T h e Da i l y S t u d e n t N e w s p a p e r a t The U n i ve r si t y o f Texas a t A ust i n Austin, Texas, F rid a y , A p ril 14, 1978 Tw enty-Eight Pages Vol. 77, No. 134 Copyright 1978, Texas Student Publications, all rights reserved F ifte en Cents News and E d ito ria l: 471-4591 Display A d ve rtisin g : 471-1865 Business Office and C lassified: 471-5244 osing investigation into GOMA By United Pre** International State investigators plan to end their three month examination of the Gover­ nor's Office of Migrant Affairs soon without seeking indictments against any government official, sources close to the inquiry told U PI Thursday We’ve turned it inside out several times, and there's no crime unless we find something tying up the loose ends,” one source said. We found felony mis­ management and gross stupidity but no crime,” F ED E HAL investigators, however, say they plan to continue looking into administration of Manpower training grants by GOMA and the Texas Depart­ ment of Community Affairs. F B I officials said it will be some time before they are ready to present any evidence to a grand jury The state investigation conducted by a special task force set up by District Attorney Ronald Earle is expected to culminate with presentation of evidence to the Travis County Grand Jury on GOMA’s contracts with Don and Clarence Gray of Harlingen Insiders said the investigators do not think they have evidence to warrant and do not plan to seek indictments against any government officials or employers, although a report criticizing GOMA administration may be issued The district attorney began in­ vestigating GOMA operatons in January after a Carot***) County grand jury in­ dicted tiOMA executive director Ro- jelio P e n t and program director Joa­ quin Rodriguez P E R E Z and Rodriguez face witness tampering charges in connection with testimony of GOMA subordinates at a Brownsville court of inquiry into misuse of Manpower money Gov. Dolph Briscoe suspended Perez and Rodriguez when they refused to testify at the court of inquiry Briscoe also suspended Sergio Mar­ tinez, deputy GOMA director, in March when he refused to testify before the Travis County Grand Jury about GOMA contracts with a private consulting firm, Martinez was quietly reinstated last week and put to work in the Gover­ nor’s Criminal Justice Division. Polish joke accusation draws official’s anger IKL - - ■ H _ _ _ The Washington Star quoted Philadelphia attorney Anthony Kr- zywicki. president of the Polish- A rn erie un Affairs Count ii, as saying, We re mounting a campaign for Beil’s resignation or a public state­ ment of what occurred ” WASHINGTON (U PI) - Attorney General Griffin Bell has been falsely accused of telling a "Polish joke” that supposedly acknowledges Justice Department confusion over the firing of U.S. Attorney David Marston, a spokesman said Thursday. A story on the joke which already has drawn criticiFtn from a Polish* Amerlcan group, appeared a i an un­ sourced item in the April IO edition of New York magazine. The spokesman said no effort was made to determine whether it was true “ Not to inquire of the subject and not to name the source is plainly irresponsibility of the highest order and reckless disregard for the truth.” said Justice Department spokesman Terrence Adamson. The magazine claimed Bell has been telling the joke in about these words; “ How would the Poles have handled the Marston Affair?” The supposed answer: The same way we “ I have heard the so-called joke all over town,” Adamson told U PI “ He (Bell) bas heard the joke, mostly from reporters He doesn’t H I ethnic jokes." B e ll’s firin g of M arlton, a Philadelphia Republican, involved the administration in a political con­ troversy and lias been troublesome for Bell, “ He (Bell) doesn't approve of tell­ ing ethnic jokes and doesn’t tell them,” Adamson said. “ He has a high regard for Polish people In fact, he has a second-generation Polish American, Walter Fiederwicz, on his small personal staff Solar flare will affect earth little BOULDER, Colo. (U P I) - Atomic particles produc ed by the largest solar flare in four years approached the earth Thursday, but scientists said it was possible they would bypass the earth and have little effect on either com­ munications or the Aurora Borealis. The Space Environment Forecast Center earlier this week forecast the solar flare could disrupt some com­ like ham radios and munications, telephones, and produce Northern Lights visible much farther south than normal. The flare, the largest since 1974, oc­ curs! as an explosion of energy on the face of the sun Tuesday — spewing X- rays and streams of atomic particles into space. An earlier one Saturday had been smaller, but produced some ham radio disruptions. “ It takes anywhere from 24 to 72 hours for the particles to reach the earth,” forecaster Joe Suporik said. “ In this case, we predicted they would arrive in about 48 hours ” THE STREAM OF particles, mostly protons, travel in the “ solar wind” at speeds up to 420 miles per second. Energy from the solar wind enters the earth’s magnetic field at the poles and produces changes in the shape of the ionosphere, Suporik said. The increased energy at the North Pole produces auroral displays and the fluctuating ionosphere affects com­ munications that rely on radio waves that “ bounce” off the earth's at­ mospheric shield. Suporik said it was impossible to forecast with accuracy the path the solar wind follows because the particles “ travel in a spiral like a lawn sprinkler.” “ Saturday* s flare gave magnetic storm conditions Monday and spilled over on Tuesday,” he said. “ After that the ionosphere takes time to recover, so it is conceivable it might have caused those problems la Boston. ” With the arrival of spring one may witness many wonders of nature. Bluebonnets, the Texas state flower, blossom in a field in North Austin, while a pair of spiders spin their web so as to catch Insects, whose numbers are increasing as the weather grows warmer. Blooms and beasts —Texan Staff Photos by Mika Lour Civil rights effort faces review HEW team to look for segregation at UT By M ICHAEL P E R R I University Reporter The University’s efforts to meet the requirements of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 will be reviewed next week by two representatives of the Dallas branch of the U.S. Office of Civil Rights. Under Title VI of that act, recipients of federal aid must not discriminate in programs or activities on the basis of race, color or national origin. “ A number of state-supported institutions of higher education are under review to see if there are any vestiges of de jure segregation,” Gerhard Fonken, ex­ ecutive assistant to President Lorene Rogers, said Thursday. THE TEAM W ILL look for signs of segregation resulting from a racially segregated system of higher education operated under state law. The office has found in other cases that patterns of racial discrimina­ tion remained after ending segregation, which violates Title VI. There are two Texas campuses, Prairie View A&M and Texas Southern, which are historically and predominantly black The University and other state funded campuses are largely white. desegregation plans from Arkansas, Florida and Oklahoma. At that time HEW rejected plans from Georgia and Virginia and the senior college and univer­ sity part of North Carolina’s plan. Troy Coleman and Mimi Lee, the review team from the Dallas office, will be on campus Monday through Friday. Dr. Stephen A. Monti, assistant to the president, has been planning meetings between the office team and David Hershey, director of admissions, and Shirley Binder, director of student financial aid. Administrators in student recruitment, athletics, counseling, tutoring and employment will also be consulted. “They will visit with a number of administrators and collect a body of information” for the Department of Health Education and Welfare, Fonken said. ON F E B . 2 Joseph Califano, secretary of HEW, an­ nounced that eight state systems of higher education, in­ cluding Texas, would be investigated for remnants of dual systems. The announcement followed HEW's acceptance of These plans, which commit the state systems of higher education to “ substantial progess in the first two years” of implementation were requested by HEW after a suit against Califano brought by Kenneth Adams and several civil rights groups. The 1970 court orders resulting from this case call for a state-wide response signed by the governor and all state officials responsible for higher education The data gathered by the team will be reviewed along with that from 17 other Texas institutions of higher education. If HEW finds any vestiges of segregation within the state's public colleges and universities, the Coor­ dinating Board, Texas College and University System, headed by Dr. Kenneth H Ashworth, will be the state agency responsible for developing a plan. Gorman says he planned to return $6,700 camera By BOB BERSANO Staff Writer A former University Co-Op president accused of stealing an expensive camera from the store testified Thurs­ day he planned to return it to the store prior to his arrest but did not get the chance. Robert L. Gorman, on trial for theft of the 86,700 Hasselblad camera outfit, testified he planned to return the camera at a Co-Op Board of Directors meeting on Sept I. Gorman was to make a presentation to the board. GORMAN, 35, was arrested Sept 2 and charged with third degree felony theft. The former president testified he planned to talk to the board about hiring Charles Walker as Co-Op president following Gorman’s June 18 resignation to be Joske’s general manager. Gorman had intended to use the camera, he said, to indicate to board members the mistake Walker made in ordering the camera while he was ac­ ting general manager in 1975 Gorman assumed the Co-Op’s top level job following this period. The board never saw the camera, Gorman tesified, because the meeting ended abruptly and quickly went into an executive session from which he was ex­ cluded. Gorman testified he later returned the camera to Joske's. “ I intended to do nothing that would hurt the Co-Op in any respect, in any way. I never had the intention of steal­ ing this camera.” Gorman said. No other person was ever informed of the plan to present the camera to the board, he added. Grady Waldrop. Joske's security of­ ficer, testified Thursday Gorman did not have the case containing the camera when he entered the store that evening. Joske’s loss prevention supervisor, Arvid Sundbeck, instructed him to observe Gorman, Grady said. Sundbeck tesified he entered Gor­ man's office a number of times after he first saw Gorman with the missing camera. Sundbeck later informed the Austin police that the former president had the camera. Gorman described his “ theathcal ac­ tion” with the camera as “ stupid.” The defense called nine character witnesses before Gorman took the witness stand. They all testified he had a “ truthful reputation” and was a man of “ truth and veracity.” Final arguments will begin at 9 a.m. Friday in 147th District Court friday ... Mild Friday, Austin will be warm with partly cloudy skies. The high temperature will be in the low 80s and the low Friday night in the low 60s. More weather, Page 27. Tennis ... The Texas tennis team will host the No. 4 ranked SMU Mustangs at 1 p.m. Saturday in a key SWC match. Stories, Pages 15 and 16. Rock... Hard rock bands Journey, Montrose and Van Halen visited Municipal Auditorium Wednesday. Review, Page 19. -TSP S t*« Photo —To*an Staff Photo by datora RaingoM Body sculptor A bodybuilder in training is a kind of artist, sculpting flesh instead of •tone — the father of his own unique design. Feature, Page 28. < tty of A uM kn Look a t Your Electric Utility Bill Clo*ely Thi* M onth Thgr# Aim important ch «n gt* on your municipal utility bdl itm month Now 0mr trie fate*. approved by tho Austin City Council became e f f e c t s April I* featuring u-monat < bangos you w ill be billed at Winter Pat#*** this m o n th (Novnrnber through April), and at Summer b a tel for the month* of May through October, blee trie generation coit* are higher during jam m er month*, tho* your billing rate will be higher Residential alec trie energy consum er*, who alto have natural ga*, will pay a W in ter energy charge of 77 ren t* per kilowatt hour, a custom er charge ot *3 per month* pig* a fuel ch arg e that v a n e * monthly depending on how much the C ity of Austin mutt pay tor generation fuel The Sum m er R ate •* the sam e plus a capoc * ty t barge of 7 5 < eof* per kilow att hour for the first SOO kilow att hours, and I 175 i fusts per k.lo w att hour for all additional kilow att h o u '% Residential All I lee frit consumers will pay a Winter Rata of S i 50 pi-* month customer charge, an energy charge of M < ants per kilowatt hour, plus the fuel charge The Sum m er Pate is the same plus a capacity charge of ? 5 cants per kilowatt hour for the first SOO kilowatt hours, and I 275 cents per kilowatt hour tor all additional kilowatt hours CWS tom s • c h a r g e is a fixed monthly amount for making service available regardless of the amount of alef tricity used Metering costs, billing and iccoun* ting costs are included in this charge f n ir g y (MAROIS depend on the amount of electrical energy each customer us #4 M ott operating and maintenance costs, e*capf fuel. are a part of this charge capacity CHARO!! are related to investments in plants necessary to satisfy tim Investments in generating plants, demand for electric service by customer* transmission lines and a portion of the distribution line system are included Other changes enacted bv the Austin City Council include 1 Ow* dele * You now have 77 days from the bill date *o pay without penalty, but payment must be in the office by the due date, so please malt in time to insure postal delivery 2 Reentry Has been reduced from 10% to 5%, but now applies to water, wastewater and electric service I Water a Won* wo tar Minimum Chary* Mas been Increased, The minimum Applicable to sale* of 2.000 gallons or lest monthly, 4 Waiim A w«i»#w«t*r Stand Ry Chary* i i i applicable) Each customer who has ser VU a available by virtue of the existence of a meter or other facilities shall be charged even though the meter was off and no wafer was used ROT further information on item* I 4, call your Account Representative at the number un your bill I h i best way to lower your alts trl» al energy costs Is to monitor your consumo Non and prat fife conservation A < opy Of the ' W a t t W atcher'* Guide to Energy < oatervefion" Is available in the city's libraries* the Utility Customer Service Of fur or the- I let trie U tility Building Information on alec fries! conservation or any questions about the new ole. trie rates < an be obtained by asking tor Con turner Services at 3 9 7 - 1 6 0 0 . Jaworski stresses belief in judiciary to**m .hworsfci former Watergate* $$>**< jai prosecute* said Thursday al tin? University kl* chord lh;*t th** Water gab- in-,* Migenon represented the American judiciary $ finest hour Jawurtki spoke us pert of ’he Strasteurger la** tu/<- Sen* * and f « uv J on tin* ^at«>rgate and Korean in v eMigationf in flu e n ce piddling The Constitution doe* work sn time* of the severest stresses md strains/' J.iw<»rnkt said adding th.it the operation of our government under law would h.< .<• brought forth »‘xprc*stlon* of pride and plaudits from tfl#» fra m e r* JAW O REK f also said although the founders of do' nation would have deplored the Watergate activities, they would have retain cd their faith rn America largely because of th*- American judo tary This salute to the judiciary rests not in who won or tost It rests on the record of the court* putting into operation the judicial process r n it should w ort," he said, Jaworski said if the trial ami appellate e>flgd(>)ng J.ivmrskl vasd Jaworski also lauded the Supreme ( ourt for acting boldly and unwaveringly and with a minimum of delay un laving) to r**i lh Is lei Ii I H i .M U til i t ‘t4 n H i v u M l n H H ti I h . t l g l |*l,U>-» »>t S n»-»it Ii* I » | Shut Af** t'tH’iH i> gum. •- Iwvih'd | 'l.*i iv* I *4 I ', .st *.».! vlJk's !.** »> ilk < • .‘s’j'tH il'it pin- S. lo* jstM.gjv tn.i I i * ink \ • ■< i n • .I S t »\lt i t, It.iiv ;* Student Accounts Invited • red • black • beige • yellow • green Today is Natibnal Blue Jean Day Gays are wearing denims Are You? Celebrate With Fruit from the Gay Fruit Stand On The West Mall Sponsored by the lesbian/Gay Alliance • * • white f or • green Super light bottoms in white or amber. Canvas or patent- make banded or strip sandal tops 2 5 . 2 5 d o e s i t f o r s h o e s ON THE DRAG AT 2406 GUADALUPE Fri(ja^ APQL H J 978 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ fa. Vance to meet with Africans Rhodesian guerrillas may attend conference ® 1978 New York Time* DAR ES SALAAM, T anzania — S e c re ta ry of S tate C yrus R, \ a n e e w as rep o rted T hursday night to h ave received a ssu ra n c e s th a t R hodesian g u e rrilla le a d e rs will ac ce p t the A nglo-A m erican proposal for convening a co n fe re n ce of all p a rtie s to th e R hodesian con flict in an effo rt to avoid an all-out w ar. This w as disclosed to re p o rte rs on V an ce’s Air F o rc e p lane en ro u te to the T anzanian c a p ita l for th e s ta r t of w hat A m erican officials ca lle d a d esp eratio n m ission The m ain p roblem is th a t even though th e g u e rrilla le a d e rs, Jo sh u a Nkom o and R o b e rt M ugabe, who fo rm th e P a trio tic F ro n t, have now rep o rted ly dropped op­ position to talks, the S alisb u ry g o v ern m e n t, headed by P rim e M inister Ian D. S m ith, and supported by th re e m o d e ra te black le a d e rs who live in R hodesia, has so fa r refused w h at is called ‘ th e a ll-p a rtie s c o n fe re n c e .’’ And V ance has no reaso n to believe he w ill be able to ch an g e th e ir m ind on th is trip. V ance, ac co m p an ie d by A ndrew Young, th e ch ief U.S. d e le g a te to th e U nited N ations, a rriv e d h ere about 10:30 p m . T h u rsd ay night a f te r a 19-hour flight, including refueling stop? in Spain and th e Sudan. On S atu rd ay , V ance and O w en w ill fo rm a lly co n fer w ith N kom o. who heads the g u e rrilla s o p eratin g m ainly out of Z am b ia, and M ugabe, who lead s those based p rim a rily in M ozam bique. A lso a t the m eetin g , w hich is ex p ected to extend into Sunday m orning, w ill be the foreign m in iste rs of th e so-called front-line s ta te s , those co u n tries th a t b o rd er on o r a r e n e a r R hodesia In a d d i­ tion the foreign m in iste r of .Nigeria is due h e re as w ell O fficials on V an ce's plane said th a t th e front-line s ta te s had inform ed th e U nited S ta te s th a t th e P a trio tic I* ront. w hich e a r lie r had balked a t A nglo-A m erican p roposals for bringing about a R hodesian se ttle m e n t, w ere now rea d y to ac c e p t w hat w e re d esc rib e d as ’ the essen tial e le m e n ts ’’ of th e plan, w hich has been re je c te d by S m ith in favour of w hat in S alisbury is called the ‘ in te rn al s e ttle m e n t.” B ecause of th e e x p e cted opposition of S m ith and the black m o d e ra te s who a re p a rt of his in te rn al se ttle m e n t, V ance and Owen w ill fly from h e re on Sunday to P re to ria . South A frica, to co n fe r w ith F o re ig n M inister R .F Botha and seek South A frican help in persu ad in g S m ith to be m o re co n ciliato ry . On M onday, V ance and Owen w ill fly to S alisbury for new d iscussions w ith S m ith and his black colleag u es, Bishop Abel M uzorew a, the Rev. N dabaning Sithole and Sen. J e re m ia h C hirau. THIS WILL BE th e firs t tim e a s e c re ta ry of s ta te has gone to R hodesia and V ance has m a d e it c le a r th a t he feels th e m ission m u st be u n d erta k en to go w h at he c a lls to try to p e rsu a d e the v ario u s fac tio n s to to n eg o tiate a po litical solution for R hodesia. the la st m ile try O therw ise he is convinced, r e p o rte rs w e re told, th e re will be an all-out w a r w ith Soviet and Cuban involve­ m ent a strong possibility th e e s ta b lis h m e n t of a The A nglo-A m erican plan, w hich will be the focus of the talks here, e sse n tia lly c a lls for a c e a s e fire in the r e s id e n t c o m ­ c iv il w a r. m issio n er. Lord C a rv e r, tr a d i tio n a r y g o v ern m e n t until elec tio n s a r e held leading to a fre e and th e R h o d e sia n in d e p e n d e n t Z im b a b w e g o v ern m e n t th a t is re g a rd e d as illegal by th e U nited N ations for its b rea k from B rita in in 1965 to g o vern a to r e p la c e It also e sta b lish e s a U nited N ations fo rce to su p e rv ise the c e a s e -fire and provide se c u rity for the ele c tio n s p en­ ding form ation of a new united R hodesian a rm y it it it VWIA WHA R hodesia (U P I ) One hundred political p riso n ers, so m e held w ithout tria l for m o re th a n a decade, w alked out of prison fre e m en T h ursday w e a r­ ing new boots d o nated by the R ed C ross, c a rry in g c a r d ­ board su itc a se s m a d e in ja tl and singing freed o m songs. They w ere th e first of 461 m en — n e a rly half of R h o d e sia’s po litical p riso n er population — being re le a s ­ ed by the new in te g ra te d go v ern m en t A g overnm ent sp o k esm an said an o th e r 19 d e ta in e e s w ere set fre e in o th e r p a r ts of th e co u n try T hursday and th a t the re m a in d e r would be rele ase d w ithin d ays - U P I T elep h o to Rhodesian political prisoners released Thursday. Farm backers to seek compromise on aid bill ( U P I ) W A S H IN G T O N F a r m spo k esm en se t out T hursday to salvage som e fo rm of co m p ro m ise, scaled-dow n p rice su p p o rt aid for f a n n e r s following H ouse re je c tio n of the m ulti-billion- d o lla r e m e rg e n c y a ssista n c e bill T he bill, w hich won S enate approval 49 41 M onday, w as buried by a 268 150 H ouse vo te la te W ednesday fa rm E m b itte re d le a d e rs of the A m erican A g ricu ltu re strik e m ovem ent, vow ing to keep up th e ir cam p aig n for is s u e d a s e r i e s of h ig h e r p r i c e s , s ta te m e n ts including one th rea ten in g la w su its a g a in st m e m b e rs of C ongress who voted a g a in st the em erg en c y bill Other f a r m sp o k e sm e n , h o w e v e r, th e ta lk in g ab o u t p ick in g up w e re pieces. T H E A G R IC U LTU R E D e p a rtm e n t rep o rt (Hi T h u rsd ay fa rm e rs intend to p lant 3 p e rc e n t less corn th is y e a r than l a s t , b u t n e a r ly 8 p e r c e n t m o r e soybeans, indicatin g little resp o n se to a call for m a jo r red u ctio n s by the national farm s trik e m o v e m e n t Corn and soybean p ro sp e c ts play a m a jo r role in fu tu re co n su m er food p rices b ec au se, a s an im al feed, they figure in th e cost of m e a t, eggs, milk and poultry R e su lts of a cro p survey m ad e the to ta l b e g in n in g of A pril in d ic a te d a c re a g e of livestock feed g ra m s would be dow n 4 p e rc e n t from 1977, a m uch sh a rp e r d ro p than the d eclin e of about I p erc en t ind icated in a Ja n u a ry survey. T otal e s tim a te d crop a c re a g e w as placed at about 341 6 m illion a c re s , down 3 p e rc e n t fro m 1977. S E N . ROBERT Dole. R Kan , au th o r of th e p ro duction-cutback and income- the re je c te d bill. support se ctio n s of m oved T h u rsd ay th e only phase of the m e a su re th a t P re sid e n t C a rte r lias in d icated he would a c ce p t an in c re a se in the 1978 su p p o rt ta rg e t p rice for w h eat to rev iv e D ole introduced a bill to boost the scheduled $3 a bushel w heat ta rg e t to $3 50 P u m p in g for p ro m p t S e n a te p assag e. D ole said he would ask the S en ate A g ricu ltu re C o m m ittee to a p ­ prove the bill next W ednesday. A g ricu ltu re S e c re ta ry Bob B ergland sa id M a rc h 29 th e a d m in is tr a tio n fav o red a boost to 83.40 o r $3 50, but la te r said only th e $3 40 level would be a c c e p ta b le a n o th e r , Sen D ick C lark, D -Iow a, also in­ tro d u c e d f a r th e r - r e a c h in g second round bill th a t would ra ise p rice supp o rt ta rg e ts for w heat, corn and co t­ ton. and loan r a te s for w h eat and corn in c re a se cro p supp o rt G lenn M oore of W illard , M ont , p re s i­ dent of the N ational A ssociation of W heat G ro w ers, announced “ d eep d is­ a p p o in tm e n t" a t th e H ouse vote, but added to w ork for an ac c e p ta b le bill th a t im ­ p roves fa rm in c o m e." “ W e're going to continue House so u rces said A g ricu ltu re Com ­ m itte e C h a irm an Thom as F oley, D- W ash . w as discussing possible ro u tes to a po ten tial second-round fa rm bill, but had m a d e no decision on how or when to proceed, A D M I N I S T R A T I O N o f f i c i a l s , meanwhile, said B ergland and h is aides w ere e x p e cted to begin discu ssio n s on how to m ove th e ir proposed in c re a se in t h r o u g h th e w h e a t Congress. t a r g e t p r i c e G ene S chroder, a spo k esm an for the f a r m s t r i k e m o v e m e n t w h o s e d e m o n s tr a tio n s , p a r a d e s an d m a s s W ashington lobbying ended in failu re when the House re je c te d the fa rm bill, said m o v em en t le a d e rs h av e a g re e d to m a i n t a i n i n W ashington, l o b b y o f f i c e t h e i r S chro d er also said fa rm m o v em en t members would w ork for the d e fe a t, in N o v e m b e r's e le c tio n s , of th e c o n ­ g re ssm e n who voic'd ag a in st th e ir bill, and w ould k ee p u r gi ng f a r m e r s to “ s tr ik e ” by cu ttin g production 50 p e r­ ce n t Uhs year. India wants facts on device NEW DELHI, India ( UPI ) India urged the U nited S ta te s T hursday to d e te rm in e “ as e a rly a s possible ' th e fa c ts about the rep o rted planting of a n u c le a r d ev ice bv the CIA n e a r the h e a d w a te rs of th e holy G anges R iver A F o re ig n O ffice spo k esm an said the U S. g o v ern m e n t had been told th a t if th e re p o rts w e re tru e , it w as e s se n tia l for India to know th e h a z a rd s involved, a foreign office sp o k e sm an said U S A m b assad o r R o b ert G oheen w as called to the F o re ig n O ffice on th e m a tte r by F o re ig n S e c re ta ry J a g a t M ehta G oheen w as told th e re p o rts w ere bound to c a u se " g r a v e c o n c e rn ” to th e g o v ern m e n t and people of India. a m e ssag e about th e situ atio n from th e S tate D e p a rtm e n t, w hich w as looking into the re p o rts O utside M agazine, an offshoot of Rolling Stone M agazine, said W ednesday th a t d uring a 1965 spy m ission the CIA lost a n u clea r pow ered device filled w ith plutonium 238. It said th e n u c le a r d ev ice w as lost d uring a clim b of the 25,645 loot N anda D evi m ountain in the H im a lay a s and the device m ig h t still pose ra d io a c tiv e d a n g e r to u se rs of the G anges, T he m a g azin e said the dev ice w cs intended to keep tra c k of The sp o k esm an said G oheen info rm ed M ehta he had receiv ed C hinese a to m ic te s ts and m issile launchings Farmers angry at the support bill’s defeat gather before the White House. —UPI Telephoto DeConcini amendment Treaty backers waver W ASHINGTON (U P I) — S om e lib e ral D e m o c ra ts show ed sig n s of ab andoning su p p o rt fo r th e P a n a m a C anal tr e a tie s T h u rsd ay in sy m p a th y w ith P a n a m a ’s d is tre s s o v er a U.S. s e c u rity rig h ts am en d m e n t. As S en ate le a d e rs w orked behind th e sc en e s on th e a m e n d ­ m e n t c risis, a n o th e r lib e ral D e m o c ra t, J a m e s A bourezk of South D ak o ta, also th re a te n e d to abandon th e tr e a tie s a s a m e a n s of opposing P re sid e n t C a r te r ’s stan d on u n rela ted en e rg y issues. “ E very b o d y e lse h as been b lack m ailin g th e p re sid e n t on the tre a ty , why sh o u ld n ’t w e ? ” an a id e to A bourezk said. O b jec t of th e budding lib e ral re v o lt w as b elate d re a c tio n to th e re se rv a tio n a lre a d y a tta c h e d to the firs t of th e tw o ca n al p a c ts — known a s the N e u tra lity T re a ty — by Sen. D ennis D eC oncini, D-Ariz It says th e U nited S ta te s re s e rv e s the rig h t to u se m ilita ry fo rc e to k eep th e can al open an d o p era tin g even a f te r P a n a m a ta k e s co n tro l of the w a te rw a y in 1999, and even if th e th r e a t is p o sed by s tr ik e s o r w o rk sto p p a g e s by P a n a m a n ia n s th e m se lv es. PANAMA HAS m a d e c le a r it re g a rd s th a t re se rv a tio n a s an in su lt and a ju stific a tio n for in tru sio n into its in te rn a l a ffa irs. S ta te D e p a rtm e n t and S en ate le a d e rs have been se a rch in g for a w ay to m ollify th e P a n a m a n ia n s w hile not losing th e vote of DeConcini o r o th e r b o rd erlin e se n a to rs in T u e sd a y ’s r a tific a ­ tion vote on th e m a in ca n a l tre a ty . Sen. D aniel M oynihan, D-N.Y , d e c rie d th e S en ate s actio n in adopting th e D eC oncini re s e rv a tio n — w hich it did ju s t b efo re it ra tifie d th e n e u tra lity p a c t in M arch — and Sen Floyd H askell, D-Colo, told U P I he, too, is “ tro u b le d ” by th e re se rv a tio n All th re e of those se n a to rs, plus A bourezk, voted in fav o r of the firs t tre a ty . It w as ra tifie d w ith ju s t one vote to sp a re P ro -tre a ty s tra te g is ts , m e a n tim e , m e t T h u rsd ay aftern o o n in S en ate D e m o c ra tic le a d e r R o b e rt B y rd ’s o ffice in an a tte m p t to work out so m e w ay of taking th e stin g out of the D eC oncini rese rv a tio n w ithout losing DeConcini. S ources said the le ad e rsh ip w as try in g to d ra f t an am en d m e n t or u n d erstan d in g , to be a tta c h e d to th e second ca n al tre a ty , w hich would r e s ta te A m e ric a ’s p ledge not to intervene in P a n a m a 's d o m e stic a f fa irs The goal w as to red u ce th e o b je c ­ tio n ab le im p a c t of th e D eC oncini re se rv a tio n w ithout ac tu a lly w ithdraw ing o r chan g in g it. THE SOURCES said Sens. F ra n k C hurch. D -Idaho, and P aul S arb an es, D-Md , w e re superv isin g the d ra ftin g and w ere in fre q u en t telephone c o n ta c t w ith D eC oncini A ssistan t D e m o c ra tic le a d e r A lan C ran sto n said, how ever, he did not ex p e ct a reso lu tio n to e m e rg e until e a rly next w eek b ec au se th e S en ate does not m e et F rid a y T he S enate, m e a n tim e , c le a re d up its w ork on proposed tre a ty te x t a m e n d m e n ts. Am ong o th e r ac tio n s, it set asid e, by a vote of 59-29, an a n ti-tre a ty a m e n d m e n t th a t would h av e re q u ired P a n a m a to hold a second p le b isc ite on the tr e a tie s On M onday, th e c h a m b e r w as to begin d e b a te on the final resolution of ra tific a tio n A m en d m en ts m ay be offered to th a t resolution a s w ell, how ever. T hey would p re su m a b ly include a second re se rv a tio n D eC on­ cini is planning on U.S. d efe n se rig h ts and, possibly, w h a te v e r the S en ate le a d e rs d ev ise by w ay of r e a s s u ra n c e to P a n a m a Pricing of natural gas still separates houses W ASHINGTON ( UPI ) - W hite House ta lk s pushed con prodding and pep g ressio n al e n e rg y n e g o tia to rs c lo se r to a g re e m e n t on n a tu ra l g as p ricin g T h u rs­ day, but H ouse m e m b e rs a n g rily voted to o rd e r th e co n fe re e s into open session. R ep T h o m as A shley, D-Ohio, c h a ir ­ m an of th e H ouse E n erg y C o m m itte e , said te n ta t iv e a g r e e m e n t h ad b een re a c h e d on so m e key d iffe re n c e s o v er p lan s to re m o v e fed e ra l c o n tro l fro m n a tu ra l gas p ric e s by 1985 But in la te afte rn o o n , th e H ouse voted 371-6 to o rd e r n e g o tia to rs out of s e c r e t sessio n s un d er a d m in istra tio n control and back into open sessions Som e key m e m b e rs of C ongress m e t a t th e W hite H ouse for a th ird tim e T h u rsd ay m o r­ ning and got a " p e p ta lk " fro m P re s i­ den t C a rte r. “ We ought to in sist th a t c o n fe re n c e s ta k e p lace on th e (C apitol) Hill and let th em know th a t w e a r e n e ith e r la ck e y s of nor su b se rv ie n t to the W hite H o u se.” shouted R ep John M oss, D-Calif. A shley sa id m e e tin g s w ith th e a d ­ m in istra tio n to d a te have been only “ in­ fo rm a l d isc u ssio n s,” and th e fo rm a l H ouse-S enate e n e rg y co n fe re n ce would be held in public w hen it re su m e s. invited S E N .JA M E S A bo u rezk D-S D , a S en ate co n feree, w as incensed a t not b e ­ th e W hite H ouse and ing th re a te n e d b la c k m a il” to to rp ed o the P a n a m a C anal tr e a ty if th e se ssio n s w ere not m a d e public. to Sen H enry Ja ck so n . D-W ash , c h a ir ­ m an of th e S en ate E n erg y C o m m itte e , w ent fro m th e W hite H ouse m e e tin g to a closed session erf th e co n g re ssio n a l con­ fe re n c e and told re p o rte rs . “The mood h as chan g ed T h ere is re a l m o v e m e n t.” R eps C la re n c e Brow n, R-Ohio, and Anthony M offett, D-Conn., fo rm a lly asked th e H ouse to fo rc e the en e rg y con­ fe re n c e s to be open. L e a d e rs of th e co n g ressio n al en erg y c o n fe re n ce h ave been m e etin g w ith C a rte r and his en e rg y a d v ise rs o ver the p a s t th re e d ay s in an e ffo rt to break th e y ear-old deadlock on C a r te r ’s proposed national en e rg y p ro g ra m T hu rsd ay , th e p re sid e n t dropped in on a W hite H ouse en e rg y session th a t s ta r t e d a t 8 a rn. J a c k s o n sa id he stopped by “ to sh ak e a few hands and to give a pep ta lk .” C a rte r also se n t E n erg y S e c re ta ry the aftern o o n J a m e s S ch lesin g er energy co n fe re n ce on C apitol Hill. to A S H L E Y S A I D th e c o n f e r e n c e le a d e rs h ave ag re ed to the S en ate con­ fe re e s ' p ro p o sals on ending n a tu ra l g as p rice reg u la tio n by J a n . I, 1985, and on an co n tro lle d -p ric e e sc a la tio n ra te th a t would ra n g e from 3 5 to 4 p e rc e n t above the inflation ra te . B ut A shley said th e H ouse w ill be “ p re tty in siste n t" on adopting its own version of language th a t pu ts th e biggest burden of h igher p ric e s on in d u stria l g as c u s to m e rs T hat issue is am ong s e v e ra l r e m a in ­ ing to be w orked out by the c o n fe re n ce le ad e rs, who m u st the w hole thing to the full c o n fe re n ce for ratific a tio n , then su b m it W hite H ouse p re ss s e c r e ta ry Jo d y P ow ell sa id C a rte r " i s q u ite pleased a t r e p o r ts h e h a s th e m e e tin g s in th e W hite H ouse ” r e c e iv e d fro m news capsules West Germany supports neutron bom b policy BONN, W est G erm any (U P I) — Chancellor H elm ut Schm idt said Thursday he supports P resid en t C a rte r’s decision to postpone production of the neutron bomb but is still concerned about a Soviet m ilitary buildup Schmidt told P arliam en t in a governm ent d eclaration he w elcom es C a rte r’s d eferm en t on m anufacturing the bomb th at kills people but does not destroy buildings "a s a contribution to a policy of a rm s lim itation ” But he said an increase in the num erical superiority of the Soviet-led W arsaw P a c t in “ some a re a s causes us co n cern .” Possible IRA, Red Brigades link probed ROME (U P I) — Police said Thursday they a re looking into the possibility of an Irish connection with the Red B rigades, kidnappers of ex- P re m ie r Aldo Moro. “ We a re following all tra ils th at have em erged in Italy and abroad for identifying the Red B rigadiers and establishing th eir connections with te rro rist gangs operating abroad, such as (W est G erm an y ’s) Red Army Faction and som e Irish g rou ps,’’ a source close to the investigation said In B elfast, a spokesm an for the IRA’s Provisional wing dism issed the theory as “ purely speculative” and said th at any connection betw een the P ro v is io n a l and political factions in Italy is "pu rely a political b a s is /' Israelis refuse U.N. order to vacate key village BEIR U T, Lebanon (U PI) — Israeli troops Thursday refused U N. orders to pull back from a key border village in south Lebanon and residents said Israeli bulldozers w ere building roads near the town. The reported Israeli reluctan ce to pull out of the Shebaa are a , despite Isra e l’s w ithdraw al from other towns to the south and west, followed rep o rts over the weekend that the occupation forces w ere converting a nearby hilltop into a heliport Critics attack Sadat poliicy, favor end to talks CAIRO, Egypt i U P I) — A sm all band of p a rliam en tarian s staged an un­ precedented attack on P resid en t Anwar S ad at’s foreign policy Thursday, but the governm ent rejected th eir dem ands to cut off direct peace negotiations with Israel The c ritic s also took issue with the proposed supply of A m erican-m ade F-5 w arplanes to Egypt on grounds the planes w ere obsolete and called for improved relations with the Soviet Union and hardline Arab countries that oppose S ad at’s peace initiative. Most reflected growing im patience with the lack of results. A few blunt­ ly advocated m ilitary preparation s for war. House panel votes to block loans to South Africa WASHINGTON (U PI) — A House Banking subcom m ittee voted 10-5 T hursday to block any fu rth er cred it guarantees or loans to the Republic of South Africa by the E xport-Im port Bank At the sam e tim e, the subcom m ittee ended previous restrictions on Ex- Im loans and gu arantees for the People's Republic of China. Both actions cam e as the subcom m ittee approved a five-year extension of the bank, which m akes or guaran tees loans to other nations. The bank would expire on Sept. 30 without the legislation to sales, earnings DOW J O N E S A V E R A G E 30 I n d u s t r i a l s 7 7 5. 21 Closrd a1 197• Stock rising attributed * i m N e w Y o rk T im e * NEW YORK - Stocks surged hig h er a c ro s s a broad fro n t Thursday in the heaviest trading of the y e a r with a strong rally that caught Wall S treet by su r­ prise A nalysts attrib u ted the brisk advance to an upswing in new- c ar sales, im provem ent of the d o l l a r f o r e i g n - c u r r e n c y dealings and som e better-than- expected earnings reports. in Gaining m om entum during the afternoon, the Dow Jones in­ du strial averag e ran ahead 8 92 points to 775.21 Gaining stocks outnum bered those losing by 5 to 2 . i. M i editorials p a y : IheBoMBThreat T h e D a il y T e x a n Page 4 □ F r id a y , April 14, 1978 Jimmy’s big bomb By William F. Buckley Concerning President Carter s ap­ parent decision not the neutron bomb (ER — Enhanced Radia­ tion Bomb), a few observations: to deploy 1) OUT OF curiosity, just who does Mr Carter think he is? Or — more to the point — just who do we think we are0 The president of the United States is vested by the Constitution with the ti­ de of commander-in-chief and with the authority appropriate to the discharge of his responsibilities. But he is commander-in-chief subject to certain supervision Just where the line is drawn was debated as recently as in 1973 when the Case-Church Bill was passed, limiting the authority of the to commit U.S. commander-in-chief military forces to a certain number of days, after which the approval of Congress is required It is implicit in all the talk surroun­ ding the strategic arms limitation con­ ferences that the President cannot, ac­ ting alone, make strategic dispositions of grave consequence. By deciding not to deploy the neutron bomb he is doing exactly that, and the question is: Are we obliged to accept the president’s caprice as a fait accompli. There is certainly temptation not to do so Because there is a preponderance of expert opinion on the other side The president’s own top advisers argued in favor of the ERS. The implications of Carter s decision are enormous. It can be plausibly contended that the ERs are the critical instrument by which the Soviet advantage in Europe could be resisted on the battlefield. Surely a deci­ sion so basic as to whether to defend Europe is a decision that should be reached, in a self-governing communi­ ty, more broadly than by the afflatus (rf a sin g le m an w ith title of commander-in-chief* the OR 2), IS IT more correct to say that President Carter was influenced other than by inner meditation? If so, by whom’’ Ever since Joe McCarthy, it has been risky even to frame the question, but here goes: How influential was the Soviet campaign against the ERs0 Or let us put it another way. Assuming the Soviet Union had not mounted its cam­ its circu its paign. energizing all worldwide, triggering the sympathetic detonations of the spastic left and the pacifists, would Carter have reached the same decision9 Somehow one doubts it. The countries of western Europe, heavily influenced by Communist opinion, tossed the ball to Carter, with the noble exception of West Germany, which publicly recommended deploying the ERs The assumption has been that the leaders of these countries desired Carter to impose the ERs on NATO, relieving the western European nations of direct responsibility for af­ fronting their indigenous Communists and fellow travellers. Still the question remains. How critical was the influence of the Soviet Union in Carter’s thinking? * 1978 Washington Star Syndicate Statute should define habitability To m illions of tenant* across the state, Wednesday's .Supreme Court decision acknowledging an understood guarantee of habitablity com es as Rood news It should also serve as the impetus necessary for the Texas leg isla tu re to draft comprehensive legislation defining habitability for tenants and landlords alike, Muling in favor of a single tenant who claimed his landlord breached contract by allowing an apartment to go to the dogs, the court set a prece dent by which many future landlord tenant disputes may be settled Basically, the court found that every time a landlord rents an apartment, there exists an understood agreement that the dwelling will be main­ tained in livable condition* ALTHOUGH THE PULL implications of the ruling are not known yet, the court has implied that all tenants are entitled to safe and sanitary rented homes and apartments That is a much needed assurance for those tenants who have suffered outrageously on account of calloused landlord* and prolonged exposure to mildewed carpets, broken windows and roach platoon* Now, the court has said, tenants can sue to bring the apartment or house up to tolerable condition* Although the court made a strong ruling for tenants, it did not define ex actly what was and what was not habitable That chore now rests with the Legists turf For several years, legislators have attempted to do this on their own with little success Heal estate lobbies understandably are opposed to the conc ept, and have worked hard to prevent the passage of comprehensive laws protecting unwary tenants from unsc rupulous landlords AFTER WEDNESDAY*! decision, though, it is no longer a question of whether a dwelling must be maintained habitable the court said it must Im- The* question which remains to be solved is what exactly constitutes habitability, and that s a question the legislature Itself must answer The tM**t and quickest way for the Legislature to handle this problem is for Speaker Hilly Clayton to empanel a special study com m ittee to draft model legislation which can be considered when the next session begins in January Political dilly-dallying on this issue will only produce an onslaught of court cases, with only a general judicial precedent for a guide In effect, the courts would be allowed to usurp powers which should Im1 the exclusive prerogative of representatives and senators - defining habitability for tenants and landlords alike The Supreme Court has ruled The precedent is set And < Jayton can in­ sure thai the rights of tenant* and landlords are adequately protected and up to date by creating this special com m ittee D M Economy By L*on«rd Silk : ITesident C arters • NKW YORK -anti inflation speech contained only (mc .surprise the assignment ul * additional duties” to Hubert 8 Strauss as his special counselor on inflation, with / specific authority to speak for me in the public interest ’ I < arter was quick lo list screen credits > nd roles for hts other inflation fig h ters W Michael tltumenthal, ♦Treasury s e c r e ta r y , C h arles L Schul tie chief economic adviser, and Harry Bosworth, directs of the wage did price council However, he left no doubt that Strauss had n o w become his alter ego on the inflation front I THIS IS AN Important move not only apolitically but psychologically It con Mittiis publicly what some high officials had been saying of Carter privately Blat he has not felt comfortable and .secure with his sophisticated and professionally v I serf trained economic ad On crucial m atters of economic policy, Carter could neither afford the luxury of turning to any of his Georgia political advisers and helpers, nor dis Card theoretical technical and proficiency of his economists the Hut In turning to the Texas bom and politically experienced Strauss, the president has chosen an Inflation counselor W ith a southern accent and style who has already proved himself sympathetic to the business community He also has shown himself capable of the kind of toughness and swift maneuver associated with Strauss * long time Texas political associate, former Gov John H Caudally. Presi­ dent Nixon s No I inflation fighter SKEPTICS MAY question whether Strauss will bt* as effective in fighting inflation as he was in settling other at the cost of problems for Carter JO i* m b ite ig h a h .. r n ((SSIAN'OAY Ai I IM Cf ANO 6 A fO U * J fA tU D A Y . .. 6 0 0 /0 \TlYF AOA A ( a w HOV fe (M AV A m n Anr tx&AU , r ^ N A T i t f r y . . I (elfMina (AHI iA( s n is r s if ivo ry# \ ANI f t - i t Af AS M M V s a t K no K l m o im A M NCC ( U t r m (, cm s h a w n U t e O L # M C A /1 A f 'T S * A f C A A tn z A S X ! MST V S / N 6 I E S 8 I A N S TfH fO TY /tS b. HA ST H U H STAnAf, SNOUT MAIA, HAtD c / A n A e s ... HNH t o v H a t HAIK I C o rf M l A f - l f & t f D j rn A H it At' Inflation, energy sinking dollar key concerns feeding inflation He helped get the coal strike settled but at a wage cost of 39 percent over three years, and he provid­ ed the ll S steel industry with protec­ tionist that per­ refer **nce prices” mitted their own prices to rise Hut politics is the art not just of the possible but of the currently crucial, and the non ideological Strauss, a m il l i o n a i r e businessman and lawyer, now w ill seek to apply his persuasive talents to the new task of arresting and reversing the rate of rise in prices and wages lf this is to be achieved without violating the president’s pledge of "vol un ter ism,” it will require a perfor­ mance of jawboning and armtwisting worthy of an earlier Texas politician. President Lyndon H Johnson IT IS WORTH noting that Johnson's until his un­ jawboning was effective willingness to ask Congress to raise tax­ es to pay for the climbing costs of the Vietnam war caused discipline on the wage and price front to crumble The current risk to Carter's anti- mflation effort, according to his conser­ vative and business critics, is a similar lack of discipline in fiscal policy Carter s economists argue that his ad­ m inistration s fiscal policy, unlike President Johnson s at the start of the Vietnam war is not so expansive as to destroy his effort to slow down wage and price increases The country still has 6 2 percent unemployment and is operating at only 80 percent of capacity. Carter told the American Society of Newspaper Editors this week that * the budget that I propose for our next fiscal is both tight and capable of year meeting the nations most pressing needs " HOWEVER, THE fiscal 197V budget, calling for a deficit of $61 billion, was presented last January at a time when looked the unemployment problem somewhat worse and inflation problem somewhat better than they do now Though Carter did not say so directly, he implied it in his talk to the newspaper editors, and his new Federal Reserve chairman, G William Miller, has stressed the shift in inflation and un employment priorities the M eanwhile, however. Congress, spurred by lobby groups, has shown a tendency to break discipline in both ex­ penditures and taxation The president s talk was notable for his commitment to hold the line on the scheduled budget deficit of $61 billion against an unruly Congress HK WILL ALSO have to combat special interests on a wide range of other issues, including hospital costs. Umber cutting meat imports and air­ line deregulation His proposal to freeze top federal ex­ ecutive pay and ask private co r­ porations to do likewise will probably result in relatively little public grumbl­ ing. particularly from its own ex­ ecutives Some business corporations, especially the most conspicuous, may well make a public display of the willingness of their executives to follow the government’s example — as an ex­ ample of cooperation to their own workers But Carter is going to have a lot more trouble in getting the unions to accept his holddown of federal wages as a model for their behavior CARTER IS NOT in cid e n ta lly , proposing to set a 5 5 percent increase in federal civil service pay as a guideline for private wage settlements Rather, he wants business and labor to hold wage increases in 1978 to less than their average gain in the last two years The president is going to try to get employers to hold their price increases to the same standard The aim will be to chip half a percentage point to I percen­ tage point off the rate of wage and price increase. Perhaps what was most important about the president's message was not any specific thing but the news that he is now focusing on the economic problem in all its ramifications THE SPEECH WAS light on the inter­ national side, which may be the most crucial area, with the threat to the dollar and the entire world monetary system But he made clear his deep con­ linkages among the cern over the problems of inflation, energy and the weak dollar A Cabinet level committee headed by Secretary of Commerce Juanita M Kreps will start laying plans for an ex­ port drive E n e rg y S e c r e t a r y J a m e s R Schlesinger will relaunch the drive in Congress for an energy- bill And the president will prepare himself for what shapes up as a critical economic summit meeting in Bonn next July - a meeting aimed at finding a way out for the endangered western economies c IIT* New York Times our erorr Thursday's article on the Michael Murphey concert to be sponsored by the Texas Cowboys stated the organiza­ tion hopes to raise $1,300 from the con­ cert Ttu* Cowboys actually plan to take in $12,000. which will go to the Austin Association of Retarded Citizens T h e D a i l y T e x a n I Un Malone Karen Hastings ............... -.........-............ ...... ......................... Editor Managing Editor ........................... ... tu n a Khrlieh, Victoria Iam* Assistant Managing Editors Harvey Neville Assistant to Uh* E d ito r.............. News Editor .. .............................. ..lau ra Tuma Associate News Editor ...... ............................. ....................».............. Nan Powers ................................... Features Editor Sports Editor ............ Assot late Sports E d ito r................... ......................... Entertainment Editor Photo Editor ............ Images Editor Supplements Editor ................... Campus Activities E d ito r,..., General Reporters Gene A shlock. Boh Bersano, Cathy Brooks, Carole Chiles Mark Dooley. Beth Forking, Christy Hoppe Mary McMullen Michael P ern, Charlie Reese, Melissa Segrest Mike Stephens. Janet Wilson Debbie Wot .user Jay Allen Osmond Henning!leld Mary Day Mike Smith Monty Jones M arne C.ugenhetm ............... ............... Issue Editor News Assistant Editorial Assistant Entertainment Assistant Sports Assistants Features Assistant Make up Fail I or Wire Editor Copy Editors May Helmet** .... .............. ISSUE STAFF Laureen T Cheroow Don Howard Earl Austin Mark Pritchard .. ...... ................ Mark Goodson. David Umber .................................................Ann Spillman .... ...................................... Anne Garvey ............. ....................... Steven Fay Kitee Berger, Eugene Laycock. Davis Tucker Alice Aanstoos. Jann Snell ............... Berke Breathed. Russell Smith .... Mike Laur debt a Re Ingold Artists Photographers Ginger Bergh) i t*j»\n*‘hl 1*7* T r i* ' SUnSirt Cubit* ,Oh>iin Ktyrndw (MKI til any }v*rl til U t ' puMh alit*, i> I »r> itu hi tty) without I hr expresN p m etssm n al Texan Student Cubit* alit i|>rvw*i« CW IU,!. r*rtj» art Um« Ar UWM.* rn liar wmr* «* (Mr 'tow .* Mb- Hwwrotv tWiHBfijijtom* tar HbhbNI Bl tto y to bt (tor TV**. Mb* * I’MMb Bb b- »*■***« •* tv*"*.*** t*»ti.-r» Carter troubles press By James Reston WASHINGTON — In the last couple of weeks, President C arter has been criticized more severely by the press at home and abroad than at any other time since he entered the White House For example, he made a most solemn and impressive speech on the economic problems of the nation before the American Society of Newspaper Editors this week Secretary of State here the adm inistration’s Vance defined foreign policy before the sam e audience. But at no point during their formal addresses were they applauded on any single point by the most responsi­ ble editors of the nation s newspapers THIS RAISES some fundamental questions both about the president and the press Is there something about Carter personally that creates doubt about his capacity for leadership? Are his policies wrong or poorly presented, or merely misunderstood? Or is the press underestimating the m agnitude and com plexity of the problems before him. and blaming him for problems involve the that also Congress and public opinion beyond his control0 Since he will be president over at the White House at least until Jan 20. 1981, and since these doubts obviously erode his authority at home and abroad, these questions have to be faced. AT HOME, he has been blamed by Big Business for the inflation, by Big Labor for the unemployment by the farmers for prices that are too low and by con­ sumers that prices are too high Also he is blamed by blacks that his new policy for the cities is too cheap and meager, and by the white middle class that he is taxing them out of existence and even threatening the financial stability and moral integrity of the American middle class family. Abroad, he is being condemned by the Soviets for being too tough, by the Chinese for not being tough enough on Moscow, by the Japanese for Limiting their exports of steel and TVs. by George Meany of the AFL-CIO for not limiting foreign exports enough THE AMERICAN press has dealt with all these problems one at a time Reporters are a little like doctors They hear mainly from people who have a pain and get a lot of news from “ losers" who have a grievance. From Big Business on inflation, from Big Labor on unemployment, from farmers running their tractors up on Capitol Hill, from the labor lobby and the Israeli lobby and the Arab oil lobby — Carter is getting a hard time. All of this makes "news” but doesn’t make much sense The men who come forward to speak for a vast continental country like the United States can define policies but cannot really compel the Congress to accept them This is the point that may be underestimated by both the press and the Allies — they simply do not understand the com­ plications of the American federal political system. THE PRESIDENT of the United States can suggest, as Carter has, what to do about inflation, unemployment, education, abortion, health care at home or overseas, how to deal with strategic weapons, the cruise missile or the neutron artillery warheads, but the Congress may have a different notion and these days, it usually does. The Congress wants to know why Carter ha sn t come forward with an answer to alt these questions MAYBE THIS is Jimmy Carter’* major problem at home and abroad. He is very persuasive when he is in a small room. expressing his convictions and yearnings to two or three people. Even Chancellor Helmut Schmidt of West Germany testifies to this, but when t arter talks to a large audience, there is something about his voice and style that loses them, and makes them wonder what he means and where he is going Accordingly. Carter is not only get- ung a bad press these days, but getting into serious political trouble at home and abroad. Even his most enthusiastic supporters complain that he does the right thing many times but does it in the worst possible way. The newspaper editors seemed troubl­ ed about all this. At this time of the year. this is a recklessly beautiful city, and the flowers that bloom in the spring bloom with more tra-la than most places, but even so. Jimmy Carter didn t send them away very happy * I§78 New York Time* Rights apply even to those who express hateful thoughts Friday, April 14, 1978 □ THE DAILY TEXAN ^ P a g e 5 ' "m ...... - w began publishing the Saturday Press. It was a m uckraking new spaper, making sensational charges that local officials w ere in league with gam blers and other crim inals The paper also printed some crude anti Sem itism Minnesota had a law allowing the sup­ pression of “ m alicious, scandalous and d efam atory” periodicals Officials in­ voked it in court and got an injunction that closed the Saturday P ress a fte r just nine issues The paper had few* ad m irers to m ourn it But som ething happened O ther p u b lish e rs, u n sy m p a th e tic though they w ere with the yellow jo u r­ nalism of the Saturday P ress, began to see a troubling precedent in its death Col R obert R McCormick, the strong­ m inded p u b lis h e r of th e C h icag o Tribune, led the way in attacking the Minnesota law as a danger to all the press The New York Tim es and others jo in e d in T he C h icag o T r ib u n e ’s law yers took up N e a r's case and c arried it to the Supreme Court. THE COURT heard the case on Jan 30, 1931 Justice Brandeis was the one Jew ish m em ber of the court then, and according to one report, counsel for the suite hoped especially to im press him in interrupted with the nasty natu re of the Saturday the arg u m en t P re ss But e a rly to criticize the Brandeis idea of prior re stra in ts on a new spaper because it m ade charges of corruption By a vote of 5 4 the Suprem e Court set aside the Saturday P ress Chief Ju stice Hughes, writing for the m ajority, established the constitutional rule disfavoring prior restrain ts of the press injunction against the THE STORY of the N ear case ii lustrates the wonderful way in which Am erican consititutional law can work The courts, dealing with a m ost un­ popular or unlikely party, m ay build th a t p ro te c t e v e ry o n e ’s p rin cip les freedom It follows that judges m ust not be put off by dislike of p a rtic u la r in­ dividuals or they m u st ideologies, worry about the larg er precedent And that is the problem in Skokie When the Nazis proposed to m arch. the town authorities quickly passed three ordinances The first and m ost significant of these requires a perm it for any parade of public assem bly of m ore than 50 persons The applicant for a perm it must have $300,000 in liability in­ and $50,000 in property dam age surance - unless the authorities waive the rule. Such a permit system , with its huge insurance req uirem ent, is a flagrant in­ vitation to suppress freedom of speech Just im agine opponents of the Vietnam to hold a public w ar being unable m eeting in som e city unless they could get a perm it and produce $350,000 in in­ surance, IT IS HARDLY surprising th at die If it ACLU challenged th a t ordinance w i t h s t o o d t e s t s , o f f i c i a l s l e g a l everyw here would have a new device to prevent the public expression of un­ popular opinion "If the is any principle of there Constitution im peratively that m ore calls for atta c h m e n t than any o th e r,” Justice Holmes said, 'it is the principle not free thought for of free thought those who agree with us but freedom for tho thought th at we h a te .” We should be especially w ary of punishing law yers or others who defend the right to express hateful thoughts They m ake sure that, som eday, our own beliefs will be safe from attack « 1978 New York Time* Freedom of speech By Anthony Lewis WASHINGTON — The proposal by Am erican Nazis to m arch through the predom inantly Jew ish town of Skokie 111., has aroused an intense debate about the lim its of freedom in this country Approxim ately 4.000 m em bers of the A m erican Civil L iberties Union resign­ ed becau se ACLU law y ers arg u ed against a ban on the m arch, and m any m ore apparently let their m em berships run out Why should a free society protect the right to advocate a m urderous and a n ti­ id eo lo g y 7 The a n sw e rs d e m o c ra tic there a re practical usually given are philosophical. But beyond John Milton and Thom as Je ffe r­ son. reasons arising from the natu re of our Constitution and legal process Consider a bit of legal history reasons IN in Minneapolis, a m an nam ed J M N ear S E P T E M B E R 1 927. firing line % Free speech When Beverly Bryant and Barry Meyer referred to yelling in a theater, they were inaccurate in at least two fire respects. First, the yelling must be false - lf there really was a fire, the speaker could hardly be faulted. Secondly, the yelling must cause a panic — if everyone just sat there, the speaker could hardly be punished If you don't believe me, you might consult Justice Holmes in Sebenck v. United States. Happily Bryant and Meyer did not make the third classic error — the theater need not be crowded (contrary to the headline writer for Buckley s re­ cent editorial). Hopefully now the m asses will not abuse Mr, Holmes’ famous example ami the mem bers of Charles Alan Wright’s constitutional law class, who learned the hard way, can rest easier By the way, the Nazis’ march in Skokie Is constitutionally protected speech whether or not it is approved by Bryant and Meyer, the JDL, m yself or anyone else. We should be eternally vigilant against attem pts to check the expressions of opinions that we loathe and believe to be fraught with death ... * (Holmes again, in Abrams v. United States). The Jewish community can best prove its moral superiority over the Nazis by ignoring them altogether and respecting their First Amendment rights. Tim Fleming Law School Blue Jean Daze I would like to commend Anime Hogan for her unique idea of declaring a Gay Blue Jean Day, so that anyone wearing blue jeans all day long would be .suspect of being gay, and therefore acquire a little knowledge of what the gay ex ­ perience is like. I wonder why other campus organizations haven’t picked up on this idea and used it to their own ends. May I suggest that the black student service organization® declare a Black Blue Jean Day, so that anyone wearing blue jeans can be honest­ ly mistaken for a black person. This is only a start. We could also stage a sim ilar event for any other oppressed campus minority ... and why stop at blue jeans? We could have a Young Republican Leisure Suit Day, or a Fraternity Button Down Lapel Day, or a Walt Rostow Receding Hairline Day. The possibilities are endless. Dan R. Barton KTF Which way? A Wednesday Firing Line letter stated that “whether they call that deity God, or Jehovah, or Krishna, or Buddha or whatever is really a small m atter,” Will all due respect to a person’s right to believe what he wants to, I would like to say that it is a natural concept that all roads lead to Rome, i.e. that one religion is as good as another This prevalent attitude today is the result of ex­ istentialist thought and the abandonment of absolute values. If there a re no absolutes in the universe then it really doesn’t m a tte r how one worships God The problem rn that Jesus Christ said I arn the way. and the truth, and the life; no one com es to the F ath er but through m e ” (Jn. 14 g) That is a pretty strong sta te m e n t and it deals with absolutes E ith er C hrist is who He says He is. or He's not If not, then m aybe it doesn't m a tte r, but if He is the way ... Concerning C hrist, P e te r said ‘th e re is salvation in no one else; for there is no other nam e under heaven that has been given among m en, by which we m ust be sav ed .” (A cts 4 12> This too is an absolute statem ent, worthy of our considera­ tion lf P e te r and Jesu s w ere lunatics, then one can go ahead and worship how ever one w ants — but if what they said is true, then the way is clear. Steve Manifold M echanical E ngineering Cartoons offensive It is quite obvious that The Daily Texan is not geared toward the interest ct m any students on this cam pus It b is repeatedly, throughout the year, shown offensive cartoons that a re in very bad taste The cartoon titles “ Walk softly, c arry big prom ises’ (In Tuesday s Texan) is a prim e example Stereotyped pictures such as those were shown in newspapers very’ early in our history, but this is 1978! Nothing is implied in the cartoon but ig­ norance There may be a place for such cartoons. But it is not in an unprotessional newspaper like The Daily Texan. From now on we will not read the Texan but will do som ething m ore useful with it. Soodra Oil worth RTF Beverly Dilworth Finance Pot smokers unite Pot sm okers should fight back. Since our governm ent gives every indication thai it will persist in supporting the poisoning of citizens. I think a little civil disobedience is in o rd e r. th a t e v e ry o n e w ho o p p o se s o u r governm ent's insane course of action, plant a handful of m arijuana seeds a day. I su g g e s t If even half the seeds, which can be inconspicuously dropped onto any likely looking plot of ground (be it a flower bed. vacant lot or a highway right of way), germ inate and grow, there will be an abundance of pot, and dependence on tainted M exican m arijuana will be ended And furtherm ore, such a strategy would force drug enforcem ent officials to use their resources in this country (in a necessarily m ore benign w ay), and ultim ately, to capitulate (if our resistan ce is m assive and overw helm ing). So let us m obilize L et us here in Austin show people how to resist a crim inal public policy. P lan t a handful of seeds to­ day. Tony Conigaro L iberal Arts r r r f < f f < < r r r r r r < < t r < J > > t> > > > > > J > ) The Basic Ligthfoot with latigo leather straps and insoles. Simple, comfortable, durable, and only $12.50. Resolable at Footgear as long as you own them for only $5.00. FOOTGEAR H o m e of R oots. B irk e n s to c k an d o th e r in c r e d ib le fo o tg e a r 2200 Guadalupe Austin. Texas 78705 Hours: Mon Thurs Fri.-Sat IO A M. IO A M SPM 6 PM FYec Parking at 22nd St San Antonio N- \ ~ \ - V- V . \ _ V- | d > > * I - , - f f t e ■ , B E A U T Y B E C O M E S YO U it ii It inth riilim liz n / skin ra n - h\ h.rno Im s z Io >J £ A M S ( r T K T U G S LOWER LEVEL DOBIE MALL 4 7 7 - 6 3 9 1 LEVI’S MOVIN’ ON JEANS e n tire stock 20% o ff WOMEN’S T-SHIRT *3.98 WOMEN’S TOPS PANTS & SKIRTS *3.98 WE'RE " R O U N D I N G O U T " REGISTRATION and moving to the SPECIAL EKEN TS CENTER Beginning SUMMER, 1978 Office o f the Registrar 471-7701 HAIN. APP ©OIL HO C M O H STF MOI mo M i s t r v a t i v e s M C N NI K H Y M U SA r u n A r f * THE FINEST oil FOR COOKING. SALADS A BAKING $2 .4 9 GT l mn i »/* MRS. NELSON’S BAUSCH & LOMB (Jr) Soft Contact Lenses ate Available at TSO* We care how you look at life. T e x a s S t a t e Oi T I C A L •Available .it most T S O Offices Please call in advoke. N o . 5 J e f f e r s o n S q u a r e call 462-8846 ORANGES G ood *Food * 5 5 0 5 AIRPORT * 9 0 0 W,29t h St . ♦ H O I W.5t h St . * 2 7 2 0 HANCOCK * 1 0 0 2 W .I 2 t h St . * 2 A t h & GUADALUPE Stores Austin Area TSO Locations 2900 A West Anderson Ixmk- • C aprtai Plaza • Westgate Mail • 133 W Ottorf at S Congress 907 Congress Avenue • 215 Springtown Shopping Center (San Marcos) Open Saturdays until I .OO p.m. P g jje 6 □ t h e D A IL Y T E X A N □ F r id a y , A p ril 14, 1978 Introducing N o w Q u ality Mexican Food in Austin Grand Opening April 13-17 El Cerrito Mexican Restaurant (formerly Del Prado) SOO Lydia at E. 8th 477-9006 II Carrus Specializing in Mexican Ft tad Steakti and Seafood Food To Go Beer and Wine Served Free Nachoe with your meal (ant/ order per tahiti I 7‘H c r m T T T r n r r r r r m T y Let yourself to Pizza' Pick your pizza savings. PENNY PIZZA. I• m • m4 9* • rn 7:10. A BICYLIST rode by. “ Hey w atcha cam ping out for*’” ‘ OU tickets for next y ea r!” “ Hey, you Ronnie called b e tte r get l i ne! ” The in bicyclist rode away, laughing. ‘Guess he doesn’t want to th e g a m e , ’’ R o n n i e se e shrugged, grinning. I could tell I was with a bud­ ding com ic, a real Woody Allen-type He even looked like him. The next person cam e by. "Watcha waiting for9” “A w hile'" Pat, a dark­ haired fellow with a curly handlebar mustache, said. Another comedian! I loved it! 7 40 We discussed the possibility of another Civil War if another line was sta r­ ting on the other side. I sneez­ ed I knew I shouldn’t have washed my hair just before I came. By now, I was waiting for I , k k . , . Libby to arrive with my food with a growing gnawing con­ cern Knowing Libby (as I have, for m any y ears), it would be just like her to take the $3 and hop on down to Southwest Airlines for the 8:00 flight to Guadalajara, spurred on with the energy from MY Schlotzskv’s—! MORE PEOPLE ASKED us (I was beginning to think this was the least publicized event of the year), “ What are you waiting for'’’’ Ronnie did his OU thing again "Don’t blame me if it’s a national championship game and you miss it! You know, it won t be on TV. " What else were we waiting P at: “ E eyore’s B irthday for’’ P arty." Bonnie “ This is the line to 311 next add Accounting year. Maida “ This is the line to DR OP Accounting 311 next year ” W H E R E WAS L I B B Y ? Almost to the airport by now, no d o u b t , t r a i l i n g m y Schlotzsky’s behind her 8:00. The T ow er rang. Who’s th e re " I said. I was faint from an extrem e case of ma l n u t r i t i o n . Li bby w as probably on the plane, in a seat by the window, of course From somewhere I whiffed the sensurround smell of a sausage—a nasal mirage, I decided My neck hurt. Hy hand hurt, my hips hurt- bv n o w. W OR L D! I H A T E D T H E 9 40 A couple of "sm all’ ( S t e v e M a r t i n g u y s jargonese) cam e up "Hey, man, what are you waiting for?" Pat: “ The sun." RONNIE: “ ACTUALLY, we’re in an art class We’re going to draw the sun when it comes up." Libby finally brought me my Schlotzsky’s Well, half of a half of a half ... well, that’s better than NOTHING. isn t it? 12:05. A thunderbolt split the air. The storm arrived "I was melted by a lightning bolt once," Ronnie observed. “ It s not too bad. Some parts are still edible ... I had heart­ burn for a week, though OU! How 'bout a tip?? l f yo u kn o w of s o m e th in g h a p p e n in g on o r a ro u n d c a m p u s th a t th e U n iv e rs ity c o m m u n ity w o u ld be in ­ te re s te d in, g iv e th e T e x a n a c a ll a t 471-4591 and ask the news e d ito r. A g re a t m a n y s to rie s th a t fo r a p p e a r in The D a ily T e x a n g e t s ta rte d in ju s t th a t m a n n e r. o* ^ “ WE ’RE WAITING for Playboy interviews." Bonnie announced "Playing chase,” as she left Donald O’Connor here any m inute!" We got into m easurem ents 60-20-60." “ 40-40-40 -" 80-80-00, Liz said “ Blirn- pie contest ” Two p o l i c e c a r s we n t speeding down the Drag one behi nd t he o t h e r , s i r e n s screaming By this time, Bonnie was sick of OU, everyone was sick of moths and spiders, and rain had begun to fall Bonnie c o n tin u a to think up more ideas as to why we were there. "THIS IS THE east and in the Rain, ll Gene Kelly and crew of “Smgin P art 3 30 a.rn When the Trash Patrol came out, one woman started haggling about sleep mg students blocking the door People rolled out of the way of her smashing feet Move' M O V E ' M o v e t h e TRASH'” f o r After everyone finally went this di st ur bance, to sleep, awaking to a saner world ah. except for the fall­ ing pigeon eggs As I reflected on the homicidal, genocidal, and suicidal impulses of pre­ pubescent pigeons, Jot' said, "Hm mm , breakfast." 6:15. WE WERK roused by an A PO g u y w ho w a s pleasantly re m in isc e n t of Chief Sharkey's favorite tall, drawl i ng ensign. Finally, after a wait of infinite jest, we J GO T O T R T I C K E T S ! Was it worth it? Well, all V. can say is, if tin* concert is HALF as much fun or, a( least, half as unusual—as waiting in line for the tickets was we should have a WILD and CRA A WILD AND; Pardon m e; ('R A Z y wh i l e I AAA * CHOO! I wh i l e time' Former UT student dances for hobby By CATHY BROOKS General Reporter Roy Lozano may have started dan­ cing late, but he made up for it quickly. Lozano, a form er University stu­ dent and dancer with El Grupo U niversitario de Danza y Arte Folkloric©, now dances with the Ballet Folkloric© de Mexico in Mex­ ico City. At 17, Lozano began taking classical ballet in Corpus Christi After he got over the initial shock of too few males in the class, he began to enjoy it, he said "I liked what it did to the body." LOZANO, who has been with the Ballet Folkloric© for six months, was also the first North American to dance with the group’s touring com­ pany. The group also has a resident company that perform s solely in Mexico City Two months after Lozano took the entrance exam to be adm itted into the group, he was dancing with the touring company Lozano said he was always in­ terested in dancing, but it was never m ore than a hobby. Even now, he does not consider it to bi* a career, he said He also has a part-time job with the U.S. Embassy in Mexico Ci­ ty, working as a translator and do­ ing office work DANCING is "something I love to do, because I feel it inside. I like the stage I like the lights I like perfor­ ming. ’ he said, But for most dancers, dancing is a full-time career. "It s their life," Lozano explained The dancer’s to d a n c e h i s "professionalism ” he said The dancers are proud of what they do, Lozano said total devotion a c c o u n t s f o r t he bal l et Da nc i ng wi t h is different from what he had done before, because of the differences in choreography, stage presentations the training, techniques, he and said. THE BALLET requires a lot of ac­ ting, he said "You re not just mov­ ing your body, you’re feeling,” he said The first performances can be frightening, he said, hut “ once the music starts you forget about all your fears You have to concentate on your steps ” "Once you’re on stage, it s the real thing It’s fantastic.” laizano has just returned from touring Bong Kong aud Mexico and is in Austin because he has some free time He said he wanted to see his friends and help El Grupo U niversitario de Danza y Arte Folkloric^ rehearse for an up­ coming performance, THE BALLET "hardly gives us anytime off.” he said The group rehearses from 9 a rn. to 3 p m. dai­ ly, with a IU minute break at noon The dancers' only chance for social •> I . activities is usually in the early* afternoon before perform ances,* Lozano said, becusc they are usually; too tilt'd afterw ard Lozano cam e to the University in fall 1975, as a transfer biology m a­ jo r, Lozano and som e friends star ta i a dance group at the Univer­ sity. Lozano said he wanted to start* a group, the Universitario de Dania y Arte Folkloric©, because he hated to leave the folklore group he danc­ ed with before coming to Austin. There was no presentation of the Mexican culture through the arts in Austin on an adult level,” before the formation of the group, he said The group performed for Univer­ sity o r g a n i z a t i o n s , b a n q u e t s , recitals, in dormitories, in the malls and schools. Luzano said biology is still his major interest and he will return to the University to get his degree. “ I can’t m ake dance a career,” he', said. 4 I ? ? & % us: I , A .t if A i ' V Agr A . ' . v • Canoe the W hite W ater of the Texas Hill Country Located on the Guadalupe River fo r re s e rv a tio n s c a ll 24 h rs . in A u s tin 477-1239 f t ■ # TA I W I I I V I A? YOU A R I IN VITED TO ATTEND A SEMINAR DISCUSSING PROOF O f PAST LIV TS ANO WHAT THIS CAN MEAN TO YOU THERE WILL BE A LIVI D I MONS! RATION OE SOMEONE R f CALI INO A PAST LIPE Que m o n e nd A n th e r period Howard Johnsons N o rth Interregional BLUE R O O M B OO P M A P R IL SI IEIB d o n a t i o n B i o d , *> l u f f ! , * * ’ t i l l * pklWt'H1*? n i m J H f I , I t i l Br l I v i *, *» M U * 4 ( m m N i»* r»|l»m»4 ll Vim STOREWIDE SALE - em ocrutic nom in atio n for a tto rn e y g e n e ra l, said the n e e d s L e g i s l a t u r e t o the s t a t e ’s open stre n g th e n m e etin g s and open re c o rd s law s, including p e n a ltie s for perso n s who refu se to ab id e bv the open re c o rd s s ta tu te a p r o p o s e d s e t t l e m e n t betw een Lo-Y aca G ath e rin g its c u s to m e rs and Co allow the d isp u tes to be s e ttl­ and Voyager 2 receives radio communication t h a t PASA D EN A , Calif ( UP I ) — V o y a g e r 2, h e r s p a c e jo u rn ey to J u p ite r and S atu rn th re a te n e d by a w eek of radio s i l e n c e l e f t w o r r ie d en g in e e rs unable to co n tro l it. T hursday broke the silen c e by- ac ce p tin g an e a rth co m m an d . E n g in e e rs at J e t P ropulsion t h e y L a b o r a t o r y s u c c e s s fu lly r e - e s ta b lis h e d ra d io co m m u n icatio n w ith the sp a c e probe, now a lm o st 295 m illio n m ile s a w a y f r o m e a rth , e a rly T h ursday when they sent a com m an d to the robot and receiv ed c o n firm a ­ s a i d tion an hour the co m m an d had been received and ac c e p te d la te r th a t t h e V o y a g e r 2 ' s w e e k l o n g e m e r g e n c y b e g a n Apr i l 5 w h e n s p a c e c r a f t ’ s p rim a ry rad io re c e iv e r failed and th e backup rec e lv e r show­ ed ev id en ce th a t it w as having trouble ac ce p tin g co m m an d s T h e s p a c e c r a f t wa s the p ro g ra m m e d so event a c o m m a n d w as not rec eiv e d bv th e s p a c e c ra ft for seven days, it a u to m a tic a lly t h e b a c k u p s w i t c h e d s e v e n - d a y r e c e i v e r T h a t th a t in t o period w as up e a rly T h ursday the D uring rad io silence, engineers w e re unable to c o m ­ m and the s p a c e c ra ft Engineers planned to send m o re co m m an d s to Voyager 2 the day to m a k e throughout th e r e a r e no f u r t h e r s u r e pro b lem s Voyager 2 and its s is te r I. were .spaceship. V oyager launched la st y e a r and will rea ch J u p ite r rn Ma r c h and Ju ly 1979 and then continue on to S atu rn , a rriv in g th e re in 1980 and 1981. Group to hold ‘multi-athon’ T he A m erican H eart A ssociation, T exas Affiliate-, will .sponsor a 13-mile C ycle-Jog- W alk-A thon S atu rd ay . The c o u rse for the IO a. rn to 5 p m ev en t w ill begin at the in te rse c tio n of Rollingw ood an d P ark roads, w ind through Z ilker P a rk to S tra tfo rd D rive, High Road. Toro C anyon R oad. W estlake D rive and back to Z ilker "W e had a c y c le a-thon last y ea r, but only ra ise d ab o u t $1,000 O u r goal this y e a r is $10,000. R a lsto n (T e sse ll, H eart A ssociation Council ex e cu tiv e d ire c to r, said T h u rsd ay Funds raised by th e Cycle-Jog-W alk-A thon will go to local p ro g ra m s of h e a rt re se a rc h , education and co m m u n ity s e rv ic e s P a r ­ tic ip a n ts who ra is e th e g re a te s t a m o u n t of m oney will be elig ib le for p rizes including a 10-speed b ic y cle and a $25 gift c e r tif ic a te E n try fo rm s a r e a v a ila b le a t all local U- T o tem s and B u rg er C hefs o r by co n tac tin g th e h e a rt asso cia tio n , 451-5135. MEXICO in MAY TROPICAL PARADISE IN THE SUN CANCUN >252 SHARE DOUBLE INCLUDES AIRFARE FRO M H O U S T O N M A Y 17-21 AT EL PRESIDENTS HOTEL PUERTA VALLARTA M ay 2 5 -2 9 • Holiday Inn • $2 4 0 from San Antonio M ay 2 6 -3 0 • Posada V allarta • $ 2 5 5 from Houston Call Today for Reservations 478-9343 HARWOOD TRAVEL The T ravel E x p erts at 2428 G u a d a lu p e Does a college student really need life insurance7 No Not unless your life is important to someone Or will be soon Like if you’re planning on a marriage, a family and a career. But not lust a policy You need a sound program, designed to fit your pocketbook now and your needs 30 years from now That's financial plan­ ning Let's talk about the right program for you Person to person i i S o u th w e s te rn Life Hwe* • to - rwus* iaotoe. h d 7 5 ueau. Brad Smith 1304 San Antonio 4 7 8 -9 5 5 4 LANGENBACH G e r m a n y ’* great w hite w ine. It rhym e* w ith "rock," ha* the b rillia n c e o f Haeh, a n d it* taste i n i n tune with today. You 'll love l,a n g c n h a c h ! N ot too d r y Not too sweet, lig h t . It'* alw ay* ju st right! A c o n c e rt o f grape* fro m the o r ig in a l L ie h fra u m ilc h vin eyard*. T h e r e ’* mon* to it: lni|M>rted in the big green litre.. .La n g cn h a r h l i t h e b ig g er bottle o f better w hite wine. I any**” ! i c ' » I tires < ■' L • •btr*urr itch .if*© Mr • c h o n a r r importer! b y S h a w Moss Importers Inc Mi.imt I la ...maybe it inspired Bach BONG? s a v e 25% ON ALL SARAH'S FAMILY AND ; 1 TOKE INTERNATIONAL BONGS OVER THIRTY MODELS TO CHOOSE FROM FROM 4 inches TO 4 FEET DURING SP E CI AL P R E - P U B L I C A T I O N A P P E A R A N C E A R T I S T - A U T H O R M I C H A E L A R T H W I L L B E S I G N I N G P O S T E R S F R I D A Y , A P R I L 14th, 1-5 p.m. Original Etchings Available. Today Only RECORDS TAPES FRIDAY SATURDAY IO AM-9 PM STOREWIDE SALE 10ARR* 1SPM IO AM-9 PM BlueDcmeAUlv RIVERSIDE ONLY PagejO_D THE DAILY TEXAN □ F riday, April 14, 1978 Lo-Vaca settlement means rights surrendered — Johnson By MICHAEL PEHR! SUM Writer if lh# consumer The Texan Railroad Com- rolxxlon w ill b«* w orking against it kufepta th# settlement of th# l^*Vi«*a Gathering Co dis put# ond#r co n sid eratio n , Jak e Johnson, D itn o c f Uc candidate (or th# comm in mon. •aid Thursday groups and oil companies pre sent testimony On l i e r I $77, th# 12, Ka 11 road Commission ordered laeVaca and Coastal States C ai Producing Co L av aca s parent company, to refund m ore than $1 6 billion lo customers and return prices to Ifr73 contract levels fed ween rates stipulated in the contracts and the amount received from custom ers to ALTHOUGH originally op posed the a e ttle m e n t. Austin and San Antonio are among the m ajor customer x to support the* proposal, John son said lf th# commistion accepts th# settlement it will mean th# unconditional surrender of the rights rd consumers. John son said "No on# will receive on# cent of th# $1 6 billion pass through moory if th# sett I# m#nt is accepted," h# added PUBLIC bearings on the settlement began April 3 and ar# continuing as consumer ix>-Vara Th# three man commission in had authorized lift to charge rates in excess of prices specified m long* te n n contracts with hundred* of South and Central Texas i n d u s t r i a l c i t i e s customers a n d Th# settlement under con­ sideration would not require to return the Ii 6 1*0-Vaca billion which is the difference lf th e s e t t l e m e n t i f accepted Austin and San An­ tonio will have to drop a multi million -dollar damage suit ag a in st Lo-Vaca and agree to an increase in natural gas prices of more than I per­ cent The higher rate would affect millions of customers, not just Austin and San An (onto Rates w«Hild increase more than 2 percent in the se cond year of th# plan He a s k e d I-a sd week Attorney General John Hill who is a candidate for governor also expressed reservations about the agree­ t h e m e n t proponents of the settlem ent to dem onstrate that the plan is in the public interest and questioned whether the plan requires enough of Coastal States and Oscar Wyatt, head of the pipeline system " T h e a t t o r n e y g e n e r a l should intervene and reject the settlem ent on behalf of the consum er,” Johnson said Six lawyers and an engineer con suited by Johnson could not decipher the 1,000 page settle ment agreem ent, he added Th# mul ti mi llion dol l ar i n c l u d e s a s e t t l e m e n t proposal to create a partially customer-owned company — Valero Corp to take over assets of the Lo-Vaca pipeline system and a HOO million gas search program financed by Coastal States The proposed new com­ pany would he 83 percent own­ ed by the stock holders of Coastal States — not by con­ sumers Johnson said In rejecting the settlem ent Johnson said that rather than form a new com pany the Railroad Commission should request Lo-Vaca to declare the bankruptcy By putting company in the hands of a court appointed receivership, federal proceedings can be in­ stituted to recover the )l 6 billion gas pass-through, John son said Spring swans Spring finally arrives In the hard-hit northeastern states this week, bringing with it weicome warmth. These chlidren in a nursery school in Boston looked over their newly painted swan boats Thursday as they wait to bring them dinto the pond at the boston Public Garden and start another spring season. —UPI Telephoto Scuba diving course offers field trips to Florida Keys By CATHY BROOKS General Reporter To some people scuba diving may mean liitlr more than Lloyd Bridges in "Sea Hunt,' or going under water conjuring up images of "Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea, IhiI students taking a scuba diving (ours# in the physical and health educe* lion department actually get to "sea hunt " The University scuba diving program began last spring with four basic classes Thia year the program has basic, in term ediate and ad va im ed classes and a course allowing certified diver* to take diving trip* to enhance the learning tx* perience Baul Meng and David Brown, in*true tors in the departm ent, started the scuba diving trips last fall to give the students actual field experience "Very few universities have a program (with field trips) like thla," Meng said The divers travelled to the H onda Key* and to fresh water springs in northern Florida to Grand in D ecem ber, and Cayman Island, south of Cuba, in March The Fl ori da t ri p was a rra n g e d for academic credit The educational philosophy underlying these trips makf c them different from trips taken by individuals or travel groups, Meng said The students learn to ap^ preemie the area environment and what types of diving are appropriate for each diving site, he said Students travel, live, cook and dive together, Meng said There are also pre­ trip to make sure students have a safe and enjoyable trip Grand < ayman is especially nice for div­ ing because one can dive on all sides of the island, Meng said If one side is windy divers can go in tin the tither side They also can dive right off shore there, without Boing out by boat, he said training sessions To qualify foi the field trips students must be certified divers They also are en couraged to pre register for the Florida trip which will he offered again in the fall. because the classes fill quickly, Meng said The trip will coat LUO Next year the divers will take a Carib­ bean trip, which will be limited to 20 students Students are selec ted for the courses un the basis of diving skills and personal in- tervicws Citizens group boycotts center Opponents of a new struc lure for advisory com m ittees to the Austin-Travis County Mental Health Mental R etar­ dation Center boycotted an ad­ visory com m ittee meeting in F ast Austin Wednesday ( ailing themselves Citizens Advocating MHMR Services, four boycotter* appeared out­ side the Adult Mental Health Advisory Committee meeting to They ur ge d m e m b e r s resign because the structure prohibits balanced minority r e p r e s e n t a t i o n , " g r o u p m em ber Rosa Rios-Valdez said from a T K F G R O U P ' S a c t i o n s stem restructuring decision by the center s board of directors Judy Yudof, chairman, ex­ plain*^ there had been five g e o g r a p h i c a l a n d f i v e categorical comm ittees, but they had not provided the in­ put In the board needed January, the board eliminated the geographical advisory com m ittees Y u d o f f i v e s a i d c a t e g o r i c a l c o m m i t t e e s t h e ( A d u l t M e n t a l H e a l t h , Chi l dr ens Mental Health Drug Abuse, Alcohol Abuse and Ment al Ret ar da t i on) would each have m inority quotas and broad geographic representation "At that January meeting, we made a public statem ent that we would evaluate the structure in six months and make ch an g es to provi de input. We honestly better thought we were designing the best structure," Yudof said. Rios-Valdez, who served on the E ast First Street advisory com m ittee last year, said a s i x - m o n t h d e l a y wo u l d prohibit citizens from ad­ vising the board on its $5 3 million budget She added the gr oup a d v o c a t e s a c o m ­ promise that was discussed and tabled by the board at a public heari ng, in which m em bers of the categorical advisory com m ittees would also m eet in geographical groups on an informal basis They have co m p letely input. e l i mi nat ed citizen Blacks and Chicanos have un­ District. Of the eight board mem bers, three are black and one is a Chicano, she said. ique problems within our com ­ muni ti es. With the ot her structure, we were able to ad­ vocate our needs," she said. of the disagreement Yudof said MHMR funds are received from the federal an d s t a t e g o v e r n m e n t s , Austin City Council, Travis County com m issioners and Independent School Austin Mike Manor, MHMR staff member, confirmed that one citizen had resigned because Education Typing imperative for blind R i o s - V a l d e z s a i d h e r citizen s’ group will w rite government officials to out­ their complaints. line typing Typewriting skills are a blind person s only means of w r i t t e n c o m m u n i c a t i o n between himself and a sighted person, so i m ­ perative to a blind student who wishes to continue his education beyond high school, a University professor of general business said recent­ ly is Dr Faborn Etier, professor of g en e ral bu sin ess, was honored March 3 for develop­ ing a sp ecial sy stem for teaching the blind to type. E tier received the $1,000 Col l ege of Bus i ne s s Ad­ ministration Foundation Ad­ visory Council Award for Teaching Innovation for a system he developed in the early 1970s, which uses tape reco rd ed di ct at i on, e le c ­ tronically paced, to teach typ­ ing to blind students and for a system which teaches sighted typing to students by elec­ tronics. The blind typing program uses record-dictation, enabl­ ing a student to work faster since he does not have to remove his fingers from the keyboard to run them over a page of Braille. The recor­ dings are electronically paced to permit the student to work at his own speed. The program consists of a series of 24 lessons, each lasting 45 minutes The first nine are devoted to learning the keyboard Lessons 10-24 are skill developmemt exer­ cises to which each student l i s t e n s o v e r a s e t of earphones. The program is aimed at teaching the blind to type with speed and accurancy so they will be able to prepare essays w r i t t e n a n d as s i gnment s , t han t e a c h i n g t y p i n g a s a vocational skill, E tier said. r a t h e r o t h e r E tie r’s learning system for sighted beginning typewriter s t u d e n t s u se s e l e c t r o n i c audio-visual equipment. UNIVERSITY CO OP WAREHOUSE SPECIAL Sale Starts April 14 through April 15 th Tm 8:30 to 5:30 Behind the University Co-Op Si $ „ 0 V c „ „ _ H M M , . ^ ^ H 4 M M H 4 4 4 4 J 4 * 4 * + * 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 M 4 4 4 4 4 4 ♦ 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 v <3 & v £ 4 4 4 .5! v 0 4 ) 4 4 4 4 4 C 4 v 4 ! 4 4 4 "> $ $ 4 v v *4 M M P 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 ■ U 4 4 4 4 4 . A I M M M I I H I M 4 4 U 4 4 4 4 4 4 M 4 4 4 4 4 I 0 0 0 v v 0 v 0 1 0 C 4 4 4 4 4 I 0 4 4 4 4 M f 4 M M ‘ Books, Books and More Books BTF, I Foot Minimum at $1.00 per foot and $3.00 per yard I J A A, with a Large assortment of Textbooks and General Books, plus who knows what? •t i r < P f « • f *p r * * ' v * .' * • A * * . , . , G *% « ,* - » f * *, , M t r, J / i 'll 7 / Tr 7 Textbooks Census report says a third of U.S. voters unregistered W ASHINGTON WASHINGTON (UPI* t v . ____. - The m ajo r reason Americans don t vote is because about a third of those eligible a re n 't even registered, according to a census bureau study released Thursday. The survey of 146 million A m ericans eligible to vote in the 1976 election showed that 48.7 million w ere not registered to do so Of those who w ere registered, alm ost 20 percent told the census bureau they did not because of an em ergency o r illness This was the m ost frequent reason, while 14 percent said they w ere out of town or away from home THE THIRD leading cause was apathy — 114 percent said they did not p refer any the non candidates Seven p ercent of voters said they could not take tim e off from work or w ere not interested in elec­ tions that year. Eligible voters gave a wide v ariety of reasons for not being registered The m a­ jo r ones w ere ll percent who said they w eren 't U.S. citizens; 10.6 percent who said they w eren’t interested a t the tim e; 6 8 p ercent who said they did not prefer any candidates, and 5.8 percent who said they dido t want to get involved. J ? ? . . . The rep o rt said 54 percent of those eligi­ ble voted in 1976 — the lowest since 1948 and down from a high of 63 p ercent in i960 The poor voting re c o rd s of people between 18 and 21 w as blam ed for the con­ tinued d eclin e in voting The cen su s bureau said this group continues to be a larger percentage of the voting-age pop­ ulation. and continues to have the poorest voting record of any age group OTHER findings rn the report • The voting ra te for m en and women is for the first tim e approxim ately th e sam e Twelve y ears ago the voting ra te for m en was 72 percent and for women 67 percent. • About 61 percent cf whites vote, but only 49 percent of blacks But when the voting ra te s for blacks and w hites are a d ­ justed for differences in age. incom e and education, this disparity is reduced to about 2 percentage points • The voting ra te is dropping faster among blue collar w orkers than it is for the white collar category. • M arried men \o te d a t slightly higher rates than m arried women Widowed and divorced women and women who have never m arried voted m ore than th eir m ale coun terp arts in 1976 Friday, April 14, 1978 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Page ll Townhouse vote deferred Council to decide Shoal Creek project fate April 27 By CAROLE CHILES and MARY MCMELLEN City R eporters A fter th ree hours of argum ents about w hether to grant a special p e rm it tow nhouse developm ent above Shoal Creek, the City Council voted Thursday to post­ pone a decision. for proposed The council will decide April 27 if developer Bill Clendinning’s propos­ ed 24-unit project betw een 3912 and 4010 Shoal Creek Blvd may be built A special perm it for townhouses is required because th*' site is zoned residential A r e a th e tow nhouse d ev elo p m en t because they say parking will c re a te a tra f­ fic h a z a rd a lo n g Shoal C reek Boulevard and the construction will increase runoff into the creek and r e s i d e n t s o p p o s e chances of flooding RESIDENTS also object to noise and glare from parking c ars the rig h t "W e a re not asking you to prevent M r C le n d in n m g fro m b u ild in g anything on this site He has the right to develop with sinfle-fam ily dwellings or duplexes He does not have to develop with to w n h o u s e s ." D av id A n d erso n . I rd versify law professor who lives a t 4111 Shoal Creek Blvd . said G LEN D IN N IN G ap p ealed th e Planning Com m ission’s decision to reduce the num ber of townhouse un­ its from 26 to 24 " l f you s ta r t c u ttin g out th e variable income, the p ro ject could likely fai* at 24 units. I ask the coun­ cil to reconsider and approve 26 un­ its, he said. I w ould b rin g in a stro n g hom eow ners association to clean up the c re e k ,” he said The developer argued townhouse ow ners also would bt' concerned about the creek and that duplex re n te rs would not be as responsible. is not granted, duplexes m ay be built on the site th e s p e c ia l p e r m it lf "T H E THREAT of duplexes is just another cro ss w e have to bear. But we don't want th a t to cloud our thinking now. B arb ara Anderson, who lives across the creek from the site, said In other action T hursday, the council • Received a rep o rt on the statu s of this y e a r’s Aquafest boat races. to b i' held at Town Lake F estival Beach ('ity M anager Dan Davidson said the Boat f lu b h as m et council requirem ents for the site and that provisions for shuttle bus service a re being worked out. T he a n n u a l b o a t r a c e s are scheduled for the weekends of April 22, June IO and Aug 12 • Authorized a c o n tra c t th at will allow Austin to sell 500 m egaw atts of power to Houston Lighting & Dower in 4980 and 1981 The tra n sa c ­ tion will bring the city m ore than $16 million in revenue • Approved tax exem ptions on historically inned buildings. Non­ profit or residential stru c tu re s are IOO p ercent exem pt on building im ­ provem ents and 50 p ercent exem pt from land taxes C om m ercial stru c ­ tures will receive a 50 p ercen t tax break on im provem ents and 25 per­ cent on land C horyos Andrus requests updating of law providing cheap water to farmers (U P I) WASHINGTON - Interior S ecretary Cecil An­ d ru s c a lle d T h u rsd a y fo r reform of a 1902 law m eant to supply irrig a tio n w ater for sm all farm ers on arid w estern lands but which has led to huge profits for large landowners. low -cost Andrus, testifying before t h e S e n a t e E n e r g y a n d N a tu r a l R e s o u r c e s C o m ­ m i t t e e , t h e 1902 s a i d R eclam ation Act should be am ended to allow an increase Photographer wins awards in competition U niversity News and Infor- s t a f f m a t i o n S e r v i c e p h o t o g r a p h e r F r a n k A rm strong recenty received th ree distinguished achieve­ m ent aw ards, four aw ards of m e rit and the Council for the A dvancem ent and Support of Education Quality Award for photography in annual com ­ p e t i t i o n a t a S o u t h w e s t D istrict IV m eeting. in the size of fam ily farm s r e c e i v i n g g o v e r n m e n t - subsidized w ater. But he said Congress also should force co rporate and the a b se n te e irrigated five years, with ex tra lands sold to eligible individuals. lan d lo rd s off lands within " F A M I L Y F A R MS con to t r i b u t i n g t h e g e n e r a l w elfare a re the objective — not opportunities for specula­ tion and profiteering at the ex­ pense of the tax p a y e r," he said The 1902 law set lim its of 160 a c re s in single ownership and 320 a c re s owned by a fam ily th at could receive low- c o s t w a t e r f r o m f e d e r a l reclam ation projects. A n d r u s p r o p o s e d t h e acreag e lim it be increased to 320 a c re s for an individual and to 640 a c re s for a fam ily "to k eep p a c e wi t h c h a n g i n g e c o n o m ic an d so c ia l c o n ­ ditions." Up to an additional 320 a c re s could be leased by the fam ily fa rm e rs under the ad m inistration proposal. The U niversity News and Inform ation Service received a total of ll aw ards a t the organization’s annual m eeting in Albuquerque, N.M., last week t h e A n d r u s n o t e d l a w applies to 17 w estern sta te s but m ost abuses occurred in California landholdings in the thousands of a c re s getting subsidized w ater. The secretary also backed a recipients that requirem ent live on the land or near it. M a n y of t h e s o m e 40 two w itnesses appearing at days of hearings said the goal of the law was noble, but that it should be am ended to p re­ vent abuse. O T H E R S A R G U E D acreag e lim its should be in­ creased or elim inated. A n d r u s , m e a n w h i l e , is the White about to present House with his recom m en­ datio n s for a new fed eral w ater policy. Birth G overnm ent sources said the dr af t s t a t e me n t would allow com pletion of the m ore than 1.000 w a te r p ro jects now on the books and add th ree new projects. The draft also proposes re­ quiring. for the first tim e, th at states chip in IO p ercen t for construction of federal pro­ je c ts or that fa rm e rs or in­ dustries benefitting from the projects pay back 25 p ercent of its cost. In addition, the recom m en­ dations call for an increase in federal w ater ch arges which currently a re below cost. Although President C a rte r, in an announcem ent last May, said the policy would stress conservation, sources said the r e c o m m e n d a t i o n s o mi t t e d w ater-saving m easures such as requiring installation of w ater m e te rs in cities in dry w estern sta te s or requiring states to effectively m anage their groundw ater reserves. A spokesm an for Andrus, however, said the docum ent has not gone to the president and rep o rts about its contents "have taken the wrong tack and a re in e rro r." f unda me nt a l l y Gestation may be shorter BUFFALO, N Y (UPI) - A U niversity of Buffalo scientist says the accepted idea that the hum an gestation period is 270 days may not be entirely accu rate. Dr. Lyle C. Borst, an astro n o m er and physicist, says he has found evidence of a 262- day gestation period. His findings, he said, are based on studies of birth records keyed to Buffalo’s fam ous "B lizzard of ’77." Checking birth records 270 days a fte r the blizzard, B orst found no abnorm al in crease in the num ber of births. But 262 days a fte r the blizzard, he said, 21 births w ere recorded, which is m ore than double the 8.5 daily average for the city of Buffalo. period doesn’t occur, he said Borst studied birth p a tte rn s related to two black o u ts in New York C ity and found evidence of 268 and 270-day gestation periods. However, he a ttrib u ted the variations to unstable test conditions in New York Pow er was restored at various tim es during the night in Brooklyn and Queens, he explained. Any study of reproduction p attern s m ust be related to power blackouts or paralyzing bliz­ zards, he said. "T he ideal study would require about IO in p rim itiv e con­ living million people ditions,’’ he said "B ut where do you find conditions like T h a t’s not to say th at a 270-day gestation th a t7" Sprays of vivid tulips rippling on a mist o f gentle grey, over matching fluid gown soft, subtle, and naturally alluring Polyester, sizes 8 16. 60 00 Hancock Center • Highland Mall y Texas Union Events FRIDAY 9 a rn. to 2 p m. College of the M onth: LIBRARY LIBATIONS (A N D SUSTENANCE) Enjoy refreshments in honor of the Com m unication Library as part of UT Interaction Com m ittee's recognition of the School of Com m unication as College of the M onth. Fifth level of Com­ m unication Building A. 10 a m. M A R A TH O N BOW LING SIGN UP. Sign up by 4 p.m . a t the Rec Center to participate in our m aratho n bow ling m atch. $ 5 .0 0 entry foe for a w hole night of bow ling (4 p.m . to 3 a .m .). W inner w ill receive a n ew b ow ling ball. Bring your o w n band aids to the m arathon m atch. N u m b er of participants lim ited. 10 a .m . M A R A TH O N 14:1 STRAIGHT POOL SIGN UP. For lots of pool playing, sign up a t the Rec Center for this m aratho n! $ 4 .0 0 entry fee — w in n er receives a gift certificate. 11 a m. GARDEN GRILLE STEAK SPECIAL. Enjoy a 14 oz. Texas Steak for $ 2 .9 5 or a 26 oz. w hopper for tw o for $ 4 .9 5 . Both served w ith the best onion rings in Austin. Noon to f p .m . Sandwich Sem inar. THE PROBLEM OF SEX IN IN D IA N ART. Dr Don Stadtner of the Art Departm ent w ill discuss the interesting d ilem m a of sex in Indian art. Texas Union 4 .2 2 4 . Co-sponsored by Ideas and Issues Com m ittee and Asian Studies. Noon to I p m PUBUC RELATIONS: YO U 'VE GOT IT WHETHER YO U K N O W IT OR NOT. Alan Scott, UT Professor of Journalism, w ill speak as part of the program for the College of the M onth — the School of Com m unication. Texas Union 3 .1 2 8 . UT Interaction Com m ittee. Noon to 2 p m EL ARROYO M E X IC A N PLATE. The Cactus C afe features a delicious M exican lunch — a burrito w ith choate, rice, beans, an d a jalap en o for only $ 1 .5 0 . Texas Union 2 .1 2 4 . 4 p.m . to 3 a.m . ALL NIGHTER! O ur special en d -o f-th e-year celebration gets u n d e rw a y at 4 p m today! Games, contests, demonstrations, as w ell as food and drink specials are plann­ ed. 7 an d I O. t 5 p m R im Double Feature: C A SABIAN CA A PLAY IT A G A IN SAM Union Theater $ 1 .5 0 w ith UT ID. -* - • 1 0 .3 0 p.m . to 3 a .m . A IN 'T M IS B E H A V IN '. Austin's most versatile band. They're hot; they're heavy; they're goad. Texas Tavern. Musical Events Com m ittee. SATURDAY J I a m. S aturday M orning Fun D u b : CINDERFELLA. The show on the screen as w e ll as the one in the aisles is free. Union Thoater. 6 p m. SOTA COVERED DISH SUPPER Call 4 7 1 -3 3 0 5 far details Students O lder Than Average. 7 a n d 10 .1 5 p m R im Double Feature: CASABLANCA A PLAY IT A G A IN SAM Union Theater. $ 1 .5 0 w ith UT ID. 9 p.m . THE COCONUTS. The hottest band out of Dodos, playing Beatles an d other papular favorites. Cover: $ 2 .0 0 w ith UT ID. Tavern Musical Events Com m ittee. 10 p .m . SATURDAY NIG HT UVE PARTY. Join the Not Ready for Prime Time Players on big screen TV. Texas Union Coetus Cafe ( 2 .1 2 4 ). SUNDAY 7 :3 0 p.m . Film; THE GODFATHER Jester Center Auditorium . $ 1 .2 5 w ith UT ID. FOR ADDITIO NAL IN F O R M A T IO N C A U 471 5 6 5 3 p ? S e 12 □ T H E D A IL Y T E X A N □ F rid a y , A pril 14, 1978 Castro invited to speak Cuban leader sought by section of State Bar B y C M R V f t K E E M Eld#*! ( awm Kjx .ik in# lit tho M at? 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A. file U H ) K A U K F S H vkk)\ \i k i t th a n e K r a l o n . an d itu u i pbh s Rt'iar drm or (o o h alike I .1 0 -2 . t m o n I ( O n t r a t I V IO t 2 * V i n iS tg n *iy o r \ : i Nighter C h a m p i t sax I p t f B I j U IL HIU UCH M t k l K . a U g r VV,x x i i M ie n I \ p ilo t fro n t I ‘Mi 2 2-2 lib t i n t tn t h , j ! r , U N VS I N IO N K l I VV S C a m gam. o f V l u . . . al C h a ir , t h , I j f . savt- - 1 .a m e an d th e (Jo v e I e , . i d R a t . 1 tun i Ha: - nun H I V D P IN SOV R S WH N I 2 i H r* C e n te r S i OO u p 41 P V R A in O F IS IN N E R S Wm ta ra o f a ll I . r n lr w i l l t ll- to t H i. 2 i ( Vs IN (J W t ti- 4rra « g rd l o b a te a l i t t l e h i • M o n l< V a H o n g b t h e r e • ti Vita on K u u i.-lte t rap* 1 wit! he a-.4 -iabit- f . it c u r d e itg h j fu r a S I OO rn i n h t I n . . . d u r u m T W r v a b i.. . i i i He o p en Itutti 4 p rn 2 a rn til th.- santa R tia K o w t B l V I R VV.! > H tlim a te n d o n w >!i xHU 1 j t . n - d b e e r ihnaaigtt- r u i i a - g . too He M in ■ n i l H i , It* n a t e h I t * .war " i t a l lig h t j x x t a ' . P ' , Medviva t imu m SJI M ' M I K S S ir t»tn« v e n * » * aid >eU I db b e , a t V i t a ut i i x tw x a tfi •at a xix k — L l : -L U J L U — — r n n i n . i i — j L i i i i m t U f n « » i « » ■ - t « » » » * * r - t r t i i L t I * : . . ^ L .... f I * T P . I * * » « . * * RECORDS AND TAPES L P H LP HAPE U r n¥ %/i ¥ EVERYTHING IS RIVERSIDE ON SA LE ONLY APR 14 APR IS mum m m roo w m in t ut u h IHE (HM X VtU SD 19165 A- -V./ ■ I- tHscou ut Centers «» rn ANNUAL Welcome the Seeson In Stereol PRICES ARE LOW ■ A N D READY TO GO! Store Hours: FRI. 11-7, SAT. 10-6 y > S P R IN G C L E A N IN G W IPES AWAY T H O S E W IN TER B LU ES ! And what better way to welcome the Spring Season than with S U P E R S T E R E O at TH E Lowest Prices! We're America's Largest Stereo Dis­ count Centers, and that means you get the Best for Less! A LO T LE S S . All Year Long, but especially NOW!! Hurry, quantities are limited on some items. GET EXPERIENCED Th© SANSUI 1010 A M /f M Stereo Receiver is an EXCEPTIONAL VALUE! Packed with all the Power and Features you need for great stereo sound. W e ’re sure you ll agree, this is a GREAT PERFORMER and the price is right! THE PROVIDER The PIONEER S X 7 5 0 is a GREAT midsized AM/FM Stereo Receiver A Beautiful Music Machine with SO* Watts of POWER and all the features you’d expect from a real pro ..because it IS! Spring Stereo Savings FOR YOU! •so W alt* RMS PNK charm*! < 8 Ohm*. 20 20.000H* with no mop a than O 1%TM0 *129 *259 ► GET 2 FREE BUY 2 The BIG sounds really come through with ECI’s PROFILE 620 Speakers. You’ll get unbelievable clarity with the BIG 12" Woofer in this unique 3*Way design. Buy aPAIR, and get a pair of PROFILE 420 2- Way Speakers FREE! It s a Golden Opportunity to spread the sounds around. Are we CRAZY? No. W e’re Custom Hi-Fi! E G I *190 S H P - N , m p i o n e e j t FIN E ROTATIONS Rotate the night away with Sanyo TP626 B elt-D rlve Turntable. 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Hear it, TODAY! a / Headphones cto youi J r head a Favor and Pick up the Savings. *89 95 T h e Da il y T e x a n sports UT hosts No. 4 SMU Horns need big win to take SWC lead F rid a y , A p ril 14, 1978 □ P age 15 By JO E L H O LLIS Sport* R eporter Texas men s tennis team needs an impressive victory o ver fourth-ranked SM U Saturday or the Horns will have serious troubles at the Southwest Conference tourna­ ment. The match is scheduled for I p m at Penick-Allison Courts. SMU is 53-10 in Southwest Conference play, six games ahead of the third-place Ironghoms Texas must win at least seven of nine matches to have the best record going into the SW U tournament April 21-23 in Corpus Christi A lesser score w ill mean the Horns must make up the differences in the standings at the tournament Coach Dave Snyder express­ ed little optimism that the Horn s w ill pass SM U in the standings Saturday but said any kind of victory w ill prove beneficial. " W E C A N T hope to shut them out. They're too good of a team ,” Snyder said " If we could win the match 5-4, that would help ” Defeating the Mustangs by any score would at least boost the team ’s confidence going into the tourament SM U has blanked its last three op ponents, Texas Tech. Texas A&M and Rice The Mustangs also have beaten such national tennis powers as No, 5 USU, N o. 2 T r i n i t y and P a n American Three of their five losses were to USC, Trinity, No. I Stanford and No. 3 UCLA SM U ’s top players include junior Chris Delaney, 7-1 in SWC competition last year; Ja i Di Louie, a sophomore from Dallas who played at the No. I position as a freshman, and M ark Vines and Pern Guerry, who finished the 1977 season with an 18-3 doubles mark Last year, Texas lost to SM U, 5-4, but finished the regular season in first place. The Horns then picked up 20 of a possible 27 points at the tournament to capture the SWC championship. U.S.S.R. swim team is introduced to football at Memorial Stadium. TSP Staff Photo* by Larry Kotvoord Soviet swimmers try football B y D EN N IS R O BER SO N Sports Reporter The Russian swim team got a little taste of good ol’ Am erican football Thursday. The swimmers were on the AstroTurf at Memorial Stadium, supposedly just another stop during their brisk tour of the University’s sports facilities (SEC and the stadium). But one group of students on the field just happened to have one of those oblong pigskins. When asked, a few students obliged their services for some fun­ damental lessons in passing, catching and kicking the football. T H E S W IM M ER S were a little hesi­ tant, but after a couple of demonstration down-and-outs a brave boy sporting a sailor cap stepped forward. One of the students showed him how to grip the ball on the seams and throw it. The swimmer watched carefully, took the ball, reared back confidently and threw. W e ll, it w a sn ’t e x a c tly R o g e r Staubach’s best — more along the lines of Garo Yeprem ian’s famed pass after a fumbled field goal attempt in the 1973 Super Bowl. But after some advice on how to make the ball spiral, the swimmer tried again, This time it was better — nothing big, but at least as good as what B illy Kilm er has been doing for the past few years for a few hundred thousand dollars. But he kept working at it, and some other swimmers got in on the act, and after a while they got pretty good at it. Naturally the kicking part came a lit­ tle easier. In fact, the swimmers even taught the students a few things in that department, like how to practice kicking by yourself without a tee. When the lessons were about over and everyone who was interested had a turn, one swimmer boldly proposed. ‘‘Let's play.” That got a good laugh from all his teammates. Most of them were more interested in taking advantage of the beautiful spring weather — taking off their shirts, rolling up pant legs and lying out on the field for a little sun. Others discovered that the old rubbing-the-feet-on-the-carpet shock trick also works on AstroTurf So that started some fun and games Even the reporters and interpreters got in on that one On Thursday night the swim m ers danced to some ‘‘Chicano disco” at the Texas Tavern. Besides the swim meet against the U.S. team this weekend, the Russians’ activities w ill include a shopping spree “Saturday Night Fe ve r” and Friday. Close Encounters of the Third Kind” over the weekend, and the Ice Capades Sunday it it it The US/USSR dual swim meet w ill begin at 2 p.m. Saturday at the Olympic Swim Center. The Russian team is just coming off a slim victory over the East Germans last weekend and the A m erican team members competed in the AAU national championships last Wednesday through Saturday. U S swimmer Greg Jagenburg said the Russians have an advantage because they are used to swimming meter dis­ tances while the Americans have trained all year in yards. The Russian team is coming off a not so sure the meter distances w ill make that much of a difference. “ I don’t think we can win against the best team in the world We ll try to make up the difference but I don’t know if it s possible.” Two key races w ill be the 400-meter in­ dividual medley between Russia’s Euro­ pean record-holder Sergey Fesenko and the United States’ Jesse Vasailo and the IOO- and 200-meter breaststroke between world record- holder Ju lia Bogdanova and Am erican record-holder T racy Caulkins. 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Regular, short and long lengths Men's Clothing ^Dillard’s men's store SHOP DILLARD'S MONDAY THRU SATURDAY 10-9 HANCOCK C E N TE R I r n * m m P a 8® J 6 O T H E D A IL Y T E X A N □ Friday, A p ril 14, [978 Vines’ status drops Former SWC champ likes SMU My .FOP;!, HOLLIS ‘'port* He porter Mark Vini** left bit fin hrnotid Va home to {'Say tennis at Southern Meiftodtst wh#*r»* hr* hoped the* rorrtiHd ive ness cd the program would impi.ive his p.»rue But in his junior year with the Ponies Vine* finds that the competition may be more than hi* experted Alter winning the Southwest < deference No I singles c hampionahip as a freshman Vines was dnmoted to the No 5 position in 1077 and continue* to play in the lower half of th* FWD lineup fbi* year Th** reason is competition I really didn't have any pressure <#i me at Vines said of nh freshman year the tone "Last year's team was a lot tougher This IP * tough lo move year'* (earn is even better Lip B's almost impossible " Vitte> even bt ought sein e >d his c o m p etitio n with him whew b* came to Dallas " T IIH K h O T H E R guy*, who were m y I knew with he retailed friends « im® three of bel guy* at SMU. they d make me play w ell" Apparently Vines did more for hi* lf lends play than they did for hi* However the 21 year old left bander has another reason for hi* diminished status on the team Should* i and bin or<>hiuni* hove kepi Vines from performing as he did Iii' freMiman year not ion percent I've had a anre boulder I've played some good matches this year, but I can't say Pm playing as well this year a* I did when I was a freshman " Another factor Vines considered while deciding which college to attend was the Blustang!* coach, John Gardner 'I IJK LD ♦ ..irdriei He was young and I thought hr I stay I wanted a roach to guide me That a something I didn t have when I was playing in th# Junior * ** ftyt Gardner h*lt SMI last vest to become a pr*»fe%scaiai tennis instructor at I billa' ( mn try Club And although the situation is somewhat different from what Vines had en visioned he expressed rn regrets about * owing to SMP I rn enjoying d I love Dull;.* B 's centrally Un abd Ah far as as th** players you can't find .my better Awl good pros are always coming fbi*ugh U ke Im k Stockton, you know he s g** mg to bi* here And despite being on athletic scholarship and playing na the fourth-ranked team in the na Bon, Vines 'aid tennis is not his first concern My education is my main goal here I keep my grader up “ the bttstnesi major saki V wei also has ulterior m o tive for wanting to turn professional after graduation If I have m good season tm 10701, i might go out for some of the American Kspresi tour­ nament!* and maybe a few others My main goal would Im* to travel see lh*- world I rn not going to b t a < Jim m y i f;onnora or a (Bjorn Borg Not that I won t try to win, but I have t< la* realistic rn my thinking DN L ABV AN'TAGF, V ines will posses! if b* turns professional is having one coach Gardner, who emphasised physical con downing a mf now Gardner s replacement. Bill Me t lain, who stresses mental toughness He i Met lain* has ii completely different 'He philosophy than Gardner," Vines noted •hows me arn >ther viewpoint Gardner liked to do more drills, McClain lib * to have match situations fie likes to ex- periment in doubles H t s versatile "Gardner had his opinion lf you didn’t like that wa* lough for you McClain likes to it emphasize toe mind I've become more men tally tough I ve had to " And Vines had no doubt* about the et fee liveness of McClain*! approach "Tell all the people dow n there that the SMU tennis team is going to be ready to take l f Vines pi edit ted t ! / / ‘ . A V E ON -—Texan Staff Photo by Carlos Osorio !*'xas second baseman Andre Robertson is congratulated by teammates atter hitting home run against Central Michigan. U N IV E R S IT Y O F TEXAS DIAMOND CLASS RIN G S Order ai diamond I Diversity o f Texas ring by J OST UN'S Isl and save u p lo $100.00 on (lie d iam o n d before M i n Dinnuthd ((liii - x iii im-rcii-e on May I si to reflect recent world diamond p rirr rises. {dun n un ordn at th** I M V E R S I T V ( < M ) P ( la s s M in u s t«*i ms a\ ai ta iii«' I ^ T ttU u c u U U f& x - O fi One Month Only 1st Annual 30% off all Jewelry Sale ( e x c lu d in g K e e p s a k e ) earrings ian.es rings stick pins U Lnnjzzutu Diamond C e n te r Dobie Mall No. 35 w a tc h nbc'S "HOLOCAUST" ON KTVV CHANNEL 36 ON SU N D A Y , APRIL 16, 7:00-10:00 p.m . M O N D A Y , APRIL 17, 8:00-10:00 p.m . TU ESD A Y, APRIL 18, 8:00-10:00 p.m . W ED N ESD A Y , APRIL 19, 8:00-10:00 p.m . SONATRACH National Algerian Oil Co. in­ vites you to a seminar en­ titled ALGERIA: TODAY AND TOMORROW by N acer Ad jail, " M in is tr e Plenipoten- t ia ir e " in charge of Political A ffairs of the A lgerian Embassy. MONDAY, APRIL 17 3:30 P.M. J. FRANK DOBIE ROOM of the A.C. An exposition of photographs, " I m a g e s of A lg e ria ," will a c c o m p a n y the s e m in a r. Horns, Frogs need sweeps B y M A RK GOODSON Sports Reporter Texas Christian expected to have a good hitting baseball team ut the start of the season, but inconsistency has been their biggest problem as they host a three-game series with the Longhorns this weekend in Fort Worth. The opening game of the series is 3 p m. Friday with TC U ’s Reuben Tomlin (1-3) scheduled to pitch against Keith Creel (9- l) Saturday s doubleheader begins at I p rn. Texas coach Cliff Gustafson will start Keith Walker (3-1) and Jim Acker 4-1). "Acker will start the first game Saturday if we use Walker in relief (in Friday’s game),’’ Gustafson said. TC U ’s starting pitchers will be Dale Arnold (2-3) and (1-3) Arnold and Tomlin both have 29 Cameron Young strikeouts in SWC play. ALTHOUGH BOTH teams have had disappointing seasons, there ts still a mathematical chance Texas and TCU could make the playoffs No SWC team has clinched a playoff spot, but no one has been eliminated, either. Texas is tied for fifth place in the conference with Texas Tech at 6-9, <1 1 games behind fourth place Baylor). TCU is tied with SMU in last place at 4-11. Texas is 7 ’ at games behind conference leader Arkansas. A sweep of the TCU series would be a big lift if Texas is going to make their move toward making the top four, however, Gustaf­ son is not promising anything. "W e haven t swept anybody yet and we haven t won more than one game on any road trip," Gustafson said Something that has hurt both teams is losing close games. Nine of Texas loses have been by one run and the Horned Frogs ure coming off a series with Texas AAM in which they lost two close games “ We hud two excellent pitching jobs (Tomlin and Arnold) Against A&M and still lost." TCU coach Willie Maxwell said The Aggies swept the series 4-3, 3-1 and 14-3. “ TO M LIN G A V E up three hits against A&M and beat Houston the week before. He’s better than his statistics look,’’ Gustafson said.” Despite Gustafson’s compliments, TC U ’s chances of making the playoffs are remote at best, but they are not going to roll over and play dead. “ We just want to put it together and finish strong.If we make the playoffs it ll just happen,’’.Maxwell said. The Horned Frogs have had their problems with pitching as well as hitting. "W e thought we had a good hitting club, but when you are not holding up your strong suit (hitting) you’re in trouble.” Maxwell said. c <^A u $ iiffijfie a tie Q ro u p P r e s e n t s Iw o One^Act Plays at the Zachary" Scott Theatre Center" 'APRIL 16-18 A. 23-25 8 15 pm./*200 av; m r b i P i (Srccnbetft Mm**--** 9 * ; J ' i 'W..- et*. WK. * *> Sundays in toe Cemetary B v : J I M FOREIGN PARTS FOR GERMAN - JAPANESE - BRITISH - EUROPEAN CARS COMPLETE LINE OF REBUILT BOSCH ALTERNATORS • GENERATORS - STARTERS REPLACEMENT PARTS - ACCESSORIES O N N 1:10 , J " " * SAT M CH IE DR. LIGHTS INTERNATIONAL CAR PARTS H EA D Q UA RTERS FOR DO IT YO U RSELF M EC H A N IC S PARTS FOR PO RSCH E 3025 GUADALUPE 474-6451 Seniors, pick up your cap, gown & tassle before A p r i l 15th. We ca n' t guarantee that you can get one a f t e r the 15th. degree Humanities Natural Science Sod a I /Behavioral Science Genera I /Comparative Studies Engineering Business Architecture Fine Arts Education Communication Pharmacy Music Physical Education Nursing Home Economics color of tassle black black black black orange drab brown brown l i g h t blue crimson o l iv e green pink fern green apricot maroon I om orrow is the last day for guaranteed delivery. I he 15th is also the last day to rent academic regalia for graduation exercises. No refund after April 29th 52nd annual Kenyan Relays? Banks M iners a re the defen­ ding NU A A indoor champions NEW MEXICO, headed by Bill S ilverberg, was voted this y e a r's outstanding team at the Texas Relays With runners l i k e S a m m y K t p k u r g a t . Je rim ia h Ongwae, H arrison Koroso and Fatw el Kimiayo, the Lobos will definitely be in the NCAA p icture at the out­ door cham pionships in June So why doesn’t Texas sta rt recruiting K enyans0 C ertainly Austin’s w eather is hot enough There are no m ountains but th ere are plen­ ty of hills This y e a r's track team , which has been draw ing lot of “ this is the worst a showing as a team since I ve coached at the U niversity of T e x a s” a sse ssm e n ts f r om head coach Cleburne P rice, could use help, espec ially Ke­ nyan help Money problem the im m ediate is The track budget this year is $3,000 and “ quite a bit of it” has already been spent mostly on telephone calls, a c ­ cording to P rice. is ANOTHER PROBLEM scholarship cutbacks Track p r e s e n t l y h a s 14 f u l l scholarships to work with next year This year, Texas only had 12 scholarships to work wi t h b e c a u s e o f NUVA violations Those two problem s are the highest hurdles T exas m ust clear before P rice can set swill for Kenya \c tu a lly . he would ra th e r stay home “ Right now , we re concen­ trating m ore in T exas.' he said, “ sim ply b ec a u se we know the people b e tte r ” R ealistically, P rice, whose team s have won the SWU out­ door cham pionship every vear except his first knows that Texas is heavily recruited to stop in T exas,' he continued, “ but obviously we c an't. We can't fill all the holes we have by staying in Texas ” "W F D LOVE Despite all the problem s, P ric e h ints about possible recruiting treks “ We’re going to try and find quality people w herever we can We’ve spent hours on the phone the last I ve even couple of nights sent a le tte r to Iceland ." L ater he said that the p re ­ sent situation had to be su r­ veyed carefully, event by event, to recruit ap p ro p riate­ ly* We ll look at the situation now See where we re hurting and m ake a dec ision then ” More sports, Page 27 Friday, A p ril 14, 1978 □ T H E D A IL Y T E X A N □ Page 17 Speedy Coors 200 draws Indy drivers By TOM KLECKNER Sports Reporter World speed records a re expected to be broken at Saturday's Coors 200 at the Texas World Speedway (IW S J in College Station, and som e of the best Indianapolis d rivers a rt' going to be on hand to m ake sure Johnny Rutherford. Al and Bobby Unser. Mario Andretti, Gordon Johneoek, Tom Sneva and the ever present A J. Foyt lead 30 drivers com peting for 22 startin g spots Q ualifications sta rt at 12 SO p m Saturday with the race scheduled for 3 30 p rn The Coors 200 is the third race of the season for the United States Auto Club (T S A O Championship for Indy type c ars Of course, the best known USAC race is the Indianapolis SOO in late May Although it doesn t have the statu re of In* dy, the World Speedway is a much faster track and the tim es prove it N ineteen d rivers have broken the 200 mph b a rrie r 38 different tim es at the Speedway, In 1976. eight c a rs qualified for the race with speeds of over 200 mph and in 1973, 14 c a rs qualified with 200 mph speeds. That sam e year, A ndretti clocked a tim e of 214 158 mph to set a new world record for Indy ears, which still stands Since then, tougher engine restrictions have been enforced, cutting down on speeds Still, Poy I is among those who expects 220 mph laps and an average speed of 200 mph “ THE WAY THINGS have been going, with the speeds th at everybody has been L running I really look for a track record to be broken,” he said recently Foyt, who is leading the US Af standings for Indy cars, will be going after his 80th c a re e r win driv ing Indy cars. Foyt himself doesn't expect to be one of the faster drivers His c a r is in th e process of being readied for Indianapolis, which the four-time winner is alw ays thinking about. Andretti, let s face it. to m e is probably one of the greatest race d riv e rs in the world. Foyt said. You take Bobby Uriser, Al Unser You take Johnny R utherford. G ordon Johncock, W ally D aM enbach You’ve got so many of them th a t could win ” Foyt is not the only one worried about the com petition Tom Sneva. who won the I'SAU title and the Texas Grand Prix at TWS last year, is also concerned about the com petition “ THIS HAS to be the most com petitive season e v e r,” he said. “ The cars are m ore aerodynam ic, the engines are different, and m ore d rivers have better equipm ent.” Sneva should worry He was the first d river to break the 200 barrier at Indy last year when he finished second to Foyt Five o th e r d riv e rs e n te re d have won Indy, though The Unsent and Rutherford have tw o wins each and Johncock and Andretti have one win apiece Andretti is taking tim e out from the F o r­ m ula One Grand P rix tour, which he l e a d s a l o n g wi t h C a r l o t c u r r e n t l y R uetem ann He is tied for second with Al Unser with 32 c a r t e r US AU wins £ 1 5 7 ? MHK* 0. Another Texas Relays has gone by. So w h at0 It was just like the Texas Relays of the last cou­ ple of years — dom inated by all those foreigners.” The results w ere a public address announcer s as well as re p o rte r's nightm are M a n y w i n n e r ’s n a m e s either sounded like the extras in old Tarzan movies or the supporting cast of “ Scandina­ vian Sw eeties.” W a n d e r i n g a r o u n d M emorial Stadium 's turf, one could get the feeling of what it s like strolling around the U N TALKING TO the athletes w as a n o t h e r e x p e r i e n c e . R e p o r t e r s d i d n t k n o w w hether to ask them to talk slower, repeat statem en ts or crack a copy of “ Swahili, Made E a sy .” But the point is becoming increasingly obvious Relays a fte r Relays. Foreign athletes, especially from the African nations like Ke nya, a r e f i l t e r i ng into NCAA track program s at an alarm ing ra te of a r e coachable, dedicated and ex­ trem ely gifted And those kind of qualities have Am erican coaches drooling when they f r o m A f r i c a n r e t u r n M a n y t h e m r 6 % o n ' l S A V I N G S NIVERSTTY r n V J Jeff walker recruiting expeditions t o u c h KENYA, A sm all country of a p p r o x i m a t e l y 14 mi l l i on l di wh o s e b o r d e r s Amin-ruled Uganda on one side and the Indian Ocean on a n o t h e r , i n t e r ­ national athletic prom inence in 1968 r e c e i v e d K enyans K ipchoge Keino and Amos Biwott each won gold m edals for their country in their respective events — the 1.500-meter run and the 3000-meter steeplechase. But m ore im portantly, they opened the w orld’s eyes to the tiny, mo u n t a i n o u s nat i on which has gone through Arab slave trad ers, British control and tribal uprisings and has m ajor resources of coffee and gold in university track program s a re distance runners. With M t Ke n y a s t a n d i n g as a 17,000- foot training ground, plateaus, valleys and a coast a n d g e n e r a l l y hot, a r i d w eath er, the K enyans a re well-conditioned T H E I R P R E S E N C E changes of track team s. The U niversity of New Mex­ ico and UT El Paso are prim e exam ples of what a heavy Ke­ nyan influence can do. Both c a m p u s e s , in hot, m ountainous areas, a re ideal fo r t he the Ke n y a n s a nd Lobos' and M iners' program s the re w a rd s have re a p e d N either school was a track powerhouse before the arrival the fo re ig n e rs although of r e s p e c t a b l e e a c h h a d a program U TEP, with athletes T rack coaches in the United States, however, a re m ore in­ terested in another resource — the country’s athletes. like Wi l s o n W a i g w a , J a m e s Munyala, Kip S enna. Geof­ N aturally, the m ajority of f r e y K e o c h , h a s wo n a the Kenyans who p articip ate national cham pionship. Ted •♦CAA A A A A A A A A A A A A A A * • * * Long Neck Special * , Schlitz - Lone Star - Pearl - Shiner * J * « 4 - * * "k Taco Flats L 5 2 1 3 N. L am ar * "♦CAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA4- Food special 6 to 8 pm only Our fam o u s H obo Plate includes beans, meat, taco salad, tortillas, jalapeno, etc.___________ only 99* 25* each No Limit Fri. 4 to 6 pm THE AUTO AUDIT PROFESSIONAL M A IN T E N A N C E and SERVICE O N IMPORTED CARS PORSCHE — AUDI — BMW 9 1 1 -9 1 2 -9 1 4 -9 2 4-Fox I O O L S-B A V A R IA 2 0 02 BRAKES SHOCKS MUFFLERS Body Repair & Painting • TUNE-UPS • ELECTRICAI • FUEL INJECTION 30 05 G U A D A L U P E IN THE UT AREA 474-0610 6 M IL E S E A S T o f A u s t i n o n h w y 2 9 0 POST TIME. IL » 0 0 WM ion Admi Child ra n u M c r l l S I OO TIRED OF 5 5 MPH? UT FLYING CLUB MEETING • General Officer Elections Wed., M a y 3rd 8:00 pm Texas Union Rm 4.224 • N ew Ride Referral call 251-4748 • Demo-flights Sat., Apr. 15th 1:00 pm-5:00 pm for only *1 at Tims Airport IH 35 Take Dessau Rd Exit Is Driving to Class Driving yon up the Wall? Then make your move to The campus. ) on can sleep a little later every morning let the maid clean up for you, and if you have a break between classes, we're close enough to come home. The Castilian's almost perfect. A ll we need is you. ('.astilian. just one half block from The Castilian a privately owned coed residence hall in the heart of the student community 2323 San Antonio St. 478-9811 1 — — entertainm ent T h e Da i l y T e x a n f I F r i d a y , April 14, 1978 □ Page 19 Hard rock scores at Munici Soap Creek Saloon rule t A / r r « ,e * « n THIS WtlKtND Capricorn According Attn! A i DELBERT MCCLINTON Hot ft. Worth Boogie Us 707 L h C a v a * R d . — k---------- 3 2 7 - 9 0 1 0 4A— SCI Shoe Shop ■ ■ W« make and ................. GENUINE SHEEP SKIN RUGS IO OO Naturel A Beautiful (elors ★ SADDLES* ENGLISH WESTERN r e p a i r b o o ts th o ** b e lt* Ua,h#r goods OS* Capitol Saddlery c a n 1614 La va ca Austin Texas 478 9309 By DAVIS TUCKER Entertainment Writer Everybody had waited a long time to see Wednesday’s concert. Three heavy rock-and-roll bands at once — Journey, Montrose, and Van Halen But there were some questions Would Montrose be the same without Sammy Hagar0 What was the “ new” Journey going to be like0 Would Van Halen fulfill expectations? Would Journey still play their old music? VAN HALEN WAS SUPR1SING. The guitar work was really wild — Ed Van Halen showed command of his instru­ ment. Their version of the old Kinks classic "You Really Got Me,' showed how much energy they possessed. The crowd loved it and even dragged lead singer David Roth off the stage. But they just did not play long enough — 40 minutes is only a taste, and it was unsatisfying not to hear any more of Van Halen Ronnie Montrose came out next, with a new sound that shows lots of promise. To answer the earlier question, yes, he was great without former vocalist Sammy Hagar Mon­ trose’s set was all instrumental, with two synthesizer men backing him up as he ripped and tore his way through some cuts off his latest album “ Town Without Pity,” his latest hit, was superbly done. Montrose ruled his stage, running around and pulling screams out of his guitar as the crowd roared. HE PROVED that he can still play lead with a beautiful touch and that he can change his innovative style and con­ tinue to improve However, his older work “ Starliner,” was excellent and revealed the Ronnie Montrose of previous y*ars. But he only played for a little longer than Van Halen, which was a big disappointment. Everyone wanted to hear more. When Journey came onstage before the packed crowd at Municipal Auditorium, they received a loud welcome. This San Francisco band has been touring the United States almost non-stop for a good while, seeming to stop only to cut an album. With their new lead singer, Steve Perry, they have a different sound and a different image, which is somewhat “ commercial” and not as hard rock or down to earth as they used to be. Their new album, “ Infinity,” received most of their attention Wednesday — Journey played every song on it. While the album does have some fine music, it is not up to Into the Future” or “ Next,” or the level of “ Look “ Journey,” their first release Though Journey did play their big hit, “ Look into the Future,” straight from the heart dur- mg the encores (Neal Schon was unbelievable), and though they played more of their earlier work, most of the concert was devoted to ’in fin ity.” To a hardcore Journey freak, they almost sounded like Aerosmith or any other commercial rock-and-roll band. Journey is better than that Schon showed that he is still one of the best new guitarists out, as his fingers slid up and down the instrument’s neck, almost fusing with the guitar. He played his soul out, crying and stomping and wailing out his leads, tuning in with the Ronnie M ontrose rocks out. Texen Staff Photo by Keith S a rd is stars Aynsley Dunbar was a dazzling performer — his drum solo was energetic and just plain fast His talent shone through in every number Steve Perry has a strong clear voice, and to his credit he did sing the old Journey song, Next,” blending in easily with Dreg Rolie on keyboards It was a topnotch concert with a lineup dripping with talent and technique, but it did not last long enough Journey played six encores, which is not hard to understand in view of the delighted crowd, but why not play a longer show in the first place? As it stood, Journey played for a little over an hour .md a half < encores included) The guitar work and drum­ ming and keyboard playing of the three groups was im­ pressive, and they received an enthusiastic response from the audience Journey, Ronnie Montrose and Van Halen showed a lot of people (punk rockers especially) what hard, loud, talented rock and-roll is all about. All things con­ sidered, it was a great performance. Department to present Moliere play The Department of French and Italian will sponsor two perfor­ mances of M oliere's play “ Les Precieuses ridicules,” Friday and Saturday in the courtyard of the Architecture Building. The play is a lively farce which satirizes male and female vanity, social pretension and the blind arrogance of conceit Instead of us­ ing the contemporary 17th century French setting, however, the action will be set in modern-day Dallas Sen io r dram a m ajo r Ju lie Needlman will direct the show Needlman previously directed a French production of Anouilh’s “ An­ tigone” at Hofstra University in New York. The performances will be at 5 p.m. Friday and 3:45 p m Saturday Admission is free. For more infor­ mation, contact Dr Andrew Suozzo at 471-5531. She laughs, she cries, she feels angry, she feels lonely, she feels guilty, she makes breakfast, she makes love, she makes do, she is strong, she is weak, she is brave, she is scared, she is... Global Menu Club Of Texas Introduces Jo in b y phono, w ith your V IS A . Master Ch ar go, or Am en* an I (press Coil A ustin THESE LEADING RESTAURANTS ARE NOW PARTICIPATING IN THE GLOBAL PROGRAM r n 477-2902 HERE'S HOW GGbal menu club WORKS FOR YOU I TM MM M i t a HM KXK I * . t a m I X m u n t W O OO ..« «,! m u m rn mumm, w a n <«* m *•„< V IS A M m w C H M ) „ » « • » l i m i H S M o i rn O NO * M m , C U (O M V c * > «<•*. Sm.m l l * Urn Utm TOMO rn mom t.ui MtM UM ITT MOT « I Im, a..ii 'U fn u , t a —.I t a t a p M . i un -.IKM . . . n a m , 11 mjtt. I,.at t a • W M W . MM M M alM ta tm. KIM I tmtUUm aal, I .I aa. . . aal a1 a** I *«aa U W M ! aaa... >Ma. 'Urn o u ttU tm III « ( • t a ’ M a lta hi t a d rn (TOHM t a V a * —m m f i n I M M a t t a in t A f T I A t a hun M t a M l t a * (*>»>«• Mal M M I M K l Ml . t a al mmu m i iii t a gum aal ( . i n n . mum a. mm •mtmumi a n * t AM I I M il m a.i n . (na. int, Im ..anJ twin, int nm* tm ti MMM t a M t a t a l l .a la i S d - * * , - t a t a * ! MIM tBM>* .MWlm, Ut .tutti ,I,K . M .tl. I'- .M rta* I ' t a d a a t a i M A Y i-m a-., . . I . rn* a . . m i l l , >..«ta«1 t>, M a * t a l t a d H Business C ilia U p O rg anizations a t t e n t i o n 1 Raison, and Chonta Contact Global Group Salts on* Austin 477 • 2902 lo 349 - I 75 TEXAS TUMBLEWEED ON TOF OF 2222 IM MD Cowboy Peeks cook et! over mesquite H ill country view on top of F m Rd 2222 THE BARN 8611 BA LC O N ES ON MOPAC Famous for its chaeta See the original girl ,n th* Red Velvet Swing " THE CAMBRIDGE I BOI LA V A C A S T R U T Enioy an evening of graciousness and charm Outstanding food and service THE DRISKILL HOTEL IW F /th S T R U T To make this a truly amovable and memorable occasion the Dtitfcill offers you the very best in food, service and your favorite wine or cocktail THE SANDPIPER 2700 W A N D ERSO N I ANF AT THI V IL L A G E The beauty of The Sandpiper wit! enchant you A broad selection of savory seafoods and fine wine VIVE LA CREPE 2/00 ANDE U SON LA N E IN THE H EA R T OF THE V ILL A G E SH O PPIN G C EN T ER The romantic setting of en outdoor cafe or the garden dining room adds to the pleasure of then finely pre pared meets tov ton* onfoy Dining for 7 ... Priced for I a l 1 3 e l IO * A R I A S I IM I ST R I S T A U * A N T S tit Hot* n 4 tnmMPwluM} th* l f ti Urn tv ii to p * few racial I#*!*!,# iNlfHh O? ftw.iM im Tho iffcAWft pt-j*Ta*0h TOMTOM! un* fW'i HTM* wHm TR a1 iv SMi $##Urt hm vt MATT NI limy art> «n>ohiu <$*#M * mmtmt* ul «*»#« tianml =** f iii* *i*e 2H IO for rw<•, plus c is and gratuity. l ins I I f o u r M oor 2 * of W e stg a te ro w e r, h a resets a tio n s a n d c u is in e o f th e e v e n in g , call 47T 1864 Free v a le t p a rk in g th r o u g h o u r 1 2 th a n d I a v a c a S tre e t e n tra n t, e. EJVUMSH'S for Lunch or D inner Dancer/choreographer Sally Bowden Choral group to perform Saturday The Southern Singers, a U niversity choral group directed by Sue Collins, will p resent a “ Spring E v en t” a t 8 p m. Saturday in the LBJ Auditorium Admission is free. The program will include songs m ade popular by Barry Manilow, B arbra Streisand. John D enver and Judy G arland — as well as selections from the Broadway m usicals “ A Chorus Line" and “ P ippin.” The m ulti-m edia show will be staged with choreography by Nancy Bacon and a live jazz band directed by R obert Donahue. M em bers of the jazz band a re Tom Cantrell, bass; Kevin Lem an, drum s; John Mills, wind; and Suzzan Craig, piano Night People . . . The perfect gathering place where the art of conversation is alive and well. For late diners, a full dinner menu until midnight. Sn ackers and sippers until 2 a .m .! Wine Cellar — Tonite — EiKTRtElMlE HIE — Saturday N igh t — VINCE VAN CE V A L IA N T S A N D THE — N ext W eek j Restaurant 3010 Guadalupe • 476-0283 Wmd A Than. B a c k b o n e Friday B u b b l e P u p p y S a tu rd a y N e w W a v e B a t t le Q u a l i t y I t a l i a n F o o d ltd)oat Springs p r e s e n ts Thurs.-Sat. I Greezy | Wheels La Promenade = 7115 Burnet Tillllllllillllllllllllillllllllllllllllllllllllllir 459-4318 \ U t i le Ail*Iii M u sic M usic an d Lyrics by STE PH I N SO N D H EIM B ook bv H U G H WHEELER him bv I M Vt AR B F R C A U N A p r i l 14 — M a y 7 W ed. Sat 8 15 Sun. I i i 1’ Reservations 476-0541 % ZACHARA SC O TT I HF ATRI CEN TER P R O D U C T IO N Rn i rside and I amar w it h the a ssista n c e o f a s e rv ic e gra n t fro m the C it v of A u s t in Tickets Also A vailable at B Y GEORGE, Dobie M all I was a singing shoeshine boy when I was a kid, but I was polishing too many socks" toddle Money Ft om the school cl hard knocks c o n td a class hatd rocker. A Wolitjany Pi eduction On Colunvbi* Recot ck arnd Tapes. Sou PksIu. ed by Bn*-* Bomb* for ffeipm g hwdto»-«H*w ■ "i , I (N ev er a cava*) KITTY APPLING Happy Haul 7-7 pm (Free Snoek* A leva M v a cl 7S H,boite St AS baar Alit Ha.* Try a o r M y ifx M u ah i e a rn ar awr Oreperten Fra# Audition* Thor* A Tri FRERCTj Tonite DOC WATSON Ain't M isbehave Sot. Rock 'N Roll BUDGIE Garfield Missouri Sun Mas tor Saxophonist M X TOK GORDON Thu» 27 B O B r e s t a i i B i n t & b c i r 441-1195 20051. tiverbid* v> g a B w r n EW1 _ SXS1/ , BARTON SPR IN G S R D . 4 7 7 - 0 7 0 * SHANGHAI Chinese Chinese Restaurant Check our New Menu 1 * Lunch 1 1 : 3 0 2 D in n e r 6 - 1 0 S a t & S u n 1 1 : 3 0 1 0 C lo a a d M o n d a y 4 6 9 - 3 0 0 0 Commtrcc Pork - Koemj Ion* of Guadalupe L U N C H E O N BU F F E T S oup , Sal ad, a nd San dw i c h l l A . M . -2 P.M. D I N N E R 7 P . M . - l l P.M. " The Bent l*rime Ri b in Aunt in..." L A D I E S ' A P P R E C I A T I O N N I G H T S A R E M O N D A Y A N D T U E S D A Y 7-2 W I T H H A L F - P R I C E D R I N K S F O R A L L U N E S C O R T E D L A D IE S . Th e Asian Music Circle and the C e n te r for Middle Eastern Studies p r e s e n t Hamza El Din in a concert of Nubian Music Monday, April 17, 1978, 7:30 p.m.Burdine Auditoria Tickets $3.00 available at the door TGIF ON THE UNION PATIO ^S| Music beginning at 12:00 noon, Si Belly Dancing 4:30-6:00 ^ 2 5 c Beer Beginning at 2 p.m. A 9 ® THETEXAS TAVERN ...at tha Caba f t th • whole world ii baoutifull In th * boart of D o w nto w n A uttin, Texa* — 6th and Brosot 4 7 4 -2 1 6 9 REGIONAL FINALISTS FIFTH ANNUAL STUDENT FILM AWARDS The Texas Cowboys present ■ M i c h a e l ! M u r p h e y & Denim Saturday, April 15, 4 an Communication Auditorium ADMISSION FREE presented by Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences Dept, of Radio-TV-Film M M K S C R E E N S Let me be your guide in the art of love. Thursday, April 27 Municipal Auditorium 8:00 pm Tickets: $6.50 & $5.50 Available at Raymonds, Discovery Records or from any Cowboy. All proceeds go to Austin Association for Retarded Citizens. VOO 2 46 4 30 6 15 8 00 9:46 iii i mmmmmmmmmmmmmm min FEATURES; 51.50 HI 6:00-51.75 aller MIDNIQKTERS 51.50 I ------- I X 1 OO 3 10 5 20-7 30-9:40 ...................... 1 ....— — — - " ■Hi* i J Padre Padrone IHI*Man.” Bruce WiHtemse*, Pteyhey - “This keewtifei epic Im peetry, pewee end T h is Is t h e w e e k e n d t i icy dftdn’t p i a v o o lf. SkUt’u D u vall fjis-y S fkhA IntuY R u b ,<:<**» Rd*it Altmiu [PG] MIDNIGHTER P g g e 22 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ F r id a y , April 14, 1978 IRK IIGMTIO PARKINS AQ UA RIUS 4 4* »fc., > ». *s* UA- *, i i *M -soars* HUY CRYSTAL t i (HK IO PRICES TH 4 P J I AON TMfftl SAT ACA d i t t y AWARDS W IN N * * w o o r n * p i * 1 0 0 - 1 J I M 4 0 -4 35 I 1 5 -1 0 OS WOODY ALLIN DIANI KEATON " A N N IE H ALL" D K ) Til * p M m a t in m .f. WAITER MATTHAU GLENDA JACKSON "House Calls’9 (PO) UVE ROCK 'N R O U THIS WEEKEND TEXAS H ap p y Hour 3 -8 pm w ith B obby Doylo on piano 443- J 695 1907 E. River.,de Dr Great rabbit movies you have known and loved: g e n e r a l c i n e m a t h e a t r e s ■ ALL CINEMAS-E VERY DAY TIL 1:30 P.M.-S1.50 I THE PARAMOUNT THEATRE PRESENTS £ / " ✓ 0! / ' \* ^ ✓ • ^ ' C e l e b r a t i o n of the PARAMOUNT^ THIRD ANNIVERSARY Wednesday, April 19 8:00 p.m. No Late Seating Order Your Tickets Now! PRICES: $7.75/6 75/5.75/3.75 Maatercharga t Bank amene* rd Accepted At Paramount Bo* Office or with Phone Order TICKETS AT PARAMOUNT BOX OFFICE OPEN 12:00 NOON-8 OO P M MONDAY-SATURDAY Ticket* also at Inner Sanctum A DI ac Records, Highland Mail Charlet Eckerman A John Bern*naord—Producers 713 CONGRESS/472-5411 JOIN THE DRISKILL HOTEL ANO THE PARAMOUNT THEATRE FOR DINNER ANO ENTERTAINMENT WITH TICKET PURCHASE. COMPLETE DINNER FOR T W O -f 14 95 PHONE 472-5411. Some kinds of pleasure are excruciating! You may have heard about it.read about it. Only now Alex dcRenzy lets you experienced. The very first film of excruciating pleasure. Alex deRenzy's f e m m e s d c S a dc Low is o hurting thing C - t i c 2 13 E. 6 th 4 7 8 -0 2 4 3 THEATER TWO F U L L L E N G T H C O L O R S O U N D F E A T U R E S NC > OPEN 34 HOURS! BOOKSTORE LA RGEST SELECTION OF M A G S F IL M S B O O K S S E X T O Y S IN AUSTIN I I I I I I L m u i m i h m ^ 25c ARCADE IN TEXAS ARCADE CAPITAL PLAZA 4 5 3 - 7 6 4 6 I H 3 5 N O R T H I Q th I H H D I over! I O w *. ACADEM Y AW ARD W INNER C1 0 5 € 6 NCOUNT6RS O f THC T H IR D K IN D 2 :1 5 -4 :4 5 -7 :1 5 -9 :4 5 — N O Nills _ H IG H L A N D M A L L I H 35 AT KOENIG IN 4ST-7326 FIN A L WEEKI 4 A C A D E M Y A W A R D S 1:00-2:50-4:40 4:75-1:15-10:05 .V * * ^ . lAf Ail -Am; ^ A N N I ! M A I L A - — m m H IG H L A N D M A L L I H 35 AT KOENIG LN. 451-7326 HELD OVER I 5 th SMASH WEEKI GUT-WRENCHING TERROR. . . The coat la tin t rata, and the enacts are, In a word D E V A S T A T IN G !" ii: “AN ENGROSSING THRILLER! " K ir k D ouglas m o b iliz e s a k in d o f crazy energy he has n o t d isp la y e d fo r s o m e is d e lic io u s ly evil I " J o h n C a s s a v e te s tim e THE CARRIE SNODGRESS FURY KIRK DOUGLAS JOHN CASSAVETES ■ T C O . C I M IDEAL GIFT FOR M 0TNU S OAT FATHER'S DAT GRADUATION E N T E R T A IN M E N T GIFT BOOKS! P a tr ic k T a g g a rt. A m a r ic a n -S ta te s m a n ] VALUABLE C O U P O N I L A T E SHOW FRI & SAT CINEMA "WIST 2'30S Congress • Open 11 j m • 442-571 ‘ I MW #.(•%*•*« »**»#* I # I 4 M M * 7 9 * 4 5 9 5* HELD OVER AT BOTH THEATRES T e x a s 799 J J* Sd* * 4* I IV * 59 I IJ S TU bas TOBAV : I “THIS IS A WONDERFUL MO V IL A etoile iou* film •od its Otcai waft Mr#!! datary* O ' M etrunwbi MiMIMk " A W O R K O I H I M A U K A B I I Q U A L IT Y , U N W t U N ! IO U S A N O M I M O R A N I I u8 to bd to this film " in Their is a gemtiha lust«M Judith Chil Saiv>!sja» He. »» It i» w ith “ ‘ B L A C K ANO WHITE IN COLOR IS A UNIQUE. DIVERTING AND HIGHLY REFRESHING CHANGE How rued lo Add a French film about somattong t>#*Kto* sax and sacral a g e n ts 1 He* Hew* Ne* v.w* tv*. > Hew* * S a tu rd a y.................................... 7:30 4 9:30 S u n d a y ..................................................................7:00 * M O U C l a m Hall A u d ^ . *r -i THE MOST H ILA R IA I W ILDEST MOVIE rn x IS HERE! "ONE OF THE BEST ALMS OF THIS SEASON!” h m AA»im.* rn N v * \ *: A i v De*-* /A p a st ** - N T I m m . ■ A C A D E M Y ^ AWARD WINNER BEST FEATURE DOCUMENTARY n ancient horror slept beneath the elegant old mansion... Fact — not fiction! THE/VWN WHO SKIED DOWN EVEREST STARTS T O D A Y r T o : ' * ; > J J ? jh r ; ^ j i i u - . ' . V , j a* J ^ I -V J J *3 v - > J *)-I*.7 J . i v l I ' r * ■< J ' I t * rn •* mJ ” J J J? * * i* ti j ! V * A . ' .r ;> /-* V U .” J ;’ • ? - i ' ■ f / - * ,, * • f J, X L j # #» J j / . f " , j ? a ? A . \ ..H r I r 1 F r i a Sol Sunday 7:00 & roo 1.50 A .C . Aud. 7:00 Only U ;i i AUSTIN PREMIERE CLAUDE CHABROL'S MSS* C A W O ‘ o r - j * / ^ > l r > ‘ V ys^'Z* ' v * . v ; u n ‘-v»*« . > V* V • Kl » •* » UH.V ■« C ha brot a b im a b o u t ferrortam aex, a n d p o litu a in France Sender al YOO p. ar Only * “ A C Awd French w tfh m b h t h * ■J-' asi' " ii# * -* j f t, ■^71T’ V -J* r - * X , X v i f ‘j 'C \ > s* y* _ -J x # ^ * / , L* 5* n -. - - J - J r f * •* 'J .. 3 4*. . .. ^ J * J j t f . i ' I * / - V 4< je ' . 5 . w w & t N e W w ' v i e s M d*y * Saturday Nth HaN Aud. ||;30 Only t l a ___ j 10 f J %/ Jt J J The ScducrioN of MiMi S tu d e n ts * A ssociation Film Program . W P -UTIL. ' ~ I M Friday & Saturday Burdina Aud. 1:00 4 H S P ’ h fro ban with ivk>Nt* T S O * « * . * j -J* - -■ : - y ’ - "THE EVIL" R u RICHARD CRENNA JOANNA PETTET ANDREW PRINE VICTOR BUONO KU. A. JOSEPH MAltOLM LEVWTHAl ED CARLIN ri r n W I Pita* reave FE A TU R E S M S -2 55-4 30 6 10-7 50-9 30 A N 0 A N D T O O A Y FE A TU R E S BOX OFFICE OPENS 6:30 Center Stage, Inc. presents The Capitol Acting Co. in 'JESSE AND TNE BANDIT QUEEN' Fri, Sat Thru April 22 8:00 - $4.00 11:00 - $3.00 Tonite AUSTIN SWING SOCIETY Saturday B O B B Y SHEHORN BAND Sunday BOURBON BROTHERS The Longest Happy Hour in Town Double Shots • 2 for I 11 am -8 pm Never a Cover Charge N o w in our n o w b u ild in g In Rivortow n M o ll ( r i g h t b e h i n d the O l d So c k R oom I Friday, April 14, 1978 □ THE DAILY T EXA N □ Page 23 rn ■uu£hTlfA%vi A q u a r iu s 4 * ' '•MSS* ,* , , *«, I FUTURES DAILY AT I 4-4-1-10 FEATURES AT 7 -4 -d -i-IO 4 - i- e - e * » S? OO TIL 6 PM . M O N -SA T - BO TH TH E A T R E S SOO H m w c A D fiw -453* 44! “OLD FASHION FUN" John Boltin AUSTIN CITIZEN WALTER MATTHAU GLENDA JACKSON ART CARNEY RICHARD BENJAMIN I * * "House Calls” I S . ' 4 • kl *WiU i p Q w P R E S I D I O T H E A T R E S .VAyAXXVVSN SSSSK? “A HAUNTINGLY LOVELY AND MOVMG FILM.” NOvy Yolk limes "O ne of the yeai's IO best. A film that sings with a moving beauty." “ w-Xv I I I Hip iJ t l l [SXOL ERASERHEAD *HM|» OM. IO t 'WCH 320 E. 6th 477-1012 mummg M LI we...... ... H IG H L A N D M AI__ I H 35 AT KQCNtG LN 451-73?6 SECOND WEEK AT BOTH THEATRES FEATURES 1:00-2:50-4:40-6:25-8:15-10:05 A C A D E M Y A W A R D S -m s iligg , v J ills , -v V- i H JL ro m m y Father, m y M a ste r a film by P a o l o a n d V i t t or i o T a vi an i □ O B I E 1 & E O O B l f M A L L • 4 7 7 . 1 3 3 4 1:00-3:10- 5:20-7:30-9:40 ............. " i i ..... . WINNER ACADEMY AWARDS BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR Jason R o lla i d s BI SI SUPPORTING ACTRESS Vanessa Redgrave lib**, flint*, ut if. *si SAT. A T M ID N IG H T $ 1 .50 VARSITy T i l T f i T W I T . T . ^ T r l mw Stotbmt* was amc Ct# >2 is ca n tu s I - UM sue* w » > sane** n se CAO** MAH u< M E L i B R O O K S ■(AS f c l M I S T H C H I G S L C C P “.TIS M S U t n t ) ASP OdeTo B i l l y J o e l TIS M0> M S I0 SS tm k revert IS SPW* A OMO S a t u r d a y n i c h T FE V ER |( IMS I K W I Ii I A " i m SISkTAS-l A P t v o h o - C o m s d y MADELINE KAHN • CLORIS LEACHMAN' HARVEY KORMAN * * A USTIN S N O I HIT' HLS 6 3 0 ) 1 30-10 30 Clear the tracks! k9 It s a IOO t o ffs-a- minute runaway as T im goes tramping ■r 0V' with a loco mot i va and a can i ne kl k l im U2fT U S O 2nd GACA! W E IK ! TIM CONWAY THE BILLION DOLLAR HOBO (TIS 6:AS)-9:OO-IO:SS T i ■ L * i l i l i i 'J k £ l LAY I K M lin is t e r to rses f r o m lit it world a q i i n i l t ir o sp ace tra ve le rs f r o m arvo tfier* JI' N t 5th WEEK TONIGHT at 6 : 1 0 - 8 : 0 0 - 9 : 5 0 p m Matinees SAT. & SUN. (.IS’ ASPOUT (IVO 1454 2 7 I H %« M I va oats W A I T D U N I * V a lt e r M a tth a u This crazy mixed-up family doesn't stand a chance of winning a million bucks. BEST PICTURE BEST ACTRESS Dton» Keaton BEST DIRECTOR Woody Alton BEST SCREEN PLAY (PG) ANNIE HALE A nervous romance t e x a s union p r e s e o t s BOGEY, WOODY AND DIANE IN SPECIAL DOUBLE FEATURE! HUMPHREY I INGRID I They have a date with fate in A N D “ It's s t ill th e s a m e o ld s t o r y ,a a flight t o r lo v r arid i>lnrv.,MJ Pa* amount Prft«rti present* ••I I * VI V I N . W M * ? Starring Oscar Winners b WOODY ALLEN DIANE KEATON J m Friday and Saturday at 7 and 10:15 p.m. n l f J*- Texas Union Theater * . $1.00 with UT ID * ^ SPECIAL SH O W IN G OF THE LAU G H M AKER^. A re c e n tly d is c o v e re d W o o d y A lle n T V . pilot fr o m 1 9 1 2 fe a tu rin g L o u is e L e sse r a n d o th e r s S h o w in g s are 2 a n d 2 3 0 a m a n d a re fre e B e s u re to e n te r th e W o o d y A lle n. O is n e K e e to n an d P H u m p h r e y B o g a rt lo o k a lik e c o n te s t a t 1 : 3 0 a rn ...................................... RgWRtlmon WncHn&MUUf/ l lwnnnnn TECHNICOLOR* ; G . i s m s W a r n e r B r o s PAUL AUO! SY D N E Y M H R n Wanna bet? 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Lamar FOR R EN T M I N I V T O N A G A S O O T H C a n c r a t # BiocK c o n s tr u c tio n . * a c o r t t y p a t r o l I M u p m o n th ly aaa SAM. *N a o d i# '*d i A A A M in t W arehouse t FURNISHSO A M tT M lN T S ■ FUtNISMIO APARTMCNTS ■ FURNISHED A P A ITM Imtc — . NISHIO A rA IT M lNTS ■ FURNISHIO APARTMENTS ■ FURNISHED APARTMENTS ■ FURNISHED APARTMENTS M A U N A K A I 405E 31st w alk to f a m p u i. ih u fti# and c ity b u l. ?fcr 26# attic i#n ' * T-f*'(ttrnatir‘ l CHEZ JACQUES — Sum m er Rate — I BR Furn. $ 1 7 0 • • W alk to C a m p a l • Nice Pool - Patio 130? W 24 472-7*29 El Dorado Sum m er Special • I BR Furn. $140-155 • Shuttle Front Door • Nica Pool - Patio • Foil loosing Tool 3501 Speedw ay 4 7 2 -4 8 9 3 EL CID Student Special I BR Furn. $ 15 5 • • Shuttle Front Door • Fall Leasing Also 3 7 0 4 S p eedw ay 4 5 3 -4 8 8 3 M ARK V — Sum m er Rate — • I BR Furn. $160 • Nice Pool - Patio • Shuttle Corner • Fall Preleasing Too 3 9 1 4 Ave. D 4 5 9 -8 0 8 3 VILLA NORTH Sum m er Special • IU. Furn. $125-130 • I BR furn. S1SS-US • 2 BR Furn. $1S0-KS • Fall iN iin g Toot 4 5 2 0 Duval 45 1-5 64 1 Long Haven Apts. — Sum m er Kates — • I BR Furn. $150 • 2 BR Furn. $195 • Walk to Campus 4 7 2 - 5 9 7 4 Villa Arcos - Sum m er Special - • I BR Fem • Shuttle Front Door • Hic# Pool - Patio • Fall loosing Also 3100 Speedway 474-9486 C ontinental Apts. - Sum m er Rate — 2 BR Furn. $1 9 5 Shuttle Corner Nice Pool - Patio Fall Leasing Too 9 1 0 E. 4 0 4 5 1 -4 1 3 7 Fall Leasing Too 452 6071 4100 Ave A A p t No 106 LA PAZ APTS. Sum m er Specials • I BR Furn. $ 1 6 0 • 2 BR Furn $ 1 9 0 • Shuttle I Blk • Nice Pool, Patio • Fall Leafing Too 401 W. 39 4 5 1 -3 3 6 2 THE RETREAT *130 — Sum m er Rate — Large Furn. Eff. Nice Pool - Patio 4 4 0 0 A v e . A 4 5 4 - 8 1 6 3 Su Roca Apts. Sum m er Special I BR Furn. $1 6 5 W alk to Cam pus Nice Pool - Law n Fall Leasing Also 2 4 0 0 Longvi.w 474-8041 Avalon Apts. • Sum m er Rates - Eff. Furn. $ 1 3 0 1 BR Furn. $ 1 5 0 2 BR Furn. $ 1 8 0 4 7 7 - 0 0 1 0 VILLA SOLANO APTS. Sum m er Special 1 I BR Fum. $165 2 BR Furn. $185 Shuttle Comer Intramural Field Across Street 51st & Guadalupe 451-5865 Hyde Park Apts. — Sum m er Rates —- • Eff. Fum. $129 • I BR Fum. $139 • 2 BR Fum. $165 • Shuttle Front Door • City Tennis Courts 8 Pool Across Stroot 4 4 1 3 Sp eedw ay 4 5 8 - 2 0 9 6 MARK VII APTS. Sum m er Special F E W S U M M E R C H O I C E S L E F T • R E S E R V E D P A R K IN G • ON S H U T TL E • F R E E P A R T IE S I and 2 Drs, pool, la u n d ro m a t no net* p ie a ir, D70 and up. a ll b ills paid except C O C K T A I L T H E S PANISH T R A I L 451-3470 4520 Bennett S U P E R S U M M E R R A T E W a lkin g distan ce to UT cam pus. 2br- 2ba 2br Iba, ea ch, ca ble TV, pool, la u n ­ d ry fa c ilitie s huge closets, p le n ty of p a rkin g , q u ie t A co ngenial atm osphere. 472-5332 478-3303 I BR $190 Walk to Campus B e a u tifu l new fu rn itu re and drapes, b u ilt in kitch e n CA-CH, fu lly carpeted, pool, each apt has its own balcony or patio, w a te r gas, cable paid 3301 Red R iver. 474 8530, 451 6533 Central Properties 1717 E N F I E L D RD. Summer & Fall Leasing E x tra nice e ffic ie n c y and studio B eg in n in g ra te *145 plus E la rg e lb r 478-9767 W A L K T O U T 105 E.31st E x tra n i t e e ffic ie n c y , d ishw asher, d is ­ posal la u n d ry, cable, gas heat and cook­ ing S145 plus E, su m m er ra te 477-0859 327-0064 C A S A D E S A L A D O 2610 Salado Now s,gnm g c o n tra c ts fo r su m m e r and s u m m e r l b r f a l l a p a rtm e n ts 4 blocks west of cam pus on VVC sh uffle route, CA CH pool, paid cable TV, la u n d ry room , o ff stre e t p a rk ­ ing L u x u r io u s th r u C all 477-2534 o r com a by M a n a g e r's a p t No HO L A R G E E F F I C I E N C I E S S U M M E R RATES UT & C ity bus routes Hancock i i i Apts. 5 BLOCKS WEST OF CAMPUS Sum m er lease, larg e e fficien cie s, pan e l­ room , offse t bedroom and ed kitch en f u r ­ nished cable -w a ter-g a s (sto ve ) liv in g Red Oak A pts 2104 San G a b rie l $136-5142 476-7916 477 5514 fo r su m m er CASBAH, NOW R ed u ce d ra te s , sh a g , C A -C H , d is ­ hwasher, ce ilin g fans, b-b-q p its W C ro u te r <78-1749 2200 San G a b rie l leasing Free Service Parking Transportation HABITAT HUNTERS tr a p a p t j# ,- v /c # A spec I n i n n g in com p/o K o s m t h a c c o s t to s b u tt lo lo c a t o r PfB lo a tin g For S u m m e r A Fall Oolite kdeM Suite SA 474-1532 EL CAMPO Sum m er Special • I BR Fum. $160 • 2 BR Furn. $190 • Fall Leasing Too 305 W. 39 454-0360 Summer Student Special Tanglewood North Apts. • Wa Poy Tour Air Conditioning • Shuttle Bus Front Door • I BR Fum. $160 • 2 largo Pools • Shuttle Front Door • Signing Fall Leases • 2 Pools 9 Fall Leasing Too 310O S p eedw ay 4 7 7 - 5 0 8 7 1020 I 45 452-0060 * 1 3 0 Sum m er Special THE ESTABLISHMENT Large Efficiency Nice Pool Area 4 4 0 0 Ave. B 4 5 1 -4 5 8 4 MARK X X - Sum m er Special - I BR Furn. $ 1 6 0 • • 2 BR Furn. $ 1 9 5 • Shuttle 2 Blks. • Nice Pool - Patio • Fall Leasing Too 3 8 1 5 G u ad alu p e 4 5 2 -8 4 0 9 The Embers Apts. — Sum m er Rate — I BR Furn. $145 • • Shuttle Front Door • Fall Leasing Too 31 OO S peedw ay 4 7 7 - 5 0 8 7 Circle Villa Apts. Sum m er Special • I BR $140 & E • 2 BR $170 & £ • Shuttle Bus • Foil Leasing Too 2323 Town lake Circle 444-5003 La Canada Apts. - Sum m er Rates - • All Bills Paid • I BR Furn. $195 • 2 BR Furn. $230 • Mica Pool - Patio • Walk to Campus 1 3 0 0 W . 2 4 472-15 98 2207 Leon Apts. - Sum m er Specials ■ • I BR Furn. $160 • 2 BR Furn. $230 • Walk to Campus • Nice Peel I Patio • Fall leasing Too 2207 leon 478-5057 ASPEN WOOD APTS. Preleasing Summer A* f a l l Sum m er 1 BR Furn. $ 1 60 Plus E 2 BR Furn. $ 1 9 0 Plus E Fall IBR $195 Plus E 2 BR $ 2 4 0 Plus E SoJocf Your Apartment tarty • Shuttle Byon! Doan • In tra m u ra l Maid aero#* St root for your w o rt* • I la r g o f o o l* 4 5 2 -4 4 4 7 4 5 3 9 G u ad alu p e "t e l t f c f ?- | S u m m e r S p e c ia l Run, don t w a lk — tom orrow w ill be too late | for these choice residences J Tanglewood Westside J Apartments [ I I I I I I I I I I 1 Bedroom Furnished $ 1 3 5 -1 6 5 2 Bedroom Furnished $ 2 1 0 -2 2 0 Gas A w a ta r it p a id by ow ner. T.V. Cobia Too! Shuttle buses a t your front door Stoning tall loofas Now 1403 N orw alk In. 4 7 2 -9 6 1 4 I I I I I I I 3 o a a a i i m T r r r L \ i i T i w r Avoid the Last M in u te Rush — Prime Locations A vailable Willow Creek Apts 191 I W illow Creek Super Summer Special U n fu rn ith o d — Fum ith od Large A partm ents 4 4 4 -0 0 1 0 4 4 4 -0 0 1 4 I Bedroom Furn. $ 1 6 0 -1 6 5 2 Bedroom 2 Bath Furn. - $ 195 2 Large Pools f ] * 4 i h JQ C h h i u l .V 1 $ ,l l L k V i L 'ik'h 'ia iJ L 3 L li z 1 '\ r " : L ^ % Pf# Moving br b it new ,i . N. 'S. ft ■gg p g a a c i A ustin's b u s t * f f P r P P l ® ■ O i l l l u ^ l ^ y jjftE W l 2101 Burton Dr • 447-4130 FURNISHED APARTMENTS M f u r n is h e d A i j f f l g f f t F rid ay, A pril 14, 1978 □ THE DAILY TEX A N □ Page 25 HELP WANTED SERVICES TYPING ROOM AND BOARD N E A R UT I br ) I ?0-|!•$ pius E NO* le tt in g »c „ Fro *' fret Summer F e ll a no Sprn g refr*g TV tab le continuous cean.ng c-en. dishwasher carper no * winy* m a rb le - a n .t y 2410 L o n g v en M E S Q U IT E T R E E A P T S Manage' *U )J45 No 303 b a l c o n y , w i n d o w s T R E E S ;04 HOS *?35 pius E . no* leas ng for Summer F a ll and Spring Rough cedar accent walls. frost tree rofftg, T y cable continuous cleaning oven, dishwasher 4205 S p e e d w a y , S K A N S E N A P T S Manager 451 6672 No IQI E F F , I BR , 2 B R Apts. W a l k to campus, all features, summer & fall rates, 2907 West Avenue 474-1712 N E E D TO S A V E AND [S T IL L B E VS BL O C K F R O M C A M P U S B L A C K S T O N E A P T S 2*10 R E D R IV E R 47* 5631 I We w it' help you * na a ro om m a te to Ishare expenses 179 50 a m onth a ll b ills Ipaid A P A R A G O N P R O P E R T Y S P E N D T H E S U M M E R B Y O U R P O O L D U V A L V IL L A A prestigious college com ­ munity 4305 Ouval 451 2343 Bring this ad for I weeks free rent UT APTS. FOR YOU 2br, I br, effs. 38th St. (on shuttle) 453 4002 26th St (on shuttle) 472 6 58? 452-4158 F O R M $ 1 3 4 Guadalupe St (N ear Highland M a ll) D E L T A IN V E S T M E N T S R E N T IN G F O R S U M M E R Large efficiency, 2 locations, summer rates. CA CH, carpeted, 43)0 Ave B, 459 8018 46th & Airport, 459-1045, 451-4519, 345- 2556 S U M M E R R A T E S Walk to campus or shuttle bus I br and efficie n cy fu rnish ed , CA-CH, shag carpet ACT III 4312 Speedway JI 15 and S165 plus E, manager 453-0S40 ACT IV 3311 Red River 1)45 plus E, manager 474-8125 ACT IV 2801 Hemphill $145 plus E, manager 474-5650 ACT V II 2808 Whitis IH S plu$ E, manager 474-5650 ACT IV 2803 Hemphill $145 plus E, manager 474-5650 Three Oaks 409 VV 38th $145 plus E , manager 453-3383 The Westerner 2806 Hemphill $135 and $155 plus E, manager 472-0649 H em p hill P a r k A pts 2711 & 2721 Hemphill $135 plus E , manager 477-0066 E D P A D G E T T 454 4621 NOW L E A S I N G tor su m m er and thereafter R ave r»e your |.| now W alk u t 2 rn,notes, trorr ti44 water gas 304 6 J3rd 47» t e a rn a a a 'rom H JT wa»er get, cable paid tao Hearn 47e-095J E N G U S h a i r e e tf,cia n o es. I and 2br a p a rtm e n ts fr©rr> SISO pius electricity Shuttle pus, han d b all and tennis courts, ie i t Burton O r 444 pools and cable TV NOW L E A S IN G lb rs sum m er SIAO pius ta ll SITS plus E W alk to L B J L ib ra ry E Law School on shuttle I block east ot • *! * ,y* f on 2**h Tow er View A pts 474- 6B4J E f t lc i e h C y T H E B R O W N l E E m ale, u tilitie s paid *105 month CA CM, 2502 Nuacas No IOO (2 blocks from cam pus) Call 477 I37t attar 5 pm Grad student preferred C O N V E N IE N T WEST t- |, w ater gas. disposal pa d No pats. c h ild re n S IP . TW Hearn. 47»-09SJ C O M F O R T A B LE SU NN Y on# bedroom townhouse L a rg e w in d o w s p le n ty * l0 f®2* CA CH SIM plus e le c tric ity 926 6994 327 281/ L A R G E E F F IC IE N C Y clos* to campus and IF shuttle, $140 plus electricity Come by 3408 speedway No »or call 451- 4725 between 2 end I t J ¥ 2 Large 2br fiat. in attractive old Stockton Apt Quiet persons w ill ap predate $240 piui utilities 1902 Nueces, 476 8683 N IC E S U M M E R efficiencies. *125 plus E double bed, ges stove 3805 Ave B 451- 2215, 444-1268. T A R R Y T O W N E F F IC I E N C Y garage secluded, private apartment Qi et Partly furnished cable airconditioned $195 A B P 472-»521 S U M M E R R A T E S , I block U L I br, CA­ CH la u n d ry , d is h w a s h e r, ca rp e t, covered parking 477-8146 452-0779 I B R F U R N IS H E D , available now *155 plus E 476-7013 after 5 pm. I B R F U R N IS H E D apartment, smell quiet complex E R shuttle. *135 mon plus electricity 2514 W 17th 472-4742 UNFURNISHED DUPLEXES SOUTH, S H U T T L E , luxurious 2br. 2ba new carpet drapes al) appliances, CA ­ CH, vaulted ceiling, yard maintained, $255 Also 3br 3ba, very large fireplace, garage, available June I $345 443-4667 R IV E R S I D E AREA~ 1200 $q ft 2br, 2ba, new carpet all appliances CA CH, UT shuttle $245 plus E 443-4007 S U B L E A S E S U M M E R 2 1 duplex, all ap pliances, $195 month plus bills Available M ay 17 Near Delwood. Han­ cock Centers 472 *154 for info HELP WANTED C H E F A SS IST A N T dishwasher Need hard worker desiring to learn kitchen work See chef 912 Red River, 476 5000 B U S P E R S O N N IG H T S and days See chef 912 Red River 4/6 5000 C L A R K S V IL L E C R E A M Shop now tak­ ing applications for parttime employ­ ment Apply in person 1200 West Lynn T Y P IS T P A R T T IM E one or two weeks. 459-5561 P A R T T IM E help wanted, day and night shifts, apply in person 2-5 pm Burger King 35th and Jefferson is now L O P A K A S R E S T A U R A N T Inc ta k in g a p p lic a tio n s for m a n a g e r trainees Phone 476 5126 to make ap pointmen! for interview H E L P W A N T E D , day or night, full or p a rttim e starting $2 75 hr *2 95 after training Apply in person at M r Gaftis 3706 Jefferson 451-4610 or 1926 E R iv e r­ side SO LA R E N E R G Y 10-15 hrs/wk Selling solar No experience required, prefer engineering or business student 474 8522 P R O F E S S O R M O V IN G to Dallas seeks responsible person to drive U-Haul truck M ay 30 and or 31st 442-9303 P H O N E S O L IC IT O R S or sales people for solar products * paid daily Call Paul or Hat 454 5107 W A N T E D P A R T T I M E T T T ce n s e d plumber, students considered Call betw een 8 4pm Ask for C la re n c e Haymie, 443 7401 C H IL D C A R E needed Working mother with well-behaved pleasant children (15- 12-6) requests help, af irregular times especially after 5 pm and weekends Car helpful *1 00/hr References desired 476-4725 A T T R A C T IV E young women wanted for photographic studies experience not necessary 477 9130 after 6 pm W AN T TO S P E N D summer sailing the Caribbean7 The P a c ific 7 Europe? C ruis­ ing other parts of the world aboard sail­ ing or power yach ts7 Boat owners need crew s1 For free information send a 13* stamp to SKO KO , Box 20855, Houston, Tx 77025 L A R G E R O O M Y I & 2BR apartments, $150 8. $170 plus electric and gas, CA/CH, shopping center, 1200 E 52nd, Apt 102- A 453-6239 HELP WANTED HELP WANTED W eekend Production Operators Positions are available immediately for part time operators to work weekends (plus four hours during the week for total of 20 hours per week). Openings on following shifts: Sat. & Sun. 4 pm-12:30 am (evening shift) Sot. & Sun. 12:30 am-7:30 am (night shift) Above average wages & benefits. Interested persons should apply at Motorola's employ­ ment office, 3501 Ed Bluestein Blvd., Austin, TX 78721. When applying please note on application "weekend operator." E qu al O p p o rtu n ity E m ployer M / f / H r nN C *c PROGRAMMERS $14148+ SYSTEMS ANALYSTS $16140+ PROGRAMMER ANALYSTS $19044+ The Texas State Comptroller of Public Accounts has openings for Programmers. System s Analysts and P ro g ram m er Analysts. The minimum requirements are • Bachelors Degree and or • Two to Six Years DP Experience • Working knowledge of COBOL & JCL M VS, D B M S d esig n , a n d /o r C IC S programming experience are definite pluses These openings are in Austin. Texas lf you are interested in employment with the State Comptroller's Office contact C o m p t r o l l e r o f P u b l i c A c c o u n t s Personnel Division 111 East 17th Street Austin, Texas 78774 Toll Free: 1-800-252-5555 (Ext. 146) a n e q u a l opportunity employ» NEED A JOB THIS SUMMER? W e ll P a y Y o u To Try A r m y R O IC ever $ 4 0 0 plus room board and transportation co»t» fo Fort knox XV 30 May-6 July 19 June-27 July I 7 July-24 August N O M il it a r y o b lig a tio n lim ito d o p e n in g * CALL NOW! 471-5919 COPIES w-he-e you have a Choice T O P Q U A L I T Y Good Quality or 3* Budget Copies i uncollated loose sheets 48 hoc r%) Ju s t North of 27th at G uadalupe 2707 H em phill P a rk / O r n Quality V ersatility speed Convenience M BA T v p i n g P R IN T IN G B IN D IN G G rad School Q ualify g u a ran te e word processing tun sat vice bindery G IN N Y S C O P Y IN G S E R V IC E 7 am IO pm weekdays 9 5 Saturaay 476 9171 9|7? • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • a * t h e c o m p l e t e P R O F E S S IO N A L F U L L T I M E T Y P I N G S E R V I C E 472 3210 and 472 7677 • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • a The C a r e fu l T y p e Th e F *i*t T y p e J a N E W G U IL D c Q O * O P ROOM S FO R M I N AND W O M E N SU M E M R AND F A L L H ' x ' W 23rd Deutsches Haus Co-op O r d I ’ j btvXks from iam pus Oppor •unity h> pray ’He conv*'sational G *r man and Spam rn at supper Boarders welcome 477 Mas 474 1397 W O M EN AND M EN large rooms good I b lo k from campus Laura* meals. House Co op 2812 Guadalupe 47§-5154or 47* (MTO P E O P L E s h a r e tun food expenses d e c is io n s F r o m intel Co op Coom ii $10 W S147 oxy 23rd 476 1957 f e e lin g s w o rk W O M t N A N D M E N large rooms, good meat* I blenk from campus Laurel H ouseCoop 2*12Guadalupe 476 S154or 47* CH70 T E M P O R A R Y S IN G L E vacancy • now through Mas in small l o o p $130 mon. W alking distance UT 479 4443 TR A Vfl S U M M A R IN P A R I S O f A C U OF F ( RS i week F r e u h progr am Ju ly August i*?» Classes at Am erican College in Paris 3 credit* • Housing 2 meats per day excursion*, i oundtrtp Aer I* For E inform ation and bro. h u rt* Herrington, Sutton 115 or (hom e) 25* 2954 t o w COST travel to l»rael E a rn high commissions Toll free *00 773 7*7* 9 am 7 pm NY tim# BUSINISS OPPORTUNITI* I I started a business I months ago with irss than *100 . apital y o u can too I sell the "L iv in g P u tu re and everybody loves it I t s an tx IO mat flam ed with easel and engraved on aluminum foil Has fantastic coloring with magnificent detail Sample *3 so Stan Garrison, 572 Rose M an e A ve Va Beach Va 23442 L E A S E F U L L Y e q u ip p ed lounge resteurent in shopping center 609 w 29th Plenty parking I »tellen! lotation 453 5314 452 I T W LOST A FOUND LOST STAT 309 book In G arriton Hell with personal photos and term paper Rew ard *15 Lait 477 022* for inform# R E W A R D NO questions Bon leading to return, or return of f e a s i b i l i t y A n a ly s is C o n c e rn in g Prospective Apartment Complax with blae k plastic spiral bulder < all 472 0*17 MUSICAL INSTRUCTION I XME R IE NC I D P i a n o feat bar in terested in teat bing all levais of studants popular or i lasso ai mush 472 207* E X P E R I E N C E D p i a n o te a ch e r. beginner ad van ce d UT M usic Ed degree Guitar also, folk < lassie al 459 40*2 476 4407 TO P L A C E T E X A N CLASSIFIED A D C A L L 471-5244 FURNISHED DUPLEXES STOP Do All That* Ad* Drive YOU BANANAS? Wa Rant Apartment*, Duplexes, Homa* 74 kaw r*/7d«y*/AH aver Aw«tin Real World Prop«rti«s Campus 443-7212 fro a Locating Sarvica North 345-6350 V E R Y Q U IE T , cool lbr downstairs, available M ay I SIVO, water paid, *06 C West 37nd 447 117/ S U M M E R S U B L E T , 2-1, f e n c e d backyard, pets, AC, $l25/mo plus bill*, shuttle, shopping, 459 6 321, keep trying IO B L O C K S north UT 2 bedroom duplex, available April 25, AC/CH, responsible adult, no pets *178 plus utilities 478- 5850 MISCELLANEOUS C L A S S I C A L G U I T A R in s tru c tio n , b e g in n e r s an d a d v a n c e d D r e w Thomason 47* 0650 W IL L B U Y used foot lockers 477 7730 leave message S U N A S U IS a balanced, preventative p ro g ra m c o n s is tin g of v ita m in s . m inerals and herbs in cello seeled p a c k e ts that put c o m p r e h a n s iva, nutritional protection in your pocket or p u rse R e t e ll or d is trib u to rs h ip s available Act now Call Charlie Broom, 454 0176, or Susan Springwater, 451 009* BOOF H U N T IN G 7 No obligation search out of print books A rja y Books, 283-2957 F A N T A S Y E X P E D I T IO N S • live this adventurous. 7 day w id e r ness gem e" designed by Colorado State University and Survival Unlim ited, P O Box 1288, F t Collins, CO *0522 N E E D F E M A L E Beach Boy tan in terested in attending concert free Call 447 ?944 M E D IC A L SCHOOL, start August, Mex­ ico Guaranteed placement Four year. recognized schools, loans available Call 719 996 4710 • Econotype NORTH : M ON THUR 7 30-9 OO • • FRI 7 30-6 OO SAT T 0-5 OO • J SUN 1-5 OO J • : • 4S3-S4S2 • ; • •37Hi & Guadalupe SOUTH : M O N THUR 7 30-9 OO • • FRI 7 30 6 OO SAT 10-5 OO • I SUN l-S.-OO * a f Riverside I Lakeshore443-4491 a • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • a • a p o r t * , T Y P I N G E R R Y C F R V I P l Copying A binding i a it mini tr service resume*, technical work, transcribing typesetting * *V>C. t h e s e s 9 8 Mon-Th 9-5 Fri-Sat 472 8936 Dobie M all S L O W & E A S Y T Y P I N G S E R V I C E Our prices aren't the lowest in town but neither is our quality ( E v e r y p a g e p r o o f r e a d without extra charge ) 452-4092 P R O F E S S IO N A L t y p i n g service, dis sedations manuscripts, resumes, etc Call anytime. 444 1134 B O B B Y E D E L A F I E L D IB M Se lee trie, IO years experienct Books, pica (Mite r e p o r t s d is s e r t a t io n s , mimeographing, 442 71*4 th e s e s , W O O D S T Y P IN G Service All work guaranteed reasonable prices 707 w M I K 47? 6302 T Y P IN G . D R A F T IN G , illustrations and recording lectures conferences, etc 477 1761 transcription of T Y P IN G S E R V I C E Theses, disser fattens, reports Near N orth ern* M all Ca!) anytime, Joni Tlbbets 457 *326 or *97 0479 M O U N T A IN L A U R E L typing Fest, fnendly professional service Theses, dissertation*, books business etc Rush lobs D elivery available P a tricia 472 3555 Ju st North of 27th at Guadalupe 2707 Hemphill Park R E S U M E S with or without pictures 2 Day Service 472-3210 and 472 7677 P R O F E S S IO N A L T Y P IN G Theses, dis s e d a tio n s , resum es, m an u scrip ts, reports, etc Cal) iudy 471 3365. 451 *60? F RO M F R E S H M A N themes to complex equations and scientific date ... • com ­ plete typing service Technical Typing Service 4/8 5313 a l l P A P I R S typed, te rm p apers 85 up theses dissertations l l OO up 15th L a v a ca Alice 263 5109 P R O F E S S IO N A l t y p i s t , all fields. VI V i a n B r ow n 45* 8151 921 19 1 9 Reasonable S A T IS F A C T IO N G U A R A N T E E D E x legal typist, also penenced qualified theses, dissertations IB M Correcting Selectee M rs Fow ler 327-0109 T Y P IN G IN all fields and s u b le ts with an expert s touch rn typing the sciences mathematics-engineering foreign languages Ten finical Typing Service. 471 5313 Just North of 27th at Guadalupe 2707 Hemphill Pa rk JImx Sure, we do type 7 Freshm an themes. 472-3210 and 472-7677 R E S P O N S IB L E NON S M O K IN G room m ate for 2br house South A ustin, *85 mo plus ; bills 44 7 7020 Doug s h a r e L A R G E clean 2-1 apartment, non smoker, unfurnished, room, close Coll M arc, 475 7226 day*, 454 *515 night* H O U S E M A T E N E E D E D Lake Auitln, fence, fireplace washer, *15 plus '/i bill* Coll 263 2814 G A L V E S T O N T H IS sum m er7 Nursing student transferring to Galveston needs in a fe m a le Galveston starting in June Call 44 7 7000 or 444 1643 lo s h a r e a p a r t m e n t F E M A L E R O O M M A T E house 2-1, great neighborhood, begin fall semes let or mid M ay After 5 474 2079 H O U S E M A T E N E E D E D for fine home very close UT 472 6374 N E E D F E M A L E roommate to share ?br 2ba apt Pool near shuttle, *95/ ' j E 443 5133 ___ f e m a l e r o o /a m a r e ? M uir#3-Br apt. M a y 20 end of fall semester * 130/mo, ' i util Complex pay* first *25 of gfll Cen dy. 443 7907 R E S P O N S IB L E F E M A L E roommate to share* comfortable 2 bdrm apartment close to campus Your part *112 50 ply* •■'i elactn city Call 474 2706 after 5 Q U IE T N O N S M O K IN G ternate share two bdrm apt Own room, *150 A B P Pool, AC, Close 477 3941 L U X U R Y 2BR 2 beth, A B P , furnished A vailable M ay 1st Walking distance to campos 1152 50 478 4090. 454 597* f a l l , M A L E student to share duplex, 2- 1 $62 50 pius ’ i bills Close shuttle, shop ping 459 632*. keep trying N IC E A P A R T M E N T $90,'month A B P , AC big pool, laundry service, nearby shuttle bus slop just across the street Hank 4744831 after 6 pm weekdays OW N ROOM in house, on shuttle. *80 plus bills 453 35U atter 5 fe m ale R E L I A B L E , non sm oking Snare comfortable I bdrm, nearby N Campus C R route, summer/fell, pool, t*0 plus * e 476 3912 L A W S T U D E N T seeks m a le non smoking serious student to share ap art­ ment tor summer, possibly fall 471-2713 2 O T H E R females needed tor summer 4br 2ba apt $90 each A B P , RC shuttle, 443 6961 ANTED UNFURNISHED HO H H C L A SS R IN G S , gold tewelry, oid pocket watches, currency stamps wanted High prices paid Pioneer Cain Com­ pany, 5SS5 North Lam ar Bldg C-113 in Com m erce Perk, 451 3807 B U Y IN G W O R L D gold yoid (*welry, scrap pow. old coms, antiques pocket w elches Pa yin g fair m arket price Capitol Com Co 3004 Guadalupe 472- 1878 P h ilip Nohra owner W O U L D L I K E to surcease turmstsed apt n e a r U n iv e rs ity for both sum m er sessions Ibr Iba Cai! collect 0-824-4724 W A N T E D TO R E N T , I acre with water, lights, septic hook ups for mobile nome. have horse dogs. 253 5109, 263 2*11 N E E O C E R TIF (E D female teacher (or soon to be I to accompany m ale teacher as m a rr ie d couple to e a rn pig st teaching rn Saudi Arabia A business arrangement — good opportunity it in­ terested. c a i! Mike after 4 OO at 441-4103 Q U A IL C R F E K, 2-1, CA/CH, fantod, new carpel, fresh paint, ail appliances, $195 11111-A Renei A V E F , u n iq u e. 3-1, huge sunken master, porches, convenient to shuttle, 205 E 54th, A vailable M a y 20, *295 A V E F. 2 1, m assive den w/fireplace, paf!r roofs with solar collectors, put up 120,000 windmills and bum more wotkJ and trash, they could answer about half of the nation * energy needs by early in the 21 st cen tury, the Council on Environmental Quality says, lf we commit our w ill* a* well a* our resources to this goal, we ran probably achieve a solar society within the lifetime* of today * c hildren,'* council member Gux Sp«*th said Wednesday T H E CO UN CIL lh far more optim istic titan tile Energy I>epartment, which estimate* only 4 to to percent of the nation could meet 25 percent of it* power need* with solar and renewable resource* by the year 2000 and half its need* by 2020 To spur solar energy development, Sped) Mud the nation must make serious oon*erva Hon effort* the government must eliminate actions which keep the prices of other fuels artificially low, and federal assistance must he given to encourage solar energy research and development To meet the council estimates Speth said solar energy would have to be utilized in varying degrees by 40 percent of all new homes, one fourth of ail commercial spat e and all energy intensive industries such as steel and textiles ANI) TH E report said parking lots and rooftop* would have to become lined with photovoltaic cedi* that transfer sunlight into electric c urrent The nation also would have to M U 120 (KW windmill* and increase its use of turbines in small dams and wood and city trash as energy sources speth said solar energy has strong ccm Kress ion* I and public support But he said the the role of main political obstacles are utilities and other legal and institutional problems Ile cited a study which Mild UM* government spent 115 bi) I toe over the past 30 years to boost nuclear power while ti 25 billion was spent in 1976 alone on grants, Lax breaks and other federal benefits for the oil industry Music hall safe but still deserted NEW YORK «L PI* - The Rocket tes were back on the Great Stage Thursday, kick­ ing and smiling to a near- empty Radio City Music Hall The hall — as much a sym­ bol of New York as the Em ­ pire State Building and the Statue of Liberty — was saved from closing hours after the curtain fell Wednesday on what had been billed as the Rockettes' last show An extended Easter Show — instead of a darkened theater was on the program for Thursday at the financially troubled hall, which got a last- minute, one-year reprieve from its scheduled April 12 closing D ES P IT E the good news, lines outside the famed tourist attraction were non-existent Thursday morning, with only a handful of people filing in to catch “ Crossed Swords, ’ a PG-rated movie sharing the stage with the Rockettes' precision dancing For weeks, tourists eager to see the last glittery shows had queued up outside the theater at Rockefeller Center Even Amy Carter, the president’s daughter, and her classmates took a special field trip to New York to see the last of the fam ily fare entertain­ ment The small turnout Thursday was a disappointment to the dancers and ushers, who almost lost their jobs the day before Radio City has suf­ fered financial losses in re­ cent years because of declin­ ing attendance. is NOT E V E R Y O N E aware that we’re open today, unless they read the papers or listened to the radio this mor­ ning.’’ said one employee At their “ final” perfor­ mance Wednesday night, the high-kicking Rockettes got a standing ovation and did their first encore in the hall s 45- year history for the more than 6.200 fans who filled the house and roared for “ more” as the dancers tossed out roses. To save the hall, the state Urban Development Corp. adopted a resolution es­ tablishing a UDO subsidiary that will jointly operate the hall through April 12, 1979, with Rockefeller Center. While a feasibility study is undertaken for a permanent plan to keep the tourist attrac­ tion in operation, the state will assume up to $1.8 million of the hail s operating deficit. The center said it was going to close the show place because it lost $2.3 million in 1977 and was expected to lose $3 5 million this year. Odessa businessman new alumni president John Ben Shepperd. a businessman from Odessa, is the new president of the U n iversity’s Ex-Student s Association He will serve a two-year term. Shepperd, who received a law degree from the Universi­ ty in 1941, has been active in the Ex-Students' Association for many years He succeeds Gordon Rountree of Waco, who was elected chairman of the executive committee. Others elected to office Saturday are John Stuart of D a lla s , v ice p resid e n t; Michael L Cook of Austin, secretary; Jean Welhausen Kaspar of Shiner, treasurer; and Roy Vaughan, executive director. A smile for recovery Ten-year old Lee Stimson of Boston smiles from his hospital bed While sledding with a friend last month he skidded under a passing train and his left foot was mangled. Through a team of 35 doctors and nurses, his torn blood vessels were repaired, and now there it hope that he will be able to walk again. — U P I T e l e p h o t o Union hosts ‘Texas-size’ party cam pus news in brief Wan! a good t canon to stay out all night'' A lex** size party is coming to th# Union Building F rid a y night A program of events is planned ^•ginning st 4 p rn to keep every corner of the Union buz zing and everybody enter Lamed iii night For more in formation rail 471 5653 AM M O UM CI M C M f S • ruOCMTS Olton THAM AVtRAOI rn* N R B Happy ***•' *»**' A k» c |i tti y -nifty to tm ir n C lS l n*> A b*#*' cr'# im NM I m * P RI »0M<»#* CW W I H » ‘< ».* Iola.*# IOC AC ANO IC C O C S * O M M lf f RC mm cws c ecwAAcc ow tni emen>s d >— m Ittrtw Arf th O OCNW* S W V W , IM M at NM*' CnCCf »' «•"! (Woto#*.- til Hmm C I N I C S A * U N IO N o w h iu n n M •*>•1 *•# (■< " D a n a ,I* r e m G o n n M M » WNI '*** ti***' . or H OU* ) A UT IN T C A A C T IO N C O M M IT T S 8 rn* », rn •t* a *•**•'* an euro* VPU r« Oui n WNMNw T in Snow M .* Ni«< b y U t A N n M i t m f W u M a a t * u t fn u > al •••»«. 11atar *t Unhip • a '?* I C l AC U N IO N RU m C O M M IT YCS <*4 |«* Nm) • (fcxrfjN Not...* {A C oma* * " • tm em* * aaa- Nim" « > wm to u t» rn cm*, ami Com im* *> tm unum »*.*#»* AdrtMMh* a I t RO wan U t *() I t TS jnt-mm an la M d a y M< • .*#«•< mn* Run C M I w e S m n w «>MaNNW t i a ••* iff •{» I t Tf itmxrnm a*eNfM«to UT IN TR* AC CION COMMIT TCC f t . 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OR e u t lN C C C a » rn turn tm Man « g a * * N a lt> a c r ito l* aa and C .,t'«»a .wwa.j.11 by tx Franco Most-j-a .* n*RM » tin AM U w Cl M f aa .mr* -A ma en P H ym bM Nf" Hmm* at to IO a at u » day rn 0>a.)uom ScNma a ti *'« m n- "A’N Aa ..-Mca*ta* ta utf» oih) Ock WCN an.do»n a a „«ga<) h. ana*-) TANZ a ' ac »-tM* . rn- at mal ' iy Mint 'ha St High Iola* tin,ii * ti, IO p ft' Rut ta, •> {...ft, rn HOW tot Itagwwt#.* OW* aam - na QNA O UA TC a r MOOI OR SU C tN C C C « aport** a to iM N an M nnaN *fn and ma < tx n a u t Nam*.*at enoniy" by IM * tan* o M, al V N R * cnattttda protaaao* at M U cd I 'n NXM et C» rn M< bum -rn* HuMm g t Z I® Th* toe*. a••*■>» a a*.M a an tenon Today o» ma t‘n'*u,i til Non Hftiartadga by N a. • d * ad *'"A ft {J* it**** of f tyncm al rn* Slat# UnNartMy Of N a# Yoe* « Out taw n J p m Today vt SdSon hor H O O C R A K T M C N T OR C R A N IC H A N D e O N T U O U C C I ann »*• . -*.b a a c tufa rn erotaamq by tea* ordo do Campo#, nadtng prcdoaoor. VON UftMRtdy a I p m f ratty RI flc S i HCC H S ' or-alatern fit Pocmh M I AL TM R T IO R ISC IO N C ANO C AHC RA CM OtCC IN R O R M A T IO N C C N T IA cwt!! ccw moot a nam,new on Chooamy a Motor W w w e'op" tor at u dom* inca, a alod rn NMdlh profoooKma bul utmwt about a aum.dc moRK al Z p m Monday rn union Suodwtg A t JO C H I C A N O C U C I N C S S C T U O C NT I A C C O C IA Ti ON act tpont'H a cor M w * # cnm a Nnc^oon on Catoor O r* I h >di.n«aa .n flu *"'tM . 'OcMu' mg t roc MI Ty et acoma.t »*wn M ov#r m* i n n frotn It A) a rn to 5 p t i Saturday rn Gradual* School >t Sue r on Budding t ZIC M CCTINO C U N IT A R IA N U N I V R R I i r y C O M M U N IT Y fnt* ■” «•! for « luncha.in at t ? tg p m Friday m lh# Uhcon't Sprit Hoc* Mown Mot M< Ctm cNi <*>>. at a** on TNI CfCmNeT BaRaaan Mumamam and m dwMRMMMCcn-* UT O A N C t TC A M ani • i propor* ’ b c n f'p itih u fl Saturday rn th# U nion tty# H R im rn* Toot from Quad'anga* 11 * "i to lp m and ma A loam arca moat bom I to I i> rn RC V O LU T IO N ART C O M M U N IC T YOUTH CRIQAOC at# N»-1 a re , and awxhthopa on tm Ba*** (Motion at 11 JO p rn Frt- tar m tm Went M ill Fro# S c o tc h Arot T M I U M IV K R SIT T C Y C L IN Q C L U C rn ’a** on aas. group txM » B u d a taavmg ai ’ 0 a m Sunday Bom th# Parry I MtAmada library Th# Rip * about 26 O' HW Ptooa# b»-rig a apart For mort in­ ky malum con Maoacca at ATA I2g7 O S P A N T M C N T O R Q C R M A N I C L A N Q U A Q C S ANO T H I C O L L K O K OF H U M A H IT IC C anil •>«« tor a poaCry raad ng by Tomaa Tronatromar ranorrn Od ‘>aad.*h [mat al A p rn I nday rn Batts Ka* 20t K I-A IK IO O mtt matt :o uracRca mmd twx)y corwdtoMlon and oaf datonqq ad* ai A p m Fn d ty m BattmoN Hon 966 OAT C O M M U N IT Y C I R V I C I S * hod (noir regular F'-dty mgw rap group ai 8 p m rn (ha (K S Octets to too Un varsity v aoova Sommart Drug Stora ort ma Drag - AH moo* I-to'a*tad to d«cnoting %su#a rmavani lo rn# gay htostyt# are n ' tewI to Orland For moro tnformaiioh CON ATT 6699 N U R C IN Q C O U N C IL OR P R C N U R S IN Q ANO N U R IIN O CTUOCN TC a -.aal (or nominal ora and otoctiont of nay* of* 'c a rt from noon lo lf pm Friday in rn# Hudcmi lounga of Th# Nutting Buttdma I H S Nett m m S i T H I O A M N Y A M R I C H cr maal at b to p m Friday rn front of lh# Varefy Thaatra tot lh# Tpm thoanng of 'Nor* Vor*. New* Tc>r* At 9 35 (ha mooting Ani! movo lo F ngbah *, 30m and Guadalupe suoota for a social hour All damn and ofhor Vanhaaa and trtondi are cordially rratcom.- New regulations to allow child labor WASHINGTON lU P I) - Farms can hire IO and 11- year-old children this summer to hand harvest some crops, Hie Labor Department said in announcing Thursday proposed regulations for ob­ taining waivers from federal child labor laws Prior to enactment of 1977 amendments to the F a ir Labor Standards Act, such employment of minors under 12 was prohibited in most cir­ cumstances Assistant Labor Secretary Donald Elisb urg said the regulations would require that the crop to be harvested has a particularly short harvesting season and the waiver is necessary to prevent severe economic disruption in the in­ dustry Employers would also have to show that individuals aged 12 and above were not available and that pesticides and chemicals would not be harmful to the children Elisburg said federal law also mandates that work be outside school hours, and that employment between June I and Oct. 15 cannot exceed eight weeks. V i l l a g e 2101 Burton Dr. 447-4130 1 BR from $14900 2 BR from $17900 3 BR from s29500 rent subject to change w ith o u t notice SUMMER LEASE PROGRAM AVAILABLE • 3 swimming pools a 2 lighted tennis courts a Plenty of parking • His & hers saunas • Furnished & unfurnished • Shuttle bus stop a Nice laundry rooms * Exercise rooms • Putting green • Professional management Ask about our "Summer Specials TODAY/ T . ( Cincy sneaks by SF Jackson homer leads Yankees CINCINNATI t CPI i - Hay Knight walked with one out and scored on pmch hitter Rick Auerbach s double off John Curtis in the 13th inning Thursday to give the Cincin­ nati Reds a 7-6 victory over the San Francisco Giants Manny Sarmiento, the last of five Red pitchers, blanked the Giants without a hit in the final two innings to pick up his first victory Dan Driessen walked, stole second and scored on Dave Concepcion's single to give the Reds a 1-0 lead in the se­ cond inning but Mike Iv:e put the Giants ahead in the third when he homered after a dou­ ble by John Montefusco and a single by Rob Andrews Driessen s homer, coming with George Foster aboard in the fifth, tied the score at 3-3 The Giants went ahead 4-3 in the seventh when pinch- hitter Tom Heintzelman homered off Fred Norman, Consecutive singles bv Ivie, Jack Clark and Marc Hill gave the Giants two more runs and a 6-3 lead off Pedro Bor bon in the eighth sports shorts Sports symposium to start The Texas Union Ideas and Issues Committee will sponsor a sports symposium Saturday through April 27 with various speakers and sporting events Beginning the symposium will be the 10th annual Austin Rugby Tournament with 30 to 40 teams from five states com­ peting. Games are scheduled from 8 a rn. to 5 p m Saturday and Sunday at Zilker Park. Among those speaking at the symposium will be J. Neils Thompson, president of the NCAA; Butch Johnson, wide receiver for the Dallas Cowboys; Pete Gent, former Dallas Cowboy and author of ' North Dallas Forty;* Frank Broyles, University of Arkansas athletic director Women in fourth The Texas women s golf team is holding onto fourth place after the first round of the Sooner Invitational in Norman, Ok la SMU leads the competition with a team total of 307 followed by Oklahoma State with 326, Oklahoma with 330 and the Longhorns with 330. Cindy Lincoln shot a 79 to lead all Texas’ golfers Kyle O'Brien of SMU shot a course record 73 to lead the field. The tournament concludes Saturday. Soccer teams busy Texas Longhorn men’s and women’s soccer teams will be in action this weekend at Freshman Field The women are facing the Arlington A’s at 2 p.m. Satur­ day And the men are meeting Arkansas at 2 p m. Sunday in the SWC Challenge Cup. Currently, Texas is in fourth in Cup competition with 20 points, and the Razorbacks have 21 points. Texas Tech is the leader with 27. Scott places 7th In second round action Thursday in the AAU Diving Cham­ pionships in I leveland, Texas' Tony Scott placed seventh and Michael Cook placed 27th in the men’s one meter dive. In the women’s three-meter competition, Texas* Erin Beiter finished I5th and Denise Christensen placed 23rd Golf team 10th The Texas Longhorn men s golf team is in 10th place after a 36 hole point total of 603 in the All-American Golf Tourna­ ment in Houston Putts Benedict has compiled the best in­ dividual Texas score with a 71 on Thursday for a 147 total. Oklahoma State leads with a 560 team point total with 36 holes to be played. "The team played terrible,” head coach George Hannon said. “ I hope that they can get everything on track for F ri­ day and Saturday.” it it it N EW YO R K i U P I > - Reggie Jackson’s three-run homer in the first inning touched off a five-minute 'Reggie Bar shower” Thurs­ day and led the New York Yankees to a 4-2 victory over the Chicago White Sox in the World Champions home opener. Jackson hit his homer off loser Wilbur Wood about 400 feet into the center field bleachers after a walk to Willie Randolph and a single by Mickey Rivers After Jackson completed his tour of the bases, the field was littered with hundreds of “Reggie bars, the candy named after him, which had been distributed free to fans entering Yankee Stadium. The home run. in his first at bat at Yankee Stadium this year, gave Jackson five home runs in five consecutive at bats at the Stadium dating back to the World Series. Angels I, Twins 0 ANAHEIM, Calif (U PI) - Joe Rudi drilled a full-count pitch over the left-field wall with one out in the bottom of the lith inning Thursday to give the California Angels a 1- 0 victory over the Minnesota Twins in a game that was just two outs away from being suspended by curfew Cardinals 6, Pirates 5 ST LOUIS (U P I) - Ted Simmons had three1 hits and scored two runs and Mike Phillips added a two-run triple Thursday to help E rie Rasmussen and the St Loui*; Cardinals to a 6-5 victory over the Pittsburgh Pirates and a sweep of their three-game series Rasmussen evened his record at 1-1 as he pitched the Cardinals’ third straight com­ plete game Pittsburgh starter Bert Blyleven lost his first National League deci­ sion, giving up all six Cardinal runs in the iirst three innings. A’s 3, Mariners I OAKLAND (U P I) Gary Alexander drilled a two-run homer with one out in the bot­ tom of the ninth inning Thurs day to give the Oakland A's a 3-1 victory over the Seattle Mariners and extend their winning streak to four games Steve Staggs opened the ninth with a walk, went to se­ cond on a sacrifice by Mario Guerrero and then scored when Alexander hit his second homer of the season deep into the left field stands It was Alexander s third game win­ ning hit of the season. Detroit clinches DL I HOIT (U P II - Bill Loohead, who has never lived up to the promise he had when Detroit made him its No. I draft choice in 1974, scored his second goal of the game with less than two minutes reamining Thursday night to enable the Red Wings to defeat the Atlanta Flames, 3-2, and score their first victory in a Stanley Cup playoff s e rie s in 12 years. The Red Wings, a year ago the worst team in the National Hockey league, advanced to the quarterfinals where they will likely be paired against the defending Stanley Cup champion Montreal Canadiens. lf Colorado defeats Philadelphia in its series, Detroit would meet Boston. Rangers 4, Sabres 3 NEW YORK (U P I) — Don Murdoch scored at I 37 of sudden- death overtime Thursday night, giving the New York Rangers a 4 3 victory over the Buffalo Sabres, evening their best-of-three Stanley Cup playoff preliminary round at one game apiece. Murdoch took a pass in front of the Buffalo goal and fired it past goalie Don Edwards. The deciding game of the series will be played in Buffalo on Saturday night. Flyers 3, Colorado I DENVER (U P I) — Philadelphia clinched its Stanley Cup preliminary round Thursday night on third-period goals by Don Saleski and Bob Kelly that gave the Flyers a 3-1 victory over the Colorado Rockies. With the score tied, 1-1, after two periods, Saleski poked in the rebound of a Mel Bridgman shot at 1:13 Kelly later skated behind the net and tucked in a goal at IO: 36. Friday, April 14, 1978 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Page 27 IV E BROUGHT VOL’ SOME AUTH EN TIC B IR 0 5 -N E 5 T SOUP: S ---- -nT / » - n HIH IMN fssfe* one A u t h e n t ic ? h o w P O I rsNOW IT S a u t h e n t i c 1 DOONESBURY by Garry Trudeau UMM „UHAT HAK M E W M TE7 IT LOOS UKE A T NINE-WAY VB! IT'S.. , m m M O P S ! Aa t J vins H *: •p ✓ ? ] I a nm m ist is NOMS ALEX- Ander HAte.. iL f i l r * r - T TODAY’S CROSSWORD PUZZLE A C R O SS SO Latticed U N ITED Feature Synd icate structure 57 'You’ve go! to be 54 Traversed SB F a b r i c 59 No! tau! 60 Unreturned© Serve 62 Osculated 65 Peculiarity Prefix 6 7 Having wings 69 Inevitable TO Temporary c r a z e s 7 1 Of the cheek 72 Old Olympic s i t e 7 3 Gratuitous 7 4 Oglers TS Chitty .md wet DOWN 1 Instrument 2 F u s s e s 3 *■ up Messy 4 Conger catchers b Corridors 6 Mr I mcoln 7 (van - ---- Movie maker I Aspect 5 Crowns ot heads 10 Talks at length 14 inactive 15 Residence 16 Turkish of beer 1 1 Fetid 18 Seed eating bird 19 Scold -TO Organic compounds 22 Cargo carrying vessel 24 Unsound 2b Stamp on 7 T Jo b learner 29 Omens I? Assistance 33 Roman tutelary delly 34 Color 36 Gemstone 40 Shoshonean Indians 4? Plum-tike fruits 4 4 Blue jeans’ crealor 4b f ammino ti tie 4? Declines informal 49 Negative pre dx Thursday s Puzzle Solved I .* [ S T r n r r q r* t*tvTS] ttTaT IT c] I rn n j O l l m f [*T* I Ta*U;(>; tj * R O S Ti R A I t S] * A V P H H I J rf—.♦H ’ A ! I.... I I -4., I I i rn © 4 4- 4 -4 I f N ■ sTfiOj i ' - ’ a' i TT jT i ■ T " '*1'* (T v. ♦ 4 ♦ 1 * u . I' H T * * * * s t AT a T o 4 4-'4-'< 4 * v ■ r ; e i t T 8 T c * t T o F I ! Ti a I Q T V ■ V*« ■ rfiTS M ? ! ' r e f i l l !fi?M 'oTi 46 F tat topped vessel 11 O n ce more I ? As long as 13.. a, manger Dining room LM Harvest 23 T arry 76 Trades 78 Adored per son hiti 48 Queen of the gods 51 Grew to be 53 Fatted to at 54 Steep rock tarn face bb Detecting dew ic© 39 Fruit tree JO 1 ip chestnut ^ Chemical J I Reprimand 15 Inheritors 3 7 Gasp© or Florida compound 57 Postponement 61 Chest sound 18 I nattily river 63 British Isl© 39 Vim 41 Cutting tools 64 City 66 i riding for tuber or verb 8 Proclamation 9 Spanish title I 0 I .ii I hen wa re 43 Commons and Con gross VIFs i 14 i7 JO ........ i nHi . — IH J ■UtI J 9 lo T P 40... u . . . 56 T I. 41 W ~ 64 I lr im and feather po'"”' ii 2 U 16 [tv .'4 17 is IV 61 64 L B l r I T H * W I Z A R D O F ID by B ru n t p a r k e r and Jo h n n y k art T T I£ PP *S 4N A \& r> X ,M p e > O F H C M P N o w r s i p e , to TAUF W IT H YOC, S I P P M F \ KE A PDT OF COFFEE AND BRINIE (TIMID m y o f f i c e % by Jeff Millar & Bill Hinds 'N k am I mistaken,oriv W R HAIR THE SAME material 7 T A N K M C N A M A R A r 5 0 THM‘5 WHAT A SUCCESSFUL SPORTSCASTER l ik e roo w e a r s / - y ep lorp know r ' HOWK WUES Ptep fO MAkt I - W weather f o e ’/ ••ATTLE lOW 3000 v 3000 M INNEAPO U 29 77 _____ . - s L x i l BORTON j NEW YORK -HU. \ • 1 SAN FRANCISCO ^ D E N V IR I—---------/ . j \ ' • / I f l w / V / / S,\ f a i r LO S A N G ELES V HI GHE S T T f M R f I A T U k f S 60 80 60 80 V U P I W E A T h e R F O T O C A S T £) ^ MIAMI L f O f NO ----------- RAIN •NOW AIR / l L •MOWER# ^ rLO w i/» J I Sunny skies w ill dom inate most of the nation Friday, with showers expected over the mid end northern P a cific Coast, the C en tral P la in s and southern Florida. Austin tem peratures w ill be warm with pertly cloudy skies through Satu rd ay. The high tem perature Friday and Satu r­ day w ill be In the low ROS end the low tem perature Friday night In the low 60a. W inds w ill be southeasterly at • to IS mph. The sun w ill rite Friday at 8:05 a.m. and eat at 0:58 p.m. Satur* day the sunrise w ill be at 6:04 a.m. am i sunset at 8:58 p.m. Sunday's sunrise w ill be at 0:03 a.m. and sunset at 6:50 p.m. Let yourself go!1 . . . to any of 68 different countries, in Peace Corps. SIGN UP NOW FOR INTERVIEW SENIORS / GRADS PLACEMENT OFFICE JESTER RM. HSA BEB-GSB 2.114 EDUCATION RM. 244 REPS ON CAM PUS M ON-THUR AP R I! 17-20 cappuccino Leu Amis Sidewalk Cafe 2 ith & San A ntonio features Bodybuilding: ‘I just want to be the best’ T h e D a i l y T e x a n ’ H o d y b u i b t i n g should he fun b e c a u se you pet a feeling of satin/, chow Which i i v e r y h a r d to e r f d a in A b od y bu il d e r k n o u t t hat w he n he pit fit JM up hts mum lex it m ean s g r o w t h So rn u s c f cs p r o w T h e t h e r e f o r e he known w he n he t h a t p u m p s u p w e l l , is thai sa tisfie s p rop ers % And h im b e c a u s e he th e / e e l s p r o g r e s s in his kodg ” Arnold Schwar zenegger from * Pumping Iron’* Bodybuilding is the name of the sport, but confident*# is the name of the game for ('brin Johnson C onfidence in himself and months of disciplined train mg have won him three bodybuilding titles ami two runners up Miles in the single year he has teen entering com petitions in additum to winning the Mr Central Texas ami Teenage Mr Texas titles Johnson was runnel up for Jr Mr Tex as ami Teenage Mr USA He won U h * IU78 AAC Collegiate Mr Texas com ­ petition as well It is an amazing record loi someone who has been entering contest! for such a short tune John­ son's own modest explanation: "I ve been lucky " You have to know your boun* d a n e s /’ he says "I into m eets knowing that I have a good Chance to win ‘ like going j o h n s o n WON the MU* of Collegiate Mr Tcxa* in February, but not under the brit of circumstance* "Besides having the flu, Tony Munzo, (Mr San Antonio amt Johnson * nearest competi­ tion ) was in good shape I had der ided to enter the mer*! (wily two weeks before because people had urged me to and I had to get ready fast I lost about IO or 12 pounds in two weeks and was getting dizzy and seeing stars I can put on a I m c o n fid e n t ” b e tte r Nevertheless, Johnson was an audience favorite and won the meet in fine form sh ow if During the regular bodybuilding season, in preparation for m eets, John son trull s s u days a week with Terry Dunn, a local high school student In the oft season! he still trains four day* a week The day begins at 6 a rn with training at the Texas Athletic Club from 6 JO until 8 ami in the afternoon from 4 until 8 Bodybuilders tram in what is known as a split routine, concentrating tm one body area at a tim e and working it to the fullest "It is bad (or the body to work out for more than two hours at a high in­ tensity,’ ‘ says Johnson ’‘Using the split routine you can work out the chest muscles, for exam ple, go through the whole routine amt not get stale ' SPLIT HOITINK training also in votves exercising different body parts tm different days "Everybody has a different training program.'* says John- son "Cor instance. Terry and I will train back m uscles on Monday and Thursday mornings and chest, calve and abdomen m uscles in the afternoon We change the routine about every four weeks, by changing what body parts we exercise im particular days " The Texas Athletic Club, an unim­ pressive building from the outside, is filled with a menagerie of weight-lifting machines and barbells Two full-length mirrors span the width of the room and there is a small, but seldoin-used swim* ming pool outside In the gym s outer office snapshots ot meet contestants ami formal posed photographs of title winners, including Johnson, adorn the i wails A car whose license plates read "JBKUC" sits outside Johnson admits with a grin that it is not his car DIRT, as well as workouts, keep* Johnson in top shape for competitions "For contest training I keep on a diet low in carbohydrates, mostly fish and salad, and keep my liquid intake down," he says "Right before a meet I start carbohydrate loading by eating beef and fruit, ami I always stay away from sugar" in terested Johnson has been in bodybuilding for about two and a half year* "My interest in bodybuilding just sort of happened," he says "I started lifting weights and got interested in the long-term effects Before then I had played football, baseball and wrestled in high school" I started training at home, but found that training at the gym is much more intense You could train at home for five years and learn there what you can learn in two weeks here,'’Johnson says. "I BLAN ON training as long as I can. Musc les atrophy if you quit training, so even after I stop entering bodybuilding m eets I’ll still work out three tim es a week he says Large, well-toned m uscles are contest winners and crowd-pleasers. but they can be disadvantageous, too With wide shoulders and upper arms that measure 18 inches around, Johnson often has trouble getting clothes that fit. ' i f I want things to fit. I have to get them tailor-made It’s a problem main­ ly with dress shirts; I’ve always had a little problem getting clothes to fit, but now it * worse," he says. JOHNSON, a sophomore, is a business major, but that is subject to change. "I ve thought of majoring in physical story by Ann Spillman photos by debra Reingold education and also in theology I would also like to teach, but that’s just a thought," he says. B etween school, training and his girlfriend, Iris Hudson, Johnson’s time is filled Hudson is a competitor herself who is currently Miss Aqua Festival and was runner-up to the Miss South Texas t i t l e . “ Iri s in bodybuilding as much as I do,” says Johnson. "She s into beauty pageants and knows how it feels to win. We both have fun entering m eets and pageants She enjoys it for the competition and has a reason to do it, too She competes l i k e s my b e i n g for the scholarships so she can put herself through school.” Johnson plans to enter the Mr. Texas meet in August. "If everything goes right, 1 11 enter and 1 11 win,” he says. "If I get Mr. Texas, I’ll compete for Mr. USA this year and the Mr. America title next year. I plan on winning it" BODYBUILDING demands dedica­ tion and concentration so m etim es almost obsessive in nature. "For some, bodybuilding is an obsession," Johnson says. "But I’m not obsessed to where it’s all I think about I just want to be the best at it.” Above: Johnson goes through a weight lifting routine with barbells. Above left: ‘The hardest sets are done with the most pain.’ Below: Training partner Terry Gunn watches as Johnson works out in front of the mirror. Below left: Johnson relaxes after a strenuous training ses­ sion.