v-Vi !??' • --«p~ . \yk ^ * \'' \ N ^ xmsM$ A -H.J * •»Vj? i ­ »&.. r-f^ ' . ... , ,». ... ... 5f vjft Student Newspaper at The University of Texas' at Austin -•s •< ii* Plant Struck by SAX/pS" flU fc$t» -rf- Cooling Tower 80-100% k-£S?i.1 By DAVID HENDRICKS : The cooling lower is used to condense to water steam Texan Staff Writer .which, had been used: to drive turbine generator^or the ipjassESsaasgi; JThe.cooling towerfor the UniversityJPhysicfal Plant jvas University's electricity. The tower had six oellst each with,a Wt-hy firo WfHnpgria'y afiprnnnp, sending black smoke and -• fanontopto-drawair upward from the bottom of each.cell. ashes over the University area fof' Mmost anhour. . riUs Mrnf w<"Hlfii itnrlifrl lilif 'rccftfttrfofirrrilr 'No injuries were reported. William Wilcox, director of the [• up the water which, dribbles downward being cooled;by the Physical i Plant, said the .tower was 80 to .100 percent-5 Jlow of air. -• , . ' ; v-N-._ •• • destroyed: ~ —v. '' . • •' -Thg-water is then piped back to the Physical Plant for-Cause of the fire has-Tiot yet been determined, although reuse,-Wilcox -said.. • Wilcox said the blaze apparently begari at the tpwer'stop. .At. the top of each cell, is electric-powered machinery to THE FIRE began minutes before 3 p.'m: At. times flames run the fans,. Lights' also are located on top, fie^Alaihed. . could be seen 30 feet high.The-Austin Fire Department was ;; THE TOP third-of the"Corrugated, fibet-glass siding was • called at 3:02; p.m. and responded, with nine fire-fighting ;} melted except at one place on the westside,; which was-burn-" companies.: ' ' -... " ;'\V to the basin. . After ed all the way the fire had. cooled, "Wilcox said University Fire Marshal Richard Borden will maintenance workers began retrieving ashes from the Water' " investigate the blaze to try tQ'iietermin'e.'Us cause^Wilcox . basin,:..... :,i. explained-iio estirriate of monetary loss could be masBe JIOW •\ Although Univereity buildings periodically are inspected—cilice.the tower, was built and expanded over a number of •-for fireSafety reports-the booting tower doies not fall intothe different projects. .. V ;';... • category of.a building and thus.inspectiorts areHot required,Campus-and .Austiri -police worked together to -keep p Wilcox remarked • v ' ' • onlookers at a safe distancefrom the blaze. At 3:25 p.m., of-f! -ficers moved onlookers northof the buiidihg oh 24th Streetto| (Related Story & Photoi, Page 16.) west Of,Speedway Street',' to keep persons troirrfrifralvng^" . possibly escaping chlorine, gas.'. .. _ „ —=— '• "" — =c.—MfILCOX.SAn).there isa chlorinaorcytinder in thetower's •' He stated the Universityhas no fire fighting equipment watef.basin'to keepalgae fromforming inthewateprA-large; -%eeause: •/the. City~4f. Austin-has too good of a—fire­tank of sulfuricacid at"thesouthwest corner.of the tawer was department;!­ f **"'4 ** .never in danger of eXplodingV Wilcox.added. ... Wilcox estimated the ftreJs-temperature reached between rt«*an StdK Photo by Marion.Taylor • Hesaid, "Obviousls, we willhaye toshutdownsomeorall ^_75(Land 1:000 degrees: of the generating capacity in that^uiiding1 (Hai C. Weaver. AT ITS June meeting, the Jpniversity .Sysfem'Boaird-Of ^' Smoke envelops the cooling4ower'during the blaze. ^ Heating aiiJ(i Power Plant). We will continue to generate Regents considered possible expansion.of the power plant :­electricijSdwer in.the^as turbuies which are:in the building because of present constructiph projects. The board ap­immediately east-of..the.co6ling station, The rest of the pointed a project engineer, Power Syst^ms of, Houston; , power: required to run the University^will come from tHe" which recommended the purchase of a $4:5-mTiiion steam ; City." turbine generator between 1976 and 1979. • . . ! Wilcox explained Uj^Unw^rs%already had befeh purchas-However, the.UniversUy would have to make some ad­ Cities Win Court Ruling •! ing 5percent ofits pf^^iromAustin. Without theuse oi the ditions to its present equipment by 1979 at a cost of $20,000 cqoling tower, the Univ^ity.vwiil-have to purchase 40 to 50 and purchase two additional 30 megawatt transformer ties " PBK^NI'af iK |UIUJHI fiv»^ Av^'n'/n siftwtion whirh will last, with the City of Austin by 1980-81 Cat an estimated cost of • For Extra Lo-Vaca at least several months, he said. , . -$2.1 million) to helpmeet electrical demand through 1982-3 ?« ALTHOUGH THE city,'s power will not be cheap,"it's still What thecooling tower firedoes tothe regents' plans could'i . By NICK CUCCIA . • Railrpad Commission has.ijo.course but .agreements with Lo-VacaSvere beyond ~ 'better thaij closing down the school," tie said. not be determined Wednesday. • • — • ;. "exan Staff Writer to comply." . „ • *' the commission's jurisdiction. . •k.' ,v-s Austm and San Antonio won another The. commission contended it had no However, the courtsaid, "Under these" T undzWednesdayziaJhe^teUle^or;their^autftority jo apportion gas supplies and^-™. transactions, nothing more 'has -taken .r 8a*--—"'••""fnni^.d^-r«UMta-for'jieli>-hv--ft«iWn;— place-than-'-the segregation-of specific • .T 1SCourit o:f Civd Appeg^Is ruled San Antonio and the LCHA. An AUstin~""*resmes-fin-ihesp^ific bene'ftt-oM-Bar-' that the Texas Railroad-Commission has district court ov-erruled the com-ticular Customer; authority to forceLo-Vaca Gathering Co.­mission's stand, and the appeals court-When-such-tr/ansaetions-impairto­ tP divert supplies of'gas'from commer­ affirmed that decision,Wednesday.. . sfssKVaca's ability ttf serve its -general_cjal.customers to the two cities and the • . In their suit Against the commi'ssionMil system customers,; th«i' impermissible Lower. Colorado .River Authority" —ATist)ff, San Aiitonio,-and-ihg-LGRA~-discrimination-appgflrR whirh requires v 4LCRA). ^claimed a LoA'aca contract .with Texas. i hi " r""" ""regulation by the,commission:" -i•••' The commission will appeal the ritl'uig Utilities Fuel Ca.(TUFCO)v • wliicfiT': ..to the,.TexasSupreme Court said Frank Serves Dalla^ and Fort ftbrth, allowed ®aware-they were dearing with' a natural,. • f 'Youngblood, director of the gas utilities: r330"million cubic-feet5of^3^'pertlay^tabe^~-gasditility-wh"ea41jey^dealt4iWthiiOn be proved innocent of any wrongdoing ia::* Department of" Housing and Urban Development' in tlijs affair "/ Washington. -. •• ,— * .'•'r'" The indictment said that the chargesstemmed from an efi-. ' . In return for the contributions,HUD. would bepressured to <; Joiztrto'raise funds ih( exchange for influencing the use of« i»* give favored treatment to those builders and developers in if-k pj •>. "government housing'and mortgage money. The senator alsoJ^si; awarding contracts for government-sponsored housing and was accused of participating in covering up the scheraej , mortgage insurance, the indictment asserted. defrauding the government and lying to the grand jur/ '. , The indictment listed 115 overt acts a's part of the-con-' ^ v; THE SECRETART~Df-the Senate^said_ the la§t-;sitting­spiracy and said $233,160. was paid by {tie unindicted co­senator to be indicted was Burton K, WheelepofMontanaTT"? conspirators either toa-Gurneyaide or toOrganizations link->--­ who was accused of influence-peddling-wfth the Interior ed to the senator. r.--• : • Department in 1924. -­ ' The scheme''allegedly was. hatched at a Januafy,-1971,'Gurney's" former.administrative ' assistant, James L.. • meeting at Gurney's home in Winter Park. At that meeting. " Grott; and former executive assistant, Joseph Bastien, also ' the indictment said^. Ourney; Groot, Bastien and the two were indicted. -So were two: Florida Republican Party of^ ' Florida party officialg^Earl M Crittenden and Qeorget&ff;-||tci.9(s..«fld the officials in the Florida housing and urban Anderson, discussed a fund-raising operation and decided to development department J 4 hire.Larry E.'Williams to cdrry Tt out^ ' ; Foi-tyrtwo other, persons were mxeA as unindicted coV Williams pleaded guilty last-Febriiary to federal chargesconspirators. •" -of income tax evasion-jlnd aiding a former FHA official in The specific? charges agajnef'Gurney, a member of the accepting,a bribe .and Was sentenced to-one"year in prison.­ 1S&-' Judt€iary Committee investigates Twxan Staff Photo by-Marion:Taylor Firemen hose down the structure's charred remains. Registration Scheduled Monday . University summer school students will have only Sunday '-r "Students coVne to register, at Bellmont from 8 a.m. to to recuperate, from finals, before they.reiurn to second ses--.... noon and,l to;4 p.m.," Goranson said;'s"ion classes Monday morning: * • . All fees must be paid Monday before leaving Bellmont • Second session registration will also be held Monday in-' H a n , . . , . Bellmont Hall.. • ' -* . .' Speer.explained, that students who have attended the first GarySpeer, registration supervisor,said new studentscan • summer term and want:to add or dropsecond term courses • pick up their registration materials in the central hall of the should go to. their academic department's to pick up add or Main Building from 9a.m. to 4 p.m. Friday and Monday. • drop cards and have.them,signed before proceeding to Bell­ After they haye receivi^'their materials,students need to " mont. All students must have .adviser,approval:beforegoing ­ : go. to their departmental offices to have an adviser approve to.Bellmont. ' ; V. y!*2 II their courses. '•"Adds and drops take,plaqe in Beljmbnt Monday from 8 '~-Z "Students must havean adviser'ssignature on tfieirilean's"" ^:nrto-noon-ind;l-to4;prm^StudeiitswisbingtoJ3ropcourses . course record card or it'mustlbe stamped "self advised" to; after Monday must do so through, the department of their enter Bellmont-Hall for registration," Brute Goranson of major," Speer said. v; . the registrar's office said. v ''Thelast day todrop acourse without academic penaity.is • -I At Bellmont Hall there will not be an alphabeticsfTse-• "" July 26." Speer said. After thatdate coursesmay bedropped quence to follow for registration witjt-a "Q" or an "F " • " ~ " Pnfg* * 11 f •iWBBm •H. -* t Game Camelled Partly Cloudy The College All-Sta.r Haldeman-Mitchell m-t­ game vaga;inst the a Thursday will-be pa'rfe "WSSPTNSTdN"CAP) -? Former AUg^^4ght-4a-4.-Jair_lr^Ljn_|tie_iVatergale^ -telephone, call .hadj:nothing-to do, with ... • MiaiVii' Dolphirts 'was.-' Gen John N Mitchell fenced for hours cover-up case ~' \ -sT ly cloudy v/ith a s'light Watfepgate or parents to Hunt. Hesaid 4 cancelled Wednesday Wednesday with House impeachment in^ s. 0„. , ^ '' Sir•' ' • Haldeman called to tell him the.Presi-"" -chance of late'alter--. vest,Kators , -But it was the cover-up thai the com­ _ night JD^-^he v dent wanted him to come to W^shingtcjn. fm -utte-'joryinc. to get, the benefit of the liSlitte(nv?nted to know about The pane] noon sh&wers. South­ d in ^e^wtS °f sponsors. The action­ Fifth Amendment withodt usWg it," p —-According to-the Judiciary Committee' erly winds are ex-­commented Rep, John. Seiberling, D-. 1973, tbe day President Nixon and aides transcript.of that discussion, Nixon at''/", resulted, from Mon­ pected to be from 8 toJl OhiOi-about Mitchells testimony.before-;. discussed demands-" for:«money! from •' one point, referring to the money -for-/-day's refusal"t»y-the-­". a closed*session ot the HouSe Judiciary" Watergate conspirator E. Howard Hunt Hunt, said.'"Pqj* Christ's sake, get it 18 fn.'p. R. T^empef'" Co»praittee , ' Jr, and alsoUie day$75,000 A1J-Stars to compete; .James (>. St.Clair, the President'sim->iS atures will range.fro.m W" J-"He doesn't recall thinpq qniri Rrti' Hunt s lawyty, William until,-an agreement a"high-in the mfd-9 was reached betweeri to alfcwJjDjhe mid-70s. ftchell reportedly tolfi the committee* telephone conversation between Mitchell-arranged for ina telephone conversation": the-jNJF4__J?la yer's. --fre^ld-noi-wish-lp 'Dlead the Fifth -and H R haldeman. White Hquse star before the Nixon meeting " % -I-Assocrs t '^f'4 etidmfen^ against self-incrimination,, cmet, at 12,3rpjRT3rMafctrZT; r——MitchclLla scheduled-to-go on.tmL r naithAli tin inAmri A Uit, * ** f)..4 Kf i.L.11 t t J .I i,A i1 n i ,ft > ^ « ° r owners. Story^age.61' 4>-s»yj. sm *?|||8^ :vv/^tfji^tavaS.^.i'; «£ Barton Creek Citizens Will Appeal /•/IV' '* Wan To Build Sewer Line on Stream , By JACK KING struction on the sewer -line Noting, that the group had group Tuesday by AT Department, who was present Barton -Crtek Citizens which would have begun .:';taken.-a sta-nd pn what we' Merchant of Bryan and at the meeting. ' • Association members voted Thucsdax.ftQder the terms of a •wanted and being reasonable" an engineering Currington, • Wednesday night to appeal to' special city permit. • Bannerot that- stated the consultant firm associated "Hillis has said' that-thethe City PlanningCommission JAMES BANNEROT and .developers had. satisfied .all Parks-and Recreation Depart­ with the developers, proved to '"'".the city engineer'sapproval of Don Walden of the association the requests except verifica­ is not able to take on ment have a critical error in it." -developer BilJ Milburn's plan met with developers and city tion of the digging data-and a which: left 200 feet of . pipe responsibility-for restoration • for building a sewer line on officials Wednesday afternoon 'definite plan of restoration space unaccounted for. i of the area and neither is any;.,..Bartoji Cr?ek. -' : to review a list of the^group's . A PRELIMINARY drawing Other city department,"W-The appeal will halt con-demands." 3 7of the site provided to the In the plans there appeared Bannprot said. to be a difference of 30 feet in the levels of two sections of Sexism in Children's Books Probed The'developers have said proposed pipeline. • that, they, would require a-: •, ."Boys and Girls Together,-",a slide presen­stereotypes will be recommended forchange. work order for the restorationtation concerning sexism in children's books, Reviewers have found unequal representa-. • "Those plans are mis-_ project. We'd like to -know was shown Wednesday mgnt oy the Austin" -tiun in pkturco. titles. central'rolos and .. leading or incorrect who is responsible for the chapter of the National-Organization, for stories. Reviewers-find, that female Bannerol said. "We want to restoration-and whois going- Women (NOW) at the Austin Women's characters are not given-normal abilities to have a decent, correct plan to pay for it," he added. > that we can make a judgment • Texas chapters of NOW are reviewing. represented in. stories, pictures, liUe's^nd-—on; we feel'the data is in­ -Center, ,— —_—think an d act "rationally'arid are unequally Tiie jlans presented..bv bilingual. Jtindergarlea^and elementary central roles. complete." ~ ­ •Hillis called for the planting"! science books for evidence of sexism and Bannerot said the group's of 30 to 40 trees in the area in racism. The texts will be-considered in . , Volunteers are needed to review materials position was that-the deeper" -addjfitin to nativ.e-groundSeptember"for adoption by the StateTextbook ,which are available at Maplewood Elemen­ the pipeline had to be diig, the cover. Committee far the 1974-75 school year. -tary School, 3808 -Maplewood Road, from 9 v more dam'age would be done. "This does not come closeBooks which the NOW reviewers feel teach a.m.-to 4 p.m. Monday thorugh Friday until to the surface area. y SWu* -• • -T ^I *?.>.••• f'h- t-rS' i Vbrf* • it&$L >1^ ^ '"'r M WM mm THEHIGHE fJ:¥ ys. ?S:-' H. • Is# tssh •wHt. »*i6^^,Mi«sas»5®gcs, ¥5®' USED •.ms 'I v-->" ' DON'T SELL YOUR BOOKS UNTIL -YOU HAVE CHECKED WITH US. ,, ~T3— f*. m 5 T* •F'.^i'iSU—— W>t h f ""ft h. — {it? r ? ..c ' "S "» T % 5"^#,' C *r .l~t _ f % TjS r4 — /—> V% V* •'WC ' •V/ lit ^ ~jas"-< <*<$$$ •t'J .T-­ , v,' I*m -.v z-t.tr•'rv'iMs Z * r'vP­ " *>• , ^ ift r;:hf- V "* ^ ir» > A" " ,9­ -X, ­ :iw5;« #1 i&xm V • : in .....fxWi ;£v ^ v> " ifI&J&?/ J#®* Professor Says VW fife" Seat Anchorage Dr. John James Allan III, a University, • seat,.,.;, associate professor of-mechanical engineer* ing, concluded-.three "days -of testimony' '-J.ohn^Cpates,.Volksw_£g'en.'s attorney.; tried Wednesday in a $450,000 U.S. District Court -to establish-that afty.automobile sppt wpuld suttagaiost"VolksWagenverk, manufacturers haveTorn loose under the impact of"the colli­ sion. _ ' ' . "of Volkswagen automobiles. ••••••:•_ .Sandra Meredith, an Austin woman whose a 1968 A . mock-up .of Volkswagenwjas survivors filed the suit, died in. November, brought Into court. Th^c-ar-^as-been'-sees­ 197p_, when-her:-Volkswagen-was "hit from tioned lengthwise toreyea'l the interior: the' befiind by'a car traveling 30-m p.h: . : —i ofigiffat seats,involved in the: accident."'" -. , Allan said the seat was torn loose from the- Testimony is scheduled to resume'Thuffs­floor in the collision, causing Meredith to day morning and is expected to' continue .stnkg her head fatally against thecar's back through next week. ICC To Protest Zoning f**C Before Coyricil tonight _ W1 By KEN McHAM'< and bar to be established in , r / Michelle Shaunes§y, ICS ex­ Texan Stall WriterS®';-C^stilian dormitory. ecutive secretary, said the — •The. Castilian .currently-1 organization is protesting the , City Council will consider a meets parking city -re­ -variance because,' -'We want number of property zoning quirefnents for the number of to keep the.neighborhood as changes Thursday, "including persons and businesses in the neighbqrhobdy : -as possible. an appeal by the Inter-Co­ building: A requirement ofr70; Ther more; commercial It operative Council (IGC) of a additional parking spa'ceS'for . becomes,--the less desirable'Planning Commission ruling the restaurant and-bar was­ -. our houses-are to live in." parking . waived.by the Planning Com­ waiving off-street ICC owns two houses in the, %_ requirements for a restaurant mission " ' » ... ... %* « r -"area, the New Guild co-op at 510 W. 23rd St. and Seneca co­|op at 2309 N(ietes St. 'J. STEPHEN MOEHLfAAN, NLDj shaunessy charged city boards had been ineonsistent" .oFHtsoma -in".decisions.:jib^aarking: (OR THE PRACTICI OF ^variances. 'TTieFoafffoTHa­justments-and-Plaiaing^Com-H­ DISEASES AND GENERAL SURGERY Of THE m ~4~ . mission--app roved ifi'e \t ? PtASTICAND RKONSTRUaiVE "-;v Castilian's request to ignore r-'SOJIGWY-OEJHUYi -1' parking requirements, but -»v reTusgflastsummer ta-^iHow­: iripfotJirwir*-" AT College Houseto uS6-anearby ... .rumioiib ...•oilnm SUITE 512 omatsts) 4SMm -lot for. parking.College House" MHMCAt PARK TQWIR «• —1J01.WEST-SMi'STIiEET* : was forced to buy an adjacertt lot,and destroy the house on-it i- for parking/' she said: Fred Young, owner of You Are WelcomeL University, Motors, 3200 Special 10 a.m. Summer Worshfp Service Guadalupe -St.; will~discuss"/mUniversity area-panhandlers UNIVERSITY CHRISTIAN^ Before thecouncil. Young^was instrumental' in efforts a year j ttr'T: CHURCH ago to remove street vendors­ 3VCA&< , ' « i from Guadalupe Street. ,lsl2007 University AVe. A proposal lor developing j-w -Speokirig-Joly-14 ™ alternative-energy sourcesfof-­ the city will be presented ljy = W^AGEKEEION James Hughes , tff Austin ; Dean of U.T-law^chool Friends of the Earth. •Roger D. Napier, president "of Austin Police Association, will appear before the council' to'discuss police salaries.'. -In-executive session, the Whatyou council reportedly wjll con­sider filling more than 60 vacancies on city boards and want/is committees and appoint, a committee to investigate the possibility of establishing a what we'll streetcar system in downtown Austin ' ... get! You're looking «• :— for a new l#'?>. apartment... im University Co-Op Consume -'ijvz itZj Conslder the quiet privacy ActionLin under the spreading oak treos^ of our one bedroom apartments for SI66 Aft 478-4436 Bills Paid , :§ll •"iSglflj) Wt.1' Polo Blanco 3H Mon. thru Fri. 8:30 to 5^0 911 Blanco 472-1030 NEW HOUSING POLICY!! ;vc?47 .'i^l I>EXTER HOUSE ' 1u ::sll03 W. 24th 1 p rtsc OCCUPANCY ONLY s^?S.',^p-45BS\ j&M Semi-Private Rooms as Low as $60 peS0. Luxurious Private Rooms Heated Swimming Pool • Refrigerators •'IntercoTn 7"V». — ^ Laundry Facilities • Vending Machines r' • Study Areas „ • 24 Hr: Desk Service • TV.in Lobby :'J Of.f Street Parking • Close'to-Campus' (< iJl^c^XlSoecial-Packaae Deals n.^.. B j ' JS i*or U.T. Men and Women HOUSING OFFICE 709 West 22nd St 478-8914 Come See • Come Live -JSEIJ^XJFOOOUR MONEY $ $ v •— • . WMMAMAMAMAMUMMBMMMMMMMSMAAMMMMMAAAAAMMMBUMAM .vofoff' V^RFYS'^'&R I* SH/^ « "»m„ v.: .uX* ^. W *rr 'iw® Ue&u *» 'S«. •> tn* •CLySf/ •. ^<•' vh& ••v vil.S. V*h--."-J kAJ SAN ANTON10 (AP)-— Two of the Vic-; CvAiS • Homer Garcia. 15. shot, twice in the ',)iapf5en (ri_a person with a id -> itie". v..4 Un T.Uphot* and ;law degrees, • identified .the five underground-fitohiit testing" -VT» Convention leaders attempt to chart*rcourse of-actio'ri Tr,^«^W^l^,eti0,,Wl*C?re vi«'pDresid. ' through dental records and gave his opi-.. .The test device, •wtiu the code narao ent A.M. AJk^j Jr.,of (Juris; Sen. Nelson Wolff of " «»roi San Antonio, Submissions, dnd nian The Swedi£h.Sei.smological'fnstitute m ^'Escabota,". was detonaiecf-aull siii ' Trflnsitio,!) Coixinjittee chairman Jiirt Ray, executive director and president Prfce Daniel Jr oni on causes of death. ^{fj# Daniel Jr. • , Stockholm: registered. an Underground- r». * >' Frank Anthony Aguire and JphnnyRay / --1 * / ' >• -Fr "Although theiewerenosoientiiiceom­ explbsion located "in the Semipalatinste Delone.. 16, whose bodies, were found >;,parisoris. available;.amateur: test.bomb area; of the Soviet".Union's Kajtaktetqh­ buried on the beach at High Island, died •• experts in Las "Vegas, 90 miles away ,.Republic as did.lhe N:o"rwregi^n from a lack pp'air, the"doctor testified, '[om.the '¥oqca;Ela.t.site; fatcd'ifrabrive* . seismoligicaji station Norsa r'-rn Oslo,*\ s PeloiwS"*hi^it—alsoj-haw-died from a- the pretious blasts but well one ^ganslinLkpund in tile head. . The U.JS..Atomic*'Energy Commisswnv .below -of!lV9"s -----­v-— _ ' j'>$i The'^pjithologist igentified. the other reported a nuclear. Blast of 2Q-tcT'2fltl­By ANNE MARIE KILDAY it will passv' £\ljF vSen. Lloyd Doggettzwas^Ainavailable 4?: vouths.otnd'their cause of death as kilotorts in the Nevada' deseri, setting; August NogarTTRSrhost at.Uic;Top of rrep..T0Rr^asseyj>f >r comment, but his aide, John Dietz, ~ ChaTtesJC. Cobble, 17, shot twice in chandeliers swaying 90-.mik>s away"-"'" -J"heStrjpjrestaurant at tlieTJunes Hotel, that only 45 percent jsaid that Doggett-would-make his deci-the head ahd buried in a Houston boatsfi-".said-the WJ-chandeiiers-m-lhc.fxiom.began Texan Staff-Writer :One-poiyaken J1 rft K. ' - *y4Siyv MICH ydUSC yl,UCdUl dp' m • *'.'j- ,T vU.llJu,OI1U convemtonTJostppned-ftnai-vote-on-the—iittlifi^lj^tjswillvqteTincondilionalli —sion -probably altet jie reads the le^nea^al5UnedlnaH0Ust0nb0atsfl THERE WAS no confirmation.a] -a~ny swaving jnd mat \vatei ^.lo-shed.m a glass, -iW proppsed-coiistitution Wednesday aft^r fori;ife tiach^ent, •-— . Soviet explosion IromStl&iSovi.et'g/jv^>rn-he was holding --»-Marte_fiav'Jones. T8. Straffeied'with­ s?r y-meeting for less than an. hour monf ' ? ~ — *•• . :L—^r—— .l^;S>»tiTO!^i<>n-.9ncl-..tr|lpj(tion .com-com-The convention will faceup the rBplu-' a rope and found in the samq grave with The convention had intended to take up inittee,. surveyed, all but 12 THE 4t-<_ sairt tue.aevico was reia\ed of the ; j. tion at 1.3d p:m. Thursday. . cobbie • -'. ''The underground explosipn was -consideration of the resolution, of .'the ilefegatftj,-. ' to the jjrftion's v.eaptihs-arsenal arid not registered at 4:03 a.m. and'hiid-"ar5^ ~. rnmmtttefe^m.-Subnfiaion-TandJTranstr:^^^^pfe^ihat^osfeo'rtheWenibers-of Richter magnitude/' -part of the '/Plpwsh'are"-program, for MarlTus-. Baalh of" •Jion, which :contains,the entire new.cq.h. irtlie 'l'ravis countS'"aelegation to the con-. .the. Swedish Seismic Institute sah®, . 'S: . .development-of peilcefui-uof nuclear sUtution," but the resolution was still be­L V treaty agreementsith theSiivici Cmon. chairman pf the Committee on.Submip-.. wording Fin inclined to vote for it, but . sion and-Transition, explained; that the myOdecisioo.^A'ill be made after the it with, constantly Soviet blast apparently was in an area; i>ejsmolqgicaT.stations have recorded a threatening worid peace* . . near-a common border of the Soviet • 'nuiiiber ottitlici tremors,-pinpumted as resoIulioH~wa5^takingHengeF—to-f>F»n<——idebatiiijid after I've.snpn fhf»-wrirHin^ of Union, Mongolia and'Chirta. -* coming itom IJie-XLYufiji .site ^ than the comnuttee had expected. The the.resqlution." WBrt«fii.Rtmi.Virt -— J _ Tile .deixia.Lbg a grCat power of the rights of Panama is a source of in­cOfHmittee"voted-14-flto send the-resolu--" " '* .. • -Rep :WilsojLFQreman_saidWednesdav /ternaU(inal tension arid & constant threat to the peace ariti:securi^y-of-Hv_ A Norsar spokesman said " we Onlf a week ago,-on JfuJv.3 in Moscow tion to the convention floor he will .vote for the resolution. *"7Cmitt^Tit^Tidi;he-seasr'-Bepiity-Foreign Minister-Garios-O7.ores4old the._ registered what is believed to"bsrsrSovitH-Vresiaent i\ixoH~and JSov-iei Cui'mrramst— The resolution'of-the committee m' Hep, Ron Earle said,"! am leaning —undergroundkiuelear explosion^.' 148-nat)sn U:N. CbnPerence 'on Sea Law. -Party­ cjudes the text of the proposed: constitu­toward vot ing for it, as it comes ;6ut in - . r : . The American blast was the,259th un--dn _agree-men'."j'Jifhitunderground tion, "four separate proposals, Ihe effec--the resolution. Of course.-we have to Stock Market Resumes Downward Tr6iid ..d.erground explosion'lo be publVcly an­ •-tive-date-of-4hejjiew..iConsliluliQni£Uie.^ ypto on the document and the six • NEW YpRK (AP) The gtock nuclear" .tests to weapons up to i50 nounced since the 1963 atmosphenc ban kilotons starting March31;.1976, limiting proposed ballot, and-election date^ The separate proposals, none'of whichTlike Tnarketr resumedHts~downwa'rd" vNew Vork-(AH)-— InW York Ext; *-agreenrentTvittrthe"Soyffits: > P—r: "tlie nhiuber of tests-to"an unspecified • convention 'must apprdve ^tlie^'entire -•• at-all. But I=m--willing to-overlook them ^ 'ch*ange.xlosing index; .trend Wednesday. irnniinum-and, providing for continuedresolution bel'ote the nuw -constitution -in orrlrr to Mihmit (hp wnrtn.nn>,, t" thr The Dow Jones-average of 30 in-; The Atomic-Energy Commission:-­ . Market .-... off.49 cents negotiations with a .view fo-eventual lataican be submitted .to-voters; -. wtersv" -^ •, -. : • .dustrials, up a lew.points in early-•fflden—; ,• 11 fii off -wcjild say only that;it was-a "weapon?.-ban of underground testing. ­ Although the-resolution must receive Jim-parnsh, aide to Rep. Larry Bales, . : relaUid" duvu:u >n the range of 20 to 2P0" 121 votes", two-thirds of the convention tliat Bales Will vote" against the trading, moyed-consisWntlylavs'pr Industrial .!. .. 46.60 off 0.'85 •Secretary-,(>f: said r Transportation kitotonaianA..tiiat:*'ho ---radiation-.leakag^., .State-Henry Kissinger membership., convention president Price , after noon arid elosed o^f. 10-17 at :S|^29.50 off, 0:51 resolution "Larry doesn't feel the s Utility . »?/!' < v.-1 --.-cMt '•'i--y • -. .... v-.-fr /.*>•.,-r\ ­ v7' "j-t? j , ^^ ^ Jj* * A **£ lv *""» ? '' *A"i 1) PICK UP REGISTRATION MATERIALS IN lyi-t. OBTAIN APPROVAL FOR: CENTER HALL MAIN BLDG. i-m TI {fFRH^AYv JULY 12>?M9 a.m. -4 p.m. 1) ADDING AND DROPPING ALL COURSES * /' t- ^MONDAY, JULY 15, 7 a.m. -4 p.m. ".-tv sj IN THE DEPARTMENT OF^THE COURSE i5 CONCERNED k-lis ~ 2) SEE AN ACADEMIC ADVISER z~ 2t BRING^ALL ADD/DROP CARDS1TO 3) PROCEED TO BELLMONT HALL TO PULL ;M BELLMONT HALL ON JULY 1S FOR FEE. . CLASS CARDS AND PAY ALL FEES • "-fx-sJSS. -Wjf,!r*f:&7s<<"tzS f'-Ss tu - r ASSESSMENT«jOR f^APPLICAtION FORI P§ M 8®il KM BiFUi^ SJ " ' p.m.> 4*3O p.m. iH 11 jil 4— FM 4) ALL FEES MUSf BE PAID IN BELLMONT­ SPSS 2p.m.-1*p.m. -4*30 p.m.r ] F-T HALL ON JULY 15 _z_ •M 3) ALL FEES MUST BE PAID IN BELLMONT i •* 1 m m m m m a. ^ _ ' » . ^ , ,-wi fiPRIREGISTRATION FOR FALL 1974 '.V •fi, ' >s®® ' ; AJ^Y llliSUMMER COURSES |if ^ I STUDENT WHO HAS WITHDRAWN .-fi- A -M FROM SUMMER COURSES FOR ANY TERM MUST REQUEST^ fi1) MATERIALS AVAILABLE:®3® "ate-,­ -Sr| & ~f A. JULY 12 AND l^CENTER jhtAlTMAlN BLDG. ^ VJ, nk" innicniHU f SUPERVISION ON MJLY 19 r>p ts ®1JKL.16~24 REGISTRATION SUPfeRVISJON MAIN BLDG. 1-0 ~};0i. » _ COMPLETELY NEW MATERFTTS FROM REGISTRATIOMFF: * ..... ... _ IP _2) SEE AN Y ACADEMIC ADV^^ : 3) RETURN ALL-MATERIALS-TO-YOUR DEP-ARIMENT BY_J1 1 J— i—s ^ HHMMfEOtL^NSWERS %-'.h. OR COME BY MAIN BLDGM-G it' \* t'-'v® mmm is-.i'Sfc' A* ••*•'' vgri-• V>'! »f *'%•' *•" . -.'ft--i1;-' * J^t^sC—„*,i­fiiM ? 4 ^»n"j rtfy <¥®R , -*«• &S&L. if em cg^s 3SJE. rM&-mi guest viewpoint EDITORIALS rTyp\-&'$sr­ ion %M *~%i Page 4 Thursday, July 11, 1974 %6 • '1 unity Coal;power^ By LARRY JACKSON f Employment-and. Training Act states:': ^Editor's note: Jackson, a former •' "It is the purpose of this act to provide Fayette Countv residents first learned a coal-fired power plant Would be ^ coordinator of SNGG, has been a comSI . job. training and employment "oppor­ built near La Grange when they saw the-news on Austin television March, munlty Organizer in Austin -sincc thc§fl tunities for economically disadvantaged, 21 " early 1960s.). * • v s?k; unemployed and underemployed .per­. In reply to Ben McDonald's denial -of " sons, and to assure that training and .".""I ra not criticizing, but it was kind of a shock." said-La Grange discrimination at the Texas Department other services lead to maximum employ­ ^Chamber of. Commerce President John Bouldin. '-'No one knew anything. oi Community Affairs,: which Was ment; opportunities and enhance self- The coal plant, proposed, by the Lower Colorado. River .Authority written bV "Affirmative: Action.Offidgt-' sufficiency system of federal, state and! (LQftA)'a,nd the Gity of Austin, will cover 6,4Q0 acres of Texas Hill Coun­Brenda Rutherford, the following should local programs." • try. for a eonlinp lake. Cedar Creek. then Bavlor Greek^will be dammed, be noted -Currently there is an administrative McDonald's-.lackof commitment to af­ n~inl wal"f jMiniii-^t frnnfTFin~y<"lf?rarf^ R1vor wfll fill the man-madg reserr technician IV position being advertised firmative action-is reflected in the posl-With the. educational -requirement ofvoir ,-7 , tinn hnlrl hv Pnfhorfm-r) The nositinn nf _master's decree. This has not been a re-• • FavetteCountyrresidents 4inew that some people's land would be con­ n .affirma'tive.actioii officer is only a half-quirement in the past. There are seven Jernrred-forihe-pft>ie€^—but-nottMng^mora-_A_£rQiiB of them formed the -stime position at the salary of. $552 per employes who have been hired in this "Faygttg'County. Landowfters'Frbtectiye Association to try to find out /•.••month Rutherford is a black PhD can­same position in the ManpoweKServices .•• didate ill cducaliuual psychology at the —D>V4i;ion—Qnlv details of-the project . . • •', nnp has a mqstm>^iwnk-hy.en{rin<»Pr<: anri GOPdopeL is a federal right-to-reply-law which •: •private enterprise of several University • w ' —To "the rriitnr-' aoolies to television and radio broad-students with \the help and advise of officials, Herrirtg fook the microphone tb-ansvveiLcitizens' questions — / TO'the editor: The-reaction of The. Texan to' the •; casting: tneuie l*.airnefesr.airnefes IJoctrlne.Doctrine.-uioluwt • tw -tluarting raonlty^m»mbocg_InJVnvpmh»>r) . _ behind a system that prevented interrogation. Questions were required to-J\-• The-entertaining columns of. E. t •Supreme Court decision overturning ^mention FCCcontroi'of licensing). The 1903, the pape;r voluntarily was passed5?;-be submitted in writing on note cards passed around the audienee. • . tm Truman Randall are a delight to read. Florida's right-to-reply law would be federal government is able to impose into the hands of theJiewly.formed Stu­ However-, Miave one question about his * •y— -The landowners,invited iLCRA officials-to-stay for another meeting -w i amusing if it werenot such a disquieting;-this limitation on: the "free press" dent Association; Hie Texan had been Talest one. How does he know that theses­ aftenvardsia^iscuss the coal plantir^IyThufTIigCC'RA delegation head-" indication of the tunnel Viiion of the-prc— •tjecqase-broadcasters use the-"public primarily responsible for the Young Republicans were, smoking mari­sent editor aiid staff. ""f" -r—-.•airwaves-"-This-is^nuch-more-indirect-^association'_s_Wrth. | ed for the exit doors of the high school auditorium. " ' ' juana? He did not give any sources. _ an efccuselfpr governnrertt regulation It was-never intended.thaTThe Daily~ .. .it's not as if. there is nothing to question or discuss: —• J om Smith The Dailv Texan consistently^rrs m than the direct government-subsidy"The. -^w^exan should everhecome an "auxiliary Slte Be"dvoZ!a!.S liSSiil* selection report-by ggchtel Power Corp. substantiates,^ ssUming it is partof the "free press It Texan receives. Themain question is.notj ^enterprise" of the Board of Regents, or a'hdlherslte ^~on WilbargerCreek"—as most economital for a long-term-i|s r"'•'":•• Another look not.-n.^subsidized^bv the State of whether a law requiring The Texan to £.'for that matter of the administration! cost analysis. , " ' Tn thp p it possible _yfalher It is whether the use of public _ -Todd KatC Mayor ftoy Butler happens to own 1,600 acresof land in the WilbargeB|f|| •It Was MiChaehHaggertv'ilettento thei'- IfSi!:.' that-it-can-he_uncDnstitutl»n.nl-for the money through subsidization .of The JonrnallBin site area. • "' .. • — ...•._•.••'•-•..:•• • editor in last Friday's Texan that finally convinced me to get off of my tail and to IP>V • Thei-e is"evidence LCRA and the city are seriously misrepresenting -look lUto the: Ninth and 10th Street pro­ the effect of the coal burners on air quality^ ^ already* a ject .on my own: There -is Despite the city's intensive campaign'to the contrary, the coal plarite&i, narrow bridge over-Shoal-Creek at 10th ?Jwas not and is not needed to fulfill the city's energy requirements.' | Street, and it is so old that it brings to u ECONOMIC : «slf LCRA and the City of Austin have nothing tohide m their plans-for the mind old Model T Fords and the good old . days. The area qf. land that Ninth streetfife ; piant, they may talk to the public without fear. We urge LCRA^and the is.supposed to go-through is really a * City Council to schedulea public hearing immediately on the proposed La . ADVISERS •secluded.. wooded grfeen space, between ^ii:: Grange coal plants and forever expose faicts_or lay to rest doubts concer-"|West Avenue and ji<}ioaf Creek. The'hike- DONOTFEED "King the decisiohs they.liaveTriaae,.-.'p;' bike: trail -(leading from Pease 'Park) ends in this area,, near a small play area :for kids and-a couple'of picnic tables-/. Shoal Creek widens out a bit here, and I noticed a grandfather and grandson • There are a number of us liberal Commie idealists who believe thaia • fishing,in the shade oLthejie'arby.lnees.: The wetpds are rather dense to wander public official should not be able to make decision^ matter5^|iich in­ •through, but-there are several winding M' volve personal monetary interest.. . ^ footpaths going through it. I was hopingvi vObviously, Mayor T^oy Butler does not agree wifli'us. Even though he that someday they would extend the owns property-where the controversial extension of Ninth Street is being ,hike-bike trail through to Town Lake; but planned, he believes that it is his_decision whether.to abstain from voting; if they allow more construction along m •Shoal Creek like the secluded offices of , on the extension. ' ' ' f " '• " ' Jagg^r Associates and Don Nelson, both?!# s: ''I don't think it (theextension) will affectanything that I have;" Butler- i big: Austin builders, it won't really,^ was quoted last week as saying in The Austin Citizen, "whether it goes in matter what they do with Ninth and lOthx or not. You might tell Mayor.Fish I'll,handle :my own ethics." jig •Streets.. These .offices and-other| 4 "Mayor Fish" is Butler's term foi^ Russell Fish — the-president of The-builrting's go right up into the creek, likesS >•„ v;:>st:N 'J ' "" sprawling cohcrete and .asphalt:---: . : . •• •­ .^..^Bitizen*Ss:.'Wtio.;iiKHrecUy suggested that Butler abstain from voting on ,monsters. ­^ NintlvStreet. As Bu,tler implies with the.namecalling^-Fish could be play^ m The hike-bike trail could go^hrough, : politick in a plan for the mayors race next spring.. because it won't harm that area's en-,.,.. Butler,-though, says he will handle his own'ethics. AndA it is Butlerrs :• vironrr^ent. As for^Ninth street. there is.-'The most obvious inflation solution is to tire us..J hope noBody thinks of itJ 5!^'-''-/ ethics we worry about. >•' '' This idea isn't one to stop the extension of Ninth Street or to put down' .• . v V guest vleiypolnt . . « Quest vleaipolnt, > r~--Butler It is one that is crucial-m-domgrawajtwith special-interest-in rr^ goveniment^nierejsnlt^aigtlun Chilean economrc yoke placed on podr THE DAILY TEXAN .. By BETTY ANNE-DUKE four months, of this year. While "the .--SS. H*wspop§rmt Th» Vntvrultr •/T»*o» af AwaHn •• •••• •A • (Editor's note: Duke is a-member one-fifth .of the* population^ • have ab-. ^economic model of the.miliUry regim^'. J;: v minimum wage for a-Chilean worker ' •solutely no means of support. ^his "freedom" has led fo-l.Sido percent V i jSDlTOft ',v,„..*:..*.Buck Harvey of the Latin American Policy Alter* is remaujs at $39 a month, prices have ? The latest measures announced by ^he•-• -natives Group.) V; * , .... . •. . 1,300 percent arid 1,500 percent increases J MANAGING EDITOR BJ Hefner ^riseri from six to nine times above .their".' junta are consistent with the policies in the price of oil, sugar and kerosene * —The'Chilean military junta which ! 1873 level. ASSISTANT MANAGING EDITOR ! Lynne Bcock that the government liaS followed ever respectively. V _ NEWS EDITOR A Pam Clark ' overthrew Salvador Allende's Popular v Even before the recent price hik.es the -*(jice September, Virtually-all of the ,4_ , Unity government on Setit. 11, 1973, has cost of the basic necessities was reform programs-instituted., by the--.^-l™ ... ' '~s~' ASSISTANT TO THE EDITOR. ' Dave Risher provoked, international protest againstfe ^."prohibitive: Poor people.were unable to Allende government have been cancell-. ;lne Nlxon"adtninlstration has con----: •iS SPORTS EfblTOR ; .'....Larry Smith its practices of the imprisonment, tor-;-:' s afford. cheese, meat,-eggs,, mil,k -and ed. . . -5-v ®ise y doneeverything possible tohelp AMUSEMENTS EDITOR Debra Triplett fure and murder of thousands.of Chilean] vegetables May, Chilean • the fjrst most in a One of the main objectivesof Allende's It was • people. Not. so widely publicized,/- government to extend credit to Chileand PHOTOGRAPHERS Stanley Farrar, Marlon Taylor , truckdr^ver tolci Eduardo de' Benito'of" -•:«eonomlctpoIicy,*during:fhe PopulauUm- City Editor • -Gail Burns however, are the junta>-lofig-term' > the London:Times: :''After-deductions, I. ty years^ was to abolish the LatifundiUm, has used'its influencetil the U:S. banking economic policies-whirfi-are causing General Reporters _ • ^ , Richard Fly, £>avid Hepdricks ; bring home between 15i000 and 16,OOQesiV v. the. system vof largfe. estates and pjlan-cpmmunity to-securie loans for the- widespread malnutrition, disease: -and cudos (about $23) a month" I have five military government. In the ForeignAH •* tations. During the three years of " the m Anne, Marie Kildav.. Ken McHam.. starvation among the.wordingpeople-of children..The-cheapest'pairofshoes dost Allendle.government, nearly-3,000 large Bill of 1974 ,(S. 3394), Nixon has rip .Susan Lindee, Wa3e Wilcox, Steve Golub, News Assistants (Jt, Chile: TO escudos: The etieapest meat, pnait]- an increase In-military rrnriit Charles Lohrmann, Nancy Mills, Karen Albaral, Dick Jefferson, Mike Young, estates were expropriated, a Just last month the government an-,lyK bones for stewing, is 'about 560 est trjbuted to;thp peasants, who had worked! •sales f6r.fiscal year 1975. Thp bill aslcs' em , , . " . " Tom Snlclow, Mary MurtaugfT ^fSIS n "~~nounced a, new:plan to combat spiraling 'udos. If it weren't for the clothes we them under the provisions of the! ;,for $20,5 million in military credit sales 1';. Randy Burgess • inflation. On July GehL Augusto Were ableto buybefore September— we.. .and"?80Q,^QingrantinHitaryassistance ^^^e^muiiementS-JEditpr Mark.P^L "Make-up E3itqr ir„" uv--:BuifiehetcalIed wgoveriitnent'apncie! Aicould afford,them:then though we had to- Wire Editor ] 'wait in line for a-. long time today wV • -cr..• : Roe.Traugott tocut spending by15 percent and banned ,,... . ., Keith' Hartneil ­ the initiation of any new public works!.wdiild "be going about-naked." ­ Copy .Editors,'-.... • . . --.Oavid Rose. Cindy Worma, Jan 'Phipps^ Govqmmen}subsidies to universities aQ-jj .. for the unemployed the situation is , : i-OrUs Leister. Tptn'Tipton, -Karen McLune. Mary:Ann Wilson j .-..•-.,' . .... -v : have intpoducsd aitiendnieritHtliK also to be cut off. The,plan also incites' ' OpinlMU -Ofraxil in Wc Dilljr Town are Uuk of even more desperate. Excelsior of Mex-• ed thosS "inefficient" Ja^s guaranteeing ' bill which would restr^thSto Ch5e rtitnr of the wrjter of Or arlWe aul • rnunlcaUon.BuitdiAff A4196). Inquiries coo£tnung.&liveF¥ the firing.qf 100,000 public employes' by' ICQ 6I.ty estimates that more thatLpOO.OOO' and cftjsif^dadvcrtlimK should bem^tfe tnTSPBOittfing1 Job stability; the right -u «(nowT .^.Sen-James Aboureik. and" jW* °''^e t-Vi|vcrtily.»dmlnis{rali«t or the Sbtfrd o( the end erf the year. On tfijTday priof 'tF j.,.. -. . 5.2W;MZl*524fi j^td dJspIay advflrlis'lDg InTSR Buildlria people^.have^"6eff"fired'(ronT tbel^'jobs,—-"treason-to-the-country-)-and the rightUinnnlH p-r^or „ S2!0*«7M8to) \ i - ^D'onald-Ftazer-and-Michffel Harrjn^^ had. :hecaiise::thep^|^:§^pi^iei!^the;^;...to belong to. a trade union Passage of these amendments'dejirivinfc r,X?xan U Nallitnalfevducatwnal ASvertis\ng-Servk*«-Jnc^ AHenaeigol^rnment::-Ofefedjave:.bteiffa -vs&ider.the "* "* 366-Lcxuinton Ave Vorli « V 10017^ -ui, -on .breadj-'milk and: ooplung otl. v ..... as 'TO® rtm n* DaU)> Tejun Is publuhed Monday, Tuesjay, fired businesses' have'-Closed. down.' rvTKc Da)ix,T«xdn subscribes .The. AsKoclated Press.' 'rtSiT™5Uni& "? Frkta>-S«P"«i>w tf-ough ^Unttod JVets ^ntenuUonaf aitdPacUicNewi .Service.The-What these rigid"Ttieasures mean "for Althpugtif .of-redistributing the income,: f-Md ToMflay W«dnfala» Thariday. and PridayJune v countless Chilean-people.Is. extermina- o at vui? • .Texan 1b a njcrtlbcrof.lhf Assoclated Collegiate Press.'lhe # » - unemploynierit Is 10 percent, meiinbers ing" people'spend a higher pjropoi>tion'of [ • ^Bowtbwcst-. JourmUsm Cowpres* ylni• (he •Te«**vbaijy tion "Apcordtng to statistics given toThe jrtitlcal time tpaywell haveanimpact oh' T^owtrapor A«iopfiu *hp basisot the mosi no pricf*control:^ir -o r—r— -i-u'x,—Mti'v already declined 56 percent in thfe.fifst serv^tive estimate, two 'irtilUon CJillfians Bed Bua ^rail lanit ira 8"li)(0&h6^)Vd "" the Chllt»an pfepnte. jvintapf .'titherfr are otl the frei? market, tfie basic T *• u CliHe SuppOrtCommltteeat47iMMOr ^ fflsliS f ;- Company • • •is -used" to dealing-with she is the bestbet in the coun-. pushes her passes up into her spot on the ballot) and win-strongest contender for the # ^"WASHINGTON -If you ask realities. try for a major break-through chopped reddish-brown hair mpg_J>y increasingly large, .nomination and the .general Rep. Ella Grasso, D-Cfonir.r The-present reality-is that,' — •a fact, she says, "I try not: ; and focuses her'deepset brown ma"rgms m her two races for election. But she was neverwhen the idea of running for thanks to her^own efforts, and to think about," Bufjf Grasso eyes, the intensity of Mrs the House, able to budge her old allies, ' governor ; of her native'' not Bailey's, she has lined up. symbolizes anything^ it is not, Grasso's concentration on the She can ^lter hpr diction to-Bailey, Ribicoff and- Connecticut < first entered her •• enough votes to guarantee her; _so_. much women's liberation person or problem she's ad­ suit the-'eitewd, moving easily Dempsey. from their cautious head, she will tellyou, '.'It was nomination for governor at as the successof the complete dressing is extraordinary. from conversational Italiaii to * neutrality toward her struggle there for a long time; but' it the July 20 Connecticut political professional. -HI' don't knofo of ope group finishing-school French, from with, the other. leading •didn't seem possible." Democratic^convention. The Her colleagues in .the she's had with her thai she's the -vivid1.. language of "back­. Democratic liopeful, Atty. Why not? "Because, women polls show her a strong early Connecticut legislature in the ever lost," says her former room p'ohtics to what Bailey , .Gen. Robert KillianY Shedoes : weren't candidates'^ You., favorite to beat her-likely'op-1950s noticed . her .abjlity, House colleague, John jokingly, calls her Mt not allow-herself •remember John Bailey's., ponent, Rep. Robert. H. and elected her' the first •Monagan, "thev.Mt. Holyoke..-Holyoke platform voice recriminations.famous statement>-sthat he'd Steele,-R-Gonn., in Noveriiber. woman floor leader in hqr se­alumnae, the -League of run a woman when he thought" . If she-wins, Grasso will be cond term. So did Abe Like Ribicoff?she hasidrj-vri; '• Women Voters;, the cystic ;edi a powerful political ' understand why theyhe'd lose. He would-say that the first, woman to^ain an Ribicoff (and John Dempsey. ' fibrosii a rid retarded • cpuldn't helpj" .she says, "andand chortle — ho, ho, ho." American governorshiponher when each was governor; aftd : children's families, the AFL-a 11 lance•. wif/i: the .state no\y. it's ail:to'^he good that 1­ 'Ella Grasso recalls the at-, own. Thcother three — Nellie they used-her talents to draft. CIO, tbe-vaterans. She's been Democratic-tro.ss, while •had to do itmyself.-They were" , titude of. her comrade-jn-Taylor Ross of Wyoming, • preserving a reputation foran. -platforms andbudget -"phenomenallysuccessful " v, arms, John Bailay, the ''MV'P'prgngnn nf Tpy^s anri messages ; and' handle the -nfttrat's'trnp1'' she savs. .dependence attractive to sub°-not against 'me.' They just Connecticut. Democratic Lurleetr Wallace of Alabama u rban . and rnVj 11 • t ovvn weren't formc. It's,a line peo­ tough.est policy problems. ,, : "it's only because we've kept ple in polities understand.1 chairman for the last quarter-— all followed their husbands' The brainpower is what won ; our communication and: -.in---•Republican voxel's. She is • equally adept at picking her century, in totally matter-of-footsteps,' Thomas Grasso. Grasso her reputation_amon& ' volVelpent \vith iali of tfitSm.". / Only after she bfca-t-Killian fact: fones, devoid of' either ; way .among the" issues. it—is-^the—_ Whatever-ftie^ausershe-has^- ULthg delegate nrimarv in hip false' sentimentality or a'recently retired school prin sense.that she!s interested in been a remarkably successful' .v. While she talks persuasively, home town of Hartford, doom­bitterness. . ' , cipai,, who never ran for people as individuals candidate, leading the state of an "emergi.ng era of'state ing. his chances, did Bailey,That was just the reality of' public office. really inspires trust/' ticket in two -of her three leadership," she rejcclsan in-•RibicofLrand-Dempsey step'9 > come tax for Connecticut-, one forward, to urge" the-Irish A /l©•sssps«f> of -the handful of 'states' . favorite to'acCgpt the lieute­without one, because "there is n.ant governor's -^lot ton the Nixon great antipathy to that among ticket, in the interestsof party -M®s the voters " and ethnic harmony.By GEORGE F. WILL president, even one fighting -This would -have protest to .Brezhnev-about *1974 The Washington Post impeachment and trying to demonstrated to an un­either the arrests or the cen­DOONESBURY Company convince an undestandably derstandably. skeptical sorship. But if the arrests and '. WASHINGTON -• I n ..skeptical public that he is in­American public that Mr.lSix-the censorship-occurred in"~ WAsrre! • iiixon -em-dispensableaispensaDie to peace, shouldsnouia lsnotdead teetings ot^-spite of what'Mr. Nixpn likes ZONK£K. ZONKER. wr. on isnot dead to all feelingsoL mcms to ^barxassnigly_ and" almost "solicitr-publrcrenthusiasnr-for-^-disgust-abouUhe bullvine-nse . lo call his quiet diDlomacv. HARRIS, SAY HARKS? . • TM 8MARM,' 'I nathatinatlir < »*af •r\ kic ''narcrtnnl fnln^Snnpliin" /if nfnl/1 nnn.nn a «••*%•« I . •* -* •• to "personal wer^JdrfTiC Tmjmt­detente;as;largely the product with the commandant .of ;the have demon:nstrated to . ' ODR-mSR. FROM THE rnT W&.60TTA e/ve' pathetically referred his relationship "oFstate power. would. tTial7TmWe~ev1tfeiieeihatTttre"'r -mm-tmbRmrr­ •m-of his "p^rs'onal relationship'.' Gulag Archipelago. But these t'andjbly skeptical ing as th'e" personal -' iAUN COVER OF • l THIS PUDE: A . wewm -J_ -/J4CTW --Mf "J. with Leonid Brezhnev. are odd times, as the sui Brezhnev: that there is some . relationship.. ^ C .3L . Sj -**1 .^It might seem odd that a demonstrated ev|n-b6fpre it Soviet behavior too gross for • startfiLI.".. _ '• "Mr. Nixon to tolerate in the Marxism insists that- As Mr. Nixon prepared to* name-of"detente -—---~po 1 i t ics -('an _fly to Moscow there were politicians) are (austfn topics) .But Mr. Nixon either did not "numerous "reportk -that.,, .. ephiphenomena — that history-Brezhnev was preparing for • ordid not eare to use his is-a-dialectic fo vast imper­personal relationship with­ -The -Latin-American-Policy. Mr. Nixon's arrival by order sonal forces moving ineluc- Brezhnev^ to-stop the,, arrests • Alternatives Group and 63 : ing wholesale arrests of the( tably.to'a predictable cjimax.. that his own trip was causing. tocal'sponsors'will host-aft in­most conspicuously brave' So" a proper Marxist "like formal cocktail party from 6 Jewish dissenters.. Mr. Nixon Aside from Mr. Nixon's nori-Brezhnev rejects the notion" •to 9-p.m.—Friday at the; home i gavd no sign that he thought responseio the persecutioh of--that -any "'personal mLASKAitt'f&MBS •-A of Peggy" and Jim Danietl, that anything was happening. the Jews, the most interesting-relaiionSlrtplv"l5rreally impor-isfc-JMiW-. <AKB >ms,snm% boon. bllbgkRb, ^W~ 4507 Deepwoods' Drive, in Tnrr—aspect-of-thfr-summit-was-the—tanLinJiistory. s^dmNjitrnd, A KIM,. _ •honor of Cecilia "CheChe" Here was tlje leader of the brutal Soviet censorship of all" cm A 6wnsAwmrtPs, W A PAIR "Garcia ami to benefltrChilean-television broadcasts . Unfortunately; the tattered PAmit MHM-&ISB£R6\ ORPtPV-OF PIPS'. -tn-.-Ijis toothbrush for a trip that from Moscow concerning: th& " —WNAMZ-JTJ / A Mm! Jk^sj refugee relief. . doctrine oT"aetente~restS"T»nT -AfAm' ;Jie knew already was produc-persecution W -Largely -as (a resbjt Qf ef-_ the blind hope that the Soviet ••ing as itsfirst (and, as it turn­ w forts , of many friends and" 0ne leaders are not serious about ed out, its most important) • reason. Brezhnev elected officials'in Austin, es- their. Marxist ideology. Bu result the wholesale persecu-arrested the jewsSvas to.try to • peCiallvU.S. Rep. J.J."Jake" they obviously do take Marx- Unn ffUnir- rnilj," k<'eP thpm away from Piokle and State Sen. Llojd -istR^-serioasly. It conditions- Crime is adherence to prin­'American journalists. .One Doggett, Garcia was recently their approach to detente.-It ciples of freedom. • reason Brezhnev censored the --\~aUfiwed _ t!,aft?r the; National: Football League -<_ • • plagued-by the National Foot-1 -CharitieSi sponsors of the All-first time.since 1834 that• the ' All-Stars.voted Mt to'playin it, placers and reprfesentatives of 'ifWI 3ill $®y ••• ••• • • •• • ••fy*VAvrr.. . -_,ball League players' strike, Stargame.^said^ta newscooi. ATL exhibition sfeasonbasinot: unless the strike by NFL "the league's 26 owners have , was Wednesday,' to The Daily Texan sports pages have been|$i|: the league. Aaron is hitting over100 points i.sV-itS} cancelled ferfcBce-that-the' decision veterans Was settled -by'then "'agreed ,w Friday "irv been kicked off by the'Aii-Star meet behind the tjmes for the last year. , less, y.et has received more,votes than any .;marK)ng the first time in its call off the-game was..tafcen game.. . Union president .Bill Curry_ •.'.'•••.Washington: to see if-there is While most papers were sayltig what yother'pla've'f, if#l-year existence .that-the an-:: Wednesday after the players' • •<-.;• :V0uh veterans deserved the .said he deeply-regretted: the jany-. jbasis, for..; resuming nice guy Hank Aaron:w§s-\vhenfie"bfok-6™ Aaron :will make the team because 'jof fgr-? nual charity , game will not be union, failed to give-•'Us full; trip to Chicago.,l~a disap-cancellation andhoped it serV*. negQUationsr ?on a. new con­ • .-played; '• -: v Babe-Ruth's home run record, The Texan :past seasons and a.tremendous amount of sanction" to the playingof the' pojnted: Don Shula said : in • ed to speed negotiations for a: tract, the two sides ' con-was just mute. ,We did what otheij • the pre'ss.-/On ' The.-game's sponsors' game, scheduled July 26 IVJlanv Sluila," the Dolphins new contract. • • -*^ finned' / attention from tlie other periodicals had done for the last'20 yeatsr-r-tfand^^while Garr has had good seasons u\ appeared to.place much of the against-the Super Bowl chant-: ^d:Garvey, -'"Now,-the majority of jpoftswriters are" a thftt reason plus being from oneo'f the less ; -the NFLPlayers',Association;! . The decision to call off the-•-for his veteran players, which dieted that-the game-could . executive^director of -the either writing ctitumns on . the NFL ' glamourous teams;-Garr l^".ninth in, the« ti'flhe-union of veteran players game will cost under­: had"been schedule^ for. tliis be played withoutaffectingits ^piayers^union, the NFL players' strike or how the selection of -balloting with 386,890 votes. Aaron has l.r ­ -that went on stnkd Julv 1.' privileged' Children, in "the Sunday. * ' • -t-negotiations witluhe. players. Management Council and .major league, baseball's All-Star team,, 561,870. Chicago TrihnnpQianttp.i had—tadena1—n>ed+at-«n^-James ——1 should:be returned rcrtlie"players;~ S ~Itris hariiiwagree-with-any-af-the-othet^ hoped lha{-:a=waiv.er_:migfit fie! Scearce would notjbca formal ••••••• Instead .of totally, shortchanging the • ' National. League outfield picks. Pete. FREE RECORD gcantea-by both,tkrUt^-mjtlu.1 nvgoiidujjg acjigigii....—•'••.. . readers again, this column will be used to — Roac. wlio-ig second in the balloting, is disputtTwtucti would have:per-Rather, they said it would critic'ne Bowie Kuhn. * . batj-ing only around .280 and has onlv two timit one.. with Purchase! nutted the game to -tie be a meeting between' the two , . • ""-,rr home'runs. .. -Biased;!! sides .and" the mediator • in Mistake Los .Angeles' Jimmy Wynn, who is vir- Rollow, -who also is-sports ^whtch 11 would be~determined tuallr assufed7tlte""l1itrd"*ontft5ld"spot;~re" •your, choice and editot of the Chicago Tribune; ~7F ~ifiere"7s~a=-ters"fomw— —"-rLetting—ihe-fans—flhoose-4.he-^Ul-St3t_ the onlyoneof the three with anyclaim' to *' Golden Oldies said the Tribune Charities, bargaining •< teams has been-a-mistake ever-since it ­ be on the entire 25-man team.But others .would give the 47 All-S'tars" •' There havfe not tieen any --was Begun by CommissiorierWuhn. The |fr0"1 have ajt much rigtit to start. : this coupon, g checks for expenses.and send: . negotiations jn two weeks, reason it does not work is simple Big­*5fl|Oldies them Jiome. The All-Stars since' the mediator recessed ' name players.from the biggestcities have ' Good till 8 were t

Hr Pointing^* -MI* Gtjttflf ry ALSO Tdp iocyeop-c&w-souL Garr-is -batting around :360 ahd has 130 "dividual's-merits could be based on.the en­ Gymnastics hits which is 18 more"th""an anyopfcglse in ; tire first half of the season. Shoe Shop ^SALE* Austinite Wemakeand SHEEPSKIN >r{'' At repair boots K/vj'?­ RUGS Advances i WELCOMESTUDENTS ~CV »ho« belts ?tj00 ---Manv . j^ 50 Beautiful-Colors--• I leather In Golf i ri .' •LEATHER SALE • .goods Various kinds, colors -75( pfff ft, DALLAS (AP) —• Lisa- Parkinson of Houston upset _ Capitol Saddlery medalist Kixu, Bauer ofj.-Conroe, 1 up^9 holes,'-in-the-'.;i" 16l41_avaca-;.-%; Austin, Texas-' ty 478-9309 quarterfinals of the Texas' ^"­State Junior Golf tournament. here. Wednesday^ • Other.s 'gaining the I®., semifinals in the open divi-;;,-;;' iw sion< which-determines the" >» •TrS, •tournament's over-all cham­ .1616 Royal Crest •pionr were-Sherry -Wood of-^r— 444-&631 Austin, Pam Skelly of San An-7'^ f . . A leading .choice of tha Rlverslda' -tonio and Jayne Kinder-of -. [ ' Or-apartments because we offer Dallas.. . .. ' ipeci ^extra-spacious .living and . direct " « ."JjTacdoss to the shuttle bu? ._ ' .Wood won her quarterfinal^­ .match over Sandy -Yount of^ (" 1-1 $165 Piano, 3 and 1, and Skelly* , -" 2-1 185 "defeated Patti Johnson of' metinufi 2-2. 195 all bills paid -Nocona, 5 and 3. - Cvmwm LO; ' F01 1WZ CACTUS ' 'i,,8.40 F03 CZJ LOCKER & SHOWER (ONE SEMESTER)^-,;/ .75 ,FO0 CZJ 'C" PARKING PERMIT FOR. AUTOMOBILE 10.00­POp. |—| M BABXIN6 PERMIT FOR MOTORCYCLE 6.00 t-rA . THIS CARD HlIST ACCOMPANY YOUR REGISTRATION' MATERIALS. live at Dobie? SIGNATURE. _the uhiver'siTjf. of texas at Austini isv4-:KKW, Sm Mni1 If -. . ' -.»> * t 't? i Vv OPTIONAL FEE CARD (op'shen'ul fe kard), n.; (1) A V*Wp4- . -? -~ " ---i­ fou will be billed witlj your fees for ftie fall! r A>u-' v 1 ikm^r?;/S0*'*'H#± * f£^-,-I ^-'V'.;'ir'^f,^f%H.V"'' V'H^n %c* nwlt'HV«'in*v of Marshall ;. The Cardinals "_tagged Dave Cash snapped Los. and th? Dodgers for the first Houstoft/starter Larry. standings Angeles relief ace Mike time in the past five games. Dierker for runs in the-first NATIONAt HAGUE AMERICAN LEAGUE ? JVlarshate—«sBsetfutive vic­It was Marshall's 25th relief ; and second innnings, but five Est! ) tory stringat ninegames with appearance.^nce losingio the?./ > double plays by the Astroscut W t6B * W F«t fee'. a-'run-scoring single in the Cubs on June 2. ­ _ down other St. Louis threats. St Louis 43 41 -.512 • • Baltimore '46 554 Phjlaphia-r.,^...:.9-4I _42 .506 ^ .{n Cleveland 45' .S49­ Bake McBride singled home' 40 42~T\4Bff~—^•'^Bbs^on Montrealu-. ,,s.v: •v46 .549: SL_a run in thfe'first' inning, and'. PUisburyh/iivJr;;':'37 45 .451 5 Milwaukee '43 .512 3 Jimmy Dwyer bla&ed a home -Chicago--451 -S—^Detroit 43 .506 *4" New York. :42? ."Ala. run leading off the Cardinal WMI 7 Nfcw York. 41 13 second, Jjis second, of the 2532 GUADALUPE J- baseball-season, ' Los Angeles;.-.^ 60 -28,; .682 Oakland ...~ '48 37 >565 ; 48 37 .565 . Kansas Cily^ 42 -'41 .506. r 5'- I. . . -* 1 * • tf, -The-Astros tied the score_at Houston 46 41. .529. 13VV Texas. ~4r 4r "7TO"1 Atlanta-. r~-46 -523 . 14- Hank's Famous 43 :«483 2-2 in"*the second inmng on -a- rChicago-^ 40 7_ San Fran.-. 39 49 " .443 21 Minnesota 39 <7 .453 9V>",run:SCoring double by Doug SanDlego;.;.,.;... 37 53 .418 '73Vi CtltfornTa. ..i. -. 32 56 .364: .«. Chicken Fried Steak . R«tuUt 5 Houston. X'St. Louis 2 Boston 3. Texas 1 ' 2' pcs.VMeat, Frencti Fries,"by bierker.;> t Sao Diego 8, NewYork T •w New York 9, Xdnsas CNy * Rader and force-out grounder •. RmuIM . . jChicago 11, Cincinnati 3 ; ^/Cole.Slaw, Hot Ralls & Bufter ­ Mike Cosgrove picked up Mlfwaukee 6, Chicago .1 Philadelphia 5/"Loi Angeles 4-, Minnesota fl, Detroit.6. . 5-9 p.m.only |^$1.45 Reg. $1.05 the victory in relief,, his fifth Atlanta 10,-Pittsburgh 5 -• Baltimore 9, California 1 straight without defeat $an Tranciscd 4, Montreal 2 Orlando Pena, 5-1, was-,the, loser. ' -' ' Blazing'Starh^r ^ • • • f§ BOSTpN (UPIf -T-. Dwight Florida.Bldzars' Billie Hayei hurdle* the Hawaiian l(lander*roffen*e after the fir*t in*" Eyans^toW home.to-highlight -tereeption of thb new World Football .league «ea»on. .The Blaicrt wen the game, a. two-run fou^h inning, and 1 • which-was played in. Orlondo, 8-7. ' " • We're Not R^NECK ] This Week Onlyf"r/ Barbers r Chicago • PRICES TOO LOW TO QUOTE• EARN CASH WEEKLY •T MEDICAL AtlTS ;> Defeats DISCOUNTS UP TO 50% Blood Plasma Donors Needed® BARBERSHOPS J _ . . . •2915 Red River 477-0691:r -1W .* Men & Women: Texans ODDS & ENDS -DEMO UNITS -SJJC3 t *""" EARN $10 WEEKLYts * KELSON'S CHICAGO (UPI) — Virgil CASH PAYMENT FOR DONATION BOXED UNITS .-All NATIONAL BRANDS GQ ' 0 000 GIFTS Carter completed two touchdown passes and gained t'§ Austin --ags So' Congr««t -Tf^.4'. Including Mardntz, Dual, |CI, Sony, AKAI> ond more. 'ft t 44441)4 18$ yards through, the air ZUNIAND NAVAHO Wednesday night to lead the Blood Components; Inc. INDIAN JEWELRY; Chicago Fire to a 17-0 win OPEN; MON.&THVBS.8 AMto 7 P.M. MFIXFCAN " I~ over, the;Houston Texans in TUES. .& FRI. 8 A.M. to 3 P.M. , IMPORTS V their,opening World Football OffN 10 a.m. to 6 p.^n.^ „ CLOSED WED.Jt SAT. League contest :before an an-• "GIFTS THAT INCREASE 617 W. 29th of Rio nounced Soldier-Field crowd IN VALUE" HOURS CASH, CHECKS 409 W.6lh^ 477-3735 of 42,000. Grande M0N.-SAT. 10-6 LAYAWAY, K . Carter > sparked the-Fire CLOSED MONDAY FRIDAY 10-7 472-5471 FINANCING after-the opening kickofftoa H0-yard, march—:f-orr^-a touchdown, passing for .five* DtrrouowNUN yards to Cyrtt Finder for the score: , " In-vthe third, period 6hfe­ ® STA-PREST® IMPORTED directed the Fire1* over a '55­yard parade in 13 plays,"pars­NUVO® FLARES ing fop fiveyards,to Jim Scott INTERNATIONAL CAR PARTS for the score. • * ' . • ... I1...,.-;..... ....J ...I.. . •> . 1 .•;-r* "•The Fire's final points came 2828 GUADfttUPE , ' 474-6451 on a-30-yard field goal' by t kicker Chuck' Ramsey. • . Houston: never -threatened r* for a touchdown, and its best IS THE PLACE (l scoring chance went astray wlysn place, kicker ;Charlie TO BUY YOUR PARTS Durkee missed a 47-yard field- goal attempt. " , , -The Texans broke up the KiSi Fire attack three tinies with-Weekend .pass Interceptions.-. -.,J: winner—Levi's Resu/fs '"difcaib 17,-Houstoh 0 .favorite rFiorlda 8( Hawaii 7 !'• 'A -PWIa3elphl« 33, Porlffntf*"^ .fat-f-t^& Austin s Mostosr Complete Suppl Birmingham 11, Soulhern Catlrorhl? fashion leans. Detroit-afMemphls, N : , . -5^ of Imported'Car Porta New..Vork at: Jacks^wHie/ natipnal:^?? fefeWsfon Thursday i . x1 / • ^ ^ Styled.for active sports of altagjas in a rousing range of great new ftp o f ' dolors. Sta-Prest, so 25^ BkBSTKftt they never ..ineed ?/9 6V«V»WMK ironing. '9 Thesepopular LEVI'SJeatts feature 7CROV/M 9MNPIO WHI5MY . . , : i western-sjyled scoop front pockets, patch backpockets, and a moderate flare leg.Take your * •" ' pick from agreat range of fabrics'— is. in solids, plaids, and stripes. StHENLeY 95^. 4> <• *» is w W* -* "4.41, « -kl •• F5S-V ••TayptT^; v,? r0. ARPI 9m ,*3 » ^ i&V „ Ws' m mm 'm 4M .Hi s^auiSt8 Www-' • •-••• mmm' ±Jr WmsPI-# . fiC , , 30§"W. 1?»H 4V'2 C0N6RESS ***** '9U z% — — — ~ h • • — P*— r -. • — ^ " JLl ^ » . . . &>}&?>g*-ajUtfr* '.""-v.--- - r r , » - , - * . * * _ ~ T —^—7-r -^ ,l nucsdav. 'JUiy. 11, ,1974 THE DAILY TEXAN-Faa* item " r-I'"--: ^ J Jv-\ ,• -- .> -'s r'» •T s -• BKB m MB prtf, shtmst the early British: Open lead with 69s Wednes­day ..: *• ./ •'" : Defending ch'ampgm Torn _ WeiskQpjL^aSjlat eyeb'par' 35 '.aftei; the first tiifie holes. — Meanwhile, favored—Jac-} $, RETAIL: .SJ3k*SS2 m 'fsutS Nicklaus striigged in liitlra 74 * fwhile Johnny Miller, the, leading money winner on the PACKAGE THIS RECEIVER WITH AI^IY R t­ 3p7r0.s:-touY-;rimshed with a"~ Wr.and d lot of confidence. TURNTABLE AND AMY SPEAKER AND ;Placer,missed a chance to •.fike.*soie. possession of the GET 25% OFF ALL OF IT, " " «.V U,1 . lead when he -tctok a double ' JfeS ?4 fogey .six oilthe ifth hole.The TSouth"African, who. has won the U.S.. and British Opens, ljg» ' torn Weiskopf hit* from-a bunker onto the -Sjtifcl — '-j .»--~--W—-• -' ' — -:——­-V-'-' «@5>55i • ' IkvA' -4m T are 'the'home teaitf;:' > _ -"THE ;UNION • has-l>een a co-sponsor of the. team .by.,_ providing the "lahes for home meets, and the UTSA has t provided.the money," he said • "If AebowMn another house, we'dbelucky to get a 60^ent;.ii; rate. TOen we'd need;$21g for bowling " * <21 -That is not all the money -the sponsors need to provide; however. Tfiey'also rnusf provide shirts,.8 cents a mile for 1 the driver on;"away meets,-$5 extra for the driver'on away • meets, ?5 extrafpr Hiirleyif "he accompanies the teamand $5 . a day^oHlierboWiersif they stay overnight m a.different cis^fil ty. ' . A definite,conclusion to these problems probably will have :'•­to bereaehed by the: time the fall semester begins^ Hurley^ ?-' noted/ "at.least in time.-for aii^organizational meeting in^S September" . .•••: .feisi , IN THE meantime Hurley will be tryihg to havesomd new^l .jnachines purchased for the Union bowling;lanes. 'i«i; —Fve-bten-tryinE to: give (Texas -Union Directorlf Shirley '^ I colors. Natural oak cabinet. Except for the price sounds expensive. The L-2& achieves the open, effortless 'perior-. m on ce-—>hot is characteristic of all JBLs. It even approaches, within; a few db, the thunderous volume levels required of JBL monitors in the recor* ding studio. i1 '•fli J* v. Association (UTSAT. "The home school has to pav for the bowling of TIBd^*;' -8itd-PeHgt"backgr-ound-data..so.5hfi.canjlecide whether to r. buy or rent.Brunswick" or AMF machines^' he said. " Hurley also suggested some new lanes be put in the plann%i El T^Spurs GM May Leave hive,given permission.to the Squires to make Ankeram an •offerr ---—. Ankerson, vacationing inhis home-state of Wisconsin^-was 'gjV^Amencan Basketball Associa-—quoted here Wednesday as "•'-fSjtion club dickering for their' 1— ' !-4— SAN ANTONIO (AP) :-The -, San Antonio Spurs, who have' ?lost their top draft choice-to?: the rival National Basketball .. Association, now-find another saying he has been inter ed Union Building Easl, but nothing was decided on the ' issup, % •. ; "We bn|y have $3!& million for temodeling, and that's not •' nSSfly enough. We will have to cut some cornersrlt might-1 mean not^getting new-machines," he said. -. ; -Butt&esuggestedTanes-and-machinesareplannea-forl976&^ Unfortuna'tely, the-Texas bowling team needs them by ' _ September. , -' ' IS V — -mr—tr -L' rr"Vs: % 4-FVk "» f» J&li B­ x\ J. w ,|_SUcCe^sful general.manager. viewed by the Squired . The Lafvsm Jack Ankerson, who after Squires,, under ' new 1 •£»-­ aphis' first year in a general .^•manager's post was chosen /ABA Executive of the Year by Sporting News, is being jV .offered'thegeneral manager's "~post with theVirginia Squires.' Spurs official^ say they ownership", are ^seeking a -general manager to replace A1 Bi'anchi. "There's a lot to consider," ^aid Ankerson. "Ididn't go to Virginia because I was look­ing for a job." . • Photo>Service:-:;"^^tep 222 W. 19th & 5324 Cameron R'd. RESUME' & „ ^ TEAC.360S Until recently, the only,cas­vvithafewless professional A'4 a-ARMAND ^II• ..-Siiw pP 1 SSiSi CHARCOAL BROILED HAMBURGERS with lalfuce, tomato, mayonnaise ••••• . Reg. 89c each ^ 2 9 109 FOR I I I lj IgmmiSAVE 69c I& Must Present Coupon with Purchase '*. • • .. Coupon Good Thru July 31 IDENTIF4CATIOJSLTYPE # PICTURES *• Al ­WTO ; ' Quick, Reliable Service s'' fi • .1 I (GUADALUPE LOCATION ONLY] set^ojeclj' in.the-world-with" back wow and flutter-was the -TEAC 450. Then TEAC intro­duced the 360S—identical-in performance to the 450, but Askony engineer. mixiiigife'aturesivAnd there­. _ 1 loWerTThe iJtiuS fs : an incredible deck/It has four input mic or Jipe mixing, and .Dolby?;circuitry'with; Dolby calitjrationcontrols. •; • Check ' Our -Price1 ' Bl I 411 W. 24th St. 478-03951 ,f' , ,&&& THURSDAY SPJCJAli §1 ANNUAL—PRICE >4 Attending the LIQUIDATION £ALE Summer'Session? ;- PERHAPS THE LARGEST SALE^OF TOP- m 'WHY NOT"*'* QUALITY -NAME-BRAND-COMPONENTS TRY THE BEST! EVER HELD IN THE STATE OF TEXAS. 25 -80% PRICE REDUCTIONS ON IN-STORE W.'<••• b. •n.si DEMONSTRATORS AND JUST-DISCONTINUED ::S * 21 Great Mea/s per Week * Mafd Service _ „ ^ ^ ^..ClQse to Campus ^ •Private Transportation ^ MODELS BY SUCH QUALITY MANUFACTURERS AS;L • PIONEER • TECHNICS JBL SA KOSS ^ TEAC i] • ~w% CHOP SIRLOIN DINNER k*. ' ALl THIS AND^i ^ J 8 02. CHOP SIRLOIN. " \BUTTERY BAKED . . JViRyONE SETS aifc -A PRIVATE ROOM i |PQ.TATQ^H-E«6MCH|FniE8. HOT TEXASiTOAST, AND jCRISP . /r,/T0S8ED SALAD v WADISON H0USE3 3BVt St.^« '''"454-0416 -s?.«;Also Open Sunday For Browsing. • *&• HI- fl s 709 Wr22nd 478-989r 478-891K Madisqn -Pellaire^ Apts. ^ ofso available for Summer DHURRY! £ 28V5-GUADAL NO TIPPING ^JttME^AS Yau REMEMBER: THE 3011NIT" GALLERY WILL NEVER LOSE A £ALE BECAUSE OF PRICE m: ife : TSrn • 'iSli 1 y *'^V "*T?F -sO-,7*-a vf ta< S-*» -»1 •>S+' h''"l -T "* -V4 1* « ~ *1 r_>, ^ ri-..V^^!---i^^-R7.^.njHL.^11vft^ Z"informa­ .staff to search the.liles}of Dr. ;Ehrlichman to exercise tivlties of the unit before or' ... paign contributions^Senate amined President Nixon's tion about ihe man who leaked ^Fielding, for information general supervisory control alter the'break-in; including "Watergate committee staff assets and liabilities last year, the Pentagon papers. > about Dr. Ellsberg without a < over • the Special the;FBI. Nixon: said, be.--did said Wednesday. • :•..... „fcven though Nixon was : In statements'read by the­ . The staf|.report,.which, has !'awa¥e of and concurred in at to thejudge plumbers trial -,-• been challenged by presiden-least'some of these im-' ."'not Have-a precise recollec­ jury, Nixon said he created a Friday Funeral Set lial lawyer Jam$s St Clair, provements to his propertyl" tion .of instructions 'given to special. investigative unit at .. cites a swimming-pool, a the committee staff's report' cp§t§| ,Mr tShelichpiaV with, respect. the White House to plug leaks , i biiljard table, pool, furniture; said. " V ,\ - to anv specific agencies of .vital national .security For Justice Warren and carpeting and a pair of' And copies of President material. v.But he 'denied • pla tinum and diam on d Nixon's Income-taxes for 1969 authorizing "a break-jn .com-' WASHINGTON (AP).—The body Of Ear!Warren will.Jie inItm earHngS-for Mrs,. lNixon through 19V2 made public last mitted bv membersof the unit statd.Thursday-ih-tbe'W^iite-marble buildteg^tOie-Supreme LYRIC i-;:i among; the uses to which the. ..year by the White House, do lil' the office'ot-psychiatrist Court.yvei-^JiicliJie pivMiiaii fuilG yuaij,.ds Chief Justiceof tliu ' money was put not listany gifts from Rebozo. Dr. Lewis J. Fielding, . United States m « , uniceu flaxes f ^PheFe-lS-no-Sneclfie-prohihi--Thp. rppnrt lairi IHaOarn. -Nixon's comment in sworn .Funeral servicesfor the nation's utbChiefwhodied .tion in the federal campaign paign contributions were the -answwft-tn-wgiUg^.^iioij^^nf-m a Washington hospiial jupgjav-nipht .tjlMhfl agp, 0f 83, will tie . P«s. law against using campaign only apparentsource formore sent^to him by the court Tues-held at W^shingi^Cauiedr^at-vauituiciyoi iiui»UTnU£l^.7ooouiFnday..* • V ; ~ icontributions for personal ex-than $20,000 in cash purchases day .jught, put a dramatic Warreh will be buried Fraday alternoon'ih Arlington NatiSnal­ 7 penses But the Internal «,made by Rebozo for Nixon »n climax on the two-week-old Cemetery,.a funeral'home spokesman said: ". " --->• Revenue Service said such, November, 1972, alone. •trial of-four plumbers defen­Details of'the lying-in-stateatthecourt were n«t immediately dants; including John D. available". .Ehrlichmani Nixon's onetime • WSrr,en, a former Californiagovernor, was appointed chief' chief domestic adviser. justice by the late PresidentDwight D' Eisenhower oriSept. 31. : The defense had rested a 1963 ' -' v' short time earlier-after hear- mg Secretary of State Henry is ft —UPI TiUptwU A.-Kissinger testify that he GRAB A BRASS RING! TJidiicttorderorrequest a psy-­ Political Groups Springtime - Ring Time. WASHINGTON (AP) .by, coupled release of the chological. profile or Daniel SIGET ^ GGODY! ? -Political special •.••interest -Henry Kissinger arrives 'at court. report with a plea-to Congress Ellsberg. groups already have almost to. pass"legislation"-'for new ' twice as much cash available clean sources of campaign ,'ftall wedding rings -—:in a variety'-of-styles; for this fall's congressional: funds. ' • • THURSDAY NIGHT : 'Handcrafted to perfection: candidates as • they spent two --JWhen Kalmbach artd Stans And conveniently arranged years ago; Common Cause swept through .the corporate ' in fashion collections, reported AVednesdaj'. x; front offices of America like JESTER CENTER SPECIALS ­ -so-it's easy to seleqt the .The American Medical Ssi' Sherman marching"through t.ring Jhat best expresses ;• Association heads the list, Georgia, they totally .• your love. leapfrogging .the milk destroyed _ the-credibility^ of^ Great Table Make ft a beautiful Year producers, ••• the old system'"ftardfTer One with Sheftall. STOREtit 00 • In 1972 the groups spent$9.7 said.-"They didn'tdestroy the PANTS ;Night million m Senate and House system. It live'?.'' .and : j-Only races. As of May 31 the same •Herbert W. -.Kalmbach,T Your ON CAMPUS Student Store — * business, agriculture; health, President Nixon's former per­ labor and other special in­sonal lawyer, recently went to Weckdoy5 8:00 'til 6:00 JEANS terests."had-$17.4 • million at prison for violating campaign 1 Team Up' : -J7fc • hand. laws. Maurice H. Stans was • Saturdays 9:00 /til 1:(00 , ; :For A John W. Gardner, chairman . Nixon's chief fund raiser in One of These: / Tiny of-the-self-styled citizensIotK 1972 "-7 LOVE LOCK "Irs * TOPS ^^ • BLUEBOOKS -• COSMETICS . - ^ ^ • SPIRALS • RECORDS Treat yourself! SNACKS • MAGAZINES —¥ ourAife^cajj— ~be full of~ surprises atC \ 2322 GuadalutM "ON IKE MAG". -ALUNOUt VUUM T1U CUAD&IOK -;S77» IVtXCT KO. CONVENIENT FOR SHUTTLE BUS RIDERS! Open tifl 8:00 p.tn; Tonight! V -As ­ 4. 'Mmm ,,— ////////s mm vyk Weddrded 'announcements bf • '///AS /s/// • TexmUnion$ campus events -...... . ///// s/v//t /s// • Mhoura a day * . SS/A ////. f /s// r-........ ,..r. ///•/ ^ What a line! It ranks right up them-With the clas-M\ sic scenes of the mustachioed \^aiii abandoning the jsweet young damsel tiedrto the tracks and cackling, -sr.* -»"V i "Just s i g n , etc..i Thedifferenceis,oneisa classic,theotlier a reality;" m f ^ You. know howit goes. ; • U" -r You find a place you like, but the landlord shoves^ a two-semester con­1/2 OFF ; --tract in yourface.Soit's'sign thedeed and suffer' or move on. Oh, the ag­ ony of it SLIL , s 1. ' ^ V • ­ HALTERS J But fear not.Tri-5T6wers North has a little somethingwe invented called W HAtTER SETS& theOneSemester Contract. You*aren't trapped intostaying or losing your SWIMSUITS deposit if you move on after one semester. And we haVen't raised our iisSSSt prices-• — since— v '''1969.CTf-v.-. " ...SSSfiK .. •. : ^•• ••. a • ~ , -*.—-r w -. •-. / ••. •" "• Irgw Tri-Towers North is two and a half blocks west of campus. 801 West m&tg J * v ** 24th — 476-7636. SUMMER PANTS, SHORTS; ¥•?" ^ ^-reps^jAdKETSr. ­ ' plus GRABBER SALE —fiBURNET^ AND RIVERSIDE ONtY Odc(s • and ehds, s^ort' ic^cket^NOWr^l4o$5.i N fr-SffV _ smm i®»S m AftWe 5f#fe: St^fe" f V: •fr Speaker Candidate Head . r',.^>11Jj" Redevelopment Studies _ • ^ c ,pMvr:• mm SiiES Probe Urban Character Solon Leads in =Sgp By DAVIO HENDRICKS races, was by Rep. Bill «imply "I'm for you," Parker., votes "of so few persons. plans to-improve governnient "Texan .Staff .Writer • Clayton of „Sprlnglake, who .explained Parker said he has traveled rather than trying to tear-By CHARLES 'LOiiRMANN' thousanidollarswasgr-ariteti Ure city, he said! " ;• If the next speaker of the Said hfe felt the candidates Parker is so confident he from Port Arthur to El Paso " down another's-campaign forTexan-Staff .Writer for a tenrmonth.'Study of .Owning" ^jibotogi'spby Texas House of 'Represen­were jww. withm four or five" has the most support at the and "all points in between," speaker. Two studies on.integration Congress Avenue. Leslie M. busmess-on^ East Sixth gave tatives should be determined' votes of each other.— .moment that he said he would adding, he-has been meeting-Have Constitutionali?p of. econotnie growth with the Gallery, assistant professor of Watkins q vi,e*w.of the copiplex by*contributions, Rep. Fred Clayton would not guess the meet anytime,-anyplace with •with both House members and Convention'delegates been,character of downtown Austin architecture, and her hus­flavor-of the neighborhood. •Head from Troup would win at-extent of his support, saying, the Other contenders with his House candidates. votirfg with the speaker's race this time. ^Ua miMitWAMn will be made-by a University band, John Andrew Gallery, Not only were the old-. ^ *11 fnlntfthink. playingnlftiTtMff the numbers an^l thtflr supporters, "if it ist-Clayton agreed, stressing a i in the back of their minds?"——graduate apdtwoarchitecture associate deanofthe School of T, buildings unparalleled but, a the winner should game isrjdiculous. It changes agreed the tow two-will back. candidate: must be • Two candidates: saitf they If be. . professors furtded' by'the City Arcfijtecture, will conduct the ' ' "Jreal sense of identity »and determined by claims of; sup­everyjday. Numbers don't add' out of the race." ^ -knowledgeaWe'about the state j doubted that was the case. Options-Program or the study.. >. closeness"-amongAhe people credibility to'-'a speaker's­ port, Head would win; . Head said-he has announced and the problems each'.' Parker .said the speaker's.National Endowment for the Watkins, working with was apparent, he said.' • sv-, 'race." ' -• ,••..-the na{n.es of 32 of bis sufH -, representative faces in the in-.-race has not -affected his. -• Arts. ...... . , sociologist Mary "Sanger, And if the-winner,should be However, -Head .and Rep.; porters, adding Parker has dividual-districts. .-• -voting, btil about other Architecture apprentice hopes-"to preserve the mul­determined by who has beeir ..;s#."I wourd-""iike lo provide" Carl-Parker -of Port "Arthur" announced only three. • '• "A speaker's race' is delegates, "their 'recordDavid H. Watkins, 1600 West-tiethnic character'! of East; : reasons formore-people-toiise. running the -longest, -again are.playing thenumbers, each Head has the highest con-4ifferent-from any other type speaks for itself." ' . ­ an Sivlh fmm TH as tQ.Gmipre.ss sayingthey arer.withoutaues­ .: Ave., has, received $8,800 -tlffl .irm-n V'fl) -ig prnyjrfp Head would win. " _!_ .tribution total so far with$44,-of race." Clapton remarked. In May, Convention presir • grant for a thrte-month study Avenue. The principles of the fhn .ia^^ing ranSjflfltP 000: impetus for business to cater But all the "ifs" disappear Jnri, however. this~~rriay7be "Wm ib notrdealiiin with-John—yent-Danfel warned the co.n-­ • .•of->--Eas£'' Sixth Street. Ten-•study would apply to the-e,n­ :_to the peopie there," Watkins next January when the House Head said 80 representatives" because he has been.actively!" Q. Pllhlin, linl thp-^frakpr's ­"said 'i4 ->;*l' M votes to replace •< outgoing-. have'indicated interest insup­running longer than the other in the field." .• • . race^off the convention floor. 'f *«• K". ' I It-.* K. , =Speaker-Pr-iGe-DanieLJfcAnd^ porting him, although he conr two candidates. Clayton said Head, too, is traveling,- say^ However, off the floor the with -the-uncertainty of. ceded. s(OT6'effiih}~be-facing-—he-fras^-reg&iygtLJm.000. ing he wants to take the race race is on, and all three • Both Watkins. and^the Qmgfit&tr November's general election; re-refection problems ' in Parker estimated he has been. to the people and has been, representatives—agree^-the- Gm fMr Gallerys desife coordination. • „ fmi with the City:Planning Com­no one candidate; can de.ter-. November. given -$25,000 and expects to-talking, to service clubs and campaigning .will continue toeuKwawwrfiig jl«# mission and such groups .jiiine what.isupport-he-'will Stttttz. *fIT uy PARKER SAID he,has 48 spend about twice that before other organizations across'the . after the convention ends, as have in January. . "uhconditranal'-' pledges pf the year is out. state. regardless of whether the SNwicAm JS Austin Tomorrow and (the • support. 9 ineans "whatever happens,"..-to justify the great amount-of paign "affirmative" explain­before ytK left-it* & make the goals as ".availaBle •. legislative-session rs statement made by ojie of,the" "you-are second to no one," or -money needed to-influence the ing he h?s been setting up January's regular session. -"and economically feasible as " 41 three active candidates, who' possible." Sertai* this week : discussed their •JHterirriuCfau t.TO t.tO &*CA#tr Y.\$r .• • t$£~,... i.&tt.et t OtokCfox **•*. J.« EVERY THURSDAY AND FRIDAY TRY A " * *briefs:Informal. Summer Courses Offered tso j.«* " «•» StfptrtHi tM . Vegetable gardening; iCun-. second summer"school ses-Ra C6 Relat ioh s benefitChilean refugee relief. JwuOJW Jtuwurni dalini yoga, sailing, skydiving^ion."-----V Garcia visited.Austiain_195S;_2 GmwwKtn and wmifeed are among the ' The" vegetable gardening" -» -on the UT^Chile Exchange ihformarclasseg beingoffered "-QOiirsjs i'sfa _oae-S-fessiojt . -HProtyamr-After-teac-hing-and —.i.. by the TexasUnion:during the woikshop in organie garden--forking here tiirtit -mz.-she;^^ will:i>6 acateingljn.3Seminpr ving' \vhich• will iprovide infor- returned;:lo:J Chile where; she-" ; offered the -second summit mation on .soils; mulches and wa? iriipriSonedJ following theHSTAUKANT * insect pests, peculiar to the. ilf8?^on . . ,^e American military coup last Septembe'r. Yf: Specialty Austin area. , . . studies.department." SPjoce^ds of the benefit will •>; fadiions for American Studies 370 '^ill . "The weedfeed workshopwHI VdutjtT . rhen and gandMcfies ER:SPECiAlrl o4 Tomato 'S women *'f " meet* through August aqd v »-, « HtiKjvtsttv dfyt HU f&Ujtitt. "* *~i~ " proach ^'^eto teminewhat E^^S—ChtleSrSiaaS^S-, Stuffagbnafr _ >.}S U~ ' ' • ' » f.there will be field trips aswell determine daughter. Any excess will go changes, if any,.have occured qjU CSuhnMrtnt) t.70 —V ^ as.ciass meetings. The course for relief of other Chilean in southern race relations.' will focbs on tjieidentification-refugees. „ • • • ' / ? and use of medicinal ^nd food" LAPAG:Cocktail Donations of .$2 will be re-' .V , -r-tmSC :: plants found around Austin.' quested at the door, and. ~ |a pitcher v -• the'Latin Atperican Policy I ; JwiM Apt, fmidiI • immtt. m cocktails,will be ft eajch."The1­ * kMirurrt* • '• W The 'beglnnlhg~sa'iIfrig -Alternatives Group-and4>ther_ ftemabjaua tts • z-f clktvuj$u& . um ' ^ * 1-9 p.m. icourse .will includfe both on--?°cal sponsors, will-host an in-ANNOUNCSMCNTS • I TiivyStUj-fUA tm*r, fmuft • I 1. te«hi0*.i-iff i-v, ,land and,on-water instrtictiori!"^H^cocktail^artyfrome-TlXAS,UNK)fij«]ll-$RQQSorr.e_!rM concert riJntG&aCt Sub • -uy c." , 1 .to. 9 FridaJ-wlfh K«nnerht • 4" "and' fitgr mtmtftUt wA <&MuiSat(i iU its SANDWICHES®F00SBAlL®P0NG * p.m. at 4507 -• Velvet Co^fJatture at 8 p.m. Thurs* students may -register in Deepwoods Drive. • ¥ . Say on the Union Patio. jprfrat# tf d&Qt , •Hmniwi ardmnWnrf* u rSfcci.^lMk.anicdUoki' . t tbqf w Union Building 104 through The pariV will honor Cecilia ' TEXAS UNION will -sponsor a free eSma tf ntt wr KiCdr Fndayv .' demonstratfon of the potter's w^l • ' "Che Chef' Garcia and will Open til! 4 a.m ; • af won Thursday.in.Union.Building t4* * '333^ '• «ap TCXAS UNttNwflliponior'a fllm,"Anairt With Dirty Faces," at? arxftf p.hw Corner 19th and Guadalupe 477-682? • alia ,k Thursday Inthe Union Theater. Ad-^.v. mfuion U si for students, faculty^ • •and »taflrs JlJ5bJor meoibers.;-, -,TiXAt.UNtOttMdlUpQMora free concart .^ with Lonn Taylor* wd h)s barrel ­organ atnoon Thursdayon theUnion Ju ^ _ " 1 " • Patro. IWAS UNION.wiDi^onsorb film, "Paper­' rMoort/'af-8 and Wp.m. Prldayand t informal Classes-\ .* •-Saturday in the Union Theater.-. TCXAS URIION wilt-s^on^or a free 3'^ *7 -demoMtraHorof^aiket wea.ving-at Midsummer Registration noort Friday in Union Buiwinp 333. • --• : MSR1MOS.. ' " CANHELPPROTECT at 1 Jp mr­ .'TABilTOP,OWUA(S wlll ^t . ^ r«ir~ • •" •• • Wecl. July 10 to 4;^ Union 104 " Sunday In Unfon &ulfdr'ngJtffoptay • war gan>ei. -, V .v frf. July 12.,r-^8:30 ­ WHOLE EARTH BOO^ A TENTS y '"inp^ „ t_>, -tA r FREEZE-DWED FOODS 4 TOWNES HALL 9pm Thtftt.; Jvfy'll Y.M.CAT-^ '* PACKS _ t;* CANOES -KAYAKS ' 8pm Fri., July 1? Y.M.C.A. >j* aocKa ": ? FOAM pApa $ MORE t|Mn Sat.,. July. 13 Jr. .Ballroom * OOU4 CENTER tN&WmUNC' CtHTW ­ • CHiUj^TrAtiofi UnloA BWg. |TOWNISHAa|U«ScKMq 8pm Sun..-July 14 Union Theatre •O Eju-tK ProvisioivCoj StMUNS HALL • a 2410 SanAntonio 478-1577., M •Stppmmrrd.by CiA.H.pSiM * S*® WBirtAH KD6. HO UK •-aygiNctftwoLM' roqr ... MRSe MlMOfliAtMVSSUM UNG'!'."'"^ART >LD6.1 MUStUM" LAI jTHUTEi \KA»0-TV «Ui imtpN 4CH0SH LAIS.: . tAHMALi MAIN K06 uiiuitir MCMOIIAlSrAUUM •ATTS P^Tl SI J «sp MOOUHALt OmiHlLP FOimtAm-Zi "mm |?| m-m mi »r *\x ismt _u_ riNjCKCQUATSj-.' Jeiveler8 J -and ' since 1888...Jeweler8 .Letusheli;p^you Choo^the" " ^Wkere Auatinites Shop-ivith.Confidence" I •r. J -—mast beauAjfutdjamonddfatl. . ~ . 611 CongregB Ave.j?-' -_ •:» SQSTUDENT GOVERNMENT ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION COMM. ^RE WeGIFTOF LOVE fS "...e OlAKtdNDS'ARe - ~ j' $ V C? §^"'-^1 ' '' " * ^ Jv" i'•4 r-^4-A* Z.C. m® .ffRSTUf.* iW KS&&5BS4'1 *">£», 'fjtl f-' i^aVpSrV long .Hot Summer *v. ai«,fT»n^ M„ Pills Still, Rising By SUSAN LINDEE sider-the announcements as ^, , ._ Texan Staff Writer -public •service". V--VSo-your air .conditioning is Randy Turner, of the • already turned up-to "hot". Energy-Conservation Com­ • and you have started doing mission, ^aid apartment your housework nude, andstill dwellers have different your utility bill .goes u(r every problems ' than the average, -'month' Voti're not alone, -tMv .homeowner^ TJhe commissipn •: Austin's utility -tangle has has drawn up a list of direc-• reached a crisfs of confusion. .tionsv specifically lor apart­There has-not been an official ment dwellers,-to help them ,;rate increasesince the 17 per-reduce, their-electric bill. •: --"'cent—boost ^ofKJan^_t,-jjut--QNEOELIHE.most,impor-; •4mi^or~?;mp'irm'jrtiiiii-hn'r 4n-T~-^-ii , littlP ""MaF<5"" how to conserve energy. This . sure television s'ets ianiJra3ios ; wilUncludea radioafid telcvi-are off ifrno one'is uSing them. sion campaignandAvill costan-Irons-consume^aJotoLenergy^ -sjjestima'tEd ^li'SOO.'.The lowxpst. so they should-. b£ used: for g.l"s-i:rediteAJLO-:cfl!0P.era_tion_of moce than mie article at a •••local-media, which will con- THUJIS. JULY 18 thru SUN. JULY 21 . HEMISFAIR ARENA'SAN ANTONIO 103rd ECiTiGiv NEW! UNIQUEI UNPARALLELEDI SEE 25 FANTASTIC ACTS NEVER ^" BEFORE SEENIN' AMEftIC A fg'i : jtRfQRMANCfa. :> THUIS? (JUIY. 11) rSd'fbiC FAMILY NIQHT • SI 50 OFf W|7H ;. '.NEWSPAPERCOUPON)*Ff{t. < JULY 19) 2j30&7:30 :P.M.*SMi, iivvr;20) H:00 A M.; 3i00-8tOO P M »SUH (JULY IfOO & 6 00 P M. All S«aH,lletervc(l -tax In^udtd $3.30 ..Si.SO;S5.SO SAVe St.OO ON KIDS UNDEB 11 . FRI 2.30 P^SAT, 110Q AM MAIL ORDCRS: S»nd sell-addressed; stamped anve/ope •'There is no requirement in the law that the Harris County group report the names J: already reported from-.theother committee," he said." • o - The-report-filed by TAP. lists semi con-'' tributors and tlftir addresses/The secretary 1 * of stage's office received the* report May 28. The group, consists of members,.of the Adger, Corson,Dailey Corporationof Houton, and others. • • . Dean said contributions received by Briscoe's,approximately 45committees total-. > ed 5860,000, Expenditures amounted to $746,­ 000. The total includes a loan-from Briscoe <>• himself of $365,000. . ^ . creasea.the over-all amoupto^ draperies and Blinds closed on '.­energy used-, so '.b-ills m-the -sunny s!cIo~ol tnp' apart1• throat' Defense Loses magnify the" heat -from the sun.' Turner said." --sk;;.­: '-Anoth'er important sugges?p:.i-By KAT CUNNINGHAM .tio'nis to keep-the filter.clean The hunt is on for a new ex-on air conditioners;: v Or;: pert.defense witness to testify "'A; dirty, filter ca.n-. mak^-in theohscenity trial of Austin your, air conditioner work nightclub proprietors-J. Nor­.twict^as' hardy and it will use man Wells and Joseph Lloyd • twice as; much-energy A-:h&"a Smith, their defenseattorneys said Wednesday My-Oh-My Club/Zipper Xou.iige owner We11S and meager Smith arescheduled Witness relationships. witness will definitely hurt Doyle, who is out of .the-the • trial,'-' the -defense at­ country on a.speakin#. tour, torney said. -. /• woultl have been a "good • Dellana said'he denied .the witness for several reasons, motion, for • con tin u a pcc Terral Smith, lead counsel for because he felt there were -Wells and; Smith, said,-other • expert witnesses who •irShe is-a clinical psy­could testify for the defense. chologist . who advocates the _ "If she were an eyewitness use of-sexually .explicit to. a murtfer it would be­ • movies as -a learning tacluii-different." Dellana said. "If to be tried ne'xt \veek forcOm~~qiig'; he"said—­ ~r theyrwanted-her-so-badlyTthey -shwld-faave-puUioiuindei^sujimaterial in connection with-and Dallas trials involving" poena7~betore she lettT the showing of the conj.rover-. ''Deep frhroat "added siaJ tilm_"Deep Throat.' lfsihard-to-say-Avhat-1t-tl The-triaMs-scheduled- County Court at-Law Judge do. bur not having her as a begirt Monday. Jerry Dellana denied a motion Monday to delay. thd tnal awaitfng the return ofDr.Lee Doyle, a specialist m sexual e •errmitf­ • • Rkk Nilion and tN* Conyptt Bowd ow Sot., far two •K®w»^7-A40 niraSS • • • Tttliitt-SS"-;'. Advanc* at lno»r Sanctum, OiKount ft««erd«r 7«xai Hdittri, and Th» Opry -------Hom*-—-. .. Annex Al#* /Horvry;;-;Slv at the 'door' •• -# through Sol.­ LEBANESFDINNER Starting at $2.95 ' bun., July 14, 11 a,m.. --8 p.ni. a ALAMO / RiSTAORANt j476;5.455 • Regular American, dinner•& Wfre List Available ' Orders to GoLlv Open 6.a.m/til 9 p.m. EVERYDAY HAPFY~H001T45B~PM 1 Muq Pitcher Shiner Beer." f>•1.11• • i J , Ssff i —Michelob Beer " $1.60 ; . Mondays Wednesdoys .... Shiner MUheitib;~ Doy •• •• • •• -'-i' Hoppy Hr. Happy Hr. Prices Prices * • Good All Good All. Day With Day With Purchase Purchase RESTAURANT Of -Meal 01 Meal Featuring.14 varieties of hot sandwiches, served on 12 inches of hot French Bread.: Ako, the" best in Pizza; Italian food, and Shish Kabob. SUN.-THURS. 11:00 a.m. to 1 o.m. HII. & SAT. 11:00 a.m. fo 2:00 a.m. 2801 Guadalupe 472-3034 . s,. I. •TAHVIAAL nAv • « « PMMCTWH rnni ^ | rr %l n 5 iS KI oarnumput \tt Theres «sucker bornevery minute!1 Pc,t' * p-odoewn papeb MOW iv/d B'own .1.1V..V "T-FRITOT-AHO-^ ffitoAY-AND SATURDAYS SATURDAY -f­ 8K)0 • 10:00 p.nC 8=00 £"18:00 p.m. C'VSl UT Studentj, : $1.50 Members Stall, Faculty. m ;••&£££ i . • By STEVE GOLUB Texan Staff 'Writer -_ Austin city limits would ex­ tend nito Williamson County jf the Citv Council annexes the 2.600 acres northwest of the city nowrbeing studied. . ' The City Planning.Depart­ment will submit the-study of possible annexation to the city manager in two to Four weeks, Planning. Director "Dick tlliie said. • • • .. •, "THE AREA IS NEXT to U.S. Highway 183 and includes :the Barrineton Qaks subdiv.ir jiion. asmall sliver qf which is in Willitnamsftn County-, Deputy City Manager Homer Reed said. : • .• ••:•••-.•• • ., • Austin can initiate annexa­tion under: the 1963 State Municipal Annexation Act, Lillie said. EVEN THOUGH SOME people in .the proposed area­won't want to be. included in the city because of higher tax­es, '"We think-the benefitsout­weigh-the costs," Reed.said. City limits^ Studied Citv. services like garbage The.^uy also is looking, jnta? collection and poiice a'nd fire :: pi oposed strip annexation " proteotjon are" normalTv ex-; : Along tTidjor highways for land terided ,mto a new are,} m> use control and sign control,'', "mediately, Heed said LiUicgyid" . Water biijs. garbage coilec-: THERE ARC TWOor thi t,. tion and fire insurance iwouid -jilaces where strip annexatioii go down m price, Lillie added,. couhi be used to any advan-' - The citv manager's office'is a Lage. Reed said. PosKiWe preparing, information about arecis would be HI 35 uorih ­ the eoSts and services which and sottltrdpcTHighway 2'i0 wOuld be available for the Weit, Reed said. , . area residents if the land. iso Austin is now a little-o've; annexed. Reed said," 100 square mt'.3s. .(64,1)00 SEVERAL PLANS are be-" acre*i. Reed saidT The. land ing studied in response to , ibeing studied northwest of the CoOTcitman Lovfoll: l.cficE^-'•i'v' ^"ufd -arid innre than four : mann's.-six-pointplan to, ex-MJUdtti. iumj?. fcw idii-r.— . tend the-citv's annexation, State Ia,w allows cities to. zoning, and subdivision annev up to 10 percent of their' -auHioritv incorporated area each ve.a ^ Austin has no cjontrol-ovet, They can-accumulate thisi* zoning or: building'standards power lor thiee -vears to ,i outside the city . corporate ijnaxmium'ot 30 percent.. area, Lillie said , "In land outside the city with no zoning orbuilding con­ trol,-substandard-develop­ ment-can occur in a direction the city is-likely to gi;ow Lillie said. presents LONN TAYLOR and his Incredible Barrel Organ ­ Today a-Union Noon _ Patio ^ presents. fiesfauranf & Arcade; , 255& Guadalupe > LUHCH SPECIAL PARY i • $1:39. ~ rilVE MUSIC 6 HiTES N$ Cover . ...-MixeaV,DrInks*Key^-.:i^-ii"WmyvfrmfiAmttSBTTTWr-" l LocHesTu& fhor20vBefttS ' Tequila 50*yxKot Wed;-& $ahJ _ Hoppy Hour 4-6 , FREE OUTDOOR CdNCERI with 3m KENNETH THREADGILL an I r "i I mtown P|K. $s- Second tevelDobYe Moll 477^1^4 ft 4 poul the O.'iVfal.iBrothers Screen 1 MUSIC > jwa I JESS DEMAINE AND THE' COUNTRY"' I !. ,CINEMA 5 FESTIVAL^;-j§. DOUG SAHM AND BAND inrtUtJIflg-RfcUai'd REVDE will play at the El Paso'Cattle | Greene, Line Davis, Auggia Meyers, Doug Company Friday night at" 831 Houston St; b9ut9l P $1.25for one fi)mi$2'.00 forbotff*'"g Smith and others will play at"the Texas B„RONCO BROTHERS will play at the -• Opry House at 8 pum. Friday. Tickets vvtfl v • . Rockm' M Club, on Highway 183, halfway ' be $2.50 at the door.. " , / sltfitween. Austin and .Iflckhart.^Saturdoy-, the great joys of the college ex­•One moment of thwarted glory exceeds £6SdrandRoSdlfi€^ v • One of AMERICA AND BREWER AND SHIPLEY : night, fhings are scheduled ti> get under ' makes you feel §ood r perience is learning to perform your liiun--• all -others in my., wash , 'n wear-career^1 r w)ll appear, in concert at Municipal, way at 9 p.m, drv cliores,commercial-style; I am referr­-While waiting for the finish of a spin-dryjIs Auditorium Friday night. Advance tickets •' .CEDAR FROST AND ALVIN CROW WITH ing tothe ari.of mastering those machines... made eye contact with this"absolutely-^for-the 8 p.nt; show ace'ayailablefor $4;$5 THE NEON ANGELS will play at the Ar-' .which eat quarters and dimes and an oe-1 gorgeous-gee'-what-are-you^doing-tpnight ' r and'56 at the-MagicMushroom. Riverside ;'-J imadilloWorld Headquarters;525'AsJ3arlon casional sock 1 hate it girl adding Nu-Soft to her rinse cycle.She,:1 j V'« : Records and Tapes and the Highland Mall-Springs Road Salyrdar night Cover is SI, :.l usually realize the time has come-for -. • had the most graceful pour 1 had ever -. . Home Entertainment store ALLEN DAMRON is.featured'at the Crjcket-' this endearing ritual when-1 discover one-'.seen.. \ : . • . . . : RICK NELSON AND fHESTONE CANYON .. Glitb thorugli.Saturday. The Cricket Club- :nionnng-I wore my Jast.clean shirt thejday . .-•I..'TRIED to be'cQol, pulling out theBAND will play shows at 7 and fOpm. ', is at 2201 Burton Drive in the English Aire, • before. Invariably, ihis qccurs on a-satui'-quarter Isave for the dryer and.flipping its . Saturday at the Texas Opry House. Ad­Apartments. , * . daywhenthe laundromats-, rooms, etc.... a.la George Raft, while I leaned-against^vance tickets, at $5 each, are-available1 at TRACY i NELSON AND MOTHER EARTH arc full of lots of others in the sam« situa­. tlie sorting table s?' Inner Sancturii/Discount Records, Texas • •...'continue theirraet-ai-0astleCreek through> tion._ • The washer stopped, and as I-suavelyi; Hauers.ana the Upi'y Huuse. —_ Appnficjnf iritti LAST DAY' | will be presented by the Creek Players •who -by merely raising an' eyebrow can lose lace with Ms. Nu-Soft. Oops. Nothing free. . ' • •" * " , , -•%% .Cesar: 5 . Friday and Saturday nights at the Creek say, "If you take thai dryer,. I'll.break but shirts with 19-inch necks 1:30 |• JO&N PERRY AND-LEONARD POSNEft, .Theatre. Also, O'Quinn Cairo,' magician,-. your arm." -' ..... -"HEY!!" screamed. 19, raising th§ Ptamst and "yioliriist, respectively, will ' ' 5:00 • ,?will perform between acts.Curtain time-is .. ..Or, therers aIso..the girl who can cast a foreboding eyebrow: • " . present.^ sonata Irecrtal at 8 p!m. Thurs-' §;30 p:m„ .and ticket prices are. $2 50 fo> deadly side)ong.glance, which translates, •'Well, whaddaya know," I quiveri •f • day m the.Music Building'.-Recital Halt Elvira: adults and $i tor children. "Take your eyes off my underwear, you "Wrong laundry room'" * MOE HANDY AND'THE MAVERICKS will ^GODSPELL"-AUDITIONS -for the next pervert,'?'Few secrets exist in.a laundry, :. As strong an argument for disposable play at the Skyliiie Club, 11306 N. Lamar production of the Center -Stage Theater, room. • _ ' paper clothes as I've every heard.-•>#? Blvd.. Saturday' night. The show beings at 403 E. Sixth Sti. wiH be held from 7U> td 10:30 : 8 p.m. Friday night the Skyline features p.m. THursday at th& theater FRIDAY SATURDAY television mm&t VILLAGE 6rJ0 p.m.' • 1 Dream of ^Jeannie 36 >r,onslde . 7 o4 N'Civi ^ rw" • mm -9. News 7pm 24 The SiceeU ol.5an 7 TheWaitons r > .^. Eyenjng at ihe Pops * 36 Dean Martin's ComeclyitotflfN Tm'ANS jcTEXAS 9t30 pn|. OPIN 12:45_ FEATVRES 9 Speaking Frcefy 779Q *n!,»a4«rtM UM •' Macioavi t|$1.5Q til 6 p.m. w 0UTHW00D l:00-2:4r-4J0 7<00; p.m. fOp7:WH6 News ,4;!J-SKW-y:45 24 FJrenouse-10;30 p.m v.- !v -(MON.-SAT.) BNl^-44??333 T Movie: ''Lafayette EicaflrtlCE^ . She did As she pleased. 24 S -™?-AAovl9;JJiheChajrrrian V Thrce by Martha Grah^rrt" " 9 Jazz d la Mpotrooyx DIcK Cavett Show 24 Kung Fu 36 The Ton(ght-Show m % OVER! . • mam 'APETER BOGDANOVICH $ MIDNIGHT SHOW FRIDAY % l^PROPUCTION_ onof ONL ^ESSBBBasa™* 11:30 P. Reduced Prices fiJ 1:KT % ? MayJjjB theTunniest_rnovie_of^the y_ Mon-Fri —Writ Jonei. Minneapolis12^0-2:35.4:20-^:05-7:50-9^5. No Passes Fttot / SEATS Hellstrom Riverside TwiiiCii\cn\< ITS HAPPENING IN Nobody: I 3;45 U1-5W Kasl Hiv.iryid,. Dr.v,­I 7:00 EV^21*Oju A MM NOT io B: MISSED, BY-ANYOHE Vracufa @ INTERSTATE THEATRES ! I0jO5 SERIOUSLY CONCERNED WITH IHE.EUIURE Of THE &AS CINEMA" — V. Ver • Jumpintoltw riffc.Down FEATURESadventure and excitement! • Without You • Moonbeam • At My f fonl Doo>" 40-8:20-10:00 HOMES' 719 CONGRESS AVENUH t PETES KASTNt* JVU£B/COS • ^pON'OWCN • -•> " A CJNEMA V^P£SCNTAT«ON Sun, and Man. ^H^XSlssonRinqoStarr ntocK itIHb^iOMDf OBAOULA MERUNTHE MAOICIAKH GIMME PUTNEY m •X MACuU'«MtfHtOQtCJOMtf.' and ' Sr • ' '«"•<»»"«• r •» JM r.UIBU,, «,«»00 I1MI! ' -• HE'S A SKIP TRACER, AND A BOUNTY mm SHELTER SWOPE HUNTER f ^ ^^wiCTTSouSTBttTI SCREEN 2 Thru Thursday TRANS< mm OPIN 1:45 FEATURES • ,$1.2S «l 3.-00 p.m. I VARSITY BEST PICTURE • BESTDIRECTOR 1^6-3:20-SK)0 $1.00 til 6 2-4-6-8-JO 240O GUADALUPE STREET. 81: I ZtHOuidiluj*St.-«MSM ; • 6:40-8:20-10:00 i It' It was 1948 and all the boy# at school knew Billie... i'l |--r""tmnnjiiimiiTiB V . pPG? WW ;EK10SIVE AUSTIN SHOWING ,Mn , OPEN 2=00 U, FM.2J0-5-0O-7J0-»:4S From W«rn«f Btos. -453-6641 W£Eli;i18 i:1S I "A TRUIY TERIFFIC MOVIEPACKED WITKSRAMA -ONE : $*|25 «f^:30 ft#*?? OF .THE MOST SOIIO FIIMS OF 1V74I RUN, DON'T WAtK JTO SEE r I 5;00 ^10:00-$"J 50 V.. . •CHINATOWN'I" .-NORMA MctAlN STOOP, Ah»r BaA ^ybut'fitfs&r' 3-" MiDNITE $1.25 TODAY THRU TUES. i ' m A ' 'A A / i90m Amw< fat w>Mi :~t: loved her •k arid no ow TtnderstvOjd jfrsr' BUSTE COLUMBIAPl&TURCS/A DWlStON "CHINESE PROFESSIONALS!' "HOW EXCITINGCAN AMOVlf8E? SEE feature11;00-jJOJJOBarncin Matlme Mon.-Fri:'1.00 til 1M 'THEPflRflLlflX VIEW'ANO VOlfUFINDOUT!" IVIK7 >*cV -Norma McLaln Sloop, Aflw Dark rn UNO. . SAT WARHOL'S I Reduction of» ; , V , AN AUN i PAKUU WOOUCTWN m BEflTTY" iW;' ITU i */>***» mvmuuvm a PhgMTlSs, .«-.'--IfiOfFMAN TRANS^TEXAS in -v; O'jjM'WdnAjt. HELD QVER1 UTHE ? aNHOSION.i r. ... .---J?;.-' 640Q Burntt R«itf •— 465 6933 BIGMAN UnitBd -— PPENJitL A-V * c1ftil' AI m i iioo, -Vyfj­ flnfijSs BUI[lll»WimhlH **P ~ ~|||ttinr f ± in wrni. fSH-W I 5^9? ]2 TEXAN & ? ~r wM 'WsskM ''V'y I»sp 'mISM the union T " 9AB^FRIDAY 8:30 ajn -4 p.m.Registration for stones. The -group will then go to( 'Li"l informal" classes." Last -day;-Union Horpsby Bend cemetery, thesite of one i>-*fcS ' K** " Building 104. - of Stephen F. Austin's settlements, and' *.' • ih J-iV~«* \K' " J w-.f&l - • 10_ a.m -5 p.m. Art Exhibit: Richard;;^ take rubbitigs:of the.graves of early^y" High exfiibltsrhis charcoal -drawing: settlers. 'Materials-.will be iprovided, ••*' and enamel paintings. Last day. Union and^particIpantsTrwJtt-tjerat)le-to.keep-~­Gallery. the rubbings they make. Bus will leave • : Noon.v. Demonstration::Basket Weav-at 8 a.m. from IJtilefieldfountain and ing.^ Free. Arts and Crafts Center, return at noon. Unib'n3uilding 333. ^ Vv -8, 10—p.m. Weekend Film: "Paper, 8; 10 p.m. Weekend Film: "Paper Moon." ' Moon." Stars Ryan and Ta'tum MONDAY .'8 a.m.-5 -p.m: General Store (daughter) O'Neal; directed by Peter A1Way'r Bogdanovich, the film:also proves that,^.4 °"afer's „ sn iKa omtvio nt D T Dmniy. "• *•'. Write, Half-price sale-on a group of in tKe words of P.T. Barnum, "There's-^ ballpoints pens. Union.'General Store. a sucker born-every,minute,"The story -§n°e Trip Sign:-Lower of a. 10-year-old -gi-rl.-and. her Guadalupe T^ipi July 19-2Q . Registra­friend/peBhaps father who travel the tion"thrqugh Friday.l$7.'50.each: Union country hawking Bibles. $1 UT Building 342. •' students, -faculty, staff 50 :membfers.-Union Theatre.: 10 atm^L'A.fti;':Art_Exhtbite' Seven art .... SATII^rtAV Ha m NnQp Day Trippinffr -—cfnHpnK pppspnt-marraftlft. hatiRs"flnd his flowing white beard and Netherworld Jn the last 100 poM^IJat? _ Z".^gr^Tjfflitpiot.iscant as it is; Actually, I'm sUll trying to begins to form when the figure the -movie out. rookie-vampire questions his NOT TBfAT the plot-is a right to the crown. heavy or symbolic one, mind Mierlin (Ririgo) informs you, but I'm wondering what Count Jr. that his imlecision Starr vfas trying*to create — 'regarding the -crdwn stems or if he was just having a few' fromi the fact that"bis mother laughs-with some of his. musiv...was.a mortal,..so .the heirr dan-and monster cronies. apparent is a-hdlf-breed add is For the greater part of the therefore subject to a few FRIENDS OF DIONYSUS •. A group doWCBted: to the pleasures of conviviality and oenologieel discovery. Learn how to select and serve wines with, self-confidence and authority through our informatr PtassntatiWt and^discussions. A Wide range, of fine winds ,—r —ara santpled gad rsnktid at each mnntJrig .Syrnpnstums are heldmontltlyin the relaxed andfriendly surroundings of a small restaurant in the lake Austin Hill Country for more information obtain Our free newsletter imcluding an evalua­tion of the best buys in the Austin area) from any of the following wine merchants: : SSIM ' Centennial, Dan's (Main Store), and Reubens Or Catl-^28-2056­ Village| Riverside Cinema Twin Four Cinema tm*Q! AN&qsM Uft^ 4J14JO •A MOST IMF>ORTANT AND EXC1TIMG FILM «X!CANDS1SnOGHLY' EFFECTIVE. A SMASH. Vincent Canbf.N.V, Times *1SL* In. 1959, she werchwd while he kitled a tot of 1:00-2:45-4:35 6:20-^:10-10)00>«*kW Mm HI IM. «H4rl H* fllMt i. m s ^ 3 SHORT DANCE FILMS THE. |m NUT€R^€I\EK ' 'Tehilkevshy'B~musks.pulaimsd by II" Budapest fihllbtrmonlc and danced, by. New Yorll.City'BalhrinrrrftMird-VJilella^ Patrlkie Mcfrlda and MaU^ta Haydan • Z" •: m&ik IK ih>u-".T? IS--* rA.tt'udy4f dancer Mtrrca Cunningham and his company,: with' mutic byJohnCage and stagedesign, lightinga^d costumesgy Robert Hauschenbarg.-: ®nnrtm-.. A t ^M&^taltM^JaMtJtattaau. prtttndng the.arts; fvn­c eiawmhnaltenfmonral ifantU ofUfa ChadTA Fremh~ 1 Shepherd Unfit as yMiller' — JiDflLsy Miller;" directed^ amour, CvbiU Shepherd, did _in._making Daisy. a_ three-by Peter Bogdaii.oyicH; .On their-,summer vacation"liT dimensional'character-.---­screenplay by Frederic iiEurope-tharfan m-depth study Raphael; starring Cyblll;-wof the nuances and undertones BOGDANOVICH. moves her Shepher. and ClorisL. ii>f turn-of-thevccnturywarfare -around like a clothing-dummy Leachman;-at "The .Villager -—society^tvE~IlT~ -^-ailralned _io'TTead—eue—cards— "Cinema Four. By DANIEL D? SAEZ Texan Staff Writer ?. i'. - It had .been said of Henry; James' heroine, Daisy Miller.­that she d|d what she liked. In-the James novel, Daisy doing what she liked best, flouting society's rule?' in turn-of-the­century Rpme earned her scorn;and an .early death. Podr Daisy• didn't'deserve­the results of .her afctions, but . * Peter Bbgdariovich does. As ... producer and .director he did Tombstone Rubbing. Participants will weaving — Janet Burke, Kim Stanley,. what he-lilted, aqd it;showed "first visit Oakwood Cemetery, Austin's • Cecile Bbgan, Kathv WatkinSj'Marilyn T thanks to Bogdan'ovichy' li-.'i.oldest and*largest graveyard, where Wesson, RuCh Held.ahd Mary. Beth , '."Daisy Miller'' is -rtipre.like •ys, -thev"wm~take^graghtte-and-goft-paDer~-^~^Bippfti^-JlhrniigH .Inly 19. . Union T. an expensive home-Jhovie of •; ^issruKblngs of some Interesting, older " Gallery! Dracula Sings This Time "The SoA of Dracula {film,' director-writer Starr mortal traits — confusion he-problems are settled as the written and directed by;5 Strains the cameras on the ing one of them. . Count finds solace in'his pianoRingo. Starr; starring : night-time antics' of Count -THINGS GET a little more' and downtown diversions. Hingo Starr and Harry • Downe (Harry Nilsson.) as he -fo'mplicated When the plot • While the movitfis.certainly Nilson; at the Southwood. -.^wanders around the dives of «hiltsrits g^ars to a-vampire-not award-winning..material — By GREG BUSTIN r ~Londonr-CounHDowne-is-in1:• --meets-gfrl tempo and-the con-' on' any counts, s'o to speak, it What can I sav about "The deed the son of Dracula, part-•-tuse4'-'.6ount'-que_sti6ns does offer a taste-of half- Son of Dihicula" — that I've time vampire,""part-time Mer 1in's Lpower," arid' "comic,' half-intense^viewing": nevgr figard vampires -sing ^ singer/com poser, and .knowledge as astronomical "andTemindsTls in-thelong run—, better before; or-that l^ingo happens.vlQ bG the first cjaim^.coordinator aiid coronation that Nilsson is stitt the best never looked so wizardly-in to -the throne of the' adviser; Most' of these singing vampire around: y GULF STATES 0RIV6-1N°V. RAWINM BOX > OFFICE OPIN 8:00 HELO oven SHOW STARTS DUSK N 710 E. Ben White *4 MACON COUNTY} Samuei.Z. Arkofl presents a ManBaer production ftmerican ® Macon County line color by CFI • . lnternational'release fRlcggfr ^AnotfaeiflaceJinpinerTimf!" rnmnmwland snn ie Sentry -HLUS CO-HbAIORE­ % viftKOFF-present* -. i DiLLiNGER •starring WARR(N OATES-BEN jOHNSON-MICHEUE PHItUPS AND _C10RJS LEACHMAN os the tod* in Red l-r» L--^k JSs5!esiSSS';SB THt -VittA6E~J im ifM Wnt Anitfttm (»»« McQ-he's a'busted cop.his"gun is unlicensed, 1 and his storyis incredible! 1:00 -^1.00 jomiM 3:10 7:30 r $2.00 9:40 ::JM Reduced Prk«s 'Mon-FH !(,«•>(.OMP-WN VPETER BGGDANOVIC! PRODUCTION 12:50-2:35-4:20 HM-J-J0-W5 K»b*t4 W<« til NUo-W ^ ^ J.00-2 45-4:35 4^^20-810-10^0 ' Reduced Prices hl l.-QO Mon-Fri No Passes* W/(fiOND : FEATURES ; 525 Cawt SI*I V< Str«»»n *'?Z 7S7Q 6:45-8:25-10:00 MARILYN MONROEfCANDY BARR -RA HOST OF OTHERS I N : "THE EROTIC FILM CIRCUS// fx) 1 ^ , lite 'licxt vf rlip -Sfiw.York Eroftc iorijv. of fnt tnrw m thin group art botft crtxic and amitung • -flJSMf '« Jbi, without a ilouhu :ix"'Appfo KnQc)icui:atui Q short xtofi lifm mudr rtraunik 1V-18 wrth a rWv t ^rv .ub^rrt^hohng Mantyn/Monrue;-bhe titilht in.front of thv Cnmrra, silt (ititf Jt hptUwth a fakf irvcand v.viiwicrtrii a &f*nv4tr{p'te»lnnptnn$lflrNr.uh Midnite.Movies. Fri.' &^Sal. Only The Marx Bros. . in s, "Duclt Soup". $1.00 i framing almosfevery Shot so ­the. viewer is forced to admire ­ •ONE OF Bogdanoyich's idols, What saves'"Miller" from', •..Orson WGlles, once said that a ; movie studio is the best toy a costume.;; designer J^urness". creations. -John ' • -boy ever had. "Bogdanovich gees hjm -one better, aitd Uses Italy..; and Switzerland for his being a. prohibitively*•expem; attempt at transposing ,si"ve fashion show and'', literature to the screen. -. travelogue is* a marvelous ­:supporting east. Eileen Bren-•' Thanks to .photographer­-Alberto. , Spagnoii. Bogd'anovich almost :pulls it -off., Thfirrppn prnpts-ULrioiS-­-oi color. Utily problem is ihat • "for the most part Shepherd is always smack in-the middleof ot it. , >- £ 2915 Guadalupe combined.-• " ^ . Trt-n)rcKD.iM«rKs Tir. 6 P.M: I50p S. PltASAMT-VAllEY RO --^400 MON !hru SAT JUST OFF EAST RIVERSIDE DRIVE Wt'Sltl $2.00 W1AM TO BlAtiyS $1.50 fil 6 p.m. • HI 6 p.m. FEATURESFEATURES UOO 2:50 2:505:10 4:357:35 6:259:55 8:10 NO PASSES *W«W.a*W(CATtteCOUPW Q 10:00 NO CHILD UNDER 12 YRS. WARREN BEATTY 51,50 Robert Redford'Mla Farrow SI.50 til 6 .p.m. hi 6 p.m. THE FEATURES Features 1:15 .1:50 PARALLAX VIEW 4:25 3:15 5:15 7:00 7:15 RtoWVSON* TECHMCOCQn 9:35 Sl-15 A Paramount Acturtn GENERAL CINEMA COHPORATIQN ALL CINEMASEVERY DAY $1.25'TIL T.301 A' .. '"i" ' i I NOW at tjMNAL IN 35NORTH I WK-END! A^mbtron Picture that makes you feel good! w-lt's the dog fromPetticoat Junction in a fresh, <* ^"exciting, unorrfmary kind ot ptcture that tellstts-stoiv.. -^corrfpletely from aJog's point oi view ' •' "Everybody who has ever teen loved ty a dog will> adore Benji."» — —-i a»»opour** '...an almosthypnoticalfy entertaining film." •' i -MEMPHIS PRESS SCIMITARS r-TODAY 1—^ i.:'. at 12:45-2:30-4:15 ^ •6:00-7:45-9:25 fl family film by joecamp T>rttr»6«trt by V4il&f»rjf Sflbirt RtlNSmg.fnt; MutOetfjr S5w»"«'Proaa«i0f»J HIGHLAND MALL 451-7326 IH35 AT KOENIG LN. Tqkea touch of ^'American 1:00-2;45­ Gt-affiti," a sprinkle ' of 4:30-6: t5-r:f< "Summer of '.42" . . stir in a'portibn of "The Last •&:00-9:45 Picture Shew/' and you have tine IpgI From Wirner.8 HIGHLAND MALL 451-7326 • IH35 AT KOENIG LN. JLJP»r: ­ "^i -at-3"1 ^00^i00-7:00-10:05 " i.* Diane ^ bananas •s'M -at-«,, ,2:35-5:40-8:40 A " • .* •' ittoTi')'­ \ - ^ 4 . ff • r-n ?l% r^.,— 9^*^ !.*¥* ^>"i^U#%> •?-•.'? '& *•".»>-)$. &» iiife i0^mm jgMv*"35Sgft.7*& Sr&S^§SwmS f Wa&fiitiBXmiC? w^aMM*«tiLwi>iia .AAw ^ * „ 3^pHHf£m«ifa , -f'v' l/r,r l -—-iS^l« fer ^ €s!^ -* *»• ^ &>, »•** »s­ a^ ®l '-?$ m~ CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING -g FOR SALE tfATES FURN. APARTS. H F0RN. APARTS. ffl FURN. APARTS. tS \*-orcf-mfnimom. , i-T~j_ ROOMS TYPING Esqh:word one"litrve..;.-.^:........ $ .itf-•EMBlflB Efith.^vord 2-4 HfAftt L'',"i;.' .... •S'-OS'-Musical,» For Sale \:MkEjJR. DE;-1.1Sj.*04 East 30tjj; Mature TEXAN DORM. .1905 Nueces* Doublei"­ £» .. • -. r y.-»«T • "iS»ti<-.-444'g!)37^ •" .-;• " V •••• •—— 5282-r ,w^s. session--Daily maid service, cen* copies •Quadjalupe • teal atr. Refrigerators, .hot plates allow-. "Cusyrticcj Dfsy^y. ,etf. Two blqofcs from campus. Co-Ed. . > C^ * t Cich'ong tfe^ft S2 56 'SOUl.fAfc STRINGS. Save: 20% on all" • Colortui-ao"ar :^/TCh*2.5 tifnes. ':52.46" ,-:gtntar, mandolin. -.and. banjo string;.' .« "SHG1 ..(ron^ Uavf-School.-Shuille-bat -one. ."' : • > '. -•••' "• . .­ • keg^y * V-f»t>Me« crmar^r-n-ves $7 37 Amster Mus«c i6u Lavaca^ _ . . • Lentrai Air • -Uxi'»»•'. 1111-CI'" .'''""" rl-l-Ilf • •l>nw»T'!.»Ww.-,)(;^».,«jJ|t, THPf^^f^DMrON ^l_ :APArtments.,--P°QI -eftrpef. jiS^washc^. dixposflj, -watfc-io.. -paid^ & btks frorrl dsrtiDus hroterniiv OVATION ACOUlrie"vE?ef7riC ^Jsiaf4 Htm 47?-035ior'477-49BI -. >. -eop-v center -——: 0 • '• 1 with case.. Penrfcr:swp«r';roverb, 15^ -. • • " Shuttle Bus 3 Blks-0C-UL3 3728 , " ^ s Typmg.-Mult Hithlng,: bindings .. DEADLINE SCHfDUlE ', . spcaker.iBflJlv new Sale 472-3565' •<' • '' "i «•' •' ' • PR'VA.TB ROOMS. 2-.,blocks. eartipuSi­ Ti»l00 o<>j1;oHer-Caltt44i')3{2 • hwashcr coiy-commumty. Near shutt«e MS/rrufnth: AS P.; 478-3471.'Xceptrying : with or without pictures!® ; The..v-Soiitb-Sfoce's cehtfaj l^atlon APTS... ,:.prom>S115 pl»s>rectrlclry..12) IWest 8th Room 314 . 4400 'AVE. A vlofi"Blanco).,474-U07, 472*4162. Barr^ 2 Day^Scfvice tn-.-jtit *v»#vt of ««ror» mad* in on • flUffara,-v/ohns; &• &an)os.»-erc .'. Comeby,ana. si& purnew 6ffiticncy and -• G» fj tafias !er• compaf ly. ••••:•'• ; '; S65'-month. Call alter $:00 p.m. 926-5071 The Texas Union" 472-3210 and"472-7677^ . ot)v*itn««n»nt„j(nm»dMU not** mat! b* OUIclmer* made to-order. 139 and -up ;1"bedroom apartmenti^on' ^e banfcs-of-* Monday-Friday 8:3Q_ fl.m, -given as the pvblnh«rvQ'e Mtoonubfi Im • Geoff AAeflk674 Lf voca.'478-733J . Townt -Loke-.v QompleXe* wlttj shag. MOV^ IN.TODAY' EL CAMPO. J912 Nuecof. Boys,stngle-73:09 p.m . ^ " * 2m Hempb.tf ParK vH only ONE mcofrKl >meMusim«nt« ttowld-b« mod« no' lat*r COMPLETE 5ET ..tdI; C/ra .drgnis-JiF; .., "ptoi aatr>dMdyaf deck overlook-' •: .•.Ji/fflJsfcWXfc Sftag, '.wet bar, ^rfvafe club Kitchen ava»»b/ef 45M736,* 477-8486. ; than 3Q-.ea^\ oiiti pwbfcartan." /eluding.stool. S7,5. 266-.10(», v. -%ing ^e water,^ :-rftomSr-.on snottle. 1bedroom Irom­ . S]49.90;ABRi .2.bedroom:SI69.S0 A0P: .STUDENTS! Rooms.al.S60. n35 West' ARTLEY silver FLtfiE, al$0 Pe^x^ ; -POSADA ItOQ. eroadmoor; "454-3585/-:.47iS'-2833;» 20fh.See manaaeraf The Clinton or call G.l-NNY'S earneraMnwent. 453-*t6tfV, AIwi other Prom S'145-« all bills paidV-i.Barry GUlmgwatei' fCompany, •;.• •= 478-5846." ,v; ABACUS ' IP$£-?• misc-yw^s.' .300 Cast Riverside Drive DEL NORTE'" EXCELLENT SUMMER RATE? on .COPYING • BUSINESS $ERVICES IP, A/.:'LOVV;STUDeNir.f?AXE5 'fJowioostn^ for-taii.'SiZS • S180-Garfien4 JLS-woro.Tw4mmtfm.each gray s " 444-3337.. pOQl &C.-ziifslc, laCndry: »anet|rtg:* Bus.1. v.spac«bus offe^nd-two".bedroom SERVICE ?—' --Rooin 200. 1301 Soulh IH 35 «<• each.aaoyionai word each-daw LfcLome j;r ^/'aparrrftenfv Fnif rafes-reasonable. Can-FURN. HOUSES For Sale .to Downtown ^ UTv •;< 4S4-9475 , J-cQlv < iJncJTea^u day.n^i '-rsSja?-conR&c«cws" v. !NC. " 444-0816 M t Ung ^d^yy' Sl'06 ,TWO COND/MNED HOUSES Small -^oaEasriVW' . --• fe^';:^Typing. Printing. Blnding^^ .. . {Precra)dT7?5ftttunds)-:* •'• •"?* ;—rffiwn fc m^p/ply pavmyntt \/ary. I5 ^nureb« --^ ' •tm, Students,must Jvfi&v*. Auditor** ' rYoygh.and f%i liveable;:Call, j'ack-Jen-~Biciels^. cmn pp 3Mack's-' V.--• • ,. 4l5^ receipt* atujpay.Tn advance »vT.£P' .rungs. .Consolidated Realty Assoc/at/on ™ 42 Dobie Mall 476-91ZI Bl0~p-^-M-F -e F. -—thiaei;. Letiof«^ ^. 'h } • •workshop. Excellent Condition-Appoint-^ -POOL.Ls. 6,aCOCKl.CAMPOS.SHUTTLE 8USS0UTE" ^paneied^ CA/CH. disposar, dishwasher-» 9 o,m -Spin Sat<. W Ail University anajAf ~Sfr~ iTlAftr. 474.5617 • r 2122 Hancock Dr., -^KSH^C0T'"l,0r' SHA^REnT Luxurious, lounlaln. S , X business work -5®tV Wt •ROO.MMAT.E ' ..F U.R M ISH E D ' IF-v ..•Ar_ * FT? , _7 -'-pan!_ I. .?^n,«n.~ie?L'?i"aLK,2tfd.,t'--Irg*rBbRw7fur-^hsrs^rs-C»1I45V5559. iv-elcb,u5ujio. SERVICE '5 Frl Sa' -M. 2 ,:47f-3467 • -;.. . • r-tonfe,.to,-^Drt}t.Loo£i_&hopp/ng;.Center LR.G;-2 BORM„ Furnished, shag asrpeh" and Luby'S One hall bfcci> i.v -7i Toyota corolla 51175 Blvd * 03 or call 45M84& * -» ,tTtrr ^ AC'.south. S-tiident^-only ^ CHRISTENSON S! bxs|area» carpeted,, disposal.; :' ASSOCIATES I^S4 CHRYSLER Newport "af ^e" RS> :6LEcr.RQWK:.vmu^c.'.s*nt&esizerj«lthvW.ij ~ 'Our serwee Is free EFFICIENCIES' S100 table.TV,^un.deck> CA/CK, laundryi.--.3 BEDROOM, 2.BATH/CA/CH home 10 keyboarc, $200. Mmor ultra-mJn/aturf^"~""w'">~*-"'""'~"--- -OntfTttSO..Call 476-3438,^,.cameraand accessories, SI00. 288-2349 •* l-3H£lRQOALSJ35.0(L 'Shuttle;-ores)' location, ABP/ summer ' • minuies from campus;S190. $epi. Isfroc' ABORTION ALTERNATIVE! Pregnant -A TYPING SERVIG PARAGON . -"rates-PalfiLeaslngL 422 MS7 Cupancy. 928-1315. -and distressed? Help BuU -Creek. —Theses and dissert-ations J950 or. best ofter-.McGraw, 47V447« creases. 452 3082, 4S3 3192 apartments. Road 454 0935 UNF. DUPLEXES SWIMMING-LESSONSj • Experienced, ! ' irrLaw briefs , T days; 444-4170 nights, • : Certified instructor. All abllitresi MISCELLANEOUS F URN tTUR E^V 472-4171 ' ' 474-1712 -'.,-u.. COMPLEPS^LAJKURY~ Twq bedroom (Begmner «-Senior Life) My pool or-.rrTerm papers ana reports; |l ' MUST SELL: '71 VWSuper.-Excellent housenolB Mems. selling A316 Bull CreeK^ • •' .•. . . weeKdays ^%-^and-efflclenctes;- Summer;-^ates 24 ' NEW LARGE DUPLEX Op or yours Groups, private 478 5401 downstaw^ 3 1'6. CA/CH, sfove, refrlg , condition -call after 6:00 p.m., 441-1359 Road; Apt, 207: July 11 and 12 only • v ' '29J9VVest-Ave. ~%-;^Wata •Apaftments. I5t5 Palma Plaza. Prompt, Professional a-wr.lfWftr • • Come ear'ly for good bargains-; -water paid $150 NE East St Johns/ . -.. ^i^r'ji74^322. ShuHl9 bus>corner. ;u-y: -' -Meodor. 926-3445 or 477-8559. VOLKSWAGEN REPAIR Experienced 472-4175 .student,: maior-.and minor work, < Service 5EBRING if ':-J-.'.Jjn PLYMOUTH PLUS. • "Vfc:Ni-U^k imTAMARAN vnUlt-fraHerj• r-r-n—wechends wA ; HduSE-» one bedroom-apa^fme^t-1 ..reasonable prices, personable service, ST.OOO. 454-1547"^ " -THE TOWNHOUSE two bedroom, ffreplace,' 453-8101 •* -., red/whfte, FM stereo tape) my prfce ^^^mAia^UO.-.furnKhed 3 hloekyfrom . —i. 29T " -convenient, campus "area,-by appoint-"• _|ard. 2909-g.. 51st. $170 month: Call 928­ ^—ihSg5>^aH uanny. 472-7^66, •nDOLPHIN SAILBOAT In good shape BLACKSTONE ••c v -comptjsvC5fge-6Sorifrtreaxtttfui"Sethngr---^J«Wr-47^«?2r—— L—^ — Pick up-SErvim AvartdUIti 'a with -• •• — — Call 472*1238 or come by 604 W, 17th at .mmm • ' 550.00/month i Plo Grande. r * *» FREd jESTIMAtES on body and prfint-®r—— ' irnm, 2VBED'ROOM» 3. blocks campus. „ • i, ­ KENMORE HEAVY DUTY washer and available July 26. $150 prus bills: $100 ^0[k*. Paint Joych up -$4 50, Rudy's* -iiildiVldbaf aoolifwntn -•tpPICitNOitS"'$9S*rpt0T-electrT0tty/" dryerr 1 year old. S200. GE dishwasher/ .':: •» r.r» *-Jlj* .. .matched' witn compattbie. roaiW-V i' -ml Vi-p^| fftiwU deposit, BetweenJl-6 |tm^cnlyJj4Zfc7259 -Aufobody.,811•yyesf>th • :./1972 DODGE POLARA, .<«lly; loaded. S4(7.:>.Ojsposat,-$15. Serta double-" bed,'" 0° FUmJ maJej v->.. • Hngtonnr .V^ila,-46/h.amJ Ave. A' 454-W03 ' -~oood cofidition^new-S4754.. Best offer - • ,T^-P«e5-1-^d^Ap4ia44. 451-5397 •Jgm.b.x spring and maiyess. ^Tanglewood West' 2910 Red River A 476 S631 TUTORING • •A'PARAGON PROEERtYrf • "SAN JACtWTO'ARMSi. 1709 San Jacinto' MISCELLANEOUS­ 472-9614 . ;FOR—Sfiijs; 1973 Pontlac Grahdvllle : JURQlKSlSP:" Selection of beautifUif^.-s frut.t Je:B vs*Cori^er Wa^rngdistance Uolversify--Caoltof •?­ glifijtf?-•Bedroom.-.r^.bath,.CA/CH. carpeffeS; MATH TUTORING that you can unders-' -^^gmjert.mle pafnfed Spectal Orange anQ -polHhed stones from .85-si 15 percaraL?-: • tand. 476-0757: ' JOHNSON & . W&'le at iacTorY^ ^ectric winaowsTSTTtj— :^'^wateff gas. cabie.oaid;No pets. silS up.' NELSON'S GIFTS Zum Indian ,lea t. power; door locks; AM/FM stereo'•y1-^ 7-$.100 476*0920, 472-4W8 jewelry;-African and Mexican imports. :»ape,, «aliy wheels, steel beirVadia) NEW KING SIZE mattress and bo*: 4612 Squth Congress 444 3814 Closed ASSOCIATES! -Phly 26;000 • mlies; ow.ner out of springs SJ25. Must sell. 44l-7W5,k444-4t43. ^TBR~njRN -7 ^.;UT..PR&5Ht=V PMMTFn *> hftdrft^To-Mondays.* •. country ^Bue^tei, inc. Ei Camps. Texas ^L.-bath^u^ClT;laundryi jiopf^ csbie,qulef. 2200 Guadalupe -Suite 220 px , 7X137. l-^l3-54W72V. • • ;• .." -• SELLING-LONG embroidered Meyicao'^1 iangiewood" reasonable. 477-2608", '476-9813.! ' •. •"MOVING?^Y-ptCKUP-can-maKe-'"lhe , $115 SELL FLOWERS. Make530-$60worKlno: S9,n0 » lor easier. Tom's Oo Rite Truck pertlse-thests—dtssertat^imsj^^i -—V^httyT^Exceilem^^^n^,^6"" a"er 4 °°. " Annex 4 peaceful days a week: Thursday/ Fr|. Ing. 258*1891.jthemes, resumes, 8," business1 MM jOW.TVWfeand whj#e sjdewall«. 447'2040. CANONlENS FWOOmm F-^LW? ROOMMATES day afternoons,. Saturday, • Sunday all -—'1———1--" ' '••'• , ,t L #1o x_ V*" $140 ($220 new); 477-1966. 3pm to'S^m^i -476-i)94S. A day;,-Top commls4ion. Paid daily 476* " "-L.EABW.TO play Guitar Beginner and fypj ..> -,194?. FORD XL. Good condition,-new "All Bills,Paid ' ^S^Wtlc Bvt CornefV 3060. 453*1508, 453-2761. advyfe^d--Drew T.homason, 478-2079 -C3|J 472 8417 : . ;:pa»nJ, 4 speed, air, radio. $J200k 447-6521 MOVJNG "TO Norman, Oklahoma . : v Walk to-Campus .. -T" " KOpiV^SATE NI s-campUs.... .1 bedroom-':All bills :.';y.;«fter 6 p.m.•• '• • around August first. Will share larg'e-0: •?-Tr^c:-Bpbfymedh' i-bis , . NEAT>8r MATURE grill cook needed for BUyvVEDTPLAYBOY, Penthguve, e7ficted, ^ery nice. Best 6fter: Creative Outdoor Portraits' 'NeTD~HOUSEMATE to ihicel Calt.327-2733 before.noon: FURN. DUPLEXES 60 cents per page. Theses 75 cents ~ --CaU after 5, 476 8946 iji-Save' ufffctiefr. Michael. 4J3-97y3. , SoAg writing-theory-;Call 441-5610 Now leasing for-summer andMall .NEEO. BEHIND,-Thc-Counter manager' FRANCES WOOdSTYPING SERVICL...... Motorcycles -for .Sale ; strhenter, Price range-from SJ20 -5165" *. $no ; ,1 OR.1FEMALE roommates needed! 2$ . .for ice pream-p.a^lor.Must.be willing and ' -Gyitar instruction, CajJ 441-5610 '-~m : . Experienced,: U«w, Theses, 0lsseii»w See at 2503 Peart, Apt 4 . bedr^onj apartmenf near shuttle, 4faopr '; -able to work-evenmgs & weekends Also* taiions, ftftanuscrlpts: 4S3-4090 St." IWO TRIUMPH DAYTONA. New heaoi: 477-3264 plrtg Call 459-0733 after 5 -need part* time help. 452-2666 Les Paul Jr. Fender CAB 44I-5610 and prstons. $750 firm. 459-5864 • $105 •MaSYL SMALLWOOD Typing. Lait" „1 Bedroom* b", 1 Bedroom _ QUI ST. MALE;:to rs"hare :farg^' fwo Minolta10i&acceisorlGs$190472-6665 ....minute, overnight available Teem FROGS. DON'T FLY papers, theses, dissertations, letter!, IWf HONDA CB450. Excefleot condition -bedrocmaparfmentneaf 5huttle-$«7.50 " CON V e NIE NT. Vf •Call;.Marc;;476-0571; Ijefore 5^30 . MasturCharge.. tiankAmerJcard 892 $800. Call Allan, 47K3H4i -474-2B6V, Shopping and-downtown..r ;io-^ ^'Tanglewood-North; BUT-CRAZY CAPTIONS DO Engagement ring 74 caraT15 W584 v. ;0727 or 4ft-8MS. - anytime.-1 -• '. •. Bills paid. Water, gas &,cable HALLMARK .1020 E 45th SHARE bUPLE^T'sVoT ^ bills, Largi CATC!H THE EYE •. Border, collie mixed pups. 459-^328 • ::* ' - '73 HONDA 5CO. 6,000 miles, good Condi-' 452-0060 " .fenced-yard, rbll?c to campus Calf Bo nappy doing the thing you HKe best; .MINNIE L HAMMETT Typing W tlon. W8-254B alter 5:OO p:m . •TrV. Dtahwasher, garbage dis-Shuitic.Bus -Micbaef after 5:00 p.m: 459-0456 . mikmg to people.on the. telephone-New J964 Jeeptryck/ good $500. 478'7S93-^.PVP^^^hB^ervIce. Theses, dlsver*« • posal. laundry, large closets,' ''V~-A--RTS. ' f,ve days a week, free parking, ;;'^;;faf«ons, papers of, all• kThdfTwumiiSv* 1974.Yamaha rd-250 sirret bike, 300 S covered -parking (across -vii^OOMMATE (S^.Jpdsommer.session :2-'r; ..friendly atmosphereWull .or part time H60-15 tiros, rims for VW.47S>7593 ' .^^Free refreshments. 442-7008r442-1616 CA?-porch$92.S0 oWs-'/j bitls^ 447-. bonuses pjus -safaries. Call 451-2357 !'• 5350. Call W4-6S67 aiier 5 from* the .Orange Goose • 709 W, 34th 6352, Frank f pet ween 9 a jtvjind 1 or.^etweeH S j Fende^ultar & amp. 454-6178. : ^FIE4-0. IBM Seleclrici earslpxperl^ppe, bookk. m School). 1 bedroom S135 2 454-6294' £,m. and 9 p.m. Experience pays more -pica/elite,- iBOBQYE OELAFI 25 years ;• ROOMMATE_NEEOED l^r-large twoJ -:buf nof necessary.--. -•--. Sunfish sailboat,, frailer; 454-6)78 dissertations/. theses,' reports*rep <1972; HARLEY • 125,v'Street^ Need-vw-No.motor(oi. bad! 478.2744-'v-.:r^LonG. <59-7205.. .: year, s750irrm. 2812 Nueces. 4724497.• l Bodrocwnn, t -bedroom,. Si90. '.V bedroom,-Ira Fr#m J15£ ABP 1100 R/lnli 4S2-. negotiabre' Couple/.single;-472-2490.' ^vetth OPERATOR . S145-S1S0. 30M Whirts/No: !05/:: 3202<.4^4|62,,Barfy Gil(ifigyvatcr Com-exjjerience.-Pleasant : wording; F.«(IHrieMMn«MPIatMpl«y«r4S1-n74^|.^'i!S * 'ENCED SB C RETAR*"I ET-ertrT v v after 5 Mon.-Priday. After 10 >. pary 7 ^ -NEEDED;-oneorWomale"foommatev/'^' .conditions. Good benefits & soiary^i. " r 'papers, letters, envoiopes, p-oo> ?-•.Stereo -For Sale -« , Jv/o bedroom,-two both1 apartmenfc— Fr6e kitten 7 wks-477-3175-• -^flpina -grammatlcal correcllon*^ EL DORADO .a.m..weekends. . Shuttle bus 447 6158 ,s.Rapld,' accurafe.-.so centsTpaoMs STEREO, McmTOSH, MCJ505 amp?"c-453-1883 4.72 48*^ ' " ,;-c*J1'!454-2791 J..." ' Crib 8. mattress $20T«77-2230 SGrctchcn. 4i2-346», 451-2332 . "-X'SM 26 pre-amp. Mf?-71luner, all wtffiwalnut" ACii niter-view cablnsls. sop«rscop^ CO-301 cassctte ••HutTu: buscorne'R $119 SM -* • . TYPING-PRINTING-binding rfiet^P vdeck, 19":B&W.TV. Call ciwdC 'OMW?! NEW . plssertatlons, 'Professional Report^ ' 1 Bedrooms J ROOM & BOARD TRAVEL avv, reports. Sell-correcting |B"A. Bai^ "JHORENsTuRNTABLE 175 MKII. Or. i'-' ^ ^ -, .n EFFICIENCIES -Shag Pane-my WAITRESSES . bwa Tullos. 453-5124; .. : -v::"ipi •own cartridge nine months^old in, jy fV -^5|40 •A^Giatvt waiK ins -Bafcooies CLOSE TO CAMPUS $P«hl&h furnHhmds ROOM, BOARD for. long session 1974^75" : WAITERS ,• -TYyiTTg EXPERTFTVcemji 2433 Town lake Circle . r?rt*exchange, for; fte(p{na._dtiflbfed stu-•NEED TWO OR MORE DRIVERS TO PX0.."^"01 -waiki_on sell correcting.tuner, tJrnfnoTfe. Six wontrti* oid'~$300^ .••.BarWtGlliingy/ster^ompany'-.; GALLERIA Austin to Washington D C. or Westport, . Itematenal. Linda, -444-87G6 --T.BRAND.1!iEW_SONY Stereor>cassette;' 2 Bedroorrfc y.-SHUTTLE BUS ' •UX8U6 ' «72 4162 .dtfftL CaH Mr.^John Flowers, 476-7374 v i OR1VE 1968 Dod^je.automatic from' : IBM. Theses, dissertstions maljP - new, asking $235 453 4965 . 8ELLSON . DORM for-Men.' Excellent; -Connecticut as .soon.'as possibly Drive Swimming pooi, beatutitully^ ,home i cooked jiieais.-Alr-condltlohpdy" my car; :buy fbur^twn^tias^ Personal AUSTTn^ECRETARIAI SCRVid® TEAC 3340./Fourfrack' tape recorder; MARK OCX furriished double or studio . ,wdid,i5wirnm.ingpQoTr76l0T«0 Grande^---.-RESTAURANT references required. Please contact Will | . with. SeL-Smc. Must sell. .Best offer -454-3953 452^5093 bed, all have dislWasher, dis.-; Catt„476 4552 4S4-5087 Klack.-ApffTnO;-tl4;<2204-:Eflfieidv An^--htby .hshprthand'iSWor s,ryour, ",.rnachlooTyPng dihemeM;etail® accep)ed Call 444-6824 $ BLOCKS WEST 'OF • ttfles Apartments (on-ER -shuttleJ^for, posal, .central air. and hesk: CAMPUS C0"0P " VACANCIES 'Tuf^er/FalL 452-5510 furlher jnformallon,'. • -orchl,ec,urtr,r"0"'r£ NEED TO SUBLET 2 bedroom/3 balh shag-corpetf exit a' storage •Malei'Femafe.. Aiso vcgQtarian? Cheaoi-" •-3 v ., fcllraija, apartn«ent."N!ne monthvfease -jtfdw,. .lac^-elirclepcest KyIhg^.room;'v Contact inter-Cooperative Council 476--URGENT! Need, piano player for all ' •' ­ "THE SPOIUER" 5240 4a<> Tan;i, 441-0630 room;: Tw.fset bedroom & kitchen, cab)e/wiater^. -fernale. show. band. Must,navo^accesi fdt^-^ "Jusi North of~ 27TFT .'.Ki MK 305 West 35th Ga5:furnished;-&ynimpr>.si21l00 • .> ; eiecfric piano. Call alter 6 p.m.451-8574.£t#9p-/ . Mb* • Come hear the S200-Speaker GARAGE Aj?A*RTM£^Ti Oi>e'iedroom ;(6 blocks from campus) 477 55?4 -476>7"»6; -" Guadalupe # ::.that>pu.t-per.fornns those tn the . unfurffilhed.Cootffecation^sji&iatl bills > PED OAKJ^PTS . '1 >£300-5400 r'artges -patd, 45^ 1427 / % Manager Apt lOi 2104 SAN GABRIEL ^ 431-4364-HELP WANTED — ^ LAFAYETTE.RAD101' . *i 29lh&N Lamar gj< ^-SaXpA & Ser >ice*Dept "f-r*; YES, we do typeHfjm» «N5fSr PART-TIME WORK ivV; Freshman themes mi$*k Don't tie s • -• . -" |£| Ideal for Students Why not start out with up your 'good grades! y,s;&11O1 BR. FURN. ¥>M COST PLUS H cash in ..STEREO ' ^472-3210 and 472-7677, , Help clean commercial buildings Woy. pay • retail-when; I can A-LL BILLS PCX Viooiirvgs 4:30 ^,8:30 a.m^'-' uhusedjf m. ""'"-^iip^-^ -.. .-5^-Ve'VOU up to 60%? Most -'6ranas'~Alf'^Fai^5ry;:=^ealefL_. —lAhnyp average pav items LOST & FOUND "boxes. 'Full^guar-antees. Call Ideal working conditions^; Fletcher • at 451-5500 between Tsimiwi ^ong^eRn empibymehit^ arouim-theJ •»Al£LM«le Irish Setter, hl.ri, pm for a price «uote. house.V ..»3wf StsF^?' • ?REWaro'j Green Dawes Gaiaxy io­ spcodt Losf . noar' Burdlne, -Juiv ^r/<' 4?-y-5&.J. Sell them EpmfcS MUST: 1"^ misfit DEPEND'ABL KL.LABRAUOK The . . .^E^cellfr.nt; chiimpionstil*jr. b)ood>'iine LONDON SQUARE •c,A^e A hustL£R abraitissa.h, ^ssr*^si - "r*"" wormed olacK&~$65; 444 1901 WILLOW CREEK DR. ?400ITJWlt^K^-g^CLE. HAVE • YOUR 5KSS«(i.«iWARD FOR RETURtf'ol -T-* ' SI.1-?51.™»s Au tin Olagnosllc Olnl? PEDIGREE inale Irish Terncr IFT-Texan!^r -­ 1 ,o f ^ *. Shag'-carpet_it^and a swimming pool don^ M w ftment ife WANTED 1 •t^irvTce after yoii lease with us,* |Jf „ , . -• r , -, T'.. • -> , , : Li . ! --^ . 'T87&rr' --— -feas^w^Y®^,l^®^#w*7ttv 3 1 r 11'^'" * • •' '• • • • . . . -. " ,, ... .. — during-day v IK'-, Page 14 Thursday,-July.Mi..1974 THE PAtEy. TEXAN" -If *" j • -•" ' ' . 'Ss rr s.yW -??• 'm: New Bank.Utilizes TrietBni# ',•»4 *ratt£ WSBI v Atty. GSn. -John Hiil's motion for a-rehearing ;n a con­ -America's first triothnic Mnk opened in . amount of. interest" in the bank, he said, iy klCHARD FLY/ ;jXi||H:olman, vicfcp?eSident-of"A 30-day dogfight would tempt suit a'gainst evanjgelisf.Letter Roloff was rejected. * " Austin*Wednesday with the slogan"Together "When 'we were selling bank stock we , . ., We Stand." .-Texan Staft Writer.Arf il&TCUSSEA, said. not gainf anything," he added. Wednesday by the Texas Supreme Court. . (SvVjdidn't have-enough to go around," Martinez . University staff employes He added the meetingwould ' "The-state could afford the , Hill wanted the court,to reconsider.it|decision that Roloff At -IfcQfci and East Uth Street, Union -----• noted. "We had to limit stqck sales." ~ WiH meet Thursday with Rep) -not follow any particutar pay raise," hp said, ''but I . . can .operate"his Rebekah Horfie for Giris in Corpus" Christi I NaUwiSTBank will serve mainly East Austin • ' Dr. John King, president' of Huston- without estate-license--, " . . ' . and downtown, Gilbert Martinez, cashier, Tillotson College and a board member, said, Neil Caldwell of Angleton to„.agenda,but Would include dis-don't'know now much it would J discuss: a. possible special cussian of the. proposed con-cost." ^ The controversy^ ,centered, around the legal definition'&f said. -• • • • "'A financial institution is'as valuable to this — legislative session and, should stitutiort.' a possible special The staff-assjjciatioft .Tues-. children. The state, charged tliat. persons.jin'der .18";^are " MARTINEZ said the -triethnic concept .-community as the businessmen and people . pay "day^presented petitions ;>vith chiWr-en,~ atfd. jBStitutions housing them must be.IlicensBd. _ • dominates the bank's philosophy. The bank is •themselves,",. one be held, whether a session and staff payraises. -raise for staff might be "don-"We don't expect. Mr. " 2.500 names to James Cblvm, • The-court follow&Hnc'State Welfaire Department's ruling".,­ owned by angles, blacks and chicanos, with THE BANK has a total capitalization of sidered. -. ": -----' -Caldw.ejl.to say this, that or University vice-president "Tor*' •that institutions-caring for persons^ilder than 16 need not be each group equally represented on the board -$900,000 with 60,000sha'res of stock field by 428 The noon meeting, in Union the. 6thex,''.TO -a:.business:_.aff airs, and asked licensed; Rplbff'shom#had includedgirlsbetween»16and.18. oT-directors. " • shareholders. Stock sells for $15 a share. No Building 307, Is sponsored by technical, staff assistant for that University.. President . Larry Yoj"k of the attornex general's offrce.said; '"'We have '-V "For the fkst .time, the minorities in shareholder" may own more than 5 percent the Texas College and Univer-tjje University, said. : • Stephen Spurr seek a 10'per-• continued concerftthat the decision ieay.esXsgap in the law- A»stin___have_ a place in a' financial in­stock in the bank. sit'v System Staff Employies .Caldwell jiiight have an opi-^ent raise for employes. Children of 16' or 17 aren't given the opportunity to be in an stitution," Martinez said He added he hoped • Martinez „said""WTr~hope-we're-~FibBori Association ('TCUSSEA),;' -nion, however', on» whether Staff personnel are joining jinstitutidn Operated" by the state: ' • " Hip Vnnk wnnlri-Wnmo a training nWp for cutters in tjhis area and encourage other which is seeking a ,10 percent there will be a'speclal session the, list of University-groups The Suprehie Court.had eariier^oVerturnrf a jtidgment by^• minority bank worfcers and they would use it banits ot uiis typo in the counUy.J ukv hlkti.fUl .sUff pp.rsnnnrl nnri hnw miii-h nf a pay raico asking for a special session to "a Corpus Chri&Xi court Stating l^ioff was in-aontetnpt for ..3S, a".stepping'stcme:Into the economic Banking facilities include klnve-intelfers, Caldwell is chairrrtan of the' :for ^taff employes the state cqnsider pay-raises.; kpppint; thfiil sis rliilili rn'in ,'i hnmr* withnnf n -itntrmainstream of Austin. ' loans, savings.and checking accounts;. ­House. Appropriations Com­could afford, he added?--* At its Jiily 1; meeting, the license. '. THE ORIGINATORS of the bank felt there, The bank's gr.and opening. continues was a need for a bank in East Austin, and thev . through Friday with entertainment and mittee : and. considered by The lawmaker said, "State Faculty/Senate expressed its -State law requires-lic^nsing for.facilities if they keep more TCUSSEA to be a-friend of employes ftave really b'een. desire that Gov.' Dblph srsas, neighborhood has sho\vrt; a"tremendous0 refreshments from 4 to 7 p.m. v than six cJiHdgeji* --^ •<— ^ ®Sk . staff employes; eaten itf) by inflation." Briscoe call a' special session «£& . Hill.requested the'.reljearfng' saying We. ruling put 16^ and -"Caldwell has always given , : Sdftif consensu.s on how and Consider faculty pay in­17-year-olds ih "legal hmbo" because it meant they were not the staff consideration ... and much of a raise should be creases. • ; ^ children ir](3 not adults. • listened to our side." Henry , given, though, needs to be . TSpurr alsohas>said hewould v.­ •T . . _ "*"sr reached before consideration like to see a spepial Session: ' York said he hopedthe Legislature would fix thegap m the by a special session, he said' devoted to faculty salaries »«statute, and provide for.a clear classof-adults and-children. Students' m By Austin Ex-Bishop IN CONCERT•IN CONCERT•IN CONCERT Attorney r • By ALAN WINTER tere'sts' during his tenutat&s -Austin litigation". NCERT• IN CONCEBXllHCONCERT•IN < SJA J&' The most Rev. Louis J. diocese bisttbp. "I"don't think it has any-NWNCERJ>^^^^^*l«)NCERT •"'•V: Reieher-.retired-bishop of the . .. The Most Rev, Vincent M. effect on it, one w.ay or T fre~OTf ee of-IN COI >5? Austin Romkn Catholic "Harris, pr%etirBrshop of the another," he said Wednesday -Student's -Attorney "ainrpsp; ha.ij pai8 ot BEER' fox-YJui_oWl^ Frl. 9-12 si A business associate of and Tapes, and. Home Entertainment -Fraternity or Sorcjrity composites and paddles. Sat. 9-1 Reicher, Howard .!W: Lawn, 1 'HighUind Mall.. • 914 N. LAMAR 477-3783 ~~al?irwasnamed4nthe-settle-~ HAPPY HOUR 44 THE BUCKET /'23rd and Pearl AVAILABLE NjR.PARTIES ;ment. ACROSS FROM HARDINNORTH -3 HRS.FREE PARKING ~f""Tlie availability. of sReicher's tax exemption ^enabled-Lawn and-Reicher.to •shelter 90 percerit of the ORIENTATION STUDENTS • profits 'from federal income IK*3­ ArmadilloWorld Hdqtrs. v..„¥,tax," -asserted the firm's at­ iSSf'torneys. • v 1 The bishop realized profits presents ,.When You Preregister For Fall,'74 ... of $2.8 million from business Si..-interests in a three-year period. RICK CASUAL A. spokesperson', tot the Internal Revenue Service in; i-1 • 1 Boston refused comment f*a i about possible action against The Kitchen Band DON'T the retired bishbp. ' Meanwhile, court in the Beer Garden "-1 proceedings continue in Austin to determine whether 52S%'BA1?TON 477-0357 sReicher's $3million trustfund1 SPRINGS RK belongs to the Catholic church. -He maintained the trust fund for business in- IT'S YOUR STUDENT NEWSPAPER AT THE UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS AT AUSTIN Tha Texan will Keep You potted about happenings on campus* In* Austin and around the world! It's 9 must for alt your campus activities TONIGHT TRACY NELSON 1 & MOTHER EARTH •Mi-ALSO APPEARING dollar! BILLY C. 5 ADVANCED TICKETS AT DISCOUNT RECORDS ^ AND INNER SANCTUM 0^\\% SSBffS'ise Texah-H! •SiLlV- PLUWn*IILLY |Unclassifieds TEQUILA NIGHT I Come by m\ TSPWjj. STILL4QC A SHOT Ropm 3, m\ FRIDAY 'ijSsand.pIt " your MS BUCKDANCER'S CHOICE When you receive your-Optional Student Services Untlaul fee; .|i&i \ Ad i •* *1 '^1 * ASIEIP AT THE WMEE Fee Card, read your instructions carefully! Fill in .'fcI SATURDAY fcsftl! your name and Social Security number — BUT students only SOUTHERN FEELING DQN!1 MARK THE TEXAN SLOT leave it nus no.refun THE NIGHT CRAWlIRS " jyill be.subscribing' to. Whitis £7X>^.Bei"icivVA^.4f327.-.90t16™ Texan for next year! 2j fists' seS£*—. THE DAlLY'TBXANrorfolher TSPPublkatioZ -nrr p J ? '• j a t-j" • 11 -*" • * ' "«e mm™. -»**-f-t j'r rfj 4^ a,K ^ f *b* S-i.* 'h\&$ C$1 Is. ISBy DICK JEFFERSON Ev.en without a direct vie\V of the blaze, they were all in­\ , Texan Staf£ Writer formed on the firefightifig techniques via the truck-mounted"A routine "media report .will follow in 10 seconds r: fire speakers blaring out orders; or the police walkie talkies war­ _burning out of control at UT,cooling,tower, smoke all over the ding the-crowd of the possible toxic chlorine gas.­ place..:?' 7^ " -7-7^— :—­ —-However^t;.alljthe spectators got the best seats to view­ ——Thp'nnt-gn-rnntinp report sent more tHan reporters rushing "l. the action. Qne who ended upliownwind'fromihe^mokecoh­ to the sc£ne. —J*1 -: ~ "rffinlmi, 'I'll n^v^r mrnplnin nhftnt smnkpri in'my f|agg More than 40 firemen,.12 fire trucks/emergency medicap •r;™again.'J technicians, University _,and Austin police, Physical Plant. s.Others showed up, but not fojf the amusement of seeing theengineers, gas and telephone company officials, reporters-, fire. .i' . ^ -Tf-v^"" camera crews and of course hundreds of spectators arrived, Austin Ambulance medical technicians were'called to'stimdeach with his own purpose in mind. " •.••••. ®iby in case of smoke inhalation or chloring poisoning.' One spectator joined the firemen in rerhoving the motor---• : •.•'cycles • blocking a fire hydrant,-while a disgusted drivep^^sf1 . ^ •P9"ce.-alsohad a different chore in mind when the^ attempted to" extricate his small sports car from a snarl of *' .arrived and began controlling thetraffic,both pedestrian and .water hoses. vehicular. ,j -_ And the crowd grew, drawn by the billowing black s'moke,— Gary Hector, who first reported the fire, was moving spee­the sii'ens blaring or as one of the fire gazers, Erna Smith • tators away from the service-building, towards San Jacinto jsaid^'Tjustsaw alltbe_people runnin|this way, and I wanted -Street but as tbe wind changed, the Sari Jacinto cfowd was -to-^ee^wfia^as-goiiTg^on^ • -— --r moved east pastJheJala2e towards Speedway. * *** — -More-and morej;am_eun^th^Jiadblocked 24th Street at Gas* company "Worfem^^owed" ujTlo ^uraofFa' ITFTncn Speedway Street They planted themselves along the west~'-^ain-running^rectIylbeneath4heJireJeleDhone officials bank of-Waller Creek, directly,.across from the blaze. And were worried over the cables, but the spectators-just came; U they gathered between theGeology and Drama Buildings try-, As a journalism , professor who rushed from his class with a mg to eatch^ghmpse1oLthe.itiiernoi_Jl^__ : colleague put it, "we just wanted to see a good fire.",--' ­ %W- tr If t °> ^ t. ^ v s MMs i tiZ i rf.c ..za&Ut !S*f -•*' > rS J s%ks m0l j v;:; •Wm .*• Or v f j. ! M ^ ,jt Jtf. I3 -*-• f. mm xr:'rrt*,* . m wmk f-MJSS W:s; J?Zh iK: ®l -J •• i ' 75S®«Wi tWfi , T* %" ' ^ 1yiii&M.' •Y%3V?S • -mm­ •4-^»v^pfV 5 3®%t 'm, mii fsssrj m#>r s. r > mzswmm-. Photos by Marlon Taylor , r> , , ' • hm •iiftiiiiii'iiily-,>A ;'-S: ji i-f'r" •L-i?',irtr _ * < »ir i» ^4£Sf fflfl Hi' ^ */• 1 1 r I iStififfii m r -V­^J ' .; Y— 1 it» 1 *-.f t.~<\ k,wv y A v* gtt r:2< •rJ& ^si.