w-Cr' rw3J F "3 • w (Cyx T V mwNorwf Twenty-Four Pages SSSSP fervir... i ^iiSti >4di> h v.fWli'-fd ^ , . „ ...... ^ . It WASHINGTON (AP) -Egil Krogh Jr., repen Krogi had pleaded guilty on Nov. 30 to a singlef vestigating panel overrode their three Republican background to the dispute:lant but asking no favors, was sentenced Thursdaj count of conspiracy to violate (he rights of W colleagues Wednesday and voted to proceed with When ErVin returned Mo to Mex-dings on the Reboso affairs. He said they had learn* to serve six months in prison foe his part in Lewis Fielding, the psychiatrist who bad been ' the$100,000 gift probably was connected to thei^ Ellsberg burglary. He said President Nixongsif treating Daniel Mitchell's approval ofHughesp |Ud not authorize SS broken intoSept ze it "directly or indirectly." _ „ . — Vegas casino-hotel. The Justice ••\jT*/ -Krogh,supervisor of the White Houseagents whtit|f Krogh could have been sen than mere party line voting. published, but Lenzner had been able to tie a series Department's antitrust division opposed the aptcarried out the office break-in,. thui discounted^ prison and fined flOjWOf^fj; H of senators had any stomach for more of confusing events into a coherent story about quislUon. 13 T *, ,',Js !# reports that his marching orders had come "right||$ U.S. Dist. Judge Oar! rings," one source reported Thursday. "Sam billionaire Howard R. Hughes' 9100,000 cash pay-, Tmr T out of the Oyal Office:" cings Kroflb D66ck bulldozed them into it to save his own face." said needed no rehabilitation Kut " && HE SAID he bad only one contact with President^ [ but "any punishment short of jail Would in the Eh, tiie committee chief Counsel "Nixon on the work of the special investigations unit* > court's view be inadequate." weeks that the hearings would known as the ''plumbers'' and in "thatmeeting Drf He then imposed a term of two to six years~s 'SSs:-jxs£tijl&it&!&a WMSwsaesrs i , _ ... . .... . v-promised they would expose new and significant*. went home to North Carolina for a one-day rest. prLwiir Ellsbergts name did not appear to be mentioned. tag Rrogh would serine six monthsand be on superv^evidence about the 1972 campaigns' . t«u k«j •>——•» rresia n . Dash told associates the chairman had agreed to Sut he said that J for two years thereafi ON15 ,,^/Prelsdent's domestic „ ^unit authority to exerci gave„ the uni engage in "covert activlfe,.House aide > s ?P. ty to obn|n information on Dr. ]Ellsberg." aftermat Democrats sai^ they Shared that analysis. :&g'iV 'tictsm." ^JtliffTbere is only enough evidence to~&citfi fel The^p , nature of. that authorizaUqi^ and thr«;t, , When Chairman Sam J. Ervin Jr., D-N.C., aad Ervin replied* there Would havrf bis suspicions," the senator said at one point. "f­ M/f; Extent it co red the break-in are matters to be:-, :The Innate Wa committee, divided as. Vice-Chairman Howard H. Baker, R-Tenn., an-further hearings to avoid any inference that the -Baker, too, was skeptical of,the evidence? Y.-'f •{?y ,.decided by th\courts, he said. g||never before, Thursday set-about preparing for an nounced their split, Baker called Brvin the victor committee was backing down In the face ofWhite * i r -^ ""i r m^S Ehrttchman vid Young and G. Gordon Uddy ' abbreviated set of public hearings next week that and himself the vanquished.1 Hfliuee pressure. But he said he wanted no more mat ^rescheduled on trial ih los jogelesiaApril tow •oMhe-^eaatsnrwantedr"^^—^ , ^Ifae.ai^imts of several-segatoirana^flrfflaes, TJ^lEwlJays oh eacfiofftTtwo chief subjects. Stopped the hearing, and Serf. Lowell P. Weicker rrr ^tritatrefts^er "The four' Democratic, members of the in-, who attended the executive session, disclosed this ,;|<|ls the executive session began, Lenzner read a Jr., R-Conn„ upbraided him for the remark* tat 7&*3­jk L *10 'M' -^ ffTj Panel Approves %3f Finances $p! & i 9,0-Day ? Hie Administration Committee of the. llightowersaid. WASHINGTON (UPI) -President Nix^ Constitutional Convention approved presi-i -.ft "If wego longer than 90days, wecanape m* on asked Congress Thursday to scrap" dent Price Daniel Jr.'s proposed fl.8 propriate from the general revenuefund, more than 30 "Great Society" education! million, 90-day convention-budget after, ;the Vernon senator added. programs and appropriate $7.6 billion in a nearly two hours of debate Thursday. Austin Rep.Sarah Weddingtonasked the revamped federal education program he A $100,000 item for production of a committee to allow each state ^said would give more flexibility and • " documentary film was jumped b^pre tfte tative. an additional $250 a month for uthority.to.local communities. budget passed 7-E'f.; **.-• ^ . ;•February and March to pay their staffs. Breaking from tradition, Nixon sent « Daniel watched intently frOm the ' Representatives now receive the essage outlining the program td Congress before delivering hisState of the' sideline, interjecting explanatory regular legislative interim expense allot­remaj|cs, as several committee members ment of $1,225 a month, she said. Her r Union message, the normal vehicle for ' ? outlining.such plans. questioned the advisability of tying the proposal would not increase the budget He also disclosed forihe ftrst time the. convention to his tight list of ap-since it would only involve "a reallocation propriatlons. of funds," she said. $7.6,billion, an increaSeof $2.5 bjUionover ^ federal education spending in 1970, !-Senators'receive $5,000a month for staff plus "unlimited office expenses" as "No matter the faith , or family cir­cumstance, each child should have equal,; access to a good education," Nixon said.: sSsri£%££ SSMsisysMs The program includes: -^ 1 trselves|;: ict _ bddget/lt seems t%me this ^ould Wt! ^_,oMM t kil. Angelina, told Rept Bauoy p: « is thatVe'ra jiving to continue keeping The full, conventim will vote on the uded in Our $7.6 billion figure. district offices open and all that stuff and |V budget in the Conv«ition Hall at 1 p.m. • A phasing out of the don't have ahy help,'' she added. recommended that districts with large numbers of students realistic and will meet the needs of tiij? Weddington offer the proposal in amend­installs convention," Comftiittee -Chairman Jack ment form to the full convention Friday. program to sSfc# i 'grants to needy students for college and other post secondary educational needs.. Currently the average grant is $260 and limited to entering freshmen. Under the new proposal grants of up to $1,400 would S/i*1 be provided depending on need. Foresees Financial 'V* A supplementary program to J /: «9y HELEN VOLLMER suits against individuals or corporations . guarantee student loansfor otherstRdei\ts „*The mayor of the state's largest' city that, would damage or degrade the en­11 .•yJrvT^ ^ho need financial assistance, .'I >A' Low Witter. BrUlg*mm0 ~a^f| said Thursday "the tax base of Texas. vironment. new to • A grant program( designed would be eroded" if the Constitutional iThe committee Thursday heard W. .jStudents crossed over»r a wet West Mall Thursday on^sheets of unused plywood. They W«» pressed into service ^lolve speci|ic problems «used>y_scho^t . Revision Commission's (CRC) proposed James Kronzer oif Houston, a CRC 1 makeshift "Pontoon Bridge."'Actually, the bridge h 4x%lf and k«pt « few Met dry en a rainy day. desegregation. &*£ ^ :• , -. draft is adopted. member,jask the committee "at the very-Fred Hoflieinz, newly elected mayor of least, declare these ri^its to be a public consolidation pf eight different Houston, testified before the * trust." __ ams for handicapped children into • Constitutional Convention's Finance Com­Knmzer said he agrees completely wi^i four broader categories. mittee that deletion of the "equal and un­Doggett's proposal. Wwi- Tlie main thrust of Nixon's new plan is iform" tax restriction would "open a Pan-l; <; "Granting the right is the important rawAnty?'^y •••mnjiiL';lkil i-'--i . . . , to' consolidate the education programs dora's box" for local governments trying> ;thiiig," he said. "Tlte time is now for in-Ky GWEN BYLES f?®of'tl»e ^^l^tirtecation. $200,000 is pledged -hopefully within a ^ president Lyndon B Johnson : to provide equal services for all persons. itiathig a development plan for protecting Pledges, donations and contributions ^ '-Vfe have between $50,000 and $60,000 8 ' it 4 Into broad categories. -/< The mayor proposed that if the equals toe environmental^!£-1® are needed from citizenstoterested ta the~~talready committed to us in unsolicited , -"Hie group encourages other groups to £ T < '. ^'4 and-uniform language is deleted from the^ •^• 1 preservation of the Hunnibutt House to^ funds,''* McMurrey stated. "The become active in .preserving_ buildings. of -* Nixonsaid his.......proposals were "flamed Constitution, it should be replaced by^ 'X Although Texas voters may get to vote pay for restoration, moving ami acquisi-^ remainder of the finandngwillcomeIr&n. historical importance to Texas ,or we ^to adiieve the maximum possible con-, separate categories of taxation, under tion of land, Milton McMurrey, represenspresen-^, pledges and donations,", he said. >-. _ ?solidatioa of funding authorities on an all-new Constitution next fall, the w , /i won't have an/architectural history left that which specific items would receive equal Preamble and iBUl of Rights in the state ..tative ^Preserve Austin, Inc., said at a^ McMurrey pointed out that once the in thestate," Dr. Emily Linn, professorof-state and local agencies cfcn use federal tax treatment. charter will be exactly as written in 1875. press conference Thursday. ^,,%ioney is obtained,, the group can go to psychplogy at St. Edward's Uniyemty, /fcmds to m«| natio^ pj^riU§jKjj[;gw^rt Although Texas has traditionally func-g^: Rights and Suffrage Committee Preserve Austin, Inc. is a nonprofit cor-^^ocal lending institutions for additional «W. ygytSsm tioned under the equal and uniform tax'^teembersVoted 15-O-Thui^ay to adopt the? wilt" inotniTe*^»H ' 1 theory, Hofheinz pointed out "special current Preamble and Bill, of Rights, the Austin immunity. T&ash payment of $9,650 for the land and pressures on state legislatures or city following a ruiing by Atty, Gen. John Hill A .temporary restraining ojrder; which '; j$150 a month fqr re»^i _ J ;• Israelis, Egyptians councils result in discrepancies in tax that no changes could be made in those established Feb. 9 as the deadline daU^for^ "Declaration of intention has been J?#8" ' . . , guaranteed tights. the moving of Hunnicutt House from wHLvij%repared by Preserve Austin, Inc. arid the buildingil^pavid and Riith Woolett, owners of ttie ts expected by all 181 delegates next was dissolved in 126th District Court: property at the new location, for the lease, Begin Wednesday. PreserveAustin, Inc.is mak-S-! pf the land.Hie lease i&loag-tenn with a ing plans to begin moving Hunnicutt^guarantee of 99 years. . mm -By The Associated Press " Egyptian movement frdm the eas^ide^ The'Education Committee could best-House. ' • "• "* "~"The move will take.from sbc to ei^ht Israel sped up its military pullback based on a technical military document assure "each child in Texas equal The -house will be ^part* pf^ a three-..^onths arid restoration qf the house will Thursday in Egypt, and Cairo will make signed Thursday on thjb Cairo-Sue* road, constitution educational opportunity" by adopting a building composition, including' the; i|»e minimal because the house is in its first negotiated withdrawal' along the . said the commander of the U.N. force, Lt :^Mi4 proposal which better defines equality in i^torical ThrasherHouse anda|awoffice?||#emarkably good condition/' McMurrey Sue* Canal front on Friday, .the United Gen. Ensio Siilasvuo ^f Finland. the constitution, Austin Rep. Larry Bajes t building, across San Antonio Street,,westK '"expiained. "Moving will be^ when the Hofheinz also blasted the highwayusers Nations Emergency Force commanded Israeli forces began withdra A told the committee Thursdayv ,; . . ' . vT wing -rdvenue fund, thriee-fOurthsiirths of Bales iuid 1^. Howdd Coleman of Ef * Jfold. " . ; -Wednesday from the west sfdeof thecana which is canal %m\ ^Full-scale Israeli withdrawal from thfc -while the Egyptian and Israeli chiefs used solely for constructing and main faso are sponsoring a prppt^aL they say m rfaoi-rff®! tabling a state highway system. tJWjtt-Side.tff the Suez.Canal and the first 'staff still were discussing the technical Will base the allocation of state: sdwolThe Constitutional Revision Commis-funds f 'only on educationallyrelevant fac-. document. u < slon retained the fund in its proposed con; ion retai The document was Signed by Lt. «v.-W fO"" •&kM^fkdjekts stitution. David Etezar of Israel. and tt, Gen. "We felt the accident of being raised 3acow-v %r wmt:i Mohamed Abdel Ghany Gari&sy of EgypW^ rural areas or areas without a hi^i tax for Governor's Seat occur in the constitution," Hofheinz said. r,id$y^.^torecast..„ the two countries' chief of Sim. J--1, base should not deprive a child of eqtol ^flt is apparent to the citizensof thisstate education," Bales said. ^WASHINGTON (AP^ Sen. John Q. The Israelis are pulling newt ji^aHs for continuec^f 1%$ larger cities require a multiple.,, word equality ik. nice rhetoric %wer, R-T^., annouhc^i Thursday he ^lines 12 miles eastof the^aterw. _ n iii^PfrtaUon system." although it has little substance/' Coieman cloudiness and cool won't run for governor of Texas this yearv Details of the. Egyptian ^mmifmeni ^^Testimonyonthecontroyersialfund has emperatures with a but said he believes on the oasis of polls, have not been.disclosed officially, but thf; %& been heard by the committee for tfa^je lant. Tt "the race is winnable" tottile Republican1%raeli state radiosays the disenga|em€3it They suggest stating that students ^chance for rain. Higb'lf. aMWfa|.iday8;;;^i " * Jiarty. * Vwill leave, the Egyptians with 7,,0fl#f * 4'shall have access to programs and s^> rlday vyill be ln„fth^|r .MTower fold a news wmference l^ had ;spldiers and 30tai^sop theeast sideof tb!P. * TTj trices substantially.equal.'! bee»urged "by anumber of party people" ;jcanal. All heavy Egyptian weapons and By ^O^MORRti The Education Committee will vote on Os.^ The low Friday to seek the nomination against ^missiles will be pulftid back to a point. ^v. Texan Stoff Writer . adoption of .the first six sections of the llaA proposal submittedTuesday by Austin education arUcle Friday. ^ ight willbeinthe .Democratic Gov. Dolph Briscoe. Texas, seven miles west of tfo canal, thfe radlo n. LloydI Dogg^tf ^nt^ues to spark , testimony Monday will center on the Wtnd$7~witi" thefirstti^ein 1974, ——r to ^ Com^^pennahent University Fund aftd Available lortheasterly 10 to", ;; lOwer said he would support the GOP had an estimated 65,000 troops Iw' hi.'* i V University Fund. -' -Doggett 9 addition to the ConstituUonal University Regent Frank C. Erwin and if1m.p.h. decreasing^ nominee but declined to name a choice or -tanks on the east side Of the wat -Heviston Commission's draft includes a reDresentaWe? br other large stale P 1 Saturday. ?f„T> proWpkm for citizen's rights to bring law-' primary -surrounded Aerr^tVrVy.^k./! scheduled to rT;.T . -«r i.• ^ ~ mm im*m Counci v/* * ^„i « iy CYNTHIA HORN on the arrest, police clerict, Vwhic^ denooneedthe Austin to put Austin transit system stigateiitizen useof buses: f By PAM CLARK were delivered viaJohn Hill's office/'*&d aod have been unable to find any police force's "general afe.boSes on a "lowered rate'* Brackenridge Hospital , . Texaa Staff Writer Bowers. . ...< J,T . canales: .. reCords, tiutierrez said. ";r titude" toward minorities. -fhe state treasurer'soffice cameunder at­ ' * * "(f, scale bjr Michael Smith of architects reported that "However; the figures Were datedDefe. IS, r_ ,5 He later commented that Mayor Pro Tem Dan Love Save Austin's Valuable En­available funds would Dot be tack from State Rep. Sid Bowers, f police^reeorels may have been!:reque-3ted parallel in.-vironment (SAVE). Smith enough to finish planned Houston), in a statement released at l2:0J figures werecompil^ brf^Jam^l^^aed ^&qktality wa6 heard by City "conveniently misplaced." vestigations by the Austin said that ranniqg btiseron**' hospital improvements. Louis a m, Friday. them," he continued. ^ Council Thursday nightfrom a N. Joseph Swift, an East Police Departmentand Austiij. cent per trip fare fw o^ C> Page of Page,Southerlaftd Borersdiarged theoffice witfrseCrecyand "Bowers said be believes the iiiateriaf is Mexican-American Couple Austin resident, filed a peti-Human Relations Committee. month, that raising fare ~5 and Page told thecouncil that inefficiency and accused State Treasurer falsely dated and "that James agreed to and their soii who asked that tion signed by members of the In other action, council ex-cents every twoweeks to an prior estimated costs were in­Jesse Jamesof Showing "contempt for those honor my request only after pressured tff do two Austin police officers be East Austin community^rpressed interest in a proposal wouldin-valid because of inflation and representatives of the people wbo so by the attorney general's office t&avoid the energy crisis. He es-geek to moderniseand reform the treasurer's one Democrat suing theother for vioirftiott ofa*-*.-,. -v AYQ Striyes f6^ Grogp SoH^rijy limated a15 to 20 percentcost office to save tax dollars bring ^Open Records Act." """Fabian Villaneuva, his wife* escalatta|,* and son reported they were openness into government.'V.^ am le# to believe this, becausemy ' stopped by Austin police of­V'lro carry out such projects MAYO will' sponsor .a tatlve of the Mexican The accusations stonmed^MikeSheaV talked with James by telej ficers Dee.1'26 for driving as minority recruitment and Mexican-American dinner Ameflcan Cultoral C.„: rMiMftf^inforrnaUon ofl t^ states tank at Jan. 15j ^4, during wfiich without faillights and woe political campaigning, the party at 7 p.m. Saturday at d^pMits. The requ^t was "®de Nov.?7 to James toldhim, Til get the report to ybuas 'subsequently mistreated bjr Mexican American Youth ATmand's restaurant on West ««,i fe officers and then arrested; Organization (MAYO) must 24th Street to recruit new the Union Ballroom. builders. asa-r §m> 3'fel Mrs, Villanueva testified first create a solidarity of members. Cost for the dinner /Other MACC activities will ^>ue council moved to «?vf \ she was taken to the Austin chicano students on campus," will be$1 per person and the^fe include an art exhibit at the purchase land along Town police station and charged MAYO president^Tfichard will be beer and dancing after Union Art Gallery Feb. 18 to Lake, adjacent to landalready ; : f •=»»«>« w "J telephone, with disorderly conduct. Ex­Ante said Thursday night. ^ 10 p.m. on the second floor; 22 and a poetry reading Feb. owned by thecity, for new a& "liiF cept for a rough report filed pgiTo encourage involvement, ^Teresa Acosta, a represen-26. ministrative offices. asked th " "If®­ OTtE%7^r^,iTe Sam?C»iKfi^°KS w>* y office' ey general seek a writ of mandamus ^£?J£feat ? attorney _ continued^ m iw>Tf>«aa Siinrpmp Court to comoel the r • ——-treasurer to produce the material requested When contacted about Bowers' chai :es, "Two days after I requested the attorney James replied, "We tried to find him/, *. -xkx r * HkLtw.Js A* »'iftSres general to investigate Jesse James' possible called several. Ume^^uLh^.ggwfirt) jftgi from Ute^fexas Supreme compel xftSfaBv m ^totaUon oi tbeiaw. the fie""*?! d«««i«Ted talk to me. git »: ^•iSt 5T»52*^ May Speaks on CRC if® ' K The effort to introduce a' peminaf^ •. . :Mth ,;v igg?tion by thre^-quarte^$ to ilsLl, • ,J*J Hew constitution in Texas is;' Dr. May, a Universityassis-produce "£ people^', w^fjsiT'wnrTsatrefiiriroarnaa easy~TS "rea,! J>"*' tr* VP V ttevision Commission (CRC), Dr. May said the CRC and to end with them in eilec­& V-i said Thursday at a sandwich ^.reduced the present Constitu-:.tion^M|^ , ^ i fai t**i 1 CommitteeVVIIIIIIII • ww Backs Fvntf jrSsm p-" • The State LobbyCommittee filiated with the Texas Stu-ad valorem tax on property • Thursday night announced dent Lobby, announced it also used to support.state in­plans to work for the retain-will work to increase stitutions of higher learning l> ment of the Permanent allocations for education and and the. passage, of ^. en­5 University JSrnd. . _ l^riass transportation from the vironmental proposal.. -1 ­|^ The Student committ|e. &t* iHighway Trust Fund, a higher Lynn Caulcnr, ch£(irpei^OQOfthe State.Lobby " said spUttbgI $21 Million Bond Sale nent University Fund the state institutions of higher learning would spread the |Nets Austin Good ; fund so thin it would have lit­ I Austin's good credit rating paid off Thursday when City tle impact on any qaippus. Council received what were termed "excellent" bids for the ' Two of the seven members at sale of $21 million in bonds. . the meeting expressed a .feel-: wi "I'm Mppy'with these bids," Curtis Adrian, city fiscal ad-ing of moral guilt th§t theviser, said^ "Austin's bonds continue to sell well," he said. ; fund is° restricted to two un->: Adrian said the credit rating helped the city to get good iversities. H>, (T bids, resulting in a savings of more than $800,000 in interest. Cauley, whohas been in con-« Blyth, Eastman, Dillon,Incl of New Yorit City underbid : tact with all but one member1six other firms for $15 million in revenue bonds. Twelve . of the Austin delegation to thefirms bid on the $6 million in general obligation bonds witii^ Constitutional Convention,Chase Manhattan Bank of New York €ityl submitting the^M said all; agreed to lisack the lowest bid. '" •* Permanent University Fui®J|The bonds will be used to finance electric, sewer system, . but felt the regents an$I ' water works, street improvement, bospM aministration at the Universi­recreation, library and"police programs. 1 ty should concern themselves; with minority recruitment. £ J-VVI J u ™ Cauley said the State Lobby v Committee will be working ! ; CO-OP with the Texas Student Lobby " on all issues. That group will^ ^m-v. ... hold a~convention Feb. 2 aiid S ~" " u;Vs *9 CONSUMER , to cover the issues more fully. m -&&& > t *n.7 ACTION LINE TV ^ Ji v"" -jZ=zi • r ^ ^ i 2a ^ During these three days you can bring in your own ^5 camera, put one of these Tamron lenses on it and shoot 478-4436 a. rir#ftlFo,cJxample:fe^%-^^ -tis7**— " — !ifc—-WEEKLY CHEDUtE i Nsr$174.9» *99.95 Sundays vLr, tyttsik •& A.M.—Worship TTt; |Ir.'Wj »»«iV *l. . '^5:00 P.M. Chi Rho Rehearsal 4fr,f-'#r' - Student Supper , " 85-210 f4.5 zoom w/amrmf mwmf fist $324.90 145, ^ & *l Student Worship^''" Mondays Marriage and Family Um>"> J Co-Op Camera Si " il|" I c tr ,rx Jij^ ^ Seninar (Begins January &8 r 3rd Floor, 22nd &^"Second Floor jgi. San Antonio) v?v kr-r wr The ultra-modern Tamron engineering center in 6:00 t».M. $uppey;; < , v Omiya, Japan. In ctfse you've never xMetn if. if4|ir#^dneaday® J.'-' 3 ur« o! $2 ®r H&&"' fi,,„ a!"— ' . i ^ . • • I ^Encounter (Begins"January onkAme^icard . MAsMfChofp# welMiiw. ""0 -T, 3rd-Floor. 22nd & & t"­ an Antonio) Page 2 Friday, January25, 1974 THE DAILY T®XAN m, ©» i-'i.'.-a -7 Political Roundup ' ' ' " !Ji ' " 1 ' 1""^' ' I-!,'" ' ' " I'1 "• 1 1I|'J|LU Mhm oulds Several State add local can*1 .ciples money missioner John C. White fiw# constitutional Convention's.didates filed and began earns orient.,' N£s-&\m Austin leadership is faced Thursday for re-election subr Committee :o« . '\the M Geraldine's hip, "The Devil mademedo !first heardof Harvey's personaldemon An employe of' the^l»nii>sp^th three basic alternatives^ J'ect to. the Democratic Legislature. He warned' the it^ ain't so funny since Wiljiam Blatty's , stan Avenue Fblock party.Harvey's Wife Democratic primary.. > iroller's officesince 1962, Edi-^oignore the problem and p6i%" a primary, novel of possession "The Exorcist" bounce committee that the voters was proudly making the rounds annqun­ bufg resigned his present trfMtajt free unencuriiberecf The only Can-would reject any constitution «d from Uie best seller Ust to a Hollywood ' cuig, "Harvey's possessed, you know/' " _ lice, effective Thursday, to /growth, to shut Ute door on alt didate for the office; White, that set up a commission -tet and helped restortterror to American ^-S*She did admit' to a fe«? minor ft*­ Hugh Edburg make the race. He formerW J^wth and establish a no^ 49,, first became.ag-Uaxltute which would Jteju&yte, nightjife, ., r conveniences causedby Hamy'spOs^s-Gdburg, diief trf ac^ majored in accqanting at the*1«rowth poUcy, or preferably commissioner in i960. 7' •/ Unttl "The Exorcist," for most of us the r legislators' salaries. sion. Hls personal hygiene'had. counting in the state comp-University worked action# Agriculture become *4lt would be hard for a can­ and foii^o-take appropriate has " * only Gremlin in Our future got 20 miles to deteriorated and shecould not understand trolter^ office,,announced he -u s-Steel , 3$now to guarantee quality extremely visible to.the public didate for the Legislature — ,|»e gallon. * t. , the several new languages he spoke. « %i» «nter the comptroller's 1 , * growth m Travis County.'f in recant months," he said. like myself — to campaign for . ^Oh, we knew about Devils and Demons * On the other hand, she said possession race as a Democratic canlil^ Bob Bullock: Honts told supporters at the "The needs of our farmers adoption of a constitution But a quilt pulled over the head and a 200 had done wonders for their sex life plusdidate. _ .. Stephen F. Austin Hotel. 2 and ranchers, coupled with which* makes provision for . watt night-lite u uialty keptthem outof th% reducing the family outlay for medical Edburg's decision follows Another Democratic can-. A strong local government^ the limitationsimposed by the, highej-legislative salaries -oearoom.bedroom, : h \„'bills.bills. ;~ -' ;didate for the comptroller s. both city and county, is the the announcement made last energy crisis, should make" without some voters believing' P|Now, millions of people are lining up M|Apparently Harvcy'^jim^pm^ii^;;! post is Boh Bullock, i%^ritoary essential t« week by Comptroller Robert my work more challenging that 1 am seeking a new con­" where "The Exorcist" is showing to have though along forexorcism (castingoutthct , former secretaryof state who guarantee quality growth, be S. Calvert that he would not been campaigning than In any previous year." stitution for self gain," he Heli scared into them and add,a,goose said. >•<-., i\-' seek re-election. Calvert, 81, several months. bump thrill to sleeping alone.'; ' ' TtweouhtyhaMnobUg# w is endorsing Edburg's can^ 'Carroll Colo He reminded the committee She called me three^ $|ej tion to the existing and future that the voters rejected in in addition, a large number of spon-, didacy for theposition Calvert Bob Honts rroll Cole is running for the priest I recommended had been out of .^population an taneous-possession have has held for 25 years.^j||p|g| .......... to provide justice of the peace, Precinct November a proposed amend­ cases been town, but that a traveling evangelist had On the county political orderly framework and reported. _ :!i "As director of the central 3. He is a city councilman ment that would have in­exorcised Harvey's demon with a black level, Austin businessman systefa for this growth," said crease^ the legislators' On Avenue P, Harvey, the neighborhood ~'^accounting division, Edburg from Rollingwood. Bob,Honts filed for county, Honts'. j- hypochondriac, threw away his books on . s -kno^s more about the state's commissioner' of Precinct 2 Honts "had announced his "A nevif tonstitutrlii f^W exotic diseased and developed all the ma* "Do youknow if jsxorcishu is coveredby finances than anybody else," pledging to support "quality candidacy-last November. He Important to risk oh th& voter jor symptoms of possession. ^Calvert said. Blue CrossT" She asked. * . growth" in Travis Ctanty.' |p'fnamed attorney Shannon #hue other candidates reaction to a pay increase for Edburg, 49, said Ytlie comp^ Honts, a partner of ab^Ratliff a^ Jtiis campaign were filing and beginning the Legislature," Mino* said.­\jtroller's job is highly governmental services and mai»ger.t * -their campaigns, Jace Minor, The-salary Mcomria?sionJ sttftfe it ttitaiis the public relations firm, seeks c&xvivi&tetartheTexas House -~ -direct supervision of the over-the office held by retiring , from Travis County, was salaries for the legislators.!.^and^posespysti® .% all fiscal affairs of the state, Commissioner N.S. Gault, He John C WWte 1 speaking at the State Capitol Under the: present constitu-, fit requiresa professional man paid the $150 filing fee to Trying for a13th term in of-* Minor, an Austin-lawyer, tion, voters.must approve any .who understands the prin-County Democratic Chairman fice, -Agriculture Com-spoke , btefore-v-; ihe pay raises. '^ui iStlr:; -x.v, : :wi , A subcommittee of the , accurate sample can finally Research League's plans) andiotiners Guaranteed i^-i^LegislaUve Property—Tax -be-estimatedv-and -to^eecmr^t-woutdkln effect'TX^graiolie— Committee during an :-J m mm -mend that— independent ap-effecUve action," Jones said.)­SO emergency meeting Thursday praisers be contracted to Im-^The representative suggestinimoved to. recommend to they glement it. " that the committee report, to Fuel Crisis Bypasses full committee a method of Subcommittee Chairman the governor that it did not estimating the market value Chrys Dougherty moved that have the means to accompli#••-^'By ROBERT GOETZ ment-fd the Emergency mand for boater and Other lie said there has beeti T months" as this is the slowest j&f property in Texas. the plan sbe accepted as^bhis purpose, -The energy crisis apparent­Energy Act insures that the marine recreational supplies "slowdown" in the sales of time of the year for the saleof ^ The plan, originally amended. "We've got to start^ Jones, departing from the-. A ly is not adversely affecting marine industry will not be will increase. The people* who these types -oi; marine craft campers anyway. suggested by the Texas somewhere and modify a$ we* opinion of his fellow com^-i Vthe sale of power boats ,but limited iki its gasoline supply. can afford to buy boatsare not because Of the crisis: Representatives at theBoat Research Leagiie,an indepen-go along. It is not a pdffect %ittee members, introduced ^?may'be directly respon^ble Roy Reeves, owner of Dou­likely to be inhibited by the But Gardner, likeseveral of and Camper Show agreed that dentresearch group, proposes plan and could not be evfen if motions questioning the ;*for a boom -in the sale of ble ^ Marine, said that the fuel crisis where recreational the other boat represen­persons who can afford to buy that the 300' school districts the Legislature is willing to validity of the Texas ..canoes .and sailboats. "marine industry can't be time is involved. tatives, doubts the boats and campers are not with the most unreliable proceed on this. We've done Research League's desigitT! Boat dealership repfesen--shut off," and added that he assessment figures be check­all we can," he said: Vplan ­ The increase in manmade seriousness qf the fuel shor-likely to be averted by the fuel, v-^tatives voiced opinions at the is not "worried about it (the lakiss and reservoirs vvill crisis. Crutchfield pointed out ed and that an average of the Subcommittee member^. The subcommittee had ask^J Central Texas Boat anda fuel shortage and possible serve as enticements for the Representatives at the show that the marine industry is a differences in tax ratios of the Rep. Luther Jones of El Paso ped the research group to •; /Camper Show, running decrease of sales) at all." He ' leisure-oriented American,, sail the effects of the fuel relatively young one and is remaining districts be opposed the Texas Research recommend a method of using -throu^i Sunday at the Austin noted that demand is greater public, he added. shortageon camper palescan-getting bigger all the^time. ..accepted. x'-4 1 V 1 > ' League plan,supporting a ran­school district figures and to­^Municipal Auditorium. ? now, exceeding even Ute sup­The sailboat arid canoe in­not^be detected yet/ -The sale of boats totals in ex-The subcommltte§TnodIfiied dom selection method of Obtain a property estimator Steve Crutchfield, Mer*" ply. . dustries have benefited from Robert Dudley, speaking for cess of |4 billion a year and^*h« P»ant to lnclu(je addiUoiial formulating data. that would take into account cruiser regional sales Reeves and other boat the energy crisis, Qudley D. Bob Mallory's Camping there is no indication that the ratio "In my humble opinion, the the lack of uniformity its manager, said Thursday that representatives agreed there : Gardner, a spokesperson for Center,-^aid he wilfuiot be fuel shortage will affect this ^districts, to provide that the Legislature could make no application and .the incojiv"fuel consumption of the has been a slight cutback in the Sailboat'Shop, said. able to tell "for three trend. intital selection sample will meanlngful use of the data sistency of tax ratios in schooli^f.: "'•^11" > «' / • boating industry totals less production because of a shor­Gardner could not quote any ^'be modified to assure that ah formulated under the Texas^ jdlistricts throughout the state than one-half of 1 percent of tage of crude oil needed in the figures, but said that the sale IE. annual fuels used as gasoline, manufacture of resin. Thus, of sailboats was up ap­kerosene and distillates.' .prices for boats are higher preciably from last. year. Crutchfield also noted that than a year ago. However, he did. not agree 8i-. Mf-'­ • legislation is helping the Crutchfield said that as the that powerboats were not be­ boating industry. An amend­working week shortens, de-ing affected by the shortage. JESTER CENTER < ,« • ifino 4 1 hr 1 '3 STORE - v T -k Yoar ON CAMPUS Sfu iW Clip „. >.-< .1.. Vfifi Latest styles, quality brands, many colors s^rr''. dollar-saving values. "Special group of NOWU On-the*Dra9 •4 tiotM lMatMl Hlghwdy WO 3S^T Op«n 10 a.m. til'9 p^m.^ Monday through Satwidiq^p g;and all pver town . -m w,4ay#4anuarV ?V-r -< i I * omment V statervtolence ed has succeeded lit taking over all "judicial" forms, codifying thick collections of its violenflaws,"draping capes across'the shoulders,of its "judges" --is the most threatening danger in our world of today, even if if is only barely recognised or understood WL $$&? <' iffm Wuu^&' ^oday as every day isolated individuals aroiind the globe continue their struggle against the legalized regression of the state. We note but two among the thousands here, ||| iipThe Russian writer Aleksandr Solzhejiitsyn has Strengthened the case afkinst Russian repression with Galag Archipelago, his account of %MICHAELEAlUN elite: of men wtoWed^ca!,, _ A number of times these past mroths -with finance.I learned that realityhadbot certain individuals have asked that I ex-' changedlittle these past15 years;, only the plain myself. People correctlysense what names, and not many of thosb .is Variously called anoverriding "anger,''*' Matterover min^ " ,, , Si: or "passion," or "resentment." As ondqt? At the University it quicklybecaipe ap­conventional wisdom goes, Eakinjs;"too; parent that glorified destruction of tl|ebiased;the fellow "hastoo manytue$ to physical landscape took priority. over grind." . cultivation of the mind andspirit.Through I must confess there is some truth to follies like Waller Creek and the needless these claims. Like others I have acquired loss of key faculty one quickW became certain beliefs*and blasies, set apart and, aware of one's total powerlf$snes*. A framed by thAustin asa UTsophoiporeandfound manjfe SM. "% Now, things have changed. The Austin! HSm" of the sought-after virtues. Austin, after once knew has undergone incredible rapidall, is the nearest thing in Texas to a gar­urbanization these past five years, aden city,a University town whereintellect Minorities:: LSAT change mogLAustihites do not want-JThe-=• receives itsdue credit. During thatyearof skyrocketing population, the increasingly1969 any illusions I might have had on the —^Project Info is offering afree LSAT prep session series for minority unbearable traffic, the skyscrapers: all nature of Texas reality were quickly students (blacks, chicanos, women) every Tuesday and Thursday night boast, of Austin's unseemly birth' Into swept aside.The harsh pronouncementsof * megopolized Anterica. ' v~:\* for the next two weeks. Classes will be held at the law schqM, Townes the Board of Regents, coupled with the J. 1 Many have accepted these-'dhanges .Hall 122, at 7:30 pan crass moral blindness-of a .servile ad­ * '--.rvV • wearily; others, myself.included, havenot ,W"?» '1 tf.sT/fi/sotf 7$ ministration, rendered me cynical. A accepted them at all. The personal loss in . -Here is a schedule of the sessions::r>7-6 . vw neophyte reading of Willie Morris' "North ihe change has become an onerous, daily ^Tuesday, Jan. 29 — Charts and graphs" ' In Russia, in Vietnam, the struggle"continues. Toward Home" further instructed me in burden. In my own instance the anger . the historically crass and arrogant Texas . Thursday, Jan. 31 — Cases and principals -started with tne forcible eviction of some Tuesday, Feb.-&^-Reading comprehension fir-Mi Vl JOCollege House residents fromfourlove­ firing line ^ Thursday, Feb.7—3-hour practice exam (full simulationof actual test) ly old homes on Rio Grande Street. From •that time on I have lived in no less than The courses are taught by Dr. Alan Sager of the government depart­ '"three fine old houses on the campus West •CJ­ ment and Bobby Bigham, director of RASSL. Hie program is sponsored 'Side, and allhave undergone thebulldozer. iTSP: Nosupport for Spurr "• *In every instance die neighborhoods and and conducted by student volunteersfor the purpose q|increasing minori­ quality of life have suffered. The trade * ty student enrollment in the School of Law.^ j ,J? To the editor: ... .r.| be your newspaper at this time. Bales Safeway's organization affects usin more' ~waB a simple-one: clvHiaed, Hissed :• In your coverage of the Texas Student merits your support, and your support at ways than one. Last year Safeway was in­i neighborhood living for the "progress" of Interested persons should contact theProject InfoOffice in Townes Hall 'Publications Board's response, to Presi­this time could well mean the election of dicted in over 50 cases of meat fraud and ramshackle, pennynail apartments.^'... 109, 471-4326. * dent Spurr's suggestion that The Texan an outstanding individual to 'Congress. sanitation violations. Its warehouses have editor be appointed, you have a rathersub­r T — -Jim Mattox been found tb be infested with ratsand its Similar tales abound-everywhere. I stantial factual error. ; State Representative grain products contaminated with bugs. know of certain nooks in the Northwest A Texan reporter comments in a Jan. 20 • •-District 33-K And most of all, Safeway, as a powerkl Hills where a friend and I took loflg, in- news article that "the TSPjBoard voted opponent of working people's fight forla /vigorating hikes in 1969; now they are Hunnicuttpower Thursday to postpone action on Spurr's decent life (as exemplified by their scraped and subdivided in moonscape Some kind of Celebration is in order^rar the salvation of Hunnicutt request until Feb. 4." This account is A public meeting to introduce the Alter­.struggle against the UFWA), and a fashion. ­ native Community Tax will take place at House. All legal action by the tenante of the house hasbeen dropped;Cen­ wholly inaccurate. • staunch defender of monopoly, and cor­ 7:30 p.m. Sunday (after Sattva Communi- Another instance. A chicano friend at' tral Christian Church has agreed to postpone demolition until Feb. 9; in I moved, and the board unanimously ap­ porate influence in the government, is ty^Supper) in theMethodistStudent Center Rabbit's Lounge tells of boyhood adven­ proved, that the TSP take final action on representative of the orientation of the interim, Preserve Austin, Inc. will arrangefor a new location and the our Auditorium, 2434 Guadalupe St.* tures on theColorado; the river'now reeks this matter "by simply taking note Of whole food industry, which, functions for of excrement. Young people once ^eelined moving of the.house. President Spurr's views on editorial profit only, and not to fulfill the needs of ''"Austin's old netghborhoods^reflect a >unique lliStor£ that should be policy." There is quite plainly nothing in all us .for an adequate, nutritious food for tozy days at Lake Travis; pow the •• pteserved. They should not be destroyed for the sake of parking lots 6r the foreseeable futureleft for the board to A Safeway supply. If we are really*concerned about process is doubly difficult as the .LCRA consider with regard to this matter. and selfseeking developera, closft jur the profit from more "intensive" use. ^ To the editor: ' ^ rising food prices, decline in food quality lakefront land. ^ ' ^Perhaps nothing short of money can change fte' pri<§rities:of Further, I must say that I have beert ; Last Friday (Jan, 18;' 1974) you printed and quantity and the general decay of our asWt"*--:­ ? # l somewhat surprised at the-lengthy icon?. an articleannouncing that asurveyof food-.standard of.living, we will look beyond the velopeis ^ "—--—*•" '•-«• ^Iroversy which Spurr's letter prompted. prices by TexPIRG showed Safeway to be few cents we may save weekly by suppor­ -lhave watched this systematicidenigra­ only by hostility by the board of trustees of Central Christian Church. .The TSP Board has~ plenary power to in­the least expensive grocery store in ting a corporation like Safeway. Thefarm tion with a strong,measure of disbelief,un­ Their insensitive, uncooperative and almost malicious attitude towards itiate handbook or trust revisions. And my Austin. What the article failed to mention , workers and their organization,, the able to comprehend a people who toleratethe public and the press is hard to forgive. Had' not many good people understanding of the vote taken last week was that the ; such jis that there is virtually no support on the things. Operating in the name or donated their time and money to the preservationof the house,it would be America, AFL-CIO, has been carrying on provement of their daily lives, but by ex­growth, profits and progress, board for Spurr's position. T a nationwide boycott against Safeway for posing operations such as Safeway, for a rubble today. travesties occur, and occur; and the pkee __The.maintenance of student control over., -qualitatively betterlife^forms———r~ Thesuccess^feffortsto^eWehou^is^nTmpoftantstepIhtfiefrgfit the paper by means of an open electoral quickens still. Madness, the reaction. the farm workers' cause,have found many BOYCOTT LETTUCE, BOYCOTT Blind madness. ' • 0,1 ..." protect Austin's environment. Austih can b %. -mMt r s.J&br Makeup Editor ..Sylvia Moreno about Uie true record of Rep. Bales. Mr. W&e Page Editor '........................James Dunlap Wood. I am sure, will tellyou that reform Copy Ekiitors.. ....John Byers, Pam Myers, Army Armstrong;* -has no better friend. Robert Fulkerson, Ann-Wheelock Your editorial says that, Rep. BatesPhotographers, Andy Sieverman, David ISewman compiled a "moderately' progressiverecord.".If you will chedc the record, you udu «tpmnd In Ike IMIjt Tcxu W» Ummc at tit iraamaUoattwidiHrAWMI. iaqnhrte* delivery t&or ur th* wriUr <4 ibrutldt mm) arc vot neccturth > and cUnKted Ktvertmog tbaaU be made in ISPBaUdtag will find that Rep? Bales was truly the >#»•.«( the Uaivtnity #teiiaiitraUM1 or the Bawd at » ^ -r a r 1 Bvmot _ -R«iwia.' •, ——: •*—•-• v . ft;; liJ8 i4Tf-|Wi. y:j:. Tb» mumiMummw at nwtMwnii? >»»iWgtf*il>ir«> 'Tie'0iM< Of felted by Tew Sladeptf bTtxaa-U SaUawa Kdncattoaal Adv^rtUmi Unhah fta,-ed in the history of our State Legislature. r AlkbMIMMv Drawer U. Uafc«nttrtft*Uoa. AaMla. 1«>» aW Leiinjtao Aw »e» *«•*, N.Y.. U6J7. jftllyTte Baity Twt«« l» |M>ili»had Moadajr; Ttotdff?-TV Daily Tnuo nMcrifit*loTbe AMockaMPrcaa,ilw ' Having served with him, I know that he „ ... U«iu»dpi*M*liltrtattanal rlWWtf Mp.S»ea»4-da»« pottage paid ai • ;«>d Zodi* SeM Snvke. Tk« Texas'ia a mnnlwr of tlw' Antia, Tex. - A»«>cat«d CflUe(U]e Pret>. lbe SMtli«c*t JonnxUam his stand will be.fojr the people of Austin ^oBf^ ^Oie^trajrOaarllrwtetp^t AJMOciaiio*. «MntnliaBa'4>iit tia.ancpM by tctoptam )«n» and the rest of the lOth Olmgressicmal _ r_. tecreteag wiwijliif Um mmtfafm ax al1Mb It Sates^ #»!,'*t Qm tdUm*I ptlkx itnut Stwkm I F=."~ "JTI" *_n. 11 f tr IhoiiW r tti0 otd Americah oxlom—sHevet $et infe d land war In Ai .itshould 1 • i P«ae 4 Friday, J^nuary ZS, 1974 THE DAILY TEXAN W5 ' • -m. Mr•' . f to off before the faU planting __ As 6f l370, the largest 5 „ ttoa Project Report^"Tie winter wheat. For a long time percent of farms got more ?,j£rbs* W FWd.") -»* <«" ; Secretary of Agriculture Buts eash subsidies than the jgsl Aa^ooi who haswalked into jtmallest 60 percent. claimed they were not aware ajwpenmarket lately knowsu^One of the 10 biggest of the. Russian sale until the fall, but recently the vice­tte sinking feeling you get "farmers" receiving thissub- president of Continentaldrainvmen you look at food prtees., sidy is Tenneco Corporation, testiiied before the Senate Sine® Jiui^.l^.i^tion ^rtte of the 10 has clipibed to tts highest biggest defense contractors. that he had ..told the govern­point in?2years.Why? Who is Another large beneficiary is ment About the sale as early iv, Steals*f'i' responsible? -C"* as July S,1972, Under the,pre­ Sen. James Eastland of i}&2 f " f , Farmers?"' ^ sent system, the government Mississippi, the third ranking iWt Many people believe' that member of' the' Senate regulates theamount of wheat I'M'! ' planted eveiry year. Our Ir^, &• farmers are responsible for: Agricultural Committee. Still rising food prices. But the or-'" another is W.R. Poage, who government, could simply dinary smallfarmer, farfrom owns two farms in Tekas and have increased the amount being greedy, is having a dif­receives thousands of dollars planted to compensatefor the ficult time simply surviving; in subsidy to keep his land un-g Soviet grain purchase. More than half of all farms plowed. Poagejusthappens to I' Instead the government did that existed at the end of nothing. "The fact remains be the head of the House World War II have gone outof , that the government failed to Agricultural Committee. business, leaving less than act last summer in the face of Government restriction of three million farms in the makes food ' a huge surge ita international production . demand for wheat and feed United States. Each weefc scarce; food prices go up and more than 2,000 farms fail, so do profits for the big grains." The reason? many of vhich then — ITT, Boeing, etc, Business Week claims, "Elec­ are farmers bought up,by big corporations. In 1972, farm profitswere the. tion year politics and thefarm Ttt "Is this, new breed of vote were at least an implicit highest in U.S. history, /v..® factor;". High whegt. prices ^S'fairtnerii large cor«? ^ TheGovernment ? iy® Wit. -: : • |IX>.rnoilo®«mtnt: America's new bwd of.farmer*. mean happy farmers, in this „ porations like DuPont, Mobil, • In addition to--payinfp? ^JBoelag and Greyhound ^-wha farmers not to.produce, the *"March 167tr made lifeharder forthe food pri(es by blwnini 'itlm^^ms* t are making thelargest profits government also buys huee lonlaM nf In March, 1971, the govern! Throughout the rest of 1971 percennror the same period;the corporate "farmers."-:.,-. ment raised the support price and 1972, the dairy industry Swift's profit was up 95 per­ •(-,, Consumer!? of milk — as a result, milk to the . Our government has been prices went up a a ave $400,000 cent. penny Can Party. * Russian wheat pre-law? toying that the average per­gallon and 1300 million in addr X Meat prices Our government has tried toson-is buying so much food ed profits wght to*the millr® r meat answer criticism about high ; r that prices can't help but go companies. ,'Bie government-'' •v;*;V--v.'• . ':" up. In fact, however, the bad initially ruled that there I UKEI^e Bovfernftient itself is & major wouldn't be an increase in the mmmm TWKWSHTHAir rHE06E cause of high food prices. support price of milk for 1971. hawjesthat OF INTO THE 0RICK (JALL? Every year it pays farmers$4 What changed their minds? ^ BIKE billion not to grow food. (Watch the dates.) pre-pare. This makes food scarce and March 12, 1971: Then therefore more expensive. t Secretary of ''".-'VrvV '•"V -"'v J • This farm subsidy program ' Agriculture Tlra iwxi LSAT ic P«b, •!hmmvapi began in the 1930s as a way of Clifford Har­ ymm aiwr<,.wHh,lfc«.p«1971< Dairy in-out a fow ontMi^nh. ., r .1­ small farmer out of business. -, dustry gives CHu scfiodufo hf fob. WSAT.-j |^ Most Of thesubsidy goestothe, •' ^ Republican' • *••.* -j* ^ large corporate farms who party $10,0005 I Mon.t JOru 28; W»d„ Mi W., fobv If fMo»,t DOONESBURY m W MUSTNT ' 18S8S f»r lutermalleni Ires ssuppose ^ YOUR BATHIS JUST wm. seif. im yofflee/em; TH/NK YOU*. «aii ara-iiaa «r writo« imtA bomH m/cme* Burmese om&Aiaaa ••viow Cows* *f Tiih,I«m., SIS A Ftm£N.AK£ NM .QMS war m w60w~. Otd"HforfiT"Charni" witHHeW (fcrttf comlort, it you will. /U the HoteT " ^•rrylrooki •M9.,AimHn,Y«x night. Or you can really hit jhe big Mme by' askinglora room with bath. Wmonlyasiiing $8^KSTor one of ffiem. Either way youV be in the ^mie building with a LubyVrCafeteria and El Poco Loco. One of the liveliest clubs on the River. And right in the heart of San Antonio's exciting Riseo del Rio,,l^ake yQur ntervatjons.nowf. for a weekend Or a week.Then,rest easy ­ knowing you're spending money "on the town". Nol on the Hotel. Om Country-fied An»w«rto Yoatorday'* .. Crossword Puzzler LiROLiM UTJIirak* I fK ^ > looking coun HD!2aCQ[3 HDHDQH! With teal "down-home" i XCROS8 s--an nnriP^ i e M«nrsnlckn«mo •no BiinoH rano t »•-^ embroidery of. country oranti HPHsn CUB ilSfS. . 'SSff >1 .^ 6* \ in strategic 9 Crowd 8 Go by wator nraasH ISsehebe T-C ^ 5.13. •qredhbrasruKf-; m-ara BLiECiR •una *26. Pante. »18 OHBG SRBE3 EE •I3QI1ES SnOHBK r-jpfTiiron f-^mnnn u^; Mty t3T ON-THE-DRAG 2406 Guadalupe im, dip/ jgiaf S­ n and women 47 ^%07W; w 7 W. 28th tMtw , J Friday, i . m . -. m >®ilSS?iS3i3sS!eilII®SallllllSil5llll5alE:SSillP£S|5te !loat|j| it ha8 made to soybeanVafter failing to in-and feed grain farmers. This tteaM£|iie amount of grain would have forced farmers to| plai;Oteff#St pay the loan* by felling •i " loaniby« ment $ould haye done a crops instead of hoarding numbeaMtf other things in the them ia hopes tttat prices faU andftarly winter of 1972 to item f riirln feed ai prices.' * u»e public becjame incireasUig­1) It could have dumped ly angry over high prices, the government sold some of its surplus wheat, called in its loans and increased wheat planting for the next crop. But, as Business Week ad­mitted, it was "too Uttie, too late," especially,in the faceo| ; bad weather conditions which reduced the harvest and led to further tightening of the world's supply of food. WatergateSince the Watergate scandal: broke, .with its revelations about the huge corporate donations for special favors from men at the highestlevels of the U.S. government, we have ail become more aware 'Thet. u' noWoytd of the control that major cor­•& vent rite in, food porations have over politics: >m Pr*iid«ntNix> and government. The role of en's 4 message. these corporations in enlisting some tif the millions oi government aid to increase- bushels «f grain it .holds in prices" and profits should storagiNHito the market. This make it perfectly clear that would have increased supply jjntll their power isended, the "^l^lcegrcfown. , 'average per^,.the averageIt ifeuld have demanded consumer, will continue to i payment of special Have to pay the price. SeFFS Sk-X m ANCIENT ANSWERS gs'iisliw , ' MODERN PROBLEMS ^SEMINAR By Dr. Bruce Wciltke . Sponsored by Grace Covenant ChurchsM MW. Himtlond Or.{Continmlal Cars Showroom) if: l=.K GrtOfe cSiant €hurcf^ft be privileged to sponsor «Waltk* Stir. .P^D;. Harvard, Th.D. Dalla. 1heological Seminary, speaking on messages from the Psalms and Eccleaiastes. . 'f$M "—"™~" •:m si mm f e!82r of Semitics and Old Testament at Theological Seminary, is not only an authority V? OW Testament scriptures but also a very warm. inspiring speaker H Ui) 1Numtv vviW prwidid at QH .temlom.J SMU'JiHi. 27 S0^ deal society" "totswu frwn Ecclesiestts" "Th# AnafMity wf Covngw" 70 p.m. "How. te Gain Wlsdwn" i« , nf* 4«< J> ^ Z-. V |«PJM)t«iWapmmwWI8JlPJIIU!lJUIW^^ xS fS t "-.-m """ " issti® • *C*.*• • * 1 c ' ** * '• j *"• 8i6PHtfB?5IZk-KSW^BSUl^^BE6S. ' IS • SI K IS SStov>$5 •££!fc'ik Union Reservations: «41 proving and stamping all cards placed on ' 1 iMMan*** and operations areas, etc., and Is responsible for ap-Although the Ex-Students* Association moved out long ago, Stm Union Building 200. necessitated by the shortage of space. She pfaving major staff appointments, bonding use, buildingexpan­dent Government occupiesasuitejof offices in the newaddition said last year more than 200 organizations In many cases, the'*bucK*s'also sion, program directions and tbe Texas Union budget" completed in 1960. v Hie board is composed of 11 members, two of which—the Numerous other offices, such as tne Students' Attorney's ofr-i there, for the Union Building A small fee is chargea to tnose|f|i the semester or the year. Mrs. Taylor said r". * i$ located in the Reservations Office. ^ ­ director-of-the Unicnandthedeanofstndents-^arynonvoting. fice, tbeTcxasUnion Program staff and the ArtS andCrafts organizations which; wish to set up ad4^ they are popular with transit students and . ,TjLS?2rh u ^ '»•" ^^ Other members include six students, four ofwhom are selected Center, are located in the Union Building, and space is at^ < As the name implies, all reservations^* she could easily rent twice the number pi e ditional chairs in the room they reserve or * in a manner determined by StudentGovernment; one wbois the premium. ... ^ 3>J for Union Building ro9ms are made lnckf>r» " %.m, to 5 p.n)-> but night managers are for any other necessary room set-up. student body president and ooe who is the coordinator of tbe Tlie Union Board not only decides which organizations shou|f office. Registered campus organization#^ ^ • ' available in the office until midnight to' Program Council. get offices, but also where the lounges should be, where the reserve meeting rooms through the office!!! The Reservations Office also letsout theSs The Reservations Office also is respon-f,fondle any problems that might arise in Three faculty members serving three-year staggered terms, i Center should be located and so on. on a per semester or per day basis. fiX%|o«ms containing pianos on ,a first-' -Interim­ also sit on the board. v§| A concern for generating traffic and income wps partftr Union Board actions are subject to approval of the Board of responsible for the new General Store and the Press On CopyT negents. Center, both housed in the Union Building. Although financing and budgeting would seem to Be the major #1 Looking at a building originally bUilt to house vario^i * -fflm problem of the Union Board, David Garden, board chairman, facilities for20,000students at the most and now trying to cope*, said space allocation also is aznajarboard at the beginning of each school year. space is understandaDie and CorteH"emph&&s!ed that the 1 Partly for this reason, the Union Board hopes eventually to is concerned with providing age^tefa<#tiesfor atljUnfr formulate and finalise plans for one or two small annex Uiuans^ ty students. W*SP VS-M* *vr 1 >! Information Center 7\* ' 'S •* vf r1 The nine students who staff the Texas Uitf<& Information I'iM Centerdomore than answer questions. Tbeyalso run an IBM 1 'Ps copier, check out magazines and newspapers for readers, w'viwsell Union calendars, make change,-post notices on the cotter's bulletin boards, give refunds for money lost in ven­ding machines and revise the center's collection of resource *• materials.,-? •••:-• , e>T .i'i Tbe center has a library of more than SO magazines, daily newspapers from major Texas cities and The Wall Street -» " 1?Journal and The New York Times. All publications-can be checked out by leaving an ID at the information , desk. A reading lounge is across the hall. Students also may pick up pamphlets on Union events, campus maps, fine arts calendars and copies of On Campus f M'SSf .££?$•­ , and The Daily Texan at the center. ©S&SftS The center, in Union Building 102, is open 7 a.m. to mid­ night Monday through Friday; 8 a.m. to midnight Saturday and 1 p.m. jto midnight Sunday. I ^ilk,-jSl--^ 1 •' •» • ~ m mmM 1 v.­ 'W ?• Js^30S553S » -CL f J, t^. J r-lvmn Staff HmM* by Bp(M ttowmm ­ i 5J rfW Weekly or bimonthly exhibits at the color slides of the various exhibits. i $ feA « Union Art Gallery are free to passersby Past works displayed include a Many of the activities held for t|ie University . Texas Union Board of Directors and allots the.: and offer varied displays of student works photography exhibit on children and the; community, such: as the Texas Union Klin ';' money to the various committees, except for the; . and traveling exhibitions. . A rather bizarre "Memories of Meat" by /f *-£*si? ^ ^ Program, sandwich seminars and cultural •.. ' Calturaf Entertainment Committee (CEC); LV, x Robert Burns.. Included among the "ex­ ~7&z -« £ The gallery is run by the Union Arts and events in Municipal Auditorium, originate in the 'Miich is funded through the student activities 1 hibits scheduled for this semester are Theater Committee, and all displays are 12 Texas Union committees. ; • fee. A certain portion of the funds., paintings by Bert Spoerl, photographs by chosen by them. The committees are imposed of sttid chaired has to be returned to the Union Board,. . . Larry Wilhelm and a Mexican-American Hal Weiner, Union program adviser,' • art exhibit., by students. Chairpersons are chosen in March. -.". The 12 committees are: " ; 1 wgSfc"'! V said persons interested in exhibiting their Student -attendants on duty during by the Texas Union Program Council (TUPC)' 1 Academic Affairs Committee, Bowling, billiards, table tennis, Foosball: Table tennis ^15cents for the ball ^Students using the facUities must leave .several tournanfents will be held during works should contact the.committee at the. , -gallery hours, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday which consists of each chairperson dnd a -Afro-American Cultural Program Com,' and air hockey enthusiasts abound in the^£:Foosball coin-operated 25 cents per game -their ID at the Games Area de3R until the -1 mthe spring. program coordinator. Committee members are . «tntttee, Games Area, in the basement of the Union -Air iiocKpy coin operated # cents ^per^ equipment is returned. ^ Table tennis and billiards, as well asProgram Office in Union Building342. The throu^i Friday, act as securityguards and committee makes its selections based on selected through interviews in the: fall and Vs:; Arts and Theater Committee, , Building. .t K ,,*? J, ifcjg,. ^ gg bowling competitions* are held jp ACUR ^ answer questions about the exhibits. ^ 3,,-i « 'c-.. ^ T~ ,7 'TJ 's ""VI!>v< 1 R: Tbe Games Area also provides fowling spring. . n: ~ " .' Building Use Advisory Committee, • / Bowling shoes may be rented for 10 nr; facilities for the physical ^instruction ; tournaments; Regional competition will David Cordell, coordinator of the Progriun.' , Cultural Entertainment Committee, ^ . Nine, tables for pocket billiards, two^ cents for students; 15 cents for non-->4l( classes Monday through Thursday. be held' at Southwest Louisiana State tables, (or Council, said committee membership averages -.igi'Ideas and Issues Committee, snooker one carom three--- University at Lafayette ih February.' -r cushion) table, four ping pong tables,^ students". ,-i k Campus-oriented league alsa use the about 20 persons per committee, but some cwn-'"-' Mexican-American * Cultural Prbtfrairi Hurley said that althougfchandicappifig! three Foosball machines and one air|r r^.En^Paff "Hurley, "Games Areata lanes-^a faculty/staff 1®®8U® a,' mittees may only have six j^ Committee, 4 ••r'rir&y . pool players to. make competition more hockey game are available to students at ai^ • «-' { manager,, said that smce faculty ' and• staff noon Friday, and the "Strike and Spare others have up%'30. T"-Musical Events Committee.. ---equal is difficult,.he hc^tes to devise some mixed student league will use the lanes Fulltime, nonstudent staff Mikhbfer^r work.i'j " Recreation Committee, % minimum charge. ' members do not pay a Union fee, they areps this semester, as will the men's in-i^ettiod so he can hold UUiattb tiw~ m with each committee in an advisory capacity to • ' UnioH Communications Committee<4 '' Rates for students and nonstudents are:|#: , as.v.nonstudents. tramural league on some weekday nights. naments in the Union Building­ „ thej»mmittee chairpersons. . » 4 Union Dudng Service Advisory Committee Hurley said bowling lanes can be reserv-Jr • Hours for the Games Area aft 8 a.m. to Bowling ^40,cents per game,-students^ _ . „ _ „ ^ Xs coordinator, Cordell attempts to keep, the ^* tnid --45 cents nonstudents ' ed by campus organizations, but not by in-.X v Tournaments, such as the Association of 10:30 p.m. Monday through Thursday; 8 "•iw efforts between the committee chairpersons' ^,-," UT Interaction Committee. ' Billiards 25 cents per stick per h6ur,#lk dividuals. Although studehts always are^«" Coil^e Uniwis . Recreation Tournamait a.m. to 11:30 p.m..Friday; 9 a.m. to 11:^ organized. Basic outlines of proposed compiittee^.^'Cordell said that the 12 committees are not the -students^l given priority, there usually is a waiting^-1 (ACUR) durtng tfe fall, are occasionally' p.m. Saturday; and 1 p:m. to 10:30 p.ih'' programs are approved by the Program Council,, -'tome in any two-year period. If the Program 111 40 cents nonstudents^ ligt to play pool, he added, hieid in the Games Area, and Hurley-.said Sunday^ which Cordell .called-? "joint accountability" "/^Council feels thatji committee has outlived its system. , purpose, that particular committee is phased *• Edited by Kristina Paledes 3 ^ 4 ••VSJ'A oj: The Program Council receives funds from thevf*} om. (, ^ && r~ V-' !•, SSE3i iv« >>v i •£'>•)' SSSfc t1" A " i . , asfe SEwSSit 'ii Tbe Texas Union Building has someser-" available 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.'Monday through budsman, in Uition Building 334, handles tools. A use fee card may be purchased for Kinard said. i -% vices that beconie immediately apparent Friday in Rooms 200 and 340. complaints from students about "abuse; 95 at the beginning of the semester. It is The center can provide informationr I --1 Dinin§ to the student through visibility and adver-Jft-ee felephone* are in tbe south end of or capricious acts by University of-prorated as the semester progresses. referral and a Valuable checklist of things-'iwii-h'>h'-£fc 1. •mm -tising, but the building offers someless ob-the Union Building on the first and second, ficials." a job description says. Darkrooms, viUch must be reserved hot every student, planning to Study abroad vious extras, too. floor:. Pay telephones are in the Gamte : The current ombudsman, Jiih Osborn, a more than 24 hours in advance, coat 50 should do, she said. . Three dining^areas in the. Union Building and another^ For the culturally minded is the Texas Area in the basement and along the first law 'student, receives cents for three hours use. ^The center, funded by Student GoveriK^ ^S^'the^lawia„schooloc,servei,c the University campus. All areas are University com-™ "Cultures Room, containing records, and second.floor hallways. -plaints from individuals who havebeen un-Some supplies are sold, although ment, presently has no set hours of opera-' • weekdays; and the Chuck*Wagon on th6 first" floor is newspapers, magazines and books which Amid the" constant "noise and interrup­successfiiMn solving problems. He can students must provide thfeir own ti(m, but Ms. Kitiard said permanenthpurs !' X'-^pen Saturday. jrelate to various cultures on tbe Universi­tion in ttjg UnionBuijkj|in£, Students' At- , should be set aooa;r— n.„i jnHitiina nr-«n» -fbe Commons open^7 isti; to2fhm. Monday-through Fri^ty' campus. Tlfc Umon Afm-Americ^S torneyi Frairic Ivy and Ann Bower divide to find solutions. _-J. _ Arts and Crafts, in Union Building 333, is j The Union ^offers copying at two -^>itldayTOffers hot and Continental breakfasts and a lunch menuCulture Committee sponsors the renter in tbeir time among clients wforfUe in from . The ombudsman can be reached on open from noon to 9:35 p.m. Monday,, separate loeatiems in the Union Building. ! -'» « * the client is referred to a le^al lawyer who'leries of Sunday afternoon ctasfttes tton Crnnimittee. , through Friday; 8 am to midni^it SStur? In the Latir School Snack BarTwIePfoils and siiid^lchL . . 0m"t*s!aia desks" space in #Union will be able to take the case tp court, teaching craRs not ordinaiily pursued hr ^ Martha Kinard,-co^tairperson of the day; and 9 p.m. to midnight Su ' ^^are offered, but a new grill tp be installed around Feb. l wlll ££T P5r„-kf'>/:^§^ulIdin8 for 125 a semester. The fee in-Referral to other legal ageocies inAustin tbe Union room, will bescheduled againas subcommittee and a worker at the center, s rnnt»«'»r»Conies are s rom.™»nt« ni„.Pu,« ta* ,Z 35a ^'4'/^t^fs/^f^iadesuse of a Union room. ihe main ^urpoK oi^the office as -BotM^'coiM ches(friedpieaan4grinedbreikfasts.Hoursare7;80 ¥'mm Jn additioo to lvy and Ms.Bower, thert— Persons using ArtsandCrafts*,prcwidinga placr-wherestudents can^ UniveMtyidentification^ for theamount v are 25 law studentresearcbers wiimi Ivy f^Uties pay a smallf«. tbei^lyrate l4^ csflnne and get information on study., of the bill. IFf ' 9S' > ' v but . at tiie Union Buildi^ tikve is no describesis the"backbone of the office." 25 cents to useany or al!of the power tools overseas.'' Press On*S;nourf jSre t charge for notaries pubUc. Tbey are Tfie office of ttie 'University om-and 15 cents to uw any or all of,the hand The center is' for referral only, Ms. Monday through Friday —•BarsBatissasriAsaaBatBsiBB^^ ipinnlM»»»i — •,i«iiW«i ' f J], , »vr 4.69 .49 t. Vi GAL %GAOLD CHOW Vi 6Al.lr7.69 i!SSJIS<^^I..:.c;v_ H ©Al.;;9.25 WALKERS DELUXE I , ft* io ANTIQUE -k.: k 3 ad -gftgsfig y-o-J.W. DANT 10 yr. old « ooMMOHtlTWWIiWMy ACQUES BONET 1 ^ ;CM Orf.tUk,CM Duck ---t••})>• fr * -f i ^ 3.39 •MM H % RON RICO RUMI0>mfh»ili Bc—lw CROWN RUSSE VODKAlOhlllVMhl GORDONS GIN ^ WNlllOfcl SOMBRERO TEQUILA MATEUS ROSE l^^Wi\ebtra»m\\chOSfMCM 0lhM WWl# ' PABST CANSCmMCM •— PEARL0|MVJ4NA fl u <•»• luti •••«> Ml TEXAS FRIDE ,410 3^9 20-Mile-A-Day ""-'SPOUT*" •Vibrtim Sda •Laath«f-lin«d Vamp •Steal Shank •NaiM*M Construction m RED WING SHOE STORE confidently that it's helping everyone. I think it's helped some people more than, .others. 'We feel every team is get?' work in the water. The team couldn't really work out in the; water any more than it does >, now.1 Nixon Happy %Bonehead',Gone " fan. »nrfo>4tn>ui 4hna&aM fiu> »^.»nr..T «n k« Jra DALLAS (UPI) — Presi* Nixon, an avid football fan, i-a-past winner of • wiiu tliti award in 1978 fur his the Dallas Bonehead of' the coaching ability and the playsYear award, Thursday told the group he was "delighted^ "" " -.«'they will drop the ^ward. CB" SMITH VOLKSWAGEN "'WJ *M, watk ar KhMl car 1695 •••••• «.»••••• QUALITY SERVICE B r0"DTR A U T H ORIZEDDOWNTOWN VOLKSWAGEN DEALER 476-9181 .CORNER5 FH & LAMAR jf181• he gave Washington Coach : George Allen and Miami Coach Don Shula in the 1973 Super Bowl. -" " The club will give its final award, Friday to the "no-show" professional football fans of America. The text of the Nixon telegram to the Bonehead Club: -"To rtily fellow Bonehead awardees, and to all of those -splendid people who have spent too much time in the hot Texas sun, thus qualifying for membership in the Dallas Bonehead Club,<$<,, send •warmest greetings. 'I''"As a past recipient, I must %ay I was delighted to learn of your plans to Fetire> the Bonehead of the Year Award after today's (Friday) presen­tation. I want to extent hear­tiest congratulations to Al Hirt, who is accepting the honors this year for tl»e 'No Show' fans. *-'' '•>" We make and repair boots shoes, belts ?'I understand thoseare the bleS who buy game tickets' and then, Stay home to watch on TV — Which Bob Hope says is like separate honeymoons. "Seriously — if that ispossi­ble on this occasion — I truly enjoyed the good humor and fun associated with the Bonehead Award, and I grateful to all of you for havr| lngSiengiven theoppofttfiaJtst; to participate. My only regret is that Don Shula waited two years before using the Sui Bowl plays I gave him. "Again my thanks to the^, Dallas Bonehead Club and# warm best wishes to all of -you." San Diego Lead r -SAN DIEGCM AP) — Former University of Texas teammatea1 Ben Crenshaw and Tom Kite took advantage of bright, warmLt sunshine to fire matching seven-under-par 65s and tie for the ~ first round lead Thursday in the $170,000 Andy Williams^rrJ Diego Open Golf Tournament. The rookie Crenshaw, who has won once and finished se<^Mi twice in an infant pro career, went six under parin oijestringof , r ^ event BOOTS SHEEPSKIN ^ RUOS 100 Many Beautiful Colors $750 leather M rmi goods •LEATHER SALE * Various kind*, colon -75' p«r fr. .... KuiHwgSr m "Canon Capitol Saddlery RaitUi wiMerness/whitewatar wpply 1614 Lavaca Austin, Texas 478-9309 5440 bumet road • Single-lens reflet—full-focusing' screen viewfinder^ with micrdprism rangefinder. T/. Quick-loading mechanlam—fast-loading" eliminates^ ­>the need of threading film. [{'I \ • Built-in highly sensltlvejhrough-the-lens CdS spot meter—gives wide-open or stopped-down readings. • Breech-lock lens, mount—accepts over 40 inter-1"' 'r I , changeable lenses from 7.5mm to 1200mm. ,4 Chronra Body w/f 1.8 Uns *279'7 ? ^ -t**r _ |Chrome Body w/f 1.4 Uns —­ For block bedy odd $10.00 M Cose $10.00 when purchased w/camera m Designed for every photographic apptlca-•Fsllipartan Ml stipp«tf-dtwa dafhstf am Hon. the F-1 accepts a multitude of acces-aeteriSK mm sories and over 40 interchangeable lenses. • THaaiam facal-plMe shatter ta 1/2000 ttmd ' i ir« a truly integrated 35mm camera system, • Brewfe4wk lets smut fw Caara FO, FL aril with professional features yet an ~amiBi2ing R leans ~ -. ease of operation. You'll have to seethjs fine • Matcb-satdlt (CAT) flash axpatsra sy.tmasystem—conje in for a demonstration todayl a'aad 1st* swn! ^ _ y (i „ . F-l w/f 1.8 Lens— LIMITED SUPPLY * ^ C J ^ F-l w/f 1.4 Lens - " 4 • Ttrtrr^ri nytfiif t n iyVj * •' , "i ^ \ L ' Mti Joe'Lippman, the CANON represen­ ''Uijfr , i tative for this area will be on hand today: The Vlvitar Model 281 V .* THE »?*h picture* automatically frorrr2 to from 9r00 a.m. to. 6:00 p.m. and Saturday 21 feet. BuilMn batteries can be $r>. $ from 9:00_ a.m. tab3:00 p.m. to answer Vivitar ^ssasss-- Tired of the routine? Take a break at McDonald's. t 'H* questions, and demonstrate CANON AO, trol, color-corrected flash tube/qulck 281-charge ability, and a built-in battery products.^ saving circuit. Comes complete with larger, case and ehtrger, wide mel* nyjit. >..rf­ m 5355 N. Interregional WOJfcrn#t K BMKAMI 303 E. Oltorf /''(/r/'Mf far)/ -rpm m > -r j»"wry.a, 1974 THE daily texa* feMs m -'¥w^Lrr4k-t * , ^ §m™A -y MS DANNY "Heaven.-help * m «$* win^' Said Twtas Ti ttle early j|3Manager Richard Boidt, 'had his best game since TEXAS HAS lots ot it.;' much about records. A lot of mm** James Price came off the people toss around the wojti bench in the second half Tues-' 'loser1 carelessly. Ttaes^ peotf < Texas basketball gatne in Tuesday. Then you have the IN IWfc, day night to score IS points pie aren't losers. Even before GregoryGytaSaturday.«fter-^, Wood factor. Maybe this im ^billed as,a "sophomore sen-', against Rice, and freshman w?were3-Mnconference^ ,, sation."— the Red . J?vhoi» they were boon may be a nostalgia tripS ^erest will getthe special;, . r . — —, Raider«:L Phillip-fcavis has been HJrtmij they. Were . — way. s»,wiVi.t^ sin^ conference We^ centeriwlltinihe 20th~managed to hoM him valuable as,a substitute sirifce play) they, Were for another shocking telkall by anex-jock. * ictly two years ago Ffi^' below his average -and that SWC^play began. sUll winners t really v ! You don t put five in- True, Cowboy, fans mil have fun trying day^ these two teams met in £§f was basically how th«y beatt ' yming players have just realty *pft first time I piW^MrCWt's to match up the book's characters with Gregory Gym and both were .. 4 . e ais£"te Texas• "The big thing 1, developed into their systemttem of divlduals out. there and Iptntfwl "North Dallas Forty" I began teal lite players and wondering if Don undefeated and tied for the 'mong histwwns as towhen remember from tbat game,%u play," Myers said,readingtbe quotes which were scattered Meredith is re&Jy a doper, but tbfese Southwest Conferencee lead, as ^the last ; tinfte the1 Black recalled, ^was thiki timing sure was £ ttte inside and back of the book things are not whrtfee book was written. just like they are now. lit thai onghorns beat the Red physical aspect of It on Larry. In its Tuesday night game season, things that "North Dallas Forty*', was written U> 1972 game, Texas put twi iders. .It was. in,4Mthe. 20th««h it depehda thfcw A&M. learned hefpp I guess ft just depends on thjfe.,,-.r with Texas A&M, Tech's tim- the. were the typical kidsof Quotes you mediocre halves of basketbal tury, however, 1969 to be position of the officials.'^^ing was bad. The Raiders piK >J5an,"_ „ tell a story, astory abouteightdays in the _ onbookcovers—the typethaftmake a lifeof Phil EUi^.^v^^^ Uwether and lost, TSMHtes irecise. Last year, Tech .took Tech has three other ed up a .l6-point lead, only ;p3)r in 1972. book sound like it is out the verge of out­% . wo overtime victories from regularsback from last year's almost to blow it in the end as stripping the Bible in popularity and which team is never referred to as the Cowboys) it prompted one Daily Tex| a always seem to have been surgically who still plays football e*s4, though his rr,rr rASgS.atSfA^ ed from content ^ injury-ridden body quit years ago-Jokeep going and bear the constant painhis in ••/ftut of the quotes was by Dan Jenkins, juries have brought him, Elliott stays aithor of "SemisTough," which still center, Rick Bullock, a 6-9, all th? time. f stands as a monument to the tastelessness ^35-pound sophomore frorh; as to which team was now the. frorti U8Tn toKilgalS «, ZZw oj|jtoe American reading public. -Sometimes b^lrltigti od''^»r —T^'ol' best bet to win the SWC title.'' Sa n Antonio Jefferson. . a «ettln« ;So, of course, Texas won th^ Bullock should, literally, be a w, " kI^ a^ ^u t ,ref' BOOQ .JQd said fhki ''North iwJ£l&£g» '«t ptoyi^§|i^ 'Cutis' / pi%ie factor in thls Wame Myers. But he 8 the best one with it. I expect other t^ams '!T. «ame' i.Olltot W.i'erWrtioW *««*oSKb£^K£Sr «?™-«or«MaU.»tgettogtop1W.t Ulle -we have in that spot.'! ^ ' i f* -to do it, too.". •%« time popping a wide enough variety of currently have 3-0 records^ showing his team films of last They don't run the ball vety, should not fall behind. s, o*it« JNo^emi-Tough! pil^toj^aj^armac^v-.-g. . p.m. gear's before ch,M he said: "They golor never been lrappfef -Saturday's 2 g>me 1 oSses much "I've J shoufd bea sellout although it Thursday'sj!§prac ti ce?;V discipline Thie cipllne and, control. with ,a baliclub," Black said. Next I tfead something that said Crent's Not all of the players on the Dallas team will-be televised locally on "Every time he feets the.bay .ill ?J?t book vwas about all of the sex and violence use drugs as heavily as does Elliott, but ....Channel 36 ^ . ;Uv there he is a threat because^, etc.. jn .thft world nf pivifW* *re markedly d^fcrent> auqlj^,gnd all.are incredibly immature^ &s,i stggw nn»mS DOYOURSELF A $ ' *'North Dallas Foirty" is a good bOoki^^^-'^s ' 'M; .4:*. ^ m . . t T«w«T*$»«•. ON' •s [W G00DTURN...I0CATI "Semi-Tou^i" is not to "Semi-Tough," ^ People Are Real Tommy Wellert C t-7 Fr.,-1' ?; ric*Bullock -I' JrtA'S C i-9 Soph. all the sick and gross things that pro foot-, : ? r Larry Roblnum „ ^ F 6-7 Sr.:,,\y Wlllta'm JohniOftv y * ^ F 6-4 Jr„ " Ed Johnion M Soptfr-; ..:. i ball players allegedly do are supposed t&%? > All are also incredibly believable, audit H»rryl^rrtb*rs'g^ G 5-10 Sr. -Rich Little G 6-3 Sr." TOE HANDIEST be hilarious. In "North Dallas Forty," , is Gent's excellent characterization which 'DanKrueger ©ill • • • tton-Moot*-• ••• 6 M Soph. they are supposed to be sick and srross; gives the book its strength.. ^ * N$ O fllfv ^ Peter Gent played offensive end"for the Also, Gent develops his setting!which is wx. S&ki$8r>. Dallas Cowboys for five years and his none other than our dear old state of Tex- story obviously ^parallels his experiences .-4 as, in a way which I, at least, found most with the team to some extent. But the n identifiable m » £ CRAVING I -­TH ft KI$$EP" HAMBUI9S6RS, Morton Trade ptAND VETERINARY CUNIC IMC wTP OUICV ONION RINGS^Mr Not Likely * 9177 Research Blvd erl-^ Announces the opening of its^ ARE ^ETTER BECAUSE " DALtAS UP> -i t)allas W Cowboys General Manager ODOBIE PCB-rKJV Tex Schramm said Thursday the chances of trading reserve it iittittv VOU JUS — --_ . THAT,.. SCOUTS HONOR! quarterback Craig Morton wst&ih . HOURS J10A.M. -I2MIDK11F ;before Tuesday's National I9TH ST R.B. Smith Football League draft are not ^f^orAPri likely/ R B-W«Wl« II D.D.M. i/'It would be very difficult , -Vi! m-HOW? By taking the LSAT . 9, at 6:30 p.m. at the Dobi^l^ Review Course that is now bein^ ,,^^'jCenter Conference Room whiciSl' BARBERSHOP JACK DANIilSWi.^.l:isI.12J9 offered to University of Texas failxps located on the 2nd level of!® 291S Red River 477-0691 prelaw students. We can make Tj|®obie Center. (See the class Green Label •Opr. Whiskey ' -v , 1^. Honest Values regularly to $2.95 StH this claim base&on the reports x^ch^dule below)"; Each of the we have received from the ^classes are approximately 4 WINDSOR CANADIAN i##3.99 thousands of students throughout hours;in length and are taughtby SO pr. Canadian Whiskey , fEiffel f Vour „ %>2 the country who have taken our 4L trained instructors.-; ? Choice r ^ Cpurse. (Affiliates located in HIRAM WALKER VODKAf ^6.95 most major metropolitan areas EARLY REGISTRATION isMIX OR MATCH3Sthtfor in the U.S.) important because our class size THE LSAT REVIEW COURSE is restricted in order toassure as CUTTY SARK «^S^i!fi:£B^5.99 is designed to completely and • much individual attention as • MAISON JOUVET Fraecli Red tierat /,T? thoroughly familiarize the stu-possible. The Tuition for the KING GEORGE IV fOpr.Scetdi 5tfc 3.79 • PEDAUQUE'SI Fratch Rhh Nrtmt .dent with the LSAT and at the JCourse is 195.00. Payment in full m . same time teach valuable timing br a cteeck in the amount of $10.00 •PEDAUQUE's freMb R«m' Nat«r«l PASSPORT FULL QUARTS ^5.39 «Jj-and question answering techni-as a deposit to reserve your seat V" ')» '111 ar kottb ' •HOSE d' ANJOU imG.rw.tck,. ^ ques. The course stresses both -in the class should be forwarded familiarity and technique since today to the address listed below, • SYtVANER 70hmUSkaby JONG^ GILBEY VODKA QUARTS both contribute to higher score; • lor call 472-1122 for further infor­YA&i 10 pr. Vodka 1 IIRACROSEirMiillMRHONE-V.rvDry jn the LSAT. V rmation. We believe thiS course FOR THE FEB. LSAT, the Lk^rill be very beneficial to you and ANDRE ^1 AO • INTRE^DEUX'MERS immm, ^ zr* PIDAL OUt OUR^WAY Cold DuckyQwmfognt first of. the course total of 5 -rare looking forward to having classes will meet Monday,, ^ ^ '>u as a student. Colorful new effIclency and " |#-c * CHATEAU des PRADELSto*^' on ^ >«-]-'' • two bedroom flats plus ^ CRIBARI . inamiMigna •>•>#.• *•*. ...5th IM • CHATEAU OllVERY r#c«i^ ^ citing^netoedroom-studto? FdR FURTHER INroRMATION AND REGISTRATIW with a dramatic vaultet • DULONG RID BORDEAUX mo ceiling, skylights,.and loft bedroom. Park Side offers •COTES du RHONE VILLAGESto ir.it. BEER CS. 24 you shag carpet -irt thi^ee •' tiw 1472-1122 vlbranr color schemes, tots MILWAUKEE'S BIST CANS\ 3.W • COTEAUX dulANQUED0C7iiw of closets, and covered I i parking, all in a beautiful SCHLITZ^rr,... jCAHS 4.6? • SPAWISHdARET"•vdiw setting. Prices are from m. il34 to $199 pluselectricity. peari- cahs m* ' •spahish rougehpineda LSAT REVIEW COURSE ' i MIIUR'S NR BTIS -3.W •PIMORD Sfo^fc-N OFTEXAS, INC. On the edge of ^Dlfeer 3r —1 <. -N-/-n~ *• ^ • BLACKBERRY or 3 PERRY BROOKS BLDG. — AUSTIN — PHONE 472-1122 * ** • ADRIATICA YvgedavtanWinM % Barton Road •CONCHOY TOROaMMeWhrn I REGISTRATION FORM iSif§ Reubens -lerieejy-.er (Hesliiig. LE •ITALIAN WINES by FouMuui For Feb. ISA? s,v. SOAVI er |lll»0lll«r, ' top z.-i;''-lif.j 'ii J Address Oobi«Ci»nt«r • AUSTRAIIAN WlNESwimt CURtT, QUIUi, IUMHIN0Y^> •*sft aFri Spapfeapliiq«©ps > h" >' 2nd Uvri •I •. . ^ MVH mi Conference Room If you haven't shopped in our store yet, your JERO's •Chetk for $95.00 Moo., Jon. 24 6:30 p.m. I - Austiti experience is Complete. ­ HOT BUTTERED -r Feb.-^A, "" 3-1209 Red 18v«r ^ 4764WT RUM KATTER ^)3Q p.m. W ro* *. )f*«y Tom-i Feb."S""i».»«»^i4. Ik30 p.m. 5501 Airport Blvd. -452-7104 1221 Barton Hills • urn* Thurs., Feb.6;30 p.m. en or brfm fnt _ V"1 vvT. i~ * t 441-1717 8311 Research Blvd. ^i36413 'j$H? sf m « 15>*-?~A < "•^ii •J-*v?iiiji"-'--V:;» ^i' r'< t' .^;:r <" ? rJ-^* w!£$ ?;F§W%w$!8 jB» eri %• (Editor'i Note: tkisii -rf receiving amaster'sdegree in lookforwalrd to, youhavet<> third In a series oil physical education from the admire them,"he continued; lty sports teams Univerai «'You have to open up your Jniversityof Houston. jdnbt net operated Page said he became In­heart and be more sensitive the Texas athletic terested in women's basket­With the women than with the department.) w£3 ball while he was a senior at' tfieh. With won^en, acoach By CHRIS UH, where he assisted in has to do a lot of teaching #--$exan Stall coaching the Cougarwomen's because women are basicallyTexas Intramural Director basketball learn. >, / '*t. Starting with raw skills. ~ Betty Thompson says the . Page says his biggest' 1 "It takes a lot of time and University has participated in problem at the present time js * patience to coach these young women's basketball since funding. **But the push,-: ladies, but they comprehend 1966.,But those were the days towards equal 'rights, foir wfeen equal rlgits for women women should yield to a %T*om Rosfeif, were the, exception, not . budget increase for next' Oebbii Turnbou0if^4; ; 5-10' " „ Sic ­ the rule. , .year," he said. "How well we Barbara Harmon . M Judy Thorn* \ MO All was not rosy for the do thisyear may also bea fac­ Paula MutcNr \-\Sf9 , teams of the past, as the tor for obtaining additional: JpAnnHQlmM' women basketball players had funds for our program." Cathy Jester ^ > sl .CjajthlaHiiL. to (foot women'-s-Lor«n*McCt«ltan -M-T «<# with little or no help from the basketball is similar to men's -: ••Tra»« Tries• ^< s •OabbteMooraV >11 jf University. in that basic fundamentals S-7 RltaEMW -Sol­ oe taught. "The and This year, however, the must be taugni. »«>/ . f--t team has been allocated a $lk-difference comes fromi a mj/ f^era "Paae^ .. . 120 budget by the University chological standpoint. Women 'earners, .rage..saia Page feels"women's teams Sports Association. This have to be motivated to a have not been treated fairlyin money covers travel ex­ greater degree ttian men do, the past. "In the past the girls penses, tournament fees and because thevjhave no future have had to pay their own payment for officials during gains to lpek forward to as a way. This year that will not little games/ previously, the result of their time spent and happen. They must be treated their effort put out,"-Page well to-perform,wellhe-r these costs themselves. said. COACHING HIE team ir "AT,TIMES a coach must ALONG THESE samelines, t Rodney Page, who earner to be very delicate with the Pagesaidwomen athleteswill lite University in the fell of young ladies."When you coach be given certain privileges 1972 as an infractor of a bunch of girls who have no which are given to the men ihysical ed«jc«ion aftfer^ scholarships or fringebenefits now. Women will be able to • The Largest : : • nvironmental Family : Sehction of • Community IdMl for UT faculty and staff. Large«m 2and 3badroom apart-f •RECORDERS! mmt homas located in scenic#" • is T«xas T„ • Northeast Austin. Faaturaa inchxto ihag carpet, all electric kitchens, private patios, duMMuae, gym. • See us and saunas. From $225 to $305 • Recorders ££S • Recorder Music Amster Music { Dy?v» ^26-9435 ' 1d2«-lavocQ-•' it>s«Me>Mssss»Ml >'^r [1^ [ "*Hr~ ~­ MONEY-SAVERS Uv , -Sm 0^9 ®sr/ ^ Wr1 ss- Hsrs•fsw frsmaur msch iargareaSscttaa. Exaiapltaf mm|s Sb Ra».O5J0,Srfa $21.00 -hr Ra|^$*5i^Sale$MLM i. t, f. Ba«. $8SL00, Sria $S2iM »• ss V/V J ^ 1 $ Um aim of our own ctwrg* ptoro, or * ("Vs# _ V "u y,i -x-i. «i n>& -J • ''9 WOe CONttKE f •HIGHLAND MAL *r obtain a*'waive# from the"? W8y HERB HOLLAND* die dIJanoaiyto physical1 education require­ 'mi Texan Staff Writer tag out/' " u ment for the semester in OKLAHOMA CITY—Texas <: The milerelay tram, f»hichJ they are engaged in sprinter Overton Spence ei v strong point last year, willtheir particular sport. They 1'IXingston, Jamaica has never have a different loofc r will also be given the same l^'jeven.seen an to^ JimkywrlrF tM« rteekendp , considerations for scheduliftg . .. Don Stnrgal is < . ft^ meet let ak»e run in one. ^ classes as the men now have.... ^ However, he'll Hhave his ^etriber o^ the team whfcfc The women's team now has |i chanceFridaywhojthe Texas: placed second last yeiar in theif members. Page said 12 to -, track team opens Its 1974' NCAA National Meet to make 15 playersisa good number to? ^season In the United States'; the trip. ' , work with, but. he would be) ,' i Track and Field Federation Ed Wright graduated,bullpleased to havemore players, ^.(USTFF) National Indoor , sunimer. Billy Jacksoniirun* 7The women must pass a Championships in thfc ning the 440 exclusively and physical examination and 1\-.Oklahoma City Convention joim Lee won't be aUe to 'must pass 12 semester hours Center. make it this year.' iwith a 2.0 grade point average m The meet is being held this , LEE IXfflT nUtfmli^ for eligibility.: The players -year in Oklaboma City rather last• semester when be failed wdrk outevery day from 4:45 V • than in the Houston to complete the number tfto 6:45 p.m, in the Gregory Astrodome, whereit wasstag- classroom hours necessary to Gym Annex. Women need.not: •Mk r ed the lastfew years,and Tex* keep it. ~ C be physical education majors as will open its season earlier to play on the teain. Of the 11 Sturgal will be joined by m than usual because of the Spence/Glenn Gossand Davidplayers now on the team, ojjty cfcugeT 7S£ v / «H«w» ran ttMS;. two arein physical ^i^atidin. ; THE EAR.|laying on thecourts, weha^ pressing defense and t?n our last Saturday at Notre Dame, ed UCLA's 88-game winning said the USTFF mieet was ato wait for them to finish."? . The women's first game is rebounding," said Wooden, la gim^' in which-tire Irish string with a 71-70 victory "trial' meet" so the coaching who denied that the over-all ri^ed off 12 consecutive here Saturday, will play, the staff could determine/which Wednesday in the Gregory work is tougher than usual in .po&its in the final thiee and a No, 2-ranked Bruins Saturday .runner is best suited.f<^r $adi.. Gym Annex againstSouthwest preparing for Notr^ Dame. chalf minutes to overcome i(:7<^ night in a nationally televig$l Texas State. •'Although I believe both 59 deficit for a 71Vfo victor^, game from Los Angeles. *: S'We, as a coaching!staff, ' breaking the Bruins' recprd Shumate, the 6-9 irish Bit like our team would be ^ fS^gaiine .winning streak. • center, and Dantley, a 6-5 weqk," Miller said."But we'll ' Although he scored 24 .ireshman. forward, scored get there. Right now, We've • points, Walton wasn't at top Notre Dame's first 10 points got»t totoeconcentrate on Uie SWC ;t ^strength and was unable to as the Irish jumped to a 104 indoor championship meet in perform at peak effort in th& lead.' " • " • . ; FortWorth." game, grabbing only nine Dantley finished with 22' T^cas, by the way,.i^ Gte ­ rebounds. But he has points to lead all scorejrs, defending SWC tfack, Cham­appeared stronger in practice while Shumate added 19 ' pion. ' * •* . , |v , f ,J \ flBHJIIIK iP«;t1 J t K ^ > J &T'ft. X.. RenewFeudi 1 'WWi,*'M&'M The. spring . rugby season began three years ago.when traditional beer gtazzling FISH PLATE -*k!$s ;qff jjt^p m-.Saturday „ Uje Austin Rugby, Club spUt ^whichjfollSws the same^.when the4 Austin Huns meet into two teairis^the'Hiitis The (Blacks counr on with frerich fries, green an ­ the Austin Blacks on Town and the Blacks. aggressive kicking game pins salad, Texas Toast and conditioning for victory while ~ 25 . iced tea or coffee The match marks the promise to mix it up pretty the Quhs expect the return ofrenewal of a rivalry which good in the game and in the injured star T.J. Lambert and v. a "secret play" to counter the T^mi Blacks',attack. 1 t --Both -teams arcf actively: seeking recruits, so^anyone itudtman's who likes ph^sica^activity plSs^b^er should contact Foss 5 p.m. -10 p.m. thru Friday Photo Service Jpoes lit 472-8763. Vl 222 W. 19th W* ac' 5324 Cameron R^. * RESEARCH MASON GUMBRIDGL ft A RESUMEtA Thousands of Topics IDENTIFICATION • $£7!rper page Send for your up-to-date, 160-page,PICTURES mail'order catalog. Enclose $1,00 FAMED CHIMNEY SiW ^ i to cover postage (delivery time fc 1 to 2 days). •M RESEARCH ASSISTANCE, INC. 1-Day 1*941 WILSHIRE BLVD., SUITE *2 Quick, Reliable Service LOS ANGELES, CALIF. 90025 (213) 477-8474 Of 477-5493 our rnMrch iMttrlat It toWtar moiNATm rmirch »Ml«{u>c« only. ^*> ^ i w ITIS WARM? '•!» • 3«re"f can own energy everything be fine, University credit -ic^nr rUMj I ,-H'J coa "4'e­ h—h A &EK SALAD,FREO FRIES &WOST iSPONDEN( wife .7 5TUDY COMPLETELY REMODELED / AUSTIN NEW HOURS :•-• -f-. 'N; EXTENSION BUILDI 7 AM to 10:30 PM <> ti3-^ Pag410 Friday, January 25, 1974 THE D^y jpXAN ,fcl4 al#."? '7"* "~7l877™7i & «-.agy-g­ nHnmHnp T JLyifc^i: Srje> BttFfElt i "jaaw j<-_*"T"/ —J,-?_rTr*« T"*",ai*fI PS While in LosAngeies,^Goberuooer couldr®couw .ana tinmngan student.So findingan occasional studentSo, fct&km "must sjistaw b.'TL'SK; rthing you set your big billiardshall and Iwottld just ban*Isfiulliards Dlavins:"Itimn th» PaHfi* ... ^»«touvi0«if!L »:mLJH£L i0!?-!1** withhismiod didn't takeme longuntil iWasplaying played billiardsfor yearsfollow^ "J played in the Texas Open 11 i, and shot in the low rsixtiei W>-;':;boine,Ithink home was in Lubbockjt. ..-know. . "•• ^ "'A * flnkp Game* Area "since before four wt» tbflftfiw like^ ^abourthat time, and!teard about , ' " • ' ,„ jthereeven w»*agamesarea. I'm the ?10 Mil these days." ™ -* * k these brothers in Dallas that were So this one time they told me to go one who stttheequipmeot up,"he WsntcXel and dime <%$ J»is tin-^^sS^SteCMliSd^S^-out and be part of Porky Oliver'sf<*S­ * v tbi. Ju. ,.,yn -wasa chflmninn hark then «,v i * , eM«&'* Mm!pool hatiban ^MylRswst^/®^tt^rndtoey^Ml'kOMhuti^HMt «hk some. He J*i?s a <^«Pton back then. l.!!0w.^fw*8 *^**P«ri»g so Gober decided one dfvjp^ to J^irgument to see which one of them ^ cije sticks, instructing novice haaS^tT 'Pfcy ,«e-^ really didt^t ^ 1 Ib plUw^tt players and "mostly just -After biavina W mMsfW'^.^^natter, because I ended up winning "K®1®®(5>^ leehigto itthet things go right" drafted by the Los AngelesPHI Angebv|-prettyAtirtaie' ba^fi^rsaid' W "T™* said 'yep, that's why' . n*B%Zleague teton 88 a P*teber toJ£u ^|%"A lot of my students end up quiP toem allttart day, too.1 emtoddtoteated hfcSL!w^ *** m tJSlT?4 iS* J1"*^^won't take the time to Gober stiU plays billiards when he «*iifcTrtI«r—Z—T 1#??rce,Jtury *«wmk:. job ranemoermaisnipumtywKmra tm> fiinrinnr>pnta|c " .^nic,you remember that ship thnt%Jearn the fundamentals." ' -1 gets the time, and likes to shootTfew ««*>*nd I got picked to pitch. It was8^%aya SKt on staying active,|holes of golf, too, And at a young 88, Swnf especialiy ^GoS&*4ust couldn't satisfy himseli he may just find some other sport to • . -mi~ , ' J piayer ana a jreco«w»old|ng golfer. a sl^wtTwoo 2-1." ,, > swith reriaMmr^ : T """"V w 1*** **»«* WM»5 www »| hmiania 8®S"\F & S-i. wth repairing billiards equipment % introduce to his way of living. "k. . " r\, 4 m i , Hi'? i^vR v " i* -•Anal# clniqg that thf! ^Peopte can -sit at fy concerned, thi Clergy' vQ»mmlssion, -should tov^^^W ^S.S! tf*television, «9risls has "killed us," Earl ^The early 1974 brat office as Sritrr f»h ? Jtey wveboth gasand money Podolnick, preaidentof Trans-figures were bigger than ever there probably would bean in­ ,y»} h« f»W. Texas TTieaters, Mid. With . before, he said , crease in filmgoing. Si Carlyto ^ &*r*r,r? Dr. Stanley Conner, Barring that event, Dotmer cannot 8tart- L»tnf +L *^13?«J®?' drive* ina professor of radio-televialon-' said there would be a lag in ?iwvte8 mtil about 9 P-m oTJL J&5 ' film, said that another factor movie attendance and moreis Sra^i£S2£«S ".But ^c^'t m ?1. y^c^tod.Tetevi-televjaioc "" ol energy.If the UnitedState, :.feetter «i a fwult, --, > . V ? •'» i ' f which rrjpvie is playing. J f "At first therewas a scare, pJ»« •••I*' M* I " mt I However, CharlesRoot, city He predicted i^wiH take |itpeople seem to be going to CClllOf FlllflCI EnllS lOflfl# •,MI1Vl janager for Interstate least six mdnthk to see n ftiovies more than before," • •••••JJ K|IU9 I UVlUV Inc7 841(1 lt*8 going ^ general attendance trend. Warren Skaaren, executive VStudents seeking the posi-must be serving on the Pearl Anolicants also taint h&ve> ^2 WE'RE IN THE TREES V n0W' - ,A* tar as. drive-In theater*: director of the Texas Film * lion of Pearl magazine editor staff at the time of filing., completed or be registered fo#|S Large new I, 2, and 3 bedroom flat» and townhpuses WArC C»Ann;nM S3|S?a He or ,he be ^ •fireplaces *. x * private patios or deeklV^ -University and must have>£rjimilar magazine production. • shag cerpe** ^ ... , *i>»auflfu1 landscaping 01 m : W&?-^ 5 P-* Thuwtay. no completed 60 hours of college?^ • --v « 3 color schemes »lots of trees * * letexlub room-,r^n scenic Northwest«HHIs ttoe bad submitted an applies- work and at least 30 hours a#|| In exceptional eir- W » tiai, Dolores Moore, senior . the University with Jt tumstances any of the • * J fertX'-* Tacan Staff ge ^ qualifications may • wiived 1816 Tallwood V&rsm.Vlmi --by the TSPBoard. itA riftiriiT , iV ' T-Vv' *'r' "• ^.**F •••••••• «1»U, piVUUbVIVU • VVIJ9UVU§ W HK J , $itrodueed a bill Thurt-outside NortB" America only soch legislation.^ to eliminate the foreim works fi»ainaf that ffftfll" WMmM the position is jurevious ex­ tbe.Pearl staff, THE CULTURAL ENTERTAINMENT s name must j»nd a minimum of , p JEWISH GIRISJ COMMITTEE OF THE TEXAS UNION A spokesman for Pickle in ^ln<>r __ > sports simlUu-legislationinthe Austin fcaid, "This will change n^dtfip^Uons will not suf-four times in the monthly Did i6utv»r f»at rtmllyUbaratad In your lift? staff box. An applicant also.U.$. Holaie of Represen the incentive" from foreign tb patives. ^ domestic exploration. ; DO THING .14The.. depletion allowance President Nixtnytuggested STUDENT MINISTRY mn YOURFOWN yC0MMI|TEE IHTIRVIEWi, ^ visa i pereentpercent iax deductdeduction the removal of the foreign ^"EW«Hl%gg tax 5S, , jich oil companies Can apply allowance in his energy 'J&J Spring ....1974 r'lfer domestic or foreign message to Congress this Ught the Shabbos Candles every Friday e j •-operations. " wed?. J «•«» NlBht 3 ,Bentsen said application of Pickle Said the oil cW * ,!*% m . • Sign up in Iexos Union Room 342 "the allowance fur both panies should not be punished, This Friday, Jan. 25. Candle lighting from 8:30.»y , 5^dailyr. i domestic and foreign explora- "but in view of our energy tion defeats the reason for the situation and rising oil profits, ^titne )• 6:45 p.m. Interviews January 2# « Tuesday SPEEO allowance, which is to en- some tax rt>ang»a are in my f *¥? Vi Shobbos CandlM may b« obtained at Chabad . Texas Ifctian jRopm Mi ^L5 d, couMget domestic develops tfpinton pepessaryi" ^ - Jfe!*rWba«!tdi of U.T. ^311 E. 31st, Suite 20*, ment^f ffeiotih>eS. J -Pickle also sri WORSHIP rtxai Union R4m 34«%S p.m. 'If our««•» nalatiohti is to move icuukWiisreductions «rin UU.9.S^ taxua creditscreoin • ** u w Iiwre -m •i* BIBLE 465-6S87 ?toward the goal of energy in- for foreign tax payments and '^n M jW«| |S5-| ^ «r & 4*5 W m m SB *" l\ k miimmmmmK 1 '• M/ ipr­ mm SBL jPSWW * ' -. > - 'Sid •"4 f!. PE OPEN 7 DAYS & NIGHTS A WEEKUNTIL MIDNIGHT fa* ',| L a . ^ "* ^** , \l * * f A-•" f-i * ^ * \ tssp Friday, January 25, 1974 THE DAILY TEXAN Page 1) ,6^­ K-V^Fl.fcL BiKftM6* V" <•, \ ( 1 ' *(V-'I '. * FRIDA1 ie items * 'WE MEET.S 837W *0-7 HI have limitedf -'sSOB'teAT SATURDAY ANY STEREO PRICE quantities Sk^©*®1 <&•*# REPEAT /' ?5 ki ""// MARANTZ THORENS ? <. i ~*(J\l > «*£?*• . °iA SONY RAIC0 MSEC-••• ARAI PIONEER SANSUI MEMOREX TOREWIDE Ivfc) SELLOUT DUAL DYNACO SMURE FISHER jMMokit«lyii^2(kys\ AW Sm : » Na PhoneQuotes -You must come in lor the low storewide clearance prices. Be prepared to lake it straight from the warehouse. -^ ' tA Storewide deerance SANSUI-BSR-ECI MmZTm" ISANSUI-BSR-AMPEX Prim ' $3S0S! •«8 m m •ye tZc&y I* SANSUI-240 SANSUI • 10 nns per choanal M * BSR 31OX . 'abiBty n play 2 tape decks, 1 pheao'.•BSR 31OX 50A (sHh? •Cueing,smooth turntable iti'rtirifiri . .1^11.^m.ii i .-•--* -•:—^a •MaMiKMlf •*Cv;~<&V * . mMr-fms per channel v.«.^»,r,r|w||w~ rfutt raw Shuf*tUr­ • NHg. Sugg. Ust $149.95^%"^ * *"* "»*' »*• ,4^, 54W.9S.; SterewMe^Cleeraiice Prki ...... ••••'389'5 SterewkjftClearance 1^ ^> 12. AKAI AA9M, 375 mper cImmmL IM $399.95 Ivy Amt 2. IUJI53 CborQiiM^ +±af*oi•ij• • •,if;K*r'-Ctearance e e* t e ••••'• SHER 594-32 rmsperfrmdh^,2er^4^cheeeri. Iht 5. K^f-^3w»yUst $19*.95 Nv A" s499.s •5 [$599.95 Storewide Qearance Stomwidi aranc^ PORTABLE CASSETTE ; cu^. StirewMe Oadrake RECORDERS ——Prkn ~ 5ss? •SCOTCH I ilNUTE ,V\f • AlKO ATP701 BMt.t track 1 • good br eay monfing • list $340 • Bettary Mly . • fpRty repioAictlou 0 im(f9jpiMNW Storewide CTetvanceM ^ REEtTOROL ^ 1 l^Ai htw*k iffl"rtnl • «%. StiM. list $34.95 Sterewide Cteanme Price $2*» •%4••*»••• SterewMe Qiinew Priw 2. SCOTCH 207 Scetch's Iwst 1SOO ft. List $7.20. Sterewide Clearance Price _*3»­ ^J." »21w 3. SHAMROCK 041 • 1100 ft. U^ $100.' 1. Creif AC/DC cessette recenler vtrHli; ikreplnei. list Stertwkle Clearaike Price 99' ITRACK 1 VISION AC/DC cessette recenUr MH fai ericroplieee List • 1. UfilVaSAl 4* or 10 ariavte List. $2.00 ^Sterewide .OteinWw Pifc^;^^;^.. 98* $49.95 Storewkh Cleer—c« Price ; *24" $59.95 Sterewmle Oeereece Price-t *29" 2. SCOTCH 90 minute low noise Dynarange. List $4.99. Storewide " 3. SON* 1CA*AC/DC awwtte recenbr wMi beih ie tekrepheiie eleamee prkt . sir* . CASSETTE ^549-*5 Sterewide Oearmce Price *59" •1. SCOTCH 90 Reiti Uw ooise List $3.00 Storewide Ctearance Price *l»-« 4. SOHY TC45 compact cassette racerder. AH tfa^feeteres. Ust AWPlX 90 imnute chromium , diexide Ust $4.W ~Storewide gig - •••••#•*««• >109" ..iv# I 8-TRACK RECORDER i-TRACK CAR STEREO I 8-TRACK DECK , CASSETTE CAR STEREO wmmm • _ ^ ... / 'PAX MIKADO v • ums with eR power cenb < • Hooks iirteeay stereo ^ I*4t • lyiippeJ with 2mkrapimws •eigtbettea • leoe ead veloaM ceetreb • qwSly, reprodadiee -il • Welairt sides • 10 wetts • thnaet selector • thaaeil selectoc_ -, /,* • leatheielte^lap • lane control • cewpert Mredj • fast forward • Aoaeil selector • 10 watts • tliwiil toes __ • list $79.95 -Ust SS9.9S • —^ • Ust $49.95 • List $99.95 Storewide Clearance Price Storewide Qearance Price Sterewide Clearance PHce Sterewide deonmce Price frice $69W "Price $3»« BSR ,v; VISION I ANSWERING SERVICE STEREO CARTRIDGE CASSETTE AM/FM JUMBO RADIO •i<9l a SHURE JM93E uumte^m it •HBaWtoSr^­V 4. Nefoe Mfh Oatpat •4J* Cessette Tepe % •>, t; Vi^ V&UF.VW&S •8< * ' ' % •N:> • memep to 30 cdls ee siagie Sterewide Clearance Price fefSssa *f^4­ cesselte . HPS SHURE M93E II TRACK CARTRIDGE-33T • 'UilMR cuAMifr nic fj*r A low Price • AM/fM STEREO CASSETTE v-V * ^ •. •. •talspkoM ^tw9f r 9*fflMlly i" Ust $39.95 • AJ.C. C-60 • SOLID STAli --lIBflwItB • list $24.95 -­ rvfe deaiwke StereMde. deareeco Price Ciuete^ae' faeat^erb' ' MVIWIMI. VhVBV^M* 5* " v ^ O 0-0 o 0 I. m* ,,n p .„ 04>O6 Wmim: o Lf—;.»! • HHARANTZ •DUAL 121 3';- • wahet hese, hjegedKesl ceMr,1 • MARANTZ •DUAL 121 mm ' -» ^ v walnut base, hihged" du*t mo foyer, Shure M9$£ v^,­ _.|^^:U»t--«99J5-c>eipl*t»>-^­ *20 rms per channol -• lowtylteh • high and lowyHteti •bual pretision at K>fy priai''v. • Morantx quality at low price • A«fy. Sugg, l/«f $199.95 • Mfg. Sugg. Ust $299.95 % lijciitss V: STOREWIDE CLEARANCi f ' S STOREWIDE M^Seaa/'^ *l2"teeel«r Mtg.SuM.-k ECI 1253 S ™« ,.m&t Ust« * 't?' "Ahii||e t CLEARANCE ':IP Systtm , h**et«r .PRICE ?«[leer::l^«ey!Soeadr^MS#^' • quality repredvcMoe : ghss end• base, dust cover, Shurb cor­ & iferrito heeds ,.W;. ' IWjk Sun. List: $319.95'r­ • Mlg. Sugg. List $76.10 complete Storewide Clecfrance •249" 1. SONY TC 3530 -Economy 3 head reel to reel. List $249.95. ' Siwt«|s r Storewide Clearoneo $204" it. BSR 510X, base, dust caver, ADC cartridge, Hydraulic cueing,v 2. SON/ TC 377 -"lost reel to roel for under $300'r. Ust $329,95.-list $1M.M. Storewide Clearance --' *59** Storewide Clearance • 5269" 2. BSR 710X, walnut base, hinted dust cover, Shura M91L Ust 3. Pioneer HR 991track player recorder quality Ust $119.95 $206.10.. Storewide Clearance *119** ! Storewide Clearance *149" 3. RSR I10X Walnut base, hinged dust cover, Shura M91ED List 4. AKAI CS35D economy cassette deck, fits any system. Ust $244.10 Storewide Clearance price ". *143'' 4. DUAL 1214, base, Shure M44E, List $199.95 'j, $119.95 Storewide clearance price *119'5 Sterewide Clearance l^rice .99.* 5. AKAI 4X220 -auto revpHw real to reel Ust j>529.$5/ 5. DUAL 12^f|walnut base, hinged dv;t cover, Shuro MflED List Storewide Oearance S399" $331.30 Storewide Cf«at«Mca Price' doxord^ t. GARRARD ZERO 100C, base, Shure M93E Ust $269,95. Storewide Oearance 1,......*89 Sterewide Clearaiwe Price *169" • 'Storewide Clearance — Prices " """ SONY COLOR TV's and Compacts • PIONEER TP 222 dMM'tw. W&Wm' • Ittttck cor stereo — • little unit with a big sound • comes with oil .necessary patch cords i $449f Storewide Clearance Prices ............... 1. PIONEER KP 300 auto reverse cassette and EM. Ust $149.95 Storewide Clearance Pi|ce 2. MIDLAND fiiItrack for car. Ust $119.95. ^,^ Storewide Chwirance Price S9's 3. PIONEER auto reverse cassette far car. list $99.95 ij;, On Sale for Wholesale Storewide Clearance Price .. .^74" prices. No phone quotes; 4. BOWMAN AM/NR cassette for car, in dash installation. Ust Hill TV's and Compacts $119.95. Storewide Clearance Price ,$124" in stock but limited 5. MOTOROLA f track player Ust $49.95 I -S» f vvyt'?, Storewide Clearance Price *39" STEREO SYSTEM ICALCUIATORI HEADPHONES DIGITAL CtOCK •'-88^ mc* rms SONY TFM 660W AM/FM digimotic clock radie^ •"Snooie Bar" (or deep sleepers /s, * AC aporation SUPEREX .• -Lifetime" block light systems .../ A • better thaa XossPrMAA • AM/fM steree i!»Vj'Ar i' • Desk medal ? tolls dity, date end time to the J • Pkeae heekep Ust $49.95 • 9 digH .S , •:two-way speakers secowi et e glance » Tepe beelHip —? • List $89.95 • Ust $59.95 7 p '• ' •S«m4 yea weaM expect eat ei eaiM ; Sterewide Clearance Price!: Storewide Clo§rqn»J?Jiw J__ ^ • Ust1S9^S-^ Storewide-­ •li. pm. Clearance m'A "59", Jmm 3 •PrkQ'j-P^ «v?'< - RSj financing with WAREHOUSE " approved (credit MON-SAT # 10$ BAHKAMERICAHU " M Af ­ ^ -. . %. . 'T UiJ^.v ^i%T}> r"' r fiu< i ,if*&*?>.*J» £*&?<•*'• 6A?y*. 29th;at Rio Grc^de THIS HMDAYfc % f* j|ji n 1^93 Layaway ^ 1 mm* mm m m rn Mwho­ 4 s&syirSfer;v4k^iss$A«b'^'A5s?lwy >: GEORGE ' because the chance (hat by law to check aU pumps ah-Texas motorists arelooking pumps will deliver more £as-dually but can check' on closer and complaining more oline than shown on their stations any other time. The By MARIAN McDOWELL ' to the eye of any of today's about accuracy at gasoline metersincreases withageartd oir companies also conduct Old gradsand Texashistory inflation-beleaguered con-pumps, ad(Ung wofter fa«st use. check-ups regularly, he add- buffs might not he the only sumers. Turkey was priced at to theenergy crisissyndrome. "Our experience shows that edl • \ mum who feel nostalgfe.at jl_ 5 cen|a> roast beef a* 4 awl ^ •> Gallon-conscioTiS sFrutiny those that are out of adjust-"Some pumps arouhd here University Memorabilia E*-shrimp (even then a luxury recently has pronrtpted an: ment are more likely to give are incapableof reeistetineat hibit on view at the Barker item) went for the shocking , average 80 to 70 complaint too much than too little." more than 49.9 cents a Texas History Center oncam-price ot, 7 c«nts for a Ulf-calls a month to the weights White said; gallon,^.Ftomter *aid. ?*if it pus-dozen. Coffee was free and and measures section of ,the Field insjiegt^WW' ever goes up that high, we're University students may be touted , "strong as our Tii!aw Department of department drawa five-gallon prepared with a regulationinterested in such display faculty."^ Agriculture, almost doubling test for accuracy. "We only that wiirRequire stations to items as the first Daily Tex-other display ibenns inl^ the usual numberof such calls allow the pump to be off seven sell by the half-gallon." an; a 1303 Cactus yearbook; the 1924 Thanksgiving D$y made to that division, Charles cubic inches, over or under1' , "There will be adequate or one of the fii*st bac-UT-A&M football program F(^?r'i**!0" the i,lS5 cubic inches, warning signs," he qualified, calaureate degreesgranted in. commemorating the dedica- I, ' " Forester said. and indicated he hoped it 1887* tion of Memorial Stadium. That's recently, witti the Tht? ^Mr|i^ent U required, wouldn't be necessary, Victoria Bean, assistant to several old Cactusesdating to prices/ going up, and the ^ —aS-. • • •• . -r—*-* ^v/the University archivist, 1903, and a 1012 "Book of Var­-;K| arranged the memorabilia ex-sity Songs and Yjdls'Vfbrthe figures ... are a lot it hibit which fills display cases trntwwfoy • diffei^entit in Travis County Ti in both the Hogg and Winkler W than elsewhere in the state,": |% *_» J-z* '1$ Studies at the center. The ex-centered around three general Forester indicated, Re said KfJfA 111 AUSllVI < -­K' U-& Wbit is one of a seriesshe has themes: campus, faculty and people in Austin ire more 1^ "11 rivg|1,1 > -&Ui . ;:r'S planned for the 1073-74 academics. A yellowed and governmwut-consclous: -. Contrary to the incasing handled by his offl& 'wbs the academic year. fragiletopy of AshbelSmith's "When they think something national trend of automobile , theft of 350 gallonsof gas from Mm address on the occasion df the is not quite right, they call m> gasoline thefts by siphonhigor ^ storage tank at an elemen­ • right away," °ther tneans, Austin residents •• tary school last Noveknbeir. -m**--* ' ^^d Alain ^»^ ' The division will try to 1ft-apparently not suffered He laid he has received no^^i SSnSteTSSEEl sure that a gallon^ Just tlrat from this new crime wave-Y-reports of gasoline being at all service stations and un-Austin Police Department siphoned from other cars, but W ^trt^back^to^O^flto this exhibit is a f One of the articled i'n this der all brands, Agriculture' officials said Thursday the he encouraged the use of gas­ £*** course catalogue^ for Commissioner John C, White most common form of gas-oline tank locks to prevent the **v. historical newspaper cbVers a academic year188445 and ; said. > ^ % oline theft reported to them use of "California Credit heated debate that the 1900 ®® of-the first, diplomas, 2 Although he indicated no has been theft from self-Sards''j Senior Class was having over f ^Baccalaureate knowledge of deliberate service gasoline stations. % tanks l4| ihp q«MUoa,»k,fiapB and ii & Uarrison dated June 15, #wn». ,.»-T £ou"ty The exhibit Will remain •&-£ Austin area. "If there are any ' , Sheriff s Office said of on-campus gasoline ';,r« The ciasi dedded to adopt view to the'public through problems here, I'd have heard Wmajor gasoline theft University poUce sald.XJ t| • %•; the Yale style gown which peb. 22. The Barker Texas ,of them," he said. . I would make tieir commence-History Center is in Sid Manipulating a pump'i irient exercises more ifti-; jUctecdson Hall Adjacent to metering system Is "pretty PIANO>DENTALS pressive and unusual. thel^braiyandisopento ~dangerous«v White added. A h An 1892 Thanksgiving fray the public 8 a.ni. to S p.m. station 'owner "who did so s .menu for old Hall dotr--Monday through Friday and 9 would be guilty of a mis­: New Kawai Consoles I 'SB mitory could well bringa tea? a.m. to1 p.m. Saturday. demeanor and-.the^ eommls^ ^$85 for first three mohth^F ; • slon vtrould shut down his ipisipi ' • j^ndudes Delivery, Tuning, A Pickup^| pump until legal action .took •jm J&. m&sBm Rates TcEMse*-*^..... place. "And that hurts hlm^ $20 per month thereofter • s. and latest Texant are •v-•±yZ-•• ..White said. >"'* .U H 'V7 ^ he- The-commissioner-said- H ,,.,.3^^ FoilAre#Renters has always adv}sed trading at • older stations "If you want to/<$£>. Dwellers in "all bills paid" apartments will e&ape utility Bea Luby's or Romaria Cafet^Tia^Ianager and mak% get your money's worth/® - rate increases — until theirpresent leasesrunout, anAustin builder said Thursday. «'••• But they will soon face higher rates or a switch to paying mm ' /!.for what they use, he warned. ^ z>(^, _ (r Austin Apartment Association president;^Barry ;km Gillingwater said he feels utility increases will be "handled i •$!}' ^jon an individual basis," with each landlord or real estate Enjoy an unusually rewarding income •Liberal hospital,life, and ,^agency making their own decisions. MaEv.-v-i88i — "Barry Gillingwater Co. will probably be raisingIts rents A profit-sharingprogram among the;;^?%accident insurance program-: SS8B68BII*) v^when present leases expire, andmost landlordswith 'all bills 1?$ most lucrative inthe industry". %;•Top-notch retirement program a-i < ^paicT apartments will, too, if they want to stay in business," j ^^Gillingwater said. Rapid advancement J M Paid vacations A P^.^76.9271 j Jioutique vasfiiom ' y;-The property manager of Harrison-Pearson, J(duiLudlum, ^T >1 •Excellent training y^said Thursday, "We will honor all the leaser we have now,. -« :!Wm 'l^-but 1don't see how we could keep from passing on the In-, -,-v _ ,i J j&licrease in utilities^. >, / , .s i , riast Inc, operates 33 Luby's, and Romans v "We have taken a long hard look flihe sibiatiOn but p $^«rias throughout Tejtae^aoGbtMew/Mexico. 4 (more W"^^ haven't done anything yet,", he added. ^ : . undei' c?onstruction with several n^ore unit$ already oh mi • the drawing board. That means rapid advancement for TilaliS ' • . * Pt|s/arr qhmuk) 5t)ie right* bright people ^ fsjsh Interested? Then schedule an interview with Mn m IMPORT^. "tommy Griggs, Vice-presfdent of Cafeterias, Jnc. Wed» M „ • What'* Thai? Come and find out! y?r nesday. January 30 at the UNIVERSITY DF TEXAS •arv.via- ICAFETERrAS? BUSINESS ECONOMICS BUILDING, ROOM 134, 8:30 Meditation through Movement AM.to 5:00P.MAILmajors are welcome.5®ilK3| BRINCi THE COlJWTBIf TO TM CfjVt^ Tues. & Thurs., 4-5 $15 for 6 weeks . ^ University Y „ mm »,» -f--> 2330Gfuadalup* V*i.v mim: v 472-9246 (abov* Semmvre) i , * -dais taught jt»y linda Sitkiad ­ fr«p. rol Chi Cfiown Assoc.) ,/ ^ HOMEMAKER DEC0RAT0RBSE1 * ^HOSmit 15 *tVubted lie existenceof a * issued information fflsoliine rationing was (Hi six. Austin bus&Msnmi^^is^l &Z2apr.> Thomas H. Williams, future. Only Dr. Williams nd University professors1' Jaek ii: ^It^FfMiraf^,Gilliam Said. '''accounting professor, agreed speculated that rationing ontapted this week, five, manager of McMorris Down-v Bay Lee, public relations thatconseumersdidn't restrain, might begin in April or Mai. elieve that the energy crisis , town Fore said the crisis had* manager for IBM, said that .usagel^^ilf . 'ISome of the menoffcrtd faciqgthe United States is . been coming for a long time, although he realizes the came 1 »erious. \\ ,.Lbut the Arab oil boycott made United States has an energy poor planning and artificially < only one df the foujr^. it worse.• -:^ ^rtagete believes tt is a-, low oil prices. The low prices Ullams said be would like i usinessmen questioned -Randy Gilliam. Austin site;41 manageable problem rather prevented research for new see the government set S i manager­ ianagerl for Texas than a crisis. « eifergy alternatives," Or-limit on automobile sizes. 1 -Instruments, .agreed with JNte KHngnaq-suggested the h*­Potter. He said oil companies; tentionthaVtfiegovernment Darwin D." Klingman, tion turn to other forms attried to warn consumers for, has overemphasized the chairman of the general energy such as coal. Lee said L.. • ' .. years they weren't producing energy crisistodistractatten­business department, saw a since the UnitedStates issuch enough oil, but industry not , tion from Watergate. "I don't different reason for the crisis, .a scientific nation, it.c^ild CLASSIFIED AD only_ ignored the warnings,. but see how 200 million people He said the crisis advanced find new resources. im offered .more energy*|g qAild be fooled," he added, when oil companies cut last -.yJUe and Gilliam said their CALL471-5244 consuming conveniences. LEE SAID the shortage year's production S to 5 per-companies work to prevent . "The government also came from people taking centwhileusage jumped3to5. fattening,with volunteer ed fttrieqU •w v' bactak. 1 JACK POLK, president of "IBM reduced electricity Dependable Motors, Inc., was and fuel consumption by 20 the only one who discounted percent. We also formed Somewhere the crisis. However, he does Energy Task Force to assist agree with Dr. Williams, the government," Lee said.1 someone wants Gilliam, Lee and Polk that oil GILLIAM'SAID TI also cut companies have profited fitom dowivon electricity uses. "TI to buy your the crisis.. He said 1973 oil-also made it easier for car company profits have in-pdols by reserving space near creased from 23 to' 60 percent the door and matching re­ ' wl over 1972. guested car pools," he said. But Potter-and Lee skid oil Lee and Williams are,stereo,„TV, companies profited bidden-worried about the en-, tally, not intentionally. ; vironmental impact of the Gilliam justified excessive crisis. They fear the govera­ used car. oil profits. He said companies ment will relax environraen­ . 3A need profits for motivation to tal controls to supply thewhatever seek new resources. demands for resources.. Polk and Potter agreed ;&But Lee and Polk seeadvan­automobile dealers Were hit Cages to the energy problem, 1 . *& -W4? hard. Polk said big car ahd People have been r> < e abuses of To result of the shortage. Potter Polk said. Lee estimated McMorris' sales concluded that the problem A"*'* are down 35 percent from this "could be a blessing in dis­time last year. guise by awakening persons to * Most businessmen doubted wasteful uses of resources."­ Tell them it's for sale. With The Texan Classifieds you can4 reach over 92% of the ?, Political Intern Program University audience, every day. Call today! f Schedules Last Meeting wf •••PW \ "•V fe WT ; v v&VU 1 -s® ---S Waiting for Godot? -NP The lasi general informa­Tentatively, the internShi)^^-> 1 .^*i cg||^ "| r* tion session for the Univer­program will span Juneip^ A common occurrence in the new Communication Complex is the breakdown of the sity's Internship Program in through August, approximate#^ elevators. University student Shan Halt waits for someone to come to her aidk; lL yzcv 1 % Washington willJbelp^m.FrL-ly a 10-week period: Student*^': ' -i" . '• TWF*" day in Union Building 304. will work in congressional of-K.i .- ,-wu#j«>j/.T3FO;; '^ Applications and informa­fices artid federal wtion concerning the 15 Washington. : pmm %w$ m % available positions will be Ms. Smith noted thsti/ ? %.^ «v ror DaW Sh^hkC 'piubiiMIr of tie CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING! WfWi JS ^The total construptio^futhorized in Austin business letter "Dave Shanks Buslhess student coordinator for thein-paid many of the 15 stude^ts^ for fellfc^theaverage rate for other »r 1973 fellj Review — Texas Syndicatorbonjeciured vecontribute.^ome latrgeTew^ ternship program. mU hf1. to jige-Te^^tfopoUtan arias ttiat some of the decrease in reStitential per­ or all finances for ?the ' 1 ~ Dir. ilolui Stockton, professor of business mits granted could* be explained Jiy.ttiehigh ^ 7 summer. statistics at the University, reported Thurs­cost of construction materials. ^§ v ^ "Nonetheless,' I am o^> day that vthe total construction authorized in a Stockton concurred and also suggested thaf" timistic.that we will beable to; .raMsisifr. • Texas for 1973 eked out a gain of 1 percent the volume of residential building had ex­ raise money to partially memo toadvertisers over 1972 after ending the year with a ceeded demand, with a resulting slowdownin defray student costs," she decrease of 11 percent for December." housing starts. added. ; -^ ^ • itH."--' ; In Austin however, authorized construction "Other possible factors are high interest Additionally, students will remained unchanged from 1972 with a 30 per­rates and concern over the energyshortage," have the opportunity to ac- teill 67,0 cent decline for December, Stockton said. he said. " --'. m quire three hwrs of academy Stockton's figures showed a 12 percent ifSl Both Shanks and Stockton.agree4ith$t|be ",rou8'1 an independent decrease in the number of apartment units one quarter perceht decir^aSe -'ori*interest courfe* . . a ' :-«««, .' authorized in Austiniast year and a 29 per-rates-for FHA loans would help boost ithe.. ! "We are planning to provide cent drop in the number of one-family a residential construction sector during 1074. students with weekly-dwellings . constructed. Other Standard Stockton predicted an additional easing ofs^Tunar program where they Metropolitan Statistical Areas (SMSA) in "the residential construction decline because can exchange information^and Texas averaged a 6 percait decline in the -^whenever-housing starts in the nation drdP insights gained from ^ quanti^of^apairtment unit^uthoitHMl aiid^ "below an" annual rate of two million units, ~hand experiences, Ms. Smith-16 percent decrease in one-family dwellings. analysts believe that the housing industry is said- . The number of nonresidential permits not providing as many units as are heeded to Undergraduates in any mar granted during 1973 rose 19 pearcent across -supply the combined r)?placei^e||' and i \ jor may apply. Texas and 39 percent in Austin, hejiotecl. demand." :^r , 'J f Interesting^Reading in this month's PEARL ' ­ y. * £ ,Vr £-"CI? slilfei ^iii JLV? GAS/GIRLS/AND GYPSIES. -? 1 'KM ' H t * 4.^ „ ' ^ 1 t Jfjfu 1 V •> » •» r . ,.A. • -ir^ mm;z U- The Energy Crisis. the trade? All these questions ZIQOI6 K Lately all you've heard about is how the 97 answered in the January issue of Peart. Energy Crisis is hurting the speed limits i 0" & and big businesses. But little business Palmistry. :v& % F* I and the common man are feeling the J". %^Pear/ gets,the facts behind the lines on brunt of the fuel shortage, too, as Pearl's CONFUSED? .... ­ r jyour palm. An exclusive interview withtraveling correspondents . Austin's top reader report. A With all the mdmbb-iumbc of readership figures flying abound cross-country and ^advisor and ^fg a these days, it's nice to kriow that The Daily Texan can deliver survey on do-it-yourself ^ you an audience of over 36,000 and a readership rate of over the -Energy^ article i : on palm-reading -92%. Where else can you find a hnedium so direct, so relevant; ^ m Crisis covers' help you find out / that your penetration figure:&fie^^^ your^ the big cities whereyou'ieheaded visibility rate. The Daily Texah^s got what it taK^s to move Nand smal} 43® f»)vsr3s in.life. To learn towns: your merchandise"in the University community, so call our ad iPfe everyone ^ a little about yourself department and ta^k to an advertising representative^ from airline Iread our article'"in.^ employees in Austin to cab i H this month's Pearirk drivers in Call 471-1865 .Today T^~— +r * ^ f1! (fjy -3 ^>V-»*B v M.W5SSSW • m&f ® Etrnfe ^ ^ ** n ". '' All "forthcoming campus movies are •" ^ ^ w . -vrr^yf.. J*? % Topless Dancfrs.•vsw" wf' r# ,v " -JJate. ., previewed in the Reel World: Joe Niclru " A first-hand report by a^ormer topless fl. 5^ -Hx* Patoski talks about the late and gr ' dancer and an ­ Buddy Holly And Epicurious hits THE •* , {exclusive Peart \ y . ' larden ladles and reports on BlU' -interview with Specials in and artiund Austin. at 1h0 University of Texas at Austin a six-year lif ItJ ~j>_f . veteran mof it give an insight . took for ut in the exam ^2*'W£t ^^ 4 into what's " r y»: -really goings -^n backstage. Why do girls go into the-profession? What kind Another publication of of people are it) TEXAS STUDENT PUBLICATIONS thty Mogofln* 5upphmtnt to Tht mm -1 " •' i 7Pa^.."-r,da^ ?5, DAILY 1EXAN 4 HWWI t • .• ,r&. •*> ' "<|H itiM}--J-iS ,*r Jeff franks summer program,said Ua'teycbok, «1.».# whether one persoi With the openingof ,the new day the courses willhave an ~ member,of the subcommittee texait',S«afr'1Vjriter» other,'* he Added&^»j®,*.-« Foreign Study Referral "International component." . on foreign study,said, "There The poclcet tyratn may beon the way outfor­Dr. Kermit Larsdii, ciilrman of the ac­Center in the Union Building "For instance, classes In are minimal programs in this cing students to use their own, if the Univer­counting department,said thereisno specificand the finalizing of pia«« for art will stress the art located area for a campus thissize.lt sity follows the example Set recently by the policy regarding use of calculators, but the its first summer school around Vienna and classes in is ridiculous for adversity University of California at Berkeley. department is in.a difficult position because program in Europe, the government will stress types of 40,000 not to have an ade­The California institution banned they wort closely with theaccounting profes­University hastaken what one of government in that part of quate foreign studies calculators for use on exams because It sion and the Certified Public Accountant Ex*professor calls "the first step the world," Perkowski added. program.^ allegedly causes a disadvantage.for those am.* s' ^ ' * 'T > t towara developing a good Those wanting to study who can't afford them. Presently at the Cheating Would be a' by-product offoreign studies program.',' , in Vienna should expect to BEYCHOK BLAMED the University itis upto the individual professor calculator use on tests, Department of Thenew referral centerwill spend about $2,000. The basic lack of such programs on "a %b decide whether the mini-computers may physics Chairman F.W< deWette said. ^ provide students seeking ad­fee of $1,385 (subject to lack of coordination on this be used on exams. "One student could borrow the Instrument vice andinformation ohstudy­change) will cover round-trip campus" which he,.. v Seymour Schwartz, assistant dean of the from another with the answeralready,punch­ing abroada centralservice to air fareon charterflights, tuk palled" him. College of Business Administration, said, ed in. We need todiscuss it andset somekind which they can go.The center tion, double room and two Bevchok's "Calculators provide only a'psychological ad-^of policy," he added. , , , v Atlfllli i*-gffovided-4>y Student meals a day. A, minimal working with the University vantage. It is the same advantage that a stu­If the University did ban use, Clarence §£ff£2 Government and ismanned by number of grants-in-aid equal on improving thesituation. He dent with a carwho getsup 10 minute*before Koslan, manager of the supplies'department volunteers from the subcom-to about one-fourth of the said its purpose & twofold, 8 a test has over one that has to get up an hour at the University Co-Op, said sales would be Wjf,p mlttee on foreign study. It is basic fee will be available to "We want to develop a earlier to catch a bus." drastically cut. "Calculators are habit for­ mm — _ those who can prove financial located in Union Building 319 Schwartz said the calculators should not be master plan whereby the ming andonce you areused to them, it'shard and open from noon to 4 p.m. never °P®? fr0111 n001^^ need. banned because "slide rules were University would establish in­ to do without. If a ban is imposed, a student every Monday and Thursday. The charter flight to Vienna ternational agencies for study banned arid they serve^he same general pur-' who was contemplating purchasing ont ^ will leave from San Antonio abroad, either by creating its pose." &*<' probably wouldn't, even for homework, SSI •m fttffc jSUMMER^wholrf^' July 4-Classes begin July 8 own branches or, by working Are they legal for um on tests? "We shoufiJnTmi^what's fairor uWfSflrf* because of this tendency," ^ ip?m program, which will beheld in and end Aug. 13. The return out agreements with otherVienna, isopen to all students' flight doesnotleave untilAug. schools. We also want to set now enrolledattheUniversity 26, giving students some free up a foreign studies office on m yho.-biive~ after classes „$»mpus.' $iaiintes&&tis for admissionto end. Further information may -iThis spring thecommittee the Uiflversity. be obtained by contacting .will present a proposal to Stu­By GWEN BYLES 0 members what time they made by the Austin Jaycee's tices," Robinson surance Institute for Highway ' Approximately SO -courses Joyce Brewer, program dent Government calling for^ (Editors Note: Wilf V^want toleavehome andarrive who promoted "Car Pool Safety states, "car pooling in­ will be taught in English by secretary, in Main'Building an investigation of foreign^ Austinites come' at campus,how much they are Week" last week. "The The Austin DPS is making creases car occupancy University professors and 102 or at 471-4310. together for the sake of studies programs on campus, Il&willing to pay, how long they promotion wasan effort to ini-' no formal endorsement as an creating a greater possibility other instructors. The classes Despite these tWo as an addition to research be-?Ws. fad and traffic? Two p|want to wait for a ride and if press Austin citizens with the agency because, as the In­for casualties." will vary in content, and' developments, the University ing conducted by University ip; separate car pool ?V»fjthey favor car pooling in v importance of car pooling tostudents will receive credit lags far behind other major Vice-President Dr. Loreno ^ studies being conducted copsyrvo fuel and"kas-»afflc-'aaiM tsaaraE?^ studies, programs, the chair­Rogers. Dr. Rogers is looking,;^ we Austin area Mil In February; Ihterest^d .. *""1 colleges in tEe irea of ioreign in«> the f-'? congestion at peaktime," Lee intoforeignstudy programsat determine the , faculty and staff members Cooke, a spokesman for the Dr. Jan Perkowskl, man of the Student Govern­other schools to determineeil an,*er to that ^^>will be issued a list of people fiaycees^iald^pi associate professor of Slavic ment Education, Committee, what type would best fit the5^? question.)* |f;T|living in their area who want c Resultsfrom't^ Jayceecar MicWH languages and director of the -said, v . ' f,„y -University's needs. ••£$ A massive car pool study^ ^to participate in car pools, ...pool survey' show, that involving more than 10,00c;i A real world situation isMs. -'automobiles traveling MOT University faculty and staffyiftosenbloom's objective ScrapMetalrap Metal « _ «Bir « J m for crpsstown carry fewer members, is being conducted^" her class. ^ "mL fill liSSil passengers than do hi a graduate class taught b® "My class hopes to com­ ^1 . automobiles traveling in the * Sandra Rosenbloom, assistant|^plete a car pppl file by Jun^ dowitiown area. AEC Aids Recycling professor of community v Also, Hhe Department of f&iWfij. ... regional planning in theg|Jmoyement patterns-in 'Public Safety has organized ^Automobile graveyards, 'economicallyf liaid the der reduced pressure 'and School of Architecture. ;j?|Austin," she said: "In addi-its own car pool, said Jim frequently eyesores, may bulletin. removing impurities by_ f A questionnaire composed Ution, the class will develop Robinson of the Austin DPS. . provide valuable scrap metal ^Despite the present limited^ of 25 questions was distribute<®altenmte-routes for transit ~ "However, asa safety agency" and savings for the steel in-use of cars as scrap metal, Copper, tin'and chrdiinium Thursday through the campur^systems in the city/' our DPS chapter cannot |AA OINIB-YI . dustry in the future. three Austin automobile com­would be separated and saved mail asking faculty and staff Another car pool study was accept or reject car poll prac- There ate, however, a few panies areselling old carstoa also,;I^r. O.N|Carlson, senior hurdles. According to a local salvage company which metallurgist; explained in the IARCAINS ON UNREDIEMiD MERCHANDISI^ National Geographic Society cut and ship the carsnorth fpr .bulletin • leans on most anytfcing el vaioe news bulletin, scientistsat the recycling. V^u, ^?'%"A ,onerstep induction WIIUYANDSIU I THE B-HIVE .Atomic Energy Commission's When perfected, the process "belting, process has been (AEC) Laboratory in Ames, of recycling automobile scrap developed in this work, which =Now leasing for the spring semester SNOOPERS. PAWN SHOP IIowa, are searching fora way " will be of value to the steel in­also could lead to recycling Srand new luxury effitienties p|SS| 3Savl % to remove impurities from dustry, which provides 30,000 other forms of^discarded Rustic decor 615 W. 29th 476-2207 " automobile .scrap metal fpr types of steel, said National scrap such as tin cans and inclosed courtyard with huge shade trees ~ recycling*% ;! —Vft' , Geographic. other metal from municipal Close to campus and shuttle bus • tHECK CASHING SIRVICg I If the impurities are not •The process showing most dumps/' he said. Only $137 per month, all bills paid removed, only a small portion promise to AEC researchers of scrap can be reused involves melting the metal un-KBpaKo Sirtween til «xai Union and thi 4207 AVE. ft 451-7303 cademic' Center li m UT Police Conserve Energy ?: : , fe esignatfd a> an he campus for use by By Walklhg Instead of Riding dents and ortMniiattontl «"DAy, ' NEW SHIPMENT Campus policeofficers have-recently been given a "walk-'?--or peaceful publii. JL MTemmf Mir wr prtmnl ifPck fo/noktVoBm fot a naw Mltipmtnt.1 GREEZY WHEELS *»embly,piiblicdiMUulian,| iTake advantage Qftgnrlntnjlk0 (h*» and mam -• by University Police Chief Donald Cannon. j lememtratien or installa- 1953 SATURDAY -* To conserve gasoline consumption, officers have been in-1 ion of-booth* without priori (3) Sofa ondf Chair .Cir $89.9^ H ! ALVIN CROW t THE NIW ANGUS structed to walk during at least half of their work shifts.;. rrnhtlonof the Unlverrity.f (3) Mattrra and Box Spring _ .. $39,95I MG -TD SUNDAY «nlHtt;tt<, tl9tW m said Tuesday. (7) Badroom Stlt $99,95 1 THETOCKETS^ (3) Stereo Contolot tc -• British). IR6. leavtifvlly Campus officers were spending about a quarter of their (2) Rociinort molnfliifdi origiiwL 327-90 lime but of their cars before theenergy crisisarose/Cannon LA1 I HE MK.l 07 CavM ltd. (2) Stereo Cempenonto Miner tweim will restore It explained. New they will spend one-half of their working day. _ everything muit go, to hurry In end take advanta to perftctio*. OST OF LIVINf m " ^hoofing it" as they make routine checks of buldings. tootle MVlnsi at UNITCO FREIGHT SALES, 6S.^ ids olew, '*e BonkAmerieaitiileiterChargo, K-Z Term*.9-9 Dally, 9-A Saturday.I Cannon said the additional walking will aid "selective.en*, nu qu.ilitv .is $1750 Rim. 474-1227 aftor i. forcement" — being seen instead of heard. lent i)l \\ .linii! /ire iikK I Ihr ! MA Modrr.H INORTHWST^JCUEI CLUB STUDENTS! ' FREE MEMBERSHIP WITH — OREN UNDER NEW MANAQEMENT! v 1 SNACK. BAR, POOL TABLES, & MACHINES yahoo HRS, 11 a.m. -2:30 a.m. 9063 Research K I V11 NfS INGMAR BERGMAN'S $*>•>$ People Pleasin' Pizza•Spagh Salads•Sandwiches•Soft Drinks mm OLD TIME-MOVIES TOO! n m Pizza Palace 6619 Airport" 5849 Bttrkmifif mm: iooo S. lanwr ^ HERS A DAY AT THE s Friday Only 7:30 & 9s30 $1.00 Surdin* em Gov*t. Sat^t-dayOnly 7:30 & 9.30 $1.00 XGB PIZZA 8:45/j0;30 MEN UNITED Jan. 26 Burdin«Aud. -Sludcnti^ov^ti Ml JFjriqtey,.January 25>:_1«74 THE PAILY TEXAN Page lS • -:gg«a ~ 1"*­ " t* sv NightiEnrollees Ceuldpste Facilities m Committees imm _ lutajm.,, HI Students desiring fttftrlpad^^.' JIWKHSTVUNtS fjnwitrledge -on/ subJecte^tw«g-^^S wiltM iighiRngum* ivaV«:45>jnyirll«vi SSsfllfl '-nt' f->.. ft Scot* bob* ticipatein Uiuon^porfifl^tfclivitles: ficial in the Office of Extension said, big from finance to consumer^: Middle East Solidarity-; Htoilfr emu cun win Tixan Staff Writer lite proposal to make these ser-"We've given thought to it, but have and environmental protection' 'Committee is sponsoring H The aroup nicturethat p.m. FrJ#yin Union Bulldog, thi#- Jm proposaltograntstudent services vibesAvailable to nightstudentson an: not gotten any orders, to that effect ihay fill out an applicationfor benefit on tbe Union Patio ati>-,„ ^Kp taktaken„n 0ffa entireen floor,C)ita forfl,aurapidB c-«-»•• * -areas such as academics, 4he food will go to the • ---­ rrT flift iiwaii'f '• students,and thus arenot permitted to study." services had been as administra-housing, -political' action and stitute, which provides ' OMMUOKTAVaUMwill mwt^ip>£ use those facilities which are provjd-j^^, Kress said he expectsfinal passage ^,«tion.policy. ' minority affairs, Janet New­daycare .and hot meals fo Sunday hi Union Building 300Wrttt ' ' - '.'$«&• ed for regtiUirly enrolled students,,-, ' ?of,the proposal next week when it thestudent leadersaid,"We're not ton, committee coordinator, Children of working mothers. - -TMun»;«M|Mswilt "By making available to them a comes out of committee. It then will ^seeking full integration into all said Thursday.' ; -:v>^ Monday night the day care AMOKRWHTWilt btflinrv*hItodneidaytg®::' *Sun0«y In »hf USWrtl(S v general studentservices fee onan op­be sent to the University Council. If University facilities at this time, but rtufe* Kgardlo. of •tentewUfha,,, an' tional basis, night students would be passed, the proposal would affect , . we wish to provide the nigfyt students tfnajor, could assume an ac-house. We the People,an East' ' ture and si rush fa* i» r«*itr«d »«-• able to utilize these services and more than 6,000 students enrolled in X^with the same benefits and services .^^i^bUMTHp^We :A"8"fr organization which .»» „««. facilities," he added. tight school. ^accorded day students." JiCwnmiiiee, sne saia. runs tne day care center, in--mutual »ire»w« and *11* aticwrtwffccft­ $LW ,;At this time, Office of Extension will be If the proposal parses, "night ^ApplicaUopscffliELPlcKed^iiitesja^ use the following'facilities and taking a poll sometime nextweekT? 1;r$Sstudents would be able to reacT up in Union Building 321 until spend some time each week.: * MCflf««WI St. Edward's UnWerstty, jy(r«& It -health center, shuttle •>A Kress said, "but the night students I >17V l *" Wednesday. Students selected •AJBWAR, Will Lincoln Center,'will talk abbdt"L«privileges: Texan, ride theshuttle and vote working with children. People^ III 1meSef • p.m. 5or»-:?' buses, TSP publications; intramural have contacted almost universally JP$n student elections," Kress said. "It •ill be notified during the who can teach art, dancing^ day to dltcuw the knowledge of-:; Plnfos: the AMMcan-Ametitinuii Guru Maharal JL The mtetlng will Sy^ U°^ field, blanket tax, the University support the proposal.'' ;< fwould make them feel more of a part "first week of February^ music or black history are en-be .held In Butln«s*-Economlc$:M;­ ID,the Counseling Center, or par-( .When asked about thevpoll, an of-the University." ?:V5si fSSS. ."O * ••••:• :• i'ff. 4. Jobs Supplied by Project SET1 policemen Mingle With ftuJgW . ' * '^.W^Students currently enrolled academic year may receive program under the Summer Jose Antu, student develop­ and planning to return to the financial aid by: participating Employment sTexas (SET) ment specialist'for the jWorklToward Enhanaan Imq University for the 1974-75 in a summer employment" program.^; .•vm-University's Student Finan­ SSBSfSS cial Aids Office, .said that students .wishing .to par­By BEN KIN6 more jpersonaft:|(^ta^>wl^@SIoore-ai^^ ticipate must oebe single, 42 _ Texan Staff Writer' .,.J.tudentiSI , -,-tV| The. police have been* One^solution tothisprttbl^ii ucipaie :——;MICHAELANGELO ANTONIONI'S dependents and Texas -"Is Creating a favorable itnage^: ^ The Austin police have had;, patrolling the Drag area on , is to meet citizens wheii i roairtontg^Austin police for University Che worst problems in dealing^ >foot rather than in patrol cars are in a more relaxed "liii , w*' ^ students from all over Texas ' with foreign students, Moore.if3n an effort to increase per-.^such as at-exhibitions or Students will work mainly $nd the world is a major,.ob-explained. ^.^onal contactwith the Unive^^playsin;shoppingcenti^ig ^agraci^ In"s^ome of thR Middle^ 'glty-eommunity. * AccOTding to Moorts, wh«^a department's current com­ternirountries there such as public hospitals and munity relations program*?' certain families in the higheiv^-percentage of times when a "friendly and Mrof qu&stioits schools and county or city "Almost every student who classes that are considered person conies into contact about police work a(nd the agencies, Antu said, and they cpmes to the University, untouchables and are neverK,,;with a policeman is when his department.. ' % brings with him th? image of questioned by, or come into ^impression would naturally be ^ " " Kp~ ,j(rill work intheir hometowns. it >iut elSi what policemen were like contact with, the police," he vunfavorable," said Moore. MKLIT Tfl 4ir •m ^'-Interested students should where he lived, and in most, y»M, -Essentially the problem the^^T,* J" j / & ' * \ ?'• apply no later than March1at cases the image isn't very p "s 3^ > So naturally, there ar%Af police must overcome is, pf/f Or KlffntS the Student Financial AidsOf-favorable," Capt. Harland some problems when we deal^ ;!"how do you make a person W» -m general financial aid applica­Relations Divisionsaid Thura--aider it a disgrace to even be ->arrested for DWI or getting a * oretationsof the Billof 1° 6 * ^ >»• ".s-sr> tion,plus a'family financial J a y . 4 ^ « • « * ' * Questioned by the police,"-Jicket for runninga red Bght.% theU S-^titutioni ^: DIRECTED BY UflVUWITH: • --•> statement. ^ ^ Moore said one remedy.was; jtliikciistsed at l:05,pjn.r] lVIDHEMMINGS MICHAELANGELO on J{UT:FM aa this week's '0 VANESSA REDGRAVE segment of "Insightl" SARAH«ILES Tomorrow's University." i­ " f f-S i-Joining in tiie discussion will be presidential counseldr and University Law Prof, Charles Alim^Wrights ©|. Benjamin Fr Wright, Uidver­sity professor of goyemihenl, and Dr. Stanley R.,. jloSg; ^TMUR. University vice-presidentPht provost. ^ ^ 3"6 ip* SAT. tV iiJirX r* *" STAfl HICKS 1% Cf , the expansion of Americ^tt'ls a individual, libertie's, ipt leadership fble-'Of tlK IALL J* „"i-lb. -Supreme Courtand the coui0 • G1 F" •w«i«r• NEW interpretation of the Bilf?of Rights-. IL , v -st 304 E;6th FRIDAY & SATURDAY ion. 25 & 26 TONITE UVE MUSIC BY , , •mm* SEWINGf > JfSTiR AUD. r^'MVE MUSIC THUHS., f*l. & SAT. MACHINES r* lifvizX1 & &, ,^<^1 r v *• «•"* 7H)0, 9:00, 11KJ0 P.W. PRDL hi iwa»4wi«;t m KENNETH THREADOILt -4VEKY SUNDAY^r:^—"-fcww. Mwt Iwwt tO y—rpwili i IIMC hmnmhis • mwdrty'W.IS; 1 «no flrft MfH ~ MM 23rd & PEARL . V,.-. ,V\! ALVIN CROW as Kttfo m $99 atii.-: _> s >•~ ^ MA^OSS FROM HARDIN NORTH®! HAPPY HOUR 4:30-8:00 Mon.-Fri. i ^ imm»n»OHT SMv v& 6S35N.UMAI 50* Highballs •BnlftmiiwidL M—lwCHory. C4 *rr 3 Krs. free parking in Hardin's Garage inyTfnhi H 4W%REE PARKING IN rear AFTER 5:30 Opm 9 H «.Myrf ia *$Wwiiey-i J'"'X "V% £ver siri»Tt» Maltese Sron. you ve wanted to be a Gumshoe' let s see what kind of a Bogie-man PREMIER -you really are. i/Qdam good '•'M&ki hisimilti-laMted —JUDITH CRIST. K . ,'il i"& . Pr T-k ill § "HOUR 0FTHEW01F" tToei Gr [ Max Von Sydow ® Liv Ullmann »• if is unthinkable for anyone seriously intereste Hn movies not fo see Hour of +he Wj»lfir; 3isms, Retted* Adler -—^NX—Tim*.* JAMICE J^^t^VIUISMITH-M^WAhCREWaOM) P«>d*cdW Ml&imMEfWINThe°tr* Committee .' D*«cwd ^ 5T6PHEMfFEAR^ |poI^S^E^3 I ^fUlOAY ONI * t W5, iidi • -$i^i IIT Mum, Icorfty, Staff 7 oadi f:15 jua. J n— --V.-—§ ' v •> i. " H ten* Mtt > 'jter SATURDAY ONtY 7*0-*20-ll:W M 'UNIOItfHEATRf ! $|00" \AmmoM JAN. 26 BattsAud. Qrietna4Q .? 3 i;S.-:'L i.r-yr-1 11974 "fef 216^ >$£*» 5«S "A, P ­ S-»­ ys^fvr^sin'j«,''M«,!S*.P^. wmwwp^ •a*AV3lY-i / J-JS. -4 * -* « J' -V „ ". „ ' / * Obtains Vath The action lihe also advises Other ®r^ApBWIU»*:f Taming the computer an . training it to perform certain routii* journalistic tasks, like fitting headlines, is the goalof *graduate seminar conducted Dr. Wayne Danielaon, dean 3fillSiPi§the School of Ctanmnnica- M••P The seminar, Content Analyst!" of Media, ' will — ftliiii "analyse content of jour­nalistic tasks and see if the , P#t#» SiiMteiSi. computercould > out the !i$S sssiSfi1m reporter,"-Danielson said Thursday./w <• 'i *. Already the -class hat designed programsto rewrite headlines andmakethem fit the space available to the editor. IMt-i* T \-. &l j W ^ T^^fewJfSfr , s crU ?* "t at 'kfc Basically, a headline;is a entenopi, A sapple is suggested to the computer, and the computer recommends alternatives i-3TV I1H ^ywffiV';y'' d I which will lit the space iVswym ^ , Ottiielsonsaid. ' Lli computer* to write stories for I -: ^ hometown newspapers such x % as whoa a student makes the /' •,.. list, be explained. stories need to # "T good, but since thousands-must be written they often aren't," the dean said. "If a program could be designed to write a story from an tafor­mation sheet, it would be a tremendous hefy." ^ Stories written from infor­mation forms,, sucjjt as wed­dings; obituaries or funeral*, might just aseasily bewritten by a computer, he added.'­ \f-"Computers will not "eliminate people but will free ,M" 1 1 > ^ them from many of the, routine stories baaed on infor< J A Window to the WorldM* mation forms,'' Danielsoir: predicts. ' » . X A Uniyersity student stops for o moment qnd pondm>«r fytwre through a mist covered window at Gregory %i%ry5i§p^'' •" ' #rf-7 * • • •Recycling Stations S3& Newspaper recycling stations are locatedat 24th and c«7ctITI ft;/''* •v , . ourme sS? mem Charlie Davis ,JS; 4 j* ? * ^ -­ j. , n/ ! /ft| ^>\ v ^ fe f -*? ^ n^i!®1 'JPsUm wm •? , Unarlie Davis makes onion rings frond. ^cV'hrfi ^ U! j * ? '-KSSi^ .M scratch daily for Hambui^eirs by= W~ ' .f3> ^ 4 * -Gourmet. He slices the wholefresh ~ ^ i, f ** t, ?A r ron^°n. and punches out the rings by '"it * h hand.Then Charlie dips and fries the is-onion rings. He maizes them himself fo insure a good, freshiflavor. Charlie pavs fof :1 good— he wants them to be the best. He knows that good eeapng^ Tls a serious business. NiceSi. n ^ C-J p" ^ %• S^[ M ifflteiifa jP»W>elr P '"t 81 x;:*: W: ?S. W« also havo hom«madasoup and cookifts,^ uupi „ salads* hamburger steak dinnera, bear. wirta 'nfetf "fcijii ANPaSOMlANI AT HAW* (Nmt IwMt)^ jfflQltrl8iuUf-eouniHir«at hamburgers. ...-MliW"»AT^utrnii sraiiMs ; "" "" BSBS ^fiv :.,\y .ff-' tilers oil store policy in '* In its four, months of operit areas such asbuying used tex­tioB, vthe tbooks. refundsanddividends. ipecial"window f6r changes""' One of the action line's Consumer Action. Line has We're not here to tell what ticket* and dividends to important functions is to keppp W handled a variety of calls, items we have in the stare;for shorten check-cashina the C0>Op informed of wtotC ^ " * i-• • -. ranging from complaints' sale and the price," said McClajty is Working on plans customers would like to about Ned Newt, a cartoon McClary, "but to help answer '. an express line for still stocked. McClary sai character us^d.in the Co-Op's _ k« service, .numerous requ^rts for canoes , advertising campaign, to McCJary has been in¥ and other outdoor equipment , The Co-Op became involved*^ more serious topics, such as the possibility of a have initiated plans. forS through16* general, information counter relocating and expaMing ther aetion^iim» hi the Ce-Op to servestudents Co-Op's Outdoor Shop on West-• The ^ Consumer Action Line terested^Dresen^infftiiPr£ much like an orientation 23rd Stwjti^'^,£ '|W was begun in October to give SSrt St PeoPle new to the A special' faculty-ltarf®# customers a simple means of result Sp S.^n't LI University or out-of-fbwners charge plan also is being di»> communication wittf the Co* bussed as » result of action ' Jpp and its administration. "counseling, directions and ad* line calls. -!%, Life until the corporation J "The line exists for an ex­vice. Questions of location and When a person calls the ­ Stops using, paper made from change pf ideas, suggestions .staffing the counter have yet Consumer Action Une, his'"­ Big Thicket trees. and complaints," Michael ,;to be answered. ,> call is dated and recorded and * McClary, coordinator, , said An unidentifHil Waller com­'I? Several callers public, will be held at 10 a.m. ­ecutive order of Gov; Dolph "federal funds for drug abuse Is an Mvisory body with norftrin the Joee. ThompsonCenter Briscoe, will hold its first programs in Texas are'handl-. iidmiiustrative dutiesi ^f^ . Library at the 'University^ meeting Friday in Austin: ed by the department's State "i w. The 30-member panel, ap­Drug Abuse Program. Galling Costs May fie Cut • pointed by the governor, is Mike Sharp, program direc­akpac News Service munication satellites will responsible for advising the*' tor for the council, said the If y|>u think your long*, eventually lower the cofet of ' Texas Department of Com­main purpose of the meeting ^adistahce phone calls cost too' all loqg-distance calls. munity Affairs on' matters will be to inform the pftnel of ~J#nuch, here's sbme good new| The report predicts that in relating to drug abuse in the the TDCA's drug abuse J^or a change. the not-too-distant future, state: ^ 1 program and its ac-p A report on ComputerLand "the cost of a telephone call to \ , TDCA is designated as "the, complishments to date. The. the fiftnre, prepared by the China should be no more than 'single state agenty for the panel also win be told the g Diebold Institute for Public. the cost of telephoning the of^?; preparation and ad-function and role of an ad-r Policy.Studies, says thatcom-fice next door." TONITE ^ ROCIjr R0U Till 4A,*. IS^t-SUHDAY­ UGHTNIN KRACKERJACK HOPKINS Mvmk«I Hchtts at DtecMit lUcwtb & lnwr Sonctva OPINI sm. lOth/Umar 4H!47IS THIS SU lEXAS BLEND 4* S BUND SPRINGFItlD West • f SNUFFY >3® ANDS UVi AT iis %Sfer; m ALL P'®' SPONSORED fV IFC w lift;i#l2ys>'<* "P»W'W w SSS'SroasjfflW­ n>\f?rH£s£­ ISuranee *' <' ^ t v • dfcMAVf To^Supporf „dentist Faces Greater C _v.; By MARK YEMMA for health care! ,sVJ" <•#$Houston -(now Lyndon H. .Jpjtosotf for at NASA. 8UZANNE PEI^ERMAN £tage was growing to obt^Jgsnougf iiwmwjt& ^y''tteife . fit Texui Stat Winter m The presidency of the cehier'is a Space Center). He was appointed) In addition to monitoring the con­Mjlftsurance companiesacrittss srrttten assurances firom *»nir|^iaimsk \ £•/• ,V"® what could be moreof a challenge new position created by the Univer-director for life sciences forliASA ditions and responses of astronauts -ffie nation, especially in Sanies inA the state to; :,£ Under ala#^sk«1>y the £8 B»-than bringing healthy .men Jt»ck sity Board of Regents to bringunder in September, 1971. to space flight in Mercury, Gemini, larger cities, are trying tp cooperate with the board's^«3rd Legislature, called the from the moon, or from ari SWay the supervisionof one administrator Berry will retain this position Apollo and Skylab, Berry was help alienate the fuel shor-.' policy to include car {xwla in ^toompetitiye^ Auto 'Rating I Skytab mission in the void : president of the University's Health tion in the Houston medical com­that will show that man is tM whether they are i. or ^STtoveltaj U C-»'of Llvmg. Council •" i Science Center at Houston on April plex. . . physiologically and psychologically decide to join, a car pool. XM* { Ar :'f v AlUS. CfflinOt ,D6 "• -Berry oonsiders the goals, of the thfr Air TTniw* in IflSj. He then "We are proving that man Is not manager Henry Boardman as 3a 5^­ Health ScienceCenter today and the became chief of the Department of Tlfiir^eSETllJlrta thechain/asaome--^ylng,, JIThis information •" 1 * iff The State Insurartcfe Board K Sife": Plllg goals of NASA 15 years ago one and Aviation Medicine at the School of want to say," Berry said. should help eliminate any fit-Proffitt explained,.that, ii^pls. monitoring statistics and the same, that is, "a marriage of. Aerospace Medicine and chief of r What of his new challenge? decision on the part of our some states, the autonaobil^^data on share-the-cost or SP different scientific disciplines." '^flight medicine in the Surgeon ^"Challenges are time dependent. (policyholders) to participate! insurance industry files for-Malternating driving '•% "Disciplines" faced at NASAsgGeneral's Office. ^ / fpl'When 1came to NASA it was a in car pools during the enerjgr and sets rates itself underp&arrangements. As soon as m were bringing together and manag-'#| As an Air Force flight surgeon, new frontier,1feel veryfortunate to crisis because of uncertainty! ''file and use" provisioiis. Iri/^enough information is ­ ing all biomedical research, bioen-^Berry participated in the medical be in this time period. Right now about the effects o&jtheir!»:. Texas, however, the statesets*f||processed and the situation is -S^&i vironmental systems, aeronautical|^evaluations leading to the selection health care is more Important — it surance^'~-' standard ratesaslow as possi-^warranted, the board hopes to l», life sciences, bioengineering.^fof the original seven Mercury one of"the key problems the T 745-M5-$1.50 students woyld be shown the but decided to, blow it off like everyone else';"' '' answers, and he emphasized y--that filing the questions was Bruell remarked, "There supposed to be an incentive to will be a few who will want to SPECIAL CHEF FROM NEW YORK students to study more than. get in under the rope.But, you MM. «nfa 11:39 UL-2J0PJL,^ they would ina regular class?.:* can't remember the answers Nothing is more important than friendshij wgpr*. He also-said moist students if you don't know the • We Serve ..'. QUICK LUNCH in self-paced classes get As material. I'm not really Not fame.not money, not death. E{{ D,#p Soup-Fried Rice -2 Fried Wonton with~-> ' 1 and Bs anyway and tend to do woreied.''^/-V' / %;' -«•% . i . wiclcw Chow Mtiii: ttniiM $1<55 duokcrt Almond $1.75 • Shrimp Chow Mein......... $1.65 e Shrimp Lobster Sauci.... $2.25 • Peppered Steak $1.75 e: Sweet Sour Shrimp $2.25 x TH^AXOypUB - "£'{?•F?'--',. ; ^ • Sweet Sour Pork ............ $1.75 • Beef with Tomatoes ...... $2.25 " , PRESENTS • mmSfiipSat!SmiliM>w-1Qpj. -7toysHWeefc 'Tr$k£ .. v .-,.3 ..r.* /. "ji 3306 North Lamar at Rundberg Lane RAY WYilE HUBBARD ' AUTHOS OF "RED NECK MOTHER" SUNDAY NITE JAM SESSION 8 p.m. till —r1 \ 38th and IM 35 454-8115 r-t-i. w MP' MS tars JS2F 'mm I f llECTOR"TACO FLATS i/i iii II 5213 N. Lamar ^ ^ » Fri.-Sot. Specials "EASILY ONE OF THE BEST OF THE YEAR ?j ' 6-8 OnlyAYE BIST IN ANY CATEGORY!" -Richa^l Schickel. Time Mag. 5 Junior Hobo Plate ^j N Beam-Meat-Salad-Tortilla " "ONE OF THOSE RARE INSTANCES in TICKETS ISuper Nachos which close adaptationof a good book has ONLr THE YEAR! i »'. |Schlitz Cans resulted inpossibly an evenlietter movie. '> TATUM O'NEAL Heme ofjhe^alajp*rio Champions j| A remarkablyItelMul rendering!" HASAN -* * ^ '--Roger Grwttpun, N.Y. Times itt EXPRESSIVE FACE J^NE OF THE LOffiLIEST OF FILMS! He ^NATUBA1 Niro's performance is extraordinary. / ACTING TALENT DEPT MUSIC Moriarty is fine too.1don't know when THAT COULD you'll see a more human, more moving Present EARN HER AN movie in any setting. A CLEAN HIT!" ­ ACADEMY AWARD!'' w&sr PI -Vtfiwn Scott, U.P.I. «'ARARE EVENTINTHE CINEMA. A TOTAL­ LY WINNING EXPERIENCE.1" -h,im raw* T0M6NT THRU SATURDAY AT MI: MIDMI6NT ONLY $1.25 Ra*amount PicturesPresents Hogg Auditorium 6f all the Fairbanks "ivrashbacklers." none is as unioue The Thief of Bag. 4 JuLJmu was the f,rst,and only time that the st^r indulged ir fantasy which "St ^% !f ANTONiONI'r flowed him, to extend hrs debonair exploits into the realm of the imagination V:jf • o ^the .bott°m ot an ocean, ride a w-nged horse across^sjr I " "f Concerts ards of an lnd. chapter Tfte Pfiontom empire v­ P3& m «.» Wtfttoft, oountrv muw and the 'elects of Entiri:wA-" ; -•jtombined into a classic pictura that ww Jlli—Beethoveti-­ K^SnSSsj funy twenty fiy* vMri ahaatf M it* time, Cycle A l«U MOVII WtTNl 0r*Wing & Ticket Sale* Optional Services F STMKY. UIMFA, AMI TM I Sunday 27 Jan. 16-29 Tickets Sold Oat IBTOriWSAM |TOW WIT TMW SATIRMT | AT 10 Poblic ticketfrjbS 1I00N f AT Hoik Auditoriww;^ 25* 24 v-mntm war »IJS t® MNUA 30 Mimutis afti*mjdni m at ^P«aejf F:rw^ January,^ 1974 S'Efi S'&ki J :JuilliardPerfor 1 } ^|rc«g -?i^vTrr By lAJTHER SPERBERG $ ' • changes unhesitatingly ^-wftktar the Juilliard StringQuartet will play. absence of visible signals. i; nis Shawe-Taylor of The New YorkerJ 4 third In a aeries of five concerts) years of rehearsing togetherand en* who admired • their ''prof buna comprising the IS Beethoven quartets couraging what Manh calls "parallel ^ musicianship.'*. * n I at 8 p.m. Friday in Hogg Auditorium. feeling" result in their striking unity. One reason for their vigorous 0'J No tickets remaip for Friday'! per: As Rhodes notes, "When you think the ;-#»ay arise from their superb in­ —nance. Persons wishing to register' sajtne, the music comes out thesame." strumentation. ;Mann, the first»j unused tickej^ sbould arrive at the Rut beyond the almost-perfect coor­violinist, sports a violin made; byoffice one hour early to sign the dination that awed two.attentive-and Joseph Stradivarius in r1718. Carlyss* waiting list. The remaining three con-appreciative audiences Tuesday and the second violinist, plays a violinCerts will be broadcast live injfeeir en­Wednesday nights, lies a robust and made in 1707 by the equally illustrious tirety-en KUTrFM* 80.7 FM. mm. aggressive vigor that seems toenflame "irtOBii maker Joseph Guarnerius. -AJuilliard's appearance on campus their material and which separates the ^Rhodes and Adam possess equally tl $iso includes three free* informal Juilliard style from the VQentral* "ancient and valued instruments.fl^iecture^moostratioqs,'' tye second , European school." : Rhodes' viola was made before 1700,Of which will be held at 10:15 a.m. Close attention to tempo and color , while Adam's^sello-was constructed in modulation also characterise the 1,740 by fte artisans who took overv Juilliard approach. When they dig intoli^tradivarius' studio after his death the strings, reach member charges the^^ juilliard's eight-day stay in Austin 'i Spday in Hogg Mdi^oun^ notes asIf to wrest the most vivid and^-^ebmes in the middleof a five-week tong %distinct tones possible from their in-coast-to-coast tour of the United States & *An electrifying precision marks the struments. ' ,-and Canada..Sandwiching the tour an' tying of the Juilliard String Quartet, Naturally such intensity and preci-^pearances in flew York at the ,1: --1 a precision noted most easily in the ab­sion has won the Juilliard Quartet Metropolitan Museum, Lincoln Center, -•* solute synchronization of their attack, much praise and fame. They have sur-and Carnegie Hdl a&, of course, their , but which extends inevitably into the ... passed the natural limitations of fame^ teaching obligations at the Juiljlard „ farthest readies of ensemble playing, placed upon the field of chamber musics School of Music. -. ; te On stage, each of "the four members by, the media (an easy test: can you This season will beClaus Adam'Slast -of the quartet —Robert Mann and Earl name even„one. other American stringy with the quartet after 19 years. Mann; , Carlyss, violink; Samuel Rhodes, viola quartet?). In doing so, they have beenili has played with the.group since itt in* and Glaus Adam.cello*-move and act lauded by the likes of Harold Schonberg^b ception 28 yearsago, While Carlyssand •as though part of single, four-headed ofThe Ne^ Yorkljmes,who^creature, bolting through rhythm ".represent the very nqodel of .m^erm^^yMri'ago,"respectively. . .. ' Eari Carly**, Robert Mann, Qau< Adamand Samuel Rhodes. , , * —» '£Spp -1 TOPLESS ^ HIGHLAND MALL > Show-1 The Devils' TcfOilih Season OFF IH 35at HIWAY 290 i j j 4 4 m ^ feSf *• —-"•*- AUSTIH.nCXAS. 7t74l.i'. mVHOHt M14MI Co^enc^. . . Porpmoonl Picturtt Pr«s«nlt BARGAIN ;V MATINEE CVtRYOAY •TIL V30KM iving. AU SCHLOTZSH Y'S Wonderfully perceptive satiric jabs at - WotherhoocMhe military, psychiatry jpind 7\> eomputer dtoting. Bud Corf if the very' l ECHNICOLORe AUNIVERSALPjCTURC' embodiment of lost boyhood; Ruth Gordon ft* "VANISHING WILDIRNESS" f M mssb is beautifully restrained and deeply touching] ,J,3-M.»fcOLOR (G). • ••• -• . ' -• " t.;.,^^-*hers is a performance fo cherish. ^ Vivian Pickles is simple perfection!"A Wt —JudithCrist,Now jaz/na T-'" .i'C ' • ffilHGOTOON ^^•i;KATURI BUDOORT 1:15-3:00-4:45-6t30-S:15-10KM> .H.35 NORTH EXCLUSIVE ENGAGEMENT CINEMA II 'Mi r*r IS Also appearing Sat.,Jan. 26 ^ ENDS TUESDAY Sf»?8S mm FEATURE OFFICE OPEN 7:00 SHOW STARTS PliSK 1K»-2^5-4Jl *0tf ~ 4$ * ** EVERY ML t SAT. m MIDNITE MOVIE MS w?M J>4, *i w f -4'? ^ ^ 1 7?/r w kIH /vmmnfl The 11 Horrunn "fa iGRfmfUtPCflD QUICK/ILVCft OPEN"DAILY • • ^COLOR An AMERICAN IHTHRNATKMM. RaMHW «4M r r J PUIS CO-FEATURE I2.-30 PM tlTIUCIiQMMciehaxcsdoustoyowhcattil T® 8AMUEL Z. ARKOFF PRE»trn*' ,f;v« / r , ^ ^ •3 5 1 CdDr^iioaljuM* iSSZl U»1 > AN AMERICAN INTERNATIONAL PICTURE "S« ^ afc SHOWtOWN EAST -SOUTHSHP NORTH the/ had in comtnoa^ #^bargain\IMATINEE a* -'\^ I fVWYDAY • : BAMUgt ? MttfQfT puttnli', w Tllt;30KA*. AllSCATS :SCKBNINGS TODAY Sl^OO BSt­ l:30-3.-30-5:30i7:30-9:30 1 111n.nt'," HOLLAND FIST'VALOFMUSIC *SANTANA *AL STEWART 8R<€ZV, ielor byTtoholootor* • Tt an AMERICAN INT69.NATtf.NAL QO-STARflwS £' I*ITS A BEAUTIFUL DAY PtUSCO-HIT ¥i? -^18 I*OR. JOHN *FLOCK ATHE BYRDS ROGER C. QAR^EfrMARJ DUSAY-iOAEHOTCHKIS-^^il^o® Tg LIAT *COUNTRY JOE #WNK FLOYD HI W Ll •) llllllhlil W j. WmWOSSL-v:.­ IEFFERSON,AlRPLANEja 'BABYLON^ ^=riday4 januafy 25.'• ayA 3anu rap W iimma fe }$h St " M ;IM M I®,™ P? ^ &s£m fio, l Do; wkh lyrics by l^m Jones sad dealing with that respected, revered add questionable in Celebrated people like Ann Miller/Juliet Prowse, Uta< number* — "Flaming Agnes,' a bump _ ......M,by Harvey Schmidt based on"The Fou-poster"by Jan stitutlon known, at "marriage," the Jones-Schmidtg& ysUnnelli Celeste Holm, Shirley Jones and Jvte Morgan, t routine performed by the ordinary,everyday ^ojmwife,afldat Country Diaaer PUyhowe, 1*173 FM Road partnership givfes a fresh approach and amusing interpreta^4| ?W you're cynical, it may take.some convincing forydu td her tender rendition of "What Is a Woman?" Sbe cap sln», Robert R. Kaye and Katiiy Dexfau. tfoo of one particular marriage over a period of 50 years. believe in the man's talettt. But, just listen to him sing. My ^^ ByDEBRA tKSFUSTJt^ As ex-studentsof the University drama department,J6ne%^ first thought was "he must have been In 'Brigadoon','' MISS l^BQd^A'hai%»^ good and in comedic abilities. The transition of Michael and ;..Of his singing abUiUes. _ _ „ „ box office profits and artistic success for twolocaltheaters. -But not just the good music and strongcomedy make this *** *5 Kaye'brought the words of Tom Jones to life through Agnes from blushing bride and groom into ased grand­ Add another Jones-Schmidt winner to the list. production a hit. Two actorsadd the charm,ability andspon­'Harvey Schmidt's music with his gestures, his Voice control parents divorced the production from reality •:|*1 DO, I DO" descended upon Country Dinner Playhouse-taneous talent to this already funny piece, making itdelight­and his expressions. His control and a unique rapport witfr quite common in musicals. The makeup changes fCDP) thisweek with good music, professionalactingand an ful in its own special way. -*->* 2 * the audience made everyonelove towatch, love totaugh and die age to old age were actually made'oo stage/in incredibly, funny approach to a tired subject. 1 Robert Kaye as Michael bringai considerable stage love to listen. He gave the illusion of sharing a private jobs the audience. <• Although following the recent pattern of GDP productions perience.to CDP. His.experience has been concentrated inf?^ with the audience. * ? KS "I Do, I Do" is fub, amiable and full of good mns^1 W* legitimate stage productions. Consequently, few people ing® Some good words must be written about Kathy Dezina Ticket prices at student rates are# for WednesdayV--» Austin have heard of him, unless they read The New York1* (Agnes). This young actress replaced the original Agnes Thursday night performances. The playhouse is etom ¥ -Times theater section and Variety faithfully. (Judith.Haskell) and learned songs, linesand choreography Monday. If you're under IS, Sunday afternoon matiaeeirt^OW r TEXAS NOW! 0PHM.-4S KAYE has made the rounds in stock, in productions orij":S in approximately one week. She did it so captivatingly that $4M. Prices are plus tax. Dinner is included to ticket nrfee:771*1 ™ KATUWS*-«44-W tour, dinner theater and on Broadway, wither lot of she received well-deserved applause during two solo? Call AURl for reservations.-, ^ lll«t UfrrvltBtlCED PRICES M (MAIL. gig --<-•&> A -r£ • * ANINVESTIGATION OF A MURDER DOtoCtiVB TheNurse TheGbp JCWMsHSl'Wry^ Mystery Isrtt IteBtond* TheRSch The Street WhoDoesn't WithA Lot Girt Friend Degwwa#^aDude Like Men :; To Learn By JOSEPH KRUPPA ^ , ff^f'%onders if it will ever be more than a word:? ,-Things become very complicated for Ed-draw their inspiration from '< (Editor's Note: Cinema *will premt the " . „ ^ Sie. His brother is bothered by the ad and the Watching it, we experience simul film "Gumshoe" in its Austin premier SatuT' THIS LIVERPUDLIAN SAM SPADE is bad publicity it brings to his respectable genre film and a playful activity wiugn uses t .^reduced to running an ad in the paper, offer* day only at 9:20, and II p.m. in Batts business, the Botha Export Company. Eddie genre as its focus. We oscillate betfaen Ed4 "4 < ^ ,.<4';1ng himself as a gumshoe for hire. In«* theM™. is bothered by the fact that his brother Auditorium. Tickets are $1.) ™""v" "" " »""»"« »«• die playing a role and playing at a role, ' ;"He thought gumshoeing would be fun »#>W>eantime he ekes out an existence as an married his girl right out from under him.He between story and "story-telling/' between :-"v —Dashiell Hammett in "Blood M(»ey" 1 emcee and intermission comic in a crummy plays "These Foolish Things'* for her on fiction and meta-fiction. In thissase the film >Eddie Ginley Is a comic in ^ightclub. Eddie has all the moves down, the piano, she-asks for "Melancholy Baby," he is alwaysplaying witii itself, turning itself in^ 'Liverpool who aspires to be a bigtime \4WSemitough patter, the requisiteseediness, but asks ''how does that go again?" Wait a fide out ,as a.process o| Pi*8 gnmghno Minh^ jn Qftdafd'i ^maegP3tone«i thaTeiPcarnatipn from v'minutel What price do we have: to pay-to-get* act or ^releas^.; sM ' • " "Breathless," he draws his inspiration from 4he movies. Eddie is an actor who has out of going through all these things twice? • ^ ^ m' movies; but unlike Michel he also reads 7 memorized a script for aiilm that doesn'tex-_ -THE CAMERA STYLE reminds us of the When Albert Finney as Ginley remarks, ^Jist.% • a , • « * :.r :r -enclosed nature of Eddie's world, relying ; "I've gone Ginley," perhaps we are to surf (Hammett's "The Thin Man"), Perhaps this 7 t T c *** C<"a 'f4 i 9 >T * v ^ > mise that role and role-player^become 'one, touch of literacy saves him from the fate But then the film begins to materialize. A constantly on medium closeups which seem • that the story and the telling of .it fuse, and which befalls Godard's character. rs Vibeautiful woman (natch!) shows up to offer tgcftge Eddie in aseriesof spall boxes. Even .T* never We first see l&die in his psychiatrist's Of­:^:'Eddie a job. Eddie picks up a package at the OanMn mtf Pmn . yiMOi You tMComi aw«r« of Hw nMd JOHN BUSTIN CUISINE LIBANAISE ^5 *•» wH Hil»jhw», an for a major change and raorlenta­ i < iMal ••lr«U|«rs t^Mlallilng M tlon. 3 AMER. STATESMAN ' ' Sun., Jtn. 27 -11 a.m.-8 p.m. diadt, p«mnal U*»njfiw*, amrfytw 'r . vUMAi Good tlma to plan anything having ami —tulty J •) to do with events of • social or ar- WalterHhrtUMSi (CALL THEATER AttCii Don't.takc« dark view of people tittle nature. jki^feaisrfaa and events luit now. „ *COWIO> You feel in tune with the uiv * - FOR SHOWTIMIS i-IAU«», You find yourteif en|oyln«-the iverte and should be abletodiscover ?.«. good life and yearning Inwardly to Inner truths about yourself. FIRST SHOW 6:10 J ^ share It with othfcrs. „ _JAOITTA«lUtL Don^t deny-your^leslr^to m RESTAURANT QIMWCTfTlmportant ffiat ydu..become. . socialUuu.ar~braadaa-~youueii fhat a."IENMO*vectlcality" CA»«KX>«N, A possessive quality within six Is as Important as noble motives. you arises. . •04 Guadalupe !FW*f3 -^47^5455^ i^tUKBh Communication and the need of AQUAMiti A sunny disposition describes /.>$*!•-It on a personal level Intensify your you to a tee; though there may be Regular American Dinner & Wine List relationships at this time.-some inner turmoil. i ' "I V-Available . M GREAT ; ;; ttOt Consider'-carefully any attachments mcafc Though you may feel limited In * r—f W'JIIFTFN'Y * -Y ORDERS TOGO1 -you make and see that you have the :your energy field;: VTBWE« ROLL PLUS CO-FEA CHUCK semv AIIRURKXARD • FATSOOMINO • CHUSBY CHECKER ^ From the prbducer of "Bullitt" FEATURES 1(25>3s30.!i:40-7s50-11JOO Roar once again with theoriginal movie "*|W,EIE*DM^YV-OFLRE«FFE» FEWEST. m« THIS MM MM " IWWIF thetall CM poiriMi STARRING ®0 WORF»^ . i&cuntain folk swear ni« SCVEMV DAROCM SHASON OmVEITPVU [ 9ENJAWIN i,wa*cy WOWWOUM AIRHTO WYPGW SASAWSTB^THQ .HAHIUS YUTIFT 20 J|rlii»y« January 25/ 1974 THE DiULY TEXAN . . & ' ' ' " s » '4-' » * 1 « i -t *ttftUfc9i s » "" * + h*^ ' tr'% "* f""} '* ?03:­ AUL BEUTEl fffl? 4b»er music „ and wew,imi»«w»«p^^ttnd»r»/V4^?Sl|^|l \ in Stiff Writer that time she What they heard was a crisp, cosk-4^ ACTUALLY, Miss Lauren does you dont exactly groove oh featured vocalist with a number of! lied voice, rich with resonanceand' i^possess an exclusive style of the kind the "Austin sounds" of progressive local groups, including.Wink titer's, shades of Vocal stylistics. Miss has-catapulted some pet whatever and hard rock tends to play who occasionally broke out of their excells on soft, lyrical love formers to fameand'yet often sevei upon your nerves with the subtle im-' usual cotifttry-western mode to dis , butshecfih also belt a soft?*, , wly iimits them; If anything, she i* e&\ pact ttf ah air liamtneir; jiist whfere-#fcy Mite Mut^'a VtesaUUtSvi # version of "Proud Ifary^ thai" Storing nfew-stylesand poiishing thr can you go for a little musical uplift? ^ In addition to her appearances r_.„, often result in abundant top-' vaSt amount of vocal talent-that is -1 You could go Jiome, crank up the the Depot \ "I| -What Miss Lauren-sells is a rare1 ? Sadly, she admits that in a city sand songs," she commented, '.'even commodity oh the Austin entertain-dominated by one-man-and-guitar though!don't believe our styles are ^very-right to be. ment scene — a solo female per-music, the market fbt female soloists similar." But I love Streisand, and (in addition to 1 former, capably vocalizing an assort-is rather small, limited mainly to I'm tremendously -flattered every ">aLatiren also*111 perform qti ment of pop, jazz and generally "easy supper clubs, ''class bars," o)r resort timel get a request to do one of her }-1ipn Feb. ,17 and J4.J /'klfsrgvr F*1 listening" tunes.-area clubs, like Horseshoe Bay or " ~ "*-Ti . .—' HAVING SPENT the formative Woodcreek. ..£iy|£ dlOrUS AUCIltlOriinCl™ part of her » years in Dallas, Miss "I CHOSE to remain in Austin for ^ ,w • •%#•••• igp Lauren arrived in Austin in 1969 to awhile because my friends are here, The Austin Civic Chorus isaudition^Scholarship program by -the chor. begin her freshman year at the and because I have made, $praer ing for chorus members in prepare v&riup. Four $100 University. Last year she received a h valuable contacts," she said. i4% r#gtiop forJts annual spring concert. Cf Available to graduating high^S degree in elementary education. "I Obviously she doesn't intend to re-Soprano, alto, tenor andbass ,fSeniorS who are Mrticlt>atlil '^PL'S^.r41* ?lBWtaw ""f•t*r "»y»at»A«S msta. quitea |*it, but I'dmuch rather pursrie "•* feompleted, a professional audition^y.in the Social Hafl of the find ife Additions for aU diorlwB a singing career," she »id. i, ^tape,' Which she is ending to 2 J-JtOaJn. . *v Waft9 French' Chef. '• 4i0 IM*. , 7/Aovle; "The Oram Sllnrtt",,»; » AA*jterplece ThaatreJ4 PoiMMlon „J» The Tonight SMw* years.--. v . ag" Anyone desirine further in> wisc\ u i ss-i"*-Anyon? d?8irin? furth« '^sWhile at Berkeley, Ozkox -formation about u»e workshop was named one of the six nut-tpay^fcontact Jean Bollinger at standing foreign students in ,^2-07»( * fc 7 oirly Sally•i ^"^9 WaMilojhm Itovlfi* :; ' INTERSTATE THEATRES ' Brady Bunch'36 Sanford and Sow1-;" j-v AAovIt: "Ko|ak sWtfie"Marco*--I PARAMOUNT ,u*4'',. Nelton AAurdars" * 1 ! • r C»rj ' ; F? f AVP Nl: —T-^*watrstr«frwses r \nttpM. i '• ,¥p5sf«^, .... S1.00 til 3:00 (UN. ir-nif ii"i inriiTiiiiiit--ilJ+tf' VARSITY $1.M ttl 3 p.m. 24NMM. MOJiMJfcOO f . . .. 36 LotlA UucK •i;" • '. >9CapHol Gallery -; 36 Girl With something Extr* -V 9 P" 9>m. • .9.Austln Profile ti; -.3* Tome -" ' ., . '9i»9 San. -.r ^ ^ "A DARK AND FR1GH'I ENINuJ EXPERIENCE UNLIKE ANY-• THING EVER FILMED! i)ircc(oJI Nicolas Rovg establishes an unsettling sense of| foreboding. He builds up an atmosphere of HH dread you can taste in your throat'." — Paul D. Zttiniief uidn, Newsw; t n„ ,• »* <*> "A BRHJ1ANT FILM 01 DI.EF TERRORS ^IMMEDIATELY TAKI LNK AS ONE OF T "BEST PICTURES THE AMERICAN ^^Arohtor Wtaatetot fork "O. K. GANG. HEKE'S A MOVIE TO SBB.:.OITB (XP THE MOST ENJOYABLE AND 8A' 11 'l" TROUBLING INSIGHTS -OM THAT WORKS A SPLIT OF COM IN LAI MOUNTING ANVIL: —Jay Cocks, Time Magazir>.e IfflVTliS ipnaiii f WAIT'mi.vAAO mAi.a iiiiv, IN A LONG TIME. IN ETKRY WAY 'THK PAPB& CHASB' STACKS UP!' ALLIED ARTiSTSpfe&rits NO COVER -FRI. 25th DANCINd , C*^ AT THE.it-ft c ^ f •> ft > ,"'.i ;>.Idimebox "THRILLS AND SUSPENSKI DIRKCTOR NU OLAS ROEG AND HIS STARS \VIl HOLD YOU IN THRAIT —Judith Crist New York Mogpzine I * f MBC-TVTttdarBlmr *» * HOFFUHI MFRANKLIN i.SCHAfFNER film wTSIT"-­471-0112 nJay Ifcr* FrMiy Opm *40 LEA ANN h«lw 7:0MdJ p.m. * OF BURNING Milium Sctvrday A Swdijf SAND THE BIZARRO^ t?»iiiu«iiT...»N INTENSITY A ND 1454-2711 5 -SAT -DISH RBINC If EROTICISM, I I : t.: (.RIPS THK DOAK VIEWER LONG AFTKR THK jSNEA T" i- FINAL FRAME!" in- BAND tlf'iN. Y. Daily News THE IONG-RUN "^OMKVHIT v .ijwis-„-..7 ^<7** ... BEVO'S #OMET W TWOTHYK5TTOMS iy^SAYWARNER" JOHN HOUSEMAN /THE RMWCHA* I WIST SIDC TAP fMCSTnCTUMl >«(VOOERT.C. IHQMBSON in PODWCKPAUL o-r^lAWESOnBJeB:" _ AMw\M Film J mw.MMES BWOGtS ^-.-.JOHN JAY OSOOfW,W-.i«.«JStfl^tt:U^MS| "FOTHEJCKEEN! ?*•?. MIXtO DRINKS , s LhM imj &*0t­ {-IWJWM*iaiCOT>MYIJKKW!Tl!>X)l;-|**r»l»MW-h«n . ' | % 24tk oad Hit Grand* • 'iiP-W*' • ' . 'Fw*wiFeiumFwm •ntrwu^atnu»F^tin-JomHavhwwmoaanCntturrHwn>*} vy" A' FRANKOVICH i 'JULIE DOnHLD _ PRODUCTION , ; JC, •WTV^rrT-r> :n CHIIISTIE AP HNcfiody ' 1:10-3^0 state: .,6:.vh­ "DNIRRLIIAICS • • . : N U' $1.00 Hi 3 5JO-7JO NLTUFFEA "• sandwich^ 'i+j ... livUllmann.i MTBtaei PresXllwPtTPiKAn c >ASK» OnaMbrMCOtASWEC PfUto mom--teuMPMucirMTHONrB INB0I' MOotor "• 51.00 Ml 740 ^11 tm w* j-ss j-"Carats" at tpun. Only -"FreiPat 6:10-9:5! II hN'i SATURDAY & SUNDAY pfe •v "Carats" at2:204:05-9^5 pjw. < .< JMIIMMMI mm "Frw"«f4:10-W» . -ft r if® # wm PROM . .A> ^ (Jass HOGG AUDITORIUM ?VA of? V ¥ •S' iUIUIAR^ ACADEMY STRING WMfR! EllEW «£CW»K. ­ QUAJRTFTP BEST. 1 •' sywoRime/i ACTRESS • IA wSBM f^rr BDmBFUlilREFBEE mfinil aTMl .fm a»^HAL}ftWfOwwny*i) MS7.I • From WarnerBros.. t** m m FFIDAY^ 4ANUAIY 25I>974 TFIG DAILY: - < liiiini! 'CLASSIFIED ADVENT I; FOR SALE FURN. APARTS. • FURN. APARTS.1FURN. APARTS. 1FURN. APARTS. FURN. HOUSES •ROOM & BOARD \ RATES "A minimum • on* _ -W lime* ,09Each word J-9 times s .07 Each word10 or more times...$, .06 Student ret# each time....; ..$ .75 Classified Display 1 col. x on* inch one time $2,96 1 col. x one inch 2-9 timet (2 66 1 c»>. x on* sincti 10 or >«r>ore.time*'. „ p ^oiAouw'iBwoanTr^­ T«m ftM» 1,00 f. m. Tytn** t*ma Mendey )0>09 a.m. Wedneedey Trawi Tves** IOIOO «.m. "wrtfey fwMn We*w«iay 10=00 em. Mday Te«e« tfcvndey.--"IOiOO a.m. "fO.lh* aranl «l *n*n mMh.lM an '••mllMUMnl.' #va»« rtw itiiWlihaiiw» »»<«tmltlitw •enh OMImmtm loMrNan. A1d*inu far a*urtm»nft «h«tM be mMle net laM« than 90 day* after pohHartiee." . e®®-: • LOW STUDENT RATES 15 words or less for 75' the first tlm$, 5' each ad­ditional word. 1 col. x one trtChT each time $2.37. ^"Unclassifieds"—1 line 3 times Si.00 (Prepaid# No. Refunds). -Student;must show Auditor's receipt^nd pay 4n advance in TSP Bldg. 3.200 (25th & Whitis)from 8 a.m. to 4:30' p.m.Vtcmday through Friday. FOR SALE the ws biscou^& • shop 5vi STEREO & TV 3 Reasons To Shop At THE DISCOUNT SHOPS .IW 1. Personal Service 38th & Speedway. '477-0937 STEREO Kenwood JVC • Sansui : Marantz .v Pioneer Sherwood 1 Harman Kardon 'Both two and four channel receivers. Check this one out. Stereo Center •203 East 19th 476*6733 . Five blocks east of Guadalupe on 19th Near the Spoke -9 w. In . Appreciation « of your Christmas Patronage, The Bead Shaman "an­nounces 40% Deduction p? Sale on aH American In­dian iewelry and beads, from January 23 through 31st. We also (4) NEW STEREO CONSOLES edOipped with AM-FM Radio. 4-speed auto record changer; functional controls tor balance, bass, treble and AFC for drift-free FMreception, built-inantenna plus many other features. Thesesets art finished in hand-rubbed walnut ($99.95)cashor terms.UnitedFreighf Sales, 6535 N. Lamar or our new location at 1006 S.' Lamar ILamar PlataShopping Center). 9-9 Daily, 9-6 Sat. -r T HUGE GARAGE SALE! Over 200 families contributing clothing, furniture, etc. Jan.. 25-26th. 9am until 5pm and Jan. 17th ^Ipm Until 5pm. Old white. house on grounds of St. George Episcopal Church. Airport and Interregional. Sponsored-.by Central Tf»a< Hur.srvflswinion,^ .. BRASS BEDS, D«K. BEN»WOOD coat rack (With umbrella ring), Bentwood chairs. Sandy's. 506 Walsh.. NIKI^ORMAT with 50mm/fl.4 normal lense plus seven (liters.Excellent condl­ -JioiV Atter-6:00 pjn, 451-7705. 19nt CHEVROLET ^Ton pickup. Good body, tires. Recent paint, shocks, battery, 384-49IJ after 5. BOZAk URtt"AN~Speakerv;~3"-wey­system. Walnut cabinets, $39S the pair. 4.8 Jaguar Sedan, wire wheels, sunroof, *430. Dodgepick-up $350. SquashblossomIMdclace, *300, Phone, 451-4632 or 477­ IUf. . •CAMERAS 36%-SO* OFF. Canoh Ftb F1.2. list $S34«onty $282.00. CamerjLObscur* . 478»5181 enings.BfnkAmertcard. MasterCharge. J97I FESTIVAL 14'*70' doubU­ insulated, >2, CA/CH, w/0 carpeted, iSil!!j^J21^rnlsNd. bw window , *«ALI$TIC TR'OB 8-tr*d(' recorder. Past-forw«r4 pause, timer, large view . 44MU7 kj. .-» .—. XFIYAMAHA J50WxTtut» i^ca.modified Kort>s. etc. wll. <74- TOP CASK.PRICes paid fordlemonds,/did gold. Capitol DiamondShop, 4010 N. Lamar. 454-6877. ' YAMAHA GUITAR SALE. Free Case with eybry guitar, Amster Music, 1624 Lavac^. -GUITARS AND OTHER FRETTED In­sfruments repaired at reasonable prices. OUDS. LUTES. DULCIMERS, etc. Custom built. 20% discount dn all -slrlngl Oeoff Menke • Amster Music. 1S24 Lavaca 471-7331. WHY NOT BUY condlmlnlum and build iPIVHY WASTE TIME ona bus? , Walk to c|a$$.. , SOUTH LE AAARQUE Close to campus. "Luxury efficiencies Sl(S;.Tone tddfoom IIB, two bedroom! ^ "Oid AAalrt Apartments. Unique'" SHORE up an equity while you arein school? No MtAnwa In TAHai;I ? One and two bedrooms yard care, nice pool, private lake, coun-fjTVlUVB III IUUdV J ^ Tappan Appliances lA4^'»5% down"0,lk HIM #rea &SiU,2,• Best Rate on the Lake $•', Dishwasher, disposal, gas stove, Shuttle Bus-Front Door,! '. ;"u" n/v.n« uwii iv vomi 1969 SUZUKI SAVAGE 250cc. Good trail ; 2400 Town Lake Circle® SEVEN TOWERS or street bike, excellent condition. S3S0. mm 1306 McKie 453-7608; 442-8340 with accessories 477.5502. % •••'• • ' ' -• 'm CHAIRS $20. COUCHES $35; desk M0; bookshelves $20; coffeetable $15; tables WALK TO CAMPUS^; •/No Lease $20. FOURSQUARE FURNITURE. 10-5 Mon., Wed., Sat., (theold service station -Reasonable priced. Large one bedroom® ' Furnished and Unfurnished between 6th an5 Rental Department,Capitol Camera 476­ 3581, Central properties Inc. ^GIBSON GUkT ARSESJJSTDC electric, iw#* ihard shell case -J-^5 standard with _ csase, both excellent. 441-7948. SU CASA -LENDER -BASS, custom black - finish. Great necK, two years-old. Best •; %? :. ,203 West 39th voffer, must tell. 477-2931. 451-2268 till 6 ' SELLING TYPING SERVICE. Take -over our contracts and customers, office • Now leasing for Spring edulpment and lease. Two blocks from campus; 1500. Call 453-8983 after 4:00 • Apartments just redecorated • Quiet atmosphere ;AKC IRISHSETTER puppies. Excellent • Shuttle on corner r pedigree,champion blooid Una,,must see to appreciate. JH8-2147. " • Pool, party room & -Bar-B-Que vm ELECTRIC TYPEWRITER, • Water and Cable Paid •-*=— Underwood office model,'S65.00. Victor adding machine comptograph, S35.O0. • £)ur Spring Rates are LBo»h good. Phone 453-3358. ! 1 BR, 1 BA. -$160 'SAILBOAT. .22* Venture <197H, many 2 BR, 2 BA. -$275­extras, sails, trailer, sleeps fiye. head, gMhty, outboard, superb condition. fUr PANASONIC: four channel receiver, turntable^ onfl 2/4 change! 8-track WILLOW recorder with 4 speaker boxes. Call 478-; 3867. SUPER 8 MOVIE Camera, Canon S14 " 1969.VW CAMPER-Excellent condition, new battery, paint, tires. Pop tent. Phone 385-7087'levenings." 1972 YAAAAHA 100. Twin. Excellent con­dition. 476-3307 '71 YAMAHA 650. 8" extensi' mpg. Tools and shop manual. S93I after 4 p.m. NIKKOR ZOOM LENS, 50-300rhm, f4.5, $600.00 Phone 836-2276 after 6:30 p.m. ^ " '• ^' ' COLOR TV, RCA console home enter­tainment center. Includes am/fm stereo Lradio, record player. $195. 453-4603. NEEDED. Good-home for 1964 Buick Skylark. Ps, ac, 2 door ht. Economical and very clean. 454-8972. 10 SPEEDMen's Raleigh. One year old. Best offer. Call 451-4131. ONE YEAR OLD Cable Nelson pianoand bench.Spinet pype.Excellent condi­tion. $650. 476-4918. . £>• . ; AKC IRISH SETTER pups. Championbloodline, excellent pedigree. Four weeks old. $125. Steve 476HM78. AKC IRISH SETTER pups. Born Dec. 20th. Males $m; females $70. 472-7740. have new shipment of" FURN. APARTS. recycled leather jacketsand flannel shirts. Opert 10:00 to'8:00, Monday- TOWER Saturday. MANOR. 2200 Guadalupe 477-3478 r CO-ED DORM BRAND NEW SEWING. MACHINES l~* 1 Block Campus • Quiet3 nationally -advertised brands. Thase » Free Parking-• Maid Service are ligsag machines complete with fac­ • Laundry Facilities • All Bills Paid : tory warranty. $49.95 cash or terms. These machines have built in controls for making buttonholes, hemming, decorative stiches^ sewing on buttons, darning, mending, overcasting, and many, other features. They may be In­ Four people suites; 2 bdrms, 2 spected at UNITED FREIGHT SALES, 6535 N,Lamar or 1006 S. Lamar (Lamar baths, living room, dining Plaza). Open to public 9 to 9 block fromCampus. Apartment Iran apptl individual applicants matched wi Jatib campatlbleroommates 1910 Red River : 474-563J A Paragon property CONTINENTAL .APTS 2 BR Furn. -S180 efficiencies and one bedrooms. 25th and Pearl. Furnished. All BillsPaid. $125 and up. 477t0770.V ; Pre-Lease for 2nd semester#; i?® P°0' All Bil|S Pdfd'B^jfrurnlshed and Unfurnished Apartments Tappan AppfuDishwasher? disposXgasstovVH^ Individually controlled^CA/CH,T-V caj>le| 454-1376 " to U.T. '$125.0(81!Luxury Furnished Manager Ap^,. 103 4105 Speedway 451-2832 J 04 E 32 345-4555 476-5940 TWO BLOCKS UT One large -* bedroom apa'rtments. C A/CH,carpeted, cable, dishwasher, covered parking, laundry. ABP $142.50 477*•814$ 2101 Rio Grande' POSADA DEL NORTE Save money. Come live with us. For the­ * next three weeks onltget your si00 gift. -Orange shag, large closets; complete 476-^633. Young managerand tenants. Clubroom, • kitchen with food service :bar,'poel, 5 volley b»U court, privite parties, shag min to UT.lFrom S179.50 ABP. Waterloo ENFtfeLO AREA: one bedroom with carpetjbneVnd two bedrooms, flatsand Flats, 41 Waller. townhouses. every-extra. Furnished or unfurnished 476-2633. 2. Quality Stereo Components H62. .~.™s 1 B«"S1«5 2 BR S205 3. Lowoverhead. Low prices , NEW EFFICIENCIES TANGLEWOOD EFFICIENCY for rent, AIR CONDITIONER. 24,000 BTU'S, ALL BILLS PAID £lose to CAMPUS-SHUTTLE BUS-s. Old butcomfortable. $125. . ... -10 to 6— -walnut finish, l'/iyears old..»150. Retaili-tjT Shuttle Bus Route . swimming pool, beautifully furnished, 'I:-"'' ' '-.if:­ EAST . electronic. 8* toomf1.4, macroscopic, ..453-6554. .,459-9463./ 476-949] : from $139jo, plus electricity. -B07 West slow motion, remote control, $300. 471- Lynn. 477-779fi 476-2633. «9s.oo. ED HIII. DISHWASHERS-2 LARGE POOLS ;..g°"b'y. jjr fetitf.. W.lWVt'dHiv' — : SECURITY hwasher, disposal, central air and heat, $H5 SECLUDED one bedroom fur­19" TV FOR SALE, B/W, UHF, with CLUBROOM, VOLLEY BALL COURT Vhag carpet, extra storage room. SUPER SECOND :: nished. AC. close to campus and shuffle stand. 167.50 cash.. 477-4049 evenings.?: MOVE IN TODAY 305 West 35th .; bus, small quiet apartments;Water, gas,3401 Red Rtoer. • ; 1901 Willow Creek 444-0010 Manager Apartment 106 , SEMESTER , cable TV paid.40«East 45th,No.lll.4S2­ • . 451-4364.:-;•••• 1435 or 476-4655. Ceptral Properties!nc. ELECTROPHONIC AM/FM sterep' LEASE radio/phono. A bargain atSB. Keith453-' V/a BLOCKS FROM LAW SCHOOL. (Let's make a deal) 6523; MWF after 3, T-TH after 1. QUADRILLO -Near Eastwoods Park. Tak* 0ver>laase 30 Apartments through May. Onebedroom, gas, Mattr, ' Furnished, one bedroom apartments. STEREO CONSOLE excellentcondition. ! Must rent by February 1 • cable $135 Wus eliectrlcity, 472-0565. , THE RETREAT Available with TV cable, swimming .AM/FM, longwavfe,. shortwave, .Dual pool, and patio areas. Largeiclosets, ful­1 and 2 Bedroom turntable; stereo tape recorder, 1 BEDROOM' APARTMENTLarge *$135 ALL BILLS PAID ly draped. Washer dryer facilities; MOVE IN TODAY! Located1 > block from shuttle bus. Sep at automatic tuning),, remote control, . Furnished or Unfurnished:. pool, shuttle. $155 A&P. 3212 Red River beautiful walnut cabinet. S275.00 or best Ride Bike to UT No. 207 between 10am-3pm. offer/Call 454-0261. after 5:00 p.m. Keep Colorful Furniture — Shag Carpet 3405 Helms'. (One block east of trying. i Central Air & Heat DON'T FAIL TO CHECK THESE $100 REWARD'for taking over spring " ST'' 454-0455 345^4123 SHUTTLE BUS CORNER 2604 MANOR ROAD contract: Suite contains 3 bedrooms, 2 COLLIE PUPS. AKC negistered.^e.' 4400 Avenue A 451-7092 477-1064 bath, kitchen, (4girls), allmeals-Includ­ and white, tri-color. CallIll 453-6529 after ed. 2707 Rio Grande. Bona Austin, 476­ 5:00 p.m. • ..4648;;:. 108 TOY APRICOT POODLES AKC. Two New Furnished Efficient/ Apartments -GREAT PEOPLE! Brand new twi femates Show .quality 3 months. Worm­BUCKINGHAM SQ. • dishwasher-disposals WE RENT-bedroom apartments, completely fured, shots,'groomed. $150.00 after 5:30 • swimming pool nished; Frost-free .refrigerator,-self­ 454-1116. .1Br., Furn.>-$155 • patio-barbeque * AUSTIN cleaning oven, dishwasher, $149.50 monthly, $75-deposit. Convenient 1 • one half block to shuttle bus Your timeis valuable Bergstrom and Highway 183. Students ALL BILLS PAID . Walk to CampUs —' Fulljr Carpeti _• Indlvlduol storage andfamrues welcome/Manager 385-2Q43 Dishwasher — Pool •'bookshelves ' , after 4:00. 711 W. 32nd Our service is free ; ,• Hotpolnt electric appliances -• 454-4917 -451-4245 • laundry facilities , SOUTH AUSTIN, close to shuttle bus • i;es.ident.m'anager. PARAGON route, new: efficiencies, $110 -all bills paid. Call for John Holmes or SteveTHE CONSUL $140/monfh -All Bills ?>aid ' Gr.innell, Harrlson-Peerson Assoc., Inc.108-West 45th 452-1419 or 453-2771 472-6201vnlghts 454-9901. q ON TOWN L,AKE HIGHLAND MALL. CAR UNNECESSARY' • 2 befroom NEW MANAGER ••/ weekdays • • M»fJ townhouse, near Hancock Center^ shut­ AREA ON tle, Red River bus. CA/CH, Mediterra­ NEW ROOF SHUTTLE v nean furniture.$l75/plus electricity.476^ 8575; 478-3712, Large 1, 2, and 3 bedroom Huge 1 & 2 Bedrooms furn. or 472-4175 townhouses and 1 and 2 unturn. with large: walk-ins, weekends -LARGE ONe eeDRGOM-tarntsmref ­ Bedroom flats with great 'beautiful landscaping. From apartment. Close to campus, on shuttle, features like these — gas grill; $154 ABP. 1100 Reinli. 452-THf WILLOWICK ., maid service, pool,allbillspaid. $158.00. 472-1651. large pool, study room, cable 3202, 476-2633. , Live in Wooded Seclusion ; TV, dishwasher, disposal, in­TWO BEDROOM FURNISHED apart'dividually controlled CA/CH, Larger Apartments with shag carpets, ment. Walkingdistance UT.$190/month:FACULTY All bills, paid. .Paneled, carpeted, TV shuttle bus. TurnEast off IH35 modern furniture, accent wall.and con- cable, pool. Central heat and air. 3011 on East Riverside Drive. Whitis, after 5:30 p.m. •• v .venlenf. ceptralJocation. ;—— Come by apartment H3. min. from downtown, 5 min. from UT.. , ; SHUTTLE BUS 2 BLOCKS WOODWARD APARTMENTS 1201 Tinnin Ford Road Large 3 bedroom duplex townhouse in 444-341V convenient Northeast Austin, WD conn., vaulted ceilings, orange shag, fenced 64138AOburn-ni~ 6413~ -" SUNNYVALE APTS. 1 BR FURN., $150 No Lease 2 BR. FURN., $170 -.—Furnished and unfumtshed apartments -PRIVATE BALCONIES - Efficiencies -1 and 2 bedrooms DISHWASHER Tappan Appliances POOL-CENTRAL AIR Dishwasher, disposal, gas stove 441-00584 4414606 Individually controlled CA/CH, pool, TV SHUTTLE BUS CORNER >• cable GASTLE ARMS — ., 3121 Speedway ' 477-3210 MARK V APTS. 1 SOMETHING DIFFERENT 1 BR Furn., $150 > ^Efficiencies with eldVated separai^ . DISHWASHER CH-CA "a bedrooms plus enormous one and two KINGSIZE BEDROOMS POOL w bedroom contemporary apts. with every"convenience, furnished or unfurnished. SHUTTLE BUS CORNER i • OAK CREEK, is environmentally -3914 AVE. D 453-1084" oriented an 1722 E. Woodward .; : Office ft7 *A~. " 441=7555 V , i' 1, 2. or 3 bedrooms THE SAXONY ' • i.-Unfurnished or furnished1 i From $140 -$265Come by and see our l#rge, comfortable, • 2'SWiipmlnb pools, playgrounds," totally electric apartments. Spacious:'. washaferia,^!ght^d grounds, 5 minutesgrounds with lots of grass and parking. .tO-UTv minutes to B.A.F.B., steps from Our' pool is surrounded by a beautiful IRS, on bus line, BILLS PAID, Free-courtyard with an a|oinirig club room: channel TV. -• We are tocated-at-l614-Royal.Crest;.Oftly— one block south of the Town Lake Shop-: - Pino Center on East Riverside Drive —; 1 Bedroom $1S5-$175 S&iS| C&XT9S ipmatsu ' aue0roomHMMhS190-s2K>^ 2 Bedroom .2 B«tti S210-S245 -IDEAL ADULT -Furnished or.unfurnished -ENVIRONMENT FOR *r At) Bills Paid .; FACULTY, GRADUATE / - ' On .shuttle bus ^STUO£NTS AND Y9iJWG^: MT' • i; . :. MA RBIPN\ MARRIE0S. Brand new one and two bedroom uniii, No Lease furniihedv«and-jfffurnishtd. «ha carpets, draperlesr dishwasher, Furnished andUnfurnished Apartments ­ posal, frostless refrigerator, total s Eliioonctcs -land 2 bedrooms trie, much more:Located-near Higi . _ Tappan Appliances Mall, iust I1 j blocks west of Ra . . Dishwasher, Disposer, Gas Stove 'r­ M^)h, between IH35 and Hwy. indfviduaUy controlled CA TH. pool, TV «m Cable 1 t1 ; CA5A LINDA APARTMENTS -.RATES FROM $152 J?L* MRK^ ^ ' ---4S4-9413-=s=—A^LL©H.tSi»A»D— " ' .7707GRANDCANYOW ORlVET 4545515 452-6047 "ftoW LEASING new efficiency ap^-' rnent One *#m#sTer ot' iortger. $13S/month. All bills paid. 2700 Manor Rd., 477-4118. 2S04 /Manor Rd ;474-2»». ­ L*TcwrrXJ'APiRf^ttfs,liirth Lamar and Werrbwv city bus fo-'-UT ami: * *" • -y, ii». ' Downtown-iMdnwrnefffcienar',: WaO,2t*edroomsl5Pptu» efectrtclty; ^,v W. 39th -V ^76-4455 central Properties, inc. c u^jC'enC^' V4flCT * iww mint'' Offer the \SOl..UjJ6n^;':ift^reour housing, The South Shore's central localloft'-I^FFiCIENCies ON SHUTTLE. S129.50 provides easy access to U.T. ; -Includes shag, complete kitchen, Comfc by ami sfee our new^efficiency antfH'-.'i-"®4 1 bedroom apartments ow the banks 452"w#6< 476-2633. Town Lakj-.Complete_w»h_shag seaaIs'ter LEASp. Large^"i»'yj .with shag bccerrt wall, fnwlecfMyiS Ibedroon^ wltf^hag/ Itfem&er.v an individual ' c^vsKrlri-­|Uwroom/TREEC.^sE-FFw V^r venient to child care facilities and shop' " " ,"BEDROOMS ^ ping center. 2 bedrooms. 1bath. 100 sq. ..-— -uare Drive, Harrison FRO/yy $132 ALL BILLS, Mana^?i^^pL<\^2^n.rHa^lto •,'»r . b> DAIn i: PearsonAss. »t»Cr47M201..>v, ;r-w A new concept in apartment SOUTH, POINTEiAPAttTMeNTS. 5 minutes fo downtown, close fo shopping community living. Five • center; .1 and 2 bedroom apartmentsarchitectural styles, choice of available. Priced to-fit your,.budget. furniture styles, color .coor­ $137.50 -&157.50. Resident Manager, 1336 Lamir Squar* Orlv*, apt. F, 442-6077. dinated throughout. .CA/CH, Harrison Pear^pn Ass. Inc., 472-6201.' all built-fris, available unfurl nished for $120 ail bills pald/i 'NO LEASE. One and two bedrooms. • Furnished and unfurnished. $129 andup, > -J501 Kinney Aye. NO. 109 t , 5606 Roosevelt. 454-9848. 476-4655 ' Central Properties Inc. NO RENT till February 1.6.blocks cam­ -'.pus. All bills paid. One bedroom, S1S0. 476-3467. 2408 Leon. DOWN BY THE ? ;!NORTHEAST SHUTTLE and city bus -RIVERSIDE . route. Colorful'one bedroom with dls­ r.hwasher., pool, unusual furniture. S139 . Large new 2 bedrooms furn. or unfurnC * plus electricity. 1400 Cast jlst. 453-330fc if,'rn-'i.-..71 Bedroom SUBLEASE LARGE EFFICIENCY; Shag parpet, dishwasher, and disposal. SI45 unfurnished $160 furnished $119.50 plOs electricity. C6II 453-8903 >ayer 4:00 . ., 2 Bedroom •' ' $178 unfurnished $198 furnished WALK To UT 13 blocks Law School). One-bedropm, roomy, furnished.. Shag All Bills Paid ^ carpet, CA/CH, pool, private -balcony. ,$150 ABP. 3301 Red River, No. 207. 472. 600 South First St. 444-0687 0994. t .i '' ' ••••"" NEW! .PEPPERTREE IV and V. Outstanding apartments -2 ultra- EFFICIENCY take over lease $135, bills desirabie locations, outstanding layout, . pajd. No deposit. January fentpaid. 453­totally, different color scheme, close to • • :i'' • ''Y'-' !;:-r'V UT. 502-404 W. 35fh. $135-$149.50 (ABP) S169.50 (ABP) 472-8253. . 1 • ONE .BEDROOM ACt living, room, kitchen, bath, private, entrance, water Two BLOCKS UT, one lafge bedroom' furnished; Law student, couple apartments. CA/CH, carpeted,, cable, ^ preterr.ed, $110/month. .No .pets. After diShwashe'r; covered parking, laundry. six; 472-1091, available Feb. 1 AIJP $J4?.50. 477-8146, 2101. Rip Grande, HALF MONTH FREE RENT Large MINt APARTMENT. Open beam celt--furnished, one bedroom. CA/CH, cablle. ing,-shag carpet throughout, all built-in 258-1832. kitchen, color coordinated.GA/CM, pool near campus. 4000 Avenue A. $134,50 all- NEAR UNIVERSITY living-bedroom bills.paid; 452-5533, 436-4655. Central combination, kitchisn, private bath, AC. lnc Qutet, mature persQn, 906 Wesl 22nd. EFFICIENCY TO SUBLET: Vi block-EFFICIENCIES. $115 plus electricity. shuttle, bills paid, $135. 108 West 45th. tington Ville. 46th and Aye. A. 454-8903. Pool, AC, carpet.-paneling, no pets. Hun­ Call 454-0555.; ~ » BIG DEAL. 4 bedroom apartment fur* apartments. Good location, near xam'^ 5PAC.1PUS 2 BEDROOM.,furnished nished, ABP, on UT bus route, Riv«r pus. shopping-centir^ ahds shuttle-bus: Hills Apartments, 444-W7.: — AllbiW|SgTdrFw'iiioi'ftrfformatlon,"CaH­454 9475 ­ ONE BEDROOM River Hills Need .someone take over lease until May. or NEW THIS WEEK !Ponce.de Leoij l11, Longer. 441-2181. 444-3886. 22nd-and Sani Gabriel. Extra Jarge two ° bedroom, two bath apartments ABP. Most outstanding apartments In thew-. UNF. APARTS. LAKE AUSTIN, quiet country ilviiM, BELLSON DORM for mart. Excellent winter rates. IS minutas to. com> heme cooked-meals, AC maid,-iwmi­pu^S°^"t0*'nl!!#w '<*"d3 Ndroem mtag pool-2610 Rio Gnii^ty-iiM. •mobila homos. S7W140. Houseboatstao. Mack's Marina. 177-ini, 327-US1. ,, | 2~BEDROOM MOBILE HOME. Near 472-4331 dose to campus SINGLE AND DOUBLE vacancies. Co­^ *d, AC, maid, walk tocampus. Unlvorai-BEAUTIFUL 2 bedroom heusev CA/CH, ty Hduse. 2710 Nueces. 4774371. -furnished, jtrtilitlw. yard; SlW/momtl plus blHs. S27-2192 or 45M6W. ROOM ANOBOARO Vacancies.Overt! .*> or Oraduate woman, warm, friendly ''bwr,'5f. UNF. HOUSES WILL PAY «200toanyoA« whowllftilai TWO BEDROOM. Near UT, five Mocks over, contract for a private room for east of IH3S. *l2S/month plus Mils. 327-mal« atContessa. 477-*m ka«|i tryin|.0425^--•" " 1 FIVE BEDROOM older horn*. Niar *** downtown; 3 blocks east of IH35. S2«5/month plus bill*. 327-0425, ^ FURN. DUPLEX ,; ip, SPACIOUS MODERN CA/CH, walk-in closets, 1 OOOKSMviVvlif * * wjMlwr. ttfyer, dlshwash* (tutfygi M!0' UNF. DUPLEXES NEW TWO BEDROOMS'fully carpeted,CA/CH, SM0/montMy, no bill*. Near shuttle, 3pop Catalina,.Southeast. Three bedroomr two bath, fully carpeted,CA/CH, firepwee, $200.2313-B La Casa, Southwest. NORTH, 2 BEDROOMS, carpeted,fireplace, garage, patio, fenced yard, CA/CH, dishwasher, disposal,near shut­tle. $165.926-7369 * ' ROOMS LIBERAL AAALE. Very nlce furnished' room with bath. Bills and cable paid. •• •1 Refrigerator andcooklng top.Naar cam-. PUS. S100. 453-4652 LOST & FOUND ^100 REWARD for male Wekt Highland '• ~ Whiteftrrier. Looksllkeawhitt.$«ottlt. == PHOENIX — Lost December 17. If found please call vyaiK one mocK to campus, single and 459-8802 1 double rotirns, lounge with color TV and Extra, large hotel beds, HOBBITT OFFERS' $5.00 for TSturn of shag carpets, dally maid service. Hot small grey cat Withlight markings.Last plates allowed. No extra charges. -seen running across GUadalupe,in front.: Singles $89.50; Doubles S49.S0 of Varsity Theater towards UnWarslty 476-9265 477-5777 Methodist Church. Cat is wearing white: collar.Please callAmanda: Sanders,454­8452, She wants her Kitty-cat. PASO HOUSE -LARGE MANILA CNVCLOPEr^omer" 18th and San Antonio. Contains (MEN) valuable. REWARDI Owner >138. 442-3878. • . Sprlng semester, large rooms, CA/CH, refrigerators, Maid service, hot plates REWARD. LOST Blue Merle Collie. allowed, parking space. Single $90; Dou, Grey'with black spots. 8W months old. ble $50. All Bills Paid. ;"-.-; ­ "Matthew" lost 30th-Red River. 477­ 1808 west. Ave. 5;*r Ph. 478-3917 3125, 4774146, Jan. ­ LOST: SILVER BRACELET with tur­ f, TEXAN DORM ­ >' 1905-1907 Nueces < Fall, Spring semester — $46.50/month. WILL PAY $5 for silver.bracelet lost-onDally mala service, central air, com­East campus Saturday, Call 472-2347. pletely remodeled. Also available -­Nancy Call. single rooms, packing, refrigerator.Hot Plaws allowed. Two blocks from cam­LOST BLACK/GRAY CAT Six months. pus. Co-ed. Plnk,c6llar with barrel. Vicinity Lake -RESIDENT MANAGERS 477-1760 Austin Bldv. 472-0734. FURN. APARTS. NEW EFFICIENCIES 6T5 NELRAY : • STOVE •NEARtSHUTTLE • REFRIG_>.^ •SHAGCARPET ­ • DISHWASHER •SWIMMING POOL • DISPOSAL •LAUNDRY PRONE 459-5647 K 837-2030 V "J.B. Goodwin Co. M HELP WANTED , • We have <-ti an opening for noonjeashieripand grill help. We offers $1.70 starting pay-;;Scholarship Plan r; Vi price on food 'm. flexible Hour$ ^Rrofit Sharing t FOR RENT SUBLEASE OFFICE or small business space. Two blocks from campus. Call 453-8983 after 4:00 ., ' • •• ••* ** > • NORTH BLUFF ESTATE, ' A truly friendly community, come look us Over, We.can be neighbors and enjoy the following: tealonal^mtn ;pavadsl.^aets,}! olt-»tnat iNMlclrnr &ht paffos, storage «*a,-.a a club house with lliard^room, laun­ lounge, kitchen and bllliardj'oom, _ dry facilities, picnic areas with outdoor grills, 2 well-equipped playgrounds and an Invitingpool.Quiet country livinglust ' 10 minutes south of DowndownAustin on ^ IH 35, Bluff Springs exit/-Monthly rent starts at just $H. Ad|acent. to the . Mminty Clay golf course. , <600 ELM CREEK OR, a&il' 441-1627 E« TRAVEL UT COMMUTOR deSlres tofoTrhCarpool ' from Belton-Temple area to UT dally. : 947-5178 evenings. r ^ IversHy areaI. Call Rod Wetsel at 472­ , r_ ——,-Apply 2-J Hamburger 89416r 472-8Z53: ' ".v 870-3371 'Wm§£ *149.50" ALL BlLLS PAID. 1 ^ ilshed, CA/CH, near furnished,_CA/CH, built-in kitchen, neaj fjf ^^EhgliiftAird^ campus. 4307 Avenue At 4S1-7878, 47^­ 4655..Central Properties Inc. Efficiencies, studios, 1, 2, and 3 bedrooms, furnished or un SIX.BLOCKS from Law School; 2 blocks furnished, and ail the extras shuttle BUS. One bedroom $135. AC, carpdt, dishwasher, .disposal, walk-In you ex-pect — {ike laundries, closets, 32nd and Interregional. 472-3995. saunas; exercisjsrooms, game rooms, pools, putting green, MINI APARTMENTS, also one and two bedrooms:' Close to campus/ Fully PLUSa areatrestauram carpeted, CA/CH, rich wood panellnft the CricicetCfub. Soon poel.-ett bunt-in*itehen. From $lt9-.Jft" &ea"waTerpolop6ollif. 4200 Avenue A,454-6423,476^46^5, Central. Properties lnc" " , ball courts, tod. Come Join us ONE BEDROOM STUDIO, full -i From $145 carpeted, buiiMff kitchen, pajeony~offc 444-'1 bedroom, pool, l1'* baths. Convenient to 2101 Burton campus and Highland Mall. Available unfurnished $150, furnished $155 bills (offEastRiversldeJ: ,0. Nn,.K. J 454-3837,: 476-465$. "NORTHEAST. Huge land 2 bedroom. : v Complete kltchens, lotsof storage. From age. PEACEFUL WEST AUSTINwCdforJul )4»r t St. Johns. $125 plus electricity. 1402-Eesf efficiencies and 1 bedrooms. »ms.Shag, com- (by Reagan High School! 454-1583. 47&• . . •pleft. -kltchen,..-near Enfield~ ' shuttle. -. SAM. •*», ;-r^, From $139 ABP 1211 West 8th (off Blaiv f. a CO) 474-1187. 476-26^3. , MOW^lEfciiairidnaMeiuWi^ • ' -• ^ d«"fn* nfonth free on tfnetMroom iTEPS TO UT 1 81 2,b«room efflclert­or (wo bedroom apartment. Larger than cies, Nice pool area, stuHy room, orien-ayirMe, privat* Mfios, gafand witer $ , nil tgrnlshlngs-Prom$139ABP. ^5East: rei fgfnishiogi. From1 pald^Cocated northnear |H3S. $1504165, >lst,47^jiy. 476-2633 Mtthen funiished. AC/Clj. Call^52-9»51 IET ENFIELD AREA. One bedroom h bullt-lns, vaulted ceilings. Smau COMFORT, CONVENIENT 2 rtor| community living. $139.50 plus electrici­-townhouse apartment. 2Miedroom», . ty, 801 West Lynn. 477-8871, 476-2633. NORTHEAST NEAR SHUT-TLei. -HighlandMall,VCapltolFweia,Large1­ f,1bedroom with all the^extras. From TUTORING $137.50 plus electricity. 1105 Clayton UlW 453-79TtU78?203l r,|" WATHTUTORING that youjcan uoders- ESlENDLy .PEOPLE. Largo 20-i| —tanrf. SemesterratesavalUbie. 476-4757. small community, Jt^st a Walk ..™ UT„. ^ .. a ... , .. with beautiful courtvart and wl-From SHYSISHYSICS, MATH TUTORING, Ex­ -J200 #»Pi>4i^„ West -Mrien< st Mth, f72-6M0v476^. ...Mrienced grad student. Prebfem solv­'?633.p:.' . Ing. 451 kw 451-2013,452-82l0orleavehumberat. &^-391ELivlQCth Lamar: " VETERANS O SOMETHING NEW-THIS YEAR! FOR THE t tutu bestpart-time job in , AUSTIN11 ... Wiii THE W8. T E X A S ^A I?MY GUARD is3isi5i®i dpi rAN^fQUiAL UNITY EM^t-OVfel ESEE Page 22 i=rid»y/January 25r 1974 1WE ©AILY TEXAN " ' MM' mm ''SKSSSEB1 v,JhRI­ tiM­ „ ROMT ANSI COUNTER attendant*}, ,nibftation.Mester Valet Cleaner*. Mi Surely consymerisnvsomeday Will rival A1 &aters who have recently;been riotifteSSwPf. •w*"* WHWHItW##, Binding ^ y .. ..' >.. 'eicaa Staff Writer consumption in popularity, fit fact, I am the government-imposed cutback on theifcO iCompjtt* Professional 1TCHEN HELP NEEDED. inwrwdlat#; One of the more interesting "isms" io only surprised that no onehasyet devised This weeTc We Coifiljfeat PULL-TIMETyj>li»g*J Heflinl jrtir the hearts of the American populace m do-it-yourself consumer protection kit gasoline, stations supplies. Dealers will receive only so per*|$| takes a look at some ANTEOi CASHIER for Vagal . 4# years is consumerism. ' and made a fortune from it. In time, located on or near The Drag. This survey M A •e. Perfect for students Y< Certainly consumers (Webster defines, •$S8L someone with enough good old Yankee in* was made Monday and all prices are sub* o jpftfh of wtthdirt pictortL Call m-im after 7 Pi*!.; igs 'i **consumer" as "one thai utilizes* genuity will no doubt comftiercialize fcon-ject to change. Some stations provide son, owner of the Conoco star . ItkMfi • '-Vp T© «NGr. UK* people? economic goods") have been around a ^umerism. ... < < ifon at 3402 Guadalupe St., joked that b&% interregional now more services thanothers, and some take *W eojwtft his place into a liquof storej®­ --* Consumer Union Seeing the great potential of this more creditcards than others,Thesurvey 15^1 ^ -;'.v .'f.v :•"! oegaft; so interestm consumerism is not-promising new "ism,'' The Daily Texan 4Weedbft v^to the most vocal of the sta-,,.. will, however, give a good comparison of SltfERt*). Mostlyafternoon* • .exactly new. tion ownersinterviewed. Heindicated tha^ hereby initiates a weekly column on eon­ Ithtw0*mailvO*m*il children.children Shuttle busq»k present prices. octane ratings and hoursot _ the big oil companies are trying to force'1' TYPING II . f jwient. Call before noon. *77-»4} \ r *There is a ffeeling that a lone consumer, *. 4k* «U.11 A A \ --,, -sumer affairs. The column is designed to operation/for a limited number of I A the small dealers dut, to convert to aelf^M Ri»liontiv4)V^ing PROFESSIONAL' 1 no longer stands on equal footing with the be of interest to you, Joe or Jane Student, Guadalupe Street stations. , ... . FiWJrWkAl AlTElSertAfWl.* service operation. This elimination of th^ff^ .i?yi>AlTER5/«*AlTF6SsiiiiwiKic-multitude of giant corporations, Con­* consumer, you wage your average as Because of the gasoline shortage, most Ssmornlng and evening, Guar*' middle-man could havemany Implications^ sumers have, therefore,, joined together . idwadaiupE* .LekeWayJi^SIMiofc-^ never-ending fight against high prices. stations have troublekeeping enough fuel ^ '.M< __ for their own protection. •• t-fey for con^uii(iers. . poor quality merchandise, and worst of on hand. The 7-11 store manager at 2850 If it seems untair that small dealers are % 'jPART TIAaI EMPLOYMENT, Astro , ~ Whatever the explanation.one thingcan v"^­ . leaners. ?r*:30a.m. M-F,>5Saturday, all, misleading advertising. Wf Frutft St. reports thatit takes from one to being kicked into the street,.consider that -' T& . m Call 4W-4H4W appointment. -be said unequivocally—nobody consumes W-,'Thwir The Compleat Consumer will be raking two weeks'for him tq get more gasoline Weedon says most of his profits tome^v I frofeislonaf Resumes PART TIM£ EMPLOYAAEWFT553®T Qualll like the American consumes. Consump­. a weekly survey of certain retail es-once he runs out., lie Texaco at 3016 from repairs and the sale of tires and ­ v, Scientif i«t^-.v'R«ertafiofi tion stands as rather sacrosanct in our tablishements in the area to provide you D«v the Draf *-Next HGourmet I Creek Blvd Guadalupe St. may just remain closed the pumps out,'ii 5r *,w'~ fj/JGMt." «3S »$ other accessories. Gasoline culture. It is our inalienable right to con*.,­ with a time-saving comparison of retail '1 ' " 1 '"" " ' 11 'j-. MASSEUSE NEEDED. Applyln person rest of this month< * front are often just lures to promotemOre'r^' ll'll* •; *w+'- prices. Suggestions of items you would There is general discontent among the profitable;purchases. . . . UAHn • , I AM" (IfliuAriliu^ anil M,:wWwf •Hp PART TIME VtORK. 20-25 hours, par week. (300/month. Call 4J2-27St. • '^1 NOW HIRING for evening thlft. Full or >Ga%Co%p' Provides iER¥ICE||l La»t Service part firm. Dairy, Queen wast on Bee J/«SC •• • •' Covet Road nev zllkar Park. 3274Mk ,«,^:fpewi 9-t. Mon-Th t. M Frl-Sat »*Pobie Center 1 ROOMMATES -21 -A tdjE' Automobile Services MACE SECRETARIAL SERVICE: uNDA;HHreiavs;:s'gg: giiSi§!&".j£»£«fj«tist'>" "A M --47J. ,r '>»wr Univorrtty work.^Fasli aeCUiat# "IP. '*!;f"' KduCation, envlronmanC aiu ona|>ie. ^rlnflng-Bfndlnjj.Pr' " " Mriv The members range from eatOhM — lour, FEMALE NSEOEOitlare onebedroom fairness in business dealings. JL. • apartment. Near campus. *7J/month, Xerox AAtJItilith students to distinguished .EXPERIENCED TYPIST. Graduate Shuttle. Call Holly 47M601'attar Spm, Although still known to elderly men—people from all „andundergradUata.worH. Choiceottype Transparencies many as ttie "gas co-op", the walks of life. " And. *lie*. Barbara Tuilo*. 4& AAALE ROOMMATE wanted to »har* s^lz4. ) -S.;7?^.J large two bedroomi two bathroom, • Master-Maker CAC does not sell gasoline. Requirements for becoming' u a^rtment. Riverside area, fill 472­ ' ./THESES, DISSERTATIONS TYPED. Room $14 The operation of a gasoline a CAC member include a per­ faT^o^ftSr;^^, 2 MALEI to share largl3. The Texas Union station Was, however, the manent membership fee of |6, m presentsl*"* A-"?? . bedroom us 'A bill* and Monday-FrFday 8am-5pm original idea behind.its a current address for t£> TYPING WANTED: S0-/page. 472'42t£ • deposit, Call Oave,-' -031), ant. 3«i Xali bgfore |am and after.3:30 p.m. ^ after « p.m.' 4« copies organization. ' fSyi>. newsletter distribution and Ms. Grigasy explains the -.VIRGINIA SCHNEIDER Diversified ROOMMATE TO SHARE 2/2 mobile participation, to peirpetuate •ihe ServicO*. Graduate, and undergraduate home with tenlor. CA/CH, pool, HSjM. reason for their failure at the the co-op. 'mm plus half bill*. 315-5102. * !jKle®4j?720SnB' b"ld'!>g' VS Koox'S start in selling gasoline: "We mf AAALE GRAO NEEDS Roommate io mJohnson & -MS. GRIGASY SAIDthat Experimental had to sell 50,000 gallons of Multilithing, Typln9, share nice 2 bedroom apartment near , out of the present 2,700 SR shuttle. 444-5404. f1# Associatesm: gas a montii at-a station to members,.1,500 are active. V M Ensemble l^eak eVeh. Even the 1 Xeroxinotf^ fNEED PEJtSON to locate and share „ -> P»' •' ' Aus-fex m houte, prj•aferably North AOttin. Call 2200 Guadalupe; ,$uite SKumrock station on Barton ; "Active means participa­ 4 ^ik|Luis 477-1227, ? -V , L4 — DUPLICATORS' 220 Springs. Road, which ^ keeps tion of some sort by either­ iiirSEAAALE ROOMAAATE NEEDED im­ ^ mediately to -sfiajha nice, furnished one Word Procesiing -Stutfenl pretty busy alii the vtftn^ attending the quarterly* •The "n ^ bedroom "apartment,ar~ dose to IF shuttle. and Business Typing, Tax doesn't sell that much.". meetings or assisting in dis­ > S75 ptwsjblllIlls. Terrle after 5:00.451-9016, \i_! -118 Neches- and Notary Services.-Selling 50,000 gallonr^f tributing newsletters and HorbieHancock ROOMMATE. Beautiful COMPLETE . Juif Nortfi if""57th NEED MALE THE month, even-if possible, sxip i four bedroom apartarfment. Cascade*. All BUSINpSS I'jxt leaflets," she noted. iwsm Guiddalupe K bill* paid. Shuttle. 137.50/mpnth, 441- Quintet* r> fc* ^ wouldn't have been worth the V, ^f§P«»65.'>8965. ' SERVICE COMPANYi % effort, because eveni then the M Inactive members are not ^;-Cail 472-8417 Today! £S# TWO FEMALE ROOMMATES'of one. « i Three bedroom Est/ada Apartments. co-op couid only afford togive J penalized as of .yet, but Ms. ,t- S Call Sherfy, Becky after 5:50, 447-3340; a 1-cent discount. Grigasy reported that it was iTne lik FEMALE HOU5EAAAE WANTED! Own Xerox or IBM AS A decided at the last ISC \uA Hn 4wr\a 'Vr'^room, fenced yard, ER shuttle. S90 bills ifevT CO/ we 00 Ty pe ,^,K paid, coil Diane 47A-SM7. now keeps in stock a Jarge membership meeting to sur-. Chuck ^angione 4c COPIES variety o^ automotiveMparts charge all inactive members Freshman thOTieSK", NEED FEAAALE roommates to there 'v larg* Victorian house. Private rooms, Reduction Capability to 24 *36 suchtas tires, tools, batteries, starting in April. not start out wijtesC8*¥s-m-^!#0/*"bl,,t pald-c"'477-oil and specialty equipment. lor 453-3537. Hie GAC is assocfaled'wi^v good grades! ' Printing, Binding^^ ?The co-opmembers buy this THIRD ROOAAAAATE needed to share 2 v the various other local br/2ba.apartment:Own room;*10 ABPi equipment at the Iowest cost Spanish Villa-North apt*. CR shuttle. of •"Austin Cooperatives;" In 472-321O and 472-7677 4»«049, Tom or Randy. possible and mark up prices12 addition, the CAC sponsors« GINNV'S 40 ® percent, enabling a 20 to FEMALElRdOMAAATE to share large 2 such community projects as br. apartmenton shuttlk. Calleither 451-l°mDviMr 40 percent saving on most 3S75 or 4S3-0523. the Alternative Community •Wed./Feb. 6/Mtinici|al Aud./7^0 pm *%\ HELP WANTED FEMALE $HARE 2-1 duplex, o'Wn ,/S£RV!CI pMaucts-Tax, supports the Gulf In addition to autoparts, the or bedroom.' 21 older. CA/CH, Wfw Boycott Coalition and is . '"^Pptional fee holders 500/Hogg Box Office 1Q-6' dailv/'Jan, 29-Febi 6. > -flCHCVRON OIL COMPANY -western1 sCS/month, V4 bills! West Austin, near CAC also realized the need for v Division, wholly owned subsidiary of shuttle. 471-4523. < organizing a committee on.J •^General Public $3.50. $4.50, $5.50/Hogg Box Office 10-6 dally/Jan. 31rFeb, 6. " -Standard Ottr Company of California, car repair services. They 42 Dobie Mali 476-9171 headquartered in Denver, Colorado, will -FBMAui COUPLE' :ilve In three consumer education. Classes"1 Jl seats reserved. ifW 's have a representaflvtion campusat 9:00 -bedroom house.-. W«lfer,~ dryer, fenced: , ) attempted to operatea garage on car1 -T^tf.m. January 30, 1974 to^; Interview backyard. $83.33 month P.B. north 454-Free Parking a year ago, but as problems are planned Petroleum Land ^Management ma|or*^ ecological ."for employment awgraduation for the . Open 75 hour$ a week arose during the course of maintenance and ay cias*. lmerestfd *ehior« of ttti»-'' transportation. several months, the idea had iclass should contact Mr. OndKey, dlrec-, MISCELLANEOUS COPY SHOP li V , tor of Placamertt^ er-Dr, Nick. to be.abandoned. -.Woodward, your adW*ory-; . > ; RBC/Bond Paper Super But instead, the co-op now Copies Typing has a referral list of 18 to 20 s. HOLIDAY HOUSE1'NO. CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING ORDER BLANI mechanics who have agreed ^^rWe hava lobi ^pen for cashier -:c,'production worker to work' part-time to charge reasonable rftt$s 'noon*. Company has txcell#nt mm and to rebate a percentage to scholarship prOgram to offef to college ;students. Apply at Holiday House No * •^7t|e'coH^ ; 1003 Barton Spflhgs'.Road.vBetwMi 474 "24 ; Abacus Services Pictures' " Binding Printing •.sp.m.dally, Kfeloora'pH 'rlntlna PY" MfeSS;. mm,.,.:,, Save Tlme.'x^ Save AAoney Next to Gourmet on the Drag llllltf COLLEGE GRADUATES * t •_ ,jL2L4^*e2 79Qife or Urnm WUhhnwW *flCi»ftrt J^J VC U quired ^graduattnpsenior orgradoater- STUDENT i£Jkj3& "tr.i-TT -• five figure incomewith *3,000 bonus iWth .an{tual trips to Austl'nParachute Cerft adding machine repal .. > repair®®? '' s Acapulco, Europe, end Hawaii. Working IP Reatonable rates. "• in area*of college* and universities,cell >?-, For Information please jbalif' Sales, Service, Rentals. HOUSING Oeorge Furqueron,Monday through Fri- MesierCharg* BankAmericard day 10: pjn.if*. 477-3757.& * ;272-5?ll jsnytime --Coll 474-4239 ­f > w.1..'*• ifl>" '.'fi" ABC TYPEWRITER CO;-­Zuni ,'tndlan , ifjSr.ee pidtiup and,delivery. xlcan imports. ? 444-3(14., Closed AAondays. CATCH THfi BYE DAN'S TYPEWRITERS and 'H 6e happy doing" th$"thing you tike best,. LEARN io PLAY OUITAR. Begmnor Calculators. Sales, service, rental*. All mbltes. 24M San Gabriel. 474-63M.' -.. r *•>'•' -"is.-•: CUSTOM PICTURE FRAMING. HINT, BUY--,, CLIP AND MAIL TODAY! •VKS; talking to paopie on the fefepnoiie. New and admancttf. Draw-Thomawn. 4lt* WE BUY ANOSETL best quality used Hlghetl quality, lowest prices In town. _ .. cldthlng. Try us. oorothyfs1^11,3^ Cell Tom 4414NM. Will fraipe anyming. n San AAarcos Street. 477*2ft|S. 0#eh , OR sea flmto S:^t ci<»*ad yyednesdays and i WRITE YOUR AO HERE —, JOB WANTED SOMETHING? 3EQ WANTE anrnix minimum >» li K«r «,rtiMr TV .RE.'iI?L black and White jS.OO Jl For further •T^ ^ . ' . . " "'" ' 1 — ' ; >r r. •»-' swr*'r"r-s,'. s Or call . rcau Aa'rry Adair, «53<"haftffSpMn sS^-bR,^.'^7"^' REATtVE CKI^O CARE •fV^,?n?"u<^^:BFTDR?NK3 4»^r^^ We appreciate in your resjd4>9ce,tor children who want return bottle* *4.00 per ca«e.. 5415 No^h MS/XT.rdSlvetyonel3iSaR?,!r. SSil!r5Si3La"#v#r,Be' , TbmM iiilflnimi-ffnirti ^isse^ssssaia Was ' LEAD SHEETS Melody, ehordi, lyr|c*" ,#arn,n« l*obt«ms Judity Michaels. @^3 tor copy % -,.,}..44it0624 . -j: : RfecEf^flONlST II Jbn. 44*081, v perhour sSO.OOperweekend ' Amount IncfocMf * " r ~ * i ll*e thi* handy chart to quickly drrivo UNCLASSIFIED ' ot cost. » Number at Day* TEXAN . Mail to: ) WANTED Recwded blastl Qla) 477-37«. : 1(15 word minimum; HVW«^?l«lp-; S10 a tw«Sad.TS«-H»r No* Times Times MI1Y TEXAH CUSSIFIIDS Times IAMS BuyT'seii -'ail type* glrley magatln«P CLASSIFIEDS limb iTELEPrtQNE bi^s-records-gglun-stere<>s*rao>M-> AKC Oalmation pup*. M0.474-U3i. Wenis ' M • 1 t S 10 20 P.O. I0X D . lit STATION -SAliES. tirrt« ti«i - 'AUSTIN, "**173712 #« | xABfrxrrJxs Cest per werd 10 It 35 1.20 . bust %use pfaMi, raatonable. 474-1100. Herred. Hourly guarintee. E#m m 1100, weekly OeyShHf orl 451-M74 -lor Bob Dylan ticket* wanted. «SM11». 15 1J0 5.25 9.00 2M pp V.,. L.«. M RUVKtll — RT TIME TYPIST; will pe ' tT * TA " '•ah'MJk'. '' 'M"" w*1 *Hi,«wpm.T»eal 5.95 IWfr 20^40 V1—* L ^ ~ " i 1 * >' * Ic. Send retumo LC P.Q. I%MDUS. ET«K isioo "T A«Mtin( Te^as tJO 124 4.30 10.00 200 IJITY,: ^ ^ ^ t>, ' (*» Triumph Wltflre UU.474-1741. „ >. O- " X- 1- •ursr; .. -2-— ttf-'torrtnt *tTi7twr«W»ii^r^ ~ T.fO ^.42 L JM :Mtohe*tjaM Smitt cutewpp^Chw^555BT 59|4J3-7l»orrfiir i A m Frfdayr^aouary 25, 1974 THE DAILY TEXAN m lr-lfeV ^*1 i •>, I * HOUSTON (AP)1^-A defendant in thfe Henley testified Thursday, "1 asked him where17 bodies werefound, includingthai Houston mass torture-murder case what he thought abouta lawyer—whether of Charles Cobble, 17. < . testified Thursday no one told him of his I neededoneor notfor theCorll killing.He £-Henley is to go on trial next week iig*> .constitutional Fights beforehe gavedetait-^said, 'No,' he probably wouldn't even f3e Cobble's death, but Ids lawyer said h$j ed statements to police.. ^charges on me on that one." < plans to seek a six-months delay. Instead,said Elmer Wayne Henley,17, a Henley said he relied on Mullican's ad-.Gray subpoenaed about 40 newsmen detective told him he might have "a ne^ ^ vice during this period. Thursday and indicated he will call 30 vous breakdown or a heartattackand die" ? "He wanted me to tell him about those more to testify at a tearing on delaying . it he didn't lead officers to the 27 bodied f bodies. 1told him I had nothing to say. I the trialS <0; V* 41# ^7T W HENLEY SAID he asked officers1 was crying real hard. He told me I tod m Henley^iMd 'Jtfet tefofT^vhfc repeatedly for a lawyer but they either better tell him about it or I might have a written statementto MullicanheaskedtoitC .persuaded him to forget the request or ig^ . nervous breakdown or a heart attack and a telephone book to find the number oK riored it. I -die," said the defendant. Samuel Plotkin; his lawyer. , * < . Henley, looking 10 years older than his ' HENLEY SAID that for about eight "HE (MULLICAN) said he didn'thave*-, 17 years, lolled in the witness chair as he hours before Corll was shot he had drunk phone book in the office. Just beforfe b££ answered questions from his lawyer, Will beer and ' moonshine whisky, smoked started typing (thestatement) I astedhini|;5 Gray. He talked easily, smoking ~ marijuana, taken a marijuana derivative again ifbe thoughtI ought togetalawyer.-: Cigarettes and at times smiling and known as THC and sniffed acrylic paint. He said a lawyer would tellme just toshu&. chuckling. The junior high school dropout said lie up and I shouldn't do it." Henley's lawyers in the current pretrial was "hung over, haU.drunk and.stoned" That night at a jail in San Augustine^hearing aretrying to persuadethe judge to when he shot Corll. County near where police found the bodiec throw his statements out- of court. They Henley said he suffered recurring of four youths, Henleysaid he talked tohi> arenot denying that he made them — only blackout periods in the next three days. mother on Uie telephone and asked her that they cannot be used as evidence. £j|Those periods, he testified, included the have Plotkin call him.1, " i7 -J • r $ V' ' "Henley1_ was arrested Aug. 8 after * four different times that police said two "At that time,Mullican saidif and when ^Shooting Dean Corll, 33, to death. officers and two justicesof the peacewere my lawyer called he would get me to the!'# POLICE SAY Corll was the leader of a warning him of his right to remainsilept phone," Henley said. Homosexual murder-tortuo&iiDg and that and.to haye^''KiWyeri^;:;fS)il§|^^^^-week Sheriff John Hoyt of San Henley and David Owen Brooks, 18, ONE OF THE blackout penods,'"Henriy "' 7vngtfSWne testified Plotkin did' call that procured youths for him at fSOO each. The $ald, included the time police said he was night but Hoyt refused to call Henley to Slaying,ofXorll was ruled self-defense. leading them to a Houston bo^t shed the telephone. *^,TeleFl?le During 90 minutes of cross-examination ­ Belgian Tragedy - in the afternoon, Dist. Atty. Carol Vance Thesfbtu* ef Blessed Virgin looks down over the entrance students escqplll the blaze. Bodiei 6f some of the victim*" ' K took Henley over the events leading toand art Boys School in Heusdon, Belgium, where Legality of Lobbyists Sacred Heart con be seen through the window at loft. Folic* said the after the shooting, of Corll. To almost 23 students died during a flash fire Wednesday. Fotty firomay have been cautedbyayouthimokingin bed. every question, Henley replied: "I don't know." -f Most of the questions brought astring of Questioned: by Daniel objections from Gray but, in most cases, By LORRAINE L. GUTIERREZ Senate he was overruled. delegates are unaware of the action The legality of the 90 registered lob­ At one point, Vance asked, "Did you tell against the lobbyists. Dean-you would kill the other two if you byists influencing delegates to the. An opinion from the attorney general Constitutional Convention has been got loose?*' usually takes from one week to two questioned by convention president Price otSCrud^Oil Price "I MAY HAVE,".Henley said. "I don't -months, he said. SPU-. Daniel Jr. ;know. I may have promised him $1 million Rep. Dave Finney of Fort Worth and' Daniel has safd the 1973 Lobby Control WASHINGTON (AP) — Senate^ :. Among other things, the measure would ing with a rollback in domestic crude oil and half of Texas." ' "jjJc Secretary of State Mark White Jr.also are Democrats expres strong support^ 'give President Nixon authority to order prices. • • • Vance asked if he couldn't recall any of Act specifically requires that the special asking Hill if lobbyists are: within legal- Thursday for a proposal to roll back the gasoline rationing. Mondale said his price resolution,would the details of Corll's death. "Mr. Vance, I interest groups state and register, what bounds. price of domestic crude oil. : : The energy question dominated the first save consumers |6 billion a year. suggest you go out and shoot a man and tifey are interested in, including bill Dan Looper, an aide to Finney, said numbers. The.support was voiced ata closed party Democratic caucus of the new con­The price of crude oil in November, then go out and grin about it," Henley Thursday that Finney is requesting an caucus, senators reported later.However, ~ baniel has asked Atty. Gen. John Hill, gressional session. Debate focused on a 1973, was $4.25 a barrel for so-called "old" said. ;v• "interpretation concerning the expen­ action on the matter was delayed by the resolution by Sen. Walter F. Mondale, P-Vance, after repeated questioning, final for a ruling ditures of the lobbyists and f 1 ... caucus awaiting hearings by the Senate Minn., for a rollback to November, 1973, and approximately 15.75 a barrel for so-ly ^ot Henley to admit "I understand seme of them (lobbyists) are just writing on their, registration Finance Committee. -prices—~—rr~-—'•—— called "new" or decontrolled oil. Old oil application to join the Navy last His concern is whether the associations : T' Meanwhile, the |; Mondale said he will introduce his currently is selling, for $5.25 a-barrel, . when he said he had never used drugs. li§forms that they are interested in matters also must file financial reports stating! to vote next Tuesday afternoon before the convention," Daniel said.. proposal as a bill. Jackson announced a "You said that because it would be their expenditures on the lobbyists,^emeigency energy bill stalledsince before similar measure. to an average of $10.35 per barrel. your best interest, didn't you?'' Vance "That is not the kind of disclosure that Looper said. Christmas. _ ^ .. With severalSenate committees becom­, -< was intended by House Bill 2 last year." _ In another energy-related development asked. i/Finney also questions whether the lob­ . Sen.,Russell B. lii8f,'D-La., indicated a ing involved in varous aspects of the Thursday, federalenergy chief William E. "At the time I thought it would,"Henley Carlton Carl, executive assistant to byists must file their financial reports on Daniel, said Thursday, "We read House move would be made to return thebill to a energy situation, Mansifeld annourced Simon criticized a proposal to impose a $5 • answered. i their spending to influence revision of the House-Senate conference committee. creation of a special panel, toconsider for­billion annual tax on U.S. energy produc­Bill 2 to state that all special interest state constitution. Henley gave Pasadena Detective Daniel After the agreement was reached for a ming a committee'tostaidy all matters in­tion. The tax, proposed by Sen. Mike groups must specify exactly what they White wants Hill to decide if lobbyists final vote at 4:$Q p.m. Tuesday, Senate volving energy, the environment and Gravel, D-Alaska, would raisefunds foran Mullican a written statement Aug. 9 ad­represent. The Lobby Control Act says must identify all those who paid a mitting he killed at least six of the 27 that the lobbyists must stalehow, why and Majority Leader Mike Mansfield natural resources.. ? ESiergy Trust Fund to finance government membership fee or contributed to suppor­ withdrew acloture petitionhe filed earlier The study committee will be headed, by projects to boost energy production. youths, testimony shows. what they are representing," ting theirassociation during the past year. in the day to bringa voteon ending debate Sen. Daniel K. Inouye, D-Hawaii, who Simon; testifying before a Senate . Before Mullican took the statement, Carl said that most of the convention i '•" 1 on M The officer said portions of .the movie, dry.oat, they will become brittle, Ms. Koble said. ' _ great for athletes" z-­ depict Vaughn as the officer who allowed ^ ^^ ^# "Oneway youcandisitroy them,andIhavedoitethis, is muCbe filled with distUl^. water. ; ; to wear them while using spray paint or hair spray," Ms^-Ruby to enter the basement of the Dallas Also, jthe wearer must use ssaline solution every time Schwab recalled^ " " -police station Nov. 24,1983. the soft contacts are put on, she said. "Saline solution, . _t. . , to soft tauef as "weird" because of theifeii _salt and water, is as near to our own tears as possiWe ^ fay th^ of thefr flexibility. I _ -Vaughn^ suit against Nat w '4¥o^can't fall asieep whUewearing Mt tensesorelse iSi^WMreFcan some lrritation if they are worn in­ -Pictures Corp., General Cinema Corp. ?f they will harden some and irritate yourf#es;^^£: put. Ms. Schwab'said. By holding orte up to t^ie light' Said. " on T*xas, and jciipt writers Mark Lane and Drug Adminiitration-approyedxoj^ contact laues are manufacturedby Bauschand Lombiif Rochester. N.Y., lhoudli some other companies are «* •K --.-m,''• ' ^ >"•1-:VT•f»g. '• idm*. . . Haines said |»rices for soft lenses vary from f195 to' 1300 while prkesfor hardlensesvaryfrotnfBOtolSOO •WW* Penn Jones asks for $1 million actual damages and $2 million in punitive damages, tt was filed Wednesday in IUJS.