T h e Da il y T e x a n S t u d e n t N e w s p a p e r a t The U n i v e r s i t y of Texas a t A ust i n F ort y-E ight Pages Vol. 77, No. 47 News and Ed it o ria l: 471-4591 Austin, Texas, M o n d ay, N o v e m b e r 7 1977 qzz^L xx‘e»n»a •OUI 9 C W x ° f i *. o r a t t h e n e w s l a b o r a t o r y ( C o m m u n ic a t i o n B u ild in g A 4 136 In q u irie s c o n c e r n i n g d e liv e r y a n d c la s s i f i e d a d v e r t i s i n g s h o u ld b e m a d e in T S P B u ild in g 3 200 '471 5244' a n d d is p la y a d v e r t i s in g in T S P B u ild in g 3 210 '471 1865 Che n a t i o n a l a d v e r t i s in g r e p r e s e n t a t i v e o f T h e D a ily T e x a n is N a ti o n a l E d u c a t io n a l A d v e r tis in g S e r v i c e In c 300 L e x in g to n A v e N e w Y o rk N Y 10017. T h e D a ily T e x a n s u b s c r ib e s to C n ite d P r e s s I n t e r n a t i o n a l a n d N e w Y o r k T i m e s is a m e m b e r o f th e A s s o c ia te d C o ll e g ia t e P r e s s , t h e th e T e x a s D a ily N e w s p a p e r A s s o c ia tio n , a n d N e w s S e r v i c e T h e T e x a n S o u th w e s t J o u r n a l i s m C o n g r e s s , A m e r ic a n N e w s p a p e r P u b li s h e r s A s s o c ia tio n T H E D A U Y T E X A N S U B S C R IP T IO N R A T E S O N E S E M E S T E R K A L L O H S P R I N G ) 1977 78 P ic k e d u p on c a m p u s b a s i c s t u d e n t f e e P ic k e d u p on c a m p u s ■ U T f a c u lty s t a f f P ic k e d u p on c a m p u s - g e n e r a l p u b lic By m a i l in T e x a s Bv m a i l . o u t s id e T e x a s w ith in U S A TW O S E M E S T E R S F A L L AN D S P R I N G 1977 78 P i c k e d up on c a m p u s - I T P ic k e d up " n c a m p u s By m a i l in T e x a s Bv m a i l o u t s id e T e x a s w ith in P S A g e n e r a l p u b lic f a c u lty s t a f f SI M M E H S E S S IO N 1978 I 75 I 65 6 75 13 OO 14 OO I 3 30 12 OO 24 OO 26 OO I I OO P ic k e d u p on c a m p u s U T s t u d e n t s f a c u lty s t a f f 4 OO P ic k e d up on c a m p u s B y m a i l in T e x a s M I Bv m a i l o u t s id e T ex a s w ith in I S A 9 00 S e n d o r d e r s a n d a d d r e s s c h a n g e s to T E X A S S T U D E N T P U B L IC A T IO N S , P O B ox P U B N O 146440 I) A u s tin T e x a s 78712 o r to T S P B u ild in g C3 200 g e n e r a l p u b lic ........................... Shoe Shop W e m a k e a n d W S B r e p a i r b o o t s s h o e s belts l e a t h e r g o o d s E s s siw 1 6 1 4 L a v a c a GENUINE SHEEP SKIN RUGS Natural & Beautiful Colors MO00 ★ S A D D L E S * E N G L IS H W E S T E R N Cap ito l Sa d d le r y A u s t i n , T e x a s c=za 4 7 8 -9 3 0 9 )0 Academy 443-1591 This Weekend - Friday Nov. 11 STEVE GOODMAN KIWI Saturday - Nov. 12 and TOM WAITS and Jonnio Barnett A dvene* Ticket* $5. 5p*t reg. 22.25 brick dk. brown Bt J.W. Fox t h e tC IR O fp Television Theatre Movies Art Dance Books Reviews Bike Security Cable $7.50 With the 8 ft. T urnip cable & I lock you can secure both wheels & the fr a m e to a rack. T u rn ip s are m ade of 7x19 vinyl-coated galvan ize d steel aircraft cable The cable has 133 strands of steel. 266 wires m ust be cut before a Turnip opens. L igh t weight alloy c la m p s are c om pre sse d twice to g r ip the cable at the 3 loops. Turnip E n te r p rise s offers a I year guarantee again st m a n u fa c tu rin g defects Co-op Bike Shop sos w. 23rd st. 'UeUvVMitq (Id 'Cfi ort* and entertainment supplement to The Daily Texan COOL WEATHER SHOE SPECIAL O N - T H E - D R AG A N D A L L O V E R TOWN Phoenix murder trial ends Jury convicts two • I>77 New York Timet PHOENIX — Max Dunlap, a stocky P h o en ix c o n t r a c t o r , and J a m e s Robison, a heavyset suburban plumber, were found guilty Sunday of murder and conspiracy' in the 1976 bomb lulling of Don Bolies. an investigative reporter for The Arizona Republic. took The defendants the decision stoically But Dunlap s wife and seven children wept and hugged each other as the verdict was read One daughter bent double in a courtroom aisle, moaning: “ I can t believe this. I can ’t believe this.” The jury of eight men and four women, which had deliberated for five and a half days, also found the two men guilty of plotting to kill Bruce Babbitt, the Arizona attorney general, and Al (King Alfonso) Lizanetz. a former advertising man Lawyers for each defendant said they would file motions for a new trial. Sentencing was set for Dec. 6. The jury’s deliberations followed te s tim o n y and e ig h t w e e k s of arguments and another eight and a half weeks of jury selection, which began July ll. WILLIAM SCHAFER 3D, the chief prosecutor, based his case primarily cm the testimony of John Harvey Adam­ son, who has been accused of arson, burglary and receiving stolen goods, and Howard Woodall, convicted in con­ fidence swindles. Adamson, 33, testified as a result of a plea bargain that gave him immunity from prosecution in other cases and allowed him to plead guilty to second- degree murder in Bolies killing He faces a sentence of 20 years and two months. Adamson testified that Dunlap ap­ proached him in March 1976 and asked him to kill Babbitt and Lizanetz Later. Adamson said, Dunlap added Boites to the list The price for all three killings was to be $50,000, he said Dunlap said, according to Adamson, that each of the three intended victims had somehow disturbed K em per Marley Sr . 71, the millionaire rancher and liquor wholesaler who is a friend and heavy financial backer of Dunlap BABBITT F IL E D an antitrust suit against the Arizona liquor industry Lizanetz, who said he was notified by a vision from God in 1969 th at he henceforth was to be “ King Alfonso, a Robin Hood of all,” denounced Marley in wildly phrased letters to reporters, legislators and others after he was dis­ missed from Marley’s liquor business. B o lie s’ a r tic le s about M a rle y ’s background hampered his efforts to gain and hold a seat on the Arizona Racing Commission Dunlap’s attorney. Paul T. Smith of Boston, attem pted to show that a Phoenix lawyer, Neal Roberts, a friend of Adamson who arranged to have him flown out of the city after the bombing, could have played the role of which Dunlap was accused. Smith contended that Roberts, not Dunlap, nired the killers of Bolies and then laid the blame for masterminding the killing on Dunlap. Mood a y, Novem ber 7, 1977 □ TH E DA ILY TEXAN □ Page 3 77 national groups back Bakke case (U P I) WASHINGTON D espite strong differences of opinion on the Bakke reverse discrimination case. 77 national organizations said Sunday they will continue to work together “ to secure full civil rights for all our citizens.” The groups, in a statem ent released by the Leadership Conference on Civil Rights, acknowledged they had fought over the case of Allan Bakke, a white man who charged special programs for minorities kept him out of die Universi­ ty of California medical school The case is now before the Supreme Court. “ Our differences on the m erits as well as on the ultim ate impact of the Bakke case are deep and not to be the organizations said minimized.” “ But neither should they be permitted to obscure the shared goals that still unite and bind us together. •'WHATEVER THE decision in the Bakke case, we shall work together in the future, as we have rn the past, to secure full civil rights for all our citizens and to help realize those social and economic conditions in which alone the is possible,” the statem ent said fulfillm ent of those rights Signers of the statem ent said they would continue to fight for government policies and programs that “ establish as a m atter of right a job at a living wage for everyone willing to work or who can be qualified for work by training .” They also pledged to work for “ a guaranteed income, sufficient for liv­ ing in dignity, for all those unable to work, a decent home in a decent en­ vironment for a ll; education to the lim it of each person s ability and medical ca re for all in sickness and in health.” BAKKE SUPPORTERS signing the the Am erican the Am erican the A nti- included statem ent Jew ish C om m ittee, Je w is h C o n g re ss and Defamation League of B nai B nth Anti-Bakke signers of the letter in­ cluded Americans for D em ocratic Ac­ tion, the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, the National Education Association, the National Urban League, and United Automobile Workers of America. included O th ers signing the co o p e ra tiv e pledge the Am algam ated Clothing and Textile Workers Union, A m a lg a m a te d M e a t c u t t e r s and Butcher Workmen. American Baptist Churches, A m erican Federation of Government Em ployees. Am erican F ed e ra tio n of T e a ch e rs, C en tra l C onference of A m erican R a b b is, C h u r c h W o m e n Un i t e d , C o m ­ munications Workers of America, In­ dustrial Union Department AFL- In d u stria l L ad ies G a rm en t CIO, Workers Union. League of Women Voters, National Bar Association, the Newspaper Guild and the Southern Christian Leadership Conference. jt —u n T«tophoto Max Dunlap (I) and James Robison were convicted of murder in the 1976 death of Don Bodes. Georgia dam break kills at least 37 persons ° New York Tim es TOCCOA, Ga — A 35-year-old earthen dam on the outskirts of this north Georgia town collapsed early Sunday morning during torrential rains, loosing a 35-foot wall of water that killed at least 37 persons as it surged through a trailer park on the campus of Toccoa F a lls Bible College. Two persons were still missing Sunday night as rescue workers searched tediously through the three miles of destruction left by the flood. Forty­ five persons were injured, IO seriously enough to require hospitalization. “One moment the water was inches deep and the next I was swimming for my life ,” said Eldon E lsberry, a college maintenance worker who managed to escape by hanging on to a floating tree. The dam, built on Toccoa Creek in the Ap­ palachian foothills about two miles southwest of Toccoa, gave way shortly before I a. rn. Sunday after four days of heavy rain had filled its 30-acre lake, called Kelley Barnes Lake, to capacity. MOST OF TH E victim s had no warning as the w aters tumbled down a narrow ravine, spurted over 200-foot-high Toccoa F alls, then spread rapidly across a low plain dotted with more than two dozen fragile house trailers, a few permanent dwellings and sev eral co llege m aintenance buildings. Many of the victim s were m arried students and their fam ilies. Others were faculty mem bers and ad m in istrativ e personnel. Sev eral volunteer firemen who were trying to move people out of the path of the w aters also were lost. plain, a jumble of broken trees, smashed ca rs and twisted home furnishings, all stained dirty amber by pigment washed from Georgia clay When the news reached Washington, President C arter and his wife, Rosalynn, were at church ser­ vices The President dispatched Mrs C arter to the scene to assess the damage, and she flew down by je t and then by helicopter to this community “ JIMMY WANTED me to com e to express his concern,” she said “ It s a terrible tragedy.” Gov. George Busbee of Georgia flew to the scene from Atlanta. He declared a state of emergency and announced the formation of a group to inspect all dams in the state that might pose a hazard to people living near them, should they collapse “ This is the worst disaster ever to hit our c ity ,” Mayor Roy Gaines said after a tour of the flooded He noted that more rain had been forecast for northern Georgia Sunday night and that state of­ ficials would be keeping a close eye on other Georgia dams, of which there are more than 80 Toccoa F a lls Bible College is a 450-student, non­ denominational facility operated by the Christian and Missionary Alliance of Nyack, N Y , and it trains m inisters and m issionaries The school was closed for a week The lower floors of several of its dorm itories suffered extensive water damage, though most of the residents escaped “ WK ARE NOT in a position to carry on,” Kenn Opperman. the college’s president, announced, terming the disaster “an act beyond our com ­ prehension ” The worst thing is that we had all been praying real hard recently for a revival of our spirit,” said Dan Seeord, a 25-year-old junior “ Now this. (’an you believe that creek was once ju st a little bubbl­ ing brook College officials said the dam was built about 35 years ago to provide the school with water, elec­ tricity and recreational sites They reported that maintenance men visited the dam three days ago to cheek on repairs to a road that crossed it. However, they insisted that those repairs had nothing to do with the dam’s structural integrity. ASKED WHEN the dam was last inspected for structural integrity, Opperman replied, " I can ’t say ” Busbee said that in May 1975, the Army Corps of listed 84 Georgia dams as “high- Engineers hazard” structures “ By this,” he added, “ i ’m not talking about faulty dams but dams that, were they to let loose their water, would cause loss of life and proper­ ty.” USSR to mark 60th birthday with T-72 tank presentation MOSCOW (U P I) — The Soviet Union will mark its 60th birth­ day Monday with a traditional m ilitary parade through Red Square displaying the most muscle seen in recent years. For the first tim e since 1974 Soviet tanks — including the new and never before seen T-72 main battle tank — will rumble past the Kremlin walls. Monday’s parade will feature 336 m ilitary vehicles, more than double the size of the 1975 and 1976 parades, in honor of the 60th anniversary of the Bolshevik Revolution. Soviet President Leonid Brezhnev and the entire Soviet Polit­ buro will review the half-hour, sabre-rattling display and a two- to-three hour civilian parade from atop the Lenin Mausoleum. Foreign delegations from 104 nations will attend. RED SQUARE has been closed off to casual visitors for days while decorations went up and the troops, tanks and rocket launchers rehearsed their movements in the midnight darkness. The Red Square parade will be televised nationally and sim ilar displays of Soviet might will be staged in the other m a­ jo r Soviet cities. Western m ilitary experts do not expect any display of Soviet strategic m issiles and will be focusing their attention on two squadrons of 46 T-72 battle tanks making their first public appearance. THE NEW T-72 tanks are shorter and broader than the previous Soviet armored mainstay, the T-62, and feature laser rangefinding devices and an autom atic loader that reduces the tank crew from four men to three Also on parade for the first tim e Monday will be the newly developed Soviet self-propelled 122mm and 152mm field a r­ tillery guns The parade also will feature squadrons of the BM I) airborne tank, armored personnel carriers, rocket launchers, a full range of Soviet surface-to-air m issiles and the SS-12 Scaleboard and Scud-B short range guided m issiles Moscow has draped itself in red flags, huge heroic billboards, strings of colored lights and posters of V I Lenin and President Brezhnev for the occasion news capsules Smith, Carver disagree on peace plan S A L IS B U R Y , R h od esia (U P I ) — P r im e M inister Ian Sm ith and F ie ld M arsh al L ord C a rv e r , the B riton to w hom Sm ith is to su rre n d e r pow er p rio r to black m a jo ri­ ty ru le, m e t Sunday and d isagreed on key a sp e c ts of the U .S .-B ritish p e a ce plan for Rhodesia Sm ith said he and C a rv e r beth hope fo r a ce a s e -fire in the fiv e -y e a r g u e rrilla w a r and s e ttle m e n t of R h o d esia’s p olitical p ro b lem s, “ but m o st, if not a ll, of the highly co m p lica te d question s of how this is to be ach ieved r e ­ m ain u n reso lv ed .” Student rights to be examined by court Th e S u p rem e C ourt is about to e x a m in e an o th er phase of stu d en t righ ts a t s ta te un­ to m e a su re up iv e rsitie s: ca n a student who fails W ASHINGTON ( U P I ) - a ca d e m ic a lly be dism issed w ithout a h earin g ? A rgu m en ts a r e scheduled for 9 a m . CST Monday on the appeal of the U n iversity of M issouri fro m a ruling th at it should h ave a cco rd e d a h earin g to C h a rlo tte Horowitz b efore she w as told to le a v e a K a n sa s m ed ical school. UT No. I Tune-up Speciol The Horns' wins are our losses and the 1977 Football your gains Season. for Tune-ups* No. I Price Reg. Price 4 cyl....................... *28” 6 cyl....................... *32” 8 cyl....................... *4295 Front End A lignm ent............$1450 Spin Tire B a la n c e ...^ 00 p * . M r. * *39” *46°° *66°° $1850 *450 * " • •In clu de*, points, plugs, condenser* Sonny's Service Center Inc. 509 Walsh 476-1556 3 blk* w est of Lamar b etw een 5th A 6th Streets On MS Shuttle Bus Route At least 37 died and 45 were injured in a Georgia flood Sunday. — UPI Telephoto o-op Ring Lightweight - $129.50, IO karat gold Heavyweight - $142.50, IO karat gold No Deposit Required /1RTC71RVED IO karat gold $115.50 No D ep osit Required G^4>ur IO karat gold w/birthstone - $89.50 Experiment on following rules “ N e c e ssity Is the plea for ev ery infrlnjcment of human freedom It is the argum ent of tyran ts; It is the creed of sla v e s “ W illiam P itt in a sp eech to the H ouse of C om m ons, N ov. 18, 1783 A pparently “ necessity* also is the ra tio n a le a d m in istra to rs use in a tte m p tin g stu d en t) su b jects re se a rc h at the U niversity In the D e p a rtm e n t of Psychology, students a r e given the “ ch o ice " of p a rtic ip a tin g in behavioral te s ts and psy etiological ex p e rim en ts or w riting a te rm pape r, the length of which is determ ines! c a se by case to ju stify th eir policy on hum an n e in stru c to r by ins true tor Few would question the d e p a rtm e n t's need fo r hum an su b je c ts in some re se a rc h And, they would arg u e that if students w ere not coerced into p a rtic ip a tin g in ex p erim en ts, it would be very difficult for th e d e p a rtm e n t to p ro c u re th e little guinea pig like s u b je c ts needed to c a rry on its re se a rc h Hut the problem is students a re co e rce d and th ere is re ally very little freedom involved in choosing betw een w ritin g a te rm p a p e r o r taking p art in psychological ex p erim en ts "T h e way it w o rk s," says R o b ert Young professor of psyc hology and d ire c to r of the d e p a rtm e n t's student su b je c t p ro g ram " is we gay this is a lab re q u ire m e n t and if you don’t fulfill th e lab re q u ire m e n t you get an in c o m p le te " T he re su lt is th at 99 per c e n t of the stu d en ts in the* d e p a rtm e n t the m in uscule " c h o o se " re m a in d e r o pts for the bisk of the te rm paper in Hie ex p e rim e n ts, while to p a rtic ip a te U n iv ersity guidelines on student subjec t re s e a rc h c le a rly s ta te " th e volu n tary con sent of the hum an su b ject is absolutley m s e s s a ry ," and the su bject m u st be able " to e x e rc ise fre e pow er of ch o ice w ithout the in te rv e n tio n of any elem ent of force, fraud, d ec eit, d u re ss o v e n eat bing <>r o th e r u lte rio r form of co n stra in t o r coercion While the g u idelines th** I d iv e rs ity has estab lish ed seem c lear enough some* a p p a re n tly have trouble under standing th e ir ex a ct me aning The ex p m n ttftta , says Young, are laboratory re q u ire m e n ts, the co m pletion of which is re q u isite for com pleting the co u rse lf they a re re q u ire m e n ts, then they should be* listed in the official U niversity c o u rse schedule so stu d e n ts will know about the " la b " before they re g is te r for the course* C u rre n tly , they arc* not T hat 99 p e r ce n t of th** stu d en ts in th e psychology d e p a rtm e n t p a r tic ip a te In the e x p e rim e n ts see m s to in d ic a te th at they a re required to p a rtic ip a te , a s Young s ta te s , and th a t v io lates both the U n iv e rsity 's an d IIK W 's guidelines, w hich c le a rly s ta te th a t p a rtic ip a tio n in e x p e rim e n ts can n o t be req u ired from stu d en ts And finally, those th a t say stu d en ts a re not co erced into helping w ith the* e x p e rim e n ts should lake* the tim e to study the* guidelines, the* m eaning of the* w ords us<*d and th** re su lts of the* ru les Noah W ebster s d e sc e n d a n ts d efin e o v e rre a c h " as " to get the* be tte r of, esp ecially by sh arp , unfair, is so m ew h at m o re than “ u n fa ir" to m ak e stu d en ts who do not wish to par tic I p a te in a lle g H ly volu ntary e x p e rim e n ts p erfo rm ad d itio n al work Ad d iu rn a lly , it I S d eceitful not to p rin t the " la b o ra to ry re q u ire m e n ts in the* course* sch ed u le as o th er d e p a rtm e n ts do tric ky or dec eitful m ean s " It M em bers of th e U niversity R eview C o m m ittee for hum an su b ject re s e a rc h p la c e the d e p a rtm e n t's p ra c tic e s in a grey a re a , not sp ecifically defines! by I ^Diversity ru les One c o m m itte e m e m b e r w ent as fa r a s to say th at it is not eth ica l to re q u ire stu d en t p a rtc ip a tio n in re s e a rc h P e rh a p s it is not e th ic a l, but in p ra c tic e stu d e n ts m ost assu re d ly a r e req u ired to p a rtic ip a te S tu d en ts, o r for th a t m a tte r, anyone, should be allow ed to tak e p a rt in e x p e rim e n ts if they so d esire . In fact, th e re a re m any benefits one can gain fro m doing so volu ntarily P a rtic ip a tio n o ffers stu d e n ts a firs t hand view of ex[»erim ental tec hniques w hich, no doubt, would be* useful to those w ishing to p u rsu e behavioral re s e a rc h a s a c a re e r. H ow ever, to fo rce stu d en ts to p a rtic ip a te , o fferin g as th e only o th er alternative* the* u n d ertak in g of a te rm p a p e r as a lab o ra to ry re q u ire m e n t m ocks th e ex isting ru les governing h um an su b ject re s e a rc h and smac ks of p a te rn a lis m lf th e p ra c tic e does not h alt, stu d en ts should sim ply re fu se to p a r tic ip a te in th e e x p e rim e n ts and co n sid er lodging official c o m p la in ts w ith th e D e p artm en t of H ealth. Education and W elfare UKW will, no doubt, vie w the situ atio n in a very d iffe ren t w ay fro m th e p ro fe sso rs, d e p a rtm e n ts heads and a d im n s ttra to rs who p la c e th e ir own a c a d e m ic p u rsu its above the rig h ts and freed o m s of th e ir stu d en ts Let it flow T h e re is no c u re fo r h em ophilia H em ophiliacs a r e bom w ithout a clot ting factor in th e ir blood, a skinned-knee, a shaving nick, o r a tooth e x ­ tra c tio n could c a u s e them to bleed slow ly to d ea th T h eir m edical bills a re a stro n o m ic a l P ulling a tooth can easily cost se v e ra l thousand d o llars An a v e ra g e person w ith the d ise a se spends between $6 6,000 per m onth (or m ed ical c a r e alone A cknow ledging, in a v ery sm all w ay, the fact th a t thus s ta te has the la rg e st c o n c e n tra tio n of h em o p h iliacs in th e U nited S ta tes, the Texas Legislature a p p ro p ria te d 175,000 last y e a r to help those w ith the illness d e fra y th e ir living expenses C alifo rn ia w ith a little m o re sympathy, ap p ro p ria te d $225,OOO Though th ese su m s m ay seem larg e to us. a person w ith hem o p h ilia would spend th ese a m o u n ts on medical bills in only a few y e a rs T he state s e ffo rts to help th ese people is m o re sym bolic th an it is su b sta n tiv e F o r m ost hem ophiliacs, the s t a t e 's aid is no m o re than a d rop in the bucket T his w eek. Alpha P hi Omega sponsors its sem i an n u al blood drive to benefit h em o p h ilia cs But the in te re s t of U niversity stu d en ts in helping A l \ ) has w aned in recent s e m e s te r s , o n e y e a r ago. they c o lle c te d 2,200 p in ts of blood, last spring, th e to tal n u m b e r of pints fell to 1,500 They need y our hel}» From 8 SO to 5 p in Tuesday through T h u rsd ay rn the Union B allro o m and on the sei*ond floor lounge in J e s t e r C e n te r, you can stop by for a few m in u te s, don ate and then be on your way S om e people a re a fra id to d o n ate blood, but asid e fro m ov erco m in g the fe a r of giving, th e re is nothing to be fe a r It s as p ain less as shaving and m o re helpful to a hem ophiliac th a n a check for $1,000 It you re in good h ea lth , h av e had no m a jo r su rg e ry in th e past y e a r. cau g h t no cold w hile s c re a m in g a t th e T exas H ouston football g am e, and have taken no an tib io tic s in th e la st 48 hours, th e re s probably nothing to keep you from giving U n less, of co urse, you’re m e re ly a fraid — D M T h e D a i l y TEXArt Page 4 □ M onday, N ovem ber 7, 1977 \ * \ \ t W " T C * r n '< Ct ^O-t'E* * *^‘.i . ' k i f l p y B t e v h w p s , „ ----------------------- ... 4 'A. I ( mot'. ; ♦ , ♦ 4 '< T 'A / \ r v , W / ' o - - A f - f . , V Pt0e<\ (Dev r, , b o u } m o o 1 I i v vAv rn ' . j n m r n \ r „ v vs - c 1 ■ n tt y a * ” ' v fV ! * ’L ^ I 'f y / * J V . l * ' VA ■' I L i x 4 ' - y - : - "--**/> I MR P s itu Va t v ’•n I 7 Kissinger’s legacy A foundation for peace... By Jason Redwood R e f l e c t i n g on h i s t o r y . H e n ry K i s s i n g e r d e s p a i r e d o v e r h o w e p h e m e ra l peace and stability have been As a staternan. he pursued a Ucsting world stru c tu re ” in spite of history The- form er se c re ta ry of state, who speaks Monday on cam pus, could not build a com plete stru c tu re of peace He perhaps only hoped to leave a founda­ tion, and in this he succeeded I hiring his tenure, the outright hostili­ ty o! the ( old War was redirected toward a quieter, m ore cautious com ­ p e t i t io n between the United States and the Soviet Union The com petition did not disappear, as Kissinger was well aware* YET ARMS ag reem ents w eie signed Trade and travel between the super­ increased Science becam e a powers reason for furth er contacts And these form s of cooperation w ere building blocks tluit could support m ore blocks ta le r r e m a in e d Since Jim m y ( a rte r took over, the fo u n d a tio n h a s in t a c t Although a second-stage a rm s a g ree­ m ent, dubbed SALT ll. rem ains an un­ certain proposition, neither side has been im patient enough to scrap SALT I \s the negotiated lim its on m issiles and launchers expired last month, both par ties proclaim ed a willingness to abide by the expired lim its while work con­ tinues on SALT II AN ACCORD that limited the size of underground nuclear tests is opening the way for C a rte r to negotiate a com ­ plete ban on testing Raising hopes for this, the Soviets announced last week they w ere ready for a "m o ra to riu m ” on testing for peaceful purposes, together with a ban on w e opt rn tests Mutual re stra in t has been shown on issue The b itter the human rights rhetoric of e a rlie r this year, which followed C a rte r’s le tte r to dissident An­ drei Sakharov, has mellowed N either party w as e a g e r to blast hard enough to hurt the foundation K issinger's stru c tu re assigned a sup­ porting role to China. The door that sw ung o p e n in 1972 h a s h e lp e d pragm atic, nondogma tic leaders to win the power struggle in Peking over the radical group IN TRK MIDDLE East, K issinger’s step by step shuttle diplomacy founded an Arab tru st in the United States. It is the where none existed before I rn ted States that has the strongest potential to fashion an overall peace settlem ent, however distant and unlike­ ly such a se ttle m e n t currently seem s K issinger's focus of attention on the th e M ideast m ajo r pow ers and on delayed A m erican re a c tio n s to the loudening dem ands of developing coun­ ...or for imperialism? By Betty Ann Duke Tho Austin C om m ittee for Human Rights rn Chile is disgusted to hear that Henry K issinger, a m an who has caused suffering and death in all p arts of the world, has been invited to this cam pus to speak on foreign affairs th r e a te n U S Kissinger has been a consistent ad­ vocate of harsh tre a tm e n t for nations in te r e s ts T he th a t dem ocratically elected governm ent of S a lv a d o r A lien d e in C h ile, w hich th re a te n e d to becom e a m odel for revolutionary change in other countries, r u t h l e s s l y c r u s h e d u n d e r w a s K issinger’s policies On June 27, 1970, K issinger said in referen ce to Chile, "I diHi’t see why we have to stand bv and watch a country go Com m unist due to the irre s p o n s ib ly of its own people ’* KISSINGER’S decision to follow a hard-line policy in relation to Chile m ay have been influenced by Pentagon of­ the National Security ficials within C ouncil or by the views of his friend N e lso n R o c k e f e l le r S in c e 1969, Rockefeller has advocated support for m ilitary regim es as the best way of in L atin p ro tectin g America According to Rockefeller, the question is less one of d e m o c r a t or a lack of it than it is simply of orderly ways of getting along” K issinger’s role in determ ing I S p o l i c y t o w a r d C h il e h a s b e e n docum ented by the Senate Intelligence in te re s ts I S to power, Com m ittee Senate investigators have referred to K issinger as the "architect” of cam paigns to prevent Aliende from coming to overthrow his governm ent, to legitim ize the Fascist junta which deposed him and to help the new governm ent plan and im plem ent its policies As chairm an of the 40 Com­ m ittee (a group of just five men who have final a u th o rity for all c o v ert operations), K issinger approved the ex­ penditure of a t least $8 million to rig elections, stran g le the Chilean economy after Aliende was elected, control news im p o se a c re d it and p ro p a g a n d a , b lo c k a d e a n d e v e n tu a lly , to p p le Aliende s U P governm ent. w as to help AFTER THE COUP,says the Senate report, the goal of covert action that the 40 Com m ittee, was approved by th e new g o vernm ent organize and im plem ent new policies.” One of the m ain policies that U S ad­ visers such as Milton Friedm an helped to develop was Chile s economic policy that has resulted in m ass hunger and starvation and a 20 to 25 per cent ra te of th is u n e m p lo y m e n t B e c a u s e of econom ic policy, is desperately needed by the Chilean peo­ ple is being exported instead food th a t the In to resp o n se in te rn a tio n a l ex­ pressions of outrag e over the thousands of people who have been im prisoned, tortured and m urdered by the junta, the I S governm ent has been forced to publicly denounce the junta s violations tries and to the m ounting tension in .southern A frica. K issin g er turned toward these issues before he left office, and before the United S tates lost the op­ portunity to affect events THE FORM ER H arvard professor tru*d to shape the world, even as he wondered w hether a single individual could control the direction of history. At the least. P resid en t C arter in­ herited a foreign policy fa r b etter tuned to the com plicated global picture of 1977 than the one handed to R ichard Nixon and K issinger in 1969 Moro optim istically, C a rte r m ay be able to strengthen the foundation laid by Kissinger and add som e new levels to it. R e d w o o d is an e d ito r ia l assistant. ol hum an rights. The tru e attitu d e of U S policy m a k e rs, how ever, w as revealed by K issinger’s statem en t to Am bassador David Popper, which was reported in the New York Tim es on Sept 27. 1974 After Popper had discuss­ ed to rtu re and other hum an rights issues during a m eeting on m ilitary aid w ith C hile s m in is te r of d e fe n se , Kissinger told the am bassador to "cu t out the political science le c tu re s.” to In June of 1976. K issinger tried to legitim ize the junta by attending an OAS m eeting in Chile Although he m ade a sp e e c h c o n d e m n in g h u m a n rig h ts violations, he cam e hom e and lobbied for continued aid to the junta Kissinger reported international the House relations subcom m ittee that the situ a­ tion in Chile was improving at a tim e when the Chilean secret police (DINA) was stepping up its efforts to kidnap thousands of people Although there are no records of a rre st of these people, many of them have been seen by other prisoners. They a re sim ply referred to as the dis­ appeared io s d esap arecid o s” — KISSINGER’S role in Chile did not stop when he stepped out of public of­ fice He has served as a consultant to IBM. which has invested at least $5 6 million in Chile since the coup and has loaned another $4 million to its Chilean subsidiary that distrib u tes com puters 'rn order to im prove the quality of governm ent operations in banking and industry and to aid international com ­ 1 B usiness L atin A m erica). p a n ie s' Kissinger also serves as the chairm an of the Chase M anhattan Bank In ter­ national Advisory C om m ittee, which is a m ajo r cred ito r for the governm ent- owned copper m ines Without the finan­ cial support of m u ltin a tio n a l c o r­ porations such as IBM and banks such as C h ase M a n h a tta n , th e C h ilean Fascists would not be able to rule Berry Ann D u k e is a m e m b e r o f the A u s t i n Committee f o r H u m a n R i g h t s m Chile Pray for moderation By Monty Jones The world s m ost fam ous ath eist was a r r e s te d for " d is r u p tin g a p u b lic m eeting” Thursday a fte r she refused to be quiet while a m in ister was trying to give the p rayer that traditionally opens Austin City Council m eetings. Madalyn M urray O’H air says that she will be back next Thursday and a t every council m eeting for the re st of the year to protest the p rayers, which she con­ siders a violation of the constitutional principle of separation of church and state. This protest follows a recent late- night raid by O 'H air on a local church fund-raising affair, or gam bling den. depending on one s point of view In that o u tb u rst, O 'H air c h a rg e d the ch urch's bingo gam es violate sta te laws against gam bling and th a t the sta te en­ forces gam bling in favor of church bingo rack eteers, but against m ore secular sinners laws selectively, th a t O’Hair has lived in Austin for several years, but until these two incidents she had not meddled in local affairs very much While she concentrated on the sins of other places in her cam paign for stric t interpretation of the Constitution, m ost Austinites w ere able to tolerate her oddities. Now th at she has brought her cam ­ paign to her hometown, the feeling m ay grow among Austinites that she is not m erely a c h a ra c te r whose e c c e n ­ tricities can be am using, but a crank and a nuisance, and even, possibly, a threat. O’Hair is a refo rm er as p u rist in her beliefs as the 17th and 18th Century churchm en w ere in th eirs when they prom oted separation of church and state. As a true believer, O’H air can be irritatin g in her efforts to clean up the inconsistencies and irreg u larities in the lives of the rest of us. But as usual, the m ost serious danger to a healthy society com es not from refo rm ers like O’H air but from the reaction against them and th eir kind. The m ost serious danger is not th at O Hair will prevail, but th at those who oppose her will re so rt to hate and violence. We have already seen signs of the sort of cruel repression th at our city 's “ con­ fo rm ists” are capable of. O’H air’s daughter was taunted by her classm ates at a local public school until O’H air realized that, for the child s physical and psychological safety, it would be necessary to place her in an out-of-town p rivate school. This hate cam paign against O 'H air and h er fam ily is, of course, not consistent with the religion of love and c h a r ity one a s s u m e s O’H air’s enem ies claim to follow. But neither is it unusual. E stablished groups a re alw ays in danger of giving way to h atred against dissenters. And this is alw ays one of the m ost serious dangers to an open and d em ocratic society. One problem here is that O’H air’s atheism is being confused with the con­ stitutional and legal issues she is ra is­ ing This is partly O’H a ir’s own fault. But one doesn t have to be an ath eist to have nagging doubts about the propriety of m andatory p rayers in public school, relig io u s slogans in sc rib e d on our money, clerical cerem onies a t public m eetings, or exem ption of churches from sta te law. E fforts should be m ade to sep arate these m a tte rs from the personal beliefs of the person who rem inds us of them. They seem to be legitim ate m a tte rs for the courts to deal with as they perform th eir duty of seeing th at society and the Constitution a re in as close accord as possible While our city faces the dangers of repression, there a re oth ers signs that a spirit of m oderation and decency will prevail. Mayor Carole McClellan handl­ ed O’H air’s protest Thursday in a fair and enlightened m anner. McClellan saw th at cu rren t law was enforced when she from council had O 'H a ir rem o v ed c h a m b e rs, and she also sought to protect O Hair s rights of expression and belief, offering to talk with O’Hair in her office and rem inding O 'H air that she is welcom e to place her nam e on a future ‘citizen com m unication” agenda so that the m a tte r of opening p rayers can be brought before the council in an orderly and fair m anner. McClellan could have used O ’H air’s outburst as an occasion to do a little th a t would have cheap p o litick in g brought wide support But she would have been c r e a t i n g a public mood of repression as much as responding to such a mood. Instead, by using the in an even-handed, m a y o r's office resp o n sib le m an n e r, M cC lellan has helped to prom ote a public mood of m oderation We can be sure th at the m ay o r’s leadership in this regard will be needed further, if O H air retu rn s to this w eek's council m eeting to resum e her protest. F u rth er protest seem s entirely un­ necessary to m any people, if O 'H air s purpose is to get the m a tte r of pray er at council m eetings into the courts, where it can eventually be ruled constitutional or unconstitutional. By forcing her own a rre st Thursday. O’H air already has her th e c o u rts F u rth e r public ca se protest on this m a tte r would seem necessary only if O 'H air's purpose is to a ttra c t attention and get her nam e in the papers in Jones is an editorial a ssistan t T h e D a i l y T e x a n E ditor M anaging E ditor A ssistant Managing E d i t o r s A ssistant lo t h e Editor News E ditor F e a tu re s E ditor Sports E ditor E n te rta in m e n t E ditor Photo E ditor C am pus A ctivities E ditor C onsum er E ditor G eneral R ep o rters .................. ............................ ................. ................. ...... Dan Malone E rie H arrison Stove McAdoo. L aura Puma Gary Fondler Dana Khrlieh Carole Chiles Brad Buchhol; Tom K essler .. ........ ..................................................... ............................... ................................ Danny Cunningham Bill C oekenll, Ja n ie Leigh Frank,B eth Frerkuig M a rn e Gugenheim , Karen H astings. Chris Hearne. Christy Hoppe Kathy Kimball, Nan Pow ers Dee Steer. Mike Stephens Tom Swmnea City E ditor News Assistants E ditorial A ssistant Sports A ssistants Make up E ditor Iter gin Wire E ditor Copy E ditors A rtist .................... Photographers Mike Smith G inger (.'olm H unter .........V alerie May Amanda M artinez. Charlie Rose . . . . Dennis Roberson, Mark Good son Ken Mathews ...................... .. Jan et Wilson Steven Fay, G inger Bergin, Mike McDougal, Cindy Klein ............. . .. Monty Jones ................................ . Kurt Siegfried Carlos O sono. Mike Silverwise ‘ V- t v IV m w u ti a tm a n * raooa jr t o t Hoard a* Hagwats ra t W tarufeag t a i Mfrfe-nptMa tahviuatm i. ant P iy t I t v n * « ! w I t * U a*b P i u s i n t u m t iW s i* ar Ut* a n t a e at t o t a r t* -* «mS a r a a tt M n m n l ; tfew* of Empty slogans Lee Yeakei, a candidate for sta te representative, has been cam paiging in televi­ sion spots on the issue of crim inal ju stice reform His contribution has been to suggest that the convicted crim inal be ordered to make restitution to his victim This is not an original idea It is c u rre n t practice for a person, as a condition of his probation or parole, to be ordered to m ake restitution when his crim e has caused a property loss Perhaps Mr. Yeakei was thinking of the crim es of personal violence? I am not satisfied that the victim s of such c rim e s want to be reim bursed by the crim inal How much would you want or expect a fte r being beaten by a m ugger0 How much is a rape w orth0 If the jury is to assess this fine. im agine the nightm are of setting such penalties Those convicted of assault seldom go on to acquire m uch personal wealth I doubt they could ever pay m e for the psychological dam age such a crim e could cause It is alw ays an a ttra c tiv e slogan to say that the crim inal should pay The sad truth is that some dam age is quite beyond rep air So Mr. Yeakei, do not give m e an em pty slogan and a cry of “ Law ’n O rd e r,’’ they went out with Spiro T Agnew Joseph H. G rant Travis County Young Dem ocrat Yeakei has the edge Ms Bode would have us believe that her experience as a new sperson with the L egislature m akes her b e tte r qualified. She m ay have m ore friends in m ore places, but this does not m ean th at she will be m ore effective The Austin Sun on Oct 28. 1977 stated, “ Despite all h er experience, Ms. Bode seem s less than well versed on som e of the tougher and m ore im portant issues..." The thrust of The Daily T exan’s endorsem ent of Lee Yeakei was that he has the firm est grasp of the issues and the m ost com prehensive understanding of the political process of any of the candidates. D istrict 37-B needs a representative who can get to work on our education, energy and crim e problem s NOW before the L egislature convenes. Y eakel’s edge in knowledge and his actual experience in passing bills m akes him that candidate M argaret Mihalik Education Yeakei has experience Lee Yeakei has spent m any y ears living, working and raising a fam ily here in D istrict 37-B. He has not been viewing the Texas L egislature w ith an eye for what might be of general interest to the people of the nation, but with an eye to what is of vital concern to the people of T ravis County. As a law yer, he saw the injustice of back-room plea bargaining and the cour­ troom ch arades of pretending that no deals had been m ade He authored a bill to m ake plea bargaining a m a tte r of public record, to bring it out into the open for all to see. As a m em ber of the Texas Young Law yers Association he took his bill to the L egislature, sat through hours of subcom m ittee and full com m ittee hearings, successfully fought against those who would have killed or w atered the bill down. It was subsequently passed by the L egislature and signed by the governor. This experience as a p articipant in the legislative process gives Yeakei a decisive advantage over som eone who has m erely observed that process He has proved his ability to function well under stre ss; no other candidate has. Lee Y eakel’s concern for the people of D istrict 37-B is seen in m any other a re a s as well. He has seen need for a full-tim e, independent utility consum er advocate for the people of Texas. He proposed the creation of a consum er ad vocate’s office on the 23rd of O ctober and will work tow ard the realization of that proposal in the Legislature. In addition, Lee is a patron of the Austin Rape C risis C enter, he has spent a great deal of tim e raising funds for RLRN and has long supported the Wild Basin Cam paign. Lee Yeakei has a record of concern with an involvem ent in the a ffa irs of T ravis County. He wishes to c arry th a t concern and involvem ent into the L egislature as your representative. He m e rits your vote on Tuesday. T erry G laser C hairm an, U niversity Students for Yeakei M onday, N ovem b er 7, 1977 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ P a g e 5 firing line Give the gift of life Your fear is reasonable Most people a re scared to give blood, which is why only 3 out of every IOO actually give P retty poor odds Usually the problem is just fear of the unknown However, let m e hasten to reassure you — it s never as bad as you thought it would be Most healthy people between 18 and 66 can give blood (17 with parental consent* Some people a re rejected perm anently because of history- of specific illnesses or of a risk of transm itting disease O thers are tem porarily prevented from donating because of undesirable constituents, such as certain m edications, to the patient receiving the liquid of life But, m ost likely, you can give The U niversity of Texas Blood Drive is coming up soon: Nov 8, 9 and IO (Tues­ day. Wednesday and Thursday). It is so easy to give, ju st com e to the convenient locations in the Union Building. J e ste r C enter and Kinsolvmg W omen’ Dorm w here you will register, discuss your m edical history- and have your hemoglobin (red cell iron content) checked Then you will lie down on a donor bed, and in about 5 to IO m inutes, it s all over T here s no sensation or feeling while you’re donating You rest and relax for a few m inutes, have some refreshm ents served by APO m em bers, then return home The whole process takes approxim ately 45 minutes, a relatively brief tim e to give the invaluable gift of life to another The only tim e people feel faint is when they neglect to get the proper am ount of food and or sleep before. Therefore, it s im portant to get a good night s sleep and to eat prior to donation. Help the U niversity set a record this year; we have a successful football team — let s also have a successful blood drive We’re relying on you to help Karen Katz Blood Drive Committee Union mismanaged I cannot recall any tim e when I have found a business as m ism anaged and ill run as the Student Union. I have tried to acquire a cup of coffee during evening study breaks and have discovered repeatedly that they a re eight out or the ser vice area is closed before its posted tim e. I assum e that this happens not only to m yself but to o thers as well. This type of business practice would not be tolerated for long in a priv ate business w ere it to o perate in a sim ilar m anner It is apparent that food and services rendered a re priced above all nearby com petitors, and at tim es certain services a re not available I have alw ays taken for granted that the purpose of the Student Union is to benefit the student population It is c le a r that it is failing in this regard After be­ ing closed for three years and still collecting fees, it is not presently m eeting the students needs in an effective and consistent m anner. With a potential m arket of $40,000, it should be questioned as to why the student union is constantly facing financial d ifficulties'! Ron Gernsbacher Social and Behavioral Sciences Negative inducement In reference to Nov. I, article on the psychology d ep a rtm e n t’s subject roundup: UT experim ents debated? Why do the ‘‘d e b a te rs’’ not include a t least a few of the prim e subjects of their debate: student lab “ r a ts .” I have learned all too well that the undergradute student doesn’t count by the adm inistration and m ost professors. The student is forced into conform ity; the institutional route is the only way into a profession nowdays, but coercion to attend is quite different from being forced as subject to experim enters regardless of the la tte r's “ status ” F irst of all, this is not a sm all m a tte r and the repercussions m ay not be felt for some tim e to com e. I am one of those students who has literally been “ hounded” to p articipate in departm ental required research. I do not have a phone, but a friend of m ine has intercepted a t least two calls for m e; where on the first I was threatened with having to do a difficult project in lieu of research and on the se­ cond the im pression was relayed th at I would fail if I didn’t particip ate Even if this pressure had not been applied it is quite obvious that the "psychology” departm ent doesn’t even know the m eaning of "v o lu n teer" and the im portance of a p articip an t’s anonym ity. Has any one taught those people positive inducem ent and respect for humans other than their colleagues0 Do they not have the slightest conception of the significance of human rights? Have they ever seriously studied history? These questions don't matter to the pragmatic opportunist. Som ew here within “ duress, overreaching and ulterior form of constraint or coercion is the pragm atic method of the psychology department’s drafting of students Even spelled out they still will not admit that the requirement of an alternative paper with adm ission of the fact that the research is the easy way out I as 99 per cent of the students d o ") is a successful coercion to induce students as subjects I here is no "g ra y area The penalty is quite evident but buried in the rhetoric lf you don’t participate you must do a term paper and if you of the debaters don t do it you fail In other words if you don’t participate a direct result is the grade U or a forced alternative that is subject to a grade. Participation is therefore a definite part of grade George de Cisneros Jr. Symposium missed some We thought som ething struck us as funny about the foreign policy symposium that was held at the University recently. But then we thought of the speakers and how appropriately they were selected to deal with the topics What could be more natural than for Gen Risner, the “highest-ranking Vietnam POW,” to speak on the racial peculiarities of those inscrutable Vietnam ese0 And who but Korean Ambassador Run could give us such an objective view of South Korea? Then, it is alw ays nice to have exiled Czech cold warriors discuss the foreign policy ap­ propriate to the Soviet Union We should not neglect the Canadian nationalist who has com e to give us the latest facts on the Quebec separatist movement. No, we thought, surely th ere is nothing wrong here. And then we realized what produced our vague feelings of discontent. The I niversity forgot to invite several people who should certainly have been included on the program Why wasn’t Gen Ihnochet brought in to discuss human rights in Chile’’ And why not B ert loanee to discuss ethics in Swiss banks? When so many are concerned about overpopulation, why wasn’t Rudoph Hess brought in to dis­ cuss m ethods of population control? If those who organized the program had only rem edied those om issions they could have made the symposium a complete su ccess' Jim Greene, Graduate Government Jim Blanford, Graduate, Government Gary Kline, Graduate, Governmnt Kathleen Hattaway, Graduate. Government Tolerance is a virtue to the University To be sure. Bill Brown needs to learn tact, but neither he nor Al Davis is “an em barrassm ent I remember the late Sixties, when the overriding them e was Tolerance, Tolerance At that tim e, gays among others, pleaded with students to to lerate divergent viewpoints. Now, when the prevailing attitude am ong students is acceptance of gay lib, the suppporters of gay lib (at least those who have contributed to the Firing Line last year and this year) show no tolerance to viewpoints o ther than their own A recent exam ple is that of Jam es Bagg, in the Texan Nov. I. I guess tolerance is a virtue only when someone else does the tolerating BUI Dean Physics Graduate Student Laser photo misleading On the front page of the Nov. I issue of the Daily Texan there was a photograph of a laser beam being sent to a reflector on the moon. The beam of light that one is Uh! to believe is the actual beam sent through the 107-inch telescope at McDonald O bservatory is really the light from another laser that was strapped to the side of the telescope for the sake of the photograph (the actual beam would not be visible) This can be seen quite easily since the point where the light seem to com e from is not a t the cen ter but at the side of the telescope Daniel Morgan Westlake High School Graduating Engineers: If jour heart’s in San Francisco THE MOST DANGEROUS PLACE IN TRAVIS COUNTY IS THE TRAVIS COUNTY JAIL Island is hiring t Live in the heart of Northern C alifornia-A m erica's most fam ous w ork and play land. Ideal, smog-free climate, short drive to the Golden Gate, the wine country, lots more! Work in a ch allen g in g environment at the West Coast’s oldest and best-know n naval institution, with unmatched p o t e n t i a l f o r p r o f e s s i o n a l g r o w t h , r e w a r d and r e c o g n i t i o n . Get the facts on civilian career opportunities. Contact your Placement Office. Campus interviews:n o v e m b e r 8 In 1976, a Federal Court order found the Travis County Jail to be "un­ safe and insecure." The Court stated the jail violates Texas statutory law and basic constitutional rights. M urder, rapes, suicides and beatings do not occur only on the streets. Crowded and insufficient facilities allow crimes to happen inside of jails. The Public Safety Bond Election is a carefully planned program to meet this community's entire crim inal justice needs, now and in the future. V O TI FOR PROPOSITIONS I , 2 and 3 IN THE COUNTY BOND ELECTION. Politkol odvortbomont paid for by Students h r Publk S ahty bond*, Judy Spalding, Chair po non Mare Island Naval Shipyard Vallejo, California 94592 $ SAN FRANCISCO An Equal Opportunity Employer U.S. Citizenship Required % Page 6 □ T H E D A IL Y TEX A N Q Monday, November 7, 1977 Education Building judged Open classrooms draw mixed reviews UT psychology department ranked sixth in the nation By JULIE HELD Education Building at 1911 Speedway St it the first University building ic use open classroom* (irtginally in­ tended for elementary and secondary schools, th# use of movable partitions instead of walls ami doors is being ex penmen ted with in some college classrooms Teachers and students who us# the open classrooms in parte of the Education Building have mixed feelings about their suci'om But the architects who built the building three years ago say the open cbiases permit versatility and give potential teachers a chance to experience work bkg in m ort than one learning atmosphere GUY MAN ASTER, associate chairman cd the Depart­ ment of Educational Psychology said open classrooms have created adjustment problems for both professors and students ‘ But most people have gotten used to It," ha added Open classrooms a rt not appropriate in certain situations. Uke counseling or discussion courses he said But, for the moat part, students can get along with it. Manaster said "The open classroom concept was primarily for gram mar school — and sometimes high achoo! * to provide op portunities for continuous learning and personal involve mem lf that is th# basic notion, it doesn t really apply when giving a lecture," he said Bot) Kline, associate professor of curricular imbrue Bon, said he likes teaching In It foe several reasons 'The open classroom gives more mobility so I can I move around the chairs and tables if needed," he said can change the nature of the room to fit the nature of what I'm teaching " STUDENTS and professors can meet people in other departments became of the Interaction that takes place when ria uses change Kline said Also. people often walk by to get somewhere els# and end up NUhis in on the class - and that is "great," he said Although a woman professor in the same office once told Kline sh# would never again teach in an open classroom Kline said he likes the openness and would Uke to continue teaching in this manner. Not everyone shares the enthusiasm for open classrooms I hat# teaching in it Everything is too noisy There s nothing you can do but listen to the noise." Dr BUI Bago. an educational specialist said IN AN O PEN classroom, a class with 40 people has no boundaries he said Although there ii a partition, noise still can be easily heard in the classrooms, such as films in th# neat class, people talking at the elevator and students walking in and out of the restrooms. Bago said I guess it would he good from some standpoint — hut I haven t gotten there yet It gets to be a pain, it s too noisy and there is no privacy," he said Uurt# Dushkin, a senior in special education, said she has not been bothered by noise in open classrooms, probably because sh# takes meetly night classes when few other classes are in progress Movies do interfere with the classes because students can hear the noise from the next room, but one learns to lune out the noise, Dushkin said. MANY EDUCATION students often find the situation distracting and unfavorable for learning Although th# open classrooms do have partitions separating the classes, students said they can still ace and hear the lec­ ture next to them The good things about open classrooms la that they are informal and nontraditional, but It Is atilt very distracting during classes and when taking tests, Sand! Frucht. a senior In special education said ‘You can hear everything from the classroom next door and they can hear everything from your classroom You can hear everything in the halls and any type of media shown in a class near yours is very distracting," she said B y A M A N D A M A R T IN E Z Sta ff W r ite r Psychology faculty members are pleased with a recent study published in the American Psychologist, ranking their department as sixth in the nation, but they question the survey’s ability to measure the relative strengths and weaknesses of the departm ent's program it was learned Sunday ( undueted by two University of In­ diana faculty members, the study rank ed psychology programs according to frequency of publications from 1970 to 1975 in the 13 journals of the American Psychological Association (A PA ) Tile study is described as the first, attem pt to evalu ate psychology departm ents through o b je c tiv e measurements rather than subjective opinion The authors W Miles Cox and V iola ( att, claim their ranking provides objective indices of quality and separate ratings of each of the major areas of psychology, unlike the last ranking done in 1970 which was based on opinions of department chairmen and faculty T H E Y P O IN T out that since the ranking is based on the number of ar­ ticles published in journals relating to each individual area of psychology, the strengths and weaknesses of each college are described in the study. On that basis, the University ranked sixth or higher in five areas of psy­ chology: abnormal psychology — third, consulting and clinical psy­ chology — third educational psy­ chology — fifth comparative and physiological psychology — sixth, and experimental psychology - sixth Low er in the standings were developmental psychology — 12th, counseling psychology — 17th, per­ sonality and social psychology — 22nd and applied psychology — 27th We re proud (of the general stan­ ding) but we don’t have any weak areas said Dr Philip Gough, psy­ ‘ The chology department chairman study simply counts papers without considering quality or significance.’' HF] S A ID the study was probably fairly representative of departments in general but disagreed that it could give any picture of which areas within a department are strong or weak.” One problem for us and probably for everyone else in the study is that it only represents APA journals,’’ Gough con­ tinued Some of our strongest researchers don t publish in journals of the APA The consequence is that they are not included in the count " Gough said the No. 22-ranked social psychology area is actually one of the best in the country. The objective method of the study, however, may actually have helped the University in the general standings, Gough said, by eliminating "cultural lag — the tendency of judges to think of an Ivy League type school as having a top department, but not a southern school." " I ’M D E L I G H T E D , " said Associate HEWLETT kilo' PACKARD P r o f L ee W i l l e r m a n of the department s standing Willerman, who teaches abnormal psychology, said. ‘the ratings are probably fair, but I m not sure how comprehensive they are Too much can be made of it; our department is more responsive to quality rather than quantity Visiting Prof James Dabbs said the low ranked social psychology area rating might be attributable to the fact that in social psychology there is only one APA journal while there are five nonassociation publications Dr Wilson Geisler. of experimental psychology called the high ranking of his area ‘ pretty impressive’’ but noted that the study did not accurately measure every department. Ranked higher than the University are the University of Wisconsin in Madison, the University of Illinois, Yale University, the University of Michigan and Ohio State University. W H E N D E P A R T M E N T size was ac­ counted for, the University was rated at IO 5 with 40 faculty members con­ tributing an average of 3.8 articles each The school was ranked lith in the 1970 evaluation Overall, Gough said, " It shows we have a faculty which works in the laboratory as well as in the classroom, and as hard or harder than any psy­ chology faculty in the country." Since the research in these publications is at the frontiers of our knowledge, students who take classes from these scholars receive the benefit of the latest and best knowledge of human behavior, he said Texas Instruments Program m able J TUC-7 / '> W o P , o q 9 f r o < * s rn 9 your Ti Pr BUY ONE ROYALE BURGER g e t o n e FREE | J with thit coupon vorct ofter N ev I S I I < | ; j I J i I , \ ! 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I I I ' ? l is the onk calculator at its price that perlornis all arithmetic, logarithmic and trigonometric calculations automatically even rectangular/polar conversions And you can do your trig calculations in either radians ordegtees, just by flipping a switch. I l l ' ? ! is also the only calculator at its price that oilers you full displav formatting, so you can choose between fixed decimal and scientific notation. (The latter is extremely helpful when you're working with vetv large or small numbers.) Hi acuity &t ' Oft I J . copy rn GRAND OPENING WEEK SPECIAL!! 8 am -l1 pm M-F, 9 a m - 6 p m S a t . 1 pm -6 pm S u n . 214 W .M L K 476*6662 Free Parking tCAOCMtC C E N T E R Self-Service All Day COPYING Notes, Resumes, Theses. Dissertations. Reports, etc TYPING Dissertations, etc BINDING Perfect Binding. Etc Reports. Resumes. Theses, SpiraL Kroyden, Buckram. a SKK Bl YO fit** Si' rn MCK BivO 2 r ]2 i i . New math chairman explains plans of future ‘superstar’faculty recruitment Bv K A TH LEEN KIMBALL S cien ce R eporter Jim Daniel alm ost becam e a newspaperm an years ago, but he chose to go to Stanford University’s graduate school Now, at 37, he is the new chairm an of the U niversity's D epartm ent of M athem atics His diversified background does not end with academ ics. During the 65th Legislature, Daniel was spokesm an for and p r e s id e n t of th e A u stin chapter of the Texas Associa­ tion of C o lleg e T e a c h e rs (TACT). For TACT, he successfully lobbied against Legislature- im posed facu lty w orkloads and teaching assistan t re stric ­ tions and was the first faculty the to m em b er fin al b u d g et U n iv e r s ity 's te stify at hearing “THE ADMINISTRATION and I got along extrem ely well. I realized it wouldn't pay to have a lot of conflicts, un­ less they were fundam ental conflicts.’’ he said As the new chairm an, he w ants to see the m ath d ep art­ ment be, and be perceived as, one of the top IO departm ents in state-supported institutions in the country." How does he plan to do it? T h r o u g h “ s u p e r s t a r recru itin g ," he said Daniel w o u l d t o a t t r a c t m o tiv a te d a n d e n e r g e t i c young m ath graduates, as well as older faculty with highly respected backgrounds l i k e “ RIGH T NOW we have a low n u m b e r of r e la tiv e ly faculty who a re tenured — Lesson for the President hire people with the prospect H Jf of earning ten u re," he said .J, ,:v; hi soul ii’ vv, h.t\ t H H V m S B m o | W *' K' j f / l t f m lt’ v< beyond the nationwide average th e ir P h D than r£ 5 5 & I i i I H r I m ||* * j m m * 4 Although | H m ath m ajors has th e num ber of dropped d W m d ram atically within the last from 1,000 in 1970 five years, to 200 this fall. the total enroll- m e n t is slightly-increasing. in ma t h c o u rs e s i “ Mo r e a n d m o r e n o n ­ science a reas a re requiring Dr. Jam es W . Daniel m ath em atics in their degree the responded is with a g r e a te r v a rie ty of for slightly under 50 per cent The n a tio n w id e p e rc e n ta g e between 65 and 70. so we can p la n s," he said. And, d e p a rtm e n t h as including m ath classes business, arch itectu re and life science m ajors T H E N E W C H A IR M A N , who nurtures an interest in tra n sa c tio n a l an aly sis and group therapy, plans to add a new program in the d ep art­ ment for students who suffer "m ath anxiety," he said Next spring - subject to the approval of the U niversity R esearch Com m ittee the g e t d e p a r t m e n t w i l l volunteers who have the a t­ titude. “I’m a dummy and I can’t do m ath, " and work with their anxiety through group therapy to teach them math- solving skills, he said He is optim istic the group interaction will help ma th-anxiety students over­ come the m ental block that hinders their perform ance that Local history buff reprimands Carter By j o h n McMi l l a n Staff W riter President C arter will soon be receiving a brief correspondence course in Texas history. The self- appointed instructor, a local publishing com pany president, says he is aw aiting a response from his unwitting pupil. W L Thompson, who shared his knowledge with C arter in a le tte r last week, says he was spurred to action by the P re sid e n t’s assertion th at Texas was bought and sold" by the United States. C a rte r’s com m ent cam e during a speech in which he contrasted the United S ta te s’ annexation of Texas with the acquisition of the P anam a Canal, Thompson said. "It s just irritatin g that he would m ake a sta te ­ m ent like th a t," said Thompson, a B artlett native who claim s to have followed Texas history as a "hobby." in d e p e n d e n t “T E X A S W AS an re p u b lic recognized by G reat Britain and the United States prior to the tim e it applied for annexation," Thompson explained Texas paid off its own debt and was allowed to keep its public domain under the term s of the 1845 annexation, he said. “ You wouldn’t have a state university today if it the public dom ain being kept," weren t Thompson added. for "Texas. Mr. President, was bought’ with the lives of the gallant men at Gonzales, the Alamo, (ioiiad and San Ja c in to ," Thompson wrote. " It was paid for by the anguish of the Texas fam ilies forced to flee their hom es in advance of the in­ vading arm y " Thompson also quoted from the inscription on the San Jacinto Monument near Houston, which boasts that the battle was one of the m ost decisive in history. Accompanying the le tte r was a copy of “ The Bugles a re Silent.” a novel about the Texas Revolution by John Knaggs, sent “ so you, and perhaps others in the White House, can b e tte r un­ derstand in our this short, but epic period h istory.” Inner Sanctum has the Superstars Johnn> W inter Nothin* Rut l ite Blues including Tired Of Trym Mad Blues TV Metro* Dr ink m B n * * Walking Thru Th# Par* Bruce Sprint’ s teen Born To Bun •ne Hiding Tent* Avenue F reeze Oui Jungieiam i B ackstreet* Thunder R oad S h e s The One J A M E S T A Y L O R inc Hiding Hand* Man B arten d er s Blues Wk* Smiling Fat e Terra Nova Traffic Ja m C R E A T E S I H IT S S IM O N A N I K iA R I U N K ! I S mdudmu Bodge Over Troubled Watt** Mrs Robmwrr The Sound OI Silence T h e Boner fe e k n Groovy Scarborough F a* I Am A Md. k Weather Report Heavy Weather •ne Hiding Birdland Teen Town PaMadmm The Juggler Havoc* Kenny Loggins Celebrate Ste Home int tutting trim My Dr MTT, Why Do A k * * L a I * Dor T h . Mafcxty I Um p hi My NMTI I OM dv » Bor ll la d y Luck _ " iZ e O & l. H E A R T I in tr Queen including B arracuda I ore Akve Sylvan S ong O a e m Of The Arc her Aw* ti Out T reat Me Wall Bey Meno Cr* * * Me Go Ort Cr* Joan Bac: B iot in’ Iteur including Time Rag Sailing Cry Me A Rive* B O Z S C A G G S SILK DEGREES •nu. ludwig ft * O w W hat C an I Say G eorgia Ju m p St reef/lo w d o w n Lido Shuffle r n . .4/1 ii yid tin Elegant Ei/psy including I light Over Rn. Midnight Tango Mettder r e n e a n S u n d e rs rn 8 a a With Devil On Spam**’ Highway I ady Of R om e Sister QI B raid J B S S 1" ......... Ja m s Ian MtuAt It Row including l e t Me Be lo n e ly • Went to Mea# Vow lo v e Me Cancha Hgbt lane lo The Sky The Surreal Ot Vour life MM! ASF PINK FLOYD ANIMALS including lh * , im T h . * >y (Part Ona! O 0 9 . P h K ( T h r ..D .n « .„ i c m a ,) S h aa,, Phyk On Tha Wmg i Follow the crowds tr^sm to " Billy Joel!Piano Mutt •ne Hiding C aptain Je t * Worn# Com a* To TRA* et Th# Ballad Of Bm* The Awl S to p In N evada Travel*" Prayer Sot f n s irn Jo h n n y iso rut is m lf) JI m s THIS T IM J I T S H W N I i i I Ain I Go* Th# la v a . No M ora/C hack Mi Papaya L im . Ga* D o r m a n m t i m . H . Fu, Aaa! t o m On Tha a h o n g S o t o r Town D ave M ason Let It Flow me Hiding So High (Hur l. Me B aby And Ron Me Away) l e t H G o Let H Flow Takwi The Time To Fmd We Just D isag ree S easo n * PINK FLOYD WISH YOU WERT HERE Shine On W*u Crazy Diam ond Watt." m e To Th# M achine Have A Cigar Wren War Were H en Chicago XI Mxiudtrtg Misvsstppi Delta Cay Blue % B ab * W hat A B*g S u rp n s e T a b e Me B ai ii To C N e a g o Vote Fo» Me Itll*# O n e B O ST O N including M ore Than A Fe e lin g P e a c e Of Mend Foreplay/Long T im e‘Nock A Rod B and SmoAm fi l c h A fed* D an Fogelberg Nether Land* G one By M j JC 34860 The new Chicago music you’re hearing is from XI. Brand new, on Columbia Records and Tapes. CHICAGO and marka registered in the U S Pat OU cire cotU M 6 .* M A R C A R C G S O I I H S ID E J O H N N \ and the ASBI RA J I H L S I Dte’t Wan! IHG* Mort* Wjm Mean S o Much Me It Am t The Meet I* • The Motto*) Th# Fever Hoer C om e you Treat M* So Bad I O o r t Warn lo Go Home BARBRA STREISAND STREISAND SUPERMAN My H eart Botong* To Me Don t B ehave Wha* Sou Read Anew#* Me luAatoy For Myself New for* S ta te Of Maid OO O ff Regular Price! O pen 7 Days a W eek M onday, N o v e m ber 7, 1977 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ P a g e 7 ACCOUNTING AND FINANCE MAJORS LFT US HELP YOU PLAN AHEAD TO BECO M E A C P A i I ... REVIE EW 512-472-41*? Austin 512441-3423 Son Antonie OUK SUCCI SSI UL STUOfNU Kl Hit SINT 1/3 USA ★ ★ ★ A a a * * * * * * * * * A ADULT * A * A THEATER * A * featuring fu ll 2 hour A ♦ color feature% A * also 25' arcade A * Escorted ladies tree A * A * thi* a d $1 OO off w A * O p e n 2 4 hours A * 7 days a w e e k A ♦ Homa Calor Movias A * only SM S A if 3401 N. IN 35 A * A * 478 0702 * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * riiiiii MR. ALLEN’S BEAUTY SALON Paula Johnson Austin 8 M ost Creative N e w Hair S t y lis t - N ow A t Mr. Allen*8 GET ACQUAINTED WITH PAULA SPECIAL! Shampoo, Cut, Blow Dry s ic 00 W ITH C O U P O N I 2307 RIO GRANDE | Call For A n A p p o in tm e n t TodayI 4 7 2 -1 5 5 7 i i Iiii Ii m m J* at ■■ ar ■■ T E X A S ■a j a w mw ■■ mw U NI ON I M O N D A Y J Noon to 2 p . m . Seminar; SEPARATISM. Paul M . Tallier, D e p u ty * Secretary to the Cabinet of the C anadian Federal-Provincial Relation* I Office, w ill speak on the problem * of Quebec's wish to have a special | status w ith in the C anadian Confederation. Room 4 .1 1 8 . Ideas a n d a Issues Com m ittee. ■ 3 , 7 an d 9 x 1 5 p . m . Film: THE APARTMENT. Union Theatre. $ 1 .2 5 | I UT ID, $ 1 .7 5 others. 4 p . m . Distinguished Lecture: DR. HENRY KISSINGER. Dr. Kissinger, S renow ned statesm an and influential public figure, w ill speak on the J United States' foreign policy stance and his role in W ashington as | Secretary of State. LBJ Auditorium . Free admission. Ideas and Issues I ■ Com m ittee, LBJ Library and LBJ School of Public Affairs. J j FOR ADDITIONAL I NF O RMAT I ON CALL 4 7 1 - 5 6 5 3 The Fox Hunt Monday Night Special 50c Bar Highballs Free Drinks No Cover And 35C beer are what make happy hour at E li’s a single-m ingle affair. From 8-1 Opm on M ondays everybody except w om en with student I D ’s get these low prices. Of course ladies with student I D ’s still get free drinks from 8-11 pm. A ll ladies with student I D ’s get free bar highballs or beer from 8-11 pm on M onday nights— What a Deal! There’s no cover charge and that means that everybody gets in on the action — meet new friends at E li’s. A 1st 6 5 2 8 N. Lamar, 4 5 3 - 9 2 0 5 N.« >.k«t -M.ry.iMM Ul t |«w„ N<» Im,; |». Um I..*,*, TM MAH KOTT SKOV I i Texas Instruments Tritium LCD digital uuatches T is new Tritium LCD watches have a sharp, clear display that shows the time continuously. The green Tritium backlight illuminates the display at night. Checking the time is easy and fast...in any light level. Hook '•rn Horns! v.v.v A O O K Little Campus videotape may be shown to regents A videotape about the Little Campus created by four radio- television film students may become part of a Campaign aimed at convincing the Board of Regents to save the buildings where O n George Custer once had his headquarters The tape "Saving Little Campus* will air at 8 30 p rn Mon­ day on cable Channel IO, Karl Feller, one of the tape s cocreator*, said Sunday It is hoped, he added the videotape will also be shown in Tyler, where the regents are scheduled to vote Friday on the fate of the late I9th Century buildings. The regents will decide at the meeting whether to preserve part or all of the Little Campus structures or demolish them to provide parking for the Special Events Center Feller, along with Julia Houston, Tim Hatfield and Lenny Heller, created the tape as a class project but became so in­ terested in the Little Campus they joined a group trying to save it. THAT GROUP, the Little Campus Project, is leading a peti­ tion drive aimed at convincing regents to save all five remain­ ing Little Campus structures for use as a University museum or some other purpose The group’s representative and founder, Susan Berry, has been given a spot on Friday’s regents meeting agenda to pre­ sent her arguments for saving the historic site If there is time, she will show the videotape she said A majority of the regents have already expressed an interest in preserving at least that portion of the Little Campus where Custer actually lived The problem with preserving the entire complex, they say, is that the land is critically needed for park­ ing at the Special Events Center The people involved in the Little Campus Project, however disagree, " The destruction of the Little Campus) would leave at most. a parking lot for the Special Events Center, or at least, a promenade or ‘clear viewing’ from that building to the L B J Library," said Peiler "VA** think it s silly to tear down those buildings for those reasons,” he added P E IL E R SAID the tape includes a tour through the buildings, which at different times have been used as a men s dormitory, a school for the blind and Custer’s headquarters during the federal occupation of Texas It also includes a brief history of the complex and a discussion of reasons and possible methods for restoring and preserving the structures, he said. Berry said several historic groups have expressed an interest in the Little Campus and might be willing to contribute toward its preservation. While estimates on how much such a project would cost vary considerably, Feller said his sources estimate a price tag of $2 3 million University planners, however, estimate a figure closer to $10 million ________________ Canadian official to speak Monday Paul M Tellies deputy secretary to the Cabinet in the Cana­ dian Federal Provincial Relations Office, will lecture Monday about Quebec s wish to have special status within the Canadian Commonwealth The lecture, entitled "Separatism ," will be from noon to 2 p m in Union Building 4 118 According to a letter from the Canadian Consulate in Dallas, Tellier is interested in audience reaction and will provide a question and answer session Jury votes ‘no action’ against police officer The county grand jury will take “no action” in the criminally negligent homicide case against Austin police officer Rodrigo R Herrera, Asst. County Atty. Randy Mercer said Friday. The county attorney’s office presented Herrera’s case to the grand jury Nov. I. The jury decided not to take ac­ tion against the senior officer. Mercer said. Herrera was charged in the Oct. 2 death of a pedestrian. According to police. Herrera was en route to back up other officers at a disturbance call in the 3100 block of East Seventh Street when his patrol car struck and killed Joe "Peewee” Herrera in the 2200 block of the street. J O’Hair claims state proceedings ‘illegal’ Atheist Madalyn Murray O’Hair was ordered to submit to police booking procedures Friday by 126th District Court Judge Jim Dear. O Hair refused to be fingerprinted and photographed Thursday after her arrest at a City Council meeting Mayor Carole McClellan asked Police Chief Frank Dyson to arrest O’Hair after O’Hair interrupted the meeting’s invocation O’Hair subsequently spent 12 hours in City Ja il before Dear authorized her release on bond late Thursday night At a habeas corpus hearing Friday, Dear rejected O’Hair s contention that booking procedures violated her con­ stitutional rights and moral ethics He 7 7 n » n said his decision applied only to the "v e ry narrow " issue of booking procedures as applied to O’Hair O Hair contended the Texas constitu­ tion is illegal, saying it requires all state employes to believe in a supreme being THEREFORE, she said, the booking procedures violate her rights as an atheist, since the person who would process her is required to believe in God When asked if she would comply with the judge’s orders, 0 ‘Hair said, " I will submit myself to the procedures because I have several gross health problems and cannot spend more time in jail " O’Hair said she is taking medication tor high blood pressure and thyroid problems but refused to name the medication ACCORDING to O’Hair, all state proceedings are illegal, including her habeas corpus hearing, since the con­ stitution is "unconstitutional." She said she will appeal Dear’s ruling because "the judge here is in error.” " I thought for a moment he was a brave man," she said. O Hair said she hopes the appeal leads to condemnation of the state Constitution. (the Constitution) needs to be scrapped, and I hope I'm the one that scraps it,” she said " It American Professors Peace in the Middle East Invite you to a brunch and meeting at 12 noon. for At Hillel Foundation 2 1 0 5 San Antonio 476-0125 A ll interested faculty are invited. h a ir J e iU f n e r i El Lobo invites you to discover hair-styling that keeps up ti lth you ... styling that falls into plate naturally every day ... ( till for appointment 171-ill I or 171-Mi 'did ll I i at ’n'an I ntonio] Page 8 □ TH E D A ILY TEXAN □ Monday, November 7, 1977 fae/uiuj b O N -TH E -D R A G ■ ' /Pi) AC, S BEAUTY B EC O M ES YOU u i i h i n d i t UJuuhzpfl ski ti t a r e bs b r tm I m *zIo No. 5 Jefferso n Square call 452 8846 Suitable for juniors all three pieces ... 52.00 All your favorite pieces for fall In popular Cafe Cam ille a choke of two entrees, Y A R IN G 'S 2406 G U A D A L U P E BEAUTY WORKS Calendar of Events All of our favorite customers are In­ vited to attend one or all of our tete-a- tetes These beauty, fashion and health seminars will be held at no charge at Yarlng's, 2406 Guadalupe, on the se­ cond floor. An optional luncheon will be catered by Cafe C am ille...a choice of two entrees, bread, tea, and a luscious dessert, for a charge of 2.50 per person, at all meetings except the Wine and Cheese Tasting Seminar. At this meeting there will be a nominal charge of 1.00. Also, register anytim e at Y arln g 's for the three gift certificates to be given aw ay at each meeting, Saturday, November 12 1:00 pm Special showing of Holiday Fashions Luncheon by Cafe Camille. Friday, December 2 4:00 pm Wine and Cheese Tasting Seminar, Wine & Cheese Shop. Open discussion by a True Connoisseur. Saturday, January 21 1:00 pm Hair and Beauty Makeover . by A ZIZ. Luncheon by Cafe Camille. Saturday, February ll 1:00 pm Y a rin g s Spring Fash io n Preview Luncheon by Cafe Camille Saturday, March I 1:00 Beauty Treatment Sem inar ... by Clinique Luncheon by Cafe Cam ille Saturday, April 8 1:00 pm Lingerie Trunk Showing ... Diane von Furstenberg. Luncheon by Cafe Cam ille For optional luncheons, stop by or call 476-7457 before Nov. 9. Yaring's 2406 Guadalupe fro m tho rom oto A n d ro n v illa g e of C o ch atC hico, p y ro g ra p h o d gou rd *, a craft d a tin g from 2 5 0 0 B C A v a ila b le a * sculpture* or ito ro g o v o tto lt, t a c h I* colored by P eru vian In d ia n * u *in g •u c a ly p tu t e m b e r*, th e n carved to d ep ict tear*#* of life or f a n ­ tasy From SA 2 5 TlHivt'i&iUf -Oft S O N Y TRINITRON IIN . K V 1724 $439 S4J9 retail KV 1724 65 vs downpayment 45 86 monthly payment tor 9 months IO 67% annual percentage rate y * K Y 1512-S379 re td .I K V 1M2 S379 56 8 5 d o w n p a y m e n t 39 $8 monthly payment tor 9 months IO 6 7% a n n u a l p e rc e n ta g e ra te IEI- I > ♦ ©I £ mm* 3> —Tl, . rn rn \ KV 1215- $339. 50 95 downpayment 35 41 monthly payment for 9 months IO 67% annual percentage rate vw approved credit) Travel... (Continued from Page I t concerning the NTSC complaints Rosemarie LeMoine, an employe with I PD in St Louis, said her office was working on a complaint from NTSU students and a professor when she received a complaint from Univer­ sity student Robert Whitehill. Whitehill, an attorney who was a full­ time student at the University last spr­ ing, saw this ad in The Daily Texan • INTERESTED IN LOW COST JET TRAVEL TO EUROPE AND ISRAEL0 STUDENT TRAVEL CENTER can help you travel with maximum flex­ ibility and minimum cost, For more in­ formation call TOLL FREE 800-325- 8034 ” As the attorney stated in a letter to the CPD, "I have been the victim of a consumer fraud,” "I was planning to go to Israel in the summer to supervise the publishing of a book of mine, ' Whitehill said. “ I call­ ed the number, and they sent me a brochure and an application form ” Round-trip New York to Tel Aviv was $650, which Whitehill paid with a June 20 cashier’s check from City Bank of Austin. WHITEHILL WAS assured of an open date for his return trip, since he did not know how long he would stay in Israel. campus news in briefs He was instructed to travel to New York City to get instructions for the trip In New York. Whitehill received tickets to gel him to Tel Aviv and in­ structions on how to get home Whitehill was given a book of voucher forms for the return flight. Three weeks before he wanted to return, he was to send a form to St. Louis, and money would be sent to a travel agent in Munich The attorney was to call the agent a week before he wanted to return home and confirm his final plans He said he called the Munich of­ fice live times, but "each time I wTas in­ fill med that no money had been sent to them by my agent in the U S and therefore, they could not put me on a flight " I he student said he then telegraphed St Louis and requested their help, but none came "I finally borrowed some money from some Israeli friends and decided to buy a new ticket for a flight from Zurich to New York on a Swiss charter on Sept. 15.” Whitehill then went back to New York to find out who had rented the hotel room where he had received in­ structions for his ill-fated trip. A I Capolw. general manager of the Century' Paramount Hotel, said Raymond Isbeque. a representative of Vista Travel, rented a room at the hotel July 19 They’d pay for the use of the room They'd be in about an hour or two and then they'd be gone They did it for a couple of weeks in July and June, Capolw said A spokesman for Vista Travel denied having anything to do with STC and denied renting the room at the Century on July 19 I never heard of them (STC*. We’re just a handling agent We just handle Europeans We don’t handle Americans.” Howard Schmeltzer. an attorney with the Civil Aeronautics Board (CAB) in Washington. D C , said he was not aware that Vista Travel was doing business The company was issued a cease and desist order by CAB in 1974 for some charter practices it was us­ ing, and the company’s petition for reconsideration on a 1977 CAB denial for affinity charters is still before the courts "I they quit doing thought business and closed up.” he said. Schmeltzer also has never heard of Student Travel Center, although he knows of business practices which appear to be similar to the St. Louis company's operations RASSL signup today in Jester E n r o llm e n t for RASSL Learning Services’ third ses­ sion of the fall program will be held from 8 a m. to 5 p.m. Monday in Jester Center A332. in clu d e stu d y P r o g r a m s te c h n iq u e s , t e x t r e a d in g , c o n v e r s a t io n a l E n g lish and v o c a b u la r y . Writing papers will be the topic of discussion sponsored by RASSL Learning Services at 3 p.m. Monday in Jester Center A325 f a s t e r A N N O U N C E M E N TS TE XA S U N IO N ART GALLERY will feature a display of hand-crafted furniture from Hand Feats through Nov 19 The display is sponsored by the Texas Union Fine Arts Committee TE XAS U N IO N FILM C O M M IT T E E will feature "The Apartm ent,'' starring Jack Lem m on, Fred M acMurray and Shirley M a d a m e , at 3, 7 and 9:15 p.m. M onday m the Union Theatre Admission is $1 25 with UT ID. $1 75 general admission T E X A S U N IO N R E C R E A T I O N C O M M IT T E E will feature a bus trip to W ursttest Wednesday The bus will 'eave from Littlefield Fountain at 4 45 p.m and return around 11 30 p m Sign up is un­ der way in the Student Activities Center. Union Building 4 300 Cost is $3 for transportation and $3 admission. TE XA S U N IO N R ECR EATIO N C E N TE R will sponsor a pm pall/video game campus tournament November 14 through 17. The cam pus cham pion will be deter­ m in e d b y h ig n s c o r e s o n t o u r predesignated pinball machines and four video game m achines First prize is a p in ­ ball machine. Entry fee is $4 Sign up in the Recreation Center The tournament will begin each day at 5 p.m. Duplicate bridge will be featured from 7 to 10 p rn Tuesday rn the Cactus Cafe Bar It win be conducted by a certified duplicate bridge director Novices, intermediates and a d ­ vanced players are all invited Admission s 50 cents per session lecture in conjunction with C E N T E R F O R M ID D L E E A S T E R N S T U D IE S ANO TH E SO C IETY FOR E T H N O M U S IC O LO O Y , IN C . will spon sot a the Society for Ethnom usicology, Inc 22nd annual m eeting at 4 p rn M onday in B o l­ d in e H a ll 6 0 2 P h ilip S c h u y le r , Ethnom usicology Department, University Of Washington, will speak on "Uses of Music in M oroccan Islam ." O M IC R O N D E L T A K A P P A A N O U T IN TE R A C TIO N C O M M IT T E E will spon­ sor a sandwich seminar on a nuts and bolts approach to com m on problem s of cam pus organizations at noon Thursday in Union Building 3 116 Clare Buie will speak on "Problem s of a Student Leader- How to Cope " D E P A R T M E N T O F S P A N IS H A N D PO RTUG UESE will sponsor a lecture on "Borges y la cultura hispanoam ericana" at 7 30 p rn Monday in Batts Hall 201 J u lio O rte g a , v is itin g p ro fe s s o r of the guest speaker S panish, w ill be Ortega is a Peruvian writer and literary critic and has taught at Pittsburgh, Yale and M aryland The lecture will be in English Admission is free The public is invited S LAVIC D E P A R TM EN T will sponsor a lee lure on "The Yiddish Avant Garde .n Eastern Europe, 1918 1928' at 4 p rn M onday m Sutton Hall 210 Seth Wolitz, associate professor of French at UT San Antonio, will be the guest speaker O F F I C E F O R P U B L I C S E C T O R S T U D IE S /IN S T IT U T E O F L A T IN A M E R IC A N S T U D IES will sponsor a brown bag lunch at noon M onday in Sid R ic h a r d s o n H a il 1 3 1 3 R o b e r to Abusada, professor of econom ics at Pon- tificia Umverisidad Catoiica del Peru, will speak on Industrialization Policy and Organizational Reform® " This is part of a series of lectures sponsored by the O ffice tor Public Sector Studies to encourage m ultidisciplinary research on the public sector in Latin America "P e ruvian P S YC H O LO G Y D E PA R TM E N T will sponsor a c o llo q u iu m at 4 p m . M onday In Graduate School of Business Building 1 214 Dr Jack Block, professor at the University of California at Berkeley, will speak on "T h e C o herence of Per­ so n a lity .” B lo ck in ternatio nally known theorist and researcher in per­ sonality He for his longitudinal research and for his co n ­ tributions to m ethodological issues in the study of personality is best know n is an THE G ERM AN C L U B will sponsor a bus trip to W urstfest on W ednesday The bus will leave from Jester Corner at 7 p m and return by 1 a rn. Tickets are $2 50 and can be obtained from Mary in W aggoner Hall 416 The deadline for purchasing tic nets Is 5 p rn. Monday. Everyone is invited to come U.S. M ARINE CO RPS w ill sen J re p re s e n tatives the Liberal Arts Placement Center to recruit Monday through Thur*. to day For more information com e by Jester Center A115 or call 471-1217 IN S T IT U T E OF PARALEGAL S T U D IE S will send representatives to the Liberal Arts Placement Center to interview for ad missions W ednesday and Thursday For more information com e by Jester A 11 5 or call 471-1217 M EETIN G S S T U D E N TS ' A S S O C IA TIO N C O M M ITTE E C H A IR S will hold a regular meeting at 3 p rn M onday in Union Building 4 402 V O C A T I O N A L H O M E M A K I N G A S S O C I A T I O N , T E A C H E R S S TU D E N T S E C TIO N (VHTAT) will meet at 6 30 p rn M onday the Home I i onom ics Reading Room Phoebe Den­ ny an area teacher consultant, will pre sent a p rogram on the essence of teaching, especially vocational subjects Ail members are invited to attend in UT PHYS ED DE PA R TM EN T will hold a Florida scuba trip organizational meeting from 7 to 10 p rn Monday in Gregory Gym B2 All those Interested in the trip should attend B ring notebooks and swimsuits S E P A will hold a general meeting al 6 30 p rn M onday in Union Building 2 406 OVEREATERS A N O N YM O U S w it meet at 8 p rn Mondays at the Brentwood Church of C h ris t, 6701 A rro y o S eca, and ' T hu rsda ys at T a rryto w n M e th o d s Church, 2601 Exposition Blvd For more information call 444 1312 before 5 p m and 4 5 1 6949 after 5 p m Newcomers are welcome Monday, November 7, 1977 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Page 9 ow n' mrm n w i i s n e e em—w io ih im i im a m s ThaTs entertainm ent. SPORT SHIRTS • • • • • • • • • tJ L M J P • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •VWWWWWWWWM• • • • • • • • • • Co-op Ring L i g h t w e i g h t - $129.50, IO k a r a t gold H e a v y w e i g h t - $142.50, IO k a r a t gold IO point d i a m o n d - $67.50 15 point d i a m o n d - $75.50 20 point d i a m o n d - $125.00 25 point d i a m o n d - $165.00 No Deposit Required / J T ia u te 'U itq C c -O ft S M I T H C O R O N A S C M C O R P O R A T I O N Coronamatic 2200 1 C h a n g e rib b o n s in s e c o n d s C a rb o n film c a r tr id g e for p rm t-lik e ty p in g . S h a r p a n d b la c k F a b ric rib b o n c a r tr id g e for c l i o a d r e t a i l r e r a n e v e ry d a y ty p in g a n d d ra fts C o rre c tio n ta p e fo r e ra s e r-fr e e c o rre c tio n s N e a t a n d c le a n 1 C o lo r c a r tr id g e s for im p a c t, in d iv id u a lity a n d e m p h a s is W i t h a p p r o v e d C f G d l t 4 8 4 8 d o w r i D a v m e n t * " 3 3 3 , m o n th ly p a y m e n t t ' 9 m n n t h * m o n i n s 10.67% a nn ua l p e rce n ta g e rate Or pay cash & S A V E 10% off r e ta il fyUUmHttiu Ca - Oft W aikiki - The H o tte s t Tee in Town P u t y o ur s e lf into a W a i k i k i Surf B u m Te e. A n if ty abel on the sleeve, add cool sur f designs. 100% pu re cotton gives you a n a t u r a l high. W a i k i k i is the f a v o r i t e of the i n - c r o w d in H a w a i i and C o p a c a b a n a . C o l o r s : b e ig e , blue, w h it e , ye llo w, and n a v y . Sizes: S m a ll, M e d i u m , a nd L a r g e . Available A t THE CLOSET 2 5 1 2 G u ad alu p e You can usually tell a lot about candidates for public of­ fice by the organizations that support them. University of Texas Young Democrats Austin Association of Teachers (PACE) MARY JANE BODE has received the endorsement of every organization that traditionally has worked for progressive government in Austin and Travis County. Support like this, which criss-crosses the community in interest and location, shows the wide support and con­ fidence in her ability to be an effective representative from District 3 7 -B . Texas Nurses' Association, Austin C hapter (PAC) Austin Am erican-Statesm an AFL-CIO (COPE) Central Austin Democrats South Austin Democrats Texas W om en's Political Caucus C apital City Young Democrats Travis County W om en Lawyer's Association West Austin Democrats Austin W om en's Political Caucus M ary for State Representative Because it matters Fbi Ad pend tor by Student* tor Mary jam* Bod*. Imna Guerrero, Treasurer. W283 Jester Center. Austin. Texas 76712 sports T h e Da il y T e x a n Pag e IO □ M onday, N o vem b er 7, 1977 Earl ‘finest in America’ — Akers Shepard fumble leads to Texas’ go-ahead touchdown in 35-21 win By TIM COWLISHAW Sport* Repor t er HOUSTON Tonsil* tis and Ii#*VO were just two m ore m- **ffe* t ive obstacles thrown in lh*- path of b a ri Campbell in this 1977 season They I tad no m o re s u c r e s * th e Houston f ougars in stopping the settlor halfback as h r roll od for 17i yards and three touc hdown* in the 1/mghoms .'*5-21 victory at Rice Stadium Saturday th a n III S THE M M ST player in A m e ric a ,” Coach F red Ak**r» said in tribute to Earl I wouldn I trade him fro any two Re had tonxilitls and a high fev er, and we had to put him to bcd when we got here last night I felt h* would be able to play but I was Just w orried he might tie weak, ' Aker* Raid If Campbell was weak. the C o u g a rs mu hi h av e ben a It was K arl’s two decrepit long run* in the third quarter that broke open tight gam e and enabled the Horn* to pull away from last year t SWC co*-ha rn pion s the With 4 40 to play In the third period Houston was trailing 14 13 ara! had held ( arnpbeli to HH yards on 21 c a rrie s Ob viously, they had not shut him down e n tire ly but holding Earl to a four yard average is considered a victory for most defenses BUT ON A third and five situation, Handy Mc Ka chem pitched to Campbell, who raced 40 y a rd s for a touchdown right Aftrr the Cougars failed to move on the next possession, I ar I s next carry netted 43 yards on a draw play to the < <*n* Bushing Attempts P**s>ny v«ii a* Hut'"- - y Af ti* Passing Punts * umbles — tost Heosiiies y A'dfl TEXAS HO US TO N 20 IS 44-232 'n ' 9 'UH I i 25 0 5 45 0 1 i 5 56 I 7 7 48 178 186 5-47 13-21-0 5 -4 3 2 4 3 6 56 I 4 2 7 t a 6 7 i 0 8 , Texas H ouston mou* - B ise” wen 44 run (H a lte d kick) l e i — Campton * run (Erxiaten kick) Hoc* Martini 26 f<3 Ta* — Compte* 2 run ((m itten luck) Hou* — Hatfield 43 FO !#* CampteW 40 run (Euiaoan k.ch) ?* « M e l r tc n a r n I r u n (E p l a t e n k ick ) Ta* Mikveh 18 pass from Mc IT ac tern (Em » (i# n k n * i H o t* ic Btu) Art B n * pit** from Br ain (Brown pass 72, 124 individual Statistic* H u rtin g Th, as E Csm pteH 24 *73 H Ona* 8 IS M e l s e w n 10-7 'OO, Br, a i 17 40 R I Jon#* 5 79 Jackson H Jilon m a * *eti 2I 1 ova 8 2 ’ Receiving 2 43. M k sch 2 24 I Houston Has* 5 b i Adam * J 53 Blackwell 2 s- Passing Houston Brow n 13 21 Texas Met attern 11 25-0 Defense forces Houston quarterback Delrick Brown to fumble, giving Horns another offensive opportunity. — TSP Staff Photo* by St«v*n Pumnhrr Volleyball team falls Conradt complains about UCLA conditions d ifferen t,” he said Cougar Coach Bill Yeoman had som ew hat the sam e at titude about Texas passing o ffe n se Y eo m an who in vented the Veer which Texas adopted this veal , felt that his Creation was responsible for I T e x a s’ p assin g a tta c k thought that was why they copied our offen se,” he said Yeoman felt the Texas sui gc in the second half w as at t r i b u t a b l e m a i n l y to his team s ineffectiveness rath er than anything the Horns did “ We just hit a sag in the third q uartet Anytime you sag it is m ental ” Texas wide receiver Alfred t h a t the m ain J a c k s o n b e l i e v e s M cK achern was reason for the H orns’ airborne “ Randy is doing a offense great throwing His passes are so easy to catch, he just lays it in there ” job ut JACKSON CAUGHT two passes for 43 y ards “ L am ” Jones caught five passes for 79 yards and dropped two long passes that could have m ade the point m argin wider Bv JEFF WALKER Sports R eporter D e sc rib in g pl ayi ng c o n ­ d itions as “ u n b e lie v a b le ,” T exas w o m en 's volleyball coach Jody Conradt expressed satisfaction with her tea m s play, d e sp ite a final 1-2-2 f i n i s h , at U C L A ’s 10th N a t i o n a l I n v i t a t i o n a l volleyball classic. “ I WAS PLEASED with the —Texan Staff Photo by Mika Smith runs 43 yards to set up M cEachern’s one-yard Cam pbell touchdown. The Helsman candidate rushed for 173 yards and three touchdowns. way the girls played under the c i r c u m s t a n c e s , ” C o n ra d t said “To go out there is just another w orld.” Texas m ust have thought it was in another world with the hectic setup of the gigantic 24- team C alifornia style tourna­ m ent. “ There w ere six playing in Pauley Pavilion,” courts “ T here continued C onradt w ere no d iv id e rs betw een courts so there w ere a lot of interruptions and distractions d u r i n g pl a y It w a s u n ­ b e lie v a b le " “ T h e re w e re a lw a y s 24 team s either playing or w ar­ ming up," she explained, “ and in som e gam es there w ere seven or eig h t rep lay s of points because of balls boun­ cing onto the c o u rt.” Texas probably wishes it could have a replay of its se­ cond g am e F rid a y ag a in st U tah S ta te — its opening round opponent. A f t e r t h e y ou n g H o r n s shocked the Aggies 16-14 in each te a m 's first gam e. Utah State settled back and trounc­ ed the Longhorns 15-7; even­ tually advancing and placing fourth overall in the tourney. The firs t of T e x a s’ two losses followed as the Horns fell to Pepperdine, ranked No. 4 in the nation, 15-5 and 15-13. “We really didn’t have tim e to get our feet on the ground,” Conradt added Texas finally did Saturday and stepped hard on Illinois at Chicago Circle by 15-11 and 15- 2 for the Longhorns’ lone vic­ tory. A s p lit wi t h C al S ta te - " Northridge followed before the Horns dropped their final pool m atch to U niversity of Pacific, 15-8 and 15-12. I rn CC team lacks talent for conference meet By JEFF WALKER Sports Reporter Running a t M onday's SWC cross country cham pionship in Waco m eans running into trouble for a Texas team devoid of a surplus of q u a lity d is ta n c e p eo p le and d e p th , ch a ra c teristic of the m eet s favorites “W e're not very stro n g .” adm itted Texas Head Track Coach Cleburne P rice “ We just don t have the talent w e’ve had in the past I'm afraid w e’re going to finish up sixth or seventh.” P rice s fears a re justified for the ll a m. m eet — a relatively flat 10.000-meter layout on W aco's Connally Municipal Golf Course Five wa Ikons, two of whom a re freshm en, com prise the seven-m an Texas squad One of those walkons. senior Mark Vincent, is in his first year of SWC com petition a fte r tra n sfe rr­ ing from L am ar ONLY JUNIOR Ruben Linares, who finish­ ed eighth in last y e a r's conference m eet. se n io r D anny G ilm e r and ju n io r Jim Rawlings have much SWC experience under th eir belts. Everybody is picked to finish under 1976 SWC cham pionship belt-w earing A rkansas with Rice breathing heavily on the Hogs heels “ I think I d probably pick A rkansas,” predicted P rice, “ with Rice right up th e re .” Coach Clyde H art of host Baylor tabbed the Razorbacks as the “ heavy favorites with Rice as the top challen g er.” ' “ I guess w e're favored.” A rkansas coach J John McDonnell rem arked ra th e r reluctantly in his Irish brogue, “ but it’ll be a tough b attle with Rice ” RIC E’S talented tandem of Mike Novelli I and M arty Froelich indicated that th ey 're ready to do battle with the Hogs led by Mike Clark and Steve Baker. Rice has not run * against A rkansas this year. “ We feel we can run fairly even with noted sophom ore F ro e lic h , who a f t e r a them . r e tu r n s “ c o m p le te ly h e a lth y ’ “ flareup of tendonitis inside my knee “ The Owls' adrenalin is flared up for the . R azorbacks, says Novelli. We re really fired up.” he said. " I think that w e're definitely going to have a good * race with th em .” “ A rat ra c e ” is what Hart labeled the I involving h it ; fight third place probable B ears. SMU and Tech Texas Asst Track Coach Ja m e s Blackwood * agreed, adding that Houston, AAM, Texas * and TCI w ere “ all about ev en ” for the rem aining positions % Dejected Brown heads for bench after receiving greeting fro m Brad Shearer on second half third down play —T o m Staff Photo by Mika SmNh MIKE DESTEFANO tty Sports Reporter Even though E arl Campbell and the latnghoins’ rushing at lark stole the xjxitlight in Tex a s ’ v ic to ry o v e r H ouston Saturday, the Horns passed mort* this gam e than In any other this season Q u a r t e r b a c k R a n d y Mc Enchant completed ii of 25 pause* for IHI y ards ami one touchdown This was m ore [Misses than the t'OfltMftPd el forts of the A rkansas and Oklahoma g a m e s and m ore than was thrown in eilhei the SMU or Texas Tech gam es “I didn t feel I was throwing well enough I W it scattering th e p l a c e . ” It a ll o v e r McKachern said He threw long short, up in the m iddle ara! around the side he was a real pain i i i Ute secondary a side D E S P IT E M cK acherns s modesty cooch Fred Aker* felt that there wax certain lac tors that contributed to Texas inflate! passing sta tistic s "They stacked up real tight *ml we had to get outside When you get lin eb ack ers playing real tight, you have to throw outside to loosen them up, Akers said ” Wr pasted a little m ore than expected, it little pressure oil took a E arl MCEACHERN used Alfred Jackson, Hanky Mikacii. John ny “ l a m J o n e s . M ike Lockett and GU H a m s to keep the Houston secondary coo scantly off balance "I d idn’t expect to [miss that m uch Cougar cor n e rb a c k A nthony F r a n c is said “ I w anted them to run the hall m ore ” them Francis, who let the nation is pass interceptions last year. c one u)> em pty handed Satin dap H o u sto n sa fe y E lv is Bradley wa* unim pressed by th e Horns’ passing e ffo rt They didn’t do anything M o n d a y, N ovem ber 7, 1977 □ T H E D A IL Y T E X A N □ P age ll D a l l a s s t i l l u n b e a t e n Johnson, Burrough le&d Oilers1 destruction of Beers EAST RUTH ERFO RD . N J (U P I) — Roger Staubach. the N'FL's leading passer, tossed a five-yard scoring pass to Billy Joe DuPree, and Tony Dorsett plunged one yard for a touchdown Sunday to carry the un­ beaten Dallas Cowboys to their eighth straight victory. 24-10 over the New York Giants Staubach, who completed 14 of 25 passes for 190 yards, connected with Drew Pearson on three long passes to set up three Dallas scores Reserve tight end Ja y Saldi returned a fumbl­ ed punt eight yards and Efren Herrera kicked a 35-yard field goal for the Cowboys to drop the Giants record to 3-5. T H E G IA N T S scored on Joe Danelo s 51-vard field goal in the se cond quarter and Bobby Hammond’s one-yard run. set up by his own 28- yard punt return deep into Dallas territory late in the third quarter Oilers 47, Bears 0 HOUSTON (U P I) — Ken Burrough hauled in two long-distance scoring receptions and B illy “ White Shoes” Johnson scored on two long runs Sun­ day to lead Houston to a 47-0 blitz of the Chicago Bears and move the Oilers within a game of the AFC Cen­ tral Division lead Cardinals 27, Vikings 7 BLOOMINGTON, Minn (U P I) - Jim Hart passed for two touchdowns and Wayne Morris and Terry Metcalf ripped for big gains while scoring twice each Sunday to give the St Louis Cardinals a 27-7 victory over the Minnesota Vikings Rills 24, Patriots 14 FOXBORO, Mass (U P I) Roland Hooks ran through big holes and left the New England Patriots gaping at his back Sunday in pushing the Buf­ falo Bills to an upset 24 14 victory. Broncos 21, Steelers 7 D EN V ER (U P I) - Speedster Rick Upchurch returned a punt 87 yards for one touchdown and quarterback Craig Morton threw 20 yards for another, but it was the Denver Broncos’ “Orange Crush” defense that made the difference in a 21-7 victory over the Pittsburgh Steelers Sunday. Lions 20, Chargers 0 PONTIAC. Mich (U P I) Rookie running back Rick Kane scored two second-half touchdowns Sunday to break a scoreless tie and propel rushmg-minded Detroit to a JKH) vic­ tory over the San Diego Chargers. Raiders 44, Seahawks 7 OAKLAND (U P I) - Ken Stabler ran his season touchdown total to ll and his pass completion average to 58 per cent Sunday with three scoring strikes and Earl Mann booted three field goals in leading the Oakland Raiders to a 44-7 romp over the Seat­ tle Seahawks. Bengals IO, Browns 7 C LEV ELA N D (U P I) - Pete John- son burst ll yards for a touchdown and Chris Bahr kicked the winning field goal midway in the third period Sunday as the Cincinnati Bengals up­ set the Cleveland Browns 10-7 to tighten up the AFC Central Division race Dolphins 14, Jets IO NEW YORK (U P I) Hob Griese threw touchdown passes of 20 and 24 yards to Duriel Harris and Miami’s swarming defense bottled up New York s offense, enabling the Dolphins to defeat the Jets 14-IO Rams 31, Buccaneers 0 LOS A N G E L E S ( U P I ) Pat Haden passed for two touchdowns in the second quarter, one of them a 51- yard bomb to Harold Jackson, Sunday to spark the Los Angeles Rams to a 31-0 victory over winless Tamoa Baw 4tiers IO. Falcons 3 A T L A N T A W ilbu r ( U P I ) Jackson plunged across from 2 yards out midway through the third period Sunday for the first rushing touchdown scored against Atlanta this season, giving the San Francisco 49ers a 10-3 victory over the Falcons Chiefs 20, Packers IO KANSAS CITY, Mo. (U P I) Ed Podolak rushed for 98 yards and plunged in from the one-yard line for the decisive points seven seconds into the fourth quarter Sunday to make Tom Bettis' debut as head coach of the Kansas C ity Chiefs a successful one with a 20-10 victory over the Green Bay Packers. Eagles 28, Saints 7 P H IL A D E L P H IA ( U P I ) - Ron Jaworski passed for two touchdowns to Harold Carmichael and ran for two more TDs in leading the Philadelphia Eagles to a 28-7 victory over the New Orleans Saints. National Football League B y United Praaa International A m ar ic an C onteranca Caat W 6 t 6 2 2 8 2 8 Cantral W L 5 3 4 4 Pct 887 750 825 250 250 3 S Haiti mote Mum* Kit'* I nglaiKl NY Jato Hullato C In vt* la I Hi Houlton fMtttHirflh Clncmnat! Oar* vat v Oakland Sa<* I'' J rom* ton M|| mn I AWIT mum 0 . 3 - L I I i i • < • • c c c c T P A P JL JLnnJI A "IOO cosselle deck A -100 •D o lb y noise reduction. C I | *D C tervo-confrolled m otor. / Q 9 5 j g •In d iv id u a l d u a l-p o titio n b io * & o q u a l i i a t i o n ••fo e to r*. •T im e r control function. •L ig h te d c a d e tte c o m p a rtm e n t. • D ig ita l ta p e counter. •F ro n t p a n e l m icrophone in p u t*. • T w o V U -fy p e lo u d n e ** m e t e r * . •S te re o h e a d p h o n e jack. a l a a a a aal ■ a a a a a a a a sa a a a ! Intl [ I of fu .iiin y i o|m*s Ut no o n .’ . op,-n' CI o f wnlklny a couple rn lies to a copier I o f needing ( hang.' for a coin r o p i e r ; of ripoff cr tin i opier rales-1 □ of being iirtsi r Nett! time try vorrr Texas Union C opy Center I'1- ’ ■ ret qualify r opres. be W2 sided copies. "C reductions. He, id p i liters. (FT handbills Texas Union Copy Center Ive,vt linum Se* and I ci'cl 471 1616 Mf m h i M a rn Sat Sun ll) p m IO a rn 4 p m 2 pm 8 pm u r n PEt Et Et Et Et Et Et Et Et Et Et P Et Et Et P Et Et PI Et S t Cougars nip Horns By BOB DABBS Sport* Reporter Al E rle r and his dwindling Texas soccer team can t seem to win for losing Searching rn vain for som e kind of m orale booster after four players quit the team , the Horns easily outplayed the C ougars S atu rd ay in H ouston, con­ trolling the ball and the tem po for most of the gam e A m om entary lapse in the Horns defense, however, allowed a Houston player to break through midway into the second half and score the lone goal of the gam e to beat Texas 1*0. H ouston scored its point when a Cougar player took a breakaw ay pass from a team m ate, dribbled down the left side of the field and shot the ball past fullback Ben Bollinger and goalie Kevin Shalit from about 20 feet out I don t know what to say without sounding like a broken record, a de­ jected E rle r said “ I alm ost feel like tell­ ing you to talk to one of the players. We played like the b etter team Even the Houston coach said after the gam e the better team got beat today I’m really down because if we would have won it would have been a real m orale booster. I think playing well is exciting, but it is also exciting to win every once in a It just hasn’t been our season, while even when we play well we seem to lose ” T e x a s k ep t th e p r e s s u r e on th e Cougars throughout the gam e, working and controlling the ball in Houston's end of the field. But several “ fa n ta stic ’’ saves by the Cougar goalie kept Houston out of hot w ater, E rle r said The Horns received som e good news from Houston, however, E rle r said The Houston Southwest Conference faculty representative is supposedly trying to pressure the SWC into making soccer a varsity sport, E rle r added SMU is the only SWC school with a varsity soccer team Sports shorts UT wins tennis doubles Texas G ary Flock and Kevin C urren won the doubles crown at the Inwood R acquet Club Collegiate Indoor Tournam ent Saturday to continue their unbeaten record this fall as doubles partner*. Plock-Curren defeated Houston’s Randy Crawford and Tut Bartzen 6-4 and 6-1 in the finals In the singles Texas advanced Steve Denton and C urren to the sem ifinals Denton lost to SMU’s Tom Cain 7-6, 1-6 and 6-3. C urren lost to the Mustang s Drew Gitlin 7-6 and 6-4 Denton defeated the first seeded E rie Iskersky of T rinity in the first round 2-6. 6-3 and 6-2 “ The team played real well with Denton collecting a couple of upset wins and Plock and C urren continuing their winning stre a k ,’’ said Tennis Coach Dave Snyder. Texas hosts golf tourney Texas hosts the eighth annual Harvey Fenick Intercollegiate Invitational Monday a t M orris W illiams Golf Course and Longhorn Coach George Hannon has definite feelings on how his team should perform “ Not only would I like to do better, I’m going to expect to do b e tte r,” Hannon said Hannon has taken som e of his younger players to tournam ents this autum n and the team s finished lith and 12th, respectively, rn their last two outings. However, Hannon plans to use his front-line players in this last tournam ent of the fall season Competing in the 21-team field for the Horns will be Stew art Shockley, Phil B lackm an John Chaffee, W arren Aune, Rusty Pulley and Phil Vescovo. to be my best players, based on what happened this fa ll,” Han­ non said “ I picked what I thought w as the best team for the Southwest Conference Match Play T ournam ent (in Septem ber) and we won it.” Texas finished third in the 54-hole tournam ent last year and to contend again, along with Hannon expects Houston, Oral Roberts, Texas A&M, New Mexico and last y e a r’s champion. Oklahoma State. the Horns Play will continue through Wednesday. Volleyball team wins at A&M The men s volleyball team had a perfect 8-0 record to win the graduate division of the Southwest Conference Men s Vollebyall League tournam ent in College Station over the weekend. The Longhorns defeated Rice, Southwest T exas State, North Texas S tate and Texas A&M, each in a best two out of three series Texas recovered from a 10-point deficit in the finals to beat NTSU. Women's cross country places second The T exas w om en’s cross country team took second place in a regional m eet in College Staton Saturday, finishing ju st two points aw ay from first place. Texas A&M w as first with 42 points. Texas W oman’s U niversity finished third with 62 points, while Houston and Texas Tech cam e in fourth and fifth, respec­ tively. T ex as’ No. I runner, Julia Campbell, placed second overall “ The first three (Shockley, B lackm ar and Chafee) I consider with a 17.57. 0 UNION T a r g a b y S h e a f f e r HT T Si}-' wonder BIKE HEADLEE BIKE TAIL LITE Universal mount Battery included $4.75 each Block Generator One piece unit, co m ­ b in in g g e n e r a t o r & h e a d l i g h t . C h r o m e finish. Universal moun­ ting bracket. Summit Arm /Leg Light $ 2 .5 0 Safety arm or leg light. Battery operated. Attaches with strap. Co-op Bike Shop 505 VV. 23rd St. Straight Line Design 1005 23K Gold Electroplate Lee Yeakel is the only candidate for state representative who has received an undergraduate as well as graduate degree from UT. BA in Government 1966 Doctor of Jurisprudence 1969 vote tuesday He’s stood in the same long lines and seemingly un fee felt the same frustrations about a ling system. LL rn not certain that anything can be done about the long lines, but the system at the state government level can be made responsive to the University community. My academie experience and my experience with the legislature has proven to me that an effective legislator can get things done . . . things that the University community needs done. I intend to vigorously support the University in its attempt to gain more funding for faculty salaries with the goal of reducing the overcrowded classrooms. I was honored to receive the D aily Texan endorsement along with their confidence that I can pass needed legislation, a a Thank you. 7 7 X Warm-ups for people. Save 20% 1 0 0 % acrylic triplg knit by Winning Ways, reg. *45. NO W *35.95 1 0 0 % nylon double knit by Net Worth, reg. *21.95 NO W *17.50 conto* 1 0 0 % acrylic triple knit by Winning Ways, reg. *36.00 NO W *28.80 2 2 4 6 G u a d a lu p e 4 7 6 -7 2 1 1 sporting good* U t 8 . IM tv Ait' lamiMtti* m Elect Ii* VmAN. Kirk Ifaen-TM n lOttt We** Nth Street. A UM ir Tete* 7>OtW 512 474-MIKA re p res e n ta ti i SWC roundup Razorbacks bury Bears ' '*4 *4 fe. — 4 I ■M K *rrW " il l Si I M onday, N ovem ber 7, 1977 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ P a g e 13 Byron Hunt brings down Earl Cooper after a three-yard gain. —UPI Telephoto coupon SAVE a DOLLAR when you buy a record album in stock Monday thru Wed. e x p ir e s 11-9-77 coupon SAVE a DOLLAR w hen you buy a record album in stock Monday thru Wed. e x p i r e s 11-9-77 excluding classical 1 coupon per album coupon e x p i r e s SAVE a DOLLAR when you buy a record album in stock Monday thru Wed. ^iHu^en4iUf Cd ~ Oft excluding classical per album 1 coupon 11-9-77 ^ B\ MARK GOODSON Sports Reporter Arkansas enhanced its possibility of playing in a postseason bowl game Satur­ day as it never trailed in a 35-9 v ictory over Baylor The No 8 Razorbacks, led by Ron q u a r t e r b a c k Calc agin’s passing, improved their season record to 7-1 and moved to 4 I in the Southwest Conference standings Only one game behind con­ ference leading Texas and Texas A&M. the Razorbacks will travel to College Station this Saturday with hopes of tightening the SWC race with a victory over the Aggies Calcagm threw for two touchdowns, the first a 40- yard play to wide receiver Donne Bobo for a 14-0 lead early in the second quarter Later, in the fourth quarter. he connected on a six-yard screen pass to running back Michael Forrest for the final Razorback points B A Y L O R H E L D A r k ­ ansas potent offensive attack to only six points until the second quarter when the Razorbacks exploded for 15 less than two points minutes in Calcagm s pass to Bobo provided the first points in the outburst with 10:40 remaining in the half. Then, during Baylor’s ensuing possession, defensive back Vaugh Lusby intercepted a Bear pass at the 50, Arkansas marched in for the score with Gary Stiggers running a flanker around for the final 16 yards with 8:46 remaining TEXAS TECH, another one t eams with four of G R O K B O O K S 503 W, 17 6% on SAVINGS Higher Rates on Passbook Savings than Banks or Savings & Loans N I V E R S I T Y mathematical chances of go­ ing to the Cotton Bowl, out­ in a lasted T CC 49-17 homecoming victory for the Red Raiders Running back Billy Taylor ran for a school record five touchdowns in helping the Red Raiders up their season record to 6-2 and conference mark to 3-2 to keep within striking distance of the con­ ference leaders Quarterback Rodney Allison played a prominent role in the Raider victory, leading Texas Tech from behind twice Allison had seven completions in IO attempts for 56 yards SMU also relied on its quarterback during its 41-24 victory over Rice Freshman Mike Ford accounted for three touchdowns, completing 17-21 passes, in a close game played before 6.918 fans the smallest crowd to see a Mustang game in the Cotton Bowl KORI) WAS not the only freshman to play a vital role in the Mustang victory as run­ ning back Derrek Shelton scored the game winning touchdown on a four-yard run in the fourth quarter. Ten freshmen started for SMI , eight defensively and two offensively Coach Ron Meyer praised the individual performances of Shelton, running back Arthur Whittington and defen­ sive tackle James Wright. Sunday is a day for Relaxation. GBapir IO karat gold w/birthstone $89.50 No Deposit Required 'UhUaI'VUU} Cd And now you t an take advantage of Sunday's relaxed prices and atmosphere to make your own sharp, clean copies on Cinny's well maintained and easy to use Xerox or IBM copiers That's right. Ginny'* Copying bervie e now provides self-servic e copying with the l>est choice of mac lunes, i leanest Copies and most convenient loc ation every day of thc> week. 4C self-service copies from IO am to 5 pm every Sunday at Ginny's Copying Service 44 Dobie Mall Austin, Texas 476-9171 The Amos luck School of Business Administration Dartmouth College. Hanover, N.H. 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Or handier Just aim and shoot Fits in your pocket 22.95 KODAK INSTAMATIC^ X-35F Camera Outfit Keep your memories alive with the KODAK INSTAMATIC X-35F It has automatic exposure control and a fast lens for extra picture-taking capa^ bBity and convenience Camera Outfit 47.95 P a ge 14 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Monday, Novem b e r 7, 1977 JO par i ant d itfo u h t w ith *<] A p a rtm e n t* D up )* ra t H om a* 2408 Leon 476 3447 ( I A S SI* t i ti A D / f RT H I N G B A T I % l l W O '6 rn m fm w m I 11 C A tli w a f t (tot lim * » to i •< ti wo' a J nm#* I l l I arn w o " i I tim # * I I t I ach « o f d to tim # * t *0 Vtudenf i a l* # # th tin *# *4 l l I rot » t inch oo# tim # I i et I i *4 t I loch 1 1 tim # * I ) » I rn* ti tan O' m o '# tim # * I ) l l (NAOUM S' Mf IHM JI h*A»>y HS—Any I m A , ! . . « I M . ) W*4«*»4• , l» # H l» M * * | t*>w>M*v» *•••«• # « A w 4 * f A*rttwf ! « ( • • l * » iN «t I OO # rn l l OO • rn I I OO • *» I I OO • * 11 OO • rn In Mw •»•«* •* #**•*« WX #4# MI WI ihI w i m i m m iiwiii.«A»i» «•*-*• i w a Im #'*••< « th# )mMi»*ih <#*e#*t«A»U In •n l, O M M w w l .n »*.<•*., AN a la MMI In thou*# Aa MiaN. aal (alw •♦mmi M d a f t a A aa ,« W m«N m tltU O I N I I A t m I r - IT A f I B A T I * ti d a * I* w w 1 im ti #a-rh day l l OO I Un# I d a y * Km l # t * i l ’# d i iB iA fM 'd No P e tit rids) t M trdent. •#< o ily anil l f Aff rn. <»1 O'• Ad sam a r i l l ' # ' d I ( i and (»ay ya m a In TM* d id y I TOO ( I t ll* A WM ti* J lr urn I a 'n M A IO ft rn M n n d l i tfiroogh f r i d a y ROR SAU PHBtofrofshy-FtM Solo M i n o l t a m c bo a aor a, jf i m m • va th *d e SHV V n o "# V ' ' # ♦ AC# N m m I I V MV AT# T*V? 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I t BO BO I T t i I to o t mw rn I (aa j» . ta i** 0 a tta ' A OO TI t 0 M A N * OI O O a ond d lon naw lira * 11 MO or tr a il #*•#' ITT 0*00 m K -ion Pedro I t t v t G a 'd " # ' IOO* M O BOT ra d ia l* A M PM, o v a 'dr Iva m at Manic a d y aoumt tv a n ln g i MT D M O * 7*14 l id 41*1 day* J im low m ile a ge • OTI D A T S U N H a te h ta c h Ac (OW m ile a g e t a i anam «o nd d lon l l loo ( a n I o n n it at adj s i# ; m i t m W t» O O O i VAN I I I V I 4 Ipa a d A ( rad*#, c u a tp m iia d unbar w a rra n ty ** lo o lo c k h a n attar a OO it# a m } l*T4 K A M M A N N G H IA J* OOO m i lt * At • taraa. att. h th in » jr w # « ,# ii# n t cond* don adar l p m id wa# a and i m * IMO W ill trad# t i VW, (X X X I < ond d lon •pa. lad IT M m mm artar a T I O P l’ l H A I I V 4 »i>##d 4 * 000 good aaa m ileage br-.* r a w b a rg a in ai 11400 44? •attorn I N I to o t on# ow nai i t a l * 4Til J*©* I * p m Ta MC, M IC X X T M u tt ta ll im m a d ia ta ty JO mpg ra d ia n UTT* 4/e it a l 4* PONTIAC V I N TO H A P i MU AC (lo a n mar n a n li ady v a ry K u r il) MT* C a ll UT U M a lta r * SAI I IT# AU T it u t ** OOO m it t * 'Abeam Angina < a lt m s ala# attar * * 4 / io n ad T Nunda, b ird m \ mw I A AV INO C O U N T R Y m o .b a n k * not a to n y p a in t/ * L T O MOO err bat) attar 441 MV* f nod pl goott Ord IM T VW BU U a n o lia n ! c o n d itio n AM P M , A tta lla I a int t a tm id any,na nan t it# * l a r r y M P I * u t s a w M a (m n H MONITA ( V i e I Nm m>, ra d ia l* vary good im ar ia»« I ovln g ow nor a ! 41; aa 11 t i t a n and erin#. t i KIO * tp o a tl nor, h p # ,* l#T4 N OBD I ton van duty (u tp a na lon H id in g tid a d«m> U T SBM .IVO V I A t n#a*y I7KK) POR SAU M # l # t ( y ( i # - F # i S o t# i# D n d n Oa TW ta x # m ii aaga g o o d ,o n ditto** H U O 44J4#01 fV in in g * P U B S A L I Y a m ah a IM TM# l * ’ i tw o ITI TI H O N D A Scott 4 r* 4*0# I A PH I SS Mu Pod UTO I k y c t d - I 1* * S o io M i S p o rts I M O speed 1 1 4 * 9$, rn a p p re v e ^ . r a d ii IWV 1 8 S d o w n 4 b o to n e# a v o , 8 BMBttka. M I ®pbb Taoror . l l $174.?$ M i * r m m * l l - I? $194,9$ M i $19*$ * 1^ speed $144.9$, w appro*a#l tredit. pay 18** t#w# 4 baton*# avar 9 m oo tit* Co-Op 84bo Shop $85 W JJrd St. 9J8-$:J8, Mottoiay Veto* day 474*7111 IH# VISA, HkBStoKbopfo or Co-op Star— -At Sari* B IO N ! K B SA TVC receive) # m onth* old Boat o tto r a n i m # U IS D U A L c h a n g s B ;yow s n Iv# and c o r tf tog# S IM J # -"# * *•# VU* AVA I OAT • VO X TSO W A T T b a t* a m p and to o # ta r baa SISO A n a l no© SS a , n a n n a i re c o rd e r SISO AS? JO#.’ BC A P O R T A IL S * t# r OO and *t#nd good io n d d io fc US Con Bonny #• t !#j.> 471-0767 o tto r a p rn O O K O R D S R " l l m o to r av to re v e rt# . at# da#*' a tta r * to fo a l a n a to J t i L A N G S C USTO M beild S w a y S pot lear* 1*0 OOCh Poe d e m o n s tra tio n c o lt AT# SMI e vening* STERIO a v a r IR O b r a n d s i a w a s t f j a i o i b l a p r ic e # C asU 4 5 4 * 1 1 8 9 t v # n i n f t M w e k o i- F e e S o la G IB S O N ES JJS fa c to ry O 'oon »>h>»h (n o t m a te lilc ) num b# n i"> g k e y * O 'over Ik C R itM t c o n d itio n W T I ATI p ic k u p * FURNtSHtP ARARTMRNTS ■ FURNISHED APARTMENTS ■ FURNISHED APARTMENTS H I U W A N T E D HELF WANTED TYPING ' • • • • • * * • • • • • • • • # < Free Sarvice P arkin g T ra n s p o rta tio n HABITAT HUNTERS hmm a p r A tm tv ic m *pa< im h tm g rn c o m p /# # # * w it h ar r a n To I h u ttlm to e m to t H o tv I m m tin g F o r Sijntm m t A f m// ti-th rn ll# I arr#* Ft A 474-153? Oo Att Th#*# Ada O n va Vou b a n a n a s ? Wa Rant a ,e> n I I I I I Can ut R E A L T Y W O R L D N o rth MV ASM C a m p u t 441 77)2 2 BR S225 On th u tti* P f i»a t# p a tio * and b e k o n io t, t<##>iMu' POO) H o i! He# ' t t r i g t 'a t o r tu iiy ih a g >thaw w elkin c io ta t* w ait to wan carpal, swimming peel, water ga* depose) W alk to m u fti# bu* M an lu ia t pah»p «■ No tm d u ty children, no pat* *10 A tre . gnad tor 477 SIV# loth ALL BI LLS PAI D A bu,' k * tm c a m p u l near w e CA (. H. $ m in u te * M OP AC th o rn # lo dow ntow n and Larg e E ft fro m 1175 I B drm left 1215 OC 2704 SALADO Luxurious 2br, 2ba, with C a ­ cti dishw asher, disposal, off- street and covered p arking for 1285 plus E No pets O ther I A. 2 brs a v a ila b le Jan. 1st 477- 9275, 444 2750 LA PGF ROOMY I B TBH a p a rtm e n t*. USO 4 Si TO pius a i* , trie and gat. CA c m ♦hopping (e n te r, HOO I: S?nd Apt 102 A 4VJ-#JJ9 r U B N OB UNP U B N on th u ttia 'a r g * b e d ro o m * C a p ita l V illa » # ln ii ( M D M I and I IOO# l l, 1-1 vs 1M UTTL8 BOUTS roomy t a lk 'n c lo ia l, fu lly equipped kitchen, free ga* water la b ia T v P rom H W 740# I ungview 477 *4)9 4S9-OIVA IB R B ALC O N IE S, W INDOW S Ira ** rough u n # .pa, tad re cen cy, »|#* ptw» p ( • ( t a r a c c e n t w a i l * l r * # I r o n r e f r ig e r a t o r , < a b l# TV, c o n tin u o u s I y r old, 420V «'aaning Oran. dishw asher Vp##dway S ta n to n A pt*, m anager ASI AATI. No 101 N E W A N O U N I Q U E Ib r t. HAVand *1 70 piu* e le c tric tty l and»capad. pool, leon d ry J b lo ck* U T M T W 2Vfh 477 20*7 W A I# T O U T Itu d y d#*k cable covered p a rk in g lea*# SIM p lu* F 7H2 N uacat 472 44#/ la rg e i 11 C A C H THE W E S T E R N E R A partm anT* Ib r HJO m o plu* e le c tric ity C onvenient to UT Sea m a n a g e r s n y tlm # a f 2104 H e m p h ill or c a ll at 472 0649 G R E A T o a k k p f* Wa w ill ha va 4 ib r ?ba lu x u ry a pt* a v a ila b le a ltar C hrl»t m a* C lot# to la w school and J shuttle i ar pated, C A C H , d l* stop* P u n y h w a i h a r I r o i t f r a a d l t p o i a i . ' • l r ig a r a to r a n d w a lk - In c i o t a t * taper a t t *tudy larg e room pool and la u n d ry room Now n g o in g I .a e r <#•*#* a i *290 p lo t e le c tric ity To tea < om a by 1900 S w lth e r No MA or can *TT na# tundack UNP * P f C H D V A C ANC Y UT area mc# fu rm *h » d #tfi< ancy M u t’ ang Apt 20V W 20th Apt $ Cal! 4V1 40#7 10-12 p rn m u s t S U B LE T nice e ttlc itn c y AC ABP w e shuttle *179 p lu * IVO deposit 771V San G a b rie l No 14 E duardo R in ­ con ATI 4001 days ATA v # l| nights SU BLE ASE W A N T E D lie g e nt*h4Ml on ih u tti# near tao# IV ib r a p a rtm e n t a b p , w all fu r a m p u l ATT- fro m Nov 7BR a b p *700 m onth STV deposit ASI TO J 2 w w ^ TR) TOWERS A P A R T M E N T a vaila ble for sp rin g sem ester P ot In fo rm a tio n ca ll 474 9)19 or ASI (AVA FURNISHED AFARTMINTS I j m iljl I J.U .1 W.TOT1 FR E E • la c t r .< :ty Oar deposit, 442 * SAC I ’ M »',oi##*e ?bf 2be *250 p lo t keep H ic and Jan S U B LE T SPACIOUS ib r a p t *1*7 plus E r x iu d t* gas heating, cooking a # «,n c ote* d '* h * # th # r C le r k s * " ! t a r t # 477 JAW A ttar 5 JO im m e d ia te occupancy IB R R iv E R S iO E sp rin g sem ester SR. Rf. s h uttle *, pool. h an d b all, tennis M u * 1 sub At H95 pius e le c tr ic ity AA) *7*0 o m fo rta b ta u n e x p e c t e d v a c a n c y s m a ll, ib r c o m p le te ly fu rn ish e d I Speedway No sh uttle a t fro n t door 4'03 Sp*# 105 Ava 40)7 UNFURN. APARTMENTS TRAVIS HOUSE APTS. 1600 Royal Crest I and 2 BR Choose I'o m 4 door plans o s h w a s h # , g a r b a g e d s p o s a i c a 'p e d n g CA CH Pool and p a r '* room on shuttle bu* route lots of storage and p arkin g p r u es s ta rt ar fi# o and we help on e le c tric ity Can 442 9720 W O R L D F AM O U S L ib e ra te d Space L a rg e pool, c lo th in g optio n a l, secure 'e la t'v e ly fra a < o m m un lty e n viro n m en t, re c e n tly r*m oo e ie d . cross v e ntila tio n. a ir (and 11 ionlng an prem ises s tr v ic ts , *#r tn in )d(Min' .No dr-xree )rr tedchtn# i e rt req (I You I apanese [y, W A T E R B E D S *39 tp S895 Finished, un­ finished, do-it-yo u rse lf kits, heaters, v ib r a to r s , a c c e s s o rie s W e pay a ll fre ig h t charges Free catalog Cascade W a te r b e d s , 12344 S E D iv is io n , P o rtlan d , Oregon 97236 Phone (503 ) 761- 5229 TRAVEL O V E R S E A S J O B S - s u m m e r / y e a r - round Europe S. A m erica, A u s tra lia , Asta. etc A ll fields. J500-H200 m onthly. Expenses paid, sightseeing Free in ­ fo rm W rite In te rn a tio n a l Job Center, D ept TE , Box 4490 B erkeley, CA 94704 SERVICES COPIES w here you have a choice TOP Q U A L I T Y Good Q uality or 3‘ Budget Copies uncollated loose sheets 48 hours) Q uality V e rs a tility Speed Convenience G rad School Q u a lity guaranteed w ord processing fu ll service bindery G I NNY'S COPYING SERVICE 7 am IO pm weekdays 9-5 Saturday 44 Dop e M a J76 9171 108 Congress 477-9827 COPIES (3**4*) B I N D I N G S s # r v ) TYPING (lr 85*/p#) S«lf $crv 4c c o p is t alt day Grad School Work Guaranteed I. T. COPY 8 a m -1 1 p m M -F , e t a s 9 a m - 6 p m S a t. C l ; 1 p m - 6 p m S u n . 2 1 4 W . M L K 4 7 6 - 6 6 6 3 Convenience Copying SOUTH East Riverside & Lakeshore 443-4498 NORTH 37 & Guadalupe 453-5452 EASY PARKING C h a c k o u r l o w p r ic m t t o t v o l u m o c o p y i n g IOO copies $3.00 f f o r a n y i i n g l o d o c u m o n t ) Econocopy a r t s M O V IN G and H au lin g any area 24 hours, 7 d ays 477-3249 N E E D SOM EO NE TO c a r t to r your In­ tent^ to d d le r? Call 926-2934 H A N D Y M A N S E R V IC E ] o b v s m a ll. R em odel, ra te s Free e s tim a te . 471-330# evenings la rg e - re a s o n a b le re p a ir, re fe re n c e s g u a ra n te e d w o rk H E A L t h W IS E * D a y C a r # T r a s h vage tar.an meats, M ontessori developed e n v iro n m e n t Near UT. ca ll N it# Sm ith 477 1593 T h e P H IL O S O P H Y of O b je c tiv is m 12 taped lee tu r fs by D r Leonard P a iko tt S ta rts J a n u a ry IS. 197* For in fo rm a tio n c a i’ 926 H93 P R O F E S S IO N A L M O B IL E disco W ill hand * dances or p artie s up to SOC peopi# w ith a high fid e lity PA system Can B od 441 4526 A L T E R A T IO N S RE P A I RS, tip p e rs and custom m ade ciotttes T ry me Call Paula. 458-4047 HELF WANTED I HEUP WANTED Joske’s of Texas Now accepting applications for Christmas ex­ tras We currenty have openings in all shifts — Now is your chance to earn that extra Christ­ mas spending money plus receive liberal dis­ counts on the days you work Apply in person Personnel office. 4th floor. Tuesday, Wednes­ day, Friday IO a rn.-12 noon Just North of 27th at Guadalupe 2707 H em phill Park lf \ w jd ia f iy w , j i v f i u MBA, U T Y P IN G . P R IN T IN G . B IN D IN G T H E C O M P L E T E P R O F E S S IO N A L F U L L T I M E T Y P I N G S E R V IC E 472-3210 and 472-7677 One fre e copy of any paper w e type • \ \ # you can affo rd E needs m e dica tio n Please co nta ct owner 4S4.84S 4512107 LOST P R E S C R IP T IO N , tin te d g ,a ,, to 4500 b lo ck of G u a d a lu p e 2100 H allow een 441-2041 R ew ard LOST B L A C K and w hit# m al# k it1 T a rry to w n area 476AS#0 Reward *25 R E W A R D to r Kish Long-haii lig h t g ra y c a t Ju stin Lena Flea col 'a b ie s tag 459-0542 LOST CAT long haired S iam at# c o ile r R E WA R D 609B Bellevue I STS. w ork 471-3813, ask fo r " R a in # ' D ocum ents W IR E -H A IR E D Fox T a rrie r tost i Of UT P leat# cal! 4S4-787! or ATB- ®j8 r e w a rd w a m iss h im va ry m c LOST L A D IE S gold w atch Re o tte re d P i# # ** contact F r# n at * 4 3 . u n f u r n is h e d d u p l e x e s v e r y c l e a n w est A ustin IBR dupi *185 m onth 444-8717. R iv e r C ity R e* UNFURNISHED HOUSE H Y D E P a r k r e f r i g e r a t o r t r o t *175, m onth, deposit arsd aas 8787, 448-1038 Riva# C ity R< Ib r house I b lk 6 1 8 W . 5 1 s t 4 5 1 -5 8 6 5 Joske’s Highland Mall EOE Black unemployment rising, leadership gone, teacher says ARE "OU REAPV TO Pl AV ? 7 < t - 7 By CARL HOOVER Black leadership is practically non­ existent at a time when conditions are worsening for blacks, Dr Don Davis, assistant professor of government, said Friday at a Union seminar Traditional black leaders have failed to provide direction for blacks at a time when unemployment is the highest since World War II. he said The last two quarterly reports of the Department of Labor show a 14 per cent unemployment rate for black adults and a 29 per cent rate for black youths. Davis said In some cities, the unemployent rate for black youths ap­ proaches 40 per cent, he added “ WHAT HURTS is that there is also a noticeable decline of blacks in colleges, especially white colleges and universities.’' Davis said This leads to a “ double jeopardy” situation in which black adults cannot find work and black youths are not getting into higher education, lim iting their already meager job opportunities, he said Previous black leaders, such as black militants, liberal “ status protesters” and students, have dried up for several reasons, he said. Black militant leaders diminished after m ilitan t groups split over whether discrimination was a race problem or a class problem, he said. “ Nationalists and Marxists were really at each other s throat by the end of the Sixties,” he said. Some believe the struggle between black militant organizations was need­ ed to purge members who would hinder the group, he said Such competition wasted energy which needed to be spent fighting the conditions the militants wanted to end. Davis said Because there are so many splinter groups, one group cannot gain enough strength to lead blacks effectively, he said THE LIBERAL “ status protesters,” another group which provided black leadership in the past, is now “ almost totally co-opted by the system they tried to change, Davis said. These protesters never objected to general social conditions or the social system itself, but rather the black’s place in that system, he said. In work­ ing with the system. Davis said, they have now been absorbed b y it “ From the outset of President John­ son’s War on Poverty, an increasing number of middle class black leaders were drawn into governmental work,” he said. This removed them from the forefront of black activism and helped l i m i t th u s t h e i r p r o t e s t in g , “ decimating” this source of black leaders, Davis added DAVIS CITED Andrew Young, a former lieutenant of Martin Luther King. and John Lewis, a former chair­ man of the Student Non-Violence Coor­ dinating Committee, as examples of status protesters now with the system. Young is ambassador to the United Nations and Lewis is executive director of ACTION, a governmental service organization which runs such programs as the Peace Corps and VISTA “ The status protesters are extremely enchanted with electoral politics as a solution to black problems." Davis said But the small number of elected black o ffic ia ls and the lim ited resources of most blacks who enter politics weaken this alternative as a solution, Davis said The third group which once provided black leadership was students, but the force which led students on freedom marches and rallies is now “ entirely dissipated,” he said MOST OF WHAT students sought in the Sixties has been achieved, he said The end of the draft and more liberal drug laws aided the decline of student activism and student leadership. Davis said. “ There s nothing now at stake for whites.” he added leadership No new group exists to fill the void in black left by the three groups, he said Blacks are “ virtually yet they face serious leaderless, problems. Davis said. “ The real problem today is that some 8 to IO million blacks have no jobs at all. and not that blacks have a hard time getting into med-school or law school,” he said M onday, N o v e m b e r 7, 1977 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ P a g e 15 TODAY’S CROSSWORD PUZZLE 51 Throw rocks A C R O S S at UNITED Feature Syndicate Friday's Parte Solved • i W K C i l M N i w n i M n n i d t noel u t i Bb 1 Heavenly instruments 6 Egypt god of creation 10 Large number 14 Separately 15 Israel tribe 16 Parts airport I 7 Army officer 18 Turkish title 19 High priced 20 Flower organ prefix 22 Arranged in succession 24 Unseals 26 Cai mountain 27 M usical composition JO Bank abbr 31 Canadian Indian 32 Cold crystal in the air 37 According to 2 words 38 Reveal 40 Cereal grass 41 Vatican City palace 5 ? Certain rays 54 Contem- plates 58 Fitzgerald or Cinders 59 In the direction of 8 i Honor 62 Humble 63 Shortly 64 Evergreen 65 Emendate 66 Pairs 67 Playing cards DO W N 1 Poor actors Informal 2 Pit - 3 Ruler in India 4 Advance in lank 5 Zebra feature 6 Sad 7 Pro 8 V is f ace to face 9 Lowly worker 10 Oress 43 Stiff hair 44 Beverage 45 Overshadows I 2 Color 48 Magna I 3 London t I Regions designer warning device J I Final 23 Hindu princess 25 Makes firm 2 7 Plant disease 28 Man s name 29 Chime 33 U S A Nev events high goals 42 Changeable 43 I awbreaker 46 Mr Chaney 47 Whole 48 de cacoa 49 Dragged with force 50 — Stevenson 53 --- goose 55 Protuberance l l Accomplish.-, 35 Tardy 36 Or letters 38 River deposit 39 Pursuer of l o w c a r ! 5 ’ E !nd weights lime AO 1*1* DOONESBURY by Garry Trudeau ROIA NP, I (NONPER IF you COULD exp lain TD US HOU/WUK REPORT ON STUDENTS UHL FTT INTO abc N aus' t a o s ca m FORMAT UR LL,/T H M N * UKE HLS, MARK HARR) REASONER, The SUPER anchor w is e s m t story frltm Nix/ YORK THEN At THfiOUt' fT TO THERE ENCINAL MSN! AN HOR » s t* * tn e w e r A n le t # * T H E Q U I N T I I THE CHARLIE PARKER QUINTET LIVE! O N E N IG H T IN B I R D L A N D inclu d in g I m b t« i eahie You Out Of Nnwtiere I ll Remember April 7n! J A / / P I A N O IU )l I I V . (Villi ( A IlllljW ISI I M A lii l l H A M A N ! . -ill IM S M A I IN IM .IN l l s t i n t * . U A '.* . CHARLIE PARKER and the ALL-STARS S U M M IT M E E T IN G AT B IR D LA N D *fHluh n y u .t i v in M -gfi H#hathI M td r n g h t M o o * # T h # M f k h h# I uHjtoy I )i H*f ritatfMi Night in THE LESTER IIH Mi S KIRT VOL. 2 A MUSICAL ROMANCE including Hr- s F unny That Way Honey sui Ile Rose The V f y I bought Of You I Can t Get Started When You re Sm iling including W inning Problem Too I ate To Run Tai E n le Take A Chance including N ow a y Don t Be Afraid I Want To Be W here You Are You re Num ber One Sara Smile p o M H I (JAVIS |M 4 » ()A \1 |H 1 1 N (W I M I J |N p A W s p .s iT V 5 a ( M i m r * M i m j v / / I n c l u d i n g I tnbr a. o a t an Wk . H ifttn l® lh ... t B lam e M e AH I he t h «m « V*ty U iirP rt I «l ! It# ( hikNw* f*l#t CHARLIE PARKER B IR O W IT H S T R IN G S in c lu d in g I avy To Love I aura lu m p in g W rth S y m p h o n y Sui Dune mg In The D ark th e y C an t lu k e That Aw ay f r o m Mr- THE LESTER YOUSE; STORY VOL. 3 ENTER THE COUNT including tov#* M#* Of LeJv** Me And The Angels Sing I Ain t G ot N obody lf I Dido t Care f Adc fly I the You BILL WITHERS MENAGERIE including: She Wants To (G el On D ow n) Lovely Day I Want To Spend The Night Lovely Night For Dancing Let Me Be The One You Need LET S CLEAN UP THE GHETTO THE PHILADELPHIA INTERNATIONAL ALL STARS including: The O Jays, Lou Rawls, Teddy Pendergrass, Billy Paul, Dee Dee Sharp Gamble. Archie Bell & The Drells UST PRICE OUR PRICE SALE! UST PRICE OUR PRICE UM f u r l i n g ne On. C I m w O ver Huru S p e a k I .He A C hild O t A i e P i H u * P i a f t (Mi t i t I l a . y * n » i i | » d arni i omliu toil ti* including Com e Go W ith Me Pusado Elusive Lady W i/ra rd W urzit In The Pocket ARCHIE BELL& THE DRELLS Hard Not To Uke* It including: D isco Fever On The Radio D isco Showdown Its Hard N ot To Like You I ve Been M issing You TIS v s # e v.tmr G E R R Y M U L L IG A N T H E A R R A N G E R mwlud.ng Meet H igh th* W w i AH l h * I hung* You Alw Tfiuiway lk»c Jus key Jump Bwtwwwi. The i v . . . And The Deep ti*,** sea H lfU U M p ia jo + u + U u t S n eJJMo* u td including B aham a M a m a N o m a ds fo lk rn Voce H e a rt I a c e Blaster i ..ri ngs, k/w T he Hardest W ord* To Say n m k \ L O K O K E V E R R ( ) M \ M K V W R R I O R including Medieval Ovet tore Sorceress Meieetic Oence The Magician Duel Of The Jester And The Ty rent (Pelt IA Pert ll) including Gom Places Do What You Wanna, Different K md Of Lady Fmd Me A Gir I Heaven K nows I Love You, Girl A l I ) i M o o l a La n d O f H ie M id n ig h t Sun including The Wizard Suite—Golden Dawn Short T alc; Of The Black Fore;! Love Theme From ^.Picture s Of The Sea Land Of The Midnight Sun M n .S c vt r i f h i ti BRAND Nt W THING t fH tutfe'ig I V it VW C h n ( M t t # MNihittf f kttf V w git vis* St** what Soft Khh h Freddie H u b b a rd Bundlo O f Joy HH kkkryg I n u it Now c*«■ I'i . I m ! th je n n y l l * n e S to m p f n u n Behind H stnyO e MAYNARD FERGUSON / V t * * V in tc u ie including Maw* T die (F ro m Star W ats ) M e n a lf rom W est Side Story ) ■scb a h e ra *a d * O a s t* t i V u e *) (The Flight) w th j o h n McL a u g h l i n NATURAL FAIMENTS including M ug I t .'fogy FacefcF ace Peace Of Mind Happiness I* Being Together Come On Baby Dance With Me Jan Hamm er Group melodies including Too Much To Lose Peaceful Sundown What tt Is Don t You Know W ho Are They I Boh J ame' / / « ud\ including N ig h tc ra w le r We re Alf Alone One Lovn du Are So Beautiful I rn DOBIE M A LL ( U P P E R L E V E L ) 4 7 8 - 6 1 1 9 Pag* I* Keith Emerson Lake « rat mer: to the show that never ends9 Welcome back my Mends 6reg _ _ ft Carl n -m . . . Page 17 „ B y Thomas Kessler and Ray _______ Helmers_ Walking into the Emerson Lake and Palm er concert Thursday night, it was impossible not to wonder why Britain's prem ier classical-rock muscians were playing in Austin Despite a two-and-a-half-year layoff from touring ELP still retains its status as a supergroup and the band m em bers’ collective image of Austin is probably one of it be­ ing the home of all the regressive, progressive-country pickers in the world The answer, my friend, is blowing on your airwaves Namely. ELP feels its last effort. "Works Volume I. was totally ignored by the radio stations and the group is out pushing "Works Volume 2” in an effort to avoid a similar fate That means touring Europe, Japan, Australia, America and, yes, even Austin The three musicians are also giving their highly interview s, som ething successful days leading up to 1973’s "Brain Salad Surgery they shunned in There is a tendency to refer to Emerson, Lake and Palm er as the band.” But that is precisely what they are not, as they drop sharp reminders such as volume I of Works, a two-record set that includes a side by each of the three musicians and only one side where they appear together But the individuality of the members lends itself to the impor­ tance the critics place upon them as being superb musicians, each in his own right Emerson, Lake and Palm er began their tour this summer with a large orchestra intent on bringing to life every dazzl­ ing note of "Works Volume I.” However, that mission had to be aborted when the astronomical food and hotel costs started running in excess of $10,000 a day. Thus the 1977 ELP show came to Austin s Municipal Auditorium, greatly altered but none the less brilliant From the opening chords of Henry Mancim’s theme from "P eter Gunn" (honest, Henry Mancini), Keith Emerson, Greg Lake and Carl Parlm er put on one of the most theatrically and musically exciting shows in Central Texas history. Of course the new m aterial was there, such as Lake s "Watching Over You” and "Show Me The Way To Go Home.” in addition to Em erson’s suprising version of Scott Joplin s Maple Leaf Rag" - all from the second volume of Works.” But a m ajor portion of the show came from "Tarkus (as Emerson said, " I t ’s a bit like an arm adillo” ), though Take A Pebble” and "Lucky Man" were pulled from the group’s first album ELP also delievered its popular interpretation of Mussorgsky’s "P ictures at an Exhibition*’ to a very recep­ tive audience Keith Emerson had been rumored in recent years to have cut down his onstage exhibitionism, though it was not ciear from the show While he was not strapped to an organ spin­ ning in mid-air. Emerson wasn’t exactly subtle Early in the show Emerson self-consciously grabbed a small, portable synthesizer with a hose attachm ent and roamed around the stage alternately twisting dials and spraying the crowd and other band members with clouds of vaporized gas. It looked more like an obligation than anything else ELP brought with them the most impressive stage set-up Austin will probably ever see Their self-contained stage elevated them at least 15 feet above the Municipal Auditorium stage and included tall though unobtrusive scaf­ folding which contained their intricate lighting system The speakers were all placed below the front of the stage, presenting the audience with a clear, uncluttered view of the band, as well as a clear, uncluttered sound. To produce much of that sound, Emerson uses a 10-foot box of complex electronic gear, including an osciliscope. which rises out of the stage floor and connects to the back of his Hammond organ The Moog main console, as it is called, is a custom-built piece of equipment that controls all the sounds played on the keyboard At one point during Pictures at an Exhibition,” the console swings out to face the audience and begins smoking, and apparently explodes and disappears into the floor It reappears intact for the second set. During a long, blues-based encore based loosely on Freddy King s 'Hideaway,'* Emerson donned a plastic Halloween mask and attacked a small organ, alternately playing it and throwing it around like some phantom of the opera gone wild All the while, Greg Lake, the mellowing influence in ELP, stood to the side laughing and enjoying Emerson s an­ tics After seeing Emerson s sheepish grin when he finished his fooling around, it was hard to figure out who it was for Carl Palm er was. in a sense, the center of attention His two-faced drum kit was mounted on the pinnacle of the ELP stage and rotated 180 degrees to reveal two tympani drums and large painted Chinese dragons on the backs of his two gongs His set-up was the focal center mainly because of the multi-colored lights mounted beneath him which pulsed with the music. A classic music-review cliche is to talk about how "tight the band was The only way to accurately describe the music of Emerson, Lake and Palm er is ‘‘tight Real tight. They epitomized "tightness as a music producing unit. Complex passages and off-beat changes were handled with incredible ease Sort of "ho-hum” like. However, Emerson, Lake and Palm er could in no way be term ed cliche. And their performance was definitely not "ho-hum.” fly Nelson Duffle As five m am m oth trucks were being unloaded at the highly Municipal Auditorium Thursday. Carl Palm er acclaimed drum m er and percussionist of Emerson, Lake and Palm er, talked about the group s new album. "Works Volume Two," and the current tour. The new album is based on the the same concept as Volume One. having six group tracks and six individual tracks, with group and individual tracks on both sides There s also a single coming out called "Tiger in the Spotlight” which might appear before the album. Palm er explained that the cuts themselves are not at all sim ilar to Volume One. even though they were recorded at the same time. "Because of the fact that Volume One was a double album, the pieces tended to be more conceptual The new album is possibly more commercial and was written with that inten­ tion.” ELP performed four selections from Volume Two at the Austin show but seemed to concentrate on longer, conceptual tracks from earlier recordings Some of the concert versions were edited in length, however, and the changes were quite noticeable at times ■ Well. most of our pieces like Tarkus’ and Pictures at an Exhibition' have to be edited because, if we were to play them in their entirety, plus play pieces from Volumes One and Two.’ we d be playing for nearly four hours We play for two hours and 20 minutes as it is and rather than leave out selections which we feel the audience wants to hear. we decided to shorten some of them That way you get a little bit of everything." Three weeks before Emerson. Lake and Palm er began their 1977 world tour in May. they were forced to drop the 70- piece orchestra which was performing with them because of financial reasons Although the orchestra augmented E L P 's songs quite well, particularly cuts from "Works Volume One.” which used orchestration as a dominant force, they were losing $215,000 each week on the road Palm er noted that although it was a bit disappointing at first, he actually preferred playing as a trio. "The group was together before the orchestra was ever formed, so I was in favor of playing in a group before an orchestra It did supply us with a certain amount of extra musical content, but it also took away energy from the group When we lost the orchestra after only three weeks. I still wasn’t totally disheartened because we picked them up and played in places like New York and Montreal. The a r­ tistic gain was fulfilled in every way. We made a film with the orchestra and we recorded a live album which will be released sometime next year. So actually we did everything we could except take them with us to every show and we might still have a possibility of doing that next summer. It would have to be a more limited basis, but w e're checking on it now.” When questioned about E LP's long leave of absence from the public eye. Palm er adm itted it wasn t the right thing to do. but at tire tim e it was necessary because EXP had run its limit in creativeness "Absence doesn’t make the heart grow fonder and we shouldn't have been away as long as we were." Palm er said "But we had toured for six years prior to the layoff and we had released an album every year We had to take the time off to determ ine what direction the band was going in and whether it should continue that way. "And. it wasn't actually a layoff to us because we recorded "Works One and Two" over that span of tim e The only way the sales were hurt on Volume One was because it was a dou­ ble album and was more expensive for the public to buy and because it was a very uncommercial album We suffered in that direction mainly because it was more classically orien­ tated. "There s every possibility that the live album we recorded with the orchestra will be our next album and so we shouldn't be away from the public very long at all after Volume Two comes out. Also, we re hoping to release the live set in conjunction with the film which we are now trying to sell to cablevision We’ve already had a few offers, but there s nothing definite yet. We may even go back into the studio next year to record some new m aterial, who knows?” "Works Volume One" was the culmination of efforts by Keith Emerson, Greg Lake and Carl Palm er to write and record individual music away from the context of EXP After the realization that they were all involving the use of orchestras in the music, it was decided to combine their work on an ELP album but devote one side to each member for his solo endeavors Palm er said he was pleased with his side, but was not sure how it went over with the public. "I can tell you that our desires to do solo work have been fulfilled through Volume One There are solo pieces on Volume Two, but that is mainly because we recorded the Works albums at the same tim e,” he said. " It was a new and fresh concept and I think it showed a large amount of unity within the group. I don’t think that my solo side was accepted as well as I would have liked, but I feel that most artists would say that I don’t know exactly what people ex­ pected from me. I was very happy with it musically because I managed to cover every style of music that I ve been involved with over the 16 years I ve been playing. But, I don’t think it saw the light of day that I would have liked it to have seen. Who knows — maybe it’s the kind of album that will grow on people more and more. "A fter our layoff, however, people were much more inclin­ ed to want to hear the ELP group side. Also, if there s a singer like Greg, his side will be more com m ercial and will probably receive more airplay ’ Besides their technical expertise in performing such com­ plex music. ELP has long been noted for their ambitious stage presentations. Focusing prim arily on keyboardist Keith Emerson, each tour can be expected to yield an ex­ traordinary amount of emphasis on visual effects and theatrics Although their early days saw Em erson throwing daggers into speaker cabinets and rotating around on a grand piano in mid-air, this year's tour seems to have been toned- down a bit. Although he concedes that Em erson has slowed down his theatrics, Palm er feels the show is basically the same. " I think it’s pretty much the same along the lines of theatrics, but we have concentrated on better lighting and a better sound system as we always do. The only problem with using theatrics is making sure that they enhance the music and don't take everything away from it. I think the only thing we’re not doing any more is that Keith doesn't throw knives now There are occasionally some stunts we will use at par­ ticular concerts or just for awhile, and then we'll throw them out. Apart from that, the stunts are pretty much the sam e We've lived with them for so long now that I don’t think they jeopardize our stage show, I think they actually add to it. “ The stage is a lot neater now. All of our am plifiers and monitors are hung below the stage. We designed it that way because of the film so that it would just be us standing there with the bare essentials and not having piles of amps behind us That idea of showing off your number of amps is getting a bit dated anyway. Our sound system is not simulated quad as on the last tour It is a much more sophisticated PA than what we've had before. It doesn’t have the rock-and-roll frequency which you get at most concerts. You don't have that deafening sound; it puts out more of a m ature sound and is a little more suited to our music as a group.” The Austin perform ance was indeed a rare treat when one considers that Emerson, Lake and P alm er have rarely played a concert hall in the United States as small as Municipal Auditorium. Palm er explained why the Austin gig was added to the Texas schedule along with Houston and Dallas. "To sell a record you have to get it to the people. It's just like any other business. We could have just played Houston and Dallas, but we were aw are of the large college audience in the Austin area. There's no reason why the people in this town shouldn’t have as much of a chance to see Emerson, Lake and Palm er as the people in New York City D h n i n c h y P a y H a i m e r s » * * be** « S 1 I B S » 5 5 »V# 5 s a ss 3 v # Si0 1 e fir* as<* George Romero: 'M artin' director does it on his own P a g e 1 6 can go out and have a ball. I'm sure it s gonna be a very lighthearted experience, the whole p ro d u ctio n . " M a rtin is different, it s much more studied than that It s more controlled, it s not as loose tary that you could release and really do business with Hut those are the things you just can’t do until you have a mechanism, be it financial, corporate or whatever, in order to do it IMAGES: We seem to be getting into of course kind of a teenage horror thing they did that in the Fifties, too ROMERO: “M artin” unfortunately falls into that I was really sorry to see “ Carrie because of “ Martin It opened right when we were shooting, and I avoid­ ed seeing it until we were all finished Then I never got a good look at it because I was sitting traum atized — and worried. there IMAGES: It seems like we’ve been get­ ting a lot of new films that aren t horror films at all, but they really hit you Like ' Looking for Mr Goodbar,” which really gets you — but you can’t say it s a horror film Or “ Taxi Driver ” ROMERO: It depends on how you want I normally use to define horror films the classic definition of a horror film But 111 t h e r e , or “ Repulsion in ' It doesn’t have to be gothic th ro w " J a w s IMAGES: Would you Uke to get into documentary again? it s something ROMERO: I love to do documentary that I guess 1 11 film always love I d like to do a big documen­ tary I think that you could do a documen­ To a certain extent I guess I ve been selfish I ve been surviving since I got out of school as a filmmaker without too many compromises and by doing things pretty much that I want to do. I’m willing to take a slower approach to it. which is what it s been really, and it s been working We’ve been able to go a little further and a little further each time out. and that's been great. And now that we’re setting up a slightly expanded operation, it looks like there s some things on the horizon but you never know IMAGES: What if you make a big hit with “ Martin and your next film, would you like to join an established studio or distributor? BARENHOLTZ: Like hell ROMERO: No, I don’t think so, I don’t think ever I would have to be in such an extraordinary circum stance You can do it on ytnir own, you can become a major in­ dependent without forming m arriage ties to a studio And I think that s the way w e have focused, towards becoming a major independent Th* n you’re still kind of your own man By M a r k P ritc h a rd G e o r g e R o m e r o , 33, is o n e o f A m e r i c a ’s li tt le- known f i l m m a k e r s . Best k no wn f o r his 1968 mi nor horror classic " N ig ht o f the Livi ng Dead, " he and his c o m p a n y , Laurel Tape and Film, Inc., o f Pi ttsburgh, Pa., have been m a k i n g f i l m s f o r s ev e ral years, i ncluding f i v e n a r ra t iv e f e a t u r e s , a television d o c u m e n t a r i e s series o f a nd c o u n t l e s s t e l e v i s i o n c o m m e r ­ cials. In A u s ti n r ecent ly to p r o m o t e his n ew f i l m " M a r t i n / ' R o m e r o s po ke to Dr George W e a d ’s R T F 314 class and later to an aud ience g at he re d to see his f i l m at Ri ve rs i de Twi n theater. Be t w e e n t hese a pp e a r a n c e s he m e t wtth I m a g e s to di scus s his career, notably hts u n s h a ka b l e b el ief in the future o f i n de pe nde nt f i l m m a k i n g Also p r es e nt at the i n t e r vi e w w a s Ben Barenholtz. p re si de nt o f Libra Fi lms , the di st ri but or o f " M a r t i n . ” ROMERO: I ve been supporting myself in the business ever since I came out of school, and all I knew about a movie cam era was how it related to a still cam era IMAGES: Then you didn t go to film school or anything ROMERO: No, I started as a painting and design m ajor at Camegie-Mellon Institute, did three years and transferred into the drama departm ent as an acting major. Right out of school, four of us set up a little company There was really nothing happening around Pittsburgh at that time rn term s of commercial production We did about eight years of that I really didn t even know how to synch up the audio with the picture I had mi idea what that was about We just learned that way It s just a question of having a desire and then jum ­ ping in and doing it We bought some equipment, we rented equipment It was the old story of le ts put together the stuff and make commercia is ami use the stuff when we re not working By the time we made Night of the Living Dead we were doing pretty good IMAGES: You produced all your own films raised all your own money'’ ROMERO: Well, initially; 'Night of the Living Dead was IO of us that kicked in KOC each, and that just bought the film stock and it was enough money to rent the farmhouse where the film was shot for four months Gradually as we started to shoot a little film we were able to show people rushes the unedited results of a day s shooting and convince people that they should in­ vest During the course of the production in­ we sold about another ISS OOO in vestments which we raised all ourselves to The Craises We made four pictures from Night of th e Living Dead 19721, and after that we finally realized it wasn't an easy business Since then we ve beer, building for three or four years we did television about 24 TV specials we did a series of 17 sports biographies anc that to was great It was cathartic you know feature filmmaking us: get away from for awhile and do that We weren I planning another feature an­ tu thm one we re gonna shoot nest but I for a tang had had the idea for ‘Martin time and some money fell oat of the trees and we said, well it s something that's relatively small we can produce it pretty quickly. and so we went out and shot it and are using it to kind of re-enter (feature filmmaking) It s worked real well so far, it s just been really well received abroad. IMAGES: You say it’s been distributed abroad? ROMERO: Well, it s been sold to all the m ajor territories; it’s just been playing the festival circuit I don’t think it s open­ ed anywhere yet. IMAGES: So Austin is the first city it s opened? ROMERO: Yeah IMAGES: Why Austin0 BARENHOLTZ: Why not0 It s a good movie town, one of the best in the country I t ’s a good cro ss-au d ien c e, a very sophisticated audience Where you don’t have to spend $50,000 to open a film IMAGES: Do you try to stay away from explicit violence in your films? I don’t have any con­ ROMERO: No science. (laughs! Romero and friends started ‘Night of the Living D ead’ with $6,000 and an old farmhouse. BARENHOLTZ M artin” is - ROM ERO: . . violence | - a d iffe re n t kind of BARENHOLTZ: There is no other the violence has to be there, choice, otherwise the film would be false . . . ROMERO: Well, it would be very grey The im portant thing is that 'M artini is a vampire by definition And so nght up front in the first scene I wanted to show exactly what he does BARENHOLTZ: And also the contrast here is somebody who is a very violent guy, a very sick character But you can sympathize with him ROMERO: You sympathize with all those m onsters IMAGES: Sure Frankenstein ROM ERO: T h ey ’re all very sy m ­ pathetic c h a rac te rs * Godzilla Saves Tokyo or something IMAGES: You mentioned in Dr Wead I class today that somebody proposed you make a sequel to “ Night of the Living Dead ROMERO; Well initially there were all kinds of offers You d be surprised the way those deals are packaged A some of producer w ill come to you nod say I have a script which is a perfect sequel to Night and it has nothing to of the Living bead do with anything and they try to package that as the sequel , ast because it s in the horror genre That s the kind of stuff that I really did resist violently Then a couple a4 years ago I got the idea for this new picture we re gonna make now Dawn of the Dead > it s not really 5* sequel it s the second part of a trilogy in which lr. Nigh: of the Living Dead zorr.tie* lay seige to and finally invade an isolated farmhouse the new society steps up and says Here we are While the humans si the farmhouse die human society is still on top In me next film we aegis right at stalem ate point, and by the end of the film we believe that the humans are losing lf VOQ buy a premise like that then you y r \ I c > 5 l S i ? r £ iC -Bi r - l ,:f| S l x e ? S?Sj. * S 2 ? 3 « ? ? X* r- > to rj5 I Kl 22 ^W* co *< KSS V I FresIh TRAcks Talking Heads say a lot TAI M S C , HEADS year that has produced perhaps the finest harvest of new bands in almost five years. — J e f f Whittington titles Not all their lyrics are this offbeat, though like “ F irst Week Last Week ..C arefree." “ Don't Worry About the Government, and “ The Book I Read might give pause to those whose sense of lyrical art was developed by Rush While the knee-jerk tendency is to dismiss lyrics this odd and obviously am bitious as pretentious, it must be granted that Talk­ ing Heads’ words are easily unusual enough to be worth a serious look (though one w riter bemoaned the fact that all he could be sure of after repeated listenings was that the band were either geniuses or morons). Perhaps more significant is the fact that the Heads seem particularly adept at mating even the most unwieldy lines to hook-filled music that sweeps you along the way good rock was always meant to to “ Tentative Decisions, In addition include “ No C om passion.'' highlights Don t Worry” and “ Psycho Killer." One of the more unsettling songs of the lot is “ Don t Worry." wherein the first- person narrator describes pleasantly but hollowly his idyllic life in ' ..the building I live in ..My building has every con­ venience It s going to make life easy for m e." “ I see the laws made in Washington D C I think of the ones I consider my favorites.” this member of the new Eloi sings; "I think of the people that are work­ ing for me Some civil servants are just like my loved ones They work so hard. and they try to be so strong I'm a lucky guy to live in my building And I rn so happy to be a Beta is “ f un” and the W here B londie Ramones are “ noisy, the word for Talk­ ing Heads — perhaps in lieu of any better sum m ary — is “ interesting ” Altogether, they make one want to abuse the English language and employ a phrase like “ one of the most unique...” leader Talking Heads consists of David Byrne, guitarist, vocalist and (head Head7); Martina Weymouth, bass; Tina s husband Chris Frantz on drums, and ex- M odem L o v er J e r r y H a r r i s o n on keyboards. With their intriguing m ixture of complexity and accessibility, they become one of the better new groups in a Talking Heads 7 7 Talking Heads One of the more confusing aspects of New Wave to the uninitiated is the fact that while almost all English punk bands sound alike, no two m ajor American punk bands remotely resemble each other P art of this results from the arbitrary’ grouping of all the bands that play regularly at CBGB's into a single category. Perhaps least punkoid of them all is a group which has been displaying its surprisingly sub­ dued music at CBGB's for the past two years, and who recently released an album on Sire: the Talking Heads Talking Heads began at the Rhode Island School of Design, and their lyrics have a certain offbeat originality that you might expect to find in a band with an art- school background. Sample, from “ Ten­ tative Decisions:' "G irls ask: can I define decision? Boys ask : can I describe their function?, The boys would like to talk about these problems And the girls say t h e y a r e c o n c e r n e d w i t h t h a t I decisiveness This certainly ain t Don’t Wanna Walk Around With You. it also looks like something you probably won’t find yourself humming on the way to work There you we wrong; it segues from a robotlike intro to a chorus propelled by a m artial drum beat and garnished with broad harmonies. Positively catchy. Moonflowers Santana Devadip Carlos Santana has returned to the helm, as far as the musical direction of the group Santana is concerned Their newest release. “ Moonflowers.” presents the best of their recent work on a live disc, plus the addition of nine new studio cuts The presence of Santana's wailing guitar has never been more evident. The live record features songs from and “ Abraxas,” “ Welcome,” “ Amigos “ F e stiv a l.” Utilizing the percussive rhythms which have emerged to a large degree on the past two albums. Santana leads the band through scorching, up­ tempo versions of “ Carnival,' “ Let the Children P lay,’ “ Dance. Sister. Dance” and other songs. But it is on the slower tunes that the group excels most of all “ Eur opa ( E a r t h s Cry, H eaven’s Smile)” sounds as good live as it does on the studio recording Santana's guitar work builds slowly until it climaxes with a fullness one only finds in live perfor­ mances And the production on the live disc is excellent; at tim es you forget that it is live. An i n t e r e s t i n g o m i s s i o n on “ Moonflowers" is the usual mention of Sri Page 19 Chinmoy. Chinmoy has been Carlos San­ tana's spiritual leader for the past few introd uction by years sin c e th eir Mahavishnu John McLaughlin; he is credited with alterations in Santana s music after that meeting. Many people felt that the music suffered, and only recently has the group been able to regain their popularity completely. The last two albums, “ Amigos' and “Festival,” are the most commercially successful the band has ever recorded Featuring driving rhythms with the accent on percussion and Santana's guitar, the re­ cent recordings have more than made up for the momentary change that resulted from Chinmoy s religious overtones (San­ tana continued to name Chinmoy as s p i r i t u a l a d v i s e r , h o w e v e r , until “Moonflower.” ) in One person who deserves credit providing the newer, successful direction is keyboardist Tom Coster. Coster cowrites most of the songs and his in­ fluence is felt throughout, especially on the songs that emphasize his organ play­ ing He is also listed as a producer on the recent albums It m ay be that the r e l e a s e of Moonflower" signals the end of one path and the start of another While the live portion consists primarily of already familiar songs, the studio cuts show further growth in the band They still are able to combine a degree of tightness with a feeling of individuality, but what stands out most of all is an added emphasis on vocals. Santana has had a number of vocalists in their ranks, but Greg Walker is undoubtedly one of the best. He has a voice that can be soothing at one minute and harsh the next. It blends particular strength on the live cuts with the pulsating Latin flow of the percussionists and creates a balance which practically pours from the speakers. “ Moonflowers” may be deemed too commercial by some, but it is the most accessible album Santana has released to date It is also an excellent introduction to those who have been away from the group for awhile and are curious about their new - W . / . o t t Out", direction Soup, Sal ad, a nd Sa nd w i c h l l P.M. D I N N E R 7 P.M. II P.M. " The Bent P ri m e Rib in A u st i n . . . " L U B U E E E T L A D I E S ’ A P P R E C I A T I O N N I G H T S A R E M O N D A Y A N D W ITH H A L F - P R I C E D R I N K S F O R A L L U N E S C O R T E D L A D I E S . T U Y . . a t the C a b a n I the w hole w orld it In t h * h e a r t o f D o w n t o w n A u t t in , T o i t a , — 6 t h and B ra I O I 4 7 4 - 2 1 6 6 o u arn © rn* ■■■■I 3 N ©• a OO © 3 a O ©< a o © © 3 ® O | S o 5 - o 2 5 O * O 3 8 a ° o — * © 0 => O’ © < cr 3 . 'n -• o > 1 cr " © JO > I O C TO r> o cT J o z Lr r . Cl O A S T H a a i H cr ~ 3 = r c t CB « CW O « < l/I — s = £. sr C5 Si s T & ® g s - g * S P ct) * ct < Si x n 9 - 5 J to-a o 2 2 &> ^ 3 " ^ ^ * ! & 5 * ■< : ? t s ~ 3 g O —- '/I CA ~ S > * a . < t ck» « , CT 3 8 ~ * CRJ *,"t •■■** C _ » q. <; re * ° 3 H g " 3 o ar c ex CU =; 3 o CB •£*••’ ? » 8 I ? sr X. o JU 3 — o SS c c *5 £ S . o. 2 •**■ S 1/5 ¥ 3 i ? <» 2 c J E T s r < r ’ S i ^ CB < » S S S .•3 ” Cu O CW x > < “ i rn S $r£ l f * S. J TS i t 3 S5 l l ! S *' t % ^_i sc c r 2 S ’ 3 o 5 j 3 ET S’ Ct h I t i t ll I P e n n s y l v a n i a B a l l e t : C o m p a n y s e t s A u s t i n p e r f o r m a n c e Recorder revival reaches Texas By Gregg Hill " Tis easy as lying, govern these ventages with our fingers and thumb, give it breath with your mouth and it will discourse most eloquent mustc " — Hamlet (III, it) Since the 1920s there has been a revival of the music and instruments of the period from 1200 to 1750 The most prominent sign of the recrudescense of this music is the growing popularity of the recorder One of the individuals most responsible for the discovery of much music and the revival of forgotten performing practices was Arnold Dolmetsch of England, who organized a firm that produces replicas of viols early violins), harpsicords and recorders The work of Arnold Dolmetsch is being continued by his youngest son, Carl Each year Carl Dolmetsch goes on a world tour to display the craftsmanship of the famous Dolmetsch workshops This year s tour included a concert and workshop in San Antonio The concert program included works from the 16th, 17th and 18th Centuries, the “ classical” period of the recorder, and several works written for Dolmetsch by contemporary composers I Dolmetsch revealed after the concert that he had received an un­ solicited composition at a university in Wales He believes a composer should be compensated for his work but rather than a commission, the composer preferred a case of Italian wine i Throughout the concert Dolmetsch and his accompanist, Joseph Saxby, gave ex­ cellent performances and told anecdotes about the music and stories from previous world tours The latest development from the Dolmetsch workshops was also shown, a recorder hardly larger than a fountain pen with a full two octave range At the workshop the next morning, Dolrnetsch demonstrated the advances he has made in reco rd er playing Ap proximately 50 recorder players of all a b ilitie s attended and showed new techniques that have increased the effec­ tiveness of the recorder as an expressive musical instrument Dolmetsch made it clear he believes music from 300 years past is just as vital and expressive as more recent music Musicians of the 18th Century sought ways to improve their in­ struments, just as Dolrnetsch is doing to­ day. Each summer Dolrnetsch conducts a two-week school for recorder players in the English countryside The growing pop ularity of the recorder, the increasing number of concert groups which play m u s ic from the Renaissance and from Elizabethan England are evidence that the warm and lively sounds of the viol and recorder have found a new appreciation and an e v e r g r o w i n g n u m b e r of enthusiasts The Austin Recorder Society, founded in the 50s boasts a membership of 35 who play various instruments, including the recorder In addition to several groups that m e e t weekly at members homes, monthly meetings are held on the third Friday of every month at the Episcopal Church of the Resurrection, 2008 Justin Lane Since Austin is a center for recorder music instruments music and literature are readily available T h o se interested in learning m o re about the recorder may contact the Austin Recorder Society at 476-5772 or 476-1518 WHITE RABBIT DISCO MD B A R HAPPY HAPPY HOUR SUNDAY-THURSDAY 6-9 $1.00 DRINKS .50 BEERS SERVING DOUBLE DRINKS AND 14 OZ. BEERS MONDAY-NIGHT FOOTBALL 7' SCREEN FREE KEG OF BEER B.00-TIU WED - GREEK NIGHT GREEK UTTERED SHIRT GETS YOU HAPPY HOUR AU NIGHT ON HOUSTON. JUST OH UM AR OMN I OATS A WHR A m*--2 • 451-91 IO Across H ighland :!! * 6019 D:i!or:! C.ic!c • 152 2732 • 19 7 Daily ? IO CO CD 3 CD =3 a o CD CD co 0 ) e x CD t o CD OD O Co < 0 a ? "0 3 O ? 3 I ® 3 - -U Ca) K) S a * O on S S IO X) S 'S Ca) CP CL * * « O' “» TO < n> f * % " J S r 3 on to 00 0 OO x U 0 3- • I/I 3 Q S o • o IT I O ~r Ort IT to 3 3 “t TD CD O Cd vc o H TJ c re a> en CL to CU 3 re I n 3 en C o ^ - ► O 0) . : 3 c l z o o < Q> CD < CL CD 3 CD Ort co *o CL CD QI O ^ to I ! _ C l !° .< en — o (/> — ’ TD re C. 2. o to -j— \ en t/» ~c — z i ' fD r o cd (Q 3 - f CHIQ 3 - Lrt 3 (D ^ O O W • n • in U) I T 0 * 5 I— 2 0 ® o § o 2 --P 2 . <0 $ c -V Q Q . o — CD CD on - n Qlc/> -4- 4 1 u O =3" O 3 -L O 2 . CU 3 . — C U ^ O' D — 3 3 3 — -J? C/> C L - O U 2 « IT . iQ n z r ° a . - f — TP — o 5 0 ^ T C l - 1 O I T ‘ J u s t i ’ : e c Keeping the memory alive P a g * 2 1 Hair Styles a 1 ’8 " to *10" Only w ith the am azing * f o jc a n e d I# it, Performing Daily 10 Shear Madness 1202 San Antonio. y ,477-7924 B a r-B -Q & S u d s With This Coupon $ 1 Dollar OH $ 1 O n purtha— of any regular lunch or dinnor plato O pen M on-Sat 11 am -9 pm 5512 Airport Blvd. 452-5868 - V . . - r n a w m c a m e Chicago Style Deep Dare P iz z a /9/3 £. R iverside.-•• V V 2 -6 3 7 3 6 0 3 W. 2 9 **-•!•••• ¥ 7 « - 5 7 / Z e m o il il y judging of the defeated side in war by the victorious one A woman of advancing years, now a member of the French Senate, and a form er inmate at Auschwitz, talks about her feelings testifying at Nuremberg One of her recollections went something like this: th ere and while Looking at m y ident\fication n u m b e r tatoo, 3 1 , OOO-s om eth in g, I r e m a r k e d to a frien d , tf i v e ev e r get out o f here, no one w ill b e lie r? us. E v e n while we w ere there, it w as difficult to b e lie re w ha t was going on F o r ty -fiv e m in u te s a fte r a trainload of people would a r rive at the cam p, m o s t o f th e m had d isapp eared into one o f the large buildings, and clouds o f s m o k e w ere rising. Some of the most interesting parts of the film are the interviews with Albert Speer, architect of the Nazi move­ ment, who was sentenced to 20 years in prison at Nuremberg Now a distmguished-looking, white-haired, soft-spoken and basically sympathetic figure, Speer candidly admits his guilt and discusses the fram e of mind and social pressures behind it. This film breaks new cinematic ground in essentially two areas — the scope of its thesis and the psychological consequences of its length when applied to that thesis After three hours of complicated, intelligent analysis of the almost unthinkable Nazi system, the perceptual barriers and prejudices of the viewer have been reduced or eliminated The notion of atrocities has been accepted, with all of its disturbing corollary ideas and feelings, these things really happened, and the people involved seem quite normal A process of detachment has been seen and felt on many levels. The unrelenting intellectual approach leaves no room for denial, avoidance, con­ tinuing ignorance or simplistic interpretation of the com­ plex and profoundly shocking historical truth portrayed. A few of the questions discussed include: Why do the victims of a holocaust tend to feel a sense of guilt0 WTiat causes regular people to explode in passionately destruc­ tive rage at a people they don t even know? How can an individual exert his conscience in the midst of the collec­ tive violence0 At about the three-hour mark, the film begins to expand the range of its examination. The human capacity for mass m urder and crim es against humanity having been demonstrated, other ex­ amples of sim ilar events are shown, including the Allitnl bombing of Dresden, the dropping of the atom ic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki, the Christmas bombing of Hanoi and other acts agaist noncombatant populations The moral and ethical situations are strikingly sim ilar The historical differences between the events are discuss­ ed in detail thus crystallizing the sim ilarities The viewer cannot fail to be overwhelmed by the immense and per­ sonal implications. The four and a half hours spent in absorbing the images and content of “ The Memory of Justice" become a rite of passage through the evolutionary history of the 20th Cen­ tury. It is an extraordinary experience. S T A I N E D G L A S S S A L E ! Nov. 5 thru Nov. 12 N e w G l a s s P r i c e s 1 0 -2 0 % off on all supplies C L A S S E S & W O R K S H O P beginning in Novem ber Basic f i v e w e e k c ourse in s t ai ne d ^ I ass c o v e r s , gl assc ut t i n g, s ol d e r i n g . t h e m a k i n g o f su n e a t ( h e r s , w i n d o w p a n e l s a n d “ T I F F A N Y " l a m p shades. For Inform ation and Reservation call 477-4987 FISHER STUDIOS 1208 W. 4th St. C o m p l e t e l ine o f st ai ne d glass a n d suppl ie s 0 L A Y # V t t V * r »T T V T iT T v v f > i j j Bv Geoffrey Marks The limits of the cinema have been expanded by Mart*J Ophuls in “The Memory of Justice,’ released in 1976 and appearing Tuesday at the Varsity. A four-and-a-half hour documentary covering prim arily the Nuremberg trial of Nazi war crim inals in 1945. it attem pts and succeeds both in making comprehensible the reality of those crim es and in using that comprehen­ sion as a basis for analyzing the larger issues of individual and collective accountability for crim es of war. The French behavior in Algeria in the 1950s and American involvement in \ ietnam and its neighbors are the other prim ary ingredients of this two-part film essay. Almost all possible viewpoints concerning Nazi respon­ sibility for atrocities are presented in P art I. We are shown much actual footage of the trial, many interviews with notable figures there and prim ary footage of the death camps Ophuls, son of the great cosmopolitan film director Max Ophuls, does the interviewing in German, English and French His sensitivity and intelligence are astounding as he asks just the right questions of the ap­ propriate people. Preconceptions of the Nazis are dealt with in several ways Chief American counsel for the trials Telford Taylor, now a law professor at Columbia University, dis­ cusses the various moral and legal issues concerning the Hitler with Albert Speer and aides in a scene from ‘The Memory of Justice.’ jf Tired of P ayin g Sk y -H igh Prices? A t South A u stin O p tical we feel that fine eye w ea r shou ld fit yo u r needs, not b re ak y o u r pocketbook. W e ha ve cut ou r costs by d o in g o u r ow n lab- w o rk on the p r e m is e s Y o u d o n 't p a y for added lab costs or added time. i r i n g fOt/r • f d o * * — '* pfumphan *• w ^ S o u th /ft us (hum O ptical Co. 10% Student Discount (show ID ) Fro* Adjustm ents And M inor Repairs Contect Lens Cleaned And Polished Convenient to River­ side Area SOUTH AUSTIN OPTICAL F in e E y e u e a r A t D ow n to E a rth Prices Next door to Pants South 4422 Pack Saddle Pa ss 447-2333 Suite 102 S I M W I e t f H W I I M I S * K k S o w n . P a n od O - II vc 4* N Odi o . s 03 g o t ^ *£:3Cfc S O I " 3 > 3 ^ V ) ^ r ~ : JU 5 j 8L * 5 S O D ^ Ca m Cep 03 u* r - I * & Od I Od O o^J; n c f*3 * 5 rm 5 > * " * 6* , ' 5 ^ 0 3 o £ h < - & j - . £ 3 ' s c c d , 5 2 ^ > Qts 0 5 = ^ Ch ^ 5 ^ 2 © C a SIO rn> t o 5 g g » N S * ° ® 3 * i c * . s e Q t t 4D> Q «* 0 Ii * IMI «► a t » Q « » 0 Q k » o ^ Q O ® 0 • e # i * s i 6 " 6 * 5 0 I S S * - ... ■©* rn i ® I * r @ 3 @ " i ss e ? 2 | | > » B 5 i C x » | _ "SMSI eo e * 0 - — ee=5 0 ,- e pee® P5SS s ; > £ f t rn S * - — > - ^ - . O £ -* CD O - * Q > GD I S 2 3 s f e e m _< /-. ffl U *D r 5 * 0 * o si.® § O sr I > 3 $ O £ 9 3 c ► "o J m > •< ITI (a r w o 3j > 5 0 ! o m > 2 DP rn ~ 5 X H I * £ C C _ rn 3D j ~ ~ o 8 < * 8 ~0 N> 0 QQ m 0 0 O A* >C i Q ^ . 0 + z -» 0 C O © O M ^ m 0 e 0 § 4 6 § © © © S > z 0 X rn 3) ff J h 0rn Z rn i c ? n | f ? r ^ >^8 i g g r o m 5 ^ r 5 | m ^ 08 C < m I s I 8 JO s > 0 H i fc * 5 a 0 0 © 5 ~ 0 " 0 6 * 0 i i ! ? ! 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S O C/3 3 "o 3 U 3 O CA 3 s r c r - <® C/3 "Si CU > 3 c > £ 3 it. <■■► 5 2- 3 o 9 CU E n ^ I g * S 9 ss 3 2. 33 w re Hope and for reassurance the stout Page l l ‘T A T & THIN. A Natural History of Obesity;'* by Anne Scott Belier; 210 pages; Farrar, Straus & Giroux; By Christopher Lehm ann-Haupt c New York Times Is it really so awful to be fat? It isn’t g re a t As Anne Scott B elier rem inds us in her lucid and com prehensive “ F a t & Thin: A N atural History of O besity,” i t ’s un­ healthy, unfashionable and som etim es even uncom fortable to be overw eight. The obese a re likely to die sooner, get hired la te r and be poorer, according to actu arial sta tistic s and surveys of the rich and successful. M oreover, it’s not only unfor­ it s also downright tunate naughty, or so the m oralists among us have led people to believe with their not altogether unreasonable assum ption that people get fat sim ply because they eat too much. to be fat, Still, there was a tim e in hum an history when it was fashionable to be fat. “ I am resolved to grow fat, and look young till 40,” said John Dryden s Maiden Queen reflecting the 17th Century wisdom that being young entailed a certain degree of fleshiness th e ir There exist studies indicating that fat people a re happier, sm a rte r and m ore in­ to p e rse v e re once som ething clined a ro u se s in te re s t And besides, w hatever the m o ralists m ay say, no one has ever lost weight by being good In fact, according to Miss Belier, few people lose their fat by eating less, and among those that do. few a re able to m aintain their fat loss for any significant length of tim e. In short, there m ay be m ore to being fat than m eets the eye And this is w here Miss Belier com es in with her sophisticated in­ terdisciplinary survey of the research that has been done on obesity in recent y ears For viewed rn the full perspective of hum an history, the so-called problem of o b e s ity m a y w ell be one of m a n s evolutionary responses to the way his en­ vironm ent has been And considering the advances that have recently been m ade in such scientific disciplines as genetics, en­ docrinology. physiology, psychobiology and anthropom etry — the m easu rem ent of the size and proportions of the hum an body — it m ay well one day be possible for the fat to get thin without self-flagellation. th e h u m a n b o d y , Actually, “ F a t & Thin” is considerably m ore than a generous serving of hope and reassu ran ce for the stout. Miss Belier is a physical anthropologist who received her gradu ate degree for her work on the body com position of infants. And her book teem s with all so rts of intriguing inform a­ tio n a b o u t fro m speculations about the reason for hum an th at have been breasts draw n from W illiam H erbert Sheldon’s fam ous typology of body build — en­ dom orph^, m esom orphy and ectom orphy — which seem s, perhaps because studies have increasingly borne Sheldon out, to have assum ed a scientific respectability it has not alw ays had to conclusions Still, if you step back from the m ass of inform ation that is woven into this elegant volume, you can m ake out a p attern that m ay just foreshadow an interesting theory of obesity Miss Belier isn t draw ing any g ra n d c o n c lu s io n s o r m a k in g an y prom ises, but — to oversim plify — in her ch ap ter on genetics, she points out that obesity can be h ered itary In her chap ter on geography she reveals that peoples from cold clim ates tend to be fa tte r than peoples from w arm ones In her chapter on psychobiology she describes how the part of the brain th at regulates food intake and satiety is the hypothalam us, and how people who habitually overeat behave very m u c h r a t s w h o se l a b o r a t o r y h y p o th a la m u se s have been su rg ic a lly lesioned And in her chapter cm ecology she discloses how anim als that hibernate lend to store fat in much the sam e way as do surgically tre a te d ra ts lik e th a t All of which is adm ittedly attenuated But it leads alm ost inescapably to the specu latio n ‘ p hysician and th e bioclim atologist F rederick Sargent has is a v e s t i g i a l (m a d e t h e r e m echanism operating to ad ju st m an s m etabolic juices to seasonal facto rs ex act­ ly as it does those of the tru e hibernators t h a t th a t th is m e ch an ism is still — and in our clim atologically operating even homogenized environm ent long past any real need we m ay once have had for such a m echanism ” And ju st as in­ escapable is the corollary speculation that fat people a re fat because nature, in her wisdom designed them that way today, What can they do about it in a com ­ paratively tem p erate world w here fat is frowned upon and thin is b eautiful9 Not a g re a t deal a t the m om ent, because a p ra c ­ tical and effective m ethod of losing weight perm anently has yet to be discovered Behavior therapy looks prom ising but not enough evidence has yet com e in But in the long run, fat people m ay not need to do anything. ~ By fa d Barton “ F o r , ” a s M iss B e lie r c o n c lu d e s ‘ d e s p ite th e g r e a t a r s e n a l of o u r technological inventions, despite all the refinem ents of our basic prim ate and c a r ­ nivorous food-sharing relays, at the c u t­ tin g e d g e of h u m a n h u n g e r it h a s , historically, alw ays been every m an, every ham let, or a t m ost every nation for itself And in a rapidly cooling world with its growing season and growing lands relentlessly w hittled down, the ability to put down and m aintain fat m ay yet turn out to be ju st as high a prem ium in the species’ future as it m ust have been in the In a changing c lim ate and species past a possibly changing ecosystem the case against fat and fatness has not beer, proved ” H A P P Y H O U R Moo. - Prs. S-7 30 p.m. Doubles for tt>e Puce of Stogies DISCOTHEQUE 3500 Guadalupe* 453*9831 UNESCORTED LADIES Seated at the Bar SO? H ghb a»ls/75d S h ak e © fin k s •Jflondoy TuesdayY l^ rte sd ify } T h u rsday} S atu rday car* i g s 'mi CciiteAt *>*•* 9K.mU.t 9am <»«m . f * SEXIEST fig u r e Cartiest <50 if. c m - r* X C \ r \tf I tw (jD upbtfr MIKE CflflTtST‘SOCAS*4 z e LADIES C O N T E S T win A ffttl a <*** a* C o h o l B l U o ^ B u r q e r s & H3EER b lo t,l 8 30 /'a U y m CaT^X iAT0 DRINK V O l i m i t s / t o * 1 * 9 Gals, OPEN DAILY 11 TIL 2 a m. Sunday S M U H3 EER (>•3o i i 5 3o MR. S E X C o n te k e * $ 2 5 i«* O CD * O CD O CD o n o CD S 3 CD * © 03 09 s f c/>

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S L -* -< 5' 03 rp re (k s fX3 3 T* C CT- ©■ s o O' 3 c © 5 °S- 2 3 - ^ f/i C 3 - > a x j Q . 2 . o . c ©• (K3 r - “ » M rt> o - O r* X ' c a . 3 r a - MONDAY U l l a g e s Novem ber 7. 1977 O KMOL (N B C ) San A ntonio, C able C hannel 12 0 KENS C BS) San A ntonio. C able C hannel 11 O KO EN ( N B O T em p le. C able C hannel 6 O KTBC (CBS) Austin. Cable Channel s O KERN (Public) Austm-S.A.. Cable Channl 8 © KWTX (CBS) Waco. Cable Channel 2 ID KTVT (Ind > F ort W orth, C able C hannel 9 f f i KSAT (A B C ) San A ntonio. C able C hannel 10 €D K V U E (A B C ) A ustin. C ab le C hannel 3 © KTVV ( N B O A ustin. C able C hannel 4 CD KW EX (S p an ish ) San A ntonio, C able C hannel 13 ACTV (C om C a b le) A ustin, C ab le C hannel 2 or 10 Page 23 M O N D AY (N B O MONDAY NIGHT AT THE MOVIES: 9:00 PM E S T.. P S T. *8:00 PM C S T., M S T . “ A s p e n ” C o n clu sio n . Sam E llio tt. 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' 63 w ° 03 S’S “ L I S3 x> (Kl 3 23 i S i- H to a r s ret) 3 o 2 ° to ^ 3 ^ J 3 i ^ 3 5X O et) W c . C . 3 3 Ps et) ~3 ^en et) S' 3 < £ S o *0to p i *™1 3 sr re to -i e) Ll a c- S '< aq . Q.-3 O 3 CZJ 2“ o•— ft3 £ C/l •H-2.8 et) *** •— 3 3 5 -0 s> a qo — 3 “et) 3- sto pl to 2 J*3 S3 3 " (ti (t r» o sr <7 3 et) 'n J - : to *-». 3 c 2 et) se *=- _, a s I si • 3 (Kl Kl s 2 - 5 - s ^ et e® _ 2 S'S & & ^ *-i 2 c rSI -< o t o 3 3 5 < S w in 3 o-3-^ i & 3 O ' S l | ^ v ; ~ 2 2 : 3 2. ° ^ X - ^ w et) OKI > 3 et) (Kl to et 6J J! £} b 2 S 2. * EL o '< s g J ?* 3> J I ’ ? ' 8 * S • p l ■? i 3 - ^ ^ r* * I to C 3 — 3 X1 P 3*et) _ to 2 5 . 3 3 err en c v r * 5 o c r 3 8et) C I ic < en et 3 3 3 SP ® 8 g* & 3 & 3 o S O § 3 to to <§. g 3 ST “• «-» 2, o ° - 8 (5 et T m i s WEDNESDAY November 9, 1977 O KMOL N B O San Antonio. Cable Channel 12 O KENS (CBS) San Antonio. Cable Channel 11 O KCEN NBC Tem ple Cable Channel 6 O KTBC CBS* Austin. Cable Channel 5 O KLRN P u b lic « Austm-S A . Cable Channl 8 © KWTX CBS Waco. Cable Channel 2 CD KTVT (Ind) Fort Worth, Cable Channel 9 CD KSAT (ABC) San Antonio. Cable Channel 10 OD KYTE (A B C 1 Austin, Cable Channel 3 € 9 KTYY * NBC > Austin. Cable Channel 4 CD EVSEX (Spanish) San Antonio. Cable Channel 13 ACTV (Com Cable) Austin. Cable Channel 2 or 10 P a g e 2 6 J © N E W S 3 a ) PTL PROGRAM 12:30 1:00 10:00 2 3 O 4 o Q 8 9 CE) 10 CD 33) CB 12 © © NEWS L l Q DICK CAVETT SHO W G u e s t S ly d in i, m a g ic ia n a n d s le ig h t-o f- h a n d m a s te r. 32 CD CORAZO N SALVAJE WITH THIS COUPON FRAME IT YOURSELF = 3 5 i £ e v e n i n g 6:00 2 3 O 4 O J O 6 o CE) 10 l l CD 12 © © NEWS 8 o M AC NEIL-LEHR ER REPORT CD BEW ITCHED I 3 CD REPORTER 41 1 O CE) i i PRICE IS RIGHT 3 © BEW ITCHED O 12 TRUTH OR CO N SEQ U EN C ES 3 0 3 MY THREE SONS J o m a r y TYLER MOORE O X f CD ADAM 12 8 o t h i s w e e k id CB M UPPET SHO W G u e s t M ilto n B e n e 6:30 7:00 3 CE) IO CB © EIGHT IS ENO UG H T o m a n d A b b e y 2 d e c id e to m a r r y d e s p ite c o m p lic a tio n s c a u s e d b y h is e ig h t c h ild r e n . (2 h rs .) 0 4 0 ? 12 © THE LIFE AND TIM ES OF GRIZZLY ADAM S G riz z ly A d a m s ra c e s a g a in s t tim e to lo c a te a n d sa ve th e c u b o f a d y in g c o u g a r, b e fo r e th e h u n te r s th a t a re s ta lk ­ in g it c a tc h u p w ith th e fr ig h te n e d a n im a l (60 m in .) O J O i f GOOD TIM ES M ic h a e l E v a n s d is c o v e r s th e e x ­ c itin g n e w w o r ld o f C B ra d io , b u t h is ja w ja c k in g le a d s h im d o w n a ro a d th a t c o u ld b e m o re th a n h e a n d h is "h a n d le " ca n h a n d le "A W o rld 8 O NOVA T h e T o n g u e s o f M e n " P a rt L a n g u a g e ? ” e x a m in e s h o w A m e ric a n iz e d E n g lis h is r a p id ly b e c o m in g la n g u a g e a n d o ffe r s a p e rs p e c tiv e o n its im p lic a tio n s fo r o th e r c u ltu r e s (60 m in .) ST CD G U N SM O K E B CD m a n a n a s e r a o t r o d ia 7:30 th e w o r ld 's u n iv e rs a l ll Q i i CAROL BU RNETT AND FRIENDS -5 O BUSTING LOOSE L e n n y c a n 't d e c id e w h e th e r h e w a n ts to b e fr e e o r tr u e o n ly to J a c k ie s o h is b u d d ie s try to c h e e r h im u p w ith a b ir th d a y b la s t. 13 CD SUPER ESTELAP M USICAL 8:00 0 4 0 8 12 © POLICE STORY A n o f f ic e r c a n n o t c o n ­ v in c e h im s e lf th a t h e d e s e r v e s th e M e d a l o f V a lo r a w a rd e d h im a fte r a s h o o to u t in w h ic h h is p a rtn e r w a s k ille d . (2 h rs .) 0 3 1 MOVIE " B lu e H a w a ii" 1961 E lv is P re s le y , J o a n B la c k m a n . A s o ld ie r r e tu r n s to th e is la n d s a n d w o r k s w ith a to u r is t a g e n c y . J O CBS W EDNESD AY N IG H T MOVIE "O n c e Is N o t E n o u g h " A la v is h s to r y o f lo v e a n d m o n e y a m o n g th e p o w e r ­ fu l, g la m o r o u s je t s e t S ta rs K irk D o u g la s . D a vid J a n s s e n , B re n d a V a c c a ro , M e lin a M e r c o u ri. (2 h rs ., 15 m in .) J 0 GREAT PERFO RM AN CES T h e R o y a l F a m ily " L o o s e ­ ly b a s e d o n th e illu s t r io u s B a r ry m o r e s , th is a ffe c tio n a te ly s a tiric a l p la y b y G e o rg e S K a u fm a n a n d E d n a F a rb e r re v e a ls a g ifte d fa m ily o f a c to rs w h o , e v e n at h o m e , a re c o n ­ tin u a lly u p -s ta g in g e a c h o th e r . Eva L e G a llie n e a n d R o s e m a ry H a r ris s ta r in th is 5 0 th -a n n iv e rs a ry re v iv a l. (2 h rs .) 1 CD M Y THREE SONS 3 2 CD M U N D O S O PUESTOS 8*30 X CD BEVERLY HILLBILLIES 9:00 2 J © 10 © O D C H A R L IE S AN G ELS T h e A n g e ls ta k e to th e a ir w a v e s to tra c k d o w n a k ille r w h o h a s th re a te n e d a n e w s w o m a n ^ life . (60 m in .) 9 CD MOVIE " S la u g h te r h o u s e F iv e " 1974 M ic h a e l S a c h s . V a le r ie P e r rin e A m id d le a g e d m a n in s u b u rb a n A m e ric a , fin d s h im s e lf th e u n w illin g tr a v e le r th ro u g h tim e a n d d is c o v e r s an a s s a s in fr o m th e p a s t a n d a p re s id e n tia l e le c tio n o f th e fu tu re . 13 CD NO CHES TAPAT1AS liv in g 9:30 13 CD CA CRIADA BIEN CR1ADA 9:49 32 CD f u t b o l J Q NEW S 10:15 10:30 3 © © ST ARSKY AND H U TC H —MYSTERY OF THE I WEEK S ta rs k y a n d H u tc h " L o s in g S tre a k " A m u s ic ia n ru n s in to tr o u b le w ith h o o d lu m s w h e n h e a c c id e n ta lly s te a ls n e w a n d u n c ir c u la te d c o u n te r f e it b ills . (R ) M y s te r y o f th e W e e k "T h e N e x t V o ic e Y o u S e e " B r a d fo r d D iiim a n s ta rs as a b lin d m u s ic ia n w h o r e c o g n iz e s th e v o ic e o f th e p e rs o n w h o b lin d ­ ed h im . (R) O J O 6 1 2 © THE TO N IG H T SHO W H o s t J o h n n y C a r­ s o n G u e s ts : P ilo b o lu s D a n c e rs . M c L e a n S te v e n s o n . (90 m in .) 0 i f M OVIE " K id G a la h a d " 1962 E lv is P r e s le y . G ig Y o u n g A b o x e r w in s th e c h a m p io n s h ip b u t p r e fe r s th e q u ie t life o f a g a ra g e m e c h a n ic . !8 O ABC CA PTIO N ED NEW S 30 © MARY H A R T M A N .MARY H A RTM AN 3 2 CD 24 HORAS 10:45 J O THE CBS LATE MOVIE "H a w a ii F iv e -O T h e C lo c k S tru c k T w e lv e " A s e r ie s o f b o m b th re a ts fo llo w s th e a rre s t o f a b a n d o f v ig ila n te s . " D e a th R a c e ” S ta rs L lo y d B rid g e s , D o u g M c C lu re T w o U S p ilo ts a n d th e ir o n e c r ip p le d f ig h t e r p la n e a re p u rs u e d b y a G e rm a n ta n k c o m m a n d e d by a G e n e ra l o b s e s s e d w ith t h e ir d e s tr u c tio n . 11:00 Ce O IN PERFO RM AN CE AT W OLF TRAP "A n E v e n in g o f B lu e g r a s s " D iv e r s ity o f s ty le s is c a p tu r e d in t h is ta p e d c o n ­ c e rt w h e re th e r o c k - o r ie n te d m u s ic o f th e " D illa r d s " is ju x ­ ta p o s e d w ith th e m o re tr a d itio n a l r e n d itio n s o f "D o c " a n d M e r le W a ts o n . J o h n H a r tfo r d a n d B ry a n B o w e r s d e liv e r a v a rie ty o f in s tr u m e n ta l s o lo s . (60 m in .) 1 CD MOVIE T h e R e s u r r e c tio n o f Z a c h a ry W h e e le r" 1971 A n g ie D ic k in s o n , B r a d fo r d D o lm a n . A p o te n tia l p re s id e n tia l c a n d id a te is ta k e n to an e e r ie c lin ic a fte r h e is m a im e d in a n a u to m o b ile a c c id e n t. 10 © IRONSIDE 11:30 12 CD EL SHO W DE W ALTER M ERCADO 12:00 O 4 © 6 12 © TOM O RROW H o s t: T o m S n y d e r. G u e s t A r th u r W e in g a rte n ( A u th o r o f T h e S k y Is F a llin g " ) (60 m in .) 3 0 © F B I . WE FURNISH • ALL MATERIALS • PROFESSIONAL ADVICE A ASSISTANCE • A COMPLETE WORKSHOP A EQUIPMENT IO AM-5:J0 PM DAILY MON-SAT h e f t WEDS. IO A M J PM limit nm pm m itm i f lu p in * Nm 12, lf77 \4 t 1700 WEST 34TH AT JEFFERSON • CALL 451-3045 M 00 OFF! BUY A BOTTLE OF VITAMIN C T H O M P S O N vitamin C C -1 0 0 0 w i t h ro se h ip s GET A JAR OF HONEY FREE! Limitmd OHmr 90 tog Reg. $5.95, Now $4.95 plus Fret 8 oz. Honey 180 tab Reg. $10.95, Now $9.95 plus Free I lb. Honey OHmr good w ith th it coupon G o o d F o o d Stores Good Nutrition starts here. 123 E. N o rth Loop.......................................4 5 4 - 2 0 7 6 9 0 0 W. 2 9 th St.............................................4 7 4 - 2 0 3 4 H O I W. 5th S t............................................ 4 7 2 - 1 9 4 2 2 7 2 0 H a n c o c k .............................................^ 4 5 3 - 4 7 0 7 ONCE IS NOT ENOUGH Kirk Douglas and Alexis Smith star in the lavish tale of love and m oney am ong the powerful, glamorous jet set in Jacqueline Susann's O nce Is Not E nough,’ based on the runaway best seller, to be broadcast on ‘The CBS W ednesday Night M o vies,' Nov. 9. T h e m o v ie c o -s ta rs B re n d a (in p h o to ), w ho w as V a c c a ro nom inated for an Academy Award and who received a Golden G lobe Award for Best Supporting Actress Douglas portrays a washed-up the m ovie producer who m arries fifth w ealthiest woman in the world (M iss Smith) so that he can continue to keep his daughter in the opulent style to which she is accustom ed to prom ote a tries The heiress h e r n e w r o m a n c e b e t w e e n rich m an- ste p d au g h te r and a about-tow n, but the young woman p refers a hard-drinking novelist M i s s V a c c a r o p l a y s t h e d au g h ter’s former schoolm ate and the m an-hungry friend, now good editor of a glam or magazine. C O N S U L T O U R l i s t i n g s f o r LAS T M IN U T E NET HVORX C H A N G E S A N O E O A EXACT AIR T IM ! § 3 £ b ^ 5 s > u - O *1 ? ^ ? o <5 o * * ► J S' 2 5. &> 2 p d .3 o * 1 a > IU 5 o c : 5 s I hS>3 5t-< Co * co t o OO 3 «•* 3- s- o o ■q o 3 t h u r s d a y I ■ ' V J B I M a J a s s t i l it1O 0) iw e e el 3 rnrn zrn r < r w t i 8 U r j z ,': ■ : ii l i b * \ r i i . l l K H l j f f i * '! 11 • i i i I i i 181 ' l a H J S ! ? ! ; > ' 3 .■; O rn Z CO n - < * ^ O O c o m co O > X I m 0 3 - < m > z n xo ! Q < * Q to. 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A ESTIV AL (G) Anim al'**;™*/D uck I Horse h Crackers / Soup'iyi*jFeathers*1 HIGHLAND MALL I H 35 AT KOENIG IN 451-7326 7 JM J» Int »T* S E E ! . . . W h a t happened- to ch n ape- theta- & ve& o n tarring Rte h a r d T h o m a s in “ 9/30/55” ENTERTAINMENT GIFT BOOKS on Safe NOW! WANTED WIT! NERVE! A U D I T I O N S F O R T H E B O N G S H O W is an all U n iv e rs ity showcase o f cam pus talent being held on F rid a y , N o vem b er I I in Hogg A u d ito riu m . U T students fa c u lty and stall w h o possess ex cep tio n al, un iq u e talents are m eed to au d itio n . Reg ister for a tim e in Texas U n io n 4.3 0 0 . P a g e 7 GREAT MUSICIANS SERIES Sponsored by I he ( ult ural I ntertainment C ommiltee of the Texas Union in c ooperation with the Department of Music C ollege of lin e Arts Kyung-Wha Chung Korean Vm lhm t Saturday, November 12 Hogg A u d ito riu m , 8:00 P . M . C K Tic ket sale* I hursd.iv N iivrm K r 3rd Si OO with C I t lf) n (Ne Iw rec npfst G e n e r a l !'u b li« I n k e ts w ill be .o ld at th*- tlcK ir $4 OO H o g g O f f J O t> w e e k d a y s N o c h e r J i a c t e p t e * ) i- w h o f a i l t o p r e s e n t C E C I D Wi*! ■ « charged < .eneral Admi-.'ton N o i ar n e t.t - o r tap*' re< o rd e rs l ur f u r th e r in t o r m a t i' rn ple a se p h o n e 471 5 l i d Presents T®ni?ht O n l y K A T H A R I N E H E P B U R N a n d C A R Y G R A N T i n HOLIDAY (19311 O n a a f Hm m a s t s o p h is tic a te d co m e d ie s a f Hm JO*. D ire c te d b y G e o r g * C a h o t ( P H I L A D E L P H I A S T O R Y , A D A M 'S R IB .) 7 rOO I 9 KIO p .m . J e s t e r A u d The Cultural I nlerfainment ( nmrmttee o( the Te*as Unton with topport (rom the Trow < ommrwton cm the Arts and Humanities and the National Endowment lot the Arh present the ELIOT FELD TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 15 PA R A M O U N T THEATRE 8:00 P.M. ( i t T i c k e t ' d i e s M o m J d v N o v e m b e r 7 $ 2 S O a n d I 5 r>0 w i t h e f ( I D s ( N o f e e rec e i p t s j G e n e r a l P u b l i c T s e k e f s a l e s W e d n e s d a y N o v e m b e r 0 - t h V O a n d $ 7 V I H o g g B o x O f f i c e w ill b t- C h a f *«-'! g t- o e f d l a d m e s s tO n N o < 10-fi w e e k d a y s N© < h e r k s a c c e p t e d T h o s e w h o f a i l t o p r e s e n t t ( ( ID e ? a O f O p e O f f a r r i e r s ■ e s « d e n c * A c l m l m M o n d a y , N o v e m b e r 14 ' 10 P M G o t f e ’rf nUjrrr,* y d is c u s s e s th e e a tte n t cra te o? fia n c e I av 7 fg, p V# * '!'•*' < r-f i M a -.fee f J j . S ’ » T,, C far -hr*1’ 1 IB *0 Speed a a. > rr, *tf\t t S C Sr!*-" Tuesday, Novem ber IS ■J ai 4 st Audtt*om st Paramount I J ‘Kip S t C O " J ' . I * *' r P 4tdCWO*/ Of Wednesday November TA f ' * . 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P “ * ° r> ? 2 : CT* A £ > W 03 0 o e >1 scr p p 9 nft) JU s s ft) A Q ^ Br =r ft) S) 5 3 3 3 A_ re o" co 3 -g 3 O c/i ft) 3" ct; ^ a c o ^ Bs > 3 C > c/J g ET- <-* 3 O - 3 n o & S n A Acr O re * g CT a; A 3 3 N) A OO Be=@e@ >S5£ I I 3* Z<* £ j m j l S g o O r E r ^ d o ™ Q 2 J o > o 2 * r ■h rn ^ *rn f| 8 O I > m m rn * ui (p w o —) w 3^ < -r 3 3 0 w a 1 ? 3 < m a o o A w 3 ^ = r J 3 ° i 2 3 3 o ® I H ^ (J J I • c 3 0 A A ™ A * A o “ ■ ^ 3 “ a A » A- A 3 A -J. w a < c a a o t f i sgg ® s * « * ® ® w ? 5 a 2 • co f hall mit beer und sausage * •» • 0 \ P a g * 6 E d ito r......................... .ray helmers Associate Editor ............... damond benmngfield Assistant Editors david rn bbs anton riecher Contributors .............................. ted barton mary day nelson duffle gregg hill tom kessler victoria loe geoffrey marks jane steig parsons mark pntchard Charles e ray jr mike stlverwise jim thomas jeff Whittington cathy zagst cover photo by ray helmers Deck der ShoRT TaIces Fag* M By M ark Pritchard comedo out * dramatic ova stew A Facmo a a oytess race dr ear *-<; « .--a t* -gee to become more human Dy Tm Salty n e w Excellent use of E.-ocean sef -g On Campus HO LID A Y ( IK M ) jateer A i-U jrv * 7 and 9 c " Monday Gacxge C u kor s sa c r * *:-e w o a com ady about a •'a n co n to rm *t D w , a.-am. * T 0 a rc c M -te r* a ss.**, m r ta r-.-, a r c tee-' b a c * sheac *atear-te Haobum THE A P A R TM EN T ( IM O ) 3 7 and 9 i s p ~ M onday Urvor ""a irt® Best = ctu^a af 1980 — -s B * y A aa* Mm star* .a c * ta n — c r ana S h e w , r -m iadY ariuraa s m -n u n d -g . r n w o n e - a ng ~® acara-® '-! *e v to H a n d * HEAR TS ANO M IN D S (1074) 7 p.m ., BA TTLE OF M ID W A Y (1 0 *2 ) -ew er AueM arw n 9 p ~ ~ .««ca? " a e c e - * m o o r* r > wa- 3 o o ."'a n a n a s w h e n snow d ‘*ar»nt -teens and Minds" a a r <— a n s a r, mov- sides of ct f l e n r 1 w a-* oar O'aaa'- re - »® tea— anc rn on# o* TW - S portrw t of M a * onty s . cess*. M am p M — on Mm or TV r b o o k * or -.a g a r ■-wa — • co m m y - o a » r ® ~ mad of m al t m * ic tatar raara B a r * of V awa. a Joftn Ford'* c o rr buSon to tee war after? THE D E C A M E R O N (1S72) 3 and 7 p m Tuesday Un*on T na ara a * o - p a t * ~ a . r e a * tai a - : 'actor P®r Radio Paaofcn; bas­ ed o f a a an at of baw d. —-oeava -aas LuSMy and unM ncft -gf> film ed 'alae * if * no "L a w Tango b u l m e e r m g M M *S» ie Am • you're rn Tm m ood tor ma! IVAN THE TERRIBLE PART I (1B42) -■ •o n "*® « p» 9 p ^ Tuaaday Serge- E- s e -S te -‘a - stonca s e x dteons durin g W orld A a r c c o r and * De show - -ie*! wee* ai me same • me - a d e dur"*g chaotic con- - a d e Tom '94 2-46 . s - 3 a t TA R G ETS ( IM S ) 7 and 9 p m Wednesday 3eter B o gdanovichs first film , paseo m p a t on " a * ® ' snider C ranes a - . tman about a sn Der at a d r re- - movie Stars B o rs Kartof? je s te r A u d io * am TH E A M E R IC A N SO LD IER (1970) 3 7 a d 6 45 p m W ednesday, j w An e a -y a a.-« r Warner Faaabtedar Tim patiemac an Amancan gangster moves and sea -g e m coma. perversion and co-- •rac* rn..•de' Fassbinder appears as an oily mobster Theatre TW O OR TH REE T H IN G S I KNOW A B O U T HER (19SS) 7 and 9 p m "-u rs o a y .-e a r-Luc G odard's cnaractenst-caiiy aunaakakc teve story starr­ ing A m y Ouparey je ste r A uditorium BROTHER SUN. SISTE R M O O N (1973) un io n 'n e a r # 3 7 and 9 i s p m Franco Zeffere- s youM -onentad Biopic o‘ St Franc® of Ass s err- songs by Donovan M A R A TH O N M AN (1976) 8 p m F id a y and Saturday Union Theatre Dustin Hoffman and Laurence 0 m er star in A am Goto m a- s 8 ' PP " 3 suspense story of a m ild-m annered graduate student * n o is pulled into intrigue w - e - ntem atona gangsters De eve ne has the inform ation ® ac - g lo the stolen gems Directed by John Semes.nger (“ M idnight Cowboy' FUN W ITH O IC K AN D JANE (M T T ) 10 IS p m F- cay and Saturday, Union "-e a tre Bar a situation com edy apout a suOurban couple I ja n e Fonda and George Sega a k o turn t o e me w -e o begets a c c t am e' —a - give up their m aterialistic lite s ty e A good dee (very Am erican) w - ch doesn't won* SU N D A Y. BLOOOY SU N D A Y (1971) 7 and 9 (5 p — Sunday, unio n Theatre aete- f -e n ; N e tw ork') Glenda Jackson and M u'ray Teed are nvoived " a ma 'om antic ‘ r a n g e Excetent perform ances by f neb and Jackson with direct o r by John S c h e s nge' Off Campus BOBBY DE ER FIE LD f'o * Triplex Sidney PcMiac* directed th® potentially sticky teve story with a grit touch (to ' once.' d o w rp .a , - g the schm aitt ana pointing up the gentle -..m o r of M arine Keller's perform ance (sh e s a good ,n the style of Diane Keaton; Yet this s r t a com edy actress CARRIE Scnhcnwa 6. ccses "-ursday at Southwood Tem E*Ce ant. film by 9 " # - D e F * ma Obsess c r " Sissy Space* cays a -ec'eaaed “ g h school gin teeth-g r I na i-ig horror w i t "he Bower * - : gets -avenge or- -ar teenage tormenters CA N I OO r r U N TIL I NEED G L A S S E 87 Nortecroae 6 . .v a - a grahtt beueve • or not to - 1 collection af -a"-d*~y ewes « me s e c .e ‘ You Dor? Sw c A. You if Go B k n d " THE C H IC K E N C H R O N IC L E S Norther oes S A - .eta g a tom a b o .' high achoo rn 969 U a *e s you wonder new ow soma*- ng -a a to oe before * ga?-® npetaigic value D A M N A T IO N ALLEY =Q* T n p a * Chgtte-*>>ed a e of a poetec*ocaust journey ac'ces the . - t e d State* to the prom-sec a d. A (Deny N v 'n e Tim conman-v pen ays » ow - rules * n a -snstormmg a good sc-ence-ncbon •up.e by Roger Z ea c -» r n "v ne Denaaty A compere east* of 'm e D* c-ector .a c k S - gm and stars J e n -v c n e e Ymcen> and George Repparc H A RO LD ANO M AU DE Nonheroes 6 " - a sun -ever seems lo set on rn® w-dery loved arf! Mm — it see -® aiweys to De play -g somewhere - town -otao® ‘or me oe'Tyma.nces of Sud Oort and Rum Gordon it concerns • orttBhCB c t a ncf boy obeessed w Fates star lh th® screwball comedy about a bnde-te-be who ta w r ova with a neurone Vatnem veteran I NEVER P R O M IS E D YOU A ROSE GAROEN N y T K ■ y i-i 6 a reworking af ‘a— a-- nsane-asyium themes th® Bim s given power by the p en . "hance O' newcomer Kathleen Quinlan Aho stars B-r Anoersson K E N TU C K Y FRIED M OVIE Nonheroes 6 Another pose menage or ones on the order of "unnei VNion“ t has ‘ ashes of O' >ence Henry G o and "The Groove r uOe son kiting The '2 warning signs c-‘ death") and boredom but I rn miies above th--gs l f v ou Don’t Step It “ TH E LIN C O L N C O N S P IR A C Y a —e-c a n a Th#«er Wooden h®tor-cai drama with the look of an educational turn, about me consp-acy to assassinate Lincoln and h a top staff M AR TIN Riverside Twin An enjoyable ;o*e about vampire movies by George Romero (“Night o ' the L vm g Deed ) The hero « a fairly normal teenage' with the unfortunate need to' fresh bteoc OH. GODI Fe* Tr pie* George Bums appears as a gentle, grandfather y God who picks assistant supermarket manager John Denver as hie new prophet Lots of good gags, not so be taken seriously Directed by Can Se ner A P IE C E OF TH E A C TO N Aquarius 4, coses Thursday at Vs! age 4 Sidney Dartier wrote, directed and starred in rn® comedy about con men who become socw workers Also stars James Earl Jones a : Bi Cosb y STAR WARS Capite Plaza Cinema Astoundingly we'.-done comtc-iike sc®- ce fiction about under­ dog ’ebe's who rescue a princess and attack the e v empire s space station The third film from George Lucas ("American Gra* "i") who has emerged as one of the most ta e n » c exacting American directors n years Greet fun V A LEN TIN O Village 4 Aith th® film, a -actor Ken Russell may have reversed his trend of m.dKing ash epics that fa at Me bo* off ce Dancer Rudolf n j- , e v s superb as va w -tm o . and w*-m costar M-che i t Phji-ps s awkward Carol Ka-® a httenoua A me drawn out. but the good pans surpass me tooheevy whe e to produce a -eatty enter - taming movie VOU LIG H T UP M Y LIFE A q u a n u t 4 A co w a rd s wea> f im thai seems to in® sn a we d of is own me •ea> -o s A n gees en»r*a»nm e-- -d u s try m ote "W elcom e B l * ’ De>cw s s . ® v nofhmg I . « me watered d e w - smarmy version we see here Apparently wee- meaning, ttet poor tecnnot,gh Thursday. Paramount T*®atre Awa-d-wnn.-vg. star-studded M GM film from 1940 Directed by George Cukor, the him stars Cary Grant as tea ea-'-usband of s o c 'e h g al Katharine Hepburn, who has a fling with populwt .a m e * Stewart Highly recom m ended FR EEB IE ANO THC BEAN Mon da. and "uesday. Dob® Screens a a - A lkin a -c .® -® s Caan star n th® recent detective com edy a which me o n e c t seems to be to d o w away as many people es p o s s ‘ D* ALLEG RO NO N TROPO V '.age 4 Ad-.ance P utnam says th® s a m ode— ranee* on me m uch- espected D®ne> m aste rr® ce of a - mehon, - Fantas® BARBARELLA F .ars-de "w in Jane Fonda's b g ores* m to film s ss a se* sym bol w e t much m o'e pa arab® tor m.od® A m e n e * * m a - ner radical oo X 's of atef .ea-s when she opposed m e v® m am war Th# Tim s a se*- onented science fiction com edy, sort of a "F ® s- G ordon of me e a t FA N T A S T IC A N IM A T IO N FESTIVA L Aquaflue 4. Texas Return of an - ated ‘m s nciud -g some Academy Award * oner* feature-length collection of state-of-the-art the M Y S T E R IE S B E YO ND EARTH UFO; FA C T OR FtC TIO N Southw ood Twin No (''form ation ava ab®, but the lites give one a pretty good idea. Closing 9 / 30 /5 5 Highland Ma# Cinem a D isappo ntihg portray of 50s sexual and inlen the lead ro e ated g vestee film its only claim to dignify He plays a cottage student whose life s changed by me death of ja m e s Dean Closes Thursday R O LLING TH U N D E R Aquarius 4 A portrait of tee seething neuroses ns.de 8 form er Vietnam POW who goes on a ram page against border crim e written by Pee Schrader (“ Taxi Driver” ) Closes Thursday BLAC K AN D W H ITE IN CO LO R Village * A graceful, engaging t a * of an unnecassary colon® wa De twee French and Garm ans in A frica during Work} War i FMS o f irony and wisdom , it manes its unsurprising m essage about war palatable even tunny Closes Thursday RO LLERBALL W ednesday and Thursday D o b * Screens James Caan stars in rn® toturteBc fantasy of what sports a f* ba I,* when merged w rn entertainment, blood « spitted rn a Roller Derby - *e game C E A S A R AN D R O SA LINE W ednesday s - d thursday Dob® Screens No inform ation ava - a b * THC C H EE R LE A D E R S ‘J anights for one wee* starting W ednesday, O oh® Screens B e ta '.e h entertaining dirty-com edy film made from tee toke everybody snows a squad of voluptuous rah rah* sets out to deb ■am the ,-p p o s i- j teem the night betorn th# big gam# G UM S M anigh® beg'nm-g Wednesday. D ob® Screens Anomer porn tom th s one more to tee po*# than tee above C U S H IN G U R A W ednesday and Thursday. Varsity "heater a.ten's nako-a ep»c which has been staged to* three cen lu re s according to the ad which tens nothing else HARRY AND TO NTO THE LATE SHOW Friday and Saturday Varsity Theater Two recent # - ® starting Art Carney, en underrated actor w h oM latent Anni uoaee- tor ’ 0 years before he cam e out in film s again Harry and "o n to " has Carney as an old bum travel - g ae ro ** the natron a t- a cat. " la te Show 1 features a brilliant scnpt and dirac- tom by R 'Den B r- lor with C a n e y as an oui s h ® detective w it stomach problem s who teams up with a flaky woman pteyad by Lily T vntin AN N IE HALL frid a y through Sunday, Dob® Screens W oody a en em erge* as a major Am erican filmmaker with tea serious com edy about rom ance k l tee Saltish Seventies Dtant Keaton « ta b u io u* a t his *:>»« tea w h o * picture « toted with s u r f honesty a • i* iii grave that t hard to im agine anyone not B a ku touched DV It Ona -af the beat toms o f tea year C A P T A IN S C O U R A G EO U S '8 , Param ount Theatre S onde, through Nev An overboard he-, boy s ‘-shed out of tee sea by Spencer Tracy who i m . —ax him tee lore of the see Victor Flaming directed ten 193 ' vers ion of Ruyard Kipnng's story A®o faMures Mteket Rooney and John Canadine Come out of your shell! helena’s school o f Bellyhancinq A beautiful dance an etching may t o exercise j s r I M M « s r A U YOU CAN EAT REAL PIT BARBECUE pork • ribs • sausage • brisket chicken • & all the fixins' $ 4 4 5 Thurs., Fri. & Sat. 6 -1 0 pm ★ ★ ★ ★ Serving beefy burgers, sizzlin' sirloins and the coldest longnecks in tow n daily. “Good things are worth coming to." Pflugerville exit just m inutes north on I-35 2 5 1 -4 6 8 8 Shellfish, that is! We recom m end ours. Live Maine lobster, fresh king crab, and barbecued shrim ps are all affordable feasts at Lobster Island Serving Mixed Drinks Now Open For Lunch 1508 Guadalupe 5-10 p.m . 7 D ays a Week •*** STAR RATING S ‘ m i our a n shop por unique GIFTS A m D/4 MC ING ^UPPUGS w SMONIKfc. t>kN«K'S K h o o L o f FOLK >AN H > g -i CD rn ■JO Iii?!. X b I S ^ B P?3S*§ r n O r n w Q 8 « ? * \ s * * * < 3> r > m • «CD X I £ “ V t a i - < o g i ? e » Q * 5 § § ? s e g SfS 55 - o s a e - e - e o * * i e ; g Q < e e « o e e o ? I | S §I © S a g * ? ! ? <* 9 * 0 w *■* o = e ^ e g O “ J p J - < o > < > I 0 c ■< ^ i s 5 O § h 5 r n s •OO » Q w w e - - 0 s e © m 5 J > m I c ? g ? 3 J 3 ? 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A UNIQUE AND VARIED SHOPPING EXPERIENCE E A SY STREETS UT CAMPUS 1 8 t h S tre e t M IK JR BLVD Sh»*e llwr i ^ H n O u i Ko * WHi M a ) G'**' Ii Journey's End 14K DIAMOND STUD EARRINGS I/S cerat fete! wwffct 5 2 17th Street O ------------------------------ *- EMERALD STUD EARRINGS 1 / 1 0 c a r e t f e t a l w e tffc t 16 »5 Z ^ Grafc baiit ai u L -------------------------------------------------- 1 rL z o# wmm ~y ^ I - — e . | 6 t h S f r M f mw i *u*f e* v»a i ■>■>»!■ & _ _ _ I 3 - 15th Street ^s> 3 ^ [ O ' « SAPPHIRE STUD EARRINGS I 5 caret fetal weiyirt Singles or Pain Available B O O K S Easy Access Easy P a rk in g offer expires Nov. 12, 1977 •05 B WEST r f -ry *76 OHS A unique ft varied shopping experience 1 7 1 6 S on A n to n io 472-0102 * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * 404- W15™ 474-T292 MON-^AT TO^-S** 9 1 L V C R 7 C W e t R Y \ _ ^ QUATenAtAN c o t t o n t a b a i e tnporreo Bore? B A ^ K C T ? & t i n ? u r H o a l r c u i t e r B Corner of f*an A n ton io and I Bib I TI 3 £an Antonio M A R C I A T O M M A R C Y D E L O R I S f e / r / o r O / I i p p i 4r8-D079 f f la r r ia f r la u g h lf r , J r o p . o rr e noee WITH CCCL ING \MI9t E CLOTHES .< / 1 d r r m n JI) 1 g n b m rd in r /o ' it r n I Of t ■ m o o / P r n d l r t n n •Airn m / A p*/mmm / m n t i k t m o m n Sc t m o k m g fm r k r t* Ut • p i n t r d fr o m i fu n * V I ' S M b o s * I i b u t t o n m d o r p m n it 4 f t U r n , / n r l r , M i l l n ig h I got* rn S ro b * ’ • b n d r d A W tfu tn r d * u n t r r * r g r t r l* d M u r J m r n th tr c t A f u t u f f t Im Im Im m vi+nt IM >jrewewewewewewewewewewewewewewewewewewewewww*wew*ti*wewewewewew***wrj r j -yo o >o —* 8 <** a> 3 3 a s r 01 o o I X 3 3 D < O 3 -♦-►3 f» C S' J X3 S Ss ssK sO Ch o xj o ,-T> ^0 3 & _ 3 3 o Ut £ S § S * 9 I 3 lilf- rf * *» * ? .. * $ 3 r*f3- I c I • — s i ! t ■' S ? ! * 3 3 lf I11J „ S < W H S H a nj a vj , S M - — ? • in „ _ a _ 6 ? a 3 f t 1I 3 Ss I(pf. i. 3 i d ! “ 3 * J h 5 Ifs?;! ii|I* a I o j !R I I aCX 0) I a CD CD CD CO LO* £ r n “0 CD I L o- s 3CD 13 o CD cH i T I I < < NiH I 0 } J L * I i i r<| tft I * n § 8 8 A ' .6 rn ^ ,1 M g I * Pi 5 a I • w# «* IT iii 5* J Hit J f "8 to Q 3 > <__ C 09 Q <9 3 Q TI 3 ■* WI 0> • (6 N (3 images W e d o n ’t live in an ivory tower, you know. In fact, we can p ro b a b ly be reached by telephone m ost any day. W e ’d love for you, the a v e ra ge and abo ve- av e ra ge Im a g e s reader, to give us a call (we know y o u ’re out there). Just pick up the ph on e or d ro p u s a letter and tell u s your ideas, su g g e stio n s, com m e n ts, d islik e s and your favorites. W e ’re su c k e rs for an objective viewpoint, and that’s what we want from you. W e ’ll h a n g onto your every word. G ive u s a call. W e ’re listenin’. 471-4591 Im a g e s Draw er D, University Station Austin, T e x a s 78712 NIGHT PEOPLE... v* ■-L jfflP ' S h - \y v The perfect gathering place where the art of conversation is alive and well. For late diners, a full dinner menu until midnight, snackers and sippers till 2 a m.! Restaurant FREE DELIVERY C a m p u s 476 7181 3010 Guadalupe • 476-0283 FOOTGEAR Fabu lou s Special of the Week R E G . P R IC E $38.00 T H IS W E E K $29.00 FOOTGEAR H o m e o f R o o t s . 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