T h e D a il y T e x a n Student N e w s p a p e r a t The University of Texas a t Austin Ten Cents Vol. 74, No. 190 Senate Approves Viet Aid Troop Use Limits Debated I W A SH IN G TO N ( U P I ) - A m id som etim es bitter debate, the Senate Wednesday voted $250 million for m ercy aid and a iim ited arm ed evacuation plan for A m ericans and South \ letnam ese. The House worked into the night on a version of its own. After a parliam entary snafu wrecked a day’s work on fashioning a house bill, supporters of an aid-evacuation package sought and won the backing of House leaders to work all night if necessary to finish the job. troops to torescue Vietnam ese only troops rescueSouth South Vietname; v . . . . i a as p art of the withdraw al of Americans. The Senate bill stressed the im por­ tance of getting as m any Americans and their dependents out of South Vietnam as possible right now. Mr. Ford would be allowed to use a rm ­ ed forces to assist the evacuation of en­ dangered foreign nationals along with Americans only after he certifies to Congress that every diplom atic effort had been made to term in ate the th reat to the foreigners and th eir lives were still in jeopardy. During the debate, critics of the bul expressed concern th a t Mr. Ford could use the evacuation contingency fund $100 million of the $200 million total, with th e o th e r fu n d s e a r m a r k e d f o r hum anitarian purposes — as a cover for further m ilitary aid to Saigon. Sen. Hubert Humphrey D-Minn op­ posed all efforts to re stric t Mr Ford s e v a c u a tio n a u th o rity beyond th o se already w ritten into the bill. The Senate bill also . • Limits the use of troops to evacuate foreign nationals to are a s where m ilitary p ro te c tio n is n e e d ed to e v a c u a te Americans as well. • E arm arks the other $150 million for hum anitarian aid to refugees in both South Vietnam and Cambodia, with the funds to be channeled through the United N ations or other voluntary charity agen­ cies • Requires Mr. Ford to report to Congress within 90 days after the legisla­ tion becomes law on the amount of hum anitarian aid actually dispensed, ex­ pected recipients, the nam es of all organizations involved in its distribution and how the distribution was carried out Sen. Barry Coldw ater, R-Ariz . and others complained about the Senate s slowness. .... “ By the tim e the bill is passed, he said, “ all A m ericans will have been evacuated and m any South Vietnamese. _ Texan Staff Photo by Z « h Ryall When the N orth V ietnam ese get in rocket range of Tan Son Nhut Airport C om m ittee m eetin g (near Saigon), no m ore will get out un­ less we want to go to war. E arly W ednesday, the Senate ap proved by voice vote a requirem ent that Mr Ford formally inform Congress dai­ ly of the exact num ber of Americans and South Vietnamese evacuated during the previous day. Disputes in both houses centered upon provisions authorizing Mr. Ford to use un­ m uch a u th o rity now. M ore is un the troops for final evacuation efforts warranted. in my opinion and on the general issue of financing In his State of the State address in evacuation of friendly South V iet­ January, Gov. Dolph Briscoe called for namese. Mr. Ford has cited a moral passage of such a bill, though he obligation to rescue up to 200.000 Viet reportedly intended for the University nam ese who m ight face Communist and Texas A&M to be included under its reprisals. provisions. .. a c tio n action. The kill action capped six hours of bitter House debate on the evacuation issue and set the House back to working on the original $327 million bill. The S enate legislation puts s tric t lim itations on how President Ford can use U.S. troops in any evacuation effort. The bill provides $100 million for evacuation purposes and $150 million in hum anitarian aid to South V ietnam and Cambodia. It would perm it the use of American A. ifc r a n . The ~Senate concluded its own ra n­ corous debate in late afternoon by ap ­ proving a lim ited hum anitarian aid and evacuation bill by a vote of <5-17. About an hour after the Senate vote, the House approved 272-146 a bill that substituted for its original $327 million proposal. But the substitute was ruled out of order because it did not comply with a House rule that requires three days to pass between the tim e a bill is reported to the floor and the tim e it comes up for Sens. Lloyd D ag g ett, John Traeger a t S tate A ffairs College Construction Curb Bill 'Clears Panel, Minus UT, A & M By MILAN HUGHSTON A bill which would require construc­ tion priorities for state-supported in­ stitutions to be approved by the College Coordinating Board rath er than each school individually was approved by the Senate State Affairs Com mittee Wednes­ day. An am endm ent excluding the U niversi­ ty and Texas A&M System s from gaining Coordinating Board approval for con­ struction was left in the legislation Sen. Oscar Mauzy of Dallas introduced the m easure, which calls for all new re­ quests for construction and repair and re h a b ilita tio n of all buildings and facilities at institutions of higher educa­ tion to be approved by the Coordinating Board , ^ _ University lobbyist V rank C. Erw in wrote an am endment Monday calling for the exclusion of the University and Tex­ as A&M from the bill s requirem ents The com m ittee sent the legislation to the subcom m ittee on higher education with instructions not to exclude the University and Texas A&M. However, the bill was returned to the com m ittee with the Erwin am endm ent untouched Sen Peyton Mc Knight of Tyler said each institution's board of regents, not a state board, should have the ability to recognize the needs of their institutions. “ The boards should have their own rights to decide what buildings need to be built.” he said. Sen. A M. Aiken of P aris also en­ couraged the com m ittee to vote against , ,, the bill. “ It is ridiculous to send a bul to s u d com m ittee with specific instructions not to exclude The University of Texas and Texas A&M. and then have it sent back this way.” he said. Regents Chairm an Allan Shivers said Monday the Coordinating Board has too today C loudy . . . T h u r s d a y will be p a r t ­ ly cloudy and w a r m w i t h a 30 p e r c e n t chance of showers or thu n d e r s h o w e r s . Winds will be southeasterly f r o m IO to 20 mph. The high will be in the mid-80s with a low in the low 70s. F r i d a y ' s forecast calls for cooler t e m p e r a t u r e s and a 40 A rx! r h a n rP By CHUCK KAUFMAN A Travis County Ja il inm ate told The Texan Wednesday that he gave a fiveinch-long centipede to Robert Kleasen, defendant in the alleged m urder of two Mormon m issionaries, after Kleasen claimed he was fed a centipede tot dinner by prison authorities. Renaldo R am irez, 18. whose cell is close to K leasen 's, claim s to have received the insect from a person in the hospital tank. He said. “ I gave Kleasen that centipede. It was burned and put in a plastic bag. and I gave it to him to give to his lawyer ” R am irez is serving a twoyear sentence for robbery. A licensed vocational nurse, who asked not to be identified, said she knew “ they kill several of those anim als in the jail, but said she was not aw are that cen­ tipedes had been killed much less found in the hospital tank. Wells Appointed To Parole Board By DAVID HENDRICKS Texan Staff Writer Selma Wells, a black from Houston, was appointed Tuesday to the Board of Pardons and P aroles by Texas Supreme Court Chief Justice Joe Greenhill. The first m inority m em ber to be ap­ pointed to the board, Wells is the widow' of J.D . “ Sonny Wells, an exfelon and m em ber of a citizen s ad­ visory com m ittee on prison reform before he died last December. The couple are widely known for their es­ tablishm ent of nine half-way houses in three cities, especially the New Directions project in Houston, to assist ex-offenders in a successful adjustm ent “MRS. WELLS has dem onstrated a continuing and sincere interest in this d iffic u lt a r e a of g o v ern m e n tal operation. G reen h ill said. H er background in working with people recently released from prison should prove invaluable to the Board of P a r­ dons and Paroles. Wells also has been active in work with alcoholics as a m em ber of the Advisory Com m ittee for Alcoholism and Drug Abuse of the University of Houston and on the Review Board of the National Institute of Alcoholism and Drug Abuse. She also is a form er H arris County grand juror, a m em ber of the district attorney’s Grand Ju ry Advisory Coun­ cil and a m em ber of the H arris Coun­ ty Alcoholism Program m ing P ro ­ jects, Inc. Kleasen. 42. filed suit in federal court Tuesday against Travis County Sheriff Raymond F rank and head jailer Bill Mansell, complaining of m istreatm ent, including the serving of a “ centipede sandwich." KLEASEN IS SEEKING $50,000 in dam ages for alleged violation of his civil rights. Kleasen said the ugly black insect was given to him between two pieces of white bread April ll, it was reported Tuesday The centipede was dead. Ram irez called K leasen's story “ a bunch of bull. I gave that m an that cen­ tipede.” Kleasen told The Associated Press he had been “ starved" on skimpy meals for weeks. He also said the “ centipede sandwich" was served with potatoes and tacos in which cockroaches had been mixed. Sometimes he is so hungry he Saying he was glad he blocked S k elto n 's re n o m in a tio n , D o g g ett emphasized “ there is a real need to change the direction of the Board of Pardons and P aroles ... with new le a d e r s h ip th a t b o a rd c a n be changed." Wells resides in the senatorial dis­ tric t of Houston Sen. Bob Gammage. who called Wells “ a fantastic person” and “ eminently qualified for this posi­ tion. I wish to commend Justice G re e n h ill fo r th is o u ts ta n d in g choice.” TWO BLACK HOUSTON represen­ tatives also reacted favorably to the appointment. Rep. Mickey Leland said Greenhill asked him about Wells, and he told the judge. “ Wells can serve excellently on the Board of P a r ­ dons and Paroles. I can only speak highly of h e r.” G R E E N H I L L S ACTION w as necessary as his first appointee, the renomination of then board chairm an William Skelton of Austin, was block­ ed when Austin Sen. Lloyd Doggett in­ v o k ed s e n a to r ia l c o u r te s y la s t January. Rep. Craig Washington said he was “ elated. I think sh e’ll m ake a fine a d ­ dition to the board. She has a lot of humanity and compassion, and th a t s what is needed on the Board of P a r ­ dons and P aroles ” Washington. Doggett, Leland and Gam m age all w ere m em bers of the J o in t L e g isla tiv e C o m m itte e on Prison Reform which drew up many b ills b ein g c o n s id e r e d by th is legislative session If Wells is confirmed by the Senate, which is expected without any trou­ ble. she will serve a six-year term The board m em bership consists of one appointee of the governor, one of the chief justice of the Supreme Court, and one of the presiding judge of the Court of Criminal Appeals. Doggett said Wednesday Wells is going to be a g reat appointee He added that he called Greenhill after learning the news to congratulate him .on the appointment. The board adm inisters the sta te 's p a ro le sy ste m and in v e s tig a te s applications for and recom m ends acts of executive clemency by the governor. During the last fiscal year, paroles were issued to 4,237 inm ates, and the board had jurisdiction over 11,608 parolees. The Texas prison system has m ore than 17.000 inmates. Problems Accompany Airlift Move to Guam By United Press International The U.S. airlift of A m ericans and Viet­ nam ese from the w ar zone switched Wednesday from an overcrowded base in the Philippines to American territory on Guam The evacuation produced food hoarding on Guam and a warning that tropical diseases could reach the United States. The round-the-clock shuttle sent an in­ itial group of 219 refugees to Guam aboard a m ilitary-chartered DC8 - the first of w hat Guam Gov. Ricardo J. Bordallo said m ight be as many as 131 OOOto enter U.S. territo ry via the island in the next few weeks. a team of officers and clerks to Guam to process the refugees. The processing will include health and security checks a spokesman said. YET ANOTHER possible threat loom­ ed for the evacuation Pentagon sources said intelligence reports indicated Com­ munist forces w ere moving surface-toa ir m issiles southw ard in V ietnam . Stationed 20 m iles from Saigon, the SAMs could effectively close dowm that city ’s Tan Son Nhut air base — and the airlift. Health officials in San Francisco said the Vietnamese arriv als if unchecked could spread m alaria, virus dysentery’ tuberculosis and other communicable diseases to the U S. mainland Vt e could have very serious problems said Dr. F rancis Curry, head of the San F ran­ cisco D epartm ent of Health Register E a r l y . . . Preregistration con­ tinues Thursday through Friday. D e p a r t m e n t offi ces advise students to p r e r e g i s t e r e a r l y to avo id F r i d a y ' s lastm inute scheduling rush. (Story, P a g e 12.) of In m a t e 471-4591 T w e n ty Pages Austin, Texas, T h u rsd a y, A pril 24, 1975 In Washington the Im m igration and N aturalization Service said it would send Insects picks the roaches out and eats the food but other tim es he doesn't eat anything. he said R Roscoe Haley, K leasen’s chief attornev said, “ We are bound not to dis­ cuss anything th a t’s pending litigation Sources close to K leasen’s attorney said, however, th at the centipede “ was not burned.” FRANK SAID he has retained a t­ torneys W aggoner C a rr and R obert Crider for his defense Carr said he would file an answ er on behalf of the sheriff soon and begin an investigation into the alleged m atters. Frank added, “ We have bent over backw ards to tre a t the guy good He is the only man in jail who has his own television “ We have to segregate him ,” Frank continued. “ If we put him in a tank of *4 (persons) they might kill him. Among those 24 people are two Mormons.. .” F ran k said c e n t i p e d e s and cockroaches a re not fed to inm ates. “ What do you want m e to say? I don t know whether it happened or not,” he said. FRANK HAS INSTRUCTED Mansell not to issue any statem ents about the m atter to the press. Frank said only persons under sim ilar circum stances as Kleasen might be allowed personal television privileges. Kleasen told The Texan, “ This place is filled with all kinds of bugs.” but denied that the centipede was given to him by Ramirez. He refused to com m ent on any other related m atters. The presence of cockroaches in jail cells has been attributed to the inm ates use of m olasses and sugar as a paste to stick posters onto cell walls. Ram irez says there have been fewer cockroaches in his cell than in the past He has con­ cocted a soapy m ixture with which to kill them In addition to the allegations on food, the suit says Kleasen is being subjected to cruel and unusual punishment in the jail, including assaults and harassm ents KLEASEN’S CASE for capital m urder will be heard May 19 in the deaths of Gary Smith Darley, 20, of Simi Valley. Calif , and Mark J Fischer. 19. of Milwaukee. Wis. The two missionaires of the Church of Jesu s Christ of Latter-day Saints disappeared Oct 28 after telling friends they w ere going to K leasen's trailer home for dinner Police say Kleasen shot the two and sawed their bodies into pieces too tiny to recover on a band saw. in a taxiderm ist shop near his home Kleasen claim s he has been persecuted by the CIA since 1965 when he says he quit that agency to join the peace move­ ment He says he’s not sure anybody has been killed In Washington. Rep. Thomas Morgan. D-Pa., chairm an of the House In ter­ n ational R elations C om m ittee, told Congress 866 U.S. officials and 59 of their dependents w ere still in Saigon as of Wednesday. IN ADDITION M organ said . 457 A m erican c o n tra c to rs, 167 of th e ir dependents and 331 other U.S. citizens, including newsmen and m issionaries, were still in South Vietnam. Morgan said his inform ation was supplied by the State Department. The official reason for the shift of refugees from the Philippines to Guam was the overcrowding at Clark Air Force Base, which has forced them to cam p where they could — in movie theaters, trailers, gymnasiums and schools, where no beds were available. But American sources said the Philip­ pine government pressed the United States to send the refugees elsew here because it feared an influx of Vietnam ese refugees who would settle in and around Manila indefinitely. THERE WERE other com plaints at G u a m w h e re m a n y of t h e 85.000 residents of the island, only 30 miles long and 4 to 9 m iles wide. w ere hurriedly buying food and hoarding it. The G uam le g is la tu re dem an d ed assurances that there would be enough food to feed the newcomers as well as stric t security for the refugees and safeguards against health hazards ^ An old 900-bed hospital annex on Guam was readied for the refugees by the U.S. Navy. Authorities said they hoped to house 10,000 more in dorm itories form er­ ly used by air crews engaged in bombing North Vietnam. Huge tent cities were built to catch the overflow’ A spokesman for the G uam governor said, “ the civilian governm ent has asked for volunteers to open their homes and the response has been as much if not m ore than expected. The ratio of South V ietnam ese to Americans aboard the evacuation flights appeared to be running at about 20 to I. Where the Vietnamese and Cambodian refugees eventually would live rem ained a qustion. In Washington, State D epart­ m ent spokesman Robert Anderson said the Administration was discussing the “ foreign governments and international organizations” prospects for relocating some of them. Editor Analyzes V i e tn a m Errors Senate Appoints Chairman For University City Lobby ji.. Kin ♦ tho B v R O B E R T RO T H SC H ILD jMjsedly answerable to The Student Senate com- Senate. Dieted re-establishment of its Form er student president authority over the University ^ " dy Kress, s^ akm g rn S a City Lobby Wednesday night doloski s b eh alf, said fought all the way down the by approving the nomination line" to prevent the lobby of Lee Sandoloski as that com­ from having that power dur­ mittee’s chairman. ing his administration Kress L a s t w eek, the Sen ate stripped the City Lobby of the called the committee "selfa s d id power to appoint its own p e r p e t u a t i n g chairman, a power that it held numerous other speakers since its beginning during the a g a in st the c o m m itte e 's Dick Benson administration. power. According to Kress, 1972-73. Until last Wednesday. that appointed committee was no longer answerable to the the lobby had been the only elected Senate committee with that power. L o b b y le a d e r s S te v e Student Government Presi­ Jackson and Ja y Bond at­ dent Carol Crabtree, much tacked Sandoloski’s appoint­ relieved after Sandoloski s ap­ ment as well as last weeks proval saw no reason why Senate action during the the City Lobby should be any different from any other stan- meeting Presenting a letter riina mmmittee that is sup- from some of the lobbyists. The and Caskey that.' challenged r'hanpnopd Sandoloski s The Mayfield M they appointments provided the se­ la c k of e x p e r ie n c e , his cond c o n tr o v e rs y of the abasence over the summer meeting as Environm ental when the City Council ap­ Protection Committee chair­ proves the budget and his lack man Noel Levy challenged of expertise in city matters. them on their previous actions Sandoloski answered the as m embers of that com ­ charges as they came, first mittee. pointing to the fact that he had Levy accused the two of tur­ never spoken to two persons ning down proposals brought who signed the letter and that before them that were later he had never known another approved by the full Senate. In On his lack of experience. defense, Mayfield and Caskey Sandoloski pointed to the said Levy never presented relative ineffectiveness of the specifics in asking for his re­ c o m m itte e th is y e a r as quests Both were approved evidence that experience was twice, as a move to reconsider not really necessary for the worked against Le vy's hopes. position. Another action affecting the As to his absence over the Appropriations Com m ittee summer, he promised close was tabled Sen Mike Cohen contact with his committee presented an am endm ent vice-chairmen, and regarding changing the makeup of that his lack of expertise in city committee to six senators matters, he openly conceded four nonsenators and the that if anyone with total ex­ chairperson(s). pertise presented himself, he Crabtree handed down the would bow out. gavel in preparation to speak Crabtree said Sandoloski against the amendment, but w o u ld p r o v i d e “ g r e a t the motion to table came first. leadership" and would be a After the meeting, Crabtree great asset to the Senate and told The Texan that Cohen s the student body. amendment was "e litist' and Sandoloski said he would no better than what the City keep a m uch c lo s e r Lobby had up until last week relationship with the Senate T he thought of se n a to rs and the president, something automatically being placed on that has been m issing in that committee went against previous years. her beliefs in increasing stu­ In other major action, the dent input. Crabtree said that Senate approved the chairmen when she asked senators to appointments of Ron Wilson state committee preference to Minority Affairs, Audrey fo r S e n a t e - lia is o n a p ­ Egger to Community Affairs, pointments. only three put ap­ and Paul Mayfield and Liz propriations as a first choice Caskey to Appropriations. M M M —Photo by Jock ild g a Irw in Silber speaks on In dochina. Celebration Honoring Big Thicket Slated W hat h ap p en s w hen Congress creates a national preserve in north Lib erty County? A m assive celeb ra tio n , that s what. The fre e p u b lic p a rty , honoring the creation of Big Thicket National Preserve, w ill be held from IO a m. to 3 p.m. Saturday at the Planta­ tion Ranch of Mr. and Mrs FREE POETRY READINGS by Q. What world region made the most headlines last year? A. The Middle East. Q. What do you know about it? University Y and Lucille M a g a zin e Friday April 2 5 at N O O N University Y fA b o v e Sommers' Drugs on the d r a g ) G e o rg e V . O liv e r Jr. a n d G e o rg ia C a tre lt M onday April 2 8 a t N O O N DEM M OS BRUTUS Read ing fr om his n e w book STRAINS Bill Daniel Approximately 8,000 per­ sons a re expected at the ranch between U.S. 105 and 146 near Romayor. Daniel is the former governor of Guam. Entertainers will include the Kilgore Rangerettes. the Centenary College Choir from S h re v e p o rt, L a ., and 40 members of ‘ The Texas Ar­ m y" who will load and fire flintlock rifles and the "T w in Sisters cannon. In addition, Paul Revere s ride w ill be re-enacted, a Spirit of 1776 drum and fife corps will play, and the 1776 Bicentennial flag will be rais­ ed. Other entertainment will in­ clude Chief Fulton Battise and his Na Ski La Indian Tribal Dancers from the AlabamaCoushatta Indian Reservation and an air show, narrated by Charles Wiggins of Liberty. Pandora’s Box. Don Emilio tequila and pineapple juice lf you drew a blank on th at one, consult your Course Schedule for Middle Eastern Studies listings. Luminificent! © 1974 BACARDI IMPORTS, INC . MIAMI. FL I tUUiLA MU r n w r DITTOS Hi-Rise Baggies. Feel the Fit! s u n t w in * * i j n m r a / w m u , -------- — ............ ........ .. we are subject to.’ he said. Silber cited IO acts by the V ie tn a m e s e C o m m u n ists which led the country to liberation. "T h e Indochinese C o m ­ munist Pa rty scientifically saw a connection between national liberation and the struggle against feudalism. It a ls o ta u g h t th e revolutionaries of Vietnam that the true natural and social resources of the coun­ try were the Vietnamese peo­ ple themselves. The mass struggle of the people was the true wealth. Silber said. T H E V IE T N A M E S E Com­ munists upheld the MarxistLeninist proposition that in the struggle between people of the T hird W orld and the c o lo n ia lis ts , n a tio n a l in ­ dependence can only be ac­ complished by uniting all peo­ ple. regardless of class, he said. The In d o c h in e se C o m ­ munists showed the V ie t­ namese people that a mass arms struggle was indispensi­ ble, he added. E le c t io n , petitions and trying to change the consciences of oppressors were not effective weapons. The Communists also put into practice the principles of complete equality of women and men, liquidating the backyard institution of male supremacy, Silber said T H E E D IT O R S A ID the Communists also convinced the Vietnamese people that they had to fight for rights of all 60 minorities in Vietnam to forge on in unity. F in a lly . S ilb e r said the Communists achieved victory "T h e Vietnam ese people for the Vietnamese by convin­ were able to win because they cing them that Marxism developed m ilita rily . They Leninism was not abstract g a in e d e x p e r ie n c e and dogma. " I t is a living science leadership and they learned of revolution when applied to how to mobilize their own concrete circum stances by people.” Silber said. p e o p le who u n d e rs ta n d While the Vietnamese peo­ revolutionary theory and app­ ple themselves struggled for ly it,” he said. liberation, another force aid­ Silber concluded that only ed in the struggle. Silber said by the establishment of a that the Indochinese Com ­ socialist system would the m u n is t P a r t y p r o v id e d necessary food and clothing leadership for the people be provided to the V ie t­ namese. "A M E R IC A N S F IN D this “ I p r e d ic t t h a t w i t h fact hard to comprehend. In socialism, by the end of this order for the American public century, the Vietnamese peo­ to understand the Vietnamese ple will emerge as a modern Communists, we must first industrial society." he said. overcome the brainwashing By P A M P A D G E T T The light at the end of the Vietnam tunnel is not the "fading glimmer of U.S. im­ perialism " but a "brilliant and shining Red light” of liberation, the editor of the G u a rd ia n m a g a z in e said Wednesday night. Irwin Silber. speaking to a crowd of 200. examined the m ilitary and political situa­ tion in Indochina. Sponsored by the Radical Student Union, Silber’s ad­ dress was based on his im­ pressions and experiences with the Vietnamese people while visiting the country last December. " I N T H E M ID ST of gloom ... there remain in Indochina o c c a s io n a l n o te s of o p ­ tim ism,” Silber said He cited the United States’ "im p erialistic" intervention into Vietnam as the tragedy which slowed down the Viet­ namese people’s struggle for liberation "R ig h t now the world is in disarray. Some such as M r Kissinger think that this is bad. Others realize that this disarray shows that people are struggling to overcome the oppression which im ­ perialistic governments place on them," he said. S IL B E R S A ID that in the struggle against imperialism, people must first rely upon themselves He cited the re­ cent Indochina liberation as the result of the Cambodian people’s struggle for libera­ tion. a struggle which did not require help from m ilitaries of imperialistic countries. I] . I PREREGISTRATION ENDS TOMORROW Final Deadline is 3:00 p.m. B UT Y O U R D E P A R T M E N T ! M A Y H A V E AN E A R L I E R TIME. BE SURE TO CHECK. See ads in ye ste rd ay s or| tomorrow's Texan for further information. Questions, complaints or suggestions?? Registration Supervision, M ain Bldg. 16 471-5865 SHARE THE RIDE WITH US THIS VACATION AND GET ON TO A GOOD THING Us means Greyhound, and a lot of your fellow students w ho are already on to a good thing. You leave when you like. Travel comfortably. Arrive refreshed and on time. You’ll save money, too, over the increased air fares. Share the ride with us on weekends. Holidays. Anytime. Go Greyhound. GREYHOUND SERVICE TO Dallas San Antonio SALE WED. THRU FRI. Waco ALL DITTOS in stock! Buy one pair of DITTOS get another for 6 0 % OFF! Houston Ft. Worth O N E­ WAY ROUND- YO U CAN LEA V E T R IP YO U A R R IV E $19.10 2:55 p.m. 6:45 p.m. 5 7.90 3:50 p.m. 5:50 p.m. S 5.35 $10.20 2:25 p.m. 4:55 p.m. 5 8.20 $15.60 4:00 p.m. 7:10 p.m. $ 9.60 $18.25 2:25 p.m. 7:10 p.m. $10.05 S 4.15 UNIVERSITY CO OP 2 2 4 6 Guadalupe 476-7451 Greyhound Sta. 401 Congress (Highest price prevails) M.S. SHOP IST FLOOR Page 2 Thursday, A p ril 24, 1975 THE DAILY TEXAN G O G R EYH O U N D ...and leave the driving to us Ford Tells Students To Rega in Optimism Schoolchildren greet President Ford o s he arrives in N e w O rleans. ~ ... ...nri, JOBS FO R ALL who w ant to work and econom ic opportunity for those who w ant to achieve. • N a tio n a l “ s e lf s u f f ic i e n c y in en erg y ” bv 1985. • A w orld in which consum ing and producing nations achieve a working balance and in w hich all hum ans on e arth a re free from hunger and disease • TECHNOLOGY THAT enriches life while p reserv in g our n atu ral environ­ m ent. • P eacefu l ex ploration of the oceans and space. • A c u re for can cer. • To speed th e a d m in istratio n of equal justice and m ak e good citizens out o f convicted crim in als. • C o m p o s in g th e g r e a t A m e r ic a n s y m p h o n y a n d w r i t i n g th e g r e a t A m erican novel “ to en rich and inspire our daily liv es.” R E F E R R IN G TO F A IL U R E of A m erican policy in V ietnam in the last decade the P re s id e n t said: “ Some seem to feel th a t if we do not succeed in ev ery th in g , everyw here then we have succeeded in nothing anyw here. I re je c t such polarized thinking We can a n d s h o u l d h e lp o t h e r s to h e lp them selves. But the fa te of responsible m en and w om en ev ery w h ere in the final decision re s ts in th e ir own hands. The V ietnam co n flict and tile feelings it s tirre d in A m erican s tended to keep U.S. p resid en ts aw ay from college c a m ­ puses b ecause of stu d en t agitation, h ord ing on state m atch in g fund contributions began m oving onto th e cam puses a s he to s ta te re tire m e n t sy ste m s for teac h ers tried to unify the co u n try a fte r taking o f­ and sta te em ployes from th e existing 6 fice la s t y e a r. p ercen t to a m ax im u m IO p ercen t of When he w ent to N otre D am e la s t a g g re g a te c o m p e n s a tio n paid to in­ m onth onlv a handful w alked out w hile dividuals. NEW ORLEANS (U P I) - P resid en t Ford told A m erica W ednesday it can “ regain the sense of p ride th a t existed before V ie tn a m ,'’ and said now th at the w ar is over th e n a tio n ’s th ird cen tu ry m ust include such go als as full em ploy­ m ent, a rich er life and freedom from hunger and disease. Today A m erica ca n again regain the sense of pride th at ex isted before V iet­ nam . But it cannot be achieved by refighting a w a r th a t is finished, as fa r as A m erica is concerned. M r. Ford said in a speech for d eliv ery to a T ulane U niversity student assem bly. “ T H E T IM E HAS c o m e to look forw ard to an agenda for the future, to unity, to binding up th e n atio n 's w ounds and restoring it to h ealth and o ptim istic self-confidence....’' M r. F ord said “ We are saddened, indeed, by the events in Indochina, but th ese events, trag ic as they are. portend n eith er the end of the w orld o r of A m e ric a s leadership in the w o rld ,' he said Calling on A m ericans to re a s s e rt th eir faith in them selves and in th e ir country. Mr. F ord listed ite m s on the agenda for the third cen tu rv of the nation: it fri#»nriiv stu d en ts stayed staved. Beyo ll (vm OOO friendly Beyond Tulane. he goes in a few days to Y ale and the U niversity of Pennsylvania. THE W EDNESDAY night speech lay at the h e a rt of his 11-hour v isit to N ew O r l e a n s . A id e s s a id t h a t it rep resen ted the thoughts of w eeks, dis­ tilled in a tw o-hour session T uesday in the White H ouse with his chief political course!. R o b ert A H a rtm an n , chief speech w rite r Milton F rie d m a n and S ecretary of S ta te H enry A. K issinger. In the aftern o o n he delivered a call for a strong N avy in a speech to the 72nd convention of th e Navy L eague. Then he spent an hour on an offshore oil drilling Rig 35 m iles in the Gulf of M exico to d ra m a tiz e his drive to m ake L nited S tates independent of foreign oil. Briscoe Approves of Poy Raises A m endm ent Benefiting Legislators W elcom ed ‘" Capitol By DAVID H ENDRICKS T exan S taff W riter L eg islato rs and Gov. Dolph B riscoe ex­ p ressed happiness W ednesday a t ap­ proval by T exas vo ters T uesday of two co nstitutio nal am en d m en ts raising the pay of leg islato rs and increasing benefits for retire d te a c h e rs and s ta te em ployes. “ I am very pleased th a t the v o ters of T e x a s a p p ro v e d b o th of th e c o n ­ stitutional am endm ents, B riscoe said^ ‘ In creasin g the ben efits for re tire d te a c h e rs and sta te em ployes will provide som e m uch-needed financial re lie f to th ese m en and w om en who have been . m o st seriously affected by inflation the L e g islatu re is m o re than a p art-tim e responsibility and ce rta in ly m e rits the in cre ase w hich has now been approved. The solons w ere given a $200 perm onth ra ise , from $400 to $600, or $7,200 per y e a r r a th e r than th e $4,800 they now get T heir p e r d iem allow ance in Austin also w as ra ise d from $12 p er day to $30 Most leg islato rs re n t a p a rtm e n ts or hom es in A ustin during a session. G arland Sen. Ron C low er, speaking before the e n tire S enate W ednesday, said, “I would like to take th is opportuni­ ty to thank th e people of T ex as for the pay ra is e ,” explaining it would help cover the ex p en ses of being a leg islato r, “ BY T H E IR votes. the people of T exas have indicated th e ir deep co n cern for th ese re tire e s living on fixed in co m es.’ the governor said “ T h e m e m b e r s of th e T e x a s L eg islatu re a re also deserv in g of the sa laa ry he—added. Serving in l v uini crease, v i t o u v , — BY GRANTING th e ra ise . C low er said, the people ‘‘ex p ressed confidence in us. and I think th a t’s im p o rtan t Angleton R ep. N eil C aldw ell said the sa la ry in c re a se “ w as too sm all to be m eaningful b u t th e p er d iem in crease w as im p o rtan t. It w as getting to the point w here it co sts m oney out of our pockets to com e down h e re .' C aldw ell, who last y ear said T exans do not d eserv e a L eg islatu re fo r the am ount they pay its m e m b ers sta te d W ednesday he thought leg islato rs deserv ed $1,000 a m onth, or m ore if annual sessions begin. a s proposed in the new co n stitu tio n to be voted on in N ovem ber. “ With as m any d em an d s on o u r tim e as th ere a re , we ju st c a n ’t do th e job rig h t,” Caldw ell said, adding th a t as a m e m b e r of the House A ppropriations C o m m ittee, “I should have visited each of th e sta te agencies la s t y ear, but hell. I ju s t co u ld n 't do it. I have four kids and a w ife and you g o tta m a k e a living som ehow .” The p resen t level of pay h as been in effect since 1959, and T exas v o te rs have re je c te d re q u e sts for pay in c rea se s five tim es since 1960. the la te st in N ovem ber. 1972. The o th er am en d m en t ra ise s th e ce il­ HONG KONG (U PI) — Cambodia began three days of official nationw ide fe stiv itie s Thursday to c eleb ra te the victory of the Communist-led Khmer Rouge rebels after five years of warfare. The rebels captured the capital Phnom Penh last Thursday after slowly strangling the American-backed government of Marshal Lon Nol inside the beleaguered capital, forcing Lon Nol to flee to exile in Hawaii. Peking s official New China N ew s Agency, which has reporters in ambodia, reported in a dispatch monitored in Hong Kong that the celebration was called "to greet the victories of the revolutionary war of national am popular liberation. C a m p a ig n in g Rises Before Portuguese le c t io n s LISBON ( U P I ) — The Communist Party staged the last rally in the campaign for Portugal’s parliam entary elections Friday, drawing 50.000 persons to a Lisbon soccer stadium for a show of pretty girls wearing hammer-and-sickle scarves, fireworks and som e fiery oratory. All political parties clim axed their cam paigns for the elections with hundreds of rallies and m otorcades throughout Portugal, plastering walls Senate Vote Postponed in fo rm a l v o te and found th e re w as enough opposition to the bill to k eep it from being considered SENS. LLOYD DOGGETT of Austin and Ron Clow er of G arland, who oppose the bill passed la s t Monday out of the Senate S tate A ffairs C om m ittee a fte r th eir own legislation was killed in sub­ co m m ittee, both “ w orked the floor W ednesday m orning to m aintain enough votes to keep the bill from being voted on. D oggett said, “ T his is not a u tilities com m ission bill, this is a utility com pany bill w ritten for and by the utility com ­ panies I intend to oppose it. CLOW ER SAID he opposed the com ­ m itte e 's bill for the sam e reasons outlin­ ed by the T exas C oalition for U tility R egulation in a W ednesday m orning p re s s conference. The T exas S enate did not take up a bill to c re a te a public u tilities com m ission W ednesday a fte r L t Gov. Bill Hobby learned th e re w as not a tw o-thirds m a ­ jo rity to suspend n ecessary rules to con­ sid e r it. Hobby, who p resid es over the S enate, said a fte r the S en ate’s session th a t P asad en a Sen. C het Brooks had taken an * » with posters and slapping stickers on car windows. Cars decked in flags dotted the streets, and from tim e to tim e their drivers - belonging to different parties — could be heard swapping in“ cam paigning for the 247-member constituent assem bly elections of­ ficially ended at midnight 16 p.m. CDTI. The population gets a day o respite from three weeks of intensive electioneering Thursday and will Stock M a rk e t Falls 11.65 Points NEW YORK (AP) — Concern that the huge federal budget deficit may again raise interest rates helped push stock prices sharply lower VVednes(ldphe Dow Jones average of 30 industrials fell 11.65 to 802 45. and declin­ ing issues swept over advances 1,064 to 3% among the 1,819 issues traded on the New York Stock Exchange. Trading began active but slowed throughout the day . totaling a moderate 20.04 million shares compared with 26.12 million shares tu e s­ day. W e d d in g to n Calls Present La w 'Inequitable a n d Unfair ^ . . . W right ex p lain ed th a t th e m onthly in­ su ran ce allo w an ce helps the individua' em ploye pay fo r his own self-chosen in­ su ran ce package. UT D a lla s A R E Q U E S T TO th e H o u se a p ­ p ro p riatio n s C o m m ittee for financing a dow ntow n b ran ch of UT D allas will be m ad e in sev e ral w eeks by Rep J im M atlox D 3II3S An e s tim a te d $330,000 w ill be re - .M. idland . . . ifr the city governing body, hv by oro r­ d inance, d e te r m in e s a c o u rt to be "necessary. SB 238 conveys a tr a c t of land to be used for p ark or re c re a tio n a l purposes to th e City of Big Spring. School Finance The L eague of W omen V o ters of T exas and th e AFL-CIO W ednesday announced th e y w ould a c c e p t h ig h e r ta x e s if necessary to fin a n c e p u b lic school refo rm . H ow ever, n eith er group b elieves the L eg islatu re is likely to in c re a se ta x e s to quested for the n ext biennium to fund the p ro v id e m o re e q u ita b le fu n d in g for facility for ap p ro x im a tely 750 students. public school d istric ts. The new b ran ch would provide a m ore “ The governor put s tra itja c k e ts on the acce ssib le facility than the R ichardson L eg islatu re in saying they cannot get cam p u s, since people can get public new so u rces of finance. H a rry H ubbard tra n sp o rta tio n w hich is not av ailab le in of th e AFL-CIO U nited L abor L egislative R ichardson, a M attox a id e said W ednes­ C om m ittee, said. The two org an izatio n s say proposals day. U T-D allas officia ls a re in v estigating u nder consideration in the House do not four possible site s for the cam pus now. dim inish inequities b etw een school dis­ If th e ap p eal to th e A ppropriations tric ts and would ta k e too long to im ple­ C o m m ittee is not accep ted , re p re se n ­ m ent. ta tiv e s w ill tr y to a m e n d th e a p ­ “ W hat w e w ant to see is a tru e com ­ p ro p riatio n s bill on the floor. m itm e n t to re fo rm , even if it m u st be phased in and even if it n e c e ss ita te s a H ospital Act (higher) tax b ill,” V eta W inick. L eague TEXAS HOUSE M E M B E R S approved of W omen V oters p re sid e n t, said. W ednesday th e H ospital Financing Act. “ We think the proposal to c re a te a tworelatin g to th e prom otion and develop­ y e a r study c o m m ittee is unnecessary. m en t of new and e x p a n d ed h e a lth One y ear of study is ad eq u ate to explore fa cilities to provide m edical c a re , public the concept of th e w eighted pupil ap­ health and m ed ical re se a rc h . p ro ac h ,” she said SB 243. sponsored by Sen Ja c k Ogg of H ubbard suggested rev en ue from the H ouston and R ep T om U her of Bay City proposed state-ow ned ocean su p erp o rt au th o rizes c itie s, cou n ties and hospital be used for school finance refo rm . Even d is tric ts to issue revenue bonds or notes if such a su p erp o rt is built, how ever, it to finance any fac ilitie s by a nonprofit will be sev eral y e a rs b efo re any m oney corporation. is av ailable. In o th e r actio n , th e House passed SB H ubbard said it is h a rd to get the 344 re la tin g to licensing and reg u latin g L eg islatu re to ta k e m oney fro m the real e s ta te b ro k ers. b udgets “ of those who could stand som e Two local bills also passed th e House. trim m in g of the fat He cited the SB 354 esta b lish e s a co u rt of reco rd in n t AY C A C i l H H lfV lkf CLOW ER ALSO SAID hep looked at a Southern Union G as Co. req u est to the R ailroad C om m ission for a 21 p ercen t in­ c re a se in n a tu ra l gas p rices Southern Union eventually w’a s g ran ted a IO p e r­ cent in c rease “ H o w e v e r, a 26 p e rc e n t in c r e a s e would have been m an d ated under this b ill.'' C low er said, “ so you can see why I'm concerned IN T H E PLACE O F u tility re g u la ­ tion the Senate took up and passed a bill to abolish pay for 39 county school superintendents. SB 226, sponsored by P o rt A rthur Sen. D Roy H arrington, would discontinue pay to countv school sup erin ten d en ts who have less than 150 students in th eir ju risd ictio n If the bill receiv es final ap­ proval. it will go into effect Dec. 31,1978. —D.H. Viets Studying in U.S. M a y Be Subsidized vote Friday. Aid for College Retirees Sought S ta te R ep. S a ra h W eddington. DAustin, called the s t a te ’s tre a tm e n t of r e tir e d u n iv e rsity fa c u lty and s ta ff in e q u ita b le and u n fa ir" W ednesday and announced p lan s to am en d leg islatio n to m em b ers of the T ex as A ssociation of College T each ers and o th ers, one of h e r staff m e m b e rs said. P re s e n t law authorizes p a y m en t of a m onthly $15 insurance contribution to all c u rre n t senior college and u n iversity “T here is no doubt about it. T he Soviet Union u n d erstan d s the im p o rtan ce of sea power En ro u te to New O rleans abo ard Air F o rce I. p ress se c re ta ry Ron N essen elab o rated on the P re s id e n t's relu c ta n c e to an n o u n ce his c a n d id a c y for th e p residency in 1976 during a television in­ terview Monday night. N essen said M r. Ford would “ run definitely and ab so lu te­ ly for su re but would not y et officially announce b ecause he w as not read y to begin running for office. Utilities C om m ission Bill news copsules----- C a m b o d ia B e gin s V ictory Celebration “ SOVIET NAVAL UNITS now freely roam the w orld’s seas, circu m n av ig atin g the S tate of H aw aii in the P a c ific and o p erating in the Gulf of Mexico. M r. Ford said. “ We cannot afford to cu t (defense spending! any fu rth e r w ithout endangering our national secu rity . In fact, the foundation of d eten te is the m ilitary b alan ce that ex ists to d ay .’ U niversity as one en tity that should get U niversity a s one en tity less m oney so public schools could have m ore. He said if it c a m e to a choice betw een appro p riatin g money for school te a c h e r sa la rie s or public schools, ‘the children ought to get p rio rity .” The educational futures of South V iet­ nam ese and C am bodian students stra n d ­ ed in the U nited S tates would brighten considerably if an educational subsidy bill gains congressional approval. The bill, introduced this w eek by Rep P aul Sim on, D-I1L. would g ra n t these students $2,500 p e r y ear or the actu al c o st of th e ir education, w hichever is less. The proposal w ill be considered by the su bcom m ittee on postsecondary edu ca­ tion w ithin th re e w eeks. T erry M ichael. an assistan t to Sim on, said W ednesday. “ This In d ic a te s so m e m o v e m e n t” b e c a u s e m o s t b ills in tro d u c e d by fresh m en leg islato rs a re n t h eard this quickly. M ichael said. “It would be a very good idea because of the situation in Viet N am . Bhara Quoc Suan, p resident of the V ietnam ese Students A ssociation, said W ednesday. W ithout th is type of financial aid. m any of die 43 V ietnam ese stu d en ts h ere would be unable to continue th e ir educations, he added. Sim on said the co st of his p ro g ram would be about $7 m illion for the first y e a r The cost would d ec re a se y e a rly until th e ap p ro x im ately 2,300 V ietn am ese and C am bodian stu d en ts in the I nited S tates have com pleted th e ir deg ree p ro g ram s. S t u d e n t s n o w e n r o l l e d in u n ­ d e rg ra d u a te p ro g ram s would not receiv e aid if they go on to g ra d u a te school, M ichael said. ‘ My bill is s im ila r to le g is la tio n adopted in the la te 1940s to aid C hinese stu d en ts who w ere studying h ere w hen m ainland China fell to the C om m unists. S i m o n s a i d . “ It s t h e k i n d of h u m an itarian aid which I think m o st of us in the C ongress are w illing to vote. legislative roundup p e rs o n n e l and m o st o th e r s ta te em ployes, both c u rre n t an d re tire d . W eddington said. It excludes, how ever, re tire d faculty and staff. “ U nlike m o st o th e r sta te em p lo y es,” W eddington said, “ when a faculty or staff person of a T ex as sen io r college or university re tire s , th a t person is no longer eligible to receiv e th e m onthly contribution from th e s ta te .” W eddington said h e r proposed a m e n d ­ m e n t w ould solve th e s itu a tio n by authorizing the $15 m onthly in su ran ce for retire d a s well a s c u rre n t faculty and staff m em b ers. “ T h ere a r e sev eral bills in both houses th at can be used as a vehicle for such an a m en d m en t,” W eddington added. Achieving this equ al in su ran ce benefit has been an o b jectiv e of TACT for the p ast two legislative sessions, according to F ran k L. W right, ex ecu tiv e d ire c to r of the te a c h e rs’ organization •R etirees of s ta te fa c u lties have gone w ithout the insuran ce su p p o rt p ro g ra m f o r fo u r y e a r s w h ile o t h e r s t a t e e m p l o y e s b e n e f i t e d . T h e r e is no * ratio n ale for giving such a ssista n c e to h o th er state em ployes and not te a c h e rs ' W eddington said th a t m o re than 4,500 persons would becom e elig ib le for such benefits during th e com ing biennium — T e x a n Staff Photo by Carol Jean Sim m o n * Terminal Construction , J a “d J w b e h in d the l^ a , L a k in g A u . , in M u n ic ip a l Airport. T h e construction is p a ri of renovation* b e ,a g u n d e rta k e n o n th e a irp o rt ', te rm in a l. T h u rsd a y, A p ril 24, 1975 T H E D A I L Y T E X A N P a g e 3 J Fuzzy-kneed liberals NO, NO... I'M T H E GODFATHER! YOU'RE THE a n d nuclear proliferation C IA "! Bv CHARLES E. WATKINS ABSURDISTS TRIUMPH! I w onder if anyone else has noticed this but m e. As R ichard G oodm an signed off w ith Bob B inder and Roy B u tler just a fte r m id ­ night of election day, I s a t dum bfounded with the revelation that th e d irection of A ustin’s city govern­ m ent hinges on the w him sy of A ustin’s looney-left. I re fe r to the con­ ___ ________ s titu e n c y of P a u l Spragens, the can d id a te whose p latfo rm w as p re s e n te d in th e N ew U nified Spaghetti Code, w ith its tough ground beef provisions, req u irin g c an d id a te s to live in P ost Office Boxes, and to m ato p aste regulations for sexual conduct of p o l i t i c i a n s a n d j o u r n a l i s t s . Y ou rem em b er, the one who w anted police c a rs to serv e as ta x is in off-m om ents, and w anted all can d id a tes to file th e ir pow er fan tasies with th e city clerk. H im . In d u lg e m e a b it of p o li ti c a l speculation: with F riedm an-L inn and H im m elblau-L eberm ann we have two solid lib eral-p ro g ressiv es a g ain st two ' r n i s v progressive co nservatives, tied to big developm ent in terests. This leaves the unfathom able Jim m y Snell and the two runoff w inners as sw ing votes on the council L iberal victories in both runoffs would g u aran tee a governing liberal coalition of F ried m an . Linn, H ofm ann and T rev in o C o n se rv a tiv e v ic to rie s w o u ld p r o d u c e a L e b e r m a n n H im m elblau-G ray-Johnson block w hich could e ffe c tiv e ly s tifle m a y o ra l in ­ itiatives. A split endows insurance m an Snell w ith the pow er of a tie b re a k e r, a power best reserved to the m ayor. Some fuzzy-kneed lib erals a re upset th at S pragens cost T revino an outright victory in the election, and of course they are co rrect. Had S p rag en s’ sup­ p o rters voted for T revino, or even stayed home, th eir candidate would not be fac­ ing a runoff W hat they fail to see is th a t a Johnson-Trevino runoff is cru cial to H ofm ann’s chances in P lace I. C onsider the breakdow n th ere G ray got about 42 percent of the vote. H ofm ann about 30, and Rocha around 20 p ercen t. As in the other places, the liberal vote exceeded the conservative turnout, but h ere it split betw een two candidates. With the sam e turnout, Hofmann will win easily. But the goal, w h eth er it be free elections or e n e rg y in d e p e n d e n c e B o th e s ­ t a b l i s h m e n t s h a v e a t t e m p t e d to m an ip u late public opinion by controlling inform ation In addition to erroneous safety rep o rts, the industry has launched a drive to place pronuke m a te ria l in the pap ers by ghost w riting for ex p erts and conducting controlled tours for top-level jo u rn alists. W orse, th e n u c le a r e s ta b lis h m e n t d e m o n strates th e sam e contem pt of legal channels and individual lib erties as d id m i l i t a r y i n t e l l i g e n c e . S e v e n M aryland co n tra c to rs have been indicted for kickbacks in construction of the C alv ert Cliffs facility. K aren Silkwood died in m y sterio u s circu m stan ces on her way to p resen t dam ning evidence of nu clear unsafety. And the necessity for secu rity has led a V irginia facility to re­ quest perm ission for a p riv ate police force w ith pow er of a r r e s t and access to confidential citizen records. The u tilities a re not u naw are of the c a ta stro p h ic risks and cost overruns. Yet they have plunged stra ig h t ahead into th is technological V ietnam — outw ardly optim istic, in­ w ardly troubled, and alw ays furtive. P leasan t d ream s. th a t hinges on R o ch a's v o ters going to the polls. O therw ise G ray s p lu rality will becom e a m ajo rity . And w hat will turn out R o c h a ’s s u p p o rte rs , who re s id e m a in ly th e b ro w n n e ig h b o r h o o d s 0 T revino. If an o th er brown can d id a te w ere not in th e runoff, m any of Hof­ m an n ’s potential supporters could be ex­ pected to stay home. But T revino is in the runoff, and who do the lib erals have to th an k 9 P aul Spragens. th a t’s who. Y es, the ab su rd ist vote is the d e te r­ m ining facto r in not one. but both of the runoffs. Laugh th at one off. OUR FR IEN D THE ATOM. W anna lie aw ake tonight? C onsider som e d is tu r­ bing p a ra lle ls betw een the co m m itm en t of the U nited S tates to nu clear pow er and our involvem ent in V ietnam . Begin w ith the e stab lish m en t of the A tom ic E nergy C om m ission, an institution charged w ith not only prom oting atom ic pow er but also g u aran teein g its safety, ju s t a s the m ilitary estab lish m en t w as responsible for both executing and ev alu atin g the w ar In b o th c a s e s th e c o m m i t m e n t proceeded in crem en tally , each tim e w ith a ssu ra n c e s th a t the m ost re c e n t e sc a la ­ tion would be the last needed to achieve Sr firing line^ Adulations for tho racist, imporialist legislature . . . To the editor: I, the undersigned, thank the T exas House for passing the bill to ra ise the tu i­ tion for foreign students especially h ere in Texas to prove m ore than e v er already proven — h atred and preju d ice and d is­ crim ination I thank them because m o re foreign students are going to stay in th eir hom e countries and suffer and get fru strated for not having a place to get an education because the U S big businesses are m ilk­ ing everv penny out of th e ir countries. They a re going to realize who supports the puppet regim es in th eir countries and why. Finally, they a re going to ca rry guns. lib erate their countries from your exploitation and m ore universities. Ladies and gentlem en, it is going to be m ore V ietnam s and C am bodias for you. It is going to be m ore hum iliation and evacuations for you. If the V ietn am ese w ere able to s tir your nose in the ground for one inch, they a re going to stir it a foot. I prom ise you if I go back 1 11 tell my people of w hat you think of them and m ore guns ag ain st your exploitation and victory to the third w orld c o u n tie s We’ll see in the next session for a higher tuition. Riad M. Hamad Austin The issue is not really the m oney, but the quality of student self-governm ent at th e university. Why do c o m m ittees of p r e s u m a b ly n o r m a ll y i n t e l l i g e n t students insist on screw ing th eir friends and neighbors9 Is it sim ply to have som ething to fill all those m im eographed n e w sle tte rs th at a re never d e liv ered 0 Jeffrey L. Meikle 387-C Deep Eddy Apartments W ater fee To the editor: With regard to the $7 w a ter fee propos­ ed for g ard en ers in M arried Student Housing, it ap p ears th at th e stu d en ts own officious junior b u re au c ra ts a re again, a la Union E ast, bending o v er backw ards to betray their constitu en ts. In this case the offending p arty is the G arden C om m ittee of the M arried Stu­ d ent H ousing C ouncil, a c o m m itte e suggested by a nongardener who w anted to ex p ro p riate plots of c u rre n t g a r­ d en ers. m easu re out dollops of land of uniform size and issue these new plots to r e g i s t r a n t s on a f ir s t- c o m e b a s is . Although th is utopian pro g ram w as re ­ jected . the co m m itte e unfortunately w as established. F o r sev eral weeks now there have been ugly ru m o rs of a co ntem plated $7 w a te r fee (I say "rum ors’ because I h a v e n ’t received the past th ree issues of the co u n cil’s n ew sletter — how about a c o m m itte e to rectify th at?) The Texan a rtic le m a k e s it plain th a t the G arden C o m m ittee g en erated this proposal and p resen ted it to Housing and Food S er­ v ice. W H Y? D o n 't we have enough h a ssle s w ith the adm ittedly fair re n t in­ c re a s e s of n ex t fall without suggesting an a d d itio n al fee which the a d m in istra­ tion h a sn ’t even contem plated? Will the additional rev en u e low er the com ing ren t in c re a se , w hich presum ably covers o u ts id e w a t e r u s a g e a t p ro je c te d volum e? Will it p re v e n t future ren t in­ c re a s e s? Will the fe e itself become sub­ je c t to the im p e ra tiv e s of inflation0 Volunteers To the editor: During N ational V olunteer Week. 1975, I would like to take advantage of your colum n to openly express the a p p re c ia ­ tion of our sta ff for the w onderful work of all of o u r volunteers a t the In fo rm a­ tion and C risis C enter — “ H otline It is through the w onderful giving of tim e by t h e s e p e r s o n s t h a t w e k e e p th e telephones answ ered. It is through their skills th a t m ore than 24,000 c a lls w ere answ ered during the p a st year. Since our se rv ice is m aintained 24 hours a day, seven days per w eek, in­ cluding holidays, we use a larg e num ber of volunteers Included are students, faculty m em b e rs and their spouses, housew ives, business people and persons from all walks of the com m unity. T heir caring and sy m p ath etic listening ability m ake th is com m unity a m ore carin g one. To e a c h an d e v e ry one of th e se v o lu n te e r s , p lu s a ll of th e o th e r v o lu n teers who give so m uch tim e in th is com m unity, w e are indeed indebted. (Ms.) Ruth M. Sanders Director of Volunteer Development In form ation and C r isis C en ter — “ Hotline” 472-2411 478-5693 (Administrative Office) _ ___ t ....... • A.. L. ............... 1 U /4 ( A r n n k l i A f i n m i n . ofe Ju rists have called for public denun­ ciation of these gross violations of the United N ations U niversal D eclaration of H um an Rights. On behalf of the thousands of persons cu rren tly being held in the U ruguayan m ilitary prisons, all concerned people a re urged to d ire c t le tte rs of inquiry and p ro te s t to th e ir s e n a to rs and co n ­ gressm en Also, find tim e to see “ State of Siege ” F or m ore inform ation call 478-0630. Bob Rhoades Encouraging bikes To the editor: The U niversity a re a has the heaviest bicycle traffic of any a re a of the city. Aside from the safety facto r m entioned in the a rticle, one would hope th a t the U niversity would encourage the use of the bicvcie as being m ore clean and ef­ ficient than the auto The 26th S treet ram p would be one of the only safe w ays for bicycle tra ffic to e n te r the w est cam - n H cshould hoil I pus a re a 3and be built. Joseph E. Beaudette M ember, Texas Cycle Com m ittee nile Ethnocentric To the editor: I feel th a t Mr. D unlap showed an am azing lack of insight and com passion in his le tte r on problem stu d en ts in the Austin Independent School D istrict. If the econom ic w orth of the p aren ts is the basis for judging students, penalizing the poor p aren t even m ore by forcing him to m ake a deposit on his child’s behavior is only a fu rth er step backw ard. I h ate to lay an o th er one on society, but we m u st accep t som e of th e blam e for conditions th at p e rm it a country as w ealthy as ours to have la rg e portions of the population at poverty level. M iddle­ class p a re n ts have had both th e tim e and money to invest in the developm ent of their children. U nfortunately, th ere are m any p a re n ts who cannot get much beyond basic survival, which leaves little energy for discipline or p ro p er groom ing for the g reat, w hite, m iddle-class school system . May all Mr. D unlap’s c lasses com e only from the highest s tr a ta of society and m ay an “ excuse m e ’’ alw ays bring resp ect and im m ediate calm . Monica Shaw Austin Fishology To the editor: The p ictu re of the alleged rainbow tro u t in the S um m er S afaris a rtic le in th e April edition of P earl has been w rongly id en tified The p h o to g rap h show n on P a g e 9 o f P e a r l is th e G uadalupe b ass (M icro p teru s trecu li) and is not th e rainbow tro u t (Salm o g a ird n e ri). nor the brown tro u t (Salm o tru tta ). to w hich the tex t refe rs. P e rh ap s it would have been p re ferab le for those responsible for this a rtic le to co n cen trate on the sp o rt fishes n ative to Texas, ra th e r than species which do not occur n atu ra lly in T exas w a te rs, and which have been introduced. Robert Edwards Zoology Siegi To the editor: Tuesday the widely a cclaim ed m o­ tion p ictu re “ S tate of Siege” opened a t the Dob ie T h e ate r and will continue through T hursday. “ S tate of Siege” is a pow erful account based on ac tu a l fa c t of the “ T u p a m a ro ” kidnaping and eventual execution of U S Agency for In te r­ n a tio n a l D ev elo p m e n t o ffic ia l Dan to public .scrutiny and w e re e a sily accessible. But under C lay to n 's new in te rp re ta tio n of the Open R ecords Act, to gain a c ce ss to these files one m u st gain specific, w ritten perm ission from th e legislator (or h is designate) whose reco rd s a re to be exam ined Thus to exam ine th e ex ­ pense and payroll reco rd s of a leg islato r, even one s hom etown rep re sen ta tiv e , he m ust first gain w ritten approval from that leg islato r Though m o st House m em bers will c e r­ ta in ly give th e re q u ire d p e rm issio n fo r th w ith , th e s itu a tio n re s e m b le s R ichard N ixon’s idea th a t H E should be the judge of w hat w as relev an t to the W a te rg a te in v e stig a tio n . And m an y House m em b ers do not ap p re c iate the p recario u s position (and th e legal confu­ sion) th a t C layton’s ruling entails. C layton’s reaso n s for th e change in policy stem from his responsibility as custodian of these reco rd s. H is custodial d u ties, in effe c t, req u ire him to decide w h eth er any of th e inform ation con­ tain ed in th e files is specifically excluded by th e Open R ecords Act. And Clayton feels th a t th e re m ay be m a te ria ls con­ a g e 4 Thursday, A p r il 24, 1975 THE DAIL\ TEXAN / ' W e l c o m e to t h e l e i s u r e class. the intent tained in the files which a re excluded from public access. But m ost re p re se n ta tiv es a s well as m e m b e rs of th e sp e a k e r’s own sta ff (i e. E xecutive A ssistant Jack G ullahom ) a re n ’t even su re what is ac tu a lly con­ tained in the files — w hether each file con tain s generally the sam e basic infor­ m a tio n — m uch le ss if an y of the m a t e r i a l is e x c lu d e d by th e O pen R eco rd s Act. . And the C layton ruling, ra th e r than clarifying this question of open records policy, instead c re a te s a m yriad of hassles. It. 1) Adds to the w orkloads of already o v ertax ed le g isla to rs’ staffs who m ust, with each re q u est for access to files, p rocess a w ritten approval. 2) U nnecessarily delays th e access of the p ress to inform ation contained in the files, thus delaying public disclosure. 3) In flic ts on th e public a n o th e r b u reau cratic obstacle with which to grapple to gain inform ation which is ALREADY rightfully th eirs. 4 (Sticks the tax p ay ers w ith the ex­ pense of an o th er unneeded rung on the b u reau cratic ladder. Though an atto rn ey g e n e ra l’s ruling has been requested on w hether C layton's policy conform s to the Open R ecords Act, the em phasis of this opinion m ust, to clarify the situation, cate g o rize w hat m a te ria ls a re contained in the files. Only through a delineation of the contents of the files which would definitively rule on w hat w as open for public disclosure could a w orkable sy stem be developed to provide expedient a ccess to these public records Clayton, in his fervor to conform to the le tte r of the Open R ecords Act, has w orked to the d e trim e n t of the actu al in­ ten t of the Open R ecords Act of 1973 — the right to quick access to public records. The sp eak er would do well to exam ine the final p a rt of the D eclaration of Policy of the Open R ecords Act: T he people, in d e le g a t in g a u t h o r i ­ ty, do not g i v e th e ir p u b lic s e r v a n ts th e rig ht to de cide w h a t is g oo d fo r the peo ple to k n o w a n d w h a t is not g o od for th em to k n o w .... To th a t end, the p r o v i s i o n s o f t h i s A c t s h a l l be L I B E R A L L Y (e m p h a sis a d d e d ) c o n ­ s t r u e d w ith th e v i e w o f c a r r y in g out (th is) d ecla r a tio n o f pu b lic policy. quire The te a c h e rs I have w orked w ith have b e e n f r u s t r a t e d w ith th e n o r m a l problem s of discipline and a d m in is tra ­ tion but unlike the generalization th a t Mr. Dunlap p resen ted , m ost te a c h e rs reveal love for the stu d en ts and even som e days like teaching! While at Allan, I have enjoyed som e positive experiences. I am sorry Mr. Dunlap did not have sim ila r experiences. M issey Worrell Education On education To the ed ito r: > In response to S. D unlap's two G u est View points, the la te s t being Monday, April 21, I can only re g iste r shock and disbelief H ere is a m an who purports to be a teach er, w hose only goal, as gleaned from his artic le s, is to produce an o rd e r­ ly, a c c u ltu rated nonperson who will not upset Mr D unlap’s day — NOT m ind you, an in terested , activ e o r m otivated student with a fu rth e r desire to learn and use his education. At one tim e. I was a m inor problem for the AISD. m yself. T he education I w as receiving w as poor, a t best, and nonexis­ tent. a t w orst. In o th er w ords, due la rg e ­ ly to the inability of m y te ac h ers, I w as bored silly, a s are, I a m sure, m ost of the “ problem stu d e n ts” of whom D unlap w rites. But I w as a m inor problem because, being a child of the upperNot fair m iddle class w ith a firm background in To the editor: “ p o lite” society. I m erely needed the I would like to c o m m e n t on Mr. m otivation to d ress according to my D unlap’s observations of Allan Junior fam ily ’s m ean s and to keep politics out High school and the p roblem s he en­ of the classroom (oh. reprehensible sub­ countered while su b stitu tin g there. je c t for a developing c itiz e n ) — or leave. I have been doing my stu d en t teaching T hanks to m y financial ad vantage I a t Allan Ju n io r High since Ja n u ary , and I enrolled in a p riv ate high school w here have yet to run into the problem s that EDUCATION, in the real sense of the Mr D unlap encountered. T he children I w ord, w as all-im portant. But w hat of the have w orked w ith have been basically students trap p ed in the less than a ttr a c ­ coop erativ e and cre a tiv e . They by all tiv e, less th a n se c u re neighborhood m eans have had th eir “ o ff’’ days in schools “ta u g h t” by the D unlaps of c lass but then I would guess th at m ost o. public “ ed u catio n 9” They becom e the us w hile a t the U niversity have talked s u b j e c t s o f v in d i c ti v e t e a c h e r s , during a lectu re o r been late to class. businessm en and politicians whose only I feel M r D unlap’s ju dgm ent of the recourse for th eir own insensitivity and p a ren ts of Allan stu d en ts w as not a s fair ignorance is to penalize — and w hat as it could have been. I a m su re th e re a re m o r e f i t t i n g p u n is h m e n t th a n a som e p aren ts who do have problem s m onetary fine em phasizing the hardship handling th eir children, but I am equally of these people living within a highly dis­ as su re th ere a re parent-child problem s c rim in ato ry sy stem w here money and in N orthw est H ills also. skin color (w hite) a r e the only standards The problem s th a t face a black or of w o r t h ? M exican-A m erican child in the school I agree th a t a public te a c h e r’s salary is tend to be h ard er to deal w ith than those laughable, but p erhaps Mr. D unlap’s facing a w hite m iddle-to-upper-class com plaint would be m ore effective if he child. P a re n ts of Allan stu d en ts also tend couched it in te rm s of his w orth as a to face h a rd e r econom ic problem s which teac h er, not in te rm s of the nonw orth of do not plague W estlake Hill p a ren ts and his students. Susanna Franklin th erefo re do not get to spend the tim e Plan II w ith th e ir children th a t they m ig h t re ­ tit\ i/l C l a y t o n : the letter By DAVID WHITTEN P u r s u a n t to t h e f u n d a m e n t a l p h ilo so p h y of th e A m erica n c o n ­ s t i t u t i o n a l fo r m o f r e p r e s e n t a t i v e g o v e r n m e n t w h ic h holds to the p r i n c i ­ p le th a t g o v e r n ­ m e n t is th e se r v a n t o f th e p eo p le, a n d not the m a s t e r o f th em , it is h e r e b y d e c la r e d to be th e pu b lic p o lic y of the S t a t e of T e x a s t h a t a ll p ers o n s are, u n ­ less o th e r w is e ex_____________ p r e s s ly p r o v i d e d by la w , a t all ti m e s e n title d to full a n d c o m p le te i n f o r m a ­ tion re g a r d in g th e a ffa irs of g o v e r n ­ m en t an d th e official a c ts o f th ose w h o re p r e se n t them a s pu b lic officials a n d em p lo ye s. — Declaration of Policy of the Texas Open Records Act of 1973 S peaker of the H ouse Billy C layton recently issued m em o ran d a which have severely lim ited public a c c e ss to th e e x ­ pen se and p ay ro ll re c o rd s of s ta te representatives. During the te r m s of form er S peakers R ayford P ric e and P ric e D aniel J r these reco rd s w ere open • M itrione in U ruguay. M itrione w as ex­ posed by his c ap to rs for his role in the train in g of the U ruguayan special police ( t h e D e a th S q u a d ) in th e a r t of counterinsurgency and to rtu re This unique film is m ore than a m oving p o r t r a i t of L a tin A m e r ic a ’s m o s t renow ned urban g u errilla organization. U ru g u ay 's N ational L iberation M ove­ m ent (T u p am aro s). It delves into the v ery organization and w orkings of one of th e m ost brutal and rep ressiv e m ilita ry go v ern m en ts in the w orld, including e n a c tm e n ts of actu a l police co u rses in to rtu re by e lec trical shock and the U.S. a d m in istered training *in a W est T exas tow n) of U ruguayan police in the use of explosives ag ain st d em o n strato rs. Since April. 1972, when the U ruguayan g ov ern m en t d eclared “ in tern al w a r on th e T u p arm aro s. m e m b ers of the group have suffered im prisonm ent, to rtu re and in som e cases execution In an e ffo rt to ca ll atten tio n to th e inhum an tre a tm e n t of these and o th er political p riso n ers the In tern atio n al Red Cross, A m nesty In te r­ national and In tern atio n al C om m ission D a il y T e x a n he S tu d e n t N t w i p o p t r s t Th. U n iv e r s ity o f T . n o t u t A u l t in E D IT O R ................................................................................................ Bu('k H arvey MANAGING E D IT O R ..................................................................... Lynne Brock ASSISTANT MANAGING ED ITO R S...........................................Eddie F ish e r Claude Simpson NEWS E D IT O R ....................................................................................K athy Kelly SPORTS fc]DITOR..........................................................................R ichard Ju stic e AMUSEMENTS E D IT O R .............................................................. Vicky Bowles F E A T U R E S E D IT O R .....................................................................Jan ic e Tomlin CAPITOL BUREAU C H IE F .................................................. David H endricks ISSUE STAFF Issue News E d i t o r ....................................................................................... N ancy E. ( all G en eral R ep o rters ............. Steve M cG onigle, Bill Scott, B arry Boesch N ews A s s is ta n ts ......................................................................... ,oan li v e n s , Beth M ackAmy Cheng, Toni Snidow. P a tti Kilday ( ’n n trihutors Ann P lunkett, E ric a L uekstead E d ito ria l A ssistant”.!’. ....................................................................... B ryan B rum ley A ssociate A m usem ents E d i t o r ...................................................... W illiam A. Stone Jr. A ssistant A m usem ent E d i t o r ..................................................................... B rad Buchholz A ssistant Sports E d ito r .............................................................................. Johnny C am pos Make-up E d i t o r ................................................................................................ Ann Wheelock W ire P age E d i t o r .................................................................................................. Scott Bobb Conv E d ito rs ................................................... Mike Young, Anne G arvey, Ja n Phipps, Dawn O ’N eal, Nick R ussell Photo graphers ............................................................C arol Je a n Sim m ons. Zach Ryall O p in io n s e x p r e s s e d in T h e D a ily T e x a n a r e t h o s e o f t ile B u ild in g b a s e m e n t H o o t 1 o r a t th e n e w s la b o r a to r y iC o m e d it o r o r t h e w r it e r o f th e a r t i c l e a n d a r e n o t n e c e s s a r i ly th o s e o f t h e U n i v e r s i t y a d m in is t r a t io n o r t h e B o a r d o f m u t l u a t i o n B u il d i n g A tilt* )> I n q u i r i e s c o n c e r n i n g d e li v e r y a n d c l a s s i f i e d a d v e r t i s i n g s h o u ld Im' m a d e in T S P B u ild in g Regents :t 2tKt 1471 5 2 4 4 ) a n d d i s p l a y a d v e r t i s i n g ll 210 (471 18*45» * T h e D a i ly T e x a n a s t u d e n t n e w s p a p e r a t T h e U n iv e r s it y o f T e x a s a t A u s t in , is p u b l i s h e d bv T e x a s S t u d e n t P u b l i c a t io n s 78712 D r a w e r D . U n i v e r s i t y S t a t io n . A u s tin T h e D a ily T e x a n is p u b lis h e d M o n d a y . T ex T u e sd a y . in T S P B u ild in g The n a t io n a l a d v e r t i s i n g r e p r e s e n t a t i v e o f T h e D a ily Tee s a u is N a t io n a l E d u c a t io n a l A d v e r t is in g S e r v ic e Inc 10017 ■ r n i. e x in g lo n A v o . N e w Y o rk N Y T h e D a ily T e x a n s u b s c r ib e s to T h e A s s o c ia t e d P r e s s W e d n e s d a y . T h u r sd a y a n d F r id a y , e x c e p t d u r in g h o lid a y .m d e x , o n p e r io d s S e c o n d - c la s s p o s t a g e p a id a t A u s tin . U n it e d P r e s s I n t e r n a t io n a l a n d P a c i f i c N e w s s e r v i c e T he T ex N e w s c o n t r ib u t io n s w ill b e a c c e p t e d b y t e le p h o n e <471 T e x a n is a m e m b e r of t h e A s s o c ia t e d C o l l e g e Ic P r e s s , th e 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 a n d th 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 ♦ M il' a t th e e d it o r ia l o f f i c e i T e x a s S tu d e n t P u b lic a t io n s N D o u b le g o o d th in k in C h ile e c o u n try s q u ir e fro m to the memo, students f n r c p ii f ouD em ath ecmo r d i nag t o cording t h e memo, students th e c o u nth try r con e d thupon than any other candidate M aryland's ea ste rn shore, w ill re c e iv e 96 h o u rs of Thereafter, the CIA and ITT cu rricu lu m of “ n ation al l i k e s t o f l y a r o u n d in “ theoretical” and “practical” sought to underm ine the security” studies, has assign­ instruction The theoretical chartered airplanes and drive Allende regime, we reported, ed soldiers to monitor the around in rented limousines. program covers such subjects by sabotaging the Chilean classrooms and has organized The taxpayers, of course, are as “ in te r n a l t h r e a t s , ’ a secret spy system to check economy. We quoted from stuck with the bills. “ s u b v e r s io n ,” “ p o litic a l secret U.S. embassy cables of upon the loyalty of students, We have access to his travel deviations” and “political and teachers and administrators a “ sh arp en ing ec o n o m ic vouchers, which show he has ideologic aggression.” Our own National Education crisis.” The practical program con­ chartered private planes to fly Still, the embassy advised Association, which has been as far as Alaska and as near sists of “ atten d an ce in a keeping track of teacher op­ Washington. ‘‘Chileans have as his Easton, Md., home A national defense departm ent great ability to rush to the pression in Chile, reports that single charter flight to Alaska in s ta lla tio n or u n it for a hundreds of p rofessional brink, embrace each other cost the taxpayers $21,868 m inim um period of three and back off. With Russian educators have been dismiss­ m onths.” When Morton arriv es at an ed and jailed. Some of them, and E ast European help, airport, he doesn t hail a cab Not only students but their some debt relief ... and some according to reliable reports, like lesser passen g ers. He parents are summoned to the breaks, Chile just might be have been cruelly tortured rents a Cadillac to drive him h ig h s c h o o l s to a t t e n d We have obtained copies of able to rock along for some around He vouchers show he m e e t i n g s . “ F a i l u r e to a “denunciation” form, which time to com e.” often spends more than $200 atten d ,” w arns one notice, the junta has distributed to C h i l e ’s d e m o c r a tic for limousine service on a “ will be more than sufficient 'Not I v o r th m aart II'm rn com p a rin ' myself to tr a d itio n s, we re p o rted , students and teachers for use single trip. reason to proceed with your should keep the army at bay. in reporting on the attitudes By an in te r e s tin g c o in ­ im m ediate a r r e s t.” Again we quoted the em ­ and behavior of their peers. cidence, Morton did m ost of FOOTNOTE: The Chilean T h e fo rm a s k s fo r a b a s s y 's s e c r e t c a b le s ; this traveling during the 1972 “ history” of the subject, in­ em bassy in Washington ex­ “ Prospects of m ilitary in­ presidential election. He ran n liti^ Q llv H i c Q D r o o a h l p fchoices, h n irP S w h i l e reser­ re plained to us that the “ denun­ tion of making the npolitically disagreeable while By DAVID S. BRODER tervention for foreseeable clu d in g in form ation that up a whopping $121,682 in c i a t i o n ” fo rm s , u sed by ving to Congress a guaranteed right to second-guess. w ould h elp a t “ th e in ­ *1975 Washington Post Syndicate travel bills in 1972. com pared While ruling out rationing or taxes, the Senate commanded future are extremely small. stu d e n ts an d te a c h e rs to WASHINGTON — Despite what you have been hearing du™ng The embassy was wrong. terrogatory.” Persons filling to only $43,982 the following, Zarb to promulgate, within 90 days, precise standards of energy report derogatory information out the form are asked to this week s debate about gasoline taxes; it is not true that conservation covering everything from decorative lighting to The generals moved against “ evaluate” their colleagues on one an o th er, w ere c ir ­ nonpolitical vear. Congress has done absolutely nothing about the energy . car pooling and mass transit use. The bill does not say what Allende. left him dead in the All of these bills, of course, on a scale of one to IO for culated im m ediately after the Just two weeks ago. while public attention was - l i b e l e d by w ere charged to the ta x ­ those standards should be. But it says that if Zarb guesses presidential palace and im­ “ fanaticism ,” “ audacity,” m ilitary dictatorship seized events in Indochina, the Senate passed a marvelous bill called payers The vouchers show, wrong. Congress can veto any of his guidelines, with suitable posed a military dictatorship “ d a n g e r o u s n e s s power to uncover the radicals and the Standby Energy Authorities Act of 1075. upon Chile. moreover, that m ost of his on the campuses. Our own rhetoric within the following 30 days. It was approved on the same afternoon that the senators, in a This most democratic of “ p o s s i b i l i t i e s of a r e ­ 1972 charter flights were bill­ That is only the beginning. The mandated regulations then sources report, on the con­ education” remarkable burst of legislative creativity, also passed a resoai­ ed d u r i ng t he c a m p a i g n would go to each state, which would be required within 180 days South A m erica n n a tio n s trary , that the forms were The smuggled documents tion posthumously restoring the full rights of citizenship to Gen. m onths of August through to formulate its own conservation plan designed to m eet Zarb s suddenly was transformed also include a memo from the still* in use just a couple of into a harsh police state. September. At m ost stops, he standards. Here, the Senate has created a two-edged sword for months ago. R(Uwould be hard to judge which action will do m o r e lo help Evidence was smuggled to us education m inister to the gave political speeches urging later use against the Administration. WATCH ON WASTE: Tall, defense minister, discussing with today’s problems. But the bet here is that Lee s ghost has the re-election of President On the one hand, it has commanded that the state conserva­ of w id e sp r e a d p o lit ic a l tw e e d y S e c r e ta r y of th e "the teaching of national more substance than any lawyer can find in the Standby Energy Nixon. tion plans should be approved by Zarb only if they “ minimize arrests and torturing. Interior Rogers C.B. Morton. courses in Authorities Act of 1975. Now we have received even s e c u r i t y adverse economic or employment impact-’ and “meet unique educational institutions." The reason Congress had to vote Lee hts amnesty, at this late local economic, climatological geographic and other con­ more depressing documents DOONESBUHY The memo instructs the date is that his own application for restoration of his smuggled out of Chile by our ditions.” On the other hand, the Senate has decreed that the net defense minister to appoint citizenship rights, and his pledge of loyalty to the I mon. sub­ sources — as before, at great ef fect of these varied plans must reduce total domestic energy mitted shortly after cessation of hostilities in October. 865. risk to themselves and their “ advisers to the schools and consumption by 4 percent within a year of the bill becoming to name “ the officers who will was unaccountably misplaced by the bureaucrats of his time families. law. and was not rediscovered until 1970 t These documents show that be appointed to teach the So. if the regulations pinch in any state, Zarb will have the military junta has taken classes.” Despite this demonstration of the penis of government violated one Senate command; and, if energy use is not reduced At the university level, ac­ over the nation’s schools, has paperwork. the senators came up with a supposed energy nationally he will have violated another. ’program that will, if rediscovered IOO years from now, make That leaves him in the interesting position of reducing the size Crossword Puzzler the’ historians of that age wonder about the competency of 20th of the energy pie without cutting anyone's slice It is a no-win written A C R OSS Century Americans. proposition — and the Republicans were probably right in say­ DOW N C K Q iiiiS E @ s a n 0 | g 1 Encountered That bill is a hodgepodge. Part of it gives the President ce 1 D eface ing it was that way by Democratic design, and not by 4 Command to a n lia 'a a s n u p _ tam em ergency powers, which he might use in case of another 2 Period of cat a s g time 8 Snare oil em bargo, unless blocked by Congress. But to this marginally happenstance H S T a u llG a . ’f i i S S S By the most charitable interpretation, the senators abdicated 3 Tried 12 Exist useful grant of authority, the Senate Democrats attached a iffl 3 - 2 0 3 lin H a a 4 Reach 13 Gama played their own responsibility for hard decisions and left the country complex provision, full of high-sounding aspirations and short of R a u a H 3H H . across on horse­ with what can only be called a false-front facade of any energy 5 Mountain back 333 a policy directions. It commands the federal government and all pass 14 Hindu queen a a S a E c ta s ia ., a a 50 states to devise energy conservation programs (again sub­ policy. 6 M ans 15 Scamp That's the kind of performance which already has brought the i d s d n sfp U a g g nickname ject to congressional veto) which will supposedly cut energy use 17 Period of O H (3 1 1 0 3 ® -S H O W federal government into disrepute with its citizens. Some 7 Right now tune the equivalent of 800,000 barrels of oil a day without hurting 8 Attempt a is a r a a r a g ta g ^ 19 N egative friendly medium ought to ask Gen. Lee if he really wants his 9 Sun god c a b ia i ai { refix citizenship back. ____________ 10 Dye plant unbum T T s as near-perfect an example of buck passing as land 30 God of love 21 Uncouth per­ 11 Pellet 45 Three-toed 31 Parcels of Washington has ever seen. The man "ho would have to 16 H eadgear son sloth land 18 Paid notice Friends o f minister the act. energy chief Frank Zarb Pleaded wit!i the 22 Sick 46 Merriment 33 Fondle 21 Join 23 Walk 48 Likely Senate not to establish such “ far-reaching but ill-defined man­ 34 Skill 22 Suffix: 25 Plaything 49 Suitable belonging to 37 Metal datory energy conservation programs. 26 Indefinite ar­ 50 Household 3 9 Roadside 2 3 Pretense ticle None of the 60 senators who voted for the bill seemed to care. et hotels 24 Dom esticate 27 Possessed reek letter 4 1 Change And the suspicion among those Republicans who opposed it is 25 Large cask 28 Vandal 53 Conjunction 42 Pedal digit i i ill h a t e a G a r d e n Sale 26 Emmet 29 Heavenly that Zarb and his boss, the President, are being set up as the fall 55 A state 4 3 Clean 28 Pronoun being (abbr) 44 Aleutian is­ guys when the program inevitably fails. th 10 a.m . to O p.m . S a tu rd a y , April 26 2 9 G irl snam e 32 Part of "to _ .. _ By JACK ANDERSON with LES WHITTEN *1975, United Feature Syn­ dicate, Inc. WASHINGTON - It has been our lot to chronicle the tragedy of Chile. In 1972, we published secret documents which proved the CIA and ITT had plotted together to block the late Salvador Allende from com­ ing to power. But Chile had such strong dem ocratic traditions that Allende, although a Marxist, couldn’t be stopped from assum ing the p residency because he had more votes but -Roosevelt, ---L_-------------------— False front energy facade roaaaa aug anatox Margret H o fm an n 1*1 W I Ii I F rie n d s M eeting H o use. <03 Vi est 31st S treet S COVER YOUR MOUTH.'IT'S A v, ill benefit Margret cam paign. C om e Tin th e r e vvill bi1 ami browse t h r o u g h the booth* so m eth in g for e \i * r \ o n e in th e family. DRAGONFLY.'.' u Cf • Baked Hoods • Plants • H ook- * R efre sh m e n ts I • • C lo th in g Furniture * Toy8 • Special Items I DRAGONFLIES SEU! UP YOUR LIPS SO YOU CAN'T EAT, I \\ f Ii I ■ D onation* for th e -ale will be ac cep ted al th e m eetin g hou se g a rd e n t h u r s d a y . I rid ay and Saturday (for baked goods). T o give large items ilia! need a tru c k , rail 172-6.V76. Margret ll o f m a n n also need* volunteer*. T o help elect b er. rail cam paign h e a d q u a rte r* at 1722112. H r c o m e by 3(12 NXest l o t h S treet. ujh&j! s (lily C ouncil, Place 1/M ay 3 I I Pl as S be 33 Flag 35 Artificial til language 36 Measuring device 38 Sea eagle 39 W itty remark 40 Pronoun 41 Perform 42 Hurl 43 Pale 45 In music, high 46 Obtained 47 Near 48 River island 49 Despoil 52 C ease 54 G reat Lake 56 Unit of Lat­ vian curren­ cy 57 Damage 58 Ceremony 59 Music as Margret Hofmann. Iii rPenak. V I' IM In Si *«$**«$«■ forr M argrrt.H o fm an n , tvd n w k . ehp*r» m n .. ■ — ■ t » 1 THIS YEAR, STUDENT GOVERNMENT ESTABLISHED: PROVIDED LOBBIED FOR •O ffice of Graduate M inority Recruitment Course Description Guide ‘Minority Emergency Grant Program ►Teaching Excellence Awards ♦Housing Guide ♦$1,000 for TexPIRG ♦City Council Election Supplement ♦ Low Cost Vacat ions and Football Trips •Building use fee c e ilin g •An additional $10 m illion in financial aid •Responsive Regents •Expansion of Women s A thletic Programs NEXT YEAR DEPENDS ON ^ YOU! FOR $2.70 YOU CAN HELP DO MORE SE = J u n io r F la tte r y in do your part CHECK-OFF STUDENT GOVERNMENT ~ THIS WEEK iB H IIIIIIlllllllllllllU M IIIlllllllllllliliU IH IIIIIIlU IH IilllllllllllllllllllH U U lllllH llillllU llllltl llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllltltlHIIIIIStlllllllll S o ft F lu tter y ArneH H it th e s u m m e r sc e n e w ith the h a p p y -g o lu c k y lo o k s an d f r e e - m o v in g c o m fo r t of th is free s p ir ite d d re s s . 1 0 0% A m e l ' tr ia c e ta t e in cool s h a d e s of d otted b lu e or g re e n . S iz e s 5 to 13. 26.00 YARINGS ON-THE-DRAG 2406 Guadalupe limillMIIIIIINIIIIIIIMIIIHIMIINHIIMNMMHIINiMMMinMINIIIMMaNllinMMMMIMIIIIVmiimiiiiiiuuiiiiiiiiiitiiiffi T h u rsd a y, A p ril 24, 1975 TH E D A ILY TEXAN Page ! N C A A Council O K s A A U Trip Richard Wortham: Pitcher Enjoys Success at Texas By B IL L SU L LIV A N Texan S ta ff W riter Pitching is the p rim e p re re q u isite for a ch am pion sh ip con ­ tender. a stan d ard by which T e x a s m a tc h e s up w ell with any team in the country. . thrilo R ich ard W ortham h as been a sta r te r at Texas for th ree se aso n s, com piling an im p ressiv e 31-4 record d espite num erous physical prob lem s encountered in his c a r e e r here \ f t e r a highly su c c e ssfu l fresh m an y e ar, a s evidenced by an 11-0 record. W ortham con tracted pneum onia a week p rio r to the 74 season when he slipped to a 10-4 m a rk L a s t w inter, he w as injured in an e le v ato r accid en t, c a stin g se rio u s doubt on his ath letic future and leavin g h im with a lengthy s c a r on his right arm and leg. Fortu n ately , he w as not perm an en tly im p aired and h as m anaged to regain h is old form . D E S P IT E HIS m isfo rtu n es, W ortham c la im s the injury h as in no way changed h is pitching sty le He is ge n e rally p le ase d with his p erform an ce this se aso n , a se aso n in which he has thus fa r com piled a 10-0 record •Som e things ab out this se aso n could h ave been b e tter, he said , 'but m ore than anything I rn glad that the leg carne around and I w as ab le to c o m e back " W ortham is p rim arily a fa stb a ll p itch er, although he m ix e s in the curve and change-up to keep the h itte rs gu essin g. The f a s t ­ ball. how ever, is his money pitch, the one he go es to when he _______________ g ets in trouble TOYOTA DATSUN VO LKSW AG EN VOLVO WITH THIS C O U P O N TO YO TA OR V O LV O M A J O R TUNE-UP $ 16 . S 0 p/u$ parts T6X3S “ I W O ULDN’T tra d e anything for the e x p e rie n ce I ’v e had h ere. he sa id "T h e coach in g is excellen t, and the b e st is a lw a y s gotten out of the p la y e rs. With the new sta d iu m , this is e asily one of the top p r o g r a m s in the co u n try .” W ortham , along with a num ber of other T e x a s p e r fo r m e rs, is a defin ite pro p ro sp e c t At the m om en t, how ever, he is in no hurrv to burn any b rid g e s at T e x a s, having m ade no firm d e c i­ sion to return fo r a fourth se aso n here, or to c a s t h is lot a s a p ro fessio n al , ,, .. “ I doubt that I would turn pro next y e a r u n less the o ffe r w as really good I ve m a d e a lot of good frien d s h ere, and I w ouldn't feel at all bad ab ou t com in g b ack Undoubtedly. C oach C liff G u stafson wouldn t feel too badly about it. eith er. WF QHtt JOod Ihtu Mo, 31*# Engine Repair Brakes O v e rse a s En gin e K A N SA S C IT Y (A P ) - The N ation al C o lle g ia te A thletic A sso ciatio n gav e the green ligh t W ednesday to co lle g e a th le te s who w ish to a c c o m ­ pany the A m ateu r A th letic Union tra c k and field te a m th at will tour m ain land China n ext month. A fter a join t m eetin g with Jo se p h S c alz o , P re sid e n t of the AAU, O llan C a sse ll. AAU e x e c u tiv e d ir e c t o r an d R ich ard H ark in s, se c re ta ry tr e a s u r e r , the NCAA council g a v e its ap p ro v al, say in g that the AAU o ffic ia ls had m a d e it c le a r that the com petition in China in volves “ a n ation al t e a m .” T h a t p e r m itte d w aiv e r of an NCAA bylaw th at p roh ib its c o lle g ia te a th le te s fro m co m p etin g on outsid e te a m s. B u t D r. John F u z ak , p r e s i­ dent of the N CAA , m a d e it c le a r th at the a th le te s in­ volved would still have to be c o n c e rn e d w ith c o n fe r e n c e ru le s and ru les of th eir in­ dividual in stitution s. " A s f a r a s the NCAA ru le s — Photo by Mon vol t i m W i a r e con cern ed, any co lle g e ath lete m a y c o m p e te ,” said “ C O N T R O L HAS a lw a y s been som eth in g of a prob lem with m e .” he sa id , “ but I se e m to get the o u ts when I need them . O ver-all I don't think that I throw m o re p itch e s than a v e r a g e in a g a m e d e sp ite the w alk s " The T e x a s d e fe n se h as c o m e in fo r som e c ritic ism fo r spotty play this se aso n , but W ortham defen d s the d e fe n d ers, noting that ‘ we ge t them out when we h ave to ,” W ortham fe e ls the pitching sta ff a s a whole is stro n g e r than la s t y e ar and c ite s w hat m u st happen for T e x a s to c la im a national ch am pion sh ip this y ear. “ TO WIN in O m ah a, w e're going to h ave to e lim in a te a lot of our m en tal m ista k e s. P h y sic a lly , w e a r e a s good a s o r b e tte r than anyone in the co u n try ,” he said “ What w e re a lly need is to ach ieve so m e d e g re e of co n sisten cy in ou r rem ain in g g a m e s. ’ T e x a s h as an opportunity to finish unbeaten in c o n fere n ce play if they sw eep the s e r ie s with T e x a s A&M at C o lle ge Statio n this w eekend The record is a m a tte r of pride to the T e x a s te a m , and d e sp ite the fac t that the con feren ce ch am pion sh ip is sew n up. W ortham and com pan y would d e arly love to tak e the fin al th ree, p a rtic u la rly fro m the A ggies. W ortham is thoroughly sa tisfie d with his decision to com e to Electrical S H E EPSK IN 1 0 0 3 Sagebrush, 8 3 6 -3 1 7 1 RUGS $5 OO MamBeautifu l Colors $ 7 50 ★ LEATHER SALE ★ V a rio u s kind s colors * 7 5 p *r ft Capitol Saddlery ^ § 6 ^ A u stin , T e x a s 478-9309 Richard W o rth a m Alexander Gains HOUSTON (U P I) - L ean A u stra lia n Jo h n A le x a n d e r won $12,500 W ed n esd ay by clinching the cham pion sh ip of the World C h am pion sh ip T e n ­ n is red group with a secon d round 6-3. 6-1 v icto ry o v e r M arty R ie sse n in the R iv e r O aks C lassic . But ailing D ick Stockton lost his fir st round m a tch , and B r ita in ’s M ark Cox lost in the secon d round of the final red Finals g r o u p t o u r n a m e n t o f th e se aso n to s c ra m b le the r a c e fo r the fin al b erth s in the WCT fin als. S crap p in g E d d ie D ibbs of M iam i d e m o ralize d the se ­ cond seed ed Cox with an a c ­ c u ra te b ase lin e g a m e and a 76 tie b re a k e r win in the fir s t s e t to tak e a 7-6 0-6. 6-2 v ic ­ tory . Stockton, who spen t la s t weekend in tractio n , fell to Ja p a n s Ju n K am iw az u m i. 61, 6 - 2 . Cox w as left w ith 510 points fo r the WCT tour w hile fo rm e r champion Stan Smith, d efeated T u esd ay in the first round, h ad to be content with 490 and Stockton 480 Stockton , one o f the W CT's top p la y e r s during the m iddle o f the se a so n , w a s th erefo re knocked out o f the $100,000 fin a ls to be held n ext m onth in D a lla s. Sm ith, WCT ch a m p in 1973, a ls o w as in je o p a rd y of m issin g the tournam ent. Solom on needs only to win h is s e c o n d r o u n d m a t c h T h u rsd ay a g a in st R az R e id to p a s s Sm ith. If R au l R a m ire z re a c h e s the s e m ifin a ls in the b lu e g r o u p t h is w e e k a t C h arlo tte, N C ., he a lso would p a s s Sm ith in point to ta ls. **7T> summer program of gtxkiard college ALTERNATE ENERGY AND AGRICULTURE wind, water. solar WILL YOU REMEMBER ANYTHING SPRING? YOU DID LAST First Jum p Course includes: AUSTIN PARACHUTE CENTER 272-5711 SATURDAY, MAY 3 I S THE CITY C O U N C I L R U N O F F ELECTION. IF Y OU P L A N TO B E O U T OF TOW N S T U D Y IN G , V A C A T IO N IN G , OR FO R A N Y REASON, THEN OTHER PLEASE.. VOTE ABSENTEE J U S T G O TO THE CITY C L E R K S O F F IC E IN THE M U N I C I P A L B U I L D I N G A T 8th & C O L O R A D O B E T W E E N 7:45 and 4:45 T O D A Y U N T IL TUESDAY . IF Y O U N E E D A R I D E C O M E B Y L IT T L E F IE L D F O U N T A I N B E T W E E N IO and 4. S P O N S O R E D BY S T U D E N T S FOR VOTER P A R T I C I P A T I O N Page 6 Thursday, April 24, 1975 TH E DAILY T E X A N A n intensive 12 week program in social e c ology and environm ental sciences, exploring alternative technologies, a no-grow th econom y, organic agriculture, urban decentralization, the politics of ecology, and the d e s ig n and constru ction of experimental m od els for wind, solar, and m ethane-powered energy production The sum m e r program is directed by M U R R A Y B O O K C IN author of Post Scarcity A n a rch ism , Our Synthetic Environm ent, and Lim its oi th# City V isitin g Faculty will include ou tsta nd in g national experts in the fields of alternate technology and co m m u nitie s su c h a s K A R L H E S S , C om m u n ity T echn olo gie s, S A M LOVE. Environm ental Action, JO H N and N A N C Y TO DD, founders New A lche m y Institute, W IL S O N C L A R K , author ot Energy tor Survival S T E V E B A E R , Zom ew orks. JO H N S H U T T LEW O R T H , p ub lisher of Mother Earth N ew s, R O B E R T R E IN E S , Integrated Life Support S y ste m s Labs, and S T E W A R T B R A N O . p ublisher of Th# W hole Earth Catalog F u zak . “ B ut we b elieve they should be fully aw a re of the p ro b lem s involved. T h ere a re co n feren ce m e e ts, fin al e x ­ a m s and other p ro b lem s. The in d iv id u a l a th le te h a s the right to m ak e th at d ecision F u zak said th e re had been “ a lack o f com m u n ication and a lack of un derstan din g of the im p a ct of the to u r.” U ntil W edn esday’s m eetin g, the AAU n ever had req u ested that its China te a m be iden­ tified a s a national team . The m eetin g betw een the NCAA and AAU c a m e a s a re su lt of a le tte r that F u z ak sen t to S calz o e x p r e ssin g the c o lle g ia t e b o d y ’s co n c e rn "W e a p p re c ia te th eir c o o p e ra­ tion an d th e ir a p p e a r a n c e b e fo re ou r c o u n c il, sa id Fuzak. F u z a k sa id t ha t o th e r m utual p ro b lem s of the two bodies had been d isc u sse d and th at he fe lt the m eetin g had been " a positiv e ste p to try and re so lv e d iffe r e n c e s .” F u z a k e m p h a s iz e d th a t although the NCAA now w as ap pro vin g p a rtic ip a tio n of the a th le te s, there m igh t be other p ro b lem s involved “ In so m e c a s e s , con feren ce ru les an d ru le s of individual in stitution s a r e m ore r e s tr ic ­ tive than those of the NCAA, he said . “ I can n ot s a y what the likelihood of a c a d e m ic people o b jec tin g m igh t b e ." In e ffe c t. W edn esday ’s rul­ ing p e rm its a th le te s who will m ak e the M ay l l to M ay 30 tour of China to still co m p e te in the NCAA ch am p io n sh ip s in Ju n e. Students' Attorney T h * stu d e n t* a ttorneys, F rank Iv y a n d A n n B o w e r , are a v a ila b le by a p p o in t m e n t from 8 a .m . to 5 p.m . M o n d a y t h r o u g h F r i d a y in S p e e c h B u ild in g, R o o m 3. T e lep ho ne 4 7 1 - 7 7 9 6 . The s tu d e n ts ’ a t­ torne ys w ill h a n d le la n d lo rd tenant, c o n su m e r protection, e m p lo y e s ' rights, ta x a tio n a n d in su ra n c e cases. C rim in a l cases id d om estic p roblem s. INSTANT CASH CHARLES LEUTWYLER JEWELERS 1 5 cred its X E R O X CO PIES 5 e Each Over 2 0 of one original only 4 C Each G oodard is located in a rural Verm ont com m u nity, rich in both natural and hum an resources, in a slate noted for its p ro gressive environm ental legislation • G rou nd S c h o o l • Parachutes • B o o ts & H elm et • O n e J u m p from 2 ,8 0 0 feet A L L F O R $ 4 0 .0 0 ' for old-gold high school rings, graduation rings otc. s#h i.ii < •0*S II * COURSES OFFERED FALL SEMESTER 1975: Ru ssia n, Pole and J e w Scan d ina via n Culture and Civilization Slavic Folklore. Finland to Fredricksburg Politics and Culture of M o d e rn G erm an y - Ea st G erm any Independent Research: Eastern Europe independent Research: W e stern Europe C ontem p orary Scan d ina via Society and Culture Solzh en itsyn and Unofficial R u ssia Sp a n ish Civilization See Dr. D ona ld H an cock W M O B 206 UT A's G ils tra p Suggests Radic al Changes To Solve Problems Inflation Affects Athletic Budgets feel fpr>l like I’m I m overdramatizing overc this thing, that their situation is not as critical as ours. But they may change their perspective in the next couple of years," G i l s t r a p said c o l l e g e athletics are worth fighting for “ People just equate bet ween e x c e l l e n c e in athletics and excellence in education." And, he added. “ I simply come back to the premise that this has been a major part of the American scene for a good many decades And I rn just prejudiced enough to believe there s some value as a result He said there m ay be “ some of the unifying forces that are people in higher places than mine in bigger schools who present.” , .... , the capability of preserving year lost IO of l l in the major Dr. Wendell H. Nedderm an. (E d itor’s Note: itself by some means — “ The results, even during college Southland Conference, Collegiate sports are suf­ m a y b e some that I ve causing Gilstrap to joke that the past 12 months, a r e fering under the strain of suggested here. “ we were 6-4. lost six on the significant. UTA, like many the worsening economy G ilstrap said there are road and four at home other institutions, is facing a and fa ce an uncertain others who believe, as he The university sits in the financial crisis in its athletic future. Later this week, the does, that e l i m i n a t i n g middle of a “ metroplex NCAA is convening an programs.’’ scholarships would not prove which includes Texas Chris­ THOSE WORDS do not bode economic summit to dis­ fatal to quality football tian in F o r t Worth and well for the school’s athletic cuss the problems. In this, “ I truly believe that within Southern Methodist at Dallas. program, which was directed the second of a three-part five years the quality of com­ Both are members of the by Chena Gilstrap for many series, an athletic director petition would be back to as more prestigious Southwest whose program is losing years. good as it is today, " he said Conference and they and I TA G ils t r a p . a r e s p e c t e d mo n e y d i s c u s s e s the He said the truly economical­ must compete with the Dallas former football coach, resign­ issue.) ly disadvantaged student now Cowboys for the sports enter­ ed as athletic director earlier A R LIN G TO N (A P ) - A has greater access to more tainment dollar. None has widely respected athletic of­ this week and will head only kinds of grants than at any consistently done so with ficial' says swift, sweeping the physical education depart­ other time in history. success. changes must be made if in­ ment at UTA. In lieu of scholarships, he G I L S T R A P S AI D the He has given some con­ tercollegiate athletics are to suggested the motivation University of Texas is talking siderable thought to th e survive. would simply a desire about a' $300,000 athletic nu a u u p i j be m ~ to The problem is money, or economic problems and has deficit next year, and that some startling suggestions: the lack of it. Inflation has without television and bowl taken a brutal toll on the Ab ol ish all a t h l e t i c exposure Penn State faces a Reduce athletic budgets of many s c h o l a r s h i p s . similar loss. colleges across the country, c o a c h i n g staffs. Cut -' S t,-. “ I figure Penn St at e and the University of Texasre cru itin g e x p e n d it u r e s . u n T•*•!>♦»<•»o FRAMPTON probably had $5 m illio n Limit the size of travelin g Arlington is among them. r a t hol e^ s o m e w h e r e . ' Peter Frampton “ Intercollegiate athletics squads. Gilstrap quipped in his Texas What I'm suggesting. ’ across the nation are in finan­ W a s h in g t o n B u lle t s ' W e s U n s e ld (4 1 ) se ts u p a p ick drawl He said powers such as c ia l d if f ic u lt y . The in ­ Gilstrap said, “ is that inter­ fo r h is t e a m m a t e K e v in P o rte r a s h e g o e s b y B u f f a lo Ohio State. Southern Cal, flationary spiral of increasing collegiate athletics has been B r a v e s ' R a n d y S m it h (9 ) in th e firs t q u a r t e r o f th e Penn State. Notre Dame, costs is having a devastating. living at a level it can t main­ p la y o f f g a m e . T h e B r a v e s w o n t h e g a m e l l 2 - 1 0 7 to Alabama, Texas and effect.’’ said UTA President tain We may be at the end of e v e n t h e s e rie s 3-3. -------------------- Oklahoma can hold out longer an era You'd be surprised at than others, but not indefinite­ some of the schools with ly. reputations for success that “ I think one of two things is are r e al l y strapped for going to happen." he said. money. I bet there are fewer “ Either we’re going to have W o m e n 's 8than 50 colleges that show a fewer colleges participating I want Jo Ann to take it easy on her leg profit in athletics. By MELANIE HAUSER in intercollegiate athletics, or (she has a pulled muscle)” , said Hagerman Gilstrap's boss, Dr. Nedder­ Texan Staff Writer we're going to have to change “ Amy is tired, too, and I'd rather not have man. recently rejected the To put it mildly. Texas did to Southwest our modus operandi ... We recommendation of a student them compete two days in a row Texas State Wednesday what Trinity did to may be fixing to find out just Without the top players. Texas once again advisory committee that foot­ Texas on Tuesday. how many college football proved its strength down the line, winning all ball be abolished. He chose in­ Tuesday. Trinity women's tennis team teams our society will sup­ stead to commit UTA to a the singles matches with ease. defeated Texas 9-3 in a dual match. Wednes­ port. Stacey Nichol and Meg Froehlich. normally football program through day however, the Longhorns came out the “ It may be 60. It may be IOO No 14 and 15 for Texas, played No. 3 doubles 1975. winners, beating SWT 8-1 at the intramural But under the present format, and defeated Pam England-Donna Steinmetz BEYOND THAT he refused courts. , I predict the number will ap­ comment, saying, "W e have Only two of the matches were close. Texas preciably diminish in the near h ^Texas’ top players. Wilkins. Kurz, Mary the situation in constant Kathy Dring won after splitting sets with future.’’ Tredennick. Becky Roberts and Dring. will review ; we’re taking the issue Bonnie Ayers 3-6, 6-3, 6-0. In doubles. Susan Gilstrap believes if football The 4th album from an have their chance at competition Friday. All a year at a time " Kurz and Marty Corley of Texas split sets is rest ri ct ed to a sm all exceptional artist of the will compete in the state tournament in Fort The advisory committee with Ayers and Tommie Schanberg, but Tex­ number of colleges, it will highest musical virtuosity wanted $300,000. traditionally Worth. as lost 6-2, 1-6. 7-5. lose its over-all appeal. Texas just hopes this weekend will resem­ given to football from student The matches were an anticlimax atter “ BLT' IF B Y some major activity fees, funneled into ble Wednesday and not Tuesday. Tuesday's meeting with Trinity. restructuring we can save the Sum m ary other areas. “ It was hard to get up for Southwest Texprogram that now exists, M a r y T re d e n n ick ( U T ) d efeated B e c k y Shofner ( S W T ) .6 There are some uncommon said Corley. “ We played so hard yesteras, I A-3 K a th y D rin g (U T ), d efeated B o n n ie A y e rs ! S W T . 36 without really diminishing the 6 3 6 0 b e c k y R o b erts ( U T ) d efeated D en.se R h 0 d e s (S W T _ aspects about UTA s case, a y . that today wasn't as exciting dav quality, I say it’s not only good 6 0. 6-2 Susan K u rz ( U T ) defeated P a m TE n 9 la ” d r ^ o h £ r o a l t h o u g h m a n y of t he Texas Coach Betty Hagerman didn’t play 6-1 P a u la P h illip s ( U T d efeated T o m m ie Sch a rn b e rg for the schools, but good for tsW T ) 6-2 6-1 M a r t y C o n e y ( U T ) d e fe a te d D o n n a problems are similar to those her top two singles players. Amy Wilkins and the country,” he said of other universities. The S ^ K * ^ L a u r a G ilb e r t ( U T ) defeated V .o fn e ^ R h o d e s Jo Ann Kurz, against SWT. She wants them to “ I ’m not pessimistic ... I . S W T ) 7-5 6-1 M e g P ro e h tich - S ta c e y Ntehol t u t ) d e fe ated school has enjoyed some be ready for the state tournament this En g la n d - S te m m e t; (S W T .' 6 4 6-2 A yre s- S ch arn b e rg ( S W T ) believe college athletics has success in football, but last defeated C o rle y- K u r* ( U T ) , 6-2 1-6, 7-5. weekend on i— play. i_ In Texas, he said. ““ Ufa We have a fine interscholastic program and the only reason I know of is because they want to play." F U R T H E R M O R E , H E add­ ed, “ I think this would remove some of the feeling that s come into college athletics, that those guys knocking heads out there are not part of us. but a kind of group of paid gladiators representing our school.**." Gilstrap said he's been ask­ ed, “ lf Penn State's having problems, how in the world do you people hope to survive? — _____________ ____ A&M SPRING FEVER! DI I K A P INTO IM T O PLUG ME SOMETHING Henry Gross Brave A t t e m p t \ f ' Horns Down Xochis Tennis Team Wins, GHOSTS Strawbs Since their milestone album “ Hero and Heroine" many have waited for “Ghosts” to appear 1975 Sounds best on 89 ARBY’S 99e MEAL CHICKEN FRIED STEAK SPECIAL # mm —mw im— w—r Henry Gross second album of his distinctive and dynamic guitar work and vocals r n “-OST* RECORD TOWN D o b ie M a ll 2021 G uadalupe 4 7 8 -6 1 1 9 6.98 LIST I Chicken Fried Steak Sandwich I Order of French Fries I Medium Soft Drink A ll fo r 9 9 * !! Reg.$1.44 G o ld en b row n chicken fried steak w ith lettuce & t° m° ,0_ , f ea ed on a g ian t sesame seed bun H e 'o yourself to a ll the m ustard, salad dressing a n d ketchup. N O C O UPO N N EC ESSA RY OFFER GOOD THRU M A Y 6, 1975 892-2058 472-1582 451-3760 4411 South Lam ar 1715 G u a d a lu p e 5400 B urnet Rd. 1....... . THERE S A 8 a m . - 5 p m . F ie s ta S ig n - U p . S ig n u p in t h e ‘ W S H LIGHT IN OUR I 4 WINDOW Texas F ie s t a . th u rsd a y Pandora’s Box. raswi Don Emiliotequila and pineapple juice. 9 PM. WHOLE EARTH PROVISION COMPANY c u n Serendipitous! S o u th Room Leave East M a ll F o u n t a in at 6 :3 0 p .m .; s tu d e n ts , f a c u lt y , and s ta ff; $ 4 .5 0 o th e rs . B a m - 5 P rn U n e S t a r T j g i i H i l ^ i s n - V e . S ig n u p in T e x a s U n ,o n P r o g r a m O f f ic e U n io n P ro g ra o r O f f r c e . U n r o n S o o . ^ R o o m 1 1 4 for t h e trip F r id a y - S u n d a y A p ril 25 , . N o t io n a l F o re s , l e a v e 5 p .m . F r id a y ; r e tu rn a p p - o . r m o . e y s o m . Sunday S p lit Cos, o f g a s w i t h o t h e r , o n t n p . R e c ,e o f ,o n C ° 7 h d 1 7 V o ll e y b a l l Tour n o m e n . S ig n - U p Today is -he lo s t d a y .o r I d e n . r i o f u l E y T n n d s .o ff-in ^ e C o lle g e s of B o e rn e ., A d m in is t r a t io n C o m m u n ic a t io n , E n g i n e e r , n g . E d u c a t io n la w . an H u m a n it ie s to s ig n u p fo r a r o u n d ro h rn v o lte y b a l .o u - n o m e F r id a y . M a y 2, f r o m 3-6 p .m . S ig n u p rn c o lle g e o ffrce. UT 6 M T A M IA 2410 BA N A N T O N IO A U S T IN 4 7 8 -1 5 7 7 ,J^lUll O f f ic e , U n io n R e c r e a tio n C o m m it t e e . lim e DROP BY P ro g ra m r e tu r n a p p r o x im a t e ly I a .m . R o u n d trip cost $ 4 for UT ’TIL U n io n 11 4 , for t h e trip F r id a y A p r il 2 5 , to S a n A n t o n io s ,IO I| 2<" n o o n " c p n c e r t rnmm* --- --- 4 6 p m and c o n te T e x a s T a v e r n . M u s ic a l E v e n t s C o m m it t e e S c o ts a n d Irish S o n g s . E d M ille , w i l l s in g , r a ^ ' o n ° l m p o r a r y W o n g W a h f f^ b a lla d s . F re e . T e x a s T a v e rn . M u s ic a l E v e n t s C o m m it t e e . 7 & 9 -3 0 p .m . M e x ic a n F ilm F e s t iv a l: Et---a — _ , —_ _ H .s ro n o d e u n O r a n A m o r E a c h h im w i ll b e s h o w n o n c e ; no Engl,rs h T u b h H e ; ' Ti r G T l i ; 7 rp o r t r a y s t h e e x c r e m e n t a n d d r a m a of UniversityofTexasPress HoleSale APISH. 24t2%2£, lO OOAM-t OOPM ON me uNiveesiTY o f m s n e s s CAJCP A one I£ A m e note I IN c a m s •MAY 1, 9, STIO. i m th ro u g h th e ca m e ra IT, s ta ff S I 5 0 o th e r s a r C n & t tv me n o u s ) e/cti UT r & s s 102 , ^ = = 20m w ce zr G a b r ie l F ig u e r o a C u lt u r e C o m m it t e e a n d S p o n s o r e d by t h e C e n t e r for M e x ic a n - A m e r ic a n S tu d ie s . i it fo cu l7 & 9 p m R i m : H o lid a y . 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C h in e s e G a rd e n R o o m , 4 th flo o r, A c a d e m ic C e n t e r ; if r a in in g , g o lo T in k e r R o o m on t h e s a m e flo o r. Id e a s a n d Is s u e s C o m m it t e e . 9 a rn S a t u r d a y . B jc y c ie C o u n t r y T o u r to R q u n d J I o c l r l e a v e »5T — = pu r c h t17' • of A c a d e m ic C e n t e r A u d it o r iu m M e x ic a n - A m e r ic a n C O M IN G N OM AG JEfcC/fA£*f£ N M e x ic o J 2 noon UP TO T}0*/t> DISCDUA/75 ON 6Y0CY TITLB IN etO CK I ru ra l " H is t o r ie s " is a s u p e r b p ro d u c ito n of t h e g r e a t S p a n is h n o v e l n in o d e la B o l. A d m is s io n S I 2 5 fo r U T s t u d e n t , f a c u lt y a n d fro m L it t le f ie ld F o u n t a in ; b rin g own lu n c h . R e c r e a t io n Com -1 " ’ ■M O p m . S u n d a y . U T R o lle r S k a t in g P a r t y . A d m is s io n 7 5 ' f o r 1 tv& U T s t u d e n t s . R e fr e s h m e n t s . C a p it o l R o lle r R in k . A d m is s io n p rice in c lu d e s a d m is s io n , s k a t e r e n t a l, a n d c o n te s ts . R e c r e a t io n C o m - ] m it te e . HOUSTON (A P) — Rookie P ete Falcone stopped Houston on five hits, and G ary Thom asson drilled a home run as the San F ran c isco G iants whipped the A stros 3-0 and gained a split of th eir twi night double-header W ednesday R oger M etzger d ro v e in tw o runs, and Ken Boswell trip led for another, leading the A stros and rig h th an d er Doug Konieczny to a 3-2 victory in the first gam e. Astros Split Doubleheader With Giants UT To Host Track Meet The Texas track team will h ost a tria n g u la r p ra c tic e m eet with Texas AAM and Baylor a t 4 p m T hursday in M em orial Stadium Those Longhorns who will not travel to Des Moines for the D rake R elays F rid ay and S atu rd ay a re sch ed u led to c o m p e t e . T h e m e e t is referred to by the T exas tea m as a “ snake” m eet, a te rm for a m e e t in w h i c h s o m e L o n g h o rn s c o m p e te w h ile others are a t the D rake or K ansas Relays. No points will be aw arded and the m eet fo rm a t w ill follow a dual m eet, w ith only two relay events (440-yard and nmle relays). T exas Asst. Coach Jam es Blackwood said. A bout 20 a th l e te s f r o m Baylor and 25 from AAM a re s u p p o s e d to c o m p e t e . Blackwood added. Pct. it if H unter, who lo st his first th ree s ta rts as a Y ankee, w as unable to hold a 7-3 lead built w ith the help of two ANA HEIM (A P ) - Bill S in g er checked T exas on six hits while Tom ­ m y H arp er laced th ree stra ig h t hits and drove in the winning run as the C alifornia Angels handed the R angers a 4-1 setback W ednesday night Singer, 2-1, outdueled fo rm er Angel Clyde W right. 0-1, who was h u rt by erro rs. Two of the C alifornia runs w ere unearned because of m iscues by leftfield er Joe Lovitto and W right him self. OMC * d a y 1 t a. a l PTS Major League Baseball Tim Foli. who had singled and stolen second, gave the E xpos a 1-0 lead in the first inning when he raced hom e as R ennie Stennett bobbled B arry F o o te’s grounder a t second. The E xpos scored four runs in the second on one-run singles by F rym an. Pepe M angual and Mike Jo rgensen, w hose hit up the m iddle got p ast c e n te rfie ld e r Al O liv er to allow another run on the e rro r. Singer struck out five and w alked one as the Angels snapped a twog a m e lo s in g s t r e a k . T h e t a l l righthander w as seldom in trouble afte r yielding a first-inning hom e run to Mike H argrove S ADD THESE TO YOUR IMI mfr COUPON SAVINGS! QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED. PRICES GOOD THROUGH APRIL 26, 1975. spr ay 89 S3 3 9 R eg W ith iron, TOO’*. lim** National Locguo I it BOSTON (A P) — Cecil Cooper ig­ nited a iive-run uprising ag ain st C at­ fish H unter. Sparky Lyle and Dick Tidrow w ith a pinch trip le in the seventh inning W ednesday, as the Boston Red Sox rallied for an 11-7 vic­ tory over Hie New York Y ankees. Lyle took the loss a fte r Tidrow. the third New York p itch er, su rren d ered a tw o-run double to Bob M ontgom ery. capping the d ecisive rally. M ONTREAL (A P) - L efthander Woodie F ry m a n handcuffed P ittsb u rg h on seven hits and con­ tributed a run-scoring single in a fourrun second inning and the M ontreal E xpos notched a 5-0 victory W ednes­ day over the P ira te s. F ry m an , now 2-0, picked up his se­ cond victory in as m any s ta rts this season ag ain st the P ira te s, hom ers bv Roy White. ★ ★ ★ more than a drug store Standings W The 21-year-old F alcone posted his first m a jo r league shutout and second victory in th e nightcap, outdueling v eteran D ave R o b erts. 1-2. The G iants scored runs in th ree of the first four innings for th e ir young southpaw C hris Speier doubled and scored on B ruce M iller's single in the second inning. San F ran cisco m ad e it 2-0 in the third on F alco n e’s single, a sacrifice, stolen base and c a tc h e r Skip Ju tz e 's th r o w in g e r r o r . In th e f o u r th , Thom asson hit his first h o m er of the baseball season. OB Reg V $ 1 .4 9 Reg A n e sth e tic , a n tis e p tic ^ o o th v /a s h V E ffe rv e sc e n i d e n tu r e lr c le a n se r, Ease#] R e9 ^ 8M M S -. * [ £ ll J HOW' ^ U n s e e n ,e d . 1 3 0 . and 9“'? 'I 96 's . Lim it ' 6 ox lim it I Chicago New York Philphia St Louis P ittsb u rg h M ontreal SH OI San Diego A tlanta S. fra n c is c o Los Angeles C incinnati .. Houston — led W u d n m d o y I S v w lM « York 7, st Louis I cago 9, Philadelphia J ■ntreal 5 P ittsburgh 0 uston 3-0, San F ran cisco 2-3 lanta 5, Cincinnati 4. l l innings n Diego 7, Los Angeles I Thursday * Coma* P h iladelphia Lonborg 1-0 a t Chicago Stone 2-0 C incinnati B illinaham 0-1 a t A tlanta N iekro 1-1, n San F ra n c isc o B a rr 1-1 a t H ouston R ichard 1-1, n Los Angeles Rhoden 0-0 a t San Diego Freisleben 1-1, n Only gam es scheduled FOILLE CONTAC SPRAY CAPSULES -■4 39 87 Reg. $1.59 Far m inor bum s, abrasions, bites, 3 ox. Boston — B altim ore M ilwaukee D etroit C leveland New Y ork. 11 K ansas City O akland C alifornia M innesota T e x a s ........... C hicago SPRAY, SYRINGE T hursday s G om es K an sas City S plittorff 1-1 a t O akland Ab­ bott 1-0 C hicago Wood 0-4 a t M innesota Blyleen 2-1, n T exas Brown 0-1 at C alifornia Singer 1-1, Only g am es scheduled SCASHS T w o -p ly , V a "x 5 0 ' w it h b ra ss c o u p lin g s . we a h o bu y a n d sell ra re coins W a k e to m u sic or a la r m , sle e p to m u sic , li g h t e d d i g i t a l n u m b e rs . EXCESS FUESS Fast Turnaround High Q u ality Low P rices D obie M all 2021 G u ad alu p e Park FREE rn the Dobie G arag e ADHESIVE BATH PAC LOTION KIT Reg. $1.49 Tans w ith or w ithout the sun, 2 oz. tube 53 7 9 jg- * Reg. 98c Tw in double e d ge blades, 4 's ■TW O*IX*!**'COTTBt,ACEV' tm INN! X SOFF P U FFS PADS 27 77 I KO LESTRAL I ^ BY WELLA 56 49 KODAK K0DAC0L0R ll FILM Reg. 99c N a il clipper, tweezer, toe n ail clipper, n a il file a n d H o ld s dentures longer, 2 .75 oz. HL7 Model FEC-S006 CIT Reg. 89c H air conditioner, 1 % oz. Reg 97c B y Johnson & Johnson, 2 6 0's C l IO or C -1 2 6 , 2 0 e x p o su re s Kodacolor II COCOA BU TTER CREME | 99 Rea. $2.25 10% OFF your n ext p rin tin g w ith th is a d O R A FIX BLADES MTS Ait TXM*,* f DOt INA*’!Ytfi REG. S34.99 JULIETTE DIGITAL A M /FM CLOCK RADIO 98 rVisine SCH ICK 3002! 2002 97 Reg. $5.19 W ith travel for old gold class rings & other solid gold jewelry "C heck our Offer" American N a tio n a l Coin Exchange 926 American Bank Tower REG. $3.99 GERING GARDEN HOSE >88 W e d n e sd a y 's Results C leveland 4, D etroit 3 Boston ll . New Y ork 7 Chicago a t M innesota, ppd., wet grounds M ilw aukee I, B altim o re S C alifornia 4. T exas I K an sas City a t O akland SH S* R eg. $2.49 Soothes tired, red, eyes, 3 0 cc's 97 SHY le di-Qui hit aid sp** * Reg. 98c Fits in your pocket : M EDI-QUIK Reg. $1 .64 For fa m ily first aid, 5 oz. 39 59 . I F IR S T A ID G e r in g 99 FIRST AID KIT REG. $5.99 LAWN AND PATIO CHAIR ~ American le ag u e U t* G a m a s N ot Included East VISIN E EYE DROPS C o lo r fu l n y lo n w e b b i n g o n ru st-fre e a lu m in u m . F o ld s to store. Reg. $4.19 12-Hour cold a n d hay fever relief, 40's ?|RST WO SPRAY CURITY By Balm our Barr, 3 oz. tube I SU D D EN TAN LOTION P la in , A lm o n d or C ru n ch . R79 DENTAL S K IN rpa B R A C E R I d en ta l , FLO S S REG. 69c NESTLE KING SIZE CHOCOLATE BARS 99 Y o u r ch oice of G a lla n t e s o r E le g a n t e s RIGHT GUARD FOOT GUARD 79 * Reg. $1.29 Dry spray powder, 6 oz. Limit I Cal! 472-2b4S for estimates. Page 8 Thursday, A p r il 24, 1975 T H E D A IL Y T E X A N Reg. $1 29 Flavored, by Johnson & Johnson, 50 yd. Reg. 99c After shave, 4 oz. DECORATOR AIR FRESHENERS PACK OF 6 /19c GARCIA Y VEGA CIGARS 59 69 .sS s-. Reg. $2.69 Bronze instantly, by Coppertone, 4 oz. NEW MINT! BY MENNEN T w o sty le s t h a t d is p e n s e flo r a l a ir fre sh e n e rs w h e n lid is lifted . im S LOTION 1 06 / P ' MILK OF . ^ m a g n e s i a H IL L IP S BY PPHILLIPS RY ' genuine PHILLIPS* m ilk o f MAGNESIA FUVOREO ANTAClO-l AXATIVE Reg. $1.89 For skin care, with dispenser. 1 5 o z i- 'L im it I Us/A i 1M«CWAS HPHKI CO CONTINI* 12 ll OI Reg. 98c Reg. or Mint, 12 oz; Limit I > "V * «\ i i O M *, ' By AMY CHENG T exan Staff W riter S /im Job Chances Seen This S u m m e r For Texas Students As a r e s u lt of sw ellin g s e a s o n a l u n e m p lo y m e n t, prospects for sum m er jobs have never been exactly sun­ ny, but the forecast for this s u m m e r , ra n g in g fro m “ gloomy to dism al” is even worse than in previous years, according to Ruth G abler of the Texas Employm ent Com­ mission (TEC). The U.S. Labor D epartm ent estim ates that this sum m er th e r a t e of u n e m p lo y e d students may be as high as 30 percent. Last sum m er, with an estim ated five m illion students aged 14 to 21 seeking jobs, the rate of unemploy­ m ent was 16.2 percent The glut of unemployment facin g th e n atio n f u rth e r pro m ises th at jobs which were filled by students will be grabbed by "those who have been squeezed out oi the labor force by recent layoffs, accor­ ding to Labor D ep a rtm en t releases. STUDENTS IN Texas may fare slightly b etter since the rate of unemployment in Tex­ as is still lower than th at of the nation. T exas- rate of un­ em ployment in F ebruary was 6.1 percent. H ow ever, TEC sta tis tic s show a trend of rising un­ employment throughout the s ta te . “ An u p tu rn in the economy is not expected until O ctober.” G abler said. be w hat they want or what they’re qualified for, but since I have read that sum m er job prospects are anywhere from gloomy to dism al. I suggest that they don’t sit back but use every resource they can think of to hunt for a job. Gabler said. Area surveys of the state show border towns suffering the highest rates of unemploy­ m ent. said Harlan Smith of the local TEC Office. According to TEC figures, the larger southern border towns of Laredo. Brownsville and th e M c A lle n -P h a rrEdinburg region register the highest ra te of unem ploy­ m ent H o w ev er, TEC su rv e y s “ The jobs they find may not TEC, which usually runs two m onths behind in its comp i l a t i o n of s t a t e w i d e statistics, will not publish the March figures until the end of this month. “ There s no one who can give you a clear in­ dication of w hat’s going to happen this sum m er,” G abler said. G A B L E R rec o m m en d e d that students returning home for the sum m er go to the local e m p lo y m e n t o f f ic e an d register for work. “ Those who already have college credit will face better prospects than high school students who have a lig h te r ran g e of knowledge,” Gabler said. showed these three are as h a r­ boring shortages of personnel fo r jo b s su ch a s s e c r e ­ ta rie s. clerk s, w a itre ss e s , b o o k k ee p ers and d ra g lin e operators. The western and northern border towns fare b etter than those in the south, but still av e rag e higher unem ploy­ m ent rates than the rest of the state A C C O R D IN G t o t e c fig u res, the unem ploym ent rate in El Paso skyrocketed from 6.0 percent in February, 1974. to 8.9 in February. 1975 The 3.9 percent increase can be traced to layoffs which affected a large segm ent of the town s industries. However. TEC reports that the completion and staffing of new shopping centers has in­ creased the number of retail w orkers bv 8.0 percent T ex a rk a n a's 8.7 p ercen t r a t e of u n e m p lo y m e n t “ reflects the many tem porary layoffs until inventories are reduced and supply is balanc­ ed w ith d e m a n d . T ex­ ark an a’s current labor shor­ t a g e in c lu d e s : b u ild in g m a in te n a n c e m e n . hom e a t t e n d a n t s , b o o k k e e p e rs , secretaries, m aids and ac­ countants. The in d u s t r ia l a r e a of Houston has a fairly low un­ em ployment ra te of 5.1 per­ cent. but TEC surveys predict th a t “ those lacking skills and or schooling face many problem s in obtaining and holding meaningful em ployment.” Dallas showed a 5.9 percent u n e m p l o y m e n t r a t e in February, but according to Betty Dixon of TEC, “ That s a little misleading since the un­ employment rate for Anglos is a t 6.0 now. but for blacks it s doubly high a t 12.0 p ercen t.” WACO AND SAN ANTONIO are the two Central Texas areas with the highest rate of unem ploym ent Both citie s a v e rag ed 8.1 p e rc e n t u n ­ employment rate in February, and TEC surveys show a shortage of only skilled labor. The Gulf coast cities of Cor­ pus Christi. Galveston and Beaum ont have unem ploy­ ment rates which a re slightly higher than the state average However, only a shortage of professional w orkers exists, and TEC officials agree th at “ skill and education are the key to em ploym ent.” Austin showed a 3.9 percent r a te of u n em p lo y m e n t in February, which is relatively low com pared to the rest of the state. However, Austin usually enjoys high employ­ m ent ievels, and a drop in un­ employment rate is not ex­ pected soon. B An upturn in the general economy is expected in Oc­ tober; however, as G abler noted, “ th a t’s a little late to do the sum m er job-hunting students much good Late-Filing Seniors M a y Still G r a d u a t e S e n i o r s who pl a n to graduate in May but have not filled out diploma nam e cards m ay still be allowed to par­ ticipate in com m encem ent ex­ ercises May 17 if they act soon. Although the deadline for filling out the cards has pass­ ed. some latecom ers may be adm itted. The policies of in­ dividual schools d iffer, so seniors should check with their dean’s office im m ediate­ ly The U niversity Co-Op has assorted sizes in caps and gowns left, said employe Pete Mesche. “ We will keep these on sale until the graduation exercises, so students can get them right up until the 17th,” he said. This spring, 4,542 seniors are eligible for graduation. “ Of course, not all will go th ro u g h c o m m e n c e m e n t.” said Rick Kennedy, student employe in the reg istra r s of­ fice. The num ber of graduates expected by each college or school are listed as follows: A rchitecture, 63; Business A dm inistration. 730; Com­ munication. 348; Education, 368; Engineering. 272; Fine Arts. 173; G eneral and Com­ p a r a t i v e S t u d i e s , 143; G r a d u a t e B u s in e s s , 145; G raduate. 657; H umanities, 256. N atu ra l S cience, 528; Nursing. 86; Pharm acy. 80; and Social and B ehavioral Sciences, 693. NELSONS GIFTS 46 17 So. C o n gre ss Phone: 4 4 4 -3 8 1 4 • ZUNI • NAVAJO • HOPI INDIAN JEWELRY O W N I O O rn l o 6 p m "G IF T S T H A I IN C S K A S S IV V A L U E " CLOSED MONDA Y accounting and FINANCE MAJORS Let us help you: PLAN AH EAD To Become a CPA THE BECKER CPA REVIEW CO U RSE DALLAS FT. W ORTH HOUSTON (214) 263-0106 (214) 263-0106 (713) 692-7186 S A N A N T O N I O S ) 341-3423 Our Succoostul Student* Represent Price good with coupon through April 28, 1975. Price good with coupon through April 26, 1975 Price good with coupon through April 28, 1975. 1 / A of usa Price good with coupon through April 28, 1975. T h .ir s d a v . A pril 24, 1975 TH E DAILY T EX A N P a g e 9 Malpractice Suits Boost Medical Premiums By STEVEN SUCHER Texan Staff W riter M edicine in A m erica has been suffering from a p ec u lia r d is­ ease la tc h The m alady is inflated m a lp ra c tic e in su ran ce prem ium s The sy m p to m 0 More expensive m edical c a re for everyone. Concern arose am ong doctors in the la te 1960s a s th e ir in­ surance prem ium s first began to sw ell. M alp ractice a w a rd s have grown steadily in size and nu m b er, and in su ran ce prem ium s have consequently risen d ra m a tic a lly The unprofitability of m a lp ra c tic e insurance is forcing som e c a rrie rs out of the m a lp ractic e in su ran ce business. O th ers are doubling and tripling th eir ra te s to co m p en sate for la rg e claim paym ents DOCTORS WHO can get co v erag e pass th e in creased c o st on to their p atien ts In high risk sp ecialties, such as n e u ro su rg ery , the th reat of a suit leads to a phenom enon d escrib ed in m ed ical journals as "defensive m edicine The doctor orders m ore te s ts than a re n e cessary so if he does get sued, he will have plenty of evidence to back up his c a s e in court This adds dollars to the a v e ra g e bill of check-ups and presurgical c are The patien t pays and pays and pays. An increasing num ber of doctors c a n 't g et co v erag e, and they either cut back on high risk operatio n s and tre a tm e n ts or quit practicing alto g eth er D octors in C alifornia and New York have been hit h a rd e st Pacific Indem nity quit issuing m a lp ra c tic e in su ran ce Ja n . I affecting approxim ately 2.000 Los A ngeles physicians. As of July I. New York physicians will join a p p ro x im ately 3.500 northern California doctors who have alread y been dropped by Argonaut Insurance Com pany of C alifornia. THE PROBLEM in T exas is not as se v e re In su ran ce co m ­ panies a re still w riting policies, but the p rem iu m s co ntinue to rise. A recent poll by the T exas A cadem y of F am ily P h y sicians, answ ered by 60 percent of its 1.600 m e m b ers, show s th a t 18 p er­ cent paid 19 to 50 percent higher in su ran ce p rem iu m s in 1974.14 percent paid 50 to IOO percen t m ore. 24 p e rc e n t paid IOO to 150 percent m ore. 9 percent paid 150 to 200 p ercen t m o re and 36 p e r­ cent paid m ore than 200 p ercent m ore. Hospital m alp ractice ra te s also have risen A p re ss re le a se from State Sen. A R Schw artz. D -G alveston. re v ea ls th a t ra te s averaging from $80 to $100 p er bed la s t y e a r now a v e ra g e $500 to $600 per bed in som e T exas hospitals. What a re the rem edies for this p ro b le m 0 F irst, the m ed ical profession m ust bring its sta n d a rd s of p ra c tic e in line w ith its stan dards of adm ission, and second, deficien cies in th e legal system s th a t govern m a lp ra c tic e ju risp ru d e n c e need to be elim inated G ARRETT GRAHAM, a fo rm er h ospital a d m in is tra to r nowdirecting the G re a te r Houston H ospital Council, said the m edical profession has been lax in review ing co m p eten cy . H ospitals and m ed ical p ractitio n e rs have not a tte m p te d to work as h a rd as they could in doing the kind of rev iew that they should have done, and w e 're all now paying the cost of those that have not done the job. he said. Abuses by physicians range from the g ro ss to the m inor. In ra re c a se s, d octors have been known to diagnose illn esses in p erfectly healthv children, “ c u re them and co llect a fee. F a r m o re com m on a re incidents of sloppy su rg ery . In a re ­ cent A ustin case, a d octor o p erated on a m an s h ea rt tw ice, the second tim e to re trie v e a hem ostat kit In a n o th er c a se an orthopedic surgeon o p erated on the w rong hip In fact, the D ep artm en t of H ealth, E ducation and W elfare says 57.2 p erc en t of all m a lp ra c tic e suits a re filed a g ain st surgeons. HOW DO DOCTORS presently review th eir m ethods? G rah am said p eer review , doctors review ing o th er d octors w ork, o ccu rs in everv hospital. H ospitals have been attem p tin g , w ith th eir m edical sta ffs, to do a review of the kind of c a re th a t's o ccu rrin g inside the hospital. It s been done for 25. 30 y ea rs easily, he said He also cited professional audit firm s in the m ed ical field th a t have g a th e re d and analyzed d ata on su rg ery and o th er tr e a t­ m ent sin ce the 1950s They co m pare y early figures and d e te c t tren d s, fav o rab le and unfavorable. One such study showed that of IO m illion p a tie n ts o rd ered on an tib io tics. 62 p ercen t showed no signs of infection When such d isco v eries a re m ade, d octors m u st be inform ed. An im p o rta n t activ ity of m edical so cieties like the A m erican College of Surgeons, th e A m erican College of P h y sician s and the A m erican A cadem y of F am ily P hy sician s is the continuing education ol its m em b ers. Dr V incent Collins, a Houston radiologist, said th ese p ro g ra m s “ com bine th e prod and the c a rro t th at will ach ieve the resu lt oi m ain tain ing com petence. “ T H E INDIVIDUAL can atten d co u rses and achieve points that will do two things fo r him It will keep him (inform ed* and w ill o ffer him a stim u lu s to do so. At the p resen t tim e, we do not really need to. but looking forw ard to a tim e when som e solution of this question of achieving and m ain tain in g co m p eten ce becom es really u rg en t, we will be th e re with a p ro g ram th a t shows w e 're alre ad y doing it C ollins called th e proposal to review a physician s c o m p eten ­ cy by e x am in atio n e v ery y ear an “ o v ersim p lificatio n of the problem “ F ir s t thing you know, we ll have the g u ard s looking a fte r the guards looking a fte r th e g uards looking a fte r the g u ard s, and w e 're standing in a c irc le exam ining each o th er S tate licensing b o ard s, which have the pow er to revoke licenses o r im pose o th e r restric tio n s, don t do it often. In a fivevear period ending in 1974. C alifornia, w here m ost board action has o ccu rred , disciplined 194 doctors out of 33.000. In T exas, which had 16.490 licensed d octors as of D ecem b er. 1974. such discipline o ccu rs IO to 15 tim e s a year. Action is taken a g a in st STU D EN TS ON CITY COM MISSIONS? Y ES... LAST CAU? STILL TIME TO GO NEW YORK/ LUXEMBOURG $310 NEW YORK s .J C 7 5 9 SALE THURSDAY P.M SPECIALS V s to V l O ff O n ly Two Thursday Nights Left this Semester! H u r r y in for (tonite 5 :3 0 to 8 p.m.) Vorpal M.C. Escher Posters, Alva M useum R e p lic a s Sculpture and Jewelry, Art Nouveau Prints, and Sandy Atkins Batiks. CUnicorn^^^ Gallery' 2nd floor G reat looking Tee Shirts assorted pastels soft am el Little short sleeves Sm all-m ed -larg e 66 Reg. 7 OO 'l on can A I wavs do Better at 2322 Guadalupe 477-0343 ROUND T i f f UT GROUR RATE RIUS TAX “* y JU N <;■» IS Jut 14 LEAVE W ITH A GROUP RETURN ANY DAY C A U THE TRAVEL tX M K T S In m edicine, there has to be a principle to let th e patient bew are to this ex ten t — if he doesn’t tru s t the doctor to s ta rt with, let s go som eplace else before w e get into tro u b le .’ “ TH E PU B L IC has a ra th e r glorified idea th a t H e re ’s the cobalt unit, lie dow n.' O r, H ere s the m iracle drug. Shoot it to m e. I'm sav ed .' It isn t that w ay ." A patient does not have to be g re a tly d issatisfied to sue, how ever. For instance, how m ight an indebted patient consider settling his d o c to r's fee? Collins hypothesized. “ The doc m ight not bt- a bad follow I w ouldn't w ant to h u rt him . but h e ’s got lots of insurance Gosh, th a t w ouldn’t hurt th a t little insurance co m ­ pany ju st to pay mv hospital bill, would it? " How often p atien ts abuse insurance policies is difficult to say. The highly-publicized c a se s — the la rg e st to d a te is $4.5 million a re problem enough. O nce som ebody sees or read s o r h ears about a recen t m alp ra c tic e suit w hich m ay have been ju stified then they a re going to throw in a c la im im m ed iately for so m eth in g ,-' G raham said. “ K verytim e th ere is a m illion d o llar suit given to som ebody, w hether it s ju stified o r not. it s going to cost everyone in our future hospitalization, and people d o n 't think of th a t." he added. It s a peculiar, m ixed-up a ttitu d e a lot of the public h a s." Hrs. 10:30-6 Mon.-Sat. IV . M AY 15/RTRN. AUG. 21 IV . MAY 29 STRN. AUG. 8 IV , MAY 22/RTRN. AUG. 20 IV . MAY 29,/RTRN AUG 19 (Add $20 for independent return between 22 45 days) GROUP FLIGHTS do cto rs not only for bad p ra c tic e but for o th er reaso n s such as not keeping records or becom ing too ill to p ractice. IN FE D E R A L L Y funded m edically p ro g ram s, the govern­ m ent is adopting utilization review to m onitor health c a re . One such review , the Professional S tan d ard s Review Organization, sets guidelines for length of a patien t s stay and m ethods of c a re "U tilization review looks into, th eo retically , all a sp e c ts of c a re , but unfo rtu n ately the regulations a re n 't d eterm in in g any way of helping hospitals do a b e tte r job of quality c a re ," G rah am said “ It s all d irected a t cost con tain m en t ra th e r than quality of c a re , and we object to th is." Collins said. " I c a n 't see any m o re ad v an tag e in i governm ent m edical review ) th an th e re is in having a citiz e n s’ c o m m itte e to review the decisions of the S uprem e C ourt The im personalized d o cto r-p atien t relatio n sh ip and the co n su m er-p atien t m isled by lite ra tu re on m edicine and en­ couraged by the new s of big m a lp ra c tic e aw ard s have con­ tributed to the m a lp ra c tic e in surance c risis , also. COLLINS SAID the p ra c tic e of m edicine has gone from the kitchen to the m edical c e n te rs of Houston, New York o r Los A ngeles w here one m ight say, “ W ho's the doctor? I d o n 't know anything about him . He doesn t know m e. T here a re people in his w aiting room in terfe rin g with m y golf gam e How do I know w hat he’s been doing” H e's probably been out having tw o m a r­ tinis with his lunch while I'm w aiting h e re ." “ It m ay in fact have been h e ’s rushing from one c o m m itte e to another o r m aybe he did have tw o m a rtin is .” C ollins said "W h atev er the reason, people g et pushed to g eth er, pushed together, closer to g eth er — the te m p e ra tu re rises. D o b ie EUROPE GROUP FLIGHTS ✓ HARWOOD TRAVEL I f you 're qualified fo r the fob, yo u could be ap p o in ted to A u s tin ’s City Planning Com m ission - on e o f the c i t y ’s m ost vital boards. The U T C ity L o b b y will recom m en d several stu den ts fo r consideration b y the C ity Council. I f yo u want to help A ustin, and kn ow enough abou t city business - or can learn we're looking fo r you . Interview s will be held all day Friday, A pril 25, at the n ew Union. Call 471-3721 to m ake yo u r appointm ent. Rho. 478-9343 • 2428 GUADALUPE A N N O U N C IN G KNOW LEDGE IS POWER Ll w headquarters in Washington to let it knows one’s skills and desires to volunteer, and 2) to get a passport or to make sure it is up to date. S E L E C T S . Fri9s &Sat.'s On the D ra g USE NO- I RENCH. ONEY CAREEEEEY READ fNSTKECT,O N E . . L U SECURITY NUMB! R IN THE B O X ES p*iw’ VOOR nil c o i ux Es r o NOi NCBt" provided AND mare toe V E A C H BOX MARR v tH J the items you C O R R ESTON W N C WISH TO WISH BE HUED TO K 'N Keith Thompson's E A R N C A S H W EEKLY Blood BOA UA M THE END OE T H E A R D P R IN T Y O U R NAME A t HEE ( V . M A R X 1* W E L L VE H E E HEIS I AKO | N i O R « E r r M A R K IN .; AND S T R * AND SE AKE OVER IE YEH MAM THROW THI ‘ ARD AW1 M IS T A K E .. i I I I IN. OR" \EEE>S - s t f s s s a s w ^ ..... VOV ^ N e w R e lig io u s R o c k O p era W ed. N ite C a b le C h an n e l 2 9 -1 0 P.M. A CTV EARN $14 WEEKLY CASH PAYMENT FOR DONATION Austin Blood Components, Inc. e ^ / / / 1VY O P E N : M O N . & T H UR S. H A M to I P M TI ES. & FRI. H A M to 3 PM C L O S E D WED. & S AT. WILE. BK KK.l' l R C TO YAY KOR A U . IT E M S YOU S E L E C T . _ Have You Heard? Plasm a Donors Needed Men & Women ______ AC IS? A tt e n d in g the 4 7 7 -3 7 3 5 4 0 9 W. 6th S u m m e r S e s s io n ? WHY NOT TRY THE BEST! Four Theatres Unfair ★ The Best Food in Town Four theatres in A u stin are engaged in unfair em ploym ent practices that deny ★ 5 Day Maid Service dignity and justice to citizens of our com m unity. These four theatres are. X Riverside Twin Gnema X Northcross Six ★ Sun Decks X Village Cinema Four X D o b ie Screens I&2 ★ Private Pools ic Shuttle Bus at Here's what these four theatres are doing: • Paying sub standard wayes. Front Door • Engaging in discriminatory hiring practices. • T ry in g to destroy the standard pay scale in Austin. • U sing big profits from Austin citizens to benefit out-of-state corporations. • E m p lo y in g persons with m inim al training which results in inferior service. a cce p tin g contra cts for S u m m e r MADISON HOUSE Support the Theatres that Support Fair Play 709 W . 2 2 n d St. 4 7 8 -9 8 9 1 4 7 8 -8 9 1 4 Fourteen Austin theatres A R E paying fair wages. Fourteen Austin theatres A R E using fair labor practices. Fourteen Austin theatres A R E concerned about democracy and the economy IN A U S T IN . These 14 theatres are: /Amerkana /Fiesta Drive-In /Southside Twin Drive-In /Aquarius IV / Fox Twin /Highland Mall Gnema /Southwood /Texas / Austin /Varsity / Paramount /Burnet Drive-In '‘ J /Capital Plaza Gnema /Showtown Twin Drive-In ...A A ; : r .''C-’ ■ ' ;;' : ,'-'v;•% F O R FALL .V. Members of the International Alliance of Theatrical Stage Employees and Moving Picture Machine Operators of the United States and Canada, A F L -C I0 , Local 205 urge their fellow citizens to support the above 14 theatres and to boycott Village Cinema Four, Riverside Twin Cinema, Northcross Six and Dobie Screens I & Z. P age 12 T h u rsd a y , April 24, 1975 T H E D A IL Y T E X A N Madison-Bellaire Apts. MADISON HOUSE & DEXTER HOUSE (M eals optional at Dexter) I J Mggg| ' v mmmmmwn»— H ollow ' Claim ed Polluted —— C ra b tre e , Sororities To Discuss H E W Discrimination G u id e lin e s ting out the provisions. Each By STEPHANIE WARD president contacted this week S o ro rity p re s id e n ts and d ec lin e d co m m en t on the m em bers of the Panhellenic letter until after the Thursday Council will m eet Thursday to meeting. discuss issues raised by new U n d e r T itle VI of th e HEW discrimination guidelines, discrim ination on guidelines sen t them la st week by Student Government the basis of race, color or national origin is prohibited President Carol Crabtree. Acting as a m em ber of the for on-campus organizations U niversity Council on the at state-supported schools. “ The meeting Thursday will S t a t u s of W o m e n a n d M in o rities, C ra b tre e se n t b e a d i s c u s s i o n of t he letters to the presidents poin­ guidelines,” C rabtree said. comous briefs T exan Seeking Sum m er Staffers Shakespeare The English and classics d e p a rtm e n ts w ill p re se n t Shakespeare’s “ The Two No­ ble Kinsmen” a t 8 p m. Thurs­ day. Friday and Saturday in R ich a rd so n H all II ( LBJ Complex). Admission is $1.50 T h e r e a l s o will be a videotaped perform ance a t 2 p m Sunday. Admission is 75 cents. Chicanos The Chicano G raduate Stu­ dent Association will m eet at noon T h u rsd ay in S peech Building 104 This meeting will be a wrap-up of the y ea r’s projects and issues as well as a planning session for the next year. ANNOUNCEMENTS TEXAS TAVERN w ill sponsor Cole Porter Revue "D ecam ped, DeBauched, D e P o rte r,*’ at 8 and 10:30 p m Thursday, F riday and Saturday in the Texas Tavern Admission is Si for UT students, faculty and staff, SI 50 for guests Tickets w ill be for sale at the Union South information desk fro m noon to l l p m through Friday. TEXAS UNION MEXICAN-AMERICAN CUITURE COMMITTEE w ill sponsor the double feature movies " E l Gallo de Oro' and Historia de un G ran A m or" at 7 and 9 30 p m. Thursday In the Academ ic Center Auditorium Ad­ mission Is Si 25 for students, faculty and staff, Si 50 for others texas u n io n m u sic al events c o m m it t m w ill sponsor a noon concert Thurs­ day in the Texas Tavern. Admission Included in the guidelines, until the “ W a gg o n er Amendment,” were cam pus organizations who receiv e substantial benefits from the school. The Waggoner Amendment states that private organizations can be exem pt under Title VI if they are in no way related to the school. But it has not been determ ined whether sororities fall under this am endment. MEETINGS BAHA I ASSOCIATION w ill m eet at 7 p rn Thursday in Jester Center A309 CAREER CHOICE INFORMATION CENTER w ill present a workshop "In terview in g Skills" at 3 p m Thursday in Jester A! 15A CMABAO MOUSE will m eef at 8 p m Thurs­ d a y a t 311 E. 31st St., Apt 206, todiscuss Jewish ethics GEOLOGICAL SCIENCES DEPARTMENT w ill meet at I p rn. Thursday in Geology B u ild in g IOO to h e a r T h o m a s G rim shaw discuss "E nviron m ental Geology of the San M arcos Area GAY PEOPLE OF AUSTIN will m eet at 8 p m Thursday at 3309 Grooms St., Apt 208 INOIA ASSOCIATION w ill meet at 8 p rn Thursday in Robert Lee Moore H a ll 7.104 INTERNATIONAL STUDENTS ORGANIZATION w ill meet at 7 p m T h u rsda/ in Business-Economics Building 155 to see a film on the M exican Revolu­ tion. SLAVIC LANGUAGES DEPARTMENT will meet at 8 p m Thursday in Burdine Auditorium to show the film "I Even M et Happy Gypsies," with English subtitles STAFF ASSOCIATION w ill meet at 7 30 p m Thursday in Faculty Center 102 to h e a r B r u c e H in e m a n d is c u s s "Teacher R etirem ent System STUDENT RIGHTS spo nsored by th e Reading and Study Skills L a b o r a t o r y (R A SSL) w ill meet at 3 p m Thursday in Jester Center A 332 i* *r e e TIX AS UNION MUSICAL EVENTS COMMITTEE will sponsor Ed M iller, a Scots folk S inger fro m A to 6 p m . Thursday in the Texas Tavern. A d m is s i o n is free TEXAS UNION RECREATION COMMITTEE w ill JOAN HEGARTY GIVENS Texan Staff W riter A Lake Travis resident has threatened a lawsuit against the Lower Colorado R iver Aut hor i t y if t he “ Hippie Hollow” area is not cleaned up By “ We wish to stress the impor­ tance of being an on-campus organization.” sponsor a bus trip to toe San Antonio fiesta from 6 30 p.m . to I a rn. F r i­ day, leaving from East M a li Foun­ tain Fee is S4 for U T students, 54 50 for others TEXAS UNION M CMAHON COMMITTEE w ill sponsor hiking the Lone Star Trail from 5 p.m . F rid a y to 5 p m Sunday in the Sam Houston National Forest Price involves splitting the cost of gasoline. Sign up in Union Program Office Thursday. TEXAS UNION MCMATION COMMITTEE w ill sponsor a Lower Guadalupe canoe trip fro m 7 p.m . Friday to 7 p m. S a tu rd a y A d m ission is S8 for students, faculty and staff, SS 50 for o th e rs Sign up in th e U n ion P rogram Office. TEXAS UNION THEATM COMMITTEE w ill sponsor the film "H o lid ay" at 7 and 9 p m . T h u r s d a y in B a t t s A u ditorium . Admission is Si for students, faculty and staff; SI 50 for others. A p p lic a tio n s a r e b e in g a c c e p t e d for s u m m e r positions on The Daily Texan. Please pick up application form s in The Texan office in the TSP Building and return it to the office by May I. Lak e Travis Resident Threatens Suit SE M IN A RS UNIVERSITY CHRISTIAN CHURCH Will Spon sot a soup and sandwich seminar at noon Thursday at 2007 University Ave. with D r Armando G u tierrei discussing the "64th Legislature -Taman Staff Flints I n v e s t i g a t i o n of t h e organizations and inform ation Carol Crabtree from the Council on the Status of Women and M inorities con­ feel about the guidelines,” tacted the sororities and im ­ C rabtree said. “ U n d e r T i t l e VI, a n y pressed upon them the im por­ tance of considering the new organization that abuses the guidelines is in danger of los­ guidelines. “ We are in hopes that the ing federal funding,” Sandra meeting can be inform ative Williams, of the D allas branch and that we can gain some of the U.S. Office of Higher feedback on how the sororities Education, said Wednesday. In a recent le tte r to Charles Herring, general m anager of th e riv e r a ut hor i t y, Bill Lam bert complained that un­ controlled w aste, noise and traffic a re d e trim e n ta l to Comanche T rail subdivision homeowners. The degradation of the Hip­ pie Hollow area by human pollution and illegal drug traf­ fic has resulted in “ actual dam ages to a d ja c e n t lan­ dow ners by dim inution in value of their p erties.” Lam bert charged “ The pollution of the lake in and near our property by the u n c o n t r o l l e d w a s t e and defecation of as many as 3.000 human b ein g s,” should be stopped, he said. Much of the litter blows into the lake and drifts onto the hom eowners’ lands. An undesirable amount of “ noise pollution” results from the unlimited am ount of entry by motor vehicles into the area, the Austin attorney said. The terrain and prevailing winds create an echo cham ber effect that amplify the sound of “ screeching tire s.” Unattended cam pfires also threaten residents, he added. He s u g g e s te d t h a t t he number of vehicles and p e r­ sons entering the a re a be regulated and that portable the problems at Hippie Hollow are as serious as Lam bert depicts I don’t think anybody has the authority to keep people off Lake Travis. T hat’s public w a t e r , ” t he sher i f f c o m ­ mented Polluting a w atercourse is a state violation. But in this case, it really com es m ore un­ d er th e h ea d in g of pet t y crim e. William B erger of the Water Quality Board said of the alleged human pollution of the lake. If sanitary conditions are improved and roads not block­ ed L a m b e r t m i g h t be am enable to a solution other than population control. “ I don't think anyone out here is opposed to a park, as long as it’s controlled, he con­ Other than the lack of toilet cluded. facilities, Frank doesn't think latrines and additional trash barrels should be provided. A resid en t of Com anche Trail since last fall. Lam bert said he wants action on his suggestions by July I or he will seek redress in court. By law. Hippie Hollow is o p e n to t h e p u b l i c for recreational purposes at all tim es, H erring said Wednes­ day. “ We are not legally authoriz­ ed to keep people out.” he ex­ plained. Travis County Sheriff Ray­ mond Frank allows prisoners to c l e a n t h e g r o u n d s p e rio d ic a lly , the g e n e ra l m anager said. As for the trash barrels, “ people have hauled them off,” he added. (GUADALUPE L OC A T I ON ONLY) THURSDAY & SUNDAY SPECIALS DELI-SANDWICHES Ss The Finest VIENNA BRAND HOT PASTRAMI THE FINAL BASH Highly Seasoned beef, cured in spices ten days, then smoked for eight hours. Served on rye bread with a kosher style pickle and chips. ALL Y O U C A N DR IN K CORNED BEEF Made from lean brisket of beef pressed, boiled and cured to impart the Corned Beef flavor. Thin sliced and heaped on rye bread, served with kosher style pickle and chips. > fe a tu r in g REUNION (Open Bar & CHICKEN FRIED STEAK LARGE C H I C K E N F * ! E D STEAK. B U T TE R Y B A K E D PO T A T O OR F R E N C H FRIES H O T TE XA S T O A S T . A N D CRISP TOSSED SALAD I n q u i r i e s wi l l be ser ved) ALSO CHOP STEAK DINNER 28 15 GUADALUPE 4 7 8 -3 5 6 0 $ 2 0 at the door The sausage specialty of Italy, Milan style.. .made from lean beef, pork and pork fat seasoned with pep­ per, garlic and white wine .. Served on rye bread with a kosher pickle and chips. REUBEN $ 1.4 9 B0N&N2B SIRLOIN PIT $ I 5 a couple in advance SALAMI $1 39 Friday, M ay 2 N O T IP P IN G 24th & San Gabriel Call 4 7 6 -1 4 4 0 for tickets "-C O M E AS Y O U ARE o■ A Corned Beef, Big Eye Swiss Cheese, Sour Kraut and a tasty dressing, on rye bread with chips. Problem Pregnancy Counseling Service S tudent H e a lth Center 105 W . 2 6 th St. (4th Floor-South) C onfidential counseling w ith all alternatives discuss­ ed an d referrals m a d e to ap p ro priate resources. Cal 4 7 8 -5 7 1 1 , Ext. 2 6 , for an a p p o in tm e n t. Ind ividu al appointm ents Tuesday 1-5 p .m ., Thursday 1-5 p.m ., DELI-SANDWICHES HOLIDAY H ouse • 2600 GUADALUPE • 2003 GUADALUPE Friday 9-noon. I CHELSEA STREET PUB I FOOD -SPIRITS I I line liv e e n t e r t a in m e n t n ig h t l y I I I I NO COVER days I N O W OPEN I I I H IG H LA ND MALL dollar II NORTHCROSS MALL I I I B o th L o c a tio n s open a fte r M a ll h o u rs. E n te r H ig h la n d I on 1-3') side. I M a ll ou tside e n tra n c e n e x t d o o r to I The H o u rs : S u n F ri l l a.m . -1 2 p .m .; S at. l l a .m . - I a.m . I I I Daily I I I I Texan I CHARLES ROSEN I Pianist, scholar, author, professor in concert, I I lecture, seminar, class I I Unclassified! I S U N D A Y, APRIL 27 Program : I Come by I I TSP Bldg. 3 .2 0 0 I I Room a n d place I I your TUESDAY, APRIL 29 I Unclassified I M O N D A Y . APRIL 2 8 I Ad I I I I I I students only | I pre-pasd J r 'I I I I :3 I Piano Recital Admission: Students $ 2 , Others $3 Hogg Auditorium, 8 p .m . M a s te r C lass in P ian o M u s ic B ldg R e c ita l H all, 9 - 1 2 am In fo rm a l C o ffe e w ..n S tu d e n ts M u s ic B uilding Loggia 2 - 4 p m I I J J P u b lic L ectu re " T h e m a tic T ran sfo rm a­ tion in Late B e e th o v e n " A c a d e m ic C e n te r A u d ito riu m , 7 :3 0 p m > * | no refunds rn | 25 th & W h itis I L _________ J Scarlatti: Three Sonatas Lust: Reminiscences of Don G io vanni Beethoven: Diabelli Variations NEWLY OPENED Com e ride the fun, easy to operate, 3 -w heelers and mini bikes! You can ride speed on the lon g stra ig h t “s “ b ig tu rn on the up to a fa s t and onehalf 35mph fly th ro u g h the m ile track! Open M on-Thur. till 10pm ♦ F ri.-S a t. till m i d n i g h t S e m in a r "C lassic S ty le in 18 th C en tu ry O p era a n d C hu rc h M u s ic " (L im ite d to 2 5 stu d e n ts ) M u s ic B ld g R o o m 2 0 0 , 1 0 -1 2 a rn S e m in a r S ch u m a n n an d R o m a n tic Theories o f Language & Expression (L im ite d to 2 5 s tu d e n ts ) H R C 4 252. 4 6 p m M r Rosen s visit is under the auspices oI The U n ite d Chapters e l Rh, B eta Kappa V isitin g S cholar P rogram and The U n ive rsity o f Texas at A u s tin D e p artm ents of M u sic and English ___________ ____________ _______________ Thursday, April 24, 1975 T H E D A IL Y T E X A N Page I M usic Festival Set for Saturday 'Tyrants:' Passion and Irony Nabokov T r a n s f o r m s Logic Into P o e t r y " T r \a n ts D estroycd and Other S to r ie s ;’ w ritten by Vladim ir N abokov; published by M cG raw -H ill; $7.95, By MIKE SPIES Texan Staff W riter I one ago. a young Russian em igre wrote stories of a sort not far rem oved from the Joycean-M aupassant pattern The w riter ev en tu al I c a m e to A m e n ta and p u b lish ed se v e ra l sophisticated novelistic gam es which made his reputation. Slowly, his work in foreign languages has been translated to provide clues to the rules of his gam es (and he has made it clear that the gam es are his alone). Nabokov s short stories comple­ ment his longer prose so neatly that one wonders about premeditation The title story, about a young man who finds lite in a totalitarian country- increasingly intolerable, finally laughs the despots away Nabokov himself is sur­ prised to find a precursor of Humbert Humbert in one of his stories But these are easy sim ilarities. Constantly in Nabokov s prose the read er's gullibility is played out until the layers ot irony are revealed as if in plain sight the whole tim e *in a novel such as Pale F ire " one needs to have this in mind for every "The Austin Music Festival, featuring seven bands, is scheduled for noon Saturday at F iesta Gardens. devious page) These early stories, mostly a bo 4 la r i s and Berlin em igre society during the 20s and 30s. are m ore self­ conscious about the disguises the author assum es. Net the author s passion, so often buried in the la te r novels, comes through m ore directly, especially in such stories as Music " "L ik.” ‘ In Memory of L I Shigaev. and a sh° rL sublime ascension into the dreamworld appropriately called Perfection " Actually. "Lik - a dying actor happens to rem eet a hated childhood acquaintance - is not too far from Dostoevsky, whom Nabokov has since denounced as vulgar. Those strong opinions of tastes were still being formed Of course, these small m arble sculptures are not completely without deceptions. An old man sits on a bench while the narrator relates a sad tale of his history, then the n arrato r says he never met the man and just made the whole story up Al^ H A P P Y H O U R ¥ '7 DAILV “2. f o r ! ” I I I 1111 ' CUNNINGHAM CORNER HAPPY HOUI AIL NIGHT LONG and & B a c k by P o p u la r Dem and 2405 JoJo Gunne Ruby Starr Trapeze 23rd and Pearl Blood Rock This Wish Featuring LIGHTNING $2.00 Shiner & Falstaff CO M ING S O O N O ’REALLY SOUTH DOOR ALL Y O U C A N DRINK CO NO the world bv c a llin E the museum a att 452- this Ihfe ppart art of ot the worW_ by calling Mrs DeMenil is a physicist 9447. The D eM enils a re c o n ­ by t r a i n i n g a n d an a r t historian by choice. She is sidered prem ier a rt collectors in the Southwest. The collec­ chairm an of the art dep art­ ment at St Thomas Universi­ tion includes a large number ty in Houston and director of of prim itive works, including Oceanic. American Indian, es­ the Institute for the Arts at Rice. She is on the board of p ec ia lly N o rth w e st C o ast pieces, and African. Im por­ the Houston Museum of Fine Arts and other m ajor U.S. and ta n t in the collection are European museums. works by Max E rnst, Rene The Rothko Chapel was Magritte and other designed by architect Howard Surrealists. There is a general Barnstorm and is adjacent to collection of European and the St. Thomas campus. It A m e r i c a n m a s t e r s . Th e h o u se s m a j o r p ie c e s by D eM enil C o lle c tio n a lso renow ned A m erican a rtis t houses one of the most extenMark Rothko. sive a rt history libraries in TONIGHT OLD SALT LADIES FREE ; H in p C H . B He did this despite the Big Time Band and “ A By M IK E S P IE S Texan Staff Writer “ He’s the top,” says June Smith, referring to American songwriter Cole Porter. A revue of P o rte r’s songs, directed by Smith, will play Thursday through Saturday in the Texas Tavern under the ti­ tle “ Decamped! DeBauched! DePorter!” “ I might go so far as to say that if you liked ‘At Long Last Love,’ don’t come. That film was slower than ‘The Last Picture Show,’ ” she says about Peter Bogdanovich’s re­ cent attempt at a Cole Porter musical. S M IT H ’S “ mini-musical’’ was f ir s t p erfo rm ed in Houston in 1970. At present she is a classics scholar at the University with plans to go to Berkeley. But she is by no P o p p e ts A d d ic t an d Klein ( I t ) in DePorter' means neglecting her interest in the Am erican musical theater. She hopes that with c la s s ic a l G reek theater 9 Captioned A B C E v e n in g N e w s IO p.m. 6:30 p m. 24 W ide W o rld Special: "A b o r tio n behind her she can convince 9 L ilia s, Y o ga and You 9 C o n su m e r S u rv iv a l Kit M e rcifu l or M u rd e r 7' ' Berkeley that study of the 10:30 p.m. 24 Bew itched 36 Tonight Show Banate*. 7 B onace* * # _ 36 N e w s American musical theater is I p m. serious business. 7 T h e W altons 9 B ill M o y e r s Journal It is Porter, of course, who 24 L ights, C a m e ra, M onty HOLLYWOOD (Spl.) — “ Tom Mix Died for Your Sins a is her first love. Among top 36 Sunshine new book on the life and times of the legendary movie cowboy A m erican m usical co m ­ 7:30 p m 36 T he Bob C ra n e Show bv Darryl Pomcsan, will become a major motion picture for posers, only Porter and Irving • p 7 M o v ie " T h e Good G u y s and the 20th Centurv-Fox late this year with Jerry Zeitman producing Berlin wrote their own lyrics B ad G u y s , " s ta r rin g R o b e rt it has been announced by Alan Ladd, Jr., senior vice-president to their music. And the lyrics M itch u m , G e o rge Kennedy of Porter are in a different of worldwide production. 9 In P e rfo rm a n ce at W olf Trap: D o n i z e t t i 's ''D a u g h t e r s of the Ponicsan s biographic novel on Tom Mix will be published class of sophistication from R e g im e n t," sta rrin g B e v e rly Sills this fall bv Delacourt Publications. Two of his previous works, Berlin. 24 M o v ie " O B V I I , " P a r t T hree Cinderella Liberty" and 'The Last Detail." - have become sta rrin g Ben G a iz a ra “ Porter was really dirty, ’’ 36 T he M a c D a v is Show major motion pictures. The author also will write the Smith says. “ He was known 9 P , 3 6 " D e a n M a r t in R o a sts S a m m y screenplay. ____ television Fox Planning Mix Film D a v is, J r . " Broadway He did this despite Little Skipper From Heaven a crippling fall from a horse in Above." 1936 that paralyzed Porter for The cast features Mark Adthe rest of his life and left him dicks. Lynne Pappas and Beth in constant pain Klein with musical direction “ H E WAS able to find fun as by Jim Livingood. Addicks the world was coming down and Pappas are University around him. We need more students, and Klein — the only satire like this. The kind of member of the Houston cast feeling audiences get from — is a University graduate. ‘Singin’ in the Rain’ is what The show will be performed we’re trying for.” twice nightly at 8 and IO 30 In form, the revue will be p.m. Admission is $1 for mostly blackouts and settings for the songs with a few in­ students, faculty and staff; SI 50 for guests. Each iden­ troductory bits. Big hits like tification card holder may br­ Begin the Beguine.” “ My ing three guests. Tickets for Heart Belongs to Daddy,” Laguna Gloria Art Museum will offer a program devoted to “ You’re the Top" and “ It s the show are being sold at the Texas Union South Informa­ integrating the arts called “ The Creative Process, a Summer De Lovely,” are represented tion Center from noon to l l Workshop in the Arts” July 14 through 18 as well as more obscure songs p m. For further information, The workshop will be held at the museum as well as within like “ Most Gentlemen Don’t call 471-5653 the galleries of the museum itself. Like Love.” ‘ The Leader of The workshop involves five full days exploring elements com­ mon to all art forms, bringing together authorities and ar tists of differing viewpoints. Students will be involved in a variety o experiences and media. The emphasis of the workshop is on I developing the student s perception and awareness. Each day the workshop will begin with exercises in move­ ment exploring the elements of breath, space, time, energy, Theatre C o m m ittee p resents rhythm and design. .„ . Cary Grant, Katharine H ep b urn in At the lunch hour on four days the museum will present a lee turer. exposing the workshop students to topical concerns within the Texas art scene. Throughout the five-day workshop, films will be shown relating to various artists and art forms. Registration is open for the workshop at $100 (IO percent dis­ count to museum members). Enrollment is limited and design­ ed for persons 18 and over. The fee does not cover meals or lodg- as The G e n te e l P o r nographer.” He knew all the words, but there were always other ways to say it — more satirical, more brittle, more sophisticated. And he’s still topical. After the preview perfo rm an ce last F r i d a y , someone asked me, ‘Did Porter really write those words?’ From the ’30s to the ’50s, Porter had more successful shows running on Broadway than the other teams of writers put together. From “ Anything Goes” in 1934 to “ Can-Can” in 1953, scarcely a year passed when he did not have at least one hit on Art M useum Offers Sum m er Workshop TEXAS Information concerning inexpensive meals and lodging is available on request. A nonrefundable deposit of $20 is due to secure a space by May I. The balance of $80 is due in fall no later than June 16 Further information can be obtained by con­ tacting Judith Sims. P.O. Box 5568 or by calling 452-944.. ___________ AusriN Music FestivaI SAT.,APRIL 26 - N O O N TILL M ID N IG H T Fiesta G ard ens ZACHARY SCOTT THEATRE CENTER JESUS CHRIST SUPERSTAR Tonight! Presents The Further A d v en tu res of N ic k and N ora C ha rles and their dog, A sta Reynolds Sisters & All You Con Eat Band Joe Valentine & The New Oso Band Slippin' Stones Marsha Ball The Imperials Admission $3.00, Children Under 12 Free T IC K E T S A V A I L A B L E : U n iv e r s it y C o - O p , S e a rs, O a t W ithe J, P a n t s S o u t h (R iv e r s id e D r iv e ), H e m p h i lls ( O n A B C R eta rd S h o p the D ra g ), R E SE R V A T IO N S monday * friday 9 to 7, ( 1936) 476*0541 saturday 1 to 7 April 25 thru May 4, nightly L yrics by T im R ic e M u sic by A n d r e w L lo yd-, W e b b— er l.. prod u ced n O r ig in a- llly o nn H B rr roi ai I d w a y b y R o b e r t S t'g w o o d O r ig in a l b r o a d w a y production co n c e iv e d b y Tom O and M CA in c by s p e c ia l a r r a n g e m e n t w ith D a v id L a n d Tonight AFTER THE THIN M A N Norma Childress Dobie Bond Mexican Revolution HOLIDAY Batts Aud. 7, 9 p.m. D ire cte d by VV. S. Van D y k e W ith W illiam Powell, Myrna Loy and a very young Jam e s Stewart, and A sta as Asta. JESTER AUD. $1.00 UT Students, Faculty, Staff $1.50 Members $1________ 7 & 9 _______________ C op y righ t © 1973 by W .n d y s In t im a tio n .!, Inc All R ig h t * R « * r v . d G R A N D O P E N IN G ! 415 W. 19th OXJD F A S H I O N E D HAMBURGERS FEATURING: OLD-FASHIONED HAMBURGERS 256 WAYS W e start I fresh each J a y . O u r h a m b u r g s are IO O * pure b e e f . . . never precooked nor press rapped. AND OLD-FASHIONED RICH, MEATY CHILI FOR TEH B P S ! m il m DYNAMITE H iilTS teas! 30 dynamite nights of folk, rock, jazz. dance, wmphcxiy drama and comedy throughout 75-76. (During the 74-75 season 33 events were offered.) WHAT C IO IS. CEC is the Cultural Entertainment Committee, a student sored and coordinated by the Texas Union. CEC is students l5i?/-^s76are variety of cultural and entertainment events with you in mind A feadY f c ^ k ^ for 75 6 i e the Chinese Acrobats of Taiwan, the Roger Wagner Charles Dickens, the Cleveland Symphony the Broadway ^ the Royal Shakespeare Company and Theatre of Harlem, me .-77 .. ^ of ..------.I------itertaine come are bookings popular entertainers (such as recent CEC-sponsored peitoimances by Loggins & Messina,Chick Corea, Todd Kristcflerson & Coolidge. Leo Kotlke. Chuck Berry. Gordon Lightfoot and Jon: Mitcnei). That’s the CEC Series. The CEC co-SDonsors even more events on the Solo Artists Series, the Chamber Celebration s ! S S and w K K ^ u s rin Symphony. Ifs a1! going to add up to at least 30 dynamite nights. WHAT YOUR 610 O H S YOU. Your CEC O ptional (nobody's m aking Y o u pay) Student Services Fee of SIO entitles you to draw for disc°u nt^ tickeK^ season. You have pre-public drawing privileges and free bus rides to off-campus attrac tions. * f — ** 415 W. 19th Iv ¥ OREN DAILY 10:30 A.M lf you attend three or four shows you'll earn your 510 bac^ l bi. ^ r^ *,L (^ S ^ v r lk fa b k n pay the Optional Fee pay regular admission prices - when there are seats avanaote.j This is one of the best entertainment values on any American university campus - and it only costs you SIO to be part of It. Be part of the dynamite nights In 75-76. UMI Im prove your porsonaMty - andltsur# beats hell out of staying homo. Thursday, April 24, 1975 T H E D A ILY T E X A N Page 15 W ith G aslight “ Lu v,” directed by Dex­ ter Bullard; written by Murray Schisgal; starring Stephen Coleman, Karen Seal and Robert Edwards; at the Gaslight Theatre Workshop. By VICKY BO W LES Texan Staff Writer “ Love is a gradual develop­ ment based on physical at­ traction. com plem entary careers and simple social sim ilarities," “ Luv is a perversion of love, playwright Murray Schisgal's telling r^rt r a it of the S ix t i e s ' dehumanization of the highest emotion into a formula, a gradual development based on. etc. The G a s lig h t T h e a tre Workshop personnel had e a r lie r expressed some trepidation that the play might be outdated. Nonsense — the phenomenon explored in “ Luv" may have begun in the Sixties, but it certainly continues today SCHISGAL’S tableaux is a dreary, deserted New York bridge of the sort which would appeal to a suicidally-inclined James Baldwin character. It is, in fact, the scene of an attempted suicide — one Harry Berlin (Stephen Cole­ man), a poor, dejected victim of life’s miseries, winner of the Brown Helmet award, is about to end it all At the last desperate moment a man steps onto the bridge He is the exact opposite of Harry, a nattily-attired, obviously successful businessman. After watching Harry for a mo­ ment. he tentatively asks “ Harry0 Is that you. Harry0Like something out of a television commercial or a sentimental old movie, the line is the first sign of the saddled with a wife who won’t play, although this intimacy divorce him and who keeps als o w o rk s a g a in s t us him from the waiting arms of claustrophobics occasionally. (Personal to Bullard: you his mistress Will Harry take alm ost asphyxiated two her off his hands0 Austin critics last Thursday Yes and no, as we soon find with your motorcycle scene. out. And the getting there is a Much as the reading public real joy. “ Luv” is a superb comedy, somewhat reminis­ might have enjoyed that, it needs to be remedied ) cent of an old Howard Hawks T H E SM ALL cast of three movie with its quick pace and bats .666. with Coleman and numerous sight gags (but not Karen Seale as the wile. Ellen slapstick). Manville, excellent. Coleman “ Luv” is a physically ex­ displays a capacity for com­ hausting play for its actors; edy that is surprising only director Dexter Bullard never because I never would have lets them rest, nor does he let considered him a comic actor. the audience rest. The in­ He is indeed, showing us a tim a c y of the G a s lig h t sad, Chaplinesque figure with Theatre lends itself well to the a face and body he can bend at will. Particularly hilarious is his banana scene, which an unintended pratfall opening night made even funnier. lf You Need Help or Seal is, well ... I ’m not as Just Someone W ho W ill Listen good with praiseworthy adjec­ Telephone 4 7 6 -7 0 7 3 tives as I am with the other kind, so forgive my faltering. At Any Time The Telephone Counseling an d Referral Service Seal gives a consummate per­ formance, so full of talent and raw energy and hard work it makes me falter. many irreverencies to follow Having established that the derelict is indeed his old school chum Harry. Milt Man­ ville (Robert Edwards) takes him under his wing. Milt describes the joy and ease of his new life at great length, followed by a long game of oneupsmanship in which the two compare the miseries of their respective childhoods. These tales of childhood become a running gag. one which never flags in humor and interest. T H E R E A L reason for Milt’s joy at seeing his old buddy is soon re ve aled , despite his happiness. Milt is Robert Edwards, Stephen Coleman Karen Seale (1-0 in tov' Edwards, on the other hand, IS a disappointment in such talented company. Admitted­ ly. Milt is the least interesting of the characters, but he also has his share of good lines, most of which were lost in Edwards’ delivery. S C E N E R Y , designed by Michael N Wheeler, is ex­ cellent, a real accomplish­ ment on such a small stage. One other minor gripe — the 8.30 p m. starting time is much too late considering the length of the p lay, the cramped quarters and the fact $ 1 .2 5 til 3 p.m . V A R S IT Y 2400 G UADALUPE 474 4351 STREET Feet. 1:40-3 20-5:00 6:40-8:20-10:00 NOOMMMI I I 1MKH without feeling bad. I Eve' y Nigh? t I 6 P V ALL ENGLISH SPEAKING l ets you /eel good AAM M A L IC N - Thurs., Fri., Sat. In Dobie M all STARTS TO M O R R O W J — — — — — — I— — ■— APRIL The best m live rock and roll 7 nights a week Open at 8 0 0 p rn Music begins 8 30 Happy Hour trom 8 to 9 6:15 7:45 9:15 ? ls t & G u a d a lu p e Second le v e l D obie M a ll 4 7 7 -1 3 2 4 ( m Yves Montand in JO H N W O #. as B B W a JOHN WAYNE BRANNIGAN RICHARD ATTENBOROUGH ASPY GEESQN M EL FER R ER JOHN VERNON ■RALPH M EEK ER ■ ’!w S m o t n u OPENI NG e a r t h 3 THEATRES / T o m o v ic u j' SKYJACK KIDNAP. STANDS W ITH O U T PEER AS DOCUM ENT AND THRILLER'' — J u d i t h Cr ist 1 :0 5 -5 :2 5 9 :4 5 OPEN 12:00 $2.00 ATIM E-BO M B OF SUSPENSE HAS STARTED TICKING. DANIEL PILON TR A N S ★ TEXA / 477 3783 914 N I AVAR LAST D A Y f- NO JO K E N O COVER HORIE SCREEN I & 2 NOW WATCH HIM LOSE HIS TEMPER. N e w Rock 'N Roll b y r n 22-25 mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmiiimtiimnmmmmmminummmmmmmmmui Y O U ’VE SEEN THE DUKE IN ACTION workshop moves to newer and larger quarters. ★ ★ ★ “ Luv” will continue at the Gaslight through May ll with performances at 8 30 p m Thursday through Sunday. Call 476-4536 for reservations. NO COVER CHARGE TONITE on ru mutt »»uti w a m -« n C that two p e rfo rm a n ce s , Thursday and Sunday, fall on week nights. The G a s lig h t T h e a tre Workshop’s first running production gives the hint of many good things to come, p a r t i c u l a r l y wh e n t he BEST EHTEBTATOMElfT TILDE 50c FEATURES I 30-3:30 5:30-7:30-9:30 ‘levo...„ •«. &Bor HAND TO MOUTH G E O R G E BERNARD S H AW ’ S C LA S S IC 1938 C O M E D Y O F M A N N E R S IN W H IC H E L IZ A D O O LIT T L E IS T R A N S FO R M E D FROM G U TT E R S N IP E TO LA D Y T H E FILM W H IC H “ M Y FAIR LA D Y” IS BASED ADMIS­ SION SEE DIRECTORY AD FOR FEATURE TIMES « * I 25 each * 2 00 both last Day -- Above all...Its a love story. a Features 12:15-3:15-6:1S-W5 \ Steve McQueen • Paul Nawman W INNER OF 3 ACADEM Y AWARDS S T A R T S F R I D A Y - TW O DAYS ONLY S tarts T O M O R R O W ! rjf p (Mon-Sat) la W E N N G I INFERNO! (PG) In clud ing Best Song A C in e m a to g ra p h y Morton The Garden 01 The Finzi’Contini# A howling/v funny film " "Tho hand o f genius is N Y Tinirs once again evident. J u d it h L r i * l 4 :3 0 8:15 2 :3 0 6 :1 5 1 0 :0 0 I I OPEN 11:45 • $2.00 TU 6 P M. J Dustin Hoffman “ Lenny EEA. 12-2-4-6-8-10 NO PASSES w 2224 Guadalupe St - 477-1364 held} T R O V E R !* A Bob Fosse Film ☆ t 5 ra n k * * A ☆ i * $ 1 50 8 :0 0 - 1 0 :0 0 * I Sacco & Vametti 1:45*1” A Brief Vacation - 6:005125 Not a triple feature S eparate a d mission tor each film MIDNIGHTERS M“ LAST Two nations are being held for ransom and... DAY! SACCO A. Y A N N E T T I s s Ais the t\ agent C who on n e lly takes on m e TERRORISTS .JA N MCSHANE t ^ n ^ P E T E R RAWLEY iby PAUL WHEELER ' Music by JERRY GO LDSM ITH / j ^ H n e n M M Q M R COLOR b y d e l u x e * J GULF STAUS DRIVEIN’ _ J GULF STATES DRIVE-IN V . Showt o w n USA Hwy. 183 4 i m * on «83fr4H84/* Page 16 Thursday, A pril 24, 1975 THE DAILY TEXAN ja n d ^ ^ S o u T h s id c * \7 1 0 I Bn. Wh.te » 4 4 4 2 2 9 6 / TRAMS ★ T E X A S KOKE NITE H NO ONE UNDER ADMITTED ADULTS 52.00 9 $Bas L JK 6 4 0 0 Burnet Road — 465-6933 HELD OVER FLESH GORDON ANO ON THI SAME PROGRAM (X) * r AT 8:30 & 11:30 . f TA k llv 10:15 ONLY GRIMM'S FAIRY TALES! N B C Ju g g le s N E W Y O R K ( A P ) - The N B C television network has announced it is cancelling seven series, including the Smothers Brothers’ attempt at a network T V comeback after their C B S series was axed six years ago. NBG, the first network dis­ c lo sin g its f a ll p ro g ra m lineup, said it will air eight new evening series when the n e w s e a s o n b e g in s in September and will shift six current weekly programs to d if f e r e n t t im e p e r io d s , different evenings, or both IN A D D I T I O N to The Smothers Brothers Show ,” N B G said it is cancelling “ Adam-12.” a seven-season veteran; “ Lucas Tanner” and “ Petrocelli,” both in their f i r s t s e a s o n ; and th r e e midseason replacements — ‘Sunshine,” “ The Bob Crane Show” and “ The M ac Davis F a ll m Tony Curtis as a con man N B C ALSO SA ID its movienight schedule for Mondays. Tuesdays and Saturdays is be­ ing changed It said made-for TV or theatrical movies w ill regularly appear next fall only on Thursday and Saturday nights or as specials on other evenings. The new series for N BC s The network also said it is 1975-76 s c h e d u le a re cancelling “ Amy Prentiss.” “ H olvak,” starring Glenn starring Jessica W alter as a Ford as a southern country policewoman, as one of four preacher in the late 1930s; rotating shows in its “ Sunday “ The Invisible Man.” starring Mystery M ovie” series. David McCallum in a TV v er­ sion of the H G Wells classic T h e p r o g r a m , w h ic h about a scientist. “ F a y , ” appeared only three times this sta rrin g Lee G ra n t as a season, will be replaced next freshlv divorced woman em­ fall bv “ M cCoy.” starring Show.” H o w e ve r, it s a id “ Petrocelli,” about a Manhat­ tan lawyer in a New Mexico town, might be resurrected if NBG decides to put it in a stillopen Monday night time slot. A network spokesman said he didn’t know when that deci­ sion would be made. S c h e d u le harUino upon a new life ; barking “ E lle ry Queen.” with no one yet cast as the m y s te ry w riter. Medical Story, an anthology series of medical dramas; "The Metro Man. with Lloyd Bridges as a un­ iformed policem an; “ D oc­ to rs ’ H o s p ita l,” sta rrin g George Peppard as a surgeon and chief of services at a large hospital, and Sunday Dinner,” a situation comedy starring Tony Montefusco as the head of a large ItalianAmerican family. • F a y ’ ’ and “ S u n d a y Dinner” are half-hour shows; the six others are 60-minute programs. N B( said TO P L A C E A T E X A N C L A S S I F I E D AD C A L L 471-5244 N BG also al^o said it is moving ‘Chico and the Man from its Frid ay night slot to Wednes­ day night next fall, and shif­ ting M o vin g O n ” from Thursday to Tuesday nights when the new season begins It said “ Police Story” will start an hour earlier than it now does on Tuesday nights. Sunday Mystery Movie will start a half-hour later than it now does and “ The Wonderful World of Disney ” will beg-n a half-hour e a r lie r than its current 6:30 p.mi CDT star­ ting time It said its “ Monday Night at the Movies” series will shift to Thursday nights Today at Presidio Theatres an R rated, rather kinky tale of survival Ink draw ing from the Michener display § O e n sla v e r Designs S h o w n “ Four Centuries of Scenic Invention.” a selection of 125 stage designs from the Collec­ tion of Donald Oenslager, is on display at the Michener Galleries of the University O rg a n iz ed by the I n t e r ­ national Exhibitions Founda­ tion in Washington, the show w ill be seen in Austin through May ll. O e n s la g e r , is on e of A m e r ic a ’s le a d in g stag e d e sig n e rs , has c o lle c te d books, drawings and prints in connection with the theater since he first became a stage designer 50 years ago. H IS C O L L E C T IO N includes rare books and prints relating to architecture, perspective, festivals and theatrical scene and costume designs, as well as more than 3.000 drawings of stage designs. From these, the drawings in the exhibition were chosen, representing a comprehensive survey from the mid-16th Century to the present. The earliest work in the ex­ hibit is an elaborate city scene attributed to Aristotile da Sangallo. dated ca. 1535. An illustrated catalogue, written by Oenslager. accom­ panies the exhibit. In the in­ troduction he sums up the diversity of imagination evi­ d e n t in th e d r a w i n g s : “ Together these drawings m irror the changing tastes and theatrical reforms of the stage I n t e r m s of draftsmanship, some of the designs are obviously the work of routine journeymen; others display incomparable peaks of technical scenic sk ill; w hile a few of the drawings are indeed works of art of the highest order. As a co llectio n , they form the branches of a glamorous fam i­ ly tree — four centuries of scenic invention nii’v i rG. rEuR W W IL i n L. O E NcSiL A visit the University campus to pre­ sent the first E W. Doty E n ­ dowed Lectures on April 29. 30 and M ay I at the Jo e C. Thompson Conference Center The lectures are open to the public. In addition, Oenslager will present a gallery tour of the e x h ib it to a lim ite d number of people from 3:30 to 5 p.m. on Monday on a firstcome basis. J feU tr STAUS D R I V E I N § SUow tow n U S A Hwy. 183 * > G U LF »836-8S8 S I M I S ORIVE IN I s B O X OFFICE O P E N 7 3 0 S H O W STARTS DUSK : Its all new! & SU 6T0IIR. M USKETEERS G g W lR A L C H IE M A C O R P O R A T IO N I ALL CIN E M AS EVERY DAY S1.25TIL 1:30 CASH Pb; I FOR RECORDS & B O O K S "MEL BROOKS" COMIC MASTERPIECESr 474-5294 after 5 Bargain . , o „ i , Alp*,, S A IU P O A P M P * * - Matin** St.25 til 1:30 Ii i I m a n a g em en t c MURDER et 12:00 ■PLUS CO-HIT- Jfom J u d y Com lf** J smmmmnamiiHiHiitiiiiiiMiiHiiiiniiiit LAST I days ! a n d th e Dixie Ingrid Bergman Best Supporting Actress Dance Kings 6:20-1:10-10:00 yyr. I R l V E R S l b E M U S IC A L P R O G R A M Pm ir v iD ED h □LIARIUS Theatres IV I SOOS P L E A S A N T V A L L E Y RD . . . Reincarnation til 6 p rn FEATURES , , DOORS OPEN ll 30 UM \ SI 25 ALL SEATS ,,\ N TIU CJB P M -. 1 K KD ! < K D PRICES rn . 6 r m MON thru SA JU S T O F F E A S T R IV E R S ID E D R IV E s\ so 10.00 IPG. "WOMEN IN CAGES” 10:00 i.. M M BI T R A N S + T E X A S 2:30 S. OO 7:30 Tommy ONIRE ORIENT 5EXPRESS - R e y n o ld s in W W . 5:30-7:45- does no t r ec o m m en d STREISAND & C A A N • r :w * w g il I u r n ii'imi- M E ni B u ri j S T H I l T GI H L S NOW I »«’ m* ........i Screenings 1:45-3:45 5:45-7:45 9:45 P G F IL M S FOW Y O U N G E R C H IL D R E N n ifc iit a m m . r n e r r r e il .i u h r l i I I ,m ii T O N IG H T r ,J HASto Bt Sits t HOMin; StGlWfrHH, *0ORF *0WITTtP § § I pm STEAM HEAT Tee Unicolor • 4:30-1:70-10:00 Ben White *444-2296/^ S s D o o n Opon SOUCHEK o Saloon (>\i( B d l® ® | 'OS! S o u T h s id c t 20 -3 05 -4So­ ft 30 New Y o r k * — Bruce WiHt«m*on, Playboy " t u b n m o o « * On b c h o ih o » * v p u a RWW W IL L » r t w YOU H A V W U rn SOMH OF T M MOM m o n o *C M « * ... . * I V U B N o r u n i x * , aw* N».YS»T*r** “ M M A R K A BLEI IT W ORKS HLAONIMCSHTI.Y, TENDERLY, EROTICALLY I ” --« ° g e r Graenspun. * Penthouse Magazine “ SPELLBINDING!” — Mony Haskell, VWaga Vote# U A A deserve to see a movie that cuta to the quick of human amotion!” A TH O R O U G H LY E X C E L L E N T FILM An intense, intelligent, innovative and stunningly impressive work. O N E OF THE M OST IM PO RTA N T F IL M S OF THE Y E A R !” “EXCEPTIONAL ORIGINALITY. THE FILM ACHIEVES A FRANKNESS AND FRESHNESS RARELY FOUND ON SCREEN. The torrent of talk is unceasingly fascine ting. The acting is superb. The movie is well worth a visit’* — Ogvid Elliot, C h ica g o Deity N ew s an in t e llig en t, f u n n y , J V I iii “ Je a n Eustache shows the influences not only of Bertolucci and Rohmer but also of Godard and W arhol in a work that is nevertheless very much his own. There s a stark beauty and honesty. His leading players are im peccable in their revelation of self!" “ POSSIBLY THE MOST IMPORTANT FILM OF 1973!” — Ja m es M on aco. In The New York Tim e s "EXTRAORDINARY!” — T h e Wall Street Jo urna l “ UNIQUE!” — Jerry O sie r, N. Y. Daily New s “AN OVERWHELMING EMOTIONAL EXPERIENCE!’ Ic rn 1*111Jrn - i i AN EXCELLENT FILMMAKER. The talk is marvelous— extravagant, Ironic, witty. Francois# Lsbrun provides the richest and most beautiful performance. But neither Bernadette Laton! nor Jean-Pierre Leaud have aver been better!” — C l a*daddy — F ra n c e s Herridge. N Y. Post — Village V o ic e “A CLASSIC OF SEXUAL INTIMACY! The script is so rich that it pushes the movie even deeper than ‘Last Tango’, A long, funny and finally frightening glide into the marrow of modern sexual feelings. Many people, ‘ AN U N P R E T E N T IO U S M A S T E R P IE C E A G R EA T FILM Its stars are electrifying. You must find the time to see it or miss out on O N E OF THE IM PO RTA N T C U LT U R A L A C H IE V E M E N T S OF YO UR L IF E T IM E . ’ -AN EXTRAORDINARILY TRIUMPHANT FILM! “ OH A P P H *ITH K R O M A N S BS PROM A MARRIAGE’. “A C lassic” “ M a s t e r p ie c e — R oger G reenspun, Penthouse AN IMPORTANT, NEW CONTROVERSIAL WORK. I found it fascinating! — Judith G rist N ew York M a g a zin e — W illiam Wolf. C u e M agazine . A w A r - Hem York Daily N ew -Newsweek Magazine 9:30AM-2:30AM J Sun. 12-12 J S t u d e n t D is c o u n t M u s t be 18 to E n te r J ★ ★★★★★★★★★★★★★■A STRAW HAT PIZZA PALACE happy hour 3 - 6 DAILY 9 8 < PITCHERS 2 4 < MUGS 6619 AIRPORT 1000 S. LAMAR I I I I I I I I I I I I “Don’t cry 1mouth full" S ta rrin g A n n ie C o le a n d B e rn a rd M e n e z A N e w Y o r k e r F i lm s R e l e a s e In F r e n c h w i t h s u b t i t l e s Friday & Sunday A p r i l 25 27 April 25 & & 27 H A la in T a n n e r’s Pascal Thomas \1nd.Cinm m $1‘50 7:30 & 9:30 A.C. Aud THE MIDDLE OF THEWORLD A F ilm bv A la in T a n n e r the d w a c lo r of " L a S a l a m a n c a Slatting O M * * Cart# ami " W IW Lac*a.d Kl Cato. A Tort* r.Km Wapato T H E * BW AHDTHI Friday, Saturday, Sunday April 25, 26, 27 Burdine Aud. 8:00 P.M. Only Adm. $1.50 P rt's e n le i! bs ''In d e n t ( in t I In F r e n c h w i t h s u bt it le s Starring: Je a n -P ie rre Laud Francoise Lebrun B e rn a d e tte Lafont In F re n c h w i t h s u b t i t l e s Saturday Only April 26 Mini. Cinema 7:30 & 9:30 A.C. Aud. Si.50 A New Yo rker F il m s R elea se CAMES FESIIVAIIS73 KANO S C H M * PRIZE -^1________I - . . . OA 1 Q 7 «; T M F . H A H A ’ T E X A N P a q e I / C L A S S IF IE D A D V E R T IS IN G RATES IS w o rd m in im u m E ach w ord ore ?'me » E a cr w e d 2-4 ?>mes * Each w ord 5-4 * • '* '« 5 Each w o rd IO or m ore * mea $ Student ra te esc* * me * C a d d ie d D isplay S3 25 1 c d * I inch one tim e SI *3 I cot x I inch 2-9 tim es nth *en or m ore h m e s*2 64 I CO! Mondo » I«»on H«tay To. »Oo. To.on Monday Wodnoxtay Tt*«n Tuooday 11 OO a ’n Thwrtdoy Toxon Woan«M*oy l l Friday to .o n Thwitddy OO o m . 11-00 arn In tho ovont o f » "O r« m o d o in a n a U v o r t n o m o n t .m - n o d i o io M I K O m u l l b o 9 ,van Of tho p u b ii.h o f. O '* o n ly O N E incortoti n .o ttw n ra*pon*it»l» to ' AH c la im * to ' ad |v**m o"t» .h o o ld bo m o d o (ban JO d a y * a h o . p v b in a tio n no* Ibtor We have a com ple te lin e of m a c ra m e goods jute mal. D e a d s h o o p s etc We also” have an excenent & inexpensive assortm ent ot beads o liv e wooo. Israe li. in d ia n , M e x ic a n , A fr can. etc P lu s m any fine c r a ft supp' es to r n e e d le r rk candies, b a tik deco & painting Homes-For Sale D o b ie M a ll D U P LE X FOR SALE w a lk to UT s h u t­ tle and in tra m u ra l field 2-1 eac,l , st" * CH. range and r e f' a e ra to r. $27^500 E llio tt System, 451-8178 N ig h ts 473-1466 A T T E N T IO N PROFESSORS! 2 S tory w e s t of L a m a r 3-2, no g a r a g e a & h P roperties 454 9788 A fte r 6 451 4296 834-7058 ___ __________ HOME W IT H C H A R A C T E R ! 3-2-2 con­ venient to UT. trees, fire p la c e c a rp e t 2300 Square feet. Low 40 s Owner 4.12094 LOW STUDE NT RATES IS w o rd m in im u m each day s SC Each ad d it onai w ord each days 05 ’ CO! x I ,nch each day $2 64 "U n cla sstt'e d s I line 3 days *1 OO (P re p a id No R efunds) S tu d e n ts m u s t show A u d it o r 's receip ts and cay in advance in TSP Bldg 3 200 25th & A h .tis ; from 8 a rn to 4 30 p rn M onday through F rid a v b ig g e s t 1972 R E N A U L T 12 stattonw agon 24,000 m ile s Good co n d itio n F ro n t wheel d riv e a ir M ichelen R a dials. C all 4773046 • n M A V E R IC K AT, AC. 6 cy lin d e r. Runs g re a t E x tra clean in side and out _______ 836-3166, 836-4760 ’ 970 PO N TIAC B o nneville F ully-loa ded Good condition s i 275 or best otter C a ll a fte r 5 30 447 5426 1954 C H E V Y V A N , 283. V- 8 , carpet, pan­ eling, mags N ew com ponents $1 200 Can 441-6897 ________ 72 T R I U M P H SPI TF : RE New tire s and b a tte ry Good gas m ileage $1900 C ai' 453-0964 or 471-7436 _____ F O R E IG N S T U D E N T L e a ving C o untry, M ust Set! 1973 Audi 10CLS, 2 dr Auto A C. A M F M cassette 441-6111 R o ta r y , 73 M A Z D A R X -3 w a g o n ra d ia ls a m FM , 4-speed m e rc u ry blue, good shape. *1995 474-2978____________ 1956 M E R C E D E S I 90 4-door sedan^Good c o n d i t io n New in te rio r $850 47’_ '555 ? „ . M U S T 5 E L L 1969 VW. good cond ition r e b u ilt engine 327-2644 '65 K A R M A N N G H IA Recent engine o ve rh a u l New tire s $750 C all Joe 4520902 E venings and weekends. I block to s h u ttle Lovely fu rn is h e d I oedroom apts A s hort v is it and you ll w a n t to stay 4505 Ave. A J u s t oft G uadalupe ne a r In tra m u ra l F ie ld 4514041 453-3520 C H IM N E Y SWEEP APTS. C O N D IT IO N E R , 119 $55 as is. A fte r 5. 472- 2068 FOR SALE R a ie g h bicycle 3-speed 26 Boy s, $60 452-0994 atter $._______ E X C E L L E N T BU V - - Na va to S ilv e r Concha B e lt Cost Dec 1974 $375 OO Sell $375 OO U.T P ro f 4531073 , 471-2491 P O R T A B L E D A R K R O O M D u rst M-600 com plete w ith c a rry in g case, fitte rs T ra y s tim e r, p rin t d ry e r, etc. $95. 4535513 _____________ ___ ___________ STO VE A N D R E F R IG E R A T O R $40 Stove $25 R e frig e ra to r $15 O d b u t excedent cond ition 472-1225 (a tte r 6 p .m .) 1973 HOD A K A 125 W om bat 3 m onths old I 400 m ile s P e rfect co nd ition $650 w ith helm et 477-7147 F M W R75 5 Equipped fo r to u rin g E x ­ ce lle n t cond ition M ust sell. Best o fte r 453-4578 or 477-0585 1973 O U C A Ti 250, re lia b le street bike, $550 1972 K aw asaki 175, stree t and t r a il, $450 444 5607 Stereo-For Sale SONY TC388-4 four-channel recorder 5 m onths old L is t $680 Sell fo r $475. P e rfe ct 44 ! 3649 h a r m O N -KAR D O N 150-Quad receive r 70x2 w atts stereo 30x4 w afts Quad C om plete v e rs a tility , $395 441-3649^__ ONE ON S P A R K L IN G CREEK R A L E I G H Racing Bicycle C a m p a g n o l com ponents! 453-8873, ask fo r Kevin M u s t sen. S U P E R -8 C A M E R A , P ro je c to r 35mm c a m e r a , m o to r c y c le s k is ta p e recorder s ki boots m uch m ore 474 4669 D A N E CR AF T 404 Sailboat c a trig g e d 13'6", 110 sq ft . I y r old. * 1,000 w ith tra d e r. 442-7528 _________ M U S T S E L L brand new V iv ita r !35mm telephoto lens F2 8 - $85 or best ofter C a ll K a thy at 475-6561. A tte r 5:00 4424978. _ M A N U A L Sm ith-C orona ty p e w rite rs in good condition. B a re ly used O n ly $49 C a ll a lte r 6 OO 453-1407 NO FROST RE F R IG $65 282-2150,10-6 D iane or Vanessa A D W K & G , 926-8524 has new S495-S845 and used S4S0-S550 K ite s & G lid e rs a v ailab le. C a ll o r come by! _ _____ V M R E E L TO R E E L recorder w ith pre­ a m p Top of *ne line *125 AR tu rn ta b le $35 454-6308 a fte r 5pm PANASO N IC STEREO Compact w ith c a s s e tte E x c e lle n t c o n d it io n M a rg u e rite 475-6656 before 5 OO, 4744621 a fte r 5 OO A AAPEX HCR ' 8 -T ra c k re co rd e r playback deck. 50 Tapes in boxes Q uick Best o ffe r. 472-4791, 4596196 SONY 7065 A M FM receiver, $500 Call Cindy, 454 3781 ext 275 8 5. A fte r 5, 4538315 A K A I 370D reel to reel tape deck R e tail S800, sell fo r $500 E xce lle n t cond ition Steve, 476-0208 K IM B E L U P R IG H T Piano. Reworked in te rio r by P earl A m ster E xc e lle n t con­ d itio n $350 delivered 258-5559 m orn ings ________ 8-12 and evenings a fte r 5. LU D W IG DRUM S six"piece set P ra c ­ tic a lly new V in yl cases Custom made case for hardw ard . 476-2988. 2420 G uadalupe T H E S T R IN G S H O P The S tring Shop is now open under new m a n a g e m e n t w ith 2 0 % o f f on a ll accessories H andm ade G urian steel s tr­ ing guitars, and g u ita r rep a ir, also 1716 San Antonio 476-8421 HANCOCK ll APTS. APARTMENTS 33rd an d S p ee d w a y 605 a W 28th THE BEAD SHAMAN 10-7 477-3478 2200 G uadalupe We re s till con tin u in g our ta x sale. Co.ne in and get the best Indian ie w e lry at the best p ric e s in Texas. G R E A T DANE puppies B rin d le AKC E xcellent Bloodlines 9 weeks 2 le ft $125, 459 8534 or 452 9819 R E G IS TE R E D B lack toy fem ale p a rty poodle Seven weeks Student priced *65 4306 Ave A, NO 117 454-8217 . IRISH SE TTER Puppies,' 8 weeks Old shots worm ed, $60 M ust sell 926-4557 OC 928 0074 W IL V E R S T O C K Sheet, w ire-round, half-round, tria n g le , square, f u ll bead, soiders-she et and wire, bezel p la in s and shelf J e w e lry tools and supplies, la p id a ry supplies, ai type finished stones Open IO a m -6 pm M on-Sat STO N EAG E 459-653! 5915 B urnet Road N o rth w e st Center 478-4096 S H U T T LE BUS CO RN ER S109.50 e xcellen t new See these e fficie n cy a pa rtm e nts. Just a few blocks west of town and U n iv e rs ity We pay w ater and gas A ll furn ished , carpeted, b u ilt-in appliances. Close to shuttle bus B a rga in at above rent 1115 W. 101h Phone fo r app ointm ent, 472-9228 T E W iley Cc 2 4 0 0 L o n g v ie w V e ry close to cam pus and shuttle com ­ p le te ly c a r p e t e d C A CH. b u i l t 'n kitchen, outside siorage a v a ila b le pool and sun deck W ater gas and ca b le TV paid 302 W est 38?h. 451 3154 or 451-6533 e f f ic ie n c y 1 BR furn $140 Sm all, frie n d ly com plex Shag carpet, dishw asher, shu ttle bus 2 blocks 45* W O 4 7 6 -5 8 1 2 NOW L E A S IN G FOR JU N E retreat ASPEN WOOD Under New M anage m ent Spacious C o nte m po rary L iv in g 2 f>oo!s - covered p a rkin g S huttle C ity bus routes C onvenient to any lo cation I BR $140 2 BR $165 4539 G uadalupe 452-4447 Com e L iv e W ith Us! W ILLOW CREEK 454-1289 4400 A v e . A 203 W 39th S u m m e r-F a tl Leasing ' u tile Close to campus, shut E x tra la rg e I BR 2 BR 2 Bath I OO andM 3 BR IJ Rsfh Bath also av a ila b le Q uiet atm osphere, f>ool, w a te r, gas and TV cable paid O ffic e hours M onday F rid a y 9 5 Saturday-Sunday 9-5 4si 2263 NOW A V A IL A B L E F U R N IS H E D O NE BEDROOM I OB Place D ishw asher, disposal, s w im m in g pool, patio, barbeque, cable TV, in d iv id u a l storage, bookshelves. Va block to s h u ttle bus. La u n d ry fa c ilitie s . Rate th ru Aug si47 plus e le c tric ity 108 W 45th 453-2771 NOW LE A S IN G FOR JU N E M A R K XX 1 BR $140 2 BR $165 S u m m e r R ates N ow E f t / I B R / 2 BR SHO U P 6 blks w est of D ra g 2408 Leon 476-3467 W A N T E D . A p a r t m e n t m a n a g e rs . P re fe r student couples Send resum es Box 1668. A u stin, T 1^78767, BONUS ROOM 2 bedroom, 2 bath plus panelled den F ro m $205 A B P The South Shore IOO E R iverside D r 444-3337 Quiet com ple x - not a p a r ty place - now ready fo r leasing for S um m er and Fall. W a lk to and fr o m ca m p u s 1-2-3 B ed ro om s an d b ath fo r singles. A ll a p a rtm e n ts pa n eled , shag c a rp e tin g , s w im m in g pool, la u n d ry room , study room , p le n ty of p a rk in g space an d b e a u tifu lly lan dscap ed. Special Rates for S u m m e r and Y e a r Leases Lease now before rates increase 1802 West Ave. Phone 476-7473, 476-5556 442-1499 M O V E in TO D A Y Now Leasing fo r June 1st LA PAZ E L CAMPO 1 BR 2 BR SUO $165 401 W. 39th 459-5700 305 W 39th 454-0J6U MARK V I BR - $140 453-1084 V IL L A SALANO I BR $145 618 W . 51 St L a rg e I b d rm & effs, la rg e closets, fu lly carpeted, cable, disposal, w a te r, gas, sw im m in g pool, furn ished , w a lk in g dis tance to U T, no ch ild re n or pets. 610 West 30th 477-8858 2 B R - $155 454-6293 V A U L T E D CE (LIN G E L E V A T E D BE D R O O M New & b e a u tifu l, fu lly shag carpeted all b u ilt in kitc h e n E norm ous step-down close? L a rg e pool w ith sun area. CA /C H , accent w a ils, b u ilt-in bookshelves, ex­ p e n s iv e c o n te m p o r a r y f u rn is h in g s , Short d istan ce to the In tra m u ra l Field. F ro m *139 W ater gas «. cable paid 6000 N L a m a r 454-3238 or 451-6533 Central P ro p e rtie s Inc BEDROOM $135 Close to shuttle bus and tennis courts, fu lly c a rp e te d , a ll b u ilt in k itch e n , C A /C H pool overlooking creek, lots of trees W ater, gas and cable TV paid 407 45th St 459 8614 or 451-6533 1700 NUECES New e fficie n cy, custom fu rn , an w ith big balconies for your plants. G re a t loca­ tion g re a t looking $165 plus e le c tric ity . M anager 201 - 478-9058 Now Leasing to r June 1st $175 IB R Furnished A ll B ills Paid F re s h ly refu rbished, pool W alk ride, shuttle to cam pus La Canada Apts. 1300 W 24th Bedrooms AU B ills Paid 4306 Ave A 454 9835 F I V E B LO C KS W E S T OF C A M P U S New la rge e fficie n cy, liv in g room , offset bedroom arid kitchen. Cable, w a te r gas, (stove) fu rn ish e d . Sum m er $116 and Si 19 477 5514 476 7916 R E D OAKS APTS. 2104 San G ab rie l ONE B E D R O O M on shuttle, *142 50 un­ furnished, i'6 2 50 furn ished We pay a ll u t ilit ie s The B ro w n s to n e , 5106 N L a m a r 454-3496 _ _ _ _ _ _ _ 3 B E D R O O M , I bath a p a rtm e n t ideal fo r young fa m ily C onvenient to UT P riced fo r a fa m ily budge? *205 *215 u nfurnished, ABP *230 *240 furn ished , AB P The South Shore 300 E R iverside D r 444-3337 E F F IC IE N C Y w ith sle epin g alco ve o ve rlo o kin g Town Lake C onvenient to UT E co n o m ica lly priced *153 ABP The South Shore 300 E. R ive rsid e 444 3337 _________________________ E N F IE L D A R E A *100 plus e le c tric , on shuttle T he P a rkvie w , 1616 w e s t 6 th. 472-1337 .............. ............................... F A N T A S T IC S U M M E R lo c a tio n 1 Block L a w S c h o o l L u x u r io u s 2-2. poo l, sundetk, cable, shag Leasing sum m er or th e re a fte r $210, AB P 477-3388 FOR MATURI STU D E N TS l and 2 bedroom furn ished apt Shag carpet drapes, c e n tra l a ir, dishw asher, un­ d e r n e a t h p arkin g, w a lk to cam pus. 477 ___________________ 5282 _ H E L P F R E E - H E L P th e R e d c o a ts A p a rtm e n t Locators 447-7705. We lis t over IOO com plexes In c ity of A u stin We a re f r ie n d ly , e x p e r ie n c e d , a n d know ledgable. G ive us a c a ll. _________ On shuttle bus route 17000 Burton E F F IC IE N C Y $119 S huttle bus at fro n t door, pool, CA CH, shag ca rp e tin g , a ll b u ilt-in k itch e n , te n ­ nis courts across stree t, huge trees. 4504 Speedway, 453-3769 o r 451-6533 e f f ic ie n c y W A L K TO CAM PUS Large fu rn ish e d efficie n cie s b u ilt-in k itc h e n a p p lia n c e s CA CK lots of storage, supe r lo caiion, close to g ro ce ry and shuttle bus at fro n t door Gas and w a ter paid 910 West 26th 472 6589 or 4516533 L A R G E O N E B E D R O O M . W a lk to school, study area, carpeted, disposal, c a b l e TV sun deck, CA /C H , la undry, great location. No pets S u m m er $144.00 ABP 2812 Nueces 472-6497 F a ll Leasing A v a ila b le ______________ ON S H U T T L E f o r 2 la rge bedroom s F urnished U n furnished C a p ita l V illa A p a rtm e n ts. 1008 R e inli 453-5764 HUGE paint, cedar Sid s Steve i BE D R O O M , new "carpet, tile , re frig e ra to r and stove Large patio, big yard, I b lo ck east of 3501 N L a m a r. O w en C irc le 451 6832 P L E A S IN G FO R S U M M E R N ic e I bedroom apt N ear UT, shag carpet, ac, pool. $129 50 w a ter, gas paid. 478-1031, 476 6134 758-3385 $150 NOW, $135 S U M M E R . I bedroom ABP ce n tra l a ir, I block U T. Can u nfornish 476 1700 300 E 30th i a FIRST MONTH FR E E, Hancock III Apts Furnished lu x u ry e ffic ie n c y apt on c ity bus route w a lk to shuttle bus A va ila b le now. 4100 Ave A C a ll 452-1789 S T U D IO A P T F ire p la c e , s k y lig h t C A /C H , cable, convenient. 900 E. St st $139 plus e le c tric ity 451-3464, 472-5129 N ow Leasing fo r June 1st L E A S IN G FOR S U M M E R N O W L E A S IN G FO R S U M M E R R IVER HILLS V M O V E IN T O D A Y now leasing to r june SI 15-5125 A L L BILLS PAID STUDENTS P R E -L E A S E NOW FO R SUMMER E FF IC IE N C IE S $ 1 4 8 OO F U R N IS H E D A L L B IL L S P A ID D ishw ashers-2 Large Pools S ecurity M O V E IN TO D A Y 1901 W il'o w Creek________ 444-0010 3815 Guadalupe 459-3953 452-5093 3914 A v e . D Close to cam pus, large, open-beamed ce ilin g , fu lly shag carpeted CA CH, all b u ilt in kitch e n , color co-ordina ted no u t ility co m p a n y Dassies 4000 Avenue A 452 5533 or ISI 6533 Now Leasing fo r June 1st 2 BDRM I bdrm $215 * * 65 A L L B IL L S P A ID S T U D E N T -F R E E D o n't p a n ic ' W e 'll find you that apt y ou've longed fo r Our service is free 8. so is our tra n s p o rta tio n So save gas and tim e by c a llin g Nancy a p a r t m e n t liv in g lo c a to r s 6000 N o rth L am ar 452 9541 345-1645 $139 A L L B IL L S P A I D NOW L E A S IN G FOR JU N E 1st L A R G E E F F - $1 IO E ffic ie n c ie s fu lly furnished, dbl bed or studio couches, shag. CA CH, sw im m in g pool, dishw asher disposal gas range Gas w ater, cable TV paid $120 - $125 305 W 35th St., M g r No 106 454-9108 454-5869 One clock o ff shuttle bus route 444-7797 1601 Royal C re st D rive , just o ft R iv e r­ side D riv e 2 BR furn S155 I BR - $145 NOW L E A S IN G F OR S U M M E R RIVER HILLS V I L L A NORTH Efficiencies SHO SU ROCA 474-171 LANTANA APARTMENTS Page 18 Thursday, A p r il 24, 1975 THE DAILY TEXAN 3100 S p ee d w a y NOW L E A S IN G FOR JU N E NO P E TS A L L O W E D Pets-For Sale AKC G O LD EN R e trieve r puppies, weeks old. *100 Cai! 442 9703 J E R R IC K APTS. 104 E 32nd, M anage r Ap? 103 476-5940 4105 Speedway, M anage r Apt. 203 452-2462 lf no answer c a l1 345-4555 F a ll Lease N ow A il Beads Phone”*77 3531 W alk U T or s h u ttle at door Split level lu x u ry liv in g B e a u tifu l 2 brs)2 baths plus study Designed fo r 3-5 m a tu re students New fu rn itu re , w a lk-ins, pool, cable TV. Quiet, elegant atm osphere, k in g size I bedroom a'so a v ailab le Leasing fo r sum m er and f a ll D ra s tic a 1ly reduced sum m e r rates Pleas# c a ll between noon & 7 p.m 477-7451 W a lk in g D is ta n c e to U T 1/3 B lock to S h u ttle Bus F A N T A S T IC R E D U C T IO N ON S U M M E R LEA SE N O W $111 to $119 W a te r & G as P a id OFF M A R K IV APTS. 476-0948 327-2239 I B E D R O O M - $137 E F F I C I E N C Y - $115 I B r F urn. 475-0736 24 u n it c o m p le x C o v e re d p a rk in g 40' Pool $150 & $180 $170 $130 UP I BR - $140 SU CASA VIP V3 O FF M -S TANGLEWOOD WEST F R O M $135 29th, West of D rag 2907 W est Ave SHARE T H E R E N T ! 4 CAN S H A R E 2B R -2 B F O R $66.25 EACH PER MONT H . F U R N IS H E D , ALL BILLS P A ID . Now Lea sing fo r June 1st APARTMENTS M o s t of ou r A m e ric a n In d ia n J e w e lr y CAMPUS G U IT A R SHOP Si60 fr o m $200 441-0584 NOW L E A S IN G FOR JU N E L U X U R Y E F F I BR 2 BR L u x u ry one bedroom a p a rtm e n ts w ith c e n tra 1 a ir, carpeted dishw asher, la u n ­ dry ta c k ifie s , T v cable 1624 Lavaca 1304 S U M M IT Large a p a rtm e n ts, fu lly shag carpeted, CA CH an b u ilt-m kitch e n each a p a rt m e n t has its ow n p r iv a te p a tio or balcony, pool, trees. IOO® W est 25’ a. 4785592 or 451-6533 xjmyy I C A S IN G FOR JU N E Is l 1 BR - $130 2 BR - $150 2900 Cole (3 B lks to L a w Sch ) A LL B IL LS P A ID W A LK TO C AM P U S Opening Sept 1st in the he a rt of the U n iv e rs ity area, 2518 Leon St ! Stunning new efficiencies, decorated and f u r ­ nished by a w e ll known deco rator and equally fam ous a rtis t. Lots of **Tas. B R E A T H T A K IN G _ V '| W A P A R T M E N T S a v a i l a b l e . C all Rod Wetzel at 472 8941 or K a th y Stephens at 4 72 -82 5 3 See us fo r S U M M E R R E N T A LS ' SUNNYVALE ABP Next to A m e r i c a n a T he atre w a lk in g d is ­ tance to N o rth Loop Shopping Center and L u b y s. N e ar shuttle and A ustin tra n s it T w o bedroom flats, one and tw o baths. A v a ila b le townhouse w ith patio, unfurn. 8. I fu rn . CA CH, dishw asher, disposal, door to door garbag e pickup, pool, m a id service if desired, w ashateria rn c om ple x. See ow ners, A p t 113 o r c a ll 451 4848 509 R io G r a n d e W e O pen a t 8 A M . 476-0948 NOW L E A S I N G S U M M E R RATES KEN RAY COTHRONS B I K E A M S T E R M U S IC I BR -$115 UP 1307 N O R W A L K 1403 N O R W A LK 472-4219 6 0 % T IM B E R S Furnished, b ills p a d , shuffle M A N A G E R 442-4124 F urnished lu x u ry e ffic ie n c y apt on c ity bus route, w a lk in g to shuttle bus. A v a ila b le now 4100 Ave A C a ll 452-1789 S p o r ts 8. o t h e r 3 s p e e d s . R eco rd s, G ra n d P rix s , S uper Courses, G r a n d Sports ALSO R a le ig h In te r n a tio n a ls 21 Va" 22 Va" 24Va" G U IT A R STR IN G SETS SA VE 20% HO HN ER HA R M O N IC AS SAVE ’ 0% Y A M A H A G U ITAR S SAVE 18% G u ita r In stru ctio n A co ustic G u ita r Sales and R epairs, Accessories, Books, Classical G uitar Sheet M usic. Sale on Student G uitars 1 b e d ro o m 2 b e d ro o m 2 b a th 1 2 F ir s t M o n th F r e e RALEIG H BICYCLES IN STOCK BEAT NFLATION NOW L E A S IN G FOR JU N E A R E N A P LA C E APARTMENTS 2 br $167.50 plus e le c tric ity E ffic ie n c ie s $99 50 plus e le c tric ity . Shuttle bus co rn e r 1515 P a lm a Plaza 474-4322 F ID D L E LESSONS - coun try western and bluegrass. Betty, 441-8408 M A R T IN D 28 copy w ith solid spruce top and hardshell case L is t $299. sale price s 199. Q u a n t it ie s li m i t e d . G u it a r R esurrection 3004 G uadalupe 478-0095 12-6 Tuesday-Saturday. 3301 S P E E D W A Y BILLS P A ID 2 BEDROOM PONCE de LEON IV I BR - Si45 AC, Carnet, Paneled Pool, on Shuttle, 46th and Ave. A 454-8903 Also P re-iea sing fo r F a ll S u m m e r R ates ROYCE P O R T R A IT S V IL L A ARCOS Now Pre-Leasing Summer Rates Efficiencies $105 plus Elec­ tricity " T H E 24 F L A T S " V is it O ur Studio 2 BR - $175 474-i 836 _______ ANNOUNCING THE BR ILLIAN T NEW 2408 LO N G V IE W 1414 A rena D rive CONTEM PORARY^ A P A R T M E N T S S ave v3 N ow _______ W EST OF CAMPUS San G ab rie l — I b r . 2 br a rtis t studio, $125 $150 Sm all, quiet developm ent. W est 22nd St. - e fficie n cy, I b r., $80 and $100 W est 32nd St. — la rg e e fficie n cy w /fu ll kitchen, very nice and p riv a te $115 We are in terested in m atu re reside nts w ith references Consolidated R ealty, Ja ck Jennings 474 6896. 9 to IO a .m .. 4-5 p.m . One block o ff sh u ttle bus route 444 4485 1221 A lg a rd e F ro m in 35 take O lto rf e xit *o A lg e rita tu rn r ig h t one block Best R ate on the Lake Shuttle Bus F ro n t Door 2400 Tow n Lake C ircle" m jr n 1 B R - SHO 4305 D u v a l 451-2343 I & 2 B d rm tu rn ., c o v e re d p a r k i n g , s w i m m in g p o o l, r e c re a tio n r m ., p lan n ed a c ­ tiv itie s , on site s e c u rity o f­ fic e r, 24 h r. m a in te n a n c e . A L L B IL L S P A ID M O V E IN T O D A Y LO NG VIEW Sum m er Rates are now in effect $30 o ft each apt (u n d e r new m anagem ent) 708 West 34th 454-8239 C reative O utdoor P o rtra its LA R G E POOL NOW L E A S IN G FOR JU N E DUVAL V ILLA APTS. HALLMARK APTS. $135 CASUALLY YOU 2 BR - $165 916 W. 23rd 472-6573 L E A S IN G F O R JUNE & S EP TEM B ER Larg e , lu x u ry one b e d r o o m , w i t h shag c a rp e l c e n tra l a ir, dishw asher, dis^ posal. TV cable, la u n d ry Sm all, qule, com plex Now Sum m er $125 F a ll $139 1700 Houston St 476-5940 451-1375 345-4123 The Cascades I B R - $165 2 B D R M . - $255 3 B R - $345 -$ 1 3 5 NOW L E A S IN G FOR JU N E A ll new furn ish in g s, carpet, drapes and fu rn itu re W ith in b ic y c lin g d istan ce to UT Call 452 3926 RING S FOR S A L E -s ix em eralds set 14k gold s ite fo u r Six opals set 14k gold, s ite _______ fiv e 478-3855 _ _ R A L E IG H G rand P rix , IO speed bike, n e a rly new, fo r g irl about 5'4 $100 451 5590 a fte r 5 ______________ _ R A L E IG H G rand P rix E x ce lle nt co n d i­ tion IO speed New tires *90. B um per rack $20 Robert, 442-0972^ 14x50 M O B IL E HO M E located M a rrie d Student P a rk Occupy a n y tim e now to August. 474-2207 ___ ________ C A N O F s P i c iA L O ver 50 a lu m in u m , fib e rg la s s and ABS canoes Cost plus 13% thro ugh M ay 4th on all m odels and colors S a ilboat Shop, 1607 E a s t R iv e r­ side D IS H E S fo r 12 plu s c o m p le te r and a ccesso ries iro n sto n e , d is h w a s h e rproof, ovenproof, best offer 441-0358 Musical-For Sale BEDROOM S q u a re LONGHAVEN And Spec al Sum m er Rates too' A beautiful area w ith in w alking distance U T G ive us a c a ll Y o u 'll love it Ask fo r Dottle 472-3816 4441931 Share a la rg e apt at sum m er rates, $57 50 mo furn ished a ll b ills paid M a d service once a week B rin g y o u r own room m ate or we w ill m atch you w ith a com patible one T n ,s is econom y and conve n ie n c e a t its Des? O N L Y 200 YA RDS F ROM UT CAMPUS 2910 Red R iv e r 476-56JI A Paragon P ro p e rty 2068 NOW L E A S I N G FO R J U N E 1 B R SHARE TH E R EN T! 4 C A N S H A R E 2B R -2 B F O R 566 25 E A C H P E R M O N T H . F U R N IS H E D , A L L B IL L S P A ID . •London 453-4883 472-4893 474-1532 N O W L E A S IN G fo r Ju n e 1st 3501 Speedway A v a ila b le June I. Large I & 2 bedroom apts w dish disposal, patio, pool, & la u n d ry S u m m er Rates: 2 br 1215. I br s;60, A ll u t ilit ie s Paid 2520 Longview , across fro m Pease P a rk at 25th & N L a m a r 477-1741. D o b ie M a ll S u ite 8a 476-1172 SK NOB H IL L APTS. SUMMER & FALL I BR - S125 2108 San G a b rie l I BR - $125 up C e n tra lly located Q u ie t - R o o m y - P a n e lle d I B R , 2 double beds $135 w ith w a te r & gas 708 W . 34th 454-8239 476-1146 L e a s in g fo r ENVOY E L Cl D E L DORADO HALLMARK NOW 476-1927 1911 San G a b rie l FURN. APARTS. A fr e e a p t. lo cato r s e rv ic e s p e c ia lizin g in co m p lexe s w ith access to s h u ttle . NOW L E A S IN G FOR JU N E A L L B IL L S PAID BLACKSTONE APARTMENTS R O LLT O P DESKS brass beds w ic k e r desk U nusual dressers m a rb ie to p n ig h t stands Sandy's, 506 W alsh 47S-820« W IN D O W AIRT C O N D IT IO N E R , 115 volts 9000 BTU $50 00 as is, a fte r 5 472- 476-4088 NOW LE A S IN G FOR JU N E BE ST D E A L IN TOWN 1301 E xp editio n. F or h a rd w o rk in g up­ perclass or g radua te m a rrie d couple A va ila ble now N ic e ly furnished. Clean apa rtm e nt, in quiet, a ttra c tiv e area I bedroom, file bath, large liv in g room , w ell equipped kitch e n Am ple closets carpeted flo o r 1500 BTU AC Covered p a rk in g , near s h u ttle bus No pets SHO mo F o r a p p ointm ent c a ll ow ner, 478 4356 N E E D A G R E A T PLA C E TO L IV E ? TR Y THE M E N 'S HAR SH I SANDALS fro m India S im ila r to M e x ic a n Huaraches but softer leather Also w a te r buffa lo sandals lig h t and d a rk colors. M a h a ra n i 1504 San An­ tonio, on the D rag Saturdays. ___ ’ 973 K A W A S A K I 350 trip le E x c e lle n t co nd ition 2 helm ets C a ll M ichael, 4786586 or 474-18)9 1973 HO NDA 750 W in d ja m m e r luggage rack, other e xtra s $1395 447-8487 V ILLA O R LEAN S S m all Com plex Close to carnous A ll luxuries E ft $125 plus etec, I B r w firepla ce $155 pius eiec TOP CASH PR IC ES paid tor diam onds. old gold C a pitol D iam ond Shop. 4018 N L a m a r, 454-6877 ___ _ S TA R F IS H S A IL B O A T ! The 14 t i tun m a c h in e T o p q u a lit y f ib e r g la s s a lu m in u m spars, dacron sail $539 (lis t S630 T ra d e rs $119. 453-1768 a n y tim e Motorcycle-For Sale K itc h e n 454-8483 105 W 38 Va D IP L O M A T I BR - $135 p a n e lin g , We have b e a u tify Mowers, big pool, and best residents in town 206 W 38th I or 2 bdrm tu rn or u n tu rn M anaged by owner A ll B ills Paid 1*2-3314 453 4545 459 9927 NOW Misc.-For Sale SALE 61 VW C h ia Body rough, engine re b u ilt. $300 472-5710 ___________ ’ 964 FO RD G A L A X Y auto m a tic, needs m in o r re p a ir $150 Call 454-2206 or 4539536 _________ 1965 VW SE DAN, $500 Good c ity car M ik e O om jan, 471-3358 (o ffic e ), 442-7742 (h o m e ). ______ _____ s e p a ra te d e p o s a l, N ightly w eekly o r lease rate s Copper Key A p a rtm e n ts - M o te l AR AM P AM F M a d ita l, appliances. IO speed books, mon and board, crock pot, © s te rn e r m uch m ore 2502 Nueces. Apt. 205 _______________ W IN D O W A IR volts 9000 B T U d ish w asher Habitat Hunters NOW L E A S IN G FOR JU N E CHEZ JACQUE shag la rge w a lk -m closets On city and s huttle route SI05 plus e le c tric ity 475-6781 476-8324 FURN. APARTS. For S ale-G arage Auto-For Sale L a rg e e ffic ie n c ie s , w ith T R A N S P O R T A T IO N 454-4094 910 E . 40th NOW LE A S IN G FOR JU N E 1302 W . 2 4 th S E R V IC E P A R K IN G 2 BR - $165 2204 Enfield 476-2279 I BR - $145 C R E E K SIDE COSA 2 Bedroom hom e on .9 * c r e ,s , ’ >9.^f, 3 oedroom home w ith a fire p la c e S21 OOO To see homes. C a ll Don W ilson a t 2552894 F IA T 124 Coupe, 5-speed. OHC. AM P M New ra d ia ls $3400. 472-0650 earth Come and g it it lf we don t have it you don 't want it G ift, accessories, fu rn itu re ne a and old. Hawked a t 1204 W. 34th. 10-6 S tarting T h u rsda y H o m e s in the C o u n try 74 sale on laotra G AR A G E SALE 9 a rn. - 7 p.m d a ily through 4 26 F u rn itu re crib. playpen e lectronic parts, kitch e n w a re m any other item s 502 San jo s e ___ D IN E T T E $55 Glass tables, lamps, car seat hair d ry e r 2106 N e w field 472 6820 FOR SALE 9 a m -9 p m M - 5 FREE C O NTINENTAL 2 BR - $195 A BP Dishw asher 8. Disposal S w im m in g Pool Patio S. Barbeque - Block to S huttle Bus in d iv id u a l Storage Bookshelves Cable TV L au ndry F a c ilitie s Resident M anage r Lease th ru Aug S'47 plus E 108 W. 45th or 453-2771 452-1419 fURN- APARTS. I NOW L E A S IN G FOR J U N E A N T IL L E S I Bedroom Apt. G E N E S IS C R A F T S FURN. APARTS. ■ NOW L E A S IN G FO R JU N E 108 PLACE Misc.-For Sale AKC R E G IS T E R E D Cocher Span.el pup pies shots, ca.) a fte r 4 and on weekends 442 0968 or *42 448z LARG E B E A U T IF U L G e rm a n Shepherd puppies F iv e weeks old, v e rv reasonable p ric e 452 4902 _________ FR EE PUPS J shep .'L a b 3220 B on­ nie Rd A tte r 5 p m 3 OO p in 11 OO a rn FURN. APARTS. ■ A V A I L A B L E NOW Pets-For Sale Of ADttNt SCHIMA* FURN. APARTS. ■ FOR SALE FOR SALE % 472-1598 N ow Leasing to r June 1st Move in Today THE E STABLISHM ENT 4400 Ave B. 451 4584 Large E ft SU5 OO W alk Pedal-Shuttle NOW L E A S IN G fo r June 1st 1 BR - $145 U P 2 BR - $167 UP AC P A ID T R Y G R O U P L IV IN G The College Houses is an edu ca tio n a l c o o p e r a t iv e c o m m u n it y L o ts o f pro g ra m s planned by m em b ers W ork w ith o th e r m em b ers to m ake decisions fo r the o rg a n iza tio n Single and double room s a v a ila b le Openings fo r women S u m m e r room and b o a rd $ i4 7 'm o single, $112/mo double. 707 West 21st, 7000 P e a rl 476-5678 4 B e a u tifu l P ools F u ll tim e M a in te n a n c e L a rg e I & 2 b e d ro o m , o v e r ­ sized w a lk -in closets, b e a u tifu l c o u rty a rd s , n e a r school an d s h op ping . $135 & $155, w a te r & las p a i 4 5 2 -7 2 0 2 500 E a s t 53rd Summer Rates Now through Aug. 31 Estrada Apts TANG LEW O O D NO RTH 1801 So. L a k e s h o re 442-6668 1020 E 45th 452-0060 S huttle bus corner B e a u tifu l Lakem ont A p a rtm e n ts BROWNSTONE PARK A PA R TM ENTS Are c o n ve n ie n tly located and priced rig h t. I S. 2 bedroom a p a rtm e n ts located on s h u ttle bus ro u te F ro m $142 50 A L L BU LS P A ID 5106 N L a m a r 454-3496 A P aragon P ro p e rty T H R E E E LM S 400 W 35th Furn U n fu rn S u m m er rate s sta rt $140 $192 50 Also leasing fo r F a ll 2 B d rm 2 Ba I b drm I bn Close to cam pus, shuttle bus. E x tra large, shag carpet, dishw asher, ra n g e , d is p o s a l and r e t r ig L a rg e closets, p r i v a t e patios, stora ge cabinets, cable la u n d ry ro o m and pool 451-3941 W A L K LAW SCHOOL L a rg e I 8. J br. Start $165 AB P C A /C H , disposal, pool, la undry, no pets. 3001 Red R iver. 4723914 L A R G E C ARPETED e ffic ie n c y , f u ll kitc h e n w a lk -in closet, I b lo ck lo w school s ilO 'm o n th 2700 Swisher St See M gr No. 107 or c a ll 478 6550 C O N V E N IE N C E and lu x u ry - at low s u m m e r ra te s 2 B D R M ($215 00) I B D R M ($155 00) A ll have C A /C H , d is­ hw asher, cable, disposal, and w a lk-ln closet W ith pool and L a u n d ry room , it m ust be seen. V oyageurs Apts. 311 E. 31 St 478-6776 TWO BE D R O O M , two bath, one block 15th St Shuttle, Pease P a rk , pool, *185 __________ 476 5072 476-4999 waTTk TO C L A S S . o T d Ma i n A p artm ents. Now leasing e ffic ie n c y and I bedroom apa rtm e n ts fo r sum m er and fa ll Sum m er rates a v a ila b le 477-3264 TWO B E D R O O M , tw o bath. R iverside A p a rtm e n ts. Poolside, balcony, m ust s ta rt paym ents in M ay 447 - 1169, A L L B IL L S PA ID.'$134/m onth. E ffic ie n ­ cies Shag c a rp e t furn ished , C A/C H, close lo MS shuttle O ff W est 6 th 808 W in flo 8 5 345-3340 Sue Pow ell A fte r 5, 477-1415, F ra n k Engles U N IQ U E , quiet, spacious wood pan e ll­ ed, hid e a w a y O v e rlo o k in g tra n q u il creek under canopy of trees, birds, s q u ir r e ls F a r out b u t c lo s e In. N o rthw e st C all for fu rth e r in fo rm a tio n . $165 b ills paid. 453-1768 H U R R Y ! E fficie n cie s Close downtown, U T , s h u ttle $100 th ro u g h A u g u st M anager H U West lo th 477-5074 454 7618 TH E P E P P E R TR EE People are now leasing apa rtm e n ts for su m m e r and fa ll E f f ic ie n c ie s , I a n d 2 b e d ro o m apa. tm ents 4 /6 9279, 472 8941 472 8253 T hanx SHORT W A LK to Tow er Large, old 2 bedroom fia ts $240 OO 1902 Nueces 476 3462 476 8683 )2 B L O C K S UT Available M ay 5th. Unusually large 2 bedroom triplex. ACCH Responsible adult, no pets. Summer rates. $148 plus utilities 4715850 afternoons S U B L E T FO R M A Y plus efficiency *80 A B P CA/CH 1804 L ava ca 471-7264 atter 5 pm. ________________ ______ E F F IC I E N C I E S , furnished complete Kitchen, near campus, CACH, Now ren­ ting at Summ er rates 105 E 31st 4774078 ____________ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ — NOW L E A S IN G for summer and fall. I bedroom I bath, 2 bedroom I and 2 bath CACH, on shuttle bus route. Large pool, blocks to UT L aw school. 3212 Red _________________ River 477-2104. O N E BEDROOM , one block 15th St Shuttle, Pease Paris, P ri/a te Balconies, pool $144 50! 476-5072, 476 4999 E X T ^ aT p E C I A L ' One bedroom, $40 off regular M ay rent. 5u Casa Apts 203 w est 39th __ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ E X T R A S P A C E you can afford Two bedroom/2 bath on Town Lake from $160 A B P available furnished or unfurnished The South Shore 300 E . Riverside Dr. 444-3337 _ .................. C O N V E N IE N T . Ave. F . 2-1, fireplace, patio, fenced yard, new carpet, trees, dishwasher $240 453 0596, 459-5210, 4535778 __.......................... O F F IC E A P A R T M E N T Ideal student businessman Close U T . Gas. w ater paid $169 D iscoun t fo r part-_tlme eping. in*. 454-7691.__________________________ I BE D R O O M , vaulted celling, wood pan­ eling, built-in bookshelf Enfield area, $139 SO plus E 472 0784, 477-1410._______ OLD H O U SE, homey, convenient loca­ tion Single men $85-$i40 No pets. 1705 Nueces 477 2755 Appointments.___ I, J B E D R O O M S T U D IO Apartments • near campus, shuttle, $I25-*135 plus electricity (sum m er) 451-8383. 474-5757 E F F IC I E N C Y Summer rate *110 gas paid Pool, laundry, w alk to campus. 709 West 26th 478-9170 _____ A P A R T M E N T M A N A G E R wanted. 4503 Speedway, contact manager No 102 or coll 453-0139 after six and weekends. $ 129.00 Ju s t North of 27th at Guadalupe 2707 Hem phill P a rk 251-4101 M BA, T Y P IN G , P R IN T IN G , B IN D IN G L E A R N TO P L A Y G U IT A R Beginner and advanced D rew Thomason. 4782079. __ _____________________ ____________ B U Y IN G U S S T A M P S : Collections, ac­ cumulations, plate blocks, sheets, misc P A X 2930, 476 7063 eves._______ __ O V E R S E A S JO B S Australia Europe, S A m e r ic a . A f r ic a S tu d e n t* a ll professions and occupations S700 to $3000 m onthly. Expenses paid, overtim e, s i g h t s e e in g F r e e tn t or rvs a 11on. T R A N S W O R L D R E S E A R C H Dept AS, Box 603, Corte Madera, Calif 94925.___ "Mi O D E L S W A NTE D All Ages And Sizes THE C O M P L E T E PR O FESSIO N A L Men - Women Professional modeling agency is conducting a search for new faces Experience preferred but not re­ quired. Local, regional, national assign­ ment Full or part tim e B y appointment only Call 477-6766, 9 a rn to 9 p rn. Universal Model and Talent Agency, Inc. FU LLTIM E T Y PIN G S E R V IC E 472-3210 and 472-7677 ___ R R SERVICE Reports, Resumes, Theses, Letters All University ond business work Last M inute Service Open 9-8 Mon-Th 8. 9-5 Frl-Sat Dobie M all 472-8936 ST A R K t y p i n g . Specialty Technical. Experienced theses, dissertations, PRis. m anuscripts, etc P rin tin g , binding Charlene St*rk>_453 M l i : ________________ V I R G IN IA S C H N E I D E R D iversified Services Graduate arid underoradua e typing, printing, binding. 1515 Koenig Lane 459-7205. B O B B Y E D E L A F IE L D IB M selectee, pica/elite 25 years experience, books, d i s s e r t a t io n s , t h e s e s , r e p o r t s , mimeographing 442-718 4 . _________ D IS S E R T A T IO N S , theses, reports and la w b r ie f s E x p e r ie n c e d ty p is t Tarrytown 2507 Brid le Path. Lorraine Brady 472-4715 — H O L L E Y S C O PY S E R V I C E The com­ plete s e rv ice ty p in g , ty p e s e t in g , guaranteed copies, printing, and bin­ ding HOI Mottle D rive 476-3018 In^ptftuk C A S A ROCA Y E S , we do type Freshman themes. ROOMMATES S H A R E F U R N I S H E D apartment for su m m e r vs b lo ck fro m ca m p u s . *57 SO m onth ABP F e m a le C a ll Martha, 476-5631 S H A R E L A R G E 2 bedroom Lake and shuttle front door Own room $107 A B P Call Fabio 442-5017 L I B E R A L B U T S E R IO U S students to share 3 bedroom apt Rent $92.00 month A B P 472 4717 Claudia S H A R E L U X U R Y 3-2 house own room all extras. Northwest Austin, 4 miles-!F Route, S90 plus ' • bills. 451-6137 Tom or Yvonne H O U S E M A T E L I K E D O G S’ Clean and considerate Now or summer New 2 Bedroom duplex Own room, small yard $88 50 12 eiec 442-6979 evenings M ike E X P E R I E N C E D A N D F A S T typist Theses, d isse rta tio n s, pro fessio nal reports law. etc. Printing, binding B a r ­ ________________ bara Ju lio s 453-5124 M A B Y L S M A L L W O O D Typing Last m inute, o v e rn ig h t a v a ila b le T erm papers, theses, dissertations, letters. 892-0727 or 442-8545 T Y P IN G S E R V IC E F a s t s e rv ic e Reasonable rates D elivery available Call M ary, 441-4742 Ju st North of 27th at Guadalupe 2707 Hem phill Pa rk F E M A L E R O O M M A T E tor summer Share two bedroom apartm ent near campus. Call after 4 pm 471-7837^ Free cheerful kittens - 478-3616. Reason rapidly resort to Russian H U M A N IT IE S S E N IO R wants very quiet m ale roommate tor summer and longer 4S4 1043 after 5 P a * _ M A L E TO S H A R E 3 bedroom house with graduate student $95 month, utilities and maid service paid, 6300 Windslow Court. 926-8001 • _____________ N E E D F E M A L E roommate tor summer two bedroom $67 50 per month 1712 Enfield Can Judee 472-876T___________ Flying Club, Wed 7:30 S E B 166 l973Audi,auto,ac,am-fm,ca 441-6111 F A L L F E M A L E R O O M M A T E needed Want duplex or apartment Paula. 4411154 after 4 30 478-0022 477-0423 ~ G IN N Y 'S ^COP YING [s e r v i c e B F ” INC. $65 *90 ROOM S in older houses. Share bath, private entrance, refrig , AC. I block UT Nowand/or summer 476-1700 ROOMS BE A G U E S T IN THE WOOTEN M A N SIO N THIS SUMMER. UNF. APARTS. TUTORING 9 a m. - 5 p m Sat. 476 9265 1930 San Antonio THURSDAY NIGHT, 7:00 P.M. SHARP THE DAILY TEXAN w i l l p u t Y O U " O N TARGET" ALL OVER CAMPUS EVERYDAY/ V \ N EED A JO B? _ JOB F IN D IN G WORKSHOP French liitchen sate 14th & Rio G rande 452-1928 70 V W Bus, m any goodies 477 3733 ____ Nikon P T N pert cond $360 472 2725 Sony TC277 4ch $370 447-8016 Jose Typist needed SO1 pg pica 477-1330 '70 V W Bus clean 478-4346, 255-4632 Apt moving S, hauling M ike 454-6079 ROOM & BOARD B E L L S O N D O R M for Men Excellent home-cooked meals AC, maid. sw im ­ ming pool Now taking reservations for summer and fall 2610 Rio Grande. 4/6 4552 8-5:30^__ Y O U R R O O M a n d B O A R D both summer term s In exchange tor living with and helping handicapped student Call John Flow ers 476-7374 FURN. HOUSES r i N E B R IC K house, tent yard, pets, 2 bedroom F o r summer $175 OO Dave 4540743, Alan 474 6636 ___________ ________ _ S o li YOUNG G EN T LEM A N Sh arenew home P rivate bedroom AC/Ch $100 837-4823. B R IC K 3-1, H ig h la n d M a ll a re a , fA / C H fenced yard, dishwasher, trees $270 453 0596, 459 5210, 453-5778 ______ SU B I E A S E 3 bedroo m house for summer M a y 15 thru sept. I AC, fenced yard garage quiet, mile from school. Call 45) 358* ___ ________________ _ JU N E I A U G 15. Need caretakers for 3 bedroom fu rnished house A ll co n ­ veniences. Ideal tor couple or two grad students Pets ok. You take care of yard, pay utilities. Rent negotiable 447 6765 tlOKS bo xes Btt-O* -nit tttVL f " n u i XRO $tt»S WU I VOO’ Come Ride Horses at the All New D E LH U S T A B L E S High Quality Registered Horses Large wooded riding area. Horses A vailable to Ride to Lake Area Guided Rides and Lessons on Request H ay R id es by Reservation. Inquire Now About The Rental Purchase Plan Located 711 mi out e . 19th Call 928 2725 for Reser vations I \Rt VOV OVIK N E L S O N 'S G IF T S Zuni, N avajo and H op i In d ia n je w e l r y . 4612 So u th Congress 444 3814 Closed Sundays, Mondays. st Ski ...... U ',N YAT T° V’ V VOY vVA. V iJL ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ A PIONEER COIN CO. J will buy your yL II CLASS RINGS'POCKET WATCHES * GOLD JEWELRY 2 'GO LD«SILVER«U.S:FO REIGN COINSj CO M M ERCE PARK 5555 NORTH LAMAR ii. SUITE C -1 13 Yr UST MARK YOUR OPTIONAL FEE CARD IN THE DAILY TEXAN BOX WHEN YOU PREREGISTER AND PAY FOR YOUR SUBSCRIPTION WHEN YOU PAY YOUR OTHER FEES! HRS 10-5 MO N-SAT 451-3607 ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ * * * C O N V E N IE N T - UT , 2-1 c a rp e te d , draped bar, ample closets, storage, fenced yard, maintained *165 Lease *155. 336-2944. _________________ 2 B E D R O O M , carpeted, CA CH, d is hwasher, stove Fenced, patio, carport, l a u n d r y room P e ts p e rm itte d S165 4535506. _____________ _______________ S P A C E S N O R T H E A S T . 2-1 ’ a, carpet, drapes, b u iltin *, pantry, adequate storage, fireplace. *180 3309 Hycreek. 453 4847 454 1643 'is T K V TO SALE Yam aha lustring w/case E x . 475 9683 Good '55 Chevy pu $300 263-2334 O N I'1 - NVJ**®*’ 2405 Nueces 476-0986 20% or more O F F Forrest Smith Loves Dede 2 bedroom duplex tor rent in a quiet N o rth e a s t A u s tin r e s id e n tia l neighborhood E a c h duplex otters large fenced backyard, covered parking, ex­ tra storage room. Plus washer, dryer connections Kitchen appliances furnlshed. *160 plus bills Call 928 2296 / Vintage Threads '73 V W exc quad fm $2350 472-1413_____ PRETTY DUPLEX tit I\ I: Nikkor 3Smmf2 lens $145 472-2725_______ UNF. DUPLEXES ;r\O N 9-6 W E E K D A Y S Russian’ 471 3607 ask for R u b y ________ FALL FEM A LE mature, serious stu­ dent Chevy Chase. 80 acres woods, shut­ tle $90 A B P 454-2215 Nori. WOMAN R O O M M ATE Share house, SSO T ravis Heights Studio space Over 25 Barbara, 441 3488 atter 5. F E M A L E R O O M M A T E needed by M ay 15, June I to share large apt, oniC R shut­ tle Own bedroom, bath $115 A B P 4590716. F E M A L E share two bedroom apart­ ment, electricity phone. CR shuttle^ Non-smoker preferred Gayle, 453 803/ tor information.________ __________ __ S U M M E R F E M A L E roommate needed to share 2 bedroom apartm ent 4 blocks (rom campus $82.50 plus J bills. Carol, 474-1379. F E M A L E R O O M M A T E to sh a re 2 bedroom, 2 bath Prefer Spanish speak­ ing. Susie after 6. 452-7867._____________ F E M A L E R O O M M A T E for summer Own bedroom-bath *92 SO A B P On Town Lake Call Kathy, 447 2014 !/ SATURDAY, A P R IL 26, 9-5 FOR D E T A IL S CALL Need ride to Oregon Rich 475-8546 Tennisracketsstrungcheap 475-8060 ____ S U M M E R F E M A L E R O O M M A T E to share 2 bdr furnished duplex $66.25 plus 1.7 bills or house. Susan 454-8908 after 5:30 p.m. _ _ F R E S H M A N F E M A L E Med student needs fem ale med roommate tor next fall in D allas 441-8497. H O U S E M A T E needed for su m m er. About *110 a month Nice house, trees, fenced yard G rad student preferred Nonsmoker. Call 475 8448 \ ATTEN D THE 1974 Suzuki 250 good cond 472 5063 ___ _ Smallest trailer HARD WORK GOOD PAY BEB 261 65 Olds top cond $355 472-7033 "M Ford G a la x y 375 auto *41-5479______ l97!Fiatl24amfm5speed*!000 476-4369 S U M M E R O N L Y Lai ye X oedroom I oath, near campus V ery nice 459-7996. A W A Y F R O M A U S T IN M O V IN G ? W e can m ove you fa st w ithout breaking anything Cheaper than you think 454-7846, 472-5713______ A N Y T Y P E Roofing and repairs Good G erm a n w orkm ansh ip 20 years ex­ perience Day or night, 327-3322.______ V A C A T IO N IN G ’ M ature house sitters will live in or give pets or plants daily care References 837-1741 E X P E C T IN G U N E X P E C T E D L Y ? Call Vicki or Jane at 454-1795 They've been there and they like to listen. All a lte r­ natives discussed 477 5777 WE NEED U.T. STUDENTS FOR SUMMER WORK Cash tor used bicycles 477-3002 ___ 1951 Chev pickup $475 451 2500 WANTED UNF. HOUSES Have you heard Quiet Thunder’ Cash for records 474-5294 afterj5 alcoholism. TRAVEL Rest home needs volunteers to play and sing, provide transportation, donate plants or prints, show movies, call Bingo, supervise crafts, or simply act as friendly visitors. Call Loretta 444-6708 Afghan Show pups 282-0453 8. 44 ) 8633 and services available in the county for treatm en t of The program will begin at 8:30 a rn in the Agard aw E- amt. _________ The program will study the Lovingood Building, with ROOM S F O R S U M M E R . AC. 5 blocks a lc o h o lic , tre a tm e n t of coffee and an introductory cam p us K itch e n a v a ila b le Coed. $50/month 2706 Salado. 478 0444 alcoholism, emotional issues speech by CAPCO chairman David Samuelson. S IN G L E ROOM S $49 95 $54 95 month Ju n e 1-Aug 22 A C, Kitchen privileges, Ken Beahan, executive community bath, early move-in possi­ ble. near campus 2414 Longview, 472director of the Texas Commis­ 5082 After 5 pm sion on Alcoholism, will speak A T J J T . Corner room. Furnished for one H U G E I B E D R O O M , new carpet, tile, person AC *100 *120 A B P 1902 Nueces at 9:15 a m. on the com­ paint refrigerator, and stove Large 476 3462 476-8683 cedar patio, big yard One block east of missions role. CAPCO ex­ Sid's 3501 N Lam a r Owen Circle Steve S P E C IA L S U M M E R R A T E S P riv a te ecutive director Richard Bean 451-6832 P _______________ rooms reduced rates tor summer leases Two blocks campus, kitchen and m aid S P A C IO U S I B E D R O O M with all luxury will then outline C A P CO s service Co ed Central air ' til Rio B e a u t if u l, turn-of-thefeatures Pool, close to shuttle, campus Grande 476-2551. r o l e as t he r e g i o n a l SHO plus eiec Three E lm s Apartments century home now open to 400 West 35th 451-3941 alcoholism authority. su m m er room s. U n f u r ­ 3 B E D R O O M 2 B A T H apartment in After the opening speeches, S o u th A u s tin . F o r lea se s ta rtin g nished singles & doubles summer A B P $285 447-6308 workshops will be held to dis­ fro m $60 to $180 A B P . cuss topics such as ‘ Chronic Come by 700 W. 19th and Inebriates — What Can We apply for a room or call E U R O P E - IS R A E L A FR IC A L O ST Em broidered workshirt, rick ­ Do?,” ‘‘Alcohol Programs in B rian Davis, 478-4982 for rack borders, red buttons Third floor - ASIA - SOUTH AM ERIC A. Hospitals,” which w ill be AC, Monday 4 1 4 Rew ard 447-574L appointment. G rads 8. up­ Travel discounts year round. presented by two doctors L O S T DOG W H IT E , black mask, ears, 3 Student Air Travel Agency, p e r c la s s p e rso n s big black spots on back Like Snoopy 926from the Texas Hospital Inc 4228 F ir s t Avenue, _______________ 7860 preferred. A s s o c i a t i o n and ‘ ‘ E n ­ Tucker, Ga 30084 ( 404) 934- L O ST 4'21 vicinity I F tennis courts Sm all (cat-sued) sandy haired dog, 6662. couraging Education and brown ears, very friendly Reward 454Prevention.” 1496 A play entitled ‘Lady on the 2 B L O C K S UT Rock” will be presented at Furnished Apartment and 1:45 p.m., followed by a dis­ Q U IC K M O N E Y W ill buy used tapes rooms, and records Highest prices paid. 2226 cussion. At 3:30 p.m., Will M A K I N G IT ? Guadalupe (next to Texas Theatre). 472Ex p e rt tutoring can help. Math, Physics From S 8 0 / m o n t h . Spong. professor of theology 1564 or 441-2517 atter 6pm E ie c Engirt., from PT D in E E.. dis­ W A N T TO B U Y electric potter'* wheel. at the Episcopal Seminary of tinguished teacher Start today sleep 2800 Whitis 474-1887 tonight Reasonable rates very handy the Southwest, will give the to campus P a r k i n g . Now it's your move 477-7558 Call 472 7635 The' password l l H E L P ! final speech on the emotional F IR S T HOUR IS F R E E issues involved in alcoholism. NO H ID D E N C H A R G E S The seminar is open to the LO W S U M M E R R A T E S N E A T C O M P L E T E O F F IC E P rivate S IN G L E S 75 D O U B L E S $42.50 entrance. W ill handle your m ail & the public, with the place and Fu lly turn. room, daily maid service, co­ telephone $85 Common Co. British Im ­ R E W A R D 1 C O U P L E and dog need ed shag carpeted, lounge with color TV, ports 459-0090 454-6976.__________ _ _ ___ time for the workshops to be house or duple with l a r j ? fenced yard refrig and washer-dryer, hot plates and 16' T R A I L E R furnished S60 lease for given at the end of the opening by end of May Furnished unfurnished. refrig allowed I block from U T Lots of s u m m e r , inquire back of Alamo Motel, Call 263-5135 free parking 5112 N Lam ar except 2 30-8:30 p.rn. talks. T H E P H O E N IX 42 Dobie Mall 476-91/1 Free Parkin* » 7 a rn IO p rn M- W O R K WITH O LD P E O P L E UNCLASSIFIED The Capital Area Planning Council will present a day­ long seminar on alcoholism Thursday at Huston-Tillotson College. FOR RENT T H E HAIRCUT STORES MISCELLANEOUS 2 Day Service 472-3210 and 472-7677 Belly dancing instruction. 472-3344 Finest Quality, Reasonable Prices Call on us before you get clipped A T T E N D A N T S W A N T E D for care Of p h ysically handicapped people F u ll time part time, including three hours Saturday and Sunday Call 644-3480. T Y P IS T and assistant to script editor needed tor full tim e summer (ob by C a rra sco le n d a s, n atio n al bi-lingual children's television show, 60 wpm, able to read write and speak Spanish. 4714811, Anita Dallas C O U N S E L O R wanted tor boys' tam p in H ill C o u n try P a y in c lu d e s U ta h Wilderness Trip Day 471-1571, Night 4598274. _ _______________________ S Q U E E Z E IN N , 1809 Guadalupe, now ta k in g a p p lic a tio n s fo r p a rt tim e beverage servers Experience, hustle personality a must See Bobby 12-6 F r i ­ day E X P E R I E N C E D S A L E S P E R S O N for ladies sp o rtsw e a r shop P a r t tim e e v e n in g s in p erson. M a in S tre e t Highland M all RwithEorSwithout U Mpictures ES N E E D P L A C E to liv e this sum m er b e g in n in g M a y (5-10) U p to $70. ............... ..... Richard 447-6551 F E M A L E H O U S E M A T E to share three bedroom house *56 plus VS bdls CR Shuttle 451 2904 __ ______________ _ M A L E S T U D E N T w anted to sh a re house a c. $90 per month plus ! s elec­ tricity, 452-5810. W A N T E D F A I L F E M A L E roommate *0 share duplex or house. Call 471-482? Tracy. _______________ R O O M M A T E W A N T E D to Sh are 3 bedroom apartm ent S66 66 475-8810 836-2066 P A R T T IM E T Y P IS T wanted Average typing skills Good knowledge of English gram m ar. Call 447-2737 anytim e A L S TY P I NG S E R V I C E Theses, dis­ sertations, m anuscripts and business typing Pick-up & delivery service. 8364117______________________ ______________ N E A T A C C U R A T E and prompt typing 70 cents per page Call 447-2737 N E E D A T Y P I S T ’ W e re a secretarial specialist. Resum es, letters theses, legal, statistical, research papers, etc Pick-up and delivery available 837-3323 L I B E R A i B U T S E R IO U S student need ed imm ediately to snare two bedroom a p a rtm e n t, $85 a b p N on-sm oker preferred 472-8501, David S H A R E F U R N IS H E D A p a r tm e n tfor summer W block from campus *57 50 per month, A B P . Fem ale. Cali M artha, 476-5631 _________________________ f e m a l e s u m m e r O N LY House on 35th S50 plus bills Must be neat. Ja n e 454-0107 ________ ______________________ L O O K IN G FO R A House or duplex to share for the summer Call Bob at 9262962_______________ ■- - ■ F R E S H M A N M ed ical student needs fem ale m edical student to share two bedroom apartm ent in San Antonio from June I 75 472 2870 Store Your Belongings This Summer! From M ay 16th thru Sept 1st 31a months storage for $35 Up to I OOO pounds You Bring It You P ic k It Up Pick-up 8. D elivery Service Available Bow Transportation T H E F L O W E R P E O P L E need people to sell flowers Highest commission, paid daily 282 I i 02, IO a.rn. • 6 p.m. ROOM ANO B O A R D in exchange for babysitting Off D uval 454-4310 S E C R E T A R Y W IT H A R T S K IL L S need­ ed for small office Must have own transportation Call 327-2733 between 8-5 Why not start out with good grades! 472-3210 and 472-7677 M A L E R O O M M A T E n e e d e d to r su m m er Va blo ck fro m ca m p u s S57 50 month A B P Call Joe^476-5631 WHY HAUL ITSummer H ORates! ME? P A R T O R F U L L tim e salesperson. Call on Variety, Drugs. Dress shops for dis­ tributor. P ierced earrings, costume lew elry, Hook'em Horns K e y rings. A u s t i n only 10% commission M ark V II Sales Co 8010 Vantage-3C, San Antonio, Texas 78230, 1-341-3865.____________ _ P A R T T I M E work. $300/mo Can be full­ time or part-time this summer. Time oft for finals. Call 452-2758 V A L E N T I N E ' S A U S T I N 'S new est nightclub now taking applications for cocktail servers, Apply in person at_25iB San Antonio Mon through F r i. 1:00 to ......... ............... ..... ... 4 OO NOW T A K IN G A P P L IC A T IO N S for waitpersons 8. kitchen help Apply in person at Mike 8. Charlie's. 1206 W 34th per session Texan Dorm ■1905 Nueces D a ily maid service ce n t r a l a ir Refrigerators, hot plates allowed Two blocks from campus Coed. Residem a n a g e r s . 477-1760 R o o m s a l s o a vailable for F all. Program To Study Alcohol Problems LOST & FOUND SERVICES U S N avy has a limited number of 2y e a r s c h o la r s h ip s a v a i l a b l e for technically oriented students, lf you have had integral calculus, are a second semester sophomore, and would like a chance for a scholarship that pays tui­ tion, books, fees, and $100 a month, cal! 512 341-0224 or 512-341-8777 collect im ­ mediately. Just North of 27th at Guadalupe 2707 Hem phill P a rk 441-7577 1302 Packer Lane FURN. DUPLEXES S C H O L A R S H IP S A V A IL A B L E ATES S U M M E R R Singles S95.00 b o o k -L o o k i n g ’ L e t u s h e lp no ot ligation search for out-of-prmt or rare books Call 263-5335 or w i f e A n a y Books R f 8 B o x 173 , Austin 78703 S O M E O N E t a k e o v e r Lease this summer Duplex * 2 bedroom, 2 ba SISO plus bill*. 475-8698________ ______ G R A D U A T E S T U D E N T ? L arg e quiet I Br Nice place to live SISO 2202 Nueces. Owner Manager, 447-1177. n Doubles $52 SO A B O R T IO N A L T E R N A T IV E S ! P re g ­ nant and distressed’ Help is as near as your telephone Pro-Life Advocates. 5 West 26th 472-4198 F R E E Y U G O S L A V M O V IE - ''• Met Even H appy G yp sies." Thurs., April 24 8 OO p.m. Burdine Auditorium W e are looking for 4 ambitious students to be trained as telephone collectors Located lust steps from campus, this work is done on weekniahts and Satur day We pay *2 50 per hour while you learn. $3.75 per hour upon completion of training Up to $5 OO per hour thereafter A nne B u rfo rd - G e n e ra l M an ager Educational Credit Corporation, Cam ­ bridge Towers, 19th S. Lav a ca 472-9253 r C O N F ID E N T IA L C A R E tor pregnant un m arried mothers Ed n a Djadney Home 2308 Hemphill, Fort Worth. Toll tree number 1-800-792-1104 __________ J e w e l r y c o n s t r u c t i o n m silver C la s s e s s t a r t i n g m o n t h ly C a ll ST O N E A G E 459 6531 S’ 1* Burnet Road Northwest Center Open 10-6 MondaySaturday _____ ____ W E N E E D a few good men Audition (or admission to the Austin Chord Rangers, barbershop harmony chorus. Tuesday, April 29, 8 00 p rn at Highland Mali $5.00 P E R HOUR Large I bedroom, dishwasher, disposal T v cable. pool, shuttle bus, nice I bedroom townhouses *175 OO Gas and water Included Now leasing summer and tall Call Bill Harrison F W AITERS AND HOSTESS Western-type restaurant Must be neat. TYPING E SERVICES HELP WANTED ■ MISCELLANEOUS TYPING FURN. APARTS. C A M P U S GUITAR SHOP N O W OPEN S p e c ia liz in g in guitar instruction. Q ualified te a c h e r s in c la ssic a l an d a c o u stic guitar. G u itar sa le s an d a c c e s s o r i e s , g u it a r b o o k s a n d c l a s s i c a l s h e e t m u s ic . S p e c i a l rates for b e g in n in g students. 477-3531 605 Vi W. 28th FOR THE FULL YEAR! Property Deposits Often Unclaimed Offices Expect Last-Day Rush " G r a d u a tin g s e n io r s , transfer stu d en ts or any stu ­ dent w ithdraw ing from the U n iversity m a y c o lle ct his $10 general property deposit. By PATRICIA WARD ‘Do it Thursday” is the ad vice to stu d en ts from the registrar's o ffice and sev era l dep artm en tal o ffic e s in an­ ticipation of F rid ay's last-m inute preregistration rush More have p reregistered than I ex p ected at this point. Things are going sm oother, too. P eo p le se e m to be m arking their cards m ore ca refu lly than b e fo r e ,” B ruce Goranson of the registrar s office said W ednesday. | The only problem en countered thus far by the registrar s | office is with the optional fe e card s — they won t go through the com puter IBM is attem p tin g to rem edy the problem Goranson said. G oranson e x p e c ts a p p r o x im a te ly 24,000 stu d e n ts to p reregister by the 3 p m. F riday deadline P reregistration is running ’ behind usual in the School of A rchitecture. K ellv M cA dam s, assista n t dean, said We p reregistered about 93 percent of the school last tim e around We do it a lp h ab etically w ith about IOO students each day O nh 51 percent had signed up a t 1.30 today." M cA dam s said W ednesday I Richard C onnelly, a ssista n t dean of the C ollege of EducaI non. said m ost people who would pick up packets already I had and would "crow d in" on F riday to turn them in. I Things h ave gone pretty sm ooth ly becau se w e have had ■ preadvising for the la st tw o w eek s. So when p eo p le com e in I lo get their m a ter ia ls, they can a d vise th e m se lv es, Connel- ;j l u ic ticoH ac a o ffice, said the fe e is used as a secu rity dep osit to c o v er any unpaid fin es or b ills w h en a stu d en t te r m in a te s e n r o ll­ m ent. The d d ee b are on on file file at at The p oo sits sits are the b u rsar’s o ffic e four y ea rs a f t e r th e s t u d e n t ' s l a s t se m ester . If a student fa ils to claim h is refund w ithin this Street Fest O pens Saturday J Celebration To Raise Funds for Tree Planting I § l y said N o crow d s were reported in the C ollege of B usiness Ad­ m inistration W ednesday. Noon Thursday is the deadline for stu dents to turn in "w ork lette rs" for tim e p referen ces tor I c la s s e s . W innie H uskisson. ad m in istrative a ssista n t, said. The C ollege of G en eral and C om parative Studies is beefing up its ad visin g sta ff to a cco m m o d a te the exp ected crow ds street from C ongress A venue This Saturday is m ore than just another Saturday It is to IH 35. A c tiv ities w ill include food "Saturday on Sixth S tr e e t.” F e s tiv itie s are planned d is­ booths, strollin g m u sic ia n s playing the restoration of S ix ­ and art w ork for sale in th e 600 block of E a st Sixth S treet. For th S tr e e t, fo r m e r ly P e c a n those in terested in the history S tr e e t. M any h is to r ic o f th e s t r e e t , th e A u stin buildings have been turned into restau ran ts, th eaters, an­ H eritage Guild w ill condu ct w alking tours of h istoric site s tique sto r e s and resid en ce s a lon g th r e e b lo c k s o f the over the la st few years. street B efore th e con stru ction of A ch ild ren ’s puppet sh ow is th e C a p it o l on C o n g r e s s se t for l l a m . and a m a g ic A venue. Sixth S treet w a s the show a t 2 p .m .. both a t the m ain dow ntown thoroughfare Creek T heater. The fun on Sixth Street will T he D r is k ill H o te l w ill begin at IO a m and conclu de fe a tu r e a d is p la y o n th e at IO p.m . M oney raised w ill proposed W aller C reek pro­ go for planting tr ee s along the ( ( Thursday and F riday. P L - .,, ^ ... All stu d en ts pay this m an datory fee during registration their first se m e ste r at the U n iversity. Bob M ourie. a c ­ counting clerk in the bu rsar's ROOTING AROUND A COURSE? je c t and on the A m e r ic a n B icentennial. A slide sh ow on th e p rop osed S ixth S tr e e t trolley sy stem and an infor­ m ation booth w ill a ls o be presented in the hotel lobby. P articip ants in the c e le b r a ­ tion w ill be able to r e g iste r for a coupon book offering “ A Y ear's E ntertain m en t on S ix­ th S treet " "Saturday on Sixth Street is being sponsored by the E a st S ix th S t r e e t C o n s e r v a tio n A ssociation and sev era l other area organizations Problem P regn an cy C o u n se lin g Service Stu de n t H ealth Center 105 W. 2 6 t h St. (4th F lo o r-So u th ) C o n fid e n tia l c o u n s e lin g w it h all a lte r n a tiv e s d is c u s s ­ ed a n d referrals m a d e to a p p r o p r ia t e resources C a ll 478-5711, Ext. 2 6 , for a n a p p o in t m e n t . In d iv id u a l a p p o in t m e n t s T u e s d a y 1-5 p.m., T h u r sd a y 1-5 p.m ., F rid ay 9 -n o o n . FOR Pandora’s Box. TRY LINGUISTICS . _ 306: In tro d u c tio n to th e S tu d y of L an g u ag e Advertising Group To M eet in Austin T he F r id a y s e s s io n s are Bv ST E PH A N IE K IESEL The Southw est D istr ict of free of ch arge and open to the general public. th e A m e r ic a n A d v er tisin g D e leg a te s and stu dents w ill F ederation (A A F ) w ill hold its 1975 annual convention in m e e t on the School of C om ­ A u stin T h u r sd a y th r o u g h m unication P atio at IO a.m . S a tu r d a y a t th e L y n d o n Saturday for a tour. B aines Johnson Auditorium . A ctiv ities w ill include gu est s p e a k e r s , s tu d e n t p r e s e n ­ ta tio n s. e n te r ta in m e n t and sporting com p etition . T ick ets are availa b le for individual e v e n ts by c o n ta c tin g B ob Hulan of th e Austin A dver­ tising Club. An all-d ay student ad v er­ tising com petition w ill be held Thursday in Sid R ichardson H all, as an adjunct to the con ­ vention. The winner of the d is­ tr ic t c o n te s t w ill c o m p e te again st 14 other te a m s in the 1975 N ation al Student A dver­ t i s i n g C o m p e t i t i o n in W ashington May 31 T he U n iv e r sity te a m in ­ c lu d e s a d v e r tis in g se n io r s M ark C oh en . B ill H ollan d , R achel M ostert, H olly O ld­ field and Barbara Sanderson The fa c u lty sp o n so r is R. D o n a ld V a n c e , a s s i s t a n t professor ad vertisin g F rid ay, th e D ep artm en t of A d v er t i s i ng , the Austin A d vertising Club and the AAF w ill p resen t sp eak ers on c o n ­ temporary advertising, m ark etin g and m a n a g em en t com m u n ication topics. A luncheon at V illa Capri M o to r H o te l wi l l p r e s e n t H ooper W hite, v ice-p resid en t and e x e c u tiv e producer of the L e o n B u r n e t t A g e n c y in C hicago, a s gu est sp eak er. He w ill n arrate a film depicting h is a g e n c y ’s m o st hilarious " b lo o p er s.” The convention returns to LBJ Auditorium a t 2 p.m . for sp eak er Tod M oore, president of the K atz A gency of N ew Y ork, w ho will d isc u ss inside LIGHTWEIGHT in fo r m a tio n a b o u t “ A d v er ­ tisin g — T he M ost C riticized. M ost G lam orous of M edia. Jon ah G itlitz , e x e c u tiv e v ice-p resid en t of the AAF in Washington, concludes F rid a y ’s sp eak ers w ith the t o p ic ' o f “ U. S . C o n g r e s s ’ V iew s on A d vertising." to student organizations. They t o s t u d e n t organizations transfer the stu d en t’s deposit to sp e c ific cam p u s p rojects and a c tiv itie s. F o r s e v e r a l y e a r s , T exP1RG has req uested stu dents sign over their d ep osits. "W e usually r ec eiv e about 200 s lip s at each r e g is tr a tio n ." S h ery l H ar­ ding. T exP IR G m em b er, said The C om m unication Council is sending out le tte r s to co m ­ m un ication m ajors requesting the authority to tran sfer the d ep osits to student projects. period, it is forfeited to the U n iversity sch olarsh ip fund. Jim W erchan. d irector of accounting, said m ore than $81,000 in gen eral property d eposits w a s forfeited to the scholarship fund last year. Students w ish in g to r e c e iv e their refund should c a ll or visit the bu rsar's o ffic e and fill out a req u est form . A check w ill be m ailed to their perm anent ad d ress 60 d ays after the end of the s e m e s te r Students a lso h ave the op­ tion of donating their refunds Don Emilio tequila and pineapple juice. 7r D Q * \ 310: L a n g u a g e and S o c ie ty 373: L a n g u a g e and S o c ia l I n te ra c tio n Halcyonic! AND M O R E FO R D E S S E R T ! OPEN 9 AM TO 5:30 PM TILL 8 PM THURSDAYS HENRY JACOBSON's 19th ANNUAL Aim NOW'S THE TIME sh o rn <1eeve CASUAL PULLO VER w, L ig h t . Western Shirts and Lively***** SU M N ER OFF Complete Stock Va "y ■ / S U IT S 60% | SPECIAL GROUP JEAN JACKETS OFF OO Reg. *5500 to ‘160 25% o„ PRICE ALL Leisure SUITS Reg. IO 00 to 1800 OO N o rth HME A p« m c a T w m l C o m p l e x NORTH Guide Maw - nomadic h ik in g r e u t « t h r u o u t U.S., C a n ad a , M im e o vM U T C noam trac fo e u s e lis t: B a l BOS B lo o m in g to n , IM TlHOi OFF IF Y O U A P P R E C I A T E A GOOD BUY THIS S AL E IS FOR Y O U lo n g \ > e r r i n jf if u n h e . c r e p e * , a' i n r ie l \ o f u m p * , salad*. a n d p a * tr ie * . I m p o r t e d c o f f e e * a n d le a * . B e e r * a n d w in e * . I ll al rearm n o b le p r ie r * New Course TECHNICAL RUSSIAN (special section o f R us 4 0 6 4 07 ) Fulfills language requirements The Slavic Dept. 471-3607 price sle e v e FAN C Y SHIRTS OO OFF SOLIDS PANALS Reg. L eather Coats DON'T MISS THIS SUPER GREAT SALE 70 OFF 2 2 TO C H O O S E F R O M Ba n k Americaro n tfa m e f a r % ALL DESIGNS D O N T MISS THIS SUPER GREAT SALE SPO RT COATS a o A M ER IC A N EXPRESS OPEN 9 A M TO 5:30 PM TILL 8 PM THURSDAY Page 20 Thursday, April 24, 1975 T H E D A ILY TEXAN 3600 to mr 2222 Guadalupe NEXT TO TEXAS THEATRE 31 TO CHOOSE FROM