» si. mm • m Student Newspaper at The University of Texas at Austin Please Recycle This Newspaper Austin, Te-xas, Tuesday, August 13, 1974 Ten Cents illMIS • levery .boiler, are being,, installed t or Consciejitioiis ^doperS; beware?" We' now1have"the1story t»f arm5ii6t' con­jbufinfr. th tfip rtplinfiueiicv .of his elderis-i-' --< ' f' • An -ll-yeat'-bia boit was recently: rrestedf, htne for allegedly. selling-^~" r,Cainenr-, ['Austin'1 Police' Officer -Roger Huckpbee made thearrest at2',15p m," Sunday;"after the.youBgstei1 attempted to sell ofte-half gram of the substance •JWr ^.'yl«je-rojectt -Matagorda County nuclear power plant, as an example of Austin's concern for its future. ONE OF the-main problems with Lo-'_ _ Vaca's curtailment plan is that it would force Austin 'tp burn'fuel oil in its generators, he pointed out. The-generators are designed to use fuel oil only in emergency situations, and con­tinued use of fuel oil could permanently damage the generators, Hancock said. ' Austin is modifying its generators so that they can burn fuel oil, but it takes • five or sbrmonths tomodify a-generator. Since all the work has to be done in the ' -"off»peak—winter_jnonths_.ancL.only one. generator at a time can be worked on it ; will take until 1980? before all the generators' are modified, Hancock reported. -Modifying, the present-five generators will cause-between a 10 to:15 percent reduction; of efficiency thus" creating a needHo build new generators to replace " the .output lost. TBe cost of the new generators and modifying the present ones will be around $25 million, Hancock said, OTHER PROBLEMS Hancock iordered.'$£$$$$^V 0T .«j.:£By MIKE MORRISON " ' — ' - said could occur from'a heavy-reliance on oil are that there would be a shortage Of trucks and pipelines to Carry the need- . • i&Sfc -..Texan Staff.,Writer •„ JsSSajfiiSI .• __Ltf Gov. Bill Hobby was accused Monday of block­--'-iifjig a Senate-House committee investigation into'the ' recent Huntsville prison shootout by a spokesman for a group demanding-a-citizen's review of the nuntsviile Incident: * Hobby directed a "cover-up. of information from public officials and created a news blSCfcqut of infor-k mation from the publje," a s s e r t e d B i l l Kimble, j , , (Related Stery, ,Pog« 11J spokesman for Citizens for Public Scrutiny on Huntsville. Cater in-the day, {lobby qnd Sen. jChet Brfaaksv -DrPasadena, ' chairman of the "joint legislative committee, storngly-denied-4he-ac­cusations' , : KIMBLE SAIJ) Texas Department of Corrections Director W,J. Estelle urgedHobby to call offapossi­hlp jnvcstifaHnn hy thgr.Tnlrit Legislfttivp rnmmltfpp on Prison Reform • ^ i ' ' Hobby then called Brooks, at that time in Los Angeles, and Instructed, him to "get his .people off" the investigation, Kimble-said. . ^'John Albach. head ;of the joint coitfttiittee staff* ed oil and that heavy oil burning^;® accelerates corrosion thus_ Causing .eariipr replacements .and.mor^ frequent shutdowns. Hancock also mentioned heavy reliance on fuel 6IT could be dis-" astrous if there is another Arab oil em-• bargo. Hancock >qlso£•' HE SPLICED HlJjWOR into his repeated calls for federal ^economy to stem inflation, confessing that as a Michigan con.­gressmanhe sometimes.voted to spend money on Grand Rapids . "while VigorouslyTopfwsing-wasteful-federafrboondoggjes-ia. Oklahoma.That is'the home state of House Speaker Carl Alberi. ./.-"• • In the House chamber where he served before his,appoint­ment to the vice-presidency, Ford said.what he wants is not a honeymoon with Congress but "a good marriage" forlong-term cooperation.' ­ • Ford said his was not a formal, report on the State of the Union, but it-amounted to that. "My instinctive judgimerit is that the State of the Union is ex­-•ceIlent,'v':Ford said. "But the state-of,-our economy is not so good." * • ' ' . • He said that is the unanimous concern of Americans. FORD PROMISED to work'with Cortgressih an-effort "tobr­ ing. the.federal budget into balance in fiscaTyear 1976," which beginsflext July 1. " Setting-a bipartisan tone. Ford said his first specific request ~~is not to Cbngress-but-to-voter»-in"-'gie-Novembeg-electionsT-to­_,SUPP?£^.candidate5 of either party who. back ''tough de&istpns to •.; • ii\flation under conffol."~­ • Etfjrd .said -it may take timejto stop inflation, but-ticked off ii4a5lhree immediate steps to fight it: . ' • The drive for a1 balanced budget. . • A request that Congress enact immediately a bill to revive . the Cost of Living Council to "let.us monitor wages and prices , vjto expose abuses" without reinstating controls. Ford said that •^should be done before Congress takes its Labor Day recess.: ' • A "domestic summit meeting to devise a bipartisan action •-plan for stability and growth in the American economy." He • said he would conyene such a conference.-and "Iwill personally ­preside." Ford-said the meeting should be ITeld soon, and "in' ; i 70s. to call-off any investigation t»f the affair. ^ , Brooks explained Monday the joint committee was established to make aivanalysis of the Texas Youth Council and the Texas.Department of Corrections and does not have the authority-of an investigatory body. -T-yrmin^KimMfl'" hs "nnfortiinate. Brooks said Hobby, called him in Los Angeles, but Hobby waSonly"sfeekin^reassurance"that(he com­mittee staff would not "get in theway of the ongoing Department of Public Service investigation,-" ­ LAST WEEK, at the request "of the TDC, Gov. Dolph Briscoe ordered Uie 'DPS to investigate the Huntsvilleincicjent, Fred Gomez Carrasco and Rydolfo Domlnguez, both inmates .at Huntsville, reportedly killed two women hostages and then themselvesas they tried to escape after holding'as many aS 15 hostages for 11 days in the-library of the Huntsville's Walls Unite. ^ KIMfetE STRONGLY criticised Briscoe's selec­ :tt^ir7lf7Tiiyqg-Rang«>p-C?a}ttr-.I-4V^ng^rg.to hparf DPS-investigation. ?It iaaft •.elementary principle of "faimess.that persons involvedlntlie inildent^iould. not be asked to Investigate tt,J' he said. . After the shootout,prison'officlals said theslain in­ • Said.Ttfarsday;.BtobKrta)lerf.RfaBr;a.BiH!!^^fit^^imj?r -,mate3;Were-not8hot by, prison guards,rFfll agents or. A, ** -^ * **•»* •iUr*zgt. f r*f.S -Ir-y •5 JSP Twelve PagesV 471-459"? full view of the American public. ':-In-a -st^teoient-aimed_at.JKassjirijjg allies overseas and cautioning potential adversaries, Ford pledged to continue the •Nixon foreign policy and then added: , • . "Let there be no daubt or misunderstandinganywhere. There ­are no opportunities to exploits should anyone so desire. There will be no.change of course.mo relaxation of vigilance; no aban-' donmentof the helm'orourShip ofState as-tbewatch changes." • Foitl asserted he would support maintenance of.the nation's military strength,^saying, "A strong defense is the surest way to peace. Strength'makes detente attainable. Weaknessinvokes war, as my generation knows:from four bitter experiences." Ford said he has instructed Officials of bis administration "to <|j make fiscal restraint their first order of business; and to save every taxpayer's dollar the safety and genuine welfare of the country-will permit. > ;v . • . rfkS He urged Congress to follow suit and warned that he would use his veto power to fight spending he considers excessive. The President said he would sign Uie Elementary and Seco'n-• dary Education Bill passed last-week by-Congressbut added, "I i will oppose excessive funding during this inflationary crisis."­ Ford addressed himseiralso^ftrttiedfpkrmatic-corps-assembl-^-^ ed at the Capitol, promi'sin"f"tb deal openly with both allies and adversaries, and to continue in support of "the outstanding foreign policy:of Preadent Nixon.".-. • " iie-said America's-witl for p^ai^ Hall be second to none, and "so will America's strength be second to none." ' ' While he focused on inflation and the eocnomy, Ford made these specUif points with regard to foreign affairs: •To Western Hemisphere nations, he pledged "deepening dialogue to define renewed relationships of equality and . justice." -• -. ' ' . »To Asian allies, |ind particularly South'Vietnam, Laos and";^ Cambodia, Ford pledged"a.,continuity in.oiif support fojf-their ­security, ind'ependence. and economic development.' • He vowed to continue the policy of detente, with, the Soviet Union saying""there;can 'be'no. alternative to a positive and peaceful relationship between our nations/' . To China .he promised a cohtinuation'.of the relationship "iS started by Nixon. -v •• • He pledged ongoing negotiations aimed at a lasting settle-, ^ . ment in the Middle East. ; ": 5::. '» ' • "Toall nations," hecotidiuded "Ipledge continuity inseefe -ing a common global goahia stable intemafional structure of trade and-finances which reflects the interdependence of all peoples •' Ford^aid'there-was no needlor him to pFeacfi^ttblic-rooralis­ty; that there are better preachersand the Scriptures"to guide us on the. path of personal right-living and exemplary official-conduct." • " • '' ;• '"...Frequently along the torturous roa'd of recent months;-^ from this chamber to the President's house, I protested that.I' was my own man." Ford said. Jf , "Now I realize that I. was wrong. "lam your man, for it'was yt/ur carefully weighed confirma--­tion that changed my occupation," he said. : ' ­ Ford made-no mention of his coming appointment of a new vice-president; a choice that will besubjcct to'the confirmation of the Democratic Congress,as washis own nomination as No.2 v> man. : i ' Auto Accident todoy UT Killed -.-'MM " . *< • r.S Partly Cloudy... Parker A. 'Alford Jr., 22, the starting His body" is at the Waltrip' Funeral-; Tuesday will be part­tight end for the Texas football team last home in Houston. Funeral arrangements' season, was killed Monday in a traffic have not been completed. ly cloudy and Hot with accident in Houston!" the wind blowing from Police said he died moments a'fter his, • small foreign-made car collided at Loop the southeast at 8 to IS • BIO and San Felipe with a tractor-trailer mph. Tuesday's high loaded with 48,000 pounds of rice. •Alford,. 6-1, 220, would have been a will be in the mid-90s senior education major this fall. Last with a low in the mid-. was his first ^t Texas after year transferring from Na'varro Junior College where he was a junior College All-America. In 1973, Alford started five games; • catching, three passes for 22 yards. Two .of his catches-'"era for touchdowns against Rice University. His receptions Were limited because"Texas-employs-a Wishbone formation".whichvuses^"a tight end mainly for blocking purposes. "It's hard to say how something like this will emotionally affect a team," Offensive Backfield Coach Fred Akers said. "His loss also.changes jou&over-all . depth. His'death was very unfortunate." Alford is the.youngest son of Houston oilnf&n^.Parker Alford. He graduated' from Spring Woods High School and his older brbther Lairy was a star defensive back at Texas Tech during the late '60s. Parker Alford Jr. Texas" Rangers, but killed themselves. An autopsy performed last week indicated the fatal shots were fired at point-blank range,* indicating suicide. ­ However, a letter written by a prison inmate claimed prison guards .Shot the inmates at point­vblank range, •Thf^-letter, written the night of ,the shootout, was receWm last week bv the joint pom­ was unable'tosee it because Rogershad as*ked his in-: vestigators to study the tape" first • Meanwhile, The Associated Press repSrted Hobby admitted he instructed the committee staffers to1 return from Huntsville because they had'"exceeded their authority mittee staff.and theTexas Civill.ihprties llmnn 'I'hp • BROOKS-SAIB-the-staff-will-conUnuR-to-i'mn'niW |• inmate said he was told of the incident by two other the situation and' keep.the committee generally in­injflkes who wprk in the prison hospital and witness-formed.'.' If any possible unlawful acts areJurned up ' ed uie shootout . j by the committee, this informatfijiKwill be turned. Kimble. also said Sen . Bob Gammage'of Houston r over to the proper law enfdrfcqment authority, he'^ and a staff . member of the joint committee were continued. ^denied access to information last week by prison of-v To add to the speculation and rumors, there were ficials. * -7-unofficial reports from members of the committee GAMMAGE. a member of the committee, said the—that. Ignacio CuevgsT^one of the three inmates-to only reason he went to Huntsville was because the-attempt escape,, was badly beaten and taken to the chairman, Brooks, was out of town. He. termed prisonMnfirmary'|orjtreatment­Kimble's statement as '"absolutely untrue." 0 ' Gammagesaid jhe staff had recejved this informa-: rGamtnage said-Estelle offered.-them "sincere tion from ;a "normafly. reliable source.'' V y PooperaQo'n. but-Estelle was concerned about iBrookS; and Sen, Lloyd Doggett, D-Aust3n,v also; releaSmgSome of-the information forpublic."ScMtiny^-:acknowledgea,i-sf?* Convention >#13 Ji§£/,{Congress — at least for a while, members of the:University— is*'-. . By MIKE M0RR1SS0N " "eteftion thari'revision." government faculty concluded Monday. , *" * ~Mr Texan Staff-Writer While governor; Shivers twiceattempted but ;"Ford will have a honeymoon for the first100 days, then he--­Former Texas Gov. Allan-Shivers said Mon­: failed to get Uie Leglslaturr'-to call a eon-­aid the Congress will become diserichanted with one day if.Gov.' Dolph Briscoe had' used his in­stitutional-convention. Those Fevisio/i N^yf/^nother, and the conflict will begih," Dr. Richard Kraemer, fluence during theConstitutional Convention, a proposals failed because of-thelarge aiftiount-of'y1''*-associate professor of government, said. "The conflict is a proposed charter might have been adopted. the proposed citizen participation,The said. built-in situation with our Constitution^'' -• . -;However, Shivers was not totally in favor of SHIVERS SAID he might have vdted for the . Dr. SamOel Popkin,'associate professor of government,• the document that failed , and'said he did.not 'proposed charter but was not sure if Texas' , I§. also predicted a "honeymoon," but doesnot think-much, will > know,how much the people-of Texas lost, ex­;voters would nave accepted it in November.' ;v.rj:. be accomplished before the November elections. Popkm­cept the .$5 million spent on the revision One o.f ftie 'main faults , he saw in the final ' siv, ..thinks .having.Ford as President will be a. "great :ex- process. . • proposal'centered aroundtthe financial section. vh?perience,'' since he is the "first true Middle-American SPEAKING to-a University class, Shivers Asked about the, right-forwqrlj;. section,.Republican we've had in years." based his opinions from experience he gained Shivers said it was of a statutorynature, and C <2s_ '.'Gerald Ford should have warm, .friendly relations with _ while governor between 1949-1957. shoukhnot have been included in the proposed • the Congress* but whether anything ban be accomplished ~ Shivers* a University regent, said he.did4jot-^-eonstitution; However, "half of the presentremains to-be seen." Dr. Rdbert Linebeny, associate t/lllf . Iffhir . auamI ''U2m 1h ^1*ik.iiAM tou»erf»rd-{r)-itshawnconferringwithjSecretorv of State Henry Kissinger. Most of the cabinet members are expected to remain for the time being as Ford has yet to make any alterations. ' ment a staiie~aniversityi— The . : Merger Consider By BRYAN BRUMLEY professional schoolsin the Rio oi Texan Staff Writer Grande Valley..' system in South Texas. Middle The-Austin chapter of . Pan American Universityat; TWO MEMBERSof the Pan He did n president is «x­workers at Middle Earth, a drug crisis in­COVERED PARKING American with the three cam­pected Tuesday. tervention center. The people at Middle POOL puses of Texas A&IUniversity Further- direction will have to form a University of South to come from Schilling; Mrs. -Earth3iescribB:lh&ircenter-aB^awarm.place Texas failed in the Allan Shivers, chairperson of that cares/'-This is the reasorv the boolTwas" Legislature, ^ the Pan American Board'of written. . -\ . ' Bep. Da^Kubjakj Ch^irper-Regents, said. She was at the tlUGECLOBEm . "*son_ of-the-HtraserEdueation—:Aug;^meeting.:SchlllingJ9id This book is available in the Middle Earth" ; ISHWASHER/DISPOSAL Committee at the time, said. the matter wiil come before office, in the University "Y" office, phone there were many indications the Pan American Board of472-9246, or at the University Co-Op 2810 RIO GRANDE pointing toward the establish-Regents at their regular -^meeting-.Wednesday. """ Action Line^Speaks^LouSer k;'-The chancellor's officeThe University Co-Op smade no. official pomment. •ST EL PATIO • • , General Books" Second Floor ' ' ab-ss-"r 4 Than WordsflCD ' an Insider. However, the possible merger i must be considered by the > BanlcAmericard and MatterCharge•wefeome. One ' University Co-Op Consumer Action. Line in regents of both universities, . hour free parking with purchase of $2.00 or mora?' 476-4095 and iil-tkmately by the,' Mon. fhru Fri. 8:30 -5:30 478-4436 'Legislature. ^ -"WE ARE trying todo' what .we can for the people of the ' Id m -.••Valley," Schilling said. "There was no one at the IT'S OUR BABY! k meetingwho had the authority Sf8? HL " to say yes or no. I don't think anyone has said' up yet. I Good v . In our Boat Moc.TKe hottest don'twant to say they've said ­ ' shoe in: the U.S. Brown leather yes', either." with whitcj-ubbcr solo.i Sizes-;' ^Reasons 6-9. S17. •j-. Pan American was founded • • A - in 1927 as Edinburg Junior College. It became afour-year,^Mwn college In 1952 and a' state-( tSLIVE it supported school in 1865. lid .mms • om Dobie's right next to campus. Jusl across the ­street from the main academic complexJfefS' 'JL anifl fas±_dashjo the Tower. "Cr Dobie has-space. I^-ore room per room than &i&r­gems you'll find in all but the most expensive apartments. Extras , . like a bath with each bedroom. Space to study, to relax, to LIVE. RECYCLING Dobie serves 19 del ous meals a yveek ifor take only 10 and ^ave) , ,' .-i^ a spacious, •' BOXES! w.ellilighted cafeteria real food like eggs cooked to prder.., not overcooked dorm -fiirr nnd plenty nf rhnirV . When .you have finished reading your • -Dobie has a. friendly, personal'atmosphere. Texan, or other newspaper, please do not A fine group of residents ... conscientious Ivs throw it away! Take it to the nearest security;.» , and /i staff that CARES about, GREEN RECYCLING BOX and pitch it 'YOU. BFLTESASI * * in! THt TO LOCATIONS ARB.-fy There /s a-//me tor love. , ... Dobie has the Mall. A deHght(u) selection o(-Jjifhere Is a timelor peace:'*' shops,"entertainment, essential s^vfces, evcin • TOWNESHALL« T,herel8 a tlme tor foy a double-screen rriovlelHeafer*: ~ And torjou the time la now • UNIVERSITY CO-OP« T" ,ed^rM" • 24TH AND WHITIS " Cepitffe.'tflflritty: wJ\h an OranfrBtossm • 26TH AND WHITIS m^etltlve Thanfefe "- y • ACADEMIC CENTER"'1 <1 expert professional management, it dpesn't cost any more to go First Class • ROBERT LEE MOORE HALL (Formerlv_JWA BldgJ • LITTL'EFIELD FOUNTAIN '.J'* 'Uona Sdjiltin, .^tSummx a»wlon^f6 wM) -ui-$1360, • • 24TH AND. SPEEDWAY •*»?« . .' "OS TrilWAO1'" , V-1 -1—WwC — i ifsit 1 lano AUANDAtrViU'«OI 'l&fliaatt.pcrwMk' • JESTER WOMEH'S DORM ,]214BuXDAlUH flan A 19 m«al» psr w»«H stu itmHtm 14 fesi 2JSF AND SPERTLWAY^­ Live Smart...atH01B10E. •tea* * ^4^'-" $ ""^'bjtoniored by:TEXASjTODENT PO^MCATiO^ xn~£?. ^ . Dobie T6wer • 21st at Quadalupe •: 47Z-84.11 STObfcNT GOVT. ENVIRONMENTAL1 PROTECT. . V ^ X»l_ , COMM. CEiyf socHffr^ • V..;-" '! if'r (If Umt, Uf Texas GOP F&rd Considering Chairman for Vice-President _ -181111' By'JIM HILL be a Democrat, the aide said. ' -p • J -j.''' Texan Staff Writer President Ford called Tower to a conference at the White George Busn, Republican national chairman from Houston, House Sunday evening to discuss possible vice-presidenfial can­Would be Vice-President today if the mood across the nation didates, the aide said, adding that Tower was not pushing any in­ reflected the desifes of Texas Republican leaders. -dividual for-the post."George Bush He did say that Tower suggested a Vice-president who "thinks' w»rge Busn is the only man who can unify the party, and I uiink the country,, Rita Bass of Dallas, Republicarf national like Ford both domestically and OR foreign policy issues." committppuffimnn tnlrt THfl T p v a n M n n r i n v i . committeewoman, told The Texan Monday Millard Neptune; Travis Coimty.Republican chairperson, said,BASS SAID she has contacted her fellow members on the "I'mjike Sen. Barry Goldwa'ter, R-Ariz., George Bush not only Repubjjcan'Natlonal Committee urging their support for Bush. heads my list, but he is my list." . ' She added she ha£ "detected a real grass Toots support all over- IF BUSH is not chosen, Neptune said liis secbnd choicfe was the country for Bush. • . "anybody else but Nelson (Rockefeller)." "It looks like we might have a Texas Republican in the Whits Rockefeller was "bom with a'silver spoon in his mouth" and House once again," Bass said. Would be too .wiljinig to give away taxpayers' money, Neptune Jack Warren of Tyler, state Republican chairperson, said.his charged. ' -1 . cjioice was Bush; Watren commented that anotherpossibility for ' "For most Texas Republicans, Nelson is just tooliberal," Nep­ the post, Nelson F™K0f°H0r, foFmfr'jjwftnwr r>f New Vnrlf. "in fnno Mended. ^ much more acceptable now than he was four; years .ago.'J But _ A third Texan mentioned in some circles as a possible Vlce-Warren said Rockefeller was notacceptable to as manxpeqplpas President is Anrte Armstrong, White House counselor to the President." i ltS. Sen. John Tower, R-Tex., is another Texan who has been "I am.indeed honored that my name is being mentioned," Mrs. .mentioned as-a the vice-presidential prepared statement delivered from her possible candidate for a Armstrong said in Vacancy. However, an aide.to Tower-said.Tower "feels his place Washington-office.is in the Senate." < • "I. believe that President Ford's avowed consideration of TOWER DOES not want to give up his'Republican Senate seat' •women is an excellent signpost of-the active rolewomen Will-play •to a Gov. Dolph Briscoe appointee,-who. would almost certainly uihisadrftinistratidnj" Mrs;"Armstrong said:' : George Bush Revoir Richard Nixon bldt.farewell tohfsCabinet and White Houte itafferi Friday k #1 Bush's Rise: From Harris County morning Wore leaving for hii San CUmenU, Calif., hom«,>^ -i ' " I ^ V Lf? To National Republican Leader • By IRWIN SPEIZER . > -terrorism in~lhe resolution as ihe~peason foi' the-veto.' ~ '~Hnwg»ni^tgj»^JHp ftoM thff ^ongrp^slonal post from 1966 Texan Staff Writer When questioned-at his appearance on the rationale to 1970, serving on the House Ways and Means Com-, Vice-presidential froiitrunner George M. Bush began . behind U.S. aid to totalitarian gpyeraments/Bush said mittee andchairing theTask Force on Earth Resources.his political career with the Harris,.County Republican the Amencan'goVefhmfent has "long since stopped in­While Congress, to" '••'fif in Bush 'pfpmdt^d' legislation serves the Party m 1959 -and currently as party's sisting on democratic purity. ' provide jobs.forunemployed arid-for bilingual educa­ :~-nl national chairman. "Aid to'these countnes isQot a rubberstamp approval tion. He opposed welfare arid tax reform legislation, f • Bush, became national,chairman in January,: 1970. of dictatorships. We realize that there is an ideological During the Cambodian crisis of 1970, Bush voted inPresidentNixortappolntedBush JJ.^ambassadorto. _ the difference, but it isa necessaryeffort toestablish better •support of Administration action. He was absent for United Nations in February, .4971, and he served until giobarreiaiionrand switch from-a policy of eonfronta­ —^voting ^n-the-Cooper£hureh amefldment to bar troop .; January, 1972; tion to negotiation." '• . • \ 7 ' r ..commitments to Cambodia: Bush cast the Second U.S; veto in U.N. history.when Bush made two Unsuccessful attempts at a U S[. Bush has been a Texas resident sinc£ 1948, founding he voted against a measure calling (or cessation ot Senate seat, in J964 and"l&70. Lloyd Bentsen a the Zapata Petroleum Corp! in 1953. J:' military operations in the Mideast. : • Democrat, defeated Bush in thel970 race. . . Bush attended Phillips Academy at Andover, Mass., In a speech at the University in 1972, Bush cited After his 1964 defeat, Bush ran and was elected to the ' and.Yale University, where he graduated Phi Beta Kap­ failure of any mention of the Munich Olympics U.S. House, the 'first Republican to represent the -< pa in 1948 with a'BA in economics.­ Threatens Jo Stop Talks f Ultimatum Comes as Cease-Fire Breaks Down I 'r- By United Pjress International system with partition to fpllow." leaders of the Turkish Cypriot minority' During the night,-Turkish invasion'Tur4cey;thmteiie4^rfandayita?en!k{he­ ^he-Turkish-proposals-are on the island want-it divided into forces and; Greek Cypriot National*Geneva.peape conference.unless Greece accepted, we go^on^ the next stagp," se" accepted.demands for a divided Cyprus,- Gunes told n'ewsmen MpRday nignt. "it •and;Turkish Cypriot regions; artillery—fire-east, at-the 'Turkish but'Athens, rejected, the plan and the Turkish Cypriot leader-Said the" talks they are not'accep.^ble, the conference ; Turkish sources, in Geneva said beachhead around the north shore port of • . Will-be ended." , . ; ";v 'Secretary of State Henry Kissinger had Kyrenia. • . . 1 »-^would probably "collapse in failure, Gunes said on the other hand that the telephoned Turkish Premier . Bulent. There were no immediate reports of 01 y for Victory The Turkish ultimatum marked the ^essential elements in Turkey's proposal • Ecevit on Sunday urging him to keep.the casualties, r-v ' ­ latest in a.series of walkout threats at -. /'are not negotiable." ' _ ' • • , talks from breaking down. "The two sides areboth scared of StillP/etldentpf the United States, Nixon thowt hit familiar victory waveon the . three-nation conference and -Gunes said, hoWever, that he agrfeed to In Athens, Greek:Premier Conslantine ting-up the snooting again, but they. the White House ground* Friday white boarding a helicopter-. appeared the"most serious setback thus -fallow British Foreign Secretaiy, J^mes Karamanlis met-with his military com-refuse to put down their aims/' a U.N^. far for attempts to work out a political. Callaghap to convey the proposals to late last week,-Was-reported around the Turkish ftrprtot autonomous-area in..the;, .s,-Greece and % leaders' of the Greek' ­southeastern villagesof Melousha, Atsos Great. Britain, the former • colonial northeast of.Cyprus and^smaller siniU^c^L;^ 'vCypriot majority on ~ Cyprus want the antl Ayia . Kabir. The Greek Cypriots power on Cyprus, and and'Greece -feyis-island to remain a single political unit were zones elsewhere in the island. bringing up reinforcements .and Turkey, with largepopulations there,are- Earlier in the day, British Foreign?' >with both the Greek and Turkish tom-angry Turks fired .at^.them,;,i^iU.f}. co-guarantors of the Cyprus in­Minister James Callaghan put foward a munities represented. Turkey and the spokesman said. ''"T'-\r*' dependence treaty of 1960plan for splitting the island/up into -tf-i. -sa jH* 1 ' series of Turkish Cypriot and Greekf .Cypriot districts. . • 4 Bell Telephone & •The plan did not differ greatly from m m « ^ 'S-m the Turkish "proposal hut presumably^ ,11M •#% M -does-not envisage th.e one large£=^^ "ra_ llvJI Vote on 3Year Pact autonomous Turkish Cypriot zone in the WASHINGTON Bell (AP)• The .; this week, an American TelepHone~&~ 6 percent nsFIn tKe~cbst pt -livingAvould northeast end. of thfe island. ^ ^Telephone System and unions which Telegraph-Co. spokesman said. Balloting -mean an increase of $13." is being conducted by the various unions. . In addition.to pay Increases, the offer creating-autonomous zones on Cyprus • three-year contract a week ago Results are not expected to be tabulated caHs for an-improvement in the pension —UP) YafeplMNM ; "is not acceptable." Hesaid he saw little.^'completed.almost all negotiations -on until Sept. 1. ^ plan, a company-paid dental plan and -chance of compromise, ,(>ca* issues Sifliday night and agreed to The agreementon local issues, the last more than $100million in local money forHome in California w Greek officials at the.conference also;;; forward the contract to union members barrier before the contract was sub­• resolving problems in jobclassifications. -rejected the idea,saying "itwould be-the^ for ratification or rejection. :. mitted for a vpte" was reached by the offer;,also calls for more union Deplaning at El Toro Marine Air Station in California, private citizen Nix'on The first step towards partition?,' and thatlt! , Balloting on the national contract and. ;Bell System and by theXIommunications security r reacts to.'.-a tumultous welcoming ovation.from 5,00Q «upportert.» * would' be "tantamount to "S" federal local Issues is expected to "begin later Workers of America, 35smaller indepen­dent unions, and by a branch of the Inter­national Brotherhood ,of Electrical neuus capsules- ABA Head Wo.rkers that represents employes work­ '^hU­ ing directly for Bell. , Security Council Recommends Admitting Nation" " handful of refugees. !&•« ; Negotiators for a separate group of s UNITED NATIONS (UBI) — The Security Council Monday Unanimous-•" •" WeSt Berlin police said 2,584-refugees escaped over the wall during Its Sends Call ; IBEW: members employed by Western! ly recoipmohded that Portugal's African colony <)f Gulhe'a-Bissaii He ad-first ye31.'?30 during its second, apd 334 in its third. They said the wall has Electric-Co.-, a Bell subsidiary, have re­ niitted:4o-the< United Nations as an independent nation. - become almost escape-proof in the las£ several years, with only one East jected the national -agreement, and For Amnesty The new Portuguese-government of President Antdhio de Spinola had German soldier and a handful of civilians surmounting the barrier last •' members of that branch are on strike atss'* supported the application 6f Guinea-Bissau, formerly called Portuguese-f£'iyear:,;1 'sV -1 -''4 _ 10 Western Electric plantsacross the na-" HONOLULU (UPI) -The ppsident of • Guinea, for U.N. membership,,^ , _ . Corn Production Down . tion. .Negotiations between those locals ^s.v^e ^mefncan ®ar. cal'ed arid Bell broke off last wedk. -u& ^"fay for amnesty for Vietnam war The Lfebon regime that ousted the right-wing dicta'tprship of Premier WASHINGTON (AP) —The Agriculture Department satd Monday that , w • .-iV,. . „ draft evaders and deserters. MarcelloXaetano in ^miirtary coup April 26. has also pr0mised in-?i^^isye^i»rn harvest,wll} be 12 percent below Iast yea'r; meaning con--The TWA sa d local iargam.fiS talks ..A cltiz^n of ai free free countryshould not -had been completed with 32^filiates of dependence to its other African rolonies of Mozambique' and Angola, dis-t^sumers can expect.hlgher prices in 1975. • ~ —; ~-^~- be-forced to fight in awar.that neither he, the .Bell System and• talks were con-sSj mantling the last major colonial empire,in the West. " -"It does mean in 1975 upward pressure on food prices. There's no ques:' "nor his elected represCTtatives chdse"ti>"~— tinuing with two remaining local units, :" initiate or declare," said Chesterfield/ Portuguese, foreign Minister Mario Scares told'the council before that,," said department economist Dawson Ahalt< " • The>union sSald-ail local negotiations'1 in­•Saiitlt—head -of the 185,000-mcymber' hnet" thai Portugal would grant formal 'recognitor! to an independently Ahal.t commented'after the Crop Reporting Board said theriatitHt's corn ­ volving qtfier unions: Had been com­group/ . ' Guinea-Bi&aau "at an early date"and would withdraw its military forces?^croP> plagued by heavy rains at spring planting and d'rqugl&auTfirift the ' In remarks prepared for. the bpeniftg*. pleted."'""' . . °"fiS ranidlv as? nossible" from thA iAirlrnrv . * liSvJcriUpfll qiimmnr smMh iwrlnri ic.ovniuilu1'in ha (tt& lnliMot iann The tentative national agreement?^ session of the ABA's annual-meeting,; j wotild boast wages^ and benefits 35.8 p^r-V'' Smith sa d the nation should, al^ex-j Af -onorate aU ^ cent over the .nexLthre£ vea« ReHv2 ex-«rvicemen who cainei ! *S' out with ."less than honorable dis-i . spokesman sa.id top-rated craftsmen,-xyj charges.' -" ^ 'itstock market, mired in con-NEW .YORK (AP) -New York Stock Exchange closipg index; who presently receive basic weekly pay?v;> iktuing inflation wprries, trudg- The Lakeland,'Fla., attorney said he? -MarKett.,' v\.off 35 eentei or$240.50, would get an immediatein~ woQld 'support unconditional • amnesty­ . e^isteadjly low# Monday in ope Index 41,85*off .54, crease of $25.50."There would be further^? conditional amnesty, alternate service! ' The',Berlin wall ^pirr^Tu^-Wmor^f-rte^^ —Jnriiiatrial 4R 47 nff n.fi*" increases in thebase pay of $9in 19?5.ajid*^f? "or any other plan which in whole or in' -itTiMnetrable than eyer> -"4V. -< ^' 11 % i. yeai* * *iv Trapsportation....... 31,01 off Q.18 ' F"-1 1976 plus*cost ot living adjustments. - * . I, ~rr SlpcjJh^Cotmiajjhi§\jEa|l'Gerrqan govemment began building lis,'' The Dow Joiies averaue of 30 ' JLllWity27.61 off tt.20' -Svnii. ^ *• ' ; . . He said there are an estimated 30j)00? i Finance 42,73 off 0,60. •y/ The cdst ofliving' adjustment could^-;-10.20Q)000 war resislers and ^ capesM thg:.West across the"Wall have trickled'in recent years to a-mere":-S ) v : tiny gesture of someone playing the rights movement ''An avalanche of"bodies tumbled down —ff"ifnr Viftnr qnrtded his head jmilinp ^ -rrillinginto:the arena.*fhe cries of the reunion, sharing a sadly.... The military man ...called four stage "ftgain with At the benefit, Ochs told,what he said - •wounded were horrible. But Victor Jarar— soldiers and_Ordered them to hold Victor •; -.j-j • .. ... • ,, Dylan, Pete Seeger was the story of Jara's death. It was dld not hear them anymore" there. TOenhe ordered a table to be put ?. _ and Arlo Guthrie, ex­ such an incredible tale thatI.suspected a in of-tftfc" arena . cept that the Felt I liberal application of poetic license, a-the. middle so that -';-n . everybody coul(Tsee whatwas tohappen ^ was not in the National Stadium and Forum is a lot safer ' slight carving of reality to fit a song; They took Victor to the table and ordered """ therefore do not. know exactly what,, " than many places After all, how many traditional ballads him to put-Jris hands on it.In the hands of happened. I do not know Miguel Caben-;., they-.played in the wo,uld we. have if songmakers always the officer rose, swiftly, an axe. 'ip ;-zas, and I've met Phil Ochs only in pass1 ' Sixties. But, from restricted themselves to the literal V,ing. But I do know that several thousand I the few accounts I read,some of the joy truth? My reaction came partly from "With one single stroke hesevered the^'pcople were detained in the stadium by t of the old times -in the shadow, of Jim 'knowing thaf Ochs was not inChile when fingers of Victor's left hand, with il'ifjunta — Jara wrote 5,000, Cabenzas 6,000 r Crow was missing that night. Ochs was Jara died, but mostlyfrom sheer horror. another stroke, the fingers' of theS^'^ many hundreds did not come '•t very uptight about the politics of the oc­ s right..;."1 iack, Victor Jara among them. And, casion and the.death of his friend, the •"l'*',. • c Lscently, however,• I came across an , rmost important, I know that the Chilean Chilean poet Victor Jara. . article, in the New York City Lawyers Six-thousand prisoners in the stadium "military is equipped. with American; r Guild paper, Blind Justice, reprinted -t«fe"watched the same officer throw weapons. 1 -from "University Review, hy Miguel himself aver the fallen body of the singer X Jara was afolk singer, a people's poet, Cabenzas, who was in Chile's Natftrial i —About-the:same.'timg •• and I don't mean to give the.impression Stadium and who. witnessed Jara's J he wasin the same league withthe Nobel murder. From the Cabenzas article, and sing.'' Cabenzas described, Newsweek was~ . c .reporting that bodies, mostly of young l-s laureatePa6l0"Neruda,wh0alsd-died--fro®, reports of .worse happenings in ._ Japa "laboriously raised himself to his^..^ jople, were stacked like cordwood in •'•8 during the postdoup terror, at a time Chile from Amnesty International — an ,b feet and ..turned toward the bleachers ofTv^ e Santiago, morgue. There iftust be a most convenient for the junta. No, Jara organization which has never mixed, in - F the stadium ... his mutilated hands* < better use for American tax dollars. did not move mountains with his words, partisan politics r-I have becom^ con- c Reg. Michael Harrington, D-Mass, hasbutinanyClhileans listened to his songs.. : vinced that Ochs was nof exaggerating. stretched forward like those of a sleepwalker.'" '• i: promised to sponsor legislation tocut off Ochs made a point of meeting Jara for I ^military^d.tDrthei(^lc^junta^^_|n a some song-swapping when the American The poet cried out "All right diet'sdo world that already has too-many guns'7 J! lit-?-. singer visited Chile during thedays when Cabenzas and' Jara were among the senor conunandante the favor!" "6 and too few poets, such a move seems to Salvador AUende was struggling to gain thousands of students and other political-1 t "He steadied himself for a moment-?^ me the essence of-wisdom. t mm P tJ* r t 5lf ' 'J MaSMVFifSV ' WH6K MV FIRST; • By NICHOLAS VON HOFFMAN . over us. Thirty-six winners and one foul would still be President. BORWl m? <5 eaxpv FIRST kNP 1 e1974, The Washington Post--ball. Not-a bad record ^ . Remember thfi people who said they'd, •I0(TH CDT&0UJ6' CMPCZUTr HUHCRSP -' urn,-F . King Features Syndicate • However, there are some who'believe' never stop suppcfrilng hinruntil he was f WASHINGTON — The past Weeks.-.-;:: that the events of the last two yearshave found with ttie smtAing gun in hand? hv v have-seen the mortuarial face done to a . badly weakened the presidency. That's! iliey were WiUing to keep him in office, \m>. c saaa?" j>pint approaching burlesque. Politicians ap, understandable but unthinking. while his agents shtedded the Constitu- 0 (WI5 cu( It follows that, if we accept Nixon's reverence ; the Constitution^-but-untiK," fell not as the denouement of a shabby To the e«Utor: Watergate most Americans-were like career but as a chance to reconstitute v-attempt to be the great moral enforcer Building Revived,-Renamed.;.." Aug; 8.J Christians in the days before the Bible, our system, then we will have a care. I was disappointed butnot surprised by' ilof the entire world, as Vietnam taught tin^to maintain the power he once held. your editorial on the resJ^mtlon bT" How about "Physics Building Reyived, He admits to wrong judgments, and he was translated out of-Latin into the . about veiigeance, about exacting thelast -us. AndrabCuTtHe ''peacrwltlrhonor,JMt— President Nixon. You say that you find Renamedi-Repulrive-amLRepugnant??" holds no resentment to his opposition. modern .vernacular. We revered the ~ measure of punishment the criminal law was as honorable a peaceas wecould ex-' The alliteration follows and addsa cer­no joy in his fall, yet there is a gleeful /Constitution, we just didn't know what allows."If we ca'n't have amnesty, let's pect under the circumstances.-Our . tain needed something to your heading. And — you wish PresidentGeraldFord was in it" Until six weeks ago,how many have amnesia so that we aren't dis­(As in repulsive: arousing aversion or best of luck when you "wilj probably 'knew that the house of Representatives tracted from asking the more important disgust; and repugnant: hostile and in­have occasion to be sharply critical-of -'"-impeaches and theSenate convicts?How -questions — about how we can insure l^.( . MI -.sent to fight and spending up to seven compatible.) , him in the future."-Are you going to push many even knew-what the word im-ourselves against other Presidents mak-Contrary to your beltef, Nixon years in a prison camp. Money really Three rousing cheers that "The . the knife further into the wounds, or ate ..-pea'chrnentmaant, much less what,is the war consent of the ft? you going to help' with the hfealing? ing without* the does 001mean a hel1 of a lotcompared to graphics of Painter Hall's paint job was ' sense' and the meaning of "the Tourtlr^r representatives-of -the-peopler^against— "hiiSi tfaat_50 Americans are dying in not the Physical Plant's idea, Wilcox |Glenn Rhodes ^wss^Amendment? other.Presidents defilingour privacy and 1>ilndochlna to combat: To"me7moneynj­Saldpbut" was-the-work of-an Austin­ iff The nation could hardly come to judge turning' the -power of this mighty state determination to do*what he believed' worthless next^ to the lives saved by architectural firm." To the Physical.right for the country -he loves, the stamina to fight for what he believed in figgL --"that Richard Nixon had offended the against its own citizens.- President Nixon's honorable peace. Plaiit^TPWse, and to the architectural wSI . 7 fojsj|;isss5$Wnstitutiommtil we learned what was ; Donlt answer by saying that Nixon's At home, you of course find his record To the editor: • :. : in it. So you can thank the former Presi-• being brought down -shows that all is and the guts to takeall theabuse that has even bleaker. He "ended the war firm, may they each have to work eight Amnesty for Nixon. BeingPresident of on "i&r - dent fqr that. Instead,.though, we dwell working asit should:In the finalsense he been heaped upon him by people like you poverty. He cut< mothers frorn the • hours (or. more) * a day wearing the United States must be a very hard sunglasses while typing to counteractthe ^during the recent months. As for that. j®! on thp shame and tragedy of it. Itdoesn't brought down upon him&lf his expulsion welfare rolls and put Lockheed on.' glare of those whiter than white snow-job. The last three Presidents have been Jp?|, occur to us that, given our inattention to from office. We didn't do it. Neither did • blinding walls; May the architectural forced out of office by publicpressure of public affairs, we're avery lucky bunch. Congress:or the courts or:Sam Ervin or some sort.'' firm -all go to a heaven full of super-From the time of George IH to our own Judge Sirica. If Alexander Buttferfield graphics in as bad taste of those of §§||; day we've never once had to overthrow-hadn't-goofed-and blurted out'the ex­other Administrations and corporations' of people out of wdrk and in the.welfare . Let us join together in support of our I that long series of men elected to preside istence of those tapes, Richard Nixon for' political benefit of th6m both. And and unemployment lines. The "war on Painter-Hall; Those in the basement^of new President. this building have no windows to relieve .what makes cooperation with • the . (,;.. WalIy Washington poverty" was not working as well as its nation's big business so ev{l, anyhow? If ? --was much the,tedium, either! ^designers planned.: There • not for-those corporations, most of the' Shirley Dlmmick »t?orauo?e / THE DAILY. TEXAN ^ ^ 1nf' Tu 0 duplication and wasteful overlap of agen- rape Administrative Assistant >» Stvdint Mmwtpmpw •» th* Umhtnltf of 7«K«» «f cies ,nd money-Nlxon As if Uiis wam"t^ what he Biological Sciences To the editor: EDITOR ...*. '.Buck Harvey 1 damn > 1q rJ? u' . ^ t -A saw as t^e fat of these programs in the this About "rape of "MANAGING EDITOR. . _ Green Lake'* BJ Hefner 'Again, Se ^Kre™ttrtetofe!:^a?rl,>e th°Ught Would taPfove ef" Exultation f/A business, it never fails to amaze mehow ficiency and reduce cost. ASSISTANT MANAGING EDITOR .1 To the editor: . wk .......i;1;tLynne Brock Middle East peace. "Though this political all those bleeding heart so-called en- As for President Ford, the ! •most volatile areas jof the worid." That|l| out. ; his bollciCTin'mdtion.anHlhta phltoMtptiy % ::eagles.;Purcell and his iUc admit Green PHOTOGRAPHERS .-Stanley Parrarj-Marlon Taylor ' ^too, is bulls—„ Without the evil' oil& However, his victory, is. he upheld the• into the;govenra^f?^(^."youv&e.:'' oF the "President of-the United s^^jjiaiitinr companies, your nice car would be oath iSSUET-ST-AFF- Qreen Lake would be a godseiid to the States. Our.Constitution worksll City Editor^7?.,r. ....Dfclt'Jefferson people in the area — it wpuld provide "As a formet editor involved with stu­ , Gerieral-Rcporteiv,...^ ' •/., Bryan Brumley Jobsforall those "poor people" inTlvpll dent publicationsalanother university,' I ^.Ngws Assistants..v. .... Jim Hill, Rdggr Downing, .Md :thereabouls. Have any oj riBar question the responsibility the editors of... Mike Morrison, Steve Gelub 1>ayti vua|JlavCu uutIUK UHS . people been ouf there, this p^per have displayed during tMs -. "'concerned" , Editorial Assistant ..."...v., Steve Russell/ rnbmentous hour. -Does freedom of ate? Assistant Sports Editor... : to-tell-the^avfet--:-^wfto^Tn' ti ;':,-Johnhy Campos' getttlem sneech^HhA-frpwtemarf-thk^p^M nyoU Welfare. Make-up Editor , , , . , ,, , Claude Simpson-Union how to run their country, dictating MievL^i f^ht IhS£ that they must let all the p^ple leave £teVg ** With freedom of dissent and freedom Qf' ; ~""xoTr environmental" types'havelKien Wi're Editor David Hendricks prop'algante?- successful in blocking-these convent* • Copy Editors. Susie Schram, John Farley, Nick Holzschuh gndeMI»' are Ite mSTo?. Watergate started whenr a sole hotefi^ plants where the ill-effects are­ { F" — '3 — 'guard nottped that a lock has-been"obvious" that ypu've -n!onj >xpVeswi1 TM Daily TraD ire U»m W the " muftleaUoffBuHtJing AJI36V; Inqalriet concerning deUverf> — : ( I K Uafvetirtty, sdmlnl»lr«(loli tered into the room, saw men ^ to atomic plants prisons-in ^'country and-let all the H«((enW 1 V criminals loose, or that we sbp'dis-Hnal-years. called Ms superior. Two unknown news. j,..und?rs^<™' and therefore arguable.'It's ^. TTie naUonal .ariVisril*mg repres«U.Uye of rThe* D4ily­ Tllr luflv 'lr.. • criminatingj against the' "oppressed Without Trick Dick to kickaround' reportere' were ghren that'assignment,'^^sl««cifkrN,«w*8ervloe, The- fear and isolation which tlie executive VV^dnwdiy.. Thur»d4y. and Kridjy S*ptcmber, Ulrtxicti to go to hell, and I suspect that if we thata smolfy, sooty co#l burnfer is' t Texan Uaroembcr otlb? AnociatedColleg^ate Pi'en;tfi* made such stipulations that they would Hoover Jx,, brajich erected.JaMrTNixon s^ • -1903 Rio Grandest. Uirouih ^uxust holiday and etam ptrfjxb. Stfeo^J-. K -reply3milariy blamed for erecting soafca wall-when the;­ ; NOWPAPAR AJSOCUTU)!} Xjfrvr4'COQtribQiiofi« M^li be -accepted ty tdfliborw.(f/i« yifioriMi otllce -ft&tiH SUM Publicity BuOdtofc.-Hpori pr kt tite n«ws loryiCoflv^ % W m? "S'^MS -iSfrr./A SrsaflKs? . >' * m 33 &"•c "V-5s-% rrji •~»­ & ' £ guest viewpoint ' *A Ort the brink of chaos By%D4LLAS PERKINS, JR, faced with a lack of con-—went as it does from the~--await some demonstration in the decline of a complex in­:• (Editor's note: Perkins is fidence unparalled in recent process created through'the "Wat government is~being dustfialsocietyHadthecon­a third, year student at the history, alack of confidence . wisdom df-the Founding carried"on for the good of'the stitutional process failed; weHarvard Law School.)• that would bring rioting in the Fathers. Yet public opinion " " governed rather than the might have-reverted to When asked by the press to streets or intervention by the polls " governors, and th^t-sincere oligarchy,. .dictatorship or 5»4 consistently show that comment on President. Nix­military in many parts, of the most citizens are losing faith efforts are being made to whatever. Peoples: have sur­on's resignation; Sen; Lloyd world. .in both the honesty and the reverse current trends toward vived and usually reformedallBentsen echoed a sentiment _.i ln the wake of the effectiveness of their govern-more.crime, worse schools, of these forffis of government. expressed by almost all of our President's announcement, " ment —not just Nixon, but all increasing destruction, of our But when the people lose con­ nation's leaders: '.'Our our leaders repeated a single government. Of course, the. natural-resources, galloping -fidence • in ..all government,Constitution remains sound, theme:, the Constitution .has constitutional process . con­inflation, millions of people none cansurvive regardlessof f, our people strong, our ideals been vindicated. But'let us not tinues, and a man elected by killed or maimed by unsafe 4 its form, and the very fabric t,unshaken." Politicianstalking kid-ourselves. The survival of 2Q0j000 voters in Grand products and working con-< of society is torn.asunder. "mostly to other politicians the Constitution ' results as Ttapids, Mich. m'oves into the ditions, a -medical care This would have':especially ihave become unaware that much from the confidence of White House. But the' vindica-system squandering the severe effects in a complex new this. . .what's tbe situation? government-Hi this country is < the citizenry in its govern-. tion-of the Constitution must money as wellas the health of society withits-economic.and \ • tens of millions — in short, a bureaucratic interdepend-* real commitment to ? ence. . —meaningM-improvement in . • It is literally true, that y" the quality of life in America: politics for. the sake of" "vf more firing line> ——The -dispassionate observer politicians • can destroy * The Texan's irrespbnsible use of headlines for op­ ~ > finds little ;cause civilization as weKnow it, and timism. All too ..often .one .very possibly, in our-lifetime. > n ~ To the editor: "— surface and not by air mail/ -•' The foreign press, which is On the olher hand, if most of tion of the world's problems points out, Connally was. hears pleas for unity and sup-; If the disaster which' has "3 * The Thursday edition of The • • The reasons given for these found in the various libraries the air mail subscriptions are . by. their students..The foreign Pickle's campaigii manager port of the new President be-.. befallen Richard-Nixbn-and • % Daily Texan contained a bla­decreases-economic. serves sizable .publications "are a ing laughed at.' are now, the turnedio surface subscrip­vital por­for student body president, those around him could teach .wjjV tant example of slanted jour­Subscription rates have gone minority of • the foreign tions; they will not senre their tion' of these, means. . and Pickle served' as Con-, Has not the time come to' the world's leaders this • nalism. The story in question,, up, and the University.cannot students in this University.. purpose. They.will arrive here . . Angelas Stangos realize that America is pn the lessph( even if a ,2" nally's campaign manager in only, for an AP release about Israeli afford t)iem, especially,if they They get a minimum amount • with a delay of.four weeks at International .Student verge of giving up on govern­generation or two, then our ^ Big John'ssuccessful effort to air attacks on Lebanese of about on Organization r come by air mail., information their least, depending where succeed his roommate. ment and politics altogether? ex-President would have serv- civilian villages and -Palesti­We understand the home countriesfrom it.It also • they cope from, and they will ' Well,, here we' are with There is.no more radical step:: ed us„better^than&iye know. nian ' refugee, camps, "was economic difficulties of-the ' serves the American students not bring us news any more.; Gonnally%Pickle another Veep to choose, and . t headlined1 "Lebanese Terror" University regarding its by providing them with .Cutting dtiwn the subscrip­ To the editor: where is Jake? Why l thoughtCamps Hit by Israeli libraries. What we cannot un-reports from anotherperspec-tions will be'also a blow to the As The Texan pointed out' he'd be right, out on the front BombersT" 'Terror camps? " .derstand-is-how inflation-does -tive^and-inaWngJhem aware_ proper functioning of the Thursday, even after.Wiggins, lines urging Big John again This term implies some kind pot have an impact on the/ of other points of yiew and Crossword Puzzler • Answer td Yesterday's Puzzle deparTffre^S: of foreign -rSandmalri and most of the ^urely^Big-Jflhn.hasnLt. dfene of armed military camps nnmnmu-s pmfepts—and—a\ . money despite the fact that* apd understanding," two. con-wal.ls of the classrooms only. -brought hack fond indentations 10 Frock BcaQotsiia comment H0 SHSC1 -But the reaiity is that the jusf piss--u^ ; the Great 13 Teutonic . . • 1t Fdneral song • aOHQi the. majority of the students cepts which are on the top of They try to-make available BIEB SH0QB memories of another Pickle DEJG3 American.. deity. iiAct Israeli Air Force has bombed, and faculty cati'not cpm-^ the list of the priorities of ail the meaiis for broader 14 Insect'. 15 Civotgoat ?3Q stance taken last fall after the Since this is Jake's big year ••US napalmed and committed prehend their purposei'i.Mf# nations. . knowledge and better percep-' Sptfo Agnew.' 16 Note of 18 Built -qehkubs resignation of ciaarara other aIro5ties~(si2Ch~as"the- for. taking' stands on con­scale 20 Feels Indig- Pickle was quick to call on DHH toy-bombs'dropped in camps troversial issues, I wonder 17 Man's-; . -.rant at BHraemtas Eaasas President~Mxoir-tonominate-where he stands-dn: the issue nickname 22 Lake on that were exposed by NBC -19 -Frult-tpl.) —Calilornia-ODB -saesra John Connaliy for the Veep. of immunity fronj prosecu­2CS Female ruff Nevada line ' besbb asas News last spring) Against Said Pickle, "Jfohn Connallyis tion. He'H;probably come out' 21 Saucy 24 Bazaars 33 Detests ment IBmen, women and children in a great American. We used to for immunity any day now — 23 Slnkinmid-26 Plunge •34 Gldssy fabric 42 God. of love * • ttfese camps; and villages. ' . die 28 Greek letter 35'Merry 45 Chicken - . be roommates in. college!" ...for Connally, that is. 24 Ward off ' 31 Writing 37 Rodent '•'Terror camps" for whom? 46 Drunkard -Indeed, as the Keevers and , < • Randall Stanton 25 Peruses ^.tablets '39 UrSineariimar 49 1-lebrew letter They are terror caitips for the 27 Wipe out 41 Await settle-' 32 Dinner course 51 Greek letter . Crawford Cotoaliy biogtaphy . Government Palestinians who were driven 29 Greek letter 30 Hasten . P" IT from, their homelands ^nd PF.AKVT*> :PACESETTER. The in one AU.R6HT when r cowe IT SHER.II 31 Halts were forced to live a state ' STAMP UP 33 Antlers ultimate apartmsrit. Spl.it-level bedroom split levels. Large bidroom arounr.YOU ITS H£R!« of rootlessness, hunger and living in a twqbedroom studio. PLAV6R00NR 5TAN0UP, 00 MV FIRST . 35 Merriment and bath" with a full study'upstairs 36 Macaw • ~ over:5rbwaingrIdonotdefend ^^Downstaicsrafully elpotrio kitchen with walk-In WUHEAR ME? SWEETHEARTJ 38 Pierce' . •Downstairs,-a spacious living area, en-pantry and spacibus living room tor entertain-­ the actions of some of the 40 Yoilngboy Ing.Upstairsvtwo largebedrooms andbath with . tertainmg area and all electric kitchen­'41 Piece of dln- Palestinian groups. But-1 do .walk-ms Free Jiving at itp (ine'st See it to believe it. nerware 444-7880 support the just rights of the 43 Safnte Palestinian people. ' . (abbr.) • 1 • f4 Near-;• "TlHfctffffilliTtB7in~Thi>-T-*l«»"'-~ ­ .45 Warming implies in a few choice words —^.devtcea^ that one has.the right td drive 47 Babylonian, others .from their homeland |F VOU DONT 00 WHATI-W. WHAT 48 Rely on and then bomb their refugee THIS BEAfeLE WILL BITE 3BA&LE?! 50 Earlier 52 Dispatch camps when they try to fight TOUR. LE6! 53' Stupefy back. And.it implies thatthese DOWN -'"indiscriminate bombings are m 1 Halrcutter ' riot themselves. terrorist ac­ 2 -At state tions. . ' ' ' r (abbr.) "• :•••'••• Mark Wilson Pacesetter ApartmentsforFree-LivingPeople 2124 Burton Drive 3 Emmet rM Latin-American Studies PiMr. by United Feature Syndicate. Ine v (Editor's note: You're right about1 the. headIinel...We apologize.) Le Monde? To the editor The International.Student Organization-has learned form reliable sources that th^ Main Libraryhas plansto stop subscribing to many foreign newspapersand magazines, It has also been suggested that gpS?Great subscriptions to the remaining foreign dailies should be -by Gabardine P A sandal that gets you close to the earth by 513-At with a sole contour.ed. to cushion the terrain. College-Town Soft natural leather uppers; sole tapers Groat g.fJiardinc from toe to,heel with separates to add ground-gripping ribs i»» jvilli fantastic iooktnp-l)I ouscs;-Icnit tops a ml-s'wealor«; 22.00 Shown just a few 1 - Irom a large . collection in tf i-MI hazy blue, smoke green ofT-wliit& dollar sese ni|;l)t: Cubic knit turllciU'rk pullovor. SI 1. Cardigan, SIB Solid Pant. S23. Left: llmindstootli The o.lii-ck juckol, S2R. Slurt, $18. Daily Mutctun^ pant, S22. Texan r —|ITnhIassifieHs | "IB ^3Come by i * TSP Bldgt • 3| ' ^ Room 3.200 2 -> 'tqnfl pfac* yow Uptlauiffod «1*_ ir J**®* 1 'r *»'" \» 1,8 p stqpents only pre-paid p s no refunds -25th & WhitiS, V. over (This Is the fifth in atseries and you can try to develop the much, work is good for a par­ success „ ^"on coaches of.varsitysports at Jbig muscle groups. We do ticular athlete. system." •the University.) somfe body mechanics, with 'Some people thrive. From Texas' track record By LARRY SMITH freshmen, but we do very jitv -overdislancing while some do-. the last few years, Price; v% Texan Staff Writer tie-with junior college best with underdistancing,'* ; seems to have been fairly {:$$• Sprinters, who can run the -transfers." Price said.."A case of under-'?• successful,witti his system. sSgMOO-yard dash in 9.1 secqnds. What Price can do as-a distancing plight mvolve a Since came the In :1964 Phillies had looked like a aren't developed. They are ' coach is work on techniques miter running mostly 880s and®!# Price to • the Philadelphia "Anything ttiat even fan University•in 1971 after being •' everything, pitching, so.und defense and letter I wouldn't open it. Man, they were born. and conditioning while trying 440s." . --'«•};§ the head coach and athletic. ' awesome power. too brutal," said Allen. He refused to be No one knows this better to help thej.athlete find his While one person might be . than Texas Hea'd Track Coach;; inaximunTability. director at Dallas Baptist Another/thing that they had was a six-interviewed and once walked off a . coach able to conditioning, .College, the Horns have won and-a-half-^artie lead with 12 contests to postgame show. He came late to games Deburae Price. J'You really.' CONDITIONING not only several persons are . usually • i three Southwest Conference-' play. The-ending is' now,famous. Gene and didn't show for others. ; *,?£%, <­ can't teach someone how to Involves getting the athlete to needed to. instruct technique _ run," Price said. "You-can spend several hours a-day properly. This is because* track titles. The victories Mauch panicked, and he started Jim Bun-Then the fines began, and Allen really •have been since 1972, with ning and Chris'.Short, his two aces, with became depressed. One Philadelphia v'^work on -body mechanics so •working out; but also finding there are about 20 different ' Texassetting a newhigh point one.and two day'sTest,~and~he blew iU but paper reported that "his Jines totaled «s##fhat he functions properly, out just what-type and. how track events. . • • • •• a total in the SWC meet each of .. Mauch took it like a man, admitted his more than.what somefringeplayers"make did a survey once on highVs the past three years.-The; guilt; and the Phillies' fans recognized it, -a year." Still when he played his bat did w. school coaches and'Tound thafc^-# Horns' also have done well . right? --his talking. Every year that he played in nationally, 'finishing 14th this blame instead Philadelphia 'ended -the-difficilty in teaching aivj/l Wrong. The fell on a with good power,We make and *«sSIijpsKirr~ .event depended a jot on what Cleburne • Price" year ahd eighth in 1973. rookie who led the league in triples, runs stolen base and batting average totals. • repair boots the coach . himself par­. Part of Price's successmay scored, hit .318, had 91 RBIs, and hit 29 It all reached the boiling point in 1969, RUGS^ ticipated in.' Thecloser asport-stem-from-the feet. that he _ home runs. Allen was suspended for 26 games at alost shoes belts-»Many . 00 •>' 5750 is to the'one he was active in,. could be .because the body studied psychology . while '-a "Richie Allen, who wasflamed Rookie-of-of $ip;50b, i'If my actions Mther some of ,s5 Beautiful Colors I the easier-it is for him to functions in planes that.it is student at SMU and Wheatoh ^ the-Year, that year,, committed 41 errors' mj> teammates, fine,, let them hit some" leather ; teach it," said Price, who was normally not in. College iti Illinois. • • ; :andstruck out a lot ahjl was booed unmer­more homers," Allen said. Soon after the •LEATHER SALE * , goods . Voriotii kindt, ^colore -75' per'ft. SWC long jump champion "THERE IS no correct i-"i think today we deal with v:-cifully..-HJs publicity^ although it. is in­•season ended he was traded to St. Louis w.hile at 'SMU : and . a technique for any event, more than technique,he: credible, has ^one down.ever since, and for Curt Flood and others. ,iMKMtliCMft decathlete. ' '-'However, though," he continued. "We said: "We alsohave to be con Ujis'year is no exception *Y In St, Loufis. in but 122 games, he had 34 Capitol Saddlery technique-wise the' majority .use a system we believe cerned with the psychological • : home, runs and )01 RBIs. 1614 Lavaca Austin, Texas * 478-9309 of coaches said the pole vault •works, although someone else aspects.-... The most impor ^4 Team Leader It was hoi enough, for the next year he was the' most difficult. This tant, thing is 'to coach each lofind himself in, Los Angeles. "The might have just as much Allen is leadinjg'ihe major leagues with runner; as an individual..Not ; 31 home runs and leading an average Dodgers toldine that they wanied my bat, all of them are going to like . • • team, the Chicago White Sox, in their not my personality^" Pi VOLKSWAGEN you equally, andyou'renotgo-; quest for a divisional title'. Allen lead the Dodgers in"both hom runs --*v^ ing to like them equally. But, The only real publicity Allen has gotten, jind RBIs, butit was notenough. He had aTOTOTA DATSUN VOLVO you have to.treat«ach Qf them . this year was-when he shqwed up 45 hart time adjusting to .spacious Chavez PriceV " . fairly'."-minutes prior to' the All-Star Game and. Ravine. Someoneonce asked him if he had (GUADALUPt LOCATION ~ --P-RI.CE thj-it believes anoth'er picturfe In Sports Illustrated ask-any trouble hitting the ball out of the park,ONLY) "CARBURETION modern athletes are highly ing it he was,Dutttn^ont-to-his^ull-abilitv He replied. "I can hit a ball 'out Of.any. ALWAYS FREE TUNING & EXHAUST ^ijotrvated and . that this "My real troubles in Philacjelphia park,• including Yellowstone^ CLUTCH. & BRAKE DIAGNOSIS ^motivation "increases-their-f; TUESDAY SPECIAL ESTIMATES f! started with .Thomas;" Allen,said. Allen # , VALVE & RING ability, to perform. was referring to Frank Thomas, Who at * --\Afall Trnt/ofor/ENGINE REBUILDING COMPRESSION TEST "A great number ot athletes that time (1965) was an over-the-hill out-"*fUVeiea are self-motivated; and a.lot PLEASE TRY US! ; fielder with -an immense. followmg in The -He then found himself in Chicago and in a in by" are aided motivation :City of Brotherly Love. During batting •new league. At first he didn't want toplay: OVERSEASENGINE 10035aijebrtljh836-317V -coaches. CoaChes-know more' .practi'6e,; Thomas and Allen had a fight in Chuck Tanner, ihe White Sox manager, now. about motivating"" TwRicliThomas hitAlle^over the head-with__.stalked talked^ him into it. "He's (Tanner) like a runners," he said. ''Motiva­ •I a bat. brother, man. I've knownHhtreversince-I--­ tion comes partly because this ^ : "Mauch got'avlo^;of flack for releasing was a kid," Allen said; Tanner and Allen, is']a motivated society. him < (Thomas);''and .I really got a lot. grew up in the same area. ' Runners know more about • Mauch refused -'-to allow me to say' Upon his arrival in a friendly city, Allen­1 ;.what it takes to be a winner anything, but jhe secretly told me that he won the American League MVP award than they di3"in tEe fjasf. So, wanted to release-Thomas' anyway, an^ and almost brought'his team to the top. they work for that goal. this just gave him an out," Allen said. -His next year was one full of ^injuries; H« ' "One reason records-are This is when the booing1 and-the bad . played less than half the season and his continually being broken is publicity really began'to roll. "I had to team finished fifth. This year he is that the psychological barrier start wearing a battinghelmet in the field healthy, and although he is getting littie -has been broken in the events. CHICKEN FRIED STEAK--because people were throwing pennies at . support, his team is hovering somewhat •.-That's how it was with four- URGE'CHJCKEN FRTEtT. my head," Allen said. Soon after that the close to-Oakland. His. maj^r league-' minute mile. Once somebody ' STEAK. BUTTERY BAKED • booing became 'malicious. His house and' l^adihg 31 home runs play a large role in _eai£TOOR FHENCH FRIES. •broke four minutes, a lot of his life were threatened. Shots were even that race. 7" HOI ltjyVST^SSTF3*NB people_were abfe to do it." CRISP TOSSED SALAD.-taken at his home. tvfsl Allen says that his years in baseball are Price "firsTbeRatr coaching ­ 7-"It was-like war,-man. J ^0uldnlt_evgn becoming numbered. "I'm just 33 years wlibn Jie was-a-graduateifaefcrr. ''4m EVERY'WEEKDAY J ^3itoHrmyHtlds-to-Bo-to-the^ames^I didn't old, and! am calling my own shots. How ­ assistant at the University for want them to hear the thingsTHarpeople—rTnanv-otRf^etFgainagithat?1^­ two years. He later became were saying about me'," he said. His future is in horse racing, and he DONSNZfl SIRLOIN PIT the first high school coach at Allen began to brood in the "city that^Viownsa corral full of horses. Allensays, "A Dallas Kimball in 1958. FrOm BEER and GAMES would boo Santa Claus."I^e began todrink ">orsegoes out andruns!, gives you his best, 2815 GUADALUPE ; 1964 to 1969, he Was an assis­ a lot, and some reporters wondered how When he comes off the track he.doesn't try • 478-3560 ^ tant at Texas.before going to he even drove to games, much less played' to kick in the stall or stand around. He just ..Dallas Baptist. Open till 4 a.m. iin them. „ -' gives you his best." NO TIP&iNG ^ TOMECASTfOU Corner 19th and Guadalupe 477-6829 M -t DUVAL VILLA ^J; z J APARTMENTS^ • 7 bedroom -1 bath i 2 bedroom -2 both 11 * Furnithed Apt*, for Rent UT FACULTY „-i • / «* - vrr* THE DAILY TEXAN ' < f ' mmmm'1' '0 & STAFF tvrf JSC ;itl ^5 • t) 4 ru mmm -m CLASSIFIED Fall Semester shuttle bus. passes for IIT , P » h FACULTY/STAFF members may be r: P national • c purchased at GREGORY GYM during the ; ' .••m -• sandwich - fe' ?% m> r week of AUGUST. 12-16 when you pick up ,| month • .rmstsp 5= -d sl-your 1974-75 ID eard. The charge is only $8.00 per semester for full ridership S««« MM a]} *rtT ^iriltli privileges. v; ^ v? ^SairiWltohflhop R U.T. Shuttle Bus Committee m •-2821 Stn itelhio 2604 Guadalupe 4T ...something r-&-Dob{e Mall­ „nam to really NEW HOUSING POLICY!! sink your STUDBNTSi TEETH s^EXTER HOUSE V U03 W. 24th mm- OCCUPANCY ONLY $1.00 wh.en you have • ^ WILL GET Semi-Private Rooms^as Low as OU per-mo. som^hing to 'ir K'j W>* ~ *• ' toy a ­v i-x <: Luxufft^PrivafeR&rr^il'OO per mo. ? BUY • RENT • sTl 3®i Maid Service M SELL • LEASE •£>% TIME RUN IN • Heated SwTrr>ming Pool • Refrigerators • Intercom or something Laundry Facilities -Vending Machines :^thejr?? to just give away! sft -• Study Areas ' " < ;e *~24Mrr f)p«;k Sprvirs » TV in Lobby DAILY m Off Street Parking -Close to Campus TEXAN Special Package Deals (Room'at D.xt.r-Board atM-qdlionJ-fsf: -You'll Get A / a v a i l a b l e a s low a s $1 4 ? 'UNCLASSIFIEDS' OUTHFUtipfTResuIts! -Now aaepting Fall'74 Ccmfait. 1 U.T. Men and Women TSP Blift. , Room 9.200--::: HOUSING OFFICE 709 West 22hd St. 'M"nd place y°ui/ y*, , 478-9891 .478*91 "irT ' ' £l-Vn«asj/W«W • l to..--6ft i-y&§3 E«rt» W. i Pel GB ed with hlrbig single." • Commerce., Okla., • Mickey Mickey ' to switch hit andThe struck • Bostdh':^'-• ;<-rfe*j63 "51 553 St Louis '4* 60 56v 512 Brewers for m ; Mantle wore uniforms his sharpened the skills that"Cleveland . lis*58754 V.51B , Phllophia • . • ;59';-:S7 .509 U three runs in the seventh on a llgg Baltimore. .. WMS7 • "57 Pittsburgh mother made, hit home runs . carried Mantle to greatness. ..500 58 58 ,'500* 2. double by Dave May, Briggs' . New Yofk •• $7 •;496 • 6Vfe Montreal . : 55 W ,487 3>A • thai reached amazing, propor­Mutt Mantle didn't live to Detroit • -55 61. ,474 9' •New York-. r'-49 63 • .438 run-scoring double, a walk •4$ekm s5 tions and became "simply one see his son hit' 536 homers,-Milwaukee^ 54 -62 466 10 Chicago • \ ' 46 66 .411 i1 ,b and Porter's two-run single of Wn't • ;-.••• • % v' W«it" , the-greatest players' this drive in i,509 runs, play in 20 Oakland ""i* off reliever David Clyde. 67 49 478 . Los Aflgeles:•' ;--;/-r$."4V' 647 'game hasever known',"accor­All-Star games or set a hand­Kan city ;6o: 54 --536 . Cincinnati 598 &£ • Colborn allowed only two in-ding to Commissioner Bowie ­ Chicago • "".',!v 58. 56' 509 Atlanta vifj" «1 -54 530 13Vj ful qf -World Series records -Texas. • v. 60/58 SOB Houston 58 $6-509 16 field singles through the first -si Kuhn. . Ford and Mantle , were the -Minnesota . 57. 60 San Fran six innings, but the Rangers, California • 22'/} . joined -New York • v: {-;,:• 45 ' 71 :388 .487 10^ .22 ;San Diego • ••••••-'.46.; '53 .64 70:-.397 .453 29 chased seventh Mantle brightest-stars of New York him-in the .. -Mondgy t Cepiii i Monday's Gerrici -J Yankees te'awmate and /clubs'in the 1950s and 60s. Detroit 5, Kansas cit/11 .PhtkxUlphlo 4, San froAduo 1 r:## when l», N V'j? came on to,get Jifn Sundberg and Negro Leagues star among pitchers with' more O'her clubs not scheduled ' Olfiif dubr not *ch*dut«and.Sam remains unmatched. , CINCINNATI (AP) -Tw<>­ -Thompson, .were honored Conlan, 74, .umpired 24 run homers by hot-hitting posthumously. Cooling -Off Period : years in the National Leagues.­ Willie Stargell and Ed Kirkpatrick carried i the Pittsburjgh Piratestoa 7-4 vic­ Displeases Players tory over the Cincinnati;Reds EARN CASH WEEKLY By The Associated Press in a nationally televised game , There has been a truce in the 42-day-old National Football Mopday night. * Blood Plasma Donors Needed • League stride, but remarks and. actions around the league There were no incidents to ShQW tfiat many players and coaches are anything but at spark a replay of the bench-• Men & Women: fieaoe with each other. ' emptying brawl which marred EARN $10,WEEKLY i • ^ •'This couldbe.the worst thing that could happen ata time' the last meeting-between the —4ike-this^'«-sai(LGreen Ray Pikers' offensive tackle Dick two clubs July 14 CASH PAYMENT FOR DONATION ,3 Himes, a playerrrepresentative, .wl'his could be ruinous to ~ team..unity;.\V.g're going into camp without'a contract sign--* Austini Lee Trevino.fought off some -..e Picked °p° rb?Ta r and liad a 72-hdle total of 276. firs» down the 1409 W. frth 477-3735 ••••. The 26 members of the NFL Management Council will be hard^way-ai he-was4iit-a| »he line^of«rimmageJn_an exhibition gam* with v • "I think we're showing, that we want to get an agreement t 23rd & PEARL and now that it's up to the owners. All our guys are100 per^ cent behind JEd Garvey,'1 Talbert said of the NFLPA's ex-THE Home Cooked . ecutive director. -. Italian Pood WWi- Baseball Team MARCH iSuper-Bert m LUNCH AND SignsRecruits (Wayficresf^ HAIK DINNER SPECIAL w/cheese -. "HafrcuttirtffStuclio- SAVE 49:£iS The Texas baseball team Waterbeds 501 W. 18th 472-2984 MtrTHE has signed two more recruits, Horn Coach Cliff Gustafson Compiete JAY. SPAGHETTI announced. YOU CAN EAT |acos & homemade onion selection of water-1 The two are Scott Sodenj a .. (formerly of The Haircut Store) . , :".'v' San Antonio East Central out-/ beds &accesBorlM.| SEv'-?250 ; -rings. Alt at popular prices fielder, and Odessa Permian ~ i infielder-Mark -eheleite: 6407 Burnet •INTRODUCTORY OFFER* OPEN LJUNCH 11:30-2:30 , 'Chelette:. was, selected AIlv_ 10:30 -10 p.m. ;' 454-7901 1-FREE RK BAR W/Hair style DINNER 4:30rl2:00 3303 N. Lamar . State "at,-third and had the game winning hit in the first rrTTTT. IV|'VIVilli I, l Try annual North-South High School All-Sta'r game in . Houston. % . The signing of Soden and 't Chelette leaves only one par­tial scholarship available for fi i the Texas-team, and Gustaf­ _ son already has"recruited the player but will not announce his, name until all-tlie paperwork has been'taken • caTe of. TUESDAY "It really hasn't, been an . Ut : outstanding year recruiting FEED A FRIEND FREE because there weren't that 2 FOR 1 SPAGHETTI . many good ballplayers . available," . Gustafson said. ''We felt there were fjve,real­ M .39 ly 'blue ttap'-ptayers "in the M state, and we got two of them, ALL DAY Roast.beet, corned beel, cheeses Baylor one and two signed paslratru, ham, quiche.barbfecue. with the_pros." ' r avocadpsoup,cheesecalseS baklava; But not all at oncelrfpr" 304 West 13th 3720900 MARTI'S f(f% 23rd.& PEARL HOUSE ^OIIMOII 2100-A GUADALUPE Home Cooked MhBKET 474-2321 or Italian Food LUNCH AND DINNER SPECIAL You'll Feel At Home ALL THE SPAGHETTI YOU CAN EAT in Pleasant Valley. j FOR ONLY Join Your Friends in LUNCH 11:30-2:30 DINNER 4:30-12:00 Wf 19TH STREET STORE ONLY! The Popular East Riverside-Area 10% off Drop By All Brand ISfew ALL REGULAR PRICED DEilCATBSEN} 1 H5t*«W5 r Look Around MERCHANDISE WITH 38^«nii Gtu^|drmk witk iKia -i. i-P H^|fl6upon and pur-\ Tel. &nd­ 447-7771 i vvicVi crmea I. ' SELECTION-OF'^EVI'S"-IN TEXAS; 3Ratfi ii Igs Saw » Sib w sic- IS • 4*1 >S|J ** # , ^•ltipiis "^1 Series States InternationalfsasgfMusicians mm . -sag® '--• " • ­ Six of the world's leading DeGaetani has appeared .in porary works of Henze^-;s>i£ ting intfeVTptetations of Shostakovitch's ''Thirteenth * * .solo artists will be brought to cities throughout the United Tretyakov, a .^-year-old"1.Prahms; "Beethoven* Symphony." / Austin during 1974-75 for the States vrith. many major Russian violinist, has toured Schunfiann; Chopin and Liszt.i According to the Vienna Ex­ Solo Artists series of the orchestras.-She appeared at" Europe, Latin America, jyid The. London Times said. press, ."Krause possessed an -Department of Music and the ••• the University last year to the United States extensively "He is at home in every enormous musicality ahd an Kfc P< Cultural Entertainment Com­perform, George; Crumb's • since he won first.prize in the period, displays a penetrating excellent vocal-techniquei'' •mittee. 'Ancient Voices of Children;" "T_hir^~ : • J nteiBa tiona l insight into every composer,. Starker is a Hungarian-born • The series will present Jan a work written for her.-Tchaikovsky Competition ;-his sheer ipianism-is cellist who this-year-will con­ • DeGaetaai, mezzo-soprano, German pianist Eschehbach Moscow in 1966. stupendeous." duct a'sold-out . global tour Oct; 30; Christoph Eschet)-is the most prominent pianist ^.Concerning violinists. The' . Finnish baritone Krauseis a which will take him to four bach, pianlst.-Novy43; Viktor to emerge from Central New York Times describes star, of the Metropolitan continents.. ...TretyaKov, violinist, Jan. 28; Europe since -World. War II. him aSu."one of those rare, ..Opera* the Vienna Staatsoper; He is perhaps the most Glaudio flrrau, pianist; Feb;. Termed the ^muslcian.-s phenomena.'' -­ v the Hamburg Opera,the Paris • recorded cellist in history. His 2: Tom1 .Krause, baritone; pianist? by the Chicago Sun-: Chilean • artist Arrau has.. Opera "and the Chicago Lyric : work includes -three-completes Mar. 16; and Janos.Starker,; Times, he has appeared with become something of a • Opera, TogetBer with Eugene recordings of the Bach Suites,cello, Apr. 15. major orchestras-all over, the legend^ playing more than 100 Ormandy, Krause achieved in addition to recorded perfor­. DeGaetam is known.for her • w.orld in addition to 'solo •concerts; a year . in music world recognition for the. mances of virtually"the-entire performances • of contem­recitals. t> centers of the world, presen-world premiere > of cello repertoire. . porary works, but her vir­His-repertoire includes tuosity extends to the. baro­piano woHcs ranging from ;• The Cleveland Press que,;classical: and.;romdntic. Mozart, .Brahms, Schubert 'Goc/spe//' Opening Set •described Starker as "one of repertoire. and Schumann to the contend the most amazing recitalisis in. the world today." . •/.."jSodspell," the high-.Higley, Dock Lee Jackson Jr., spirited-wrmsical retelling: of' Kletia Kelly, Lana McAdams, -Students who pay the CEC it;OPEN 1:45 the payables from the Gospel Scott "Meynig and Joe optional services fee may at­ 52r.50 M» 6 p:nt FEATURES according to St. Matthew, will Shinfessel. Laine Leibick will; Bachman-Turner Overdrive tend Solo.; Artist-, Series con-<|fe& . . ... Gldiws 2-4-6-8-10 Mlncluded open Aug. 23 aFCente'r.Stage serve as assistant-director.--50.,.cents. .^Season a '^The group from Canada, who detcribe their music d» "heavy duty rock/' (meaning 22?4.Gu8da!itM St <77-1964 theater: Director.Ken Johnson Musical director is Jim tickets for the series are$6 for ."less. screeching "than heavy-metal'-')/ -will .perform at 8 p.m. Wednesday in hasselected a cast of JO young McNabb, and Martha Thomas: people, ages l7 to 25. is the production pianist. Appearing in the production ; &&*• will be PatU Davis, -Diane^'^Reservations for 4. Fre^pnan; Richard Freeman,' '-'GodspeH" may be ,obtained:L JtmlviUarhols Melanie Guilbeault,' Susie -by calling 477-1012. Barefoot Jerry, Charlie McCoy sp NME axeeH ui Guocfolupg_Second level Dobie Mali 477-1324 * Trankensi Give Fine Show to Small House By MARK PEEL SCREEN oLleader WavneMoss, bass andguitar; Terrj^Dearhorn,vocals'' LAST DAY! Texan Staff Writer — Afb>r^in0~ni»-fi««•nnfnfmrfr"-T'ni•I, it n. ,i* l.'Z -ahd rhythm BU"ar; Si aowaros, anims, peiiiusiion ' *"m ",yufn» guitar; ai EawaTdsmiums, peiuuhhion and t§W$ ?«fv-SSC-ggK^gS&P^ ^ ­mm ^BRILLIANT| ,he hu Tsai'-' ? ­ P sem?1 ^gs fr(?m ^lr Mdnu- FEAT OF !• You had an e?cuse Friday nighti wha't with the fireworks dis-IpnM^r i^ MOVIE-tfae Pands, stayerawayrHowever1-*°Tr?s l°X ^ K>WIif­ "S who-didn't JL; SS ONE OF TltEIR best songs' was a fairly long instrumentaland MeGoy sUU loved'every mipute of uie Somand'cffliid nS MAKING!"! called "Castle Rock" that features each member of the group have played any better, . -TIME MAGAZINEJ >in his own segment. ; . , . THE SEVEN-MAN group that is Barefoot Jerry iscomprised If the show that Barefoot Jerry put on by themselves was , 'DUSTOi HOFFHAJrsl good, then the result of'Charlie McCoy, .NashviUeTs.greatest FINEST PERFORMANCE Harp player, joining them was just too much. Feoluu SINCE UDDNIBHT' 12:30-2:20 HE OPENED with "Silver Threads and Golden Needles," a 4.-10-4:00 . recent hit song! on the country charts, then followed vrith COWBOT!" I DAYS 7:50-9:00 "Tootin'" and Stevie Wonder's "Sunshine of My Life." ; -THE NATIONAL OBSERVER! TECHNICOLOR (©>#74 Wa»O^A*yPraduetiOfa McCoy proved he could sing, almost as well as he blows the MANN THEATRES harp when he did the standard-blues number, "Stormy Mon­. day." Barefoot' Jerry and McCoy then did their current hitFOX TWIN , single, "T.D.'s Boggie Woogie."The song iscurrently in the top nSMMPEOdfWfs 67i7*UK)*rKVa 454-2711 twenties on the country charts. ey returnedto ..Jh..d0 several standards including "Jackson " -—Help-Mfe MaKeJt-TJlfflugh the^Njght," "Me and Bobby $ H 25 3;!S $ f50 T:sfo T W 5=45 • | encore from the small BuTgrateFuTaudiencer $1.50 .V,. -QgWHB*! CIWEMACORPORATIOW^, . .. Features jlfe|Alt CINEMASEVERY OAYS1.25'TU. 7:30|,A ModernHorror Film'"^—Judith Crist mwm PartirtorrfcKv They're the • |Harry.Gayl^will-—^ dumbest thieves ' IW-MOHjtgCT-SU,nwt ^.Ortk^xlrs Honquowiwortn w&**_••WroouangArno Jtanm*Dtfta 01lazzaro*Sflfc*n Zefeno* is Washington. - CAfllOP(W-eRAW-. OPEN 2:00 Austin 22QOHt8codDmt-. bowin FEA. 2:30-5:00*7:30^9:45 5 w His talents are STACY KEACH .. Reduced Prkes Til 5:15 •' unequalled. of FREDERIC FORREST (2-24.6.8.10 IThey've alreadyfbeenresponsible HIGHLAND MALL 451-7326 • IH35 ATKOINIGLN. |for three murders: | LUCILLE BALLa"MAME"1 CO-STAQftlMC BnSi 4 -p*i Barbra I TtoAfaxton Company piMMlt BEATRICE ARTHUR • BRUCE DAVISON • JOYCE VAN PATTEN KIRBY FURLONG ' Streisand ^RQBERTJPRESTON as Bea-Jtegard • Based on the SraadwavMusical 'MAMr JI CeneHockmon. ; -J OPKH ,«Vtr ,3ero?s ^12 NOON ScrMfilnac TheConversation*^ 'v>.Vi -v.--., -I --- -Sake" 12:45^:3$ 0PM 1:45 "Jyx, / « •"•V — W«WvPn>AC*Jl&»«0«lth' , \ 4:20-4:05 (Men-Set) '2'4'6'8'10 < vBst 7:50-9:30 $1.50 Hi 6 pjB. Village STARmWS MlCHAEI. • I? -w nn ; • Color byTECHNICOLOR* • APardroounf Pictures Rele&s&V Cinema :Lm . no«ocrr,«ur -wo^xir,"KMOWS after your TNCTSOUUMTS MI CAPITAL PLAZA Four 452-7446 • IH 35 NORTH 1t20 That ^Trinity" ttar a oot • 2700 Wast Anderson lane!: 7:50 uM&- to build a Itgtnd in _ $ % 25 3:30 Sf50 The^cademy Award Winner* )5I4I52 10=00 Hj) hit own good tiim . M •' ...what next ! HBMEVVMVIEKMil(MN MIDNITEMOVIES sl" •. And MAURY ftEIAFOMTv S:45 ns -sea F HARM feEIAMNTE AMERICM COWBOY As Gee^iie Dan __ • 'i® ....... „­ K. k- 12:15 LAST ijheyget COLOR funny wHerf twytR3«.«LE^E-THCHNCOLnR» PftWtXyH SgA MARLON you mes^ A RE-RflEASE V. ' ­ OPEN 7:45 AIX BRANDO SHORT FEA. ADMISSIONS AT 8:45 \ ii. "vvith their BACK BY- i^rni $2.00 TWO SHOWINGS AT 9:00 & 11:15 ss® 'viijogey: POPULAR DEMAND PASS UST SUSPENDED 3 Held Overt NO WIKflB" 4th Week! UNDER, CHILD , ' ARE-ROEASE >12iiS-2sli«15 THE OftlBINAL IR 1 .12 SCREEN APPEARANCE OF "• t Oh The fASSIS SIKKHob _4 \| REOUCtO PRICES-Tit 12:15 |PCl«!B> MON-HH. IWUKH1M WCOtOR­ as8,LLY » IJHOWW iHK*"«Mnev 2 12*00 ;; LAST DAYl ; BOX OFFICEOPEN 8KM. 6A1URPA* M|«HT : How SHOWING "'Thre Touch'i a fascinating • * m WJM PETER BLATfy$ picture to place in,Bergman's gallery of haurtfing experiences MfflLs8 IkiWI and yOUrS."-Archer Wln5!an,N.Y. Post Over --' .CPLfflATB llllireiM ' S TA T E Week! • UE33H PARAMOUNT ,,,,, 1 3 CON-GFVESS AVfJNUEi .$1.25 Hf 7:00 p.m. 6:00-8:00-10:00' SHOW STARTS AT DUSK , FEATURE TIMES ^ .^all it takesTs" ! 2S4o-$1.-50 2~-» FEATURE TIMES 8:00 And 9fA0,'?S INTERSTATE THEATRES 1:15-3:00-4:50-6i35-8:15-1 a ilffe Confidence: , -R«Ai((d Prices 4-sS S,' ' It^THE TOUCH" BOX OFFICE OPEN SUS HI 7:00 p.m. SHOWVARV AT DUSK PARAMOUNT... SllOW TOWNUSA 1 1 'i CONGRESS Af' N . ;!' ,6:30-8:10-9^0 !i CO-HIT as -XHwYimnamwpa^iMstV* .r^'OON'T IOOK NOW" I WE WILL BE m -r •-' •' v-",'Vj m qilcmte,0»ystyle- ^ 1-^'PASSES SUSPENDED WHJNSOIf &,, Reduced Prlees Msn-Fri til 1:00 3.^ Jg^.juryjandexecutioner. •*" ' 1:00-2;<5-4:30^:IS.8l00^;45Sg? "DEATH CLOSED , $i:2S nn 3ioo i CHABLESBRONSOIf VARSITY .'2f30-3:S5-5sv. „ , 2 Tomorrow,. August 9th> through September MorelSanamSJinwT v J< 6:45-8:10-9:3J~i •xaMMwainnHni' "1 , .Ait exploiive ' I 3rd, celebrating.the inauqurqtron qf'ihe ni 'DEATHW1SIT Jucinema cencertl • m |president and rertiotfeling DOBIE SCREE •.:-AaKameuatfliMaat:- .•it •We hope to see you when we opeitWedn L A j1 i ratm DAYS' *4*k ^ Rirfwwd Prlws Trf 17 4S %sjy August THE^DAIL^TEXaiSl^: tj?k; .-Tf­ 1 mm® mm S Group To Perform TO3 Tties., ' Falls Flat "•Mame," directed by Gene Sacred Music of Lucille Ball ii? the title role. I've -"You're a loving person, Miss Den-had been scrapped, "Mame" would ful, broadly played sequence (pra'c-Sacred music of lhe: German .Reformation period Will -be Saks; screenplay, by Paul Zindel; a.navid Lucy fan, and . nis — peculiar, but -loving.-' But tically stolen by Joyce Van Pattenpresented Tuesday by Musica Getotscht, an ensemble' com­based on the Broadway' play by 111 admit,she looks agelessly lovely . Lucy's Mame 'is too loving, too" have been a hoot indeed. As it is, Saks not only hasignored the story's . as SallyCato. an obnoxious southernposed of graduate and undergraduate-students in the.Depart-• Jerome-Lawrence, Robert E; Lee ' here, enshrined in soft-focus warm. She's more like an eccentric great partxlistic possibilities, but... belle), which alSofeatures the big ti­mentof Husic. The.concert is scheduled for 8p.m. in the Music .and Jerry Herman; based on the sincere- -fn<^lfryjnSinanny than a Ii'ee-thfoking, fuh-he's also given the movie very little tie tune, grandly performed.Building RecitarHdll. novel by Patrick Dennis; starrfng-. ly to make-sure we'll' like" her:' loving woman. Try picturing Olivia PinotTlofiA chrla 4b etrnll ......... • " Lucille Ball-and­ cinematic style as well. As RobertAccording to co-director? Doug Kjrk and Charles Turner, Lucille Ball, Beatrice Arthur and r"MAME"SHOULD have been the Walton impersonating Sally:Bowles ^ For" the first hour or so, "Mame" Preston stroll down the tree-­ graduate students in mus»corogy,' the group derives its name Robert Preston; at the Fox Twin. -crowning .achievement of Lucille and you pretty well get Lucy's inter­just doesrr't-go anywhere. .Visually covered path' while the-singingfrom the title-of a treatise by Sebastian Virdung, published in By PAUL BEUTEL I Bali's career,^At 63, she has retired pretation of Mame; if thuds. The composition"and cut chorus looks on; "Mame" achieves­1511, which is"devoted. to; descriptions of musical instruments. Texan Staff Writer-.^w' from her weekly television series, -ting are flat, and the pace drags. a , moment of true cl^ss.' ' THE GROUP PERFORMS on instruments described by Vir-EVEN THOUGH the musical ver­ movie DOES dung, including'recorder, Krummhorn, sackbut, organ, • I can't recall ever having felt so and this was obviously sion' mistakenly plays down the . '-IN THE OPENING "It's Today" "MAME" have its good lasting big-screen . moments — Jk-I organetto, zink and shawm. The pieces are accurate copies of ambivalent toward a movie musical designed -as a zaniness of the original .^Auntie "number,. (today being 1^28) •' precious few that they monument to America's most pop-. ar.e— but the over-all productisstill extant instruments in museums and private collections. as I 3m toward "Mame." It's a Mame" and plays up the .sentiment.' choreography by the usually depen­ ular comedienne. Yet part of the hugely 'disappointing, particularly Selections to be performed will consist mainly of motets, genuine clinker — after "Mari of La the most successful moments of this" dable Onna Whitehas more the look blame for the movie's failure must when we .see what musicals have chorales and organ solos b£ Leonard Kleber, Cosmos. Alder, Ma#cha.t" probably .the. least "Mame" are some deliciousty Cam-of outtakes from "The Great be placed on Lucy, someon director. been' in the past (as witness the Ludwig Senfl, Aroolt Sfhlick, Heinrich Isaac, Martin Luther successful of all'the Hollywood py scenes' whicli preserve the flavor Gatsby" than-a big ----v-~-number, in— a Gene Saks, ahd., th6..rest. ofti the marvelpus ''That's' Enier-'' and Hans Kotter.rAcCompanying themusical pieceswill be Ger-'"blockbuster'' musicals of-the last of the original show -like the bit ' multi-mjllion^ dollar .musical. Saks property itself. ,'\ 'e tainment!-which opens here Aug. rriar) poefns read by Dr. Wolfgang. Michael of the Germanic . 10 years or so.Yet "Mame'^is never with Lucy roller skating in a depart-'—t*°f® improve matters; he!d 23) or what-acontemporary musicallanguages faculty an;offensively bad screen adapta­: There's.more brain in Mame-^han ment store (shades of Chaplin and rather dwell on Lucy's throwing her can be in the. right hands, (i.e GROUP-MEMBfiRSi -include Bonnie Harris^ Gayle George; tion. It'sfitfuliy enjoyablealmost in rin the standard Lucy character and -the Marx Bros.), or just about any aTTnf about qr wiggling to the music "Cabaret"). Doug Kirk, CharlesTtfrner and JamesWheat, instrumentalists; spite. of itself, in the. way that • a -good -deal more warmth, —' Scene with Beatrice Arthur, who or haye ^Httle Patrick-(Kirby , Yet — .rightly or wrongly ¥-theBarbara Amaral and Caron.Cumminj;s, sopranos; Louis Botto, mediocre musicals of the' past often megawatts of warmth. Unfortunate­does sort of a drag qiieen parody U).thebanister. movie does have Lucy, and wfi^iftil counter tel.or; Jamas' Cook, tenor; -and Charles Castle, are — a great number here, a good ly,this Mafne is not quite as zanyas camp perfection. ... However, when Beauregard Burri-' was over I found myself halfway;baritone.--• scene"there.'-K. r5-t' either the TV Lucy or-Rosalind side (Robert Preston) arriveson the smiling and humming the title song.­ Admission is free to Summer Entertainment:Series season :.v • v -v:; ^ Russell's 1958^nonmusical "Auntie In fact, if Lucy and Saks had scene and-takes.Mame to-his You won't love this "Mame," but ticket holders;Otherwise, tickets are.?1 for adults and 50cents Much of my ambivalence; Mame." followed Arthur's example, and if Georgia plantationythemovie final-' for children-.-, . ^.. --however, derives from the presence . As Agnes Gooch tells Mame, . some of-the more saccharine songs ly gets off the ground. It's a delight-then 'you Won't completely dislike her, either... ..U-*5 'SUmm m _ * * W ' "Pink Floyd;" directed by put it across as so much dis­ Studtman's SI THE PINK FLOYD movie give the .viewer. theTeeling he. Adrian Maben; starring who tortion. "Time," "Seamus" and "get beeii nice, but several over­ is part concert, in an. ancient is, there alone with;fiavid • else bht Pink Floyd;. a_t the The movie itself is pretty the Controls for the.Heat of does itquickly-Thesame goeis Photo Service Pompeiian'. gmpitheater,• and Riverside Twin and Village f : good; it just' doesn'tlive up to Gilmour, guitars;' Mick the:,Sun."-Strangely enough, for superimposed scenes Of part studio takes with scenes Mason, percussion; Richard Cinema Four. ; r v the ad descriptions. There are their recent hit-"Money" was-the band over a light sho'w 222 W. 19th y'.i 5324 Cameron Rd. By MARK. PEEL a-couple-pf rock:movies mak­of the band eating at some Wright, keyboards.and Roger not -included. Most -of tfife (circa 1967 and Che Avaloti greasy spoon and some qf Waters, bass..This would have songs played lh the film.are : -TexaB-Staff-Writet ing,thff r0ttnds.this_sumirier in-Ballroom), faces of Roman -RESUME' & ^ them wandering around in a . worked; but-somehow, all.the The ads and radio spots bill eluding Floyd'' true .to. the recordings-they gods and the backs of their ''Pink and • hoi-springs bed or on a moun­ cameras, -hghts and .film v came fromand arevery good. the movie 'Pink Floyd' as an; • "Ladies and JGenMemen, the • tain'. • . : crews get into the act and manv-:amplifipr, WHljam 9:45 ing~ Sftalnti, Ai>gIo PkKlnion, Mar|< ^ lOrOtl -Oortoefr­ 36-Adam:i2 23rd&PEAf?t Mel Brooks' Wurren Oales. Timothy Bottoms ' and Lou Go«kU as Wfialen $1.50 411 6 : ? Hawaii Piw^O-. : 9 Eye toEye: "ABook of Marvels'^ Home Cooked '••'rsiy Fealuna mo, 36.Mystery Movie; "A Matter of sItalian Food 3:30 .. • MirglCf*' starring Dan Oalley^'^ ' • I pjn-' • • •. . 5:30 9 Jeanne Wolf Wlth_ tUNCH AND 7:30 '-Wl vm. • . 9:30 7 HawWns '. ' ; DINNER SPECIAL 10:00 4.CVM A ———CjimMAiii" • ••---» • -ALL THE ALLIED ARTISTS presents . 9 Performancei "'The Baltimore'­ " 9fitn . ,. -.9 .You O>¥^,.lt to Yourself • SPAGHETTI STBfE DUSTin •• :r^;24 MaroJS VTe(&yr M.D. *36 Police Story : • • • vi" YOU CAN EAT mcqusninmnnl 9 Byline k . * FOR ~ SO50 in a FRANKLIN J. SCHAFfNEfi iilm •9s30 p^n. • •. ^ '' • ?v-­ Village 10 p m I ONLY .Z/C 7. 71, 36 News ./t ^ mum v 9' Insight:•*'Why Oon't You CalVMe Skipper Anymore?" fANAVISION* TECHNICQLOR* Cinema LUNCH 11:30-2:30 0 /.-JOlJO pjtt. ' • -ALLIED «RTISTSi.-.QD DINNER 4:30-12:00 'Movie: "Myrder A hoy,"starring Four AAai^aret4Rutherf6rd. 2700 W.it Uh 451-S352 SO&FCRGGE" | Saloon ipptpsf Every Tuesday ArmadilloWorld Adqtrs. BUCKDANCER'S Riverside >:f ,, „ -presents I Twin CHOICE ' presents an air-conditioned Pk 1*78016 I ^ Armadillo Aug. 14 WmiMM CinemA 1930 E. Riverside Drive BEE CAVES BDl inn Tonite Paim Suipendod Feature! 1:00-2:45-4:30 441-5489 U Cover BULL RESTAURANT OPEN 24 HOURS august 2 GameRooVns * -\­ ° Pooi*Foosball*Pinball -_ _ t . 3500 Guadalupe' WIS S: 451-9151 national M andwich month ' Presents2 ANNEX. TONIGHT v the"SaiftWitch sho^s cSeBrates" vr RODEO . National gandwich " KwthedelicateSSeiY daily sandwich,spec k HAWPS 1 qonniCMSseur. S®|| ' ' j Sflvf 19.34 by eatir m. & SAt.-AU$. T6 & Vr C ' -thirty-one specials. ^thousanddrilcidnfrom theepicurean <• S& ^ 8 F.M. $$ 5 -,rf capital*of th*w'oirld.Blc'adlng thecolor of ^ earl % •PMW*"«**• tteUMolmmmm<4 ^0 SCRUGGS .Th«PW|M of hMlietn '!WmM Iumc*.Tndy•world ofimOghtMaraMV'^i A"llort•tr°a fro" REVUE Capitol !Ll o,, MSMWMtlSth.47S.19M. =JSp«^JL28^1jSari Jacinto . Advonw^Ticfcati $3.50 ^ 'j' w'* " ' At Inner .Sanctum omj •' • No. 2 2(&4 Guadalupe ^ Odd Moments (inoitiiadMtii^ &TheOpryH[pDse , -B6x Office" SHOW INFO. 441-2743 • 200.AtADKMY liRHKET * SuiBtndMi sssims»®pi^p**l^^p*^^^^ • r~r^^f™ v-'V: --1 |Sl^ I :...•.' &...-'.f •.. . A 'Iff* 'C* •&&-," j/-} ^U);*-;X»,^ ' SI : Po -ri. ii\\ mc VL ^V " >.*s " i 4i3^-* ^. tea -'• tfrJSW 5p n' • ?£&$i •.^.v <.-;.: .\J/'V :vm Pr« Col tlm Inti CLASSIFIED ADVERTl5tNG'.r:,v: res RATES rec FOR SALE FURN. APARTS. • FURN. A.PARTS. H TURN. APARTS. B FURN. APARTS. S FURN. APARTS. TYPING wit !5:«ord'.fT*inirftyrTj :, Each wordofte•"limev.vLj..;J .10 Each.wordl-4-trmeSt:.V...; • >.'..$ .0? Homes -For Sole W Si30 up NOW CEASrNS'FOR rrister Manor. AT? Just North. ofr 27th 2^33J »ractlvex)neb«droomapar Each.-word-10 or more .nmfcs? & $ .06 "1BR "Furn. Now Leasing for Sept.'*-•' pool/ c^blrTV.' and^ disposal, CA/CH ^Us'dalupe Each word-5-9 times.;-: S :07 $125 -$140 Student fk*d.,0*Sfrf8V"' : • • •.-•«'"•*. ' COMPLETED HABITAT APTS, 202 EAST 32NO.STREET, Bent tree­»i:coi;« x Mnch ?-Vtimas.u.,Vw\$2.66 . Apts. AU new on* bedroom efficl^ocies. ;1t«?,v*-l>-{fK^-OIJC.Lmc 42.96 Tanglewood .1 BR -$145up .. One. .bedroom and efficiencies, -large ' /m jovUip.. . LAKE AREA -closets, fully carpeted, cable, disposal : l-col. * 1 met*tenor more limes$2.J7 •3J* acre hid away w/view of La'ke' Arinex "2 BR -.Si80 up HUNTERS wnler.^gaj. fiwinimlna pool, furnished. extra long btds, cfcble TV, CA/CH. S135 Travis. Close to free swimming/boating 1315 NORWALK LANE piuv«lecfriclty. See mgr. Apt. No. V MBA NEED AN APARTMENT Walking dlstanca lo UT. No dhlldren of i»sbing.area.-Lake living without the - l»t» -K!/£wUi£ 477 8858. --bedroom apartment. 1240. 476-3462, 476-• The Complete Professional 345-2267 GIVE US A CALL! iTanglewood North < 8683.1902-IW tiveces. • . ;tr-tvttdoy Ttran Mortdeyi..... 11:00 a.m. Habitat Hunters is FREE, apartment 5 BLOCKS FULL-TIME Typing, 1020 E.45th locator Wvice^. located in.the .tower, W«dft«*cfoy T«*on Tit*«day.; MrOC 6-m. SCOTT It leasing'fpr fal!. l,bdrnn.« dis-Service " ,4524060 tevel of pobjeMail. We specialize in stu>;v WEST OF hwasher. pool, Vt block shuttle, 3405 TBurtdoy Itian Wt4n«tday. IfsOO o.m" :S125 plus E • Shuttle Bus Corner dent complexes, CAMPUS . ,, -" RE5UMES . . . Helms. No, 101, 472.7M9.­ Check Our Summer Rates •• ' . fftday T«KOI% Thurtfkiy .......1IJOO o.m. 3-l'/2-Cul-de-sac HABITAT HUNTERS large efficiencies, living m,. ' ; New ^largc iiving' ropi :i • ColorfOI ShagGarnet Lower Level Dobie Mali, Suite offset bedroom t kitchen, cable, water-ATTRACTIVE RJVER HILLS efflden-with or without pictures! WA Huge fenced yard. GoodCombinationlor-• Central Air gas furnished, Summer $121. :cy, available'Aug.15. Pools,shuttle. $145 2 Day Stervicev Pre small family.' Nice, frees. A modest f 8A ABP. 441-6878, Keep trying. -itii • Pool :.w • 476-7916474-1532r-.-> • Red OskvApta. 2104 San Ga*briei .home, but so's the price ts23,950).' Just WALK TO CAMPUS 477-.r-5514r"J " ,472-3210 an(ci 472,7677 * In .MM: mnl tf iiroh mod,* M an :Usted • so hurry. • Shuttle. Bus 3 Blks. .TRAVIS HOUSE. Apartments. Student 370+Hcmfihill Park 'ific.r .edverttMcnenl, bnm*d>of« ito1k* MintW 472-3438 4J4-20M EFFICIENCY •. ;.V:-.'V . section. 1 'and 2 bedrooms. From $1$0 grven oi fh*pubtoh«r> anretpontibfa for -• -RETR5AT . Large efficiency, paneling/ built-in ; ABP. Shuttle. 442-9702; 1600 Royai Crest ooiy ONE incentct imwtwv AD ckjimi for * Lee Phillips, Realtor. kitchens, furnished, CA/CH. Very close < Drive;-. ; '• . ' od|vilmtnli iJimM b« mod* not lel*t APTS. -to campus. than 30 doy» oft«« pwblkolion." »ro w. 76th SI. MOVE TODAY THREE ELM 4400 AVE. A 459-0058' En]oy tennis court, swimming pool, gas ONE BEDROOMPlus Study.River Hills <73^589 : 45MS31 - 400 West 35th ' V. Taka lease on September 1 $214, V "CHRISTENSON grtiis, lovely courtyard. Four color :. -1- ABP. 444-37*L u •:•. FOR SALE BY OWNER -Central'Properties : schemes: se»blue sexy leopard, orange 'FURNISHED -UNFURNISHED..Extra . ' 833 EAST 38TH . > antf -olive, yellow, with black patent large 1 bedroom, shag carp«t, dls» ASSOCIATES Beautiful 11: year old home for sale, 4213 AVENUE FF.F.Old two stefy home •• LOW STUDENT.RATES: HEFLJN (lather, One or two bedrooms: Aly> teas* hwasher; r^nge, disposal, /efrigcrator, 15 word minimum each day •...$ :75 located 1 mile north of' Law 'School. WALK TO CAMPUS mg for tall. . .. . •' pool/close-to campus, shuttlebus, cable. (1I9T). .Four tMKiroom, tvra full hath/ A TYPING SERVICE INTERNATIONAL Each additional-word each days .OS Three bedroom,. 3V*\baths, den. inside FROM $79 ALL JBIIXS PAID ' S spacious rooms, large kitchen, garden, formal living, dining room, 2 Furnished .: .single and • double room ,;. . 1200 west 40th Apt. 135 •• 451-3941 • porches, Specializing in hardwood, fioprs,. assorted •.^X.col—n_l_LQCh A*rh large basement. -avtfliable now wiin or 451-3333 plants, animals.' Housemates needed. Unclossif»edV' V »me -3 days.: $1!WJ without ttoard. W meals per week. On IC we are remodeling these aptsr fust fdr^- —Theses and dissertations 3500 square feet for iW^OOT— •. • (Prepaid,-No Refunds) ^ shutMe.^.rour^r ^ool, parkmdr-^rom -Xfitji^-New shao carpet and drapes, All > , -Law briefs , Students must show* Auditor's ,.rv 477-S430 . $97/month. AU Sills Paid: bullMrr kitchefL...poblTW/CHrOid... t' WA! 1200 SQUARE "FEETi'2'bdrm, S^baths.' -cecoipti. andpay m advanor in TSP ' JV"'" .-• :-.j••*' 2505 Longview »"<« «<• Cjose to campus, $140: ^Norih-Austln. pool, 459-7614, «f.B49l, —term papers and reports. -COU) Bldg. 3,200 I25th fc Whiltj) 'frdhfi 8 ••••• -V-' . . ' I: E' 3,s' st houi 451-1959. •a.m. to 4;30 prm. Monday through 477-6371 r 478-6776 451-6533 1 BEDROOM 9 MONTHS LEASE , —L_Shei 15x60 SHERWOOD mobile home. AC Prompt,-Krofe^sloncrt- Friday/ • • •..'• Central Properties central heat. furnished or unfurnished.."' 1150 A*LL BILLSPAID Need to sell quickly. Dan, 474-1450.. ' 1 Bedroom UNF. APARTS. Service Lots of glass, unusuat floor plan, over- PM neci hours. ••••••..."• ' j • • ••••• 1and:!?""'" HALLMARK 453-8101 451­ anytime/ Keep trying* <53-3377 decent NOW LEASING FOR SEPT. sued pool, onshuttlebus,.fully carpeted, : .CA/CH, -kitchen appliances, cabl* TV. " T/.t FOR SALE 4209 Speedway • . Pick-up ServiceAvailable MUST GO; 10x50 mobile home. Lots ofs. BEDROOAA>^ 453^921 ' . 451-54?* APTS. $160 IVJ • , extras at 6 T3B5onabie-pflc^t77-0366. .. Central properties WOODED from $135^Auto -For Sale MOBILE HOME, 1964 model, furnished, 1 Becfroom Furnished, panetingrallbuHMjUdlchefi, 708 W. 34th CREEKSIDE 1 v(ev 10*50'. 1 Bedroom pius study. $2400.926-All Bills Paid •on shuttle bus, poor,.«nd sun-deck. Sh^g • One «nd two-bedroom-apartments in. T9n/GREMUN"X".JE*lras, AC, Three-8281; '• carpeting, CA/CH, Individual^ gutsldf -— 454-8239— Utt^aly_creekside settind. Huoe grassy TYPING Reports. Resume* PAi I BEDROOM;:r speed. Lowmfles. Excellent* new condi­. vvalk to Campus : •.storage. 302 West 38th St. lawn, lots ol^ees.'Conv*hlent^ort5Tr—Pm ^ —tXheses. Letters • YMl tion, $1995. 477-3388; anytime.. Buckingham Square 451-3154 . ; 451-6533 downtown, shopping, recreation. Fully s!®^ Ail University £ntT -E«r dyw SAVE $500.1972 Gremlin X. Beautiful 711 W. 32nd • Close to campus ami shuttle bus; Rich : $129 the storage space! From $134.50. Call Rs Last.Minute Service . silver, blue. AC extras; 3-speed, lux­. PIANOS AVAILABLE for ttudent ren-•' . 4S4-4917-wood paneling, buiIMn bookshelves, -.-9264555. Open *9Mon-Th 4 . 10-3, Musical -For Sale . Central Properties $154;ALL BILLSPAID carpeted, paneled, and you^ron'tbelieve Jj business work Imrr Large 1 bedroom* dishwasher, disposal,. urious Interior, luggage rack, • toi, $85 for 3months. Amster Music 1624 SEE OUR SUMMER RATES KENRAY carpeting throughout, CA/CH, all buiit^ -9-5 Frl-Sat 2330 v economical. Mint condition $1993. 477* Lavaca __ in kitchen. 4307 Ave. A cabie,:pool, gas & water paid. SERVICE 3388. •>• •. • .:• • . .NOW LEASING FOR.SEPT. APARTMENTS 454-0173 • • 451-6533 2. bedroom townhouse $170. Newly ALL BILLS PAID DA> MARTIN D*28gWfar.CailMlka 454-S7D1 ..Central properties decorated, shuttle bus. -r 472 8936 30A Oobie Center­ iiJr 2 BEDROOM condHion more, than -outward 2 BATH iIF..YOU VALUE excertenj mechanical 9r 442-3327. - 2122 Hancock Dr. ' -» $195 *41-7577 appearances, this panel truck may 66* GUITAR STRINGS Save 20% on ail 2 BR FURN". Next to Americana Theatre,walking dls* c CA$A ROCA 6tratford Hail at Trafalgar Square has the one. ?59 Dodge withsldewmdowj, 3)8 guitar, mandolin, and banjo strlngs,^^ ' ALL BILLS PAID. •tance to North Loop: Shopping'Center EFFICIENCIES; t and J BDRM from APARTMENTS " luxury apartments Ideal for sharing. Inc. peril . Plymouth-englne -4 transmission with Amster Music '1624 Lavaca: • and Luby's. Ontf haif blo^k from shuttle S122.. Beautiful efficiencies, also 1 and 2„ Quiet garden setting,':pools and. 1302 Parker Lane WWv.476-9093^ inly. J5,000mile*.New driveshaft, heavy , and Austin transit. 2 bedroom bedroom aptt.'. Heavy wood paneling,-clubhouse for privateparties. SW5.50 un­ Antilles. •l£fi gverslwd radiator;. l„EBLANC Classic clarinet.-Ebony, ^.towjnhouses. extra large*. Two bedroom fully.carpeted, all built-in kitchen, open furnished, $230 furrtlshed. Easy drive to typingstereo/:.other »mprovements. ceilent condltion. i300 or offer. 451-3350/r^,^; __ 2204 EnfieUU r: Hats.;one and two baths, CA/CH,:dis-beam-ceillngi, CA/CH,_pQOl, easy UT, downtown. Coll 834-771» or 451-1159. $7^5. 327-2802. < ^ " 472-1923 hwasher, drsposai, door to door Garbage bicycle distance fo campus and closrio-—NEW printingWE REPAIR all string instruments(' -' SHUTTLE BUSFRONTDOOR .. pickup, pool, maid service e>r, e*t. bed; 6 cyl.« new tires, clutch;- ,lh~a — JackV 926-^47. •. / . EL~CID & NFFICIENC1ES hwasher, disposal, central .air and neat, . • Townhouse andgarden apartments,only 60 cents per page. Theses 75 cents.JSali rMi W6i(. $500r<5ti8585. • sha^ carpet, extra storage foom. minutes from shopping,,parks, golf; One> ^>447*2737. -EtrDORADO-Alt-Bills Paid ^_vbedrooms from $149.50 all bills paid. ••• lAUSTIN 'v '71 WHITE TOYOTA Corolla 1600. AC, v.^j'Also 2~bedroomsr FDrnished^or-unfur—-DlSSER" radio. :4-spee115?i law :brlefs. Experienced typlit", "—r|PIANO SHOB'_ CHECK OUR SUMMER RATES 'Your time is valuable ° CA/CH, unasuaJ(/ good furniture, huge > . Manager Apt.lp6 Tafrytovg^?w Brjdte Path. Lorraine Won .457*7407 afier • atier..6:00.' 454-9108 1969.VW,: very low mileage, radio, ex-, Our service is free trees. 4504 Speedway. -Sept cedent, tires, recent tune-up. $1050. 474-• 5311 S. Congress J, •451-4252' . .• 451-6533 If No Answer Call1" PLAZA -4728. • • .•'* • x NOW LEASING FOR SEPT. •' PARAGON Central Properties 454-5869 • STARK TYPING, Experienced ., * Reconditioned Uprights need theses, ^Expert Tuning & Repair £ « 5IU n " unwnitwifc 'rirUIng aM>.. dissertations, PR% etc Prir Piapo Moving , VE jNTUR A '69.KARMANN GHIA rteeds generator, • . 1 BR-SI55 -Tlfed of small rooms~isnd iio closet Binding/specialty technics4r. Charlene otherwise very good condition.$950.451-PROPERTIES space? Tired ot asphalt arid ndise? Try Stark, 453-5218. ' EFFICIENCYkL 6533 or W31S8 .' "Call 441-3262 Plata Ventura.* Iand,2 bedroom, fur-:' • 2 BR -Si84 C NOB HILL nished or'unfurnished, ' " HOLLEY S^TPING SERVICE. A com­-1:1953 FORDPICK-UP. Goodrunning cort-T 472-4171 $115 A' APARTMENTS r-pletes*rWc* from typing throughMo*­ From$129.50 pluseiec. " Mtsc. -For Sale weokdayi Fully carpeted, bullt-.lnkitchen^ CA/CH, 3410 Burleson Road ding. Available antll10 p.m. Experlenc­-454-JHSi. ^ r . ' . 452-5093 (-.vpool sundeck, onshuttle bus;Inquire v i Available for, fall/2 bedroom furnished Barham Propertles ed mail fields.Near campus. 1401Mohie * , ,^1^69 GTO by original owner. AC, AT, 4 TOP CASH PRICE5.pald.for dlamon^E-at 302 W, 38th Stntet/ J7V" apartment -large enough for 3 or 4 peo-.447-6571 -MARK XX- old gold. Capitol Diamond Shop, 4018 N. -. r.neaciynew.steel radiais.Very clean.471- -3815 Guadafupe"^""77-" ^ 472-4475 i: ,^*51-3154 45;T6533_ Ele. TV* bath, walk^in l:losets~dtt.-«nrrtrrnrm jiv„. . t L_ x ' • .,3228,"472-52J5. . Lamar, 4544977: • i weekendsr * '• ^ wftthof—dLtpftfi, -priwafe ApartmentonlakeAustIn--FRANCES.WOOOS TYPING SERVICE!' Central Properties patio,.pool, laundry. Near IC shuttle, 6 -hil»tji70Rlus electricity, after Experienced, Law, Theses; Olsser-' • >72 PINTO, Mlcheilns, 29,000/ RAH, 30 SJTONBAGE • CAPlDA'RY" :a«d:r -JERRICK APTS. — blocks to.campus. Move in Aug. l0, no tafloni, Manuscripts. 453-4090 . mpff. E*xceMen»v appe»rance, 'JpWELRYCRAFT; Unusual' gifts and -OMY.THE BEST. _ • rent until Sept, 1; $250 all uflllfles paid. -mechanical. Best offer; -Bill Johnson, ' supplies.-Good -.selection..pf semi--, Utilities paid.. 2 BDRM .-"7 Bath. Shag -— 2520 Longvlew.(across fromPease Park : 1200 SQUARe FEET. 2 bdrm. 2 baths. MABYL SMALLWOOD Typing. Last 442 7821 preciouk stones and mountings.. Rough'; .FALL LEASES carpet, paneled, walking distance toUf V ARENA 7^ 25tfi.and;Lamar): -Horth^Austin, pool. 455-76|4, 4S9-M91, minute, overnight available. Term TO .:•«—•--• • • • rock, tumblers, books. Open 9:30 -5:30,"---' :rom $128 and Caoitol.ji770:« $280. ; -45I-1W9. papers, theses, dissertations, tettecs.—Jfi Fro •^68 LEMANS. PS, tape deck, paser, im-5915 Burnet RoadIn Northwest Shopping-' Also, pinVate. BDRM & Bath,"(no .cooW^-APARTMENTS i BR Luxury ..^maculate condition, new paint. $1295-. Center; 459-6531.; ' . • 104 E: 32-476-5940: . ing) for one person. $80/mo. • ^ 1414 Arena Drive v.i 477-8741 w5T 451-2832 courtyard ^nd plenty ol parking. 1802 . 2 Bedroom• From$210 fm&* MINNIE L. HAMMETT Typlnd-& Wi inch frame. Whiter Very good condition. •. Manager Apt. 103 Ml1,.v-Jt( West Ave.. Suite 100. Furrv-All Bllis• Bus Duplicating Servlte.*ThBl«,• dtHer>. •-Walk or Shuttle S8S 452-9979. NOW* LEASING.FOR.SEPTEMBER lat(ons, papers ot all kinds, resumes, to UT • -ft-* 476-5556 <' i Mgr.'442-4124 NEED ROOMMATES; one and two .bedroom apartments, from $65 ABP, 6 Frw refreshments. 442-7001, 442-1416. tiP'op Dollar Paid For GRANNY; ET. AL:; have wooded >W? blocks to campus: 4764467. acre tracts., Get somi of Granny's v> •• BRAND NEW EFFICIENCIES;/.^; SUNNYVALE BOBBYE OELAFIECD. IBVSelectrlc, Nice Used Cars ' -Gorgeous.Grounds 459i?574;_478-0992.-_. ' ^ WILLOW Mini-Apts. APTS. • FALL, FEMALE roommate needed. ­ plca/elll«, 2i years experience. Books, ASK RQ(? JACK POTTER : -*—1700 Nueces 1 BR $155. Beautiful 2-2 luxury apt. Shuttle. Own dissertations, theses, reports. < All Bills PORTABLE DISHWASHER, good COn-'l lis Paid bedroom, bath. $100 ABP. 476-3672, 478* BILLMUNDAY" • ditlon. $45. Good, portable ..washer &: Close lo campus, Beautifully furnished. CREEK ^.^l4rge efficiencies -close to shuttlebus 2 BR $185 4954.' . » • -dr^er, exceilent for,apartment. $90.837-All with big balconies lor your plants. 1 Color-coordinated, open-beam ceilings. 1304 Summit 441-4684 Diversified VIRGINIA' SCHNEIDER $150 X PONTIAC " jricty and , >;N0W LEASING FOR SEPT^-^Fully»hag earpeKd. All KJm?l'n Shuttle'at front door . MALE T05HARE 1 bedroom furnished Services. Graduate and undsroretfuat. if7ION.Lamar 478-7225 deposit. . 1135.1 as. •at < " • '& .,J i kitchens. CA/CH, pool. : aptvAIr cond,2 blck. campus. 478-1141 typing, printing, binding: istf.Koenlg i NIKON F2, bl«k body, $375, NikOfl F,: : Manager -Apt..201^2 ,•<'& ' BDRM 2J90RM J.iv 4000'Ave, A , after 5 p.m. Lane. 459-7205. •V0lV( "fy 478-9058 12,001 $240. NIkOft100mm,-$120 "928-2281 ' 4523533 ... most $175 $220 n Motorcycles -For Sale . Central Properties MALE TO SHARE one bedroom apt. In EXPERIENCED-SECRETARY. apt., . BUY-AND^SELL us«d tennis rackets; " • NOW LEASING FOR SEPTEMBER ^jNorth Riverside.Sept. 1stor sooner.Call Papers, letters, envelopes, proof Call Max; 45*0927.affer.3 p.m. . WALKING DISTANCE UT, ALL BILLS PAID • 444-6825. • reading, grammatical correction!. Dishwashers -2 Large Pools V*«197? YAMAHA 250-street bike, greatfun, bills paid, AC, panele.d, DIPLOMAT Rapid, accurate, 50 centt/pag*. . ^".•'•4economy. Oflve it-first, only $620. CHAIN LIGHT* hanging fixtures with Security -NOW-LEASING FOR SEPTEMBER A NEEDED: Female roommate fairly Gretchtn. 452-3449, 4S1-2332. I frosted glass* lens and 12" diameter -carpeted, pool,: no pets. 2 SfHumberto, /I76-3967 Slobes. At least 50 years^old. $)0 each. • bedroom, siSO. r bedroom, CiubrooRV;Volieyball Court >; THE . ^ APTS-on< bedroom apt. for TYRING-PRINTING-BINDING Theses, Vac i5-08?7 after 6 p.m. MOVE IN TODAY 1911sTrt GabrielF '" ^.ik chain,jl-. SI45-S150. 3011 Whltis, NOPIOS, '"-C ' Lai • h?!«.^*73 HONDA 500, 4 Header, new Dissertations, Professional Reports,r477-45M. 3202 Moss Rock, Apt. No. typewriter. Elite typfe. after 5 Mon.-Friday. After 10 it >-'$975-/ ...1901 Willow Creek " ESTABLISHMENT, 1 bdrrrf furnished ir* MALE, own bedroom, house, shuiie, aw; reports* Self-correcting IBM. Bar-"Inst . IBM'-Electrlc .v, V3101 garage^ washer^ dryer. Must move In • bara Tullos.'-453-5124.. Good condition. $100^477-5654. --" : as.{TU..v^eelj.ends. . ^ yRSi.-! r 444-0010 $129 Plus E. 474-2703 v oryer. . Aug. 1}. $100. 451 H-3584. /YAMAHA 150 mliev 74 model with in , FLEUR OE LIS. 404 East 30th. Mature BEAUTIFUL PERSONAL TYPING'. All [•: • Large efficiencies v HONDA 50 motorcyclewith twohelmets, 451*4584 459.-0058 .surance,J For Sal^ " " 6^ ACRES, Liberty Hili area, beautiful-, " THE m NQW LEASING FOR SEPTEMBER J SUMMER. RATES NOWI Six blocks 5325."". ' • • • • MIDNIGHT SPECIAL'Typing Service, •country estate:. For information.-call 1«'^ '778-57644 * , -BLACKSTONE from. Law -School; Shuttle bus.'One ' EtASY-GOlNG FEMALE^ roftmmaie, Experienced, allkinds ot typing,special­ ..... „74 MOOULA* STEREO SYSTEM,by' ¥ 550.00/month iottte MARK V -bedroom $130. Efficiency $110. AC, n ce.2 bedroom apt. near campus. $105 «*.dissertations, tow rites;-FAST • :^W JCafanna, Includes turntable, AM/FM WATER SKIERS;-Maharajah Racing Apartment living 'a block from Nice qulet compiex . ^ carpet, dishwasher, : dlsposaLi walk-ln glus electridlfy/AposIt Georgie. 478-nSw^!,cei^.Corr,c,ln8 Seleetrlc. Qual it? f ••••-*:-i-.-•»,^ntape ptayer/recorder, 2 large speakers; campus. Individual applicants 'Sm • closets, 32nd and Interregional. 477*0010 ' Pita/Elite. 837-2421 cans i -M .^BEAUTIFULTTNL>E7FECRCONDITFOFR-5350R442« Ski. $250 new;. $150:-Four pair matched ' with .compatible room-. -SL50 -or GL3-2228.* -shop Itfmpers/blnders? Jlm-Woflhr-478tQ7m • m |-0 .4943 after 5 30 rftSTtfr w§ NEEDED to share 2 bedrooms. Prefer BRING YOUR Stenographic needs tome ' >comi NIKOMAT with case^ 50mm F1.4 $225. 453-1084. -39)4 Ave. D. 2910 Red River . ,• 476-5631 •LARGE 142 Bedroomfurnished andun-^' ??'n-South, >95. Carlene, 441-for Treat, accurate and correctly dona Tune t-1'"4 PIONEER SX-828 $375 AKAt 200D auto -Walk-Ride-Shuttle furnlshad. Shag/ wet. .private club or477-^707. •; work. Mrs, Stenger, 442-4820. 1807 parts - 1 furnjshed. shag; wet bar, private dub -472-79l1after 6:00. . * A PAR AGON PROPERTY.* . reverse $300 or best .offer. Both ey-Summer Rates Start_Today ;'" -rooms", onrshuttla:-I-twdroom -from Treadwell. , COUCH/ CHAU?, and: Ottoman. $60> or -J:BR, 1 BA 2 BR, 2 BA 3 BR; 3 BA' extent. Doc 453-6238, 1 5154.50 ABP. 2 bedroom 5174.50 ABP. HOUSEMATEWANTEA-St^retwo-ov make offer;Call 476-9470 after 6p.m.. all 1200 Broadmoor.454-3985, 47r-24M, bedroom townhouse, Calling tens, TYPING. Car$(>fl rit>1Jon tBM S(!l»ctfIC. 1 [TTTTKENWOOD AMP, A«-turntable...Sony , jiCOMANCHE ,.y~, •THE Barry Glillngwater Company. -. after 8-30 T<""'S* ,47J-°'« anytime 50 cents /age. Call J deck, Pioneer speakers. $300 firm. 476­LARGE POOL • ALL BILLS PAID ^ 7806 BRAND NE$i Mercier 21", ten speed' APTS. fMh bLA£Kstone. EXCELLENT' SUMMER RATES On NEED; SOME: Typfno done? .Call • Regular $I40> now $110. Call 476-8319 or Furnished.!bedroom,,life.blocks from MOVE"1"N "TODAY.., ^ spacious one and two-.bedroom TWO CONSIDERATE FEMALE.room-Virginia at 478-2408 or 47S-3450 tor quall­4764276V ' ". Law Schooi. $l30-$135/monfh plus elec­ SANSUI ,2000k receiver with cabinet. -$64.50/M0. • . ~ * r a^artrntimrPall rates-reasonable-Call-Sf'-i®" »pt. WC/IC shuttle. •fy work, reasonable prices. • Reasonable,; Call after 4. 454-1398. Best Rate on the Lake Apartment llving v* block from campus; 55230/mo. PW««t;47MMI.­ tricity. Gas, water, cable..furnished., r r ..v;«Shultlfe Bus Front Door; Individual applicants matched with EUECTROPHONIC Multiplex Stereo$75 . MEN'S CLOTHES:.Sport coats, shirts, CA/CH, poo! qnd laundry^. >--v2400 Town Lake Circle compatible roommates. ENFIELD AREA.. One bedroom with STUDENT-FEMALE-share Jargt-"JUST Norttl Of 27|h & • i- pants,: Jles, belts, etc^^maller -sizes, r Infori or best offer. Leaving Austin,'must sell. 2800 Swisher 2910.Red River 2 BR, 2 bath. Near, Leavt Cheap. 903-22M. 478-1857. 442-8340 , 476-5631 every extra. Furnished or unfurnished P9, shuttle. slOO, Yi elec. 474-7284. , Mon. JfcSPEED. BICYCLE, • Schwlnn; floo'd L^nn. BarryGIIMngwalef Company. 477- «(ai4i ; NOW LEASING FOR SEPT FEMALE ROOMMATE needed to shart..':;­ condition, 24T. $60. Vickie,* 385-7265.' -. ~ Now Leasing ySSTEREO CENTER •? K.* «P«l<«.«rom campus, VVC:->: ij LENSES and. accessories. ­ -20? East 19th Slreef ' . Honeywellr for September „ T . COMPLETE LUXURY: Two bedroom '"Utile Liberal, tasy-going, have plano.v ­ ?*r (Located on South Side of UT)K--v . HIGHLAND'MALL and efficiencies. Pail. Rates:?4 Flats' Cindy 1-512-425-5545/collect °h':,X artd BrBun Strobes. Please call alter ^Stereo Equipment at prices you cert af-. ^ioon, "472-572J. ' -AftEA/ONO $155 Apartments. 1515 PalmaPlaia; 474*4322,' SHUTTLE -^ FEMALE lord.:Our brands,include: Kenwood ENVOY 4W*2ir2163, Shuttle bus-corner. -ROOMMATE. 2. bedroom^ ^ Sony^receivers;-Pioneer, JVC Nlkko, & \ WANT.TO ADD. books to your collec-Hugo.l <6r3 bedrooms fffrn. or unfurn. 1 BR-Furrf^ 210^ San Gabriel house; Shuttle; *45 plus 'A bills. 474-2513 A YES, we do type lus-electricity, beforr 9 a.m. orat noon., ^Sansui; Altec speakers; Fairfax Rtfc-, lion? Old Records? Posters?Call Laura, with large walk-irrs, beautiful landscap­ EFFICIENCIES SUSJHU* ei< . A. ­ titfnear, fCU-f, Aft; P.EACi Ak«r; JVC, & ing. From $165"*"" <)l, ac, carpet, patMlftg,.no p 7,'Freshman. themes. -.471-5109, Leave message: ---r " * pool pets.'Hun- G^rrarU turntables. Many more-. See us1 pany. . Barry Glillngwater Com--/Y V?1>J>C S V .«~iA.-,1 "471-1172 * Shuttle Bus iJngforj Villa, 46fn rooms. 175 plus >/) bills. 451-3539 • 5ony tape decks; Phillips* Dual & 3202. 472-4162.f^7t53r«38:" MARK IV APTS $135 Ting ifh and Ave. A!/ 454-1903. NEED.2,GIRLStosh«3*2 house.Own ^ ^ " Jor ccr stereo equlpment also. SAILBOAT.14' sfoop/ rigged/ shallow- — . 3100ISpeedWaySpeedway, •: • -iCPM-Management-• draft racer complete with sails, trailer. 59940.'DARLING EFFICIENCIES-full " Why not startout with 476-0198 ' ' 476 673?,-$300. Call mornings, 4^7*2197. •< . 477-1685 kitchen, quiet residential Mlghbortiood, • WANTED: i FALL. Luxury -apartment,1'.' SHUTTLE BUS CORNER „ ......... downtown. Now-Leasing lor Sept.-Shuttle, walking distance downtown.. W.J" bathroom,_ NR. shuttle. JIM? good grades* fat 1 A8P..Call anytime. Sheila, 44741428 f' VENTURE Catamaran with trailer. • $159,50 -ifl $115 $150 tofi?474-21^ m 1111 West 10th, Apt $95p. 454-1547 COST PLUS 1 Bedrooms., : .1 BR FURN. fJ=MALE-FAT.L. -Oexter House;-472-3210 and 472-7677^,,-j \«J BLOCK from Law School, Tower View. MO/month. No food; Will be leaving ln% Shag-Paneiini Economy-Minded 'l-* TIMBERS APTS, vyApartmenls..,Large,-nicely-decoratei . December, Laura, 4714109. • ".ji \ 27(17 Hemphill Park " / &' Giant walk-ins •Balconies'^: . STEREO ' CASUALLY YQU 478-9468, . 476^0948 gas^water, cable TVpaid. ft35;No>|ts. m. SpanfJh furnishings, ; v.r: Why pay retailwhen lcan saveyouup ton 2423 Town Lake Circle Students • 1307 Norwalk Lane -. w°RK|N(iFemaleshare .-•;.^ A60%?' MbM brands. All factory-sealed1. Creative Outdoor Portraits-• <44,8118 , 472'41«2 Wqfk UT, share large !,bedroom apart-. Shuttle Bus Corner S^?kll!rlJir.8Vn, ,J40.Mack's;Mar]na, 327-, Pets -For Sale" 2420 Guadalupe-472-4219 PARK PLACE ROOMS ISff i • • FOR FAlSL yarv.near'UT. im.w. m.. j.arge 2 Beoroom ^ • ».>.»wi^>>^Mgiww,.^...uiiaiiiuii«ii,. 1RISHSETTERS-AKCChamplOfl'" tOOT^rUT-STUOENISu. •hag carpet, panellno; and.pool; Water-es.Uoublek'-LEAF 'nm-Tt. pald.,%^^47M«V327.13« teiilon. Singles -J9500/4 Father, f/om1 Colored^ vlu*urlqusly.i LUXaRYJ3^-, ^ to Campui. 2 bedroom; Wafed and large boned. Quallfy Irophy -»r2802WWtl$^Welk'. _$J90.00 aBR >454-3164. f UNF. HOUSES ^tHdertcle^ie/gebath& - ' *lnab»g mother; PupsHpiecOvely bred e batir/kUcherr for 2-or 3 H52.50ABP ~ / -^ •\SHR4MtC , Free storage 'ty tail t~'J^r^CPMManagement--STUDENTSSEE 2;-BdiTO/l,Bath.;F0rnlshed;or.untur-TH|S.WatjHoo Flats S.iSJS^T.S&^T' Co.Ed.~-cjmditlonitvg.fA«!i«Jhi!5!P'W8Lease. 3701Speedy 478--rtlgerr . ifwfirfcn'i.'cdaf, and-.talrrr temperement. v perSorfS, $16S for 2 persoftfc-$W0.fori3 Shuttle-'route..-.Roommates-furnished, ' 4S4'WJS Rfady for adoption AOgust'25,'Reserve personi, vrus eiec. Parking, maid Central a'7" now j Fresn—V-wltlM 1-y^rsl»K5fr dsi-aias "•htdr-Shag, caWe, walk-lns,pool,com­ 327-1875' whitd shrirnp the ^..A., boat. Large ssize. $1.25 lb. 476-. -'-240SLeonT-'476-"34d7^ *-—-— -... _rPl«t»'k(tchen. .Close .tO:shopplng and AKC ENGLISH'springer spaniel,pub-; - Mdl&rCM^MSW 1|' pies, Llver and -Jrtille.'Chimpron ' , i 2280 after 5. , 3«S»4S'„BR^0 . bloodlines; Pedigrees avWlab>0.)75,282-.' if ^EFFICIENCIES FURN. DUPLEXES 0225 , . STUDENTS LIVE ^ 1700 Nueces -' /- •fAPARTMBI OR House HUNTING? South/3509 IRISH SEtTER pupc AkCFOSB sir<::-NEAR CAMPUS / SOUTHERN ESE „ Close,TO: campus,.beautltuily:furnl$hed. TMEtiT town homes . with ui « Stay -with wblle you look. Full tur-;io^low«r. Large ^6rn*r Buddwing.jhoti, woamed, many cham-." IZTri A . 1907 SM Gabriolu,^^ All .with'big:balconle$; for yOur plants'. 4 APTS. i:nlshad.I, klKlftfl-.color TV, maid lervlci, sSj: .plon*,:Paflpre»,.»2Sdeposi»,.r»asonable.«" fMpnvvwv^fw vrbedroom/alrooAdltloned^EfflcleScles;^ ^5155 plus electricity and deposit,'* .'SK"Bji,Paid" 4,V^«^»,'&<& : ..... •>—W8,«ot.—r: plus electrftlfy,/^Parkingr meld-v Cols o.f_tr«si poo<, AC beam ceilings u,tM FURN. APARTS. ervice, nlcely.fw'DHfted.-4V> blocks to ^r^ MneMng. T BrarctomHl35 plus eiec-• Manager • Apt. 201 VlJjh*"-— . _, _ '5° 474-779"idhn PendietDn, :AKC DALAMTIONpuppies. 2 Males, ID;i 478-9058 ; • ttrtffxSPACIOUS CONDOMINIUM witft a OUIET TARRY 'We.Kl old. S60/Bach. 24i-375J, Kyle. ' 453-3235^? 459-0007 • --^—country., jtnwmohf. -" minutes" --Pr|v.liges. On^cUy^Nmiif M^n °tAUTIFUL 4 '"?TtrJ00fWes»rMth2~S2S4S9^MO7 vi ' H""" ROOMi '^iewly lose* Buy °rr AFGWAN PUP5, pet and ihow quality, "JERR1CK~APTSr^—^ «" t&K* j,. tnaleiand'^female. 451r35». NOW. LEASINGFOR SEPT ENFIELD ROADK ^FALLL'EASES' fllMiwoE Wstudios, eA/cHTiuT"^li'lafc JBirlBI ™or 1 & 2 Bedrooms LOST & FOUND 1 i-ji -CpniVt c1OQ -r/Sh!!',».hl!/?l»ppsal,notrostrefrigerator, VHl HPDW» --for Sale. ALL BILLS.PAID hjj-, r rOm Hp IZO,aectric. irlendly atmosphere, NR . . 18. 2 bedroom apts.-We.araremodellni ^ . , I"9?<*$!; »235/mooth1 ABP, UNF. DUPLEXES idellng | IBR Luxury 4 tojT: S-2 W V) ACRBVLOT, trees, swlmmlrtg carpal104 E.32-474-5940 A' •thesaapls.luil foryou.Newthagcarpe ElrW -Mopac SK"£HSGT'.iWEnfiaid­ 'S ,y»l, WI-5291. >-2408 Longview" and (trapes All MHIMft klfchen/pio). TB Vl*lVf»C-.'..'J'\'3j1 S, 2 BR . % ' new *1 £•.droom -studlos, sh, CA/CH, OID New Orlea ...... #•' 30X5^/A«SBILE;HOME, ibeftroom, tur-, .Shuttre-BuS' CLOSE TO CAAAPUS Roam. «« Jen-,STU? I""-. ri^ AlshM, sal up fn iqr on C. Lamar, 441. CPM ^.JM W.st 29th Efficiencies 895 pluseiec^' ^Uii two amai. —r-a--Consolidated Realty. 4JW89I hlnw stamp,„tocrai »" ' ';,( »W4,W5iH7,„ &|W^_h Gabriel -Barttam PnipartlM-fi^rd RM's,a'rJjf 4514U0 trUh better pup' carri? 1 "Mroofti/l bath, carpet, 451*4630 7,. PUP Jklf a --­ Ljnr?'~ljry I , ' tg|S$E* (« * „ N 1 -„ * ' \ ' ' v t • ^ * -i ; <> „ , >„ ~ •> M «. » _ 1 , : S?4 HELP WANTED r-:* Flaws Aired 'LOOKING FOR MEANING IN YOUR LIFE? 7" 3Hl-->-".51 i s v,5 #.w :.:&••••• Nursery School Manager &5\ JSKS35W«Sj ^-Position include* wiary, 5-room •apt.;' • Commissioner$. Discuss Needed Changes I -f \­ utilities paid, and child care. Ideal for i <• ' $iW$4 mother. *w1th small. children;' Also I teachers for4 year olds. «00West 30thv l« . Travis-: County Jail im--• .terim opinion issued by U.S. The contract for a padded the jail were bad. • .1 •'•e 4 v cell to be jnadeoutof a cell in :If the-fifth floor space i»" „^_1S p,rn_472-3437. provements are needed, . Dist. Judge. Jack Roberts on. 9 months J300/Month) Samuelson said Monday. Texas RSvised Civil statutes tage on needed materials and visitors' facility. . ' i^:. : : Minimum Raqulrementsr^-^r^rrj • "It has been opinion padding the my Article 5115 as the mail? com-; problems" with Frank said another problem fll ;. './'-.Bachelor's Degree, w *v£ * Prefer Individual whp hor worked-with since -I-was-elected-that we . plaint against the jail^irlajor sliding door were hoUdingup with the space deficiency is College-age students in parMimo orfull* U .time proDrjsmmlng'posltion, Experience v need, some other, jail out and points were lack .of single: constniction, Samuelson said, the lack of prisoner exercise with . Minority : students preferred.: v away from the present cells, no padded cells or The sheriff pointed out jail facilities. He said case law Interested -applicants should forward resume, hours available,'& supporting ''. courthouse," Samufelson said, facilities for mental patients faults that could be corrected precedents have shown these ^gecomrnendAtfons fo: •m Cris Cunningham, Director > '-f-, But Sheriff Raymond Frank and unsatisfactory sanitary by increased space. facilities are needed, and'he 73s • " '. '•.••rUnrversIty.Yv-had'a different opinion. conditions. • "We need 70 individual proposed the use of the 5330 Guadalupe Austin 78705 t •.. By August 19. -p . WE4X>N'T need a new jail, SAMUELSON said, com-cells, and wehave none now," courthouse roof'as a recrea-• £QJUAiL__LO£P0 R TUNITY. v EMPLOYER but we need an increased missioners had done a great he said,'andfacilitiesfor men-. (ion area. k^L ^rapacity,"'he said. • deal for the jail, but "theonly tal patients.are almost'nonex-"OUR MEDICAL problems The"jail ls on the six-and —problem-is-that^we-started-So Jstent, are real," he said. "We need McDonald's seventh floors of County ; far. down.that .the public has?• "FORTY PERCENT of the '' the space for a hospital ward --Now hiring, for-our new unlt'Jn Doble Courthouse. Frank said if the l(»t sight of what we "havfe prisoners have mental health for the prisoners." ; --' Center.-Ftifl or part-time positions available; No experience necessary. .K... entire fifth floor of the done-," referring to the. fact problems and a small perceii-, An inspector sent by ;Apply Jn person at Doble Center^^j ^ —r7««w llnff-Photo byMerioaTflryJot. courihouse is taken over'arid the-jail hasbeen ih violationof tage of those have serious, Roberts saidin theopinion the ^McDonald's.-See^Braid Walts. Msnday-.^p, -Friday 2-5 p.m.; only-•• -• ^ 5 Nearing Completion converted into, jail space, a Article ili5,sinceit was pass­.suicidal tendencies," he said.'. jail"was no^lept inan accep­new jail will not be needed. ed in 1957. "We:could use that space oh {able stateof cleanliness" and Because of a sticky asphalt subsurface installation of the n«w bed of AstroTurf at WANTED. APARTMENT MANAGER. . The commissioners met for ''The Commissioners Court the fifthflooi1 to carefor these .''cockroaches were evident.'' > Prefer, married. Send resumes to Box « Memorial Stadium was delayed e6r|ier in thd summer. Progress is under way, 16^8, ^Austin, Texas.' , the.first time with Frank Fri­has spent over one quarterof people." ' "That's my...fault,'' Frank however, and the new surface shoilld be completed before'the fallsemester begins. FULLTIME and part timV;Applications day to discuss a iuly 31 in-a million dollars this year'for 'Prisoner Rehabilitation is • sai'd. "I-don't haVe as many • now being taken.Hang It On in Highland : , :• slighting, cleaning,and conver­lacking because,of short space people as I nee subcommittee staff, said viewing for Autumn. -c"o u r.ses th ey w.a nt' a t departments onSept. 4,5, and : AYOUB ;'1-1 $165 . on DPS, Mauzy"said the the hearings "will go preregistration or regular 6. 2-1 .185 •PART-TIME JANITOR. University YMCA-YWCA'.1 ?.hours dav. S2.25 hour; registration can try .adding -hearings would be a broad' rn- specifically into the Pomeroy « HELMS 2-2 195 all bills paid -gjtfJy-mftfnlng hftnr<. Ah|nty1Q dp hah- quiry, not confined to any one -and-3ropping-their-way_ta_a-From 10„ to 15 thousand matter, into the intelligence dywork (fixing things^ required, start Tequila Shots 50c lmmedlately.472-W46,Monday'Frlday, better schedule Sept. 3 to 6. -•students are"expected" to "go -area of-government, .' . section ,nl.DPS, into the .IQ-lCris Cunningham for-'appolntment. • is Sunrises75c 2330 Guadalupe. through Bellmont on Sept. 3, ' "The right of privacy access, to their intelligence Centralized add-drop day at Gary Speer, assistant something I feel has to be files by nonagency people and : DAY-NIGHT waitresses/ night waiters; Oay-nlght bus help. Call forintervlews.: Bellmont Hall will be Sept. 3. registrar, and registration protected from infringements , into Uie standard operating NO COVER 'J.Gatsoy's, 2700 W. Andersop.4S4-4637. The first day of classes has supervisor, said Monday, by both governmental and procedure for DPS in­CHARGi °SHOE -SHINE-girl or male. No ex-been changed to'Sept. 4.-• .nongovernmental bodies," vocations." ; ' perlence necessary. Oall 441-90W. Library hours will be etalic Mauzy sa|d. 1 • PORTER: Must be.21. Mechanical ex-. Admittance to Bellmont from Aug. 21 through Sept 4 The investigation was. • perlence helpful. Hours: 2:30-9:00 p.m.. will.be-according to Contact Airways Rent-A-Car. 3515 an All libraries will be closed prompted by disclosure that' Manor Road..{ alphabetical sequence not yet' Aug. 27 and-Sept. 2.The Main DPS bad sent -a confidential . WANTED: Receptionist part time, to announced. and Undergraduate Libraries report concerning an in­ SHAKEYS ~work-~vHfh-photographIc equipment.. -Courses can be added or 1 •••Ajpply^I W.24fh. ^ . : will be closed on theweekends dividual to tfiat persan'-s £• 2915 Guadalupe ^COLLEGE STUDENTS wanted:to:help,4 •of Aug..24 and.25 and Aug. 31 employer. Thereport involved. "&S. ShA-Pt Employer. - _ Wine Coolers, Sangria^: and:21 Varieties of Pizza. WANTEOt NICE two bedroom housed duplex -near-town, for rental mid* August/September. Call»Sheri. 447-14U. 476-4394 2915 Guadalupe SERVICES .NEEDED: . A CAR with or without . driver; Aug.19th«24th. Ofle'day or more. • Will pay gas plus. 454*3040 after 9:00 AUSTIN ROCK * . p.m. . GINNY'S . 1 ^COPYING ROOM & BOARD BOJLA HOOKER Howard Stein Presents An Historic Event­ ^ >E.RV ICE S*§®118 AND ' £ELLSQN_QOl4M fof:Men.;Excellent'' ; cookecT. meals-..A!rl^E; 454*5572., : . shop 4t1003Sage.Brush. Freediagnosis, ^compression -checks and' estimates. TEQUILA 50° A SHOT ** Tune-up on starlSard VW -S10.50 plus parts. i36*317l..^lease try us. I OVEFTSEAS ENJOIN E & supplV LIVE ENTERTAINMENT I CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING ORDER BLANK ,-Ctv eightttiredriviW- Featuring I v " PREGNANCY . SMWfUCtef I prcacnta fe'^vSI TERMINATION wM-m • We !will trade you a mug of beer for your old -—WEft- I and distressed? Help is as near as your/ telephone. Pro-Life Advocates;510 West Fraternity or Sorority composites, paddles,or II |thaNI6HT_. _ 26th, 472*4198. ^ usable decoration. * I J SWIMMING: LESSONS: .Experienced; v |CRAWlil^J^OBRAS P . Certified-Instructor. All abilities'. I (Beginner v $v>lor. Life). -,My pool .or: , THE BUCKET--« l yours.-Groups; private. 478-5401;. • v / v K'*jS HI .r-i' " .ACROSS FROM HARDIN NORTH-3 HRS. FREE PARKING • PROMPT:MQVING*HAtJLlNG;Student v I Mm lJl with large bed pickup: Save. ComMreA Free estimate.-John Jackson/763-2535. f SEWING OFAi-LKiNDS^dresimaking*,:,, I I CUP AND MAIL TODAY! • mending, alteratlons^etc 474*2821 after-I ji.00 p.m ^ I " WRITE YOUR ADHERE-—— im MISCELLANEOUS I IS I NELSON'S GIFTS: ZUnh Indian I |ewelry;^African and.Mexican Imports.. reclory' S11 4612 :South Congress.' 444-3814.-.(Hosed Mondays I : LEARN TO PtAY Oultar. Beginnerand ­-;«uvaiitwl. OnwTh I I, 13 — '"r-> ~ v-'T PREE' KITTEN..Extra-playful gray -. »trilne4PI|!a»:helpi.<77-J175*.._ i1lB«rrBoic 1 J 1% "BUY-SELt PLAYBOY, P*nthogt«, etc.-;: I 6ookir'recordv dultan; lawelry. cadlos, RESTAURANT ^—Amount Enclose T ijRE I _ if»i-eoj. 'A«ron'i, 3!0:Consreu, Down-: Use this handy chart to quickly arrive I m Nurriher otjiays^. ^. ot cost. I I m (15 word minimum) Mail tp: rtSKYDlV£!^ : :^1END OF SUMMER BEER BUST I I .^Austin Parachute' tvryqpy ' Happy Hour He#» J l4°; a-Times Times; Times I Times Timesi DAUY TEXAN CLASSIFIfD$ „ l Mud * " Pitchar ms P.O., BOX D UT STATION: [m ' „1.10 MA£W°*^S' lWords 2 : s 10 20 -M I I -';(3For Jriformatlo'n-please call •fS? 1.60 IIIAU6.;22G«odwAoupon «nly: I Cost per word 10 18 35 60 1.20 AUSTIN, TEXAS 787)2 ^ 272-571) anytime II V Center Shln«r'>'f,:5 20,V-' 1 . ;^&Mondqy -Shinetr Da^ --Michelob -Day.%§, *IS 1.S0 2.70 5.25 9.00 T8.00 NAMirl_ I-HoppyXour Pricat on Shlnoroll day wirtth the .JHdppy Hour price* or) Michalab with ths 16 2.88 1.60 5.60 9.60 19.20 BUSINESS OPP. pur^hase of ajmaal;, purcK'ate( o(~irm«Bt^ ADDRESS m M 1.70 5.« 10.20 20.4A --StUg® ThQf{/$ffarant sandwlch.t0tt2a and ltillan Toodl Restatirtini ^ m SJUFFJENVfitOPES, ImnrHWHIe «*r-, cmzzz 10.80 nfnos. 50 mi)»i 6*t IM. Strtd >•!(• SlIN.-THUftS (Ii60 o.m. to « a.m^'; . mi.&1AT. fltOO p.m. to ^:00 a.m. 6.30 21.60 fl'WPW.-Mlljddrauefl tnvalop*for In-, w ' HS,rt4iPn,'Tl^rPr,^1,M" 2801Guadalw 472-3034 PHQNL. | . Tuesday, August 13, 1974 THE DAILY TEXAN Page 11 J -•wwlslill-. ft m '; J 41 Japanese -V,.™o'-... J.sa&ffl ;; J\: :•::..vl*,.*.;.­f-'; ItlfS-lS ;.§«P@V© The sma VisitrngnJT '•r-'SSsSsi S5fes '^S':« ?.'>» * ' ?r&Sf 'By RAY MABRTT LGoodFoodStores Forty-one Japanese teachers of English are visiting the v University for four weeks to imjirovetheirEnglfeh speaking • ' Natural Foods and teaching ability:' : : -; The group alSo is studying .American teaching;®! methodology, political institutions and civilization. • i-j" The Japanese are attending daily lectures on various®® topics, including • curriculum t and test Election, -Amsricaif|fi WEEKLY SPECIALS political institutions and varieties:;of-spdkeniErigH^. NUMEROUS extracurricular actlvities bave been arrang^p! ©»»-• No Limits—Specials thruSunday August 18 X'l ed, su®?as a toifr^ Austinr«^ip4o^hiAntbniiCL^^I?fl &"V western-style barbecue. • . Since landing in .Los Angelesj .the teachers have visited -­few York City, Washington, New Orleans and other cities; . NATURALVITAMINS W After leaving Austin they will go to Carlsbad Caverns, the „ m Grand Canyon and other stops before departing "from San-?,. Tablet of LiquidFrancisco for home. '•••': till' ***?£ 'The group's stay here was arranged 6y the University's VitaminE Off the Block International Office and the Council of International Educational Exchange, based in New York: our choice ^;-Uft T«l*phote The teacher-students are sent by their school systems and > hompsonfA.D.L.,Schiffthe Japanese government. Seven other-similar groups are ml attending, other universities in the United States. 7%k H-f Gerald R. Ford's boyhood home in Grand Rapids, Mich.,' was'taken off the market THE JAPANESE, who range -in age from 35 to 42, love ' 10%off popular American music and especially enjoyed'a Sunday Monday <>IT order of the veterans administration, which owns the-h6use. The agency, fr barbecue -with-its western band, said Dr. Martin Todaro; :r; which acquired the home when aprevious owner defaultedan hismortgage;aqreed if# *ne selling price of $9,000 was too hiflh. -. ;,K s-associate professor of speech, one of seyefal persons giving" ' -lectures to the Japanese sscs 'MPRODUCE' m m Fujiwara Kiyoto, a teacher from Fiifcuoka City on" the Beatinq the Heat' * I'.ft &­ island of.Kyushu in southern Japan, said he wasenjoying his f6s«­ ^ -gsmm te: M- stay in the United States and commented,on Japanese and . • American-life. . HomeGrown Okra1 ... '—r—Big-busines^oontrols Uie eovernn^nriivr.Tapan KTynta-^­An Austin woman fountf a against- the-law as-long as it rejsponded by saylng "'God -said. "The.politiciansare not'on the side oMJiepeopli way to beat Friday's noonday doesn't cause a disturbance'­ ftiad^mybody, and I'm proud^^are on the.side of .business."^ '• •. heat — she took her shirt off; Malofte said, ' ~ |!£? *- of it." • -KlYOTOsaid America seemed a "sti'snge place" to him. . Molly Malone, 25, may go Randy Mercer, assistant , -"The scale of.everything is'so big,'.' he notedIIIm down in history as the first county attorney, agreed say­• •After her walk, Malone Noting the'freqiiency with which Americanfamilies move, -AVAmani_to'-stroll down ing "I know Of no State law. tvcui mui> a menu, eleven went with a'friend, Steven Kiyoto said moving from place to place was uncommon in Guadalupe Street bare-HiSt "would prohibit—going^-Good^into^a-'shoD to trv_on Japanese society. "There is some proverb... a movingstone Large ­ breasted. V topless unless there is a dls-some clothes. ! "gather&?>, GREEN RECyCLING But fear not. Tri-ToWe^ N^th tUttle^Ihfeg weW^&d caul the One Dniester Contract. You aren't trapped into paying or Inainp your .NEAREST YOU AND PITCI4 LOCATIONS: IT IN! pnees since nin""Tci^iis tw° ^a^blocks west of campus. 801 West UNIVERSITY CQ-OP ,r>j • 24TH AND WHITIS •-26TH AND WHITIS if m • ACADiMIC CENTER W" • ROBtRT ltf MOORE HAi • tfoAj*,lY PAW ma.) • UTTtEFIElO FOUNTAIN • 24TH AND SPEEDWA'. . • JEStlR WOME^I'SJKJRML • 21ST AND SPEEDWAY^ |.STUDENT CQVT. ENVlflOlVMEfftAL PfiQlXCTr,C(i>»M.