Sil s St?" W i$|l .&ip| 55'??1 #1 •gj%| W&* I :X amiii alBSI r^r ^ v ; "T->;<»#' \ 1s*i ^ '."'v.' J .'-" iv,-•!> * *- 1 »NICOSIA, (Cyprus (AP) — Turkish ^Cypriot leader'Rauf Denktash called off a key meeting, with Ifresidegt Glafcosi% , tClerides on Monday after more than 20/ ,:bodies were discovered in a mass grave ^'at the Turkish Cypriot village of : _ ^-^'Maratha. Survivors said the toll could >4?reach 73. ~~ ' ! In Istanbul, Premier Bulent -Ecevltel s>old a crowd of thousands that Turkey's role on Cyprus will not.be over before 4®"peace.Land security, justice and \^freedom are brought to Greeks1 and' i-g-*1 flCiSTurks alike., M4-"We shall understanding, com< j s t t. at mm WW* JK fSSSlsp; Sifr­ iriions #-• » S jYaryon Success of -By IRWIN SPEIZER, damage.­ ' '*** '*^-;?by Phil Huber AH they lefTbehind were pieces of personality. iOnallty. y .rj:—•• ''^r". By KEN McHAM Municipal Golf-Course (Muny), which, Texan Staff Writer the University leases to the -qity, Plans for the relocation of Red River ;; although .14 years remained before the :(Street will be examined in a;public hear® expiration-date of-the'lease contract:' irag" before City Council Thursday, amid COUNCILMAN Jeff Friedman charg­neighborhood dissatisfaction, legar ed the Red River relocation was -a , questionsandcharges byonecouncilman tradeoff". l?y,the city in return'for con­,of bribery and.pressure on.the council by»Av tinuation of:l*Suny?s lease, and said the -r^the University Board of Regents. . . -joint committee had never been m The relpcatlbffplan wasadopted by the -: iiuthopzed by the council to consider the ; fI^H?»ni!nrn -lasKirWofnhflr nh TfilOfrfltlOtl ' council laslDecember on recommenda-f tion of a joint council-regents com--. • ''There has been an extremely strong j^Jmittee. The committee of three council' amount of blackmailand pressure put on ^members and three regents was formed the city by the regents,'' Friedman said. A>~ito negotiate a dispute between the city . Regent Frank JO. Erwin Jr. told The •-Sand the Uhiversity caused when the Texan Monday if the relocation of Red • • Regents announced plans, to reclaim River "is not followed by the city, it will antf 120,,(#0 Turkish Cypriots. ?\ Cool at last T.U-fisctgv will atures should 'range from a high in the up­per 70s to a jow neat 60, Juesday nighty V--*y IRWCvj STOKER damage -• ; orob'fems Ar He admitted the • problems of > Among the. charges . logged * sss? .-.-•^JEwmii Staff: Writerjgpg ••?•• A I-:Lunds4e4t,--athletics ;accommodating 30,000 people (sometimes jnore than oneBy early Monday afteFnoon, business" manager,• reported •'iiriOre than;expected _ charge to.ah • individual): two ..,.Jsthe cleaning crews at, Memorial numerous burns arid stainson the-' -: "When you get people standing cases';of possession of cocaine:r« ^-Stadium had the rubbish of 80,000 turf,-and a three -to -four -inch in the sun three hours before a • 20, possession I'?/--marijuana:^spectators of Sunday'sfZZ Top's. hole in the shape of the state of -concert and four hours during a seven, driving while intoxicated.First Annual Barndance and. Texas carved out of the turfu,t concert, you're going TO have ™.„ uuiwu, you re to nave -.and 44 cases of public intoxica­ Barbeque swept andbagged, , It certainly doesn't look new trouble taking-care of them " tion. . • * . • •• while Student Government spon­anyijiore,'? Lundstedt said. • Fleming said-' N|# :;•: "We're still putting them in," sors were busy bagging the ca^t "I DOUBT VERY seriously if UNIVERSITY POLICE seem-Belvin reported at-3 p.m. Mon­:« Student Government's shareat HKX&i. -*»rrr"* r"*"v;•*? vuv. awacui. ucpai uiiciiu vvuuiu­ the athletic;department woulfesed fatrly pleased with the' out-day. i-^.the gate was 125,000, with $10,000 allow anything like this again," come. University police made seven %-»i*»7' ' wV**>•*Y»w. uiauc scvcl going foivgpenses aiid-the -l\6oinfL_for expenses aiid-the'-he addedr-"We-are-utteriy disap^ _We.werejamazed, Umverst^of the arrests, mostly, for posses­ " remaining $151000 befog" deaf • profif, "Frank • Fleming, .student: body.president, said, " , • Although the stadium was'HT cleaned:of the surface traceroT: •• Sunday's confusion, the surroun­ding area did not fare: as well. • .Beer bottles still lined the Art .Building walls, and trash fanned, out in all directions" from the stadiunv£*j.V--, 'X­ ' THEW\! ,/ASTROTURF SUFFERED a few scarj, but seemed to stand up under* the .strain fairly Well. A mattress set ablaze on fee 50-yard line Satur­day night left no apparent IS 'MEXICO CITY (UPI) -Hurricane Carmen lashed,th&coast and swirled into • the heartland of the ancient Mayan Em­pire Monday, gradually losing its killer .-force as it passed the halfway-mark across the Yucatan Peninsula of Mexico. ' .With 100-mile-an-hour winds at its " center, the storm blustered west­ . northwest at10 miles an hour, the Mex­: ican weather bureau said. It had crossed the line betweeft Quintana Rod Territory and the state of Campeche. THE "STORM -was-expeeted-to-reach^; the Gulf of.Mexico: toast early Tuesday, ^, the -weather bureau said. But its intensi-ty was expected to drop sharply before reaching the populous coastal region of Campeche, ampecne. pointed." -. " . % .. . . —— 6L Police Capt. Harry Eastman-^sion of marijuana and public in-Damages to the stadium are said. "It went much smoother ioxication / covered by a $1 million insurance -than we thought. We experienced *~ ^tSTpfltee^o-reported 15 policy taken out by -Concerts "*West pnor~ttrlfte--cGrreer4r—T-he­policy was taken o\it in the name . of the'University.. . . Vet, promoters and officials • generally, agreed that the crowd • was well-behaVei-in spite of,. numerous organizational ;. problems. Nobody, it ^eems, ex­pected 80,000 fans. FLEMING TERMED the con­cert a "huge success, the largest one-day musical event in Texas history." mi safe; Pi IPS Field, and a few hundred earlybirds camped in comfort. AUSTIN POLICE reported'40 arrests during .-the two-night period, but that "figure included all cityarrests. However,Special Servites Sgt. J.Belvin noted that five or six arrests each night would have been normal. Student Newspi^er.'af-The-Umvsrsity-of-Texas, at Au&tjn...^: * Vol. 74, No. 46 Ten CentsJ .Austin/ TexasrTuesday, September 3, 1974 Thirty-Two Pages 471-4591—5 Carmen Strikes Mexican Coast Force Expected To Decrease Before Crossing into Gulf toward the Gujf of Mexico on the other' sld£. It appeared headed • for -the Campeche, state coastal cities of Cham­poton, with 20,000 inhabitants, and Carmen with 45,000, authorities said. • ... The storm Veered east of Belize City; in the former British Honduras nestled on-the Caribbean-coast of Central America, then turned inland at Chetumal Bay, and the town of .Chetumal in Mex­ico. ; -T •" >• j AUTHORITIES--.in-Belize said they ' fparprf -the northern part of that British colony, just south of Chetumal, was bad­: ly damaged when the hurricane swooped inland from the Caribbean, .but medical and rescue teams "were g'r.ourtded because of bad weather.- - The hurricane battered the east coasl^v The center of the hurricane passed 50 id -the'nfln n^nlaaMt milpt: nnrth nFPhflhim-ii nrn>,:n. .and then moved across the peninsulas!# miles north of Chetumal, capital of Quin­ open up other matters of the setOement.gf ,of -San Jacinto was released to the for reconsideration — such as. Muny/.' University by the City of Austin in the The relocation, which would skirt RedMS early195Ps. River Street around the eastern edge.of*.?^:.' "Friedman argues, however, that cons­tjle.University campus between Eastii^ tant through traffic and city 19th^nd 32ndStreets', has been criticized^' maintenanceof the street since that time by neighborhood residents^^ a sfe-have nullified the University'sownership "unnecessary'!, and ''extremely desttTicr^fS of the street. "I think-San.Jacinto"pas 'live to the neighborhood." The residentsfjP-become. part of the public use again -ind plan to present alternate routes to thes|^ needs another 'vote by the council;" ^council: Friedman saii CITY AND University spokesmen; "I think tbere'could be, a-legitimate .have deemed therelocationnece^sary to-' lawsuit against the University!s closure • relieve traffic ilow on GuadalupeStreet of the street if;there is no revote-by the when the. University closes San Jacinto council," Friedman said. .,/ Boulevard to through traffic between' ERWIN HAS said San Jacinto should East 19th and 26th:Streets. That section s;IS-be closed to non-University traffic -»m: d^tiHead Quits Talks 21fUriewthMl promising and Just on.the Cyrpus ques-* Turkish troops dugout the bodies from tion, butshall not give concessions/ a heap of ear.th and rusty tin cans,:and which wiHserve no other purpose than to survivors in the-abandoned village said ^revive the;past cruelties,and lack of. the -victims were Turkish Cypriots order on the island."' murdered 19 days ago by gunmen from Hie Turks invaded Cyprus July 20five -nearby Greek villages, " ' days after a Greek National Guard coup !»;; "I have counted;21 skulls so far," said "overthrew "President~Makarios-with-a~—^hief-ImpeetbTrtars Uakansson, a -plan to join.the island to Greece. They» Swedish.U.N. policeman who was at the now control about 40 percent of Cyprus.: " . graveside;Sunday:when the bodies were' -THE -GRISLY discovery of the.cor-,s-;discovered-and again on. Monday.^ J­pses, including women and -children,"W|> At least another half -dozen corpses ; dimmed the future of peace talks oalihe ®??could be seen sticking grotesquely from island, which has 520,000 Greek Cypriots the earth. At least two were women , .. holding babies in their arms, i^fe Turkishv Wldiers with handkerchiefs! covering their noses against the stench -vi.dtig past thepsty tin«ans^)f the garbage '^plt and unearthed corpseafter coiT)se. A; l^jMWozerriffiW^^r^;th^oclty^^ TWO PEASANT women hugged each no majpr proBlems." . cars impounded for-illegal park­ -«• I--taiainifjuuiiueu lur-antgai parK­Peopte^^airivingibe-nighjL-ine. whereas three to four is con-before the concert and streamed sidered normal. • " : " to. the Drag., • • -­ HEAT. PROSTRATION was University police opened Clark -the affliction of the day.with ap­ order to provide: safer and more con­ vonient pedestrian passage across San Jacinto for students." ' :'.v Ki a' Friday press conference, Larry- Brownstein .of North University. Neighborhood Association questioned why pedestrian bridges could not be built across San:Jacinto instead of closing the street Erwln'sa'id the decision to close San' Jacinto was made"because of the desire . to havean uninterrupted campus and not have it bisected . by' public streets." Seven proposals iincluding pedestrian : bridges and elevated streets were con­ sidered, Erwin said., Brpwristem s chiet concern is for the neighborhod cor|sisting mainly of older, apartment -buildings along Red River between East26th and 32nd Streets..Four apartment complexescould bedestroyed by a proposed S-cun-e beginning at 32nd Street, shifting Red River i'eastward to link with SWisher Street at 26th Street, Red 'River would then follow Swisher south to Manor-ftoad, then curve Westward to link with existmgRed River at 19th Street. -BROWNSTEIN said the project is"ex­pensive and unnecessary'—andextreme­ly destructive. It's:like dropping a bomb £ftS|other and cried in anguish. U.N. officers^ right in the midst of the neighborhood," he said.' "It will, in effect, destroy the •—neighborhoody-The right •I behind St David's Hospital, causing a'-1; gheap. ^great-deal -of—noise and pollutants," \ ' Hassan Nihat Mustafa, the 65-year-old , Brownstein said. "The road" will go j' f ftimsm or religious leader of Marathai :; ^throifgh four old and pppular,.apartment^l ".There were 90souls inthe village. -complexes, and the ones it's not going-?&J1 •J^j.'Six of us arealive. TheGreeks tookaway .. through will be made uncomfortable to U men as prisohera qnd we do not kiibwp liveJn.^i . , ... .. Vg'£Jwhat happend to them. All the rest may •J '.'^;be in the^rave.' . i^-Alt considerations have been carefulfy$ii«? 'ijf , ' "I HID With my wife and my son and J made over along periodof time, and nowf»l proximately 30 ambulance cases. Brackenridge Hospital recorded all cases dismissed::without need .'of hospitalization. The wSter situation, became particularly acute when a water line was ruptured, according-to a University policem&n. A oar parked in a,construction area ap­ r'f k. parenUy, raptured the-water line." The car was towed away and the-• water turned on agafti. • Several cases of vandalism • were reported, mostly by conces­sion' staftd Operators. Steve • SmiUi. business managferfor c6n--t cessions, reported $1,000 in losses­irom 'theft-, including 200 bags of ice, two cases of cup's and 40 soft • drink', tanks. BOOTHS WERE CLOSED temporarily and then reopened . under University police ^upervi--­ • sion. . -One thing flowed better than expected: -theijrnoney. Student-Government reported 50,000 atf-~7 ~vance-tickets—sold and 23,000­" tickets,sold at the gate, bringing: •; total.sales to $680",000. By Monday afternoon, most of the promoters had cleared out of: •f% town, but Terry BaSsett of Concerts West remained.When a -rlF member of his: entourage was; ' asked where the money would go;< he asked,-"What money?" , "The $650;000." % "Chickerifeed,'.''. he answered. mTEXAN tana R6o .Territory,, causing only minor Hurricane HatU'e that destroyed over 75 damage an4 injuries in the city. • p.ercent of the city of Belize in 1961 and' 5 The. National Hurricane Center in ­not quite as strong as Hurricane Janet 4 Miami said that at 9 p.m. the center of •(U)at near dest'royed Chetumal in 1955,"| Carmen was located 75.miles southeast--, he said. of the Mexican city of Campeche, near The highest hill in the zone is only 330-­ 19.0 north latitude and 89.9 westl&jfeet above-sea leVel, indicating there longitude. It was moving west-northwestf'S'/would be litUe tostop the storm describ­at less than 10 miles an hourand was ex-'ed by the U.S. Weather Service as pected to emergeinto the Gulf of Mexico"""' "small but dangerous." Tuesday morning.; HIGI1EST WINDS -were probably still above hurricane' force in a few soualis "but were expsctefl-to-aecrease well-below hurricane force before the storm • crosses into, the Gulf.1 Dr. Neil Frank,' director of the-. hurricane,centeri ranked Carmen as a on the 1-Uh5 hurricane severity scale. •«» «... -m_ ^ It was comparable. in strength to-' ;'•£> THE HURRICANE threatened cause heavy damage to farmers' in the-height of the ripe-planting season; Ricei; -fishing-and-iniirigm an-nrpa's main industries.. In Campeche the Army said it was mobilizing "Plan D-M-3". prepared, 'in advance for-hurricane' emergencies Mbbile communications units' first aid groups imbuCcTs and s>oupa, diuouidncei anu supplies were set up in the five cities, a!°ng with coordjnatidt^ between the I Men^n&Kiii^.cialul'' states.; and-local; authorities. In Belize CitJ% authorities rushed helpf • . .. #~.&tp a. l,000-sguare-mile area in the FRIEDMAN argued that closing-San^y northern-part: of the self-governing Jacinto -would overburden Guadalupe,"^"British colony, whtfe it was feared the forcing, construction of supplementary,^ ,;:storm had caused great losses. Com-traffic systems. The University Areai^f:^----­ .munications: with, the "ar,ea Street Plan would extend 26th Street" , west through Bank's Grill,curving south'-® to merge withWest 24th and 25thStreets, Which would be widened toform a major one-way couple bridging.North Lamar. ; Boulevard and Pease Park and-merging-. with"Wijidsor Road west of the park: Rio Grande and NuecesStreets wouldalso beferf • widened to form a major; north-south|Sj| couple from West 29th Street to Westiss* ^First Street! I " nto. 0 Asked for comment on the effect of " closing San Jacinto on-the University 1 ­Area Street Plan, Erwin said, "I don'ti­ : see any relation between the two-plaifssfics; They're both plans by the City of AusUii'^ and other than that there's nbs^ •> similarity." "It's all interrelated, Friedman said. "I don't care what anybody says. When the city says the expressway programs are being slowed down, they are just be£;« mg called other things, like boulevards^©? and arterials " >. „ are ; precarious in-normal circumstances.-; : THE COROZAL district, on the Belize-: side, of the Bay of Chetumal, appeared •' the hardest hit. A government* "reconnaissance task iorce" set out from Belize City Monday • to the northern area. .The force iriqluded • Units of the national guard; public works [department, highway crews and damage" • assessment experts. Medical teams hoped to fly to the area, but no planes could land at Corozal town airstrip as of 10 a.m. because of con­tinuing high winds, Belize authorities ­sai Customs launches in Belize-City were . unable' to depart Monday morning : because of rough seas and-strong currents. Meanwhile in the North Atlantic, the .season's first hurricane, Becky, moved further out to sea, \veakened and lostrits status as a hurricane. inning : Its that time of yeariagain! Approximately 13,000 lost souls are ex­pected to converge upon Bellmont Hall Tuesday to adjust their schedules during the official adds and drops period. For some students, this will be their"fii;§t time through adds and drops. To make it easier; the registrar's office has added 30 '.'checkers""to audit -student fee receipt-forms and note'add and/or drop transactions.: After adjusting-schedules. wiUi respective departmen'ts, students will complete pards and submitiee receipts-U* the^checkers,"jwho wiU record changes ­on fee receipts. '• a ; * Billing-for adds and drops will . take place 6n approximately Oct. 1. The following schedule for Tuesday adds and drops islisted by students' last names:4 Nam* ' \\ sot r.^... A*Alfc 8:00 QM.1 . i:Q0 p.m. ¥• •30 w J 30 ......Tlif-Vonc' 9i00 J 00.. So-Tai; 9 30> .. ;..(k..butk-Dau 3 30 .Kow>Sn JChOOw \ , 3^00 ^..^OfRov ' IDtSO . i... A^Bol 3 30,.. . < v « .v * AJ-Ar* 4 00 . ....... Kin-Mar -55^" Students may-also add and drop courses Wednesday and Thursday in departmental offices. -^ Ifa student has not'yet.ne^istered for clashes,"he>must go through late registration. Students registering late"will be require^pay a special $5 gi^daugh'ter in the cellar. We covered. chdrge.M^burseives withsacks and stayed there at thelast minute thinking nobody'scon-23'5 Students may also have required University identification cards made' •TtT»«g»r is the last day foefiyedays. ' -' 'S3 sidered any alternatives " . ~tv][ "I this week"in Gregory Gym: A validated fee receipt and a photo identifica­ WW n4T: on ca U»e Greeks'say "don't be In hisjnitlal cnUcism of the council4-S afmld. we wlilrteke^ou to the Greek r^n^' agreement last npotmtar .." tion will^necessary f0r the ID photograph to be taken. Students should r to register^o vpte in Travis County at feeilmont -w-school ana bring you home again.'Some Friedman ,«har^fTp^I6sinr^^ .pick up their lDs during the following times: ' Ha I It Gregory Gymof West Mali bqoths. To~ 3®Jt)f bur cBlldren were,laughing. Ther /"Jacinto would malfe necessary the con-fl 1 f m tftgfT) " UfV,W,KY,2 ' thought they were going for ? walk.1' / §tructioji of the University Area Street## m change precincts, a current vater^egistration AA "The.Cypirus r$dio-says the,1»rksare«^£lanv=IUmporarjly-.Bhelved -by the City^ ii-rpf|iiirrH~ • For moqajjiformation, students jmayfcalL 471-4838, fr -'•i mm fih Holi obby Blamed for Blocking Inquiry By DAVID HENDRICKS gssas'Vpriwhs,"/ , Texan Staff. Writer . .. iM DURING THE WEEKEND House Joint Legtelative,Comrgittee onPrisonn|?^!ministration Committee, meeting,--John : Reform bad only half of its requested •J'^Aibadi, prison reform committeestaff direc­operating budget approved by both the House S&tor, appeared on behalf of the prison reform and Senate Administration Committees in ^committee rather than Leland, the com-meetings during the last week. M-mittee's top ranking House member. . ^"WEjDNESDAY, the Senate AdAlbach said he tried to expiain-the-scope^of— MM ministration Committee approved $9,752 and .^vhis staff'.s work in investigating the Texas days later, 'he House Committee ap-. "Department of Corrections and the fadpaattKl the same.atPount, drawing sharp . . Huntsville shootout." but they wanted to talk criticism from :the cominittee-s ' co­ &>*! to Leland,,rFfe'said. chairperson, Rep. Mickey Leland of Houston; Leland blamed Lt. Gov. William Hobby of THdEHOij^ MSbi the .Senate committee for the Senate cut* :j':ts appropriated money from the prison backs. He'cited past actions of Hobby. who • reform-committee until. Leland . appears : has'been asking thecommittee and itsstaff to "before the panel. tone,down its'investigation of the Huntsville Also critical of the budget cutbacks was .prison brealcattempt Aug. 3. X-'.-rBill Kimble, a memberof Citizens for Public m'r "Lt. Gov. Hobby has for the past several s Scrutiny of Huntsville. In a letter to HobBy, weeks.been instrumental in delaying, harass-'^Kimble threatened to file a complaint of ing and interfering with the efforts of the' Sgffipbstruction of justice agaifist Hobby if full • .-Ms Joint-Committee on Prison Reform to com­plete:the-task mandated by the 63rd Legislature," Leland said. _ "RUMORS havepersisted recently (iatLt ...Gov. Hobby is carrying out some kind of per­sonal vendetta against the joint committee, its members, staff and work effort" he con­.tinued. "For these rumors to be followed so US? clftsely by. the cutting of.the funds necessary jveh-v: ~v — "'-v'y «•»>««<. • forour committee to completeour work upon the insistence of Bill Hobby certainly' lends ^.credenfce. to_the rumors/' , ailed-sueh action "criminaTTtsral -^responsibility," adding that''Hobby is try ing to destroy the efforts of the joint' com­ I W'-« mittee to make needed improvements m«Tex­te** |Sx lit IfrtOS-?*'. J#* p III m -WM- .—~ — j**­ It* ^jfiEuncis aire not restored; to fte?;prisdn,iifofhi e-^wmmittee byrioon'Wednesday. KIMBLE SAID he would file thecomplaint •^' .^ith-the U.§. Department of Justice, which : •" vvalso isconducting an investigation of TDC in > fxmjunction with the prison refonn com-: - mittee. -j;..,:., "These cuts are in retaliation against a Vi?staff which has acted in the most restrained manner imaginable. The staff has even 'Sat J.on' evidence of federal crimes, refusing to report iho 'rtformatinn-faj the t)mtedJStat^s ijKi:,:;Justice Department, forfearrof violating the • t^vrishes of the joint tommittee," .Kimble-' --''-wrote , '' ^v?53| Kt/ 'JM%imm t Tir^WU W m% |S: »%• • • s-:^B(0oR«i8SM©«8wsHSHkr.v-i•••• •5?i£s>aa£'vfeKS. 1 W&isSL K |;v.* — - .* i^ii :y. I r '3;£7-»9ir:<-. ;.T • »V».1 II|ICf ' VI -purple, 4.25. Cap-sleeve leotard' ;S biack only, 6.00. Dance girdle, to trim you iC-whftte-you dance,-btack on-: i ly, 3 55 r '-~:r &'C-ksk*' mum. The Labor.Day holiday traft fie death toircontinued to:iii? ':creaseMbnday;esce^ngth^ ^Department of PublicSafety's prediction of 34, as'motorists .^headed home f^m the-tiiiree­-•day holiday. mm Late Monday, ,th? DPS 5 reported,41: persons had died . on state streets and highways |jv since the countrbegan at" ft- p.m. Friday and .eliding mid­night-Monday.., , L ^ Col. Wilson E. Speir, DPS director, 'said, VI am yeiy •concerned over the number of : trafjFlc deaths which have oc­curred in'Texas during this Lstfior Day week'end ; and would urgeall motoristsas we move.through this final day'of the .'.period..to be .extremely cautious.". w-a Speir attributed the. rising ;desith toll to reckless driving,' .speeding anddrunken driving. "There has been an, alar­ t » "VvV'^v">5-' -*'"\i-; niing,disregard for the55 mph ^fcp&oMloy-tfaHic /-„ v * _ - * • -' ^ speeds limit," Speir said. Holiday Road 'Patrol v^ucIm .traveling interstate \ ' I -I ~ r v / Nr highways hi the TVler; Waco, Austin, Buffalo, Dallas, Houston, .Corpjis. Christi, EH - Paso and San Antonio areas -Texan Staff Photo by Andy Swvermcm .carried first £id equipment, ;-.'»ii:..i-gasdiiie.-sa»e^ containers'*ani W -"W i•­ •f5 • .. ;rWt .h 'ffi1 Informal Class AM mm ni --§mm sS?| Sept. 3-11 «3. 8:30 a.m. -4:00 p.m. (Weekdays) (Registration Phone No^ ^71-4721) w-,-* SveThC <*® a? • Natural Foods WEEKLY SPECIALS Limits -Specials Good Through September 8 ^" ' We Gladly Accept USDA Food Stamps '•ftoptv• fggf';­ &i| In Bulk Only Raw Texas Honey^ Bring Your Own Jar Reg. 79c lb. w, Oiaiigcs^ .No:,CoIor Added top.,^quality educational programs?': m "A new reallocation fo*-. t m mula should distribute stat(iB'^ i! assistance on: the irelative^'l^i^ economic ;bases "from whidiV* ® school districts rnust draw^H their Jundlng. ^with these W school districts with; low^ econflmic..base«:'gettinfe| proportionately^inore .state? money: for each student thanf those districts; which' 'have*; adequate local • tax bases,". Hubbard said.• "We ; need a-S different formula that would |j make • school / funds more ' equitable." • support legislation, that would--.THE STATE has an oppor-° give poor.School districts half tiinity"to open the door to a the expected revenue surplus. "TfOality education for all The present .formula for children-iir-Tejeas^HiiSbard istate aid to school districts said. "guarantees^ that rich, school The present school finan­tlistricts get richer, and the : cingsystem has created a gulf poor districts go bagging to between .the educational op­ the federal government," portunities afforded,the rich Hubbard said Monday.' * * and those offered the popr, he ; SOME school -districts added, spend ilnder-$400 per.pupil per "We can use half of the sur-'.; year while other, districts plus just to catch up with theu • spend over $1,701); Hooker present inequities:" The Governor's Office-of Blackout Hits -.,?• Ejaucationgl Heseaiuii . aud-Plartning will submit"a plan to Rivefstde Area ® the Legislature m January > Riverside area residents that would restructure the were without electrical power • state aid procedure^ schools-; far-about an hour-Monday-^ anH *:imnHfu "Hib mnd mm. andjsimplify "the most com­nig^t as~ a COld front'p.-,i--edJ plex schooradfohnulainthe Through the cityr-pne-"nation," Hooker said. J ' telephone caller told The^x­ Hubbard's'leiter to 'Briscoe • an that electricity in her-­said,-"We strongly encourage apartment had gone out at your support for new public' about 8:55 p.m. school financing legislation Others said their electrical which pumps at least half of powe'r had gone out asearly as this surplus money,: into:; 8:20 p.m. and^was restored at-; schools and school systems , about 9 p.m. *H-.— City electrical crews work-• «3 . ed rapidly to restore power to . INEXPENSIVE the -electrically powerlessLUXURY APARTMENt area by approximately lOp.mv ­Larye-and comfortablebne betfroom in some sections. . ­ apt.;, f r.om 5149, -fiirnUhed. Convenient locatlon on shbttle bus, Areas affected by the within Wktng distance-of campus. ' blackout-included the 1800 to. 6e)ideilT tennis tourts» Intramural fields. . Two,pools, bsrbeque. pfts, 2100 block of ftivergide Drive,« laundry, room-.:and. courteous proresstoftal manaper^ent. -. . the 120Q to 1600 block of Tinnin ;;Ford Road and the 1768 to 2200": ASPENWOOD block of Burton Drive." ^~SPAT?TMBNTS • A Spokesman for_the eiec-., -' 4539 Guadalupe ... tric'company said theipower'l ' 452-4447 blackout was caused by light-i ning.' ' Stiidtman's Photo Service -­ 222 W: 19th . & 5324 Cameron Rd. Nikkormat PTN chrome ' $20053 with 50 mmf/2 lens ,V.;:.*' Bell/HoweH FD 35 f/l.pK. : compare toCanon TLB with case .. .. M 79l Spotmatic F55 mmf/1.8 ..«iv,'!'. Mamiya/Sekor DXS 1000 50 mmf/1.8 . A .iV. S17995 LIMITED SUPPLY! -M Westtlock-Bold II Reg. $4.19 masts Sgle .Prite J2.99 ^University Co-Op Apt. Shop . Second Floor BankAmericard crnd MaslerCharge Welcome.One hour ffee parkina -wilh-nuuhase oh$2^0Hf^fior^" ISburrnoneyback if th^s# booksdrafthelpyou! 'Xjliffs~Cgur^e.OutlineSeries jjjjp* Great for helping you keep up, HiSOutllnoB summarising nllmajor .flelds.containmgJBattlplequestions, bibliographies, appendixes and> ?:•comprehensive indbxes.­ GliffsKeynqterR^Uws .Unique programmed ibripat letsyft'u _ t-test yourself on.wiiat ybakn6wrrr gives yputhohelpybiinoedin "we&k" arcas'before it's too late. Bett«rrt !ffc;than a:tutor, at a fraction of.the cost­ Guara'nteed:You muBt be aatisiied that theCliffs S -Course Outline and/or Cliffs Keynote Review you • urchasehere has helped you'^n thecourse it,covers> not, return it with your receipt for.complete cash , refund within 50 days of purchaser , eforallmajor W&MM&WSm r-,,'2 , '" • -~~™'~.~ -w -" Signs *s& . ^f€ik#S^v ^,_ Pension Billspjs i? .aftO*.'*? mmam "WASHINGTON, j(UPI)— Presidents FORD FLEW'by helicopter* to1 the" 1 . Ford: chose . the sun-drenched Rose Wljifi House ia.wn" from Camp David,Garden Monday for a ceremony to sign • Md.» for the ceremony, andlatprreturn­landmark pension reform legislation he ed to the' presidential rdtreat where.;he », ;,|>said would "«itfrk a brighter future for and his'family spent the long Labor Day r^galmost .alI4he men. and.j_women of-our weekend. They were expected back,in; ' labor force." •*•,' ^0 Washington late Monday, Surrounded by manjrSf'the country*!® ; Labor Day'in Washington Was_wahn;v • .. tojH government,—labor .^md~ business .1 bright iiid breezy,' and the historic foW leaders in the White House Rose Gardenf -roakgard^waSTatJLt^ late-' ' t Ford used 45 pens to sign the new law season flowers in full jjloom. /'• j ' --^setting government standards for The holiday ceremony drew an elite }'* .^private pension plans pnd guaranteeing audience' of top leaders, including three H-'!?ninimuin 'retirement benefits to all Cabinet members, ' four congressional _; , •" ' workers covered by them, leaders, labor officials,'businessmen and •' more than -a-score' of Congressmen arid v , "It is certainly appropriate that this> womeh who .had-served the-com-: on law be signed on Labor Day," the Presi­mittees which had been workii/g-on pen­ i \\i(,dent said/"This act marks a-brighter sion legislation' for many months. Wt'l'li j Ssliij*future for almost all-tbe.men.and wromeh ."Thiffis really a historic Labor Day,"­ "of our labor force.'* i .Fordsaidas hestepped up to the podium ­near the srt5ainablepi«ierehe«iened-th :•••.: THERE WAS a festive atmosphere For , . the signing ceremony in near-perfect i. weather in the historic formal garden. Before the signing ceremony, Ford Ford-distributed the souvenir pens to met with United :Mirie Workers Presi­& members of Congress and labor leaders, dent Arnold. Miller in the Oval Office; • ;-%ji>as while-jacketed waiters.began serving' Miller was the fifth top orgatuied labor l&airefreshlnents. with whom Ford has consulted since " ' •' "v.' ••; i ** becoming President'four weeks ago. *. hi. a statement read during the AFL-CIO President George Meany,ceremony, the President called the act who attended the ceremony, said later -"a.;mo(lel:of. what can be done by the ft the hew la,w is "a great step forward. ffovjarnmpnt-tn impinge-: the lives of _ -the f . sector -•, "i 'rafwlfl .U'& bmi jlong time In uoni­ _Americans' within private -without nar7iiihg"the~dyriaTriics ofi -our-ipg,'/^e^nLjold_.reporters after the fpon ontarnrico etrrl-nm t'~ *"* it;--j. free enterprise system ^pei^TiontiCJ^Sys^.a "matter ofSimple r jusiicjW^rot^'the people.-We. think President.Ford prepares to sign pension reform bill ot WhiteTflouse MonSaf^lb^ j^~The"Pension Reform Act does not re-* this is a great step forward.". • .r^-" "quire em'p'loyers to have pension^lans^ * bjit:It-sets strict-standards and--*aen^j:loyd~Bentsen, D-Tex-'said-the Reform Efforts regulations to protect the beneficiaries new law-would prevent"abuses ~wlficin~n" j of plans which do exist.—-------J the past have meant thfit thousands of Americans weree denied , pension A worker employedLfor at least five benefits they had earned and expected toyears by a company which has a pension Cites Violence receive. program is now guaranteed, minimum ' retirement benefits when he fulfills the "This law will give.peace of mind-to WASHINGTON (AP) — The nation's hostages. •ke said. the in r-,4.';age PIus length of service requirements, millions.of Americans," he said. "They prfsons may have bought themselves a . . Release,from prison was'never a fac-' at the--turn, .ol century To counter ttye risk of revolt by armed Leavenwor-th. Kan.. Atlanta, Ga .. and J even if he is fired, quits voluntarily, or if-will know that when they reach retire--new; brand of violence with their efforts-tor in such mass uprisings as the Attica ,inmates, prison officrals; must "take all . MacNeil:Island, Wash. Leavenworth and|;}foj^;.the company goes out of business in the ' ment; their money will be there waiting to remedy two lingering problems; says, revolt, in. which demands weremade-for? I Jp'fmeantinie.. ,, for. for .them." the government's chief jailer. r the precautions possible to prevent the Atlanta each has about^ 2,100'inmates, improvements fn"the' institution itself.? ' Smuggling ot weapons;" he urged MacNeil Island about 1,000. ' -­Norman Carlson, director of the Prison conditions • were involved only • .. Federal maximum security prisons • •'You've got these.guys stacked up in j'.HIFederal Bureau of Prisons, said in an in-peripherally, if at ail, in negotiatidns screen, visitors and inspect their .. five-tier-celiblocks with eight or nine terview that success in easing visiting ' after, the recent revolts. Huntsville Inquiry restrictions and fn sealingoff traditional packages, inmates: are stripped and: guys tn a cell — na pnvacy. no provision Carlson said he-believes "violence in ' searched after all visits. for human.dignity"really, no real oppor­'escape routes may have encouraged a the, country is definitely on the in-The', federal-penitentiary in Marion. tunities in.. terms of education andseries of violent escape attempts en­crease, filling prisons with a higher''-'^ ni., is .experimenting with a magnetic vocational training " ' * -„ ' dangering, the lives of hostages. proportionDronorhnn :nf violence-pronev nlonpAinmna inmntAK s a weapons detector simUar to ' those used of inmates. ... v But, he said, prison officials should not . ',-Carlson said, the prison system's long- Planned for October This trend, he said, creates an environ­to screen passengsfeiii airports, he said. allow-the risk" to impede these. ment conducive to range Construction program was de^ign­ . incut., to violent ^escape The device probably will be installed at October-will; be theprobable start of •-. The grand jury hasseen three different*? ?develop^nt^^e.„uT.ged_jiew__and.._ ,_attempts. .vw.KW. . an 1 ed to add epough new institutions; -each: all major federal institutions, Carlson court into 'stronger treasures to prevent weapon s more than. 500 the public inquiry the videotapes of the shootout"provided by Closed-circuit television monlturs and^w^said accommodating noiiy iiiuxc iiian" oUtr Huntsville jjrisqn 'escape attempt last from being smuggled into-institutions. the.Texas'Department of Corrections. sophisticated sound detection-systems in ' -matjsr to-e^^-the-Ahreo-penitenlxariesiai . Aug. 3, Gpv. Dolph Briscoe and Atty, ' ;.-is In three recent revolts, a handful of But its use will beJiiaiJed to visitors. by 1984 • -' ' many cases have made it futile for ;«1 Geh. John Hill announced last week. TheTexas Department of Public Safe^fe,farmed inmates at'^a iederaIJcourtlMu9e prisoners to saw through the bars or Carlson said he doesn't consider ft prac­•Mt ;y; Upon finish of the Walker County' ty investigation — first ^lled for by. cellblock in the District of Columbia $ tical for searching inmates * But the-~ntHTibeT-:"of-''iflfnates :is in­ scale the walls to freedom, he Said. '-. V r grand jury deliberations of the shootout •Briscoe; a;. few days; following the, "..state prison To Huntsville, TexM and a : : creasing at the rate of 5 percent a year. AH federal prisons and many state and Carlson-said that the federal prison which killed two inmates and two shootout -r will conUnue as planfied, Hill . • county jail in Amarillo, Tex , demanded "We're no better off-than we were two local, institutionsnow permit inmates to system's "greatest problem is haying to ­ hostages, the inquiry will begin, Hill .said. , ., ? . . • their freedom as the for see visitors in living-room surro years ago. We're'holding "pur own," he " • 1 y:l, said. , i'V---fi>"is' ireeaom as^uie price lor releasing living-rqom surroundings. operate",three large penitentiaries built said ' -• w ^3A court of inquiry is held in public, but U does not have the power to indict. However, according to"the Texas Codeof Dallas Student Boycott Slated neuus Criminal Procedures, a judge can turn w ' .DALLAS CUP!)-A boycott by black.'u;. Deputy Police cfiief B.W.< Pope had over to a prosecutor any material that kev Hearing that, Sneed'said the school Times'of London Appoints Womah Editor 3 students of threthigh schoolsapparentlyj.^-reached tentative agreement on a the judge considers incriminatlpg. \ .boycott was'back on. . . , W»ll opcur Tuesday in the.pro.test of.the demand ~ trdnsfer.of Officer Robert LONDON {AP) — The Times of London has appointed theTirst womanThe court proceeding will be handled principally by three persons: a judge, .a ... shooting deaths by police of two Ross from patrol to desk duty-uritil in-Ross and his partner, Officer Fred E."f' news editor in the paper's 186-year history. . - teenagers .during an alleged robbery a vestigations of the shootings by Ross of dourt .reporter and an inquisitor. Sexauer, were in a steak house in Oak Rita Marshall, a Times staff reporter with 20 years of experience iti ^week-ago; ---brothers George Johnson, 14, and Johnny Witnesses, who are called, may be Cliff when six .youths entered and con­journalism, will take up the post, equivalent to the city editor on-most represented by counsel. js«|^iDon Sneed, first secretary of the Com-Johnson. 13, 'Aug'. .25 are completed, gregated around'the cash register. Ross" • American newspapers,-next-month. mittee for theUnification of the^People,sraSji However^ Pope told The Dallas Mor- Any witness refusing to testify may be said one of the youths said, "All right, offered immunity from future prosecu­announced at iirst that .the boycott had£M nitig-New5: "No, we are not going' to everybody," and appeared to draw a. "I don't think men find it odd gettipg orders from a womanT'^shesFicT7 H tion in the judge.'? court, but it is partial . been-called off because police had metV transfer Ross at all. There has been no' weapon. -Rosssaid he warned himhe was : "I think I'm taken seriously.-".; o ­immunity as the testimony may be ex-, their:demands^ but then said the planst,;aisi'a8reenienfl.-The only, thing we've agreed from the police and.then began shooting Mm traded again In another court, . had been reversed when told that thejllift0 that Ifwould meet with him (Sneed) . when the boys appeared to point weapons: Mexican Kidnap Victim Feared Dead police had not complied. talk about the demand^" .j-o;­ pj® Hill • said .that. the. court of-inquiry a h m . ' • \ • t i ' GUADALAJARA, Mexico (UPI) — Authorities admitted Monday that probably will-be held in Walker bounty ~ 'The boycott will be at Lincoln, Adam-j,^ m I m • % -CA' still clues as President they have no to-the whereabouts of Lais: Sfi District Court of -Judge James F. son and South. Oak Cliff High Schools,^?' Warren. -i Echeverria's father -in -law and the, terrorists" who abddcted him last ­ picked, as one CUP -member said/ Radioactive Leak Threat . • Hill had -been to Huntsville Friday to because they'are the main three where$->.' Wednesday. 7---v -•:. ?;tr;iiassure the grand jury thatthe court of in-' we have problems of police jumping,ori$|$ Fears mounted that Jose Guadalupe Zuno Hernandez, 83, may be dead quiry* will not interfere with its black students." ... . ' May Abort Ship Voyage .^1 — either slain by his captors because of Echeverria's refusal to accept -proceedings. iiHii Sneed ;first announced -UK* tfieir ransom demand's or possibly because his shaky health could not ,'JX TOKYO (UPI) -A leak in the reactor shield. They told newsmen.aboard-the. • •if 3a °f Japan's first atom-powered ship may ship,radiation at that level-would be stand the kidn&p ordeal. . » • sks force the vessel-to cut short its first acceptable if the reactor were in full The kidnapers'-f members of the leftist Revolutionary Armed Front of I •)r, voyage and return to port, the Science operation. However, it-was occurring at the. People'(FRAP) — had set midnight last Friday as the deadline for and Technology Agency said Monday a time , when the.-reactor was almost at ­ acceptance of their conditions, for sparing Zuno from "execution " ^ .Fishermen at Mutsu City, 375 miles ' rest north of Tokyo, threatened to use force if : The leakage was not senous enough tc' Dean To Begin Prison Term necessary to bar the vessel's return • endanger those aboard the Mutsu, 650' miles northeast of Mutsu port-in thev; WASHINGTON (UPI) — John W. Dean III. who provided evidence that The radioactive leak was detected late North'Pacific, the scientists said helped^fopple a President and send his aides to prison, goes behind bars Sunday by scientists aboard the 8,214-ton '' I ok-Efforts were being made to repair the himself Tuesday for his role in the Watergate cover-up __ '; cargo.ship Mfutsu. nartted after the port leak, but it was feared the ship would near, the northern tip of Japan's mam Dean wa,s.to .turn himself in to U.S. marshals to begin .the one to,fouri -Jiave to-return to port if .therepairs could island of.Honshu where it was-outfitted Stwnotr be completed at sea. -" year prison term he received last month for his guiUy_plea to a singleFour-years in the building, the;vessel iMi K The Aomori City and Province count of conspiracy to obstruct justice. 1 , -K: sailed off, on its testvoyage Augr26 after -•• Fishermen's Alliance called a mass ­ police cleared a blockade in the-harbor • .-Prison. offic}als.sald Dean would be taken'to an undisclosed location in­ meeting.foe.Thursday to lay plan&for«•; by 260 small.fishing vessels. Fishermen protests and possible action againstto>e-:. the area"until he is no longer needed" by Watergate prosecutors Tlife icharged th^ vessel's presence threaten­ .Mutsu's return. - . j., balance of his term was expected to.be served at the federal prison camp ed possible radioactive contamination'of-^ "If there's the slightest doubt about itSe at Lompcfc, Calif., near his home _ > Mutsu's harbor. we want the ship transferred to another"' " _ 4 Government officials insisted the port," said JiroSugiyama, the alliance's : • fishermen's fears were groundless. Maddox Fights for Career -^ .chairman. "No matter what tfiey do, the • Scientists said Monday radioactivity _ Mutsu will never avoid the image of be-, ATLANTA' (UPI) — Flamboyant Lester Maddox, fighting for*-his—with anJntensity .oLO.1 miliroentgens -,:ing a radioactive contamina'tor of haras •political life in a campaign he has called, the ugliest of his career, and was leaking from a gap in the reactor's""-' .-bors." ... . , veteran -state legislator George JBusbee Monday climaxed a bitter'o as-.m . .. emi&: • primary runoff campaign for governor. Brooks Pretrial Motions Slated mS Both candidates called each other liars in the Jast week of the cam- HOUSTON _ _ during August the marketbasket went up in every city"surveyed except Hatten also heard pretrail motions for, i Brooks, is abused. Of killing Rubeii ; _ ^mer Wayne Henlej, 18t accused in six WatSon James , Dallas, Tex.i where it dropped, by a penny. The average increase was 4Vfe -.^Willfortf 17, Eugene ' or the '27 deaths' A' San "Antonio "jury percent. During July, the AP marketbasket rose in all 13 cities' ;/ "Glass,-14, Wiinarp Ray tawrence 15, and . •Hgnlfey, jaiilty lasf' Jnlv an^ Riof Aftermath Johnny^Delotie, 16. -Many increases reflectedhigher prices paid to farmers, ancf there werg > l > i > c A „ J Z-, t-*1 L^, WabiOu liad bw1i~ui4&Aiiig''sitie"er-,JAiig. •*" indications (if further iiw'ttuVn^? - f'h Newark, pof^cunan tWhd» guard Monday in the aftc severely damaged the -corn cro(> that feeds the nation's dairy cows poultry~and beaf cattle, *' ' " ' ' ' > >$%s®!sssa M'V- SSms rep,.'¥Wi«f* V •fi'.' Getting depresse Page 4 Tuesday, September 3, 1974 f/y about inflation T There are other figures which Show Parent receives answer • A'..• 'v\\ '• •: " ' V#5>fc-•.. »,<•?«•. I'*v/i J. '/ that the banks themselves are notonly in. ; C;So you see, Councilman Binder, whatever the police do must Be right," To tbe editor: the State of Texas and deserves a -little' My impression of; the document was debt from borrowing, "but that slow: ' .'l^cause that's what, they did. Now that you've got that, straight, there's •' Thisas an attempt toreply to the letter *• bit of support once in a'while along with uniform in all-departments. However, repayment of loans to the banks is.also •aijother cue you can take from Bill Rittenhouse: if you get tired ,of making <.-. of a concerned parent in Thursday'sTex­all the pot-shots.: • * , due to spacerequirements this letter will,. imperiling them. As an example,an (Aug 29, 1974) -?10 a week, he knows a foolproof method for .drumtaing up a-lucrative C .'VavfeS Verne; Grant . be limited to the cityiderk's office This;® ^v"Barron's Weekly" reports that the Ir­ - private practice.^— .... . t . 1) Vice-Hre'sident Brown cited the Professor of Botany office is small and representative of mysi^iwing Trust Company and three other 's ; • Impressions of.the entire budget. Thisin-3ft;i-|banks had to takeback their mortgage on ; high rating of-the graduate program at •'' •-• • 'ife .UT in "orber to-emphasize the-.bigh Disclaimer . .fprmation.comes from Page 34 of the. > new $90 million' New-York office academic quality of UT in' general. Totheeditor: • fipiaVHiwiimpnt. ^|jihuilding, which was then sold at auctionf'1 ficial document: Money, mismanagement, Universities (true universities, that iS; • City pferk $12,747.00; .. On Fnday.a letter entitled "A tatter for $69million. Undoubtedly these banks not community colleges labeled as; un­; tale" appeared in FiringLine purported-Deputy City Clerk.:."....,/..' 12 609.00; had to take part of;that bath, which iversities) are rated on their graduate ly signed by; me. I did not write this: Executive Assistant 13,933.00; would be all right if it ,were an isolated^ sunstroke and Z Z Top -g programs, not on their .undergraduate Secretary H.: J 7,786.00; incident, but they'regetting beatenon alls " JP ||i§ . programs. Most undergraduate students si -^ Landon Lockett Secretary! 2 at 7,637.50 ea.; kinds of loans, ranging from private tof ffgTherewas camping.ifiitieJstreets~and stomping in the standsas 80,QDtitriedCMs are better off in an excellent University E 2304 Enfield Road Clerk Typist H 4 at 7,413.00 ea.;t corporate. - .tiptoe Ihe Woodstock tebbg on holAstto-TuH . --Qpen fetter Parttime Assistants ...5at 8,966.80 ea.;&£ None of this need make-you bolt and • "tV'.-p'T ,• ' . -. . ' ... . • • •• . • • . 1W, .UIIUVI^l UMUUl^-• • \.UUVUUWII • Jiao I IIVl> -Erjpge benefits. Overtime27,529.00^' *' run to get your money out. Unlike thi f's|| For some at the Z Z Top Barn Dance and Barbecue, there was the excite^#' been '.'sacrificed in order to achieve high . Stability, (lO fulltime people). cas5!tlunng'i;he-GreatrDepression-tiii ;.ment moderately;big-name groups and the joy of smoking grass where"% status" at^^UT. To the editor: • 11? .Thereare three executives, only seven government will use the Federal , An open letter^ to Councilmen Lowell fulltime, and five part-time employes^,; Reserve to keep the banks' doors,open]Lebermann and Dan Love: . Notice the part-time assistants ares cost what it may, and that may be plei ^ Perhaps the Student Government proceeds will be handled, bettSr. .professionals doing ^ vital (but under­, Having-left my number with both of • budgeted $8,966 each. This is pretty goodi: ty. Theconsequences of a bail out, whic f°°d C°St HZSFJ? DFLPFVE^,LAB/ED""'F' Par'wi^V'LSRTOTTHLFOFSLCONDA^ ydu and not .being 'called back, I am "pay for part-time work. Also, clerk is probably already many times thatof^ga-^ aMthit bUt^ ' writing an open letter concerning my typists-are budgeted $7,4l3 each. This is Penn Cehtral, won't be nice. • td the>ubstantial admission char.ge> There.was no school ' teachers. Yes; the educational study of the city budget One-thousand pretty good pay for clerk typists. Infact*; But at this moment we must propgg^j^^ ^sjjarn, but there was a ^considerable amount of frantic dancing around the—*process in a slate university^ different copies will be distributed throughout the I assume the workers are not actually the. banks. Sometime soon, hosyevem^lil*1" from J 1 J ^ jbathrooms, wateF fountains and under-stocked!,foodstands ••'— that"•-* in-secondary schools, and so~ city. getting this much, The fat in the budget few high federal-officials are goif; are the,students. • -The scope of my studies.is limited to is the difference between all of the have to talk about this publicly and\^«^$, |-With the temperature in the 90s and the predictably large throng, better ~ 3) Tbe funds appropriated by "the" one. hour spent at the library .reading budgeted salaries .and what the people; didly; and Congress is going to have;|pS$'^reparations could have been taken for the basic needs of the people -/'Legislature support onlya fraction of tbe . every"page of Jhe bound document. It is are actually /.gettlhg. Please put 'your' ask the same questions they asked, ahi • over-all costs''of-either undergraduate;or my-hope that ^n inquiry will be'made by knife to it:':,-;^'^^ . didn't answer in.the 1930's, about;hq' cause of the lack of drink, good:numbers of people suffered sunstroke (a­ graduate education' at UT.. Concerned people, with ,more-.access to relevant ^ 5,5 Meal Avery Watt high and how crazy we can let our del Bexan writer estimated 30 cases were treated an hour). And because of the parent is worried" that undergraduate facts. 04 3409-B Willow Springs Road: structure get. ijMlsiekJaf organization, these suffering peoplefound help to be a real problem. : funds ,may be diverted into 'graduate , ; ^Management and security personnel were unable to cope with wliat theyJiad —education;-Actually-itiis.,to=some^.extent . J^created * " , " -c the otlier way arOund;:A significant frac; ^ " ' ;,J tion of UT's total operating budget con­¥?3^|;!rDespite the hassles, there were many contented concert-goers who avoidgjgl sists of nonstate research "grants and contracts whichprovidesubstantialspinf. • |^^;'®®--®^ble'iairi-;waitBdifor'-the;iniMc-;And;Stu«^t6oviMtraiieSt actually^'; contraot® wbich-orovldesutetaiitlalADln. • There is nothing wrong with"a wealtliy Student Government. We are a bit Guest Viewpoh ^envious;.And with such an abundance of lucre; we look forward tctan active The Texanwelcomesguest viewpoints, ^ilmade some money;.,^A? * "^s .•p&i^< ^cert proceeds, the Student Government coffers will contain $31,000 rtidre V^ljthan the operating budget. That is a lot'for Fleming and-the Student Senate' negaUvistic standpoint, but the^S' negalivistic attitude is unjustified.-UT is . ."doing a great job for its students and fort, I to" work with. •i > ~ . • • ' ' kM wl m 'tiiUjt* but each piece submitted "mustiW­ {and innovative Student Government. With, a budget like Fleming's,,* lot -• Be typed triple-spaced. ­ ^community help can be given. i'S,, \ • -5­ m-• • Contain only 60 characters per line. " :: • Include the author's phone number;-. • Be limited to a maximum length of 100 lines. m '•m Submit guest viewpoints to Drawer D/ ' THE DAILV«TEXAN i, "...• • • Nt«»ia(urai'Tli> '^1 v. a <• 'WwlV?. » S Ir.J.nl Htmrmfr o) Tt.UUnnltr*1Uxat «1 /luilla' -University Station, Austin,: Tex. 787U or wMi&i >"-"'V 'EDrrOR ................ —,v.v.., 4 i* to the Texan office.in thebaseinenjLlevel • Buclc Harvey "MANAGING EDITOR of the TSP Building. ''-J ^'%n' the rough ....... Sylvia Moreno ASSISTANT MANAGING EDITORS Lynrie Brock S'jSS .* Larry Smith JtfEWS EDITOR '.r is«m revolution^Mfyawn) is over...zz. .'^n^a^tha JP McQuade MUNICIPAL EDITOR Ken McHam ; ' By BOB GREENE #«l 4'?';the podium, when ta-.resolution tov, leaders''i.on .the campuses always have sleeping in Uie sun. Kick him in the ftq University editor ,-l. Richard Fly *»1974, Chicago Sun -Times"4"' -— overthrow ient and been a weird breed of someberaiunded to wake him upj and then s6y, "What < SPORTS EDITOR. (Editor's note: the following-story is ®$$'slit the better ^ou think of trends and'developments 1 AMUSEMENTS EDITOR ; •; ..../....Paul Beutel reprinted from the Chicago Sun-Times was gpmg jwrf by the con- than to wake up in the moriiing and dis-.educational innovations'" FEATURES EDITOR—..Mark Vemma syndicate. -Student Government.Presl-^gvention as •e,orwhenthe" covet that they have aged 20 years over­At a workshop called "Combattifl y^f dent Frank Fleming was presentat the National g to be put oii night, and thatthey have to be downtown Apathy on the Campus," 19 studen fHOTO EDITOR -rl. Marlon Taylor National;Student .Congres&-,whichj,tpo^..>. alert, because ooking college at the office by 9 a.m. to take part in leaders showed up. The topic for discus ISSUE STAFF rt ^. .City Editor-. .. place in August) ^ sophomore had ttedstMlling: some seridus corporate hardball*sThink sion was how these^student leaderscouio f .[2....;'^..,..'.,. Dick Jefferson General Reporters... ", r.v ST. LOUIS -^-The 27th annual National •within a three-blocjc r 2one~ol the about it — did ydu ever know a student make the otfifer students on their cam^ • ; .David Hendrtcks state capitoli i&isp News Assistants ' Student Congress is now under way at. > body officer you would feel comfortable puses, pay, attention to student gover ' 7?«',;'>*r^m:SpeiZer, Eve-Curingtoni RodoIfo RRsendez, ' & *e. ^ t*' I > . U-the ChasePark Plaza Hotel. Yawn.'Yourr-Great entertalnnienV. Thrs 7year,' banging around with? ment projects. Keep in mind^ this isles Cotitribytqrs..*~ than five years after1 student^"activist! correspondent on the scene can assure though.... Well, listeir to .the titles of -Continuing'with the theory — for a cou could drdw half ^ million-people Patti Rilday • you that not only is the revolutioiroverp1'. som? of -the / discussion groups and_ pie of year; in the late '60s and earlyEditorial Assistants. »i .Robin Cffivey,-Steve" Russell • lt's been.buried-and-forgotten. Student ? workshops: "Financing t^r-Secendary;—f70s,"that changMr^hecampusesxtruly h Washington for an. anhw, • • Associated Amusements Edii{or.r..ItrTl government leaders once again are~-Education." "Response to Title IX * -• --r9^tq«mnouncingithfiiilateif _ Vitiky Bowles' became politically mlhdedr _and so the Assistants Sports'Editdf^*.;... .,, \[[ 'fn "harmless, Silly twerpsS> F~ Regulations."-''National Student Assn. Here is the most representative^o ^ _ ..EdiDalheim s students started to cai'e about their stu-. Make-up JEditor.— ,',i ' Life and Health Insuranct3^ust.'' "The^ —mentr -to^cijme-out-.of-the^apathl 5 P L.sv). Jeff Newman. Torti1 Hayden or R^/nnil Dlfvfs Wul4 * • dent governments, and to elect ^Qple Wire Editor. Future< of Tenure." ."Trends and ' workshop: yWell, on our campt)s .thai­ ... ...'.:v.\».,.,.',...l,.;.Keith Hartnell feel about as comfortable here as at a who were"gemUnefy Desk-Editors 'students flon'tjpay too much attention i ^ Jan Phipps. Robbie MarshalK--convention of country clnh managers students. For several spfiVigs there, a the-student government. About the best , Jay Jorden, Jim Fuquay The major Social controversy of the •Mudentb^ypriesident could \ralk down Photographers- student-response on^ campus all year Phil Huber, Andy Sieverman week.so fables been oven theiughprice Now, that's alliegitimatestufi, but it's Opinions exv»sacd Jn TW, Daiiy T<*aa"art of the of strawberry cheesecake in" the hotel'? -not exactly designed to make thq Cronk-' ihose (11 the Mwrcfty'jltfminlJiratton or the Board at'l tjoo uft.iw, ^OKpiayadVtrtliliiif fa/TSP Bulkhnl, cqffee shop One afternoon a .radicalized break.intp ,!Asthe.Worl(i^'Rjrns".with a," ^ c , Now, the real students are golng back pledges get thrown Into a ring and get /ziuinrml • fo^mpr Vietnam prisoner of war came to breathless bulletin, ^'The blood-boiling . a"£tiHent TJ 1"'if!'" 1'!. aj'jrlbios-t-. repfelscnUO/e <4 Tb6^UV ' to livingtheir Uvea andenjoyingJthfi feel--chased aromd-by (he actives.The"whole| . ^ , ... ing of being young —-and the'student^school turns out for,that," | PttbliciUons Drtw«r U. Of|iver )nrrfnr pn'HTiy.'^ntf^"'^'ffrt'^^rtt^^schedqled ^at-the..National' $tudentj ^r. » « -ijv MJW «yjuitwur»w«»nu 4 •V'®) -• awJ Tbp^y,Wednesda>/.T^wr* an*exftin txn-te JoOrnah^ Ungre^am* Dkity of thelate ?60s" wereSfWaysrfairJy creepy administfators.thanto-a'bWw-of rS«»»P0Pfr AM^Mlon ^ A& Bl bundi of*' of-nothing'more-than an-^agly-blonrrilng' j"~th6ugh. the junior'-Jeb Ma'grud^rs am ^ -* ^Kwyclinn «UUoiui fur lEe JfctaBtfWf in theui own wftK of course,'but at lea^t ,footloose students ih the fading days'of lust for, pojver> What kind of kid'wojrtd'%,^wl^t;*Chapfns"d6l^tw^M^S^s8^»0 summer. " ' ' " wjllingly go^toSI 'LoQis in AugUst-to talk j#Bifufc^Uon •"''y'-^"»^r;OT.PV4Bp.T>ewgi^raunyjto0h^tfwy^>iuBh;«aui ond'Whiiirafttf 4twyAcadtMito^Ontolc wnen-a Drigaae--ot ^uiRmg-biaeks-wewi Which bringsais-toiturjnajor thepty SSSt? r-JL j«i|li ^_s:;|KI.9RL iai& v#oinG© illcirij0ci!•ci us praise W?. By jack Anderson^ workers-and other ".pot" drugs for Eastland's Senate youth caught by federal parently learnedof the su«« It is small, wonder that censed because Banzhaf had expertly catches the piranha5 and smokers will not be jailed Ior; internal security .subcom? " agents with a single .mari­veiilance and -abandoned the Federal Power Commission announced in a press release quality of the Nixon \Vhite5 LES WRITTEN simple possession of the drug. •mittee.' juana cigarette isexcessive in crop. ; • experts told Us they had that he had filed suit to block House. There, H.R Haldeman' • ,®1974» United Features Syn-" .. Eastland, whose 'closest After tatking .earnestly with. Eastland's vleWii,As: a result •NATURAL GAS.:.In letters "never seen-such a gross then-Vice President Agnew manipulates Spiro Agnew, dlcate Walt and listening todozensof his -internaj security staff is to many-newspapers", the contact' with drugs is a good aberration" and the Senate -from subpoenaing reporters -John Hhrlirhman sneers at ^witnesses atvarious"hearings; conferring regularity with the American Petroleum Institute WASHINGTON -James cigar and atot of whiskey, has Commerce Committee-' s&ff • and to force-appointment of a honorable men like Bob Finch ­ "the senator came to the con­Drug Enforcement Agency on (API)', whose members own ; Eastland of.SunflowerCounty, become convinced that jailing suggests the oil"companies special -Agnew prosecutor. as "the Pasadena Hamlet" clusion that "pot'-' may cause possible legislation.' Shortly Missone of the • Senate's those caught with a few much of the nation's natural are "simply lying" to get One of Uie ringleaders in the and Pat Moynihan as "our geritetic^-brain, lung and other after Labor Day, Senate crustiest conservatives, is 'joints" is.not the way io stop gas, cites numerous figures to more money.. •...i... unusual effort to punish , Oscar Wilde," and a Secret walking proof that an old dog^ "marijuana traffic. damaged He also decided that staffers will meet with DEA's try todisproveour disclosures A few other:,,figures are Banzhaf was Federal JudgeC. Service man loathingly con- traffickers still deserve stiff -. legal office to.hammer out a can learn new tricks. that. Big-Oil is driving up glaringly omitted from the Stanley-Blair, .an'Agnew pal. fides-that "'We say .... come __ '-...The contumacious senator penalties and ; that even •; formal draft . natural gas prices with faked, API letter: Some of its and-aide who was given a the revolution; be sure andi, The veteran Judiciary CoW'TinlferwenHris metamorphosis^ possession,should not becom­ _. . members naturalmittee chairman is working after his oldfriend, 6x-Marine pletely ''decriminalized. TiTs mind~entireiy,;but-he is-—It is wor-th-noting-that-we-—holdings—report profit^In-dent Nixon at Agnew's .bid-Haldeman and one forquietly to relax marijuana Commandant Levris Walt, : But the possibility of a year, toying _withthe idea of setting sent our own figures to. the. -creases in excess of 100 per-ding; The other was-Judge-Ehrlichman." Eastland^ has. notmadeuff figures. with gas-lifetime judgeship-by Presi-' save two bullets: one for laws so young students, and conducted a world survey on a fine for a first "possession" cent Herbert in jail and a $5,000 fine for-a API statisticians before we because gasoline and Murray, personally . "The Politician Primeval"'.^ | . • s«*if offense, and explicitly ban-wrote our story. The API did-natural gas prices'areup from cleared for his job in 1971 by Hubert Humphrey's doctor ­US JS' , ^.ning jail. A -second offense not -quibble-with them then, 60 to 100 percent and likely to .after a 30-minute interview and adviser,. Dr. Edgar Ber-; would bring a stiffer fine.-and does not now in its letter. climb still,higher.. cwith Agnew. ..; : man, is so'outrageously can- Tisrhim to the or j ••'v -Since state laws tend to In fact, the API ignores the 'WsSbfei is^f £&&. Mfc ... . CRITICAL PUNISHMENT-! claiming Banzhaf was in di.d about the. press and •w follow federal statutes, ind crucial figures. The fede'ral judges in "apparent"violation of the politicians that the book took since Eastland's -Judiciary^ .To _ repeat them: Big Oil Baltimore who stepped aside, Code of Professibiial Respon-three monthfs tp clear the libel E& gettihg off to Evel thrills Committee writes federal reported exploratory 'natural •in the Agnew case to avoid sibility,V! .the-Baltimpre Still. Berman omits, laws, it may be that a whole-gas strikes from 7.9,to 9.4 per­any possible charges "of judges urg-ed Megal;"dltrue a* , By GEORGE V, WIL^ that they:hSVe a 50-5Q chance -VI like to live with;a-lump, in! generation of marijuana cent of Uie time Off Louisiana cronyism have nevertheless cipirhary authorities in-tales:. thenames of the famed .lK—i' ' 61974, ' of seeing a man splatter my throat and a knot in my. dabblers will" praise Jim: until'1972 when they,began to tried to punish one of Agnew's Washington to investigate reporters who; on the wayithe .• Washington Post himself on Idaho's rocks. stomach." He also likes a Eastland's name. -connive for price increases. most vocal' critics.1 .Banzhaf;.After much,'Waffling : home from an Asian tour with Footnote: On.,Eastland's " : -Company Asked-why she was waiting lump in his wallet. When he is Then, mysteriously, the The target of their un­the Washington disciplinary .-Humphrey, had to be shot ' • j, WASHINGTON -Idaho's in a long line to see the* not dispensi'ng metaphysical Mississippi ;plantation;rvstate^-tstrikes-dropped.to'2.4 percent successful action .was • John unit threw the judges' request With massive doses of narcotics agents found a Snake River Canyon, where gruesomely shocking movie -mush ("The' greatest com­ in 1972 and to a mere1percent -Banzhaf fll, a prominent con--out. -••* penicillin because they pur^ • every prospect pleases and "The Exorcist,'' a woman petitor in life is. death'.'), it is marijuana patch near the in 1973. This allowed the oil sumer, advocate and law BOOK PICKS: '"flip Palace . sued Asian pleasures more only man is -vile, soon will be answered: "I want to see clear that money, is the lamp Sunflower Rivef. The senator companies to demand more .professor in Washington. The Guard"'by CBSnewspien Dan zealously than they" did rtews ; the scene of a remarkable ex­what evMyBody is throwing unto his feet. He is going to cooperated in a stakeout, but consumer money, supposedly Baltimore judges, were in^fiSRather and Gary P^|H Gates stories.­ 's; ample of man's work. OnSun­up about^' That movie only make a fortune with this _Jhe "pot" planters, who had so they could carry out more day, Evel Knievel will try to titillated an unseemly jump. ,, > been harvesting by boat, ap-exploration. " leap 1,500 feet across the ca­appetite for^ the .grotesque. r The voluptuous pleasure of nyon on a 350 mph motorcy­The witless" Knievel is watching a man risk killing Crossword Puzzler ..Answer to Yesterday's Puzzle You'll Feel At Home cle. ' •' titillating_ a barbaric appetite himself evidently, is not • ACROSS. . mammal ­ BSES BQia SIESfl -^Thfough-aHofwhat-might for_ti~eatihe violentdeath aUT " dampened by the nagging 6SEBQ B@I3a Btasra ~ ;4M>*-fill«iH hi \ Mail letters to The Fifing line, The Daily: Texan, Drawer D, UT (abbr.) 20 Misleads.. county . j-44 Preposition 25 Paradise , .23 Playthings Look ground Come See spinach witlj sand in it. Station, Austin, Tex. 78712; or.bring letters to-.the Texan offices, 36 More vapid 47 Greek letter • .27-SpecK 26 Portions of . 37 Head of Cath­49 Beverage -. olic ChurcU 51 Paid notice about himself, tumbles trip-• • (measure,. 28'Teutonic 38 Confiagrat(ons:53 Army officer A H' » . -• . Conversation, especially basement, Texas Student Publications Building. , 2B Printer's " medicine i 29 Plumlike •! . deity •w~ * • • -pingly from his tongue,and he JU5T THINK OP 1" fruit -i i!' ' AU-THE MI5ERV i 8 10 expresses himself wiUi es-i At3UCAU?\ i •30 Slippery Wl!'.V£ T-33 Frolic. Recially generous strength on-«XlR5ELf , . 1 PjLEASANT VALLEY CAU5EP.' 34 Negative -IV- — . . 13 the subject of his own A SCHOOL | 1'!'"iI T 35 French: of heroism. 1 BUILDIN6jy • WrrYr 1 , the 16 t . ESTATES 37 Time gone But Knievel; and'the hard-' I ! 1 18 1 . eyed men who merchandise n , 1 ,J 1 38 Note of , him,:and .the mutton-headed , I.. scale 1300 So. Pleasant Valley Rd 39 Trials people who celebrate him,are T1 41 Conjunction ft r 42 Newspaper 32 exeeutivo 45 Near tion of man as nature's final 'word. !doesn't wur 34 46 Baker's pro­ He estimates that he has a CONSCIENCE duct BOTH'ER IT'5 A 48 Place tor ' 38- 447-1890 50-50 chance of failing in his combat m? LIVING J T~t , > jump, and falling to his death 49 A state 42 >45 ir in the canyons If the jump is (abbr.) Next To <§§4-. 50 Landed pro­ . . not as risky asit isadvertised .party " & AQUARIUS; ^ ^to be, it' is a .fraud. If,", as 52 Cultivator seems probable, it does in- 54 Underworld­ 55 Aquatic THEATRE .. . .volve.serious risk of Knievels' ; - death, it is obscene. Millions, Diatr. by -Uaitod JPeAtare 'S^diotte,lac. of people watching this dread­ ful spectacle will be happy as'',;! . yjj. giddy crickets at the prospect -' DOONESBURY 1 NOPe. THIS -mummm? Atmrmr ' MKSPOCmUJytSlON6WSRr ' YOU MUST we-BBStPeS, Be KWm! &NNY, WRB S • ? \ MYF/mne ^ M wSmfBiI 'M M i ­ &&!\ v Leather weave-it huaraches for-that South-oHhe-Border look for Fall! L: Medium.wood platform with "side openers y R: Caffinated Lamiwood platform/ close-woven uppers. ** -fmm t . >' f xrWh. JW-4-­now. lermsee, wIl, 1 &?Wk BBN&PIN6 ACARPer •SA.>E4 INM&-OLD em's r fsss; PRSTTY RATTY... THE ' COUGH SEEMS OKAY || -7WWgV.r-V-­ 4A«/- SHOES m Al! over town ^ ^ v \ \\x ^ >. \\\ ..thatam T .HEY, mm MLUME1D pomeiut $Q,m>7He• , tOOKlN' CABINetS.TOO. . oorsbous jne table x AS USUAL. ' mm CAN sm./\ SWPGOBS. I" A&REEP.. ' r, J. r mm, -i :, i.7 •; wm* Luggage i Leather n* Wine :• Nnv : '«,4r8 fcwV£ ^m the,Tour Wf.« iWr*st .-at* Sound m Sgswsy (Editor's Note: This Is5g5|?his Aggies were honest -to -Offensively,* the Aggies lose football game.. J;.p|r successful 1973 seasons. • in the lineup-this season. Last' . season, and Bellard-.expects -199) are players Bellard leels­of nipe-partc£' goodness contenders:for the Alvin Bowers from a, 6-0, -j season, he saw extensive duty" overlooked year" the third a fullback "Last year, we'hegan the BEAN, 195-pound *jnuch of the same from him were last series of stories gathered?, f'1974 Southwest Conference last year's 5-6 team and season with a lot of question junior, rushed for 711 yards and picked up 272 yards and ;this year, "he's oneof the best when the postseason honors -e • on the annual Southwest championship. that's all. last year-tor lead the Aggies, four touchdowns as a reserve. /marks," Bellard said. "But split ends in1 the SWQ," were passed around.. -Conference Press Tour.) "There's no doubt that we'll and Walker, a Junior, gained " t\ THE A&M offensive line This year's offensive squad we're starting this year with Bellard said. c PERHAPS THE strongest ; BV HERB HOLLAND-, be a greatly improved offehr ; 671' yards and led the Ags in Was the biggest in the SWC- those question marks basical- Junior tight end Richard is the same then except for point of the.Aggies' defense Hfgls Texan Staff Writer sive football team, 111. every touehdowns-witheight. _last__season,and everybody-is.: who 29 Osborne, grabbed one. important point: at:the*lie linebackers. , COLLEGE STATION -To respect," Bellard sai Swilley (6A,'240) will work as the SWC. junior. . Fullbacks. B As a freshman, Walker a swing tackle to fill in &'Only "one starter' is gone On the other end is junior. passed for 426 yards at a 45 Quarterbacks B wherever needed. from Beilard's defense this Garth' Ten Napel (6-2, 1'97), '.,: percent pace. He also fushed Defensive Line B The guard situation looks year, too -r-safety 'Larry who Bellard rated a "solid"equally asawesome size-wise. for 283 yards. Linebackers A player, and sophomore Lester Halfbacks Bubba. Bean and Bruce Welch (6-4, 257) wasyf*. But Ellis didn't spend all of Skip Walker both return & Secondary B Wed second team Ajl-SWO 1973 in the starter's role ^ ( ' '•P depth at outside linebacker their starting {positions after las: year as a sophomore and " because he shared duty with -••• -i •*' Depth iSS -b should improve with age while junior Jackie Williams, who that is needed over the long ­ season. -Probable.-JLinish: ; sofihomore Billy Lemons (fr5, returns to lead this year's The Presenting: Second 290)iBas theqiucknesstbopen ieEehsive secondary.-——--middle linebacking'. duties will be^plitnp betweeh ;;massive "holes : for Walker, Along with Williams (Wl, W, one of the, tops in'the SWC. ^ _Bean, et al. three players: senior -Ken : 176) is senior Jaroes Daniels Stratton (5-11, 198), senior"Skip alsowill be one of-the' Center Ricky Seeker (6-3; (6-2,187) who played his firs.t Pest in the-SWC;" Bellard—241) wassecond team All-SWcL—turn yoarc in ji.hi^ McCrumbly (6-2, 253) 15sT::y6ar~rfs(r-and-sb«wld— -rson (6 3, 222), ning abilities are second to emerge as the premiercenter Aggieland last year. Beliard' also has a 'solid -none.. He's-got a touch of in the league this season, ,? $ Cornerhacks Pat Thomas --speed aver Bubba, Jjut' Bub-front four. "By solid, I mean Seeker is the only senior onJ^^g^iSO) and Tim Gray (6-1,_ba's a.more fluid runner."^ : i! the starting offensive squad, : 1-1 • •' • fuqdamentally soundj" he The v* Hew Junior fullback Bucky Sams WtV\D nrtiintirnn /*' ' ~ said, to r define-a—'football WIDE RECEIVER Carl' w Wide cheke of rotary models. A full -pSP (6-0, 212) will replace Bowers Roaches (5-8, 165) returns coaching term as old and un­selection of rotary-engineMazda RX-2s •" a-great .sophomore 7973 Results iversally • abused as football afters ;qridRX-3s, insedans,coupes.ondwoqons 1»74M It itself. (5-6 .p Mnidc 5longer engine wuiiutily.5^000 Shoe Shop Tackles Ted Lamp (6-2;242} and Warren Trahan (6-4, 26t), 3yean?Every car in our salecarries this We make and SHEEPSKIN both possess the quickness to warranty— a warrantythat only thecarsi rush the passer Along with the from Rolls-Royce''" . -repair boet^' RUGS.0 size to stop runners at thelinecah match: shoes bel>«-• Many >i:. of scrimmage. '500 Beautiful Colors $750 The . end situation is even leather. more to Bellard^ liking. *LEATHER'SALE • Along with senior Don Long - MkV *129" ..qoods Voriout kinds, colon -7S'"p«r ft. (6-3, 241) and PaulHulin (7-1, MoxdoVnon-tronsferoble-19", 21", 23" & 25" frames warranty is fr««on all • 315), the Ags have sophomore.: now.roiorrengine • . luirtwnuiit Max^as-sotd onor aft®r • Capitol Saddlery RIVAS Tank Marshall (6-5, 237) and March 26.1974.Mazdo . worrante thot thv^asic junior Blake Schwarz (6-2, engineBlock and * ^DAWES s169's 1614 Lavaca Austin, Texas • 478-9309' OF: 219) to pick up any slack. ­ i'1 .internalports will be •. • 21 23", & 25" frames t fr*eofdtf»nd reimbursement for textbooks for her last 2 • il • • years of college. In addition, a tax-free-monthly! Why Hassle allowance of $100 is paid to both scholarship and non-scholarship cadets.alike. With A Dealer When she gets her degree, the career as"an Air %S ' Force officer awaitsher, matching herabilities.to a' For A(W ^jiairs?.. m job-with rewarding challenges. With benefits like 30 wk ITHEBUG ^vV Interested? Contact: Captain Jim Careill at RAS 115, 471-1776 or 471-1777,=^^ CORNER PUT IT ALL TOGETHER .801^ West Ave. 477-2725 HAVE WE GOT A a IN AIR FORCE ROTC • Engine Worio " ' 9 • Tune-Ups NO RIP-OFFS MEAL FORJOU! s ALL WORK GUARANTEED • Brakes V eft * af Dobie Center seleci sm OLE FASHION PRICES .^from a -full line salad: Are Here With A New ' bar. Three different r. ^8t' STUDENT COLOR TV entrees/ Condiment bar $25 Mo. DISCOUNT unlimited seconds, wide mo*, for $75; KU.'p 32 Week , . selection of beverages," and a plan that bdstf S1E«0S , WITH Mjfits your needs. W5 Mo. $75 Wfr6IV&'YOU"FREE'90 DAY OPTION TO BUY "YOU CAN LIVE WITH US TOO" On sale at the front desk ­'*'US TAPE RECORDERS $12 MONTH 42 PUNCH CARD® "Monthly Plan" ' STjJOENI DISCOUNT $7W S*pt. 1 thru Pk.20,1VtA ^ r&-l.fbr$3^6­ $32.00 'iMixtuowrHweotmi pwcg J.se the, punches lllte^casffiyf^ $&2.00 RATES raR WK S^pfwnkwt.lW riinf t>wwlibw'20,1974. Dayy ond Svndoy -v.—3-for-dinner-,-2 foHunch^ EUaRIC PORT. TYPEWRITER n-Tranifarabl*. s.'lUSukir ; Discount.* 1 for breakfast, 4 for specials. •t2 5$ •i.»3 Sevan Ddys a W«|k OR WITH 'CARRIAOE RETURN ^Gootf-thronnh May 44r-re7S^'T?ansferable: 'i2M " : Breakfast, lunch and Dinner ADDING MACHINES * -A'«Ul*S *NOVK»UUTK)NJ 0» OHMI WITH CREDJT BAUNCC turnd mi MANUAL TYPEWRITERS ' . EUECTRONic CAICUIAT MMMIMMl. MhpMiaii iniMl * \ tiJIO-itOf# v *5f «. f g?34 GUADALUPE -476:3525 to". 5134 BURNET ROAD -454-6731 ^tatMon r ^ ? 1 * * '»i. 1 .T ^ '' ' " ^ i 'Ip. \'* iv^v 1 i Call Him 'Coaeh' COLLEGE STATION -After the dis­ astrous CottonBowl of 1972, wherein Penn 815 .State mauled Texas 30-6, only, 5-8, 171­pound quarterback Donnie Wiggington had ­reason to be happy. i -Unlike many -.graduating college athletes, the 1971 Southwest Conference Most Valuable Playerdidn't have to worry .­about his future. hoilond "I graduated Texas in December,' played in the Cotton Bowl Jan; 1 and w^s " cle this seascui and the quality of athletes on the Texas' A&M payroll Jan; 2," V i"s much higher than in years past.Wiggington said. • _ Jr "There was astretch wherea lot of good "The Wig,'.'. now 2Sririirhls~third:yearA -athletes, botlwwhite^nd.Alack, were Ipav-_ as offensive backfield and receiver coach' ing Texas," he said. "-And the conference for Coach Emory Bellard's Aggies, and now realizes that the black athlete is here Bellard cbnsiders him one of the up and to stay •... there's just no--difference coming coaches in the SWC; between staying here or leaving anyniore • "I GOT. the job mainlybecame of Coach ... that's why we've got so many quality BeUardj'' Wiggington ^aid. "He thought athletes around the SWC nowadays.". I'd dohim a gdod job here becauseof whatfpft ONE OF Wiggington's biggest jobs is .he knew.of me whenhecoachedtlieoffen-U ,slve backfield at T^xas.11. In his first yearof coaching, Wiggington season, and the eventual matchup with worked with freshman backs and bad no Texas, Thanksgiving Day. trouble instructing the youngsters; "They "We've got to make ourkidsrealize that (the freshmen) all knew I wasa playerthe-up until-Texas' string, A&M won more season before, but w6 had a good rap­SWG championships," he said-. port," he said."They were real eager to : "Three or four teams can beat anybody get first-hand knowledge -aboutthe in the SWC," he said, "And we're one of Wishbone." them.^But we have to get over this psy­ Last year, Wiggington moved up to the chological thingVith Texas. „ varsity and began his real career as A "You'll notice that Oklahoma, Alabama, coach he even began to learn his or"Nebraska aren't too scared of Texas," "coaches' rhetoric" and how to he said. "And .we've got to convince our philosophize. kids of tBe Same thing." "There's lots' of ways to look'at Wiggington enjoys coaching and plans to coaching," he said. "If ydu commit stay "with it indefinitely, eventually as a yourself then you've got to "come through-; w head coach. • : • as head coaches tiuwir tlieie-and they expcct-you-to-win wh»n thoy-were really he sald. • another. That's why Darrell (Royal) has'* : "BatUe at'Tennessee was young when he to be pessimistic. got the job andjtoyal.— he was young — _ "But if you're trying te get to the top," young when he got his first head coaching .he said,"you have to beoptimistic Soyour job, so I imagine' I could , get a. head kids will be. coaching job pretty young if things work "Of courseI'm notsaying we'regoihg to out right. win or. anything down here, but we're go­, "Then again, we could havea really bad ing to be tough and play some football." ££ losingseason, and I could get fired ... but Wiggington feels the SWC is in an up cy-I'm not too worried about that." . Campbell Shines in Workouts Freshman lullback Earl; to lead the second team Fri­question, will arise with the Campbell scored three day, sat out with a pulled now first team fullback touchdowns.Friday and aided groin muscle but came back Campbell. in three more Monday as the. Monday to lead the first team Though Royal was not op­ Texas Longhorns held their to three scores in seven timistic with Friday's scrim­ second and third scrimmages attempts. * • • ; • -mage, on Monday -he thought of the fall. ; • With senior fullback the Horns."have a ways to go • Campbell ran -^'for Roosevelt Leaks expected but we showed • a lot more 1 touchdowns of.-65, 1 and 2 back in two weeks another a&g^nveness. yards in Friday's scrimmage: and assisted first team; quarterback-Mike-£i£Sley_Jn. HOUDAYJCLEANERS Monday's . scrimmage. With the season openeronly M SPECIALS 12 .days away the starting SLACKS 74c DRESSES $1.74 quarterback position is still —i—open. On Kriday quarterback SHIRTS 36c, • •-' • . ''' ' ' Marty Akins led the first team Specials Goodof; • -j " -w^ to three scores in eight . possessions and-the second North Lamar a» 30tli'and Duval 1304 W. lynn­team, to seven-scores in_.14, Koetiig lane Wednesdays Only Thursdays Only possessions on Monday;v ^Tuesdays Only Presley, who was scheduled" How can you face the problems of overpopulation^ world monetary policy; and con­ tinental drift without a good Itmm BREAKFAST?m ™Now you don't have tol We're serving a complete ~imSSm '^breakfast daily from 7-11 A.M. Something solid in restless world! . '• * • > Hours: Weekdays—7 A.M.—Midnight ' Friday & Saturday—7 A.M.—T A.M. . Sunday—8*A.M.—Midnight r * Holiday House #3, 2606 Giftdalupe pi -Simm Mi S; m m SWe'll help feed the hody^while •fl the soul grazes on our contin­~ s display of top student art. ­ /Hamburgers in.tl)e congenial atmosphere of a con-, S qbanging-exhibit of student art. Visit-the-oiMy. a kv-'-1®--'•'< 1 i Holiday House #2,^2003 Guadalupe— ijM & J J-r5-' "i3S> a-5?! Defensive Backfield f-a -iMy am Experience (Editor's Note: 1iii%. istackier with the uncanny -secondary's -teamwork • As for speed. Well, as defensive chain, it will . the first of fia eigh»-part„'v ; knack of clicking togetKer fhe (they're"as solid right"now as -Campbell says there isn't an perhaps rbe much stronger.series dealing with the1974 ^heels of his opponents to the resi. df the denfensej he is-: abundance.of straightaway than-fast year; when it leaked ^ Tsxasr Longhorn football^f-tackle them a bit wary of their size. speed in the Horn secondary, Jike a sieve, -allowing op-. t®am.) . -Only-a sophomore, Bizzell "It's scary sometimes, see-but he (feels that they're quick ponents long gains. -;• By KELLEY ANDERSONSfei&tarted tjie final seven games. • ing them out there. They're;. enough to get the job done. Texan Staff Writer last season and picked off . . awfully, small, especially", Melancon agrees this is the As Texas defensive coor-_'' an interception in the 1974Cot-Bizzell. But, they seem tohold • THEY'RE quicker than case. . -•­ fast," he explained."Besides, dinator Mike Campbell, ton Bowl. • up pretty well.. They're "Last year people told usspeaking in football jargon, The weak-side halfback is -tongh," he said. you can get* away with less how good we were going tobe, -describes this-year's defen-the_only_position that doesn't speed if you're in good posi­ ; He also thinks . the Texas • . (i„n ,h (i ••and we let it.go to our heads •• sive backs, it! may seem that have a player solidly~oc- a11 the-tlme" "cbntiBgent-coTild-be-the—;ion -and-blew it,. This.jear.all thehe's talking about men from cupying it, Campbell in­ smallest around. "I wouldn't • So it appears that although sports writerssay how bad theMars. -dicated. doubt if -this, is.-the smallest the secondary, primarily . secondary is, and we're work­ But when Campbell says the PAUL JETTE,a sophomore . _ secondary in the country play-young and untested, will re­ ing harder, to prove' themLonghorn defensive secondary who quarterbacked . the ' irtg major cqllege football." main the.weak-link in the Tex-•wrong," he commented.­ will be manned primarily by. freshman team last.year, is ".little; green men,1' he isn't battling Mason for that post; ,W-r .commentingvpnj his players^-.;flie one vacated, by All-SWC color;" nor the . money they " Jay Arnold, who" graduated; earned during the summer. He's referring to their inex-: perience. . Of the players vying for positions in the secondary, only three have ever played a -varsity down before —-Terry Melancon,-Joe BobBizzell and Sammy Mason. And only Melancon, has had a substan­tial. amount of playing ex-; perience. Rounding out the defensive . backfield is senior Fred' ''Sarchet. Sarchet 5-10, 173), after an outstanding freshman yaar (he was named All-SWC freshman defensive back) and spending his sophomore and junior years in_ relative, anonymity warming" the bench, has emerged asthe top contender at rover.--• Also in contention for defen­ MUNTZ CARTRIDGE CITY FOR NEW OR US£D CARS WE CARRY AM/FM 8-TRACK OR CASSETTE STEREO SYSTEMS FOR IN-DASH INSTALLATION FOR AS LOW AS s9500 SAVE! SAVE! 10, 20, UP TO 30% ON CAR STEREOS. -CASSETTES, SPEAKERS. AM/FM RADIO, WHATEVER YOU NEED. backtto SCHOOL SALE: NOW OPEN WE CARRY ACCESSORIES ii $0, i.T?f • MELANCON, who also is the only defensive back with decent size' at 5-11, 190, "returns" as Uie incurabent aV Jhe strong-side halfback slot. "Terry^as theslzeandsav­vy to play good detensive tool ball. He's been very depen­sive halfback assignments are Landy Min&r Jfreshman, 6-0, 170), Mike" Featherston "(junior, Mike-Bar­tinger (sophomore, 6-0, 182). ~ Whlle Campbell praises the-— _ Cassette Car Stereo ~ for as lowas FM Multiplex 8Track Car Stereo /S LIMITED! HOT 8 Track Car Stereo 1 for as lew as '19" 8Track Car Stereo for as low as Sffi50 SJJ9Sm»i120" dable for us," Campbell said of the seniorsecondary educa­• tion major. Melancon has been a starter since the 1972 Oklahoma game. • r; Bizzell, by far the smallest T.V. Speakers of all kinds with savings up to 30%. Limited amount stefeo speakers •2.°°-'each.:' Come in and see our AM Radios & FM Radios. See our "Cassette Car Systems with AM&FM Radio. • Everything is. reduced to sell. Longhprn, at5-7,138, is thein­cumbent at safety. Although , All Cassette Tapess2" the diminutive sophomore lacks% the size to halt the brutal charges of big fullbacks and tight.ends, he is a sure Austin T.V~. ~ Rentals . 453-8041 . - CARTRIDGl CITY 1601 Son Jacinto 8 Track Tapes as low ass 1 WE INSTALL — WE REPAIR Accessories and Paris Available iin "r '(W mm :• > i • • i * . -TI* -• " * -••-p . --vgf.'/Jr.--. Like at three Saturday morning. Most checking accounts won't do you much good'5% ' • Well, if you're banking with Texas Bank,* you can-cash a check twenty-four hours a day, six days a week.-And with"real people, too."At WINDOW 624: ^ What's more, our "TEXAS CHECK", plan is designed just for you. You-see, we know that as a student, you'll probably only have to write a,few checks a month.: -J' And that^your average balance isn't, well, a's large as it will be someday. . ; ­ • So instead of having*to maintain a minimum balance that ties your money up, or an average balance "that's hard to figure, you're charged ten cents for each check you write., ' . im - A statement is mailed to you each mondi showing the acuvity of the account, ' Come see about a "Texas Check" account today. At Texas State Bank. A quick drive -^ downtown, at Congress and Ninth. ., . v vx Save time during the Registration Rush. . , Have your account ready on arrival. •?.:1 Write about opening your account now'by mail. rJi •-V Mail to:. P" TEXAS STATE BANK • New Accounts • P. O. Box 1328 • Austin, Texas 78767 g lflM ^ w x-Mi WM •1 %l si »l Ipl1 Ml f'A m, I Ml|H Wi • ; A3 Northwest Corner Congress $t Ninth / Window 624 Drive-Thru Bank, Ninth and Colorado 1 . "p • jr, -vA ^ \r * * * * Nicklaus res " iwll rf U.SOpen '• TOREST-HILLS, N.V. (AP)'— Hoscoe^Tsnner^ a cfew-cut|ATLANTA (AP) — Jack Nicklaus endeda s? and'placed him at the $206,307 piark for the: 'ryoungster out of the Tennessee mountain country! upset former^ ia^-^gsix-nionth victory drought Monday with ablr-? year,, second, behind leading money winner :tiUeholder Ilie Nastase of Romania Monday in a wild five-setter _ •I^die binge in the rain-delayed final round .o!$$ Johnny Mitter; Snead, nephew of golfing - and joined;Jimmy Connors and Stan Smith in a potent one-two^|®i jifthe 5250,000 ^Tournament Players Cham1' great Sam Snead, won $28,500. In his finest, • • three American punch at the U.S^ Open Tennis Championships.^ liuuship^firing a67,for-a272 totalanialwo^^^earorhte seven seasons on the tour, Snead : v In a marathon duel finished in semidarkneSs before42,000"at$ hrtf •riiimnKntroTr"T P. .6ma««I\ . --"• •—' "" • i~r~«—•— ... shot triumph oveFJ.C. Snead now^has earnedjust under $129;000r~——--;the West Side Tennis Club, the 22-year-old Tanner, from' Nicklaus and Snead were among a dozen Australian Bruce Crampton finished third ! • vliooKout Mountain^ Tenn.;;toppled the No. 7*;seeded Nastasei 4-6; < -players: still on the course Sunday when a after a 67 for 276. \ - -6-7, 7-5, 6-47-6-4 ~ ~= = — ..thunderstorm' struck. Tournament officials •Gene Littler-,-who-fired a 67 for 277 was . Snother seeded player was amongthe victims. Dick Stockton, Osssjjf^ithen suspended play until Monday over the fourth and became golf's eighth'millionaire of the Houston EZ Riders and-seeded No. 14, was beaten by the •: ^ •'•*par-72, 6,883-yard Atlanta Country Club with his $.11,750 in prize money. He is $8,454 deft, left-handed Ismael El-Shafei of Egypt 4-6,1-6, 6-3, 3-6. 6-4. ; course.. ' " * ; over the million doftarynark. The top-seeded-Corinors celebrated his 22nd birthday with his • ^.Tirr^^-Ni.cktius!, winning his 53rd .tour event, had . Gqlfs. other-oiillionait'es, areJ kM®nday'» <" M Cft 2 QUARTER LB; -New York 3^lwaukee T, Isf j'tf*# IS THE PLACE m BEEF .-. Meodpy't ' :Milwaukee 3. Aew York Z 2nd • *$&$••• •Pittsburgh ?-11, PhiladefpWa 4-l^^.v Baltimore T, Boston 0,1st Sandwich WT-HAMBURGER Atlanta USan Diego 2-0 • :•. Boltrmore 1/Bo^tp^0. ?nri •> Montrearat^fTLbuIv'PPdTrain --j Cleveland at Detroit • . New York at»Chlcaga ppd« ral^/i-?i Chicago 6, Kansas City 4 CD TO VISIT San Frapcisco V LovAngeles 3 Minnesota 9, Texas 3 : •REG. $1 70 SAVE 51 Houston 4^ Cincinnati 3 • • Oakland 6« CalHornlb 4 ' • Snappy Suvk* u-Y* ,1b.. fresh ground beef with lettuce, Wieranl /Umoiphw tomato, mayonnaise and pickles ­ • a«dn • Colorful OFFER GOOD THRU SEPT. 13 MUST PRESENT AD.W/TH PURCHASE 1705 Guadalupe 472-1582For the students who like to createtheir Good at Waco, KJWwn t, -Austin Atby't 5400 Burnet Rd. .451-3760-M O N E Y 4411 W. Sen White 892-2058 owntbookcases, Reese Lumber has shelf CD *Arby's » Arby's • Arby'-s-* Arby's • Arby's • Arby's • brackets and standards, also lumber, paint Bargains .on. Unredeemed Merchandise: and bricks for the popular brick-and^board Loans on Most Anything of Value'tsf i bookcises. g| ' We.Buy and Sell Wfer Summers Another favorite back-to-school item is ;^he barbeque pit, ... what better way for M SNOOPERS PAWN SHOP p?lligi? c' lP 0'-friends tsr; get togethermi „. vScSbackYard"barbeque..... „•> 613 W. 29lh 476-2207 ' Airport at " -i4t m tjm? m-m., Come;.to N. Lamar Check Cashing Service I REESE LUMBER 459-6565 DIVISION ar MILSTEAO CO. • Exercenter jl •i>± J6 Wi <>>­ BICYCLE the sv«lch from summertime synshine and outdoor activities to long hours in stufly class-EARN CASH WEEKLY ipoms and libraries, doesn't sound loo appealing. And whatabotil losing fhat areat sum­mer shape you ate In? " • Blood Plasma Donors Needed -EXERCENTER has Ihe physical fitness plqn JusPfbr vtou.and (n just a few> minutes |hree days 0k6& -a week. With .the help of Nautilus equipment, used.and^dofsed.byjhe MiamCDolphlns, -— Men & Women Ihefraned EXERCENTER staff can make you took eood.'feei goo<± and keep Ihat summer-' shape all year long • • EARN $40 WEEKLY1'^7^^ FULLY LUGGED FRAME FOR STRENGTH ; : Visit EXERCENp? today tor a free demonstration on our Nautilus equipment theri CLOSEOUT SALE CASH PAYMENT FOR « ^ ALLOY STEM & HANDLE BARS and enjoy the. sauna and whirlpool. DONATION sisa m 1 \-TOOLKIT ^vat-0(ERC0>fFER.^ Student Prlcev Avaliablt. WT: 2?t» • v" Austin Blood Components, IncT ® mk§ wm ^.W'l MPEN: MON.&THURS. 8AM to 7 P.M. TUBULAR TIRES ALTENBURGER ALLOY 8RAKB sMmm -­ WITH QUICK RELEASE 2108 lApderson Lane;i^ ,-V TUES. & FRI. 8 A.M. to 3 P.M. 454-5816-^ 8. CLOSED WED. & SAT. ""'fls , m 409 W. 6th ^ ap ' An Exclusive Men's HealthFadlity. Be a winner £:'\ *&k with POMPS! Enter now.;-. ALLOY RIMS r5$ti "0Sk-'M AdaiSSt »3k RAT TRAP WIDE-FLANGE ALLOY HUBS WITH* PEDALS WITH REFLECTORS 3% SIMPLEX TRESNGE" QUICK RELEASE A DERAILLEUR m II- Suggested Our Regular CLOSEOUf 9W : SgdlM , List Prfte ~ SALE PRirP I® • iVm fTRAK s13995 $|Q900 $9900 am "&p. a>f«mbled Belgium Made.# •.*•• -and tuned - ' i ?' u * ».« i-vs f" v -1 ' ' ife VAGABOND -i Mi $12500 ,411900 •. *89°° Thie Jack* Steak Sandwich,ii Onion rings. atwmbi»d_ 4 *T i " ^.Gitane' and'fOnad1 :-"" TheJunibo Jack. > Hot apple turnover? j T * The Jumbo Jack witltch'feeset^ Coca-Cola59, root be'erf ;f 'Jn ' 1 The BonusJaek® and orange dnnKspTpr mm life The Breakfast Jack, Y.--Pure grange juice.^ R^-•m 11 $8500 m $&?<'^ Pomps Pre.'Cut_Tis8(JB8/Alway$:llf6J cholC8>lorwirtnlnflhoirio-''!,y.v " USED BICYCLES -?50°° - Ham&urgers. Chocolate, strawberry : P^mfno lloalt. Now you can win iriore wUh PoitipslOurnallpnwlde/^ (loal contest 1s ready for Kick 0)1 Your group's Ildarcoma win-_ -^ Cheesebtfrgers^u^^-^v^ andjyaniJK^gl®!^!^. rt.iH ' — ' The Mo,by Jaq^Fish.Sandwich " ; . • Tacos. " GRAND PRIZE: $250.00 IN CASH 1ST PRIZE: $100>00 ttfCASITT French fries • *|QQ' FriEE paekageiot Pompi 2ND PRIZE: D.P/HZE: BrcyGLESHOPS -'A'--.'-:'-.-'; V • ' ' -" • •• ­ msmsi ~6liS1v; 29th iadalupe&26th Burnet Rd.& N.Loop 'THE CRySTALTISSUECp.;! r E DAILY TF.VAN <*'~ KWA.J' Wt&3W9S& Carrotsports. *" >t. J&rA.nW ££%mM By IRWIN SPEIZER -rnsmmmmrn Texan Staff Writer Bill Bownds'used car lot handles justabout everythingfrom a hotrod Henry J to a standard Chevrolet; everything buta fat profit. .Wheels and Dealsis a new.idea in used car sales thatgives the private owner a lot to sellhis car from. Bounds rentsspace on i;iS:lotjoc4he-ratP nf ai^ay-All thenars ohbis lotare novate ll) AlttVioy) • n«r) "Qnn>M _a>riA. ly owned, and.Bownds shows thecarslo prospectiVebuy^bffC doesn't close deals. The owner must do that • _c He has opened two tots, one in Austin and the other in" Houston. ' -•gas s,His lots average abffut 30 cars at any one tim6,'which at the1 , Tate of |2 per.car, gomes to about $1,800 a month. After ex--.. penses, that doesn't leave much for profits. » " ' ^""r^ The idea.is pure Henty Ford-Keep the unit priee lojv.and^Jv maintain a high"volume of turnover. ~ • -f --? ~ ®§?f . FOI^ YOUR $2a day, Bowndswill startyour cardaily, keepitsag' washed, show it to prospective buyers and let you look Into the Automobile Dealers' Association-Price Book. t i -The price book is the used car dealer's bible. It lists the suggested dealer's buying and selling price for nearly all late model cars , "With .the book, we can tell.a seller if he should be asking' more for his car, or if he.is asking too much," Bownds said. »the amount of time it takes to sell a car on Bownds'Jlofi varies. Therecofril for Austin is30 mjnutes, while in Houston the ^•2-,--record is 30 seconds, Bownds'said. 'V* "THIS GUY drove up to ask aboyt our service. He just stepped out of :his car whensomebody asked if it was for Sale." " :: Hesaid sure, and jthey left for a test drive. By Jhe time' they got ...back^thexar was sold..We didn'tmakea'penny offthe deal,;.fe Bownds moarieclr — — dL^s.: '-4 Bownds has his share of unusual cars, with the hot rod Henry; I, a •>-« XR^and-a^SS-Fordrconvertible?-:;""i Bownds bought the '53 Ford himseil, drove lt arpund Austin ,j for a month, tjien took it to hisHouston lot andsold ifataprofitSir campus .briefs ,? . m. i • -1' • I- NightClasses Still Offeredm Registration forfall evening Extension Building 301 at19th •>*; ^classes at tile University qo'fK "and Sabine Streets. ->7,tinues through Sept. 10. . >: C.C Through the Extension Retarded Aia |j '-"'Teaching and Field Service "Parent-To-Parent,"' spdfi-"* Bureau of the Division of El-sored by the Austin Associa­ intension, the University offers tion for Retarded Citizens, f ^^college-level courses to those ji^lps parents of mentallydisinterested in continuing:/ or ' retarded children by bringing ^"—beginning their educations but them together with other^unable to attend regular —parentS-Who share their situa--? • daytime classes. tion. • 7 Anyojift is.eligible to enroll The program provides infor-­ j^who isa high school graduate, mation about services;;and'yvihas a high sphool equivalency agencies available to mental­certificate or is atleast21and; ly handicapped children. notion scholastic dismissal OK For more information, calldisciplinary ; probation from: the Austin Association for',any institution of higher lear­•Retarded Citizens, 476-7044 ««„­ ning. ­Classes'"are taught by .. ANNouiWMws.sy'aiSSf; regular faculty members or SIUOENtS OLOEIl THAN AVttAOl (SOTA) persons approved by depart-will operatA -an information t»bfer ment chairpersons. Although^ enrollment in classes does not * . exlilencfl and to answer any l^I™nMrnlns l,r "rudu™ constitute admission to theJ^J ^( University, credits for exten-TIXAS UNION HNI AITS COMMITS win Sion Classes may be applied* »ponsor»n«f^x^lllrom»».mto* » j„__. i 'f > 5 pm. Tueidfiy through FrWayfTn;; toward a; degree. the UnlDn Building Arj GaUary .The • ^f!nnrsf fpp't arp^lfi nor^Bw. -exhibit:coosT»ta ot animal Mlnllnot . semester hour. * "Wl jt.,-More infornvation and m»ARTMBIT OF FHTSKS win ipomor a' 5?V sphorinloa nuv ha nhtatnwl hv relativity temlnarwithtpeaktfiall u*»? schedules may be obtained by and. 3 p.m. Tuesday in Robert Lee .^calling 471-7335 or by visiting , Moore Hall1m Wt- OINGON Shirts f&H ess-ent/al^Thej-m a Mi'tv/rti £vz/y -/f?/hy . ^ •iiWioa ~Jhe bi^shtrf-j /n gfgk £Sk CaJi'to pdlchtitprk' &11396 >*'. V w £mr*8i •%f m' (dS* ft:­ mSi M A Store H - ... "• • ••• ART SUPPLI ( -1 TOTAL PURCHASE IN SAGE PAINT DEPT. , 1. IN SAGELINEN -LUGGAGE DEPT." WITH COUPON AND CURRENT U.T. ID. WITH COUPON AND CURRENT U.T. ID. DpESlVOT APPLY TO SALE ITEMS VOID AFTER 9-10-74 ipOES NOTAPPLY TO SALE ITEMS VOID AFTER 9-10-74 Ki mm m. mSSn jaSBB mm SAGE m\ ^ ON CUP OF COFFEE IN HOUSEWARE-DEI OR SOFT DRINK m WITH coupon AND CURRENT Ui MTH THIS COUPONAffe CURRENT U.T. ID::' VOID AFTER 9-10-; liswiaw' !t"­ rj Wl M VW •v •-> a,-wosvWiS.,'«ri,J« .-wtv. .f-vsjte- i* -;.'J > \ f h' • ,v,-^v SOMETHING t1 1 , f^/*'r.' 3V*U "*^V^ll*V tf*Jfc"H W -,£ W*. A t M -»"..I'S' -? * '*'--Tv ; "*t •^*3arf i •"'" -• -•••-• *s*«Around about registration week, when everybody rand his or her dog comes down to the-Co-Op to buy - their textbooks things get a little hectic and-conse­quently a little depleted, used books being the first ^things to go. But if you've• pre-registe.red and know ' what courses you're taking, you can get ahead of the game.-You can buy most of your books now in -relative comfort and get dubbies on whatever used , books are in stock. If you buy the wrong book you can bring it back as long as you don't go out of your way to violate the Co-Op Refund Policy. -••• ' 1 i -*•"v•. • • 1 OUR REFUND POLICY If you happen to foul up and buy a book in error, the Co-Op will accept the return-of textbooks under the following conditions: 1. Books-must be returned during the current semester. (Subject to the follow­ing deadlines.) — 2. Full refund will be given if a book is returned on or before Sept. 18 without • penalty. Books purchased after this period must be returned by the close of • business on the second business day after purchase -i.e., a book purchased December 1 would be returnable for a full refund up to the close of business on December 3. „ • 3. Refunds will be made only with cash register receipts. 4. Books must bear a Co-Op price tag. 5. New textbooks must be free of all markings and considered bjnstore per­sonnel to be in new condition. 6. Only those books which are required or recommended for U.T. courses are eligible for refunds. 7. Books returned at times other than specified above will be purchased under the University Co-Op Buy Back Policy. 8. Defective books will be replaced free of charge. These defective books shouldrbe returned as soon as the defect is noticed." NOTEBOOKS, PENS, PENCILS AND MUCH MORE, ARE FOUND IN OUR SUPPLIES DEPT. What you need is what you get in our Supplies department. We have such things as notebooks, bluebooks, pens, pencils (the things we've always had), plus things you may not be aware!of. Flashlights, batteries, light bulbs, hammers, saws, bulletin boards and much more. We have a large selection of art and craft supplies. We have oils and watercolors, raw canvas, canvas boards, sculpting supplies, a full line of art papers, commercial art supplies and that's not all. You can even find those engineering and geology supplies. We've got everything from Architect scales to calculators. SET UP HOUSEKEEPING WITH OUR APT. SHOP J In the Apartment Shop you can rent a i.8 cubic foot Sanyo refrigerator for $27.50 per semester. Pick-up and delivery are available for an additional $5.00. There's also a $15.00 property deposit which you get • back, and you can apply the rent toward the purchase of the refrigerator. Also at the Apartment ; Shop you can buy things like Pots and Pans, Pillows, Clocks, Appliances (Small)., Terrariums, Glasses, Posters, Prints and variations thereof. We'll make you and your apartment look great. |Save Your Cash Register Receipts | * The Co-Op returns part of its profits each year to * |the membership, of which you are a part as a stu-* a. j. -v-: • . _ . . ' . . dent "eceive your share you should save your $ regisrer receipts whenever you make a purchase.I Before June 30, you should turn in your receipts to| receive your rebates which are mailed to you in'aI check, the following September, if you will not be| around on June 30,. you can turn in your receipts any f ~~ I '""iSfCSMATlOKi COO«TEK '-v:: .,r~ir~T uuu • I S—I I ! u CHcCk our J 7 ] n' fl !l ! ||COOT I 2 CLIP u't'tiiS<-i«nc*. • •rti»ing •jtpnc* tngu'es'i Civt'nafiGi «'!C4T1 Siudi«» • tmifmlojjy ^ R«g-'inalPiimunf j'i»iFound of Education MiK"h«-wj r.»f««rl! p n n' il. ! I! M ! i f! U |1 Pj U !j UU 26 THIS IWftSl •n» Fcck'omtcs nt.-'i! Af»n ' > Sj.«" * v (.«'Ami'.. « $«vrf « jaws' i*|| mm Bill ffH gl '*p OUT!!! f« ss& We will buy back books during the first week of classes. St oi*e \1~ I ^ foil j'S SiiI ()|K'lis t at Iff its 5^Sf5 i$S ^5 s|u jjg ;{t JJj 3% ^^•fa ^jj, 3^ BankAm(-ricat d 1»1P II 'r *' 8t Mu-if'-r'Cfiar ge li SB kftfeEb'ftff :SSr'i>i?> ''I®!'.;#''>4/1: w«AJ? #f % J' T Si >fe m­*"«U^gi ? •£*% {.$: ^\\n , ?raS8.«Ji »*r%zr • -V5f ' »* >** rrt *i Wp:?v:iK? $f W3**# r^'f *•* '|rt" 'II „ 'Sli $$£•?** $*? 5 I-Vlte­fl£A«« Sfc .S^'V ••iewdon wunwrlghl Ul ft. W^4££,^^ vBfesaastfat "-•* 1"* yjeL V* yrrf*fte2r.c*V s?S4i"^ » *?r fier * *£>'A Wftthn f. won b««kum ,4Mj$y 11: i 1 wfel££& yv^'5 11 ""It was a Worried Barry. Fey who Sar-enthusiastic crowd and followed wi^h such veyed tho patchwork Canvas covering that ballads as "Guilty," '-'Performance" and would shelter the Memorial Stadium switched^back'to '•'High-Tirne'We "Went" AstroTurf from the expected 60,000 ticket for a rocking finale^ ,ir. -holders. With .thegates due toopen,and the After a lull. Carles Santana and corn-north end of the field stil^uncovered, the -pany lessened the mental, ordeal of the . bearded; rotun(i Fey,. one__of the five masse& un the stadium, which-by. now-:, promoters of the. Z Z TojTbahidance ex^ resembled fa •concretefishbowl;' with an travaganza, was clearly worried uplifting selection of their hits In addition' '."Our supplier in Dallas shorted us out to standards such as "Black Magic on canvas. We bosght every piece of can-Woman" and "Oye Como Vathey in-' vas in this tQwn.i$6;600 worthy and "it still troduced a new song; "Mirage " • ~ ..isn't enough It ive conld~ have had it WHENSANtANA -finished. the lights " :£-;; earlier,, we were prepaned to open the went out-and, to the ttme-of-"TheEyes < gates at 8 a.m. People could have come in Texas" rendered banjo-style, the Z Z Top and sat jdpwn Without a. hassle. What -emblem was horsted.skyward to the. roar » happened .to thegood old days when a band of tjte 80,000. The band came on, the stage ;. . could. just get. upand .play?". ' \ lit up and Top launched into "Thunder-i BOTH 1FEY ,and the 80,000 capaoity bird " '^Vcrowd jammed into Memorial Stadium -Observers agreed Tl~ was a good ap­, : Witnessed, the. throes of a happening born • proximation of the second coming,-with. of the new age of rock concerts — Texas orange and gold Hare bursting above.' The. style. _ -generar consensus was that Z Z Top was ! Promoted by the biggest names in the worth the Wait; concert business -Alex Cooley, Bill At 2:25 a.m., after the 150-man security .7-^,,,, ; • -'Graham, Don Fox, Terry Bassett and.Fey . force comprised of Austin and University ~i .and, advertised from Texas to police and 30:redrshifted .volunteers had . .|®l| ^ Tennessee, to Mexico, everyone knew-it long left, two-tired .campus policemen, -: would be big. Nobody, but nobody, was surveying the debris in the stadium and . s -^'Wr ; i prepared for-what ensued. . the half-dozenstranded carsscattered-out-K&f ^ .The first aid stations ipanned by 60 pe^-side, tipped Iheir hats back and shook'"' • >$ons from the Middle Earth and Inlet drug -ffleir heads; : ••••.• ^g^.; crisis centers reported several cases of "Jt could have gone a wholfr lot worse," "* f . lreat prostration^ almost immediately. one said, "but you know for sure it could?®? 1 VPeople who reallyneeded something to have gone a whole lot better^s ^'dniik justblew it off on accountof the long ' '* , liliesr " Mike Cushner of-Middle Earth ; saidiv The fir^t. aid station under the • ~i^TtMiuni-estimatedHreeiting-approximate^„ •ly, 30 persons per hour. Aides in the two yellow, and white first aid tents,-dis­pensers of salt tablets and,cold com-; presses, lost count. Frenzied stretcher-bearers clawed their Way to the unconscious-whowere slurftped in front of the.stage;-Drug overdose cases were^ taken "by Austin ambulances, to'fli* Brackenridge Hospital for treatment, %M' their progressslowed to a crawl by the uh-' moving throng. ' • * . j'-Backstage, away 'from; the crowd,-a profusely perspiring Fey vented his dis­• gust ,at the fact the. concessionaires ran v-; out of food.. .•. 4{'We had plenty of supplies," stadium -Toncession owner Charles Walden said. ; "The crowd wouldn't, let us in to restopk : the stands-."; . . CONCESSION business manager Steve Smith reported a"conservative estimate" \/|J of $r,00b worth of merchandise stolen by the-'outrbf-control. crowd. After seven.^f4| Austin policemen were besieged in one stand, unable to prevent the looting of drinks and barbeque, the order was given to close the-stands down,, _ v ' in ihe midst of the confusion, the music started at 3 p.m. with Jay Boy, a Bill Ham group, Bad Company followed and rocked into "Can't GetEnough of Your Love",and their theme song; "Bad Company." ' The inimitable Joe ,Cocker howled out-^i"; ''Pardon Me Sir','.;to,jthe wildly^Tr••'Vl'l. >-• •. . : . .. •-•.•"/jyv.— . -SfS&k" mmmBS ... . g®»!©i '' ; ksMl yd­ .v, "r-?:1 I'l l.. f". '.".• SSS8SS& wmm wiSSt m f-A •&y hcr«i moov i ^5 % 'Wk • ;• ... V. SW Mf «£W T> fj-»^a WVVn j-i x cjEJCW^ CXXM/x/ x^ • |>r x^4 ^ \-v v' t,./'K ,AS >&V\ Y J\rVY IiAX >> ... . \/\s yF')l \\mA -V." '^-^2 W&i;­ mmm y&srui! . iPP^lP 1st: ._• • ­ m?&§ «-«ssa Seminar,? Educate J*2»V On Abortion By GARY UDASHEN.C,, _ ^summer and that it will be.^.n she explained. " BRADF1ELD explained Texan Staff Writerji.-? *j^jnext spring beforeany racV^3 Although many-people that diseases affecting - Officials Councilman iBob-i'Binder •Friedman and Binder asked The University Student Although the industrious ij&coons are available. keep exotic pets, it is still frii these, animals are often fe Monday had not yet received Brown for an estimate at a Health Center, will not per-1 •-' —•-•*--7f'\ ' -'.Twenty county adV­ turtle ,n Aesop's "TfiiTor-y^ Kanme Koiffures is extremely difficult to find "an" official ..estimate from $§pT budgetwstudysession-Iuesday. -form: jLbortipns_ because the toise and the Hare ones -.ministrators,---including. twoJ' Brackenridge . Hospital ad­Brackenridge Hospita1 procedure,is not'"considered to fable -,^0{ several pet stores in" veterinarians who -will ;#*Jdogs and cats. 1 became a folk. hero to • •» 'I .Av-... * * , • *• * from Travis County, ""provid­ treaf these animals. ministrator William King presently must borrow abor-• be emergency surgery, the' ^"{Austin that",sell exotiai.«. mt'A. "They have respiratory generations of American s animals 1 Austin veterinarian Dr. ed a unique ciioss^section of: Brown on the cpst of installing:~tiorrequipmerrt-from-aloca] only.type pf anrgerv that can 15 mi -nti. j,. ,j • r jl .. ^ prablems,' tumors, county-officials who are not '1 youth, real turtles may be,'j?, . . abortion equipment "in the-physician. • ' >«« «—-» ~x~ T.G.Bradheldisoneofthe , abcesses and'suffer from be. permitted at tEe facility headed for-a life of;virtual rS?with-explained that. _ all doing Ujg" same,jobs" at a hospital, Requests from Austin doc-under University regulations: . ndiul .-^-Jocal ^—constipation," he com- anonymity. -'i^any people call looking •:".seminar-v:that...ended Friday, . " 'Ithink we ail'fcnow thatthe' . tors for abortion equipment •-"We can doonly emergency-• exotic veterinarians whotreat ex-• the director of conferences . ~ ? presently s<|for > .. * figure will be less, than $2,000. :installation,'have.been denied surgery. We do not do abor-" Turtles are birds, reptiles,'1^ otic animals quarantined with little monkeysi -<-"We treat a lot of rep-:Xs-7 Bradfield said -most and training of the Lyndon B." Something between $2,000 and because money for the equip­tions and cannot, until the hope of the ban lifting IS, "MONK&YS. MAKE}^ tiles ahd birds, m we ^tehnarians refuse o Johnson School of Public Af-' I Wt-V $1*500,''Binder said. ment was not included in the. regulations arrechanged,'• Dr. anytime soon.It is alniost E00^ pets, but they're a lot generally don't treat ?'^reat' exQt,c an™als fairs said Monday. Austin City Councilmen Jeff • hospital budget; Friedman Paul C. Tri'ckett, director of impossible to purchase a like hyperactive children," -The seminar, in the Joe Chw? I monkeys or fish," he said,.^^®u®f said. the health center, said.->•••••. ;. pet turtle"anywhere in 4he -^as"';.!formation about them is Thompson ConferenceCenter;"; I "The main thing "isrrthat • The facility does provide--United States. _ ^ H fllflfecant. ' was sponsored by the LBJ m -Specialty Brown should liave included it pregnancy counseling, abor­ School. Attending were.Thtvis AUSTIN veterinarian,:j- ^sr,^-.Riddle does treat snakes, fashtonsjor in-the budget," Binder-said.-... STVUil P tion-referral and. treatment -Dr. ft.B. Riddle said"*,, "7'rE* .. armadillos, and other such County.rAuditor Wilburn Rust i men and . Brackenridge. is the only for students' suffering com­turtles carry the disease. - ^•9JCKAAI^VSBK| petstut advises his clients and first Assistant County At-­ -women . publifc facility in Mistin that plications-resulting from an salmonellosis, which has-7; r^M^that antj.. dogs make ty. Mike Rehfro. *' . ~ can perform -abortions. abortion. np effecton the turtles, but'^. &*••• .-better pels-. , "I wanted to see other ap­does cause grave problems",* "WILD ANIMALS proaches county officialshave. I®-had,'and. if we could improve for humans who associate-'' should be left in their t. OFFICE SPACE AVAILABLEM with turtles. Humaris who,-, -natural habitat,"-Riddle administration techniques in«i W fondle''turtles 'are taking' ' ^''''said. * our county," Renfro said. "I •2200 -GUADALUPE PLAZA the chance of contracting Bradfield agreed that : talked;with people from other w -"Across the street from campus various gastro-intestinal ' most of these animals do counties, such a§ Harris, and Suite^2VK2G0iq. ft. -diseases.^ -— ' » •i not make good pets but listening' to them, our: Suite 214 -'515 sq. ft. rS$ -4 cited a"s proBletiis iif^Traviff-^County­ : Riddle said thedisease is raccoons one seem very small indeed." .i'-Tv? Suite 215 -242 sq. ft.. ' difficult to combat. He is,i,-» ' animal which, can be *S»*.rfMk»dcrfUc*j V Suite 226 -690 sq. ft. Renfro. said that although • *w*y-pessimistic about the-^ .domesticated. possibilities of lifting the saa-i^ ''J treat a lot of raccoons, the seminar operated on a first-time basis for both ad­ ~ContQct:~Nieman,Hanks and Puiyear quarantine. and tti'y make good pets," ministrators and participants, r - he said. —If the tnrtii» problernls" he expected future-sessions to-Armadillfls_were cited by not enough to depress'an •-rimpFove-wtth-morelpubliiThboth vctcrinariatiSr-as-exZanimal lover, therraccoon ""arrd'gieaUii attendaoeef-—ceptionally troublesome. . shortage might do it.0­ • • '"I enjbyfed it.-1 was parr*: "Armadillos-are messy, Sandy Smith of Kariine"^ ticularly interested in talking they smell bad, and they Koiffures explained" that It with other people about court A can't adjast td'living in a JESTERCENTER is impossible to purchase a administration and how they ; confined situation,". Brad­ **hS2* —$kalch • , pet raccoon this late in the dealt with backlogs of cases. • •H field said. 'Don't touch the turtle' "Corpus Christiis buildingav • new. jail, financed by a $16 tpx -million bond election, and I 8 .STORE LIBRARY FINES • wonder if this wouldn'Uwork-­ i&mm NoHcet from the Univ«r»it^ C m Travis County. Our 'jail is • Library or any of it* mm taking floor after-floor of the ; ? Your ON CAMPUS Student Store AW KEEP A LID branches areofficial Univer­courthouse; and modernizingsity communications reqUir' Weekdays 8:00 "til 6:00 -eosts aregetting prohibitive, Ing immediate attention. he said ^ Z , ON JOUR msT Saturdays 9:00 'til UOO •• • SH :M COPYSHOP U -TYPING II: Wx 2200 Guadalupe Si-... • BLUEBOOKS v-« * COSMETICS w; PLAZA LEVEL ' ^ i' SAS'. 25% • SPIRALS • RECORDS^ s,^1. ;SNACKS • MAGAZINES discount with, this ad need copies or typing? I • "*«fc tf,jagt in q hurry? : V:, ... Wi Bond Copies • Binding . Printing +-^fypirig~ . DICKENS Convenient Self Service or Full Service Available, CONVENIENT FOR SHUTTLE BUS RIDERS! Just across the streM from the University -474-1124 e Cleaners & Laundry *-.» • • •,* «. %^P,RKSS15 lasMJ SHELVING 2918 alupe 477-7394 RENT mi «S«FS SHELVES -No. 2YP CONCRETE BLOCKS MONTHS FOR l"x\2"x3' ....82« ea. 8"x8"x8" ... 39c 1>''X12'/X4V. $V.09 ea. a^xs^xia'' . 55^ 1-x12"X5/^, $1.37 ea< 8"x8"x16" ;h?57* RENT IT...THEN IF YOU UKE l.64 ea. Light Weights IT YOU CAN RENT—BUY IT •i S /? COLOR TV Texas Lumber Co. " 4 MONTHS FOR $75 1313 E. 6th 478-8772 1 . . Rent by the week;-month .or semester Copies-until M p.m. (or after) Mon.-Thurs.: -7 a.'m.-1T p.m. ' every night of the week^ Friday: -^7 a.m.-mianight BERKvnnns Information Center Soturddy::.''S 8 a.m.-midnight the stereo store Room-102, The Texas Union p.m. 223.4 6UADA.LU PE • 476-3525 5^ 3^ ® ^ R N ET ROAD • 454-6731 ike Packs ,, ART SALE BecomirjgaiAysicianis W0A­ mk-rr Ihr2*! Mis&ctioQ.•» m'•,'"'i * m-.-dan mm m ,;Let usgiveyouthe|6bsatisfaction., tbatdraolagowithit: -Wheibci you'rl stillmmedical school wfth the theAir Forcedoesnot He finds hisofficeestablished , rigors of three lo fiveyearSDfgradujtiemedicaledu forhim. Supplies and equipment readilyavailable. : catlon^till to be faced, or are already a practicing He hasrmanyoptipns availabletohim whentreating •>>«.;«V:op«wi^r,ajeyVir;porc:e^an patiems/FpreXi^pleihecahVonsultwitKAir Force otl^r both professional and .personal-satisfaction spejcialisij He also hat referral toother AirForces nant tcf duplicate >h civilian life f facilities Via acromedical evacuation. Last,but nop ' /in overstatement' Not if you-consldsr the lease'are the satisfactions that come with having ; . , ' ' , -' , i i the.opportunity forregUlarfo!low-Ups, andamftsai­ . I j|Kt-inc-ptc>yi£fn orgtiiju8ift;iBiidirai edMCi* ruppointwyntffltg fbpf U praciirfllly^nil. r-p"Ml J^fwxlpfypurlifc^©AirHorcccaninal^'isv.vTOiclhcryou arcaireadyaph^iciOTror"sthiiilt* m Ueature comfons asidei the AfcFbrce offers -il^Mbear&l^e^ipeher.Ifyou'ilrmil'ih'tlwdHl­ professional advantages•Betides receivingtraining * pon,We'd-be happytosend youdetailed uifoririatiofl. tn your own speciqlt^ you'd be in contactwith - -^ < wm physicians in.^ll of the .medical Sp&ialues. YpO'll f"' ' • h j ' i i : function in an enviropmem which is.intellectualIy /.| r Air t$ttc AlpitKitodUcis' po,w,„ attmulatHie-and^roCessionallychallenging.' -• fmuALMH •i&F ,. ;Not allphysicians pursue p«f )fttidencyfelloy#-,• -'-'m i'ft.ships, Butif vduareimerested.the'Air porcecon-Picsie una me jn&ftnuuon 6ri the Aw Fofe« Plmtiitll&S' m^Kers $1.00 off on all Lambert prints tt'am. *uodt(»Und(hfr€i»riooblJ8«tJoa. _»h v r­ •mm P--4V L^-duets memboth ir>houscand arcivilianiosriiutions. < f !i?h. ^ ^ J -7 •• -v ^ v',r^ti2 -The physician.already in practice cantook for-Mm**.T T ,, < (WL«. . 215)8 HI&.34BK Age of Absolutism TT+iV30-3 00 , kierstead* '" CLASSIFIED AD 1M6-1W ' 21566 Hl» 354M Modern GreokCuHoreTTh7-00-8.30pm.' Arnakis .. . 2)569 His 355K U.S History . MWF 12 00«1 00 Calvert , . CALL 471-5244 " * 1877-1901 •S. 21637 . < His 3A8N. Africa* imperlaUsm TTh 1*30-3 00 Broadhead Si Nationalism •. B li W -stv~l Fr- WALKTO U.T. 8 M ALL BILLS PAID COVERED PARKING POOL i&8&te8S8mm• CAPEZIO DANCE FOOTWEAR HUGE CLOSETS BAUET • TAP • JAZZ SHWASHER/OISPOSAL LEGTARDS"»TIGHTSandA«:essori6s 2810 RIO GRANDE 476-4095 807 CONGRESS AVENUE YOUR DANCE POWNTOWN 472-4149 HEADQUATERS: , -v & -" m BIG Pens Spiral notebooks r35 C from any DOBIE MALL DOBIE MALLmerchant merchant. Live country-reck University music from 2-5 X. information booths one place for all Thursday Friday m^our questions. edar Frost Denim » < Thursdayl-& Friday only^ a ^s,r4ki Despite an early afternoon bomb scare at the KTVV-TV .channel 46, studios;. $84,024 for {he Jerry Lewis Muscular Dy^rbphy telethon was collected Monday'from individuals and* • businesses in the Austin area.-The Labor Day telethon resumed • after a search of the studios failed to-find a bomb. CecilioGarza, KTVVj^roduction manager, said approximate-ly $10,000 also was collected from a fishbowl outside the station . where motorists dropped contributions and pledges. Last year's.>total fishbowl total was $7,000, Garza said, while $63,000 was collected locally ' . . Other major contributions include $1,000 raised in wa'lk-a­tho_ns, sfatera-thons.and carnivals held by Austin children;'$3,-• 000 raised by the^ ... SHOP DAILY 11) 'TLL 9 mMi i ' i&fci SUPER FUN r * v -;./N¥v/:v ^ VV'<-K% , V ^ t • •* -" NEW! ONLY AT JOSKE'S!... BIG FLOOR PILLOWS­ZIP TWO TOGETHER, YOU HAVE A CHAIR! -'•«p9atesK--^ ^ .. ouch tun . • for dorm-room, apartment' Soft, colorful 26x26" tloor pillowy that go their way alone . . or zip together *<> v to give you ^relaxing chair! Two chairs make a 'love seatrV» ' three a *!sofa."Sturdy cotton covers,"plumply filled with shredded urethane foam. Heavy-d'uty zippers ffiat will last 19" and last. Choose from six smart prints in colors"for most ' * •; '-vSt any decof. Downstairs Homeworld, Joske's Highland Mall ONE CHAIR (SET OF 2 HLLOWS) VA1UE!...BRIGHT VINYt BEAN BAG CHAIRS 30ST tiisate *^§L Choose solid avocaao,. ~ §Ls yellow rre3"."pa"rsTe^'green^rj dark.-bluei mahogany, t;£g. black d>r.squash ! Gloves soit vxn-yl, polystyrene bead ",'C ii^llv lap-stitched, seams 'double zippered enclosyTes|l| ^ 99" q*pumierence x'481' -• a.-ba •.JBean bag 'refills,-3 cu "If 2.99 -,1 u, ' • ; m • • i wrnmimimmmmmmm mmm S 1 1 A •* ^ ^ tV* « J ' '•«. r r-\ £v*V»?. sw$gw :.;:^':-<>R­ *^e«**»wr3i WSW^nseStfSKft1 MUFIIFF. • Ri mpmfr. r^iSSvlT&S'TI mwmm 1~*L sr,sn*nf*w •* * -**\ * .•••.'•.-•a®--" ^iV„*A'ri?yS>: c,;®»S?i5ij^^a^^^rIfeff.i t-'J ss'j.>3ji®i£• £ B|A -^\lWSS$lSSi I,M sw» W^t #8? ­ Lamar Savings Offers Financial Assistance 'Mlf •ww!& .By.-NANCY MILLS " Fowler originally had planned to move from beingdemolished, said Wayne Bell, Texan Staff Writer the historic home and use it for offices, vice-president.pt the Lapdmark Commis-• The$7-year-oid Walter Tips house may But when he discovered the cost of mow sion. escape the fate of the Hunnicutt House, •tag-tlie house would be 'approximately "If it (the plan) works, we would con­which was demolished in.March, if a $60,000, he went before City Council to sider committing ourselves to finance plan :engineered•; by Lamar-Savings request financial aid. When the dty the saving of one historical structure a Association is implemented. : declined.to provide aid, fowler's plan to year.-If the plan works,;we could apply it: . In a press conference Friday, Stanley1 save the house was blocked;: to a number of the structures, possiblyAdams, chairman ol tfie board of tamar^ T~However,Lamar's'"aecept' ;ti»e^house.: That: relocating the structure and. assist in decision would be; based on the money building an Austin-sizeRockefeller Center that would include the-Palm-financing the relocation; acquisition of­-available for the project and -primary Goethe house, he said. land and refurbishing ol the house, need, MdBee said. Adams added, . Adams suggested the society could Bell, a yisiting associate architecture At present Lamar'-Savings "does not receive donations for the restoration of professor at the University, said he will own theTips housebut ownsthe property the house from the community, then sell-a graduate seminar - conduct this fall on which; the house-rests. If the present the house for a profit and use the money which will draw: up plans for the center. owner, Bob Fowler* cannot relocate the for other projects.-Those plans will ''respect the historical house by Oct. I, it will. :b3gg$^t|&v, if any historical house is sold, it usual-value of" and "complerhent" the Palm-property of Lamar Savings. ly contains a restriction preventing it* Goethe house, Bell said. GIVMSSUD «fr mversity-employeS-ComdAnd go.'but few giyetip2,000hours With the,loss of his garden, Davisreturned to carpentry; with of-paid-sick-leav^whpnnn thf»y depart. But J. MonfoeTJavisnra—-a-shop-ftrst-iii-Kinsnilvinfr and la tor in -ipgtnr-C• -From carpenter, Davis went,into .the nursery business and Bail Bond Laws f " -— --• '•"• " • ^ k I«B A*MMA v ri W C MJ came 'to the University in 1945 as a groundskeeping foreman. V. ANY ADD/DROP CARD PROCESSED IN BELLMONT HALL TODAY MUST BE DATED Davis kenta flowergarden across from Kinsolving Dormitory 09-03-74. WRONG DATES WILL CAUSE REJECTION. to furnish dormitories with fresh flowers daily. His garden is ­now a parking lot. r~ in Suit 2. EVERY STUDENT SHOULD CHECK HiS CARDS THOROUGHLY FOR ERRORS AN EXTRA "I raised a variety of flowers year round ^snapdragons, cor-i-£xin a test case of new bail Wells turned himself in last a . MINUTE TODAY WILL SAVE YOU MANY HOURS LATER THIS SEMESTER. tglowefSTimagnoHaS7ypeach-blossomsr-pear-Mosaoros.^-_1Jwnd laws, the-owner of ah Tuesday: wiiu mws. uie-owner oi an ^uesaay, iarranged the flowers for decoration in'the diningand reception' Austin club filed suii' Friday"; Whem-he-arrived -^t^-thfr-i? 3. DO NOT MAKE ERASURES ON ANY IBM CARDS. COMPLETE A NEW CARD IF THERE IS halls," Davis said. ' charging false imprisonment police station, Wells ANJSRROR. "But as the University became modernized, theyT3i* Twia^e < '< .The suit stems from Wells' . filed to test the new law. tJtFF-ERENr SWLiri arrest in late August on In the.suit, Wells asks fora av RAicnte nverr/v,-. charges of exhibiting obscene total of $1,150 in damages. It . material. Brady issued the wasl filed in 126th District OUMHAHi AHb' -arrest warrant Aug..22, ami Court. KASTlNCreR *&•. SYLVESTER BRADFORD IMPORTANT m £§'-*3 -ANNOUNCES1 *•••<&¥ THE ASSOCIATION OF •MI m John M. McGuire O.D. "* ; FOR THE PRACTICE OF OPTOMETHY , WILDEf?NESS/WHlT£WATER SUPPLY — BY APPOINTMENT — MEDICAL PLAZK .-2113 E.'iaTH " AUSTIN, TEXAS" 78702 47e.9907 EXJENSION EVENING CLASSES '' EXTENSION TEACHING AND FIELD SERVICE BUREAU THE UNIVERSITY fa TEXAS AT AUSTIN FALL SEMESTER REGISTRAT10N-1974 'mat i:;Q0l6:QQ to 9:00 P.M.-AUGUST'26727,"28, 8:3^ A M »RT A>IR\ O M CCDTC&UDCD RI A 30 A.M. to 4:30 P.M.—SEPTEMBER 3,4 ­'v'M-JOE C. THOMPS'ON CONFERENCE CENTER 24th AND RED RiyER (NORTH OF L.BJ LIBRARY) lUs... CLASSES BEGIN SEPTEMBER 9 and 10 --\ ' r ---(Final Exams-Scheduled for Deeember 9-12) GGUfISE-0EEEBINGS IN ' ' --" " t * ^^l^rTTTT^GQUFISE-OEEEfilNG^IN^ :«S >mS}r ISlf Accounting i&j,4-.-ClaMlcat Civilization _ 1 Government , Office Administration (Shorthand) AmjrlcanrStudies ^..Computer SflKWT" yt Graduawi.anjuaBe Courses Oriental and African Anthropology * *s.­ : Lanooftes8ntf:Ulttrature«^K5» Art ' Astronomy " • -mmi Bible' Biology h^T-xhiit' naaio-1eieuiston-f-ilmft^ur&rfi" ym Botany -"WFinaA.. Lfngulsilc* Real Estate Business Admmlstration.v;BK.(ir'e'heh Management^ Russian -7r Sfte3^nBSlComrTnjrncation^ GeographV • * Marketing i Sociology ^ « ,,W-Uw 1F^U.r Geology I •" i„ Mathematics -.f Spanish German •Muster -.Speeth:V; ' '*'1$ ? 'BUL ET'I.NS mJJWNG, 19th and SAB!— Sift'i' BUILDING 16 471-5865 */js * ttf t tarry Mckeyltt watches John Narum demonstrate basic sculpture techniques in a class at Elisqbet.Ney Museum. To BeginCfasses The Elisahet Ney Museum, sjres5%r;meffid3Cdl?MP]^\.Jto1»^304 E. 44th St;y will offer art ment and-use of various' in th° mrriin Clashes meet modeline. $25 fee for modeling. fall , program beginning next Wednesdays beginning Sept Arf; projects Monday. 7 11, and there is a $12 fee... eiementary-ag^d children will The staff of the city-. jr An evening class in sculp-feature drawing; painting and fl sprmsftroH iviiisAiim win teach _ . ~ "coursesnn-sculpture-and-life­drawing for adults; as well as children's'art. . . Drawing and sculpture classes for ages 10'through mid-teens will -be featured in the first six-week session, Wavecrest Wafcrbeds Complete <->•...$ •election of waller beds & aceeesoriee. 6407Burnet 454-7901 r ,­ a BULK I RESTAURANT OPEN 24 . 2 Game Rootns Pool»FooibalI«PInball ]' '»3500 Cuadalupe 451-9151 J, Roast beet, cornedbeel, cheeses ,pastrami, him. quiche.'bartiecue:' avocado sdu0: cheesecake & baklava.Bul not allai once'jp*r* 3W W6SI t3m 472-1900 , COHnon ^MBRKET BlKe/BooK . MpdJCK&f* Whole EartKtt Provision Ca; 24i6Ss>tAftt<$£ >• ture for teenagers and adults sculpture". The classwill meet _ will mppt~fmfiir-7TlS--tor^rlO from^-3-t4S—to-^-4-^4S—n, mT­ p.m. Mondays and Tuesdays beginning:SeptTTitr Wednesdays beginning Mon­and has a $14 fee.-Most day. The $35 fee includes clay materials are included. and modeling fees. An additional $1 fee • for A sculpture class for adults registration, will be charged will be open from9:30 to 11:30 each student for the six-yreek, a.m. Mondays and Wednesday ; sessions, -^^r. JV; beginning Monday. The$35 fee Further-information maybe again includes clay and .obtained by. calling the modeling fees. • tnuseum at 4S4-1762 or Louise A life^drawing course': to be Saxon, education director, at held from 7:15 to 9:15: p.m. 452-7368. SHAKEY'S m 2915 Guadalupe , Presents . tfll WILCOX & WEST .TONIGHT ONLY Serving your favorite. Beer, Wine Coolers, ^|° Sangria', and 21 varieties of Plxia % 476-4394 r 2915 Guadalupe 3-t* NO COVER AUSTIN ROCK FOOLS . -NO CQVER MONDAY-THURSDAY r, ^ \ D06RS OPEN: 8 HAPPY HOUR: 8-9 Menu tAiTH I 914 N. LAMAR 477-3783 \ 7c jf Tz< <•' ArniadillaWorld Hdqtrs. 'presents ~ , CEDAR FROStf mMf­ ®»fel IN THE BEER GARDEN NO COVER FROM THE KITCHEN PlISlArQOD-.­GUMBO WITH RICE nam 52SK> BARTON SPRINGS RO, lii/. t ^477-0357 im 1*fF jDRINK: DROWN, |.FRE^8EER|g ALL nighi4^! ^ Specials Prices On High Ball* -. LlVEENTFMTAmmN?^. ... SEATURING . !™B fPAPAloi AND THE RIVER I-,...rr.'lrr? THE BUCKEI 23rt| aria v Apron dromHardin Norffv-^3Mrerfere»rP»rklng^ We witt trade you a mug of beer for your oMf mm tMmm %..m. x&s£m ,, ,.^j» *s ^ Doc Watson *Heals' Opry Crowd tvj Q« TAU'MIt I 17D • • . L.r I.. J # •!. i—' "•'• -; ' By TOM MILLER " Texan Staff Writer ~ Doc and Merle -.Watson's Saturday night show at the Texas Opry House showed-the effects'pf musical medicine on the ear. ''"-ysYVV.^sp „ . "" 'Jr=; FollowingyDenlmj,'*wljbse': precise vcfcals and instrumen- with -his incredible flat-picking and arrangements of -country-and western folk. tiUdltiDnal°mu^cP°rary BEING AT.the end. tour and on the verge another, Doc's .bass "player had to be flown in for the gig. Starting with "Way Down South," Doc worked through; gathering Mtiated by alcohol, Dop. still mesmerized them in their •_ '.'Deep River Blues"showed his essence a song Doc said took 10' years of practice wa.jp R«>touran> J; Attad* 2538;Guadalupe LUNCH InCUlSAHY $1:49 UVR MUSIC 7 mm NO COVBJl Mixed Drinkt » Beer Wine • Food » Amuiements IrtMn AtOO Invito Mfjitwi W«4. f Sat.?'. Hoppy Hour-4.6 2 for V.MUed Drinks DuiCATESSQI i 98*aii3 Otudftli^a COOL OFF !+Kis sammo-{ USf® Have a muA , Of fcee r or Soft t jdrink witt* iKU® jOoupMvand pur-"| ithaao. a 5and*| ,v^icV» or meal. ' ! e-8io before he could perform if DOC SEEMED especially® ;he was 15. years old an^' banjo arid Michael Cijleman. competently, A combined proud of "Tertnessee.Stud," a'v .started g professionally on bass. When these three sit" '.'Salt Creek" and "Old Joe song he;considers mandatory:•_ . in 1962 when ie was'30. Merle down/ there are few more Clark" displayed his beautiful Merle and Doc are present--^ .joined • him' in 1964, and pleasant places to'be. ' finger dextesijy.. Doc's ly on the Poppy label, a sub?? together they played with the .... . The audience reluctantly let • eountry-swing style was exri division of United.Artists. Doc Jack Williams-Band for 10' ' Doc go after three-encores, hibited In "Black Mt. Rag," said he has "expanded"'his years. ... "We-really appreciate thehis first recorded song for the s.tyle since, leaving Vanguard,® .HiS present entourage-in-: warmth you've shown here.Vanguard labal. Doc took up the guitar when eludes Merie on .guitar and tonight," Doc said. . ' Works of Carl Bmbrev Vi , Institute Plans Exhibition his first.* set responding to ast yf _ The.artist .was awarded degrees of bachelor of fine arts rambunctious audience. '• and master of"fine^arts from the University and was 'a-v teaching assistant here during his.graduate studies. He also ­Doc, who has been blind was employed as an instructor at the Laguna Gloria Art .; since birth, said his* perfor­ Museum. - . _ mances are never planned;!.,, and he picks his-songs accois;.'; ding to. his audiences. As op|S posed to the Opry House;? . .faan Even with a " GROUP R7VTE ^Marion Kwgler McNay Art Institute in San Antonio Embrey, bora inHamilton, isknown in San Antonioboth as® an artist and as an instructor at the San Antonio Art Institute, a position he has held since 1964, His McNay ex­ i hibition will be his first important museum presentation; DINNER •or •SAUSAOS • RtSS . rOTATO SAIAD • MANS f-^OWIOtf^-WCKIt. SWAP bmrvod homily~STyld . MJUMUJUL-— •2330 S. Lamar v 444-8461 -Custom Cooking—­ TUESDAY NIGHT SPECIALS (START AT4.-00P.M.) Rib Eye Dinner Rib Eye Steak ButtMYtBaVed Potato or Fiench Fries. Hot Texa* Toast, and Cri«p HB Toued Salad ;$129 Also Chop SteakDinner BOHfiKZfi SIBLOZK PIT £ ' fMW • mmm 2815 Guadalupe 478-3560 •msm*..T-JG",* L: h&TIPfHNG '^OMEASljdUA i -• Embreyhaspreviously fKbibited^atAe 0all&s.Museum of— HemisFair: The works in the McNay exhibition were produced over a four-year period, many of them expressly for this exhibition. They reflect the placid, rural surroundings of the artist's honle in Hamilton. The. exhibition will include landscapes and still lives; as well as portraits: FALL FILM SERIES J AT ­ LAGUNA GLORIA ART M'USEUjr r-iW­ m 3&. ­1.^ mt' tm |p; m kWf W- i "S«Pt.-3~i_TILMS 8Y~WDMENra vartaty ^fic«on.­narrative, documentary and fantasy films. Sept. 13—PRIMITIVE ^RT. many examplea ofEaklmn ' Sept. 26 w. ' : UCt. 1-0 Oct. 24 Oct. 31 , ^ NOV. .14 -K| .. NkOV. d.1 and African art which illustrate the role ot­ritual, myth and legend in shaping the ar­tist's perception. CONTEMPORARY AMERICAN ART I. four! films exploring the creative styles ofi Leonard Baskin. Jacques Upchitz. Harry;'! Bertoi? and Jack tevlne. . ' I CONTEMPORARY AMERICAN ART 11.dis-i cussion and illustration of the work of Class-Oldenburg, Alex Katz. Milton Avery and Hans' Hoffman. , SPANISH ART. including Goya, Gaudi and/ Velasquez. EXPRESSIONIST PAINTERS, represent are Kandlnsky, Klee, Munch, Bacon and" Nolde. DANTfSINFERNO, explores the lives of ' —ProrRaf^aelite Brotherhood of England and their leedar, -Oante-Gabriel Rossetti. SURREALIST FILftafc. Interviews with leading exponents of Dadalsm: Interviews with Rene Magritte and others. ' • Dec, 19 ASIAN ART, reflects the Impact of? '• • w,J?uddhism on art and archiiecttire In China. ­>r,\ Japan and Ja\)a. All films aia ^ fne and will begin al 7:30 p.m. at . thoMuieum, 3809 West 35th. Fot.further infar­ motion, tall 452-9447 j -CSJ£' ifc"1 Vsfc^i* A $?50 Music System if® ' & is not an $w- If you oreJooking around for :. a music system in the S2S0;-J, -'; . price range you caneither go to^fVi? an audio specialist (like ui), ojgf" fo: a large heme appliance^ ..Center ,or, department store; -Fearing that at an audio> specialty slbre you won't be-' • aMo'to buy anything for the . amount o! money you have to spend, you may well go first to talk to the nice man who sold^ you your refrigerator. : • . Following him post the air conditioners, oll-ir^on»-ilereo< ' 'theatres,:and. freexers/ youi '-' " "come to the corner devoted to-­stereo equipment.^:"Here's a nice one/' he'says,'pointing of «, fe^nomeles. boxes. ed down from $400 to' $200 iust this week. Buy It. You'll W 'Ik® !'• ?f 'here Is any problem^ •a&tp'JS* iust ship it back to the factory." We at Audjo Concepts have " an alternative: our $259 Kenwood-BSR-Creative . System. Our experience o* ' specialists in listening to,' and carefully evaluating' good slereo equipment gives us the. " ability to carefully choose the best values in low-priced;: equipment. Each component In our two hundred-fifty dollar system has proved Its value and reliability.iip arteries of mm fests. Each component it guaranteed by our -servlt« ­department for one yLr ^ The . receiver is a Kenwood KR1400. There are controls for balance,' loudness,' bass, and treble.' There is a speaker selec­ tor switch. It doesn't have the power to shatter goblets but It reproduces music with a clarity that is hard to find in an inex­ pensive receiver. : The speakers are Creative 2-2 .and are pf a .bookshelf ••s4" design. There is a .6" woofer and a 3" tweeter. The bass Is firm and dean, without any. jukebox boomlness. -The record-changer we are'' -recommending Is the "B&R­Model-310X, a quality" HP putomatic turntable. It can be operated either manuallyvpr automatically.-there is a ran­venient cueing control. It comes complete with a cartridge and walnut grained base.-'. The system price is $259 which is $80.80 less than the price at which we .wouic^sell the components to you separately. It is o great starter system;--it--wHf-get you into~ quality stereo music, at a price ­which _will leave you some money'to buy records With. Come by and talk to us ' ohout tt. We're specialists; but we dob'l-blte..You ravy'. Thank yoy--. %85| ~ A' r • 2021Gtiidalupe Dobie.Mall 478:7421 •*•&?«-!? SiSi-iWilw —;—r ,irn^mWr---: Stones Hit Theater Circuit KerTOII# SWiifff Rains Diminish Crowd Bui Not Festival Spirit AW.Ji, By PAUL GLEICHAUF w With,Qu&d^hahif'M^i$ 1 lifH J '' 7>§?i"~ls ' '--"-ft*"' w? • •" ^-MW ' 'J Promoter .Rod-Kennedy : >» •«. -— •><«*'' • ­ celebrated {he ninth anniver­Ki CHICAGO (UPI) —"What.we have here is a group of pe<>-:• ... "The filmis so-loud,so allencompassing, that it makesthe sary of the first bluegrass?tple who've never done anything like i it before, working show an intensely personal experience," one female viewer :, festival Virginia) together on a kind ol movie thatis never been made;" ex­. said. "All the sensations in your head explode out from the (held in wilh the ambitious first Kejr­ plained its financial organizer and road manager, George , lorce of sound pushing in." , •'•.-••••-- ,'v •; Lattgworth ' •••'••:. THE FILM QPENSwith thesound of the audience filingin ville Bluegrass Festival held 1 * « 4 f ^ at his Quiet Valley'.Ranch. . ;s The movie is"Ladies and"Gentlemen, the RoUinfStones," ' '-'and explodes into.yBrown Sugar," going through i*Bitch£,; The-rural location of th«J-•a film concert originally released in quadraphonic sound; "Gimme Shelter,'1."Dead-Flowers," "Happy," "Tumldm'­festival was threatened by the •fl~" ? . The fttra, Saysdirector-producer Rollin Binzer, is "a^simple -Dice,"'"Love in Vain," "Sweet Virginia," "Can't Always drenching rains of the past ..> documentary of the-.RollingsStones doing15-songs.V shot in "Get 'What You Want," • "On Down the Line," "Midnight week, forckig the transfer of • Houston and Fort Worth during the Stones' 1972 U.S. tour. < 'Bambler," "Bye, Bye Johnny," <'Rip This Jpint,'•"Jumpin* Friday's events to Auxin's "IT'S A VISUAL. ALBUM: you-can't lakehSlne,"' Jack Flash" and "Street Fighting Man." The Stone's, no Municipal Auditorium, but, LangWorth said. "It's fof people who figure thefe's traditional blackouts between the songs are there, Mick •.reason to pay $10 to $15 to-hear (scatalogical word deleted) Jagger prances and struts like-a camp imitation of himself, because of some hard work by " . v--J the staff and the fortuitous -.'sound at a live concert," B'mzer said. • : and one of the.world's.raunchiest rock 'n roll bands putsona :4 ding of the rains, Saturday . s:i15 .You sit just where you dream of sitting ata live-concert superb show. At the end of the concert, an airplane makesa and --front row center — with npne of the attendant hassles like circuit of the theater in quadraphonic sound. Sunday's events were resumed at the ranch. .? v.® someone tryitig to scramble over your seat' to get to the The film's creators are executive' producer Marshall stage. The rains may have thinned' Chess, producer-director Binzer,-producers Steve Gebhardt the crowds from the expected;^|vis The film is revolutionary in its time as Cinerama was in and Bob Freeze and financial organizer Langworth, all 111 9,000 to around 5,000 for thess^tbe 1950s. The main reason it works,is quadraphonic sound, : . their late 20s and 30s. three .days, but the playing : -s> .the finest audio available. Quad is sound .coming,fjrom 44 y \$ v was not dampened. The' speakers in four directions at once at a,volume range of 95 to groups represented the best of: 1"1110 decibels. • television several-regional trends. In : -jo p.m. -J • z>K r|S>M p.m. ~ bluegrass, 4um1 they came to • 7 Hawk?n*' JPreMdjo^Theatres ; . .9, 36 News '« WA*1? ^tfgf the festival not only to set ata / 'iff » -f-.-.2AJJ3r*«rtn.of jMnnt* . --.. 24 Marcus Waiby, M.Q. appreciative crowd: to foot- v ,7 pjn. --4 3i Police Story ,/1 \ . ­ ? Man BuUds, Man Destroys •; 9:30 pjrL - stomping during their perfor*-­ >— nwto py mil i»iimio«rf r--24 Happy Day*—-* ^ ^.-::jrxA.A_Woc 17:30 pjn, . together ofetagetojamwitlrr;jg Lester'Flatt (c),.fellow.musicians in Kerrviile 7. 24. 3fr Newt' -% le ' 7 Haw&K Rve-O ^ 9 Insight one anotherand toteach some'IS *" i. 9 Eye to Eye .. ;:10i30 p.m. ' •• ,24YAovie: "Mr*. Sundance/' slot1 1. Movie: '.'Sailor Beware, Marr­of the aspiring how to'play the Virginia "vs" the Country "Scene in all the finery and-enthusiasm of the young,}ng pMrnbfth Montpomery. • ing Dean Martin and Jerry Lewis.: real bluegrass sound. Gazettewas a crowd professionalism of their., groups j but still capable of RGAJN-MA£5UL33 .12:30-2:50-5:10-7:30-• 3f Sanacefc 9 &peaKlnp"Freetr Two particular evpn.ts_ pleaser •• of musical nationally famous' name. making great music. . 'I p.m. . • . 24 wide vVorW of Mysfi ;i 9:50 ; ^; 9 .The Killers:"Heart Disease; T»>e' •by ProxV" -. nignugited the Satnrdajrcon-:—oneupsiftanshipv^eaeh—band -E>riving-j>ack—to—Aiistir.iVy^aoth Century Epidemic." 36 The TooTtfht Show if, *^7" cert. Hie first, billed as afeud taking the stage several times ' Flatt,-of-Flatt and.gcruggs Tthfough the Hui u5untryr~I~betweeh two of the brightest and-then all together. (remember the themes to could almost hear the bounds.v OfM IM young renowned bands — the Later, Lesfer Flatt and the "The Beverly Hillbillies" or; again — the picking of a ban­ tARGAIN MAT,', T1U IfcJO Country Gentlemen: of Fw. I-4-M-lt Nashville Grass .made the' "Bonnie and Clyde" with its jo, the crying out of a fiddle, R«AK«I trim ID M0 "Foggy . Mountain .the quick high voice of a' man­ ROBERT |AXTMAN'S Village Breakdown" soundtrack) and dolin, the full resonance of a earlier of the original Blue guitar Aid the deep snapping Cinema Mountains--Boy's' of Earl-bass all combining to form a BnnuwnuuiTiM«u«B VILLAGE: Four Monroe, remains active at 65 rhythm that seems to belong -NCIS-, . ' ' 27SCW«i tofcreMW iffSteff^stRhrtn^e with a group of virtuoso to the landscapeand its people musicians, perhaps ho ldnger — sounds which have found an THI —FEATURE TlMES^.^ft. . >• , possessing some of the Kerrviile. HELD 1i00-2:30-4:M-5:25-6:55-8:26-9ls0 iLlKE OVER RfVERSIDE .gi^i I'M fzToauiest'picttire of th? year... KUT Radio Honored T $$38 With Top Merit Award RIVERSIDE >.. • KUT-FM has receiyed a Oiree-star award of merit,'theji-S; i lughe^ti givenstation^in; the 1974^ParadepTbARGAIN MAT. Till 1:00 American Music sponsored by the National Federation of IFEA-':00-2:4S-4:30-6.-15-1 Music Clubs. Xtm. I' i&00-9:4S I " Eleanor Page, music supervisor of the Communication^;^'•aj There's VILLAGE ,Center, expl&^«^'5^fojij-ent^:^he^staLtion record-^®-®MBIBSCReEN 1&2 -.edL.and_ broadcast'a s'pecial halif-hour program of perfor^y cne vyoy ?AIN MAT. TltHtOO-­ I«A,1:00-2:45-4:30^:15­ • to eure him--. -ffntinnhr fn..?iVr, Tim B ^as,ue ?eo. :i/ io as as American music week-. AU local-©:# HBOpetiS tomorrpW With —• -progiains aiiwJ-|hat-week-fe?tured-music by^Americanxmir r—and | A GROWN-UP FAMILY FILM five great movies... . ': • . posers and performers. • • ­JOSEPH B010GNA-BARBARA HARRIS /nk. SCREEN 1 DOUBLE BILL OPEN 7^0 Hunm u £-STARTS WEDNESDAY URSTFU. $u« Ifl f& I% $1.25 til 7 p.m At IJO showtime: PARAMOUNT 6400.Btira«t-Roi Frnacois . 1«3W B« Vfcrtt >' \ CONC.^T^S ATf. rviir. Features 6:10-8:00-9:50 Truffaut'g JULES AND JIM are two of the most-"M: BARGAIN KAT.1M-S1,7-M «r,wriMgni>moM GEDHBE $L» nWhltlM? miHMIHH beautiful filmi , q| love ever-made; BLACK I FW. lM-24»4aa-SdS4^S4^9. • froifi tho man:who ORPHEUS ^retells .the legend of * Orpheus and,.; • SEGflO < , brought you fc&.ii bjml • Eurydice in a modern setting. f'.-g/JI k h m HI*1*! -• "FISTFUL OF DOLLARS" * JULES AND JIM u the story two men and the^--1 IS THE ne woman they both love. ' '> |SCREEN 2 , Starts Wednesday • EHBIIMfiL BARSAID MAT. TIU. 1115 ! m mi''"----' •38c IHenrarondaHTterencelKHi HA. talS-2:IM:t£fc15-l:tS- I fe—£ j smm 10:15 HI 3 p.m. K» VARSITY 15-4*10-6:05 Vtffi* PG j<: f!13**»! I VHO:U3 UPTOWN QO C.UADAl.uPt STRCCT .STARTS 8:00-9:5 ft a cc;rn/.Rantm% TOMORROW! OPEN 1:45 . ACOMEDY CLASSIC!!! & $100 III i iMn.' -NI€H1 ClusnliKladW ~ 3444-I* - EPCS. 'PASS LIST SUSPENDED "ANIMAL CRACKERS" STARTS A UNIVERSAL RE-RELEASE VILLAGE • :/.nj , Ml* / TOMORROW! iM fc'.Z-.P: rfr*Mi »l» imfM:"Vk*luiSln|WP< Features: 7:00^8:25 9:50 IVtRY MITf -Midnight Movies M25 LAST DAY! Russ Meyer's Cherry; Pas* TheTuielveChairs List fWtw'teiN idrtin VKl^rR^l Suspended •k HIGHEST rating ("A COMEffifGEM! A CAUSE FOR REJOICIN H'mi.York D»llji H»w» By •A8HTOH contemplate '.«4T -MM r * xmo retm _ «HOt,;A. fKI^«B4M55W wwenoN; • v -where.undergrouhd.meets U«derwj>rld 3, 1974 THE D :; 1'••'VS;'C: •'Ji•* W1 *• * ~*r— | '."•SJ^fP "A." !5Vfe4i fcrfSW A-Wi-.­ ' ^*wS5$9s5^l® • i&5 ^§§5 •Fi?. X ntertainment I --sjgtr "That's Enter- t'talnment;.''^produced?-8 directed , and written by .Jack ..Haley Jr.; at the" Highland Mall Cinema. By PAUL BEUTEL -^. Texan Staff Writer' ;SI have seen "That's Enter­-tainment'' three 'times,-and I shall see it again. 'S wonder­ful, 's marvelous. Thank heaven for little girls and for Fred Astaire; Judy Garland, , Gene Kelly and everyone else represented and involved 'in this: splendidly enjoyable •movie. In caseanyone hasn'tjieard, '."That's Entertainment" is a collection of and reflection on film clips of Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer musicals (circa 1929 to 1958), all lovingly assembled -by > producer-director-writer Jack Haley Jr.Vwho is the son of "The Wizard of -Oz" tin man: for musical lovers, see­ing the very best of the MGM production numbers all in one 'sitting is an experience very ,nearly_approaching complete nirvana. ­ THE FILM is generally divided intosegments saluting either the biggest of the musical stars or occasionally a particular film -or produc­tion number, (e.g., a ."Sfiow­ ^opt1 "r—tna nam-raising number from "Seven' Brides for Seven Brothers"). Haley has persuaded many stars toijarrate thesegments: veterans Astaire and Kelly ••-comment on each other: new- Svery Tuesday BUCKDANCER'S CHOICE Pitchers of Be«r A mere $1.25 >c&sL IBUTBI Giving naturea nandwiih plants andthings to grow in voj' dorm youtnew apartmentorhouseBUi; mostly in yogrheart Now twofocatlons loryoOr growing needs Davfd & Schraeder international Garden Center lust QflBurnet Roadand,' North LoopDrlveot Long John Silver s David & Schraeder interiors 2825 Hancock DnVe.nextto The CraftsmenmLantern. Lane Shopping Center.;^ n GARDENCENIER opening I'M ClOU 1204 W. lynh art, plants fresh flowers­ i 7 "'•*}{ 140 till 8, comer Liza Minnelli-appears ^he highlights. to pay tribute to her motheip^ Then there's Astaire dan-Judy ^Garland. -'' lacing on the ceiling ta ""Royal Admittedly, the narrations'"" Wedding;" Eleanor Powell become somewhat gushy at spinning-madly through times, but Haley redeems himself by good naturedly kid-. ding -MGM's less-than-,' aesthetic endeavors, such ail' attempting to transform its dramatic stars into musical ones (Joan Crawford :dancing like a drunken seal, Clark Gable valiantly struggling with "Puttin' on the Ritz" are the standouts.) or. the hilariously opulent numbers featuring Esther Williams regally diving intoincreasing­ ly. larger swirpming pools. . My favorite bit is a cleverly edited sequence of clips from the Mickey Rooney > Judy Garland movies of /the late '30s and early '40s which all play upon the inevitable idea of ambitious, stage-struck kids putting on their own show. "Not m bad idea," exr claims Rooney in one clip. "That'd be different!" THE JBIG NUMBERS^* all there, many. of them eliciting spontaneous applause from the audience:; Gene Kelly doing the title number fronr"Singin! in the Rain;-' Donald O'Connor in Ills--hitarhnis—"Make 'em-—] Laugh" routine (also from "Singin' in the Rain"); Judy Garland singing "Get Happy" from "Summer Stock" and "A Pretty Girl Is Like a Melody" from "The; Great Ziegfield" are only a few of 200 ACADEMY TONIGHT ­ COST HIGHWAY BAND >.|n The Small Ballroom. . ALSO v<*' DELBERT McCLINTON InJOiaJVniuxj $1.50 At The Door ** NELSON^ : FRI. & SAT., SEPT.6 & 7 B P.M. Advnncr Tlckati $5 at Innw Sanctum, r Odd Mom«nt« •' (Highland Mall) TheOpry Hou» Box Offk« SHOW INFO. 442-2743 plastic hoops in her "Rosalie" itajL routine or dancing gracefhlly with-Astaire in "Broadway Melody of 1940;" and . Bing Crosby looking. slightly emfiarassed while -singing the-title song from "Going Hollywood." , The film ends with an ab­breviated version of the "An American in Paris" ballet. WE MUST REALIZE, of course, that what makes "Thafs Entertainment" iive up so well to its. title is the general absence of tfie often-mediocre plot lines' surroun­ding the big numbers.. Spellboirnd by Esther Williams and all those bathers diving, through Technicolor smoke clouds, we tend to forget that most of he'rmovies really were fairly dreadful. gratulafing Itself) is also somewhat'of an obituaty for the now almost defunct film company. Once, the most powerful studio in Hollywood, MGM now produces only a • few films a year and has withdrawn completely, Jfrpm "the distributidn business. And, who would care-to en­dure all of "The Toast of New Orleans" for' the 90-second (United "Artists now dis­tributes all MGM films.) But what a. fabulous re- thrill of. Mario Lanza and cfu'ieifl this movie is! Kathryn Grayson singing "Be My Love?" V­;••• Nevertheless, ..what .we 'Hollywood,-for allits contem­porary consciousness, has rediscovered its.heart._ remember most .from:!.'f .• musicals even th&excellent '* —ones-with--good-stories-like:­might add that anyone' -Dassinff-ihr'niiph riallag nr . 1 I (MGM indirectly con- Dollar Mermaid/ part of 'That's Entertainment.' : ISUO 4. fieASANT VALIEYRD. .«.tfnnn MON. THRU SAT. JUST Off EAST RIVERSIDE DRIVE 444-32Z2 $1.50 'r' Paramount Pictures presents III 6 p.m. 1:10 GEORGE C.SCOTT "2:50" 4:30 6:05 'BANK SHOT 7:45 'Bdmtobhr A F^r&m&unt P&ure 9:25 til 6 p.m. •JENNIFERO'NEILL • GARYGRIMESt $K50 FiAurit jJEBBYHOUSER • OLIVER CONANT j til 6 p.m. 1-.00 2:30 4:00 IIneveryone^ lifetherefc aj 5:25 .6:55 8:20 9:50 jSUMMER OF*421 I.. nraNK010"* I{-'jf^Pj ' »nsn,V»*me^ro<, I 7:45 • ACRES OF FREE blGHTED PARKING *i^4S jignumTT 1U aiMARCIA formerly of the Haircut Store CX'-V >:i SHEAR MADNESS 1202 SS&rA^tonio 477-7924 ummuwtutt 4 i^h'J J. by fhe phone .. * They go for dlnrter, good folk qnd the 'rmellow music of Syl Smith, ot J Gotsby's Bot ond Resfqurant, ,)/ © '; for Austin. 1" f In the Village, 2700 Anderson Lane.v X v ^ ..^oighrFrtaSy^nSSohndoy ? ,S7". 1.-00 am.Opensfor Sunday Oturtch,ot lSeOO, * 'Enfatifelrii^wBfTOWdBy-^Saturday,.tkaCUpdo»». • 400 pm^7 pjn.—drink*two for p!H*vwy °ay*><<*>t'iaturdoy­ •'Ta:. —^ "Singin' in. the Rrfin" or "Meet Me in St..Louis'-' — .are.' the songs and dances." The' grandest of these numbers • .(and even the nearTgrand) were the ultimate product of the Hollywood dream factory. For escape from the less-. i-than-fantastic world, these films, have never bet./ sur­ . • passed. And -now that Hollywood seems to have-lost its sense of fantasy, and par­ticularly since little talent has ajpived to replace the musical"­stars, directors and craftsmen now fading from . the scene, Frank Sinatra's comment Lp the film is prophetically valid: "You can sit aroiKid and hope.but you'll "—never-see-the-^lkes-of—ffi; •again." ' SAD, TOO, as the conceptofEsther Williams in a scene from 'Million "That's Entertainment," THIS IS THE EAR BIG DADDY LISTENS WITH WHEN YOU PHONE IN FOR PIZZA BIG DADDY S 2513 San Antonio Behind The Hoie-ln -The-Wali. 476-6795. REDUCED PRICES TIL 6 P.M. 11-1 "A 11 —•-' Houston during the next several weeks cansee ''That's Entertainment'' presented in 7Om-m • a nd six-track stereophonic sound. The"print at the^ Highland Mall:Cinema is standard 35 mm,i which is perfectly adequate, but the super-wide-screen blow-ups and the sound recha?mfetlng"oir • the larger film have been' supferblyhandled. GULF; STATES ORIVCIN GUI.F STATES'.ORIVE.IN *\710 E. BCT «flim»«M-2a6i Op«n 7:45 • -­ Show Sfarti Dutk -. Mel Brooks' "BLAZING Ffom Mrnw Bro«. PIUS >•Cb-HIT i^« "WAY WAY OUT % Shovvtow\ USA SouThsidE warn* PETER /DENNIS /JACK FONDA / HOPPER /NICHOLSON She'll coax the blues right out of your heart.-; PG] WMfubys Of* S pun. SI^O tfl 6-|Lm. fm. 5:10-7aW-MS 4riiWMk POX TWIN iMUKKM HVD. 454-7711 Gtorjt ;S«9al BKott Gould ...being the storyot ~l bet^on^futythtng who happtty discover somethingcaMed I , a"winning sireak." PlCIlRB-PWMSai WNfaky«iQpM S^Si '. tm. 64-lt ^ feteils r -A * V'* i Exttpt j ALL CINEMASEVERY PAY SI.25 '111.1:30 Tbcfs brt«fhAuMi>f • :.iam 451-7326 • IH35 AT KOENIG LN "DON'T MISS i451-7326 • IH35 AT KOENIG LN THBIG WEEK! OPEN «jr Pete's SaK« DAILY12:15 in color RD RECORD WEEK! REN m — DAILY li:15 452-7646 • IH35NORTH "Moviegoer* of almost any tatfe will find thi* film quite, an engrosting affair ... Go see it! ... I thinkyou'll have a fine timel -—John Bustin, The Austin Citizen Julie Andreu?s OmarSharif TheTamarmdSeed . «Avco Emt>«ssy «I(1« P5g^S?l . V.--'• U22S£JUiJ5S£aj D announcements m'Px&i ck f j* 'U V t-W Smash W«eM Passes and Bargain Stfjjwndad This Bnag«nwntf 12.-00-2:30 W5-7-JW 12^5-2^0 »4:1S-«:00 7:45-fc30 12:45-3.-00 3SS^isrr*ffilif>tSSftiiS; HI list :.-s2Spi' *• % *W£ lliBspsiisfet tmshi wmsm ,^y.?^%y>y^rx-a -j^t "-­ k,« liyShitfi ­ fcsl ;m *ti^;:if8. cvi _ y ' -{v>> P-' ^§0^Mmw^m ?••:>'• • . ;:• • •••; • • • • • -.*pWS>! . {••: ^ •«-*• ^ ^ ^•'v; ••-'• ' 1 • • $g5Ts-« . :••...••• . .--•; • V ' ..\vv •• • :••.< . • ;.-\,TKJS^S?:-r •rV,/ ' , :;,• .-•-. .•;.•• :.•...• :-;;•. 8Iff MON.'THRU FRif SsaO-SiOO '" t>Hf'»?1i%''sv .r*^ s-stw^^ *v » ^ &t*yvk* tfi.t. * \.... if —'~CUfcS$IFI£G ADVERTlSIN^" -RATES FURN. APARTS. •FURN. APARTS. 1FURN. APARTS. • ROOMMATES TYPING .i H wi>rri ininlmum _ Each word one time.-.' TZ.M. -NOW LEASING FOR SEPT. -. .^ v; SIX" BLOCKS from Law School; shuttle ••' ." . ' : •' ' ' " . "'•* i.;y^—-—• •'• — -I , • : •• .. •.. •/ ..•wl. « Each word 2-4 times..-»y.;:...1.10 Misc. -Far Sale-: bus. On« bedroom5135. Efficiency $122. ' , * /vi-P'CK. UP 4fh Gr0d*r 2.30 p 7)h—dUS±~North—Or 27th Each .word 5*9 times .S .08 Each word 10 or more tlmes..V.07 TOP CASH PRICES peid for diamonds^!• Large Ibedr-ponj. -dishwasher,. " » G u a d a l u p e , , ^ $tudenf rate each time v .$ .80 .cable, pool, gas & water paid. :•interregional. 477-0010 or. GL3-2228. nlshod .Tprryto«n ^fwo-sloryr^prlvate:........ old^old^ Capitol DiamondShop, *018 Ni^i * . .. Lamar, 454-6677. . •*:$: iondtnt m M Classified Display -: .bedroomswasher, dryerv;CA'CH; . COOK CHURCH DAY Care Center near T Wk I col. x 1 inch on* time;;......13.25 : 2 bedroom tokwnhouse $)?0r Newly . EFFICIENCIES NEARUT. Doublebefi,-Carpeted. Two blocks ffonv UT shuttle/ UT ^8 30 -1 00 $1 90 per hour 453 1657 or _ ^ W& .1 col. x 1 inch„2*9 times.;.,...82.93 REDWOOD FLOWER BOXES. Great;•: decorated, shuttle bus. ' * "' refrigerator;, stove, disposal* shag Prefer humanitipsf graduate, or »other 1 col. x 1inch tenor more timesS2.64 flowerbeds: < . 441-7577 £ar£et. 477-5781 after:5:3Q p.m. or 45V . \ for apartment gardens or Sizes 7-6 feet,in length. S3.S0 p«r foof. .serious.UT student. 477-2719. 1704 Hart-: WANTED:.BABYSITTER 11:45 t<^3:30 Phone 477*2)04. $5uare CASA ROCA ford,,?" Tuesday -through. Friday; 'Frreridiy. 3 Typing/ MultjlitHng, bfpding-^^^;^APARTMENTS V;TWO.BLOCKS CAMPUS. 1-2 bdrm. 2406' ; •year. eld. Call Hovland, 476*3715. NEW JS125) DOUBLE BEO-S49. Super-. ... . ^iijThe-Complete Professional'ift Summer Rates Start Today*'v • -1302Parker Lane • --* •. RioGrande. 702 West 24^.s^e manager -'.. DtADUNI SCHfOMB : 8<($120) Movie camera,.projector -sS9. IBR. IBA ?2 BR. 2 BA 3 BR, 3 BA! Apt. A or B. * FEMALE ROOMMATE needed. Owh INSTRUCTORS NE6DE& tor>,­ .... w .|j-'lj-S nnt-i —. .-in. uAKuc 2 06dr00m Win . -6 pjn. stereo; ' Royal electric —l»i«mill«m*»iii >11 •"tyr*irr1tf)ri Rftmrnlt' ff-IQ. 196V radio tr ' son share 2-2 apt. $75 ABP. Close cam­ gfiin i»i lh« fintiHilmimi mi>ml1>lt[• portable NOW LEASING FOR SEPT. :/••.\ DUCKin9n9nfl-,-5CJU3rGy.iM5i;?shag, rich Paneling,huge walk-ins, pool. ^TWO LAW STUDENTS need third per-, 1 -71V WJ 32nd ^a^i^SOna block to shuttle andHtghland-Mall. WAITRESSES/WALTERS needeD •flmtwnFr «h*vU4M modi .Ml later — amS liealer/-36-mpg^477-339(^-~_T -• --"s >,'VrPromj229ALL BILLSPAlO.909 Relntl approximately ,20l>ours wgrk per week. .. 1IrlNG [ Reports, Resumes 454-4917 pus. 442-0882. '• -i' .Ihon Av tfayvtifiw tmlrfhulton.--^——— -SEE«UB=5UMfiiE«^ATES ' 'f?:^•^iB4-9863.'47WI6j;-v~;.."c ADJUerem Drummer.-2405-A NOeces,: ~. 'EaSKi"-""^^ ^Theses; Letters • .HAVE iu iELL ufyenliy-fOf-tuiHofW1 -YAMAHA 250. Could/be good business-n . • r SERIOUS LAW OR-pRAD y/inn_. . • to share Iork you. 453-8371. 451-2670. • ^-^^L^njm-$igg;^9>vrgaotestic^^_smaiL convenient. AC 2 ffidroom. 2211 BULL > TIME' •.business work:­1 BR Furn apartment» w7Th c»ttni7 poolT-hTti"-L«on:'NSTW^mir^t=i2z=r BOOKKEEPER/Secretarv. --• r::L4st Minut6'ServlcefW« • LOW .STUDENT-RATES'' kitchensvkitchen^. On titytlty and shuitle bus: ^ bus; Open 9r9-Mon-Th IS word minimum.each day ..s .80 OLD MASTERS. RembrandtrVermeer, NEW P Convenient to shopping; 1105 Clayton Good typing skills^-(60 wpm/accurate). .Each additionalword each day j.05 Da Vinci Durer. $1.00-$4.95. Unicorn MARK IV APTS. -^EFFICIENCIES 1>J Lane; 453-7914, 472-4)62 * • for, fall semester/1~Mdrobm fum. apt.r -Shorthand preferable.To apply, call474* srawcET—*W5*-S»'-" ""MALE *. ROOMA^ATE needed urgently. X-caL-» lInch each day ...... Galtery, DobleAAaif. 10-70 " CLOSE TO CAMPUS 1 ' *(Pref>aW, No Refunc.. OLtVgm LETTggA periahle_Awarri. . SHUTTLE BUS ATTENTION CLIFFDWELLETtS'. Uni David,. 478014Vaf!er-5 p.m.br anytime 472*8936; ^OADobleCenter AaMiiif:} |lne 3 days .snw~ 3100 Speedway .neat. quJet. AC, $67.50/moft)b. *CaJ) -477^85- We€fk6nds.'--; r1.-'. MALE ROOMMATE: help wheelchair, Student* most -shov? Auditor's winning deslgrf.Must sacrifice^ likenew. student; Compensation Jester room and receipts and pay.in advance in TSP 447-1263 after 4 p.mt SHUTTLE BUSCORNER MRS. BODOURIS TYPING SERVICE. board, Call TonySantos; 47T-7282or John ' RepQrls^ theses, dissertations and books a-m. to 4:30 p.m. Monday through DOUBL&.8ED and box springs, $6^ shag aarpet, extra storage room^Ty •Of,® cliff. From $170;ALL B1LJ-S PAI^. • two bedroom, apartment. Own-roorfv—P^Wer-v 476-71?fl • --•*-Accurately.-fast-and-reasonablv^ Btdg. 3.200 (25th ftWhltis) from! ' • 7211 .Northeast Or1vfe;-926-94l5, 472-4t62. -near campusi shuttle, pool; Urgentl 476^ ' .. Printing-and binqmti ou iuauestr-Close- Friday; ••< -•••••' V •>••.' New waterbed and liner, $25. Waterbed „ , 7013. FULL TIME^WAITER^WAITR-ESS. Ip4478'81l3. healer. $25.478-7856. .DOWNTOWNER . v,:' , 30S West 35th ..TARRYTOWN: Shuttle, :mature slngle, host/hosless. Must be personable, heat. ' ^•^(6 blocksfrom tampus). • : ^>•^1 pool, large yard,aotl coprse, lake, from • SHARE. OUR HOUSE. .Your own room -Apply at 1907 Guadalupe. 478*1686/ : • ' DISSERTATIONS, theses, reports,.and'APTS ' Managed Apt:106 VJ*" $125 ABP. 459-79M; : • for $80 plus Vi bills. Mark, 452-8751: ; law briefs; Experienced-typist, • -•wntf — •••-•-•-••: • . .-,*•••••. KEYPUNCH. Must have 6 months on* FOR SALE REMODELED MY OFFICE. These -V Bedroom $150 month; Furnished, ail 1 . Tarrytown. 2507 Bridlepath. Lorraine. If No Answer Call "curuww run-*tngie'or.-aouDies. ua -lob experience. $2,4G/hour.6> 10Monday* prices beat those of the office furniture bills paid.CA/CH, walking distance UT, 454-5869 V.^1• BEDROOM for jlnglc or doubles. La . FEMALE ROOMMATE needed toshare Bfady. 472-4715. >^r?OrilloBlanco, 801West Lynn.$139.50. $50 -2 bedroom :apartment with three olrls.' . Friday. Sam Spears "Empioyment Scr.liquidators! 2 '.desks* 30''*54". $49.50 cohered parking, laundry room. ' • x deposit. 477-1410/ 477-3212. $70/month. 478-0670 after fiver •vice/477-6006. 8th and Braz6s. « HOLLEY'S TYPING' SBRVICE. -A ' Auto -For Sale ' each. 1 steno-ctotr, $19.50,«1-at-$8.50. 505 East nth ' Complete Service: typing; printing, bin* : Three fluorescent celling fixtures, 13''x-. vSTUpIO APARTMENT. Fireplace, GRADUATE STUDENT--needs typist MALE ROOMMATE NEEDED, two ding. Experienced In all fields; Near M(»C. Runs & looks flood. 444-33®i 48", $7,50' each. Thermo-fax .copying 472-0515 ^ skylight, CA/CH, cable,convenient: $139 bedroom-apartment. 612 Franklln..Apt. ' anQ proofreader during lalUspring .campus. NOl Mohfe-Drive: 476-3018. ^V4S03-B Shier Cove. machine.:$25Jp. 3 T-drawer fetter site ;>pius electricity. 900 East 51st; 451-3464, B. $165/monlh (split). . semesters of.1974-75. Estimate working NOW LEASING FOR SEPTEMBER.­ •477-SI29. time 8-ti hours/week. 477-7301.; fl a m! ­ -metal files at $&50 each. Charles Sikes.* 1 : FRANCES WOODS TYPING SERVICE-; -.*71 VW BUG. $1000 cash. '61 VW Bug.' DiPLOMAT • NEEDED. LIBERAL-Ml^OEDFemale • Theses, •. llp.m;- Experienced, . Law, Olsser­ ,S650 caifl. Both lock and run good. 447* .; 452-5994 or 452*3241. . A.NP BUS; El-roommate toshare two bedrjDQrt)'.d^pl«st-— . . •— EFFICIENCIES NEAR-UT AND SHUTTLE -BUS; Ef. talions, Manuscripts. 453-6090. . iidencies and 1. bedroom apartments.; 'near Barton Springs;fijenCTdtockyard. ^PART TIME-WORK $300 per mooth, 1 Adult only. No pets. Water, ,, Call 472^78. Keep Tryrno>r^ ' CaN 452-2758. No experience necessary, MINNIEL..HAMMETT Typing. &, gas,-ca*ble paid.-478-4118. 477<4048. A J1970 FIAT SPORT COUPE. Excellent 7,^ $140. 451-6364. 521T Ellers. FEMALE SHARE 2bedroom house wlth^ Mr. Chance. 472-4194. • . yiRGINlA 'SCHNEIDER Diversified-> *•> "new; $1800. 836^S^ S3M014. . 1-35, Hampton .Place Complex: HUNTERS 3 others. Enfield shuttle. Clean, respon­-. Services.'Graduate and undergraduate•/' i Large 2 & 3 bedrpoms. l^, 2V^ bath« NEED AN APARTMENT CLEAN WELL-LlGflTEO place sible; non-smoker. Charlotte^452-lfi82. .'typing., printing*-binding. 1515 Koeqlg . 1971 TOYOTA CORONA Mark It Coupe. X northeast huge, yard,: pets or ; •^RadiOr heater, AC radtals.' Porsche studio. Shap carpet, private patio, dls-FOR FALL? ; $13S,'all but electrJcity. 4^4-2587. garden AUDITORS: : Lane. 459-7205. ; ./: MALE. ThirdIn twobedroom.'Shuttle to•aK^hwasher, jjisposaL pool.Laundry rooms, •; iwray/black vinyl, top..Perfect condition. WEEKEND' -" furnishedunfurnlshed. $210 and $275 all r GIVE US A CALL! door;-$55 per. month. Air conditioned,. STARK TYPING. Specialty? Technical. ! ^ ^$1875.327-0829 : _ ' LARGE EFFICfENCY,, carpeted, dls-/ PJM.451-2998 Gradciate students"irs Experienced fheses, dissertations,PR'v* '•'I': .Habitat Hunters is; FREE apartment: iMUST^ELL 1973.Honda'CIvI& SHII Ufti; 300 East CroiJm. locator service, located-In • the lower walk-In ctosets.close fd shuttlebos.lftO Printing, binding. lively fowr. aa;e hideaway you can en-: v dent complexes k plus^.electricit/. ClO Ave. B. 4524143, ; Broadmonr ,luxury. Shuttle. Capital. SECLUSIO hwasher, pool« laundry facilities; large •' Auditors for-1:D.A; Lecture manuscripts/ etc* gdervwarranty, $2i00. 472-«i64. •. o 459-0273 level of Dobie Mall.We specialize Instu-ROOMMATE(S). Female, 20'i. Greaf Note Service. $3.50 class Charlene Stark, 453-5218. |oy now. Will^take-small down payment;' • PfSzaTTrti pays aiL 454-1209, 459-7778. hour. Call 477-3641 or!come . MINNIE L. HAMMETT-Typing. 8,. tWVING—OVERSEAS.-^ei»oa 196B . -End finance balance. 345-2267 HABITAT HUNTERS 7 ^-Pupllcat.ing Service. .Theses,, dissef mVOIVO 144.20MPG^ radio,'rtewOres.451* • .• v •: • eFPiCfENCY-'.-L-musf. moye. 6 month by 901 W: 24th . _ . ) mpg^ radio,'new 1 -—-o—r— UT.' ADORESS, STORAGE ; ROOM, and /.kfdflons, papers o? a(l kindr. resumes* ;t .2268. 203 W„ 39th. No-. 101V-- Lower Level, Dobie Mall/'T ' lease; In beautiful OaK HolVow7 bills ; paid, A C.paneled, messages laken.tor>Hberal female who >x:free refreshments. .44277008, 441-6814.. •' Suite (JA^ Z'irgt •, ApaHmenH. j45-"2Sttt"aftert^o.— --^>18 m? ha^tlfl frtf-n family.No c ASSISTANT: SALES ..cear5 coilege *luTmaftTnTTTnarxetlmr4 y^ion.^650 472-7611 (days) % ^cWe-Welcome-Spot-Purchase j^ids 476*0509. ' Just North of 27th & -Fast service jt-ia.m. weekends.. STUDENTS $130 PLUS1 noon, after 11:00 p.m. » .and;«reer"ob|eclWe'W-sales^' -1 w" • •• • :••.••-ffv-.-vvv'-;:---Functions; ;. . .• ^ Guadalupe '73 VEGA GT 4-speed, tow mileage, exv VACUUM TECHNOLOGY -_ _ELECT. TARRYTOWN. Shuttle. 2 mature MALE ROOMMATE share 3/2 house ; " • Assist|pr°ceiying.distributor boig -cedent condition^ $1795: Call Jean, 288* . s/utJenfs. Large,ibedroom. Large yardi l-bedroorn~efflcIen­ 1351 after 6 p.m. CO. $159.50:?; .Lovely trees, pafiy, 459^795^.-'-. —^iciimonm "«4-ls55.'she<* ^ 0^2 Assure boat schedules and Maf ALL BILLSPAID" 12703 ResearchBlvd. * ^ cies. Near-.campus, -shuttle, --•• ' • •• • • • •' . •.•.vr;--^---^:....^j>5^ioads are correct.' • • isa-v(a maid, parKlng.-Move. Iri now. ONLY 3 BLOCKS from campus. Ef-S,, ; r3. CaTcul8t^qU'6trarKJ'5ale5^rfor^----p;-4.CI 1 BEDROOM FURNISHED tlclencyaoart^nentswlth largewlndows.w;^. -Top Dollar PaidFor Shag, paneling;giant waik-lns,-balconies: 453-3235. S132.50 bills paid. $132.50 (iepoilt Call 836-0836 e*t 270 >'V j~,li for appointment Nice Used Cars FURN. APARTS. EL MONTERREY' Gtoslron Boat Co. . YES, we do type ,4.NOW LEASING.FOR S^JTi OLD.MAIN APTS. Walk to class. IS ilk •. 9108 Reed Drive • • ASK FOR JACK POTTES ., '.2423 Town LakeCircle ;• I .bedroom' and elllclencles for tease. - • Freshman themes. •mu 472-4162 1 m: Range 1140 -«1«5 ABP. 47?-3264. v , ,,,, BILLMUNDAV 4T 1 BR-$155fMj THE AUSTIN STATE SCHOOL Isaccep- ROOMY MISCELLANEOUS ling appflcaffons for: Registered nurses . •fe? -PONTIAC -' ' 2 BR -$184 Why not start out with, ML $1000 , ^tfnON LAMAR * 47S-722S EFFICIENCY UNF. APARTS. •-^v Two.(2) positions :v.8 a.m. -5 p.TniONDA CL450, perfect for on; off 1 % 2 bedroom apts^We areremodeling gas grill, pets ok, mtnutes.from snopping/parks, golf.One ticipater in other ovents offering growth '' An Equal . Employment Opportunity.: ^• v-i roftd-' Good co^dlWoalots of.accessories, FOR RENT $&-;.these apts.lust for you..Newsnag carpet bedrooms fromsi59, allbillspaf(l: Also2 and adventure. All in on*, week.* Very > Employer •1 QOIBT'TARRYTOWN AREA.«.Ful!priced tosell.$450.1B,000 miles.452-9977. cozy community . .and. drapes; All bOUMn/ kitchen, pool, Inexpensive 476-4246 bedrooms. -Furnished . or.unfurnished.• • house priveleges. On city transit.-Men ' One bedroom studio apartment with 1 ^4- CA/CH,.Old Mew Orleans' style,-and so near shuttle . • 1.-• 11 *. 1 -baths, CA/CH;.pallOr small uiilityroom, close to campus: 31VEvilst. St. Call 926-1247:or 451-1159, • :. . 1-"A" student preferred. Rhone < :: 476-8218 after five Stereo -For Sale washer/dryer, connections. s)40. plus S1?0 plus E; $150 plus E 47*6776 451-6533 electricity. 2218Mission HillsDriy/i, For 1211,W. 8th 474-1107, Central Properties NELSON'S GIFTS Zunl Indian " 18 JOBS SCOTT. 386 AM/FM stereo receiver. 3$. : more information call 442>2192. v v off Blanco J" 472-4162 WOODED »i.ewelry, African and Mexican Imports vlMS Nueces. Doubles w/ch plus. Quad adapter and fwot" tt-4612 South -Congress.-444-3814-Dosed S220/Semeifer^ singles $385/Semesfer. $3.05' speakers;-$24S. 477-3887,;keep trying; • • CREEKSIDE .Dally ;ma1d,. service, central air. , l#f. $130 Op PER HOUR v Ratrigeratorsi hot piates ailowed: Two J --One and two-ibedroom apartments'in^ 1 BR Furn. lovely-creekside selling. .Huge grassy 477*1760 REVOX A77 tape.recorder, J500 or bej»r-ijN°W LEASING FOR SEPTEMBER " • LEARN TO.PLAY GUitar. Beginner and » Advertising '.Personnel -Sales-Mor-blocks from campus. Co-Ed Residenti oner. 385-4836. • • lawn#-lots of frees. Convenient fo UT, -.advaijced. Drew Thomasoh.. 478-2079. ningst afternoon or evening worte-v Managers j"h SUNNYVALE downtown,, shopping, recreation. Ful/y 453-0175 PANASONIC 3-in-lstereorecord player,?-' OAK KNOLLs?'-i^Tangtewood , carpeted, paneled/andyou won'tbelieve . MOVING? My pickup can make the do*-*"•' ..SEVERAL FEMALE OPENINGS fnoff-l rf.vwty cassette tapej>layer,andstereo AM/PM^-f-APTS. the,storage'space!-From $134-50; .Call-. J.hg«JoJ easier,Tom's Oo-RiteTruckingi; -Campus .cfred Co:Op,. Homey; lnexpen-5 radio(allInoneunlf). Call472.8457after -'&£ Annex 926^555 • .Z5S'IB9I.. • •. • ?J.ve'. iCter CtHOp Council. 476^1957. 510« 2 pedroom ' Close to downtown> furnished or unfyr-' • PRQP^SSOR S FAMILY-living npar West 23rd lushed, !•or 2 bedroom, large walk-Ins, 8P.315'NORWXLKjLANEfSj KENWOOD KA-^000. ami Dual 121?. , $210 , -v extra storage, private balconies, lots of ,^4ng ,,-BEEN to share-your BUSTED FOR experience GRASS and In a will-TV campus nefcds reliable student to help i.H^R,?us HOME. Own tfedroom^ 1304 Summit -441-0584 BASi'SH0rrt-Eau5coRN6R',\.fel|p -ALL BILLS PAID 1 withfhgty.household duties; but mainly grass. Perfect for the-working student. NW fireplace, ^tereo, TV,etc Graduate! i,1 itwo) -Documentary? tdfitl^;-«Jth Stanton, 5O0-E cartridge,. ^ • '-Shuttle rt.front door ' From Sl4& ptuv E.-620 South 1st.' (Use If so, call Telecom Jo baby-sil with 2 year old. child. Most KLH 17 speakers, all S400 firm:-All .r-feA 2 BEDROOM -Productions at 47S-S259 after i'tjo p m . sMent only. 1125 ABP. 451-5559 •' '^--•auipmenf inre*celient,condltron. f77^­ Timber .Creek.entrance:) 444-1269; 472* aHernoonSi In exchange )or.;elther room 6667, • lU 4162 ..BRAND NEW'EFFICIENCIES. • 2 BATH BUY, SELL.^LAYBOY. Penthouse, etd. • and board plus negotiable salary^ orlust .-fORBOYS(near UT, AC, maid,JtitchenS .Stratford Hail at. Trafalgar.Square has - prlvilgCi. M5 double, SB0 singly, 26021 . Books, records,guitars, iewelry, radios,•' salary. Must en|oy children. Spanish fwjeury apartments :ldeal • for sharing. -Guadalupe. 477-0045. -a '.„ NOW LEASING FOR SEPT ., ^ t :.jtereos. Aaron's, 320 Congress-'Down­speaker appreciated call 472-0194 for , Qulef garden setting, pools- and Musictil -For Sale -$140 i3r.?iAClose4d:campus;>Beautllully.furiiishedI: clubhouse fQr privateparties,S205.50 un-town more: details.-< . • . ^ ; m -.ntTAII with, big balconies••for'-'your-'plahtsv furnished *230 furnished. Easy drive to -G-rande.3 blcfcks TROMBONE, Vincent ' -frasK'*; 5 ? 4$155 ^ ' • CA/CH, alii? mo lease . . •••. v.v^siso Summer " ptui electrlclly; and UT,-downtown; Call0360719 or 451-1159. StradWariui; model 6 Vll: *250. Ex­ • 80n 478 74H tacilltles Call 478^ •. deposll.-^iiv-' -.''' — i."-r' cellent condition 472-6446 ^ 1 Bedroom ^ . DBUIUWII. Manager^ 201 ' LARGE BEDROOM Apartment>- ^WANTED 1 Bedroom 1 All Bills Paid walnut paneling,-pool, laundry, close to dWon>S325firm. Callevenings, 92^4757, Walk to Campus HALLMARK APTS. , -' ^ bus/UTi Will furnish, 472-39771 . open,-several part-time.May ^tart train--s? 15/monfh-r.oom and board. ISfl . Buckingham Square ^• . -70f.!fJSi,h --t'^EFFICIENCIES ills plus electricity, EFFICIENCV, needs a creative tenant:;. ing immediately and start working upon' . ^eajs/week: Co-ed,AC German spokehj ' 454-8239 ^ ^ jj ^wo^ac. Carpet, paneling, no pets HDti-complelfon of training. Call Transporta-,. ai meals. Catl .477-8865 or come by 2101$ SELMER TENOR.SAX; Excellent con- Men: afhd womon. Bus.driving positions , • f,6,?^N.HOUSE. Vacancies for meni paneling; 4 , r-711 W. 3JIW ^tJngton V1Ma/46th Ave. A. 454-6903. 609V5 West llth.S75/month.475-3461,477--Nueces ' ' -I f 45W917 P& h and Ave 6816 after six T^d*"4 t|{pn Enterprises.-... • §m THE ,SEE OUR SUMMEg RATES " UT STUDENTS ""• APARTMENT OR HOUSE HUNTING? UNCLASSIFIED ?28-1660!%> .Stay Wh,us while you took. Full far* l\> ANEOUALOPPORTUNITY PIANO SHOP,;i NewlBr.lustcompleled, greatlooklng; ;nrshed, kitchen,;color'.-TV,-maid service/ ' UNF. HOUSES i? \ EMPLOYER ROOM & BOARD . Unit Great - Al&d? shuttle^,pool, DW,;disposal, cable, $139 5311S. Congress 29 complex. furnishings, ;Mephone.:-Odfly^ and weekly-ratei; 472-Gas range S80, best ofter,.44lvM8». iS' ,Artrtj * Reconditioned Uprights A 1-* $125 -$140 • , plus E. ' . 5202 DEECHMOOR;. .. 3:. bdrm, 2--bath. : DEPENDABLE INDUSTRIOUSsfudeht " carpet. ' Sewing, mending-474'J82t: -.fgSS • Expert Tuning & Repair- • • r I—drapes,-p", vflv(ngt:room,MVr 11, • uitiiiiudining • , ;' K if *,Piano Moving i , FOUNTAIN TERRACE 301 Wesl 39th I?5® SQUARE FEET# 2 bdrm, 2 baths •"pon?* Kitchen wifh.gas-stove, garage, ,(male or.femaiol.fomalntalhTwo North' --Why not a co-op? 45"6H 4S9*4491huge fenced yard; S275/mo.; 476-4042 Green couch *25 alter 6: 453-5778. Austin Jiquseholds on allerrwte days 2L$* ?.V-CoHeOe House isa largeco-edco-1 |fe.y Call441-3262 .. APTS. ml 478-2576 or ' between 7am -7pm ' V ' .Duties include/housccleanift&voversee-educational ac-f : One bedroom and efficiencies, large "4&T Ettlcloncy.J145ABP ,?roon»s 454-6484.; ,lng naps and jsiay of 3 kindergarten flge members Navd he •J CAVALIER AP.TS. 307 East31st. JBdrm closets, fully cirpeted, cable, disposal, • NORTHWEST ,3-2#. recreation ^ room, . children and some buildings, lots ot trees. Double occiioaifll& t -for Sole water, gas, swimming' pool; furnished. — KENRAY . fenced, convenient; 3-4 maturestudents ' _Hajt-Slamese kitten free 478-A996 ;.;tron$portation».-M*F, 2 p.oi, cy si 10/mo Apply at 2000 Pearl, eft 3 > -i-v t«rnl*hed, AC, pool, shuttle;walking d]s-' cooking. Need own i???e to UT S200^up, arl bills paid. 472-• 5?30 September 1. S295. 459-7950 $gfr-IRISH SETTtRS. AKC Champion ^Md«h,#ted,l,d,e,,or^ APARTMENTS WWh _ ^S^Muslong air V 8 J450 452-1739., ,12.00/hr; References. after .6 . 258*1245 p rrt p ^ Father, Colorado,^luxuriously HUGE 2 BEDROOM"; 1503 Murray, ;REDWOOD EFprciENdES near cam­ -2122 Hancock Dr. between Enfleld' and West, Lynn. ..Wental.Patlents.'Llb. Shorl 4/1-S17S :BE'AUTIFUt^—ONE-* 7—, PART-TIME AND FULL-TfME"*-^ BEDROOMAPARTMENT Klext to AmertcanaTheatre.walking dls-^ x_4913;-AusllqWAITERS AND WAITRESSES ^-BELLSO.N • OORM tor ^ Men.: Excellent wormed,^rea.; papers*. ^_ reeprovld-. tance to North. Loop'Shopping:Center., JEAUTJFUL,2jStpry home, 3 bedroom; ­ 38lh 453-0540, 472-4162. -BEAUTIFUL 2 Storv homp home; copkea; ;ffleals: ^ Alr^ondltlonSQ, Hows-varipfi for,conscientious person* ed..Reasonaoly priced. 32ft In -small 'complitxU,ln Enfield •and LuBy s. One half block from shuttle' ONE BEDROOM -S140 plus E. Near/ :?y* bath, AC. sSro/mOnth. Perfect loca­Big AC $75^304 E Deep Eddy Apts, .. Will.adapt to class sciicoulu, whmHJossl-iSMSjW12M0RloGren^ • neighborhood. This may be lust what and; Aus11nImti*11. 2 :betfroom tion Ted 475-3461, 477^816 after six. v .IRISH SETTER ipups;. champion lines. .(ownhouses,.extrawge. Two bedroom' •73 Toyota"Cefica 4 spd AC 4418^24 you're-looking for :canipus 6ndshuttle, convenient todown* • ble.Nodrlller*.sl.90/hri,dlicounl;on AKC -FSDB, papers, shots;.wormed. flair, one ••?.'®^®POOM#..2bath restored home..70? . town.Newfurnlture,pooL407West38»h: -.meal. Must have transportations Apply SEVERAL HEMALE OPENIRC in person to: $135 plus bills and two .baths* CA/CH/-dls* 4534540, 47^4162 pampus.to-ed .CO:Op.-; Homey, lnfe*pen-i17V4rSummlt View No. 6 -pickup,> pool, maid service -if desired, 4/o-ZlOK ^ j '' "-A1 Males S75, females $60. 4784932^" : hwasherf disposal, door to dogr garbage Wes»30lh at.Sai^do, *325/momb. L^ases 6?, SAAB 96 aJrim^clean 477*6879 G&ft^Bulfet : KITTENS. Tonklnese rrrele only. ACFA-459-0007 washaferlaln Qomptex.See owners;Apt. BARGAIN.ONE vmHwo bedrooms for-. r »v # regfstered. 452-8995 Keep frying. -113 or call 451-4848 t oiihed—ClosefocampusandHancock . ->• < ^-^Ms^:^^pe,lwopd-Cen»'er. (CenteMncludes djshwasher,warmpen* 'Miimum ' Home* -for Sale * UNIVERSITY-^f\AIC ppMT FURN. HOUSES nil OW^ER wJLUSEU.atiacrtfl»2M»r-SQUARE 1 6 ^ 5^"' J00 SQUARE FEETIIl fn fMte VANTED-:APARTMEW.T:.MANAGER. PJDSITION OPEN to work wifh children LOST & FOUND . ly jieW mobiie homes,. Excellent oppor­4.blockt (Mm;iainpin.-nNt -WM-' AUS"II °"l.li0<"T» anjthe?bedrooms aremam-: V-Wll 474^4639 476-2524. Nicely^V ages 4 mos »o 3 yrs, 8 30 • 12.00 a m, -Rreferimarxied. Send resumes: lo Bo* tunity foranyone whpwantsaborne; 476r • vMshed, walking distance UTr garden., 1668, Austin,-'Texas , "Newly remodeled, furnUfeed. J bedroomsrfet'ffr *I5aj>ermon1h. Bolh sexes mfcy-apply,.. LOST SMALL. Female Called "Mon.-Frl. 8 30 -5 00. Call 478-7411 altermM^ Y.our^tin^e js.valo.ab Prom tt65; ALU BILLS PAID;V 2606 manonl people toieli flowers'fpr fhe new -physical-work load. Interviewing August side Reyvd. 477-495} • iwnu Bedroom,^,bafh. ACjcentrat b&af.W/D -•5:00: Apt. 201. v.Oor-sef'v.ice'ls^ree.. . Wheiess Une, 92M202;i4^162:^^^ ', FURN. DUPLEXES .'74r'75. season.v-por -Interview,^ Denise-. 30 and Septs 3, University United furnlshed/unfucnished.476-l650,*453^ s Meth6dis)DayCar?Xenter,-,2i09 French, 282-1102 sSOUEWAUP Lost black andwhite pMwa: '' 3377. Evenings only ^ 92^0210,-926-9550, _ ACTrCENT.UATE.THE"P05ITfVE;';^t:V die with loner tall and flea collar.'Lair%* V-Apartmants ybest of both worlds. Ontf :. BA8ysiTT.ERI.'Two: smlllxhltdren' in;v seen South Riverside vicinity, UUXURY. town, homes'-.South, 35W Guadalupe, 474-5101, 7;30 • 12*00 only,; ^ l~ AKMp trylhg. * j :^p!n6 Circle,alpog (lowingcre^Ki2-)W,' WALK TO CAMPUS bedrooms and efficiencies:on shuttle iat CA/CH-, allappliances, w/a connettfons;1 ,our:home.^ShuttlO'bus;-H.25:per hour.': ^ A * v Boscoe, Office 452-2794, home 447.3741; ' affordabie .price* |or studenls..'From; • Non-smokers' required t 15-4 45 NMV v ^ -•TARRYTOWNW'2olderhome-Twol|v-BROM -Indareas, CAVCH. Largerooms,,cornerw'- si25;plus.E8i<:cable;,924 East 51st.-472^ 255?^rPe,-Jprlv»,'JP!"l<"' cable TV All or pari 477-9042 after 5 pm. Rooms, •*» 4162 * j MMblMs^ld, 476-jrr(.John Pehdleton, ^39,500. 29%"owner finance^ 478^153, Weore REC6PT16NIST-SECR«TARy. with"'{ A HARDACTTp FOLLOW,Act IV;331ii; vjight bookkeeping skmsc.Gdodfefephohe HELP WANTED .238*5854, ~ --* ­ Wrkitchen^ppoLuilkilCMnsflndtiMlhesli^' 'Uf' i-WHlYPAY Vj-r ' \*i' *' X 47W776 " 451-4533 > ~ weekends . From1144 plus E & c^ble.3311 Red -^MftTrnir n,inTor.n/>ninTi ...... % nrdiTo ^'** Central Properties v River. 476*2662l (47?*4162,;' :part:tlmemodel,'E*Rerl«il£e nof essen-.' HOUSE *RENT? tiaLjJackson Riley P.O 80*JIM,787WJ. -'-^o't building .equity be better? 2 month. Op6fi,J11ltN. 'Immediate.openings for oarMlme help.' Xhjs-is an ex­ COCKTRtCHELP wanted. Salary plus* JCt;3-Br homes — - o... -good tips Apply In person. TheBucket,Si cellent .opportunity fofi -college students due to. the about 4miles fromUT. bedroometllclendes.-Allonfhe shuttle: HiW.>33rd. ,1. scholarship available fof ]| \ , Openings-are program. Fran 1125 see Mgr. Acf 111,-4313 AJIBilli-Pafd Alghtrdn.shuUle> large eflidle -J^^Afeo^Drivi" Speedway. 453-0540, 472 4162. WANTED jOPPORTUNjTy.lor a flexible childless cashiers anefprodtier/on.workers. Noexperience'needea.-'*" ""^{rpayrflexlwe-hours, and many other fjMhg'e ,J: ipllcant must be able fo worK'noop houri'fof.i­ese ppenlngi are,at any of Jtti0fireeiUriits daysv9 >•5, *3£ ,listed'below antf the correct time is alsd lisfed^to dbblyf ' f \ * i- -'£ irlnhCtti1! N * —' t* ~ 15 y^mmemura%. 'Hollda.y"H6use Nb. V-1003 BartonSprtngS'Rdtbetween 5-1 'orappoijffiHertT^r'^.ji pff=o#r-.._j 1 -1 -* ^ * i j>, -A ,•i-w' •*> "«•' wn. 16* ^Holiday Hcf505 Texas Ce» 47?-4^4tfr Essms^ *mmm MWBtoMMw HSiVjj Business as Returns By ROGER DOWNING vative.: !Tm not-a-conservative because I don't want to con-­^ --Texan.Staff Writer. serve what we have now, but what we had 25 years ago." Booming The Jfu Klu^ Klan is supporting a national presidential ticket Nelson feels Jews should pay twice as. much tax.because of • for the first time, James R-. Vfenable,. imperial wizard of the SOUTH PADRE ISLAND then-."undivided allegiances to Israel. Jews area lotmore-racist • Wational Knights of the Ku Klux Klsfa announced Monday. (UPI) — Jack McMahan, 36, than a lot Of people,,,L Nelson said. The Klan nominated Houstonian Scott Nelson'^s the vice­ . loves boomerangs. He can About government officials, Nelson said: presidential candidate and Dale Reusch xjf Lodi, Ohio, as the throw them, carve them,.sell Ford has proven that,he is justafter votes. Nixon proved his presidential candidate at a national convention in Stone Moan- them and trade them. He's disloyalty to the country by putting foreign-born Kissinger in tain, Ga. o--known for it o.n the Texas Gulf high office. Rockefeller was the worst person to pick-for Vice­ ; Nelson, 35, is.the imperial wizard of the Texas Fiery Knights, £ -'. Coast. ' President. And Sen. John Tower is not concerned with anything • ' an independent Klan. Reusch, also 35, is the grand dragon of the j He can throw and catch but. the downfall of our country. ; mmm Klan in Ohio, and was an unsuccessful candidate for Ohib gover­ them with either hand, with -wMSn should support the segregation of races," Nelson said. '7\' nor last year. : •m,u both hands, behind the back or Nelson claimed that within the next coupleof years there will : in front. He once sailed one;;; NELSON SAID the Man's platform will consist'of promoting./ be tetrcen Zandthree 103 yards down the sleek ?bolig .eignaid, ^Tttag^uUf the Umted Natlnnfand .sl*jnffor,fthe 1920s there Were seven.millioa Klansmen and that Warren -Padr.e--Island beach and Sithe291,1 was a Klansman,. 'caKght it.coming back: contribute. ™ • ~~J~­.He canxatch a boomerang yBystartirjg his campai i early,'NelSon said he hopes to get'.37 .times jn a row behind his'-; .'^oiigh populai^support-i gethis .and.Beusch's naniesjjn theback. ^72 times with both Texas ballot:-^-..... ... CHRISTIAN ­ hands-or 108 times with one, c Thousands or millions-of peopie^ho believe the saifrie as wehand. ' ­ He. can throw, caj-ve. seH ;S^fr-u«r»fcipho»o do will supportus," Nelson said. "$elwillSeek support from all. STUDENT peoples including blacks. Bipcks don't like forced busing, and trade, them: Jack's life, No Ordinary Motorcycle ''ii gy-!--Jjuite frarikly, is consumed n,j "T i i i j j . . -" > .--^either, ""-ffelsc^said,adding that society was segregated by the FELLOWSHIP Evel Knieyel s skyeycle is loaded on a truck to be transported to Idaho where the ^Creator.. X WltlTBoornerarlgs for the sim--; stuntmon-will use tf to try-to jump the Snake River Canyon. • NELSON SEES himself qs an individualist.;got a conser-UT. students are invited-to the Baptist Sfu­ pie reason that they allow him' to live as he wants. V Antismut Drive. • i dent Center, 2204 San Antonio at 7:30 m"""Boomerang Jack"dumped SATTVA VEGETARIAN p.m. tonight and every Tuesday night for-his construction tools eight Worshio and Fpllau/thin ~>i'/ years agoinNew York, joined RESTAURANT. Libertarians CriticizeCity the Coas't Quard and made his > SERVING BREAKFAST 7 -9.-30. LUNCH 11:45 -2-15 _way south. • NOW OPEN ~JacF'weafs ~$rr"Australian ­ IVl^THODIST STUDENT. CENTER hat, its wide,brim pinned flat 2434 Guadalupe '• 478-2433 against the crown. . _ --' MEA*. CONTRACTS -LUNCH $1.31 A MEAL' rTried3^v Pft«*; ly t:rlme® His only income fs-selling". Send «»<•n0 one thinks trying these cases is a TrOO:87*A-SEME5T€Rr:DESSEgTA,DRlNK.INCIUDED. -boomerangs weekend organized -by -the was .repipient of any harm waste of the taxoavers' 1 Gourmet & International quisihs. smoothies, -juices, "If I sell a dozen a day, I'm legumes, teas, whole wheat, yoghurt, pastries, desserts' in fine.shape," said the well-Party, which leveled committed, caTB¥^i^3rstT5ebjisr-^salad&rJ/eggies^lmporLcolfees. cre'oas. eggs (your choice). crlticism at 'the citjr's.recent Hank's Famous • • tanned boomerang huckster. . All that is really in ques-What is communicated is un-" ,. Community Atmosphere • live JEntertbinmen) antismut drive. . ' •This summer he sold ap- ,tiOn,are some people's valu|es',-popular;-what freedom is People's Prices --. Approximately 150 letters . • proximately 500, averaging'' Becaose one segment" of any . safe?'.'he said. Steak were mailed to members of $3.50 each. The 'meager given society thinks ; "I THINK *he Supreme- Meal City Council, the chief of revenue is enough to pay for a something is wrong, doesn't Court'made a tragic mistake Bulter police, city manager an^ necessarily mean that it's THE , small .apartment in Port when it set up popularity as a' Isabel. County Atty. Ned-Granger, -wrong, individuals have a legal. b£feis Mr' censorship.­He wanders through hotels . .right-to conduct themselves in Freedom of speech is more -If MARCH supporting Councilman Bob Binder'sstand last month op­any and into restaurants, selling >. -manner they feel is cor-important than closing offen­ his boomerangs. posing the city's campaign : rect as long as no one else is sive theaters. We m'uSt. try to ;ss HAIR against "victimless crimes,"­ , And he teaches skepticshow . injured,.or as long as anyone elect politicians who will get to toss them. and charging the police else's rights are not violated. the police and prosecutors' Xaircutting Studio department and the countyat­ 501 W. 18th 472-2984 "I like it out here, I meet a The government has no right onto more worthwhile tasks," torney with misplacement of lot of people," he said. "Ilike to" tellpeople how to behave. It h? added. - priorities. ' WE ARE PROUD TO to teacli people something is nothing, other than dic­. The letters sent to the city 'Councilman Jeff Friedman tatorial," she said. INTRODUCE THE ASSOCIATION they have hever done T>efore. officials all supported Binder They'get theidea they can't do • said Monday he; too, thought •; f'We hope, by this mallcam­and expressed concern 'over OF • •; the county attorney;.and the it, and I like to prove to them'' paign, to encourageother peo-what they: called "growing they can." police department had other ple whojeel the same way we DELORIS government control in* all , matters that fated.more im­do, to-write in'to. put enough Jack, who claims a world realms of"man's life." (FORMERLY OF THE HAIR CUT STORE) mediate. attention.-than —record in two hand; single pressure on elected officials •FREE,SHAMPOO WITH HAIRSTYLE AND'AP ; hand, behind the back, and raidingpornography-peddling so thQr cancease this type Of distance throw-for the ' Oppression,'* she added. IdlPTHIS LUCKY COUPOhI places of business. 'I BELIEVE things-like bootTrerang^3aw-hYs^fitsi-1J3,BELIEV? l'ke : A-letter Libera EVEY TUESDAY TRY A 1 IN A lettef to Binder, Liber-I TAW V2Off YOUR I' seven years ago. •• _buTglaTy-antf-crlmes-trf--tamn--P«-ty-GhaiFperson • 6UKTS MKALIHT15| «... °c violence concern the citizenscitizens, WntMiincnn the •-EQIiAi. OR USSTHIDI' •" "Just out of curiosity, »I. SanHraSahdra Hutchinson said of A.ustin more^ immediately Buying and selling of por-"YOURS; FROM 3PM-1IPMii picked one up in a restaurant • and started fooling around than a few allegedly filthy hc®raphy was engaged in by. •ONLY. OFFERCOOD MNTILl with it,"-he said. . books or films,. Government consenting/ adults and -was OCT. 6,1974. MM _.%He. found out selling tne officials really nave no place therefore a victimless crime. i_n_ dictating moral? -or items wasa'good way to m?et "Neither/Attorney Granger, people and hang around the deciding" what is "SociaHy--Poliee-ChieLMiles ngr a cpin­ acceptable to the ' general . islands. t , munity should determine an A} Bored? public," he said. .ifidiyidual's moralSi--The w i ."The City Councilobviously "Sometimes. So, you just go police should arrest and the", cannot make laws concernitig HAMBURGER out and do a lot of.surfing to courts should prosecute in­ this particular .issue or "any make up for it." , ~ dividuals or groups who in­ WITH ALL THE TRIMMINGS other,' but we can and will itiate the. use of. force -or : SERVICES tneet with the Travis County -violence against other per­FRENCH FRIES endstate Legislature delegation sons," she said. ^ and see if something can be VOGUE cover Plank Party member ' Ed A LARGE SOFT DRINK done legislatively to put the * , Caruthers said what , was at CANOES matter out of theway for once issue was not mere por­ I:SAILBOATS and for all," he-added. nography, but civil liberties. -, 89c 4 . • SALES• RENTALS.,.^, Friedman said he had v' • INSTRUCTION '•?/% ' "The current .wave of Serving ((apjacRs ; > m received about 20 letters.from -t. TYPES & SIZES . prosecutions in Austin is bas­succuient^speoais I Wnicorn Galleryif • f>EW AND USED members of the Libertarian BEER • FOOSBALL • PONG supporting I 'LESSONS START 9/10 $>Ql Party Binder's ed entirelyjon the unpopulari­miSuKtlMML ty of '.smut.' -It is only-the Open till 4 a.m. \ floorSAILBOAT SHOP^ stand and urging him and the result.;.of .. political pressure 1^07, E. RIVERSIDE other members of the City Comer 19th & Guadalupe ' c; 442-59,00 V Council to take whatever 477-6829 steps necessary towards the curtailment of what they call­ ed police BRADFORD-TOWNSEND harassment of '4^>irLearn * bookstores and' movie 'houses KUNG-FU^ dealing in pornographic" INC. material. "From CHINESE ^ " rf 1600 NUECES ijJANET SMARR, Liber­ tm, Tonight! INSTRUCTORS % for : self-de'fense and sportsX Announces t'P. Tradltlonal.teaching method. " Students' Reglster^now at: i.; the opening of their \PEISHAOl_IN-.-Attorney,yi>. ­ r-^KUNG-^u ^ . -} INSTITUTE1, £- Mini Discount Store i -3401 Guadalupe ir»~ The students' attorneys; -3-1Q p.m woekdayv — Frank Ivy and Ann Bower, it , are available by appoint­ ' Fabrics & Sewing Notions ? ment from 8 o.m, to 5 p.m. Monday through Fri-Mon. thru Sati 9 a.m. -5 p.m." GINNY'S day in Union Building .COPYING 301. Telephone 471-; Come sew with us! ERVICE , 7142. The students' at­ INC. torneys' will-handle ­landlord-ten,ant; con­ mi PAUL NEWMAN WEEK sumer protection, j^;42_Do'bie Mall 476-9171 *+employes' rights, taxation Free Parking Paul Newman ,s«S arid insurance cases. v10 p.m. MfiF , • 0 * m • 5 p.m. Sbt;---ar-.....CrJminaI.case s and-FAST FOODS&l'SS raS'-iw ~^~domesti*frctofalemi. U ALL AUSTIN The Texas Union Dining ^eivice sells doughfiuts, COOPERATIVE NURSERYL. tfA •• , 4700 GROVE R . sweet rolls, cfiips,sandwiches, ice cream,,fresh ' 453-2048 454-5315 fruit, rpHk, soft drinks, coffee and tea.*' ­ ;fSv *-AGE8 JV4 Good V-i ~'3 dar-rrogrtm 00 mo, T 2 day program SH 00 rrto ' <0? Directed by Martin Rit0 ^ if 'S CREATIVE LEARNING EXPERIENCE!' &%1 Also starring Patricia Neal, Brandon de Wilde Life! Tlje Patjff Snack Bar^ J 'ALTERNATIVES! Proi" and 'Meivyn Douglas­ Cr^rtant and dlstrested? Help lias ftear as union Patie ^ / your <9lephone. PrcLifo AdvocM0s,-5l0 i J West 26tb, 472-4198 ^ ^ • 8 a.m. -4 p.m. weekdays/ Based.on the novel by-Lariy;iMcMurtryrrwb6 MIDWIFE Regliteredf-Auttin Oapt . .He8»h^3(500>Nalurolhomebirlha".Nm'-- brought YOU THE LAST PirniPF gHnyy . mdn-C«jserle Ifa Ranch, X)rlp» n f,^PMPT rAAOVWG»y iiouji haultnj|«rv'leev^ ,-t««.w^d plck'VPi. Lower . £t_udem w|lh lafge bed pit TheHillsof -Upstairs Restaurant JESTER Auditorium 7 and 9 p.m. •; ^Tj Atlmission $] [ric8StCompare(johnJeck»onr3&3-. Chei^K Second floor, South end|ff 7-fln am— 1ran p.m "p->-Wednesday Paul IMewman is THE HUSTLER .Weekdays ^ ^ (1961) ~ -v ^ ^ -• Wt Apcwtmenjfs , Jwith George C. Scq&. I and 9:30 p.m. ­ CLOSE TOTOVW,Realnic'a.2bedroom• mobile.home. Low rates ton l^Me fd * Tennis ¥L couple*. .^UnWstudent* welcome vyi h^ . ^efer«nceJir* ncek/4764214/ ^ ^ Bike Trail Thursday Paul Newman fs HOMBRE (1966) Swimming . -kis PARKING SPACES avflfl )bie, %6 mon^h. $ee ArcoVrtlon*^ OWMt Wh/ " "" with-^ichard-.Boone •"T-rf" ~~ J_" •1~ ' ' • —' '•••-•I'l'n "T|r,i>i'r'i''-'>l"jiVii'iiti OOUpLE:GARAGB^yoiriod«r.-;S*orafle ttniy Nd Utilities Reafy Hffl NueSl^ 3 ^ S20/mo^U7-U?7,4S9-$334. *\ 385-9295 —Riyefsi^Bfjve^ ­ r^|frp«r4!j>ri^sJ ctotot11 T T --iVi mlles eastof 1-35T ' washtri/dfyert/ litraos'tor font. EZ Rentals, 401Etft 1st, 4W-4275 --^23K)*W|cter^drn oic- Season Ttcket Good For All^SS Programs—$12 17. ~%m'' "'5 , .js> ^v. ?*;|W as "s^few lif^S J JJ& P'l* *&3& • «-. ^ «•« SSt&W* *•*£> i*£fef i£ ; *'•"%& -f#S ,V.>-.^1 »?*, ->\A* as* . -sr^>: -teA­ l2S" <. r't? ,->•-%J' -\2zM^>\,-A*'' vf /Syf ? %£? " ?Y& >r We can •s?-^ w? i­ • ~4~~ -7-WW ^Jr ^rc V'^-. v&s? ?i ft fi^\ a TSiiET !^* ? $?<* •< IrftA/1 f4§ ^^-f-i.££h£r> -Hi ^ " j»iyflM iiijiliT.^.i'.^i S?""* *<*$•**£ 1\r •S.VrcW>M~» f -wWs arwfc­"•€-J V^ *&k< \&J,i 4 V5C> **' 5-,»J? .^afci-irkv : V*?­:& • > J ..i' y---> i *=•#/ II IV"»* ^I """ ':r"Ii j£-" .1 I r— . 1, niiiiiiiif ••" ** -I Huge selection of new and used textbooks for all UT classes. 5S Q&6\ VTTTT •§P¥P ;t This means that at Hemphill-Wal+a^e^yotf-tf «so£^%* 3^ won't have problems finding the book you need for any ciass. So makeif easyon yourself.Buy •jVi mi * / viwvg* yv 1 1 iwivv 1 I VA4 w jr. . yli Jrvu» 0\*I1, XJU-y^ 5sa>i®a ft 11 A/HIIr u hnnkC frnrn uc Vnn'll nat Ihrniinh m*-. a" your ,books from us. You'll get through c i^quickfy~%nd get your book' buying done in one convenient W ssSmv : •; — • I-••_. • . ••••••» . '• >"l '•'• >••• . '--".r^y • • . • v ••• :-•. • : -•. ­ i u-i. book expenses m •¥ >»rj &5V^.-2i Hr.«a fitea -»$£<& '''V'"' ' . tear «88« 4 5^ • m, mM fM mMMM. . W$ "Vifp haveJ complete line of school suppliesl Kwsfv.™ K M-f you're ** '• •• , Hemphill-Waillace••• • V# I•» i.|^ll• « l llUllUvV •; -1 buyingWU jf' •<• •ty; ^ ••'•••>•"While.••T^ •• /:•• • •; • .• at — M SAI/C AI I4 Atik* *^UAAI ^ I!-.-•:. ;,".booksA check out our school supplies.. We have SP® • .«sj ^all the extra items you'll need for your classes.^, ^ 'V . jg That's just one more reason Hemphill-Wallace is yobr one- K JrK ' stop school headquarters.,., ^ r;­ . :• it S-^3<«rtW. "f/8> -.' " V vJ1 W:if^' >• .-r.fcrli <&•*&> K ­ 1. Ai m m ^4ff 34CW WtH-r •^ey«s in r/& 5<^» arv/t ^Si^rw,3? ,*i*& 13' 3* >SSFi F.>'U 'mrnmmm