^ >' $&& l.* / "i /•4*y i. DAILY r TEXAN r 4v 1 ^ > ^ r ^ > # *i ^ f *, -* ~ v i ? * ^ l'* -i .-v -^v n _ -WmMMt:'' rv "£ Student Newspaper at The University of Texas at Austin Vol. 74, No." 54 Please Recycle This Newspaper , Austin, Texas# Friday, September 13, 1974' •Ten Gents Twenty-Four Pages " -'471-4591 _ <1... Viyk •^p«*«f "THE-fNCRgASB-JWUgliL hei e-actttslr—r-,the .currcnt.reguest, Laczko and other . THE LETTER' stated ' attempts to vw lyr amounts to more than 35uoereenl35£pereenl." Southern Union^~offi6iaTs" saia^ffSr "TjUstlfWivpas5mg-a-.:rneaaideF:in-Uie-pregK^Hess said, '.'The key is l'S~percent or 35 was "not recommended, increase suf­have been shown to be groundless. .S percent of what. ficient to produce a fair rate of return for . Guantt questioned if the intent of the"'They areasking for an increased rate the company."-v. Creek Ordinance ^ "that the proposedol return uii . Lheir curreiu. level , of —-TIIE. COUNCIL -praritpri Snnthern deveionmeni preserves the natural«*** revenue — but their level of-revenue has Union a delayuntil Qct. 10 toreply to.thg character °l tne .land and watei^ay lu­ »*»"*• increased 70 percent in recent months" rate analysis report.: . " the greatest extent feasible"; — was"because' gas costs have increased that In other, business. Asst. City Manager... applied bv th Planning' Commission. much, and are passed directly on to the Homer Reed presented a 1974^75 general> AsstV City -Atty.-Richard Tulk said •consumpr " Hf=s said... -L fund budget that 6ould. mean a 7^-2 cent decisions'by the commission about sub-­ —T«*on Staff Photo by Phil Hub*r • Citing numerous Jnflated^ cost Es­~qut in. property taxes-foi LiU/eii's..' -divisions were.npt appealable to.theC.ity timates in the-request. HeSs'said only The cut represents $1.19 instead -of the George F. Hess,.city rate consultant, speaks to City Council. ' Council under state law. $500,000 of.the company's requested $2 3 . present $l,27,tax rate on $100' of assessed V : TULK DIRECTED Guantt to requestproperty'valuation. ;jthe;:PIanning Commission' to allow a • Mayor Pro-Tem Dan Love'suggested rehearing ;of-the channelization permif. totally.^ eliminating property tax' re-: "Also, a shuttle bus system used last 'evaiuatiotis which cost the city$3 million ­year for University Ifome games was ap-: , a year. This'would reduce thetax rat&ie . " proyed by the..council. cents.. '• v . :: Th.e shuttie^bus'system will allow per-J "J Judge Indicates State May Still Prosecute However, Reed said a greater reducr. sons attending the games to park in out­ mnftt —i • ? J . j .. DALLAS (AP) •The Justice Department said Thurs-' ff* i _• ^...1J .i ' « • >He§aitf the •statecould decide.to prosecute'jacobsen, tiori of .-taxes, this year Would cause day it does not to McCOWN pointed out in his notice'that Hill had stated' lying areas and ride transit buses to the intend prosecute lobbyist Jak(»' "if there.are any.;corresponding state charges.*' . higher taxes next year.. that the court had every indication that the United stadium for a 50-cent round, trip fee; Jacobsen, thus honoring its-agreement with, him .for . • BUT. HE stressed that the state prosecutors'would CITY COUNCIL voted to have the city States "would proceed because-until the filing of the mo- testimony against -former Secretary of the Treasury Have, tb build their.'own case-for a separate indictment • manager's staff study four alternatives tion for dismissal, the United(States had vigorously pur­ John B.'CoTinally.. .­ The department-had sought dismissal of the diarges, . :to tax rate cuts ranging from 16 cents to sued the prosecution," of the Jacobsen case in Texas. The department's decision wasdisclosed in anotice of arguing that iJacobsen already had pleaded guilty to -7M> c«nts and a $2,000 homestead exemp-. However, McCown stressed that all action' related to . intentian.not wto prosecutey»i"cufiled "en.-here Thursdayiuuisua>,.*miwith v.o.U.S urioeiybribery cnargesinchargesin wasmngionWashington and hadana naa agreed to testify ' testily _ tion for the elderly. the prosecutionof the Texas case took place before"the ' ^painfct.fVwinatliy ^Icn imHiMflH a briberv charee recommen- KriKanr ^it-irn T»*• Dist Judge RoKnTHUIrlrWasHHl-who-last-EudasLhad... against Connallv. also indicted on n Tn • The stafP will . present 1 defendant Jacobsen pled guilty to.the felony in the denied a mOlionmfWinti hv-'fAflpralby federal nrnQwtitm-tflnprosecutors torirondrop Minrdo-tf—charges ' -lorr.nv ^ n .nil -.r i ''m i .«i11..v i i ' r _ -J « dations'at the coiincil's budget wiDr'kshop return Jacp.bsen's. teStlnimiy.-the—^federa-1­•DlStrict-of-Golumhia-pursiliwit to the plpa harpain " against Jacobsen'in a case involving misapplication of prosecutors had promised to' have the charges in Texas . WprlnpsHav ' " THE PUEA BARGAIN" related to. Jacobsen's funds from a San Angelo savings and loan firm.. dropped. •• The council" an IIP • . also approved testimony asa principal witnessio'the caseagainst,Con-; HILL DECLINED to comment ori what his next action "THE DEFENDANT Jacobsen has fulfilled a major ve'stigation of -^converting the.' cifv's nally. Jacobsen was a lobbyist ior "Associated"Milk would be following the:government's decision not to ipart of his plea bargain and in fact, on Aug. 7. 1974, natural gas burning power plants to"oil Producers Inc., a Texas-based cooperative from which prosecute. -•• '. entered a plea of guilty to"rfelony in the United-States burning facilities. • ,; ; -;':!­ ' Connally allegedly accepted two $5,000 contributions . . WASHINGTON lAP) — A corporation But m his-earlier oplnion'Hill had said that his.court District Court of Columbia," stated the notice filed by R.L. Hancock, director of Public . channeled through Jacobsen.'.The government claims (0\vned-by billionaire Howard Hughes , had the option to appoint a special counsel to prosecute McCown. . — UUlities. requested the study of possible • that the tfenlributions-were for-Connally.'sefforts to.in-... gave federal drug agents $20,000 with' the case in Texas.:"In brief,'-Hill noted in his opinion, . Jacobse.n and a partner. Ray Cowan, had beuii named con-version of two natural gas in­ crease federal milk subsidies. Which to mount an undercover operation-."the court mayjiaye the same-inherent power to ad-in a several-co'unt.indictmenl related to the misapplica-• stallations. the Holly and Decker plants', The San Angelo trial, was set for-Sept. 23. -against a: suspected'drug rihg at one of ^minister justice to "the government as It does the defen--tion of:$825,000ieloneing_to:the.First Savings and Loan into oil. burning-plants. ­ Hill, m hisdecision rejecimg the motion for dismissal. .jHughes' Las Vegas hotels, accoTSJSg to. 'ffiirit" ' Association of San-Angelo. '-• —— 1 NATURAL GA5burning plants cannot £tated'that the-Washington"and San Angelo cases-were the Drug Enforcertient,Administration. " -U S' ^t-tyi'/Frank McCown said after-submitting his Hie notice of-retention not to prosecute -was fijed !by ~ burn oil for long'periods pf time,without' r unrelated and that the government"had not shown-"that • The money was usdd in February;,1973, notice to the court that "nothing we have done binds the McCown and his ^assistant, John W. Sweeney Jr., on in-_ building up sludge and other wastes fhajt the best interestsof justice" would be served-by the dis­to finance activities of two undercover state government structioris from Asst.'Atty: Gen. Henry E. Petersen 1 cali hamper the efficiency of the missal of Jacobsen's indictment agents fdrvthe 'Bureau of-Narcotics and facilities^-Hancock said! .: Dangerous Drugsas-they'gambled at the ; "The plants have to be. modified to casino.in Hugtes'-Frontier-Ho'tel in'an: handle, the different type• of- fuel con­effort to infiUrate' the Suspected drugsistency,': he said.. .ring, DEA officials ,§aid; in response, to Court Denies Jewish Appeal; 'As gas becomes increasingly short in-­.questions.supply^ greater electric demands by the .The.money was.supplied "by Hughes-vcity.show a need for alternative fuels." owned Summa Corp, in accordance' withhe said. "This study will show the an agreement between the bureau and a : technical and economic impact of the private agency as Draws Delegate Wrath detective known conversion processr*' ITH •' -v.-.-: Intertel which .provided security forBy ERNA SMITH pected the court to rule as'it did;-many "progressive" Democratic r MARGARET GUANTT; 6905 Crystal P)ay". and llughes' Las Vegas hotels, according to criticized the SDEC for not voting to Texan Staff Writer. • ­ ," Brook, requested the council to clarify .. Harsh criticism was leveled Thursday. of new Creek caucuses pointed outboth caucuses pass-: George B. Brosan, acting chief inspector interpretation the Or­ amend its convention agenda to accom­for the drug agency.' ed resolutions aftef the July 16 hearingmodate the Jewisti delegates.. .'!certainly wouldn't approve of such at the State Democratic Executive Com­dinance as it applies to-Walnut Creek to..ask.the American Civil Liberties ' mittee (SDEC) by Travis County, channelization; . c ' an operation, and I know. DEL^ Ad­ delegates aftera federal court of appeals Tedd Siff, chief plaintiff in the case,' Umotv ;to file a suit against the SDEC. • " The Planing Commission on Aug. 27 ministratorJohn R. Bartets wouldn't," a. new upheld a lower court ruling refusing to Said. "TheSDEC hasthe power toset the ' • approved plans which call for Brosan said. "It's bad for the govern­ "If anybody is affected, (by the channel to be constructed to cut off a grant adelay.of next week's state party convention agenda." ment to be asking favors'from.anybody .V .absence.of Jewish delegatesl it will be ' "meandering loop", of the creek; 1 convention. -. that owns gambling casino's...;" " •--­ "A PUBLIC hearing on July 16. the liberals," said Jeff JoneS, former northeast of Austin. • • '. Thestate convention, which isschedul­DEA,. the successor to the Bureau ofJ > various parties" testified and asked the . University student government presi­; Austin.Savings Association sought ap­ ed to begin Tuesday,'conflicts with Rosli Narcotics and Dangerous Drugs and proval of the channelization to enable it SDEC to add to the agenda a motion to dent and progressive delegate to the con­other federal drug programs, was form­Hnshanah. the Jewish new year, obser-. Cloudy recess the convention for 48 hours until • • to fill in and develop over the loop of the vention. 1 ; ed inJuly, 1973, several months after thevance. " : ' • creek.: • the holidays end on Wednesday, Sept. 18 so-called "Operation Silver,Dollar." Friday wiIl;Jbe consid­ELEVEN JEWISH delegates filed a", Democratic officials -have asked thesuit Aug. 8 in U.S. District Court in erably cloudy with' a Dave-Richards, attorney for the Legislature to amend the portion of Arti-Austin. The delegates asked' • that the 50 percent chance, of -Jewish delegate's, called the entire con­-_,cle 1338 of the Texas Election Codecourt issue a temporary injunction for- Co-Op Board Votes troversy "an outrageous ca'se.of the ln-« •showers. The wind which reads, \'conventionishalllineet'on. bidding the SDEC. from, convening the sensitivity of the State Democratic Ex-' • the third, Tuesday in September each will be from,the north­convention ecutive Committee." T-he SDEC-in ac­ even-nuiiibered year."-" west at 8 tcJ 15 mph. Spears said the delegates failed to pre­ting as it did, violated the "rights of The high will be in the; sent enough evidence io show the suit.; Jewish delegates by forcing them to "HOPEFULLY'when we come out of would succeed iif brought to. , trial. • ByPATDRYDEN choose between-the-right to freedom of ' turned in receipt slips for 1973-74 upper 70s with a low . the next legislative session, we'U' have '•and Wednesday-,the Fifth Circuit. Court of religious principles and the right to par-is rebate for 1972-1973 wasJjll Friday rnght in 'the :• Appeals confirmed the district court rul-ticipate in. the political process,'; an election code which will not dis-VICKl VAUGHAN • percent, there seemed id be little ques­ •ng. •••;•' • -r * ' criminaie."' said Peck Young, 'ad-• -The University Co-Op Board .voted fi-^ • /tion among board members that it wouldlow 70s. !-Richards said. \ . s ^'ministrative assistant to Travis County Thursday to return a 3 p"erceiit rebate to Although-most parties involved ex have to be lowered for 1973-1974. •SPOKESPERSONS from the "Fair"" : Democratic Chairperson Ken Wendler. • the 27,514 students.and"facultv whcrhave Internal and external, shrinkage, property taxes, accounting arid, data processing fees and the country's . economic situation in general were cited­ 13th as reasons for the lower rate . By ROBERTA C'LELAND ^ in this.nation. And famous figures tn.history have been"known to ­ — NEIL WOLFE, student member of the•••: 'Friday -.the _j3th has more superstitions surrounding it than aWt avoid the number ... Victor Hugo, Napofeo'n I. Napoledn III and'• boAd.. said the Co-Op ill Vi*Ar>~-'r-H a.',.; 'J4 ­ b' '' •1 " . i~ < —— 'v-4£e,i'Qf, £«** ' v.» _ ^ Continues By STEVE McGOMGLE children.1' adding that at least four out . .. ?,:y-•. • and of five women depicted in books should .THE UAST group to be heard from '•'^MARY BETH JONES-b?' shown, in the home. Otherwise,she was the -JVIexican-American School San Jacinto Street Ownership Disputed By KEN McHAM ficials have cited this pAiding city attorney .in' 1952 and .in the purpose clause at the. The final day of textbook hearings^ said, they "misrepresent reality".' Board Association. Three represen­ Texan Staff Writer closure as justificationfor the drafted the Ordinance,, said "end. I've heard Long say this Thursday-.was-vmarked-by complaints'of* tatives dited the exclusion of chTeano Billy C.. -H jteheson of Fort Worth -A ' former ci ty coun-• relocation of Red River Street "if it vacates thfcstlfeet, that, -before, but it doesn't .make cultural misrepresentation, excessive culture anij dialect from bilingual texts complained that material" exposing eihvoman and a former city: around the east .campus boun-wasn't what v.;as interided." any.difference, what they say criminal content, the de-emphasis of as a violation iif Texas'Education;Ageifr children ^ .descriptions of criminal WILLIAMS SAID. "Other 20 years later." sex roles and-evolutionary ' thWry in cy guidelines for Spanish texts. They acts. w.as unsuitable for ifiinorg; She1,-sity's ownership of and right iLJhe. UTLER SAID for the or-books up for. approval. also accused;the publishers of using poiiited out.thai the detailed, descrip­ 'to close thecampus section of • same time.; but notsSn^Stitp- i nratgrial; originally published in SpainTTTri'inUTT) flllllli i irdTlliirr ffrpfnnnpil "maite it to. Independents were selling ­ tions of shoplifting .and robbery outlin-• would have io be some show­ without adapting if .for . in commissioner, ot the Texas- use the day,'Claiming a 1952-city orW-sjKiettie te-vacStr-ionh^-TOe-fi"'th ill'firnrrSrng "" »•» a . mistake that com­ ing nf Agency'presided over the last round of tion for a criminal career. dinahce transferred only the. sidewalk of San*Jacinta Street sidewalk jndcompeting with' "^telyconirarfict?rHhs4wU«it= -4wj>ywpi.'iJu'"flii i'i': >>]f» Rnarrt of The C07iipla sidewalks — not the street the-University. : was raised against the theory : the Athletics Gouncii,; which . of the council liot just some the textbook committee for further EducaUon's textbook committee meets to ihe University "We.did-,not vacate, the couldn't sell enough inside the, vaguemisunderstanding." of evolution -depicteVTrtn-ifc-£np^tariP • . jjhpne a^lot.i Then1will be^^ on crutches^^fora while, butthat won'flHead anB Shoulders f Wella"Balsam-.. •'It-was very painful when 'out'," she added, •''! couldn't put "Tnterfet'^ wiUi pulrfjc-appeafances or campaign activifipc •' ehoU any weight on it at all, but after it was fixed it felt fine — no -said. . f soi-efiess"at all." * -» . Shampoo Delco said she expects to be completely well by the time.her , Conditioner IGoz The operation was decided upon when" the last incident re-. • campaign requires two or three political activities a dayT\ 11 OZ. ­ "I'm still.verydefinitely involved in the campaign,and intend .-. ...y «?•-• . , c•Sug. Retail 2.98.. toJive up to all the expectations of the people who nominated : Sug. retail 2.59 me," she;said.,; . The operation would certainly not impair any-legislative ac­tivities. she concluded. ',v." -j,, ^SdN^V 'f) have KLRN To Air Series Now 1.69 Now 1. ' -We a yv\ complGre seTecfion of Sony products. /: "Ca jQjp Development test . An educational television series designed to help adulLs 17" g University Co-Op q and older prepare for the General Educational Development Crest Q Tips Sure (GED)^^ Test;premieres at 10 p.m. Sept 17 on KLRN-TV.Stereo Shop ^ channel 9. > The 34-part series, to be aired Tuesdays, Thursdays and Toothpaste 50Z. Sug. Retail .73 Deodorant soz. 1 ^23rd and Guadalupe^ Fridays, will coveryive subject areas — math, science, Sug. Retail :83 v Sug. Retail-1.99 -literature, grammar" and. social studies, The three 30­minutes segments will be reshown 7:30 to 9 a.m. Sundays, k froe One hour frt-e parking with '" i 1 Information about enrolling in the. GED-T.V series is GiyIngnaiure a norKCwitfr~: O RR «ti nr, L1( AA m p;nr ; ,c «a ,r ci«fi-& % available front tfee-DiviSion of-Adult and Continuing Edu'ca-Olanls ana things to grow MasftirCharge V^elcome y ^Uon, Texas Eduwttioa Agencv. 201 E. 11th St. or by railing te-,1 j purchase of S2 or niore ' in voo» Oorm. your new 47Jp3i»T 6 -r — ""Now ' abarrmenl or hfciuse But ' .59 Now .55 Now .95 mostly in vourrteort ­Now two locations tor your •­growing nftetls ; Use Texan CIassified Ads. 1 David & SchraeOer : iniematioaai Garden Center •All Drugs Have Been Moved T-o The Front Of The Store. just oil Bumet Road ona On The Right. Street Floor ; North loop Drive at.x?r|S You say we ain't got your long John Silvers Oavia & Schraeder Interiors us favorite chawin7 tebacey? 2825 Hancock Drive next to . Itie.Craflsmen in tq^jtexn' ^ lane Shopping Centel • One hour free parking with purchase of $2.00 or" ; Don't..get cranky! S more. BankAmericard Arid MasterCharge Welcome. The University. by Factory Expert . -GARDENCENTER Co-Op wants to ^ know your .flr " .|/t ' Vli ***• * VX 11 V|i • »i• Chi Omega -""'-'J- '.%l± !• Alpha Delta Pi, »'.3,v. H«tp U« Ptonl o IfM. Wat ra tl Alpha Phi Delta Sigma Theta STUDENT Alpha Epsilon Phi'?;;' n Alpha Xi Delta .Delta Zeta -'••• BUSHY DISCOUNT - -• — • ' -ihi SOUJBtfl a; i ~ . • TOGETH • • . n • " 'Friday, September -20 Mon'day, September 23 Tuesday, September 24 i" We Can Help Each Other ai ! rz>? ^ . M ( '5.^ Delta Delta Delta Kappa Alp"ha Th&ta ^igma DeltQ Tau ' Delta Gamma KappqKappa 'Gdihma »»: • "" .(*(" •• For The Future Of Austinv 1a . Gamma Phf'Beta : Pi Beta Phi ^^'<*1 : C] M : • • . CL'J •i • — -'-f-v li, *­ -r< ffet * » di Wednesday, September Thursday. September 26."'---'--Friday, September 27 1 P;-:L'­ w Zeta Tau Alpha'; Alpha Phi Alpha Delta Tau Delta Alpha 'Tau Omega m Acacia -Wi P< Delta,Upsilon ~Alpha Epsilon Pi%*\­•: Beta Theta Pi ~ %c. Kappa S'gma STUDENT DISCOUNT OFFER „-c. Delta Sigma Theta ''*•& Lambda'Chi Alpha' ' ' i ^v-.'.-zY"' ".S«pl. 1 thru Oec. 20, 1974. > J V A t »: m >-»AU 5TUD6NI DISCOUNT PRICES . "X , % : * " Pi -<.**>{ S«frttmb«r 1,1974 «hrw D«c«mb«f 20, 1974. Doily od58 *2 83 Omega Psi Phi . Pi Kappa Alpha Sigma" Phi Epsilon C SAVE 25% Evening ft .Su/idey.v .^ M2 02 1 '3 02 Phi Delta Theta Sigma Alpha Epsilpn Tao Delta Phi ' r.'-nS l/S8-. :Phi Gamma Delta Sigma Alpha Mo'p: Tao Kappa Epsilon^ - Phi Kappa Psi te--. Sigma Chi "Theta Xi ^^rRUU^'AND REGUUTIQNS Ol-OFFER : Phi Sigpia Kappy , Sigma Nu ' v Zeta Beta Tao | mm •• • -» ' 'S ."S'iiST — -—• • . • w I kxad tbv «Is i'«B 114. m«t w«i «: > M < nt*M aumii pmtd li a»imka lukum -v.vv 1-pET W")• iww»3—>»wiim >. -Ma#mat m mmmm*m If1Mwrtot-XMuiM »mi imtiIiui *anwi. M| -: » lotri JMn oNwf lWrth pfrtt• iityel lht:citr thti mituwuowi. •4' "MM IMatm, hlM W H|M MM tt tlL. ... . B iMnc '• "J™ V* « PIMWHotlttlibll. fW itity attlcr . MM maim. MM MMpM mm M(l» i*fI n»r iMtMl We a<% iwtrs o( tH« need tor gfftwth.vOur w(m*il mm.mi miT.k mtmwn. »imiat mtnnam im M>Mm>l Aimintwi sftlnJioiimiin'iliw. . pro|«ct ijdtitgotiJ to «neo«ri|9 »lf c»Uz«n«lcr :wont(l!li«i MtUAptt-iMMIilMaMtr'Ihteuth7-­ wrth 12:30 Noon ^1:30^-4:3^^ PMMMr art MHMcm ttMMM ytaH Mr mi Mnow MIJKI MwMMin W . ' t *iy to plwl Uvft.Orti md Crif* MyrUi a tretyilf-.^i^HjltlMfor.!»«• futureirni tend it jjfh* Ctr­ WUlKW^MilmtnLfO 601 6W AmUq t,u, ; 1.9tu mukimru mvutmn* iktmrtm iwn^' Z-Jgp-x.* Out p• , T-Far «ich nt» iut>tuiplion lootrMw«L|pif .TSP-8«iliingrltww''Ot^2^I^S j, beJwWff Aualrtl 28 iM.OcioUt 31.1974,wt mii »5,r ^ > ' doniu tl,00 !o w Pifki and^ecrnttOA y giiiup^FwITlesr r^jni , Pnlirprommi^innpr Rnhprf .r Digrazia per: the high school weretreaied ior outs and then released bv Sonally escorted black stud'&ilUi iiiTu iwutli liouum-High t€6lgmt? principal prosecution deliberations. All three were women. One. Elalfiie Grono, ttyvSHING^N (UPI) President Rockefeller — before it goes home next -•witnesses refused to testify about what they may have seen said"The prosecution didn't prove the charges beyond a confirmation of Rockefeller before Ford appealed to Congress Thursday to month and promised new efforts to cut in Wounded Knee on April 27, 1973, the date of their alleged shoadow of a doubt —there just wasn't enough there." Congress leaves to campaign , in the -offenses act on a-,broad range-bf. 'unfinished : feaeral .spending " ' * MORE THAN 130 Indians haive" been indicted in connection;, buslhe'sS;:;—' pariipularijr\.the-.vice'--'v: •-:... ....<. , November elections. H-oiise. Democrats fl. * • * . with tbe occupation of-Wpunded Knee. " ' ^ presidential "nomination of Nelson A. Ford outlined the prioritiesin a spfec-ial meanwhile announced they cannot com­message to the House and Senate during plete the confirmation process before a busy day that also included talks with;.' the election.' '• " . Republican, and Democratic; con-' AMONG THE pending pieces of s KilJer * gressional leaders and a second meeting legislation which Ford '.singled out for with Israeli JPnme Minister Yitzmak. , priority were bills on trade reform, U.S. Rabin; ------... w foreign aid, appropriations for govern­ ment operations, modernization of theIN A. FURTHER-effort to clarify thd unemployment compensation .system, a h Penalty JW^ite House, policy on presidential p'ar­new "agency for-energy-research and ddns,:depuf yl^ipoecretaty^Johh^Wt­ "developrnenl~-Bn eight wtfites*and foortiacks ^-£ Chenaull's court-appointed attorney! : Watergate : deliberated about 70 minutes in finding * Randy Bacote. speaking in alow;voice, Chenault guilty of the slaying of Mrs. repalled how King was slain by an •> King and £>eacon "Edward Boykin at < , assassin in 196^. .Si?.® Dismissal Motions fibenezer Baptist Church. . " , J During Bacotefs argument against the Chenault bowed from the waist to the •=' death sentence, Chenault clutched the •>jury from his chair in the courtroom arms, of, his-chair, stuck out his tonguewhen-he heard the death penalty read. and convulsed as /hough he we're being •-.. -In|addition to the-murder counts, the electrocuted. Seconds later, he -smiled, * jurj*' also convicted Chenault on one- flashed a ,V-for-victory sign and sat up. ........ £88j| t Again as Dist. Atty. Lejwis Slaton call­pool from which.I2 jurofs anc|.six altei • ..'I count of aggravated assault and two -Of. WASHINGTON (UPl) — U.S. .Dist-. carrying concealed, weapons; ed for his execution, Chenault turned his \ Judge John J. Sirica Thursday denied nates.will be selected: -• Standing before Eulton Superior Court demands by three major Watergs te.con­ thumbs down and shook his ihead,. -; i The. court, in; early July had sent" it-SjatOTsaid, ''thissociety.cannot afford '• questionnaires to more than 700 District Judge Luther Alverson, Chenault smiled ; maum aaiu, uus am-iety caiuwianora spiracy defendants fpr a dismissal of. as he was sentenced to die.Nov. 8 inthe-.^tKls'defendant. Send hitnVprison for charges on grounds that Richard Nixon's of Columbia-residents, asking if they electric chair at the state , prison atwhat hapj>ened, and he'll find a Weapon. tacif admission of guilt by accepting a 1 would be.able to serve on a sequestered — UPI Telephofo™ Reidsvil e. . ;_Ladies and gentlemen, he has tasted pardon had made a fair trial for them jury fora highly publicizedcriminal case Chenault, wheralso received a 10-year ft iblood, and he'll kill again." Marcus Wayne Chenault is convicted of murder. ' impossible. " • , .'•• expected to last three to four months; Sirica also rejected their rsquest-that the cover-up trial ;be postponed .in­HALDEMAN -contended that this definitely because of the mass of publici­tipped off prospective jurors that' they ty over the Nixon pardon. But he did might be serving on the -Watergate order a, one-day delay, until (5ct; 1. to cover-up jury and thus might have been1 ­ Ethiopian Military Ousts Selassie permit caliinga fresh totch of nearly 1,-' -influenced by Nikon's subsequent 000 prospective jurors.. ' -si resignation and pardon. • ' But Sirica did grant a Haldenian mo­He said the new -junr pool would be l/ort of Judph' Arrested,Accused of Embezzling tion to disteissthe400 prbsfjecfivejurors composed of. about 175, persons already;,-,-^-, , who havealready survived a preliminany ADDIS ABABA, Ethiopia(AP)— Ethiopia's armed forces'deposed Emperor . , "As frpm ioday.his Imperial Majesty, Haile Selassie has been deposed from of-' notified to report for routine jury dutyrf|p| screening 'process, and.to t;all a fresh Haile Selassie on Thursday, climaxinga six-month gradual takeover: They placed .-r^fice." • :"••• Oct. 1." plus about 800 others. " ,.. the emperor under arrest and accused him pf embezzling millions while the THE COMMITTEE said-it Would recall the emperor's son, Grown Prince Asfa . nation's.peasants starved. ; .X ;>Wossen, 58,, from,Switzerland to be crowned king and continue Ui£ 2.500-year-o*Id Lt. Ge» /^Mi^^aelAndom, 51, a popular war heronamed defense minister -monarchy-. It was clear, however, he would not have any real authority ; antf armed forces chief of staff during the prolonged takeover, emerged as the • The prince, who has lived most of his life in the shadow of his father,-suiffered a .. .•--•••­ new leader.. . ••'•• stroke nearly two years ago. He js still partly paralyzed anil spends much of his 4 "rMNOTGjWipi" )hey quoted Selassieas saying. Butthe frail emperor, on'ce ' time in a Geneva hospital, & friend saiid. ' adored by fiis 26^illion subjectsas the Lion of Judah and Elect of God, was putin , The committee said itwould maintaina provisional military administration un-' .the back seat of a blue Volkswagen police car and carted,a\vay. til a tiew constitution is adopted providing for free speech; land reform to help"Later he was,believed moved to" the air force headquarters4it Debre Zeit a -sharecropper-peasants, a separate church and stateand a democratically elected . By STEVE OLAFSON Tenneco is not discussing any aspectof lakeside town 2SmiIes outside AddisAbaba. Troopsblocked the Debre Zeii road to civilian government. • . ' • -The father of two University students' the negotiations and will hotcomment on . • civilian traffic. . . . • . was .released Thursday/after spending It said parliament pnd the present constitution were suspended,and that strikes any possible ransom. Carpenter said. Six pther members of the royal family were reported under house arrest in the and antimilitary demonstrations were banned. six months a'& a kidnap hostage in In a prepared statement to the press - . Ethiopia and was reported flying'back to -royal palace. , THE COMMITTEE also-said a military court wil} be established to trj' persons N.W. Freeman, chairman of the board of Houston... ... The coup climaxed a six-month campaign by the soldier-rebels who promised-without appeal. Two^hUndred high-ranking officials have befen rounded up in the Tenneco and head of the: negotiations,;" democratic elections and land reform after 58 years of feudal rule. last few months and are awaiting trial on charges of corruption, graft and > The kidnap victim. James W, Rogers, said, '.'I am pverjoyed~becau&e We have : .?.Ul',0Pians rea was a Texacogeologist workingas an ad­ ' ,cted twPPi'y. decorating six tanks that rumbled into Addis Ababa malpractice in office. worked long and hard to achieve-this '. (lowers and.green banners bearing the military Slogan, "Ethiopia First." The committee said it acted befcause the emperor refused to hand back billions viser.to Tenrieco. Three other .hostages, release." _ ..; a„ United Nations geologist; and two"" international Tli^ht^.werec'-jncelod And a 7t30 p.m. to5a,m curfew wasim­of dollars he had invested overseas, because Qf crimes againstthe Ethiopian pea- posed on the entire country. Tenneco-employes, also were reported pie over the last half century, and because Selassie was too old and weak,' both /he strains of martial music, Selassie'souster wasannounced.on the govern*«i » r .<. physically and mentally. ' released, said Bill Carpenter, Tenneco- Granberry spokesman ment radio in thejiame of the Arjned Forces Coordinating Committee It said-'v--: UnofficiaLestimatesjnit Selassie's wealth abroad at$10 billion, making him one m Houston: Carpenter §aid •-••• -&& 13v-. ? • of the world's richest men ~ > M • all four were, unharmed; • *' " ' fit . ? Rogers has tw&7 sons enrolled at the To Meet r'tj -University. Bill, a senior chemistry ma­jor; and PauJ, a sophomore geology ma­ neuiscapsules With For^" jor, both drovo-to meet their father an'd ; family, in Houston Thursday-. j Republican gubernatorial candidate Reiease .. Set for POWs . , -The geologistwas expected to arrivein - There were no passengers aboard the ship'whenthe fireb.roke out about .Jim Cranberry will meet with President Houston between 8:30 and, 10. p m , ^VIENTIANE (UPI) — Laotian coalitioh' government members met "<& 7:15a.m. Artotal.of 256 crewmen, including 50 entertainers, abandoned the Gerald Ford in Washington Friday todis-^ S Carpenter said 'f; .'"''V SsSf Thursday to work out additional arrangeVnents for tHe exchange schedui-ship while 52 crewmen remained aboard to.battle th^flames^ -^ cuss "iubjects of gener^ interest to Tex­. 'Rogers, was,rreported kidnaped March* ans i ed for next Thursday of about 840 prisoners of War — expected to include a Stocks Hit 4-Year Low -26 after his helicopter vyas -forced down ' Cranberry, said he was delighted the ­ the last known American POW in Indochina," ' NEW YORK (APJ -The ' •in a storm in an area occupied by-the ' President" had availed himself for" the r: ^eis EmmeMKay,47,6f Honolulu, a clvilianpiloteapturedby-.the pro-stock-market skidded to another Erjtrcank Liberation Front (EL"F).: mefeting at the White House. • ­ , M.S.E. DOW JONES AVEKACE Communist Pathet Lao on May 771973V a'nd held-aUhe' Pathet Lao head-four-year low under the pressure Profit* v .30 SmtttttrliU Oipenter said. Rogers' party had been si-ikih "I out the ship s emergency powef supply and forcing firefighters te pban- _ Cranberry will return to Texas in time i market on May 26, 1970, with • been pretty much unihfortned about the . _don ship. ' to address-the platform committeepT the­ finfsh oT 631J6; : negotiations;'' siace learning of the kidT-l ; .Republican state convention -meeting-'in. -haping six mopths ago , Houston Saturday morning'. V_ •>-' j-w "" ' Friday; September"13, 197^ THEpAILY TEXAN Paje 3 : '* mj t o ^ ._ 4-/ 1 ^fj f 'H *3 ^ r ? * ^ .Ar/ m " 1 * a guost vloujpolnt Frid^y, September 13, Nixon new setup By ROBERT I,, BARD ; CONSIDER THE pubU.c reaction. Gont/fi" r* (Editor's. note: Bard-is a visiting stder trie reaction of anyvjury,-andr . Daily Texan introductory editorials are normally pubMshed the firstday of professor of law.)- sentencing judge. Consider how different!­ j publication; This is ours, three weeks late.', • "V >« A To no one_'s surpris6,.Richard Nixonf !c.the public reactioHiwould be,if-Presfdent ^ We have reasonsffo^ our tardiness: For one. our first'^reelc of publication eagerly accepted President'Ford's pari ' Ford, after a possible i tljough unlikely) *' was during registration, which means ourintroductory message would have dori. 1 winder if it ever occurred to hin# •.a conviction then granted a portion for Mi4,::?: .good oofdotrgf;the campuat-Far^tiother; the rnain;.puvpase of-our , _Jte refuse it-V " • ' V-Nixon and those of his subordinates who,. •:Inffegtnft.-..this-.,script.• -President Ford " —tfidino more than-carry out his ordep^fe bfe jnfrC^"tdl&! ~ ' offers -to pardon. ex-I^residenHVixoijJn _. Now imagine, the course that events editorials; whV the Editorials aren't signed,,why,somefieople have pictures now alnirat^taftathiy'jiMHt ^-^aaitaDgei.tfea.'minimum Statement of -almost7cerfairily must take The^ " 'with their columns, how you can wule lut-~Hte-Ttf.wu,-cte •mil • • To answer these questions, wfe had to assemble the editorial staff..It took tapes arid' Nixon's . presidency fifes. very different team of prdfcecutors, s . . i •' H" n'ln'i" i '""'ii ^liyrr; " longer than two weeks._ But we think we have it all together,now.'(at least in his zeal to protect tfiS massive elec-lawyers who participated personnel-wise). so here we go with the mtro. :; • wvjr victory_ lus .accomplishments * v es.t 1 gato ry ..stages^-, permit.tiijrf!il The operation offjie Texan editorial staff has — to paraphrase Dylan — deserved from consequences of the misr--^ -Ita4d amdtl:gi| thennfei-ves -t o-.-try changed-with the times. City'politics — as well as state and national — haye guided zeal of some of his subordinates... Ehrlichman and Mitchell without tryiit^l® entered our 40-acre world. * ..-•isvis-j® he broke the law and broke,faith with the1 their chief. Mr. Nixon is called American people. Whatever, there are too many issues for one or two people to. pass judgT witness Wprobably by both (he proseai^ -He refuses pardon, because he must tion and defense.-The defense d'oesfia|i| Tnent on. An attempt to do this would probably result in lack of time for share the fate of his closest associates within Its.power to establish Mr^ NixqffiP|research and a lack of issues to hate time«for. Instead of this method, we r-*wJio stand to lose liberty, reputation and guilt in order-to make the defense ti^i: ; operate as a group. The editor is still responsible for what appears as com-. -• career because of their efforts to carry their clients did no morp than carry-'d|(|; „ment, but he is assisted by a number of issue speciahsts. _ _. . out his ifiisconceived'policy of conceal-. their President's express orders. Mr^i ment-. just as they su^rted him in his ; At least two people write«very Texan editorial: the editor and'apeditorials ; Nixon, deprived of his right .to take th?E;| triumphs, he must share their fate m ' Fifth ^.mehdment, either can admit assistant. Sometimesthe editor is the originalWriter;-in-which casehis confc; I their bitlerest' houfsv.^Qt-.only": must hebi guilt or;try to prove that hissubordinate® ment is then.reread by at least one other^Sometimes an editorial assistant is. rriisled hini. With the. ex-President a the.original writer, in which case hisjcomm^nt is reread, by the editor and rstand trial quickly, andlie Will waive any' his closest-friends and advisers" -'stand trial, he asserts, but he .wishes to' • possibly others. And sometimes as many as four or five edltohar staffersr .idefenses challenging therfairness of the mutual combat, the jury may convict Tt is common knowledge that serious allegations and acquit. Either-way he loses. • -ppntrihiitf •h*3 subject / j'ury or trial procedure because he has ; -accusations—hitnq lilc* a swotij ovpr the former —full-faith in . theAmericari/people's, UNDOUBTEDLY PRESIDENT Foi We have adopted this method for a number of reasons: 1) even if we sign rannntvto pivp him a fair trial.'even un-" acted from eompassionJbr'his old'frii editorials, the. editor is still responsible, i);with so many, issues President's head/ —and-oonopm for (hp rnnnfrv anH •der these cifcumstances. arising, this system allows time for more research. One person couldn't his party. Almost tragically the res possibly dti it all, and 3} with editorial staffers writing and r$writiflg,_it will be exactly* opposite-to his hopi firing line Watergate^"which only yesterday seei lesseiis the chances for mistakes and insureseornpletehess.' __ >• ed a dead issue for this November'sel t -Besides the knowledge vou may/already have of the editor (a frustrated tion has, almost rrtiracuiously, sportswriter who backed his way into the job), you should know about the,, thrust info the Oemoct-ats ever fumblin editorial staff which wll be presenting the Texan v/ews during theBmmley's» interest is other misguided people I spent two-and-. 1428A Brackepridge Apartments..... i.faculty salaries because we see this as t . mittee will resplit along the old fault^the most critical factor in mainiainirig Staying on top :'lin«-77 liard-core Nixon haters outraged, the academic ranking of the University. ' • Robin Cravey is an American Studies major who was editor and . ­ and the rest by my own'choice, through To the editor: •. . are, all, many other old Nixon supporters-relieved and the There after . publisher of Ecology in Texas. His interest -— of bourse — is txiolo'gy. voluntary extension^. I stayed that extra I would not ordinarily respond to the great middle perplexed and vaguely un­ colleges and universities in the state of. '• Louis Delgado is a.Latin AmericaaStudies rrEajqr who was a Texan newsf| 'Cime for personal reasons, none of which easy,"And finally, Mr. Nixon himself1 type of emotional attack which Mr. Texas which can provide an adequate un? • assistant last spring.Delgado. away -this summer on a scholarship to the^ "had to do with service to my country or Robert Sledd .directed against Prof. Hill dergraduate education for iriinority-as forced to play the most ignominious role of all. the forgiven sinner watching hisUhiversitv*--of Mexico, will: be organizing the Minorities columil this fall. -to the South yietnamese people. and me in Thursday's Firing Line, but'l well as maj'ority students. But UT I am for total amnesty-for all draft fellow sinners punished. am afraid Uiat his letter may mislead Austin, because of-its academic stature, -•/I-.* Mikfe Morrison is a senior education major. He wasa Texan news assis­ Strange, isn't it. that this man. for all evaders and military deserters from the your readers concerning the position of.. plays a unique rote in Texas' higher i tant. a co-chairperson of TexPIRG and a member of the Student Senate, fi# t Vietnam war. Many of them are morally the Chapter the education. We must strive to maintain his -crisis mentality, seems: unable UT-Austin of Texas T ^ DannyBobbins isa senior journalism major who — like theeditor — has^C 'superior to meor anyof theAmericans I Association of College Teachers on facul­make the large gesture that will sav. that stature'or there will be no reason to knew in Vietnam, Certainly they are ty salaries. . him in the futureas wellasextricate him I " the stittina of uiice-bejflff-a-TexaR -SBOHswriter .-Robbins was sborts editor of' , try tg recruit minority students-.to this -mondlv^supenor to John Kennedy. Lyn- from the present. Egil Krogh, Th^Texan last spring and was aji intern with the Houston Chronicle. Otr principle concern is that of preser-particular institution. David Gavenda served his sentence, could'publicly;su|i?^H| don Johnson and"Richard Nixon!-all of" ving ine mgft academicTtandmg-pHhis--;——Ppofwuinr-iof, Physlrs and Educauon • Steve Russell is a high school! dropout, an Air Force veteran,.a 1972 -port.the; Prpsirtpnfs pardon. Even whom committed heinous crimes university. If Mr. Sledd is not aware that -* • •--• • •­ education graduate of the Universityand is a third year law student.. /•: against -the American and • Vietnamese UT Austin is ina state of decline, then he • - appealing little Donald Segretti could" ^ GueSt Viewpoints Of course, there -will be times,when these six people disagree with the people. I do not know if certain draft should talk to some of the older facultv ru^. W -' . . say that he wasn't sure that he hims< • i --editor on-an issue. If this is the case, the disagreeing editorial assistant can evaders or desertere were cowards, as who were here during the middle Sixties T?x°? deserved a -pardon,; for he. had acte 1 some letters have asserted. Perhaps ^ eaeh p,<,te wrongly. But this man cannot. Upon h' |—-wrjte.acolumn, those stories signified by a picture. But columnsaren't only' •ft-hen ^grewWpidly in Stature. Since-'-fom,s' must: some we're, but at least no draft dodger then "our salary situation hasV election he could not quickly end written because of disagreement. The editor 7and"a5sislants~ may "use~ kiiieo anyone in TTtmipleteh^sensel&ss—^-4eterihratpri nnt nniv with roQpppt to . .• Be typed triple sper .so much death and-agony I -killed; nobody directly, an leading tax-supported universities ' in ' Upon his propriate in editorials. "" -n"---' ill instructor to Vietnamese 'line. election and his partial success in English other states, but alsoin comparison with ­ • Besides thesse. people^ there will be an.opportunity~for others'to contribute^ military personnel, but Iindirectly killed sister institutions in Texas-• • Include the author'* phone tricating-us from'.direct involvemei people, perhaps' those Very students, number. • the conflict, he could'not-forgive the • regularly to the editorialpage. There will be an unlimited corps of volunteer • «/» There are many funding problems fac­. many:of whom I considered my friends, • Be limited to a maximum length fesisters.-And now he.cannotsee hisfj columnists -~t chosen foi"V^ariety and distinctive writing — that should add ing the University in the next biennium of 100 lines. . by enabling them tocome totheStates to opportunWy to .make.History recogni different opinion to a newspaper that has beencriticized for the lack of it. If including TA. salaries, graduate \ Submit guest viewpoints to Drawer get advanced military traiMng (artiilery him-as the'lonely' tragic hero he you would like tocontribute in-this way. please stop by theTexan officesand schools, fli^it,sdiool. etc.) which they fellowMiips aridst^ff salaries, tomention" -D, University Station, Austin,s TX. eh'imself to be: But perhaps-if Richaj a few,-as well as minority scholarships:'"-78712 or -to. the Texan .office in the discuss it with us'. • •' . , " -wifs would use against bther Vietnamese*peo- • Nixon could refuse a pardon he ne' ple: :UT-TACT will EKr working on all of thesei?: basement-level of the TSP Building. would have needed one. • I have nothing but syrhpathy for men Absentee substations I S who. were-crippled';in Vietil^m; .and I fetSt* Any influence TheTexan may have on local, state and national politicians' mourn for those whodied. Mr.Tobin; U[ie is based ona progressive electoral-coalition, of which westudents area vital,^ draft evaders and the^iiiiiitary deserters part When we vote, people listen, and it's no exaggeration to say that our®!?four; those did not send these crippled men por those; votes havechanged the'pplhical face of Travis Countyin the last four years^wi dead men to Vietnam. Why should they be forced to confess crimes they did not ­ -And one way the politicians «gauge our feelings is through The Texap. commit or give-compensatory service, ; Therefore, there isobviouslysomeself-interest in our urging you to register^® -either. John Kennedy, Lyndon Johnson k. to vote in Austin, but this does not detract from the advisability of voting and Richard Nixon sent those men to where we can influence decisions on our day-to-day affairs. ,, • 4i-Vietnam; they are responsible for the i.-, However, many elections are held in Austin1 while students are away on * cripplings, the deaths, the ruined lives of '"thousands of Americans and many more ..breaks. This means votingabsentee"and it means fightuig the traffic and the thousands of Vietnamese. If anyone' - f lines to get to the oneabsentee polling place: the TravisCounty Courthouse^®**fc should, be contrite and give-service it is I*", Monday, the county commissiofiers will orice again face the'quesUbn-of'r^'' Richard Nixon. John Kennedy;and Lyn-.'is - lft :-whether to permit absentee voting substations. There is a precedent — the don Johnson are beyond such terrestial is! fe school board maintained absentee locations inits last spring elections — but -judgment. • And, Mr. Tobm, while you are asking |.r the idea has been turned down before: The needed swing vote seems to be those yeterans in hospitals for their > David Saniuelson, a cqmmissioner' elected with the support of the £ opinions on the war anil draft evaders progressive coalition in Travis-County. * j . -'' ' I 5-s and dedertpte," why don't you also ask ' We hope Samuelson will vote to allow the substations. Anyone who claims -some Vietnamese people, my wife, for the support of progressive voters shdtild always,work to maximize citizen^ example — whose brother-in-law, cousin and last month another cousin have died;®?!1 in the war — how they feel? They willi^i ­probably say-, that they arp very sorry about, the sufferings of the hospital n> • .participation ire government ' f.> ( % THE _DAILY TEXAN -patientsand.the deathsof 50,000 men, but :•* -Wj: »W««» Htwtptpirml ft* UalwrtlH tlUftmfAuitf s they are. more sorry that all this suffer­ EiDITOR Buck HaiVey ing and death was and is completely MANAGING EDITOR' .J— Sylvia Moreno useless, and that it benefited no one but' ASSISTANT MANAGING EDITORS.;.£:.y.',Lynne Brock -•j"- Larry Smith NEWS EDITOR . guest viewpoint Martha JP McQuade MUNICIPAL EDITOR Ken McHam liNIVERSITY EDITOR ' .Richard Fly SjPORTS EDITOR !. .. Herb Holland •AMUSEMENTS EDITOR. ,'•...,..7.7.7.Paul Beutel-FEATURES EDITOR...:.. By BRAD WESTMORELAND question: then merely becomes what to relatively inexpensive new'"bousing^Miirection, To the extent that our s^sti ~ ...Mark Yemma ' (Editor's note: ^Westmoreland is a se­do about it. , which can be purchased today, and. at||i|s:is a free enterprise system, waste is 1 l|HOTO EDITOR. -^(.7.:.. Marlon Taylor cond year law student.) . The economicissue: Don't bother look­any rate, what we don't need is another ing avoided. As for the remaining ;:r_ 4' T<- .1 was utterly disgusted by the-casual, ing for any answers in Cravey's article, waste ^ we need more free ;ISSUE STAFF, ' 'KSfstSr--: high-handed'and misleading -indictment : because he-didn't bother to volunteer r less. This requires the in •tesue Editdr'i?.1. .Anne Marie Philbip of AmeVica's economic institutionsmadei^iiany. What was offered.^vas what by now --General-Reporters ..Carol Barnes, David .Hendricks f external costs and can| by Robin .Cravey in his articleaJHsshould be; rote to any Texas-un-; •News-Assistants ,a.;,:v.>.77frr7TiRoger Downing, Erna .Smith',.Barbara' Williams. aesthetically pleasing, besides represen-v.^not be done by any other economll Marci Wittels, Ann Colwell "Economy and Environment'' in Monj^|dergraduatp -who has been sufficiently ting an affront to a ''sturdier and moret^.', system as effectively. Paper recyclingday's Daily Texan. If I may be allowedj^S immersed in radical-chic gobble-degarb: graceful age " As for .the general higfi3?5/?plants, building-construction material! for purposes of argument to reconstruct||sk American society has-more problems cost of housing, .before pointing the-^imade from compressed junfc, profitablehis inane meanderings (covering^## that he can shake a, stick at, but the finger at what is a highly competitive,-^ emission use.are all-instances of priyat Make-up Editor.... Claude Simpson everything from canned food to legacieis|lf villain is the? corporation who pollutes ; ^hencehoti/in. efficient,nfftninnf . industry, CraveyPtrntinii might,i,t'xAti•.? decisipns,rlmrtlpirvmci . by profiti ' WhlCR'*^ motivated ^ire Editor i. Ann-Wheelock for oiir children) into a topical arrangefefe our air,'gives us shoddy products,'steals--Veil examine the-archaic building codes'^ result in public betterment. men^t, I thinks our considerable!^ our.earnings.unemploys us and generally '^opy Editors...;...7..... .'....".....Jan Phipps, Robert Fulkerson, Joy Howell, /supported by unions, not corporations) --' • Corporations: They were label, differences of opinion .will become more&?& makes life as miserable as it possibly , which keep costs up Finally, I can'? "cancerous" by Cravey I 'submit ihaColleen Doolin,; Brenda.*Barnettt Norma Gfeas6n, Steve Arnold' fhotograpJiersl/^^r" Phil Huber, David Woo highlighted. < . Jri can -But as much as Cravey hates to ad-assure Cravey that American nothing more than his .analysis1-isi • The environmental issue: Now you mit it. these are precisely the m--businessmen would be all-for any declined: cancerous when One' considers that know and I knQw.^'nd evert Cravey,knows%s stitutions, and our ecpnomic structure is,; in interest rates they coijld engineer?'® LttpinlOO* expressed Ui The Dsilje "fexon qrc those of the munication BulWwjj Inquiries concerning delivery isolated, minute business enterprisest&U* or the ^vriter of (he articie and-ve oot ncctwnfy -and cfawded advertising tftoulrf lie matte In TSP BuiUlnft that the world is facing an enviropmen-^,1 precisely 4he-system most' capable of •That problem is a serious one, though''-;' .simply canH 'utilize-economies 0frscaIe"S the. Unfvefvily admlnmratfbn or: (Jms-Boafd: of-• !471424trand(dispJav:a-.» • into it MIL is boyoijd me.) Cravey-feels frankly delighted'to leam thai the"main Tbe."Daily Texas lubacnHes to Hie Associated,1>ms think pf ij., just who is going to build the The. DaWr -Toon' IvpvMltbttHMaidayi'.TuitxItr) I'mted t'reit Internatunal and PacificWen* Serfite' TTie V; ed to shut-downis likely totell.you wherefe y that '.'we must live in these shoddy new, • qualification for making' decisions Is a sturdy',-hardwood 'homes for everyone Tharmay. H*(-F'rl4«y SefAmbtr through ' ifH Tuexiay..W«diw»)iy, ntindty.andFriday Texanjsa nwmbet.of tin Associated Collegiate Press.-llie to go if you hand him the ecology pitch.)* bouses" which the corporations leave us strong drive" for money." If, as Cravey • that Cravey. calls for? Soi^bwest. Awnulijm Coogress .and -the Texan Daily uMiKwtexrtpt holl&n M4etaro .Vmpapcr Association ' _7}/Iahy would-argue that the ecology thing ~ ntj choice blit to buy. While I'm not too --suggests, -"the' word is waste" with < • In summation, bigness hardly meahs' Tf* • digger .'.".itecyclDW"Station*' lor the ncK'ipjpef tre at PMii • is largely"a preddet ot wealthyacademic enthusiasjlc about thin-walled, -regard ftrpojlution, then ttie onlysolution' badness, change should not be confused ^..amtribatioat otiu b»#««it«l W ulepli«w <«!}• BbiHim. Uttieliptd (-"-bonlaii]..21(^1and Speedway, Jester. types .anyway, But lei's assume the: prefabricated housing (red shagand all), _j.it Uw^sUtortal «0k» lTe*a« SIikK«( PubUtaUopI 2lirahd Speedway. Town« ffaUf Unlveriity ^OfSt -r that tiered/, I'll be thje last id deny someonethe right it profitable (a, dirty word).either tq, anv feasi-l" Th6r ' boy one. For some/it affords the only ,-avoid.waste'or allocate.lt in,a usetjil ble alternative in the offing. *4 * V* **?* * f ^ V1K "£« AH >;ft-"PpfKr *" "&j5S? '•Sfl . I „ ^11 i'5' # t n: avo w Agnew bull.... Ry JACKANDEItSON ^ Not until the parleying had' detailed the reasons that 1-fe Nixon ss partTof ihe-paMon—thf roun-I* ftlA4 .(nllfn • J ** ... ' W4, .fcrilrtfj 'Feature _Syn--been completed did a taut, President Ford granted his agreement »• — .Later, the' talks resumed in statement were carefully 1 try-... ... . They, found Nixon mentally­ -v.---: -dveate _ t troubled Nixon put in an predecessor a blanket pardon. ~ZlFEierV-efl4€€—Erpr;iipnflv worked tflit - They were concerned that-; The question t)f conbrition. alert but terribly tired and H WAJjHLJVGTON — TShe' appearance -to murmur his The overriding reason, accor-he migM aggravate the" Ziegler and Miller would slip THE""DETAILS also were *• '.-A amahp nvon f C VwhiWfTl^l 4n tknnl/r II" ~ was brought Up delicately distraught Ziegler stood at .. . dramatic events wh'ldf led" to thanks He ,didn't even men­ding. to • our WJiUe J House Watergate controversy by- out uf tlie-room for Whispered finalised for giving Nixon r! with Nixon's-,track, criijiinal*" • consultati 3ns,•—perhaps with the door while the others .sat --the pardoning of Richard Nix-tion the pardon. Nor. did he . eventual, custody . of his sources;-was to save-Nixon proclaiming* his innocence and talked .<>" can now be told attorney, Herbert "Jack" the: Presi(ient ..At one point. ask about the fate of his from d possible emotional -presidennal tapes arid once i t was no longer possible Miller. They didn't' want; to Becker showed Miller an ad-". • 'Thank you for bemg fair,:'' The former PresiUent didn t former aideswho fac6 trial on collapse. '..documents, with safeguards .'for the courts to establish his make it a conditioner the par- , i\ixon murmured to the 36­ • -• Pfli.ticipate in the conver­Sept 30 forthe alleged crimes, -BUT THE President s • Vance draft of the pardon > • 'to assure thaf they would-be guilt. As one White House don. so they merely'sagtfest.ed year-old Becker "You are a sations at San Clemerite but that he no longer "can be lawyers, Philip. Buch'. wa^ reached-that a pardon, weary emissary sat-down •ft -r«-Cr * "k ^ -Miller flew out to San if the-President agreed la it; .custody of his presidential • with--Nixon .himself . Before , .CKejnente for : the: final ^p.a.pers, but he made no'men­ would be followed, by a state»­ guest viewpoint Becker and Miller were .'negotiations! White House tion of the pardon orthe plight ment of contrition froiSlSan ushered rnto. Nixon's:office, aides say-Ford's parting in-Clemente, The contents; if not • of his former aides they were -cautioned -to keep *structions-.to Becker were: 1 In a few minutes, it was the exact language, of the the meeting.informal' -•ha^hfluld riot promise Nixona over. History had been made. • •-• •• -• pardon but shouldtnionvrbirrr' "vTt -• ,B* MICHAEL RUSH ; • gunfire VpI 9 ft p^nl»l thj™ f.•ki, nnllLjhirt'a parrlnri pnee.­sr (jfiditocVrwle: Rush" Is n teaching assistant in the University where the trials."will be held. still'believe the lie. The Attica ' ble-and 2) Beck.er "should . English department atid -a -membcF ulXew. American Brothers;face trial in aliostile-rtiy-'iar-^m-^ir-owm'^^V'St^'-tlMi'-ttte-^tergateease- Motomenta' munities ' ' v_.^_was an "albatross", which . Three years Ago Friday. 32 prison inmates and -9 prison WHILE THE prosecution has unHmi*t^.money'ai^'!tfaff/h»j"pf&TFor;:'r.-the,l.2Q0.piisoneri: m.Dyard of the massive maximum security trial judge has refused to consider prison conditions or harass--. San'Clemente at 11 p.m., niitp'rivJri f rf -a .-or^". a-ve^age,cp)leg.e attended, medjcaladvLsor for Further prison wa;) to. unleash a level-of-terror-unknown before in 20th me.nl of .thedefense as. relevant to the case and has clamped a Ca I ifornia time., and im-'2S^l!'T!Sts^°fresidenc«?aEeand. information or write r. Century America. Yet the struggle of the Attica Brothers con­fortress-1ike security over[the courtroom-: IH such a kangaroo-, mediately'werttihW-a-ttwee-™ ^Ouin more effectively as-othercriteria are used in a • A.M.C.A.P. Inc Box tinues as:they iface the second wave-of repression: 61 par- court atmosphere the Attica Brothers-must fight for their -'hour huddle with Ziegler se^ng y^^qua.lifieations ,^pmpara^"ve.atial^is with 8747. Boston ' Mas­ -^..Ucipattts in-tltc-reheilion are going on trial this falL collectively lives After the discussions broke up and mor? accurately di-the previously accepted "sachOsetrs 02114... fdCirtg 50,000 years of prison sentences and a presfceaiien team. ^The Altifa Brothers say that "Attica is all of us " In the at 2 a.m.,, Becfeer and Miller, recting youri medical class at the medical ' " -* . .•• trfv MALCOLM X once safU, ' The-system-is-very.good at making separated .blatdCi white and brown and were-uhified..against:fl.--.thgp retired to guest rooms in tl'c criminal appear to.be the victim aiiclthevictim appear to be 'common enemy. In his stajenient to the press'after the assault tne ban nilr)nfTrti'teT-m-f-wpXl.j»n/t1fnr.Qvcr a year tiririrtn the "\\l)ich has received $5 mlllion-from the State of New York course of the rebollipir, the inmates o\'ertame the distrust that-drank a couple of beers and families of.hostages who died at Attica.;';He went on to blame 'to tdldphone a progressreport ­upnsmK had acted on their knowledge that the criminal. ~TlVirfelrelliu»^feftfli^ifghly=8r^m2fidjp«nliitinnarv tarU'r-g nf to.Bu.chen at thfe White House. ^system in. tlie United-States .is a total failure by-organizing militants" and called the inmatedeatlts^'justifiable-bomicide."' :JBemselves to demand better-conditions. Officially. U»e goal of Rockefeller;, our .yice-presidential Tiominee, Was only actin'g.irv.­ I vvMiutvvf '*o«J uiiij Ur jiho prison system was to-' rehabilitate.'.' but at 'Attica the the.tradition of his 'fatlieri\who oh.April.20,1914., ordered an at­.iPH-ionm were kept in.tiny individual cells14 to16 hours a day wcit; on sirixing-uieir children: Lu ldcE~6tf striking miners, their* wives and children at L'udloW, and were let out'oinyTpr rniSil57Wteanmgleas:Worlt-and4o-roam —Colo.. The Ludlow Massacre cost 33 peoble their lives. alKRU. "yards'' the pnson • • • . : • . ' TOp-'A'ttipV-dproncSTfi k.-.-n,„ oji -• alKnu. the-four "yards'" of nnson. TKe A'ttica defenseTs.supported bv" the peppier Send all con­The prisoners began to mako1 "the connection between the tributions and requests" for additional informatioit oii Attica to: poverty and racism lhe\ faced on thd "outside." \*hich kept Attica; BrotherS;Defens& Committee, i47 Franklin St.. Buffalo Pierced Ears Anyone? .iftem hustling just to survive,-and the brutality of prison life-NY. 14202. ;• Thev Avere,unwanted and forgotten: the state sought only the ,Still, >v:?, can remember, them best by realizing what they' Saturday this week' only, Yarlng'^ . .most efficient way..to remove them fro'm society. The Attica fought for: Prisons bring out in itssharpest form the conflictin ••rebellion was a crv of protest not just against the prison bad as our, society.betweep. the .rich and, powerful;, who govern ul­UT store makes it easy! No fuss, no it-was. but against the-teri ible waste or human lives that our timately by force, and the poor and oppressed, to whom:death-appointment and s\st£m perpetuates. by resistance'is preferable to a--life ofsubmission, v- purchase of a pair of earnings. You • • TUEN-GOV. Rockefeller appointed the McKay Commission . to investigate the.Attica massacre, and.-its report is available choose either 14 kt. gold-plated it documents the policy, of neglect and hostility, which was earring, 740, or 14 kt. gold earring,",v:-r'J°ted in the pervasive-racism of the prison staff.'who by and 'P*0P-. Yaring's UT store only. '-'••"large were from rurah upstate'New. York while most Of the prisoners,were from black and brown urban ghettoes. These guards and state troopers were whipped-to a fury of racial hatred for the assault by officially repealed lies that hostages had-been killed and mutilated' by inmates. Later, tlie"truth Mexican-American Culture and iroo —Musical Events Commktefts PEANUTS TXE PRINCIPAL'S ,1 fWTE 60IHSTQ THE PRlNClBXl'S present 0fFlCe?M6?l fO?PlCS« 1ALWAYS HAVE THE HZS.MA'AM.,, FEEUhtS THPDT ill NEVER COME BACK,.OR-THAT NOONE WILL EVER SEE ,M£ A6AIN-• UN GRAN -­BAILE ' On-the-D?§jg, 2406 Guadalupe m 7SOO£J A10RNIN6...] ' £s3 . i. • . I WA5TOIX?"TO AL10MEP RETORT TOTHE ,* PRINCIPAL.: with Mike Saucedo and . The Latin Im'ageif^^ Saturday, September 141''I SI.00 UT Students, Crossword Puzzler -Answer to Vesterdav's Puzzle 8 p.m. to,J2 midnight f$p Faculty and Staff' ACROSS ,,, DOWN B|E!S. BE30a 0S3S JJnion Main Ballroom ' $1.60 Others ­ •1 Part ot body *;g 1 Jump. pHsagEBa s@n i A RnsKlcied 2 Artificial -. aa_acst§ aaraaaa ;-.-9 -Conjunction^ : language Hgra E53I3 QHS ' 12 -Room in ; 3 Pretentious; & snsns [isa aataa harem home ­ 13 Cognizant __ilKa 3(50 G5Q@ 4 Intertwine' 14 For shamo! 5 Bo Indebt ; BamJ3saos@0 si! 15 Protoclivc 6Symbotfor , nea HDB rans • organization,i calcium • . BCIHH BBS nsns, <17 Form of s--.-,7 Dim SiEg iSHS soa Jortery 'i•" •. 8 Conduct ,' 9 Spare the 19-High card '; nsaatis Huaia gaa 20 Cowboy .'' price ot fflaara Brants ' * compatltlert 10 Nothing OHS QncSS G30Q 2.1 Heavy club 11. Rlver.m 25 Surglcal 39 Philippine iO 23 Quarrel Scotland thread-V Moslems24 Gaelic "js 16 Frozen s"°; 26 Wear away 40 Largo tub 27,Beverage i• ; water Vr 20 Guldo's high 42 Roman tyrant •28 Vast ago-/ '*'18 Touches . ; -~>A3 Fliday C?wNoting salmon29 Church ; ':20 King Arthur's 29 Goal 44 Existedbfdffat•• f ' -lance 30 Symbol lor . r21 Partners 31. Finished Anger Friday, September 13" 32 Diho -• 46 Enemytantalum 22: "Winged 35.Deer's horn 47 Silkworm ' 3T Antlered , -.•: 23 South Korean 48 Male sheep .11:30 a.m. to 2 p.m. INTERNATIONAL FOOD 36 Distantiinim&l •sotdlor 37Noose 51 Note of scali BAZAAR.-: Student^ will prepare and serve dishes from 32 Abstract ->; being 1 3 3 A 3 6-7 r~ 9 to 11 their native countries. Nominal prices charged Cor food 33 Preposition Union Patio. Union Program Council. || 34 Babylonian iT" nT hero \4~: . 12 noon.. FINE ARTSFILMSERIES: ARTIST: CLAES 31.0036 Novehy 13 M6 rr* 16 OLDENBURG. Studies the artist preparing for a major 37 Briek­ exhibition of his works. ' • ,' carrying 19 M 20 ! dcvlce I THEARTOF CERAMIC DECORATING: Leon Moburg ml'-: *7? if 38 Olspatch W) 22 73 57" 25 26 shows two students His approach to various techniques of­ 39 Smalt roq r 40 Wind 27 ! decorating ceramic greenware. Union Theatre. Free. 28 2? IRtfrcator :_ . T Fine Arts Committee.-V : > 41 Singing voice 36 43 Crony ­ 32 M 33 ' 5 p.m. CANOE TRIP ON THE I^OWER GUADALUPE. (colloq ) 34 33 Leave from East Mall fountain ip private cars: Recrea­ 37 :44 More pi w g . A ­ tion Committee. ferocious 38 M 39 46 More obeae i .5 to 7 p.m. S.O.T.A. HAPPY HOUR. Club Caravan, 49 Exist 41 . 42 „Villa Capri Motor Hotel, • . ' ~ -SO Moving part 1HP 43 of motor '. 44 i_i -- 7, 10 p.m. WEEKteND'FILM:. OLlfCKV MAN:Admis­ #*i » 4B l*Vy. 52 Period of time; sion $1 fop UT ;stuctents, faculty, and staff; $1.50' 53 Weight of H fel -49-I50* members.'Jester Audi Theatre Committee. -India 32" 54 Willow . — — 8:30 p.m. CONCERT: WILLIS ALAN RAMSEY. Ad­ 33 34" 55 Edge v. -v; 3T mission .$1' for ,UT students, faculty, arid staff; $1,50­ sWia Diiftr. by UniUd Future SynSlutiIn pthers. Union Theatre. Musical Events Committee. Wallow IO . sh 12: rtiidnight. .MIDNIGHT FILM: INVASION OF THE in the comfort & BODY SNATCHERS. Admission $1 for UT students, & of a Wajlabeis! faculty, and. staff; $l-,50 -members. Union Theatre;­Theatre Committee^,-,' , Glafks of England AUSTIN'S a -Saturday, September 14 comes to Texas with' 'ja naturally-formed 9'" •10 a.m. -2\ptti FRISBEE FLING AND CROQUET,. GOT A c shoe in soft sand suede •} TOURNAMENT. South 'Mall; 25' Admission. Prizes', ,m\ Special padded insole, J'1! SATURDAY MORNING^FUN CLUB. Film will be 'The Time Machine." Union Theatre Free Theatre' piantation-jcrepe soles, ^ ,-r"­ GUATEMALAN Committee Indian moccasin construction. i 7,10 p m,WEEKEIVDP1LM-O LUCKY MAN.See Fri­day CONNECTION P-m, to '12 midnight DANCE-DIEZ Y SEIS DE SEPTJEMBRE BAILE. ^Traditional dance to celebrate om'>'e'e • 451-2494 miH«jL^Mu$icalj-Bvenjs Committee. Main Ballroom 1 SIM p.m.'COr*|cfcRT:;WILLIS ALAN RAMSEY..See "'"":'t "&Z*-.h? All over town < ''^¥,5SrJ riday, September J3; 195^4-THE DAILY TEXAN Page Wlmm I r (* J '• zrj ^ T, * •* ^ ^ "va— '" " .• -.> -i. i* r.>i .-V-KV'^V.-ITIj-vrV* -v-r.,<-..r ... '"^V" '* ' --1 '•:• -.-v vr.-.--—.r * .\ ;; n .s>-. ^ -/<"R . -C' . I • • J. /,v 1 '••*. 7 j -I '.' .1-, *•. •.,vv.;;vu;*v.s ••;•'. -r.. —- v.-•: ~~ ---*.:•{.'.~J ••••-• •"--.-'F O--..••,,'/:;;.~v-!•"•.»>-.,/ Y -.-. ..• ^"k-..-'I--v v — «•*•»**•*".. "i,VEsr,'w«'«" «'*" ^ *HJ-,'J -t-4*"*'" • >• 'tVfe*\; V <•* j•p"-.Yr"i'" leen playing nothing to'do with that small , televised'Iqeallv'Tho local in-, Ksposito. and he s.supposed to!?p "J"— Texan Staff Writer m-ho^l-gatnes tar-so manv,"^ figure.:" Lundstedt said-"If it testerestni thisgnme is justfan-V run with the football like other; . T.BOSTON — Not: counting \ears llral this is like our 12th-was up" towe, we'd beplaying­tastic , Espositos plav hockey -Uie...Co!toii Bowl, Texas has game '• -Ohio Sjate in Columbus." v BC FINISHED last season BC's offense: while not aS'-s^ never played an llth regular' Maybe> it i| the 12th jjatne OHIO STATE! IS "another 5 j&vf with a resspectabJe 7-4 record, -big ii5(-man>. was still potent_ "M- though national power Xh&C&dded~an: -season. game* even from the placers' standpoint „one game worse than Texas . . enougfi to ruti up some scorMS**®" it most of the NCAA has doneso. but financially. eachvbowl • oxtra..game to Its schedule ,,but Yuoika'isn t altogether op-last season — 45-0 over T© \* for, the last few years: . name a Southwest Conferencev this seasoaJLike Texas. Ohio Jimisttc about Saturdav's pie: 44-7 over Navy: 59-14 ov The Horns wil! tins \ear. team playj> nets a fractfon of State s extra opponent is not *'Jgame with the Horns ; Massachusetts:and:42-21• opening, their 1974:season with: the.revenue a regular season e\act|y a threat-— Oregon mJgsr-r"-I • don t -think we .11 stop Hol^ Cross . & iCoach. Joe Yucika's. Boston gamedoes. That's because the State § ^'I'exas' offense '.he said 'I Meanwhile, BC s fourlosseSk.College Gagles at &30 p.m.. revenue from_ those bowls is • "I"m not-sure '.whetlier op sdon fcknow that anvbodv does."--came-to bowl participants.^. 'Samntiv -iii-Alttrom^Uadnim splk~up" amofig SWC: not w:'' on the BC campus"."" ~~ . , " "^FKeTlg'gaT^eFthgULghi Wiflf't-—wi-t'stpargamer'-- 43zit. /-an^vou ve got to defend it all (28-14) plus M laini (15-10) anct^., net the athlettc department ;Athletic Director J. Edward itc i?1 Thr-P^"!^x­ ~r -Tlie" t'awn-.: :much*m6ney a_t-_-all — about—"-fWeaver'-Mid_ "But.it you're College footbalF game will •^H offensive is-as versatile as anv. werfaiU badlv beaten once ir|F" i SSS.000 — considering Texas 'gqing-:to -plav a-Texas or ^ : in the-countiy " W, be* broajlcast live at 6*23'_! mmmm r? i-_ -Hmk., " realizes about.$250,000 from Notre^ Dame, the coaches "i -=-»••.p.m. S^turda\ on KLBJ--.'r /Campbell Akins Clayborn ~. L.'fst year BC shciclcei ffit" Bat Y'uilka "ofily is •eadj Oklahoma game and--wouldTnuchTrather do it tacer—' AH 58t> and*\VOAf ljflO' -_Southwest"bv deleating Texas terested_ in "keeping invth^?other seltouts ea"ch year' ' in the-season." «— didn'tj^d:._an_e)dded^k-'~*' ~Z siW "Look... I had absolute^-. : Financially. Ohio.:State • The admittance of Houston Longhbrn squad, Texas Coach Darrell Royal announced Thurs­ THE > year. emotional; motivation to the SWC caused even more-day. • • ••••.,". • V , ••• . •••.•;•-.•• fullback Roosevelt1 Leaks be^8 CORKER scheduling •. problems. "We The three, sophomore defensive-back. Joe Bob Bizzell. and ing readj'T^r the game. ^ had to drop Nebraska and two reserves. Ken-and Don .Thujrman, were released for dis­ SUPER COLOSSAL I-Colorado from ourschedule to ciplinary reasons. . -a . .. -Saturday'sjgameshould also f\. WINE SAVINGS see the erherg'cnet of make room for UH.'"-"It's a personal matter between the playersrand me," Royal freshman Karl Campbeij as a^.Ellington said ' ~ said. He declined further comment. > , . Yago Sqngrla (5th) . dominant force in both the Bizzell, a former All-State halfback at .Odessa-Permian, .... MAYBE Houston's admit- Marty :Akins-led Texas $1.49 . started one game at safety last season. The 138-pound safety IMPORTED AUTO PARTS .tance into the SWC and the •offense and theoutcome of the was recently moved to second team when Royal switched Ray­ Cold Duck (5th) llth. game-scheduling 'did gome.: With the Horns mond Claybom from KalfbSck to Bizzell's position -' mess upTexas' next 100 years defense $1.53 ; 452-0244 Ken Thurman is a sophomore and Don Thurman is-a intact/including of ; football schedules.. And former halfback Raymond jreshman;jrhe^_were^resexye linemen from White Deer \lt , Imported French 4.' Clayborn atsafety,' tlie Eagles Beaujolais (5th) r, •AUFA4IOMEO •FOBD (Brilnh) . ; •PORSCHE should be easy pickings for • $1.47 •'AUDI •HILLMAN , •RENAULT BOTTLE : Texas-. ' v .. :. •AUSTIN •HOHDA •RILEY Imported German , •AUSTIN-HEALEY •JAGUAR •ROVER SHOPS j We'-rc Not REDNECK j m liebfraumilch (5th) •B.M.W. L.U.V. (Chevrolet) '•'^•SAAB'^ The stores .that brought you the $3,915' ' : Barbers • CAPRI(Lincoln/Mercury) •MAZDA v!^smc*ss£ ^ * $1.19 >CITROEN •MERCEDES-BENZ > •SUBARU BACARDI PITCHER for only 95' and the £ | MEDICAL ARTS : -'A* •' r,Jtm * Imported Italian >COLT ( Dodge) •M.C. S&0 MMBRAMVf< BUDWEISER HAf for only 99',now bring w BARBERSHOPS j lambrusco fSth) >comnirM .5?" •MORRIS ^•TOYOTA you the genuine BOTA from SPAIN, : 2915 Red River 477-0691* •CRICKET (Plymouth} • •NASH * TRIUMPH -$1.19 ~ kTSUN ! »OPEl •VOLVO which sells for up to-SS.00 ctlseWhere/ ; Bud or Schiltx j > FIAT ^ •PEUCEOT • VOLKSWAGEN •PINTO iFotd U3.A.) Leather-covered, for only 2 •6 pack $1.39 : Individual catalogs of parts and accessories availablc.iorlhese models. j 908-A WEST 12th j ' NEWi NHW! HOW ABOUT THIS? Schlitz < at Lamar j MADRIA-iVfADRIA Beer : ; . . (5doors downfrom » PLUM HOLLOW Liebfraufflilch ; Villa Espana Restaurant) I OS^ NR BTLS by Annie Green Springs SANGRIA St, Petrus Regional 5209 NORTH LAMAR : 472-6161 : DlstribOtor GOT A BICYClt 4.9? c Sth 5th 88 Srii 1.69 1.19 COME TO THE RACE! Novice races -All classes^ Sombrero RUM IN . Sunday, Sept. 15 PARTY REUBEN'S 1 • 5 P.M. QUARTS . . . • 12th & Red:River 476-8990 Nelson Field, across THE PEDALER BICYCLE SHOPS .80 pr; 5th from Reagan H.S. -, • Castillo 80 pr. (Halfway between UT & Riverside-Dr.) sponsored by •8311 Research ; 836-8311SHINER BEER MRom (Just off 183 a NiUmarl Capitol Bicycle Of Austin ^ '-Racing Assn. Pass-Out Games oniv AU specials(ash or'check only Announce. Their Warehouse Cleorance The Village 2700 Anderson Lane ¥&. 453-3329 VMS • • •--*•-"• • rti-iW........ a ' ' 615 West 29th St. 472-5549 -Y.V\: fi?y. I Trak Bicycle Royal A$p6rt • i > Simplex Derailleurs by Gitane,. Simplex Derailleurs -' tC; W*^ Quick Release Hubs Various Frame Sizes Clencher Tires 4 'r,1 Lam Brakes Tool Kit 7> ;V,REG. 5129,00 -. rf Reg. S125.00 WT&. Sale tv,L \ Sale jaaie " T' ^ "-5 $8900 ® KM W- U -?>its b las&sfstfesi-fsy M m ** - ^ 5UP nuTuiwiiwsiiinm, gz. »»* M 1 \ -i,i—TTirlm-wifniN Used Bicycles i >. 3 Speed, 5 and 10 Speeds " wmm tUtuuH Tinea AitwnMM•ALiar tiwtiiV: WTMOWKK $6500 *okoo #15"! t i IfA"*" t t ^ m mpail — . ... .t&m ..J$9L _ ijLV-icycles Assembled . SEE YOUR OFFICER & Fine Tun< ~ INFORMATION TEA] 16-18 SEPT BEB BLD_ Specializing In Raleigh, Gitane & Peugeot 18-20 SEPT ENG BLDG SAKS -SERVICE -ACCESSORIES ereallcolleQt 512-431-0224 ?age 6 Friday, Septelmber 13, 39>r4 ,THE D^ILY TEXAN . A*J *<• i-**• *1 "r i 5 ^ V if t \\ ? »S irtft.* '*•' J W•i W*'1 k O's, 3-0 •_ BALTIMORE (AP| — Unbeaten Mike Wallace, making hi's .first American league start, held Baltimore Icr three hits m • seven and two-thirds inttings for Ms sixth consecutive victory, and the first-place New Ycfrk Yankees tagged Jim Paltrier for ' three runs Uii the' 'eighth inning anddefeated the. Orioles'*3-0 -ThuftdSy^ni^itV. • •_ . , -­ ... Dick Trdrow 'relieved Wallace in the eighth-and completed a­four-hitter, the Yankees' 22nd victory in the last .29 games. The victory leH-th^m^twp and a half games ahead of the Boston Red Sox-in-the American League's Bast-Division .i'.-. -IT-:r--. •* * •" -• PHWaPEL^HIA; 'AP>. Mike Schmidt blasted a threeyun i: homer/ and 'Dei Uhser smashed a two-run shot in a six-run eightlMrimng tOjgivebthe Philadelphia-Phillies a 64 victory,over "TtreTMttifitn^h^fi^^-Tirarsday' ntahtr­ —/-• ;> /::• * • •1c * -„ . CLEYELAND — Carl YastrzeittykflBdnftthe-eighth-in-. ning-with a double andscored on Dick'lVlfAUWWs.sacrince'fjy: to give the Boston Red Sox a 3-2 victory 6ver the ClevelandJn-'; dians Thursday.^night "" j *_ . \v??7''> -O BLOOMINOTON:' Mmn (AP)—: Sal Bando's sacrifice fly dgliverpd Fnrn tfiiMbasem theeighth innings giving; "tfie^'OaSrahiTA'S'a 2-1 victory•over-Hie-Minnesota Twins'Tfiws-: day niEhtrf , ' \ ^ NE,W YORK'(AP) ^Reggie-Srruth's-22nd. homesun.of the" season touched off a six-run, sixth^inning rally that sparked the 'St,-Louis Cardinals to a 12-5 victory over the New. York Mets Thursday night * * *­ •g: DETROIT (AP V — Tom Veryzer belteff a. two-run.homer/jn; "the 10th inning, and relief pitcher John HiUer.notched a redord­setting 17th victory as the Detroit Tigers beat the Milwaukee • Brewers 9-7 Thursday night. •• ig r €IJVGINNATI (AP)ircrrJohnoy Bench drove in six runs,-four of his career; topace theCim^ • cinnati Reds to a f-2 victory over, the Atlanta; Braves,ana sweep of; their twi-mght. doubleheader.Thursday 'r£; ' •* * "CHICAGO TAP) Ken Henderson's 18th-home nurof the season gave the Chicago White Sox a 2-2 tjerwith the Texas ^Rangt'i s in tlie sixUritmiflg Thursday night, -moments.be£ore_a_ heavyvijlownpour halted Uie Bame,rA'i3-, houj they stand AMtttCAN HAGUE: NATIONAL HAGUE 7W E«r Eoftt •* \W I Nt.'-Gft H* 'New York. 7B u .542 •.-— .Pittsburgh -71 1,1 6i 536 Boston ....... 75 68 .574-Si. Louis .. 76 '68 528 •Balitmore 75 $21 J Phuaohle 73 71 507 Cleveland-. 71 71 :S00. 6 New York.. i* ; 65 76-.461 Milwaukee 69' 76 .476 9*9' MonlreaV -v 65 77 45B­ Oeirolt'... 66 70 .458 17 CMcago;>-57 :65 * .401 . , Wnl w«u OaktanJ .. S3 67 572 LosAngeies.9C; *52""" 634 TexAi. 77 61-.531 6 Cincinnati • " ' 88 56 6U Minnesota 72 500. JO'.'j •Atlanta 78 67 538 Kan City.. 70 73 .490 12: Houston '.ZlAt 71 71 500 Chicago.*. 70 74 .466 \2*j • San Fran J—». 66 77 462 CaHforoia. $8 87 1400. 7i San Diego 52 92 361 ThtHnrfov'* Oom*»-Thwtday •Cam*« Boston X.Clev«fa'nd 2 Cinc^nnaH 9-6>-AilantA 6-7 New -York 1-B»H5morft 0 : • vW Phtladelp^la 6. Pittsburgh.* •• D^frolt 9t-Ml)wau*e* 7. iO ^nnlr>gt^ St. Lotas 12, New York 5" jOakUnd 2. Mlr\ne&ota \ Montreal 4. Chicago i •-iiHooston at San Diego, late " G8 V*3 4VJ 11 H"i WKr n 3 W* 19 24V 9 " 39 r Onty yames scheduled -Los Angeles ^t san PranciiCfl. ifl'C" Shoe Shop *SALE * We make and • SHEEp SKIN, j "• . -.-;--• , repair booti , RUGS ,ihoei belts .. triin Man-V Manv $coo'' $750 .j&5«s O Beautiful Colors I leafher . -LEATHER SALE * goodt. Vortoui kinds, colon--75' per ft.. unuttfAcua Capitol Saddlery 1614 Lavaca Austin, Texas . 478-9309 pg Clip & Save ' Repair Clip & Save Qi I.of-. 1*1 «*! Sarvlce and Repair all Brands jfioj \*\ i ft! ClIAN-CREASt (•Si -j ADJUST lottwn Iracktt ...... ..3.50 Hm4 S«t ,........ . . 3.00 Braku -,.,»1.5Q n if' fr#al Wb#tl, .7.... ..7S0 I ' Rmt Vfliitl .•....•;i ..350 . |D«raIlleur< ~ ijo I j j• Rx-flat* (wheel,off bike) :.v.....;:?ivv 1.50 | ; | >| Tru wheel* (off bike) front, 1.50, rear, 2.00 I ||i PARTS AND ACCESSORIES I i•of j Si CycU CoddyCar Bike Rack,..................12.95 !°.i |K|27x1!vGwn Will Tire ; 3.29 In I ' 10 speed XalkhoK Simpltx Derailleur ...._,.,89.9£ l I WE SPECIALIZE IN BICYCLE WHBCLS — loWCST I PRICES I I «,! Mon.-Sof. Q I I# P fl , I D A fU 4627 Red River, I|j. '0 6 DIIVC IvMvIV Au.tin, T.«a. [Q| |' ••! Highway 620 In Round Rftck 'ff'.fe|«-! I°®| Wf MANUFACTURE COMMERCIAL BIKI RACKS |p Clip_& Save Repair Clipjt Save ®V , "They've got a'very effective fS ite •m YouDeserve aBreak Today Five Locations Jn Agstin (01^74 McOon*id!»Oorpoftioff , ^k ;! Robinson Sold To Clpypland tAH Frank IRobihsoiv, a $172'.000-a­year designated hitter, was sold for $20,00f by the Califor­ Tiia^-Angels Thursday but did— not play with the Cleveland In­dians^Thursday, night against Boston • • Robinson. 39. the only man to be chosen 'most • valuable player in both major leagues, obviously was not surprised • that he was leavingthe.Angels • after nearly two Reasons with the team that is in last place in the American League West. i.."i''He's out buying-his air­plane ticket and plans to bein Baltimore; Friday.V said _ Robinson's .wife." Barbara —Ann^-­ ,jp in litiiiltiSs wmsm^m Big Game Boxers Ali, Foreman Train in Luxury S^LET Zaire TAP) — as envthing to providing.the_ Muhammed Ah lives in a African backdrop for the white villa, draped with trainrng, phase of the hibiscus, in crocodile-Foreman-Alt. title fight here. crawling distance of the Sept;'25.. Congo River _ v THE FIGHTERS would, GeoFge-'Foreman-is staying.-, .almost have: to turn on their in what would pass across,the • radios to 'make certain that Atlantic for a$46,000 suburban they-reirilyiare .a .half hour's ranch-house-. It's down' the drive from big game country-road from-3-thatched sentry . and not.in some equatorial:im-.. box that looks a little like an itation di Grossjnger'Si withV African hut. but possibly not couple ol Chinese arches and enough so. to make it into a African motifs thrown in for SeeZaire travelogue:. . exoticism. 1 The ^somnolent Congo; and The fight camp is part,of a flie^n^Ttfrrottse come as close" •• presidential' Do If Ag^n, GetciIffr . NORMAN. pkla, (UPI) --President'Ford has been asked to ''pardon'!.the Oklahoma football team-so the5ooners will be eligible for ^television Coverage. . Seve'n emplQw^of ^rman .Municipal Hospital sent " -Ford-a '-telegKHTi. whieH stated;:;;''since pardons are the orde'r'of the day, please pardon the Oklahoma-University"r football team so 'they may be nationally televised." The_ NCAA and Big Eight Conference have placed a ban on Oklahoma television appearances because of "a recruiting violation. ' • U.S. DisL Ifudge-Stephen.Chandler dismissed an an­ -Ult Tef.photo titrust suit aimed at reversing the ban Wednesday* in "' Oklahoma City. -r • Rennie Stennett throws to first, s •Arby's. » Arby's;• Arby's • Arby Sunday Special Regular 2 Ham SAVE Vafue Sandwiches 80 $|18 "Full Ravor Hickory Smoked Ham Steomed Piping Hot on Large' . Bring e dolt and »n)ey th« Arby Atmotph*r* SfiSQtnfi S^6cl Bun. Mu*l httnt Ad With Pvrtftf&i • : (Qwodolup* Slpr«.Qrily) ' • Arby's • Arby's • Aeby's • Arby's • Arby's • Arby's INFORMAL CLASSES -1 Begin Sept. 16th week unless;stated otherwise 472-9246: Held at University Y. 1. MASSAGE -Mary Petrigre>y (472-5034),_6 lessons/$l5; 11-T2:30; Mon. or Th. CHILDREN S THEATER -apes 8*12.Sat. .at-10? 6 les./$15: Janet Yaiinq (479. 7448}-'—— ' . .......... 3. HANDICRAFTS -Jan Moore (447-5391), 6 les./$15. T.Th. 3:00; knit, crochet, macrame. 4. MODERN DANCE -Betty Fein; 6 lessons/515. 5:30 Jues. IVi hr. Y Auditorium. • nuifSZrf?!!' Kelley: (453-3089), 12 lessoris/$2d;3-4 Mon. & Thur*., Y Aud. 6. PHOTOGRAPHY -Alan Pogoe (478-8387) Mon..7:30. BeginSept. 23rd. A 5 week course for $1.5. Bring your.,own camera, learn alf basics. ' •'• 7. TAROT CARD READING -EdwinDuncan (444-4067). 12 lessons/$15.M.Ei Jtoom Mon. & Wed. 5:30 or Tues. & Th. at '5„:30, (Deck not included in cost.) :­ 8. HATHA YOGA t larry Young (454-7448),. 6 le*sons/$H. Mon, 5:30, Y Aud. ' Yarby Gratt0rrK(451-4979^, 6 lessons/$15. Wed. or Thurs. 5:30. HATHA YOGA & BODY AWARENESS -Joan Levlne-(451^4871), 10 lessons/$20. Classes at 8 a.m. and 9 a.m. Mon. -Thur*. " , KARATE.-Dwight Wong (454-5470).Classes at Castillian Dorm; 1st lesson free. $15 for 2 lessons/week or $18 for 3 per week. BEGINNERS: M & W 6-7:30; Sat. 3-4; T.TH-7:30-9:00 p.m.-Sun.! 4:36-6;00 INTERMEDIATES -T:TH. 6-7:30, Sun. 3-4 p.m., (Castillian -24tK & San Antonio. 1st floor -garage area) ATTENTION IAW STUDENTS: iTODAY js-the- H i • .-o' r ;• -'flftf k-jfri­ fo have your picture taken ' P*&L ' •ft* for the 1975 PEREGRINUS "•> law School "4l Yearbook $$' Mis ^STUDIO HOURS: .1^ 8:30 -12:30 1:30 -4:30 TOWNES HALL AUDITORIUM rget to Order Your The 1975 EREGRINUS n you have vow picture taken" 0nly *6>30 eludes an .experimental farm: ran bv the;. Communist Chinese It has a big swim­ming pool, wicle lawns of iparched grass and a series-of low. white buildings where! members-rof Zair-es-lone : polrtical pa rty gatner foi rest •and indoctrination. The. -choicest villas have-been turned overtp.the boxes-. and'theirstaffs-' i * « : THEIR LIVES-.converge at the convention-halt ^midway that-has been stocked with a ring and .punching bags. If -handlers are careful, there is no reason their paths weeks. Ali s'villa fi'asTwo blue-tiled plush that would-flot be out of . --place m a cut-rate showroom. : ^television, a phonograph and ?5;s;® a wall photo of .President mxk • M&butU'Sese.Seko." His food js prepared bv his. " own cboks:and will not follow the* local training table. pattern'which for the Zaire .>s • na t inna 1 ;.sb.c£.er.. tea m -.sometimes, includes monkev meat. Foreman, who is room­ing with his.brother Robert,. •••his dog -Pasha r an*a-couple.of •-cousins, will have his 'meals in if his villa, too. • AIJHOLUiH . crocodiles occasionally Kinshasa area'.'there are"non/.1 , OLD CROW -! »••••>r>11iljjlit Pniii-Hnr -, WINDSOR CANADIAN BOPmof CanadianWhisky ....­ JlM^BFAM "^ : M Proof Straight Bowbon Whukry ..-..Vi STILLBROOK . 96P^ool Straight Bourbon Whtikcy ... .v,: «•.... ia BACARDI RUM 80 Proof l*wi»rto Rkan Rum .., SCHENLEY VODKA SO Proof Vodks V.;,... GORDONS GIN 86ProofG«n' SOUTHERN COMFORT 100 Proof Jiquvvr .«• BONET CHAMPAGNE CalrlDry.Rnk.Cold Duck BRUGAL RUM 60Proof Virgin Island Rum QUART 3.88 HAIG SCOTCH $6 ProofScotch Wh«ky-»* . 5.191 LEGACY #0Proof-Scotch Whisiry*.. « 3.59 MACKENZIE-­ B6 Proof ScotchWhisky C3UART 4.79 HIGHLAND BREEZE 80-Proof-Seokh Whiiky.,.;......'.5ih 3.39, USHERS GREEN STRIPE 16Proof Scotth Whrsk^ -• -" s,h 4.89 ANCIENT AGEB6 Proof &trotghtSovtbon Whtikoy ... -Vz GAL. 8,99 .WALKERS GIN90 Proof Wn ^4-­ V2 GAL 7.99 FALSTAFF6NRBolri« 6 PAK 99c PABST CANS6CANS , 6 PAK 117 SCHLITZ 4NBS5»It.«— . V ; . "77 , 6 PAK 125 LONE STAR6NBBottks 6 PAK 1.17 fINES AND LIQUORS 6501 Airport Blvd. «| Specials. Good Fri. & Sat. \ BOURBON fM&M 80 pr . 5,h2.89 |Ky. Beau lOO pr 3.491 Ancient Age 86 pr 5*3.79., QrnTrH KING GEORGE 80 pru 5*3.49 Harvey 86 pr .^3.99 %?Ballantine86 pr s.h5.99ff -ISWJSkttBLENDS * [CALVERT EXTRA 80 pr ..... sth 3.69 i iuckenheimer 80 pr .......... sth2.99j WINE [Liebfraumilch iRoyoi) .. .....rstbl.29 [Biirgtrndy (le Cardinal#) •v5:^i.294 (Champagne or Cold Duck) . sth 1.59 lYago Sangria .^.W 6al.-3.39 VODKA ISUSMAN0FF 80 pr y [Susmanoff 80pr ....... G>N^ [SEAGRAM'S 90 pr . p (Susmanoff 80 pr ... RUM iSEVEN SEAS 80 pr BEER 7* 3.89 sti, 2.99 3.69 3,78 3.99 3.1 3.88 "iSi, 2.77 3.39 5.59 4.49 .. -5*2.99 ..-.:^Gal.6.99 'Gal. 7.951 sth 2.991 - *c-5<>v .7777. sth 2:99 -i V. t% > 'WIICHELOB-.4Pk,1.47 # -if ** , Prestige labels at-Discount Prices QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED s ;fy-iday, Septer5bes43, 1974,THE DAILY TEXAN Rage 7.. --Vv.-A,# i. i *1WS&iieiaBSS*81® >nun•-isi-n»Srt?a,^v^uAwv#ew -. S •> Texas to sooth Unheralded Soccer Tebmi'o Meet UTA y ' mi 'program have a now iornYat v\ith Jhtetf '<, The-darting Jinpup -tor the B>'Et> DAi.HKlM. funded. -NCAA r Texan StaffJVVritcr .schools. •'Texas_.Coa.ch.Altre4:1 dtvisioai^ -Nurtli. .Omral and -kWEboriis \\\ ill. be ^Aubrey .5^ The Texas soccerteam will' Erler said South.: each having six: teams. Carter at? goal; Bill . Pegier. , ;\get a chance Saturday to. Texas will play home and Bea Bollinger.-Craig Litton -.Holland. Justice,. Trott Datheina-Anderson E.RI.ER, m hfs Second measure its itl'-fiinded awav againsvcaeh team-and and Ghns Jordan at-Fullback!!..'-;. Teifivet BosfOi^CoUetie-I5«>_ ^ by JS Te*.as by 17 Texo^ bv l? Texa's by 21 •season-coaching the soccer • program against-the more then the division winners pluss.* Hw>t0n »2ej^*?'v'i: vr>>Houston by j>r :.••• '.••!lb" • Tcxas:T«cti by.fr •" Toxfct .T®ch by 7*• p.-Thegame-wilt beplayedat 2-league championship North Texas it, a* S-vb---"'1 SMU iiy T• by the University as a„varMt\ Texas Tech by .6^? Texav Tech by 14 "Thomas are the halfbacks. • • sport. to get the funds' and. SML) by M 5V»U ^4 '. p m at the I'TA soccer field PLAYlNG'in the samediyif? WTrArjmgtoivatTCtf'-TCU by 7..­ ••N'CAA. recognition that, is / TCU by 1 rT~ Tcacyj TCU-by Wv _ TCU by T3'-*"'**Wv»-.vc*.i sion with Texas w»U be SMI' -Mikev Sheffield.Fred Ohacti ft^or atOklahoma- Pfttohopia D y • Oklahoma by 51 OkSahoma by 38 •: OKtahoma'by 35: £>klanoma.'by;"38 ;.*.«•• VSC ^ ._ • Thi-y m-ipsoafcscncp -,• matr.hv. rexas A&M and Le Totirneaii; •uftAr. (JSC-byU jJSCby 17> . P»tfvbucfth at Flcrid«3». Pftuburon by V PtttibO^g^ by 10 ^ Pittsburgh b>c~lQ v P|tfjburghlby"*T3 will be theonlv tune-uptorthe --Texas has had one oi the «5nS? ^>oCiinn^»'-Viv17y .Longhorns-before their, con-better teamsin the state since most ot their regulars troiw siders starterswill-not be ablf -Utah-St, a! Wyoming . Ufah.^r. by !4 Utab it.by 6 ' fere.nce opener next week last vear and .have added Ufa* St. by*-9; Utah State-by 7 . its program started-m the ear- to plav. Fullback Pal Missouri st MnuwippI ' Un&ourr by 3 agSmst another X^AA-teaw. some new -players, mostly M ' -JL LSO by 3 LSU by u"^*" bSU by 9 LSU by T6 1 ; Durki-Jacnbo have «j,nkle ,in-/ Iqws at Artichlgan ^ Vlfthlgart.by .3) N * * • \< • Michigan by fl Michigan by. 2V^ _-, . We schkluled UTA to give division and finished fourth in ''We should be stronger this juries,., and forward Pa'blo'-Mjchig^ftby14: MichIgan by 31' us some mdicatibn-of• where the league. • V OMf> St. aJ A^ipnejota^! Sng'STliy so ^O^Ta^t-by-38— year because last year we had Toboada has an injured back. ,%9-Slate by.17 i Ohio ^ 35 ' st*n^of^ .Pftnn;-St.-jPenn St we stand m comparison to' . This year the league will so matiy new plaver.s u was . Halfback Elio ~Kingi will'not • by 12 Penn Sf.vby U • Reiw State by jj-Penn State by-U .' Penn.St^^y-lT^ •*"»»-»»•»9•< hard -for them to get .to' know plav because Of a job'commit--Prexbytenan 6t TNc Citadet: PresbyieriBfi:by:2 PretByferiao byI The Cltad»|by l-Tj>e CUadel by •»^ The Citadel byr^ -Oattai df-AHanta ei'Ch u"tht?r --Eriei said--^ _ nieni v-. • -DalfasbyO' Dallas by t.: OaUas by 6 / Attanfa by 3 • •• DaUas by 9 •SatvO^jo at Houston •• ^oy&ton by 7 • Houston by I Houston by.7 ' San Diego.by b* San Oi©ga:bv ) n Oakland at r . BuffftJo by-1-: ­ VAN'S SutJo^by-T­ ^ • s ~" -1 • • .... •s.'yrsM-s . ISs-l j OLD MEXICO i SWC Roundup M® ^ IMPORTED ;a^ - i -29th & Rio Grande huevos rancheros strips bacon.2 flour tortillas. 4 AUTO PARTS -j Hayden Returns To Face Si dVStraight off the* grill /' The iNorth TexasState-SMU -retain his position. •" 99« paying players cash bonuses think as • football, game Saturday night . The Eagles-Mustangs game- we hd\e good a last; season. SMU;. Athletic chance to win the nationalti­H-.Director Dick Davis de.clined ~If~tbnghornrWirF^-VOvOff-in Texfis-'Stadium mav be' is the highlight of the first full -lie as anvone:" said Trojnn- NOW OPEN Everytfuiig on Mcjto Monday-Morning Hayden Fry'5 chance £iball action. .. JIYoy^Parts'Problepis VANish*it VAN'S employes, but it is Mustang SMU received more bad' Parts for Ail Imports^: Who Tbe .Arkansas: Razorbacks ( - Coach• Dave: Smith news Thursday when it learn­ have a~1fougli task when .theytouchdown underdog ~* desperately needs a; victory. ed that c.o-captain (••enter Mike : .djfcn-with^^SoiitHerrirCalilorfiia The. -Texas., Aggies -should...-, Many feel the Mustangs have Smith has. been: declared in'^ 3705 N. Interregional -fop-the-third,stfaipHi .jpncnn ' have-rtti w,v Umeas thev tiike ,to dowell in theSr earlygames eligible by the NCAA in fight Next to the "Body Shop" Ph. 472-6236 And the.Razorbacks have lost on Uenison. wnicti tlrtTniaal-­ for. the beleagured coach to of recent penalties against the .the'last 'two . ed 30-15 last season. A^M fteS-2532.GUADALUPE school by.the NCAA. returns 11 defensive and 10The Mustangs are serving ; "We jiave a chance to win offensive tarlers off last,, Hahk's Famous RECORDERS out 'a tw6-year'probation for everv -game we re in. and I season s 5-6 team s ^ A&M is favored by .17 points''• AND .mthti^P-n\..KykvFioitl game: Chicken Fried Steak RECORDER MUSIC Texas.Techwill-unveil 2 pes. Me.at, FrertcK Fries quarterback;Tommy Duniven Cole S|aw; Hot Rolls & Butter LARGEST SELECTION as ir hosts Iowa Slate. .r< «'iy -it's the HAIR Sooners-by five touchdowns^ I a pitcher Haircutling Studio TOTTOTA . DATSUM VOLVO COWBOY SHIRTS • The Tarrant County Cham­ 3 p.m. till 9 p.m. 50T W. TStli 472-2004 Qualify Service -Reasonable Prices $1 OFF Coupon pionship -game will be:played : W t. IRE PROl I> TO f\TRODL CE ""Drag at23rd Street CARBURETION Saturday night when UT­ THE ASSOCIATION OF ALWAYS FREE meets The Sandwiches ° Foosboli • Pong TUNING & EXHAUST • Arlington TCU. ClUTCH & BRAKE g,, DIAGNOSIS • Houston cit>': '^championship? DELORIS will have Rice-and Houston ; Open till 4 a.m. f Formerly of The Hgtrcut. >{ori'j :. VALVE & RING H§: ESTIMATES ENGINE REBUILDING meeting "r COMPRESSION TESt • ?•' Handmade haircuts Corner 19th and Guadalupe 47477-6829 at People's Prices ' • PLEASE TRY US! -TCU will unveil* its newl coach. Jim Stiofner. and its! OVERSEAS ^WGiWE 1003 Sogebrmh 8.36-3171 new 'Offense.-a pro style one.S T Why Hassle Big Daddy .hasn't been a long time coming With A Dealer Cil GuwJaMw OcfttoOrtt*' He s been here all the time; (He started on the Drag For VW Repairs? But-that-was no plateJo soothe his soul.r He needs quiet. A;pface to.pufup his-feet \ \ . X -•'"•x, DISCOVER THE MIND Play a little"pool, drink sortie beer with the AND HOW IT WORKS! HUNDRED-POUNDER' Club THE BUG 1/ust across the room at the Flagon & Trencher3v BUY, READ AND USE So He:s been at 26th and San Arutomo for a 32S Roast beet,corned beef:cheeses DIANETICS": -iexi i-'i-pastrata; ham.quiche, barbecue " 'y;-'.'THE MODERN :S while now.-But time means nothing to this CORNER avocadosoup:cheesecake & SCIENCE •:?.Big Daddy. He has foosball. Shuffle baklava But all atonce1 801 West Ave. 477-2725 3CMWes^3th.472«1900 fjr% OF MENTAL HEALTH boar^and.pinball to Keep-him-busy BY L. RON HUBBARD (When,he.s not making the best '^RBSSMiS Engine Work pizza there is for those Hungnes • Tu{je-Ups -NO RIP-OFFS Connon that creep up on you.) ALL, WORK GUARANTEED Brakes '• Big Daddy s > just Waiting for youjo catch on He caught on a long time ago. (A.Oianetics* Publicution) Use this knowledge to Help Others and Gain Increased Understanding of Yourself; A complete1 v -workaHIc , '3.3Y', ' lccllW(>lp(!y of the mind waits' for you between-the covers of this book. (Irasp this oppofr M iife tunity lo learn how the-mind works and.discover Hie source m of mentally .c'aused"ills Gain' too Uie ab;li,ty to help rtthcrs-hy applyIE "the simple techni­ques In this Jjook This best seller, fs a must.(or. voii and p\ ? 5V 1 1' ^—• anypne, who woul'd help, himself and Ins fellow man to greater sanity and happiness/ i Everyone Hopes to Get It Together! ~­ Over t,000.000 copies sold1 Order jfpur gnpv oY sri , We'r« trying io do fust thaf this Suniday atAjniversity Methodist Church. Worship DIANETICS. • " sefvices begin at 8:30-_and_l 1iOQ in the sanctuary. Following-the second service a The ModernScience of Mimtal m^sssP- Health ladayl' Festival of Tfie Beginnings wilj be held across 'the sTfeerlrrthe-auditorlum_of, the. •.Just-CaM)r-Aaad^^u2513 SAN AN'TONlO f, „ ; H»olthCore V^olion1-^ y *C%»a _ k .BEHIND THE "C vf --s.vyi' -i:h;Universi,y Methodist -jl409 Guadalupe (on jhe Drag) J-W":-^S01,°0y OK XA1JFoRMA-a-NL-the-WRLL^ %£§< Mlniv°" Geo,9«-M. RrciTer?Janfcf R. Hyie, Sanford D. Coon w : • omj • jegUivrttj'rcgUi?rn)': namen ^ ' -478-9367 ' Ar-Y-i-— age 8 friclay/ September 13, 1974 THE DAILY •. w'Sj?- V<5 5"»*.'J1 ' . lf t. ^ V, T — r t ST5 l5fiS^r3^­ *-- i t ^ --'\"W«iS«yW h4t, -<-»—• -'4.&»£»*»-.»» Jr^J,„\t >•" Of Worldly PINEHUKST, N"C (API-. • Bob Murphy: orrihe rebound' '• from , a tour-month abtenaf:' ar from the tour because of • . hand injury, fired a strongstx­--undervpar 65 for a one-strokt; ... Jcad Thursday.fa"ft*er. the fiiVt"* -round of. ^h& $300,000 ..World. i.Open Gol^Tournamentr -• . v.» Murphy played the bac'.t m'ncon Ific Kb. 2*irtua^v;iiicm. \.uuiil||x \\-ouldtVt ti nui Management Council, vyuuiu ip-Bacf a bi>rTorrrWpT^ripf?a-ftfi(t-—hf4n^mplntn.yh^rgp Af ftpar Football Johnny Miller,'-the season's -operations. , lg Standings 11% leading-.monev winner, a 73. George Halas, Sr., rBear W«rU. foelbell l*egk>« Eent*ffi Oviuen "wv NPwYorv ' 7 4 634 253 173 Football Popularity . Florida-,4^,. 7 r:-4 636 193 149 • PKdaphtov. > 0 4» $90-224.Jackionv4.;.• 7 , 0'' 364 215 73£ Xvntro) Di^iien Slipping, Poll Says ... ?V:-,: o 909 282 224 'Blrfpham.i'C 10 • v; 8JS 353 W5 C^caqo;; Oeiro/f .^v 1-: • ; ) ;10, ~0 091 167 27S NEW YORK (AP) — Tennis and horse racing were the only i?..",-'.3:''.0. .700'292 756 sports which attracted increased fan interest in tjje last year, DlVttttfl according'to a scientific survey released Thursday by pollster S Calif 7 • 4 o 6& 747 2U w Louis Harris. •. ,. Hobstpn 3 • t • 1 W 777 'Hawailans .., 3-"8 0 273 196 796 The lfarrissurvey of a crbss-section-of spoils fans'around the Portland .. : 2 v 7 • 1 2S0 131 227 country showed that football remains the most widely followed : Wedn*M(ay »^C«m*s » ' •' T . DciroiMS, Florlde 14 «/. -:. game. But its popularity in the polling-slipped for the second , Philadelphia 41. JacVjonvllle 2l, over* consecutive year in a tow. while tennis showed1 a dfamatic in­time -' ,"Hawalionv ^j: Houiton l7. . crease in interest.. . • •5oufhernCah/ornia3l,Chicago28 ­ The.Harris survey found that 26 percent of the fans it sui*;-" Wemphis 46/-Birmingham 7 New 34, Portland J5 ­ veyed .said tliey followed tennis, compared to 17" percent.only a Noliw^et ^ year ago. That placed lennisas thefourth most popular sport, a • . • SiMdoy i Gome* climb froiti 1911 when it ratiked last among the12 sportsinclud­Cleveland al-Cinctnnall • Miami.at New England ed in the.survejv , Waiftingtoh at New York Giants •> •The 1,384 sports, fans included in the survey were asked. Baltimore at PHUbur^h • Detroit at CMcago • *. "Which of thesesports doyoitfollow?" and were then given the Minnesota at.Green Bay"' list,_of 12 sports. San D!ego at Houston -'? San FranclsccAt fciew Orleans Football drew a 63 perocnt favorable response, followed by Philadelphia St ss, Louis > baseball — 58 percent, basketball. •=-44 percent and tennis: Dallas at Atlanta . ... Olher sports, in order of fan interest in the survey, were auto L^os Angeles at Denver • Ncw_Y-ork Jets a! Kansas Clty -;??; • ' • ..racing —24i golf — 24, bowling ^23. horse racing"— 20; boxing-;' ; Mondoyl Gem* -r 19.. track and field — 19, hockey — 16 and boating — 11. < Oakland at Buffalo. N UOR mm %> * »AO9^ K1 Kipow H0RN5 1 IflfMfflGUADALUK 47(0633 ^lOOC.RIVERSIDE >M10067 — CONGRESS 4422.7IP i 40,000 QUADRAPHONIC S & H 8-TRACK WITH GREEN STAMPS 4 SPEAKERS i . »•» ^ *£•,•/££% FROM NOWHERE TO NO. I IN AUSTIN IN A -LIT T LE OVER A YEAR. ^H^&MUSCijPDttASON!!!!# SAVE $102.65 SAVE ST18 70 I-A. -1 KENWOOD EPI BSR 50 WATT. PIONEER KLH GARRARD^b WATT AM/FM STEREO MUSIC SYSTEM AM/FM STEREO MUSIC SYSTEM Kenwood KR 1400 179 95 Pioneer SX 434 239.95 EPI 60 (2) r 139*90 BSR 260AX *, sTilo KLH 38 (2) 149.95 ^ GARRARD 42 97.80 # Total if Purchased Separately $40) 65 18 Totol if Purchased Separately. $487.70 RECEIVERS CHANGERS SPEAKERS MISC. - JC Automatic . turntable,. speakers, 8V SHERWOOD S7200 ISO • Watt AM/FMSlereo Reteivor Topt-Monitor list 3S9.9S HARMON KARD0N iloB' 100 Witt AM/fM Stereo' Receiver--(1/A list 199.95" J : I O7 BSR 310 AXE Automatic turntable, Magnetic cartridge lh».91.80 " ; GARRARD 62 3. speed automatic | with cueing and anti< : skate; Complete with * base' ond Shure ellip--• tical'cartndge. ' Heg-126iS s49 $59 SSI4V 3 Way Speaker w/12" woofer,, 19 Year Warranty.'^ ; list J109.9J ea. " ­KLH 23 . -12" WooJjfr air suspension speakers*, walnut cabinet list 169.95 DOKORDER 7140 4 Channet^ReO to Reel"" Record " Deck with ECHO Sound on Sound & Multf Sync. ksj-Ust 629.95; • * '* *459 SOUNDLIGHT HR 810 ,'ftrtrnck • • . • . recori/plclybittlc. tfdck • • w/pause cpntrol and fast forward:. -' (aa list.149.95 Q/ KOSS HVUCl ­lightweight .-•. , • headphones w/volume controls OLYMPIC HP70 Stereo . headphone.-left/Right Volume controls. "| ' " list 29.95 SUPEREX PR0B VI *34 v \ A S"1 11 J KLH 54 100 rnts -wott-4--thonnel receiver -with AM/FM toner, tape monitor & joy stick list 535 -v. A> SOfkA /yy GARRARD ZERO 92 speed -Auto/ Garrftl-.d's: finest. Complete with-wood . base & Shure Hi-Track EllipHcal Cartridge. < lot 239 119 ssi 2vy.{;.: (" Coaxial speaker with-cone wluzzir • list 59.95' ... -•»! '29 BSR TD8S ^ 8 track.. stereo playback deck-Perfect ­for the budget minded. Very reliable. Reg. 49.95' *29 Proles jiaMl,.Stereo HSadpi^ w:: lht$ttfiT: ' S-*34 SOUNDLIGHT CS 7000 8-trcck auto player ,. • -•> .w/FM stereo radio.. t # A list 129.95 . OV % — SHEPW00D S7100A PANASONIC RS 26 3US BLANK TAPE 70. watt AM/FM stereo-solid state.. g DUAL 1228 . ^ ' KLH31 . Stereo record/playback AMPEX receiver tope monitor 4 .2 way Cassette deck with 84 Minute 8 track Walnut hose; Shure Ni­ woeler, high disper­ switch tape dubbing Doby noise reduction blank recording tape. Track Magnetic car- $] 19 special FM hash filter. $ sion tweeter. Deluxe system.; Cr02 switch Reg. $3.19 tridge. J Reg. 239,95 199 grill. SOO automatic stop.: $ List 259J5 159 Reg. 99.95 pair JJ-Reg. .199.95NOW 169 AMPEX 350-C60 60 minute blank ciosE.oy^s. CARTRIDGES cassette" recording. tape, limit size per • -80ZAK 4000 . customer 69< floor standing. £?/­ AMPEX 363-C60 speoker. t Tweeters,. 60 Minute Chromium2 Woofers. SO4A djoxide cassetteTetor-•list 629.95(2) ' jjy ding tape. S|99 Top quality OLYMPIC RTC 900... ARXB 91 EMPIRE 6000M 50 "Wtfrt AM/FM 2 Spwd maiiwal turn- MAXELL UDC ,120 3 way floor-speaker ­stereo with 8-Tn)dc tffili w/Shure M9UD SHURE M91ED Minute cassette tope. cetorder, Garrard w/marble top.-.., j, *109 Sj99 $174.90 ' Usti35 lht $149.95 Ust 54.95 ^22 ena2speokers |.#7. MAXELL.64 Minute changer ' $100 BSR 520AX low noise blank OLYMPIC Q140 ' Walnut bose, -dost^tg HARMAN KARD0N HK20 SHURE DYNETIC' , track tape. 300 ft. S|99 cover and magnetic3?^ < channel stereo 8-. . 2 Wny-speokertwithBi' --^ :~'J v list 3.35 partridge. Stereo cartridge - track player w/4-. dcaustic speakers. list 115.80 *69 w/ellipl.icol stylus" ; MAXELL :^S;» . *34 list 44.95 list 129.95 DUAL 1225 *9 M Minute low noise 169 3speed automatic .,^ KLH 17X *. -cassette tape. SHERWOOD S7900A $ "J 49 list 2.20 Stereo receiver. 280. record changer;'. ~-:-t An. indSstry standard STANTON 681EE w/base and Shure Hi--'-' 10" woofer, 2": BASF 1800' Stereo ellipticbl car—.,,. Track cartridge. . |^ tweeter. tridge. . Reel to reel tape. Reg. 89.95 Now list 72.00 ito7.oo-• list 479.95 *339 S499 *59 *35 GAkRARD 74MS, BASF 90 Min. flew auto record in-r~?" PIONEER CS99A Track tape. , $2« B0ZAK B301 : list 3.8S ­ eludes base and Shure^T^ 5"Way speaker w/lS'' SHURE HI TRACK ­3 way speaker w/12" ' M91ED magnetic car-< -i-' -" woofer, .2" mid, 3" Elliptical. cartridge BASF 60 Min woofer $110 tridge. %JLI% tweeters. w/diamond stylus SlO 6N cassette lop*. list 167.50 • I iy Rm.151.85 Itst 49,$5 • List?.?5 f Pi ^ - * . HOURS: NORTH STORE TUES. • FRI. J2;00 SOUTH STORE SS 104 E. Huntland Drive SATURDAY raro'o 19.14 £. Riverside Drive % Near Highland Mall CLOSED MONDAY ToWnlake Shopping Center - p nil LAST YEAR, ACTVwent to City Council-to • 000 to City.Council \«th hopes of-receiving atf-'' the abprbpriate thing to de." Tuesday. 4:-30.to6 prm. Wednesday and itCL6p.ni 'Thurs­-Sahdwiohes, "moved the "ven­fice. said. . ask for "seed money'.' .tostart the organization ditional funding. The money was' to -be used -. iVo c-ritt'i la lui. grant)«^-a= day. For further information, cbntact BettV;Hagerman, r ding location' off the Curb. • with the hope of being funded through private njamlv to pay fulltirne: persohnel.since all The libertarian group would • permit;; hiis.. been established: coach of the tenhis.team at-471-1224. • THURSDAY.. HOWEVER-"sell near Moore Hall. grapts from foundations by fiscal 1975. At that . work now is done on.a volunteer basis. ACTV either, since, the situation; is' interested in team may attend vendors by; time, the council granted Sl.SOO for equipment was informed at that time that it was only one . the volleyball the were .told SOME STUDENTS from the new. he indicated. The permit tryouts m Bellmont Hall 528. from 5 io 7. p ip. Monday Austin patrolinan they were' • Collegevof Fine Arts have im­would preced'ent and 56,000 for general operation. V of approximately. 40^organizations asking for a set . B and through Thursday. Pamela Lamplev, vollevball coach, violating a city ordinance by pressed interest in selling would heceive "considerable was.not obtained untirjulv. ,Since that time. 5750,000. is. .still available! • . . ' r '"* sandwiches in'Uieir area, but consideration . to • determine Because of contractual problems, equipment total.ot^^ut jivS mUlidp-iii funds, of which may be reached at 471-1224. . selling in the street. * : Basketlwlktryc>ut^wU1.4ake.piace4U.the Gregorv Gvm ''After campus • .said demand for^seryices ACTV provides is about •BROWN said after meeting with pound) the police DeNoie "they '-haven't the proper' procedures,ii- Annex from . 3:30 ltd. 5'p.m.' Oct: 28 through':Nov, T.'r"A"~ ' Ki^iW''BS"MtiThe;gutter:;«re* " TiVe times what it -was-lastyear.« •members Wednesday night it was learned that Austin threatened to 'freen^earthfmnvyet-.^.,>~.^„-~Sl«w^Je_sauiL. preliminary meeting for those interested in the team will police t In 1970-ACTV negotiatedan agreement for an additional grant-"of $8;000" was all' AC^V­ be at 5-p,m,.Tuesday in Gregory: Gym 217. Rodney Page. bust us for.loitenng.' DeNoie 'prograhjnring—tfm^wjtiF-^-apHftl .Gable. Co; cauid hope for from the city ' " ­ ; coach of ttio basketban teams, will conduet the meeting said Thursday^ ACTV was granted access-tb-a cable channel • Brown said Qther av'emtes; such as private" -• S^in%estgct in >the golL swimming or .Phil Baerreis. an employe . from 7 to 10 p.m: and. 10:3tTp.m. to midnight -solicitation._ are being explored,. but private, Inick and ttams should contact the ' respective--•. tff Salvation Sandwiches said; Monday through Friday. Under terms-of the contributions cannot be written off as tax' city make; Vfr coaches for tryout information. Pat Weis. 471-1224. is police would agreement, all ACTV programing is subjectu> • deductions. \ . '-' '• ' coach of the golf team; Dr. Jack Daniels, 4.71-1273, isthe ; arrests-if Che vending location; traekand field coach anc|JPat Patterson is the'swimming ' is not moved. By DEBBIE JAMAIL "IT LOOKS LIKE we'll . TexanrStaff Writer -"Competition is generally -with schools in Texas. have to close, it down," he _ The Federal Bureau of frtvestigation will join a search for However, some of the teams have competed nationally in safid, but added it. may he: . Edward Lee Carpenter,; the'former University financial aids wjf " J " buree said. nved across the stret dlffi£tpr who was charged with' embezzlement of funds 'Under: regents' rulesr Setlffi, provided. iorth"eTffn<^..of.:studeni;^;lT®mrtaHHdsrT-^ f|od on campus.is prohibits ,v; U.S. Magistrate Phil Sanders issued "a wairant for • fo:ept under • University; Carpenter's arrest Wednesday, charging him with interstate •-aifljib'rization. Because of the .•flight .to avoid prosecution after being charged lastregulation, the,sandwich venr December with embezzlement. • ' •dors were told to move off The Trayis County grand jury,chareed that Carpenter"did5 University: .property near - fraudulently embezzle;-misapply andxopver.ttp'Wsown use" 2IOO Guacfalupe Moone. !J.aU_and the Art: more than $200 from the gitfnt and scholarshipaccciunts. An'­ • Next to tuigi's ,. Building-. " audit begun iwo days after Carpenter-'s resignation.at the 476-5905 p&'fe ' -1 DeNoie was told by Univer­. iequest tif Vice-President for Student Affairs-Ronald Brown' sity.administrators he should Back to School request permit • 3nd James Colv-in. vice-president for business ' affairs,^,. • a to sell, his revealed $24,505 missing. . ' •product on campus, but 10-50% Off All . Car^nter was apprehended in Pennsylvania Dec, 12 when' ** - Baerreis said such; a .permit an all-points bulletin Was issued-for his arrest after the auditapparently does not exist for Hundrads tf corton prints, outlandish Hawaiian ­ was revealed. At the time of his arresj^grpenter had$5.000' i P"nts.. lnthan gauze, jerseys, single knits, yarns, outsiders. V: .-v..' • ^notions. Fna food \coma in & brow.se. ' A REGISTERED CAMPUS ' cash which he claimed belonged to a 19-year:old woman " companion. She later deniedthe money was hers. The countyorganization, however, .would grand jury returned.an indictment against th. ''Wfr"e Students • *x» 4.95 4-tn­ a,,d 4^" •S3 Bus Transportatio ^nicornv^Ciallery^ •r ^ Dobie • 2nd fIqor ^ Finished i i f-i J,. , i ^ Sunday Mornings and Evenings *• • ?bI •?s~' 'm.'1 r*< A-"-n -»*"-rv JPageJO^Frlday, Septeipber 13, 1974 THE DAILY TEXAN It ' '-"iz*sr *1 *» ^ <• I \ £.r» «-*. • .. f t 4 . * V* M M t-V ^ -eJ'^ r '*-'&> «3V < P» &< J ^L rr; i®8 sfsc?" UPI Ttlephoto Flaming Liner • Cpast Guard cutter Diligence sprays water onto the bur­ning luxury liner_Ambassador Thursday off Key West, fire broke out, and most crewmen were jeinpved. rkit Utility Rafe Debated By ANN COLWELL '• '•f&e^l fiStes, estimates residential • "users but" also hospitals nursing r*"" • and •/'.. •users, now pay. more than S3 million homes, low. cost public housing, largess^,MIKE. ULLMAN ^ ^ more per year than they would if elec­ apartment complexes, privately owned „•& I _ Texan SfaffAVriterS fyj--••*}>•* trical rates were uniform. dormitories arid low cost student ho'us­ • A-gonsumer interest,group and.cityrs -Blasting this Teaspijirig. Lebermann r ingl Lebenriari noted. . , t "•*" * couitL'ilmen disagreed Thursday on the said that a.flat rate would add .34 dents long-range effects of a fjat ratew Noting that attempts to-establish'new-'''v; per £i)owatt hour to'every user's elec­proposal for utilities';" • % tnc bill. " : •' --rates • have:'; filet. both praise and Texas Public. Interest Research criticism. Lee Pearson, local TexPIRG • -. ''What this means is'that we .will not Grewp (TexPlRG) and City Coun­-co-chairperson, said "We. join in the': ' raise .water and^sewdr charges, but we­cilman Jeff Friedman issued praise and want to. answer* the' *•" • will raise electric rates to cover water Statements of support for such-a plafi. -andsewercosts.""said'Lebermann~ .criticism, . j^ww^vw,., , . lctc.,rate.s strongly opposed-the proposal in ashort minutes,-Eeber^iarih lafele^ the flat -were set-at'a uniform 11 cents perpress conference! '""_' piupwnf kilowatt-hour; the city would get as le tiat raie-fl ty plan claim such.'rates will reduce'' :.tractive. cohsumer-issue,' it is inap-. strudluFe--returns.­ utility •bills-for alraost.all'residen'tial. ;..propnate Tor these-reasons: --• , -If a tinifortri rale wab set at 2 3 cents --A users/ Under thistyan,,large businesses • Out* of 3,5(W electric utilities in the"' "• per'KiloWatthour; Pearson added, this will-be .charged, for:electricity at the United States, na(one has adopted the >-• •would generate enough money to cover same rate as.residential users flat rate concep.tr the water and sewage increase; yet . However, Lebermann disagreed with; . • Of thesq systems, 2.040 are govern--­ almost all residential users would rtillthe claim, saying thatproponents of the ment owned — federal, state and local . save money. r '' ^ plan "fail to; note that the aver'age — and not one has adopted the flat rate Friedman pointed out that under the '"I?* overhead-related business expanse is rnnpppt proposed city budget',-city charges for ­ jlist, passed right "along to the • • -All -of the states except Texas and sewage and . water will go up-2$0 . customer.".' ... -.:...., South Dakota have regulatory com-cent for-the average residential-user. ~ T : TexPIRG reports current electricity" ^missionswhichestablishratesin the ;:Saying>'he opposes this"' increase, i>| Friedfnan recommended eliminating •adopting. : thatwftl cover the* increased water -­One group, .Citizens for Fair Elec-increases hbt only for the bif business ­ cost-. Position tA *i ­ H * ' B> 1WARY WALSH • with. Qty-Council over its cip­ m Texan Staff "Writer' proval"oTcoflstruction permits The director of Austin's Of-4 along creek banks sinee the" fice of Environmental €reek-Ordinance was passed. Resource Management: Stuart N. Henry, submitted his resignation . Tuesday to City Manager Dan Davidson. • •Hemy, who has held the --position since 19% said he in­tends to practice lawin Austin -"I'VE OPPOSED several of • them (the permits), and I'm a . little disappointed.-But it takes a. .while to work out the limits of any new ordinance," Henry said -afterhis-resignation, becomes effective Oct. 18. ' In 196" Henry .began work­ing for the Air Pollution Con­ . . DAVIDSON said Henry has "done.a good job"and the city Will begin researching hiring, trol Board of the City of*| Houston Health Department and in 1969 he became af­ Offii a new director immediately because "it is a very impor-­—tant-budgeted-positionr^— The environmental resource filiated -with a citizens' en--vironmental group fighting -tuberculosis Rvantualiy_-hei_| worked for the Citizens En­ 13 BOB •management office . was vironmental Coalition which • created "to • help design was made:up. of 50. Houston rtleasures. to protect Austin's environmental quality and to help coordinate and improve' various 'environmental programs with all city organizations. ^jeaalty ffidaalS1 WW departments," Da^dson said. , The office also Serves as a liaison to. the 'City Board of fashionsfor' .men and • women 10 AM to uru Sterling Component Sjfslem HI Environmental Quality with . the director acting-as a SPEAKERS Source person for the'City -.«p>tincil, DavVdson s^id.« -•v| Henry organized'-the -en­ SE-3T0§ 89.95 EacT 46-1500 @ 79.95 . 'vironmental office and­ SE-410 @ 109^95 Each— ^6-180ff @ 99.95" -beeame the-first to. hold the director's position. ~ Two major ac- I 1% SE-610 @ 139.95 Each PIONEER* compltshments of' the office have been the'..adoption of a. city environmental policy and Uie Creek Ocdmance, Henry said. w-T However, he has disain'eed r . •SiW. 4"^*y S SXfV} TEAC ••mmDolby Record/nay e-lracK Deck % ; v "V. Ulollensak 3SH MODEL 8075 »t# WHAT'S GOING ON Shirts. • . $ie.n2-W Pioneer SX-424 AM/FM Stereo Fisher 49SAM/FM Quad Fisher 895 AM/FM Quad JVC 4VR-540S AM/£M Closeout Sterling 7CMXX35A AM/FM WAS NOW 199.95 159.98 300.00 499.95 380.00 249.95 29935 259.95 139.95 99,95 JVC VR-5515 AM/FM Demo ,v 299.95 239.95 ©ght-track geU Serioui. . .and moral This is lha'firet cartndge racorder with performanceaqual to casiette and close to refai; 30-16,000. ,Hi.frequency response,.0.1% wow/flutter and than 1% distortion! Special tape equalizerfor **Scotch" Classic .Tape, Dolby Notse Re­duction System and Dolby FM broadcast de­code. Auto-eject logic circuit;^digital timer, locking tet'tm'nd end peuse control. mm Tv/1 eszenihl. Thcjjje> where. •< > u/fth , bktf/vr'f-, /o SE410B's WAS 109.95 NOW 48 00 [crc l-ecfctj •n-l'« « ICO i CCC ®KENWOOD AM/FM QUAD / STEREO •, *1395 Sorting 710*J-loor mod«L ' 4 spoakar EPl 60 Mint 2-Way -• -AR AR3A AR best 3-Way Sterling 82-01 00^ Ultra* compact 179.95 119.95 65.00 227.00 39.95/pr 24.95/pr 1 V­. MODEL KR-6340 , 2/4'Channel AM/FM receiver is.a real powert>ouse:-features 152 watts.of IHF power.at 4 ohms! Special . 'Two-Four" bhdgmg circuit doubles power when unit is uaed foe 2 r 'fOnrt #*iig m PIONEER 838 1%-^­iW ils PIONEER P112D ^X,. "V^l A AUDICO A15V *fc ^ | v'3s^Tf^-«6rnt!» This is one of the" super receivers in Pioneer's nevv: i^liability electroni«;,:,S0; watts.RMS/thannel.lFlawless . FM s'e.• way -system capable of tremendous sound with; only modest 'amplifier power. Put this speaker in. a Sound Gallery : package and enjoy .rack-bottom sound and price. ; TECHNICS • direct-drive turntable • brushless DC' motor • • seryo-control • rack & pinion tonearm • low-tapitunce leads' • battleship construction -extremely fine reviews •w ary^-i. I / i;'4; cili1" I..X ./}S-£•:1 • 'av ?Ti -,Ttv >s, l9SxX>lVlblis DECADE Some of ihe people at iBl think thot this loudspeaker (the lowest priced one they mode) is one of the best .two-way systems : they; make, four grille colors. Natural oak cabinet. Except for the price^soundsexpen­sive. The 1-26 achieves the open, effortless perfor­mance that is characteristic of all JBls. ft even ap­proaches, within a few db, ws (he thunderous "volume fayeis required of JBl monitors in the. recording studio. iM t'W^r5S NO;^ IDLERS CAMS­ !• » LEVERS GEARS, SHAFTS] • ft »i ^V.5 AJ . 360S Until -recently, the only cas­w|th a few less prxufe'ssional sette-deck' in the world with •^mixing features;-Ajnd' there-' gCheck M, 0.07% WRMS record and play­fore priced lower. The 360S"is back wow and flutter was the an.incredible deck. It has four 'Ou&d TEAG 450. Then TEAC intro­input mic or liiie mixing, and duced the 360S—identical in , •J^olby* circuitry with' Dolby Price! performance to' the 450, but '"calibration controls, : The Sound Gallery offers you peace of mind and guaranteedsatisfac • lion,with your component purchase wifh these unique services. -*'**>• 30 Day initial defecf merchandise -exchange, you never qet »uct with defective equipment at the Sound Gallery.-^ —viWarranty coverage extended to d full 3 year labor and 10 years T'mparts on all system purchases./1"' -^ : m ^dTh? Sound Gallery proyides^-factory authorized service for1-n't s.(merchandise sold at the Sound Gallery. "Noh-warranty repairs for v ---most -major brands is also performed by.our service'department. ' /'Service is.done quickly, at reasonable'prices and carries a full 90 i!«i$dov guarantee. S:^ §% . • .-g&m ih ht*M-M \ AND CHECK OUR GROWING RECQRD DEPARTMENT ® •BAD COMPANY •RICHARD BITTS ; ^•vRICKvWAKEM'AN­:•PHOEBE SHOW •JOE COCKER •ERIC CLAPTON •MARSHAL TUCKER M+ IEON RUSSEU 5^4 THE '"Teachers-svere^old to lower my grade, and onl^ • inteme.w,-the relationshipns not ope .of gnjployer to employe, -Hc.saVoo.the.',living,(gom.floor carefully manipulating the one refused-to do it I" got nasty letters arid the wholfe bit," he. but person to person. He does not direct us. but-oets more as a continued. t.knobs that kept the silver-marble fromfalling into one of the 60 coordinator. ' -.. holes along the maze; . ••'•. •'" ; • ..-r- After high school, Albach attended Tofts University in : Albach. doesfield work like the rest of the researchers and U on full He" successfully navigated the marble to, the:50th hole and .$5 Massachusetts a academic scholarship, graduating understanding of the,. problems they encounter traveling tyfcfl.'ost it/He looked up from the game."You have to-go slow magna cum laude. From there;bewent to the Center for the Ad- around You can't beimpatient."Thesecond timehe made itto tKeend • yancem'ent-of Criminal Jiistice^at Harvard 1-aw School as a' Regular staff meetings are held at which staff .progress oh -eloff faeoar/>hai-'. *.... '• . ." t_._v vanous"l-eporU..is.discussed. "We present.our regorteUo qacli '.perience as a labyrinth traveler and hole dodger as staff dtiPgc^^p""­tor pf the legislative. Joint Corn'rniltee' on Prison Reform. ' * •question;"' Keeper saidr. ; ~^4i-. ' someone of opposite persuasion Caiyoej*•Kaya^aFoldin^Boats .needed legislation.. It has most recently come into focus angry. I donvt wanf to cafer to AtkWrCftit •Uvcr/CteMCiiides because of Fred Gomez Carrasco's attempted breakout at sowyw anyone." Zt); Watervptnbl B»xa Huntsville State Prison Bpowkum Ace«ssat>tes " "Alftach started last October-as a-partrtime. researcher. "L' -tfdnV^wanLto..®A-fulltime because oflaw school; tut Iended' m some from antique shops and some he Feav.e3.in a glass case at- tip putUng-ii>fulitima.b6urs anyway." . home. -7 ' ... • "'""In •VfeV'a staff-shalMaip ended:with Albach. as staff director. i?is appreciation, for the unusual. the original,-the fin?arid the . "My work overrides my life,.I'll be doing good to make a guest pretty are evidenced :elsewhere. He has jriore paintings ; _ JJEPearanc.e at law school1 ; , -' collected from various galleries than heiias Wall'space to haWg .. . them. One picture he bought at a prison art show hangs on the ."I can't go home and get.away from my work-like most peo­|—^wall-behind his desk It is bv IgnarihCuevas. the only inmate jn-. ple. I turn on (he TV, and the committee lias made the evening vol'ved in'the attempted breakout at Huntsville to survive the news. I can't forget the problems I-encounter during the day,'' ordeal. v-.. ' r ', ; • • ' Whole Earth Provision Co. ..Albach said. •' The picture, doine in vibrant blues, grieens and oranges, is a 504 west 24tK 478-1577' ® * Dealing with the committee itself is one of Albach'&problem representation of Cuevas' •earlier escape, attempt' from the •'T haVe a No,-1 boss and a No. 2 boss, and all other committee PecosCoilnty Jail. Albachexplains thisattempt wasTionviolerit. members have a legitimate claim to staff time and work You • Prison' life is.not meant to be pretty and contrasts sharply can't please 14 people " ' with Albach's own tastes. ' ' , ? Albach studies "committee reports, Albach attended public high school in Dallas, where hisfather ' •. His:No-J' boss is Committee Chairman Sen. Chet Brooks of is fated of the Civil Liberties Union. One day at a mandatorv The Living Stream Ministry', a Bible-Pasadena, and his No. 2 boss is Vice-chairman Rep. Mickay assembly, a film was sbowi> which "labeledMartin LutherKing belie'vipg, Christ-loving, Christ-centered ] . Leland of Houston. There are12 othercommittee memberswho -caterr>to anyone...So when I.present reports to the committee, I a Communist. . .' try-to cover the political spectrum from ultra^conservative to ultra-to be. af dispassionate as; possible. l .don't.consider their group of Christians presents: "It was obviously a Blrcher film, and we were required U)biases, but I try to keep mine out," Albach said. liberal. ~ ^ 'i watch it; In between assemblies Icalled,my father to.come see AJbach's staff consists usually of five to six persons,' fluc­ it,".Albach said. ./ \ ~ .•••. ., . A Life Study '.'I can't fcater to any one individual on the committeewithout tuating with budget chainges and staff commitments.to school. . "We were supposed to go before the school board, but I w;asmaking someone of opposite persuasion angry. I don't want to Researchers generally are law students:" effectively prevented by being tackled from eight sides during, : of^ . The Scriptures "We believe that all those seeking the reality of the* Guitar String living Christ, the enjoyment of the indwelling I! Christ,-and a rich, living knowledge of Him from the [v FOR CHANGE Phpto Service » Scriptures, will. not.want to miss these meetings." 3 Sale 222 W. &'• '5324 Cameton Rd. Highland Mall Communitv Nlkkormat"Fffirtliromer-——•— with 50 mm f/2lens .... * H. —'Hall Save 20% On PEOPLE Bell/Howell FD 35 f/1.8 21This Friday: -'The Flow of Life-compare to Canon TLB with case Hie Spirit" Join the University All Guitar Strings ,. 7:30 p.m.' * Young Democrat$ Spptmatic F 55 mm f/i,b\ ;. For transportation, call 4-76-9706 -The Ministry v • . Membership Booths at AMStiR MUSIC ., 1624 IAVACA Mamiya/Sekor DXS 1000 Co-Sponsored 6v Christians Qtt Campus 'S& West.Mall . 21st & Speedway " 24th&Whitit 50 mm f/1.8 ....... $17995 Spontorrd.hy UT Young Democrats 478-7331 LIMITED SUPPLY! Sears 9 spaces leather handbags rich in quality, low in price imported fromltaly One style"nicer tlian the next; that's our smart assortment of imported leather bags! See them in. assorted shapes and styles —with" stylish trimmings and closings: many with two-tone %;*7j appeal, flap and-zipper closings. Fall colors. EXPERIENCE TRUE.FLIGHT Kondor s Rogallo V^ing Regular 20.00 A High-Performance Hang-GHder fi -. Sales -New & Used Repairs -Parts --Sails Free Instruction With Purchase Ready-to-Fly or Kits 14301 (Suadalupe' -453-6209 j mm w£ atnOBX£ Dobie offers something most students find in short supply TAPE SPECIALS . . . ROOM. The space you,need ta-study,.to relax; io ^ > •?*! iis entertain friends . .-without falling.over-your roommates; Dobie doesn't think you should have to suffer just to be ^ LNC-120 close to school. That's why we wouldn't dream of UDC-90! -{4.90 ' cramming i^u-into some modified broom closet . . ,-o'r / . Sample Payment Plans 8T-400 8-track v.^W--§3.60 feeding you anything but delicious, carefully prepared , p" "J/ 00:35-7 ^8.40 food. .. '\ —Lo»S-S«&sl^r%­LNE-18-7 12.40 19 rpcals per weclt Dobie features pleasant surroundings, parking^Viineteen­ .39 , meals a week, and dozens of little extras . .' . like a pool,.-'' Siiigte •SlSGd IOUU.. a sauna, aod a Mall full of delightful shops and ^ sale ; Double .41485 J BUY 12 — GET ONE F^EE entertainment-.. PLUS a staff that really cares about &-v LIFETIME GUARANTEE SuUe 41600 YOU as a person. , __ -t*. . m %4*\t •v-w.'i Regular 16.00.^ ~Wi 1 And it's all right across the street frorti campus.^ f'1 lMM Mi r Sate Prices in effect for 2 days only*?!,, / J ... ' CHARGE IT on ScarsRevolving Charge'"" BERKmnns m > yV-"»t:,«ir<»6 atora Satisfaction Guaranteed,br •Your Money Back ' ,^i ^TZ^^ OUADA4Ly PE > 476 f3525 SHOP AT SKARS C ^ Hancock Center * % •S13H BURNET ROAD • 494-6731 Guadalupe • 47^-8411 4 >§fi^ , ANJJ 15SVFT" ,',W ....... tjfe . ^ ^ • I . , . >. PtAL i »r SB^BSj ROEBUCK AND CO.) . x ' ''MiF 'r.13,',1974 THE pAU.y ^ r -~..vI..T.: | < Ifwwr-T7',Vny\ ».>*«£} ~,:i „..y ; v..** y * •• '•£ !.,.!•—^ ""r^r" '••'-* •'• ""•ft -" '"Ui»,w" ' " ~ *•-•'' 4'?.,' > » 'W * , MVW­ •*1 fc^?£ " i_ .-t' Lit' Li3-^' i*» <-'£>•< "W /SM-SSSs •*£•>? V?K-<5>' CS/T •X** •••••fc'^ft^v.; * _•• .-*4,7?* 2 :CC~> ..-,„vJSS '• iM A.Vw' 1 ^^iTO'^Swy"-—— —I-4-V-* • J?c-> -2_»f 'u~%< * ' ^ £ ^>,fV? r '••i* :k -«•"}. 4 ' M MSW&iTtWsrftfV;­ STg-r-'j-f-l .-*i it^V s« / >v • r &Ci *4~m ,--V; tirf­ t«8 t v»v , hi — J •,?«;•: ~ -t .l SpSi. WTg-j;. tec [ .•V:'t'| iss-Jr **'''« " t'F -n'"^ ,5SJ -y~; ~. nlTI* «, ft ' \r v r t •'ISill / ejSTO.. ?Wjt . ft hi; ' -». *•{ *.« ­ , ^W' ^ £*?•> > •''•fr-irZi^' i-> ' \ * i&yfrAxtc* -$£±>.1* A1 n:'4b ^ MK y&Mgiasi ;-• • 'Xf?; -* ^ ^ «#«W 'feC •Ph*t r Jfr ,.v-v: W^ic . \iv r I.>H ^4-s'S fj,-j Aninvestmentin real estate^ • • )SSr,c'j-ni•J*} ®s,' 1X55-Buy your owrn.lotjn beautiful Imperial Valley (just S miles east of Ed Bluestein) on the Colorado Riyer and while your garden is growing yourcan catchfishjandlet your investment grow too! An average lot is100' x 120" andis ideal toplant yourown gardennow. Thisis the season to plant snap beans, beets,broccoli, cabbage, carrots;lettuce,mustard,-Bermuda onions* peas,potatoes,radishes, tomatoes,andma^ other vegetables. These vegetables willmake your monthly payments withplenty left' over to feed several families. -^ .: l-ffc v ^ ^hese lots all have paved streets, city water, lights and gas. There are many homes already builtinImperial Valley,but if you don't want |to build inImperial Valley later, you can always resell your lot. 40 lots to choose from. jy£$R gllll It's just a plain good investment, especially with only s25 down and low monthly payments (dependingonprice of lot).Lots arepriced from '7 f1,495 to $3,995. Owner financed at only 8-1/2 percent simple interest. That means on a $1,495 lot,$25.00 down alfld 8-t/2%annual >v.,¥ percentage rate, your monthly payments due the first of each month Would be $19.53 for 9 years. Totaldeferredpayment price:*2,134.24. ^ Come on out today and visit with us at Imperial Valley;It doesri't cost to talk and youmight decide to make tf smallinvestment inreal M *i?*k estate. One of us will be on property all day today to help you (rain or shine). v Directioiis: go out E. 19th St. 3 miles past Ed-Bluestein and you will see the Imperial Valley sign. ^ _ &F-i£h ' \ % * "«. l-f%* Th i»* / .gfc: S"% 'f1! * -.y i,. r~£f" ~ < r £*$ "j?* •r^WMNltf-W-OA7\V --.• V ? * ^*-4 6**-lTv H*^5 3§pj . " ' ^ l®i­ • ' n ^s:-* •-. •• • . .. IV­ V ^ V£| -T^V -V '37 Sft?fcsSC-36<>V ^r-1? ^ J*.I A H ""VS-Wci ^ v 1 "iJI <.r -"'i-.'f>*c ?»" j jJAirt*£w£?tk' "ny, "fl-^ It? wall „».... tP& m ^^ ' 4^4 -i&=^' H%"r< ' 7f' * tr r:t 825 W.11th Ph.476-2641 ^— ,.r< * JKVi , of program. It, has. advanta-ges training,' Snjith said "TV of the entering law .class • -situations. that ~ tefrd: over the other two-because it . "We started last yfeat;trying., it"; ... meeting in-large classes:-up • themselves-to a sernester-foy-can^ be' a strucWred-situation­to-recrui t. more minority law.. •,.* until-February. V --semester course,; he -added,, to fit. the jseflnesler." Smith students^ 'but we had np fun-LVr, !'l "After that; half the students' : pointinu out • that-most con­said. . V j ; ding.: Ax present, we are try­ would break up into groups of. flicts alee -a long time, Objections are. that the ing to,.getfundijigfrom^fouri­ 201 oi" 30. then meef with an in-•appeals may take-several students reajizeit is artificial.. .datiorifj-'and individual privatef£c|f,i'r.smifcsk —~gar nrmt<*rn.r.biB sources. However, the private "''® years of-hi'ghe educational training, and they governmental agency, aiid he are already tired of the becomes a part of the s'iaff. I moniessori Harmonica Sale Donna >Peso{i, Director Siipcrrisnl fcv Asibriatptf Mnntewri Inlprrialionalp ':"t0®cVO On~~y~r­ . ^ Pre-Scho'ol & " Elementary Levels ­ " r' Ages 254-6, 5-7, 7-10 All Hohner Harmonicas North 4108 Ave. H • South 400 W.Alpine ii ^ 2904 Jones.Rood Amster Music "T624 lavaca 442-315 2 478-7331 fii OROtirtEFt eummt'e k-v 2405-A Nueces PARTY ­ Presents on the Patio nI-.. ON UAKE AUSTINSTORM ; CPXMesmt (giveg. ww; IUN> MO COVER [-.:/• i Sn.fvivti~Sz.rr. V»oc>T0'l>'S |J|HAPPY HOUR DAILY 3-6. SO* .Off Pitcher of Beer Trinite.i^giNow Footuring Turtles kitchen 2405-A Nueces -2 Blocks Qff Drag THE OL SUGAR OV" Mondayitm^n presents <*» lib night -no cover for ttdg mon -plus — barrhighbat!!» REUNION FRlOBt -SECR BUST ^ m,Fr). 4:00-6*45 |tappy. Hr, Mon.-Fri. 2 for X fell 4>00-j6:00 P^» l:V ­ "9 piano ^ ' 2 for l -• ­YU "TV*.. :1 3iC Tt /?•»«/ -Tut*' rr)Acf^K niat ti.'/,? 442-9032 • 442-9934 1S07 £. RiY«rsid« Dr. 629 W. Ben White Fun Place to Go ,-U 2PJ­ Dancing Uncier the World's Largest Tiffany Dome £¥ '•Your favorite cocktail in; , ; • / '' :•> ­ *' J : ;Ahe DriskiirTradkton am -'J ;'Tap Beer •Frosted Gla'ssjes fr&P' 'J Corner of 6th Street and Brazos V>.„,f riday t September -13, 1974,THE DAILY TEXAN Page 15 msm «m' •>"J *jg*f«j *5»»;i«Sjfc>»**»«'8»^^ •«:-.*' " n** ~~ J^.i»7'^'l\"J!*^?y'7?7^,^''"'^agKB''^ Vl«' *-' __ „ ( ™rj'"X'"T'Tflnnff g«­ . 4^-5' >. /-v. ?<3® •Jil JeMIfii ,»P ,• • • .. t • • • ~~ j *~ • - • • • •• • . - .-••••. • ^ . $$5& Final Revisions Made for ,Council Presentation £ m '•-•A -pro{^sed%ee ordmance v. dioance is going .through final Kestriciions on.theremoval of 'appointed by the director ol • awareness and settling permit ---JO restrict-unwarranted revisions with the Board of trees areon a graduated level parks and recreation under^'"disputes v-V.. r. -• _»j. • • >•.• i •... to" wit En-depending on class and loca-' the ptop^&^oMinar'"*-'-''' i removalremovjl of certaincertain'sizes'sraes and Natural Resources and En loca-~ proposed".'ordinattc«V'--^a%&'Mterpresentationto'-Clt^ ' *• * . types of trees tn Austin-vkonmenlat^Quality. ' • . • Tree Policy Gommission,-,vCouncilt the ordinance . '» V *v' H « -stwprobablv will be presented to The ordinance states that irrhe ordinanceris passed, a composed -of :^he-parks,awli<":-.-4ircibabIy»a«ai be passed.-pn to; i|^CJty (SwnCll Sept. 26 Manlvn public interest m preserving permit,from,a city arborist recreation director and six" "the city's Planning and Legal .SfSNeelv of the citv's eri-trees transcends the right of would Ae, required before council-appointed citizens . Departments for recommen­ "F -virowjiental board saidThurs-the individual property owner removing a tree in ofte of the .also would be established,The.. :dations, Neely said, fcillow&d day . . when 'preservatiqn causes lio protection, zones. • /com\tttssion'^ duties-would.ia::---bv:public hearings and a final-" . A group of concerned hardship to the owner. The city, arborist would be sclude stimulating public^yote,, ^ . •-; .erttzens~^o^TR5tight?™K trees>!" r'Shf^tirf^ssUicauQE.^; § were ^eing unnecpssat-ily trees and three •'prolectreK L . .•designated -undw < ongifiated^he ideft. The..or-:. the proposed ordinance* Vets •te&s ^p.mi Thursday. • t o g e t h e r and tell them the ptee veteranson campus to" The workshop will acquaint-dean ot students office-is in­thei^vet^ransAdministration veterans with: benefits terestal '' said Frances A" (V.\V representatives will be 'available uTiherff. •" Plotsky,,. coordi nator' -of held in'the Dobie-Room oif the genesal information for Acadenuc Center 'from 3 to 4 . "This isa chance toget vets veterans and adviser to the University Veterans Assocra-• tiori (UVA)... . .. Mww, "'f,.Hie si -''We. are trying tp eaSe en~ • try into school and make it a pleasant experience for them,. Sfi We want to d^monstrate that.-. the_ University administration;• does care about veterans and TONITE & SAT. is here to help them in"any T >8:30 way we can," she said. ' The workshop;sponsored by the dean of students oftice, TONIGHT AND SATURDA Y .SKOGIE r :will-jnelude-an"4ntcoducttQitLoT. LIGHTNIN' ^NEW FROM MINNESOTA .student services, a discussion M SUNDAY on^student financial aids and' ~ ik " A ^ ^HOPKINS ELECTROMAGNETS -ypterans" tutoring a discus-;^.; —tV»*an Staff Photo hy fhll Hwtm' wTQTT rllvIV sion of special services 0 The ^oldwell Treaty Oak is one tree that is safe. V DOORS OPEI i-?M,cine.-featuring exhibits' from local . University Co-Opwill -be clos-' ­ tatives from Waco. bhow and General Boogie health agencies and music by " ed to traffic to accomodate'•GRAND OPENING Doak Sneed, the booths, Marie Draudt, a ) 1 Fihns on childbirth and sex clinic nurse, said Thursday. C p education tfill be. shown by -Groups sponsoring booths" Planned Parenthood inside include the American Cancer if the clinic?-A portion of 23r<) Sbciejy, the American Hearty •fe 's Street in frontof the clinic and Association, the • American^^ Red Cross. Aastin-Travisi,r"lfS z • County-Health -Department •and the American Council oh|f Altoholism ;^tnd Caritas,f?i Z FRIDAY &' SATURDAY •which is a medical and dental| association, ^ LIVE ENTERTAINMENT^ : -rt- A Other exhibits will be spon-f! _ FEATURING sored by ~Fr6e Space, a •: 'ViV^vC counseling service: Middle ' ms ^JSarttuJiot-Line. Austin Com-'; |LARRY RASPBERRY Introducing Spaghetti, Lasagna, Ravioli Dinners mumty Project, Vocational^ AND THE HIGH STEPPERS Switchboard « Off This Week On/y Austin T.V. Rehabilitation, X>,N CONCERT" •Rentals and Women's Health­ ••*•**•*.*******************^ ^ Wine 25e A Glass All Defy Organization. -* 453-8041 . j' i , tiw-"4• Happy Hour Beer Prices AH Day ^•i>£ ' * vi^ -«v f-iT Michelob 30e aGIass -i1•60pitcher -Shiner 20e.a Glass .. 1-IOpi.ch#^ "AT THE BUCKET i£%r, The French Kitchen f-n-r. SUN..FIU. f f a.m. #o I a.m. Dining Room arid SAT. If a.m. fo 2a.m. •diig._ _ uming worn and -* 4-7 •<:«„ j v fo--3tpUIyiificlqlupe To go Orders Available FAST BECOMING A U.T. TRADITION 472-3634 HAPPY HOUR 4-7 EVERY DAY S *U-Has Something FEATURING V " EXPERIENCE AR1CA pts —— Nice,For ' ­ tea> ROCCOS' CARTOON CARNIVAl EXPERIENCE YOURSELF Your Kitchen" OPfN PATH WEEKEND WORKSHOP Came to THE BUCKET 23rd and £eorl SEPT..14 and 15 $25 Across from HarJln North 3 HR5. ffitE PACKING 611 West mmcA mM JiMSttnnt sue. 813 W. 24TH INCLUDING 476-2281 **" Wavecrest Waferbeds i Complete selectiqn of water-beds & accessories. •4^5 64b/Biirnet 454-7901 PAUL NEWMAN of a time!! ROBERT REOFORDto KATHARINE ROSS „ •ik|i Thursday thruSaturday, STUDENTSi B0TCHCASSIDYANDTHE SUNDANCE ^suncle Stanley's Public House *!5 i;s opening in a grand way. . Friday-Saturday-Sunday^ Bui-dine Aud. $1.25 Eat! 'isfe Drink! $1.00 Sept. 13-14-15 Wsherhotdogs Beer by the 95C 7:25 & 9:35 *sm WILL GET smotheredin saurkraut. pitcher or the 15? mug. Student Gov't Films YOU A BeMerrv! • "v. m itSfl LATE SHOW 11:45 ONLY O $&kr~ Dan.ce to Chuck Berry around the ',l950's jUke box: Play ~—games in Uncle Stanley's Amusement Center. XJ "f WET % 7? -W«^§vi te'" u TIME RUN |N BlSli&fSSSfefi #* FRIDAY & SATURDAY^' ' ItMe, §j3: ^"W x-Uncle Stanley'sjs_ here today, to stay, in Doble center -9>^'W-5s LOVES, WHATEVER YOUR PARTNER PREFERENCES,lower ifevg'f. open dally 11 AM till '12 pm. with graater clarity and depth than avar bafora:..'' THE SEPT. 13-14 Poallcally photographad and directed*...an eya-opener Saturday till 1 A|VI. So celebrate! .x-> • si and a heart opener." i DAIUKf 11:45 ONLY '-^Norma MpLaln wmm 3*exAn, ADM. $1.50 CUSSiFIEDS" * Burdlne Au/1. K&i*' UNCI m y It'sthesameclrtly different ,Como]f>p • i-ssati . tSPBtdg. , V Room 5.200 5f| Mtdnd-albei*:: Unclassified HOUSl ^:0jm0d§p^^; A. CHRISTOPHER LARKiN FILM %% P,ejRoid i: V fi I > o* J. * •**. ^ -*"'•> *" ") *•"'« nJa. V^' _vj r <•> i -f *v *$tr*iclunng-the educ'alioti, program to include kindergarten."'>• .. ''TOO' MANY children get Substation Dispute 7 . .hudpot and expanding the bilingual' DR. OMAR GARZA, board • categorized into special education, •njropiram were topics mfist member":, fr-o-m.: Edinburgh that don t need it " Denton sa'd ^emphasized at-a rtieetinB .of . j;mphai>jzed • that-VUhis •.•is-. »an . 'The. language barrier ii> an unfay ~>,r legislative cdiicaharucommittees educational aid fpr our children I'estriction/" ' Bilingual To Be Discussed fe ^'Sand the State Board, of Education • who , need special-help in a ' 1 like.to tell the storv of the *" Thursday to discussimpt ovements traditional society ' , • : psychologists who taught the lowlv t i ^ _ v . r m u Fetter priorities taming proper instructional oeen 3.-J»ad-£sUmateck-afid­",r>idff)friittvnge:.Tfwnes Hall. • •• throughout Austin. r The 49th Armored Division AMERICAN SOCIETY OFClVIl ENGINEERS will" " meet at 3 p.m. Fridayat Eastwoods. Band at Camp Mabry will pre­ .-."i'fLess exotic, activities also •.'Park —-— THE AVtiinmnmtui, sent a• twilight., concert at 7 AUSTIN INTERNATIONAL FOIK DANCERS wUf •are scheduled at aTl centers * • frteet.at® p.jEuSaturday At Hancock- DARKROOM i. .during the dav". after ^choolr-'^V^?1^^ -;rr "Rpr'ffaU^^enfe/^to^dancfe ^nd a learn dpnees. ; . "" "7 and in the evenings for DEMOCRATIC'ASSOCIATION OF IRANIAN citizens of all ages selection of popular and other •STUDENTS will meel at 2 p.m. Saturate1®­ • concert music> -* . . . ..day m Architecture Building: 105­ DIRECT ACTION meet at7 p.m.Sunday.^­ - Detailed activiu' schedules " The concertisfree andopen ?CDO -at Friend's Meeting House> Mlf® i? are iivallable at theParks and to the p'ublic/Contributions to WashiKiton Sqtfure; for a; Vlet*/*£­Recreation Department. 1500-. the Infantry Museum, will be. . * nan^esedlftner. MaryJo Warren will -;/.' spea£. on tndochlna and the war \V. RiverSiSe .Dr..and at other .appreciated y>A • • orphans MORTAR BOARD .wtli meet at 6:34 •p.miWHj^i \NNOyNCtMINTS Sunday at. 3300 • Greenlee •St CAPlTOt etCYClE R&ONC ASSOCIATION will': •Members muitmake knovsm the rt ^ ^ ho)tf novice bitycle races from Uo5 tefltion "to Attend either in pe cr» . p.m. Suf^aya f Kelson Field parking NOTICES from the Main 8utfding i?l or by-calling 47 -{adtaeent to Rtagan High 1133.' •••••• • General libraries ar any School}'Ex{fer}tf)c&fr rtdenr.also: -• -will give Icitohs.. . ; • of the branches are of­ DfiPA8TM£NT OP ASTKoWoMY w)lt present ficial-University com­* a lecturc otv stellar spectroscopy by < David L.'Latotoeri *! noon Frl*. munications requiring day. In Robert. Lee Moor* 'HalJ .-H. immediate attention. , . # h•j •v»s< .-DfPAR1MENT OFPHYSICS witf sponsor lh£. Sigma Pi Stgma RhysTc»-"Surtfi6VT \T{?xos Union lois Bebout Course, orosenfed by Or. Austfn Glccson, at 2 p.m Friday in Robert —AAusical Evenrs Associate Director of Gatsby Girls don't.v^aif General Libraries, ' • •• • 38«'.' by the phone ... . -fxesenrs in concert WILLIS ALAN RAAA5EY ; * Public Services ' •* v." mmm ' • They go for dinner, good talk and the Thurscby-Sotufdoy . ^ •­ 9 . aiellow music of .Syl.Smith • ot J. Gotsl}y!s Dor ond Restouront. iy,r;„5epr, 12-14 " It b\& Something new for Austin. iT­ rhurs. & fri: In the Village, 2700 Anderson Lone. —Unioo-IbeQfi:e_Qi3Q_ 'ri Tickers: -JvcC.. JIM MINGS AGOHITS S1°? UT Students Faculty & Staff fha j & S 1.50 General Public ' ^ Benlwood Tavern Fn.-Sun, drnft special j MIRAGE 11:30 o.m.—.12 midnight Friday, and Soturdoyss . til 1:00 o.m. Opens for Sunday Brunch at 12:00. .v'Avallabte in theJhearre Box Office Sepr.12 &13­ • " : Saturday S I 25 Entertainment,Tuesday—Saturday. 8:30 to dose. Pit:i "A BRILLIANT, DAZZLING GIANT PICTURE. STARTLING, VERY Pi OF A FILM.-A behind-the-scenes • Rejfauronf t Artadt ' •' POWERFUb-AHILMOVING. It ij_' view of a bordello. The woijien • $ 2538 Guadalupe LUNCH SPECIAL DAILY gripping, technically brilliant,5% **>> debase or tantalize thfeir • $f.49. LIVE MUSIC 7 NITES commercial and universally • ''J'' customers. Their ace is sexual 5 • NO COVM -' • power and these women are the • . appealing to all. A wide canvas of Mixed Drinkt • Beer . • . • > ~ film's life-giving force." m $ Wine • Food • Amujerriunts1 -• ' decadence and vulgarity! Rush to Sunday Dinner Ipttlal' . jiisj®; —Mar/one Rosen, Ms. Magazine • -from 6i00 |i,in. ' ,• see it" SO •r &|S tequila SO,)»het Wed. & Sal, "W<$ Happy Hour 4-6 y~Rexi Reed, flewYork Paify News;1 "A MAGNIFICENT NEW MOVIE. : 2 for 1 Mixed OWnks "I wouldn't kick her "Shi /ust his to b» "/rfo hkt you.'But ltiki "Alt I want ij to it ABOUT: LOVE, HATE ANO 'JEX. The • out of M." ., met, tint'stil." you for othir msons." lavtd.tod mtrrin! "DO ANYTHING TaSEE~1Trr^ perfprmances are overpowering.; ; -,Vogue Magazine ' fV'J.. Five camera eyes.*4-; ; •Clipthis luckycoupomI »MIKENICHOLS*, . s-—Ldonord Harris, CBS-TV • r IAND TAKE 1/20{FF YOUR| "A VITAL, WONDERFUL, AND .|GUEST'S MEAL IF IT IS -• JACKNIOIOtSON GVND1CEBERGEN SHARPLY ORjGINAL MOVfE. It is ;^"'A FASCINATING FILM! Rich inI' i'.Z Squalor lessthan ARTHURGARFUNKa ANNMARGRET (•YOURS-FROM 3PM-11PM" exuberant, tempestuous; hilarious ^ fPf: 7„ ^ character and mood." • -PlONLY. OFFER 6000 UNTIll -and powerful.""-^ ^ ' r-Gent Shal»{, NBC-TV I Oa.6,1974 . Carnal Knowlcdge'is an amazing, brutally honest •^-Bernard Drew, Gannett Neuspapprs' ^"'MEMORABLE... GREAT! A film • film. Mike Nichols* handlingof actors is"-.*, ' "with passion, force, superb camera; unsurpassed among American directors!'" ••••# STO work and dfrection "J —Playboy Magazine , "—vH —Kathleen Cerroll, • ... . ^New YorkDaily tiewt "I've experiencedonly three or four movies that I? genuinely was sorry to see end. as-«. 4m smml Ptaio^tapiry v •' H"1 was sorry to see'Carnal Knowlettee'end." A Outi^fiOTUNHe; M«mc. by,' imk „ NMOKOTA »OOWCtt»»T»»OUAi>OCAI»OW>tVUfOfl' WtotNiriwikTiortM rail* . ;4* itr*v!^ ' ' WRITTEN AI^O DIRECTED B,Y LHMA WERTMULLER 9 GIANCArCO QIANNIHriWlnnw • BnuAclor A HtBBERT ft STE1NMANN 81l.LV B PHE^ENTAtiON ' '« NGELAMEtATO/EROSPAGNln-INAPOLlTO • ' A PE^PEflCORN-WOHMSEB RELEASE 5ervjnS'lta^acks and v sgctuieAt specials Friday, Saturday; Sunday?tSf Batts Hall Aud. • ADM ll'IU2A.UMAA w HM2AI Sept, 13,14,15 ^ >" Sunday 8:00 Only Texas NORML H • ' %\>'% -Subtitled A 35mm 7:25-9:25-11:^5 Modern Cinema "•••••••••••••••••••••••• «.(f mmwm wN^.-firs y*.jtfr M ^•m Mit =V1 s^f*i\~\ wy£: mm? •^""T^.dW?"**-"r J-4«tcs« •% «sc j^. - By VICKY BOWLES thfr band lost its heart, "the world's 'tallest banjo disappointed they" left oiTt*"' hro," -Gom?--to­ s. ->• ;~*% > -Texan Staff Writer . •evidenced by their lack of player." , '(heir other two hits. '^Buv for •• Boston'' -and -"On My Own/', S^aa-v-if*.;'#. .fffiN' -f'll The Nit ty Gritty Dirt Band banter with the audience.• Their material doesn't fit a:, -Me the Ham" and "Will the •lie ..was joined by -a five-: • was upstaged Wednesday banter which has, become Dirt -single category. PrcJbably Circle Be Uflbrofcen, '. These • meoiber-band; featuring an night.by. the V.Dirtettes*" and Band trademark" 'best known for their blue»rass• numbers"probably had been excellent female fiddle they knew it:As a result, their JohnMcEuen. the premitere • and countryrendition&suchas: .saved foivjhe encore, jvhich and. sfid.anto player, his-: jFT^ less-than-enthusiastic stag.e musician' of the group;' was • are found. oa their most the audience wanted but the livelier numbers." w presence. transmitted Atsell to most in control, especially* acclaimed album. '.'Will the group refused to do HurU,("IWAl.KKU MADE h,is Sii the audience and left us feel­during .lus soJo^spot with his.Circle Be Unbroken." they feelings, mavbe® , appearance-'during one of his «; ing somewhat' unfulfilled. " _ ba.n}o;v.ffi are also comfortable with '50s' StcvertSon-WS'Hot^so hesi­ songs, 'LOpen Road."'andrj^__ mi ; Oh. they were good. Bros '5teplienVincent:Benet;>: ;.'The love songs like .'^Young LoVe^_.Jant to encore "after his set, joined them for the enc 1 -• "with good material generally Mpuntam Whippo^viii,'';' uie. First Love." Ibbots&n's baby-which was one of.hls best per--"Hey Good Lookin '"""it's stf°' are. But the "Dirtettes," be-story of a mountaineer who/ faced Everly Brothers looks formances ever He openedby easy to enjoy a musical p«­-in^-lw.o -penllerpen. named .vehturesto.the'ciiyto eri'ter'a' ,auit th§ material perfectly. •< himself, and the-audience-.was-formance -when the eoter-Jerry Jeff Walker and B.\?~ 1iddle; cqnitrslv ytTIS'Zrrtgly FADDEN'S DfeADPA^-rl^^l..talCRUQysn'.kfle^i-.tamers..themselves are ob- St&wtsan. -iiro hip -pp^iph • qnicf^ fha stnging of ".Honky. Tonkin gimmicks. . viouslv hSvlng^i'goofflinie^™""'*withu Au'stitt .crowdsTRat, it^n y^u'vi; aial-^ juUHED-B.Y a good smind 1 iTi.'Vn. lggsy$= The difference in-mood takes.a great effort to over­"Malaguena" on "the banjo,• • {"I'm gonna stick to you like a system (yes. vir-grnfa.~gai3il" T)"elw(?btt^.tli!irl?li l Oaiid s~an3? come their.power. well, it can be done. "gooey oWBand-Aid"???) once sound. : lni -Munvcipa1' Stevenson's sets was a matter' The Dirt Band could, have •EACH JVtAN is/quite-ver>--again showed-their fme" com-Auditorium )i Ins, clear, boom­ ..of timing w Stevfenson had a Jer-ryJeff ^/alker(I) and B.W. Stevenson,(second from right) join members of the Nit­ done it — they're one of the satile.. able .to:play virtually. edic talents ing, voiye filled -the hall: So" chance.. to~capture the ty Gritty Dirt Bond. : most popular non-TexaSr every^nstFum'ent;"dh.the . Of course, the -biggest great-was his-controi-t-hatdurv audience ufor...himself,.-.and groups ever to play this area stage..Usually, however, they crowd pleasers • were ing "Texas-Mornimg"-one­ Walker.only added to..his — but they just seeme3to give .are Jeff •Hann^guitar,:vocals-r ,-'--'Rockvtop, Tennessee^ with;^" could hear "all tboSe funny lit triumph;, the Dirt'Band didn't s>r, up-and head' cut-up;'Jim Il^bot- washboard accompaniment!" "He"hrssTngltOlScs:"'as.-Steven-­ 3^ * have; an opfmrhuuiy to build.-­ WALKER ca me on during son, bass and vocals: Jimmie "tylr.. Bojangles" and "Diggy son later.termed them. Iheir own rapport before lliey Stevenson's sot',--and .both: Fadden, -• drUms, harmonica Liggy" Lo " I personally wqs After "Don't Go to Mex-were joined by: two already-returned to do '.'Cosmic Cow-and vocals-:--afld-j McEuenv j,esfsblished"crowd: pleasers. % boy,''7 '"Battle of' New ;banjo. fiddle and -steel guitar. fan Club Schedules. Meeting $ heatre Committee Presents Orleans" and/< "Little Bird" Joining* them for a few Although 1. dislike giving • The Donna Reed Fan Club, anew campusorganization, which' Vfith the Dirt Band After that,'-numbers was Bill Kenner< them the publicity, I must and a "search for meaning in American mass culture,': will claims to be"devoted to truth, justice and the American Way," mention the evening'sopening meet at 7-30 p.m. Friday in Union Building 334: ' -" •act, the. Moon Pie Datnce {iand. irom El Paso The Everybody 1 ^group's leader is Jimmy Carl r&, DANCERS WORKSHOP Members of the club;also claim to be "the onlv people on : ' campus who know whererJerry-Mathers really is^-The-seC'i^et —KSHR _ _ .. / "Hi-jC ••• ^ goingthrough of Mathers' whereabouts will be-revealed to-members' .-.Black, a former.-,member of SERIES The Mothers of Invention changes!* •^dBLscussion topics wlir include the^forthcoming Maynard G, CLASSES IN MODERN DANCE Kfebs Sock Hog, the Silver Spurrs'^armvore and the'fortunes-4-eTcdnstant of Hugh Beaumpnt. New roembers will Ije chosen from'inter­re.ference toriiV^'''formerTECHNIQUE AND EXPRESSION views. and all UT faculty; staff and students are eligible They-asswjiations arid.dedicated a. BASIC MOVEMENT UtfKJLSE will be judged by the ''honesty: sincerHy and the value of their song. *'v59 '. Chevrofet," to cars." Hazing will foIlbw^Triie'eting; but Those who atteftdare Fsiank Zappa." I'.'haye little DEVELOPMENT OF MODERN DANCE STYLES advised that Donna says, "We're a wholesomo-gang " ° respect for a mucician who must: exist on his past elorv. ­477-2210 The group's music was loud,• Molcot*v " common and ho-hum. My companion-rdad Texas lNlonthlyand '^Merrte :From vti David Q:Selznik" during their#4V£/O0G£ set.' I wished I had brought a . good book. 4323 IH-35 GROUP RATE DINNER (At Ef St. Elmo Road) • • SAUSACE •TUBS $ASO­ • POTATO SAIAO • UfNS • M fp] MAMJ '447-S5U .-3 • ONION • ftCKU • BltAO Mm \ Serwd Family Sty fo Minimdnl€-•' Of fout )V --i 'OJJ _CWi-r f>«f» I.'H •i'.'i MuitcawJ Sofc^sbfi MAM WitCfc Sjf. NOW APPEARING • 2330 S. Lamar t 444-8461 Custom Cooking— : w TS -* ' miQMLMJfcflPWHJ.tnlBTOSAT MDaSOyS"0LUCKY HH" V MONDAY through SATURDAY, GENERAL CiNEMA CORPOHATION AMenaai/SAM ProductcftsF3m Co Starrsig RALPH RlCHAf?DS0fl'-T?BCHErR08fRfS— WV' ARTHUR LOWE • HELEN MIRREN -0Am)Y NKHXS• MONA WASHBOUflNE a 8 P.Mr=: Midniglit EV£RXDA3C.SJ^25.'TJU1I30. EXCEPT * Pfbduced by MICHAEL VEDWiN and LINDSAYANDERSON • Directed by LINDSAY ANDERSON / Screenplay by DAVID SHERWN •Ong^SounriitackonWairerBfOS.Recgfds '• CefeSrating Watnef fees 5Ct"h AnnversaryQA.Waro CommufwatwsCompan^"1 BOBBY DOYLE \ •Sigg 451-7326 • IH35 ATKOEN1GLN. V I Friday, Saturday . Jester Center Auditorium 7i00 and 10:00 p.m. $1.00 UT Students, Fwulty, Staff * .%v ~ HILLEL PRESENTS e Ki $1.50 Members NOTHING SHORT OF'AMASTERPIECE! STUNNINGl"' .SLEEPEB HIT OF THE YEAR.UT HAS ^ • f. -r KING KONG *3& TEN TIMES THE ENERGY OF ,, . „ • ana MOST CONTEMPORARY FILMSr " ' MIDNIGHT SPECIAL ~flex &eed /V.V D&uyNews •:• ­"V MARK OF THE VAMPIRE v':. Both T>ie Or'9'nal Versions "• A STIJNNING SAGA! -• ' ;f -GeneSnahCfiiBC-TV ! im Ml i , A ' ''."••MllwM' SATURDAY Members.25* m ATCDKOTCHEFFF.fm -9;30 P.M. • j t Non-Members 75c J \ _ ' ^ IHCAPPRENTICESHIPOF H'm* 2105 Son Antonio 476-0125 j wA gDUDDV KRAVITZ Sti7ff*IC.HAWDO#SVFUS8wicxiwt tAMcrdr w$}* zM_i"§ife The Jewish Presence at U.T. : «NKXM EUC71 XX slivtR ord *MAX** * •rfxv,': Vifej5S«;(xa. SKS iMwmwiim PG;sv IP? The Interart Works : -K® ?fe^ & Laguna Gloriq HIGHLAND MALL 451-7326 • IH35 AT KOENIGLN. VIDEO "DON'T MISS IT!.. ..You ­ DONSIEGEL'S wbn't see anything like H ever againl" ELECTRIC CIRCUITRY AS IMAGE i -JOHN BUSTIN yM SEMINAR TOPICS & • Nof«: Patsei and, -'$wi The Aushn Citizen i *1-JVa Bargain Malln«et,v>! PRODUCTION LABORATORY: ­ Suspended, thl* Engagemen • Software . • Hardware "w> k . ^ • Conceptions r f V > S!^. Splits il;L * - • Developments ^ Irv : Union Theoifre tonight only at Midnight r • Experiments ® Mil $1.00 ULStudents, Faculty, Staff $1.50 Membe rs ?sl V IV J r„*st FOR INFORMATION CALL tt 452-9447^or 477-2210 || DooriOpeo Screenings % Doily 11:30 a.m. 12:00-2:30-5:00-7:25-9:45 1&-'' L ' V1 , ' SGLENSHAW CORPORATION| CAPITAL PLAZA PRESENTS 452-7646 • IH35 NORTH JH AND FINAL BIG WEEK! ' •ENDSTHURS, Ticker* Julie m w < f Andretos sJ® GBNE and •-. my At ; "\ W lWSJKMWiiO Omar , _7:JS-9:« • 4 j SAT l 'SUN at SilO-fettJMQ t •' ?» SKiiiil 3s .. w/fft special guest f ^ SJ A.'iH'W Iw^jrpj'CTt Corp7ij thjwwxjdb*** w " MVI LOGGIN5 Ihel^omeind MOMTOOEBNtrri "Phase Ctime to Boston •BtCOMMtKU v torcHiiDRrwl '* | Seedmm* >& mi % .; 3ester Center Auditonum $1.00 Ut Students 4 Raterved Matt ovallnble at 'Raymond'* Orugt 1 .and % % . »*] grow* «ndpanonllowm Yi JP-tpxX QA 6 Jotke'HirHiahtand.Mall ancTMpilOrdar fronvAuitin Tickrt' .7 ahdyp.m SI.50 Members-:^-s'-Faculty/'StaH . ' g Servic® 4706 «» Granda, Au.Hn 78705 (include money >> iday, September 13; 1974 THE DAfiLY TEXAN 'J^ku&sss; *'+..**.,1 . tr.V~ M --. -JSlzk wis! i««: .. . K*. :r^--~g?- RrS*" T3> ^ " —tixon Sfoff HioW by Corol J«on Simment > "cS Jim Franklin -^^aning) and Bill Livingood at the Rtjtz theater. Use Texan Classified Ads By .DANIEL D. SAEZ r.. , aj_ ... t-.-.... .Texan Staff Writer Z2} Like the legendary phoenix of myth" the Ritz"theater on East Sixth Street is rising anew from the dust of decay and an unr savory reputation as a skin-flick palace When the red and white marquee lights up for premiere night, sometime in.October; partnersJim Franklin and Bill Livingood witTbegin an expBflmenrin Austirrentertainment._ — V JHE of the Armadillo• that surround^ Franklin: jjie ' bearded, bespectacled artist-in-residence of Armadillo World Headquarters,-now, of course, surrounds the' Ritz — to a point/ ---"Many-people-are under the impression that the Ritz willbe ..some sor-t ofjm-Aroiadillb annex, which is not true; This is and Livingood. insisted, will be the rule at tire Ritz. Different, nights; they postulated, Could be devoted to different programs which-could feature classical music one night, dance the next, drama the following evening, as well as : v; : 1. ;-^ V Film and musiccould be combinedwith the"shlwmjfoTaTMls' singTng cowboy movie follojved by a contemporary interpreta­tion ofthe music By a group such as Asleep at the Wheel. "It would beridiculbus-tb try,to classify exactlywljat we'B be doing here," said Livingood, the Ritz' new business manager. '-'We'd .just be backing ourselves, in a corner." THE'OPENING of the Ritz will eulmiriatealongtirrie dream for Franklin. Several•years 5ack'"when helived in the East Six­; th Street neighborhood, he used to climb to the theater:roof via theSf Chartes.Ho.tel fire escape and fantasize what he could do - wiHut " " --„ ; . "I had this feeling.itwould be possible to do (UfKiwtWndsW""„^fe^|#^i^? * " i -.5hojys_here," explained Franklin as he peered down from the Ao the~vfork-in-progre.ss littered^TIopn ~ r~ • "Only problem was-that I had no idea who owned it.". Tlal.fninbf grdglem wassolved during a shoppingspree. Tvio • •years ago Franklin and friend Leon Russell were spotted enter­ ing the St. tfince.nl tie Paul thrift store'across from the Ritz-by an artist.friebdfof Franklin's. Michael Tracy. J • • WHILE RUSSELL came away with a treasure {rove of denim , ("Leon "couldn't'believe how cheap blue jeans were selling for"), 'Frarikliii found himself promised an introduction' by Tracy to the-Ritz' owner, Elmo.Hegrnan. Hegman ran the Ritz as a legitimate movieJio'iise from its . opening in 1937 till 1964, when he Was forced to close down. The theater remained shuttered for six years until'1970, wheijit was leased to pornographic film exhibitors. . v Hegman had read about Franklin in a 1971 issue of the New Yorker and. upon meeting him. was receptive to Franklin's ideas. The upshot w^s that whenthe pornographerswere forced Allf.nf Klicinocc lact Flll\* htr ihin Pnuol out of business last July by theSupreme Court rulings. Franklin and Livingpiod, the bwner of Slow-Printing, a .silk screen shop, assumed the.lease. SINCE JULY a work crew under Franklin and Livingood's supervision has been busy, plastering walls,fixing seatsand tak­ing care of^the legion of details necessary to put the 700-seat Ritz back in working condition. Oldtim.ers stop 'in front of the theater and remuiis'ce'about'the davs when a Bob Wills or a .Gene AutixfeaUire-length film cost oply a nickel, and OSrwas" with three cartoons and a serial. Franklin tells them that the theateratmosphere,will be intact, that he's not ripping out any seats to make a dance-floor-and that, yes, there will be ade­quate bathroom facilities available even in the balcony. "People used .to walk circles around the place when it was a porno house for fear of being seen in front of it," said Franklin. "We want lo 'make this.a place where people can dress up if they feel like H and not feel out of place. , ^ •VHell. he.continued, ."if we can find some~cheap tuxedos, we'll keep them as uniforms • ,u . "After all. you know, it's the Ritz."'5. ''Citli Raduced Prices lit'U30 Mok-Fri. Show TOWNUSA WM SouThside F»otoret I:30-3i30-5:30-7:30-fc30 W huMiwurtou • .;• tNWw^IW. *^1710 E. Ben White«44*.2g6^ ^ FUTU8C TIMB Mostcopsplay '' 1ilQ.fe50-M»fc05-7^5-MS ; ^BOX OFHCtOPiNS 7:«•SHOW STARTS AT DUSK itl>ythebobk, Newmanwrotehisown! Bp -»»* f m*?:PEW»!lUtD . Pritn ,* Jfc VILLAGE 4 tlll4:lS"Mon.-frCri,­ 2700 ANDERSON LN. 451-835 (nhirat 17:1S-2;15 ,* 4.1W.1S MS-lfclE ORinTNAi 'M ak'ii^phiptc a " c ' i i-W>11 be.pr^seoted,at ?. p.iB,, Sundav,at the First tinitsrian OK GINAL MANUSCRIPTS, correspondence, first editions ... Qiurch "4700 GhwpKSt.-Fnr mnroJnrnrrn?(,„„ iw. -» and. iconography commemorsiitig the deaffi"oT;George"tT—6168 """ ' Slte^'o^SSrth n^r!!!*1°V*" m "!* "D()WN IN' THE MINES," a melodrama in 19th C-entufy Sen 20 Also £.2 KLf1"10 <*n^u"tri style, is currently at the Creek Theater. Performances , ept-Also, in the.Josey Honors Room, an-exhibition w. begin at 8:30 n.m Friday and Saturdav honoring Robert Frost will be.presented The galleriesV-H,rnncr>Fr r ' u-<> i u -, • are open-ft-a.m. to 5 p.m Monday through Friday-and:--, Ken Johnson s production of the religious- TiBmiam to noon Saturdajc-'i.--r—~ -_ ^ roc'c m"SicaiTbpminues at-GenterStage'-at-MO p.m. Frj­c \ r *' i f ... day-and Saturday:8-prnr,Sunday -and a-6-prm.-Sunday ] " r "=• .MUSIC matinee : • A COUNTRY DANCE BENEFIT for the Rpund .Rockf THE.STv ijt THE blind I>.IG,'\a~product!.on by.the-A/rct. .:. • division of the.American-Heart Association will be Jield&w -4mpricdn playeps is being presented at 8 p.m: Fridav and from 8 p.m. to1a.rri. Saturday in Old Fettler'sPark at IH* 1 : Saturday in thq Methodist Student Centfer at W 25th and 35 arid FM 620 in Round Rock. jPIaying for the dance will • • Guadalupe Streets .be Buckdancers Choice and Plurt) Netty. Dqnations re-.•HWHjrRP nin rn .. . i , quested are $2 per -person: Fodd and beer will be VV , "1,U ^\E G0 WRONG? a-generation gap /aHce ,at: the Country Dinner Playhouse • •at the door. ' :• • The pe^ontianees-are 2-prm. anav p m SHnaay-aSg^rfe: ^ ' P-^ -Tucsday. through Saturday .'Opry House Friday and SatuVday._wj£h Steve. Fromholzc "WOODY GUTHRIE CHILD '^sd^app^earrng'on"Saturday: Advance tickets are $3.50". *^"Tavlor*K.irtiii:rhnTi ci Taylor s-rium/8:00 P5f wilh Optional Services Fee I k'kel I)r;i\viii«f: i September \7-2(] Ii<>UU IJox ()Hiee/1()-() \vcelieneral Sales Seplember Hu^ Sehe'luL.v I'r.-e l.> l:,-f holders .Je^ler. Kiiisolvinsf. ( <>-()p 7:00-7:^0 I'M \<> cameras or tape recorders allowed His-name is Harry Benson. He's thirty .four; He's the first, human be, of his kind...and^tJKil^maybe the iast. R«bucm Pncts til Fri. Ftolvrtj 1JO-JJO-SJO-7JO-WO Robert Redford as .Jeremiah Johnson" V . I.-00 Msn.-Fri. F«tur.i j-«m0-4^04.-00-10-00 4^ RIVERSIDE 1930 E HiVERSIDE 441-5689 UPTOWN SATURDAY ZERO M0STEL in MEt BROOK'S "THE PRODUCERS" • Rnfocnl Prim HI IJ0 Mm-FH . MIDNIGHT M0VIES;®^ PRY FRIDAY AND" " a3& .SATURDAY \ P5 sn)DHARTH\ isanexqmsite.movie. m A NOVEL BY K,HE5MAAIN NIGHT HESSE *&' A FILM BY k!'ti CONRAD BOOKS MIDNIGHT MOVIE -COLUMBIA PICTURES ftss^nte AVWoMA DAVIOSONProductlonTHE lOHDS Fl!/tTBUSH• IVm fRlDAT SNO 1 m withPEftfWKINQ•S^IVESTERSTALLONE•^jtNRYWlNKLEft• flMJLMACE*SUSANBlAKElif' ..... -M -----SATURDAY . kM* AN EXPECTED IOVE STORY . NEXT WEEK'S MNS . ­ tSSSSSSSSSSftSBi l SIDNEY PCMTIER • BILLCOSBY mmiVBELAFOOmE 8 f-.u-Ti^if II >CA0FI*Y AWARD-WINNER ' .-Tc.a;--ti«-5:4»-»JS R«Ak«d M<«i nvnH|f*rfM»f , BREWSTER McCLOUD -/.C -v cHgpi^aaj 4-3k" J$ rr £gt SBft -v, ;f Ma-" il«Hne!SOtpi&2 *t & Guoda(upe Second Level Dobie Moll 477-1324 SCREEN 1. TODAY THRU THURSDAY I I SCREEN 1 ThreS Showings Daily:-i-s I I «MasterpieceI "AN UNPRETENTIOUS ' MASTERPIECE. A GREAT. I . . ,, FILM.-Its startart electrifying^ Yoo mD*t lindvI th« |im« tosm,K or miss out onONE QF THE -^ jyPOSTANT CULTURAL­ LIFETIME'' WRVR ineTHE Possibly the Most Important Film of 1973 New York Times $1.50 12:45 4:30-8:15 -FRENCH WITH SUBTITLES I SCREEN TODAY THRU TUESDAY I t Mel Brooksf -•* I I I I I from the people who gave you "The Jazz Singer" 1730 • ,5M 3:20$|75 „i. BJ0 $|50 5:10-J 10:40­ |MIDNIGHT MOVIES $1.25 TODAY THRU TUESDAT 12:00 BUSBY BERKELEY'S MUS1CAUXTRAVAGANZA GOIDIGGERrOFl93J n' • " "Fashions no woman' would dare to wear' f at 12:20 LOCAL CAST! FILMtD IK AUSTINl . THE FILM THAT DARESTO ASK THE QUESTION: jCANATRAVEINGMAGAZINtSALESMAN^­TW.O FEMALE VAMPiRES, A10NES0ME COWBOY, SIX C0LLE6F SWINGERS, A TEENAGE MODEL, ONl DIRTY OLD MAN, » GERMAN SHEPHERD/THE "LEATHER -S LADY", A HOT WATER BOTTLE, Ap STEWARDESS, A SINISTBi INTRUD­ ER, A RUNAWAY HEARSE AND 13 OTHER AVERAGE PEOPLE 4 FIND TRUE LOW & HAPPINESS? i ' I t MACUS RATED )C • FILM < . • No One! Under 19 — GROUP " BEDROOM •resents \T LAST~A FILM THAT %ETS THE AUDIENCE Iscore Admitted! EVERYONE ENTERING ' THE THEATRE WILL RECEIVE A SPECIAL DEVICE TO MEAS­URE THEIR OWN PERSONAL "BEDROOM POTENTIAL" j UT Instructor Heltnsr^ Ballet Mremiere fySjbr Bv J WE KOOCK Bamsey Lewis one? said music draws all the most basie emotion1-from far1 in­side men. ' • Lathari Sanford. University associate professor of_dfama. is mounting a jazz worksetto Lewis' music and shares a ^imilar philosophy in regard to jazz./"Jazz is a' very .per­sonal respon.se to what von are feeimg or thinking." he ' Avja^maivL express RoWl feel — like an' performer, actor and choreographer since -1958.­_ Sanford first Began-lo' study• |-dance "as a student at "the University. With g foundation in modern dance, jazz -and'a spattering of .ballet, he puV sued more advanced work in New--York-, which-;ineJuded­seyen years of study with the multi-talented,.^aneer.-'MiaV Mattox. ^ "I:, gravitated to Mattb* because he was the most challenging, and 1 had a lot of catching up to do." says the articulate 'and talented teacher. SANFORIVS professional ^career. as, a dancer .was launched With appearances in National Company's and Vegas Company's • "Sweet Chanty." Since that; time, he has appeared in 50. different shows-in and around New _Yprk'. 'jihoreograplieii and,, Sweet Charity",m Tokyoand; nightclub -work" and. jnost • notably, • choreographed the: world-' premiere of the "Fan­tastiks.' : "1 like all the theater except bad perfor­mances," he-says emphatical­ly After-a request to return to • the Umversityjis a dance in­structor in the""drama depart­ment. Sanford established -jazz as-a legitimate program in ' the department and con-' PARAMOUNT JOSEPH" ELKE. GOTTEN -SOHMERio. [HEUNITED STATES SUPBEMECOUm "/ mtMn't kttk / "She just hat * I it hkt you. ' All I mut a tiroutif J u it nkt. Butlhktyou for it loYtd.nl M." .thit's til" olhtf rtnens" mirntd." ^ MiSKiaioiS::SccOlS : P*\*scrv fcTnedtar jm |COMING WEDNESDAY SIPT. 18th | -MmB • "The MostBrilliant 1 VARSITY «M»r 2<:00 GUADALUPE STREET m the. .51-25. til 3:00 p.m. • FEATURES-2=15-4:10 .6:05-8:.00*9:55 • 4TH HILARIOUS ;5B WEEK eJlChsshs! 1b~mb^N viewMovieof theYeorH | -ANDREW SARRIS.The Village Voice 1 "TliebnigrittMen... ttenitMfiMritrmmie fonMIMMCJWbtBS ford*Mrts«pii4B|tj, celved and designed the BFA 7 :30 p.m. Sunday at Armadillo the energy thai comes out of dance degree in the College of*^\Vortd.-Hea'dqoartert;r~"'*rr--'-.­ the body goes way beyond it; Pine . Arts. He haswnnit H „­ ,^THE WORKK to Sanford considers., this choreogutphed numerous :'' A" to, be. premiered, entitled "Hea\%"' work more: lyrical than his •University productions, in­: features a.coreof dancem Wlp -usual staccato style and feels cluding last season's "A Fun­-that the ABT dancers' have'! structured and cam­ •ny Tjjmg-Happened on tli'e --" , -,, ; adapted to the piece readily / Way to the Forum ""This year's' bill will include the i, r ^ • A STICKLER for qualifv, Choreography for "Damn touple;> P,aced ,n front The •Sanford.'s., strong technique- dancers give the 'impression Yankees." the world of a controlled homogeneous . premiere of "Yankee Doodle" bodv beamed wjth erfbFgythat; •and a . segment in the April cannot be contained, thrusting dance festival. ­ itself out through fully extend­ Hall;-University professor of : collapsed to the.floor in a split . a.Udili£C£lfin.9.f.. Austin*-Ballet l heatreV'tkin-; r '' - ford is actirig qs gues.1' :ff?y.To maintain < the electricity •choreographer for the.reper­of the tension* the dancers' tory company's opening fall 'must move from whatSanfqrd performance scheduled for calls the ''gut level" so that No Texas yApple's Way' , "Wheelers' Best By MY SHARBUTT t" ; ages 24, {7 and Itf-a 12-year-AP Television Writer .4-old airl and their old man, a ,. NEW" YORK (AP) ~ Stop bewhiskered, wild-eyed, no-whatever you're doing at 8/30 , account, shiftless rascal. • " p m. and watch,"The Texas THIS 30-MINUTE.,caper, f Wheelers" on ABC Friday, starring veteran'characterac-night. It's one of the funniest, tor .Jack Elam as the reluc­best-written shows I've ever-• tant head of the clait, is in no seen,. • way a Texas versibn of­_ It-concerns a motherless. r:'Apple;s Way." Virtue isn't dtt-ppjOP-^and^fondampntaHy^on-eonstant-display^" decent rural family.-The fami-On display is an excellent ly consists of'three-lads — sense of thteoff-hand,_deadpan SHAKEY'S ^ 2915 Gyadalupe . ,„rr *' , presrtils-• BRUSHY CREEK _ TONIGHT THRU SATURDAY Serving, your favorite Beer, Wine Coolers, . Sangria, and'21 varieties of great pizza. 2915 Guadalupe 476-4394 SPECIAL LATE SHOW OPENr-l V:45-P.M.-Feature 12 Midnight \\ i®POINT •J3r COtOR RtSTRlCTtO nd the Shop#. Denmark^ (North Viljas Tickets also will be available art the door for $2. Children • • -, ' Other, wopks to;be, featured Tchaikovsky Suite. • "Le Combat, "i);ipollb t'as tie TJ°'S\LL and_ '_F\1uj..ers 3 _I Am«rtc|6.Ethnic Oancesff^"­ ^^s_ TV Bet humor of the Lone Star State, brilliantly, captured by , scriptwriter Dale McRaven who created the series and is !its executive producer. - The openingshow dealswith •' the_ family'sreaction to the relurn of Pa Wheeler, whodis­•• appeared eight months earlier -in search of gold arid left Kisr*' Ubrood in the lurch. ; : , HIS cheery arrival, hailecT" • with a lunge for'h'is throat by ; one son, is preceded by some • wonderful;.;commentary con--­cerning manhood; drinking " and-dne of-the son's girlfriends, who flounces off the' Wheeler premises ,wjien the oldeSt boy takes away his brother's six-pack of beer-. ' — "Can't trust a woman who onl\ wants vour-bceH '^drawls r the olctost. boyv.. ^ •'I didn'rwanx totrusttanr' ^ the kid groans. 'Monly wanted7 -to get her drunk,7' 1 /•£ The show also • contains a~ wild, classic, segment in-­ ..WJxiflS. L.J betweeniather and oldest spjx xf 'and the burial of a duck. It's -hard-to-explamlhg two in one paragraph, but-.the scene made me laugh untiLmv sides hurt ; _ . The direction is great, and-so is the entirecast. Theshow manages the difficult feat .of .. being-•funnv cand -reftlistio .­simultaneously. It's one series I ho_pe will be with us a long time " television 6:30 p.m. • -lpm< " * £££ . 7 The New Candid Casnera' ,ti•.•*7: Movie; J'MASMT4 .T 9 J6 Ne*s -• CaottoJ ^a4(eFy. ••'-Nk;., r ... J? p.m. . ;• •• . The Rocktord Pitffs-.v.;1" T Planet of t*te Ape* 4 •> 1,30 pm.9 Washington WpeK In Review •9.Lawn and Gafdeo'i-^; • 7* Kodiak • 24 The Texav WheelofV^ • 36 Sanford and Son • ' » •p.m.. . ••7:30 p m 'v 9 The B^acK American Sun:' 9 wait Street Week : v The Nfflht Stalker•-24 The Six Million Dollar Man 36 Police Womtft ' ^J-'' 36 CWco and the AAan 9x30 pjn , r' H ^ 9 Blick.Perjoeah'e-v txi* News ? 10 p.m.-.'":.'--1 u 7. 24. 34 News-­ .. .^. Thc ©oardin^ttiHrte •" ' : 7-Movie; ,J'Nl9Mt of lhf'tcj>u>,* v:. 'r,; 9 The 3 • -44 Widt? World ot: EritefioJAment--*v "sin Coflcyrt" ­ . 36 Thfe-Toftighl Show • • ­ J GULF.STATES DRIVE-IN MIDNITE SHOW >TIP E. to «W«»44»2»t/ PRIDAY 13TH JINX PREVUE ft DOUBLE HORROW SHOW "[ffllSfJOfiK OPfN 1.45 Ji-oo til i p.™. Ft A. 1:00 CLASSES IKClUStO 4:00^00 ' 5' -Maasnwuwa.-«n.nM 8M-10M LVPASS LIST SUSPENDED" . :n r-P-­ ^ '-'j & uft '•$m. •­ -Qf VF MHALIT WNac-TY Mnd ti* ­ . HBC'TV MILjy(QRKf ­ sy -1 i • ' SVi#f WJDE CHABROLS ^ILLIANT THRILbER mm $|(f§a§SSgp 13 '-.^'.7 A MfiTTOt OF LUST AND 8f 'S^bf Paul niorrlsscy P • '---.\\ WMuSuSlBm^56^1""*S^Mw0<'^nw^0L0H»ABUmmroKncrgws. MICHELPICC.OU««STEPHANE AUDRAM' , I w^iJLtWN ROTH'ri ;• ATeuiANf^iNCouin'iMiKsiiiKaMtt I a: ~:-V^attiaMM«icniMiiite'Hi«•«•••••••••••«#« WfcnaSK/eKin SSm" * Dollla ft Wi* -fc-• t /» 'M*UW!">0 * MS,AM '»OfWCT/,W -^#5 '.v-.'.-i.-' V* ' 1 tr- 1 + « -* A "^Vri-5^1 A AA.". rt/'V'' '"*"1 ' ,»*" v-5" ^i. s, A 1 9-,V-A ** "* rJ ^ •"Sf'V P e : L *1 £ S^rl'Zsz the union , FRIDAY: .International Food Bazaar.-11:30 a.m. to; 2 p.Yn. Union Patio. Nominal prices for food. • '­^"'.7 F"ine Arts Film Series "Artists Ciaes Oldenburg'/ and • "The Art-of Ceramic Decorating." :Noon.' Union Theatre; Free Canoe Trip-on. the-Lower Guadalupe: Cars leave at-5-p.m. from East Mall Fountain .... SOTA.(Students Older Than Average) Happy Hour -5 to.7 p in Club Caravan. Villa Capn Motor Hotel Weekend Filnv-'-'O Lucky Man" 7-and 10,p.m; Jester Center wtwssw-. Auditorium. Admission.$l for UT students, facultyand staff: i-SiSSa v members 23 Concert Willis Alan'Ramsey H"30 p ill" Union Theatre Ad­x-'.yam mission $1 University students, facility. .and -staff; $1,50 : others. Theatre; Admission 51 for University students; faculty and staff;$1;50members. 'SArUKDTTP'V'nii^lJeii l liiij. to-2 p.m. South: Mall.-Admission-2& cents. Prizes. « . .. Saturday Morning Fun Club. Film: ''TheTime.Machine." 11 --'•am Union Theatre'Free. -_ _ a* ^Weekend Fjlm: vO Lucky Man" at7 and 10 p.m. See Friday: Dance. Oiez y Seis de Septiembre Barle Traditional danee: -to celebrate Mexico!s Pay of Independence from Spam.-Ad-" A"* mission Sl for University studentsi ,fatulty an'd"staff; ft.50 others. Music by Mike Saucedo arid The Latin'Image. At 8 p m. in the Main Ballroom. • • ; " "" Concerh-WiHis-Alan-Ramsej-v-fiiao.pjcn. Se^jilrLdgy­ *SUNDA-Y rWeekend-Film"Scarecrowl'-at 7;antf:9,p.rnJ3SfeK Center-Audltori.uVn; Admission-$1-{or University -students; ' faculty and staff: $1.50 QUHM-S, —-­MONDAY:' Art Exhibit: VVork by Chicano-Artists. 9_a;i1i. to 5 p.m. through Sept. 20. Union Gallery,-first floor. Union Committee Interviews 1 to 5 p.m. Union Building 342-. TUESDAY:-Drawing for Return to Forever featuring Chick """Corca: -• -. — > -_ " J227, ens'eriitrle; "first G-EG-«3uH.ural -Entertainment Cornj mittee) event of the vear. Ticket prices for optional fee. h(rfders^$lj$2-and"$3^Drawing-bogins-at_l(Lajil.an_Hogg Box • Office. , • . ' Uftwp Committee Interviews. 6 to 10 p.m. Union Building ~ ~ 342 --> * . . _ , iAVEDNESDAV: Film: ''The Sound. Of Music,-8 p.m. Batts Auditorium. Admission $1 for University students,'faculty • -<»na.'siaffi.:£L5.0. me^iberej ^ TilURSDAYt SOTA R«Gopliorrior .vetcrans."T):30 to 4:30 p ni-Dobie Room, Fourth floor. Atsdemic.Cunter, Patio Concert; • Gosnej^-Thornton, folksmger.: Noon. Union Patio ' , Film: "All About Eve" at 7 and 9:30 p.m. Batts Auditorium. ' .Union Committee Interviews 6to 10 p.m. Union.Building 342. THE >• ' Je*& f. AMERICAN PLAYERS Presents "THE STY OF THE BUND PIG" •••;• -> by . Philip Haves Dean 7 "fRi.-SAT. THRU SEPT. 28 2434 GUADALUPE, 8:00 p.m. Adm. $2.00­ jSA-TEXAS r. PlEASANT VALlEY Ri l«Dtt S. PIEASANT VALLEY ROAD m •>«* ht* I love and'Anarchy' «r' 3? '-^--tMaTianqela Meloto (r) desperately;bafties her sister prostitute Lino Polito in a brothel . . . .when'the latter attempts to thwart'the scheme of Giancarlo Giannini. It's alf a part' of "Love and Anarchy," a much-praiseid film by director. Una Wertmuller. Giannihi. the nnes Festival' "Best Actor" award. The film wiU teceive its-Austin 0­ .? premiere at. 7:25, 9:25 and 11:15 pim. Friday, Saturday and Sunday In Batts Auditorium.. ' 'A SHiar Is ?orn?' --By-Jlbb -Worl'd N'ewserYtce-­ ' Barbra-Streisand-atid Kris Kristofferson have been cast as the. leads in a film remake of the Judy Garland classic, .r,.^--.S|ai[-Is.-. Bom/!. Entitled • ".Raihb^-;Bpa3^Jhe. film features Streisand and ^ Kristofferson as a rock, and' -fE " TONIGHT SHLV A'SHEADBAND -/ • Returns Returns-Returns •-? SATURDAY . GRE^ZY WH^IS rollin ..eoitple-who-tpui the— — — -SUMGAY _ _ country.. Actual concert THE BRONCO B --foo^e-qs^ia^BHgtfTd-be" shot-.­ 707 Bee Caves R 927-9016 • -in San -Francisco, Los;Angeles,.r., and Atlanta. ~-5:».7:«0.»J0 1:10-7:S(MJ04KI5-7:4S-MS moVle of. v—Joe Pollpck, the yearj St. toois. Ppsl Diipaitd Rush to- see it/' —Will Jones, Minneapolis.Tribune* H-INOOlORll . RESTRICTED ^ Brncc Lcc.® S1.25 til Si p.m. Returnof The Dra£onDr,21 x JGULP STATES PfflVE-m^Vr sHnyir F STATES DRIVE-llf ' -STARTS ^ IShovvTOWNUSA AT I fEATURES6:4M:20-10:00 " •»>'^•836^58^' DU5KI . -... 710 6. Ben Whhc» 444-2296/•* g -'THE FOUR "*** THEATRE „ Reduced-Prices ' ' , *^''->1 " ' Company Seeks Artists By CHRIS GARRETT \ '• '' Texan Staff Writer s^;.Remember when the album "Switc]ied-On 'Bach" broughtsynthesized musicinto vogue? Since then, eiectronic'"niusic has.ceased to -be a curious fad, evolving into a mature and legitimate medipm. A new theater cancept utilising the medium .-•as a focal point is l»ing initiated by musician-Jacob Acosta. Acos"ta hope:s to combine local -artists. liye m'uSicians. dancers^nd recorded V electronic music into a multi-media produc­ tion he terms . "intellectual vaudeville." ; Acosta seesa"need to pool,local talent into a - profitable, avantgarde. theater group." THE PROPOSED company.wouldcompose group to augment the electronic sound-trac TneideaofAcosta'S'plaoesartistsonstai TENNIS INSTRUCTION • LT>W student rates ' ' '.Beginning -!High Intertriediate ^ Group lessons, starting Sept. 16 MWF mornings • Individual byappointment MIKESTeWART 385-8958 . . 200 ACADEMY ' ANNEX TO&AY & EVERY FRIDAY HAPPY HOUR FROM 4-7 • 75* HIGHBAUS TODA'Y'STBAND PLUM NELLY I .. . -• " •' TONUt* 5AT. 8 P.M.r' RUSTY WEIR A|JEX HARVEY STEVE FROMHOLZ . WITH BUSTY SAT. QNtV ADVANCE TICKETS $3.50. V Al Inntr Sanctum,' Odd Moment {Highland Mall) A The Opry-Hpvt* M Offi« / -' ^ ' ALSO WILD BILL and th* Buffalo Yankees (, '• IN THE ANNEX SUN. SEPT; IS OREEZY WHEELS SHOW INFO: 442-274? painting a mural durmg :a portion • of the - music. -.• . , Acosta studied .music at>:San ,-Antonio College an'{l North TexasJState University un­•der Merl&^EHis in the electronic music : department. Labeling his electronic music looselv as 'very progressive jazz:" • his attempt to combine music rand the:• arts:-­though far-oat. seems interesting. ­ , _ANOTlI,ER UNIQUE aspect of fus concept concerns his co-operative gfoup theory. let­ting the members of the cOmpanv take an ac­ •< tive role-in the production and direction. ... Acosta'sgoal is to tap the artistic'talents of people-coming into the company, and pay interested in legitirhate art tocontacf at.472-7838 -FtATURtS 7K»-8J0-10k)a ONE WEEK ONLY-. -".•J.ay.Cocks Trme Magazine MYSTERIES OF YHEORGANISM wntten, directed, produced by Dusan Malcavejev STARTS WED.: 1 TRANS•TEXAS . ' MBlBMM $1.50 ~til fcli , Pon.-So».j 11«3 W. Ben White Blvd —4422333 FEATURfSfclS-MO-MS I'M PROUD 'THE EROTIC FILM CIRCUS' TRANS*TEXAS HURRY . il'l LliB.Wfl Mfttl t. # f\t \unyem DINE WITH US 64006um«t Rotf — 465-6933 .... "THiGREAT AMERICAN COWBOf' 8:i5-11:« 2nd Feature "BROTHERS OTfOOLE" at 10:15 BEST DOCUMENTARY OF THIS FILM' The Academy Award Winner AT TWO THEATRES -,v / COLOR BY DELUXE • The exciting true story of . a vanishing amerioan ^ -41 ^ and his special kind of freedom. Starring. Lorry Mahan and Phil Lyne -Narrated "fay Joel McCrea Winner of. "^rangier Award" from:Cowboy. Halt of Fame EXCLUSIVE UMITID ENGAGEMENT­SEE IT NOW.BEFORE IT'S TAKEN OUT'^® OF RELEASE—ON OUR GIANT SCREEN— •/ OPEN -1:30 • Feo; 1:45-5:15-8^0 Reduced Prices til 5:30 WINNER OF 6 ACADEMY AWARDS! Best Screen Play " The story of Zhivago • Best Movie Score Besi Onecnaiography.Color a man torn between Best Art Direction, Color his love For his Best Set Perforation •est Costunie DesiQn.Color wife and.the * passionate and tender "Lara...told T' against the flaming background of revolution: MEIBQ^GQLjDWWMWER PflESCNTS AMffiKMIFKHJCIW DAVIDLEAN'S FILM OF BORIS FASTERNAKS scruh A&Y 8/' DIRECTED BY DAVH) LEAN ^r-—J'-­ DOCTOR ZHiVAGO ilM" ROBERT BOIT " Fmn LC*twmbkifktum- A KM Sbapiro Film ,A PIVHIM «ldlwnM« KcfutM, IM. STARRING PANAVISION: COlOR tO GEBALDINE CHAPLIN • JULIE CHRISTIE • TOM COIJRTENAY -METROCOLOR, f FrWgyrSfeptemi5er:-13rW4 THE DAHLY teXAN Pago 21­ y ~ " ^ v. ^ ^ ^ # i i ^ ^ ^ 4 ^ ~s" ' , —, <• rfpyrft... I V A « V7 ^ hi _**' , ^ •SSttSBEBSf ._....11 ^--.. J."1.11'! IHKMKHMnngg W-.5?i?5f-: «•* -V"-'^ A:^;,v :<•";-> :V, *-'*vVf *». c­ -3r.i CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING FURN. APARTS. HELP WANTED RATES Each word one Mme. Stereo -For. Sate =For-Sole . . .«— — TW0 BEpR00M*apartmer\t Stl5 plus Eacft-woro 2-4-tfcoes-: Each word 5-9 times . -Kicww pcopt c< -MlftACORO 40-A automatic turntable^ XOP CA$W J?RLCES-paW40MJiamondS7~ Each word 10 ormofe-tfmei.sS . =?,, N?w I6friu»rconiBVtieleft:'.*2!0 ABPr 2208 Eh-female, of.*viegetarlafi houses-Mombcr . ..I, r)Uv Cm O, 1 ccfl.x.t inchtenor more times $2.64-i, WP.048). BSRturniabJev 8-track-, • dia..Ujifor curtains, wall-*iangings,.ap-. AND Held. 476-0734, owhed and operatrt.vioc*pens|ve. com* . l !>' 301 West 39th M*M/FM.Good shape .$100, 476-2452 after parel, upholstery. Maharani.* 15W. San Portable. Inter-Co^Op Council. 510 W. r-\>— A •«-«'<« •-%' * • •.'6 ; v i" • Antonio: 476-2291 478-2576 or 345-3171 ; ONE BEDROOMS UNF. APARTS. Jlrd St 476 1957 RESTAURANT. . OYHACQ STEREOT20 power amp, *85. • •AUTHENTIC NAVAJO *ugs.-AHHies, i ' DCAOUNf $QfSXA£ .-•* Shag, dishwasher, ; -Accepting application? tor Kenwood AM/FMstereo tuner,$45. Exc:~ acd-pricei: Call 477-0032 alter sevtf^. .-.-DOWNTOWNER-I MENCTEV TT«W FNDEF ....-—.3:00 AJN. cond. &iH, 444-6864. : ' : .vAnydayi-:-v---^ -;---»^'-; •; -p gas grrtf, pets"6Ki -V> ~~~~~ ' ' . night kitchen personnel, even-cozy community Ttmdoy ,\> i.11:00 o_nv . APTS 1"Vr-wooded WHY NOT:A GO^OP?­ . STEREO SYSTEMJ $ansufr.receive.;>: ;...•/ time servers. Appfy in person TbwfWay.TMon W«dn*tdoy .11;QQ ajn. frWfe^Sy&ereK headphones/5450 Firm: •; ;; bifls paid.CA>.CH>.walking-distance UT, • lovely creekslde setting. Huge grassy -. op wiih many socialand educational ac­ Fnday T»MB TTWIDAY ..•... .11:00 «-'M-,1211W. 8th ' 474-1107 Covered parktng4 iauodry room • fawa -lote'of .trj^s. Convenient to UT, tivities run by the njembers. New between. 2-4 • p.m; Monday • : JBM TYPEWRITER. AfedeV C.carbon v ../ 472-4162 off Blanco downtown, shopping; recreation. Fyliy buildings, lots'ot.frees. Double occupan* Saturday..40? West Andorson .;K0SS ESP-9 Headphones, In warranty,/ 'rltsbon.-Used 6'months. UKe new, S260. . 505 East nth -cy'SU0/mQ: Apply at 2000 Pearl, after­ .$75. _ L»ke ,new-records {early Dyjaru , -:4i72"64«6;.-v : -.1 •**•" „• * carpeted paneled. and youwon't beheve Lanie. Eq-ual Opportunity .LighttooL others.! evenings _ _ STAINLESS .tidmtiwiwui..nm»tic>t woftf mvi) b» 5ANSUt 2000 solld-stat? stereophonic kHa1, stand, pyrometervshfelves..posts*->jnM«th*pwMuhm onrttp»wftl» ftp tunet^meWjefj 32.W4tts xxt&rctuiiBfrW'*?-cbnesr"srllTs. wud.Front loading wameh.: •CROW'S;NEST-o^ilQ.My&cev^Room and-> 2W.. odprtftnMft.abpvU/.bft.med* mi brtr. ..board: jingles/ sJ42.50/ffionffr. doublM ­ auk ONTim»rM*rfrwfio«:AffcMmt«f ..Best <&ier:476-2452.•• . . inokUn,-'lOO.voUsr425;iCathy.Oaysoniy: ' EFHICl'EJMCIES.'T . • ALL BILLS"PA1D\ ;;L' . r 1LLUSt-RAXOR •45l'S^7; 451-9482. t: :EXS®!LONJ;..5IPPORTOT>L»JJJ-FOR-JFVDTV|DUAL.: rtm 30dap «ft«t pMhfcatwn." • GARRARD TURNTABLE'with Walnut •„•••• * 1 Bedroom " * Ohly S>25 plus E • 2.BEDROOM -$U7»50/nyroti;v*oomy:":"slngtef' iomyj • with-lob experience or concTerflfalM * $t5.'.mpnth, air.condilionlng. 475-8242. Lovely shag, lull kitchen. CA/CH-Dou: ' TV. 4$4*7096. : 0983. •• • . bie bed. Somewhat secluded. No pets •5lratlord Hall at Trafalgar. Square has ability and free I •speakefi. Zenith 84W cabinet model BOLEX Jfrmrn-mcvje camera. $200. 453^ '' 2 BATH schooling in technical lllus.tratlon; artist . •• •. -j • . HALLMARK-APTS, 3805'AVehue B." ~ -—-j~ luxtrf-y apartments ideal". Vbft-shaclng. 0OBIE-22nd floor slde slilte. Fabulous • handl HtyVtratlon background needed. Also desire )5 word minimum each day ...5 .30 "PAkASONlC COMPACT. SYSTEM. , GET YOUR. DORM refrigerator from . 70S W. 34th ' • 459-8564 !^r^Ou)et garden setting,'pools and mechanical drawing Experience or •-UOW STU0ENT RATES. •. . .. view campusralrport, bav»d4 4754002. • Each additional wordeach days :0S AM/FM receiver.-BSR turntable. Hook­•Appfiance Distributors. $179.95. 3814 ^^»ctubhouse for private parties.$205.30 un* trainee ' —3-ca*. x 1 mgh each.day...:..,S2.64 up for Quad and tape. $125 or best offer. Woodbury 444^466. , . -MISCELLANEOUS •s Ca(L.8W-W4A,'e*ts.270 for Appointment " ^'W..^454-8239 ... fornnhed,-$230 burnished.-"Easy dr^efo: --•UfKl«isH»eda"vV4i«e 3«U'Ts Rel{TDr. *• "---> Students-must show. Auditor's AW;FM STEFE& "Receiver with •»-• typewriter, $25. Round plcknltk table* • AR E-NA- "With chalk in hand, the vagabond* receipts and pay madvance inTSP .track, slkJe' controli, filters, 2 4-way. ;five-benches, $25:-Pair -hangmg laMpsA -Dcga.T-—-••••— -——-— ALL BILLS PAID ~ iBW^ 3.200 (25th & WhitisMrotn'1*. soeakers.$?5 or bestoffer.Perfect GOndv. $25. Flve>speed btke. $30. Three motor- ST59750 : ^ a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Monday:through' 475-1206. ..cycles. Cathy. Days only^ 451-5)37, 4M-: - APARTMENTS ALL BILLS PArD-jTo skptch a face.that might weil • STATE- b\jy, tncToutof any rnon .''-tiFfe Friday. . •• f4t2;.'"V--.' •' •• • ••••"' 1414 Arena Drive TWO MCINTOSH ML-2C speakers With " MINI EFE, $110 2 Bedroom-From $210 v«^..: -;Large patios,-balconies, -and-beautiful Then -as h^ praced'another look EMPLOYMENT k SMITH-CORONA 1 BR SI57.50 areas Chateau : HP;. equalizer. 5 months^old: Moving Mm-)'-USE"D" adding -Furo. -Au EUfta -Bus ..courtyard at Trianon. upon the shapely head. • tsd/ Save S3W 44M552 . .With a. fearful shriek he leaped':; .' » v . HALF-TIME * .^machine, portable^ with case, good con- Townhouse.and gardenApartments,$nly .and. fell across th# picture—dead'r" v, dPisrr $35 454-6705 -6 blocks to Campus Mgr. 442-4124'° minutffs feom shopping, parks/golf-One, ­ FOR SALE Musical -For Safe """ 2408-Leon • -476-3467 '•ft bedrooms from$»59,;aH billsoaid.Aisol--' Hugh D'ArcV/ ' KEYPUNCH "QLYMPIA TYPEWRITER, portable' .v:. bedrooms. Furnished or 'unrurnished^;:^ Excellent, condition. 575. 47MI04 att«,:^/ : Call 926-I247 or 451-1159.^ -."The Pace on'the • OPERATOR GIBSON J*200, with case; Flawless. 474«." . • Barroom Floor"-: 1518. 474-1723. 5:30 p.m.and weekerids.Office,.472-1124; . $159.50 p;| Auto -For Sale 4ik .,. 2.BDR/VBATH in smatt."qulef complex-'-?*';:--Unkorh Gallery/Dob?c Mall 4 hr». per day. 5-9 p.m '5 day week, 2-3 V ALL S4LLS PAID years experience. Salar SILVER ANO; TURQOUISE jewelry. ' " on U*eAustin inlet,$170 plus elec: • _ , .--ry $234-$767/per . 1972 GREMLIN; "X" 3*peed. AC. ex-FIVE PIECE DRUM set. Zlldiean cym-Custom work ana rtpai^ 1972 -Honda-•; .1 BEDROOM FURNISHED 0479 after 5. month.depending on qualifications balv standi, hlgh-h^t..throne, pedal \t*. Texas Rehabilitation Commission- . tras, Excellent condition. Best ,m-.-duded: $450:Negotlabfe. 47^7).-.. 3S0SL: Completely overhauled. 459-7554. .^Sha9' Pa.n^hog, glartt WaU-cns. ba^cof'ies -* blllt " ' --­ . mediate cash offer. 477-3388. iondem /•l BO^M... AQP. CA/CH, shag cafoet, l6 E dishwasher, balcony, $139 unfurm^cd. "" l-NTERVIEW^ • An Equal Opportunity Employer • '67 JEEP WAGONEER. 4 wheel drivel,_ RMi.ELECTRA piano, harpsichord, the. 6th. Oatrs, tables^ doors* dinettes, — EL MONTERREY * 44^ 4485, '452*8192. ' hubs, foor mudgrlp tires, heavy duty ... finfsTmade." m jnint condition; With • • 2423 Town LakeCircle • ' "• * 1 For dissertation on : desks, rugs,couches, antiqueii bars, 476- doctoral durcn, power brakes, rack, runs well, Kasino arrip and stool, S800: 451*2974 • 3478. ' -4A4-8LLC. ..B. 472^162 COUPLES ONL/1 One bedroom -souths "Cohabitation Without nights. ;• looks goo^. SH9$. 454*4310. ., Garden spot, qoiel. fenced $ 13» WANTED Marriage." Sociologist needs Men and women. Bus driving positions . piu^ etcctric»>\ 441-T17fT,NIKON plKORMAT.with 50mrr> f1.4 lens:?|v , -TO DODGE VAN. AAA/FM rta'to.Carpet .ACOUSTIC 360 Bass amp. $700. Ampeg ani case, like-.-new.-Rogers drums, married 8. singlecouples, botfy ...open, several paM>tlmevMay start train-* and paneled new palm, good |lres«-clear body bass.; perfect, $295. *us torn: BR, IBA • 2 BR, 2 BA OAK" KNOLL- mg immediately an^^•MfYr After 6 p.m.. Call 476-4426 . . : • 1968 MGC. Runs & looks good. 447-3382? ...Cibse to downtown,.finished or unfuc^ or tion Eaterprifes. . . MOVIE CAMERA. proie«or,-$59..Car LARGE POOL--ALC.BILLS PAID^I: 6803-B Shier Cove.-^ -— --LEARN -— —tapedeck^speaketvsw. Cast aiumfnum-.-nished,-.1or 2 bedroom, Jarge walk-int write 1602'Palma Plaia, 928-1660 y ijr MOVE IN TODAY cxr.r» storage/ private.balconies, -lots of Austin, -TX 78703. , ? •AIR SHOCKS for '6*'70 Pontlac '6^00 barbeque grill; $9.. 385-$?5J. grass-r Perfect for, the working «|udcr>t AN EQUALOPPORTUH'Ty. v , EMPLOYE!? TO PLAY ,WE. NEED A HOUSEMATE tor-our fur-, COMPLETE HEATH StAT>GN: SB^IOI • .• -Shuttle Bus-Front Door -C'rceK nished; Tarrylown two-sfory.-Private MUST SELL^GMCVan. V4standard • 74CO Town Lake Circle-. bedropm; washer^ dryer. CA/CH Ofds. SX. BitV 444-6864. Best Rate on tne Lake. . •From $145 Plus E. 620 South -1st; (Use the Guifar transceiver, .power supply., speaker/- 4J62ber entrartcej J44-1269,-472­ micrpphone.' phone-patch, and "much**'-NELSON'S'GIFTS;: Zunl Indian i mcre .452fll42d. jewelry; African and Mexican Imports Posl-tract, .heavy-duty suspension & "Beginner & Advanced •• -342-8340 • Carpeted, Two biotks Irom UT shuttle DANCERS . cooling. From body, damage.453-32QS. • Prefer, humamltes, graduate-or other 46)2 South Congrefss. 444-3814 Closed Drew Thomason. 10 SPEED BERTIN 23" man's frame/ XMous UT student..477-2719; ^704 Hart^ • Monday*. lj/72NOVA 350.2barrel,Rail^wheelj,sun WALK TO CAMPUS 4 v -BRAND NEW EFFICIENCIES lord te Jj TOP PAY Good cond»tlon, $80. Xashlca Electro-X. . -ranTTj5:30.^ 836-5050. Evenings, AND BEAT 1700 Nueces advahced. Drew Thomason 478-2079 r^CALJ. 453-9272 " •[ 451-3913 -Pets -For Sale" MIEN'S SCHWINN WarSitrtOTliWmitr- » Irv ramr>uy-gffaiTm» *. ktdtfy-seit.-*$80, German shepherdi7 0VU*&3LMy_oItium-caiLmake the go-' .Aft .wtth biff balconies-for vwr pJants '66.VOLKSWAGEN Squareback.. In new IRISH SETTERS. AKC Champion. month*. $25. ;454-8587. Twp * one bedroom furnished $J^; Syri>mer v)us . electricity;and-; room, $80^month plus bilis?'North oft ^^lOUasiei.Twu'AOuRUe liuckmg, • Aftel^6-tMT> ­or rebuilt dmdition throughout: Call -tor Ratiter from Coidrado, luxuriously-apartments Pool, cable, laundry, quiet deposif • C.R. shuttle. 452-6264 initfonationr Gary, 454-^99. coaled, largp bonect.Qualify trophy wlh--.MAMIYA XTL' 35mfti .fT.-8-lens,' -spot setting. $150 pluS electricity at commer­. .. Manager • Aot. 70t • -••.•• .. WANT INTELLIGENT 4 Dependable WOULO L4ICE to lorm.car pool Irom n»ng mother. Pups'selectivety* bretf ?o'r averaging meter; manual,' auto set-cial rates. Rio House.'472*1238. 606 W ? -T 478-9d58 -i * . ROOMMATE MEEOED. $66irmonthpluS ^ person to sell-infant's,.-children's, & 'lings,, other features. $155. Mamiya 500- ' W electrtefty. IF shuttle. Call Ed. 453-San Marcos to UT. Cohtact Mike 391­ rich oats, calm/femperament./Shots, i.-17th atvRio Grange • • maternity wear,inone of Justin's finest repairs (valve ufter piust). Best offer. DaveK 454,-0618 alter 7 p.m^. ^ specialty stores. Pleasant working con-* w< ' '63 CHEVY WAGON.-needs* rhaior, wormed, reo. oaoeri. atdloree provid-OTL -wtth flesh a^d case, iioo. »Cail.: i 0377 after 5:30. . -' .2152. 452-3509 evenings, weekends. ed; Reasonably priced. 327-J875.. ACT CENTUATE THE.POSITIVE. Ad dltions.!^ day .week, (including Saiur­ v Afartments; bestx^f both wdrlds. One -• MALE ROOMMATE, pwn bedroom. PRE-SCHOOL .CO0PERTTIVE IS d«y).Free parking,employeediscounts. .1971 PORSCHE 914. Red With :MOVE INTOOAY shuttle at • J2 00/hr., ta sfarf. Experience not AXC DOBERMAN puppies.7 weeks old, • SAILBOAT-; 1»7J Aquacat T2' „b«droo.rns and efficiencies on Three bedroomhouse. -Shuttlei air. heat, months • * yearsMWF. Teach your own ' shots, wormed, big antf healthy.1 $100-Catamaranl Excellent shape.-r Traneh . affordable prices for students-From' -furnished, garage $100' Lee -451-3584. •" child -4SW7IS. 4SJ KI51, 477.3318 appearance group option. FM/sfereo, necessary/ Call Charles Slkes. 452-5994 extractor, maintalned.lnexcellent condi­. -6220:" v'.-v ^ 6187, 472-4162. •'' FEMALE TO 5HARE-rrtce Soothside 1 • for appointment. 28S-197I. ^ < life lackets: $875.'Caff zeke. Phone 447-'$125 plus E & cable. 924 East 51st. 453­tion. 451-7231. $155 FREE MALE gray and white tabby b^rootp. apartment. $77.50 ABPr Shut* UNF. HOUSES BO-PEEP . 1966 DODGE OARIi Economical kitten.Fine markings, well-mannered.8 1 Bedroom A HARD ACT TO FOLLOW. ActIV. 13U • • • 3V30 N.Lamar He. Call D.D. 441-6690. ' transportation.^$125; 4S4-5943; • r -* weeks. 477-8972. : • SOFA/CHAIR f AII.BIIIs Paid ' ,Red River. E»ctptlpnal floor plant -lor v •••.,, ^ •• r-—— • students. Largebedrooms in-anefricJen* '"fBER^uFEMALE share ideal house, EIGHT GERMANSHEPHERD puppies; Select various sofas V chfclrs }n her-': • Walk to' Campus cy 5etilnj,.Fui|:ki|eheraaiidj®tij4"sht/t-snvttle. Own room. j57/month, ABt»i}^ WEST AUSTIN '69 CHEVROLETCAPRICE, power, air. •culons 8. nylon. These sett have a' Evenings. • • .:•... .... •• • • r '• , 24 • ^tauto; excellent; $1250. 476-492K' 1st p«fk $40.*Full blood, not registered. construction.. Buckingham Square tie. Fromi144-pios E,s. cable 33ri .Red ' ;F?3ncoln!, 177<30J;-I0O9 West 2«lh. 5 Minutes to Campus • . -• 442^463. 4 ^nd 4. . . LIFETIME -guaranjee. Rlver;;^7fr-2Wt ' Listed retail $249.95 ... HURRY? While • SHARE 2 BDRM apartment, xwl. AC . 3 bedro«m/2 bath. CA'/C-H/ fireplace. atK^they last - *71,TRi. Excellent condition, AM/FM $?59 454-4489 GET itiTP-THS'ACT, ActVII. Especial-dishwasher, carpet, 6 blocks from oam-yard/'-OPENINGS rX .IRISH* SETTER-PUPS; -females -7-:. - hardwood floors,, fenced-back • weeks, $45.1711 Palfrrf Plaza. 474-5597. stereo, radlals. 454-5639, 327-3)77. ".UTsllTED " rfif.bedrooms-A-one Carol s^ade trees, detachrt enclosed wraje^ SI20 Full time -J60 Part time." ctes. All oh__ the»u. shuttle..a,,,.... From $144 • $149...^ " • — — -Stove^-r-e " 1970 TOYOTA' CORONA Mark 11 Monday-Fnda.y 9-9 : THE OFFICE OF THE Secretary of • $13,500. 3 bedrqom *home. $19,950-Call . 2 Betfroom, 1 bath: furnished or onfur­mpg, 4 speed. Sandy, 8-5.-471-4484. StatJofrwagonr$)295. Good condition, 25* Rick, 452-5626, 459-9485, 454- MALE -FURN. HOUSES needs n4ght David or nished,Shag', cable, walk-Ins. pool, com­FREE rent untlt Npv. 1. Pool/-StBJe ihlft computer ; 7646. • plete kitchens,close to shopping & Town-AC. shuttle, walk to campus, laundry. . operator,.with the foHowfng": MARK XX $5$/monlh. 475-8631. i,AKE AUSTIN. Quiet countryliving, 15 .. qualifications; X1^ Currently Cbmputen ;• Lake. From $170 ALL BILLS-PAID 41 OLDER, ROCK.HOME, 3-2* Red RWer. minutes-campus/downtown. One,.two; Science, or Technical' degree maior], .Motorcydes -For Sale excellent condition,great terms:$34,950. • Rent,.with four months option .'454-3953 > 452-5093 "••If-' Waller-Street. 474-4493. 472-4U2;'. ' • BEAUTIFUL FURNISHED Hou*6, 2-2. . and three bedroom mobHe homes. $70 >'. b|1her in graduate orv undergraduate . 1/ SAVE MONEY! Call us before buying Call/Jackie, 454-7646, 451-3353: Fllip -to'buy: . 3815 Guadalupe LARGE 1-2 BE OROOM.:stud10 AC. patjp, fireplace., washer, Enfield $140. Mack's Marina. 327^1891, 327-1151.' school, (2). Has operating license. (3>. .• Bennett 8. Assoc. apartments. Pool, Water, gas. cable TV shuttle. $100 plusv Studious' male grad ^Has authentic desire for a future career ; motorcycle^ insurance. Lambert In­Week - !Month paid. $115 * $16$. Posada Real Apts: $001 preferred: 475*8630. ' 2 BEDROOM^ ~2 BATH*mobile home on-in programming. (4) Wishes t6 remain u surance Associates, Inc. 4200 Medical , v ----• • B&V«.TV$5.00 * ? : $15.00 Bull Creek. W2-1S0X • Lake Travis. Quiet place to study. For ih9Austin*rea after gradOation. ContactI .Parkway^A52-2S64, . Garage Sale ^ For Sate CQlor TV $7.50 up $20.00 up t--U.Ti-FEMALE/.own. room, share bath.'^ Showing^ call 266^19^, . Oweo Coon at 47$>5845.. . *74 KAWASAKI motorcycle • 100. New> Stereo or 8-track $5 00 415.00 up: URPERCLASSMEN •• $137.50 PLUS E, gives you full kitchen $78/month; CA/CH.. Townlake Apti. • ... . Riverside aree.-441»2493, Jayne, Kathy. •TARRYTOWN'S ATTIC. 3209 Cherry Refrigerator 4.9 cubic feet 1)0.00 with breakfast bar,-extra,large cJoseis, 'WAITRESS, BARTENDER needed ' only 2^0 mfles. Street legal.*StiM under warranty. $490. 2824635. r Lane. Saturday-Sunday Silver service, WORC.O OF STAINLESS JLlGHTS'A"ND-*'-1907 SAN GABRIEL cable. pool, and shuttlebus at ElCortex. FOR RENT part-time to serve Austin'* Finest 5 golf clubs, old dental drill, housewares, SOUNDS ilk c Nearly newIbdrm ef^ 1101 Clayton Lane. 453-7914. 472-4162. FEMALE: Pool» -sauna, gas grills,« Tavern .clientele. Must, be available ' Walk to campus linens, chairs* etc; ', " , .3004 Guadalupe "476*2267-ficiency. CA/CH, shagcarpet.*cable, hearER. MS ' through Fall.See Mrs.Overton between h 1971 TRIUMPH DAYTONA 500, helmet, vlullsfif kMchen andbath; maid.; FJREPLACEi LARGE 2 bedroom with -shuttles. Nice neighborhood. $52^80 plus • MICROWAVE OVENS, dorm-slie fyi; 4:2?-;T^ Draught HOUSE. 4113 %shop manUaL Just tuned, excellent can-* GARAGE SALE;;Electric typewriter^ ^ men> -453-3235qu et ' T'DSS^ shag, rich paneling,huge walk-Ins, pool. ' ' TV's; : ] Medical Pa^ky«^y. -a -parking $IM S2s Jlec WRE, :feSBieck ights-lncense-Wall plaques shag/ elec. 476-8157.. refrIgierafors,. color . Austin's Hl9h • One block tovhultle a noHighland Mall. for. rent . dition, must see. Danny, 478*4766. bike, guitar, mqch more. 4108-A Shoal -iHigh Class Head-ShopHead;Shop • b • washers/dryers, stereos E2 Creek. Saturday and Sunday only Open Noori til Midnight- . From $229 ALL BILLS PAID 909 Relnli -SHARE 2 BEDROOM apartment Rentals. 408 East 1st, 4724275. . • PERSON TO'DRIVE school type bus-2 ^1970 TRIUMPHTrophy 500cc.Tuned, liv chain, tires. Looks and 454-9863, 472-4167 -. Westlahe Hills Beatifl/ul seftlng. quiet. ' pitn. i a p.m. Monday • Friday. ­: spected. New EDDY Apartments Lake $87 50 blus M electricity: Bob, 327*2197 ' DOUBLE GARAGE, you locki Storage Chaufferu's license required. Apply in * ^ rtw* good. $750. Federica, 477-4626^ DEEP and . PLAZA around noon, aOfr-ll p.m. only. No utilities. Rear, .4202 Nueces. 1972 'SU2UKI .185. Excellent condition . Austin Blvd. Harvest "Gold ga$ range, EL POSADO ffom $130 FantasVie . perwrt. 517 South Lamar. deep freeze, plus many other items 9-* £3 VENTURA apartments with cable, pool, full -$20/mo. 447-1177. 459-5336 " ^ . . •1 2500 mile*. $500. 3854396. ' Sat 9^4. FURN. APARTS. _ kitchens: On ctJy and shuttle bus. HOUSEMATE "NEEDED 2-1 duplex,. BEHAVIORAL WEIGHT CONTROL ' Tired of sm®ll rooms 4. no closet-space? /Convenient 1o shopping. 1105 Cia/ton » Near. Zllker, Qwn roiw. $77.50 plus research-staff neetjj clerk-t^^ls with Tired of asphalt & noise? Try Plata Ven- v: 71 SUZUKI 90cc. 1600 miles, 2 (leimets, Bdrm turn./unfurn.^From I Lane.-453-7914. 47WI62. ' electricity.Dog okay. Mike, 474*4639. ' CANOE RENTAL .-V" college work-study grim 471­ •!V2v.J*&'2 extra knobbies, must sell. Immaculate • $129.50 plus electricity v .-. AND SALES ' $325,926-2078. *. HUGE GARAGE 3410 Burleson RdiVL^ ? MALE ROOMMATE one bedroom 33rd­ ; ATTENT»ONCCLIFFDWELLERS. Uni­ . •DOWN RIVER SPORTS offers you the SUNNYVALE Barham Prop-• • . que 18, 2 bedrooms, Skylights, sunken, and Speedway. Share rentjucall 475-3896 • great sport of canoeing at inexpensive SANOBLASTE R.P AINTE'RS for~? YAMAHA 250 street. $250. Will bargain.v SALE living areas, bright color schemes or 476-8802, Mlland. Urgent! elevated water-stofage tank worK. S4­ :-^E- 447-4571 ' 9U4365 rental 8. sales rates.TAKE OFF.AFTER 452.-1058 after.5. Furniture, kitchen iteAis, clothes. • p£!xAPTS:->;f v available. Inconvenient NE on the edge S6/hour, based on experience 444-499S. XLASS w/a canoe 8. accessories/or onlyappliances, fish aquariums.untlques; •: $$. Canoe shuttles available'to Town Of 8 Cliff, From $170 ALL BILLS PAID FEMALE HOUSEMATE. Your owii .7211 Northeast Drive. W6-9415. 472-4162. room, $50 deposit, $60/month plus half COCKTAIL SERVER wonted 6 p.m. •11 ?:HONDA CL350. Excelfentcondition new bdoks, fools. Moving -Everythmg willbe* 2'Bedroom HARTFORD ; > If course, lake, from*125 ABP,45*7950.' bills. CarOiyn, 472*1657, 476*48\9. Lake and Upper Colorado RJyer. ;p.nt. Apply 517 S. Lamar. . • '*77" motor, economical on Or ctf rdid. 5213 Ave. G --• . ^&'451*8349 sold Friday, Saturday and Sunday.'4407 -• S210 $500 Cish. 454-5918; CALLTODAYi^i Ave H east of EHzabet Nex museum oiv. • STUDIO APARTMENT. Fireplac^" DUP. OWN ROOM.-$100 plus elec. Near . CA.N YOU BABYSIT occasldoai : NEED CASH -must sell 1973^ Honda ; .» . • * -1405 Hartford Rd. , 446-2683, immediately) dirt ro96t 1304 Summit -J • . 441 • .... PLACE . skylight, CA/CH, cable/convenient. $129 UT shuttle, carpor-t. Debbie/ 476-8179, . • -1' Y "-3 evenings for one » year old? SJ • * ALL 8ILL5 PAID ' ' plus elecfrrcity. 900 East. 51st. 451-3464, minimum. Ovitn lransporlatlon?«6-W21 . bike. 836-8255; CB350. Will consider trade for smaller,. : Larfle furnished efficiency apartment, 472-5129.. V room for . UNF. DUPLEXES after. 6 p.m. ca/ch, shag carpet, full Kitchen, jus! off LIBERAL FEMALE. Own '73V> HONDA-CB350. Front disc brake, Misc. For Sale .Enfield Rd. Convenient-to UT; captlol, $117.50 or $)2^50T~ONl*" pEDROOM $72.50/month plus:1/} bills. VJ mile east ,ONE OF AUSTIN'S finest clubsnow hlr-. luogage rack, good condition, only. 2100 WILLOW * shuttle bin.: • -Apartment, • very near UT, AC, shag Hancock Center. 472*1468-, . J-2 LUXURY DUPLEX, CA/CH,electric . ing. Salary, plus commission, tips. For smies. 2Helmets.Goin$Into army-Must 327-2260 carpet, pool, water and gas paid 2711 kitchen,, carpeted, disposal, pool. 1303 . interview, call 4S3-WW, 4SMS14 self. $400 or make an otfer: Steve, 453-CANOE SALE CREEK Hemphill Park1. for to .share 2' 472-4408, 476-6134, 327-•DESPERATfi female W«t 29th;.October 1st. 472-2696. 7582 nlghtv . AND RENTAL'S » 1355 bedroom mobile home*vS85/'monthty NEED INSTRUCTOR In gymnastics,S215 ALL BILLS PAID KENRAY (negotiable) ABP. 385-9116. -• :Contact. Pam Laufer at Austin Recrea DOWN RIVER SPORTS oilers you the „ , , ;-4ion.Center. 476^5662. . stln .ONLY. 3 BLOCKS, from campus. Et-rental S sales rates. Canoe Sale now In ..." APARTMENTS " . flciency apartments with largewindows. ROOMMATES needed: to share' equal ­' great sport of canoeing at Inexpensive Large Pools.Security, Volleyball Court 444^)010 $132.50 bills paitt; $132:50-deposit/478-rent. $70 each. ) .bedroon) apartment, /, "• VFEMALE/MALE bartender cocktail AUSTIN O - .progress. ' • • I9PI Willow Creek .... "• ,, .Use 2122 Hancock Dr. •9594;'i." ' CA/CH, pool, lovely grounds. Great waitress/.walter, noon cashier. Call for ' Take off after class w/a canoe".^r^ ^ Northeast location. 459-8668. appointment! 476*1344, 441*6382.. 1 k '• SPORTCYCLES & accessories for only $5. .Next to-Aroer/ta/ta Theatre, walking dJs-• ^TET/TCLEAh: EFKicrENcfEs* ' • • '• •• .-•• . Close toCampus JHodaka* 125s in Stock •' 5213 Ave. G ' 451-8349 $130 up . y, tance to North Loop .Shopping Center-' Dishwasher, disposal, near shuttle, bus.-r; OWN ROOM, J05~plus halfvelecfrfcfty,, Cfassifieds BABVSfTTER(S) needed: In our home -*i­and tjuby's. One half block.frorn shuttle, Wafer, gas paid.$125. See manager; 1111 near campus, female share 2 bedroom-for 2 small Children. Shuttle available, I: 75-100 mpg. $625 C-ALL TODA,Y! ^ 1 BR Furn and -Austin transit. 2 bedroom -West lOlh 476-4413, apartment. Janet. 471-1871; 8:30. *'4:30 M-F. Take all or part. $1.25­. 4117 Guadalupe. > i. tQwnhouscs, entra large. Two bedroom > No housework. Non-smoker raquired­ 451-2340 Tanglewood fiats, one and two baihs; CA/CH. dis^ •SCOTT II. Furnished one bedroom, dis^ "y MALE ROOMMATEr-tbedrolm abVM- 477-9042, ,4:30 • ®:30. ^ -• •'. • PLANT Annex -hwasner* disposal, door lodoor garbage hwasher. $140-plus electricity. 3405 ment, ABP« dishwasher, disposal, tenni$t • HELP WANTED yjpickup, pool, .maid service jf desired; Helms. 472-7049. . • .. . . •' courls, pool, shuitie. $B/.50/month..444-PB^ . TRAINEE 2:30 t 10 30 p m* 1315 Norwalk Lane "•..>1 washatorta tn complex. See owners. Apt;v,''i • 5205. :. " -,' ' ' ' • , Wednesday .-Sunday. $i.90/hour Sam -r Stereo -Fdr Sale • • SALE ' 478-9468 "Sar J13 or»MH 4$l«4848-•' v : IFURNISHED 1 bedroomv Apt. No. 10, WANTED APARTMENT-MANAGER.* Spears Employment Service 477-6306 y~ Shuttle Bus Corner • '-.2505 Enfield. Shuttle, surblils pald, $50 FEMALE HOUSEMATE, tp share 3*1 81h and Braxos. - Bromeliads from Guatemala, Mexlca^' Prefer married Send resumes to Box and Cosfa Rica.. Mounted and un» • . , 1668, Austin, Texas,-.•' deposit. 442-1112. . ABP house off Enfield. -Fenced-yard, -^ mounted, /hany-species. 4407 Avenue H. < CA/CH, $100Amo. .CaK Ofatre/ 476*5667. --GAL or. Tjuy to shine shoes STEREO SPEAKER SYSTEM-for- East of-EHzabet Ney Museum-Last'-* WE RENT ONLY $125 plus electricity?Likenew ef-FLOWER PEOPLE need several per*;. perlence necessary. Will train Apply.In^?* house on wrt road. 5ale Friday, Satur^'; $.155 -flciency. No pets; 3805 ^ve. 8. 459-8564. FEMALE ROOMMATE to sharer 3 . manenl people to seiiliowers for thenpw per$on.2301 South Congress Image Halr^:-Vi serious audlophiies. Incfudes Pioneer •bedroom'apartment, on CR shuttle. Own Por interview, Alline 8. Bgdy Boutique.-: . _ : . 15" diameter woofers, multi-cellular ex^ day, Sunday; Monday, Tueiday " • ^ AUSTIN '74-75 season or WALK TO UT. N?ce efficiencies. 2502 room furnished, $80 plus electricity, . * —-rr-fntwf fawnmidraiwixandtweeters, 454 8973, Ashley, 282*0001. -LU }:CHEZ JACQUE . Nueces. CA/CH,*> .. 1302"We5T24tR ; HOUSE IN N. AUSTIN. $65. Sharr /he" Call 452-2758, No experience necessary.. Ss5ch»'» Restaurant.. Slli-feS: affer 5 00 i 3L. Laboratory, Weather 4 Our service ist/ree^; «SAPARTMENTS -AVA^ABLETn'smail utilities. Call Cathy, 451-7033. ' West 6tn.v -.: • ­Equipment and instruments':^" ' 476^408r k^comRlex ritarUT LawSchool-flndshul-—COUNTER ATTENOANT for laundryWe Welcome Spot Ptorcbase B18$. • PARAQON ^fe.Water.tga*, and cabiepaW'SMOand ROOMS hour^j. 7 a.m. • 10 a.m; Master-Valet .. WANTE O-W aitresses/Waiter sr."?' ,. Fast Service''-. ' $125(:-One adult, novpets. 478-4118. 477' . ~ Cleaners. 2710 Manor Rd. 1 ••v.-.r.vv' Evenings add day slWfl Apply in persons^ 6048 —' ---Flap Jock Canyon 1817 South Lamar 'VACUUM TECHNOLOGY PROPERf IES? TEXAN"D6RM: 1905 Nueces: Doubles C.O.O. DELIVERY. Mmt be neav fasti" AIR SUSPENSION -. $150 FRUE"APARTMENT for Girl-Friday. .$220/ Semester; Singles $385/Semester: » alert,have goodrunning car.Make'up to " WATTIR/WAITRESS ParMime'nlohir >-", „S7703 Research Blvd. Ullra-busy taw student needs someone Daily maid service, central air. • $35 a day. Part and'lyll-tlme ' Learn lo,bartend. The FortrosjW SPEAKERS -.< -253-2023 , .472-4171' > for hous^keebingy cooking, shopping, Refrigerators/ hot-plates allowed.-Twp . applications nowbeing taken. Apply3108. Reslauranl. 444-5J13, D93-0743, * -• • : EL.ClD-t',.; weekdays . light secretarial work. On tne level! 442-• blocks from campus. C<):Ed. Resident ' N. Lamar,'Suite 102. 454-8761* S«*e,50%. Pull specs induce Wl6* t0 y NEED-A GREAT HA ITAT ^APA^TMENTS; Air-condifion'lng, HELP WANTED Female openings in-off-campus co-ops.. ?v?: blocks^.from campus. 477-75M-y^ Coed, ail-male, aH*temaie,4irj(«i}efariatr . SALES ——SAILBOAT SHOP .houses/ Member ownedand operated; in* Monday-Fridav T-9 j ' SPLAGE-TO LIVE? HU TERS -expenslve,comfort«E>le.intoro V,/' AX 7000 ISO 385-726) bltycle-" "Habllal Hunters Is FREE apartment "LARGE-2 STORY, 2 Bedroom fpurrple*;*-. > apartment$/477*755& 1 PROGRAM?' . ' BOYS' tO-SPEEO Schwlhn 24' 'LGIVE US A CALL! l/i'blocks from 1 • Has ikylight, CA/CH, dlshwash^AJis-r 4? i-Jt 9»lor. servlte, located In ifie lower Sosali cable, shao carpet; Shuffle near* .-.tOWER-FLOOQ. corner -&tilterx>om _V Scholarship pays up to S20Q per Semesfpr'jr A , " CLOCK AM/FM/TV CdmbO. 100% solid . -?M waft stated screen, Perfect for dorm-453-;take. an entire room .fdr -$1)2,50. fur/ ;dent complexes:.:• / <>• Hill .2301 MisSlorr.-: cOrtt/act brice. 'Jd*h Golman; 47T-3982. •' ; • A. »100 when registered. ' i „ 'GARRARD :Sharea;fargeroom-fbr:$64i£j/"mo-or lex'} ot bobfe^Aail.vfe special!ieIrrsfu. y.i<47*8975, 476'4716;.$200. available Odbie-Center, ?59& di$counf Amplliler. AAA/FM. slereo • 7050 mornings. )100;.: ;Jtrtheid, ell, bills-pald-Mald'serviceonce m B. tlOO mW-semester h ..tuner..Garrard professlbnal series furn- HABITAT HUNTERS ,:a-,week., v$>. .i- iyOTICKETS ELVISPRESLEY Tuos Lower Leve/; Opbie COUPLE, CHJLO need I'nole person v /.ROOM rAND.;BATH-Jh-private, homfc; 2. Most-be eligible lo work-»>por>S, weekdays, < V'.;: Brlng'yoor own ro6mmate or we *wll»^ swimming pool, gradi/atemaievsw. All' ??/-October 8 »30 pm.San Antonltt * ouier-1M.$50 month. Snar6-Mils;::-Close to UT. 3,Must work 20 hrs. a week. — ; dwi October fi.0:30 p.m. San Antonfo: vmaitth.^du^ wi.thTi coitipaiteie on§^ Suite 8A fr_«J- 2696 ^^^Mijlleids IW4 O Rio-Qrandc .. . & scholarship, riyXyi-K-i-XWtJ'-" T i tv^eeter^ Suggeited ,$10 Must sell 451*8682 or 472 7178 . m- ... , i* 4 4, Will*v»n ireceivecv,6ive pay at auiuuii.xiiu, .... • v " .»>» :-loor U)lo^Bllal j)»,Wihor >.TWs. is ec6n DRACULA. JOHN WAYNg, Frankens 2^.; teln -aif ybvr favorIte /novlempnsters -ONLY 20p YARDS f?*OMUTCAMPU* • •SQUARE FEETIl! In these ! bedroom wlttrjtudy or office. Shag. d(l, 4" K^uPrnffi°/hr P'US ,O0d d,SC0Unt' UNITEDFREIGHT Hwasher, disposal refrlo, tlovo Water, pa,d ^«tlon, & un­ ^edrooms.and iheJ bedroom,are mam-: mom, fdd-FormiiwtfTir Mforrashea, ^SJ_e»ld Si^ ilSr.jwZ, 1302, Radclitf SALES . ' C&shler's PoslfIonOpen. SomepridUQtJpn work open.DQ9 Weelc" , *»*> ly^»f«r refrlperattifi ffresfi TUTORING "^OLF CLUBS, tulRsft Halg-Ullra..e)c-free), DW, cable, wai?-lns & built Ini" Ap?MH?"d^y Hous6 No. i rT-% a"er iP:n<4 From SI65 ALL PILLS PAID, Wt> OLD MAIM \APtS' WalK". lo class 1 4 * bedroom and 4fficieflelei for l«ase, VlOLlN,^VlOLA/ Fiddle lesions "Near », •TKrHflOirBMlon SDrlnn< OH ­ • TlU.'. .W? Just North of 27th at Guadalupe Service Programs 3& < w • YES, we do type Research v A Freshman thehnes. Establishment-of the Center r Why not startout with­•forrSocia.1-.Work-Research, an good grades! interdisciplinary applied 472-321 ff and 472-7477 — , -•, 2707 Hemphill Park ^ research unit in the Graduate-­ * Sch.oo1. "Qf -S ooi-al—Wo rk. tGSS.W),.has been -announced TTYPINO J^jReports, Resumes by.. University President Ev„, * . if Tf>CSeS i-CUCf4 AH Diversity and busihess work "The center will carry out a -1 rut ftVnMtrtfr'fSlfcy Opeh v-v Wfln. m k* ' 9 5 Pri-Sat'. SERVICE . 472^8936 30A.Doble Center CHRISTENSON-& ASSOCIATES —r-A-T-YPTMG SERVICE s: Specializing in : ' Theses and dissertations ? -— Law Briefs — Term papers and reports ""PrtfmptrPnjfesslonal ~ « -^-•-'•';-.Seryfce-':--'V7':: • 453-8101 . Pick-up Service-Available 3102Glenvlew Jusf-Nortti^'27th &t Guadalupe uuaaaiupe RESUMES with or without pictures 2 Day Service . 472-3210 and 472-7677 , . 2707 Hemphill Park MRS SODOUfS'S -TVP1NO SERVICa- Reporti, fhei«s, dluertAtions and books typ*c! ^ccora^ly, f»tt and reasonably. Prinf ; DISSERTATIONS/ ibese*, report^ and law bri^s. Experienced 4 Bradyv 4TJM7^. " , ' ! -Tarrytowm. 7S07 Bridie Pa»h. Loffalne 1 >40LtEV'S TYPI"NG SERVICE. A Comptete Service: typing prinHng, bin­ ding Exper»encen Saturdays, last dates for registering witliout a late fee and the final registration datesrjmth a.late feeof '?4 include respectively Oct. 26! Oct.1 and Oct..8; Dec. 14. Nov.19 and Nov. 26; Jan. 18. Dec. 24 and Dec. 31; Feb.22, Jan. 28 and Feb. 4;.April 26, April 1 and A$r.il 8 and June 21, May 14 and Jun^ 3. W Fees for the te^ts given by the national adnJinistrations iri-^ elude ineptitude, ?10.50; advanced. $10;50 .and tor both. $21.: The. .advanced test will not be available Feb: 2Z. :Special administrationsof the GRE are given in Austin during the months, when national administrations' are riqt .given. Arrangements for. the special administrations are madei tftrough the .Southwestern Regional Office of Educational Testing Service at The-Quadrangle, Suite 253. 3810 Medical.: of Blocks " Unless a jjlkn is devised to rriunication Complex; will ;be; move the blocks cheaply; the ' discussed : Wednesday at a-inscription ."Vincit Omnia School of Communication Stu-Veritas'" ("Truth Conquers dent Council meeting, said. A h*»v n • •. . ,a )» WUl rCrn3Vn pSrt .Ol tu6 Dick jetfersQh;council;presi--' Geography; Building. '.needs medicine. • nalism department, said. A 15 percent increase in new ' LOST PURSE SEPT.fth; West Campus. No questions. Reward;«2-USi. Please, studentsihtheschool.plus the sentimental value. : , • . . .... need for new equipment, will •kSIm!SfwiwS -use; all available funds, he .Collar. Answer* to Jose". 475-0582. fls-said. " ­ LOST MONOAY-. Male. Labrador-Seller pup Elghlj wBekj. Black. while Iront. Mils him. J4I-5433. . ­ DARK GRAY end white longhaired cat named firttsy. Yellow collar. Hi- Carolina rabies'tag and black tleai tao. Mliilng.5ln.ce Sept. 7 Irom Ave. H and TS r S5th street area; 452-3TO; Reward! .C'wi*t3aV80. rad 7, 477-2114 INEXPENSIVE A»|»/ liiid. int • Turntable new, S40 BSR. 4S3-M06 OK LUXURY APARTMENT 476-9093 , ' * P*** edorable Kittens. 476*9706 "* " l?rge andcomfortable onebedroomtyping apt., from 5149); furnished. Good cleah twin bed, SIS. 451^4544. • ' Convenlenl locatlon'on shuttle bus,>%AlAT' Printing within biking* distance of campus. 3M Scotch 207 S4.4S. 4S3-581V. • ~ QesTde UT-tennis courts, Intramural binding fields: Two rfoois. barbeque pits, J-ots share^babysHtlng .451-4410 • ^ laundry. ropm-JUVd^couMeous professional nSanagerpenf. 3$$ 420 w. riverside'drive Need wat^rbcdjhjtr^& trm 385 2907 ASPE.N.WOOD, Ropfjng. £xpcrfcnced.Je^ 447654P GAY RAP APARTMENTS • '69 Saab •M/ Air,fm,clean 477*8679 " ?4539 Guadalupe ~ GROUP New type; warranty.155 475 8754 ' • dlicunlftfl gay life , > .452-4447 •Good twin-bed/ frame. 'S65 478*5118 ~ - €very F.riday Night s# UNIV^HSITVyMCA J • ton th« crao) Sponsored by -Oay -People of Auttln. Mpre inforn>allon« C«n 476-3002 ^ MIDWIFE. Registered* -Austin Deaf*:­Health ^SOO f^tural &meblrths nS> man CaijerWy, Agarlla.-Ranch, clip­ ping Springs, 7M20 H of we'll do M ~l1 : ii* -I, eleclrlcol/ a l r -• EYE-FAWM ,0 UT S4°73>^C°nVC MEWA Learn linger CAWPTTWy prtRlfigiecmnquei of Mance Llpicomb, L»o Kollke, andfKurt.Van Slckle.Begln-" .nlng;-Adv«iicej|,4^i»7H/. . ™.t..; utiiveww. ATTENTION STUDENTS: ... •Individual ^TPROCUSRtiess ;VOICELESSONS.i: Expert encode • qualified feather. Cr^enffalV on re' quest ay audition 447*1788 LOST & FOUND D|rl4.472-473l.No questtensasked.-, WILPERNESS/W flit EWATIR PPLY ifoST',-WESTERN WAU.ET on cam-5440 BURNET RD. ,c. -k-j»; u 452-4647 'pui.'.NMd ID artd credit card, Rtwartl Ron-itarliel,IW-HM. a . Nov. 16, Marc& 15, May 17,^ July 12, Aug. 2 and .Sept .13 Applications must be mailed at least two weeks before the test date.-and applicants must appear m person ai the Educational Testing Service. Regional Office on, the Wednesday preceding the test. Fees are $15.50 for Uie aptitude test or advanced test; or $26 for both.. ' The Measurement and Evaluation Center recommends that GRE candidates register for the Oct. 26 test or theJan 18 test, at which time's UT Austin's test.center will function at full capacity. In addition, UT Austin will.serve as a center for the GRE,special administration on Nov. 16 Intensive and STAMPS : group therapy FOR COLLECTORS Available at NEW IN AUSTIN THESTAMPMART AUSTIN "THkVIUAUt—­ iNsTTOTrr= 2700'ANDERSON IN. INC. ; -T. MON-SA7 10 Til 6't Staff did their therapy at THURS TIL 9. '' Janqvs PRIMAL INSTITUTE 452-8083 " Call 451-2516 OFFICE SPACE AVAILABLE 2200 GUADALUPE PLAZA Across the street from campus: • -Suite 211-200 sq. ft. 5i»frzi4 - ­ Suite 215 -242 sq. ft. • -Suite 226 -69i> sq. ft. Contact: Nierngn, Hanks and Puryear. 476-701 i Guitar Sale Save 10% On All Yamaha Guitars AMSTER MUSIC 1624.LAVACA 478-7331 , EARN CASH WEEKLY Blood Plasma Donors Needed. ., Men & Women: EARN $10 WEEKl# CASH PAYMENT FOR DONATION & Austin • Blood Components, Inc. OPEN: A40N.&THVRS. BAM to 1P.M. TUES. & FRI. 8 A.M. to 3 P.jtfs—.­CLOSED y?ED. & SAT. 409 W. 6th ^ > >477-3735 :V Archer Center of ;rt Central Texas PHIL-TEX ARCHERY CO. u-;;> Most complete suppfy~of~ archery equipment & Over 300 bows ^ J Over 500 doz. arrows' hU Owners have over 38 yrs. of 0 fc/ Ki tj bow hunting experience V^.VJ • 11 ihdoor lanes ' c ..'frz' &£k-^Instruction classes Open-shooting Hentaf equipment M* Family-rates'^ Have Deer Leases Available Jt* 8600Blk.Burnet Rd. ^ «• i 454-5541 <"TITe.objectivqDf the tenter "—:SomlelrWorJ "tablishnrernt'Of the-centeFr-A7H)0 P.M. •mS Student .'?7MP.M. ->^MorTta9.andhomily Stmimir " ?, s^' -v , f8#8'n* S*|rt««k*r W -3rd V r ri'; l' 22nd and San Antonio.) ­ r 6.-00 PJH, Slipper <-'* , / A& 6^Q P.M. ^ ^r. Worship " ­ -aft 7:30 P.M. f-. • a Personal Growth En h ! (Begins Septftnber t>»3rd-Ho«r;ife Thursdays :fy: (8»9li»sS^t«iiib«rI#.3rdfloor,3',/' nam ^ i4& 'x f* Ai* ^ W* T i y'! " (or mof lnformation calf 478-$S59 .-1^^ V.^ S,;', • -*3 (of -M 1 *• 4j|SSi at frzfi- V''-;S r [ J* • .--U. '0. ' ' -Z '0 -'• ^ .1 h,, , r * * 'i&tV+vz -^1 •.« f " li¥S StefJ1 rL 'frm >f®S ,i -°-*,i > k,; j l&BP­ c. By MARK SKILES student's"to get the trckljte fh'ey wtint-, BoUli c.v Shuttle Drivers Seek Raise -•i su Inflation and other considerations have plained ' By SALLY CABPENTER ----i;' , He ^aid TEIhds acknowledged that pay raises will be rotrw-Resulted in a slightdrop in football ticket sales, •< "We have made more date tickets availableTexan Stalf Writer N tive to Aug 26. if wage increases are necessary. h>" -including student activity fees for men's -this year so vou don't have to apply in advance ~-L SliiKtle bus driver; and Transportation Enterprises. Inc. athletics Richard Boldt, ticket manager for r;-iTEi!. m-' They (Jftli hinted at the tact tdat wafjfc Increase for them You just go to ihe window set aside will-begin negotiations oyer cost of living wage University athletics said Thursday.-; ^ •JSSS^abwg. not actual Increases, are. in the contract:"' Odetv™-for this purpose We always have more than \vp i"*lcreases ne\i weel. if necessary gwerm>ieni~figufes"a'rn've." . Inflation was cited by Boldt as a major, fac-* ife v% 'A-spokesperson for the bus 0riveTs* AtnalgamaUjd-Transit tor. in the sales drop thrs year. "A guy isspen­ sat'd ~ _ really need. 1.000 pairs for home gnm'es, Boldt said. "i see no potential grounds for bickering over figures " he.•>;Unmn Local I5t9said negotiations were-scheduled to-startAug; Ticket ding twice -as much_thls_year to come to the..|Adds also are beinf; run in The Daily Texancontinued, adding that TEI could use technical contractual ­ • 26:birt were delaved because the cost of living figures wiere not: ~=-'-* University from out of town'THan liryears ­ grounds for'drsagreementJi • ' ' -lo inform the students c\b<)ut thejicket_situ;i­available. past." hesaid. "There has been aruncrease in: tion and tell them what's available, he said •$h \ "In-a contract vse signed last August, one of the stipulations . "The University gave TEI 26 cents per hour more last spring1 the.cost of everythingfrom gasto food to the'SjU:! we are-very pleased-with, the sales Sales -\was that starting after the Oh month th? first cost of living in­to make up for the energy crisis TEI could oppose us on it -increase in the tickets themselves." J . —-• • t...—, • SP far this jyfear," Boldt continues ""The trend crease would be made m wages." Ken Oden. local union'presi-without looking to us as opponents, but the,University.' Thoy ;.-Baldt said the television coverage also is a ' wirh some students in the last'-few years lis*/ ..£ould,.sa.v to .the I niv^rsity, "If you can't give us more'monev iactor.. '.'.|VIcist of our big games will be televis-: been away from football games but latt'l. :••••'. Hivsaid wage increases Wet tljis year. Arkansas :and A&M rare'home ' there, has.been some sigri of a resurgence•.•eserv Six months1 thereafter. According to the contract,• bus He saida clause in the TEI contract waives'the no-$tnke. no •—=^ -Culifiral-Entcrtam­dnmrr -one-cent increase in wages for every. walkout".clause during negotiations.-so.the'drivers could legal-are.no local I?p_ one*hal<' percent increase in the help nffwt y mmm rf,\ i " / ' \ 'V FRIDAY SATURDAY BamkAmericmd u+t/i'tn* hi We Meet Or Stereo Price Pioiveen* HiPIONEER' Vfesomd better. 'Pft ,T. •* — *y^l' ^•Pioneer SX424 . BSR-260 Pioneer SX525 --BSR-31.0X Maranfz 2220 Garrtird 74M Marraritz2230 BSR-620 • 24 WaHs RMS ~ • 34 Watts RMS " " . '•'1 •* • LOUDNESS CONTROL feose • 40 Watts RMS • Base. • Walnut Ba^e • 60 Watts RMS • dust cover • •. 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