Democrats Sweep Elections WASHINGTON (A F ) - Democrats recaptured control of the Senate and sur­ ged toward heightened command of the House Tuesday in off-year elections that also installed a Democratic governor in New York for the first time in 16 years. Democratic Gov. Wendell H. Ford wrested a Kentucky Senate seat from Republican Marlow W. Cook Richard Stone, a former Florida secretary of state, captured another GOF seat in Florida With those turnovers and their incum­ bent victories, the Democrats had won 50 Senate seats and were guaranteed another in Hawaii, where Sen. Daniel K. Inouye had opposition in name only IT WAS T H E lith successive election in which Democrats have taken charge of the Senate In New York, Rep. Hugh Carey, a Brooklyn congressman who challenged the party establishment to win nomina­ tion. swept to election as governor He beat Gov. Malcolm Wilson, w h o as lieutenant governor had taken over the office when Nelson A. Rockefeller resigned Rep. Ella T Grasso, 55, a Democrat, won the governorship of Connecticut and became the first woman elected a gover­ nor without succeeding a politician hus­ band In Tennessee, Democrat Ray Blanton, a former congressman, won away another Republican governorship. AND AS T H E verdict took shape on House contests. Democrats built leads in what had been safe GOP districts. Four GOP House members were trail­ attorney general, won the North Carolina Senate seat retired by Sen. Sam J. Ervin Jr. DEMOCRATIC GOV. Dale Bumpers of Arkansas was elected to the Senate to succeed Sen. J.W . Fulbright. the man he beat in the primary election Democratic Sens James B Allen of Alabama, Ernest F. Hollings of South Carolina, Adlai E. Stevenson of Illinois, Thomas F. Eagleton of Missouri and Abraham Ribicoff of Connecticut all won easy re-election. Sen. Russell B. Long, D-La , had no opposition. Democrats kept the governorships in seven states — Alabama. Georgia. Florida. Oklahoma. Maryland. Vermont and Arkansas. Big-name re-election winners included two potential 1976 presidential contenders. George Wallace of Alabama and Reubin Askew of Florida Republican incumbents in two major states - W illiam G. M illiken in Michigan and F'rancis Sargent in Massachusetts — were trailing in guber­ natorial races And Democratic Rep Hugh Carey took an early lead for the currently Republican New York gover­ norship. IN SOUTH CAROLINA and Kansas, ing in New Jersey; five were behind in Indiana; in the Virginia suburbs of Washington, Rep. Joel T Broyhill was beaten after 22 years in Congress. Democrat John H. Glenn Jr., the former astronaut, won election to the Senate in Ohio after a decade of trying His victory held a Democratic seat. Robert B. Morgan, former Democratic Republicans were ahead for Democratic governor s chairs An independent can­ didate led tor Maine's Democratic governorship Republicans were ahead, in some cases narrowly, in their defense ol a half-dozen Senate seats, and in Iowa and Nevada lur currently Democratic-held Democratic seats. But Dem ocrats led for current Republican seats in four other states, one of them in Vermont, where the race was close for election to succeed retiring Republican Sen George D Aiken, dean of the Senate Voter turnout patterns and returns in­ dicated that participation in the off-year balloting would exceed advance forecasts — which in some cases had pointed to turnouts as low as 40 percent of the electorate. Tuesday's balloting passed judgment on a government irretrievably altered by the trauma of Watergate T H E P R E S I D E N T , who urged Americans to go to the polls tor a show of confidence in the government system, was not the man they elected to the White House by historic landslide only two years ago. President Ford, who waged a 20-state campaign to bolster the GOP cast his Michigan absentee ballot in advance, then urged his countrymen to turn out and send to Washington and the world a message of trust in the American way of government. In Congress and the state capitals. Democrats were virtually assured con­ tinued and increased control As the electoral procession flowed through town halls and schoolhouse poll­ ing places from New England across the time zones to the West, the statistics and the political omens signaled a tightened Democratic grip on the levers of p..veer at the Capitol and in the states About 145 million Americans were eligible to vote, but off-year turnouts are traditionally low Forty-three percent of the eligible voters cast ballots in the last off-year elections, in 1970 This time apathy and political dis­ enchantment spawned by Watergate, and even some rainy weather in the East and Midwest, seemed likely to hold the turnout even lower The level of par­ ticipation will not be known for several 'days, but as President Ford noted, some surveys indicated a turnout of only 40 percent of the electorate T h e D a ily T e x a n S tu d e n t N e w s p a p e r a t The U n iversity of Texas at A ustin vol 74 No 96 Ten Cents Austin, Texas, W ednesday, N o ve m b e r 6, 1974 T w enty P a g e s 471-4591 Briscoe. Incumbents Re-elected By DAVID HENDRICKS Texan Staff Writer Gov. Dolph Briscoe, riding his in­ cumbency and a nationwide surge towards Democrats, was given a fouryear gubernatorial term Tuesday, carry­ ing with him the entire statewide Democratic slate to victory. At 2 a.rn Wednesday and with 90 per­ cent of the ballots counted. Briscoe led with a total of 881,145 votes (63 percent) Republican Jim Cranberry1 had 433.145 i30 percent), Raza Unida’s Ramsey Muniz had received 70.002 (5 percent), Socialist Workers Party's Sherry’ Smith's votes totaled 6.011 <1 percent) and S W Sam McDonnell, American Party, had received 18.117 votes (I percent). Briscoe called the victory “ an en­ dorsement of my record, meaning no new taxes and a budget surplus at the end of the fiscal year. IN L l BB(X'K. Cranberry conceded defeat, claiming "the antiGOP trend spreading across the nation was irrever­ sible " A Cranberry aide. Mike Smith, added that Watergate had been a factor in turning Texas voters away from the (R e late d Stories, Photo*, P a g e s 3 & Cran berry a n d w ife Republicans citing the Democratic upset Tuesday of U.S. Rep. Boh Price. Pampa Republican, to Democratic State Sen. Jack Hightower of Vernon. (Hightower received 52,506 votes to Prices’ 38.326). Muniz, in falling far short of the 200,000 votes he received in 1972. maintained in Corpus Christi Tuesday night that La Raza Unida was still an important political force — UPI i«iepno»o "In two years, we have changed the at­ titudes of 50 years, and things will con­ vote in Lubbock. tinue to get better for the party, he said In other statew ide races, with 90 per­ cent of the vote counted. Lt. Gov Bill Hobby won re-election with 914,884 votes over Republican Gaylord Marshall s 364.769 votes and Soci; ist V irker Dan Fein s 8,916 ATTY. GEN. JOHN H ILL was re­ elected with 951,581 votes, over Republican Tom Cole s 310,767 votes and electric utilities, especially in the Southeast, where stockpiles are low Socialist Worker Pedro Vasauez s 20.861. The state comptroller s office went to A Georgia Power Co. official said in Democrat Bob Bullock, who received Atlanta the comp ny might he forced to 887.748 votes over Republican Nick institute "rotating blackouts" in all Rowe's 344.233 and Socialist Worker Sa parts of the state if there is a prolonged Scoggins’ 10,471 coal strike State Treasurer Jesse James again Major steel mills also have less than won re-election with 840,522 votes over three weeks inventory of coal, and the in­ R ep u b lica n Boh Holt s 441.168. dustry estimates some furnaces would Interestingly, Holt carried Travis ( ounstart to close down within two weeks. tv with 36.609 votes to James’ 35.272. The Federal Office of Emergency Land Commis* oner Bob Armstrong Preparedness estimated the spin-off also won re-elec ion. receiving 924.149 results of prolonged strike could add votes over Repub lean Mary Leu Grier s 600,000 to I million workers to the 315,372 and Socialist Worker William already-high unemployment rolls. Ravson s 8,019. Guy Farmer, general counsel of the AGRICULTURE COMMISSIONER Bituminous Coal Operators Association, John C, White was re-elected with said the operators gave the UMW "an 912.061 votes O' e r Republican Zack offer that in my opinion has not been ex­ Fisher’s 339,303. ceeded in any negotiations in any major Fo r a Railroad Commission spot. industry in total scope " Democratic incumbent Jim Langdon But UMW President Arnold Miller was re-elected with 852,672 votes over responded by leading his officials out of Republican Joe Cain’s 335,811, Raza the negotiating session and declaring, Unida Fred Garza’s 55,851 and Socialist "With this contract proposal they’ve Worker Rick Cor gross' 6,728 declared a strike in the coal fields." To an unexpired Railroad Commission The UMW's current contract with the term of two years. Democrat Mack BCOA expired at midnight Monday and Wallace was elected with 876,377 over the union traditionally does not work Republican Dale Steffes 332.047 without a contract. Even with a settle­ From the 10th Congressional District. ment, the union’s ratification procedures U.S. Rep. J.J. "Ja k e " Pickle of Austin would take an estimated week to IO davs easily won over his Republican opponent Paul Weiss In Travis County the final The union s "no contract, no work" returns were Pickle with 54.494 ( 78.94 rule could be relaxed under extraor­ percent) and Weiss with 14,566 (21 OI) dinary circumstances, or President Ford percent) , could order an 80-day "cooling off" Hill said Tuesday night that people are period under the Taft-Hartley Law, a increasingly voting more for the in­ procedure which has met little success in dividual than for a particular party He coal walkouts in the past. Coal Strike Likely After Talks Stall W ASH ING TO N (U P I) — A coal miners’ strike next week — which could dim the nation's lights, sharply curb steel production and add hundreds of t ousands to the unemployment rolls — appeared certain Tuesday, despite union promises of new contract proposals United Mine Workers union leaders walked out of contract talks early Tues­ day. and although a union spokesman said, "W e're busy working on our own proposals," there seemed little chance an agreement could be achieved and a contract ratified before the deadline at midnight Monday No further talks were scheduled, but a spokesman said the coal mine operators "fully expect to hear from the guys (UMW representatives)." - Federal energy o fficia ls said, meanwhile, the governors of a dozen coal-producing states had been invited to the White House for a Thursday after­ noon meeting to discuss the impact of any strike The governors will meet with Interior Secretary Rogers C B Morton and Frank Zarb, acting executive director ol the nation s new Energy Council "Because of its direct impact on the steel industry and other heavy manufac­ turing and all that that means for the automobile industry - the threatened coal strike can have great job im­ plications for Michigan,” said Michigan Gov Ronald Milliken, one of those in­ cited to the meeting The contract covers 120.000 UMW members in 25 states, who produce about 70 percent of the country's coal. Experts predicted a lengthy strike would disrupt ll.) added that he was disappointed in the turnout. T m worried about the country and the state." Hill said. " It s scan’ when you see people turned off to democracy. " In Travis County. Briscoe received the most votes for governor with 34.209 tallies (46 21 percent), while Cranberry received 27.229 votes (36.78 percent). Muniz received 11,221 votes (15.16 percent i Smith and McDonnell received 958 and 411 respectively for about I per­ cent each. Travis County Following the same trend set by the nation and the state. Democratic can­ didates in Travis County had little or no trouble defeating Republicans. State Sen Lloyd Doggett handily defended his District 14 seat, beating the GOP’s Clarke Straughan in each of the five counties covered by the district. In Travis County. Doggett received 46.377 votes (62.78 percent) while Straughan received 27.496 votes (37.22 percent * FOR T H E four state representative places in District 37. two incoming Democrats wron, Wilhelmina Delco and Gonzalo Barrientos, while the two in­ cumbents, Ronnie Earle and Sarah Wed­ dington. captured what could only be called landslide victories. Delco won the Place I seat by receiv­ ing 46.642 votes (64.78 percent' over Republican Will Wyman's 21.899 votes s30.31 percent) and La Raza Unida’s Pas Pena’s 3,703 votes s5 13 percent'. Barrientos captured the Place 4 seat, getting 42.394 votes (57.27 percent) over Republican Bill Todd's 29,229 votes (39 48 percent). La Plaza Unida’s Arman­ do Gutierrez received only 2.404 votes 13.25 percent). The results of the Earle and Wed­ dington races were similar throughout each precinct in Travis County. Earle regained his Place 3 seat, receiving 53.363 votes (7591 percent over Republican Max Jackson's 16.938 votes (24 09 percent' W ED D IN GTO N R E C E IV E D 53.638 (73.02 percent' over Republican David Kirchner’s 17,458 ( 23.76 percent) and Raza Unida’s Orelia Cole s 2,365 (3.25 percent). In the race for Travis County judge. Democrat Mike Renfro won. receiving 54,430 votes (76.59 percent) over Republican Joe Leonard's 16.639 votes 123 41 percent) TH E TRA VIS COUNTY’ vote turnout was 75.392 (37.57 percent', somewhat short of the turnout predicted by County Clerk Doris Shropshire, who had ex­ pected at least 40 percent There are 200,649 registered voters in Travis Coun- Briscoe a n d w ife cast ballots. Runoff Race Set For Student Senate Two remaining Student Senate races will be settled in a runoff election Wednesday. Gary Ellison and Bill Ware are com­ peting in the at-large race, and Dale Napier is facing Cindy Powell in the School of Communication race Polling locations are Gregory Gym. the M ain M a ll, the C om m unication Complex. Robert Lee Moore Hall and the law school. The polls will be open from 8 30 a rn to 4 30 p m Students must have an ID to vote Ellison and Ware received the largest vote totals in a large field of candidates for the at large position in last Wednesday s election today Partly C lo ud y Wednesday will be partly cloudy and cool with a slight chance of rain at night. Winds should be light and variable, and temperatures should range from the upper-60s to the mid-50s Wednesday night. A g o n y a n d the Ecstasy . . . Texan staff writers Scott Tagliarino, Dick Je ffe r­ son and Charles Lohrmann report the mood of campaign's end at the state headquarters of Dolph Briscoe, Jim Cranberry and Ramsey Muniz. See their stories on Page l l . ____ Ellison is a senior government major and coordinated the Student Government Task Force to extend dead days. He is vice-president of the So cial and Behavioral Sciences Council, senior ad­ viser to the Freshman Honor Council arid a member of Ute Advisory Council on Student Affairs Ellison stated issues in his campaign are the quality of advising and the availability of advisers, the University policy concerning incompletes and the policy concerning foreign language re­ quirements Ware focuses his campaign on minori­ ty recruitment and an optional check-off fee for the Union. He said he had helped in the attempt to establish an American Indian scholarship fund and wanted to do the same for blacks, chicanos and women law students. Napier expressed his support for the Union optional fee and said Student Government should ' serve and protect the interest of the students " He is a member and past chairperson et the City Lobby Committee and has been active in lobbying for low utility rates for students and protection of University neighborhoods P o w ell expressed concern over problems in the School of Communica­ tion such as overcrowding, the need for more individualized instruction and a lower student-faculty ratio. She said as a member of Student Government she would be active in the selection process of a new University president, in campus physical planning and in improvement in shuttle bus ser­ vice Middle Earth Denied Permit 'Deep Throat Has Social Value' U n iv e rsity Professors Testify for D e f e n s e Bx BAHRY BOESCH Texan Staff W riter Two University professors testified Tuesday that "D eep Throat" does not appeal to a shameful or morbid interest m sex ' ami is not patently o ffe n s iv e " a s the m ov ie obscenity trial entered it" se cond day Dr Roger D Abrahams, chairperson of the English department ami professor of anthropology and Dr Robert F er n e a. p r o fe s s o r of anthropology testified for the defense following the presen­ tation of the state s case which included the showing of ‘social inversion” in which film and the defendants. the film "D eep Throat man turns things upside down Lf Bo Gregory , immediate The film has “ redeeming in his culture in the form of s u p e r v i s o r o f th e tw o social value Abrahams add parody arresting o fficers at the time ck! Deep T h roat" is connected of the arrest, also testified for e n d er the Texas obscenity to a form of art encompassing the prosecution la w . m a t e r i a l m u st be bawds plavs in 18th Century Gregory related the c i r ­ patently offensive applying England and dating back to cum stances under which he c o n te m p o ra ry com m u n ity the ‘ satyr plays of ancient becam e aw are of the showing standards" and appeal to a G r e e c e ' w h ic h in c lu d e d of the film and the subsequent sham efu l or morbid in­ grotesque representation of investigation terest in sex and have “ utterly g e n it a l ia ," A b rah am s Deep T h ro at" was shown no redeeming social value to testified to a crowded courtroom atter he declared obscene “ The community would suf­ a minor problem with the T h e p r o s e c u t o r s c a lle d fer from the restriction of sound was cleared up The a r r e s tin g o ffic e r s Sgt Deep Throat* " Abrahams p r o je c to r ag ain m a lfu n c ­ Kenneth F razier and Lt Je r r y tioned at the end of the film , Culp to te s tify about the causing a delay nature of the investigation and The prosecution rested Us the arrest and seizure of the case after confirming that the film shown to the court was the sam e film confiscated. A braham s linked Deep T h ro a t" to a s o c ia l Austin police have no new p h e n o m e n o n he te r m e d leads or suspects in the case involving two missing m is­ sionaries from the Church of Jesu s Christ of L atter Day Saints. L l. Colon Jordan said Tuesday. The m is s io n a rie s . G ary Sm ith O ar ley. 20. of Sim i V a lle y . C a lif., and M ark J a rn e s F i s c h e r . 19 o f oggett, v-ho fille* the Senate spot vacated in June. 19718, bv resignation of former State Sen Cibaries Herring, was expected to win e a sily despite a heavy campaign bv Stra/ghan . Arriving at his (Campaign headquarters Ibout ll p m , D aggett told supporters. I guess cornin*; on will be going on.” Straughan s carJhpaign slogan was “ Com­ ing On S t r a u g h n .“ I see this riot only as a victory for me and for ns.'g he told an enthusiastic crowd, b u y a victory over a campaign run a g a in sjf working people, young pen pie and pcMor people." He a ttrib u ted his victory to "a positive campal*.*!, running on solutions ... rather than a J rea r campaign l> ogJ|eU called the issues raised by S tr a u ih a n such as right to work laws anc*J»velfare ceilings, "phony " T*W.e former Texas Consumer A ssocia­ to r rn president s headquarters reflected a j ovjFial air throughout the evening, with % ;uy Sporters watching their candidate s regress eagerly on television and cheer­ ing with each Democratic victory His percentage lead climbed as high as 70 percent early in the evening, but a strong showing by the challenger in rural counties brought it closer to the mid-60s Doggett was pleased with the higherthan-expected voter turnout, particular­ ly in som e of the rural counties, and felt it aided his victory “ We tried and didn t m a k e it, Straughan told supporters. “ We gave it everything we had, and that s the main thing." Admitting he thought he would do better in the race Straughan said he was outnumbered by party affiliation, with too many people voting the Democratic As his top priorities in the next legislative session. Doggett listed ap­ pointments to the University System Board of Regents, pay raises for state employes and college and university faculty and a form ation of a state utilities regulation commission. Final Travis County totals showed Doggett with 46.377 votes, or 62.78 per­ cent. and Straughan with 27,496. or 37.22 percent. ticket Watergate also had its effects, he said, expressing the wish people had looked more closely at the issues than the party. Calm in defeat, Straughan said another reason for his poor showing was being up against a “ strong, well-known, hardcampaigning incumbent " Straughan prided himself on an old­ fashioned. shoo leather, hand shaking campaign, with large em phasis on the district s rural populace if rn 4 Yin, SAA — Texan Staff Photo If the party does not poll this election, it will be n o m in a te th rou gh th e process, which consists of 20 percent in required to c o n v e n tio n petitioning Gutierrez said Raza Unida had ac­ complished what it set out to do in Tuesday's election, which was to set up a local organization. Democrats G a in Seats In County “ We found out who were workers, who w e r e t a lk e r s and g r a d u a lly got together ’’ Gutierrez said By MARY MCELROY The Democrats made a clean sweep in all of the contested county races in Tuesday's general election In the county judge s race. Democrat Mike Renfro defeated his Republican challenger, Joe Leonard, by a margin of 54.430 to 16,639 votes. Renfro will replace retiring incumbent J H Watson who has served as Travis County judge for the last 12 years. At his campaign headquarters Renfro expressed his excitement and pleasure with the results of the race. “ The race was clo ser than I e x ­ pected,” Renfro said “ Everyone work­ ed so hard, and I'm very grateful for all their help." I hope to see county government in more of the spotlight in the future and I expect to be very active." he said D em ocrat Bob Honts soundly defeated Republican Gregory Lacy by a margin of 16.084 to 5,937 votes in the county com ­ m issioner's race. Precinct 2 Incumbent Richard Moya was re­ elected in the Precinct 4 county com ­ m issioner's race against Republican challenger Darrell Vaughn and Raza Unida candidate Raymond Donley, Jr. Moya received 68 percent of the vote Democrat Johnny Crow easily won the county treasurer’s race against Raza Unida challenger Juan Hipohto by a margin of 53,327 to 9.713 votes. In the only other contested county race, Democrat F.W. “Joe Horton defeated Raza Cnida candidate Jose A Torres for county school superintendent Horton received 52,079 votes against Torres’ 11.774 I i. r b y M ik e Sm ith The recently revised Texas Election Code requires that a party carry 20 per­ cent of the total gubernatorial vote to nominate candidates through primary elections. The previous law speeificed 2 percent. We also discovered our pathetic dependence on the media. We will have to appraise how we can handle this. “ We are dealing with a hostile media that is preventing an alternative or m in o rity party from c o m p etin g . Gutierrez said The two established parties do not res­ pond to the people s needs, he added. We’ve gone beyond simply getting a Mexican-American in office, he said As Gutierrez viewed it, the fledgling local Raza Unida Party has not been dis­ mantled by the new Election Code. The party is viable and will continue even if it should not be successful in its projected lawsuit, Gutierrez said. “ If we are unable to get on the state ballots, then we will concentrate solely on e le c tio n s at the lo ca l le v e l. Gutierrez said The party would center on City Council races. The main problem, as Raza Unida sees it, is money: it cannot afford to compete but will not compromise its views to get funds. This is precisely what it accuses Gonzalo Barrientos of doing. “The media pictured us as having no chance of winning, and we did not have the money to combat this picture. Gutierrez said As one party spokesperson put it. “ It all com es back to money " The money-media problem. Gutierrez said, will be combated with legwork — getting out to the community. But the question after Tuesday s elec­ tion seemed to be. will the party be able to get on the ballots at all — Texan Staff Photo by Corol Jean Sim m ons W ilh e lm in a Delco an xiously w atch es election returns. „ conversations, presumably for history, although I don't recall anyone telling me that. It was an assumption Butterfield appeared as part of the prosecution s preparations for the possi­ ble introduction of 22 presidential tapes. Chief trial prosecutor Jam es F. Neal said the government intended during the remainder of the week to finish laying the foundation for introducing the tapes as evidence and to call stenographers to v e r ify the grand jury and S en ate testimony of defendants Haldeman and John D. Ehrlichman. Then. Neal said, the playing of the tapes can begin, and “ we can get to what this ease is all about." EARLIER, FBI AGENTS Daniel C Mahan. John Denton and Robert E. Lill testified that in the first weeks after the Watergate break-in, defendants John N. Mitchell and Ehrlichman had said that all they knew about the break-in was what they had read in the papers. Neal said later that since the newspapers had carried little about Watergate at that point, Mitchell and Ehrlichman were not telling the truth when they made those statem ents. The five presidential tapes that have By TONI SNIDOW Texan Staff Writer D em ocratic candidate V. llhelm ina Delco defeated Republican Will Wyman in the race for state representative. Place I. receiving 65 percent of the total vote A fir st-tim e ca n d id a te for sta te representative. Delco received more than 50 percent of the vote in the Democratic primary elections. She is Travis County’s first black represen­ tative since the Reconstruction era “ We’re serious about the office in E ast Austin Delco said. I hope to be as responsive to the people in Travis County as they have been to me. Delco said her high priority issues as representative will include public school financing and a more equitable tax struc­ ture but added that fair treatment of all issues is important to her. D elco claim ed she w as “ am azed that her opponent received 30 percent of the total vote “ without cam paigning or do­ ing anything ” Wyman was not available to comment on the election By Large M a r g in s Weddington, Earle Win B y BILL SCOTT Texan Staff Writer Two m em bers of the Travis County legislative delegation posted decisive victories over their Republican and third party opposition in Tuesday's general election, winning by margins as great as three-to-one. A crowd of 20-plus persons, many of them legislative aides and staff per­ sonnel. gathered in the speaker’s recep­ tion area behind the House chamber to watch as the results of legislative races from throughout the state were posted on a toteboard. “ I think my victory, in part, can be at­ tributed to a general dissatisfaction with Republicans, not just in Texas, but across the country," Earle said at the gathering Tuesday night. “Though I feel the public is resentful of public officials and politicians in general, the people don't blame the Democrats, he added WEDDINGTON, who. through seniori­ ty, will become the dean of the Travis County delegation, said the group would be balanced for the first time between men and women members. “ I think the margin of victory in­ dicates a majority of the people of Travis County were satisfied with my Nixon Requested Tapes in 1971 . Delco W ins In Contest For Place I G onzalo Barrientos Watergate Trial WASHINGTON (U P I) — Federal Aviation Administrator Alexander P Butterfield testified at the Watergate cover-up trial Tuesday that form er President Nixon ordered a taping system installed in the White House in February of 1971. Butterfield, whose testimony at the Senate Watergate hearings in 1973 dis­ clo sed the existence of the tapes, told of ^ receivin g instructions from form er W hite H ouse c h ie f of s t a f f H R Haldeman. Butterfield said he im mediately con­ tacted Secret Service Supervisor Al Wong and told him: “ THE PRESID ENT w ants a tape recording set-up in the Oval Office and the Cabinet Room. It s to be a good s y s te m . T he W hite H o u se c o m ­ munications agency, which m eans the military communications people assign­ ed to the White House, are not to do the work The Secret Service is to do the work. It is to be done hurriedly, as soon s possible No one is to know about it ex­ cept those who must know Butterfield, who was White House deputy assistant at the time, testified the purpose of the system was to record all Wilhelmina Delco, “ it seem s they (La Raza Unida > angered the local com ­ m u n ity .’ Barrientos said I didn t think it Aould be an easy ra c e ." he said Speaking of the switch from P lace I to P lace 4 by Todd. Barrientos said. “ I don t think the law was w r i t t e n for the purpose it was used " B arrientos is an advocate of a state utilities com m ission, public school finan­ cial refo rm s t r ic t e r p en alties and stronger enforcem ent of environmental protection laws and salary increases for state em ployes. Republican Todd said his candidacy was a step toward establishing a twoparty system in Travis County. A conservative businessman. Todd ad­ vocated saving most of the estim ated $1 billion surplus in the State Treasury. It could be saved to fo restall future tax increases. Todd said. The big issue is conservative versus liberal.” Todd, who operates four sm all new spapers in T exas, said Tuesday night. % By IRWIN SPEIZER Texan Staff Writer L e g is l a t i v e a s p ir a n t A rm a n d o Gutierrez did not present the expected drain on Democrat Gonzalo Barrientos’ vote as Travis County Raza Unida can­ didates took a severe beating Tuesday at the polls, Gutierrez attributed his loss in the Place 4 House race largely to hostile media coverage, said the party probably would file suit testing the legality of a state law which may challenge its sur­ vival. felt they had to beat us. Barrientos said about La Raza Unida party. In running candidates against such candidates as Travis County Commissioner Richard Moya and Democratic House nominee were important issues. “ Legislators should not only make good laws but be advocates of good laws, he said after his victory was assured. “ In order to establish their party they ( h p m t i nthe 0 o fruling t h e O Oof U rt. Si the court.” Sirica by" T h . l t 's "That's said firmly “ Let's proceed " former White House counsel John W Dean III, who participated in the conver­ Mahan and Lill testified that Mitchell sa tio n s. P r o se cu to r s do not have told them July 5. 1972. when they inter­ witnesses to authenticate the other tapes viewed him in his law office he “ had no and must lay another foundation for in­ knowledge of the break-in except for troducing them into evidence. what he had read in newspaper ac­ Presiding Judge John J. Sirica said he counts." clearly heard Haldeman, also a defen­ U N D E R CROSS-EXAM INATION, dant, mention the word “ Gemstone" in however, the agents acknowledged that one of the Oval Office tapes recorded Mahan in writing his FBI report had m is­ June 23, 1972, six days after the break in. spelled certain names and got the date Wi h the jury of eight blacks and four wrong whites out of the courtroom, Sirica said Mahan and Denton testified that he h e a r d H a ld e m a n m e n tio n Ehrlichman told them July 21. 1972, that “Gem stone,” the code word for bugging he was “ in possession of no information operations at the Democratic National relative to the break-in other than what Committee he had read in the way of newspaper ac HALDEMAN HAS CONTENDED he counts " never heard the word until months later Under cross-examination by William His la w y er, John J. W ilson, said S. F r a t e s , E h r lie h m a n ’s la w y e r , Haldeman used the word "convention however. Mahan acknowledged that dur Sirica ruled that the defendants could ing a pretrial conference with Frates he not have personal copies of the White had m isstated the tim e during the inter­ House tapes to be transcribed. He said view that Ehrlichman had made the the defendants and their lawyers must statement. continue to listen to the tapes in the “ I don’t want to be personal. Mr special prosecutor s office Mahan, but we all can make mistakes, “That s the vice of this whole thing," Frates said Haldeman attorney John J Wilson “ Yes, sir," Mahan replied protested record after two years experience in the House." she said Both faced only token opposition in their individual races. I really didn't wage an active c a m ­ p aign." Earle said, adding that he never opened a campaign office “ This afternoon, (Tuesday I passed out leaflets at Jester Center urging peo­ ple to vote, but that was about it. as far as election day was c o n c e r n e d , he said The victories o! other m em bers ot the d e le g a tio n w ill h elp in th e n e x t legislative session, Earle said “ This election will produce a group of representatives who were all elected from the entire county and who will be responsive to the needs of citizens from all a re a s of the county," he said. THOUGH ORIGINAL e stim a te s for Tuesday's turnout were low, m ore than 50 percent of the eligible voters in the countv cast ballots Weddington said she w as “ quite su r­ prised" that the final show ing reached as high as it did. while E a rle term ed the turnout “damned good Both representatives have definite plans about what they would like to ac­ complish during the legislative session beginning in January’. “ I want to see a centralized personnel system for all state agencies as well as a right-to-privacy measure em erge from the upcoming session." E arle said. WEDDINGTON SAID she will con­ tinue to work for a pay ra ise m easure for all U n iv e rsity em p lo y es, a u tilities regulation comm ission and the preserva­ tion of historic buildings throughout the state. “ I feel this next L egislature will be the m ost active one in recen t y e a rs .’ she added A revision of the Texas Constitution w ill e v e n t u a l ly be e n a c t e d , th e legislators said. “Some of the m easures (of the ill-fated, revision attempt earlier this year', such a s th e L e g is la tiv e , E x e c u tiv e and Judicial Articles can hopefully be sub­ mitted to the vote!s." Weddington said. “There is also the possibility of a referendum in the 1976 elections concern­ ing a citizen convention to attempt to produce a new docum ent,” she added. E a r le w a s le s s s p e c ific on the timetable for the submission of a new charter but felt the document would be produced “ in m y life tim e ." Weddington drew more than 73 percent of the vote to defeat Republican David L. Kirchner and La Raza Unida candidate Orelia Cole in the P lace 2 House contest. Weddington captured 53,638 votes while Kirchner and Cole received 17,458 and 2,365, respectively Earle. Place 3, defeated Republican Max Jackson 53.362 to 16.938. Earle earn­ ed 75 percent of the vote in his race. _____en f n p iita i i i t h o n t i c ' : » hv Ibeen played sop nfar were authenticated Boy's Father Charged In Halloween Death PASADENA (UPI) — Police Tuesday filed murder charges against the father of an 8-year-old boy poisoned Halloween night bv a candy straw con­ taining cyanide P olice, who had gone from (loo.- to door in a two-block area of this Houston suburb tracing the youth's trick-or-treat path, announced at a hastily called news conference that Ronald Clark O'Bryan, 30. was held under $100,000 bond. Timothy Mark O'Bryan died late Thursday from eating the candy His father told police his son had begged to be allowed one treat before going to bed. “Thirty seconds after I left Tim’s room. I heard him cry’ to me. Daddy, dad­ dy. my stomach hurts,’ ' O’Bryan said last week He was in the bathroom, convulsing, vomiting and gasping and then suddenly he ven t limp," Detective ( apt. R E Rhodes refused to discuss what led to O’Bryan’s arrest. “Obviously we and the district attorney's office felt there was sufficient evidence at this time for a charge to bt' filed." Rhodes said. “ At this tim e we cannot comment as to any other aspect of this ease or about any statem ents made by a n c of the parties involved due to the legal aspects involved. Police said four other straws containing candy powder mixed with cyanide granules were found in the O'Bryans' neighborhood, but apparently no other youngster had eaten one Police said the father had taken his children trick-ortreating because of the late hour and light rain. Wednesday, November 6, 1974 T H E D A IL Y T E X A N Page 3 EDITORIALS Page 4 Wednesday, November 6, 1974 Buying the Thicket before it's sold out FOY— NOT FOR THE1 FDA WE'D REALLY BE number of sm aller Texas foundations could follow the Nature Conservancy s exam ple. Another hope is the State of Texas. The Texas Parks and Wildlife D epartm ent, a s of Aug. 31, had $8,460,$28.21 in governm ent secu rities designated for land acquisition and developm ent and $12,947,459.01 in unencum bered revenue from the cigarette tax. In addition. P&W has sold only $15,750,000.00 of the $75 m illion in bonds it is authorized to sell. The Parks and W ildlife D epartm ent should buy and hold Big thicket land scheduled for federal a c ­ quisition But it should do m ore. The acreage provided for by C ongress just is not enough. An ad­ ditional state park in the Big Thicket would com ple­ m ent the national preserve adm irably It is tim e the State of Texas lived up to its own responsibility to the Big Thicket. S ecretary of the Interior R ogers Morton an­ nounced this w eek that negotiations are under way for purchase of 71,250 acres. We must assum e that he w ill sign contracts and then ask Congress for the money. But what about the other 13.300 acres Mor­ ton d o e sn 't h a v e on h is l i s t 0 Y arb orou gh rem em bers that the Departm ent of the Interior op­ posed a preserve of m ore than 68.000 acres Mor­ ton's announcem ent looks a lot tike bureaucratic footdragging. W hatever, w e are all aw are that any delay in purchase of these lands could mean their destruction. Trees are still being cut in the Big Thicket Though the President has signed into law the bill creating a Big Thicket N ational P reserve, none of the land included in the preserve has been purchas­ ed yet The law gives the National Parks Service six years to purchase the land. In the m eantim e, the trees keep falling, the w ildlife keeps starving, the Thicket keeps shrinking So at the end of six vears. we TI be the proud ow ners of 84.550 acres of bald land The m oratorium on logging land in the preserve area, announced by the m ajor lu m b er com panies, is worthless Those com panies still buy and m ill pulp wood that has been cut from preserve land by sm all contractors I S Hep Bob Eckhardt received a report last month that a 188 64-acre tract on Pine Island Bayou, owned by the Federal Land Corpora­ tion (whose registered agent is WA Counts, Dallas . has been stripped Congress passed its appropriations bill with m illions of dollars for guns for foreign countires but no money for land in the Big Thicket. Today is none too soon to begin working on next year's ap­ propriations bill. If U.S. Rep. Jake Pickle intends ever to take an active part in efforts to save the Big Thicket, the fight over the appropriations bill is his chance. Victory parties and congratulations pass around the ranks of those who fought for the Big Thicket But while Congress stalls, loggers hack aw ay at the woodland Ralph Yarborough, who has worked as hard for the Bi*: Thicket preserve as anybody, warns that now is not the tim e to let up. One very real hope for an interim m easu re is the Nature Conservancy, a nationwide nonprofit cor­ poration which buys land and holds it for p reserva­ tion. The Nature Conservancy, which does not lobby for parks because of its tax-exem pt status, is ex ­ perienced in buying endangered land awaiting governm ent acquisition The land is purchased through a revolving fund. A IF TROUBLE! < Quote for the day The relationship between trustees and the faculty m ust be to create an environm ent that a ttra cts and holds outstanding scholars. There m ust be absolute freedom of inquiry and a b ­ solute expression so long as it does no violence to another's right to the sam e freedom. E lm er Anderson Chairman of the Board of R egents, U niversity of M innesota firing Un© Break bread with Friedman today Urn -T. I'll call that an d raise you two N e w York banks, an automobile factory a n d a chain of ne w sp a p e rs/ To the editor: T hursday, A u stin ’s C ity C ouncil members will decide whether or not to grant them selves a pay raise. The action would establish annual salaries of $12,000 for each ol the six councilmen and $14OOO yearly for the mayor. The current salary stands at SIO per week This move has prompted criticism from many who feel that the council is flagrantly dis­ regarding the will of the people — last y ea r. Austin r e sid e n ts r e je c te d a minimum $5,200 salary in a City Charier e le c tio n by a tw o-to-one m argin . Furthermore, rarely does a legislative body vote itself a pay increase to take effect during the term in which it is ap­ proved Yet many proponents of the raise have equally persuasive reasons for adopting the proposal. At the forefront of this debate is Coun­ cilman Jeff Friedman On the second reading before the council. Friedman voted for the pay raise. What action he w ill ta k e T h u rsd a y is u n c e r ta in . Whatever his decision, and that of the council, the entire matter will no doubt be an issue in the upcoming city elec­ tions. W ednesday at noon. C ouncilm an Friedman will speak on the political pragmatism and moral questions in­ volved in the matter The sandwich seminar will be held in the Garden Room on the fourth floor of the Academic Center Since he has consistently spoken in concert with the student community and in all probability will be a candidate for mayor in 1975. students should take this opportunity to speak with Friedman and better understand the moral and philosophical problems involved in the pay issue and the political ramifications of its passage or defeat ThursdayLee Sandoloski A cuperson s To the editor: I admire the acuPERSONS of the editorial staff in the Daily Texan In the last two weeks, reference has b e e n m a d e in t h e s e p a g e s to : C hairP E R SO N S, SpokesP E R SO N S, Fairy God-PERSONS and. the latest Cow PERSONS. Can life hold anv more? Dr. M E. Leesley Assistant Professor Chemical Engineering Plea for love To the editor: Please, please, people, if you hear someone remark that he or she is con­ sidering suicide, do not dism iss it as an idle threat, but as a cry for help, a last desperate plea for love and caring; when this is not heard, it is as tragic as the resultant death — for when there is no love, the spirit dies Dean Ornish 308 E. 32nd St. Senior, Humanities C h a n g e of scene To the editor: Let s say you're doing research on a [Mper at the Academic Center on any given night, and you want to Xerox a The perils of central p l a n n i n g By TERRY QUIST Friedrich A Hayek and Gunnar Myrdal shared the Nobel Prize for economics this year Which is ironic Myrdal, you see. may be termed the current inter­ national high guru of central economic planning. Hayek has fought central plan­ ning most of his life The wire dispatch described Hayek as a ‘conservative economist. But Hayek never liked that label He depicts him self as liberal in “ the original, 19th Century sense in which it is s t i l l c u r r e n t in Britain.'’ He finds it a continuing source of puzzlement that WI the term “ liberal’' has been corrupted in America to mean "the ad vocacy of almost every kind of government control.'’ He finds puzzling “the consequent tendency of many true liberals to describe them selves as con­ servatives Hayek published The Road to Serf­ dom’’ in 1944 This seminal work in econom ics and political philosophy assaulted the blossoming love affair b e tw een in t e lle c tu a ls and q u a s i­ socialism; between intellectuals and state power Hayek asserted the nexus between facial) and the centrally plann­ ed economy, and although he focused upon Nazi Germany, he was equally con­ cerned with Stalin’s Russia But in 1944. it was still indelicate to attack our friend and brilliant ally. Few are reach/ to recognize,’’ he wrote “ that the rise of fascism and Naziism was not a reaction against the Socialist trends of the preceding period but. a necessary outcome of those tenden­ cies Many of the key theoreticians and personnel of the Nationalist Socialist m o v em en t w ere fo rm er M a rx ist Socialists Sombart, for instance, was acknowledged as a leading M arxist scholar early in this century, before his conversion to Naziism Plenge led the H egal ren a issa n c e am ong M arxist thinkers. And observers of the Nazi movement frequently noted that the best potential recruit for National Socialism was a young Communist (and viceversa i Both the National Socialists and the Marxist Socialists were inheritors of the Prussian tradition That is, the concept of the military organization of society from the ground up, the assignment of a place in society for every citizen, the Beamtenstaat The Nazis, of course, were glad to receive an ambience of sub­ servience to the state The Socialists, no less. It was Trotsky who said, “ In a coun­ try where the sole employer is the state, opposition means death by slow starva­ tion The old principle; who does not work shall not eat, has been replaced by a new one who does not obey shall not e a t.” As Hayek o b serv ed , the cen tra l planners cannot tolerate dissent from the central plan That is. the pawns must be obedient, for the billions of capricious decisions of individuals in free society make central planning im possible. Whereas in liberal societies the govern­ ment merely provides the ground rules for the free conduct of individuals (“ the rule of law ’ ), the central planner becomes increasingly concerned with decisions affecting our daily lives. He decides for us where we shall live, what we shall eat (whether we shall ea t!), where we work, what we read. (Surely, a free press cannot survive when the government owns the presses, the media and the paper stock ) The enforced tendency is always towards the confor­ mity of action and uniformity of opinion which facilitate the planning process. Because the planner cannot allow such notions as “ individual rights” to in­ terfere with comprehensive planning, in­ dividual rights slowly capitulate to the rights of society.” Which means that the arbitrary d ic ti of the planners usurp the rule of law Which means the rule of expediency It’s not sufficient for the government to be “democratically elected ;” for the parliament must in any case delegate the self-sa m e arb itrary pow er to the bureaucracy. The parliament, by its very nature, is equipped only to consider the most general aspects of the plan. It’s not sufficient to say that central p lan n in g is “ in e v i t a b l e ,” due to monopolies or the complexity of society ; because it isn t. Hayek com m ents, “ Private monopoly is scarcely ever complete and even more rarely of long duration or able to disregard potential competition. ... It is only since the transi­ tion to protection and the general change in British econom ic policy accom ­ panying it that the growth of monopolies has proceeded at an amazing rate As for the “ complexity of society,” the incompetence of a central bureau ad­ vances pari passu with the complexity of its tasks. It is in a milieu of complexity that the sem iautom atic “ invisible hand’ of supply and demand com es into its own as a planning device. “ The Road to Serfdom” profoundly affected a generation of intellectuals A handful of leading Am erican leftist editors and writers of the era were even­ tually to grace the pages of National Review, citing Hayek’s book as an im­ portant influence; one thinks particular­ ly of Max Eastman, Jam es Burnham and Frank Meyer. Hayek deserved the Nobel Prize, and his books deserve thoughtful considera­ tion. us. people who gave them something to eat, could not even approach theTi a l w a y s waited for us to put down the b o wl s a n d retreat into the hose befool th ey e v e n tr ie d to sn a tch a mouthfuls magazine article but all you've got is a dollar bill. Well, you could ask a total stranger if he’s got change Better vet, you could ask the librarian at the front desk. but he doesn t have any There s a bill changer in the vending area north of the Tower, but they lock the Main Building up some time before they lock up the Academic Center. Or you could trot over and get change at 2-J’s on Guadalupe Street (shiny quarter. I don t get rich doing this), couldn't you? All sounds a bit too real, doesn’t it Steve Sucher D o g food To the editor: Not a very long time ago, we were call­ ed to the manager’s office and told that we had to stop giving food to some hungry straying dogs. They told us that giving some food to any straying dogs and cats was considered as having pets, but giving food to people was all right. We asked the opinion in the students’ attorney’s office and were told that we did not sign any contracts not to give food to some hungry straying dogs and cats, but the University is so powerful that we would lose if we ever wanted to bring the matter to the court The straying dogs were particularly very shy of people. The manager’s office has been trying to capture them every sem ester but without any effect. Even T he Straying dogs and cats are everywhere in the city and the student housing is poi surrounded by mines, barbed wires armed guards As a result, anyone wH opens the door for one little creature ti creep in. especially when it is winter time, is a violator of the University rule Whoever gives them anything to eat would be convicted And a lot of people I know have had cats simply by adopting a straying little cat (easy to hide in the house — unlike dogs which are usually too big to hide from the eyes of the “ law ’’). Even if we put all of these pets in the Humane Society to be killed later on, some will travel from other parts of the city , and if we obey strictly the com­ mandments from the officers of UT’s Married Student Housing in not giving the animals anything, no matter how hungry they are. there will be creatures who only meet the hostilities from the humane human beings. A human being was crudely defined as an animal who is more intellectual, who is more human than other animals. But of course, to define humanity, it is a verycomplex matter, H Y. Tran Graduate S tu d en t D a il y T e x a n I M m I N ew spaper mf The U n iv e rs ity o f f t i n af A es* EDITOR ............................................................................................... Buck Harvey MANAGING EDITOR .......................................................... Sylvia Moreno ASSISTANT MANAGING EDITORS . . ........................... Lynne Brock Larry Smith NEWS EDITOR ............................................................... Martha J P McQuade UNIVERSITY EDITOR ...................................................... Richard Fly SPORTS EDITOR ............................ Herb Holland AMUSEMENTS EDITOR ........................... Paul Beutel FEA TU R ES EDITOR ........................................ Claude Simpson PHOTO EDITOR ............................................ Marlon Taylor ISSUE STAFF Issue E d ito r.......................................................................................................Kathy Kelly General R eporters............................ Susie* Stoler. Irwin Speizer. David Hendricks News Assistants Kermit Fritz. Patsy Lochbaum. Vicki Vaughan.Willard Hall, Mary Walsh, Gwen Spam. Debbie Jamail. Sharon Jayson Danny Robbins. Robin Cravey Editorial A ssistants................... William A. Stone Jr Associate Amusements Editor Betty Holmes Assistant Amusements Editor ...........................Kelley Anderson Assistant Sports Editor ....... .................. Jeff Newman Make-up E d ito r .......................... Laurel Laurentz Wire E d ito r................................. Russell Leigon, Sally Carpenter. Copy E d ito rs............................... Jay Jorden, Debbie DeLaCruz Carol Jean Simmons. Mike Smith Photographers O pinions ex p re s s e d in T he D aily T ex a n Are those of the ed ito r a t tie w rite r of th e a r tic le an d a r e not n e c e s s a rily those o f th e U n iv e rs ity a d m in is tr a tio n o r the B o ard til R eg en ts Du D ailv T ex a n a s tu d e n t n e w s p a p e r at T he I n iv e rs ity a f T e x a s a t A u stin , is p u b lish e d by T e x a s S tu d e n t P u b lic a tio n s. D ra w e r D . I n iv e rs ity S ta tio n A ustin, Tex 7H712 T he D aily T ex a n i i p u b lish e d M onday. T u esd a y . W ednesday. T h u rsd a y , and F rid a y .S eptem ber through May an d T u esd a y . W e dnesday T h u rsd a y and F rid a y Ju n e through A ugust e x c e p t holiday an d e x a m perio d s Second c la ss p o sta g e paid a t A ustin T ex N e w . c o n t r ib u t io n s w ill b e a c c e p t e d bv t e le p h o n e 1 471 45Si> a t th e e d ito ria l o ffic e (T exas Student Publications Mudding b a s e m e n t flo o r ) o r a t th e new s laboratory tOomtnunication Building A4136 Inquiries concerning d elivery and c la ssified ad vertisin g should be m ade in T SP Building 11200 1 47 1 5244) and disp lay ad vertisin g in T SP Building 3 210 <47MMS). The national ad vertisin g rep resen tative of The D aily Texan is National E ducational A dvertising S ervice. Inc . 360 l-exm gton Ave . N e w York, N Y . 10017 The D ailv Texan su b scrib es to The A ssociated P ress. United P re ss In tem at.onal and P a c ific N ew s S ervice The Texan is a m em b er of th e A ssociated C ollegiate P re ss the Southw est Journalism C ongress and the T exas Da.iy N ew spaper A ssociation J NEA- w hen politicians become patrons of the arts . . . ^ which includes opera and quiltm aking, ballet and landscape arc h itectu re tan “ environm ental a rt ’). Hanks notes that “ pride of craftsm an sh ip c re a te d the Shaker ch air If craftsm an sh ip is a rt (and Hanks sensibly co n sid ers it th a t), the NEA can subsidize an ex trao rd in ary range of activities The NEA does spread its g ran ts fa r and wide. Not to put too fine a point on it. the NEA sends g ran ts flowing into a lot of congressional d istricts. The elastic definition of a rt helps m ake th a t possible. An NEA g ran t helped som e Goshen, Ala., high school students turn 1,400 pounds of old auto bum pers into a large model eagle Sen W illiam P ro x m ire, D-Wis., has found the NEA budget as hard to c u t as the Pentagon budget. When he attack ed the soaring NEA budget, his phone rang off the hook with pro tests from g ran t recipients all over Wisconsin. Someone By G E O R G E F. WILL * 1974, The Washington Post Company WASHINGTON - Nancy H anks, chairm an of the N ational E ndow m ent for the A rts, is th e M ayor Daley of the arts. She is the beneficiary of an e ffectiv e political m achine — a responsive, demanding co nstituency that supports the N E /v As a resu lt, she plays upon Congress, from which all blessings flow, as upon a strin g e d instrum ent The NEA was bom in 1965, an ornam ent for the G reat Society Lyndon Johnson w as building for us. Its first budget was $2 5 million. When R ic h ard Nixon appointed H anks in 1969, the budget was $8.2 m illion. F or fiscal 1975 it will be m ore than nine tim es th a t — $74 7 million, up $14 m illion over th is year. TH E NEA operates with a usefully elastic definition of a rt. whn Hose attention to the progress of the NEA budget budget who nays pays close through Congress had alerted the clients in the provinces. Hanks says she is gratified by such spontaneous outpourings of support. . , HANKS SAYS she thinks it is rem arkable th a t the nation s m ayors are enthusiastic about the N EA ’s m atching grants for cities' a r t program s. T here is nothing rem ark ab le about it. When the NEA m atches, dollar for dollar, a city 's spen­ ding cwi the a rts, it m eans the city politicians get two dollars of spending fun for one dollar of their constituents money Of course, th a t dollar would have stayed w here it began and belongs, with the taxpayers, if the NEA m atching g ran ts had not incited new city spending for the arts. True, som e com m unities would not have m useum s or o rch estras without an NEA subsidy It also is tru e that uest viewpoint Describing Swap and Shop' board a By JA N IE STRAUSS free telephone and gen eral in­ (E d ito r's note: Strauss is form ational services. c o o rd in a to r of the T e x a s THE UNION Copy C enter is Union P ro g ra m Council.) in the adjacent Moore-Hill At the m eeting of the B oard H a ll, a s a r e th e U n io n of R egents F riday, it becam e business offices. A pub o ffer­ clear to m e th at there a re ing a variety of food item s, in­ several m isconceptions and false ru m o rs circulating con­ cluding san d w ich es, pizza, f r u i t , p a s t r i e s a n d b o th cern in g th e fa cilities a n d alcoholic and n onalcoholic program s which are, or soon beverages will soon be open will be available to students There will be an additional d u rin g th e T e x a s U n io n m eeting room th at m ay be renovation period I would r e s e r v e d by U n i v e r s i t y like to take this opportunity to o rg an izatio n s for m e e tin g s rectify this unfortunate situ a ­ a n d s o c ia l e v e n ts w h e re tion by once again describing alcoholic beverages m ay be the te m p o rary facilities and served It m ight be noted (as program s offered by the Tex­ th is did c o m e up a t th e as Union regents’ m eeting) th a t th ere Within the tem porary units a re plumbing facilities now north of Moore-Hill Hall end available, and m ore will open e a st of G regory’ Gym a r e u p o n c o m p l e ti o n o f th e housed the student activ ities Pub Other Union facilities in­ offices. APO. GDE, S tudent clude a recreation a re a in Government and th* Union Bellmont Hall and the two P ro g ram Office T ’»ere a re Texas Cultures room s in the also two m eeting room s, a M ethodist S tu d en t C e n te r, third TV' lounge-m e ‘ting room which allow for the sharing of and an inform ation cen ter. the M exican-American and A ls o in c ! u *1e d a r e th e A fro-A m erican cultures. In following APO ride board. p i \ \ i is V lR iw t. n I Franklin iiWAT T hink /v HOURS 0CKN6?1. tfS U Jnion's temporary addition, th e Union continues to o p erate the Law School Snack B ar. B esides th ese physical s e r­ vices. the Union also provides an e x te n s iv e an d d iv e r s e program which takes place in facilities all over cam pus. The T e x a s U nion c a le n d a r of events for the first half of N ovem ber w as published in The Texan on F rid ay , and it is an ex trem ely im pressive list of activities. PROGRAMS IN the p erfo r­ ming a rts include the Leipzig G ewandhaus O rch estra, the Paul T aylor Dance Company, the Royal L ichtenstein Circus and ro c k a r t i s t Todd Rundgren. T here will also be tw o a r t e x h i b i t s in th e Academ ic C enter foyer: re ­ cent w orks by P e te r Max and sculpture by Edwin C harles R eue. S peakers being sponsored by the Union include Dr. An­ drew Weil, a renowned psy­ chologist, and P ulitzer P rize w in n in g h i s t o r i a n J a m e s M acG regor bBurns u rn s rnI i l l „ I --- L ^ ...fM A .A tir T here_ will also be num erous noon sa n d w ic h s e m in a r s , ranging from a question-andansw er period with M ayor Roy B utler to a discussion on “ Buddhism : W estern Concep­ tions and M isconceptions Musical ev en ts include a D ay -A fter-H allow een M as­ querade Ball, noon concerts on the AC te rra c e and a m usic film series. T h e T h e a tr e C o m m itte e presents film s on Wednesday th ro u g h S u n d ay n ig h ts in B atts A uditorium and Je s te r C enter A uditorium , bringing both popular film s as well as classics. This month the com ­ m ittee is producing a G reta Garbo F estiv al VARIOUS OTHER p rogram s for this two-week period include a bike ride to the C ap ito l, a cam p -in a t B a s tr o p S t a t e P a r k and horseback riding The M ex ican -A m erican C ulture C om m ittee also offers a w eek­ ly program . Chicano T ertulia. an opportunity to m aintain ano a n ^ s h a r e t h e c h i c------- facilities A com ­ eager to serve the cam pus co m m unity. The im p ro v e­ plete schedule of Union events ment of Union facilities and is regularly published in The s e r v ic e s is an i m p o r t a n t Texan and is also available at aspect of the fulfillm ent of cam pus inform ation centers If a student w ere to take ad ­ this goal. The Union is for the cam pus — a com m on place vantage of only a few of these fo r a ll m e m b e r s of t he a c tiv itie s in the next two U niversity com m unity. If any w eeks , he would easi ly student or faculty m em ber receive the value of his o r her would like to discuss possible Union fee. Even at $8 the Tex­ program ing ideas, please call as Union fee rem ains one of the Union P ro g ra m Office. the lowest in the country. Texas Union South 114. or call T he U nion c o n t i n u e s to 471-4721. We really are giving m ake every effort to share y o u vour m oney's w orth ra tio n a le , in fo rm atio n and ideas with any interested student. There have been num erous articles in The Tex­ RECORDERS an as well as various oppor­ and tunities to talk in person All RECORDER decisions have been open and public. MUSIC It is fru stratin g to keep LARGEST SELECTION repeating these sam e facts. IN TEXAS The Texan news staff con­ tinues to be m ost helpful in m aking the cam pus aw are of Union events, and I thank 1624 LAVACA 4 7 8 -7 3 3 1 them for this effort. I m ight at this point stress the —- fact that the Union is lo n m io rtft and on/i iT »l11111r*i language culture. A m s t e r Music COMMUNICATION MAJORS: PlAYINo HOcKEVfj IT L0OK£ UiHAT 0G£5 IT /UKE ^ J KE LOOK LIKE ? J IN MY (JAY VOTE DALE NAPIER Qualifications: for .MANY P l ACK Players in tm e NHL , FRANKLIN ?y/ r*jins ! awat aS / t m e ? ^Fi&JkE /I'M PRALT.'w.iNg JNS ( TD 6cCOME A rr.TiON IJ cl?EAT HJuivEPLACES Y—O I H O ltl Editorial Asst.; Daily Texan, Sum m er 1 9 7 4 News Asst.; Daily Texan, Fall 1974 Volunteer Organizer f or Farenthold M em ber, Am erican Civil Liberties Union Whet the word "subsidy" is spoken in Hanks presence, she. who normally is the soul of graciousness, becomes, like Lady Macbeth, a trifle frosty She has a governm ent p e r ­ son's norm al, understandable aversion to a c c u ra te talk about what government does. She says the word subsidy reminds people of farm pro gram s It should. THE NEA subsidizes artists the way the A g ric u ltu re D epartm ent subsidizes farm ers It p a y s a r tis t^ to p ro d u c e more of some things ie g . plays) th a n they w ould be a b le to produce if consum er demand were not s u p p le m e n te d by political that is. g o v e rn m e n t5 demand. And NEA su b s id ie s enable artists to sell more of some th in g s to pay the difference between w hat the team cost and what the people of Macon were willing to pay for it The point is: the fact that a community would like something, but cannot afford it without a subsidy, is not a sufficient reason for the subsidy 8 | J a • Chairman. Task Force to E x ­ tend Dead Days • Improve quality & availability of advising • Review the foreign language req u ire m en t • Sr. a d v iso r to F r e s h m a n Honor Society • V.P. of Soc. & Beh. Science Council "Academ ic concerns have T o p Pri or it y ' Pd fo r fay G a r y U h s o n pct po l ecfv i ff Corry S tu d e n ts fat Dote N apter J HHIIHlHHHHHIHHHIHIHIHHItHIIUHHHIIHHHHHUHHtllHHIIIHIUHimHttHWmitmttH DOONESBUFtY •Ti •fei •.i i w I I - —^Ta WOODEN BOTTOMS RUFUS! RUFUS1 I: jar \ = M Brown C orduroy N avy C orduroy B urgundy C orduroy IN THE C A F E T E R IA 1 ANE BOBBY5 IN THE M IEPU OF I T I / CV Crossword Puzzler 1 Pierce 5 Unusual 8 Uncouth persons 12 13 14 15 17 A lin s box Fem ale ruff Spoken Continual Title 18 Beef animal 19 Colonized 21 Sink in m id d le 23 24 27 32 34 Answer to Yesterday’s Puzzle 7 8 9 10 Forced delay Satisfied Sea In Asia Title of respect 11 W inter vehicle 16 Snare 20 Golf m ound 22 Im pressive 24 Shellac ingredient 25 Tim e gone by 26 Precious stone 28 M an's nam e Bom 29 Plunge Fall behind 30 P e rio d of Shammed tim e Matures 31 C ondensed Mohammedan m oisture 38 42 43 44 45 46 Back of neck Explode Man s nam e U nusual Dye pla n t Ship s complement rn name 33 Breed of dog Weary 37 Em met Associate 5 4 2 3 A nim al’s foot I Conjunction 13 12 Catch Frenzied 16 15 Pocketbook Hindu queen 18 Commanding VC Great Lake T O ? JI 22 w Observe 27 Antlered 74 25 26 a n im a l 34 33 37 57 Secluded r n valley 37 58 Fem ale sheep TA 59 H its lightly 40 NVX DOWN 43 44 45 1 Aigonquian Indians 52 51 2 Jog Mi 55 54 3 Skin a ilm e nt 4 Foundations XX!; 58 5 Anglo-Saxon 57 money 6 Lairs 35 36 39 40 41 43 47 51 52 54 55 56 48 Girl's name 49 Break s u d d e n ly 50 Urges on 53 River in Scotland 8 6 I 9 0 29 SS SS 30 JI I a? 14 N 17 20 IV V VT 23 28 $ 38 46 39 SS 42 41 G v 35 v ,-. 47 ,V 53 Si 48 rn ACROSS 49 ..± 50 56 59 l l W e d n e s d a y , N o v e m b e r 6, 1974 THE DAILY TEXAN P a g e 5 Shearer Named To Start 'All-America' English Eyes Pros Bv JOHNNY I AMPOS Texan Stall Writer Doug English has always s;iid that the main reason he cam e to Texas was because he "didn t want to play against the Texas Longhorns Now, atter English s three season s in the Longhorn s defensive line Texas Head Coach Darrell Royal is saying he is glad English cam e to T ex,!' because he would hate to have him playing defensive taokle ai ross the line from his Longhorn offense Royal ha> been complimen­ ting English all season saying the D allas senior should be on everybody's All America list because of his outstanding pl av all year does not think Royal is try ing to push his n am e on to any AllAmerica team s And that s B IT E N G L IS H the way he likes it "Th e only time he (R oyal! mentions anything about me is when somebody ask s him to I think that s what I like about the T exas coaching staff.” English said. ‘ They will give their opinion if someone ask s it.' But whatever compliments the coaching staff bestows on him, he probably deserves English seem ed destined for greatness since his first start in the 1972 gam e again st Oklahoma " I w as re a l lucky that g a m e , I m a d e so m e b ig p lays,” English said. " I think I had about 18 tackles. I was just in good pv sition. It sur- SKIPPERS IMPORTED AUTO PARTS 452-0244 • FO RD (S ri fish) • HILLMAN •H O N D A • JA G U A R • L.U .V . Chevrolet I • M AZDA • MERCEDES-BENZ • M .G . • M O R R IS • N A SH • OPEL • PEUGEOT • PINTO Ford U S A ) • ALFA-ROMEO • AUDI • A U S T IN • A U STIN -H EA LEY • BM W • CAPR I ( Lincoln M artyry) • CITROEN • COLT Dodge •C O U R IE R Ford • CRICKET M ymovthi • DATSUN •MAT ® R e g io n a l D istrib u tor • PO R SCH E • RENAULT • RILEY • ROVER • SA A B • S IM C A • SU BA R U •S U N B E A M •T O Y O T A • TRIUMPH • V O LV O • V O LK SW A G EN 5209 NORTH LAMAR sophomore year I w as having prised everybody, including problems with my back, and m y self." What h as not been su r­ last year my head would swell prising is English's develop­ up and my nose would be torn up after every gam e ment on the defensive line since then. THIS YEAR English has LAST SEASON, as a junior. been having problem s with hts English w as selected to the feet. A ll-South w est C on feren ce first team defense " I twisted an ankle during With his career at Texas the Washington gam e, but I alm ost at an end, English’s finished the gam e on it. After only regret is that he was the gam e I found out a blood never on a national cham ­ vessel had busted causing it to pionship team and that the swell. I got high-top tennis Longhorns never defeated shoes, and it hasn t bothered Oklahoma while he was on the me since team "Som eone knocked my feet "I thought I would be on a out from under me in the national championship team Arkansas gam e, and the way when I cam e here, and I it felt then I thought it w as all thought we had Oklahoma this over,” said English "B u t I y e a r." English said ‘ But at got it retaped and got back in least I w as real fortunate to the gam e.” p lay w ith good fo o tb a ll If English can continue his p lay ers, and the coaching c a r e e r at T e x a s w ithout staff has been just g r e a t ' fu r th e r i n ju r ie s , he c a n E n g lis h h a s not liv e d probably look forward to play­ through al) the glory without ing in the pros. paying a price Although he “ I g u ess everybody that has had no m ajor injuries in plays football wants to get his career, he has had some paid for something they've type of nagging injury every done for free all their lives, season English said “ If I do get " I v e been lucky as far a s injuries g o ," he said. “ My drafted it won’t m atter who I play for. It ll ju st be a job “ It’ll be ju st like playing in college, but the incentive for playing will be different,” he continued. “ In college you OOM A' play for a free education, but S o * S p c ^ e 2 W o m M *s I if you play in the pros you play Superstars pet Ccid Suds de'aui* so you won’t get fired.” C l a i SD 2. Crsp.es I Sum m er Spike rs 2, R ed H e rrin gs I If he had his way, English Tooars 2, R e a m e rs 0 said he would like to play for Sixth 2, Y a m s CVo«> "W the Longhorns again next Superstars Pet S . I A C.C , default year But there is probably Phi G a m m a Detta del Kappa Alpha so m e pro fo o tb a ll tea m , default Heacker s P ca k ers 2, Ju m p 0 somewhere, that already has H aley's C om ets I Seagram s 0 its eyes on the T exas tackle If A S C .E 2, N a v y I A P O 2, Delta Sigm a P i I they don't they might wind up PEW sr 1 a i we default playing against him A F ROTC aet Alpha Kappa P si d e fau lt IM Volleyball Freshman Brad Shearer has been moved to first team defensive tackle for Satur­ day’s gam e against Baylor at Waco, Head Coach Darrell Royal announced Tuesday. S h e a re r r e p la c e s ju n ior David McLeod for the "sa m e reasons we've moved others up Because Sh earer’s been plating well,” Royal said Royal added that although Shearer will start, both he and McLeod will shuffle in and out o f th e g a m e m u c h a s R oosevelt L e ak s and E arl Campbell do at fullback Shearer is the third starting lineup change Royal has made for the Baylor gam e On Mon­ day, Leaks was named to start for the first time this year Halfback Jim m y Walker also was named to start, instead of Joey Aboussie. -Texan Staff Photo by Chip Kaufmar E n glish ch ase s O U ball carrier.____ ' Plastic' Landry Plays Joker DALLAS (U P I) — D allas Cowboy Coach " ’om Landry, who has the undeserved reputa­ tion of being humorless, pulled out his Norm Van Brooklin imitation Tuesday. It was a great su ccess with the audience. Landry had dutifully read his morning newspaper Tuesday and discovered Van Brocklin's confrontation with writers, which took place at the Atlanta coach s weekly press luncheon Monday. r GREAT OUTDOOR CHOICE Men's and Women's VA SQ U E Red W ing 9090 O A ee^ , V a< v/p * /5 UCB Of • Sp eed L aces • Vibram’ Lug Sole EXPERIENCED FITTERS RED W IN G SN O ! ST O R E CMJhPIAhJ 6A e o n H i At Landry's luncheon Tuesday, the coach filled his plate with stuffed pepper and assorted vegetables, walked into the dining room and said W it t, his typical straight face; “ Okay. which one of you wants to fight first? We can start stacking chairs over there right now.” \ Landry s “ outburst” * virtually word for word what Van Brooklin had said seriously — brought the proper amount of guffaws from the gathered writers and broadcasters After college, will you get the job you deserve? L e t s face it. things aren’t equal in tod ay’s\tph market. Even with a college degree. But the A tv Force has jobs that fit your college education, on a i \ equal opportunity basis. The Air Force is deeply involved to provide: un­ derstanding for its people about the sensibilities sensitivities of others. D oing its part to make thi pgs better. W e’re not perfect—yet. But brother, we getting there. There a re m any job op p o rtu n ities op en to you a an officer in the United States Air Force. You m ay consider being a pilot or navigator. And don’t forget the Air Force R O TC Scholarship Program , Scholarships that cover full tuition, reim­ bursem ent for textbooks, lab and incidental fees. Plus an allow ance of SKH) a month and flying lessons. A pply, qualify, and enroll in Air f orce HOTC at RAS 115 k S u rp rise your mother.** eat b reakfast at M cDonald's f W ait 'til she hears About Egg M cM uffin Y ou probably think breakfast is for sissie s. You know, the kind of people w ho get out of bed an hour early, just b e cau se their lf you really want to kno ck your mother out, you sh ou ld even g o the com plete breakfast route; juice and coffee or milk with m others alw ays said to them, “Eat your e g g s !” But M c D o n a ld ’s E g g M c M u llin breakfast is a whole new ballgam e. A fried e gg, ch e e se and a slice of C an ad ian bacon, neatly stacke d on a toasted, buttered E n glish muffin. your E g g M cM uffin. However, Wa l k e r , Aboussie. Gralyn Wyatt and Raymond Clayborn will con­ tinue to rotate in and out of the game periodically. Royal explained 5504 Burnet 454-9290 Mon-Sat 9-6 Thurs 9-8:30 4 7 1 - 1 7 7 6 or 4 7 1 - 1 7 7 7 C ap ta in Jim Cargill Put It All T ogether in Air Force HOTC But break it to her gently. Think of all th ose ye a rs sh e spent trying to get you to eat your e g g s. I f s delicious, so nobody is go in g to have to n a g you into eating it... and if s fast. you'll love it. You deserve a breakfast today E g g M cM u ffin 1 served daily 7:00 a m. to 11:00 a.m. u nJ I r y I ^ H a w ant bargain hunting He thought all cla t* rings ware alike He hadn't heard that the official cla ss ring is official because it is made to rigid specifications for the protection of the student body. Neither, apparently, had he heard that it is m ade by Balfour, the moat distinguished creator of fine c la ss rings in the entire world. McDonald’s £ (c> NOW OPEN Page 6 W e d n e sd ay, Smedley Didn’t Buy The Official Class Ring. *— A splendid fellow. Sm edley But there are reasons to suspect he is not com pletely in step with the times. N o w you cen get the official ring et SS.OO off the regular price pius free full nam e e ngraving {regularly a S2.SO valua). This is a saving of $7 SO. D on't m ake the sam e m istake Sm e d le y m ade £ Jew elry Dept. Ground Floor in Dobie Mall N o v e m b e r 6, 1974 THE DAILY TEXAN T U E C O -O X 3 CP Penn St. Votes for Cotton A 4-HOUR ICHAEL’S f MIDNIGHT SALE M E I * ! W E A R 2424 Guadalupe 8 P.WI. TO 12 P.M. Sugary N e w Year Set for Huskers, Gators By The Associated Press Lids began popping off the nation’s college football bowls Tuesday when coaches anu officials cracked under the pressure of trying to keep a secret. Coach Joe Paterno said his Penn State team had voted to go to the Cotton Bowl against the Southwest Conference champion. Coach Torn Osborne confirmed Nebraska would face Florida in the Sugar Bowl and an Orange Bowl officials said the deal was all but sealed for defending national champion Notre Dame to meet Alabama in Miami. OF COURSE both Paterno and Osborne qualified their statements by saying they would go “ if” they were invited. Dr Frank Rentz, president of the Orange Bowl Committee, said of­ ficial announcement of the Notre Dame—Alabama matchup could come after Saturday's Alabama-Louisiana State game. But a Notre Dame spokesman said “no decision would be made before Nov. 16.” That's the third Saturday in November, traditionally the first day for invitations to be extended. However, the National Collegiate Athletic Association rescinded its third-Saturday rule last January because it found the leaks impossible to plug The bowls then agreed among themselves to wait until Nov. 16, but they couldn’t wait in the past and this year proved no ex­ ception SO T H EO RETIC A LLY, until that date, the only sure thing is that the nation's No. 2 team, unbeaten Oklahoma, won t be go­ ing anywhere That talent-rich team has been banned from postseason play because of recruiting violations Paterno said his seventh-ranked Nittany Lions. 7-1 with three games remain­ ing, voted Monday night to return to Dallas Still alive in the SWC are Texas A&M. Texas and Baylor. Penn State s last trip to the Cotton Bowl was New Year's Day 1972. when the Lions ripped the Texas Longhorns 30-6 According to Osborne, the president of the Sugar Bowl Com­ mittee assured him thai New Year's Five in New Orleans would pit Nebraska against Florida FLO RID A, ranked sixth nationally is 7-1 while the ninthranked Cornhuskers are 6-2 with three Big Eight Conference foes still to come — Iowa State. Kansas State and Oklahoma. The Notre Dame—Alabama game would be a rematch of last year’s Sugar Bowl battle in which the Irish emerged with the national title after crimping the Crimson Tide 24-23. Notre Dame currently is ranked eighth on a 7-1 record and Alabama, 8-0, is third behind Ohio State and Oklahoma Ohio State, if it keeps winning, will represent the Big IO Conference against the Pacific Eight champion in the Rose Bowl, the New Year's Day classic in Pasadena. Calif,, and Auburn, ranked 10th. is a logical choice to land in the Gator Bowl, perhaps against the runner-up in the SWC. However, the SWC runner-up could decide to go to the Astro-Bluebonnet Bowl in Houston, instead, since that’s a prime recruiting area for all teams in the conference. By The Associated Press The two Big O s of college football. Ohio State and O k lah om a, co n tin u e to d u in I ii a t e the w e e k ! y Top 2 0 8-0-0 A la b a m a (2 ) - M ic h ig a n i i ! ........... 8-O-0 8 -0-0 7-0-0 I 212 7 10 I 090 918 850 643 531 522 503 N e b raska 8 -2-0 464 Auburn So Celiforni# 7 1-0 381 Te*aj 6 -2-0 324 13 M'am.. O ................ 14 M aryland 15 Houlton 7-0 1 5-3-0 149 ie II 5-1 0 4 3 0 7-1-0 5 Tenas A A M a F lo r id a Penn S*atp Not-e D am # 7-1-0 7 1-0 ......... SM A r n o t ta St O klahom a St 344 54 42 36 33 6-2-0 ie C alifornia 5-2 1 20 us P itt tie Texas Tech O th e rs r e c e iv in g 6-2 0 19 5-2-1 rotes, DATSUN Texan S taff Photo by M ik e Smith Associated Press poll, but A la b a m a has bum ped Michigan from the No. 3 spot Ohio State, with a clean bill of health from the National Collegiate Athletic Associa­ tion. remained No. I while Oklahoma quarantined from postseason play for league in­ fractions again settled for the runner-up role. only 122 points behind the Buckeyes. However. Ohio State, 8-0 after a 49-7 victory over Illinois, had a big edge over the Sooners in the number of first-place votes received from a nationwide panel of sports writers and broad­ casters. The Buckeyes wound up with 49 top votes and 1,212 of a possible 1.240 points. The Sooners. 7-0 after a 28-10 triumph over Iowa State, reaped IO first-place votes and 1,090 points. Alabama, fourth a week ago, took over the No. 3 spot after blitzing Mississippi State 35-0. Michigan, which pulled out a 21-7 victory over Indiana, slipped to fourth in the poll released Tuesday Alabama had two first-place votes and 918 points while Michigan received the only other No I vote and 850 points Recreation Committee sponsors Justice Stables W IT H THIS C O U P O N Saturday, Nov. IO $5.00 UT ID Holders 4:15 p.m. Food, Cokes, Horse provided $6.00 Others Sign up in the Texas Union South Program Office T O Y O T A OR V O L V O MAJOR TUNE UP Turtle Necks 9.95 n o w 14.95 no w 16.95 n o w Flannel Shirt Sale Texas split end Landy Minor an d SMU cornerback Robert Smith run stride for stride as they w atch a long M arty Akins pass intended, incom pletely, for Minor. TRAIL RIDE/HAY RIDE/COOK OUT VO LVO 105.00 now 85.00 135.00 now 99.95 99.95 now 79.95 SOO C.P.O. Shirts Crew neck - 7 colors. Brand new sweaters. Pre-ticketed 17.00. Tonight 12.50. Save 4.50 each. Entire Stock § En t ir e stock of Brand | „f Belts New Ties K io n OH 10% OH | 150 C.P.O. Lined Shirts It's like a jacket. 24.95 Believe it or not.xj values now 16.95. All They are w o r t h ! »«•*• Aswell good lookX; ,„ ' __ X, 18.95, now 12.95. # 30 Electrical Brakes Engine Repair O v e r s e a s E n g in e 10 03 Sagebrush, 8 3 6 -3 1 7 1 Aller finals, live a little at... Ina colors. 175 Long Sleeve Knits all on sale. Each one m arked - fine patterns sizes S, M, L, XL. Deduct $1.00 additional which gives you a savings of $3 to $4 on each shirt. 7 5 0 Long Sleeve Dress and Sport Shirts a ll on sale each one m a rk e d - b e a u tifu l p attern s - a ll sizes. A bonus of a n a d d itio n a l $1 .OO to be d e d u c te d fro m th e sale price. T w o sales in one. One Group of Dress Slacks straight legs. Sizes 28 to 31 o n ly . R e g u la r 10 .0 0 to 13.00. N o w 2.00 a pair. Entire Stock of B rand N e w Slacks - cuffed a n d flares. O n e g roup o f 1 0 % discount a n d one group w ith sale price tickets (Vi p rice). Balance of our good looking short sleeve shirts. Dress and sports. Solids and patterns, white on white included. Each one is mark­ ed at sale prices - sizes 14 to 17 and S, M, L, XL. An additional bonus of 1.00 to deduct for sale. 3.00 to 4.00 on each shirt. Yes, It's True - Only 50 W e s te rn S h irts w ith yoke. Typical Western. They are w orth 14.95, N ow 9.99. Others on sale at different prices. 172 Pairs of Shoes m ade by Dexter, P o rta g e, M a n ly , Bass, and other brands. Values to 32.50, now 10.00 a pair Corduroy Jeans by (you know the famous manufacturer). Jeans that are hard to get. 10°o off tonight. Only 95 Pairs of Blue Jeans - | Levis B lu e | Lee's and Landlubbers. Regular! J e a n JQCk e t s | The Hills of Chevy Chase O NLY on sale 6.99 10.95 12.95 120 Sweaters 12.95 now 9.99 9.95 now 6.99 10.95 now 7.99 S I 6 . S O p Iv $ parts offer good thru Nov Sweater Sale Our entire stock of sweaters on sale. Save 3.00 to 5.00 on each :j: sweater. Long and sleeveless - all >: sizes - IO colors. 9 5 .0 0 n o w 6 9 .9 5 6 9 .9 5 n o w 4 9 .9 5 7 9 .9 5 n o w 5 9 .9 5 All sizes. Assorted p attern s a n d solids. Synchronized Football 19 a lp h a b e tic a lly Arizona M iam i of Florida, Michigan State Mississippi State Missouri NorfhCaroiina State San Diego State Stanford, Temple. Utah State Vanderbilt, Vale VOLKSWAGEN Leather Coat Sale Walking Suits i s le d TOYOTA Sport Coat Sale The biggest selection in the city, | 69.95 to 89.95 now on sale at we believe. Corduroy suits were S 45.00. 89.95 to 95.00 now on sale 79.95, now 59.95 - save 20.00. Ex­ pl at 42.50 to 55.00. FREE - One Damon tie, 6.50 retail, with the tra fine winter Corduroy Coats 4 purchase of a 45.00 sport coat, were 39.95, now 29.95. Corduroy f One group of sport coats at 25.00 Coats were 59.95, now 39.95. regular 69.95 to 79.95. FREE - a Beautiful fall coats 49.95, now £ 5.00 belt with the purchase of a 34.95 One group of suits at Vt price. Free - 2 pairs of Burlington Socks, pre-ticketed at 1.50 to 1.75, which we are offering at 1.00 are free to you with the purchase of our ’ ? price suits. M ich ig an Drops in Poll Ohio State O klaho m a I IO) I O uterw ear Sale _ also reinjured his right knee when he ran into an Iranian defender This week, Erle r plans to have the team work on pass ing In reference to whether his team will regroup for its next game Saturday against Le Tourneau, Erler said, I don’t think we'll make the same mistakes twice ’ I J A special reason fo r th is sale. W e are low ering our inventory as w e are overstocked. It's ou t of proportion. M o st of the item s w ill be offered on sale. You have not seen anything like it. It's fan tastic and unbelievable w h a t you w ill see here and the kind of merchandise - rig h t in the heart of the season and especially w ith the kind o f infla tion w e have and also so close to C h ris t­ mas. Here is your chance. W e w ill list here ju s t enough item s for the space th a t we have. There are m any and many item s besides the ones m entioned at these 'o w , lo w prices. Here it goes: 130.00 now 79.95; 145.00 now 99.95. All new styles and materials - assorted colors - all sizes. Free - a $9.95 dress or sport shirt with the purchase of one of these suits. Longhorns Lose 3 4 WEDNESDAY, NOV. 6th. Suit Sale Soccer By ALLAN NIGHT Texan Staff Writer The Texas soccer team suf­ fered a hard tough' 2-0 defeat Tuesday night jgainst a spirited group of Houstonarea students frejij Iran Texas gained *tfce momen­ tum early ap p jp g constant pressure on the Iranian’s goal Geoff Giffort took several shots, and B -ii•Gonzales had one attempt sail just inches over the crossbar Texas finished wi„h 20 shots on goal while Ir a r ^ p i only four. Just b RATHERVUE D Handsome private, secluded apartments. Sep­ arate entrances, rear door parking, balconies tennis courts, tournaments, a small lake, 200acres of bike trails and natural wildlife. No other apartments on Riverside Drive compare to the Hills. Check us out. Call Michelle: 385 9295 The Hills of Chevy Chase Apartments 2310 Wickersham, I V2 miles east of Interstate 35. off Riverside Drive E P IS C O P A L THEOLOGICAL N S E M IN A R Y Another living idea (j) from Russo Properties (ne ALL SALES FINAL - NO REFUNDS B ut w e w ill exchan g e or g ive a cred it slip. D o n 't fo rg e t th e tim e and place It's to n ig h t. W e d n e s d a y , N ov. 6, 8 p.m . to 12 p m. Be here early to avoid th e big rush. M ic h a e l's M e n 's W e a r, 2 4 2 4 G u ad alu p e. Thanks, S in c e re ly M ic h a e l's M e n 's W e a r, Inc. P.S. D o n't fo rg e t our o th e r item s th a t are on sale such as gloves, scarfs, b a n d a n a s (red a n d b lu e ), s w im suits, cut-oHs, a n d p a ja m a s . Also our g ift item s a t Vi price such as cuH -links, shaving kits, tie-tac ks , p an ts han g ers, etc. W e a cc ep t the fo llo w in g : 1. Bank American! 2. Master Charge 3. American Express 4. Diners Club 5. Carte Blanche Alterations at low prices. ICHAEL’S M Parking spaces available in rear of our shop C I f$ W E A R 2424 Guadalupe W ednesday, N ovem ber 6, 1974 THE D AILY TEXAN Page 7 Female Athletes Stay Busy Svalberg Sees Bright Future for Texas Volleyball « Bv P H IL IP B E L L T exan Staff W riter W o m e n s v o lle y b a ll h a s c o m e a long w ay in the last four y e a rs at the U n iv e rsity . a n d Sandy S v alb erg has com e w ith it. S valberg a se n io r, began h e r volleyball c a r e e r w hile a t t e n d i n g T e m p le Hi gh School U pon h e r a rriv a l at • e U n iv ersity she continued h e r p la y and th .- y e a r is leading the T exas w om en in a fa irly su ccessfu l season This y e a r. how ever things have t hanged W om en s a t h l e t i c s h a v e b ecom e a p a rt of the a th le tic p ic tu re a t T ex as, and as a re su lt Sandy S v alb erg is on sc h o larsh ip T h re e of us split _ . I . __„ the g ra n t T h ere s ju s t one sc h o larsh ip to go a ro u n d It pays for m y tu itio n and m y books , ' S v alb erg said It s not a ll fun fo r S v a lb e rg . h ow ever, a s th e T ex a s te a m p ra c tic e s q u ite often. We p ra c tic e four d a y s a w eek fro m 5 until 7 and then on the w eekends w e ’r e a lw ay s a t a to u rn a m e n t I ve le a rn e d the h a rd way th a t the to u r­ n a m e n ts tell m e w hat to do I n ev er p lan a n ything for S a tu r­ d ay e a rly My d a te s a r e usualIv p re tty late , too W hen S v a lb erg b e g an h e r c a re e r a t T e x a s th e v o lleyball t e a m s p l i t t im e w ith th e w o m en ’s b a sk e tb a ll te a m for u n ifo rm s. “ We w ould w e a r the un ifo rm s in the fall then S tu d tm a n 's Photo Service 2 2 2 W . 1 9 th & 5324 Cam eron Rd. NIKKORM AT FTN CHROME W IT H 5 0 M M F 2 LENS $28853 *3 2 .5 0 N IK O N CASE N O . 4 8 7 P u r c h a s e d w ith C a m e ra 4 Price BELL HOWELL FD 35 F /1 .8 C o m p a re to Carton TLB w ith case THIS AD CAN BE PRODUCED FOR 1 0 % OFF O N B W STUDTMAN PHOTO FIN ISH IN G (FINISHING O f f i l l EXPIRES 12 31 74) 1. give th e__ m knz. b a ck to(ha the Kaelrat. b a sk e t­ ball te a m in th e sp rin g .“ T h is y e a r th e te a m has g otten new u n ifo rm s and is w aitin g on w a rm u p s W o m e n 's v o lle y b a ll h a s been a p le a sa n t s u rp rise for T ex as C oach P a in L am p ley this y e a r. “ We had try o u ts and 40 g irls show ed up We ev en tu ally had to c u t dow n to a b o u t 15 g irls. T h a t in itse lf w as a good sign. T he ta le n t w as re a lly good I w as q uite s u rp ris e d I w a s fra n k ly a m a ze d a t th e n u m b er of p e o nli» *’ I -»mnl#»V pie ti*to trv try nut o u t.' L am p ley Was w as hfM»n been ffood good not a b le to r e c ru it a th le te s a c ­ tiv e ly . so anyone try in g out w as doing it on h e r own S tu d en t su p p o rt h a s a lso been a su rp ris e to L am p iey . " T h e S tudent G o v e rn m e n t has re a lly do n e a good jo b in p ro m o tin g us A b ra n c h of the g o v e rn m e n t. I d o n 't know e x ­ a c tly w hich one, spo n so red a s e m in a r e a r lie r th is y e a r for all w o m en 's a th le tic s and all the c o ac h es got a c h a n c e to g et up and talk. T he resp o n se from th at s e m in a r h a s re a lly Atlanta Falcons Fire Van Brocklin ATLANTA *AP - N orm Van B rocklin w a s fired a s g e n era l m a n a g e r and coach of the A tla n ta F a lco n s T u esd ay and r e p la c ­ ed as coach bv M arion C am pbell, the N ational F o o tb a ll L eague t e a m s d efen siv e c o o rd in a to r. Van B rooklin w a s in th e m id s t of one of his m o st f ru s tra tin g se a so n s sin c e becom ing h e ad co ac h of the F a lco n s a f te r the th ird g a m e of th e 1968 se a so n T he te a m , picked in som e p re sea so n e s tim a te s a s a c o n te n d e r for the playoffs, h a s a 2-6 record T he v o la tile Van B rocklin, a s t a r q u a rte rb a c k d uring his p lay ­ ing d a y s w ith the Los A ngeles R a m s and la te r th e P h ilad e lp h ia E ag les, has been under in ten se c ritic is m fro m local fan s and new s m edia and Sm ith a ls o had been c riticize d fro m failing to fire th e coach known a s th e D u tch m an T he F a lc o n s su ffe red th e ir w o rst d e fe a t in th re e se a so n s — 427 - by the M iam i D olphins on Sundae But his c a r e e r as a c o ach h asn t been im p re ssiv e . In 1 2 4 c am p aig n s, he has a c a r e e r re co rd of 66-100-7, only a 401 p e rc e n ta g e He w as the in itial coach a t M innesota, coaching the V ikings fro m the incep tio n of the fra n c h ise in 1961 u n til 1966. Afast co.urse In economics. S tu d en t su p p o rt h a s a lso been b e n eficia l to S v alb erg "M o st people tell m e that I don’t look big enough to play v olleyball, but e v ery o n e is re a l en co u ra g in g . It s e e m s Uke people go out of th e ir w ay to w ish m e good luck and stu ff like th a t. I t’s re a lly g r e a t .” S v alb erg is v e ry o p tim istic a bout the fu tu re of volleyball a t th e U n iv e rsity . ‘‘The te a m th is y e a r h a s got the p o ten tial to be re ally good We ju s t got s ta rte d kind of la te lf we s t a r t p la y in g to g e th e r w e m ig h t be a b le to go p laces. S v a lb e rg a g r e e d w ith L am p ley th a t re c ru itin g w ill d e f in ite ly h e lp W om en s v o lleyball a t T ex as. S valberg does not plan to let her volleyball die at the end of h e r se n io r y e a r 1 11 probably sta y h e re an d g e t m y m a s te r ’s. T he c o m p e titio n a s fa r a s volley b all goes is m uch g r e a te r a t the college level th an a t th e high school level, " I f I have m y m a s te r ’s 111 be a b le to g e t a job a t a c o lle g e .” “ You k n o w ,” S v alb erg co n ­ tin u ed . “ volley b all w a s in­ v en ted in A m e ric a and th e re is no re a so n w hy we should have to ta k e a back s e a t to a n y o n e . A m e r ic a n w o m e n h ave all th e p o ten tial in the w orld to be th e best. It s up to us to do it now th a t w e a re g e t­ ting th e c h a n c e ." Shoe S h op VSA ir W e m ake and SH EEPSK IN re p a ir boots shoes le a th e r ★ LEATHER SALE * ta i i«;» a*; V ariow t kinds, color* - 7$* p e r ft. S M U s a fe ty M ickey E a rl/ g ra b s a h a n d fu l o f M a r t y Akins' jersey. E a rly c aug ht the Longhorn q u a rte rb a c k on a s a fe ty b litz several tim e s in Texas' 3 5 - 1 5 w in over the M u s ta n g s S a tu rd a y . 1 NOTICES from thef G e n e ra l Libraries or a n y I of th e b ranches are of - 1 f ic ia l U n iv e r s it y c o m- 1 . . I m u m c a t io n s r e q u ir in g im m e d ia te a tte n tio n . A ustin, T e x a s Hair Styling Facial Manicures Shoe Shines 478-9309 cDufing the 2 3 0 1 S. Congress 4 4 1 .4 1 5 1 V \ T h e r e it is. T h e 80 m ile s o f s p le n d id is o la tio n in P a d re Is la n d N a tio n a l S e a sh o re . W h ite s a n d b e a c h e s , e n d le ss ro llin g d u n e s , c u rlin g , “s u rf in g s u r f ’, w h e e lin g gulls . . . al l u n c h a n g e d sin c e first seen by S p a n ish e x p lo re rs . A d d o u r s p e c ta c u la r , c lo u d c re ste d b lu e T e x a s skies. I he Best T hings rn L ife a r e still c o m p le te ly fre e O u r “ p e o p le p la c e s ” a re fu n , lu x u r io u s a n d n o ta b ly in e x p e n siv e S p e c ia l (o lle g e ra te s. Be a g(x*r. The Jumbo Jack. A 100% pure beef hamburger patty that measures five inches wide. Sesame seed bun. Sliced tom a­ toes. Sliced pickles. Shredded lettuce. Rings of fresh onion. And a special sauce. A Sooper Scoop of french fries. A shake. It won’t cost you much to take the complete course. R e c re a tio n C o m m itte e sponso rs C A M P IN Bastrop State Park S a tu rd a y & S u n d a y N o v . 9 & IO Sign up in Texas Union South Room 1 1 4 \ G u itar S ale Save 10% On All Yamaha Guitars AMSTER MUSIC 1624 LAVACA 478-7331 C C. Area Convention Se Tourist Bureau Box 1147-DT, Corpus Christi, Tex. 78403 Please send me information on special college rates in "the Sparkling City by the Sea” N am e __ ___________ Corpus Christi A d d r e s s ____________________________________ Guadalupe & 26th Burnet Rd. & N. Loop ------------------------------ -— -— BIRM IN G H A M , Ala ( A p t - A T ex a s C h ris tia n U niversity football p lay e r p a r tia lly p aralyzed rn h is te a m s gam e with A labam a Get 26 w a s lis te d in fair c o n d itio n T uesday Kent W aldrep, a 20-year-old junior fro m A lvin, Tex . w as b ir t w hen A labam a p la y e rs tac k led him e a rly in th e gam e H is p a raly sis, r e s u ltin g fro m a broken v e r te b r a in the low er n eck , has been d e sc rib e d a s p e rm a n en t. N u m e r o u s civic g ro u p s fra te rn itie s an d o th e r organizations, w ith e n c o u ra g e m e n t fro m Coach P a u l B e ar B ryant of A la b am a, a re c o n trib u tin g funds for Wa Id r e p ’s m edical bills B ryant also h a s o a id v isits to W aldrep a n d n is p a ren ts at the hospital bitaQxbpiwhole enchilada. w, I_____________________— — Injured TCU Player Listed in Fair Condition For Both Sexes C a p ito l S a d d le r y 1614 L a v a c a by M ik. Smith Tug o' War RUGS Many Beautiful t olors belts goads -T .x a n S ta ff P h o to C ity _________________ S ta t e ATTENTION MINORITY STUDENTS! a U.C.L.A. GRADUATE SCHOOL RECRUITER -— w ill p a rticip a te in th e G ra d u a te S c h o o l In form atio n Program sponsored by ETHNIC STUDENT SERVICES Office of the Dean of Students Speech Bldg., 1st Floor NOV. 7 & 8 FOR A N A P P O IN T M E N T OR I N F O R M A T I O N Call 471-1201 12 noon. S a n d w ic h S e m in a r: " T h e $ 8 6 ,0 0 0 Q u e s tio n ." Austin C ity C o u n c ilm a n J e ff F riedm an w ill s p eak. Fourth floor, A cadem ic C e n te r. Ideas a n d Issues C o m m itte e . Becoming a physician is a tremendous satisfaction. Let us give you the job satisfaction zevi that should go with it. u u 'r e s till in m c d ii al s c h o o l w ith ’he to five year*, of g ra d u a te m e d ic a1 e d u hc fat c d , o f arc a lread y a p ra c tic in g o ur o p in io n that she Air Force can .ifesM onal a n d p e rs o n a l s a tisfa c tio n n e in c m i l a n life [a lc m e n e -1 N o t if you c o n s id e r th e sp ecific*. l ake (he problem of g raduate m edical educa lion lr'*.! period of your life 'h e Air F o rcer an m ake inc, and the glow ing Af**' laity o f ‘‘fam ily phy*M u n ’’ W hatever your interest, there arc few spcr tallies w h ich are no t hemp, prat tic cd in t**iay‘» A ir F o rce T h e physic tan - tartin g h is practice in civilian lite has to take into acco u n t th e c o st o f settin g u p an office The physician co m m e n cin g his p ractice in th e ,\ir F orce does not, H e finds h n o ffk e esta b lish ed for h im Supplies and eq u ip m e n t readily available. He h as m any o p tions available to him w hen treatin g p atien ts. For exam ple, he c a n c o n su lt w ith A ir F orce specialists He also has referral to other Air F orce facilities via aerom edical evacuation. L ast, b u t not least are the satisfactions that com e w ith having the opportunity for re g u la r follow -ups, and a m issed appointment rate that is practicably nil W h eth er you are already a physician, or soon to becom e o n e, you m ig h t find it extrem ely in terestin g to find out w hat the A ir F orce has to offer. We d u n k it could be a real eye-opener. If you’ll mail in th e c o u pon, we’d be happy to send you detailed inform ation A k I c c t U w u r iu m t i n I-(J Bz,. Al P um a ll SMU* CCM P le a -* .m il m e in tor n u n u n on ih e A ir b o re r P h y m u n Pi ({rem I u rv ie rc u m l (h e ir is n o o b lig a tio n N erne S ec AM: 7 4 9 p .m . FILM: " D ia ry o f a C o un try Priest.” Classic French film by Robert Bresson. Adm ission $1 for UT stu d en ts, fac u lty , and s ta ff; $ 1 .5 0 for m em b e rs . Batts A u d ito riu m . T h e a tre C o m m itte e . 7 :3 0 p .m . FILM: "T o Build a F ire ." Based on Jack London's short story a b o u t survival in th e A la s k an w ild e rn e s s . 5 0 ‘ a d m is ­ sion. Benedict 1 1 6 . Recreation C o m m itte e . 8 a . m . - 5 p .m . Sign up continues for th e C a m p -ln on S a tu rd a y a n d S u n d a y , N o v. 9 a n d IO , in Texas U nion 11 4 . The ca m p -in w ill be in Bastrop S ta te Park; cost $ 1 . C a ll 4 7 1 -4 7 2 1 for fu rth e r in fo rm a tio n . R ecreation C o m m itte o . IO a . m . - 6 p m . Ticket d r a w in g for O p tio n a l Fee holders for Paul Taylor Dance C o m p a n y on M o n d a y a n d T uesday, N ov. l l a n d 12, a n d for C hristoph Eschenbach p ia n o concert on W ed n e s ­ d a y , N o v. 13, continues in Hogg A u d ito riu m Box O ffic e Tickets 5 0 for Eschenbach a n d 50% Si, a n d $ 1 .5 0 for Paul Taylor. C u ltu ra l E n te rta in m e n t C o m m itte e . S€RV€ UP AN A7J€C COOLER. M ontezuma Tequila Tropical Montezuma Tequila, I K ounces. Grena dine. bounce. Orange juice, 3 ounces. Lemon juice, I teaspoon. Pour into highball gloss over crocked ice. Garnish with orange slice and cherry IO a . m . - 6 p .m . Ticket d r a w in g b eg ins for O p tio n a l Services Fee holders for Todd R undgren concert on Friday, N o v. 15. Tickets $1 a n d $ 2 in H ogg A u d ito riu m Box O ffic e . C u ltu ra l E n te rta in ­ m e n t C o m m itte e . lf. ACAT!, f 'hr Of*! .'po! a »cpi. N ew Course Offerings Education College Will Introduce Karate, Scuba Diving New courses with subject matter ranging from karate to sexism and racism, and from scuba diving to psychological approaches to nutritional problems, will be offered by the College of Education this spring. The six departments in the college w ill o ffer many courses for the first time, some of them at the request of students Several of the new courses are in the Department of Health. Physical Education and Recreation and can be used to meet P l requirements for all lower division students These include; • Three sections of Begin ning Co-ed Karate (P I 105R) will be offered for the first time. Asst Prof. Daeshik Kim. who has sixth-degree black belts in judo and karate, will be the instructor. • New aquatics courses, offered at student request, are Basic Sailing ( P I 120E); Basic River Canoeing (P I KBC) . Basic Scuba Diving (P I KEG and Water Polo (Pl KEM • A revised and expander program in Conditioning (P I 106 i and 106C) will pro'Hie development for specific areas such as running, swim­ ming or general weigh work • Mental Health in the Classroom (Health h duration 370K 1 will be offered for the first time, examining prin­ ciples of childrens’ personali­ ty development p ertaining to the role of the family, com­ munity and school. • The department will offer for the second time a one-hour course on Current Health Problems (P I HOH) super­ vised by Asst. Prof Demetri Vacaiis. focusing on health matters of concern to the students. This fall’s class dis­ cussed death, radiation birth control and human sexuality. Four new courses will be offered from the Department of Cultural Foundations of Education. • P ro f, John M. R ich , department chairperson, will teach Education Heresies (CP'E 350 or PHI. 321). The course will focus on heretical ideas about the concept of “ education,” educational alternatives and educational philosophies. • Rich also will teach Alter­ native Images of the Future: Education and Society (C F K 350! which will look at educa­ tion from the present societies up to and beyond the year • A computer-based in­ structional course (ED C 371) will aim to teach potential teach ers and com puter science students how they can use the computer to write programs as instruction aids for students. The Departments of Educa­ tion Adm inistration and Special Education added a jointly sponsored course to their curriculum Issues in Administration of Urban* Minority Education Systems (ED A 383) or SE D 383) will examine school administra­ tion and school systems, 2000 • The D e p a rtm e n t of Educational Psychology will offer a course in Learning T h e o ry and .N u trition Psychological Approaches to Nutritional Problems (E D P 369K) supervised by Prof Jack L Dunham. Much of the focus will be on Dunham's personal research in dietary problems in Austin and in lowincome countries, although psychological approaches and research findings from many parts of the country will be ex­ amined. • Asst Prof. Bonnie Cook Freeman will teach both a g ra d u a te and an u n ­ de .'■aduate course in Sexism and Racism in Am erican E d u c a t io n , The un­ dergraduate course (G F E 3501 will concentrate on the chang­ ing status of women in educa­ tion and in the political system The graduate course (C TE 3851 will be research oriented • The D e p a rtm e n t of • Dr. George Stelmach of the University of Wisconsin, who w ill be a v is it in g professor in the spring is a specialist in behaviorally o r ie n te d m o to r s k il ls research. He will teach Infor­ mation Processing and Motor Memory (P E D 395), focusing on factors such as efficiency of practice, response con sistency and process in motor memory control. M BA To Compete I in a management world I Curriculum and Instruction will offer a course preparing future secondary school teachers to teach Asian Studies (ED C 371) Literature To Extend Students' Imagination By G A RY UDASHEN Good books have been tan­ talizing the imaginations of all sorts of people for countless numbers of years. But Dr. Neill Megaw, University professor of English, feels many students today are suf­ fering from illiteracy of the imagination." M e g a w , head of the sophomore English depart­ ment. fears many students complete their English educa­ tion not knowing how to read “ reasonably mature works of fiction ” Megaw’s anxieties were in­ tensified last spring when most of the departments of the U n iv e rs ity cut their English requirements from twelve semester hours to nine. Without being required to take the second semester hours of sophomore English. M eg aw th o u g h t, m ost students would not choose the 314L courses as electives. So the sophomore English com­ mittee decided to encourage individual instructors and teaching assistants to devise attractive literature courses which students would choose to take as electives. The result has been a wide offering of E n g lish 314L courses ranging from The F ic tio n a l World of Kurt Vonnegut" to an examination of “ Women and Men in Dramatic Literature." Seven of the experimental lite ra tu re courses were MIDDLE EASTERN STUDIES S p rin g 1975 Courses 24900 MES 3011 Obtain.... the graduate degree English Introduction to the Middle lost: Adjustment and Change in Modern Times. Bezirgan. 24905 MES 331 MWF 2-3, BEB 154. Male and Female Roles: Traditional and Changing offered last spring and this fall. That number has in­ creased to 13 for the spring semester. In addition to the 13 ex­ perimental sections, the four 314L sections n o rm a lly offered continue to attract student interest. These four sections are * The Novel,” “ Tragedy and Com edy," “ Bla ck L ite ra tu re ” and “ Modem Authors." W e had a team of three visitors evaluate each class last spring, plus student ratings and teacher selfevaluations." Megaw said Courses being offered and which will be continued in the spring include the Vonnegut course and the “ Man and W om an in D r a m a t ic Literature’’ course. For the 314L student who is looking for the humorous side of life, the course “ Humorous L ite ra tu re " w ill also be offered again. Novels dealing with cow­ boys and Indians of the Wild West will be examined in the “ Literature of the American West " St udent s who mi ssed “ Tr eas ure I s l a n d ” and Mutiny on the Bounty will have a chance to redeem themselves by taking the course “ The Adventure Story as Popular Reading and Literature ” Sophomore English students can escape into the depths of middle earth by signing up for “ J R R. Tolkein as Novelist and Medievalist.” Students interested in the changing roles of the female in society will have the oppor­ tunity to sign up for Roles of Women in 19th and 20th Cen­ tury Novels ” How music and literature move from tension to resolu­ tion will be discovered in the English course “ Shapes in Time: Literature and Music as Temporal Form " Other experimental 314L c o u r s e s i n c l u d e ‘ The American Dream in Li t e r a t u r e Since I960." Modern Short Novels." “ Man and His Fictions," The Reader and The Lyric" and “ The Compleat Reader ’ Megaw explained that the enrollment in English 314L hasn t dropped as much as he expected it to. probably because of the experimental courses S e lf-A w a re n e ss Program O ffe re d A workshop examining the changing roles of men and women and the effects of these changes will be held Friday at Trinity Lutheran Church. 1207 W 45th St. The workshop, entitled “ Man and Woman,” will consist of discussion and experimental exercises using various methods to get in touch with new feelings," Pattie Osher. workshop co­ director said Osher feels men and women can be brought together when the individual gets down to who he really is. rather than con­ forming to the expectations of others.” Osher added that con­ forming to the expectations of others destroys intimacy between two people Bill Hawley the other workshop co-director, said what it means to be a man and what it means to be a woman in today’s changing society puzzles a lot of people. Yet the more manwoman relationships change, the more each discovers his or her own identity “ Man and Woman ’ is part of the Interchange Workshop program being offered monthly as a service of the AustinTravis County Mental Health-Mental Retardation iM HMR) Center All programs are designed to teach people skills for tak­ ing better charge of their lives and utilizing their abilities to the fullest according to the MHMR Man and Woman” will begin at 8 p rn. Friday and continue through Saturday A follow-up time will be arranged between the members oi the seminar to allow further discussion of per­ sonal ideas and experiences. Hawley said Registration fees for the workshop are $25 per person and $40 per couple The fees may be adjusted downward on basis of ability to pay A minimum of eight and a maximum of 12 will be accepted. Those wishing to register should call M HM R center at 4774141 and ask for Interchange THG Please be patient. Our shoes are being mad# as fast as possible. RIPON is ON We always knew the EARTH * nega­ tive heel shoe was a great invention. We knew you’d love them. What we didn’t know was that you’d want them faster than it takes to make them But it takes time do make a good shoe. And if it was [made any faster, if just one detail was eft out. it wouldn’t the Earth* THURSDAY Roles of Women, Men, and the Family in Middle Master of Business Administration Courses meet one night per week Full schedule of evening classes ST. EDWARD’S UNIVERSITY Eastern Societies, M odem Feminist Movements. MWF 1-2, BUR 224. I. Fernea. 74910 M£5 360 of instructor must be obtained. Manners in charge. 249 55 M f5 36. logics in Civilizations ond Cultures of the Arab World: Medieval Cities ond Societies MWF 3-4, ARC 307. Williams. 29420 MES 363 Topics in Civilizations ond Cultures of the Iranian World. T 7-10 p.m., BUR 220. N ote Phone 444-2621 Ext. 321 or 444-8239 M iddle Eastern Stud ie s courses m ay be used to fulfill Area D requirements for the B A. degree. P lan I They may also be taken in lieu of the foreign language requirem ent by students enrolled in the S c h o o l of C o m ­ m unication FMTFR CPI I e n This is your key to unprecedented calculating capacity. Only Hewlett-Packard offers it It lets you “ speak” to your calculator with total consistency, because it lets you load data into a 4 Register Stack.This means: ( I ) you always enter and process your data the same way. no matter what your problem, (2) you don’t have to re-enter data; (3) you can see a ll intermediate data anytime. Our H P-45 is one of two pre-programmed scientific pocket-sized computer calculators with this key. That’s one reason it s the most pow­ erful pre-programmed pocket-sized scientific computer calculator. Here are three of many others: 1. It's pre-programmed to handle 44 arithmetic, trigonometric and logarithmic functions and data manipulation operations beyond the basic four (+, x, +). 2. It lets you store nine constants in its nine Addressable Memory Registers, and it gives you a “ Last X” Register for error correction or multipie operations on the same number. 3. It displays up to IO significant digits in either fixed-decimal or scientific notation and automatically positions the decimal point through­ out its 200-decade range. Our HP-35 is the other. It handles 22 functions, has one Addressable Memory Register and also displays up to IO digits in either fixed-decimal or scientific notation. It’s the second most powerful pre-programmed pocket-sized scientific computer calculator. Both of these exceptional instruments are on display now. lf you’re looking for unprecedented calculating capacity for your money, by all means see and test them. W M B *: t *■' f A •v t* & ^ The University Co-Op S u p p ly Dept. One hour free parking w ith $2 purchase or more. A\ Conference Course. Hoars to be arranged. Consent Street Floor M astercharge a nd BankAmericard W elcome JOSK€’9 brand shoe. There’s a lot more to the Earth shoe than making the heel lower than the toe. The entire sole is specially designed to help you walk naturally and comfortably. So please be patient. If we’re out of your sty le or size, we’ll have it soon. But remember, just because a shoe Hooks like ours :doesn’t mean it works like ours To be sure you’re getting the Earth brand shoe, look on the sole for our Earth trademark and U.S. Patent # 3305947 And believe us, when you do try them, you’ll see, they were worth waiting for. Shoes, sandals, sabots and boots for men and women From $23.50 to $42.50. *F.ARTHis a registered t rtidemark o f Kalsf Sgstem et. Inc. £ 19~4 Kills0 Systemet, Inc EARTH SHOE STORE 205 E . 19th 474-1895 The Minolta Photo Competition for college students. Your photograph can win the summer of a lifetime for you and a friend. RULES AND REGULATIONS Enter the Minolta Photo Competition for college students. 1. This contest is open only to matriculated students attending a college or university in the United States between September. 1974 and April, 1975, except em­ ployees of Minolta, their wholesale distributors, the D. I. Blair Corporation, their respective advertising or public relations agencies and their immediate families 2. Pictures may be taken with any brand of camera. They may be color or black-and-white, prints or transparencies Do not submit contact sheets, negatives, prints larger than 8x10", unmounted transparencies or transparencies larger than 35mm. Print your name and address on the back of each print submitted or on the slide mount. 3. Each picture submitted must be accompanied by a completed oPiaa! entry form or facsimile thereof Only one picture per form, but you may enter as many times as you wish For additional entiy forms, write Minolta Corp . Advertising Dept., 101 Williams Drive, Ramsey, N J. 07446. 4. Each picture submitted must fall into one of eight cate gorses These are sports, still lites, social commentary, human interest, abstracts, environment, humor oi news. 5. Entries will be judged by a pane: of experts in the field of photography undei the supervision of D. I Blair Cor­ poration. an independent judging organization The deci­ sion of the independent judges is absolute and final in ail matters relating to this prize offer. The following are the judging criteria Visual effectiveness (appeal, creativity, originality) 4 0 °° Appropriateness of subject matter to stated category ........ ...................... .................... ............ 20% Technical ability ............................................4 0 % 6. To qualify for the Grand Prize judging, a picture must have first been selected for publication in "The Minolta College Gallery” . At least IO pictures will be published. Such publication entitles the entrant to $100 and the pic­ ture is entered automatically in the competition for G^and Prize. Duplicate prizes will be awarded in case of ties 7. The Grand Prize includes round-trip air transportation for two from the winner’s home city to any destination n Europe with any number of stopovers returning, providing they are west of the original destination, $5,000 for all lodgings, food, ground tiansportation and other expenses, plus two Minolta SR-T 102 35mm reflex cameras with f 1.7 lenses and cases, lf the Grand Prize winner and or his or her traveling companion are under 21 years of age. parental or guardian approval are required prior to the awarding of the prize 8. All entries winning either a $100 prize or the Grand Prize become the exclusive property of Minolta Corpora­ tion and none can be returned. Entry in the Minolta Photo Competition constitutes permission to use the winning photographs and name of entrant rn any manner bv Minolta, its advertising or public relations agencies AH tax liability for prizes is solely that of the winner. 9. Except for winning entries, all pictures will be returned if accompanied by a stamped, self-addressed envelope of suitable size with appropriate packing material. Minolta, however, cannot guarantee the return of pictures. 10. Prize award is contingent on the availability at no additional cost to Minolta of original negative or trans parency and standard model release for all identifiable people, if any, in the photograph. Ail entries must be pre­ viously unpublished. 11. All entries must be postmarked bv January 20, 1975 and received by January 31. 1975 No substitutions for prizes offered All prizes will be awarded. This offer is void where prohibited by law. No purchase required. 11. Entry rn the Minolta Photo Competition for college students does not constitute registration in the Minolta Creative Photography Contest which is being conducted simultaneously. These are completely independent con­ tests. lf you desire information on the Creative Photog raphy Contest, please write to 0. I. Blair Corp,, P O, Box 1831, Blair. Nebraska 68009 lf photography is a part of your life, it could win the sum m er of a lifetim e for you and a friend. Just enter your most im portant photographs in the M inolta Photo Com petition for college students. Choose from any of the eight picture categories listed in the entry form. At least IO pictures will be selected for publication in The M inolta College Gallery, which is a special section that will appear periodically in College magazine. You win $ 1 00 if your picture is published, and it’ s entered au tom atically in the Grand P rize judging. The Grand Prize winner and a friend get to spend July and August, 1975 in Europe at M in olta’s expense. As spelled out in the rules and regulations, that includes round-trip air tra n s­ portation from your home city to just about anywhere you want to go in Europe, planned with the help of our travel agent. Plus $5,000 to pay for all lodgings, food, ground transportation and other expenses. And to top it all off, each of you receive a M inolta SR T 102 35mm reflex camera. lf you think the summer of a lifetim e is worth shooting for, send us your finest pictures. r OFFICIAL ENTRY FORM Attach to your picture and mail to the Minolta Photo Competition, P.O. Box 1817, Blair, Nebraska 68009. Name: Class of: College: Address:. City:____ State: ______________________ .Zip:. Picture category (check one only): □ sports O still lites □ social commentary □ human interest □ abstracts □ environment □ humor Q news Please print all information and put name and address on print or slide mount. Only one submission per entry form. nu. L_ Wednesday, N o v e m b e r 6, 1974 T H E D A IL Y T E X A N Page 9 Final Reading Due On Pay Proposal rn SI SAN I IN D K F Texan Stair W riter Councilman Bob Bint $1,000 a month pay pro; comes before City Counci [m at t e a Cor:! The plan has ap p ro v ed a t two pee1* meetings althea*;? Ma-, or Tem Dan Love abstained toting on the se- etui re® Councilm an Lowell I • m ann will present an ' i native to pay for Cav ( oil." which will recumi the establishment of a ' s of aides to he hired bv th* m an ag er, ra th e r than a a th ird and Thursday council m e m b e rs Also cornin be council w ill b e (finan ce, profit! in p u b lic immediate preservation of ord er," which means it does not ha vt to be read at three sep arate tim e s to becom e legally binding Vuthorizaiion for purchase of property for the Fayette County Pow er P ro je ct will be considered bv council, as well as plans tor the expansion of F ie s ta G ard en s B e c h te l Engineers made the Fayette s ite s e le c tio n to r a S250 million coal-fired plant, at the request of LC HA and the t av >! Austin and now the council m ust a u th o r iz e funds to purchase it Landowners in Fayette County have objected to the site, claim ing it would ood many important areas md that they had no sav in the pi; The Fiesta Gardens project iiso would displace an entire com munity. but the agenda does not state which land will so licita tio n et ‘ The measure sidered an * t Ii nance i gene unde Book Explores Infancy in Texas rs old in T e x a s w ere 'M ore than 76.000 im without any pr v about early a new one of the i rn childhood in Tex >mrn unit ations creative Com piled bv rn team and w rite rs from the Off** rf E arty Childhood Developarut ' A ffairs, the book The m en' T e x a s Lie pa r tm en t of C oir Darker Side of Childhood, pr >nts 46 things you need to know about T e x a s ch ild ren e O ffice of Early Childhood Je a n n e tte Watson, d ir e c to r of •ih>K s goal is to provide a I developm ent fO E C D I, s a c ! th informing the public of the b e tte r life fo r T e x a s ch ild ren ! n Texas, in hop*.- that these p ro blem s involved in grow ing a problems ca n be w orked on who lack basic opportunities T h e re a re many T e x a s ch ii-lr “ How extensive is this lack ;or sound developm ent sht sa of op portu nity? T h at s w hat we show in the b*»'k A sta te m e n t from Gov. Do Ipl? B risco e m s; ire d the title of the hook FC said for m any T e x a s ch ild ren, life has a darke r side — d ays on the run. b e a tin g s bv p are n ts, le ss than ad equate nutrition T h is Is a book if fa c ts acco m p an ied by graph s F o r exam p le accom pan ying the fa c t. ‘ T h ree out of four T e x a s fa m ilie s with ch ild ren under 6 have m oved sn the last fiv e y e a rs, is a draw ,ng of th ree su itca s e s n e xt to a draw ing of a house. Mr had Hunt a rt direct r of Media Communications, said, Nobody s w aiting to get fumed on to tables of statistics So art. layout and typugraj h * work to make these stories visually com pelling ■ ■ :r - a..-.**. The book is to be distributed by the O ffice of E arly Childhood Development throughout Texas to people who work with hi Id rep and wh a re co ncerned with hum an resourc es I? also will be distributed to lea d e r- in the a r e a s of fam ily life, health, nu trition , child c a r e .md child se rv ic e s be authorized tor purchase Binder s pay proposal had been supported by a m ajority of the cou ncil, until Love chose to abstain on the last v o te Now L e b e r m a n n s p r o p o s a I, w in c h w o u I d elim inate individual pay com ­ pletely. may have stronger support I e b er mann said his plan is m o re su ita b le to Austin's city m anager form of government and has worked successfully in other cities in Texas Vs of Get I a1! council aides were cut off. but Le Hermann's proposal would not result in rehiring them because coun­ cilmen would no longer have private aides, but the pool could be used bv a ll for research and assistance The council also will con­ sider two requests for historic zoning The Planning Com­ mission recommended both for acceptance Under consideration are the P a ggi House at 200 Lee Barton Drive and the Red-Purcell house at 210 Academy Drive The council is scheduled to hear a report on the city 's progress with the "park and ride project from Urban T ra n s p o rt ion D irector -Joe Tem us Hts report indicates th e p r o g r a m ha s b e e n successful showing a 143 per­ cent increase in bus riders since the program began The meeting is at I p rn at th e E l e c t r i c B u i l d i n g Auditorium at 301 West Ave. d iv id e n d : (5 V i % Regular plus V i % Bonus) ON ALL ACCOUNTS U.S. B u d d h ism O n the Rise In terest in Buddhism is gaining mom entum among A m erican youth, who are searching for an alternative to the values of a cap italistic society. R aja Rao said in a sandwich sem inar Tuesday Rao. University philosophy professor, set the tone of the talk when, upon bein g in­ troduced as a m em ber of the philosophy d ep artm ent, he asked the audience. ‘ Am I ani m em ber of anything at a ll” What is a m em ber" Increased technological ad­ vance- and the corresponding increase in rationalism or questioning of values, has led to a g r e a t e r i n t e r e s t in Buddhism in the West Rao said BANK DRAFTING NOW AVAILABLE FOR SHARE DEPOSITS AND LOAN PAYMENTS si Enjoy dinner out for half the cost! (Almost As Good As Payroll Deductions J SHARE ACCOUNTS INSURED TO $20,000 BY N C U A — A N A G E N C Y OF THE FEDERAL GOVERNMENT ASSETS IN EXCESS OF $7,000,000 JOIN THE SKYVIEW MENU CLUB. Brand new to Austin! in such cities as San Antonio, W aco, and S h re v e p o rt. The Sky view M enu Club is a new concept in dining th at Allows you to sample a wide range of menus ai half the cost S u ccessfu lly introduced Ii Buy one meal, (ret one free! M em b ersh ip in T he S k y view M enu Club includes 37 d ifferen t d inner ch eck s, each one worth up to $6 50. Buy one meal at any of the 24 participating restaurants and present a Sky view d i n n e r che. ' for the second meal. absolutely free A $101.57 V A L U E FO Et O N LY S12.00! 37 meals at these 24 restaurants Adv -.teak on th e m en u a t The S iz z le r A c a tfis h d in n e r a t T h e B ig C a t \ L .iM e x ie a n a d in n er at th e S p a n is h V illa g e (2 ) V nit k en -fried s te a k d in n er a t B ig T e x S irlo in \ B a r -B -Q s a u s a g e d in n e r at J e r r y B s B a r B Q <2) \ h a m b u rg e r at R o y a le B u r g e r (2 ) A rn* it ar. d in n er a l V ik a sh m o" a \ .* a food d in n e r a t V ik a a h m o ’a X n v th in g on th e m en u a t L o y d ’ s P it B a r B Q \ ch opped sirlo in s te a k d in n er a t E v e ry N ig h t is N ew Year's Eve (2 ( V s p a g e tti and m e a tb a ll d in n er a t T h e C iond ola 721 A fish and c h ip s d in n er a t A lfie 's \ W h a t-a -b u rg e r an d fries a t W h at a bu rg er V I) A ny d in n er up to SI 45 at ( . regrades. (21 The Any ru n n er ex- em . F o r tr e s s M ik e & A ny d in n er i C h a rlie s at The A ny d in n e r up to C a p ito l O y s te r B a r Ut •I A A n y ti n e b o r d ia n e O re l el \ s irlo in - ' n o dinner at Th** B a ck F o rt The \ry I M Ut t- -3.7 Q u ie t M a n Any d r nor at S a m b o '* i v t. a a t A rn f d i UIB s a u s a g *: Ferrari'** 21 C lu b A ste a k d in n e r 7at. H a m b u rg e rs by G o u rm et A h am b u rg * - at G o u rm et A l l lim burger** bv eel & sour pors* dinner al Th* G old en D ra g lei A horner'.>o>--ti dints*-- at. F la p J a c k C anyon it BONUS! \ co m p lim en tary ticket worth $5.50 to the Austin Symphony with the pu rch ase o f *me regular admission md send it •uh your chark or money * Meno f tub 1021 Kramer {.ane, i *us 7M7> 478*77 1 7 A C T NOW! ne The Skyv due olph B r is c o e , who gathered under a canopy e re c te d in front of B r is c o e 's hom etow n h e ad q u arters Tuesday night, w ere a fa r c ry fro m the crowd two y e a rs ago. W hile m o s t of the lo c a l B ris c o e ite s in 1972 went hom e around IO p m. election night thinking th eir "good ole bo y " had lost, the 1974 su pporters h ere seem ed not only unsur­ prised w ith the two-to-one v ic ­ to ry m a rg in , th e y seem ed a lm o st unconcerned. As th e c ro w d g a th e r e d b e f o r e th e h e a d q u a r t e r s which w as set up in an a rt gallery' owned by and ad jacen t to the U v ald e n ew sp ap er, w ell-w ish ers w ere occupied m o re with getting ta m a le s, b urritos and the o th er freebies h an d e d o u t by c a m p a ig n w o rk ers than they w ere co n­ cerned about B risco e , even before the national m edia had d eclared him a winner. C ontinually, m o re talk w as heard about th a t d eer S a m s boy sh o t" or how cold it w as getting than when or by how m uch B ris c o e could claim v ic­ tory Such w as the unconcern that about 8:30 p m cam p aign w ork ers had to urge m any in the crowd to s tic k around for B r is c o e 's sp eech. But m an y in the crow d felt they w arran ted al le a st one e a sy ele ctio n night They had seen B risco e through his e le c ­ tion failures in 1968 and 1970 when he opposed P r e s to n Smith. In recallin g the disappoint­ ment to their n ative son in the p a st one e ld e rly w om an sum m ed it up saying. " Y e s . I w as there through all of that. But now h e's won, and th a t's a relief " Finally at a little a fte r 9 p m B risco e and his wife. Ja n e y , showed up to claim v ic to ry and g reet the crow d of h o u s e w iv e s , c h ild r e n and stau n ch D e m o c ra tic m en, at le a s t 20 of whom could have p assed fo r B r is c o e s tw in . w ire -r im m e d g la s s e s , L B J S te tso n s and all S u p p o rte rs resp on d ed to B r is c o e 's a rr iv a l w ith loud and w arm applause, w hich continued as the- hom etow n c o u p le w en t a m o n g th e m g reetin g m ost by th eir first n am es. B ris c o e thanked the crow d not only fo r th e ir support but m o re for th e ir " frie n d s h ip ” T h e g o v e r n o r th e n r e ­ em phasized those p ro g ram s w hich won him e le ctio n in 72 and 74 and prom ised no new ta x e s and m o re and b e tte r jo b op portu nities. " T h e ele ctio n p roves that w e do not need, do not want and will n ev er have a s ta te in­ c o m e t a x .” B risc o e added W hile he seem ed e a sily to aro u se h is neigh bors, the m a ­ jo r ity of the crow d rem ain ed s u b d u e d a s w o rd p a s s e d around th a t B r is c o e 's m o th er rem ain ed serio u sly ill a t the lo cal hospital B u t re g a rd le ss of the a p ­ p a re n t b o red o m B r i s c o e 's e a sy win provided, his sup­ p o rters did turn out stro ng , not only at the h e a d q u a rters but at the polls. In u n official retu rn s from all 19 p re cin cts in U valde, the g ray -h aired c a ttle m a n handily stom ped R e p u b lic a n c h a lle n g e r J i m C r a n b e r r y and R a m s e y Muniz, the R aza Unida c a n ­ d id ate T h e re tu rn s showed B r is c o e w ith 3 ,0 5 5 , C r a n b e rry , 270, and Muniz 361. thus supporting a front p ag e e d ito r ia l in S u n d a y 's U valde L ead er-N ew s w hich urged 90 percent support for B risc o e Election Woeful For G O P By DICK JE F F E R S O N T ex a n S ta ff W riter L U B B O C K — R ep u b lican g u b ern ato rial can d id ate J im C r a n b e r r y u rg ed T e x a n s Tuesday to continue to sp eak o u t w h en th e y f e e l t h e i r g overn m en t is not op erated properly. In a Lubbock h e ad q u arters s p e e c h on e l e c t io n n ig h t. C ra n b e rry em phasized he felt his can d id acy had m ade " a s ig n ific a n t c o n trib u tio n to T ex a s g o v e rn m e n t." He ad d ­ ed he w as proud of the way T ex an s e x e rc ise d th eir right to vote. C r a n b e r r y c o n c e d e d h is ra c e to G ov. Dolph B risc o e at 9 :3 0 p m , b e f o r e a s t i l l e n th u s ia s tic cro w d o f su p ­ p o rters who w ere stunned by the early retu rns. C r a n b e rry su p p orters a t the L u b b o ck h e a d q u a r te r s had r e m a in e d e o n f id e n t throughout the ea rly evening th at th e ir can d id ate would win, even though as e a rly as 7:05 p.m . B ris c o e had been d eclared the w inner by m a jo r netw orks and both w ire s e r ­ v ic e s A rg u m e n ts b o o stin g this o p tim is m c e n te r e d on eith e r the ex p e cted high ru ral vote or the big city vote H ow ever, when the Lubbock o rth od on tist, acco m p an ied by hts w ife and five ch ild ren , conceded the electio n th e ir op­ tim ism turned to te a rs. T h e o b v io u sly e x h a u s te d Ju st a s the e le ctio n s lop­ can d id ate said in his s t a t e ­ sid ed n ess ca m e a s no su rp rise m ent to the crow d, " t h e antito U valde County, statew id e G O P trend spreading a c ro s s resu lts w ere rn* su rp rise to the nation w as irre v e rsib le ” B ris c o e stra te g is ts . C r a n b e r r y 's aid es b elieved Ken Clapp, B ris c o e 's c a m ­ as la te a s 8 p rn th e ir c a n ­ paign m an ag er, claim ed his didate could still win T hey can d id ate’s winning p ercen ­ had counted on heavy support tag es w ere just about what he in both the P an h an d le and predicted H o u s to n , a s w e ll a s t h e " B u t now it looks like we D a lla s -F o rt W orth m e tro p le x m ight not get two million area T h a t su p p o rt n e v e r v o tes, which is less thai I m a te ria liz e d , aid e M ike Sm ith th o u g h t," he said said, " b e c a u s e of the obvious s tra ig h t D e m o c r a t ic tic k e t As f a r a s c a m p a i g n v o tin g ." s tra te g y , Clapp m erely stated T h is a n tiC O P s e n tim e n t he had a g re a t can didate and w as m ost c le a rly evid en t in referred to his organization as th e P a n h a n d le r e g i o n , a "ju st the m ach in ery ” tr a d itio n a l R e p u b lic a n stronghold, when U S R ep Bob P r ic e o f P am p a w as d e fe a t e d by a tw o -to -o n e m arg in T h e incu m b ent P r ic e had been favored to win this el ect i on It wa s t hi s " W a te rg a te b a c k la sh that co st C ra n b e rry the e le ctio n . Sm ith said C ra n b e rry added th a t he w as d istre sse d o v er the lack of in te re st d isplayed in the sta te e le c tio n and re fe rr e d to e a r l i e r c a m p a ig n a p a th y . T e x a s is so n ation ally issueoriented th a t w’e ju s t co u ld n 't m o tiv a te the v o te r s to be a w a re of s t a t e i s s u e s .-' T h e oth er m a jo r problem w hich plagued G ra n b errv s e f ­ fort w as lack of fin a n cia l sup­ port "W e w ere outspent two-toone in this e le ctio n — and it ap p ears w e m ig h t be be aten that b a d ly ." the fo rm e r Lub­ bock m a y o r said His o rg an izatio n had hoped to sa tu ra te the m edia th is la st w eek, but could n e v e r g a rn e r the needed fin a n cia l support to p u rch ase a ir tim e . C ran b e rry c o n g r a tu la te d B risco e in his re -e le c tio n sa y ­ ing. ‘T h a t s w hat th e ball g am e is a ll abo u t — suppor­ tin g th e w in n e r ." B u t he e m p h a s iz e d t h a t T e x a n s should e x e r c is e th eir rig h t to d is a g r e e w ith t h e i r s t a t e governm ent. C ra n b e rry did not ru le out the option to run ag ain in four y e a rs for the s t a t e 's high est o ffic e but adopted a “ w ait and s e e " a ttitu d e H ow ever, m any p o litical o b se r v e rs in the Lub­ bock a re a fe e l C ra n b e rry w ill run fo r the co n g re ssio n a l se a t now held by R e p G e o r g e M ahon. D -Tex M ahon ran un­ opposed th is y e a r. C ra n b e rry ad m itted th at he had not ruled that r a c e out In his bid to b e co m e the fir s t C O P g o v e r n o r s in c e R e c o n s tr u c tio n , C r a n b e r r y fe lt that this y e a r provided the opportunity fo r R ep u b lica n s to win, but he ad m itted he " ju s t had n t w o rk e d h a rd e n o u g h ." though he trav eled th e c a m p a ig n t r a il fo r 19 m onths previous to the c le e tion. C ra n b e rry and his fam ily w ill fly W ednesday to th eir E a s t T e x a s ra n ch w here he will spend a few d ays before returning to his " n e g le c te d " orth od on tist p ra c tic e Muniz Claim s Solidity Bv C H A R L E S LO H RM A N N T e x a n S ta ff W rite r C O R P U S C H R IS T I A m idst shouts of V iva L a R a z a " and V iv a R a m s e y M u n iz .' th e R a z a U n id a g u b e m a to ra ! ca n d id a te c la im ­ ed solid support T u esd ay for his s ta n c e on issu es and r e ­ je c te d the idea that h is votes w ere p ro test votes a g a in st the esta b lish ed p a rtie s ‘ T w o y e a r s a g o we r e g is t e r e d p r o te s t v o te s a g a i n s t the e s t a b l i s h e d p o litica l sy ste m , but th a t is ch anged . Muniz said . " I n two y e a rs we have changed the a ttitu d e s of 50 y e a rs , and things w ill co n tin u e to get b e tte r fo r the p a r t y ." he add­ ed In 1972 Muniz gained 6 p er­ cent of the vote w hich a lm o st g a v e th e R e p u b lic a n c a n ­ didate Hank G ro v e r the g ov er­ norship. Muniz scrap p ed this p ossibilitv for 1974. how ever. saying that R ep u b lica n c a n ­ didate J i m C ra n b e rry " w a s a w eak ca n d id a te, and I b e a t him in sev era l co u n ties I'm only helping m y s e lf." B y 8 :3 0 p . m . T u e s d a y . Muniz had g a rn ered about 4 p ercen t of the vote, but he e x ­ p ressed co n fid en ce th e party would gain 20 p ercen t of the total v o te, the am ount needed fo r a state-su p p o rted prim ary' in 1976 " T h e prim ary' is im p o rtan t, but even if we d on't m ake it, w e 'll still have a conven tion and ta k e our p la ce on the b a llo t,” he said . B y ea rly W ednesday, how 'ever. with 90 p e rce n t of the sta te to ta ls in. M uniz v o te to ta l had a d ­ vanced to only 5 p ercen t. At 9 :3 0 p.m . Muniz spoke in Sp anish to a crow d of about 50 in his Corpus C h risti head ­ q u a rte rs The sp e ech , less a co n cession than an urge for R a z a Unida to w ork for a su cce ssfu l future, w as full of thanks to his su pporters. Muniz e g r e s s e d hopes for an a c tiv e future for the R aza p arty , saving “ W e're not go­ ing to w a it until 1976 to work on the issues and get o rg a n iz e d ." H e declined to co m m en t on the p o ssibility of his ow n c a n d id a c y in the future, h o w ever Muni z extreme self co n fid en ce w as one sen tim ent shared by R a z a w o rk e rs at the h ea d q u a rters T uesday " B r e a k in g into the p o litical sy stem in T e x a s i-; like bu tting your head a g a in st a b rick w a ll." one w orker said But even a b rick w all w ill c ru m ­ ble. and we ca n do i t . " R e y n a ld o M a d r ig a l, u n ­ s u c c e s s fu l c a n d id a te fo r ju s tic e of the p e a ce in N u eces County said " la b e l voting is a p ro b le m th a t R a z a C n id a fa c e s " ‘ Many people vot e I) e m o c r a t i c in T e x a s reg a rd less of who is running or w hat th ey sta n d f o r , " M ad rigal said “ T e x a s p o litics is based on two fa c to r s , r a c e and m oney — and w e 're on the losing end of b o th ." said D r G e o rg e T rev in o . R a z a can d id ate fo r sta te rep resen tativ e P la c e 3. D istrict 48 "H o w ev er w e 're the only third party in T e x a s to c e ! on the ballo t a f te r the fir s t try . and t hi s is s o m e th in g in itself he said UPI T e le p h o to s Four M ore Years G o v . D olph B risco e b r e e z e d p a s t h is fo u r c h a lle n g e r s . Wednesday, Novem ber 6, 1974 T H E D A IL Y T E X A N Page ll W ally Pryor: The University's Quick-Witted Athletics Broadcaster —Texan S t a f f RHote by David Announcer W ally Pryor lf You N eed Help Just Som eone W ho Will Listen Telephone 476-7073 At Any Time The T elephone C oun seling and Referral Service GRADUATE SCHOLARSHIPS EVERYTHING YOU NEH) IS ALREADY INSIDE IN C O M M U N IT Y O R G A N I Z A T I O N P R O G R A M AVAILABLE OF YOU m o n d a y n ig h t c l a s s e s m e d i t a t i o n m a n t ra m r e la x a t io n b r e a th i n g 8 p m S t OO 504 W 2 4 th S t 476 2281 ARICA RESEARCH Thousands of Topics $2.75 per page Send for your up to-date. 160-page mail c i e ' catalog Enclose SI OO to cover postage ^delivery time is I to 2 days RESEARCH ASSISTANCE, INC. 11941 WILSHIRE BLVD SUITE *2 LOS ANGELES CALIF. 90025 213, A?7 8474 or 477-5493 W oe By JIM LOW E For a while st looked Uke Wally Pryor’s greatest claims to fame would consist of having starred in his high school s senior play, having collected stamps and having had a Feb 29 birth­ day th a t was before he entered the University back in the 1940s and before he took an active role in school athletic events. He soon found out that chemical engineering should not have been his major, and his interests turned toward the broadcasting in­ dustry THE SWITCH IN curriculum as a junior later proved to be one of the main reasons why Pryor has become a widely known person around Austin Although some may not associate names with announcers, Pryor s is the voice heard throughout Memorial Stadium on Saturdays during football season He livens up the crowd during a lull in a game by giving the weekly Slippery Rock State College score, he pages Luckenbach's Ma\or Hondo Crouch and he mixes humorous public ad­ dress statem ents with serious announcements during the course of a game * Pryor re ce n tly recalled the years leading up to and including his college career at Texas Three stories above the ground in his office at television station KTBC where he is production manager, the 45-year-old Austin native sat behind a large desk and discussed a student organization's scheduled project After the phone conversation ended. Pryor put his glasses on the large desk in front of him. leaned back in his chair and reminisced rn a relaxed manner about his high school days. Those days were occupied with swimming, stamp collecting, and in his senior year, starring in the class play. " I was scared of girls and didn t have a date until my senior year,” Pryor commented with a chuckle. “ I was shy then — you couldn't get me to stand behind a microphone " Part of his time now is spent behind a microphone, though, as he has overcome his uneasiness among crowds and announces during various University events such as football, basketball and swimming contests Like his father who owned (me of I I ! ! I | I | | I Austin’s first theaters, Pryor is often in the public eye. although not as a promoter of movies as the senior Pryor was Wally Pryor’s interest in events such as the Distinguished Alumni program, the Longhorn football banquet, which he has produced, and the massive pep rallies before the 1969 and 1970 Arkansas-Texas games probably dates back to earlier childhood days when his father actively promoted his theater business A vaudeville dancer, Pryor's father also advertised the various shows in much the same manner that a ‘ circus barker’ promotes circus performances. Pryor believes he and his brother. Cactus, were influenced by their father’s “ line of gab and by hearing him talk.” IT TOOK A LIT T LE while for Wally to show his talent, however, as he claims he was not the outgoing person he is now Part of his “ show biz” joking nature shines through when he explains that he was “ too small” to play on the Austin High football squad “ I had a stamp collection, though." he said with a laugh p r o f ll© Later on in the interview, he spoke of his 45 years, but ex­ plained with a grin. * I was born on Feb 29th I ve only had l l 1 1 b irth d ays ” Pryor lettered as a swim team distance freestyler and played water polo during the fall semesters Captain of the team, Pryor and his teammates played several of the better water polo squads But midway through his college career at the University, he switched from engineering to radio. “ We didn t have any T V program then,” said Pryor “ You took a lot of speech courses.” THE FIRST S E M E S T E R of his senior year marked the arrival of the latest form of media Pryor took the first televi sion class offered and then helped teach the course in the spr­ ing After a tour of Japan via a two-year hitch in the Army as a member of the Counter Intelligence Corps, P r y o r returned to his hometown when KTBC was just getting established “ The first thing telecast was the Texas-A&M game Thanksgiving Day," said Pryor, then a floorman and projec tionist with the Austin station Pryor shook his head and grinned, while recalling the first College Seniors and Graduate Students are invited to apply for a specialized program of graduate education and training in: Community Organization, Social Agency Management. Administration. Community Planning, Fund Raising, and Budgeting. Upon completion of graduate trainings professional positions and long term careers with Je w is h ! Federations will be available. Any major sequence may I qualify for those with at least 3. (B ) academic average.! For descriptive material and on-campus interviews in f January and February contact: Be an In-Sider . . . TO P L A C E A C L A S S I F I E D AD CALL 471-5244 broadcasting efforts in the Driskill Hotel “ Everything was live then. I ,'on’t know how we did it. Of course, everything is taped now, except the news. When the subject turned to hi s first announcing jobs. Pryor said he took over basketball gam" duties in the mid-1950s. A few years later, he became football announcer. I didn t know anything about football he said. “ I still don’t know anything about it now. but I bluff my way through “ I enjoy it... I don’t know why. It seems like I ’m a part of the game " Pryor frequently amuses football crowds with his spur-of-themoment jokes, side comments on the game and humorous an­ nouncements directed at different persons. " I F T H E R E IS any humor it does come off the top of my head," he commented. " I try not to he too humorous ” He add ed that a fine line exists between a little comedy and too much, which would irritate spectators Any time I do inject humor, it s when UT is well ahead." he said, while explaining he tries to follow the mood of the crowd During one game, officials made a debatable call when Texas appeared to have scored The nicest statement Pryor could br­ ing himself to make was that the football was on the fraction of an inch line Most announcers probably would have said the football was near the goal line, but Pryor's slightly different comment was greeted with laughter. Perhaps one of the most popular parts of Pryor’s an nouncements concerns Slippery Rock progress reports. Before announcing the small Pennsylvania school’s football score, Pryor remarks, “ Now here s the big one ” The crowd roars its approval after Slippery Rock s victorious score is read. ALTHOUGH THE s-i'ores formerly carne over the wire. the results come by long distance phone call now Recently a Slippery Rock fan club was formed in Austin to help raise money tor the school’s cheerleaders “ I think it s a healthy thing it s sort of a big brother little brother type of thing," said Pryor of the cooperation and in­ terest between the two schools One of the earliest indications of Longhorn fans’ interest in the school was shown when Pryor first announced a Slippery Rock result. “ I didn’t know who they were whether it was a big school or a little school, so I read a The nest game, I didn t and I bet I had IOO persons say, Why didn t you read the Slippery’ Ro ck score ’’ I said. Was I supposed to?’ When Slippery Rock scores failed tc come in one year, Pryor called the school and found out it had already finished the season with one of the best records ever All scores were read and Pryor urged fans to send congratulatory telegrams When a large number of spectators did. Coa< h DiSpirito ‘didn t know where thev all came from, explained Pryor Last year he sent a cowboy hat to the slippery Rock coach b e fo re the school’s homecoming game Pryor added that the coach was told the hat had been personally blessed by Texas Coach Darrell Royal Apparently when the hat left the state so did the luck attached with it As it turned out. Slippery Rock won its game, while Tex­ as lost the next day to Oklahoma 52-13 This year Pryor sent a pair of cowboy boots to the coach and noted in a message to DiSpirito that "it might be good for him to send the hat back COURSES IN BIBLICAL AND RELIGIOUS EDUCATION FOR UNIVERSITY CREDIT in our Boa* Moo The hottest shoe in the U S Brown leather with white rubber sole S u e s 6 9 $17 OFFERED 4 7 6 -0 1 2 5 R a b b i Kessler i BY THE BIBLICAL STUDIES ASSOC. B i l i c r oui«« a i r ta u g h t at th e follow in*; lucatior.v. B B C — B ap ti'i Bil ic C h air: 22m San Antonio c* on 1 C C B — C h u n h of C.hri-t B i b l e C h a i r : 19Q3 U n iv e i '• !, A s e . (4 7 7 - 5 7 0 1 ). H B C — I Ii Ile! Bible Chairs 2105 San Antonio ( I 0125). L B C — Lutheran Bible Chair: 2100 San Antonio <172 5461), Legal Eagles... Contrary to popular belief, the demise of Pere' has been greatly exaggerated. 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SOC SEC NO PRINT NAME Last Name Middle Fi cst 52815 52820 52825 528 30 rn J — 11__I— 11— »— i— I MOSER THOMPSON K ESSLER REY N O LD S H A R R EL L KESSLER I WISH TO BE BILLED FOR THE ITEMS CHECKED BELOW: - - - -Check what you DO want- - - $ 8.40 EOI CUO THE CACTUS YEARBOOK .75 F03 C Z J LOCKER & SHOWER (ONE SEMESTER ONLY) F06 C Z J "C " PARKING PERMIT FOR AUTOMOBILE 6.00 FOS I— 1 ^ " PARKING PERMIT FOR MOTORCYCLE FIOCCO PEREGRINUS (LAW SCHOOL YEARBOOK) 4.00 6.30 DO NOT SELECT ANY FEE PURCHASED IN THE FALL SEMESTER (EXCEPT LOCKER 4 SHOWER WHICH IS GOOD FOR I SEMESTER ONLY) SIGNATURE THE UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS AT AUSTIN, 1974-75 only "Check the Card" 6.30 * HIK Budweiser' K in © OC ****«€ > X tax included N o w isn't that a sm all price to p a y for Tr« intern*! protectionmore eomtn Inn* The Marrow of Tradition S ^ i f r JSC" £ £ r ty the law escshuh g m er rn the # 'jtHd&od ■US* i ^ s a & 'a & s R L s i B i Qet it onfor $29?$! 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TTH R E L I C TEACH M A RRIA G E t MORALS 1200 - I SOR HBC THREE HOURS B I B L E OR CONSENT OF IN ST R U C T U A 1 B I B SIBR I CHEAT lO E A S OF THC B I B L E 1200 - H O P CCB THREE HOURS OF B I B L E OR CONSENT OF IN ST RU C TO R MWE T H I R E L IG IO N OF THE P H A R IS E E S 1000 - H O O CCB B IB 3 1 9 K THE R E L IG IO N OF THE P H A R IS E E S r 700 -10 0Q P HBC 813301 ir t tu n (Me * S M I Kl /Worn#* S M I ) ™ hKlCt %n rn ---- * tOTAt another publication of Page 12 Wednesday, Novem ber 6, 1974 T H E D A ILY T EX A N Ta'as Student Yubl/’cations I Minority Referral S ervi ce Offered M a t c h in g m in o r it y students’ needs with proper sources of information and assistance is the prime con­ cern of Ethnic Student Ser­ vices, a referral and program planning unit within the Dean of Students Office. L o c a te d in the Speech Building, the o ffice is a “ troubleshooting advocate for the needs of the minority s t u d e n t ,” C o o r d in a t o r Baltazar Acevedo said “ We try to open up every avenue available to students and make them aware of possible sources of infor­ mation,” the coordinator add­ ed Two fulltim e assistants, Homero Lopez and Linda W ilson, coordinate office programs and services with Acevedo. Specific programs provided by the office include: • Advising, counseling and r e f e r r a l on a w a lk - in , telephone or appointment basis. • C areer information on job, graduate school and professional school oppor­ tunities. • M in o r ity stu d e n t publications including direc­ tories. • Ongoing orientation for minority students. • S e m in a rs and r a c ia l awareness sessions. • R e s e a rc h concerning minority student interests. Although much attention has been focused on the special needs of a minority student at the U niversity, Lopez said minorities en­ counter the same problems as anglos “ The bigger problem is bas­ ed on how minority students respond to a problem that an anglo might react differently to, Wilson said The lack of stiff members trained in all University of­ fices to respond to a minority student s needs has caused Fifth Grade Students Do College M ath By SHARO N JA Y SO N Texan Staff Writer An otherwise normal day of school for 72 fifth graders from an East Austin elementary school won t be so normal Thursday when they take their seats on the .stage of L B J Xuditorium and proceed to d< college-level mathematics At ! 0 a m . tht se rhildren 'vin take part in a demonstration of Special Elementary Educa­ tion for the Disadvantaged ( S E E D i, an ll* year old national and international project which teaches mathematics to standard public school class* s of disadvantaged children The public i> invited to observe this method utilizing techniques of Socratic, group-diseovery learning. Following the les son, which is the fourth one for the class, the national director and founder of Project S E E D William Johntz. will present the background of his innovative teaching method, This event is being spon­ sored by the U n iv ersity mathematics depart­ ment with tho? cooperation of the Austin Independent School District. Johntz, a af. year-old former high school math teacher t developed the S E E D method for teaching £ri athe ma tics after realizing that ghetto schools were tailing because they were usingjf white middle class methods and language with poor, non-white students He believed that math, which is culturally neutral, would be a good place to start im­ proving education for the disadvantaged The S E E D theory' involves the teaching of abstract, conceptually oriented high school and college algebra because Johntz feels that a n yth in g sim p le r would d e stro y the program’s purpose — “ to raise the intellec­ tual confidence of culturally disadvantaged children by proving to them that they are as capable as middle class students of handling ‘culture-free- subjects.” Johntz began testing his theory in 1963 in Berkeley. Calif., by devoting his lunch hour to teaching algebra to black elem entary students The experiment worked so well that he soon devoted himself to fulltime teaching of the method to administrators for use in school districts Since then, the program has expanded to school systems in more than 12 states and is landed by federal, state, local and private sources All instructors are industrial or university mathematicians rather than public school teachers. After a few weeks of daily instruction, elementary students are able to lecture to un­ iversity undergraduates on math difficulties, the coordinators agreed. “ Each unit in the University needs to develop its own staff to have that perception and s e n s it iv it y to m in o r it y students," Lopez said. However, once University staff w orkers develop an aw areness of m in o rities, Ethnic Student Services will still have a job to do, Wilson said. Referral plays a large part in the office s responsibilities. “ We try to have someone in each agency who we know we can work w ith ," Acevedo said. For example, if a minority student wanted information on fin a n c ia l a s s is ta n c e available, a phone call to the financial aids office would be made to pave the way for a student’s individual con­ ference. However, the office staff goes beyond strictly academic concerns “ Fo r so many students,problems are not academie We try to plan activities for students to participate in and just get the ball ro llin g .’’ Lopez said. Existing m inority organizations such as Mex­ ican American New Students ( MANS ) and United Niggers Integrating Te. as ( U N IT ) work with office coordinators in planning programs, recep­ tions and other activities. Although the services office has extensive outreach, the coordinators recognize “ some students may not need our service. They may be flexible enough to acco m m o d a te themselves. Lopez said. Counselors Baltazar Acevedo, lin d a W ils o n a n d H o m e r o Lopez a d v is e s tu d e n t M a g g ie H ernandez (se­ cond from right.) — T e x a n S t a f f f h o t o b y P h il H u b e r Stu d en t's A ttorney THE U N IV E R S IT Y O F TEXAS W A S ONCE K N O W N FOR FOOTBALL TEXAS IS NO. I LATIN AMERICAN STUDIES* "Sometimes, all a person really wants to do is come in and say. If s a really nice day,'- Lopez explained. ‘BY VIRTUAL CONSENSUS OF In addition, working with difficult attitudes and getting people to see why they are reacting negatively to a situa­ tion is challenging, she added ... Our new Salad B a r Order a salad and help yourself. • 6912 BU RN ET • 8010 HW Y • 2 7 0 0 S. L A M A R RD 923 E. 41 183 N LATIN A M E R IC A N IS T S NATIONWIDE. There's more to like at Burger Chef. ---------------- • TM I lf you forgot to order your Cactus w h e n you registered j Sfcy -Houri IN D IA N A AND h E l T S ) /THEMSELVES AT f k ' o u r s a la d b a r / FOR INFORMATION ON MAJORING IN LATIN AMERICAN STUDIES SEE MS. JANIS GREER, S.R.H. 1.301 (471-5551). The hardest part of the job. Wilson said, is misinforma­ tion. p a r t i c u l a r l y w i t h freshman. H A N D C R A F T E D I fo lk s love to b u ild ... > THEIR OWN BURSERS ‘ AT OUR WORKS 3AR JEFF/ ’ The office itself tries to re­ main flexible enough to meet a variety of students- needs S pecializing in F ire Fix your own burger the way you Uke it at our new W ork s Bar IN U se^Texan Classifieds U N IQ U E Come see what's new at your Burger Chef. The students' attorneys, Frank Ivy and Ann Bower, are availa b le by app oin tm en t from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. M o n d a y through Friday in Room 3, Speech Building. Telephone 471-7142. i f for Fall, w e l l give you ano ther chance. All y o u 'v e got to do i s ............ J m i/ J E W E L R Y MAKE YOUR MARK Bead Necklaces =;p C NO pc I NT N AWF _ las m s c a u te u s r i m I - I Bt B IL* kl s is — mn Th!f o r THE HEMS CH:. - t_ _ _ - -Chee* what ye* S 9. AO Ttc YEARBOOK FGI l * ‘ ., . , , i V r R : one s i 1* SS N, \97A-T5 " ' " “ Z on your Z * or T O U » WH. SIGNATURE-. OPTIONAL FEE CARD DURING PREREGISTRATION NOVEMBER 6, 7, 8 To Reserve Y O U R COPY of the J Y E A A ___________ R O n ly B O ncluded A n o t h e r p u b lic a tio n o f O K W h ic h y ou p a y a lo n g w ith y ou r other S p rin g re gistratio n fees w h e n you p reregister Tne. is now setae* mg material tor publication In the 1«7475 issue Original creative writing if any language or genre is accep table M aterial may be submitted through Nev 15 in West M all 0*tice Build ng 2Q6A Alt material must in­ clude tne name address and phone number of the contr.butor CARtM CHOICE INFORMATION CINTER w ii present a wi rkshop at I p m wednesday in Jester Center A lts A entitled "C areer Planning." a n a lic t a C O U S G E O f S IZ IN E S S STUDENT C O U N C Il career development program at 2 p m W ed nesday in BusinessEconomics Building 25? E*ecut.v-es ♦rom accounting technical business banking and retail marketing will speak on careers in their field* STUDENT GOVERNMENT TOURS will prov de round trip bus transportation to ’ ne Savior football game Saturday for $5 per person vVednesday is the ast day to sign up at union South 112 Interested persons m ay can 471-3721 for more information TESTWI SENES5 will be discussed a! 3 pm Wednesday in jester Center A332 bv the staff of the Reading and Study Skills Laboratory R A S S L ’ TEXAS UNION RECREATION CO M M IT TEE wilt show the film, "T o Budd a F ire at 7 30 p.m. Had lie U N IO N P rie s t at 7and 9 p m W ednesday rn M E E T IN G S CANTEREURY Will meet at 5 30 P rn ' Wednesday af Gregg House tor worship and a mea SEMINARS U N IO N w i l t sponsor B soup and sandwich seminar ai nooR BAPTIST STUDENT W ed nesd ay in m e Bap tist Stud s*# Center 2204 San Antonio St. U niver­ sity athletes Jo e y Aboussie. B o b ® G u t s and George Dennis will spaafe and entertain. DEPARTMENT O f A STRONOM Y will SPONSOR a C e l e s t i a l M e c h a n ic s a n d A stro m etry Sem inar at 4 p rn, Wednesday in Robe” te e Moor# Hat! IS 216A TEXAS UNION IDEAS ANO ISSUES COMMITTEE a ll sponsor a sandwich seminar at neon Wednesday in the Academic Critter fourth floor Austin City Cour-Cilman je t! Freedman will spear on Tne S86 OOO Question " Don’t M ake / A Move Without C allin g APA RTM EN T Pin c e r s . SERVICE A Free Service 24 Hours a Day 472-4162 lf The AH N e w D IF F E R E N T D R U M M E R P RE SE NTS Italian Sandwiches, Pizza HAPPY HOUR 8-10 P.M. BEER 25e 29th off Guadalupe 477-8413 T u e s -T h u r * 1 1 -1 1 F r i-S u n 1 1 -1 2 HOLIDAY HOUSE SPECIAL • HOLIDAY HOUSE SPECIAL • HOLIDAY HOUSE SPECIAL As an RO TC student you will learn to organize, motivate and lead others, you will develop qualities many other college men and wom en miss — self-discipline, physical stamina, responsibility and bear­ ing — qualities essential for success in a civilian or military career. THEATRE Bans Auditorium Admission is Si tor univers-ty students faculty and stat' si 50 for members SANDWICH SHOP WHAT THE PROGRAM WILL DO FOR YOU. W ednesday in Bened'Ct Admission is SO cents C O M M IT T E E wilt snow the film, ' Diary of a Country T ES AS GONDOLIER Army ROTC A D M IN IS T R A T IO N vs I s p o n s o r 8 CAHTOl BICYCLE RACING ASSOCIATION will meet at 7 30 p rn. Wednesday in the Catholic Student Center to discuss bicycle training and weight lifting ILAN VITAL w ill meet at 8 30 p rn. weonesoay in Business-Economic* Budding 151 for a lecture by Bru et K Avenel! entitled 'Lite, Death and Higher Conic iou* ne**." THE f ASMtON OROUF will meet at 7 30 p m vVednesday n the Home Economics Budding Reading Room to d!*cu»s plans tor the trip to Dallas INTERNATIONAL STUDENT ORGANIZATION win meet at 8 p rn Wednesday at the Baptist Student union.. 2204 San A n­ tonia S t, for a general meeting MARK-AGE will meet at 7 30 p.m. Wednes day in Communication Building A 3,112 for an introductory lecture, a discussion and meditation NEWMAN CLUB w ill meet at 8 p rn Wednesday in toe Catholic Student Center basement et sigma lh will meet at J p rn Wednes day in Engineering Laboratories Building to hear Jim Rogers speak on e m p lo y m e n t o p p o rtu n itie s available with Proctor and Gambia STUDENT SENATE wilt meet at 6 30 p rn. Wednesday in Busmess-Economics Building 251 UNIVERSITY CAVE CLUB will meet Bt 7 30 p m wednesday rn Experimental Science Building US to show slides and to discuss future trips UT INSURANCE SOCIETY will meet at 7 30 p rn W e d n e sd a y in Bu sin ess Economics Budding 163 Garrett R per ink w ill speak and a film. "H ow Lioyds of London Operates." w ill be shown UT s a i l i n g COIR win meet at I p rn in Welch Hall 319 John O'eveira will speak on "S a il Max ng and Trim Buying new boats will also be dis cussed TURTLES A unique sandwich shop serving hot and cold sandw iches with good cold beer on the patio. 2405.NUECES Mon.-Sat. 11 a.m . - 12 p.m. B R H K E 4ST ngir mmSSk, -M T ^ I S P E C IA L You will be making the most of your po tentialities for both a civilian and military profession. >2 EGGSc HASH BROWNS ’TOAST£JEILY< ’SAUSAGE °«< >BACON <** >H/4NV Arm y RO TC is not all M ilitary Science. There are many extra-curricular activities: rifle team, drill team, color guard, adven­ ture training, flight training, intramural sports, and many social activities. ENROLL IN ARMY ROTC NIXT SEMESTER. , . , •TV- 'V. •, A v 11 i 'J 99 c R E G . ‘ 1.25 Contact: Cadet/Mai Reed Rm 110, Meindam Hall 471-5919/5910 mr Army ROTC. NOVEMBER 7^-814-911-10^ EVERY TRY T K I M MONDAY AND WEDNESDAY r v b i/ iT b JU # # I V V\ V A Ii J R ^ RESTAURANT ROAST BEEF SANDWICH FRENCH FRIES AND A * SOFT DRINK ‘ 1 .0 9 BEER’ FOOSBALl’ PONG Open till 4 a.m. Corner 19th and Guadalupe 477-6829 IN ASSOCIATION WITH KRMH VAN MORRISON SPECIAL GUEST STARS LITTLE FEAT SAT. NOV. 9-8:00 P.M. AUSTIN CITY COLISEUM TICKETS: $5.00 IN AOVANCE $5.50 AT THE DOOR FESTIVAL STYLE SEATING ON SAL E NOW AT JOSHE S TICKET The more you kx>k at it, SE RVI CE . 4TH L E V E L , HI GHL AND MAL L INNER SANCTUM & UNI VERSI TY CO OP the better it looks. Produced by Southw est C on certs, Inc. A rt Squires, Executive Producer Page 14 Wednesday, November 6, 1974 THE DAILY TEXAN Austin Symphony Plans Second Fall Performance The Austin Symphony O rchestra s second concert of the season will be perform ed a t 8 p m. F rid ay at Municipal Auditorium . A rtistic D irector W alter Ducloux will lead the sym phony in de G rignon’s “ A ndalucia,” R av el's “ P iano C oncerto iii G “ and B ruckner’s “ Symphony No 4," U ruguayan pianist Alberto R eyes will a p p ear as guest soloist. R eyes will perform R av el’s “ Piano Concerto in G .” DUCLOUX has been internationally honored for his achieve­ m ent in both o rch estra and opera work. A ustinites last saw D ucloux w hen he co n d u cte d th e U n iv e rsity Sym phony O rchestra in the p resentation of “ A ida.” The opera was presented in English a s tran slated by Ducloux, one of the top tran slato rs of foreign opera into English. E ducated in Sw itzerland, G erm any and A ustria. Ducloux m ade his A m erican debut in 1940 with the New Yolk Symphony O rchestra, Ducloux becam e an A m erican citizen in 1943, and a fter World War II w as the first A m erican to conduct the Czech Philharm onic, the N ational O pera and the Radio Symphony O rchestra, all in P rague. In 1948. he was chief conductor of the B allet R usse, on tour through w estern E urope. Upon his retu rn to the United S tates, Ducloux w as guest conductor of the NBC Symphony O rch estra for three seasons under Ute legendary A rturo Toscanini He has been m usical d irecto r of the Voice of A m erica, and a m em ber of the M etropolitan O pera quiz panel since 1949. BEFORE COMING to Austin, Ducloux w as a m em b er of the music faculty of the U niversity of Southern C alifornia for 15 years. A desire for new challenge brought him to the U niversity in 1968 as p rofessor of m usic and dram a P ianist R eyes, although still in his 20s has p erform ed in Moscow. B russels, South A m erica, New York and San F ra n ­ cisco. Reyes was born in Montevideo in 1948 and began his m usical studies at the age of 6 with S arah Bourdillon de S antorsola. Two years later. R eyes gave his first recital. His 1961 deb u t with the U ruguayan Symphony O rch estra was acclaim ed by the press for the “ surprising m a tu rity of his m usical ideas. "In 1966. R eyes cam e to the United S tates to con­ tinue his studies with fam ed A m erican pianist Sidney F o ster at the School of Music a t Indiana U niversity. REYES* CAREER has been m ark ed by his prize-w inning p er­ form ances in prestigious intern atio n al com petitions: L ev en tritt in New York. Tchaikovsky in Moscow. Rio de Ja n e iro in B razil and City of Montevideo in U ruguay. The Austin Symphony O rc h e stra ’s second co n cert will open with deG rignon's “ A ndalucia,” the first p a rt of a cy cle called “ H ispanicas.” The m usic is lively and full of th e rhythm ic verve that is custom arily associated with the m usic of Spain For co n trast, there is a slow er, m ore lyrical m iddle section which fe a tu re s a cello solo, to be perform ed by principal celloist P aula W right. Next on the program will be Ravel s “ Piano C oncerto in G The last of R av el's w orks for o rch estra, it w as first perform ed in A m erica in 1932. The concerto is in three m ovem ents. The first, allegram ente. is light and gay. C ertain jazz and blues elem ents m ake th eir ap pearance here and in the finale, not a lit­ tle rem iniscent of G eorge G ershw in s “ C oncerto in F. The second m ovem ent, adagio assai, opens with a long solo passage for the piano. The en tire m ovem ent bears a spiritual relation to som e of the slow m ovem ents and a ria s of Bach THE FINALE, presto, is even m ore high-spirited than the opening m ovem ent and utilizes m ore freely the jazz idiom, alw ays colored, how ever, by a French accent. L ast on the program is B ruckner’s "F o u rth Sym phony,” also called “ The R o m an tic.’ B ruckner began his Fourth Symphony in Jan u ary , 1874, and com pleted it in l l m onths, but it w as to w ait another seven y ears before its first perform ance. In the m eantim e, the com poser tw ice revised the work, first w riting a new scherzo, then changing the finale. Its world p rem iere took place a t a special concert of the Vienna Philharm onic O rchestra. H ans R ichter conducting, on F eb 20. 1881. Laguna Gloria M u seum Shop Crafts To Be Shown, Sold Laguna G loria’s Museum Shop will reopen Thursday, the evening of the m u seu m ’s annual Beaux A rts G ala Those attending the p arty , which closes the m u seu m ’s m e m b e r s h i p d r i v e , wi l l receive a preview look at an assortm ent of Tex.i-. cra fts, including pottery je w e lry , work in fiber, glass and m e'iil On Friday, the shop will be open for m em bers' pun bases only, and on .Saturday it will be open to the public The shop will shew blown glass pieces b Frank Kulasiewicz I niv ersity a rt d e p a r t m e n t : f unctional ceram ic work by Mal Randle of W estbank P o ttery ; woven wall hangings by Shelby H ar­ man of the W eaver’s Co-op. and batiks and b askets bv R ebecca Munro. all of Austin In addition, th ere will be w ork by c r a f ts m e n fro m D allas Lubbock, Houston and Denton. Besides c ra fts, the shop will offer a variety of m ate rials appro p riate for children — puppets, posters and books — m a rk e te d by San A ntonio ed ucator Je arn in e W agner un­ der the logo “ Kid C oncern” and sold also a t N eim an M ar­ cus L a t e r in N o v e m b e r , m useum reproduction C h rist­ S tu d e n t's A ttorney The stu d e n t^ attorneys, Frank Ivy and A nn Bower, are availab le appointm ent from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. M o n d a y through F rid a y in Room 3, Speech Building. Telephone 471-7142/ A rrV iad illo W o rld H e a d q u a r t e r s f T O N IG H T RUCE SPRINGSTEEN A N D HIS ADULT MOVIES RATED X 505 N E C H E S I block w. of Red River Open 10:00 a.m. to 2:00 a.m. Sun. 12 noon - 8 p.m. WELL WATER Adult Bookstore 25* Arcade TOMORROW R e serv e d $ 5 & $ 6 M utt be 1 8 yrs T O N IG H T to o n to r 2 Adult Shows Weekly Call for Titles 477-0291 S I OFF with this ad or Student ID 521 East Sixth THREADGILL 472-0061 niHiiiiaiiiittiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiHiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiHiiiiiiHnuiiiiii Tickets N o w on Sale J o sk e ’s in H ig h la n d M a ll Inner Sanctum Records Texas Stereo on E. Riverside A King B e e Production d i f f e r e n t Osotines it FR ID A Y A SA T U R D A Y (I n s i d e ) SU N D A Y N o w Featuring Turtles Kitchen 2 4 0 5 -A Nueces - 2 blks w est of D rag A N N E X - TONIGHT R A Y W ILE Y HUBBARD FRI NOV. 8 J. GATSBY’S W E E K L Y S P E C IA L WED. N I G H T C H I C K E N FRIED S T E A K D I N N E R $195 Soap Creek Saloon T O N IG H T GREEZY WHEELS Tequila N ile - Still 4 0 ‘ a Shot T H U R SD A Y P a u l R a y & The C o b r a s E ENT ER TAI NME NT NO COVER l \ THE I Cowboys in 1971 These con­ certs have featured The N itty G ritty Dirt Band. Isaac Hayes and the Doobie B rothers. P ro ceed s fr om the show have been donated to the Austin A sso ci ati on for R etarded C itizens during the show s 23-vear history The m instrels show has enabled the Co wbo ys a n n u a l l y to do n ate betw een $5,000 and $10,000 to the AARC. The T em ptations have just released a new al bum entitled “ 1990,'' which m ixes the old rhvthm -and-blues style with a progressive new sound. T ickets a re av ailab le a t the G reg o ry G ym Box O ffice, R aym ond's Drug No. I and 2. T he Soul B o u t i q u e , ABC R e c o rd s and t he V ic to ry G rille. THE CULTURAL ENTERTAINMENT COMMITTEE OF THE TEXAS UNION presents *lW '•DauI Tavloi* '‘Dance (•ompqm TOO ACADEMY E A S T STREET ( O u t s id e on Pa tio J R E D L M X O IS Y. Sunday, N ovem ber 24th 8 :0 0 p.m . Austin M unicipal A uditorium All S c a ts N o t s u it a b le fat y o u n g p e r s o n s C H A R L IE D A N IE L S B A N D P LU M NELLY 2 7 I M ) ll T h e T e m p t a t i o n s wi l l headline the 23rd annual T ex­ as Cowboys M instrel Show a t 8:30 p m . W e d n e s d a y in G regory G ym . The show is the fifth in a series of big-nam e e n te rta in ­ m ent concerts begun by the V C H R IS M O S S L E R FOR IN F O CALL 4 7 7 -0 3 5 7 Temptations To Headline Concert p .m .); and from I to 5 p m. Sunday. F o r fu rth er inform ation call the m useum a t 452-9447 E STREET B A N D THE P O IN T E R S IS T E R S Ell m as card s will be available from the M et ro po li ta n M useum , th e M useum of Modern Art. th e Philadelphia and Boston M useum s of Art The shop. w hich will be staffed by volunteers, will be open during the hours the museum is open . from IO a.m . to 5 p.m ., Tuesday through Saturday (T hursdays until 9 BRU CKN ER’S “ F ourth Sym phony” presently exists in two versions that have caused considerable controversy When the score w as first published in 1890. it contained a num ber of revisions and excisions m ade by B ruckner's pupil, conductor Ferdinand Lowe, with som e assistance from two oth er A ustrian m usicians, the brothers F ranz Josef Schalk Then, on M arch I. 1936 nearly 40 y ears a fter B ruck ner's death B ans W eisbach conducted w hat is reputed to have been the w orld p rem iere of B ruckner's original version of the sym phony a t a concert in Leipzig. The Lowe revision, how ever, is generally recognized as the best version of B ru ck n er's "F o u rth Sym phony,” and Ducloux. a longtim e student of B ruckner, will present this tim ehonored version Symphony M anager John Tabor encourages coneert-goers to get tickets early to avoid the last-m inute rush. A few season tickets are still available and are on sale at the Austin Symphony office at 701 W 15th St phone 476-6064 Individual tickets also a re on sale a t the sym phony office and will be available at the M unicipal Auditorium Box O ffice the day of the concert, beginning at ll a rn .7 0 7 B e e C a v e s Rd. 3 2 7 -9 0 1 6 ^Monday, Nov. 11 and Tuesday, Nov. 12 BOBBY BARE AND B ILL & B O N N IE H EA R N E TICKETS 54 at Inner Sanctum, Odd Moment* (Highland Mall) & The Opry House Box Office. SAT NOV. 9 RUSTY WIER R A Y WILEY /ith HUBBARD also DENIM TICKETS $3.50 AT LOCATIONS ABOVE M unicipal A uditorium 8 PM $.50, $1.00, $1.50 w ith O ptional Services Fee T icket D raw ing: O ct. 31 -Nov. 12/Hogg Box O ffice/10-6 weekdays G eneral Sales: Nov. 7-ll/$3.50, $4.00, $4.50 Bus Schedule: Free to Fee Holders/Jester, Kinsolving, Co-op 7:00-7:30 No cameras or tape recorders allowed. ID must be presented’at door. Master class, Wed. Nov. 13, Anna Hiss Gymnasium, Studio 134, l l AM Informal discussion seminar, 12:45 PM. Limited to first come— first serve. SH O W INFO 442-2743 What ever became ti Orna 61of the 1967 State Champs? M D T H M LAUTH I 914 N. L A M A R CEC-74 4 7 7 -3 7 8 3 _____ The Solo Artists Series He’s traded in his football for pinball flippers. He’s gone from the gridiron to Uncle Stanley’s gameroom. What’s he doing there? He says it’s the competitive spirit in him. lf you’ve got any competitive spirit at all, Uncle Stanley will bring it out of you. They’ve got the toughest gam es in town. You'll get a chance to test those lightning reflexes on those titillating tables with the bouncing steel b all After you've won the table of honor, have your own victory party over a mugfpgger or two. st a step from campus in Dobie Mall. announces THE A U S T I N S Y M P H O N Y ORCHESTRA RAVEL, deGRIGNON & BUCKNER Friday, November 8 4'h r is t o p h E se h e n b a c h pianist M u n icip al Auditorium , 8:00 P.M. Conductor: W alter Ducloux W cdiB csdaT . I i \ o v c i t i h c r I ii M u n i c i p a l A u d i t o r i u m / SKM) P M .50 w ith O ption al Services Fee/Student Tickets $1.25 Ticket D raw ing: October 3 0 Novem ber 8 H o g g Box Office/10 6 W e e k d ays B u s Schedule: Free to Fee holders Jester, Kinsolving, C o-O p, 7 :0 0 -7 :3 0 H ic ('u ltu ra l E n te r ta in m e n t C o m m i t t e e til* t h e T e x a s T i i i o u .SO with Optional Services Fe*. Public Sales 50 Ticket Drawing: November 4 Id I log^i Box ( hik e 1 0 -6 w eekdays Ibis S chedules l ive to Fee holders fester, Kinsolving, ("o-Op 7 OO 7 5.40 S p o il sored by H ie Cultural Entertainm ent C om m ittee o f the T exas Union & Tile D epartm ent of Music Wednesday, Novem ber 6, 1974 T H E D A IE Y T E X A N Page 15 'W ' Fails To Provide Suspense •W ;“ directed bv Richard Quine; produced bv Mel Ferrer; starring Twiggv; at the \ arsitv Bv NS I L L I A M A. STONE JR , Texan Staff Writer ■VV i> a nice. neatly wrapped little suspense -thriller with only one problem: it s neither suspenseful nor thrilling It has a bland, antiseptic quality about it which fails to inspire either approval or dis­ approval ifs simply T H E R E squatting motionless in a void where aspiration seems to be a dim word THE S U I ESS of any suspense-thriller depend' largely on its ability to manipulate its audience In the more successful ones an a tni0 ' t>here of uncertainty prevails, Hitchcock f*r instance, 'eases his audience constantly Ute sudden closeup of a man s face or the shot of a lighted cigarette in an empty room seem to mean everything, and yet they mean nothing firmed as the villains, and instead of feeling delighted or satisfied at having been fooled, we sigh complacently and wonder what all the fuss was about. Through skillful direction and editing, inno­ cent people and innocent circumstances can be made to appear almost sinister, forcing the viewer to dwell unnecessarily on them, and when finally, something totally unex­ pected jumps out and grabs us. we know' we've been manipulated but we don't really care — our chagrin is outweighed by our delight and satisfaction TH E ACTING in “ W ” is much like everything else: while not offensive, it s so cautious and uninspired that the cast never takes a chance, spewing out all the proper emotions at all the proper times, giving more attention to style than to feeling In VV." however there s no sense of mis­ chief or trickery things we suspect from the beginning are ultimately deserving of our dis­ trust. i.e.. all the suspects are eventually con­ isn’t bad, and that, my friends, is a rather dubious distinction. It would really serve no purpose to provide a plot summary here; suffice it to say that “ W ” concerns a happily married woman whose former love returns to haunt and tor­ ment her psychologically, and in some ways, physically. As such “ W ” borrows a great deal from a movie released several years ago titled, ‘ Daddy’s Gone A Hunting.” but as discussed earlier, “ W ” doesn’t have the same sense of suspense or the macabre that “Hunting’’ had. and it sinks, slowly and unnoticed, into a lifeless series of plot developments which, added together, equal two hours best describ­ ed as forgettable I was half-expecting the star of this movie, Twiggy, to fall flat on her face, the way Raquel Welch always does, but she didn't — she’s just as cautious as everyone else, giving safe, stereotyped reactions to her character of the frightened, dependent wife Twiggy is good only in the sense that she G e w a n d h a u s Offers Fresh Id e a s 6IM 8BA L C IM IX * CORPORATION By B IL L DARW IN Texan Staff W riter The Gewandhaus Orchestra of Leipzig under the baton of Kurt Masur presented Mon­ day night one of the most s k illfu lly rendered concerts of a symphonic nature heard in Austin in quite a while. Masur was actually the one to be faulted for the lack of a n v extravagance where it offered itself in the music. I ALL CINEMAS EVERY DAY S i.25 TIL 1 :3 0 I ( IM M ■M U NCMTX • i t mi fi n it UM*' i tutti tttovcet BURTREYNOLDS “OOTHE LONGEST YARD” iOf1a, ’eoaucokon•* ->««*»*>.•.-xcruxe R -£LS" But his approach, rather academic and lightweight, is certainly valid for several reasons. In Shubert’s “ Unfinished Symphony" in B minor, the in­ itial bass melody and accomp a n y in g v io lin s and woodwinds were held back very much. However, upon reaching the final climax of the movement it was apparent Masur was contemplating the great effect it would have after the restrained opening section TH E SECOND movement was purely Schubertian The excellently controlled clarinet and oboe duet was enhanced even more by the effects of the woodwind and brass choirs. All this was played with a lightness to bring out further the innocence of this moment. television Mum K T t .g .I t. r l i.f-W a TODAY! Poe *10,000 they break your Nims. For *20,000 they break your legs. Vide-O-Works productions w ill be broadcast from 10:30 to 11:30 p m Wednesday on channels 2 and IO. Vide-OWorks to be shown this week include "Life Lines With Sal­ ly Jo n e s ,’- “ The Green Snake.” part three of a fairy tale serial, “ Saffron Swings. ' an interpretive jazz dance by Grace Broussard. “ Live at the 12-00-20C f egg. I ' - JO . Hie Gambled. |:4Z>« 4m4Mt3<4 -4C2JU M Mux* — •‘TH, Gam) Im I pm TheOwt IME WAY WE WERE a w ithe Pussycat REDUCED PRICES TU 5:15 for a perfect vacation take... T R A N S OPEN 1:45 51.00 Til A TAKE ADVANTAGE! ft T E X A S E '«*4aW XA S *Si STARTS TODAY!! IO -JO p m Movie - "C ry Rape international Performance Wide World Special Tonight Show *xeekc /%s » ★SHINER I: , AWD* JOS* STO lo t UWC mL I M W * JO A 3* SSHUS SELUS I =4 5 - 3 : 3 0 - 5 : 1 5 - * 1 ” 7 . 0 0 - 8 :4 5 - 1 0 : 3 0 SCREEN 2 I TODAY THRU TUESDAY TOF.TRIPLE^ AWARDWHINER IS RACK! — H u m f o r * f i l m C r it ic * . 1970 imam b is t ________ D irected by R o b ert B resson; orig in a l title: " L e jo u r n a l d u n cu re de ca m p a g n e; screen p la y b y B resson, based o n th e n o te I bs G eorges B ern a n o s ; p h o to g ra p h y by L e o n c e -lle n r i B urel; m u sic fey Jea n -Ja cq u es G ru e awald. lf ith C laude C a v d ia , "Sicole Vlaurey. F ren ch dialog w ith E nglish subtitle*, n arra tio n in E nglish. $ 1.00 UT Students, Faculty, Staff $ 1.50 Members Tonight 7 and 9 p.m. Batts Auditorium a pitcher 11 a.m. - Midnight Ever' Night I - i w t i l l e e w ft.I P B ! ! A film by the author of I 4 S T Y E A R A T M A R / E N B A D TRANS-EUROP EXPRESS (1968) Directed by Alain Robbe-Grillet With Jean-Louis Trintignant and Marie-France Pisier TR t \ S - E ( R O P E X P R E S S , u h u h reverses all o f th e il­ lusions o f realism , is n o d o u b t th e m ost tru ly cin em a to g ra p h ic u orb th a t has been m ade tor a long tim e. Alain Jo u ffro v , Rated X JESTER AUDITORIUM L'Eiprew, Paris -------- $1 7 & 9 P.M. BESTSUPPQRTWG* RCfltESS -r -T T FAST DRAWERS TI weren't the only thine that droppers q in the old west. PARDON MY BLOOPER “It ’s th e 75 TACO FLATS, M KERMIT SCHAFER’S C O L U M B IA FICrunes P n c c e lt • yL= _ B B S P ro du ction JACK NICHOLSON Laugh All You Want To B ut... FT V E E H SM P IE C E S surprise movie of the M T E ^ HECTOR'S FEA. 2:00 3.30-5:00 6:30-8:00 930 A RIOTOUS NEW FULL LENGTH MOVIE . . . BASED ON RADIO A T.V.’S MOST HILARIOUS BONERS! BEER 20‘ — DIARY OF A COUNTRY PRIEST DI M d O F \ C U I \ T R \ P R I E S T , %.inner of th * G ra n d P m dti Cinema Francai-e and three major afeard- at the \ enter Fdm Festival* tell- the -tor* of an ailing prie-i (Claude Cavdia) feho behove* that he ha- failed to raive the moral level of the pari-h. Ile t- unable to convert an arrogant countess and the villager- believe that he in an alcoholic. The priest’- final feord*. uttered a- he lie- dying of cancer, are: “ A II ta grace.” Thev evpre— the director’s own believe in ultim ate salvation. STEREOPHONIC SIX TRACK SOUND SPACE ODYSSEY 7, 24, 34 News movement built on a chord progression). Here the dry ap­ proach finally worked against the musicians. The movement became meaningless but still tonally pleasing The faulty pitch and mis­ calculated attacks so often heard in many orchestras was pleasantly absent The inter­ pretations were ultim ately satisfying, if different from more standard approaches. I would certainly enjoy hearing this groqp again TO NIG HT! HELD OVER 3RD GREAT WEEK NOW IN MAGNIFICENT 70 MM 2001:A » Video . s.ona- es IO p m. Truckers and their women! It’s a violent, shocking w orld you’ve never seen before! OPEN 2:15 STANLEY KUBRICK'S • JO p m proached the first climax for a grand effect, showers of violins overlapping as they crescendo — one of the great moments in music T H E A LLEG R O giocoso movement was played in a perfectly relaxed tempo to alleviate the dense orchestra­ tion, allowing the listener to hear everything that is oc­ curring within the thick tex­ tures The final movement is a grave passacaglia THERE S A REW a 60DFATHER i IN TOWR... rowwiuway CIM ATO* *0U»TWt»]| [St) A Psychic Thriller Page 16 Wednesday, November 6, 1974 THE DAILY TEXAN V ___________ ELI W A LLA C H . LYNN R E D G R A V ^ FRANCO N E R O INTFRNATIONAL AMUBtMLNT CORPORATION • IN C O L O R STARTS s s is m Po PARAMOUNT.™,, . CONGRESS I A VE N U E Ray Price Comments on 25 Years of Music Singer Offers Viewpoints on His Career, Peers, Current Rock Groups By BETTY HOLMES Texan Staff W riter The suite a t the Stephen F Austin Hotel w as noisy. Peo­ ple w ere carry in g on a t least th re e co n v e rsa tio n s, h igh­ p it c h e d a n d f a s t - p a c e d Against this lively background R ay P rice quiet­ ly leaned back on the couch, his deep-set blue eyes rev e a l­ ing that he was, indeed, bonetired When he spoke, the words w ere careful, slow and low-keyed, strongly em phasiz­ ing his southern draw l. Someone handed him a cup of coffee in a plastic D unkin’ Donut container. ‘THANK YOU, p odner," P rice replied As he sipped the coffee. I alm ost expected him to slip off his boots and put his feet up on the coffee table But P ric e m aintained at all tim es the casual, yet polite m a n n e r of a s o u t h e r n gentlem an “ We had a n ice c ro w d tonight The kids w ere just g r e a t ,” he s ta r tl'd . “ T he sheriff brought us in P assin ' everybody and pullin’ them over. Nice bunch of kids — do a lot of good work “ E v ery o n e sittin g a r o ur d nodded in a g re e m e n t, and someone pointed out thee he thought the sound system had been especially good out a t the rodeo. A discussion developed as th e p ro s and < ons of different sound system s were thrown out. ‘ N o w a d a y s, wh e n t hee build an auditorium it s all m asonry and the sound ju st bounces everyw here, and then som e politician gets his friend to put in a public address system and it sounds like a Bell tone hearing aid when they get through with it. P ric e lau g h ed so ftly , then leaned back again “ NOW THE young kids like tonight — they know what th e y h e a r . N ow I ’m n o t dem eaning any of the sound people They can tell you on paper how m any ohm s a re in this am p. but they c a n ’t tell you w hat they h ear The young kids have e a rs for it — they understand, and t h a t s w here it s at. The sound today is improving. ‘I go way back. I been in the m u s i c b u s in e s s a b o u t 25 years. Back then you had to com e through the back door. We don’t do th at anym ore. When I first sta rte d , a country m usician w as som ething th at you had his records, but you had ’em hidden in the closet The old hard-core fan w as the one who supported us for all those y ea rs They didn t give a dam n who it was. Ray P rice is by no m eans a celebrity of the past, but he d oes go a long w ay back speak in g first-h a n d of the G rand Ole O pry's history, of people like Hank W illiam s, of c o u n try m u sic a s it firs t '■merged. “ T H E G R A N D Ole Opry was sta rted — they had spare tim e on the radio station WSM ... so they had som e ex tra tim e and told G eorge Hay w e’re gonna give you som e tim e and do a show They w ere following an opera hour ... so when it cam e tim e for them to go on the a ir he thought h e ’d m ake a crack So he said. ‘Well, you’ve heard the G rand O pera. Now you're fixin" to h ear the G rand Ole O pry.’ It was ju s t a pun and it stuck and it got real, real serious. ■‘Everybody listened a t th at tim e, and they liked it and they kept adding m ore and m ore radio tim e. Roy Acuff got so popular that during World W’a r II, the Jap an ese used to try to get the m arin es in the South P acific to show their positions by eussin Roy Acuff. T hat w as one of the b attle cries. T hat s how pop­ u lar the m an was.*’ I asked P ric e about another po p u lar s in g e r, Hank W illiams W hat was the m an really like0 “ He w as a real fine p e r­ son.’ P ric e paused for a few s e c o n d s “ Confused So near genius that he w as about to go crazy. He got m e on the G rand Ole O pry He w as a pure alcoholic The first country mu s i c i a n s w e re t ha t wa y because the stigm a of country m usic did it to them . People called them hicks and they w e r e n 't. T h ey w ere ju s t human beings like everyone else. Ray Price TACO FLATS SOUTH N O W OPEN U IS T h e A u s t in T OPEN 8 a . m . -7 p.m. -T A C O S NACHOS — CHALUPA— BURRITTOS--------BREAKFAST — ‘OUR D A I L Y SPECIAL' FOR THIS WEEK st C e n te r K now th e m GROUP RATE D IN N E R ATO SALAD • BEAN S • O'W ON • PICKLE • 8*1 AD N o O b lig a tio n . Served Family Style 7530 N. ILamar, Room 205 7 p.m. to c t p.m. Tee*, and Wed. Includes: HOBO PL A TE • B i t i • SAU SAG E • R IS S • •2 3 3 0 S L a m a r - 4 4 4 - 8 4 6 1 - C u s t o m M eat, T a c o R efried B eans C h eese, Salad J a la p en o , T ortilla you see today — the hard rock g r o u p s w e a r i n ’ al l t h e rhinestones and everything We w ore those in '55. 56 I w as ju s t as loud as th e rockiest rock groups that ever lived And every rock group you see today is a hard coun­ try group T hey’re actually playing hard country with a rock beat ' T h e y ’ve m a d e ex­ perim ents with m usic. They played rock m usic to roses and the roses died. and they played real p r e t t y m usic and the roses flourished So there has to be som ething to it. “ I think th at m usic will p ro g re ss until the sounds become m ore celestial as the y ears go on I don’t believe that manki nd has r eal l y scratched the surface on the be a u t y of mu s i c . I t hi nk m usic’s all joining together. F or the first tim e, there s a very thin line betw een alt m usic.” What if the roses heard R ay Price music*’ “ I d o n ’t k n o w . . . I t ' d p rob ab ly jum p out of the pot and run ’’ M ore s e rio u s a m o m en t later. P ric e paused trying to d e s c r i b e h i s m u s i c . He thought 't over for a second and. raising his heavy lidded eyes to gaze frankly and open­ ly. he answ ered “ Ju st m usic At le a st th a t’s what I hope they call m e when I ’m dead and gone — ju s t a good singer ’ Early dining means free wining. lf you will m ake your reservation to dine, during our happy hour, 5:30 to 6:30 pm, you will receive a complimentary g la ss of fine imported wine to compliment our continental cuisine and your good taste. IN THE RUSTY NAIL 24th & Rio Grande PERSONALIT ( TESTED offers for a fruited time FREI PERSONALITY TESTS Your pan tonality and aptitude determine vol r future lot of people think that you re ­ sent them , but that isn t the way. Y ou're alw ays on the defensive, God knows, without the people I w ouldn't have nothing, but you do get on the defensive." P r i c e l a u n c h e d i nt o a description of one of his early bands, a group com bined of the W estern C herokees and 1 And I resented the h illb illy tag. Hillbilly, I think the dic­ tionary says, is a m ountain goat I really resented it.' T H E CR O W D in the room had thinned out. To the sm all group left. P ric e com m ented on the effect of those e v e r­ present fans “ It gets to w here it m akes you craw l back into a shell. A the D rifting Cowboys, which the sin g e r had nam ed the Cherokee Cowboys. “ My front m an — I hired him from the fire d ep artm en t in A m arillo — w as R oger Miller. And my guitar m an w as Willie Nelson. And my bass man was Johnny P a y c h e c k . T h a t wa s th e original Cherokee Cowboys, and that s when it was all go­ ing good. “ We h it s e v e ra l p eriods w here we have real low peaks, som e p an ics, and ups and downs with country m usic. The last big downer was when Presley cam e in. T hat w as in ’56. “ The big upsurge that really lifted it off its feet w as R ay Charles. He cut a country album and they said he w as a com plete idiot and it w as the biggest dam n thing he ever done. It w as I C an’t Stop Lov­ ing Y ou.’ “ Everybody began to say w here did these songs com e from ? And they said ‘country and w estern. Ray C harles? Well, if it’s good enough for him , it s good enough for m e .’ Now they dig the lyrics ’cause they're true. You can identify with w h at's happening. Most of the groups th at REG 99' Jefferson Square Kersey Lane a! VV 38th C o o k in g . TU * P.M. A Q U A R IU S TH EATRES 4 MON. THRU SAT. 444-322? • 1500 SOUTH PLEASANT VALLEY RD RfOUCtD PRICER Trexas Union REDUCED PRICES TU 6 P.M. MON. THRU SAT. presents leo ottke PRESENTS Nov. 8 - $ 1 .5 0 til 6 p.m wilhSTORM 8:00 - $2.75 FEATURES -2 5 5 -5 :1 5 -7 3 0 -9 5 0 - 10:00 - $3.25 ( Adv. tickets - O o f Willie s, Inner Sanctum , Ritz Em porium ) For m o r e in fo r m a tio n C o m in g : B U R K A 471-4721 10 : 0 0 - S I. 5 0 til 6 p.m. FEATURES IT A L I A N f l i t 1 1 ITI -8 20 - B O D ID D LEY November 24 Hogg Auditorium Ticket draw ing begins Nov. 12 S I 50 fit 6 P M FEATURES -1:50-3:30-5:05-6 45- COLOR PG From th e s m a s h s u s p e n s e novel of t h e y e a r. AUM I Shapiro FHs THE O DESSA FILE J O N V O IG H T M A X IM I L I A N S C H E U ! PG R W H I T E . N o v . 1 3 -1 6 ^ Today at Presidio Theatres AU STIN VILLAGE 4 B a r g a i n M a t in e e til E X C L U S IV E F e a t u r e s ^ : O O -3 : U > - 5 :2 0 E N G A G E M E N T ! ii 7 3 0 -9 :4 0 Art Carney infuses the film with a shining performance. It s a lovable movie, funny, touching and superbly directed/ — Gene Shaw NBC-TV TOOAY SHOW ill HARRY'S GANG ‘ART CARNEY GIVES THE PERFORMANCE OF HIS CAREER, A CERTAIN NOMINEE FOR THE N F X T n Q P A R " NevfnSander*. V O U H n , ^ ABC T V (New York) '•WtWWWMW/1 tu n :: ; ;,v m HUflM I J,Iii ONE OF THE BEST MOVIES OF 1974. 11111 » rT VILLAGE 4 L im ite d Engagement I 7700 A N D ER SO N UM FROM THE MAN WHO GAVE YOU“BLAZING SADDLES” RON MOODY Ii € MR. IWAJESTYK1 111 3:30-Mon-Fri Features 1:30-3:30-5:30-7:30 9,30 V O N RYAN S E XP R ESS" filii ill ii _ / G U L F S T A T E S D R IV E - t N Show t o w n USA S o u T h s id c Hi Ti -■v lit ! § § li M ss PLUS C O -H IT Bargain M atin ee til OOM DeLUISE Hwy. U S B C i m t r o n » 8 3 & - 8 S 8 4 / ^ BOX OFFICE OPEN 6.30 SHOW STARTS 7:00 y . i TBS A w ild a n d h ila r i o u s c h a s e fo r a f o r t u n e in je w e ls . «» A Mel Brooks Film IK - r# R IV E R S ID E Iff: The Twelve Chairs " EXCLUSIVE DELICIOUSLY GROTESQUE A new concept in the macabre in which the Good come out of the j£rave and the Evil are sent to fill the vacancy VI Harry &Tonto marcel marceau f f R People’s appearances often suggest a name they should hove, maybe not their reul name, but a name fitting to their image. Give a nome to the members of Harry's gang and if yours is the most imaginative you will win a year's pass to the Village. M ail or drop off entries at the Villoge before Nov. 13, 1974. Nothing to buy - You don’t hove to be present to win. VILLAGE 4 2700 ANDERSON I N Where suer* youtnSe? nit lllil rn 'Bugan Matinee TO 4 OO Men Frt Fealties 2:00 4 OO 8 OO 8 OO 10.19 ENDS T H U R SD A Y si ART CARNEY NAM E HARRY'S GANG AND W IN & PG nam* m m w«tsu» Bargain Matinee til 1:45 Mon-Fri Features t:45-3:4S 5:45 7:45 9:45 \y y X \v , nil iii ISI Jill;. HH iii lit Bargain Matinee til 1:30 Mon-Fri Features 1:30-5:00 «:30 (G) I ll .Jill . PG ain WISH KUK PLUS C O -H IT 'COUNTESS DRACU LA" Wednesday, November 6, 1974 THE DAILY TEXAN Page 17 C L A S S IF IE D A Q v E R ’ RATES SS w o r e m in im u m E a c h w o r d s r * t im e E ach m o te 2-4 1 m e * E a c h w o r d $-9 H m e s E a t " m e t IS O ' m e r # t i w i S tu d e n t ra » » e « c - t i m * C i e * * ' M D va a I cai « i x t J "* n m # J cc * ’ in c h J-* • m * s 5 ll i 'S * I 8? I *5 Musical - For Sale 70’A S3 IS $2 93 G I B S O N 'l u s t r i n g s m a - l l w * a c o u s tic in i e - 4?-:* c ondition o tte r 444-SS3? V u s 1 * # " USO or aes* F R t N C H HORNS U sed t r C h ica g o on -* h C onn 2 * 0 He “ OH 77 S y m p h o n y <71-2491 * s c H io u u tov !»m« Fn#ay... ~— 1-00 em L m o o , T a w ) I W M * .. I ' OC a m I L i M ) < m > « M n e id a v l l OO a m f I ,# » , T M M T tm n d ay In th* «v*ty 788-1353 w it senataa mvsr ha lo o n os ’ ha jnvUkxhavx am -a%e*«**6ta Nr art* Q N t tacawatt aw arn*" Ail siotmx to* J d v f- O - I OO ” *o«o "OO Solo* ♦Nor SO a o r* otto* (O»0t*t0 «0« 3 200 5 n ;c 4 JO p m NUM* TO P C A S H 'P R IC E S p a id to r a a —ends Shag, d ishw asher, gas g r ill, pets ok. cozy c o m m u n ity near sh uttle $119 plus E ; $129 plus E 453-4072 177-22*3 ic-’ I n 3UE EN ta p -s e a m m a t* 'D e c ra s e d . ‘ me n e r r y r e d s t a in e d g r * . n C a’' W e s le y 447-7317 Auto - For Sale P E U G E O T ’ 3 -speed S im p le * d e r a i'ta u r v a *a c b ra v e s , c . i ’t “ or or •ire s sea* q uic» re le ase Tubs - - le a s :u : t. 2 to n t i JC * N ew le e d s b e d a n d pa Run s g re a* »S7 F C R O re c e n t!, , Sa t o r $458 A p a rtm e n ts M I® . ERI A p o w e r AC M " ' .r e - v p $375 17 , , o r a Aes C a '. 452-4130 c e n d -t-o n 176-2641 , i C a-! u s b e f o r e b u y - - n o-torcycte in s u r a n c e L e m p e r* nsur a n c * Associates inc 4260 M e d ic a l B a r w a y 152-2564 300m m V era "Bes- 125cc B u y" see a? A u s tin Sportcycles 4117 Guadalupe 451-2340 476-0948 ’ 8 *“ a n d San A n to n o T h is is e co n o m y 6 co n v e n ie n c e s ' its 5 30, M o n d a y - S a tu r d a y 6 B lo cks <72 O N E OF C E N T R A L TE X A S ' P R E T T IE S T SPOTS R E A L IS T IC R E C E IV E R 80 w atts R M S F is h e r 3 - w a * s p e a k e r s . B e s t offer B ll. 441-1550 betw een 3-4 p rn B e a g v M flow ing c r e e * b o rd e r* this secluded wooded tr a c t A lm ost 5 acres Fish and Swim on y o u r own land Good B uilding Spot * G a rd e n Spot A R 3a S P E A K E R S ( f w d ) w th s p e a r e r s 345-2267 THE S peakers 0 * f '-es1 q u a lity p a ir Aud-co A -1 O M ' ! G r e a * sound o e a u 't f ui c a b in e try , four yea' w a rra n ty 474-2858 N E E D AN A P A R T M E N T POR F A L L 7 G I V E US A C A L L ! S A N S U I O S $ 0 8 , B S R t u r r t # b I e. Panasonic cassette p la y e r reco rd e r 4 speakers S475 176-2502 or 447-3395. Mao ta* H u n te r* s F R E E apa e--" locator service, lo c a te d in the low er level of D u p le M a li. w e specialize In stu­ dent com plexes. J U N IO R L E A G U E THRIFT SHOP F “-es' qua *y. -j-&‘ rh and M e m o re x 60 a n d 9 6 m in u te * . C al! 452-8382. HABITAT h u n t e r s 523 E a s t 6th M o n d a y th ro u g h Sa1 , - 0 4 * IIM 472-416", G w en. M OVE Sh a r e m e n f on Shuttle, 175. 447-6039 v a l e r o o m m ate N E E D F E M A L E H O U S E M A T E to r house ors H e m p h ill M u s t be cool C a ll a n y tim e , 452-2152 l i b e r a l M A l E R O O M M A T E needed " , m e d ia t e ly 3 b e d ro o m house n o rth *125 a h o n ;* N o d e p o s it 452 2998 F E M A L E R O O M M A T E to s h a re b e d ro o m c o tta g e , f ir e p la c e SSO tric. * / 4 7 6 -7 5 H or 47 8 3698 a rg e I > e le c ­ O L D E R D U P L E x O w n b e d ro o m , s m a ll I,,,.., ed y a r d SSO 5304 A v e n u e F 4546559 454-0338 Fam e,-.. 1 a x 7 f ss G e r r a r d s te re o s w ith a m '• pa lu n e t , c o m p le t e a u d io p h ile c o n ­ t r o l* a n d g * g a n tii a . ' Suspension 10 wa y s p e a k e r s y s te m These s p e a k e r s come equipped w ith « IO" duo coned woofer 5 . rr fifa'sge and a 3 * sweeter i year j M * r » r i* e e on p a r ts a n d la b o r lo c a l aer H O U S E M A T E 2 B R ow n ro o m L a r g e house y a rd S85 p*uS b ill* 454 5512. M ic h a e l, k e e p t r y in g C H R IS T IA N ro o m m a te i h a r * a p a r t m e n t n e a r c a m p u s , 177 50 p ius e le c t r ic it y S u sie, 477-34*4 a f t e r 4 p rn f e m a l e /s r * R e g u la r r a t a p r ic e $539 M i t e sen it SJW H u r r y Cash or 6 Z T erm s United F re ig h t Sales 653S N Lam ar M onday-Friday 9-9, Sat 9-6 FURN. HOUSES L A K E a u s t i n Q u ie t c o u n try liv in g , IS m in u te s c a m p u s /d o w n to w n 2 b e d ro o m SITO, h o u s e b o a t H W 327-1891 327 H S I Pets - For Sale D a l m a t i a n P u P V g u r e b r e a . beautiful 181 *574 W hite T e rrie r pups shots IN T O D A Y MARK XX 452 5093 *54-3953 3815 G u a d a iu p e a n t il l e s APTS. O F F E N F I E L D 3 1, fir e p la c e , fe n c e d y a rd . p a r t ia lly fu r n is h e d W a te r p a id 1503 M u r r a y 453 4914 a f t e r 5 3 B E D R O O M , I b a th . d is h w a s h e r, d is ­ po s a l. c a rp e te d . C A C H , gas g r ill, g a r ­ d e n , la r g e liv in g a r e a , n e a r p a rk 457 0996 44 7 i m 2 BDRM ‘205 s h u t t l e S T U D IO P e te ' IO ' a r t i s t or c ra fts m a n le i la r g e ro o m s 2 B a th ro o m s L o c a t e d d o w n to w n *135 474 1348 T U T O R I N G IN F R E N C H a ' a ll I e - e l s d o n e o r n a t iv e s o c a « e ' T e le p h o n e 474 2771 v A T h T U T O R N G f o r th e f o llo w in g c o u rse s 603 JCS.; 808 J U , 66$ 373k C a l- 451-6838 S U F F IC IE N C IE S M o r e th a n a ' et fic ie n e y D e s ig n e d w ith th e s tu d e n t in m in d S U 4 plus e le c t r ic it y a n d c a b le A c t V II 4 5 3 -0 5 4 0 , < 7 2 -4 1 6 2 B a rry G i lim g w a t e r C o m p a n y t BDRM E p F S U 5 a b p M a im s < * C lo se to c a m p u s . H u g # w a lk - in s , fu lly c a r p e t e d s 99 A B P 405 E s s * 31st 4722147. 472 4162 B a r r y G U h n g w a t e r Co T h e P e p p e r T r e e P e o p le h a v e a n u n e x ­ p e c te d v a c a n c y L a r g a e f f ic ie n c y a p a r t ­ m e n t w ith l o ’ * o f b ig w in d o w s D is h w a s h e r , d is p o s a l, C A C H , s h a g c a r p e l, 2 b lo c k s s h u ttle , * b lo c k * c a m pus S tu d e n t m a n a g e r N o h a s s le s G im m e a b u zz a t 476 9279 472 2518 o r 472 *941 s i t s p lu s e le c t r ic it y F C T a w d b 2 BEDRO O M 2 BATH FU R N SITO A L I B IL L S P A I D APT LE803 West FONT 28th 472 6480 472-4162 B a r r y G IH in g w a t e r Co. S T U D IO A P T S F ir e p l a c e , s k y lig h t , C A / C H , c a b le , c o n v e n ie n t VOO F a i l Sis* $134 p lus e le c t r ic it y 45* 3464 472-5129 Page 18 Wednesday, November 6, 1974 THE DAILY TEXAN 454-0907 a t e p e 5s p e e d fm am . S2>0C 451-2637 3 ($ h 8 m m C a n ie r a 8. P r o i 4 C M SU " m a g * $75 '.8 $100 476 S ! 8C 474 28S8 B I L L S O N D O R M to r M e n E x c e lle n t h o m e c o o k e d m e a ts AC — a id sw ho­ m in g pool i s i s R io G r a n d e 476-4552 p e tw e e n 8-5 30 p m NEED T O S U B L E T c o r n e r - s u it e a* r o o m m a te to r s e c o n d D o b ie s e m e s te w -’ r m e a ls 475-0120 J e f f S IN G L E R O O M in D o s e C e n t e r A v a ila b le ‘ cr i m m e d ia t e s u b le a s in g C a " 475 *066 C A S T I L I A N c e n t r a l s t o r subV a e o r f e m a le 475 *15 5 k a t h y F O R SPR ’, ■ S E M E S T E R I C a s t ilia n c o n t r a c t fo r m a l e ( r o o m a n d b o a r d ) n e g o t ia b le C a > 472 59*3 H E L P '* N e e d to s u b le a s e r o o m a n d b o a r d in C a s t ilia n D o r m ,t o r y G re s ’ fo o d C a '! 475 *04 ROOMS TEXA N DORM 9*35 N ie c e s D o u b le s S220- S e -r-e s 'e r S m g ia s $315 S e m e s te r D a ily m a > d s e - v ic e , c e n t r a l a i r R e f r i g e r a t o r * , h o ' p l a ’ es a llo w e d u .b lo c k s f r o m c a m p u s C o -E d R e s id e n t M a n a g e r s 477 't C $65 *7 5 SS" " J h f h iy M a id s e r v ic e lin e n s a c a b p - e a r c a p it o l. 303 E a s t lith T o see c o n ta c t j o e F r a n z e t t i 4726279 4 ’ 8 4 4 '6 N E W L y D E C O R A T E D ’ a r r ,sh ed ro o m 2SOC W h Its 477 7558 F E M A L E N E E D E D t o b u y ro o m c o n ­ f r a c t lh J e s te r I s - S p r in g C o -e d c o n n e c ­ tin g b e ” -, m e a ls , B n en T V C a li4 7 1 79 59 477-295? CAMPUS Room s *6 5 B a r h a m P - o p e r t .e s . 926 9365 n e a r S95 477-29$? vier-* $695 ( n eed R . m d g r e - t ic k e t s - cep 477-2957 476-8103 c h a ir to r t a t e 471-3709 64 F a ’ la n e w a g o n $350 476-1818 UNF. HOUSES H u n d r e d s o f v a ' a n c le s a v a .t a b le in to w n a n d in t h e c o u n tr y A u s t in '* o ld e s t a n d l a r g e * ’ R e n t a l S e r v ic e p ro v e n r e s u i’ s 451 743.3 R E N TA L BUREAU 4501 G u a d a lu p e O pen 7 D ays (.A R C E O N E B E D R O O M E n f ie ld a t L o r r a in e C a b le T V 441-4993, S16S A B P UNEXPECTED VACANCY fu rn is h e d one b edroom , N e a r c a m p u s 476-5940 M a n a g e r a p a r t m e n t 103. 104 E a s t 32nd SM A L I O N E B E D R O O M s a ra g e A p a rt m e n t T e n b lo c k s n c a m p u s $128, a ll u t ilit ie s p a id A C /C H R e s p o n s ib le a d u lt. no p e ts A v a ila b le N o v e m b e r IO 478-5150 a fte rn o o n s SU B LE T FOR DEC I s ’ or e a r lie r ? B e d ro o m , 2 b a th S235 m o n th A B P C R S h u ttle ro u te 4S2-S888 U N EXPEC TED VACANCY F u rn is h e d one b e d ro o m n e a r cam p u s R en t re d u c ­ tio n M a n a g e r A p t 103 IO * F a s t 32nd 476 5940, 452 2462 Specializing in — Theses and d is s e r ta tio n s - L aw Briefs — Term papers and reports P rom pt Professional Service *53-8101 Pick-up St?vice Available 310? G lenview M R S B O D O I R f® T Y P I N G S E R V I C E R e p o r t * th es es O i r r l a t io n * a n d b o o k * ty p e d a c c u r a t e lyt, ^ ta ' an d re a s o n e r v request Close P r in tin g an d b rn, 4 7 8 8 1 1 3 D I S S E R T A T l O h d H H f e e * r e p o r t * an d la w b r ie !* -J x p e r •- n e e d t y p i s t Ta rryto w n B ra d y 250' B rid le 472-4715 '**’ L o rra in e s i, F r a n IS S W O O D S T Y P i t * S E R V IC E S upe* enced . .a w . Tfefc?? to s s e r te n o n s . M a n u s * r w B R P Q , Just North of 27h at Guadalupe 2707 H e m p h ill Pa;> ABP A S S U M E C O N T R A C T fo r fa ll s e m e u e in w o m e n s co -o p C a ll S e n e c a H o u se 4 77 0225 RESUMES WANTED C H O O S E Y O U R H O U R S Sen b e a u t if u l s h ir ts to id e a ' b o u tiq u e s a n d h ip sh o es 836-5181 k e e p t r y in g W A N T E D 56 7Q v W f r o n t a x le B e a m Ca 4 4 ’ 0459 if yo u lo c a te one H O V E FOR my G em ini i spa. e ,:apsu'e in a com m on a y zoned reside ntial area M ax 45' 852$ JOB WANTED M O V I N G -H A U L l N G f - e a k y s e r v ic e to w a n y t im e Pas* r 3 ie i fr ‘ r -i0ftd*¥ e n d iy .58 3678 with or without pictures 2 Day Service 472-3210 a n d 472-7677 BOBBYE D E L A F IE L D I B M S e le c fr tc , p ic a 0 - ie 25 y e a r s e x p e r ,e « c e b o o k *. d i $ $ e r • s * , on $ ' heses, r e p o r ts ,# ' m im e o g r a p h in g 442 7184 . ; fir ‘. I N A V ) H N E I O E R D v e r s ifie d S e r v ic e s G r a d u e ’ e a n d u n d e r g r a d u a t e ty p in g , p r in t in g b id in g IS IS K o e n ig l a n e 459 ’ 205 S T A R K T Y P N G Spe la ity T e c h n ic a l E x p e r ie n c e d th e s e s d is s e r ta tio n s . P R s m a n u s c r ip t* etc P r a tin g b in d in g C h a r le n e M a r k * 5 3 -5 2 )8 v NNO. L HAM M ETT T y p in g & D u p li c a t i n g S e r v ic e Tneses d .s s e r ta tio n s p a p e r s o f a " k in d s re s u m e s f r e e r e f r e s h m e n t s 442-7008, 441-6814 LA W S T U D E N T S , TODAY is t h e N E E D « T Y P I S T ? W e '- e a s e c r e t a r ia t s p e c ia ls ’ Resum es l e t t e r s , th e s e s . (•g a s t a t i s t i c a l, r e s e a r c h p a p e rs , an d e tc P ic k u p a n d d e l i v e r y a v a i la b l e . 8373323 V I P S e c r e t a r i a l S e r v ic e . H O L L Y 'S ' T Y P I N G S E R V I C E . A C o m p ie te s e r v ic e T y p in g p rin tin g , b in d in g E x p e r ie n c e d in a l l fie ld s N e a r c a m p u s 1401 M o n te D r i v e 476-3018 T Y P IN G W A N T E D — N e a t w o rk SO c e n t * p a g e , (d e p e n d in g on ty p e of lo b ) C a ll W o o d e n # S im p s o n 453-2404 Just North of 27th at Guadalupe 2707 H e m p hill P ark j4nn LAST D AY to order your 1 9 7 5 P E R E G R I N US MBA P R IN T IN G , B IN D IN G THE CO M PLETE P R O F E S S IO N A L FU LLTIM E TYPING SERVICE 472-3210 YEARBOOK during Law School Spring Preregistration! E F F I C I E N C I E S , k it c h e n , o n e b lo c k f r o m c a m p u s S12S, S130 472 OMS ONE BEDROOM A P A R TM E N T Mi A m ig o 4505 O u v a i a ls o S p a n is h T r a i l, 4520 S e n n e tt 451 4119, 451-3470 CHRISTENSON t ASSOCIATES A T Y PIN G SERVICE T H E P E R S O N A I T O U C H WHI do y o u r ty p in g Q u ic k ly , E ffic ie n tly and R e a s o n a b ly . C a i* 451-3061 o r 475-0617. T A R R Y T O W N S h u ttle M a t u r e c o u p le , 'o o m n r a f e s o r s in g le P o o l. p a tio , tre e s , la r g e v a 'd . q u ie t, la r g e I b e d ro o m , 2 beds $160 R e c o rd e d d e s c r ip tio n 4529913 S A N J A C IN T O T T r m S 1709 S a n J a c in to W a lk in g d is ta n c e U n iv e r s it y C a p ito l O n e b e d ro o m , C A C H . c a r p e te d W a te r g a s -c a b le p a id N o p e ts $145 476 0920, 472 0706. 47? 4838 THE CRO CKETT CO M PANY the c o m p le te s e c r e t a r i a l s e rv ic e T Y P IN G th e s e s m a n u s c r ip t * , r e p o r ts . p a p e rs re s u m e * a u t o m a t ic T Y P IN G le tte rs a n d m u ’ ti c o p ie d o r i g i n a l * X E R O X C O P IE S $3 JO 'o r IOO c o p ie s (p e r o r ig in a l* P R IN T IN G ft set a n d le tte r p r e s s and c o m p le t e tin e s o f o f f ic e p r o d u c ts V *I '8 V SS3C B u r n e t R d M A B V L * S M A L L W O O D T y p in g Last m i n u t e , e v e - n l g ’' - a . a 'a b l e T e rm le tte r s p a p e r* th e s e s d is s e r t a t io n * B a n k A m a r ic a r d 892M a s te rC b a rg e C7J7 or 442-854$ 4 B L O C K S f r o m c a m p u s . I b e d ro o m C H AC $>23 472-5515 a f t e r 5 p rn A P A R T M E N T 2 b lo c k s U T 2800 Dobie Mall 472-8936 475-1000 A fte rn o o n s 471 354’ *C e n g a g e m e n t - " , i4 vV . V a n 9 5 F ri-S a t S E R V IC E 44 2 2480 ? c a ts e v ic t io n o r e x t in c t io n $200 R ROOM & BOARD 2 t2 -C 4 5 i 71 H o n d a C S 4S 0 x’ r a s S625 4S4-620! 7 -f R C R O W S N E S T 2710 N u e c e s R o o m a n c b o a rd s in g le s *142 S O ,'m onth, d o u b le s Si 17 50 m o n th Room s s -n g ie s o n ly S3* m o n fh a . r c o n d itio n in g 475-8242 TW O e as e R e p o r ts R e s u m e s Theses L e tte rs A l! U m v e r S .t * sn(3 B u s .ness w o rk l a v M in u t e S e rv c e O p e n 9 8 M o n - T h S. N E A T A c t u r a ’ e a n d p r o m p t t y p in g 60 i.e n is p e r p a g e T h e s e s 75 ce n ts CaM 4477737 O N E B E D R O O M S U S p lus e le c t r ic it y n e a r c a m p u s a n d s h u t tle C o n v e n ie n t to d o w n to w n , pool a n d p e r f e c t a tm o s p h e r e fo r s tu d e n t* 407 W e s t M TH 453-0540, <724)62 B a r r , G illin g S a f e r C o m p a r , P L U S H E F F I C I E N C Y~ A P A R T M E N T , fu ll k itc h e n , d o u b le b ed. s h ag c a r p e * , 4415 A v e n u e B 451-7937 HOWDY AGAIN. Kow a 35m m SLR A u s t r a l ia , E u r o p e S A m e r ic a A f r i c a S tu d e n ts a d p ro fe s s io n s a n d o c c u p a tio n s *70 0 to Sr OOO m o n t h ly , E « p e n s e * p a*d O v e r t im e , s ig h ts e e in g , F r e e in f o r m a ’ ion T r a n s W o r ld R e s e a 'c ” C o. D e p t AS P R ’.'’ Box 603. C o r te M a d e r a C A 94925 S137 50 P L U S E g iv e s you fu ll k tc h e n w ith B re a k f a s t b a r e x t r a la r g e clo sets . c a b le ac OI, a n d s h u ttle Bus a t E l C o rte z H O I C la y to n L a n e 453-7914, 472 4162 w a l k T O C A M P U S I b e d ro o m e f f ic i e n ­ c y , f u ll b a th a n d k itc h e n N ic e ly f u r ­ n is h e d , m a id a n d p a r k in g 453-3235 /o u c a n s h a re a 2 B e d ro o m w ith a f r ie n d fo r o nly *9 2 OO e a c h W e p a y g as, w a te r an d c a b le T V Y o u p a y e le c t r ic a l W e h a v e g as h e a t a n d g a * r a n g e * to h e lp you c o n s e rv e S h u ttle bus a t th e In t r a m u r a l F ie ld C a ll 454 6394 1 E D * * o r 17 i t f ib e r g la s s c a n o e in o n d itio n 472-2199 o r 4 78 -6 *7 5 2 00 A C T -C E N T U A T E T h e P O S IT IV E ac* V A p a rtm e n ts Bes* of Both w o r ld s E f ­ fic ie n c ie s a n d one B e d ro o m s a t a f f o r ­ d a b le p r i c k i e r s tu d e n ts F r o m $125 a n d fr o m $149 p ius E &. c a b le 924 E a s t S is *. 459 572* 472-4162 sto p OAKCREE K APARTMENTS 447.7582 T IR E D OF THE DORM? THEN m o v e TUTORING L - x „ r y E f t $125 p iu s E , I b d r m . SKH p iu s E S h a g , b u itt-in s 1717 E r f s a 478 9767 B e tw e e n 4-8 p rn. F U R N IS H E D $ I35-- m o n th A B P W h itis 47? 7558 ABP P o u n d C a lc u la t o r S T U D IO fo r r e n t fo r te a c h in g p a n c o r v o ic e 2 B lo c ks fr o m c a m p u s 47I-2C7Y A f *G E O N E B E D R O O M E n f ie ld a t L o r r a in e C a b le T V 44i 4993. *165 A B P 472-1923 477-6015 A fg h a n p u p s, P e * % S h o w t y p e t a FOR RENT l 2204 E n f ie ld M A L E R O O M M A T E to s h a re q u ie t tw o B e d ro o m a p a r t m e n t N e a r U T s t a r tin g J a n u a r y C a I now *75-1070 H O U S E M A T E s. N E E D E O O w n ro o m fe n c e d y a r d C o n v e n ie n t to U T S66 p iu s 11 i b ills 454-05*2 M a u r e e n 260 WATT STEREO SYSTEM B R O W N U , k . ' E S p a n ie l P u p p y mas s tu b t a i l , n ee d s s u r g e r , D a y 4518682 N g h t 459-652’ SHO Si 25 $U 5 475-9679 477-6015 Y a m a h a g u it a r a*-d .:as e S75 474-2859 lo st T A R R Y T O W N . S h u ttle , m a t u r e s in g le . pool, p a tio , tre e s , q u ie t e ff ic ie n c y * 1 1 5 ,1 B e d ro o m $125 459-7950 I BR - $125 a p a rt- FEM ALE H O U S E M A T E 2 b e d ro o m d u p le x n e a r U T P e * * ok STO p lu s b ills 454 0582 D e b b ie a ft e r 2 476-6733 476-0198 F irs t 41 w a ile r Straaf B a rry G H U ngw atar Co. F e m a le r o o m m a t e , d u p le x tow nhou se S h o r e h a l f r e n t , p r i v a t e oath b e d ro o m , a p a r t m e n t fu r n is h e d P h o n e 454-7974 la y s 345 411 tite r 6 F E M A L E R O O M M A T E n e e d e d to s h a re o ne b e d r o o m f u r n is h e d a p a r t m e n t *85 OO m o n th . A B P n ea- c a m p u s and s h u ttle , e q u ip p e d w .th c a b le , w e lk in s , com p le te k itc h e n 452 7222 a f t e r 5 p m P ik e bio- ks east of the D ra g AKC E x c e lle n t m ' . f e e i r s ',r?7 a t t i c t 0 0 p rn ALL BILLS RAID • .F E D E O Close to UT VYE s t h i g h l a n d 2 B e d ro o m -'I B a th . F u r n is h e d U n f u r ­ n is h e d S h ag , c a b le , w a lk -in s . pool. c o m kltchan C lo se to s h o p p in g end T own L a x SI70 u n fu rn is h e d $ '9 4 f shad 474-4493 STEREO CENTER 203 6 m d w o rm e d U C T SS W ATERLO O FLATS M A L E R O O M M A T E One b e d ro o m , AH 8 ifs paid s r OC 4 Blocks to cam pus 476-3467. 240* Leon TRY STEREO C ENTER B efore you buy This is a sm elt store w ith some v e ry good n am e b rands a t th# best a r i a n K E N .MOOO M ARANTZ P ’ ON H E R SANSU1 See our N K K D re ce ive r line Bos# Speakers A lte r Speakers Sensu* S p ea k er’, F a ir fa x Speaker;, Donor de r Reel to Rec' Decks Philips a r d P io n e e r t u r n t a b l e s Sound C ra fts fm e n audio " e q / e n t , aqua* .•*•". P oneer c a r stereos S h o t* S tu d e n t* W F a m i l y c lo th in g , H o u s e w a re s , T o y s ' y r o ld C o lo r T V E l p G5 a DO fro m s ’ 30 F a n ta s tic a p a r tm a n ts w ith c a o ia , p o o l fu ll k itc h e n * O n c it y a n d s h u t t le Bu* C o r ,e n e n t to s h o p p in g 1105 P e y t o n L a n e 453-7914, 472-4162. Lo w er Level, D obie M a ll, S uite SA 474 1532 ROOMMATES L O O K IN G FOR GOO D S T E R E O E Q U IP M E N T ? 478-3176 H o b ie C a ’ •& Buy r e c o r d s lo w m ile a g e N iK O N 3 5 m rn a * w est A u s tin P a y g r o u n c n e a r .Y e s ’ L y n n a n d N n th S t 'e e ’ s S u D s fa n t a R e w a r d 47 * 8810 I B e d 'o o m 'a u n d 'y , c o u r ty a r d , a m p le p a r , ng $149.50 A B P 2505 E n f ie J 478-9171 d is ­ SSO ac 2 B a y lo r s tu d e n t tic k e t s E N F I E L D ROAD ON SHUTTLE “ H A B IT A T HUNTERS .•ands used th re e m onth* P e rte r* con­ li • on, W alnut $37 5 345-4055 IPU* a Sh w a s h e r, p osal pool, etc 474-1712 V record *u rn ■a p l* ADC 303Ax speakers L ir e new y 1 * 0 ' S375, 44 7-7390 tapes to c a m p u s , 1972 C a p r i 477-6666 L O S - 2 5fh a n d Sa*- G a b r ie l B la c k L a c f e m a l e s m o n th s 472-7079 o r 472 3071 k e e p • 'v * n g . R e w a r d O N L Y 20C /A R D S F R O M U T CAM ,PUS 2910 Red R iv e r 474-5431 LUXURY I BR - $160 P M c a r ra d io s , in -d a s h 17' c a n o e w it h o a r s * b lo c k s to c a m p u s Best S to n e a g e . 5915 B u r n e t R d . 459-4531, 9 38 S A N S U 1 2000X re c e iv e r M IN I E F F EFF. I BR. UNCLASSIFIED LOST & FOUND A L L B IL L S P A I D S h a re a la r g e r o o m f o r $64 50 m o or • a k e sn e n t ir e room f o r $1*2 50 f u r ­ n is h e d ai* B *ns p a .d M a id s e r v ic e o n ce a w ee* B r in g y o u r ow - r o o m m a te or we w i l l m a t c h you w ith a c o m p a t ib le ane W ANTED A p a rtm e n t m a n a g e rs P r e f e r c o u p le s S en d r e s u m e s P O B e * >668 rf 8. R E C O N S T R U C T IO N C O S p e c ia liz ­ in g m a ll k , " d * o f b u ild in g , r e m o d e lin g . an d c a b in e ts C a n b u ild a n y t h in g you w ant F r e e e s t im a t e s 447-4973 U IS M ile s A v e n u e . w eekdays Why not star* out with good grades' 472-3210 and 472-7677 OVERSEAS JOBS ELI'S CLUB C H A V O Y A 'S S T R I N G I N G S E R '. ‘ C E P r o f e s s io n a l r a c q u e * s ir n g n g a « d r e p r ip p ng fo r th e " t i « ’ t e n n is p la y e r 12 h o u r s e r v e # L o w e s t p r ic e s 0*10“ * 472-4849 472-4171 472-4175 YES, we do type Freshman themes. E IO SPO B ike PA RAG O N PROPERTIES NE ED A GREAT PLACE TO LIVE ? TRY THE BLACKSTONE APARTMENTS .•95 CASSETTE 478-9468 Shuttle Stop TT\tvjJia T Y P IN G C H I L D C A R E w o r k e 's n e e d e d a* p s y ­ c h ia t r ic c h ili: c a r e c e n t e r S a la r y c o m m e n s u 'a 'e w i t ' e x p e r ie n c e W r i t e c o C h a r le s v a n Scoy P .O B o * ’ 248. C e d a r P a r k * > « a s 78613 C O N F ID E N T a l c a r e 'o ' p re g n a n t u n m a r r ie d m o th e rs E d n a G la d n e y H o m e 2308 K e m p t! F o r t W o r t h T o ll f r e e f iu - H r e r i 8 0 0-7 92 -' 104 B eginner Thom ason 478- g u it a r D re w p e v e eau 261-6000 ext 2 i m C R E A TIV E E X P E R IE N T IA L LE A R N IN G 2122 H a n c o c k D r . 926-9365 il» iC * . G IR L IN G DAY SCHOOL p a id KEN RAY APARTMENTS F ro m M O V E in T O D A Y ! ts.s ?eiepno?c ens or N a v e n am e and V A LA C H I T E B E A D S a r c e w e ir , fro m the S ah a ra R e ta il, w holesale. J o u rn e y '* End u n io n *304 S U M M T 3 B lochs to Shuttle U P R (G H T P IA N O a nd b e n e t G ood cond • on S '25 C a ll 159-7863 a ‘ »*r 3 0 rn Popular Cycling's tu rn 2 B D R M SISO T P i v A T i P r-c e o r -ess L a b o r a t o r y corone* $40 Accessories Ca: i i * 4973 Hodaka 125 $695 2 B R 2 BA p o o l- a l l b ills Q U IE T E N F I E L D A R E A . I B d rm . w ith fu ll kitch e n , b rig h t shag la r g e ro o m s . Good storage, pool, sauna, cable and co ng enial at I bedroom fro m $148.50 plus e le c tr ic ity . 307 W est Lvnn 477-7794 4724162 1 B D R M Si30 S C H W IN N v a rs ity brand new never ridden, w a rra n ty , 19" la d es, c a r ‘ ra se ‘ or your size D a le 471-4542, 17S-4C42 80 “ I OO mpg s p e a k e rs . “a r |!3 0 172-1194 num ber J, 2 B d r m Sa* 420 w. riverside drive Sr _ ’ • e B us F r o n t D o c 2400 T o w n L a v e C ir c le SUNNYVALE APTS. P R A K T IN A C A M E R A H m m . w ith e x tra 4 0 0 m m lens W orth SISO B e s -o fte r. Ca-;; 477-S78C a fte r 7 30 0 rn Motorcycles - For Sale K P -!4 p o rta b le St I n O W N S IL V E R S G O LD y o u r rn set* IV • ation le d g e Ca' A o r'd 's a 1 gas- silver esc henge 454-3673 ‘or d a ily price and tre e new sletter 9 * 4 v a V A N . e x c e e m m e c h a n ic a l a r 3 b o d y c o n d itio n , n e w p a r t w o o d p a r e $495 477 2957 R is n e r a ra w h ite m' 3 * * 6 1 a id $45 30 345 4091 5-7 pm MS -os MONEY w a rra n ty tw o I s' 29 SC pius e le c tric *y 3410 Burleson Ro 3 a r n * m P rop 147-6571 j SEO" . a p p e t E x c e l>ent c o n d itio n A p p ro x JC s q u a r e y a rd s . J a r * b lu e 8 *9 O P E * . ‘ a O E T t l - e n e n g in e a r a B a t t e r y v e r y good ‘ r e n s o o r f a '-o n . STSI AVE blac k Y - i - V B es- R a t e on th e L a k e room s & tie close1 space ’ -'e d of a s c h e r & noise"5 T r y p * a ie v e n - , • jr a ‘ pm lea r n and advanced 2079 Norm ot 27th at Guadalupe 2707 H em phill Park ju s t Y O U 'V E B E E N T H E R E a n d ,o u k n o w w h a ' i f s lik e V o l u n t e e r s n e e d e d fo r p r o b le m p r e g n a n c y h o t lin e C a n A lte r •a *-y e s D is c u s s e d C a ll 4 5 4 -3 5 /5 9 5 LAKEWAY W O R L D OF TENNIS V F typing Tired of s m elt C O K E M A C H I N E fo r s a te H 0 *ds »4 pc* • e a n d or ca n s C h a n g e r se's f r o m 5* * 0 75* " C k » * v e 5 m o n th s h o ld P e r t * c ’ ‘ o r v e n d in g b e e - O n ly $425 OC C e ll 441 -4060 •»a> t r i u m p h T R e E x c e lle n t c o n d * o n n e w • res. ne d e n t* , p e r te e * Pa - * M er 172-13*1 •> " W 32nd M O V E IN T O D A Y PLAZA VENTURA 2 D Y N A M O c 'D O S S A - _ - a t e s * 0 ' sa e S595 3 0 e a c h $1154.00 f o r b o lti L e s s th a n one r e a r o ld Q u a r t e r p e r g e r r e P a y s ‘ or ‘ s a lt C a i* A l’ 6C60 S RTS V V. B U G R a d io g eed Si *10 407 E a s t 45fh N o n a IS N C H y to r o id la r g e 472-4162 $ 25 30 $95 OC John 171-7911 472-1772 V .i.w * Londcm S q u a re off B ian co POR SAl E B o w m a r M x -1 8 0 Two m e n t is o ld T r i g fu n c tio n s m e m o ry -pas, s q u a r e ro o ts , m o re O ' g in a it y jnjpactei Colorado 711 W 474-1107 i n 6258 IO p m A ll B ills P a id 1211 W 8th M U S T S E tv . 9 S i* 790 t u n v o o ie S '2 5 a “ 3 •a speed " -c to b e c a n e S75 B o m o r e y e a r o ld 441-6431 834-4*34 Runs grea* tw o or Misc. - For Sale * “ 0 *" I iT : V E G A A - ' a c e r r a * . : Good a * a a ’ * * * * a “-d m u f f l e r a r a tv 1196 ta g a ra g e 125 SOC A ssu m e e» i ' ag 7*a :oan w " co nsid e r « a d v a n c e in ’r %° 25**' & $155 m ust w e* C all M r G o odm an or M r K e rb o w ___________258-1853___________ 42 Dobie M a ll 476-9171 Fre e Parkin g 266-148C 2 B E D R O O M M O W E A IT H LO W S T U D E N T R A TES SS o o r i ) m i n i m u m M IC ti Oat I SS E s c * M d t t K H W m o re e n c " O sos 05 I cc* * I if*c*r e a c h O a r *2 * * U iK le $ $ * f l a d s '' I t i n * 3 c a y * S'- OC ( ° ' * c a c N e R e *--“ cs S tu d e n ts — u s* s“ c * a ad ’ c ' s s a *} s a c r if ic e py W e need P a n tim e help E ve n in g have tra n s p o rta tio n Hours per Open 114-0010 i p a r t m e n t s n e a r c a m p u s a* 1007 w e * 1 2 t*h Lo ts of tre e s poo A C S I35 p ius E A lso 2 b e d ro o m a p a r t m e n t s sou rn a * 910 l a < e T r a v !S PROPERTY fry owner I acre 2 c e e - x — I a aa**- M o * -g a w a * aivarx mo#* rn or re ce ipts a r a pay C om e A S S U M P T IO N Roca ’ «•: a.-res. SA > I 2 s u n * * # l r * ' lC R A N o c it y * * * * * . 1 1 OO a rn 2 t a r g e P o o ls S e c u r ity V o lle y b a ll C o u r t 1901 W illo w C r e e t L O O K IN G FOR AN A P A R T M E N T W IT H C H A R A C T E R 7 Homes - For Sale . I I OO a rn W M n w U e y Texan T « ! < * [ F g r n shed s c a - ’ T e " * 2 b lo c k s U T s?5 a ? p F i r m m a n a g e m e n t R r s p o n b ll tv V a r ' - e O c o u p le o n ly 176-1*55 N E L S O N S G IF T S Z u n i In d ia n je w e lry A fric a n and M e x ic a n Im p o rts 4ft!2 South Congress 444-3814 Closed M ondays CATFISH PARLOUR G IN N Y 'S COPYING SERVICE NC. WILLOW CREEK 2 BR ALL Bi LLS PAID TYPING HELP WANTED I MISCELLANEOUS SERVICES FURN. APARTS. S P E C IA L D E A L 1/2 Rent L E A R N T O b l a y ' - O I “ A R B eg * * « * and a d v s -c e d D r e w T “ c ~ a son 478- * co* • I inch ten of mer* * —«iS2 M m ao un FURN. APARTS. ■ FOR SALE 5 NG and 472-7677 UNF. DUPLEXES PRETTY DUPLEX 2 b e d r o o m d u p le x to r r e n t in a q u ie t N o rth e a s t a u s 1 1n r e s id e n tia l n e ig h b o rh o o d E a c h d u p li > o tte rs la r g e ten