T h e Da il y T e x a n S t u d e n t N e w s p a p e r a t The U n i v e r s i t y of Texas a t A u s t i n - , r , VT ‘ • • V I * ® S ‘, ' ' q f < 7 S * x ° a ' ° ' a Vol. 75, No. 222 T w e l v e Pages Austin, Texas; T h u r s d a y , June IO, 1976 m m m Top Demos endorse Carter Ford Reagan deadlocked for nomination By tin ted Press in tern a ’ onai Jim m y Carter all but clinched the D em o cra tic p resid en tia l nom ination Wednesday with the endorsem ent of top party leaders and Hubert Humphrey s pledge that he will m ake no effort to stop the form er Georgia governor B ut P r e s id e n t F ord and R o n a ld Reagan rem ained virtually deadlocked in an increasingly bitter fight for the Republican nomination which m ay not be decided before the GOP national con­ vention opens Ford. however, said the situation w as looking “ better and better' and that the convention would nom inate him because he was m ore “ elec ta b le’ than his con­ servative challenger Carter em erged from Tuesday s final three prim aries with an overw helm ing lead rn pledged delegates, and during the night won the endorsem ents of Alabama Gov. G eorge W allace and Chicago Mayor Richard D alev and the prom ise of sup­ port from Washington s Henry Jackson Later in the day. Humphrey, the last hope of the an ti-C arter fo rc es, an­ nounced he would not mount a cam paign to stop the 51-year-old Georgian but did not offer an endorsem ent “ I have stated that I would seek the nomination only in the event there was no clear front runner following the final three p rim a ries in C aliforn ia, New Jersey and Ohio,” Humphrey said in a prepared statem ent “ The prim aries are now over and Governor Carter has a com m anding lead He is virtually certain to be our party’s n om inee.” “ I, therefore, will not authorize any presidential political a ctivity on my behalf,’ Humphrey said, ending his shadow candidacy. The only m ajor holdouts appeared to be a segm ent of the party’s liberal wing, led by C alifornia’s Edmund G. Brown Jr., Idaho’s Frank Church and Arizona’s Morris Udall After Tuesday’s last three of a record- little- setting 32 election s. Carter, a known total form er governor and a stranger to national politics at the start of the prim aries, had 1,240 of the 1,505 d elegates needed for the nomination, ac­ cording to U P I’s count. Asked if the endorsem ents and pledges of support put him over 1,505. Carter told a news conference in Plains, Ga. “ Y es, m ore than that, much m ore than that That’s the way I f e e l.’’ D ressed in denim workclothes and standing on a loading dock at the tiny railroad station in his hometown, a hap­ py and g rin n in g C a rter sa id o n ly “ through som e catastrop he’’ could he be denied the nomination. In quick s u c c e s s io n , D a le y and W allace endorsed Carter, and Jackson prom ised him support. Daley, one of the last of the country's political bosses, prom ptly delivered his 88 hand-picked d e le g a te s to C arter. There was no estim ate how m any of tho W allace and Jackson d elegates would follow the lead of the fallen candidates Sen Adlai Stevenson III, who ran at the head of D aley's ticket, released his Illinois d e le g a te s, allow ing them to follow their political into the Carter cam p Only hours later, a defeat-scarred W allace endorsed ('arter and urged his 168 d elegates to vote for the form er Georgia governor Most are expected to do so. leader Jackson said he would support Carter but was not ready to release his 248 d elegates Jackson said he would m ake a recom m endation to the d elegates next week The endorsem ents, which followed a series of late night phone ca lls to op­ ponents and party leaders, w ere e x ­ pected to set off a stam pede am ong un- com m itteds and easily put Carter over the top Carter gets a haircut while awaiting returns. — U P I T s U p h o t o Court rules MLK Boulevard name change illegal By TOM DREW Texan Staff Writer J . , .. _.. The 3rd Court of Civil A ppeals ruled W ednesday the City Council acted illegally in changing the nam e of 19th Street to Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard by motion rather than by or­ dinance. “ We are of the opinion that the change of the street nam e was a leg isla tiv e action by the council and w as one required to be effected by ordinance instead of by m otion ,’ the appellate court said in its unanimous decision. The West 19th Street A ssociation, a group of 19th Street property ow ners headed by insurance agent Marion Findlay, w as created April 15,1975, five days after City Council passed a m otion to change the street nam e. D istrict court Ever since then there has been a tug a war betw een the two factions and “ hopefully the ruling will put an end to it all and they’ll return our 19th Street sig n s,’’ Findlay said In N ovem ber, 1975, a district court ruled in favor of the city in th0 case “ N ever before in the history of Austin has the City Council changed the nam e of a street without IOO per cent approval of the property ow n ers,’ Findlay said. Owner approval The last Austin street to be changed w as A lice Avenue to M edical Parkway in 1970. “This w as initiated by the property ow ners and approved by all the tenants as w e ll,” he continued. But with the 19th Street change, the council never sought property owner approval. “ The council informed us of their idea only a few days before the m otion w as p assed ,” he said. Court ruliug Mayor Pro Tem Jim m y Snell believed the ruling “ w as the worst court decision I have ever heard. “ I never thought the court would rule like that. Now if the street s name w as LBJ, there never would have been any questions ask ed ,” he com m ented. “The stature of R ev. Martin Luther King Jr. has never been a question,’’ Findlay said. “ The council could have changed it to Jim m y Carter. Gerald Ford, or Ronny Reagan Boulevard, and w e still would have protested. 80 street nam es “ We just don’t want the nam e of our street changed; when we do, w e ll com e to the co u n cil,” he said. The cou n cil’s stand is that approxim ately 80 Austin street nam es had been altered by past council m otions and not by or dinances, Snell explained “ If we changed the street illegally then the other 80 w ere done illegally and also should be changed back, he said D evelopers’ choice Findlay explained the council was referring to 80 subdivision streets named by its developers, conflicting with existing street names. “ The developers' choice for the street usually conflicted with an existing str e e t’s nam e and therefore it had to be changed. All that w as needed was approval by the property owner (the developer) and a council motion w as sufficient for the new street n a m e,” he said. Snell feels the property owners of East Martin Luther King Jr.Boulevard should have a voice in the m atter Black vote “ There are far m ore businesses, churches and professional offices on the east side of the street, than on the w est side, and they want the nam e Martin Luther King Jr to rem ain,” Snell said. Originally it w as the Austin Black Assem bly that proposed the new nam e to the council in 1975 “ All they wanted was East 19th changed, but Councilman Dr. (Bud) Dryden urged the Change to extend to West 19th Dryden felt it would be safe since it w as election tim e and no politician would oppose it due to the black v o te,” Snell said. Findlay feels the conflict is not an East West one “ The conflict has been with the City Council and the Austin Black A ssem bly, which lirst proposed the nam e ch an ge,” he said. Black assem bly One of the first petitions delivered to the West 19th Street Association was from the E a st 19th Street Baptist Church. “ The list contained over 200 nam es, m ost being black o n es,” he said He also mentioned that he did not know of any m em ber of the Austin Black A ssem bly who lived on 19th Street. The council plans to m eet in .in execu tive .session and decide what to do, Snell said “ W hatever it takes, I’m w illing to do it,” lie added Jan Kubicek, city attorney, said the only options w ere to “ either appeal to the State Supreme Court or bring in an or­ d inan ce.” If an ordinance is adopted to change the nam e to Martin Luther King .Ii Boulevard it will face alm ost certain appeal through a petition and a referendum LeM aistre attacks health school bill ed by the bill. If 25 per cent of entering students nationwide sign up for the program , then there are no requirem ents placed on in­ dividual schools. P IP By DAN MALONE Texan Staff Writer (E d itor’s note: This is the first of a three part series detailing the effects of proposed federal legislation on m edical education.) U .S . S e n a te B ill 3239 ‘‘u s e s th e leverage of federal spending to influence educational policy of the health profes­ sion schools and estab lish es a precedent dangerous to all education, said Dr. Charles LeM aistre, chancellor of the U niversity System If the bill is enacted, the secretary of the D epartm ent of Health, Education and W elfare (HEW ) w ill be em pow ered th e n u m b e r , to g o v e r n t y p e and location of all m ed ica l g eo grap h ic residencies in the states. The secretary also w ill be able to regulate faculty-student ratios in schools of pharm acy, m andate portions of den­ tistry school curriculum , m ake receipt of federal funds dependent on percen­ tages of students adm itted to the school f e d e r a l w h o h a v e a p p l i e d lic e n s in g s c h o la r s h ip s , g o v er n f o r th e procedures for physicians and im pose stiff civil penalties for violation of the bill s rules. Com plete control Carl Hardin, ex ecu tive director of the Texas Board of Dental E xam iners, said the bill is a m anifestation of a govern­ in com plete control m ent “ interested ... esp ecia lly those of all professions dealing with health. “ Although the bill has received sharp criticism of its m eans, few have ob­ jected to its goal: the m aintenance of quality health care. these requirem ents “ Philosophically, our goals are the sam e. But no one wants to be forced to m eet to receive funds. Pounds are already going in this d irection ,” LeM aistre said. Federal funds to r e c e iv e F or a m ed ica l sch ool federal funds under the bill, it m ust reserve 25 per cent of its 1978 freshm an cla ss for students who have applied for National Health Service Corps (NHSC) scholarships. The NHSC scholarships are establish­ LeMaistre In return, scholarship recipients serve in NHSC for a period of tim e equal to the tim e they spent in school or pay back tw ice the amount received tim es the proportion of unserved tim e. NHSC is a body created by the bill used at the HEW secreta ry ’s discretion to deliver health service in areas with m an­ power shortages. M em bers of the corps (every NHSC scholarship recipient) are assigned to work w herever and for w hom ever the Secretary designates. ‘Soft-conscriptlon’ L e M a i s t r e c a l l e d t h i s , “s o f t conscription ’ Any hospital or postgraduate institu­ tion which does not grant “ adm ission p r i v i l e g e s ” to NHSC s c h o la r s h ip recipients becom es ineligible for federal aid under the bill. “ This provision rem ains objectionable in that it by-passes m edical staff review of com petency as well as the usual ad­ m inistrative safeguards and m andates, under the threat of severe penalty — the f u n d s ,” L e M a is tr e s a id . lo s s o f th u rs d a y Fair Skies w ill be fair and tem peratures w arm Thursday and Friday w ith southeast winds from 6 t o 1 0 m.p.h. The high w ill be in the upper 80s; the low Thursday night in the upper 60s. The sun v rises at 5 :2 8 . sets at 7:32. Gas leak adds 'spark' to firemen's convention T im e was when you could get anything from a haircut to a home-cooked m eal in a good hotel The Sheraton Crest Inn has m anaged to go this one better. As luck would have it, the hotel was playing host to a convention of firem en Wednesday when construction workers ruptured a gas “ The* a ccid en t line couldn’t have happened at a better t im e ,” c o m m e n te d a s s is ta n t h o tel m anager Bob Dobbs But the firem en who evacuated the the only co o p era tiv e hotel w eren ’t guests Dobbs noted that approxim ately 500 others decided it was tim e to check out, it only for a little while, while gas com pany workers sealed off the leak. The hasty evacuation caused som e confusion am ong observers The whole operation took about IO m inutes. While the situation was handily com ­ prehended by everyone inside the hotel, things w ere not so w ell understood, out­ side “ I thought it was som e kind of fire drill since they w ere having all those firem en there and ev ery th in g ,” one m echanic working across the street said. UT's Ames claims names not same English professor authority on onomastics By MARK RICHARDSON A recent survey showed that Kowakczyk is the m ost com m on nam e in A m erica. D on’t panic, how ever; it s sim ply the Czechoslovakian translation of good o l’ Smith. Dr Karl A m es, professor of E nglish, said that the n am es Kovars, K ovacs, Haddad, Kuzentov, Ferrari, Gough, Herrera and Gooch are foreign translations of Sm ith, also. A m es, who is an a ctiv e m em ber of the A m erican N am es Society, is a leading authority on on om astics, the study of the origin of nam es. ‘Swollen head’ “ It is an area that has been neglected over the years, said Ames “ In fact, you don t even have to dig very deeply to find out som e extrem ely interesting things For exam ple, what d ifference would it have m ade in A m erica’s political history if the public had known that Could the Cam pbell Soup Com ­ pany sell quite as many cans of soup if everyone knew the name Cam pbell m eant crooked mouth?' the nam e Kennedy m eans “ sw ollen h ead 9’ Or would parents allow their children to see the Grand Teton Mountains, knowing they w ere named by early French explorers who thought they looked like large b rea sts9 Could the Campbell Soup Company sell quite as many cans of if everyone knew the nam e tom ato soup Campbell m eant “ crooked m outh9 Begins in England For the m ost part. A m es explained, nam es of people and places can be ea sily traced The naming process is influenced by such factors as appearance, an incident, a chance happening, a m istake, an invention, or Indian or Old World derivatives Surnam es cam e into use in England during Hie 12th Century, said Am es, with many com ing from either the first nam e of the father with a suffix added or from the name of a person’s profession N am es such as Smith. Carpenter, M iller and Taylor (Tailor) are obvious ex am ples, but others such as Shoemaker or W alker are not as easily identifiable Shoemaker, explained A m es, was not one who m ade shoes, but an English derivative of Shumacher, a Ger man title Walker literally com es from the profession of walking - one in the 12th Century who was paid to walk on stacks of cloth to soften them. Though m any of the nam es in America cam e about by fluke or oversight, explained A m es, we can thank A m erican im m igration officers for many of the co m ­ mon nam es we hear. Surname ‘A m erica’ Often in the rush to process the tired, poor and huddl­ ed m a sses yearning to be free, expediency, not ac­ curacy, was the modus operandi In one case, a Polish im m igrant named Zajik passed through the portals at Flllis Island in New York and the im m igration officer couldn t spell the man s name. An interpreter for Zajik told the official that the nam e, when translated, m eant “ rabbit.” The im m igration man quickly penciled in "O’H are” and asked for the next case. Som e nam es w eren’t so ea sy , said Am es, pointing out that m any im ­ m igration officers faced with a nam e like Pappasidim t- tracopupolous, just w eren ’t in a creative mood that day Therefore, for years there was a substantial listing of the surnam e “ A m erica” in the New York City phone book So what's in a nam e? Shakespeare (w hose own nam e com es from one who w ields a spear) said that “ a rose by any other nam e sm ells as sw e e t,” but A m es d is­ agreed with that assum ption ’ A nam e is the m ost im portant possession a person can h a v e,” said Arnes “ Most people aren’t very aware of where their own names com e from. This being the bicentennial year it should be a year of aw areness. Peo­ ple Will be traveling all over the country but won’t know a Hung about any of the hundreds of nam es they will com e across ” N am e changes A m es stated that a person can easily find the background and origin of his nam e by consulting a number of books prepared on the subject. The two prin­ cipal authorities are FI C. Smith and G eorge R. Stuart, whos** publications explore the origins and m eanings of "M ost people aren't very aware of their own names come where from " ______________ nam es However, A m es warned, the less com m on a nam e is, the m ore research m ay have to be done. If nam es are so im portant, then why do m illions line up yearly to have their nam es changed? A m es said that so m etim es nam es are changed either to call attention to them or aw ay from them . In the ca se of English actor Charles FIdward Pratt, it was simply to gain attention. Said A m es, “ Som eone named Pratt might have been easy to forget, but w ill A m erica ever forget Boris K arloff9” English Prof. Karl Ames T a ia n ito f f p h o to by D avid B rotiaitof Page 2 T h e D a i l y T e x a n Thursday, June IO, 1976 Parents establish cash reward for facts in missing coed case " ' N Lo-Vaca aid Utility com paies file requested to extend gas rates By M A R K R IC H A R D SO N Texan Staff Writer Nine more utilities joined with Central Power and Light Co of Corpus Christi Wednes­ day in filing motions before the Texas Railroad Commis­ sion to extend the current in­ te rim rate for L o -V a c a Gathering Co before a mid­ night deadline Monday The firms are asking the commission for a 30-day ex­ tension of the current rate, which Lo-Vaca says it must it w ill file for have or bankruptcy Those filing motions were Lo-Vaca, Coastal States Gas Producers. Medina Electric Co-Op, Texas Utilities Fuel, E agle P a ss N atural Gas, Southern Union Gas, En-Tex, City of San Antonio and City of B row n sville The City of Austin had not filed any motions bv Wednesday Hearings Thursday Austin City Utilities Direc­ tor R L Hancock and other city utility officials were in Houston Wednesday, meeting with Lo-Vaca and other gas producers to try to work out an arrangement for direct purchase of "sp o t" gas. a commodity unavailable to Lo- Vaca because of its fragile financial condition H earings scheduled for Thursday by the Railroad Commission do not include any action on the Lo-Vaca situation A spokesman for the commission, who asked not to be identified, said he was un­ sure when the commission would consider any of the motions filed before it on the Lo-Vaca situation. Lo-Vaca reiterated Wednes­ day that if an extension is not granted by the commission before Monday, the company would file for bankruptcy. Receivership Spokesman Don Newquist of Lo-Vaca said the company had hopes that meetings between utilities and other gas producers Wednesday could help ease any burdens caused customers if Lo-Vaca is put into receivership Should the City of Austin be forced to curtail usage of gas for generating electricity, it now has a little over 19 million gallons of fuel oil in storage, a city utilities department spokesman said. Austin is using well below its daily maximum allotment of n a t u r a l g a s , wi t h Thursday’s supply totaling 94 million cubic feet The max­ imum amount that the city can request is 130 million cubic feet Any demands beyond that amount must be made up with "spot gas purchases or fuel oil. Austin is expanding its elec- t r l c a I p o w e r - p r o d u c i n g capacity, but only one of the three new projects under way will be in use soon. An ad­ ditional gas-burning plant at Decker near Long Lake will be in use by next summer Coal powered units near Fayetteville are expected to be in use by 1979, leveling off fuel prices by 1980 Hill wants court to nix Florida port Attorney General John Hill has asked to intervene in a Florida case seeking to gain veto power over a proposed Texas deepwater port, he said Wednesday. Hill said he filed a request with the 5th Circuit Court of Appeals to come into the case because a favorable ruling "could greatly affect the State of Texas’ development of its mineral resources." Florida Gov. Reubin Askew was denied his request by U.S. Secretary of Transportation W illiam Coleman to have Florida designated an ‘‘adja­ cent coastal state" to the Gulf of Mexico in regard to two groups proposing to build deepwater ports. Florida filed suit for a court review of the case The two groups, Seadock, Inc . of Texas and Loop, Inc,. of Louisiana, are seeking l i c e n s e s to c o n s t r u c t deepwater ports in the Gulf of M e x i c o . T e x a s h a s no deepwater port. If Florida gains the status it seeks. Hill said, the state’s powers would include " a potential veto power over the applications (of Seadock) by the governor of F lo rid a ." ! / Dobra Stew art fr HI now involved Margaret Stewart said her sister talked to the family so often, "it was Just like she lived next door " The local KHI has been notified along with the Tex­ as Hangers and the Iiepart- ment of Public Safety, Jor­ dan said "T his is normal procedure," he said By HICK TH UR M O N D Texan SUH Writer Acknowledging that hi* office ha* "h it a blank wall” in the Debra Kaye Stewart disappearance cane, Dint Atty Bob Smith Wednesday announced a $1,000 ra»h reward for in formation leading to the woman * recovery at a pre** conference Wednes­ day Stewart, 19, wa* last seen leaving work Friday, May 21 Parent* offering reward The re ward will be paid based on the informant a role a* evaluated by a the re p re se n ta tive of Austin Polic e Department, the district attorney's of flee and the Stewart farm »y M r and M rs Willie A Stewart. I>ebra's parents, are offering the reward Any lead wanted ‘ All com m unication* re g a rd in g th is m atter should be made to the Austin Police Department or the district attorney * office," Smith said “The identity of persons fur nishing the information will be kept in the strictest confidence" "W e are hoping this will spur someone who knows something about this case to crime forward," Smith said His office is "looking for any information, good or bad, that will help loc ate Ih»bra Kaye Stewart Stewart'* 1975 Plymouth was found abandoned May 23. appro*innately a mile from her 2700 Manor Road apartment The doors were loc ked, and the key* were inside Police first noticed the car shortly after IO p m the day Debra dis­ appeared Doc tor's appointment Wearing blue patchwork jeans, a blue top and a blue bandana, Debra told her employer she- was feeling ill and had made a 3 p rn doctor s appointment Sui* sequent police investlga Hon failed to confirm an actual appointment. Austin Police Lt C K Jordan said " I d like someone to come up with a doctor s ap­ I m hoping pointment some doctor has been busy and hasn t noticed her name in th** paper," Jor dan said (lose family ties "I'v e known of missing persons who have been missing for years because they’ve wanted it that way," Jordan said The .Stewart case is unusual, he said. because liebra has been very close to her family "W e were in constant contact with liebra, we talked at least three time* a week, Stewart said " If we didn t talk to her, Margaret or Willie did " Margaret and Willie are Debra's sister and brother "She was as happy as she could be." Stewart said, referring to May 3, the last day the Stewarts had seen their daughter Shuttle drivers' union denies strike rumors By D A V E LONG Humors of a strike by the members of Amalgamated Transit Union Local 1549 (shuttle bu* drivers' union I have been denied by the union. Transportation Enterprises, Inc , and the University ''Nobody wants a strike," Joe Richmond, treasurer of the union said " If we have our support organized and out In the open, we probably won t even need to (strike)," he added "W e have no breakdown (of corrtmunica (ion) around here," Ross Raymond, Austin manager of TEI, said (hit of control Raymond added that he has been in con* tan! contact with Huger Moore, president of the union, and there Is no reason this com municatlon should t ease " I hate to even see the whole thing hit the papers, It seems to always get out of con trol," Raymond said “ The first I heard of the word 'strike' was the Texan article on Friday, June 4," Jim Wilson, in charge of the shuttle system, said The University has a contract with T E I and is expected to honor that contract, Wilson said " T E I will have to stay within the til 75 per bu* hour bounds of the contract recently ratified by the Board of Regent* How it spends that amount is their business, not the University s," Wilson said Not signed Raymond said that tile contract between the University and T E I has not been signed and thut only a "so rt of gentleman’s agreement" has been reached "In legal terms, a contract exists even though it may not have been signed," Wilson said Each fall T E I hires 30 to 40 new drivers, "strike or no strike," Raymond said He add­ ed that he expect* to receive more than IOO application* by the end of the summer In the unlikely event of a strike, the shuttle buses will be back on the routes quickly because so many people will be seeking the job, he predicted Increased fee T E I and the union have not discussed pay but have talked about safety standards, work tng environment* and fringe benefits. R ay­ mond said "O f course, any increase in our operating costs will necessarily result in an increase in the student services fee," Raymond said, referring to an increase in drivers’ pay This increase reflects the 111 75 per bus hour set forth in the new University contract That portion of the student services fee will go from $8 lo $12 per ae melter for a fulltime student, he added OLYMPUS M a k e Y o u r S u m m e r M o re So wi t h H o m e W EEKEND SPECIALS (Thursdoy-Friday-Saturday 9:30-5:30) M ig h ty C o o l Summer Dresses H ip -R idin g S n u g Blue Jeans W hile They to st I A n d d o n 't forget to sh o p o u r T e e -Sh irts ( H e g i n n i n g at o n ly 4.99) WWls 2322 Guadalupe This is the original rope ham m ock that’s been hand-w oven at Pawley’s Island for generations. Made of high grade cotton twill cordage, it comes with oak stretchers and all the tackle necessary for hanging. In three sizes: Small (holds a six footer comfortably, 4 8 "x 80 body size), $50. Medium (allows one person to lie length­ wise or crosswise, 54"x82"body size), $55. Large (holds two per­ sons side by side, 60"x 84" body size), $60. storehouse Highland Mall. tel. 459-3161 JUNE SALE I BIG GROUP VALUES TO 36.00 *120.95 Pocket Camera! Model 402 * 23.99 Modo! 600 * 39.95 Limited Q uantities 2nd Floor Ask about our easy time payment plan. All over town D O E S IT FOR S H O E S A Syria orders a Cease-fire B E IR U T . Lebanon (U P I) — Stubbon leftist and P alestin ian defenders hurled back Syrian tank a tta ck s on three fronts Wednesday Syria ordered its invasion fo rce to c e a se fire and welcom ed the help of o th e r A rab to stop Lebanon's civil war. troop s r a g ta g Amid a whirlpool of activ ity in various c a p i t a l s , l e f t is t - P a l e s t i n i a n defenders held their lines against Syrian arm ored might and vowed to oppose the Syrian advance until “ not a man has been left alive to fig h t.” Iraq ordered its arm y to the Syrian border in an attem p t to c re a te a second front to d ivert Syrian invaders from Lebanon and called up Iraqui college students previously exem p t from the d raft to report to the arm ed fo rces in 48 hours Soviets stre ss in terest the S y ria n The Soviet Union also called for a ce a se -fire and for the firs t tim e publicly cond em ned invasion and bluntly told the United S ta te s and F ra n c e that R ussia had clo ser in terests in the Middle E a s t than eith er W ashington or P aris. A Syrian spokesm an said orders had been given to its troops to stop their ad­ vance and hold their fire but accu sed P alestin ian gu errillas of to observe a c e a se -fire and of continuing to attack pro-Syrian units. refusing Syrian P resid en t Hafez Assad m et a delegation from the Arab League, which voted in C airo a t dawn W ednesday to send an A rab fo rce of 4,500 troops from five nations to rep lace the Syrian Army tro o p s A fte r w a r d , a g o v e r n m e n t spokesm an said Syria w elcom ed “ any Arab aid which will a ssist us to re sto re s e c u r ity th e P ale stin e revolu tion.” in L eb a n o n and s a v e The Syrian spokesm an also said con­ tingents of Libyan and A lgerian troops would arriv e shortly in D am ascu s to join Syrian Arm y units now in Lebanon, D iplom ats said S y ria ’s a cce p ta n ce of L i­ byan and A lgerian troops could be an e f­ fort to sid etrack the Arab L eague plan of a five-nation Arab force. Iraq u is fa ce ‘national duty* Iraq , whose ruling B a ’ath party has long been at odds with S y ria ’s Ba a th party, ordered its arm y “ toward the S y ria n fro n t in o rd e r to ta k e th e ir positions in the Arab aren a and perform their national duty, the Middle E a s t News Agency reported from Baghdad. Th e K rem lin statem en t, carrie d by the Soviet news agency TA SS, said “ all sides involved in the L eb an ese events should im m ed iately hold their f i r e ." The Soviet state m e n t said F r a n c e ’s recen t o ffe r to send troops and the p resen ce of U .S. w arships off Lebanon's co a st m eant the civil w ar “ is ceasin g to be an internal Lebanese m a tte r ” “ The Middle E a s t is m uch clo ser to the Soviet Union than to those who issue such th reats, and the Soviet Union is not less in terested than they a re in how the situation the K rem lin statem en t said. in Lebanon d ev elop s,” T h e t h r e a t s , c o u n t e r t h r e a t s and m aneuverings ca m e during another day of heavy shelling a cro ss front lines near B eiru t, Sidon and Tripoli but in which the Syrian invasion fo rce m ade no further l e f t i s t - m o v e P alestim an d efenses which have held un­ der two waves of tank attack s. B eiru t a living h ell’ th r o u g h s m a s h to In B eiru t, a b arrag e of a rtille ry fire betw een C hristian righ tists and M oslem le ftists and betw een rival P alestin ian groups turned the ca p ital into “ a living h e ll” of sh ellfire, m aking every stre et and open space a potential death trap T h ree shells ripped a nu rses’ dor­ m ito ry at the A m erica n U n iv ersity hospital killing the building’s porter and slightly injuring one nurse U S Am­ b a ssa d o r F r a n c is M eloy v isited the scen e and said he w as “ a g h a st” at the the h o sp ita l, w hich has d am ag e t r e a t e d t h o u s a n d s o f w o u n d e d throughout the 14-month civil war. to U P I co rresp o n d en t M ich ael R o ss toured B ham doun. 12 m ile s e a s t of B eiru t w here Syrian tanks and troops w ere stopped again by leftist defenders, m any of them teen -agers. R oss reported that the Syrians w ere still betw een the town of Sofar and Bhamdoun, trapped in the rugged peaks of Mt Lebanon and w ere digging in defensive positions, ap­ parently for a long stay. the town R oss said Syrian tanks continued to shell from dug-in positions sev eral hundred yard s e a st of Bhamdoun but w ere m aking no new attem p t to ad­ vance through it, which they m ust do to en ter B eiru t from the e a st R oss said leftist-P a lestin ia n fo rces defending the town w ere laying m ines along the highway — the only road to B eiru t. “ The le ftis ts ’ m o rale is high,” R oss reported. “ They a re walking around like heroes — each one thinking he has beaten the Syrian Arm y single-handed ” One leftist lead er said if the Syrians ever passed through the town it would be “ only becau se not a m an here has been left aliv e to fig h t.” In Sidon, the ancient B ib lical port 30 miles south of Beirut where ragtag l e f ­ tis t d efen d e rs firin g fro m ro o fto p s, balcon ies and alleyw ays repulsed two Syrian tank a tta c k s, the two sides traded daylong a rtille ry fire e a st of the city. But again, the Syrians m ade no attem p t to mount another onslaught. Tanks re a ch Tripoli M oslem le ftis t com m and er Lt. Ahmed K h a tib , grin n in g through his heavy beard, rode through the city in a ca p ­ tured Syrian-m ade tank — one of the nine the leftists captured. In Tripoli, the third front 52 m iles north of the cap ita l, Syrian tanks rolled into the ou tskirts of the city but did not en ter the port itself. W estern d iplom atic sou rces said pro- Syrian fo rces controlled the c e n te r of town and all was quiet. But le ftist reports said the Syrian s w ere pounding Tripoli with ro ck ets and m o rtars and a b it t e r h o u s e -to -h o u s e b a t t le ra g e d betw een P a le stin ia n -le ftist g u errillas and pro-Syrian gunmen. With the c ity ’s c o m m u n ica tio n s c u t, n e ith e r re p o rt could be confirm ed. news capsules U S. and P an am a announce treaty progress SANTIAGO, Chile (U P I) — The United States and P an am a announced Wednesday they have m ade “ significant p rogress” in negotiations for a new P an am a Canal treaty. They promised to continue their efforts to reach a settlem ent “ as prom ptly as possible” but said “ differences rem ain ” on im portant issues. The joint statem en t was submitted to the Sixth General Assembly of the Organization of A m erican S tates, where S ecretary of State Henry K issinger is m eeting with his Latin A m erican counterparts. Tanks dig in By United Prest International Red Cross workers carry away bodies of Syrian armored troops killed when their column of tanks and armored vehicles was ambushed by leftists in the center of Sidon. A shattered tank is in the background. — U P I T a l c p h o f o Briscoe rules out session Blames Legislature for utility rate inaction Gov Dolph B risco e said Wednesday leg islato rs have failed to produce any recom m end ations for new laws that could substan­ tially reduce utility bills if he called a sp ecial leg islativ e se s­ sion “ I do not know of any sound legislation that could be enactt*d in a special session that would substantially reduce utility b ills ,” B risco e said B risco e indicated he still has an open mind on calling a special session but told rep o rters at a news co n feren ce , “ I think you can go ahead and m ake your vacation plans ” The governor said he doubts even the financial failu re of Lo- V aca G athering Co., the natural gas supplier for Austin, San An­ tonio, Corpus Christi and m ost of C entral and South T exas, would n e c e ssita te a m eeting of the L egislatu re befo re Jan u ary . “ The R ailroad C om m ission has authority to a llo c a te supplies of n a tu ra l g as fro m o th e r s o u rc e s w h a te v e r happens R eg ard less of what happens I don t think we ll be faced with the problem of gas s h o rta g e s .” In other com m en ts, the governor said: • He is not recom m ending any salary in c re a se yet for public school teach ers and sta te em ployes but thinks any pay ra ises should be the sam e for both B risco e said his s ta ff is preparing figures on a 6 8 per cen t cost of living raise for study purposes only • He will propose a constitu tional am endm ent to set aside and freeze $1 billion of the $2 5 billion surplus the state exp ects to have and invest the money for future use • He will recom m end in creasing the num ber of parole o f­ fic e rs to allow c lo s e r supervision of ex-convicts and require supervision of all crim in a ls released from prison B risc o e said his sta ff c e n te r s ” recen tly established proposals to recom m end to the 1977 L eg islatu re is studying s o c a lle d “ restitution in G eorgia and work re le ase “ We a re faced with the fa c t that the D ep artm ent of C o rre c­ tions is now fu ll,” he said “ We a re faced with the reality that unless som e fa cility such as a restitution ce n te r or work re le ase c e n te r could su b stantially reduce the num bers of prison in­ m a te s, we a re faced with the n ecessity of having to provide som e additional fa c ility for the D epartm ent of C o rrection s ” Veteran protesters end 'statue' siege federal cou rt for a rra ig n ­ NEW Y O R K ( U F I ) - F ifte e n V ietnam veterans who occupied the S tatu e of Liberty for about 18 hours to p ro test cu t­ in G I b en efits w ere arre ste d backs W ednesday and brought back the m ainland. to The p ro te sters, all of them w earing life ja c k e ts and som e in handcuffs, w ere brought to a fe rry pier shortly a fte r I p.m. and put into a patrol wagon by N ation al P a rk P o lic e o f f ic e r s , who e a rlie r in the day w ere sent to L ib erty Island in a show of fo rce to end the protest. T h e c h a n t i n g d em on strato rs, m em b ers of the V ietnam V eteran s A gainst the W ar, w ere taken to s i n g i n g a n d M anhattan m ent, police said Jo e Fin e, a VVAW spokesm an, said that an ag re em en t had been e a rlie r worked out allowing the veteran s to sur­ render without being a rre s te d ,but that a g reem en t fell through that Another v e ts ’ spokesm an com plained fed eral au th orities had b itterly negotiated in bad faith , agreeing to c le a r the island without a rre s t, while in fa c t planning to a rre s t the p ro testers. Hundreds of sig h tseers, som e of whom had w aited all m orning, lined up at tick et windows to get on the n ext ferry to L ib erty Island at 2 p m ., the first since the protest began at 6 p m Tuesday. they never received anything for their investment. Y arb rou gh ’s attorn ey, Michael M aness, told the jury in D istrict Court that Cooper never asked for his money back. Judge thinking o f w rite-in candidacy DALLAS (U P I) — State D istrict Judge Sam Houston Wednesday said he would run as a write-in candidate for ju stice of the Texas Supreme Court against Don Yarbrough if he was certain he could defeat the South Texas attorney in the November general election. “ I wouldn’t be here if I was not vitally interested, and I would like to be a Supreme Court ju s tic e ,” Houston, 40, of Lewisville, said at a news con­ ference. House debates revenue sharing WASHINGTON (U P I) — A many-sided argum ent is developing in the House over a bill to continue federal revenue sharing to 38,000 state, coun­ ty and local governm ents. The House began debate Wednesday on the bill, which would extend revenue sharing through Sept. 30, 1980, a t a co st of $25 billion, or $6.65 billion a year. The program expires at the end of this y ear unless Congress extends it. Local governm ents are lobbying hard for extension. So is President Ford, who wanted a 53/4-year extension instead of the 3Y4-years contained in the bill. Court refuses to lift Longet press ban D EN V ER ( U P I ) — The Colorado Suprem e Court Wednesday refused to lift a ban barring the press and public from a prelim inary hearing for actress-sin g er Claudine Longet in the love nest slaying of form er pro ski sta r Vladimir “ Spider” Sabich. The hearing for the French-born en tertain er, charged with negligent m anslaughter, was set for Thursday in the Colorado ski reso rt of Aspen. Lack o f bidding cause prices to dip •ow lou t w a u l 30 IriMtrial* ffOO.OO I IIJI CHIK It Thursday, June IO, 1976 T he Daily T exan P a g e 3 Nuclear proposal defeated LOS ANGELES (U P I) - Proposition in California by a 2-1 15 m et d efeat m argin, but its supporters said W ednes­ day their attem pt to set s tric t safety guidelines for the n u clear industry was not wasted They claim ed Proposition 15 forced state law m akers into quickly approving a package of three n u clear safeguard bills, described as a m oderate a lte r­ th e c o n t r o v e r s ia l b a llo t n a tiv e m easure to P e o p l e 's L o b b y D ir e c t o r J o y c e Koupal, whose group helped sponsor the the s a fe ty in itia tiv e , said m any of initiative problem s addressed by w ere solved by the bills the Brown refused stand “ No longer will the ato m ic industry be able to brush safe ty problem s under the ru g ." she said of the bills signed last week by Gov Edmund G. Brown J r . for Brown, while cam paigning the Democratic nom ination for president, refused to take a stand on Proposition 15. fo rm er Gov Edmund G. His fath er, Brown, was a lead er of those opposing the m easure The b ills signed by the gov ernor prohibit construction of new nuclear power plants until w aste-disposal and reprocessing m ethods a re approved by the legislatu re A one-year m oratorium on new plants goes into e ffe c t while the state s Energy Commission studies p lac­ ing nu clear re a c to rs deep in the earth . Nader d ecries outcom e N uclear industries and u tilities, both in and out of C aliforn ia, poured m ore than $2 million into the cam paign again st the initiative, fearin g passage would trig g er action elsew h ere Colorado and Oregon have n u clear safeguard m easu res on the ballot for N ovem ber, and 20 other states a re d rafting s im ila r proposals. “ The m u ltim illion dollar cam paign of the u tilities, oil and nu clear com panies to spread grossly distorting and in ac­ cu rate inform ation on Proposition 15 prevailed this tim e ,” said consu m er a c ­ tivist Ralph Nuder Police arrest protesting Vietnam veterans._____ — UPI T*UpH®»o Tunney outdistances Hayden in California ( U P I ) - Sen. LOS A N G E L E S John Tunney overw helm ed onetim e antiw ar rad ical Tom Hayden, who donned a necktie to cam paign and borrowed heavi­ ly from his w ife, Ja n e Fonda, in C alifo r­ n ia ’s D em o cra tic sen atorial prim ary The Republican nom ination was ca p ­ tured by S I. H ayakaw a, retired San F ra n c isc o S ta te U niversity president who ripped the w ires out of a rio te rs ’ s o u n d t r u c k c a m p u s dem onstrations of the 1960s —the sam e lead in g p ro te sts tim e Hayden w as against the V ietnam war q u e l l t o Hayakaw a. 69. m aking his first bid for public o ffice a fte r converting the Republican party two y ears ago, upset fo rm er top Nixon ad m inistration official R o b e rt F in c h and e ig h t-te rm R ep Alphonzo B ell, scion of a m illionaire oil fam ily to ‘ P ro g re s o v e voice’ final In retu rn s Wednesday, Tunney trounced Hayden by a 59-41 per cent m argin to win renom ination Hayakawa drew 40 per cen t of the vote, Finch 27 per cen t and B ell 24 per cen t Tunney, 42, H arvard College rom m ate of Sen Edw ard Kennedy and son of box- mg cham pion G ene Tunney, acknow ledg­ ed he had “ underestim ated Hayden’s ap p eal” and urged his opponent’s left­ wing supporters to unite behind his ca m ­ p a i g n t o “ k e e p a p r o g r e s s i v e , D em o cratic voice in the U .S. S e n a te .” ‘Jo k e ’ candidate Hayakaw a, grasping the b eret-like T am -o’-shanter he favors, told rep orters he wished Tunney had lost b ecau se he had encountered “ people like Hayden before, and I ve clobbered th e m .” Hayden, 36, a C hicago Seven defendant and a founder of the Students for a D em o cratic Society, called it an “ em pty v i c t o r y ’ ’ fo r T u n n ey and d e c la r e d him self sen ator for the m ore than one million C aliforn ian s who voted for him. He announced he “ will be av ailab le to run again when the opportunity presen ts its e lf." When Hayden entered the ra c e , he was considered a “ jo k e " candidate and so described h im self. B ut with huge loans inclu ding $50,000 fro m M s. F o n d a, borrowed again st future m ovie con­ tra c ts, he m ounted a surprisingly strong cam paign and gave Tunney the political sc a re of his life. Hays victorious in Ohio B E L L A IR E , Ohio ( U P I ) - The sex scandal involving R ep Wayne Hays cut in O hio’s into his usual power base D e m o c r a t i c p r i m a r y and s h a r p l y narrowed his victory m argin over his perennial prim ary opponent Although Hays won renom ination for a 15th term in Ohio’s 18th D istrict T u es­ day, the recen t revelation that he had an a ffa ir with E lizabeth R ay sapped his usual strength a t the ballot box In 1974, Hays sm ashed perennial loser Nick K arnick 42,769 to 10,878 With 671 of 793 p recin cts reporting in the la te st con­ test, Hays led K arn ick by 42,783 to 25,051. H ays a lso p re sid e n tia l which failed te lt the e ffe c ts on his fa v o rite son ca n d id a cy , S lates of d eleg ates pledged to Hays lost in six con gression al d istric ts, in­ cluding H ays’ hom e 18th, w here he ca m e in a distant second to Jim m y C arter. K arn ick, 56, a b a iliff from Steuben­ v i l l e , did not p ress the sex scand al in his low-key cam paign. The sm all victory m argin showed it was an issue, however, becau se it was the only elem en t that s$t the 1976 H ays-K arnick duel ap art from past con tests. The clo sen ess of the ra c e also in­ dicated that Steubenville M ayor W illiam C rabbe, an independent, m ay have a shot at d efeating Hays in the N ovem ber e le c ­ tion — an all-but-im possible proposition before the R ay scand al. Hays was un available for immediate com m ent on the election , but e a rlie r he had said, “ Only tim e will tell if M iss Ray has been su ccessfu l in destroying my c a r e e r .” The dim inishing popularity of Hays, the dean of O hio's congressional delega­ tion. ca m e as a surprise becau se almost i n t e r v i e w s wi t h area a ll r a n d o m led to resid ents before speculation the 65-year-old master politi­ cian would storm to a smashing victory. the election I I Sybil Thorndike D a m e Thorndike dies LONDON (U P I) — Dame Sybil Thorndike, grand dam e of the English th eatre for whom George Bernard Shaw wrote the play. “ Saint Jo a n ,” died Wednesday at the age of 93. She suffered a h eart attack four days ago but died peacefully at her Chelsea ap artm en t, said her son, John Casson. J u ry considers Yarbrough suit HOUSTON ( U P I ) — A jury Wednesday began considering a lawsuit a c ­ cusing T exas Supreme Court nominee Donald B. Yarbrough of defrauding two investors of $117,500 in a bank purchase deal. The two plaintiffs in the case. R ex L. Cooper and Douglas Ford, claim NEW YO RK (U P I) - Late sell­ ing erased many of the earlier gains Wednesday and left prices lower in the fourth slowest trading session of the y ear on the New York Stock Exchange. Observers said the m ark et was hurt by a lack of bidding. Most in­ stitutions m ade heavy investm ents early in the y ear and have held onto them. Rising interest rates have made money m ore difficult to ob­ tain for further ventures With this in the background, the industrial a v e ra g e , Dow Jo n e s ahead around 3 points at one tim e, lost 1.88 points to 958.09. P a g e 4 T h e D a i l y T e x a n Th ur sd ay , June IO, 1976 T h e f e Editorials Honor-bound street Renam ing 19th Street after Dr Martin Luther King Jr seem ed a good idea when first proposed in April, 1975 H ie murdered civil rights leader s reputation was rising gradually from the murky depths to which the FBI had dragged it Mark pride had e s ­ caped its subversive taint So the City Council, acting under former Mayor Roy Butler, passed the resolution to honor King s approachig birthday by renaming the street But one group of citizens deplored the decision and collected the 17,000 day. signatures necessary to force a referendum The council wrapped in a m antle of altruism , blundered when it tried to sidestep the issue and reject Hie petition on technical grounds 'That ex planation Just doesn't wash an appeals court unanimously held Wednes day when it ordered the referendum The ‘new, progressive” council’s behavior in this case scarcely differed from that of the "old, reactionary” council when it voided a sim ilar petition by the Drag vendors in 1973 The* Texan condemned that action, claim ing the intent of the petition was clear, even if its form was improper The same reasoning applies to the King Boulevard referendum, despite the supposed rac ism underlying opposition to the name change Whenever the council denies citizens the right to petition their government, it under­ m ines die critical elem ent in participatory democracy We com mend the m otives which inspired the council's initiation of the name change That action contrasts sharply with previous governm ental attem pts to subvert Dr King’s work and even drive him to suicide. But the* council can only lead; it should not drag everyone unwillingly In the referendum , the citizens of Austin can reaffirm the honor ac­ behind corded King Observer in exile Molly Ivins, coeditor of The T exas Observer, left Austin Wednesday to join what s o m e consider the sole native Texan class, the N e w Yt>rk e x i l e . A terror with a semicolon, Ivins mixed stylish writing with a slangy ebullience in her Observer p ieces Reading her dispatches from the political front lines galvanized the spirits of etiolated liberals all over the state, dem onstrating that alternative journalism need be* neither effete, nor cloying, nor outraged while rem aining serious and anguished A remark by Billy Wilder seem ed to typify her attitude "If there s one thing I hate more than not being taken seriou sly,” he said, “ i f s being taken tex) seriously " The U niversity’s journalism departm ent had its shot at hiring Ivins for ii parttime* position but juggled the issue like the proverbial hot potato Tex) many problem s, such as parking and office space, she was told, developed when the departm ent hires! parttim e faculty So ... It w as the students’ loss Now Ivins is off to join the gladiators in New York's political wars It may take her a while to get used to a Republican assem bly — but she carries her own inexhaustible flask of hope We wish her luck and gcxlspc* *d Onward thru the fog Where* do we go from here? The National Conference on A lternative State and Local Public P olicies will attempt to answ er that question this weekend at St Edward s U niver­ sity P rogressive, leftist w hatever you choose to call them — these* co m ­ m unity organizers are com ing to Austin to d iscuss local developm ents in national trends And, by doing so, they will present and develop som e e x ­ citing and practical m ethods of improving public policies The list of progressive dignitaries spans both the breadth of country s geography and scope of political involvem ent From Jose Angel G utierrez, the founder of the La Raza Unida party, to ex SDSer Tom Hayden From Sam Brown, the Colorado state treasurer, to Marion firing line Texan ghosts letters To thr editor I have heard ominous rumors that the Texan Is going to sta rt writing its own le tte rs to th** **ditor lf m ore respondents dun t sta rt writing Is this tru e ’’ Where can I get a job ghosting these letters"’ I ve got a great one about hippers and Communists that I'm saving for my try ­ Huger Sperberg out Special Student T h e Da il y T e x a n IMM) *•»»#•#•» al ti# Uii ami Amen, an XiMra(iij*f IN#hi»at'«e» Vnhh ta Mon ,*t the Anaortated .'alleiiiate Presa TH I I M I U T I M N SI BSVUlPTtO.N HAt l N st vi ait n s k s u o n try IN. 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D raw er I* I w v arw tj S u tn w Austin Ta* ffT lJ TW O at)) T e s-n is p u t .vhavt Mxmlas Tveada* vtoinosdas 1'hurMtsi and EfHU* can** A*t«4a> an.! • s a m pa ..HS- V s . n l . tass f*s*ta«e paid at Aum* Tm N an * i .xsirthuti.*' nill hr a.-. ev«ad hi lr >-,xva» 1*1 091* at Ute editorial oft tee Tat as Modem ISihtHati.ru Building J IO* ‘V at he is- »» .ahura*.us t Comus wan tauaa ttujo >e* Budding A 4 IM- .. presented it, and found H earst guilty UnifiA'itioo Church, etc. More such controversy surrounds the ministry of Sun Myung Moon The reverend s "U nification ’ church, which exists in m any form s and goes by m any names, brainw ashes young people into joining, sc say Moon s c ritics This con­ tention is supported by those ‘ Moonie*’ who have left the church and who tell horror stories about the persuasion, forceful breakdow n and p ro g ra m in g used bv the Moon organization c l y d e h o o v e r Of course, m em bers of Moon s church will hotly respond that they have been enlightened and converted, all of their own free will It is obvious that their belief is strong and places them squarely in a reality en­ tirely shaped by the Rev. Moon the p articu lars of to n e h e s ita te s the Moon W hile it re lig io n C hristianity i can be argued and debated ad infinitum, one thing is clear Moon s people are m a ste rs of persuasion to c a ll What's reality1* R eality is quite a subjective thing, with each person having his own version according to his norm s and values, as acquired traditional source of values is the fam ily, in which most of us begin our learning More com es through our society, the school life The though system , from the com m unication m edia and from contact with others in our peer group Of course the value system so invested upon us is norm ally modified or replaced through contact with “ the world " It is the stablity of a value system which allows people to keep their sanity through tim e s of rap id and violent change or protest A decade like the six­ ties strained the sanity of m ost people, and the recent political m ess brought on by V ietnam and W atergate have only added to the feeling of helplessness, despair and finally apathy that form s the breeding ground that the quick-answer- brandishing cults appeal to Many people are just looking for som ething to believe in. all their form er beliefs dam aged and som etim es dem olished by the grinding pace of recent history Cult enticements The cult com es along, usually through a smiling and well-spoken m em ber, offering involvement purpose and often a ready-m ade set of values that will rem ove the conflicts from the psyche And m any, often open-minded, “ bite' just to see what these people a re like to T h a t the person. “ convert” or “ brainw ash is se iz e d upon and u sed who becom es a m em ber and no longer m erely an interested outsider. The growing influence of "th e m edia" cannot be totally ignored in analyzing m odern society and the transm ission of value system s. Now a child receives m ore inform ation on social behavior, political system s, and m orality from Am erican com m ercial lowest-common- denom inator than from his parents. televsion What future? This breakdown of traditional value transm ission, which was shaky enough before has resulted in the present pop­ ularity of cult following. One wonders w hat the next generation of television-reared children will do. what kinds of cults they will flock to. who will em erge as their spiritual leader (if anyone will) and w hat their “ re a lity ’ will be W h e t h e r t e l e v i s i o n , V i e t n a m , W atergate, et a1, was responsible for P atty H earses being the in the Hibernia Bank holding a subm achine gun. or for the m ultitudes of Moomes. it is not possi­ ble to tell But one thing is c le a r — the m inds of m any people a re very* literally up for grabs for him who bids the highe*t amount of fulfillm ent Thursday, June IO, 1976 T he Da ily Te x a n Page 5 Kennedy's economic numbers game waihingion Star Syrwiicot* Sen Kennedy has w ritten most provocatively to a num ber of new spapers challenging an analysis of his report to the Joint Econom ic Com m ittee published in this space His reply is given in several seductive paragraphs and ends with a paternal suggestion “ The next tim e Mr. Buckley feels the urge to shoot from the hip on economic issues and tax reform , I hope he ll lie down until it passes, or at least check with a responsible econom ist ." that Now Sen Kennedy had w ritten federal governm ent" was a “ m yth the notion of the “ m ushroom ing He handles my dem onstration to the contrary by holding it up as an exam ple of “ how to distort a set of figures.” “ The big jum p in the ratio of federal spending to GNT (G ross National Product) cam e between 1951 and i952. during the Korean war, when it clim bed from 13 per cent to 20 per cent. In 1953 the ratio moved up a notch to 21 per cent Then it settled back, and for the next 20 years it hovered around 20 per cent. So much for Mr Buckley's progression “ Now look The following figures, taken from the official docum ents, a re undisputed In 1951, federal spending was 14 per cent of the GNP. In 1956 it was 17 per cent. In 1966 it was 19 per cent In 1976 it was 23 per cent. Sen Kennedy says Ah, but the Korean w ar was in progress in 1952 causing that rapid rise And in 1975 there was the depres­ sion. causing that rapid rise. In the interm ediate 20 odd years, “ it hovered around 20 per cent " Questionable axiom s Is Mr Kennedy asking us to regard as abnorm al (14 per cent- in 1951) a year in which there is a D em ocratic P resident — and a w ar? Or — at the other end — is he asking us to consider as ab­ normal (23 per cent in 1975) a situation in which there is a D em ocratic Congress — and a depression” These would appear to be the planted axiom s of his analysis. Because the historical fact is that a) we have risen from 13 per cent to 23 per cent, and that bt the apparent stability of the intervening years was directly the result of a decrease in the percentage of the GNP spent on defense Between 1952 and 1972 — the critical 20 y ears — defense spen- OUR HOURS 4 OC ~ (rn O O - < 4 OC - I n o - rj OOH*‘it CO** 12 OuPm ,? OO** I? OO** O C - william bucklev ding dropped from 14.3 to 7.2, while federal dom estic spending soared from 3 9 to 12 per cent Federal nondefense spending has been increasing at an accelerating rate — 3.9 per cent per year from 1960 to 1965, 12 per cent from 1965 to 1970; 14.7 per cent from 1970 to 1973, and 21 9 per cent from 1973 through the third q u arter of 1975 Growing tax bite in constant dollars, Here is another factor on which Sen. Kennedy does not touch. the average Between 1951 and 1972, Am erican increased his earnings by about 95 per cent But the population increase was only about 38 per cent Accordingly, one notes that the federal governm ent, though apparently tak­ ing the sam e bite out of the citizen s taxes, was actually in­ creasing its take at about three tim es the ra te of population growth If, given constant dollars and a constant tax ratio, you earn $2,000 a year and the government taxes you 20 per cent, and 20 years later you earn $4,000 and the government taxes you 20 per cent, what is the relevant figure to the taxpayer? That the govern­ ment is still taxing you 20 per cent? Or that whereas it used to take $400 dollars from you, it now takes $800 As for checking my figures with a responsible economist, well, I did so And if Sen Kennedy thinks hun incom petent, whv did he vote to confirm him as secretary of the Treasury7 Though, as a m a tte r of fact, the figures a re not all that in­ scrutable. and I d have had little trouble ferreting them out m yself, having e a rn e d a d e g re e , how ever long ago, in econom ics, passing all my exam inations in the subject, without anv aid from the public, or even the private, sector. S H A N T I C A P S herb*! cm!ma 8 T I M U C A P 8 p u n - strong J * MMB TEAS HME IMPORTED SPICES Fragrant E**antial Oil* RARE HERB AND ORGANIC VEGETABLE SEEDS Liva Marfa Plant* ★ Aloe Vara Chines* Medicinal Products Largo Sanction of Qintang 504 W. 24th - Upstairs 478-9792 The Mel Millers will celebrate their 50th Wedding Anniversary with family and friends at an Open House in the U.T. Alumni Center on Saturday, June 12th, and Sunday, June 13th, from 1:00 until 5:00 p.m. 'Com e o n c u t jimmy C a t o — we know voure in th e re ' 1 The new, improved Carter c R e e u l't Boston 6 O a kla n d 4 T exas 4 B a ltim o r e I C le v e la n d 4 M inneso ta I New Y o rk 4 C a lifo rn ia 3 Chicag o 4 M ilw a u k e e 2 K a n sa s C ity 6 D e tro it 3 T h u r s d a y » O a m e t ( F o r s t e r 1-2) at M ilw a u k e e C hicag o (B ro b e rg 1-5) O a kla n d I B lu e 6-5) at Boston ( Je n k in s 5 6 ) C a lifo rn ia (T a n a n a 7-4) at New Y o rk (M a y 4-2- B a ltim o re ( P a lm e r 6 6) at K an sa s C ity (S p litto rff 3-6) W e d n e t d a y t i e t v l t t A tla n ta 2 C hicag o 0 San F ra n c is c o 6 M o n trea l 2 C in c in n a ti 6 Pittsb u rg h I Houston 5 St Louis 2 T h u r s d a y t O a m e t A tla n ta (R u th v e n 6 51 at Chicag o ( R R eu s c h el 5 4) M o n tre a l (C a rr ith e rs 14) at San F r a n cisco (H a lic k i 4-8) C in c in n a ti (Med>ch 4 4 ) New Y o rk ( M attock 6 1) af Son Dlago (S tro m 6 3) P h i l a d e l p h i a A ng eles (Sutton 5 6) ( C a r lt o n 5 2) at L o s J 2) at P ittsb u rg h (G u lle t) F rid a y • O a m e t C hicag o at C levela n d Texas at New Y o rk C a lifo rn ia at D e tro it O aklan d at M ilw a u k e e B a ltim o re at K a n sa s C ity Boston at M inneso ta F rid a y t O a m e t H ouston at Chicago P ittsb u rg h a l A tlanta St Lo u is at Cincin nati P h ila d e lp h ia at Son Diego M o n tre a l at Los Angeles N e w Y o rk at San F ra n c is c o PUT IT BLHiND YOU STOB! MHS. Young, aggressive compaii) seeking managers for regional retail fashion s t o r e s . Experience preferred. Satan negotiable. Opportunity for advance­ ment excellent. Send confidential resume to P.O. Box SBI, Austin, IVxas 78767, A t t e n t i o n : Personnel Manager. 478 6764 2408 S e n Gabriel MILITARY INTELLIGENCE IN THE ARMY RESERVE " IS N ’T A U C LO A K A D A G G E R . WE’RE M O R E T HAN THAT!" ALTERATIO NS JEA N S, SHIRTS DRESSES We ore now doing ■ OUTSIDE ALTERATIONS g Expertly and Promptly IMAGES b v H o b T ilt o n '.4 2426 G u a d a lu p e . J I | I I I I 7459-7393 AND YOU ARE MORE THAN JUST A GRADUATE. But maybe you're confuted ae to what you should do now W e cen help and pay you as a citizan-soldlar. C A U US N O W 459-7393 THE GREAT EXCHANGE "who feels it knows" HUARACHE SANDALS JEWELRY MEN'S & W OMEN'S IMPORTED CLOTHING. THIS COUPON WORTH 50% OFF ANY PURCHASE Offer g o o d 'til J u n e 3 0 BIKE/ DAY PACKS WHOLE. EARih k k w v i o i u i m u j . 2410 SAN ANTONIO 5T 478-1577 UjCM-UHUUIW nwv* iXw nm '11' i i i e r d i n M i r i nrtfuxwetwHFrfrrgHT" I 1 "■ "> * *■» m . . i V 4 % ; . J A i l + o h BankAmericarq Open Mon.-Sat. 10:30-6:30 I t a «/INTERSTATE w ... V A R S I T Y , , i 4 0 0 G L l A O A l U P I f t t f f f C r j * 9 * F i e l d s W I E I R W J M I H J R t i n e m i n s VAA I H M P I R R I N I „ -wit * I i A A A J L A H X 1 1 U U I L r im iii f i n n I i i IJLXX X 3 Adults I SO Children I OO En d s S u n d a y ! 7 1 J C t n g f d i 4 73-34 I 7 I im u * * . * * ■ 177 nu r (S 2JS , * 7 pu x ( t i lo TH 6 OO] MIA T U tfS i 40 I IO 3 "Kl 6 40*1 30 10 00 THC RPTURrt oFTHe Tall'BLOND Mart . ^ >■-. WITH OHe w * J” 1 ■efadLetti -BLdCKSHOe ■ N g f l A l i C I N E M A T I ■ A T W f AU CINI MAS-! VIRVDAY Tit I JO P M D SO I s a s t a i S E a 9th BIG WEEKI s f.I':... I T OO ” ° REDFORD HOFFBIAN r n M Ad *** 10 00 PftESOENTS MEN" 0 , ,(i 'ey Now, 12-7 4 6 * 10 O t ie T o O i l y J o e [THa H I W TTT»TTT T i l 4M‘ TtN • IMS* A T K O t M O O I N 17 30 ?:IS*4 OO S 4S-/ J0 9 IS W l n t * r h * w h A U l m h f o u l l « | | n n i l /M i#Am t w m n m I mtnrmntw m tuwiccw rut* (.uteri i NKI 'F H I L i m H xLp ju j H xm n €vM Juj B xu j DON'T FORGET: 4-9 PM A l l D R IN K S 2 FOR I including our leo Croom Spoaalhoi THURSDAY . SPECIAL . STRAWBERRY DAIQUIRI MSloe V n io n tin tlx O ften D x iiiij from 4 until 2 with no cover Serving only top brand drinks if an outstanding itmospim'e 2 5 1 8 S x u i A n t o n io ji\fl ^ f e # ' |rr— Tonight ||; i I J e s e C o l n i u n g s Y o G | | | S t e v e o o d m n Tri.-Sat. B a l c o n e s F a u t a l A u s tin C ity C o lis e u m Prelim inary 8:30 - M a in Bout 9:30 p.m. A dvance Tickets: $10 OO Day of Sh ow $12 OO R a y m o n d * D ru g *, D isc o v e ry R e co rd * D a v i d '* S ta tio n For d e t a il* 4 7 6 - 1 0 9 0 WELCOME SUMMER STUDENTS H E A R L A R R Y G A T L I N • Nashville Songwriter • Written many religious songs • Popular hit "Broken Lady" will ting and rap with: D R G E R A L D M A N N , P A S T O R Sunday, June 13, 7:30 p.m. U N I V E R S I T Y B A P T I S T C H U R C H 22nd and Guadalupe A U S T I N . T E X A S < & L _ _ 725 W 23rd T O N IT E HAPPY HOUR A ll NIGHT N a m e the tune get a free drink! Pitcher of beer $ 1 .9 5 , H ig h b a lls 9 5 ‘ N O C O V E R D O O R S O PEN AT 8 T R A N S *• T E X A S A I P UARIUS Theatres IV 1S 0 0 S PIT A S A N I V Al LF Y RO just Off i a st Htvmiof QRivt 4 4 4 - j a a a . . . I — I — ---------------------------------- I U . I l l I K U P H K I S T I L « P M M U N t h r u S * T SI SO t i l * * r n f e e l e r e t ICO ■Ii# 4 30 400 •7 40 f:36. COLOM t i n n i n g ST UAR T W H I T M A N C a ll H i m M nnr# Shatter AVGO I M AASSV HI I FAS! P f T ri ’i , i rT Ty;, i ^ i o n e n e e OVER Si— ■ 1 2 2 5 3 3 3 SISO t i l 4 p rn fMtwre* 2:30 SHK) 7 30- -••43- ! L E S C K O M W teeter** ITO A V R " • T H I B e t s S I M 111 I-ANI ’ 7 SO 10 00 I is not a musi P T T T T P T T T r STEVE M c O U E E N in "THE REIVE RS” with S H A R O N FARRELL WILL G E E R PG S T A R T IN G "AT 8 PM $ 1 .2 5 P IT C H E R N IG H T FREE P A R K I N G OO BIE P A R K IN G G A R A G E FIRST LEVEL D O BIE M A U SOAPCREES o Salon T O N I G H T STEAM HEAT PH *279018 ( 707 EBB CATE* BD SUNSHINE'S PARTY T o n ig h t FLY BY NIGHT Fri. & Sat. BROKEN STRING BAND H a p p y H ou r 2 -9 Pitcher* $ 1 .5 0 M u g * 30* 2 6 1 0 G u a d a lu p e 4 7 2 -0 0 7 8 T O N IG H T BILL & BONNIE HEARNE Bobby Doyle Fife $nd roe * t h e r e < a m vhatfo w ti# «fcr#*m» id hnna smmkmdfc Hr a a hwvK tiwplHgn "nan k l t o (Hal hr - Alive ClA.L.$M#M4 ONA. T iiiit v Kl>81 RI DI MRO TAXI DRIVER 6 40 7 45 9 50 „ 1 *Ov \ F E A T U R E S S I 25 til 6 OO - Si 50 after M IO N 1G H T E R S $1 25 (F n A Set I Si 501 ! v } / s j L IJ r f * a. EDITH BO UVIER BEALE AND HER DAUGHTER EDIE rn A M A V S i t s W H ’ t n t K S F R M GREY GARDENS V I L L A G E 4 2 7 0 0 A N D E S O N 4 S I - 6 3 J 2 S T A R T S T O M O R R O W ! K 7 I 6-00-7:20-9 40 ; t - ~ T WINNER tart CANNES FXM rf STTVAl JURY M I K AWARD t V: ^ " - y -A r ~ . terne ow *4# *#*»' ;»* a ViwthWief - H m Ja i P i A ' * D I (MN PRperi §MN1 Qnx > tottwiB *» BUW ...... — ... r * MIDNIGHTER \ P.tu M.*iarvk» Pr»«1 j.-i*.-. v . GEC>RGE SEGAL SI SAN ANSPACH KRIS KRISTOFFERSON .SHELLEY' W INTERS ."BLUME IN LOVE" rn us* -lo- - tot i* rn-.iios Paul Ma.'ui>k\ TONIGHT 7 and 9r05 pm Batts Aud. S I .OO UT ID $ 1.50 Ahmfcers T h e t e x . Entertainment T hursday, June IO, 1976 TUE D a il y T e x a n Page 9 Fontaine Noel C ow ard's 'Blithe S p irit,'' starrin g Joan Fontaine, is at the Country Dinner Playhouse through Sunday a t 8:15 p.m ., with a m a tin e e Sunday a t I 30 p m R e se rv a tio n s a re n e c e s s a ry Red Chief FUN (For Under Nineteen) T heatre s production of "The Ransom of Red Chief,” a popular short story by 0 Henry adapted for the stage, is at the Zachary Scott th e a tr e C enter Produced in cooperation with the 0 .H en ry Museum, the play is intended for all ages It will run through June 19 at 7:30 on Thursday. Friday and Saturday, and Sunday at 2:15 Ticket prices a re $2 for adults and $1 for those under 19 For re s e r­ vations and inform ation call 476-0541 Harry Ransom Center The exhibit includes paintings by corn- tem porary artists from Mexico and South America Textiles African textiles from the G irard Foundation Collection are at the Huntington G allery in the Art Building More than 200 ex­ am ples of weaving and textile a rts of West Africa m ake up this collection of traditional and com temporary fabrics, including handpainted m aterial, special weaves and in tricate em broideries and appliques Scott classes R egistration for the first session of classes in Zachary Scott T heatre C enter’s sum m er FUN (For Under Nineteen) program continues tins week at the cen ter Laguna classes Fiddler's fest R egistration for the first session of sum m er a rt classes at Laguna Gloria Museum will continue from I to 5 p m through Friday at the m useum Classes a re offered in aw ariety of fields M i che nor Galleries An exhibition of Egyptian tap estries from the Wissa Wassef Workshop continues at the M ichener G alleries at the H arry Ransom C enter through June 27. Designed and executed by children who began the weaving project as an experim ent in creativity, the weavings are circulated by the Sm ithsonian Institution s Traveling Exhibition Service Also at the M ichener G alleries a re sm all-scale Cubist paint­ ings from the Vallenilla Collection, one of the m ost com plete surveys privately held. Not previously exhibited in the United States, it includes works by Braque. Duchamp. G ris, Picasso. Gleizes, Delaunay and many others. The M ichener G alleries are showing highlights from the Dun­ can Collection of Latin Am erican Art on the first floor of the Davy Crockett M emorial P ark in Crockett will hold the 40th annual Champion F id d ler’s F estival all day Friday R egistra­ tion in all four classes will begin at 9 30 a.m ., and the compotl tion will last all day A total of $700 in prize money will be aw arded to the best fiddlers. The ev en t’s sponsor. Beta Sigma Phi sorority, will keep concessions open throughout the day H ik e r The Spirit of '76 Singers will present a patriotic program at 8 45 p m Saturday at Zilker Hillside T heater Admission is free Singing cowboy Neely Reynolds, the winner of the a national talent search for the ' Singing Cowboy” in 1974. will return to the Texas Tavern for a single perform ance sponsored by the Texas Union on Thursday Admission to midnight appearance of the form er UT student is free for the 9 p.m . A rm aditio Armadillo World Headquarters will host Jesse Colin Young and Steve Goodman on Thursday, with tickets $4 in advance and $5 at the door On Friday and Saturday Balcones Fault with bel­ ly dancer Chastity Fox, the Cold Nose Fife and m im e Turk Pipkin will celebrate the full moon in special shows . Admission is $3 Rome Inn Bill and Bonnie H earne will be at the Rome Inn on Thursday, with admission $1 Delbert McClinton will follow on Friday (ad­ mission $2 50). with Alvin Crow and the Pleasant Valley Boys on Sunday (adm ission $3). Tommy Hill and Castle Creek will ap p ear Sunday, with admission l l . All shows a re at 9 30 p m. Soap Creek At Soap Creek Saloon, Steam Heat is appearing a t IO p m through Saturday with adm ission $ I 50 Antone's Rhythm and blues p erfo rm er Barbara Lynn and her eight- >iece band will be at Antone's Thursday and Friday Tickets are pit 13 at the door Paul Hay and the Cobras will play the elubSun- $: i-iv dav Fredericksburg The F a ir Side of Country, the first a series of special concerts celebrating the Hill Country and its m usic, will take place at the Gillespie County Fairgrounds one mile south of Fredericksburg on Highway 16 on Sunday. Asleep at the Wheel, Steve From holi, Vince Bell, Bill and Bonnie H earne, The Full Moon Band, Claude Morgan and the Buckboard Boogie Boys. Man Mountain and the Green Slime Boys, Rick Stein and the Alley Cats and John Dandiver will perform from noon to midnight Tickets are $3 in advance at P ants South locutions and Inner Sanctum R ecords in Austin, and a t the gate for $4 Zany soaper to air here The w ait is over, the wait is over. Beginning June 21, “ Mary H artm an, Mary H artm an ” can be seen in the Austin a re a on KSAT-TV, channel 12 (cable channel IO). N orm an L e a r’s syndicated mock-soap opera starring Louise L asser will be b roadcast at 10:30 p.m. Monday through Friday, im m ediately a fte r “ N ew sw atch.” The station will run the entire series beginning with the first program . “ M ary H artm an, M ary H artm an ” deals with the daily crises surrounding pig-tailed housewife Mary in an outrageous parody of the daily soaps. Most of the travails are of a type that would crush norm al people. Supporting c h a ra c te rs include M ary’s husband Tom; G rand­ pa Larkins, also known as “ the Fem w ood F la s h e r;” and M ary’s teen-aged sister, Kathy, who has an affinity for m ales. L ear syndicated the program after network officials deem ed it too controversial. Photographs needed IMAGES, the T exan’s weekly en tertain m en t supplem ent, is seeking photographs to run on its staff page. Contributors can bring photos to Chico Coleman or the en tertain m en t office of the Texan, TSP Building 2.122. Photographers whose photos are published will be paid. ANGELS TONGUE f o r m e r l y White Dwarf af the ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * 4 5 3 - 9 8 4 9 * f •CRAZY HORSE SALOON June 10 & 11 *- 6 2 0 6 C a m ero n Rd. * Mr. Peeper's Bookstore Open 10 a.m. - 3 a.m. "Y our fu ll service n e w s s to o d " 213 E. 6th St. Books • Magazines • Paperbacks Also a C o m p le t e A d u lt Section 25c Peep Shows Some rivers can’t be dammed... some people won t be broken. Johnny, the father M atte the mother Jerft the son From the Broadway smash... 'T D E W e* a raging drama of America tnrUru n a m s i m s V I L L A G E a ’ OO A N D E R S O N - 4 5 1 - 8 3 5 2 STARTS TOMORROW! Jazz great dead at 61 * She NfUi JJork Slime * NEW YORK — Bobby H ackett, the corn etist whose mellow tone and graceful style m ade him a favorite of both jazz and pop m usic audiences, died Monday of a h eart attack a t his home in West Chatham . Mass He was 61 Although H ackett had just returned from a two-week stay in a hospital for the rem oval of fluid from his lungs, he had m aintained a busy schedule of perform ances and was due to appear in Boston on June 17 with Arthur Fiedler and the Boston Pops. H ack ett’s playing often rem inded some listeners of Bix Beiderbecke, one of the great pioneer jazz m usicians of the 1920s. But his basic jazz inspiration was Louis A rm strong “ I heard my first A rm strong record in a Providence departm ent store when I was a kid,” he once said, “ and it turned me around The sound never left m e .” H ackett spent two years with the Glenn Miller band a t the height of its popularity. His m ost notable contribution was on a 12-bar cornet, a solo in the m iddle of “ A String of P e a rls .” A fter World War ll, which he spent in the Army Air Corps, he spent 15 years as a studio m usician with ABC. In 1951 he m ade a series of six mood-music album s released under Jackie G leason's nam e, on which he played m elodies anonymously against a setting of strings. For the last 15 y ears, H ackett led various groups of his own or worked as a soloist. B. Iden Payne autobiography publication set Yale U niversity P re ss will publish posthum ously tho autobiography of Shakespearean scholar Ben lden Payne in the Fall of 1977 ' Payne cam e to the University as a d ram a professor in 1946 and was chairm an of the d ram a departm en t from 1946 to 1948 His autobiography, which he sta rte d writing a fte r he retired from teaching in 1972. begins with his life as a young actor in England and includes a description of his m ethod, with a detail­ ed application to his production of Ham let ” Born in 1881 a t Newseastle-on-Tyne, England. Payne died April 6 in his Austin hom e. He was 94 In his 73-year ca re e r he founded the British repertory th eater movement, directed the Abbey T heater in Dublin and developed the modified E lizabethan staging of S hakespeare’s plays. He also m ade a nam e for him self on Broadway John B arrym ore credited Payne as his “ d isco v erer,’ and Payne directed Helen Hayes in her New York stage debut Shortly before his death, Queen Elizabeth ll m ade him an the highest aw ard for for his th e a te r con Honorary Officer of the British E m pire a British citizen short of knighthood tributions. EREE PIZZA F la g o n & T re n c h e r and P iz z a K itc h e n 476-6795 A nnouncing a private course in PR AC T I C AL HERBAL USAG E ^ ^ IO w ea kly classes on the consisting o f P R E P A R A T IO N and U S E O F M E D IC IN A L th r e e a n d C U L IN A R Y P L A N T S ; a n d the A ustin VYE EKE N O E X C U R S IO N S ID E N T IF IC A T IO N of periphery TE X A S N A T IV E P L A N T S fo r F IE L D in to Choice of M onday or Thursday Evening sections June 14 F E E $ 2 5 Please sign up by Juns 14. For info: C all 4 7 8 -9 7 9 2 or come by Herbs. Etc.. 5 0 4 VV 24th. Upstairs Photo c o u r t ly tho Austin C litio n Ben Iden Payne STARTS TOMORROW feature Ti moi 1:50-3:45-5:40-7:35-?: JO HE MOST AMAZING SHOW ON ANY SCREEN! OPEN 12:45 NO PASSES Natural I OO J: IO 5:15-7.40 *5 0 R*du<«d P rim til 5:30 (Moo. Sot J JACK MARLON ‘BRANDO NICHOLSON THE MISSOURI 'BREAKS CBB United Artists 7 tciDier AMARO MINNI l l TOGI IMI* to * in i ll! TIM! Starts Tomorrow »**x te n wry—no drff ja p * Nr correct 17:1 *■ M O 5:454:30 Tori-lit* 5:1 $-5:45/$1.50 ...The perfect creation of science...almost. jANO* rtUMMO HI (XAA* IN , ROCK HUDSON * UA,-., I*. ,* v EMBRYO P G J 4 I P a g e I O T h e D a i l y T e x a n T h ursd ay, Ju n e IO, 1976 The Daily Te x a n C la ssif ied A d s PHONE 471-5244 MON. THRU PRI. BlOO-BlOO W IN ISH !D AM ITM IN TS ■ FUINISHIO AIAITM1NTS ■ FUIN tSH IP A f AITMiNTS ■ FURNISHED AFARTMINTS ■OOMS TYPING __ __ .... C L A W K t « 0 A D V ! » T |$ * N G R A T ! S j l l arar4 m in im u m $ >1 l e x * wnf 4 ana tim # ll $ ( . r h w a rd 7 4 tim e* S 99 I ar h w ard $ 9 ’ »>#* t 08 I a c h w a rd IO o r ” s to S tu d e n t r e '# e a c h tim e I ) st I i « i f I tm h on# tim # I r ol « 1 Inch 29 lim .*! SI TI I co t * I im ti ta n or m o re ' m n I? 90 a ti n e t : nr........- .....- - - ........ ...... ....-..........■-..................... 4 pa a m in . tcHgbiM f SA..e .y Ii m . fne«y t ».»#■! 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N o o bligation t o # 'th out of -or int Rook I A r|# y *Oi M tin P IN K P l A M I N G O * fo o turo t h a n d c lo th in g lo o m blouse* a lto fin I ag# wear o b i fair I an tm U U D $< U l A O f A i J re g u la to rI w ith g oo go l 441 I I N IOC odd s h ir ts a n d JS O S N u e r .t '.atm da/ I wm JO I J 72' I I sm a ll v o ttt t >0 M on day i/ I O k ’.At I Maori I#)**''1 • d in "# ' ring lo ttin g < an V I 142* N ill I4 i gold at ( apt be*! o ffP f P l U G I O T b a i ord OuM ond# 24 inch * !►#( tim # N u n ( ar ( ed dy V I 1444 IO t{i#*d i . aiiant condition 1*0 C a ll v A \ M I ( A T i t i / I m at U N IMT speaker* 4t* 5*85 I (ai fro K H m m t i R r a t a U teri ten i«» i* fi|in u filter G O IN G O V I M M A t M u ll to ll 21 « / W tv new g a* stove w a rra n ty P e l t offer I M U l t It U t P it;V C I I l r om o IIV I, May fo ld s H I Hilt a lo u t (M f t i b ro o k ! toddle. Clnolll !«•"> H JT 4J\ m o C A N O E S K A Y A K S D ow n R iv e r Sport* h a t ■ a m p le x ito ck of new and triad « anna* and k o y O k i for id le a n d l i n e e t et t e n o r le t t t h if t t and riv e r m o p ! a v a ila b le C a ll today 45' 114* f a n i C o m p l e t e fo r R A L E I G H G R A N D P R I X (.a n t* M i« ta Bill# R a g .iia i ( l l * *1 Rad G re e n W hite to le P m a 1144 f t W A L E I G M R E C O R D G a n tt M u l e W h itt R e g u la r i l l * » ( P in * t amor. sal# D r u e 1124*1 ( l o r n * R a le ig h R#r C O TH RO N 'S B IK E 5HOP M f R ia G ran d # "pen ITM fUjW A N E W F R O N T I E R It you a r# w ltllp g to w ork hard. and you w ant to d e velop a differen t Itta tty la in iie a d of liv in g in en t u n u m e p a r tm e n ti you i on m ok o your iii earn to m e true Y ou I an b u ild your own hem e grow your own toot! lit h in the ire e k and IU# your own Mio I N O il# lr OI t i tor io ta ne#' P u f fin tor only 14 OOO lf you w on t to bv# for mth o to n /i t Id#4 today d iffe re n t intot m a I ion Don Wilson I ii a n te d R e a l I " e t a B ro k e r PURNISHID APAHTMINTS I ti S T U D E N T S M on y tw a u titu i lo m p io a f l on ih v ttia Hr i h u vM tror*> * ng j . i ta » i# to N o r'n lo o p $ hopping Cantor and I i ' l l I N e#' Ih v ftt# and A U llin t» a n n i T wo bed' irom " a t t on# and two b a ih i A *# .!# b .e to w ohom # w th (>#tto un to rn a I to m c k CH d 'th w * |h # r d iip o ia i »KH« to door ga bag# un t o p (SNu m a id I# ' vie# it dev (#d w *»h #t# rl# i t } or c a ll i n c p n M i ga# a w n e r t Apt 41' l t d 1717 Enfield Road Qui** I o m p i# i D b shout# I P R Mod o t vtr# (UC# and tar go snag d ih w # ih # t I U * UU i I ( ( f i e tpnc* 11 IO p lo t t « » » » '» ' J } / 44*1 N E X T TO C A M P U S A P A R TM F NT B A R G A IN I a a tu rn Apl i l l * I U ’ p io l # i# v '* i • c a rp e t paneled w o llv A l Poet b r e v I m o n 14 un* * lo m p ta a .“ I t H e m p h ill P a r k r n K R * tss ess* F R E E S E R V I C E P A R K I N G T R A N S P O R T A T I O N H A B I T A T H U N T E R S N O A L E A S IN G FO R S U M M E R & F A L L Dob'# M a I Son in# b a i t a* 'n# i m l g # H o llo w A o l i I la k e lb i t rig h t p a il M T P on fu r rvilui a i a n tiq u e m o d e m I stereo o g v ip |n#nf| #nd rn ant i i v " i n g h o ld e n I Iplhing g o o d I Cf a t l i T m # i(# m # .VI 'If f y 1*1 ftp w a rt, gdom pf f li d o t.g m #ii I. end m an y lv p » M i i ( A ll k in d *} N»i>fci ii| # « i ( a ll f o t f - f o r S o ld A O O R A B I I M i Setter p u p p ie t I a ll #41 d i l l i eg i« # '# d " U h a m T U R I N I " ti Sp an.al m a l* puppv P i c k of ff * l llffar IO a r n i did #*T c o b J * } NT# I A D O N A P I I w e e k ! a v a l S T R I P ! 0 K " a m t f r o # to good n o n e t j * POO’ ( R P I . M A I I >##< 0*d f#rrt#r Irio n d ly to m # i# J m o n th y p o m a ra n ta n p!#y»ui A n n 441 4.I# I Stan V I f#4# FOR SALI TEXAS INSTRUMENTS ’c i r 1 » mo H E W L E T T JIO P A C K A R DSt r y I RONK I k i l t I IIU R V 1 1 1 1 J lx i H I VK 'U S ' K ' I A r i 1 1 H I ' 6 sit : I sa t i 1 1 1 1 i t n e H r u ,’ i H r Hr 27 Hr al iv at as vc aa at 143 ai I NI ai im ai an no I 4k SO I Ak Mi Hallie ’ I S OU I nm t i «a /amarna XI NU UUNl y l* IM « ua I t W I K . I M ilk # vt i u u i i a i i t M u r t a v IMM IM T I I 11 l l I 4 IX IP ' I t * ' P O M i l M d#: G A U . V V T C X A S TS IS# X I I attests $115a b p I B R I B R 3 m i v 'e s to I ’ Oow ( it town or m o p * l Poo f co vered p o '» "g CA C H 2408 Leon 476-3467 E L DORADO E L CID Sum m #r Student Spacial I B e d r o o m F u r n $119 NIT E POOL A R E A Shuttle Front Door 3501 Speedway 453 4883 SUMMER STUDENT SPECIAL T A N G L E W O O D N O R T H (W a pay your Air C o n d ition in g ) 1 BR Furn. 2 BR Furn S145 $175 2 Large Pools S H U t t l f C O R N F R 1070 f 4*th 4*2 OOM A S P E NWOOD Summer Student Special I B R Furn. $139 Shuttle front door Intram ural f mid across street for your sports J large pools 4539 Guadalupe 452-4447 T A N G L E W O O D W E S T Summer Student Special 1 B R Furn. $150 2 B R Furn. $180 1 4 0 J N o r w a l k 472-9614 Shuttle Corner la rg e Pool t ' I U it N i l l \ end I B R C lost to M S shuttle ftarnished f r o m s i t * pius I I J H W est (th 4/4 HO? and V I 41*2 RTMINTS Well l i m ! w m ail ng. dining. G E l a r g e k it c h e n , c a r p e t , d r a p e s , l a u n d r y ta cit.ties T V cable paid. on shu ttle bus route Y ou p a y the ufibt>e* s m onths lease lim it e d num ber a v a 'able C ell B e tty L e n io a ' O R E S R E A L T O R S 4*7 640/ or 32/ 37*2 Q u ie t U n iv e r s ity Neighborhood W a lk to C am p us I Bdr Furnished A B P S u m m e r $175 Fall $195 E fficien cy Furnished A B P S u m m e r $125 F a ll $135 304 E. 34th 476-5804 U n d er New O w nership C L O S E TO C A M P U S Quiet Neighborhood 4 Blocks off IF Route Bdr & E ft Furnished A B P Sum mer & Fall Rates Come By 408 W. 37th or call Chri$ at 451-4528 U nd er New O w nership $130 W e 'I nego tiate L iv e In lu x u ry fu rnished for econom y rates N e ar I B R or E ti cam pus T H E W A R W IC K 2907 West Ave 474-1712 Need A Great Place To L iv e 7 B L A C K S T O N E A P A R T M E N T S Now at Som m e* R a te s 1 Sh are a la rg e apt a ' t*5 m o furnished ail bills pa d Hr mg your o w n room m ate or w e wilt mate n you w ith a com patible on# This is econom y end . o >«e w i t at its bes' O nly TOO y a rd s fro m U T cam pus 7 * K R ed R iv e r 4/#-S631 A P A R A G O N P R O P E R T Y 2200 San Gabriel Under New O w n e rsh ip 2 Bdr 2 Bath Summer s?75 A B P F a ll $275 plus E * blocks tra m i a m p u l On W C SBufti# R o u t* D > ih w a ih * r D isp o sa l. Sh ag C o vered P e r k ng CA C h K E N R A Y A P A R T M E N T S 2122 Hancock Drive N a u t to A m e rica n # Theatre w a k in g d U to m e to N o rth l o w Shopping c e n te r and Luby v N ear shu ttle end A ustin tr ansi* T w o bedroom fia ts on* and two beth* A v a la b ia townhouse w th patio, u n fu m A I furn CA C H dishw asher disposal door to door g arb ag e pickup (HH., i m aid tory.v a if d e sire d w a sh # !# '.# rn io m p if « no p e n no ih iia r e n Se* i i w n t n Apt I J J or ca b 4*' 4*41 njRNISHID APARTMINTS S U M M E R R A T E S SW M plus Elect. la r g e eft a p ' close to shuttle and c ity bus rout# 4100 A v e A Apt to# Hancock III Apts 4S7 (95* C O M A N C H E A PT S. I B R S near U n iv e r s ity L a w School *130 I D S m onth plus electric 06 1604 P e a n 4/2-86/0 7 B R E a $ tw o o d t P a r k W alk. shuttle UT AC p i. rate, c a rp o rt R ent plus e le c ­ tric ity R e 'e re n c e s , tease 452-8320 S M A L L . B E A U T I F U L , quiet, air con d itlo n ed C o n v e n ie n t u n iv e r s it y and C ap ital *135 472-90*4 _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ S T U D IO A P T G ra d u a l# m al# student L a r g e ro o m , k it c h e n e t t e , w a ik - ln clo sets, h a n g in g c lo s e ' til# sheerer, p riv a te en tra n ce N ear shuttle. 1125 F o r sum m er only 47( 63(0 30th 404 E I bedroo m s L O V E L Y CA CH, w alk to cam pus, shuttle d is­ hw asher, shag carpet, w ater and gas fu rnished 47/ 5282 I B R S T A R T IN G AT $1(0 2 B R starting at 1210 On shu ttle W ill show evenings by appo intm ent 442 9720 R E C E I V E R E D U C E D R E N T , couple assist w ith IO unit co m p K k near U T 258- 33(5, 25« 5555. T h e C A S T I L L E A tro pical p a ra d ise P o o l sauna N e a r E R and M S shuttle F rom SISO plus E 477-7794 and 477-4X2 ROOMMATES N E E D E D I M M E D I A T E L Y R oo m m ate to r h a n d ic a p p e d m a le a t t e n d a n t s fo r 1st a n d 2nd s u m m e r s tu d e n ts sessions Room A board provided af Jester P le a s e c a ll Te«as R e h a b ilitatio n Co m m ission at 476-/374 S H A R E L A R G E split level house# m ile s to shuttle O w n room an sw erin g s e r­ v ice $90, ?/« bills 451X137 S u m m e r Q U I E T C L E A N F e m a le Sn are tw o bedroom apt Own room, A B P W a lk in g d ista n ce 47 7 3941 F E M A L E Own room in the u ltim ate duple* off D u v a l, 2nd floor furnished, m an y w indows, porch, ya rd $87 50 plus Va bills. 478 3609 _______________ F I N E 2 2 S T U D IO 2 blocks cam pus D iligent student p re ferre d *100 mo 304 E 32nd 478 6839, 474-S400. IN T O D A Y M O V E L u x u ry A B P fu r ­ nished 2 H i S112 50 Shuttle B r o a d ­ moor F e m a le pre fer working, g rad 454 1 209, 451-2109 S H A R E 2 B R d u ple* starting Ju n e 12, sum m er A fa ll w ith P e ru v ia n g rad u a te student S blocks cam p u s S IOO t bills 22nd and R io G ra n d e . W C sh u ttle Sam uel, 474 9684 N IC E H O U S E F ire p la c e , own room , E n fie ld a re a B lo ck shuttle *90 *95 Vt bills 477 4944 477 0114 H O U S E M A T E 505 Texas Quiet close to , am pus P r e f e r g ra d student C a ll 453- 7676 Cable, ca rp e t, g ara g e F A R O U T 2 sto ry H yd e P a r k Y o u r ow n room L a rg e y a rd $90 451-6832 ROOMMATE W A N TED to sh a re fur - mshed R iv e r H ills a p a " m # n t C A CH , A B P $92 RC Sh uttle C all 441 6466 L I B E R A L R E S P O N S I B L E F e m a le share co m fo rta b le house, A ve B $100. bd s C indy, 454-6568 before 2 30pm, a fte r l l 00pm R O O M M A T E W A N T E D 3 B R house near H ig h la n d M a ll SSS plus T bills L a r r y , 459-0719 R O O M F O R R E N T for w om an over 25 2 bedroom house South S60 B a rb a ra 441 1488 S U M M E R R O O M M A T E w anted T hree bedroom house fenced bac k y a rd $67 SO a month plus Vs b ills 459-9410 O N E O R T W O fe m a le room m ates need ed for second s u m m e r session Shuttle spacious reasonable 452- 5156 a ttra c tiv e , l i b e r a l quiet, n eat "0 7 w M A L E 25th 476-16*9 $62 50 plus ' I bills. 2 bdrm M a rk H O U S E M A T E N E E o l f c r 4415 Shoalwood, on bus 'm e Be au tifu l ya rd w ith w orkshop $75 bills 454-8036 N E E D E D sm o k mg v e g e ta ria n w om an to sh a re 4 B R house sac C a ll 478 49/0 I M M E D I A T E L Y ? N o n N E E D R O O M M A T E im m e d ia ta I y Three bedroom house *88 > bills 928- 3353 N E A T R E S P O N S I B L E ro om m ate to sh a re c le a n , fu rn is h e d 2 B R house C A CM M ik e R eed 452 8461 475 5599 room R E S P O N S I B L E O U T D O O R S Y m ate sh a re 2 B R house near shuttle P a r t ia lly fu rn ish ed S K S A B P B y Ju l y I 453-2015 Q U I E T M A L E P r a te g rad u a te et fan No co n tra c t m ad e ye before 9pm F o r Leo 472-2617 f e m a l e R O O M M A T E S h a r e 3 b r w . f h two g rad u a te students CA CH, shuttle S/2 plus 'Y OHIi 452-5975 atter 7 OO pm. F E M A L E R O O M M A T E Su m m er N ice bedroom rn a tw o bedroom house, ten blocks fro m ca m p u s 477-0754 UNIURN. APARTMINTS P A R K S I D E A P T S . 420* B u rn e t Road S p e cio u s I B R a p a rtm e n ts w ith a lt m odem a p p lia n ces F u lly carp e ted T e n ­ nis and s w im m in g a cro ss the street F u rn ish e d SISO U n furnish ed *140 P lu s E le c t r ic it y 454 (ASO lf no a n sw er 454 3251 ! I SIAO P L U S E Stove dish w a sh er 453-4991 re frig e ra to r, l l SUO P L U S E '453-499! U N F U R N I S H E D one or two bd 2 blocks fro m ca m p u s S U S pius bills Porn in c o r­ porated 837-1*42 452 t/91 N E A R U T L a r g e I bedroom pen#iec d e n a b u n d a n t storage «IOO Plus e le c tric ity 4/1-/682 c o m p le t e k - tc h e n I B R ( F U R N I T U R E A V A I L A B L E ) , t i l l PIU S Sw im m in g p o o l 6 blocks U T 47* 9192 after 3 OO pm ROOM ANO BOARD C o m fo rtab le and co n ven ie n t studios F u lly carp e ted and cool tor 'h e su m m er L o w -a'es $84 50 month A B P , I block /rom ca m p u s T H E P H O E N I X 1930 San Antonio Apt ll, Phone 478-4401 f u r n i s h e d a i f a itis P a id Q u iet, block to U T 306 E 30th 472 5134___ E L C A M P O 1912 N ueces B o y 's rooms. single $38 and up K itch e n p rivileg e s 459 7436 4/7 8486 N I C E L Y F U R N I S H E D room s w ifW n w a lk in g d istance to U T P lu s h carpet, C A CH Som e w ith kitchen p riv ileg e s $47 50 and up 2/10 N ueces 477-9388 2800 W h itis, 477-7558 C O Z Y R O O M in p riv a te resid e n ce IS m in utes bike ride fro m cam pus, A B P , sh a re oath m ale p re fe rre d C all 471 -3815 days. 4/6-8365 nights F E M A L E R O O M M A T E needed, own room in 3 2 house 2629 W 45th Stre et No ______________ pets L eslie, 451-3539 M A L E S T U D E N T , p r e fe r a b ly g rad La rg e , p riv a te AC, ca rp e ted room a t­ tached to g ara g e Sh a re bath in house Som e kitchen p riv ile g e s S2S m o plus some assista n ce m a in ta in in g prem ises _______________________________ 442-3628 F U R N I S H E D R O O M S r e frig e ra to r, hot p la te b ills paid C lose to ca m p u s *85 sum m er Call 4/8-5501 evenings M A T U R E W O M A N seeks fe m a le stu­ dent to sh a re apt 442-9720. evenings 447- 3951 UNCLASSIFIED V W 64 runs good $375 P h 474-9798 B e liy d a n c e lessons 282-0607 W ed ding P h o to g ra p h y - s ta v e <51-002! H A I R D R Y E R R E P A I R S ’ 452-4406 C L O C K R A D IO R E P A I R S "<52-4406 N ew V W engine 477-3002. Cash for used bikes 4/7 30C2 A ll C am pagno lo on sale 477-3002 A fghan pups 837-3954 or 282-0453 H a v e van m o v e y a w lo v e & c a re 345-7650 G ir l ro o m m ate for su m m er N ee 477 0754 Good 3 speed J50 454 8430 ev e C S . — A ll m y V. Lo ve, Irg ln is. iap»W28Si00 477-1219 e a r l y 'la t e Used bike auction Sat 12 477-3002 IO speed SSO Good shape 442-6509 G ir ls stin g ra y bike $35 443-7016. Rob Ken Bob 8. Ann fixed it good Carfm cassett$75 327 0239 471-1292 E * lg tw in bed E x c e l $60 476-4174 F r e e kittens. 472-2926 B ik e I speed B e st offer 472-0746 M in S R T 101V i v 292 F I a s h Z t e I e 471-3667 L g e R a ta n C h a irC h p 478 3927 477 1389 Com ponent stereo *75 454-7443 P ia n o W h ite U p rig h t $150-444 6884 F>[ant S a le A fternoons 2224 M a n o r TUTORING V I O L I N / V I O L A / F I O D L E L e s s o n s N e a r c i t y , s h u ttle bus C a ll C a r o l ev enings a fte r six at 454-2885 P IA N O L E S S O N S , open to a l' ages UT G ra d u a te student in piano R ea so n a b le rates 476 7913 G U IT A R L E S S O N S for beginners, m ost­ ly fia t pickin g blues and co u n try styles M ic h a e l 474 1819, le a v e m essage MISCELLANEOUS S U M M E R D A N C E W O R K S H O P P ro fe ssio n a l instru ction in ad u lt ballet, lazz. ladies ex ercise and aero b ic dance classes C onvenient location, 2201 W est 1st L im ite d cla ss size F o r e n ro llm e n t or m o r e inform atio n ca ll Ja n e G roos B a lle t Studio 453-8232 IN T E R E S T E D IN NO­ F R I L L S LO W COST J E T T R A V E L ? To E u ro p e A frica , the M id d le E a s t, the F a r E a s t ’ E D U C A T IO N A L F L I G H T S has been helping people tra v e l on a budget w ith m ax im u m fle x ib ility and m in im u m hassle for si* y e a rs F o r m ore into , ca ll ton free 800-223 5569 F O R H E L P w -th an unwed pre g n an cy, c a ll E d n a G la d n e y H om e F o r t W orth, Texas Toll fre e I-800-792 1104 FOR RENT FOOSBALL T A B L E S for rent F u ll Size Hom e M odels $35 per m onth Call 452-3742 S T O R A G E S P A C E R en t yo ur own No cre d it check, free d e liv e r y C onnell P o r ­ table B u ild in g s 441-1812. " 0 7 E a s t B e n W hitz _____________________ S P A C E F O R R E N T A p p ro x im a te ly SOO f t , 2nd floor rear Y a r in g 's Store, so 2406 G u a d alu p e w ith p riv a te en tra n ce and p a rk in g C all W a lte r Young, 476- 6513.____ ____ C U T E E F F I C I E N C Y for s u m m er S105 plus E 477 3388 B ill or 478 1580. D a rry l A v a ila b le for fa ll too SITO plus E Just North of 27th at Guadalupe 2707 Hemphill Pa rk TfyvuAa j4nn M B A , T Y P I N G , P R I N T I N G , B I N D IN G T H E C O M P L E T E P R O F E S S IO N A L F U L L T I M E T Y P I N G S E R V I C E 472-3210 and 472-7677 T Y P IN G E R R Y S E R V IC E Reports R esum es Theses L e tte rs A ll U n iv e r s ity and business w ork L a s t M in u te S e rv ic e Open 9 8 Mon-Th & 9-5 F ri- S a t 472-8936 Dobie M all H O L L E Y ' S T Y P I N G S E R V I C E T Y P I N G i T Y P E S E T T I N G C O P Y I N G & P R I N T I N G B I N D IN G 1401 Mohle Dr. 476-3018 Ju s t North Of 27fh at G u a d alu p e 2707 H em p hill P a rk f in n Yes, we do type Fresh m a n themes. 472-3210 and 472-7677 P R O F E S S I O N A L T y p in g S e r v i c e D i s s e r t a t io n s , r e s u m e s , e t c C a l l a n y tim e 444 1134 E X P E R I E N C E D A N D F A S T T V p S t, T h e s e s , d is s e r t a t io n s , p r o fe s s io n a l rep orts law , etc P rin tin g , binding B a r ­ b a ra T ullo s 453-5124. __________ D I S S E R T A T IO N S , theses, reports, and l a w b r i e f s t y p i s t . T a rry to w n , 250/ B r id le P a th L o rra in e B ra d y , 472 4715. E x p e r i e n c e d T Y P I N G in m y home. C all G retch en , 452-3469 451-2332 V I R G I N I A S C H N E I D E R T yp in g Ser- v ice G ra d u a te and u n d erg rad u a te ty p ­ ing, printin g, binding 1535 K oenig L a n e 459 7205 A L L P A P E R S T Y P E D " Theses" disser tations re s e a rc h On cam p u s location - B E B 400 A fter 5 OO p rn C all A lice, 263- 2863 T Y P I N G D O N E D issertations, theses, etc F a s t s e rv ic e K a ty, 454-0532. T Y P I N G . P r o f e s s i o n a l q u a l i t y a t rea so n a b le ra tes A fte r hours service , I B M C o rre ctin g S e ie c tric ll H elen, 451- 3661 N E A T . A C C U R A T E and prom pt typing R ea so n a b le ra tes C all 447-2737 C R O C K E T T CO Typing, copying, w ord processing I B M m ag ca rd ll, m e m o ry t y p e w r i t e r T ypesetting , p rintin g and binding 5530 B u rn e t R o a d 453-6385 to r a u t o m a t i c ty p in g F A S T A N D R E A S O N A B L E typing lobs M u ch e x p erien ce C all B ill or P a t a fte r tour, 477-1152 P R O F E S S I O N A L M a n u scrip ts, theses, d issertations, te rm p a p e r s , le g a l b r ie f s D a y s , n ig h ts , w eekends, c a ll D ell, 447-2161. T Y P I N G . Ju s t N orth of 27th at G u a d alu p e 2707 H em phill P a rk ^ m^AjJux Am R E S U M E S w i'h or without pictures 2 D a y S e rv ic e 472 3210 and 472 7677 SERVICES G IN N Y 'S C O P Y IN G S E R V I C E INC. Free Parking 7am • tOpm M-F 9am - 5pm Sat. 44 Dobie M all 476-9171 P R O B L E M P R E G N A N C Y ? C a ll 472- 4198 for help in pre g n a n cy decision. Pro- L ite A dvo cates, SIO W 26th P R O F E SS IO N A T T R E S E A R C H and a d v a n ce d level Open l l 00 a rn - 6 00 p m 454-8580 B a s ic in v a rio u s fia ld s A L T E R A T I O N S , m en, w o m en W ill re p la ce zippers, pocke's, also do your m en d in g . 451 2806, !0am -5pm . M o st w eek d a ys HOUSES HOUSES HOUSE HUNTING? H undreds of vacancies available each day!! HOUSES - DUPLEXES - APTS OLIVER rentals "Austin Rental t tcpem" REALTOR Call 443-5260 9 a.m. til 8 p.m. Daily Sundays IO a.m. til 6 p.m. 5330 D Manchaca Rd. Austin Licensed by the State W e S a v e Y o u T i m e in L o c a t i n g R e n t a l s / ” ii iii**6ngIiskAh*rTRkl A f A I I M I M T s * " \ I , 2 bedrooms • Studio, • Furntthod & Unlurnnhod • S w im m in g pools • Tonnit, H a n d b a ll courts • sr shwttio — — (ANC a w * * * »^OA.AWp A Vt N M I ^ yr, 0 3 I j 1 | 2 m . — n ,ow L ALL BILLS PAID 1919 Burton Dr. 444-1846 L A R G E ' B R 6 clo sets o t s o t w ndows ana lawn No pets J3rd and Tom G r # * « U J 40(2 I X C tx udos w a ’er I B R N E A R c T a n c H ancock Can’t- c a r p e ' e ie c t'ic k itchen CA CH $ u s pius e le c tric ity *52 JO/# S " 5 g lu t E E F F I C I E N C Y L a r g e m odern # p ackm en' Se p a rate a ’cher, m D udes o s h * e » h # r and disposal CA C H Shag ca rp e t L e w n d 'y fa c ilitie s and shut- be bus 447-4(4/ 44! a l w I F O R R E N T m im ed i a ' e x bedroom fu rn ish e d a p a rtm en t Ail g ilts pe d Cab a I X * 452 SJO* a g * S P A N . S H T R A I L A 'tr* c * iv # on# and Shorn# bus assigned N e bedroom * pe rk ng T w o b lo cks H a n co ck P o e Cen'a- *526 B e n n e tt 45' 34/C Mi A M t G O E t on# and tw o bedroom F a ts end one a-’d 'w e bedroom studio* S e cu rity g uard S h o w # bus Sauna es- ere se bom poor ASO* Du v a ' 451-41** ON SM U T I i . E ->ce v ty , rushed V* C lan­ cy w ith b g c oset **05 par month sum m er term p .v * e.-ec" C-*v » U 5 par -Hv-ith ta n ano spring pius e le c tric ity 4/0? Speedw ay P * m # ia Ann Apt* *$! A 'S * N E W M A N H A L L W O M E N 'S D O R M Summer Rates $42 up weekly Sm ell, q u iet frie n d y e x cellen t food. doubles sin o i* ro om s m aids parking, c l o s # k - t c h # n * t t e to l f m ea is R o o m b o a rd 202# a u n d r y e v e r y th in g C a 'h o x " e i d t - o f . n a t i o n a l G u a d atu o * 4/6-0669 G R A C x A T E CO -O P Seneca House co­ ed R & 0 a w eeks s ' 40 doc b e S ’ K s .n g e 2309 N ie c e s 41/-C22S S u m m e r , f a l l . C O O P O P E N I N G S Room board fro m $1 u —o rth F- e-Os 'un 4/6 ’ 9/7 "e e d o m JIO W 23rd i n ' c -Co-Op Cox,ne WANTED B L > N G C U T O F F S and je e ^ S S SO - $2 IO "2 2405 Nueces, ub- S a tu rd a y s o nly s 'a * I i 454-1739 474-1144 t i r v e . Picasso fortune worth $256 million M obility impaired protest Boys State A complaint by Mobility I m p a i r e d G r a p p l i n g T o g e t h e r H u r d l e s i MIGHT) has been made against Boys State concer­ ning wheelchair bound males being barred from participation More than 900 high school fr om boys throughout Texas are attending Boys State this week at the University. is B o y s a S t a t e ‘laboratory to teach kids the mechanics of our political system," said Dr Firman Haynie, director of the week long session “ We have had kids on crutches, but there is a problem with the mobility impaired being able to keep up with the pace. Haynie said. “ These kids in one week go through what a college student would go through in three weeks, said Haynie, who is also director of the Emergency Loan Program at the University “ It Mould be physically impossible for the han­ dicapped to participate." Marty Scirratt, a former participant of Boys State, *aid “ We are constantly on the go and cover at least five miles walking He added it might be possible to accommodate the han­ dicapped if the schedule were expanded to two or three weeks “ If somebody will spon­ sor them they should be allowed to participate," Danny Fry, a participant from Lockney, said “ Cer­ tain functions such as the recreation activities would have to be cut out to make it easier for the han­ dicapped," he added. “This is a policy made at the state level of the American Legion (the sponsoring organization)," Haynie said. Boys State is modeled after the organization of stategovenmi^ Academy. Apart from the $260 million art collection, Picasso s six heirs also will inherit their father s two residences and two castles and his bank ac­ count No estimate has yet been published about the value of these vario u s supplementary assets The heirs are Picasso's se­ cond wife. Jacqueline, two grandchildren from a first marriage to a Russian dancer and three children from two nonmarital relationships who obtained legal right to a part of the estate lawyers for each of the six parties recently reached agreement on how to divide it. But one h e ir, P ic a s s o grandchild Narina, had a last- minute change of heart, charging the agreement was unfair Her lawyer pleaded before the tribunal in Grasse for a renegotiation of the agree­ ment. citing a technicality. The court said it would make a decision on the plea in IO days. Thursday, June IO, 1976The D a ily Texan P a g e l l 'Grass roots’ representation demanded Butz evades consumers Tuesday’s meeting WASHINGTON (U P I) Agriculture Secretary Earl Butz Wednesday accused consumer groups of playing politics with a fuss about being excluded from a review ot his department's food safety regulations Butz made it clear he personally will decide whether the review committee will include a “ grass roots consumer The committee's second day of open meetings produced a debate between Butz and one consumer representative which ended with Butz slamming his office door in the face of a dissi­ dent who chased Butz down the hall. B u s in e s s interests At issue is the makeup of an eight-member committee form­ ed to decide whether rules governing the inspection of meat and poultry and the marketing of milk. fruit and vegetables should be changed Consumers contend the Agriculture Department's advisory committee on regulatory programs made up of outside ex­ perts is made up of farm and business interests with no one to speak for the consumer Jane Armstrong, vice-president for consumer affairs at Jewel Food Stores in Chicago, asked Butz Wednesday to add a consumer oriented person She made the proposal Tuesday, when Butz was not there, and it appeared the suggestion would be the topic of Wednesday’s meeting. Political •I don’t want that representative to be a politically motivated, publicity seeking organization." Butz replied “ From what I heard you had a political demonstration here yesterday " Butz referred to representatives of the Consumer Federation of America and other groups carrying protest signs into “ We don't have the Republican National Committee represented here, and I don't intend to have the Democratic National Committee represented, either," James Graham, agriculture commissioner for the state of North Carolina and a member of the panel, asked Mrs. Armstrong if a member of a "home demonstration club" or the president of a women's club would fill the bill. Jeans and tennys Butz interjected " It would be better than someone who writes me an inflammatory letter and releases it to the press before I get it." As Butz was leaving. Dr Michael Jacobson, codirector of the Center for Science in the Public Interest, asked him to stay for the debate Butz walked briskly from the room " I don’t propose to sit here and let a politically motivated consumer representative on this committee ” Jacobson, in jeans and tennis shoes, chaste! Butz down the marble hall, and Butz finally slammed his office door in Jacob­ son’s face. In his introductory remarks. Butz said government regulation raises prices " I don't know why we have to look at every bird that comes down the line lf GM inspected every piston ring the way we inspect chickens, a new Chevrolet would cost $20,000 " rfiC z ry o s C o g n a c o r m a g a n o c a l f on p o l i s h e d I e a t h e r h e e l . O l d r n g I i sh s t a c k e d 7(>. T o nito T he F o lk A r t i s t r y o f B o b b y Bridger S p e c ia l G a "B en t Net. K e r r v i l l e 'a j i b A c t ” S hug Mauldin Sun. A M on. T h e E lectrify in g Eddie Harris ' Adv tickets $4 OO at all Fotomats and the ABC House of Music $4 5 0 at the door. TMK TK T A V E R N NEELY REYNOLDS “ The Singing C o w b o y " 9pm - M id n ig h t FREE Coming Friday: AUGH MEYERS Coming Saturday: STARCR0ST Th* Texas Tavern i i lo cate d b e h in d G regory G ym K e Grievance hearing delayed for former extension director A public hearing for the dis­ missed University School of Extension director has been postponed, the director’s at­ torney said Wednesday Frank Maloney, represen­ ting e x -dire d o r P e r c y Morehouse, said the death of Morehouse’s father Wednes­ day caused the hearing to be r e s c h e d u l e d The a d ­ ministrative hearing was originally slated for Wednes­ day morning. Morehouse is appealing his May firing by taking it to a grievance review panel Morehouse was alleged to have spent federal funds on families of the center's employes at a country club conference last September He was indicted on official misconduct charges in con­ nection with the alleged ex­ penditures in March, but the district attorney dropped the indictment May l l The misappropriation charge has brought John Stokes, regional counsel for the U S Department of He al th. E d u c a t i o n and Welfare into the case as the funds allegedly used were provided by HEW Stokes reportedy is going to summon two HEW employes to testify at the hearings, at the University’s request "The rescheduled hearing will probably occur about a week from this corning Mon day," Maloney said. Maloney added that he had requested the session to be open to the public Pl Group flig h t to AUSTIN LUXEMBOURG VIA ICELANDIC /BRANIFF FLIGHTS Round Trip QplusTox NY/LUXEMBOURG-ONLY $440 Doparturos July l l *Airtara subject to airlino regulation* and change without no tic* limited to UT Students/Faculty * * * N E W Y O R K G R O U P FLIG H T S * 1 6 7 5 9 * I W e hound mr ‘ Flu* $13.41 if not (onnecting with international flight* Departure*: Juno 24 July 9, l l , 15 Aug 15 SANYO COMPACT REFRIGERATOR RENT $10 for 4 Wk*. $17 for 3 Mo*. 3 2.2 CU. FT CAPACITY RENT IT, THEN IF YOU LIKE IT, YOU CAN RENT BUY IT BERKmnns the s t a r i o atom 2 2 3 4 GUADALUPE 4 1 3 4 B U R N E T NOAD • 476 3525 454 6731 W SPACE LIMITED! CALL 4 7 8 - 9 3 4 3 W H a rw o o d• T R A V E L U T . orientee 1 1 0 2 H ighland M a ll 2 3 4 H ancock C enter Roe Ann's Early Summer Sale Up to 60% off jeans, pants, tops, dresses, longs, baby-dolls, bikinis, scarves the CACTUS is a memory book our staff is putting the finishing touches on the '76 book and already planning the next yearbook to cover 1 9 76 -77 more than 2 0 0 of your fellow students will spend many months to provide you a comprehensive review of the total student experience here at the university. as you preregister today ... please consider ordering your own copy of the 1977 CACTUS 2 4 04 G uadalupe 4 7 8 -3 4 9 7 and Rae Ann charge PAR • A • DIGM (par’ a dim) n. I. any pattern or example; a model that explains. — fast — dependable — but most of all, thorough, complete, and comprehensive Paradigm Books and Lecture Notes Service 4 0 7 W . 2 4 th (Mi block from G uadalupe) 4 7 2 -7 9 8 6 (Summer Hours 9 -6 M on.-S at.) it's easy to do ... simply fill in the box on the optional fee card you'll find in your registration materials & w e'll bill you along w ith your other fees. the cost is small ... it's only $ 9 .4 5 Memories ... easy & inexpensive be sure to order your CACTUS another publication of Texas Student Publications By ANDREWS FR EU N D 1976 N Y Times News Service PA R IS — A staggering $260 million price tag has been placed on the Picasso art left by the painter when he died three years ago. The figure has been es­ tablished by experts and made public by a court in Grasse, on the French Riviera The breakdown showed that Picasso's collection of his own works comprised 885 paint­ ings, estim ated at $160 million; 7,098 drawings at $24 million and 1,228 sculptures at about the same amount. Other included ce ra m ics, art sketches, engravings and tapestries. The team of experts which worked for more than a year on the "Picasso Picassos" was headed by M aurice Rheims, a prominent auc­ tioneer, art historian and m em ber of the Fren ch LOST A FOUND LOST L A R G E Orange and Evon imilitary oxporienca, >only ' f u l f i l l a c t i v e d u t y quirements, if you qualify. I ’ You im m ediately begin get-! ting good pay for a One* W eekend A M onth P A R T T IM E JOB tw o w a a k t tak e SERVE YOUR COUNTRY AND COMMUNITY Contact a Citizen Soldier TODAY Coll 4 5 9 - 7 3 9 3 » » » ♦ » Former UT employe to appeal: Goran son to take case to court By D A VID DIAZ Texan Staff Writer Although U n ive rsity President Lore rn- Rogers struck down the Bruce Cor Anson insubordination appeal Tues day. the case may have been ter­ minated only on the administrative level, ' Carol Oppenheimer one of Goranson‘ A N N O U N H M BN I* IMVtOOM O f M A O O tiA l V O C I* ' I UKK* t o o n * on* a at I IO p m s a tu rd a y in A tt B u ild in g A udito rium Anorn I IMC t i l A t (MUON w ill ip o n to i tho M n . m um # 'n I ©»a at J and * 0* p rn T h u rsd a y in B a tt* A u d ito riu m Ad m illio n It l l W ith U t IO I t *0 tor member! t n t t i l a i u n * * * w in te a m e r N e a 'y 11 A m in a t i o n ! k m c o u t t a cagoti ti a y no i d ! fro m f p rn to m idnight T h u n d e r in th# T a * a i T o v a rn Ad m in io n i i fr a t in c a l c u l u s , c h a m i i t r y S t e n c h , G o r m a n . IO* G o r a r n m a n i . 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(2o-0fi Camera Department 2nd Floor BankAmericard and M a»terCharge Welcome. KENWOOD CLOSEOUTS featuring ^ K E N W O O D K R - 3 4 0 0 A M F M - S T E R E O R E C E I V E R 16 Watts Per Channel, Minimum R M S at 8 ohms, 20 20k Hz with no more than 1.0°o Total Harmonic Distortion Approx. Not. A d v . Value $260 SALE *179 costarring KENWOOD KR-1400 Approx, Not. Adv. Value $180 Sale M3400 (Limited Quantity) KENWOOD KR-2400 Approx. Not. Adv. Value $220 SALE *159" (Limited QuantityJ The Discount Shop Stereo & TV Koenig Lane at Guadalupe in Commerce Park I 459-1371