R?*£3P!3E5S3S!K >r-^*^^».^'."!«i-i*t^ii!i4S9HMI Hank Aaron D$fkrjp 4«v­ 'As Baseball's Homer JCmg 2-#tK.u'V 5 (See Story, Poge 7.) , M, -v. W # X \ ,\ V y 1M£ IWLI^II^.I.^iii 1I.MIA.IV)»LI'U II FL LL i k: S' j Vv. S€2S£ XX '8CIT»a rf ftek. jk 9£K*t x°9 '0^ •3UI <2931133 OTTIO^^TW Newspaper at The University oi exas at Austin *?«& S'4^^V J" J"fwwi*hJ, &* i H. V'A ma Vol. 73> NO. 168 Ten Cents Austin, Texas, Tuesday, April 9, 1974 Fourteen Pag* 71-4591 3 »KH.r­ am • V.' H Memos to Senate WASHINGTON (AP) — The White House made atotal Testifying before a joint session of three Senate sub­331 in taxes owed in 1966 alone. Other years for whidh effort dating from the first days of the Nixon ad­committees investigating the extent of covert govern­.•deficiency figures were given showed much smallerministration to use the Internal Revenue Service and ment intelligence operations^ Weicker also produced totals. other federal agencies to control its political and documents indicating the White House had a strong in­Specific comparison tax audit information also watfideological opponents, Sen. Lowell P. Weicker said Mon­ terest in the tax problems encountered by presidential > supplied the White House onentertainers Prank Sinatra, day-- , friertds, evangelist Billy Graham and actor John Wayne.; Sammy Davis Jr., Fred MacMurray, Peter Lawford,Weickler, R-Conn.; made public & flood of memos WAYNE HAS sent a telegram to Weicker saying he i;-Jerry Lewis, Richard Boone, and on Lucille Ball and her which he said showed the systematic abuse of the IRS, never asked for or received IRS favors. husband, Gary Morton, the memos showed. starting with the creation in 1969 of 9 secret task force Weicker advised Wayne in a telegram to take hiscom­Weicker said the IRS memo on, the formation of the'to collect tax information on stalled activist groups. plaints to the White House and said he was sending the special intelligence task force discussed various meansUSING ANOTHER set of documents given the Senate actor the memos in which White House aides John W. -by which the tax laws could be used to attack what |tWatergate committee, Weicker detailed what he said Dean III and John Caulfield discussed his tax dif­ described variously as activist, ideological, radical,were 54 separate undercover investigations conducted ficulties. . militant or subversive groups. * for the White House by retired New York City detective Weicker produced what he said was an IRS memti that Thememo, signed by D.O. Virdin, added: "We do ndtAnthony T. Ulasewicz. showed that Ronald Reagan, now California's wa(it the news media to be alerted to what we are They included three separate and unsuccessful Republican governor, was assessed $13,091 in taxes attempting to do or how we are operating because dis* -Hank Aaron Juts Homer 715, attempts to link Sen. Edward Kennedy, D-Mass., to owed for the years 1962 through 1965. closure of such information might embarrass the Ad-. "wild parties" in California, Hawaii and Arizona. -THE MEMO showed Wayne had been assessed $287,-' ~ ministration:.." -~;r „. Osorio, Carr Cleared Defense .UiwyerX©ilt®i^i||fts In Stock Fraud trial DALLAS (UPI) — Former high ranking practice. Against Texas officials Waggoner Carr and John "I don't know that I would ever run for Osorio and Dallas businessman David office'again, but if I do, then the voters SAN ANTONIO (AP.) — A defense lawyer for a 17-year-old and killed them. ' Hoover all were acquitted of conspiracy will decide," Carr said. "A man my age youth charged in the Houston mass murders said Monday an Another defendant, David Owen Brooks, 19, is charged with and fraud charges Monday in cases spring­ has to think first of supporting his assistant district attorney had conspired with a now-fired jail four of the deaths and is due to be tried after Henley. Brooks ha? ing from the 1971 Sharpstown stock scan­ family." guard to incriminate his client. been subpoenaed as a defense witness in the current hearing and dals. The allegation by Will Gray came at a pretrial hearing which was being held Monday in tta Bexar County jail, Sheriff Bill;Osorio, former Texas insurance com­ "I feel that I have now cleared opened here Monday for Elmer Wayne Henley, who is charged Hauck said. X . . 'I missioner, said, "I am pleased that the name," Carr said. my with murder in six of the 27 deaths of teen-aged youths discovered jury was able to work through the per­ HENLEY'S CASE was transferred here in January by Houston: f last August in Houston. jured testimony in this case and were able Dist. Judge William Hatten after a three-week pretrial hearing-s The trial was shifted to" San Antonio on a change of venue. Dist. A former attorney general of Texas, he to reach a nojt guilty verdict." Gray said he would ask Judge Dial who got the case here Qi) a f Judge Preston Dial has not set a trial date. was found not guilty of four counts of change of venue, to transfer itoutof San Antonio. Gray saig tHere § GRAY TOLD the judge that he would attempt to proveTuesday fraud, conspiracy and filing false reports was-just as much prejudiced publicity here as in Houston. OSORIO is free on an appeals bond from that ex-jailer Robert Weidner conspired with Don Lambright, a to the U.S. Securities and Exchange Com­an AmariTio court conviction in 1 Dial Monday heard Arguments by the state and the defense on mission . Hoj^on gssistaoi ^tj-ict attorney, .to gatlj? t «ihe^dmissibilityt^ffl4ae{1ieia4'and'one writtfemjtatemeBtettenleySharpstown-related matters'Another case* prosecpftoii. j ; '"" following,fiis arif&tlOTi" Afiagainst him also is pending in Houston, '-r-The indictments were politically tten ruled that the statements motivated, he said again Monday after the site of the collapsed empire of Frank lawyers and passed it on to Lambright. Lambright denied Gray's Sharp. voluntarily given but did not say if they met Texasrequirements < , eight-man, four-woman jury returned its allegations. v for introduction to the jury.Under Texas law, oralconfessions, to ? verdict to be read by U.S. Dist. Judge Gray said he might also put Henley on thestand to testify about Hoover, the businessman charged with be admissible, must lead police to physical evidence. Robert M. Hill. the alleged incident. one count of fraud, said he was "grateful" Warmer, i . WEIDNER WAS fired as a guard at the Harris County ONLY FOUR OF the nine oral statements are directly con­ THE JURY had deliberated 14 hours at being found not guilty. (Houston) jail after he was indict$d in an unrelated sodomy case nected to the victim in this case, Charles Cobble, 17, whose body ­ Saturday and Monday, capping a three- Warmer temper­ involving another prisoner. After he was fired it was learned that was found along with those of 16 other victimsin a boat shed near|week trial in which the government had in­Joseph Lawitz, a maintenance engineer, atures and fair skies Weidner had posed Henley for a photographer in his jail cell, then Houston. • : / troduced hundreds of exhibits and called was foreman of the jury which heard the sent the photos to a California lawyer. Vance set off a reaction fron> thedcfjwt when he told of a plan j numerous witnesses. complex case in Judge William M. Taylor are forecast for Tues­ Gray said he expected also to fHe a hidYion for a change of to bolster one of the-oral statements gtel^y-gave to officers with •Jr.'s court. Lawitz handed the verdicts to day, with southeast­ venue Tuesday. some new evidence. The indictments against Carr were Judge Hill, substituting for Taylor, who erly winds 6 to 16 Monday .Dist. Atty. Carol Vance of Houston presented In the Houston hearing two Pasadena detectives testified handed down by a grand jury at a time had been called out of the city Monday on testimony "by Pasadena detective Sidney Smith about a piece of Henley told them of sexual tortures, suffered by the victims. when John Mitchell, President Nixon's ap­other business. • m.p.h. The high Tues­ rope found tied around two of the victims. Monday, Vance sAid the officers remembered, after that hear­ pointee as U.S. attorney general, had day should be in the Vance did so to bolster an oral confession Henley gave to ing, that Henley had also tpld them of a special kind of rope used ^ "turned the Department of Justice into a Carr and Osorio had been accused of Pasadena officers three days after his arrest last year. to bind the hands of the victims. The rope was exactly the same political machine," Carr said. fraudulently borrowing $880,000 on un­low 80s with the low GRAY OBJECTED to the rope testimony, saying Smith should kind of rope used by Corll's employer, Houston Lighting and ]He said he would return to his home at registered stock of RIQ International In­Tuesday night near have brought it up at a pretrial hearing in January in Houston. Power Co., Vance said. Austin and seek to re-establish his law dustries, Inc., and other counts. 60. Henley was arrested last Aug. 8 after he shot Dean A. Corll, 33, In futile objections to testimony about the rope Gray said ^ following an, all-night sex and drug party at Corll's home. The neither of the officers made any mention of this at the time of the ^ killing was ruled justifiable homicide. Houston hearing. "I asked them not on one, but on a dozen oc­ Police said that Corll was the leader of a homosexual ring casions if they had related everything the defendant had told which lured youths with the promises of parties, then tortured them and they said they had." Faculty Senate Requests <> Changes in TA Program - r By GAIL BURRIS recommendation was passed with only aTexan Staff Writer few dissentions. m A proposal requesting University Presi­In other action, the Senate voted to send dent Stephen H. Spurr "to act immediate­ 13 three proposals concerning ethnic ly to correct inequities" in the teaching minorities back to the Committee on* m assistant program was passed Monday by Showcase '74 Opening Today Minority Representation in the Universitythe Faculty Senate. Community. "We are asking for attention to a The first proposal recommended that a 3t ^ problem which is recognized by everyone, special fund be created for the recruit­University Showcase, with more than and is a great injustice," said Dr. James ment and support of ethnic minority facul^ 70 exhibits of teaching, research and w Sledd, professor of English and author of fir ty members. This fund would be separate public service activities at the Univer­ the resolution. from, regiflar departmental budgets and sity, opens Tuesday in the UnionHe explained that TAs are required to would be used in addition to normal., Building. ^ teach two courses and take three graduate recruiting practices. The theme for Showcase '74 is "Fan­courses, and "that's an overload." tasy, Fact and Future," illustrating m The recommendation did not specify DR. IRA ISGOE, professor of psy­that through yesterday's imaginationsolutions to the problem, although Sledd chology and education and director of the and today's research comes said the obvious solutions were to reduce Counseling-Rsychological Services tomorrow's reality.. the number of hours TAs teach or the Center, said,/"I view this as an"affir­ Showcase '74 will honor 15 outstan­number of hours they enroll in. mative action. This fund, could be used as ding engineering alumni selected by"ALL PROPOSALS concerning TAs der risk money to attract ethnic minorities." the College of Engineering, who willpend on money, and only President Spurr Dr. Baxter Womack, professor of elec­open the 1974 Showcase with a ribbon-can do something about that," Sledd said. trical engineering, opposed the cutting ceremony at 11 a.m. Tuesday. He emphasized that Faculty Senate recommendation, saying, ""fhis is a clear "Visitors to Showcase this year will"passage of the recommendation would case of double standards. We would be put­see a varied and interesting array ofconvince Spurr that the faculty as a whole ting ourselves in a position of accepting displays set up by the Computationpeople of lesser quality." 4s concerned about the situation and could Center and the Department of Com­possibly result in positive action. The second proposal sent back t»£?..• 5real courses ' V; combine all ethnic studies programs.in an ( day. -He said "phony courses" are used Which -academic home" said Dr. Miguel The exhibits represent the combinedrequire no, >voi;k and thus relieye TA Gonzalez-Gerth, associate professor of efforts ,of University faculty and :v workload. Spanish and Portuguese. V students to display a sample of workHe also said iHe faculty has profited Iscoe said, "Asking for abuilding now is within their departments. Exhibits in from the nine-hour requirement by asking for trouble, unless you want a nice elude a collection of photographs from generating mo,re money from tuition fees little building isolated on 28th Street." 1840 to 1900, a 30-foot glider, computer^ 5 for faculty salaries. §p ' .Dr. E.B. Allaire, professor of terminals and a sailplane. } . ~lmu,; DR. PHILIP SCHMIDT, Assistant philosophy, said, "It's dangerous to Showcase '74, which is open to the*, . prolgssor,of mechahi<;a|l engineering, said, propose a center which implies the pur­public without change, Will continue"Our TAsj^riri the front-line troops. They poser of recruiting minorities to this un» through Saturday. • •-- • ' -4T*xch> Sfoff Ptwtebffoul Colap* Jav« mor^ out-of-class responsibility for' rversity < is) to study themselves." ftudents than jpitlpfessors." . •*. Gonzales-Gerth denied that they were Showcase glider is carried to the Union Building to hang from the celling*A motion 1to setup a committee to study trying to Segregate minorities in an Ethnic < ­ ft defeated, .and was di th^.^ Studies Center^ - •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••( I Wi> MS& %•?& #4i, Committee Ternus^ Informationmf 1* %Park and Ride Tb* Te»as Stnd< i Attack the "pootaad ride" «pw*teMWMlailmjM Ptffl&afioM tW) -.Kjfca* «»famnrdnr** —r*wt*.*»« .pointed a task force to ,^:ta endnate the system, Joe Tern**, (Erector of the Urban Investigate the validity and W-TmmpmUtkm Department. said Monday. enforceability of the trust "We fed like it needs to be in effect two to ibiM ia0Qjjg$ agreementregardingade- III before any serious change*should be made," be said. ?, -jr quacy of consideration Approximately CO people a day have been riding the live tendered to TSP, Inc., and Maes, a disappointment to the department, wbicb had expected I other iegiatl qaestions," 109 passengers daily. ' ~ minutes from the board's last "Mmg in the twinee area ismt» oiiieai o Asctnras -4 meeting' state. say, in Dallas," said Teams. TSP did hot,contrary toThe He said be feels that President Ntxoo's statement that the Texan'sMonday report,select energy"crisis'' has now become a "problem" is another factor the task force to investigate hi the system's slow acceptance, because much of the public the feasibility of legal action does not believe that energy problems exist. agaiiist the University System Ten** said that educating the poWic about the benefits of the Board of Regents if"park and ride" program will solve many of its problems. negotiations on the student To acquaint Aostinites with the system, the department has services fee controversy fail. begun a publicity program with a strong news media emphasis. Also, the chairperson of the Sarveys for possiblyimproving theexistingsystem will begat committee is Sarah Schatt­ next week. A similar program for Sooth Austin also is being man, not Councilman Bobconsidered. • —T«M* Staff HMI* bf "Park and ride" buses leave from the Fox Twin Theatre Binder as reported Monday. parking lot every 15 minutes between 7 and 9 a.m. and retnrn Binder is a member of the Parkl andriders are not as plentiful as hoped. between 4 and 6 p.m. committee along with John A total of six stops, are made in the University and Capitol Bender, Ronnie Franklin and Mike Wilson. areas and downtown. -Texan Staff Ptwt* by David WM Faresare30cents each way,and parking isfree.Commuters The Texan regrets the may purchase monthly passes for $10 that may be; used on all some are finding it convenient. •;* errors. transit lines. SENIORS-April 12 Anti-Monopoly Is the Deadline For Purchasing Vs. Monopoly Your Cap & Gown By Zodiac News Service First there was -'Mcnopoty/' die game for the whole family, and now there's "Anti-Monopoly." The Computer Industry Association Co. of Encino, Calif, has come out with its own game to challenge the favorite from Parker Brothers. In "Anti-Monopoly," players don't build hotels or acquire railroads: They "Trustbust." The Grimier is the one who spends the least amount of money to obtain the most antitrust indictments. ^ Study in HADf In The Sporting Goods this Summer CLASSES: JUNE 17 — JULY 22 Dept. On The Street Floor A/»nropoi097 * Art History • ttilitn Ctrtmraf C«*tet. Jt . Di'ector Onflow frw parking witbjbrehaMtf 12»r -WSftf&Q C<3i*rt;"06l06 ~ nor*. {203} 527-3151. Ext. 218 (•nkAmtrkord IMasttrcharg* W*kom« use It'll makedentsin We've been telling you for some time To tellyouthe truth, we'vefound that the now how great it is to use Pocket pictures best thingto use is the great old American totpostcards Allyou'vegot todo, wesaid, fountainpen. It willhelp you save face is address the picture, put oo a 10e stamp and write a little something on the back. With what? Goodquestion. If you Write with a ball-point pgn,press lightly so you" won't make creases inthe front of the picture. If youuse a felt-tippen, be sure to let theink dry, lest the words smear. Six models to choose front Prices start at less than $23 Kodak pocket Instamaticr cameras. '££•4 1' Dr, Kenneth W. Prescott, a the art department faculty, professor in an inter­Ford Foundation executive, said Prescott "has the widest disciplinary program at Tem­was named chairman of the possible knowledge about U.S. ple University. University Department of Art studio art.'' He is an art consultant to Monday by Dr. Peter Garvie. Although formally educated the Kennedy Galleries in New dean of the College of Fine as a zoologist, Prescott has York City and is a former con- Arts. worked in the field of museum sultant to the Harry S. Prescott, program officer art for the East 20 years. Truman Library Museum and of the Ford Foundation's Divi Prescott has been director the Washington and Lee sion of Humanities. and the of the New Jersey State University Museum. Arts, will succeed Prof. Ralph Museum, managing director Prescott recently conducted White, acting chairman of the of the Academy of Natural a survey for the Ford Founda­ department, on Sept. 1. Sciences of Philadelphia, tion on the teaching of studioGarvie, who made the an­" director of the Kansas City art in the United States which nouncement at a meeting of (Mo.) Museum and adjunct resulted in the-foundation's adoption of a program of -TO PLACE A TEXAN massive financial support for studio art in private and CLASSIFIED AD public art schools. He is the author of several CALL 471-5244 books on art and ornithology. Kenneth W.Prescott The Center for Asian Studies & T^e School of Architecture present a public lecture (illustrated with slides) by UT Interaction Committee will present MR. C.P. ANDRADE An Informal Discussion with on Jacques Barzun "Urban Forms and the Environment " " University Professor and Planning for the Greater Calcutta Former Provost of Columbia Metropolitan Region in India" University BEB 52 Friday, April 12 at 1:00 Sign Up 3:00 4:00 P.M. Union Rm. 342 April 9, 1974 ... the telephone, that Is, and call 471-1865.. for complete details and all the information about the big ROUND-UP EDITION THE DAILY TEXAN to be published FRIDAY, APRIL 19, 1974 • FRATERNITY CARNIVAL • MARATHON DANCE . • UT SWEETHEART • COWBOY BBQ • ROUND-UP PARADE • PLUS MUCH, MUCH MORE! Call THE DAILY TEXAN Advertising Department at 471-1865 and let one of our Adv. ; salespersons help you plan your ad for this special ROUND-UP EDITION. You will reach >, well over 36,000 potential customers. Your ad should be in there ... give us a call todayl •; M- Page 2 Tuesday, April 9, 1974 THE DAILY TEXAN .v , ,ur4n'v ­ * J T^T & ^ u * h* 7 "•BP" »+=« &5lS — ... •-:../y?^h.<, W a.' :^vM*«w^s '• ' r-QfS m-^i Si By PATSY LOCHBAUM f?S University System failure to "I log dates, hours flown,Texan Staff Writer •$>£ keep a complele flight log on destinations, type of equip­Qne of two University/^ the plane leased from Univer­ment and the Office that re­ pilots, Lawrence "Johnny"! sity of Texas Foundation, Inc. quested the flight"Madsen, said Monday he had — a possible violation of the Madsen, a pilot since 1969,"no reason to doubt" System current appropriations bill — said he flies an average of usage of one owned and one meant that all flight records four or five days per week. leased Beech Air King planes were in flight request forms "was anything less than what, or in the pilot's log. "Sometimes we make seven it was meant to be. or eight flights per day, and I "THE ONLY federal "As far as I know, even havp flowrn as many as12 days regulation to keep a log on a though Idon't always have the privately owned plane is bas­in a*row at a particularly busy names of all my passengers, ed on Federal Aviation Agen­time of the year," he said. every flight is on University cy standards and kept for the Because of University business,''..Madsen said. pilot's own use,'' Madsen said. System policy Madsen could Blood Drive To initiate IFC Round-Up Activities This year's Round-Up, April 15 to 20, will feature a blood drive, a street party, a car­nival, a barbeque and the annual Silver Spurs dance marathon. Round-Up is sponsored by the Interfrater­nity Council (IFC). A blood drive, jointly sponsored by Sigma Chi fraternity and Zeta Tau Alpha sorority, will start the week-long activities. The drive will last from 3 to 6 p.m. April 15. That night at 7:30 p.m., Zeta Beta Tau fraternity will stage a torchlight run from Mt. Bonnell to the University, i signifying the beginning of Round-Up. A skeet-shooting tournament at 2 p.m. April 16 will be sponsored by IFC. The open tournament will be held on the skiet range on FM 2222. A beer wagon will be provided. Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity will host a two-day carnival on its lawn, 2414 Pearl St., beginning at1:30 p.m. Aprl 17.At 9 p;m., Tex­ 23rd St.,^featuring live bands. A chug and pedal contest will highlight the second day of Sigma Alpha Epsilon'scarnival during the afternoon on April 18. At 9 p.m., Phi Gamma Delta fraternity will present "Hot Nuts" at a dance in the Womeh's Federation Building on 24th Street. Tickets will be $5 per person, including unlimited beer. The Texas Cowboy Barbeque will be from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. April 19 north of the Union Building. Tickets will be $1.75. From 3 to 6 p.m., Sigma Alpha Epsilon will host a street party featuring "Zeus". Hotdogs and beer will be sold. The Silver Spur dance marathon will begin in Gregory Gym at 7:30 p.m. April 19 with dancing continuing the next day. A 2 a.m. breakfast April 20 hosted by the Union will feature "Daddy Doo-wah and the Wadells" on the Union Patio. Activities will PIRG will hostapartyalThe BlKfc®t,725»W:~ -' conclude with the Round-Up parade at l p.m. Impeachment Committee Counsel To Present Lecture Thursday Albert E. Jenner Jr., chief Series. minority counsel to the House Jenner was chief counsel to Judiciary Committee which is the Warren Commission in­ considering impeachment of vestigating the assassination President Nixon, will speak on of former President John F. "Watergate" at 1p.m. Thurs­ Kennedy and counsel to the day in the Charles I. Francis Commission on Eisenhower Auditorium in Townes Hall. the Causes and Prevention of Sponsored by the Law Violence in the United States. School Board of Advocates, The attorney is a former Jenner's public {ecture is the president of the American latest in the year-long Henry College of Trial Lawyers and Strasburger Trial Advocacy has been a member of the College Council of Humanities Is selecting new representatives If you are interested in representing your department sign up for interviews in WMOB 206A Interviews April 8-12 WMOB 206A 9-5 p.m. JOSEPH BLINDERMAN, M.D. ANNOUNCES THE OPENING OF HIS OFFICE FOR THE PRACTICE OF PSYCHIATRY GROUP & INDIVIDUAL TRANSACTIONAL PSYCHOTHERAPY ANALYSIS BY APPOINTMENT 22001 GUADALUPE, SUITE 221 476-8217 ... 37 DAYS IN EUROPE: MAY 31 -JULY 6, 1974 ACCREDITED FOR 3 SEMESTER HOURS IN ART 309, 376.3, or 386 TAUGHT BY DR. TERENCE GRIEDER ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR DEPARTMENT OF ART UNIVERSITY OF fEXAS AT AUSTIN N« amount of book learning can substitute for personal ac quaintance with the great monument* of the European culture; Thin courw.Reflect* the belief that first-hand experience of ouf cultural heritage, under the guidance of a trained andexperienced observer, is basic to a genuine education." ALL TRAVEL ARRANGEMENTS MADE BY r j£-' • -• • •• -• • <-.I--.,-,, MERIT TRAVEL 2200 GUADALUPE fSECOND LEVEL) AUSTIN, TEXAS 78705, (512) 478-3471 '&?. for turthw informitton plmasa contact " DR. QRIEDER OR MERIT TRAVEL board of directors of the Lawyers Committee for Civil Rights Under the Law since 1963. Jenner received his bachelor's and law degrees at the University of Illinois. TO PLACE A TEXAN CLASSIFIED AD CALL 471-5244 IFree asms sgssfe "raw MM not divulge specifics jabout < *r County CoirinslssVbher University flights. u* Richard Moya-asked for and"To keep rnisinforhiaUon to received a one-week delay;•a minimum it has become our Monday in Commissionerspolicy to let information come Court action on absentee only from one source," he voting substations. ,; _ i said. "Flight request forms logging destination, agency At Moya's request, an using the plane and cost of the "emergency meeting" of flight are kept as a record," commissioners will be held at he said. 8:30 a.m. Wednesday to con­ If state officials need more tinue discussion on the sub­information about flights than stations. the System has on record,' Commissioner David they can go tothe pilot, accor­Samuelson moved to requesta ding to University System representative from each of Regent Frank Erwin. the three political parties "No one has ever question­ (Democratic, Raza Unida, ed me about flights made on and Republican) appear at theUniversity business," Madsen Wednesday meeting. The mo? s&fl. "The matter just has tion passed unanimously. never come up." Referring to legislative in­Moya said after the meeting vestigation into forming a he had asked for theemergen­state air fleet, Madsen said cy meeting "at the request of such a system might actually some of the other com­be less economical than the missioners." •, present system. He add£o the com­ "The flexibility of being missioners will discuss the able to operate on the basis of number and locations of the individual need rules out time proposed substations at the wasted waiting for a plane to meeting. "Some of the com­ be available," he said. "The missioners feel that we don't cost of lodging for the group have the right to determine waiting for one passenger's the locations of the sub­ meeting the next morning stations, but Idisagree," he equals the inconvenience to said. the rest of the passengers. Moya said establishment of "Costs need to be reduced, the proposed substations but I don't think this is the should be approved next week way to do it," Madsen said. if some of the aspects are Testimony of state agency cleared up in the Wednesday representatives owning or meeting. leasing planes will be analyz-Presently there are no ed when the new Hobse ap-. -absentee voting substations in„ propriations aviation subcom­Travis County available for mittee meets at the conclu­voters. Absentee voters must % sion of the Constitutional go tothe County Courthouse to' Convention. cast their ballots, t D. WYLIE JORDAN, M.D. Announces the opening of his office for the practice of PSYCHIATRY The Jefferson Professional Building 1600 West 38th, Suite 426 \ 451-5588 -FACT Union Ballroom April 9-13 9 a.m.-9 p.m. Freel (.BENIGN NEGLECT? UT STUDENT CONFERENCE ON LATIN AMERICA Conference Schedule Friday, 12 April 1974, Main Auditorium, Joe C. Thompson Conference Center 9:30 a.m. THOMAS C. MANN, FORMER ASST SECRETARY OF STATE FOR INTER­AMERICAN AFFAIRS. "DEMOCRATIC THOUGHT: THE LATIN AMERICAN • .. CASE" • 10:45-11:15 R. Escalante, Bolivia's Ambitious Targets 11:15-11:45 A. Lucas, Multinational Corporations and Imperialism in -.Latin America ^ 1:30-2:00 J. McDowell, The Cristero Rebellion of Mexico -A Sociological Approach 2K)0-2:30 T. Wheeler,^Military Civic Action in Latin America 2:30-3:00 V. Castro, Imperialism and Ideological Penetration through the Mass Media 3:15-3:45 K. Winkler, U.S. -Brazilian Relations 1961-1964; A Clash of Interests 3:45-4:15 D. Davies, Cuban Economic Dependence: The U.S. in the Past and the Soviet Union in the Present 4:15-4:45 R. Villamizar, Agrarian Industrial Colonialism Aspects of the U.S. Influence in Colombia ^ ~ ~ ~Z\ - - 8 p.m. HACKETT MEMORIAL LECTURE ;, "JULIO COTLER, PROFESSOR OF SOCIOLOGY AT THE COLEGIO DE , MEXICO, FORMER EDITQR OFSOCfEDADYPOUTfCA (LIMA; S-^ERU). FORCED INTO EXILE BY THE PERUVIAN GOVERNMENT^ "POLITICAL PROSPECTS IN THE LATIN AMERICAN FUTURE" JrT^Uim gg o« this day ••och«* me.£|how things are I ' ' - - ' being lovely,j •lysiv* minute by minute it go«t/ , >• it stoy* never the same J/t • with it* motion of heavy particular clouds . ' , I am one s,' v ' , • t 'possessed;* being in it Near the street thin branches weigh ­new clusters of mountain laurel r v '.V •' i." ' this day comes up to something ' new. Pale lavender presences r: " ^ the moment shadowed "pendant among green . leaves I try these ways to make ». the sun comenip. sun fall: to re -Call (looking to that red horizon what is " there is here — Michael Waddell •tt..-'sSv CELLULOID ESCAK Dreaded darknen close* On my *pirMA ;' 'like the predator stalking.I(• prty^-j ' Ilk* the'rabbit avoiding \ ikft •AVMAM#'* UuMMAII* ... the serpent'* hypnotic Sftorfc/ my eye* seek refuge:; from the part of self that seeks my doorn|fi|5 * way exht* to thwart the beast. Celluloid bandages' bind'the wound* from which my essence flows, ; Movie theaters become havens '• to hide in from inabilities t ° ' to feel; to cry, to be» 4 ^ Watching the emotions of others ' ' flicker on the giant screen becomes a spiritual transfusion \ Mf that sparks feelings again in me, Settling in the healing chair, I chant a moviegoer's p/ayer: _ Oh please, turn down the lights " ' so f can't see how alone I am -' — James Dunlap . •••. Information concerning cs.n> > -. tributioni to the weekly Ars Poetica column ihould be directed to Molly Stafford, 471-4591. i i ""V*. ' rK'r* \ Qon't wait 'til the tail end to qet in on Round-llp. CALL 471-1865 NOW for complete Info about the • ROUND-UP EDITIONm FRIDAY, i PRILJ9^1974 ' ,'.3-r^ I'AV :r 'ASi •r4 fi Pantsuiting ... It's a Natural • • . • .•'i'-i. •'i*. i / A great-looking pantsuit that Mays that way through a busy da), doesn't wrinkle, washes and drvs in a jiff! Perfect for Spring traveling and Summer vacations or school or tvork or just about anything. In natural tones or blue or pink," Sizes 5 to 13. $20. SPORTSWEAR, 2nd FLOOR •"s »• >C 3 ' i • 4 '&( 'fV w> $ ON-THE-DRAG 2406 GUADALUPE ®1 <«^%«i!'--Joes'day-.APrWA?974 WDAILY4TEXAN,fage 3, i>i Pi? mmsmmmmmm :f®:: <€ •comment wmm m m SfcSii. m \i «t Ik •') i 1 for the HL fill ^relation Foods "i-r. was !* -By NICHOLAS VON HOFFMAN to •m ' money, lots of* it This food company, it] e 1974 The Washington Post-King Features should be explained, grows, processes and Syndicate packages food which it sells to other com­ v On Tuesday, March 26 the Planning Commission's Zoning committee ; WASHINGTON — The peculiarities of panies, who then retail it under the labels| made what appeared to be a precedent setting decision toward the sur­ the Nixon administration are such that, vou see in the advertisements and the during the same period of time it was " JF 4 I vival of Lake Austin. The ruling came on the proposed 163-unit , ^ ~ •stores. --­bugging everyone in the telephone book, it "Williamsport" high density housing development, which would have The stimS involved^here^fte almost past "was also trying to put two of the richest located directly underneath beautiful Mt. Bonnell. After hearing men in America in jail for wiretapping. In imagining, but as of now it .s estimated that Hunt Oil put about $45 million into testimony from representatives of morethan 100 (Citizens the committee fact, it isstill trying toconvict H.L. Hunt's H.L.H. Foods that cannot be accounted voted 5-0 to turn the permit down. Zoning committee members listed the sons. Bunker and Herbert, who are ac­ for The Hunts, their lawyers, accountants cused of hiring private detectives to listen immense density of the project on the lake as the primary factor in their and private detectives believe some or all in on some of the Hunts' executives' phone decision.'As one elderly resident had put it, granting the permit would of it was embezzled by about three key ^conversations. have "opened the door wide open to the rapid deterioration of Lake., people in their own organization. ; The. Hunts maintain their innocence, However, no one has ever admitted the Austin." '• although the detectives concerned in this crime or been formally charged with it, -•" t NOW, ONLY ONE WEEK after thatdecision, Austin's City Council is to bizarre affair involving tens of millions of although boxes of what the Hunts consider dollars have either pleaded guilty or been consider a proposal which will by definition have a far greater impact on convicting evidence were turned over to ,convicted. Two have gone to jail; three, the lake. On this project the environmental outlook is less sanguine. the Justice Department six months ago. including a phone company employe, have The development in question is the so-called Wilding project located In the course of trying to find out what received suspended sentences; while the happened to all that money, Tom Hunt north and west of City Park. Wilding is unquestionably the biggest .Hunts have had their case thrown out on began to visit locations where the food building scheme ever to hit the Austin areacoveringan area of over 3,500 the grounds that, the evidence against company was supposed to have processing them was improperly collected. But the acres and including a minimum of 11,500 dwelling units for approximately and found no manager, nogovernment is appealing, so these two operations — 30,000 persons. The development's primary problem is this: as presently workers, nothing happening. An attempt brothers, each reputed to be a billionaire, planned the development fronts the north side of Lake Austin for about was then made to go to the old man, H.L. may still be brought to the prisoner's two and a half miles. The environmental impact of 30,000 people residing dock. Hunt himself, with the information that it in the Panther Hollow valley basin has to be substantial. One reasons the m The madness begins looked like he was being betrayed by some of his own, most-trusted people. The old J'i;, council damn well better consider. Wilding's impact soberly and well, or The story of this madness begins in 1969, man, it appears, refused to hear talk of it, j' when H.L.'s nephew, Tom Hunt, who also Lake Austin could quickly resemble Town Lake.., _ so a detective agency was hired to look •iis.. 'Some people go too far* is a senior executive of the Hunt Oil Com­ INCREDIBLY, NO EMPLOYE or department at City Hall has under­ into the matter. pany, noticed that H.L.H. Foods — no t«c; taken an impact drainage study of the Wilding project—which comes up This agency and several subsequent ones learned thatsix differentgames were for water district approval this coming Thursday. Instead the city has being run on H.L.H. Foods. Inspection of relied exclusively on findings prepared by the developers of Wilding. The the crates of evidence suggests that the firm, funded and owned by former Gov. Allan Shivers and a score of lob­ company was buying properties for well byists and legislators, promised The Texan and several others a copy of over the market price, with the average their impact statement on the Friday just passed. On.Friday, represen­being split between the seller and certain IT!!' companies which were no more than blind" tatives of Southern Living and Leisure, the developers, indicated they U The fatal flow derpinning of racism. In adopting class post-office boxes. Another scheme was to would release the study Monday. By GORDON STEWART JR. Under pressure from HEW, the Univer­Reverse discrimination isoften justified justice rathfer than individual justice as declare high percentages of the premium­ .On Monday Southern Living arid Leisure attorney Tom Leonard and quality food coming off the production line sity recently adopted an affirmative ac­as being a remedy for past discrimination. their rationale,, liberal activists have "developer in charge" Lawrerice.Smith declined to release the statement, to be distressed (that is, slightly damaged tion plan — including percentage goals — The fatal flaw in this argument is that it played into their opponents' hands. Arthur saying it cottfd be. "taken out.$ context.'' treats individuals only as members of a • Jensen publishes datawhieh he feels in--but stiltsaleable merchandiseXsellitaU?'­ designed Is increaseminority employ­ ­ knockdown price to a broker, who then LEONARDSAID thedocument ^originallydrafted involved an impact ment. Furthermore, an HEW investiga­class. The white males that have dis­dicates that blacks, as a class, are in­ — tellectually inferior to whites, as a class, turned around and sold it for what it was assessment for a 17,000-home development, which was Wilding's initial tion covering University employment criminated or have been unjustly really worth. There were also kickbacks, favored — are most likely those at the top, and civil rights activists become proposal. He said the statement does not apply to the presently proposed practices ( as well as other things) is currently in progress. not those applying for jobs or most in need hysterical because if he is right it under­phony brokerage houses arid such goodies (ji+i 11,500 honnes. The study, he said, is for "in house use only.'' cuts their position. This is soonly because as $185,000 spent on a 100-year-old pecan X, The obvious intended effect of percen­of promotions. And the minority job Apparently the city's Environmental Board has received similar con­ seekers being favored are most likely they have failed to discredit the type of processing plant containing machinery tage goals in affirmative action plans — sideration. Board members have yet to receive the plan, with the excep­ and certainly the goal of those who have those who have not been discriminated thinking which labels people as members fused by rust. By one of those cloddish accidents, the tion of. city environmental director Stuart Henry, who received it as a initiated the present investigation — is to against — at least by the same employer. of a cla& — in fact have adopted it. tappers were discovered, arrested and "personal favor" from the Wilding developers. Henry said he is not at give preference to minority applicants eventually convicted. The tapees sued the(including women) for employment. HEW Of course, there may be employes who If people are treated as individuals, liberty to release the impact statement, but did say the study primarily have actually been discriminated against Hunts for damages, and the 'Hunts and the EEOC have extorted similar plans whether blacks are an intellectually in­ concerns land use, but not "too much" on drainage into Town Lake. in promotions and, as in allcases of actual countersued for damages to their food designed to give such preference out of ferior class is an irrelevant issue.' The THE TEXAN SERIOUSLY questions the conduct of Southed Living AT&T and other privateemployers aswell discrimination, these employes are en­range of intelligence for blacks and whites company. Both suits were settled out of titled to a remedy. But to treat past dis­ court under a secret agreement in which and Leisure Inc. and the City of Austin. On a development that will as out of government Employers such as is the same — or at least overlaps almost r crimination as something done by the the Hunts were paid $100,000 by three of profoundly affect Travis County's Hill Country — and specifically the the City of Dallas. completely. To deny an individual black a class of white males to the classof minori­ their ex-employes. The marginal hurt job on the basis of his race's average in­ quality of Lake Austin — the city hasnot even consulted itsenvironmental ty people, which can be justly remedied by That is hardly compensation for what To make it clear why this government- telligence without considering his in­ board. To its discredit Southern Living and Leisure is seeking city ap­ favoring such minorities at the expense of was lost. Nor has anyone explained why, if compelled discrimination against white dividual qualifications is racism — proval for creation of a specialwater district, but isless thanopen on the males on the basis of their sex and race is white males is to ignore the fact that the whatever his race's average intelligence the Justice Department is slanted so far individuals involved are not the same. In toward crusty right-wingers, they went project's impact on the lake. The city council should u^.er a decision on is. Unless one approaches the problem objectionable, it is necessary to make "remedying" the past discrimination, you after the Hunts, who wereonly goingafter the Wilding project pending an independent environmental appraisal by Clear who if hurts. It hurts most the from this direction, genetic research are in factdiscriminating against innocent their money. The Hunts hypothesized that marginal job seeker who is deprived of an represents a ticking Bomb, ready to ex­ the city, or admit that it simply does not care what happens to Lake individuals solely on the basis of their sex it the CIA getting back at Bunker equal shot at the jobs he applies for solely plode at any moment. The bomb is defus­was Austin. Either way, it's long past time that Austin's city government or race — the very thing you are supposed­Hunt for his refusal to let them place their because he wasborn a white male.It hurts ed, however, jf it is. recognized that it is seriously questioned its approach to land use on our Hill Country lakes. second mpst the lower level executive or ly remedying. one's own merit thtft matters and nof'the agents in his since-nationalized Libyan oil — M.E. company, where Americans could hang ordinary worker who is denied an equal average "merit" of one's sex or race. The basic problem around and spy without looking too, tooopportunity at promotion based on his per­conspicuous. Maybe they're right. With aformance and abilities rather than his sex This preoccupation with classes of peo­Gordon Stewart Jr. is a student in the law story like this, ordinary explanations Flyhorn fantasy and race. Itdoes not hurt Frank Erwin. He ple rather than individuals is the basic un­school. hardly suffice. is already at the top. It does not hurt theHey buddy! Wanna go for a ride? high level executives of AT&T. They Oh, I thought we'd buzz on down to the Lutcher Center for dinner. I've already have it made. It does not hurt the had a hankering for some of that diicklin' a l'orange ever since the big boss' son or nephew who will be hired and bash when,wre decided to screw The Texan. Mighty tasty. prompted anyway. Whadda ya"mean drive? I'll give my chauffeur the night off, an' we'll This is why the "consent decrees" arranged between HEW (and the EEOC) take the Air King. It's a real beaut. Orange and white, y'know, and a and public and private employers — with a deelux interior. We're putting in a wet bar in July. Stewardesses, too. I federal court sometimes giving its bless­ met this little doll on my way back from the Mardi Gras conference and ing — are arrangements by which twopar­ told her that I'd ... Huh? Oh thank you. boy, another Cutty on the rocks, a ties bargain away the rights of third per­ double this time. Hook 'em. sons who are not even represented in the A bargaining process. An employer obvious­ AUTHORIZED PERSONNEL? Hell, I do the authorizin' around here, ly have incentive ain't that right, boy? Here's a pass to the Arkansas game. I mean what's does not much for protecting such rights. It may cause some the point of bein' part of the System if you can't show your friends a good psychic pain for an employer—especially \f time. You work for the System and the System'll work for you, I always a bigoted employer—to give preference to say. Just leave everything to yer ol' buddy. We've got this little system minorities. But a company's management (as noted above) has already attained the worked out, y'see. After the Legislature passed that bill sayin' we gotta top. The business is not going to be hurt keep full logs on all our flights, some of the boys got together an set up -—-Simon much — especially in the short run — by this University Foundation. A 'charitable organization' they call it. That hiring less qualified minority employes.In means they get to write off anything they 'donate' to the foundation. So contrast, a long federal court battle (or „ my pal the (wink) Anonymous Donor buys us another Air King, just like the withholding of federal funds in the case of public employers) is costly. the one owned by the University, but get this, we don't have to put down m Furthermore, if an employer has beenthe passenger list on the foundation plane. So let's go, ma friend. Bombe MM guilty of discrimination (or even if it has pralinee, here I come. not), a federalcourt is likely to see a huge, m The old plane? That's-easy, we're selling it this summer. Get a better guilty corporation arrayed against price y'know, after all the ruckus settles down. Why I wouldn't be sur­helpless blacks, chicanos and women. Thus, an employer has little reason to prised if Anonymous Donor don't want to buy a new one for himself, what fight to the bitter end for the rights of with his old one bein' used, for University business and all. We'll give him potential white male employes and pre­ msmmsi a good price, too. Bring the bottle. sent lower rung employes. 'Simon says ... "Fetch!"' NOBODY UNDERSTANDS ME like you do, mah friend. You're not like all those snotty nosed radicalsover at the University. Why when I came to Austin, they wouldn't have let them run the place like they do now. Foot­ THE DAILY TEXAN ball team woulda beat the orange and white into 'em before they cut their Stvrfenl Niwipmptr ml The Unlnrtlty ml Texas ml Au»Hn first class. An' doncha fergit, this is a university of the first class. First in EDITOR , ,..Michael Eakiri football, first in endowments, first in the Southwest Conference. MANAGING EDITOR John Yemma ASSISTANT MANAGING EDITORS Betsy Hall. Mark Sims It's not easy bein' a VIP, y'hear? Students just don't look up to wealth NEWS EDITOR winterringer| 'n' power like they used to, don't appreciate everything I done for 'em. ASSISTANT TO THE EDITOR ....... Ken McHam What's the point of bein' a VIP if you can't take your best pal down to the AMUSEMENTS EDITOR !'."";".!!!!!!!!!".!!David Dailey ol' Lutcher Center for a little Sole a la Nantua? SPORTS EDITOR . Danny Robbins Closin' time, y'say? So soon? Well, leeme go call my ol' buddy, E.D.. an PHOTO EDITOR . jay Miller1 To the editor: but also between administrators and tell 'im we got a little University business to attend to. The recent decision by the University of ; students, is one of the most vital and — C.W. Texas Board of Regents to revoke student primary aspects of a responsive educa­services fee funding of Student Govern­tion. Any attempts to hinder this com­ISSUE STAFF ment and Texas Student Publications can munication can only be interpreted as ef­ City Editor...... .....; . Mark Dorsett I only be interpreted as a reactionary and forts to stifle the educational process, and News Assistants Another week; another leak ..... Gail Burris, Mary Barnes overly defensive move on the part of the to assert authority where it should not be Contributor Sharon JaysonBy Zodiac News Service regents. asserted. Editorial Assistant. The Atomic Energy Commission has done it again: the AEC's nuclear dumping v . ,v , . C h a r l e s W a t k i n s I area near Richland, Wash., accidentally leaked 2.500 gallonsof highly-radioactive 1 fully'understand that compliance with If criticism from student'leaders and Assistant Amusements Editor —,.....................«,.Jim Frederick HB 83 will Assistant Sports Editor nuclear wastes into the soil this month. necessitate revision in the the newspaper hasunnecessarily made the ....... ..;.....bui Trott allocation of student services funding, but Make-Up Editor;. ...... The spilled liquid contained the radioactive ingredients Strontium 90, plutonium Board of Regents overly defensive, then -; .Nancy Calf I am not convinced that this recent deci­ Copy Editors....*...... v. Keith Hartnell. Rathy Kelly, David Rose. particles and cesium. their attempts to deal with it by cutting Kor people who keep track of such things, this is the 17th publicly reported leak sion bythe Board of Regents is the only the student government and publications Anne Marie Kilday I viable solution to the problem. Photographers „. -.•....Paul Calapa. David Woo I at the ilanford site since 1958. * funding can only result in a stronger The commission reports that approximately 430,000 gallons of hot waste have Student newspapers and student dichotomy between students and ad­ Opinions expressed in The Tirtaij are tffose oMhe been spilled accidentally at the Richland site in the last 16 years. Independent . governmeftts are often times skeptical of ministrators. -, ... * . eiiiior pr the writer of the article and are not necessarily and classified advertising should be made InTfcf* Building-J.200 M71-52H) and display advertising In TSP> studies show that low levels of radiation have reached the water table below the the motives and actions of, the administra­j Uhmc ui the liniversity administration or the Board ol Building 3210 1471*18651. , UcitentH ­ dumping area — and will eventually feed into the Columbia River. tion, not only at (the University of Texas, I will do whatever I can to re-establish The national advertising representative of The Datl.v The Daily Texan, a student newspaper at lite University Environmentalists warn that thesespills indicate that nuclear wastescannot be but at universities everywhere. 1 cannot this funding; and 1 sincerely hope the ol at Austin, in published ,by Texas Student Texan i* National ^durational Advertlslng Servic*. In?.. Texait JtW Lexington Ave:. New York. N.Y.. 105l7 stored safely: they point out that the spills are occurring today when the United help but feel this is a healthy attitude, ob­regents, will act quickly to reverse this Jliblicationx. Drawer l). University Station. Austin. Tex 7*712. The Oarty Texan Is publlshed'-Monday, Tuesday. ' I Tin' Dully Texiin nubst rlben t«The Associated Pre^ Th* States operatesand storesthe wastes of onl^ 35 nuclear plants arpund the nation. viously preferable to blind faith in the decision, as I feel there must be an alter­ Wednesday. Thursday and Friday except holidayand «xani t News Service" United Pre2 InternationalBy thenar 2000, the AEC plans to increase the number of atomic plants from §5 states quo. native solution to the problem. $0* <"• r prrnxfct August through May. Second?lass postage paid at flnd AMliac. New* Service The T«x»n to A nftinbci14rt th? to 1,000 — requiring many additional nuclear dumping ar£as. , . ' ^ Austin. Tex. AiwiK'iaUtl I'ulk'glatc l'reiiii. the Soiilhwest Joum*l!*ri> : New* (imiribulions will be accepted by telephone <47t-^ *"flKnuH jukI the T^Xan taily.Nrwftpaptr Aftsociottyn. > • According to theAEC, the areas where thespills areoccurring can not be used X newspaper is one of the most basic 45»1>. at the editorial office tTexat Student'l'uhllcatlans , ' v Ron Clower Htv.vrllng million* for the mwgpaper are4124th fcSelw i fpr human habitation or farming until theyear 2124"AD modes of communications, and a free flow, State Senator llutMing. basemenLitoori or at the news laboratory _ HojHt. l^lie Auslln BoOleirtirtf-l^ Nlivets, fllUQ N. llurnet l nVmnwHilraiion Building A41X). Inquiries concerning .jled Hud Trail and IMP« Ultwhdrte Blvil ' " •r of information, not only among students,-^ District# i--ge 4 T*jesday,j^pril 9/ 1974 TH& DAILY TEXAN •kr~ M, • ' -:r "• t. X 7? b \ y Quest viewpoint herd "ontf/ie U v I>V,. -'••••»V-.. -Mili:. .'•••••is• •'•:-.-^•':••' ' • By JAMES JL KILPATRICK the past 40 years, first became, less rural and the Hill, it was "with a sense niversary of the Declaration' II 161874, Hue Washington Star and then-in flood, this river oF /more "urban, Slid of KeTptessn^ss*^ that of Austin's great divide tlf*' Independence in 1978, the Syndicate, Inc. power has been channeled accelerating urbanization Congress contemplated the government will be spending Almost By PAUL W. HANNEMAN WASHINGTON -toward the White House. The created ; accelerating figures. This budget "breaks more than $1 billion a day, school district. without public notice, the movement began even before problems. When state and the 1300 billion barrier, lifts with no letup on Sundays pc Austin, Tex. ; since 1839 a racist communl-By the way,, do you know wliy 65 percent of Congress last week passed a FranklinDelano Roosevelt; It ;;;iocal governments failed to .the federal debt above the ty. Austin's unpaved roads are in the East Austin holidays.Wm Phase III of the Austin Tomorrow program v watershed point. By this continues to this day. Now, ;;cope with the problems,a host half-trillion mark, increases triangle? ...Since 1839?! ­summer, if all goes well, a with the Budget Reform Act, f'bf federal agencies sprang federal spending 136 billion Congress in Ervih's view, is almost completed. The citywide program Austin's white and middle or upper claiss Budget Reform Act wilfbe in some governmental bang. These agencies, amount es­has lost control. The White is touted asa chance forsignificant citizen in­expansion continues Austin's segregationist part of into above the first full operation, and the put to city planning. Citizens are asked to construction. Recently the new MoPac Ex­ _ power will begin to flow back ^{dealing with welfare, medical timated for thisyear, requires House effectively has decreed I' 3ST" relationship between the toward the House and SenateC'-^care, housing, urban what will be spenj and what define what they consider to be the major pressway demolished' the Clarksville black |30 billion just to pay interest -^4jt, legislative and executive", Historical process ^redevelopment, industrial costs on the public debt, and will not be spent. And a problems facing Austin and the goals they enclave between Sixth Street and Enfield branches will have. been ^ The growth of what Arthur*v^safety and environmental im-feel Austin should attain. At Austin Road (black generationshad lived theresince ^»V delivers the 14th budget Congress"that cannotcontrol significantly altered. Schlesinger has termed the provement, swiftly became deji5i.tr in the past 15 years. , spending, cannot effectively Tomorrow zone meetings the individual is in-Pease freed his slaves). The Interregional MS f;; The watershed metaphor isv "imperial" presidency was entrenched in the broad field Losing control control the executive branch vlted to participate in one of 10 goal topic promises to be a virtually complete bar to Remarkably appropriate. perhaps inevitable. Part of of government. either^; areas. Significantly, no goal topic deals with; westward urban migration by the East At the rate the budget is f* : •h.> Geographically speaking; this massive trend of power Sen. Sam Ervin spoke to the growing," Ervin added, "it Austin's shameful racism. • Austinites when the new double and triple Washington's river is the toward the executive was the situation last mo'nth. In A major step The East Austin ghetto and low income decks are finished. Oh, and thereisa newcity as;.' will exceed $400 billion during Potomac. Politically speak­population changes when the '• With approval lastweek of a area surrounding it are a systematized cage dump in town. .]' result-of January, he said, this decade. By the time the -ing, our river is power. For and social demands. Our peo-budget for fiscal *75 went to U.S. celebrates the 200th an-Budget Reform Act, the to keep blacks and ehicanos in a separate en­Situated on the opposing side of C.V' -Senate took a major step vironment from the white community. Interregional from East Austin is our Alma M> 4, *r-v., toward regaining con­The East Austin cage is located in the core Mater. The white pyramid of LBJ and the gressional stewardship. The of Austin and is surrounded on three sides by bastion School of Law at the remote edges, firing line * Senate bill must be reconciled 1) the Interregional triple-decker freeway, 2) with the 40 Acres to the west. Aside from the with a House bill, but the out­the noise pattern between Bergstrom Air . physical planning aspects, I do not think I lines of a new structure are Force Base and Municipal Airport and 3) the need to remind you that the UT area is an ar­clear. For the first time, the Coiorado River. Did Austin create this tificially created white enclave, a separate Oo* Ifonly the police would get... • ••. .ri*.* •••••• Congress will have itsown Of­situation? You bet it did. government and a racist institution, do I? "Jf To the editor: titled "We Love to Sing About' canine equipment favorably fee allows a graduate or part­fice of the Budget. For the Here are just some of the problems this Her brother's smart, he's got more sense As UT students pursuing Jesus" (and God knows, they with that of man. Massage time student taking ninehours first time, the House and city has created fbr the minority community.'than many. »< '•> careers in library science, we do). We had everything but books you'll never find at the to "write off" |9. If the stu­ Senate will fix their own spen­The Austin Police Department's procedure His patience long, but soon lie wtftft firivefeel we must protest the the vanilla extract, and we set health store. dent pays the $2 optional fee ding levels. For thefirst time, for "civilian" review of police misconduct any. repeated raids on the adult out lightheartedly for a trip to Libraries arrange books ac­the financial relief amounts to Congress will operate with a charges is as follows: first, you must cqm-To find a job is like a haystack needle.' : J<;: book stores in Austin. We are the nearby Minit Mart think­cording to subject matter. $7. This action does not result comprehensive picture of plain to the Civil Servke Commission, a pure 'Cause where there's work they "don't usebasing our protest on two :• • ing only the clearest and Because of this, a person in a substantial reduction of revenues coming in and ex­white panel appointed by the city manager (uneducated) colored people." points: first, the bookstoresin purest thoughts. We found the seeking a book on European the graduate students' finan­penditures going out. then approved by the City Council; but since Living just enough. 1*£\, Austin, specifically As You vanilla and were proceeding history would not have to face cial burden; it only assures the Civil Service Commission has n\ • Like It on Lavaca Street and to the check-out counter when a monograph on the gestation that the Student Government , The Budget Reform Act is vestigative powers you must also go to the • Stevie Wonder' l\< * International Art Theatre on we were rudely slapped in the period in marsupials, just as and the student newspaper not as strong as some conser­Intelligence and Internal Security Division, Austin Tomorrow is a city-sponsored pro- San Gabriel Street, are sorry he would not be obligated to hoped • »>I j. face by the raunchiest porno will not be fully funded even if vative observers had Austin Police Department, so they can in-ject for citizen input to city planning. As UT excuses for porno shops. We display we have ever laid eyes view the novelties in the As every student decides to pay for. but probably we hoped for vestigate your complaint. Most major cities predicted, there has been distrust in the East *yty have been on the mailing lists upon — and as we've said, You Like It book store on his the fee. too much. As passed by the enforce complete civilian review of police Austin community towarid any project by the % of several West Coast we've seen it all. , t ' way down Lavaca to buy an Although they claim to act Senate, the act is immensely misconduct charges. In Austin recently City of Austin. East Austin and citywide MMv Two revolving racks of "the . *. publishing houses for years, outfit at Maya. But .let that in the interestof graduate and encouraging. It lays a founda­chtcanos and blacks have increasingly com-attendance by blacks and chicanos has been and after a rather thorough '~i\i •• type of books you hold in one same person go into a Minit part-time students, their most tion on which future plained about alleged police misconduct in low, n » j . ' 'W exposure to erotic materials, hand" when you read them. At Mart to pick up the March recent decision will effective­Congresses can build ad­East Austin, but since the Austin police There is only one more Austin Tomorrow ^rti • we feel confident in calling the eye level of elementary issue of Reader's Digest, and ly eliminate the forums in ditional barricadesagainst ex­always investigate the complaints meeting in this neighborhood zone: at 2 p.m utj'u selves connoisseurs of the school, children, magazines he has to wade through, a which students can com­ecutive power. True, the themselves... ^ .. Sunday at Campbell Elementary, 1600 Chicon twgraphi'c.-. Imagine, our featuring ads from couples in malarial swamp of "Mister municate In fact, the regents "imperial" presidency -will If you look on the map, you will see St.!T?V* : surprise upon shelling out SO Odessa, Midland, Corpus-3un,'14Erotica/' -''Hot aresetting themselves up, not not be deposed overnight, but -Westlake Hills almost surrounded liy the ^ If you do not change it. it's not; going to cents at the XXX Bookstore Christi and other familiar Chick," "White Meat," just as the official voice of the if this act works as its spon­Austin city limits on the west side. Why is change. ,l -if/i' for what turned out to be the places requesting every sort "California Girls" and so on., University community, but as sors believe it will work, this thrivingextension of Austin's community Paul W. Hanneman is a neighborhood limpest peep show we've ever fj$* 11 of perverse gratification, as and so forth; there's no end to the only voice. future presidents 'will be and commerce not annexed to. Austin? I'll director for Zone 7 of the, Austin Tomorrqw n.. seen. And the magazines, why Girl Scouts request foreign it. If the police would only As a graduate student, I something less than kings/ , give-you a clue: they maintain a separate program. " the only thing "up" was the pen-pals. And accompanying spend more time cleaning out should be encouraged by their price. But quality aside, theise each ad was a large the places where everybody new-found interest in our DOONESBURY •j» Mi • afraid to have appeals made. anonymity, but genitals in Graduate School of Library sincerity in alleviating our PRESS CWmNCG, out < Which brings us to the se­flagrant display. Science financial obligations. But even iDUHAU& REFERRED '-2io-! cond point: the Austin police Right next to the Double-more, I question whether they WFS, lb iometFAs'm are looking in the wrong Bubble gum display a garish Regents' voice are man or woman enough to MR.JAWBL. PRESIDENT,* INSTEAD dealer in ACistin OVER place. Only last night we were cover asked the question — To the editor: disclose their real intentions. OF X % msNTr mes.. planning a quiet evening at "Anyone For Incest?" As the The recent regent strategy Ellen Boozer home making fudge and racks revolved, new shocks for an optional Student Graduate Student listening to a George Jones-came into view with every Government and Daily Texan School of Architecture CHARLES Tammy Wynette album en-turn. Charts comparing Crossword Puzzler Answer to Yesterday's Puzzle EPUCATION SM, FOR INSTANCE, TkAT I'M ACROSS 4 Strict sejid an IS IMPORTANT, THE MANAGER OF A MAJ0R­5 ^™e3,flod~ FRANKLIN I 1 Mountains of LEA6UE 8AU. CU/BAMPfMTAKlN6 ratiBfflran Europe SO1 THEUNEUP (XJT It)THE UMPIRE.. 6 Pronoun •Q ••ilQLISS 5 Be in debt >iyV" 7 Organ of nta HEQI3 HBBQj 8 Actual ; . hearing 12 Chair ' • ESBB SBBS EEE! 8 Puzzle 13 Edible seed •••us oshq r-ia 14 Sea eagle 9 Expunged QHE10 nMHki sir.arn/sfmr 2518 Guadalupe ' — 10 POker stake OF A CONSCIOUS m . 15 Communion 11 Dregs nr:i miinEi hhhss plates THE PRESIDENT Parking al back door on San Antonio St. 16 Profits •OS HBHS (3I1I3S 17 Refund REFUSES TO 18 Arabian 19 Primitive BSHB taCJ DI6NIFY THAT chieftainreproduc­ NIKON, CITIZEN. QUESTION WITH E tive body 22 Proprietor THAT LINEUP HA$TD6£ PUNCTUATED [EWCATI0N 15 iMfWTANt 23 Units of AN ANSWER.. 20 Ponders CiHQiaM KMH CORRECTLY, OOESNT IT?40U CAN'T electrical FRANKLIN! 21 Preposition measurement 36 Peel TAKE A STARTING LINEUPOUTTO f 23 Sagacious 46 Expanse of 9 C:,\ 24. Things,in 24 Fish eggs 37 Identical . grass THE UMPIRE IF IT ISN'T I love you for what you are, 25 Goal 38 Iterato ~ 47 Girl's name PWCTUHED CORRECTLY, CAN YOU? law 27 Lamprey 40 Weird 49 Press for. but I love you yet more for26 Declare 29 Number 42 Fall behind payment • under oath what you are going to be... 30 Bushy clump 43 Part of church 50 Soak 28 Speck — Car) Sondburi{ 35 Goes In " v..,44 Scorch 53 Conjunction31 Preposition 32 Openwork 10 8 fabric 33 Negative 12 13 14 34 Dutch town 36 Animal coats IS 16 18 *=* w•-, p1 y 38 Crimson 39 Approach 19 20 • 41 Transaction 43 Showy 21 flower 45 Shade tree ACULTY 24 23 27 28 29 30 and 48 Looked in­ tently " 32 3350 Amend 51 Hindu gar­ 37 3$ ment 52 Employ54 Carpenter's 39 40 42 s tools 46 47 55 Gaelic ONE CHECK ' 56 Negative 57 Sicilian 49 lu. volcano 32 54 FOR DOWN * ' ... f , vj 1 Snakes 36 57 • U 2 Jump e » 3 Dialect Dlatr. by United Feature Syndicate, Inc. r s2.25* •t4 • i1 • ^ Aitending the L. Summer Session? .r: buys you * t WHY NOT a subscription TRY THE BEST! to • 21 Great Meals per Week • Maid Service THE DAILY TEXAN "k Close to Campus Chosen but once and cherished torevqr, at the same low rate the students' pay! • Private Transportation your engagementand weddingrings willreflect your love in their brillianceand beauty. Happily you can choose^ • Private Pools FILL OUT THE COUPON BELOW AND RETURN TO TSP BY CAMPUS MAIL Keepsake with complete confidence*-,2^, because the guarantee assures perfecf'ctarftyt^ "*^ ALL THIS AND precise cut and tine, "y EVERYONE GETS j"TEXAS STUDENT PUBLICATIONS 1 white color.There is A \j TSP BUILDING, ROOM 3.200 I no finer diamond ring.V^ A PRIVATE ROOM I I COMMUNICATIONS COMPLEX TMReg A.H PoMCo I 5 "* I mm HOW TO PLAN YOUR ENGAGEMENT AND WEDDING, !ti$ ^sr rwi|l lu^sfrlbe to The Daily Texan, which I will pick up each day on cam-} * .yV . Sandn»w 20 pg. booklet. 'Planning Vour Engagement and Weddma plus- pus. Enclosed is my check for $ • •--• • . gsi-j full color (older and *4 pg. Brides BooK gift oiler all for only 25«. . -*••%* Wm V* mm •* V s f MSB; i W ]r « Jk ^ i 7?, *> rtk Jj (PIMM PttrtH • Springsemester $1.65 • Faculty •*fr, 709V|,5i#St. s fs ' ' i41 <• O Summer Semester .60 • Staffer "j v • 'V '> & I 478-989l-V: ^ 478-8914 5. » 55. C * V-Yl ' ~*>y m r <.1 m&i I SIGNED: KEEPSAKE DIAMOND RINGS, BOX AO SYftACU8E N Y^13i Madison -Bellaire Apts.IS UiVJC,MJ " a--j 1^ . a/so avoi/ab/« for Summer Xd your on**oteM.tnttQQ-: ^ON*MAIL SUBSCRIPTION RATE. PICK UP YOUR TEXANS ON CAMPUS Sifc'T.' ^ -n '"V'' HURRYI & THE DAILY TEXANlPage 5 I "< ,4, v'iv-•'d—llWii m m Tennis Team To Trv Cougars ( <•» f*,!„ , S. » ... . :l|g||, *» By ED dalheim^T^ -— <-----—-*»"«-----=—• ^ Texas is 20-8 whileSMU is 19-vincingly deieatwl tastaypaF^s No. 2. & -• Texan Staff Writer' 9. SWC single champ/George After four conference* - '"With three, matches to go Commenting on the SMU-Hardie. Walker will draw Tex­matches this season, Keller before= the Southwest Houston match last week Tex­as' No. 1 Dan Nelson in what and Bayless are undefeated. Conference tournament, Tex­as Coach Dave Snyder said, will probably prove to be Keller has won ail four of his tmmm it'SS; i as finds itself with one last "With that kind of a lopsided Nelson's toughest .match of singles and along with partner chance at the conference win over SMU, Houston's in the year. , ' -. -Nunez is unbeaten in four ' 'The coach asked me today when I'd be ready to throw The Texas Relays this weekend will mark the one-year an­ championship when the team the driver's seat right now. 1 "Merry will play No. 2 doubles matches. Bayless has again." Busha said. "I told him two years." niversary of the University javelin record, 264-10feet, set by travels to Houston Tuesday to "We are going to need to followed by Ogle, Dale Ogden won all three of his con­The idea of waiting two years tor Busha to recuperate Siggi Busha. play the Houston Cougars. play better against Houston and Matt Rainey. . . ference matches sinpe enter­ might not make Price too happy. Especially when he must For Busha, last year's Relays mark was the high point of,The Cougars are coming off than we have been playing. If The doubles pairings will be ing the lineup after SMU. In carefully select which athletes will be on what kind ofhis career. He set the record as a freshman. a surprising 6-1 annihilation of we are playing well and they Merry-Ogden at No, 1 and doubles, Nelson and Whaling last year's conference champ Walker-Ogle at No. 2. Busha will also remember lastyear's Relays asthe begin­scholarships. J , have won three and lost one. „ . aren't we could take some ning of what could be the end of his career. Considering the row between Price and Busha last year, . and.preseason favorite, SMU; matches," he added. Texas' linkup wll be Dan things actually don't seem so promising*.either. However, He set the record on the fifth throw of his series. But Houston has lost only one The Cougars are led by All-Nelson, Stewart Keller, Gori-To overtake Houston the Busha said the differences between himself and Price weresomething in his* arm went snap on the next throw. match this conference season. Americas Lee Merry and Bob zalo Nunez, Graham Whaling Longhorns can't afford to add pretty well ironed out. The conference champ is not Ogle and a newcomer from and Jim Bayless, in that anything but wins, to their "I got so excited when I threw my 264-10 that I wanted to "We have an agreement now," Busha said. "Last year I decided on a dual meet record England, Koss Walker, who is order. Nelson and Whaling records and one cap, be sure give it all I had on the next throw," Bushasaid. "But I threw was stubborn. I've learned now that I should think before I but on the total of individual playing No. 1. will play No. 1 doubles and that Houston will make the too.far out and something popped." . say anything. You just got to keep your mouth shutmatches. Houston is 27-1 and Against SMU, Walker con-Keller and Nunez will play Horns work for victories. . Doctors examined Busha's throwing arm and recommend­ sometimes. ed rehabilitation rather than surgery. He threw in the "But the things I said last summer still hold true," Busha ? Students' Southwest Conference meet despite the pain and finished se­ said. • „ Attorney Giants cond with a throw, of 233-11. Busha is a native of Iceland but attended high school in The students' attorneys, Frank Bremerton, Wash. His full name is Sigurdur Fridrik Busha Ivy and i Ann Bower, are IV. "Km Sigurdur IV because Iconsider myself mpre Icelan- SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -D'Acquisto blanked the Reds walk to Roy White helped the; Throwing With Pain available by appointment from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday Garry, Maddox knocked in on three singles until Merv New York Yankees to a 5-3 Sthan American. < / Jt through Friday in Union four runs with a three-run Rettenmund belted a' leadeff victory over the Cleveland In­Busha's arm continued io worsen and, by the time the owever, the AAU doesn't think so. Busha couldn't com- Building 301. Telephone 471-homer and a single, and the homer in the seventh inning. dians Monday. NCAA Championships came around, his arm was barely : for Iceland last year because of AAU regulations, he 7142. The students' attorneys unbeaten San Francisco The Giants scored off laser It was the first time since functional. Busha said. will handlei landlord-tenant, said. In high school, Busha threw 220. TheIcelandic record is Giants rolled to their fourth Roger Nelson in thefirst, i to6-959 the Yanks have started consumer protection,-employes' Nevertheless, he threw in that meet ... and speared a 224 feet. rights, taxation and insurance straight baseball victory, a 4-3 by Bonds led off with a w alk, the baseball season by win­television cable on his first throw. It turned out to behis last cases. Criminal cases and decision over the Cincinnati advanced to third on a ground ning three consecutive games. domestic problems by appoint­Reds Monday. out and a balk, and scored on Hegan, a left-handed batter, one. •• v : Cheerleader Type ment only. : -• Rookie righthander John Maddox's line-drive singles to ripped his decisive hit to Then, something strange happened to Busha. After the left. center field off southp&w Tom NCAA meet, he mysteriously quit the track team. Since he can't throw this season, Busha Wanted to be a MASSAGES • • • HilgendorT, the third cheerleader. •:./•• > ' HOT OIL SWEDISH , STEAM ROOM NEW YORK (AP) -Mike Supposedly he was told that the team didn't want him back Cleveland pitcher, scoring MAGNETIC TOUCH WEIGHT LIFTING Hegan's single Gene Michael, who had doubl­for this season. Busha said he was ordered to throw even "I'm just a-big sports fan,"he said. "I likeall sports and I tie-breaking POWDER when his arm hurt badly. "The coach kept telling me to really like the cheerleaders. I always sort of wanted to be a with two out in -the sixth in­ed down the right field litie throw, but I didn't want to hurt my arm," Busha said last cheerleader, even in high school. But I can't do it becausening following an intentional with one out. (Magic of & July 26. "He (Coach Cleburne Price) told me it wasn't going I'm on athletic scholarship." to be any good, so I might as well go ahead and throw." So Busha now works and waits for the day when he throws BODY MASSAGE FOR GENTLEMEN Baseball Standings that classicalspear like he once did. "Javelin is such a lonely Busha wanted to transfer to UCLA but returned to Texas Young Lady Masseuses in Complete Privacy I AMERICAN LEAGUE NATIONAL LEAGUE after he and Price came to an agreement. sport at times," Busha'said. "But I'm lucky to have Marty [10 A.M. to 12 Midnight 1104 KOENIG LANE EAST EAST (Petermann) behind me-to slap me in the face'and say, W Pet. (7 Days) AUSTIN. TEXAS Not before he had an operation, though. A three-inch metal New York 3 1.000 W L Pet. 'Grow|ip some, man.' j. CALL FOR Baltimore 2 .500 1"2 St. Louis .2 0 1.000 pin was placed in Busha's arm on June 21, weeks before his .APPOINTMENT 1. New YorJ< 1 1 .500 1 512/451-81»a .500 1'2 decision to return to the University. Busha may throw "Just wait, in a couple of.years or so,, we'll beon the same 500 v-V • \S00 t­ (Satisfaction Guaranteed! Detroit • ~pfra&gij5Trrar ~ T~ Milwaukee .500 1 'a Chicago or .000 1 memories and hopes howadays, but he doesn't throw Olympic team." -— ---7—--r-r—r Cleveland .000 3 Montreal 0 .000 ) javelins. J Pittsburgh 0 .000 2 Busha doesn't really know what will happen to him in the California 1.000 WESTr Book Now! Oakland .667 San Francisco 4 1.000 "My problem is all mental," Busha said Monday. "I'm future. "I just may stay out of school and work^next year," Kansas City .500 Los Angeles 3 .750 ] just scared to throw and hurt my arm again. Isometimes lay he said. "Also I'd work out here with Marty and the boys.Deadline for applicants April 72? Minnesota .500 Cincinnati 2 .500 2 awake at night thinking about it popping out again. .333 11 3 Atlanta 2 .500 2 Texas "But I'd probably go to another big college if my arm got .000 Houston 0 3»'2 Monday's Results San Diego 0 3' a ."But I'm glad I gof the operation," he said. "Well, like back into shape again. I'd just have to prove myself again." New York 5. Qivetand 3 Results .000 Jim McGoldrick told me, the only way I'll ever throw and Chicago .000 Other dubs not scheduled San Francisco 4, Cincinnati 3 EUROPE not hurt my arm is to do it right every time ... everytime. "Don't believe that," Petermann said. "The PacificCoast Atlanta 7, Los Angeles 4 Other clubs not scheduled That's something I don't do. Club would pick him up in the blink of an eye if his arm was in shape." GROUP "But it gave me some self-discipline," Busha said. "And ;*ST* ^ that's something I never had before." Busha winked at Petermann. "Just wait until meand Mar­ty get our heads together," he said. » FLIGHTS HORNYBULLSLOVE Despite his arm, which is Jaadly out of shape, Busha still works out in the weightroom and occasionally tries to throw. Sadly enough, waiting is all Busha can do. AUSTIN/LUXEMBOURG THETASTEOFPING-PONG via Braniff/Icelandic Jets For U.T. Students/Faculty & Families Departures BALLS,WHICHKEEPS Relays Tickets on Sale May 16/Aug. 6 82 Days Tickets for the Friday night ning. The USTFF Texas May 20/Aug.22 94 Days THESCORELOW. and Saturday afternoon finals-Relays decathalon events EARN CASH WEEKLY May 23/Aog. 7 76 Days of the Texas Relays in Wednesday and Thursday will ROUND TRIP May 26/July 24 61 Days Memorial Stadium will cost be free. Blood Plasma Donors Needed PUIS TAX ay 26/July 5 40 Days students $2 with blanket tax. Adult general admission July 14/Aug. 23 40 Stays _ -Men .& Women: .. ^ Students will be required to tickets for "the finals will cost New York/Luxembourg Portion Only $261 pay only $1 to watch the $3 and reserved seats, $4. EARN $10 WEEKLY Austin/N.Y. $142.60 (plus tax) Return Any Day preliminaries Friday mor-Adult preliminary tickets will cost $2. CASH PAYMENT FOR DONATION Call the Europe experts 478-9343 Tickets may be purchased Austin this week at the ticket office What, Where, in Bellmont Hall or at the HARWOOD TRAVEL Blood Components, Inc. & Why is meet. Serving UT Since 1961 at 2428 Guadalupe OPEN: MON.&THURS. 8 AM to7P.M. Plants Plus? TUES. & FRI. 8 A.M. to 3 P.M. CLOSED WED. & SAT. 409 W. 6th 477-3735 20% Discount on all The Montezuma Horny Bull: " Guitar TUESDAY 1 oz. Montezuma Tequila. 5 oz. CONCENTRATEDORANGE Montezuma FEED A BREAKFAST DRINK,Over ice. Photo Service It's sensational, and that's no bull. jA FRIEND "C1S74. 80 Proof Tequila Barton Distillers import Co. New York New York. FREE 222 W. 19th & 5324 Cameron Rd. Amster Music 2 for 1 Spaghetti CSTMW H*T PIZZA PALACE <970 1624 Lavaca -$1.39 RESUME' & "PEOPIE PLEASIN' PIZZA" all day IDENTIFICATION TYPE PICTURES 1-Day Quick, Reliable Service 2100-A GUADALUPE 474-2321 1 FOR rn Special I •I < • • A • I I NOW Becominga physicianisa tremendous Isatisfaction. ONLY I SUPER BERT 63c I Let usgiveyouthe job satisfaction Quarter Pounder ^ you save 23c w/cheese with this coupon I thatsl|oulagowith it. ^'0iud bur8»r heaped high with Umit 2 layera of hot cheese, lettuce,and onion* -served on a I Whether you're still if medical school with the the Air Forcedoes not.He finds hisofficeesiablished 8 toaaty setame teed bun. rigors of three toJiv^ears of graduate medical edu­ > for him. Supplies and equipment readily available. cation still to be faced, or are already a practicing I He has many optionsavailable to him when treating physician, it's our opinion that the Air Force can GOOD ALL SPRING SEMESTER patients. Forexample, hj.can consult withAir Force Buy A Pizza-specialists: He also has referral to other Air Force offer both professional and personal satisfaction hard 10duplicate in civilian life. facilities via acromedical evacuation. Last, but not 'An overstatement? Not if you consider the least, are the satisfactions that come with having Get One Free! specifics. the opportunityfor regular follow-ups,and a missed A 14in Take the problem of graduate medical educa­appointment rate that is practically nil. I jAvV™1™ tion. It'sa period of your lifethe Air Forcecan make I' CUP AND SAVE Whether you are already a physician, or soon to 6 considerably easier with comfortable salary and liv­ I 52 -£ become one,you might find itextremely interesting A, I ing conditions. tp find out what the AirForce has tooffer. We think l-lik-p Ta'C/ . I WORTH ONE FREE PIZZA Creature comforts aside, the Aif Force offers it couldbea realeye-opener. Ifyou*II mail in thecou­I '£ 19th & -J C professional advantages. Besides receiving training ,5! pon, we'd be happy tosend youdetailed information. 1 With Purchase of in your own specialty, you'd be in contact with I physicians in all of the medical specialties. You'll Another of Same I function in an environment which U intellectually rf"'o*«Oppominiti«> Size and Price. ^ stimulating and professionallychallenging. ^ |PO.Bo.Ar C-CM-44 I 24th I I Pcvfu. 11.61614 "Not all physicians pursue post residency fellow­ Not Valid On Il'tqnc KMi me information an Take-Out Orders ducts themboth in-houseand atcivilian institutions. UNIVERSITY OF I I | The physician already in practice can look for­• IIMaine -3**fori .-iK* n | 'MristftiMi «i» " ward to Other things. If you want training in the TEXAS I I I . .. --• -I EXPIRES AJ>R: 15, 1974 practice of the medicine of the future, you'll find.it Ottor «ood «t »»|Nrtbcjp«tm« Mom I in the A«r Force, For example, there's emphasis bn |The Ugly Place with the group medicine and preventive medicine, and the j Swir _ .Phone. growing specialty of "family physician?' Whatever .Zip. Beautiful Quality, Service, and 6619 AIRPORT BLVD. 5849 BERKMAN your interest, theft are few-ipccialtieswhich are nut I Su. SS«. »_ .Date ofBirth. I" Value beingpracticed in today's Air Force I ' . OPEN f % i" 1 ^ lOOOS. LAMAR , , phys«cian starring his practice m civilian I HealthClareatitsbest .*,3303 N. Lomar 1 10;30-9 p.m.' *•»« <»* Minn* up tfn ! — AirFnrre' 5 Daily 452-2317 -office. The physician commencing his.practice '• I " i yiV.C. m Wge e Tuesday April 9, 1974 TftE DAILY 5 TEXAN . -iy r-%WV"l i' 1'­ ron oric Atlanta Slugger Becomes Alltinw Homer Kine/ —UPlT.kphoto Hank Aaron displays home run ball to Atlanta fans. Sports Shorts UNIONDALE, N.Y. (AP) ­Brian Taylor came alive with 18 points after a scoreless . first half and sparked New York to a 108-96 victory over the Virginia Squires Monday night that advanced the Nets into the semifinals of the American Basketball Associa­tion playoffs. After missing all four shots he attempted in the first half, Taylor hit eightof 10 after the intermission, including five of five in thefinal quarter, as the Eastern Division champion Nets eliminated Virginia four games to one. After seven ties and 14 lead changes, the Nets went ahead to stay, 70-63, with a seven-point burst late in the third period FORT WORTH (AP) ­Texas Christian University had additional coaching assistance Monday as San Francisco '49er standouts John Brodie' and Gene Washington arrived on cam- Watch mr res pus to work with the Horned was an all-league wide Frog footballers in spring receiver when Jim Shofner, training, f TCU's new head coach, was Brodie was an all-pro an assistant with San Fran­quarterback and Washington cisco. " South Austin Flea Market April 21,9 a.m.-6 p.nu Come Sell Your Wares Set up your own booth, tables and tents. Plenty of Space Available Only $10 per space. Food, Drinks, ana Music Benefit for Senior Citizen Queen Contest San Jose Church. 2424 Oakcrest Reserve Space Now Call 442-6502 ic. i'.'I vVJ­. We make arid SHEEP SKIN repair boots RUGS shoes 4 belts $500 . B Many eautiful Colo rs $750 leather •LEATHER SALE •goods Various kind*, colors -75' ptr ft.. bankamericmq Capitol Saddlery 1614 Lavaca Austin, Texas 478-9309 PLEASE COME BY AND SEE ROOM 8COMPUTATION CENTER WED. 10th (all day) Wang System 2200 Demonstration Revolutionary New programmable Calculator Featuring: • CRT display !* • " • Basic language • Telecommunications with centra! computer mmmm. ATLANTA (AP) ^Ueniy * The 40-year-old Atlanta Aaron, undaunted by the swirl Braves,superstar left behind of controversy surrounding the ghost of the legendary his quest for baseball immor­Babe Ruth when he connected tality, became the game's for the historic clout in the alltime home run king Mon­fourth inning off lefthander A1 day night when he smashed Downing of the Los Angeles the -715th of" Bis iflustripus, Dodgers in a j careet|®; , •WslM Braves 7-4. "i lass , • gSMw a Downing Record Books r ATLANTA (AP) -"When he first hit it, I din't think it would be gone, but it kept carrying, carrying," said A1 Downing, moments after surrending Henry Aaron's 715th home run Mon­day night. The Los Angeles Dodgers' lefthander said that Aaron, who became baseball's greatest home run hitter in history with his one swing of the bat, "Hit a fastball, right down the middle on the upper part of the plate.." ' 'The blast, a 400-foot towering drive over the left centerfield fence in Atlanta Stadium, came during a misty rain in the fourth inning on a 1-0 count. "He's a great hitter," said the 32-year-old Downing, a quiet, self-contained bachelor. "When he picks out his pitch, it'sgoing somewhere, but when he first hit it, I didn't think it was gone. I was watching (left­fielder) Bill Buckner, and the wind, but the ball kept carrying, carrying...." • 1 Downing, a 13-year man in the majors With stops with the New York Yankees, Oakland A's, Milwaukee Brewers and Dodgers, came back after the delay and walked the next two batters and Was removed from the game by Manager Walter Alston. • "I didn't have good control and got behind him," said Dow­ning. ' "I was trying to get it down and didn't. He hit it like good hitters do." • & , Downing said earlier that, "I'd like to see Hank get No. 715, but I'm not going to change my way of pitching to him. "I'm certainly not going to walk him, not going to throw four balls over his head." Ironically, Downing had given up only two home runs to Aaron previously, both last season and the only ones the Lis Angeles staff yielded to Aaron, who is in his 21st season in the /.majors. • *. • " w . , >r. e .. , . . For the Lowest TransJantic Airfares Check With Austin's . SOFA AGENT 88 Right Across the Street 2200 Guadalupe Second Level 472 3471 MERIT TRAVEL 1iiav#ArbiMb>ope/lsrael SOPA can Issue you a TrtntAtlantlc Youlh Par* tichet ofia Other services available from SOFA include tchetfufed flight from Canada to Europeor a U S to Europe a draat Car Plan, the Student neifpass. Student Far* ticket on a luiury ocean liner. language courses inEurope, and tow cost' As the wholly owned subsidiary of eleveA non-profit ieecommodations in hotels, holiday vilteges. European National Student Buresys. SOFA canissue andhosteis All the dope I* inlhe you the International Student ID Card FflSl 1074 Official Student Travel Guide' and book you on any of lhe S.OOO A*1 to EuropeIsrael. SOFA -don't sii on it ->• student charter (lights within Europe. # dQ /O7 Send for it NOW Israel, the Par East and Africa, at up <0 TVf* saving* over normal fares. DrMM Oiwde is sentbulk 3rd clsss mill if you want to lead a nomadic (?-4«*eksd«Sveryi; Sena ^postageand . vacation, conskter SOfA's package .we u send «l t« class maii containing a TransAHantic ticket from [ the U S to Europe and an Air Pats which is good for unlimited travel on all student charter nights around Europe and Israel. ' •OFAatsooffartanaiieftslvearrayof tours attowtng the independent student Send 10:SOFA' traveller to lake advantage ol inexpensive •—»>*• >ixs»Tiaiil CaimiIK. group arrangements and slghtaaaing. 118 Eaat 57th StreH Suite 120ft J Wa leeture euNufalty rewarding tsraet Hew York. N V100W kibbuti programs and educational tours 1 Tel wfth*n Europe and the Soviet Union. fofTsifirn# * • \~ ^ --X ^ V ^ \ ^ X . . s ^ \ X V -•• |:l iil'M si '•.Iff 1£P7 J;' FRIDAY, APRIL 19,1974 THE DAILY TEXAN 5 will publish its anntiai ROUND-UP This edition will capture ell the excitement < good timet of the many events scheduled Round-Up. ?•>:% t • ROUND-UP BAR-B­PARADE " • FRATERNITY DANCE. • MARATHON CARNIVAL ...... ...... ... . . ... < T plus other BIG evetrtsi* Call Tho DailyTexan advertising offfi 471-1806 and reserve your ad space I Round-Up Edition. YOUR ad should I there! • !•/¥? ' A 1sr. Wi'mM} * Aaron hammered a1-0 pitch Ordered the Braves to play^ito play Aaron In the final road over the leftfield fence just to Aaron in Cincinnati Sunday«#game Sunday the right of the S85-foot <.against the club's wishes. ;>£ The Atlanta star received a ™rk«r U"*»sespf Aaron had ended his highly/ ^wo-minute standing ovation for the 715th time accom--• publicized chase of Ruth on' ' "(iuring those ceremonieswhen panied by a massive fireworks opening day in Cincinnati with J*e told the crowd: "Hope this his first swing of the 1974, ^hing gets over with tonight,f A SELLOUT crowd of 52,870 season. It came offjs ^ Aaron's homer gave the rose as one for •standing ova­,. righthander Jack BillinghamW0 * z? % J8 V.( ^ V HOUSING OFFICE 709 West 22nd St 478-9891 -478-8914 SsSA' Come See -Come Live GET MORE FOR YOUR MONEY $ $ Tu|sday&APriJ 9, 1974 THE DAILY T^AN P$ge ' » U ' A" " b S-> ^ \ T* ».» .'Kr» >r • f • r Interest Rate • . pi,-fplpf By NORMA CAVAZOS there is not Mich variety.-luck job Hunting in a bigger city like available in their office. Students can Although Austin employment ser-^, "The majority of openings involve . Houston or Dallas. arrange interviews and., accept jobs vice representatives Monday/Neither clericial or construction worki?£ tfsJBut for those who plan to stay in with no obligation to Snelling & Snell­ Austin predicted an abundance of summer;-,l!with food service funning a close , Austin, there are several placement ing. a jobs,va .University official was skep-.-third," she said. services designed to hglp the.student, STUDENTS WHO will be enrolled: By DAVID BARRON immediately, bank "possible." ?. • -tiea!fl^VJ»i, V'rf -, But Frank Campbell,director of the find a job at no cos&JH5S .&$ in summer school can fill out a-One Austin bank raised its Cad Williams, said. The new high was the result "The market in Austin is excellent/ rT part-time job placement division of THE TEXAS ErritfloylfiM' Coirn-' registration form at the Student (-^rime lending rate from 9.75 "I THINK rates are atioiit of a nationwide prime rate in­There are probably more jobs than ^' the Student Financial Aids Office, mission, 1215 Guadalupe St., invites Financial Aids Office, 2608 Whitis /.-^to 10 percent Monday in the as high as they'll get now. We crease over the last few can be filled," Bob Fair, manager of J;'LS said jobs on campus will be scarce..' ', students to take advantage of its job Ave. The office will then refer the .•"^wake of a similar action by a do follow the New York banks weeks.-The rate stood at 8.75 Snelling & Snelling Employment^' "THESE JOBS are rough to get" informationService. f ~ ' students to businesses which ate for 3%iajor New York City bank, ^insetting up our rates, but our percetat in March until various Agency, said Monday. "because word of mouth is the primary The commission has a catalogue of .jeed of summer help. •# The 10 percent rate, a#^'own internal money costs are banks began to increase it at­ ^"Manpower, Inc., an agency factor in filling them. The every available job. Students are en­^Although the chances of finding a Enounced Monday morning by; going up also,"Williams said.> the rate of one-quarter per­specializing in summer employment^ departments seldom go through our couraged to look through the listings job look good, all the employmentser­^Bankers Trust Bank in New :• Officials at UniversityState cent per week, culminating in also has been "snowed with job offices," he said. and select, jobs for which they, feel vices advise students to begin early York, is the highest in;history, Bank, Austin National Bank, Monday's action. openings, more thanwe will beable to hi': "It will be a typical summer -A;/; qualified. • and to be persistent. . equaled only by a similar rise American Bank and Capital' THE INTEREST limit in fill," a staff member said. . more students looking for jobs than Snelling & Snelling, 251 Hancock "The Austin job market has always, in late December and January National Bank all said Mon­Texas is10 percent, but Austin ALTHOUGH THERE is evidently' will find them." Center, will begin its sixth summer been good because employers are of last year. Texas StateBank day their prime rates will re-r National Bank President Leon an abundance of jobs, KarenH He said students not planning to at­job program May 6. A listing of jobs willing to hire students who want to Of Austin then raised its prime; main at 9.75 percent but said Stone said the rate could Eggleston of Manpower pointed out tend summer school would have more and prospective employers will be work," Fair said. rate to 10 percent, effective future increases were climb as high as12 percent in other states if inflation is not stemmed. "We're just hoping we can continue as we are and not have to charge higher rates, but since our depositors can take their money to New York and obtain better rates for it, we may be*forced to change," Stone added. Bob Present, chairman of the board of Capital National Bank, attributed the latest rise to increased loan demands throughout the na­tion, "but at the same time, the Federal Reserve System has not supplied extra money for these loans, so money 'is tight. Inflation is the root .of the problem. '"THIS IS A very'disturbing trend, and I'm sorry to see it our faretoDallas into happening. We thought the ' * rates would go down this year r and we still hope so, but we i -s ungaKttle follow the New York ratesand if there is a general increase, K we'll have to follow it," Pre­sent added. . K Both Present and Stone, along with Tom McCrumbin of American Bank, said they "hoped" they would not have to raise their prime rates and would study the nationwide^ situation before doing so. more comfortable. "WE'VE ALWAYS tried to hold the rates down for the benefit of our.customers. As a i consumer-oriented bank, low interest rates are better for all of us. However, with infla­tion running wild, I can see it getting even higher if things h-* do not change," Stone said. Bob Ryan of the University Bureau of Business Research said while the increase was not a drastic one, it might tend to stifle new construction prpjects and long-term in­vestments. Accordingly, the New York Stock market slumped badly in early trading after the New York bank's increase was an­nounced Monday morning. Park Trails Give Fun, Relaxation 3 An exercising conditioning • trail, Vita Parcours, designed to give people an enjoyable way-to stay physically fit, is now in Austin. The trail is at 29th Street and Shoal Creek Boulevard on Lamar Every weeknight (and throughout Boulevard. the weekend) Texas International The course, just over a mile in length, has' signs posted rides you high between Austin and along the way describing theDallas Love Field for a new low fare. exercises to be performed. The exercises go from warm- Only $15 either way (plus a minimal ' up to difficult, to relaxing as security charge); That's 40% off the the trail progresses.regular $25 fare, so you get where Brackenridge Park's Waller Creek area will be the site of you're going with $10 to spare. another Vita Parcours course. I* Handy money whether you're on The trail will be near the r business district so business the roam or headed home. men and women can go there Board Texas International's flight on their lunch breaks. The 168 DC-9 jet at 8:50 P.M. in Austin trails have no hours and are free. and be at Dallas Love Field by 9:30 • A.A. "Sonny" Rooker, head P.M. Leave Dallas Love Field at 9:50 of the state physical fitness P.M. via DC-9 jet flight 169 and program, said, "I get 1,000 in­arrive at Austin, by 10:33 P.M. Or fly quiries a year from people in the community for this type of anytime during the weekend for the park. same low price. "The Vita Parcours can be You'll get a 100% Texas-style ride adapted to any hike and bike for 40% off regular fare. From Texas trail by only installing the signs," Rooker said. "It is the International. The airline that knows perfect way for our parks tothe territory. serve the community more fully." •. Erwin Weckemann, a Swiss architect and gym enthusiast,' is the founder of Vita Par­cours. The trails have spread throughout Europe from their start in Switzerland. Jn Europe the trails are used for dates, family outings and business meetings. International . We know thetetilloiy. The Largest Selection of ' s > K RECORDERS iiVnYt-rSl im i from *2.25 upf See us for •m'' Recorders Recorder Music Amster Music 1624 Lavaca , Page 8 Tuesday, April 9, 1974 THE DAILY TEXAN mmM* £ . ••• -• • —••••­ 'if v -« •us political roundup u i .evasion was an impeachable representative candidate,! Also, Weiss said the conven* Supplied all the money for offense, Pickle said, "The proposed at a press con-•• lion "failed miserably" in campaign. \ |S|joint congressional com-ference. the formation of a' providing for mass transit Glen Murchison, candidatf V. v „ mittee simply made a state-' Texas Regulation Commis­funding. He proposed the for county commissioner^ ment of fact — the President sion that would have control , creation of a transportation Precinct 2, has received $13,^|r| owed a certain amount of tax­of all public utilities, in-7 commission to regulate mass 000 in contributions and loans^', es. It did not say there was eluding natural gas, transit throughout the state. leading the race of TraviS J; any element of fraud.", petroleum and oil and in-; County commissioner' Contributions trastate> telephone rates. .. hopefuls, Murchison has spent ,Endorsement An Environmental'" ; AH Travis County primary $6,295 of the contributions?;V Resource Management Com-'* candidates have filed cam­with $2,273going for television.-. With an eye toward educa­ mission he suggested at the paign finance reports with the advertising. " tion, the Travis County conference would be responsi­ county clerk's office Bob Honts, also a candidate Democratic Women's Com­ y.? ble for seeking out new energy enumerating their con­ in Precinct 2, has spent $12,­mittee endorsed Mrs. Exalton sources, setting standards for tributions, loans and expen­ 362, the most of any Travis Delco for state represen­ 4 tative, Place 1, Monday. . the production of energy ditures through March 25. ^County candidate. He has sources and » Barrientos, one of four can­ received $9,533 in *\"iV1 Committee Chairwoman protecting con­* natural resources such as didates running for state tributions, with $500 beingMillie di Donato said that with timberland, the coast and representative, Place 4, has given by University System education being a major con­ cern of the upcoming Texas rivers. garnered more contributions Regent Allan Shivers and $2,­but has spent Legislature, Travis County also more 000 of his own funds. will need a representative Weiss money than any other Although not surpassing legislative candidate from Murchison in contributions or. with Ms. Delco's experience The Constitutional Conven­ Travis County. exceeding and insight into educational tion met criticism Monday Honts in expen­ .mm issues. from Gerald L. Weiss, Barrientos has collected ditures, Richard Moya, run­ $10,324, with $5,000 being'con­ can­ didate for state represen­ning for re-election in m Barrientos tative, Place 4, in the May 4 tributed by James Bruch of Precinct 4, leads the pack of Democratic primary. Martchaca. His largest expend the four candidates running f Gonzalo Barrientos called Weiss, who is trying to un­diture was $4,313 for televi­for that position. Moya has Monday for the creation of seat incumbent Wilson sion advertising. spent $7,233 of his $7,657 in tWo new regulatory com­Foreman, condemned John Wofford Mugge, can­contributions. missions that would supervise didate for the Place 1 House Travis County candidatesdelegates for failing to ''for­all public utilities and would' seat where there is no incum­will have to file financialbid the creation of a state in­ provide comprehensive bent, has outspent his four reports again seven dayscome tax" and for not incor­ management for Texas' competitors for that position before the May 4 primary andporating a limit on welfarenatural resources. spending in the proposed con-, Mugge has invested $3,908 of must submit two subsequentBarrientos, Place 4 state stitution. his reported $6,523 for statements 31 and 62 days billboards. Mugge has after the primary. THE PUB" , presentsTonight Only DOUG SAHM BILLY JOE SHAVER and Friends * with Fat Charlie •Link Davis Open for Lunch 11:30 2 for 1 Mixed Drinkt fill 6:00 • Richard Elizondp • More 0 38th pncMH 35 152-2306 707 Boo Caves Rd. 327-9016 ashoprrr aSpccial SHOP NO. 1 SHOP NO. 2 SHOP NO. 3 Our very first shop! This outlet opened The largest Sam-This store still retains just three months after Witch shop! Designed its original charm— oUr first shop. A little and built, to serve you a snug shop just large larger—but still main­quickly in a pleasant enough to seat 20 tains the small friendly atmosphere—a unique friendly people, which atmosphere. Located indoor sidewalk cafe probably explains the on the drag— inside Dobie Mall. cozy atmosphere. convenient to the EVENING Convenient to the east Communication School SPECIAL side of campus. Complex and the north part of campus. Ruben or Pastrami Soup or PotatoSalad Fountain Drinkor Beer TURKEY MULTI-MEDIA SANDWICH SUBMARINE SPECIAL $1.50 SPECIAL This special is Multi-Media Submarine Turkey Sandwich offered to solve the Potato Salad Potato Salad Fountain Drink Fountain Drink afternoon and evening meal search. Offer good at shop No. 3 in Dobie only from 4 pm till 9 pm. Your choice 99c of a hot Ruben or Pastrami sandwich. Our popular com­Served with your choice bination sandwich, Our most popular of soup or potato salad crammed full of three sandwich! We cut the and a drink of your . meats and two ;; turkey very thin and choice, including beer! cheeses, plus a serving pile it high. Served with A regular $1.95 value of our own homemade our own homemade only $1.50. Offer good potato salad, plus any potato salad and any through April 26,1974.; fountain drink of your fountain drink of your choice. Regular $135-choice. A regular $1.40 HAPPY-TIME value—only 994. No value—only 994. No BEER 25c coupon needed—just coupon needed—just ask for the Submarine ask for the Turkey Ha'ppy-Time prices Special. Offer good Special. Offer good —only 254a glass through April 26,1974, through April 26, 1974, from 3 pm till 6 pm at shop No. 1 Only. at shop No. 2 only.-daily. Shop No. 1-2821 San Jacinto . WiM.­ Shop No. 2-2604 Guadalupe --- •* a h /-VJ 4* Texan Staff Photo by Paul Calapa The Hum of Spring A bee warms up to springtime while investigating a blossom at Zilker Gardens. The gardens, in Zilker Park/ are open to the public daily until 4:30 p.m. Masspge Parlors Rub Wrong Way The , Austin Police Department's vice squad filed complaints Monday with Dr. John Sessums, Austin-Travis County Health Department director, charging six massage parlors with violating the city massage parlor ordinance. Sessums said he and his leagl adviser will review the complaints; II they decide ac­tion needs to be taken, Sessums will issue a notice 10 days prior toi a set hearing datet The hearing could result in revocation; or suspension of the licenses of the parlors, Sessums added. According to the ordinance, any act, or actsof sexual inter­course within an establish­ment or any solicitation for immoral purposes by an employe are grounds for the revocation or suspension of a lieense.Sessumssaid. The complaints came less than two weeks after 14 masseuses were arrested and charged with prostitution. SHAKEY'S 2915 Guadalupe presents KENNETH THREADGILL TONIGHT THRU SATURDAY , Serving your favorite Beer dric/ ^ ^ Wine Coolers, Sangria, and 21 varieties of Pizzas 4764394 2915 Guadalupe [1411 tAWA-472-r31Jl TONIGHT THRU SATURDAY AND MILTON CARROLL & BILLY C Adv. Tickets at Inner Sanctum & Discount Records EVhKXONE ADMITTEDFFEE T0NITE |TOO SMOOTH 3 The establishments in­volved are Edie's of Hollywood, Caesar's Retreat, Castillo Del Reys, Cleopatra's Cove, Both Sexes and Magic Touch of Venus. 7 Students' Attorney The ttudents' attorneys, Frank Ivy and Ann Bower, are -available by appointment from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday* through Friday in Union Building 301. Telephone 471­7142. The *tudeht«r attorneys will handle. landlord-tenant, coniumer protection, employes' rights, taxation and insurance cases. Criminal1 cases and domestic problems by appoint­ ment only. U.Sr.. Rejx. r AND THE SUNDANCE '*«' ... -PAUL . ROBERT NEWMAN * BEDFORD C STARTS TOMORROW [Harry Caul will go anywhere to fcug a private conversation HisItalents are unequalled.They v® already been, responsible for three murders. 1h* CWtdof* Company potoAt* GeneHackman. "TheConversation" • 'Wrin*n Produced & o*' ftonasFord Coppola John Cazale • AllenGarfield•Cindy Williams Musc*coc«5Dy Co-oryOuce' Frederic Forrest• David Shire • Fred Roos Color by TECHNICOLOR* • A Paramount Pictures Release $1.00 til 3 p.m. STAT E *765066 2:30-4:20-6:10 719 CONGRESS AVENUE 8:00-9:50 ELLIOTT KASTNER presents AROBERT ALTMAN Rim ELLIOTT GOULD "THE LONG GOODBYE" $1.00 til 3 pirn. VARSITY 4744351 1:40-3:20-5:00 2400 GUADALUPE STREET 6:40-8:20-10:00 , cWoody" TDiane cAllei^""" Tfeaton in DAY "Sleeper"' SI -vN-IEWHS* BfcYOND 198 B6YOND 2001 iV M Page v Tuesd^f, April-9, 1-974 9 ifi* t>j« «ci &« wi&'t 'c prt FILMED IN TEXAS OPEN 1:15 P.M. FOX TWIN FEATURE 1:30-3:35-5:45 1454-27111 7:55-10:05 6757 AIRPORT BIVD. STARTS TOMORROW The Eartw A week: has1 gdays. JON VOIGHT 1 "CONRACK" 20»h Century-Fern presents A MARTIN RITT/iRVING RAVETCH PRODUCTION Aho starring' PAUL WNFlELD^i HUMECRONYN Directed by MARTINRITT Produced by MARTINRITT ^nd HARRIET FRANK JF Screenotay tjyIRVING RAV6TCH & HARRIET FRANK JR . Basedon thehook TheWater is Wide"by PAT CONROY Music JOHN WJtLIAMS f*] :PANAVISlON» COLOR BY0ELUXE»i, , MANNlMtATMi FOXTWIN 1 "rumntue M y?7nww . "Three Sisters," starring "hues creating a spritual blend nounced its concept to the ' Sir Laurence Olivier, Alan ( -of secrets of color decisively public; there were those skep­ Sates, Joan Plowrlght; timed as one color jtpetches tics who asked what the AFT based on the play by Anton : from the other. could offer that the original -Chekhov; produced by Ely theater production couldn't. Instructor Yee Jan Bao Landan; directed by The answer given then wentcombines the bits and pieces Laurence Olivierr ^t the something like this: the plays of the history of art (Simone Fox Tuesday only. Martini's "Guidoriccio" of By WILLIAM A. STONE JR. chosen to. be recorded will be markedly improved becausethe 14th Century and Arman's * Texan Staff Writer of and through the stylistic paint drips of the 60s) with ^'Three Sisters," the American Film Theatre's techniques unique to cinemaeclectic reasoning. latest offering, strikes me as and the high selectivity of its Whether the art is timely or one of those perplexing films camera. atemporal it offers telling in­which crop up every now and ; ; Therefore, the success of sights into the "creative again that leaves its audience the AFT series depends large­ time" at the University. That in a state of prickling indeci­ly on the skill, imagination, so many styles are happening sion. flair, thoughtfulness gnd ex­together says something for Films like this are not real­ecution of the directors' ef­ the artistic freedom one has. ly great, but they're most forts. With"Sisters," director There is no "Austin School" assuredly not bad, and it Olivier manages to pull the that sets a philosophic tempo becomes almost a matter of whole thing off better than to follow. academics to determine just might be expected, but as how good, in fact, the movie feared, his producton is But it is this directionless really is. hampered by some rather ob­course that causes the ques­ "Sisters," directed by Sir vious headaches. tion "What kind jof year has Laurence! Olivier (who also In the first place, the this been?" to be left un­ stung! acts in the film), probably heavier -than -heavy-drama ­ answered in a short review. Of course, I could go on and represents most truly the image which the AFT has ac­ To be answered one mustseek on about how superb the ac­ AFT's concept o£ "theater-on-quired in the past months can out each of the 48 faculty ar­ ting is, and how really filnx." Olivier, self-only work against Chekhov's tists. memorable are the perfor­ admittedly, has chosen to famous play about Russia's mances of Alan Bates, Joan leave "Sisters" almost exact­upper middle-class. With the Had there been a catalogue Plowright and Olivier, but ly as Chekhov wrote it, and exception of "Rhinoceros," to explain the year, the art the predecessors of "Sisters" space wop't allow it. Suffice it thus, rfiis production is indeed and the art faculty, one could to say that "Sisters" tries so little more than a filmed play. seem to take themselves with ' bettgr comprehend for what hard to overcome its basic such a sense of dramatic im­ the exhibition stood this year portance and weight asalmost drawbacks that I not only ap­ as opposed to the last 34 Students' to intimidate the viewer. It's preciate'it, I sympathize with years. as if one has meditate and fast it. Attorney The "year" remains as im­ The students' attorneys, Frank TRANS TEXAS portant element in an annual. Ivy and Ann Bowtr, are A available by appointment from One expects a lot from the 8 a.m. tp 5 p.m. Monday N year, as though it were the Kiu no through Friday in Union a1423 W. Sen White Blvd.-442 2333 D most sacred and precious of Building 301. Telephone 471­times. This gives all the more 7142. The students' attorneys DOORS OPEN 5:15 will handle landlord-tenant, , reason that the contributions consumer protection, employe*'­ the art faculty have made rights, taxation and insurance should be taken seriously. The cases. Criminal cases and 35th Annual remains in search domestic problems by. appoint­ of a year. ment only. This time the bullets are hitting pretty close to home! 100 BEFORE 5 P.M. FOR "PAPPILLON" CHnt Eastwood ONLY is Mrty Harry in I Riverside Twin Cinema e"on |930 EAST DRIVE AUSTIN, TEXAS 441-5689 Escape Is "Ihovenfrhad ­Everything! sucha goodtime at anew movieinyears." PeterDogdancrvich. an AFT production. SECONDLY, the film ii a rather hefty two hours and 43 • minutes long (the opening scene itself runs 45 minutes) and Olivier can just dp so much to keep the entire vehi­cle alive, moving and fresh. He tries earnestly and somewhat successfully to vary his tempo and to provide the movie bits of humor and quickness to save it from a sense of doggedness and tediousness. Nevertheless, my mind wandered a good deal as I watched this movie, and quite, frankly, I wished Olivier had assigned himself an easier project. "Sisters" is most definitely a hornets' nest f^r a movie director, and Olivier, together with cameraman Geoffrey Unsworth, has not quite survived the ordeal un- Cinema Four 2700 WEST ANDERSON IANE 451->3S2 New YcxkMagazine VILLAGE -12:40-3:00-5:20-7:40-10:00 WITH $1.00 TIL 5 M0N.-FRI. THE SOUTHWOOD -5:30-7:45-9:55 WITH $1.0K0 TIL 6 M0N.-SAT. mu;T 12:30-2:40-4:50-7:00-9:15 TRANS*TEXAS OPEN 1:45 FEA. 2-4-6-8-10 COME SEE 1:2 4th GREAT WEEK THE 12200 Hancock Drive-453«641 FILMED IN BASTROP 4:05 6:45-9:25 MANY LOCAL ARTISTS ALLIED ARTISTS presenls LARGEST PAINTING STEVE DUSTR) OF THE kvmHOfflmn THREE MUSKETEERS tTTMTH remuaui« ASIMOIIKEMIMI ina FRANKLIN J. SCHAFFNER1 IN THE ANTHONY PERKINS WORLD! PG BEAUBRIDGES PBPmai mBIYTHEDANNER Village Riverside ( STARTS TOMORROW 1 Cinema Twin x^^adnitz/MattelProductions presents Four Cinema lg30 EAST RIVERSIDE DFJVfc | 2700 WEST ANDERSON LANE 451-4352 ENTERTAINMENT FOjft THE ENTIRE FAMILY ul HAVEN'T HAD SUCH A GOOD TIME TRANS*TEXAS A OPEN 5:15 $1.00 HI 6 p.m. AT A NEW MOVIE IN YEARS." Peter Bogdanovich, New York Magazine / 12:30-2:40-4:50 NO PASSES 7KW-?:15 NO REDUCED THE PRICES THREE MOSKEi IPO, ' AliXAKOERSALKWO OLIVER REED RAQUEL WELCH , . \ v RICHARD CHAMBERLAIN AndMICHAEL YORK«oA«o,oon FRANK FINLAY CHRISTOPHER LEE GERALDINE CHAPLIN »« RICHARO LESTEH THE THREE MUSKETEERS ^ w#.SIMON WARD * • Features 5:30-7:45-9^5 DEESM 1423 W Btn White Blvcf — 44? ?333 Magnum Force '•TECHNICOLOR® ALSO STARRING HAL H0LBR00K TRANS* TEXAS $1.50 til 6 p.m. OPEN F«a. 2-4-6-8-10 1:45 I "24 Ouadaluoe St. -.477-1964 COLUMBIA PICTURES pf«»entk NOMINATED FOR JACK NICHOLSON 3 ACADEMY AWARDS THK LAaST DK1A1L INCLUDING *11ACKHAI rilM . « IP AUKillfS Fillwi l-pl BEST ACTOR BIITCH & THE KID AREBACKI Just for the fun of itI PAULNEWMAN HELD ROBERTREDFORD INEROSS. "BUTCH CASSIDY& THESUNDANCEKID" f.«MPrnk««PAUL MONASM ^ ^' Co STROTHEB MARTIN • JEFF COREV • HENRY JONES • Prfxhjcetl r>Y JOMN f Oilman • [Jwocfwny QKOBOC flpv hih • Wll t IAM OOL^MAN,Muse Composed 9'nd Gnnducied t»y ftAC^AHAOM* -M>it;*VMAN 1'OntMAN Ccuor t>y Detune' H<*( BU*f WCHAMCH5 RjtfAW H«*o r»fc«' Oft iyH«ff it J** by 8 ) TtaNf [PGL:­ NOW SHOWING AT THE FOLLOWING THEATRES FEATURES 2-4-6-8-10 PARAMOUNTwn AND 1 i f.ONr. ^ A VF NI |(. QUARIUS-4 TWIM l-WTMAIil SHOIA/TOWW U.S.A. Comofon Rd ot 18 3 ?36-8084 BOX OFFICE OPEN7il$ SHOW STARTS DUSK CO FEATURE AT DRIVE-IN'S ONLY • THE CUIPEPPER CATTLE COMPANY#!!! —-i*' tUiKfS&h .m* Fails in Presenting R&B By ROBERT E. FORD on Coniially's young yearsex-questionablie objectivity By ANN GUNTER v„ ^Strilt nn milralamiinri*ha ki.'>u»it.i./».n «- IT to unr ui i.. iwii Mnn ^ii 'Strut (with no mike)around the ofi^-^ielap. be spontaheous or otherwise For a rhythm-and-blues fan, IT IS NOT likely that NBC will Associated Press Writer cept to stow how his lack of without a great deal of ;ftagonal utage white th? iffhele—TSITOSF soulful appreciation. They there were several reasons to look "be inundated with requests, unless John B. Connally: "Por--money-base-through his -balance 7from they^pfls group sang theending-chorus over -therefore '-appeared -staged they are accompanied by : /trait in Power;" by Ann forward to Saturday night's NBC college years as "Big Man on .and over. Suddenly the viewer was -.themselves, suffering from what • criticisms of the rampant black­ " Fears Crawford And Jack Campus" affected him latere special, "Rhythm and Blues." i$iY '££t might have been an en­ tipped from her enjoyment by a . appeared to be an ironic quota oriented commercials represen­„Keever; Jenkins First, R&6 is not much in vo|is'T After graduation, Connally tirely different sort of book lot of ' series of incongruous commer­system demanding that the crowd ting the good life, the touch-and-go 1 Pubusfiing Co., Austin; 480 was really on his way up. He with a the American pop had Connally lent his aid to cials. » "•, Jbe made up of a certainpercentage . rapport with the audience and the ,,{>age8; $9.50. became friend and associate music audience and is therefore the authors^.However, he BUT the return to the show token white folks. stagey ^element. of the perfoj-"There Can be little question the rich and powerful. not often available to TV viewers. declined. * revealed B.B. King. King has by the many bitter differences it proper for a blaqk man to sing ; that they seemed a little out of ly. But how can the performers does has important effects;? otherwise. Connally became expose music fans to good pop ­ other than blood-and-guts blues or R&B specialty show. . feel comfortable if Connally had with Johnson, music other than various forms of '} place on a the audience This is strikingly confirmed an associate of the late Presi- Jo be backed up by more than a. She was followed by Kool and the isn't? In such endeavors, it should the about - particularly after LBJ white rock and country. Second, in new book the dent Lyndon B. Johnson when couple of primitive side men. King Gang, who did a long version of became President.• be almost axiomatic with the former governor and Cabinet Johnson was on his way up. black performers have been put­ gets more help now, and proved : their current hit, "Jungle Boogie," producers that seating for the member^:,"A in But honesi^M ting out increasingly outstanding Portrait Each needed the other; and they were with his 'The Thrill Is Gone" that including a long, purely jazz sax audience be optional. If the fans differences as is shown bj^lf music lately. ' they made a fine personal andhe is still doing his thing; not solo. It was indeed cool; it's a were allowed to respond to the It has a surprising amount political team. their constantfriendship. Con-^t® Lou Rawls' intra, climaxed by someone else's, as he has for the -shame that jazz is even less pop­music physically, bydancing, clap­of deUiil packed into its 460 ' The book at various points nally spoke the eulogy "a his singing ''Natural Man," gave last 30 or 40 years. ular these days than R&B. ping, singing along, then a pages without ever becoming seeks to catch the personaltiy : Johnson's funeral. §$ the promise of a fine show. But it The.fact that he didn't have the : Lou Rawls, the host, is a reciprocal cycle of inspiration boring because of the author's became apparent soon that the of this extremely complex#^ The book seems to depict audience in the palm of his hand magnetic performer with a could develop between them and Skills, Keever is performers were at times • Jack an man — it does present a, ^onnally's approach to life asfcTi made the physical setting become positively unsinkable appeal. After the performers, and this in­Associated Press staff strong picture. -4-... thwarted in their spontaneity by a • stated by the authors: "John,;,;* noticeable. The seating was stiff he sang "Dead End Street," the: variably improves the music. reporter who is acknowledged Whether Connally willagree certain directorial staginess, some Connally has never been ai^ and inappropriate. The small audience was warmed up againfor If the musicians were to perform by his contemporaries as a another matter. The is stargazer. He was, and is, f ill-placed advertisements and a audience wats arranged, neatly in a really funny ventriloquist who longer sets; they could build up fine writer and Ann Fears quoted are largely determined sources stargrabber, uM preoccupation with a seemingly rows like so many school children. kept everyone appreciative. The carefully selected audience. audience appreciation rather than Crawford has four other books critics: some a r e of Mi: clutch at all that With the background orchestradis­next group, Creative Force, was cutting it off on cue. The per­to her credit. The first group was La Belle, creetly off camera and the antisep­accompanied by some fancy formers could then pace The story wastes little timethree women and a token man, tic little stage, it became apparent background visual effects that themselves and perhaps select horoscope who were sophisticated stylists, that the concert took place not in must have been enjoyed by media preceding and succeeding songs (•dltar*! N«Mi Dantan aiMI Dawn yet so ferociously funky that they I aM Down' throuahthrough childrenchlldr Indicate^ \-­ an auditorium or concert hall, but cognoscenti all over the country. which enhanced one another,: Spivey, wh* pnparwl thh t*lumn, . SAOtnARiusi Caution suggested' wher^.;,/, got the audience stirred up to the in a television studio. This After repeat performances by rather than moving aside because Szarkowski an tstal aUrslogm* tpMlolltlng In permanent ties, such as marrlage£^ only furor of the evening. From nattil chartt, pfrMnal intMvitm, are concerned, arrangement inhibited both the B.B. King (who appeared rushed their time was up. there, the contingent oftimmensely anoly»ii and clouM.) CAMICORNi There Is an appreciation for> f performers and the audience. ' through his current hit by a frantic That is more the format of Jo Speak -ARIISi Vou could be InvolvedIn secret af­the liner things of life moilvatlnjl'1™ talented performers had to work fairs, including those'Involving, your actions now. ' feJ* As the camera panned the floot; manager), Freda Payne, La ABC's "In Concert," on which, for • John. Szarkowski, director hard to overcome a series of married people. J AQUARIUS: Financial gain thronglffi! audience during the next two per­ Belie, and mohologuist Irwin C. example, King was much better. of photography at the Museum TAURVS: Spring fever has got you, and • promotion is possible now. Uove ofj&R hurdles evidently imposed by the your romantic expresses luxury could eat up profits, formances by Freda Payne and a Watson, Rawls closed the show The difference between "In of Modern Art in New York nature itself.group called Kool and the Gang, with his usual fine rendition of o Concert" and "Rhythm and City, will speak at 8:30.p.m. QiMlNIi There Is a great'desirefor social cbmforts could bring out a selfish ­ producers and directors of the nSCRSi The desire for possessions and'':A; show. ' the fans seemed self-conscious and "Love Is a Hurting Thing" and " Blues" is that the former is more Tuesday in the Art Building ^ acceptance. A fortunate relationship side. with one parent Indicated. For example, one of the women ill at ease, particularly the white" asked viewers to write NBC if they eclectic, and the latter was con­Auditorium. CANCER: You go togreat lengths today to in La Belle, toward the end of their members. Many^ of the audience wanted to see more shows such as trived to showcase a kind of music Known throughout the world achieve harmony in your life situa­ song, did a great singing, dancing tion. seemed unsure just how or when to this one. that deserved better. as one of the foremost critics UOt There Is greater Influence on yourand practitioners of still :7 financial standing, itcould Influence your social position, camerawork, Szarkowski will • VKOO: Harmony and success are In­present slides of work by dicated now. A beneficial partnership ensues. himself and others to il­ Wednesday •' « faculty, staff; $1.50 Rogers; $1 UT students, UUA: Artistic endeavors attract your April 10 . . ' . : •i 36 Adam-12 . lustrate ; his lecture on the attention. You are Interested in the ; : -iafoernberis; Union Theatre; f acul ty, staif;. $1.50 Tuesday night on Happy Noon4:30 p.m,; SantfWich Days, Richie develops a crush history, and art of creative aspects, :sponsored by Arts* and members; Union Theatre); 7 Hawaii Flve-O . v.. scORNOt A tove of life and people Seminar — Consumer Theatre Committee. sponsored by Arts and on a new student who wants to 24 Movie;: "Melvln Purvis,,Q-Man" photography. -dominates your^mood. A gain Protection Series: "Buying Thursday Theatre Committee. keep their relationship on a 36 Stanley Cup Playoff Game liili'i t p.m. -m and Maintaining Home ^ jt M™, April 11 . 8-11:30 p.m.; West Side Se­friendship level. Will he con­9 Black Journal ",;2 Appliances," Harrell's Ser-4:30, 7 p.m.; Mandatory 1:30 p.m. cond Story: Ewihg §t. vince her :that love is better? vice Center; Union Orientation tor prospective . Times; pies," bread, tea, ,7 NBA Basketball Playoff isfpiilpr1 Tune in at i p.m. on channel 24. 9 p.m. "l ** iiS; Building 104; sponsored by Union Committee coffee, cider, hot f Virginia Museum Documentary to learn the answer. Academic Affairs. members; mandatory chocolate; through Satur­ 24 Marcus Welby, M.D. 5-7 p.m.; Patio Dinner; 6:30 p.m. 10 p.m. Village Four »MN PXUllPS SANGER 'ILM PROOUCtiON ; • W'!1 attendance for prospective day; $1 admission Thurs­7 Hee Haw 9 Eye to Eye *700 WEST ANDMSON OlIMM by HON PHILLIPS Eucuiivt oiMucti JAlJK VOPfood and entertainment to members at either 4:30 or 7 day; $1.50 admission Fri­9 News -24, 36 News toduM fry AON PHILLIPS' JOHN BROOKS be announced; Union p.m. meetings; Union Stu­day and Saturday; Union ; -24 ) Dream of Jeanriie 10:30 p.m.' NO PASSES Patio; sponsored by dent-Faculty-Staff lounge; West Mall; sponsored by 36 Eyewitness News 7 Movie: "Chandler" 7 p.m. - 9 The Advocates Musical Events Com­sponsored by Texas Union Musical Events Com­ . .. 9 Bill Moyers'Journal 24 ABC Wide World of Entertain­ mittee. Program Council. mittee. ; 24 Happy Days ment 7, 9:30 p.m.; Film: "Henry 7, 9 p.m.; Film: "Top IWft.DI IS TEXAS V," with Sir Laurence Hat," starring Fred LAST DAY) Olivier; $1 UT students, Astaire and Ginger REDUCED PRICES TIL 6 P.M.1500 S. PLEASANT VALLEY RD ... 0444 MON thru SAT AUSTIN JUST OFF EAST RIVERSIDE DRIVE Wt•iLtl ;M.K) S(V CONGRESS A V K 5 ACADEMY AWARD NOMINATIONS ACADEMY AWARD , $1.00 til 7:00 p.m. fe l e $1.00 $1.00 WINNER "BEST ACTRESS ,. f.;f" f Ml 6 p.m Features til 6 p.m GLENDA JACKSON Features "%6:00-7:50-9:40 Features 1:30 12:20-3:00 JL 1:30 3:30 5404:20 3:30 TRANS^TEXAS A Service of the Depmrtment of RmdJo/Television/Film Albuch 5:30 B?DS :«HBMOISTS fttmu THURS Of Class 5:39 1KBKMB1 9:30 9:30 6400 Bum*t Road — 465-6933 ncqaranmiM HORIZONS WEST 7:30 7:30 $1.00 ACADEMY AWARD HUTCH *TIC KVAM BMXI 1:10-3^04J0-9:20 PO AT TWO THEATRES (1952) til '6,p.m. NOMINEE "BEST ACTOR PG $1.00 til5 M0N.-FRI. Features BUTCH CASSIDYAND OPEN 7:15 Feo. 8:15 directed by Budd Boetticher 2:40 ALmCINO THESUNDANCEKID" THIS TIMl THIIUIUTS AM $1.00 til Showtime Hirrmc Mirrr cio« TO FINE FOOD t DRINKS starring 5:00 PanavmjOfT* •color by DeLuice* hoMr. 7:25 Robert Ryan Julie Adams 9:50 12i40-3:00-5i30-7:40­ Color by TECHNICOLOR*. A Paramount Release FANTASTIC 10:00 MagnumfMNe $1.00 tH S MON.-RH. . DOUBLE FEATURE Tonight! Admission $1 MLRCd vr rnu uun icu_rjyuuDiu 7 and 9 p.m. Jester Auditorium MKnnis I & 2 THE TWO TOP MOVIES OF THE YEAR! ~2I»' & Guadalupe Second'favel Debie Mdll 477-1324 LAST DAY! XXSTING" WINS 7 ACADEMY AWARDS 521 E .1si S.*th Slrj'fM 472 7<)79_ wssm Special Double Feature 1 Film for $1.25 Both for $2 INCLUDING BEST PICTURE % YEAR Maguires -5:30-10:00 LAST DAY! Joe Hill -3:15-7:45 • 1dreamed I saw I HIGHLAND MALL Joe Hill last night |LAST Alive as you or jne."*| OFF IH 35at HIWAY290 2 DAYS! WINNER J ACADEMY OF im AWARDS M WILLIAM PETER BLATTyS BOGART AND CAGNEY TOGETHER IN RAOUL WALSH'S "THE ROARING 20V -8:10 JREDtiFQRD plus/ BEST ACTOR NOMINEE BUSBY BERKELEY'S MUNiMHIAN "FOOTLIGHT PARADE" STARRING JAMESCAGNEY -6:IS-1Q:00 STARTS WEDNESDAY: MARILYN MQNROE NO PASSE* TECHNKXXOR* MO URUW MAT. AND CANDY BARR IN "THE EROTIC FILM CIRCUS" X AUNIVERSALPICTURE UNDER tl NOT A0MITTEB 12:00-2:20-4:40-7:00-9:20 SEATS NRT miMm RESERVED 1:S0 fM Village Riverside 13:30-2:47. SAMAliTHAKGGA Twin 5:04-7:21 Cinema 9:40 Cinen Four 4416689 1*30 t.AST RIVERSIDE fJHlVt 4S141S1 27M Wnt AMbrtM Iwm Screen II Special Double Feature LAST DAY! » SWEEPS THE AWARDS One Day -6-10 1 Film for $1.25 Both for $2 Trojan -4-8 WHS TOP HONORS Is Everything! •nil! •'BRILLIANT. THE AUTHOR WOULD RELISH SO KATHARINE (FAITHFUL AN INTERPRETATION OF HIS WORK $1.60 | A BEAUTIFULLY MADE FILM." Hepburn, til V By thewinner of the 1970 NobelPrizeforIJterature > .CAPITAL PLAZA LAST DAY 5 p.m. see. I'BIAZING SADDLES" 'VANESSA Mon. thru Fri. VLKX.WDKltm | REDGRAVE 12:50-2:40-440 4-V ri>-"*/ ^ i v -4304:10 1040 ^ \ " i' *> { *>& K V, « soi/iii:\nsY\'s STARTS TH^RS, STARTS WED: "GENEVIEVE WALT DISNEY'S MIA FARROW BUJOLD ALLIED ARTISTS ROBERT REDFORD presents' i< It & ALICE iRr / y . ... THE p© , fna FIWN&nCHAFFNERIiIni RtyERSIDC 'if 1:35-4:05 t:IQ-3:50 6.45-9:25 IN THE LIFE OF IVAN DENISOVICH 6t30-Vr20 I Prise (or Litmturr^ W V_// VVC.1N J| Kaffir,,^ Tuesday, April ?, 1974 THP DAH* TEXAN»P^ge11 "Sr.^i*^**'-^.' k 4 •*'* I 1.5 J IJ? V. ' {> ' * '* v -'V*" ^ t W" "t *• r < f* ^ ^ * mm ^?*4K ®is sews* «?£*5 1 gg-.^ ^ StfteaSNiSs M Ife wa Srai ^ m m CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING • • RATES • ' 15 word minimum Each word one time ., $ 10 Each word 2-4 times . .$ 09 Each word 5-9 times .....:....$ .07 Each word 10 or more times..$ .06 Student rate each time $ .75 Classified Display 1 col. x 1 inch one time.......$2.96 1 col. x IInch 2-9 times $2.66 1 col *IInch tenor moretimesJ2.37 OtAOUNC SOWKM Monday Texan Friday .......2.00 p.m. Ttmdoy Twron Monday .....10:00 a.m. W«dn»»da'y Tman Tveiday,. 10:00 a.m. > Thursday Texan tyMnwday .10:00 un, Mday Tutan Thursday...... IOiOO a.m. "In 111* miilV arm mad* in on odwoili—nwnt, immedkitenotice muttbo Biv*ii aMp*raiM*far — *--MJ|« AH ->-»-. «• •*. OeWy IOC0^F9Cv vnN^nQR* AH CVQeewv TOC adjustment* thould be mod* net hht than 30 days after publkoMen." LOW STUDENT RATES 15 word minimum each day ..$ .75 Each additional word eachdayt .05 1 col. x 1 inch each day.. $2.37 "Unclassifieds" 1 line 3 days .$1.00 (Prepaid, No Refunds) Students must show Auditor's receipts andpay inadvance in TSP Bldg. 3.200 (25th & Whltis) from S a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Monday throughFriday., fft -m FOR SALE COMPONENTS 1974 Component sets (only 3) complete with speakers and du$t covers. To be & sold for S88.0O "each. Cash -or terms. UNITED FREIGHT SALES, 6535 N. Lamar. Monday-Friday 9to 9, Saturday 9 to 6. — ——-f :—: — AX-7000-GARRARD Garrard's famousprofessional turntable is the heart ot ttie AX-7000-Garrard stereo system 250 watt amplifier and precision AM/FMmultiplex stereo tuner with FET circuitry, AIR SUSPENSION 3 way 10 speaker system. Features heavy duty 8" woofer, 5!Vmidrange, 4" .horn tweeter, and S1-1* duocone tweeter in each speaker enclosure. 1 year guarantee on parts and labor. Lists at 5529 but will sell at $299. Cash or Terms. UNITED FREIGHT SALES, 6535 N. Lamar, Monday-Friday9-9, Saturday 9-6 FOURSQUARE FURNITURE Custom made furniture. Price for un­finished begins at:Chair-$25, Couch-$35, Desk-VtO. Coffee Table-$20, Dining Table-S20, Trundle Bed-$95. We also strip frame canvases. Between 6th and 7th on Red River. Monday, Wednesday, Saturday, 10:00 to 5:00. 478-3252 & Vintage Threads has company! Happenstance has moved in with a whole new worldof fine randmade goods 8iOO­ ffeiiliilllilSlifeSiill #? FURN. APARTS.|FURN. APARTS. • FURN. APARTS. IHELP WANTED and artobjects. To makeroom for them -block North of North Loop. 606 Franklin. pits, and allof the other things you want. bedrooms with shag, icemaker, LAKE AUSTIN -15 minutes cam: New semi-efficiencies and for our Spring Finery and duds for Call 453-2835 or 451-4352. AND ALL AT REASONABLE RATES. clubroom, TREES. Secluded location in pus/downtown. 1, 2, and 3 bedroom strutting • we're selling our Winter 1 8. 2 Bedroom Efficiencies Shag, carpet, cable, gas, water, fur­Northeast off Manor Road. From S159 ASPEN WOOD mobile homes. S85 1o S140. Mack's clothing at 25%-75% reductions. nished ABP. 2602 Wheless Lane. 926-4202, 472­ Full kitchen Marina. 327-1891, 327-1151. f 4553 Guadalupe 4162. Barry Gillingwater Company. Red Oak 2104 San Gabriel r Phone 452-4447 CA/CH, carpeting 477-5514, 476-7916 FOR SUMMER SESSION 2-1 house In l'VINTAGE THREADS/ ENFIELD AREA. One bedroom-with Large wdlk-in closets Tarrytown. All bills paid. Washer and every extra. Furnished or unfurnished £* -HAPPENSTANCE SU CASA Oriental furnishings dryer. No pets. Call 477-5570. fe 4 BLOCKS WEST OF from SI39.50 plus electricity. 807 West & 2405 Nueces -upstairs 203 West 39th Study room Lynn. Barry GillingwaterCompany. 477­ AVAILABLE JUNE1, superb2bedroom 451-2268 till 6 CAMPUS Peaceful courtyard with pool V I P 7794, 472-4162. house near campus. 1140 month, fur­ Completely furnished efficiencies, AC, Only steps to shopping nishings S275. Write Box 13324, Austin, GREAT PEOPLE! Brand new two gas and water furnished. $109. 78711. 405 East 31st APARTMENTS bedroom apartments, completely fur­ •'! LA V1LLITA 472-2147, 472-4162 33rd & Speedway nished. Frost-free refrigerator, self­903 W. 22Vj Walk UT or Shuttle at door. cleaning oven, dishwasher, S149.50, I Barry Gillingwater Company Now leasing for summer Call 477-5514 or 476-7916 bpilt level luxury living.Beautiful studio monthly, S75 deposit. Convenient' UNF. HOUSES SINGER Quiet atmosphere units designed for 3-5 mature students. Bergstrom and Highway 183. Students New contemporary decor. Walk-ins, and families welcome.Manager 385-2043 Shuttle on corner l BEDROOM, AC, carport, rear fenced ZIG ZAGS $56 after 4:00. 3 Zig Zag Singers that makebuttonholes, sew on buttons, do decorative stitches & monograms — much more. Inspect to­day. UNITED FREIGHT SALES. 653S N Lamar, Mon.-Frij 9-9, Sat. 9-6. TOP CASH PRICES paid for diamonds, old gold. Capitol Diamond Shop, 4018 N. Lamar, 454-6877. YAMAHA GUITAR SALE. Free case 'with every guitar, Amster Music 1624 Lavaca. GUITARS AND OTHER FRETTED in­struments repaired at reasonable prices. OUDS. LUTES, DULCIMERS, etc. Custom built. 20% discount on all strings. Geoff Menke -Amster Music. 1524 Lavaca. 478-7331 GUTTAR REPAIR, new and used a^u^stics. electrics, amps. Discounts on strings and accessories. THE STRING SHOP, 1716 San Antonio, 476-8421. Tues.­Sat. 10-6. CAMERAS 30%-50% Off. Canon Ftb bl.2. list $534, only $282. Camera Obscura, 478-5187 evenings. BankAmericard, Mastercharge. OVATION steel string acoustic guitar. Almost new. Must sell. Penny, 442-0782. FOR RENT -Cameras, Lens, Projec­tors, Accessories The Rental Depart­ment at Capitol Camera. 476-3581, Dobie Mall. LARGE INNER TUBES for swimming or tubing .All sizes to choose from. $3.00 up. 2201 Airport Blvd. if • AKAt 1730DSS 4-channei reel to reeltape if deck. Best offer. 288-2681 after 5 p.m. MYSTIC ARTS. 504 West 24th. 10-6 Tuesday-Saturday. Handmade clothes, rose pottery. True soaps.~> ADDED $2050 IMPROVEMENTS '70 Town-Country 12-64, SSE Austin, elec­tric. $6000 442-0971, Phil Ward, 441-1776. 1967 VOLVO Stationwagon. 4 door, goodtransportation. 74 plates. $395. After 6, 447-1338 HELPS YOUR FUTURE 5.125 acres east near Colorado. Live on it or use as investment. 459-9574, 452*4305. 197f"MALIBU CHEVROLET, $2000­Great shape, new equipment. Call 477­4562 or 926 7761 FIOOLE and BOW. Excellent but must sacrifice. $50 or best offer. 477-2080 between 6:30-7:30. AKC Old English Sheepdog pups. Blue and white 4 weeks. $150-$200. Call before 3,. 441-6877. 1970 SAAB 96.14,000 actual rrtiles Great car Needs tune-up. $1395. 454-2327 •74 CUTLASS SUPREME Fullyequipped FM Stereo and tape. Aisume payment*. Smatl Equity,. 441 -1832 evenings. FOR SALE, Like new Hoover portable wather. Great (or apartment use. 451­ 6061. wfj^ FOR SALE FURN. APARTS.IFURN. APARTS. • ALFA ROMEO COUPE W6S. Excellent mechanically. S speed transmission, Hancock Apts. four wheel disc brakes, Plreilles,Weber Free April Rent On Shuttle Bus Route. carburetors, low mileage, new paint, 30 SUMMER mpg., many extras. >1900-472-4806. : Efficiencies. Sparkling new Luxury. 921 East 46th. No Lease. All Bullt-lns. Near SPECIAL: $139 HEWLETT PACKARD HP3S engineer Hancock Shopping Center. Close toing calculator $225. Sofa and chair from Make a little money 9° a long way dur­ University. On Shuttle Bus Route. Denmark hardly used, $250. 926-0524. ing Woodslde's summer special, effec­ 454-3854 451-4654 472-8226 tive June1. See ourspacious oneand two 1951 FORD AMBULANCE. Runs good. bedroom apartment with huge closets, 474-5550 477-3651 $400. 444-2546. 1302 Parker Lane. Central Afr-Conditioning NOB HILL APTS., 2520 Longview. Now beautiful decor and optional fireplaces. leasing summer and fall. Large 1, 2 Sundeck, pool and cabana areavailable PLAYBOYS Carpeted -Large Pool bedroom. Dishwasher, disposal, shaglor your total relaxation.Lovely view of RIDE BIKE TOUT carpet pool, laundry. 1 block tennis Austin's hills. On the shuttle bus route, FURN. APARTS. Ultra-modern duplex apt., includes 2401 MANOR RD. 474-4665 courts, 'a block IC shuttle. Summer 'just minutes from the University and NEWEST & downtown. From$139 to $204, furnished. hanging fireplace, panelled walls, rates; 477-8741. slanted beamed ceilings, Terrazzo FINESTWOODSIDE floors, fully draped, modern furniture SUNNYVALEWE RENT and all tile bath, 2 bedrooms, air con­VANTAGE POINT APTS. ROOMS 2200 WillowcreekDr. 444-6757 ditioning, central heat, kitchen, private 2 Br. Furn. -$170 yard/palio. Lease required .-rent AUSTIN 1 Br. Furn. -$150 $155/month. No utilities. Tenants will RESERVE YOUR APT. FORSUMMER Your time is valuable & FALL. Shuttle bus service at your Private TEXAN DORM show. 3408-B West Avenue. To lease call doorstep. Rentals begin at $135, all bills Balconies -Dishwasher 1905-1907 Nuecesor write Apartment Rentals, 1009 Main Our service is free paid. Spacious efficiency, one and,two Pool -Central Air. Fall, Spring semester -$46.50/month. Plaza Bldg.,San Antonio, Texas. AC512­ PALO BLANCO bedrooms. Closets galore. Party bars & 441-0584 Daily maid service,. central air,227-2231. ' wet bars. Private patios & balconies. SHUTTLE BUS CORNER completely remodeled. Also available •PARAGON • APARTMENTS Clubroom, game rooms, sauna*, two single rooms, parking, refrigerator.Hot pools. Individual heating and cooling. plates allowed. Two blocks from PROPERTIES Furnished one bedroomapart­Professional resident management. 1S45 MARK XX APTS. campus. Co-ed. ment. 3 vacancies. THREE ELMS Burton Drive at Woodland. Second red RESIDENT MANAGERS 477-1760 472-4171 400 West 35th. Furnished -Unfurnished. light east of IH 35, take Woodland exit. 1 BR -$115 2 BR • $184911 Blanco Summer rates, Start $135 -$185. Also Phone 442-6789 CENTRAL AIR weekdays 472-1030. leasing for fall. 2 bedroom 2 bath, 1 SANTA ELAINA HOUSE. 2411 Rio bedroom 1bath.Close tocampus, shuttle CARPETING Grande. CA/CH, maid service, kitchen. bus, extra large, shag carpet, dis­LARGE POOL $75. 472-3684, 258-1902. hwasher, range, disposal, refrigerator, 472-4175 3815 GUADALUPE LE MARQUEE large closets, private, pantry, storage, TEXAN DORM; 1905-1907 Nueces. Dou­weekends Close to campus. Luxury etticiencies cabinets, cable, laundry room, pool.451-HARTFORD PLACE_ 454-3953 452-5093 ble available at S42.00/month. Dally 263"J:?2 $115, one bedroom $130, two bedrooms 3941 1405 Hartford Rd. t ^ maid service,central air.Refrigerators, $170. Pool, sundeck, fully carpeted, cen­ Large furnished 1 bedroom and hot plates allowed. Two blocks from efficiency apartments. CA/CH, snag tral air and heat. campus. Co-Ed. Resident Managers, carpet, quiet atmosphere. Just off TANGLEWOOD 477-1760. EFFICIENCIES 302 W. 38th Enfield Road, convenient toUT, Capitol, 1 .0 FROM $119 plus £. 451-2461 451-6533 shuttle bus. Some vacancies now, pre* EAST ROOM, SHARE KITCHEN, large yard,lease for fall and summer. Central Properties Inc. WHY $65, Va bills. No tobacco, dope. Summer 1 BEDROOMS Hurry! Hurry! Hurry! lease. 459-5071, Howard. FROM$130 plusE. FURNISHED ON SHUTTLE 38TH & SPEEDWAY SOMETHING DIFFERENT SEARCH . Summer Rates LOOKING FOR AN APT.? 453-0540 472-4162 Efficiencies with elevated separate BARRY 6ILLINGWATER CO. bedrooms plus enormous one and two Start Now! TRAVEL Choose from over 10,000 units. convenience, furnished or unfurnished. 2 BR Furn. $140 " ' OAK CREEK is enviconmentair/ Advantage Point Apt. Locater bedroomcontemporary apts. with every ,1-SR Furn. Sl20-$125 oriented and offers a creek th&t winds 1907 SAN GABRIEL through the community convenient to Nice shagcarpet -central air ­ 4' j BLOCKS TO CAMPUS £UR'OPi-TSRAEUAFRICA Free Student flights allyear round. „ SUMMER-FALL RESERVATIONS campus & shopping and conveniently Large pool • Transportation Upperclassmen, air conditioned, 1 priced from $129. 1507 Houston Street. CONTACT: Ride Bike to UT bedroom, full kitchen, bath, quiet,lots of 454-6394. Central Properties Inc.451-6533 • Professional Service -451-8242 -No fee. ISCA parking, amid. 1 person $130 mo., 2per­6035 University Ave. No. 11 • 24 Hour Phone Service sons S13S mo. plus electricity. Summer San Diego, Calif. 92115 Rates $5 mo. less per person. 453-3235 LET US HELP YOU FIND THE WILLOWICK .2604 Manor Road 477-1064 TEL: (714) 287-3010 BRIGHT AND (213) 826-5669 Live in Wooded Seclusion CHEERFUL YOUR $149.50 ALL BILLS PAID. 1 bedroom Larger Apartments with shag carpets, MINI ONE BEDROOMS furnished, CA/CH, built-in kitchen, near APARTMENT, LIVE NEAR CAMPUS Deluxe with all extras. Close to shuttle modern furniture, accent wall and con­campus. 4307 Avenue A. 451-6533, 451­ EUROPE-ISRAEL-AFRICA. Traveldis­3840. Central Properties Inc. SUMMER -FALL bus, new shopping center, 290 and DUPLEX counts year-round. Student Air Travel venient central location. RESERVATIONS NOW Koenig Lane. Call today. Agency, Inc. 201 Allen Road, Suite 410. or HOME 472-8278, 9-6 and for 2 or 3 persons, quiet, parking, maid. 892-2215, 6-9 MYRTLE WILLIAMS & MINI APARTMENTS, also one and two Air conditioned, 2 bedroom efficiencies l Bedroom Atlanta, Ga. 30328. (404) 25&-4258. S145 unfurnished $160 furnished S75 month each 2 persons, 160 month bedrooms. Close to campus. .Fully each for 3 persons. Fall rates • S5ymonth ASSOC. 2 Bedroom carpeted, CA/CH, rich wood paneling, ROOMMATES more per person.* Upperclassmen. Plus pool, all built-in kitchen. From >119.50. Electricity. 453-3235 . 472-7201 324 So. Congress SI78 unfurnished $198 furnished 4200 Avenue A. 451-6533,454-6423. Central SUMMER ON THE LAKE Properties Inc. NEED TWO LIBERAL roommates nowSTUDENT DISCOUNT All Bills Paid share 3 bedroom house. CR shuttle. $45 For the three summer months only. 600 South First St 444-0687 STEPS TO UT. 1 & 2 bedroom efficien-plus bills. Cary 472-9728. Why waste time ori a bus? Town Lake Apartments will give a cies. Nice pool area, study room, orien­substantial rent discount to UT students. tal furnishings. FromS139 ABP. 405 East NEED TWO FEMALES NOW! OwnWalk to class. 31st. 472-2147, 472-4162. Barry room, Estrada Apartments; Riverside. VILLA On. Town Lake, cable, ail bills paid, Old Main Apartment disposal, telephone jacks, laundry FACULTY Gillingwater Company Beckie 478-3448 beforefive, 447-4864after five. Unique Efficiencies. Fur­ facilities, clubroom, pool, pets, spacious ORLEANS QUIET ENFIELD AREA. One bedroomnished. All Bills Paid. 25th and 206 West 38th with built-ins, vaulted ceilings. Small NEED FEMALE roommate immediate­ efficiency. 1 bedroom, 2-bedroom, 3 AND STAFF bedroom apartments. Shuttle, bus. Pearl. S125 and up. 477-0770. Lease now; make this a great summer. 1 or 2 Bedroom Furnished. Convenientto Large 3 bedroom duplex townhouse in community living. S139.SO plus electrici­ly. Own room in huge house. Close to 1500 East Riverside, 444-1458, 444-3750. UT. Beautiful Pool and Patio. convenient Northeast Austin, WD conn., ty. 801 West Lynn. "477-8871, 472-4162. campus. 474-5532. vaujted ceilings, orange shag, fenced Barry Gillingwater Co. Reasonable. Shuttle "a block. yard, large watk-ins. 6413B Auburn. 926- COOL FEMALE roommate share nice 2 452-3314 459-9927 453-4545 6614, 472-4162. B~arry GiUingwater Com­NORTHEAST NEAR SHUTTLE, bedroom apartment, near campus, shut­FURN. pany. _ Highland Mall,.& Capitol Plaza. Large1 tle. $76.50 Available endMay. Diane 454­& 2 bedroom" with all the extras."From 6139. , . 2 BEDROOM S137.50 plus electricity. 1105 Clayton TENNIS ANYONE? S155/MO. Lane. 453-7914, 472-4162. Barry Located by UT courts giving you 40 ten­TWO BLOCKS Gillingwater Company * J%! Nicety furnished with dishwasher, dis­ nis courts In your backyard. Of course, 5 BLOCKS FURN. HOUSES posal. Between Lamar and Guadalupe 1 there are 2 swimming pools, barbeque SiMESTER LEASE. Large new I & 2 TO CAMPUS WEST OF CAMPUS UNEXPECTED VACANCY. Large, fur­nished one bedroom, porth of campus. 2506 Manor Road Inlcud'es CA/CH, dishwasher, disposal, Students Welcome MANOR shag carpeting, cable. 1700 Houston,Walk or bicycle to class Manager Apt. 201. 451-1375,451-2832. 345­Efficiencies only 4123. $50 deposit sTu, ONE BEDROOM Sao Paulo*• Lowest Rates In town Summer Rates Now Apartments. Shag, pool, balconies,Going fast! walnut paneled.Oneblock parK, Tavern, 2 BR Furn. $125-5135 $124 bills paid shuttle. 476-5072; 476-4999. 1 BR Furn. $115 pool, cable TV, shag carpet. Quiet Pool, party room& Bar-B-Que TANGLEWOOD Just received in original factory cartons elegant atmosphere. THE BLACKSTONE you expect — COMFORTABLE 14 nM Mobil* Home,. ing the water MINI APARTMENT. Open beam call- h*o bedroom*, ihagcarpet, bay"window; saunas, exercise rboms, game Move In Today! Ing, shag carpet throughout, all built-in 2200' NUECisTefficlency bills paid $135. raited ceiling. CA/CH. excellent condi­rooms, pools, putting green, • Best Rate on: the Lake kitchen, color coordinated. CA/CH, pool, Call 453-6(57. ' « tion M400. M5 33S2 alter 1 p.m. Prom S14S — all bills paid c Shuttle Bus—Irront Door near campus. 4000 Avenue A. H34.50 PLUS a great restaurant AND bills paid. 452 5533, 451-6533. Central NEW'EFFT No rent™tfiT~May. Walking 300 East Riverside Drive 2400 Town Lake Circle • TRACK HOME unit with amp. SOtabei the Cricket Club. Soon there'll Properties inc. distance to UT. 451-7937, 453-3974. *hd car umt. Sean color. TV. 444-1713. 444-3337 „ 442-8340 be a water polo pool andhand­ MIWU. EFFICIENCIES. $115 plus electricity. ! CLEAN NEW EFFlOENCllsT neaT I ball courts, 4oo. Come join us Pool, AC, carpet, paneling, no-pets. Hun­shuttle, CA/CH, shag carpet, residential «JnIZO S*0„ Brand sew. tington vine. 44th and Ave. A. 4J4-W03, neighborhood. $120-$l25. Till West 10fh, .Automatic tad* ml^~tade.out. Sound No. 104 or call 472-0829. ' SUMMER RATES NOW! SI* blocks now! From $145 NEW THIS WEEKI Ponce de Leon III, from Law School; t blockt ihuttlebuy 2 -capability Original coil tSSO. Sell for 444-1846 22nd and San Gabriel. Extra large two! SPACIOUS 2 SCOROOM furnished bedroom SIS0. one bedroom *170 AC, bedroom, two bath apartments ABP./MOO. 4B Wafter 1.00. Greg. " carpet, dlihwaitter, dlipoial, walk-In 2.101 Burton Dr. Most outstanding apartments in Jhe apartments. Good location, near cam­UNEXPECTED VACANCY.'Furnished pus, shopping Center, and shuttle bus. one bedroom luxury apartment on shutr dotetv 32nd and Interregional. 477-4019 •-(off East Riverside) University area ICall Rod Wettel at472­ 4BUIC*. Centurion.'] 'door hardtop. Ail billspaid. For more information, call tie. 4103 Speedway No. 202, Manager or 013-2220 hi"'! Air, auto, AMiFM. ««tr*l •941 or 47i«MJ. 454-9475. „ Apt. 103. 451-2132. 345-4555 Water and Cable Paid King size one bedrooms also available. PEACEFUL WEST AUSTIN. Colorful WEST efficiency. Shag, complete kitchen, near Leasing for Summer and Fall Drastically reduced Summer rates 1 BR, 1 BA. -$135 $64.50/month Enfield shuttle. S139 ABP. 1211 West 8th 2 BR., 2 BA. -S230 Apartment living'/a block fromCampus 1 Br. Furn. $145 (off Blanco) 476-3895, 472-4162 Barry No calls after 7:00 p.m. 2 Br. Furn. $190 compatible roommates individual applicants matched with 477-5560 or 477-7451 Gillingwater Company. Dishwasher • Shag Carpet Central Air & Heat' FTIUR DE LIS. 404 East 30th. Mature 1403 Norwalk 2910 Red River 476-5631 student. Lovely one bedroom. Walk to SHUTTLE BUS CORNER campus. Shuttle. Summer rates. 477­ A Paraqon Property 472-9614 •$120 -$135 5282. ASK TO SEE FOUNTAIN TERRACE -IHWI OUR BRAND NEW APARTMENT FINDERS service. 472­ HIGHLAND MALL APTS. I've Got a Secret Apartments. Located . ASK TO SEE 4162. in the heart of UT area. 1 block to shut­AREA ON tle $149.50, $169.50, ABP. OUR BRAND NEW Large Apt., one bedroom, large closets, OKl^BEDROOM Apartment -SI 55.00.SHUTTLE fully carpeted, cable, disposal, water, Luxury, extra nice, close to campus, 472-8253 - 472-2518 I've Got a Secret Apartments. gas, swimming pool, furnished. Walking shuttle bus. Warwick Apartments. 2919 Huge 1 & 2 Bedrooms torn, or unfurn. distance to UT. No children or pets. 610 Located in the heart of UT West Avenue-474-1712.. with large walk-ins, beautiful landscap­ West 30th. 4778858. area. 1 blocR to shuttle. S149.50 ing. From. S154 ABP. 1100 Reinti. 452­ NORTHEAST. Huge one and two -S169.50, ABP. 3202, 472-4162. Barry Gillingwater Com­bedroom. Complete kitchens, lots of POSADA 472-8253 472-2518. pany. storage. From $125 plus electricity. 1402 ESTRADA East St. Johns (by Reagan High School)ADVENTURE 453-6308. 472-4162. Barry GfTiingwater Lease Now for Fall to get a APTS. Company. gift of one month rent. WALK TO CAMPUS KENRAY Apartments and Townhouses 1 and 2 LARGE ONE and two bedrooms. Students and singles will love Reasonably priced. Large one bedroom Has vacancies, under new ownership, 2122 Hancock Dr. CA/CH, disposal, dishwasher,pool, shut­ apartments available. Carpeted, bedroom CA/CH, pool, sundeck, built-in kitchen. our garden, pool and next to Americana Theater, walking dis­tle. $150 up, ABP. Now leasing. Ver­ tance of North Loop Shopping Center 1801 South Lakeshore Blvd. sailles Apartments, 4411 Airport. 452­ clubroom. Your own private and Luby's One half block from shuttle 311 East 31st Phone 442-6668 8365.bus, group trips, and many &nd Austin transit. 2 bedroom 478-6776 451-6533 other adventures for fall. townhouses, extra large. Two bedroom LAW SCHOOL -one block. Large one flats, one and two baths. CA/CH, dis­Central Properties Inc. and two bedrooms. CA/CH, disposal, Flats and Studios from $125 ANTILLES APTS. hwasher, disposal, door to door garbage pool. $150 up, ABP. River Oaks, 3001Red 1 BR. FURN.$165 308 East St. John •" pickup, pool, maid service if desired, River. 472-3914. 2 BR. FURN. $180 451-8155 452-532S- washateria in complex See owners. Apt. .. <• SOMETHING DIFFERENT 113 or call 451-4848. Efficiencies with elevated separate ALL BILLS PAID SAVE $40 to $50 per month on summer THREfe ELMS jedrooms plus enormous one and two 2 NICE POOLS rates. Save $180 to $240 on year leases. Also taking Fall leases. Swimming pool, 400 West 35th. Furnished -Unfurnished. bedroom contemporary apts. withevery Dishwasher study room, security, no pets, walking Summer rates. Start $135 -$185. Also convenience, furnished or unfurnished. Fully Carpeted leasing for fall. 2 bedroom, 2 bath, 1 OAK 'CREEK is environmentally 2204 Enfield Rd. 478-0609 distance to UT and Capitol. 1802 WestWOODWARD APARTMENTS Avenue. Phone 476-5556. bedroom, ] bath. Close to campus, shut­ oriented and offers a creek that winds SHUTTLE BUS CORNER 1722 £ Woodward Office 107 tle bus, extra large, shag carpet, dis­ through the community convenient to 444-7555 < HALF MONTH RENT FREE. Large hwasher, range, disposal, refrigerator, campus & shopping and conveniently I. 2, or 3 bedrooms furnished one bedroom, CA/CH, cable. cabinets, cable, laundry room, pool. 451-454-6394 Central Properties Inc. 451-6533 large closets, private paltos, storage, M/nfurnished or furnished priced from SI25. 1507 Houston Street. PARK PLACE 452-3076, 258-1832. From SU0 -$265 3941. 2 swimming pools, playgrounds, WALK TO CAMPUS. Newly remodeled 2 Br^Purn^SlSO washateria, lighted grounds, 5 minutes rooms $75., all billspaid. (908 West 29th, ELEVEN POOLS to UT, minutes to B.A.F.8 , steps from ALL BILLS PAID apartment in the rear). Efficiency . MANOR IRS. on bus line. BILLS PAID, Free EFF., 1 and 2 Central Air Condition -Large $99.50, all bills paid. 2907 San Gabriel channel TV. Apt. C.Central PropertiesIncorporated. BEDROOMS Rooms -Fully Carpeted ­ VILLA 451-6533. Summer Rates Now FROM $132 ALL BlLLS . Covered Parking Area 2 BR Furn. $125-$135 4305 Ave. A 452-1801 BEAUTIFUL ATMOSPHERE. Shuttle 1 BR Furn. $115 TREES & VIEWS PAID at front door. Park with tennis courtsCentral Air Conditioning Nice 2 bedrooms furn or jnturn. only 3 A new concept in apartment across street. Swimming-pool. Efficien- Carpeted • Large Pool min from downtown, 5 min from UT. community living. Five' EL CID APTS. cy, one bedroom, two bedroom. LeasingRIDE BIKE TO UT Large wa«k-inv extra storage, private at summer rates. 4410 Avenue F, Apart­ 2401 MANOR RD 474-4665 architectural styles, choice of balconies, iots of glass. Prom $179 plus 1 BR $150 ment 103. 454-2092. E..OAK KNOLL, 620 South 1st (use furniture styles, color coor­ Tirrtbercreek entrance). 444-1269, 472-dinated throughout. CA/CH, " Dishwasher -Paneling NEED TO FILL new efficiency 4162. Barry Gillingwater Company. apartments. Walking distance UT. all built-ins, available unfur­Central AC -Carpeted $129.50, 451-7937. SOUTH nished for Si20 all bills paid. 3704 Speedway 453-4883 $155 ABP 1501 Kinney Ave. No. Ill SHUTTLE BUS FRONT LARGE EFFICIENCY summer sublet,SHORE 1 bedrooms 451-6533, 447-3983 DOOR fall lease option, 2 blocks campus. 400shag -paneling . Central Properties Inc. West 29th, No. 1. 477-7653. APARTMENTS giant walk-ins -balconies VERY SECLUDED GARAGE APT., West university area Spanish furnishings $130 ALLBILLS PAID for sedate grad student or working per­2423 Town Lake Circle Efficiencies. I and 2 bedroom son.' $125 plus electricity. 454-3124, 6-9 Efficiency, 1, 2, and 3 . 8118 472-4162 apartments, perched ona cliff overlook­p.m. •• V GillingwaterCompany ing a creek in one of Austin's prettiest bedroom apartments. iondmt parks. Fully shag carpeted, CA/CH, $125-$115 SUMMER RATES! North near pool, built-in kitchen, beautiful fur-Highland Mall and City park and rideOffer the solution niture. 513 Pecan Grove. 442-8094, 451-terminal at Fox Theater. Shag carpet, dishwasher, disposal, CA/CH, pool,your housing. Central Properties, Inc. sundeck. laundry. No children,,pets. 902 You Belong At P3 Mayfield, 454-3137, 452-1156. The South Shore's cent^t lo/ation provides easy access to EnglishAire MTnf APARTMENT. Open beam cell­NOW LEASING new efficiency apart­ing, shag carpet throughout, all built-in Come by and see our new eff iciency and Efficiencies, studios, 1,1, and IBR. IBA 2 BR, 2. BA 3 BR, 3 BA . ment. One semester or longer. klfchen, color coordinated. CA/CH, pool, 1 bedroom apartments on the banks of 3 bedrooms, furnished or un­5164.50 S235 $325 $135/month. All bills paid. 2700 Manor near campus. 4000 Avenue A. $134.50 Town La^e Complete with shag ca.rpetmg, accent wall, Modern fur­furnished, and all the extras Large Pool—AH Bills Paid Rd.; 477-4111. 2504 Manor Rd., 474-2201. bills paid. 452-5533, 451-6533. Central niture. plus an >nvidu4f deck overlook­like laundries, Properties Inc. • . yard, large front yard, tall oak trees. 2507 S. 4th. $135. After 6 p.m. 442-8344. ROOM & BOARD BELLSON'DORM for Men. Excellent home-cooked meals. Air conditioned, maid, swimmingpool. Now taking reser­vations for summer and fall. 2610 Rio Grande, 474-5680. TRAVIS STATE SCHOOL ATTENDANT 1 -$397 per month Taking applications for full time work, mainly 1:45 p.m.to 10p.m. shift.Duties include the care,traijihB and treatment^ of mentally retardedffesldents. Apply at the Personnel Ofnee, Travis State School, 2 miles east of Austin onFM 969 (East 19th). 8 to 11 a.m. or Ito 4 p.m., Monday through Friday. An Equal Opportunity Employer FROGS DON'T FLY but crazy captions do catch the eye. Be happy doing the things you like/best, talking to people on the telephone. New offices, 5 days a week, free parking, friendly atmosphere, bonuses plus salary. Call 451-2357 between 9:00-a.m. and 1:00 or between 5 p.m. and 9:00. SALESMAN, EDUCATIONAL FIELDS , PART TIME Excellent'opportunity with old outstan­ding school. Leads furnished. Work late afternoons and nights. Must have late model car, good education and character. Mature, well-groomed. Good sales experience preferred. OVERSEAS JOBS Australia, Europe, S. America, Africa. Students all professions and occupations $700 to $3000 monthly. Expenses paid, overtime, sightseeing. Free informa­V,• tion. TRANS WORLD RESEARCH CO. Dept. A-5. P.O. Box 603, Corte Madera, C-A. 94925 HOLIDAY HOUSE No. 1 Part-time noon help. We are looking for good part­ ­ with thepossible exception qfpost office was still the Pony have to laugh when some man with or withoutpictured^ National statistics show that although nearly 40 per­construction engineers Express. There are several said he had to meet a ' 2 Day Service cent of all workers are women, women's salaries are could be the campus guan@>' variations, of course. "A professor and there were four 472-3210 and 472-7677 2707 Hemphill Park falling lower and lower behind men's salaries. whose job it is to prevent un-friend's gota broken leg,and I men in his car and a baskejb < In 1956, the average female fulltime worker earned anthorized vehicles from must pick him up." "My ball on the back floorboards ,^ 63.3 percent as much as theaverage man. In 1959, this entering campus. friend in the back seat has a Another favoriteis "I'vegoF* TYPING II ; figure had dropped to 59.5 percent. Hobby said. Students who aren't sup­broken leg and I must take to pick up some statisticalv, A Responsive Typing Service Another detrement to complete equality in the job posed to usually are trying to him to class." -'Tve got a data from Dr. Zlatkovich." market is the stereotype of the traditional "women's drive on campus. Reasons broken leg and I've got With all due respect to the to job," such as that of a secretary or typist instead of an 2700 'Guadalupt range from being late to class cruise over to the health doctor, his name is enough to executive position, he added. to being too lazy to take the center," or finally (to the scare even a veteran campus Not many women hold elected offices' in Texas. Of shuttlebus. Most aredriven to guard) "If you don't let me guard. 474-i 124 pa f Thesjs 18,309 elected officials in the state, only 1*174 are fabricate ''valid"reasons why pass, I'll give you a broken THE WOMEN guards hear Professional, Resumes women. ^ \ * No Hassles - they must get on campus. leg." another line regularly, which Scientific On the Drag -Next to Gourmet On the national level, there is only one con-What they fail to realize is A SIMILAR line is the "I've appears fairly successful. feresswoman from Texas, U.S. Rep! Barbara Jordanof that most of the guards have got something to pick up or "Hello, Beautiful, what'chaHouston. -\ f I-'/ \ heard mo^p stories than the deliver" routine. That doin' later"is usuallygood for In the Texas Legislature, there' is only one woman Senate Watergate Committee, sometimes fools them for a at least a 10-minute pass. RESEARCH senator and there are only five women.Jn the House- and they've heard most of moment. However, recently An interesting story came SERVICES Hobby said that none of the top 10state officials isa them twice. they have been demanding to from a young guard who said woman. , NEVERTHELESS, the ex­see what is to be delivered. the more some women want A TYPING SERVICE "Part of the problem inelecting women tooffice lies cuses range from the trite to More often than not, without to get on campus, the specializing in in the failure of a significant number of women to the elaborate, the most com­another word, the driver will higher they raise their skirts. —theses and dissertations decide to seek public office." he added. mon being, "I've got to use make a U-turn and go away, Wishing to remain —law briefs the post office." But that is probably to another gate. anonymous, he said it occurs —term papers and reports all the time. Prompt, Professional The guardsattempt toact in Service a.lie detector capacity. briefs: Publication Positions Open 453-7577 One guard always looks to see Pick-up Service Available Application forms for in Burdine Hall 600. At 7:30 depends on the amount . noon meals to Austin's elderly poor if the storyteller is staring -TM#B Stoff Mwt* by David managing editor of The Daily p.m., he will be with the Latin offered by the volunteer. and handicapped. For more infor­back his and into eyes Tunnel to Nowhere mation, call 474-6416. Texan for the summer 1974 American Policy Alternatives For more information, con­KASSi Is offering three-week classes in sometimes makes judgmentsand for Cactus editor are Group at the Methodist Stu­tact Deborah Morrison at 444-Study Techniques, Study Reading that way. . Alon«ly covered sidewalk catches afternoon sun and Speeds and Verbal Preparation for ABACUS available in the Texas Student dent Center. 3528 or Mrs. Margaret Robert­Graduate Entrance Exams. Also One woman went past the casts geometric shadows at 26th and San Jacinto £ (M BUSINESS SERVICES Publications Business Office, Wednesday Theberge will son at 478-4671. offered are Short Courses, Breaking 1301 S. Interregional AUSTIN TOMOmOW Study Tensions, Reviewing for same guard everyday for 444-0816 TSP Building 3.200. give a public lecture at8 p.m.' weeks with a chair in the back Sale of Caps, Gowns Slow PHASE Hi NBGHBOtHOOO MKTINO for Tests, and Writing Papers. The Self-T/ping (50* page). Printingand Binding. An applicant for the position in Calhoun Hall 100 on "What Zone 6 will meet from 7 p.m. to 10 Help program will continue. of her car. She got throught Pete Meschke, manager of the sporting goods department atOne block south of Riverside. At the Future for Palestine?" p.m. Tuesday at Meti Elementary, Interested persons should call 471­ of managing editor must: Sunnyvale shuttle stop. 2101 Willow St. 3614 or gaby Jester A332 from 9 to 5 simply by saying, "Props for the University Co-Op Monday, estimated .thatonly at ANNOUNCEMENTS gowns have been ordered Dy prospective graauaiesi. •Be registered the p.m. by Thursday. < RTF." lered by graduates«ij^li|;5 , Typing Courses All' DEPARTMENT is co-sponsoring a TEXAS UNION MEXICAN AMERICAN University in the semester in < Registration for the Seniors who wish to participate in the traditional gr^uaUon = ii:a which he applies. last public lecture at 8 p.m. Tuesday in CULTURAL COMMITTEE is sponsoring TYRING Reports, Resumes typing classes of the spring the Art Building Auditorium. John fen exhibit of materials related to The Austin chapter of ceremony must order caps and gowns by Friday,Qr^r?are be-;•-\ :-t " W'-if- TuesdW/ A^pHI 9, 1974 THE DAILY TEXAN Paf§-13 ti* r . i .••-•• •••• , 1 a * -iw ^ L •- Blastedfor T-' representation, that rules tof evidence-any answprs.'T^#?'^"^ ' = Y'V I WASHINGTON (UPIp^ Seven Sandman criticized Democrats on the should be decided on in advance and that Republican members of the judiciary committee for opposing St. Clair's par­ the hearings should be speeded up with ; committee took the House floor Monday to ticipation and called the committee , denounce the Democratic leadership and daily" meetings, if necessary. „J| committee staff for delays in the Inquiry If Nixon's attorney, James St. Clair, is meetings "undemocratic^' not allowed to sit in and cross-examine fs;'L into President Nixon's impeachment. l*r~ Rep. Lawrence Hogan, R-Md., assailed witnesses during the hearings, McClory Rep: Robert McClory, R-Ill., told a the committee staff for its memorandum said; "it will be interpreted that the ||jt near-empty chamber that public accep­of impeachable.offenses, which hecalled a hearings are partisan and unfair." tanceof the committee's work depends on "very skimpy analysis slanted against the Rep. Charles W. Sandman, R-N.J., said •j£2 a speedy and thorough completion of the President." the committee had done nothing since '-v inquiry which was started last October. reconvening Jan. 7 atid urged it to meet He said he expected the President'sMcClory, who has had several verbal every day for business sessions, not staff memorandum to be slanted in his favor,run-ins with chairman Rep. Peter W. ft V o Rodino, D-N.J.; during the K&irings, meetings. but that he expected the committee summed up the GOP position that the > "All we do is meet once in a while," he memorandum to have studied both sides said. "We ask questions, but we never get committee should allow Nixon legal of the issue. "I think it's unfair, too, for the chair­man (Rodino) to blame the President and his attorney for the delays," he said. .VT] "This is not true. We should be meetingon a daily basis until we reach a decision on these matters, and that's up to the chair­man." Claim Hogan also said it was "erroneous" to PARIS (UPI) — President Nixon stole known for its American sympathies. It use the analogy (of the committee) with a the show at memorial, ceremonies for printed a cartoon showing Europe on its grand jury as an excuse to deny the French President Georges Pompidou dur­knees, kissing Kissinger'shand with Nixon President's attorney the right to cross­ing his weekend trip to Paris where he nonchalantly resting his feet on a black-examine witnesses and participate in the demonstrated U.S. influence before world lined, cross-adorned funeral notice. hearings. leaders, French political analysts said Analysts said though Nixon's attitude may Monday. appear controversial, it reflected the fact Democratic Rep. Don Edwards of life of California rose to challenge the testimony Moments after the servicesSaturday for of U.S. military, diplomatic and and said he was certain the majority ofPompidou, who died last Tuesday, the U.S. economic weight on the world scale. ' Democratic committee members would Embassy residence became the center of "Whether one likes it or not, whether world policy talks that helped to. un­one bows to it or not, U.S. supremacy is at support having St. Clair sit in — "The only right thing to do." derscore NixOn's claim to the leadership home everywhere," Le Monde observed. of the western alliance, the analysts said. And Nixon's caviar-and-vodka breakfast with Soviet President Nikolai V. POdgor­ if ny, and his talks with West German Chancellor Willy Brandt, Japanese Premier Kakuei Tanaka and«therleaders took place only a stone's throw from the Elysee Palace from where Charles De Gaulle, and Pompidou used to fire broad­ sides against U.S. world influence, they noted. "Brushing aside traditions, a President under reprieve stole the show from a defunct president," said Le Monde newspaper under a lead editorial titled "The Nixon Festival." "What a strange vengeance for America to see this feverish diplomatic activity held in the former Rothschild Palace fly­ ing the American flag, only a few steps from the Elysee from which were issued so many condemnations of the White House, and where the expulsion of American forces from our soil and France's pullout from NATO were decided," said conservative L'Aurore newspaper. -~ "The overlord of the western world," said conservative Le Figaro newspaper. President Approves f Wage Bill WASHINGTON (AP) -Legislation raising the federal minimum wage in stages from |1.60 to $2.30 an hour was signed into law Monday by President Nix­ on. Nixon had vetoed similar legislation last yeaSr and voiced reservations about the measure sent him by Congress. But he said he wassigning it because "raising the minimum wage is now a matter of justice that can no longer be fairly delayed." The measure raises the minimum wage —UPI Tataphato for 36 million workers covered under the Lending a Hand 1966 minimum wage law from $1.60 to $2 on May 1, with other increases boosting it Workmen's hands install a patterned glass window in b Kansas church. to $2.30 by Jan. 1,1976. The $2.30 rate will be effective for all affected workers by 1978. IN ADDITION, the legislation extends Gravitational Pull federal minimum wage and overtime re­ quirements to 7.4 million additional workers. When fully effective, the new law will May Be cover 56 million workers. The last legislation raising the minimum wage was enacted eight years WASHINGTON (UPI) -The first in­gravity is allowing the moon to move ago. direct evidence was reported Monday sup­away from the earth about4 centimeters a The additional coverage goes to 5 porting the theory that the strength of year — about IVz inches — to increase its million federal, state and local employes, gravity on-earth and throughout the un­orbital period one two-thousandths of a se­1 million domestics and additional retail iverse is slowly weakening. cond a year. store employes, service industry Dr. Thomas C. Van Flandern, an "This is the'first numerical result which employes and farm workers. astronomer at the U.S. Naval Obser­appears to have as its most probable ex­The minimum wage increases would be vatory, measured the orbital speed of the planation that gravity is decreasing," he phased in on this schedule: moon with the precision of an atomic said. _ WORKERS WHO had coverage before clock to determine that the force of gravi­Weakening of gravity would have major1966, anestimated 36 million, would have a ty apparently is decreasing at the rate of moon. implications for the earth and It $2 floor May 1, $2.10 Jan. 1, 1975, and $2.30 one part in 10 billion per year. would mean, for example, that the earth is Jan. 1, 1976. This means, he said in an interview, that expanding at the rate of less than 1 cen:Those brought under coverage by the a 150-pound man would lose 7 millionths of timeter per century. That, he said, could 1966 act and the present one, $1.90 May 1, a gram of weight a A gram is year. explain why the continents of earth seem $2 Jan. 1, 1975; $2.20 Jan 1, 1976, and $2.30 roughly the weight of a paperclip. to be slowly drifting apart. Jan. 1, 1977. Van Flandern presented his findings at Farm workers, now with a $1.30 floor, the opening of a week-long meeting of the $160 May 1, $1.80 Jan. 1, 1975; $2 Jan. 1, American Geophysical Union. He said his 1976; $2.20 Jan. 1, 1977 and $2.30 Jan. 1 work was based on a theory proposed two neuis 1978. years ago by Cambridge University The new coverage for domestic astronomer Fred Hoyle. di de in th m tu th ui yi if A Document of Damage A home movie camera, operated by U.S. Rep. Donald the storm's destruction. The house in the background can Clancy of Ohio catches the devastation of one of the re-be rebuilt, although many others throughout the Midwest cent tornadoes in the Cincinnati area. The films will be were reduced to rubble by the early April storms. shown to Clancy's Washington colleagues as evidence of Tanks, Artillery Dvel Along Golan By The Associated Press In Jerusalem, Premier Golda Meir spent the day consultingAn Israeli fighter-bomber went down in flames ovdr the em­ with her Labor Party on whether to get rid of Defense Ministerbattled Golan Heights front Monday, and the two pilots bailed Moshe Dayan, whose departure from the cabinet could bring out and'were captured in Lebanon. down the .government. It was the first Israeli warplane lost over the front since the BUT SHE WAS unable to pull her bickering party together,October war. postponed a key meeting of the party leadership set for MondayTank and artillery duels imaged from dawn to dusk along the night, and left the crisis unresolved. length of the 40-mile Golan cease-fire line for the 28th consec- The crisis focused on the report of a government-appointed tive day. No.casualties were reported., commission investigating Israel's lack of preparations for theSyria said the Israeli F4 Phantom was brought down over Mt- October war. Hermon by its air defense system, apparently meaning a mis­The commission blamed the chief of staff, Lt. Gen. Davidsile. But Israel denied this, saying the plane burst into flames Elazar, and his intelligence director — who both resigned — butbecause of "a technical hitch." cleared Dayan's name. Lebanon said the plane crashed in the Arkoub region near the However, many members of Dayan's own Labor Party called village of Chebba, only six miles north of the Israeli border and for Dayan to share the blame and quit. about 40 miles south of Beirut. ­A LEBANESE spokesman said the two pilots were safe and UNITED NATIONS (UPI) — The United Nations Securitysaid they were picked up about three miles west of Chebba. He Council decided 13-0 Monday to extend the mandate of the U.N. did not say where they were being held. Emergency Forces (UNEF) in the Middle East for another six Israel admitted using warplanes for,the first time since the October war on Saturday. It said air strikes were ordered after months, until Oct. 24. China and Iraq abstained. Secretary General Kurt Waldheim the Syrians attacked an Israeli position on 9,000-foot Mt. Her-had recommended continued operation of the UNEF. mon, on the northern tip of the heights. The UNEF was authorized last Oct. 26 by the council for a six- IN DAMASCUS, informed sources said Syrian delegates will month period ending April 25. The council then decided on a leave for Washington within the next 48 hours for talks with force of up to 7,000 men at a total cost of $30 million for the six Secretary-of State Henry A. Kissinger on disengagement with months. Israel on the heights. Tile present strength of the force is 6,788 men from 12 coun­They said the Syrian team will be headed by Brig. Gen. tries — Austria, Canada, Finland, Ghana, Indonesia, Ireland,Hikmak Chehabi, chief of Syrian army intelligence, and will in­Nepal, Panama, Peru, Poland, Senegal and Sweden. clude a few military and Foreign Ministry experts. ^^0 IH 35 In Ul Area By JEFF SAMFIELD Traffic oh IH 35 near the University was rerouted onto frontage roads between Manor Road and East 15th Street Monday. The East 19th street crossing also was closed, eliminating all cross traffic, Travis A. Long, district director for the Texas Highway Department, said. The detour will reman in effect for ap­ proximately nine months while the bridge crossing at East 19th Street is removed and replaced with a new structure design­ ed to span the eight lanes of expressway to m.&S N»rth below it,. Long aid. Long said he does not expect trafficflow to be slowed by the detour, since freeway motorists will not have to contend with traffic lights. He also foresees no problems for University students exiting to the campus from IH 35. Motorists wishing to enter IH 35 from 19th Street will follow these procedures: • Traveling east on 19th Street, wanting to go noth on IH 35: turn left on Red River IS* St. Street, then right to the Manor Road crossing. • Traveling west on 19th Street, wanting to go north on'IH 35: form one lane, turn right and continue north onto the frontage road in the outermost lane without stop* ping. ' • Traveling east on 19th Street-arid wan ting to go south on IH 35: tuni right without stopping. • Traveling west on 19th Street, wanting —Skatch by Mary Yimmo to go south on IH 35: use Chicon Street south to either the 12th, Sixth or First IH 35 Detour Street crossings. I employes applies to those who work more The basis for the work is the assumption than eight hours a week, whether for one that if gravity is weakening, the orbits of or more employer, or who work as much planets about the sun, or the moon about . as 50 hours in a calendar quarter. the earth, would slowly expand and the However, casual babysitters, companions time for each orbit would gradually in­for elderly or ailing persons and "live-in" crease. The orbital time of the moon was domestics are exempt. easiest to measure, but it is also known FULLTIME students may be employed that the friction of tidal forces between for no more than 20 hours a week at85 per­the earth and moon is slowing the moon's cent of the regular wage floor. -orbit. / £ f The bill also narrows exemptions for Hoyle.suggested that if the role played overtime in some industries, grants by tidal forces were removed from the modified overtime rights to police and' calculations, the role of a decrease of firemen, tightens the present law on child gravity could be measured. Van Flandern, #1'' labor on farms an] , -' Volume 10,740,000 shares. "