T h e Da il y T e x a n Student N e w sp a p e r at The University of Texas at Austin Vol. 75, No. 144 Fifteen Cents Tw enty P a ge s Austin, Texas, M on d ay, J a n u a ry 26, 1976 Bu sin e ss Office: 471-5244 New s D epartm ents: 471-4591 CIA Gives Foreign Aid Report Cites Covert Financial Help •1976 N .Y . T im e s New s Service WASHINGTON — Nearly one-third of the hundreds of covert intelligence operations undertaken by the United States over the last decade have involved secret financial support to foreign political parties and government leaders, according to a report by the House Select Com­ mittee on Intelligence. The panel found that while the majority of such aid had been funneled by the Central Intelligence Agency into the developing countries, the United States also supplied $75 million to Italian political parties and candidates since the agency was established in 1947. That figure includes $10 million supplied by the CIA to non-Communist groups in Italy, principally the Christian Democratic party and 21 individual candidates for office, in an effort initiated by American Ambassador Graham Martin to counter Soviet political influence in last June’s the committee has Italian parliamentary elections, found. Documents and other evidence supplied to the com- Smith Explains Status m ittee’s investigators by the CIA also showed that one un­ identified Third World in political aid from the United States over 14 years and that several other foreign heads of state had been supported financially for more than a decade. leader received $960,000 The committee also concluded that the federal in­ telligence agencies, as they are currently constituted, operate in such secret ways that they are “ beyond the scrutiny” of Congress. The 338-page report, which has not been released but a copy of which was obtained by The New York Times, dis­ closes a number of irregularities uncovered by com­ mittee investigators. These include an apparent violation by the Central Intellegience Agency of a 1967 presidential directive prohibiting it from providing secret financial assistance to any of the nation’s educational institutions. The House committee also found that secret budget figures given to Congress by federal intelligence agencies over the years were “ three or four tim es” lower than the totals actually spent by the United States in gathering in­ telligence a t home and abroad. Many of those expenditures, it said, were obscured from Congress and were not adequately audited either by the Office of Management and Budget or the agencies’ own accountants, with the result that wastefulness and questionable expenditures had occurred. The report also disclosed Sen. Henry M. Jackson secretly advised the CIA in 1973 on how to protect itself against an investigation by Sen. Frank Church into the agency’s relations with the International Telephone and Telegraph Corporation in Chile. The report quotes a CIA memorandum of Feb. 28,1973, that said “Senator Jackson repeatedly made the com­ ment that in his view the CIA Oversight Committee (of which he was then a member) had the responsibility of protecting the agency in the type of situation that was in­ herent in the Church subcommittee. “As a result of this conviction, Senator Jackson would work with the agency to see that we got this protection,” the memorandum said. Possible Resignation Reported By DAVID GUARINO and ANN COLWELL Texan Staff Writer Dist. Atty. Bob Smith, filed as a can­ didate for d istrict judge, answered allegations Sunday about his status as a state official, raised in a newspaper a rti­ cle. that Smith may have In a copyrighted story in Saturday’s it was Austin Am erican-Statesm an, reported in­ advertently resigned his position as dis­ trict attorney when he accepted a cam ­ paign contribution for his race for judge. TTie Statesman explained that accor­ ding to an amendment to the Texas C onstitution, an officeholder who becomes a “candidate” for another of­ fice while more than one year of his to current term remains is subject “automatic resignation of the office then held.” Smith received his first contribution toward his judge’s race more than five months before his last year as district at­ torney began, the Statesman reported. Article 14 of the Texas Election Code states that a “ candidate” is a person who takes “affirmative action” to seek election. An example of affirmative ac­ tion, according to the statute, is “accep­ tance of a contribution for use in a future election.” According to the Statesman, Smith said Friday the "definition (of can­ didate) in the statute does not neessarily t h e t h e d e f i n i t i o n c o n t r o l Constitution.” He said if that were so, the L egislature could change the Constitution by statute. in However, several attorneys contacted -today-------- C o o l... f a i r M o n d a y w i t h c o o l e r S k i e s w i l l b e c o m e tem peratures. The high tem perature will be in the mid- 50s dropping to the upper 20s M o n d a y night. W ind s will be northerly from 15 to 25 m.p.h. Sunrise will be at 7:25 a.m., and the sun will set at 6:02 p.m. by the Statesman said that a court would have to decide which document defines the term. The allegations made in the newspaper article raised several questions as to Smith’s status in office and the status of investigations and litigation being carried out by the district attorney’s of­ fice, investigation of the Senate Secretary Charles Schnabel. including Smith, contacted by phone in his office Sunday, answered the Statesm an’s allegations and the surrounding legal questions. Smith explained that the center of the whole m atter was in the Statesman’s in­ terpretation of the relationship between the State Constitution and the Texas Election Code. “The section of the Constitution regar­ ding campaigning is Article 16, Section 65,” Smith said. It says that any officer that announces his candidacy for another office automatically resigns his position if more than a year remains in the unex­ pired term of office.” Smith said that he was within the limits of the law on that point, not having announced his candidacy until last F ri­ day. Smith also said he is within the law regarding the Election Code as well, hav­ ing filed under undesignated campaign manager status in June, 1975, as required by the provisions of the code. Asked if the status of ongoing in­ vestigations and litigation involving the district atto rn ey ’s office might be jeopardized by any question of Smith’s status as an officeholder, he replied, “Even if there were a question of il­ legality on my part, I would be required to remain in office by Article 16, Section 17, of the Constitution. “The article requires state officials to remain in office until the governor can appoint a qualified successor to fill out the unexpired term of office.” Smith said further that in such a case, he would serve as a de jure officeholder, with full legal authority. Asked if the Statesman’s allegations might lead to legal proceedings, Smith said, “To initiate any question of illegali­ ty under Article 16, Section 17, is ab­ surd.” ★ ★ ★ Dist.Atty.Bob Smith filed for the office of 98th District Court Judge Friday in the office of Ken Wendler, chairman of the Travis County Democratic party. Smith currently has one opponent in the May I Democratic prim ary — at­ torney Hume Cofer. Filing deadline is Feb. 2. Smith, vying for one of seven district judge positions in the primaries, said that all the courts will re-evaluate the judicial duties to increase the courts’ work loads. Along with additional civil cases, divorces, land title and juvenile cases, each court will be called on to preside over about 1,300 felony cases, Smith said. Totem Pole Roger Ybarra, l l (top), munches a chili dog atop University sophomore George Matcek during the Big Brothers picnic. (Related Photo, Page 7.) — Texan Sta ff Photo by Paul M. Lester Investigators of UT Division of Extension Continue Financing Irregularities Probe By RON HUTCHESON Texan Staff Writer I n v e s tig a to rs a re checking the possibility that federal money is in­ t he a l l e ge d vol ved irregularities within the Division of Ex­ tension, The Daily Texan has learned. in s om e of The division receives more than $800,- 000 in grants from the federal Office of Education. Most of the money supports projects dealing with public schools or undereducated and disadvantaged adults. A secretary in a division bureau which receives $75,000 in federal money has the joined list of division employes represented by Austin attorneys Roy Minton and Charles Burton, Burton con­ firmed Saturday. Mary Jo Smith, secretary in the Exten­ sion Teaching and Field Service Bureau; William Barron, dean of the division; Charles Kelso, director of the division’s Ind ust ri a l and Busine ss Tr a i ni ng Bureau; and John C. Hunt, an employe of Kelso are represented by the pair. “ We don’t know why she would need an attorney,” an assistant district attorney involved in the probe said. Smith referred all press inquiries to James Colvin, University vice-president for business affairs. Colvin said he would “neither confirm nor deny at this tim e” that federal funds are involved in the alleged irregularities. Investigators confirmed that they have subpoenaed Hunt’s bank records in the probe. University police seized Kelso’s office records Jan. 12. The records of a nothe r priva te firm which deals with the division were subpoenaed Friday, The Texan learned. The source refused to name the company involved. The local company is the fifth firm subpoenaed in the probe. Representatives of two subpoenaed film companies have been instructed to appear before a Travis County grand jury Tuesday. University auditors also are conduc­ ting an inventory at the Adult Basic Education Learning Center, another part of the division. The Travis County grand jury has been briefed on the probe, and some of the records involved are under the dis­ trict attorney’s supervision. -Texan Staff Photo by Paul M . U tte r Football Season Passes: A Legislative Tradition By TODD KATZ Texan Staff Writer There are many long-standing traditions at The University, but perhaps none is taken more seriously by the state’s lawmakers than the traditional season pass to home football games given to several hundred legislators and high-level state bureaucrats. Over the years The University’s complimentary ticket program has evolved into distribution of $50,143 worth of tickets. “ Nothing is expected; nothing is given,” Supreme Court Chief Justice Joe Greenhill — one of the persons who accepts the tickets — said Sun­ day, addressing the issue of conflict of interest. “The University loses as many suits as it wins here,” Greenhill said, adding th at he also purchased four season tickets in 1975. In terms of financial gain from the complimen­ tary tickets, Greenhill noted that he gives $100 each year to the Ex-Students’ Association, $50 an­ nually to the College of Business Administration at The University and also makes annual con­ tributions to the Law School Foundation. Asked if he felt it might be a conflict of interest for a state official who was responsible for super­ vising an area of University affairs to accept the tickets, Greenhill said, “ I can only speak f o r myself.” THREE MEN in the state auditor’s office receive the free season passes — worth $96 each. However, State Auditor George McNeil said he did not believe that there was any reason why the auditors should refrain from accepting the 30- to 40-yard-line seats. “ I doubt if you could buy one of these men for that price,” McNeil said. “Giving away the football tickets is a practice of many years standing ... only a few of our people have ever refused the offer,” he said. The state auditor said that he always con­ tributed more money to The University than the value of the tickets. “ I think The University is just trying to extend a courtesy,” he said. MCNEIL said he felt it was helpful for him to go to the games and the pregame cocktail party (usually held in the University Art Building) “just to see what goes on out there. The social contact is very important in the kind of work we do. Per­ sonally I feel a sense of obligation to make an appearance,” he added. “ We never had the idea that football and pregame receptions affect decisions,” Mike Hud­ son, System public relations officer, said recent­ ly. “When you have a chance to visit with someone in state government on an informal, social basis and then meet later on official business, it makes a lot of difference,” Hudson said. HUDSON, is the official who approves distribu­ tion and sale of additional tickets which are made available on a first-come, first-served basis to state officials. He earns $33,000 annually. “These football tickets are one of the little, relatively trivial fringe benefits that UT Austin provides to say thank you to the people in state government for what they do for UT Austin,” Hudson said. “ Frankly, a lot of people are impressed that UT Austin has a ranking team. A lot of people have orange blood,” he said. Hudson called it “totally ridiculous” to expect that the tickets would have an effect on decisions of state officials “one way or the other.” “ The tickets are designed to make people feel good about UT Austin, to create goodwill,” Hud­ son said. Hudson noted that there was nothing illegal in the activity since state agencies are exempt by law from having to register lobbyists. “The ac­ tivity is not prohibited under the penal code,” he said. The public affairs officer acknowledged that some smaller state universities might be disad­ vantaged by the goodwill generated for UT Austin. “ UT Austin is the premiere school in the state,” he said. THE UNIVERSITY may be the only state school that continues a policy of football ticket giveaways. Texas Tech “has never given free tickets to anyone,” Chris Connelly, assistant athletic direc­ tor of the Red Raiders, said Friday. “ I think that’s illegal,” he said. “ I think they ruled that out last year.” At Texas A&M Wally Groff, athletic depart­ ment business manager, reported that the Aggies discontinued giving free tickets to state and local officials in 1974. “ During the 1975 and 1975 seasons no free tickets were distributed,” he said. Officials at the University of Houston were un­ available for comment Friday. Robert Heath, head of the opinions committee in, the attorney general’s office, received free season tickets for 1975. “I never felt com­ promised,” Heath said. “ UT has never gotten any special treatm ent from us. “ I have never looked at the complimentary ticket offer as being a problem,” Heath added. The follow ing state officials accepted two free season football p asse s from the U n iversity in 1975: SUPREME COURT: Judges H o m e r Thornberry, Joe Greenhill, J a m e s G. Denton, Se ars M cG e e . Tom Reavley, Zollie Steakley c r i m in a l APPEALS: Judges Leon Douglas, VV.A. M o rriso n , W endell A. Odom , John Onion, T ru m a n Roberts CO O R D IN A TIN G BOARO: F re d M oore, O .H E llio tt, New ton G re sh a m *, J a m e s P. Hollers, R. Pau l Teague*, R ic h a rd Slocom b, W atson Wise. TEXAS SENATE: C h arle s Schnabel, T o m m y Townsend. LEGISLATIVE BUDGET BOARD: T h o m a s Keel, J im Oliver, B ill Wells, J .B Pace, Jere Peterson, Du d ley M c C a u le y . ATTORNEY GENERAL S OFFICE: John Hill, Robert Heath, J C. D a v is Jr., D a v id Kendell. GOVERNO R'S OFFICE: Ken Clapp, B o b Hardesty. STATE AUDITOR'S OFFICE: G eorge M c N e il, Vincent Rodnite, O M . Mooney. SECRETARY OF STATE'S OFFICE: M a r k White, Sybil Dickinson. STATE TREASURER'S OFFICE: Jesse James. HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES: Ru sty Kelley, J a ck Gultahorn, Dorothy H allm an . DEPARTMENT OF PUBUC SAFETY: W ilson Speir* COMPTROLLER'S OFFICE.- Bob Bullock, C h arle s Behrens AGRICULTURE DEPARTMENT: John C White BOARO OF CONTROL H om er Foerster, C M . Walton. TEXAS EDUCATION AGENCY: M a r lin Brochette. TEXAS LEGISLATIVE COUNCIL: Robert Johnson. Not im m ediately identified by departm ent; M r s. F ra n k G uff in, D ick y Travis, Roy Hogan. STATE SENATORS (in a lp h a b e tic a l o rd er): MEMBERSHIP ON AN EDUCATION COMMITTEE) (BOLD FACE INDICATES Don Adam s, Betty Anduiar, B ill Braecklein, Chet Brooks, Ron Clower, T om Creighton, Lloyd Doggett, R a y Farabee, Bo b G a m - mage, K ent H ance, D. Roy H arrington, O H. H arris. G ro u t Jon#*, Glenn Kothm ann, F ra n k Lom bardino, R a u l L. Longoria, Oocor M a u ry , M ik e M c K in n o n , Peyton M c K n ig h t, Bill Meier, W alter Mengden, Jr., W .T. Moore, W .N. P o tm a n , H. Taft Son- tio rto b a n * , A.R. S c h w a rtr, M an S h e rm a n , W .l. S h a ita n , John Traeger, Lin­ d o n W iMiamt. STATE REPRESENTATIVE (in alphabetical order): H e rm a n A d a m t. Fred A gn ich Joe Allen, D a v id Allred, H e m p Atkin- te n , K a y Bailey, Andrew Baker, G onzalo Barrientos, John Bigh am , Ron ald Bird, W.J. Blythe, Bennie Bock, L a th a m Boone, B row n, John W. Bryant, Ben B yn u m , Neil Caldw ell, T e rry Canales, Bill C a r a w a y , T om Cartlidge, D on ald M . Cartw right, Ph il Cates, M e lch o r Chavez, BUI C lark. Jim C lark, Bill C la y to n , R on ald D. Colem an, W .G. Coody, T om Crad- dick, Robert D avis, W ilh e lm in a Deice, W oody Denson, La n e Denton, J e rry D o n a ld so n , A L. D r a m b e r g e r , R o n a ld E a r le , J im m ie Ed w ard s, C h a rle s E v an s, M ic h a e l Ezzell, D a v e Finney, M ilton E. Fox*, A C. G arcia , M a t t G a rcia , F rank G a s to n , R ic h a rd Geiger. Sm ith G ille y, Ben G rant, F o rre st Green*, R a ym o n d Green, D e w itt Hale, Anthony Hall, W illiam H all, Joe Hanna, E d Harris, F ra n k H artung, Fred H e a d , Don Henderson, Bob Hendricks, Joe H er­ nandez, B ill H illiard, J o h n H e e s te n b o c k , B ill Hollowed, Joe A Hubenak, Sa m u e l Hudson, R a y Hutchison*, E d d ie Bernice John­ son, Gene Jones. Luther Jones, J a m e s Kaster, A.J. Korioth, D an Kwbtak, Jam e s Laney, C a m m Lary, H e rm a n n Lauhoff, G ib son Lewis, R.B. M cAlister Susan M cBe e , F e lix M c D o n a ld *, T.H. M cD onald, F rank M a d ia * , J im m y M an kin s, E lm e r M a rtin *, T em M a sse y , J a m e s M atto x *, E d M ayes, C h ris M ille r, G re go ry M on toya*, P a u l Moreno, Ben M unson, Lynn Nabers, Jon Newton, J a m e s Nowlin, J am e s Nugent. Robert O 'K e lle y, Lyndon Olson, Jr., C a rl Parke r, W a lt Parker, W ayn e Peveto, Tony Polum bo, Pike Powers, B ill Presnal, G eo rg e P reston, P a u l Ragsd ale, D en Rom s, Ben Reyes, R ic h a rd Reynolds, A b ra h a m R ibak, C a lvin Rucker, Tom Schiefter, C h ris Sem os, W.C. Sherman, E L Short, Robert Simpson, Richard Slack, Chester Slay, C a rlyle Smith, Joe Spurlock, G.J. Sutton, Pe rcy Tanner, E lm e r Tarbox*, A rthu r Temple, S a r d o n ic Thom pson, R u b e n Torres, C a rlo s Truan, D R Uher, R L. Vale, Kenneth V aughan , L a rry Vick, T im Von Dohlen, C r a ig W ashington, Ron W aters*, E d R. W at­ son*, Sarah Weddington, E m m e tt Whitehead, John Whitmire, Leroy Wieting, Doyle Willis, John W ilson, Joe Wyatt. FEDERAL OFFICIALS: U .S D istric t Ju dge Jack Roberts, U S. Sen. Lloyd Bentsen*, U S Rep J.J. Pickle. CITY OFFICIALS: Jeffrey Frie d m an , Burch Biggerstaff, D an D a v id ­ son, Don Doyle, Robert M ile s, G e orge Phifer. PRESS: J.C. Kellam , R ic h a rd Morehead, Bo Byers, Stuart Long, Roland Lindsey, Jim Berry, Jon Ford, Fred G u a r n e r e 'C la y Robin­ son, Bob B ain AUSTIN NEWS MEDIA: B ill O 'Connell, Joe Roddy, Tolbert Foster, Jim M c N a b b season tickets f o r m e r GOVERNORS: John Connelly, P rice Daniel, Preston Smith •Indicates acceptance of tickets tor specific gam es, rather than t Defense attorney Arthur M itchell — Texan Staff Photo by Frank Tilley Functioning Quorum Not Expected At UT Council, Senate Meetings Political Appeal Flimsy, Odam Says Senate Convicts Carrillo Despite Protest of Parr Influence W 1 B • By DANNY HOLLAND Texan Staff Writer A l l e g a t i o n s o f P a r r political machine influence in the Texas Senate would be a weak basis for appeal of Judge O.P. Carrillo’s im­ peachment conviction, Asst. Atty. Gen. John Odam said. The Texas Senate Friday voted 23-5 in favor of ousting C arrillo the 229th from D istrict Court bench and denied him the riqht to hold future public office. The vote marks the first successful im­ peachment conviction in 44 years. Althouqh senators voted on only two articles (I and 7) of impeachment the 10-article resolution, indictment, they failed to secure the two-thirds vote needed to convict the South Texas judge of using Duval County funds to buy groceries for his personal use (Article I). Carrillo, convicted of con­ spiring to rent nonexistent equipment to Duval County and conspiring to rent equip­ ment to the county which was not used (Article 7), would not say which senator or senators was the Parr ally. “ Oh y e s , t h e r e w a s definitely” Parr influence in the Senate, Carrillo said after his conviction. “I also think the senators just wanted to go home early,” he added. Defense attorney Arthur Mitchell reiterated in his final arguments that the impeach­ ment proceedings were the result of the political struggle between the powerful Parr and Carrillo families of Duval County. M itc h e ll fu r th e r c o n ­ s tr u c te d h is a r g u m e n ts around the state’s “inability to prove beyond a reasonable doubt” that Carrillo had a hand in swindling the county out of funds for the rent of two tractors. Mitchell contended that the prosecution could neither prove the tractors ex­ isted nor could it be proved the existing equipment was ever used. “In 44 years, never have they (the Senate) impeached a man on something as flimsy as Articles I and 7,” Mitchell said. The credibility of the state’s w it n e s s e s w a s la c k in g , Mitchell said, referring to sta r p ro sec u tio n w itn e s s Rudolfo Couling, who has five indictments of wrongdoing against him. Couling had been g ra n te d im m u n ity from further prosecution by Atty. Gen. John Hill’s office for any testimony he gave which may further incriminate him. P rosecu tor Terry D oyle contended that the defense based its case on the conduct of the late George Parr and Archer Parr, past Duval County judge, convicted of in­ come tax evasion, and the conduct of state Rep.Terry Canales of Alice, former Parr attorney who initiated the im­ p each m en t p ro ceed in g s. Doyle in sisted that th ese i s s u e s , no m a t t e r how magnified by the defense, were not real issues in the Ccisc. F o l l o w i n g C a r r i l l o s removal, the Senate next had to vote on Carrillo s dis­ from holding qualification future public office. “This court has done what could’ve been done in the Old Suprem e Court building (where initial impeachment hearings were held),” Odam said.“Now you must take the one additional step which only you have been empowered to do. You ca n n o t stop at removal, but must extend it to disqualification,’ Odam said. of the remaining eight articles of impeachment. Sen. A.M. Aikin of Paris, one of the leading advocates to expedite the trial, returned from the 50-minute caucus with a resolution to adjourn the special Senate impeach­ ment trial session. The motion passed. Mitchell was appreciative of the Senate’s dismissal of the remaining eight articles. Removal of the remaining the eight articles afforded defense the opportunity to confine appeals and objec­ tions only to Article 7, and to the Judicial Qualifications transcripts, he Commission tom im su w ■ « explained. Mitchell said he Senators voted 22-5 in favor of Carrillo’s disqualification and then retired behind closed will file his objections before doors for consideration of any the Jan. 25 deadline. A variable at University C o-O p your authorized Hewlitt-Packard Dealer ment from the group of stu­ dent senators who want to end the boycott of the University Council, Crabtree added. Student Sen. John Craddock said he was not in agreement with the faculty resolution requesting the joint meeting. He was one of the 12 senators who walked out of the Student Senate meeting Wednesday, in protest of continuing the boycott. Rogers acted on only one th e ite m d is c u s s e d a t p r e sid e n t’s m e etin g la s t December. She approved a recomm endation regarding departmental voting status faculty members. Special Offer, $10.00 Value*: Free HP-21 Applications Book with the purchase of any HP-2L Offer expires March 15,1976. O ffer void w here prohibited by law regulation, or otherw ise. A vailable only w ith the purchase of a new U P -21 before March 15, l«M>.________________________ See your dealer for details. The second generation is here By BETH MACK Texan Staff Writer The growing storm between (Related Story, Page 6.) the University Council and the “ rump” session of the Facul­ ty Senate should gather more clouds at Monday’s separate meetings. General consensus among faculty members is that there will be no quorum at the University Council meeting and at least a quorum at the rump session. The two groups have been meeting separately since the faculty decided to boycott the Land Use Policy Forum's Subject A two-day conference beginning here Monday will consider the need for a state land-use policy. The policy would include regulations for uses and protection of prime agricultural and environmentally sensitive land areas. The opening session of the conference will be at 9.30 a.m. in the Joe C. Thompson Conference Center. Registration fee is $25. The University’s Lyndon B. Johnson School of Public Affairs and the Texas Advisory Commission on Intergovernmental Relations are sponsoring the Program — “A State Land Use Policy for Texas; Mandate or Option.” David L. Callies, a Chicago attorney, will give the keynote ad­ dress on “The Quiet Revolution in Land Use Control. Other speakers will include Texas Land Commissioner Bob Armstrong, San Antonio Mayor Lila Cockrell, State Sen. Max Sherman of Amarillo and Allan S. Mandel, an assistant professor at the LBJ School. University Council meetings, forming the rump session, in protest of the appointment of Lorene Rogers as president of The University in September. The December meeting of found each both groups without a quorum. However, Rogers asked those Universi­ ty Council members who were present to stay and discuss m atters of concern at a president’s meeting. D iscussion at M onday’s rump session will include the report of the Faculty Senate committee studying faculty participation in University governance, chaired by Dr. Patricia Cain. The rump session will also in t r o d u c e a r e s o lu t io n recommending that Student and Faculty Senates meet to- qether. “ I hope the meeting can be arranged as soon as possible,” Carol C rab tree, Student Government president, said. 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Dept. 65SE, 19310 Pruneridge Avenue, Cupertino, CA 95014 •Suggested retail price, e xclu d in g applicable state and local (axe*— Con tin en tal t i S , Alaska & Hawaii blo/02 ‘ •lf not, call 800-538-7922 (in (.alit 82-98(>2) for the nam e of a dealer ne a r y o u Wallace Mississippi Victor Rules Out Third Party Presidential Bid Former vice-presidential candidate NEARLY 25 PER CENT of those tak­ ing part in the preferential polling listed themselves as uncommitted. before the caucuses, the Sargent d r iv e r was th,rd w,th 155.39 "V” , step S w a r t choosing the state's 24 votes, about 13 per cent. delegatee to the national Democratic convention. Texas Sen. Lloyd Bentsen ran a distant fourth in the balloting with 23.19 votes, or about 2 per cent, while former Sen. Fred Harris of Oklahoma was last with 15.24 votes or 1.3 per cent. A party spokesman said that all of the returns probably would not be known un­ til the county conventions Feb. 14. “I believe you could say I have ruled out the probability of running as a third party candidate,” Wallace said in Plant City, Fla., Saturday night. Mrs. Pat Derian, national Democratic committeewoman, said she was not sur­ prised at Wallace’s victory. Mrs. Derian, d i d n ' f c o n t i ^ ^ o ^ o m e ^ s S y m a - jor triumph for the Alabama governor. “Based on past voting records in the state, he really should have done much better,” she said. Carter, campaigning in New England, said the Wallace backers should be credited for the job they did. “They have demonstrated the ability to compete strongly and effectively in a caucus system ,” Carter said, This new ability indicated Gov. Wallace will be even stronger in 1976 than some have predicted.” JACKSON, Miss. (UPI) -A lab am a Gov. G eorge W allace, proving his strength in his native Deep South with a c o n v in c in g w in in M i s s i s s ip p i ’s Democratic precinct caucuses, says he has virtually ruled out a possible third party presidential bid. Although the results may not be final for several days, Wallace held a strong lead Sunday in his race in Mississippi against four other Dem ocratic can­ didates. Many Mississippians who attended the caucuses listed themselves as uncom­ mitted to any candidate, but with 630 of the state’s 2,133 precincts reporting, Wallace had 493.47 delegate votes or 41.5 per cent. His nearest challenger, former Georgia Gov. Jimmy Carter, polled 209.73 votes or about 18 per cent. Shriver Hits GOP During Texas Visit FORT WORTH (UPI) - Democratic presidential hopeful Sargent Shriver, in Texas to boost attempts to get his name on primary ballots in seven districts, told backers Sunday the Republicans are responsible for the country’s troubles and the Democrats must find a man capable of solving them. Shriver opened a weekend campaign blitz in Texas Friday night in San An­ tonio, then moved on to El Paso, Corpus Christi and Houston. “Whatever the justification for follow­ ing the economic principles of Richard Nixon, Spiro Agnew and Gerald Ford, the practical result of these acts has been to bring to America the worst fiscal and economic depression in 40 years, Shriver said. procedures now performed in hospitals might be performed without hospitaliza­ tion. It noted testimony that pressure to operate is greater for doctors paid on a fee-for-service basis than for doctors in group practices. Shriver, Sen. George McGovern’s run­ ning mate in the race for president four years ago, left behind a group of cam­ paign workers hoping to organize his followers for a primary battle against chief opponent Sen. Lloyd Bentsen. ★ ★ ★ By United Pres* International Gov. Milton Shapp of Pennsylvania said Sunday he wants to be more of a national candidate. Hubert Humphrey said he will stay a senator, not a can­ didate, unless the Democrats produce no clearcut leader for the presidential nomination. Democratic contender Siiapp, cam­ paigning in Miami for the March 9 Florida primary, said he is neither favorite son nor merely an eastern can­ didate. He said he expects delegate strength in Massachusetts and Florida, but has plans for other primaries. He said he will win Pennsylvania’s 178 delegates but also “Political pundits are in for real surprises in Massachusetts and Florida, where I expect to win delegates.” Humphrey said he does not disdain the primaries but he will not run in them. He is “perfectly content,” he said Sunday, to w a it and s e e if a d ea d lo ck ed Democratic convention turns to him for the nomination. Until then, he said, he wants to concentrate on his senatorial duties. House Subcommittee Surgery Excesses Reported Kissinger and Ford discuss Moscow visit. —UPI T«tophoto Kissinger Sees Progress Toward SALT Agreement WASHINGTON (UPI) - Secretory of State Henry Kissinger returned from Europe Sunday to report to President Ford he had made progress in talks with Soviet leader Leonid Brezhnev toward completing a strategic arms limitation agreement. Kissinger hastened directly to the White House from the airport and spent 70 minutes closeted with Ford. Later, Kissinger told reporters he informed the President “as I did during the trip that progress was made in the negotiations on strategic arms limitation” during his visit to Moscow. A senior official aboard the jetliner which brought K issinger back from Madrid had told reporters traveling with the secretary the United States was "within one or two decision of getting an agreement by June.” WHEN FORD greeted Kissinger, he told reporters “ I’m encouraged” by the results of the secretary’s week-long trip to Copehangen, Moscow, NATO head­ quarters in Brussels and Madrid. He did not elaborate. Kissinger, asked at the White House if he thought Ford would go to the Middle East this spring, said the trip did not deal with the Middle East and that sub­ j e c t did not c o m e up w ith th e President.” Kissinger said, however, that he did tell Ford that he concluded from his visit to Brussels that “relations with our NATO allies are excellent.” THE OFFICIAL SAID PROSPECTS for a diplomatic settlement in Angola were fading, and it looked like military victory for the Cuban and Soviet- supported Popular Movement for the Liberation of Angola. He added Cuban intervention in Angola, and the appearance of Cuban ad­ visers in Algeria and Guinea-Bissau, torpedoed any U.S. desire to pursue detente with Premier Fidel Castro. In Spain, K issin ger and Foreign Minister Jose Maria Areilza Saturday signed a five-year agreement tightening U.S. military ties with Spain and giving Generalissimo Francisco Franco’s heirs an indirect link to NATO. Spain has been unacceptable to other European NATO countries because of Franco. KISSINGER AND FORD also are ex­ pected to discuss the Middle Blast before the arrival in Washington Tuesday of Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin. The senior o ffic ia l said K issin ger believes the United States now must con­ centrate on revitalizing the search for Middle East peace. The question is, the official said, whether to go through the Geneva peace conference machinery. He indicated Kissinger’s step-by-step diplomacy may be superseded. Kissinger and Ford also were to dis­ cuss a new Soviet proposal for restrain­ ing cruise m issiles and the Russian "Backfire” bomber which he received from Brezhnev in Moscow. THE SENIOR OFFICIAL said some aspects of the Soviet proposal were en­ couraging but others were not accep­ table. Kissinger himself has said the Soviets gave “ significant new ideas’ during talks about a SALT accord. The United States is to study the Soviet proposal for the next three weeks and forward it to Moscow. Kissinger may have to fly to Moscow in March for a final breakthrough in the strategic arm s talks. U.S. officials believe the latest that Brezhnev could visit Washington to sign a SALT agree­ ment would be June or July because of this summer’s political conventions. WASHINGTON (UPI) - Doctors per­ formed about 2.38 million unnecessary in 1974, cau sing 11,900 op eration s needless deaths and costing the public nearly $4 billion, a House subcommittee said Sunday. “Unnecessary surgery wastes lives and d ollars,” the oversight and in­ vestigations panel said in a report. It estimated Americans spent $3.92 billion for operations they didn’t need — twice what the government pays for all health research financed through the National Institutes of Health. Included in the total is more than $1 billion spent for unnecessary surgery on needy Medicaid or elderly Medicare patients, it said. Schnabel Documents Removed By FORD FESSENDEN Texan SUH Writer Inventory records needed by the dis­ trict attorney in his investigation into the secretory of the Senate's office were found Friday morning to have been removed from the folders. However, Asst. Dist. Atty. David Shep- pard sa id th e r e c o r d s co u ld be reconstructed using the handwritten original copies of the inventory. Sheppard, who was to have picked up the typewritten records in the folders later Friday, said he needed them to check for the camera which was token from Secretory of the Senate Charles Schnabel last week. The camera, which was apparently rented with state funds, was engraved with Schnabel s initials and Social Security number. TOMMY T O W N S E N D , S e n a te sergeant-at-arms, said inventory super­ visor Don Jones discovered the missing records when he came to work Friday. The contents of “ IO, maybe a dozen” files had been removed from their * *».- folders. The records are kept in a room at the Capitol which is open during the day but is locked at night. , Townsend said he doubted the records had been stolen. He said the files were not in any particular order and could have been misplaced. All remaining inventory files have been removed to the investigator’s office for safekeeping, Sheppard said. Although he said it was his intention to review only the inventory records of the secretory of the Senate’s office, he "could con­ ceivably need” others. IN ADDITION to the records for the secretary’s office, those for the Senate media services, Capitol security, enroll­ ing and engrossing, staff services and Capitol tour guides also were gone. Both Townsend and Sheppard dis­ counted the notion that there was any pattern in the missing files. Though all concern activities carried on through the Senate, Townsend said there are "dozens and dozens of files related to the Senate” which were not token. Employes will be asked Monday if they removed the files, Townsend said. In another matter related to the in­ vestigation of Schnabel, a former state senator and longtime friend of the Senate secretory is enlisting the help of other former senators in collecting funds for Schnabel’s defense. JACK B. STRONG of Longview said he has called about 12 former senators, and most have said “they are glad I called and would like to help.” On the basis of what he knows from talking with Schnabel, Strong said Schnabel should not have been indicted, though Strong cautioned he did not know everything about the case. “ He may have been technically wrong, and maybe he should have been criticiz­ ed, but it was not something that he should be sent to the penitentiary for,” Strong said. “I would go further and say that even if he is guilty, I would help in his defense. That does not mean I condone anything, but I have very strong feelings about friendship.” STRONG TOLD United Press Inter­ national that “if you indicted everyone in Austin that’s bent rules, w e’d just have to stop the judicial process for the next 40 years.” However, J .P. Word, a former senator from Meridian who was contacted by Strong, said he did not think such "rule- bending” was widespread. “I won’t go into whether indictments should have been brought,” Word said, but he felt there was “no vendetta against Schnabel.” Word said he agreed to contribute some money and would also aid in contacting other former senators. It was the closest he has come to ruling out a repeat of his 1968 run as the American Independent Party candidate, a lth o u g h a id e s sa id h is s a y in g “probability’’ instead of “possibility” left him the option of changing his mind. “He has moved a step closer to an ab­ solute and firm D em ocratic party position,” an aide said Sunday. The aide reiterated Wallace’s pledge that if he fails to win the Democratic nomination, this will be his last cam­ paign for the presidency. THE MISSISSIPPI RACE had been billed as a test of Wallace’s strength in the Deep South and especially as a test of his ability to draw votes against Carter. “I was very surprised to learn we had done as well in Mississippi,” Wallace said. “I didn’t expect that we would do so well, and it is certainly encouraging. Having gotten nothing in Mississippi in important 1972, certainly this result.” is an Although Wallace said he did not have high expectations in Mississippi, cam­ paigners for the Alabama governor, who swept the state in 1968 as a third party candidate had mounted a strong effort in the state during the last few weeks. Three former Mississippi governors endorsed Wallace last week, and the Alabama governor ran a media blitz urg­ ing his supporters to go to the caucuses. “To the extent that (the Department of Health, Education and Welfare) has fail­ ed to implement cost control procedures mandated by Congress, it can be said HEW is responsible for waste of more than $1 billion,” the report said. The subcommittee was expected to question HEW Secretary David Mathews about its findings at hearings Monday on government control of Medicare and Medicaid costs. The study was based on testimony from hearings last year, a review of medical literature, studies done under government contract and information from hospitals and other sources. It takes note of a recent survey of surgery in 95 hospitals, which found nearly half the postoperative complications and 35 per cent of the deaths studied were preventable, a subcommittee aide said. The panel arrived at its statistical con­ clusions on the basis of a report by the American Hospital Association saying 14 million operations were performed in 1974, and on other studies showing a 17 per cent rate of unnecessary procedures and a .06 per cent surgical mortality rate. Its cost estim ates were based on an average $1,650 cost for each procedure among all types of surgery performed. The report said 1,700 of the estimated 11,900 deaths resulting from unnecessary surgery involved welfare patients under Medicaid. Medicare statistics were un­ available. It q u o ted th e C o m m issio n on Professional and Hospital Activities of Ann Arbor, Mich., which gathers data on hospital stays, as estimating that during the first six months of 1975 there were 500 deaths from abdominal hysterec­ tomies and 2,000 from cholecystectomies (gall bladder removals). Using the sub­ committee yardstick for determining un­ necessary deaths, 85 of the hysterectomy deaths and 340 of the gall bladder deaths were needless. For a full year those totals could be doubled, a staff aide said. The su b com m ittee said evid en ce suggests up to one-fourth of surgical news capsules Svria Promises Withdrawal From Lebanon REIRUT Lebananon (UPI) - Syria has assured all parties that it would respect Lebanese sovereignty and withdraw Palestinian troops wh“ch had crossed into Lebanon from Syria as soon as the security situs- ♦inn allowed government sources said Sunday. The warring factions agreed to a 48-hour timetable to restore secun y bul sniping and looting continued despite tough enforcement of the latest . Ilw Svrian army officers and Palestinian troops. S cattered sniping and gun duels raised the weekend toll to at least IO dead andllo wounded and the estimated toll since civil war erupted last April to more than 10,000 dead and 21,000 wounded. Ameriean Veto of Palestine Resolution Expected UNITED NATIONS (UPI) - An American veto of a Security^Council resolution affirming the Palestinian right to establish a state in the Mid­ dle East and calling for Israel’s withdrawal from all occupied Arab territory appeared inevitable Sunday. The Council planned to vote Monday afternoon at the end of a two-week debate on the Middle East which emphasized the Palestinian issue. Six council members, abandoning hope of agreement between the United States, steadfast in its support of Israel, and the adamant Arab backing of the Palestine Liberation Organization, submitted a resolution containing small concessions for each side but not enough to satisfy eiTher 15-member council set up private talks for Monday morning in hope of last-minute reconciliation. But diplomatic sources said U.S. Am­ bassador Daniel Patrick Moynihan told a similar closed session Friday that Washington’s position had not changed — meaning its veto was cer- tain. Congress To Attempt Veto Override WASHINGTON (UPI) - The first test of election-year Republican sup­ port for a major presidential veto comes in Congress Tuesday. Democrats predict enough defections among Republicans to revive the vetoed $45 billion appropriations bill for the Departments of Labor and Health, Education and Welfare. The vote is part of a busy week in Congress that expects: Senate confir­ mation of George Bush as the new CIA chief, House approval of the Senate-passed ban on aid to Angola, and a vote on a major job-creating bill backed by Democrats. Hearst Trial Begins Tuesday SAN FRANCISO (UPI) - On Monday, the day before the opening of w h at one defense attorney forecast will be the “trial of the District Court Judge Oliver Carter will hear arguments on a late-hour mo­ tion to quash bank robbery charges against Patricia Hearst. ^ The trial, scheduled to begin Tuesday with the selectioni ofta y a y , s ex­ pected to last eight weeks. In testimony under oath, Miss Hearst is ex peeled to give her own version of the strange circumstances making the T h e ^ o n t o X ' ^ i n d i c t m e n t , along w U h s e v e ^ o ^ r s w M filed late Friday. It asserted the government withheld from the grand J y evidence that may have been “exculpatory.” Everybody Wants That Bird! When Tom Aldermen asked for a replica of the famous Maltese Falcon, used in the Humphrey Bogart film, he did not m ollie what excitement It would cause Since Columbia Picture! sent him the original bird by mistoko, ho has boon plagued by a number of “throats" from “movie buff" friends. u n T d a p h o to State Senator Resigns, Seeks Seat in Congress Houston State Sen. Bob Gammage resigned Friday and filed for the May I Democratic primary to run for a con­ gressional seat. State Rep. Joe Pentony of Houston fil­ ed Friday for the resigned senator s seat in the Legislature. Elections for both positions will take place in a Feb. 28 special election. Gammage is campaigning for U.S. representative in the 22nd District, a seat recently vacated by Bob Casey. Casey has been appointed to the Federal Maritime Commission. “The citizens of this area know me. They’ve seen my work in both Houses of the Texas State Legislature, and they know that as a resident of the district I am concerned with and share the same problems they do,” Gammage said in a statement released Friday. While serving in the Senate, Gammage was chairman of the subcommittee on public health and welfare and vice- chairman of the Human Resources Com­ mittee. Before his four years in the Senate, Gammage served one term in the House. Pentony, a professor at the University of St. Thomas in Houston, has served three years in the House and was a fre­ quent critic of The University. He sup­ ports equal educational opportunity and is opposed to a state income tax or an in­ crease in the sales tax, a statement released Friday said. Pentony will relinquish his legislative post April 5. Monday/ Ja n u a ry 26/ 1976 THE DAILY TEXAN Page 3 editorials UT's $50,000 game plan It seems appropriate that the announcement of a legislative subcommittee investigation of spending abuses by The University and UT Permian Basin should come on the same day as we learned that more than $50,- 000 worth of state money was wasted on complimentary football tickets last season. In response to a request by Austin Rep. Gonzalo Barrientos, the three-member panel will conducta three- or four-week study of expenditures at UTPB as well as claim s that University President Lorene Rogers wrongfully withheld salary increases from faculty members who criticized her. At the same time, the com­ mittee would do well to look into such flagrant misuse of state money as the football ticket fiasco. WHILE ISSUING COMPLIMENTARY tickets is not a violation of state law, and to be sure handing out a limited number of free tickets does not seem wrong, it would seem that $50,000 worth is pushing things a little too far Suddenly realizing that $50,000 worth of state money was squandered in such a dubious fashion makes one wonder about the priorities of System officials, but what seems even more significant is that year in and year out they have the power to squander that much and even more. If University officials can hand out tickets without be­ ing monitored at all, how are citizens to know what other expenditures have been abused? Despite the amount of money involved here, what of the uncontrollable power of the University System to pull such a misdeed off? TO A LIMITED EXTENT complimentary tickets would seem fine, but as one looks over the list of elected and appointed officials it appears obvious that the System saw no limit to the amount of money it chose to give away. Some proponents of the giveaway would argue that it is not exactly state money and that since UT football makes a profit it doesn’t cost anyone a cent. Yet, the mere fact that the University could have made more money for UT athletics if it had chosen to sell the tickets rather than give them away seems obvious. JUST A GIVEAWAY also seems a crime when other sports, such as women’s athletics, are scraping for every dime they can get. If University football is so prosperous that it can afford to give away $50,000 every season, why not give that money to other sports which need it? FINALLY, THE UNIVERSITY System’s blatant use of state money to lobby those people who affect its present and future direction seems to place the University in an unfair advantage over other colleges, or for that matter state agencies. With the giveaway not uncovered, who is to say that free football tickets didn’t affect several House and Senate votes when the University’s state appropriation was reviewed last session? Who is to say that the Univer­ sity’s recent victory over the Coordinating Board before the Texas Supreme Court was not a result of tickets or other luxuries bestowed on a few influential Supreme Court justices? And for that matter, who is to say that the local and statewide news coverage of the appointment of Universi­ ty President Lorene Rogers was not slanted against the student and (and downplayed altogether), because the Capitol bureau chiefs got into see a few free games? faculty protesters PERHAPS IT DOESN’T seem like much. Certainly it is a minute figure in comparison to other System expen­ ditures, but then again should it be any less recognized as an appropriation misuse because of the amount? Surely, it would seem that in such hard economic times, $50,000 could have been better spent. Indeed, like the Duckgate expenditure of $50,000 for a golf course and duck pond at UTPB, the University System has again been caught with its pants down and un­ til either this new House subcommittee or some other government agency puts a stop to it, the System will probably continue to squander its money even more. through By TOM WICKER -1976 N.Y. Tim es News Service FRANKLIN, N.H. - A burly old H am pshirem an driving the Franklin business district slowed his car Wednesday, leaned out the window and called to a town policeman trying to direct traffic in front of Raffaelly’s Market on slushy Central Avenue: “ Hey, Bob! Better hold on to your wallet — there’s a politician in town!’’ Indeed there was — replete with television cam era and sound men, trail­ ing reporters and a bevy of Secret Ser­ vice p e rso n s w ith te ll- ta le rad io receivers buzzing in their ears. The New D e m o c ra tic in Franklin, after a morning in Laconia, the M eredith and G ilford, and fro n t-ru n n e r w as if 'Uh, oh — got down/ Hero corno the bleeding hearts!' Carter: the n e w politician? m otorist’s derision bothered Jimmy Carter, he didn’t let on at all. “HERE’S SOMETHING exciting to read,’’ he told one Franklin voter, han­ ding him a Jimmy Carter pamphlet. Con­ fronted by a young woman who wanted to know w h a t he th o u g h t of New Hampshire’s conservative Gov. Meldrim Thomson, former Gov. Carter retreated smoothly into diplomacy: “ He’s for minimum taxes and minimum govern­ ment, and so am I.’’ The only time the Georgia peanut farmer appeared at a loss for words was when he encountered one Billy Joe Clegg, another contender in the New H am pshire D em ocratic presidential primary, who is running on a re lig io u s p latfo rm . Clegg con­ gratulated Carter on being ‘a deacon of the church,” and told him: “We don t raise peanuts but we’re gonna raise some Cain.” A woman behind the cash register at the Colonial bookshoppe was not much impressed — "Ever since the fiasco in politics I’m one of those who just don’t know.” She seemed reluctant even to say the word “ Watergate.” But another woman, who stopped Carter on the street to tell she was an ex-Democrat vvho'd switched to independent, relented under his insistence that “there’s been a great move toward democratization of the election process.” She said she d switch back to the Democrats. All this is standard stuff in New Hampshire politics. Pressing the flesh with this state’s cantankerous voters is a lot more important than bigtime TV or space on The Time’s op ed page. But few do it better than Jimmy Carter, and nobody has been doing it longer or more assiduously. With his constant smile and understated manner, he has been a familiar figure here for more than a year, so that he could point out without much fear of contradiction to an inter­ viewer for the Franklin Trumpeter, “ I believe the personal contacts I've made would far exceed those of any other can­ didate.” IF SO — and good sources here say Carter has been particularly effective in his rounds of blue collar workers in New H am pshire’s old red brick factory buildings — he may well be on his way to duplicating in the Feb. 24 primary the notable victory he scored last week in Iowa’s local caususes. The consensus of political buffs here — including many in opposition camps — seems to be that Carter should finish no worse than second, and that far back only if the envied state organization put together by Rep. Morris Udall of Arizona performs at a peak of efficiency. Udall has been coming to New Hampshire about as long as Carter has — but he is widely thought not to have been so effec­ tive personally. Local opinion tends to discount the effect of the Iowa victory in isolated, in­ dependent New Hampshire, but Carter is using it in his modest manner for all it s worth - “The ability to win” was one way to tell the myriad Democratic can­ didates apart, he reminded an inquisitor. And he predicted in a reception speech here that after the New Hampshire primary and the one in Massachusetts a week later, there would be only two Democrats left with a chance to win - “I don’t know who the other one will be, but I’ll be one of them .” JIMMY CARTER is a persuasive man, and although Iowa was only the begin­ ning of the beginning, his performance so far clearly marks him as a serious con­ tender for the Democratic nomination That means he is just beginning to be ex­ amined on the issues — on which he might be described as candidly am­ biguous But a prime reason for his rise to the front rank of contenders — aside from his relentless and effective per­ so n a l c a m p a ig n in g — m ay lie somewhere in the response he makes to the disillusionment and cynicism of (a phenomenon A m erican v o ters attested to with unsettling unanimity by every pulse-taker so far consulted). Carter does not, like Fred Harris, call for major changes in the system ; he does not, as many New Hampshire men think Udall and Sen. Birch Bayh do, urge reforms while suggesting what they see as “ more of the sam e.” Can the federal government be restored he asked the Manchester Exchange Club Tuesday, to efficiency and effectiveness? Can it be made to work again? “The majority of the American people say no, but I think the answer is yes ” Can that government be made “decent” again — honest, fair, idealistic? “ The m ajo rity of the American people say no, but i think the answer is yes.” That subtle mixture — condemnation of the past and confidence in the future — may be the best formulation yet of what the American people want to hear. 'Your keeping it out would be a serious blow to our relations with our allies, of course.' firing line Thinking with hormones, not head To the editor: Cynthia Carman’s review of “The Story of O” is a prime example of the kind of counterproductive thinking that a lie n ate s m ost men from the un­ assailable goals of true feminism. It is the perversion of what should be a societal movement into an attack on the emotional relationships that give mean­ ing to existence that repulses men, not the idea of social equality. Carman’s rhetoric reflects the attitude of those who soiled the International Women’s Year Conference by hawking posters depicting the symbolic castration of men. Carman’s obsession with dogmatic BS degrades even her work as she allows it to obscure her vision of the movie itself. The film’s meaning is not revealed dur­ ing any of O’s m altreatm ents but rather when she brands her lover with a lit cigarette. This act, coupled with Sir Stephen’s obvious anguish at the tests to which he must put O, symbolizes the recip ro city of the em otional bond between them. These things are never mentioned in Carm an’s stunningly bias­ ed review. “ The Story of O” is no celebration of male dominance, but an evocation of emotional intensity that overrides every other perceptual experience. This is so apparent in the film that Carman’s review could only have been a deliberate distortion. We think Carman should start thinking with her head and not her hor­ R. Allen Jones, mones. Government Thea Hicks, Humanities Bicentennial insult To the editor: If anything is an insult to the Bicenten­ nial, it is not Confederate Heroes Day, but rather the letter written by Harvey Bresler. Up until the last session of the Legislature, both Robert E. Lee’s and Jefferson Davis’ birthdays were state holidays. When Lyndon Johnson’s birth­ day was made a state holiday, Davis’ birthday was dropped, and Lee’s birth­ day was changed to Confederate Heroes Day. Slavery was but one cause of the American Civil War. The prevalent c a u se w as th e r is e of s o u th e rn nationalism fostered by a near genera­ tion of weak and ineffectual presidential administrations. Of the near million men that served in the Confderate military 85 percent did not own slaves, IO percent owned five or fewer and the majority of the slaves were held by the remaining 5 percent. Lee had emancipated his slaves long before the war. It does not stand to reason that 850,000 men would have gone to war over something that they did not have any interest in. George B. McClellan, commanding general of the Army of the Potomac in 1861 and 1862 and presidential candidate in 1864, flatly stated that he was fighting to preserve the Union and not to free slaves. Many Union regiments nearly mutinied after the issuance of the Eman­ cipation Proclamation. And in regards to that document, it did not free a single slave as it was addressed to territory not under control of the federal government. It took the 13th Amendment to bring emancipation, and that was after the war ended. There was widespread anti- Negro sentiment in the North during the war. The New York draft riots in July of 1863 turned into a gigantic lynch mob, with Negroes as its target. It was only quelled by troops rushed from Get­ tysburg after four days of violence and several hundred negroes killed. in Negroes served unofficially the Confederate Army until late in the war when the Confederate Congress authoriz­ the use of Negro troops. Two ed regiments were actually raised and saw service in the last weeks of the Army of Northern Virginia. I will concede that slavery was a cause of the war, but in the light of history, it was in reality a very minor cause. Its main value was that of propaganda for the northern radicals. I have, th a t I know of, th ree Confederate forebearers, none of whom owned a single slave. I do not apologize for their actions, and I am proud that they had the courage to stand up for their convictions. I am appreciative that a day is set aside in their honor. The Civil War was a real tragedy, but at the same time it was one of the great events that shaped out national growth. Would Mr. Bresler, in a synonomous mood to “ 1984” have us delete the war from our history? It is a part of our heritage, and I for one am proud of the men of both sides. I am certain that if Mr. Bresler wanted to really learn of the causes of the war, Dr. Lathrop of the history department would be glad to furnish him Randal B. Gilbert a reading list. 841 Airport Blvd. Proud Southerners To the editor: We find it hard to believe that someone raised in the United States, much less the South, would have such a poor con­ ception of what the Civil War was about. Mr. Bresler probably thinks Lincoln started the war merely to free the slaves. Slavery was not the main issue. The primary reason for the war was state’s rights. Confederate Heroes Day is to honor men who fought for what they believed in. We are proud of our great-great- grandfathers who fought for the South Apparently Mr. Bresler is not proud of his ancestors. Could they have been carpetbaggers? Charlet W. Keltey II BBA Finance Arthur S. Bernstein BA Government Richard D. Myert BA Psychology The fuss on the bus To the editor: I live near the second stop from cam­ pus on the IF route. Last sem ester I rode the bus to school twice. I attempted to ride IO times. The other eight times I gave up after watching five or six buses crammed to the gills pass me by and walked to school. I grew tired of arriving late and so laid out $150 for a bike. What do I do when it rains? I don’t mind commuters taking advan­ tage of a good deal. I do mind subsidizing a system that I’m denied the use of. Bus riders should be made to pay for their pleasure. $10 a semester for a sticker to be attached to the photo ID would ac­ complish two purposes. It would relieve the grumblings of those who don’t use the buses but have to pay for them and it would supply funds for more buses to pick up everyone on the route. We all benefit from the shuttle system — reliev­ ed parking pressure, traffic and smog — but clearly the riders should bear more of the cost (not all) of the system than the rest of us. Another suggestion: perhaps during the peakload periods the buees could alternate stops. Occasionally an outlying stop would be skipped to leave room for those consistently skipped now. William Kesblear 202 E. 32nd St. Out, out damn Concorde Gov. Dolph Briscoe, never one to take public opinion seriously, recently told U.S. Secretary of Transportation William Coleman that Texas, despite the feeling of other states, would welcome the controversial supersonic transport Concorde. Furthermore, the Texas Observer reported last week that airport of­ ficials in this state have been approached by British Airways, who are also pushing the Concorde, about landing in this state. COLEMAN, WHO WILL probably decide this week whether the plane will be allowed to land in Washington and New York, has come under in­ creasing pressure, like Briscoe’s to approve the landing request. Despite all the diplomatic problems of such a decision, the Concorde remains an engineering disaster and an environmental threat to the entire nation. Unequivocally, it should not be permitted to land in any state. Oddly enough it would seem the Concorde question would be pretty cut and dried, since in 1971 the U.S. Senate cut off federal funding of the American version of the Concorde, the SST. Based on the SST-caused pollution and noise figures, and the aircraft’s dubious prospects for com­ mercial success, the SST’s defeat should have served as fair warning to foreign interests that we have no need for bigger and faster planes. But alas, it did not. NEVERTHELESS, ARGUMENTS which defeated the SST apply direct­ ly to the question of whether the Concorde should be permitted to land here. Among those arguments is a 1973 study by the Massachusetts Institute of Technology which stated that heavy Concorde use between eastern United States and Europe would deplete 16 percent of the ozone layer in the Northern Hemisphere. Using that 16 percent figure, the MIT survey projected that a 5/10 of I percent ozone loss would result in 6,000 more cases of skin cancer in the United States each year. Many scientists also believe if the ozone layer is reduced by more than 5 percent, there will be significant and harmful changes to plant growth. BANNING CONCORDE from the United States will not immediately stop Concorde use throughout the world. However, it will be a symbolic step. Offering flights to the United States is a crucial part of Concorde’s success, but that success should not come at the price of human life. What is so surprising about the controversy is that there has never been a public outcry for faster and faster planes. The flights now offered between the United States and the rest of the world have been fast enough for the majority of people. The only ones who support the Concorde seem to be those who would profit financially from it. There is, therefore, only one answer to the Concorde question, whether it wants to land in New York or the Dallas-Fort Worth Airport, and that answer is no. Those who would profit by the Concorde landing request are not the majority of Americans, and Coleman should recognize that fact and refuse the request outright. THE DAILY TEXAN S tu d e n t M e w l p a p e r e t The U n iv e r sity e t Teams e t A u stin EDITOR ......................................................Scott Tagliarino MANAGING EDITOR................................................................. Nick Cuccia ASSISTANT MANAGING EDITOR.................................... SallY Carpenter NEWS EDITOR............................................................................ Patti Kilday SPORTS EDITOR.......................................................................... Ed English ENTERTAINMENT EDITOR...............................................Chic0 Coleman FEATURES EDITOR.................................. ............... ........ PFNFRAL REPORTERS.....................Ford Fessenden, Danny Holland, Ron Hutcheson, Todd Katz, Beth Mack, Dawn Turnham ISSUE STAFF Mark E. Meyer Assistant News E d ito r.......................................................... News A ssistants.......................... Scott Montgomery, David Guarino, Mark Neal, Rosalind Jackleg Tommy Swinnea, Mike Frankoff, Kathy Kimball, Bill Krull.Mary Doyle, Jeff Helton, Rosanne Mogavero, Max Rizley Editorial A ssistant................................................................................n ? an* ^ alone Assistant Entertainm ent E d ito r........................................................ Robert Owens Assistant Features E d ito r ....Sandy Fails Sports Assistant......................................................................... Damond Bennmgfield Make-up E d ito r................................................................................... •••• Laura Mlller Wire E d ito r......................................................................................... Mark Thompson C od y E ditors........................................... C.A. Flores, Maurine Pool,Susan Levme, Carole Chiles, Scott Montgomery O p in io n s e x p r e ss e d in T h e D a ily T ex a n are those of the e d ito r o r th e w r ite r o f th e a r tic le and a r e not n e c e ssa r ily th o s e of th e U n iv e r sity a d m in istra tio n or the B oard of R e g e n ts . T h e D a ily T ex a n , a stu d en t n ew sp a p er a t The U n iv ersity o f T e x a s a t A u stin , is p u b lish e d by T e x a s Student P u b lic a tio n s , D r a w e r D , U n iv e r sity S ta tio n . A ustin, Tex 707 1 2 T h e D a ily T e x a n is pub lish ed M onday, T u esday, W ed n esd a y , T h ursd ay, and F r id a y , e x c e p t h olid ay and e x a m p e r io d s S econ d c la s s p o sta g e paid at A ustin, Tex N e w s co n trib u tio n s w ill be a c c ep te d by telep h o n e <471- 4591), a t the e d ito r ia l o f fic e (T e x a s Student P u b lica tio n s B u ild in g 2 122) or a t th e n e w s la b o ra to ry (C o m m u n ica tio n In q u iries co n c e rn in g d e liv e r y and B u ildin g A 4 136). c la s s ifie d a d v e r tisin g should be m a d e in T S P B u ildin g 3 200 (471-5244) and d isp la y a d v e r tis in g in T S P B u ild in g 3 210 (471-1865). T he natio n a l a d v e r tisin g r e p r e s e n ta tiv e o f T h e D a ily Texan is N ational E d u ca tio n a l A d v er tisin g S e r v ic e , In c., 360 L exington A ve , N ew Y ork, N Y , 10017 The D a ily T exan su b sc r ib e s to U n ited P r e s s In ter ­ nation al and N ew York T im e s N e w s S e r v ic e T h e T ex a n is th e a m e m b e r of S o u t h w e s t J o u r n a lis m C o n g r e s s , t h e T e x a s D a ily N e w s p a p e r A s s o c ia t io n , and A m e r ic a n N e w s p a p e r P u b lish ers A sso cia tio n th e A s s o c ia t e d C o lle g ia t e P r e s s , P a g e 4 Monday, January 26, 1976 THE DAILY TEXAN guest viewpoint N o rights or HlWf wrongs in Israel By JOHN SILVER (Editor’s note: Silver ia graduate student in the Department of Zoology.) i would like to add a few comments to Randolph Mahone’s “ Historical Sketch of Zionism.” Mahone, or someone else, has done an excellent job of research. They have read ar­ ticles and carefully selected phrases and sentences so that the true meaning is lost and only the slanted views he or they wish to present filters through. in 1776 a government was set up along the eastern shores of North America. Whose land was this before these “ brave” European settlers arrived? During the last 200 years this government has expanded from the Atlan­ tic to the Pacific. How many people were displaced, killed, tortured and finally forced into the camps you call reser­ vations? How many different cultures and languages were destroyed? Where are your tears and outrage against these 200 years of butchery and removal of malcontents? SIMILAR SITUATIONS can be found on the pages of any history book. They describe the bringing of civilization to the “ savages,” wars of libera- tio n and w a rs of in ­ dependence. Through most of recorded history Jew and Arab have liv­ ed in peaceful coexistence. At no time was the area now known as israel not inhabited by Jews. was also hampered by the Christian Crusaders, who valiantly freed the area from the “ in fid els” by mass slaughter, rape and pillage. As h is to ry shows, the Crusaders were no better than any other conquering army. What Jew in his right mind would leave the tranquility of his home in exile to be butchered in israel in the name of Christ? Antisemitism was always prevalent in Europe but did not present a daily risk of death to the Jews. The coming of the industrial Revolution changed all this. Populations began expanding at a quicker pace and the agricultural society was being slowly changed into a more urban society. The plight of the poor farmer becoming an even poorer worker in the cities led to much discontent and pent- up emotions. in eastern Europe the local officials dis­ covered that a pogrom every now and then served ad­ mirably to quiet the popula­ tion. Your dictionary defini­ tion of pogrom may not be adequate so i will elaborate. A pogrom often occured when a group of local Christian or nationalistic zealots were given guns and whiskey by the local government officials so that they would have the courage to march or gallop to the Jewish section for an evening of murder, rape, tor­ ture and robbery. So Mahone, there we were in 1897. We couldn't live in Spain; England and France were not open to mass im­ migration of Jews; Germany was a momentary haven but life in eastern Europe and the Baltic states where the ma­ jority of Jews lived was quick­ ly becoming unbearable. Tliis area, which is holy to Jewish, Arab and Christian faiths, has been the scene of much violence. As the armies of Asia and Europe rolled across the world israel was always the scene of bloodsh­ ed. Many Jews left israel to escape the wars and armies of occupation. Most were expell­ ed by the occupying forces. Jewish settlements sprang up in Persia, Turkey, Spain, North Africa and Europe. Their prayers always contain the phrase “ Next year (back) in Jerusalem,'' meaning, of course, maybe next year we will be able to return to our homeland. Next year became many years, and Jewish com­ munities grew and prospered but the Jewish prayers and hearts were always on the homeland they had been forc­ ed to leave. What happened to this land which they left? First, the population did not greatly in­ crease. Second, while the in­ dustrial Revolution swept the world israel remained mostly sand and malarial swamps. Conqueror after conqueror came and divided the land among his friends back home. The local populace did not own the bulk of the land. Most of the land was always in the hand of the wealthy in Persia and Turkey. Many of the local inhabitants worked for the absentee owners. in later years these owners gladly sold large tracts of land to Zionist groups. THE RETURN of the Jews WE HAD THREE choices: we could live in Europe and take our chances; we could emigrate to the Americas; or we could return to israel which was ruled by Turkey. The western countries would only take so many Jews. i suggest you read some history books and discern for yourself how many Jews after leaving eastern and Central Europe were refused entry by such upstanding countries as England, France, Canada, the United States of America, Mexico and Cuba. Still, many more Jews went to western countries than returned to israel (which was like going back at least a hundred years into history). Hitler solved the European problem and so Mahone, this left one solution. Live in israel or die. the i realize quite well what your sentiments are, but my ancestors did not want to go to hell. They had some funny no­ tion about wanting to live and p re s e rv e b a sic philosophies of Judaism so that all might benefit. The rest is history. There are no totally “ rights” or totally “ wrongs” in israel. There is survival or death. We have chosen to survive, and all dis­ cussions, treaties, etc., must begin from this point. By SCOTT LIND (Editor’s note: Lind is a senior in the C ollege of Humanities.) Reading Glenn Griffin’s ac­ count of Campus Crusade s snaggle with the “ non-God’ state personified in the U niversity, i thought the Crusaders had already been placed in concentration camps; consequently i hid my Jerusalem Bible discreetly in­ side the toilet — an ingenious task of hiding once you con­ sider the physical immensity of this edition. My skin perspired profusely as i wondered, “ W ill the secret police find it there? W ill they hear my whispered prayer?” i resolved to pray “ in the closet (H JV )” until i realized i had just left it. Was it not the prophetic Dietrich Bonhoff- man who said, “ They came for the Jews — i said nothing in their defense. Then they came for Campus Crusades — i did not say anything. And then they came for me ...” HOW UNFORTUNATE it would be if Campus Crusade had authorized Griffin’s ex­ pertise on this expose of the freedom to pray — i ’m think­ ing of their image. i doubt seriously that this group agrees necessarily with his, shall i say, “ right” political views. That anyone can praise the vast inequities of this system, rail against the HEW and minority hiring, hint that torture in certain countries is a propagandistic lie of the left, spend half the article condemning “ godless” world views and finally argue for the right to pray in this free land of ours is too much. Not that i don’t have my sacred cows. A re the e v il se cu la r a u th o rities d elb erately depriving religious groups of their rights to pray or to per­ suade? We must remember that most religious leaders su p p o rted the fam ous Supreme Court ruling outlaw­ ing compulsory prayer, and i believe the m ainstream thought of organized religion considers the issue of volun­ tary prayer on University property superfluous, to say the least. After all, antiwar clergy and laypeople were arrested not for praying in front of Nixon’s D.C. pad, but for praying and working for peace on the picket line. BELIEF IN A redeemer im­ plies belief in the redemption of the world, and i don't believe the main purpose of religious groups is to write editorials on believers’ right Express your love w ith a ring from Carl Mayer Jewelers 5517 Balcones 813 Congress Southwood Mall (And Carl Mayer offers it at a 20% student discount.) guest viewpoint 'Godless' groups do _ to pray on University proper­ ty. Rather believers are call­ ed to serve other people and educate themselves on the pressing concerns of today. A prophetic voice, you might say, in the wilderness of dehumanization, exploitation, hunger and malnutrition in lands of plenty, torture abroad and apathy at home. A voice th a t m ust be h e a rd , reg ard less of w hat the roil ai mis nrofile of group! religious profile of groups working for a better humanity entails. No, i don’t really believe Griffin captured the essence of the faith message or the supposed plight of religious groups on campus. i don’t think the ravings on cen­ sorship, state coercion bear any resemblance to reality, except, perhaps, the question of voluntary prayer. But then DOONESBURY buondie, lo o k- ev en IF I (MANTE? TD RJN POR. CONGRESS, (TV P B A WASTE OF m e ! VENTURA IS AN EI6HT-TERM (MINNER! J 1 \ I KNOW ALL A B M MR. VENTURA-FROM WHAT TVE HEART?, THE MAN IS THE PITS— INCOMPETENT, INSENSITIVE, RACIST, ANO SENSATIONALLY CORRUPT! _ / guest viewpoint Vote uncommitted o W t Hip prnun of O to elect the group of people who will both file the uncom­ mitted petitions and serve as the uncommitted group’s delegate selection committee. Then at 2 p.m., Feb. 14, in the 147th District Court, on the third floor of the County Courthouse, this delegate selection committee will con­ duct a meeting open to all sup­ porters of the uncommitted strategy. At this meeting the delegate nominees who will appear on the ballot will be chosen. if you agree that liberals, progressives and inaependent- minded Democrats can find the strength necessary to compete in the face of the im­ pediments of the Bentsen primary act only by being un­ ified, then please come to this caucus. By COLIN J. CARL (Editor’s note: Carl is the s ta te D e m o c r a tic co m ­ m itteem a n for the 14th Senatorial District.) The presidential primary that the Texas electorate is burdened with in 1976 is filled with obstacles to meaningful it grassroots participation. was built on the trickle-down theory of political power and e n g in e e re d the specifications of a “ favorite son” candidacy. to Liberals, progressives and independent-minded Democrats who want to sup­ port someone other than Sen. good again, is that so terribly im­ portant? The best prayer is work and we all know a lot of work needs to be done. And you know, some of those “ godless” groups G riffin alluded to are doing a hell of a lot of good. Something us believers need to remember. „ , ___ _ Bentsen or Gov. Wallace are faced with a winner-take-all system. MOREOVER, it is inherent­ ly impossible to predict by the Feb. 2 filing deadline which of the liberal candidates — U dall, Sh river, Sanford, Shapp, H a rris , Church, Carter, Bayh or some other — will still be viable candidates three months later. Thus, it is my conviction that the most reasonable strategy for backers of these various can­ didates, as well as for people who are genuinely undecided, to adopt is support of a unified liberal uncommitted group. in pursuance of th is strategy, dozens of Austin citizens, including many students, are circulating petitions to gather the signatures necessary to qualify the uncommitted group for a place on the May i presidential primary ballot. This process will culminate in a liberal caucus at i p m. Saturday at City Coliseum. THIS CAUCUS will be open to all individuals who support the strategy of an uncom­ mitted slate. The major business of the caucus will be 1 Shallow vessels 5 Den 9 Occupant Crossword Puzzler 5 Path AC RO SS 6 Emmet 7 Pronoun 8 Area 9 Hurl 10 Stories 11 Rants 12 Apportion 15 Seed 18 Barking 20 Make 11 Raged 13 Bone 14 Rustic 16 Proceed 17 Pigpen 19 Encomium 20 Yellow ocher briefer 22 Girl s name 24 Painful spots 26 Devoured 2. 28 Tiny 31 Vast horde 32 Blemishes 33 Foundations 34 Games 35 Period of SB G BESSO cs00 Qnaa asea GBCI QHSJBEgiSEn EGHBE H G ra ffia d R B K B o l BH® n a SG U B H S OB SG B SBGI o s s a o h s ffls Gsaw camara S S S u S E H r i E e g g a n s a g a n a s a g Q f t o a g ia n ts E G i j 42 Makes lace 37 Organ of 45 Things, in hearing 39 spanish for ..|Lrpp- ' " " r f 41 Man s 46 Pedal digit 49 Pronoun 51 Cooled lava nickname law 21 Winter vehi cie 23 Female sheep 24 Footwear 25 Man s name 27 Faint 29 Stroke 30 Transgress 31 Boundaries 33 Vegetable (pl" 35 Girl s name 36 Edible seed 38 Clan 40 Urge on 41 Brag 43 Conjunction 44 Symbol tor nickel 45 Fall back 47 Note of scale 48 Tall struc­ tures 50 European ermines 52 Bird s home 53 Oceans DOWN 1 Pounding instrument 2 Article 3 Short sleep 4 Snick and MORBID THE POINT, ONLY601?!. THOUGH, IS THE FACT THAT HE ONLY THATS PEAC­ OCK 6 0* OF THE VOTE LAST ELECTION1 LANDSLIDE! VCALLVA ELON OIE, \ - mu., so He PROBABLY HE (MAS UNOPPOSED. WON'T \ CAMPAIGN! inpiana is where the INPIANA5 CAME FROM! I pr. 9.00 FINAL CLEARANCE VALUES to 42.00 AIL SALES FINAL PLEASE 2 pr. 15.00 M onday, January 26, 1976 THE DAILY TEXAN P a g e 5 Jeff Friedman pilot* paper glider. ...--------------- i— ' ■ " — -Texan S taff Photo by Zach Ryall Boycott Senators' Will Return to Meeting j Mr. Peeper's Book Store j ... - j j _ j ...~a in n rn ia sf D r R o v e rs ’ aD- w e e k e Y O U f F i l i i S O I Y I C O N O W S S t B H Q e Postal Views Service Cutbacks sixth of the service we offer,” Treadwell said. The union’s position is that the postal serv ice should come up with the means to decrease expenses other than cutting service, Treadwell said. Les Doss, p resid e n t of Austin local National Letter Carriers Association, said his union’s position was similar. “Our national president has said that the union will fight it. We fought this in ’69 and ’70 and still feel that it is taking away from our service to the public. I wonder what the majority of citizens paying for this service will have to say about this five-day proposal,” Doss said. By JEFF MEYER Texan Staff Writer An anticipated $1.5 billion U.S. Postal Service (USPS) deficit this fiscal year has forced the USPS to study cut­ backs in services, including Saturday delivery, Jim Byrne, assistant postm aster general, told The Texan Friday. “ A five-day delivery week plan is one of several money- saving proposals presently un­ der study by the postal ser­ vice,” Byrne said. He added, however, that there were no firm plans to propose the cessation of Saturday mail delivery to the USPS Board. “The five-day delivery week plan is totally dependent upon th e f in a n c ia l s itu a tio n . Despite the new postal rate in­ crease, we are anticipating another deficit next fiscal year. With last year’s $989 million deficit and this year’s anticipated $1.5 billion deficit, we have to come up with new cost-saving m easures,” Byrne said. Byrne added that if USPS had the recent 3-cent postal increase in first-class mail this entire fiscal year, there would have been a $10 to $11 million surplus. Austin P ostm aster E G. Vorwerk said he had no infor­ m ation p ertain ing the cessation of Saturday mail delivery. to “We have taken many cost- to s a v in g m e a s u r e s counteract in mail volume and operations in the red,” Vorwerk said. the decrease Cutting overtime, not hiring with the exception of Christ­ m as employes and cutting from management between 25 and 50 per cent and skills training by 50 per cent h av e b e e n som e r e c e n t measures taken, he said. training Don Treadwell, president of the Austin local American Postal Workers Union, said the union was against a five- day service week. “ The postal service’s func­ tion is to provide service to the American public. If we do this, we will take away one- The General Libraries at The University are conducting a survey of faculty members and students to determ ine needs and interests in library instruction. Depending on the results of the survey, user education m a y b e c o m e a v a r i e d program offering credit or noncredit courses on use of resources, presen­ library tations added to established courses, printed instructions and guided to u rs of the libraries. Questionnaires were sent Mayor Discharges 'Bomber During Fun Club Activities & By MIKE FRANKOFF Texan Staff Writer Once in a great while there c o m e s a c h a n c e to do something so unusual and so much fun that it reminds one It was this of his childhood. feeling that beamed from Mayor Jeff Friedm an’s face as he tossed out a big red- white-and-blue paper airplane at the first gathering of the Saturday Morning Fun Club. The mayor was asked to throw out an official airplane commemorating the first fun club meeting of the bicenten­ nial year. Friedman wore an official fun club T-shirt. He also sported a Castro mask com­ plemented by his own outlan­ dishly big grin. The official bicentennial airplane was approximately three feet long and hand painted in the traditional red, w h ite and b lu e . It w as transported to the stage in a coffin carried by six veteran fun clubbers. Friedman opened the coffin and removed the plane, which he held up to the crowd which voiced its enthusiastic ap­ proval. He then held the plane up over his shoulder, paused for a to make sure the moment plane had the proper trajec­ tory and ‘‘let it fly.’’ The plane flew about three feet straight out toward the crowd when it suddenly did a ^ Hi.,* for the floor. It nose dive for the floor. It land­ ed at the foot of the stage where it was swarmed upon by countless num bers of would-be pilots. A huge unorganized paper airplane fight is a much­ valued tradition at the fun club and almost as big a part of the festivities as the car­ toons and movies that follow. The airplane extravaganza was followed by a cartoon, the first episode of a Zorro serial, and the Marx Brothers film land- and the Mara Broll “ Duck Soup.” The diverse crow d was made up of all kinds of people. A ll a g e g r o u p s , f r o m preschool to graduate school, were represented but they were all acting like kids, and loving it. The Fun Club is held at ll a.m. every Saturday in Jester Auditorium, and everyone is invited. Admission is free. USE T E X A N CLASSIFIEDS WATCH FOR THE OPENING... ; £ By ROSANNE MOGAVERO Texan Staff Writer Twelve student senators who boycotted Wednesday night’s weekly Senate meeting decided Sunday to return to the next meeting. The senators, however, still favor renewed Student Senate participation in the University Council and student-faculty committees, spokesman John Craddock said. The senators walked out of the meeting to the p ro te st a boycott of University Council which had been going on since the ap­ pointm ent of Dr. Lorene Rogers as president. The 12 senators also intend to call an informal meeting Tuesday night with remaining senators to “ let them know how we feel and to reaffirm that we are not a coalition,” Craddock said. Wednesday’s boycott was “ not an adm inistrative or political plot,” Craddock said. We hadn’t thought of it in General Libraries Conducting Survey out to 5,800 students on a sam p lin g b a s is w ith the instruction surveys. course that way,” he added. Craddock was one of the two students selected by Regents Chairman Allan Shivers to serve on a committee looking into the presidential selection process. However, he was not one of the five recommended to Shivers by the Student Senate. Craddock said he has been asked by some if he is a tool of the adm inistration used to mend Senate and ad­ ministration estrangement. “We’re not ploys of the ad­ ministration. This has nothing to do with Dr. Rogers or (fo rm er) Gov. S h iv e rs,’ Craddock said. When asked, Shivers told a reporter last week, “ I didn t have anything to do with it.” “The original boycott (with University Council and stu­ dent-faculty committees that Rogers participates in) was to protest Dr. Rogers’ ap­ pointm ent. I t was not to protest the lack of student p a rtic ip a tio n ,” Craddock said. “While the purpose of the University Council boycott m ay have had m e rit and promise at one time, the ac­ tual effect has been and will continue to be, to strip both the students and faculty of all voice in the academic affairs of the University,” he said in last a statem ent released week. Contacted Sunday, Student Government President Carol Crabtree said, “ I feel like the senators have to re-evaluate the boycott of the University Council.” C rabtree favors “ reassessing the situation and renewing participation in the University Council.” If put to a vote Wednesday night, C ra b tre e said she thinks that at least one-third of the senators would vote to renew participation. WHERE IN THE WORLD DO YOU WANT TO GO? American Express has tours, charters, or special arrangements for individuals to all places at prices you will love. Quality at reasonable costs. NEW 1976 FOLDERS FREE The Texas Union Copy Center Books • Magazines • Paperbacks • Out-of-town Newspapers * Also a com plete A dult Section OSAP Organization for the Study of Analytical Psychology presen ts ANN DODSON, speaking on "CASTENEDA AND BEYOND" ELSA DANEHY, speaking on "POWER SPOTS" Business Meeting Follows Bellmont Hall Room 204 January 26, 7:00 p.m. NEXT MONTH: FREUD-JUNG SYMPOSIUM (four hours o f videotape) Soma Historical Raflactions - Fraud-Jung (Vaith Si 1 . Handaraon) Similarities and Differences Fraud and Jung Correspondence: A Dialogue (Erikeon & W heelwright) Future of Depth Psychology For Information cell 442-7401 Registration Fe# SS.OO Tapes from Langley Porter Neuropsychiatric Institute Univ. of Calif., San Francisco Austin Representative Office ALL AIR-SEA TRAVEL 900 N Lamar 78703 Phone 477-6761 ME BROCHURES STA TE .ZIP YES! RUSH VACATIONS! TO: N A M E A D D R E S S C IT Y • i * i The Oval Diamond. The oval diamond has a secret: carat for carat it is likely to appear larger than other popular diamond shapes. Increasingly important as a solitaire, shown here in platinum with side baguettes. You are invited to view our very complete collection of fine diamonds of every shape and size. Priced from $500. To Love Is to Give. Do Something Beautiful.® 'Oewelers^'Since 191A 154 Hancock Center • Austin Open till 9 p.m. Monday thru Friday Phone. 452-0231 Also Houston . Dallas . Ft. Worth . Tyler . El Paso The MICHAEL SOKOLOFF DANCE ENSEMBLE Presents a m . lr. I B F IT. TRAINING IN DANCE The 6th St. Studio 209 Vi E. 6th St. 477-0234 Basic Stretch & Movement MWF IO:30-11:30am Beg. Modern MWF 3:30-4:30pm TTH 8-9pm Sat 11-Noon Adv. Modern MWF 4:30-6:00pm TTH 6:30-8pm Tap MWF 7-8pm Sat. 12-lpm Jazz MWF 6-7pm Sat. l-2pm located east of The Texas Union Copy Center, Gregory Gym and next door to the Texas Tavern, is an on-campus copying facility offering the following services: 5* Xeroxing with Same-day Service Multilith Offset Printing Poster-Printing Collating Saddle-stitch Stapling Hours: 8 a m. - 5 p.m. Monday-Friday 47 1 -3 6 1 6 The ^ G ood Food Storey Natural Foods WEEKLY SPECIALS Sp ecials Good January 26 thru February I We gladly accep t USDA F ood S tam p s Fresh Raw Wheat Germ I lb . S a c k Reg. 51C lb. Sale 360 lb. W ashington Fancy Red D eliciou s Apples 290 lb. U.S. #1 R usset Potatoes 5 lb. C ello Bag 490 ea. Garden Fresh G re e n Cucumbers 250 lh. Open on Sundays. The Good Food Store. . . . . More Than Just Good Food 1. Hancock 2. 29th 3. North 4. South Mon.-Sat. 9:30-7:00 9:30-7:30 10:00-6:30 8:30-8:00 Sunday 12:00-7:00 12:00-7:30 12:00-6:30 12 : 00 - 8:00 1. 2818 Hancock at Bullcreck 453-4707 2. 900 West 29th at Pearl 474-2034 3. 123 East North Loop at Ave. F 454-2676 4. H O I West 5th at Baylor 472-1942 P a g e 6 M onday, January 26, 1976 THE DAILY TEXAN I ■■■■ INTERESTED IN FASHION? TSP needs models, male St female, for a Spring/Summer Fashion Supplement Lo The Daily Texan, lf you have experience or an interest in modelling please see Marlon Taylor in TSP 4.112 Monday, Jan. 26 between 9 and 12 or 1 and 4 for an interview. Cam paigning for President Begins Student Groups Support Ben/sen, Reagan, Harris By BILL KRULL Texan Staff Writer With the coming of the 1976 presidential election, cam ­ paign groups backing hopefuls from the conservative Ronald to the grassroots Reagan f o r m e r f r o m Oklahoma, Fred Harris, have begun to appear s e n a t o r The student activities of­ fice, said groups supporting Sen. Lloyd Bentsen, D-Tex, Reagan and Harris have been formed. The number of cam­ pus groups has yet to equal the large number of candidates hoping to win the big one. Support for President Ford has not gelled on campus, but Ford’s campaign office in Austin said two “ UT boys” came to the office for cam­ paign literature to distribute on campus. One of the students, Randy B e n n e t t , s a i d t h a t an organization for Ford is still in the development stage but that they had booths out dur- Committees To Interview For Spring Membership Student Government com­ i n t e r v i e w m i t t e e s will students interested in working during the spring semester Tuesday through Thursday. Jan ice Wilkinson, com ­ mitte e coordinator, said students can begin signing a list for interview times Mon­ day from 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. in the Student Government of­ fice in Texas Union South. “ The in te r v iew s a r e primarily to fill the vacancies left after last sem ester,” Wilkinson said. Generally, chairmen are looking for any student who “ really wants to work,” she explained, but specific qualifications depend upon the chairmen. Liz Caskey, chairman of the appropriations committee, said her committee seeks a “ wide cross-section of student views.” Specifically, she is looking for two students who are familiar with The Univer­ sity. Lee Sandoloski, chairman of the City Lobby Committee, said his committee wants “ take in as many students as we can.” He said the City Lob­ by Committee plans to try to stop Southwestern B ell’s directory assistance proposed r ate, elimina te property deposits required by Southern Union Gas Co., and help revise the city charter. Other committees inter­ v i e w i n g i n c l u d e C o m ­ munications, State Lobby, Education, Women’s Affairs, International Students Af­ fairs, Housing, Environmen­ tal Protection, Consumer Af­ fairs, Government Tours, Stu­ dent Services and University Policy. ing registration trying to drum up support for the Presi­ dent. “ Remarkably, there was a lot of interest in F o r d ,” Bennett said. “ People were asking a lot of questions about him, but I noticed a lot of these people were also asking a lot questions at the Reagan booth, too.” Obie O’Brien, University law student and head of the University Students for Lloyd Bentsen, said they had varied reactions to Bentsen’s can­ didacy. “ Some of the people seemed quite interested in Bentsen; others looked like they felt like vomiting in the corner when they heard his name,” O’Brien said. his O’Brien said he and not group support Bentsen his only because they like he views but also because for presents an alternative Texas voters to turn to from George Wallace. Capitalizing on a relatively liberal student body, the Harris committee has been “ f a i r l y s u c c e s s f u l ” in recruiting support for the progressive Harris. MAHMssiiia Uarrie “ So far, we have had plenty of support for Harris,” Jim Coronada, regional director for Harris, said. “ Our support for Harris is growing daily and we have lots of workers.” “ We feel that Harris is go­ to win th e T e x a s in g prim ary,” Coronada said. “ The conservative voters have such a wonderful choice — Ford, Reagan, Wallace and Bentsen — that it will split the conservative vote and send the Harris delegates to the convention.” Reagan, champion for the conservatives, is not lacking support from the University student body, Lester Van Pelt III, head of the UT Students for Ronald Reagan, said. “ We feel that Reagan offers students something they real­ ly want — less government i n d i v i d u a l an d m o r e freedom,” Van Pelt said. “ But they have heard so much about him in the press, they don’t really know what he is like.” Reports on student interest in the presidential race range from what the Bentsen sup­ porters call “ general apathy to what the Harris committee terms “ great interest. lf You Need Help or Just Someone Who Will Listen Telephone 476-7073 At Any Time The Telephone C o u n se lin g a n d Referral Service Texan Staff Photo by Paul M. Lester Ride On, Brother Arthur Johnson (I), a member of Austin's motorcycle club "Souls of Motion/' takes William McCarther for a spin on his bike at the Third Annual Big Brother's Pic­ nic Sunday. More than 400 fatherless boys spent the picnic downing footballs and chilidogs at Camp Craft near Boo Caves Road. Rapist Receives Life f o u n d A 26-year-old Austin man w a s g u i l t y of aggravated rape of a parttime University student and assess­ ed life in prison by a 167th District Court jury Wednes­ day. Meanwhile, police are still looking for a black teenage youth accused of raping a University student in her South Austin a pa rtme nt Thursday night. Charles W. Hornsby was convicted by a jury of five women and seven men follow­ ing two days of testimony. Hornsby, a former con­ s t r u c t i o n w o r k e r , wa s arrested and charged July 16 in connection with the aggravated rape early that morning. The Thursday incident began when two youths knock­ ed on the door of the apart­ ment rented by two Universi- ty women and inquired if “ Carol” was home. When they were told that no such person lived there, they shoved their way into the residence. One suspect, described as a black male about 16 years old, forced one of the women into the bathroom, where he allegedly raped her while his white companion talked with the second woman. The two men then took a sum of money and fled._____ U S E T E X A N C L A S S I F I E D S STUDENTS V a PRICE SPECIAL OFFER $1.90 PER MONTH Paid Per Semester The Houston Chronicle Now Delivered in Most Areas Call 477-4485 ©1975 Hot* '"‘ I Bailli Shoe Sale Style 150 Sand suede Sale Price $25.50 Style 180. Russet smooth strap only. Sale Price $17.50 Style HO. Bark suede only. Sale Price $24.90 To help you take your first step in the shoe that revo- lutionized walking, we're having a sale From January 13th to January 31st. — -— choose from a selected group of Earth brand shoe styles and sizes for men and women. Save from $7.50 to $14.00. EARTH SHOE STORE 1610 LAVACA 474-1895 OPEN THURSDAYS UNTIL 8 PM S E L E C T E D ST Y LE S, COLORS, M A T E R IA L S A N D S IZ E S A L SO ON SA L E ! O TH ER It's a secret. • « - m - - . I _ a l C H U V v I l / L / 1 A l r+4 Don't tell a soul. Go quietly berserk. In the secret back room of our shop are leftover Spring clothes which we are selling at 70% off. Ridiculous. (Our ac countant keeps reminding us exactly how ridiculous.) Ah, well, how else can a lively store like Jerry Perlitz liven up a chilly January! I - # "I ! J ' — C C T * D P - . I I t * I i a a t t 'Sen/iy. [i^i^S& op # 7 Jefferson Square With vacation time fast approaching, many of you will no doubt be traveling to Mexico. Some of you might even be coming back. Here are some helpful hints. 1. A man on a burro always has the right of way, unless he appears to be a weakling. 2. In local cantinas, pouring a shot of Cuervo down a man’s collar is not thought to be humorous. 3. Falling onto a cactus, even an actual Cuervo cactus, can be a sticky proposition. 4. It is tough to find hamburger rolls in the smaller towns; it’s best to bring your own. IM P O R T E D A N D B O ^ ^ E li^ B Y ^ l^ ^ H E U B L E ir^ J N C .*! HARTFORD. CONN. It Sounds Incredible BUT EVELYN WOOD GRADUATES CAN READ THE EXORCIST IN 58 MINUTES At That Speed, The 403 Pages Come Across With More Impact Than The Marie. You can do it too. So far over 550,000 other people have done it. People who have different'job*, different IO*, different interests, different educations have completed^ the course. Our graduates are people from all walks of life. These people have ell taken a course developed by Evelyn Wood^ a prominent Educator Practically all of them at least tripled their reading speed with equal or batter comprehension. Most have increased it even more. Think for a moment what that means. All of them-even the Slowest-now read an average novel in le a than two hours. They read an entire issue of Time or Newsweek in 36 minutes. They don't skip or skim. They read every word. They use no machines. Instead, they let the material they're reading determine how fast they reed. And mark this well: they actually understand more, remember more and enjoy more then when they read slowly. T h ats right! They understand more. They remember more. They enjoy more. You can do the same thing-the place to learn more about it is at a free speed reading lesson. This is the same course President Kennedy had his Joint Chiefs of Staff take. The staff of President Nixon completed this course in June 1970. The same one Senators and Congressmen have taken. Come to a Mini-Lesson and find out. It is free to you ^ Y o u will leave with a better understanding of why it works. One thing that might bother you abou your reeding speed is that someone might find out how slow it is. The instructors at the Evelyn Wood Reading Dynamics Free Speed Reading lesson will let you keep your secret. It's true we practice the first step to improved reading at a Mini-Lesson and we will increase your reading speed on the spot but the results will remain your secret. Plan to attend a free Mini-Lesson and learn that it is possible to read 3-4-5 times faster, with comparable comprehension. -SCHEDULE OF FREE MINI-LESSONS You’ll increase your reading sp 50 to 100% on the spot! LA S ! WEEK TODAY & TOM ORROW 4:00 p«m. or 8:00 p«m. EVELYN WOOD READING DYNAMIC! IN S W UTE s A h i I A W A f * A 1801 LAVACA ADJACENT TO UT 7n Kind' Suits Raise Permanent Funds By D A V ID BUTTS More than $40 million in new income, generated from settlements of the gas “ in kind” pricing lawsuits pushed total oil and gas income deposits to the Permanent School and Permanent University Fund over the $2 billion mark. The “ in kind” suits were brought by At­ ty. Gen. John H ill to force gas producers to pay the current state market value for gas royalty payments from production on state lands. Sta te Land Com m issioner Bob Armstrong said the skyrocketing cost of natural gas —not prior royalty payments that were intentionally low —was prim ari­ ly responsible for the enormous amounts of new income generated. Although numerous lawsuits have been filed against gas producers on state lands and many more suits are expected, the major portion of the increased revenues apparently has been realized. “ Most of the biggies, the m ajor producers, have settled, and any added in­ come w ill be re la tiv e ly s m a ll,” Armstrong explained. “ We’ve picked up more than $1.2 million in royalties sim ply because we are operating a current audit program ,” Armstrong said, adding that this was ac­ complished without an increase in employes. TTie Permanent University Fund is the endowment of The University and is currently worth more than $770 million, the m ajority of this from oil and gas revenues on 2.1 million acres of West Tex­ as land. The Permanent University Fund’s share of the $40 million in bonus revenue, $15 million, cannot be spent directly but must instead be invested along with the rest of the Permanent University Fund monies. It is the income from these investments which comprises the Available University Fund. The m ajority of the Available Universi­ ty Fund income is earmarked for acquir­ ing library books and materials, capital e q u ip m e n t, and maintenance. c o n s tru c tio n Only The University of Texas and Texas A&M may spend the Available Fund, with The University receiving two-thirds of the fund and Texas A&M the remaining third. KLRN Shares Satellite Faculty Reacts to Address State of Union Message Spawns Varied Opinions By MAX R IZ L E Y Texan Staff Writer Reaction among University professors to Pre sid e n t Ford’s State of the Union message varies but is general­ ly pessimistic. H isto ry P ro f. Thomas Philpott was strongly critical of F o rd ’s $394.2 b illio n bicentennial budget. Philpott called the economic program “ cheap,” saying it “ buries the social welfare and job securi­ ty.” However, Philpott would not place the whole blame for these omissions on Ford. “ I shouldn’t single out Ford in doing this,” Philpott said. “ American politicians don’t talk about the real problems of the American economy and the American civil order.” Philpott identified these problems as the distribution of wealth and income and the distribution of power and in­ fluence. “ That’s a terribly dangerous thing for a can­ didate to say,” Philpott ex­ plained, “ so Ford shouldn’t be faulted uniquely for failing to do this.” Philpott did feel that, in his address, Ford should have dealt with employment and under-employment. He also said the President should “ deal with the most out­ rageous inequities in tax­ ation.” Economics Prof. Forest G. H ill also was critical of the new economic program but was more reserved in his criticism . “ I think that I would agree with some of the criticism s that the budget does not face up to the degree of unemployment,” H ill said. He also thought that this year’s budget, being only sligh tly higher than last year’s, would combine with the current rate of inflation to produce a budget actually lower than last year’s. “ In real term s,” H ill ex­ plained, “ after you allow for inflation, Ford is really say­ ing, ‘let’s cut back on the size of federal government ac­ tivities and program s.’ Of course, philosophically, that may be his intention. Ford may be trying to scale back on federal activities.” The most agreeable reac­ tion to the Ford speech came from Government Prof. Jam es M. Lutz. Lutz began by attacking Sen. Edmund Muskie’s reply to the State of the Union message. Lutz said that Muskie’s a lte r n a tiv e s to F o r d ’s programs “ sound like a bunch of rhetoric.” Citing as an ex­ ample Muskie’s proposal that the government provide jobs for the unemployed, Lutz said Muskie thinks the savings in unemployment compensation would finance the federal deficit. “ He doesn’t explain that the jobs themselves w ill cost the federal government a lot of money,” Lutz said. “ The money saved on unemploy- DANNON YOGURT) CONTINENTAL, ALTA DENA KEFIR",J tool W h at* W heat San d w ich ** Froth Daily (Mon-Fri) Look for us in your D.O.C.A. coupon book BALANCED WAY HEALTH FOODS 0:45-5:45 504 W. 24th System land-base lines from Public Broadcasting System headquarters in Columbia, N.C. In the experim ent, the satellite w ill enable four channels instead of one to be fed into re g io n al P B S systems, and stations can “ pick and choose” what they wish to broadcast. The plan w ill allow the 48 stations in the southern association of PBS to reach a more diverse audience. KLRN w ill be able to utilize fully the service, since it w ill be one of the 14 regional receiving stations of the program. Caswell Tennis Center Public Facilities Adult Group Lessons now forming Pro Shop Sale I Register Now tor dosses starting Fob. 2 Student Discounts on Group Lossons Private Lessons by appointment Call for more information • Bota Bullets $13.50 • Pro Penn tennis balls $2.40 ($9/dozen) • Sweaters & Sweatsuits Custom Racquof Stringing Re-gripping 24 hr. service Open 7 days a week 8:30 am -7:30 pm 24th and L a m a r 478-6268 M O N D A Y m „VAC 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. SIGN-UP FOR TEXAS U N I O N C O M M I T T E E M E M B E R INTERVIEWS. The Texa* Union Fine Arts, Musical Events, Recreation, Cultural Enter­ tainment, and Mexican-American Culture Committees w ill hold interviews tor students interested in becoming members, [student* *hould sign-op for an interview time in the Texa* lUnion Program Office, Texa* Union South. Interview* w ill (be Jan. 26-28. TUPC. 8 a.m. lo midnight. Display: PICTURES OF LOCAL COUNTRY AND WESTERN PERFORMERS. The Academic Center Foyer. Jan. 26-30. Musical Event* and Idea* and Issues Committees. 12 noon to I p.m. Sandwich Seminar: RISE OF REDNECK ROCK. Jan Reid, author of The Rite of Redneck Rock, willl speak on tho progressive country music scene. Dome Cento ^Conference Room. Ideas and Issues Committee. I 7 p.m. Film: OPEN CITY. The first nee-realist film to come out of Italy. Directed by Roberto Rossellini a n d ,,a rr'"9 Anna Magnani. Burdin. Auditorium. Admission: $1 for UT ||D holders; $1.50 for members. Theatre Committee. 8:30 to midnight. SOUL NIGHT IN THE TAVERN Dance tai the latest records with the soul night regulars and D .J.Dan Bailey III. The Texas Tavern. Admission is free. Afro- I American Culture Committee. lo o m. Film: RULES OF THE GAME. Jean Renoir'* scathing attack against French society which was banned from IFrance for several years. Burdine Auditorium. Admission: $1 with UT ID; $1.50 for members. Theatre Committee. ! ment isn’t going to finance anything but the new jobs, and we may run a bigger deficit as a result.” Lutz, however, had reser­ vations about Ford’s new budget. “ It has its good and its bad points. I ’m not sure whether spending a lot more money is going to help in the long run — it depends on where it is spent.” Lutz went on to say that he was less than pleased with the way the money was allocated. He said Ford should have ear­ marked “ a little less on defense and more for social welfare.” Government Prof. Jerald Yankee said that the Ford budget is a “ clear rein ­ forcem ent” of Republican party philosophy. He said that the most substantial tax cuts are for corporations. “ Republicans give big business a break, hoping that this w ill stimulate increased jobs and increased activity in the growth areas.” However, Yankee feels that nothing Ford can do within the existing privately owned economic framework w ill im­ prove matters. He explained that the Republicans are concerned with preserving the corporate structure and the accumula­ tion of capital by private com­ panies. The Democrats, on the other hand, are trying to dis­ tribute the capital equally among all citizens. Yankee sees ap “ insoluble dilemma” in the conflict between these two factions. Yankee feels that the im­ m ediate problem to be alleviated is the even distribu­ tion of the nation’s wealth, perhaps through higher taxes on upper income groups and corporations. He feels that Ford is “ taking care of the people in power and authority, and hoping that, in a medium range of time, the benefits w ill accrue to everybody.” COOL IT THIS SEMESTER! w in the fitn ess b attle at the Northcross Ice Skating Center C la sse s startin g th is week. ICE SKATING — it’s the only winter game in town. Perfect for Matches and Mixers! C A L L 451-5103 A pplications now being taken for the N orthcross Ice Queen Contest 1976 TEXA S UNION S P R IN G C L A S S E S LOCATIONS AH. Energy Referees A mer. Car Repair Art Appreciation Astronomy Ballet Beni* Bo rf ending Bfllydoncing Birdwatching Brood making Bridge Classical Guitar Court Dances Crochet Defensive Driving Dog Obedience Fester Reading Flamenco Guitar Feed A Nutrition Foreign Cor Repair French for Fun German for Fun Gourmet Cooking, Sec. I Gourmet Cooking, Sec. 2 Guitar (Beg. A Musicianship) Hatha Yoga Higher Consciousness Sam. income Tax Jewelry: Cen. A Casting Juggling Knitting Ktmdalini Yoga Kung Fu Legal Concepts Life Drawing Macrame Meteorology Mind/Body Coordination Modern Dance Modern Greek Natural History: Austin Natural Veg. of Taxes Needlepoint, Sec. I A 3 Needlepoint, Sec. 7 Navels of Ayn Rend Okinawan Karate Palmistry I A 7 Personal Growth Groups, Sec. Personal Growth Groups, Sec. 4 A A Personal Growth Groups, Sec. 5 Photographic Stylos A Techniques Photog.: Block A White/Darkroom Photog.: Intr*, to 35mm Piano Poetry: Women A Consciousness QuilHng Recorder Soiling Scuba Diving (classes) Sculpture Self Awareness Shirtmaking for Men Skydiving Songwriting Spanish for Fun Spelling Stitchery A Applique To Chuting Tap Dancing Tests A Tension Tatting Vocabulary War Gaming Win# Appreciation Woman's StH Daftnsa JES A323A Getaway Community Center PAR 294 INS 340 Tex. Fed. of Women's Clubs Univ. Preshy. Church Room 292 Uaiee South, Ream 7 Univ. Christian Church Room 304 CAL 21 Univ. Catholic Church Kitchen Univ. Christian Church Morgan Heil Univ. Preshy. Church Ream 204 Univ. Preshy. Church Ream 201 PAR IC SUT 111 Perking Let, 20th A Speedway JES A200 Univ. Preshy. Church Room 204 Union South, Room 7 Gateway Community Center JES A30SA JES A303A Union South, Room 7 Univ. Catholic Center Kitchee RAS SIS Univ. Christian Church Morgan Hell GEO 227 BEN 110 Gateway Community Center RAS 312 PAR BC 3400 Guadalupe BEL S02A BEL 242 Gateway Community Center BAT 107 EC 0.234 Univ. Christian Church Merge* Hall Anon Hiss Gym 134 •AT HS WAG 20B BEI 4SI CAL 22 Gateway Community Center JES A305A Methodist Student Center Auditorium BAT 217 Union South HO Univ. Preshy. Church Ream 210 MEZ 4201 HEB 127 TAY 317 TAY 315 Id. Annex, Ream F-17 JES A3Q7A CAL 410 RAS 313 Tewnlake Sailaway TAY 207 Gateway Community Center JES WHO Union South IOO Birdsnest Airport Univ. Catholic Conter Basement JES A307A JES A200A CAL 323 BEL S02A Moth. Student C»r. Auditorium JES A200A PAR 102 JES A209A WAG 112 Galleria Restaurant Na. I Jaffarson Square 3401 Guadalupe KLRN-TV w ill soon become ne of the first television tations ever to receive cons- ant, w e e k ly program s ransmitted by satellite. Starting in October, Austin ,nd San Antonio’s Public broadcasting System station vill utilize a recently launch- ;d National Aeronautics and ;pace A d m in is tra tio n ;atellite for regionally >roduced programs. Satellite time is usually ex­ tensive. For example, a one- ind-one-half minute news eport from Jerusalem costs 58,000 in satellite fees, however, NASA is offering ;he service to PBS free of charge for an experiment by the Southern Educational Communication Association. Noyes W illett, assistant director of radio-television engineering at the University Communication Center, originated the experiment. Dr. John Fryman, assistant professor of radio- television- film , w ill be the evaluation coordinator of the project. With the rise in popularity of public broadcasting, local and regional productions have declined steadily. According to B ill Arhos, program director for KLRN , PBS currently can send only one signal over the B e ll Councilwoman Linn To Conduct Seminar City Councilwoman Emma Lou Linn w ill speak Tuesday at a noon sandwich seminar. Since her election last spring, Linn has been an outspoken advocate for increased representation of women on the city’s boards and com­ missions. Linn w ill discuss the role of women in general and her role in particular on the Austin City Council. The program is sponsored by the Texas Union Ideas and Issues Com mittee in the Dobie Room on the fourth floor of the Academic Center. Head Coach Murdered; Football Aide Suspected SAPULPA, Okla. (U P I) — Schools in this northeastern Oklahoma town of 15,000 w ill be closed Monday for the funeral of former Head Football Coach Je rry Bailey, who was murdered Friday. Paul Reagor Jr., a colleague and Bailey’s nominee to succeed him in the top coaching spot, is being held as a suspect in the case and may be charged Monday. ISAVEM41 on GROUP FLIGHTS M AUSTIN/LUXEMBOURG VIA ICELANDIC/BRANIFF FLIGHTS N E W Y O R K , T. GROUP FLIGHTS 4 ® ' n Round Trip QpiusTax ’1634 0 * Round Trip *pfcs $13.07 lf iMt i i m ilw f with iattrnatiMMl Hight D e p a rtu re s: M a r c h 1 2 • A p r i l 1 6 M a y 8 , 1 3 , I S , 1 8 NY/LUXEMBOURG — ONLY $310 (RETURN ANY DAY VIA SAME AIRLINES!!!) D e p a r t u r e s : M a y 2 0 , 2 1 , 2 2 , 2 3 ‘ Plus $15 Weekend Surcharges Minimum Group Size: 25 Limited to UT Students/Faculty SPACE LIMITEDI C A U 478-9343 M a y 2 0 , 2 1 , 2 2 , 2 3 , 3 1 1428 G U A D A LU PE SIN C E 1962 . T R A V E L , End of the Y ear Sale 60% Beads and Jewelry Silver Heishi Tubing Silver Heishi Choker w ith fly bird Silver Heishi w /1-3 turquoise nuggets Olive Shell Heishi w/15 nuggets Pinshell Heishi w/5 nuggets ^ O Z. 1999 & ,94, & 9099 O $1^49 • THE BEAD SHAMAN 2200 Guadalupe 477-3478 P a g e 8 M onday, Ja n u a ry 26, 1976 THE DAILY TEXAN i RASSI. Head Urges Increased Minority Engineering Graduates - J ___ li/v/mtnkor a t,i\ will have three is about the sam e as for otto f r o m a c r o s s e d u c a t o r s , m inority student advisers and representatives of business and industry. the ’’The n ature of task force’s purpose is to bring together persons from diverse backgrounds to get a joint opinion,” said Heard, who holds a m a ste r’s degree in educational psychology and is the only cam p u s learn in g specialist represented. T he t a s k f o r c e m e t in December a rd will have three m ore m eetings before the June sym posium . “ W e’re l o o k i n g f o r s u c c e s s f u l program s a t universities,” .’ Heard said. T h ere a re 261 mi nor i t y th e 3,000 stu d e n ts a mo n g s tu d e n ts en ro lle d in The U n i v e r s i t y ’s C o l l e g e of Engineering, Philip Schmidt, a s s o c i a t e p r o f e s s o r of m echanical engineering, said. ’’T he d r o p o u t r a t e for minority engineering students is about the sam e as for other students,” Schm idt said. He attributes this factor to an ac­ tiv e t ut or i ng p r o g r a m, a m inority engineering student group Phi Sigm a Phi and adequate financial aid. The United Nations form al­ ly cam e into existence Oct. 24, 1945, with the deposit with the U.S. State D epartm ent of the r e q u i r e d of ratifications of the Charter. n u m b e r h y o u r h JOHN ROBERTS RING MAN IS HERE TODAY! ______ " - By LEIGH WILSON P atricia Heard, coordinator of Reading and Study Skills L a b o ra to ry L e a rn in g S e r­ vices, is working with a task force that hopes to boost the nationwide graduation ra te of m i n o r i t y e n g i n e e r i n g students. task force for The N a tio n a l R e se a rc h Council the N a t i o n a l A c a d e m i e s of Science and Engineering will identify and explore campus resources such as faculty ad­ vising, financial aid, learning sk ills and p e e r tu to rin g , Heard said. The council investig ated problem s and m ethods of re c ru itin g m o re m in o rity students into higher education engineering program s a few years ago, H eard said. “ They found that it is one thing to recruit and adm it m inority students and another to retain them ,” she said. In a d d i t i o n t o c a m p u s resources, the task force also will investigate possibilities for expanding co o perative program s with industry for m i n o r i t y e n g i n e e r i n g students. Recom m endations of task fo rce will be presented a t a national sym ­ posium in June and will be in­ cluded in a national publica­ e n g i n e e r i n g t i o n professionals. f o r the The 14-m em ber group is composed of representatives 'Support' Art H*« not o mod»rn tculptuK, but bridge support. at MoPoc oxproM w oy and the Hantotlt Drive bridge. Texan Sta ff Photo by Paul AA. lostof Professor Airs Race Issue Genetic Inferiority Theory Arouses Resentm ent By SCOTT MONTGOMERY Texan Staff Writer the Botany Prof. W alter Brown, aroused resentm ent of b o t h b l a c k a n d w h i t e freshm an biology students Friday by discussing a con­ troversial concept known as Jensenism , which m aintains blacks are, on the average, genetically inferior to whites. later adm itted he personally endorses the work of educational psychologist Arthur Jensen as the “ best o b je c tiv e e v id e n c e ” th a t heredity plays a m ore signifi­ cant role in the determ ination of intelligence, as measured by IQ tests, than does environ­ ment. Brown Cautioning that scientific evidence m ust be examined objectively, the professor re a d a n ew sp a p er a rtic le reporting a dem onstration against Jensen’s appearance at an American Psychological Association convention. “ Whenever this theory is discussed, there is a howl of protest by activists who don’t give a damn about objectivi­ ty, they simply don’t want to hear tru th ,” explained Brown. the SEVERAL STUDENTS told The Texan they were offended by Brown’s one-sided presen­ tation and questioned the necessity of tackling such a sensitive subject in class. “ I really think this whole thing would be worthwhile if some other black person who struggled like hell to get to UT wouldn’t have to listen to that sort of trash ,” said one stu­ dent. “ We cam e all the way to The University to hear that we’re inferior. “ I ’m not to be rebellious, and I’m trying to look a t it logically, but he’s dooming our whole race; h e’s dooming my children. I can ’t stand that. I just can’t , ” she said. t r y i n g Another class m em ber add­ ed, “ My father worked all of his life so that his children could get an education. Then we come here and th ere’s a man — a professor, PhD! — and he tells me, ‘I know what I ’m talking about: you are in­ ferior.’ ” BROWN DENIES he was referring specifically to p ar­ individuals, pointing ticular out that Jensen himself has said his theory applies only to the average score of blacks on IQ tests, not the ability of any one person. “ A lot of blacks and white do-gooders a re n ecessarily offended,” he acknowledged, “ but do we want the truth or not? Is a professor supposed to be able to tell the truth in a u n i v e r s i t y ? W h a t ’s t h i s freedom of speech we yell and scream about? Problem Pregnancy Counseling Service Student Health Center 105 W. 26th St. (4th Floor-South) Confidential counseling with all altornativos discussed and referrals m ade to appropriate resources. Call 478-5711, Ext. 26, for an appointment. “ There’s no point in trying to educate people who are stupid. If Negroes are less in­ telligent than whites, then we can form ulate program s ap­ p ro p r ia te ly ,” B row n co n ­ tinued. FURTHERMORE, he said, exposure id eas is to new im portant among the m ost functions of a college educa­ tion. Citing the need to introduce students to the methodology of science, the botanist con­ tended th at many who enter h is c l a s s e s “ h a v e b e e n brought up on religion and really don’t know w h at a scientist is.” L i k e J e n s e n , B r o w n believes he is approaching the m atter from a scientific point of view and stresses he is not a racist, although he feels Je n se n ism ‘‘e x p la in s why Negroes are so unsuccessful as a group.” Author of num erous articles on the subject, Jensen has been a prom inent figure in the longstanding debate over the intellectual effect of heredity, as opposed to environm ent, since he first published his conclusions in The H arvard Educational Review during 1969. The w hite sto rk , one of E urope’s best loved birds, is so tall th at even when the young a re two feet high they are still babies and need th eir paren ts’ care. % lf your plants have been neglected because your friend forgot about them while you were home for Christmas... then come to The Garden Gate in Rivertowne Mall W e have people pleasin' plants along with fertilizers, insec­ ticides, pots and accessories. Students 15% off! 2011 E. Riverside Dr. 447-4678 Come in TODAY and see TROY SCHULZ who will per­ sonally assist you in selec­ ting your ART CARVED John Roberts Class Ring, at the Jewelry Counter, 1st Floor. -Cfi Jewelry D e p a r t m e n t SONY CASSETTE D E C K S F O R 1976 ON SALE SONY TG-136SD Stereo Cassette Deck The SONY TC-136SD with Dolby* Noise Reduction System combines open-reel quality with cassette deck convenience and size. Perfect for recordists with big requirements and small space. OTHER SONY FEATURES: • Ferrite and Farrtta Record/ Playback Hand • 3-Position Tap# Salad Switch far Standard, chromium dioxide and Sony Ferri-Chrome Cassettes • Pooh Umitar • MU/line Mixing • Total mechanism shut-off (TMS) • Servecentrel Motor • Pause Control with loch • 3-Digit Tope Countar • Dolby end Record Function Indicator lamps •TM Dolby Labs, Inc. SONY TC-117 The TC-117 has a built-in Peak Lim­ iter that keeps your recording* dis- tortion-frae by automatically reduc­ ing sudden high-input levels. Economy Stereo Cassette Deck OTHER SONY FEATURES: • 3-Position Tope Select Switch for standard, chromium dioxide and Sony ferri-Chrome cassettes • High Filter Switch • Automatic Shut-Off at and of tap# • Pause Control with loch • 3-Digit Tap# Counter • Non-Magnetizing Record Hood ~supitScm. SONY TC-186SD Front Load Stereo Cassette Tape Recorder The TC-186SD offers superb per­ formance and front load design. It’s noise-free with Dolby* Noise Reduc­ tion and Dolby FM systems, and distortion-free thanks to a peak lim­ iter. It all adds up to great styling and performance. OTHER SONY FEATURES: • Dolby* Noise Reduction System with Dalby FM Petition • Dalby Cal Centrals • Farrita and Farrita Head • 3-Position IO selector switch • 3-Position Bins Selector Switch • Sorvocontrol Motor • Illuminated Tape Comportment • Peek Umitar • Non-Magnetizing Recording Hand • Pouso Central With lech • Automatic Total Mechanism Shut-Off (TMS) • Microphone and AuxiRory Inputs ‘ TM Dolby Labs. Inc. t o y o u b y S O N Y T C -2 0 9 S D Deluxe Front Load Component Stereo Cassette Deck. The SONY TC-209SD lits perfectly into the finest stereo component system. Loaded with features, it s SONY s very best Front Load Stereo Cassette Deck. OTHER SONY FEATURES: • l f KHz Muitipkx Rifer • External Dolby Calibration Controls • Ferrite and ferrite Record/Playback Head • MU/Line Mixing • 3-Digit Memory Tape Counter • 3-Position Tape Select Switch far standard, chromium dioxide and Sony ferri-Chrome cassettes • 2 Position Bias Selector Switch • Automatic Total Mechanism Shut-Otf (TMS) • Peak limiter • Mechanical Memory Capability • Selfcontrol Meter • Pause Control With Lock • Peak Level Indicator • Non-Magnetizing Record Head •TM Dolby Labs. Inc. SUPERSCOPE. North tumor Guadalupe I M SS O f * X o> Ern J U .S. TOO The Discount Shop Koenig Lane at Guadalupe 459-1371 Monday/ January 26, 1976 THE DAILY TEXA N Page 9 J 1 1 S i f . H asSaJliK. &.• k * | H H H ». SHW ii tf f c S i ,!lv BBGhhhH hS hmMs Wide-open The 1976 intram ural basketball season bounces into action tonight at Gregory Gym Annex with 377 teams vying for top honors, and competition has been deemed wide open in all classes. The men’s division dominated the entries with a total of 315: 247 in Class A, and 68 in Class R. Women’s divi­ sion had a total of 33 entries, and in a first for intramural sports at Texas, the coed division had 29 signed up to shoot for the first coed championship. A fierce struggle is expected in the men’s division, with all teams trying to oust defending champion Sua Sponte who stopped AAAE, 50-38, in last year’s Class A final. This early in the season, no one can really be called a favorite, but Sua Sponte must be considered to be one of the top teams. Other top contenders who w ill be vying for the men’s Class A title in­ clude Prather, Sigma Alpha Epsilon, Paperchasers, and the L B J Birds. These teams won divisional cham­ pionships last year and should be con­ sidered as threats to break into the ■ H H■ iii i l i l i ii i championship bracket. A dark horse also has entered the race for Class A honors. The Mean Green, who captured the Law-Grad- Combined title last year, have moved into the independent division, and they also are looking for a title. Teams who could also be tough in divisional play are the Chuck Taylor Memorial Squad. Superstars, KA s, Sig Ep ’s Sigma Chi’s. A IM E, Delta Sigma Phi, and Moore. With 247 en­ tries however, suprises w ill probably be frequent. The men’s Class B champs from 1975 were the Superstars, who defeated Mornings After (Housing), 39-32. The winner in Mullet play was the Cees (Z BT ), and they gained their title by dumping P. Explosives (K A ), 22-19 last year. The women’s division has 33 entries for the tournament, and the defending champion, Littlefield, w ill be hard pressed to repeat. The Alpha Phi’s, runners up last year, w ill be out to take the cham­ pionship outright. Top contenders also w ill come from perennially strong teams such as the Pelicans, SRD, Kappa Alpha Theta, and the Tom Terrifies. Our Gang may just sneak up on everybody and pull some surprises, though. Despite the fact that Littlefield is the preseason favorite, the women’s Free throw winners emerge David Allen, Sandra Pruneda and Louie Mendez outdistanced the field and walked away with the men’s, women’s and coed free throw titles. Allen sank an amazing 47 out of 50 shots to win in men’s competition. Je ff Robinson (Sigma Alpha Mu) placed second with 44 baskets, and Peter Delforge (Mean Green), Kevin O’Mara (Jester Pros) and W illiam T. Jones tied for third with 42 free throws- Pruneda sank 35 of 50 shots from the foul line to capture the women’s title. Phyllis Sullivan (Littlefield) was the runner-up with a score of 27, and Lisa Jeanne Lee (A BC ) was a close third with 26 baskets. Pruneda completed the hat trick by teaming with Mendez and capturing the coed title with a combined score of 32. Robert Levine and Ann Van- divier took second with 29, and John McPherson and Docia Alexander finished third with 25 baskets. forecast tournament should go down to the wire in an anticipated close race. Always aware of the changing trend in intramural sports, the Intram ural Office has added something new for this season: coed basketball. UT w ill have one of the few coed basketball tournaments in the country that w ill have five member teams, with three women and two men on the court at one time. The rules are designed to equalize competition between men and women, and despite the fact that they (the rules), are different, the results should be promising. With 29 teams entered and with the new idea for competition applied, coed basketball could steal the show in intramural basketball this season. The tournaments in all divisions w ill last ten weeks, culminating with the finals. A ll games w ill be played at Gregory Gym Annex from 4-10 p.m. Monday through Thursday. SUO Sponte, 1975 men'* basketball champions ■ IP > : j||r jill r n r n Littlefield, 1975 women's basketball champs SAS M e t* Representing The Division of Recreational Sports Canter Club members ride on port club corner Women’s gymnastics The University Canter Club is cer­ tainly one of the more unique sport clubs on campus, offering instruction in all aspects of the horse sport. “ You name it and we teach it,” says Gail Clark, president of the club and one of the instructors. Instruction at every level, from beginning to ad­ vanced, is offered, she explains. Lessons are also offered for those who have never ridden, as well as basic instruction in bridling, groom­ ing and saddling. The club concentrates on English riding, which requires more mastery of jumping and rapid cross-coimtry travel, rather than the traditional Western riding and trailriding. 1976 UT LACROSS! SCHfOUUE Oat* Feb. 8. Feb. 14 Team .................... Dallas Lacrosse Club ................San Antonio Lacrosse Club . . . . .................................. Houston Lacrosse Club Feb. 21............................................ Texas A IM Feb 29 March 6 .......................................... Texas AAM March 13.........................................Texas Tech March 20.........................................Baylor March 21 .................................... San Antonio Lacrosse Club March 27................... ..................... Dallas Lacrosse Club April 4 ............................................ Texas Tech April l o April l l .......................................... LSU April 24, 25 ......................................Fiesta Tournament ....... , .................... Tulane Lacrosse Club (Texas, Dallas LC, San Antonio LC, Tulane L O May I .................... Baylor wistsasssn announcements Hoc* Austin Eagle Pass College Station Houston Austin Lubbock Waco Austin Austin Austin New Orleans Baton Rouge San Antonio Waco Several club members participated in horse shows last semester, Clark says, and trips to shows are planned for the spring also. Dues for the spring are $75, and the money covers 18 lessons (one lesson per week for every week of the semester). That works out to about $4 pe:- ride, Clark says, and most stables charge $5 to $7.50 per lesson. She emphasizes that persons who want to ride now but can’t afford the lump sum may make a deposit and pay the rest later. Canter Club meets at Hobby Horse Stable, north of Austin on Ranch Road 1325. The stable has a lighted indoor arena as well as an outdoor riding area. Members ride at 5:30 p.m. Wednes­ day and at l l a.m. on Saturday, but persons should leave for the stable at least a half hour in advance to get in as much riding time as possible. The women's gymnastics club will be meeting 6- 7 p.m. Monday-Thursday this semester in Bell­ mont H all 546. All U n iv e rs ity students are welcome. Men’s lacrosse The University Lacrosse Team is practicing 5:30-7:30 p.m. Monday, Wednesday and Friday at Freshman Field. The team will be happy to talk with any students or faculty with prior experience Call Coach Bob Korba at 478-9731 tor more infor­ mation. Sailing Sailing Club will be giving its required swim­ ming test at IO a m. Saturday, Jan. 24, In Anna Hiss Gym Pool. Persons should bring their own towel and suit For more information, call Sandy Pardue at 474-2127. Aikido Aikido Club meets a1 4 p.m. Monday and Wednesday and at 6 p.m. Tuesday and Thursday n Bellmont Hall 966. Persons wishing to learn this defense-oriented martial art should attend prac­ tices. Women’8 soccer Women's Soccer Club practices 7 30-9:30 p.m. Tuesdays and Thursdays at Freshman Field. All interested women are welcome UTS CA roster n awk Aerial Tennis ..................... T/Th A ik id o ................................ M /w T/Th A rch ery.................................. Badminton......................... T/Th Rowlina BOW" n» ' 9. 400 Y A R D M E D L E Y R E L A Y : I, Alabama (Carl Barroclal, Kevin Mills, Scott MacDonald, Jon Skinner) 3:33.14; 2, Texas (P a t Harrington, John McMahon, Jam ie Marshall B a i r d , Wendy Smith) 3:34.91. 1,000 YA RD F R E E S T Y L E : J * ? , Shoemaker, Alabama, 9:40.61; 3, Ralph Watson, Texas, 9.47.33 (Sch oo ltab M h o M 200 Y A R D F R E E S T Y L E : I, Scott MacDonald, Alabama, I : A3.38, 2, Jack Babashoff, AiaDama, 1:43.48; 3, Darrell Fick, Texas, 1:44.15. p p r o R m . 50 Y A R D F R E E S T Y L E : I, Jonty Skinner, Alabama, 20.93 (N E W POOL R E C O R D ), 2, Lance Gordon, Texas, 21.35; 3, Rick Abbott, Alabama, 21.54. 200 Y A R D IN D IV ID U A L M E D L E Y : I, Mike Curington, Alabama, 1:57.50 , 2, Tim Carter Texas, 1:58.69, 3, Guy Hagstette, Texas, 1:59.88. I M E T E R D IV IN G : I, Gregg Hook, Alabama, 266.55; 2, Monty Daley, Alabama, 264.95 ; 3, Kenny Kaufman, Texas, 345.70. 200 YA RD B U T T E R F L Y : I, Mike Curington, Alabama, 1:53.86; 2, Ron Tyre, Texas, 1:56.02, 3, Scott MacDonald, Alabama, 1:56.03 IOO YA RD F R E E S T Y L E : A labam a, 47.53; 3, Lance Gordon, Texas 47 84 200 YA RD B A C K S T R O K E: R EC O R D ) 2, Carlos Barrocal, Alabama, 1:56.84 , 3, Jam ie Baird, Te* a*' 15 500 YA RD F R E E S T Y L E : Jeff Krumwiede, Texas, 4:4:37 93; 2, Darrell Fick, Texas, 4 40 08; 3, M arshall Shoemaker, Alabam a, 4 41.98. 200 YA RD B R E A S T S T R O K E : I, John McMahon, Texas, 2:11 68; Brent Barker, Tex­ as, 2:17.74; 3, Kevin Mills, Alabama, 2:18.30. T H R E E M E T E R D IV IN G : I, Ted Doyle, Texas, 252.95, 2, Fred Machell, Texas, 245.20 (Alabama scratched their divers). 400 YA RD F R E E S T Y L E : I, Alabama (Jont.y Skinner, Rick Abbott, Mike Curington, Jack Babashoff) 3:12.79; 2, Texas, (G ary Grimsby, Lance Gordon, Guy Hagstette, Tim Carter) 3:14.35. .. I, Jack Babashoff, Alabama, 46.52, 2, Rick Abbott, I, Mark Tonelli, Alabama, 1 53.25 (N E W POOL _____ A. . „ _ _ _ , AMSTER MUSIC The Place to Go for: RECORDERS RECORDER MUSIC DULCIMERS IRISH TIN WHISTLES OCARINAS KALIMBAS TALKING DRUMS ETC., ETC., ETC. 1624 Lavaca 478-7331 PARIS BURNING?: \ • I . . . NO SHUCK, SHERLOCK 11 jp f ...RED-HOT AND SMOKING’ * T • WITH AN E Y E FU L L J I — OF INCENDIARY i iii ROCK RELEASES J FROM CAPITOL! I • (including the • best GRAND FUNK • LP in years). £ ON SALE 5 THIS WEEK ONLY!!! J Texas' Guy Hagstette swims the breaststroke against Alabma Friday._______ — Texan Staff Photo by Frank Tilley Longhorns To Host Froggies Crenshaw Wins ...............------- - By DANNY CUNNINGHAM Texan Staff Writer In what could prove to be a pivotal game for both ball clubs, the Texas basketball team w ill host the high- The TCU-Texas basket* ball game will be broad­ cast at 7:30 p.m. on KLBJ- AM (590)._____________ _ scoring TCU Horned Frogs in a Southwest Conference game at 7:30 p.m. Monday in Gregory Gym. The Longhorns, 2-5 in the SWC after a 74-56 win over R ice Satu rd ay night in Houston, need a victory to generate some momentum for their upcoming two-game series with league-leading Texas A&M. “THIS IS a big one for us, and if we don’t get by TCU, we’re going to be in bad shape when we play the Aggies,’’ Texas Coach Leon Black said. The Froggies are not going to be easy prey for the Horns, however, as they have knock­ ed off conference rivals SMU and Houston on their way to a 3-3 SWC mark. “ TCU is a fine basketball team, and I can guarantee you that they will play some tough basketball against us.” Black said. “ We will have to play out­ standing basketball if we are going to beat them because they are a veteran unit and they will be up for us,” he con­ tinued. THE FROGGIES do have an abundance of experience, as four of their top players are back from last year, including center Thomas Bledsoe, who was the lith leading scorer in the SWC last year. l m t at TCU Coach Johnny Swaim has a pair of three-year lettermen, 6-6 Gary Landers and 6-7 Lynn Royal, to join Bledsoe on the front line, but Royal has been hampered by a lingering eye injury, and freshman Tim Marion has replaced him in the starting lineup. The other returning starter for the Froggies is senior guard Rick Hensley, who teams with junior college transfer Randy Boyts to make the Frogs’ fast-break offense go “ TCU does as good of a job of executing the fast break as anybody we’ve played so far this year,” said Longhorn Nicklaus Falters P E B B L E BEACH , Calif. ( U P I ) - Young B e n Crenshaw, playing steadily if not spectacularly, moved in after Jack Nicklaus fell apart Sunday to win the $185,000 Bing Crosby National Pro-Am by two shots. The 24-year-old Crenshaw, who burst onto the golfing scene by winning his first pro tournament in the fall of 1973, shot a closing round three- under-pa rt 69 to beat Mike Morley, who finished with a one-over 73. Nicklaus, who has won 60 golfing titles in his great career, started the final round a shot ahead of Morley and three ahead of Crenshaw, but took two triple bogeys, a dou­ ble bogey and five bogeys for an uncharacteristic 10-over- Acor r no/>h cirin who Asst. Coach Skip Adams, who scouted the Frogs. Adams emphasized that the Froggies are capable of put­ ting points on the board very quickly, even though they are not blessed with the over-all team speed of SMU or Arkan­ sas. “THEY AREN’T as quick as SMU, but they score points in bunches. Before you know it, they’ll run up eight or IO in a row on you,” Adams noted. Both Black and Adams are concerned about T C U ’s tendency to jump out to a big lead at the beginning of the game and set the tempo of the contest. “ We cannot afford to let par 82 that put him well back. Crenshaw started the final round with a bogey, but ran down birdies on the second, fourth and ninth holes to make the turn at treacherous Peb­ ble Beach in two-under 34 and lay only a shot behind Morley. His long birdie putt on the 12th gave him the lead, and he parred home for I is 69 and his first title since taking the 1973 Texas Open in his initial PGA event. thpm eet ahead of us early o them get ahead of us early or we’ll be in trouble throughout the game,” Black said. Black also had been worried about falling behind early against Rice Saturday night, but it turned out to be the other way around as Texas jumped out to a 20-4 lead and never let go. The Owls connected on only two of their first 19 shots from the field and wound up hitting only 33 per cent of their attempts. Whi le the Owls were struggling to locate the basket in the first half, Texas was scorching the net with 53 per cent from the field and grab­ bing important offensive rebounds. “ I think we had some good, strong board play, especially from Gary Goodner, even though he got into early foul trouble,” Black observed. Black also mentioned the per fo rma nce of ju n io r forward Ed Johnson, who has apparently recovered from a nagging knee injury. “ It was good to see Ed play as well as he did. He did a good job inside on them, and that’s where we needed him most,” he explained. What Black needs most now is a victory over TCU and a reprieve from the schedule which has his team playing three games in five days. Pizza inn ’AMERICA’S FAVORITES PIZZA U N iv c a r r k ar ate: c u /d t m jCA OPQNG CLA5&C5 NOW ING TAC KWON ID Jtu/bUnyoftht'lwly Uihy _ HlSlAEl USELTON C A L L I S Id Pizza inn With this coupon, buy any giant, large or medium pizza at regular price and receive one pizza of the next smaller size with equal number of ingredients FREE! One coupon per visit, please. 2nd Hoar University Co-Op breaststroke with a time of 32:42. Texas’ only other double winner was Bevy Dencer. Dencer won the 200- and 500- yard freestyle with times of 2:03.97 and 5:29.33, respec­ tively. Nancy Marter placed first in the 50-yard freestyle with a time of 25:78. Audrey Supple won the 200-yard individual medley with a time of 2:24.69. "I am generally pleased. Nancy M arter swam real l as t good. She w as sick semester and is getting in shape. But she swam real good,” said Coach Keith Bell. “ Carolyn Jackson hoped to make the cutoff tim e for nationals but missed it by four-tenths of a second. Beery had a good time in the 50-yard breaststroke but died in the IOO. She needs to get in better shape if she plans to do anything at nationals.” Bell feels his team is “hur­ ting in a couple of events” but is starting to “ show depth.” He would like the times to be faster but feels times are “ sufficiently fast for now.” The real test of the team comes within the next two weeks. Texas hosts Midland College Wednesday, Texas AAM Friday and travels to Dallas to meet SMU on Feb. 5. 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Value 199.95 Medallion 65-510 FM Multiplex adaptor for 8 track deck Plugs into any 8-track car deck Uses car antenna *89” *355OO App. Nat. Adv. Value 79.95 *24” Superex STC Stereo Headphones App. Naf. Adv. ESS AMT 5V 2 way speaker 1 2 " woofer Heil tweeter App. Naf. Adv. Value 169.95 Dynaco SCA-80Q Kit Stereo amplifier 40 watts per channel 0.6% distortion App. Not. Adv. Value 190.00 Aiko AC5-215 Car Cassette Deck Demonstrator App. Not. Adv. Value 59.95 *12” I MOO00 t e fif i f I * ^mmW *125°° I I I I *25°° cu /io m hi-fi DI/COUCIT center M onday, January 26, 1976 THE DAILY TEXAN P a g e 13 Superscope A-235 Integrated Amplifier 3 yr. Warranty 5 watts par channel App. Not. Adv. Value 89.95 Pioneer CSR-700 3 way speaker 1 2 " woofer Horn type midrange and tweeter Demonstrator App. Not. Adv. Value 249.95 Tone A-450 Cassette Tape Deck Dolby Demonstrator App. Nut. Adv. Volue 479.95 ti By KATHY GESELL Texan Staff Writer The University women’s swimming team remained un­ defeated in dual meet com­ p e t i t i o n a s i t d o w n e d Louisiana State University 69- 44 and Southwest Texas State University 77-43 Saturday in Gregory Gym pool. The highlight of Saturday’s meet came in the 100-yard breast-stroke when Texas’ Beery Boggs qualified for the national meet with a time of 1:10.92. Boggs also won the 50-yard Arkansas Defeats Aggies By United P rs** International From the start Saturday t h e T e x a s AAM- n i g h t Arkansas rumble had the smell of one of those Greek tragedies. In a fought, furi ousl y wonderfully played contest, Arkansas prevailed in double overtim e, 93-91. But the basket that won for Arkansas at the end of the game, and the bucket t hat kept the Razorbacks alive at the end of the first overt i me, were questionable ones since it appeared time had run out on both ©cessions. HOLY CROSS BROTHERS UNITY member* therm * a IWe of prayer end w ort for a oomm on carree Chrtet DIVERSITY ~ Individual effort* m e e ttn * w fde e p re e d GENEROSITY -afvtn* tim e labor, poeeeeeion* to other* in th*e land end abroad For information write: Provincial Office Vocation Dept. R St. Edward’* University Austin, Texas 78704 G re at O utdoor Boots Sixes 6-13 B-D Great for just running around r r ed! I I T I I I WING I SH O ! I STORE I 5504 Burnet Rd. 454-9290 Mon-Sat 9-6 DUCK SO UP 6 -8 :4 0 H U ■ N M t W m M mm 7:20-10:00,^^H NOW! OPIM 2:15 FEATURES 2:30-4:15 A-M JrfS-fcJO REDUCED PRICES TIL 0:15 T R A N S d t T E X A S 12200 Hancock Drive— 453-6641 they leek Mi land... hi* hone* . hi* wanton... bot they couldn't toko Chino! BRONSON IS I i >r . CHARLES BRONSON A IMO MUMOOflM I M diunbuwd By INTERCONTINENTAL RELEASING CORPORATION TEXAS IMO S. PLEASANT VALLET RD PfTlltSfN - 1:00-4:35-B:1S CARNAL - 2:45-6:25-10:00 16400 Bemat B o w l- 465 6933 OPIN 4:30 • ONB COMPUTE SHOWING STARTING AT 7:00 IF EXPLICIT SENSUALITY IS TOO SHOCKING FOR YOU, PETERSEN OAT BE TOO STRONG- jock’ p ▼ f AVC0 embassy PICTURE:S RELEASE • a HEXAGON production '“ ' I S I e t e r s e n •PLUS SECOND FEATURE Carnal Knowledge. JACK NICHOLSON ANN-MARGRET C A P I T A L . P L A Z A 452-7646 • IH 35 NORTH at 1 : 0 0 -3 :1 0 5 : 2 0 - 7 : 3 0 9 : 4 0 They Vc h o t LAST 4 DAYS! Paramount Pictures Presents BURT REYNOLDS CATHERINE DENEUVE ‘H U S T U S A RoBurt Production A Paramount Picture h i g h l a n d m a l l 4 51-7326 • IH 33 AT KOI WO LH. 5 TH BIG WK! T O D A Y a t 1 2 :3 0 - 2 :5 0 5 :1 0 - 7 :3 0 - 9 :5 0 George C. Scott . i nun i— « MMM WIK PROCTOR ■ | “The Hindenburg ..Anne Bancroft A UNIVERSAL PICTURE iP G l ^ The year is 2 0 2 4 ... I I a future you’ll probably live to see. H IG H L A N D NI A L L 431-7326 • tH 35 AT KOENIG LH. L IZ A M IN N E L L I G E N E h a c k m a n 5TH BIG WEEKI B U R T R e y n o l d s 1*0-3:15 5:30-7:45 UHM N O PASSES LUCKY LADY PG an R rated, rather kinky tale of survival j LQ/Jafp.««m,‘A BOY AND HIS DOG ,,nq DON JOHNSON SUSANNE BENT ON «* A L W MOORE Technicolor • R I JA S O N ROBARDS] ariih a spec-ai appearance fey a I S | □ O B IE 1 S 2 D O B IE M A L L • 4 7 7 - 1 3 2 4 ■ STARTS W EDNESDAY! I i2 oS v e T ! s / 5 ^ 1 ^ 3 with the Departm ent o f French and Italian OPEN CITY R o b e r t o R o s s e l l i n i ' s s h a t t e r i n g s t o r y o f i l l ­ f a t e d l o v e a n d b o l d r e s i s t a n c e , s e t i n t h e r a v a g e s o f N a z i - o c c u p i e d R o m e . Tonight 7 p .m ., B u rd in * A u d . Plus Co-Feature WM Distnbuted bv NMD Film Distribution f.n in Fa<;tma^>ir>i open OM SHOW RT DUSK — inLS g \ \ M O N T Y P Y T H O N AND THE HOLY GRAIL" Plus Co-Feature t v WHERE DOES IT HURT?" rn n o n h e r o / / — /IK y * v > 4 54 -5147 N O R T H C R O S S M A L L I A N D E R S O N & B U R N E R The masterpiece of bizarre love that stunned France. A portrait of lave and submission to disorder the senses. A n A ll i e d A r tis ts R elease O D 5:45-7:45-2:45 (^Y) HO ONE UNDER 17 ADMITTED Twi-Lite Hr. 5:15-5:4$, $1.50 © [ R e d f o r d I Hi M V F O n a w a y 5:00-7:25-2:50 Tw i-L itt Hr. 4:30-5:00, $1.50 iflOUT A: I S4:M Twilit. Hr. 5454:15, 51.51 He heed his mind and body to commit the most sensual ind shocking acts imaginable! SI SS 85 SS s Se HaTHIII S E SB 5:45-7:45-1:45 I oh-Uh Hr. 5:15-545, 51.54 I a s o n j J 4154:15 T*'-W« Hr 5454:15, ii » ll T h e L i f e a n d T i m e s o f GRIZZLY lA D A M S H H I SJW-7:30 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 9:30 I I I wi-Lite |5H)O-5J0, ■B M B B M B B H i l l . ! . . L l . i d J e a n R e n o i r ' s s t i n g i n g a p p r a i s a l o f t h e e r o t i c c h a r a d e s o f t h e F r e n c h l e i s u r e c l a s s b e f o r e W W i i . 9 p.m. Buntine Auditorium Each film $1.00 UT Students, Faculty, Staff $1.50 Members Tomorrow Night ADAM'S RIB Tonight Only! COLUMBIA PICTURESP re ttn tt MARLO! . S A M 5~l TRO M Robert Redford with Jane Fonda Angie Dickinson d ire c te d b y A r th u r P e nn Jester Auditorium Special times: 7KHI & 9:15 Admission: $1.25 R-T-F Dept. Season Tickets: $15.0 0 Page 14 Monday, January 26, 1976 THE DAILY TEXAN J T uts., F o b - 3 • Foos Tournament I (Doubles) • : l i t Prix* $100, 2nd $50, 3rd $25 \ W t d . F u b . 4 j I $ 5 E n t r y \ Pool Tournament I (Bar Room 8 Ball) ; I 1st Priza $100, 2nd $50, 3rd $25 • • $5 Entry : : BOONDOCKS • : CLUB J 4th A Braies (behind Greyhound Ins) J • • • • • • • • • St a r t in g a t s p m f l . 2 5 PITCHER NIG HT FREE PARKING DOBIE PARKING GARAGE RRST LEVEL DOBIE MALL Monday Night B H I N e e l y l a r r y K i r b a J * S P L IT R A IL J J IN N J * l f J 4 - J J * ^ J * * * + * J ^ Ar } 2 1 7 S ooth L a m ar 4 7 2 -1 3 1 4 Tuesday Night A B la m B a d m e n J o h n M e y e r i f l f J ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ S U N . THEATER & L O U N G E T O T A L L Y N U D E D A N C E R S yr BYOB, x r a t e d m ( I v i e s NOVELTIES BOOKSTORE 2 5 ‘ ARCADE 5 2 1 E 6 th 4 7 7 - 0 2 9 1 N o t • u t l o b l t lo . y o u n g p t r t o n y M o i f b t I 8 y ta rf lo t n lt i IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIimilHIIIHUIIIIIIHI THE COMMON INTEREST B O * Tequila Tonight • Disco Music • Sandwiches • Nachos • Pizza Open 2 a.m. B i t t and Medical Parkway 4 5 3 -6 7 9 5 illlllllllllHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIUUIIIIIII E njoy c re p e s, quiche, E uropean steak s in o ur h isto ric building and c o u rty ard . Open l l a .m . to 12 p.m . daily. X 3 1 4 Cost 6 f h St. yJ T R A N S ^ T C X A S til I 7774 CMdiiuo* Si 477 IMA * P * PCATURKS 2:0 0 -3 :3 0 5:0 0-6:30 -8:00 -9:30 ° ° ° * * T is MOM MORE! MORE! SXI HELD| OVER! In EASTMAN COLOR an UP rwleaae a b c ) IN T E R S T A T E Z-- VA RS ITY P 4 0 0 G U A O A l U P I S T R L ! T 't h B I G I W E E K TNI PICTURf TO I U ! FO* TNI NIXT Sn Of OSCARS! "It could moan a fourth consecutive Bost Ac t or nom ination tor A l Pacino." — Stove Arvin, KMPC » iio n n E iT io n p ? i feje, ^ ^ ■ h e f u l l p o t e n t l a l ^ H THERAPISTS AHO QUALIFICO COUNSELORS MAT ARRAME SPECIAL AHO PRIVATE SHOWINGS (X, 1:15-3KHM:45-4-J04:15-10HI0 M AH N THEATRES I I I I k iX TWIN a M W m a i ^ H n d S d 271 i o n s # A7J7 AIRPORT D tv e ■ " “A B E A U TIFU L FILM FIR ED W IT H P ASSIO N!” -------- T a CURIOUS. VMO. UNUSUAL FILM ARU | AN UNEXPECTEDLY ENTERTAINING MKI' Vm ton! Conby N Y Tunes •AN ENGROSSING SCENES FROM A MARRIAGE A LA F R A N C A IS E!” 1 : 4 5 -3 :2 5 -5 : 0 5 -6 :4 5 8 : 2 5 - 1 0 : 1 0 I FEATURES: $1.25 til 6:00 — $1.50 after MIDNIGHTERS: $1.25 (Frl. A Sat. -- $1.50) JEAN RENOIR'S HAPPY HOUR 8-9 PM N O CO VER 8 -9 P.M . 5 0 ' AFTER 9 P M . A LADIES FREE TONITE UVE ROCK 'N ROU BY L Y N X 50' TEQUILA AU NITE OPEN 8 P.M. TIL 2 A.M. 914 N. LAMAR 477-3783 M 2 T H I I S A R T I K H A N S + T E X A S □ L l A H I U 5 T h e a t r e s I V 1 5 0 0 S P L E A S A N T VA LLEY RD JUST OFF EAST R IV E R S ID E O R IV E H H H - J L L L n n n n . . . REDUCED PRICES TIL 6 P M M O N . THRU SAT DOUBLE FEATURE .’lock' p e t e r s e n PLUS 2ND FEATURE CARNAL KNOWLEDGE" JAWS[ a u s t in a t t e n d a n c e ! RECORD BREAKER J Mardi Hustam t $1.50 NI 4 p. rn. FUTURES - 2 - N O T SINCE LCVE STORY. ‘THE OTHER SIDE OF THE MOUNTAIN A U N IV E R S A L PICTURE - T E C H N IC O L O R - ACRES OF FREI LIGHTED PARKING DOBIE S C R E E D S n u PARKING IN DOBIE .4**01 DOHL MALT 477 1)24 I |H THE FIRST TRUE ADULT MOTION PICTURE FN THOSE SINCEIEIT WILLING IO CIVE PLEASURE TO KOCHE PLEASURE ort In review Carrington. Delacroix Subvert Reality --------------------- — — — — By IAN THOMAS Texan Staff Writer Lovers and madmen have such seething brains, Such shaping fantasies, that ap­ prehend prehends. More than cool reason ever com­ Shakespeare Shakespeare notwithstanding, fantasy, or the suspension of belief, has rarely been regarded as the royal route to truth everlasting. Yet in recent times, im­ aginative extravagance has become a distinguishing mark of those said to be truly wise and free. Take Casteneda and his space hero, Don Juan, for example. We might just as well have chosen Leonora Carrington, whose surrealist paintings are now on exhibit in the Michener Galleries of the Humanities Research Center. Her works have an ex­ traordinary beauty of color and form but bear, through one haunted space after another, a message of total confusion and despair. As far as Carrington is concerned, there is little that distinguishes real from unreal, fact from fantasy. In her works, it is all one. Fantasy becomes hallowed truth, so truth becomes a lie. Madness descends. For, surely it is an act of madness to blur and thus belittle the awful distinc­ tion between “ here” and “not here,” between real and unreal, or to assert that making this distinction asks too much of us. Yet this is the essence of sur­ realism , a t lea st as p racticed by Carrington. Carried to its absurd conclu­ sion, surrealism bids you believe ab­ solutely nothing so that you may be free to believe anything. integrity of your own THERE IS at least one basic logical flaw in the theory: If you don’t believe anything at all, then you don’t believe in the thoughts. Therefore, you know that you don’t make sense and, as a surrealist, you’re proud of it. Now, how do you suppose truth could emerge from such irresponsible musings? Could this presage a return to the dark ages? Carrington’s works say yes. They are full of ghosts, magic circles, backwards writing, evil spirits and diabolical happenings that look as if they were in­ spired by some medieval book of magic or were based upon Hieronymus Bosch’s suppressed underground masterpieces. The old collective name for the beliefs implied was paganism, but nowadays that concept is considered either ob­ solete or exceedingly impolite. Better to say that Carrington’s pain­ tings celebrate states of mind and beliefs that have been overwhelmingly rejected as unenlightened by our c u ltu ral forebears. Still, the choice is entirely hers —and yours. Do you like the idea of witches in Salem or don't you? Do we collectively evolve in truth, or are we trapped in an endless circle of con­ fusion? Carrington votes solidly for con­ fusion. G iv e n t h e s e a b s u r d i t i e s a s philosophical backdrop, it is no wonder that Carrington, as perceived from her works, seems to teeter at the very edge of in sa n ity . D uring h e r e a r lie s t associations with the founding fathers of surrealism, she ventured too close to the pit and was committed to an insane asylum in Spain for a time. One wonders how many of her paintings were inspired by what she experienced there. AND YET, there is abundant beauty in Carrington’s work. It results from her fa ith fu ln e s s to c la s s ic a l b e lie fs (realities?) about color, form and perspective. Rooms in which spirits abound are rendered with painstaking realism . In m ost cases, the spirits themselves are depicted with exquisite three-dimensionally. But care, quite despite the delicate beauty of their swirl­ ing garments and the intricate tracery of their “ faces,” they exude despair and mental torment. “Good King Dagobert” represents a notable exception to this long litany of doom. On a wintry landscape stands a building resem bling an old Norman church. Inside, King Dagobert and his wife look lovingly at their newborn in­ fant. The scene radiates serenity and an awed reverence. Carrington conveys, as no other well­ known artist, a vivid sense of enchant­ ment. This is seen throughout, but es­ pecially in “ P red ella,” a work of delicate beauty and restraint depicting scenes from biblical times. “ Peacocks of Chen” is an outburst of life and beauty, a fantastic vision that swirls out from a central focus. Cubism seem s to have fascinated Carrington to some extent. Works such as “ I Saw Their Eyes” and “ Illieas” have a strong geometrical underpinning, with play of plane on plane. But they are laden down with gloomy themes and anx­ ious, anguished faces. The over-all impression left by the ex­ hibit is one of frustration. Though the sense quickens at the beauty of the colors and the delicate forms, this titilla­ tion serves only to underscore the spiritual exhaustion one feels, having followed Carrington on her troubled journey of the soirit. And now, lest you should think by my opening quote that I have accused Shakespeare of being a surrealist, let him have the final word: But all the story of the night told And all their minds transfigured so More w itn e sse d than fancy s im­ t . And grows to something of great But, howsoever, strange and ad­ over, together, ages constancy; mirable. books In review Carrington's "Adieu Amenhotep' Carrington's 'Friday the 13th' n > i v i v a o u n n F By DIANA LARMORE Texan Staff Writer If someone had presented Leonora Carrington with a dozen red cabbages in­ stead of roses at her opening in the Michener Gallery, she might not have noticed the difference. And if she had noticed something peculiar in this welcoming gesture, she probably would have been delighted. Carrington likes cabbages and even equates them with their purportedly nobler plant cousin in a recently com­ posed commentary. ‘The Cabbage is a Rose, the Blue Rose, the Alchemical Rose, the Blue Deer (Peyote) and the eating of the God is ancient knowledge * > What Carrington knows, w hatever method she uses to find out, Carrington paints. “ Visions are not invisible,” she says of her drug inspired d ream s transferred onto canvas in a clean delineated style that harks back to pain­ tings p reserv ed from the days of a lch em y . The d ire c tn e s s of h e r iconography is reminiscent of medieval altar panels and their secular counter­ parts epitomized by the works of the late Hieronymous Bosch. In fact, this late 16th Century Teutonic painter shares the cabb age’s p riv ileg e of ranking on C arrin g to n ’s lis t of beloveds. His grotesque subject m atter was recently popularized and adapted to our own era in the infamous “ Walt Disney” parody of cartoon characters lustfully engaged in hedonistic pursuits. Carrington tripped in from Mexico to attend the oDening of her show and recently consented to an interview for a fine arts program to be broadcast by KPFT Pacifica Radio in Houston. THE SOFT-SPOKEN visionary, her hair in disarray and her shoulder bag looped around her neck, responded to questions about her life and work in playfully humorous, yet genuine and profound phrases. She seemed strapped into her chair by a superior force, no doubt beckoned and commissioned by her to restrain her physical responses to her own overwhelming intellectual inten­ sity. When inform ed that only five minutes remained on the tape, the artist proposed that the gathered crowd close the of reception guests close the inter­ view with a song. While Dali’s eccentric image evolved out of his self-conscious and deliberate role-playing of the wax-mustachioed villain, Carrington’s eccentricity is more than just a promotional campaign I t’s more than skin-deep. Her life style feeds into her work, composing an integral part of it. Artists like Carrington originally in­ spired and continue to perpetrate the myth of the artist/personality, a myth that persons portraying the artist must heed or convincingly discount to obtain a in th e ir degree of verisim ilitude Hparpp of verisim ilitud characterizations. Ken Russell’s “The Music Lovers” exaggerated the instabili­ ty in Tchaikovsky’s life in a typical over­ simplification of that complex madness the best artists discover in themselves and reveal in their work. CARRINGTON proffered a clue to this contradictory interpretation of the a rtist psyche during her interview. Though she allows graying strands of hair to find a comfortable space around her intelligent face unguided by a comb, the a rtist confided that she cannot work when her life itself is in disarray. Whatever supernatural force guides th e u n r u ly s tr a n d s of L e o n o ra Carrington’s existence, her imagery is every bit as real as that found in the print exhibition opening alongside the C a r r i n g t o n sh o w . At f i r s t th e iconography governing these 19th Cen­ tury French graphics by Delacroix and his contemporaries seems firmly based in reality. Our perception has been fogg­ ed, however, by the full assimilation of this romantic imagery into our visual tradition. We accept the reality of horses raring their manes and tails tossed by the wind, while the sight of a savage lion devouring human flesh seems commonplace. These two visual myths have become so in­ grained in our culture, perpetuated by pictures and literature, that we no longer appreciate the wild imaginations of the artists who developed them. landscapes, in storm y N E I T H E R CARRINGTON n o r Delacroix brewed these images out of raw imagination. The literary sources of th e ir su b je c t m a tte r rem oves the artwork displayed in both exhibits at least one step from reality to begin with. The French printmakers drew subject m atter from such image-evoking works literature as Faust and Ivanhoe. of C arrington’s in v isio n s ensuing c o n te m p la tio n of literature which fine art has not dubbed conventional sources for subject m atter such as C astan ed a and A lice in Wonderland. imagery originates Magic mushrooms made Alice grow in Wonderland. Carrington’s work is yet another step removed from reality because she relies on Alice’s method for e x p a n siv e visio n ary e x p e rie n c e , children of the Seventies may be guard­ ed from knowledge of the natural cause of Alice’s transformation phenomena, but children of the Sixties are reminded of the source whenever the hashish- smoking caterpillar gazes from the screen in a showing of the Walt Disney classic. Alice ate the mushroom and talked to the caterpillar to expand her con­ sciousness. Thanks to vicarious ex­ perience via Leonora Carrington, anyone walking near the HRC in the next month only has to explore the second floor of the Michener Gallery to do the same thing legally. -T e x an S t a ff Photos b y P aul B lan k e n m e iste r Delacroix's 'Lion' Morris' Vision, Narrative Triumph in 'Southern Album ' By DANA EHRLICH Texan SUH Writer “A Southern Album;” edited by Irwin Husker; narrative by Willie Morris; Ox- noor House; 117 pages; $39.95. The haunting mysticism of William 'aulkner’s words, “The past is never lead. In fact, it’s not even past,” in “ In- ruder in the Dust,” which Willie Morris x c e l l e n t l y d e v e lo p e d in h is lutobiography “ North Toward Home, nfluences much of what “ A Southern tlb u m ” is about. U sing M o rris ’ tarrative, quotes taken from the works if southern writers, and photographs of he South selected by Irwin Glusker, Ox- noor House has put together an expen­ s e yet worthwhile ablum about the >ast. The book begins with a quote from luthor Jam es Agee, follows up with Dorris’ simple and moving 13-page larrative, reminiscent of the first sec- ion of “ North Toward Home,” and final- y ends with more than 150 pages of jhotographs and quotes. ' , “ T h e th e m e of th e a lb u m is memory,” Morris writes, and “ there are in one’s lifetim e, certain m oments moments which elicit some deep interior tension and seem to m irror all the longings and intuitions of one s ex­ istence.” THE SOUTH’S heavy burden of memory — its past of anguish, of guilt, of despair, yet also of courage, honor and g ra s s ro o ts id e a lism p ro v id e s the moments for Morris which elicit that deep interior tension, as it has for years in southern writers. Despite an outrageous price and cer­ tain photographs which do not address or contribute significantly to the over-all theme, “ A Southern Album” is a rare literary tre a t, not only for fans of Glusker and Morris, but also for the philosophical followers of the themes and obsessions of noted southern writers like Flannery O’Connor, Faulkner, Jesse Stuart, Agee and Robert Penn Warren, who are among the 60 others quoted in the book. Morris divides what he calls my own private album into two parts which deal with “ the burden” and “ the resonance” of his memory. The powerful resonance of his memory clearly and lucidly cap­ tivates the past, and with its “ burden,” Morris effectively expresses his belief that the present is the past. “ History is not events,” Morris ex­ plains, “ it is people acting and living their past in the present; the uniqueness of man, the pride in his gifts, his genius for flexibility and improvisation.” In a s e c tio n s im p ly e n t i t l e d “cem etaries,” Morris frequently visits . . . , cemetaries in which "all the people who settled and nurtured and then led this sta te ” were buried. The cem etary provides the scene where Morris first acknowledges the buried flesh as his and realizes how to love his past, yet be in misery with it. When Morris begins P art II at his residence in Bridgehampton, N.Y. he changes his tone and asks such ironic questions such as “ Who am I?’ and “ What am I doing here?” He tries driv­ to “ Mr. Bill ing back, as usual, Faulkner’s country,” yet encounters the strange feeling of being unable to go back: tuts kiuinniM m nro i i n ^ __ t __ * “But as I get older, this becomes more difficult. Houses, stre etc or ne rs, stretches of countryside bring back to me in a dreadful rush all the things that happened to me there; I see home in a dreamlike vision, seeing it the way it was a quarter a century ago. I remember too much.” Some photographs (they date from 1864 to 1975) blend well with the theme of memory, while I wonder why Glusker even considered others. The most effec­ tive photographs are the ones of an old fiddler, a hardened tenant family, a filthy moonshine still, a Confederate bat­ tle cam p, t ie c a m D . m archers and a defiant Huev P. Long. trium phant civil rig h ts t r i u m p h a n t c i v i l ri The album, however, lacks enough photos of moonshine stills, poor dirt farm ers, Huey Longs and civil rights m a r c h e r s . M o rris h a n d le s th e narrative and theme of memory well. His greatest triumph is his wonderful ability to make the reader understand that the past is never dead, that we can­ not get away from the past; it makes us what we are now. His moving narrative triumphs over a failure to select the ex­ act photographs which m irror the past and give us an “ interior tension,” perhaps an impossible task. Co-op New Home for Arts, Crafts The artist cooperative display house is The artist cooperative display house is south of West Fifth Street on Bowie Street. I f s the house with the batiks in the windows. “ Half the house will be on sale,” Whitehill said. “ If we made it, we ll sell coopera ti ve-sponsoi cooperative-sponsored shows, Each room in the house will contain the work of four artiste. Only one of the artists will be selling there at one time. This sy ste m , Whitehill explained, will leave the artists free three- fourths of the tim e to create. _ By JEF F HELTON Texan Staff Writer The house stands in the shadow of downtown, with c a rs of unaw are Austinites rushing by at their usual fran­ tic pace. Inside lies the beginning of something new to Austin: “Sacre Bleu. An artists’ cooperative, it consists largely of those seeking refuge from the increasingly unartistic atmosphere of the Drag The frame structure is beginning to achieve a look of attractive functionality in the hands of David Whitehill and the ll other m em berartists o the organization. Sacre Bleu should be finished by Wednesday. Its grand opening will be Saturday. “WE’RE TRYING to raise the arts and crafts out of the doldrums that peo­ ple get when they go down to the Drag," Whitehill said. “ Some of our old customers want arts and crafts,” he said of the original a r­ ticles which he and his associates pr- duce, “ but they have stopped coming because there are less arts and crafts on the Drag these days.” “ We are getting away from the negative aspects of the Drag, such as the beatings and the street-people image,” he added. W hitehill stre sse d th at the new cooperative is not a boycott of the Drag. “ The image of arts and crafts in Austin is being discounted by people who call themselves artists and craftsmen and who may have talent but aren t using it.” He cited those Drag vendors who work the current crafts fad for profits of about 300 to 400 per cent. non «>ranp ‘For example, a painter can scrape along on $25 to $30 a week selling his own originals or p rin ts of them . Then someone else can come in, selling prints w h ic h he h a s b o u g h t an d th e n mechanically transferred onto canvas, Whitehill said. “These same paintings can be seen in New York and San Fran­ cisco as well as on the Drag. ” He viewed these reproducers and the bead-stringers as he did some artists. THESE ARTISTS, he explained, in­ clude the toilet seat painters, flower driers, and others whose work is of questionable artistic value. As of Friday, the house of Sacre Bleu was still undergoing remodeling. Signs of lively artists were in evidence. Batik paintings hung in the windows, a metal-sculpted bird soared above the porch and silk-screen prints adorned the newly exposed hardwood walls. Whitehill said that more was to come, pointing out that the stained glass (including a chandelier), plants, leather articles, metal sculpture, clothes and pottery were not yet installed. Opening the door to a back room, he revealed several people stirring hot wax and seeing to other duties involved in producing the larg e flow er-shaped candles previously seen on the Drag. Looking into another room, Whitehill described the articles to be used for a barbeque, which will be run by the ex- m a itre d of a fash io n a b le local restaurant. He then pointed to where his own jewelry would be displayed and spoke of the artists’ interest in possible com­ missioned work and of future monthly Dust jacket of 'A Southern Album ' This Manicure Could Take Days King Kong is back, with Jossica Lang* p laying tho original Fay W ray role. She poses hero with a giant scale model of tho gorilla's hand included in the multimillion dollar production set for 1976 release. — U P I T#l«ph© to m ttr - i n i l T V T O V A VT I C Baker: Humor Most Fragile Art (Editor’s Note: Russell Baker, author of the thrice- weekly “Observer” column for The New York Times, recently shifted his base — after two decades in Washington — to New York, where he was interviewed by The Washington Star.) Question: How has humor changed over the years? Baker: Humor has become more outrageous in the last five to IO years, and there’s a lot of reasons for this. One is that American life has become so outrageous that to keep up with it, humor has had to take some very strange turns. But you can only carry outrageousness in anything to a certain point and then you begin to react against it. And I think we’re now begin­ ning to get to that reaction where we’re going to see a tendency to pull back from sharply outrageous humor toward gentler forms ... You’re beginning to hear more and more people say, “Well, let’s be positive about America” and when people start saying that, it means they’re not going to laugh much if you’re doing the President as a fool. So if you’re going to do the Presi­ dent now you’re going to have to start doing him in gentler ways. Is there any general way to define humor? Well, humor is anything that makes people feel better. It should make people laugh, at least internally. Humor is something that’s very peculiar to its own time. What’s funny these days wouldn’t have seemed very funny in 1930. What was funny in 1962 doesn’t seem at all very funny nowadays. If I go back and read some of the things that I wrote IO years ago, they don’t seem like humor at all. It’s the most fragile of the forms of writing. It wears out very quickly and often it has no per- tinenence outside of the locale that i f s written in ... Do you think humor is a good index for a person’s philosophy? -k u t-fm highlights - Monday 2 p.m. — “ Options.” “ The Second C ir c le : A le x ­ ander Solzhenitsyn and the Soviet Dissidents.” F irs t in a series of three program s on the Rus­ sian author. 8 p.m. — Fred Bourque's in Austin” fifth “ Jazz s h o w a n n i v e r s a r y features Chick Corea, D a v e B r u b e c k a n d others recorded in local performances, as well as spots by 47 X Its Own W eight and other local jazzmen. Tuesday 2 p.m. — in cond 'Options.” Se- a th r e e -p a r t s e rie s on A le x a n d e r Solzhenitsyn. 8 p.m. — “ Jazz in A ustin.” Continuing an niversary series. Wednesday 8 p.m. — “ Jazz in A ustin.” Thursday IO a.m. — Austin City Coun­ live, with cil M eeting: com m entary. 2 p.m. — C ity Council meeting, afternoon ses­ sion 8 p.m. — “ Jazz in A ustin.” Friday 2 p.m. — “ Options.” Third f i n a l p a r t of a n d Solzhenitsyn series. 8 p.m. — “ Jazz in A ustin.” fifth a n n iv e r­ E nding sary series. i I I i i I TONIGHT Jimmy Vaughn (md the Thunderbird* 9 Tues-Sat from Chicago Jimmy Dawkins Coming Next Week Albert King!! Ant one1s 6th and Braxos 478-0547 Advance ticket* available a t A nt one'* The Ad Dept presents Crazy Clio in 60 second quickies! Yes. Basically, hum or is a point of view, a perspective. It tends to look a t events th at everybody else looks at in a solemn, serious or bored way and see them from a com pletely different angle and see something th at’s funny or amusing in them. So that a person who is called a hum orist, a word th at I shrink from, incidentally, is someone who sees things from an un­ orthodox perspective. Why do you shrink from the word humorist? Well when you talk about humor, m ost peole think i f s a business of telling jokes. I ve never told a joke. I can t w rite a joke and I don’t do jokes. Most of m y interests are in very serious subjects out I try to approach them in a way that will in­ terest people without wringing my hands and saying, this is a very solemn subject. I try to approach solemn subjects with light techniques ... How is a humorist or satirist’s view of life different from another person’s view of life? Well, they tend to look a t things through good m irrors. I think m ost people tend to see life in a distorting m irror. And the hum orist tends to see things in a true m irror and h e’s always holding up a true m irror to people to show them w hat they and their world is really like. Most people see the world in very dis­ torted term s and they see the world as they want it to be. What would you do if you found out the world was going to end next Tuesday? I would do exactly what I ’m going to do anyhow. I ’ve w ritten on that a couple of tim es. Everybody knows the world is going to end. In fact, if not next Tuesday, very soon because the world does end for everybody much sooner than they expect but it doesn’t influence people’s behavior for the m ost part. They go on doing exactly what they would do ... What are some good subjects for humor? Well alm ost anything is a good subject for humor. You know, one of the problem s you have if you think of humor, you begin to think of it in m echanical term s and you think that the best sub­ ject m atter is stuff th at’s funny. And th a t’s actually the hardest stuff to w rite hum or a b o u t... So i t ’s really easier to m ake peo­ ple laugh about things that they think are serious than it is to m ake them laugh about things that are funny on the surface. But ... television is the graveyard of humor ... Why is television the graveyard of humor? Well, one of the m ost im portant elem ents in hum or for it to succeed is surprise. What is the classic laugh line? A guy in a high hat is walking down the stree t and he slips on a banana peel and takes a pratfall. Everybody busts up laughing. Why? Because dignity has suddenly fallen ... The com m ercial in- 2 FOR I MGHBALLS TONIGHT 2 HIGHBALLS FOR THE PRICE OF I Meet Your Friends at the Bucket and Dance to the Best Disco Music in Town NO COVER CHARGE TONIGHT 2 3 rd a n d P eoria o o rs O p en a t 4 p .m . 3 Hrs. Free Parking - Across from Tri-Towers terests of television m ake it impossible to do anything that is surprising or shocking, and therefore you can t have any effec- What do you see as some good posibilities for humor in the coming months? . . . The election of course. You know Ford is a terrible subject for humor. You can’t do him. People don’t have enough feeling for him. There’s a kind of liking for Ford. I t ’s this soft, nice guy image. And humor is basically mean ... So Ford is very dif­ ficult. I ’d like to see Ronald Reagan or Nelson Rockefeller or somebody like that. That would be great. Ford is going to be the death of Washington humor. I don’t see how Art Buchwald carries on with those guys. Are you looking forward to the upcoming elections. I look forward to them with abhorrence and loathing. This is an election I ’d like to skip. Apparently everybody in Washington says i f s going to be Hubert Humphrey against Gerald Ford. Can you imagine that? I suppose it m atters but I don’t think the presidency in Washington m atters as much as people in Washington think it does, in spite of W atergate. I find it very hard to get my juices flowing any m ore about presidential elec­ tions. Do you like politicians? I used to. I’m not so sure that I like them anym ore, at least as much as I used to. I used to think they were the m ost interesting people in the world because they were the last people who took risks. But lately it seem s to me that politicians have essentially become television perform ers and I feel about them very much the w a y I feel about anchorm en on local news shows. That is, they seem to me to be mostly hairdos and teeth now ... The con­ sequence is that so many politicians nowadays have ceased be­ ing interesting people . . . . Attention! Due to travel arrangements the JONI MITCHELL Concert N O W O N WEDNESDAY, , JAN. 28 A l l tickets for J a n . 2 7 w i l l b e h o n o r e d . Tickets: R a y m o n d ' s or Joske's C a l l 4 7 6 - 1 0 9 0 lf AUSTIN MUNICIPAL AUDITORIUM: $6/$5 WB The Chamber Music Celebration St. Paul Chamber Orchestra “O n e of the most im portant music groups in the c o u n try ”— New York Times SATURDAY/JANUARY 31 Hogg Auditorium/4:00 P.M. Admission free w ith O ptional Services Fee* Ticket d ra w in g begins T hursday, January 22 Hogg Box Off ice/10-6 w eekdays Sponsored by The Cultural Entertainment Committee of the Texas Union & The Department of Music Stay tuned fo r the Clio Awards! The first show­ ing o f award winning TV commercials o f 1975. Communications Auditorium, Jan. 26, 27, 1 28. 7 p.m. and 8:30 p.m. — 50 cents. The music s The Parrot. We ll put Sundays live all week at through Thursdays on your calendar with Bobby s jazz piano and Trio We ll move you to the beat of a different drum Fridays and Saturdays, when Peggy Lauren and Carnival change keys And we ll pull the whole week together Tuesdays and Wednesdays. With Peggy and Bobby together ■nni|wiii|n|iin| Tonight and Tues. SHAWN PHILLIPS will be recording an album both nights Wed. and Than. TOWER OF POWER and STEAM HEAT The Austin Symphony Bicentennial A ll-A m ericana Concert Circus Overture, Tach Lake and Giggling Rapids, Ellington Grand Canyon Suite, Grofe Concerto Elektra, Hym an Dick Hymen, Piano W orld p rem ie re o f an original com position celebrating the A m eric an B icentenn ial in Austin. Texas, com m issioned by the A u stin Sym phony O rchestra Society. Friday, January 3 0 M unicipal Auditorium 8 :0 0 p.m. T ic k e t s a le s begin Wednesday, January 21 Hogg Box Office 10-6 weekdays $.50 with Optional Services Fee Bus Schedule. Jester. Kinsolving. C o -O p 6 : 4 5 p m. Continuous Service Sponsored by The Cultural Entertainment Committee of the Texas Union |0~7O% o n EVERYTHING, EXCEPT CARPS. o f f a l l P o s t e r s , 3 0 % o f f F o u n d a t i o n P r e s s N f w A c h k a n S ta n d a rd B ib le s . t u x p a rk in g w it h p u rc h a s e in p o B t E G a r a g e . S ale dors not apply t o t e x t ­ b o o k s or s p e c ia l - ort>e m . PO EME MAU- 2oX\ GUADALUPE! Foreign Films The D epartm ent of French and Italian will show Rober­ to Rossellini’s “ Open City” a t 7 p.m. and Jean R enoir’s “ The Rules of the G am e” a t 9 p.m. Monday in Burdine Hall Auditorium. The film s are the first of the departm ent’s French- Italian film series. The works of Fellini and Godard will be showcased later in the series of Monday night double features. Tickets are $1 and $1.50 for nonstudents. Concerts S h a w n P h il l i p s w ill appear at Armadillo World H e ad q u arters a t 8 p.m . Monday and Tuesday. He and accom panist P e te r R o b in s o n w ill r e c o r d m aterial from the shows fo r a fo rth c o m in g live album. A d v a n ce tic k e ts a r e available a t the Armadillo box office for $4. Tower of Power will per­ fo r m W e d n e s d a y a n d Thursday a t the ’Dillo. Shawn Phillips television 6:30 p.m. 36 Adam-12 7 News Special 9 This Week 24 Bewitched 7 p.m. 9 Special of the Week 24 On the Rocks 36 M ovie: " D a y of the Jackal' 7 Rhoda 7:30 p.m. 7 Phyllis 8 p.m. 24 A F C -N F C Pro Bowl 9 Special of the Week 7 All in the F a m ily 8:30 p.m. 7 M aude 9 p.m. 7 CBS Reports: " In s id e the F B I' 9 Periodico 9:30 p.m. IO p.m. 9 Capital Eye 9 Lilias, Yoga and You 7 36 News 10:30 p.m. 36 Tonight Show 24 News 7 M ovie: " T h e Sandpiper" 9 ABC Captioned News Pottery Classes Individual Instruction All materials provided Morning, Afternoon, Evening Sessions & a t THE 5TH STREET STUDIO 119 E. 5th Call IO a.m. to 8 p.m. 477-04^5 A U S T IN PEOPLE P R O D U C T IO N S presents , DIZZY GILLESPIE SUNDAY, FEB. 8 2 Shows 7:30 and IO p.m. WINE BAR TICKETS: $ 5 . 5 0 / 5 4 . 5 0 A v a ila b le a t: In n e r S a n c tu m , Disc Records a t H ig h la n d M a ll, Driskill H o te l, P a ra m o u n t. 713 Congress $ 4 7 2 -5 4 1 2 ANGIE-MINGLE NITE: EU’?: W D DRINK?, W D GOMMNV... EVERY MONDAY, TUESDAY AND THURSDAY WE FEATURE 5 0 c DRINKS. N O COVER FOR LADIES AND COLLEGE STUDENTS (WITH ID'S). $ 1 .5 0 COVER FOR EVERYONE ELSE. LIVE SOUNDS BEGIN AT 9:1 PM WITH CONTINUOUS DISCO MUSIC DURING THE BREAKS. WHERE IT S HAPPENING UVE* Page 16 Monday, January 26, 1976 THE DAILY TEXAN Yaaaa l o o m s o ver A ghost of rugby players its p a s t former goal; it m ay have frightened aw ay poten­ tial rugby players — no one came to the Universi­ ty team's practice lost week. Psychology Market Remains Fairly Open I_________. . . i L n rr/x/vrl rr« * n ^ A because they need a good grade point average (GPA) to go to graduate school or law school, said David Brown, senior psy­ chology major. “ I out s t a r t e d in anthropology, but got out because, in my experience, it was too do gma t i c. The professor’s word was law. Psychology is not like that. You can react to what the professors say. ALTHOUGH the average GPA for psychology courses is about the same as that for other schools, there is a feel­ ing that psychology is easy, Burnham said. “For one thing, there are not many requirements. Also many psych courses are so large that only objective tests can be given. Many psy­ chology students start out with the idea of staying in psy­ chology, but get upset when they find that they need at least a master’s degree to get a job, and while the admission to a master’s degree program is not as competitive as some, competition for admittance to PhD degree program s is much stiffer,” Burnham said. “It’s harder to get into PhD level psychology courses than it is to enter medical school. You can’t do much with a BA in psychology, but with a m aster’s you can go into clinical work, social work and many other fields. And, while the University market is go­ ing down, the job market for graduates with PhDs in the applied fields remains good,” he said. D R. E L I Z A B E T H McDaniel, director of the C a U a a I A f O C \7 p l l H I H 0 V School of "Psychology a t S o u t h w e s t T e x a s S t a t e University, feels that enroll­ m e n t p s y c h o l o g y departments increased prior to 1971 because so many peo­ ple planned to go to graduate school. in ‘‘Now, several students have found that they need a doctorate to get a professional license, but that they can be certified as school psy­ chologists or can do clinical wo r k w i t h a m a s t e r ’s degree,” she said. However, she continued, persons with university positions are holding on to their jobs making academic positions in the psychology field few and far between. HUNTSVILLE (UPI) - The dark, varnished wooden seat that Texas once used as its ultimate punishment has been collecting dust for a decade now. Nicknamed “Old Sparky,” the electric chair at the Texas S t a t e P e n i t e n t i a r y a t Huntsville hasn’t been used since that warm summer night in 1964 when Joseph Johnson Sr. was executed with a Bible in his hand. For a time it looked like it might never be used again. The Supreme Court ruled in 1972 that the death penalty was unconstitutional as i n h u m a n a nd ‘‘c r u e l EGG ROLL STAND Chinese Food to Go 2717 Guadalupe at Hemphill — - — . a . — ______ By STEVE MCDANIEL “Psychology has remained the single most popular major on campus, with its closest competitors being English and the various subjects in the business school,” Dr. Clark Burnham, undergraduate ad­ viser in the Department of Psychology, said. But, the psychology market is not yet glutted; there don’t seem to be too many persons offering psychological ser­ vices. In fact, the run on the Department of Psychology was prior to 1971, Burnham said. “In fall, 1971, there were 1,480 undergraduates at the University majoring in the science of behavior and men­ ta l p ro c e s s e s , and th a t number dropped to 1,365 in fa ll, 1975. The num ber stabilized this spring,” he said. Lately the influx has switch­ ed to the business and com­ munication fields, he con­ tinued. Even so, by 1973, 5.5 per cent of to tal b ach e lo r’s degrees awarded were in psy­ chology, and that number is expected to rise to 6.4 per cent by 1981. S T U D E N T S t a k i n g m aster’s degrees in psy­ chology in 1962 made up 2 per cent of all master’s degrees awarded. That number is predicted to rise to only 2.1 per cent by 1981 but those taking PhDs in psychology will make up 6.3 per cent of the total by 1981. “ I feel that there are a lot more students in psychology than there are psychologists in practice, and a lot more than there will be, too. Psych graduates can go on to get master’s degrees in counseling, can go into social work, law en­ forcement, just about anything that deals with people. I’ve flot a few friends who went on to law school. A lot of people think i mportant is psychology Large Pepperoni Pizza delivered to UT area for $3.90 Each additional large pixxa $2.90 Delivery 476-4301 SPECIAL THIS WEEK 3 EGG ROLLS for $1 Open 7 days a week Vs THE CULTURAL ENTERTAINMENT COMMITTEE OF THE TEXAS UNION PRESENTS — Texan Staff Photo by Frank Tilloy Texas' 'Old Sparky' May See N e w Life in March L*- FoyL^ A I DE LA WOCHr Food, punishment.” But the Texas Legislature since that time has passed other capital punishment laws, and death row once again has residents. Thursday the Supreme Court accepted for review capital punishment cases from five states — in­ cluding Texas — and schedul­ ed March 30 arguments on the controversial issue. Texas’ “Old Sparky” was first used on Feb. 8,1924 — the year the state assumed from Texas counties the respon­ sibility of executing condemn­ ed men. Since that time 361 men — no women — have been executed. “ Without exception, any person who claimed to be a Christian and who witnessed an execution would certainly be a Christian when it was over. When a man prays by this chair, he’s certainly not pulling anybody’s leg.” Ct Lo bs. to C a m p u s * Q i j l h S t a r e r 0 5 N u e c e s Open bu t he wee hour* yleekdajjs UAM- 1AM SSS: I KSS®::: r n iii rn- ... -Irn ii:?;:;:; m m m r n m Be Choosy Choose Wendy’s Old Fashioned Hamburgers. They’re always made to order from 100% pure beef. And they’re never pre-cooked, never pre-wrapped. With them, you can choose rich, meaty Chili, crisp French Fries and Frostys so thick you have to eat them with a spoon. CHILI This coupon entitles you to 20C off Wendy's old-fashioned, rich meaty chili. Each coupon requires separate purchase. Offer expires Feb. I dt-2 FREE HAMBURGER You receive a free single ham­ burger with the purchase of two hamburgers of any size. Each coupon requires separate purchase. Offer expires Feb. I dt-2 OFF FRENCH FRIES You receive 15C off an order of french fries with the purchase of any size hamburger. Each coupon requires separate purchase. Offer expires Feb. I dt-2 15cOFF FROSTY You receive 15C off on a thick Frosty with the purchase of any size hamburger. Each coupon requires separate purchase Offer expires Feb. I dt-2 M A R C W U mmcEKV Saturday, January 31 Municipal Auditorium, 8:00 P.M. Ticket sales begin Thursday, January 22 Hogg Box Office, 10-6 weekdays $.50,1 .OO. 1.50 with Optional Services Fee General sales begin Thursday. January 29/S4.50,5.00.5.50 No chocks accepted Bus schedule: Jester. Klnsolving, Co-Op/6:45 P M Continuous Service CEC ID’» must be presented at door tor CEC Tickets No cameras or tape recorders OXJD F A S H I O N E D H U B O B B E B S Copyright ©1975 by Wendy’s International, Inc. All rights reserved. Marlin Luther King, Jr. Blvd. and Guadalupe M onday, January 26, 1976 THE DAILY TEXAN P age 17 P H O N E 4 7 1 - 5 8 4 4 M O N - T H R U F H I . i s O O - i s f O FURNISHED APARTMENTS ■ FURNISHED A P A R T M E N T S * FURNISHED APARTMENTS ROOMMATES UNFURN. APARTMENTS C L A S S IF IE D A D V E RT IS NG RAT ES 15 word m in im u m $ .12 Each word one tim e ................ S .ll Each word 2-4 t im e s .............. $ .09 Each word 5-9 tim e s .............. S .08 Each word IO or more times $ .90 Student rate each tim e ..S3.58 I col. x I inch one tim e S3 22 I col. x I inch 2-9 tim e s ......... I col. x I inch ten or m ore times$2.90 OEAOUNE SCHEDULE M o n d a y T e xan F r id a y .................. 2 :0 0 p.m . Tuesday T -x a n M o n d a y 1 1 :0 0 a .m . W e d n e sd a y Toxan T u e sd a y ... 1 1 :0 0 a .m . Thursday Texa n W e d n e s d a y .. 1 1 :0 0 a .m . 1 1 :0 0 a .m . Friday Texa n T h u rs d a y " In th e e v e n t of errors m ade in an a d v e rtis e m e n t, im m e d ia te notice m ust be give n as th e publishers are responsible for only O N E incorrect insertion. All claim s for later ad ju stm e n ts should be m ade not th a n 3 0 days a fte r publication.'' LOW S T U D E N T R ATES 15 word m in im u m each day ....J .90 E ach additional word each days .06 I col. x I inch each d a y $2.90 " U n c la ss ifie d s " I line 3 days ..Si.OO (P re p a id , No Refunds) S tu d e n ts m u s t show A u d it o r 's receipts and pay in advance in TSP Bldg. 3.200 (25th & W hitis) from 8 a.m . to 4 30 p.m . M onday through F rid a y . FOR SALE Motorcyde-For Sale 1975 H O N D A C B F 750ss both disc like new. Fast, brakes, dependable, beautiful. $1850. 441-6589. low m ileage, L A T E 1973 BMW-R~75/5 W in d ja m m e r ll. Leg shields, saddle bags, A M /F M radio. One ow ner. 858-4328, D ripping Springs a fter 7:00 w eek, a ll day weekend. H O N D A 500. E xcellent condition. F a ir ing, new headers and tires. E le c tric s tarte r Good m ile age 477-7549, 327-0306 Stereo-For Sale L E A R J E T A M /F M quad tape deck, in box. Was $269 sac $150 or?. 447-3378. PE 2038 auto m a tic turntable, dust cover, Shure M 9 1E D cartrid g e . Good condition. $75. 474-6090._______________________ ___ M C IN T O S H 2100 a m p lifier, Thorens- tu r n ta b le , D a lq u is t R a b c o -O rto fo n speakers. M a ra n tz 250 a m p lifie r. A fter 6, 345-7624. P A IR 886A A L T E C speakers, w ith two IO" woofers, large walnut cabinets. Only I month old, $210. For pair, perfect con­ dition. 478-2310.__________________ C L E A N R IC H SO U N D : ECI-1556 five- way speakers, 15" woofer. List $239 each, both for $240. 477-7802. TA S C A M S E R IE S 70- IV trac k , V a " tape recorder, 2 years old. Low head wear, good condition. $1,200. Sony T V - 854 - track, I V i" tape recorder, 2 yrs. old, new heads, excellen t condition. $1,000. Sony M X -16 m ix e r, 8 in-4. Good condition. $350 2 Advent 100A - Dolby B stereo noise reduction units. Good condition, $150. $125. 478-9294. M u si ca I - Fo r Sal e N E W G U IT A R S , steel and classical. All sizes. 443-6088 F E N D E L T E L E C A S T E R C u s to m . Shiler m achine heads. Wood finish. Like new L ist $455, take $300. 459-9651. U P R IG H T C R O W N Piano . B e a u tifu l dark wood. $375 or best offer. C all 474- 5629 a fte r 4 p.m .________ ______________ B U F F E T B -F la t C la rin e t. E x c e lle n t condition, padded outer case and hard shell case. M etronom e, plus m ore. Ask- ing $450 471-7669.______________________ Pets-For Sale 2 M O N T H M A L E part R etriever puppy. A ffe c tio n a te , healthy, has a ll shots, accessories F re e 458-4003 evenings. Homes-For Sale I I I M o b ile H om e. H a il T969 M A R K dented, but stru ctu rally sound. 3/1Va. Just recarpeted. $3200 478-9154.________ M O B IL E H O M E . 14x70, unfurnished^ 2 bedroom, C A /C H , refrig ., stove Set up, reedy to m ove into 5101 Johnny M orris Road Buy or rent. $145 plus u tilities, lot. 443-6830 B E A U T IF U L T R E E -C O V E R E D A C R E A G E TR A C TS Southwest tow ards Fredericksburg, ap­ prox. 30 m in. in­ lots of trees. teresting te rra in , views, Fine residential restrictions - no traile rs, etc. F ro m 2'/a to 5 acres, $1,750 per acre. Financed 10% down, 8% interest for IO years. C all M a ry Cullen at The Cullen Co. 442-7833, 288-2078 from U T Creeks, C H A R M IN G O L D E R C O T T A G E F irs t week on m ark e t The patina of floors give w e ll-c a re d -fo r hardwood to this m uch w a r m th and coziness delightful older home. Two bedrooms, I bath. Situated among H U G E oaks in a quiet neighborhood. $22,500. C all Curtis Jordan at The Cullen Co. for fu rth e r In­ form ation. 442-7833, 442-9323. Mi*c.-For Sale reservation N E L S O N 'S G IF T S . Established 1945 Indian Largest selection jew elry 4502 South Congress. 444-3814. Closed M ondays BOOK L O O K IN G ? No obligation search out-of-print books. A rja y Book Search. 263-5335 P R O F E S S O R 'S P A R A D IS E 60 acre pecan bottom, berm uda park Creeks. 18 acre hilltop. Bennett Associates. 474- 5451____________________ A U TO M O TIV E I FOR SALE _ 4 5 4 -6 8 2 7 75 Mercedes 450 SEL 300 D 75 Mercedes 280 S 75 Mercedes 230 75 Mercedes 74 Mercedes 450 SLC 450 SL 74 Mercedes 280 C 74 Mercedes 280 74 Mercedes M o s t cars listed above have some rem aining warranty CHAND jdfOTA; I N*rlhsi4« AMI Ult* Car D#*t 454-6827 ACT I 4 vacancies $130 plus E 453-0540 ACT ll 2 vacancies $130 plus E 452-0540 A CT I I I I vacancy $130 plus E 453-0540 A CT V 7 Efficiencies $125 plus E451-7181 ED P A D G E T T ________CORP.________ M A R K X X A P T S . P R E L E A S E FO R JA N . I 1 BR F urn. $160 2 BR F urn. $200 Shuttle 2 Blks 38th A Guadalupe 453-4039 L A P A Z A P T S . 1 B R -S U S 2 BR - $200 S H U T T L E I B L K . 454-0360 452-7498 F U R N IS H E D A P A R TM E N TS from $149 E fficiencies and 2 Bedroom, 2 Bath A ll Bills Paid No lease, sw im m ing pool recreation room A dult living, no pets. W A R R E N HOUSE 2439 Town Lake C ircle 442*4738 On shuttle bus AVALON APTS. Eft. Furn. $127 Walk to Shuttle Small Complex HOO E. 32nd 477-0010 477-0784 ______ ____________ FU R N -U N F U R N a p a rtm e n t C lean, n e a r c a m p u s , bus, g ra d u a te s and m a t u r e o n ly . 477-8636. M o r n in g s , evenings. C E N T U R Y S Q U A R E luxury efficiency. A ll electric w ith bills paid. W alk to c am ­ pus. Shuttle. 478-7167. F U R N IS H E D E F F IC IE N C Y . $125 A B P . Shuttle. C all 459-9931 or 451-8559. 410 W. ________ 37th, Apt. 102-B. 2222 A PA R TM ENTS I & 2 BR Furnished, DW, Dis, pool, shuttle bus, sm all frien d ­ ly co m p lex fro m $140 plus elec. C all or come by 2222 T O W N L A K E C IR C L E 444-2070 M A N A G E D BY H A R R IS O N P E A R S O N ASSO C IA TES HIDDEN CREEK 1220 E. 38'/2 St. Phone: 459-1361 All Bills Paid R E D U C E D Spring Semester Rates. Under new m anage­ m ent. Professionally m anag­ ed by S h in d le r /C u m m in s Prop. M n g t. Inc. KENRAY A P A R T M E N T S 2122 Hancock Drive N ext to A m e ric a n a T h eatre, walking dis­ tance to N orth Loop Shopping Center and Luby's. N ea r shuttle and Austin tran sit. Tw o bedroom flats, one and two baths. A va ila b le townhouse with patio, unfurn. 8. I turn. C A /C H , dishwasher, disposal, door to door garbage pickup, pool, m aid service if desired, w ashateria in com plex. See owners, A pt. 113 or call 451-4848 5 Blks fro m Campus CAMINO REAL 2810 Salado I and 2 BR apts, furnished. F ro m $197 and $257 ABP. F u lly equipped kitchen Cable T V Sw im m ing Pool P a rty room Laundry fa c ility Covered parking a vailable F u lltim e m aintenance service Professionally managed by Lincoln P roperty Co. 472-3816________ R I V E R S ID E D R IV E A R E A On the shuttle, beautifully decorated e f ­ fic ie n c y , I bedroom and 2 bedroom lu x­ u ry a p a rtm e n ts . E n jo y cab an a/p o o l a rea, outdoor B ar-B-Q and private club room. Rates from $154.50, all bills paid C all 444-7880 or come by anytim e fro m 9 a rn. - 9 p.m . daily. 2124 Burton at Oltorf. A R R A N G E M E N T T H E FURNISHED APARTMENTS APTS. PLANTATION SOUTH APARTMENTS • I & 2 bdr. • Peels • Furn. ar Unfwnt. * laundry Rooms Prices Start at $119 2200 Pleasant Valley Rd. 442-1298 472-4162 TH E CONSUL On Town Lake Two and three BR townhouses, A B P, a vailab le now All with dishwasher, dis­ posal, cen tral a ir and heat and cable. Pool and gam eroom , on shuttle bus route. $225 and up. Call 444-3411 or come by 1201 Tinnin Ford Road. Turn east on IH-35 on East R iverside D rive.________ FOR SALE Misc.-For Sale S O L ID D AR K W O OD Desk. F ile dra w e r, good condition. 459-8582. D IA M O N D S fo r Senior Rings. 1/4 for $150 3/16 for $125. E xcellent color. 474- 7 8 9 6 . ________________________ U N F IN IS H E D D ESK w ith chair, four draw ers. $30. 447-2136. Z E N IT H 18" color T V . A rtley sterling silver flute, w orth $450. W ill increase In value. M a ke offer. C rucionelll gu itar, $50. Helen, 471-3284 weekday afternoons L E A V IN G C O U N T R Y . Kingsize bed, included. Studio couch, dinette fra m e set. E xcellent shape. C all 452-0756. lenses, 2 O M E G A B22XL enlarger, 2 negative c arriers. G re a t condition. $160 Yashica TL-super, 50mm f/1 .4 lens case. Like new $180. 472-7490 a fte r 6 p.m . M IN O L T A SRT 102 c am era w ith c a rry - ing case and V iv ita r flash. Only 8 months old. $275. 474-7870 . ______________ _ I ’/a years old. Top R E F R IG E R A T O R . shape. 15 cubic feet. F irs t $135. Tom , 477- _____________ __ 1815, 474-5773-W. SOFA C H A IR , $40. D inette, 6 chairs, $75. Bookcase, $25 or m ake offer. 474-5061, 8- 5, ask for llda._______ _________________ COLOR TV , Sanyo m ake, Sears case, 9" screen, 18 months old, excellent condi- tlon. $250 . 447-8183._____________________ M A T E R IA L S . L a rg e , s m a ll, v a rie d f a b r ic s , m a k e c u s h io n s , q u ilt s , coverlets, bedspreads. Reasonable. 112 W. 32nd. 478-5178. 2 T R A L E IG H Grand P rix , barely used. P erfect condition. A ll accessories, car rack $125, best offer. Laurie, 472-3329 a fter 4:30 p.m., weekends. V A T E R B E D w ith e le v ate d , padded r a m e . Q u e e n s i z e . L i n e r a n d ccessories included. $60. 441-2144 a fte r ive. _________ 'A M A H A C LA SSIC LA G130A, unused. 125. SCM portable, m int, $125. N ice tw in prings m attress, $20. 472-2023. _____________ A N T IQ U E S . Rolltop desks, secretary, round oak and cherry, clawfoot tables, Bentwood chairs. Sandy's, 506 Walsh. S R -50 ^ "C A L C U L A T O R ~ One sem ester old; battery charger included. $70. Call a fter 5 p.m. weekdays, 478-0782. K O N IC A S-2 A utom atic 35mm cam e ra, $75 36w RMS E lectro Voice am p, $55. Call a fte r 2:30 p.m ., 8 3 7 - 6 4 5 7 ._______ FOR S A LE . B eautiful P eru vian rug, soft A lpaca fu r, 5'10" by 4'4". $150 or offer. 452-0756. __________________ Indian A N A B L E P S -A N A B L E P S has received an additional shipment of ivory. Tibetan a rt A ritual S. item s. Tibetan block prints at $5.00 and $7.50. T ib e ta n turquoise, c o ral, and jew elry. Scrinshaw, Columbian am b er w all hangings A anything else we deem superb. Plus a large group of our Pre- Colum bian bead necklaces 40% off 2222 G uadalupe, above the Tape Shop on the Drag Don't cross the H im alayas, just come up our stairs. 477-7115. A U TO M O TIVE FOR SALE Auto-For Sale T9657 m P A L A SS. C le a n , e x c e lle n t c o n d i­ tion, one o w n e r. D o n 't m iss. E x c e p tio n a l c a r. $750 926-7391 e v e n in g s . __ 1969 M E R C U R Y M o n t e r r e y N e w p a in t, tire s . PS, P B , A T , ra d io , h e a te r, A C . Stan, 451-2027, 442-1111.__________________ '67 T R A N S P O R T A T IO N V W . No b e a u ty but good ru n n in g . $595. 385-0741. 3005 B a s tro p H w y . ____________________ '69 T O Y O T A . $1100. 1900 cc's, new tire s , new p a in t. 4 4 3 - 2 9 3 8 . ___________________ IM P A L A . A u to m a tic , A C . H e a t, 1966 t a p e d e c k . R e c e n t e n g i n e i m ­ p ro v e m e n ts . Good c o n d itio n . C a ll 443- 8982 ______________________________ '72 H O N D A 600 coupe. Good co n d itio n , r a d ia ls , A M ra d io , 40 m p g . $1,100. C a ll 447-4962 a f te r 5:30._______________________ '6 8 ~ C H E V Y B IS C A Y N E . A C , PS, P B , r a d io , r e b u ilt s m a ll V -8. $925 o r best o ffe r. 476-1728 b e fo re noon o r a f te r 10:00 p .m . ______________________ _____________ 1948 C H E V R O L E T '/a-ton, 4 speed, 5 w irv dow, 216, c le a n , runs e x c e lle n tly . $400, o ffe r. 454-1159. _________________ _______ ll, fu lly loaded, 20,000 1975_ M U S T A N G m ile s , lik e n ew . 2101 B u rto n D r ., No. I OU. F ir s t $2,500.________________________ 1974~280Z 4500 m ile s 4 speed, AC , FAA, etc. M in t . $6450 or best o ffe r. 442-5017. 1973 T O Y O T A C O R O L L A 1600 S p o rt top, ra d io , e x ­ Coupe AC , A T , v in y l __ c e lle n t co n d itio n . 836-5357. 6 8 D O D G E Vt ton p ic k u p . S la n t 6, 4 sp. 476-6635. _________________ M A Z D A 1972 R X -2 . R o ta r y e n g in e E x ­ c e lle n t ru n n in g co n d itio n . E n g in e u n d e r w a r r a n ty . C a ll 472-1246 a fte r 5 p .m . (P o rs c h e en g in e ) 13,00 7 < r V W 412. m ile s . B e a u tifu l co n d itio n . G old , 4 door, AC , A T , s tereo . 447-3043________________ 1974 J E N S E N - H E A L Y . A C , A M / F M , ro llb a r , low m ile a g e , p ric e d to sell. 447- 4397, 441-5 8 2 9 ._______________ 1970 P L Y M O U T H F u r y 111. 4 d r, A C , PS, PB , e x c e lle n t co n d itio n . $950 . 452-3195. 8220 R e s e a rc h B lv d . N o. 242. I I I I TWO BLOCKS TO CAMPUS FROM $160 ALL a llis PAID Efficiency* a n d d o u b t* e ffic ie n t**, fu ll kitchen*, CH-CA, carpeting, la rg e w a lk -in , closet*, o rien tal furnishings, study roam , peaceful! courtyard w ith pool. O n ly steps to shopping. 4 0 5 I . 31st. 4 7 2 -2 1 4 7 , 4 7 2 -4 1 6 2 . Barry G illin g w a te r Ce. I I I I I I I I We’ll find you an apartment free. FURNISHED APARTMENTS Efficiencies $ 1 3 0 p lu s H e e t r ic it y H o a r e a m p u i a n d ih u t t lo , convenient ta ito r o g o , a n d p o o l. 4 0 7 Mf. d o w n t o w n , 3 t t h . 4 5 3 / 9 6 3 , 4 7 4 -4 1 6 2 . Bo n y G illin g w ater i m a w p . Selector. Inc*. n . O ffice* throughout Texas Open 7 dave a week 3507 Interregional 474-6357 F R E E S E R V I C E HABITAT HUNTERS is a FREE apartm ent finder$ $ervice specializing in complexe$ around campus & along shuttle^ bus DOBIE MALL 8-A LOWER LEVEL N E E D A G R E A T PLACE TO L IV E ? BLACKSTONE APA R TM E N TS Share a large apa rtm e n t at S69.50/m o. furnished, a il bills paid. M a id service once a week B ring your own room m ate or we w ill m atch you with a com patible one This is economy and convenience at its best Only 200 yards from U T c a m ­ pus. 2910 Red R iver 476-5631 A P A R A G O N P R O P E R T Y FREE SER VIC E PA R K IN G TR A NSPO RTATIO N HABITAT HUNTERS A free apt. locator service specializing in com plexes with access to shuttle E fficiencies, I Bedrooms, 2 Bedrooms, 3 Bedrooms Dobie M a ll Suite SA 474-1532 E N F IE L D ROAD Quiet complexes on shuttle 1717 Enfield Large I BR studio, 2 twins $164 plus E 478-9767 327-0064 2505 Enfield I BR laundry, pool, courtyard A B P $159 50 478-2775 BALCONIES WINDOWS TREES Brand new I bedroom apartm ents under construction a t 4205 Speedway. Leasing fo r spring sem ester. P rofessionally decorated, frost-free refrig era to r, self­ cleaning oven, "no w ax" floor vinyl, lux­ urious carpet, w allpaper, rough cedar accent walls, m arble lavatories, wood in d iv id u a l w a te r heaters, fu rn itu re , tilings. No pets. vaulted ceilings. N o p £ ts , 478-/317 S P R IN G L E A S IN G E F F IC IE N C IE S U T and city bus route HANCOCK III APTS 4100 Ave. A, apt. 106 459-9279_________ CAMERON A P A R T M E N T S C O M F O R T A B L E L IK E O LD SHOES la rg e (2 ) A N D L E V IS P L U S : carpeted (3) U T shuttle bus (4) city bus line (5) 3 m ajo r shopping centers (6) flexible lease (7 ) even pets and children a re ok. W hat m ore can you ask for? I in touch w ith b d rm , 2 b d rm G e t m anager at 1200 E 52nd St., Apt. 102-A. 453-6239 ( I ) Page 18 Monday, January 26, 1976 THE DAILY TEXAN VILLA ORLEANS 206 West 38th St. I or 2 BR - Fu rn . L arge Pool, A ll Bills Paid M anaged by owner 459-9927 452-3314 453-4545 H A L L M A R K A P T S . 708 W. 34th $145.00 454-8239 E F F IC IE N C Y . $110, a ll bills paid. W alk to UT No pets. M a id service. 306 East 30th. 472-5134. _ E F F IC IE N C Y , $125 plus E. Carpet, pan­ el, pool. On shuttle. 46th and Ave. A. 454- ______________ 8903. 1-1. $145 PLU S E. Laundry, T V cable, clean. Parco P laza, 711 VV. 32nd. 453- _____________ 4991. W A LK TO U T. Rooms $90 A BP, efts. I BR $150 A B P . Campus SUO A BP, Colony, 300 E. 30th. 476-1700.___________ L U X U R IO U S O N E Bedrooms and e f­ ficiencies. N ea r U T . Sm all com plex. 2907 West Avenue. 474-1712, 476-3467.________ 2 BLOCKS TO U T. N ice one bedroom a p a rtm e n t. Shag c a rp e t, AC, pool. $137.50. W ater and gas paid. 474-5385, 258-3385, 258-5555 S P A C IO U S , C O N V E N IE N T E fflc le n - cies. D W ., d isp o s al, C A /C H , shag carpeting, laundry fa cilities on city and shuttle bus. W afer, gas, garbage and cable T V paid. 46th and A irport. 459-1045 or if no answer, 454-3161.______________ ____________ Q U IE T A R E A near cam pus. I BR, $185. 911 Blanco. 474-2555.___________________ TW O A N D O N E Bedroom apts. Close shuttle. Sao Paulo, 1218 Baylor. $190, $ 149 SO 476-4999, 477-8209. ____________ 1 B E D R O O M I bath w ith fireplace, on shuttle route. Close to campus. $160 plus e le c tricity. 475-3735 day, 451-6122 a fter six.________ ____________ 2 O N E B E D R O O M apartm ents. $130 plus electricity. One room $60 plus bills. W alk to c am p us, shuttle bus 477-6059 I _ E F F IC IE N C Y , s m a ll com plex near campus and shuttle. C A /C H , storage, laundry, cable, student m anager. Gas heat and stove paid. $125 plus ele c tricity. 454-9108 . 305 West 35th. ____________ L U X U R Y 4 bedroom, 15 m in. campus. RC and SR shuttle. Shag carpet, cable. 478-7593 anytim e._______________ M U S T S U B L E T large 2 b r/2 ba apt. 4 blocks fro m cam pus $290 A B P 474-8686, 474-7377 P R IV A T E E F F IC IE N C Y . R efrip erator, San hot plate, $85. B ills paid. G abriel. 452-5259. W IL L SUB L E T contract for spring. Good location close to w e shuttle stop. IO minutes to cam pus. C all Raymond, 474- 1068 2 B R ” f u R N IS H E D A partm ent. V e ry close to cam pus. $225 A B P Call 477-1600 between 5-6 p.m . _____________________ fu rn ish ed y ja r tm e n t . r B E D R O O M Close to cam pus $135 plus E . Washer, dryer, pool C all 477-1600 between 5-6 ____________ ___________________ p.m . M U S T S U B L E A S E furnished I bedroom a partm ent $115 plus e lectric. Call 458- 1058.___________________________________ PO N C E D E L E O N A P TS . N ear campus I BR A B P A ll luxuries. Furnished. 474- 1768, 472 8553, 475-0334 f B E D R O O M a p a rtm e n t I block north of campus. A va ila b le im m ed ia te ly ! $137 SO plus electricity Please call 471-3062 or 478-8021 (a fte r 5). N IC E I B E D R O O M Only $155 plus E . Some rent free N ea r shuttle. 620 S. 1st. Oak Knoll. 444-1 2 6 9 .__ ________________ C E D A R R ID G E A partm ents. O ff North L a m a r. Close to H ighland M a ll. Bike to I bedroom furnished $145 plus shuttle E New fu rn itu re, quiet, swim m ing pool. No children, pets C all 459-7605 m o r­ nings; a fter 1:00, 454-3426. UNFURNISHED HOUSES 2-1 U N F U R N IS H E D H OUSE Kitchen appliances, fenced yard . 5110 U llrich, _________ $185. A fter 5, 454-1371. N IC E /B E D R O O M house In U T a rea. $185. Good condition. 452-2134 before 4 p .m ._________ ______________ __________ 3 /1 W C A /C H . $260. G arage, dishwasher, range, disposal, drapes, huge lot, trees. $150 deposit. 451-5137, 454-9482. W ANTED V O L U N T E E R S N E E D E D for disserta­ tion study on m an tra m editation and t r a i n in g . d e e p m u s c le r e la x a t io n Volunteers must not be currently p ra c ­ ticing m editation. Study requires 6 one- hour trainin g sessions 451-6916 a fte r ­ noons or evenings. ______________ dead or cars, 3846 a live. C all G ilbert, W E B U Y O L D IT E M S : pocket knives, railro a d , spurs, beer cans, m ilita ry , tokens, toys, copper, dolls, jew elry. 459- 8335 oreign I, 444-3 LOOKING FOR N EW W R IT E R S N ational M a rk e ts N O V E L S -T V -M O V IE SCRIPTS P L A Y S No Poetry nor Short Fiction C ritiqu es-M arketin g-E diting Representation 8. Copywriting R E A D IN G F E E S Novels $50 T V -M o vle Scripts-Plays $35 DO NOT S E N D M A T E R IA L W IT H O U T R E T U R N S T A M P E D E N V E L O P E A S S O C IA T E D T A L E N T S Suite 215, 1720 Wooten P a rk D r. Austin, Texas 78758 512-459-5293 0 2 - 4 5 4 L IB E R A L H O U S E M A T E wanted share I. Own bedroom with fireplace. with Large yard, secluded. $87.50. Danny, . ______________ 3 4 STU D IO U S F E M A L E needed share nice IF shuttle. P r e fe r non-sm oker. apt. A vailable now. One B R . $82.50 plus Vt electricity. 3100 Speedway, No. 102. Call 474-1345, D ana. ________________ F E M A L E R O O M M A T E needed fo r three bedroom house near U T . $60 monthly plus VS b lllt. 477-2004._________ tw o R O O M M A T E N E E D E D bedroom, two bath apa rtm e n t. On shut­ tle, C A /C H , own room. $112.50. 453-3016, _________ Kenny. R O O M M A T E N E E D E D to s h a re 2 b edroo m a p a r tm e n t. A B P $112.50. David, 447-3567. Shuttle._______________ F E M A L E R O O M M A T E needed to share two bedroom a p a rtm e n t near campus. $72. C all Ellen, 477-6449._______________ f o r IF . p a rk, la r g e q u ie t house. N O R T H . S h a re Woodworking shop, garden. $100 plus bills. Jeff, 453-1985._______________ _ M A L E R O O M M A T E wanted to share 2 bedroom apt. w ith 2 guys. R lv erp a rk . Shuttle, $82. 443-8984.__________________ L IB E R A L M A L E room m ate needed for I bedroom apt. off Riverside. Shuttle, $90/month. A B P . 443-7156._____________ R O O M M A T E W A N T E D . 2 bedroom , near Highland M a ll and shuttle. $77.50 plus E . I have every th Ina f or apartm ent. 928-3511 or com e by 803 Tirado, No. 206. E xtey. __________ F E M A L E . Share beautiful brown shag tennis one bedroom a p t.! courts near! $80. 451-2276._____________ W O M A N H O U S E M A T E . Own room . Quiet, $75. F re eze r, washer. M ust be graduate student. M a ry , a fter 5:00 p.m. 476-6049, 452-7488.______________________ F E M A L E R O O M M A T E wanted. Shared bedroom, 2 bath apt. A B P $125. Fu r- n I shed 454-2948 (L a u r a ).______________ Q U IE T F E M A L E needed to share 2 BR ♦ourplex 2 blocks fro m cam pus; huge bedrooms, quaint. $120 plus Mi electrlci- ty. 478-2863, 477-3900, 452-9074.__________ M A L E R O O M M A T E . S80/month plus Mi ele c tricity. E R shuttle. C all 477-4984 _____________________ atter five. n ¥ e d TR O O M M A T E to share 2 bedroom apa rtm e n t near cam pus. $112.50 ABP. G abriel, 472-4620 _____________ F E M A L E R O O M M A T E share beautiful, spacious, a p a rtm e n t. N ea r cam pus. $72.50 plus bills. B etty, 478-2890._______ N E E D F E M A L E F r O O M M A T E S . Quiet, to share a 2 neat and non-smoking, bedroom stuC‘ 3- R iverside. 447-7570.__ F E M A L E R C O M M A T E ^ T o u rth person for two bedroom, two bathroom a p a rt­ m ent. N on-sm oker p re fe rre d . $57.25 A B P 443-3512._______________ _________ f ^ M A U F R O O M M A T E wanted, own IF shuttle $87.50, Debbie, 451- room, 8920_ __ F E M A L E W A N T E D to share duplex on creek Own bedroom Furnished $87.50 plus Vt elec tric ity . 454-6051. ______ fe m a le share N E E D R E S P O N S IB L E nice one bedroom a partm ent. $82.50 plus W e le c tricity. IF shuttle. 3100 Speedway. Dana, 474-1345, 474 1800 Keep trying F E M A L E R O O M M A T E . 2/2, Riverside, SR $69/month All bills paid. Accept cat. Debbie, 443-9289 __ M A L E , own room house $d0/monthly plus '/J bills 477^3966 In three bedroom in T a r r y t o w n . 2 blocks E R . L IB E R A L R E S P O N S IB L E F a m a la IF needed to share two bedroom house shuttle. Jr., Sr., grad, student preferred. $80 plus half bills. 451-6395. D E S P E R A T E L Y need fem ale to share 3 bedroom house W alk to campus. $77.50 2842 P earl 476293a. H O U S E M A T E W A N T E D S e rio u s , clean, responsible upperclassm an/grad P riv a te room. No pets $25 deposit, $92/month, share bills. Walk, bike, shut­ tle U T Kyle. 477-2961. ROOMS T E X A N DORM Doubles $199 Singles $359 per semester 1905 Nueces. D a lly m aid service, central a ir. R efrig erators, hot plates allowed P arking a v a ila b le Two blocks from campus. Co-ed. Resident m anagers. 477- 1760. F U R N IS H E D , a ll bills paid Quiet, walk to U T. M a le or fem ale M aid service, OK hotplate or re frig . 306 East 30th 472^5134^ furnished rooms. T H E B R O W N L E E , $99 50 A BP 3 m onth lease C A /C M , walk to school 2502 Nueces 478-1704. lf no answer, 454-3857. _________ F U R N IS H E D ROOM S and efficiencies W h itis. B* 2 blocks fro m U T . $85/up 477-7558, _ F U R N IS H E D ROOM S within walking distance to cam pus C A /C H , carpet, kitchen privileges $47.50 double, $85 ____ single 477-9388 2710 Nueces In C l I a N~ C O M F O R T A B L E Room la r g e o ld -fa s h io n e d house, k itc h e n privileges $6 m onthly. 1700 Salina (off E . M L K B lv d .) M rs. Rollins. N E E D F E M A L E student to take over spring contract at Contessa West. Call 472-2442 for Info. ~pr iv A f E B r o o m s . 2 blocks campus, C A /C H , kitchen, laundry, m aid, spring lease. 2411 R io G rande, 476-2551_______ L A R G E E F F IC IE N C Y room. Entrance, r e f r i g e r a t o r , p a r k in g , n e a r b a th , Highland M a ll. U tilitie s. 452-9172. ____ R O O M F O R F E M A L E . K it c h e n , bathroom privileges $75 A BP M S shut­ tle 478-7650 a fte r 5. V irg in ia . UNFURNISHED DUPLEXES 2 BR, C A /C H , built-in appliances, new carpet, 1185/ mo., N ortheast location. __________________ 454-1532, 837-6074. N O R T H W E S T 2-1, a ll conveniences, fenced yard. Pets O K . 20 m inutes to campus. $190 deposit. ^53-5506._________ N E W L Y D E C O R A T E D , one bedroom ,’ SI45, w ater paid. Stove, fridge, oarage, Northwest, no pets. 451-8249 a .m ., 452- 8575 p.m. W ANTED W ANTED Seniors - Grad Students Business-Engineering-Nursing-Liberal Arts Representatives will be on cam­ pus Monday, Feb. 2 to talk with you about opportunities with the Peace Corps overseas and with Vista in the U.S. Starting in May and June. Sign-up Now for an Interview Pick up interview packet at these locations: Busine* s-Peace Corps Business Placement Office Mrs. Groan liberal Arts-Viste A-115 Jester Hall Debbie Nesbitt Nursing-Peoce Cerps/Vlste 2.102K Nursing School Aloma Wafter Engineering-Peoce Carps Engineering Plncamant Office Mrs. Caffoy 5 p.m . to 6 p.m . 472-8936 Dobie M a ll Great grandpappy trees surrounds this huge I bedroom apt. Wood paneling and equipped kitchen and dining room. M a n y cabinets. W alk -in closet, cedar porch large yard. Garden space. overlooks $135 • $160. OW EN CIRCLE Steve, 451-6832 Come listen to the b ird !. R I V E R S ID E D R I V E A R E A On the shuttle, beautifu lly decorated e f­ ficiency, I bedroom and 2 bedroom lux­ u ry a p a rtm e n ts . E n jo y c ab a n a /p o o l area, outdoor B ar-B -Q and p rivate club room. Rates fro m $154.50, a ll bills paid. Call 444-7880 or come by anytim e from 9am • 9pm da lly. 2124 Burton a t O ltorf T H E A R R A N G E M E N T A PTS . 1-1 S U O P LU S E . Laundry, T V cable, clean. Parco P la za , 711 W. 32nd. 453- 4 9 9 1 .____________________ S P A C IO U S , C O N V E N IE N T E ffic ie n ­ cies. D .W ., d is p o s a l, C A /C H , shag carpeting, laundry fa cilities on city and shuttle bus. W a te r, gas, garbage and cable T V paid. 46th and A irport. 459-1045 or lf no answer 454-3161._______________ N E AR U T. One bedroom duplex, $110. E ffic ie n c y $95 plus e le c tric ity . See m an ag e r, 908 W . 29th, g a rag e apt. B arham Properties, 926-9365.__________ I B E D R O O M A P A R T M E N T . Sublet February-A ugust. N ear campus. 451- 5389. HELP WANTED G A LLER IA NEEDS Table service, bus and u tility people A pply at No I Jefferson Square A R E YOU H A N D Y W IT H TOOLS? M inor carp e n try and repairs, painting, w iring, general flx-lt. P a rt tim e to suit your schedule Phone M r . Lowe a t 457- 5510 R EA L ESTATE C A R EER lic e n s e d o r u n lic e n s e d associates W e n e e d We provide: Training school for unlicensed Proven successful plan N ational & local refe rral program O ver 300 listings to work on P aid T V A newspaper advertising Flex ib le work hours R ealtor and M LS affiliation C all M r. Rost for In terview 837-4600 Red Carpet M O D E L S W A N T E D HAIR N ATURALLY 453-8270, 454-5654, 443-1578 N E E D E D Experienced dance Instruc­ tors for adult m ovem ent classes 6-7 p m. Good pay Sandy, 454 2837 In e x ­ 2 B E D R O O M A P A R T M E N T l i g h t c h a n g e f o r m a n a g e m e n t , maintenance. M a rrie d graduate couple prefer red _183 N 454-0471 W O R K IN G W O M A N seeks sitter for 2 children Occasional overnight work. Call 478-6987 a fte r 5pm ROOM A B O A R D A A p a rtm e n t for babysitter for 2 school age children at fo r n ig h t . A ls o n t e d b a b y s it t e r weekends Good salary paid C ell 474- 2155 A fter 5, 477-2607 W A N T E D H O N E S T, dependable A ex­ perienced person for housecleaning in a northwest Austin home. Must have own transportation and references. Need a m inim um of 12 hours/week. $2 50/hour, 45 M 067_______________________________ E X C E L L E N T O P P O R T U N IT Y tor pert tim e work. No experience required. Must have neat, a ttra c tiv e appearance. The E xecu tive Spa 444-9001. C ell a fter 12 noon. N E E D E D IM M E D IA T E L Y . Person tor m essenger-type duties from 8 30 - 3 OO. Must be relia b le A have dependable t r a n s p o r t a t i o n H o u r ly p lu s c a r allowance. C ell M r. Kish. 476-2633. R E L IA B L E P E R S O N for child c are M F or M -T h , 2:30 - 5 00 Own car or shuttle $4 50/day. 476-2760 N E E D H A R D -W O R K IN G person to help w ith g a r d e n on S a tu r d a y -S u n d e y . 12/ hour. Lake T ra v is a rea. 266-1584 after six.____________________________________ P A R T T IM E W O R K 3 evenings end Saturday S3 75 per hour. Call appt 452- 2758. D A N C E R S N E E D E D to work a t LMI Abners, 4412 N . L a m ar 451-3285, 453- 9463_ __________________________ G E N E R A L R E S T A U R A N T Help. No ex­ perience necessary. M ust be w illing A able to train. Good working conditions. Call M iss Kay, 474-6033. _________ ROOM AND BOARD LOW COST L IV IN G , genuine respon­ s ib ility and d e cision -m akin g p o w e rl Room and board from $520/semester. inter Co-Op Council, 510 West 23rd, 476- 1957._________ C A S T IL IA N . Q uiet co ed floor. T V , m aid service. W ill work out deal. Call Joe, 443- 9648 afternoons^ SH A R E W O RK , F UN a t H a Iv con Co-Op. Fem ale vacancy. $107 • $122. V is it 1910 Rio G ra n de. 478-5043 W O M E N R O O M A BO A RD . $130. N e x fto campus Seneca G raduate Women Co- Qp. 477-0225, 2309 Nueces._____________ D O B IE S IN G L E ROOM Third floor by the pool P riv a te bathroom. V ery cheap. 477-4517 a fter 5 p.m. __ $130 MONTH Room & Board Full T im e Cook F ree Washer & Dryer TLOK CO-OP 1903 Rio Grande 478-0450 FURNISHED DUPLEXES T R A V IS H E IG H T S O n e bedroom. $135, near park, c re e k . 1411 Newnlng. 447* 5080. _________________ A L L OR P A R T of ground floor with utilities, with or without furniture. M lm . $150 Close lo U T by shuttle bus. Nights, 454-9434. TYPING Ju st N o rth of 27th a t G u a d a lu p e 2707 H e m p h ill P a r k M B A , T Y P IN G , P R IN T I N G , B I N D IN G T H E C O M P L E T E P R O F E S S IO N A L F U L L T IM E T Y P IN G SERVICE 472-3210 and 472-7677 T H E S E S , D IS S E R T A T IO N S & P R O F E S S IO N A L R E P O R T S IO years typing experience, knowledge of graduate SCHC..b o o l requirem ents. Call for appointm ent a fte r 4 836-2055 ask for Lee ROY W. HOLLEY T Y P IN G & T Y P E S E T T IN G C O P Y IN G & P R IN T IN G B IN D IN G 1401 M ohle D r. 476-3018 TYPING SERVICE lepor Theses, Letters All U niversity end business work Lest M in u te Service Open 9*8 M on-Th A 9-5 F ri-S a t Just N orth of 27th at G uadalupe 2707 H em ph ill P ark tywjJiA Ann Yes, we do type Freshm an themes. 472-3210 and 472-7677 R E P O R T S , T H E S E S : D is se rta tio n s, books typed a c c u ra te ly , rea s o n ab ly . Printing, binding. O ff 24th Street M rs Bodour, 47f-8~ 13. _______________ t im e V I R G I nT a 'S C H N E ID E R Typing Ser­ vice G raduate end undergraduate ty p ­ ing, printing, binding. ISIS Koenig Lane. ____________________________ 459-7205 T Y P IN G A L L P A P E R S . E xperienced f u ll t y p is t . A c c u r a te . n e a r Reasonable rates Bobble Burden, 41J-B East 30th 477-8376 _______________ e x p e r i e n c e d A N D FA S T Typist, Theses, d is s e rta tio n s , p ro fe s s io n a l reports, law, etc P rinting, binding B a r­ _______________ bara Tullos 453-5124 C A LL M E for fast, accurate typing of te rm theses, dissertations, reports, papers Linda Woodland, 444-9158 M A B Y L S M A LLW O O D T Y P IN G Lest m in u te , o v e rn ig h t a v a ila b le T e r m letters. theses, dissertations, p a p e r s , M aster Charge. B en kA m erlcerd 192- 0727.________ ___________________________ F R A N C E S WOODS Typing Service E x ­ perienced Lew , theses, dissertations, m anuscripts. A ll work guaranteed P rin ­ __________ ____ ting, binding 453-6090 F A S T A C C U R A T E T Y P IN G D isser­ ta tio n s , m a n u s c rip ts B usiness e x ­ perience IB M c o rre c tin g S etec trlc . Located South C all 441-1223.__________ theses, d is s e rta tio n s , w Tl l T Y P E reports Cell 441-1939 Just North of 27th at Guadalupe 2707 H em phill P erk A n n ^ lu y R E S U M E S with or without pictures 2 D ay Service 472 3210 ana 472 7677 SERVICES Ballet, Modern Jazz, & Ladies Exercise Classes jazz, Enroll now for professional Instruction ladies exercise classes in ballet, and aerobic dancing. L im ited class size Convenient location, 2201 W 1st. C all 453-8232 Jane Groos B allet Studio TA T T O O S B Y " D IA M O N D G L E N N I L L U S T R A T I O N S , L T O . " S K IN fifteen colors, Thousands of designs, In c u s to m w o rk a n d s p e c ia liz in g coverups. Open seven days, noon till midnight, end by appointm ent. E nfield Center, 12th and L a m e r. 477-0235. 20% ID . D e r - off m agrephic artists: Olam ond Glenn end Cajun Buzz to U T stu d e n ts w ith ON T H E ROAD OR IN Y O U R D R IV E W A Y W IL L NOT R IP YOU OFF Mobile Car Repair We charge 70% of garage ra te by com ing to you. Don't tow it — Call us. 443-2719 E X C E L L E N T all day care for your child Degree teachers. Congregational Child D evelopm ent Center. 408 W. 23rd. Visitors welcom e. 472-2370, 454-3962.___ A L L B R E E D show and pet grooming by Rick and G ayle. Longhair breeds our specialty. Groom ing lessons available. Pick up and delivery In South Austin. Cell 478-4304 for appointm ent. B E G I N N E R S G U I T A R L e s s o n s . c r e a t i v i t y . E m p h a s i s on A co ustical/E lectric. D ave Sullivan, 418- A Thompson Lane, A ustin, 78742.______ l l 0 / hOUr . R epa I r s, P IA N O T U N I NG, guaranteed work, references. 474-1779 TR U C K L E T T E R IN G , signs A design by T o m , d o n e p r o f e s s i o n a l l y b u t reasonable. C a lf for f r t e estim ates. 443- 2719._____________________ ___ __________ teaching m ethods. P R O F E SS I ON A L Violin, gu itar. Ages 7 - adult. BS degree. M onte W allace, 443-6088. H A IR S T Y L IS T fro m Houston building business a t reduced prices on Sebring cut. Paul, 459-4339 G U IT A R LESSONS Unique Integrated approach. C all Vick, 452-7845. ________________ TUTORING G U IT A R a d v a n c e d E x p e r ie n c e d $20/month. 458-3007. IN S T R U C T IO N . Beginners A t e a c h e r . E X P E R IE NCE D P IA N O T E A CH E R Beginners, advanced. U T music degree U T area. B ag lnn tr gu itar also. 474-5514. L E A R N TO P L A Y G u itar Beginner and advanced. D rew Thomason, 478-2079. F O R M E R U T M A T H professor offers tutoring in all m ath courses. Reasonable rates. Bill D ietrich, 454-8417. Josh McDowell Leads Vanguard In Resurrection Theory UNCLASSIFIED Afghan pops, all color*. 837-3954._____ Clock radios, hair dryers fixed. 452-4406. T IN K E R 'S DAAA Flxlt Shop. 452-4406. Belly dance Instruction. 472-3344. Telescope 8" reft. 452-5020.__________ Electro Voice speakers. 474-8967. Elec. Typewriter. S45. 474-5239, 477-3361. Good ten speed. >50. 472-5637.________ Ladles IO sp. >65. 454-9262, Helen. Plano lessons aft. 8. eve. 459-6343. >25. 472-1693. Earthshoes girls Electrovoice 12" 3-way spkr 478-7595. IM F Monitor loudspkrs 478-7595.______ Radford 7D22 preamp 478-7595_______ Crown DC300A power am p 478-7595 Bellydance classes Y W C A 477-1523. ~ Wedding photography-sless 451-0021. ampw/spkrs60wattsS100flrm443-8504 1975 Suzuki 500, like new. 472-5341. Schwinn 10-speed, <65. 478-2754. New AR 2A X speakers SISO 477^3002. Cash for used bikes. 477-3002.________ 85mm Nlddor lens SIPP 451-4320______ 17" 10-spd Jeunet bike 875 447-8850 Gov. lecture notes? ID A 477-3641. ID A Lecture Notes. 477-3641. Psy Lecture Notes? ID A 477-3641 Gibson T-blrd bass, $200 451-8686. TRAVEL E U R O P E - I S R A E L A F R I C A - A S I A Travel discounts year round. Student Air Travel Agency, Inc. 4228 First Avenue, Tucker, GA 30084. (404 ) 934-6662 C A M P IN G TOUR. Minibuses, I month Europe, 2 months U S S R , Hungary, Czechoslovakia, Poland, Balkan states. 6/1/76 - 9/7/76. 458-1095._____________ IF Y O U N E E D a ride to Los Angeles or San Francisco, call 478-0679 or 476-9559. LOST & FO UND R E W A R D for return of SR-50 calculator lost at IF shuttle stop at R L M . Call 454- 1631.______________________________ F O U N D Black and tan female German Shepherd mix. Koenig - Burnet Road area. E arly December 452-1447. FOR RENT R E N T OR P U R C H A S E 1972 Town & Country mobile home. 14 x 60 unfurn. 2 BR, I BA, CA/CH, washer, dryer, and other appliances Included Fully enclos­ ed 9 x l f porch, and carport Quiet and comfortable. Call after 5 442-4074, 4!«- 9345. FURNISHED HOUSES M ISCELLANEO US F O R H E L P with sn unwed pregnancy call Edna Gladney Home, Fort Worth, Texas, toll tree 1-800-792-1104. Use Daily Texan Classifieds They Work For You C am pus C rusade for Christ sponsored evangelist McDowell. — Texan Staff Photo* by Frank Tilley c o n scio u s, and the th e ft theory in which the religious authorities supposedly bribed the soldiers to lie about Christ’s having died. M c D o w e ll’s m i n i s t r y became popular during the free speech era of the ’60s when he toured college cam­ puses. The more famous of his evangelisms, the sermon on “ Maximum Sex,” climaxed his Austin engagement Sun­ day. And, although he colors his preaching with such off-beat and intriguing subjects as “The Middle East Crisis” and “Is Love Still Possible in a Junkie World?” McDowell’s tent-revivalist presentation has worn a little thin in all his years of proselytizing. “ McDowell is a ra th e r dynamic speaker, but he acts like his speech is memorized. If he drops a line, he just picks up on the next one,” one viewer said. But, McDowell’s presenta­ tion was not unemotional. The crowd giggled delightedly when he told how he met and m arried his wife. “I MET HER on this cam­ pus (The University’s); she was in one of my audiences. I looked into the audience and saw the most beautiful woman I ’d ever seen and I challenged her, “ Woman, are you a C hristian?” and she said, ‘Yes.’ I said (in the face of the audience), ‘Do you want to m arry m e?’ and two months later we were m arried.” The crowd hushed when McDowell refuted the “ fraud th eo ries surrounding the resurrection. His testimony of his own faith began with a soul search when he was a prelaw student. McDowell became a Chris­ tian after two years of his own research when a group of Christians on his college cam ­ pus “challenged me to in­ tellectually question Jesus Christ. “ I didn’t rush out, buy a h a r p , s p r o u t w i n g s or anything,” he said. T H E 3 6 - Y E A R - O L D evangelist has written three books and spoken at more than 500 universities in 52 countries about his research on Christ McDowell stressed that a relationship with Christ is one that changes everyone but is not to be forced on others. TOYOTA D a t s u n V o l k s w a g e n V o l e o with this coupon Volkswagen Major Tune-Up $1 2.50 plut p art, Offer G ood thru fob. 29th Engine Repair O v « r s « a s E n g in e Brakes 1 003 Sagebrush, 8 3 6 -3 1 7 1 Electric McDowell fills three-fourths of Gregory Gym. By MEREDITH MCATEE Texan Staff Writer Calling Christ’s resurrec­ tion “ an event in history w here-in God a c te d in a definite tim e-space dimen­ s i o n , ’ e v a n g e l i s t J o s h M cDowell set th e burial scene—a solid rock tomb, a body wrapped in IOO pounds of arom atic spices, a large stone in front of the tomb with a Roman seal stretched across it and a guard at the tomb. The postresurrection scene —an empty tomb, untouched jrave clothes and the stone still in place —point to the validity of the resurrection, McDowell, who spoke to a t h r e e - f o u r t h s c a p a c i ty Gregory Gym Friday night, said. Intent on establishing with his audience the validity of Christianity as a religion. McDowell chose the resurrec­ tion as basis for his argument. He never discussed the worth or w orthlessness of other accepted Christian maxims, those stated in the IO Com­ mandments. “I realize that you will read and study fraud theories. They ex plain the r e s u r re c tio n another way,” he said. Christ d o e sn ’t a c tu a lly die but tem p o rarily un­ becom es F R E E R E N T J A N U A R Y Roommate to share three bedroom, two bath, two car garage home. $90, South. Buses. 441- WL*3772. British Hope for Oil Development f f o n a h o r n S p e c i a l I 9 T h e there The staid London Daily Telegraph’s financial pages recently carried an article in which an imaginary executive was seeking restaurants he could still afford. overtime in the construction in a backs-to-the-wall situs- Evelyn Waugh, wrote in The overtime in toe construction Evelyn Waugh, wrote in The in a backs-to-the-wall situa­ that fizzled last year. New Statesman, “ It would be tion — yet. interesting to know how much in all this is truth scaremongering” and gibed at stories that “ pawn shops are reopening and replacing the porn shops of happier days.” l i t t l e r e s e a r c h among London’s pawnbrokers recently indicated that they are, in fact, busier than at any other time since before World War II. One or two said they were in some cases refusing loans on such items as guitars and o t h e r m u s i c a l i n ­ struments bought by young building workers earning big “ Th e n my wi f e r e a d t h a t Mar got so m ew here Fonteyn’s favorite dish is s omet hi ng cal l ed ‘baked beans on toast’ a delicacy we had never tried,” he said. “ The e xper i ment proved satisfactory, and we now eat baked beans six nights a week.” taking 1970 as IOO show the standard of living index rose steadily to 118.3 in 1974. In the first quarter of 1975 it was down to 112.3, but in the second quarter, last available figure, it has rebounded to 118.9. s i t u a t i o n , is far generally,how ever, from one of unrelieved gloom, despite the call a few weeks ago from Prim e M inister Wilson for “ belt-tightening” and his warnings about “a hard winter.” Official statistics, Well, a Auberon Waugh, the son of the LA SSO ED ADVERTISING ORDER BLANK THE DAILY TEXAN STUDENT NEWSPAPER AT THE UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS AT AUSTIN •1976 N Y Times News Service LONDON - The British people, who read dire war­ n i n g s a l m o s t d a i l y of economic storms ahead, are being encouraged to look beyond the bleak foreground to the far horizon. For over there, if the government is right, Britain’s own oil will be flowing, and as oil imports recede, inflation will be tam ­ ed, or at least kept to single figures But it will all take time. Standards of living general­ ly fell slightly in 1975 after many years of steady ad­ vance. Unemployment stood as the year ended around one million, or 5 per cent of the work force. The worry expressed about jobs and prospects seems m o r e p r o n o u n c e d a n d widespread than a t any time since the 1930s. This is es­ pecially true of middle-class professional and business peo­ ple, who, relatively are having the worst of it. Their plight as they try to m a i n t a i n s t a n d a r d s has produced some wry humor, although they are by no means | J i H i r g e r s Super-Bert w/cheese * 1 . 4 5 SAVE 39' GOOD ALL SPRING SEMESTER MUST BRING COUPON 3303 NORTH LAMAR Mon-Thvrs KMOom-llpm/Fri I Sat IO: M o rn-12 X U ./S»n. I IKM.rn-* KIO, rn S C L A SSIF IE D D ISPLA Y ...where people LOOK when they need services, rentals, jobs, or just shopping for a good buy! WRITE YOUR AD HERE! You can use THE DAILY TEXAN S u b scrip tion R a to s M o d o f oo C o m p o t (S tu d e n t f e i s t y end U rn ") Two » m n t « r s (F all and Spring).................................. Summer session....................................... i’LV picked o f OO C o m p o t (Nen-ftudeM*. Men-fe*ul»y mod H on-it.H i Two Samastars (F all and Spring).......................... Summer session............................................................ T w ^tam eslars (F all and Spring).................................... " ’" ’.I” ! One semester (F a ll or Sp rin g ).................................... Summer session....................................................... O u t r i d e U S. ( S u r f e r # m o d • " W I Two semesters (F all and sp rin g)............................. One semester (F a ll or S p rin g ).................................... Summer session..... , ........ . . . . $ 3.3 0 . $ I OO ....$12.00 . .. . $ 3.75 . .. .$ 1 7 OO . . . . $ 9 OO $ 5 75 JAPANESE SHITO-RYU KARATE Instructor Luis Gonzalez 1st Degree Black Belt eginning Classes Mondays A Wednesdays 7:30-9:00 itermediate Classes Thursdays Beginning January 28 at the Y 2 times a week — $15 a month WUO.W by ./ie VmvtrdlyY________ For more info coll 472-9246 8:00-9:30 the I f you are interested in the TRANSPORTATION INDUSTRIES (i.e., airlines, rail, bus, ship, truck, investm ents) TRANSPORTATION CLUB might be for you. First meeting of the semester Wed., Jan. 28, 7 p.m. Scholz Beer Garden A ll students & faculty welcome CLIP AND MAIL TODAY! USE THIS H A N D Y CHART TO QUICKLY ARRIVE AT AD COST (15 Word Minimum) Number Words I Time 2 Times 5 Times IO Times 20 Times Cost Per Word 15 16 17 18 19 .12 1.80 1.92 2.04 2.16 2.28 .22 3.30 3.52 3.74 3.96 4.18 .45 6.75 7.20 7.65 8.10 8.55 .80 12.00 12.80 13.60 14.40 15.20 1.60 24.00 25.60 27.20 28.80 30.40 AMOUNT ENCLOSED $------------- No. Days. M A IL TO: The Daily Texan Classifieds P.O. Box D - UT Station Austin 78712 N A M E ______ _____________________ ADDRESS CITY___ PHONE I I I I I I I II I I ^ Y o “ ! L k A f e M O * " ' ' f ' 13 te n * " * tocVce SVW'"* C W 6 6 6 ♦ ^ FANCY BORDERS1 ♦ I T O ' 6 'I O (LIUS TRA TIOI , 'S t a - 7/” f r f ...plus boldface type and the exact logo for your store or service! HAVE YOU USED IT YET? CALL 4 7 1 - 1 8 6 5 for complete information! Monday, January 26, 1976 TH E DA ILY T EXA N Page 19 coffipus (Wins In brief CLEP Exam Deadline Set ( Women's Commission Favored i _________________ R eadin g R oom to hear P atty O r r of the T e x a s State School fo r the B lin d talk on " T e a c h in g H o m e E co n o m ics to the B lin d ." UNIVERSITY SKYDIVING CLUB w ill m eet at 7 p.m . W ed nesday in R ussell A . S tein­ dam H a ll 315 fo r a re g u la r m eeting and to see a film on skyd ivin g . A ll are w elcom e to attend. depa rtm en t o f g e rm a n ic la n g u a g e s E in C o llo q u im m it H e ra ld G ro e h le r. Das T h e m e : " L ite r a tu r- L ite r a tu r- b e trie b -L ite ra tu rre z e p tio n ." R a u m : Batts H a lle 203. Zeit: Diesen M on tag 8 to IO p . m . J e d e r 1st b i e r w illkom m en. By MARY JO SHACKELFORD R epresentatives of sev eral Austin women’s organizations testified Friday and Saturday in favor of proposals to create a permanent Texas Commission on the Status of Women. Testimony before the House Interim Committee on the Status of Women, a sub­ committee of the Committee on State Af­ fairs, ran 5-1 in favor of a standing com­ mission. The House committee will meet in late March or early April to m ake final recom m en dation s to su b m it to the speaker’s office and the State Affairs Committee. Rep. Chris Miller of Fort Worth, who sponsored the unsuccessful status-of- women bill during the last legislative ses­ sion, is the com m ittee’s leading proponent of a bill to create a permanent com m is­ sion. Martha Smiley, chairwoman of the Tex­ as Women’s Political Caucus, testified that the commission could be used to dis­ seminate information to women, to en­ courage women to take the initiative in political and professional activities and to help pass health and child care legislation. Barbara Miller, director of tile Austin Women’s Center, said the commission should gather information on day care centers, treatment of rape victim s and health care for women, especially in the area of birth control. from A commission is needed to look at the role of women in education, a represen­ ta tiv e the M exican -A m erican Business and Professional Women’s Club said. Gloria C ontreras, an a ssistan t professor of curriculum and instruction at The University, said the educational system in Texas often endorses racial and cultural myths and stereotypes instead of dispelling them. Janice Robinson, a member of the Mayor’s Commission on the Status of Women, said the state commission should compile data, act as a resource bank of qualified women and coordinate the ac- tivies of different women’s organizations. Women in the Texas labor force repre­ sent “ a large untapped resource,” she said. Robinson stressed the help the com­ mission would give black women who often work because they have no other choice. Several witnesses said Texas is the only state that has no permanent commission on the status of women. , Of the 50 witnesses who testified, only eight opposed the creation of a com m is­ sion. Opponents used two main arguments in their testimony — There are already more than IOO state agencies which help women with their problems, and it would be im­ possible to create an agency which would encompass all these services. FIRST TIME EVER Deadline to register for the Feb. 19 C L E P examinations is 5 p.m. Wednesday. Credit for E 314 K, ECO 302, 303, GOV 310L, PSY 301, and SOC 302 m ay be obtained by means of these examinations. Results f r o m w i l l b e m a i l e d Princeton, N .J., by March 30, in time for preregistration for fall. Registration forms and information are eligibility available at the Measurement and Evaluation Center, 2616 Wichita St., 471-3032. Office Moving The Special Program s Of­ fice (International Studies, The C en ter for European Studies, Independent Studies and Junior Fellows) will move Monday to its new offices in Speech Building 303 and 304. ANNOUNCEMENTS DEPARTMENT OF CHEMISTRY will sponsor a le ctu re by D r. R. /hem m ing, P h ilip s F o r s c h u n g s la b o r a t o r iu m , H a m ­ burg, at 4 p.m . M o n da y in W elch H a ll 104. M e m m in g will speak on "P o te n tia l and C h a rg e D istribu tion the S e m ico n d u cto r-E le ctro ly te at In te rfa ce ." T h is lecture is pa rt of t h e D e p a r t m e n t of C h e m is t r y D is t in g u is h e d V is it in g L e c t u r e r TEXAS UNION w ill have signups for T e xa s U n io n c o m m itte e m e m b e r in te r­ view s M o n da y in the T e x a s Union in T e x a s U n io n P r o g r a m O ffic e TEXAS UNION AFRO-AMERICAN CULTURE COMMITTEE w ill sponsor soul night in the T e x a s T a v e rn fro m 8:30 p.m . M o n d a y to m idn igh t. A d m issio n is Series. South. free. TEXAS UNION IDEAS AND ISSUES COMMITTEE w ill sponsor a sandw ich s em in a r fro m noon to I p.m . M o n da y in the P o b ie C o n f e r e n c e R o o m . T h e se m in a r w ill be on " T h e R ise of R edn eck R o c k ." TEXAS UNION IDEAS AND ISSUES AND MUSICAL EVENTS COMMITTEES w ill sponsor a d is p la y of pictu res of local c o u n tr y and w e ste rn p e rfo r m e r s through F r id a y in the foyer of the A c a d e m ic Center. TEXAS UNION THEATRE COMMITTEE w ill sponsor the film "O p e n C it y " at 7 p .m . M o n d a y and the film " R u le s of the G a m e " at 9 p .m . in B u rd in e A u d ito riu m . A d m issio n is SI fo r U T ID holders, S i.50 fo r others. UNIVERSITY UNDERWATER SOCIETY is o ffe r­ ing b a sic and a d v a n ce N A U ! scuba in structio n for begin ners or certified d iv e rs . C a ll 452-3918 or 451-4364 for in fo rm a tio n . YOUNG SOCIAUST ALLIANCE w ill hold the fir s t fo ru m of its series " A n g o la : A n o t h e r V i e t n a m ? " a t 7 p .m . W ed nesda y in B u sin ess-E co n o m ic* B u ild in g 166. MEETINGS AUSTIN FRIENDS OF THE FARMWORKERS w ill m eet at 7:30 p .m . M o n da y in the C a th o lic Student Ce n ter to hear a rep o rt fro m the V a lle y and discuss fu n d -ra isin g plans. COROETTES w ill m eet at 7 p.m . T h u rsd a y in R u ssell A Steindam H a ll 205 to d is­ c u s s C o r d e t t e s p r i n g r u s h . A p p lic a tio n s m a y be picked up fro m S te in d a m H a ll 205 or fro m a n y C o r d e t t e m e m b e r a n d a r e d u e Th u rsd a y . COUNCIL ON THE STATUS OF WOMEN AND MINORITIES w ill fro m 4 to 6 p.m . M o n ­ day in Sid R ich a rd so n H a ll 3.101. It is im p o rtan t that all m em b ers at­ tend. GAY PEOPLE OF AUSTIN w ill m eet at 7 p.m . M o n d a y in Jester A307A to have its last m eeting and then proceed to a m eeting of the H u m a n R elations C o m m issio n to support a proposed o rd in a n ce affectin g ga y people. JUNIOR FELLOWS w ill m eet at 11:30 a m. W ednesday in the C y p ru s R oom of th e F a c u l t y C e n t e r , 25th a n d G u a d a lu p e Streets, for a J a n u a ry m eeting and to hear Ron W ilson talk about his ca m p a ig n fo r the T e x a s Le g isla tu re . NATURAL SCIENCES COUNCIL w ill m eet at 7:30 p.m . M o n d a y on the eighth floor of R obert Lee M o o re H a ll. O R G A N IZ A T IO N FOR THE S TU D Y OF ANALYTICAl PSYCHOLOGY w ill m eet at 7 p.m . M o n d a y in B ellm o n t H a ll 204 for a business m eeting and to hear An n Dodson speak on "C a ste n e d a and B e y o n d " and E ls a D a n e h y speak on " P o w e r S po ts." Business in c lu d e s p la n n in g s h o w in g of F r e u d -J u n g v id e o ta p e s fr o m the U n iv e rs ity of C a lifo rn ia at San F r a n ­ cisco in F e b ru a ry . F o r inform ation, c a ll 478-0825 or 442-4701. SOCI ED AD ESTUDIATIL FARA PROMOOON DE LA AMISTAO (SERA) w ill meet at 7 p.m . M o n d a y in the lib r a r y of L ittle fie ld D o r m it o r y to p la n a s e m e s te r schedule. SOCIAL WELFARE ASSOCIATION will m eet at 7 p .m . M o n d a y in S o c ia l W o rk B u ild in g 102 to discu ss new plans for the a ssociation. VO CA TIO N A L H O M EM AK IN G TEACHERS ASSOCIATION OF TEXAS - STUDENT SECTION w ill m eet at 7 p.m . M o n day in the H om e E co n o m ics B u ilding Mushrooms are more than 90 per cent water and have in­ significant nutritious value. J.R.'s Coffee Shop 4811 Burnet Ref. Welcome Students FREE DRINK with purchase of hamburger Open 6 am • 453-1459 £i$ SHANGHAI CHINESE R E S T A U R A N T (Shanghai, Hunan, Szechuan, Cantonese Style) 5555 N. Lu mar, E-125 Koomg Lane at G uadalupe Sun.-Thurs. Fri. & Sat. 11:30-9:30 11:30-10:00 Closed Mon. 459-3000 Mr. Calculator is proud to announce the very first calculator trade-in offer. Now, you can bring in your old calculator — any make, any model, any vintage (working or not) — and we will give you a $25.00 allowance towards the purchase of a brand new Com m odore SR4148R scientific notation elec- Com pare *iheat14-character Com m odore with 2-memories, exponent integer increase and decrease, polar rectangular conversion, and so much more, to the calculator you are now using. Or — even com pare it to the $99.95 Hewlett-Packard H.P. 21. At $79.95 the Com m odore SR4148R is a far more powerful machine and represents sub­ stantial savings. And with its special trade-in allowance, you can own the SR4148R for just $54.95. Complete with recharger, case and manufacturer s full year warranty. Never before has there been so much calculator for so small a price. u Commodore SR4148R commodore ■ rn W B w it 5101 K H £ 1 t m * 0 2 E S ESI 0 431 CU 423 CD 433 E S 433 433 433 433 433 CS 6 2 0 j M k ts e ts e C m G 3 W S m Z n W SM 4 D C a ) B P V. O O O O 7 M M 4PP c MI 4 9 i l l IU Regular Price Less: Mr. Calculator Allowance Bring in your old calculator . . . wooden slide rule . ■ ■ or even an abacus, anytime before February 14, 1976. We’ll accept them all for the $25.00 trade-in if you purchase the Commodore SR4148R. But, you must act now. This is a limited time offer and will definitely end February 14, 1976. Commodore SR4148R vs. H-R 21 Feature Centai odor. SIA 1418 $ 7 f.fS Hewitt* Pecker* U M I s m s Display (sign) (mantissa) (sign) (expo) 14 (ho(oct.r ( - 1 0 = 2) 12 thorocttf ( - 8 = 2 ) Number of Keys Logic Exponent increase Key Exponent Increase Key Direct Memories Memory accumulation Log., in., e, IO* Trig & Inverse (orc, sin, Cos, tan) Degree/Rodion Mode Change Polar <— > Rectangular Rectangular Polar Parenthesis Mean and Standard Deviation Rechargeable Square Root Xroot of Y X* Reciprocal Y* Exchange I T Change Sign Single Function Keys I Warranty . 48 Algebraic YES YES 2 YES YES YES YES YES YES YES YES YES YES YES YES YES YES YES YES YES YES 12 mo. w in U n * 31 KPN NO NO I YES YES YES YES YES YES NO NO YES YES NO NO YES YES YES YES YES NO 12 mo. 11/4“ D x3” W x5 3/4,,L Price includes built-in rechargeable Ni-Cad battery and AC adaptor/recharger • 48-keys • 14-character display with 10-digit mantissa, digit exponent and negative signs for each • P o la r/R e cta n g u la r coordinate keys • Expo n en t integer increase and d e cre a se keys • Two independent memories • Leatherette pouch included • Autom atic memory summation key • Parenthesis and power keys • R a d ia n /Degree m ode • All trigonom etric functions • Mean and standard deviation • All logarithm ic functions • A lgeb raic logic • 1-year warranty For physicists, chem ists, e n g in eers, so cia l scientists, students. 48 personal scientific calculator; 14 c h a ra cte r, scientific notation tsp ay a d a D to r/ re c h a rg e r in clu ded has a larger display at any price! Built-in r e c h a r g e a b le battery a n d A C a d a p to r / re c h a rg e r m c iu a e a . ca lc u la to r th OUR TRADE-IN SALE IS GOING ON NOW AT 2200 GUADALUPE • Lower Level H o u rs 9 : 3 0 to 5 : 3 0 + - T - X E E M master charge M r C A L C U L A T O R Next to Hamburgers by Gourmet 477-9658 Page 20 Monday, January 26, 1976 TH E DAILY T E X A N