-br bring-the-jail—thaJLpereqns held m jail before x oMered :by U.S;: Dist' Judge jail, citing as an example'the Frank-and-Commissioners. Shoal Creek waterway. . drainage project. • , , . . mto..,conformity-with—law-s.. trial-receive QoutiSEiwithiii-72-^ 41 THE DEVELOPMENT permit was issued , Jackj Roberts Wednesday to absence of one-man-cells. At Court governing sanitation .. _ Charles^Graves, director of engineering for hours.--. ' .! ;-*£§» by the City Planning Commission on Aug. 20. the city,. denied any significant^ adverse t pres'ent within 90 'daysa^ least .30. percent of the cells According to Roberts, the • • A report -on measures : Frank saidvhe ' The.Allandale group unsuccessfully appealed effects from the project written report of hiw County should:, be-one-man. Frank report should include; ---• taken, to ensure protection of. » leaned towards building a new county tojhe commission on-Sept. 10. Jail's inadequacies could be. said, which tlie jairnow has " *;A written policy on cen­-inmates frpm the~threat-of Graves said^the project will not increase jail,::but--that.ColriiT)issioners -Jhe Allandale gjoup opposes the construc •flooding or erosion corrected. , only Unks housing. 24 men sorship and evening of letters-.. . physical and seiHiaFassaultr * cCourt: might come up with'?Roberts ruled that, jail con: ..each. to and from inmates. • A-plan to provide other; ideas-to make thV'jall '-ditions violated First/ ;/'Our biggest problem is • -An affirmative policy J recreational op^rtunuSL ^ * }S" : ti Sixth. Eighth and Fourteenth that TO-donH-hftve-enough-'-againstuse of the "hole" for inm&tes. . "Wp've""pnt'Trt SSrnTf ^k­ '' s 'U0 s solitaiy confinement. Jiiiiig amendments to the -U.Sj,Broom," Frank saidr^^Ve are solitasj.-confinement.^, "Tr-A-pten -to-provide»:^x-not " Frank said,oH ••ben,,w "A~pten -to~pro«ide..^!et-;_ not." Franlc "-because Constitution. over capacity now and have • A set of written dis­ peditious treatment'-' for in-the -judge1iasr|tVcnTi9;ple«ty meh sleeping on the floor." rules -including. He cited insanitary con­ciplinary mates with .severe . mental , -of time, and we haven't done a ditions, mail censorship and ; THE JAIL HAS a capacity provisions (for( .a hearing " problems. . .^ „ thing yet" -failure to-protect inmates of 286. whileIt must holdfrom * ' from sexual and ohvsical 27Q to 300 prisoners at any one. A SUIT filed in December, More: personnel* also are Allocations Approved 1972, by..inmates.of County needed..to alleviate some of Jail •;prompted an investiga­: the problems cited," i Frank tion. Named as defendants in said. ISSl For Community Projects the suit were Sheriff Ray-"There is no doubt we must 0t$ mond Frank, county com-sicomply with Judge Roberts' Alternative'community-tax finances-"^'community: ser­ Allernatiw> rftmmnnitvfav : 2a. ment; missioners and jail doctors.#;!s«ruling," County Com-' allocations were-approved vice r projects, hadacquired! • Sattva, in care of the i think Judge Roberts' missioner Richard Moya-said Wednesday, night in',a public $873.44 for the last quarter to Inter-Cooperative Council judgment wasafine one,and I 'If it takes money we don't meeting at the -University be distributed upon requests' am enthused and happy that have, we!U have, to find it.' Presbyterian Church. (ICC), $80 to buy nontoxic, from nonprofit organizations: nonaluminum pots and pans •we don't have to run—a The Capital Area Planning The Alternative-Community «• ,Thp Rap a tnan nf jttWHn-for community use: i warehouse prisoners Council will conduct a six Tax (ACT), a -fundraising •week study of jail facilities to be paid back to ACT over a 20^ ­ Frank said. organization created -aid '"•^"Community-Switchboard, month period. $150 for materials^nd-public *. Peopie'iS. Community service announoemenjs^w"Clinic, J150 for free^ distribu­the teenage runaway pro­ tion of 'antibiotics and crab .shampoo for .those who can't afford it." * » ---••• .Austin CeffiiTiilnity' jour­ • Greenbriar School, $180 nal, in care of the ICC," $25 to • for a one-month's land pay-: aid publication costs. Come Wrangler ~tTEWARTr?9IObEt*S^ Jeans lve you your 1974 MODEL t°fe YEAR PAGEANT choice eel-offi Max HAS EXTENDED ITS'ENTRY DEADLINE FROM SEPT:15THFactor ' 1 s mmm TO OCTOBER 15TH! WHO WILL 6E THE NEXT apple. 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Great with jean?; shortskirts, Becominga jrfiysicianisatremendous Hb: long skirts, the best all- summer shoe...the best price! • satisfectkMi?SW^l»0MHI Letusgiveyouthe)obsatisfaction -j thatshouldgowithit. ' _ ............ Whedwr you're Jtill in medical iciwolwith the theAir Forcedoes not Hefindfhisofficetttabltshed COPYCENTER aI*du' already practicing He has manyoption*avaUable to him when treatingR nf£rh$h ln?Ul,P^IOn^ ^'r Fol?e can ' P4lients«Forexample,hecancomult with AirForce mmmi aS?on°n^rm £ ?™t "!ie £r?im SuPPl»« and equipment readiry available. • an?satisfaction specialists..!*: a}»o has referral to other Air Force Jfedtod6pl.cateinc.vil,an life , .fec.l.t.e, v.J aeromed.cal evacuation LasV.but^"0l ,r~v5 overstatement? Not.if you consider the leas), arc the satisfactions that come wlthhavlng Press On will be closed lWednesday through Friday,! lvrr,*".*-#nr»«»f1Y»jvu»:Mivure.nu.|uiwtiinniaw ,,L^ar?^_cln.'??.ke •r.-. jyu.aic pjiysicjanrOf-SOOIHOiliii .considerably easier withcOmforiabl^ salaryahd.llv: L, Melh« become one,you might findlt exueme)y interesting •ngconditions. • 4 , fiig OctoberT^lT, wKile lt^f r? •? tiffl? w^ai !^g Forc* toofferr,\Pfe think1 ^ mmSi Creamre comforts asid;, the Air Forcer-offers profession») advantag?s, Besldcif receiving training P°n» wefdbehappy"ro sendyou defiledinformsuonl equipment is moved to Tex- in youjf own specialty, you'd bein contact with —^yAickns-M-alU>Cthe-roedkaLtCecialtIc». You'll. i« lung'idiVM.MuCiiWiAjiunnn wIulIi n iiiMjIeetuaily • as * Union Soutli^ north of FX);BokAr Stimulatingandprofessionallychallenging.'.' 1 » Patvuraining in the : Addreit. pnjctice prthev^fpi j M »• , • • "• • VJ*I\V.V • A noisy U.S. . Embassy ." , "u*r* : .iJluUaaaj delegation,.UclCKdUUIl,'der. Radames Mehdez*'Vargas­ mcana ^ir^,nes ' flight was^;* headed by Ambassador Robert ' m Hurwitch. rushed up to-hug Barbara ||,Hutehlsbn;^47,'the U:fepublic affairslofc fi ficer whose Sept. 27 kidnap preceded the consulate -seizure.; ,.,1 , "Thanks for everyttinjg you have done' m ..; for me," Hufchison told Hurwiteh. ;{•' All the hostages were embraced repeatedly by friguls and relatives who i--had been waiting hours, for them to appear. ./ -.Rep. Wilbur D. Mills, his face scratched and'-bleeding and breath smelling of • • A final probleirt was finding a country y^alcohoVyras-one-ofJhe^eople involved in a bizarre late-night incident at thefoot of that would, accept the kidnapers. They ; ?thethe Jefferson Memorial. ~ " *•— " ' had 4. .WASHINGTON (AP) — U.S. park police said Wednesday they had no doubt that Memorial »•— for w$ -nad expressed a preference (or Mexico 'We can assume it was Rep Mills,""Franklitl A. Arthur^^assistarit'chief 6f 'tfie^^^"or—eru'9S oi SU** Wednesday only : . park police,, told a news conference. . Panama had.agreed to take ffiem. ' Mills, an Arkansas Democrat and chairperson of the tax-writing Ways and Means Ciiellar Arosemena said. Patiamfc had Committed, could not be reachedlorcp'mmentabout the Monday morning episode. agreed to grant them asylum to help the His; administrative assistant, Oscar Gene Gossrsaiffearly Wednesday that "Mr' Dominican government "end this unfor­i .-.Mills told me he was pot in the car." Later, however, Goss said "1 cannot refute* k tunatricaser'---. . "what the park polVce"say7'~*v'"t •». . ^ .Earlier in the day; the guerrillas posed ARTHUR SAID oneof?the persons involved was a 38-year-old woman who jumped^ -"for passport photographs, and the ,^*into-the^IidaLB&sinat the foot of the memorial and was rescued by police. .'.hostage,s took...theirJirstbaths;in 13 days . The incident occurred atT^m.-.'When'police-stopped-aJate.mQdeJ'Lincoln Con-• in antioipatiotn_of their i-elease. i tinental described as .traveling at "ah unreasonable speed with its lights ofP* --The.jy^^ ;b^g& Sept. 27 when the Labor leader Wilson (I), and Toryr;leader Heath, wrap up campaigns. Five people spilled out of the car. " guerrilla's --mi^iibers oT a prcPCastro"­. Arthur told the news conference one 'of them identified himself as Milfs: "I think group called the Jan. 12 Liberation Mover , s the officers would recognize Congressman Mills,"'Arthur said. ment — kidnqped Hutchison, of Newark, * : THE ASSISTANT chief said he wasn't certain what sort of identification the man Del., and stormetj the Venezuelan Con­ -j.jrpffered police. . , / sulate. -: ' . " _ ; ^Arthur said the poli.ce report described Mills as "intoxicated,-' He said the'of-'?'-» . The terrorists-at first demanded a $1 ficens based that on the'smel! 6f his breath. ' million ransom and the release of aboujt The managerof a Washington nightclub with a Carribean motifsaid Millshad din­thre€KiozenpoliticaLprison.er§,Theyhacl ed, wined and danced with a group of six other men and women until about 9 p.ih threatened to execute their hostages one Labor Party Wiii • Sunday but did not;appear intoxicated'when he left. _ --by one at two-hour intervals':if their The manager, George Bertran,-47, told a reporter he-had"seen Mills in the " demands were not met. LONDON ( AP) r--Britons vote Thurs-Pollsters, whose lasttwo nationalelec­ nightclub on a number of previous occasionis, sometimes With the same tail, blonde .In addition to Hutchison, the captives Labpr needed a shift of;at least 1.2per­ day.in a crucial national election with all tion predictions were wrong, said their woman with whom he danced Sunday night. . : included' Venezuelan Consul Jesus cent from the Tories to reach the' major pollsteft predicting a labor vie-surveys showed Wilson's seven-month­ Vice-Consul necessary 318 seats in Commons neededBERTRAN SAIt> Mills came inabout 6 ji.m. Sunday with oneother man and threetf® Gregorio, Waldemar tory but saying late shifts by undecided -oldminority governments clear favorite women, and'that two^dditional^menjater joined the party, but left before the Avarado. three other.consulate employes .for a majority. Tories iieed a l.4 percent voters and apatty could result in: an up-. this time around. ;inal group: — ^ . -and a Spanish priest who happened to be: swing to achieve the same result, f; set. . • fe Mid the IVfillS partyr J drpk a suigle^bottle of champagneandConsuinei visa. : : Forecasts of a. Labor "victory sent Heath's talk of "national r m the building applying for a looming -T. " 7 ~ wvmv vvvxaiiipaguc auu cuilduilieu Wine Labor Prime Minister-Harold Wilson and other drinks with their dinner. He said the check for drinks and dinner came'to Wednesday's prices plummeting: on the catastrophe" if Britons elect a "full­ ended, the-campaign Wednesday nightThe DomimcarTg^rnm^nilTefuseaTo -mbre .than $60 and that Mills paid the bill in cash. The party then ordered another '*!' London stock marKet. where money in bluixied Sutiaiisl government came in with a call.for. calm, while Conservative -7 .. • -T —— — --—J I grant any of the gUgrriHas' demands ex­ iXvnrio^kAna, .1^-M f A ? _ _ _ ^ * * , 'j * . . round of drinks and Mills paid the additional $18 in cash,. Bertran said X $\ a terests-fear 'large-scale nationalization an impassioned speech to a rally in Kent. . challenger Edward Heath predictedcept safe conduct out of their country. Bertran said Mills and his party had not had much to drink. > after the election; Labor is committed to He accused Laborites of "total Labor victory would tfring catastrophe. 4t was not immediately learnedwhere Mills was between 9p.m. Sunday aiidabou®! 1 extending state ownership to aircraft, madness," saying "Are.they blind? Are |/f\S—« fc.m. Monday when police said Tig.,was present at the Tidal Basin incident. 'SffjH ships, North Sea oil,; gas and develop­they deaf? These are men trapped by --i-iK -r: MILLS HAS not been seen in public since then. " • -fA-S .*84 ment land. their tribal traditions.'. . 'v Mills was not at his office or at a Ways and Means Committee hearing at which'' Wilson-countered with the charge that But late shifts by undecided voters, -Treasury. .Secretary William: Simon testified on .President Ford's tax proposals , . Heath was trying to provoke public pan- voter apathy and votes for the middle- Rep. A1 Ullman, D-Ore., preSidedin ffiHsrKEsencer~'~' — ''ff ic. "He has abandoned any hope of win­ & road Liberal Party, Scottish and Welsh!' •,-.v -:t#| Police said, that when the car stopped, Annabella Battistella of suburban nationalists and • other small ' parties^ n'n8:^n P°hW" Wllson:claimed.JBesaid •ml Arlington. Va.; jumped out, crying and shouting something, partly in English, part-JM things are better than. last February Asfcg" !«SI could'hurtWilson-more-than-Heath­ ly in Spanish-She lay on the ground, but as police began questioning the other oct® when Under the"Tories-the-nation--was- When. Parliament was dissolved last cupants, she got up, ran toa bridge and jumped in the Tidal Basin, which ranees tffP working a three-day week;" month Labor held' 298 places. Conser­ depth from 3 to 6 feet. ' "The' situation is serious," Wilson vatives 296, Liberals 15, Scottish AHhur said the woman was "obviously intoxicated." -• ••'-js?,' said, "but not as'serious as last •nationalists 7 and Ulster Unionists jlO. -» SHE GAVE her address as 1600 Soutfi Eads St., Arlington, the site of the large V •" February." apartmeiit'complex.where Mills and his wife also reside. , ' Mills, who has two children, is-facinganunexpectly'stiffchallengethisyearin his V campaign for re-election to a 19th term in the House. Arthur said Mills had been seated in the front seat of.tbe car with Battistella and 5? Sadat Meet. Albert G. Gapacini, 39, of Arlington, who was driving. ' V: , No charges were filed , s ^ ....... ,.... jSharpstownConspiracy mgMM CAIRO (AP) — Secretary of State at, the airport on his arrival for his sixtii Henry A-Kissinger flew" to Cairo Middle East mission since -the October Wednesday to begin a new search fqr a war a year ago. ' Mideast peace .settlement. He im-. Kissinger hopes to emerge: from hismediately called on.Egyptian President Asked week-long trip: to seven countries withAnwar Sadat. ' some rough ideas, but not the specific r.; Senior U.S. officials told newsmen the. slis timing, for the next phase'in negotiationsA 56-page motion requesting the Texas Middle East situation had improved in accept a bribe from Houston linancier between -Israel and the Arabs. Court of Criminal Appeals to rehear the the lastyear, but they foresaw likely new Frank .Sharp. They made"handsome He is makinghimself available.to work • case against former House Speaker Gus ties between the Soviet Union and Cairo, profits," the ruling said, from favorable ' •' —UPI Telephota out the terms op a future visit, much as Mutscher andrtwo associates-was^iled including the possibility that Moscow . _stock transactions arranged by Sharp in he arranged an Israeli withdrawal from Wednesday. • Spectators peer into ambulance containing bodies. soon will resume arms shipments to —exchange for pushing bianking legislation the Suez front and the Golan Heights Egypt. • ' The document, signed by attorneys through the Legislature. — earlier this year. . . Frank Maloney of Austin and James 'P'e unanimous appeals court ruling The Soviets already are sending in. But he is loath to get involved in an ex­ n spare parts for rundown equipment. Killer Hacks 5 People Kronzer of Houston, asked the court to held there was ample evidenceto convict -* tended operation and will offer s"everal reconsider its decision which upheld the While Israel-and Syria are said to be the three. It said the state went beyond optfons to leaders in Egypt. Syria, Jor­ 7'.' bribery-conspiracy convictions-of •life stronger militarily than before the Oc­ itsYequirements in proving the existence' dan and Israel. Among'them are'having - Mutscher, former State Rep. Tommy tober war, UiS. intelligence estimates a -of the offer to bribe and-the-actual1 pay­ the foreign" ministers make alternate-': In Bizarre Slayings slight falling off in' the Egyptians' fire' Shannon of Fort Worth-and speaker's ment. • j- visits to Washington and on-the-spot . aide Rush McGintyr power. "The— , ultimate postureKVJVU1C in which thisUUb FORT WORTH (UPI) — * HI: WHICH Investigators theorized Wednesday one man killed three talks between the negotiating parties un­ The court turned down 24 grounds of A visit by Soviet leader Leonid der U.N. auspices. court then finds itself is ihai it win per- -m A-ounp wnmrn nnrt fan r-)iiHMinirwn,- x* *>"• " Ty »• "< • -------' her sister "President is committed seems out of the question at this point, Martha, 24; their cousin Linda McClendon. 19; Stephen McLehdon. 2. Laura's son cases fot a rehearing and to reverse the JjiAmerican efforts'-to settle the Middle , Shannon was the principal sponsor of and Martha's daughter Natasha, also 2. •• --M officials said. convictions. -I f -."•East conflict," Kissinger told newsmen banking bills favorable to Sharp and his Police apparently had no suspects. A. woman had been raped in Julv across tiie Though the motion i-aised no/ ne\)v financially troubled Sharpstown State '; nail from the MeLendon-apartment, but it turned out the suspect in that case is inPoint9 of law, it stated, ."The evidence, Bank in Houston. >• J®B*a^>lnating him as a possible suspect in the five killings.. $x£, when> considered within the framework the s . VKH-siIfferedmultiple stabwounds, too many to tell about until weget acomplete v. .• . • ~ MutscheriHHM uici resignedicaiKueu xne speakershipp e a K e r s n i D Senate Adopts Ban of the conspiracy, circumstantial and ac-.^shorUy after his conviction, and "both he autopsy report, Robert Parkey, an investigator for the Tarrant County medical complice evidence, fails to establish a 1 and Shannon were defeated for re-examiner,tsaid. " . I2.cy' " election two months later.­ ,„"There is just no way to tell how long theyhad beeh dead or fix the time of death The three were wnvicted in March, The trial was switched from Austin to We found positive evidence of rape in one of the women, but that doesn't mean the' OnlArms Supply Abilene 3ury of conspiring to Abilene on a change of venue;' -.... . ....... others weren't raped, too. .... ........ WASHINGTON (UPI) The Senate voted t& cut off all militarv assistance to' Turkey Wednesday and then agreed to a leadership proposal suspending the em­ bargo untiKDec. 15. v . In defiance of President Ford's veto threat, the Senate approved 62-16 and sent to Swedish, Austrian Economists Wrn Nobels -the White House^ legislation barring U.S. arms and aid to Turkey. heu)s capsules Wednesday despite Treasury Secretary William E. Simon's assurances The legislation'^ould.force the Administration to comply with laws that prohibit' STOCKHOLM^ Sweden (AP) — Two 75-year-old social economists of that it would-affect only.28 percent of taxpayers. arms aid to a nation that-uses the weapons for non-self-defense purposes such as -fundamentally differing viewpoints were named winners Wednesday of the invasion of Cyprus. •' '-. the 1974 Nobel Prize for Economics. -< • Joan Kennedy Gets DWI ^ The-Administration so far has not invoked those la\Vs against-Turikey The aid ' • Bo.tH are individualists. Gunnar Myrdal of Sweden is best known for his ^ could be resumed if Ford informed Congress that "substantial progress" had been FAIRFAX', Va. CAP)* -The wife of .Sen. Edward M. Kennedy was' made toward_ a Cyprus settlement controversial studies of the.American.Negro and of Asian democracies, • arrested Wednesday and charged with driving while intoxicated, Fairfax Senate Democratic Leader Mike Mansfield and Republican Leader Hugh Scott while Friolrich.yoiv Hayek of Austria is-a well-known theorist of conser-•' m-_ County police said. later in the day, won 40-35 approval:for separate legislaUon postponing the embargo vative economics.^ ~ ~ r ~---r'' ,,,, until,Dec. 15. The house must still act on the suspension. • • -An aide to the Massachusetts senator said Joan'Kennedy was alone in The two will share the 5124,000 praejeflbney equally, ;^~ f The,Mansfield-Scottresolution woulcl,allow continued arms shipments until Dec' • ' the car when it hit-the rear of another car at an intersection. 15 •: Pord detennined that .'such suspension will furthemegotiatioris for a peaceful; Boston Judge RejectsMayor's Request for Federal Help The accident occurred in this Virginia suburb of Washington, near the* resolution of the Cyprus conflict." _ -J •' JKennedy family's home in McLean, Va. .Mansfield'said the ''next several weeks" could be critical-to gating Turkey aiid BOSTON (UPI)A store was looted, cars"stoned anff sevefaTpersotfe " police said she^asTeleased~on her own-recognizancer^^S^^*'1'""''-• .Greece "off dead center" and that-an arms embargo now could undermine U S ef-' -inJUred-Wedneada-VJn the predominantly-black Roxbury section of racialO ;rrrforts-to-helpTiiHM9>tiaUoiis'"' • •• .^,1 ly torn Boston. At. least five persons.were arrested^-1—— :—:— Itv an emotional appeal to the Senate.to allow Secretaryof State HenryKiMngrr TMarket^Sh^ws Retord Gain^^1— " Presiden^JFord called on allcitizens of the city to "respectthe law" but and Ford.time to negotiate a settlement over Cyprus. Mansfield said, "\Vhat we've ^m 'f NEW »YORK (AP) -The ' 5 done is to make sure the Turks will stay there. . -, v said he hopedyit^qpld^:fJfli^Becassarv>' tn ^nrt federal marshalstn on. v ­ Stock markfit at fjrSf; N.T.S.E. MW JOKES MEIKE "Who do we think w? are that we caij-tell other people what to do? We've told too r i thedtv's court-bordered husintr itococrracraflnn i.' ' . force the city's courtKirdered busing and desegregation.. ,. then rushed v to applaud Presi-VtluMmtiit; Jl liAiiiriiH many. • ; -^ -&H U.S. Dist. Jud^e W." Arijiijr Ga^ity;.who,issued the busing ofcier which -—"You can. either make sure that the Turks will stay there and the Cyprlots will: has touched off violence in both white and black sections of the city, turn-. . sufferTJ-orfjwufiaiv.give yourgovernment a chance to work out a solution/If .we r . dent Ford's new economic plan Cltlrlil 1:5 ,-^with its strongest .gain' of the'i-j 631.03 •5:y " ed down a request by Mayor'Kevin White for 145 federal marshals. v don't we will hay? the"Continuing resolution back here and What in the hell have w^ year and its sixth best-on record " .accomplished?" <> -5 it ..Wednesday. * .Fordhas tjireatehedto vetotheban oniOTItary^aiS^Turkej^buttheoverwhelm­yjj^The Dow Jones average of 30-28.39 ing votes in the Senate aitdHouse would indicate Congress-ran ovemd3'tKe'rejec-: 'Negative Reception' Qiven Surtax Proposal 1 tion. The House earlier approved the* cutpff 291-69. k ' Tndustriah surged ?8.39.points tpr WASHINGTON (tJPI) ~ President Ford's Droposed 5 percent surtax ».!»»« . Asst. Senate Republican Leader Robert p. Griffin called the decisiona politically >• 631.02 for its largest closing ad-, gota negative reception before the House Ways and Means Committee expedient vote tp satisfy a large interest group" — a reference tt> the Greek-t i4 6V .vance since-May 24,1973. " i / % 1American community. _ : ' "We ought to give our secretary of state a chance to carry out these important?-^ „^_^5^oUajfonSiV>;Griffin skid.. ,-'i.don'tknow whjrwe want to slap him in the face " ; rsdav"* irnim W f ' w 'M lf& J# tMv&i-i­ -guest vleuupdfnt EDITORIALS Q Acting with TACT Page 4 Thursday, October 10, 1974. 3V ^ By PHILLIP L. WHITE Hi -Second, Chancellor LeMaistre must {Editor's note: White is an-associate^ gor Neither he no? anyone else in the professor of history at' the-Universlty; System office has the'kind of background Law and order r and. a former, president of the campus necessary to"cope7 satisfactorily With ­ ^r.4 Today wejreaffirm our call for an impartial; civiliah investigation of the • chapter of the Texas Association, of _ academic administration. His office has '} \death of Terburcio Soto*. We do iS)t say the police version, of the facts is ^College Teachers.) not only blocked Implementation of —*gron&. there is not enough information available to support such a states Faculty members have had yery. little ^jeaaortable policies enjoyingoverwhelm­ ' '"ment. We do say, however; thaf as a"matter of human&polttics and.of c§m^_ ing faculty support-but has imposed influence on the governance of this u/k M!DiAST ^w/dversity in;recent years, Facultyydorn­ *' tnon sense the people of East Austin'should have their questions,satisfied by. policies which offended the faculty as ^mittees-appointwrbjrthe presKtehtiiave­ -7nuchl)y-yjeh«gh-hande. . It is ray sincere, belief that'The Daily in no hurry, of course. They were later Association, would"pull their heads There is much talk lately about:mis­ flow asked would I use the authority contained in Articled, Section 24 of the ,. Texan is nor worth the paperit is printed •„ caught at the front door and verbally out," a bill might be offered to the IS placed priorities. This Nov. 5-we are go-Texas Constitution to obtain this information. In view of the expected state-' ' on. Perhaps reading it is a good exercise . & reprimanded. After their names were Legislature to elect one of-the board' % jing to have to decide what our priorities^ rhent by Chancellor LeMaistre, I hope it will be unnecessary to invoke the • for those striving to cultivate aitsa$ taken they were simply released: members for each System. .are. Now that the Socialists are on the procedure provided by Article 4, Section 24, but I stand ready to use this analytical approach to life as opposed to',; MosLof.the4>eople-on-this-campusrand--rl*m_sure_the_appointees"wilh-replyto—--ballot-thelQ:viegs_w[ll get some public" the less disciplined, more commonday in this dorm,are here toget aneducation the most Authority should the expected statement be inadequate." this letter, that .they serve the student's airing. However, pressISg^ critical attitude which abounds.Consider -•• of one kind or another. The only time Regents t We have a feeling the statement will be inadequate, and we also have that the review of "King John written by ss when we get a release from "our daily needs, Yet, the UT Board of priority for Nov. 5 is to keep.the La Rai%np fires President Spurr without anyone Unida alive and well and we can only dot* -ffeeling that investigations — whether by the AAUP, by the faculty-student Vicky Bowles. Her review of the play is c ^ drudgery of school is'on the weekend. If seeming to know why the dismissal that by VOTING FOR RAMSEY* Committees or by the Legislature — will eventually be needed.-But with , •. .shallow and illustrates her apparent ig--•• all we can look forward to on weekends : came, and the A&M Board of Directors -. MUNK. : •) is avoiding intimidation. by a: bunch of _ priscoe's statement, there is assurance that the University administration " norance of human -character. Not only approves the building df a wing on Stu­1 Richard Uzzell ; have the' actors, most notably Steve" hostile jocks, I might as well move to never fej fe"not a private empire, and there.is assurance that this firing will he ex-* dent Center grounds which will School of Architecture 1Wyman'sportrayal of the king, breathed Vietnam. These attacks occur every directly serve students. . ^ glained to the public^ " -.:gjg|t life into thear respective characters, but v year, but little.is done because of fear of With the recent publicity on the issue''? ' retribution by the East Wing. If the Of­ have transcended the experience one of Texas colleges' governing boards;why ' Letters to the Editor fAW^> MNuclear news ^ normally encounters: when going,to the -ficial; of this campus, and of this dorm, not: take the opportunity to suggest a 4 cannot do any more than glap hands, it viable solution-to an obvious problem? £ Carl Hoover, an AtcmicEnergy Commissionsafety expert, has announced ; 'SrSr?te?h«SeS,andK • will never cease. • . •1 • Firing Uno letters,should: Now fs the time for students to get .fie is quitting the AEC toprotestwhat hesays are inadequate safety... tant performance takes one back, way We in West are not going to take any > some representation with these bodies * . b . &i precautions being followed by the agency. In announcing-his Resignation, back, to the time of King John's England more ^ s" and possibly improve the composition a$ Be t^ped triple-spaced. Natne withheld by request Hoover charged the agency is usiiig "wholly unaccentable" methods totiSs— not a "let'spretend" transcendence^: well. Mary Russo' ]nri|ia th» Han^rg m niwiMr • a-'but an actual feeling of being there. Any Nayh ^ iV PO Box 6854, College Station, Tx, 77840 • Be 25 line* or less. The . Texan ; At this time, the AEC;has quietly ordered 21of the 50nuclear power plants chaVp^Up'anlrwc againsi_ Jo the editor: . 'reserves the right to edit letters for ' b the United States to shut dewn temporarily because of mysterious cracks^,.script, however any ^aknessesUiwem We're No. 1, Uynastythrjeat -lengthi­developing ui the plants cooling system pipes. . are compensated for by superb acting. Nayh, nayh, nayh, nayh, nayh! ... .To the editor: -^y-^ f £ Cracks in the pipes have been discovered in at least three plants, and as a ^ Anyone seeing the play will no doubt • ifeY/. ' -Student Body Left VJi As people struggle_toj|ain theirdignitv •' ^ If University of Oklahoma " • Include name, address and result the AEC wants to exdmune18 other similar plants. The AEC said that^'a8ree 11,31 P^y has more merit ttari : */1 -:>and-to improve the qualityoTHreir lives,i, phone number of contributor. . *>.»fMs. Bowles seems to give credit for. "funny" thingsseem to happen along the V {he.cracks were not serious, but acknowledged that failure of the cooling' Systems could result in dangerous spills! • Most intelligent people will probably Donkey tale way. It's interesting to watch those with., write the article off as bathroopi graffiti To the editor: • . , power, manipulate various groups to in^ ­ Mail letters, to The Firing Line, The tl . —:—• • •-• . ... .... ........ ' ,. "v and as a.written example of the adage: After watching the Board of Regents crease the:present base of power and toi • Pally Texan, Drawer D, UT Station, "Foors.names.'like fool's faces, always for the University , of Texas System and damage the fledgling organizations. Austin, TX. 78712; or bring letters to . ,... appear in public places/'.The sadness of the Board,of Directors of theTexas A&M :•' ' TheLa Raza Unida Party is the largest 'the Texan offices, basement* Texas THE DAILY TEXAN fwr.!,»****'t*»OmlnnHf Utmt mf A»tlb the /natter is that too many people System blunder their way through a "•.and most dynamic Mexican-American.^ Student Publications Building. tEDiTOR\ : : ^Buck Harve^: 'MANAGING EDITOR "v....... . .. .. Sylvia Moreno f ASSISTANT MANAGING EDITORS 5. > /KST t. . Larry Smith f'VS, Sr1"r3v' v -" Will the next DA^please stand up? I-?NEWS EDITOR 1 ' Martha JP McQuade ^ m . ife ~ m ^ a* MUNICIPAL EDITOR :-. By STEVE RUSSELL nominee Bob Perkins enough beer; he his'litye daughter being hooked on the: Wonder what he would do if his mail was ^UNIVERSITY EPITOR -.....V/.-} Richard Fly •Those of us ^yho are supposed to make will sing La Bomba. , evil:weed. Gotdher has been zapped by running 20:to-l against the entire'Bill ofcomments ^SPORTS EDITOR ........ —;.—Herb Holland pithy on the Austin scene if you give County Commissioner West Texas superlawyer .Warren^' Rights; that should never missa political do;Benefits I doubt a person bein ^AMUSEMENTS EDITOR V, Richard Moya enough' beer, he will 'Burnett, most notably in Austin writer prosecuted for showing;films to com r"•;* v Paul Beutel and parties are. definitely the^ place to' 'FEATURES EDITOR .C4 boogaloo. ~~^-Gary-€artwright^mai-i)uana trial, but tii\g adults is much comforted^by tye • pick up inside skinny, even If you doii'l rPHOTO EDITOR „... i,y,» If you give gome Austin pols enough, ^pped by Warren Burnett is no knowledge-that—thfr-prosecutoriknQ] ?•. -. ..i ?t:,.. Marlon Taylor talk toanyone.' You can.drawconclusions -b!emish 0,1 ^ better. . j beer, they will leave the party feet first. prosecutor s reputation;from who is there. Also from who is not " t • ;ISSUE staff „ , J . „ . . i t ' s s o m e t h i n g o f a n h o n o r ; Granger is in a position n\uch likeihat . .......... w .Issue Eihtor : Gail Bun.-is . there. .And as to .some pols, you can Coanty Atty. NedGranger hasbeen do-$%s r. 9ar' ace.| Gotcher is theobvious candidate of the"''1 speaker's, General Reporters J;,,i Susie Stoler, Carol Barnes gauge their actual"-support-for the: ing-some interesting politicking-lately, , , . i, . w. 'n-order fans. This means that Parker didn t worry about'rackini up a : ' benefitee by how sous- ®r^fr -News Assistants-...:..../.1..., BUI Scott,-Jose M Flore's, Charles,Lohrmann. dd they get; those who -• He shojjred up at Uie Austin Women'sf!^ "I*-?°nne " ^n0 ?' moderatelypoor record^because to con-& ' ' _ V' Christy Hoppe, Barbara Williams Center fund .raiser to" watch the KIng-'frtJ w^° -c°vets Smith s Job servative opponent, Bill Clayton/has anarejustniakingwhat' Riggs match and at last week's benef it'^J?" ,{ro,m another, dh-ection, and ­ , Editorial Assistants^ Robin Cravey, Bryan Brumley, Steve Russell abominable^ record. Parker felt'that he ' they regard as a ftian-- for Barrientos. He recently crashed ar>^®ranpr |s ^jat someone. The only open "v ? Associate Amusements Editor „.:Chris Garrett could move to the right at will because r Assistant Amusements Editor.4..; Daniel D.,Saez datory appeararfcfe sit -Student Action Coalition party, accor-fM, 60 -theliberals would-have-nochoice-but to ®-: stiffly nursing ' one ­ 2 Assistant Sports Editor....;.;,..,./. Trott , d'n8 sOme^SAC people. Granger has'^l Granger calls TeXan criticisms of his back-him when thejchlps were down. A -Make-up Editor : Eddie R Fisher ' drink, make the flesh-m' dearlyjieen making the liberal rounds Vafprinritlos "the stubidest thing I ever funny thing happened"to Parker on his *§ 'pressing rounds and * .Wire Edi.tor Roe Traugott ' Granger is the fellow, you wiU 'recallT^jr,heaid." His-wife saysr-^You Just don't way to the navel. m .leave early, the ob­ t Copy Editors... .Curtis Leister, Colleen Jane Doolin, "***' whofefuMtopr^secjite Republican andi?^.understandall-he*s donefpryoii people, ~ GrangeFTeels ttesrlir-can-get-awayi^­ if -Robbie Marshall; David Rose ject, is to be seen Raza Unida yoterswho contaniinated thej^iWhen-1 inquire-(o whom "you people*' Wlth trtimpllngon the_EirsLAmendment'J ^vTjhout making an ass of oneself; don't Carol Jean Simmons Mike Smith primary, results but stlll?f|grefers, she gestures to the crp*d at the f Photographers ' Democratic because liberals ,wou\d never vote'for "get drunk \\ not among friends. Speaker found time to prosecute" alleged porr5?'iBarrientos • benefit, which includes all > Ophtfooseiprmed totlje Dailf.Teun&re thoieof ^ ' Mrtflr or the ymxti ol the jtUdrtod are! not ntethartij-^no(^UanBUIgdrif!«i3'1( , candidates seldom,get drunk , Herr TSotcfier. However, there are 'at fe„' . nographers. What, you may well ask, is>.'»«*three ethnic groups, bothsexes and a fair­ jelasslfled »dVwUiiof sfcooldbem*fe In T8P least two other choices^liberals can use" W­ 4 pi jb* Vriftaity admifliWrtlioo or the Botrd o( ,< "1300 Wi-StUi rf«~-3<»Gw£J»<»5§l'»' XXfnu mi-#* Trot Mb • Either GonzaloBafrier)tosx:an cany «upM«|tejptid i( Aiofia^ta Anod«ioii7 -i»'—— Is^Very good at shooting.down dope.,#J his mail rups ZO-to-1 against por-with lawyers new law graduates h&ve to n tunn In Snaniih hut nitf tn Wnplu-h »r lii^JPgartMioos' tWii1 " " jmokers; sending them off,to Huntsyille • , nography, Ope response is that Barry move to the boonies to find-work, the "** •pm tMi TF-sFigk * ft M ihSriki'Jl mm ymfy. lNs> jSwjJ/^14­ nn»,artiKnU„ tL.l.il MA: ;, i Ji. . key element "in the SDS convertibility, Nixon's new in: thelate '60s (interrupted by • (Editor's note:. David . analysis was that LBJ, Unable economic policy,-and the the.-irtflationary--. artificial MacBryde is a former to justify a war tax,wasfinan­Federal Reserve Board's boomlet ID '71 and '72) js get­ .... member of UT Students for a cing the war by a.covert, and rather frantic pumping of the ting worse. Democratic Society.) exported, inflation. (The money supply.to get out of the Here we note that'the war It has been nine years now dollar was, since the, i944 slump and generate, arUficdl-expenses and the "military­since I first heard SDSers Bretton Woods agreement • Iy and at great inflationary defepse"..spending generally (Students for a Democratic among leading capitalists, of-cost, an economic boomlet to are a fundamental Keyiiesian Society) durirtg a teach-in at fidially. pegged to gold and . insure Nixon's re-election.. device to take wealth, by tax-Yale University argue against accepted as the international The war is still with us, to the esj and manage it to spurthe U.S. government's war in monetary standards so de fac­tune of several million dollars basie industries by producingSoutheast.. Asia. One of the to inflation of the dollar hit and. massive murder every nonconsumable things. Thatmain problems SDS then had only relative-to qther curren­day, and the inflation plus Keynepian device was im­ was' to get our fellow cies.), . recession that became overt plemented following the lastAmericans, tosee not only the • The chickens did not come damage far away but also the home to roost until the PI AM I S to >us COOUPNT ' damage Americans ecortomic downturn in 1969, DOWN THE ScWER.ANP OUT find "/our caused by the UvS. 70 and '71-, resulting in. the INTO THE RIVER. HUH? PlANQ HUH? / .j government's activities. A dropping of the 'gold-dollar ^TQ®?WOrCi Puzzler Answer toYesterday's Puzzle ACROSS 3 Rangeof 1 Cooks In oven knowledge SOI3S3 BB3Q nmn ; 6 Backless 4 Teutonlc.deltV HHBQ Bam HD0 seat -5 Classifying iiHQPHHRi J/M-M. aji.1/ *V9-/ VlLn.vfr'*-'*' BBffiEQ 11 Spanish 6 Sharp pain dance 7 Zest GflBEJS 12 One behind 1 B Number gSBu KB 0Qia another 8 Hypothetical ' 14 Solar disk -force •, OH, UJEUv lF VOU WERE TO oca sa Hrnia AFT6I? HtXJ LEARN TO • 15 River. In -. t.0 Injury •••'. PLAV IT NOW; VOO'P toABLW . isormany ~ )1.Wuifi tiy ^— stin LOVE MB.SU)EETi6, YOU'LL wfnU? wij nnsrs .JUST STRIKE A SBJeHNmv' 17 Conjunction Immersion APPKEClATE MY Ml/MOR,.' 18 Definite 13 Antlered • • snrdaaB anlcle animal­ 19 Pricked 16 Suspended aalli painfully 19 Backbone DPH aahin aHaa 20 Spanish for 20 Uft ... — "river" *$S$$ .. -Vf 21 Pronoun 23 South print 38 Esciu>ed 22 Imitating 'l-bi' m -A' American .90 Mcr8ptouant"39 Woodvolant EesUval ^ A?ln nvnrnltnir . 41'M»mw ---Jecompftn. ™ ?9COmP#nM 42 24 Wplnpout, I Anraott? ' 33 Supercilious 44 Diphthong26 Place"n line 28 infernal ,;4812 47 Peruses 39 and 1-4 October 9, and 10-12 and 1-4 Oc­ 46 Confession of /religiousfaith 41 42 tober 10 in Boom 104 of the Speech DOWN Building: Come by and talk over YOUR 44 45 46 1 Annoy potential career opportunities offered by the 2 Toward 47 / Graduate. Programs. shelter Dtotr. by United KaturrSynwatt, loc. •SS3SS 5' iUfi msom A young woman who enrolls in Air Force ROTC is eligible to compete for an Air Force scholarship that includes free tuition, lab anu incidental fees and -reimbursement for textbooks for her last 2 -Vollege. In addition, a-'tax-free monthly allowance of 5100 is paid to both scholarship and non-scholarship widelsalike. • " • * 4 Whep shegets herdegiee. the cai eerasan Air Force -officer awiuts her. matching her abilities to a job with rewarding challenges. With benefits like, 30 days paid vacation, good pay. foreign travel, and a great place to build a future. Interested1'Contact Captain Jim Cargill RASTrSTPtiOT^-47^1776/47H777.­ And remember, in'the Air Force, you'll be looked up toas well as at. , . PUT IT ALL TdGfcTHER IN AIR FORCE ROTC • M itting on Jfe: a By NICHOLASOLAS VON •-• Haldeman and thpthe othernthpr twotwrt ran can separate the two; This is a gressional heroes were too. j • HOFFMAN •••,. what we accused them ofdo-case that can't be equitably chicken to lop off . one ®1974, The Washington Postr^jiing not vecy long ago/ adjudicated, so what we must presidential limousine fromKing Features Syndicate sfe'.A.. We're charging ..these-five do is either.lynch.them or let the budget. Now in a time of WASHINGTON — Whoever, men with violating the con--them go economicr crisis which will it was who spit on John spiracy statute." This was the (Not that letting them go shortly become!excruciating, Ehrlichman, as that once very device that they • used would save them from punish­ they spend their days pulling powerful man was going into ...again and again to prosecute ment. Look at .the ghoulish «<*•' , wing's off, flies the-courthouse for-his trial, their political enemies: •••• • -• performance . of media, did us a favor. He provided us UNDER THE CON­ -Perhaps thinking up new politicians and part m I _ t . -. c • ;. r-crin>es the fiveare accused of . metaphorical mob over their Berngan and Ellsberg tnals. is so inextricably bound up. debates about how mariv turning us fromcitizens into a I to be doing to with noncriminal^ political maids and butlers the in-disorderly crowd. And as for Mitchell,^ Ehrlichman, offenses there is no way we vaii'ded, old man of San their talk, against pardons:aiM in favor of trials so that future Glemente is' to be permitted. generations about Ten, five,' two.: or none, his can read Watergate, it's not our job to V •staff is slashed with dubious write history, but to make it, courage by thtv .same legislators who were warned To punish Nixon or his ' " for yearsthat the Nixon White associates any further . v • House' entourage had gro'wn'to de'mands our-becoming -lilus• great Depression and WW II help, but.hurt? by wasting vast a point where it notonlyoffen-them.-Let's pick on -another as the major capitalists used" wealth and fueling inflation, ed the sumptuarystandards of :ex-President. What about giv-•the federal government to Also, since. Nixon's a republic but the health of 'ing it to Chester A. Arthur?help manage, "our" economy Watergate; we have been abler our political processes. In that There's ^ guy'wild's reallyby deyelopijig domestic to glimpse the use to which period, however, our con-gotten away with it foryeare;: 1 porgramsy such as welfare "national security"; has-been. ' • , ^31 payments to mollify victims puL / 1 • of inequities"and provide a We do need to bite the bullet Tl*« n i floor.for consumer purchases • to stop inflation, ancT gain -'.V.©, fOm/C Strip UOOffeSDUry to "stabilize'' consumer sec-, .hope, from the possibilities of *--- •— •• . „ ... tor,: demand, and using -democratically deciding how has again "military-defense"-spending to invest that wealth-affir­to provide a floor for demand mativeiy, but anybody, like because of misunderstanding's for basic industrial'productioil Ford or U.S. Steel who"urges with the syndication company;-^ and overseas pacificatibn greater productivity; programs in the event of a reai.oriable investment The strip will again resume m"M threat to some coiporation's policies and budget cutting empire. without urging a gigantic cut one week. v.-.. y; . The whole program has iij the WMltJi.wasting military been tenuous from the start; biidet' is dodging the major^requiring .an "enemy," : re­issue and perpetuating the Texas Unicnquiring all sorts of "anti-problem. . • Communist hysteria" and Events' Tcday "'national defense'' public I UNIVERSITY OF OSLO relations explantions to V INTERNATIONAL S •"justify'-" the expenditure of SUMMER SCHOOL .. 12 noon? SANDWICH SEMINAR: "Camping^ wealth. But it worked. and Travel." "Walter Wakefield of" a local Nowadays, however, the OSLO, NORWAY, ,camping .goods store will discuss*'local and" Keynesian policies no longer ,•" /ime J»; to August (I, 197J^ ..disfanf camping and travel possibilities with • a display. Union Patio. Recreation Com­ ~TTtrttee.~-^--• . ' UNDERGRAdyATEAND • • : • GRADUATE COURSES FIIGHTS 7-4 9 p.m. RLW: "The Adventures of Robin Hood." Fun classic of the 1930's. Students, International Student Body I New York; faculty, and staff $1; members $1.50. Batts For catalog write tot 66 with a gtwif Plut To* Auditorium. Theatre Committee. Retum-eny dap A Seen)) School Departs Oct,. It,Nov. 6, 27 Chars* Oslo Summer Doc. 19. 20. 91 missions t/o Sr. Otaf College SPACE J.IMITED-B00K NOW NorthfiekJ, Mrt. 55057? call thVExperts: 478-9343 1~ Two years college.required 2428 Guadalupe TRAVEL ;5J 3-P»ece Party Pajama Panfsuit ;'Greal:contemporary styl­ing designed for those, festive , evenings ahead. Jacket ^covers sleeveless, tunic t.ap and "billowing pants:..all in" silky-soft 100% nylon. S^es^to"13 $48. i INIBKQOtD, PRICED FROM'$326 ihrtm/fasmKmt&g viiaof ON-THE-6RAG 2406 Guaifaiupex I -izt • • v T"r^-; \_-<'-t <>4-* in RV'Uqiv ­ I* tgi fm Bans Press From Practice Just p. Tflj§0gjh -B*JIICHARD'JUSTICE preaching crisis.stage inother said Wednesday, "The writer practices to the press the There's-a new breed of £tv«? w Texan Staff Writer parts of the world. " sees it as me putting him on a week of the 1970 Arkansas-"'"^.Darrell Royal' used to say three things * reporters, not necessarily "by , Darrell Royal's relationship Reporters from The Daily spot, and I see it another way. Texas gamp. He wanted ' age. I can talk on the could happen when a team ttirew the foot- to only with the .local media has Texan and The Austin I'll close the practices, andwe give the players the impres­recotti.' It's Just new ground ball and two o! them were bad. This 4eteriorated another step.-American-Statesman both won t h^ve that problem. sion he was thinking more season Royal has-been finding out the rules, and that's fine with bill ; Reportersi-for-only the^econdv . noticed the change. Royal'? • . "The locker room (during about them. He had a press me," '-: worst thing that really happens is when timeIn Royal'sW-year career, words were: "I don't want to the week) will be closed, too. conference after each prac­Texas have the opposition: throws the ball against the-, -practices at the University,-have been see any of these personnel There are confidential things tice at the Villa Capri/Motor always been a problem for Texas secondary. » --\Jd ] barred from attending changes In thejjaperilt wjin't in there', toot-If we.h$ve to, the Hotel -reporters. Royal believes the .After four games, the Longhorn secon-trott ri/onghorn football -practices.-• make that much differ&ice, I --dary's public image Is in about thfe same:r:-­ front offices as well I hate to ..This time it's different. reporter can -write only what • The worid ;Vrill not end. just don't want it in " < be that way, I've been open in "I DON'T think I've shape as Richacd Nixon's. Statistically, he tells him to. Most of the •. •""" A Te«ui»-lnt^prehve: _ The American-Statesman the past, but I can't help the " changed," Royal said. "I local writers-have gone, along the Texas defensivebackfield is the SWC's Melancon is the only back to survive the Tan tBe-siory,-for. no,matter press at the risk of disclosing . wont. Opposing quarterbacks have com-whole season, though. Raymond Clayborn think the reporters have ^with him,-again-violating jour% si^Some believe it might what reasons. The-Texan did what we do ^against our op-changed. I think it's termed naHstic principle, The Texan pleted 64 percent of their -passes and, was the starting safety until being moved . &,sf.si-. At Tuesday afternoon's not.. , ponents." ; " investigative reporting. "No, I Included. . , thrown six touchdownsuagginstjrexas. too the .^offensive-backfield this week. -workout, it did not take even THE TEXAN'S jjolicy is. : .Royal closed' the Texas don't-know what it's called. , . "I. hatf to close them," Texas has played three mediocre teams^ Sophomore'Paul Jette was a starting cor-i • the less-perceptivet writers that since Royal can kick trie beating-aK thr^e easily, but the secondary. nerback earlier but was replaced by Sam­ *<,' "•VjeR-r-* Royal said. "My understan­ • v -long to-notice that sdprtomore press outatany time,.one em:•<•#$$ still managed to get burned; When Texas my Mason two ^ames ago.' $?• ding was wheitwe Have closed • Raymond Clayborn -was work­only use wfiSt Royal says-to .• ; in m a played a good team like Texas Tech, the_ ..THIS WE^H' against Oklahoma Alfred ­ / practices, you can write only ing out as a first .string offen­use. It isagainst every princi­. secondary still was getting burned, but In " Jackson. a freshman with hardly any ex­ .. what I givesyou.Uet the'press • Ingrqm, Aboussie sive halfback. This personnel ple of journalism taught in-the come down-there and get :. Lubbock !t cost the Longhorns a game; ^ ^ perience, Will.-start in the defensive • change in the Texas football classroom, but it is an agree­background for a story .they p.Tech's quarterback -Tommy Duniven -backfield against the best team,in the na­. program is not to be inter­ment Royal Agrees. ' "and flanker Lawrence Williams combined .vtion. — Oklahoma. might not have been able to for Game preted as anything-ap' • "I had no choice.". Royal get otherwise. for three touchdowns, one going for 77 pa Royal says he doesn't expect the' Junior tight end Tommy lngram was medically approved :; "I would think this would be yards.. On the long touchdown Williams ' Sooners tQ pass much, and Oklahoma's not -un­ Wednesday for Saturday's game with Oklahoma in Dallas after permanent-This is was 15 yards away fjfom the closest Head-CoaCh .BarrySwitzer says-the same having been out of action since the Wyoming game. usual. It's pretty common all -defender, Thelman that seemed to be get­thing, .Switzer was in Austin-Saturday' Ingram .suffered a broken thumb against Wyoming:and . over the country. ting beat was senior safety Terry Melan-" •watching Texas beat Washington. He also returned to practice only this Week with the hand in a cast saw the Huskies' sophomore quarterback "I DON'T enjoy being inter­con. Halfback Joe Aboussie also returned to practice for the first viewed when I sensf MELANCON" IS the only-returning' ' complete 24 or 37 passes to wide openrfelf -~zr,~:h time Iti' a week after being-bothered with leg cramps. someone's coming after me. • 'starter in the.Texas secondary, which was •receivers, . 'Starting rover Ered Sarchet, who sprained an ankle in But Iknow everyonels'not my• ^considered weak-even-b|pfore.the,.sea.spn ; . '"After they watch the film of the Tuesday'siworkout, is doubtful forSaturday'sgame. If Sarchet : public relations man.j•-.began. But Melancon, like the-rest*ofthe r Washington game, they'll probably.JhrowH ;• is not.able to play, sophomore Mike Hartinger will start. The Texan was beaten' on defensive backfield, admittedly isn't hav-: the ball .every down," Melancon^smiled, Head Coach DarrellRoyal said defensive tackleDoug English ; the Clayborn story, a story it mg a good year. "but their running game is so strong theyftes;*;—i-; ^'iQQk^J better'^as he tries to overcome broken blood vessels in could have had. The-Texan "People muSt think I'm' the only one won't have to throw-the ball 37 times like his foot-Bustaihed^in'la^week's win agaBist Washington. ^ •:; back there," Melancon said. "I've been . •Washington did." |fr -3 f < violated principles. It will not Doctorsruleddefetislve tackfe'Fretf CurriffandhalfbackDon getting my share of criticism and I cer-~^t Before the Washington.game the secon­ ^happen-again. The readers - Burrisk definitely out'of Saturday's game.3Si$'"V>,»,t 'V talnly deserve it; Pm a senicH' back-there --^•dary -had-been given specific instructions " were the ones cheated, and to .: them "we apologize. • • and supposed: to be beating'them (the not to get beat long.They didn't,but there ^receivers), not getting beat. -were receivers breaking open and cuttingI MERIT SKI PARTY hiohunds ROOM? mtm* LIBRARY FINES "Against Tedi, you might, say what into the seams of the Texas zone all'night. ——NaHtc>_from (h» Univanlty .. happened: was .Williams beat me andI • Oklahoma's vide receivers are Tinker library or any of~ft» --guesseiLwrong^ Melancon said, "but I ~ •^Owens and-Billy Brooks. Both burned Tex­ GOLFCENTER COLORADO branches are officio!Univer-don't care what people say about" me or as with, long touchdowns last year;1 They lity communications requir-what's in the papers." • --Z\ could possibly do it again Saturday. 6001 E. RIVERSIDE^fp ; , Ing immedlote attention. ^ . Lighted driving range BMfn A&M Kickoff at Noon mzt ^ Cold beer t!06.00 fljs.oo COLLEGE;STATION (AP) Wednesday because of the hots last three weeks. Smith said V4e ^4 Professional instruction Tta la«)p#u: . ,Tb»prir>tnc>wtw. — It's official now — Texas weather and to avoidanycost­he was very distressed by* the lrA?< '.eondomMuniAWthft^piKMvxjMti'1 Aae»> or Mntb^c*band o« • MERIT ^Kt PARTY A&M and Texas:Tech will ly .injuries before the Bears' situation, especially since i-«Qu>«pM Mtehtn* leook.in «mt*4if • . Professional equipment } •:. oceupancf. (Oftwr.iMQMMowatfttie j collide at noon -Saturday in Southwest Conference opener SMU plays TCU this weekend.­ CMiUA«C9oodtof trw kimwmim. TU£&, OCT. 15, 700 WEDNESDAY SPECIAL -two buckets for the > tnyof Aip«rk»Jouriki«raw ' their nationally televised with Arkansas. "We're just not good enou^i trpianp*dMd i«a}iion«e«cm .-V CASTILIAN price of one, 7 to 10 p.m. pwty m Aapvnihwcrtc Southwest Conference'football ."The Razorbacks are an ex­and -haven't accomplished 24th AT SAN ANTONIO, jwvrrm . game. tremely physical team, with enough to not be able to go allPUTTING TOURNAMENT every Friday night 8^ now. ftor dakaitocootact:-.11th flOOR -Air timte on ABC-TV is 11:30 an abundance of quickness," out everyday," Smith said..;. at 8 p.m. ——— " v' MirtTVaMt . FREE BEER, SKI MOVIES, teGwd*e»(MUMi) Auftv a.m. with the game starting30 said Teaff.after,practice.'-vWe "We have, to demonstrate^; SKI GEAR (InmUt. minutes later. toned down the contact today total commitment every day.pMS -SIGN UP FOR SKI COLORADO An overflow crowd of 31,000 because we want to have our' it's the only way we have a1 MORE INFO 47B-3471 -fans ;will-jam Kyle. Fielg ' young men healthy for Satur-chance." '«l.'.I.M.M.MI J,r.VUliETO which Seats 48,000. More than^day's ballgame.'' But Smithsaid he'was confi­19,000 student tickets were -••* dent that ' the team would "sold... ' • ^DALLAS.(IJP1) —Southernj overcome its problems.••• Methodist Coach Dave Smith., '—-•.'.'••v.; • 1 " WACO (UPI) -Baylor sent the Mustangs-through' FAYETTEVILLE (UPI) — Head Coach Grant Teaff what he called the poorest-Arkansas made up for iost"^' shortened contact work workout they have had in the time Wednesday asthe Razor-T backs prepared forSaturday'^, a"4 home game against Baylor.,;sJfer Thp Hogs "have improved- S '•.! 305 HIGHLAND MALL EARN CASH WEEKLY with each practice" s,ince, worklng out Monday without",­Blood Plasma Donors Needed the junior.varsity players; ac-j • OPEN 10-7 "*'tOPEN 10-9 cording to Head Coach Franir:-" „ > Men .& Women: -Broyles. S" if, Mk EARN $10 WEEKLY. CASH PAYMENT FOR DONATION VV.lX'Cl'ri'Sl .Austin 'r V\ ,1Ifihrt Is ALF PRICE SALE! ^ Blood Components, Inc. Complete OPEN: MON.& THURS.8 AM to 7 P.M. solpr.tton of w.itfr­mi TUES. & FRI. 8 A.M. to 3 P.M. bfds 8* Big selection of Guys and — / w J Off Reg. Price Gals bell bottoms in stripes, " ^ A. p JUDGE ADVOCATE checks, solid, brush denim rand dehim la UNITED STATES MARtNE COR ?-Si V£S!»j Ist Summer Knits •1 The Judge Advocate Divisionmd Jackets tell V5>. i sS'Ss'S Mark Humble i llAG fa RJ9 will be tit UT Law School for inter­_ , • . .. • • -views on the lOtfj and 11th of Qc­ ^t&swc'&y ­ Assorted^olorsand sizes M ,019MKhe9^^Phojne number pfiithe^Marine Officer *• ' < • _ * Selection Office in Austin is 477­ PRICES GOOD AT BOTH HOlfSE QF JEANS worth your SATORDJWWfeiiMs^ •£| ­ "r i rrrritmtimi ,r, -J October wmm V4*' Suttonf Garvey 5 m A's Finish Orioles BALTIMORE (AP) -The Oakland A's, •Again, he.retired the .first two batters and who scored the winning run on the only hit Lead Dodgers if then walked Bando and Jackson, both on full LOS ANGELES (AP) — Steve Garvey backed Don.Sutton's they got. held off ::aninth-inning Baltimore counts. The; first pitch to Joe Rudi: bounced '.fi masterful pitching wiUi a pair of two-run homers for the Los rally Wednesday and'won their way into the away, allowing the runners to advance to se­ ««•••• Angeles Dodgers .Wednesday to beal Pittsburgh" 12-l and cap-1974 World Series with a 2-l victory over the cond and third. . Siii'tu>re Ibe National League pennant and set.up the'first all7 punchless Orioles. Weaver ordered Rudi intentionally walked; -.'J California World Series:" ~ * ~ " ; n What made this one so strange was that the .a chore Cuellar fpund easy. That loaded the ­The.triumph-gave the:explosive Dodgers the league'cham­A's-managed:ionly, onf hit all day, and the> • bases again for Tenace^ • " X-# pionship 3-1 in the best-of-five series;' the same margin the ; didn't get that one iintii" the' seventh",inning" Cueriar/tell behind 2-0 on 'Tenace"Tand Oakland A'S-ran, up. wilh-.their 2-1 victory over the Orioles in j| when Reggie Jackson banged a double off the Weaver walked to the mound. The manager Baltimore Wednesday.; "v Ieftfidld wall, justtiver the reach of a leaping barely made it back. to the dugout before i&k -Garvey'shomers came on consecutive plate appearances in Don. Baylor. It scored Sal Bando from first -Tenace had watched a ball, then a strike and Ithe third and'fifth innings, and both times the former Michigan-"' with what turned out to be the winning run. . then another ball for another, waik, forcing in ^§tate star had Jimmy.. Wyna on first base.: Garvey also singled; . The A's first run;came courtesy of, Mike the game's first'ran. It wgs Gte ninth walk of • ** twice, scoring both times.' " -— Cuellar's wildness. Itwas scored on four the game off Cuellar. and the last. -Sutton worked-eight.innings, giving up three hits; with Mike g- walks with tWo^outs in the fifth ianing'when ' Wh.err he; fell behijid—oa—CLaudeJ 1 ± |Marstiall taking over in the ninth after Los Angeles built its-124' CTyellar was. lifted from the game without Washington. Weaver yvaved for Ross ; s score, Che biggest margin ever in major league playoff history• ever-gjving-the^A-'sianything j-esemblirig.^ Grimslev. -and Cuellar left without ever giv­ : h'. • Marshall held the Pirates hitless in the ninth." base.hit.j. , „ :• ing" up a base hit. Sutton had shut out the Pirates 3-0 in the NL'championship ^ The 0ri9lesbrpkea..3feinnkig..scpreliess str­Gnmsley;got-Washington on a'grounder, to . series open in Pittsburgh. ing m their last ba ts.of theiseason, searing' end the inniirg; and worked' into the seventh He pitched 15 2-3 innings of shutout ball in the playoffs until Paul Blair on Boog Powell's clean single to; Without surrendering a hit: But with one out, Willie Stargell slammed a home run into the rightfield pavilion center: That rriade it 2-1 and the Orioles had Bando.walked fortHe third time, drawing the • with two outin the seventh, the Pirateslugger's,second homer runners on firijt and third.' .' . Uth Oakland base.on balls. •.-•• ; • in as nl^ny'-days. But that: wag it for Baltimore. Rpilie Jackson Was tte next; batter, and he finally . A crowd of 54,424, someof whom burst onto the field after the \ Fingers.'the ace-Oakland reliever wholcame , broke the hitlel.vspctl-wiih-tbe long, soaring. • game; watched the Dodgers graba 1-0 lead in the firstinning off on for Catfish Hunter in the seventh, struck drive that.bahged high off the" leftfield,wall the Pirates' southpaw, Jerry Reuss/who never found his con­out Baylor on a 2-2 count and ended this best-for-a double. Bando easily beat the relay trol. of-five series in four games. home, and the'A's had a 2-i edge. :; DaveLopes walked to lead off the gameand then Wynndoubl-Cuellar's control problems began in the . Prior ..to the* Baltimore rally, the A's s ed off thte left centerfield wall, knocking, in the first run first inning. . 1 . -pitching staff, which simply took the bats v In "the third, Garvey'smashed a low liner over the rigfit"*;-He retired the first two Oakland batters right out of the Orioles hands, was headed for • centerfield fence off Reuss, and.in the fifth, he blasted one off . = easily enough,_but then issued^three straight its-third Straight'"ShuKWtr*: Hunter-pitehejJ,-. : Ken Brett over thaleftfield barrier. The most valuable player,^ • ,• .* ~ .—UPI Telephefo walks, all on full count 3-2 pitches. The crafty • three-hit ball •-for~sev6n -jnn^igs-befo're-being-. in this season's All-Star Game, the 190-poiinder who stapds.5-iirg: Oakland celebrates after clinching AL pennant. left hander squirmed out of. thart jam by get--relieved by lingers. He-breezed through" the £ "had 21 homers during "the regular season. __ -' ting Gene Tenace to ppp out \ eighth, but ran into problems in the ninthi .• • The Dodgers pounded 12hits off five Pirate pitchers in nailing^:: down the NL crown, and GarVey had four of them, adding Beaird, Winston Honored ' singles off Larry Demery and Dave Guisti. . By The Associated Press 40 yards to set up the winning tion in Arkansas'49-0 win overThe Dodgers scored two runs in theseventh and three more in You can be like Oklahoma's • touchdown with 7:43 left in the TCU. a. wild eighth inning. • ' Head-Coach Barry Switzer game. Winston missed his seniorOn the mound, Sutton struck out seven while giving up one •; and call'Baylor's Steve Beaird Arkansas linebacker Dennis year of football at Marianna• walk. Reuss, winner of 16 regular-season games, was the loser "the midget" .if you-wish Winston was iiamedDefensive High School because of racialin the playoff opener. He worked two and two-thirds innings because the way the Bear run-;. Player of the Week for the se­problems in th,e city. Wednesday, and the Dodgers got two hits off him — Wynn's ning back seesyt, ."he knew I v cond-time this season. At one'time Arkansas Head double and Garvey's first homer — but he also gave up four : walks during that period. was there-Winston, a sophomore, Coach.Franfe_Broyles said he :PACESETTER. The THE MAXI-1. A new concept in one Florida State-knew he was played only 32 snaps but had "considered moving Winston to . 'ultimateapartment Sp!it-levelr. around Saturday night, too. as -bedroom split levels. Large bedroom 10 unassisted tackles and set fullback but that his defensive —r -living in a two beoroom studio. ineligible Player Forces the 5-7. 195-pounder scored up the Razorbacks' second coaches threatened to. resign Downsfiirs, $fully electrickitchen with walk-in and bath with a full study upstairs. three second half touchdowns touchdown with intercep­pantry flnd spacious living" fbom lor entertain-Downstairs, a spacious living area -en­ an en masse. ing.Upstairs, two laigebedrooms andbath with tertaining area and all-electric kitchen 21-17 coAie-from-behind ACC To Forfeit Win in a >»•< walk-ins/ Free-living at its finest See itto believe it ­ victory.; The performatice' 444"7880 ABILENE (UPI) — Abilene The student participated in earn^ Beaird The Associated &W11Christian College officials an-five plays of the State College Press SWC Offensive Player VAN'S nounced Wednesday that the' game.—He was dropped from - of the Week award. •school would forfeit its open­the team' when the violation • Against the Scminoles he ing season 27-10 football vic­was discovered. ACC then. rushed for 107 yards on 26 tory oyer State .College of : reported the incident to the ? IMPORTED carries and caught, three " kansas because ACC used Lone Star Conference and the passes for26.yards. He dashed fan ineli^blelsplaye,r in .that • National Association of Inter- game. .v collegiate Athletics (NAIA),' ­ AUTO PARTS •: " Stevens said the school' • ACC President Dr. John C. le^rn^d Wednesday, from the Stevens said that two. days TTATA"tHatlKe^gsmeTvasBtobe' Pacesetter Apartments for Free-Living People. 2124 Burton Drive -after the game Abilene Chris­forfeited,' The change drops WORLD NOW OPEN tian learned that ah uniden­ACC from 3-1 to 2-2 on the tified transfer student trying, Season. ACC's Lone Star CAMPUS Your Parts Problems VANish at VANfS out for the. team did not have Conference record remains -in- " 'v-s-sl Parts AI[ Imports ' V, enough college credits toplay. I.-• iPFLOftr 3705 N. Interregional ^ R-P Delivers the Goods for Fall with CB" SMITH VOLKSWAGEN to the "Body SKop'T Ph. 472-6236 . Next TOYOTA CORONA MK It sal* sir radio CAPW2DRHT . i Pringle of Scotland ltd. 2000;«ngin« fCR'OPfNIO' GOING TO "BIG D"? 2 dr.-ttd.2000 engineDODCE PART • LIQUOR AND BEER PRICES ARE S&1 6tyl ttd.oir VWSQUAREBACK $1 to $2 LESS IN AUSTIN AT »d.33000 miles' VW SUPER BUG tfd.alrTSdio REUBEN'S BOTTLE SHOPS VW;SEDAN std. rvdie 1 VWSUPER8UG Jtd.W00 miles VWSUPERKUG BACARDI -visssa ttd. radio red VW SUPIRBUG 5th SSI •vl „„ . aw«; , ltd. radio orange . ,-sYou'll sail In -February, 80 pr. VWBAJAB8G SPORT ;with the. 'ship your class-. ltd.air radio room and „the. wprld your Puerto Rican Rum VWSUPCRBUGr campus . combining ac­• Pit o>55v5.'«. credited.studies With fascl hating visits to the fabled std;ridio yellow VW.SUPERBUG ports of the Orient^Africa, ild. radio sunroof r and:. the Americas. 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An irre9istable craving in navy, natural, light grey, blue frost, yellow,• -for chicken.begins in the.pit'of your stomach. Your tlrroat seems to All Other Flasks 25% Off red. Sizes 38 to 16, 28.00., ' ' h"-M 51 scream for rettef^^ v; Wear your sweater over an. all cotton shirt from There's only one solution. KFC # 6 MILLERS IS? our extensive selection of cotttfnsvplrices from at 2120Guadalupe,.where delicious If" Kentucky Fried Chicken and slowP g 29 ^ \-18:00 to 25.00 as? l-M "i®! 1 SCHLITZ 1 cooked, smokey barbeque are M mm* NRBtls-NolCoid-6Pk _ | Coie-^l f *. * k Siiilhtfi Atrn »* our JUtttnfm • V'.y tM-4 JIMBEAM PARTY QUARTS csnsnfrcrcHicKEN^r ~r86-pfrSlraight8oMri»on' m Ttt - SOOTHINGBARBEQUE. . !!)> # ' UJ —I i •/ h'*. ..v v--j.;.'; J..... Cowens' injury leaves theCetics witha big problem at center. More Their only pivotinen now are Henry Finkel, Jirti Ard and Byron Jones. The 7-foot Finkel has been in the league for eight years,, MAX JONES SUITE 210 but only.once has hisscoringaverage been in the doublefigures. Where Yoiir Money Buys­ ^*70 JNNP COMMODORE,PERRY. BLDG. He has been-used mostly as a reserve. The-6-9 Ard and Uie6-8 ^ . 4/0-4600. AUSTIN, TEXAS 78701 Jones both are free agents: ACADEMY'S '/2 PRICE SALE YOU FIGHT INFLATION BY SHOPPING ACADEMY FOR ECONOMY • • •10% OFF TO ALL SENIOR CITIZENS • • • ^' ' ' ' • -. • ­ ifsjjfsijjsjisg -• 4. Banks Decrease 'MjSgM &b 1 Prime Rate .25% By JOE MCQUADE Interest rates for in-• if* By BARBARA WILLIAMSji|^ Powe!said whichautofrikticallymadet®*' ' Although four Austin banks "diyiduals borrowers are in­ Texan Staff Writer.' .if "The revolution-in women's; wife of a serviceman a depen­: have shaved 'onerfourth of 1 fluenced.by the prime rate, Women's rights advocates rights has come under a Nixon' dent, but only allowed a hus-percent from their prime in­but not directly "tied to it, the should-not .expect the, U.S. • ' appomted court. This court band of a servicewoman to be terest loan rates in the last officials saidV{*S|Supreme Court to drop any": has done far more in protec-a dependent under certain cir-two days, bank executives bombshells in^that areai'LiAv . Consumer rates are greater': ting women's rights, much cumstances," he said ^said Wednesday individual Po.we,\ University assistant-than the* prime rate, usually'.' $&§S| more so than the Warren^ HOWEVER, the,1971 terra? borrowers can expect little professor of law, said WednesT-, court," he said, 2 added increased ambiguities immediate relief. ranging from three to-four * $3li points higher. day. , 'i ' si: Before Nixon's appointees _ to ^the court's treatment of American Bank, Austin I don't think there are gd-to the Supreme Court, cases women's ; constitutiojial Eliiott said consumer rates. National, Capital National ig to bo any-^decisions^ that affecting the legal status of claims, Powe said. The court usually follow the prime rate• ttcg • • .and City National had all ^ 111 stir up, • national-con­women were received un­up or "because the did-invalidate requiredmater­down lowered prime lending rates troversy Ilka, the abortion favorably, Powe said. He said nity prime is used as the leave for public school • by Wednesday from 12 to 11,75 rate cases/' .Powe said. "Most'-' only Justice -George teachers, _ benchmark for all other percent. This Is the rate cases involving women's Sutherland, who served from " The Nixon, court also ruled r^tes." , ^ ---03 -.^charged l.afge. corporaterights are not that important ' 1922 to1938, promoted theidea: in favor'of women in a ease borrowers. Recent dips in ,the' rates.w^'-^ • ^ i*"1 to anyone other than spe<9al:i-that womenshouid receivethe? providing for-a property tax banks pay on money borrowed~ '' i nterest groups and the same,legislative treatment as exemption for widows,'but not "It will -be some: months . litigants Involved." -":j . before there will be a men.> -for widowers. In doing so, - The abortion decision "It isa courtstaffed by Nix­however,\the..court moved ' * . , .r .' noticeahle effect on consumer affected, many people's view on appointees that has started • r-.-loans," ..said.--.Frank Phillip," sharply away from an equali­Interlude Texan Staff Wioto by Carol Jean Simmon* government is easing the 1^1 of life in this'.country;-even if •••: a new trend. In 1971 the court ty theory, he said. '"'v!Hf* City National executive vice-reins on monevmoney"1' in an effortI effort £"•' S'.i&l it didn't affect them directly,. struck down a federal statute: . president. "The prime rate , GIVEN THE MEDIA'S Elementary education major Shelley Nathan studies her flutein the shade of to fight -unemployment, ' would probably have to con­ representation of the women's one ofthe flagpoles in.the grassy area" overlooking the Main'Mall. Phillip said • '' ^; tinue"dropping by another two 3 L> i^V I .-.movement as one tied to sub-:'v City YDs Oppose points." & s "Opening up the money •jM I . urban women bored with the market theoretically aldds I m-Andrew Elliott, American tedium of -child-rearing and, inflation pressures," Elliott 'v1® Supporting Bentsen Free Classes To Begin •%}, • Bank senior loan officer, said. homemakjng and wanting to. said. he expects the prime ,rate tobegin a career, it Is hardly mf' ' " winin the_jwmination, Butler surprising that Communiversity Offers Learning Exchange . drop at least two pointsby the "But after watching the ;ClSmIng''T7.1S:> '^jtr^fcioyd, members of Bentsen TMTex.,-''has usually-^Communi versity said,lid;, fTcan't'. say we won't the court have such a.pe/cep-__ „ free Classes (ire held in homes, relate to-the/whole communi­6nd of the year. "But we all economic summit recently, I?;% i voted against the best in­tion of the issue, he said.~ •thought, that last year and it don't think anybody knows1 support him. (We'll have to classes taught~by tlie cam^ ty by offering these free, terests of the people of Texas ' "If the poor and disadvan­|s_ oi turned around and went up.V what it is going to do." $ cross that bridge when we munity for the community "whereverfameeBng place can "SasSeST"*1 'and the U.Sij^the.Capital City come to it.'* . j-. taged enjoyed "the begin Oct. 14. , be arranged. All classes are^ Young Democrats Tuesday" The motion accused custodianship of the majority, The program is an unstruc­open to persons of any age. Persons wanting-.informa­ night declared their "opposi­Bentsen of representing "the of the V?arren court, the tured learning exchange tion about classes or Com­ tion to Sen. Bentsen for the bankers, bijg-oil companies, winners in the era of the where anyone beitacan '• ''Commiiniversity is a free, muniversity can call the Com­ 'Democratic nomination for -utilities--and .corporate Burger court are the teacher or learner. . growing experience," said muniversity Switchboard president or vice-president of ! farmers and ranchers." members ^of the middle "We felt a need to share a Valentine. "This is our third between 3 and 10 p:im. at£78­the United States and for re­Butler said Bentsen hasr class," he said. learning experience with the and are . .. "' M Photo Service ^ m •year, we trying to 5657u election as UwS. Senator'from' always voted for the Earlier cases in women's 222 W, 19th 5324 Cameron Rd. cvminuHuy—^Texas " "heaviestV defense expen­rights presented easy isshcs^—information and skills and Ml -'f^The motion, which passed ? ditures. Powe said. They involved knowledge," Mike Valentine, ~ community — an exchange of DR. TROY J. CAULE.Y 30-0; alsosaid the organization He also .said Bentsen voted either discriminatory statutes a 'Communiversity staff. NIKKORMAT FTN CHROME . •% would -oppose the election or , ..against.: no-fault insurance, which were supported only by member, said. „ . "Prospects for Inflation ^ WITH 50 MM F/21ENS s28853 the legislatures* view of the re-election of "any.politician against extending' standby Classed range from-"Colors­ woman's :• role in -society, or ati^/or Depression".^ *32,50 NIKON CASE NO. 487 or politicians to any office or wage .and j>rice; control Perception" and "Living on SP'rV authority-to thePresident and the riglrt to abortion, he said. Purchased with Camera Vi Price offices, great or small, who -Your-Bicycle," to inore basic Soup and Sandwich Seminar support Sen. Bentsen, whether against aneffort to override a "Now thatsimpie issues are instruction in"Begimiing ? BELL/HOWELt FD.35 F/l.8 or not they have enjoyed our presidential veto that would in the past, women's claims Sewing'' and "Auto Tuning Norddn Lounge At Noon Compare »j> Canon TIB withcan |95 support in the past." 1 • have rolled back prices on may press, against more subJ and Repair." $179 domestic oil. Butleralso rtien-stantial countervailing Classes are expected to-run University Christian Church 2!ft Robert Butler, president of : "tioned-a-recent case in which pressures. Women may find six to eight weeks, but Valen­THIS; AD CAN BE PRODUCED FOR 10% OFF ...Capital City Young. Bentsen the courtls -welcome mat 2007 University Avenue ON B/W STUDTMAN PHOTO FINISHING voted to deny food tine said each class would . ^Democrats, said theclub voic-:briskly withdrawn," he said. (FINISHING OFFER EXPIRES12/31/74) stamps to strikers. determine its own length. its dissatisfaction now. Powe .-.clerked for Justice K Butler said the organization; clerked [pause ."his (Bentsen's) would actively support any: William O. Douglas during the ipaign has been upgraded Democratic -candidate op­October,. 1971, term. T tl ince Sen. Edward Kennedy, posing Bentsen and "almost -.^D-Mass., withdrew from the all our members would sup­ligfLpresidential race; The' _port Sen. Walter • Mondale, D- group is attempting to heaff Mlnn., fofmeTOMahoina Sen^ him ($entsen) off at the F^ed Harris or Ramsey Clark pass." j (former U.S: attorney However, if Bentsen were to general) for • the presidency." * 2 Sss# BRIDAL SHOPPE AND ^ FORMALS 4013 Marathon (One Mock we»l of Lamar) m amsa AUnique 0 The newest in motorcycles frorn SUZUKI, including street, trail and motocross machines. 1 WM Opportunity # Head for the open seas in power boatsby LARSON and GLASSPAk;; fit.-*•See ^ Capture your recreational'fun on filni with" CANON cameras. !# j The Latest ® A" exciting six-wheeled, all-terrain vehicle ...the MAX^-'e: ' 0 The ultimate in safety and qualky &SBELL helmets. -ar In Family ^ The most modern and unique in luxury motorhomes... FMC motprcoaches. * Hk IS Leisure-Time The fun way lo camp in the wilderness by COLEMAN. — • I Experience the freedom of. flying.. . the fabulous CHANDELLE sky Praducis sails. . . WM- mm i)UEJQ_ CIRCUMSTANCES BEYOND OUR CONTROL, THE SUZUKI FUNFAIR HAS nam -BEEN SH M POSTPONED UNTIL i cliamoiul captures tlie niomc ** '%hJi ° ^ S: NiXTSPR A iart Mii\ it diamond at 20 f^ student hi lit. •« ----"Si" omy snopping mall at lixT­ TO ALL UNIV.;1 TEXAS-STUDENTS, FACULTY,. STAFF: Let me tell you why Capitol^ "Are you confused by tire guarantees? Well, welcome fo the club, deal is best for you: most everyone is these days. Even some dealers don't seem to --J3' "John W. Moore, Jr. First, take a look at our prices understand their own guarantee when you need an adjustment on iVv>.?President •m —especially on the new steel a tire. How would you like a 1-minute school that will help you radial designs—then compare them to our talk with more authority when buying tires?" j I competitor's prices. Next consider the fact that TYPE 4 {CAPITOL'S) TYPE B ' ' TYPf. C every tire we sell is premium and first line only. A specific number of miles are guar an-| A specific numbff of miles .'usually | The monthly gwtunrw for sample,teed on every tire .ind yon are reirti-j minimal and you arc reimbursed tor i "guar.'iisteeo 'iO months ' Tin-, one is burseri tor miles not received 1 tic i ni'leafc not received by credit on a . e.en wak.er tha" 'vpe B It >oui tue reimbursement is in the !orm of credit ! new tire Herd's the catch and it cat; | wear-; Out in I) months a:"j voti go back i No exceptions. Then read this information about toward 3 new tire and is always bawd j be a hip, one The credit you receive ! lot .in :id;>is!mei;! you II I.miJ out that ' on the nctuat price you paid tor the j rs based either on the cireer?? selling j the tnf *•.is giiararitoei! .TO months jguarantees. After that I can't tell you another tire This is the best guarantee avaii j puce the usual selling pure in rase ! agamM rnad Ira/anls and detects in ;able in the tire industry today In art i you got them on sal;' or the regu i worWnansnip only and not tor miir-age I rlition we give a lifetime road hazard \ lai list puce This simple lac! can put I a' .-.i! I thing. You've seen for yourself why Capitol's workmanship and materials gua-sntee I you in the position 0' p.vyn? mere for This is Capitol s guarantee. j your ari|irs!mer>t lire ton J.ii lor deal is best!" the original Watrh «o-th.< one It's sneaky A SPECIAL SALES WAREHOUSE ... % —t U. of Texas Group Purchase Pla IfftCAPITOL TIRE SALES/WAREHOUSES, INC. EffiB (NOT AVAILABLE TO THE GENERAL PUBLIC) STEEL RADIALS 4-PLY TRUCK/CAMPER" BATTERIES M? 55,000-MILE GUARANTEE 30,000-MILE GUARANTEE 78 SERIES 8"SS¥ r . Made by tha Worid'a Urgtft iJCAPlTOL'S STEEL RADIAL 78 SERIES TOP-LINE QUALITY—MAXIMUM SAFETY • BELTED TUBELESS TRUCK TIRES , _ m Battery Mamftttntr • 2strong Defts o'/ iteef and 2polyester cord belts for suoerb . 78 SERIES POLYESTER Wide foot print-tor poiibve handing and road stahikt^; 4 •' hMdiDQ, oreat traction, .long. mHage and fuel economy. CAPITQL HEAVY DUTYt Full 4-pty whitewall. tlanutactured by one ot the world's nylon cord body pies with 2 strong nylon.cord belts to EXCLUSIVE « LtfeBroe road haunt. workmanship and materials guaran­ largest tire makers,liefene roadhazard, workmanship am) strengthen and stabffze tread lor pomive traetion and long 42-Month Service Cutrantu tee. 55,000-mle tread wear guarantee materials guarantee. 30,000-mie tread wear guarantee. 'mleage. An economical replacement tire that tits most ,-St* C CM** Carry ••• • fed < tasktCmy T«4. campers,; vans: and pick-ups. No added eipenditdre for am mMl1MM U.S. niMo can. tIRE GUARANTEE SU«'',.-. WaraMnt EICIM . speaal wheel or nm: Available in Highway Design and igf" -19.90 •1*. -tfkii, 21.90 - Nmn T«l Traction Oesvn. \\W S?tu'" 43.94 t -,.p ^ A7M3* 17.50 •••• ft' fM. • 24. 24F, 63, 29NF 23.90W'c-2 95 1.80 «1 •: ••• Hwnr. Eicin TiacllM Estls* Iwj HR78-14 45:82 3,15 SSfe&sJi C78-13 19.79 1.99 42* 24.90 " GR78-15 fjij* 3.05 0»|b In Outgo, Tat: 44.89 19.34 1.97 • CAPITOL SUPER HEAVY DUTYf THEAOWMWAIANni... HR7I-1S 46:66 S&-3.26 H7B-15 6 32.68 3.43 34.94 3.61 C78-14 19.97 2.07 munt om tmiw or waram. JR78-15 47.94 3.44 H78-15 8 34.84 3.'80 38.94 3.70 60-Month Senrieo Guarantee 21.92 2.24 Ma IR78-15 48.97 3.'6S 2178 2.41 H8"16 ,TT) 8 38.4S 4.09 40.68 4.13 •Sf« onluMaakHiMma^R* 22F.& (f«M I»»| 22.90 050,000-MILE GUARANTEE S7 879-14 23.64 2.55 24, 24F, 27,-60 .27.90 24.92 2.77 . STEEL RADIAL 70 SERIES 27F lift ~ C78-15 21.71 2.02 ...29.90 Tough steel tea cushioned between 4 fabric Deft pSes, plus 72,74—SJdemoiutt 22.87 i.^8.90 . 2 Wfc body plies, am tftf wtllttyatt. nuniitMiiatHiy- ' 2.42. ^' COMMERCtA|/HIGHWAY TRUCK, 77—Sldeniount..;.. onerpl (I* watt's most respected-radial tire makets. B7H5 23:»4 -2.83- 29.90 ^Nylorreon}-~Tub«jrype^ lifetime workmanship, road hazard and materials auaran-H78-15 24.97 2.82 • CAPITOL-6-VOLT-HEAVY-OUTY+­ tee: 50.000*nle tread wear guarantee. ; J78-15 25.97 2.99 VWO-15 22.25 2.36' ffT -pha~ga.iT jt/hS 3S-Monttt Service Gaarvntee tmm. UiaHii1ttfi m «iS ( 8870-13 36:52 2.28 '4 Ptr Ultaa/RqM 179-15 28.97 3.13 4§#M-15 ,k 24.97 ?.77 EB70-14 39,74 2.79 ,1 ••i»t),»M,,a»t„16.9Q 't%00*15 28.84 FR7B-14 f 1.00 1W- 40190 3104 BELTED TIRES i#600*16 22 00 2.27 -18.50 WOIKMANSNIP AND MATIIIAIS 6R70-14 42.74 3:48 $ fNo tridc reqortd OUAIANTK... Sli' HR70-14 Ifese- M650-18. t 3.S2 .£&'}• V- 44.92 3.47 35k000-MILE GUARANTEE 23y99 GR70-1S WW OK TM U» or TMAO 42.97 3.22 1 .,^700-16 ^ 26.90 2.88 . IMMEDIATE REPLACEMENT-i HR7B-1S 1,44,94 3.42 78 SERIES 33.70 " " •«M»r m&s" 3.jS2 RBERGLASS BELTED 2 + 2 3.60 BATTERY OUMUWTB f« & IR70-J5 47.94 It ialt«y it.loniil deiKtln md Mlnot Mfd > dim* --JtiSt>% 'eTi 3-86 Manufactured by one of ttie world's largest'tire makers (1) fflEE rtf/tutrtaii wtfon go diyi of puntmt. • r Wirtewall. Uebme road hazard^fMmanshtp and materi­ra *nir 90 dt|is, CAPITOI. »k npira taOnjr, tinrglng ipro-riu SRTSi ­ 4(?OMIaei$: tan) oh ^origval puram? priu and (hewjmtnr ol -taeie «f COMPACT RADIALS als guarantee.^35,000-mle tread weir guarantee: AL HIGHWAY TRUCK oienttnustd. • • 'j--''.'. Nylon Cord—Tub«l«ss • OM*l«f:.ir« 42-monti Mi«y. eortnj:it« M, Ma in 21 mourns,vtwKimtaaoy 1erS9.9S " !K,'S700-14 24.64 45,000-MILE GUARANTEE jpMI1 6 2.44 (Appta to origral cmr ind or load ki NrrtW .gaaanr'ck. • *OAO HAZAtD OUAIANTK... . [19.80 : 1.80 ,l|700-14 8 25.49 *r»ic«onl|r) i ' is! PREMIUM FABRIC RADIALS 2.62 £M*An» ON TM 8AK OT TMAP. 878-13 19.84 1.88 ^67P-15 6. 24.64 2.72 MM^m^r«w]«ts,cwyyrtKio^to!diujm1irt. NWM. (ttwy m* tmk *» «mk er mm. Tubeless blackwalls manulactured by One of the •A C78-13 28.72 • 2:80 ™ mw prw««;i copy.ol your pontunt knot* 10 racdn in ^7-17.5 6 32.97 3.29 wptf>ncnt ~ ~ : : w«MAer |a*w«ethat Mk BPS E78-14 • 2.33 world's most respected radiaMire-makers, Lifetime 21.78 iA®fc17.5 36.97 3.89 iMWrfi W wplnil ee N» Xf\\ F78-14 22.78 2.S0 road hazard, workmanshipand materialsguarantee. / I }] 078-14 23.89 2.87 8-19.5 41.62 4.57 UAfltdL UFETIMES^^ 45,000-m3e tread wear guarantee. H78-14 25.89 2.92 -BATTERY - Wf 078-15 . nw omy Battiiy yea will ntad far Bm life ef ^ 155SH 12 20.% '1.31 23.97 2.74 4178-15 't"% 25.98 . 2.97 COMMERCIAL MUD & SNOW . your ear. 1 . nntmot ouakantk mpomaation 145SR' 13 •<1i34' 25.72 178-15 27.99 3.19 'j/'cfgl -Ex-Traction Nylon Cord Faatam 7mr . 155SR13 27.73 1 f.46 • Extra Tough PefyyropyftM Cm' 670-15 25.25 2.71 k 16SSR13 29.97 1.88 40,000-MILE GUARANTEE 670-15 6 (tubel.etf) 27.70 3.07 • Thlnaw wallt allow room f«mora platts. CArsaiSzi Spatial Pataalad OrM Aflty aim 180% 175SR13 30.60 iM extra strength ,t 700-15 27.89 3.11 —55155wasjut jroatar iatttfaace to ovarMna damaga. ja 1S5SR 14 29.97 FIBERGLASS BELTED 4+2 700-15 30.92 3.54 i»,Spatiale>llwHa 45.87 4.56 -world's most respected radial tire makers. Lifetime J78-14 30.97 2.95 ,-J LARGEST H-•I Hom 10-16.5 42.96 4.29 F78-15 27.88 ' 2.42 road hazard, workmartshipandmaterials guarantee. SHOCK ABSORBER MANUFACTURERS 10-.16.5 47.91 wns 29.90. 2.83 HP 8 4.61 55,000-mile tread wear guarantee. 59.70 5.74 • STANDARD DUTY ... Exceeds original ; . . 145SR13 «»«" 30.97 2.82 Ffe;12-16.5 6.09 equipment quality—24«000-mtle or 'V?"'.1^•r||«i'*iia, «w» *m*. m4 29.94 67.68 J78-15SS^ 31.94 ' 2.99 4S S7J5!r.T-» *?* *** $15.00. -c. — m mMmitmrmm. is '••155SH T3 31.82 178-15 33.82 3.13 24-month guarantee—$3.95 aach^-4 for ' .oW'Wfrl^ 165SR13 33.91 CAMPER—DUPLEX TYRE Wk 17SSB13 36.89 4^000-MILE GUARANTEE IHEAVY DUTY..;Lifetime gninntoo—as Nylon Coirt. Tubeless Mod Snow 1658R14 36;82 long at you own your ear. $6.68eaefr—4 70 8ER|ES 800-16.5 fl#3>44 for $24.00., ' -1768R-H-^4040L 800-18.5 ''3.72 USE YOUR CREDIT UNION ld5SR 14 42.93 EXTBAHFAUV: PUTY. Lifetime ers. Polyester cord + fiberglass belts—wide tread, -875-16.5 4.30 -155SR 15 34.96 950^16.5 ^ 49.60 f^4.B goaraittee—ai longaayou.ownyour ear. MASTERWABOt whitewall. LifetiiTie road hazard, workmanship and ^)^ikl85SR 15 38 96 10-18.5 -47.78 m'.9» $8.28 each—4 for $30.00. Beyond com­^&0M.bankamer'cabd mate/ials guarantee. 40i000-mile tread wear -1'^175/70 13 35.72 58.96 pare for tpaclal or heavy duty sarvice, ' ' BUOO €T PAY guarantees ^V185/70 13-37.81 -si" Replaces 12-18.S ' 62.69 * LEVELING UNIT FOR 71.82 ^185/70Sf: 40.83 OVERLOADS—Front and:roar—Lffoflmo '"*70# tOOOTiir 22 98 *f3W9~ guarantoo^-aa long as you,own your, : 670-14: • j -4-PLY COMPACT (735-14) _ 28.C0' 2.51 STEEL CAMPER WHEELS • ear—$12.95 each, ^ F7q-14 J77S-H) 26.90 2.63 3d,0M-MIL6 GUARANTIEE 670-14 •AIR SHOCKS.., Lifetime guarantee—at r (825-14) 28.85 j Z.82 Available Jii-a Complste Rangt ol Bolt TUBELESS ­ 1 long as you own your ear. 142.90, Includ- Tubeless WackwaHs and whitewallsr* Ufehmetoatlbbara. 870-15 (825-15)--29.84 " •<2.87 Patttrn*. Super Single and DuplaxM IngMt. -v workmanship and-matenafc guarantee;'30,000-mae tread H70-15 (855*15), 31.90 -'3.11 wear guarantee. • W *tmt s (J,P|te>:?liw>'>«e|-A 558-12 v USE YOUR UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS ID. TO MAKE PURCHASES. PICK UP YOUR PERMANEN1 8»12 ^ MEMBERSHIP CARD AT YOUR CAPITOL WAREHOUSE, 520-13 568-13 800^13 Sw^13(g. iCAPrrpiiWAREHOUSEUJCATIONS HOUSTON 0»t7). B.e.)7l»M7 «.i» l9|^l~5 „ ^*1 s w*tm mw;wm wm WSm J§ m j Ul w W"m§fl o I m Mm Mm •M VfWl»r \ L. -I—J r" 9m10 Tftursdayy Octofio: JO/ J974 THE DAltlY TEXAN > ' f sv «•* -"»j ; 'i . r t \ ^ -i* "1 U o-' A" t £ >• C '3'^ ^ ^'r * ft ^ 1-i -1) 1,-• \ a ' <" '* $ 1 - -t edf-TH . * s •?S^rv« * * itt •! '"V ,S'-'W r**f» r />•-« SHHRS mmm if'~ Hirshfeld J* svjw? On Auction Block vS^7*' f rp| s,#li PJgx-­g|^ , By JANIE PALESCHIC The Hirshfeld property,.two. as Historical Commission . markers and have been cit&t sr ^ uU ,.,u" homes built in the late '19th several times.by the Heritage By BILL'SCOTT feereiM^stMc^^hftWid,rx®mm _ Century at 303 and 305 W. Society of Austin as two pf the,-m Texan Staff Writer if ADDITIONAL PROBLEMS yet to bfe solvit :• ...I • Vi-rr-i.—:: IStf-l':^L. „ L.>, *. ^ ^v-'vx ' Ninth "St.T "1fa? been up for. rhost significant landmarks in tiny nylon tube coated Inside with en-Ved include how longthe tube device will last; : grabs for about four weeks the urban area of whatis com­'zymes may be the key to controlling* genetic; T how the blood flow will affect the enzyme with no takers. monly called the "old part ofdisease which feads to mental retardation in ^coating and howmuch the size of the tube can f|j "|N , l I Real estate agent agent Austin." y-^mi tm\ infants. ;X'Ke reduced, Kftto said., * iM Terry Sasser said the asking The disorder, known as phenylketonurias y-" "We hope tobe able tomake the'tube small The large cut-stone Vic­ , price for the property owned interferes with the formation of-nerve cells!V enough to be implanted under a flap of skin, torian mansion on the corner by the Henry Hirshfelt estate Itvhas been under fulltime-study by Dr;I ijperiiaps in Uie apn," he.said. "in this wiiy ^ of Lavaca and West Ninth is about $500,000. He said the arrie Kitto, Universjty. chemistry ^ treatment will be automatic and less subject Streets was built by Henry property could also be leased ofessor, and a small team of researchers^c to the human element." Hirshfeld in 1886. The stone. . •; -for $5,000 a month.. Both sums 5.ftor nine months. -tube method will beespecially Valuable— cottage nestled in the lot next } .1 1 are negotiable, he said: tV ?.'J?aslcally; the disease involvesa defect in^fln preventing transmission. of the disease* i to it on 19th Street was built 5gf "It would be wonderful if the"metabolism of phenylalanine; an.aminoS^ffrom tnqther to.newborn child. -'Ill- several years earlier and we could sell it to someone acid normally present in thediet," Kittosaid.;;$> "Because some retardation occurs in spite served as the family's first :iSvho won'ttearit down, but we "Under normal circum"it"antces;-^'of->diet maintenance arid 'because of the homer 1 have-no control over its end 4; >• xphenylalanine i? converted to another amino genetic nature of the fliWrder; a femaJe-who after it's sold," Sasser-said The stone -cottage now acid which is ultimately converted into^had the disease as a child may be carrying > "Any time a house is 8Q;or houses Triggs Graphic proteins." ''?|£toxic material in her blood," Kitto said, —T«*an Staff' Hteta'by Carol J*an shnrnrm 100 years Old you naturally Design, bu the mansion is un-KITTO EXPLAINED the disorder instead£k|''During pregnancy, the development of her want to save it, burthe -occupied .Leila..BenAeim, ^s*S4i converts phenylalanine to a compound called ^own potentially healthy child can be > >The 88-year-pld Hirshfeld home is up for sate. r-?ry economy may not allow that.' Hirshfeld's daughtei-, lived inphenylpyruvate, a substance which builds up j^drasticaliy affected. The upkeep and the taxes are the.home until recently. . in the bloodstream and inhibitstirstops nerve^b "BY IMPLANTING the coated tube into ' 73 expensive," Sasser added. Hirshfeld came to Austin tell development. < mother, her .own blood, and' hence the Homestead Idea The razing of the nearby during the building boom after "The disease is presently being-treated^ ^^blood "of her-fetus, will be deansed of poten^ ^,^^^.. is. Shot Tower may be testimony the Civil War, and the man-sg%r through dietary methods," Kitto said^jitially harmful phenyl:pyruvate," he said :.tb the state of the economy. Children are fed entirely on a ^blariSd,' The project, wWch is funded primarily by^ ' Concept Called Impractical' in Austin sion, though it could use a coat . • • " ~-" ] :Both structures on the 'of paint, reflects.his success „. .. cherrtcaHy pwpar^m^h.Thistypeofdiet grants from the.Clayton Foundatjoh By DAVID SHARPE ^theftl862 Homestead;.Act: in ? city-owned ' houses which : itirsbfeld property*boast Tex-• as a merchant. ­ ^ hard to make a child stick towhen aHofhis , Biochemlcannstitate. was initiated two Texan Staff Writer " which Congressigave freetitle could . be used for years ago. 'K£In the eastern part of the jm 16Qacres to any familyWho homesteading are single­ ;:s Kitto's work focuses on the development of,- United States there is a new ''stick-built" • Professor To Receive settl«l and farmed the land family units ,-i-iiew;iless cumbersome method of treat-""' Kitto predicts it will be 10 years before concept for 'acquiring liomes for five years' which are undersized andsubt^ ' ment, that of removing toxic-byproducts—^climcaljrials with the tube can begin on which:might improve blighted ; A bill recently introduced iii; standard, Miller said. Premio America Award • from the blood. . ' „ humans. ~ .Jpner cityo neighborhoods.•: Congress by Sen. Joseph' The city actually owns12*to . Dr. Nettie Lee Benson, director of the University's Latin"We have taken a length of nylon tubing / "Tfae basic researchshould be completed In Delaware, ^^mnmrer !32imed American .Collection, will receive the • Premio America and coated the inside with an enzyme called three more years," he said. "After that, we Philadelphia and Boston, this ban homesteading a: naQwial ^^tj, Jond— money"Tor-Street--J^gard Saturday in Acapulco, Mexico; .... phenylpyruvate oxidase, which 'purifies' the will have to develop a system which can be concept could_even provide a program development ; purposes, but, Benson, who7als6~Ts^a"p'f1Jfessor*of^iiistory an'd Jibraryi m. Wood, by converting the harmful 'substance •!' tested in the lab and begin experimenting on home for those who cannot af--It is unlikely,.however, that Miller said, the» city rarely . science, is the first/U.S.'citizen to receiy^ this honor. phenylpyruvate into a nontoxic, easily ex^ animals,"^, fort it — upeast, thatis, notin the concept will catch on in ­sells -a . house it owns for-a ' • The Casa de Cultura Americana presents the award an-u Austin. Austin. The reason is a Intromurol Field .,.1 ^ family to-live in. ... nually on Columbus Day. Benson was nominated for the The concept is "urban, "different style of ur-..:-, • .-honor by the Argentine Embassy. •life.®­ m && homesteading.''. In an article' banization" in Texas, making "To remodel, them would W A -world-renowned authority on :Latin America, Benson in. the summer, 1974, issue of an urban homesteading cost: more than tfie property specializes in19th and 20th Century.Mexican history, as Well Tennis People it " Land magazine, program ^impractical, Jim was worth," Miller said. as the government, literature and education of Lat'm: -Tennis fanciers at the The Laykold court surface, Shoal Creek Blvd;, said Edgar Dou^as Crooks said the idea; Miller, Austin Community V. .-. As -far as -Miller knows, • America. _University are in a ;fortunate" Thompson said, is superior to Chew.'of the recreation staff. is "simple enough." Aban­•Development administrator, • th^re is no place in Texas • She (ias traveled in. Mexico, Central and South America situation with numerous cerrient or black top Surfaces Chew said the city, is.plan­ doned, or blighted publicly said. where one can acquire the and the Caribbean collecting Latin • American researchcourts at their disposal. in that it Is easier on the feet ning to b*uild courts at owned dwellings are given or In New England many row-housing type of property ...materials.. _ mM Forty courts are at theJm and allows a.true'r bounce. -• • Northwest Park, Wooldridge auctioned off to families com­houses are characterized -as conducti.ve to urban 'f.~ She has been head .librarian of the University's Latin tramural Fields, West 46th Austin residents who play Playground, Alamo m ' mitted to living in the houses. which W „v. "row-housing;" in homesteading. American.Collection since 1942* . -. •and Guadalupe Streets, for on city courts arenot aslucky Playground, the South Austin The families, in return, refur­houses are build side-by-side student, faculty and staff use. as University studen.ts, Recreation Center and. Joslin bish the-buildings, making for blocks. Miller/said. In the The only requirement for . bowevpr. Paris, Two courts,will be built them livable'again,'within a case of Boston, Wrbann_ playing on these courts is the 'Crowded courts and waitin'g-at each location? certain time period, typically Renewal authority'justThought ^presentation of a' University . lists are not the sole result of Patterson Park on Airport 18 months. " a section .of;'-"row-housing*429* sheer FMMultiplex 8 TradtCar Sg^lS:mW e buy old gold PANTY 00 Speakers of all kinds with savings up to 30%.-Limited mountings amount stei'eo speakers *2.°° each. for Come in ahd see our AM Radios & FM Radios. See HOSE Diamond and "5" our Cassette Car Systems with AM&FM Radio. ^silver ^ Everything is reduced to sell.^ FEATURING nothing All Cassette Tapes *2" '> ' -*zrr*r. HAND Painted 8 Track Tapesas lowas*199 MORE im MUNTZ Ph. 478-4286 CHINA jewelr y and '-n COLLECTORS PIECES BY MRS. ORA than the , • , WW!/ CWjjV CARTRIDGE CITY- Suite 210 RUSSELL. FAMOUS WEST TEXAS Best ElOfir flzSaazL. W WE INSTALL — WE REPAIR Commodore Perry ARTIST AND TEACHER, 2322 Guadalupe BIdg. .AMERICAN INDIAN JEWELRY in Town 1601 San Jacinto Accessories and,Ports Available Austin, Texas 78701 ~*i u" GUATEMALAN ANDMEXICANIMPORTS, GIFTS t»niiiniim»Bg — mm -0­ *'•Ox £^ ^fjiFOR THE REAL PARTY IS HERE THE NIGHT BEFORE THE y;» ^ 1 -w-t-•» '".I'"••..• • ^T*' -••••• »—^:r-v--,... 'fcfv-Te domes'&ytor TRACY NELSON Fieriwood VfeftingMan ^ Mac W!#iW»« GtaQxde.il ZAPPA/MOTHERS Aretha Franklin S. • Hk'focs iirv ROXY&ELSEWHERE loMcirrjFind v«v*p i-rn**' • .*• . [>.•, Let MeIn Your Life L , " >• .-v >>«v licUtoSMtyakafUh' ,L Ntom/SnilMt'tiOurHUrtt .v­ ,«ss ^ir^Heall'sdWI HERB1E MANN TRAFFIC s&as-v. *Si %# When TheEagleFlies tflffisfrgj " 9 * ^ U. v" v-&, _ „s '*>" A ~i iwti 1 ^ j-.-7'' & e/, . ~ 4f •>» A „ SrSf»V >]•£ 1< f .... .... SOUTHER HILLMAN FURAYBand * !•**' '"> '4 %#* —fiss#! L W% ^«. Sf. /4 *> Cfca'* SBSiSm mtm. Mm' • *c'k S-T s*?n &S TUBULAR BELLS %» Mike Oifjfit?\{j «®)s. >-,<;•%' -Cipwv • . ,„.v^.' 4.'^ir.V.--.'ov"•> „af J-V 8EUING ENGLAND BY THE POUfiD EAGLES OnTheBorder1, lf rJM / ® m ps?s ^ -U\ . 4 ®m J kca^ai i®«S; •ri& %f$Sk?tfr''r OPEN 10 A-Mf^l2 MIDNIGHT EVERY JESSE COLIN YOUNG »<»< »!AIH> !U I I S LIGHT SHiHE MMnAWAHi ^.i' CaidMMr.' m U ii^il iiii iwM V October 10, 1*74 THE DAILY TEXA1V ;-,„ ^ ^ -v4' "" ( -S -n' ni ' Wv,-j*; \ m AINT Planning Sunday Benefit Union Begin#Transifion For American Indian Scholarship] "j 'WVlrt' Pub Opening Scheduled for November By CHERYL GRESSER . beverages may be legally sold. By JOSE M. FLORES encouragement to young In­loan us the rest. By the time, sponsor the benefit with us:<|S! Although this is. a week of transition; the move from the" Because the temporary facilities have only four meetingTexan Staff-Writer dian people to strive towards every' amendment to the Posters w'ere made; andbejog. Union Building 'to temporary Union South is-going well?' ? rooms, space for meetings is "at a premium." . . '-•With requests for funds to a' higher education." amendment" to" the "motion ot-put-up. They suddenly backed Shirley Bird.Perry, Union director, told the Texas Union Perry recommended that pampus "organizations be allow-1 • create-an American • Indian . ';MANY INDIAN young whatever was made, the down. They said they may : Board of Directors Wednesday. " • *d to book only one regular meeting per week and programs sjscholarship fund mired in peoplerealFze'the Value' of an quorum had-vanished. It was ; loan us the juse of a, PA-The board heard reports and recommeftdatiods on thp new. . open to the entire campus'be allowed to use space twice a 1 University red tape, education too late. Too often insane. Nothing but con-system, but. that's all; -They"* facilities and alsodecided that the "pub" in UnionSouth will; weej?. All other needs for space could be cleared through-the i American Indians'Now Tex-: they do not attend .college or fusion," she said. wouldn't give us an-exsk serve Schlifz, Pearl and Michelob beers when it opens early Sirectbr. of 'scheduled fOr other locationsv she. sa'id. . . ans (AINT) plans to raise the are sidetracked .into trade ' "We approach the Ideas and planatiop." she said.-••••••• in November. < 'i * CAMPOS qrganizations-wili have a chance to reserve their 4 \ needed tnome&-at a beneTit schools, as they are con-: Issues Committee for funding, _ THE MOVE from.the old building to the newfacilities east-meeting'times for the serriesterb'yletter, Perry said, and the •; «&'We .were going to use the -Sunday, featuring speaker ..vsidered . less capable and all we got out of them of Gregory Gym is being accomplished in phases. Perry _ assignments, will be as''equitable'-'-as possible. . $ "Bull Creek Party Barn —? -that's the address that's been ,. RUssfe\l Means. " students," she said. was, 'Who's Russell Means?' said. The temporary Union South facilities'are open now.'She During an executivesession, the board choseSchlitz, Pearl Besides raising-"funds; •~'An*A!NTspokesperson, Hol­... At any rate, the law school' said, and Student Government and the program committee and Michelob asIhe beers the pub will serve. The choice was circulated Jt's;ojit Route2222 _ benefit will commemorate ly Echft-Hawki. said that get­said that they would'' like top „ have movedjn. -• .-* • made on the basis of .popularity, price! service and" reputa-. and is • run1 through .rCapitol "Indians Discover Columbus ting funds fro»the University. have. Means spe^k there .An formation deslci?scheduleHTol5{)en Thursdayi-and'a'*-: ,~-tion of~the-8ightrdisfVibutors;whb jlpplied.to the board The J Realty. We calledCapitol, and Day" and therecent dismissal to. set up the planned Saturday which coiild result in representative^ tlrc Union business office will be available decision also waslbased partially on results of questionnaires they-said they now wanted: 10 of conspiracy charges against scholarship fund was not easy some -monetary exchange. in the new buildinguntij theoffice.itself can be movedThurs­, returned by a sniallnumber of University students. percent of the take. It's a . Means, Sioux co-defendant In , for the Indian organization. The benefit will be held Sun­ day or Friday, Perry said." ~ L~ ^ Th6 board decided to re-evaluate the popularity and ser-• Ihe Wounded Knee trial. -: ''We went, to the Student day ... we hope," she added. benefit for scholarships and. The contract for renovation of the old Union Building has' " "^vice of.these three distribiEors periodicg.ny. . , ' besides, we have nothing as of : . AINT Council member Ann . Senate for funds, asking 'for EVEN TRYING to hold a . been sighed and fencing and preparations have begun. • . IN OTHER business,' the board deferr'ed hearing a Kudget yet. • • »v*., Roubideaux stressed the need $500. We were granted $250,. benefit.-has prov^l difficult. "I believe that we're ready to go." Perry said, and "the revision until all the facts could be gathered. "We; are for the scholarship fund as an and the motion was made to According to: Echo-Hawk one " '''It;will cost us-$1,000-to.pay sooner _we get started the sooner we'll, be back in." operating within a legal budget now, but-we have permission ;1 local radio station and two for Means and his ^bodyguard THE UNION South-will^&opgn.fijm 8 atin.4a.il pjn';~ to revise it." Perry said; * , locations at which the benefit • to come down; mostly plane-' Monday through Thursday, 8 a.m. to ^ prhi." Friday "and -The boa.rd also Js planning a program of special: com-. Hearing To Investigate I was supposed to have.been fare, and -we can't, promise -"Saturday and 1 to 11 p.m.-Sunday. These hours are tentative, miinications with University conStituencies. which will-look 4 held have backed out. •••••.' somethingwat we're not sure > Perry said, and will be expanded once-the pub opens. The _ into such things'as married student liousinfj, Strauss said, '.-a Regulations of Utilities -"KLBJ going co-she continued.- -during hours when alcoholic "was to we'll get,' Union will .then stay open IWi -I** djF-TiSr;­ -A-6ef»te-5uljc.gramfttee on laining qualityserviee. i' Consumer Affairs will con­. Clower introduced a bill campus briefs tinue its study of the need for during tlie last legislative^ses-, possible changesijn .pjihJJc .-.sion which, had' it passed,:: utility regulationsat ahearing would"vHave •established =a5 Thursday. statewide telephone commis-" Classes To Begin The fivp-memljer subcom­sion to . handle , regulatory mittee ••will begin hearing matters. • The So„uth Austin pointments for studio photographs A332 by the staff,of the Reading UNivERSimtEfUSUCAN -CUJft wiltmeet at testimony dt 9:30 a.m. in the Among those scheduled to Neighborhood Center. 2414 : for lunlors from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 Study Skills Laboratory. . ' 8 p.m. Thursday inOarr1s«n Hall109 p.m. through Wednesday in Texas ,0 hear Lieutenant Governor's 'Com-; TEXAS UNION'THIATER COMMITTEE will Jo« Lenard, candidate for testify are Mike-Able,..fro® .-OaklCrest Ave., will soon Student PubNcatfons.Building 3.300. • show the fnm,f "The-Adventures* of • • county judge.. , . . mittee Boom at the Capitol. People Against Continental begin itslall tutoring clause#, A slttlngifee of simust be paidatthe Robin Hood" af'7 and 9 p m Thurs-CU» will meet at6p.m. Thursday timd the appointment Is made.. The afternoon session will Telephone; Ma j.• Dean Chafee • day in Batfs Auditorlum Admission1 at The BucKei for discussion of trips aiming toprovide elementary-COMMUNICATtONS COUNOL Is accepting is SI.for students, faculty fiVrT'itaff-— -' Aspen.. Cofo..f and -Taos, N M, begin at 2 p.m. of Marble Falls; Jim Boyle of several-Vacant age children with'-'individuaf-' appl^ations for SJ.50 for members:-— -• mov^y*nd a hbppy hour.-, • positions uhtil; S p.m.. Thursday. " The hearing is the fifth theTexas'Consumers Associa­help, primarily in math-, ! .WIVES AND WOMEN OF THE GRADUATE GenergL Meeting " Applicants-must be in.lhe School of ; MEETINGS > V . I BUSINESS SCHOOL will meet ai 7 30 scheduled by state Sen. Ron tion; and Atty; Gen. John Hill reading and English skills. Communication. For more.lhftFrmaV • ASSOCIATION FOR '.CHILDHOOD EDUCATION p.m.* Thuway nt Farm and Home at the Bucket •"* ^ Clower, D-Garland, subcom­or his representative. ' 1 -Tutoring sessions are usual­• tioa cpntact Janlde Tomli'n at 477-INTERNATIONAL will meet at 7^^ p,m:*;;-%5 Savings Association, ]i00 Lavaca St 771*2 or pick Jefferson:at 444-9815, . Thursday Jn^.Carothers Dormitory!/,Or. Walter: Reifslager. an Austin Thursday, Oct. .10 6:00 P.M. mittee chairperson, Other members of the sub-*'ly" held at the center from HUAR SOOITY is acceptlng-nomlofttlons : Recreation Room to hear Joanne."-: !,T psychiatrist, will discuss interper- The hearings, .held committee are Sens. Lloyd for membership until Oct. 18 at 30) Weeks of the Child Welfare Agency^ % sonai relationships Ski movies and Happy-Hour about 3:45 to 5 p.m. No 5t , Apt. 10}, 787S1. . '• throughout Texas, are design­ W. 3?'th speak on.^ChlldlAbuse." v» /; '• SEMINARS. •• Doggett, D-Austin, vice-previous experience is Membership is open"'to men and .BAPTIST STUOENT UNIOM w»i meet at noon-r OEPACTM»T Of ASTftOMOMY will sponsor Ski Aspen Christmas. ed to determine how effective chairperson;.%Betty Andujor, necessary. i womefl of iunior' class standing 'or Thursday at.2204 San Antonio St. for stellar spectroscopy aod Ex* currentmethods of local utilir R-Fort Worthy William ' > higher./'NomineUons must include a.-8ible study session. tragalactic astronomy seminars at Anyone wishing to donate' IhforrnaWop oh the ..nominee's .CHILD DEVELOPMENT, CAREERS-noon and 3 p.m. Thursday-respec­ ty regulation are in assessing Meier, D-Euiess and Walter time to the program should V; academic' background .and ex* ORGANIZATION will meet at 7 p.m. tively, in Robert Lee Moore Hail reasonable rates arid. main-Mengden, R-Houston. tracurrlcylar activities; .... -Thursday Iti the University YMCA, 15.216B. .' contact Deb Morrison at the -HOW TO STUDY FOftBONLANGUAGES" will ftoom a ft,'YoV'-tXe^ regular wepMy DEPARTMENT OF PHYSICS will spohsor center or call 444-3528, -t~~~5 ;"t>«:;discussed at.noon. ThyricJay lrt . meeting.' '. .. I--. -u.., ^ joint :solld atomic and state acid -•y Jester.Center A332by the staff ot the CHUG L'lVRiT wili meet at 7. p.m; Thurs­ molecular seminar.at 3 p.m. Thurs*1 Readjng -^nd Sfudy SKJMs day at 1800 uivaca St., Apt, 404,*r&r^ f —day Jn Robert Lee Moore Halt 4.102.ANNOUNOMINIS : ' .taboratory. ' • \ conversations in Hebrew. > Also, a relativity seminal1 Will be AlPHA; fHT OMEOA will conduct guided HURDCANE FIR RELIEF DRIVE will staff a IRANIAN sruobns ASSBOATTON will meet presertted at 3 p.m. In Robert Lee tours of the University camfKJSjat 3 table through Thursday on the West. at 8 p.m.-Thursday In Calhoun Hall . Moore Hall 9,222. p.m. Friday, startingat the APO **• Mall to collect cash donations to aid 1Q0 for speeches and slides on ^lran, TEXAS UNION RECREATION -COMMITTEE Will COME TO. . flee In Texas Union Souttv north o! disaster victims In Hohduras. the Future Vietnam." . . : semlnar-on sponsor, a .sandwich •Moore-Hill Hall; "TBTWISENBS^-will be. discussed at 4 MYTHOTOBC SOCIETY will meet at 7 p.m." . "Wilderness'Camping and Travel"YCAKBO6X It scheduling . ap> p.m. Thursday: in ..».a5slj£ m -i.*s-asaa®asa®' Spurr Returns iwlFeatured ffjf^i J v ' To M - At Sandwich Seminar j1 now . By CHARLES LOHRMANN has acquired his own said.; •.,. -Former DnivSfslty Presi-letters i)fsupi>6rt'from,both , and , theater, the Ritz, on Sixth Franklin then fold of how .,. dent Stephen Spurr "returned friends and-enemies.. I JfCtStreet. He said it will be a cer­\l:m l SYLVIA TEAGUE -the renqwhed ajwualPumpkin :;. to Austin Tuesday-as just tainly appreciate the faculty T** Texan Staff Writer* variety concert hall and 'said _ • Sfortips 'got started. another faculty professor i > hnnkanv nArfnrmincr^'.:A Uo anlrl hA woo Wfe and student support." < line, he would book any performing; The Union Ideas and Issues He said he was playing "the t after a two-week vacation. The former president said .•Gommittee sponsored its first acts suited to a concert situa-K 'oatsider who comes in.and "As far as I'm concerned, be hasn't given much con­ Armadillo-style sandwich tion such as those which were -• crashes the set—with Ramon'.j^I'm just a faculty member at sideration to what the final seminar Wednesday with on the EdSullivan orthe Steve"-Ramon, and the Four Daddy­ .,:. the LBJ School of PubUcvAf-outcome of his firing will be; mentor Jim Os when they got a. Halloween local renaissance Allen shows. J;fairs," he said. ~ "I thought1could live with .' Franklin as ther featured; ar-He alsolaid to rest the nasty, gig in Houston. \Spurr and.his wife attended myself better If I said what I madillo. ' rumor that--Ed -Sullivan in---Since it was pumpkin time," an annual meeting of the thought and did not just • * -.Wearing a dark-blue troduced Elvis Presley to the .they wanted to do something W* Spurr said, however, he has he said he believes the ap­periences as $ the He said country music"'"'is part of ,stomp*'em," lie explained. . V™' noplans toleave the Universi­ propriate actionis towait and "Cultural Renaissance in like an old piece of gum with a;; -ij"It was so successful, we ty, and beginning inthe spring' t. iaj» =# —T««m Staff Photo by Carol Jtan Simmons. follow the Faculty^ Senate's^ Austin."'" little flavor left in it; as soon had another one at thei.same , semester he will teach a decision. ' -"Jim Franklin, speaking about Austin music trends. The seminac._was_to have as the'flavor is out of it,' itll place, year "at the-same course in national research sSg-;" begun at noon, butatthattime~ be back under the table-with Thanksgiving," he said. policy. "I'm very happy in -a-committee member"'an­the rest." FRANKLIN TALKEDWi?* Austin and also with ' the nounced the speaker was sup­"Austin is more interesting about himself as an artist and Meet With. Advisers tremendous amount of sup­ University minority posedly on his.way. Just then, to me because I've lived here how his career as an artist port I've received,1' he said. HomeroLopez, assistant' never on a coordinated basi^i? Representatives visiting the students will be ablfe to meet the Frapklin a few different he" was |n Jhe coordinator of Ethnic Studenti unassuming through •bega/i.VWhen ;• ^Spurr said he has received with recruiters from various "What we trying to do this University in-October are: cycles," he said. — -<• " Services, said Wednesday. strolled up from the back'or first grade, lie drew a plc&re ­ an enoIffiSl^ammmt^inaiLv year is to coordinate the cam­ -graduate «nd.law"schools this -. SMU School of Law, Oct. 17, the room, having been there -IN COUNTRY music, "yon' which kept him out of trouble . pus visits ofulthese"' ,,"Lopez-saitfI-Tecniiteis ulebe recruiters 10 .a.m. ''It's warming to seeso many •month. ~T"*""" ,iu .a.m. , to 4 p.m.;p.m.; Yale ail the time,' '4" ; ; • can find all. the stuff you can . for-los|ng his reading"We're asking all interested Texaspnd out-of-state ^ ^af-students will:know—Graduate and Law Schools, Pranklin T>"fga*h. #rt1S' •never find in jazz otrodC-' he„ notebook.. ( . ^ ­graduate ah°f the times and dates, as 0«.18,1 to 5p.m.andOct,.2t; CALL RAPE CRISIS CENTER black and chicano juniors and graduate, and professional questions and never-got to said. It is an indicator of the -:. "1-knew.what I wanted to'So well as have a £hance to com­ for aid or Information 476-seniors to phone our office at schools have come to the 10 a.m. to 5 p.m:; and Consor­anything else.; He reminisced psychology',of .the mass and pretty well how to leam 471-1201 fand to leave their University-to speak to pare what the different tium-for Graduate School -irt-for an hour and a half until he audience since peopler"buy •-it. So,in high school,I.took all schools have-to offer,!' he . • name and address so that we prospective .minority Management, Oct.-22, 8 a.m. got ready to leave. songs with certain ' fe^lipgs* the that::doUldn't courses m can get information to them," applicants in the past, but said. , -to noon.. FRANKLIN WAS one of the because they have experienc­possibly get me into college,: founders of the Armadillo and. ed the-same emotions, he -no.matter who tried to force me," he-said.' RESEARCH TACOJi Franklin began drawing his famous armadillos in 1969 Thousands ofTopics" ~ $2.^ per page zFtAm when he was doing posters for SMYLIE'S The Vulcan Gas Company. He Send for your up-t< f was asked to do a particular ir-.it' '-U -i mail order catalog. Enclose $1.00 y(3 blocks west of Dragj^ Recreation Committee to cover postage (4eJjsteiy._tmie is poster, and happened to be 1 to 2 days).-thinking about armadillos at' Wj, sponsors Serving the Finest Liquor in Austin S$W3 :m» ' ' RESEARGHASSISTANCE, INC.: 79V the time„so he drew them; Sanclwich Seminar on 11941WILSHIRE BLVD. SUITE *2 -A PITCHER^ See Our Unusual Drink Menu When-asked why Austin had LOS ANGELES, CALIF. 90025 : such a-feeling of openness; un-­ (213) 477-8474 or 477-5493 • 4-6 MON-FRI J 2-12 daily -til I a.m. Sat. ­ common in Texas; he replied,. 0or reseiftft material Is sold for 5213N i"WILDERNESS CAMPING AND TRAVIC" . rewafch asilsttnce onty.> "the Balcones Fault." : 'Happy Hour 12-7 daity : Speaker: Walter Wakefield MALE GO-GO DANCERS vavflfn -• evafy nffe.­ Drinks 65* ^ m Whole Earth Provision Co. Paula's Playpen l t Bor Uquor L 1500Borton Springs iiMM^ °uf Amateur Nitt Mon. A fhurs..Thursday, October 10 Union Patio £& Noon W here in J >a 11a -^ourbon-Jqck'Oaniets . ; -Gin-Be«fe«tJr^ J $75 totol fcx 3 prize wlnn®r» Scotch-Cutty Sark "Rgm-Baeardi. -Covtr Cnorg*('.Hi \ou <:t>| all the Vodka-Smirnoff Tequlla-Cuero Rftwel H/umt to THE JUICE FACTORY BEER, SB • .. Wf -i-— RESTAURANT ,f1320 S. IAMAR. "Nml M HH'> U« Slw* Beautifully Natural Foods WINE. •f®' -jp, FEATURING £ For the Ecology of Your Body. , -SHUFFUBOARD DARTS 10 os.HICHBAUS (V ^II Dinner Plafes 30 * Mm (Anytimeoft«r l2/ 33 tur FRIENDLIEST BARTENDERS' P wjth.fhis coupon) i i! ii • "i r r \ -. . fins, 8 dinners daily, plus Mexican, food (limii'r I'd. IV111:1 ^ • W and incredible iilads tn mnlr* n*tnrni ill . •: .. Bill & JAY :f-J ANITA A SHERRY "Iii!ia\ < !! s < -k I • 1 i (. 111' r \ r, ALSO FEATURING 45Hi & Ave. A 454-83491 \f§k£. ^ ' ifOR $6.50YOU tiETA32-OUNCESTEAK PREPARED JUST THE WAY YOU LIKE IT, TWO SALADS, AND ®PRY FIRST TIME IN AMERICA )'//; // r/t i * i\ RON YOUNGi i ;; FRi., OCT. 11, 7 A 10 P.M. pWITTY CRITTY , lRmT5UHTnrrpnir DIRT IIAND 1 ' 1 ' |l III ; MIL'hl . ,1 U K AISO COUNTftY CAZKTTI ADVANCE TICKETS $5 I. i \ i l.U ! \ I \M I \'I Ml . M i 1 At Innar .Janrfvm, Orfif Mom»Ali (Hf^tand /Aatl), l;Tlw Qpry N«M lit ^ j -) > ! ; 1 j.j||)^ >t t\ SAT., OCT. 12, 8 P.M. g:: '• 1 ! '•. V.rli» ( tnli.ii ! \jiii COUNTRY OAStm !|f CdLUMBIA ARTISTS $3 DOOR ONLY /presepfi i'lniiic: w,:5l ANNEX • TONIGHT--t '~­ 2330 a Uarnar -444-846) -Custom Cooking 1HUM HRUY m SHOW INFO 4«-1743-S5S AND TBILISI POLYPHONIC CHOIR C.ohries to, Austin at Northdross Mall f 1, • r-~ TUESDAYOCTOBER 15,8:30 PM fGregonr^Gyranasium • $1SO with CEC Optional Services Fee Skatin adjace {Ticket drawing:Oct.4-Oct.15/HoggBox Office/lQ-6 weekdays «-^r=n.-,,g. 0ct 11-15/5450 plasses wntt?g"limite'%^-. y. -Sil" * mn%m. M / . 1 \* •;." fS3 «* ?* «Uf* r \ rs* ?*•<, * sk Sw u M 7" >' 3 $ i M \ -v ' -.-?< .V " X-X' '* .At &0 V* »*" 1 " Vj i *• v * sU^ It * h 1 1V " " •' ^ 1 M * V S All That Glitters.,, Jcm>e«;PriiigU,.t«chnical^taffa*j^«t^em^injhttdrama department, spent a month creaHng aathentic props for the music deportment's forthcoming opera, "Aida." The. objects: pictured: with Aringle were designed from: illustrations found In a pyramid. 1 11 1 • """I ' BUFFALO m 4^^ GAP PRESENTS 200 ACADEMY ANNEX --EVERY FIJI. SOUTHERN HAPPY HOUR4 FEELING Jellls 4-7 PLUM NELLY SHOW INFO. 442-2743 AUSTIN TICKETS $6 I RAYMOND'S S SPECIAL NIGHT UT DEPARTMENT OF DRAMA SHAKESPEARE'S «TOBE. rfl ~ ' < \ 5ts©g BiM "Golden Boy;" directed by JACKIE COOGAN is the guest suddenly bursts onto the boxing* fortunately), Jackson is-simply calls his wife "Duchess"1 much'in . _,,..„..„ev. Edward Mangum; written by,, . star,as Tom Moody, manager of Joe scene and is foreseen as the next wretched.-Her voic$ crackles and the same way Marlon Brando callsClifford Odets; (tarring Jackief^g, Bonaparte (James Brewer).Coogan • world welterweight champion. rasps as though she's-been smoking for "Stella!" in "A Streetcar Nam-^*&| Coogam, Lyle Talbot, James'/^ has been in shdw business since ,the; His fighting* gravely disappoints too many old tires, and her delivery ed Desire." And Annd has a-pure®-® Brewer; at the Mary Moodytftt age of 16 months, and his is consistently mo-no-to-nous. If this his father (Ralph Kems), who.wants Bronx laugh the audience loves. Northen Theatre, St. Edward's^ ^-professionalism shows. *• -University. i"J him to continue his violin playing. is characterization, it's distracting-The small stage' of the Northen:^ iinivpraitv • LyleTalbot alsois apro from way * «!PS '.vf ' ' sSSSS-Therein lies the basic conflict of the ly ineffective. Theatre is well suited to this play£9|$: By VICKY BOWLES. ,, back) but hisstar'seems to haive fad-play — Bonaparte holds back in his -• I had first thought Brewer wasnot The center stage area is a boxing.-;™;*, ed. His portrayalof Roxy Gottlieb, a ' ~ Texan Staff Writer fighting because he fearshurting his ,a good actor, but then I noticed he ring, and other action (such as the -.5 v Tight promoter, is not effective and did well in his scenes with Coogan . George Foreman and Muhammad hands. Yet,.ijf he is to become the* fire escape' Scenes) occurs on fourJi-?? . lacks vibrancy. Ali are fighting later this month in dhampion,' he must'be willing to and the other men. Only-when on small raised stages in the four «>rW« Zaire. This may be "the" boxing The St. Ed'sv production'j-eally make.fighting his life and not wony . stage alone with Jackson is he lack­ners of the theater. This shifting event of the century, but if you can't comes alive with.theonstage'boxing about such occupational hazards as ing, probably out of embarrassment from one side to the other'could afford airfare to Africa and tickets scenes; Brewer, a Texas Golden broken hands. and discomfort with her mediocrity. potentially prove distracting and un­ •.to the fight; try to catch;"Golden Gloves boxing champion, is the IN ADDITION TO the action-comfortable to the audience, but for' . ENTER "THE WOMAN," Lorna boxing 'Boy'; at St, Edward's University. -"Golden Boy/' and hestill seems in filled -matches, the other ''Golden-.Boy,'' it works well; . , Moori (Jann Jackson), Moody's good shape; puttinghis allinto these lively scenes comeon the Bonaparte ••• yi,. The Clifford Odetsplay; written in.!• r scenes. Heshould,be one tired actor girlfriend. She calls herself a fire escape. There the family — "Golden Boy" plays throu^i OctJfe:the eady1930s,' seems a bit-outdated . vtramp.from Newark," so naturally; Anna 8 by the last performance Oct. 20. father, daughter (Diane 20 with p.m. shows Tuesday.with itstalk of values and''choosing she ,i's the bait to convince Carter), and her husband • Siggie through Sunday and 2 p.m. matinees • . the right path inlife" (ormaybe I'm _ -THE STORY OF "Golden Boy" , Bonaparte to stay with his fighting. . (Mark. Jantzen). — and their Saturday and Sunday. Ticketsare $1 too cynical), but there's enough ac­-should be familiar(having been a hit And naturally,' he falls in-love with neighbor Mr. Carp (LeRoy Clemen-,for evening performances ana"$3for ;;„ _tion and vitality hefe to make an ­ Broadway play-apd a movie. her and she with him: • jtich) gather, -to drink .wine and;talk matinees and may be reserved byentertaining evening. . The 30-year-old Bonaparte '^Unfortunately (and it's a BIG uK-Siggie is a great character; he--calling 444-8398. ""~21 ?$rn~ .Sssa® it Musical Recalls Film Director's Life Armadillo World Headquarters NEW YORK (UPI) -"Mack and.,, Sennett, genius directoi-477.3783 • I CEC-74 •! =^ announces ^ 'THE AUSTIN SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA ^ BEETHOVEN, MARCELLO. EBERT & TSCHAIKOVSKY v'-/ k Amcric«n IntefAational ORIGINAL Thur»3ay, October 10 Pxlote ,c!r ' -ifeMunicipal Auditorium, 8:00 P.M.X?_>HAPPY HOUR'Pf? M' * 0%!$} FRIDAY ONLY 7;30,9:20 $1.25 Conductor:* Akira Endo , OCT. II " BURDINE AUD. ALL NIGHTS! :50 with Optional. ,Services Fee/Stud^t PRESENTED BY STUDENT GOV'T FILMS ^LADIES FREE 'Tickets $1,25 > LIVE ENTERTAINMENT FEATURING Ticket Drawings • October 1-10.f "TheMost Brilliant Hogglogo,Box.OTflce/10-6_WeekdaysBox.Offlce/10-6.Weekdays i&fIS" BLAKE |N««Movieof theYearV] Bus Schedule: Free'to Fee holders j 3^--ANDREW SARRIS, The Village'Voice J HAPPY HOUR 4-7 EVERY ^ Jester, Kinsolving. Co-Op. 7:00-7:30 FEATURING ROCCO'S CARTOON CARNIVAL j 44A film of exceptional merit ,-.ft'1: | the performancesare superb.** • THE BUCKET 23RD AND PEARL 1- —N®* York Times ? ACROSS ffOM HARDIN NORTH-3 HRS: FREEPARKING' Committee of the Texas Union I ^The French writ writer-director is at his J~ very peak ...he is the Hitchcock of ^ KurtVbnnegutJi^ prize^yir From. Benardo Bertolucci, the domestic crime of passionW comes to1 .the creator of rftiescnto! rJUDITHCRIST, New York Magazine ''Last Tango in Paris" SO? ;:BES.T DIRECTOR OF THE YEAR 1971" "THE PLEASURE OF VONNEGUT IS YOURS!"' ' -N*bct>4)$oc*{ya1fjiTn ' -JUDITH tWjisr'Ntw York M<£»ine "T>NE OF THE YEAR S 10 BEST-1971" „ ' v / ' , — 1 -y*Keni CanOr H+* Yet* Tm>& » SOV|OFTHEFUNMEST,MOSTSAROOriUC L '1 ifT " 7 ' r UNES to. be heard at tfie moment . «• v' • » t iV'j *•£>'*£" Go*?'-*™ on stage or screen! "The bestmovie Jhls yeariyfar" " -wilLMM Mxr,Cw tkiuii^ "Ay the to be seen whether "Jugged director who gave the Beatles demands of a simple action naut" will lie lost in the rash Tp^ay at Presidio Theatres I: fJSgf RI \'F.RSI1)1 eeneShalitWNBc.ri! AND BOO fmf •TfvrfijfiwSWjiJij Si ILLACL 1 it'ital Qui& v Ti ^Mirsar*8 Bonsai Mctm*. til 12:40 Mm-FiI fartwm l2^0JJB-4dW^04iatJ^tt VILLAGE 4 IJS* «#l Bruce LEC 1­ Returnof lif TheDragon 0£g.. -hislast performance is hi$be*U (•rgaia Marian (3:3M Ktm-hi v*"*** HI JM Moo-M ~fn*nsl2M.7M4:lS*M f v> t f—tum IMMJM:!5-M8 7.-45-M# 6* *> 7:45-** r LAST DAY HI VI lis IDl rffS] •p|;| Jill: Midnife Movies SUMMER '-lA ; S*«ry Friday and Sstanhy • tan* Mm. a Ml NM-M 'SS® IrlMJMJt WW IIKll I" ThefioMng w! m$\ m i itlk" l: mi "Mil l ^ I' -h Mm I* \KUH >\\'f !< H EpsSBBF®@PL mmvmm of more costly and publicized'' derstated that many lines slipupcoming "disaster" films. fight .by. First, Richard DekokerV PERHAPS it isbetter when script ( with -an; assist from " Lester can cut in and out of Alan Plater) is about 95 per? the }okes to serious business. cent-free of corn. The story of Except for the Beatles pic-. an effort to dismantle. seven ' tures, which had-songs-as . bombs Set aboard an. ocean: breaks, his form of humor has liner by a mysteriously • been a problem in sustaining a anonymous'" man:'calling­ whole film. himself Juggernaut ,is kept; low-key and-..believable', by .i Third, the actors are well turns, literate dnd'humorous.: ^tailored to the film's-style. As the captain of the rescue .Second,, Lester's direction ; crew, Richard Harrisactuallyis; cool. He doesn't., gjive:a giyes.his first likable, perfor­ damn abotit . melodramatic mance, dispensing romantip • theatrics. He concentrates on • heroism with ease. Shirleythe,action of the rescue mis- Knight, in an unmotivatedsion asaction, gettinghis best role, is not only good but at­ •effects -{pom-small-scale y -tractive-foF^the-iirsLiime.on details of the bomb dismantle- record,"a relief from herment. Gerry Fisher's smooth, neurotjcism in other films­well-outlined photography Is a big help (the white ship Anthony Hopkins, Ian Holm -7;similar entertainment .specials should the feature, films, is that they take so long. j| against the greed "ocean Is a '"and many well-known 'Sit ~~~Sinatra:show prove ahiL You'vfe got to spend10 weeksor thceemonths beautifully cool image). -players perfotn* with .the *. • "YeaM would very mu on one, and I can't really do thatand continue .,wo«ld veiy much like to do that$4 . Mmiuton/wnnaavnimtotum '•?S;,'he reDlied without hpolhiH competence one expects from£5$|[ke replied wittiouthesitaUon."Idon'twant to' with whatl'm doing now:"^. ^'^*^ ^ Tie style is-tight and- them." Evta" Lester xegularoi^vV^ , ^-.iV ^3-« yaried^with oneor twolapses; ­ I —-but:4here,are many examples >: -of«-Lester's Incongruous throwaway humor.;(one e>f-. amplef ii.stew.artL,who,rjs^ scrutably bland"6S,feverJ\ ; Asian with Uie passengers aiil5; Cockney with the crew). ; In terms of'what Lester Often, he cuts away sq fast once promised to become,from a punchline thatto getit "Juggernaut"^s "no advance; one has to"think about itover' But if Lester has decidedihels" . the next shot. -Also, Lestgr's going to be only an -enter­British -are so.dry . and un-tainer, atleast heis good atit. RICHARD HARRIS-OMAR SHARIF« THctumrsu ADvpnutud distohy basjosmisiim \ 11.1 A(,K i Korgsfai iltNaM tit 7 pjn. SEt StFARATI AD FOR TIMB Q iNTERSTATE THEATRES S1JZS tH 7M S TAT E -fcM-MMfcSl-, "MOMS"MABLEY 'AMAZING GRACE' UndaillrMs STARTS TOMORROW GIANT DOUBII FtATqBH PART color H of tbe [jpcwjuw IMti.17 MH1IP ;JS!*>»W/ "DON'T LMKABASaKNt'f^ ; ^ S1.2S HI VARSITY I M5-7»Ma IqUMMMtMCWW ITMCf^NCXUO Jenatmxm NEILVOUNG CR088Y.8TIU8ANASH THEBUFFALO8PfllNOP1ELD r 11in1 mi miw 11 icwniM JlMIW>T nBouanwHOT STARTS TOMORROl v us i*y SHARBUTT agwleave sports, particularly, but 1'veivanted to-' -i'^-r : do something like this for a long time. Sf NEW YORK (AP) — Frank Sinatrjfjmsn't? j/j "In fact, when Isigned 9 new contract with"' been known to engage to any sport-5T late,%rABC two years ago, it had a sUpulaUori that"l p'm Pa savfr an occasional workout with reporters^was allowed -to fact, encouraged -to do - So wAy is the presidento< ABC Sportsproducv^entertalnment-^rograms, whether jnwies or ing the singer.5 coming TV special? * • dramatic or variety shows,-r' -i: ' the'-'1,1 reaUy,haven't had time until now to d6'r 'S.S -any, because I've beenlied up"vrtth io'many since 1S68. But its also that Ithink the idea ^^thlngs. But-when this one came along, It was ,°f,f,°lngu ® show ,ye\s ^credibly exclUng.-^something I said I absolutely have to doj" ^ ; I ye been arguing for a long time that -Arledge, whose television career ^gan atT 'iv television has to get back into doing variety NBC, where he started as a stage manager * > live, again. And ut and later produced or directed news, special when I heard about thisshow, I toldeveryone,^,;events and entertainmentshows, was asked If —. 5?'" vZ"l h e h a s a n y other n o n s p o r t s programs pen­ . , The lfl«ape special will be broadcast by ' dlne. s r "ABC-TV from Madison SquaTe Garden_on--' -, f._, ^ , Sunday night It'sSlnptra's second TVspecial ~ ' J;0' not really.'^he sai4. ./jParf ~of my , , since'he gave up a self-imposed two-year ProbIem always Is time..There are several mov'es retirement from show biz. . ' * , h°th ni^de-for-TV and theatrical — : Arledge, a major influence in network" * I have been apprbachlng about producing,but" {sports coverage everlsIncChe"jdifted ABC 14— * JU5t haven't had the,time &(•years ago, was asked if he'd like to produce "The main problem^ particularly "Vfth" ^M.A.S.H;' Stars Alda Duog Laoi , fot, the family rttore than*40 years ago. Arid5 i|; . • ­resemblance when an I'taUan 'likeahifathW; especially atf V;rr.»/nA-^ nrrlrX og^ph 8eeke™ #y| doctor pops up soon in an" Italian, Bob Alda'is proud of ^ ---. episode of "M-A-S-H." his successful son; Single him out. If they don't ^ know his name tie" scribbles ft "-The guest star is Robert -He is perhaps Uieonly actor': "Hawkeye's~Father"~'on-theAlda playing straight man for alive whocan devote an entire proffered slip of paper. Ws son, Alan Alda, who Stars lunch hour to discussing: -'as Hawkeye in. the weekly 'another:actor, as long as the situation.com.edy.. . .subjectis,hls,san. Hie resemblance, is not all . "THE BIGGEST highlightthat easy to detect. of my professional life was Alda senior is as Italian as playing Dr..Anthony Borelli in his son is not. 'He emanates that episode of 'M-A-S-H,' " Latin yitality, talks with his Alda said. "Alan keeps grow­ hands,, rolls his eyes and ing all the.lime: He improves shouts a lot -every day. .^Alda junior is subdued, his -"We did five plays together, humor is quiet, " his -manner years-ago.-The last was six passive. >1" • years ago in 'Love' .at The family name is Paramus, N.J." D^Abruzzo,'which Papa Alda *« wii/ov ufljj,Huncrcj,uie.• • In those days, however, the CriA/t/a/' r% i". .• • . Special Student Discount at-. * Old Texas Trail Restaurant : BRHMtET, RIBS; AND SAUSAGE -Alt YOU CAN EAT * F"r!H!.y,,?Yl* b«rt>«ju», salad bar. tM or coffM~-rea. 3.96 W - * ~ p«r person vf> ' Now 3.50 with ad and itudwit ID * *xa»jia»aftaUte:.with «nt«rt»lnni»nt wtohthf^^-"' w , . *7——g* p Tnursdqy thru Sunday, 5 to 10 p.m. jL • « «o north on IH 36.right on FM lB251P//ugarvtfta axJt) T THEY KILLED HIS WIFE THEY MURDERED HIS DAUGHTER THEY THOUGHT THEY KILLED HIM BUT NOTHING COULD STOP FRANK CHALLENGE! Ihtt'thanwaiS ' 'BILLY JM^KppS Thencame 'WALKING TALL' • Now thairat to... A" INDUSTRIES RELEASE |gj}| TOMORROW"'! tfATORI TM KS-?rtS-4d M5-7:50-*J0 soulhtAim ornvbiw V He has a greatdeal of pride i5i in his own work and identity. Wi. "He"Secame tffi instant star 30 years ago playing George Gershwin in "Rhapsody in &'-i Blue," which proved to bg the y I-, apex of his movie career, (fV-T; although he went on to,make |c,rr 'scores of pictures, HE HAS LIVED off and on Cfr; -in Rome for the last 20 y»ars -h. l and made 15 films there inall. •' In addition .to working with his son on his current, trip to .: Hollywood, ;A!da has .made-:: two appearances on the new "Rhoda" -show playing Valerie .-/Harper's,, father-in--tfp;4' law. He also played guesTrr-:• roles in Segments "of "Get Christie Love," "Police Sou t lisicli WKW« ' n "Ntiotiw wm««4«»a5p Tlckthi Dlitowii »ox owqcm .show starts At dusk fnwr MKtiNR, Ttin Nflttwt" W x-Alda breaks off his televi­ sion activity this month to begin a lengthy "tour in^The Happiness Boys." • Coill* CrM ProAKHmt frtuah DOUG KERSHAW " && SUNDAY, OCT. 13 AUSTIN COLISEUM 8 pjriTfSs mm Mw 16 Thursday,^Octot»r U, 1974 T5E OAILY TE3CAN ^ ^ , \ «*'• v;i 1-. _^eaya^s-y-• •;'.;JfjAXT^\ W? - 38 -J??*. t * m '.1&?%g "'t>.• ••'Mifchunn; David. Carradlnfe -;•£;.• • Unlikely asit mayseem, Marcus Welbty has'5 that incident notljf# ,9 Balcones Fault .vSi,"j;/24 The Streets of San Francisco w segment: , , ".^pedophiHa as a prefei-enciE> and as a • 24 •f-preom of Jcannle Pace and Shelly FabaresV^T. :^war^homosextiaUty. an attitude^!,iw-^ Guadaiiw-ito^^^ " - ~ AlleyvPremieres I'Wilson ­ •two principal rcharacters-Jn the show-were ^ _ ^ Exhibits nwlfc. ,"J.Litiey_waated .„to.,deal with child One person, wfio chose"not fo be named; , Wilson,vl.aiplay bj' George Greanias concerning the life The story of two: backfietd^stars fo^the^Chicago^ molestation, why not deal with a man at-T "thought the show was "sloppy^" and thatthe_:. Tprres Mear$...j3ale Sayers and Brian Piccalo. tackinga.giri?" askedJustice, who feltmale-4?;-.average viewer would inevitably view the' CofiectJorT"] >•=#! • —female Instances of child molestation were, ^jholestation as homosexually oriented. JESTER AUDITORIUM $1 7 &9F.M. 3rtx thdt iTiW4uvuv>vu ­ * r'1°re common. --• • A GENEftAtrconsensus among those pet;.' art in Nofiif 'and "south"• Stntfwicjt Wilson: I'l'f Justice, and others, also objected to ibe^saas-Jiiterviewed-.wais.ffiat. the',show directed" Atrierica 'ahd Eiirope. Oct. 13. ;--5tnidWick created the fole of Comniander Bucher in the . PEWERjttCIWEWJI COaPOHaTtOH •• Iact ^ show both imPlied and stated ' -numerous derogatory remarks toward the to Nov.* 24. Etchings -' ^Washington Arena States^premiefC*R£^uctron;of-"Pueblo."-' 41181 Henry I AIL CINEMAS EVERY DAT SI 35^ T!L V30 '.,.1^1 -' ^ molested girl is "raped," while a "show's "villain" before adequately inden-lithographs and w'oodcuts of*" ' ,Cabot Lodge, Wilson's neme;sis, mil be played.by h ^—-——t ^^ ' '> "ID'eSted boy •s the vjetim-of-'an outrage.'^, '-'tifying ^him.as^a .child molester and not a the late German artist: returninE actor William Trotman, who_has additionally,". oy MdE®di^i~r:HErM"ADES-pROMtSE was, spmebow-more hofrible than~male-to-,R3?otie"whD mriests-chHdFen-v.-v-AND fiEKiiPx rn . assembled from collections infemale:molestation. -When confronted with the definition of the United States will be red fern grows„ ATTENTION! OPj^iUULY Xg NOON ••••••••••••••••••I A TRUE STORY v . v WnvsoN MAWLS TICKSTS ARB NOyv pN SAL£ FOR J J -f1-" /9 £vvry fightk.\ iStfaSRKBXkKluii (XiMS • •' ..V -Resioyror* / • COMMANDERCODYAND ! .* \ODor ...• presenfs SEE IT TODAY! Monday it man's • ^ 1 . t af 1?;45-3KW-5:|5-7^0-9:4S lib-night' 'no cover JOi VAUNTIM for *1ag man -~plui 5 EASY AFTERNOON onrf ftnImperhhp'^^ WITH HOYT AXTON 75tbarhl9hboll*. S \ LISTENING 1411 Lavaca ,472-7315 VwmurN |b(BM Un*Kort«d lodi«*^| WALT DISNEY'S^ 1frM BRUCE SPRINGSTEEN ^n.«Thm J. .no<«ov«r and : TONIGHT-SAT k "SLIPSTREAM" N» wvtr.Mon. » Sot.'^ 2 free highballs HoppyHr. : Mon.-Thur*; MON-SAT BILL Aim SAVE A DOLLAR WITH AN ADVANCED SALS TICKET Mon.-Fii; • . . • " *-' . FROM OAT WHJJE'S, INNER SANCTUM, AND THE 4.00^6:45 Happy Hr. Mon,-Fri,;v'' 3-8 P.M. BONNIE AR'MASHllO 5:30-7:30 r;. •. Happy Hour Prices n BIG WK •2 for 1 HEARNE AT ARMADILLO WORLD •. Second Level: DobieMolr •. iSover $1.50 T hurs; 44EADQUARTERS­ ^MHXMLSSm" -J : 21si 0 Guodolupe • . 13. $2.oo-m I0HN BUSTIN 4^2-9934 ^rt-icAee Dorking tn rhe'7ear' • : Weekend T>i Aus ia Ciiiiu 629 W Ben White {••••••••••••••••-a•t -ScritaMcs IZ:t)0-2 »4;4S 7:05-3:30 ,, STARTS FRIDAY AT 4 THEATRES : MOTET P*""4 »«rt»l« > cult statesarnvt-uTV. \\ >>J JwiF-aAraoiuvEgrv -Mi Malmcti StutM (figgi* ' AND Sitow I OWN USA "\TtOE.»«iWtih.«444.M96ir *\W»»m«riiiiiiiu.ibM^^' m Soiuhsidt V GULF STATES DRIVE-IN V_ BOX OFFICEOPEN 7:00-SHOW STARTSDUSK RRST-RATE Theatre Committee presents SHOLVTOIVA USA BOX OFFICE OPEN 7.-00 SUSPENSE i /i.i.Ac,/: t Rl\ /.RSI/)/ SHOW STARTS DUSK THE ADVENTURES OF,.. ^ ACADEMY AWARDROBIN HOOD ALmci NOMINEE 'BEST ACTOR TECHNICOLOR-' iR MSBRPICO HdCIINQ LAST OAYl Cotor bv TECHNICQLOR--g»Ri in %m Fvatum at 6:20 and 10:15 p. LAST DAYI COLOR' V $1.50 til 6:30 J at.8:00 p.m. only MANN THEATRES —PUJS CO-FEATURE FOX TWIN Mm® b7S7 AIRPORT HVD. DOUdtlAS THE BROTHCRHOOD" I 454-2711 J GULF TOO.H BOt OFFICE OPEN 7:00 KIRKOOUGUSte "IDETEXAS SHOW STARTS DUSK >1d C. Ben CMINSAW | Directed by Michael Cjurtiz fahraoola" fedTgapt^ Afeona PodudiqnO NIGHTMARE Errol Flynn, Olivia de Havilland, ^ " WEEKDAYS ..OPEN 6HK) P.M. HONEYMOON Basil Rathbotie and Clauede Rains . EIATURE.'iHlS M1SSBCRF 8:00-9^5 EBPI METROCOLOR MGIWlC^ SIJ0>til 6:15 p.m. r\Z? AfTkvncjs rnosJ bi/cirre and bn/t<)l cronies 7 and 9 p.m. $1.00 UT Students,^!?; -tPLUS CO-FEATURE— Tonight Faculty and Staff ^ UGUtoarts ly^haocMnedlstru&NowthemoBohpicturetnatiijusfas Baits Auditorium $1;S0 Members WICKED? (rIa A BRYANSTON PICTURES RELEASE Angela J,L i DMffiliTmi&"""1 Mao ffiADLY! _ DELICIOUS! A ParjasH Fdm-tn Cotor m .\ I AMERICAN NATIONAL ENTERPRISES, INC. PRESENTS , ' muni's"gsmy ~ iii • Academy Award Winner i JVCUtr STATES DmVE-IN"\. "FUNNY AND MGM BOX OFFICE OPEN 7:00 Show TOWN USA SHOW STARTS DUSK %H^im755!!iS)S57 *cww mniomiomf tcrwtrsrnMti' «<# W1 i recommend this picture fajbian. rAccN JCCTE^euCK highly to everyone who is not limited to the belief "LITTLE UU.„ mmm NEW YORKHLWl CR1T1GS that-sex is a religious rite." ScBIGJCHN" COLOH ..THETUSnUDITDTODIHEUT- Archer Winsten, New York Post THDIS800TTKBWIYOCT!! -t,-I **. COWBOY UMwmwcwwWxt KnASfmtfnllTia UURA1K #•§: SyThe exciting true story of a vanishing american 5 ;-FA8IMf»TT• tJMnpua UMS<lf4100wooowai• #l" and his special kind of freedom. -• » 1 •: > —PUJS CO-FEATURE— • B^lll ' '• ~ ' 5y^f,^INBOW A(JVENTUBeFILMS" RELEASE. COLOR BV DELUXE*"bmi- m HowlMCanaMri 7K)04 -• m ANCOOUZZOU 00 " si's $^| 25 8:4S~ >150 § iGOFELUNl WsAMtmo? TSCREEN 2 HELp OVER! B THE KING LOVES THF PEOPLE1 l»c -X. mm C i'W s' «T : IV <* :i-i 4 S.• A N H»S \(> A, BSMW VH 't. 1« • 'HSNK r,V: MASK VAN t,nr, Ft,,, r GLENN FORD Starring in S?\N. 'pi to CIUUEtTAMASlNA r&ii''.r^fcwrtfe-> -WYNTCn Uj VALCI1IC .fe ' ACmwnInternational Pidtfes.lnc?:ffeleKe'.^ ^m^KOSONA awkssieicijEiiT v>-.< :r.-. 'v .. i:..v . • '^e x -80X10EllCEjQPEiliM_ A DCL^ANOCS. «•<* -fiftMtftlNAf.|T0fY • • SHOW SIARTS DUSK ! j*iivtv-i • f ."linj j ' Areie1-! f;."1 'C*?, iftenashf) Mi —CHARLES BRONSON SPECIAL— ^ MR. MAJESTYK 4^-*l CHATO'S LAND' mi mmm ffr. <• v -I j ­ ^ ®®®«, --'"' -' ilWaMft ^SN­ * •> ^l_li -•& S, * * < T ^,, -f f vrY^V'T •:> ^ _\y> % ^ ,>; ,—v » t-_____ ** ^ ^ * ka. ^,%^v ^ *" \ > *• -v ^ s»( i.','v *b -! -.^ *--'-^ f* * rj v" ,ri l^tWiSW •5iQo;r-,'v^;^ L. -si J -* **" ^ 4 * »N J> 'Wv ^^ ISiilifl ' -^*1 »*•*"$. V„ •S" « ;• " < « \ * i ^V. *"V ^ > 1 < t.'i v f "HH* --„t,v. ? SP^M ?• tLASMFSEDADVERTtSlNG FOR SALE FOR SALE FURN. APARTS.1FURN. APARTS. « HELP WANTED SERVICES yv« * • RATES % TYPING 15 «ord minimum Each word onfc'tlme A\ Eacn wore Si iKhe*.^•x^-;..-.. v-JQ Stereo -.For Sale. . ;r Misc. -For Sale "Efch d>9 «n>«$s.01 Jusr North ot 27th at Each *ord 18or more times.:.! .07 SPEAKERS. LWE ) fEmtR)'Wf woofert * TOP CASH PRICES paid for dlamonds. OAK CREEK catfish:: GIN'NYyS Ogadalupe Student' rate each.time..*:<..•.$ .80 . old gotd^ Capitol Diamond Shop. 4018 N.­ •Classified Display. • Walnut catinet^.Origlnaity S300 «ach.-Lamar. 4S4-6477 PARLOUR .COPYING 2707 HempHTII Pack 7;-_ Want $)S0 each,^'Carol-. APARTMENTS .1 ecfc x tInch on* time ..,.1125 ! Efficiency; I & 2 Bdrnr/Furnished & : yye n«d part-Hma clcan-up heliGreat ERVICE } cokx 1 inch 2-9 times-.....:% $£93 RA8CO TURNTABLE: HermanKardoo KING.8. QUEEN SIZEmattresses & box U>Murnished • lob for.slutfenl w((h; transportation 1 col. x1{rich-ten or more timest2-64. A«30k atnp plustuner and speaker*:Best iprings'/Simmons.Si Sealy^SlOO < 1200 1507 Houston needing 18-20 hours per week. Start Ann>Jivdtp k^:.offer 4S3-3M2. < .454-4394 anytlme belween 7:30.-r«.m.. tlntlh-hy HNC., \ 459*985 r Vaulted private balcbnles* noot\. 'Sundays ml. H.;,.J40 (un,* *472. .„MOVEJN T0DAY .Freshman themes. Best Rateon the Lake HmJat T«aon Muday .*...t1*00 ojn. AKA{: .GXC-450 casserte deck. Glass HOB-IE 16/ 4 months old, owner IHAVE PRIVATE Duple* Apartments sunIasu Free'Packing •-Why not startoUTwtth •?-— Shuttle.Bus Front Door ' within fourblocks of Univeriltyof Texas warranty. Phone 454-7397 between 7 and 2355 after 5 p.m. . at . 442*340 is "Iike Love^ • 9 am. 5 p.m. Sal.« good grades' Wiriiwfay Texan Tvwley ..11:00 OJO. heads, poiby,: auto-reverse, ppe year -transferred, yellow and white sails 258-that are in immaculate condition, 2400 Town Lake.Circle • ,7 a.m. 10 p^m. M«F . ; ,1­ ttwrWay T«vpfe Wednetdoy ;MrOO ajtu .9 p.mi only; v. very, rMs^iable rates' and also some 5 4,72-3210 and 472-7677 T LARGE "OFFJCE typewriter: Smith beautiful duplexes inIthe Enfiefd area Fndki| Tnst Tfaiendey. .s...l).-00 ejn. Everybody needs it, •v­ -COrona 410. S150 Rande Brov^n 472-0)00 with iirepiace that wUt -meraliy koocK PANASONIC AM/FM Steceo cassette Vi./ 11)1cl. inoi after 5 pjyii your socks offl More,space thanyouim­ after but few. understand _ agfne for the money* Believe me, they COLORFUL it. ,»> 'f>£Uk 476-90.93; tYPlNC -Reports, Resumes, i"-:% lhi wwil.«f..«noci mad* in m *• ^ Theses; Letters: WrBiimwnt,Imiijfq*^iwhee muttb» J. AR 3AX-(SPEAKERS.' Kenwood 4002 cellent condition: 452-4389., ' • P^'ce RafB TnTWJO. ~EFPtCtENeiES-. typirvg •>-All University an^l ;fivM«IhipuMhtwn oftmnmUalw Amp;OtaiTO4lumtaLl>i».->liKkoFAMT4.":7;z;':,;^;Lrj _.•: • t. — HOMES & GARDENV' SUNASti cOmbrnes^lIIe-giwIno .. i't>! business work . *-in*y Ch^ii^wmliwctjfli. Ag«Wpi>.fcc. tuoer. Ak.L GXSD tape-deck Air — Herbs wlflrVItsmlosandMltftawtn'»n: • » -Lasl Minute Service- • «»ent condition. 45J-43W. - vedlwehnenK ttwMd btmoJi iwt kHf ^rAsoifvable.GoldtesPaol^tftndard,Im­refinished; AND' all-tr>K>neproduct crt naturalingredlenti^ --Wndfrig^TTtwf •'' ttiM30 deyi eh*r'pabBtsHeM^M'^' • • • maculate. 476-1272. 472*4807. • *•. offer 451-7723 —* ---/95^^a ("Mli'e.K ;- Gall Gross, president ol SUNASU 476-5255 (Home). *" ONE.BEDROOMS^ Pfoduets,;I'ncv ot"Glendate,-Celll SERVICE" FISHER RC-BOB -cassette deck, 10-TOM HALE Custbro SurtOoerd Ex- gfviriS lpec!al'piT«rrt*tioo»ts._-.:_j_ 420 w.'jrlverslde'drfris-" 472.8934 Chromlumdioxide^Dolby^ RetaUed$230, cellent shape. Best off er<.447-8023 _ Shag, dishwasher, , Doble Mall . • HANCOCK CENTER TOWN HALL' -• "COW -STUDENT RATES .Asking SI^ Tak^ best offen 476-1376. . >5 >word minimum each day .1.80 ..GRUMMAN. 171canoe wlth.pgddles and •-• 5 BUOCKS ^ t -1-.* sras grill, pets oTt, 1 MONDAY, OCT. I«IP.M AUTO FM Converter; and Utah .TYPEWRITERS : Each addtttonaf word vacfi dayi JJ5 rack, 1200 firm.Mamiya auro!XTCrWltfl--rr •••-^ cozy community: -''fn Distributorships evallatle.ForJocal.lov THE-CUOCKETT.qOMPAN V ' " X co). R1 Inch each day.......$2.44 flash, filters. $125. Dave. 454-0618 after 7 WEST OF — r forma|lon, conl»c( tlevld Stewirt, 478-. Ar.-the.complete. secretarial/JerVfce * "Undaui(ie -^ ? ^pnngs, $70. Antique fcedtramef l40,-or.;> 477*5514 ' 476-791^ ACCEPTED for Nurse Aides. J0% off on rpn»ir« . fper originals) » •Friday» -". -• . • Red Oakt-Ajitv-*-:^lM^San:Gabrlel • v. PRINTING" offset and letterpress J*'­ .set. $9a. Come: see 1910 Nueites: . — ler Lncl'^ npar««V;7-n^" r^OOD-THROUGH-OCT-.3^ and Musical -For Said ~' perience necessary. Only . a =T T*^.-SfiTSE<7. " * ­ STAINED GLASS craft supplies.' Opal. BRAND NEW ' ^ desire:tO'work with GerWtrIC" >Kn LEAffN TO PLAY .GUITAR., Beginner . and Cath glass. Camei Flux,-Solder, etc.:: -WALK TO CAMPUS AUSTIN OFFICE »J0 Burnet Rd;^ ' J EFFICIENCIES and advanced: Drew'Thomason. k478*' Renaissance Glass-Co. 1013-C West 34th. . w patients . Close to shuttle;:For 2079 -••••.• 451.-3971 AJJD BEAT appointment, call452-0155,9-3. MACHINE CO.FOR SALE ; : 1700 NUECES THE BUS Mitier's.Rest Home. ,j: % 600 W 28lh Street CHRISTENSON & SMC 250 Secretarial typewriter. Xike Close to campus. Jbeautlfully Ivrnished;-' 1 476^)093 — Ayto -For Sale PIANOS32S andGibson ampSSOor make-new. $150;-452*040.' ^'9 balconies for your plants.: ••;T.woron.t*.-r -furnlshedf^J offer* Both good condition. 459-6968: • bedroom ASSOCIATES*^ *155 plus electricity and deposit . apartments. Pool; cable, laundry, quiets. i''y FROGS DON^ FLY ,K ii; "ANTtQUESv-Beautlful—English-war:-., -M&mger .Apt. 201 v, setting. $150 plus electricity at commer-" BUT CRAZYXAPTIONS DO '^:^' and-Flamenco a CLASSICAL guitar ;1972 HONDA 600 Coupe ccir): Orange, LUOVyiG DOUBLE. BASS.drum;set, 5 -drobe^ beveled glass, perfect condition: ' -*-478-9058 - „ ... CATCH THE EYE ; lessons: Basic technique. Good teacher -A TYPING fit?. " .••.•u.suoTnH—Z/lditort.cymtwlSr Remo practice set. ^^lfraies^g.Hgttie/47^l238.606 West" Pie safe, Queen Annchairs. French din-vISfW v 17th at Rio Grande -Be..hfippyidojQgLtne_tning you like. best. ! with ierious students.-4HM444. SERVICE5819, 926-4116 after 5 p.m. :-can-472-8P8 ai»e^5-pjr>^ "Ing^abte;-other-beautHul-accessories^ laiMngtopeople o^f^T^e^oneT-New pregnant -a *67 MGB.-Body and engine overhauled. 3505 River Road (Tarrytown). 477-2563-~ pl«ces,,flve days a (*ee)6;free parking,' fori*uaeAts iee-iws one h . ROGERS-DRUM SET-Dynasound CONFJOENTIAL" CARE -_ Iriendlyialmtt»pt«re; full or part lime. unmarried mothers." Edna Gladney ^ -S950,454-4797, ext.283 or after V451-7017. snare, vidian cymbals. Like new, i3S0. 3SMM. LENSES'..for renl. Wide angle, ~ WATERLOO FLATS" .^ ^onuses-Olus ^alariisk'^SlTJSIOTSr -Homec5308, HemphlU± Fort Worth, 8l?» -Specializing jn Call 477*780 after 7:30 p:m: ^ !^^oger.» . • < telephoto, zoom, andmacro lens.Capitol 2 ' Bedroom/1: Bath, Furnfshed/Uofur* ' 1 BR Furn . •. between.? a.rh. and 1p.m., or.between 5 926-3304 — Thejes and-dissertation^ •. Camera Rental; 4/6*581. ' " nished. 5h6g,cable. walk-ins. pool,com-p.m. and 9 p.m, E^perlbnce pays more-.- 1970 TRIUMPH SPITFIREMK Hl.Red . STUDIO .PTANO.' Walnut finish. Ex-* plete kitchen. Close to, shopping and ...but not necessary, PO YOU FEEL UNLOVED? Visit the Law Briefs ^ — « conirecltble. Ib)gr mileage, 25 mpg, good cellent condition. $700, 327*3035. * • • FOR SALE -three student tickets lb OU. .Town Lake. • . v -^..Tanglewood .> Christian Science Reading Room. 1401 Term papers and reports ' t runningcondition. $175under bookprice. ' GUITAR FOR SALE; must sell today, • 447-5741. . $170 unfurnlshed/$l99 furnished > W'rAnnex . -> I„ --FLOWER PEOPLE need several per-Lavacav Read about Divine Love. Open Prompt, Professional*' ' . £•***S9-S316. • . . •• • • „ ALL BILLS PAIO daily except .holidays.> - -. manent cteoplfta selllloWert for the n«w St-fL-$100. case. PLANT SALE. Saturday and Sunday.. 41 waller Street . *74-'75 seasoniPay: 30 % plus bonuses. Service Kay, with hardshell Call 131SNorwalk Lane ' 1969 OPEL GT. Rew tires; rebuilt Mask. 475*718. .4/4-4493 . 472-416; 476-0948 47Q-9468 For interview, Denlse, 712-1102. • PROTECT YOUR ,HOME or business 453-8101" " -• 806 East 32qd. Large and smalliplants ^vjengine..4*speed. great gasmileage. $800. '• •... Barry Gllllngw^ter.Co. Shuttle Bus Corner with a deedbolt:loc-k. Call Austin Lock ^?CaTl 451-50)0 GRETSCH * "Chef Atkins Nashville" and hanging baskets. Very reasonable, v Pick-up Service Available Service . for appointment, 447-2005 • .-PART TIME WORK 15-20. hours/week • —— Hollow Body electric guitar with case, h\.' •'3102 Glenvlcw & MSTEP VAN for sale. Recently bedrooms and the 2 bedrooms are mam-^ w> Pignoseamp. 471-7865. Great action. ^v: < : ' MOVE-IN TcSoAY 800 SQUARE FEETif in these 1 UOO/monlh.Call 457-275J Licensed and bonded/ j­^.•vf.rebuilr eogine in very good condition, New and Used moth, 4 too. Furnished or unfurnished, MENTAL PATIENTS Liberation Pro-' COMMISSION TRAVEL AgencyOutside §&%potential motor home. $600.0.N.O. 452-IQ with jce*maker. refrigerators (frost* lect. Been hurt by I'TherapyV and wish 1 BtiSt salesperson. Send resume D-10 UT Sta­ K^337" ' Pets -For Sale HangrGliders' free)> Dw, cable, walk-ins & t>ullHns. to speak out? 471«5179 (SherU. . j MRS. BODOUR'S TYPING SERVICE. tion. ' . Reports, theses, dissertations and books : M$m TRIUMPH GT6, wire wheels, low COCKER SPANIEL 6 weeks old. A'KC Free instruction with.; •! Wheless Lane. 926*4202^ 472^62 typed accurately, fast and reasonably. From $165 ALL BILLS PAID. 2606 ' DAYTIME; BUSPERSON Tues.—^Frf.r 10;00 a.m. .2;00 p.m. $1.75/hour plus mileage X mpg. Good shape. Celt after 442-0968 aftei15 artd weekends. purchase MARK XX Printing and binding on request. Close In 478-8113. ^ 9r00 pjn. 837-6671 454-3953 452-5093 ACT-CENTUATE THE POSITIVE. Act MISCELLANEOUS percentage of waiters', tips. Mar* KalR WANT A -RELATIONSHIP with a J^453-6209^':v>' 38)5 Guadalupe .V Apartments> best of both worlds. One ihap MarCo'sJ 92806161 fcs£'6l VW. -Dependable. New inspection &eautllul c/e6ture; .Dlue seal potnl— bedrooms at-affordable prices for' DISSERTATIONS; theses, reports, and ta5fewlth.*64. engine.5 naw tlres. body clean.. Siamese Xittens. .441*093 after slx^ ' 4JdlGi3adalopr-"———~ students..Cron\.$l49 plus E & cable. 924-law * briefs. Experienced typist/ ;i450 453-2933 Easrsnrws7j«r sbund. 255-2337. Cair Rick, 457-9626, 454-7646. Fliip rnlnd,.»I44pluselectrlelty*Hircabl8-Act 20.-Now ""v- Bennett and Associates. -.washateria in complen.See owners. Art 2 BORM. $150 f»EEP till Christmas. Ml PADRt" : RESUMES 113 or ca» 4i5lui8i8. •• -VII.' 453-0540, 472*4162. Barry" • 12.92/hour. Call be!weeri 3-S p.m.ONLY' FORD V» ton pick-up truck. Recent*;.. -P 1304 SUBMIT GlUlngwater Company. . .. * i Thursday or Friday,'45?-469lt . ' GUSTAVO with pr v*ifhout pictures reconditioned. $500. Call 447-4401. exK > SP^-Mfi * Kay. or 451-5711, ext.-45a* Erwin. _ A HARD ACT TO FOLLOW.Act IV: One . 2 Day Service ' ' • COUNTER ATTENDANT for laundry. -ROSEDALE ysimRtmvd . bedroom elficiency on shuttle. Walk to .Hours,'weekdays 2-6 p.m.. Sat, 7 a.m. -1 AMSTERO^' 472-3210 and 472-7677 . 72 MSB, 7,500 miles/ AC, AM/FM, .-taw.-school;:.Quiet .for.undergraduate .p.m;Master.Vo(er.Cleaners. 2701Manor -tertor;.fmmaculate. $3595.928-1941 after 3311 Red.River; 476-2662.472-4162. Barry • : radlals^Tonoeau skr-rack, green tan In*. "AREA 1-B ANTILLES-students. SI49 plus elKtrlclty andcable. i J^TU.HIJO :t« Road. iAUSTIN -FRANCE5 WOODS TYPING SERVICGf,. •" '6 p.nv»." Across from. tennis court In Ramsey •ARTS.^^dl• Gilllngwafer.Company. 1 ADEO " Experienced, La#, Thesesj-Dlssefi—­*71 FIAT 850. 2 door convertible^ $1350. EFFICIEN065-S115 plus electricity."^ Park* well maintained. 2-1. Home with •' Your fimp U valuahlo ROOMMATES tatlpns. Manuscripts 4SM090 , »«« ' 451-^429:^ • m '••• hardwood floors and den Rick Borth, nV.r 2204 Enfield • ' Fiiip.Bennet St^Associates--•: Our.service is free . Pool. AC, carpet, paneling,no pets Hun* THOMASINI BOBBYE DELAFIELD. IBM SelKtrlQ ' S 454-6246 or 459-9485 tlngton Villa, 46th al)d Ave. A. 454-190] FEMALE ROOMMATE for 3rd unfur* pka/elite. is years experience, books, • 1 2BDRM nished bedroom. Lamar-North Loop. dissertations, .theses, reportsT." $205 ABP Motorcycles-For Sale ;' ~ PARAGON ' 1 ^DRA^. EFF. $145 abp Mauna Kal, $53 Mary, 452-1548 or 454-44)2. mimeographing 442-71M 472-1923 Close-io campus Hdge walk-ins. fully SAVE,MONEY! Call us before bOying^*^ ^PROPER'TIES can'peted. $199 ABP. 405 East 31st 472-FEMALE HOUSEMATE >50 deposit, VIRGINIA SCHNEIDER Dlverilflnt motorcycle Insurance. Lambert * -$80/month Fireplace, yard. 505 East • ROSEDALE . 214;7, 47"472-4162-Barry Glltlngwatw Co Services. Graduate.and undergraduate ,,'surance Associates;: lnc.-.4200'Medlcal.'.^^ Third Carolyn. 476^819, 472-1657.' yplng, printing, binding. 1S1J Koenlg AREA 1-B 472-4171 ; -y j, NEED A GREAT NOB HILL APARTMENTS. Available Lane,-459*7205. • •Mite FEMALE HOUSEMATE Wanted Own • Across .from'-tennis court In Ramsey •-' weekdays- now. J bedroom, 114 bath apartment. SALE 72 HONDA CB350. Excellent condition; . Park, weirmaintained 2-T home with PLACE TO LIVE? large enough for3 or 4. Dishwasher,-dis­room, fhr.ee b(ocks to campus. $62 50. STARK TYPING. Specially; Technical. Many extras. -$625 firm. Call. 453-3345 478*6050 <«veotag$) or hardwoodvfloors and den. Rick Borth, posal, pool, laundry. 1250. all utilities WATERBEDS :,Experienced tlfrses,dissertations, PR's, Jim-at 258-5121 *2237 .paid. 2520'Longvlew. 477-1741. r FIllp Bennett and Associates./ 472-4175 TRY THE -manuscripts, etc. Printing, binding.-'' iff' (days;. HOUSEMATE WANTED Mature Complete system;for only . > Charlene Stark, 453-5218 454-7646 > or . 459-9485 weekends V-'­ Senior or graduate. Ow» room In large" BLACKSTONE-i . • FOR RENT. Onebedroom furnlshed^ali 1974 YAMAHA RD 250.'Excellent CondP i- bills paid..1907 Robbins Place. 478*1841. house Shuttle. $80 BP. 476-9079. MM; MINNIE L. HAMMETT Typing's. ' • • tton. Low mileage, many extras. Make^ . r APARTMENTS^? $54.95 :%00: Duplicating Service. Tlteses, disser­ offer. 345-5678 after 5. REDECORATED one bedroom, fur­NEED ONE ROOMMATE 'share two Lowest Prlce.in Austin^ ' tations, papers of all kinds, resumes, Misc; -For Sale >?5hare a.JarQe.room for S64.SO/mo. or nished or unfurnished .Pool, cable, UT bedroom apt. with two students.$65,451-For a QUALITY Waterbed tree refreshments. 442-70W, 441 • • • FEMALE TO ^HARE furnlshM minute, overnight available* Term 202 EAST 32ND STREET.. Bent Tree best/. .' ?• • '•'• : West 22nd..Newly remodel-*• Apartments. All new^one bedroom ef­bedroom apartment. S67J0/ABP. 3106 papers, theses, dissertations/ letters. HONDA CBSOO, 9 jnonths oW. $1195 or ~ c~ "'''ttfriff'f ONLY 200 YAROS FROM UT CAMPUS-ficiencies/Extra long beds. Cable TV, Duval. 472*4841i MaiterCJwroa, BankAmerlcard.1 892*:' • best offer. 459-8340. ^ • .your bicycle need»--rn-vv -od, furnished/ 1-bedroom. ^in BnA Pivfr ' . MJAMStl-CA/CH; .$135 pius electricity. See 0727 or 442-8545 , ; We carry a large " apartments. CA/CH, all , rytaMfler apai lment no.' l -SHARE 2 bedroomstudfo apartment, $60 NELSON'S GIFTS: 2unl Indian 73'/i.HONDA CB350. Excellent condl-^4: .selection of parts "plul Vi Pills MS shullle. Lane; 471 0931— lewelry* African and Mexican-Imports. tfon.:Extras. $750.447-5694. and accessories , bills paid, $135. Mon. -Fri, Georgia, 285-6122 461; Suulli rpngmn 44< 311< CIWIMO-THE ^PERSONAL TOUCH Will do your*­ UNEXPECTED VACANCY. Furnished, Mondays, ^iftir|frntfy 'nnrtf Also try our oni^dsy " ' 8:30 -5:0(5. tuxury minl-aparfment on shuttle. Rent Reasonably. Call 451-306Vor 475-0617. -1973 BMW R75/5 (airing, Enduro repair service , *, HABITAT reduction. 4105: Speedway ,Manager MALE ROOMMATE. 2 bedroom/2 bath, saddlebags, touring pack,* new-tires, 2404 SAN GABRIEL "477^8^6': Call 478-7411 ; apartment .203. 'A&i-lAVl, 4764940, 345-CA/CH, no deposit. ABP. s72,50/month. LEARN TO PLAY GUITAR. Beginner ^4 touring seaL 476-2767. ,, > -• -. . OPEN TILL .9 P.M; ON TUES-8. After 5.-.00 p.m., Apply Apt. : 4555.' Riverside Area. 441-441S. and advanced. Drew Thomasoh.* 478-• Just North of 27th at 2079, HUNTERS * THURS. 210 Guadalupe NEED AN APARTAAEKlT UTAREA, 2 bedroom, 2 bath, CA/CH, HOUSEMATE 3 bedroom house. Need HORSE STALLS for rent. Runs,'arena, Slereo -For Sale large closets,-laundry facilitlev pool, some furnlfure. Large fenced yard, own 2707 Hemphill.Park arena. Reasonable rates. . FOR FALL? ^ -A room 452-6538, *75-8162, Craig. and exercise • reasonable. 477-2608, 476*9813. . Phone Don, 478-9309, 926-4499/ • &1VE US A CALL! iFEMALE SHARE large one bedroom TRY CASUALLY YOU Habitat Hunters ,is FREE. apartment CASA BLANCA Apts. 2506 Manor Rp8d. DAY DOVE HUNTING. 15 minutes from ALL BILLS PAID *110/month ABP, no deposit If tdnant with bonu* room, fireplace. Riverside, Creatlve.Outdoor Portraits,™ locator jervlce, located In the lower campus Phone Don, 478-9309, 926-4*99. SR shuttle SIM ABP. 447*5447 after 4 Save Vb Now • ftdfent complexes/-^ r • ** months and,get last month's free rent. • PROJECTORS tpr rent** slides, 16mm, i paints apt,;We furnishpaint. Lease for 6 t EFF. $132 s/i^ftdfent comole*« .. pm. STEREO , , Visit our Studio 474-5550. Resident manager; ­ and super 8 movie, screens, dissolve, MBA 1 BR $157.50 Own room. Near campus. Un* recorder. Capitol Camera'Rental, 476-1 TYPING,,PRtNTINGr8IN6jf|G' v j. r HABITAT HUNTERS: WANTED FEMALE HOUSEMATE. < Lower Level,; DobieMali, ^ Royce Portra Its • •'-"••• •-' •••.••'.' • . 1 BEDROOM, I.bath;2bedroom,2bath-alrconditloned, yard, fireplace $50 plus .1 block -from ..mafor.;-thoroughfare 20 .Suite 8A \ " 's®il CENTER*JJ'" 2420Guadalgpe 472-4219 • 6 blocks to campur1^'" ^'" minutes from UT.Northwest area. Pool/ bills Call 476-9403 * BUY/SELL PLAYBOY, Penthouse, etc 2408 Leon * 476-3467 474-1532 laundry, etc.Shoal Creek Nortl^ Apt,452- , • -THE COMPLETE1 wn™-.. Before You.; Decide;!#!;^ MALE.r 6 roomhouse, North. $75/month Books, records, leweiry,guitars, radios, "-PROFESSIONAL * m> '• We-sell fop brands at thesight U ^ • plusc^ bills. 454-8215 evenings • stereos.v Aacon's; 320 Congress, down- f prices. FREEWHEELING 4 blocks from campus, 1 bedroom, town , FULLTIME' "* FEMALE.-ROOMMATE '.needed for 472 5515 after 5 00 p m ' ' ;• .. • • BICYCLE SHOP, r«LU-XURY CH/AC S123 quaint two bedroom-apartment'Down-' Pioneer.J,, /; .Artarantz rfas -CREEKSIDE FURNISHED EFFICIENCY In small . town, S62/m6nth plus Vi bills. 476-4526.; UNCLASSIFIED TYPmGJSJEEiyjjCI FSr^y Kenwood ~ Sansui •7v complex. 45th and Ave. D. SI30 ABP.v 472-32TD and 472-7677 f't" iONE DAY REPAIR Large efficiency, CA/CH, shag, walk--1 BR -$160 Phone 453-4840 FEMAUE ROOMMATE; Oct. 15. Urge -BellyDaotlnglnstructroti 472*3344: '•&££-Dual & Many More SERVICE if old house near shuttle. Becky, 454-i5«^''« Ins, complete kitchen, bath-vanlty. On 6 ..blocks-fo campus, dishwasher, dis-> posal, pool; etc. .'.NEEDTO RELETDESPERATELY,No :> W»tl|yn,. 453-7S4«, '/uM/VW.bug runs well 1475 451-6847.- WgCXe-'-2«l8*t 19th . ^ • Whatever make-or model ^ ' city/shuttle route, $115 plus E > thru . ­ •(> -7 i;jBlock^ East ol the Drag . • """.-Wbateyecyour problem August '75^476-8324, after 2 p m-' "* ^ 474.1712 \ 478-3176 security deposit needed. 2 Bedroom, 2 i.EEMAte ROOMMATEneeded to share Peruvjan-poncho; 125/Donna, 477-9781 ~ UNF. DUPLEXES batlt<:Furnlshed I2S3; Unlurnlstied.UM^ • 476-6733 .fr-"1 Bring it'To Us RCrABP' 447-3541 2*1 duplex. Fireplace, CA/CH, own- r room, 454^56,.KeepTryingr«i7^> Afghan pups, exotic color. 2824453:: •_ PLAZA ~'^^]&&2404~$AN GABRIEL • NO DEPOSIT, NO LEASE. Cle»n, cute • u.FEMAl.Er'l>ESIRES a roommate to >.: iTokhlba:SR40 turntable. 474^2658. s. PRETTY DUPLEXIV (fo&STVg'* V" IAcros$„from the Kash-tCarry} " " " -Fireplaces -Pets Okay -* v^ VENTURA efflclencl»»...CIo«e_:<10)W)!ovta^-shuHie,-.­ shared bedroom apartment;Share bills Open late on Tues. & Thufs. old Austin; neighborhood; 1113-W. loth. ;-J; bedroom duple* ror rent In a du(e?!:' SAVE UP TO Tired of small rooms B. no closet space? approK^s75'per^month.for 3 gifts. Call -Sell OU date.& stud; ticket. 447^851 : Pendleton Properties. 4S4-76H, Ultm- • Northeast . Austin'/residential Tired of asphalt ft noise? T/y Plaza Veiv' 476-0962 for apt.-% V,: neighborhood, Each tfuble* S564.00 gn Wfers lar'oe THE £DOBE tura. 1 ft 2 Bdrm furn./unfurn. From '65 VW bus. C. Condit. MM. 474-5SM NEAR CAMPUS EHIclencv apartment fenced backyard, covered parklnd, ex have namd brand acoustlcaHy matched: • freacable ; v •.-• 3410 Burleson Rd 2W. S«n Gabriel. s?5 plus electricity^ Plon, carcass, best offer. Aft. 5 477-1(14 tra storage room. Plus washer, dryer FISHER and NlKKasystems. All units 8129.50 plus efecfr/cffy Furnished- - AlR'SUSPENSIONv$peakers« and:BSR CANOES •Mexlcantilefloors*Pool l v;.-v Barham Properties tifnu UNF. APARTS. . * M Professional turntables. These systems •Laundry ; v .-••«; t.GH Barbeques wv 447^6571 Barhim prop ' ( v926^365 . A , <3 spd bike; like new 477-9229 p^i'® c#aP«,% EL CAMERON APTS.*115 »«130.Furn 1 are protestfonat/y~dw?j .and-J bedro4m«,j:A/CH,water paid/on shuttle route. 120?East »nd S|ree|: 45J­ 'vv,' sold atamateur prices.HURRY!! Stock Sailboats -n0-East-374h~-—U35_ Call 474-1150 : Day dove hunt -Ideal 442-0)09 . ' §' ~«3t,-47J-W38~, _ :!s limited.;Castr or EZJerms^ -Overstocked 477-9954 $159.50 UNITED FREIGHT SALES Save up to tiooo WTLLOW -Att-BfttS-PAm-_ . Trumpet, French Besson 454 8254 ""•' TARRYTOWN. 6535 N. LAMAR Thesailboat Shop" ' 2 BEDROOM, 2 BATH FURN. APT,, LARGE. PUNISHED one bedroom rlr? V w MONDAY-FRIDAY Riverside: -S210ALt BILLS^AIO - apartment on:33rd.-S150 plus gas> elec-: Large patios,-balconies/ and beautiful ;BeautllulPirslanRUs Call 476-t5M.' OLD CHARM ^ « courtyi i&fk. bouse andgarden apartment!,only' ItMlash FM car stereos. 47746M. * SATURDAY 9-6 ourtyard'.areasi at Chateau .Trlanoit: : 2*1 triclty. CallHM)44*y t&.na OuplMi 1250 square feet2 BR ALLBILLS • "2 bedroom»vl bath . Townb1 LARGE IBEDKOOM, 5 rrilhutej from mlnuftes from^wp^lh^i^arks, jioif. One 1 j-campus; on •shuttle;.,route.' *165^ ABP." „ ^ Alio 2 '45 VW $300 K»e^ trying 474-2M7: LEFONTE ,'.l#r9e.Pflo!s,Security,VolleybaHCourt • • bedroom* .. — ^Prefer facult,. orp«r.du.,. student^ &ABEADTIFUL sd3West 28th c > wresT M71\ \ „ Zs'J:' f..,V1901v1901 Willow cCreek " "-i Manager, 472-1359 " ' ; bedrooms; > Furm id: or.-unfurnished. •MOBILE 472-6480---• "<• -444-ooip • -472-4162 'nABP. Room, b»th,-CA/AC/ newpool,^ %Mi, _ Barry $i(llng*aterCo ~~y IF-.l blK. Campus. }11 East.ilst.. Austin :.li:.need;2 tickets for OU.'442-73M —asms# 444-6734 STEREO -Jttlei 2 bedroom/1,bath In imall, quiet '' •M,8-trackin/days >-rv,v. % jcAjw's. sVoxaoeurs. 47M»(r AM/FM, /days vCs vg "the l>fg freer «Pth!s select^T—''-= complex.-»170-plte"«l»ctrlclt)<, 327-0479 ^Lbdrm apl. »170 RIverHIIU 4«4t07W '.& .ARCHITECTURALLY deslgnM on goll . Under/dasy t-lrack „ $155 FM converter • My. ^ 22*5 acre tract.Pricedright.Moderate down-. . .PLUSH EFFICIENCY apartment Fdll after 5 „ -rourie, J bedroom, a'ppiiancei, carpet, s39.95 >vpaymant.v Balance: financed• 10. years/1 ' ;kllchefi;iloubirMd,^Jhag:carpet.-'44|5-.... . ^ ' David --Happy 3 year's! Love, Carey. awf*'dram. Couple its? Mfly Lovell 145­ r * .1. ,545-4267. ^ -% .1 Bedroom"W Ave B 451-7937. Installatltlnavailable, - TAKE OVER LEASE through Feb One ; -.V-.'-5123 U. intarreotonat > ,All Bills Pjifd ,.bedroom«ludto. Nodeposit, np^lllsiOcl.' IIyou ilk. to.cook Call 475-a249. LARGE CARPETED efficiency,'J700 H75/month._3451'AWlllowrun.444­ CLOSE DOWNTOWN and thultle but. ^—r v wn^i-nai^gn«xcDFfl IffetiCklnqham Square-^'ST?.0HER^I BLOCK L.W SCHOOL. '73 Audi QU sunroof, etc. 453.2237-, (^r"kTt2h%n perfect 3 fo 4 sh/denli Luxurious 3-2, •vVj^Sef'your own mdod wHhthlsspecial ertdii vintage: /II W, 32nd ^; sln/iiiuiilil 471 tiW, r • nivinenan « ry| CT^^.c^lon, offered at a tlny|ow«9, These systems ^Ati^BtE-NOW-^bedrowntHitlnr—1 -of Jfned Funktional Finery modlows; quiet, larw.shaded lot^Wdter LOST & FOUND •^v.-tpeatef^andMradLtapdplayer;World -1MAYNARD KREBSI Yo'mrffwfJj Flats $188 ABP' f 'pald.|l?5 471-7737. Damaged Camper-shell 47^42/, , .AHmV ijgWN ONE BfeoRooM, stoVe, 'iamou< matching, Gikrard turntable . -. reetfyl) --aJfe avallabie. ThU cystem'fs fully 'H?#1 ,rbedroom-Studio, 3% tariff Wt!B> LOST MALE CAT?-. While with, dark ~ Steadfast stereo, »150.451-1909., guaraWeed/only four U) to sailtor f99. Hrlpefjshort hair. Around Robbini.. —" , Bedroof , , Place, please call 472-1772^'-, • \ Enduro »4W. 451,m*»W,1^I^!^;;^5424Ve»etibSfe >C*SIT; or termi available.' UNITEO : •248? NUfi.CESj>...gfeSSBfe^SS Sal FURN. HOUSES i ..y.* «. , . weeKanas.v t ^ Sell rnoOMkfu, I|kjl UT-AR, 471*5819. SALlMARk^PfS. TyK' J'"!-? -wc. a® •*li11 I'll Ehrbllrhent ^"EXAN DORM. 1905,Nueces. DouUlei J2?0/$em«st6r, Slngie» s3SS/Seme»ter. Seminars X .9a."y mald. Jervico, control air **•' Rttrfgtfatori, hot plalai allowed Two In ROTCm .. --j blocks trom campus Co-Ed.: R«ldetvt» * MansgM-t;" 477. -7-17M. M5r»?S.jas MONTHLY. Maid rtrvlce, Stabilizes . The University Army ROTC Offered for Womeri£ "4784416.-a Clinics in self-defense. jn­ ' ''"jshapter has suffered a calling 471-372J from noon to 5) ( William) Hearn's workload: t 2 .ROOMS* , 3;. bedroom house-oft decrease In 'enrollment, acV p.m. Monday or Thursday. tsformational .seminars, "and .»llioroushbrodlorni, »4V;noniheach plus ,' .roommate i"iles:are just a few "Dtf. Hearn is ibe only SF5 ClUHcii, MJtt k cording to a comparison of" . The Women's Affairs Com­fulltime gynecologist and he v of the services being:provided 1&73-T4'and1969-70 figures:' -MiBLOCKS FROMCAMPUS 7UW.7JV4 mittee is continuing operation sees 125,-girls per week. A -'-Elllclencles, private bath. AC MO, bills In 1969, "there were "403 this fall by the Women's Af-. of„ its-Rape Crisis Center: The iwoman has to wait a week to £»Id Monday-Friday 8'30 » J;00, 47«­ cadets compared to 63 now, ..fairs Committee, of _ Student._ center ""offers psychological-•see a gyne<»lffgist. The com­ -'Government,..,-.... . but current, figures do not In-1 counseling to any rape victim ri$'3 mittee would.like tovolunteer •• Women's self-defense­ elude all transfe^ from other ? and: provides transportation to answer the health center W'' • clinics will be held, free of Schools •- and; assistance in police -and .telephone for a week and tally MICROWAVE OVENS,' dorm-slte • • charge 6 to 7:30 p.m. Oct. 15,.' % I ,»li "Although the University . hospital matters.. Its phone rerrloerAtorj.-color :TV'», • how many people ask.for ser» 17, 22 and 24 in the Women's washers/dryers, stereos; for rent.1-EZ Army ROTC enrollment. has • number is 476-7073. RentalsvMi Cast 1st. 472-«»s , • Gynf Courtyard. The clinics^ , vices that cannot be provided w decreased steadily iri thepast, Among .the:, committee's mainly gynecological ser­ STUDIO for rent lor ttacKlnopI&no or will be co-sponsored by the we have had a stable enroll- goals forfall arethe establish­ . • voice. 3 bl«ks from campus. 47#-J07». • vices;'-WhilehUrst said. • ^University Taekwon Do ; rtuSnt for the last" two y^iars," ment of a rape crisis centerat-The will committee con­ ;v*$i 35miri,.,2Wi;.*ii&<"CAMERAS FOR RENT^ Polaroids, Karate Club. , -> meltri. Capllol Camera Rental, 476- ' The committee also is plan­ -3M). " -. . . • a rftpe victim would not have athletics. "We've won a few . t [professor of military science;PiSiiSaiiSSS Study City spspt ... ning a„serjes.'of 5VomenIs.Iix;­ Dexter explained that many :^ t-o -go to.: Braekenrid'ge -battles. Coaches of. women's , TWO BEDRQQM moblle home in BuOa - wW formation Seminars (WISe) ' • Water; furnished, •,tlJS/month,'47«-76l9, schools.have reported .an;in-£.ftsg Some people will study anywhere;—-and James Kendrfck is no exception ashe.props HospkaU and-the acquisition -varsity, teams now have .... or Buda 395-2982. '-.which,will dealwith.women in' crease in enrollment in their himselfagainst a fireplug and a full Co-Op book sack-to study his calculus. of more gynecologists for the-smaller class loads during the-v c 1 politics, .women in religion, ROTC chaptersand attributed health center. : . « season their sports-areTUTORING this,.increase^to jjajeer abortion; -careers arid sex "All doctors at the health: played. We are not trying to ^ roles. motivation,and the fact that practice general, ITALIAN: TUTORING* all levels'pith- center can general -get pay for -women's, varsity . vlsltJngltallan student. Cell Derlo, 451-the antitnilitariSm feeQngs bf Grovps ScheduIe / : A confidential file of woipen gynecology, but we • want to "atHjetics * coaj:hes," ^ 1330 • :*Hee'dmg~Tcwmifiates-,has jusf. Vietnam have died down. . g'et-another 'to "ease" 'Dr:Dr.-Whitehurst said. ise -'i--®­" beenopened,'DeeWhitehurst, ' Philip Umphres, member, of the Women's Af­ sophomore from Amarillo, , CitysMeeting this Week fairs Committee, said. said he got into the-junior ? The Treehouse r A'.' The cor^mittee publishes a JOB WANTED ROTC in high,school because ' ''University President Ad of the Legislature. to-'preserve~ the traditional® presents women's -information hand-" ^^6schola^^pr^aro-it^.IntsTimJ^rene Rogers and . The meeting will be held at academic procedure of facul­ W4„•.„•? vj., TAKE a load off yourtelf. Le) mehelp,. book, a list of University ser-The Backwood. m vn*^rv'v vcji with your light moving. Cheap! Cah ' „• . ~ ^te-%P-"^rahW«rfin^n,,5^4 , p^/ iri TthelHumaihltifs .-.iy:^actl^ti#:jn the' vitrf^ Bgi—'"*'?-•34S-20aA. •. v.;-,.• T. ..yices-for women, and; also, Its really ah experience , p.-Austin, will address a . Research Center Auditorium,.•r-''cdhcflet^s>ofefee?iiilSiyerfit6fiTKr3!S -Volunteers -spjo-nsfrrs the Women's » ^.,8£MOOEUIi4pr general building,' Ex-.' course Youleanihowimpor-.meeting of the University 4 252 • Tfla, best bluegrass West of The conference also will winced, returnable. Do "oo^a wortc, i~#flnt;-. Referral Center;a center with -V* E^^WniatetvCall 4?4-T«3VzfcMWk. tent discipline and coopera--chapter of the Texas Associa-; p e:<^d®Sr# consider-faculty,problems at: Uint the Mississippi *>* Don. , -information on anything, per­ tiort arewithinf"a group.I-don't—.Hon ...of. .College. Teachers ' resolutions concerningfaculty the El Paso -and ..Permian .. taimng to Austin women-. think. I would have gotten an '(.TACT) Thursday." "" "salaries, retirement Come Watch^Our Basin, cam^use^ ol^tfie. . ROOM & BOARD -,.^'The.,referral .center's.file SOS NECHES experience like tj>is in any T.ACT officials .expect' program, collective bargain-~ _ University System. "is an excellent starting point l Bloek W. oTHed River -Bluegrass Grow -£BP)t£SN£sr*p>oNueces. Room»nd 0rganization," he said, Rogers to discuss University ing and procedure* for selec-A panel discussion will be s for. answering questions on TONIGHT THRU SAT^f Sah, Oct. 19th y/j|:-^w^«g»wiBiiWiff.dBiihii>'-, 7U^^PeW»g;ilBiyeji. mis-faculty matters, such asa pay . ting a; new University prest" held tat 7:30 p.m:-Friday on •SU^SJ/m^lhv.^ooms; ; singles only/ Austin people, places and ser­ s«5/month, air. condfH^lh'ij;*75^242 -conception" about -ITOTC:* 'scale-declining in relation tax denL . . "Higher Education in Texas 9 p.m. -1 a.m. MUU«a I4V11 ill 1CAd£ : SILVER vices," Whitehurst said.: Dnw"" ""—purpose::is';;to' traln other-leading . univ.er­ ; ROTC's state In pther^ faculty related"" in"l976." T'aneiists -wili -in business, WANTED reserve officers and -not ;• sities, ^ lagging-fringe benefits,* ttie Texas clviSe^Veddmgton and-Dr,.Pat^ ""The^-Wotnen-'S' ReferfaV --CITY $1 GoVer in-the-process of- -103Main _ ... mifitary men." and the. denial of campus mail • Conference of the Atrierican Kruppa, University assistant Center -is SADDLE 1 , BUY» SEfLWtrx) restrfngtennisrackets. moving to the new Union loca-".; Pflugerville, Tx. For fait servise. lesioni, and good -Austinite Steve Jackson, use to faculty organizations^ Association of University professor of history. TRAMPS prJce^W1T5Ti«25. tion and may be contacted by The Bluegrass Center, of freshman;said that the reason Weddington, who chairs .the Professors: will meet Friday GREAT COUNTRY MUSIC Texas•N6ED-TWO-^0Qd-Ucketsf0r-Jhei he wasin Atmy ROTC was"I House,appropriations subcom­and^ Saturday at the Chariot ^ Washington game; Call 4?^S^t/ v really enjoy it." -~ ~ mittee on state emp]oye com-Inn!" Don't Make A Move MARGARITA NITE Jam Session Each Sunday ; ­"ROOM^-WANTEO-by^)u)et.oW couple;, discuss Among Without Calling prefer UT area private entrant S90/mo T-Jackson plans a -military -pensation, will tne items the'eori^'" or less 473-M53. • subcommittee's work and. -fer.ence-will consider,are the :career. Presently, he is m NEED TO BUY .1 daleor general admfSt. possible actions related to the recent firing of President ARTMENT rS?4«ste .waiting to heaF-about a possU slon ticket to OU p*me..47t-$56?.v : University in the'next session' Stephen Spurr and the"need ble appointment' to, West WANT TO BUY ohe"Oklahoma Date Ticket or two General Admission Poiritv "Ev6n If I get"the ap­ ERS Tickets. Call 471*2186 anytime, pointment, I may just stdy preferably after 7 p.m. .-here in ROTC,"'-he said: IA ofFFBdem m SERVICE NEED TWO GENERAL-admission7 tickets to Oklahoma game. CaU M7-3014 . A military, career is! an after flve^o'clock. A Free Service MM:'; alternative to consider if a 24 .Hours a Day Kgraduting student cannot find 472-4162 .a job. I I WANTED French. }lve-ln governess (1^30) wanted TONITE: on Texas Ranch for four-.vivacious;-bl« Army ROTC, as well as Ungual .children under si*. Some • Navy ROTC and Air .Force " housewofKT ovyn ruum, ROXCr-2E^i0inin£_fQrceS vjith EVERY THURSDAY AND FRIDAY TRY A THE ROCKETS telephone, TV. Time off between 9 00 «.- xZ^TTZ— and 3:00 weekdaysTCouldattendcollege • Cafeer Ccnter at J^StCr s -one full day off. Beginning tlOOa we«k. jointly to sponsor a talk about g . 2405-A NUECES -476-1192 v&Ap'' i Wilt consider two girls or couple. Call military programs." ~ 2 Blocks West of Drag • '^ 806-372-55a.-pr-write Marshy Rotfte I'cimmw Box I00f Amarillo, TX 7910^-Ihcluding ,photo,resumeK«nd references; Ro/ Rogers UNF. HOUSES PARADIGM LECTURE NOTES RESTAURANT 504 W. 24th FOR RENT.: Three bedroom house, 472-7986 CA/CH; t?35. 1M battu:.Ed Bielke. 441* ACC 326 Tomaxini.: CH 302 -K Wyatt • HE 407A Hutchinson ,0.-,£•• 2807 after 5:30 rp.m, AveHftble nowAS.'^.T Aintin » v f ' ACC327 Wilson ,7% CH305K Morgan MIC 319 Bose. ---.M f Guest Speaker BEER SPECIAL ACC 329 " Dealkin,.-':: CS301 • Duggan " MKT 337 Anderson,a-CS® ; . , ,;Ry55ELL HEflrts. ADV31BJ Mindak DRM314 Wyman MKT 337 Fuller ANT302 Oliver" " 'E 321 Cranfiil, PSY 301 Parker X" ,V| •-V Music By "s ANT 302 Owens \ ECO 302 Knapp ;.v-. -PSY3QV Singh .Cr^4>§ $1 bob bndger-steve fromholz-lost gonzo band '• w TO PLACE A ANT304 -Davit* • -i ECO 302" Vrooman* 4?/ PSY308 .Horn ART 350 -Grleder HN 354 ' ^Mettlen-V---'C-y< PSY 342— Gummerman;r 1 a pitcher ^rusty wier band-roger bartlett • bobby shehom" CLASSIFIED® ARY 301 Davis GEO 304 Sprinkle >. PSY 353K Belknap • -«PK: -And Surprise Guests, BIO 30^ -Gilbert GEO 305 Wilson t:'' RTF32?K FrYman 3 p.m. till 9 p.m. AD BL323 \ Jenht GOV 3101, Gutierrez ' SOC 302 . Rolh CC 303 Armstrong GOV 3101^.-Oppenheimer SOC333K Tully 5UM. OCT.13 4-10Fn CC 352 • Armstrong < GOV 312L Galston-.-Si.; STA310 -Sandwiches • Foosball • Pang te Is CALL WLL CREEK WKHMRN CH 301, Boggs ,. -GOV312L Hirsch pf-, ZOO 325 Advance tickets $2 at Bead Shaman • Oat Willies CH301 " Oovis " ' GOV312L--Richardson' ZOO 330' Wheeler Open till 4 a.m. 471-5244 CH310. . Webber HE.322 ' Hall ZOO 351 Myers • Inner Sanctum • WEST MAU $2.50 at Door Sponsored Vy $10,50 per subscription Hours: 10-6 ' Corner 19th and Guadalupe 477-6829 : • . -. Ameritan Indians Now Texans J USE THIS CONVENIENT COUPON TO START YOUR CLASSIFIED AD IN THE DAIiY TiXAN MwI • — ' -' THE DAIEY TEXAN ViSS?! " ii&isi * -DAVID NEWMAN Jr UPEKIfHCt iHD IU3GWM: TUrtfo m$& • RAY CHARLES * MONGO SANTAMARiA CONTEMPORARY WOLF|| * *\ • ORNETTE COLEMAN .HERBIE HANCOci ^.ELECTRONIC BERLIOZ • JOHN COLTRANE • KING CURTIS '* CHORAL .;-MAHtERl CHICK COREA • RANDY WESTON • HANK CRAWFORD • BOBBY SHORT® • VIVALDI:t^S'' VECCHI '• OUKE ELLINGTON • JACK MCDUFF ROSSIN^ .i^oeTRt.'* JAHNCEK—i; KpE«» GIL"EVAU®SM • SONNY STITT EDDHHIARRIS—^1^-• DAVEBRUBECK {• MONTEVER BOLCOM • FREDDIE HUBBARD • HUBERT LAWS SCARLATTI item • MILT JACKSON $.ISAAC HAYES • KEITH JARRETT v* .ROBERTA FLACK „ !• •>•• or • *QBIN KENYATTA w • SERGIO MENDES • ROLAND KIRK • BILLY COBHAM AND MANY, MANY MORE •JUSEF LATEEF • CHARLES LLOYD <54.-a',/--• ft&mto lAiaaxc AND MANY, MANY MORE f"*,Vi • \! PER DISC ~ t v —