T h e Da il y T e S t u d e n t N e w s p a p e r a t Th e U n i v e r s i t y of T e x a s a t A u s t i n A u stin , Texas, M o n d ay, Ju n e 19, 1978 T h irty -S ix Pages V o l. 77, No. 161 C o p y rig h t 1978, T e x a s S tudent P u b lic a tio n s , ail rig h ts reserv ed _ » I V T * SU l l a f *7$ *7 * o fl * ° TW F ifte e n Cents News and E d ito ria l: 471-4591 D is p la y A d v e rtis in g : 471-1865 Business O ffice and C la s s ifie d : 471-5244 County DA investigates UT museum finances By JOHN MCMILLAN Daily Texan Staff The Travis County district attorney’s office began investigating the University Art Museum in March, John Diet!, assistant district attorney, said Sunday. W e ’re looking to see if the (museum s) money was properly spent, Dietz said, adding he was called into the investigation by University officials. Dietz is in the district attorney’s Special Crimes Division, which investigates ’white-collar” crimes. He said his office has “ worked closely” with the University Office of Internal Audits. We’re not anywhere near bringing any type of formal com­ plaint or indictment, Dietz said, adding that the investigation could take "several months.’’ JA M E S COLVIN, vice president for business affairs, said 'authorized' the investigation by the district at­ Sunday he torney’s office. “ If it appears that there may be a felony, then whatever infor­ mation we have is handed to the district attorney,” Colvin ex­ plained An audit of the museum started about “ two or three” months ago, Colvin said, adding it could have begun earlier, since it preceded the district attorney’s investigation Donald Goodall, director of the museum for the past 15 years, abruptly retired May 31. President Lorene Rogers appointed Shirley Alexander, professor of art history, acting director Goodall was out of town and unavailable for comment. Goodall, among others, has been interviewed by the district attorney's office, Dietz said, but he refused to say whether Goodall was the focus of the investigation SOURCES TOLD the Texan that double reimbursement on expense accounts and the questionable administration of foun­ dation funds were being probed These irregularities were only part of a general pattern of serious mismanagement, covering a period of several years, a source said. According to these sources, the art museum used a grant of $8300 from the Tinker Foundation of New York to purchase camera equipment costing about $4,700. The camera equipment was then exchanged for photographs from a Brazilian collection, and the remaining foundation money was spent on other University-related expenses, sources said T H E MUSEUM THEN misrepresented its camera expenses to the foundation, listing inflated prices for items purchased to suggest that all the money was used for the equipment, the sources said As an example, these sources said, an enlarger purchased for $781 was listed as having cost $1,500. Rogers denied Friday having pressured Goodall into resign mg, saying a conversation she had with him that morning was the first time they had talked since April “ No one had asked him to give up his professorship.” Rogers added. If s certainly true that auditors have been (at the museum I but we’re sending auditors all over the campus,” Rogers said E SUCH AUDIT, an investigation of the Humanities Research Center, has not “ officially” been referred to the dis­ trict attorney’s office, Dietz said Warren Roberts resigned as director of the HRC effective May 31 Asked if he planned to notify the district attorney shortly about the HRC, I olvin said, “ That s my business “ Referring to the 13 Rembrandt etchings which have been mis­ sing from the Art Museum since last fall. Rogers said Friday she "suspects” that the Rembrandt etchings are in ad­ ministrators’ offices. They the museum) do not have good records on the holdings, said Eldon Sutton, vice president for research and a member of the supervisory committee which is re-evaluating the museum s functions before a permanent director is selected Highest priority is being given to an inventory being con­ ducted at the museum, Sutton said. Dollar iffy as OPEC currency G E N E V A , Switzerland ( U P I ) — O PEC oil ministers Sunday debated motions to drop the failing U.S. dollar as the pricing currency for their crude oil but appeared to have reached agree­ ment on maintaining a price freeze through 1978. Despite strong opposition from Saudi Arabia, a majority of the 13 members of the Organization of Petroleum Expor­ ting Countries insisted on a move away from the dollar to guard against further cuts in their income. Mana Saeed Al-Oteiba, oil minister of the United Arab Emirates, said O PEC members have lost 12 percent to 15 per­ cent of their revenues since the end of 1976 because of the decline of the dollar. TH E LOSS, considerable in view of the oil countries’ $100 billion a year revenues, could be reduced by pegging oil prices on a more stable currency or perhaps a basket of western currencies. Saudi oil minister Sheik Zaki Yamani frequently left the conference room dur­ ing the second day of the semi-annual meeting to make telephone calls as other ministers questioned his argu­ ment that the dollar is likely to rise. Apart from Algeria, which demanded that the price of oil should simply be in­ creased to compensate for the dollar loss, there was general agreement that prices should remain frozen until the end of this year. Yamani appeared to have convinced the ministers that an oil price increase at this time would jeopardize world economic recovery. O PEC S P L IT seriously, however, on what to do about the dollar. Indicating the intense lobbying under way, Crown Prince Fahd of Saudi Arabia arrived in Geneva Sunday one day early to confer with Yamani on the pressures against the U.S. dollar. Fahd arrived from a private visit in London and was met by Yamani in his green Rolls Roy ce limousine at the Geneva airport. “ The talks are very difficult, very tough,” one Gulf oil minister said. Such radicals as Iraq and Libya demanded that members use a basket of other strong currencies, ignoring the dollar totally, in charging for their oil. M O R E M O D E R A T E m em bers proposed a compromise formula that would quote oil prices based on a basket of western currencies including the U.S. dollar, one or more O PEC currencies and gold. Burglars take $15 from safety office Burglars chose an improbable target for crime Sunday afternoon, the Univer­ sity safety office. Police found the door to the office forced and a combination safe and fil­ ing cabinet emptied of approximately $15 and some odds and ends. Lt. B ill Best of the University police said there were no leads or suspects in the break-in. Festivities for a special day By Kathleen Cabbie, Daily Texan Staff Celebrating on a day with a heritage of freedom , these girls watch a Juneteenth parade. Saturday was mg and food. Related story and photos, Page 6. a serious occasion, but there was still tim e for sing- (-m onday------- Rain?... P o s s ib l e d a ytim e sh owers and thundershowers are expected Monday with late night and morning cloudiness and partly c l o u d y afternoons. Temperatures will reach the mid-90s. More weather, Page 11. Kid a r t ... Neophyte Renoirs at the Mathews Elementary School are given the oppor­ tunity to sharpen their artistic skills through a unique program. See Images, Pages 12 and 13 for story and photos. North wins ... A shaky final round notwithstanding, Andy North took a one-stroke victory in the U.S. Open Sunday. Story, Page 8. Shivers unswayed by demonstrators asking divestiture By JANN SNELL Dally Texan Staff Groups of students, demonstrations, picketing, marches “ and that kind of thing” will have no impact on Universi­ ty decisions to invest in particular com­ panies, Allan Shivers, chairman of the Board of Regents, said Sunday. Former Gov Shivers was responding to a demonstration the Southern Africa Liberation Action Committee staged Friday outside the Austin National Bank Building, where Shivers has an office The dem onstration dram atized in­ criticism of the U n iversity's vestments in South Africa. “ I ’M REA SO N A BLY sure we have some (Investments in South Africa),” Shivers said, adding that he was not sure of the amounts or what companies operated in that country. “ Our procedure is that twice or three times a year we review a list of ap­ proved investments ... we add to or delete or change (the list) in various respects,” he explained To date, social issues have not been used as criteria for the decisions, he said, If the University were to divest itself of interest in any company, the process would not involve lawsuits or any par­ ticular problems. “ Only the quality of the investment” is considered, he said. “ We have people who do nothing but analyze these investments — their strengths, if good for the Permanent Fund, moderate or weak.” SALAC spokesmen stated, and a November 1977 Daily Texan article verifies, that the University has $172 million invested in 53 companies con­ ducting business in South Africa. “ ACCORDING TO information the Investor Responsibility Research Center received from the American consulate in Johannesburg, most of these (53) companies have wholly own­ ed subsidiaries in South Africa A few, however, only make loans to govern­ ment and private industry there, or own stock in South African corporations,” the Texan article states. Among the total 5 million shares the University has invested are 106,978 shares ($7,854,297) in General Motors Corp , 72,774 shares ($10,18)8.735) in IBM and 228,173 shares ($6,876,093) in Tex­ aco, Inc President Lorene Rogers sits on the Texaco board of directors. ’’On Friday we mark the second an­ niversary of Soweto Day,” SALAC literature read “ In Soweto, South Africa, on June 16, 1976, thousands of elementary, junior anil senior high school students began a protest of the South African government’s apartheid policies. Within five days 1,000 students were killed and the protest had spread to black townships all over the coun­ try.” SALAC members contend the Univer­ sity’s investments help support such ac­ tivities “ BACK OUT Baby Killers” and “ UT Out" were among the posters which demonstrators carried in Frid ay’s picket line. “ How can you put a value on human life ?" Sebiletso Matabane, an SALAC m em ber, asked. “ They (some governments) still do things like in Hitler’s time and the world knows it — and the University is worried about sav­ ing maybe $200 million,’’ she said. Matabane accused President Carter of being concerned about human rights of Jews in the Soviet Union, while ignor­ ing the rights of blacks in South Africa. “ It’s just ridiculous; it’s just insane in this day and age,” she said. Israel reaches policy on occupied lands JE R U S A L E M (U P I) — The cabinet Sunday endorsed Prim e M inister Menachem Begin s policy on the future of occupied Arab lands, resolving the biggest government crisis in his one year in office, officials said. The text of the policy, requested by the United States to set the basis for Middle East peace negotiations, was withheld until it could be relayed to Washington. Political sources said Begin lined up the support of 13 of the 19 ministers before the start of the meeting, ami the cabinet quickly approved his proposal for the future of the West Bank of Jo r­ dan and Egypt’s Gaza Strip. Government sources said the policy includes an agreement to discuss a different status for the occupied territories after a five-year period of limited autonomy Begin already has proposed This phrasing was in contrast to the draft offered by Defense Minister Ezer Weizman that included a pledge to decide on the permanent status of the territories after five years. Weizman's use of the concept of deciding the permanent status was said by political observers to reflect the wor­ ding suggested by the State Department as helpful to reviving the Middle East peace talks Reports early last week said Weiz- man’s efforts resulted in a situation of no majority for any version and a deadlock considered Begin’s biggest government crisis since he became prime minister a year ago. There have been unconfirmed reports that Begin was ready to resign if the cabinet did not approve his draft. Weizman’s supporters in the end were mainly the four ministers of die centrist Democratic Movement for Change, headed by Deputy Prim e Minister Yigael Yadin. A third version had been offered by Foreign Minister Moshe Dayan, but its fate in the cabinet meeting was unclear. Dayan urged immediate implementa­ tion of limited self-rule for the occupied lands, with emphasis on Jordan’s role. Weizman left the meeting first and walked quickly to his car. Reporters said he seemed perturbed Begin was the last to leave, together with Dayan. He smiled but made no comment. The Arabs have demanded the uncon­ ditional return of lands Israel captured in the 1967 Middle East War Jerusalem steadfastly rejected such a broad withdrawal, arguing the West Bank is part of the biblical land of Israel. fa g ? I a THE DAILY TEXAN □ Monday, June 19, 1978 Scientists seek new gas source University project will use first-of-kind well By JOHN KENT Daily T«x«n Stat* A new kind of well (hat will Up , what tx hoped to be a new major soil ire of natural gas will be drilled this week by University acienttsta in the Texas Gulf Co**! region The project, headed by the University a Center for Energy Studies and under the direc tion of Dr Myron Porfman professor of petroleum engineering is the first of its kind ever attempted The well, a culmination of four years of intern#* study, will be drill ed to a depth of 16,500 feet through a thick layer of sandstone in Brazoria County At that point it is ex per tod t th a t a h ig h ly p r e s s u r iz e d (geopressured) source of hot, salty water containing methane in solu lion will have been Upped "Ten years ago this kind of well couldn t have been drilled." Dorf man said "The technology wasn't available then to keep the wells ' from barwing rut under such high » pr***sure " Natural gas la not the only boon expected to spout from the coastal * water gusher At m o re than 300 degrees Fahrenheit, once removed from hlgti underground presure the water will be able to escape as steam, turning turbines to create electricity A IO-mega wa ti generating facility for demonstration purprws is ex­ perted to be built on the site since heat and pressure cannot be transported over long distance* There are 220 trillion cubic feet of known natural gas reserves in the United States, Dorfman said Another 250 trillion cube feet are believed to exist in the subterranean geopressured zones The United States consumes roughly 20 trillion cubic feet per year A M )N C 1 W IT H the anticipated benefits, however, a number of problem* must be considered Dorfman said that "something has to give" whenever a large un derground reservoir is evacuated Possible trouble spots include anything from the ground sinking to earthquakes We really don't ex per t any trouble with that, he said “ Economics IS the name of the game," Dorfman said If for* ed to pump water hack into the earth to prevent th#* ground from sinking, for cxampl#*, there would he little reason to continue the project since much energy awl money would be required to do so There are other economic factors the value of natural gas, tile cost of drilling adequate wells, the ability of such wells to attain suitable flow rates and any negative environing tai consequences must all be carefully weighs! Money seems to be less of a problem earh year as the program has Increased IU governmental sub­ sidies from $250,000 four years ago, to an anticipated 127 million next year The program is operating on a $17 million budget which does not include significant contributions from industry Dorfman emphasized that, for the program to get off the ground and remain a success, a m inim al amount of governmental interven­ tion would have to be the rule We believe industry can handle the situation better than govern ment can,' Dorfman said He add ed however, that the program has received a maximum amount of cooperation from both the federal and state governm ent I he fed e ra l D e p a rtm en t of Energy provides major funding for the project There are six operating divisions in the ( enter for Energy Studies — geologic, resource utilization, legal, institutional, environmental, and long ranee planning encom­ passing and in vo lvin g a con ­ g l o m e r a t e of the U n iv e rs ity ’s colleges "There are between 50 and IOO people working on our program," Dorfman said "Everyone has learn­ ed something from everyone else " Dorfman spoke of the inevitability of having to learn about phases of the proj#*ct which are not one s specialty He believes all members the o p e ra tio n h a ve been of broadened ' in working side by side with members of a diverse group The University is recognized as the leader in geopressure research T h e r e a r e an e s t i m a t e d 46 geopressure basins throughout the world in addition to the Gulf Coast region, which stretches from just south of the Texas-Mexico border to slightly east of the Louisiana- Mississippi border along the coast The Soviet Union is particularly in­ terested in several Siberian sites and has consulted the University for guidance lf all goes as planned — and, ac­ cord ing to D o rfm a n , n e a r ly everything has thus far — commer­ cial production can be expected to get under way by 1085 Our goal is to have a program in which the University, people, in­ dustry and the government are all able to benefit," Dorfman said Correction On F r i d a y the T e x a n referred to the Alpha Angels as a black University sorority The group is, in fact, a social club affiliated with the Alpha Phi Alpha fraternity SJHlorter’s (ebook These times are trying my soul Here I am at the ripe old age of 2V < though no one ever believes that I reflowing for a school newspaper I should instead br finding fame and fortune with Hie New York Times or tbs* Washington Post Yeah, I know yawn yawn But consider this more important Item I am T H E minority reporter for the Daily Texan I kw*w thai because several people (non Texan staffers! have told me I am Yes, they had to tell mr* I don t think It’s a big deal (it shouldn’t be) and I haven t given It much thought But, my liberal friends. there are people at this University who insist on making the distinction between A reporter, a MINORITY reporter and j0. THE minority reporter Suffice it to say the only real distinction is one of color, which is important to our soc iety I can do without another label though Already I am an older than average student (which gets me nowhere with my professors), a veteran (8 'n years in the Air Force) and a Vietnam veteran <49 weeks of chocolate chip cookies from homec Unfortunately, no one cai es that I'm almost 30, or that I spent a few years adhering to Uncle Sam n dictates Vietnam, (you do remember it, don't you?) has been relegated to history books and Jane Fonda movies But alas, there are eyebrows raised at the reporters. minority reporter tag Okay I AM a minority and I AM a reporter editor’s soul 'W y / / / / / "> niww 4B M W *** *» We THERE IS A DIFFERENCE! Hence, one plus one equals two. I am also in­ telligent. But I ’m here at the Texan for the same reasons the other reporters are experience and resume padding The responsible people at the Texan aren't try­ ing to fool anyone by having me on the staff Are you. Eendler'1 I got here because I'm good, so I d like to think Or maybe no one else applied for the job The only thing that bothers me about this label is that I don't get extra monetary compensation for the extra distinction I get the same lousy pay as the M A JO R IT Y Having just thought of that, I think I II go try my HAIR D E S IG N S H B W e are open Mondays Call For Appointment: Tewie&'W . 5555 N. UMAR rn co*wki nu 4 SJ.7 W •2.00 •P F With TS»«. Ari On Yov» firs t Visit TevuAsW mo i tivttsiof UPSTAIRS IN town IAK! PlAZAi U M f O I j KAPLA NII0 = 9 0 1 e d u c a t io n a l i P n A u-H. CENTER TEST PREPARATION SPECIALISTS SINCE I ' M Visit Our (enters And Ss* F*r Yourself Why W . M a li. TH. W f f . r t m . Call Dnys, Ives, A weekends 7 1 1 3 B u r n e t R d . S u it e 2 1 6 A u s t in , T*. 7 8 7 5 7 5 1 2 - 4 5 8 - 5 4 3 3 Set ta 407 Dallas, Tx. 7S243 214-750-0317 Al«e: IIJ00 N. Central Expwy By Kathleen Cabble, Dally Texan Staff Little Big Man Accepting the pain of childhood, Jeffrey Wilder (small) cools off after getting spanked by his father, Dan. They were attending the rodeo at Manor Downs, Saturday. . . . » * • • • x i x a u m I.s t4XC‘4*Pl h o n d a V and e x a m f>»*rin#K Th*- Dafly Texan a student newspaper at The University of Texas at Austin is •tr- • r? ,\ V T Mud‘‘m !!ubJ!!?ii,ons,’ Dr,wer D University Sutton. Austin, Tex a. 12 I he Hath Texan is published Monday. Tuesday Wednesday, Thursday and Fri- en-.. da\ except holiday and exam periods Second class postage paid at Austin Tex" f e T S S f f r * ,n *2; typhon# (471-45911 at the editorial office (Texas Student Publications Building I 122 or at the news laboratory (Communication Building A f 13b I Inquiries concerning delivery and classified advertising should be Hckhn* I 200 «471 5244» and display advertising in TSI* Building 3 210 f r n i S i . u u i l U d V , I lit >U *4 Y r*la«e rvwd The national advertising representatives of The Daily Texan are National .160 Lexington Ave New York N Y 10017 and raucauonal Advertising Service, Inc UonununiratKXiv and Advertising Services to Students. 6330 N Pulaski, Chicago. Ill Hie Daily Texan subscribes to United Press International and New York Times the and New, Service The Texan is a member of the Associated Collegiate Press southwesi Journalism Congress the Texas Daily Newspaper Association American Newspaper I ubhshers Association Copyright I97H Texas student Publications THE DAILY T EXA N SUBSCRIPTION RATES St M M E R SUSS It IN 1978 Pu ked up on campus U T students facultv staff Pirked up on campus general public By mail in Texas Bv mail outside Texas within C S A ONE .SEMESTER .KALI. OR SPRING) 1978 79 Picked up on campus basic student fee Picked up on campus ll T family staff Picked up on campus general public By mail in Texas Bv mail outside Texas within C S A I I OO 4 OO 850 900 I 65 I SS 7 50 14 OO 15 00 TWO S E M E S T E R S .PA LI. AM) SPR IN G ! 1978-79 Pu ked up on campus U T faculty staff 3 30 Picked up on campus general public 15 00 Bv mail in Texas 25 50 By mail outside Texas within U S A 27 50 Semi orders and address changes to T EXA S STUDENT PUBLICATIONS P O Box nm IO Ii Austin Texas .8,12 or In TSP Building. U3 200 ppg SHARP COMPACT REFRIGERATOR RENT *20 PER SUMMER 6 WEEKS s 1 5 °° RENT IT, THEN IF YOU UKE IT, YOU CAN RENT-8UY IT BERKmnns ttim ( s t e r e o s t o r e u n G u a d a lu p e • ays J525 AI 3 a b u s h i t ro ad • o a * ? 3 i Tun Xhrr IPU la Yaring't — the fashion place on-the-drag ... Freshm en! Welcome to U.T I Present your o r i e n t a t i o n tag in Y a r i n g ' s sportswear department on Yaring's se­ cond floor ... fill out a charge application and get your free gift. SELECT FROM SEASON'S BEST STYLES AND BRANDS VALUES TO 58.00 GROUP I Up To 19.00 GROUP 2 Up To 29.00 1 2 ’ ° 1 9 ’ ° GROUP 3 Up To 39.00 2 4 »o GROUP 4 Up To 60.00 3 4 " Ij& unc O N -TH E-D R A G 2406 G U A D A L U P E r (Not all Stock included) ON-THE-DRAG at 2406 Guadalupe M ° Q j a & J o n e J j J 9 7 8 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ P a g e 3 Kidnapped priest freed IRA holds constable BELFAST. N orthern Ireland (U P I) . priest, kidnapped early Sunday in an atie m p i to exchange hun Irish C um, ’™ I for an abducted policem an, w as released hours la te r and found day in l o,,, ' Kin*: ^ 's id e a road with a coal sack over his head, police said b a th e r Hugh Murphy. 59. apparently was unharm ed He was A Rom an Catholic , ■ ■ ta,h* r four childr,' n- was kidnapped by " a .m aehlne gunners in an am bush Satur- «2ni T s t t ^ r nu,My , o u r m , i e s f r o m . Belfast radio station m inutes a fte r the priest w as discovered about four m iles from his home - THE GROUP, which had grabbed him early Sunday morning said h a th e r Murphy had been released following a public appeal led by Protestant clergym en and by M argaret T u rb o ts whose Irish husband was kidnapped Saturday by Republican Army Turbott still is m issing the outlawed Witnesses said Murphy was aw akened early Sunday bv three men pounding at his door in Ahoghill. near Ballym ena. SO m iles northeast of Belfast, and shouting that they needed a p riest to help an injured child H He was overpowered when he answ ered the door in his pa­ jam as and dressing gown, and shouted. ‘ P lease, please not this Sunday, the w itnesses said His 94-year-old grandm other, who lived with him. was being tre a te d for shock AN OI TUA WEI) P ro te sta n t organization known as the U lster h reedom F ighters phoned the B elfast radio Staten la te r and said they would retu rn Murphy “ in the sam e condition as (u n sta b le William T u rb o tt.” w h ^ ' m ? ? U-aders throughout N orthern Ireland h u t ic y ears of violence and bloodshed between m ajority I n lln illed v* animously condemned the double kidnap ^ ,te S U m S h8Va ,a k ™ » ( ne appeal cam e Sunday from T u r b o t s wife. She appealed the death or suffering of the or Murphyr s release, saying priest won t bring m y husband back.” WAS on a rouline Patrol with O fficer Huah » .s a m b u s h e d l wo ^hi l dr en' when their police c a r SS.StZ£, ^Zndid S k'lled ^ 3 tra“ blf aU ,r*,and’ »PP«*l«d to the IRA to clerevm ,nHI L ,a " P !!* ley; an oltem controversial P rotestant \tu rn h i t " !b! r (,f I'orham ent for the d istrict where Im phi lives, appealed for his release " s a fe and uninjured " i i — UPI Telephoto Murder and kidnapping of the occupants of this car triggered later abduction. Clements By MARK D O O L E Y Dally T exan Staff Attorney G eneral John H ill’s support of P resident C arter will not necessarily be a political liability in his cam paign for the governorship, Hill press se c re ta ry E rnie S trom berger said Sunday. “ The fact that the president is a D em ocrat and John Hill is a D em ocrat and the fact that he supported the president is a circum stance which m ay or m ay not affect people’s a ttitu d es in the ra c e for governor,” S trom berger said. In a speech to the Republican S tate E xecutive Com­ m ittee Saturday, Republican gubernatorial nom inee Bill C lem ents accused Hill of being an advance m an for P resident C a rte r’s 1980 re-election cam paign and predicted C arter will lose Texas to his Republican op­ ponent. Clem ents said he would “ hang P resident C a rte r like a dead chicken around H ill’s neck” because of Hill s support of the p resid en t’s energy and farm bills. Of course he doesn’t support e ith e r one of them . He told the president to his face ... that the m arked to ‘hang’ president on Hill percentage of Texans disagreed with his positions on energy and farm ing and th at he agreed with their positions, and he urged the P resident to take that into consideration, ” S trom berger said. ( le m e n ts sa id he w ill c a m p a ig n rural Texas during th ro u g h o u t the traditionally D em ocratic sum m er. ( lem ents predicted he would lead Hill 53 to 47 p e r­ cent by the Nov. 8 election, though he says he is now trailing Hill 54 to 45 percent. A H ill-c o m m issio n e d poll led C lem ents 68 to 18 percent the first week of June. A poll com m issioned by D em ocratic U.S. Senate nominee Bob K rueger shows Hill leading C lem ents 65 to 18 p er­ cent. in d ic a te s H ill He ( H ill) ran for governor in 1968, so h e’s been run­ ning and literally coveting the office for IO y e a rs,” Clem ents said. The fact that Hill ran for governor in 1968 speaks for itself, S trom berger said. “ We vc been trying this case for IO y e a rs,” Attorney G eneral Hill said May 6 a fte r defeating Gov. Dolph Briscoe in the D em ocratic prim ary. I in going to take a fte r Mr. Hill. He is a liberal claim s law yer - w e’re going to take a fte r th a t.” ( lem ents said, He has declined to define “ liberal claim s law yer.” saying, “ I would ra th e r leave it to your im agination.” ( lem ents said if elected governor he will work toward limiting sta te spending and cutting taxes and he pointt»d to C alifornia’s passage of Proposition 13 as public sentim ent for tax reduction. He also said he favored giving citizens the pow er of in itia tiv e and to c o lle c t signatures for a referendum to pass laws without legislative approval. re fe re n d u m — pow er Nationally, T exas delegates the Republican National C om m ittee will propose support of a con­ stitutional am endm ent requiring a balanced budget and allowing Congress to borrow money only in the event of a form ally declared war. to The Texas executive com m ittee seeks to lim it both personal and co rp o rate taxes to no g re a te r than 15 p e r­ cent of net income. Carter returns from signing canal treaties President sees no problem in zone exchange WASHINGTON (U PI) — P resident ( a rte r and his aides, back hom e Sunday afte r a 23-hour trip to P anam a, w ere th e re will not be any m ore hopeful serious problem s in turning the U n ­ controlled Canal Zone over to P anam a along with the canal. The president returned to the White House Saturday night a fte r he and Gen O m ar T orrijos put final signatures on the Panam a Canal treaties. Among those flying back to W ashington with him on Air F orce One was W illiam Jorden, U.S. am bassador in Panam a City for four years, who wanted to dis­ cuss future plans. JO RD EN HAS R E PO R T E D that, con­ tra ry to e a rlie r predictions, he now sees no disruptive exodus of A m erican canal w orkers or pilots in the offing. R ather, Jorden said U.S. residents seem prepared to w ait and see how the process of turning over the Canal Zone to P anam a goes before m aking any decisions about the future. The Zonians have expressed fears the sw itch to P anam anian control will bring a serious decline in services and poor a d m in is tr a tio n of ju s tic e . U n d e r P anam anian law, for instance, a person is presum ed guilty until found innocent instead of the other way round. C a r t e r m e t a p p r o x i m a t e l y 12 rep resentatives of Canal Zone civic and labor organizations Saturday for lunch to hear out their special concerns. They told him they fully intend to take up an offer he m ade and contact him directly about grievances during the transition period, sources said. UNDER THE TREA TIES, Panam a will s ta r t taking over the canal next year and gain full control by the year 2000, The adm inistration has se t in motion prelim inary steps to ease the shortage of Panam anian pilots. The U.S. governm ent has arranged for two P anam anian cadets to en ter the U.S. N aval Academy this fall and five others to attend the M erchant M arine Academy, U.S. officials said. It also is considering other m easures. To becom e a P anam a Canal pilot, a m a rin e r m u st p o ssess a m a s te r ’s license and train for eight y e a rs on ships transiting the canal. T here now a re only two Panam anian pilots am ong about 210 pilots. to THE U.S. EMBASSY in P anam a also has been em phasizing the White House th at much attention will have to be paid to several key appointm ents: the new P anam a U.S. chairm an of Canal Com m ission, which will replace the U.S. Arm y-run P anam a Canal Com­ pony; com m ander of the U.S. Southern Comm and which is headquartered in the to Zone; and P anam a. the U.S. am bassador The U.S. Com m ission chairm an, ad ­ m inistration officials said, will play a key role in easing the transition and helping P anam a take on the respon­ sibility of running the canal. news capsules Former president warns militias • 1978 New York Times BEIRUT, Lebanon - Former President Suleiman Franjieh, whose son was murdered last week by rival Christian militias, has served an ul­ timatum on all members of the right-wing Phalange Party in northern Lebanon that they quit the party or leave the area. He set the end of June as a final deadline for compliance with the de­ mand and called on priests to relay the message from church pulpits. The 69-year-old Franjieh, who was in office during the civil war 19 months ago, issued the warning at a meeting Saturday in his hometown of Zgharta with mayors and clergymen from 54 villages in the north who visited him to extend their condolences. Peru starts on road to dem ocracy LIMA, Peru (UPI) — Police pounced on retired renegade army Gen. Leonidas Rodriguez Figueroa, who has played a daring cat-and-mouse game with authorities, as he voted Sunday for a constitutional assembly in Peru’s first election in 12 years. Five million Peruvians were required to vote in the election, which the military regime has promised will be the first step of a three-year process that will bring democracy to this South American nation. The election was considered a preview to the presidential balloting ex­ pected in 1980, although 12 leading leftist candidates have been deported, arrested or, like Rodriguez, went into hiding. Final election results will not be known for a week. Union head backs settlement • 1978 New York Times the personal troubles engulfing Sen. Edward Brooke, R-Mass., the traditional architect of compromise on abortion funding. House members apparently thought the election year coupled with Brooke s troubles would wither Senate determination to fight a House move to prohibit taxpayer-financed abortions for poor women except to save the mother’s life Foreign aid said to help wealthy WASHINGTON (UPI) — The billions of dollars that Bangledesh receives in foreign aid from the United States benefits the wealthy, not the poor, a new report says. The poor stay poor despite massive aid because Bangladesh’s “poverty is rooted in a social order which benefits a small elite at the expense of the poor majority,” said the report. The report was written for the Center for International Policy - a pro­ ject of Stewart Mott’s The Fund for Peace - by Betsy Hartmann and James Boyce. They were in Bangladesh from 1974 to 1976 on grants from Yale University during which they lived nine months in a small bamboo house in a northwestern Bangladesh village. FTC wants funeral home control WASHINGTON (UPI) — The staff of the Federal Trade Commission recommended Sunday that the agency crack down on the funeral home in­ dustry to end such abuses as body snatching, high-pressure selling of cost­ ly caskets and needless embalming. Consumers might be able to cut their funeral bills in half if undertakers gave their customers a better idea of what they are really buying, the staff report said. The average funeral now costs $2,000 and Americans are spending $6.4 NEW YORK — The president of the 10-union Allied Printing Trades Council said Sunday that he would have no qualms in recommending as a basis for settlement” the contract agreement between The Daily News and the Newspaper Guild of New York, which on Saturday ended a five- Boating disaster death toll Climbs day guild strike. billion every year for burials. George E. McDonald, who is also president of New York Mailers Union No. 6. said his recommendation would be based on the News-guild’s “wage package being acceptable, retrogressions that would hurt the un­ ion being taken off the table and givebacks being very little.” The News published 2.1 million copies of a 96-page Sunday issue — 600,- 000 below normal — whose front page cheered: “ Hi There! Glad to be Back,” and planned a normal Monday issue of 1,820,000 copies. Abortion funds not iied to Brooke W ASHINGTON (I PI) — Election-year efforts by the House to restrict federal funds for abortions face vigorous opposition in the Senate despite OTTAWA, Ran. (UPI) — Six grotesque and contorted bodies were pull­ ed from Lake Pomona Sunday, boosting the death toll to 14 in a Saturday night boating disaster caused by a tornado that slammed into a showboat carrying 59 persons. Four bodies were pulled from the lake’s calm waters within two hours Sunday afternoon as ashen-faced authorities promised to search for the lone passenger still reported missing. Two other bodies were brought from the lake earlier in the day. The latest victims were recovered from the lake during dragging operations near the spot where the boat — the Whippoorwill Showboat — capsized in the normally calm waters, whipped into a deadly frenzy by a slim tornado too small to be tracked by radar. Chinese arrive in Zaire KINSHASA. Z aire ( U P I) — A group of Chinese m ilitary advisers arrived in Zaire over the weekend to underscore Peking’s growing com ­ m itm ent to the w ar-torn African na­ tion, the governm ent press said Sun­ day. The report coincided with Zairean appeals to its w estern allies for m ore arm s to help its disorganized arm y battle 1.000 K atangese rebels that diplom atic sources said w ere spotted recently on both sides of the Angolan border. T H E R E P O R T E D a r r i v a l in Kinshasa of several Chinese naval in­ stru cto rs w as the second tim e China sent m ilitary advisers to Zaire. A small naval training mission cam e to this central A frican nation several years ago. in A high-ranking Chinese m ilitary the d eleg atio n w as ex p ected capital la te r this week to explore Zaire s needs. Peking said the m is­ sion will be headed by Wang Teh-jun, deputy com m ander of the a rm y ’s a r ­ tillery, and Liu Hsing-lung, deputy chief of staff of the a rm y ’s head­ q u arters in Canton WHEN H E VISITED Zaire earlier th is m o n th . C h in e s e F o r e i g n M inister Huang Hua sa id China would s tre n g th e n tie s w ith Kinshasa but gave no indication it w o u ld p r o v i d e a n y m i l i t a r y assistance. its H uang d e n o u n c e d r e c e n t th e in v a sio n of Z a ir e ’s K a ta n g e se southern Shaba province a s inspired by the Soviet Union and Cuba as p a rt of the K rem lin's grand design for world domination Z aire has only a tiny naval force, mainly m ade up of a few patrol boats and approxim ately 250 m en, and only one port. M atadi, which is virtually surrounded by Angolan te rrito ry . I .ast week m ilitary officials said Belgium had agreed to help train a new 12,000-man infantry division and France would train an e lite 3,000- man airborne strike force a s the first steps toward rebuilding the Zairean arm y. THE ARMY HAS been largely d is­ c r e d i t s following last month s a t ­ tack by several thousand Angolan- based K atangese on Shaba, during which hundreds of Europeans and Africans w ere killed Ott to appeal life DENTON (U P I) — G regory A rthur O tt plans to appeal his conviction and life prison sentence in the death of a I exas R anger during a farm house drug raid but says th e re 's “ no hope” for him before Texas courts Ott, a form er honors student at North Texas S tate U niversity, said Saturday “ I never expected any positive results I realize now th ere is no hope for my case even in the appellate courts as long as it is in this sta te ” fo u r-w o m a n An e ig h t-m a n , ju ry assessed O tt a life te rm in prison S atur­ day in the death of T exas R anger Bobby Paul Doherty, killed during a drug raid at O tt’s Argyle farm house four months ago. OTT W EPT when the sentence was read and said he w as innocent of the crim e. I rn trying to understand why we can send rockets to the moon, p e rfo rm h e a rt transplants and kidney transplants and yet we cannot have ju stic e for a ll,” Ott said. “ I’m not able to fathom this night­ m a re .” He said, I could not com m it such a crim e. F o r seven y e a rs I ve studied w hat's right and w h at’s w ro n g «— not for grades or for jobs, th e re a re no jobs for philosophy students - but so that I could live a ju st and honorable life. And I feel I obtained that goal. I don’t regret m y life, a s the Bible says, even a ju st m an falls seven tim es a day and I have fallen m y seven tim es a d a y .” O tt’s atto rn ey s say it will be 18 m onths or m ore before the Crim inal Court of Appeals considers his case. Un­ til then, O tt will have to w ait behind bars. THE JU RY deliberated about 90 m inutes before announcing the m ax­ imum punishm ent for Ott, a 27-year-old convicted F riday of the Feb. 20 slaying of the veteran lawman Ott, who could have received as few as five years in prison, stood quietly as the verdict w as read. te a rs stream ing down his face. L ater, during an interview , he sobbed openly while m aintaining his innocence. I am consoled because I know as deep as anyone can know that I am inno­ cent and I know that god knows that in the final judgm ent I will be as clear as anyone can be in m y innocence,” he said And I offer the people of this county my innocence. “ MY TEARS a re not for myself but from realizing that hum anity has not in­ creased in hum aneness in the last thou­ sand y e a rs," the form er psychology and philosophy student said. No date was set for form al senten­ cing. but D istrict Judge Bob Scofield said it would be held within IO days. D istrict Attorney Je rry Cobb, who had recom m ended the life sentence, said he was elated with the ju ry ’s deci­ sion. I believe it is the proper puni$h* m ent in this c a se ,” he said. Cobb called three c h a ra c te r w itnesses for the punishm ent phase of the trial. D efense attorneys called O tt's m other, Marion Ott, but she was not allowed to testify a fte r it was established her $on had not been living with her for seven years. Testim ony from other officers In­ volved in the raid described a chaotic scene, O tt’s attorney argued, in which som e officers did not hear others shout to identify them selves as policem en, “ They had trouble hearing each othfcr, but they think the defendant should have heard som eone,” he said. Bullock to support Hill Saying he h asn ’t liked him since the day he m et him , Bob Bullock said he will support A ttorney G eneral John Hill, the D em ocratic gubernatorial nominee, in the N ovem ber general election. B u llo ck , w ho w as one of H ill s h arshest c ritic s during the D em ocratic gubernatorial p rim a ry cam paign, said in a radio interview Saturday the reason for his disagreem ents with Hill a re because “ I guess I basically don’t like him .” However, Bullock said, “ I want to m ake this c le a r to you. I really respect the office of governor of Texas If John Hill is elected — and I do intend to vote for him — my office will work with him in every way to im prove the statu s of ou r s t a t e , and I m e a n th a t v e ry sincerely.” His constant harangue of Hill during the p rim ary cam paign caused Bullock to “ com e hom e em pty-handed” a fte r Hill defeated B riscoe in the May 6 Bullock reiterated his belief prim ary, Bullock said. I tl)at although Hill is not his personal choice for the office, he is the p a rty ’s choice and because of that he will work for Hill. B ullock sa id H ill w ill win th e N ovem ber g e n e ra l e le c tio n a g a in st Republican gubernatorial candidate d ill C lem ents unless Hill m akes a ” m ass(ve an d C le m e n ts m a k e s* a f o u lu p ' “ m assive effo rt” in the four and a half m onths before the election. 4 Hill is in M innesota attending a con­ ference of the N ational Association of Attorney G enerals and was unavailable for com m ent on Bullock’s support. I A Hill cam paign aide said the cam ­ paign is “ glad to have the support of all D em ocrats” and th at Bullock’s support is “ a good sign th a t the differences they had in the prim ary will not affect the general election.” P age 4 [ ] T H E D A IL Y T E X A N C[ M ond ay, June 19 1978 • I St* rn > ; ft* VZ § * s ■' i ................. Chaotic comedy By Jack A nd«r«on WASHINGTON The Mere! minute* of Itll Amin i cabinet meetings read like ( (Milk opera, bul there ii nothing funny about them They help to explain why the U gandan d ic ta to r m a ssa c re d thousands of hi* own subjiM’ts The terri hic toll has been e s tim a te between 150 (MMI .«nd .wo.(Nm the I he minute*, smuggle! to us at great risk, reveal inner working* of Amin a murderous regime His cabinet m eettngi are a i chaotic a i he ii •capricious . The dlaruiiiona are dominated, of oourie, by the dictator who ii obsessed with dark forboding! Ile imagine* ploti against hi! regime and lu ip ecti his closest associates He |§ a p( (u turn • viciously upon anyone without warning ♦The more people Amin kills, apparently, *Ute more leisure he feels about his own •life On I* cb 2D, for example, he proclaim* sui that exiles were pteparing to assault *,Uganda "Exiles based in neighboring countries,’ he charged, "are now fully trained by the Imperialist! and Zionists •and are armed from head to toe, with .sophistteated weapons ” Vet intelligence sources told our reporter Murray Waas that there is lit tie likelihood of an attack The exiles are too few. too disorganised and spread Uh) thin The minutes show that Amin, is convinced that his nevertheless, predecessor. Milton Obote, will lead an attack against him Amin professed that he “ had never eared about Obote” in the past, but this time, he said, "Obote m eans business ’ On the contrary, State Department sources insist that Obote has absolutely no following Then Amin bellyached about security ' Ne * was not happy ’ he said, with security in the country “ The secret minutes relate "He re ite ra te d that some members of the cabinet, including high ranking security officers who were p r e s e n t a t t h e m e e t i n g , w e re collaborating with Ugandan exiles ’ The thought of th is c o n je c tu ra l “betrayal sent him into a rage "You security officers," he roared "I have given you everything you need You all have smart cars You all have good houses You are all m arried to beautiful What else do you Makanda ladies need-’ Why do you collaborate with your guerrillas?** After simmering down, he complain­ ed about dissension between the army and pol let* "I have personally come across a I police) chief quarrelling with a battalion commander and almost go­ ing to exchange fire ,” he said, ’I also failed lo calm them What is all this?” A cabinet official volunteered a sim ilar report "I went to Investigate an incident, he said, "w here a person was I went to Nakesero for an in killed vest (ga Hon, and they baked me up ** This provoked a noisy argum ent among Amin s m inisters about who was to blame Die defense m inister, gaining control of the air Space for a moment, chastised his colleagues He told them, the minutes state, "that they were abu* tug the presence of Amin and later told them to keep quiet or otherwise he would take disciplinary action " Amin s vice p re sid e n t was also offended According to the minutes, he "becam e angered and asked the presi­ dent to pass an order to retire some o( the high ranking officers because they have become unruly.” lins stirred a greater ruckus Con­ tinue the minutes: "Then a dozen voices gVOonsd (sic) and said. With you first * Amidst the secretary the confusion, signaled for a break ** After the recess. A m ins m inisters resumed their bickering This finally caused the dictator to explode Relate the minutes 'The disgusted president stood up and asked the council how they could defend the country when they had so many grudges against themselves ” HMA Amin lashed out at them all "You are all working for my downfall, he screamed "ViHi are all working for my downfall Rut I pity you. because your time will cam#, Lm> The guerrillas will kill you " Footnote Not long after the February the meeting Amin purged some of m inisters c I97N I ai ted Feature Syndicate, lac. Check the directory advertisements By S aber D elah ad It was welcome news that the Univer­ sity Directory was finally out to be dis tributed among the students Much more so was the state­ ment about the inclusion of an adver­ tisement section in it the staff and Strangely enough, the word adver­ tisement first came as a surprise however, it later proved thrilling to speculate that the University's version of the word "advertisem ent’ might be a deliberate counterpresentation to the version that is commonly presented by the commercials The chances are the University had set out. having one of the best linguistics departm ents in the country, to revive" the word "advertisem ent and restore the long lost reputation of the word With a little bit of imagination one could come up with a tentative descrip­ tion of the speifications of the courses that were thought likely to appear in the advertisement section of the University Directory Linguistics 4000 - (Prerequisites ( ornmunicative ability in Knglish is the only requirement for native speakers. how ever, non nativ e sp e a k e rs, no m atter bow sloppy their Knglish is. are ex c u sed p ro v id ed le a s t dem onstrate the ability to use gestuies they a t whenever they fail to maintain verbal communication with the teacher). The course offers a whole lot in the way of re la x atio n ; if you feel th ere fo re , already overloaded, make sure to take the course bs fact, the teacher believes that you can fare very well in this world w ith o u t know ing a n y th in g ab o u t linguistics, consequently, he easily accepts any suggestions made by the students as the suggestions provide the teacher with more relaxa­ tion and his students with repose long as Furtherm ore, he finds Chomskyaen approach to linguistics hazardous Since linguistics Chomsky advocates that should be taught on th e ‘ frag ile branches of trees," the teacher, conser­ vative by nature, says, “ Why after all take the risk of falling off a branch' and breaking your bones Moreover, he believes that if branches of trees could facilitate the languages, birds and monkeys would have been the best linguists in the world learning of Education WMK) This course trains you how to make flash cards, teaching aids, for your class use (Making flash » ards Is in fact so much fun that it may c o n s ta n tly r e m in d you of y o u r childhood), arrange the seats in your class room (gentlemen who have ac­ quired expertise through helping their wives with the household chores may earn better grades), sing songs for your language class (beauty and cleanliness may the influence your grade for course), produce various kinds of sounds to help you teach correct pronun­ ciation to your students ab e ability to burp, belch and hiccup may dram atical­ ly raise your final grade for the course). We would also like you to know what the course does not provide: The course neither sheds light on your grim career prospect nor does it train you how to hunt for teaching opportunities Language Acquisition 3000 — This course offers an awful lot of baby talk (If you have a newly bom baby at home, you can skip attending the course as long as you spend a couple of hours with the baby every day). The teacher teaching the course has IO children (actually, he has failed in his attem pt to double the number) who have been his subjects of study all th ro u g h h is a c a d e m i c c a r e e r . Therefore, he will be reporting his children's speech gathered during the first six years of their lives. the Occasionally, in his enthusiastic ac­ count of his e x p e rien ce w ith his children, teacher may unduly report, because of his being overly ex­ cited, his 35-year old son’s utterances as baby talk It is therefore often left to the talented student to tell the baby talk from the nonbaby talk He will also tell you of an instance when one of his children said, "papa corned" rather than "papa cam e.” Had he not corrected his son there and then, so he believes, his son’s language would have deteriorated for good This is why the course offers an excellent opportuni­ ty for those who are planning to have babies in the near future. The teacher will also recount another occasion when his 2 I /2-year- old daQghter said, “ I want w aters” The in­ appropriate use of the plural form for water angered the teacher so much that he refused to give water to his child un­ til the child had used the appropriate form of the utterance. The teacher believes that a dead baby is much more tolerable than a baby with ungram­ m atical speech. The teacher may also present striking evidence from his data indicating that children at the two-word stage have a strong potency for prediction; such an evidence has been provided by his 2- year-old son who had once said, “ sons of Sam s.” The teacher is now looking for more evidence to establish his findings. the He cooperation of the police, to find out whether Sam has more than one son, or the plural use of the words "sons” and ‘‘Sam s’ is simply a gram m atical mis­ take on the part of his 2-year-old kid investigating, with is also thanks F in a lly , t e a c h e r w ill be th e th e fa c t th a t his d e m o n s tra tin g linguistic to his children, the phases of knowledge, skipped meaningful cooing, gurgling and babbl­ ing sounds and started “ proper” speech from the very early stages of their language acquisition.________ D m wad is a g ra d u a te stu d en t in tho ('allege o f E ducation. U.S.-Soviet relations will get worse By Henry 8. Bredther WASHINGTON U.S. specialists in Soviet affairs see no quick end of the downward spiral in relations between Washington and Moscow Relations have recently gone from disagreem ent on the broad principles of d is a rm a m e n t, c o n d u c te d th e m oderate tones of diplomacy, to ac­ cusations of lying about what happened in Shaba, to a widening exchange of spy charges in The argument over Cuban involve­ ment in the Shaba invasion has now moved from Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei A Gromyko's statem ent on the White Rotor lawn that President C arter to Cuban Prem ier was misinformed Fidel Castro's accusations in Havana against P resident C a rte r’s national security adviser. Zbigniew Brzezmski. Hut accusations over spying have heated up enough to eclipse what of­ ficials here see as the m ore vital business of U.S.-Soviet relations. It in­ cludes not only disarm am ent but also an attem pt to maintain normal discussion of the whole range of contacts, from political to economic affairs Officials are concerned that the latest incident, the arrest in Moscow last Mon­ day of an American businessman. F ran­ cis Jay Crawford, might mean a Soviet decision to begin deliberate retaliation Two Soviet citizens, Valdik Finger and Rudolf Chernayev. are being held for in New Jersey on espionage trial charge* The Soviet government might want to swap them for Americans who would be detained in the Soviet Union Kven such a development would not to th e n e c e s s a rily m ean an end downward spiral Officials are still awaiting anxiously the Kremlin will decide to do about Alex­ a n d e r G i n x b u r g a n d A n a t o l y Shcharansky, who are being held for trial to see what The United States has warned that their trial on charges that are con sidered here to be political would cause a further worsening of relations But, after a sim ilar warning, a Soviet court re c e n tly convicted B uri O rlov of charges based on his trying to monitor the Soviet Helsinki Agreement to comply with failures So the deterioration of relations probably has not yet ended And when this round of bitterness finally does play itself out, the restoration of normal diplomatic business will take tim e repercussions Diplom ats have few exam ples of specific in contacts between the two countries One is the cancellation of some American scien­ tific and cultural visits to the Soviet Union in protest over Orlov’s convic­ tion But many other things go ahead as usual As G arter has repeatedly stated. however, the a t­ the poisoning of mosphere makes it difficult to have Americans accept new agreem ents with the Soviet Union such as SALT II, the proposed strategic arm s limitations treaty fhiblic opinion polls have shown a growing U S concern about the military relationship between the Soviet Union and the United States Now the in­ creasin g ly b itte r a tm o sp h e re h is enhanced suspicion about the Russians in a deepening swing of opinion away interpretations of from optim istic detente. taken Soviet spokesmen have the offensive in arguing that the United States is endangering detente This is based on the Soviet definition of that vaguely defined idea of better re la tio n s between the superpowers The Soviet definition is being rejected increasing openness by some with American officials It is a resistance to a Soviet inter­ pretation that allows the Kremlin to help its friends in places like Ethiopia and Angola while contending that a toughening U.S. line against that help risks World War III While the tension over Africa reflects a long-term collision of interests, as well as of attitudes about what is per­ missible in global contention, the latest developments on spying are the kind that come in periodic waves. The Soviet version is that one month after a CIA woman agent, Martha Peterson, was expelled from Moscow last July, the United States began a provocation that led to the arrest of Enger and Chernayev. The Soviets agreed to keep the P eter­ son case quiet at the request of U S Am­ bassador Malcolm Toon, they say. While not commenting directly on that, officials here say that it would be un­ derstandable for Toon to have said that nothing would be gamed by making the Soviet charges public. But the U S. publicity for the arrest indictment of Enger and Cher­ and nayev, plus the charges against a Soviet diplomat who left the country, angered the Soviets. Although they did not directly link the cases, they were obviously also angered by publicity for the U.S. detection of bunging of in Moscow Electronic listening devices in an embassy chimney were detected last month and became public knowledge shortly afterward the U.S. E m b assy Officials here do not rule out the possibility that the Soviets might have other cases in their dossiers on U S es­ pionage efforts. And they are apprehen­ sive about the possibility that another American might be detained for possi­ ble exchange purposes « HTN Washington Star Italian justice By David Whitten The arrest and incarceration of former Daily Texan editor Buck H arvey s e rv e s as a sickening reminder of the cruel incompetence that pervades legal system the Italian Stricken with paranoia and still reeling from the m urder of Aldo Moro, the Italians are apparently grasping at straw s in their attem pt to quell domestic chaos, having even suspected Harvey of involvement with the Red Brigades. Yet the facts of Harvey’s arrest and detention make the entire affair even more ridiculous. Harvey was arrested at a U.S. Navy base when he attempted to purchase a stereo with money given to him by two Italian the money was nationals. When recognized as counterfeit, both he and into the Italians were taken custody and turned over to the Italian authorities. Subsequently, two Italians signed statem ents that Harvey had no idea that the money in his posses­ sion was counterfeit — statem ents which should have completely ex­ the onerated Harvey and secured his release. But rather than release Harvey, I t a l i a n c o u r t d en ied him liberty (bail) awaiting th e provisional further proceedings. To make m a t t e r s w orse, the Italian courts adjourn from July 15 through Sept. 15 Thus, if the charges are not dropped or if provisional liberty is not granted by July 15. then Harvey can look foward to having spent at minimum five months in jail on charges of which he is completely innocent. Buck Harvey is the unwitting vic­ tim of the incompetence and intran­ sigence of the Italian legal system. For those of us who know and respect Buck, it is a very sad time. \ et when Buck is ev e n tu a lly cleared of the charges and released, I have no doubt that he will have quite a tale to tell. Likely we will learn about Italy, its jails and legal system, from a n involuntary expert. Whitten, an editorial a s sis ta n t under H arvey, is now a third year law stu d en t at the U niversi­ ty and a m e m b e r o f the Texa s Law Review . firing line Libertarian reply In the June 15 article by Mark Dooley, gubernatorial candidate Pete Peterson m istakenly least one identified at source of support for his campaign This source is the Libertarian Party Many, if not most, of Peterson’s positions on the issues are reverse of Libertarian It is highly doubtful that any knowledgeable Libertarians will vote for him. besides, the Libertarian Party has its own slate of candidates — with Allen Vogel running for governor. Vogel's stance is explicitly Libertarian, and he truly deserves the support of peo­ ple who are tired of government running th eir lives and reaching into their pocketbooks. Declare your independence by suppor­ ting the Libertarian Party during our c u r r e n t bal l ot d r i v e and t he November election in Andrew McGown Young Libertarian Alliance Art welcome The University Art Museum Exhibi­ tion Program, under the direction of Dr. Donald Goodall, has been a broad and varied program which has benefited the Department of Art as a whole ... to in­ clude exhibitions on an international scale, national, regional and local scene, also to include very specialized areas of the crafts, design, ethnic folk arts, artists and artisans, who may be anonymous in art history, As an art educator. I have found the exhibition program highly stimulating and ex­ citing, especially as resource in the education of the student art m ajor and in the education of the student who is not an a r t maj or . The exhibition program has been extrem ely beneficial in the training of teachers’ the total University community and the general public have not been excluded from a special welcome that has always been a vital par t of the U n iv ersity Art Museum’s program in the exhibition of art. The growth of The Departm ent of Art over the past 15 years — from two rat- infested barracks buildings — to our present facilities cannot be overlooked. D r. G o o d a l U s e n t h u s i a s m a n d professional capabilities cannot be in a sse ssin g the ov er-all slighted academic growth and development of the Department of Art. I can only applaud these efforts. Al Nickel Professor of Art Gutenberg Bible lands in all its glory at first class University By Ronald D. GI boon H The Board of Regents has approved the purchase of a Gutenberg Bible for $2 4 million, up to $1 million of which will com e from the Available Fund of this university. The only condition re m a in in g t hat the to be m et t'hanceUor s Council raise approxim ate • ly $300,000 to complete its $1.4 million share of the purchase price And then the University will be able to acquire its gaudiest ornament yet, a monument to the misunderstanding of its own proper purpose is Ralph Spence of Tyler, chairm an of th e e x e c u t i v e c o m m i t t e e of t he Chancellor's Council, was quoted in The Austin American Statesm an as saying. ( “ It s a landmark acquisition It s ins­ tant ivy for our walls and a real moment * ip history for the whole of education in Texas” I have nothing against Mr, Spence, but wish to point out some un­ pleasant implications of his rem ark, to a a f l a i r * * - « M r S p e n c e s s t a t e m e n t t r a ppi ngs of take issue with hts assertion and at the same time to propose that, for once, the University NOT capture another trophy is characteristic of a view which appears to be held by an important segment — not large, but influential and highly visi­ ble of moneyed society in Texas. In this view, "ivy counts for something The in te lle c tu a l a c ­ com plishm ent. not accom plishm ent itself, are valued To those who CAN purchase instant ivy, that view is no doubt satisfying The painful corollary of this "instant ivy view, however, is a huge and perpetual inferiority complex. As Mr Spence reveals, the notion is abroad that this state and its university suffer from the lack of some cultural nutrient, a kind of anemia in academ e about which one thing is clearly un­ derstood dollars, applied freely, will cure it indeed they may, but only if applied in appropriate places, according to sense ble priorities Sensible priorities would place the purchase of the Gutenberg at » somewhere ahead of the $50,000 statue of the sainted Bevo, but well below needed funds for scholarships,faculty salaries, research and m eaningful library acquisitions Item The $2 4 million proposed to be spent for the Good Book is enough to have given a $540 scholarship to every mem ber, graduate and undergraduate of the May 1978 graduating class of this I diversity, 4.385 strong Row good can a book be? Item In a survey conducted by jour­ nalism students this spring, the leading cause of faculty discontent wth the University was low salaries, cited by 26 9 percent of the faculty m em bers polled as their chief complaint Another 16 7 percent listed lack of benefits as their chief complaint Item Three University special educa- tion programs, praised for their quality and utility, a r e being d ism a n tle d because their federal funds were cut off Hie l l million of Available Fund money allocated for The Big G is m ore than enough to restore the cuts, according to figures published in the Texan Item This University, along with others, must confront the problem of the declining ability of students to write acceptable English Helping students to become better w riters would be an endeavor worthy of a university of the first class The University of Michigan has committed $600,000 to a program to improve the writing ability of its un­ dergraduates, to the surprise of no one the who understands such efforts, money will be spent largely on teaching, and therefore on students A somewhat similar proposal has been put forward on this campus, calling for $80,000 That is a paltry sum. yet the proponents, ac­ ting from the best motives, are probably cockeyed optimists if they suppose they will get it. It will be interesting to see the fate of this proposal, which in relative term s costs about as much as the Book of Deuteronomy What, then is to be done'* Ask their the regents to change minds? The regents just don’t do that, the record shows, it being always presumed that all decisions have been weighed thoroughly. No hope Write to your Texas representative or senator? Pointless. It is unwise to call the wrath of the budgetary gods down upon Nineveh if you have to go on living in Nineveh Besides, those legislators who feel that extravagance is the guiding principle of higher education already know about it. and are no doubt nodding sagely as they whet their cleavers. What about per s uadi ng the a d ­ ministration to say "No, thank you” ? Impossible. It is just not in the cards for a university, which is in the business of soliciting gifts, It is thought best not to insult the people who want to give you. for example, a graven image of a castrated bovine, on the theory that those people may some day finance something useful, such as a tokamak or a quarterback to shun them At the moment, the purchase appears to be in the hands of the Chancellor’s Council If its m em bers — whose affec­ tion for the University is beyond ques­ B m tion — can be persuaded that the expen­ diture of Available Fund money for this purpose Is unwise, perhaps they will help forestall is by simply keeping their checkbooks closed. That is what I am asking here — that they simply call a halt. Should this attem pt fail, the best we can hope for is that when the volumes arrive and are sealed in their cases, un­ teachers touchable by students and alike, the Old Testam ent volume be left open to the 32nd chapter of Exodus: And Aaron said unto them, Break off the golden earrings which are in the ears of your wives, of your sons, and of your daughters, and bring them unto me. "And all the people brake off the golden earrings which were in their ears, and brought them unto Aaron. And he received them at their hand, and fashioned it with a graving tool. after he had made it a molten calf; and they said. These be thy gods. O Israel.'* Ronald D. Gibson is an instructor in the D e p a r tm e n t o f Jo u r n a lis m . The Daily Texan owes its readers an apology 'iou may not have noticed it, but we let you down in a serious way last week. and in so doing we added fuel to the p u b l i c s g r o w i n g d i s t r u s t of newspapers What we did, in journalism lingo, is sit on a story. Instead of digging for facts on a situation which several Texan staff m e m b e rs knew to e x is t, we u n ­ justifiably ignored the story. The story involved form er Texan editor Buck Harvey, who was im ­ prisoned May ll in Italy for passing counterfeit money. And while this is not your classic case of suppressing a news story to protect someone, the end result was the same. to w rite What prompted me this column was a conversation I had Satur­ day night with a friend and form er Tex­ an staff w riter now working at the Austin American Statesman. He said there was a rumor circulating at the th e T e x a n had S ta te s m e n deliberately sat on the Harvey story. He asked if this was true. t h a t The fact that several staffers knew about Bucks situation, combined with the fact that the Statesm an wrote its story because one of its re p o rters overheard a conversation in our new­ sroom, made it very difficult to deny the implications. So, I just shook my head and told him how upset I got when I heard about the situation. What happened in this instance points out one of Hie critical flaws which plague newspaper people: When an out- No excuse for sitting on story By Gary Fandlar sider is involved in something, it s the people's right to know which propels us to report it. But when that sam e inci­ dent occurs closer to home (happens to one of us I then we are not as fast on the draw It appears we apply a different set of standards to problems involving “one of our own.” When I made it clear that a story was needed on Harvey, several people then informed me that they were aw are of the story weeks ago. Two persons argued that a story was not needed, but for different reasons: one staffer said no one would rem em ber Buck, since he was editor back in 1974-75 Another per­ son argued printing a story would look as though we were playing catch-up with the other newspaper. I can t explain why the staters who were aw are of the story weeks ago didn't deem it im portant. One person said she didn t think of it in term s of a news story, another claimed that Buck’s arrest happened so long ago that it wasn t really news, and added they thought Buck had already been releas­ ed. The Texan staff is not atypical of other newspaper staffs, in fact. we are expected to make more mistakes since working on the Texan is a learning ex­ perience But these excuses only serve to rationalize the circum stances surroun­ ding the Harvey story and do little to justify it As editor. I take full responsibility for this incident It should not have happen­ ed And while it definitely was not an outright conspiracy that kept Buck's arrest out of the Texan until another paper broke the story, it was a sub­ conscious conspiracy of sorts There are two redeeming aspects of this whole affair which I subsequently take comfort in. I) that not all reporters ignore news close to home and that there was at least one reporter who heard the rumor and then took the time to check it out, and 2) when one newspaper (in this case the Texan) drops the ball as erroneously as we did, it s comforting to know that there will always be another newspaper out there ready to pick up on its mistakes. So, for those of you who had trusted us in the past to print news wherever and to whomever it happens, we apologize This was a grave indiscretion on our part and it is one which we will not repeat. F o n d l e r is T e x a n e d i t or nr cap IMT. ,mm I K A I m us mr M T H NTH AML cart iv MD F IX ‘ rn mu M OF BLACK CONM DOW IHF STUFFT// it s r n a r n OF h p u M tr, NOU OFT IN H I AF cam ■ nos rn, m ark for nm \ lim J IETff7tMh‘ TOLAN Aff Loon HON FT, JUN CV IT W dat mrnms SCAVft FIN ALIT It AMK) WAT mr urn M IF... ut ms timm m s r n we n m Tm WE BUCKS FMS m w , TD WET COULD CCT ONt m e s e ATON OF CHOPS IN ANDUHA WF HFU ARF YOD FIO W S I Dialogue: The cold breath of the HRC E ditor’s note: Each Monday a question derived from issues in the news will be printed on this page. Responses are printed in this column the following Mon­ day. We invite everyone with an opinion to respond. Last week's question was “ What should be the proper relation between the Humanities Research Center and academ ic departm ents of the U niversity?” By B«n Satterfield The Humanities Research Center is misnamed. Constantly under the sur­ veillance of uniformed policemen, fixed cam eras and secretaries that would make Cerberus seem like a lap dog, the HRC is now a cross between a museum and detention facility. I have found ab­ solutely nothing to be accessible there — and mind you, I ’m not itching to get my hands on that lock of Byron’s hair I saw or to fondle Kipling’s egg cup. I, having never understood how research is aided by viewing the nib of Oscar Wilde s pen, have no interest in the trinkets and gewgaws that the curator acquires with such relish. I just want to read books. And I can do so at the HRC (also known as the Harry Ransom Center) if patient enough. After getting past the downstairs guard, who wants my brief­ case, and obtaining clearance from a secretary who practically frisks me in the vestibule, I’m issued two sheets of yellow paper (the only kind allowed) and perm itted to enter a cavernous room where I can fill out a form and ask another secretary to locate the book for me, since I cannot enter the stacks. If the information on the form satisfies this secretary, who doesn’t like to be bothered, she then turns my request over to someone who will in due time actually fetch the book It is a witheringly cold experence, for there is something sterile, something in­ human and tomb-like about the HRC, and every tim e I go there I feel about as welcome as a child m olester at a FTA meeting. Naturally, I (who have a profound respect for books) use the facility only as a last resort, not as a sumptuous resource. Please understand: I don’t go into the HRC expecting love or respect — after a ll, I ’m th e r e on b u sin e ss. B ut something has been lost sight of. The word ‘ hum anities’’ derives from the Latin humanitas, and is a noble word; humanity, however, is missing a t the research cen ter. Those in control appear to be solely interested in making acquisitions for catalog listings to be ad­ mired by a select few. Don’t forget, soon the center will have a Gutenberg Bible (under 24-hour guard) in a show­ case — another museum piece that should draw as much attention as the King Tut exhibit. proper relation I don’t know what The HRC should be more than a public a r t g a l l e r y o r a p r i v a t e book the mausoleum should be between it and academic departm ents — I don’t even know what “ proper relations’’ are on this campus — but I believe it should serve as a genuine resource to all serious students in the humanities. If you happen to be one of these serious students and your ego can stand frostbite, try doing some research in Harry Ransom’s Center. There s a lot to from J. Frank Dobie’s saddle see, blanket to Leonard Woolf’s cufflinks. But th is sepulcher to worship the possessions That’s what they’re there for, it seems — so don t go if you expect to be recognized as a sentient human being or if you expect to use the center re m e m b e r, you a r e in Hen S a t t e r f i e l d i n is a P h D c a n ­ t h e D e p a r t m e n t o f d i d a t e E n g l i s h . Next week’s dialogue topic: Which academ ic dep artm ents should be included in the new College of Liberal Arts and bow should the new college be related to th e U n i v e r s i t y ’s o t h e r academ ic programs? Responses should be brought to the Texas of­ fices or mailed to “ Dialogue,” The Daily Texan, Drawer D, UT Station, Austin, Tex., 78712. the w r ite r ’s include P le a se telephone number. editorials THE DAILY TE XAN P a g e 5 M o nd a y, June 19/1978 An endangered law When the Supreme Court Thursday ruled comple­ tion of the Tellico Dam in Tennessee must be scrapped because the structure threatened the ex­ istence of the almost extinct snail darter, conser­ vationists beamed. But the elation may soon turn to despair. Friday the House approved $18 million for completion of the dam, a move intended to override the court*s decision to stop the project This move appears to be the first step toward what could possibly be a vigorous battle in Congress on legislation to repeal that portion of a conserva­ tion act which applies to federal agencies. Meanwhile, proponents of the dam point to past appropriations for the project which they say im ­ p lie s that ( ongress has, in effect, already repealed the 1973 act. When the Endangered Species Act was passed in 1973, C ongress viewed the value of endangered species as incalculable, Chief Justice Warren Burger said. Now, apparently, some members of Congress feel that they are able to perform calculations that will place a dollar value on a species of life. An example of this new confidence is Utah Sen Jake Gam s recent comment at a Senate public works subcommittee hearing: / I frankly don’t give a damn if a 14-legged bug or the woundfin minnow live or d ie.” One argument against the Endangered Species Act may carry a little more weight: Man is a part of nature and must conform to its laws. Nature works by evolution, so that the best adapted species sur­ vive, the poorly adapted species become extinct. Man s actions that lead to extinction of another species are entirely natural acts; they are merely indications that we are better adapted. If we try* to tamper with this natural process, saving from ex­ tinction species that are no longer naturally viable, we will do more damage to nature than we know! We will create an artificial world in which evolution itself is outlawed. This is a serious argument. But it fails to consider the sp e e d with which man acts. The natural processes of evolution and extinction are slow, nature is in no hurry. But man roars across the countryside, transforming it overnight. If we go on at the pace we have set since the industrial revolu­ tion. no other forms of life will be able to keep up with us. The lowly snail darter will be the least of our worries. The Endangered Species Act does not repeal evolution, It may be evolution s last chance in the face of power plants, dams, highways, shopping centers, fast-food restaurants and all the other glories of modem civilization. I hose who want to change the law want greater flexibility in decisions regarding conflicts between man s projects and nature's small creatures. We believe the present law provides enough flexibility. Conservationists, corporations and government agencies have worked together under the law; in nearly all conflicts a compromise has been reached that satisfies all sides. Som etimes these com ­ promises require re-establishing an endangered species in a new area; som etim es a construction project has to be redesigned. The law as it stands is a sensible vehicle for accomodating the interests of human progress and nature. The Tellico Dam project is unique. The cir­ cumstances of its design and construction, the dis­ covery of the snail darter after the project had begun, the difficulties of re-establishing the snail darter in another habitat — these factors have created a situation in which compromise has been difficult if not impossible. But the problems with this case do not justify scrapping a law that, on the whole, has provided a workable method for balancing environmental con­ cerns with man’s projects. Museum serves many interests By Roily Fearing The a r ti c le “ F a c u lty C r itic iz e Museum’’ by John McMillan in the June 14 Daily Texan was indeed appalling to me. To tell us that in addition to two former visiting professors, the critical rem arks were by “ a rt departm ent faculty members, only a few of whom are in Austin during the sum m er,” two regular faculty m em bers in a rt history, when there are 23 of us teaching this first term , is hardly enough to justify the implications of faculty criticism . Surely, a broader survey including faculty in studio and art education would have been more indicative of faculty opinion concerning Dr. Donald Goodall's directorship of the museum for 15 years. that The article implies that the m useum 's program of exhibition should have been designed more for art history faculty and courses and the exhibition program just hadn’t been good on any count. These opinions were given by a rt history faculty whose association with the departm ent is hardly long enough to make a general evaluation of such a long ten d record. During 30 years of teaching here in both studio and art education, I must say that the 15 years of the exhibition program under Dr. Goodall’s direction has been vital and stimulating for my classes. There have been times when I did not especially find every exhibition of value to my in­ terest and teaching, but I was not the only person whose needs had to be met. A museum exhibition program for a departm ent and university the size of Texas’ has to m eet many tastes and is ju s t as valuable for needs. reference and study to studio and art education as it is to art history. During the 15 years of the exhibition program there have been many marvelous and exciting exhibits under Dr. Goodall’s directorship that have lent themselves to such educational needs Indeed, dur­ ing this time a number of studio faculty have served as curators for original ex­ hibitions. It The two visiting professors quoted were at the University for one sem ester only. Both are highly respected in their fields. Both have been in museum situations entirely d ifferen t as to educational and community needs from those of this University. I have the greatest respect for Dr Agnes Mongan, her scholarship, artistic taste and judg­ ment I don’t believe she would wain this University's museum program to be tailored to that of the Fogg The program at Harvard can limit its public obligation since the Boston Museum bf Fine Arts meets community needs Austin has needed the exhibition program provided by Dr. Goodall’s direction. If this program did not always meet the teaching needs of a few specific a rt history faulty, the variation in scope of the exhibitions have served many interests; not only in the art department and the University but for numerous public school children here the city of and elsewhere, and for Austin In my opinion, and that of many educators, a state university’s museum does have an obligation to serve many; and Dr Goodall directed his efforts to that end He directed the program with utmost enthusiasm stemming from his broad knowledge of art and a fine sense of humor. Finally, his years as chair­ man were a period of vital growth and achievement for the Department of Art. F e a r i n g is a p r o f e s s o r o f art. ' You are only as free as your neighbor By L««l«y Oelaner NEW YORK — Roger Baldwin was in his study, talking of law and justice, of terrorism and Nazis, of civil rights and women’s rights and the F irst Amend­ ment, and all of a sudden, he gave a speech — impassioned, reasoned, loud “ If you can’t have a free press, and if you c a n ’t have a fre e ra d io and television,’’ and if people can’t speak freely, then, he said, his voice building, and filling out the small room, “ you haven’t got dem ocracy!” Roger N. Baldwin is still at it, a t the l i b e r t a r i a n , a g e of 94 — c iv il spokesman, watchdog From the vantage point of age and ex­ perience, he thinks that the status of civil liberties in the United States today is much better than it was several decades ago — but still in need of im ­ provement. He is especially concerned with the status of the right to free speech Baldwin founded the American Civil Liberties Union in 1920 and directed it until 1950; he is still on its advisory council. Now the ACLU is in trouble - it has lost thousands of m em bers, perhaps 30,000 by one official’s count, in the con­ troversy over the ACLU’s defense on free speech grounds of the self-styled Nazis who want to m arch in Skokie, 111., a town with many survivors of the Ger­ man concentration camps The ACLU held a “ convocation of free speech’’ here Tuesday, in part to try to repair some of the dam age by stressing anew the value of the F irst Amendment Many groups co-sponsored it, including the National Association for the Ad­ vancement of Colored People and the Newspaper Guild. Baldwin spoke at the meeting, and was honored later at a dinner The other day, he talked of Skokie and of civil liberties in general, in an inter­ view at his home here where he has liv­ ed for 45 years. He said, of the Nazis who want to march in their m ilitary-style uniforms: You can’t bar them without barring anyone else.” Legionnaires also march in uniforms, he said; “ You’re going to stop them too?” "P eople u n d e rsta n d th e ir own rights,” he said. “ If you talk to a Negro, they know they have rights they aren’t getting. If you talk to women, you find plenty of complaints about what women don’t get. If you talk to any minority, they all have a concept of their own rights.” But when it comes to other people's rights, he said, it is different. “ Lots of people don't quite un­ derstand,” he said, “ that you can’t play favorites.” “ I think it would be better if we had a stronger left,’’ he said, “ to counteract people on the right’s natural tendency not to do anything.” He said, with a verbal shrug, “ In a democracy, you go up and you go down, you go forward and you go back. That’s the way a the way is, democracy runs. I t’s all right.” *1978 New York Times t h a t ’s it T h e Da il y T e x a n Mark Richardson .......................................................... Cary Fendler Victoria Loc E d ito r ....................... Managing Editor............................................ .......................... Assistant Managing Editor Assistant to the Editor ...................................... Monty Jones Janet Peavy News Editor Martha McClure Associate News Editor Sports Editor Laura Tuma Damond Benmngfield Associate Sports Editor Arts and Entertainment Editor Kelly Kay Campus Activities Editor.................................................. Linda Tobey Scott Bowies Features Editor Photo Editor Jim Thomas Mark liooley, Carl Hoover. Donald Howard, General Reporters Michael Hurd, John McMillan. Michael Perri Karen Rosen J ann Snell, Margaret Watson Janet Wilson Scott Awbrey, John Kent, Sue Dune .............. Issue Editor ................................................................... News Assistants Marilane Nether Suzy Lampert, Marian Marshall, Jim Barton Ellen Walley .......................................................................Gary Marshall Charlie Row Steven Orback, Jennifer Petkus, Susie Grubbs Karen Billmen thai, Thomas J. Baker Berke Breathed, Gad Woods Make-up Editor Wire Editor Copy Editors Artists Photographer Editorial Assistant Kathleen Cabble ....................................................... Rum Sheffield On letters Firing luv* letters should • be typed and triple spaced • be 30 lines or less M) characters per line • address issues not personalities On columns Editorial columns should • be Ivped and triple space • be Ho hoes or less KO characters per line < <4>vii#iu HCH pr.Mitwi.T) •"h u m (hr , M u * * I'mMw jinn-* iU-prudw 1mm ut any p*rt al this {mMk-mImm is prrm**M a oI T e m Mudml p u i u atturn OfMi.MM- ..rifv H u e .rf (hr I •tv*r*4iv edirii(usir«U(M the Board of Keg en u or (he Texas 'I oden( PhMm rftKM' Hoard of Operating Trustees include name address and phone number of contributor Mail letters it. The Firing Line The Daily Texan. I>rawer D. UT Station Austin I x 78712 or bring letters to the Texan office in basement of the TSP building The Daily Texan reserves the right to edit letters to the editor for proper length and elaritv • include name address anti phone number of contributor Mail columns to Editorial Department. The Daily Texan. Drawer D. UT SLa- Hon Austin Tx 78712. or bring columns to the Texan office in the base mem of the TSP building The Daily Texan reserves the right to edit all columns for proper length and clarity. Pace 6 □ T IIK DAILY TEXAN □ Monday. June 19, 1978 '“Darkness on the Edge : of Town? ||M £ M IB ty f lf li ljl0 mnwMil Bruce H Springsteen Dark ness % On T’he Edge Of Town including: Prove It All Night Badlands Racing In The Street The Promised Land Adam Raised A Cain JC 35318 Produced by Jon la n d a u and Bruce Springsteen. New on Columbia Records and Tapes. NOW ON SALE AT THESE FINE STORES Disc Records Discount Records Discovery Records Inner Sanctum J. R. Reed Spicewood Sounds University Co-Op Zebra Records ‘C olum bia" is a trademark of CBS lite. Juneteenth Holiday honors black liberty By MICHAEL HURO Delly Texan Staff On Ju n e 19, I860, fe d e ra l tro o p s co m m an d ed by M aj. Gen G ordon G ra n g e r landed, a t G alv esto n to issu e a g en e ral o rd e r in a c c o rd a n c e w ith a p ro c la m a tio n fro m th e E x ec u tiv e of th e U nited S ta te s th a t ail slav es w ere fre e The new s w as fiv e m o n th s late, h o w ev er, sin ce P re sid e n t A b rah am Lincoln had signed th e E m a n cip a tio n P ro c la m a tio n on J a n I of th a t y e a r One h u n d red and th irte e n y e a rs la te r. T ex as b lack s still c e le b ra te Ju n e 19 a s Ju n e te e n th ” T he d ay is a lm o st e x c lu siv e­ ly c e le b ra te d by b la ck s in T ex as, although so m e m ig ra n ts to o th e r s ta le s c e le b ra te th e d ay also •’They w as ju s t like birds, ' one fo rm e r sla v e said. “ They ju st The fo rm e r slav e w as quoted in Alwyn B a r r 's “ Black flew T exans, A H istory of N eg ro es in T ex as, 1528-1971.’* Many who left took only the clo th es on th e ir b ack s an d began to se a rc h for fa m ilie s and frie n d s fro m w hom they had been se p a ra te d Som e freed sla v es chose to sta y on th e p la n ta tio n s, becau se they didn t know w h ere to go o r w hat e lse to do. It w as a beginning of p o litical, eco n o m ic an d so cial r e s tr u c ­ tu rin g for black T exans Ju n e te e n th c e le b ra tio n s in th e la te 1800s a ttr a c te d a s m an y as 5,000 people to la rg e tow ns for sp eech es, p a ra d e s, b aseb a ll, p ic­ nics and o th e r a c tiv itie s. As m any as 1,000 people took ra ilro a d ex c u rsio n s ea ch y e a r to D esp ite th e new s of em an c ip atio n in Ju n e 1865, m an y blacks w ere held in sla v e ry through fall of th a t y e a r c itie s or fa irs O th ers, h ow ever, le ft the p la n tatio n s im m e d ia te ly upon h e a r ­ ing th e good new s A T ex as n ew sp a p er once said of th e c e le b ra tio n s th a t on Ju n e te e n th . “ th e re w as a sc a rc ity of black p hysique, giving the s tr e e ts q u ite th e a p p e a ra n c e of a n o rth ern c ity .” . w, Steve Pumphrey, TSP Staff Relaxing after BBQ at St. Mary’s Colony’s Juneteenth celebration -------------- campus news in brief----------------- * Culture weeks to begin T he T ex as Union w ill begin G e rm a n C u ltu re Week and R u ssia Week M onday. H arald in s tru c to r B eck er, a s s is ta n t of G e rm a n ic la n g u ag es, w ill co n d u c t a sandw ich s e m in a r e n title d “ B aro q u e C h u rch es and M o n a sterie s of G e r m a n y ” from noon to I p rn. in th e T ex ­ as Union G o v ern o r s Room . C ary l E m e rso n of th e S lavic L a n g u a g e d e p a r tm e n t w ill p e rfo rm a vocal re c ita l of R u s s ia n s o n g s by M o d e s t M ussorgsky and will be a c ­ c o m p a n ie d by th e p ia n is t M ic h ae l Del G iu d ic e . T h e se m in a r w ill begin p ro m p tly a t n o o n t h e U n i o n E astw o o d s Room i n ANNOUNCEMENTS CENTER FON EUROPEAN STUDIES ANO feature DEPAR TM EN T OF SLAVIC L A N ­ Ivan me Terrible. GUAGES Part I" as part of the Russian Film Series from 7 to IO p m Monday in Communes tion Building A2 320 The film, directed by Sergei Eisenstein in 1944, is also part of the summer institute Russia 'is Past and Present" TEXAS C IR C U IT ANO THE CITY OF AUSTIN present Bill Joyce and Carolyn Osborn, who will read from their poetry, at 7 p m Monday at Symphony Square. I t o t Red River St Open readings will be held at 6 p m Admission is $1 BAPTIST STUDENT UNION will hold English conversation classes at 7 p.m. every Monday at the Baptist Student Center, 2204 San Antonio St. There it en opportunity for group and ir dividual help COLLEGE OF HUMANITIES 8UMMER INSTITUTE IN LITERATURE presents the second in a series 'The Art of Inter­ pretation " Peter Brooks, professor at Yale University, will speak on Freud's case history; "The Wolf-man." T E X A S U N IO N F IL M C O M M IT T E E presents "Jason and the Argonauts" at 9 p rn Monday rn the Union Patio Special effects highlight this mythical tale about Jason and his search for the golden fleece Admission free CAN YOU SPARE S5000 FOR MONTHS? WE WILL PAY YOU P E R A N N U M U n i v e r s i t y CREDIT U N IO N 476-4676 North wins Open ( U P I ) D E N V E R B ig Andy N orth stru g g le d back fro m a h ea rt-p u m p in g strin g of th ree bogeys and a double bogey Sunday and w ent on to w in a i s Open cham p io n sh ip th a t no one e ls e se em ed to w an t by sinking a 5-foot p u tt on the final hole to ed g e D ave S tockton and J C. Snead by a shot the NORTH, le a d e r a f te r th e second and third rounds, a p p e a re d in co n tro l w hen he took a 5-shot lead w ith a 12- foot b ird ie p u tt on th e 13th hole But it w as a stru g g le th e r e s t of th e way and he needed th a t th e life-saving putt on final hole to sa lv ag e a bogey and p rev en t a th ro e-w ay 18- hole playoff w ith Snead and S tockton on M onday N orth, a w inner only once befo re in six y e a rs, ste p p ed aw ay fro m the ball tw ic e an d s c r a tc h e d his h ead b e fo re t o u c h i n g o f f a f i n a l l y tu m u ltu o u s ovatio n w ith his c ritic a l p u tt T h at g av e him a final round sc o re of 74 and left h im at 285. one o ver p a r for th e tou rn am en t S tockton and Snead, both T H E D A IL Y T E X A N sports Page 7 Monday, June 19, 1978 t h e ro u n d s t a r t i n g th r e e stro k es behind N orth, each closed w ith a 72 to s h a re se cond place a t 286 Two stro k es f a r t h e r b a c k w e r e T o m the Weiskopf, who eq u a lle d b e s t round of th e c h a m ­ pionship w ith a 68, and H ale Irw in, the first-ro u n d le ad e r, who had a 70 N O R T H , W H O had s a id before th e round his destin y w as in his own hands, in the end sta v ed off a field of il­ lustrious c h a lle n g e rs sim ply because no one e ls e w as up to the ch a llen g e A fter g ettin g b ird ie s on the fourth and fifth holes. N orth left the O pen ch a m p io n sh ip up for g rab s by stru g g lin g along w ith five bogeys and his only double bogey in fo u r d ay s But Stockton, a cool v e te ra n w ith two IM A cham pionships, w as unable to ta k e ad v a n ta g e as he m an ag ed only tw o birdies for th e round Snead had but one b ird ie, a 35-foot p u tt on No 6 When it w as obvious N orth w as sta rtin g to com e a p a r t, Snead could do nothing m o re than p a r the final nine holes. ( I ARY P L A Y E R , a w inner of 114 w o r l d w i d e t o u r ­ n am en ts and only one shot behind at the round, was p aire d w ith N orth but w as unable to apply the p re ssu re P la y e r blew up w ith a 77 to finish w ell back a t 2 8#, taxi w ith Ja c k N icklaus (73), lorn W atson (70), Andy B ean «74), Johnny M iller (74) and Hilly K ra tz ert (73). th e s ta r t of N icklaus, too, w as unable to th r e a t m ount an y k ind of d esp ite getting b ird ie s on th e first and third holes In m o st untypical fashion, he double bogeyed both the fo u rth and 18th holes On S a tu rd a y he had a triple bogey. IF T H E R E WAS any con­ solation for S tockton, a 36- year-old C alifornian who e n ­ jo y s hunting in C olorado, the $19,750 h e ea rn ed h e re enabled him to becom e g o lf s 18th m illionaire. N orth, a fo rm e r high school b ask etb a ll s ta r whose only previous to u r win c a m e th e W e s tc h e s te r ('la ssie la st y e a r, e a rn e d $45,- 000. in This w as the 20th tim e since 1941 th at the O pen w as won w ith above p a r fig u res. Petrizzi tops Al A W field By D E B O R A H K. M A N N Dally Texan Staff D ebbie I e trizzi shot into A1AW golf h isto ry S a tu rd a y a s she N ancy Lopez w as th e f ir s t - b ec am e th e second fre sh m a n e v e r to w in the ch am p io n sh ip title, leading the e ig h th -ra n k ed L onghorns to a fo u rth -p la ce finish P etriz zi fired a low 68. to give T ex as the to u rn a m e n t re c o rd in th e la st round, 294. p e tr iz z i’s to tal of 291 w as th re e s tro k e s a h e ad of second-place J u lie S tan g e r from A rizona T ex as tied w ith F lo rid a In te rn a tio n a l for th ird a t 1,223 a f te r going into the la s t round in se v en th place. H ow ever T ex as lost th e playoff and finished fo u rth MIAMI SHOT a four-day to ta l of 1,218 to w in its second con­ secu tiv e title F lo rid a finished a t 1,221 for second SMU w as one shot behind T ex as in fifth p la c e w hile A rizona finished sixth A rizona S ta te w as sev en th and T ulsa c a m e in eig h th “ I rn ju s t tickled to d e a th ,’’ said C oach P a t W eis ’ K o r a n in- expe; ienced fie s h m a n it w as a trem en d o u s a c c o m p lish m e n t ” sh e said of P etriz zi. Weis added. “ I ’m eq ually p leased w ith th e w hole te a m And I rn e x tre m e ly proud. ' W eis sa id the L o n g h o rn s’ w o rst round F rid a y , w hich put th e m in sev en th p lace, only m a d e th e te a m m o re d e te rm in e d "T H E Y HAD sh o t tw o good rounds p rio r to th at o n e and they knew they could do it. T hey pu t it to g e th e r a s a gro u p ” W eis said. L in co ln ’s 303 tie d h er fo r 10th p lace and sh e and P e triz z i w e re both n am ed to th e a ll-A m e ric a n te a m . P etrizzi is not only a fre sh m a n to T ex as, sh e is also a to the U nited S ta te s a f te r living in th e P hillipines 'fresh m an for 18 years. I w as ex tre m ely su rp rise d All I w anted to do w as b re a k 80,’' said P etrizzi, whose y e a r 's a v e ra g e w as 80 I MADL m y m ind up to b e p re p a re d an d I w orked r e a l h ard a f te r school w as out I felt p re p a re d , but I d id n 't think I would win, she continued Alter shooting 74 and 70 in th e first tw o rounds, P etriz zi d ropped to 79 the th ird day. I re a lly felt the p re ssu re th a t d a y ,” she explained. “ I w as a little nervous On the last d ay I had nothing to lose. If I finished second o r third. I still would be happy. I s o rt of felt like I would play w e ll.’’ H O W EV ER, the p re ssu re m ounted S atu rd ay to w ard th e end of th e round, and P etrizzi bogeyed on the 17th hole. I s ta rte d thinking too m uch ab o u t w hat would happen a fte r the to u rn a m e n t,’’ P etrizzi re m e m b e re d And a f te r calm ing down, she b irdied th e 18th hole to win. T hey gave m e a h ard tim e, te asin g m e ab o u t being a fre sh m a n , P etrizzi said ab o u t h e r te a m m a te s “B ut they w ere behind m e IOO p e rc e n t.” P etriz zi said her up-and-down y e a r w as a ttrib u ta b le p a rtly to th e m ove to the S tate s and th e a d ju s tm e n t to college. It w as a lot of d iffe re n t f a c to rs ,” she said. “ Hut I knew I w anted to play well for n atio n als I w orked a lot on m y putting, di m u g and chipping and I knew w h at the c o u rse w as lik e My pu ttin g helped trem en d o u sly My goal n ex t y e a r will be to defend m y title a s best I con *• she sa id s action---- -v warm-ups ] North blasts out of a sand trap on the second hole but still m anaged a par 4 He later blasted out of a trap on 18 to win the U.S. Open by one shot. — UPI Telephoto I e x a s w as the only te a m b esid es ch a m p io n M iam i to h ave tw o p la y e rs m a k e A ll-A m erican THE AUTO AUDIT Professional M aintenance an d Service on Imported Cars Porsche - Audi - Dasher - Scirocco Honda • B rakes • Shocks • M ufflers • E ngine R epairs • T u n e -U p s • Electrical • Fuel Injection 3 0 0 5 G u a d a lu p e In th e UT A rea 4 7 4 - 0 6 1 0 PRE-LAW? PRE-PA RE. NEXT ISA T IS JULY 15th Phone 478-6975 for infor- motion on how to im­ prove your score. We offer 24 hours of instruction, oil taught by atto rn ey s, designed to give you tho a s tro points you need! Coll for d o ss schedule. LSflT REVIEW COURSE or thus, ac 478-6975 Natural C risp, delicious m ake-your-ow n salads are now . the sp ecialty a t the T exas U nion S an ta R ita R oom from 1 1 :3 0 a m. - 1 :3 0 p.m . M onday th ro u g h Friday. S p in ac h , a se lectio n o f co ld , sliced vegetables, sp ro u ts, cheese, and dressings are available as well as fresh fruits and w hole w h eat breads, l ea o r c o ffee is included in the $ 2 .0 0 price. S m o o th ie s are $.75. ~ 7 c x a x . 'U n io n Santa %2oo rn HELP WANTED e Ushers — flexible hours, paid p o s i t i o n s , e x c e l l e n t e x ­ i n t r o d u c t o r y p e r i e n c e , m eeting M o n d a y , June 19, 7:30 P.M. C om e to 1701 Red River. ■TjCJ £ « •'« * « < O f r o u t 41 4U*tlM ___________ I n e SPECIAL EKEN TS GENTER An AHirm otivo A c tton-1 q u a l Opportunity E m p l o y , ♦ COUNSELING CENTER OFFERS PERSONAL GROWTH EXPERIENCES SINGLES ENRICHMENT — This group is fo r students who o re living alone. It is designed to help p articipants loom bow to m ake living alone a positive ex p erien ce. Group will m oot on Tuesdays 3-5 p.m., Juno 76th to August 1st (4 sessions). COUPLE RELATIONSHIP ENRICHMENT - Far couples com m itted to th eir relation ship w ha wish to im prove their skills rn com ­ municating. dealing w ith anger en d conflict more effectively, and who wont to heighten their a w aren ess of th eir p artn er. Group will bo offered os a 2-day w orkshop, tho w eekend of July 74. RELAXATION/STRESS M ANAG EM ENT WORKSHOP - A 7-hour w orkshop to teach deep relax atio n and s tre s s m anagem ent techniques. This w orkshop will ho offered sev eral tim es this sum m er, tho first time on June 74, 2-5 p.m. Parsons /nforested in a ny of those program s should come by tho Counseling Center, WA408 303, or coll 47 J -35 J 5 to register and or obtain further information ■■ Ag. ***, ( UNUSUAL EYEWEAR ) Vt Price Sale Last 2 Days GIVENCHY ^ufvlmbe/g^FaiNon fqeuoc* Char* P i e r r e C a r d i n e y e w e a r SSS5** PLAYBOY Sunglass Collection Contemporary fashions in eyewear 4 5 1 - 1 2 1 3 No. 8 Jefferson Sq. 38th & Jefferson S A V IN G S UP <0 * 3 ° ° Ccrmne Eorlf 4*- B est Selections / C L A S S I C A L - fbP* f o l k .*j a z .z , Sale - level LiMifcecHTrwe • Ll M\ied Quantity Visi i our te I3EC0RD fc* TAft: Peftt SdCotJi lev* I '7i*U v& t4tiy lAflfUllllEUG W A Y S »aK sex Sp orts W ear Stramt Level V* » Mw,— Chorgi Mitier Charge Free I Hr. F o rk in g w / % 2 OO P u rc h a se Page 8 □ TH E D AILY T E X AN □ Monday. June 19, 1978 BEST SELLERS San Antonio whips Austin, 30-25 STOREHOUSE t* rn rn mm 8 "W > i B i f f ■ m i ■ ■ ■ ■ i 3 BOOKCASES, $179. C o m p le te three unit wall g ro u p as shown Is $179 E a ch re a d y to assem b le unit Is 12" d e e p , 30" w id e. 72" high The b a s ic o p e n unit with adjustable shelves is $62., if p u rch a se d separately. Buy three or m ore a n d they're $55 e a c h The storage d o o r kit, as shown, a d d s $14 to the p ric e o l the b a s ic o p e n unit Secretary kit, sixteen inch depth, a n d extra shelves a re also a v a ila b le Viny) c lo d finishes a re white, walnut, light or dark b u tch e r b lo ck Each unit c o m e s u n assem bled In a box, re a d y fo r you to p ick up a n d put together. storehouse Mtgihtt m d M o t t tot 4£rV Make a choice and save. Why pay for 36 color prints when you only like 10 of them? Ask Photo Processors to pull a "contact proof sheet of your next roll of color negatives. Contact proof sheets show all of your exposures panted on 8 x 1 0 color paper. (1 proof shoot per roll) Look them over carefully and select only the exposures you want for enlargements. This way you end up with only the pictures you really like. The exposures chosen will bo color-corrected and custom printed on borderless Kodak paper (Excluding 110 film) In the long run it will save you a lot more money for a lot more picture Color Proof Sheet only $2.98 (plus small film processing charge ) OFFER EXPIRES MONODY, JULY 31, 1978 photo processors Inc. Photo Processors. Inc 7909 Congress • 472*6926 “We develop some great ideas.” By DAM O N D B E N N IN G F IE L D Daily Texan 8iatf T inrun* is usually the thin* that suffer* the most when f - Iu. a c i s w . i s m S I 2 - 4 74 -S 4 I S nrtn 16.00 CASH- ” — - $6.00 DOLLARS CASHI Free 32 oz. Coke with a 16" one item pizza on request. One Coke per pizza. Offer good until I AAA Wednesday night June 21, 1978 C a m p u s 476-7181 En field 474-7676 Riverside 447-6681 H y d e Park A re a 458-9101 F re e delivery in service area 4 p.m. to I a.m. weekdays; 4 p.m. to 2 a m. weekends. Yow can save a life by bern? a blood plasma donor It only fake* I Vi hours and you can e v e r y 72 d o n a t o h ou rs. You wi l l rocoi vo $5.00 each time you donato. IF you bring this ad in with you, yow will receive a SI .OO bonus otter your First dorsa- I AUSTIN BLOOD COMPONENTS. INC Rhon* 477-373 | 510 We»j 29th 1 AM-A JO M L Toes. A Fit I AM-2 JO PJL 4 ' Lopez wins No. 5 — sports shorts s Houston-Austin tie Frisbee series More than 120 Frisbee enthusiasts from across Texas turned out Saturday and Sun­ day to try their skills, sip beer in and e n jo y Waterloo Disc ( lassie 78” at the sun Zilker and Waterloo Parks i t was a far better turnout than we expected.” said (lin s Baker, member of the Lone Star Frisbee Club, which sponsored the tournament. Mark Keeney and Ziggy King of the Dallas-Fort Worth Club won the Double Disc Court event, as Houston beat Austin in the U ltim a te Challenge to tie the series between cities at a game apiece Mark Keeney won the Maximum Nail Delay, spin­ ning the Frisbee 56 seconds. Ricky McCurlev of Dallas took the grand prize of $40 in the men s Frisbee Golf, while Janet Bea of Austin won the women's competition. Paul Schertz of Texas A&M won the closest-to-the-hole event with a throw two feet off the mark plan which will be presented to the International Olympic ( ommittee at its meeting in Montreal Monday. The memorandum of agree­ ment, subject to ratification by the governing bodies of each organization, takes any financial pressure off the city of Los Angeles for its hosting of the 1984 Summer Olympics "In the judgment of both parties, (the agreement) will satisfy the conditions upon which the International Olym­ pic Committee granted the 1984 Olympic (James to los angeles at the recent IOC meetings in Athens.” the com­ mittees said in a joint state­ ment The two bodies agreed that the games will be the respon­ sibility of the Los Angeles Olympic Committee and not the city itself Cti# mon nMwim wf See pinball coupon pg. 4 of Images Monday, June 1^ 1 9 7 8 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ P a n * 9 LESSONS PRO SHOP G R O U P & P R IV A T E 24 Hr. Stringing 'fy s liiw u m ts $ a n i n s t r u c t i o n N EXT C U S S E S B E G IN JU N E 14th YO UTH C LA SSES B E G IN JU N E 26th BOAST, IZOD, FRED PERRY, ADIDAS Tennis Wear S tudent Discounts Caswell letinisC enter 24th & Lamar 478-6268 tonight KURT VAN SICKLE Longest H ap p y Hour in Tow n Double Shots - 2 for I - — t J l p 11 am-8 pm y Novor a Cover Charge N o w In our now b u ild in g in R ivortow no M o il (right behind th* Old Bath Room J LOOSE DIAMOND SALE $3,800 OO I 30 Ct Pear LOI Ct Round $2,163.00 82 Ct Round $1.244 00 65 Ct Marquise $896 00 53 Ct. Round $676 00 32 Ct Round $269.50 15 Ct Round $ 145.OO ( to th er sizes and graded available from $20. E S T A T E P L A T I N U M < RING I 16 Ct. center LOO Ct. Side-stones W S I F Color $4,750 00 D O BIE M A U . 2021 Guadalupe 477-9943 ftvt iHirking in lh*hie ( « < u u |f# Austria, Peru edged in World Cup BUENO S A IR ES (U P I) - Holland, Italy, Argentina and Brazil emerged from Sun­ day's action as the favorites to reach the World Soccer Cup final. S in g le - g o a l d e f e a t s eliminated Austria and Peru. West G erm an y saw its chances badly damaged and Poland stayed alive with a mathematical chance. Four games Wednesday will decide the two finalists. LA-USOC reach agreement NEW YORK (U P I) - Of­ ficials of the Los Angeles Olympic Organizing Com­ mittee and the United States Olympic Committee reached an agreement Sunday on a Maybe you can’t erase poverty, but you can make a start... SIGN UP NOW FOR INTERVIEW SENIORS/GRADS INFORMATION BOOTH WEST MALL REPS ON CAMPUS NOW! MON-WED JUNE 19-21 Good Morning, Austin! yow nerving New Orleans Style Breakfast r n !,T v . « * a Sun,tuy ,ht ***** ,u *«»infill r .1/4 ft Sift i ft I i , bra ( J o . , , ,,j m idnight I J H ltxht Ham of I »njrr vat mmm *■' ■****■ Texas Union Events MONDAY A ll U nion H ours. Art Exhibit: PA PER DOLLS A N D O TH ER TRAUM AS. The exhibit by Steven G olden, Austin artist, w ill be on d isplay through July 8 in tho Union Art G alle ry . Fine Arts C om m ittee. N oon to I p.m . Perform ance: C a ryl Emerson an d Michael Del Giudice. As part of Rus­ sian Culture W e e k , C aryl Emerson, vocalist, of tho Slavic Language Department and M ichael Del G uid ice, pianist, w ill perform a recital of Russian songs by Modest Mussorgsky. M ustorgsky, h a vin g m ade the folic song into an art tong, creates truly Russian m edium in vocal music since tho songs revolve around everyday life. Texas U nion 2.102. This sem inar w ill begin prom ptly a t noon. N oon to I p m . B A R O Q U E C H U R C H E S AN D M O N A S T E R IE S OF G E R M A N Y . Harold Becker, Assistant Instructor in tho G erm anic Languages Department, will speak and present a slide sh ow . This sem in ar it groat for those of you w ho have traveled or will be traveling in G e rm a n y in the n ear future. Texas Union 3.116. 7 to IO p m . Russian Film Series: IV A N THE TERRIBLE, PART I. Directed by Sergei Eisenstein in 1944, this film w ill be show n as part of the sum m er institute on Russia pretented by the C onter for Euro pean Studies an d the Slavic Languages D epartm ent C M A 2.320. Free 9 p m C inem a U n d er the Stars: JA S O N A N D THE A R G O N A U T S . G ra b a beer an d join the fun on the U nion Patio. Free. FO R ADDITIONAL INFORM ATION CALL 471-5653 INCREDIBLE SUMMER SALE 20% off everything (except cards) 50% off “ Plague D ogs” I . ____ K n o p f DOBIE: MALL 2021 GUADALUPE 4 7 2 - 1 5 3 4 I * K l k l ^ U H Y L l SAVE WITH THESE VALUABLE COUPONS Lopez raises her fist in triumph after sinking a first-round 20-foot birdie putt. — UPI Telephoto cappuccino Lea Amis Sidewalk Cafe 2 til) A S a n A n t o n io T H E TEX A S TAVERN Cinema Under the Stars presents JASON AND t h e ARGONAUTS Free Union Patio 9 p.m. ARBY S IS A... big juicy fresh wholesome lean luscious delicious CH AN G E OF TASTE! S A V E W IT H TH ESE V A LU A B LE C O U P O N S S A V E W IT H TH ESE V A L U A B L E C O U P O N S S A V E W IT H TH ESE V A LU A B LE C O U P O N S 2 Mgs $ | 60 ROAST BEEF SANDWICHES K O M I S July IS, 1978 Thi* cou p on g ood for on ly tw o sa n d w ich es. G o o d at a ll A rb y 's in A u stin , W aco, K illeen a n d Tem pi* | » -- 2 Myr * \ SUPER RO AST BEEF SANDWICHES K O M I S July IS, 1978 This cou pon g ood for o n ly tw o sa n d w ich e s. G o o d at a ll A rb y 's in A u stin , W aco , K illeen a n d Te m p le S A V E W IT H TH ESE V A LU A B LE C O U P O N S S A V E W IT H TH ESE V A LU A B LE C O U P O N S 2 Myr!1 I 60 ROAST BEEF SANDWICHES EXPIftfS July 18, 1978 2 Mifr*i** SUPER ROAST I H SANDWICHES K O M IS July IS, 1978 This coupon good for on ly tw o s a n d w ich e s G o o d at a ll A rb y s in A u s tin , W aco, K illee n o n d Tem p le R I I I I I I I I I i i ■ i i i i i T I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I ‘ I 60 2 Mgs* *1 ROAST BEEF SANDWICHES IXPIBIS July 18, 1978 This coupon g ood for on ly tw o sa nd w ich es. G o o d of a ll A rb y 's in A u stin , W oco, K illeen o n d Tem ple S A V E W IT H TH ESE V A LU A B LE C O U P O N S 2 Mgs* * I 60 ROAST BEEF SANDWICHES K O M IS July IS, 1978 I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I This cou p on g ood tar on ly tw o sa n d w ich e s. G o o d a f a ll A rb y 's in A u stin . W aco , Kiloton a n d Tem p i* This cou p on g ood for on ly tw o sa n d w ich es. G o o d at a ll A rb y 's in A u stin , W aco, K illeen a n d Te m p le COUPONS VALID THROUGH July 18, 1978 AT THESE LOCATIONS: 5400 BURNET ROAD 1715 GUADALUPE 4411 SOUTH LAMAR ROCHESTER, N Y. (UPI) — Rookie sensation Nancy Lopez went into the LPGA record book Sunday bv win­ ning the $75,000 LPGA Bankers Trust Classic at Loc- tus Hill Country Club with a 5- under-par 214 for her fifth straight tournament victory. The triumph, her seventh' ot the season, also shatters Je r r y P a te s rookie a ll­ professional money winning record by $234 By taking home the $11,250 top prize, the Roswell, N M pro s total ear­ nings rose to $152,336 for the year. Lopez, entering the final round tied for third place and three shots behind leader Jane Blalock, carded a 4-under-par 69 for the final 18 holes. Her round included five birdies, a bogey and several clutch shots that saved par. B l a l o c k , in h er 10th’ professional season, fired a 1- over-par 74 for a second plac tie with Debbie Massey at 3- under-par 216. “ I just feel relieved that this is all over,’' a smiling Lopez said. “ I wanted to break the record I wanted to break it real bad I felt the most pressure I ve ever felt on Ute back nine. ” The spectators who follow­ ed Lopez around the 6.206- yard, par-73 layout under mostly sunny skies gave her a one-minute ovation as she ap­ proached the 18th green. Lopez, wearing her lucky green and white outfit, said the par-5 17th hole she birdied was crucial. “ The birdie on the 17th was the real key hole for me,” the rookie said. She hit a chip shot about 25 feet from the pin and then sank a dramatic putt to send the huge gallery into loud cheers. “ I really got chills all up and down my back and arms after I made that birdie,” a beaming Lopez said. “ It was great.” No 'kjt'k'k'g * M O N (STARTING AT 5 p.m.) * $ 1 . 0 0 } PITCHKR J X- LONE STAR/OLD MILWAUKEE * *- RST LEVEL DOBIE MALLj^. k ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ k Red W in g SHOE STORE 5504 Burnet Rd. 454-9290 OUTDOOR BOOTS FOR MFN I WOMEN Large Selection of Sizes W H E R E FIT C O M E S F IR S T " ED ING S H O E S T O R E , „ W l J J T 'HL P Q * I A H PUftN W J tN IS H tO A fA P T M E N T S ■ n IR M ! SERVICES HELP WANTED TYPING Mt*«ellanaou»-Fof Sol* i t A p *. 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W alk to campus, all features, ium m pr and fall rat*s, 2907 W a it Avenue . 4741712 MotorcydeFo# Sal# 74 H O N D A < H Ma) Ale. t m M a rt r u m r nt KNO mil** ***0 nm 4J4 MJI #«t IO p m M I 7477 A tle . 1*71 N O K l O N * * 0 m ile k M A I i t awa N»*t »»tt*i 414 0711 J i m * * I o m m Anda HODO I IWX! ut t o r i av vat# ‘ 7* H O N D A 7VO A N u Ar » v i a t t* . 4*1 7*14 f * i i m y m in t w ar ra n iy , r a . v ii tid 11 m n b a i t 74 H O N D A **0 IMW * ' k a v ln 444 74 M ar 4*1 IO** 71 i U / U P I O I tau haw f r o n t B r# n a * I N im ftatv P h one vat I M I B k y « I * P o t S a l * P L K S T W f tN O IO N P D (A ttA ftt t a u d itio n l l in f i# m A < a ll l u t t u i Ie ta lk or vee t i 47* 1471 b u y r ie B k t O K I i N I B U V e t I I N r ltv IAP B i m e 471 I U * 4 *« * * 4 .' < l l * t | tim f o l i a r I „ » w LARO! St SELECTION GF M O T O B E C A N E BICYCLES IN AU S T IN F R E E W H E E L I N G B I C Y C L E SHOP 477*6846 2404 SAN G A B R I E L Star*o F w t Sold L iK L t L S i t K I O i eoA.i a b tl ty p a l of l i e f AO e»> u i p i i ta n I W e boy e n d v ail u v e d a u o iiiftiA fti and van U e t e i i p * i l * a n d a i I Afcvi.i tev 4 ie 0 *47 t i l t M a d t < . r > I t u K M ABI I i by PanaVi'fUi & r# A t v a ..n y * 44! U M I V a l and tex ftn>dua IW D I M h i t i a m t J KKfdviwavAi v p tP lA . t lita fim e w a rra n ty I t * * ea.B or tH>vt «**#» 4*4 M U to n d ltio n MvttcaLfor Sold OOOC' BK AC T K I prana. * V i * n * n t fttr b a y m n e r v M IO # 7 } 447.' P t v o t o o r a p h y - Far Sold N o Copy Apt* Far Sal# TW C i A t * ftAAit y iio d B o m # . C a tiv o t * m * u v p * . ad I et ye w h it# rn * ) # navN ffed A tt . 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( a b l e t i l * A K l * I V l u m m i i . a . a m . e v . m a l l x o m p < a . itaye< A i l 0S4$ A C T i v S 3 )I K e d R iv e r HUS p lu v £ m a a y e 4 ? 4 d ttS A C T V t IBPI H # m p B fii KA S plu> f m a n a g e r 474 **50 r n * ., aye# 4?4 SASO fn a n a y a r 414 SASO A C T V U T M I W M H * KAS p ly * C A C T t x le w M em pB .it KAS p i i d I Th ro# O aks * 0 * W MTB HAS p tu * 8 . m a n a g e r A U S M I T he W e tte r n * r .OO* w a m p u m K W a n d *TSS p ig * 8 m * n 0f * r 477 0 *4 * M am pB .ti p « r k A p rs IT M A t n t M A m p ft'ii K I S p tu » t m a r ia t a r 477 OOM A llo ra n tin g for t a li i O P A D G I TT ASA 4*21 Diplomat Apts. S u m m e r S p e c i a l I BR f u r n i s h e d ‘ 155 Walk to Cam pui 472-5974 Continental Apts. - Summer Rate - 2 BR Furn. $ 1 9 5 Shuttle Corner Nico Pool - Patio Fall Loafing Too 9 1 0 E. 4 0 4 5 1 - 4 1 3 7 LA PAZ APTS. Summer Special* I BR Furn. $ 1 6 0 • • 2 BR Furn $ 1 9 0 • Shuttle I Blk • Nice Pool, Patio • Fall Leasing Too 401 W 3 9 4 5 2 -5 4 9 1 EL CAMPO Summer Special • I BR Furn. $160 • 2 BR Furn. $190 • Fall Leasing Too 305 W. 39 452-I5J7 VILLA SO LA N O APTS. - Summer Special • I BR Furn. $165 • 2 BR Furn. $115 • Shuttle Corner • Intramural Reid Across Street 51st A Guadalupe 451-5865 2 2 0 7 Leon Apts. • Summer Specials • I BR Furn. $160 • 2 BR Furn. $230 • Walk to Campus • Nice Pool & Patio • Fall leasing Too 2207 Leon 478-5057 IBR *165 W alk to Campus f e w ii if f r # f‘ CM CA B e a u tifu l f u r n it g r # a u d d r s p a t I f it c a f pa* B u n t-in PB01 AA* ft A (it h a y -H 'SAW* U A llftfty Of p a t.* w a tt# yay r u g f# p a id MOI W#d M f*## 4 /4 I * JO 471 AS) J Central Properties R E B A T E E s t r a d a Apts. 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Summ er M ulat tra m J I M , la m a re m p h le a t t p e u a h t e rn u p p e r chut •rn* anrf te ll ut new ttude nt* » • • • • - - • 4 4 t l l t f t * l Free Sarvira Parking Trontportation HABITAT HUNTERS hm m m p l 4 tm r v ic m %(>»< t m in m y in c o m p /m a m s w i t h #4t r a n t o s h u t t l e l o c m t o r P r * l # o w r v y t o t f o il S um m m i A I 'BAW VT*,, 474-1532 EL CID Student Special I BR Furn. $ 1 5 5 Shuttle Front Door Fail Looting Alto 3 7 0 4 Sp aadw ay 4 5 3 - 4 8 8 3 M A R K X X - Summer Special - • I BR Furn. $ 1 6 0 • 2 BR Furn. $ 1 9 5 • Shuttle 2 Blkt. ► Nica Pool - Patio » Fall Leasing Too 3 8 1 5 G u a d a lu p e 4 5 2 -8 4 0 9 Hyde Park Apts. — Summer Rate§ — • Iff. Furn. $129 • I BR Furn. $139 • 2 BR Furn. $165 • Shuttle Front Door • City Tennis Courts A Pool Across Street 4 4 1 3 S p eedw ay 4 5 8 - 2 0 9 6 L ! V 6 *N c o m fo r t I b lo c « fro m c a m p o i ib r, i l l s p ip y e m c S w tih a r N o 219 4 TI S M * I l i o n A e o n L a m a r a lt a p f* Q u ia t if t u t t la b u l d ow M O w IJT Clove *0 ftu m m a r ip a c ia i t S u fr m a r r v t n ta t! ICI 4S4 Vee -r a- a y a r * t t i l l W 0474 474 A t li lo th No S P A N IS H o a k s A ith a D u v a l, C A C H f- 4 SA 7414 Ib r, [.OOI x'a b l* on v h u ttl* . KS S p iu i 'B K S U I T E M A T E 1*0 m o 4sa 4.aa I B lo c k to U T U N I TC P F ( T E D V A C A N C Y S m a ll, lu * u ry 4)05 Speed way, m o n e y e r No 203 4S« 40J7 ort vB u ttle Ib r f N T if- L D A K t A , on e b e d r o o m w pool. tw o t.« ft.or.,rn C to le v h u t tl* p a rk Sac P a u lo 472 *1 5 * 476 4 *9 * i m la rg e d i s p o s a l , i t -J, Brey, I B f, PE P P E CT L O C A T IO N , r o o m , C A C h le p o r e te a r pet.-. I, c a b le g a l w a te r oa ,d W a lk lo c a m p u s or shut He N o p e n 4 7 2 *4 *7 2 0 'I S u er es See m o n e y e r a tta r 4 p m SISO lu m m a r ra te s l a u n d r y i 4 J B K e p a r fm e n ty a v a ila b le m e d ia te ly C o n v e n ie n t 1200 C a lt J u n e f u lm a r 477 3077 lo c a tio n . im ­ I US- S H A K E R O O M w m m a r R o o m pius i f B rr d i i . I,e s or ( a ll H 'u ie 474 J K J in fo r } 4 m o re , l a r y e BOU ft# f o r ft7 5 /m o t o s t 34»h C o m e by m u ll aum T R A V IS H O U S E A P T . 1600 R O YA L CREST I Choove O i y h w a t f t e r c a r p e te d CA C H pool, p a r t y ro o m H o p on v t VIES >240 to r t u r n m e r IC 2br flo o r p la n t g a r b a g e d n p o v a l , I at ih u t t la ro u te P ric e d f r o m f r o m 4 442 9720 W O R LD FAMOUS I IB E R A T E D SPACE c lo th in g o p tio n a l Larg». pool ia c tu re r e la t iv e ly fre e c o m m u n it y e n v iro n m e n t, r e c e n tly r e m o d tla d , c r o ft* v e n tila tio n , a ir c o n d itio n in g on p r e e m ie * v e rv lc e v , te r lio n * fo r p a r t y in g , c h ild r e n , q u ie t I & 2 BK 1 160 K 8 0 C o n v e m e n t to c o m p o t p lo t f 4/4 7616 47iS 0765 STOP Do A ll These Ads D r iv e YO U BANANAS ■> W e K e n t A p a rtm e n ts D uplexes Homes 24 H o o fs J D ays A ll o v e r A ustin Real W o riti P ro p e rtie s C am pus 443c?2I2 fgo rn, u * 6.150 ' ree Lo« a tin g Service INSTANT PASSPORT E S APPLICATION W h i t * Y o u W a i t R over Studios 2420 Guadalupe 472-4219 P R O FE S S IO N A L T R A N S L A T IN G AT M O D E S T COST E » p a r ti ie m A d a b , H iv to r y , BeM ev- le f f r e t e t w e ll as c u r r e n t te c h n o lo g y , p a r t i c u l a r l y B i o lo g y . M e d ic i n e , C h e r m i t r y & P e t r o le u m G e o lo g y A r a b ic f r e n c h , R o w a n , & S p a n ish in to E n g lis h A b v tr a c tv als o d on e C a ll 453- 05*6 e v e n in g s o n ly w h e re y o u h a v e a c h o ic e COPIES TOP Q U A L I T Y Good Quality or 3* Budget Copies ( u n c o lla te d lo ose sheets 48 h o u rs ) Quality V ersatility Speed Convenience G ra d School Q u a lity g u a ra n te e d w o rd p ro c e s s in g f u ll s e r v ic e b in d e r y G IN N Y 'S CO PIN G S E R V IC E 7 a m ic p m w e e k d a y s 9 5 S a tu rd a y 44 D o b ie M a ll 4 /6 9 1 7 ! I08 C o n g re s s 477-9827 H E L P W A N T E D B U R G E R KING 2700 Guadalupe N o w h i r i n g t im e o p e n in g s on a ll s h ifts A p p ly rn pe rso n b e tw e e n 2 30-4 pm f u l l a n d p a r t f o r T E C H N I C I A N ‘ 5 . 3 0 / h r . The University of Texas at im m e d ia te Austin has an Instrument vacancy for an M aker I This is a half-tim e 20 position. Required hrs /wk completion of high school and y e a r ' s e x p e r i e n c e as a machinist or in scientific in­ strum ent repair. Must have ability to use lathes, m illing machines, and hand tools for fa b ric a tio n , assem bly, and repair of instruments. Star­ ting salary is $5.30 per hour plus excellent fringe benefits. To apply contact: O F F IC E OF P E R S O N N E L SER VIC ES A N D E M P L O Y E E R E L A T IO N S 2613 W ichita Austin, Tx. 78712 Ph. 471-3656 A N E Q U A L O P P O R T U N IT Y A N D A F F I R M A T I V E A C T IO N E M P L O Y E R t h e p e r r y s c h o o l In n o v a tiv e S u m m e r S cience S e m in a r GALAPAGOS ISLANDS J u ly 17-A u g u st 21 f or s e c o n d a ry s tu d e n ts U n iv e r s it y of F lo rid a c o lle g e c r e d it v a ila b le F o r In ­ f o r m a t io n 474-2303, 452-6751 LOCK, STOCK & B A R R E L S eeks e v e n in g c o c k ta il w a itp e r s o n s and lu n c h food w a itp e r s o n s A p p ly 2 30-4, M o n T h u rs a fte rn o o n s 2700 W Anderson Lane T H E P E R R Y S C H O O L Non-Denom irrational Private Grades 7 - 1 2 F u l l H ig h S c h o o l c u r r i c u lu m , s m a ll ( la s s q u a lif ie d te a c h e rs , in d i v i d u a t e d in s tr u c t io n A p p lic a tio n s n o w a c c e p te d t >r i n f o r m a tio n c a ll 474 2303 o r 452-6751 2J H A M B U R G E R S Taking applications for per­ fu ll and p a rt-tim e m anent help. M any company benefits. Cl ose to U T a n d A u s t i n busline Apply in person. 3918 N. Lam ar, between 2-5 p.m. L I B E R A T E D , S E C U R E , c o m m u n it y en- x i i o n m e n t S t im u la tin g s p e c tr u m o f con v e n tio n a t a n d u n i conve ntional life s ty le s a n d a t t i t u d e s L a r g e o u t d o o r p o o l, c lo th in g o p tio n a l, pool sid e c a b a n a c o m m u n ity ro o m , r e c e n tly re m o d e le d c r o s s v e n t i l a t i o n , A C . l i b e r t a r i a n b o o k s to re on p re m is e s , s e c tio n s fo r p a r ty in g q u ie t C o n v e n ie n t to c a m p u s . I end 2 b e d ro o m , $160 SHO p lu s e le c tr ic ity 4/4 5968 G ene B e rk m a n B E D R O O M . B A T H a n d k itc h e n , SITS/ m onth X) day re n ta l lease agreem ent South A u s tin K e n W illia m s 44! 8656 S T R I C T L Y Q U I E T , b e a u t if u l s c e n ic lo c a tio n I b r fti8 5 p lu s e le c t r ic it y N o c h ild r e n No pe ts 180! W e s tla k e , s h o w n by a p p o in tm e n t o n ly 327 0 4 /9 ROOMMATES N E E D I O R 2 r o o m m a te s f o r lu x u r y 3 2 d u p le x fo r re s t o f s u m m e r C a ll G a ry 44/2173 Sh a r e C O N V E N IE N T " d u p lM L a r g e u n f u r n is h e d b r y a r d , n o n * $ m o k e r . *117 50 b ills M a rc 8 U 8 1 9 8 days 454 8515 o th e rw is e F E M A L E W IT H c h ild n e e d s fe m a le to s h a re b e a u tify * n o s h e d hou se L ib e r a l, re s p o n s ib le K 5 0 , 1 j u til K a th y , *41 2616 ( h ) 475 6118 i WI EE M A L E R O O M M A T E needed Own ro o m m b e a u tifu l 4 -b e d ro o m house SIDO Plus 1. f N e ar i a m p u s a n d s h u ttle 4/8 T407 N O N S M O K E R needed A B P 5 m in ( r o m ( a m p u s , S86 SO C i l l 474 8596 478 2033 f o r 2Br a p t fu rn is h e d H O U S E M A T E N E E D E D m a t u r e , s p a c io u s m o d e m , 11 ber at j b ills |130 r e n t b a c k y a rd e x c e lle n t M o rn in g s *26 47*2 f u t tu s h e d f I M A I E N E E D E D w o r k in g o r r e s p o n ­ s ib le in d iv id u a l ? b r house o ff E n fie ld f t ! / * mc' b ills 474 7713 le a v e m e s s a g e B a rb S U M M E R H O U S E M A T L w a n te d n ic e hou se P re fe r g r a d u a te s tu d e n t S h a r e w o r k A i l e x p e n s e s a b o u t ftllC m o n th 476 2*56 N O N S M O k I N G C O N S E R V A T I V E fe m a le s tu d e n t s h a re 2 b r. 2 b a a p t E a s t R iv e r n d e t i 15 p lu s E L in d y a tte r 2 p m 44. 488 7 E E: M a i E R O O M M A T t n e e d e d to s h a re /B R I B A g a ra g e a p a r t m e n t Oft E n fie ld KOO p lu s Vs b ills N o n s m o k e r s tu d e n t p r e fe r r e d C a ll 474 9821 F E M A L E H O U S E M A T E n e e d e d S u m m e r lea ie * 135 p iu s m in im a l b ills . IC I B W 28th i a ll 47# 8434 o r 478 T O A D a n y tim e Q U IE T R E S P O N S IB L E ta m a le r o o m m a te needed to r w e s t c a m p u s SWI m o n th A B P 471-510* n o n -s m o k in g I br a p t R O O M M A T E S W A N T E D fo r house in N p i th A u s tin T w o b e d ro o m s , one f u r ­ n is h e d o n e u n fu r n is h e d R a n t plus b ills C a ll R a y m o n d 837 683a C O N S I D E R A T E M A T U R E w o m a n s h a re 2 b r house P e ts O K . KOO m o p lu s b ills 453 2872 N L iR S IN t. S T U D E N T seeks r e s p o n s ib le fu n te rn a te to s h a re v e r y n ic e 2 2 a p t SR s h u ttle 1125 p iu s Vy b ills M u s t lik e c a ts C h e r. 452 3480 l l 5 p . rn M A T U R E F E M A L E to S' .i r e 2 b r d u p le x n ea t E a s tw o o d s P a r k 1 b ills 478 2730 l u s t s u m m e r session o n ly tao p lu s ROOMS S um m e r R ATES w a lk in g d is ta n c e UT Sr-ag c a r p e t C A C H k it c h e n p riv ile g e s S I* U n . ve rsify H ouse 2710 N ie c e s 477 «3#8 2 B L A S U T E fftc .e n n e s a p ts S u m m e r r a 'e s R o o m s u p a p ts H ouse JBO® W h it s *77 7558 e ft s s t a r t K 2 5 m o -u p . L y 'e ro o m s a n d *75 m o f r o m c a m p u s O p p o r tu n ity I 3 D E U T S C H E * H A U S C o o p Co-ad to b r o ik $ p r a c tic e c o n v e r s a tio n * ! G e rm a n a n d S p a n is h a* s. ap e r b o a r d e r s w e lc o m e 4?* 80e5. 4?4 139’ Q U IE T cam pus A BP l a r g e O L D s p a c io u s k itc h e n F U R N IS H E D I b lo c k f r o m ti0 3 4 'ft «40i ’kk. se n e a r U T q u ie t a b p S h a re b a th f u r n , sbed ilv .n g 472 7433 477-300* R O O M A N O e ffic ie n c y Carpeted. ct#an» r e tr go a fe r 3 b ocks U T Room |4> af t ic e - ic v SHO A B P C a n 474-7)38 if no a n s w e r c a d 447 * > 7 F U R N IS H E D 'R O O M S i m R io G rande K itch e n p n v d e g e s c a rp e te d 3 blocks was* OE G ubda . i n a fte r J A weekends 47# 12*! l l 10 a b p 4?* 7 « n ROOMS R E A S O N A B L E bus e s t or g r a d u a te s Can 474-J9/4 D»nners a v a -‘able n e x t door t i O l w i g i r l s a n d M A L E S t u d e n t p riv a te room and b a th near U T »7S a .a -ia b te Juiv I 472 2e«e UNFURNISHED HOUSES B IC Y C L E U T b e d ’ o e m * USO Foe H hour in fo r m a tio n *52-5*7* L a r g e ord e r house a s j ' . \ n a c c e p te e s h de T r a v i s H E IG H T S B e a u tifu l h o m e l l (.s-ge o e x s deck. C A ­ b lo c k S t a n Poi- CH i? -»h w ashe r c s p o s a i 1450 ra n g e 4724)032 4*3 4314 U N F U R N IS H E D 4 b r 2-ba n ou s# USO th u s deo os I 453 i t i i J u ly i m D u x * 1st PASSPORT PHOTOS RESUME PHOTOS APPLICATION PHOTOS — lust Walk In — — Ready in 2 minutes THE THIRD EYE 2 5 3 0 Guadalupe 4 7 7 -5 5 5 5 J T O K Y O SAUNA H a v e our t r a in e d p ro fe s s io n a ls show y o u th e h e a lth b e n e fits a n d lu x u rio u s r e la x a ­ tio n a re a l s a u n a a n d m o is tu r e b a th . D o s o m e th in g n ic e fo r y o u r b o d y 8 am -1 0 p m . M o n -S u n d a y 9 5 0 1 N l a k e R u n d b e rg e x it S e rv ic e R o a d 836-9965 on I b lo c k N I H - 3 5 a r t s M O V IN G a n d H a u lin g a n y a re a 24 h o u rs , 7 d a y s 477-3249 H E A L T H W IS E D A Y C a r e . f r e s h v e g e ta r ia n m e a ls M o n te s s o ri d e v e lo p e d e n v ir o n m e n t N e a r U T c a ll N ita S m ith , 477 85*3 C O M E S a i l W IT H US I n s f r u c t io n - r e n t a ts c h a r t e r s C o m m a n d e r s P o in t Y a c h t B a s in L a k e T r a v is 266 1 341 M O V IN G A N D h a u lin g a s s is ta n c e Y o u h e lp a n d re d u c e r a te s T re e a n d b ru s h c u t tin g 451-3270 e v e n in g s U N IV E R S I T Y D A Y C a r * h a s o p e n in g s in o u r 2 y e a r o ld ro o m fo r h o u rly , p a r t t im e a n d f u ll tim # s c h e d u le s W e o ffe r a h e a lth fu l v e g e ta r ia n m e a l p r o g r a m a n d a w a r m s t im u la t in g e n v iro n m e n t fo r le a rn in g C a ll 476 6*94 or c o m e by 2203 San A n to n io , P a ts y o r M a r g a r e t G R A S S C U T T IN G t r im m in g , 20 y e a rs e x p e rie n c e C a ll 385 7394 a fte r 3 p m w e e k d a y s A il d a y S a tu rd a y tre e P R O O t R E A P I N G R E F E R E N C E S , re a s o n a b le r a te s c a l l a fte rn o o n s 474- 4702 u n f u r n is h e d duplexes f u r n i s h e d h o u s e s S H A R E M O U S E no s m o k in g , c lo s * to s h u t tle q u ie t in d iv id u a l, p r e fe r g r a d u a te p ro fe s s io n a l 451 4343 c o u p le o r TRAVEL c a l i f o r n i a 1 140 b y p r iv a t e p la n e , 6 p la c e L A a n d SF. le a v e June 30 r e tu r n J u l y * P a t M o to la , w 458 5161 e x t 4972 ( h i #37 6107 A C A P U L C O C O N D O M IN IU M P ia y a s o f IS fu rn is h e d b e a u tifu l s it * new d a y s m D e c e m b e r c a n A lb e r t 38 5 4805 to r FURNISHED DUPLEXES U N IV E R S IT Y A R E A d u p le x $260 A B P 2 b r v 2 b lo c k s w e s t p f G u a d a lu p e on N u eces 47# 74! I Q U t £ T U P P E R d u p le x 2BR fu rn is h e d m a " ed c o u p le G a ra g e d e c k tre e s . N e a r u n iv e r s it y Ne dog s 477-5255 HELF W A N T E D a n i m a t o r w a n t e d o r ” a r t i s t te re s te d b u s in e s s p r o ie c t 452 2770 w e e k d a y s in a n im a tio n lo n g to r I n ­ te r m F E M A L E M O D E L S w a n te d fo r f ig u r e p h o to g ra p h y 4$ ) 3J*o# p a r t T i m e e s p # f a c e d b i c y c l e m e c h a n ic sa le s M u s t ha v e shoe ex- per en c # Ca- 8 451-41111 S E C U R I T Y G u a r d e v e n in g s 5-0 p m and w e e kends,, s ta rtin g sa a r y 13 OO h o u r C a ll 47/ 6*90 ~ a o r x V G ? S M M A L L R A O C o m p a n y >n NW A u s tin nee ds p a r t t im e a r tu t) t im e e le c tr o n ic e n g in e e rs N e w g -A o .-a 'e s or g ra d u a te s \ d e n t* p r e f e r r e d c a d 03? 2*0* c o m p a n y S M A L L R A O needs p a r t t u n tim e 'e s e e rc h ass s la n ts J u n io r o r s e n io r e n g in e e rin g s tu d e n ts p r e f e r r e r c a n 037 2964 '■ « # pr in N W A u s tin A R E YOU A BOBO? L o s T re s B o b o s R e s ta u r a n t is now a c c e p tin g a p p lic a tio n s fo r p ro g re s s iv e in d iv id u a ls in te re s te d rn e x c e lle n t w o r k ­ in g c o n d itio n s , good s a la rie s & e m p lo y e e b e n e fits . J o b s a v a ila b le in c lu d e c a s h ie r, h o s tp e rs o n , k itc h e n h e lp , b u s person p o s itio n & w a itp e r s o n E x p e rie n c e is not n e c e s s a r y P le a s e a p p ly in p e r s o n b e tw e e n 9 11 a m o r 2-5 p m , 1206 W 38th in T h e 26 D o o rs S h o p p in g C e n te r. S T O R E H O U S E Salesperson wanted for con­ tem porary home furnishings store Must be aggressive and have retail background. Call M a rk for appointment, 459- 3161. T E A C H E R S E L E M E N T A R Y - A L L L E V E L S , E S P E C I A L L Y m a t h a n d B I L I N G U A L N e e d e d to r to w in c o m e C a th o lic schools th ro u g h o u t T e x a s $80 m o n th , fu rn is h e d h o u s in g fo o d a llo w a n c e , b e n e fits B e g in in A u g u s t V o lu n te e rs t o r E d u c a tio n a l 8. S o c ia l S e rv ic e s , 447-6M4 N E E D E X T R A m o n e y '* T h e ( lo w e r peo­ f l o w e r s , p le n e e d p e o p le T h u rs d a v -S u n d a y H ig h e s t c o m m is s io n p a id t o s e l l 288-1102 W O R K W IT H k id s r a r e o p p o r tu n ity fo r m a r r ie d c o u p le w ith no c h ild r e n to w o rk a n d liv e w ith a d o le s c e n ts in a h o m e lik e r e s id e n tia l t r e a tm e n t f a c il it y P o s itio n in v o lv e s h e l p in g a n d p a r e n t i n g 6 a d o le s c e n ts 0 3 17 S itu a tio n o tte r s e x ­ c e lle n t le a rn in g e x p e rie n c e s to r th o s e in ­ te re s te d fie ld and in S o c ia l S e rv ic e s s e e k in g c h a n c e s to r p e rs o n a l g ro w th B e n e fits in c lu d e s a la ry a n d p a id v a c a ­ tio n C a ll th e S e ttle m e n t C lu b H o m e , 9-5 w e e k d a y s . 836 2150 A P T M A N A G E R l e v e l h e a d e d , e n e rg e tic p e rs o n (s ) to m a n a g e la rg e s tu ­ p e ts . d e n t c o m p le x N o c h i l d r e n R e s u m e 4307 to P r o p e r t y M a n a g e r M o u n ta in P a th D r ., A u s tin 78759 E A R N E A S Y M O N E Y t h is s u m m e r s e ll­ in g flo w e rs S tu d e n ts w e lc o m e H ig h e s t 476 3070 453 c o m m is s io n p a id d a ily 6373 M O D E L S F O R g la m o u r a s s ig n m e n ts , no e x p e rie n c e o r w a rd r o b e n e c e s s a ry , ex c e d e n t pay s e n d s h o rt re s u m e to Box 1215 A u s tin T x 78767 K I T C H E N H E L P E R w a itp e rs o n s F u ll and p a r t tim e A p p ly in p e rs o n C a ll 476-351! N ew fo r a p p t O rle a n s C lu b S y m p h o n y S q u a re HOI R ed R iv e r b a r t e n d e r C O U P L E O R I a d u lt to liv e in g a ra g e a p t Be re s p o n s ib le fo r la rg e re s id e n c e a n d d o m e s tic d u tie s to r o w n e r a n d w ife fu r n is h e d p lu s fo o d R e n t, u t il it ie s , L o c a tio n c lo s e re a s o n a b le s a la r y to to w n a n d u n iv e r s it y i f c o u p le o f f- tim # a v a ila b le fo r I to w o rk o r a tte n d U n iv e r ­ s ity R e fe re n c e s r e q u ire d W rite B ro w n B ld g /Oft C o lo ra d o S u ite 1020 A u s tin . Tx 78701 E X C E L L E N T T y p i s t s n e e d e d 70 w p m P a r t t im e a n d te m p o r a r y p o s itio n s a v a ila b le A p p ly 9-5 T e r r y 's T y p in g S e r­ v ic e 472 8936 A D D R E S S E R S W A N T E D im m e d ia te ly ! W o rk a t h o m e no e x p e rie n c e n e c e s s a ry - e x c e lle n t p a y w r i t e A m e r ic a n S e rv ic e 83SO P a rk L a n e S u ite 127 D a lia s . T X 7523! 7 E X X O N S T A T IO N a tte n d a n ts needed fo r S a tu rd a y s 8 4 a n d 1-9 s h ifts P o s s i­ b le e x t r a h o u rs if w a n te d $620 B u rn e t Rd 459-7101. F u l l t i m e te a c h e r f o r 12-17 m o n th old C h ild re n E x p e rie n c e p r e fe r r e d W a rm c a r in g p e rs o n a m u s t C a ll 476-6994. 9-12 or_3 5 Ask fo r P a ts y o r M a r g a r e t P A R T T IM E b a b y s itte r I y r o ld A fte rn o o n s d u r in g s u m m e r M u s t ha v e o w n t r 0n s p o rta » ofi to S o u th A u s tin 452 2577 t o r T H E A U S T IN C it iJ t n has o p e n in g s fo r d e p e n d a b le m a tu r e in d v d u a ls to d is ­ t r ib u t e n e w s p a p e rs to v e n d in g m a c h in e s I 30-4 30 a t * 7 65 h o u r a n d b e tw e e n jo h n IO m i t e See P a t *21 w S t b e tw e e n 12-3 o n ly P E T IT IO N W O R K E R S needed ' Good pay E x p e rie n c e p r e fe r r e d C a ll 451- 11*5 P O S I T I O N O P E N f o r 2 g r a d u a t e e n g in e e rs ( o r so m e o n e w th J v e e rs ex p e r e n c # ) ’ im # , p e r m a n e n t e m p lo y m e n t C o n ta c t F r e d T r im b le to r a p p o in tm e n t C a p i’ o ' C ity Steel P O Bo x 3I9S. A u s tin 707*4 S O E f u l l fo r I H i a p R e n t c lo s e to c a m p u s ea c h fo r d o u b le C a ll 474-1212. t i t SO ftt# 50 to r s m g ie a b p 2 B R I B A d u p le x n ic e y a rd , c lo s * to U T 2 b lo c k s s h u ttle a v a ila b le J u ly 1st, »245 p iu s g a s and e le c t r ic it y 459 55*9 Just North of 27th at Guadalupe 2707 H em p h ill P a rk f i l m M B A , T Y P IN G P R IN T IN G , B IN D IN G V THE C O M P L E T E PR O FE S S IO N A L F U L L T I M E T Y P I N G S E R V IC E 472-3210 and 472-7677 T Y P I N G E R Typing Transcribing Typesetting Copying Binding R Y S E RV I C E 9-6:30 Mon-Th 472-8936 9-5 Fri-Sat Dobie M all 0 * 0 0 * 0 0 0 0 * 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 • The Careful Type The Fait Type g E^onotype NORTH M o n-F ri 8 :3 0 -6 Sot 9-5 Sun 1-5 *37Hi & Guadalupe 453-5452 SOUTH • Mon-Fri. 8:30-6 J Sat 9-5 Sun 1-5 • C. Riverside & Lakeshore443-4498 • t * 0 0 t « 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 8 0 # ‘ Excelo Type 2200 Guadalupe No. 217 EXCELLENT Typing •EXCELLENT Help With Proofreading 4 7 8 -3 8 7 2 9-5 T Y P IN G , D r a f t i n g , r e c o r d in g / c o n fe re n c e s , e tc 477 1768 tr a n s c r ip tio n o f illu s t r a tio n and le c tu re s , M O U N T A IN L A U R E L F a s t i fr ie n d ly p ro fe s s io n a l s e rv ic e . Theses, d is s e rta tio n s , b oo ks, busin e s s , etc . R ush jobs P a tr ic ia , 472-3555, 10-5 M -F . t y p in g B O B B Y E D E L A F I E L D .' I B M S e lC C trk , p ic a / e lit e 30 y e a r s e x p e rie n c e B o o k s d is s e rta tio n s r e p o rts , m im e o - g r a p h in g . 442-7184 theses, W O O D 'S T Y P IN G S e rv ic e A ll w o rk g u a ra n te e d , re a s o n a b le p ric e s 707 w M L K . 472 6302 YE S , I D O re s u m e s t y p e d in red, g re e n , blue, b r o w n o r o ld -fa s h io n e d b la c k E x - CClOtype, 478-5435 E X P E R T T Y P IN G , a ll fie ld s , s u b je c ts , e s p e c ia lly in s c ie n c e s - m a t h e m a t lc i- e n g in e e rin g -S p a n is h . T e c h n ic a l T y p in g S e rv ic e 478 5313 Ju st N o rth of 27th a t G u a d a lu p e 2707 H e m p h ill P a rk R E S U M ES with or without pictures 2 Day Service 472-3210 and 472-7677 T Y P IN G . R E P O R T S , d is s e r ­ ta tio n s , 70*/page 3-day s e r v ic e C h ris - 459 8672 th eses T Y P l N O S E R V IC E S, S outh I Theses,’ d is ­ s e rta tio n s , t e r m p a p e rs P ic a -d o u b le , ft 80 E lit e - ft l IO. S h e rry M c C u llo u g h , 2*2- 0070 T Y P I N G T H E S E S , d i s s e r t a t i o n s , r e p o r ts , n e a r N o r th c r o s s M a ll. Ca l l a n y tim e Jo m T ib b e ts , 45 2 8326 o r 892 0429 P R O P E S S I O N A L’ Q U A L i T~Y~ t y p i ng Sam e d a y a n d o v e r n ig h t s e rv ic e IB M C o rr e c tin g S e le c te e IL H e le n 451-3661 S U M M E R D IS C O U N T t y p in g ra te s f o r s tu d e n ts P ic a E l i t e I B M S e le c tr ic . F a s t a c c u r a te s e rv ic e C a ll 472-2716 Just North of 27th at Guadalupe 2707 Hem phill Park 2 / 0 / H A f t y w "2 P y e A i , * fy\asjrftA i»ure, we do type Freshman themes. 472-3210 and 472-7677 ROOM AND BOARD DOBIE CENTER N o w ran tin g for summ er R o o m /B o a rd prices start $ 3 0 0 For 6 wook form • S w im m in g Pool • Sauna • Across from cai pus 2021 G u a d a lu p o 4 7 2 -8 4 N E W M A N H A L L W O M E N 'S D O R M Summer Rates $ 4 5 up weekly S m all, quiet, frien d ly, e x ­ cellent food, doubles, single rooms, maids, parking, laun­ to dry, k itc h e n e tte , ciose 1 9 everything. Room/board, meals. 2026 Guadalupe 476-06# W O M E N A N D M E N , la rg e ro o m s , good f r o m c a m p u s . L a u r# t m e a ls C o -op 2612 G u a d a lu p e 476-5154 or I b lo c k 4/SHM 70 fr-e n d s h ip k w o rn . P E O P L E S H A R I N G e x pa nses A p p ly n o w fo r s u m m e r fa n in te r C o -o p C o u n c il SIO w 23rd 476- d e u t c h e s h A U s l c o i i T c < r * d ~ T ^ t© t n p p r a c tic e c o n v e rs a tio n a l G e rm a n f r o m c a m p u s O p p o r tu n ity L A N D S C A P E L A B O R E R S b a r f ' t , m e 'a y sod p la n t s h o v e l w o rk e tc M u s t h a * # c a r a n d vs* p iu s h o u rs f r e e d a y ( s ! O u t d o o r e x p e rie n c e p r e * # " e o 12 I O up 0*2-0107 N E E D E V E N N G s it t e r w it h re fe re n c e s • ' v v J i i c o 4 7 7 - 4 1 4 * P A R T T v t s a .* * ne p 15-30 h o u rs p e r w e e k *72 773! n j V E R S A T I L E h a n d ? M A N to r ” u p k e e p of 2 b u d d in g s F sexib ** h o u rs , f u ll o r p a r t • m e s t a r t s ; Sd h r 477 3644 & s g i / f i r N I G H T A U D I T O R p o i H o n o p e n 2* 32 L a k e w a y In n 2*1 oOOC e x t h o u rs p e r w e e k U e0 p e r h o u r i i pm -7 a m s h ift sec S E R V IC E A G E N T m o rn in g s a n d e a r ly a fte r n o o n h o u rs C o n ta c t a r w a v s R e n t- a -C a r 351$ M a n o r R oad ‘ " * * R 9 > 4 ' Co-op 1*05 P e a n * ' t o w . Best roo# ,n A u s tin . q u 'a t n e ig h b o rh o o d A O M E N A N O m a n S /ia r# a ia rg a hou sa w ith ?0 p e o c 'e ( a m ity a ’ m o s o h e re $221 to r s in g le ro o m se c o n d s u m m e r session P h one 472 2792 o r c o m e b v 2212 P e a n A f f Bk i f Co-op Dean to decide final policies in future college, Rogers says t h o T h o H o a n n f * The dean of the future College of Liberal Arts w ill decide the final details of the college's structure. Presi­ dent Lorene Rogers said Friday. ___ There is no need for a faculty com­ mittee to help determine the college's policy, Rogers said The dean, whom Rogers plans to appoint by September, will have until the college opens in January 1979 to consult with faculty members. “I don t think a dean can avoid listen­ ing to the faculty,'' Rogers said. The new college will be form ed from the present colleges of social and behaviorial sciences, hum anities and the Division of G eneral and Com­ parative studies The college's originally publicized starting date of fall 1979 was incorrect, R ogers said H er assistant, G erhard Fonken, had accepted responsibility for the m isunderstanding, she said. I had intended all along to get it put together as soon as I could. Rogers said. The S tate Coordinating Board Texas College and U niversity System , had approved to the change prom pter than had been expected, she added R estricting candidates to those on cam pus would reduce the tim e needed in selecting the dean, Rogers said R ogers defended the on-cam pus lim itation, saying the new dean should be acutely a w a re of the history of the liberal a rts college at the U n iversity- “ T here's plenty ot talent within this cam pus,' Rogers said Views aired at open meeting By CARL HOOVER Daily Texan Staff The com m ittee charged to provide P r e sid e n t Lorene Rogers with nominees for the new College of Liberal Arts deanship invited faculty and students to speak their minds at an open m eeting Friday. That t h e y di d. as a p ­ proximately 30 faculty and students attended the meeting to express their views on the new c o l l e g e , q u a l i t i e s its dean and desirable in criticism of the selection procedure. Dr W allace M endelson, professor of government and chairman of the com m ittee, noted the former College of Arts and S c ie n c e s had a “ strange and in te r e stin g history" dating from the tim e its dean. John Silber was D R . F O R R E S T H i l l , professor of economics, asked FOR RENT C o n c r e t e M I N I - S T O R A G E S O U T H block co nstru ction , se c u rity patrol. JIO up m on th ly 444-2411, W o o d la n d 's A A A M in i W arehou se. UNCLASSIFIED Free sw eet kitte ns 7 w k s 458-8090 U T D e s ign er line phone $50 477-8272 Free kitte ns! F re e ! 474-1109 Now! N e ed 2 ticketsSton e sC o n cert 472-7560 MISCELLANEOUS C L A S S I C A L G U I T A R b e g i n n e r s a n d a d v a n c e d T h o m a so n 478-0650 i n s t r u c t io n , D r e w MUSICAL INSTRUCTION t e a c h e r E X P E R I E N C E D P I A N O B e g in n e rs-a d v a n c e d U T m u s ic d egre e G u ita r also, fo lk -c la ssic a l, a fter I:OO p m 459-4082, 476 4407 WANTED C L A S S R IN G S , g o ld jew elry, old pocket c u rre n c y , s t a m p s w a n te d . w a tc h e s H ig h p ric e s pa id P io n eer Coin C o m ­ pany 5555 North L a m a r , B ld g . C l 13 in C o m m e rc e P a rk , 451-3607 PUBLIC NOTICES N O T I C E O F I N T E N T I O N TO I N C O R P O R A T E is h e r e b y g iv e n th at E W N o tic e C U S T O M C O N C R E T E , w ho se p rin cip a l b u sin e ss office is a t 2038 Little C e d a r D riv e K in gw o o d , H a r r is County, T e xas, intends, on or b efore J u ly I, 1978, to becom e in c o rp o ra te d w ithout a c h a n g e of firm nam e. D ated June 5, 1978 D E N N I S S A R G E N T , P A R T N E R E M I L W E R L I T S C H , P A R T N E R if the com m ittee should deter mine what kind of college it should be before deciding on possible deans, Mendelson replied it was the dean s duty, not the com ­ m ittee's, to decide -The ad ­ fa c u lty and m in is tra tio n . s t u d e n ts o b v io u s ly h a v e something to say about what wi l l c o n s t i t u t e t h e n e w college." Mendelson said He added the com m ittee was told the new dean would have a strong voice a s to w hat the final organization would be. but presently the “ situation is som ewhat fluid." Dr Joseph Horn, associate professor of psychology and a m em ber of the c o m m itte e , noted the c o m m itte e w as concerned the am biguity of the about college's stru c tu re and re ­ quested a second m eetin g with Rogers the m atter. to clarify “ IT MIGHT be that the can­ didate with the best plan for the college would be chosen (as d ean )," he said Several persons attending the th e m eeting c ritic iz e d tim e the com ­ lim it given m ittee by Rogers as well as her recom m endation that the new dean be selected from on- cam pus candidates MENDELSON SAID, My personal view of this is that is the University of Texas creating a new college and there is nothing hard and fast about how to go about it." He th e p r e s i d e n t h a s a d d e d nothing the to hide about selection of the new dean. "If th a t’s true, why is this t h i n g b e i n g r a m r o d d e d through*’ " asked Greg Smith, g r a d u a t e a s s i s t a n t i n anthropology. “ I question R ogers’ m otive (in setting the co m m ittee's deadline) it sounds like a lot of bullshit to m e. Slowly this thing is leak­ ing out. Right in the m iddle of sum m er, when m ost of the students and faculty a re gone, they're picking the new dean of the largest college a t UT. I incredible really think it’s ... s o m e t h i n g happening,” l i k e t h i s is MARK ZION, a student on the com m ittee, agreed with Smith and noted that tim e is a “ key fa c to r” in the develop­ ment of the new college D r C l a r e n c e L a s b v , wi t hi n professor of governm ent, said t he c o n s tr ic tio n s given the com m ittee, I don t the feel p e ssim istic about choices we have I think we will find excellent candidates here on cam pus It s easy to believe a nationwide search would turn up the right can­ didates. But I don't believe that m any would want to form a new college. "T he new dean will have a t r e m e n d o u s w o r k l o a d , m anaging the 21 units in the college, m any wi t h strong leadership," Lasby added “ I don t think candidates would come from all over the coun­ try to take this, ’ he said Tom Jaggard, vice p resi­ dent of the Senior Cabinet, said there should definitely bt* a com m itm ent on the p art of the new dean to listen to the faculty and stu d e n ts when shaping the college Zion added. “ I hope Rogers will choose not someone who works well with her as much as som eone who works well the U niversity." Zion with noted the new dean would work with Rogers only one y e a r, since she is due to resign in August 1979 S E V E R A L P E R S O N S attending the meeting listed the new they felt qualities dean should have D r Robert F e i n e a , p r o f e s s o r o f the new anthropology, said dean should be a bit of a innovative fighter who hail notions " Eileen Raffaniello, a graduate student on the com m ittee, said she would look tor someone who would work with the adm inistration y e t w a s c o n c e r n e d wi t h students and faculty Smith asked for a " c re a tiv e " person to be dean Dr. Robert King. dean of the C o l l e g e of S o c i a l a n d B e h a v io ra l S c ie n c e s, Dr Jam es Hilt, acting dean of the Division of G eneral and Com ­ p a ra tiv e Studies, and Dr J a m e s Ay r e s , a s s o c i a t e professor of English, w ere m entioned as possible c a n ­ didates for the deanship The m eeting ended a fte r two hours of discussion. The com m ittee w ill now begin interview ing contacting and the p o sition nom inees for M endelson said th e c o m ­ m ittee would be "d elig h ted " to receive letters recom m end­ ing persons for the deanship. THINK UTHE VISTA NEEDS PEOPLE TO HELP SOLVE BIG PROBLEMS: HOUSING, UNEMPLOYMENT, POVERTY, HUNGER, LITTLE BY LITTLE WE CAN SOLVE THESE BIG PROBLEMS TOGETHER! SIGN UP NOW FOR INTERVIEW SENIORS/GRADS INFORMATION BOOTH WEST MALL REPS ON CAMPUS NOWI MON-WED JUNE 19-21 * * G E T m a s s a g e d a t f o o t g e a r 7 M o n d a y ^ J u n e 19, 1978 □ T H E D A I L Y T E X A N □ P a g e i i TODAY'S CBOSSWOSD PUZZLE U N IT E D Feature Syndicate Friday s Puzzle So lve d across >K I Move hisn. 5 Wo>lies IO find 14 Golf un,! 15 SoU.s IO I . O m n i , ,ip, tai I 7 Ending fen T H U I c t . a r n 18 f cot ball SU-MiStK' •V Can**'! 22 Smell birt: 23 S trained 2 4 A , t o r P a t a 26 Cf in ml dot m ients 28 C a u se d to fem em hi'f .12 Th*' v\lh ‘lr Ct .12 Ism 38 African rapt tnt lb Thundet (HNI I 38 M ake tits lure! 40 Rendered hot} fill 41 C a n t o s A l Meals 46 New form Prefix 48 C (amic ct ballot 2 words 48 Be gs 50 f iuds faut! c o n s t a n t l y 5 1 B r o k e n v e e , ! i i s r t s 82 tet)i$lafrve body SS CK S9 M e r c if u l ae 1s61 Skeletal strm 'ture 62 l atin wino-. S 3 C m - a 'l e t p ad tv! P a u l s i n m pamon SS Sneaky ones S l a i n ) 6b Bund steps 6 ‘ Sister of A t e s D O W N 1 M an s nick n a m e2 Plat i's 3 Norwegian kmt) 4 R e m o v e 5 I lyes a up 6 W a t n i m ) t r y n.ll 7 I a rye yen) Stony 8 ( ‘Demit al suffix 9 Anim al lr i a m b i f o e IU Felon 11 Basic r o l e O ' A l l P r e f i x 13 - Berlin » 2 6 27 20 M 4 6 bo 52 5 J IS IS 6 3 I* I'3 Thing that u s to r e s .’I Shin iuo /•I M easunru} tut‘et.Wife device 38 f oi mat agreements 28 I el 27 U Ai Dentine c ity 28 M ush al comedy 29 Singe*Boss IO Muffed 31 f slim I turds 34 Smooches 17 I Im and H o/ 39 Musical re petitions 13 I me yr amini UM k 44 I ut option •I Solicitors 48 Make p o ssi Nebl ft seaport W Disfiguring mark S3 Ms Rames 64 Not messy 56 lean in g low er ( (Iv ‘rb Group un tup 67 Babylonian yod 68 V i e w y fill Where I A. f r — r n r n Ti * * I . ii 16 -------■ a 4 * CV 6!... * TF" 47 ha ISIP ■ 5 6 5 1 DOONESBURY by Garry Trudeau S E CUR ny, SIR. WE'RE CHECK1N6 FOR WEAP­ ONS. j WEAPONS? BUT WERE OFFICIAL UN. DELEGATES. / IT S PURELY HEY, I UKE SYMBOUC, m SORT OF SIR . PLEASE MAKES YOU RAISE YOUR THINK, YOU ARMS. KNOUT* B .C . & e o m Y f p u p p i m 1 a m p p i e . . . J ------------------ ' K IS S E D m e dxRLS AKP ttove t h e m C R Y . e u e E P W 6 L L , H Y S C H . r n » / / / v. b y jo h n n y h a i l m R o u u p d o e r n e . A f 3 ? u r R I i i U F S ; / T H * W I Z A R D O F I D fait b y B r a n t p a r k e r a n d J o h n n y h o n J Hf: CKST PF A U kvr LL- by Jeff Millar & Bill Hinds BURNT O RA N G E UT SH IR T S A U S T IN & T E X A S S O U V E N IR SH IR T S A R M A D IL L O SH IR T S LAD IES S U M M E R TOPS! a ll l i i n in fa n t a d u lt XI. T. Sc h e rt a ls o h a s : Variety of S H O R T S P RO T E A M C A P S C A N V A S B A G S p erso na lized g ifts D O B IE M A U 477-1*57 • • with a pair of Happy Feet m a s sa g e sandals. F R E E with any purchase over $30.00. T A N K M C N A M A R A I W o , NO FUTURE in making Gimmick t^nn\ks Hannah's A irsh ip s’ p " • w a >vcr In the spring, the kids at Mathews Elementary busied themselves with an afterschool program designed to encourage budding artists. One of then recent projects is the commissioned' mural on the side of Clarksville Creamshop On the cover Daily Texan artist Berke Breathed captures the artists in the midst of 'creation ’ Story and photos, Pages 12 and 13 exhibits PAPER DOLLS ANO OTHER TRAUMAS: Paintings by Austin •n u t Steven GokJin Through July 8 in tbs TEXAS UNION ART MAI I ERV CAPRICE DU PAPIER. Whimsical cut paper art by Unlvarsity student irene Kong The Unitarian Church Gallery, 4700 Grover Ave Opens Saturday with* a special reception from 1-3 p rn Gallery hours Monday through Friday, 8 30 a rn. to 5 P rn and Sunday noon to 2 p m ‘ THE KESSENS: B U S I AND K IN D R E D ” : W atercolor landscapes of Texas and Mexico by the father-son architects In the Michener Galleries through July 9 “ SELECTIONS FROM THE MICHENER COLLECTION OF the Michener 20TH CENTURY AMERICAN ART": Galleries through Aug 7 In “ S E L E C T IO N S FRO M THE B A R B A R A D U N C A N COLLECTION OF CONTEMPORARY LATIN AMERICAN ART": In the Michener Galleries through Aug 11 •SELECTIONS FROM THE C.R. SMITH COLLECTION OF WESTERN ART": In the Michener Galleries through Aug 20 -W ILLIA M BAZIOTES: A RETROSPECTIVE" Works by the American born abstract painter will be on display at the Michener Galleries through August 6 ART OP THE SEVENTIES: Exhibition of photographes by New York artist Gianfranco Gorgon! through July 16 at the LAGUNA GI ORIA ART MUSEUM. 3809 W 35th St Museum hours Tuesday through Saturday IO a m to 5 p rn , Thursday until 9 p rn and Sunday, 1 lo 3 p rn FRANCIS FRITH IN EGYPT; HENRY PEACH ROBINSON; ANO VIEWS OF OLD LONOON 1S7S-18S6: As photograph ed by A and J Bool, and Henry and T J Dixon Student ex­ hibits in the LEEDS GALLERY of the Academic Center REDISCOVERIES: GREECE: An exhibit of travel books on Greece from the late 17th century through the early I9lh cen­ tury In the JOSEY ROOM of the Academic Center through June THE WRITINGS OF ZELDA FITZGERALD: An exhort of the first printings ol both Zeida and F Scott Fitzgerald in the HRC lobby through June events WRITING MINI-WORKSHOP: -Women shaping contem- potary drama * t.30 to 4 30 p rn Saturday at Center Stage CHORUS AUDITIONS: Auditions tor the Austin Civic Chorus will be held at 7 p m every Monday at the First Cumberland Presbyterian Church. 6800 Woodrow Ave OTHER VOICES, OTHER ROOMS: Poetry readings and verbal performances by Texas-baaed gays, 8 p m Monday at f sther's Pool Halt, E Sixth St FORBIDDEN ARTS FROM LENINGRAD: Exited poet and ad critic Constantin Kuirmnaky and poetry translator Grady Hillman on the story of the underground artists in Russia Wednesday from 8 IO p rn in Hogg Auditorium Admission is St SO CAROLYN OSBORN, B ILL JOYCE: Poetry readings at Symphony Square. 6 p m Sunday 11th Street at Red River Street AUSTIN HUMAN RIGHTS COALITION: Benefit showing of “The Word es Out” 6 30 and 9 p m . Wednesday at Dob*e c$ # 0 $ SUMMER THEATRE PIZAZZZ TS: DEPARTMENT OF DRAMA <• accepting applications tor its 14th annual summer theater project to be hekj rn July and August Cal) 471-3354, Depart­ ment of Drama, for more information 1S7S AUSTIN BOOK OF DAYS: LAGUNA GLORIA ART MUSEUM and City ol Austin are accepting black and white photographic submissions throughout the month of June for .the 1979 A u sen Book of Days FILM AUDITIONS; Parts are evadable for a boy and a girl 14 years old. Auditions will ba hek) Sunday at 3 OO p rn rn th# fourth floor snack area of Communications BuAdmg A on the UT campus theater COMMEOIA DEL AUSTIN: Youth theatre starting at 10 30 a rn Wednesday in the Symphony Square Amphitheatre Children SO cents, adults free if accompanied by a child WINNIE-TME-POOH: FUN THEATRE PRODUCTION of the musical comedy based on A A M.ine's stores Opening Fri­ day and running through July 16. performances will be presented at 7:30 p.m Thursday and Fnday arx! Saturday and at 2 15 p rn. Sunday me Zachary Scott Theatre Center BREAD AND SOUP THEATER: THE CREEK THEATER con­ tinues its Lunchtime Theater with Lades of Spoon River" Tuesday. Puppet Shows, Wednesdays. “ Fe vers Femm#3" Thursdays and "Helen Handley Tens Stores" Fridays from noon to I 15 pm through Jure Cad 477-8900 Tuesdays GILDA: TAKE TWO: CENTER STAGE presents the comedy st 11 p m Friday and Saturday. 8 p m Sunday, through June Can 477-1010. ‘ ! ‘ ' i r r i. THE IN TIM ATE THEATER OF POETRY AND PROSE: Presents contemporary one-act plays by students of Lon Morris College 7 p m. Thursday in the Cactus Cafe, Admission is free INDIANS: Arthur Kopit’s myth of the American West. At Center Stage Thursday. Friday and Saturday at 8:15 p.m. through Saturday THE HOBBIT: NEW WORLD PUPPET PLAYERS presents Tolkien’s fantasy at 8 p m Wednesday in Theatre in the Rye, 120 W Fifth St A FUNNY THING HAPPENED ON THE WAY TO THE FORUM: Starring John Schuck in this Roman orgy of comedy Tuesday through Friday at 6 and 9:30 p m , Saturday and Sun­ day 2 30 and 8 p m Mary Moody Theatre, St Edward’s University through Sunday SAME TIME NEXT YEAR: Smash adult comedy starring Robert and Marilynn Horton at the Country Dinner Playhouse. For (enervations, 836-5921 LENNY: AUSTIN REPERTORY GROUP Presents the life and works of Lenny Bruce each Sunday and Monday at 8:30 p rn through June at the Soap Creek Saloon, 707 Bee Caves Road dance NOCTURE: Premiere of new dance and music by Dee McCandless and Gene Menger, performed by INVISIBLE, INC 8 p m Saturday In the Amphitheatre of the Laguna Gloria Art Museum, 3809 W 35th St BALLET UNDER THE STARS: AUSTIN CIVIC THEATRE ballet under the stars Friday and Saturday at 8:15 p.m. in the Zilker Park Hillside Theatre Admission is free GERMAN FOLK DANCING: In the Union beer garden Friday 5 30 to 6 30 p m. music RUSSIAN FOLK MUSIC: Caryl Emerson and Michael Del Guidice present the songs of Modest Mussorgsky from noon until 1 p.m. Monday, Union Bldg. 2.102 GLEN DAUM MUSICAL ENSEMBLE: Starlight Concert series Tuesday at 8:30 p m on the Union Patio. Admission is free DISCO: In the Texas Tavern, 9 p.m. Wednesday SOUL DISCO WITH OAN BAILEY: In the Texas Tavern 9 p.m. Thursday PAUL RAY ANO THE COBRAS: Friday and Saturday in the Tavern $1 with UT ID; others $1.50 GREEZY WHEELS: In concert at 7 p.m Monday in the Zilker Hillside Theatre. Admission is free LITTLE IMO: In concert at the Rosewood Recreation Center at 7 p m Tuesday Admission is free MOODS OF COUNTRY MUSIC: In concert at the Northwest Park Wednesday at 7 p .rn. Wednesday. Admission is free MARCIA BALL: On# of Austin’s favorite female vocalists perfor­ ming Friday night in Symphony Square, 11th Street at Red River Street RICHARD MASON: Twelve-string guitarist performs Saturday night at Symphony Square. 11th and Red River LES BROOERIES MUSICALES: A baroque music group with Don Tharp and Rebecca Sankey In concert at noon Friday on the Texas Capitol grounds. Admission is free STEVEN BUCHANAN: DMA piano recital. Music Building Recital Hall. 8 p m. Tuesday Included will be works by Mozart, Haydn. Bach. Bartok and Chopin. Admission is free SUMMER LONGHORN BANO: In concert at 8:30 p rn. Wednes­ day in the LBJ Library Plaza Admission is $1 LARRY HARRISON: Baritone, senior voice recital 4:30 p.m. Fri­ day m the Music Building Recital Hall. Admission is free ROSS ALLARD: Non-degree piano recital. 8 p m Saturday in the Music Building Recital Hall.Admission is free ROUND TOP FESTIVAL: Features the 1978 Texas Festival Chamber Orchestra Friday at 8 15 p.m.; annual Free Children’s Day concert at 11 a rn. Saturday; chamber trio at 8 15 p.m. Saturday; and young artists featured Sunday at 4 p m t i I iii th I* • • a t t Hating* arara c o m p ita l by M arforla By C Iim m m T iim Staff, Baumgarten, la w * Wacs. Cam ata M a n * * * , lin d a O d e *, la u ra * ftabm ovtti and W arrau Beecher OM CAMPOS JA SOM AMO TNC AMQOMAUTS S p - Monday UNION PADO Pay Narryftauaen s •ortoerluFy detailed ar*! vn*pna»vety a rw naM m o n **™ and Barnard H a rm *™ $ •com ara most of ira th o * ai to * (M o-Hollywood version. of in# quest tor ira OOMan Fleece OKLAHOM A. 6 JO 4 9 30 p rn M ono** BATTS Pin# finn Verano of ana1 a arguacm tna mow m iuanea! m u **-* of ma tost SO yaws Everytoing about in * snow say* e ta *** " Th# Nm ta,!* somewhat tto rt but ast* m a n ia s to provide jo o c soNJ anMftMnmWK Aperea da M ats* choreography rn as sw ay* am am au* T h * * Bodger* end ram m ermmr at t*w r baw — and Star* awfully good POAT APACNC. 7 4 9 p m 'a a a . BURDINE John Ford's c w k Western a ma Vat m na to n o i* cavalry tntogy fS h a Worn A >show Batoon", -•« * G rande"! arx: start John A sm s Nanty Ponds, a Managed Shine* Tam p* Ward Bono George O Bnan and oner members of the fo rd Mock company Th« to n K n o t a rty a n t* - (swung bul proves mal Forte* n e w of the American w ee and (Met aas tar mors c o m p ** and mason* than people tow * TM * M ISFITS. 7 JO 4 9 45 p rn ’ a a m . uN»ON THEATER M a r** Monroe and O s * -Gab* cc atar n th * John Huston directed *m about Monroe » wto-promottng -nuance on a group of cowboy* trg ftta ly W e* Monroe and Q M M n a n *m « ism • a s s n appearance* rn lh * Mm w rie r aaa w rfle r by Arthur Miner and Mate-aa a un# i.c x v a n g caw cf MoNfo mar y CMI Them * R u t* a d E l Waxacn TTMI A MNC AM OUCCM. * JO 4 # 3 0 p m Wednesday UNION THEATER Th* Nm •o n H tAnpffey Bogan ms onry Academy Award to Wa MSI cesare ha ms: KMharw e Hepbu rn pay m oldy bow caesar and fcxgn ap•nmm s-awromg down t nae1 rn w in # Ainee CAM MCN JONS S. « JO 4 9 p rn Wedn esday BA-TS HALL AuOtTQA _ M Otto Piam ogar * heavy d-r a c to r* hand • way much rn evidence to to * updM d var***- o* ma Stow joe* a "Caman ' Harry a n acara* and Dorothy Dandndpe head and an­ tiae* caw WHO'S AFRAM) o r YlRIOtNtA w o o e r ? T X 4 t a o p m Wednesday UNION T h e a t e r u « * NtohoM* IS M aaspwsor of ma Edward Ansa p*y The fu ry MMM HK hawing codag# tocuSy ODUMS Matures knocA-out p e rto r-w xa e by Me n ard Burton • cacam T«y«r. Sandy D e m * and George Sag* CARTOON MfOMT. 7 4 9 p rn ?»K>n*oai BURDINE A j O *TO « u W An e vw w g of American Warn** Brother* » * be e praaamso by Buga 0*P> Rprtcy and Roto R un*** ?>*r* we* be a Superman cartoon and SWN O ruiw hw w k "acamonw*r and toougnnu comedy but a or fie mow wa* eawwd and ,r»«aNM | p o rtr**** of toe iw u a or ^ to atar* D * r * Keaton anc It v u • oo-qm . 1*1 J S M A IL CHANQC. 10 p.m. Friday and Saturday, UNION THEATER Francois Truttaut returns to his persistent theme of the delights, delusions and disappointments ol childhood ("400 Blows", "The Wild Child” ) in this recent effort which is a compila­ tion of film portraits of several French children OFF CAMPUS T H I BAD NEWS BEARS OO TO JAPAN, FOX, SOUTHWOOD I 4 ll The third film in the sanes was produced by Michael Ritchie ("The Bad News Bears") and directed by Jeff Berry. Tony Curtis stars in this film about a Little League team that visits Japan THE BUODY HOLLY STORY, CAPITAL PLAZA Holly was an indisputable innovator of rock 'n' roll who left behind an exciting legacy of music whose originality and vibrancy is unfortunately not equalled in this cinematically uncreative biography CATHY TIPPEL, RIVERSIDE True story taken from the memoirs of Dutch writer Nee Doff Cannes Film Festival winner starring Monique van de Van THE CHEAP DETECTIVE, HIGHLAND MALL Nail Simon's latest laff riot All star cast includes Peter Falk, Ann-Margaret, John Housman. Stockard Channing and many many (many!) more. CLOSE ENCOUNTERS OF THE THIRD KIND, AQUARIUS IV. To many peope Steven Spielberg's tale of mankind's meeting with beings from other worlds is more than just another film it's a religious experience ITS tempting to say that Douglas Trumbull s special-effects are the real stars of the show but ifs not that simple effects, acting (Richard Dreyfuss is wonderful as always), music and direction add up to make this film wnll *Qrth seeing CAPRICORN ONE. FOX, SOUTHWOOD I 4 I! Members of the Fiat Earth Society will love this tedious piece of clap trap The premise of the film is really intriguing — it begins with the assumption that the space program was a massive hoax Unfor tunatety, it looks (and holds the audience's interest) like a made-for TV movie — a fact under ined by the cast led by James 'Dr Kiley" Brolln, O J "Superstar ' Simp son and Hal "The Senator" Holbrook THE ENO.Northcross IV The end can be entertaining as Burt Reynolds, Sally Field anc Dom Detuise prove The first 15 minutes Reynolds plays with and satirizes his macho male persona in a way few actors could Reynolds directs QO DZILIA ON MONSTER ISLAND, AQUARIUS IV. This latest entry in the series has Godzilla on his own turf proving again why he's Japan s national hero THE GOODBYE GIRL, VILLAGE IV Directed by Harold Ross from Nail Simons screenplay, this comedy about unusual roommates stars Marsha Mason anc Richard Dreyfuss GREASE, HIGHLAND MALL John Travolta and Olivia Newton-John star in this bim version of the smash Broadway musical about love and high school in the 1950s HARPER VALLEY P.T.A., AQUARIUS IV, FOX. Movie based on Jeannie C Riley's song stars Barbara Eden. Ronny Cox, Nanette Fabray, Louis Nye and Pat Pauls?' THE JUNGLE BOOK. LAKEHILLS, VILLAGE IV THE JUNGLE BOOK is second 'ate Disney (which still leaves it about twice as entertaining as any other film you're likely to see this week) The animation is flawless, but a little too slick The adaptation o' Rudyard Kipling's stories is a little too cutesy This one really is for tho kids Plus Pluto and the Armadillo." JAWS ll, NORTHCROSS Roy Scheider stars in this sequel as the giant shark comes back for dessert THE LAST WALTZ, VILLAGE IV More than a movie about a concert this becomes a study of and a tribute to the changing nature of rock 'n' roll and the end of an era Martin Scorcese (“ Taxi Driver” ) directed and The Band, Bob Dylan, Jom Mitchell. Van Morrison, Erie Clapton, Dr, John and others perform in this moving, smoothly constructed film MATILDA, AQUARIUS IV, NORTHCROSS, SHOWTOWN, SOUTHSIDE DRIVE-IN Comedy directed by Daniel Mann, starring Elliot Gould. Robert Mitchum, Roy Clark and JJboxing kangaroo Title song sung by Pat 4 Debby Boone METAMORPHOSIS, LAKEHILLS. Combination of animation and music. Joan Baez, the Robing Stones and the Pointer Staters provide some of the songs SATURDAY NIGHT FEVER. LAKEHILLS, SHOWTOWN 4 SOUTHSIDE DRIVE-IN All the faults of the film (a muddled plot about overnight maturation and uneven acting to name just two) are forgiven and forgotten when the Bee Gees start to play and John Travolta starts to dance. Travolta puts the lie to the old adage that says TV stars can't make it in the movies Ha has made It — big s m o k e y AND THE BANDIT, AMERICANA Some people laugh when told that this film is the second biggest box office draw for 1977 and that it is a beautifully crafted movie as -well But both are true statements In his first directorial effort, Hai Needham (assistant director for "The Longest Yard") dom an admirable job while Buri Reynolds as Bandit proves that he is one of the more important and talented comic actors of the 70's. Co-stars Sally Field, Ja ck* Gleason and Jerry Reed SHORT R U N * CRIAi, DOBIE Austin premiere of Cannes Film Festival award winner by noted di' a . cen •w ra lW t shovutown usa NMfT SIJ I CAMI*0* *0 SH SSM 55*,?"5ise t w e d r t v r e Ttui tt* **»iit t i*o H u m BOX-OFHCfOPlN 6:60 THE FEVER IS SPREADING. JO HN T R A V O LT A i t * fyTLWD/\Y NIGHT) FEVER----- S H O W T O W N W EST jO W TH SIPi NOR I t i V \Ct, ^ \ MATILDA IN (G) P l u s GOOD TO THE LAST „ _ l COLDEN DROP! brl-.w V H O N C V S c h I d u k s ® T E X A S T H E A T R E _____________________________ V " T « 0 4 4 J J J * G U A D A L U P E r V l).*t!, No O ne Undv ■ ’ i> Atini.t**-^ L a i e S h ,'a v f ih1.iv & SvJtu*cL*v S w w lv * * O p e n N o o n *'•. i ; i B*avg t O > w«h; wdVsv Ct Age I Betta Pritchett. Owner For Com plimentary Consultation a g e # * . \ jjjt 0 Day or Evening Call 477-4070 j VISA U N IV E R SIT Y ELECTROLYSIS n o t W. 2 4 th , S u ita 105 I J U S T I S *48 •35-18 TS TJ8-J 4S (TIS faltHM S 5 B B B I G l s c i u l x x ONE OF THE YEAR S BEST FILMS ” StVK> Nit* t v • *»*•«* [ V / A m an w o m a n cannot rasiat in a film that I find irraaiatabla Truf v x \ , , u l has m ade an exceptional film " ___________________ — G £/ V f S H A L I T H B C TV ~ T h l 1Y W M , \ t o j t o (Louted u A n n e * v F E A T U R E S 6 3 0 8 4 6 FEATURES: S1.50 ti! 6:00, S2.00 after M ID NIGH TERS: 51.50 X W R - WVYSTf M E S O F TNE O RG AN ISM MIDNIGHTS!! MIDNIGHTER R«4aco4 M i n Mi t M> HA: 1-444-11 'SMOKEY and the BANDIT" i SOUTHWOOD 1*9 J * J ^ MHH) IIM* IK ONI I) $2.00 HI 0 p.m. HA: "BAD NEWS BEARS GO TO JAPAN" i K A I W I * _______ Tony Curtn $2.00 HI 0 p.m. HA: l:IM J* -5 :« $ 4 4 * -lfc lS ’ CAPRICORN I" Telly Savalas AQUARIUS-4 44* IIH IMA HI4V4MT *4llf> IO $2.00 Hi 4 p.m. "M ATILDA" I M I IO-S M jjm-ji * o b « if M ire h u m M o t t C o a k ! l r I ' ' $2.00 TIL 4 PJL moms* js-ijmjs Mart Hnmcll ‘‘CORVETTE SUMMER" (PG) $2 OO TIL 4 P.M. J OO 44# 44*444 IOO* "THE END" Burt Reynolds (R) $2.00 TIL 4 P.M. t:«5-3 455:45-7 «S-t:4S "HARPER VALLEY P.T.A" Be rho rn Eden (PG) I HIGHLAND MALL I H 35 AT KO E N IG LN 451-7326 $1.50 HI 1:30 #r capacity - f v m y D A Y — 11:30 AM DAILY A — screenings — 12:10-2:35-540-/:2S-MS | -KXM TRAVOLTA OLIVIA NEWTQfj-JQHM , ‘GREASE ' H i v . ^ Would you be shocked to find out that the greatest moment o f our recent history may not have happened at all? CAPRICORN ONE ^ M ^ ntkrtajvment.w c n o ...» ^ I- a z I j r t« i MVAHNf » BUDS I loc - w _ ? ^ T T T n i iS I TODAY 1:15-3:30-5:45-8K>0-l0:15 p.m. MANN IN| A TRI S 1 1 1 ™ V m h m m h i FOX TRIPLEX s n ’ SIAW etvD 454 7 7 1 1 M H H «TRANS*TEXAS . S outhwood U H ‘‘A beautifully acted, haunting movie.” — Vin cen t Canby. N Y T im e s 44 A tantalizing memory—an engrossing family portrait Geraldine Chaplin glow s-A na Torrent is perfection.” — J u d ith C rist, Sa tu rd a y Review 441 VS Scene after scene is unforgettable? — P e n e lo p e Gilliatt, N e w Yorker M a g a z in e “A must to see.” — M a rjorie R o se n , M s M a g a zin e VV “Utterly unforgettable.’ — A a ro n Sc h in d le r, F a m ily C ircle Austin Premiere! Ends Thursday Also Showing: Tho Austin Promioro of “ Spirit O f The B e e h iv e ” Ona! A Larry Gordon Presentation Directed by Carlos Saura Starring Geraldine Chaplin. Ana Torrent Produced by Elias Querejeta A Jason Allen Release p c - ------ ORIA: 6:00 A 10:00 VARSITY M U O U A O A IU P C • 474-4M1 SPIRIT: 8:10 Cl NE MATE X AS SUMMER F IL M SERIES Burd in e A u d . 7-9 " r e v is e d " $1.25 Tuesdays Thursdays 4/20 4/27 7/11 7/IB 7/25 •/I •/» • /is FORT APACHE (Ha, d. John Pard. John Wayne, Henry Fonda, Shirley Temple, Ward Band. UGETSU (its)) d. Kanji Mizoguchi. Mathiko Rya. Fourth el July IT'S A WONDERFUL LIFE (1*441 d. Frank Copra. Jamas Stewart, Donna Road. CITIZEN K A N E * *15 d. Orson Wallas. Orson Wallas, Agnat Mao re Hoad SH A U WE DANCE? d. Mark Sandrick. Fred At tai re, Ginger R agar s. SINGING IN THE RAIN (its?) d. Stanley Dania 4 Gone Kelly. Gone Kelly, Debbie Reynolds, Donald O'Connor. SHE WORE A YELLOW RIBBON d. John Ford. John Wayne, Joanna Oro. BICYCLE THIEVES (im) d. Vittorio do Ska. la tuba rte Mnpgierani, laze Staiein. 4/22 4/29 7/4 7/13 7/20 7/27 1/3 1/10 1/17 CARTOON NIGHT Featuring tho warks af Max Fleischer, Warner Brothers. WHATEVER HAPPENED TO BABY JANE? d. Robert Aldrich. Batta Davis, Jean Crawford. GIANT ii,mi d. Gaarga Stevens. Jamas Dean, Elizabeth Taylor. NIGHT OF THE LIVING DEAD m id d. Gaarga Romero. Judith O'Dea, Duane Janes. BIRTH OF A NATION (1915) J I P JO I D. W. Griffith. Lillian Gish, Henry B. Walthall. THE LAST LAUGH 0*74) d. F. W. Mumau. Emil Jennings. THE CRIME OF M. LANGE ( in # d. Jean Renoir. Reno lafevro. Florida. MAJOR DUNDEE (mil 7 4 »:is d. Sam PtckinpoH. Charlton Hasten, Rkhard Harris. SECOND BREATH t,m , i m d. Jean-Pierre Melville. Una Ventura, Pool Vour is sa. REBECCA (i*40) *jo «uy d. Adrad Hitchcock. Jean Fontaine, lawrence Olivier. ( ) IK)()ks III ( olhtft’ttf I tnt'Arts Summer I ntrrtainnu-nt f i l m S eries S ^ ^ c E s i i € W T i M r A” ★ A ★ ★★ Ar ★ It INK ii i I AI 6 :3 0 K ‘IOO PM HAI IS A ! D I I OKU IM OKLAHOMA S ta rrin g (m rd o n M acRae Hi S h irle y J o n e s Admi‘>ni«»fi I u t- to m‘ost*ntk kri luthiers $ 1 .0 0 genenoilpublic f r A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A Elaine Powers’ Summer Shape-Up Party arry Hannah, a new talent with two novels and a slew of E sq u ire short stories to his name, will be called a regionalist by many. In this collection’s 20 shorts he writes about southern localities, southern a ttitu d e s, and ch an g es w rought in southern thinking from the Civil War to to­ day One has the feeling that a territory is being claimed and mapped out Vet Hannah, compelled to set his stories in the Deep South, is impatient with the South's outer texture, the expanse we see from car windows and front porches Instead, his concern is an urban, ‘ inner” South, the harried workings of minds that feel no attachm ent to the earthy dignity valued by southern tradition. His people convince themselves that humanity can­ not be relied upon for gain or salvation. They opt for peace of mind by pursuing un­ conventional desires, exploring the ab­ surd. These are ro o tless, fran tic people, Hannnah s urgent narratives barely men­ tion settings, in fact. Keen southern minds have declined far enough into civilization not to hear the mythic call of the land their grandfathers heeded These are middle- and upper m iddle-class Vanderbilt or LSU-educated failures who can ’t bring them selves to trust the instincts they need to endure surroundings where life still happens at gutlevel. M isfits in a land won by physical labor and exploitation, these introspective, spiritless characters find meaning only when and where they don’t expect it And this drives them to the brink of helplessness. Bukowski, the poet, once wrote that a man might withstand fire and flood but go crazy with frustration when his shoelace breaks In Hannah’s uncertain world, cyclical events such as war and a toilet flushing to wake an entire household each morninng get identical reactions: disgust, dread. That which is regular may strike fear in the ego which never enjoys total stability. One begins to think that Han­ nah’s desperate losers could learn something from those who had the land before them , farm ers are more noted for stoicism than intellec­ tuals. And Hannah has to sm irk, amazed — the Southerner writing what he knows — at these egocentrics of his homeland who would break down at the snap of a shoelace. Hannah, like his characters, has an obsession or two. Usually he paints the most sen seless events in his nearly plotless sketches with the fullest detail, believing his tragicomedy schem es will wax most poignant in absurd contexts; m eanw hile, he se e m s b o th ered by homosexuality enough it an almost obtrusive motif in several of these pieces. to make If one dism isses Hannah s occasional obtuseness, however, “ Airships” hits with impact. One day, Hannah will be an im­ _ R od Sny(ler portant w riter. “A i r s h i p s ; ’ ’ by B a r r y H a n n a h ; published by Knopf, Inc.; 1978; $8.95. Q Free Day Thursday, June 22 Free Use of Salon Fquipment I rue I earn I »n v Exercise Session v.j His* Prizes, Games. Refreshments C Free Figure Consultation Party Week Special 6 M Per Month Only $ Save 1/3 (Complete 4 nv>nth Pn'giant I N our season for fun begins with a free day of fun at our Summer Shape-Up Parte We know Call now for reservations! Stories by Barry Hannah Tilt* Uniwrsit v of Texas ar Austin Depattmentsoi Drama and Music Present dodgers & Hammerstein s Directed by Bob Herget Elaine Powers Figure Salons • ! U < > * i ’ .v o # • * r < g w > « & *• (> * > • Austin South I M H tiv . MONDAY PITCHERS OF BEER *2.25 TUESDAY 7:30 pm-10:00 pm LADIES NITE ant $2.00 OPEN BAR We let the men in when the clock strik es IO p.m . WEDNESDAY BAR D R IN K S 25' 8-IO pm 50'10-12 pm 75' 12 pm-2 am THURSDAY 25'BEER all night FRIDA Y-SATURDAY FREE P O P C O R N SUNDAY 7 pm-IO pm 25' H IBALLS 12 Tm in the Gifted and Talented Program ... I it means Tm guess creative. Not more c r e a t i v e t h a n anybody else, but at least enough to get noticed.1 troop of barefooted kids shuffles ■ B n H n onto the elm wood floor of the Mathews Elem entary School stag e 'They wear solid-colored T- shirts and shorts and nervous sm iles. They form lines and their jitters melt into zealous grins as dance in stru ct Tim Tingle warms them up with deep knee bends and plies to the beat of a bongo. The audience sits patiently in metal folding chairs neatly arranged in the school cafeteria A freckle-faced kid ka-boings a plastic spoon in his mouth; his smaller buddy whispers behind a cupped hand, “There’s Sarah.” After warming up, the children on stage take turns stepping forth. “ I’m in the Gifted and Talented Program,” a brown- haired. wide-eyed. ll-yea.-old girl explains. “ I guess it means I’m creative. Not more creative than anybody else, but at least enough to get noticed.” She tapes the artwork to a bulletin board on the stage and sits down. So began a presentation by 26 children who are “gifted and talented in the arts” at Mathews Elementary School. Early one night in May the kids danced, acted like telephone booths and typewriters, improvised skits and showed videotapes that they “ directed, writ, acted out and taped” (one, an excellent rendi­ tion of "Charlie’s Angels” ). Meanwhile their paintings, photographs and photogram s, mobiles and clayworks stood on proud display at the back of the cafeteria. The Gifted and Talented Program at Mathews Elementary School is a unique one because it encourages artistic rather than academic developement. “The neat thing about it is that a lot of these kids aren’t academ ically ta len ted ,” program coor­ dinator Jo Anne Schatz says. “They go to a resource room or to special ed, but with this they can say, ‘Hey, I’m special’ — they blossom. That’s the purpose, to stim ulate ar­ tistic awareness.” The project originated in 1976 with grant money allotted by the Texas Education Agen­ cy. “ Federal money was available so we wrote a proposal for the gifted and talented in the arts because we felt there were a lot of creative kids here at Mathews,” Schatz ex­ plains. “ This is a real neat community. There s lots of poor UT students, but they want their kids to have artistic training.” in­ Mathews serves the Clarksville area, cluding the U n iv e r sity ’s B rack en rid g e Apartments for married students. CTP l I I I I HI l he program involves 26 9- to 12- year-olds staying after school three tim es a week for at least six hours. Occasional field trips at night or on Saturdays have included visiting Wright’s Pottery Studios on Barton Springs Road, receiving “ special guest” status at Zachary Scott Theatre’s “ A Little Night Music” (starring the children’s drama teacher Mavoumeen Dwyer) and attending a reh ea rsa l and performace of D a n cers Contemporary Group. During the after school hours, professional artists are brought in to share their expertise with the kids. Mavoumeen Dwyer, actress, director and drama teacher at Baylor University and winner of two awards from the Austin Circle of Theaters, coaches the kids in acting Gordon Thomas, freelance video artist and employee at RLRN, teaches them to operate a portapak. Potter Nancy Jellineck, former owner of the Fifth Street Studio, gives lessons in the throwing glazing and firing of pottery. And fr e e la n c e photographer Cecvle Rexrode exposes the m ysteries of the camera: how to take pic­ tures and how to develop and print film. With the federal grant money allotted by TEA, Mathews bought two potter’s wheels and several photographic enlargers so the kids are well-equipped The Austin Independent School District pays for clay, paint, paper, film and two-dollar Diana plastic cam eras. Tim T ingle, a dancer with D a n cers Contemporary Group, shows the children the beauty of movement. Tingle says he has not encountered any problems with boys con­ sidering dance “sissyish.” “ We try to avoid any kind of sexual division,” he says. “From the very beginning I told them that dance was an athletic activi­ ty and I wore gym shorts for the first month and encouraged them to do so.” “Some of the most active participants have been boys,” Tingle adds. Beryle Bell, sophomore education major at the University and mother of a child in the program, agrees. “Before, Burt would never be caught dead dancing. Now he com es home and does this." she replies. A special procedure was designed to choose children for the program. First teachers recommend pupils they consider especially creative. Then pupils are asked who they think is particularly gifted art-wise, because teachers often miss a creative child simply because he or she might be quiet. Children then submit samples of their work and demonstrate their dramatic abilities. The ar­ tists who will eventually teach the group are judges. Children who score highest in these four areas are selected for the program. All the children participate in painting, pottery, drama, dance, photography and videotaping “Sure some children say, ‘All I want to do is paint.’ The idea is to try the other art forms. All the children do everything,” Schatz explains. “ I g rew -up dancing; my folks sent m e to dance class. But I’m afraid to hold a paint­ brush,” she says “My idea is that kids should be exposed to this multi-art approach.” chatz can be called the spearhead for the program. She drafted the original proposal which petition­ ed TEA for funds. Then when federal money expired in 1976, she rounded up parent support to convince the Austin Independent School District to fund the program for the 1977 school year. B e sid e s coo rd in a tin g the G ifted and Talented Program at M athews, Schatz teaches dance at the YMCA and educates a class of “exceptional” children — both the gifted and the handicapped — at Austin Com­ munity College. She holds a m aster’s degree in special education. At the end of each school year when the program concludes, parents, teachers and children fill out evaluations to determine the individual progress of its participants. In the 1976-77 survey, parents noted in the children an increase in artistic expression and interest in the arts and a more positive attitude toward school in general. Parents also notic­ ed improved self concept and better peer learning relationships. One child with problem s showed im provem ent in eight academic areas with the advent of the program. “ As a result of this experience, Suzanna’s confidence has grown. You can see it in how she relates to people,” says Linda Moran, senior sociology student at the University and mother of a child in the program. “The changes in the kids are more total,” says University graduate government stu­ dent Rober Haley. “ It effects their whole per­ sonality, not just artistically.” The gifted and talented group’s most recent project entailed painting a mural on the out­ side wall of the Clarksville Creamshop. Schatz approached Creamshop owner Gary Logsdon with the idea and he “ co m ­ missioned” the kids. The children then sketched the outside of the building and drew their ideas. “ I cam e over on Friday and looked at their pictures and we discussed what the wall should look like,” Logsdon says.-“ What came out of this was a rainbow with some clouds around it and som e ice cream cones falling down,” he says. Mathews supplied part of the paint and the brushes while Logsdon supplied scaffolding, paint, and ice cream for “ pay.” Gifted and talented programs exist at other schools in Austin, but none are as elaborate as the M athews program — with paid professional a rtists and an after-school curriculum. “Other programs are usually a teacher tak­ ing an afternoon a week and working in the classroom. Ours is totally separate from school stuff,” Schatz says. owever a possiblity exists that the sophistication of the Mathews program will be diminished by a in sch o o l funds. Rum or cu t predicts that next year no salary will be allotted for a coordinator, thus a teacher would have to volunteer time. “ If it could be run without a coordinator, fine. But none of us here (at Mathews) seem to think so,” Schatz says. “Coordinating this many different people at different tim es — artists, children, like with the Creamshop — i f s a lot of work,” she adds. Active parent support is another problem, according to Beryle Bell. “ Last year’s parent group was very active. This year w e’re hav­ ing problems getting parent response The programs^ been around for two years now and they think i f s just gonna roll on,” she 13 Students in the Mathews School Gifted and Talented Program (above, and far left) participate happily In several of the impromptu games that serve to heighten their awareness of the arts. says. Presently, the future of the program is up in the air. “ We’re in the process of evaluating and talking about next year,” Schatz says, but “ I couldn’t even venture to tell you about it.” Lanky 11-year-old Jason Asnes, bongo beater for the gifted and talented’s final presentation, has his own thoughts on the program: “ It s a fun thing to do after school. Otherwise I’d be reading com ic books or skate boarding ” — Monika Maeckle Story by Monika Maeckle Drawings by Berke Breathed Photos by Larry Kolvoord 7:00 ■ _ l l C B © GO OD M O RN ING A M E R IC A AFTERN O O N 14 M O RN ING 0 6 C B S N E W S V A R I O U S P R O G R A M M I N G O 11 C A R T O O N S 6:25 S A N A N T O N I O 10 ® Classroom (THUR ) I L L U S T R A T E D (TUE ) 6 D A Y B R E A K 4 © C A R T O O N S 0 i i G O O D D A V Q (TUE }. Tony Brown s Journal (THUR ) 8 Q L IL IA S , Y O G A A N D Y O U IO I R M O R N I N G E X C H A N G E ( M O N ) Classroom (WED FRI ) ( M O N . 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German Soccer (WED ), The Unwanted (FRI ) 19 CD (M O N), ‘Crosscurrent’ (TUE ), 'Last Day Of The War' (WED ), 'Enter Laughing (THUR.), Blondie's Big Deal’ (FRI ) i3 CD e n S a n a n t o n i o 'The Last Rom an’ MOVIE 1:30 8 4 0 6 12 © DO CTORS 5 0 11 GUIDING LIGHT 2:00 I D 3 © IP C D © G E N E R A L HO SPITAL 0 ( 4 ) 8 Q era a i 112 ANO I H tH W UHLD ^fuA S, YOGA AND YOU ACOMPANAME 2:30 3:00 3:30 4:00 0 11 A L L IN T H E F A M I L Y V I L L A A L E G R E C B 10 ( B © E D G E O F N I G H T G U N S M O K E C A R T O O N C O R N E R © 1 1 M A T C H G A M E R I F L E M A N S E S A M E S T R E E T T H R E E S T O O G E S C A R O L I N A (10 C D LIT T L E R A S C A L S T H R E E S T O O G E S L O S T IN S P A C E N E W Z O O R E V U E L E A V E IT T O B E A V E R H A N N A - B A R B E R A C O M E D I E S M I G H T Y M O U S E A N D F R I E N D S G I L L I G A N ^ I S L A N D G O M E R P Y L E M U N S T E R S M I S T E R R O G E R S B A T M A N F A M I L Y A F F A I R M A R C H A N U P C I A L 4:30 O C B B E V E R L Y H I L L B I L L I E S L U C Y S H O W G I L L I G A N ’S I S L A N D M C H A L E ’S N A V Y H O G A N ’S H E R O E S S T A R T R E K E L E C T R I C C O M P A N Y S U P E R M A N N E W L Y W E D G A M E R I N A 5:00 £ 2- O 12 T © C B © A B C N E W S M Y T H R E E S O N S H O G A N ’S H E R O E S © 11 N E W S Z O O M L O V E L U C Y M A R Y T Y L E R M O O R E L A V E N G A N Z A 5:30 5 O C B 11 C B S N E W S ANC5Y G R I F F I T H S H O W 6 12 N B C N E W S 1 D R E A M O F J E A N N I E O V E R E A S Y D I C K V A N D Y K E S H O W A B C N E W S R E P O R T E R 41 0 K M O L (N B O San Antonio, Cable Channel i£ © K E N S (C B SI San Antonio, Cable Channel 11 © KUEN (NBO). Temple, Cable Channe 6 © K T H * (CBS* Austin Cable Channel 2 2 © KEHN t Public t Austm-S A , Cable Channel 8 CB KW TX tCBS> Waco, Cable Channel 5 ' CD KTVT dnd ) Fort Worth. Cable Channel 9 CB KSA T ( ABC* San Antonio, Cable Channel 10 © K l VE (ABC) Austin. Cable Channel 3 © KTVV (N B O Austin. Cable Channel 4 OD KW E X (Spanish) San Antonio, Cable Channel 13 A CTV (Com Cable) Austin. Cable Channel 10 ____________ p rn M - F WE RE NOT SHORT ON SHORTS TH AS HAGS S i f t M ASSAG E X r' CELEBRATION DAY ^ G i v e y o u r s e l f a treat! j j j Io u art' in v i te d to experience a hand. J M fT f o o t and or facial massage ... with the ! j L| cream or lotion o f your choice. S A T . 1 2 - 6 H ail Hour SS OO Quarter hour S3 OO TOTAL MASSAGE 6 y W H o ^ Reg. Hardback Edition - $10.00 Special Sale Price - S8.00 C o m e Celebrate W ith U s f I X X I X PAT PAINTER’S FAMILY HAIRSTYLING CENTER MEN WOMEN CHILDREN 3 C a t i o n s to S e r v e You 454-0484 454-3876 6009 Burnet Rd. IO U E. 41st 258-6366 13216-B .cton h o c Star, a Ute A am Ponds Springs Rd. j — W ITH THIS C O U P O N — I INTRODUCTORY SPECIAL: I I S h a m p o o , C o n d itio n , H a ircu t & * B lo w Dry; 2 for $ 1 4 (Bring a friand) I I or 1 for $8. a _______________ * a c M MTS nouo) w »$ ut new W * corr* t h * b i g * * * seMwfron o t a t h b t k shorts *« Austin $3 9 l - $ IO 96 Sporting Feet 2004 ? Guadalupe Austin, Te*as Above th* Httirtyt Sror* Open Tues thru Set 1 1 6 Dobie M oll 4 7 2 - 8 6 1 0 472-*M| ( • / G R O W T H ST U D IO fPfPli!JJP®®®0-®13® ® ® ® NEWS LOWELL THOMAS REMEMBERS BEWITCHED 6:00 6:30 MATCH GAME ODD COUPLE m CANDID CAMERA 8“ r n NEWS 11 HOLLYWOOD SQUARES (5) 0 ( 1 0 ) © EYES OF TEXAS O 6 ) 'ADAM 12 ( 1 ) 0 MACNEIL LEHRER REPORT (J)© RAT PATROL (13 GD EL CHAPULIN COLORADO 7:00 (£) © MOVIE -(MUSICAL)*** “ Paint Your Wagon” 1969 Lee Marvin, Clint Eastwood. Woman auctioned off by a Mormon husband is bought by a gold miner. They live with his partner who falls in love with the girl. (3 hrs.) Sd (IO CB © MONDAY NIGHT BASEBALL New York Yankees vs Boston Red Sox 0(4)0 6) (ID © LITTLE HOUSE ON THE PRAIRIE Mary Ingalls’ excitement about her first teaching job turns into frustration when a tyrannical woman leader attempts to drive her out of the job. (R; 60 mins.) 0 (|J O CU) THE JEFFERSONS It’s the blind leading the blind when George introduces his young clerk to the joys of camping. (R) (8) O SOCCER MADE IN GERMANY Cologne vs. Kaiserslautern (60 mins.) ALIAS SMITH AND JONES HUMILLADOS Y OFENDIDOS 7:30 O (5) O U t GOOD TIMES Winona must choose betweenThe chance of a lifetime, with the man of her dreams, or something tar more important. (R) (13 GD ESTA NOCHE ES LUCIA 8:00 0 4 0 (6) Ct?) © MONDAY NIGHT AT THE MOVIES Just A Little Inconvenience' Stars. Lee Majors, James Stacy. A Vietnam veteran, Frank Logan, tries to rehabilitate his best friend-bitter and withdrawn after being maimed in war action he feels Logan could have prevented. (2 hrs.) 0 (ID O OD M A S H Hawkeye and Hot Lips, to grudging companions on a special mission another M A S H unit, become romantically involved with one another under the stress of artillery fire. (Pf of a two-part episode; R) 8 O THE ROSENBERG-SOBELL CASE REVISITED t i his program is an updated version of The Unquiet Death of Julius and Ethel Rosenberg’ using material not previously available to portray the story of the first and only Americans to be put to death for espionage. (90 mins.) (9) CV) SECRET OF LOVING 13 ® SUPER ESTELAR MUSICAL 8:30 0 5 ( 0 CU) ONE DAY AT A TIME On her 36th bir­ thday, Ann looks in the mirror and realizes that a middle-aged woman is looking back. (R) (13 CD PASIONES ENCENDIDAS 9:00 0 CD O (11) LOU GRANT Robert Earl Jones guest stars as a talented artist whose faith in his friend, Lou Grant, is tested when Lou fights to save his life work from destruction. (R; 60 mins.) 9) CB MOVIE -(DRAMA) The Seventh Cross” 1944 Spencer Tracy, Signe Hasso. Seven Americans escape from a Nazi concentration camp and the German commander pursues them to get them back. (2 hrs., 15 mins.) 13 CD PACTO DE AMOR O K M O L (NBG) San Antonio, Cable Channel 12 O KENS (CBS) San Antonio, Cable Channel Ti O KCEN (N B O , Temple, Cable Channe 6 O K T B C (CBS) Austin, Cable Channel 2 2 O KLUN (Public) Austin-S.A , Cable Channel 8 f f i KWTX (CBS 1 Waco. Cable Channel 5 © KTVT find > Fort Worth, Cable Channel 9 © KSAT (ABC) San Antonio, Cable Channel 10 © KUVE (ABC) Austin, Cable Channel 3 © KTVV (N B O Austin, Cable Channel 4 GD KWEX (Spanish) San Antonio, Cable Channel 13 ACTV (Com. Cable) Austin, Cable Channel 10 7 IO p rn M I 7:00 a.m. THE MIOOAY PROGRAM BEETHOVEN, “ The Creatures of Prometheus"; J. STAMlTZ, Orchestral Trio in C, Op. 4, No. 3; BRAHMS. Variations on an Original Theme and Variations on a Hungarian Song; DEBUSSY, Sonata for Violin and Piano,"Syrinx‘’; 1:00 p.m. THE AFTERNOON PROGRAM MOZART, "The Magic Flute": Overture; Masonic Funeral Music, K.477; BRAHMS. Piano Concerto No. 1; HAYDN, Symphony No. 88 in G; DEBUSSY, "3 Nocturnes", VIVALDI, Violin Concerti, Op. 11: Nos. 3 and 4; a Cello Recital by Janos Starker, Part I: Music by MENDELSSOHN, MARTINU and in A ("Trout"); CHOPIN; SCHUBERT, Piano Quintet ROUSSEL, Suite in F; "Music of Old Russia" 5:00 p.m. DIVERTISSEMENT 7:00 p.m. MONDAY CONCERT MENDELSSOHN, Symphony No. 2 in B flat; STRAVINSKY, “ Le Sacre du Printemps" 9:00 p.m. LEONARD MASTERS PRESENTS “ The Black Composer", Part 3; 11:00 p.m. THE MUSIC YOU WANT r a t l i t ) K M F A *t'n i K l TT *fm June 19, 1978 9:30 (8 0 ANYONE FOR TENNYSON? The Pleasure Of Poetry 10:00 10:30 4 . 0 5 0 6 O f t ) IO (11 CB 12 © © ( ^ 0 NEWS 8 0 DICK CAVETT SHOW 113' CD VARIEDADES DE MEDIANOCHE (2 CE) MARSHAL DILLON (ID GS) SOAP Burt and Mary Campbell visit a psychiatrist regarding Burt’s problem .’ (R) O (4) O (6 12 © THE TONIGHT SHOW Guest host: Steve Martin. Guests: Bernadette Peters, Angie Dickinson, Glen Campbell. (90 mins ) SI (5) 0 (11 CBS LATE MOVIE Babe Stars Susan lark, Alex Karras. This Emmy Award winning film traces the life of Babe Didrikson Zaharias, from her Olympic triumphs as a track-and-field athlete to her career as a pro golfer, and finally to fjer unsuccessful battle with cancer. (8 0 ABC CAPTIONED NEWS ■I O© ADAM 12 11:00 (2J (3) CE) © POLICE STORY A Community Of Victims’ When a drug addict comes into possession of a gun, he later uses it to kill a policeman. (R) ( 8 0 WASHINGTON WEEK IN REVIEW 10 © EMERGENCY ONE (TS) CII 24 HORAS 11.30 (8 O WALL STREET WEEK ‘Premature Growth Stocks’ Host; Louis Rukeyser. Guest: John Westergaard, of Executive Vice Anametrics, Inc. President 81 4 0 6 12 © TOMORROW Host Tom Snyder uest: Sarah McLendon, veteran Washington newswoman. (60 mins.) (IO © F B I. . ( 3 ) © PTL PROGRAM O i l ) (9 ) CD PTL PROGRAM NEWS 12:00 12:10 12:30 1:00 ( 4 ^ © 0 6 ) NEWS NEWSWATCH PRESENTS P S E a n n i t e * I L French Cuisine A A A • i SOUPS • I CR E P P S • I SALAIS • I C W T R KS • G R K K K IMH Af AUKS • ESCARGOT • VEGETARIAN WHOLE TROUT ALMON D IN E IM PORTED REER AND WINE • I SANDWICHES • ZOCH HK • I t D E S S E R T S • IZ HOT T E A S • RI VSIAN SHAN I IH • C H IC K E N K IEV STT:AK W A N K I ™ K E R S E Y LANE 11:30-11:30p.m now serving beer & wine S u O > 8 i f P u b SKK) a.m.EKLEKTIKOS, with John A.elh BRAHMS. "Intermezzi" and “ Rhapsody". Op 119; FRANCK, Symphonic Variations, STRAVINSKY, "Agon", ELGAR, in­ troduction and Allegro, Op. 47; Serenade in E, Op 20. STRAUSS. “ Amor, Amor” . Op. 68; "Breit ueoer mein Haupt , Selection from “ Daphne '; ALBENlZ iberia , 11:00 a.m. READING ALOUD with Bill Cavness 11:30 a.m. SCIENCE SCENE 12:00 p.m. con John Wheat 2.00 p.m. OPTIONS 3 :0 0 p.m. CONVERSATION AT CHICAGO with Milton Rosenberg, A Decade of Conversations The Arts 3:30 p.m.NATIONAL ANO WORLD NEW8 4:00 p.m. OPTIONS IN EDUCATION with John Morrow 5:00 p.m. ALL THINGS CONSIDERED with Stamberg and Edwards 6:30 p.m. THE SPIDER'S WEB Storytelling in America, Tales of the West, Part 1 7:00 p.m. SHERLOCK HOLMES The Sign of the Four, Part 1 of 3 7:30 p.m. NATIONAL ANO WORLD NEWS 7:35 p.m. THE INQUIRING MIND with Giyma Crawford Smith SHM) p.m. JAZZ IN AUSTIN with Fred Bourque 11:00 p.m. SOUL ON FM with John E Dee ♦ * 4|/f J The Chef's Salad Lettuce, Tomatoes, Green Peppers, Roast Beef, Ham, Turkey, American and Swiss Cheese, Carrots and Onions. F R E E D E L I V E R Y l l A M -1 AM 476-7138 I f you're looking for the best Sub or Salad in tow n ... We got it! We now have air conditioning! 16 June 20, 1978 6 0 0 2 3 O O 4 © NBKTn £ 1 _ 8 0 LOWELL THOMAS REM EM BERS 6 O O ) IO 11 CB 12 © NEWS D f f i b e w i t c h e d 8 30 . _ 2 CIO HOLLYW OOD SQUARES 1 © ODD COUPLE O 12 IN SEARCH OF 4 © NEWS 0 11 NAME t h a t t u n e l o O 0 9 CD ADAM 12 A © MACNEIL LEHRER REPORT IO i m SHA NA NA G uest Teresa B re w e r 13 f f l ENRIQUE EL POLlVOZ 7:00 m a r y TYLER MOORE 3 Ct) IO CB © HAPPY DAYS M arlon takes 2 f-onzie s a d v ic e T tu rn s the C u n n in g h a m h om e in to a sc e n e from The Arabian N ig h ts and tra n sfo rm s h e rs e lf in to a v e ile d beauty w he n s h e fears she m ight lo s e H ow ard to a yo un ge r w om an (R) 0 4 Q 6 1 2 © MAN FROM A TLA N TIS The evil s c ie n tis t, Mr S ch ub e rt, a gree s to halt h is plan to m e lt the polar ice caps and flood the e a rth in e x ­ c h a n g e fo r the s u rre n d e r of M ark H a rris G u est star / ic to r B ueno, (R, 60 m ins.) ID 5 O 11 CBS REPORTS B ill Moyers reports the to re fo rm Laredo, S t o r y o r a one man ca m p aig n Texas M arlene S anders v is its T aiw an for an a na lysis tuesday television listings on the situ a tio n th e re as the U S. g e ts c lo s e r to full d ip lo m a tic re la tio n s w ith the P e king g o v e rn m e n t (60 m in s.) e P J A M E S M I C H E N E R ' S W O R L D The South P a cific End o l E den' This p ro g ra m e x p lo re s the S o uth Pacific c u ltu re s that have re m a in e d unique and in d u s tria liz a tio n . face of to d a y s M ic h e n e r p re fe rs to e xam in e them b e fo re they are lo s t to the in flu e n c e s of the 20th c e n tu ry . (60 m ins ) (9 OD A L I A S S M IT H A N D J O N E S 13 © H U M I L L A D O S Y O F E N D I D O S in n o ce n t in 7:30 2 3 CE) 10 CB © L A V E R N E A N D S H I R L E Y L a ve rn e and S h irle y m ake a rio to u s a tte m p t at run­ n in g an o b sta cle c o u rs e to q u a lify fo r p o lice work, and one of them s u cce e d s the firs t tim e a ro un d (R) 13 CD B A R T O L O 800 2) 3 CB HO f f i © T H R E E S C O M P A N Y C hnssy cra n k s out am a teu r m o vie s of Ja ck and Ja ne t, and is m is le d into th in kin g she has a h it (R) O 4 © 6i ( U © BIG E V E N T M O V I E S co tt Jo plin K ing O fR a g tim e Stars. B illy D ee W illia m s, C lifton D avis A p o ig n a n t dram a that tra ce s the life of the m u s ic a l p ro d ig y S cott Jo p lin , a g ifte d b lack m usician w ho was re je cte d by the w h ite m u s ic e s ta b lis h m e n t w h ic h co u ld n t a cce p t him o r h is stra n g e new m usic (2 h rs .) © 11 D O W N T W O N R E V IS IT E D 5 O T U E S D A Y N I G H T M O V I E E scape From Bogen C o u n ty Stars Ja clyn S m ith, M itc h e ll Ryan. The sto ry te lls o f a ru th le ss p o litic a l czar w h o s trip s h is younq w ife o f her hum an and legal rig h ts. (2 h rs.) 8 O G O O D M O R N I N ' B L U E S A u n iq u e ly A m erican a rt fo rm , b lu e s m usic, is c h ro n ic le d from its ro o ts in the M is s is s ip p i Delta This p ro gram w h ich is narrated by E3 B K ing, fe a tu re s 18 re n o w n e d b lu e s sin g e rs and th e ir m usic. (60 mins.T 9 r n 1 3 ® ORAL ROBERTS SU M M ER SPECIAL ESPECTACULAR 8:30 2 © M A S H . H aw keye and H ot L ip s, g ru d g in g c o m p a n io n s on a sp e cia l m is s io n to a no the r m a s h u n it, becom e ro m a n tic a lly in v o lv e d w ith o n e a n o th e r under the s tre s s o f a rtille ry fire (Pf I of a tw o -p a rt e p iso d e ; R) L i. IO C B © GARTER C OUNTRY C u rtis u rg es C hief Roy to h ire a n o th e r b la ck p o lic e o ffic e r, and d is c o v e rs he has m ade a big m ista ke . (R) $ 1 (1 1 MOVIE -(D R A M A )** “ R e tu rn in g H o m e " 1975 Tom S e iie ck, W h itn ey B lake. T h is s to ry d e p ic ts the ca s u a l m ee ting am ong th re e W W. II ve te ra n s and e x a m in e s the p ro b le m s th e y face in a d ju s tin g to the liv e s th e y le ft. (90 m in s.) 13 CD PASIO N E SE N C EN D ID AS 2 3 © 10 C R © 20-20 9:00 (8 © T H E UNW ANTED This d o c u m e n ta ry fo llo w s s e v e ra l poor young M e xica n s as th e y u n d e rta ke a lo n e ly and d iffic u lt jo u rn e y in to th e U n ite d S tates to w a rd s their dre am s o f p ro s p e rity . The program (D MOVIE -(H O R R O R )***V2 e xa m in e s the p ro ce ss of ille g a l e n try and how it a ffe c ts th e a lie ns, A m erican c itiz e n s and re s id e n ts of C a lifo rn ia . (60 m ins.) (9 A n th o n y P erkins, Ja n e t Leigh. A yo un g wom an ste a ls a fo rtu n e and e n c o u n te rs a d is tu rb e d young man at a rem ote m otel. (2 hrs., 15 m in s ) (13 CD PACTODE AMOR “ Psycho” 1960 10:00 N E W S 0 4 0 5 ) 0 O CE) ap T i © (12 f f l r n DICK CAVETT SHOW VARIEDADES DE M EDIANOCHE 8 MARSHAL DILLON 10:30 — SOAP Je ssica Tate has tra u m a tic in fo rm a tio n that she m ust frig h te n in q re g a rd in g her d a u g h te r, C orinn e, reve al to C he ste r, and Danny g e ts a u ltim a tu m from the G o dfath er (R) P J O (6 ) (12 © THE TONIGHT SHOW The Best Of C arson G uests: Sam m y Davis J r., G e orge Pep pard, C ha rlie C allas. (R; 90 m in s.) © ( © ® (p ) CBS LATE MOVIE ‘C olu m b o: M urde r By The Book^ A m yste ry w rite r p u lls o ff the p e rfe ct c rim e in th e m u rde r of h is e x-p a rtn e r. (R) ‘ Kojak: The B etrayal Stars: T elly Savalas, K evin D obson (R) 8 O ABC CAPTIONED NEWS 10 © ADAM 12 11:00 © © TUESDAY MOVIE OF THE WEEK The ie Stars. Ja ckie M ason, Dan Frazer. A sm all tim e p o lice in fo rm e r a b sco n d s w ith an adva nce from a p o lic e d e te c tiv e that w as e a rm a rke d fo r a n arcotics se t-u p and flees to M iam i. (100 m ins.) 8 © AUSTIN CITY LIMITS ‘Jim m y B u ffe tt And u sty W ie r' With his road band the Coral R eefers B u ffe tt p e rfo rm s ‘ Havana D a y d re a m in ',' ‘T ry in ’ To Reason At H urrica n e S eason' and ‘C arib b e a n Soul. C o u n try-ro ck and b lu es m usician R usty W ie r does ‘The D evil Lives In D a lla s,’ ‘C oast O f C o lo ra d o ' and o th e rs . (60 m ins.) ii EMERGENCY ONE 24 HORAS ( D MOVIE -(A D VEN TU R E)** I to N o rth e a st <1 e o u l ' 1972 Ekberg. Three ]CVV ,„ ,,,VVJ;, c o n s p ira to rs are je w e l- fa m o u s e n c ru s d te d a n cie n t sw ord out o f K orea. (90 m ins ) Ireland. Anita to g e t a tryin g John 8I 4 Q 6 1 2 © TOMORROW H ost Tom S nyder u e st: N orm an P erle, Los A n g e le s p riva te d e te c tiv e (bu m in s .; F .B .I. ( 1 0 © 11:15 12:00 12:30 12:40 12:45 1:00 © Cfi PTL PROGRAM (3 © PTL PROGRAM 9 © N E W S (4) © N E W S Who says yen. can's fight city hall? L aw ren c e B erry did and won Correspondent B ill M oyers (p ic tu re d ) reports the story of a one-man cam p aig n to re fo rm "CBS Laredo, Texas, on REPORTS Tuesday the next edition of BOOK-BUYING O KMOL (N B O San Antonio, Cable Channel 12 © KFNS (CBS) San Antonio. Cable Channel 11 © KCKN (NBC ), Tem ple. Cable Channe 6 © H F B C (CBS) Austin. Cable C h a n n e l 2 © KLR.N (P u b lic) Austin-S A . Cable Channel 8 © KW TX (CBS' Waco. Cable Channel 5 (D K T V T ilnd I Fort Worth, Cable Channel 9 ) © K S A T (A B O San Antonio, Cable Channel 10 OD K l VE (A B O Austin, Cable Channel 3^ GD KTV \ (NBL ) Austin. Cable Channel 4 CD KWEK (Spanish) San Antonio. Cable Channel 13 ACTV (Com Cable) Austin. Cable Channel 10 MO p m M F rue I it) K M F A * I n I 11-00 a.m.THE MIDDAY PROGRAM _Oa>beus in Hades and other OFFENBACH Favorites J * Ren« usance Part I; MOZART Str-g L2aOCe? VOO ^ r oo p.m THE AFTERNOON PROGRAM rum a m o J L J 73 Ar<*re Watts peys CHOPIN v ? J ! T ^ ,a n a r 8RAHMS- Concerto No 2 in 8 Ha. AwO Volt" Coneen Op 11. No. 5 anc 6. PROKOFIEFF Sonata No I inF ’or Violin and P. anc MOZART. “ kJomtneo**! Ballet Mus DEBUSSY.ana 10:30 p.m. A COLLECTOR’S RECORDS A Birthday Salute to Soprano Helen Traubet Kl T * f i n ••OO a rn E K L E K T IK O S with j o h n a * z z x i z i s ' ^ v 44 ° E cm° p,n r • ^ookaign# Overture *, Op 40; WAGNER "En­ trance Of the God* rn Varna- a Ride of the Valkyr es'” and Mage r.re M„s»c ORFF “Entrata*. GABRIELLI, Canzon U»AANN. Lieoerxreis Dp 39 b e e t h o v e n ' ^ bonita Mo 29 in B ♦'at. Op 106 41:00 a.in. READING ALOUD S Cav-*ss 'Dinner Bridge* by R.ng L a rd e r 2 00 * -m T1XAS U VeLV ARTS H O R IZ O N T E 8 con john W*ea? Kaufman ZOO p.m. OPTIONS s a s s ; m & x s s s r Da- * £ 4.00 p.m. NATIONAL PRESS CLUB S:° S ta P£ r * U TH,NQS CONSIOERED Rim Ea»aras ana S Ja^ J , Hp a * T tR 'S WEB S'— 3SHERLOCK HOLMES " " ■ * Sign of ttve Four. Part 2 of 3 7:30 p m NATIONAL AND WORLO NEWS " A— t m , Cl s s £ s t o k e » * , 17 June 21, 1978 S.Arn (4 O (6 12 © THE TONIGHT SHOW Host Johnny Carson. Guests: Steve Landesberg, Bess Arm strong. (90 mins.) 15 O Hi CBS LATE MOVIE Hawaii Five O TcGarrett seeks a killer whose targets are Army wives on their way to Hawaii to meet their husbands (R) Kojak: Dark Sunday' Stars Telly on furlough Savalas, Kevin Dobson. (R) 8 0 ABC CAPTIONED NEWS (IO CB ADAM 12 11 OO (8 O PREVIN AND THE PITTSBURGH Violinist IsaacStern joins Andre Previn at the piano and cellist Michael Grebanier of the P ittsburgh Symphony Orchestra for an informal cham ber m usic concert of trio sonatas by Beethoven and Brahms. (60 mins.) (10 CB EMERGENCY ONE 13 ® 24 HORAS (9) CD UNTOUCHABLES 12:00 0 4 0 6) (12 © TOMORROW Host Tom Snyder Guest: Loretta Lynn. (60 mins.) (10 CB F B I . 11:45 12:30 12:45 1:00 0 (1 1 ) PTL PROGRAM (9 CD NEWS PTL PROGRAM NEWS wednesday television listings 6:00 ^ B ? N E V ^ ® ° ® Cl0(i1 § LOWELL THOMAS REMEMBERS D BEWITCHED NEWS 6:30 (Ti) PRICE IS RIGHT JDD COUPLE ALL-STAR ANYTHING GOES D © NEWS (T IO MARY TYLER MOORE 6 ) Cf) CD ADAM 12 Q MACNEIL LEHRER REPORT THAT NASHVILLE MUSIC HOGARDULCEHOGAR S 7:00 D 3 1 © 50 f f i © EIGHT IS ENOUGH Tom Brad­ ford decides to write a novel and receives unex­ pected resistance from his family. (R; 60 mins.) Q ® Q t o (ID © LIFE AND TIMES OF GRIZZLY ADAMS Two orphans run away in search of pets and refuse to return until Grizzly and Mad Jack show them how hard it is to survive in the wilderness. (R; 60 m ins.) O S O © CAROL BURNETT SHOW Ken Berry and Roddy McDowall guest star in a musical salute to the big musical motion pictures of the 1930's. (R; 60 mins.) ( 8 ) 0 NOVA A W hisper From Space’ This program looks at the universe. (60 mins.) (Jim ALIAS SMITH AND JONES ( 8 ) ® HUMILLADOS Y OFENDIDOS the beginnings of theories about C li CD LOS COMPADRES 7:30 8:00 GD 13; © do) CB © CHARLIE’S ANGELS Stunned by the death of ms favorite folk-rock singer, Charlie sends Kelly, Kris and Sabrina to find everyone who spent tim e with the victim the night she died. (R; 60 mins.) Q 4 0 6 © © HEADLINERS WITH DAVID FROST Tonight's guests are Kris K ristofferson, Rita C oolidge, Donna Summer and Dr. Christiaan Bar­ nard. (60 mins.) O ® O dj) WEDNESDAY NIGHT MOVIE B rink’s: m e Great Robbery’ Stars: Carl Betz, C liff Gorman. Taken from the annals of the F.B.I., the drama details the story of how seven masked and armed men entered the Price Street office of B rin k ’s in Boston on Jan. 17,1950, and made off w ith $2,750,000 worth of cash, checks and securities. (2 hrs.) (8 0 GREAT PERFORMANCES The Norman Conquests: Living Together’ Playw right Alan Ayck­ bourn views events at an English fa m ily's weekend reunion from a second vantage point In the living room, several near disasters are averted, and N orm an's farewell to Sarah holds a hint of secret understanding. (90 mins.) 19 m FAMILY AFFAIR (13 3 ) n o c h e s t a p a t ia s (9 CD BEVERLY HILLBILLIES (13 CD PASIONES ENCENDIDAS 8:30 9:00 (2 3 CD 10 C B © STARSKY AND HUTCH Starsky and Hutch try to protect a Russian ballerina whose life is threatened, and the case becom es personal for Hutch when he falls in love with her. (R; 60 mins.) 0 ( 3 ) 0 (6) © © POLICE WOMAN In a deadly cat- and-mouse game, a drug czar pursues Pepper to the secluded mountain cabin where she has taken refuge. (R; 60 mins.) Cg) CD MOVIE -(HISTORY-DRAMA) C rom w ell” 1970 Richard Harris, Alec G uinness. The story of C rom w ell’ s uprise against the King of England and the victory which brings Parliam ent to pow er with Cromwell as Lord Protector. (2 hrs., 45 m ins.) (13) CD PACTODE AMOR 9:30 (8) O BOOK BEAT An Ethnic at Large’ by Jerre Mangione. 10:00 NEWS0 ' 4 ' 0 5 3 0 6 )° ® (10 C11 ® ( 8 ) 0 DICK CAVETT SHOW (ll) CD VARIEDADES DE MEDIANOCHE 10:30 (2) (3) CE © POLICE STORY-MYSTERY OF THE W t t K Police S to ry-'C h a in Of C om m and’ The p ossibility of a conspiracy to m urder policem en nearly creates a war between a black com m unity and the police. (R) Mystery Of The W eek~ ‘S leepw alker’ A chronic sleepwalker w itnesses a m urder and later when she awakens, she w onders if it was a dream or realitv. (R: 2 hrs.. 30 mins ) O K M O L (NBG) San Antonio, Cable Channel 12 © K E N S (CBS) San Antonio, Cable Channel 11 O K C E N (N B O , Tem ple, Cable Channe 6 O KT BC (CBS) Austin, Cable Channel 2 2 O KLRN (Public) Austin-S.A., Cable Channel 8 © KWTX (CBS) Waco, Cable Channel 5 CD KTVT find ) Fort Worth. Cable Channel <9 CE KSAT (ABC) San Antonio, Cable Channel 10 © KUVE (ABC) Austin, Cable Channel 3 © KTVV (N B O Austin. Cable Channel 4 OD KWEX (Spanish) San Antonio, Cable Channel 13 ACTV (Com Cable) Austin, Cable Channel IO _________________________________________ 7 1 0 p m M F KM FA*fin H utch's life is on the line as S tarsky searches fo r an in te rn a tio n a l h it m an who is the u n w ittin g c a rrie r of a deadly disease w hich Hutch has contracted in pa rt tw o of "T h e P la g u e ," encoring W ednesday on A B C -TV 's "STARSKY AND HUTCH." 11:00 a.m. THE MIDDAY PROGRAM “ Voyage in D; ROSENBERG, SCHUBERT, Overture to America": Intermezzo and The Railway Fugue: ORFF. Entrata after William Byrd; GABRIELLI, Canzon in primo tom, "Encore! Bravo! DaCapo!- Vioinist Arthur Grumiaux plays his best-loved encores, Vol. 2, Part I: Music of VERACINI, KREISLER, ELGAR, FAURE, ALBENIZ, VECSEY, PONCE, and SIBELIUS; BEETHOVEN, String Quartet in C; PAGANINI, “ Paganiniana" Recital by Janos Starker — Part 2: Music of DEBUSSY. BARTOK, and WEINER; MENDELSSOHN, Octet in E flat; COATES. “ London" Suite; ''Masterworks for Organ” , Vol. 2 — Part 1: BACH’S Prelude and Fugue in B, S. 544 and Toccata, Adagio and Fugue in C, S 564; Opera Intermezzi 5:00 p.m. DIVERTISSEMENT 7:00 p.m. AT YOUR REQUEST Where We Play Listeners’ Requests Begin taking calls at 6:00 p.m. (472-1257) 1:00 p.m THE AFTERNOON PROGRAM 11:00 p.m. THIS IS MODERN MUSIC KODALY, “ Hary Janos": Suite: MOZART, Symphony No 29 in A, K. 201; BRUCKNER. Svmohony No. 4 in E flat; A Cello THOMSON, String Quartet No. 2; SCHOENBERG, String Quartet, Op 30 KF ♦fin 6:00 a.m. EKLEKTIKOS with John AMK DEBUSSY, Etudes; PURCELL, Selections from the Fairy Queen; MENDELSSOHN, Incidental Music to "A Midsummer Nignt's Dream"; DEBUSSY, Preludes 11:00 a.m. READING ALOUD with Bid Cavness “Shrinkiits" by Maurice Sagoff 12:00 p.m. HORIZONTES con John Wheat 2:00 p.m. OPTIONS 3:00 p.m. CONVERSATION FROM WINGSPREAD 3:30 p.m. NATIONAL AND WORLO NEWS 3:35 p.m .with Bill Anderson 4:00 p jn . FROM THE MIDWAY ; r n V - * v * * * * * f * C * -* " 4 5:00 p.m. ALL THINGS CONSIDERED with Slam Derg and Edwards 6:30 p.m. THE SPIDER S WEB Storytelling in America: Tales of the West-Part 3 7:00 p.m. SHERLOCK HOLMES The Sign of the Four, Conclusion •HK) p.m. A C C E 88 with John Harmon 9:00 o.m. JAZZ ALIVE The Charlie Mingus Quintet recorded at the 1977 New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival 11HK) p.m. SOUL ON FM with John E Dee 2HM a.m. SIGN-OFF C a tty Ennis A u stin 's M ost U nique P o rtra it S ettin g We're back! Sundance ta Austin's original antique por­ trait studio, and we're back in the University area. Bring your imagination lo Sundance. Portraits in formal Vic­ torian fashion, image*- o f lace and the bawdyhouse, the macho of a western barroom, even the daring of an odalis­ que. These fine natural light portraits are taken in our beautiful new studio location, midst a variety o f antique settings, in vintage clothing, The sepia print! becom e a delightful illusion. Sundance portraits are by appointm ent. Come in and visit tai. Tuesday-Saturday, 12 to 6 472*9610 17th at Lavaca — - r - T , T .......................... — ..........................................................................‘ y . ..... m i .......... 18 June 22, 1978 6 00 6:30 7; OO 6 O CO IO ( l l C B f12 © N EW S 1 A LO W E LL T H O M A S R E M E M B E R S 9 CI) B E W IT C H E D N A M E TH A T TU N E O D D C O U P L E M A T C H G A M E © N E W S $25,000 PYR A M ID M A R Y TYLER M O O R E 9 ( I ) A DA M 12 I% 8 Q M A C N E IL L E H R E R R E P O R T d p Q 0 W ILD K IN G D O M A Day In The Gum T ree F orest 113 CD ELCHAVO 0 5 O Cl!) 11 THE W A L T O N S Jim Bob 2 b e frie n d s a runaw ay o rp ha n, w hich le a d s to a flig h t of fan; y fo r b o th boys (R, 60 m in s.) IO © © W E LC O M E B A C K , K O T T E R E p s te in ’s 3 plan for a passing g rad e b a ckfire s w h en M r Kotter d is c o v e rs a sim ilarity b e tw e e n th e s tu d e n t s term ten years p aper and o n e he su bm itted h im s e lf e a rlie r (R) ' C l 12 A M E R IC A 4 O 6 © C H IP S P ooch tr ie s t o r fam e and a fo rtu n e on a TV qui? show , b u t h is real p u b lic ity c o m e s from h is p u rs u it of so m e c h ic k e n s that escape from an o v e rtu rn e d truck on th e fre e w a y IR 60 m in s ) 0 O O N C E U PO N A C L A S S IC The Legen d of Robin H o o d ’ E piso de Six W ith M a rio n 's h elp , Robin r Tired of Paying S ky -H ig h Price*? Al N* I Ka IM H Av A a tn f aw l Al im«mu**» T a u A w • p a y Aw m I M AW •W H rn rn 4 t i a J im «« North Austin Optical Co. 10% Student Dmount (•How IO) Hee A d d im e n t* And Minot Repair* Satisfaction Owarantood ac Your Money Back North Austin Optical Co. 3010 U W ANOfRSON LANI on tho SHOAL CRICK BLVD SIO! 458-4440 Fin* f yowed/ Af Down fo f o r th F rit os S outh A u * tin O p tic a l C o . AAH Am* M A Nm* SwM* 101 AA ’-ll JI n%k i i fry > THE BRANDING IRON h i. A Sat. 6 p.m. on ... Baaf A Roach Buffo! * Primo Rib A Your Favorite Seafood*« AU YOU CAN EAT *8.95 O vtfert Sra»opf Shrimp Creole fo g Legs Baked R o tato r Salad Bar Prime Rib Belled Shrimp W ed Shrimp Stuffed Shrimp Stuffed Crab Baked R ib Cotf»»h Aiatkan King Crab 4 ti mild* past Oak nm On H w y. 71 West 2 6 3 - 2 8 2 7 k ip I i idRpni ^ 11 iii rs< lay t elevision I istings e s c a p e s and rejoins his m en . W h e n th ey h ear fu rther n ew s of P rince J o h n ’s tyrann y, th ey attack his labor cam p in o rd e r to fre e th e slave s an d th e re d isco ve r all his a m ass ed re ven u es . ( 9 ) ( D A LIAS S M IT H A N D J O N E S l l GD H U M IL L A D O S Y O F E N D ID O S 7:30 ( 3 ) I O ) © © W H A T S H A P P E N IN G !! lf Raj, D w ayne and R eru n (ape the D oo b ie B ro th e rs ’ c o n c e rt at th eir school, they may be a rre sted : if th e y d o n ’t they will g et hurt (C o nclud ing e p is o d e . R) IN S EA R C H OF T H E R E A L A M E R IC A The (8 O T o ta lita ria n T em p tatio n A u th o r Je a n F ra n co is Revel ta lks a bo ut p re se n t day p o litic s . He e xa m in e s w h e th e r the European m ove to w a rd s th e le ft in d ic a te s that D em ocracy is d o o m e d . 13 CD L U C H A LIBRE 8:00 2 5 Q 3 © 10 © © B A R N E Y M IL L E R D isaster the squad room w h en D e te c tiv e Y em an a strike s k e e ls o ver and is rushed to th e h o sp ita l, (R) ’12 © J A M E S AT 16 J am e s and his O 4 0 6 frien d s h elp a b oistero u s old lady sav e a h orde of d u ck s from e xterm in atio n by city o ffic ia ls w ho intend to turn a park in to a fre e w a y <60 m in s.) O P E O P L E ’S C O M M A N D P ER ­ F O R M A N C E O u tstand ing p e rfo rm e rs from all facets of the sh o w -b u sin ess w o rld , as s e le c te d by the their public in a n atio n w id e s u rve y, will d isplay tau nts in this e n te rta in m e n t s p e c ia l. Stars Richard B urto n, Red B uttons, P hyllis D iller. G in g e r R og ers. N eil S ed a k a , Ethel M erm an , B u d d y H a c k ett. P eggy L e e and many o th ers. (2 h rs.) 8 0 A D V O C A T E S (60 m ins.) 9 CD F A M IL Y AFFAIR ( ll 8:30 2 3 © 10 © © ABC S U M M E R M O V IE P hase IV ’ S tars M ich ae l M urphy, N ige l D a ve n p o rt. A te rrifie d young w om an is hunted by a c o lo n y o f ants w h o have a c q u ire d th e ir natural e n e m ie s and have now tu rn e d on h u m a n s. (90 m in s ) 9 m B EV E R LY H IL L B IL L IE S 13 CD P A S IO N E S E N C E N D ID A S to d e s tro y a ll the p ow er 9:00 ,12 © W H A T R E A L L Y H A P P E N E D TO 0 4 0 6 TH E C L A S S O F '65 The fa tte s t g irl in th e class lose s w e ig h t and fin d s h a p p in e ss w h e n sh e fa lls in love w ith a s o n g w rite r w ho tra n s fo rm s h e r jn to a p o p u la r ‘ R u b in s te in , J e ssica Jo hn s in g e r G u est stars W alter. (R; 60 m ins.) 8 O W A R A N D PEA C E W ith th e F re n ch le a vin g M o sco w , b u ild in g b e g in s and th e c it y ’s in h a b ita n ts re tu rn s . (60 m ins.) 9 ) © M O V IE -(C R IM E )** “ T h e P riest K ille r” 1971 R aym o nd Burr, G e o rg e K e n n e d y . A p riest and a ch ief of d e te c tiv e s join forces in search of a m o tive for a s e rie s of m u rd ers of C atholic p riests. (2 hrs.) (I® CD V EN C O N M IG O 10:00 4 O 5 O 6 O © 10 T i f f i n © © 8 n DICK C A V E TT S H O W i i CD V A R IE D A D E S DE M E D IA N O C H E 10:30 2; (3 © © STA R SK Y A N D H U T C H - - T O M A S tarsky And H u t c h - ’H uggy B ear A nd The T u rk e y ’ S tarsky and H utch help th eir friend H uggy B ear get sta rte d in th e private e ye b u sin ess by re ferrin g a ro u tin e m issing husband c ase to him . (R) T o m a - J o e y The W e e p ' A troubled n ew sm an a cco m p an ies T om a in the investigation of th e m u rd er of a mutual frien d (R; 2 hrs., 15 m ins.) O 4 ) O 6 ) 12 © TH E T O N IG H T S H O W Host: Jo h n n y C arson. G uests: M arsha M ason. R odney D a n g e rfie ld . (90 m ins.) Q 5 Q 11 CBS LATE M O V IE ’ M A S H ' N othing stops the 4077th ro u n d -th e-clo ck p o ker g am e, even th o ug h variou s p layers a re p e rio d ic a lly d ealt out. (R) M o n ty Python And The Holy G ra il’ Stars: Erie Idle. M ic h a e l Palin. 8 Q A BC C A P T IO N E D N E W S 10 © A D A M 12 11:00 8 O M A S TE R P IE C E T H E A T R E Poldark ll E pisode T h re e . A Scottish m erchan t saves Poldark from a F ren ch firing squad, and he find s that D w ight is still alive. A m arriag e is arrang ed b e tw e e n M o rw en n a and R e v e re n d W h itw o rth , and D e m e lza g ives birth to a y ii i. i w m in s ./ girl. j6 0 m ins.) TI 9 © M O V IE -(D R A M A ) ‘T he S w im m e r” 1968 B u rtL a n c a s te r, Janet Landgard. M an exa m in es his past and p rese n t w hile sw im m in g acrosss .th e c o u n try s id e in p e o p le ’s sw im m in g pools. (105 mins ) 10 © E M E R G E N C Y O N E 13 f f i 24 H O R A S 12:00 P 4 O 6 1 2 © T O M O R R O W Host: Tom S n yd er S u b ject: S u rro g ate M o th ers. (60 m ins.) 10 © F B I. 0 ( 1 1 PTL P R O G R A M (9 © N E W S 3 © PTL P R O G R A M (4 © N E W S 12:30 12:45 1:00 0 K M O L (N B C ) San Antonio, Cable Channel 12 • K E N S (CBS) San Antonio. Cable Channel 11 0 K CEN (NBL ), Tem ple Cable Channe 6 O K I BC (CBS) Austin, Cable Channel 2 2 0 K EH N (Public) Austm-S A . Cable Channel 8 © KW TX (CBS Waco, Cable Channel 5 © K T V T dnd ) Fort Worth. Cable Channel 9 © KS AT ( ABC) San Antonio, Cable Channel 10 © K I C E (A B C ) Austin. Cable Channel 3 © K T V V *(N B C ) Austin, Cable Channel 4 © KW E X (Spanish) San Antonio. Cable Channel C it ACTV (Com Cable) Austm, Cable Channel 10 • —_____ 7-10 pm M F radio KM EV I rn Kinhin 11:00 a-rn, THE MIDDAY PROGRAM Frm ch Dances of the Renaissance, Part 2; RACHMANINOFF Piano Concerto No 3 in D; MOZART, Violin Concerto No. 2 rn D, K 211; R STRAUSS, Sonata in F for Cello and Piano 1 * 0 p.m. THE AFTERNOON PROGRAM WAGNER. "Th« Flying Dutchman": Overture; MOZART Flute Concerto in G, K 313. SCHUBERT. Symphony No 5 rn B flat: DUKAS, Symphony in C. "Masterworks tor the Organ", Vol. 2. Pan 2 BACH S Trio Sonata in C. S. 529 and Prelude and ugue rn D, S. 532, BEETHOVEN. Piano Trio in B flat LALO . — ympho£'e EsPaonoie". Philharmonia Pop Concert ' 5:00 p.m. DIVERTISSEMENT 7:00 p.m. THE NEW RECORDS ••OO p.m. THE OPERA VERDI, "I Due Foscari'* H OO p.m. THE MUSIC YOU WANT 5 OU a.m. EKLEKTtKOS with John Atom, BEETHOVEN, “Fyer Ekse“. 32 Venations in c. "Rage Over the Lost Penny" k h A c h a t URIAN. Selections horn “Spartacus" Basset 1 * 0 0 p m. HOR120NTES coo John Wheat 2:00 p.rn. AUSTIN CITY COUNCIL « i * M *e Wotvarton 5 * 0 p-m . ALL THINGS CONSIDERED w « * S ta m p e r and Edwards •-■OO p.rn. THE SPIDER'S WEB Storytelling tn America. Tates of the West, Part 4 7 * 0 p.m, SHERLOCK HOLMES, “The Nobel Bachelor 7:SO p.rn. NATIONAL ANO WORLD NEWS 7 * 5 p.rn. IN BLACK AMERICA with Bob Manor i * 0 p.m. JAZZ IN AUSTIN orth Fred Bouraue 1 1 *0 SOUL ON FM with John E Dee * . i i June 23, 1978 bogus preacher, outlaws and a M exican gang all com pete for control of the town. (90 m ins.) 11:40 f f i MOVIE -(COMEDY-W ESTERNp/2 33 “ Great Bank Robbery” 1969 Kim Novak, Zero Mostel. A bogus preacher, outlaws and a M exican gang all com pete for control of the town. (90 m ins.) 12:00 0 4 0 6 12 © THE MIDNIGHT SPECIAL Host: burton Cummings Guests. Patti Smith, Randy Bach­ man, Teddy Pendergrass, Ronnie M ontrose. (90 mins.) *10 f f i F B l. 12:30 0 11) MOVIE -(SCIENCE FICTION)** “ The Invisible M an” 1975 David McCallum, Jackie Cooper. A chem ist discovers the secret of mins.) (5 © MOVIE -(COMEDY)**V2 “ Lost In a H arem ” 1944 Bud Abbott. Lou C ostello Two prop men and a singer find them selves in a battle royal, the throne of a small desert kingdom (IOO m ins.) (9 CD NEWS invisibility. (90 . for (3 © PTL PROGRAM (4 © NEWS 1:10 1:30 ^ b ? n I v ^ C6' ° ® (1° 31 ® 02 ® NEWS TEXAS WEEKLY BEWITCHED 6:00 6:30 2 1 © TATTLETALES 3 1 © ODDGOUPLE 0 12 GONG SHOW 4 © NEWS 0 1 1 FAMILY FEUD (Ti© MARY TYLER MOORE 0 6)(9)C D ADAM 12 (8 0 MACNEIL LEHRER REPORT (IO 13; a LA CRIADA BIEN CRIADA MUPPET SHOW Guest: Cleo Laine 7:00 (2 3) © (IO © 0 3 TABITHA Tabitha is willing to pinch-hit as K x L A s weather girl, but her aunt unleashes powerful magic to make her a le g e n d , television star. (R) O 143 Q *6) (12 m CPO SHARKEY Chief Sharkey and his recruits reluctantly take part in a week-long experim ent studying the effects of stress on-board a subm arine. (R) & m usician's unique method of hypnotism . mins.) 5 , O IH THE NEW ADVENTURES OF WONDER OMAN W onder Woman struggles against a rock (R: 60 WASHINGTON WEEK IN REVIEW ALIAS SMITH AND JONES HUMILLADOS Y OFENDIDOS 7:30 . (33 © (10 © © OPERATION PETTICOAT 2 S kipper Matt Sherman ends the crew 's wild speculation when he announces that the Sea Tiger’s m ysterious passenger is General Douglas MacAr­ thur. (R) 0 4 0 6} (12 © COLUMBO Convinced that her nephew was responsible for the death of her niece, a best-selling m ystery w riter gets revenge by mur­ dering him, then, as she prepares to embark on a long trip, engages in an exchange of theories with Lt. Colum bo. Stars: Peter Falk, Ruth Gordon. (R; 90 m ins.) (8 0 WALL STREET WEEK ‘Of Wages and Prices’ Host: Louis Rukeyser. Guest: Barry P. Bosworth, D irector of the Council on Wage and Price Stability, 13 QD EL SHOW DE EDUARDO ll 8:00 GD CD © do © © FRIDAY NIGHT MOVIE Forty C arats’ Stars: Liv Ullmann, Edward Albert. A rom antic holiday in Greece turns into a bittersweet journey of laughter and tears when a beautiful 40- year-old divorcee succum bs to the charms of a young Am erican nearly 20 years her tumor. (2 hrs ) 0 ® O (LD INCREDIBLE HULK David Banner gets a job at a zoo, where he finds a lovely young scientist who is pursuing the genetic research that he had started before his tragic accident. (R; 60 mins.) 8 0 FIRING LINE G overnm ent by Judiciary' Host William F Buckley, Jr. Guest: Raul Berger. 91 OD FAMILY AFFAIR BEVERLY HILLBILLIES PASIONES ENCENDIDAS 8:30 9:00 a 4 O (6) (12 © QUINCY Q uincy pinch-hits for a vacationing general practitioner, and finds the life even more disturbing than it is back at the coroners' office. (R; 60 mins.) 0 5( 0 (11 HUSBANDS, WIVES AND LOVERS W hile the men are becom ing obsessed w ith one get- rich-quick scheme of buying a race horse, their women are absorbed in som ething quite different (60 mins.) 8 0 AUSTIN CITY LIMITS C ountry, cajun and jazz- blues musician Gatemouth Brown perform s Okie Dokie S tom p,’ ‘ Up Jum ped The D evil’ and ‘ Black­ jack.' Delbert McClinton, who w rites and sings blues and country-fold music, perform s his hits. (60 mins.) “ V anished” 1971 & [chard Widmark, Arthur Hill. The F B I that homosexual. (3 hrs., 30 m ins.) (13 CD VEN CONMIGO © MOVIE -(SUSPENSE)* *Vfc p re sid e n t’s m issing is advised is a adviser the 10:00 (23 3 3 0 4 0 5 0 6 © © O O 11 © ( 1 2 © © NEWS (8 0 DICK CAVETT SHOW 13 CD VARIEDADES DE MEDIANOCHE 10:30 3 ) © © BARETTA ‘Sharper Than A Serpent s ooth' Tony fights to save his p a rtn e r’s future after the o fficer is suspended for allegedly shooting a m urder suspect in the back. (R) o (4 3 O 63 9 2 © THE TONIGHT SHOW Host: Johnny Carson. Guests: Elizabeth Ashley, Rob Reiner. (90 mins.) ( D O © CBS LATE MOVIE C C. And Com pany’ Stars: Joe Namath, Ann-M argret. A m otorcycle gang m em ber rescues a fashion m agazine w riter when her car breaks down. (8 © ABC CAPTIONED NEWS TO f f i ADAM 12 11:00 (83 0 RHYTHM, BLUES, SO NG S...GERSHWIN The concert team of Veri and Jam ais give a sensitive perform ance of Gershin. (60 m ins.) 10 © EMERGENCY ONE (TS, GD 24 HORAS 11:30 2 3 © MOVIE -(COMEDY-W ESTERNp/2 “ Great B a n k R o b b e rv ” 1969 Kim Novak, Zero Mostel. A O KMOL (N B O San Antonio, Cable Channel 12 0 KENS (CBS) San Antonio, Cable Channel 11 0 KCEN ( N B O , Temple, Cable Channe 6 O KTBC (CBS) Austin, Cable Channel 2 2 0 KLRN (Public) Austin-S A., Cable Channel 8 f f i KWTX (CBS/ Waco. Cable Channel 5 OD KTVT (Ind ) Fort Worth, Cable Channel 9 © KSAT (ABC) San Antonio, Cable Channel 10 © Kl;VE (ABC) Austin, Cable Channel 3 © R T W ( N B O Austin, Cable Channel 4 GD KWEX (Spanish) San Antonio, Cable Channel 13 ACTV (Com Cable) Austin, Cable Channel 10 710 p rn M F Q uincy (Jack K lu g m a n ) trie s to slow down his w ork pace when he re tu rn s to general p ra ctice but gets caught up in the personal crises of his newly ac­ quired patients in “ M a tte rs of L ife and D e a th ," a repeat episode of “ Q UIN CY" F rid a y on NBC. GOOD FOR AN EXTRA HOUR COUPON FREE ON ANY BOAT RENTAL Next class June 26 MONDAY THRU FRIDAY 2 P M -DARK CANOE & PADDLEBOAT RENTAL AVAILABLE ALSO SAILING LESSONS KM FA*tm 10:30 a.m. AUSTIN SPEAKS 11:00 e.m. THE MIDDAY PROGRAM GRIEG. “Wedding Day at Troldhaugen” , “Cow-Keeper’s Tune and Country Dance" and “ 2 Eieg ac Melodies ’; BACH, Concerto No. 2 in C tor 3 Pianos and String Orchestra; MOZART, Piano Quartet No. 1 in G; REINECKE Harp Concerto in E; "Encore! Bravo! Da Capo!” Vol. 2, Part 2: Music of PERGOIESI, SCHUBERT, MOZART, SCHUMANN, DVORAK, GOUNOD and PAGANINI 1:00 p.m. THE AFTERNOON PROGRAM BERLIOZ. "Benvenuto Cellini" Overture and “ The Roman Car­ nival” Overture: CIMAROSA, Oboe Concerto in C; SAINT- SAENS. "The Carnival of the Animals” ; ARENSKY, Venations on a Theme by Tchaikovsky; HAYDN, Organ Concertos Nos 2 and 3 in C; BRITTEN, "Peter Grimes'’: Four Sea interludes and P assacaglia; L. C O U PE R IN , H a rp s ic h o rd W orks; SHOSTAKOVICH, Piano Quintet in G, RACHMANINOFF, Symphonic Dances 5:00 p.m. DIVERTISSEMENT 7:00 p.m. THE EVENING PROGRAM SCHUBERT, The Complete Music for Violin and Piano: Part 2: Sonata m P « « n g for top honors in I ybal1 £nd outdoor track and field. u lt? if SiK . Host Keith Jackson. (2 hrs ) *.4 m MARTI ROBINS SPOTLIGHT O NFL GREAT TEAMS-GREAT YEARS iT LAWRENCE WELK SHOW * Dr Mabuse the Garn­ ? Rudolf Klem-Rogge, Alfred Abel. In Fritz e t Lang s study of malevolent evil, a master criminal uses various disguises as he rules over an empire of W a r ' B e r l i " 1 2 h f S > 2:30 „ © 1 2 NASHVILLE ON THE ROAD ( X © AMERICAN ADVENTURE O JM I LOVE LUCY n°,,*T a^ hVI^, I p"Ja,es10n Horseback’ 1941 William ■Tnlw V ti)! Hopaiong Cassidy sets out to find a gold mine. (90 mins.) 12 ® MAJ0R LEAGUE BASEBALL e ODa ill) CANADIAN OPEN Third-round play In this national championship tournament (rom Ontario Canada (60 mins.) FIESTA MEXICAN A SAL Y PIMIENTA 3:00 3:15 3:30 0 ( 4 '© .6 )(1 3 © MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL 9 CD VARIEDADES MUSICALES 4:00 (2 (3 © 10 m © WIDE WORLD OF SPORTS 1) canny Lopez will oppose Eduardo Prieto in a WBC «featherweight championship bout. (90 mins.) ± O i r ,SPORTS SPECTACULAR NASCAR ariotte 600, featuring one of the year’s too stock ^ © S T U D IO SEES ,r0m NOrth Caro,lna160 mins ) A JR NEWTON-WEAVER WESTERN HOUR ill ® TO BE ANNOUNCED 4:30 _ L l p asa* u s a ? Chaos strikes the Pena ™ t , eho,d when Antonio blows out the birthday candles and makes a wish: that only Spanish be spoken around the house. _ © I © J I NEWS 5:00 AND IDEAS Guest: Michael Frary, GD GD LAWRENCE WELK SHOW 5 30 S l ^ , c b s n e w s 8 I rn yujr-HIENDS NEW FRIENDS Helen Hayes I J S * l l ? f,rs{ ,adY of the American Theatre tells about things that mean even more to her than her island. i ewett of Nantucket shows how she helps the Island I6 Cola st Qua rd JO © ABC NEWS _ (JC © HEE HAW J |0 6:00 LAWRENCE WELK SHOW 4 © HEE HAW Guests: Jeanie C. Riley. Johnny Bench, Tommy La Sorda (60 mins ) f| l f HEE HAW Guests Jeanme C Riley. Johnny ench. Tommy Lasorda. (60 mins.) 5 0 6 Q GONG SHOW | y B l a c k p e r s p e c t iv e o n t h e n e w s a CD WILDLIFE IN CRISIS LUCHA LIBRE _ © J 2 TRUTH OR CONSEQUENCES X O W*U> WORLD OF ^N(MA(,S 6:30 0 ( 6 J WILD KINGDOM Wildfire!’ Pt. II, 8 O LOWELL THOMAS REMEMBERS Be v e r l y Hil l b il l ie s 7:00 23 O ) © w © © FREE COUNTRY Comedy series that traces the lives of an immigrant family from its arrival in America at the turn of the century to the present day. Stars: Rob Reiner. (Premiere) © (4; © 6 53 © th e BIONIC WOMAN Jaime Sommers mission to rescue the son of a scientist from behind the Iron Curtain is complicated when the young man falls in love with her. (R; 60 mins.) © (5J 0.(113 BOB NEWHART SHOW Bob’s every lear is realized when his therapy group insists that he accept an invitation for the group to conduct one of his weekly sessions on television. (R) 8 © TURNABOUT Shifting Gears’ This program focuses on five housewives who have chanqed their lifestyles. 9 m POP GOES THE COUNTRY ( i i CD DOS A QUERERSE 7 30 G D ® © do © © ABC SATURDAY COMEDY SPECIAL ‘Snavely Stars: Harvey Korman. (Pilot) O C ? ) © (OD BABY, I’M BACK Two strong-arm men show up to collect a loan-shark debt from Ray (R) (83 © IN PERFORMANCE AT WOLF TRAP La Traviata’ Beverly Sills and Richard Fredericks star in this production of Verdi’s opera, performed by the San Diego Opera Company. (2 hrs. 30 mins ) (9 GD THAT NASHVILLE MUSIC 8.00 (23 131 © (lo © © THE LOVE BOAT f illS - B ( l l ® © NSC SATURDAY NIGHT AT THE MOVIES A Sensitive, Passionate Man’ Stars: David Janssen Angie Dickinson. An aerospace scientist having lost his job during a corporate cutback descends into alcoholic despair. (2 hrs ) © (53 O (11) SPECIAL MOVIE PRESENTATION (SO © MARTY ROBBINS SPOTLIGHT (ll CD LADRONZUELA 8:30 (9 GD PORTER WAGONER SHOW 9:00 111 (3) © 10 © © FANTASY ISLAND One of the world s last ruling monarchs seeks a last chance to know the common touch, and a bitter policeman hopes to return to a time when justice was handled with a six-gun. Guest stars: Dack Rambo, Harry Guardino (R; 60 mins.) (93© HIGH CHAPARRAL ( l l CD IRIS CHACON NEWS 10:00 10:15 i p f r n w 9 GD WRESTLING i i CD BOX DE MEXICO . ABC NEWS )© (0 ) NEWS ^ 10:30 ) MOVIE -(DRAMA)*** “ Seven Days in May” sud Lancaster, Kirk Douglas. A military group is underway to overthrow the United States Govern­ ment. (2 hrs.) GD © MOVIE - b u ?te r arrives she sets up a blind date for him with a reluctant Alice. (R) (9 © NIGHT GALLERY 9:00 0 5 0 J I SWITCH The case of a missing n ? i n w ™ n tKkeS Pete and Mac t0 the far™ u s San ; 0 ®' ™.h(r[e a rare white rhinoceros seem s to S h o id th e key to the disappearance. (60 mins.) i i t i J r P l A W hisPer From Space' This program universe (6ofnins$) ad0ut 9 ( D MOVIE -(S U S PE N S E)-'/! "T h e High Com- A d,nTn?,tr K1968 ROd Tayl0' Christopher p tm rn ™ . A diplomat becomes involved in m urder at the heiaht of cold war negotiations. (2 hrs ) _ 10:00 n e w s 4 ® 5 ° 6 10 11 SB 12 f f i © M a r f p o n e ° ° K 8E A T A " E,hniC a l L a rg e ' b* Je rre ^ © ABC NEWS t 5 O CBS NEWS ^ 10:15 10:30 “ lnside Daisy C lover" ? Wood, Robert Redford. Story of youna I huT in the 30’s and the com- g rl s rise to stardom to plicabons arising Hollywood society. (2 hrs ) 10 “ Once You Kiss a 3; © MOVIE -(MYSTERY)* Stranger 1969 Paul Burke. Carol Lynley A nut pulls to adjust from her failure « ° i » e R a S f^ a ^ k ' reci~ m u r d e r scheme" 3 (BIO G R A PH IC A L) O 12 MOVIE The Story of ATexander Graham B ell" 1939 Henry Fonda. Don Arnee he The biography of the man who invented the telephone (115 mins ) (IO © ORAL ROBERTS WALL STREET WEEK Of W ages and Prices 3:00 W O RKM ANSHIP MYTH I ANIMALS. ANIMALS, ANIM ALS. SCHOOL 0 12 CIRCUS WORLD OF PENTECOST _ FACE THE NATION HOUR OF POWER I § i STUDIO SEE H ER A LDO F TRUTH CHRISTOPHERS __ 12 10:50 CE) COLUM BUS AVENUE BAPTIST C H U R C H l l OO 3 t i ) ALLANDALE BAPTIST C H U R C H SPIRITUAL BIRTH O 12 ^4 © HYDE PARK BAPTIST C H U R C H faAcW f a 8 0 SESAME STREET eLnGaE^ a p h ,c 'A ‘“ " J i'a ' W O m H RRST M ETHODIST C H U R C H OF FORT 4 2 © ^ ^ S J BAPTIST CH UR C H 13 CD SIEMPRE EN DOMINGO . „ r _ O O 6 ,12 MEET THE PRESS 11:30 5 O DIALOGUE 12:00 JSSLJES AND ANSWERS INTER-VUE AMERICAN ADVENTURE SURVIVAL . O MOVIE • • Cynthia' 1941 8 O G O O O M O R N IN BLUES s9 © POINT OF VIEW I d © NEW SM AKERS 2 CG) PACE THE NATION d JO O ISSUES AND ANSWERS 12 30 Elizabeth Taylor. 5:00 HARLEY BERG SHOW ROLAND MARTIN FISHING C H AM PIO NSHIP FISHING ( ll © NEWS C B SN EW S f e d ^ r is e ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ VICTORY GARDEN German © DAKTARI 1 © © l l C B SN EW S POP GOES THE COUNTRY 5 & ) T O 12 NEWS I NBC NEWS O TRENCH CHEF Ham Transform ation’ This program illustrates how to braise a smoked ham shoulder in wine and aromatic vegetables JO © DRAGNET ^ * (13 CD SIEMPRE EN DOMINGO 5:45 6:00 i O S J O C E H 60 MINUTES p f © h a r d y B O Y S -N A N C Y d r e w m y s t e r i e s Aboard a tram to Austria with fifteen of in ^iu»rto nfi 9! * atesi sK»ers, Frank and Joe Hardy inadvertently become involved in the life-and-death 9 ,r< fe e in g from her assailants a ( h ; ou mins i m W ONDERFUL WORLD OF « L t v * L 6 1 D ISNEY T h e Scarecrow Of Romney Marsh Stars Patrick McGoohan. Tony Britton. Tale about a country priest in 18th century England who leads a band of smugglers as a m eans of helping the poor iConcluding episode, 60 mins ) 8 0 BIX BEIDERBECKE M EM O R IA L FESTIVAL 6*30 S i Jack HE SE SS ,0N ° ° n Craw ford Another Shade su sp een n ^h e b ac kd R )’ a lle 9e d '1' Sh00,m9 a murder Flight To ,4 : © NBC LATE NIGHT MOVIE Holocaust Stars: Patrick W ayne, Chris Mitchum. A team of professional troubleshooters are called in atter a plane crashes into a skyscraper and the passengers are trapped in the stricken aircraft. (2 SI 11 WEDNESDAY NIGHT MOVIE Brink s The real Robbery' Stars; Carl Betz, Cliff Gorman Taken rrom the annals of the F B I., the drama details the story of how seven masked and arm ed men entered 17 H °ff,«e of Bnnk s in Boston on Jan. 17,1950, and made off with $2,750,000 worth of cash checks and securities. (2 hrs > H i S t $ £ i ! ^ H f n K DRAI^ Ar M/^ “ U ndercu rren t” 1946 Katharine Hepburn. Robert Mitchum. A small-town girl marries a rich young man and later suspects him of being a maniac. (2 hrs., 10 mins ) © 6) GUNSM OKE 8 © A D V O C A T E S (60 mins.) China JO © MOVIE H A DVENTURE-DRAM A) C lip p er" 1936 Pat O Bnen. Hum phrey Bogart. A rn a rf is beset bv trying to start the Trans-Pacific Airlines y love and danger. (2 h rs .) _ 11:00 .9 © REX HUMBARD _ ^ 11:20 J3 © EL SHOW DE ROSITA 11:30 - G UNSM OKE POP GOES THE COUNTRY 12:00 12:30 INVOLVEM ENT NEWS PEOPLE AND IDEAS WRESTLING PTL PROGRAM M EET THE PRESS* ‘ • * « * « « America At The Turning Point 3' : r m 36'ffl Si Lucan . 12:35 D © PTL PROGRAM ___ Everybody needs an J)m a tte jj *** S t a t io n JJ X X X Enhance your Image and indulge the artist in you. Write for Images, the arts and entertain­ ment supplement to The Daily Texan. For information, call Images Editor Mary Day at 471-4591. NONSTOP FUN Pool, foosbdil. shuffleboard a six foot Advent T V . and more* Come listen to the best rock n roll aver an excellent stereo system and enjoy double mixed drinks for the price of singles during Happy Hour 4 7 weekdays GIRLS—2 drinks for the price of one all day Mon. & 'hies. Open 3 3 0 p.m.-2 0 0 a.m. 444-5818 1903 «. riverside dr. Soup, Salad, and Sandwich l l A .M .-! P.M. D INNER 7 P.M .-II P.M. "The Beat Prime Rib in A u stin ..." LU BUFFET NIGHT PEOPLE... L A D I E S ' A P P R E C I A T I O N N I G H T S A R E M O N D A Y A N D T U E S D A Y 7-2 WI TH H A L F - P R I C E D R I N K S F O R A L L U N E S C O R T E D L A DI E S . ■ \ A T & . .. a t th * C a b a f t th * w h o /# w o r l d i i b e a u t if u l! In lh # h # o rt o f D o w n t o w n A u s t in , T#xo» — 6th and Braio* 474-2169 F o r tin* l a t e d i n e r a full d i n n e r m e n u u n ­ t i l m i d n i g h t . . . . A speci al ba r m e n u v e r s ­ ed f ro m fixe in e v e n i n g t h r o u g h t h e t wo A M. D ro p o n by, pl ot a nd s c h e m e , loire or d r e a m . It s all pr i c e d fro m a n easy $2 .5 0. ►Af - a V 5 - Si n gl e ladies ha l f pri ce at t h e liar, we l o ve e m . 10: 00 P.M . till c l osi ng t V# I 4 G r e a t \X i n c C e l l a r E N G L I S H ’ S Restaurant 3010 Guadalupe • 476-0283 • e s r - p rp e d < ^ . — FREE DELIVERY M O N D A Y T H R U F R I D A Y U I T - ■%-* •• CF DAVID-** ANTHONY CXH* Pearl 4Ta**|M» warn 4 * f « S h - D E ? 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