T h e D a il y T e x a n Student N e w sp a p e r at The University of Texas at Austin Ten Cenis Vol. 74, No. 120 471-4591 Sixteen P a g e s Austin, Texas, T h u rsd a y , Janu ary 9, 1975 Sirica Frees Dean, Magruder, Kalmbach . -Texan Staff Photo by Jay G odw in 'G o o d b y e cruel world: it's to the registra tion com puter for me.' . ... W A SH IN G TO N ( U P I ) - J o h n W D ean III, J e b S tu a rt M a g ru d er a n d H e rb e rt W. K a lm b a c h - th re e m e n w ho confessed th e ir W a te rg a te c r im e s a n d th e n h e lp e d c o n v ic t o th e r s — w e r e o rd e re d re le a s e d fro m prison T u e sd a y by U.S. D ist Ju d g e Jo h n J. Sirica S iric a 's s u r p r is e o rd e r, signed j u s t six days a fte r fo u r o th e r top lie u te n a n ts to R ichard M. N ixon w e re found g u ilty of the W a te rg a te c o v er-u p , re d u c e d th e stiff se n te n c e s h e im posed on e a c h of th e th re e m en la s t y e a r to tim e a lr e a d y s e r v ­ ed. In re c e n t w e e k s , a ll have been h e ld a t F t. H olabird. M d., n e a r B a ltim o re , to be on ta p a s g o v e rn m e n t w itn e s se s fo r W aterg ate p ro s e c u to rs . D ean and M a g ru d e r w ere re p o rte d by prison o fficials to h a v e been s e n t to a “ s a f e h o u s e '' in th e W a s h in g to n B altim ore a r e a to be picked up by th e ir fam ilies. T hey w e re said to have d e c lin ­ ed to hold a n e w s co n feren ce. KALMBACH, o n c e N ixon’s p e rs o n a l a tto rn e y , a c c e p t e d h is r e le a s e w ith b itte r n e s s to w a r d none an d w ith “ profound g r a titu d e for the c o m p a ss io n of .Judge S i r i c a ." He told re p o rte rs h e re he would r e tu r n to his hom e in N e w p o rt B each, C a lif., on T h u rsd ay . A W hite H ouse sp o k esm an sa id P r e s i ­ d e n t F o rd h a d no c o m m e n t on th e re le ase o r d e rs and had not b e en in- Approximately 3,900 Students Register With 5,000 More Expected Thursday . rn By JOSE M. FLO R ES Texan Staff W riter W ith a n e s t im a te d 3,900 s tu d e n ts re g is te rin g W ednesday, an d m o re th an 5.000 e x p e c t e d to go t h r o u g h th e p r o c e d u r e T h u rs d a y , A d m in is tr a tiv e A ssista n t B ru c e G o ra n so n p re d ic te d W ednesday sp rin g e n ro llm e n t w ould e x ­ ceed th e 38.114 m a rk re a c h e d la s t y e a r. The a p p ro x im a te ly 9.000 stu d e n ts e x ­ p e c te d to go th ro u g h re g is tra tio n ending a t 3 p m . T h u rsd a y c o m p rise only 8 p e r ­ c e n t o f th e sp rin g e n ro llm e n t T he m a ­ jo rity h a v e been p re re g is te r e d and have ■paid th e ir fees. T hough a lm o s t 4.000 s tu d e n ts p a sse d th ro u g h B e llm o n t Hall pu llin g c la ss c a r d s for th e ir v a rio u s c o u rse c h o ic es. G o ra n so n said m ost of the stu d e n ts w o rk in g r e g i s t r a t i o n a g r e e d th e p ro c e d u re s w e re p ro g re ssin g sm oothly. " I t re a lly didn t se e m like th at m an y people p a sse d through. T he c ount is only a rough e s tim a te We e x p e c t a h e a v ie r day T h u rsd a y . M ost of the d a y h a s been spent by m any of the stu d e n ts seein g a d ­ v ise rs and g e ttin g th e ir d e a n 's c o u rse re c o rd c a r d s ch eck ed . If T h u rsd a y is like to d a y , w e 'll be fin e . E v e r y th in g is g e n e ra lly ru n n in g sm o o th ly ,” he said . “ S pring is the e a s ie s t r e g is tra tio n p e rio d , w ith people p r e re g is te r in g in th e fall, and fe w e r e m e rin g fre s h m e n . T h ere is. h o w e v er, a h e a v ie r a d d -d ro p . All th o se people having been b illed and who h av e paid th e ir fe e s w ill be com in g aro u n d in a la s t-m in u te c h a n g e flu rry We e x p e c t th a t, though, so th e r e ’s no p r o b le m ." he continued. ✓ G o ran so n e s tim a te d th a t m o re th an 250 s t u d e n t s w e r e w o r k in g a t th e r e g is tr a ti o n lo c a tio n , a m o n g th e m , A lpha Phi O m ega and o th e r s e rv ic e org a n iz atio n s. " T h a t d o e s n 't include d e p a rtm e n ta l perso n n el of the people from th e d e an s o ffic e . T h e y w o rk a s c a r d p u lle r s , c h e c k e rs , c o u n te rs and th ey help w ith o th e r th in g s like w alk in g blind stu d e n ts th ro u g h th e p ro c e d u re . T h e y ’r e a good b u n c h ." he said F o r m e r U n iv e rsity stu d e n ts n e ed only a d e a n 's c o u rse re c o rd c a rd w hich m ay be o b tain e d in th e lobby of th e A cad e m ic C e n te r beginning a t 8 a m . N ew stu d e n ts m u st s u b m it a c o u rse re c o rd c a r d plus in fo rm a tio n c a r d s a lso a v a ila b le a t the A cadem ic C e n te r, and a m e d ic a l c o m ­ plia n c e slip fro m th e S tu d e n t H e alth C e n te r. S tu d e n ts e n ro lled in the fall w ho did not p r e re g is te r m ay o b tain re g is tra tio n m a te ria ls in th e d e p a rtm e n ta l o ffice of th e ir m a jo r. A fte r co n su ltin g an a d v is e r in th e d e p a rtm e n ta l office of th e ir m a ­ jo r. s tu d e n ts m u st th en r e p o rt to B e ll­ m o n t w ith th e ir m a te ria ls a c c o rd in g to th e firs t le t t e r of th e ir la s t n a m e s. G oranson said c o u rse s m a y begin to fill by noon, though th e re w ould be a n o th e r c h a n c e fo r stu d e n ts to g a in a d ­ m itta n c e to c o u rse s th ey need o r sim p ly p re fe r a t a d d s an d d ro p s n e x t w e ek . “ T h e r e w ill b e so m e a n x io u s m o m e n ts. I'm su re , fo r stu d e n ts who need c e rta in c o u rse s. S en io rs a n d p e r ­ sons m a jo rin g in th e d e p a rtm e n t u n d e r which the c o u rse is liste d w ill h av e Viet Cong Suffers Bom bing, Casualties SA IGON (A P ) — South V ie tn a m se n t w a v e s of U S -supplied fig h te r-b o m b e rs a g a in s t V iet Cong h e a d q u a rte rs and C o m m u n ist po sitio n s n o rth of Saigon on W ednesday, and th e V iet Cong c la im e d h e av y c iv ilia n c a s u a ltie s. i In C a m b o d ia , f ie ld r e p o r t s s a id g o v e rn m e n t fo rc e s re to o k a s tr a te g ic hill o u tsid e P h n o m P enh, an d th e C am b o d ian c o m m a n d sa id 16 B u ddhist nuns w e re found in a n e a rb y p agoda ra p e d and m u r d e re d by K h m e r R ouge tro o p s. T he South V ie tn a m e se p la n e s hit the V iet Cong h e a d q u a rte rs com pound a t Loc N inh and the new ly c a p tu re d p ro v in ­ c ia l c a p ita l of P h u o c Binh C ity, the S aigon c o m m a n d re p o rte d . A sp o k e sm a n sa id th e s tr ik e s s e t off e x p lo sio n s th a t se n t sm o k e c u rlin g m o re th a n 3,000 fe e t in to th e a ir. A sso ciated P r e s s n e w sm e n w a tch e d w a v es of su p e rso n ic F 5 fig h te r-b o m b e rs supplied by the U nited S ta te s ta k e off fro m the iBien Hoa a ir b a se , 15 m ile s n o rth e a s t of Saigon, to a tta c k w h a t the c o m m a n d d e s c rib e d a s N o rth V ie t­ n a m e se and V iet Cong tro o p c o n ce n ­ tra tio n s , a n tia ir c r a f t gun s ite s and su p p ­ ly an d a m m u n itio n d e p o ts along the C a m b o d ia n b o rd er. L t , C o l. Do V i e t , d e p u t y c h i e f sp o k e sm a n for the c o m m a n d , said the r a id s b e g an T uesday night w ith in h o u rs of th e fall of Phuoc Binh C ity. 75 m ile s n o rth of Saigon. Loc N inh is 30 m ile s w e st of P h u o c Binh C ity. V iet d e sc rib e d the s tr ik e s a s a “ d e fe n ­ sive a c tio n ,” c la im in g th e N o rth V ie t­ n a m e se an d V iet Cong used Loc N inh and o th e r b a s e s in th e region a s s ta g in g a r e a s for a tta c k s on P huoc Binh C ity. V iet sa id the r a id s trig g e re d se c o n d a ry e xplosions, sending c o lu m n s of sm o k e I,OOO y a rd s into the sky. H e sa id a ll of the South V ie tn a m e se a tta c k p la n e s r e tu r n ­ ed sa fely to Bien Hoa. T he V iet Cong d e le g a tio n to th e twop a rty J o in t M ilita ry C o m m issio n in S a ig o n d e s c r i b e d t h e r a i d s a s a “ c rim in a l a c t " and sa id th e y in flic te d heav y c iv ilia n c a s u a ltie s an d p ro p e rty d a m a g e in th e C o m m u n ist zones. A sp o k e sm a n fo r the d e le g a tio n said a p ro te s t would be filed w ith th e fourn ation In te rn a tio n a l C o m m issio n of C on­ trol and S upervision. In C am b o d ia, field r e p o rts sa id 1.000 g o v e rn m e n t tro o p s sp e a rh e a d e d by a r ­ m o red v e h ic les lifted a n e ight-day-old K h m e r Rouge sie g e a t B a se th Hill 13 m ile s n o rth w e st of P h n o m P e n h b eca u se it g u a rd s the c ity 's n o rth w e s te rn d efen se line. T he re p o rts sa id 80 g o v e rn m e n t s o ld ie rs w e re k illed in th e o p e ra tio n to re ta k e th e hill. R eb el c a s u a ltie s w e re not know n, b u t th e P h n o m P e n h c o m m a n d said th ey w e re heavy. . . . p rio rity , but m o st stu d en ts should h a v e little tro u b le picking up a needed c o u rse at d ro p s and a d d s, he said. “ S o m e tim e s it s b e st to w a it u n til n e x t se m e s te r in s te a d of taking ju s t any co u rse th a t a person d o e sn 't n e ed o r doesn’t p a rtic u la rly w ant, or one w hich m ay not be c o u n te d tow ards th e d e g re e thee seek We w ill, how ever, try to a c ­ c o m m o d a te a s m any p e rso n s a s we c a n ,” he add ed M onday a d d s and drops will be held in B ellm ont H all fro m 8 a rn. to 4 p .m . A paid il U Ifee T C Ire C cuer ip i a lt and a i m photo id e n tific a tio n _. _i ff a re re__ q__;_ u ire d rfo r _adm ission. EFSifte enthousand p e rso n s a re exp ected to a tte n d . Adds and d ro p s will c ontinue in th e d e p a rtm e n ts u n til J a n . 16, the fo u rth day of cla sses. L ate r e g is tr a tio n will be held J a n . 14 to 16 S tu d en ts m u s t obtain dean s c o u rs e reco rd c a rd s in the A cadem ic C e n te r and have c o u rse s a p p ro v ed by an a c a d e m ic a d v iser C o m p u te r c la ss c ard s m u s t th e n be obtained fro m d e p a rtm e n ta l o ffic e s, an d s t u d e n ts m u s t r e p o r t to th e A cadem ic C e n te r b efo re 3 p.m . J a n . 16, to su b m it c a r d s ______„ r _________I :_____J _ m i r t t t ’ d rio/->icinn fin form ed in a d v a n c e of CS iiric a ’s d e cisio n on behalf of th e th re e . All th re e m e n had ro u tin e ly a sk e d Sirica for a re d u c tio n of th e ir se n te n c e s last fall. H is te r s e o rd e rs gave no re a so n why he had g ra n te d th e re q u e s ts o r e x ­ planation of th e tim in g . It w as b e lie v ed , h o w e v er, th a t S iric a s action w as in re co g n itio n of th e ir full cooperation w ith th e g o v e rn m e n t a f te r pleading g u ilty to th e ir own c r im e s — Dean and M a g ru d e r to c o n sp ira c y in th e cover-up and K a lm b a c h to c o r ru p t c a m ­ paign financing. All th re e w e re s ta r w itn e s se s a t the cover-up tria l th a t ended N ew Y e a r s D ay in th e c o n v ic tio n s of J o h n N. M itc h e ll, H R . H a ld e m a n , J o h n D. E h rlic h m a n an d R o b e rt C. M a rd ia n . Sirica will s e n te n c e th e m la te r , p o ssib ly next m onth. “ Upon c o n sid e ra tio n of th e d e fe n ­ d a n t 's m o t i o n f o r r e d u c t i o n o f s e n te n c e ...,” S iric a sa id in n e a r-id e n tic a l o rd e rs fo r D e an , M a g ru d e r and K a lm ­ bach, “ it is o rd e re d th a t the u n e x ec u te d and-or r e m a in in g p o rtio n of the se n te n c e ... is re d u ce d to tim e a lre a d y s e rv e d . THE O R D E R p e rta in in g to K a lm b a c h differed slig h tly , re d u cin g h is se n te n c e “ only in so fa r a s it p e r ta in s to im ­ p riso n m e n t” — in d ic a tin g th a t th e $10.000 fine le v ie d on him still sta n d s. D ean, th e f o r m e r W hite H ouse counsel who b e c a m e N ix o n ’s c h ie f a c c u s e r, se rv ed ju s t fo u r m o n th s of his one-to-foury e a r s e n te n c e . M a g ru d e r, a f o r m e r W hite H ouse a id e and dep u ty d ir e c to r of N ixon’s 1972 c a m p a ig n , se rv e d sev en m o n th s of h is 1 0 - m o n th -to -fo u r-y e a r te rm . K a lm b a c h , se n ten c ed to six-to-18 m onths, h a d se rv e d six m o n th s T h e ir re le a s e le ft ju s t tw o of th e 19 fo rm e r W hite H ouse, A d m in istra tio n o r Nixon c a m p a ig n a id e s c o n v ic te d fo r W a te rg a te c rim e s still in p riso n — C h a rle s W. C olson and E d w a rd L M organ. F iv e o th e rs h av e se rv e d te r m s , and the r e s t a r e fre e e ith e r w hile they ap p eal o r a w a it se n ten c in g C o in cid e n ta lly , K a lm b a c h w a s a t th e office of sp e c ia l p ro s e c u to r H e n ry S. R uth b e in g in te rv ie w e d in co n n ec tio n w ith o th e r c a s e s when S iric a signed Ins re le a s e o rd e rs . At m id a fte rn o o n , K a lm ­ bach re a d a s h o rt s ta te m e n t a t tile office of his la w y e r. C h a rle s A M cN elis. “ I APPROACH the fu tu re w ith a feel- Oil Workers Threaten Strike D E N Y E R — The p re s id e n t of th e oil w o rk e rs union said la te W ed n esd ay night he w ill c a ll a strik e if th e r e is no c o n tra c t s e ttle m e n t with the n a tio n 's oil c o m p a n ie s w ith in the n e x t 24 h o u rs. A F. G ro s p iro n of the Oil. C h e m ic a l a n d A to m ic W o rk e rs I n t e r n a t i o n a l U nion, told a new s c o n fere n ce th a t he w as still o p tim is tic that a s e ttle m e n t could be re a c h e d covering th e 60,000 un­ ion m e m b e rs who w ork in g a so lin e r e fin e rie s a n d allied in d u strie s. W ild cat w a lk o u ts hit tw o g a so lin e re fin e rie s an d a s a sp h a lt p lan t in T e x a s and a re fin e ry in C alifornia on W ed n es­ day, d e s p ite G ro sp iro n ’s re fu s a l T u e s d a y n ight to c a ll a strik e when th e c o n tr a c ts w ith the oil c o m p a n ie s e x p ire d . G ro sp iro n in d icated th a t an y s tr ik e w ould be a g a in s t se lec te d c o m p a n ie s H o w ev er, h e added th a t it w ould be “ n a tio n w id e w ithin sh o rt o rd e r T he w a lk o u ts, which th e union sa id w e re ille g al b e c a u se G ro sp iro n h a d c a l l ­ ed no s t r i k e , a f fe c te d a b o u t 8.000 w o rk e rs at th e re fin e rie s and a s p h a lt p lant in P o r t A rth u r, T ex., and s e v e ra l h u n d r e d w o r k e r s in C a l i f o r n i a . G ro sp iro n sa id no effo rt w ould be m a d e to fo rc e the* union m e m b e rs b a ck to w o rk and add ed th a t they had w alk ed o u t o v e r local issu e s, not the n a tio n a l b a rg a in in g issu e s. G ro sp iro n sa id the oil c o m p a n ie s h ad m a d e no fo rm a l o ffers for c o n s id e ra tio n but “ a s I sa id y e sterd a y , w e fe lt th e r e w a s m o re m oney to be o f f e r e d " by the oil c o m p a n ie s. G ro sp iro n is th e only p erson a u th o riz ­ ed to c a ll a s tr ik e of the union All of th e c o n t r a c t s c o v e r e d in th e c u r r e n t n e g o tia tio n s e n d e d a t T uesday m id n ig h t, and G ro sp iro n . by not calling a s tr ik e , e xtended th e n egotiations. C o n tra c t ta lk s w ith the oil c o m p a n ie s w ere u n d e r w a y W ednesday a t th e 430 local b a rg a in in g site s a c ro ss th e n a tio n , a union sp o k e sm a n said. T he u nion s b a rg ain in g p olicy c o m m itte e w a s on stan d b y a t h e a d q u a rte rs in D e n v e r on W e d n e sd a y to re v ie w n ew c o n t r a c t o ffers. T he c o m m itte e m u st a p p ro v e an y o ffe r a c c e p t e d by local b a r g a i n e r s before th e m e m b e rs of the lo ca l m a y vote on it. Tho u n io n s oil w o rk e r m e m b e r s p roduce 60 p e rc e n t to 70 p e rc e n t of th e nation s 14.2 m illion b a rre l d a ily g a so lin e p roduction. B oth union an d in d u stry sp o k esm en said it w as u n lik ely c o n ­ su m e rs w ould feel any im m e d ia te e ffe c t if th e re is a strik e . The union is seeking SI .20 a n h o u r w age hike in e a c h of the th r e e y e a r s of a p roposed c o n tr a c t and an im m e d ia te 50c e n t p e r h o u r hike to offset risin g in fla ­ tion. The union slice d 30 c en ts a n h o u r fro m its w age d e m a n d on M onday, re d u c in g it from $1.50 T he c o m p an ies h a v e g e n e r a l­ ly o ffere d 60 c e n ts hourly in th e f i r s t y e a r and 50 c e n ts p e r hour in the seco n d y e a r of a tw o -y e a r proposal. G ro s p iro n said. T he a v e ra g e hourly w ag e in th e in­ d u stry now is $5.95. today Spring . . . Spring-like w eather w ill c o n tin u e w ith p artly cloudy sk ie s and a high T h u r s d a y in th e mid-70s, w i t h a low T h u r s d a y n ig h t in the mic MO s. F r i d a y ' s hig h sho uld be in the mid-60s. C o m ap n ie s involved in th e n e g o tia tio n s include G u lf. M obil, Shell. A tlan ticR ich fie ld , P h illip s, C o n tin e n tal, T ex a co , the s e v e ra l S ta n d a rd s and s m a lle r c o m ­ p a n ie s . E x x o n , th e n a ti o n 's l a r g e s t re fin e r, h a s only one re fin e ry c o v ere d by the union. rn fn im rf T l i p f in he C m g noff nprofound replie in tthe c oOnf lttee X xt O off' w h at, of c o u rse, is a m o st u n fo rtu n a te episode in o u r n a tio n s h isto ry . I feel no b itte rn e s s to w a rd a n y o n e, and hope th a t m y a ctio n s have se rv e d to stre n g th e n the p illa rs of ju s tic e .” W earing an e x p en siv e g ra y su it w ith red figured tie. K a lm b a c h tu rn ed a sid e a ll q u estio n s d u rin g the th re e -m in u te new s c o n fe re n c e e x c e p t to r e p e a t his g re a t a p p re c ia tio n fo r th e c o m p assio n of Ju d g e S irica " ma K a lm b ach sa id he w ould le a v e fo r h is h om e in C a lifo rn ia T h u rsd a y and th a t “ m y hope is to be r e in s ta te d " in the p ra c tic e of law. " I have le a rn e d to d ay of the a ctio n of Ju d g e S irica in re d u c in g m y se n te n c e in the W a te rg a te m a tte r , w hich w ill p e rm it m y re tu rn to m y f a m ily ,” he said in h is usual soft-spoken m a n n e r. “ My re a c tio n is one of profound g ra titu d e for th e c o m ­ p assio n of Ju d g e S iric a and re n ew e d a p ­ p re c ia tio n and c o n fid e n ce in th e e s s e n ­ tial fa irn e ss of A m e ric a n ju stic e . " T h e re is a lso no doubt in m y m ind th a t the fo rm e r P re s id e n t (N ixon) and his in tim a te s did e v e ry th in g possible to d e s t r o y t h is m a n , h is f a m i l y a n d a s s o c ia te s ." W eick e r sa id in a s ta te ­ m ent D e a n , th e m a n w ho e n a b le d p ro se c u to rs to c ra c k th e co v er-u p c a s e , a f te r lengthy p lea b a rg a in in g e n te re d a g uilty plea to one c o u n t of c o n sp ira c y to o b s tru c t ju s tic e an d d e fra u d th e U nited S ta te s on O ct. 1 9 ,1973 - th e la s t a ch ie v e ­ m e n t of o r ig in a l s p e c ia l p r o s e c u to r A rchibald Cox. w ho w a s fire d th e n e x t dav in the “ S a tu rd a y n ig h t m a s s a c r e .” It w as n o t u n til la s t Aug. 2 th a t S irica se n ten c ed D e an , and D e a n ’s te r m began Sept. 3. M A G RUD ER, one of th e firs t to con­ fe ss to the co v er-u p , p lea d ed guilty Aug. 16, 1973. d u rin g th e h e ig h t of the S e n a te W a te rg a te h e a rin g s to a single c o u n t of c o n s p ir a c y to o b s t r u c t ju s t ic e a n d d e fra u d th e U n ite d S ta te s fo r h is role in W a te rg a te — in clu d in g p lan n in g fo r th e bugging an d its su b s e q u e n t cover-up. H e w as not se n te n c e d until la s t M ay 21 and began his te r m a t A llenw ood, P a ., on Ju n e 4. Though he p lay ed a key role in ra is in g m oney to pay th e W a te rg a te b u rg la rs a f te r th e ir a r r e s t and tr ia l, K a lm b a ch w a s th e only one of th e th re e fre e d m en w ho did not go to ja il fo r a c o v er-u p c rim e H e pleaded g u ilty F e b . 25. 1974, to tw o co u n ts of sh a d y c a m p a ig n financing — one a felony involving an illegal $3 m illion c o n g re ss io n a l c a m p a ig n fund c o n tro lled by th e W hite H ouse in 1970 and the o th e r a m is d e m e a n o r of p ro m isin g an a m b a ss a d o rsh ip to a 1972 N ixon c a m ­ paign c o n trib u to r. Council To Consider Job Equality Law _______ By M IKE MORRISON T exan Staff W riter The p ro p o se d lo ca l e q u al e m p lo y m e n t o p p o rtu n ity o rd in a n c e is in fo r sto rm y sailing a t T h u rs d a y 's p u b lic h e a rin g although s e v e ra l A ustin g ro u p s h a v e re c e n tly d e cid ed to b a ck th e p ro p o sal M axine F rie d m a n , a m e m b e r of the H u m a n R e la tio n s C o m m is s io n , sa id W ednesday “ th e r e is se rio u s c o n s id e ra ­ tion w h e th e r w e should push fo r a v o te' a t th is tim e . N e v e rth e le ss , th e public h e arin g w ill p ro c e e d T h u rsd a y , F r ie d ­ m an sa id , “ if only to h e ig h te n th e in­ te re s t an d c o n sc io u sn ess a m o n g A ustin w h ites fo r b la c k s, the m in o r itie s an d the a g e d ." If a p p ro v e d , th e o rd in a n c e w ill e n a b le the c ity to o b ta in fe d e ra l funding, a llo w ­ ing th e lo c a l H u m a n R e la tio n s C o m m is­ sion tH R C ) to h a n d le jo b d isc rim in a tio n c o m p la in ts. T he o rd in a n c e , w hich c lo s e ­ ly p a r a lle ls T itle Seven of th e 1964 Civil R ig h ts A ct, is scheduled fo r public h e a r ing a t I p .m . T h u rsd a y a t th e M unicipal A nnex, 301 W. Second St. C ritic a l of the p ro p o sa l is a m e m o d a te d D ec. 12 fro m C ity M a n a g e r D an D a v id so n to c o u n c il m e m b e r s . T he m e m o b a sic a lly c o n sists of a s e r ie s of q u e stio n s, p ie rc in g into so m e of the a r e a s w hich o p ponents c o n s id e r the w eak p o in ts of the p ro p o sa l. " I s it good policy p lan n in g to im p o se a d d i t i o n a l r e g u l a t i o n s on p r i v a t e b u s i n e s s an d in d u stry a t a tim e of n a tio n a l and local e co n o m ic d is tr e s s '1" D avidson a sk e d . TH E PROPOSAL d ? e la r e s it unlaw ful for a n e m p lo y e r of 15 o r m o re em p lo y e s, a la b o r union o r an e m p lo y m e n t agency to d is c rim in a te in h irin g , s a la r y , p ro m o ­ tion o r re tra in in g on th e b a s is of r a c e , re lig io n , se x , n a tio n a l o r ig in , a g e and p h y sic al d isa b ility . T he H R C u n an im o u sly a p p ro v e d w ith one a b s te n tio n th is p ro p o se d o rd in a n c e in D e c e m b e r. T he e m p lo y m e n t su b c o m ­ a a ___ 1D P t a r t 11 n r n o n n t t b n i / 4 m itte e of 1HRC w ill p re s e n t the id ea to th e council T h u rsd a y , F rie d m a n e x p la in ­ ed, and w ill d e c id e th en w h e th e r to p re s s for a vote. At the v o rte x of the c o n tro v e rsy is the c o st of such a p ro g ra m . P o in tin g to a s im ila r p ro g ra m in C orpus C h risti, a d ­ v o c ates e s tim a te th e fir s t y e a r 's c o st to be about $39,999. w ith the e n tire ta b b e ­ ing picked up by th e fe d e ra l g o v e rn m e n t. O p p o n e n ts f e a r t h a t e it h e r th e s e fe d era l funds w ill e v e n tu a lly d ry up, o r th e p ro g ra m , ev en w ith fe d e ra l a id , w ill have to be s u b s ta n tia lly subsidized by th e city C ouncilm an Bud D ry d en sa id W ednes­ day the p ro p o sa l “ is n o t a s good a s so m e pe o p le s a y ." P o in tin g to th e c i t y ’s lim ite d b u d g e t, D ry d e n sa id t h e r e “ c o m es a p oint w h e re the w ell ru n s dry " T H E DAVIDSON m e m o a lso p o ses th e questio n . “ Is it a p ro p e r c ity function to re g u la te f a ir la b o r s ta n d a r d s a n d e m p lo y m en t p r a c tic e s ' w hen th e re h a s been a g e n e ra l d e fe rra l to the s ta te s an d the fe d e ra l g o v e rn m e n t in such m a tte r s ? P re s e n tly , th e A ustin HRC a tte m p ts to re co n cile e m p lo y e c o m p la in ts by vo lu n ­ ta ry m e a s u re s , o r r e fe r s th e c o m p la in t to the fe d e ra l E E O C San Antonio office. H ow ever, th e b acklog of c a s e s in th e San Antonio o ffice fo rce so m e c o m p la in a n ts to w a it tw o o r m o re y e a r s for a d e cisio n , F rie d m a n ex p lain ed . The o rd in a n c e w ould give th e H R C m o re pow er to d e a l e ffe c tiv e ly w ith c o m ­ p la in ts on a lo cal level in stea d of d e f e r r ­ ing th em to San A ntonio. Also, F rie d m a n said, th e a d d itio n a l fu n d s w ould p ro v id e for an e n la rg e d HRC s ta ff c a p a b le of handling th e c a s e s and c u ttin g dow n on the backlog. M ayor P r o T em D an L ove sa id T u es­ day he d o e s n o t fa v o r he proposed or­ dinance. It w ill re q u ire four council votes for a p p ro v a l. Women's Groups Support Wardlaw School S u p e rin te n d e n t Criticized for Discriminatory Action ____________ * By C. JUSTUS LOHRMANN Texan Staff Writer R e p r e s e n ta tiv e s o f fou r Austin w om en’s organizations W ed n esd ay c r it ic iz e d th e Austin school superintendent for his transfer of a sp ecial education teacher to a library p o s itio n b e c a u se sh e w a s pregnant and unmarried. The groups also stated their support for the teacher in her f ig h t to r e s c in d th e jo b change. A ustin W omen W orkers, W omen’s Health Organization of Austin, Austin W om en’s Equity Action League and the Austin chapter of the N ational Organization of Women w ere joined by the T ex a s C ivil L iberties Union and the F ree Space P eer Counseling Center ,’’ sh e o f H arriet tio n for than her p r e g n a n c y ," Wardlaw’s rmaotion for an an inin­ in their support said junction ag a in st the transfer Wardlaw "Her transfer would be d is­ o r d e r o f A u s t in S c h o o l Wardlaw w as m oved to the ruptive to the sp ecial teaching Superintendent Jack L. D avid­ librarian position at LBJ High situation she has been a part son School after 126th D istrict of since the beginning of the W a r d la w a r g u e s th e Court Judge J a m es R M eyers school year, and it would im ­ transfer con stitu tes sex d is­ d i s s o l v e d fo r t e c h n i c a l pede her effort to gain the crim ination becau se it is com ­ r e a s o n s th e te m p o r a r y Special Teaching C ertificate restraining order of Jan. 6 pletely based on her pregnan­ which she is due in May of this cy. which forbade the change. y e a r,” she said. A lic e E m o r y of A u stin M eyers agreed w ith Austin The g ro u p s’ sta te m e n t Women W orkers read the Independent School D istrict criticized D avidson’s action statem en t which demanded Atty. Bill Bingham , who said a s “ ty p ic a l o f our m a le that W ardlaw be allow ed to the order did not sp ecify the d om in ated s o c ie t y ’s tr e a t ­ rem ain in the classroom . "We r ea so n s for g r a n tin g the m en t of w om en w h ic h understand that she has been order. These reasons were "p en alizes wom en in a way a good te a ch er and that the com pelling b ecau se the order that it would never penalize superintendent of schools has w as granted w ithout notifica­ m en." no other reason for his action tion of the superintendent A hearing has been set for 2 p .m . T h u r s d a y in 126th Problem Pregnancy Counseling Service D istrict Court (T ravis County Student Health Center C o u r th o u s e ) to c o n s id e r 1 05 W . 26th St. (4th Floor-South) C o n fid e n tia l counseling w ith all a lternatives d isc u ss­ ed a n d referrals m ad e to a p p ro p ria te resources. Call 4 7 8 - 5 7 1 1 , Ext. 26, for a n app ointm ent. In d iv id u a l a p p o in tm e n ts T u e sd a y 1-5 p.m., T h ursd ay 1-5 p.m., Frid a y 9 -n o o n . Got a problem Don’t cover it up. MIDDLE EASTERN STUDIES COURSES Spring 1975 24900 24912 M E S 3 0 1 1 Introduction to tho M id d le East: Adjustment a n d C h a n g e in M odern Times. M W F 2-3, BEB 154. Bezirgan. M a le an d Female Roles: Tradition and C h a n ge in M id d le Eastern M E S 331 Societies. M W F 1-2, BUR 224. E. Femea. M E S 3 6 0 Conference Course. Independent Study. Consent or mstruc or m ust be obtained. M an n e rs in charge. M usic of the M iddle East a n d North Africa. M W F 11-12, HEB M E S 361 24915 M ES 362 24920 MES 24 90 5 Call the University CoOp consum er action Line with your com­ plaints or suggestions. A rr ee p p rr ee ss ee n n tt aa tt ii vv ee o f A W omen’s Health Organization of Austin gave an exam ple by saying that it is never asked how m any unwed fathers are teaching in Austin schools. "By applying an archaic and restrictive moral code, the su p e rin te n d en t inhibits the efforts of all w om en who are working to be econom ically independent and who dare to s te p b e y o n d th e n a r r o w bounds of tradition," Em ory said. Davidson’s action also was faulted because it "denies the right of a w om an to control her own body." a right which "has been eroded and denied women through y ea rs of con­ ditioning." The organizations also urg­ ed oth ers to sp eak out in defense of W ardlaw and "to realize the arch aic m entality w h ich c o n t r o ls how th eir children learn " The public w as encouraged by the groups to attend T hursday's hearing, 24910 363 G v iliz a h o n s a n d Cultures of the A rab W orld: M e d ie v a l Cities a n d Societies. M W F 3-4, A R C 307. W illiam s. The E m e r g e n c e o f M o d e r n Ir a n . T 7 -1 0 p.m., B U R 2 2 0 . oung. O th e r courses on the M id dle fa s t ore listed in the Spring C ourse A n n o u n ce m e n t. Courses not found in the Ann ou nce m e nt but w hich will be offered are: 478-4436 Mon. thru Fri. 8:30 - 5:30 ■sp ART 3 87 Art of Sum er. TTh 9:30-11. W ES 212. Schm andt-Besseroi. H IS 38 8 K Social Justice in Ancient a nd M odern Middle Eastern Societies. M 3 -6, BEB 466. Young. 43122 M U S 642b M usical Culture of N ubia a n d the Oud. M W 4 -5:3 0 , BTL 113. ElDin. M iddle Eastern Studies courses m ay be used to fulfill Area D requirements for the B A. degree, Plan I. They m a y also be taken in lieu of the foreign la ngu a ge requirement by students enrolled in the School of Com m unications.______________________ 41422 21 0 4 0 MEY, WHY DID THE STUDENY CROSS THE STREET? T h e s t r e e t s G u a d a l u p e and the answer's simple: b e cau se he was looking for a place to live and had heard s om e good things a b o u t the Castilian but wanted to see it for hi ms elf Sc away he went. . . . Wh en lie arrived he found a total en vi ro nm en t featuring an indoor swimming pool. a game room (with billiards, foosball, ping pong, pinball etc.), sauna baths, a mini-gym. cove red parking, a typing room with IBM electrics, maid s e t \ ice, a reference libra!\ and more. . like He also liked the idea of getting all the good, ho m e-c o o k ed food he could eat foods sirloin tips, roast beef, chef salads, br e a d e d veal, shrimp, and beet stroganolf . that are becoming too expensive to buy except in large quantities. And he liked o u r price (which isn't really hard to believe). Com p a re d to the costs of living in an a pa rtm en t, ifs chicken feed. So visit us before you make your decision. Just cross the street, and hop an elevator to the 11 th floor. — Texan Staff Photo by Jay Godwin Cheesey O v e n fu ls of "H o t Pizza by the S lice" from this u nique ven ding m achine go rge passin g m o u th s daily on the D rag. _______ Briscoe Lists School Finance A s Top Priority Area in J 975 By MARY HEINECKE T exan Staff Writer Gov. Dolph B riscoe, sp eak ­ ing to 2,500 educators W ednes­ day in M unicipal Auditorium, declared that a solution to school finance problem s w ill be his top priority in 1975. Addressing the School Ad­ m in is tr a to r s A d v is o r y C o n feren ce on E d u ca tio n , which is m eeting in Austin to rev iew four public sc h o o l fin a n c e p rop osals, B r is c o e lauded the weighted-pupil ap­ proach to school funding a s "The weighted-pupil sy stem a llo c a tes money according to the student's need. B riscoe said he would ask the L egislature for a $1 billion i n c r e a s e for the s t a t e ' s e d u c a t i o n a l n e e d s, an i n ­ crease in s a l a r y for professionals, a change to the "T exas m ust take a giant w e ig h te d -p u p il s y s t e m of school funding, adequate fun­ step , a s w e did w ith the ding for school transportation legislation in 1949. I am op­ and billingual education at all tim istic that progress will be made in the next legislative levels. The governor a lso proposed session if w e look ahead and e m e r g e n c y m e a su r e s that have the courage to release would include an $80 m illion our grip on the com fort and in c r e a se in fun ds for the fam iliarity of the sy stem s of current school year and an in­ the p a s t,” B r isc o e told a male crea se in teach er retirem en t p r e d o m i n a n t l y audience. pay. Enchancing local control of A ser ie s of 32 group work school fin a n c e s, p ro tectin g session s is scheduled for the the autom atic financing of c o n f e r e n c e T h u r s d a y in p u b lic s c h o o l e d u c a t i o n , M unicipal Auditorium, with a developing unique program s group of sp eak ers including to m eet the needs of par­ State Sen. O scar Mauzy of tic u la r a r e a s , d e v e lo p in g D a l l a s , c h a i r m a n o f th e skills of children, esp ecially Senate Education C om m ittee. those in prim ary grades and develop in g c a re er -o rie n te d M auzy wi l l d is c u s s the educational program s were Senate c o m m itte e ’s research other m easures called for by in sp ecialized areas of public Briscoe school finance at 3.15 p.m. School Board Member's Son Found Dead in Room at Hom e M.K Huge II. 22. U n iversity sophom ore in education and son of Austin School Board m em b er M.K. Hage Jr., w as fo u n d d e a d in h is r o o m W ednesday afternoon by his m other, a police official said. No im m e d ia t e c a u s e of death w as known H age lived with his parents at 2613 Spring Lane. An autopsy w as ordered to determ ine the cause of death. Justice of the P eace Jim McMurtry said. U N IVERSITY REFRIGERATORS APPRO VED FOR U SE IN U.T. D O R M IT O R IE S Also scheduled to speak is Alton O. Bowen. T exas Educa­ tion A g e n c y d e p u ty c o m ­ m issioner for adm inistrative serv ices, who w ill open the Thursday se ss io n w ith an analysis of the S tate Board of Education approach to public school finance. Bowen will speak at 8.45 a rn Dr. R ichard L. H ooker, special assistant to the gover­ nor for educational research and planning, will present the second se ssio n from 10:30 a rn. to noon. "‘ A T i m e f o r C h a n g e : Toward Q uality and E quality” is the title of a report to be given by Rep. Dan Kubiak of R ockdale, chairm an to the House Education C om m ittee, at I 30 p.m. • 2 SIZES TO CHOOSE FROM • FREE DELIVERY TO YOUR ROOM • FREE M AINTENANCE NELSO N S GIFTS B E C A U S E O F L I M I T E D S U P P L Y IT I S NECESSARY TO R E S E R V E Y O U R R E F R IG E R A T O R A S S O O N A S YOU AR RIV E ON C A M P U S. 4 6 1 2 So C ongrats Phono 4 4 4 -3 8 1 4 ZUNI A N D N A V A H O IN D IA N JEWELRY CALL: 4 78 -3 4 71 OR WRITE: M E X IC A N IM PO R T S U N IV E R SIT Y REFRIGERATORS O F fN IO a.m . to 6 p.m . ‘•G IF TS TH A T I S C R E A S E IN V A L V E " P.O. D R A W E R L A U S T IN , TEXAS 78712 Castilian CLOSED M O N D A Y 2323 San A n to n io -47S-9M I DRUG SPECIALS Ultra Ban Roll On Arrid Extra IBarnes and Hinds Dry 9 oz. j Wetting Solution Retail 1.41 Now SS Now 1.05 Retail 2.39 I Now 1.40 IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIU IIIIIIIljlllH IIIIIIIIIIH IIIIIIIin illllllllllilllllllllllllll Baby Powder 9 oz. = Suave Baby = Clearasil Tube Shampoo SS Retail 1.15 Retail 1.19 Retail 1.19 Now .79 Now .69 Sale .79 UNIVERSITY CO-OP One hour free parking with purchase of $2.00 or more. BankAmericard And MasterCharge Welcome _ P age 2 T h u rsd a y , J a n u a r y 9, 1975 THE DAILY TEXAN s, N e w Energy Plan Expected Ford M a y A n n o u n c e * . horsepower tax. But the source said auto m akers have ag reed to im prove vehicle mileage 40 percent, so their 1980 m odels would average about 20 m iles per gal ion F ord’s energy policy was expected, however, to propose federal stan d ard s or tax credits to im prove building insula­ tion. In conjunction with the $3 excise tax. A dm inistration sources said Ford will outline a plan to set a g u a ra n te e d minimum on the price paid for im ported oil. _ W oman Governor G ov. Ella T. G rasso, Connecticut'* first w o m a n chief executive, arrives in Hartford W e d n e sd a y for her inau gu ration w ith her husband, Thom as. Elected by a landslide, Democrat G rasso pledged a heroic ef f or t to d e a w ith me the flare state 's» fiscal crisis. , . , By DAVID HENDRICKS Texan Staff Writer A prelim inary rep o rt to the state senate favoring creation of a utilities regulatory com m ission was disapproved Wednesday by the Senate subcom m ittee for which it w as prepared The subcom m ittee on consum er af- WASHINGTON (APi — F ive major railroads w ere ta rg ete d for strik es beginning Jan 24 as contract talks resumed Wednesday for 560.000 railway workers. The Sheet Metal W orkers Union served formal strike notices with the required warning of at least 14 days on the Union Pacific. Missouri Pacific. Texas P acific. B altim o re & Ohio and the S eaboard C oast Lines. J W O’B rien, the union s general vice­ president. said picket lines will go up as scheduled if the contract dispute w ith the industry’ is not settled _____________________________ S ev en tee n ra il unions h a v e been negotiating w ith the industry for sev eral Investigators Assigned System Officials To ~Probe UTPB * . . . - vt .!___ I I in inVPQtiC By FORD FESSENDEN Texan Staff Writer Two University System staff persons will be sent to investigate m atters at UT Permian Basin, University Chancellor Charles LeMaistre said Wednesday. The two officials will make inquiries into different areas of controversy. John Fasolino, director of employe relations, will look into questions concerning "the participation of University em ployes in Faculty and Staff Enterprises. Inc., an external organization at UT Permian B asin,” LeMaistre said in a statement. Mike Grady, assistant to the comp tro ller, w ill in v e s tig a te " se v e r a l matters, including the development fund and golf scholarship contributions.” M ik e Q u in n , a s s i s t a n t to th e chancellor, said he does not know how 3 Counts of Theft State Rep. Montoya To Appear in Court By United Press International Rep. Greg Montoya. D-Elsa, will be arraigned Thursday on charges he stole from the state by putting people on his legislative payroll who didn’t do govern­ ment work. Montoya will enter his plea before District Judge Mace B. Thurman Jr. at 9 a in Thursday — five days before the opening of the 1975 legislative session when he begins his third term. As a member of the Legislature he can demand postponement of any trial until 30 days after the end of the legislative session. Montoya, 57. was indicted Dec 17 on three counts of theft, misapplication of public funds and official misconduct in h is h irin g o f fiv e in d iv id u a ls as legislative aides in his home district. The Travis County grand jury contends the five did not have the secretarial skills indicated on their job applications and did not do any of the work for which they were receiving state pay Montoya allegedly had one of the five, Olivia Silva, working as a sales clerk for his wife in the Montoyas’ auto parts store in Elsa. Investigators indicated two of the men. Fernando Silva and Joel L. Garcia, were put on the state payroll in return for hauling equipment Montoya purchas­ ed at a surplus property sale in Austin from the Capital City to Elsa. If he is convicted, Montoya could be fined up to $5,000 and sent to prison for two to five years. i long the investigation m ay take "A s fa r as the ch ancellor's office is concerned, this is only p art of a con­ tinuing investigation into the m a tte r. Quinn said. B H A m stead resigned last m onth as president of the school during an in­ vestigation into w hether he had m isled the L egislature on the use of sta te funds in construction of a golf course and duck pond on the campus Q uestions also have arisen concerning Faculty and Staff E n terp rise s (FASE*. w hich is an o rg an izatio n of UTPB em ployes designed for acquisition of p ro p e rty fo r faculty and sta ff use. C harges w ere made that pressure w as applied to em ployes to join FASE, which has dues of $12 a month. One official who com plained that he could not afford the $144 a y ea r said his salary w as soon ra is­ ed bv $150. G rady also has authority to extend his investigation beyond these two m atters "should it be necessary," LeM aistre's statem ent said. weeks on c o n tracts th at becam e open for revision Jan . I. H ow ever, only the sheet m etal union is legally free to strik e as it technically still is negotiating issues settled with the other unions in 1973. O 'B rien acknow ledged that the th re a t of se le c te d s trik e s will put added pressure on the industry to m ake an acceptable wage-and-benei'it offer "U p to now. the negotiations have been a fa rc e ,’ he said j ‘a r / ... .0 m . c c m n Hit f i n mission ct t h o I during C P Q Qthe i n n 1975 session. fairs defeated its staff« 0report by a 2-2 A ndujar said she w as against the vote. Voting a g a in st the report w ere report because of "in su ltin g - rem ark s in F ort Worth Sens. B etty Andujar and Bill it referring to utility industry heads. She Meier In favor of th e report were Austin also said a regulatory com m ission would Sen Lloyd D oggett and G arland Sen be the state governm ent's way of ignor­ Ron Clower. ing the hard work of city councils across The report favored a three-m em ber the state in setting th eir ra te s during elected com m ission to regulate rate^ for past vears. electric, telephone, gas. private w a te r Following the subcom m ittee m eeting, and sewage serv ices Dr. Mike Abel of the T exas Coalition for The vote m eans the subcom m ittee will U tility R egulation said he favored not recom m end legislation to the Senate passage of Clower s bill. He pointed out during the 64th L egislature, but in­ th a t a ‘‘m onopoly s itu a tio n ” exists dividual sen ato rs m ay introduce legisla­ am ong public utilities which city coun­ tion on th eir own. cils have difficulty dealing with. Clower, who c h a irs the subcom m ittee He said a state regulatory com m ission prefiled his own bill calling for a public is needed to be able to say to the utility utilities com m ission Wednesday a f te r ­ com panies "if you do n 't im prove s e r­ noon after the subcom m ittee m eeting. vice. vou don't get your ra te increase ” The bill, co-sponsored by Doggett. in ­ Abel said th e re is a trem en d o u s cludes a local option clause, which would volume of m aterial and evidence of poor allow individual city councils to set th eir service to prove the need for a strong own rates in th e ir cities if they wish. regulatory com m ission. He also agreed The subcom m ittee results were not un­ with Clower th a t the subco m m ittee's a c ­ expected, C low er observed afterw ard , tion Wednesday will not significantly adding he did not view die vote as a s e t­ hurt the chances for p assage of a utilities back He set the ch ances a t 60-40 in favor com m ission bill of passage of a u tilities regulatory com ­ A spokesm an for the N ational R ailw ay L ab o r C o n fe re n c e , the in d u s tr y 's bargaining a rm . declined com m ent on the strike notices but expressed hope for a peaceful settlem ent The strik e notices were served as un­ ion and industry rep resen tativ es re su m ­ ed joint bargaining talks for the first tim e since m id-D ecem ber With 5,300 m em bers employed by the railroad industry, the sheet m etal union is one of the sm allest among tile 17 But O 'Brien said he has com m itm ents from the other unions to honor his picket lines a traditional p ractice within the in­ dustry. O’B rien said he is prepared to w ork out an ag reem en t with the live ta rg eted railroads to perm it continued service of A m trak passenger trains o p erated by those c a rrie rs during the strike. The unions a re seeking an initial 20 percent in crease the second y ear, plus a cost-of-living escalato r clause and oth er fringe benefits The industry’s latest offer, rejected by the unions, called for a 9 percent pay hike the first y ear and 3 percent in each of the second and third years R ailroad w orkers currently av erage $5 77 an hour, according to industry figures Alexians, Menominees To Continue Talks GRESHAM , W is. (U P I) - T alk s between a group of m ilitant Indians and representatives of a religious order w ill resum e T hursday in efforts to end the a rm e d o c c u p a t io n of th e o r d e r s m onastery by the m ilitants, it w as a n ­ nounced W ednesday. Col. Hugh Sim onson, com m ander of National G uard troops activated follow ­ ing w eek en d e x c h a n g e s ut g u n fire between the Indians and law m en, said the form al talk s would be held T hursday morning in a cam p e r several hundred feet from the abbey. He expressed con­ fidence th a t a n end to the ordeal m ay be near. B ro th er M aurice Wilson of the Alexian B ro th ers, the order that owns the facility, said the brothers m ight be willing to sell the facility to the govern­ ment to set it up a s a hospital. "T hat would be one an sw er.” Wilson said when asked if purchase by the federal govern m en t would be a w ay to settle it. "S om e kind of purchase would be necessary. We would like ail in­ terested p a rtie s to collaborate Wilson m et with officials and som e rep resen tativ es of Indians Wednesday, but no talks w ere held w ith the Indians holding the novitiate One of the Indians in the talks was Dennis Banks, a lead e r of the American Indian Movement occupation of Wound­ ed Knee, S D . in 1973. Banks said talks “ so far have been m eaningful and in the right d irection” but said the federal governm ent — eith er the Bureau of In­ d ian A f f a i r or th e D e p a rtm e n t of H ealth. E ducation and W elfare - must step in with som e financing to help end the situation. The arm ed Indians, m em bers of a group calling itself the Menominee W arrior S ociety,” and th e ir fam ilies moved into the 64-room m onastery early New Y ear's Day. They a re demanding the Alexian B rothers O rder turn the land over to them R epresentatives of the Alexians came h e r e i m m e d i a t e l y f o llo w in g th e takeover, but negotiations broke down last Friday and they returned to Chicago Sunday night a fte r th re e days of sporadic gunfire had punctuated w hat until then had been a quiet takeover Police O u tn u m b e r Students A s Boston Schools Reopen BOSTON (U P I) - Closed since Dec. ll because of racial violence. South Boston High School reopened Wednesday with police outnumbering students. There were no incidents About 400 students, 31 of them black, cam e back to classes after an enforced holiday of alm ost a month. Attendance was less than a third of those assigned to the school. First white and then black students passed through metal detectors to make sure they were not carrying weapons. Some were frisked. Afro and rattail com bs previously allowed into the building were banned along with spray deodorants and other aerosol containers. Then, under the watchful eye of the police stationed in corridors and on s t a ir w a y s , th ey d r ifte d b ack to classrooms. The school was closed Dec, l l follow­ ing a stabbing incident which triggered a c la s h b e tw e e n p o lic e and w h ite dem onstrators opposed to court-ordered d e s e g r e g a t i o n by busing The official attendance figure listed 423 at South Boston High. including 31 black students. More than 1.500 students are assigned to the school. 358 of whom are black students. The highest atten­ dance figure to date was 611 on Nov 13. Also opened without incident w ere two South Boston annexes and Roxbury High School which were shut down along with South Boston High The four buildings co n stitu te what is called the South Boston-Roxbury complex under a partial desegregation order issued June 21 by U S D istrict Judge W Arthur G a in ly. Attendance at the four-school complex was 876 out of a projected enrollment of about 3,500 The previous com plex high was 1,305 on Nov. U. —UM Telephoto Mountain Rescue Rescue w orkers near Seattle u se sled and heavy lines to m ove a plane crash victim up a steep slope for helicopter news capsules----IO Bodies Recovered Beneath Tasm an Bridge HOBART, Australia (UPI) - Police and Navy divers Wednesday found a third auto containing bodies in the mud at the bottom of the Derwent River, bringing to at least IO the death toll in the Tasman Bridge disaster. Police said they are looking for another two bodies and possibly five more in water 90 feet deep below where two spans of the bridge collapsed Sunday when the 10,000-ton ore carrier Lake Illawarra hit a support pylon. Rocky Appoints Aide / 's h a n iits n a i tpolicies s r>oli shaping tor presentation in F o rd 's first State of the Union address later this month and probably in a sep arate energy m essage to Congress. whose cooperation would be needed Ford has set a goal of reducing U.S. oil dem and one million b a rre ls a day by the end of this year. The source said his policy would add a longer-range goal of limiting oil im ports by 1985 to som ew here betw een IO and 20 percent of total U S. dem and, a substan­ tial cut from the present 36 percent. Preliminary Report A x ed Strikes Possible For 5 Railroads UM T«l*photo Taxes, Tariffs r r u «purpose .would k a h IH K u a ra n tA P a a The bea tton aguarantee stable income to in su re developm ent of new oil sources w hile keeping up current production levels. Developers of a lte rn a te sources of energy would be guaranteed a price equal to that now paid for oil. Preparation of the national energy policy began last .January when form er President Nixon ordered a ‘ P ro ject In d e p e n d e n c e B lu e p r i n t. It w a s delivered to Ford in November. Since then the A dm inistration has been Utilities Com m ission _ WASHINGTON (AP) - P resid en t Ford is expected to announce soon a national energy policy relying on oil tax­ es and tariffs to cut demand, and on opening new federal oilfields to increase supply. An informed Administration source said Tuesday the President accepted r e c o m m e n d a t io n s c e n t e r e d on deliberately increasing oil prices $3 per barrel but w as still pondering how to compensate for the resulting econom ic impact The oil price increase could raise g a s­ oline prices 7 Vi cents a gallon and draw $18.6 billion a year from the economy at present demand levels. The source said this would be offset by a proposal for general tax reductions. The energy policy would reject direct limits on oil imports, reduction of fuel allocations and gasoline rationing. M assive stockpiling of oil for em ergen­ cies would not be proposed, the source said, but would be studied by the National Petroleum Council, an industry advisory group. Nor was Ford expec ted to propose automobile efficiency standards or a . , WASHINGTON (UPI) — Vice-President Nelson A, Rockefeller Wednesday announced the appointment of Roger W. Hooker Jr. as his $37,000-a-year congressional affairs assistant. Hooker, 33, also will serve as administrative assistant to the president of the Senate, who is Rockefeller. Hooker, a lawyer, has been serving since February, 19/4, as director ot domestic studies for the Commission on Critical Choices for Americans, which was organized by Rockefeller. Leukemia Virus Isolated WASHINGTON (U PI) — In a significant advance in cancer research, two National Cancer Institute scientists reported Wednesday they have isolated a human leukemia virus. If confirmed by additional research, the discovery would be the first tim e a virus associated with a form of cancer has been found in hum ans. The virus particles were isolated by Drs. Robert C. Gallo and Robert E. G allagher in c ells of a 61-year-old wom an stricken with acute myelogenous leukemia, a relatively rare form of blood malignancy that generally strikes adults. Tightrope W alker Falls ST P E T E R S B U R G , Fla. (UPI) - French high wire walker Philippe Petit who startled New Yorkers last year by walking a wire 1,500 feet in the air was injured Tuesday when he fell 25 feet . but probably will be able to return to the circus in six to eight weeks, doctors said Wednesday. The doctors said P etit would be out of the hospital in IO to 14 days. evacuation. Three w ere killed and tw o survived the crash, w hich occurred in the Cascade foothills. He suffered a collapsed lung, a broken rib and a broken bone in his right w rist when he fell 25 feet to the floor of the arena during a practice ses­ sion Tuesday afternoon. Stock M arket W eakens NEW YORK (AP) — The stock turned weak and uneven Wednesday under the pressure of profit-taking after several sessions Of broad gains. The Dow Jones average of 30 in­ dustrials dropped 5.79 to 635.40 in its first negative showing of 1975. D eclin es barely outlegged ad­ vances. 728 to 687, among the 1,792 issues traded on the New York Stock Exchange. m a rk et T h i i r cr! a v lannarv 9. 1975 T H E DAI LY T E X A N EDITORIALS P a g e 4 T h u rsd a y , J a n u a r y 9, 1975 selection committee farce presidential ll ___________ 'There T h e r e are a r e only o n ly two tw o things th in g s wrong w r o n g with the co m m ittee that w ill st* n e x t U n iv e r s ity p r e s id e n t . O n e, th e c o m m i t t e e it s e lf . A nd tw o , th e m e m b e r s .v .^ o f th e c o m m it t e e . T h a t is a ll th a t is w r o n g . W hen D r S te p h e n H . S p u rr o f M ic h ig a n w a s a s k e d to b e p r e s id e n t o f th is U n iv e r s it y in 1971, h e w a s f ir s t s e l e c t e d b y a 1 6 -m e m b e r f a c u lty -s tu d e n t c o m m i t t e e , and h e w a s th e n a p p r o v e d by th e B o a r d o f R e g e n t s . T h is s e p a r a ­ tio n o f p o w e r s a llo w e d s a t is f a c t io n fo r b o th s id e s . B u t th a t s y s t e m o f s e l e c t io n w a s c h a n g e d fo llo w in g S p u r r ’s s e le c t io n . N o w th e n e x t p r e sid e n t w ill b e s e l e c t e d by th e p e o p le w h o s e p ic tu r e s su rr o u n d th is e d ito r ia l. A nd y o u m a y n o t ic e th a t tw o m e m b e r s o f t h e 14-p erson c o m ­ m i t t e e a r e n o t p ic tu r e d ; th e s tu d e n t an d th e f a c u lt y r e p r e s e n t a t iv e T h a t is a p p r o p r ia te ; s tu d e n ts a n d f a c u lty h a v e a ls o b e e n l e f t o u t o f th e s e le c t io n p rocess E a c h grou p d o e s h a v e o n e v o te on th e c o m m i t t e e . J a n e S tr a u s s , th e s t u ­ d e n t r e p r e s e n t a t iv e , w ill h a v e d if f ic u lt ie s e x p r e s s in g th e v ie w s o f th e e n t ir e s tu d e n t bod y. A s th e d a u g h te r o f a D a lla s b a n k e r an d n ie c e o f th e c h a ir m a n o f th e D e m o c r a t ic N a tio n a l C o m m itt e e , s h e c o m e s fr o m th e s a m e s o c ia l s t r a t a a s m o st o f th e B o a r d o f R e g e n t s . A s c h a ir w o m a n o f th e T e x a s U n io n B o a rd o f D ir e c t o r s , s h e h a s fo llo w e d th e c o m p la c e n t p o lit ic s o f S tu d e n t G o v e r n m e n t P r e s id e n t F r a n k F le m in g . S tr a u s s c e r t a in ly r e p r e s e n t s o n e s e c to r of th e stu d e n t p o p u la tio n , a lb e it th a t g ro u p d e s tin e d to in h e r it th e r u l­ in g m a n tle fr o m th e ir p a r e n t s . B u t s t i l l, S t r a u s s w ill b e a sp r in g b r e e z e c o m ­ p a red to o th e r m e m b e r s on th e c o m m it t e e . T h e fa c u lty m e m b e r is E u g e n e N e ls o n , p r o f e s s o r o f b u s in e s s la w , w h o is w e ll k n ow n and r e s p e c t e d a m o n g th e f a c u lt y a ft e r s e r v in g a s s e c r e t a r y to th e G e n e r a l F a c u lt y fr o m 1954 to 1970. H o w e v e r , h e , lik e S tr a u s s , w ill fin d it d iffic u lt to r e p r e s e n t h is c o n s t it u e n c y , a lth o u g h it is u n lik e ly o n e p e r so n c o u ld a d e q u a te ly r e p r e s e n t th e d iv e r g e n t v ie w s o f th e fa c u lt y H e is c o n ­ s id e r e d , by m o s t f a c u lty le a d e r s , a s a f e c h o ic e fo r th e a d m in is tr a tio n . of T h e r e s t o f th e c o m m i t t e e , e x c e p t fo r H a rr y R a n s o m , r e p r e s e n ts th e c h a in c o m m a n d in th e U T S y s t e m . N o n e o th e r th an C h a n c e llo r C h a r le s L e M a is tr e c h a ir s th e c o m m i t t e e , and R e g e n t s A G M c N e e s e ( w ho s e l e c t e d th e c o m m i t t e e ) , A lla n S h iv e r s, E d C lark and L ad y B ird J o h n so n a r e on it. G o in g d ow n th r o u g h th e c h a in o f c o m m a n d , w e find D r. W illia m l l . K n is^' Iv, a s s is t a n t to L e M a is tr e for h e a lth ai la ir s , and D e p u ty C h a n c e llo r E .D . Walker Johnson W a lk e r F r o m th e r e w e h a v e th e p r e s id e n t s o f th e I n iv e r s it ie s o f T e x a s a t S a n A n to n io an d D a lla s , D r. P e t e r F la w n and D r. B r y c e J o r d a n . T h e s e la st tw o c o m m i t t e e m e m b e r s a r e n ’t a ll b a d , if o n ly fo r th e r e a s o n th a t th e y m ig h t b e p o te n tia l U T -A u stin p r e s id e n ts an d n o w a r e o u t o f th e ru n n in g . T h e o th e r t w o c o m m i t t e e m e m b e r s d o n o t d is tin g u is h t h e m s e lv e s in a n y d iff e r e n t w a y s : W a le s M a d d e n , an A m a r illo a tto r n e y , is p r e s id e n t o f th e U n iv e r s ity E x -S tu d e n t s ’ A s s o c ia tio n an d is a f o r m e r r e g e n t, and h rank H a r r iso n is th e fo r m e r p r e s id e n t o f U T A r lin g to n and is c u r r e n tly th e h e a d o f th e San A n to n io H e a lth - S c ie n c e C e n te r . A ll in a ll, th e s e le c t io n c o m m it t e e is a f a r c e . T o s a v e t im e , L e M a is tr e — or w h ic h e v e r r e g e n t ( s ) is b eh in d h im — sh o u ld g o a h e a d and p ic k ou r n e x t p r e s id e n t T h a t s y s t e m w o u ld b e th e s a m e a s th is o n e . A lte r n a tiv e s fo r th e c a m p u s a r e f e w . T h e r e w ill b e a c a m p u s -a d v is o r y c o m m it t e e ( c o m p o s e d o f e le c t e d fa c u lty m e m b e r s and S tu d e n t G o v e r n m e n tc h o s e n s t u d e n t s ) , bu t th at c o m m it t e e h a s no p o w e r e x c e p t th a t g r a n te d by L e M a is tr e an d th e s e le c t io n c o m m it t e e . And th e r e is a lw a y s th e G e n e r a l F a c u lt y r e s o lu tio n — p r in te d on th is p a g e — th a t c o u ld in s u r e u s th a t th e n e w p r e s id e n t w ill b e s a t is f a c t o r y to a ll s id e s . B u t w h a t e v e r , th is n e w p r e s id e n ­ tia l s e le c t io n p lan is in fe r io r . And a n y o n e bu t an a d m in is tr a tio n -a ffilia te d Ransom Harrison V no m s i w ee , W . ; rectum ■- K THc h tv u r n r n w [AKadc? {I ) Joules " ttmy o -Seas f. v c ss o r 'V r f IFT ■T t T ‘ K l ‘M X I IVCV Assess m j $ ! % J- ^ L' •"> al mr(r up oh rn , f i j i 0 'W D / ' / / f A . Kl BR m f w / • h if Specializing the law By NICHOLAS VON HOFFMAN ( 1973, The Washington PostKing F eatures Syndicate WASHINGTON I t’s hard to unders­ tand how so ravenously dishonest a group as m ost of the legal profession took so long to glom on to an old gim m ick like specialization The doctors have been using it for years to bilk their patients, but it’s only been recently that l a w y e r s have realized they can make still m ore money if they “ specialize In m edicine, specialization takes the form of coy little ads which read; “ Sharply P Ripthroat, M I).; p ractice lim ited to d ise a se s of the left eyeb all, m e m b er , A m erican C ollege of Left Eyeball Surgeons.” Y ears of advanced training perm it Dr Ripthroat to ch arge larger than usual p r i c e s for confining him self to blinding you in the left eye In the old days before scien tific research had brought the healing arts to their pre­ sent pitch of perfection, the sam e man was perm itted to put out your right eye as w ell, but then he usually charged less and som etim es threw in six free lessons for your seeing e y e dog A m ovem ent is now under way to i n­ t r o d u c e s p e c ia liz a t io n to th e law business California and New M exico have already done it In W isconsin and who knows how many oilier sta te s the grou n d w ork has been la id to h e lp la w y ers charge c u sto m e rs m ore by c la im in g to be ex p e rts in v a rio u s sp ecia lities California now recognizes M adden p e r so n w o u ld k n o w it. three — tax, crim inal and w orkm en’s com pensation law — but Norma Levy, in the D e c e m b e r issu e o f the le g a l m agazine Juris D octors, w rites that we m ay soon be saddled with as many as IOO different legal sp ecialties 'Dus new est try at making sim ple things difficult is defended on the ground that it will upgrade the standards of practice. There is reason enough for that with an occu p ation that e n jo y s the reputation for snuffling larceny and sh u fflin g in c o m p e ten ce , but h istory teach es us that every line of work which seeks to raise prices by restricting the n u m b e r of people it lets in claim s i f s do­ ing it to raise standards. Law clerking or apprenticeship w as knocked out in order to raise standards. The law ju stice of the peace w as ab o l i s h cd b e c a u s e s u b s t i t u t i n g t r a in e d m e m b e r s of the bar would r a i s e stan da r d s. But the only thing t hat ever g e ts r a i s e d is prices I t s argued that encouraging law yers to advertise that they are board-certified sp ecialists w ill help the public choose a t­ torneys m ore knowledgeably The more likely outcom e is that law yers not c e r ­ tified a s sp ecia lists will be prohibited from appearing in court, A bill has already b e e n introduced in the C alifornia legislature that would stop uncertified law yers from pleading capital cases. Specialization will m ake it easier yet tor judges to intim idate attorneys “ The judiciary w ants people who will be in there and play ball, who have proven their ability to play ball, and they want to narrow the field in which the rest of us can play ball — those of us who want to be straight with our c o n sc ien ce s.” Dick E id e n , p r e s id e n t of th e N a tio n a l Lawyers Guild for Southern California is quoted a s saying. The last thing needed just now is the of th e p o w er of the judiciary Judges are already su fficien t­ ly a r b i t r a r y and c a p r i c i o u s l y secretiv e without being given another tool to use on aggressive, p o l i t i c a l l y c o n t r o v e r s i a l l a w y e r s with a proclivity for defending unpopular clien ts enhancement You do have to adm ire the organized bar for its b r a s s , h o w e v e r With W atergate, essen tially a law yers' scan dab still on their backs, with people r is­ ing up to sue them for conspiring to fix fees in violation of the antitrust laws with the public furious over the bar's sabotage of no fault insurance legisla lion, they try to sneak this one through The only catastrophe that can ruin a m id d le in c o m e fa m ily f a s te r than law yers is cancer. With apologies to the h o n est and e t h ic a l m e m b e r s , th e organized bar m ight consider dropping this odious little sch em e in favor of get ting its house in order, before the law courts are abolished The only sp ecialty worth keeping is the study of integrity, but who is to cer tify that? The faculty's alternative (E ditor’s note: the follow ing is the G eneral F aculty resolution that con­ c e rn s the cam pus faculty-student ad­ visory co m m ittee's role in the selection of the U n iversity’s next president. The resolution w as introduced by Dr. David Gavenda, professor of physics and educa­ tion, and w as passed overw helm ingly at the G eneral F aculty m eeting of Nov 19.) R esolved: that the G eneral F aculty of the U niversity of T exas at Austin will a ccep t as president only a candidate ap­ proved by the cam pus faculty-student a d v i s o r y com m ittee As the ev en ts which have unfolded dur­ ing the [last two months have m ade pain­ fully evident, the U niversity of T exas is at a critical turning point in its develop ­ m ent. Since my student days in the early F iftie s I have been w itness to slow , but steady, progress toward the kind of in­ s t it u t io n a l a u to n o m y and s e lf governance that are hallm arks of great u n i v e r s i t i e s . N ow th is p r o g r e s s is threatened because the legal authority to control the destiny of the U n iversity has fallen into the hands of people who do not understand the purpose and function of faculty self governance in a first c la ss university The attitude which prevails in the System o ffice is exposed in a letter w ritten to the Board of R egen ts by Chancellor LeM aistre (quoted in On Campus Oct. 7. 1974); the chancellor r e f e r s to the president as “ a subordinate to Hie chancellor, and as his agent in the conduct of the affairs of the institution. I call upon this body to r eje ct this no­ tion of university presidency by refusing, in advance, to accep t a president ap­ pointed under these conditions. The word a c c e p t” has p r a c tic a l as well as philosophical im plications. There is no reason why we should a ccep t as the presiding o fficer at G eneral F aculty m eetin gs an “ agen t” of the chancellor, lo use his term inology. As a delib erative body w e can select our own presiding of­ ficer. There is also no reason why we cannot have an execu tive o fficer of our own choice sign the letters of appoint­ ment, to standing c o m m itte es of the G eneral Faculty. The m em b ers of these c o m m itte es are eith er elected by the G eneral F aculty or nom inated by the F a cu lty C o m m ittee on C o m m ittee s. When the president signs the appoint merit le tte r s he is acting as the agent of the G eneral F aculty. If he is actually no m ore than the agent of the chancellor, then w e should not delegate our authori­ ty to him. in the face of certain knowledge that the G eneral F aculty will not accep t him as their leader. It is im perative that w e approve this resolution now, by an overw helm ing m ajority, to m ake it crystal clear to the chancellor and to the Board of R egen ts that w e are prepared to take w h atever step s are n ecessary to m aintain som e sem b lan ce of faculty self-governance in the academ ic a ffairs of the U niversity of ________ T exas. I r e a l i z e , o f c o u r s e , th a i th e ch an cellor’s president would have legal authority in budget m a tters, but we should not yield to him in those academ ic areas w here the authority clearly lies with the G eneral Faculty. O bviously, such a sy ste m of dual p r e s id e n ts w ou ld soon b e c o m e in tolerable in an acad em ic com m u nity ; I desp erately pray that it w ill never com e to pass. Surely no one would a c ce p t apDointment unilaterally by the chancellor r T h e D a il y T e x a n s t u d e n t N e w s p a p e r a t The U n h r r t l t y a t T a * a t a l A u s t i n - ............................ * B u ck H a rv ey F H TTO R M A N A G IN G E D I T O R . ' . ' . I I .............................................................. A S S IS T A N T M A N A G IN G E D I T O R S E d d ie F is h e t C la u d e S im p s o n NEWS EDITOR ......................................................................... •; ,Kal|’y. Kf.lly EDITOR ............................................................................. Richard Justice SPO RTS A M U SE M E N T S E D IT O R ................................................................ F E A T U R E S E D I T O R ....................... * ................... C A P IT O L B U R E A U C H I E F .......................................... V icky B o w le s J a n ic e T o m lin D a v id H e n d r ic k s ISSU E ST A FF Issue Editor ....... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .......................-......................Barry B oesch G eneral R e p o r te r s....................................................... Mike M orrison, David H endricks Now s A s s is ta n ts................................J o se F lores, C harles Lohrm ann, David Moody, Ford F essenden, Jay Jorden, Sylvia T eague, Mary H einecke, Joy H ow ell, Steve Olafson E ditorial A ssista n ts.......................................................... Bryan B rom ley. David W hitten A ssistant Sports Editor ..................................................................................... Bill Jordan A ssociate A m u sem en ts Editor ................................... . . . . . . . W illiam A. Slone Jr. Make-up E d ito r ................................. An" kk Wire Editor .......................................................... ................. ....................... Scott Bobb Copy E d ito r s...........................- ........ C. R u ssell Leigon, Sally Carpenter, Jan Phipps P h otograp h ers................................................................*a y Godwin, Carol Jean Sim m ons O p i n i o n s e x p r e s s e d in T h e D a i l y T e x a n a r e t h o s e e l t h e e d i t o r o r th e W ille t o f th e a r t i c l e a n d a r e n o t n e c e s s a r i l y B u ild in g b a s e m e n t flo o r 1 or at th e n e w s la b o r a to r y H ornm im ic , I l i o n B u ild in g A4TW i I n q u ir ie s c o n c e r n in g d e liv e r y ut an d c l a s s i f i e d a d v e r t is in g sh o u ld b e m a d e in T S P B u ild in g .12(10 ( 471-52441 a n d d is p la y a d v e r t is in g in T S P B u ild in g T h e D a ily T e x a n .1 stu d e n t n e w s p a p e r .ti T h e U n iv e r s it y ut T e x a s at A u s t in , is p u b lis h e d b y T e x a s S t u d e n t .1 210 1471-1*651 , _ , , T h e n a tio n a l a d v e r t is in g r e p r e s e n t a t iv e id I b e D a ily T e x a n is N a t io n a l E d u c a t io n a l A d v e r tis in g S e r v ic e , In c . th o s e ut th e U n iv e rs ity a d m in is tra tio n or th e B o a rd Urgent* P u b lic a t io n s , D r a w e r I). U n iv e r s it y S ta tio n A u stin . T ex 7*712 T h e D a lly T e x a n is p u b lis h e d M o n d a y T u e s d a y W ed n esd ay T h u r sd a y a n d e x a m p e ril* !* an d F r id a y e x c e p t d u r in g h o lid a y S ec o n d c l a s s p o s t a g e p a u l a t A u stin Tex N e w s c o n tr ib u tio n s w ill b e a c c e p t e d by t e le p h o n e 1471 45»1 1 a t th e e d it o r ia l o f f ic e 1T e x a s S tu d e n t P u b lic a t io n s SSO L e x in g t o n A v e N e w Y o rk N Y IW D T h e D a ily T e x a n s u b s c r ib e s to The A s s o c ia t e d P r e s s . U n ite d P r e s s I n te r n a tio n a l a n d P a c i f i c N e w s s e r v i c e T h e T e x a n is a m e m b e r o f th e A s s o c ia t e d C o lle g ia t e P r e s s th e S o u th w est J o u r n a lis m N e w s p a p e r A s s o c ia t io n C on gress an d th e le x a s D a ily Oil showdown possible IWS? MF M 36 *5 ira:- 48 49 & mn'LL IOUHEAR THIS, CHIEF' I STAYED JWUN! 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LLL 19 79 40 Plasm a Donors Needed Men & Women EARN $14 WEEKLY CASH PAYMENT FOR DONATION 4 45 Article of lur mture 46 Female deer 49 Printer s measure 51 Sun god 35 Edible seeds 37 Number 39 Afternoon IO ’TTI a lg a a n n a s QSuasB feassa aaa arabia ira a HHQBBnsaa rara asia boo ani sQamaonaa Eon a a a a a s g J E iia . aa narag___ bS — p ag a n s |T , — It ii Ara ■an ■O RCICI n i ’ Blood BHH WA Silver 45. Mixed □ E IS 5 M occasins 6 Unit of Siamese cur­ rency 7 Pronoun 8 Amend 9 Pierce 10 B e e ! animal 11 Title of respect 12 Hind part '5 Soak 18 Abounding 20 Guided 22 Look fixedly 24 Vapor 26 Before 28 B e in debt 3 ! Wrangle 32 Challenges 33 Chiels 34 More protound r n 1 Girl s name 5 Couple 9 Surgical threads 11 Substance 13 Symbol for tantalum 14 Lure 16 Hebrew let­ ter 17 In music. high 19 Sows 20 Ocean 21 Insects 23 Greek letter 24 Heavenly body 25 Hinder 27 Roadside hotel 29 Detace 30 Tiny 31 Leased 33 Listened to 35 Sheet ol glass 36 Devoured 38 Encounter 40 Urge on 4 I Regions 43 River in Scotland 44 Symbol for EARN CASH WEEKLY Answer to Yesterday s Puzzle rn A CRO SS President, for it suits neither the times nor the man. Everyone in America now understands what only a few people knew in 1971 — that our e c o n o m ic and e n e rg y problems will not be solved by quiek-fix solutions, and that any policies worth adopting will have to be carried for months and years to have any hope of success That implies that they should be introduced, not with a staccato blast of trumpets, but on a well-modulated note of logic and restraint that can HEE! - THE RACIAL EXPERIMENT: MODERN SOUTH AFRICA Taught by DENNIS BRUTUS, South African Poet, Visiting Professor ETS320 (23587) MT; Monday evenings, 7 :0 0-10 :0 0 p.m. JES A303A tn.tr O Plan to ADD during Adds/Drops or REGISTER during Spring Registration EXTENSION EVENING CLASSES EXTENSION TEACHING AND FIELD SERVICE BUREAU THE UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS AT AUSTIN SPRING SEMESTER REGISTRATION-1975 6:00 to 9:00 P.M.—JA N U A R Y 6, 7, 8, 9 8*30 A.M. to 4.30 P.M.—JA N U A R Y 13, 14 JO E C. THOM PSON C O N FE R EN C E CENTER 24th AND RED RIVER (NORTH OF L B J LIBRARY) CLASSES BEGIN JANUARY 20 and 21 (I'N A L F X A M S S C H E D U L E D F O F A PR IL 2 8 .2 9 .3 0 . A N D M A Y 1) COURSE OFFERINGS IN Classical Civilization G rad uate Lan g uag e Courses Physical Education Accounting Am erican Studies Health Education Physics Anthropology Computer Scien ces Cultural Foundations of Education History H o m e Econ om ics Psychology Radio-Television-Film Art Econom ics Astronomy Educational Psychology international Busin ess Real Estate Linguistics Russian Bible Biology English Eu rop ean Studies Management Sociology Botany Finance Marketing Span ish Business Administration French Mathematics S p e e ch Business Comm unications Geography M iddle Eastern Studies Statistics Business Law Chemistry German M u sic Philosophy Government stripes shape up in clingy simplicity BULLETINS AND TENTATIVE SCHEDULES AVAILABLE AT ROOM301, EXTENSION BUILDING, 19th and SABINE 5 (Between IH35 and Red River) P a in t the fashion scene w ith bold sim plicity in our 3-piece ensemble of bright stripes on black. Fitted clingy blouse tops the longer swirling skirt. The m atching scarf adds an extra dash around the neck or over the head. IOO o polyester knit. Sizes 5 to 13. 40.00 LATE REGISTRATION (($5 P ER C O U R SE PENALTY) 9:00 A M to 4:00 P M. JA N U A R Y 15, 16, 17. 20, 21 T H O M PSO N CONFERENCE CENTER Students in attendance at The University o f Texas at Austin may net re g iste r in Extension Evening Classes except with signed approval of the dean of the college or school in which they are enrolled YARING'S ON THE DRAG 2406 Guadalupe Thursday, January 9, 1975 THE HAHA TEXAN Page No Border Invitation For TSU It's Not Quite a Pastime The Only Game in Town Is Excessive By RICHARD JUSTICE Texan Staff Writer The 1974 Texas football season was considerably m ore enjoyable for The Daily Texan sports staff than it was for most of you average students at this average American university About half the Texan sports staff attended about half the football games Half vou average students didn't Maybe it was the fact the Longhorns have won only three important gam es the last three seasons. Maybe it was A T«*on ln t« rpr»tativ« the fact Texas has played only two reasonably close gam es the last three seasons. I am not foolish enough to believe many of you have taken our a d ­ vice that Texas football is a vicarious, w asteful v e n tu re which consum es thousands of hours and millions of dollars AT THE SAME tim e U n iv ersity women s coaches are uncertain of their 1975 budget, and soccer goes com plete­ ly unnoticed. JUST AT THE tim e he was taking m ore tim e with rep o rters, he kicked them out of Longhorn p ractices an a c ­ tion which will prove b etter m the long inn for everyone concerned He offered to rescind the lockout la te r if rep o rters would w rite only w hat he told them that the U niversity athletics d e p a rt­ m ent is spending its time and dollars producing football players, with un­ com pleted m ajors in business, physical education and com m unication, instead of academ icians As one te a c h e r c r itic a l of the program said last year “ I ve got to ad­ mit thev do a helluva PR job And, w hat he could also have said. it is a program powerful enough to sway students’ minds as well as rich alumni The problem is rooted w here we have all suspected Men who are holding on to their youths by coaching a kids game take them selves Uh) seriously. Penn State Coach Joe P atem o a d ­ d re sse d the p roblem last week rn Dallas. “ L et's face it football is not the most im portant thing rn ths country.” he said ‘ Ii football suddenly disappeared from the scene we would never m iss it. “ I w ant my players to enjoy the ex perienee of going to college It should be the four greatest years of th eir lives There is so much besides football U t. history, literature, m usic politics the changing society. I consider football just another e x tra-cu rricu lar activity, like debating or the band o r anything else on cam pus.’’ At the U niversity, priorities were m isplaced long ago. They are not likely to change ONE UNIVERSITY student politico. a m e m b e r of th e T e x a s S tu d e n t P u b lic a tio n s B o ard . w as sw ay ed enough to send me a not-too-subtle hint that he was less than pleased with a column I had w ritten in which I called D arrell Royal a terse, sarcastic m an ” when he dealt with rep o rters. But there was a positive result from those three words I was invited into Royal s office for alm ost an hour and he apologized for his actions. “ You know I ve dealt with so many Texan rep o rters who. if they c o u ld s t w rite a negative story, w rote nothing at a l l / ' he said. ‘i f you had been a w riter I was more fam iliar with, I m ight have taken m ore time Pucky Flight M o n tre a l's Yvan Cournoyer (1 2 ) and Detroit's Blair S tew art (2 5 ) w atch bounce off the back of the net during the second period of octiom NCAA Kills W omen's Programs SKIPPER'S IMPORTED AUTO PARTS 452-0244 . a l f a HOMO • AUDI • AUSTIN « AUST1N-HI ALEY •BMW • CAPRI (lincoln MercuryJ • CVTROIN • C O IT Dodgmi • COURIER (ford) • C R K K IT fWymoufk) • DATSUN . hat • PORSCHE • RENAULT • RILEY • ROVER • SAAB • SIMCA • SUBARU • SUNBEAM • JO W rlthh) * HILLMAN •H O N D A .JA G U A R • l . U . V . f Chevrolet/ • M A ID A MB1I. • M 1R C 1D IS -8IN Z *MX * MORRIS • HASH * © P IL •P IU C C O T • PINTO (Ford U.S.A.) TE XA S Shoe Shop •T O Y O T A • TRIUMPH • V O LVO • VOLKSWAGEN SHEEPSKIN We m ake and r e p a ir boots RUGS shoes Many belts OO $5 $ Beautiful Colors sponsors O n C a m p u s Q u a lify in g T o u rn a m e n t of the 7&0 2 7 th A N NUA L INTERCOLLEGIATE DUPLICATE CONTRACT BRIDGE CHAM PIONSHIPS le a th e r ★ LEATHER SALE ★ goods S V a r i o u i kind* color* - 7 5 p e r ft Tues. & Thurs. 7-11 p .m . C apitol Saddlery 5209 NORTH LAMAR Distributor 1614 L a v a c a moved on to another institution spokesman said the rule was intended to prevent the coach from committing violations at one college and later going to another school where he could not be punished. The first school may now impose sanctions against such a coach which could result in his being barred from coaching for up to two years, although he could m aintain his connection with his new school in another capacity. The NCAA m ust approve such institutional sanctions. Polivy, the association’s attorney said T u e sd a y in H o u sto n , “ Now that w om en’s ath letics are getting a tte n ­ tion. the NCAA sees it as another place to set up shop, and it happens to be in our hom e.” In other action, the NCAA took steps to crack down on coaches who violate its rules. D elegates to the NCAA’s 69th annual convention approved a proposal spon­ sored by Long Beach State which would enable a school to take disciplinary ac­ tion against a fo rm er coach who has WASHINGTON I AP) - The N ational Collegiate A thletic A ssociation killed a proposal th a t would have c re a te d national cham pionships for women rn track and tennis this spring W ednesday’s action cam e a day after the A ssociation for in te rc o lle g ia te A thletics fo r W omen, m eetin g in Houston, accused the NCAA of athletic piracy for its plans to set up a national c h a mpi onshi ps program for women It w as because of a lack of gover­ ning body for w om en’s ath letics that th e AIAW wag fo r m e d .’’ M a rg o t Sign up: Texas Union South No. 114 478-9309 Austin, Texas J a n . 14 & 16 b l o B. Elter Alum ni C e n te r LAREDO (AP) - Powerful Texas Southern University, which has won 13 Border Olympics team titles, will not be invited to the m eet schedul­ ed Feb 28 to March I, it was announced Wednesday. Carroll Summers, Border Olympics president, said TSU is now a fullfledged university division school and can no longer compete in the college division which the Tigers have dominated. “ We’re limiting ourselves to nine team s in the university division,” said Summers. “ It was a helluva decision to m ake.’’ AH Southwest Conference team s will be invited to the first m ajor outdoor m eet of th e track se a so n e x c e p t A rkansas, Su m m ers said more university team s cannot be added to the field because t h a t would n e c e s s i t a t e p re lim in a rie s in the relay events. Shirley Field, site of the Border Olympics, has only nine running lanes. Border Olympics officials also had to make a choice between Lamar University or North Texas State as the ninth and only non-SWC team. s s S ' “We picked Lamar because th ey 'v e been w ith us the longest,’’ Sum m ers said. Texas Southern captured IO straight college crowns from 1960 through 1969 and won the last three in a row. TSU a th le te s own seven o v e ra ll B o rd e r O lym pics re c o rd s and IO d iv isio n a l m arks. Among the m ost noted TSU ath letes to compete at the Border Olympics are Olym­ pians Jimmy Hines, Robert Taylor, and Tommy Fulton and 7-foot high jumper John H a tfie ld . The Border Olympics in­ cludes two other track and fie ld d iv is io n s — ju n io r college and high school It also has a golf tournament. Semi-Annual l c Sale Academy We Make Cents And Save You Dollars! Buy one child's Goodyear R u b b e r Ra i n coat-sizes 8 to 20 at our regular low price of $ 3 .8 8 and get a se­ cond one for 1* more. - S A V E DOLLARS!— Buy any shirt in the store at our regular low price and get a second one for 1* more. Buy any pair of slacks or jeans in the store at our re g u la r lo w p rice in ­ cluding Levis and get a second pair for 1* more. SAVE DOLLARS! SAVE DOLLARS!Buy any sleeping bag in our store at our regular low price and get a second one for 1* more. SAVE DOLLARS! Buy one full size com forter at our regular low price and get a second beautiful com forter for 1* more. Buy any jacket in our store at our regular low price and get a second jacket for 1 more. -S A V E DO ILA R S I- SAVE DOLLARS!— Buy any pair of boots or shoes in the store and get 4 pair of sox for 1* more. Buy an insulated un­ derwear Top at our regular low price and get the Pants for I* more. - S A V I DOLLARS!— Buy any pair of Panty Hose at our regular low price and get a second p a i r f o r 1* more. SAVE DOLLARS! Buy any pair of tennis or basketball shoes at our regular low price and get a second pair for 1* more. -SAVE DOLLARS! Buy a vinyl Poncho at our regular low price of $ 2 .8 8 - get the second one for 1* more. SAVE DOLLARS! Buy any pair of sox at our regular low price and get a second pair for V more. ■SAVE DOLLARS! GIFTS Buy one man s um ­ brella at our regular low price of $ 3 .88 and get a ladies' u m ­ brella for 1* more. -SAVE DOLL ARSIBuy any pair of Hush Pup­ pies or Ked's shoes at our regular low price and get a second pair for 1* more, Buy any G ift from our special lot at our regular low price and get a se­ cond Gift for 1* more. SAVE DOLLARS! Buy a to y a t our regular low price and get the second toy for 1* more. S A V E DOLLARSI- - S A V E D OL L A R S ! — — SAVE DOLLARS! — - - - - - - - - J U - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - — ■ — Stay alive in '75 - Help fight inflation in the greatest nation with buys like these. n m ,Hmm 'H r OPEN ALL DAY SU N D AY ACADEMY, THE MOST INTERESTING s t o r e s 1 0 % DISCOUNT TO ALL RETIRED SENIOR CITIZENS Page 6 Thursday, J a n u a r y 9, 1975 THE DAILY TEXAN 4 Locations To Serve You 4 1 0 3 N. Interr egio nal 8 1 0 3 Research Blvd 5 3 0 0 Burnet Rd 6 0 3 Ben W h ite Blvd, Grant Fancies Fran, Sore Arm * UPI T e le p h o to Bubbly Boat Th® C ham paign Bottle Boat, feature craft of the 33rd an n ual San Francisco Sports and Boat Show, is launched by M argo t Law and M ike Rtegor. The show has other boats. N EW O RLEANS (A P ) Minnesota's starting quarter­ back for Sunday’s Super Bowl game against Pittsburgh remains Fran Tarkenton, despite a sore arm which could prove a blessing in dis­ guise for the N F L veteran. At least Minnesota Coach Bud Grant acts that way. Tarkenton. who has passed for more than 2.000 yards in 13 consecutive seasons, came up with a twinge in his arm Tues­ day, and Grant was positively glowing over the develop­ ment. “ Every time he gets a sore arm. he has a great day,'' said Grant “ It s a good omen for us. I think he worries about it. and he always seems to throw a little better with it. I ’m sure if it’s still sore on Sunday, he ll have a great day." “ I hope he’s right,’’ said Tarkenton “ it’s a little sore, but it s okay. I was hit on the shoulder in the first game of the season, and it has bothered me off and on since then “ AFC Leads AP Selections NEW ORLEANS (A P ) - Super Bowl op ponents Minnesota and Pittsburgh claimed five places on The Associated Press All-Pro football team announced Wednesday. Minnesota, the National Conference cham­ pion, was represented by offensive tackle Ron Yary, who was named to the team for the fourth consecutive season, and defensive tackle Alan Page, elected for the fifth straight year. Pittsburgh's representatives were defen­ sive tackle Joe Greene, named for a third straight year, and defensive end L.C. Greenwood and linebacker Jack Ham, both of whom made it for the first time The American Conference dominated both offensive and defensive teams named by a national panel of sports writers and broadcasters. Only three National Conference players — Vary. Dallas wide receiver Drew Pearson and place kicker Chester Ma red of Green Bay _ -were named to the offensive unit. On defense, the NFC placed just four players — Page, Los Angeles end Jack Youngblood, linebacker Ted Hendricks of Green Bay and Philadelphia linebacker Bill Bergey. The high-powered offensive unit was head­ ed by Oakland quarterback Ken Stabler, who completed 57.4 percent of his passes for 2,469 yards during the regular season. Buffalo’s O.J. Simpson, who set an alltime rushing record of 2,003 yards two years ago and gained 1,125 yards this season, also was named to the backfield along with Denver’s Otis Armstrong, the N F L rushing champion with 1,407 yards. Riley Odoms of Denver was named the tight end with Pearson and Cliff Branch of Oakland as the wide receivers. Besides Yary, the offensive line included Oakland tackle Art Shell, guards Gene Upshaw of Oakland and Larry Little of Miami and center Jim Langer of Miami On defense, besides the front four of Greenwood, Greene. Youngblood and Page, the AP panel chose Ham. Green Bay’s Ted Hendricks and Phi! delphia's Bergey as linebackers. The defensive secondary showed Jake Scott of Miami and Tony Greene of Buffalo as safeties with Kansas City’s Emmitt Thomas and Robert James of Buffalo at eornerbacks. The injury didn t prevent Tarkenton from finishing fourth among N a tio n a l Conference passers this season with more than 2.500 yards and 17 touchdown passes, i think most players play best when they have a minor ailment I don't know why Possibly you concentrate more or there s a little extra adrenalin flowing." Tarkenton rested his arm during the Vikings' workout Wednesday, but two other key players — Minnesota offen­ sive tackle Charles Goodrum and Pittsburgh defensive end Dwight White — still were un­ able to practice Goodrum was treated for a pulled right leg muscle and remained doubtful for Sunday’s game. White remained in Baptist Hospital, at least until Thurs­ day. for treatment of back spasms and stomach cramps. With only three days of work left before the game. time becomes a factor for the two linemen “ If Goodrum can work by be m is s e d considerably. Friday, we d probably be able Grant said to use him," said Grant The Vikings would probably Pittsburgh Coach Chuck use 15-year veteran Grady Noll still hopes to use White A ld e rm a n as his replacement but agreer* that stamina could Ir o n ic a lly G oodrum s be a problem. “ We ll have to match-up across the line of keep a close watch on him scrimmage would normally during the game." he said. be W h ite , but this has not been Goodrum. a second-vear a n o rm a l week for the big man. pulled the plantaris defender from East Texas muscle in his right leg during S ta te He went to the hospital the Vikings’ Tuesday prac­ Su n d a y night after complain­ tice. ing of pain in his back and The leg was packed in ice sto m ach following the team s Tuesday, and Goodrum con­ a r r iv a l. tinued to undergo treatment T e sts have been negative. from Viking team physicians on Wednesday “ It's not as severe as a hamstring but it's painful, and I must say he remains doubtful He would and the problem was diagnos­ ed as a viral infection, but White has been scheduled to be released from the hospital twice before. “ The extra day in the hospital won t have that much affect on him.’ said Noll. “ He wasn’t going to practice Wednesday anyhow I expect him to be released in time for our meeting Thursday and ex­ pect him to practice with the club Thursday. Friday and Saturday ” Steve Furness is White s replacement UN IVERSITY CYCLERY BIKES can be registered with the University Police Monday, Tuesday, and Friday from Noon to 4 P M at the bicy­ cle rack on the north end of Bellmont Hall JESTER CEHTER STORE your O N CAMPUS Student Store ANNOUNCING W eekd ays 8 :0 0 'til 6 :0 0 FREEDOM OF CHOICE! Saturdays 9 :0 0 'til 1 :0 0 • BLUEBOOKS • SPIRALS • SNACKS • COSMETICS • RECORDS • MAGAZINES from France from the U S GIT ANE S C H W IN N T w o o f the best! T h e fin e s t European b ic y c le or th< A m e ric a n fav o rite — the choice is yours. Th* S c h w in n 's are h ere, th e G itanos are c o m in g ! R e p a ir on a ll m a k e s - F u lly g u a ra n te e d C o m p le te lin e o f accessories C O N V E N IE N T FOR SHUTTLE BUS RIDERS! 2 9 th a t La m ar 19 12 A n d e rso n In 4 7 4 -6 6 9 6 4 5 1 -6 5 6 7 Sports Shorts Creighton Rolls Past Tech OMAHA. Neb. ( U P I ) Creighton University, led by Doug Brookins’ 18 points, stopped Texas Tech 51-45 at the Omaha Civic Auditorium Wednesday night. It was the third straight vic­ tory for the Jays, who now begin a three-game road trip with a 10-4 record. The loss dropped Texas Tech to 5-5 Creighton held a 26-23 half­ time lead and at one time stretched its lead to IO points, but midway through the se­ cond half, the Red Raiders, behind the shooting of Bill Johnson, overtook Creighton and held several one-point leads. With 4:14 left to play, Creighton went out in front to stay when Bob Scrutchens connected with a long jumper to put the Jays in front 44-43 ★ ★ ★ DALLAS (A P ) - Quarter­ i i. back Mike Pereira of IEP lI Paso. a freshman who played on the Southern Methodist junior varsity, is planning to transfer to the University of New Mex­ ico A R B Y 'S HAM SANDWICH SPECIAL THIS WEEK'S SPECIAL. And next week s. And the week after that. Our price. $29 40 a week, comes to about $117.50 a month. A paltry sum if you ve been living elsewhere. Granted we’re not the Hilton cf college housing but what do you want for a little over a hundred bucks0 You get a furnished room with AC and carpeting, maid service, and all the good home-cooked food you can eat BU Y O N B, GET ONE FREE SAVE 99* *' « VALUE FON Good thru Jan. 15 . CIM* ami C«WH»I NOT VALID I 1705 Guadalupe 5400 Burnat Rd. ■ ■ n* b r r ■ ■ m b mm m r im 472-1S82 451-3760 - ■ The New Barrone. Two and a half blocks from campus. BARRONE 2700 N u e ce s 472-7850 892-205*1 ihare the rent and che way welive... You re single and mature You want the best lite has to ofter And you want to Keep the cost By Sharing the rent with other mature singles your problem is solved Split the rent tour ways on one of our 4 bedroom apartments and have full access to all the things that make our .Apartments such exciting places to live Th* Cascades 1221 Algar ita from IH-35. take Oltorf exit to Algarita turn right one block 444-4485 L r Ik 1601 Royal Crest Drive lust off Riverside Drive 444-7797 4 can share for $65°°each, 2br-2b a l l furnished BILLS PAID a development of Jagger Associate* Thursday, January 9, 1975 THE DAILY TEXAN Page 7 UT Baseball Team Remaining Intact By BILL JORDAN Texan Staff Writer Three names will be miss­ ing from T hursday's pro baseball draft, and no one will be happier than Texas Coach □ iff Gustafson. Less than a week ago it appeared Thursday’s draft was going to be a sad occasion for the Longhorn coach. Three of his prize pupils were eligi­ ble for the professional draft under a new amendment written by pro owners at their winter meeting in October. In the past, college baseball players could only be selected during the June draft follow­ ing their 21st birthday The new rule would have allowed pro teams to draft college players who were 21 in January, or would turn 21 within 45 days of the draft. UPI T e le p h o to B U T L A T E l a s t w eek B a s e b a ll C o m m is sio n e r Bowie Kuhn axed the new rule, sending down a rescin­ uniform for the first time, ding order to table the amend­ a baseball in Shea Stadium ment until the owners discuss­ ____________ ed the new rule in greater detail. As a resu lt T exas AllAmerica pitcher Jim Gideon, shortstop Blair Stouffer and p itch er R ich ard Wortham missed their chance to turn professional six months ahead go the New York Yankees for of schedule. Had the commissioner not $3.7 million. Jenkins was edged in the Cy tampered with the owners’ am endm ent, Gideon, who Young balloting by Hunter posted a 19-2 record last season, would have benefited the most from a new drafting date. “ I ’m just reverting back to what I ’d planned to do since I got out of high school,” Gi­ deon said, speaking from his Houston home. “ I just looked at it as an opportunity to start my pro career a little quicker Naturally I'm disappointed it didn’t work out that way.” Wortham and Stouffer, the other T exas players who would have been eligible for the draft, expressed less dis­ appointment. “ ACTUALLY I had planned on coming back to school anyway,” Wortham said. “ I forward to getting drafted. I after their junior year. If this well be in pro uniforms before probably wouldn’t have signed new rule ever goes into effect the season is over. a contract. I ju st wanted to it could really wipe out a good ★ ★ ★ see what they would have college baseball team. “ I hope we can present a offered m e.” NEW YORK (AP) - The Gustafson is certain Texas good argument to the owners San Di e g o P a d r e s , who will be in better shape with at their next meeting and nar r owl y m issed si gni ng the three pro prospects in his avoid this problem.” baseball’s most expensive F o r th e t i m e b e i n g , lineup again this spring. What free agent, will draft 21-yearG u s t a f s o n ’ s old outfielder Gene Richards he is more interested in at the h o w e v e r , moment is how the final out­ problems are over. But when Thursday to open baseball’s come of the rule change will the June draft date arrives the annual w inter draft, The Texas coach s worries will A ssociated P re s s learned affect college baseball. “FROM A coaching stand­ multiply. Wednesday. N ot onl y wi l l Gi de on, point we already give up a lot Richards, 6-0, 175 pounds, the way the draft is set up,” Wortham and Stouffer be played s u m m e r l eague said Gustafson. “ When we eligible for the draft, but Rick bas e bal l in the a ma t e ur recruit most of these boys Bradley, Keith Moreland and who are good pro prospects in Mickey Reichenbach will be Shenendoah Valley League, where he batted 366 and stole high school, we know that we added to the list of Texas 32 bases. will probably be losing them baseball players who .could wasn’t expecting to get much of an offer because of my leg injury (in an elevator accident last fall). But if I had gotten a good contract I might have changed my mind. “ I think it will help me now that the new rule has been done away with I can come back this season and show the pro scouts that my injury hasn’t hurt me any, and maybe I can get a better deal in June. " Stouffer was unaware Kuhn had changed the new rule. “ I was getting ready to sit around the house and wait for a phone call tomorrow,” said Stouffer. “ It’s a good thing you called. I was looking Fits Like $3 M illion In full N e w York Y ankee Catfish Hunter plays w ith W ednesday. Jenkins Reportedly A s k in g $ 2 0 0 , 0 0 0 ARLINGTON (AP) - Tex­ as 25-game winner Ferguson Jenkins was expected to hud­ dle with o fficia ls of the A m erica n L ea g u e te a m Thursday morning to discuss his 1975 contract. sp o rts c a p s u le s NHI Civilian I Jenkins was reportedly un­ happy with a money package that would have offered him an estimated $140,000 this year Night Go m at Not Included W I T Pit GF GA 25 8 6 sa 142 SI . Philphia a 46 161 123 19 l l N Y R a n g rs 18 IS 7 43 112 HO Atlanta .,«.w 16 15 9 41 135 113 N Y isla n d Dtvitton I 22 13 5 49 114 122 V a n c v r ...... 17 18 4 58 133 115 C h ic a g o ..... 16 18 6 38 132 141 St. L o u is — l l 23 5 27 105 172 M in d .......... 7 27 4 18 92 164 K .City Oiviiwn 3 22 6 12 56 179 111 M o n t r e a l.... 20 6 1252 117 73 L. Angeles... 14 16 836 152 144 Pi*tS ........ IO 22 5 25 104 147 Detroit .... 3 33 5 ll 83 219 W a s h t a .... Divtxen 4 6 56 173 '25 25 8 Buffalo...... 22 IO 7 51 188 121 Boston 7 33 127 144 13 IS Toronto.... l l 23 8 30 113 166 Calif. . . . . . . . WidmxOoy t Gome* N ew Y o r k R a n g e r s 6, K a n s a s C ity I C h ic a g o 7, P ittsb u r g h 5 Los A n g e le s 3, M in n e so ta 2 A tlanta 3, C a lifo r n ia 2 M o n tr e a l 4 D e tro it 4 To ro nto 6, V a n c o u v e r 4 Gam e. New Y o r k Isla n d e r s at P h ila d e lp h ia Lo s A n g e le s a t B u ffa lo V an c o u v e r at B oston Jenkins was due in the Ranger offices Wednesday afternoon but telephoned in that he would not be in Arlington until shortly before midnight because he had been fogged in at Montreal Jenkins was reportedly ask­ ing for $200,000 although he would not make public his m oney d em ands on the Rangers, who recently offered Catfish Hunter $2.5 million, Hunter rejected the offer and left Oakland as a free agent to civind.... P io iv e e n 1712 H LAVACA SONY I Of 135 99 118 89 GA 132 117 137 172 120 127 156 117 99 104 117 129 121 168 IS I 160 113 132 106 126 139 96 105 109 JVC S T A R T TH E N EW YEAR RIG HT IN YOUR N EW HOM E A T RU** TBAC 5 ,3 P l CLH.M G V K * 11 PANASONIC S L EVERYTHING IS OPEN AND ON DISPLAY EVERYTHING MUST BE SOLD SHE IO% 50'I, OM COMPONENTS IMO MOUE! Wednesday's Pro Basketball ABA D e n v e r 130, S a n Antonio 128 A »«<»• NOA B oston 104, A tla n ta 96 L o s A n g e le s 106, P h ila d e lp h ia 98 M ilw a u k e e 102 Detroit 92 W a sh in g to n 102, P hoenix 95 N e w Y o r k at Seattle, late Thursday I USE TEXAN WANT ADS Cr) RiO M een tJyrjaco s t r u m e n t s t NC Oft P O R A T I l> SA N VO ,a q S 5 In e x a s OD O (ft K E N W O O WHA ( a t t [XviMn W I T ft. 2' 15 I 43 N ew E r g 14 20 2 30 14 21 1 29 C hicago .. in d a p o t s . .... 7 31 2 16 W elt Division 0 52 H ouston ................. 26 l l P ho enix .................19 14 4 42 M in n ......................... 19 17 0 38 San D i e g o .................18 17 1 37 M ic h ....................... 12 25 3 27 Canadian Division Q uebec 22 15 0 44 T o ro n t o .....................21 16 I 43 E d m o n t o n ................ 18 l l I 37 W in n ip e g ............... 17 14 2 36 V a n c v r ................... 16 17 2 34 Wedn esday's Game QueDec 4. V a n c o u v e r 3 Thursday $ Games W in n ip e g at M ic h ig a n M in n e so ta a t E d m o n to n New E n g la n d at Phoenix T S T E H L IN G ■ ST ER EO OR 4 CHANNEL CHANGERS mm 20%-40% OFF! T i Til lf? II .1 IUV> •J ■V ■fir. ti* ‘A iii.' II—§ P -'-A get two weeks F R E E Rent ES - SPEAKERS 10% M OFF! IM PLEASANT VALLEY ESTATES Move in now RECEIVERS Mi DEMO TIIRHIRBLES 15% OFF! Four Apt. Styles to Choose From We Pay All Utilities We Have Semester Leases Wi P R IC E S A T A N ALL TIME L O W I SUPER SYSTEM DISCOUNTS! D EA LE R S W ELCOME! N A M E B R A N D S ON *500.000 IN Pleasant Valley Estates m 1300 S. Pleasant Valley Rd. T el: 447-1890 u s t b e s GIW * hoMi Q UANTITY D IS C O U N T S / E V E R Y D A Y IT E M S A V A IL A B L E ! Next to the Aquarius Theater CALCULATORS A L L D I S P L A Y S ON S A L E / RADIOS HPF RECORDERS 20%-(0% OFF! 20% OFF! PEACE lf we consider violence es a kind of diseese, peace theory and research is similar to medical activity. Like diseases such as cancer and heart disease the cure for violence has not been found. Yet there has been and continues to be important work done which will hopefully O N E D A Y provide such a cure. INTERNATIONAL STUDIES PROGRAM (WMOB 206) Announces its new Spring Course: INTERNATIONAL STUDIES 320: DEVELOPMENT OF PEACE THEORY & RESEARCH INSTRUCTOR: Professor Clinton Fink Visiting Professor University of Michigan CM C M O PLAYERS 20% 40% OFF! MUTO SPEARERS 20% OFF! RAYO SPEAKERS 25% OFF! NO R A IN C H E C K S ! CM SIEREN * &REPLACEMENT 2I%-4I SPEAKERS RFF! JUNES 50% OFF! DISPLAYS A CLOSEOUTS! 5%-15% OFF! CARTRIDGES UP IO 50% OFF! ACCESSORY HEMS 40%-5l% OFF! HEADPHONES 25%-40% NEF! LIMITED QUANTITIES! INCLUDES DEMOS, FLOOR SAMPLES, ALL OPEN BOXES! RMA, CROSS-LISTED WITH SOCIOLOGY 378K MEETING TIME: T TH 10:30 - 12:00 MEETING PLACE: BUR 216 International Studies W est M a ll Office Bldg. 206 4 7 1 -4 6 2 6 Page 8 Thursday, January 9, 1975 TH E D A IL Y T EX A N 1712 LAVACA 477-5866 m h MON., TUE., WED., FRI. 10-6 THUR. 10-8 SAT. 9-6 Union Tavern Opens Sunday With Jazz Music, Alcohol By W ILLARD HALL Texan Staff W riter It took m ore than tw o years, a r e g e n ts’ decision , an am end­ m ent to a c ity ordinance and a sta te attorney general s ruling. Now. U n iversity students, fa cu lty , sta ff and their g u ests can purchase alcoh olic b everages on cam p u s, beginning Sunday at the T 6xas Tavern. The T ex a s T avern is next door to the T exas Union South porto-pad, behind G regory G ym . It w ill be the first tim e alcohol w ill be sold at a state u n iversi­ ty in T exas. W orkers are hustling about th is w eek m aking preparations for the ta v e rn ’s opening. Built from the form er a th letic dining area in M oore-H ill Hall men s dorm itory, the tavern inclu des a large area w here app roxim ately 150 people can be sea ted , a food servin g area, the tavern bar and a sm all gam es room . W alls of the tavern are c o v e r t w ith burlap and rough-saw ed ced ar, and soft lighting from old-fashioned brass lam p s and shuttered w indow s produce a ru stic atm osp here. Union D irector Shirley Bird P erry said, The T exas Union Tavern is designed to be a sp ec ia l kind of p lace with a w arm , in­ form al atm osp here. H opefully it w ill encourage people to com e togeth er — for food and for drink, for interaction and for d iscu s­ sion, for relaxation and for en tertain m en t, for gettin g to know each other ” The largen ess of the room could co n flict with the sm all, cozy -Texan Staff Photo by Jay Godw in atm osp here som e people prefer to have a drink in. H ow ever, Michelob, Pearl and Schliti were selected for the Texas Tavern's tap. jjiiiiiiiiiitiiiiui I SPRING Mistake in Bell's Request Postpones Council Hearing By MIKE MORRISON Texan Staff Writer The anticipated showdown over “ M a” B ell’s request for a 24.2 percent rate increase has been delayed for at lea st a w eek , Deputy City M anager H om er Reed said W ednesday. City Council had planned to discuss the topic at a public hearing Thursday afternoon. B ecause of a calculation error found by a consulting firm studying the rate request and the recent illn ess of City Atty. Don B utler, the council w ill “ have nothing to act on." Reed said. B u tler, r e p r e se n tin g the c it y in the r a te r eq u e st becam e ill and w as unable to go e a r l i e r t h is w e e k to M inneapolis, the hom e of the consulting firm of H ess and Lim. C onsequently, R eed ex­ p la in e d , the c o n s u lt a n t's Body Found Zn Lake At 11:30 a m . W ednesday, the body of a 39-year-old Austin State H ospital former patien t w a s found flo a tin g face down in the north side of Town Lake halfw ay betw een C ongress Avenue and IH-35. Described a s a transient, Garwin Dw ain Skinner had been discharged D ec 30 from the State H ospital again st the advice of the institution, and had sim ilarly been discharged once before. Travis County Ju stice of the P eace Ja m es L. McMurtry w ill rule on cau se of death Thursday m orning. “ I haven't made a ruling on the drowning since I haven’t been able to get in touch with the man s next-of-kin,” McM urtry said W ednesday night. “ I have had no chance to talk with the pathologist who com pleted the autopsy today, but I have no reason to su sp ect foul play w as involved report w ill not be ready for the Thursday m eeting. Term ing B e ll’s calculation an “ hon est m istak e," R eed said the telephone request w ill probably be discu ssed a t next Thursday s council m eetin g, “ if th e c o n s u lt a n t s c a n rearrange their schedule in tim e.” G ray B r y a n t, d iv is io n m a n a g e r o f S o u th w e s te r n Bell, explain ed that “ out of h u n d red s of p a g es of m aterials supplied by B ell (to th e c i t y ) , t h e r e w a s a m athem atical error in one of the e x h ib its.” The error in creases B ell s ex p en ses by $20,000, cau sin g a d e crea se in the com pany s net profits. “ The error w a s in B ell’s fa v o r,” Bryant said. The 24.2 percent in crease proposal m ean s Bell is asking the c ity for an additional $6.4 m illio n in g r o s s r e v e n u e . Bryant explained that if any in crease is granted, then the Asia.) woul d Opening day e v en ts include Jim C u llu m s Happy Jazz Band of San Antonio. Hours for the tavern will be from 9 a,rn. to m idnight Monday through F riday; 3 p.m . to I a rn. Saturday; and 3 p m. to m id ­ night Sunday. Under a ruling by P resident Ad Interim Lorene R ogers, beer and w ine w ill be sold beginning a t l l a.m . and m ixed drinks beginning at 5 p.m . w eekdays. The tavern w ill be w ide open on w eek en ds w ith all drinks being sold at all hours. S t a r t i n g 1975 wi t h FRESH THURSDAY P.M. SPECIALS (5:30 to 8 p.m.) Fur-Trim m ed Coat « - Civilizotions of Jopon & Ching. SWEATERS V I 05600 {-GAL 310) 23280 ANS 121 31235 (-EDC 371) MWE 10-11. FAUROT. Teochino Asian Studies in Americon Schools Get a new 23285 ANS 360 18690 (-ECO 350M) Seminar in Asian Studies-Topic: Asian Food Production Dilemma. M 3-5:30 BEB 158. JANN U ZI/N O W O TN Y. I 23290 ANS 361 I 43115 (-MUS 642b) Introduction to North Indian Classical Music. TTH 4-5:30. BTL 113. OWENS. I Approaches to Asian Art. TTH 3-4:30. Art Bldg. 4. MEISTER. be gen erated w ith h ig h er in ­ stallation ch arges and m ore e x p e n siv e m is c e lla n e o u s business services. If the 24.2 percent request is approved, B ryant explained this might be translated into an increase for residential hom es of about $1.50 a month “ In the past four y ea rs, we have pumped in $108 m illion in a d d itio n a l r e v e n u e in the Austin area," he said. Councilmen J eff F'riedman and Bud Dryden said Tuesday they exp ect the consulting firm to recom m en d an in­ crease, but not as high as B e ll’s request. No cover will be charged for opening w eek a c tiv ities, but don't forget your UT identification becau se th ese w ill be c h eck ­ ed. 23275 ANS 301L city and Bell w ill m utually decide how to apportion the increase am ong the various telephone serv ices. B ryan t s p e c u la t e d th a t “ half of the n ew r ev en u e might com e from b asic se r ­ vices such as resid en tial and b u s in e s s l in e s .’’ The remainder 1975 ASIAN STUDIES COURSES I s ^ n courses ere applicable to an A sia n Stud ies Concentration but are I also open to all students interested in learning about So u th and East the attra ctiv e brass lam ps above are adjustable and with the lights turned low, the size of the tavern is dim inished. P rices for food and drink will be com p etitive or slightly below those charged by Austin estab lish m en ts, B ill Snyder, tavern m anager, said. During the opening w eek s drink sp ec ia ls will be featured. 41265 ART 379M ART 387 W 3-5. UNI 208. WILSON. Problems of Art in Western India. F 11-12. Art Bldg. 103. MEISTER. ^ 2.99| KNIT TOP £ Be a Radi Budget S tre tch er PRICE IM 2322 Guadalupe Apartments Starting at $ 1 3 5 . mo. Luxury Living in a Country Club Atm osphere Efficiencies - Studios - I, 2 G 3 bedrooms Furnished or U nfurnished M a id Service A va ila b le UT Shuttle But Service A ll Bills Paid (ftv^IislrAire APARTM ENTS C o m e See U *: D riv e S, on IM 35 e x it at R iv e r­ side Dr. East I Vj mile. Right at B u r t o n D riv e about naif m ile to E nglish A ire . 2101 BU R T O N D R IV E 444-184 6 J Z TRAPPED in the LAST-MINUTE DORM HUNT? W e stiff have room for you at HEFLIN INTERNATIONAL A sm all dorm 8 blocks from cam pus N ear U.T. Shuttle route S w im m in g pool, piano, color TV Free parking 2 0 hot m eals per w eek M a n y la n gu a ge s and cultures represented SINGLES AND DOUBLES AVAILABLE FOR SPRING— WITH OR WITHOUT BOARD HEFLIN INTERNATIONAL 2505 Longview Austin, Tx. 78705 Phone: (512) 477-6371 The real issue confronting you is this: should you or shouldn't you sign a Tri-Towers contract. For after all the promises, golden one liners and fancy talk are over, you must examine your conscience and decide for yourself. Would you rather spend the Spring Semester in a beautiful, highrise apartment close to campus, or spend it searching for parking places* or getting claustrophobia in a dorm room? Would you rather have the freedom of apartment living and the convenience of a dorm or something less? Naturally, we believe the answer is clear. And in your heart you know we're right. So stand up and be counted at Tri-Towers North, BOI VV 24th, in the middle of the student neighborhood. Thursday, January 9, 1975 THE D A ILY T EXA N Page 9 THE REGISTRAR Registration Supervision M a in Bldg. 16 4 7 1 -5 8 6 5 Spring Registration Timetable TUESDAY 7 MONDAY 6 WEDNESDAY | THURSDAY 9 I s FRIDAY IO REGISTRATION - BELLMONT I I REGISTRATION MATERIALS ISSUED IN ACADEMIC CENTER PAY FEES FOR! PAY FEES FOR THURSDAY WEDNESDAY REGISTRATION REGISTRATION^! TUESDAY 14 MONDAY 13 CENTRALIZED ADDS/DROPS WEDNESDAY 15 THURSDAY 16 ADDS AND DROPS IN DEPARTMENTS BELLMONT HALL PHOTO ID & PAID FEE RE­ CEIPT RE­ QUIRED TO ADD OR DROP FRIDAY 17 DROPS-BEGIN IN DEAN'S OFFICES PAY LATE REGISTRATION BILLS LATE REGISTRATION TODAY S SCHEDULE THURSDAY, JANUARY 9TH BELLMONT ADMISSION SCHEDULE: NO ONE ADMITTED PRIOR TO SCHEDULED TIMES 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 10:30 11:00 AA-ASH ASI-BEC W IM -ZZ VAM -W IL TUR-VAL REF-ROP No one will be admitted between 11:30 a.m. and 1:00 p.m. N O O N E WILL BE ADMITTED AFTER 4:00 P.M. 1:00 1:30 2:00 2:30 3:00 3:30 TAH-TUQ KUM-LEE JAC-KUL HAS-JAB MUL-OBQ G O S-H AR TO ALL STUDENTS RECEIVING FINANCIAL AID ... EVEN IF NOT PAYING YOUR OWN FEES, YOU MUST GO TO BELLMONT HALL AND HAVE YOUR FEE BILL PROCESSED AT YOUR SCHEDULED TIME. Texan Staff Photo by Jay Godwin Faculty and staff relax in one of three dining rooms at the new club. Faculty Center Use Grows Monday Opening Deemed a Success By DAVID MOODY Texan Staff W riter A tten d a n ce at the U niversity F acu lty C enter has doubled ev ery day since its opening M onday, m aitre d Gary Beathard said W ednesday. •We re booked for lots of parties a lre a d y ,” said Fred Han­ nah. a s s is ta n t m a n a g e r. T he c e n te r h a s fa c ilitie s for several hundred people, B e a th a rd said . T he F aculty Center c an a ccom m odate every sort of a ctivity with a billiards room , a sm all library and reading room, sev era l m eetin g ro o m s, a la rg e dining a r e a and three sm all dining room s and a w ell-stocked bar. Furnished w ith modern fur­ n itu re , th e c e n te r has p added w a lls and carp eting to help keep the noise of the street below out. Beathard said. The cen ter, at G uadalupe and 25th S treets, is open from l l a.m . to l l p .rn M onday through F rid a y and from l l a.m . to m id ­ night on S a tu rd a y s. A buffet luncheon, featuring sandw iches sold by the inch, is se rv e d fro m 11:30 a . rn to 1:30 p.m. every day e xcept Sunday D in n er is fro m 6 to 8:30 p.m . daily and 7 to 9:30 p m on S a tu rd a y s B eginning F e b . 2. the Faculty Center will be open fro m noon to 3 p.m . Sundays. Beathard explained the new fa cility is v ersatile. E ach m eeting room has fa c ilitie s to serve food, tea and coffee. Also, every room has its own public add ress sy stem . A m icrophone plugged into the wall recep tacle a c tiv a te s the system . Lighting is rheostatically controlled, providing variab le lighting for every room . PAX. C entrex and sp ecial house phones are available at m any locations th ro u g h o u t the building T he lounge s e a ts 84 people and f e a tu re s a large m osaic of the Old M ain B uilding by P au l H a tg il, p ro fe s so r of art, behind the bar. TIME-SAVERS WELCOME BACK REGISTRATION MATERIALS TO I. REGISTRATION MATERIALS M A Y BE PICKED UP IN THE A C A D EM IC CENTER BETWEEN 8:00 TACO FLATS SOUTH A M AN D 5:00 P.M. TODAY, A N D 8:00 A.M. TO 3:00 P.M. O N THURSDAY, JAN U ARY 9TH. . . 2. STUDENTS W H O WERE HERE LAST SEMESTER, but did not pre-register may pick up their materials in their major departmental offices. u rA .ru 3. NEW STUDENTS must obtain a HEALTH CO M PLIANCE SLIP from the STUDENT HEALTH CENTER before being admitted to Bellmont Hall for registration. ADVISING FEES AND BILLING Register Today - Pay Tomorrow ... A payment schedule will be issued when you complete registration. REMEMBER TO KEEP YOUR FEE RECEIPT. You will need it later. FEES MUST BE PAID BY 5:00 P.M. FRIDAY, JA N U A R Y 10TH. « vnn OPTIONAL FEES: Use the OPTIONAL FEE REQUEST CARD to request optional settees IF YOU WERE HERE LAST SEMESTER, THE O NLY OPTIONAL FEE THAT HAS TO BE PAID A G A IN IS THE FEE FOR LOCKER A N D SHOWER USE. PARKING PERMITS: Permits for the Spring Semester can be picked up i n ^ t a .m ^ i m 242 after fees have been paid. REMEMBER THAT A PERMIT OBTAINED »>n THE' FALL IS STILL VALID FOR THIS SEMESTER. UT ID S ID s for STUDENTS W HO WERE NOT HERE LAST FALL will be made in Bellmont Hall after you have paid your fees. RETURNING STUDENTS may have their fall ID s validated there. REPLACEMENT ID's will be made in GREGORY G Y M B E G IN N IN G JA N U A R Y 13TH. SCHOOL OR MAJOR CHANGES You must go to the office of the Dean of the School or College in which your NEW M A JO R IS LOCATED to make a school or major change. TO AIL STUDENTS PAYING FEES'THIS WEEK DO NOT LOSE YOUR FEE RECEIPTS - DUPLICATES WILL NOT BE AVAILABLE IN TIME FOR CENTRALIZED ADDS/DROPS ON MONDAY!!! ADDS AND DROPS MONDAY, JANUARY 13TH ADD/DROP TIMETABLE N O STUDENT WILL BE ADMITTED FRO M 12:00 N O O N TO 1:00 P.M. A N D N O STUDENT WILL BE ADMITTED AFTER 4:30 P.M. PAID FEE RECEIPT & * PHOTO ID REQUIRED TO BE ADMITTED TO BELLMONT HALL. * (DRIVER S LICENSE, UT ID, ETC) Page IO Thursday, January 9, 1975 T H E D A ILY T E X A N THE RUSTY NAIL 24th and Rio Grande WEEKLY S P E C IA L S 3 You must see an AC AD EM IC AD VISO R before entering registration, lf your department allows SELF-ADVISING, you must have your Dean's Course Card *»amped by th« ^ J " 1 vJ?.9. Bellmont. Advisors may not make major or school changes. IF YOU C H A N G E MAJORS, YO U MUST BE ADVISED IN YOUR NEW DEPARTMENT. 8:00 AAA-BER 8:30 BES-CAQ 9:00 CAR-DAG 9:30 DAH-FAQ 10:00 FAR-GOR 10:30 GOS-HIC 11:00 HID-JUY 11:30 JUZ-LEW INSID E 1:00 LEX-MCI 1:30 MCJ-NIE 2:00 NIF-QUI 2:30 Q U J-SAX 3:00 SAY-STA 3:30 STB-VAR 4:00 VAS-ZZZ M e a t B u r r it o s ............................only Hobo Plates 99c .......................7 9 c H A P P Y H O U R P R IC E S O N BEER Highballs with every food purchase The large dining room se a ts 234 people, Beathard said. With all the tables and chairs rem oved about 275 people can be se r v ­ ed for any receptions or m eetin gs that m ight be held in the din­ ing room. Beathard explained. The kitchen has all new sta in le ss steel steam and g a s powered equipm ent that “is like working in a d rea m ,” Beathard said. • The building itself is about 99 percent c o m p le te ,” Beathard said. "The dining room still lack s eight m a ssiv e chand eliers and three large P ersian rugs to be com plete." The initial m em bership fee is $50 until March IO. A fter March IO, it w ill cost $70 to b ecom e a m em ber. Monthly du es are $6.50, or $9.50 for m em bers desirin g bar privileges. Funding Denied Training Program After their third funding proposal failed W ednesday, S e r v ic e E m p lo y m e n t and R ed evelop m en t (S E R ) o f­ ficials announced they would file a federal suit At a m eeting in the E lectric Building of the execu tive com ­ m ittee of the Capital Area M anpower Planning Consor­ tium , m em bers voted 10-4 to deny SER 's $127,253 funding proposal. It was SE R 's third a ttem p t to obtain funding s in c e the D e p a r tm e n t of Labor curtailed its funds last July. G abriel G u tierrez, le g a l counsel for SER. c la im s the consortium violates the con­ s t i t u t i o n a l r ig h t s o f th e citizens of Austin. If this posi­ tion should be upheld in a federal court, any d ecision s of the c o n so r tiu m w ou ld be d e c la r e d u n c o n s titu tio n a l, Gutierrez said. Anna belle Valle, d irector of th e m a n p o w e r t r a i n i n g program, said litigation is definitely the next m ove. ly The execu tive com m ittee approved the req uest, but it w as rejected by the consor­ tium m em bers. SER then su bm itted a $102,000 proposed budget directly to the consortium m em b ers. The m em b ers refused action, and the original vote held. In D e c e m b e r S E R su b ­ m itted a funding request to the Austin City Council for $127,000 The council referred SER back to the consortium , recom m ending it reconsider the funding proposal. “ SER has the support of the City of A ustin and T ravis County,” County Com ­ m issioner Richard M oya said. “ lf local people decid e we should fund SE R . I think we should do it. H ere w e have p e o p le from o th e r a r e a s deciding whether people in this area get funded.” Moya voted again st the m o­ tion to deny funding. “ We w ill file a federal suit a s soon a s p o ssib le . T his should becom e an election issu e, though. Austin's elected o fficials have given up their pow er.” In response to criticism that SER duplicates the efforts of other m anpower program s in the com m unity, Valle said the other organizations are bogg­ ed down. “ We want to serv e 116 peo­ ple, but we can only train 15 at present,” V alle said. S E R 's p r e v io u s fu n d in g attem p ts included an app lica­ tion to the consortium last Ju­ Currently the organization is existing on donations and contributions, V alle said. —z ------------------------- _ Interart Classes Commence and Puulse se A Im age A rts begin and for for P A rts rts R egistration is open for a D ancer's Workshop Series a t the for 9 through 12-year-olds. Pulse A rts will be offered Ja n . 23 for In te ra rt Works. C lasses include m odern dance technique and the younger group. Im age A rts will be offered Ja n . 23 for the expression, basic m ovem ent im pulse and developm ent o older children. The fee for six weeks is $13 50. m odern dance styles. The orientation is tow ards developing A S aturday Studio Series (11:30 a.m . to 1:30 p .m .) will begin m ovem ent as an expressive and ex ploratory a r t experience. Jan . 18, for p artic ip a n ts IO years o r old er; the se rie s will in­ The D ancer’s W orkshop Series, tau g h t by professional volve exposure and in struction in v arious a r t fo rm s in studios of dancers including Lee B arbee, G race B roussard, Betty F ain, Austin a rtists. The fee is $18 p er six-w eek session. Sallie Holland, H elen M ayfield and C arlos R odriguez, is open to Individualized tu to rial workshops for persons 12 y e ars and inexperienced persons interested in dance; it also is open to ex­ older will be arra n g ed by appointm ent. perienced dancers. , . F am ilies will be eligible for fee discounts and applications In terart Works, a nonprofit organization of a rtis ts in d ifferent accepted for tuition assistan ce. disciplines, also is offering workshops for children and young F u rth e rm o re , the Video Workshop — E le c tric C ircu itry as people — w orkshops which began this m onth. Im age — is conducting reg istratio n for the spring session at An altern ativ e preschool for 3- and 5-year-olds will utilize a I n t e r a r t W orks. S e m in a r and la b o ra to ry to p ic s include broad spectrum of a rtistic resources in an in teg rated p ro g ram h ard w are, softw are, conceptions, developm ents and style and coordinated by a m ale and fem ale tea c h er. The school, which m edium of expression and com m unication: th e TV im age as opened Monday, is open daily from 9 a.m . to noon. both inform ational and aesth etic fram e. E xtensive exploratory activ ities to exhibits and n atu ral sites Techniques of videography will be tau g h t by B roussard, who will be a regular featu re of the class, as well as special focus ac ­ has worked in live th e a te r, mixed m edia th e a te r, television and tivities such as m im e, dance, visual a r t work and listening to film in London, New York, Austin, G erm any and M exico City. poetry, stories and m usic. P a rtic ip a n ts in th e w orkshop will produce a w eekly television Fees will be $50 m onthly for five-day p a rticip an ts and $30 for show which will be b roadcast via the public a c ce ss cable children enrolled only on Mondays, W ednesdays and F rid ay s. channel ACTV. E n ro llm e n t c u r r e n tl y a llo w s fo r m o re p a r t ic i p a n ts M em bership will rem ain open through the end of Jan u ary . F o r m o re in fo rm a tio n co n ce rn in g I n t e r a r t W orks, its After-school sessions (3:30 to 5 p .m .) in the Im age A rts (film , pro g ram s, re g istra tio n and scheduling, co n tac t 472-0718. video and photography' and in P ulse and Body A rts (dance, In tc ra rt Studios are at 1907 W hitis Ave. c reativ be ooffered forr o6- through tivee d ra m a tic s) will De n e re a lu uuuug.. 12-year-olds — . . . - . . ■ . .w . . iill ll I years he has been m aking his selections public “ When I think som eone looks ro tten , it doesn’t m ean they don’t have a good soul or that they a re n 't g reat e n te r­ ta in e rs.’’ the designer said of his choice of Reddy for the dubious distinction. B lackw ell picked a c tr e s s E lizabeth T aylor as the w orst of the w orst dressed in the 15 T h e re 's ju s t too m any y ards of flesh with too few in­ ches of fa b ric ." he said of Taylor. N e w Spanish Graphics To Appear at St. Ed's Fifty-seven contem porary prints bv Spanish a rtists are featured in ‘ G raphics 74 — Spain, ’ an exhibit which will continue through Jan . 27 at the Moody Hall A trium G allery of St. E dw ard’s U niversity The exhibit, sponsored by the U niversity of Kentucky, Lexington, has been rated by the U niversity of Kentucky as “possibly the best in the 16year history of our annual graphics show s." A rtis ts f e a tu r e d in th e traveling exhibition include Antoni T ap ies, Jo an M iro. Rafael C onagar. Joan Pone and Antonio Saura. William D yckes. New York a rt critic and author, says “ G rap h ics ’74" in tro d u ces what is "in effect a new a rt. new not only to the A m erican public but to the w orld.” According to D yckes, ‘ an appetite for experim entation c h a ra c te riz e s the Spanish graphics m ore than any other single thing. Given this ra te freedom from the yoke of tradition, the a rtis ts have not even bothered to look abroad for ideas or exam ples but have spun off innum erable id e a s of t h e i r ow n. a p ­ proaching the paper, the ink. the m e c h a n is m s and th e whole c o n c e p t of g rap h ics with the freshness and facination of blind m en who have su d d en ly h a d th e ir sig h t restored to th e m .” Dyckes describes tile Spanish graphic a rt as “ adventurous,” .stating that it has liberated itself from the tired old im age of d arkness and d esp air." G allery hours a re from 9 a m . to 9 p m M o n d a y through Friday and I to 5 p.rn Saturday and Sunday. Admis­ sion is free. UP low -tem perature, brightly colored ceram ic airplanes M ost of T hree a rtis ts will be featu red in exhibitions at Laguna G loria the pieces com bine both pottery-m aking techniques, such as Art M useum , beginning F rid ay and running through Feb. 2. The wheel throw ing and sculptural processes. The ceram ic sculp­ a rtists featured are Ralph W hite, p ain ter: David Pond-Sm ith, tures are not intended to be illu strativ e exam ples of airplanes, photographer and Stan Irvin, p o tte r T here is no admission charge to the m useum . Its hours a re IO but rath er expressions of both the absurdity and harm ony which a.m . to 5 p.m . Tuesday through Saturday, Thursdays until 9 exist betw een the object and the m aterial. All of Irv in ’s work will be for sale p.m ., and Sundae I to 5 p.m . C onducted tours of all exhibitions Irvin received his training in A rkansas and Texas. He receiv ­ are available to groups of five or m o re persons Inform ation can ed his MFA from the U niversity in 1974 w here he served as lab be obtained by calling Laguna G loria a t 452-9447 and teaching assistan t for two years under Texas potter White, a professor of art at the U niversity, has exhibited his Ishm ael Soto He initiated the c e ram ics program a t Laguna paintings regionally and nationally since 1946 M ajor exhibitions G loria, w here he will teach in the spring. include the annual Exhibition of A m erican Art. the B utler The photography of Pong-Sm ith will be featured in G allery B Institute, Youngstown. Ohio; the M id-A m erica Annual, the of the Museum. Pond-Sm ith has studied with Ansel A dam s, Al Nelson G allery [ K ansas C ity; W estern A rtists, the D enver W eber and R obert Heinecken and also at the C reative E x ­ Museum and the Southw estern Annual of A m erican Art, perience Workshop sponsored by the F riends of Photography. Oklahom a City. C arm el, Calif. He has com pleted one publication.“ M anself. A w ards for White s work include the V anderhp Fellowship and has one forthcom ing publication, ‘ T raveller. M anself’ from the M inneapolis School of A rt and Purchase Awards from was significantly reviewed by A D. Colem an in The New York the M inneapolis Institute of A rt. H is work appears in private T im es in an a r tic le titled ‘ The P h o to g rap h ic Book as and public collections throughout the country. Autobiography ' Pond-Sm ith will teach basic and advanced Irv in 's ceram ic sculptures will be on exhibit in the Mezzanine photography at Laguna Gloria in the spring. G allery of the m useum . Works included in the show will consist of both stonew are and low te m p e ra tu re ceram ic sculptures. G re a te r em phasis will be placed on recen t works, especially his r i i i AC To Host Upcoming Brando M ovie Festival A M arlon Brando film festiv al, sponsored by the U niversity Young D em ocrats, will be held F riday. Saturday and Sunday in the A cadem ic C enter A uditorium . E ach ticket stub will be good for one free beer or one slice of pizza at le x a s Pizza. 205 E . 19th St., through Monday. "T he Wild O ne,” c o starrin g Lee M arvin. Mary Murphy and R obert Keith, will be shown at 6:10 p.m . and midnight each night. “ The C hase,” co -starrin g Ja n e Fonda, R obert Redford. E .G . M arshall and Angie D ickinson, will be shown at 7:40 p.m . each night. "On the W ate rfro n t." co-starring E arl Malden, Lee J. Cobb. Eva M arie Saint and Rod Steiger will be shown at IO p.m. Admission for each showing is $1 50. i i i L COUPON COUPON LOS TACOS 705 W. 24th Bean Taco >Gh - 2 0 c 'L im it 2 COUPON CO UPON 4823534848232353485353234853535348535353235353534853535 ^ a r e o o r iT I RESTAURANT! In gm a r A Grec Y#min Ef’lerp- lf Bergman's JAN. BEER BUST A wards: Berlin Film Festival: Shiner Micheiob G rand Prize Mug Pitcher .20 .30 $1.10 $1.60 I Serving 14 varieties of hot sandwiches, pizzas, salads 2 a.m. Sat. 111 - I a.m. w eekdays l l 472-3034 I 2801 G uadalupe Venice Film Festival: Critics ' Prize A ward Y O U R S P R IN G 1975 U T [||"the unique sandwich & pizza R estaurant’ BRANDO FESTIVAL S P O N S O R E D HY U N IV E R S IT Y YOUNG D EM OCRAT S ACADEM Y AW ARDS i On the W aterfront with K arl Malden, E va M arie Saint, Rod Steiger, Lee J. Cobb do.co. Distribution On Campus Agency P.O. Box 5004 Austin, Texas 78763 Friday, Saturday, Sun day January IO, l l , 12 7:30 - 9:20 Only Batts Hall Aud. $1.25 I hts is th! story o f a p r i e s t w h o se ts out to sm ash m ob control o v e r th e S e u l o t * u a te r fr ml am i o f on a rtic u la te longshorem an w ho sloudy becom es a w a re of w hat he could am ount to in the w orld. J a m pa c k ed w ith a re a lw ttc a n d e m o tio n ^ appeal seldom achtel cd in a m otion p ictu re , it show s the lon g sh o re m a n s h ip Iron; an " I m looking - u t fo r m e " a ttitu d e to a u d h n g n c ss to n t h h ts life for what he U It. ces is rig h t. This is rem a rka b le picture . . an in te llig e n t, s u p e rio r piece of e n te r ta in m e n t. W inner o f H A cadem y A w ards. Mo de rn C in e ma C o m m i t t e e Fri., Sat., Sun. JAN. IO, 1 1 , 1 2 i i i i i YO U R E G IS T E R T H IS W E E K Ij Just mark your OPTIONAL FEE CARD in the J space for The Cactus, and then make out I days | I ONE CHECK | I I I I I I dollar! I I I I I The I D aily I I Texan I I II U ne .I assi. to cover your registration fees a n d the $8.40 Cactus fee a n d you have ordered I L l B la c k w e ll's b e st d re ssed list includes a c tre sse s AnnM argret, F ay e D unaway and N atalie Wood; Rose Kennedy, P rin cess G race of Monaco and Mrs. Ronald R eagan, wife of th e f o r m e r C a lifo rn ia governor. ■ ■ 8 I i i i i i i i i i IS i V alentine and Sonia Rykiel, the first fashion designer to m ake the list. »■ at our specially m arked table r n the University C o-O p This W e ek!I line I m FREE ST U D E N T C O U P O N BOOK ii 3 The d e s ig n e r's IO w o rst dressed people w ere Reddv; P r i n c e s s E l i z a b e t h of Y ugoslavia, fiancee of acto r R ichard Burton. F anne Foxe, strip p e r friend of Rep. Wilbur M ills; Rep Bella Abzug, DN.Y., described as dressing for the 1940s. Cher Bono, who Blackw ell said looks like a " H a w a iia n b a r m itzv ah , singer Charo. described as “ C a r m e n M i r a n d a wi t h c l e a v a g e , ” th e P o i n t e r sisters, Raquel Welch, Karen STUDENTS P IC K A rtjsts To Exhibit Works I o n . 91 n r f6-year-olds i- v is a r - n r te Jan 21 ffor IO Worst-Dressed List' Released LOS A N G EL E S (A P) Singer Helen Reddy heads the list of IO w orst dressed women of 1974 Blackwell, the designer who has been m aking the selec­ tions annually for 15 years, also unveiled T uesday his list of the IO best dressed women of the vear LLaguna aguna w o n v M n m jcw rii Gloria Art Mwuseum A.C. Auditorium 10:00 p.m. $1.50 The Chase with Jan e Fonda, R obert R edford, E.G . M arshall, Angie Dickinson § jj Renndn .l u r . as a m odern d e i s h e rr if in a .email Texas tow n w h ich g oes berserk, u Z n a n e s Z ^ d c Z v U , retu rn s The sh e riff alone belieI m g the boy I » « ^ a circum stance* created by th, tow n its e lf fights lo return same p l a n e r r f annitx and rviiH’ct for the la w itself. T his is not sim p ly a m odern-day We*tef]n: it is an e m o tionally grippin g story w ith su p e rb ch a ra cte riza tio n s, (rn(sta n d in g perform ers th a t boldly probe a t the m any g rie v a n c e s w h ic h Arn,‘n e o n fife i n f u s e , bigotry, adultery, a is,th y , th. a ivr. p riv ile g e d rich and the u ndeserving poor. jj Fri., Sat., JAN. IO, A.C. Auditorium 7:40 p.m. $1.50 w ith Lee Marvin and Mary Murphy F h E W IL D O N E , based im un a c tu a l event, a a s a prototype o f the m otorcycle film g e n re, a s w ell as an im p o rta n t m ovie in M arion H rondo s o u r l y carver. Urn nill, p lays the leader of a leather p ick e ted m otorcycle gang, w hich v a n d a lu e s cmd t o ,- .,rile s a sm a ll t o w n Mary M urphy p ortrays a nice g irl to w h o m the hoodlum is attract.,,!. I c e M arlin plays th. i m c h o l i c leader o f a «"«J™ m o to rc yc lists ta k e over the tow n. un til outraged cMizens fig h t back H rundo . c h u rm tin IS pm se a te d a, moody and vicious, but at the end we feel th a t th ere is hope fur him . The film is e x tr e m e ly pow erful, in both Ms m ood a n d Ms unp lications Com e by TSP Bldg. Roo m 3.200 a n d place your Unclassified 482323485390534848484853484823484848 Fri., Sat., S un. Sun. l l , 12 JAN. IO, A.C. Auditorium 6:10 & 12:00 $1.50 Ad (fax included) -y THIS YEAR! students only pre-paid no refunds 25th 8t W hitis I e Ar b <& k SAVE YOUR TICKET STUB FOR: ONE FREE SLICE OF PIZZA OR BEER AT TEXAS PIZZA 205 E. 19th (a cro ss from J e s t e r) one per person only1, please (valid thru Jan. 13) .mt^MnH^uiii>i.iH^iimi^iuiiiiiiii^ii^iiiiiMunniHiiiiiiiiMHiiHiiltHHlilHlltiniliu^il7lllllll!lllitll)ttlill!lltlllllllllllfilllll1lllltllllllli!tl1lllllliiilillllllllllllilHillitii!IIIHlil Thursday, J a n u a r y 9, 1975 THE DAILY TEXAN Pa ge ll 'Towering Inferno' Tokes Itself Too Seriously M o v ie s S o le m n T one D e a d e n s .Stella;■ C os!>. T M IJ ta g A«Hoo there S esqvirtually u e nnoccomic e s relief in the entire movie. “ The Towering Inferno,” produced by Irwin Allen; directed bv John Guillermin; screenplay by Stirling Silliphant; starring Paul Newman, Steve McQueen, I aye Dunaway and William Holden; at the Highland Mall Cinema. By PA U L B E U T E L Texan Staff Writer “ The Towering Inferno” begins smugly enough with an unex­ plained shot of a helicopter flying over water - practically identical to the final shot of producer Irwin Allen s last smash spectacular, “ The Poseidon Adventure.” Is Allen poking fun at ■Poseidon or is he reverently saluting it0 I suspected for a moment that “ Inferno” possibly would emerge as a tongue-in-cheek disaster epic, but a scant 15 or 20 minutes into this two-and-three-quarter-hour. $15 million mo\ie revealed a tone of deadly earnestness. When a spectacle is good-naturedly empty-headed, like Poseidon” or “ Earthquake,” the results can be highly enter­ taining The effect is not unlike that of a circus. We go for a cheap type of glamour, death defying thrills and a mental vaca- min as director, but Allen himself directed the action se quences. more than likely to guarantee nothing less than a reverent approach. While certainly the most lavishly produced of the disaster movies, “ Inferno” pushes the genre further than it really needed to go „ Every sequence of this movie practically screams E r i c . at the audience. Admittedly, the set designs and the special effects are frequently breathtaking in their studio recreation of a 135-story building rapidly burning from the 81st floor on up to the grand opening party atop. The all-star cast is a treat, too. particularly in casting Paul Newman as the architect and Steve McQueen as the fire chief. Indeed, when these two superstars appear in the same frame for the first time, even the wide screen seems too small to contain them both. But thev work well together in a refreshing, nonbuddy relationship. And Faye Dunaway, as Newman’s lover, has little to do once the fire breaks, but she has never looked more regally gorgeous. ! By VERNON SCOTT H O LLYW O O D ( U P I) T h irty m ovie-tele vis ion leading men and comedians got together the other day to help provide the most expen­ sive chorus line extant for Mitzi Gaynor’s special “ Mitzi and IOO Guys ” The LBS rehearsal stage was brimming with famous faces. “K-O-K-l NITE" TRANS ★ T E X A S FINE FOODS! HELD OVER 3rd WEEK! •iif e m LZJB&IUO Bunt* Road FE A T U R E 6:30 & 10:00 465 6933 EXCLUSIVE AUSTIN SHOWING If s Terrific! Starring T h e T r ia l DELORES TAYLOR and TOW LAUGHLIN a? B illy Ja ck TRANS ★T EX A S T T r e m T ir t S L T O T S r ADULT M O VIES RATED X NOW! OPEN 1:15 FEATURES u n to ________________ 1:30-3:30-5:30-7:45-10:00 2200 Hancock Drive — 453 6641 521 East Sixth O p sn 10:00 a.m. to 2 :0 0 a.m. Sun, 12 noon-m idnight REDUCED PRICES TIL 5:45 A F A S C IN A T IN G A N D POWERFUL W O R K " A d u lt B o o k s to re THE NIGHT £££ Joseph E. ■ Levme .presents . __ B Release j it 2 5 c A rca d e I J Dirk Bogarde • Charlotte Ram pling T R A N S * TEXA S OPEN 2:30 r 2 Adult S h o w s Weekly Call for Titles 477-0291 $1 OFF w ith this ad or Student ID R o t s u i L b i * *01 y o u n g p a r s o n * M u s t bs 1 9 y rs. to t n t . . FEA. 2:45-4:00 . . . - Between drinks from the bar. all 30 stars lined up in three tiers to have their photograph taken, en masse, with Mitzi in the middle Bob Hope w as the cheerleader: “ I never knew you could have this much fun with fellas,” he quipped when the photographers asked the crowd to get closer to one another. ii I I SMP CISEK 0 Saloon (<\ (( ( 12224 St— 477-UM Front Poge is Full el exuberant, zestful entertainment.** T O N IG H T I I I - EL ROACHO Kv 9 John Bvstin Austin Citizen MCK WAUER [BUNION MATTHAI! FRIDAY A U G H M E Y ER S I A' T V m o l W (O’Connor l T n n n n r rcheered h e e r p r l hhim im Donald 630 pm on. 7 B ig B lu e M a r b l e 9 C o n s u m e r S u r v iv a l K it — c ar “ Let s have some big r e p a ir s smiles,” the photographer 24 B e w itc h e d yelled from the top of a 36 N e w s ladder. He was promptly 7 pm 7 R i k k i - T l k k i - T a v i - a n im a t e d shouted down. v e rs io n of R u d y a r d K ip li n g 's sto ry of a y o u n g m o n g o o se w ho p rotects a “ I hope they let me retouch f a m ily f r o m d e a d ly c o b r a s myself on the proofs." Hope N a r r a t e d b y O r s o n W e lle s 9 C a n a d a N ot tor Sa le — R e p o r t said. on C a n a d ia n c o n c e rn o v e r fo re ig n in ­ Dan Rowan wondered flu e nce aloud, “ Do you think they're 24 A d v e n t u r e rn A m e r ic a - A look at the in h a b it a n t s of a sm a ll C a lifo r ­ going through all this trouble n ia tow n w h e re fire s a re a c o n sta n t just to get a close-up of me?” danger J u d y C o llin s s i n g s fo u r so n g s “ This stage looks like a live 36 N B O N e w s Sp e c ia l: " O f W o m e n Hollywood Wax Museum.” a nd M e n . " h o ste d b y T o m S n y d e r an d B a r b a r a W a it e r s V iv e c a L in d Hope said, surveying the ac­ to r s a n d the th re e w o m a n r o c k tion g r o u p D e a d ly N ig h t s h a d e a p p e a r Jam es Farentino, Greg 730 pm ^ T h e W a lt o n s Morris, Strother Martin, Ken lpm Berry and Bill Bixby were 9 The J a p a n e s e F ilm : "S a n ju r o . d ire c'e ct b y A k i r a K u r o s a w a a n d quiet members of the troupe, s t a r r in g T o s h ir o M if u n e and broke up when Hope was 24 S tre e ts of S a n F r a n c is c o asked to hold Mitzi’s leg in one 8 3 0 p m 7 B e n j a m in F r a n k li n T h e R ebel of the shots. c o v e r in g the y e a r s (757-1775 w hen “ My golf bag doesn’t weigh F r a n k d n c h a n g e d fro m a c o lo n ia l m e d ia to r to a reb e l fig h tin g 'o r h is this much,” Hope complain­ c o u n t r y s in d e p e n d e n c e , s t a r r i n g ed. “ You want my part? R i c h a r d • W id m a r k , H u r d H a ft.eld, H o n o r B la c k m a n , A n th o n y Q u a y le There’s lots for everybody." _______ r “ Hooray for Gay tLib I ’ * cried Monty Hall. Ed Asner and Ted Knight of The M ary T yler Moore Show” stood next to one another “ We don’t do any of this weird stuff on our series.” Asner said. his hand placed effeminately on his hip Mike Connors gave Mitzi a big kiss while Chris George. Bob Crane, Steve Allen. Jack Albertson, Dean Jones and 3279018 ☆ ☆ IN * & LLY WILDER DLM BEE CAVES Bl iHr—■aa. 5:25-6:50-8:15 $2.50 AIL DAY NO PASSES From all the hype the “ Inferno” publicists have been pouring on the public since last summer, it's been clear that Allen in­ tended to make this the disaster epic supreme — the “ Cleopatra” of the genre But like that spectacle of a decade ago, “ Inferno” becomes so self-conscious of its own quest for classic stature that it suffers under the weight. Every scene is programed for specific “ ooos and aahs from the audience, and the fullhouse I attended reacted just as Allen wanted them to. I D O N ’T mind being manipulated for the sake of art or enter­ tainment. but when a movie takes such pretentious pride in its audience puppeteering. it's frequently offensive. “ The Towering Inferno” may be the most spectacular and star-laden of the current disaster epics, but I still prefer the less-expensive, iess-pretentious chaos of Earthquake or the style and wit of “ Juggernaut,” N 30 Top Stars Form 'Chorus Line' | television U°ONE COL LD guess that the huge success of ‘ Poseidon” caus­ ed Allen to take himself seriously. The movie lists John Guiller­ OPEN 6:00 There are some some genuinely thrilling sequences, too, par­ ticularly a helicopter rescue of victims trapped in a scenic elevator on the building’s exterior. B L T I T ’S the solemn tone of the highly-predietable narrative which ultimately harms “ Inferno.” We know Richard Chamberlain is going to get it as soon as we learn he shaved $2 million off the electrical subcontracting by installing inferior wiring. When Robert Wagner and Susan Flannery make illicit love while Maureen McGovern sings “ We May Never Love Like This Again” on the soundtrack, we know that they, too, will pay for such shameful immorality. These can be playful stereotypes, but Allen and Guillermin ludicrously ask to accept them as tragic figures. We’ve also got Fred Astaire and Jennifer Jones in sym­ pathetic roles like Jack Albertson’s and Shelley Winters in “ Poseidon,” but there’s no humor in the Astaire/Jones relationship like Winters provided in Poseidon. In fact, 10:00 I THI FRONT PAGE 9 p m. 24 H a r r y O 10 p m 7 24 36 N ew s 9 L ilia , Y o g a and Y o u IO SO p m 7 M o v ie : 'M a c h in e G u n M c C a i n . " s t a r rin g P eter F a lk , John C a s sa v e t e s, B ritt E k la n d , 9 C a p tio n e d A B C N e w s 24 W id e W o rld Sp e c ia l — M ilt o n B e n e tak e s a look at c o m e d y w ith film c lip s and c h a ts w ith c o m ic s 36 T o n ig h t Show S tu d e n ts' Attorney The student*' attorneys, Frank Iv y a n d A n n B o w e r , a r e a va ila b le by appointm ent from 8 a.m . to 5 p.m. M o n d a y t h r o u g h F rid a y in S p e e c h Building, Room 3. Telephone 47 1-77 96. The students a t ­ torneys will handle lan d lo rd tenant, consumer protection, em ployes' rights, taxatio n a n d insurance cases. C riirin a l eases a n d domestic problems. „ " 'FLESH G O R DO N ' is the movie of the moment Go just for the Hell of it,” — N e w York Soho N e w s Peter Lo cke & Jim Buckley Present A M a m m o th F ilm s Release I I I I I I I I I I I I I LPWMSOi* hUNNfRSMPCMtt WEEKDAYS 0 PIN 5:45 P.M. FEATURE 6-4-10 P.M. Reduced Price Until 4:10 P.M. HH THEATRES FOX TWIN 675?AIA70RTSIVO 1454-27111 lW s i t L a r. ; R E D U C T IO N S J d B B kS i . , i t u t I I I I A DAY AT THE RACES WALT DISNEY Dieter,!;, WINNIE th e POOH an d TKIGER TOO BARGAIN MATINEE S1.50 HI 7:30 FEATURES 7:30-9:45 T E C H N IC O L O R » W EEKDAYS OPEN 6:30 P M I FRIDAY-SATURDAY-SUNDAY I JANUARY 10-11-12 I STUDENT GOVT. FILMS SHOWS AT 7KW-M0 Reduced Price Until 7 P.M MN tHEATBES FOX TWIN 6157»l«rO«t 81VO - 4‘ - 835/ 1454-27 l l is le 51.25 til 7 p.rn. STATE 719 CONGRESS 476 5066 AVENUE FEA TURES 6:40-8:20-10:00 4 4 4 - 3 2 ? ? • 1500 SO U T H P L E A SA N T VALLEY RD $1.50 til 6 p.m. FEATURES -1:30-3:30-5:30-7:30-9:30- T H E D E V IL T O O K H E R F O R H IS L O V E R ! W JF ..the story of a woman possessed! REDUCED PRICES Til 6 P.M. MON THRU SAT. A Q U A R IU S THEATRES 4 ! 442-2333 • l1l4 2 3 VV B E N W H IT E $1.50 til 6 p.m. FEATURES - 1: 10 - -3:20-5:30-7:454:55- An all U PT O W N SATURDAY NIO NT po Sidney Poititr • Bill Casky BURTREYNOLDS ,N“THE LONGEST YARD” C O L O R B y T E C H N IC O L O R * A P A R A M O U N T PICT U R E NEW AIRPORT 1975 VILLAGE 4 2700 ANDERSON IN 451 *352 'BIRTH OF LEGEND" S I A C T I O N ! E X C IT E M E N T ! FEATURES In ( olor Birth ofa Legend B PLUS SHORT- "u ro " |=i "WONDER OF IT A ll" A SPECTACUiAR WORLD OF MATURI SORRY NO PASSES EEA TURES 1:00-3:00 S « 7A0-M 0 IG) W IU H IF t ADVtHTURI FEATURES t i J H J O 54#-7:56-10:0« IG) Del IXC COLOR* From Warner B r o e - Q * Warner Communications Company V A R S IT Y 2400 G UAD ALU PE 414-435! STREET IP G ] Pass list Suspended No Bargain Matinee ^Featjjjes 1:00- 3:1S-5:25-7;4Q-9:5JL DID SPACEMEN VISIT BASTI IS ASCIEST TIMES? *0W WE HAV* E M U !. m m m m a m STUNNING TMI B f e l J M P M I T H E Y V A N ISH E D . • c Ocean known as , Feature. 2:505 40-8 20 iu d s thursday Page 12 Thursday? January 9, 1975 TH E D A IL Y T E X A N (G) OI TI '" S ', w arn ■ v*>f ACTION EXPLODES ALI OVER ENDS THURSDAY ^ _____________ JIM BROW N -TH RS1 FIUSD W IM O AM SO N J I M KBInIrY THIS KAH© WAY ” HEID OVER! and ia Bargain Matinaa til I:FO Fsalurt* 1:10-4:00-6:40-9:20 I G ) FEATURES 1 1 0 -3 : 2 0 5 .3 0 -7 :4 o -9 :5 0 !S c i * o i l Ti »»C . H .y IJJ A C rm t.cm » 8 J6 -8 S t4 / LU BARGAIN FAATIWF TH JrOO SONDAY FRIDA I ct RIVERSIDE MUSICAL PROGRAM PROVIDED BY BOX OFFICE OPEN 6:30 SHOW STARTS 7:00 show you! BARGAIN MATINEES ANO PASSES ARE SUSPENDED .CHARIOTS OF THE SO D S? E NEW MOVIE SENSATION GUTE STATES O RIVE IN ShoWTOWNUSA they’ll ^ A UNIVERSAL PICTURE TECHNICOLOR' PWUYlStON • Today at Presidio Theatres PANAVISJ0N®-TECHNICOLOR® Celebrating Warner Bros 50th Anniversary A Warner Communications Company J Ifjoudont understand them when thej tell vou their story••• film... I The ultimate in M artial A rts adventure and excitement! H . 7tO E Bin W h .it.4 4 4 -2 2 9 6 , BARGAIN MATINEE 51.50 HI 6:30 FEATURES 6:30-8:45 FEATURES 1:00-3:10 5:25-7:40-9:55 I I $1.00 I BURDINE AUD. 7:30-9:20 VILLAGE 4 l l SO U T H W O O D 2 - 0 0 A N K E R S O N LH CO LOR J TE­ (T E C H N IC O L O R " “THE M A N W ITH 53 Olga THE GOLDEN GUN” SSS SENIA BERGER I I I I VU JAMES BOND 007 L iu ? J S oumcJ OccllerJ -1:20-3:30-5:40-7:50- ' The M a n With the Golden Gun' 007 Flicks Showing Steady Deterioration . crippled the more recent productions. In “ On Her M a je s ty ’s Secret Service,” Connery was gone, so producers Albert Broccoli and Harry Saltzman dug up actor George Lazenby and crossed their collective fingers — with disastrous results. Now they’re gambling on a c to r R o g e r M oore (“ Maverick,” “ The Saint"), and they’re again destined for failure. WHEN I SAW Moore in “ Live and Let Die.” I didn’t think he was half bad; in truth, however, A N YO N E would have been preferable to Lazenby. Moreover. M o o r e played the Bond character a new way (wisely deciding not to attempt a carbon duplicate of Connery’s Bond), and Moore's face and style were so different from Connery's that it took me a while to get used to them. I suppose I was hoping that once Moore settl­ ed into the role, and I became familiar with him, he might pull the whole thing off. After viewing “ The Man W ith the Golden G u n .” however. I ’ve decided that Moore hasn’t a chance. I AM used to him now, and I still don’t like him. For one, he’s too awkward physically (quite unlike Connery, who moved like a cat), and for another, M oore looks too m uch society’s darling to carry off “ The Man With the Golden Gun;” directed by G u y H a m ilto n ; produced by Albert B ro c c o li and H arry Saltzman; screenplay by Richard Maibaum and Tom Mankiewicz; starring Roger Moore; at the Paramount, Village Cinema IV and Southwood Theaters. By W ILL IA M A. STONE JR . Texan Staff Writer It could well be that James Bond is dying — figuratively speaking, that is. Having seen all nine 007 flicks, I have con­ cluded that the series has been gradually deteriorating since the release of “ ThunderbaU" and that actor Sean Connery’s desertion from the title role has damn near Moore in 'G olden G un' U n io n Schedules Spring Films A Woody Allen festival will launch the Texan Union film p rog ram for the spring semester. “ Take the Money and R u n ,” " B a n a n a s , ” ‘ ‘Everything You Always Wanted To Know About Sex But Were Afraid to Ask” and “ Sleeper” will be shown dur­ ing Jan. 14 to 19. Otherwise, the Union will continue its policy of offering films of recent vintage for its weekend programs, w ith American and foreign classics fillin g out the weekday schedule. Weekend films will include ••Deliverance,” “ American G ra ffiti,” “ A Clockwork O r a n g e , ” “ The G r e a t Gatsby.” “ Last Tango In .. mi r *1 a Paris,” “ The Last Detail,” “ Cinderella Liberty.” “ The Sugarland E x p re s s ” and “ Cabaret.” American classics will in­ clude John Ford s “ The Grapes of Wrath” and Frank Capra's “ Lost Horizon.” Also slated are three Charlie Chaplin movies — “ City Lights.” “ The Great Dic­ ta to r” and “ The Kid. Musicals to be shown include ‘ ‘S in g in ’ in the R a in . ” “ Anchors Aw eigh.” “ The Sound of M u s ic .” The Wizard of Oz” and “ West Side Story ” SS k A in it fh n in e n i no f i n n ffor or latter being the inspiration the musical “ Sweet Charity, highlight the foreign films scheduled. Others to be shown include Truffaut’s “ The 400 Blows,” Pasolini's “ Teorema” and Rossellini’s “ Open City.” Weekend films are shown in Jester Auditorium, unless otherwise noted in The Texan. Admission if $1 for students, faculty and staff; $1.50 for members. Feature times will be published in The Texan. successfully Bond’s machooriented, diamond-hard characterization. As Simon Templar in “ The Saint,” Moore was a pretty boy; he was silver-tongued, verbally acidic and gloriously superficial Templar was most comfortable with a $300 suit, a dainty damsel in dis­ tress and a glass of cham­ pagne in one hand. Moore was an unbeatable choice for this kind of role, which explains Moore’s ability to capture . Bond's wit and cool with such near-p erfection. U n lik e Templar, however. Bond belongs more to a world of violent, quick-fisted enemies, international masterminds and virile sex-plav, and quite frankly. Moore is pathetic in his attem pts to capture Bond's athletic ruggedness and earthy, sexual attrac­ tiveness. (Moore as Bond has the same problem that Robert Redford had as Jay Gatsby: both men are ideally suited to one facet of their role while being positively ridiculous at another. While Redford had a knack for portraying Gatsby’s uneasiness in the social TOMORROW Under N e w M anagem en t P re s e n ts SHRIMP, SHRIMP, SHRIMP SUN. & MON. ALL T H E SH R IM P YOU CAN . SALAD INCLUDED $025 per person EAT 6-IU p.m. 2 7 0 0 W . Anderson Ln. - In The Village (Across from Village Cinem a) / HAPPY HOUR PRICES G O O D ALL N IG H T LONG LIVE ENTERTAINM ENT FEATURING LO O N Y TU N ES Chicks Free! $1 admission for guys THE BUCKET 2 3 rd and Pearl Across from TRI-TOWERS NOR TH - 3 Hrs. PASTON SUNDAY - FOOLS COVER 477-3783 O e x a s U n io n S p r in g C la s s e s /9 / 5 DANCING ■ LYNX M # T H tR bANTN BUCK DANCER'S CHOICE G REEZY W HEELS EL RO ACHO C UNN IN G H A M CORNER ALL IN OME SH O W Restaurant & B a r freaks are getting csick A of? it W hy d o n ’ t t hey t ry something different'’ I would love, for instance, to see Mel Brooks as director — or if he’s too wild, how about Richard Lester'.’ C learly, someone needs to inject some life into the series, and making it an all-out parody might just work At the least, it would provide a refreshing depar­ ture from the rut the series has fallen into Above all. it is to be hoped that Connery like most men. has his price and can be seduced into returning as 007 ■He returned once before, in Diamonds Are Forever.” only to leave again.) lf Broc­ coli and Saltzman are smart, they'll suffer any cost to get him back. Otherwise, their precious golden egg. now fragile, may just crumble 007 may be invincible on screen, but at the box office, he's con­ spicuously mortal LIVE MUSIC BY 914 N. LAMAR TONIGHT ONLY J. GATSBY’S J. NO 1411 Lavaca 472-7315 TONIGHT ll best in live rock and roll 7 nights a week. Open at 8:00 p.m. Music begins 8:30 Happy Hour from 8 to 9 BREEK CUNNINGHAM CORNER PLUM NELLY n o coven I .. |__ I BEST ENTERTAINMENT VALDE N O COVER CHARGE TON1TE CASILE Two early films by Federico Fellini, -“ La Strada” and “ Nights of C ab iria,” the . • must be seen to be believed circles of the nouveau riche, he was quite unsuccessful in and the stunts in general almost redeem the rest of the try in g to make G atsb y movie — almost. •‘mysterious.” ) Another aspect of the 007 I ’M P L A C IN G such an series contributing to its emphasis on Moore because, decline is that it’s such a bla­ quite obviously, the success of tant, formulated exercise; it the 007 series depends largely rarely creates any new sur­ (if not en tire ly ) on the character of Bond himself — prises in plot. The show s writers in “ Golden Gun in he is, after all, the one we fact, were so desperate for cheer for. Connery was about ideas that they brought back the most ideal Bond im ­ actor Clifton James to play aginable. however, and trying to construct a satisfying 007 Officer J.W . Pepper, who appeared in “ Live and Let flick without him is like trying Die.” and whose presence to continue "C o lu m b o ” here is not onlv superfluous without Peter Falk, or “ All in but banal as well. the Family” without Carroll GUY HAMILTON directed O'Connor. “ Golden Gun.” which is, in a On the other hand, there is way, unfortunate, because nothing that says the special he’s been a 007 director effects and the stunts can't be before, and he always sub­ just as satisfying, and in stitutes the tried-and-true for­ “ Golden Gun,” they're as mula for innovation and good as they ever were. In originality; the problem is fact, there’s an automobile that the formula is so old now stunt in this one which ab­ that even die-hard Bond solutely astonished me (it $1 Cover KOftP.TrCKET MF0 4 ? V ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ A ★ A A A *★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ -£ * * * * * * * * * ** * has This sem ester 60 N ights o f Film W ith directors like... J J X Alfred Hitchcock, Buster Keaton, Frank Capra, Howard Hawks , J I George Stevens, J e a n Renoir, Orson Welles, Preston Sturges, J t Ernst Lubitsch, Charlie C haplin , Billy Wilder, John Ford, J * Nicholas R ay , Goerges belies, D W. Griffith, Jean -L u c G odard , * X Robert Aldrich, Luchino Visconti, K in g Vidor, Busby Berkeley, * J G ene Kelly and Stanley Donen, David Lean, Yasujiro Ozu, J J Federico Fellini, Richard Brooks , Fritz Long, Carol Reed, Leni * * Riefenstahl, Luis Bunuel, Georges Franju, W. S. Van Dyke, lean- * * Pierre Melville, R om an Polanski, Douglas Sirk, Mack Sennett,* X R obert M ulligan, Sergei Eisenstein, Salvador Dali, Edwin S. * X Porter, Robert Flah erty , Aloin Resnais, R aoul Walsh, l ictor * J Sjostrom , Thomas H. hee, M aurice Tourneur, and Andrzej ll a- * * jda. * J 6 0 Nights of Film from Cinem aTexas * X *X J Beginning M onday, January 13 * Season Ticket Good for All 6 0 D ifferent Programs — $ 1 5 SSeeee MMoonday n d a y ss Texan texan fo Tor r Soeason easo n Sounauum c h e d u le * Free Parking ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ a IM M s a tu rn t E & Austin 2 21st & G u ad a lu p e Second Level Dobie M a ll 477-1324 ............................................................ TODAY THRU TUESDAY t h e Exclusive Engagem ent Bo w e r y STAVISKY!, boys REGISTRATION IN FO RM ATIO N : W eekdays: Monday, January 13 - Wednesday, january 22 9:00 a.rn.-4:00 p.m. Academic Center (A.C.) Foyer Evening: Monday, January 13 5:30-8:30 p.m. Academic Center (A.C.) Foyer East Campus: Monday, January 13 10:00 a.rn.-3:00 p.m. Tom Clark Lounge Townes Hall (Law School) Special Registration Telephone: 471-4874 (weekdays from 9:00 a.m. 4:00 p.m.) festival the m ost rew , . arding film s I ’ve seen this year.” mm — .i— - N o r a Sayre, N ew York Times “ Resnais brings the period to life, creating an aura of elegance and grace and a mood of sadness and corruption.” for all 3 K ath leen C a rro ll, N Y D a ily N e w s — ‘STA V ISKY with Jean-P aul Belmondo is an exquisite re­ creation of the early thirties milieu of political scandal and prejudice.” 3:45 7:15 10:45 2:35 6:05 9:35 MIDNITE — Judith C rist, N e w York M a g a z in e M O V IE S “ Resnais never makes a false move... creates the mood missed by ‘The Great Gatsby.’ The cast is Splendid. "HIGH SOCIETY” "SPOOK CHASERS” Every Night INTERESTED? SWINGING COUPLE SEEKING BROADMINDED MEN, WOMEN AND COUPLES FOR $1.25 "F u p — N e w s w e e k M a g a z in e “ STA V ISKY is Alain R esnais’ best film. W illia m P aul, V illag e Voice Cinema ll Games” Cinema I JERRY GROSS Presents JEAN-PAUL BELMONDO Features in ALAIN RESNAIS’ 1 :1 0 3:20 5:30 7:40 9:50 $72 5 $ J 50 “ A bouquet for ‘M a rig o ld s .’ P ow erful and a ffe c tin g . . .a rare achievem ent. Stephen Faibet rnrn#New Yortt Times 20thOMury-fOI Presents JO A N N E W O O D W A R D Starring CHARLES BOYER A M O N G THE NEW CO URSE OFFERINGS ARE: Primitive Skills (basketry, cordmaking, fishing, hunting, and trap­ ping, fire-making, food preservation and preparation, shelters, stone and bone tools, tanning) Geodesics NonTechnical D e sig n ABC's of the A.C. and Other UT Librar­ ies Travel Planning Through the University Library System Leathercraft Weedfeed Workshops (Austin, Padre Island, Big Thicket, and Big Bend A re a s ) Self-Confidence, Risk, and Trust in Interpersonal Relationships Life Experi­ ence Groups (friendship initiating and developing, marital en­ richment, parenting, self-assertion skills, and women s aware­ ness) over 80 separate class offerings are available in the Spring program. A complete listing of the classes and their meeting schedules will be available at registration. “ THE EFFECT OF GAMMA RAYS ON MAN-IN-THE-MOON Directed by ALAIN RESNAIS • Screenplay by JORGE SEMPRUN Musical Score Composed by STEPHEN SONDHEIM D istributed by CINEMA LION INDUSTRIES, The Paul N ew m an Production of the 1971 P ulitzer P rize winning play Thursday, January 9, 1975 THE DAILY TEXAN Page I • LASSIFIED A P H O N E 4 7 1 - B E 4 4 M O N . T H B U F B I . ds B s O O - S s O O IS I# ISS: J:':’;.;? ;■:77# ‘ ........- C L A S S IE ,E D A D V E R T IS IN G PATES 15 w o rd m in im u m $ ll E a c ” w o rd one tim e s IO E ach w o rd 2-4 rim es $ 08 E ach w o rd 5-9 tim e s E ach w o rd IO Or m o re * —es I 07 s SO S tu d en t ra te each tim e C ass • ed D is p la y S3 25 I col » I -nch one ’ .m e $2 93 ; I co l * ’ m ch 2-9 tim e s I col x I inc** ren o r m e re tim e $ *2 64 • ... — J D I A O il NC SC M IO O ll MoKOC) T«*on Hinny 2 OO p rn l l OO a rn. T w »«io y T «« o n tAonrfoy We*%e«*»y Texan Tuesday ■H OO a rn thursday Taman Wadnatdoy IVOO a m P td o y I t i o n ThuiMtoy 11 OO o rn FU R N. A P A R T S . ■ FURN. A P A R T S . ■ TO T O W E R L a rg e , o ld 2 b e d ro o m a p a rtm e n t F u rn is h e d Tor to u r S240 1902 Nueces 476 3462, 476-8483 S w im m in g pool, b e a u t if u lly fu rn is h e d , d o u b le o r s tu d io Ped ai* h a ve d is ­ hw asher, d is p o s a l, c e n tra l a ir a nd heat 305 W E S T 35TH (6 B L O C K S F R O M CA V R U S ) M A N A G E R A P T 106 454-9108 short w alk S144 50 O N E B E D R O O M Sac P a u lo A p a r t m e n ts , s h a g , p o o l, b a lc o n ie s , m a h o g a n y p an elle d, ane b lo c * Darn T a v e rn , s h u ffle . !5 th S tre e t 476-5072, 476 4999 Sn ih « e v e n t e t e r to n m o d e in en o d v e m t e m e n f , im m e d ia te n o » « e m v »t be Owen a s th e (w b tu h e n o re re « o e n « ib i* for only O N I incorrect -nternen AB d o in '* to* a rfiv ii —i* a * i , 6 o vid b e m o d e n o* la te * • h o n 3 0 d a y * o f*o r puM tcoh on ** W ALK TO C l ASS. O ld M a in A p a rtm e n ts I b e d ro o m a n d e ft c ie n c ie s A p a rtm e n ts a v a ila b le f o r n e x t se m e ste r Cad 477-3264 LO W S -U O E N T R A T E S IS w o rd m in im u m each d ay I 80 E a ch a d d itio n a l w o rd each d a y s 05 I col * ! in c h each d ay $2 64 " U n c a s s if ieds ’ I lin e 3 days I ! OO (P re p a id No R e fun ds: S tu d e n t s m u s t s h e w A u d it o r s re c e ip ts a na pay in a dva nce in TS P B ld g 3 200 25th !. W h ifis ) fr o m 8 a m to 4 30 p m M o n da y th ro u g h F rid a y 902 W E S T 22ND A ttr a c tiv e a rg e one bedroom Carpe* AC P e rfe c * fo r co uple o r room m ates S '75 m o n th C om e bv see o w n e r A v a ila b le now I BR. $155 O h LY Si t s P LU S E L E C T R IC IT Y N ice e ffic ie n c ie s nea r s h u ttle bus N o pets 3805 Ave B 459 8564 Motorcycles - For Sale Two KEN RAY APARTMENTS 2122 H ancock D r . N e x t to A m e ric a n a T h e a tre w a k .n g dis •a nce to N o rth L oo p S ho p p in g C e n te r and L u b y'S . N ear s h u ttle a n d A u s t i n t r a n s it T w o b e d ro o m fla *s. one a nd two oath s A v a ila b le one 3 b d rm 2 ba w ith new sh ag c a rp e t CA C h d is h w a s h e r d isp o sa l, doo r to d o o r g a rb a g e pickup, pot m a id s e rv ic e ,f des red wash a te r s n c o m p le x See o w n e rs. A p t 113 o r ca 45! 4848 J E R R I C K A PT S. C R O W N DC-JOOa one re a r old. m in t c o n d itio n w c n d 's bes* s u p e ra m p , 200 w a tts per c h a n n e l $729 N ew o n ly *575 C a i1 B J I, 452-7461 a fte r 7 T E AC 4010-S deck and Sansu- 2000-A tu n e r-a m p P e r fe c t c o n d itio n Can 453 2062 a fte r 6 OO p rn 200 W A T T P A S Y S T E M , a m p lif ie r , 2 sp e a kers, m * x e r 2 m icro p h o n e s *c-r $200 Com e fey 4504 Red R iv e r b e tw e e n 4-6 p rn BEAT INFLATION G U IT A R S T R IN G SETS H O HN ER HARM ONICAS Y A M A H A G U IT A R S Save 20 Save 10% Save 10% AMSTE R MUSIC T H RE E ELMS 400 West 35th 2 B d rm 2 Ba F u rn - U n fu rn E x tr a la rg e shag c a rp e t, d is h w a s h e r. ra n g e , d ispo sa l r e f r t g , p r iv a te p a tio . sto ra g e , close to s h u ttle a n d ca m p u s , ca b le pool 4 5 : 3941 ENFIELD ROAD On S h u ttle E ffic ie n c y 8. 1 B d r m Pool, c o u r ty a r d m a id b ills p a id $127 50 S U 9 50 2505 E n fie ld 478-2775 L a rg e new I b d r m stu o io s. shag, d is ­ hw asher $1 6 4 plus E U U E n fie ld 4 7 8 -9 7 6 7 NOW LE ASIN G I BR - $155 Homes - For Sale 10x55 H E N S L E E A m e ric a n a M o b ile H o m e T w o b ed -o om , I Va p ath C A ,C H $3 IOC 836-2178 MARK XX 454-3953 452-5093 3815 Guadalupe Misc. - For Sale TOP P R IC E S p a id fo r d ia m o n d s o ld g d d C a p ite : D ia m o n d Shop *018 N L a m a r 454-6877 CASH N E L S O N 'S G IF T S Zu ni in d ia n je w e lr y , A fr ic a n a nd M e x can im p o rts 4612 South C o ng re ss 444 .38u Closed M o n d a y s H O V E G A L L E R Y S ALE of o r ig in a l m o d e rn p a in tin g * . S a tu rd a y. Jar. l i t h , 9 OO a rn 5 OO p m 1500 W 46fh. C A SU A LL Y YOU C re a tiv e O u td o o r P o r tr a its Save Va Now fo r St V a le n tin e 's D a y R O Y C E P O R T R A IT S 2420 Guadalupe 472-4219 JOB W A N TED F O R M E R C O L L E G E E n g lis h in s tr u c to r seeks e d ito r ia l w o rk 441-2363 e v e n in g s or w r it e 516 A ca d e m y, A u stin . 78704 I Bedroom E L Cl D & E L DORADO 472-4893 S H U T T L E BUS C O R N E R C H E C K OUR S U M M E R R A TE S W U P I BR Furn. T a ngle w ood Annex 1315 Norw alk Lane 476-0948 I BR, $149-2 B R . $199 4539 G uadalupe 452-4447 Come Live With U s ! BROWNSTONE PARK A P A R T M E N T S A 'e c o n v e n ie n tly lo c a te d S. p r-ce d rig h t I 8. 2 b e d ro o m a p a rtm e n ts lo ca te d on s h u ttle bus ro u te F ro m $142 50 A L L B IL L S P A ID 5104 N L a m a r 454 <496 a p a ra g o n p r o p e r ty S T U D E N T W A N T E D to c le a n fa c u lty nom e one da-, a w eek T r a n s p o r t s ’ ^ p ro v id e d $2 h ou r. 5 h o u rs 327-0477 a fte r 5 CHANGE YOUR L IF E S T Y L E P r o fe s s o r s , G r a d s tu d e n ts R ent fa b u lo u s house a t fa b u lo u s L a k e w a y * s . 26! 'SSF u rn , u n fu rn ., lo w w in t e r ra te 5335 a fte r 5 p m . 261-5043. F E M A L E S T U D E N T - lo v e ly p r iv a te b e d ro o m Close to sch oo l. 500 E . 32nd 478 5439 a fte r 5.00. 711 W. 32nd 454-4917 AD G e n e ra l cie a n -u p X. D is h m a c h in e O p e ra ­ tio n NOW L E A S I N G F ro m 15-40 h o u rs o e r week 452-5510 $125 PLUS E • Colo rfu l Shag Carpet • Pool • Shuttle Bus 3 Blks. A 471-5244 M A K E $500 • C e n tra l A ir RETREAT APTS. CALL 52.00 P E R H O U R On each com m ission. C a m p u s a n d lo c a l r e p r e s e n ta tiv e s a re n e e d e d fo r n a tio n w id e e m p lo y e e s e a rc h F o r f u ll in ­ fo r m a tio n w r it e S u m n e r A d v e rtis in g Co P O. Box 643 P e o ria III . 61601 451-4584 UNF. DUPLEXES W E S T L A K E H I L L S . 2 B d rm s B u ilt- in * , fire p la c e , c a rp e t, w a te r, gas p a id . *210 327-0064, a ft e r 6 FU R N. DUPLEXES UNF. A P A R T S . finn Jct fry C O U N T R Y L IV IN G , f a r m house. N o n e ig h b o rs 1 SBO R e n ta l B u re a u . Fee 4517433 w ith or without pictures 2 Day Service 472-3210 and 472-7677 H U G E 4 b e d ro o m hom e 2 b lo c k s to U T H u r r y , R e n ta l B u re a u Fee 451-7433 HYDE PARK 5 ro o m h o m e fe n ce d y a rd , a p p lia n c e s , no lease. O n ly $195 R e n ta l B u re a u F ee 451 7433 T Y P IN G- T R A V IS H E I G H T S 4 b e d ro o m s . 2 s t o r ie s G o o d h o m e . *2 0 5 . R e n t a l B u re a u . Fe e. 451 7433 R C L O S E IN s o u th 2 b e d ro o m h om e, f e n c ­ ed $100 R e n ta l B u re a u . Fe e. 451-743.1 T A R R Y T O W N S pacious 3-2-2. L o ts of tre e s CA CH c a rp e te d W o n 't la s t. R e n ­ ta ! B u re a u . F e e . 451-7433 Q U IE T , la rg e fe n ce d y a rd B us a nd s h u t­ tle C ouples o n ly . 3/1 C h ild re n o r pets. 454 7419. T A R R Y T O W N . 3-2 b ric k . CA CH S h u t­ tle bus new c a rp e ts fe n ce d y a rd , c a r ­ p o rt S280 B e th A lle n d t 454-467 7 4772366 ROOMMATES R E S P O N S IB L E , lib e ra l h o u s e m a te S tu ­ d e n t p r e fe rr e d 3-1 house n ea r c a m p u s Y a rd g a rd e n . C A /C H A l D u P re e 4525!6> 471-3322 M A L E S outh 2 b e d ro o m 2 b a th a p a r t ­ m e n t S U 7 SO m o n th ly , A B P . J e rry , 4764611 b e fo re 5:30 p m R O O M M A T E N E E D E D O w n ro o m in 2 b e d ro o m house $87 50 m o n th p lu s h a lf b ills jo h " 475-8448 F E M A L E TO S H A R E th re e -b e d ro o m house, need o w n tra n s p o rta tio n J!2 5 a il b ills p a id 836-6936 a p a r t m e n t needs second fe m a le o c c u p a n t S e r io u s s t u d e n t N o rth w e s t 2 . m ile s C ity bus $75 4531)82 s u n n y ROOM M ATE - / 'A N T E D , f u r n is h e d a p a rtm e n t. T w o b e d ro o m . *wo o a th $92.50 m o P re fe r m a le , m id -tw e n tie s 447-6220 s h u ttle bus 4 RESUMES G O O D TW O B E D R O O M H o m e ! S tu d y, B ik e to c a m p u s HOO. R e n ta l B u re a u . F ee 451-7433 CLASSIFIED RESTAU RAN T U TILITY MEN Buckingham Square 4400 A V E TEXAN W a ite rs w a itre s s e s w a n te d . E x p e rie n c e n ot n e c e s s a ry T r a n s p o r ta tio n n e ce ssa ry. C a ll 892-19*9 a ft e r 3 p .m . All Bills Paid Walk to Campus U N IV E R S IT Y A R E A , on s h u ttle N ic e 5 ro o m h om e. G a ra g e . S tu d e n ts 1150 R e n ta l Bureau. F ee 451-7433 . L A K E L IV I N G 3 b e d ro o m c o tta g e lu s t *125 C a ll 451-7433 Fee, R e n ta l B u re a u . TO PLACE A Just N orth of 27th a t G uadalupe 2707 H e m p h ill P a rk E ft * Y fteP°r,*i Theses, L e tte r s A ll U n iv e r s it y a n d b u sin e s s w o rk L a s t M in u te S e rv ic e O pen 9-8 M o n -T h A SERVICE « ™ Sat Dobie M a ll 472-8936 I H F C ROC x F T T C O M P A N Y the c o m p le te s e c r e ta r ia l s e rv ic e T Y P IN G theses, m a n u s c rip ts , re p o rts , p a p ers, re s u m e s A U T O M A T IC T Y P IN G - le tte rs a n d m u lti-c o p ie d o r ig in a ls X E R O X C O P IE S - S3 OO fo r IOO co p ie s ( per o r ig in a ls ) P R IN T IN G - Offset a n d le tte rp re s s and c o m p le te lin e s of o ffic e p ro d u c ts 453-7987 5530 B u r n e t Rd P R O F E S S IO N A L T Y P IS T . IB M C o rre c ­ tin g S e le c tric l l Th esis, d is s e r ta tio n s S tu d e n t p a p e rs 836-6635. S T A R K T Y P IN G S p e c ia lty T e c h n ic a l E x p e r lanced theses d is s e rta tio n s , P R 's , m a n u s c r ip ts , etc. P r in t in g , b in d in g C h a rle n e S ta rk , 453-5218 Just North of 27th at Guadalupe 2707 Hem phill Park YES, we do type Freshman themes. Why not start out with good grades! 472-3210 and 472-7677 V IR G I N I A S C H N E ID E R D ive rsified S e rvice s G ra d u a te a nd u n d e rg ra d u a te ty p in g , p r in tin g , b in d in g . ISIS K o e n ig L a n e 459 7205 M A R K IV APTS. Share a la rg e ro o m fo r s64 50 m o. or ta ke a*- e n tir e ro o m to r $112 50 f u r ­ nishe d , a il b in s p a id . -v a id s e rv ic e once 3100 Speedway 475-0736 478-4096 S H U T T L E BUS C O R N E R B rin g y o u r o w n ro o m m a te o r we w ill m a tc h you w ith a c o m p a tib le one This is e c o n o m y 8. co n ve n ie n ce a t its N O W L E A S IN G V R S e O D O U R S T Y P IN G S E R V IC E R e p o rts, theses, d is s e rta tio n s a nd books ty p e d a c c u ra te ly , fa s t a n d re a s o n a b le P r in tin g and b in d in g on re q u e s t Close in 478-8’ i 3 london Just N orth of 27th at G uadalupe 2707 H e m p h ill P a rk NOW L E A S I N G PRETTY DUPLEX $155 I BR Furn. O N L Y 200 Y A R D S F R O M UT C A M P U S 2910 Red R iv e r 476-5631 a p a ra g o n p ro p e rty WE R E N T A U S TIN 2 b e d ro o m d u p le x fo r re n * in a q u ie N o rth e a s t A u s t in r e s id e n t ia l n e ig h b o rh o o d , E a c h d u p le x o ffe rs la rg e fe n ce d b a c k y a rd , c o v e re d p a r k in g extr a sto ra g e ro o m P lu s w a s h e r, d ry e r co n n e c tio n s K itc h e n a p p lia n c e s fu r ru stie d . $160 p lu s b ills C a ll 928-2296. /S q u a re Your tim e is va luable Our service is free I BR - $170 3 BR - $325 PARAGON PROPERTIES M O V E IN T O D A Y L A R G E P O O L • A L L B IL L S P A ID B est R a te on m e L ak e S h u ttle Bus F r ont D o or 2400 To w n L an e C ir c le 442-8340 472-4171 472-4175 w e ek d a ys w e e ke n d s SPRING ON TOWN LAKE Beau* h i a p a r tm e n t c o m p le x on T o w n La»e. E x te n s iv e la k e fro n ta g e Spacious e ffic ie n c ie s 1 b e d ro o m , 2 b e d ro om s, 3 b e d ro o m s D o c k s CA C h S w im m ing p o o l o v e r lo o k in g Town Lake D i s h w a s h e r - d is p o s a l L a u n d ry (a c u itie s . A ll b ills p a id S h u ttle bus. Ren t.n g b elo w m a r k e t. D isco u n ts on c e rta in a p a rtm e n ts TOWN LAKE APARTMENTS 1500 E NOW L E A S IN G I BDRM 2 BDRM $175 S220 A L L B IL L S P A I D D is h w a s h e rs - 2 L a r g e P oo ls S e c u rity M O V E IN T O D A Y 1901 W illow Creek 444-0010 NOW L E A S I N G 1 BR -$145 2 BR-$180 up up N O W L E A S IN G LONGVIE W APTS. AC Paid 2408 L o n g v ie w Tanglewood North I & 2 BR 476-7688 C H E Z JAC QU ES LA C A N A D A 1300-1302 West 24th 476-4088 1020 E. 45th 452-0060 S h u ttle B us C orner 472-1598 I B R , $160 Plus E I BR, $175 AB P W ALK W IL L O W CREEK R iv e rs id e D r 444-1458 444-3750 NOW L E A S IN G Spacious C o n tem p o rary L iv in g ! 2 Pools - Covered P arkin g TV. FOR RENT ON S H U T T L E 1 N ice 3 b e d ro o m hom e. D en A C /C H fe n c e d y a rd C a ll 451-7433, R e n ta l B u re a u . Fe e, NEED A GREAT PLACE TO LIVE? TRY THE BLACKSTONE APARTMENTS SHUTTLE B U S C O PN ER ASPEN WOOD C O N F ID E N T ! A L C A R E fo r p re g n a n t u n m a r r ie d m o th e r s . E d n a G la d n e y H o m e 2308 H e m p h ill, F o r t W o rth T o ll fre e n u m b e r 1-800-792-1104, PART TIM E $160 476-3467 THE TREES Free Parking L i - i f L E T T E R S N E E D E D . $2.00 p e r Class Can o r co m e by I D A L e c tu re N otes 90! W est 24th. 477-3641 a n d fe m a le C a ll 451-6382. 476-9171 7 a rn - IO p m M -F 9 a m . - 5 p m . Sat. STUDENTS I Bedroom c a m p u s o r s h u t t le New I f u ll k tc h e n & h ath S, n .:e iy P a r k in g m a id & la u n d ry m o. p lu s e le c tr ic ity M o v e in 453-3235. S H U T T L E - C IT Y BUS ROUTES C O N V E N IE N T TO A N Y LOCATION Don't tie up your cash in unused items around the house. Sell them in The Daily Texan! To place an ad, call 471-5244 476 0948 42 Dobie M a ll 1307 N o rw a lk L a n e S h u ttle Bus C o rn e r BR S245 One S159.50 Eft. $135 M in i-E ft Si 12.50 $135 - $152.50 453-4883 TIMBERS APTS. Q uiet ! o e d ro o m a p a rtm e n ts , C e n tr a l W est A u s tin Large o e d ro o m w ith b u iltin desk, sn ag c a r p e tin g , m d -v id u a 1 cent r a: AC d is h w a s h e r, la u n d ry t a c t ic es W a te r & TV c a b le pa d S h u ttle bus n e a r bv *145 p lu s e le c t 807 B la nco . 476-6!90 476-5940, 452-2462 345-4555 1624 Lavaca G R A D U A T E S T U D E N T S a u d it a class. S3 50 per h o u r. C a ll o r c o m e by ID A L e c ­ tu re N o te s 901 W e st 24th 477-3641 NOW L E A S I N G BR W a lk to b e d ro o m fu rn is h e d O nly s 125 now C a ll W a lk or S h u t'!? *0 U T Musical - For Sale I BR F U R N . $130 C H O IC E E F F IC IE N C Y APTS 104 E 32nd D u a l 1219 T U R N T A B L E des* c o ve r bass q u a lit y c a rtrid g e Top o f th e One * 125 452 3676 E ft. 6 B lk s . W e s t o ff D ra g 2408 Leon $115 - $135 One BR L u x u r y Stereo - For Sale S T E A D Y B A B Y S IT T E R w ith c a r I ) 45 3:30 p m 5 d a ys ween, 3 y e a r b oy, 44!• 1393 a fte r 6 p rn M O DELS M a le F a s h io n M a g a z in e $115 - $150 A L L BILLS P A ID 2 B E D R O O M TO W N H O U S E n ea r H a n ­ cock C e n te r $185 CA CH 453-4253 o r 476 8575 SO LE X M O PED M o t o r a s s is t e d b ic y c le Less tha n one ye ar o ld $175 451 2464 1803 Coronado H ills 3 PR E SCHOOL T E A C H E R needed S e n io r o r g ra d s tu d e n t c o n s id e re d . H o u rs 12 30 • 5:30 472 2370 478 94*8 Auto - For Sate 1870 C H R Y S L E R E l D orado G o d , 4 d o o r v e ry cle a n , AC, A M ra d io A ssu m e can w,>h a p p ro .e n c re d it o r p u rc h a s e O u trig h t W A6-5911 b efo re I or a fte r 3 451 4584 4400 Ave. 8 29th W e st of G u a d a lu p e 2907 W e st A ve 474 !7!2 N E A R C A M P U S A N D S H U T T L E S US I B d r m fu rn is h e d a p a rtm e n t SUO $>25. w a te r gas. and c a d e pa J 478 4118. 477 6048 No c h ild re n . N o sets R E B U I L T :600 V A E n g in e 6 m o n "*, 6, OOO m ile w a r r a n ty $275 in s ta lle d 8366635 THE ESTABLISHMENT $129 PLUS E. R E L IA B L E B A B Y S IT T E R w ith ca t a fte rn o o n s -w eek 1 c h ild , 452-98)8 L u x u r y A p a rtm e n ts C l e a n , w e ll- lig h te d c a ce n e a r C a m e ro n s h u ttle B ig y a rd ’ re cs pets w e lco m e $125 plus e le c t r ic it y 474-2582 VW S Q U AR E BAC K 1970, cic-e good c o n d itio n A u to m a te . 50,000 m ile s $1300 o r b est o ffe r 452-3676 N O W L E A S IN G w ith a n th e G oodies G I N N Y 'S ‘ C O P Y IN G ■SERVICE INC. C R E A T IV E D R A M A T IC S In s tru c to r , p a r t tim e P an A m R e c re a tio n C e n te r C al! 476 9193 L a ig e I o e d ro o m s & e ffic ie n c ie s , la rg e c lo s e ts f u lly c a rp e te d c a d e d is p o s a l, w a te r, gas s w im m in g pool fu r n is h e d W a lk in g d is ta n c e to UT no c h ild r e n o r p ets 6 '0 W est 30th • 477-8858 A P A R T M E N T NORTH 2 bedroom! I & 1 2 bath 4-piex u n f u r n . , c a r p e t , CA CH, p riv a te fenced patio, e x t r a i d s to ra g e 8617 F i r e s i d e , SI 5 5 m o n t h p lu s E or S190 m on th A B P F l e x i b l e o n lease duration. Add s i5 /m o n th turn. 836-2468 L A R G E I anc 2 b e d ro o m a p a r t m e n t Si20 S i45 Close to s h u ttle bus and UT 454-8853, ca d a ” er 5 p rn w e e kd a ys. ■ G 33B 30H 1 F O U N T A IN TERRACE APARTMENTS TYPING U N F. HOUSES SERVICES HELP W A N T E D S E C R E T A R Y 20 h o u rs p e r w e e k. *2,71 per hour A p p ly P a r iin 25 4 p m J a n u a r y 8-10 13-14 Si25 - Si40 E F F IC IE N C IE S C LO SE T O C A M P U S S H U T T L E BUS I B E D R O O M SI40 p lus E N e a r ca m p u s A S h u ttle C o n ve n ie n t *0 d o w n to w n N e w f u r n itu r e a nd pool 4Q7 W 38th ast-3727 472• 4162 B a r r y G -m n g w a te r Co B E D R O O M 2 B A T H $210 A B P P u ll K itche n , la u n d ry and pool N e x* to ca m pus Le F o n t, SCJ W es’ 28’ h 47? 648C 4724162 B a r r y G illin g w a te r Co F U R N . AP ARTS. ■ P E D A L -S H U T T L E E N F I E L D A R E A I 8. 2 b e d ro o m w ith e v e ry e x tra F u rn is h e d o r u n fu rn is h e d F ro m $ 143 50 p lu s e le c t r ic it y . 807 W est Lynn 4 7 7 -7 7 9 4 , 4 7 2 -4 1 6 2 B a rry G illin g w a te r Co R E S ID E N T S A T IS F A C T IO N is one good reason for living at APARTMENT H U N T IN G is a pain in the tin But Habitat Hunters can H e l p , w it h a F R E E Locator Service specializing in student complexes with access to shuttle. Come by or Call H a b ita t Hunters South Shore Dobie M ali, Suite 8a 2021 Guadalu pe 474-1532 Convient location - close to UT campus. Large one, two and three bedroom pats. with plenty of storage. F ro m $135 all bills paid. Landscaped courtyard, pool and playground. Brand new efficiency and one bedroom apts, overlooking the water - modern, vibrant, super­ view. F ro m $149.50 all bills paid. Come by and visit w ith a staff that is interested in your living ease and com fort. 2 BEDROOM F U R N IS H E D U N D E R S200 A L L BILLS P A ID Shag, c a b le , w a lk -in s , poo l, c o m p le te , j sh k___________ itc h e n clo se to sh o poppinpgin g A f'o w n L a ke *170 A B P u n fu rn is h e d 47 4 44 9 3 4 7 2 4162 B a r r y G illin g w a te r Co 2 BLOCK S TO C A M P U S F R O M S145 A L L B I L L S P A I D I A 2 bedroom e fficien cy 300 E. Riverside Dr. a paragon property Page 14 Thursday, January 9, 1975 THE DAILY TEXAN 444-3337 F u ll kitchen ca rp e te d , la rg e w a if in clo s e ts O r ie n ta l fu r n is h in g s P e a c e fu l c o u r ty a r d w ith pool O n ly steps ti.) sh o p p in g 405 E a s t l i s t 472-2147 472 4162 B a rry G illin g w a te r Company $ 1 3 4 50 I B E D R O O M . S ac P a u lo A p a r tm e n ts . S ha g p o o l, b a lc o n ie s , m a h o g a n y p a n e lle d , one b lo c k p a rk Tavern, s h u ffle , 15th S tree t 476-5072, 476-4999 Q U IE T I a n d 2 B e d ro o m a p a rtm e n ts on ■West 22nd ‘ or se da te g ra d u a te s tu d e n ts o r s ta ff *140 $220 plus e le c t r ic it y 6-9 p .m . o n ly 454-3124 H O U S E M A T E W A N T E D fo r u r f u * m s h e j ro o m , 3 b d rm house S h u ttle , c it y Dos SAO p lu s V* u tilit ie s C o m e bv 4504 Red R iv e r b e ’ ween 4-6 p .rn K la u s FEM ALE U p p e r d iv is io n o r g ra d u a te s tu d e n t H o use fu rn is h e d S67 50 p lu s Vb b ills . N o rth . 453-0726 a fte r 5 30 p rn. Somewhere there's someone waiting to buy your powermower... tape recorder... stereo... motorcycle... bicycle... automobile... furniture... television... golf clubs... etc... Tell them it's FOR SALE with a classified ad in T H E D A IL Y T E X A N call 471-5244 to place your classified ad! B O B B Y E D E L A F I E L D IB M S e le c tric , p ic a e lite . 25 y e a rs e x p e rie n c e , book*, d is s e r t a t io n s , th e s e s , re p o rts , m im e o g ra p h in g . 442 7184 D IS S E R T A T IO N S , theses, re p o rts and la w b r ie fs E x p e r ie n c e d ty p is t T a r r y to w n 2507 B r id le P a th . L o r ra in e B ra d y 472-4715 tyaAlJiA fin MBA T Y P IN G , P R IN T IN G , B IN D IN G THE C O M P LE T E PROFESSIONAL \ FU LLT IM E TYPING SER V IC E 472-3210 and 472-7677 FURN. HOUSES CO ZY G A R A G E A P T T ra v is H e ig h ts n e a r s h u ttle , fe n ce d y a rd . SUO. R e n ta l B u re a u F ee 451-7433 B A R T O N H E IG H T S R a m b lin g 3-2, g a r ­ age 2000 sq It , C A /C H O n ly $215 R e n ­ ta l B u re a u Fee, 451-7433, Z lL K E R P A R K R o o m y 2 bedroom hom e C o m p le te 1 H as lf a ll, just *165 R ental B ureau. 451-7433 T O W N L A K E !, L o v e ly 2 b e d ro o m , no lease. P o rc h , fe n ce d y a rd . *140 R e n ta l B u re a u Fee 451-7433 U T N O R T H . N ic e a n d ro o m y 2 b e d ro o m , fen ce d S tu d e n t*. *190 R e n ta l B u re a u Fee 451-7433 E N F IE L D , L A K E A U S T IN . 2 b e d ro o m b r ic k h o m e C A 'C H *1 50 . R e n ta l B u re a u Fee 451-7433 BY C A M P U S OR IN T H E C O U N T R Y The R e n ta l B u re a u h as homes for ah A u s tin s o lde st, la rg e s t a nd best R e n ta l S e rvice 4501 G u a d a lu p e , 451-7433, H U G E TW O S T O R Y , 3-2's, N orthw est A u s tin , C A /C H , c a r p e te d A ll a p p lia n c e s . $300 453 0596. 453-5778. RO O M S P R IV A T E R O O M - share b a th , kitchen H e m p h ill P a rk a re a . 202 W . 31st. 4751814 M D DORM Guadalupe FO R MEN 2602 Single or d o u b le . K itc h e n p riv ile g e s . B ills p a id 477*0045. P R IV A T E R O O M - S h a r e bath, kitchen Pets O .K . G arden space. Reasonable. F e m a le p re fe rre d 904 w e s t 22nd. No 3 N E A R U T. Rooms $65 all bills paid 908 w 29th. E ffic ie n c ie s $95 p lu s e le c t r ic it y . 2907 San G a b rie l, B a r h a m P ro p e rtie s 926-9365, H O U S E M A T E W A N T E D . F or unfur • nlshed room, 3 b d rm house Shuttle, city bus $60 plus v* u tilitie s . C om e by 4504 Red R iver betw een 4-6 p m , Klaus M IS C E L L A N E O U S P A R K IN G 2 b lo c k s fr o m c a m p u s Con t r a c t sem e ste r p a r k in g a v a ila b le 21 st a t N ueces S25 441-4767, H u r r y ! B E L A IR E L u x u r y m o b ile h o m e p a r k . 4 $’ a r r a t in g C o n c r e te p a tio s , p a v e d s tre e t, la u n d ry . L o ts o f b e a u tifu l tre e s S w im m in g pool N ic e la w n s 841 A ir p o r t B lv d 385 3600 L E A R N TO P L A Y G U IT A R B e g in n e r and a d va n ce d D re w T h o m a so n 478 2079 ROOM & BOARD B E L I SON D O R M F O R M E N . E x c e lle n t home-cooked m eals AC, m a id , s w im ­ m ing pool 2610 Rio G ran d e 476 4552 8 5 30 T R Y C O O P E R A T IV E L I V IN G at The A rk Co E d Co-Op o ffering a lte rn a tiv e lifestyle invo lvem ent, and friendship Apply at 2000 P e a rl. TW O W O M E N 'S Co-Op U n iv e rs ity H ous­ ing C ontracts to s u b le a se for spring sem ester. Contact O lga or Tom a t 471 4413 SIA Proposes Salary Increase Local Delegation United on Issues By N A N C Y C A LL T exas S ta ff W riter The five m em bers of the T rav is County delegation to the 64th Legislature agree there has never before been such a united group concerning issues which they will face during the legislative session. State Sen. Lloyd Doggett told m em bers of the Austin League of Women Voters Tuesday that each m em ber of the delegation is an individual, however, and would vote that way on all issues, elim inating a Travis County “ bloc " The panel of five took IO m inutes each to express their views on issues facing the upcoming legislative session and to present their own priorities for legislative action Doggett began the forum by stating that he plans to introduce between 25 and 30 bills during the session. He said he doesn t ex­ pect to pass many of them but feels it is im portant to raise the issues and present possible solutions, High on Doggett’s list of priorities are public employe com ­ pensation, long-range environm ental issues, historic preserva­ tion, utility regulation, revision of antitrust law s, child care, poison control and prison reform . Doggett said he hopes to see an em ergency pay raise tor public employees in e ffe ct by February or M arch. He said the m ost re alistic amount would probably be around IO percent. Doggett said he plans to take a new approach on environmen­ tal bills and to stress the citizen ’s right to enforce violations of present pollution statu tes of the state instead of a right-to-sue law. Confining the bills to law violators would be a m ore narrow but stronger approach, he said. The most important consum er issue is the establishm ent ot a utilities com m ission, Doggett said. "T h is sessio n will be the best chance e v er.” he said. Doggett also said he will introduce bills to rem ove Southwestern B ell Telephone Company s ex­ emption from city zoning ordinances and to lim it ra te s charged for late payments. , . iU Weddington said the main thing to consider during the session is money The leg islator’s priorities in spending the additiona $1.5 billion in the S tate Treasury will be the key to the success of the session, she said. She said high on her list of priorities are state employe benefits and salaries. M ental Health and M ental Retardation residential treatm en t cen ters, alternative serv ices for the T ex­ as Youth Council, com munity services for parolees and educational reform s. , , Weddington also will introduce a rape bill to keep victim s identities confidential and past experiences out of considera­ tion She also supports a bill to allow countywide ordinance powers on a statew ide b asis where the residents so vote If not on a statewide basis, Weddington said at least T ravis County could pioneer the field as a model. E a rle said manv of his interests in this session have to do with "housekeeping legislation ,’’ relating to state agen cies housed in Austin. A bill to c re a te a sta te personnel board to establish and im plement policies for m anagem ent of state agen cies is high on this list. , .. ... A bill calling for a new constitutional revision convention will be co-sponsored by E a rle , also The bill probably will allow for three elected delegates from each congressional d istrict; however, he said an altern ative which he favors allows for a s m a ll n u m b e r of a p p o in te d r e p r e s e n t a t i v e s and a preponderance of elected ones. He also supports a utilities regulatory com m ission, a state­ wide probation system , a right-to-privacy bill and a bill allow­ ing the attorney general to sue pollution violators without prior perm ission from the W ater Quality Board, as is presently re^ B arrientos said he also was concerned with utility regulation, state personnel ad m inistration and public em ploye com pensa­ tion. He added he was m ore interested in those em ployees m ak­ ing less than $600 per month receiving the in creases and said he preferred $100 acro ss the board to a proposed IO percent raise. B arrientos also said he was interested in the University System and will support a proposal to establish an interim study com m ittee on U niversity government “ before it gets worse. He said, “ We have to keep what good people we have and draw in other good people " . B arrientos strongly supports single-m em ber d istricting and revised school financing under which children in d istricts with little money won’t suffer m ore than in other a re a s of the state. Delco said she feels the "bottom lin e" or money issue will be an important one and that the key issue will be school finance. Reapportionm ent into single-m em ber d istrict was also high on her priority list. She said she has already set up a community office at 1717 E . 12th St. which will be open weekdays from I to 8 p m. as a m eans to begin serving a single d istrict. Delco said she strongly supports the Equal R ights Amend­ ment already on the books and will oppose the m ovem ent to res­ cind the present E R A legislation — Texan Staff Photo by Zach dyad Earthquake '75? A w in d o w pane in the G ra d u a te School of Business reflects Jester C enter, giving th e illusion th at the Balcones Fault had come unglued to torment the Forty Acres. Sensurround" anyone, or a n e w M a g ritte masterpiece? By SYLV IA TE A G U E Texan S taff W riter A proposal to provide a $10,000 starting salary for Texas teachers will be presented to the new legislature by the Texas State Teachers Association. T raxel Stevens, director of TSTA publications division, said Wednesday the organiza­ tion was going to try to "g e t it in the hopper early. The bill probably will be filed this month when a sponsor is found, he added. The proposal represents a $2.7 billion increase over what is currently spent over a twoyear period by state and local units, Stevens said. The proposed pay schedule would provide an av erage salary for teach ers of $13,865 in 1975-76. above the national average. T exas teachers rank 37th in the nation in average pay with a $6,600 startin g salary. The average Texas teach er’s salary last year was $8, 967. $1, 760 bel ow t he national average. The 10-step s a la ry proposal includes a yearly 6 percent increase. The m easure also attem pts to update the public school program and revise Texas school finance. The proposal provides for state-financed compensatory education for educationally disadvantaged children, funds for reduction of class sizes, more specialized education personnel such as librarians and co u n selo rs, increased Representatives Elected To Housing Council EUROPEAN STUDIES ANNOUNCES: Tw enty-three voting rep resentatives were elected a t six University-owned m arried student residences Wednesday night to serve on the Married Student Housing Council. "T h e Married Student Housing Council gives residents of University-owned m arried student housing a chance to improv e th eir living conditions. T e re s a W illiam s, one of four Brackenrid ge Apartments rep resentatives, said. “ R epresentatives from sem ester elections becom e voting m em bers at Housing Council biweekly m eetings at Gatew ay A p artm en ts," she said. “ Our last main issue, the M arried Student Housing pet policy, will be a continuing topic in the spring. Also, we plan to form a com m ittee for recycling garbage, and rules for allotting garden plots for the use of Colorado Apartm ents resid en ts," Sue LaCoste, one of seven Colorado representatives, said. B rackenrid ge, Colorado, Deep Eddy. Brackenridge T i aik , A p a rtm e n ts . M a rrie d S tu d e n t D u p lex es and G a te w a y A partm ents residents held election s at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday EU R O PEA N STUDIES 361 - "M E L A N C H O L Y A N D S O C IE T Y " state aid for tran sp ortation and maintenance and opera­ tion of schools. The TSTA proposal calls for the c o m m itm e n t o f lo c a l funds to help pay for the ex­ panded program, but le ss than Problem total local d is tr ic t taxes now raise P o o re r sch o o l d is tr ic ts would be guaranteed an equal school program with school aid because of a provision for equal tax effort. Pregnancy C ounseling Service S tu d en t H e a lth C enter 105 W . 2 6 th St, (4 th F lo o r-S o u th ) C o n fid e n tia l c o u n s e lin g w it h a ll a lte r n a tiv e s d iscuss­ e d a n d re fe rra ls m a d e to a p p ro p r ia te re s o u rc e s . C a ll 4 7 8 - 5 7 1 1 , Ext 2 6 , fo r a n a p p o in tm e n t. I n d iv id u a l a p p o in tm e n ts T u esd ay 1-5 p.m .. T h u rs d a y 1-5 p .m ., F rid a y 9 -n o o n . Two new and highly promising courses for Spring 1975 by Dr Wolf Lepenies, a visiting professor from the F rec I Diversity of Berlin M o n d a y s , 3 :0 0 - 6 :0 0 , C a lh o u n 3 2 3 EUROPEAN STUDIES 361 - "CU R R EN T EUROPEAN T H O U G H T " W e d n e s d a y s , 3 :0 0 - 6 : 0 0 , C a lh o u n 3 2 3 European Studies W est M a ll O ffice Bldg. 2 0 6 4 7 1 -4 6 2 6 D o n ’ t Make A M ove / Without Calling ADARTMENT Ping ers . SERVICE A Free Service 24 Hours a Day 472-4162 CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING ORDER BLANK IT h e Da i l y T e x a n S tu d e n t N e w s p a p e r a t The U n iv e r s ity o f Texas a t A u s tin I I I I I I I I I I * CUP AND MAIL TODAY! ------------- WRITE YOUR AD HERE----------------- I I A m o u n t In c lo s e d — Use this h a n d y chart to quickly a rrive a t cost. (1 5 w o rd m in im u m ) No. Words Cost per word N u m b e r of D a y s M a i l To: Times Times Times Times Times I 2 5 IO 20 .ll .20 .40 .70 1.40 1.65 3.00 6.00 10.50 21.00 11.20 22.40 16 1.76 3.2rney* w ill handle londiordm a n t, consumer protection, m ployes' right*, taxation and ssurance case*. Criminal cases nd dom estic problem*. rt rn We ll Help You Make It Through the Night. During 6iand Opening Weak at the Texas Tavern. C l 5 £ ISr ■rn • t i '* wwer* -eel I“Nr U o o tm * c* o: : i fir owl t' ■**» -est- rn Happy Hour and Hours. The Texas Tavern is open from 9:00 am - Midnight, Monday thru Friday. From 3:00 pm - 1:00 am on ^ Saturday “ rds and 3:00 pm ““ - Midnight on Sunday. Happy Hour is from 4: OO- 7: OOpm daily . . . C H T D ,, . . . U / iA I n u t n f A l i f n r if t O C m /A r t I f l U / P f C fi It’s when nwe lower our prices even lower so you can raise the roof. /\ - s..» Parking’s a Problem, But What Do You Want? quiche, r repen. a ta r ie tr o f soups, salads, and p a stries. Im p o r te d to ffe e s a n d teas. Beers and wines. A ll at reasonable prices. And through the entire day, for that matter. With entertainment like Kenneth Threadgill and the Velvet Cowpasture, Jim Cullum’s Happy Jazz Band from the Landing in San Antonio, JoAnn Holtzman and Ernie Mae Miller on the piano, the Los Tres Amigos Mariachi Band, Maria Larson and others. Plus, there’ll be informative, informal discussions with folks like Frank Erwin, Dr. John Warfield, Dr. Ronald M. Brown and Regent Ed Clark. And exhibitions and performances by the likes of O’Quinn Cairo, the magician and Bunny Martin, world champion Yo-Yoer. A diversity of programming with no cover charge . . . Indeed, a tough act to follow J Talk about a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity! In the years to come your children and grandchildren will marvel at your tales and stories about our opening week . . . imagine, the Texas Tavern, the first of its kind to be sanctioned for operation on a State University campus. Cl ^ vm The new Texas Tavern offers great entertainment, diverse programming, special sandwiches, plenty of brew (wine, mixed drinks, beer) and a warm, comfortable atmosphere. But there’s a hitch .. the parking’s lousy. You see, the Texas Tavern is located just east of Gregory Gym at Texas Union South — which means parking spaces are at a min­ imum. But then, “good times” are at a maximum, so everything sort of balances out. Lai the Good Times Roll. UT students, faculty, staff and guests are cordially invited to our Grand Opening Week beginni ng 9: OOpm this Sunday, January 12th.. seating capacity is limited (about 150 seats) and I.D. cards will be checked. Join us and go down in history. REGISTER NOW! SPRING ART CLASSES BEGIN: JAN. 13 poetry photography dance guitar drawing painting acting writing LAGUNA GLORIA ART MUSEUM 452-9447 SUN., JAN 12 9 p m - Midnight Jim Ciliium’* Happy Jazz Band from The Landing in San Antonio. MON., JAN. 13 Noon - I p.m . Folksinger Kenneth Donnell pm Inform al aI dis discussion with Dr. R.M. Brown, V P. for Student Affairs. 8p .m . - Midnight Jim Cullum’s Happy Jazz Band from The Landing in San Antonio. T U ES., JAN. 14 N oon -I p m Concert. JoAnn Holtzman mi the piano. 4 - 6 p.m. F olksinger/gu itarist Maria Larson. 8:30 - 11:30 p.m. Lo* Tres Amigos Mariachi Band. W ED., JAN. 15 Noon*- I p m. Inform al discussion with Mr. Frank Erwin. 4 - 5:30 p m , Inform alif discussion d isc__ with Dr. John Warfield, D irector of Ethnic Studies (A fricanand Afro-Am erican). 8:30 - l l p m. Music by Cappy McCarr and Steve Weiner. Also, a dem onstration by Bunny Martin, Yoyo T ^ r c X ^ T A V E R N ^ L iltin g of Events, January 1 2 4 9 Page 16 Thursday, January 9, 1975 T H E D A IL Y T E X A N TH U R ., JAN. 16 Noon - I p.m . C oncert, S in g e r/ G u ita rist Debbie Eckberg. 4 5 p.m. Country style tunes by Singer Rick Stein. 9 - l l p m. Perform ance by pro­ fessional m agician O’Quinn Cairo. ALL WEEK—Jukebox Music. F R I., JA N . 17 Noon - I p m. In fo rm a l discussion w ith R e g e n t Ed Clark. 4 - 6 p m. Concert, folk blues m u sic by Lucinda and Rich Layton. 8:30 p.m . - Midnight P rogressive Country M usic by Kenneth Threadgill and the V elvet Cowpasture. SAT., JAN. 18 3 - 4:30 p.m. Saturday Flick 'n Foam , “ Sherlock Holm es F a c e s D eath” . 9 p.m . - I a rn P rogressive Country M usic by Kenneth T hreadgill and the V elvet Cowpasture. SUN., JAN. 19 4 - 5:30 p m. R agtim e Piano Music by Nick Law ren ce' 8:30 p.m - Midnight P rogressive Jazz with 47 T im es It’s Own W eight, a popular Austin group. THE TEXAS TAVERN WPMPCT T h e T a v e r n ju k e b o x will feature records from the I950^s during the Opening Month,