^ r.« y smm ?£W?^Jt3C^ K & C* 8 '•"I*" ' < ?'< &H <-* «, ?,« Cam- gate. •17 "ac& GaL mmOwn, the military «ift radio contact: Ikcolonel saidthe 3CS''v«%5>«& r(fri-#%*• *> & ?•-'Modotucsald the ReftCrosshaci acted^ r.dicated his forces were'prepared to Ckamnr lioB, the Presidential Palace ^-"^.only as an intermediary. " , s' ('-.^accept no compromise but unconditional -in jte d^fliog|h : "t ; . • .-.".hours later. it suddenly ceased broad- j^ In tbe last story cabled lrom PJ , in the city ^-Penh, received Wednesday nigtit, rts believed the power generator .to nam tke Khmer Roqge. ^reporters: said-that the government -, had stopped functioning,; a State,DqputnwA ; v :?^|oroes. were continuing'to fight off in-i% of a lack of fuelo?. by"I am aware at Hie "5;smgents from the south, whete^ 'ttie^ it have May com-(pgrebels weremaking'strong bid toenter; rebeTleader Sihanoiik early -,the city. Thecity itself had been receiv-SgJfg tumed down a last desperate?-­tobe calm,"g^fij'^'Mvy d'dU^. the r^^rts sald.i j-^^ttempt by the Phnom Penh regime to «M-*Tli^ nBBBtes agD:V** W4*titdawsiHiaBon fegMttiiiaait offered to surrender bufef';^. JPeki He said from his Peking exile that Afe.!­ l^mgg^ lhfc.Ktanff Rage, who hwe,^4at exOed Prince Ninoddni Sihanouk in|?|«tingPreMdentGen.J&k Sutsakhan bad had turned down flie proposaL ;|§^asked for thei llth-hour cease-fire; ?He gaveahegative answer, Red;.^through tbe International Red. Cross£: and the,Wat Ptaom.whkhis onlya few oC^ "We were used only asa mearts of ~ Jmndred yards from,the Hotel Lephnom, -'^transmitting the proposal. Wedidnot­ • -*lndi has been designateda neutralate participate," Medoux said. "Itis now up, the International Red Cross. _,.; to the parties to take initiatives in what UPI newsmen in Ptoom Pe^ have 'i-they want to do. Skea.unable to file, reports from the Radio Phnom Penh caMe on tife^a as" -capital, apparently because all normaliS'usual at 5 ajn. Thursday Phnom Penl* communications frocnthecity have beeng^time bat gave no.news reports. Tw6^ , ";Ot»informatioochiefAlain idour^cSihanouk. told newsmen in/Peking hev ting off thousands of potential defenders. jay detailsoo said in Geneva jccncyni^ recommend only that the^ The International. Red Cross said ^ . ^^rt^ytpthe Cambodian; surrenderI?|^:'Quislings"inciargeoi the government-earlier it relayed a Cambodian govern­ r.acbadestfeie radio broadcast ^ proposal. --c> ^leave quickly or.face execution. He Ink ment offer to surrender to Sihanouk and SET ^ , p*-l"• ts. r •*> - Ai Student Newspaper at The University of Texas'at Austin apt,, 17,1975 • ...1 .. 1 _ I. ! ^ •• -^ »• J. •{ ; ' <%• ^ Recommendations Accepted 1*®^W®^:i§^^^pTtain^;andqilent^ itsWednesday ni^htin many University progratas and ac- Thus, the total net increase in the state ^^^^p^^^@Mssesw» ddMitttg fecial items in other• tivities; -• ' ' . ^s^-x ­ general revenue fund would have totaled "^m^M$^0ws6tifag^--taSgehL,* ?. The.: committee had proposed $19 nearly $12 million. > ^ , ***^^%:fe^^;^^Tt^tiiji^jr«ln>iwnendati«is of; the! . million of the Availably University Fund Shivers told the committee earlier that1of.theIMvexsily^ Hbuse Committee on Higher Eklucation :i be.directed for the payment of utilities by specifying the Available Fund be used maynot have been able towithstand the-.v for the Inenmum. This would'free $19 only for utilities, and> by reducing manyrefused to<^' otgamed iaessureof prtitics and pater-' -million in general revalue which the items by10 percent,"disastrous effects";«* Higher EAKation Com^A^ udism,.but we were able to garner a University normally-receives, which recommwidatioaa^ -great deal of statewide iqiport for our v -could then be spent on other institutions, efforts .to encotirage more tbst-'li:. It ,also recommended a 10"percent it-!«—sakl Rep. ' -iim uaw,--w icwucuw m general aaministration," reduction .in general-.administration -Athenv Higaer Edocatioa Committee ; organized research andspecial^items fori , «i -diainntt :and Appropriaticms Com--the budgets of aU 22 state colleges and .s. wigiiial;^.ndtt^ineadier.:://.. i universities. , " -.\> Bo«rd tf^Regents.QiaiJniiuui AIlan1.''Higher-£ducation had also swi ion be cut;, #ecialit«ns. , ^ it not to adpp^ihe icrease in inH Ccabn^ttee'S ^tional items . Shiverssaid Vbe propcsals would result notincU^ftinjtheLBB'srewmmemiMVeuUy hodget ontil 9 un.' in total dinnnatian or maior reductions datraos/ V, ' ,? 'it - pOpifiQl^, i llawyers present final/arguments'in Gonnally bribery Irtal. Jug^prepares to retire. (Story^ Page 3.) f Southerly Winds , m ' t m\ Pliunger and pariel dis&J .-Wa^Tfth -^!'S.®y !lf il te^,Pe"-atures reachlngCi^bussions on nutrition-' > into the mid-80s.Morning skies will becloudy decreas^^re stated XhWsdayJ ' ae 'surrender. -Thefinal attackon Phnom Penh began .^Wednesday with a heavy'rocketand ar­tillery barrage on the city. Rebel forces l>y nightfall Wednesday — the last word -• by UPI newsmen out off the capital — -were poised at the edge of Phnom Penh on all sides. ; '•f Radio Phnom Penh in its last newscast' late Wednesday night said government, troops had driven back-one push into the ..capital across the. United Nations • Bridge. That report could not be con­formed. " But the situation was desperate by all ­. appearances. •v Government reinforcements raced around Phnom Penh Wednesday in an ef­ fort,to plug the leaky ,defenses of the ..capital. But the rebels often wereable to move large combat units between inner ? and outer defenses of Phnom Penh, cut­ would result He-listed 18 major categories which would be totally eliminated if they could not receive Available Fund money.. Those included the Division of General and Comparative Studies, Counseling and "Psychological Services Center, numerous fellowships and scholarships and.other special programsC . , ^ AecordHjfc tothe present budget forthe application of the Available Futid,'60per­ cent of the operating money isr used for resident instruction,, including faculty salaries and departmental expenses.­ In addition, approximately 13 percent goes to the library and another43 per-, .cent to organized research.s ^ 1 ' * ~ A ' C x -j : Budget summaries shows transfers • from the .Available Fund "for instruc­tional and other education services, repairs, organized research,* physical . .. plant operation and maintenance and o:>. ac&deniic development programs"total­ed more than $8 million this year, . y;/A Univeraty System spokesman said "none of Uiese Available'Fund operating ^expenditures are used -for constfuctJon; ^except for payment of bond debts.-• ?i a ^ '' " > "« • ^"However, nearly two-thitds -of the Available Fund money is used for this debt service, and the rest (operating monies) ..supplement the legislative ap­ .. propriations. % • ­ ,The, placement *ofv Available Fund ; •i money-: into-a nontransferable fund for. ;• Utilities would have reduced Available -;Fund oj^erating moniesat the University1 -to about $1.5 million each year. ' L "5 Stuclent1Government Vice-President! -Xorn-Breeland, who lobbied against the Higher^ Education Committee's: 'proposals, said the effort "helped to : counter the.toegative aspects of Shivers' presentations",which he said resembled "scare tactics., i If**' ^"ip^te* ­contained five points but that it was "up to the parties involved-to divulge the details." -The Red Cross' major concern was the respect of a hotel in Phnom Penh that it" had declared as a neutral safety zone for ­the care of wounded civilians and' soldiers in the city,Medoux said. He said that the latest messages received from the Cambodian capital indicated that tbe '. "safety zone was working well in regard to its usefulness and the number of peo­ple entering it. Hours earlier, the Yugoslav National News Agency in a dispatch from Peking-quoted. Sihanouk sources as saying, "Sihanouk has rejected tbe offer 'of the Quislings in Phnom Penh which was signed, by the President of the Supreme Committee, Sak Suthsakhan, which he : received through the International Red Cross in Geneva. ­ j1" ^ ).k —UPI Talephoto Tanjug said Sihanouk sent a reply to the Red Cross calling the proposal' Prince Sihanouk *-. "unacceptable" and advising the the Khmer Rouge -rebel forces moving members of the "puppet Supreme Com­ into Phnom Penh ' mittee" to leave Phnom Penh before the In annouhcing that the offer had been final battle because they had earned only made, Modoux said that the proposal the right to be hanged. ' JI -Sixteen Pages * 471-459t ' „ » ? i . New Constitution Set for Electorate By CHARLES J. LOHRMANN Harris said a provision of the Texan Staff Writer Education Article providing for an Texas' proposed new constitution equal educational opportunity for all was ready for final submission to the children in Texas marked "the begin­state's voters after the Senate «m-ning of the' destruction of ciuality curred Wednesday in House education in Texas:"Hesaid hefirm- amendments; —--—, • ly 8>9ported.allowing schooldistricts ij ouiipuiicu.auuwai^BVUUUlUUHTIUU The governor's signing of the evidi their educational programs resolution, will be mere formality individually. ' 1 ^ ' since he'already has stated his sup-t -1° agreebig'witir Harris,'Creighton port for the new charter. > said "noone onGod'sgreen earthcan The constitution's 10 ne^ Articles tell^vrtiat equaleducational oppor­ (only the old. Bill of Rights,1Article t" v,\ '' \ has been retained) have been placed • ^ con8titutional resolution 8 in eight sectionsto bevoted on Nov 4. -®?*)n8?r' ^en-®°'> Gamnfcge of Represeritativcs'amended five «f„tiie " !?i eight secticms as theyoriginally pass-' ^^"^Vtte. proppsef charter ed the Senate. These alteratioi^ ^ -V'A*--» approved by more than the inquired !^t?e£fed-. . two-thirds vote in the Senate • Creighton and Harris voted agabuft n_,„_ - D111,, * the entire proposal except section six -despite Gamm&geTs statement that •wIt*2^I:onsti 2 I tte new constitution retains the best a* H nit •iS v^lrejectltand forgefabout it," he : ^tion six bontaiiis article IX The present Constitution, drafted in 1876, has ^ served the people of the' ­state well, Moore said. "The tfemen-­dous growth in Texas is a result of stability "of state: government' brought by the present Constitution,^ he added. " Moore said healso wasspeakingfor Sen. Peyton McKriight of .Tyler;; ab-" sent becauseof illness, in condemning the new constitution. Debate oil the constitution'was held off one day in' hopes McKnight might be ableto haVe his say. ­ The Bryan senator closed his fetint saying he wishes to suspend the rules to register negative vdtes for himself and. McKnight. on all sections." so he ­could go back to his offlce to answer some mail. He remained during the ' r 40—minute debate and voted "no" on all five votes. Dallas Sen: O.H. Harris.and Sen, Tom Creighton of NOneral Wells join-; ed Rtoore in his criticism of the docu-^ ment.' ' -% -^ * s i, ? which deals with local gpvemment provisions. , In answer to: Motnre's, Creighhai's and Harris'rdeprecatioas, Sen.; A.M. Aiken Jr.iof I^aris said angrily '*! won't sit hereand let go unchallenged 'M • the statements made onklai ovciir u«nnuir>t ® _ jt>. ^By:STEVE^McG0NIGl41_„,„w, when it took Bell and its enormous staff three months to compile !-='£.'•: Texan Staff Writer " iiy figrM to Nito f "T -I -; u ^y^tofattemptingto prejudiceCityCouncil's decision on its current rate request ontbe1973 data, Bell believeslast year's i-'H* ' i* -• , 'thetne rate hike.mse. t , r ' *t figures WillwiU:further,.illustratefurther illustrate t,1fceti)e "deteriorating ecwioiniceco . , The head of the aty'slegaldepartment claimed Bryanti* using • situation" which the compaity isexperiendng, he added. m ^ the"cJassic'J Bell strategyof trying to eliminate allopposition to The new rate' hike request; the second in the last thre­three years," ' j,the phone company"? $8.4 million request. ' ' < has become necessary because tbe $1.7 million increase lr ease granted -It was a letter Bryant sett Monday to the council that touched by the council in 1973 has not rdleved Bell's.-financial woes, :>fM ff the city attorney's sharp criticisms of the Bell executive's Bryant uad^'%nUaBte*igr,tiie 'l&i&MiisM'the previous iit ;,allegedlyunprofessionaltactics.llpfnllv nnnmMmut tarttnc -< ?rease, he said, istKeTact that the comparqr realized a net profit f|§i* BRYANT CpMPLAINED the letter that Butler has overex-^ vyrnriiAintiiu in ineieiter inat Buuer nas overex< of ( " tended his coUnciMelegated authority by setting himself up as 1971 to l973 Beli spent $l08 milUon -Sp ^onlyw $850,000 in 1973,-while in investmentsalone in Austin from -^e advereary, voiceof the city's telephone ratepayers. HeSaid be 1 yJS THE OTHERvi'tiKtihand^putlerhand,' guttercontended the company's profits!profits i^i # fi 1. av sxeiepnone raiepayers.nfisaiQ ^,ON tbe ; CitV^S leffal renrPBPnffitiVA ahmilHunt hnvo tnlrfin twx *i Mttuw* .-j-jj.j •• *"s i felt the city's.legal rejjresentaUve should not have taken sideson exceeded|lfnilli -*> set qver hi^ipfrticipation.in^the rate«hange issue. He said the ).hayetu g! ANOTHISR SORE S(W with Butler Cour if.^c6unctl'sdecisi6ndldnotsatisty jtfVgaa p;the:council i%ognlze the relevancy of;its newiysubmittedl974 itsf]fipahclal ne^iatthrfeaV*W^ismerelyanotherpartof the °n ^,es® n8ur?s as W®U ai phone company'sstrategy iofo#ce mpliance with itsdemands uic9C iiKures H9 weU aS/ piHJ „ M'fo we]previcSusIyfllttl 1078figures, fiuUer said ttifere Was absolutely > vant thenl^ (Belij ^koow nb>^rjhat,JieraM hijij rate consultant, George Hes^, could ,Butler emphasize*. 4 intehd to; ratepayers "\-4 MM 4 . ^... House BillsiTo Set _ 5 v ~ CballengingNew Era&utwe y ByDAWN O'NEAJL Xfald.-American electorialsystem. ­ Limits * tcfeft SUB WHter ~i;:.'^Politicians," he com-'He advo<»tK a litaited^tenti\ iWlwn jjjallup began polling., mented "still think if youcan of office;'public funding of ...^J0BNM0WUS^; ^ iternationally, there was »:"• ^>show you're ahead, you have j 'carapgigns and ,a new.jray ofi if H?^ "i«lwr Edacatioo Com-operatedat alassftr thebot tMjwv ,.... wedisli word for -'survey.'V? it made." * v., selecting candidates.*.^ -mittee voted lateWednesdaynMit tosend "ItiSTear.weaMQrhnakemaLMtMdhr ;^/ ^gw;inSwedend'gallup" It.*' to subcommithw a. bill which would re-with a drastic cWtbKk k serxKes."ske:the'i;:j»rUeS-S"^i^^:c *< Mtbe only word,witfe that mean-' " sampling, Gallup -claimed',*; ; take the people who kmck qn' ^sto-add«£. ^39ng...much to the frustration-«ient seryfcesi fees 'at stafe-sapported Re^SmitkGaqr «tCK«aetmei "Youcancover the whole on<: -the gate," he;said. "I think a, ^"'Sol thecompany's competition. ' •vcplleges'-andiunWi^ (verse with a random sample ~ selection committee wouldbe thetat^wflhKsMrtoestiMahaMX­ V3S GeorgeHontceGallup. the :, HouseBQl 20G0, by ReprisSentativ^sSen­ of 1,500. Wecansuryeythenar moire a»ropitete:"-" :it". •s f«e tu be ctotei ttE^Tbb ipoll master himself, was frooia TborapsooofHouston and GJ.SHt- Z> ^ Jms^ringrather thanaskingv too of San Antooi6^ has'"a few agtk"Y jjtbe questions inan informal •< weeks." he aifcfcd* these. circumstances^ can-details which need tb be wbriced out. hat dust;«»' ^ -jmittee sponsored': botfesi guidelines ^ bbtainiqg Student opinion ; inaanwiMaaicrbectofceiaitlkeExst=t 1 ^appearances. . " *.; l®'000 ^ prior^nxingstnA^^^^^^ fees^: the political •'•'•Tteas '***!— •'--­ v* perbapsoneoftbemost 'v.. -Few people are unwilling to eliminated from the System,' .. Earlier, the coimnittee voted to npokt lyAimmmi at >«s *wrt»y ^controversial questions n»f .answer questionnaires aslong -the United States coukieasiW favwablyto tbeHqusetwo billsauOnra-gijdjwifcUy.jhfc• *yB^aT-: 'Gallup faced waswhether opt.u -itt thqt nc Mini anonym*1.;:, cut appropriatitasbyone-ing changes in stwlent services fees at \r ^Maa polls influence election*. ­.v ty, he said. 'fourth. . „ r :as testaMaor Aagcei «a:Mfto i£*' aj^ft.' "ts' -» "I am not sure it is a bad - OttSKk bBI was HB MKt wfckk w«M thing tolet people know what : :: "That's W bUltan diiiars^ ;mal»:te:AHericaB at Ettk^' * ^r Vpeople think," Gallup said.' \ •opinion, until yon go.oat and he explained. " . LUBBOCS RKP. Ra McAhster's bOt bnrsapart oT a»IWm^!i^t|gK. tatttopeople,"Gal^-^d. :^ „ 'Besides, there has never would increase the maximum amount for : OoBMnitte^^ been any evidence which says -We are thoroughly surprised Ve:Me;.coIniBg:t^»^|Ileelld•".•• such fees at Tech from the omvMisper V SiSfei^0"1ooceevery^"n**5" °Lan Athens., atoag with Sj^tumunaw >jtjpolls affect the way people .l7* ' era," Gallupsaid. -•' , „ T|1r -l iC speaking at the Tavern. -Things are changing. This is -Lm O Bills have been proposed in ^ certainly anerawhich should afraid ba^jSistottfce ajgjNtkgp>eBMi»Ap-VnS^ pwpriattows Oaanittee. whick reje« Nixon-SSS JhSSTlfuJ P^„a .^llengeto its, ----------------....r v.).i <::5«said.Noneofj|^id. None of thesetbesehillsnass-bills pass--ihethe h^best showing,<^MrHr staUsticsot9ti^;^.' showing this, how^Nto^>#W .-«£ Students Attorney ^ d?^?i1tfal-?>r!^TOli The Appr«priaUMs Cwaaittte, . suggest the onpasite' is tfne^ barely squeaked tturwi^" h^V w-E^^'' . . vote to set the new fee in a canpnswide • Inwcnr ^ksn wM to HxtK^^4^m| *--•tud-.W Fmnk hry and Ann Iww, ara'.' referendum election. s-' ^ iu iw -a^s.v.--. • -*--> 4 ovaa°W» by opptfetatfll frem • ojh. to S |un. MofiJuy Julie Martin, vice-president oT theTedkr nfthi^ *&!• Ihraugh Mfay in Roaro .3, Sp ?•" WP'i: > SIXTH SUMMER «ry.v^ -:.v Bell Secures Reversal^ -K ^ Requests Trial Delay VaTIV -*CJ u<» •%£%. , a---,, mm SAN ANTONIO «1HJ—! m ^®§f , ^In 1970, a Tn-Toweirs apartment for 6-weeks of onter heud out .summer school cost a co-ed as low as $105. ^ . XgMOTn«>UMa.VkDueEjirtu J£ -&? :LMMT«BMrWvOli .13FVCR NBM IHB: IW* HWKLIR NO L/MMR MAT OMC JgOM[TH> Oiw rawSn PQiS>iK& THIS SUMMER WE BRING YOU fHE SAME the time duopooop Bcocjpo^vAM??naA4< j^ :1bS:S5w: fiPM^T»ocme>j "*OOMC.K: EXCEPTIONAt, ACCOMMODATIONS ATTHE > ' A etJPOIM&V^WEM >ggp CFIVC. , r jry?. QaMC. »4 Jk»0 SAME LOW>RICE. AND, CONSIDERING " ^MOST tOVt' PLBHTiJOP-BOp^BOR ^ 5 ^°°T AlX OF OiMk.it*>:'j<^ invr^igtlioBS bygiwrmiatnrm iqiw^wiihkb TMtyo^iuc. t-rr* rrs*oxD de.,dqkt^qu jUN^vr,,(,»v-» cqht^OJ INFLATION AND SKYROCKETING UTILITY ^ totended toaaetonrepMea ^ niwc oootite ^ . .v PMCTKAI^MD pReaeMnr A.KULTNek^ . COSTS. THAT MAKES *T A BETTER DEAL THAN ^ saCtte.^ -4 ^MOLELEactu _ ^ I-lin III . I;*r:a«*r EVER. OUR POOL REMAINS AS COOL. OUR iOth QM,^1V^na: -— i . j —tftwaxM. FLOOR OPEN DECK AS SUNNY. Pp.oy'SiONCO-rto»aftatoaao hslOct «.'»•»awaitsafter, . • *•;•• *'• ".?•• V.-4'* • .-is-'.'O-' -> ^v. .f' v ^ fl-.. i>, •. ^ w mepHWAND THATS A BARGA/ft. ^ * AsMnrandtbeGrawtttsanigi ttoj Miltaiaiwiailiite v, ^ 4->-» ^ A#C^ topCpttwi fcyse aayappused watepiewtafctaiware^ -poo ped "o QMcf ^ JijyuM* "SiSmil': IvUL ' -»*-P«*iu4\*Z\, BNasuas -BA oa rtiialij M « cMMtenrit J—*— •-"-— .'AiT>«^:no^9ucHis*ML. -\* , GailUOttartrt tte fiiaa «Sk |laagp« ••S ' "W.-^ •Eixuat. - gg^tywaoLAT'ON Anujrag^i CWWL >¥•*$&% ' Guce. 4UM»te. iftsi - --ntjiiMt CI^ISBB y»4(S WE eioSs. *aRMrw atfaiwilK £®*HWJ?tlTI«3MK*Eia*-tVJPi. mMti gA^T^WBMdLTME B«6 fciS ­ im' IU'.»Ur. & We're oafy two and a half Mocks West of campus at I WSOOrtiOUiiou,,; UosnCr. IIWMHI --luRij I ^aOl-West 24th St m the heart of the student .',IWTI—«• -jjTV-* H neighborhood. Call us at 47Q-7636. " IUMM i ijXOCA. >!>•> t t ?riwww;w*.Ui iHt D -» J& '1-. t <• **A. Ml 3gj£* . MSXZ Public Lecture *^95itfr 1­ W ' ^ .j»,«*'.o«aa;'»»:.ihi a w "^r--J-nikia" i bwMa^ 1 . **«• tMM k«t L> *! art • JUnin>1»irfwSg 'NLtwk^l I KBQO®^ *«Sf S^mueaMea ZfXi k IKttmiMiC 1 man YOUWON'T BEUEVE Wife •VU' .YKISEE IT lotBOOKS FREE :>-SfrWLg£5&!i«ft5« NEUnratuKS^CMBtme ggRILl|^4:00P.M s mmm ^ 's/^»mSsm HWunesfotSu) heenvironmeNtaiprotection'ION;©N v*»ctoi&u*B+h -« IANP IMPROVEMENT COMM^ OF -.FLEA WWKWMtMaMtMMBJIt V; * }Zy "* ....-. ... .. -...-.-•-•-».--r = -•---*; -•« f;Vi-Vi^i(Sv;^l$«5«''' >"' " -'• v ' 4*'in %fM tv' ^ •-'-'-? % rSAIGON (UPI):— Communist forces Vietnam) may happen, but. hell, attacking with tanks, and artillery anybody who's got any.smarts at all can Wednesday captured their 18th province look at the situation and figure out what capital, routed a government regiment kind of ride there is involved." and shelled South Vietnam's biggest air-Phan-Rang, capital of Ninh Thuan base for the third day. Americans under Province 16$ miles northeast of Saigon, orders from President Ford began pack­fell to a tank^ed, 5,000-man Communist IP ing up to leave Saigon. . force that sent government defenders, South Vietnamese intelligence reports.,. outnumbered'bird to one, fleeing to said government' reconnaissance planesfoj rescue ships waitmg off the coast in the had spotted 'a. Russian-built MIG19 fighter jet parked ata onetime U.S. base at Pleiku, 230 miles north, of Saigon, within striking range of the capital. U.S. AND VIETNAMESE officials prepared to startevacuating within 24 hours "nonessential" personnel among the 5,500 Americans still in Saigon. President Fold,"in issuing theorder, said in Washington those,with "meaningful" jobs would stay on,tat that he could not say bow many that would be. V . Maj. Gen. Homer Smith, the ^ U.S. defense attache and higie& ranking -American military. man v. in Vietnam, a*Wwi** deserted Xuan^street. said, "I'm not suggesting it-(the fall of Senate Sees!ShiftsiniSentiment Weyand Gains Support for Military Assistance to Vietnam W& VKppN(IRQ rAn^OM flat heHad been T But Committee Chairroan'John-maid some militaryassistance soon, but (nntfs'^•dor • McCleUan, D-Ark., remained opposed. . not necessarily the full $722 million Mr. He said the amount is too:small to Ford is requesting. '.~ f irar ^sUbOise the atmtiaa," and even if it -Succeeded thestabilization would beonly "Tbe prpof is cwninginfasterthan I *«*(Sau J.Hinlt Mae**. Wau, temporary. thought it would," Stepnis skldin ap­""Irtedstminsa "decided sttft SOI.JOHN STENN1S, D-Miss.,chair-parent,reference to his request for ade­t nan of the Senate ArmedServices Cgm-quate justification for the new military , &Mittee.|aedicted his panelwodfc^^ecoln- Humanitarian Assistance &-<--Mr. Ford told ^the'editors he was "ab­solutely convinced th&t'ifCongress made ­available tbe. |722 million the South Vietnamese' could stabilize the Texas Congressmen situation." "• *" , But Sen. John O.'Pastore, D-R.I., told reporters* "My personal judgment is Approve?of Viet Aid that the war is over.*' •iv: %JOAN USAMY OVENS humanitarianaid to South Vietnam. ~ ON THE OTHER SIDEof the Capitol,Of the three, only Tower advocates Albertsaid he feelssure the Housewould , D-TK, nuStaiy a|d as wdL The South Viet­oppose any effortto tie military and .OTH IfyHVR i Temer, R-Tet, and Reft. JJ. namese people will not be able todefend humanitarian aid info one package. |KSMtaliM l» Uk StMte Ap-.: Pkifc, Mustm, sapport what can be gained from humanitarian aid witiaout maitaiy aid, lGke Kelly. a 3-2 Dedskm '=.«4-nt™n 7eli6VabiUty of key witness Jake' State Death Penalty lawH • "fsay, monbers of the jury, that they offered a witness here'v-i;­ I STaid^S' as tiieyrpresaited rmaTaW^in"^ who cut a cynical deal for himself to avoid punishment for his ., ij misdeeds. vdio came in here to bear witness against this defen-.41 ^1=™^-but opposes^ the use of .S; x,, c0Bvict cnnaUy charges that he accepted tro illegal dant," Williams shouted. ' tte a n^rmr^^lnin'nl ^if5-000 Payotfe. the jury, would have to believe that he "betrayed' JACOBSEN had been indicted on hank fraud charges inTexas 'ifd l._ Mll., n i — " *v*i**tyi pwytaeis Dfcimtc e^lained., ^jhis trust aiad bargained awav his honor to Jarohwi," and had^dedared himsclf bankrupt, trading away prosecution '| ~ _ 1^'H^<*^^^jBwatteniattef of evacuation is way "tefcji pwl* ill< i Imyiiln to in the air, Devore said. ^ Wckle .favors contributing. Im;? Do Ifcqr gwd .t^hamaBilarian aid to theSoutheast Asiany i Alaudaidtess^Icomby, but he would have to beTc«n-K paaitty?" aK^.^7«|idled by a stnng argument from the.; ; ',^vlFiord administration to support military. *TPth»M •» a totfcwt tacrd (voces­ y-~— • — ..... SM-vhmssh Kol^hek S»ock Movint Mnsto Seventh Cbmecutiw Gain YORK tAl*> — lie slock nartxt wiped lass Ha* cttended lis latest wimring sfrakto smcm scsslMs. v ^Tv ^^ ^ 1heIkwJQ«esawtaceQf9iadastrals,daiininioretlnD9paiiitswith AT&T Shateholdevs Vote AgaflMI CofporateBreak-Up ANAHEIBt CaHf. fUW» — A cross-section of the threemillion people vlfe «k« stock In Kb Bdl gathered in the Anaheun Ckwvention CJenter a sesskn as ****** •" tteMMal slMtiHliHs'iRMfiMii aoren South China Sea. -THE COMMUNISTS now control 18 of South Vietnam's 44;proyinces. Field reports said the Communists swept across Highway 1 between Xuan Loc and South Vietnam's biggest airbase at Ken Hoa. The defeat destroyed about' 80 percent of a goyernmentregiment and sent the defenders reding 15 miles, to . .within 23 miles of Saigon. There were no' official casualty .reports. South Vietnamese troops held Xuan Loc. itself/ but Communists had the city surrounded and UPI correspondent Leon Daniel 'said, it was being shelled sporadically late Wednesday., , XUAN IAJC is on a key invasion route to Saigon, but Communist forcesare cir­cumventing it to strike at Bien Hoa, home of what is left of South Vietnam's air force. 14 mQes nortb of the capital, Wednesday, Communist gunners shelled the base for the third straight day with 17-mile-range 130MM artillery. The sighting of the MIG19, a Korean .war-vintage filter,,indicated the Com­ munists may be building their own air base at Pleflcu.astronghold in theCeb­ tral Highlands , during the days of tbe American presence.-Itwas abandoned by the SouUi Vietnamese in March trader orders of President Nguyen Van Thieu. 'V, . • • • WASHINGTON (UPI) -President ; Ford has'ordered the evacuation of all nonessential U.S;J civilians from South' Vietnam, but aState Departmentofficial said Wednesday thePrraident believes a 1200 million contingency fund is not enough for a &11. evacuation program. During a meeting with the Senate Foreign Relations Committee at the White House Monday, Mr.Ford accepted in prindple the committee proposal to finance the evacuation of all remaining U.S. citizens and, 174,000 South Viet­ ^ •. • namese and the limited use of American forces to accomplish it if necessary. 'M THE COMMITTEE later sent him the SSI draft of a bill which would provide the needed authorizations plus $200 million to finance the operation and is awaiting -M\ his response. The committee later deferred action on the bill because a number of members were dissatisfied with tbe current rateof withdrawal. Sen. Dick Clark, D-Iowa, said "We Svl clearly are not ready to act until we see some improvement" in the. rate :of evacuation. He said U.S. ambassador ;%l Graham Martin "is still dragging, his Mfeet," and that if Martin's plans-arcr followed there will still be up to 3,000 .-ii Americans in South Vietnam May 1. t-ji SEN. HUBERT HUMPHREY, D-N! -*>l Minn., said he agrees with Clark, i IrM -Asst. Secretary of State Philip C. Habib, testifying Wednesday in a House International Relations Committee bear­ing on various problems related to the proposed evacuations, disclosed that Mr. .^ Ford has. turned down the committee "4 South Vietnam , .-.j > bill. ' . "Secretary of State (Henry A.)-// Kissinger said the President accepted . the concept of sudia contingency fund if the funds wereadequate," Habib said. "My understanding is that the funds arje -f not considered adequate." . State Department legal adviser Muhroe Lee, however, said he believes ' Hie President would need additional -ii f authority to handle the contingency ,, ;where U.S. forcesevacuatingSouth Viet-Siamese nationals mtght face hostile situations involving combat ^ "'ij 4 •r <• defense lawyer Edward BennettWilliams. ;t .^^^on the Texi» charge for. a guil^r, plea in this case, •iif CHIEF . PROSECUTOR jFrank M. .,. . Tuerkheimer Said{'^-Williams sakl Jacobsen, a friend of Conhally's for 20years,' Jacobsen's testimony had been corroborated by circumstantial f"testified likea programmed robot...he tailored hisstory to fit' *?^dence even thodgh there w6re nbi witnesses to the alldsed" ?' the record." -• * iiaw -... ^ Cotmally is^charged with taking two $5,000 payments froin?; ^•"Illegal payments whoiinaOe to public officials do noi ^cur ;Jacobsen in return for helping persuade the Nixon administra­ijKihe presoice of third parties; or caimeras or where there are v ;tton in 1971 to increase mUt price supports. At the time, |^reporters present," said Tuerkheimer. eech s patiicdogists and audioiogisiswassentto' subcommittee by the Senate State Af^% furs Committee Wednesday. '<»!. SB 670,-spoRsored by Sen. Bob Gant^ mage of Houston, would,create -a-state committee . of .examiners -for speedi pathology and audiology_ «rithin the; Department of Health, to "examine,; .license and regulate speedi pathologists ­and audiologists." , , , '^ Vv "Ibe coromittee also approved a bill to -. bdp finance agricuttural activities at Texas Te^Uhlv^ty"withcropsales..£ , the oommitte 'alM^^'a^ ~ Sen. Lkiyd Doegett's ldl j^ remire the- Texas Department of MentalHealthahd Mental Retardation to pay thepremiums • On group lite and healih insurance policiesiorits retireek . Mouse postponed until Moo-, day a bill to allocate *2,800,000 to the State Board of Education to-buy text­books already contracted for by the v v . board. • '• Tb^Ho^inritVbted 70MB7agaj^tt&^ Wm. At.n~.n~. i Y^'The bill would set^^ta ipreme Court definition also passed. ^Ra"!ro!<1'2 e,. ... -^fSmf90^,rn,ssi0I, regulatory,authority tau,5tnp Mining fjp^^qwtoply with federal standards on strip :A bai providing for the reclamation of^M^in^n® A federal strip mining bill isex^a. lands subjected tostrip miningwas pass-s|f4pectedsoon,Sen. GranVJoms ofAbilene%« v ed by the Senate Natural Resources'" S'said.' • -> v, ' ike. ' t f as.a result of strip mining procedures!^ The Hance amendment allows^ i automatic renewal of (nining llcaises'uil-v^ less the Railroad Commission deter-':'r­ j mines tiie company not in compliance' with the act sMwi ^ ? ^t^gnd^dgd^. ^ bill, to »ilo#iJnipe^Mnbw^te board toiqipoint itsown cgtetibtim ^re^^, Ur was yoted down ?*-87 od second v .reading ' ^ x Called "probaMy oneof the worst Wllat mmm. offbesesskm^' byHoustoQjRtv.Anftoetf Fighting fciBeiriitf:Hall, the bill would hay^ altawed the PriWte^Employrtedf'Agm than125'.(tftMhtdM w? 5*.'.•'•'--J'" ^THED wmwm mm •SMMttl 8«wb!KRB* J gsgj saB&^jawasrj V*>. ->?-— '-vr ft.-j.ww: %' ' V^ ^ JPp*'-T? Page4 Thursday* April 1?. 199S r'J#^ s»,^filfci' v if Si&psif • \W&i v *?"'* lv " * ST** dweriand an nge Towlr 5r 1 'Aasffii In the words of William Prather, anearly president of the University "-Hmw»«.MW»ft»ir^..a.i">-*rrrTTllTii«iMaw n. < of Texas, let me assure you that in reaching your answer toUiat^ goes-^-^fund for tnte exccUence«kait n$assesset^mtdhk ~~ " ?„ r"~ t~pnttlrit WirtrnMnnllnwcn hnhltlfti lain nf " ll•lll^l.lM^ |^representatne5;qf^ ^become r««p—artfc for its afr—tea* weadhhi awl.•*» successfully defending the Available future Daily Ttaaato fed iKtMal• If / • 1A1-<1? iFond before last year's Coastitutinail s -Universitjr hads^ < M* Canveatioa ; for a great number of the state'sritiamk. 5w The University Tower glistened yrhiteunder thedeepsky of a Texasspring ' ^ But, back to reality. la tnti^, jast as FMt Wednesday night, a few of its interior lights brightly Spotting the rising ex-^jDonstita£oaaL OwmliM imaialh i bst jcar^ teiior of UT's most prominent symbol Ftand is almost a dry wefiv at least aetil the icar MMM Gazing at the calm-inspiring faqade, few onlookers could have*guessed &Y» ' Our wise oyerlords, have tied *»—«»ailat OT*is ta»tfti^ that the power behind the symbol had that evening exerted itself to regaina V--fuBd in paying off bonds*tr rrrtnif Hwrlun Hi !<• foundation stronger than that supporting the Main Building. >• pool, our ultra-debase casing of YestDCaJfc. awslHQn Without promising to increase minority enrollment, "without promising to list of things yoafie sa tiredof icad^g »iy vqlue graduation caps more than hard hats, without promising to become Hereare the figures: nMHSL 1IT«M rewwp^»«» open about its operations with the peopleof Texas, without explaining itself ? ;£hare of the fund,t!>r nthrr thin! i irntk^iwi i hOftj m any manner (except to issue "scare" notices about the effects of UT not "Out of that, goes getting its way),'the University emerged as victor Wednesday night in a ^jdebts. •feMNiH House Appropriations Committee meeting by a vote of 16-2. s ^strings attached. Methods used by the University to override recommendations of Athens ^ According CoErra,ashe testified k^ljKar, Hep Fred Head to spread the Available University Fund among other with that fantastic sunfor the 11 «fdi colleges and universities remain known only1 to 16 staterepresentativesand ^ Out of themote ttaajp»nilfc»Mi^-iTttNtti lMfcirirt severalUniversitylobbyists,among them,former RegentFrankErwin. '.In an editorial Monday, The Texan endorsed breaking up the University's^jscholatships. fund.hoping such.a~removalof: the financial und^imiingforso-calledex~^||eto. Bead|s officectainsthat thewethat W & tfx. ^firing line Cutalittle'regentallfat,thensMve£our!p(ol lems To th« editor: ! * I do not wantto seem sonaive asnot"""to ' H^u^srgE5^»aa)-, ; * w6Neaujao(s b ax * -tmflosirnslbw {recognize that the Vcut" list.Regent HeurfiMJJ H6iP wo? , l-c fiOtiTwCD^iSUC IDMItoOB •-JSlS^^ ^ i;Shivers placed before the House Hiiher .^vpBklucation Committee with respect : to\ ^ the proposed ttudget slash ijy the Legislature was a levepng device, in all =8^ S^5» Sgt probability, a thinly veiled countennove ' , f M b.-r.-. •"?. *&*-??> -tooffset the momentum of the proposal, -•Ci > ,hm»ever, that being recognized does not' ^ '^'najriy overcome the perniciousness of', , x '"? "such a list If the Higher EductionCom-V(v * f 9*« ie> °r make the cuts as proposed. The^^ , 3 . , '^iilatter woqld be disaster f,;''rs^^^gy^/^j" |e'^^^y'|'^yy|H5J a %Si Probabilities aside, the effort of thes««; I "ll'f House,to cot?soin>Vfatj' ottt of the 5®"' \ budget may not be entirelyout of placer '' "•• —'^the problem is what the regents and ^^3S....r the president consider "fat". I am bk^1; * convinced byiiny ovnr'^ugimi'eiit thai^^l^^ 1. ..I. »" 4T-I WV '-^oriorities. The burden of proving to Vv« /'A alreadyalienated community of 8hriaits' .miiy ikoy -j/mm' ' SSJM San AntMup; oi(r integrating wall. In ad?^'will elevate themselves to rr *Tril ^nf la oflhcr-flyf; auj. .M -L-L— •. ^ • ,CtaneoB|aadl s'sdnd'.fagr'ipqf ewg$*e^awek M^mih • jr& otJ^.confeferoe budget of $250,000 will • 111 [l^'b£ provided out of the Permanent j ii>»s Urifve^jty-FuBd:-items ^>'as fot "fpod (including two -banquets, a-T Amy Cheng?s'irticleroii Hetptari** IT?" tela barbecue and aVIP lunch,tin sedition and VD contains severalgross cies. Shestates that theBorpes Zoster, which prodncesshingles butdoes MM are. oo known aa- ^hMwlaltn ssms^ms& := tibodies that axmteract Herpes ^•'ia htetiSl^^^^^R|'^•-3^ xa«iihHdteiyrAit.y Pem,s JMeei • i^ueeeBsary tOsresptHia to'UW^ *!^^to b onfcmeaBB oT ~ **wm m|"',faring Herpe*-amptatWeeBanrr ^ r^fmassfpeBifa Texan-Trhe-^'i'"btn ithere are ooovert Worn aaflte &Srli)S#SI .^K cUnicSlly practicaL Al^: moeA peafile7; ^^ id, b» vL because of UmT kinds of antihortiw far , » ^ews;::;^®}^ already somewhat HtkMrcwnpletely tnfterent things. In the< ; %Bed;!iswtiaharlottheadminlstratwif {"bo* she shooM«^t a»ne of.the , |t^i^]which)is running this universt^r^" professors , °r. students in .the Plaudit sv sysueni wnu^i is nuuung imsumversiwj^ ^ ^ lM&£SS5teSSi''KSDg5SKS,S^-'-;»I^ * L.. U 1K&Miunrmnw'iit InCnrmaMnt 1 ^Si. * 1 lil fpr^^^Mwyt^ ,^328 Austimtes ib|)0feel that they are toeing diS-1 > Wa'iniiii ^Junpoi^anHy by American society.1^ president of theGay Aetivfarf**ma.w^ pf to tiheTtene TEXAN SZ^jmmS A^MAslMaNG inwroie^l^lA-lj ,,. ^ i 5^" > r^,v' "^P '15 *-*s> ^ IftVMitnm EDRQR 5er HumKUi TtlRES EEffTOR lOltlM (TjCXXl SWKm MtaeatHj Wpr^dt^^AMnfl^ky.. ,, u MM. ^ 7 -->^V-V*"h '"^' Vr 1 " -'-A ' f, ;•; Moreand more, Hrstyear": The-only .really,-valuable; surface -during these in I ,rK^admf.an regretting their course of instruction seems to; frequent visits; some that ' V * —.-decision if two years of. /"J be student teaching.' ; This';crop up are shrugged away ,>vs-*'~ painstakingly mundaneedoca-• serves to bring:ihe.realities dispassionately. '• ~z% ' I • »• • • -•••• -V. •••:•• tkm coorses.Curricolam >«1 foreboding truths to the THE SITUATIONseems uii­ , ••wo UHUK>. l^UTlCUIUm eye of the apprentice teacher. changeable with the current $ • i-.v* : But it is sometimes too late. administration's view on . After three years.of academic educational philosophy, I . Who dunnit? Mostly U.!k preparations and tedious, don't propose a solution that . time-consuming edocation -will keep everyone happy, but Hantly laid the congressqien -courses that serve no real •t am • hoping that if enough(hat she "wooldn'tpatup function; the student finally •< new. teachers are brought into > from sfceepherders" with gets into the cjUi&room to .the realm of practical ­.•tat dieteffl; toxceptirom take over the task of , dis^ teaching, maybe the publicwoikent' --cipline, whidi is the No. 1 schools won't lose the top •m Ed problem in the classroom to­-teachers to big business and­ ed that 3fce "8end day, eqiecially evident in the new • enterprising. oppor­them ant to the' rancB;*' . inner city sdwols. " ^x-tunities that don't exist at the ' " V- Zf presumably for-Voile -INCREASING unemploy­.niomoit for the praiuptial - ­ r western-style reindoctrina-ment, thwarting salaries and .teacher. For new teachersare;; •i; K-Tv'­ "BOB. • scarcity of good environmen­in actuality wed. to their ?4i Retorted Mrs. Brooks tal teaching jobs forces the. 'schools, and divorces are oc^' • W iiniinM.i>inn tartly-. "I wish 1 had new teacher to the inner city eurring„ at an ever alarminga OTimtnngBee thesalt mines for Jobs. The only com-.'.rate. Alimony thatschools are ~Kf| in Folandor someplace like parativeschools ta Austinthat paying results in the depletidn -m£-1 #14, flat" remotely resemble inner city of top teachers. r«S Bat the ^erstwhile schools, dwellings"and atr^ Needless to say, jf teachers *: ranchwoman hadsecond mosphere are: Pearce. Kare to come back perennially •»!. tb«wi went to: ibe:Vrii(m^9iei Junior Hi^h. Johnston .Highi ^stabiUzing educatiowai I quietly deleted' hersalty School-is reported- to.be-a: -philosophy, it-must start'at ­tanpiagp to give her remarks hotbed' of disciplineden-, the college level. • amorecaptions, bureaucratic coanters, butas asubstitutein The courses at the-univer-f the Austin IndependentSchool sities must be' reconstructed Gone from the censored District (AISD) I have been "to fit the need of surrounding ; tration are the "drooes" of engaged tpteach at just about, schools.' The relevancy of , ' . the MQnL Sheisrecorded only allofftearea jimior highsand teaching,should;, beemphasis'<| I -v» f ~ *s making-: theinnocnous hi^^drols;:andJohnstoo,in ed more than, thettepiy-dde. 4 iJBrtr,v statement: "I"wishyoo could xmyppinion, islow-keyed cqm-But.iiiost important the <•». " do somethingaboot Civil Ser­pared to Ttavis Hi^i orany pf .problems at the sdiool level -' vicerules,sowe canget rid of the : previously^; mentioned should be aired out in proper:;: -Bandana Print Long ; •. U-L'S some of the ineffective in junior highs channels instead of hi. thegovernment" ••• The real problems is-wild, .teachers''ioungei-. Go festive during those fun time days^"-^ InfhesaniSsedim^pn.tbe ahead in' our bold;'colorful,' full;,skirted*^' >-&& % guvuuiumt isDO longer"aw-long with Its' tie halter -and shirred < y'lfid,*' andsbe nok^ger wantsv bodice. * Red, white and blue bandana i $4­toeiSeaiQiMKtnthePolidr print in a cotton/rayon blend. Sizes 5 to "' amp salt mines.She jmerely slates; . fr»*N 13. 34.00H -Ap-rather t«n«^y:"a»ilServfce M­^ ndes do make it dif&colt at -,Jn. ...... •• --5^ ^ j . YARING'S ON-THE-DRAO •' 'M iti» ^S^wa-r -, t v 2406 Guadalupe a n:,LOOKING® „ ? FOOTOWTE: Ih. BnMks acknowledgedQiatfiieunce&­qnoted to *V •. 'fOR'--?' t « W yr* ' remarks' r ^ cj >4 ^ SOMETHING?! Eia§<«(f* tneaa anything ty it," An Estee Lauder gift full of i^jfce3said. "Really,Ididn't I % • 'tM, K9TSIS • ^exciting beauty-makers ' fidn*t have 'anyooe in"mind": •f what you're lobking for is a challenge, and a chance to do something meaningful % 'c'i tStSSSSt^ ti . v (I lowed hk as ^ S inhuman terms, consider the Peace Corps; 1 »' •*) e •*'" i mmmmi at^yiSTA.^ ^ Yours with any Estee Lauder purchase of 5.00f fi Th« Peacie.. Corps Jiaa 2-year oyerssas; SPS: assignments in Africa^Asia,Latin America ; Sfe apd the Pacific. ^VISTA has volunteer 4 lasftigilments^ in vfcities and rural conr\; munities across tHe U.S. The programs are Mut in , engineering^ health, education,, w-*t~3e <# i/ •* * •!"? ^ Hi* m ••iiiaiHaaiiiiiiiiiaiiiaada . ' •• > __ _ _ • -! C-*J ft IM .t m ' = Q-u -•" M Br-ul': ­ ma «iyv. W-' sit 2 m L"* .SStmialiSfi InW-opi^onwithUS ts® rni"* T"? ~:r- r J»'| --=.r-a-u r.. 13Ua :i.3a5 ,=»uwT -&£ ''"ioi ^s3 firl. mi THE NEW PERFECTIONISTScontains three tit .> c A ) »1 'v r •'v 4A v\N|finishing touches^th^t^make Jbil) beauty * d <­^SCnMllUfUUI-2S , ... ^vSf "il " "WSato differences: ^ 5 V ~ AS 'vk -• ­» ESTEE SUPER COLOGNE VpRAV" M li\ r » f " ^ __ ^ ;jj ' i';( i *• , The. super fragrance for thrfse super ifoments, in a' slefek, frosted flacon, HONE-Y GLOW PRESSED POWDER1^! *. ammxMmmmimmmm poster I ^,Cream'based for -a-flawless!/' smooth^ Ji$rf-1?.,, f--v ^ L% ' $i:0o '.. I •*«»Uak a • I Polishes lashes fo^a new, longer, more *ammw'awmmvmmm m stoftier GwodoluM K •'A'*/ I lata ami nnier urai maicn, i navew ptay my we iirsimaicasauiroay. uoa-wnat l.vrant to do." •*•••-v. *A, '' Chris Evert arrived in best t« t By MELAN1E HAUSER :< Austin Wednesday to prepare -winner; lose both her matches and her . younger-players coming up>ia KgswsTexan SWf'Writer ' -Valdez 6-1, 6*1,' and Jo Ajmcff ;for the L'eggs World Series of SINCETHERESINC1 won't bfc fourth place moqey would still. good;, and the spectators are'1 £L The scene at4hfe Intramural' Kurz blanked Maria Caero(M), Women's TennisSaturday and any lesser players to warm up equal her largest single tout-f'looking (or younger faces?* ^courts Wednesday afternoon 6-0 > -i'u' ,Sunday at Lakeway World of against. Evert plans to spend nament winnings of $10,000^ Of the four players in t^e \ Jresembledlhe battle of the. Kurt played at^ tW-,NoV^4|? been Tennis tf she wins, Evert will some time before the tourna-which she won in the L'eggs tournament, King" >Alamo, wfith Schfelner play1 singles position instead of her fe teaRIL&VNNINIIEHIN AT TILQ AIIDAIM >'•: RMNKIWT ACMTINH NN :1TI>AI4 KN« C JA*.-set being the closest thing t a lot better " ' ' t Aki tfbmpptitiottT^fojNi. thje/! Kurz-,and:Tredennick hadftiif hin little trouble ^with their Ma ftuarl 'reach the finals But onlylast -Workout, I don't need it" has done. ButEvert has noin^ Players such as King", 1 AMY WILKINS, playing the doubles Tnatcfi, **dbwtfing«# fn» Vyear's top four money,winners, -Coming from a tennis, tenUons o£ slowing down'' .J -Margaret Court;andjRosie' sNo 1 singTes. eased Jf»asf Paulssdn-Caero 0,W, llk %, nons ilace swill take part in the L'eggs fcriented family, itwas nosur-, i'j "I thinkafterthis I'llplay ft Casals ..went through-™p"y 1 Karan Meares 6-1', 6-1 'an9 in the other doubles tnaffoi; & "tournament, with Evert being; prise that Evert'sl4-year-oW the ^Family.Circle-(Cham-year? of poor pay,, bad con-t . ..... Mary Tredennick beat Jatta RobertsandKathy Dringeasi-V? Shi; 1 the favonte to take the title , brother winServeasher prac-pionships).and then I'll ' ditions and fighting before " ''''' ** ZoqiRyaR Paulsson «-l, fl-3 Becky ly won the first set from-'v illrA and prize from Billie Jean tice partner this week."Don't .probably go to Europe,V they'were able^ to wi^hifeh seasb "King, Evonne Goolagong and Iau^i," EVert said defensive-Evert said "Billie Jean is 32 women's tennis as a strong on o iRussia's Olga Morozova. ly,/'he's good." " ' and die should slow-down, Wit-gate attractiob. -And .,Where -iapta -"There will be a lot;of, ^ .Evert will meet Morozova, I'm 20 and I tlflnk now is the T King was the domitiantfigure u THEY WERE down «tadtM eainl •tfa w Sari ,on the court, she ,now is.iiore J^CHICAOO fUPI) T Rookielefthander ^ sfcorfd gmft of tfe season, 5-2^,%er the Clebd effective ,in, the, ad--TJmbarger, taking overfrojrnstarterJim Bib. -JHouston AstrosWednesday mght , mimstrative^ end of, the by with only one out m first'iiming.shut ,< Capra had a shutout going until *>»the,ninth«>»*>>in-"inf-r --We.made some shm We made some bad shot»slll| rtatua ny vrtta owyoneoutm the flrst'inningv,shut,'Capra anaWrTiioMfcn»rt ^ women's movement. Evert is -" -**" • --^ "* -::-'3 out the, Chicago^ White Sox on five hits ln^ niiig when Bob Watson Ut^i two-ruii hpm«0OW established as the. top seven -and two-thirds innings ^dmajday to pne put -sl ,, ™ tafetj ' \ woman on the courts.' ^ Akii ra a Mtri,unph With all the, comparisons S i i > C t o c J ^ S S 2 K S . Qr|ng -1 r TlThe spectators^seetoed •'to* seems logicdl that.sh^.woiiltf ---colleg^ valkedQnlyi^o'diKlsttuck out une im »«F r want to defend.wnen's hpoct »Tbe Sox cUnnM on Bibby fat »d'$B0t allow Wt3hU14he^^dS^g^£^ -good fnding-to bn y^Ri^gs.w^i^ single and an andX^rlos «ua;a ^ > <*-"$ -»: ,v-_,|ntr ' -^taring and t. lop-sided tdual^l \( ^ run tnple for all their runs before,Umbarger Braves scored fouf runs-fai 6ie,four)h ^ -> T?vert ^ wassummoned fromthe bullpeB Jim Me^ritfe^, imjing whten MlkeJ.um walkedTRolaad Office( ^ ^ " . . . .4i­? Billie Jeanproved h^r/point i( .juried t^e last iniflng . ^ ^ ^ singled awf'ViC Correll.wilked ^ r. 1 With"T that statement, most /'Jeff Burroughs rappeda homer "* „ • sugar Bear" Blanks drove in two rtlns^ MidlandTn--fi. Worid «•«»,» x oeu Durrougns rappeaa two-run Homer off "'Sugar I isaae SfiSpSi r$z?SSSB»k ss^^sri^sasi,fe UhrvwtliyOrtbikl«mon' ^"t themini stsrxfsuat&m.sattasssw1 K you hove bMn trMt«d uii-hissecond oftheseason,. Ply, : YOU JtEMIMBER ANYTHING ».YOU.< l)lD USI \r^ i*r"rFRK -V *%.*« ^ VO|IAM « V«*W1 J Wtt^IUS tv n» PMIM ATLANTA (UPI^—Bu6-Capra.scbtteM^ WBoad this season. LarryDi^iter, 2-1, gave, •Mimm hits f(^,the AtlMta,aravesas he won his%^W|U the Atlanta runs and too*,the loss mMm ,;v tators can ezpectfa"more"j*-® il m ft; One Jump from'2300 fMt F AU. FOB $<10.00 •, ^ -2 C ^ TV* potenti ttduo ARACHUTElCENTE Whei KEYSHOOT 272-5711 MSI imes I 14 -%pril 18 wplay RifleRange South y.of S( •umm edt. »h« W)TC Building, 9:00-11:30 in th« morning 25Cfol" & f f#i^b-4:0b in t|w afternoon 3SHOTS fK FREE HAM OR TURKEY AWARDED DAILYIW'A*12 noon Concert. TextsTavern. Musical fi spmsond byUTNAVY & ARMY ROTC J ^ents-Commitfee 'Contemporerv Wriitew. Jdnie»CtfJy, editor MrnM T, K WSMM & gBMp Sism: mm jitiopiC. ^WilqeirHe^i • Svmpo»iu8iii• rs / fjf ^.K-mm m/m vzmk Start from Wlderness/Whitewater will dh-• m&mm tvr.y. *kt* & ft ^4^ Vfr, " 'ft *AKJ % 'i •tarring In £ F'A VV« wmmmm m - mmm 'M&M y.«fO umm mmm ®M5»• m mmsmmm mmm „ T _ *«n««»^!«Wh:atHoflb Box 0«ici, Co 1 1 * T. l*L TJ .{ * 4 »ji -W 7 uifeaEinve mSw iPPP sssae JGYP«yui t l^vvitK "Ome mmff. w immm mmmm ij *'lAi Hii m m r^­ 9§M Sports Shyls Z»miu UT's Stouffer Fills Gaps yfagg$i r Shortstop Has Big Bat, Glove ? £ By BILL SULLIVAN % "There's no real reasonwhy -• ,11 <--".t; r.v Texan Staff Writer we didn't win Jast year. It is ? and safety Fred Sarphet have &'^l>e8i>ile; -1 The three seniors willlead-M ^^backEsutCampbelL|^ver six-other playersin­ . Texas CoadiCliff Gustafsdii this aspect ' thdr"tetoefct$ve teams Satur-" Sopbompre-to-be. Randy^.clodingVanHGillenofHoastaa ^b. blessed mth a shortstop ' "We've tried to schedule day fa the * annual Orange-McEachern willquarterback y,and favorite Andy Beanof t Jwho can provide both a potent ' teams like USC and Arizona Whitespringfootball gamefiithe .White team whichshould'Florida. " ' v-rt <­ 'bat and the good gknre. ji. • State, but it is tough to work /scHedulecT for 7< .p jn. in <• ^»to offensive punch from? Texas Tech took the lead fa'-' talented fielder with good out: With the new park, we * sMZ'ih halfbacks Gralyn .Wyattrand^' the team low ball competition ' -range, Hair Stouffer also isa prefer to play here asmuch as J V*aiS88§ Jimmy Walker, ,> -<^. with a 62. New Mexico State ; Akins will bes^rti?^ threat at the plate and a key possible. Of course, there is iy * * * ,^'and Florida Siate were tiedhird season as Texas' ^TheTexas goU team.had ^for second at! 63 followed by -.. man in the Texas lineup. some letdown in ion-v [uarterback after leading'tbe saaii conference games against ) 41 poorstartin the A^America Rice, Hoaston, SMU.North •> ''. STOUFFER has been the / Blolr Stouffer Angborns < to: a SWC' cbam-; *r*r weaker teams, but we play Intercollegiate tournament in ->Twp»it.:liniandnMafe«• followed'by , Florida SU1e>i' ' nertod:^ ootscored the Rocketsby a3-l marem lead afta two.periods. . . .. > of-bome nms, but over-allit is 2 nb;effect on'the team. LIKE MOST good players, {I uy, P* . Akins will quarterhadc the (293); Alabama (295),'ArizotiaV during the]ast8'16 af the p«iod tolead 89-70 ' HoGSton pollea-a 62^1 at 3:44 of the thinl morerealistictasrfxalL" " Jryige.team-:while Simmons (295), Oreghn;><«5>^ana ^ ----stanza on a Mike Newlin jumper, bat-then :"w*Everyone on the team Stouffer looks forward to k \l -2^1 at the three quarter mark. Don Chaney, Stouffer 1iaS :beeni in £ future in pro ball. He feels fM ii'i' ^ aiowless in the'other three qiiarters. gpt, :, Chaney; scored bis first -two pants and somewhat of a slump both at ' .feds wehave be talent to win. :fibe national ' championship.. that the experience at Tcatas f WFL Game* eight of his12 pointsin the27-9 ^weeon drfev Cowens added two baskets to begin Boston!s ' the plate and in Bie field, but ' Nobodyjputsniadi stodcin the win be a big help in fulfillingrnhaway. The Celtics finished the splurge SP inglaynps. -;%p; with-a 15-2 outburst. ' befeds heis comingoat of it iational fankings. It's no big that amlniion.-'^ *# •: Cowens led jhe Bosfaat -barrage withi?# Like most athletes^StaaBerA ^ssq)pointment if we drop M. "Texais is one of the top i -SI edfor& ponds, Havlicdc had 23and White 23. Calvin :: " Houston's last gasp came midway throu^t; must constantly strive for -the.ratings because' sdiools in ' the country for f fl»e final period on a Ron Riley bank shot tyat Murphy, the Rockets^MO guard, tapped all,„. consistency. He athnits his everylhing is decided in the baseball I've leamed a lot i ^feWYORK (AP) iFledginghohesty anToedibili^,a new dosed the-jnargin to 9»48, bat Havlicek hit •WWW With an iniinh 3' play hasbeenabiterTaticthis Jfrom the experience, and I'm ^ Wotld Ptotball leagoe emei^ed Wednesday to tamotmce it three freethrows. , , | •n>e Celtics"«pntb!i«d4roB^i the season butseessignis th^tit is Fer offers no explana-T 'really{^adthat lcame here." t, :.(v'^nie teariis play.game three Saturday,in gradually coming together aS? j%p«iod, trailfaglMafter5:12, batal2-2 mn tion for previous Texas ' Gustafson-would no dofcbt f the year goes on.-r-' failures in Omaha.' concur. iTHE CITIZENS' fbiB RIGHT TO KNOW wmmm " " A Discussion ..• Mr. Tom Sosman, Comnd to ihe Uniled States Seriate Sub^ iv CMmitt^ ouAdministrative Practiceand Procedure, prunari­ €1^ |, ; hr reponaUe for.drafting the freedom 41 Information Acl andDon Emilio tequila -if Mr;,Peter Petkasv; Staff Oitector,: United States House of^ -„v -Representatives, Sub-Committee on Government lhfbnnaUmi f and Individual Rights*.• Assistant Profcisor Dagmar Hamilton, Lyndon Baines Jobnsoo School of Public Affairs *\ Ip^ntid ft^HAise holders ba"Portli&l,v.Qre., 'two-wedu to t -^ PhUogophy, University « ? ^rodoce enbush-niQiOT'to make thrii*'^ WFTL teim. .'.js v". of Texas. .:Wbeh that inue")s dedded, the league wilt amioaiice a•»:? v*Ms. MoDy lvins, Co-Edit(B-of the Texas Observer"^'1->>'*••« ­ • ProfesMr Roy Nfersky, University of Texas School of Law s schedule^^wo of wUch will^^ l» exhibltionsv Gameswin­ r-David KendalI, Firat Assistant Attorney General of Texas f;in lateJuly, with tbeposribO^,' • in.tte middle of the.^ oi»«BMMn mroris. ^iwwFUTEQuiuiso.PROOF.niONEiauris atrmoEmT^bSSto^wSw!!!?! 2:00 P.M. APRIL 17 r*"-?!-J*'1-' JSt " 7:\-v'--• ^r-pS"? S „ * J®i Academy's 36th;AnniversarylSale Continues With Bargains like. These: "ti McGr^w-Edison, 2b Bay's TRACK or BASEBALL 9? One tot : r Zand Children's •^fiT U -£T Choose from'ther&'^v Biggest Assortment Comport crt ^20.00"^ SHOES ^3M • ' Coast Guard Mlivls 3 m • .-;rrv "WLNDBREAKERS -3-^ -. ^-Vi ANTIFREEZE • Special Purchase ,M!; %R.'STEELCLEET „JASJBmjHpEsi^ -. teF'SfWM 'ttOOlCs%i&'L awS» 1 »•. "j <-4^? ^at the Lowest' Prices in Town ,, ^ * J? J* ^ ' ATUMINUM LAW6 CHA|RS! Compateai •Sak-hiS! Ms? j.*# "c*rvr Word* CHARCOAL BRIQUETS. :*6ii 'Sale Price fTWWi [©1 lift4 j *3.98 FfcT Repeat of a Sell-Out SmokeyDanNo.LBARBEQUE:GRILI rAM jrfSltLW^ ..... ... . • fr: •• • •, V Compare 1.Price > s3.88 , i , "i 3­>ne Lot of urge BACK&.Vj' Regular $24.8$ f!4,PriceNow v ^ , -v ^Wen's and Boy's * %Ct>nyerse.i);^y; -tf\% *-5 "*• 3#^ TENNIS $ 1 ,Regular $10.00 «v" u only snMm> j*-•£< HJLMFLSLINIERESTING STORES ff% DISCOUNT TO ALL RETIRED SENIOR CITIZENS 7*v>f THE toBodStq mnM * "'•Sj* , „ «d «K grey-baited;nufo laughing'# starts in an effort to get earned." "">* !•,„£ fe'S £ ?,hls green sleeve,these days }s straightened out. ?,i ^v'* ~ ^ As forFlnfey; he drcWt jag, jvi Charles O.cFinleyi Conttov^'T " He just isrin^h>d*inf'' ~ , $*"'11' wa8J (Finley'isiad,; ~is Catfish's secret VIamj»t replace Hunter on the. A' jfmintetraUvesllp-np that made a power-pitcher; Iam a con-staff. Infact, tberepUuniul^| ^plUOifer Catfish Hunter a frfce ^ trol pitcher,'f he said. "I have . wouMgoaUB*waytothei»£? ^ 5_i agent, and setoup baseball's', to hit my spot&That's what I iform number --Nonis nm? ;while averaging more pointstharianothei;" he came, off tbe b^nch to spark the Horns, ».»great; bidding , sweepstakes; -have to worfc" on 'now."' ' givenCatfish's Na V. / group that went l*-2 to^^oofereoceti^ >•¥?-^ by* cdrte^rom-behind victory over the .^last winter. «The'«ew?iY<*k So far he's walked six Like Hunter, Norris Texas is the team thai went S-fc *(•'<,.' Mustangs With 12 points. Johnson saidthat auction forf batters in 16 J/3 innings-; 'a-made two starts so Car. Texas A&M is the team that went wV his proUeh "wasn't a physical ooeas 'C" < ® 18-76 nuUton,1but so fair huge ratio when you consider catfish, the juunffta* And defense wasn't the difference, either.-£ much as it was a mental one.". >•-' fC;", J Gatfidiribas. won-nothing .%<•_ thathe walked only 46 batters' earned runaverage of •Jfeaadf The difference was the useOf Junior ,.The condition #as similar to that with ' in S18 innings last season with has allowed just fcwrlttrfalB;college transfers. TheAggies utilisedSWC 3 tie other junior college transfer, Jeff s#, Hunter ihas -started Uwo , the A's. He's also glven up w tantagsT^ ? player of the year Sonny Parker along Boothe, the guard Black said would start v games lor the.'Yankee and , t I .with Gates Krwin and Barry Davis to give alongside: Dan Kroeger.:,\ ,I.•'* A&M its eighth conference crown i#^-'^''Jeff hurt his ankle ix) junior eoltege^/2; " n—-Major laague Ste history. < ^ -"-V&* Helotf' frcompa^Jedbyanlnfla^ 8.«; Meanwhile, Texas': hiscoofiderice while notbeingable todo. ^ earned hm average iabd when. transfers spent most of the season on the the things he was accustomed to doing " <('^Jie left'Tuesday's 'game bench, nursing injuries. Jeff Boothe was ,Black said where a player comes from s 1 k—»i.mrnmyi^fe hampered by an old ankle Mjury," and -rr high school or junior college—doesn't Tyrone Johnson had A, foot ailment' ^ •' affect his Opinion of ,the 'player."'Thefi •. i I ^ "I'd havp hnnori m* tnn t> " An Franc . SwMt.lAs»ni«,K, .(MwWtK: But even before Johnson was hurt, he A again, the length of a player's eligibility •nonMAd Vt. Was beginning to k^t^ooUsjob.wt^^mighti., -1, •, in the Texas offense is basically a lof ,yi'lf he (junior college playes:) c^uld help kdgo White/Sox' jUII Melton d£ ic^ly into post After the first few games, Johnsotf' Us win tbe most games (as compared to a I os Terns Rtngjin' shortstop TobyHarrahwaits began playing tess and less until his ankle . hi# school player), we'd signhlm," Blade thr^. T% RanjMrs was hurt , t said. "If they were equal, we'd takethe 'jome, 14-4. (R«k»t« 'T The success of other schools withjunior , .W-r*, If'iren't son and (Tommy) IfeBntiAd* ' ing whaT^ had^otfefr', S^SaT **i under the basket (MftejT Murphy and \ -with jonibrcollege * ' "**" U*S^^The latest podBd^itvitt^ I letterman Mike' gears ^' rOdadi Steve Sloan' Mid '1''" mnohts h ' Not a . . v.-'-a-; •>' .• . .01-. ;. NELSO rnimammMi ,i5 Wednesday defeated Trinity edtte Coogs as,he drieated ]'f Urtvetstty, M. «d * •V-, Triiity, no*. 1M fbr juie r team«l i^ witb ^in^aft^ ffSlvA^ 1 mmt " , aeksoo, was playing without to defeat the doubies.tara^ tbe services of Na 1 player Dave K&g and GmifKi!#! GEO,116{OldJournalUm) istwa--" ; Bill Matyastlk^ who^ U tolearilerdefeatedWalterS MNwMu I-recovering from a broken' ifaeir stages match. ^ ^ : aidde suffered eariiec in the .^Houstoijnowis 14rS CLOSEDMONDAY season bat which was tat ttu&m, fi a-ga IfPKMNK tit# 4 the brandtes tm ficiol University coitt-^? "^*0 •xitm: aUebi 'i t iggg, r±.1^ •-• -i/mm*. mmrnmm unuv&a mmm if v 4 a. ,-um imma, mm xtrtffS mmmmm* •THE POUT,CAl ECONOMY liMiiiiliiil mm Cascades super-charged sumfto -* & *6eKend$! Saturday River H8te—Th«: iAll-Amerlcan Suparslock ConytHloo. ;i'it-Here's your chance to Impi^taiir *# yow athletic abttlipi| ... a Chaniptofr .^ IIBKQ " QyerTM-shoukler tomatp maiksmat. w'tWarkang • Mudputkile jumping M 2^0 PM.tooKfor the ^ ^Cr8St Dr|v®-* ' ti miBQQ an^isi one and two bedroom troni$13^ mm 1 «sa» Si 1 IMGUA*fR(£« m m/E III I9al S55? wmtmmm?! ti---­ ssa.?Ss«K 1 JsSmSKS srni$m£3m>timM m@mm WZSSSl WMBBifliaglW'aWMMW.BiW SiSSSfa S9WR?COT «--yt c • V ­ Releases ctrf «6 •ika Delay or Veferans' Fees 5­ti^KsnfcMraatM Hte.iuwwiinMi m Ilfeaa ^3g&:j£ &-^ter ->^t' 'h .-V-i-—>• • tlli ^•Sjfvy--.,X m Kkiail E--S > ^^^sirST .-a <^oiK«»%rfr-iasa v„-; iflbeOBver­ntassuaitD ttoafep fBreBttoftttestoOans. .... ,v... ."StoeijaifpnaJ intent laniedtbe b31 also allows a sto­• datteadt ftrnfliods to withhold"directory :irihiniiirtiop^' snch as ias name,-address;.tcScjflmne cumber and Social SecurityIIHHli^lW . ... _ y .;, Or. Shylipn Monti, assistant to' Ore presi­dent, oqdaised that despite the tonfnson . opoennqg perHem Give the Salel.50 OLD SPKE . SOAP Sale.89 THURSDAY PJL SPECIALS f5^0l»ljpLmJ SOAP; Sale.25 !%S _ -* ¥TOPS^ --Tv' Alterations? ; i-v»i'JS & JZ. V- m wmm par , . '•rll, v . .r«*- MBiii iWsday. April «0-' :im^ (c«JJs for alternate members,;?twn,tl£ twoJS&use bills dee^billbecause Kr'didn'twanlto « ty sh*ould"be iregents'becatlse on*tt«'rirniia^S6AA'?tilA>~A*i«,iiiii Of the number of measures dent and faculty member. -dar ,-tommitteeJ? '•Whether ,:1 studehts, faculty. are'palj a regent arid_a .sttidkit or fotninfr,'*g*vWr ^ „ Texan SttH Writer ^ to,be elected with each Stu-^ TheMlls now~gp,toTthecalen-~^overioadif«;».A0 Ibe-Caiei^ Besides, iinlikeunlike ot4jjme problemsin being bilth' irov«egf^?yte'adershiS •pmrsday whether Austin's drinkin?hours atodld be ui) a tended utttlliZ a rtk seven'dlghts a^edt. " n%'before the Texas Legislature Both the House ana Senate they get totife House floor is v»mnii«M* nt a _«c._ a* v « UcoundlmaA Bob Binder'said Tpedday the ordlnancele^ «^ttaDlngforstudents tobe plac-panels&chhaveokayedonefeanotherquestion.'fsaidastaff? Is spgttSoringim^y pass |MUi five votes, the numbfer ^ v** , ed on,the governing boards of aid to the Higher Education -necessary fo^JS)rb(jOsal to be appjrpved^on first reading? istate-supported colleges, ana in some way the makeup ^Committee.', Whether lhe?\ v miu. i' i Tf i s. that conflict of'interpst ^as J^'TheJfotes Jtist'rfren't lere, A'4-31 voteuinrej\dIngs buWailed.oti thethlrdwtieffS| 'Mayor Roy Builer' changed his vote to nay. f t .u A Similatsituationoccurred in 1975wh6i formerMayo^J t>ro(Tem DanLoveswitched Ms voteon thethirdreading*^; */' lroHtcally( the question^ wouldfliave been moot,flvffi^ ifyearsagoif Austin hadhadspopiilationOfatleastSOa,000 in the 1970 census»?£• ^•:?ibm^^itenby^ hali rrereaistration & nonvoting^* tfrmasmr^u* ^ ^bouncilwonutn £nima LOU LiiiA indicated support-for measures'probably* one student and faculty Houston Sen. Bob Gammage ­ member of the school/aboard;Tfj&ld notjret find appftVid > the'proposal Tuesday. "The city.could prDbablyusfe'the* ' member from eachcampus to and also Jq sponsored bjr „ \of regents.Pentony's bill was £ ***' hWeVe come a long way,"J ex&a'revenue^and irince the clly nm.|is beyoitd SO^OOOlc 4,be.electedbythek^Reersftt^AnstinSen.uoyd Do^t^Ctfti 1 >• sent to subcommittee TueS-iRress said. "We ipay notget' feel the ordinance.is proper.^ a >>' f ***$ ex-ofOc» posit»oos of that in-The House ffigher EMuca-v _.. ::''iiMemberr4immy,Snell-sald,'more.ttuut'llkelyI?lfbe-.ln>i .,;.,stitution'sboard Of regents, ' tion Committee^also *has® AEreregistration begin? Moo-* ^avor of it'It would make Au?tln.niore attractive as a f * A week earlier, The Senate "okayed a bill by LubbockRep.day and will continue until 3 ftoutistCenter."T*- 4. */£BAiati«aCommitteefeassed ^ BJtllcAlist^3o^piite'^«^|^^Aptfl5a^y^v^».w«k-.-. . , , „ t ^ :rvLCouncllman lx>well;Lebertfiann;whO hasvoted^alnstv a: similar bill sponsored by governor to appoint to each* ^Students presently enrolled Preregistration is com-students to elect a voting i" University ( lobbyist,iFrank :s extensions on previous'occasionsi cited law enforcement ;| W*Lubbock Sen. Kent fiance.^ r board one member under the may pick up their materialsin pleted when a student pays his board member' because the ®rwin h§d testified against problems and energy con^ervation as reasons for hlB •xi-'The. only major' difference -age of 32. ^ the.department of their ma-fees by the designated date". „ governor must anpoiht all tte bijls ^befgre the Sgiate position "I would liketo tiya morereasonableapproaci,! :LbetweenHance"sandGarcia's However, getting out of jor, where they will be ad-On July 25. fee bills willibe' voting members Besides' committee and that last weeti ^ -such as lengthening hours only on weekendsahd retaining.; ^bffl is that Garcia's biU also 'committee may bethelast a(S: vised Advising locatkms are „ mailed to students who filed Pentony said "the elecUan Is-' w?3 ^first, time a student the midnipt limit during the week," he sald.^ **'| ^te ®eC0,?se 0l2^stu^Jcnts ^reregistwtionicards/Astui:.more; important than the \Outg9ing Councilman DhBud Drydtti^treiteratinglils^ Pr®fen°y dent who fails1 to pay his f«»rlvbfcv^ohe ^ oppositionto the proposal,said(,v''I don^tfeel adaomM CFAMILY FUN mrolledOT those enrolling for must obtain'new e different thanI'didbefofe "^"i $il.^ § the summer semester may registrar's:-board ' --whlle the « materials from the registrar's boart i . N , •• ^ ®< whil?„. Gammage-, :s» VQNmm 00 Academy &FJtL8 iM SsssiS! t / 1• J wmmmmmz wmmmm. m ^;.;V ^^X/-3r.it-Is' A .,". •il;; utffil ^-fill ^WtY^9mm ®fS! mmm mmm. ShK ;r^V.A inMiliiiSHi ^SsWf Ad->/.'Vl |lhi*'iwnov-'chart;;!© ount one$ mmmm H asiisas ihhhi 'f-rf&pri i LVi>T>T? WW il® mm ®m3L ®ss®s^ mmm •ww; Vi-KS'rt'' Municipal Crowd -yBEADBU .HoMTdci^M® ytsMi^^^ikfrybbairtt player-alsp.'#a» paaf*' •-­;»e shocnrt^h&h'-f^'tur^itl' Ifiiiii^l^^^'^^lBOT'VWTH.old'hands inOVfe^ Tiran Porter and; ; iiii^cljial'Auditorium. ^V.€^!^i^^bunmatt£«ap«r guitar;--^ night: Simmons again sinned tarist Tom Johnston, who' jCDooble Brothers appearedin a^'strong.featyring a good Sim-icONE^OF thenight's best ef­ with an excellent vocal, while nrfpr.vBcsaoctidoptor's orders^' -' cload 0(1^®*!!?; ^'™'"" * "'™™ «™«i ­ fundec^ towns vocal and excellent unitforts was ."South Citv Mid-Baxter eave thesonemoreex d iw perform because 0^ as. T*or»drununer8 v» -> Kt&fi t feeing, as new keyboard player miter r . ... -­ ^wl»rd-t»lnilng >Am«rlcShaSSDft«Sh»Hes^-Jhe National Observe said-winch hailed it as "an u»-?:|wget the words at one point. Unerieiit'writef, TillieOlsen, ^Pri^ Stoi«i:jThe"0, Hetey Dlsen's "Tell Me a Riddle"is, mlstakable. woriT of ear^^itev^^®»imm»^was vffl rear from'hef^works > AwardsrVaUd; Bert-'Tlghfly ^regarded as a -gemus " Althoorti she had set; °ccaswnally drownedoutby ri~- rhuTsdayat.theUniverrity. v American'SioHesj 191^1965^' Modern masterpiece.3" ' the book aside and^ihqighttt 1116100,1 Uare^ofttegnitaisi^-k BUT ANY descriptionofthe Olsen is perhaps bestJraown \' Shfe has Wld .a .Stanfortt^ -Lileraiy ctttics Douglas and was lost, Olsen unexpectedly ®uffled by the cavernous "Doobie Qrats" could not be " tor her ^elIa^!M;Me.a?.,JUniVen^.)^eatii«^:rfHti^g ^Sylvia Angus noted that (Msen found portions of it and com- «>cq»l echo «diandier. ^_v complete witboutrrecognizipg "Uddle,' 'ior whi^i she WoO felloiy$hip;;;t^Ey^gna>t ^ /"seems to have,"broken pleted tbe novel last'year, ii-j? The granp/,^cked/ up tthe. .dnimm«-Hartman,RcaemU-^. Ije Of Hen^y Award for #ie xU^rabm,^iMlipMp fWtn^ttrtpugh'to. fiction olJUht « -^ of concert ing oversi^ .nnBicta; a v-" !? ^Pace the after an est Agie|icaH short sfoiy in," the ^dclifK^lBisliiute 'for. -1 creased flui^tyanddensity of ^' ?01sen will beoncampus asa ^ ;"Black -Wata',-"-an excellent-monkey ready to coOect ooitts•; 96T-' „ -liidependent '-Study* ^nd^. emotion" " ^ \ "'guest of the School of Com-song mercilessly killed'by from the -audience; VBig . ~.~r y.. ;S^fWUliUK iin the f}obie >.-Natioiial Endowment for the the Academic Ge&ter Atts Award. and abe has been or an informal recepti&n and a wrlter-in-resiente at liscussl^i of heT yrork at 4 r MassadiUssetts |Bn.TThnrsday She also will Technology. - Imunleatfour .Building^'*'' = [Auditorium (CMA2"320). Both ' [events ar& free-to the public. % Olsefi's work has been ^ ... Athologiied widely and is in-n •, «fcliided in, "Modem'American' !Stories /{Britain); "Best, i s K-^ | * -* ISUfCIEBIf HUM 1 tm SOVbotria mmm CmkEH RANCH CC4JB&.BEER O.EC tmwvfif! MlBi^onlV. wyato: £'|3iS»M(giKS® foroldgdd kitoHir "SrmKV; Institute ^»f -r-"^- ..., '^'' Olsen's latest publication is'-municatio^ the Department r *'radiopyaidlL'VBaxter)ypTrt rr John'* appointed himself.; a novel;" "Yonnoodio-From -of Spe^ch Ccxnmumcation aiKl tiineai steel guitar and 4 ^**"1 dieerleader . duriflg <­ the Thirties," started.almost its Performanceof tJteratnre more on lead as tbe^Doobies i iO years ago and publidted in Senesrand the Departmentof -Played such favorites.as ­' Part in the Partisan Reviggr,/ English. , >" ^ " "Long Train Runnin*,'2 BAND x/ nunAr -«® io« vaihypoiiuoknutia + jPCpViR * ''3-'^#1''^' ^0&217 S. Unbar 472-13121 ******** d^A«©ETONITE ^ liv» Rode ^RAT BOOftW m"" mn.vSt, MADNESS —NOCOVjER A77-378ZX ^^BENEFIT L0ST60NZ0BANIK': ICKSTIIN CiPNeivly Remodeled ffrom Dallas) 1523TINNIN wtv *tm* % i. ­ ^|gp|n.SOJ-UT.tudenl» #1(d sta(f. mm GArhicrrvis-fr* MORTY MANFORD ,7'Conner President ofthe r ^ Gay ActiviststAl/iarrco of New York^V­ will speak M? Thorsitlay, April.17,8plniL^l'. MBellmo'nV328 Admission is free-'?; v •> ---SptuiiorrdiyfiurPmple of AustinandStudetU Govt,i ARABIC FOOD, DABKIH, BEU.Y.PANCING.& ,1^ X t*-< ARAB MUSIC by Hamzo El-Din S ) Annual Banquet off ''"J;,; ^fhe Organization of Arab1 Students Saturday,-Aprif 19th, 1975 VFW Hall (Veterans of Foreign Wars) '.500 VFW Drive" 7:00 p.m.* iMPr «r ^ Goest.^Speaker: Hatim*./rAI Husseing• of tb« t\i '~S*-~ * Atab League 4 Tickets: Inner Sanctum -504 W.~ 24th 1 The Sheik Club, 5555 N. Lunar, 452-6188 r%Hf BRUSHY CREEK for Family Style Dinners m Urns. Night St S®|Sfeajr se»*ed with Green Beans, t' I %||W Potato A Safad i V ^S^MSr: b •4 i-iV*' • rfjfft-%2r"*'-' -1 YOU CAN EATfesi; | Monday-Saturday l1:00 aim. -;9:0b p.m.01: Closed Sunday ^ N ^ ^t^\for.RINK? C«HTE»; .^22S!iy5«W|#™, "China Grov?" and "Road "Without Yoa;V cavorting Angel. ' The three guitarists across the stage Bi bright red dominated the conceit at ils tights and a shirt that looked conclusion, breaking away like Itbelonged -? cert's real purpose is to.sendr ' _ the audience homesatisfied, the Doobie performance was -V an overwhelming success. Austin anxiously awaitsan en--*'--­core. _ 1 v a; ^ r ^.1 m ElxSt c! 6528 N. LAMAR PHONE 453-5676 <$£&; HOME COOKING ^h0«» wt ;FEATURIN%»:' •^5 VCN 2 'Q' ' on Vu ED pgiNKS ~ ^JES 65^ HlGHBALLSl HAPPY HOUR-4-7 DA/LY -2-fcr1" sfe" TONIGHT :f DOAKJIKAD . -ICIDAB FROST1^'', COMING IKV iATIIDAT OIARI MOSMTAIII Mr Cdi 4774)357 hr Motivation . /w TEX P1RG FOOD WEEK '75 WV •fc-* %t »rw^* * --A--Presents , I ***+*& ^ ^LENDAR OF EVENTS THURSDAY. APRIL 17, Food: An IntemstiorMrf Perspective Md PM BEB^ISONowrotnr. MA. Tsachmg Assistant Economics. "The ""W Food Crises: -A -Dilemma in Agricultural Capability or- PoBtie^ .J . Economy?" ^ 1 BobwtBini, Ph.D.,VIvl4kvProfessui,Ln»."FoodasaCommar­ •*-*>" oal pToduct," . ft** Jannuii.* (fiO^Dkictor Center for Asian Studies/yY s~~ K-Economics. "Tho Food . Crisis^ in India: The Problam of rSa*> ~'S.-Sr ,Distributive Justice.**^ ^ , , 6:30 P.M. 2007 Uni«. Ava. Univ«raity Christian Chutch r^ood for the Hungty." a ^ ^ benefit dinner. $1.00. Featurod speakers: Dr. Charles Hmtshome. Prof.Emwitus. PhSosophy. also fflms and exhibits. Menu: rice > biens. • ' - ^J-.' ;v; Damn Near Free and Moon-Hill Present, Saturday Night in Austih with rfM"4, ,,5ot^'Aprill9r8:00p.m.'AustinMunicipaI Auditoriurrt^ All Tickets $2.50 voliable at:: Raymond's Drugs Inner Sanctum Lv Joske's -Austin CHELSEA STREET PUB 4 WOOD -SPIRITS WW. ' in® kfttE^tAINMENTNIGHTLx? OVER r now open; % ~ ^ HIGHLAND MALL WR'PieROSSMAIjE: -••r^s'.t'-!.4v;l wrs.Enter Highland Matt outside next doortojtoke'imI~§5*tde . -LA ^ irrljL .r ^ 1>* J! < kinsmen , Thursday, April;H7^9? Patcti^Voss Stanch in lip £** fist fill , '^^••^A?' ^•tiA*--.1 T,>* Little Foxes*?' achieve^the tight dramatics munity by^a northerti ffrnv £m^marryij*they'jre^lirj id"drew a well-­^directed by lames MoH;<^g&id-«trocture of "ttoiuy'VJfls v, and by providing one-third of _ c^JSi^'^Rjertna'nlesds.'^S ^deserted, i'5^1®written by1 LlllianS^jan'excellent exercise in In-the capital and guaranteeing Jsere"our .xieumtm; Buunng raaru.j'^j.uiyiuuai Limracieuzauuusaiw cneaplaoor, meywuiPPKiveii aun^sBen answers^ echaracter and what »mm. fnh« -'n -nAntMltifirr. In/iho Halchr>CbristyeJohii a'showcase lot talented ac-a controlling interest In the «gS«iwkltowi«elaa»d Debra Voss wrf Richard lors.Nooeofthls'oppoHunity companyandSlpercenV^Mhe * jfnntiiliitt ITri nnnrPliilttflninifSiil 3f ifw n "fjxii•!»mil'*'nni^ oral1 Ai4^•"hi& W**W'.«"•«•»>£»«••*kail b>". Bankhead talked on stage in Ben and Oscar Hubbard 1939and fi^tte,Davis appeared^CMichad:-Hay ^Cunntngham j-pn"screen iq 1941 as Hegina vandMohn^tee'Spanko) s Ctddens in "The Little"Fo^-their-sister Begma.That thfey * w Ae"'that•' fnlfk tin«.haAM M>A OAiiitknMinMn.nuiif'.tlut ifnA'U J that role has beenrcofr «are Soumetnersand the year SUCff CONNIVING youf m®M j,5. .fequal thepowerand statureof" all have an innate prejudicesJohn)toBaltimoretoretrieves' -story,line P£rhai& Jhls is to C lit! a Bankhead or a Daws Her against post-Civil War < "frame is MartiHatch, v*-urnuucs., -« director, /^families.,, , , brother^foraJargerShare of James! WhenUllianHellmanwrote/*-1 * 8 1 .. —...—.^Afterynufs^prjqwg-onall..the'iirofits, promislng.shecan -.allowed things to fUrir too•XI?1" with a break Sunday nigtdvfift -f\'The tattle fc"oxes„'*tshe wais4 ttose aronnd them,»the Hub-«oovin£e Horace to give the i smoothly,with little dran»tl«^«SJ vSfe ^Showtime Is « p.m.,. ant 1 i.^("-already Widely.acclaimed as -banisareoffered diancefor moneV The"brothers foake"' sense of what clhnaxls %.-^w"e"Heginaws,sheyxtsin • tj^ets are available at the* • 't, "aiicauj y«iucijcav\.Muuivua** wwuaatcyucicua uiaiiv^m -luuuev.'iuewuujeijruuiAe^jseiii*;ui wuai a iuiiui**» •> -• -^ nt ­ J(ho QII^KAP ,1 mmi^n -*» -.: <^A*»'.««•»>VMIHLMV'-'4*4MM'..4n • cd*.'-.vPi^wwtiilwitiV»o«Umi i<«.r1»i , fea >author^:^edUl«l^V/rwlv^w^5^#'mpn^1 —* ber promise1 farther Jto con-t Everything iseehis to tave <. ™* '* *. TC'y^ Hogg Aoditoriunl BotOOk*.-^ ''s x.^Hout." While'-Foxes^failsta...i^U^tb^lwiUInith^co^r&ivlhce'Hoia^^'allow Alesan^^beeijleftudtotheactairs.aniii Velvet couch and drtjJwi her -'-» C,'?££^ •f-<- Qy^lj""*1 ,J: I%t2-44*W Wmf, ma* TRANSA-TEXAS r . i ^GOLf,"STATESOfttVE-tN V« •^'a^^'r ** ' ' '* ...—'» Squthwqod Sliou TOWN USA IQXV.IW MiIM^MUIO^ ^ »s-?5 «'^ SR. ) «^r-" «5f5?r®^ssa ?\WNNERff <<#£.««! '• KOKE 1 t*MUTTB> ••••> NITfc; FLESHGORD m -'&'V­ VILLAGE 4 «ATUWI1MB wsg>'­ ««»1 ifci A-t.; 2 aJU™ armsacrossthe badnjfit as, JJO haturts,$\JS, Mml-M. 'j'v' "^sWr t !#«»*,».£l5-*e,r;tots mm»B^rt,s v^A^fnm AlCEDOESNTfilVE Art'CmMy-BM4Actor i^D^|P;ST?CC^ M rarelyseensuchpre^c^andv^^ StiSTSA"hfS ^eter Nen>«n«rt Saturday^punaatOkage«*T,i«slw» fi» dfee a®«pw,«te at theParamountTheaterfoe hailed asthe"Bestttew A*^- comteyL ' - ^ KingJohn last falL. Ihe Performing Arts. Ihe" tGstnbrOel Bfenww a. creature for Whom she Is ,<4.50 and are available at'itw The aext ^rear PCerw -Satefe.V.ls :^*Weiwr,8km: | named, she is constantly Joske's, Raymond's Drags,^ coOecteil h*sseraoi"eBoa»-QMtek'BBBL'*",4tt*K Vk ;| I rebuked and coifected by the Universi^ CoOp, Knag-: my "this ttee brattwaw'.»ft "W—J Oscartortryingher besttodo Vel Shoes Sbnes both down-. PerformaiBce by what he wants. Her "bit" in town and WestgateHall,and" Instrameatalisfc witfc "1 Act'.III, in^which'she at TexasSteno-on Rivetsidei;0»J>esbA." VfeminisceSc>about her -Drive. • v ' ^^-w'' BQlhnn Blllbqard, the teadfn_ ^ ^^*>6. Qbci INTERSTATE 7?« f*a.1:46-3:20-5:00 6-.40-#:iO-IO:00 ?•"— »®®o©s@®«i®®©e®«$®®ee®«e©® Cjas",k sIV KTV|Ulr)f»D -m '.Y.T-Isv^ ­ "t-t" Reincarnation QHPeters Q Proud V"S': wc»uiaiMiMait *ija fi6p.m Dusting £*******AWHMnrf Francis Fsrd (apjala's nomnts "'-1®^i Iloffmaii r5:3<'-, ^Wrtuj5~'v--.'V''>.-^\?i 'v-"-'. " '-'hV '*'* -ii••>•.>."!;*• ^ •*>" ..' n:^.: -» v:; .-~_.-c-t-.. »'•-".••.*-• • '•.--. • • •• «••••• •> •.*••• •. -.••• •>."• -r--".: -,-v r -' r N ( * -t ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ „* « ^ " -V r. r,' » ' -* ? >WS-" in lightweight Entertainment 4tected,fey. bell-raising mating• their stereotypes 1 evangelical zeal.buthejte.for • Vnteesana tfbesut. entertaining. Newcomer Van the most part;' trapped by the *8 «e namerf WJK KLW.Is Saigesse, though,'is Dyke asthe determined Dixie restrictions of Expression in-*­ ttngjHt Wmt •wnolSs'),wtSm uft&aied bySOS1{madeat, more than toolds her own op-herfent in the part. • ESton Kid. Ftanoas .posite Reynolds, who turns in -THE USE of Nashville fte nttoies vc damaging a' fine'performance-as the locations and musicians gives . . w-wjsfawwafc ©oftwndt bycuttingintothe amurad canman. His amorous "Dancekings" the landmarks B vsbe.a JB advances rebuffed by the and looks needed for a ififWng1hpdoestoaTin«kmgih Ibffist sect. Bird spM jgm to hdU vg> gtcs RSEOOOS virginal Dixie, the swagger­believable backdrop. Although to tts «att Siis afliHftiic wtteud becausebenoisedto wokon finest boor, but it isone of the the successful Nashville cat, • UxtHs Day, bat Mqg a highlights of the film. veteran musicians Jerry'• « BIB Carney's roleas the Deacon Reed, Don Williams and Mel Send Christian, besetsoutto 4tan W.VJs mnJiee sXatiuu . tlusums&M at fhe \.i, 1 ,-it Utter., W.W. does summed at 9 The„Quarterly Report: Th« Last ttb pdffic 7 8)g BlueMarble * American Supper "k '.Ac• Cnauer,, and evciyonc ^ Gonsumer Survival Kit 24 Streets of San Francisco K«^B,4ifainSteva7DDe)Bves' ' SI Bewitched 36 Bob Hope on Car.ipus — Guests/ «&e fm BB aum. to SJPJU- JtNews include John Wa»;9 8ill Moyers' iournal: inler­ aanfi aiaw>a«(es -,««s 1«(BK aai 24 Haity O -j'/.. ^.natieml R^ort ta® srtSfreao (be stales of the * 36 Movm' On ' > • SmL-;tommat 24 Barney Miller * • : 36 Sunshine I0>90 pjn. To Feature Exhibit "740*JK. ' 7 Movie: "Fade In" starring Burt.v < an wiiiMiiiiiirnii mniiiffhiin Mftnrtiqgr tqlHwctts iiwuttilsfrom,the •34Karen . Reynolds and Barbara Loden &*•: StegpHtsytflimrfbainwelB^ MMto flK piadeitf : v. • 31 The Bob Crane Show v-j*. 9 Captioned ABC Evening^News 1^.­sitcess, screenwriter-' MB.-'--: • . c?i Wide, World Special — Geraldo^­,^7;IWovle: "Brook** starring. Jack .. Rivera: Good Night, America; -5; ^ MSifcwaii ptegentle Eon at. tHnwiiiHPi»glBwC^S£**%se tt»tihe j-frataace and Tony King 1-.: <96 Tonight Show am iitlinJiy *tecSDOcess is a: gauittBg iSBt Mpmaurilfcy flie Hunterot • •'• t1 ; .1 seqansonasinit. .• Grk :•. TIE CAST, Boder': Austin Premiere Avaba^s deft dhecUaa, JIMIJIJfcatt«8E. SadfcSL m •leqaads aibUy to the task «f: "ON A PAR WITH BERGMAN'S 'SCENES FROM A MARRIAGE'." v«i —Penelope Gilftati,THE NEW Yor*9f rtitiszT*' , —Bruce Williem^on, Piayboy <* -'18 "THE FILM DOES ON ECHOING IN YOUR MIND WELL AFTER YOU HAVE SEEN IT! SOME OF THE MORE EROTIC SCEHES '4 I'VE SEEN OF LATE!"-Nora Soyre, Yor>: Times ^ '• (1964) "REMARKABLE! IT WORKS MAGNIFICENTLY, TENDERLY, EROTICALLY!Roger Gieenspun, JUDE Fmnju' Pen!hoifse Maoume "SPELLBINDING!" —-Molly Haskell. Village Voice — New York Daily NEWS „ ,®ag? .:i--r.\»i M.IX t! "" -is •X\ ^ ^ , -Zg I : mnom ^Hnithumor, fimunrr, Arcitoj p .­ "v •A-iS -•'"."Vt--w. Committae # ifvr-*d THEMSDDLE 5*^ . ^ »T , Fri., Sot.,5un.. -^ 7:30 & 9:30" ­ ">7^5^ «»W»-fWg * k i f V* " v mm ^ ^s^-x SACC0 & VAMZETTI -i Direct0d MVS r Botts And. ^>. - Givliano Montaldo »1.00 UT Students, Rxulty, Staff The Story of Two "5?-K Italian Iqimigrarits $1.50 Members Who Became Symbols Of 'Radicalism In:the 1920'S ' ^ -'}<- h '• IJohonwilhSubiilles ^ y FRIDAY ONLY 8:00 & 10:05 i APRIL 18 J BURDINE AUD. ^ ' Student Gov't -$1.25 , , >k&2 OtANGE THE REEL-PP Mickey Rooney & -Judy Garland A A In i-f k*XfZ Hrfr^ J' *• x 1HE RRST AUSIM RIM AND VIDEO Babes On Broadway^ 1HE «m1HEAIRE •KnOL at. « n • •M>-«Rmairn^^miWM.niN * KNMm) > MWflabf Jadk HMW mmi CBMIM ,S5 b|r O»i«w| Oiifc jwJ I^ --anHNMkfi "wssACiR,' «S»^?OoSkM^ SATURDAY ONLY Burdine Aud «s.^tsv^'^ss^stn,^ vm^rn.. ARGENT m V' mm® WM m SHKB WSm § a m i 1\«,r Ufc ?£&><' x ,* -t HL * * < t *< h' • , CLASSIFIED ADVERTI&|N^ •"»• FOR SALE FOR SALE FURN. APARTS FURN. APARTS. 1FURN. APARTS FURN. APARTS. IS word minimum . Each word on# flrot .11 Each word M tbnto H l % 10 Each word S* timn»; -.% --M Mutical-For Sale MUc.-For Sole ,Now Pre-Leaslng SUmmer^l FREE STUDENT-FREE| tfeNOW UEAS1NQ „ Etch word 10 or mora tlmtt;\ s .07 -TOP CASH P RICESpaid for dlamood*, ': NOW LEASING FOR JUNE Sr • Japan«4 Flat-top • Rates • FOR JUfJEV Student ratc.tachtlme jiv^Y.!-.•& MARTIN-STYLEJ^"T|N-STT1.C,Jlpinnv FIlMOp. iU(4 iii-> SERVICE . OqirtyOO u*MnklIftwnxt Wt'irJw . rtil>findtinilMyou that^apt,la It '•II •' J V1 Guitar*! yew old.Great soond/Grovar. -: LmtSr^iSISt '•moo°***** *"" Efficiencies S105plus Elec-f"' Wi5.MW'ANITII IP# CUuHted Oliplay '•ptQiiMm 'Co*t, $?20. aHUngllM^flth .-• l»e«*e<» •„ , '• CONTINENTAL •'• »ki»« aicA :SO PARKING TiLttoi. lcol.x \ tacti on* tlmrv.i;...W,I5 MnbhaM cata. Call 452-OTI ' STARFISH SAILBOATI TM M a fun . > tricity Icol..* 1 ineh 19 i< machlni. Top o^iauty :tlbargla>if TRANSPORTATION 1col. x 11nch tto or moreHmtitt.M . aluminum apart, dicron tall. HW (lltt r$ ^2„BR -$195 ABP \ III 46th and Avt. fe «W): TralHrtMI». 40-i;t« anytlma-% 454-W03 1 •.flSB , 2 BR -$165 ifiCAMPUS GUITAR PRECIOUS GEMS, facttod, r*»dy tor ? gAI«oPft->Nwliig lw;Fal| Habitat 1 2204 Enfield476-2279 910 E.40th ' % 454-4094 ' OCAOUMI SCMOUU • mounting. Qualllr praitlga »tona», •' :xt>V fe-t j,iU, ,-SHOP •T8S& Teeen M4e> pj*5< ,'.< ;.--'.;'i Guitar. Initructlon •:. w • su CASAVH^^NOW^asingfor.UNE,^ how L^ASINGFOAJUNE: Acoujtlc Guitar iSalat and Rapalrt,. PLACE UtOOej*. j^Wmalln.. cltrlna.By ap^t-, -inADTAACWTcIv flUIIICI O , , MlWWh , Accauorlav Bookl, Claulcal Guitar, , roanl. 477-ail4. y^CHEZ a-JSlKuWi...-'" &*&• IIMM«4lf TIM* '. Shnt Mualc. Sahton Student Gultarv }«: APARTMEN^TS^ W A free apt. locator service -*>?•>< „summ«r.Faii ua«II DIPLOMAT thltwaak. MEN'S HARSHI SANDACS'trom India. > T> U14 Aran* Orlv* UI.II.I__ I_ m Ptxjna 473-1531, ~w« MStfcW 21th ^ Similar toManJcan Huarachobut wtttr VO€drOOrTI;^'^;,\-'V:r-^-.>;'?.vVr.^.:v»ioyv-,_rrA!.. _J-Bath®­ frMey feae* Tlmndey ' iMlfttr. AIMwatar buffalolandau, light. : / qearoomi oam^iTroRi |2QQ "««5s»° snuttie. •avallabt* JACQUEU BR , V and dark colort; Malwtvnl1594 San Ait-from'*200 \ ^•SS*.5Siia!!»2! -$135 tonta, tfn thaOr»g Saturdayt.­ ivrBEAT © ij-" ' vf t-easing ftfor ^ 1302 W. 24th ' 476-4088 1911 S«n 6abrltjf/i, '476-1927 * INFLATION -. Pett-For Stale I'TTH T fcf "« CI IAAAAC ­ < AKC GOLDEN Retrltvar pgppIn, «. A _ _ ^SUMMER —rr ' tp^ ; 's-*_WLEASINGFOR'JUNE GUITAR STRING SETS . ABP^^|C|si;,a & NOWAVAILAB^FURNISHEDOhEURNISHED ONE " NOW LEASING FOU JUNE " V ^ *m*n4*n*** ifc >HOHNER HARMONICAS i >"!l OOG*ANp,CAThaattM6dhottta; c wttfabkHIOO.Call WrfmWttf5p:m:V' VBEOROOW •f SAVE 10% ma^Dofl^fW*^m#dii^»l** good-SUMMER RATE^^^ImFALLW Olshwashar, dHDOul YAMAHA GUITARS • . iJJXURV EFF/1 BR/) ;patlcv bai^jqua, .cabKf^'#ELnap|^|ENVOY -' SAVE IK 3s,sS'' >t«rag« bookthalvat. Vd block to mhottt*ihuttla nftDAnA'Sr'. 1 DD .ttlOt, Vi CI <• V«h&? AAASTER MUSIC -5«,'fcW bu». Rata thru Aug, EL DORADOS 1 BR -IS125 Trp W*­ * 1434 Lavaca < , -->147 plui alactrldty i M7 v«Mt aw. -i^ya+mi,' 474-153Z . I0»W,4JHt v>W ;«M7n 1 QO ClOC uri 2108 SanGabriel I-A 476-1172 ?Hoirte»-Por Sale Lplv=« f'25 UP ; "UndaultltdWl lint 1dan tl3> I DK -|U3UP u-„ .. _ JPrapald. No Rafum&t ft V DUPLEX FOR SALE. Waft tHUT ttHlK? Studehtlmuitiho* Auditor'* ' i ^THESTRlNG SHOP g,.v tla, a«l.lnt™Tniral-.n«^,>1aachUdt.', NOW ^ING FOR SUMMER ano^ 3$0T Speedway LEASING • ratttpfiand payIn advanta In TSP ca^ ranga,and/ratMantor.-.OTJM.^£ 5^9.50 : JS&r ^•3^; for-Juoe^ isti? Bl^.-3.M (Stii V Wtiltli) from t .Sat; thaia . exctitart \< ntw .« lot PLACE­ mMagam."nr»llh WoliTn"Ju EIUo"Sj^WI-W»tNW»ti4^i%: apartmanH. :Ju$t a. faw bloda-mHt-.. SHARE THE RENTL 'F Efflclaney. and. I.btdroom apt>. 472-4893 453-4884 «.m. to 4;30,p.m. MOfttSay through Frida* . accnurtn.Hai^nwltGurlao tMl«tr-5 MINUTES UT LAW SCHOOL, LBJ. .town and Uhlvtftliv Wi navyntarnMM'4 CAN SHARE JBR.7B PrtB Dllhwaihar. dltBoUL 'twImmlna oil l^9tm»n,«nd^ltv wi^IulT' PMA VMH(«pl2-V(iMr Eaitwoodk By 171* San Antonio cmim.4n&5X.y -0( londou tj«7M«1 " ATTENTIOH. PROFESSORSt . NOW LEASING : ®s-wntofLamar.S-fcnogaragt. FOR JUNE i-zm): Propartl»». 454^7*».:Altar lh t fjl LONGHAVEN Vi £r>-N BR-$135 ;J,-% Auto-For Sale f%l Misc.>For Sale .... BR-J1^ \ . jH3/50^y s ^ 1 • l* ^ ' > •-"* 2 BR -$165 2.;BDRMV^W5?:^>; •:i%;SSivtm5:;FORD:JllflNDOW•VVAH.--PMMIM.^ l. Soutti kuitln,. |u«t dft Oltorf.*a5.^i .u badnoipv 1 batfia. Nka yard, qufatti^g DUVAipcascades; 44>Summer,Rates NqwM^ 916 W-23rd 472-6573 i> 3 BR -$345-: -lXrge POOL ->u.BILLS nio VET.Partact condlHoni<07 Mgnpar^Ss 2 wait of town.» mllH.' tbadraom. 2 % through Aug 3l NOW LEASING-FOR JUNE JjVf MOVE IN TODAY LEAS.NUTVK JU« bath. U.S.afOW. ctwManlant.^Hgardan ,, VILLA*®" W**" palnL ftwad. /f^60%'"bfs'F^I acrt CSter pMtoa in ofHca. ft. WI&, , ri ^ M Bart Rata on thaUka,.,^ tSjV;' fanlan. ilda mount hatdari. AMI or CONSOLIDATED teAL.TY,lf!i®®» * W vA DTQ Estrada & LONGVIEW JACKJENHING^Vp^ m '-O WB,ppEL:CAOET.;Aufoma«ti3».000':T l«0VU«*Cp --aWS'-V-trWll*-' eaM'-wMMoK"' N*«r. radian.: . Summar Rat«ar» '^|:2 BEDROOM ^ BR-$140 ^ ' Mutt ulh ^noo or batt olMr. 47MNf. • Apts ^ 1 BR mmmw tnoiiirnim lMl SO. LAKESLWR*" ANNOUNCING •s'.iij.u-":'' -during jtay. JH4M avwingt. v*t;: offsP#^ •••a nowln'affoct.Hfe ^ 1801 :i€s *11BaadtS;'^'-FURN. APARTS. JX off aacti apL-:!';.^.; ^ _ ALLBILLSPAID 2 BR (undar naw managamant) ,<-5,-.,,1 , 442-6668 " 'WALK TO CAftAPUS7 1MLONGVIEW ^ a"m^- ITHEBEAD 4ti>43Q5'Ow*al :-,<7 Btautiful Lakafronf THP-^\r p'€»« _ SHAMAN4 Apartm«H« . NOW LEASING FOR*JUNE J4&RILLIANT^ •^3®# ;-,parKlng,SWlnnminB pool;,.' m«nt hat Ita own prlvata patio or 1 V? V f3C" W»CAMARO*cyc-«ld.Nnaltarnator M-S " frc < / 10-Y -i-t recreation rm., planned ac-SjS^.j»i!traa».il«,w»«tS» 4?»-\ Sr^-NEW% ba«tafy.Goodtlratr Tapa-at^MOO.'" ~ '?M 477-3478 ttvitiesr ^°r -WALK TO CLASS V t LLA an site security „of- O R T fj OLD MAIN APARTMENTSV T S _ Wrf? ,iicer, 24 hr, maintenance* ^ fv Eftlclanelai and ona badroom 1 A^WO^aSM. inawiyatttw bgtffidlanlaMlry aftha S#4 J-3--=_A i apartmaith ' -• it&f SHARE THE RENT! 4 CAN iii«r«, " " -~ T~ -Vi Ha;4l>SMOBILE CUTLASS Good ** . > 1 BR -$145 Hmomitt*.urn. , 111 , ,i u • / • Summer^ for B7-Jia.Call awnlnatT^ ^ 3^ -J-.v; KENRA^i?||HAACRHE 2PE2R wrtSSS*''r*^ *" 477 m» , 477~32tt > 3301 SPEEDWAY VOLKSWAGEN,BUGlGoodtwiIni,, M Rates st APARTMENTS ^^N,SHEO' ALV SICUS ^ N 47waw ' deLEON ^CASUALLY YOU ; PAID. ^ *i ji* Pftln* fhilikiia W:>tllWI^I^«!li™N|.; 'Low as $105/ Hiii.« w,n«m• Lwp,duuivvv>ui ^ » m oiife bedroom, TIMBERS IV0 '•"to tOroil.Two bedroom flatt.ooeand hfri. :U TSLt 1 AvalUhle Mwnhous# with paHd,-^ x I\ # V"* -, ONvSPARKLlNG « v| 1 BR-$115UP . t PORTRAITS R --W^V*8F iWurn. & tiurn. CA/CH^ cUshwathatrv Hr I\# J"IF CREE£ C -M307 NORWALK a^/6-7fi36S®W-, &*»*> to do* gartag* pMtmk, 1 V 1M> 1> C?E6K > ^ gSSS^SU'S^JfTl^nlSS ' All naw f—* 474-1836 ip-S™*w * *MW;i®j®®Sf.^'-i)botmaldtar»lcal( hAuhl^carpat,«apasand• ' ^ k,,-. 4764^1 I^^telSS^ isStid SdiS? furnltura.• WIJMn Wcfding cflitancato , < nlihadby • walHtnowndacorator and MpaaA r»d(al llm, f 14 I I s ^UTC.,1^^ ^ Vff# SS" ' —' 1 1 aouattf tamoua drtttt Lots o» xtm. ­ f irf-f ii« & * *%• »*S*T«T*Klil«'a^»!!gfi.»IBW: jaskaMSklJubular-Cllr>d>«M4^St'v-fen/'!S1^9. flfl S, *Z£ ev\tS ;AP>RTMENTSAVAILABLE;^Call Rod' "tirM 'Ml Royal Cmt Drfm, |w« ofMUwilSTir f, 'rriresW ^ Laroa 1Vfe?faadnm.druwi *• dl*hwa*har/ maniiy *• % TV cMK/pooS, sftume bda^^Mc*. X **0* DrWa 1 1 t §r NOW LEASING' ^^»?s4^'?.,V2P'flIlSR,E,R mmmmawBt RENTALS) J:-W= barroom fewnlK»ta^ >l7S.IIO. O«> myjr VIP i ILLS, SUNNYVALE -^S^^':aiMARO. 3B7 AO pdW COTHRONS BIKE ^^OW lEASING^OII^ON£Ht' to»-^M/FW>.II.BS£VI-JOORIoOraadt i APARTMENTS. ^WfAlP^V W* Opan at • 00 a.m, r 4. 1 JO/mo. 17.955s Mwest SitH ASI^MKA Int lob.2000 mila warranty,fa Roomy y Panelled; wlllitia VwMfh'ai 00-.'; awnpatlbta « T«$ la i956'spd IssMiB ble:.bediv»» WOODL UITD*R NIW;MMG«^W,--W­ Rehwye^'tnciuiiKf ®^13S^wj«li ter-Si gasf SMP^PSMIITESSAII 5pac^out Contamporaryt.'i";--« •n ^'^-ASSw.-W•''?'*j":-i "iv-'tl/r COTHRONS :—7—TV­ FOR JUNE .jpe*w^**eir*wie6ylM 'BR il«'JBRSte, , 1.) mt:Fam»tt.p«tu»a. da*o.:r« !<5.Vv>iVAy 45»Guadahipa -t1404447 JERRIG C0mau»»with.u»( .'torrnwla^ P£PP& WILLOW ypLKSWAGENSPECIAL Mlii !*o»M *-l er/Joe Gonzales itlfbotddgr BIBSSR Uf«MER aum ifaMOlO Moforcvde>For Sale ,o#;sio^to4n« •W^^SSSH, BR $110 ACttlTOCAMpU WBFFII$165 MLA PAZ;i M>-U» pllai»ea'•1 r"'ii Wial 11 1" • ••" 'i.OocaUant^ «'k frV-A^ SES'a FIVE BLOCKS '44W*i sw> •E^.y^'^vSSS /Ei^OFCAMpJU is^nwrtates Bedroom F room. SSS®SSjS!^1',v Ifor^ona MOVE IN TODAY sispaimainaxa in M;«ctHant. SALAN afWllWH BMl$)40 First AAortth'Free BR-$155 618 W.Slit 4544293 axfra HANCOCK njHmn New* JurmHt ^ MS ;'. from "Dair*. v ^feUCA Slack andwNtaTV •WiHr gat. m,m. ambits* ^^s3$HicAWiElScr ICtENCY APT TOffiC ^XsThttWJum'lt $145 0 WMwi&mw JRXJWA1N FFICIEH sis »M»ir* WilMB. '-UKOQS.NOR Wl^to^irrtR cwnpiM^ bmcornor, ffBKANO WALK.bAI Tha«M*VltWi nofw^ma rj4 NtWvllMlMil 4>-V.%•••..•• .;>;•. •';: -.y ••• •••. -. AppOcaaM-skaaH be at Vintage .. - Canon usbefore r N JACINTO ARMSMW SanJacinto.; least ZJyearsofaga. . yougeldipped. allabla now Kbtdroom. 1 bath. lo live iaa groupsemap. ReavaaraOea Threadsmm. kcMB wa«nan. baMotnM- THE HAIRCUT jhna oft: waton t il>lH bhw: SALE University students,{acuity said. Irwin:. Spear,-University vw,W# complexes in cityof Austin.'We1 and area residents w01 havea; Christian Church from 6:30 to v * " A/^hSf; .1-"The main purpose of the -professor of botany, "In­' experienced. and 8 p.m., David Paredes of the &S&811SGive m •call. i MEDICAL TECH; DEG. chance to sbow their coocenr rally is to raise the' cohr GINNY'S creasing Food Production in University Catholic Student •ALO'. BLANCO.'1 PncaCorpt a VISTA need n* far far world hmger daring Food scioosness of the studentbody Developing Countries;" '----*-•-Central'air.-dlsh—shst dfa-, wtmB* us Milganiwl. Mr&«t ivK1^ OPYING Center said. 4 osaLv utlMnelghb6rhood.Lacaled platameat Appryapw.u ihj«IAi aeara . r HAPPY Day on Thursday. more in the area of inter­Keooeth ~ leanddtybusroufefll Blan-^lus many alttr-vlnilili ERVICE Nowotny, teachiag! Alpng with the supper win Pood Day events win in-national . hunger than in:': BIRTHDAY assistant in economic, "The be exhibits on international ' ARQEONEBEOROOM. Walkto INC: dadea noon rally,a paneldis­domestic hanger."' Yat& .• Distribution Probleip;" and laB aadBEB. Moada»nlday. food prices and a film on the chooCJhx)yare«/carpeted. tfspeeafcS ;«2 Dobie Mall oMin cussion and a Dr, sMaTV. .Sun dedu'CAJcH. flaiindry?? .U.14 17. An. BETSY Free!:Parking poor: man's said.' ••v;:% Robert Bard, visiting food crisis in India. A preset)-• real Nopets/Summar tutit . Yates said that iflte-Ctais-^ .BP#!? Nu»cas:<7fr4• MBA. _ gggr>MiaAcnowiWcruiiMiatawWauMa»k »tACTiOwHtmnwii one teacher. cne A" panel discussion spon-sored by People Concerned _ have donations to pay for the TYPING,PRINTiMe-BtfiOING'^f ^BE^Moadai nitfa>. April M. IS. 452-1928* ; stodent, oneexecutive from a sbred by TezPIRG wfll be -i a*. r. wffii Hiiiiger. food, and .the University i4:30&a:30pjn.;^ world rdief organization and hdd at 3 pjn. in Business ?l-a-plate supper con-Christian Church is donating i^PIANO TUNING: SIS: repairs one state'representative will ' PROFESSfQNAL _ —mI»ill laarlL nan7aari) aai: Economics Building 150, jsistiiig of beans and rice wfll the hall; so we have no iipMiptama.> — ' address the rally." Yates Panel members will be Dr f -MATH-Sa6»«E DE& 'v be hdd at the University overhead," Paredes said. FULLTIME ^ . tact Corps aetds *ee tar n mliai .CUSTOM DESIGNED I CANOE THE ; atilgamm.Jutr-Sapl. pHnwiaa*. Mall '­ YPING SERVICE . awrm LWag aBpaantt pku a—r BEAUTIFUL* ^ 472-3210 and472-7677 ^ A---. ^ ss^ffisssstnsss^s ^ '~' anaBEB^onaay rtkla>. Atrtl H. H BUFFALO ^ Flab ROOMMATES Rapartv Ktsumts. j»BiIH|»iailliaaal* ' Thue*. Latlari *-\c v---' ^ ;AIIunivanityAOD^—T —• J •' btnlntsstaorfc " * ~ BUSINESS OEG. OR EXP. Alcoholism, Among Topics Explored uaMl nut*Sanrica Your lnnloin ikjih arc acadadIv too >_ MMNhaa -M r-„„, Own M Wlhlt k SERVICE'",-« *4FrMat -Carpi orVISTA.Spaw>2yrso By GINNY GREENE revealed interesting data on . I Yr aaur l>a«lau iiiar " lieAcademic Center foyer the amount of fat in a person's #|C , rj.t Llvlog allowaaca pKi btaaMsr Apply mrtarj .,v and porch took oh the body. While a 13 percent 2-89365 maat-SaathaACTMNR si-f -appearance of a crowded . Wot Maa Mid. BEB. I • ums> relationship of fat to muscle fARK TYPING. Spttiatty: T*dn(cal April Httliltlt •• marketplaceWednesday, with1' and bone,is an ideal ratio for >ptrl«nctd tbtm.diuartanont, PR's. . AUCTIONEERING &RODEO fraiM apartaMt Isrfelslwi. several thousand people in­women, most University ANNOUNC;iNG.r"Ft.Smftti AapmMmSMfaMks.sM. >lng. wlnito»; Mwllag:,BIS Kaaris Organizers of the first altout 15 percent, while {heir ^nt. 45^~770S-.. ' .; ••'. .. Term July 14 to July2t Free DBBYE TCLAFIELO. IBM Satadrlc. i CMahf! University Health-Fair preferred percentage is9 to10 ca/alltjb a wn tuparlanca,: ttodn WtttlMMdl designed it to edqeate/ the percent. " •iiertatlons. thasat, raportt, . University community in all FAU.FEMALERA jlmaooraphliiQ:qcfrll*;---. b -. :. •!5?f5,OFli laafc Ki«aia aM "We measure the amountof .Hapl.lHlu intlri; li;i-Ssalli aaapartMata , aspects of health, Carol Case,­ |SSERTATIONS, ««Mas. ^ ... raipm. OHm. OkM -tin CMLtattH)- fat in their bodies by using a bri«fs.'.Exparlancadtyplst.% coordinator of the Health ln- SHARE RRMISNB) densimneter, an underwater BrtdlaLPa^Looalaa 1 LEARN TO PLAYGUITAR. I MMncr. % Mock fnm turn formatian Service of the Stu­ rady.iy.DMns.. — |SCHOLARSHIPS gy.iifWiL ABP-FwilltJ vat, in which the student sits DLLEVS-COPY SERVICE.TI>a COO* dent Health Center, said 5^. AVAILABLE for about 10 seconds. Fat' ate. >er«lcer tTpIng, typ«uttlag. BUYING Ui.STAMPS: C Wednesday. 'V,--'/' Ui Na«y iias a' IMM • ' " . nur ihWin i. Hili tli floats, but muscle ahd bone do raar sckolanhlpi airallabla' far, PAX»tWMi One message aimed prin-not; in this way we can get an ' SERIOUS GRADUATE - *KMcamr ariaM tlaMk. H >aa djpaDy at students was from accurate reading," Moss said. Just North of 27th at' l>av*hadMagralcalaita.araaia . BOOMMATE NEEOEO Imr rast «ra : the Austin Couhcii on Guadalupe 75. Since finals are nearingand 2707 JHemphill Park13 : Alcoholism. "You learn more aadsNtamaaBvcaa CAPITOL CAMEKA CLUB imimI students will probably bestay- in college than how to take a SIMKMBt or Sl»an«n cMkt Sm- Ihgup later to study, Kenneth •nladiataty. ., test... when you're 'hung up' jut&p­ .. . > & Lraig of the Loiighoni -Phar­ S>ri>MaiLw>n.Apriia.7JiMt «B your hang-out," a poster maceutical Association warn-• " — 'nitnm. rjniL BOOWUTE. NEEOED; free mf warned. YES, we do fype : WANTED: •L. »wtTijra. Atrio> tlwh»u tft liKw.—lllrt itillM, : ed against mixing any kind of Personnel in one booth es- SludtiW IMWWJW h well M4 tm-iril >JLI. 11UIABP. CMI MM . strong amphetaminerlike freshman themes. timated that 80 percent of all Why not starf out with iHfgrlhcvttvnmN ^ as^sa&g^isn University students compounds with alcohol. are ' \ good grades! A $ Wl wwtfwWTcWdreUfctfwe**•' Bwl rwn m*in.cat! EK stum, ni»n «« ouot "Lots of students use plain : dMAiehy, Hew>Hutu CM OHM caradtC caMe TV. SIS- overweight. Ray Moss, .472-3210 and 472-7677 '§ caffeine tablets like No-Das saiitfii^MwaiMir'kmwMai; teaching assistant' in the ICPERIENCEDANDF. v;4»(P^^cy btTUnwl^';. WUJEr UU16E1 BB*OOWt IF a** and yhrarin," he said, "which sjts, dluartallonvi UNCLASSIFIED Department of Health and rn.law. etc-Printing, reaUy aren't harmful, even if Physical Education. explain­ 1 Tullos. 4SKIM. ' mixed with alcohol. But drink­ .. ;s TYPIHO SERVICE-Tbasas, iTl Irlliiiln"*riiir& aanfcni nalaina ed to listeners,. "Most ing will ruin the effects of the uS^.,Ttrry. r. students are sedentary and !S?TS{^£JiS!S? . TUMMCIU FEMALE.-SBj*gE.Laraa caffeine; since one is a . out of shape. One Of the hiain H.5»»ER.ML OWm « stimulant and the other a _ ^ACCURATE Itfmnpltyplas.: causes of this .is . that, they icei^H.twr pl9c c»ir«6$nr~ r UUSEDfATE OPeRING lar jtou so much depressant" spend time •D'A TYPIST?: WaTaasacraMrtal Other booths /offered :lallst.-Rasumav — ROOMS studying." /. screening tests for diabetes EXPERIENCED..SECRETARY. laK Roberto Davis exploins VP tregtment. . Studies on students "also and blood pressure oyernlgM irregularities, information on SaugMir. SUMMER RATES birth control methods, nutri­aimcBi«wB tion, breast cancer detection, ik|Kmrt» Criminal " -tion training dummy whidi mien, said the csuie in aUegationsinvolvingtte»460,-^ HELP WANTED of • Griffflii n , , ^ learning artificialrespiration. Attotney Marirai 'Fostefi5 BARTENDER Mrlllmi to-unri Judge J R. Alamia of Edin­Parr further argues /that Mike Von Wupperfidd of the who handled both suits, gave TlftED OF burgh .head Of the ad-; Carrillo, indicted lastwedcon/ safety group said the Uhiver-­ notice be was appealing both. ministrative judlcial cUstrict : federal income tax ; evasion sity Police Department was AUSTIN? ridings to the Texas Fourth charges, took the action as the first Texas poUce unit to. Court of CSvfl Appeals in 5«an . Carrillo removed Parrfrom part of a power struggle have all-commissioned of­ [uaamer JOBS" .^Antonio. * ... office 00 grounds the 48-year-between the Parr and GaiTiUo MORNING AND AFTERNOON MIRK ficers completean emergency^ ~ Aharpm routas laEntlaia ~ Wast Lyaa araa apaa UNF. APARTS Tbe taxpayers',suit sought old ei-Marine faces a 10-year factions in Duval County. medical training program.. IU(|lpM'j^eekdays xK INDERGRADS UNF. DUPLEXES -* jt* 5­ MUni^rsii^Women [miner Job Oppor- C«(nmi»tUns.ind«Mrl«i;«M ^|V ftifUliU.OW nftles If you're info;; tat and good pay^g Avtot^ltr mi'kk • QDM Selected by Mortar Board mo. -Apply. In per-1 LOST & FOUND A«s»la rnMcRtlil ^.pjiaJtSSwc |n,^Thursday, April f ^tjpstmttstmwnto•n-i^BTI •: Mortar Boahl, :a. national addition to demonstrauuns of . meet at I p.m. Thursday In Gaology. C*gw*wot- se«x-waaen'shooorsociety, self-cervical and self-breasts tnxmrt QOVHMMMT AMD OAY no*U or Building 100 to hear Michael .Pat-' : .thlp BEB Rm, I57ata WANTED LOSr^STOac BMk 'Mk has sdected 35 initiates for exams, this four-hour session • AUSVM.wtntpOntor.Morty'Mtnfoftl/ larotil discuss "Economic and En-J?'/ [id Rm.1S2 af 7 p.rp^/; . »W.Tb— a vlronniantal Aspects or UgnltaStrip /'­ »,,f».. ^i w ~, activist discussing "G»y ip—rOMm vms/RiMra. CONVENIENT UT. H tarfWic the 1S75-78 academic^year. will/ include discussions and -. People" at I p.rrL Thurttfay s Mining In Bastrop County." -/ v ;-s.- OMNMiAam will meat at 7:W p.m. FEMALE PWANTOM ROOMMATES "Members are sriected on drawings of -anatomy -and fnontHilim pNTIRIIf; yd.' wiifiitII Thursday In tha Kinsolving Racna- LOSTFEMALEHaCkLak,BS5g::»W.«»WL,­ the basis -of [scholarship, . physiology and ittformationdn'^ .• tion Room. CONMRIH .will, sponsor poatry. MONY; CAFOVFLH. LOST «-U-n 71st/Spccdway. leadership and 'servlce;'' ? vaginal infections and treat­readings:.; 'TTWrd worM Contam-KSSA will meet at 7 p.m. Thursday In • QUICK MONEY. WKB Iatr oaad lapM-Bk .... prtk^'canerv %pocary.WrltarstT by Jamas Cody at. Communication Building A3.114 for ia^B9er->ti^tnee,^ho^ex--gaw^ifaiiSaS.." ptmme^'iie-SE. Clare Buie, president, sald;-f; ment. A; $3 donation *wiU be noon Thursday In union Souttrm a media show. eriehdi. requited..SlAlbO If Those sheeted are:::Julie asked to cover expenses of Admlulon Is Iraa. TMI MMUMMMT ANP OONOKItAIION . l05r?«MI'.SMr Scft% t UNM^MMtoCAlXVMIS OQMMITim sponsored by the Reading and Study /i uallf led.-Greduatlng Seniors. Booty, Betty Botrett, Carol plastic speculum' and printed fillWil.Rl— Otabtree,MaryEdgetao,Ann material.-v>-2-:'^ ~«rill sponsor noon rmitlcTtwreday in • Skills .Laboratory (RASSL) .will . ajnpjs lor first summar»arm.«l-«o LEFT"-OUTSIDE: BATTS " ^ thaTa«as Ta»»rn.Admission Isfraa,1 : imeat at noon Thursday In Jester :• IHI <3Lv'-. Ennen, Margaret Flynh, .v.WMi UMON MCMAII0N COMMniWwBI Center A332. -^ -•­ SPACES NORTHEAST, mag'-g^pat. >•.>•... sponsor a panal dlscgsslon of rock (MvaanY urnxviNo out win meat aF^~s: /Melinda Fngitt; Cheryl Plant Sitters climbing with Walter WattfltMand 7:90 p.m. Thursday at SOSA W.Mtv «W>ars af 3 p.m. Thursday In ttM ' rSt. A discussion on parachute paefc- UNF. HOUSES The University's RarePlant Collar Room o« th« Texas Tavam. . Ing procedures will be given. Any44&8fe?.\M:.| HELP WANTED T-TTtrn~n~-tnirrrTirrNawiiN««»ai . tarmtlMra^iNAvoaratrdaiu * Study Center is looking for •maUMMNMCMATKMcoawrrni wilt: student: or faculty member who ''JiSiJwM laeartaAwiii «^J»r«P«ya. cawrtjparia^rog. >. sponsor threa Gary Naptuna rock ' would Ilka to learn more about -f/<\i; I volunteers to belp grow and , '..dlmMng.fflms and "Amarlcans on ikyd Wing Ij Invltad tu attana. /-/' ^'/r^s I aaly. AM»aWi Mair^AnarS,toSSr. -care forrare plantsduring the -. EvarastV irem 7 to*:4S pjn. Thurs­UMVMSrr (TUMHT ATHNSTS will meet at f VIHIIRI .UT,-EKTHH day Ipt Oaology Building 100: Admis­7:» p.m.Thursday In Jester Center. TEAGiHE RS3^^ spring*„and snmmerTjill sion H'»fanls for Gary Naptuna A305A "/w . S'^fnestic Assignments in QDUNTRY^COTTAGE.)$ TUTORING . -nims; ;"Americans on Everatf'ls Ul NHCMO AU1ANC1 will moot oi lp.m: , Iraa at 1.4] p.m. , Tfwnday In B*Umont Hell Fencing | LEMeNTARV; SECONDARY, ADULf./,8, MlinaaKtMl vm«» IIMON k , v55iJ -.McLane, Mary AliceMcLean, mull camwiM will Room. y0u*il.l>ejusl Spinman,_Martha Up^nrtt.,,•sS?SSRS?i5?tS2°S^£ MtiSr^5^ / ;>fi<*inomlcsBuWlng*wlth.Or/iaul^iSai!' •.Sternbergs5ai g^i»>Acook*nfy«i"aon'Jjjrtv^ miB.aiiowrtincei/ 'iuitment allowance, oit yrtit-jgiw. A^twa» w rtth Straet and University, AVwua.^ './;£»? ^ ,h* T««» Ta»am fallal-J Sailor s&id. "AH we want are^ —••Sft lb etmioMiiNr citimr ^ Room.., .^->,,,1,;, Wbipsa's Health -Orgapiza^ people/who" are ^'willirig Itn'^^'eSiMiSDaloNirtfi^Jii wjiet; ' IKOent a ;.donate %irtinw-l ^ FURN. DUPLEXES -EXTRA: NICE; HOusas. n».^» uwai-viga^ua-*w, ,l u"^*^«*»nAN ••H-i'*: i.,'-­ Bs&SSfi m •f" li% T-tt/^S'l »l-'r £ t'jJ^ "' "I -vf -5. >?'••• ' n v I"", 1 H'* I -'i-:*-!A< .WSiSXtSHS *4-U' -«{ k TOMCAT TOM S jgm ;A&M RECORD A SPRING »RELEASE« RELEASEGUARANTEED TO BLOW sYOU •Sir ; -: "= ;Sf'-f AWAY AT PRICES fTHAT WON'T SCARE i , ^ !*•» •«RIC^pfAKEMAN;»^aOE §S ^ ft©8'/ Ij3"* If*''" i# | f f, v'! COCKER, HEN®e^a^»l«iill 4 * ;.• ' ~ FRAMPTl _ „ _ _ s?3£v'., ?' : -* *im? U>J? : jiSm -ME^ORD'i'QWNl R&J5& mlm /_y * ®sea Wi !$fi? Sl*||^pgL •*n3,5» fi\ itM ¥#$$%/ Jg$i |&q $$ I ' '• mssm ^iiPlP [ rWP;^H^ 1. > j mmm JB1 imIpii is® msMismfc REE PARKING OPEN W/ PURCHASE 10 TILL 10 MON. Thru SAT. IN THE COVERED ">/.'/ /?/)/ ' i^s) iDOBiE GARAGE