T w enty Pages Vol. 77, No. 154 Copyright 1978, Texas Student Publications, all rights reserved T h e D a i l y T e x a n S t u d e n t N e w s p a p e r a t Th e U n i v e r s i t y of T e x a s a t A u s t i n Austin, Texas, Thursday, Ju n e 8, 1978 fifte e n cents News and E d ito ria l; 471-4591 D isplay A dvertising: 471-1865 Business Office and Classified: 471-5244 Nuclear power: is it safe? By M ARK DOOLEY Dally Texan Staff Nuclear power is a political and economic question based on technical issues, a question which must ultimately be answered by the public, Drs Robert Pollard and Lynn Draper agreed after an hour-long debate Wednesday night. Sponsored by KSAT-TV in San Antonio, the “ Town Forum' debate centered on the issues of cost and safety of nuclear power, with emphasis on the South Texas Nuclear Project being built at the mouth of the Colorado River KLRN-TV will telecast the debate for Austin viewers at 8 p m Friday. Pollard, a nuclear scientist who heads the Union of Concerned Scientists, posed the question, “ How safe is safe enough?” and said he gave up a career in the Nuclear Regulatory Commission because of government disregard for safety precautions. “ The fact is that today there are nuclear power plant problems that can lead to truly catastrophic accidents,” Pollard said. The Nuclear Regulatory Commission has recognized 133 problems with nuclear power plants, Pollard said, in eluding 41 serious problems and nine the commission has not even begun to solve. “ What you have in the nuclear industry is a deliberate attempt to deceive,” Pollard said, adding, “ I think you re en­ titled to know all the facts and then to make your decision.” Draper, an assistant professor of mechanical engineering at the Universi­ ty, also called for an “ open, forthright analysis of facts on their merits” and said, “ I personally believe that nuclear power plants are adequately safe. In my opinion, a nuclear power plant is much like other human enterprises in that a nuclear power plant can never be perfect The system works There's evidence that it works. It s worked for 20 years,” Draper said Extraction of coal, produc­ tion of hydroelectric power and transpor­ tation of oil and gas also are plagued with problems, he added Protections against meltdowns have not been proven effective and have in fact failed when tested under laboratory conditions, Pollard said. A meltdown is a remote possibility. Draper said, adding, “ Those (protec­ tion) systems, should they be required to function once every 20.000 years, will provide protection.” He said the systems are routinely tested. The South Texas Nuclear Project will cost tar more than as you’ve simply been told. If you're lucky, it ll just prove to be an inadequate power supply,” Pollard said “ Tremendous escalation of cost has accompanied the project, which was originally budgeted at $305 million, but will now cost $400 million or perhaps even $500 million or m o re ,” Pollard added Historically the original capital costs of nuclear power plants have often been underestimated. Draper said. “ Once the nuclear power plant is built, most of the cost is committed,” he added The cost of non-nuclear power is sub­ ject to inflation, Draper said, but nuclear power costs will increase “ only so far as the cost of uranium increases " I ranium accounts for only IO percent of nuclear power production costs If the price of uranium doubles, electricity rates will increase only IO percent, but rates would increase as much as 45 per­ cent if oil or gas prices doubled, Draper said. thursday - Fair to middling... Fair to partly cloudy and mild weather is for Austin Thursday, with predicted temperatures reaching the upper 80s. More weather, Page 19. On ta rg e t. . . The Washington Bullets shot down Seattle, 105-99, to win the NBA championship. Story, Page 11. Copernicus manuscript disappears By JO H N MCMILLAN Dally Texan Staff T’lie book which enlightened the work on the earth s orbit around the sun has apparently gone on an orbit of its own With preliminary results in from the Humanities Research Center’s mid-Maj annual inventory, Copernicus' “ D« Revolutionibus," which advanced the now-accepted heliocentric theory, is of finally missing from the HRC’s rare books collection, Sally Leach, associate librarian, said Wednesday. The $24,640 book is not insured, Leach said Published in 1543, the book was reported missing last June, but on!) after this year’s inventory did Leach mention theft as a serious possibility, “ I ’m very, very puzzled, and now thai it's been missing for such a long time one can’t help but be suspicious,” Leach said, noting that the library staff had searched all the “ logical” places at the HRC. “ IF SOMEBODY had seen (the book] they would have jumped out of their ski* for sure,” Leach said, explaining thai the Copernicus work was the most ex pensive item determined to be missing ir the inventory. Leach said she was not sure when thi book was last checked out, since the dis­ tinction in the records between the miss­ ing book and another copy of the Coper­ nicus work at the HRC is unclear. (See COPERNICUS, Page 8.) By Lucian Perkins, Daily Texan Staff By Lucian Perkins, Daily Texan Stal Raffaniello joins search committee By CARL HOOVER Dally Texan Staff Eileen Raffaniello, president of the Council of Graduate Students, was nam­ ed Tuesday by President Lorene Rogers to the Consultative Committee to Advise the President on the Selection of the Dean for the College of Liberal Arts. She joins Mark Zion and Shirley Ng as the student representatives on the 10- member committee. The student coun­ cils of the merging colleges nominated ten representatives from which Rogers appointed three to serve on the com­ mittee. Raffaniello’s appointment fills a vacancy left by the resignation of graduate student Kathryn Green in May. Green declined to serve on the com- Silber interview, Page 8 mittee because she felt a full-time job and her doctoral dissertation would not give her time to work in the nomination of possible deans for the college. In her resignation, Green said she would have declined the nomination, but she knew nothing about it until Rogers selected her. Green added she felt Raf­ faniello was an “ excellent choice” by Rogers. RAFFANIELLO, an assistant instruc­ tor in educational psychology, gave her personal guidelines in selecting the new dean: " I would look for someone who is really dedicated to interdisciplinary studies, one who has high academic stan­ dards and who is considerate of student input.” The committee will decide on criteria for selection first, then will recommend three or more candidates to Rogers by Aug. I, chairman of the committee Dr. Wallace Mendelson said. “ The president’s request is that we find somebody from this campus,” he said. Mendelson added Rogers was not necessarily confined to the list the com­ mittee would present. The committee will hold an open meeting specifically for student and faculty input at 11:30 a m. June 18 in Burdine Hall 208 THE NEW DEAN would take office in September and would help organize the college until its operations as a single unit begin in January. Dr. Gerhard Fonken, executive assis­ tant to the president, said the new dean would be free to reorganize the college — within certain limits. “ It’s analogous to the election of the President,” he said. “ Before he is elected, people believe he can reorganize the government as he likes. But once he is elected, he has to face the realities. “ So it is to the new dean. He has the opportunity to organize or reorganize as he sees fit. But he can reorganize only in the areas he has jurisdiction,” Fonken said When the new dean is selected, the pre­ sent deans of the schools involved will return to their faculty positions, he said “ That's the fate of all deans, in due course,” he added. Proposition State party leaders predict ‘revolt’ will spread to Texas By MARK DOOLEY Deity Texan Staff Republicans and Democrats alike have hailed California's “ tax revolution” as a sign of things to come in Texas and throughout the nation. Passage of the Jarvis-Gann Tax Limitation Amendment in California is a “ momentous event in the history of the average American’s struggle against the encroachments of big government,” said Ray Barnhart. Republican Party state chairman. More commonly known as Proposition 13, the Jarvis-Gann Amendment was passed overwhelmingly Tuesday by Califor­ nians rebelling against rising property taxes The amendment limits property taxes to I percent of assessed valuation and rolls back assessments to 1975 levels BARNHART SAID Texas Republicans are solidly behind the idea of reducing and limiting taxes imposed by federal, state and local governments. “ In the final analysis, it is the only way we are going to per­ manently reduce the size of government and control inflation. The only real question seems to be just how long it is going to take the incumbent Democrats and their ever-growing legions of bureaucrats to figure this out,” Barnhart said. However, several Democratic state officials have also en­ dorsed Proposition 13 and called for a tax revolt in Texas Attorney General John Hill, the Democratic nominee for governor, predicted the California property tax initiative will give his plans for property tax relief the additional public sup­ port needed to assure adoption by the Legislature in 1979 H ILL SAID he spoke briefly with Lt. Gov. Bill Hobby and Speaker of the House Bill Clayton Wednesday and the three Nationwide reaction, Page 3 probably will meet again next week “ to discuss the Texas im­ plications of the California vote.” “ I want to suggest to the lieutenant governor and the speaker that the legislative council subcommittee on property taxes be given the additional authority needed to start evaluating the various types of property tax limitation plans,” Hill said. “ The vote confirms what I found in my campaigning during the five months — that property tax owners feel they're being victimized by endless increases in property tax. It’s obvious we need to put in our property tax legislation some safegaurds against the overuse of property taxes we saw in California,” Hill added CLAYTON SAID TUESDAY he favors an overall state tax ceiling Bill Clements, Republican nominee for governor, also has hailed California's tax revolt as a lead which Texas soon will follow. “ I am delighted with the overwhelming approval given Proposition 13 in California yesterday ... The taxpayers of this country are mad as hell They’re not going to take it anymore... Thomas Jefferson said that no man s property is safe while the legislature is in session. I totally agree,” Clements said. Clements said Texas should expand upon Proposition 13 rather than limit reform to property taxes. “ I think we need ironclad limitations on taxation and the growth of government spending,” he said “ DURING THE FA LL campaign I will spell out a tax expen­ ditures limit plan. I will develop this plan in consultation with the legislative leadership whose associates must vote to put any such plan on the ballot,” Clements said. I will then work hard to see that a constitutional amendment limiting state taxation and spending is submitted to the voters of Texas,” he added Sen. Walter Mengden, R-Houston, also intends to introduce tax limitation legislation during the next session of the Legislature. In previous legislative sessions, Mengden has introduced proposals to limit all forms of taxes levied by the state unless voters approve an increase. “ I ’M G RA TIFIED and elated that the people of California have taken an initiative ... and told government, ‘We’re sick and tired of the way you’ve been treating us.’ I think it’s wonderful. I think it’s going to have a great effect in Texas,” Mengden said “ Everybody wants an issue that they can get on and be for that will get them elected. We will in Texas, in the next session of the Legislature, address ourselves to some form of tax limitation and something will be passed,” Mengden added. Steve Munisteri, Texas Young Americans for Freedom chair­ man, hailed the passage of Proposition 13 as “ the most signifi­ cant vote of the decade. It is the beginning of a nationwide tax­ payers’ revolt, a modern-day Boston Tea Party.” Munisteri said Texas YAF will sponsor a drive to enact tax limitation legislation. P a 9 e 2 □ T H E d a i l y T E X A N □ T h u r s d a y # J u n e 8 , 1 9 7 8 .■-smmmm Rest stop Children day care center break in Hemphill Park. from Lutheran take a PUC with By JANN SNELL Daily Texan Staff Counsel for the Texas public u tility c o m m is s io n e rs e x ­ pressed confidence Wednes­ day that they will rule for one of the lower rate increases t h e p r o p o s e d Southwestern Bell hearing d u r i n g the Bell has applied for a $220 million ra te increase before the PUC, claim ing in­ crease is needed to offset in­ flation and for im provem ents in the system m ade necessary by th e s t a t e ’s p o p u la tio n growth. The final decision in the case is expected in m id-July. • THE IMPRESSION I got is that the hearing went very sm oothly,” Allan King. legal counsel for Public U tilities Commission, said, adding, to be honest, we (PUC) a re real proud of the outcom e of the trial and we are happy that we can do m ore than just hold the line ” The PUC staff has asked for only a $109 million increase in rates, and King said he felt the com m issioners m ay opt for a com parable figure. “ Of course I c a n ’t second guess the com m issioners, but I would be real surprised if the am ount they request is over $125 m illion,” he said. ‘‘I w o u ld r a i s e m y eyebrows if it com es out over $125 m illion.” r e a l l y BELL OFFICIALS said at the hearing that if the $220 is ap proved m illion fig u re to t e l e p h o n e c h a r g e s counsel happy Bell hearings c u sto m e rs in urban a re a s ttould increase approxim ately $1 a month The $109 million increase would be paid for by higher c u sto m e r connect c h arg es, King said The connect charge ‘ has traditionally been below the cost it should be and it would have to increase to foot the $109 million b ill.” he add­ ed Tw o p r o p o s a ls w ill be offered to lessen the im pact of the increased charge, he said “ F irst custom ers will be able to pay out the cost on a p r o - r a te d b a s is o v e r six months ... in terest free th e •AND SE C O N D L Y company will have to inform the custom er th at he has this option if he needs it,” he said C e n t r e x , P B X a nd key system s would also go up, King said ‘Some p riv ate line costs will go up — som e quite a b it,” he said T h e T e x a s M u n i c i p a l League proposed an increase to be con­ of $127 million s i d e r e d c o m ­ t h e m issioners. b y June 23 is the deadline set for all parties to subm it their final briefs to the PUC. Prompt trials costly in time, resources County officials estim ated W ednesday th at county and dis­ trict offices would need 12 additional full-tim e em ployees to keep up with the workload dem anded by the Speedy T rial Act. The act, scheduled to go into effect July I, says the sta te must be ready for trial within 120 days of the a rre s t of a felony defen­ dant. or 90 days if the defendant is accused of a m isdem eanor. TRF: DISTRICT a tto rn e y ’s office said five additional a t­ torneys would be needed to keep up with the increased workload of processing the defendants within the required tim e. Five ad­ ditional deputy county clerks, one deputy d istric t clerk and one additional County Court at-Law judge also would be needed to m eet the dem ands of the 120-day deadline, county officials es­ tim ated W alker Arenson, adm in istrativ e assistan t to County Judge Mike Renfro, said the estim ate of additional personnel needed was a “ballpark figure” but added the cost of an additional five assistan t d istrict atto rn ey s could be approxim ately $100,000 per year DISTRICT JU DGE Tom Blackwell criticized the act, saying it will require courts to keep m am m oth records of exactly how m any days have passed since a defendant was a rre sted . -campus capsules- M ichener Gallery offers 2 exhibits General watercolors and photographs of San Francisco are part of two new exhibits on the se­ cond floor of the Michener Gallery in the Harry Ransom Center. One exhibit includes 50 color photos by Oleg Vorobyoff, titled “San Francisco: Another View.” The exhibit depicts views of city life and runs through June 27. “ The Jessen s: Bubi and Kindred” runs through July 9 and featu res 20 watercolors by Bubi Jessen and his son. Perry-Castaneda to give tours The Perry-Castaneda Library is offering guided tours of the facility Thursday, Friday, Monday and Tuesday. The tours are designed to acquaint students with the library. h. D aily T e x a n a -b id e n t n e w s p a p e r a t T he U n iv e rsity of T e x a s a t A u stin , is publish! ii by le x a s s tu d e n t P u b lic a tio n s . D ra w e r D, U n iv e rs ity S ta tio n , A u stin , T ex IJT, 11 I h e [I,Illy I e x a n is p u b lis h e d M onday, T u e s d a y , W ed nesd ay T h u rs d a y , a n d F r i ­ day e x c e p t holiday an d e x a m p e rio d s Second c la s s p o s ta g e p a id a t A u stin T ex N e * ' c o n trib u tio n s will be a c c e p te d by tele p h o n e (471-4591), a t th e e d ito ria l o ffic e ♦ x as s tu d e n t Public a tio n s B uilding 2 122) o r a t th e n ew s la b o ra to ry I C o m m u n ic a tio n B u d d in g \ 4 136 In q u irie s i o n c o m in g d e liv e ry a n d c la s s ifie d a d v e rtis in g sh o u ld be m a d e in I M ’ B u ildin g :( 200 ■ 471-52441 an d d isp la y a d v e rtis in g in T S P B uilding 3 210 '4 ,1 1065 I V n a tio n a l a d v e rtis in g r e p r e s e n ta tiv e s of The D aily T e x a n a r e N a tio n a l Kdui „ t to n al A d v e rtisin g S e rv ic e Inc . 360 L ex in g to n Ave , N ew Y ork N Y 10017 an d I o m m u m e a tio n s a n d A d v e rtisin g S e rv ic e s to S tu d e n ts, 6330 N P u la sk i C h icag o III ’* bOt>4b * D ie D aily I e x a n s u b s c rib e - to I rn ted P r e s s In te rn a tio n a l an d N ew Y ork T im e s th e an d is a m e m b e r of th e A sso c ia ted C o lle g ia te P r e s s th e T e x a s D aily N e w s p a p e r A sso c ia tio n S e « s s e rv ic e Th. T e x a n S o u th w e st J o u rn a lis m C o n g re ss A m e ric a n N e w s p a p e r P u b lis h e r s A sso c ia tio n C o p y rig h t 1978 T e x a s S tu d e n t P u b lic a tio n s T H U DA ILY T E X A N SU B SC R IPT IO N R A T F S S U M M E R SES SIO N 1978 P ic k e d up on c a m p u s U T s tu d e n ts fa c u lty s ta f f Picked up on cam pus general public By m a il in T e x a s By m a il o u tsid e T e x a s w ith in I S A ONI- SEMESTER i F A L L O R S P R IN G I 1978-79 b a sic s tu d e n t fee P ic k e d up on c a m p u s P icked up un cam pus - U T faculty staff P icked up on cam p u s • general public By m ail in Texas By m a d o u tsid e T e x a s w ith in I S A I LOO 4 OO 8 5 0 9 0 0 * 65 I 65 7 5 0 14 00 15 00 TW C S E M E S T E R S FA L L AN D S P R IN G I 1978 79 I T fac u lty s ta f f g e n e ra l p u b lic P ic k e d up on c a m p u s I 3 3 0 P ic k e d up o n c a m p u s 15 00 By m a il in T e x a s 25 50 z i v t By m a il o u tsid e T e x a s w ith in C S A 27 50 Send o r d e r s a n d a d d re s s c h a n g e s to T E X A S S T U D E N T PU BLICATIO NS P O Box P U B n o 146444) l e x a ', 78712. o r to T S P B u ild in g C3 200 D A u stin Jordan takes post at LBJ Regents asked to approve new professorship By Lucian Parkin* Daily Texan Staff f l u e n e e on t h e T e x a s Legislature during her years as a senator there, despite h»* mg a black woman, also was impressive Wemtraub said Tile School of Public Affairs seeks pi if es,Hors who blend academic training with prac* fica! experience in govern­ ment, Wemtraub la id B o t h W e i n t r a u h a n d C incher said they had heard t o no o b j e c t i o n s tin* for J o r d a n , p r o f e s s o r s h i p f a c u l t y or f r o m e i t h e r students I h e R i c h a r d s o n professorship is designed to provide teaching positions for th o se who h a v e had d i s ­ t i ngui s he d publ i c s e r v i c e careers. Salaries questioned McMurtry to begin probe Investigation of a possible illegal salary increase T ravis County com ­ m issioners voted for them selves and other elected officials will be delayed while County Attorney Jim M cM urtry i« in Corpus C hristi on business He is expected to retu rn to his office Mon­ day ( ’om m issiooers, in voting them selves a pay raise of $3,839 each Monday, possibly violated state law by not ap­ proving the increase a t a regularly scheduled m eeting and by not giving proper notice of the promised pay hike law sa y s c o m ­ m issio n e rs m ay in c re a se o ffic ia ls ’ salaries only at regularly scheduled I#71 TEX A S A m eetings, which are held the second Monday of each month The law also states the com m issioners m ust give the public IO days' notice of the proposed .salaries in a new spaper ad C om m issioners also provided for c a r a llo w a n c e s fo r th e c o u n ty ’s fiv e justices of the peace. According to state law. the salaries, expenses and other allow ances of elected county and precinct officers m ust be set during the regular budget hearing, which was held Jan 25 P R E C IN C T 4 C O M M ISSIO N E R R ichard Moya, who m ade the motion the justices for instead of received car allow ances increases, said the raises because the funds for salary in­ creases ran out. Since no money for allow ances was provided for in the budget hearing, the com m issioners M cM urtry said, probably did break the law by giving the allowances Assistant County Attorney P a t Kelly said Wednesday that, because McMur­ try and his assistan ts a re attending a Texas Association of D istrict and Coun­ ty Attorneys m eeting in Corpus C hristi and w ill be out of tow n fo r th e rem ainder of the week, the investiga­ tion will be postponed until Monday. The investigation will be prim arily a m a tte r of legal research , Kelly added. Sensible and Fashionable! J U By j o h n M c M i l l a n O aiiy Texan Staff B a rb a ra Jo rd an , t i s rrjw rK 'iijiitlv f from mmn will A u s tin , H i'jttn li uppiovi s Hit plan in th e H o a rd of in* rn lo ratirtft it J o r d a n , who I* le a v in g Confr**** a fte r th re e trrm * lins .M’l'OptiHi ,i l< aching jwisi tlcwi ut tho U U School of Public Affair* beginning next Jan u ary , Je a n G ra e b rr, «*x etfutive a s s is ta n t Iraan i iUjitih Hosing Kind W hines day to N K I I II K it K O S T O W no r Jordan, who is in Washington, would r o m m m l on tin* job o ile r u ntil the H o a rd of Hog on is votes Frid ay on the creation et the frost Jordan is to occupy lf the I IU Public Sci vice Professorship is approved a* e x p e r t e d , J o r d a n w ill be teaching intergovernmental relations and ethics at an aft* n u a t s a l a r y of $38.(IOO, (.raebei-said Tilt* Itichurdson f oundation will provide fund* tor the position for live years she added Since Jordan annmint ed her r e tir e m e n t from Congress List I b rem ber , sfas uiation future has co ncerning her thrived, wiih many rumors placing her in a ( ai lei cabinet p o * it i o n 01 f e d e r a l judgeship a In February, Ho,stow said sin* bari diva uss<*d with Jordan t i l e t h e p o s s i b i l i t y of t h e l e g i s l a t o r k j o i n i n g J o rd a n U niversity v i s i t e d in Januat y t h e c a r n p o i f a t ui t y K ID N E Y W E IN T R A U B , professor ai tfu* U U School of i'ubiii Affair* and chairm an of th e F a c u l t y R e c r u i t m e n t C o m m i t t e e w h i c h recommended Jordan s soler lion to Itoslow said Jordan s ' p u b l i c d e i m p r e s s i v e meanof televised duri ng House Judiciary Com m ittee hearings on the im peachm ent of former President Hil liard Nixon in 1973 dem onstrated her credential* for the lob in 1972, Jordan was the first black woman lo in* elected to I origi ess from the South Jordan s ainliiv to exert in The key to precisely cut locks. c u l p re c is e ly to fit y o u r free and e a s y lifentyle. Let Debbie, M a ry Lou, M a r r y or Lenlie sh o w you h o w i t ’n done, S e b rin g H air denign* for m en an d w om en. Sebring. r M rn I’t HK b bl. R iversid e L l ? * $ IS 5 PRE-LAW? PRE-PA RE. NIXT ISAT IS JULY 15th P hons 478 *975 for in fo r­ im ­ m atio n on how p ro v e y o u r scoro. to W t oft*, 74 Houri •f intl* vt lion ail tW fk* by otto)'tty i S t ii* nod It «i«o you Hr# t i f i t pointy you t t t t i l Coll tor (Itll it Ho Solo LSAT RIVR Rf COHRS? 4 7 8 - 6 9 7 5 " t o co JC e n r n t i X I 4SM« M r n JU - Q ’55 c 07co M r « * $ 1 3 0 (HI (Hi Y** *•* I alw j f SA ^ 1 ^ FOOTGEAR g e a r e d to com fort a n d q u a lity 472-9433 2200 Guadalupe LATE REGISTRATION: ALL STUDENTS WILL BE ASSESSED A $5 .0 0 LATE FEE 1. P ic k up D ean's C ard and M a s te r N am e C ard in ACADEMIC CENTER. 8:00 a.m . to 5:00 p.m. June 7 and 8. 2. See ACADEMIC ADVISOR fo r signed ap pro val of courses. 3. O batin PUNCHED IBM CLASS CARDS fro m d e pa rtm e nts in w hich you take courses. 4. Return Dean's Card, M a ste r Nam e Card and class cards to A ca d e m ic Center before 5:00 p.m. June 8. Xd iv n ’» ITT VO Pin* lift# NfMrSfkftt M w 5. PAY FEES at the ACADEMIC CENTER fr o m 10:00 a.m . to 5:00 p.m. June 12. Charles I e u t v w lur lewelers 26 O vniCKKMupe 476 666.' Custom* KvMxjot 'N* Cock door OW Sot Antonio Strait 6. STUDENTS W H O LATE REGISTER M A Y NOT PARTICIPATE IN DEPARTMENT DROP ADDS. OFFICE OF REGISTRAR 471-7701 Super Seal' Classic. I h e Super Seal is n u in u L u U m \l runty in A u stin Texas aru i o nly bv the R e g iste re d lew elers at L harlem 1 eutvw lei leis e l m l t s dis! in t ti\ e st vie selv st a p a r t fro m all o th e r * lavs rings a n d < a c h d ia m o n d w ill he show n to th e i u sto m e i u n d e r a in k rosy ojh IX diverv tim e o n The Super se a l is g u a ra n te e d to b e n o m o re th a n tw o w eek s It it is n o t ready to be d e liv e re d a lte r tw o w eeks 3 ‘ < of th e co st will bt d ed iu ted to r ea«. h day late Good M orning, Austin! \ou> serving S e w Orleans S tyle B reakfast s'u iu frtx , * 1 unday • am - 2 pm Mon Sat H-tl am u s j / t t d c . 1/1 tH* mornin* - at tight J U t Uh IK uchen d o e r. a t m i d n i g h t ) J M o ck, F a n 0f Congreet r= rx 1----------‘ We w ill be CLOSED this Friday & Saturday to prepare for our G ig a n tic Going O ut of Business ^ Sale! 2 3 2 2 G u a d a lu p e ; i ,' I Thu rsday, J une 8, 1978 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Page Tax groups forsss© r©volt amid warnings of problems United Press international T axpayers’ associations Tuesday hailed the adoption of C a lifo rn ia ’s Proposition 13 as the opening shot in a property tax revolt th at will sweep the country E ducators and bankers warned of the fiscal problem s it will create Proposition 13 would roll back proper­ ty assessm en ts lim it property taxes to I percent of m arket value and impose a 2 percent lim it on annual assessm ent increases. to 1975 levels, Gordon Tucker, ch airm an of United H om eow ners of A m e ric a , based in Montgomery, Ala , said the California vote was “ but the opening gun in the heretofore silent revolution which we predict will be as far-reaching as the revolution that c reated this nation 200 y ears ago. i t puts on notice all the drones and freeloaders and politicians who have liv­ ed a t the expense of the honest, h ard ­ working citizens of this nation that the day of the best fruits of this land going to those who deserve it least is just about o v e r.” Tucker said Mayor E Clay Shaw of F ort la u d e r ­ dale. Fla., president of the national con­ ference of Republican m ayors, said “ I think speculation that this is the begin­ ning of a nationwide m ovem ent is co m ­ pletely a c c u ra te The m essage should be loud and clear to all public officials that there is a tax p ay ers’ revolt under w ay.” T each ers’ organizations, on the other hand, warned that approval of Proposi­ tion 13 could m ean the closure of som e schools Stephen H E dw ards, president of the California T eachers Association, said "The legislatu re is obligated, because of its long do-nothing history regarding property tax relief, to keep our schools open and our children learning " Bank of A m erica, based in San F ra n ­ cisco. said Proposition 13 would c re a te economic uncertainty in California and called for cooperation from all to m ake governm ent m ore efficient and less costly. Other criticism , but only on details, cam e from fo rm e r s ta te tre a s u r e r Palm er Burch, who is leading a petition drive to get a sim ilar proposition voted in Colorado Burch called Proposition 13 a “ m eat ax approach “ B urch's petition calls for increases in sta te spending to bt' lim ited to the previous y e a r’s rise in the cost of living In Texas the GOP chairm an Ray B arnhart said “ Tax lim itation is truly an idea whose tim e has come The m essage from the grassroots is loud and clear governm ent is too big and taxes are tm) high." Activists in o ther sta te s looked to the victory of Proposition 13 as encourage­ ment for their own efforts to cut or freeze property taxes Action may com e first in N ebraska, w h e re a s p e c ia l s e s s io n of th e legislature opening Thursday may adopt a bill that would impose a spending limit on is a local g o v e rn m e n ts T h ere s ig n a tu r e d riv e a im e d a t a c o n ­ stitutional am endm ent, but Gov. J Ja m e s Exon has said he would prefer a law ra th e r than an am endm ent In W isconsin, w here the state has im posed property tax limits, Gov. Martin J Schreiber said adoption of Proposi­ tion 13 “ shows that people a re deadly serious ... the voters in California have sent a m essag e to th eir governm ent that ought to be heeded in every state ’’ Georgia has seen som e comm unity- level p ro te s ts but since G eorgian citizens cannot in itiate a constitutional am endm ent as they can in California there has been no concerted drive yet In U tah, a tax p ay ers' association is collecting signatures on a petition to be presented to the sta te legislature next year. The hope is to pressure or p er­ suade the legislature to pass by the re ­ quired two-thirds m ajority an am end­ m ent that would place a per capita spen­ ding lim it on the sta te government. Rep Albert Quip. the leading indepen­ dent Republican candidate for governor of M innesota, made local taxes a cam ­ paign issue and said the sta te faced a taxpayers' revolt if steps w ere not taken to ease the tax burden. An Oregon initiative, which must find 50,000 m ore sig n alizes by the deadline of July 7, would resto re 1975 property tax levels to sta rt with and then re stric t property assessments for tax purposes to no m ore than 2 percent a year. Gov Bob Straub said passage of Proposition 13 would “ send shock waves into Oregon ... “ But I think it s a m istake to give property tax relief across the board," he said, because m ost of the relief would go to business. TV, radio deregulation Subcommittee wants end to FCC No taxes, no new jobs — UPI Telephoto California Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. holds up an executive order im m ediately freezing all job hiring and replacem ents in the state of California as a result of passage of Proposition 13. After signing the order W ednesday, Brown also announced he would go before a joint session of the legislature Thursday to lay out his administration's plans for dealing with the im pact of the tax initiative which cuts revenues to local governm ents by approxim ately $7 billion a year. Labor law filibuster continues WASHINGTON ( U P I) A House sub­ c o m m i t t e e W e d n e s d a y p ro p o s e d deregulating the broadcast industry by replacing the F ed eral Com m unications Commission, forbidding governm ent control of program m ing and granting p e r m a n e n t te le v is io n r a d io a n d licenses. Byrd vows daily cloture attempt WASHINGTON (U PI) - The Senate refused W ednesday to cut off an 11-day filibuster ag ain st revising federal labor laws. The clo tu re m otion failed even to draw a plurality, with only 42 m em b ers voting for it and 47 against — 18 votes short of the 60 required to lim it debate. But th e m otion’s sponsor, Senate D em ocratic L eader R obert Byrd, has vowed to continue trying daily, looking for eventual victory la te next week. Byrd had acknowledged e a rlie r this th is f irs t a tte m p t a t c lo tu re w eek probably would fail. The certain ty of failure ap p aren tly contributed to th e low vote in favor of cloture because som e m em bers w ere absent and others used the prediction of defeat as a “ fre e p ass” to vote no, a labor spokesm an said. But it provided the first test of sen ti­ m ent on a bill th a t has caused sen ato rs to be badgered for m onths by lobbyists and inundated by m illions of postcard s and letters. is d e s i g n e d T h e m e a s u r e to stream lin e operations of the N ational Labor R elations Board and, in general, m ake it m o re difficult for em ployers to block unionizing of th eir work force. Even if clo tu re finally is invoked, op­ ponents have pledged to tie up the Senate by offering 500 am endm ents and dem anding roll call tim e-consum ing votes on each one — hoping this will p e r­ s u a d e s p o n s o r s m easure. to w ith d r a w th e Sen. Dale B um pers, D-Ark., con­ sidered a key swing vote, said as the vote began he would vote a g a in st cloture for the first tim e in his four y ears as a sen ato r He said o bstruc­ tionist tactics a re “ a b h o rren t” to him but “ if cloture is invoked, the bill seem s fairly certain to pass in som ething quite close to the fo rm ” in which it reached the floor. He said he w as concerned about the effects of the bill on sm all business and also about “ the suspicion th at the bill's supporters believe it m ay help dim inish the attractio n of the South for new in­ d u stry .” Ju st before the vote, sponsor Sen. H arrison W illiams, D-N.J., gave the first hint of m ovem ent by supporters to win the needed votes. He told Sen. John Sparkm an, D-Ala , to m ake the bill m ore am endm ents palatable to non-filibustering opponents would be introduced before a final cloture vote, so th a t they could be acted on after debate is lim ited One reason clo tu re is give a chance of passing next week is th at some senators have prom ised to vote against it for only two or three tim es Another is som e senators honestly feel debate should be unlim ited, up to a point, and th a t point will be reached a fte r th ree weeks of deliberation. A third reason is th at the opposition to the bill by som e m em bers m ight be eased by am endm ents that could pass between cloture votes. Some m em bers have indicated they would vote for cloture even though they oppose the bill b e c a u se they d o n ’t believe the Senate should be stym ied by a m inority. O ther opponents of the bill have been ham m ering aw ay a t the a rg u ­ m ent th at “ a vote for cloture is a vote for the b ill.” The feeling on both sides is th at once the bill is put to an up-or-down vote it would pass handily. The bill would speed up procedures of the N ational Labor Relations Board, penalize em ployers who willfully violate the law and require the NLRB to e s­ tablish rules that could m ake it easier for unions to organize. B o th s i d e s h a v e d u b b e d t h e m ultim illion-dollar b attle a “ holy w a r," but only opponents have predicted dire consequences lose, claim ing they sm all business will be “ d e v a sta te d ’’ and unions will in crease th eir m em bership IO p ercent alm ost over night. if Supporters say the bill only refines the basic 43-year-old labor law to close loopholes th at have allowed em ployers to escape with only light penalties for il­ legally harassing unions or violating their rights. Byrd said W ednesday he agreed with sponsor W illiams th a t “ The whole bill has been m isu n d e rsto o d and m is­ rep resen ted .” Unshackling com m unications from “ horse and buggy” e ra regulations, its sponsors said, would provide m ore co m ­ petition and b e tte r service to the public. The House com m unications subcom ­ m ittee s proposal is a 217-page rew rite of the 1934 C om m unications Act, the landm ark legislation setting up govern­ m ent regulation of th e airw aves THE EXISTING LAW says broad­ casting and other com m unication s e r­ vices m ust be conducted in “ the public interest, convenience and n ecessity." The revision, about th ree y ears in the m aking, would drop th at language and provide regulation only “ to the extent m arketplace forces a re deficient.” The proposal, sponsored by Reps. Lionel Van Deerlin, D-Calif ., and Louis Frey. R -Fla., in effect would strip aw ay 44 y ears of FCC regulations and cou rt decisions tending to give b ro ad casters th e A m e r ic a n T e le p h o n e & an d Telegraph Co. monopolies over th eir parts of the industry. Van Deerlin expressed hope the House can com plete action of the m easure next y e a r and th at it will becom e law in Disco ready, but local law bans dancing HENRYETTA, Okla. (U PI) - Disco dancing may the rage nationwide, but the law won t allow it in H enryetta Or any dancing for that m atter. Gary Moores has signed a lease to convert a 9.000-square-foot store on Main S treet into the a re a ’s only d is­ cotheque, hoping to draw custo m ers from a s far aw ay as Tulsa Work had already begun before he learned of a 1957 ordinance. “ We w ere su rp rise d .” M oore’s wife said. “ We didn’t even think about it be­ ing illegal. It w asn’t until w e'd gotten the equipm ent and had everybody hired th at we w ere told dancing in public w as breaking the law .” A group of m in isters plans to m ake sure the prohibition against public d an ­ cing is m aintained 1980 The seven-m em ber FCC would be r e p l a c e d by a C o m m u n i c a t i o n s R e g u la to ry Commission w ith five m em bers, each serving a single 10-year term. the That agency would be b arred from cen so rin g o r o th e rw ise reg u latin g broadcast content, and the bill would rem ove radio requ irem en t stations provide news and public affairs p r o g r a m s . S o m e p u b l i c a f f a i r s required of program m ing would be television stations, but much less than now that WHILE BROADCASTERS would get perm anent licenses and freedom from program m ing control, they would be lim ited in the num ber and location of stations they could own. ('able television o p erators, in the past ham pered by FCC regulations p ro tec­ tive of b ro ad casters, would be freed from all controls. Consum ers would get “ affo rd ab le” lower ra te s telephone service sparked by m ore com petition. from Politicians would get g re a te r access to the airw aves through repeal of the “ fairness doctrin e” and the “ equal tim e” provision, both of which have caused many b ro adcasters to shy away from controversy. ra d io and C u rre n tly , te le v isio n t h r e e - y e a r s t a t i o n s o p e r a t e on renewable the bill, licenses Under radio stations would im m ediately be given perm anent revocable only for repeated technical violations of the law licenses TELEVISION LICENSES would bt' for five years, renew able once, at which tim e all stations would get perm anent ones, If a radio station did lose a license, die new licensee would be chosen by lottery. S u b c o m m i t t e e s p o k e s m a n J o h n M cLaren said a radio station could have ‘ straig h t Ku Klux Elan program m ing or w hat have' you The theory h ere is that even in a ru ral area where you don’t have m any stations, if a station was blatantly offensive to a substantial num ber of people, m arketplace forces would take c a re of it.” China military leader predicts confrontation HONG KONG (UPI ) - A key P ek ­ ing m ilitary leader stressed in a rep o rt released W ednesday the need to strengthen C hina’s arm ed forces, predicting a w ar resulting from rivalry betw een the Soviet Union and United States. Wei Kuo-ching, d irecto r of the G eneral Political D epartm ent of the P e o p le s Liberation Army, said, “ We m ust step up our effort to revolutionize and m odernize our a r ­ my. We m ust p re p a re ourselves against a w ar of aggression before it breaks out. We m ust take every preparation for liberating Taiwan and ..unifying our m o th erlan d .” Wei said the m a jo r problem is im ­ proving th e c o m b a t c a p a b ilitie s a fte r the “ pernicious influence” of the Gang of Four, the purged group of radicals headed by the widow of the late Com m unist P a rty Chairm an Mao Tse-tung “ We m ust solve the problem of the im purities which exist in vary­ ing degrees in ideology, organiza­ tion and style of work as the result of” the disruption and sabotage of the gang, Wei said Wei also noted the im portance of careful selection of revolutionary successors. He said g re a t num bers can be trained in a short tim e, “ so long a s we break w ith conservative ideas.” “ O ur enem ies a re arm ed with m odern w eap o n s,” he sa id , but “ with the rapid developm ent of the c o u n try ’s national econom y and science and technology, our a rm y ’s weapons and equipm ent constantly im prove.” news capsules Egypt sends artillery, advisers to Zaire KINSHASA, Zaire (UPI) — Egypt Wednesday sent Soviet-built heavy artillery and military advisers to Zaire and U.S. transports flew more Moroccan troops to help bolster defenses in the rebel-ridden Shaba province. The official Zaire news agency AZAP said Egypt’s foreign minister would visit Kinshasa Monday to discuss further aid. AZAP said heavy Soviet-made, long-range 122mm cannons were being shipped to Zaire and that other unspecified military equipment would be sent later. The agency did not say how many Egyptian advisers would be sent. Officials said the advisers would help the Zairean army to learn how to use the Soviet guns, which were shipped to Egypt before it broke its defense ties with the Soviet Union. House votes down firearm regulations WASHINGTON (U PI) — The House, following a heated debate that oc­ casionally broke into shouting matches, voted 314-30 Wednesday to block proposed federal regulations to make it easier to trace firearms sales. The vote was a major victory for the National Rifle Association which had mounted a massive nationwide campaign against the regulations. The regulations “are the first step toward gun control,” argued Rep. Steven Svmms, R-Idaho, during one of the toughest House debates in months But Rep. Abner Mikva, D-Iil., said the proposal would merely com­ puterize and update powers that the Treasury Department now has. They would not require citizens to register firearms, and would merely make it easier to trace guns used in crimes, he said. “ Everyone except the street crime lobby ought to be for it (the regulations),” he said. The proposal was part of an $8.6 billion Treasury-Postal Service ap­ propriations bill, which passed by a 297-98 vote without further amendments. It was the first of a series of such money bills, many con­ taining controversial amendments, to be considered by the House in the next IO days. Terrorism experts testify at House hearings WASHINGTON (UPI) — Two experts on international terrorism testified Wednesday the United States is ill-equipped to cope w ith in ex­ pected increase in terrorist actions including “ more complex and sophisticated” operations involving kidnappings and bombings Lawrence Sulc, a former CIA officer who worked on the agency’s counter-terrorism program in Latin America, and Dr. Charles Russell, an expert on international terrorism for the U.S. Air Force, testified before a House intelligence subcommittee holding hearings on how the United States can handle terrorism. Russell said the Air Force could take care of itself both at home and abroad but he would not forecast how civilian authorities could handle what he predicted would be increased terrorist activity on the domestic scene “There is an acceleration of more complex operations,” he said, with terrorists “becoming more sophisticated ... highly professional.” Sulc said he suspected “there’s a lot of activities going on now” by terrorists in the United States which does not get well-publicized perhaps because it does not involve great loss of life. “ A free society like ours... is ripe for terrorism,” he said “ It s just a matter of time before it reaches here.” Bomb blast damages Cleveland high school CLEVELAND (UPI)'— Damage is estimated ai £>00,000 from a bomb blast that ripped Martin Luther King High School on Cleveland's East Side, forcing officials to close the school. Wednesday’s blast possibly was the work of the elusive pipe bomber who has struck a dozen other school and business places during the past year, according to police, who declined to say what type of device was used to bomb the school. “We believe it is the same man who has been bombing other schools, but we cannot eliminate the possibility that someone else is picking up on this thing,” said Sgt. John Fransen of the Cleveland Police Department's Intelligence Unit. The explosion occurred shortly after 3 a.m. and blew a three-by-four foot hole in a two-foot thick brick wall, shattered windows, knocked out doors and caused the collapse of a part of the school's ceiling. Stock prices slip In active trading DOW JONES AVENAGE 30 Industrials 8 6 1 . 9 2 Closed at lune I 19)1 DOWN 4.59 NEW YORK (UPI) - Blue chips fell Wednesday for the first time in seven sessions as profit takers cashed in on the past week’s gains. Trading was active. The Dow Jones industrial average fell 4.59 points to 861.92 in a continuation of profit taking that began late Tuesday. The Dow had gained more than 34 points the past six sessions and 121 points since its Feb 28 low of 742.12, making it vulnerable to profit taking. Most analysts expect institutions to continue buying soon J Page 4 □ T H E D A IL Y T E X A N □ T hursday, June 8, J978 Tragic 34th By Jam M R#t*on On the ,14th annivprsary of the Allied invasion of Nazi-occupied Europe. the representatives of the United States, Britain, F ran c? Belgium and West Ger many met in Paris this week to consider what they could do if anything about the Communist ac tivity in Africa They didn t do very much In fact, they disappointed both the people who wanted them to confront the Soviets arid ( iitians in Africa, and the people who wanted them to stay out of ail the military and political tangos of that they did coalm en* But at something that may be symbolically im portent le a st, Historical analogies are usually mil- leading. and one of the problems at the moment is that there is a tendency on C apitol Hill these days to look AlLY4W-TEX AN* firing line Encouraged As an English m ajor at UT, I am proud that the Humanities Research Center houses one of the most extensive collections of 20th century American and British in the world literature However, I am not proud of the way in which it is administered That is why Eldon Sutton’s statem ent “ We would like to have the HRC have a broader in­ terface with the faculty and academic activities." is so encouraging. to It s about time adm inistrators at UT i starting with the HRC) realized that they are accountable the state Legislature for their actions and that the state Legislature is subsequently ac­ countable to the people of Texas This is why we have the right to vote in this country — to keep elected officials honest Even the appointments of future University regents can be affected for the better if we properly utilize the power of the vote Gubernatorial can­ didates should be made aw are that in the long run (their political future) it’s more important to appoint an educator than your family physician to a regental post. im prove t o p e r p e t u a t e The quality of education at this un­ if ad­ iv ersity can only m inistrators understand that UT does n o t e x i s t t h e i r b u re au cracy , but r a t h e r to serve teachers and students who are involved with the process of education. That is why I am now making a strong plea to the com m ittee that will select a new HRC director to choose a person who is more of a public servant and less of a dictator. Beth R. Skelton English • nergy as a military weapon under the Baruch Plan, and use and control it only for peaceful purposes Since then the Soviet Union bas trie*d to use its power to dominate China, to frighten Japan, to capture Berlin and in­ timidate we-stern Europe ami its Com­ munist parties, all of which has failed Even India, which for a time under In­ dira (iarulhi flirted with a Communist alliance, has turned against Moscow So the Soviets have now turned to Africa as an easy chance there C arter and the Allies are blocking them 'rho more Moscow presses with its Cuban m ercenaries, the more it unifies the West, and particular­ too ly the old European colonial powers, who know m ore about Africa than Moscow will probably ever learn What is surprising about all this is that C arter is being blamed for being in­ consistent. for condemning the Soviets one day and eooperating with them on arm s control the next; for working with the < hinese against the Soviets but not giving Peking what for promising to support Israel "forever." but opposing Prim e Minister Begin and sending planes to Saudi Arabia, and for disagreeing with his European allies, but still working out some kind of prac­ tical arrangem ent with them in the eastern M editerranean, the Middle East it w ants; and black Africa. is clearly In an election year in the United States, when C arter s standing in the popularity polls is declining, all this is put down to C arter’s “ indecision” or political selfishness And from time to tim e, he indecisive and politically self-serving But considering the problems he faces, the guess here is that it would be foolish to underestim ate his handling of foreign policy or domestic politics. Thirty-four years after D-Day, he is tip toeing through a m inefield, and the guess here is that in spite of all the criticism , he is doing it fairly well. ' © 1978 New York Times MHI njNM'Writ’ttM m a * nan* a* Just like the old times By J a c k An d erson - S om etim es WASHINGTON it seems as if Richard Nixon never left town A few weeks ago, President C arter fumed at his Cabinet about the “leaks of Cabinet minutes He made it perfectly clear that he didn’t Uke to read his confidential conversations in our column He sounded just like Nixon. Now the State Department is in an up­ roar over our publication of a confiden­ tial cable from Ambassador Ronald Spiers in Turkey No one has yet formed a plumbers* squad to shut off the leaks. But C arter has ordered his Cabinet secretary, Jack Watson, to find who’s leaking and to submit “ a memorandum on this subject ’’ And State has its security apparatus on the lookout for our source It seems like old times We upset the pontificator at Foggy Bottom by reporting Spiers’ assessm ent of a recent speech by Turkish Prim e M inister Bulent Ecevit It was a chauvinistic speech, and Spiers called it “ mindless nationalism " in a cable to the State Department. We cited the cable in a report on the popular international sport of flogging the I nited States. Indeed, the cable ex­ pressed concern that Ecevit “ may so enjoy the popluar acclaim that comes from talking back to Americans that he will continue it." We felt the American people were en­ titled to know that our allies. Greeks and Turks alike, enjoyed assailing America But our story caused a furor; we have reliably learned chat Ecevit, his sensibilities offended, raised an un­ holy howl The State Department ordered Spiers to fly to Brussels to soothe the ruffled Ecevit. who was in Belgium at the time. According to confidential sources, the ambassador told Ecevit that we had taken the em barrassing quote out of context. In Washington, Turkish Ambassador Mel lh Esenbel filed a formal protest with the State Department. He, too, was assured that we had m isrepresented the meaning of Spiers’ comments. It has been our practice, when we are accused of taking quotes out of context, to supply the context. The controversial cable, dated March 24. 1978, began: “ Prim e Minister Ecevit’s foreign policy speech to the Senate March 23 the sam e m aterial as the covered speech before the National Assembly the previous day, but the tone was harsher and more nationalistic and perhaps for that reason, the Turkish press gave the Senate speech better coverage "In his speech, Ecevit clearly iden­ tified the United States as the source of outside pressures that the Turkish na­ tion would unite to withstand. He also repeated his claim that Turkey has given more to NATO that it has receiv­ ed, and he again spoke of the need for Turkey to develop a new security con­ cept.” The cable then reviewed the prime minister s speech, singling out several direct quotes Finally, the cable con­ cluded: i t is not clear why Ecevit decided to resort to emotional nationalism to de­ fend his foreign policy perform ance At this point he appears to have sufficient­ ly strong public and political support that he does not need the assistance of mindless nationalism. “One possible reason is his continuing deep unhappiness with what he con­ sidered to be an attem pt by the U.S. to pressure him and thus threaten the success of Montreux (A Greek-Turkish summit meeting held in March.) is “Another possibility that he is preparing the public for a radical depar­ ture from traditional Turkish foreign policy. We tend to believe it is the former, but the danger is that he may so enjoy the popular acclaim that comes from talking back to Americans that he will continue it even after the current misunderstanding has passed.’’ The State Department, in the Nixon tradition, is now trying to discover the source of our news. A leading suspect, according to insiders, is Greek jour­ nalist Elias Demetracopoulos who left his homeland in 1967 to fight the dic­ t a t o r s h i p in A t h e n s . He u s e d Washington as a base for bombarding the junta with criticism . He so irritated the pro-junta Nixon adm inistration that it actually considered deporting him to Greece where he would have faced cer­ tain torture and possible death. We notified Demetracopoulos that the State Department suspected him of leaking the classified cable to us. He sounded incredulous. “ Rubbish!” he snorted. Then he called back with a for­ mal “ These charges by anonymous s o u rc e s .’’ he told our associate Joe Spear, “ have a fam iliar Turkish ring. They are untrue, unworthy and unconscionable.” response Then he added ruefully: “ P retty soon, I expect them to be saying I gave the ap­ ple to Adam in the Garden of Eden.” ©1978 United F eature Syndicate Terrorism in the U. S. actually to lead a torturer and killer of an old woman to the electric chair. What lacking psychologically is is national resolution the will What is lacking intellectually is the knowledge that self-defense is an art It can no more be codified by a com m ittee of Congress, than the expression of love can be taken from Andrew Marvel and handed over to a chemist The problem could bo terminal © lf78 W ashington Star By W illia m F. B u c k l e y this way T he p o l i ti c a l p h ilo s o p h e r and strategist Jam es Burnham, who know* more about everything than just about anybody has written that terrorism is the spectacular in headed mode By this is meant that convell tarnal terrorism is already here 1 The statistics for resent years show about S.OOO bombings a year in the V S , along with a variety of kidnappings, hostage takings, and hundreds of acts of arson that are in fact terrorist Though many of these actions are by am ateurs, they show a promising source of recruits for serious organisations,'' But the success of the Aldo Moro operation has got to have emboldened the terrorists, who will be thinking big Thinking big means thinking about the United States We are, after all, the principal target of the antimonial!* of this world Burnham gives additional reasons for terrorists that ambitious concluding will go west “ First, the U S . as the heartland of imperialism, corruption, exploitation, etc , is the most attractive target A spectacular, and decisive successful assault in the U S would have profound global repercussions, and would lift the global terrorist offensive to a higher historical phase. " And then. "For the past five years the U S has been stripping away tis organizational, legal, and ideological defenses against terrorism " He means by that, of course, the war against the CIA, the FBI and many of the they have sought to protect the interests of the republic and its citizens techniques by which the p resen t dilem m a Now Burnham says that, unhappily. there is probably wily one way we are going to learn how to fight our way out of "M aybe sooner than we think, a senator, gover­ nor, vice president, or m em ber of the Joints Chiefs twill be) given Moro’* role in a replay of the Red B rigades scenario.’’ Let us consider the event. Suppose that tomorrow, on his way to his office, the vice president of the United States. who is probably not more heavily guard­ ed than Aldo Moro, was ambushtnl bv a dozen organized terrorists who proceed ed to slaughter his bodyguards, and scoop the vice president off into hiding By no mean* can it be taken for granted that so illustrious a person could not bt* kept out of sight Let us the follow through tin- grim scenario their demands We terrorists make th e m o st h e c tic d e c lin e , a f t e r mediations in history to give in to them, and the corpse of the vice presi­ dent is discovered in the middle of the boardwalk in Atlantic City The question Is What does America do then" Mr Burnham assumes that America will then listen to reason W hat it reaso n ’ Without exception, every person who has any acquaintance with terrorism understands that such forms of absolutely disciplined organizations can be successfully com batts I only with in­ the help of counter-actions tersect the terrorist universe secret surveillance, wiretaps, mail checks, computer tied files of millions of per­ sons throughout the world that . But what has happened in Italy in the wake of the Moro case ' Presumably the high and mighty in Italy art' taking greater precautions But short of self- immobiltration, it is difficult to eon eeive of greater precautions than those taken by Aldo Moro Or is the problem distinctly Italian Is there rn Italy, an organic disorganization which nothing will c u rt? What would be the American counter­ part of that disorganization** Surely our insistence on codifying every principle we believe in The Supreme Court is in­ sisting on it, and the Supreme Court is Am erica's moral arbiter. America s depositum fidel Can we envision authorizing the catalog of activities out­ lined by Mr Burnham — in the sam e age when a very bright judge in the dis­ trict court is ordering the FBI to divulge the nam e of its secret inform ants against the Socialist Workers P arty" This is a society in w hich, after laboring IO years over the subject, after satisfy­ ing itself, after witnessing crim es visited on innocent Americans of Cahgulale horror, we can­ not m uster the organizational resolve the Supreme Court Tulips, cats and trips to Greece By John Leonard NEW YORK - The last tulip is dead They were brave, the tulips, for a month, and then their heads fell off, and it seemed that the floor of the garden was littered with bandannas or tom flags or bold emotions If I could. I would blame the cats, whose laziness is bor­ ing But the cats respected the tulips, and hid among them For a month, with the cats and the tulips, the gar­ den was full of so much useless beauty that Marx and Freud and Calvin and Schopenhauer and Sartre, inside on the library shelves, whimpered and groaned; their dusty systems were offended It is hard to be serious The children have gathered and soon we shall sneak off to Greece, one of the many places I have never been. Instead of reading about another dusty system. I sit on the porch with Rex Warner s ' Tile Stones of the G reeks” in my lap F arrar. Straus A Giroux have squeezed W arner’s three volumes of stones into one. just in tim e to distract me from my proper work They are. of course, wonderful stories — from Ovid and Homer and Virgil. Euripides and Aeschylus One turns from them, naturally, to the olays and the Iliad. back, really, to the bloody garden where so much of what we have become started us go­ ing, I used to write doggerel. I was older then, for in­ stance the great wings beating still A sudden blow Above the struggling maid. She wrings its neck And flings it down and steps upon its bill. And says, “ You dirty bird!” Apres Ie kill. She had it stuffed and set it on a shelf Poor Agamemnon had to s u b himself Some rude fam iliarity with both Greek mythology and the poems of William Butler Yeats is required to ap­ preciate just how much has been trivialized in so few lines This is a consequence of having grown up better acquainted with the activities of Zeus than with the ac­ tivities of Jehovah The gods I cared about from the time I was 5 years old never seemed to have anything on their minds except sex and pride Antigone was' my kind of sister. Whenever I Uke a shower. I think of the Shower of Gold I never take baths, because of Clytemnestra. My office is Augean. Westerners probably can’t even think without in some sense thinking Greek Most of our words for most of the important things — chemistry, physics, economics. politics, ethics, esthetics, theology, tragedy, comedy and so on - were given to us by the Greeks As I have explained over and over again to my son — my Hector. my Orestes and not. I hope, my Icarus — Aristotle's table of categories was a sort of Trojan zebra, foisting the unconscious dualisms of Greek gram m ar upon the unsuspecting cosmos Perhaps W H Auden was a little clearer on the sub­ ject The Greeks, he said. “ have Uught us. not to think — that all human beings have always done — but to think about our thinking, to ask such questions as. ‘Why do I think’.’ ‘What do this and other person or people think".’ On what do we agree and disagree. Why"’ And not only did they learn to ask questions about thinking, but they also discovered how. instead of giving im­ m ediate answers, to suppose something to be the case and then see what would follow if it were " I like that In Auden s opinion, the Athenians of the fifth century B C were the most civilized people who have so far existed.” And I am going to Athens I am told that the Athens Hilton has a fine view of the Acropolis, but I promised my mother never to stay in a Hilton. I am told that the hotel we will be staying in has a fine view of the Hilton If not for Pyramus and Thisbe, how could there have been Romeo and Juliet? If not for Oedipus, how could there have been a complex? Without Homer, life would have been much more difficult for Jam es Joyce. As it is, the Blind Seer is a tradition: Homer, Milton. Joyce. Ray Charles My son. of course, is reading the “ Aenid.” One of the reasons I dropped Latin after a single vear is that I knew they would make me read the “ Aeneid,” the original, and I believe Virgil to be anal-retentive. Besides, as Thomas Paine pointed out in “ The Age of Reason. From what we know of the Greeks, it does not appear that they knew or studied any language but their own. and this was one cause of their becoming so to apply learned, themselves learning English to better studies.” tim e I ’m still them m ore it afforded im possible, not C onsider the Minotaur and the labyrinth and Jorge Luis Borges. Without Proserpine. Swinburne would have tulips. Without been Orpheus, we would have missed Monteverdi's C major to C sharp Eurydice is dead Narcissus and Echo speak for themselves. to mention A world without nymphs and Furies and dryads and Atalanta is a world of nothing but highways and sewers, like Rome or (. leveland Compared with Prometheus, Faust was a twerp, and every body since Faust has been Dennis the Menace. I find myself on the porch looking at the garden with the tears of Priam in my eyes There are bulls and stags and swans and centaurs and Socrates in the garden, with the wind chimes and the severed heads of tulips I don't have to go to Greece It is here It is the furniture of my brain But I ll go anyway You don’t tell Darius not to try to bridge the Hellespont. e 1978 New York Times y Ju s t before leaving office next January. Gov Dolph Briscoe will face th re e new the task of appointing members, including a new chairm an, to the board of Regents Accordingly, various groups and individuals will soon be banding together under the banner of “ academic excellence' to argue for the appointment of “ quality" regents with certifiable academic credentials In the past. Texas governors, for whatever reasons, have not found such arguments persuasive Herein, however is offered a modest proposal for the appointment of qualified regents that the governor and his successors may find more com­ pelling As the executive officer of the state, any governor must surely consider it one of his prim ary responsibilities to protect the economic well-being of his constituents Given the way our federal government operates today, the quality of our educational system can have a direct bearing on our state’s prosperity and welfare, and unless Texas gover­ nors soon take steps to upgrade that system, starting with its leadership, they will have abandoned their state to a distinctly unpleasant future. As the current energy proposals by President C arter make clear, the time has long since passed when Texas, or any state, can expect to maintain con­ trol of its own destiny. Ever since the Supreme Court discovered the hitherto unsuspected m eanings of the term “ interstate com m erce," federalism has been making a steady m arch to the graveyard. In the course of separating federal and state jurisdictions, our founding fathers constitutionally charged the federal government with regulating in- sterstate commerce, a power perfectly appropriate to any central government The Supreme Court in this century, however, has ruled that anything that a f f ec ts interstate comm erce is under federal purview, in effect turning over the control of internal economy to the central government. the sta te s' The president’s energy program, for example, empowers the federales to set the price of intrastate gas and oil and to reallocate those resources to wherever it deems appropriate Obviously, this control of our s t a t e ’s m ost vital resource will have a m ajor impact on our economy. But the current energy legislation is only the most overt exam ­ ple of the federal government’s power After all, what they can do with energy, th ey can do w ith c a ttle , c ro p s, petrochem icals and everything else im ­ aginable. The University system becomes im ­ this because college- portant in all th e fe d e ra l tra in e d m in d s s ta f f bureaucracy and form ulate federal policy. The bureaucratic policy-makers are presently drawn prim arily from the constellation of Ivy League schools in the Northeast. This is not, contrary to populist sentiment, a plot by one region against another; it is simply that these schools happen to be the very best there are, while schools in the South tend to be generally m ediocre Therefore, any governor who considers it his duty to Nuclear policy unrealistic By David C allao WASHINGTON - Since the 1950s, E urope’s m ajor states have again become economic and political giants, they remain American m ilitary but protectorates Tensions have been inevitable but so far m anageable But with detente, Viet­ nam, Watergate, congressional govern­ ment, the oil crisis, a declining dollar and general world recession, trans- A tlantic relations are increasingly touchy. In one crucial area, nuclear energy, the C arter adm inistration's diplomacy seems off to a bad start. The nuclear question has always been sensitive. We have always tried to stop the proliferation of nuclear weapons, for reasons not difficult to understand. Our success has been only partial and perhaps transitory. it Britain and France have developed national deterrents, joined by China, In­ d ia a n d , is s a id , by I s r a e l . Presumably West Germany and Japan, if sufficiently frightened by Moscow or disenchanted with us, could quickly have deterrents as well So. probably, could several others. lf we want to discourage further proliferation among advanced coun­ tries, we must convince them not only of tile continuing reliability of our m ilitary p r o t e c t io n , b u t a ls o t h a t n o n ­ proliferation is not being used to inhibit their industrial development. To countries that lack Am erica’s oil and coal reserves, nuclear power in­ creasingly seems the vital source of in- A modest proposal for regents By John Parker protect and promote the prosperity of Texas citizens must also consider it his duty to appoint quality" regents, who have the background and credentials necessary to establish a first-rate educational system Only with such a system can Texas hope to save itself from the ravages of federal economic planning. For exam ple, the U niversity's if petroleum engineering departm ent, in­ stead of the Ford Foundation, had drawn up the national energy plan, would Texas be getting screwed now0 If the federal government were dominated by University business school graduates instead of Harvard lawyers, would our government be as massive and inef­ ficient as it is*7 Thus far. the University has not fulfilled this leadership role, as evidenc­ ed by the nightmarish implications of our current national energy policy Since the second ric h e st the country, m a te ria l resources cannot be a limitation The problem lies in the type of leadership this university in is To clear up any possible misapprehen­ sions. let me note rn closing that I do not personally believe that the protection of our economy is the primary reason to improve the University system ; educa tion for education’s sake has long been a hallmark of a civilized society, and I would advocate quality appointments even if federalism were alive and well The fact that federalism is a dead letter, however, only makes the need for academically eminent regents all the more crucial, and certainly makes such appointments more directly relevant to Texas governors For if one argument or the other does not soon move our ex­ ecutives to action, this state will find itself stripped bare by federal policies which penalize prosperity to subsidize failure P a r k e r ta un editorial assi stant dustrial energy for the future. Whatever their lingering diffidence about nuclear weapons, they are bound to press to develop nuclear power to secure a steady and reliable supply of nuclear fuel, a policy all the more urgent since the oil crisis. In the p re sen t s ta te of n u clea r technology, most European experts believe nuclear development requires increasing use of plutonium, of an e n r i c h m e n t a n d r e p r o c e s s i n g technology, and breeder reactors. Vast long-term investments are committed to this course. By contrast, adm inistration an ti­ proliferation strategists, bolstered by a domestic coalition of environmentalists and c o m m e rc ia l in t e r e s t s , h av e vigorously contested this whole line of developm ent the nam e of non­ proliferation. in C om m ercial nuclear developm ent should halt, we argue, for a full re­ the ad v a n ta g e s and ev alu atio n of dangers of a “ plutonium economy.’’ To give force to our views, we are try ­ ing to impose, unilaterally, a whole new set of controls on the diffusion of nuclear fuel and technology. In e f f e c t, we hope to p re v e n t proliferation by controlling the supply of uranium — by more stringent accoun­ ting and inspection, and by stopping the spread of that technology that would make users more independent of our supplies. Congress has now passed legislation to cut off nuclear fuel and assistance generally from any country that refuses to accept new American controls. These will not only extend international in­ spection to all facilities, not just those using American fuel, but also require that any receiving or selling of enrich­ ment and reprocessing technology, or sale of reprocessed fuel initially from the United States, must have prior ap­ proval from our government. Tile law makes no distinction for countries such as France, Britain or West Germany, which have enormous investments in nuclear program s re­ quiring IO to 15 years lead time. Instead, long-standing international agreem ents the E u ro p e a n c o u n trie s of w ith E u r a t o m a r e s u p p o s e d to be renegotiated. Europeans have so far resolutely refused to knuckle under E ven th e opening of E u ra to m negotiations is blocked by the French, who proceed apace with developing their breeder reactors and hope in a very few years to be independent of United States supplies. Others follow The enormous investments in relation to relevantly small m arkets make it highly appealing to sell the technology abroad. Hence, despite our objections, the Germ ans are selling reprocessing technology to Brazil and the French perhaps to Pakistan. The French also have a giant fuel deal with Japan. The Am erican cam paign has un­ doubtedly focused attention on crucial issues and, we can hope, will bring a b o u t a c o n s e n s u s t i g h t e n rerulations But we have also caused dangerous resentm ent and a formidable stiffening of resolve to resist American “ hegemony," with the French now join­ ed by the Germans. to Without questioning the worthiness or sincerity of the adm inistration’s aims, its seem discouragingly inappropriate to tra n s -A tla n tic relations. the re a litie s of Europeans and Japanese may be our best friends in the world; they are also our m ajor industrial rivals. The com­ m ercial stakes involved in nuclear technology are enormous. Europeans will not willingly leave themselves dependent upon America for nuclear technology or fuel, especially with Congress demonstrating how easy it to tear up long-standing com­ is mitments. We do have a common interest with Europe in preventing proliferation to unstable parts of the world, but we only obscure that interest by seeming to link industrial subor­ to non-proliferation dination. The net result, many in Europe believe, is a strong boost to European independence — not quite, presumably, what the adm inistration had in mind * 1978 New York Times editorials . . j ' . THE DAILY TEXAN Page 5 Thursday, June 8, 1978 person while in custody of the police, emotions run high And, as is the case here, persons supporting the victim 's side tend to become overzealous in their accusations Quoting two protesters at Sunday’s demonstration near Austin's federal courthouse; There have been five killings (of Chicanos) in Austin in cold blood, and no officer has ever been killed alone by a ( hicano and no murder charge has ever been tiled Hint s right, and the Austin police aren't tar behind Houston's.” Inflammatory rhetoric such as this serves only one pin it makes people hate Five Chicanos killed in pose; Austin in cold blood Come on, now Either put up some facts to support this claim or shut up And a s I ,r a s com pal mg Austin cops to Houston cops, well, maybe Austin’s police officers aren t angels, hut putting them on the same level with that brutish elan in Southeast Texas is taking things a bit too far Yes. there is justification for disgust at the actions of certain policemen in Texas, especially when those actions result in an unjustifiable death, such as in the Rodriguez case But using emotion charged rhetoric will resul in alienating those persons who are undecided on the m atter, people who could be of some help in getting t«sl(M al officials to pursue a civil rights case against ( am Santos Rodriguez is dead, and that is wrong I he officer who killed him received only five years in prison and that, too, is wrong Gain should bi' tried in federal court, and, if found guil tv, unlike the three Houston police officers recently eon victed of violating Joe Campos T orres’ civil rights and assessed only a one year prison term . Gain should receive the maximum punishment under law Federal case It has been less than five years since a 12 year-old Dallas youth was shot to death while sitting handcuffed in the front seat of a police car Dallas police officer Darrell ( ain was convicted of murdering Santos Rodrigues and assessed a five year prison term for this indefensible act And unless im mediate efforts to convince federal authorities to file a civil rights case against Gain are successful, the five year statute of limitations will expire in July and Gain will be released Attempts at drawing attention to the situation center around a 20-city protest, which includes Austin I hat a person can be convicted of m urder and then be assessed only a five-year prison sentence is hard to swallow That pleas to prosecute ( ain at the federal level will either be ignored or refuted is equally hard to fathom I here is no question that ( ain committed m urder The only question remaining is whether Rodriguez’ life was worth only five years ( learly. federal authorities should move forward with charges against the form er policeman, on the grounds that he violated Rodriguez' civil rights When someone is apprehended by the police, the least he should expect is that he will live through the police investigation The personal safety of persons in police custody should never be in question, but this has not been the case with regard to Texas police officers in recent history I his is not to say all police officers abuse the large responsibility they assume once they pin a badge on their chests Indeed, the majority do not abuse that respon­ sibility. But, unfortunately, if only one officer violates his oath, the image of remaining officers is tarnished and severe steps should be taken to punish the guilty party As can be expected in cases involving the death of a More time A House of Representatives subcommittee voted Mon­ day to extend by seven years the time that states have to vote on the Equal Rights Amendment The subcom­ m ittee s resolution must be approved by the House Judiciary Committee, the full House and the Senate must also concur, so an evaluation of Monday’s vote may be a bit prem ature, but we think the proposed resolution is a good measure Opponents of the resolution (who seem to be identical with opponents of the ERA itself) have argued that exten ding the deadline amounts to changing the rules after the game has started They feel the original seven year period, ending next March gives more than adequate time for states to consider the amendment Sponsors of the resolution are fearful that the required 38 states will not approve the amendment by the current deadline Thirty-five states have approved it so far, and most observers think there is little chance for three more affirm ative votes by next March However, the proposed extension may backfire on EHA supporters, since several states that have already ap proved the amendment may try to rescind their approval during the additional period, although at this time it Is un certain whether a state has such authority One such attem pt was m ade by the Kentucky legislature earlier this year But when the legislation reached the desk of Gov. Julian Carroll, he was out of state and Lt. Gov Thelma Stovall vetoed the bill So. it (he extension does become law it could eventually serve the interests of either ERA supporters or op ponents. We believe extending the opportunity for thorough and reasonable public debate will win more support foi the amendment, since equal rights for women should be fun damental to a system whose ideal is liberty and justice for all, and since we are convinced that women do not now enjoy the sam e legal freedoms men enjoy Hut whether an extension results in the approval of ERA, we can see no harm in continued public examma lion of such an im portant issue. Many people h a v e already made up their minds, but many others who have carefully and honestly considered the m atter remain un decided. Let s give them more time. Tying OSHA’S hands By Nicholas von Hoffman Henceforth, federal safety inspectors will have to go to a judge and get a w arrant to check out the place you work to see if it’s killing you That’s the gist of a Supreme Court ruling applying Fourth A m endm ent s tric u tre s a g a in st un­ reasonable search and seizure to the Oc­ cu p atio n al S afety and H ealth Ad ministration This peculiar decision is a product of the court’s desire to be popular The fashion right now is to be against regula­ tion, especially regulation that has been instituted to protect a weak or un­ organized constituency. The court did not rule municipal health inspectors need a w arrant to protect the gastrointestinal tracts of expense ac­ count businessmen dining in our better restaurants. W arrants will not be re­ quired to assure the good working order of elevators zooming up to the 85th floor tower executive suite. In short, the work environment of the managerial classes will continue to be safeguarded The federal governm ent’s activities on behalf of aviation are not about to be re g a rd e d a s re g u la to ry ty ra n n y . Remeber whose fannies repose in the wider seats of the first class section of most any airliner. The wonder is that the Safety and Health Administration has any regula­ tion demanding enforcement inspection. On the sam e day that the Supreme Court was discovering that even the most sul­ furous chemical corporation has Fourth Amendment rights, President C arter’s Council of Econom ic Advisers was ordering the same Health and Safety Ad­ m inistration not to publish rules limiting worker exposure to cotton dust in the spinning m ills Council c h a irm a n Charles Sehultze said he feared the rules in fla tio n a ry e ffe c t would have an because they would require the industry to spend hundreds of millions of dollars on equipment to clean up the air the nonworkers breathe. According to ad­ m inistration econom ists this expen­ diture would be passed along to the con­ sumer while preventing a m ere 284 cases of byssonisis every year Byssonisis is the name of the lung disease you get from breathing cotton dust The ghoulish computations of the ad­ m inistration economists have d eter­ mined no doubt not very accurately — that it would cost 1440.000 a year to p re­ vent each case of byssonisis. That’s too much unless you are one of the mill hands who notices that each month it gets to be a little harder to breathe The Amalgamated Textile Workers Union protested but it is too feeble an organization to bother with. Cotton dust regulation has been kicking around for six years through three different ad­ m inistrations, two Republican and one Democrat Thus the court’s decision goes along with much powerful bipartisan thinking What’s desired is a bureau that does nothing to secure occupational health and safety, but that can be pointed out whenever too many people start wonder­ ing if they’re getting cancer in their envelopes with their paychecks. For the job of reducing an institution to a nullity while keeping the name and outward appearance of substance the Supreme Court is a perfect instrum ent. Where Congress would have to take much political heat if it repealed th* basic occupational safety and health law, the nine black gown<*d Sup! ernes can ac the same ends bv stealthy complish castration In the decades following the Civil War the court was able to nullify the 14th Amendment for blacks while leaving ii in th** Constitution In like manner th** first years of the 20th century saw the court keep the Sherman Antitrust Act on the law books, but in the course of a series of rulings make it inapplicable arui un**n forceable except maybe as a device to bust labor unions In this case the court never came dose to voiding the law However by r«*quiring search w arrants it has increased the amount of paperwork this already rather inefficient organ of government must now process Not that the chances of any place of business ever being inspected was less than a long shot before the rul­ ing. There are only a couple of thousand inspectors for four or five million shops and offices. 'The Occupational Safety and Health Administration has often been officious, bureaucratic and ineffectual It has done any number of stupid, laughable things but learning how to protect people in a hi-tech society full of chemicals and microwaves is a form of regulation we don’t yet know how to do well The Court s decision, which will increase the paperwork, the confusion, the litigation and the costs may help those nine geezers to jump up two points in the Gallup Poll but it s no contribution toward solving a real problem * 1978 King Features Syndicate T h e Da il y T e x a n ..................................Mark Richardson . .................. ................Gary Fendier Editor Managing Editor.......................................................................... Victoria Loe Assistant Managing Editor Assistant to the Editor News Editor Associate News Editor Sports Editor A ssociate Sports Editor Arts and Entertainment Editor Images Editor Features Editor Photo Editor General Reporters ......... Monty Jones .......... ...............Janet Peavy ............................... Martha McClure .............Laura Tuma Da mood Benmngfield Kelly Kay Mary Day Scott Bowles Jim Thomas Mark Dooley. Carl Hoover. Donald Howard, Michael Hurd. John McMillan, Michael P ern Karen Rosen Jann Snell Margaret Watson. Janet Wilson ............................... tty Editor Audrey Cielinski Stall W riter............................................................................... Scott Awbrey ........................................Steve Woolard. Mark Ivey News Assistants .................................................................Vicky Thomas Editorial Assistant Dan Blumberg, Anne Telford Entertainment Assistants Assistant Sports Editor Deborah K Mann Sports Assistant ...........................................................Bob Gennarelli Make-up Editor Thomas Kessler Wire Editor ................................................... Teresa Sheppard Copy Editors Karen Moore, Kilt Walker, Robin Scofield Photographers ............................................................... Lucian Perkins Artists Joe Walton. Berke Brethed Copyright I VTI! Tews Student Pubtic-aUuas Reproduction at My part at tilts pwbticatioa is pr til ted without the •* press perm ission at Texas Student Public auutui - Opinions espresso^ ti* TV I tally Texan are those al Ute editor or the writer at the article and ii the I w.ersity administration the Board of Regents or the Texas are not nee* - an!v thus* Student Publications Board of < iperating Trustees On letters Firing line letters should • be typed and triple spaced • be 30 lines or less. 60 characters per line • address issues, not personalities • include name address and phone number of contributor Mail letters to The Firing Line, The Daily Texan Drawer D, UT Station. Austin Tx 78712 or bring letters to the Texan office in basement of the TSP building The Daily Texan reserves the right to edit tetters to the editor for proper length and clarity On columns Editorial columns should • be typed and triple space • be 80 lines or less 60 characters per line • include name. address and phone number of contributor M columns to Editorial Department, The Daily Texan, Drawer D, UT S Hon Austin Tx 78712. or bring columns to the Texan office in the ba ment of the TSP building The Daily Texan reserves the right to edit columns for proper length and clarity. Population shift seen Cities falling behind rural trend By M AR K IVEY Daity Tgxan SUiff W hile many people packed their bags in the 80s and swarmed to the tog city in search of fame and fortune, the reverse is true of the 70s migrators, according to John Burghardt. University Bureau of Business Research associate Whereas large metropolitan areas were previously growing fa lte r than small ones,’ Burghardt said, ‘ the rural exodus has stopped and a reverse trend is evident.” Since 1970 the population growth rate for U.S. metropolitan areas dropped from 1.6 to 8 percent, while increasing in non- to metropolitan areas Burghardt to 12 percent, according from 4 Texas, which is largely rural, was no exception. The two largest ( ities, Houston and Dallas, noted decreases ii growth rates from 3 3 to 2 2 percent Meanwhile the number of people moving to smaller cities, with populations of 57,000 or less, in ­ creased from a meager 4 percent to 12 percent. THERE ARE A multitude of reasons for the widespread rural renaissance.’ Burghardt said, but he listed three as un­ mistakable • Changing lifestyles - older people retiring and settling down in rural areas and younger workers and college graduates relocating in small towns to find employment and gain m obility • Increases in mineral industries - for exam­ ple oil drilling in West Texas has opened up many new jobs in a largely rural area • I ho k of amenities and space for industries in large metropolitan areas to In addition trend Burghardt has also been analyzing the “ sunbelt phenomenon” the rapid growth of the southern states in the past 15 years the population decentralization “ In the 1970s, Texas and the South have suddenly become focal points of national population growth, ’ Burghardt stated. “ The principal source of growth has shifted from natural in ­ crease (birth rates over death rates) to in-migration (flow of people to the Southi." he explained FROM 1980 TO 1970 the U.S. population grew from 179.3 m illion to 203 3 million, a 1.3 percent annual growth rate. Meanwhile the South’s population increased from 54,961,000 to 62.812,000 and Texas from 9,579.000 to 11,197,000 -1.4 and 1.6 percent increases Reviewing the 1970-75 statistics, Burghardt pointed out an acceleration rather than a reversal of the southern migration as Texas population continued to escalate at a 1.8 percent rate and the South enjoyed a 1.6 percent annual increase The trend issues,” said raises d ifficu lt public policy Burghardt As the geographic distribution of population shifts, the regional balance of political and economic power in the na­ tion is bound to shift also.” Breaking the state down into six demographic regions, Burghardt noted the greatest increase in the Texas border region accelerating from a .5 percent rate to a very high 3 per­ cent rate Meanwhile, people are moving into Central Texas at a rate of 2 4 percent yearly compared with 1.6 percent in the 60s ONLY K ILLE E N (4 5 percent) and College Station (4.5 per­ cent) are attracting more migrants than Austin (4.2 per cent) per year Burghardt discusses population trends in Texas and other Sunbelt states in an article in the June issue of Texas Business Review Water Commission denies request for disqualification I he Texas W ater C om m ission Wednesday denied a Lower Colorado River Authority request that Water C om m ission m em ber D orsey B Hardeman be disqualified from hearing a Colorado River Municipal Water D istrict application to build a West Texas dam. Hardeman, a form er state senator from San Angelo, represented the City of San Angelo and the Upper Colorado River Authority in previous perm it hearings in 1965 and 1966 supporting the request to build the dam The current application would give the CRMWD, based in Big Spring, the right the to build Stacy Dam on Colorado River, above Lake Buchanan. The proposed dam site is 26 miles southeast of Ballinger, approximately 15 miles below the confluence of the Concho and Colorado Rivers. Opponents of the application include the City of Austin, LCRA, the Lake Travis Improvement Association and irrigation companies downstream of Lake Travis. They contend there is no unappropriated water in the Colorado. LCRA OFFICIALS say the proposed dam project would seriously reduce I ravis and Buchanan water Lakes levels, their capability to impairing generate low-cost hydro-electricity and p ro v id e w a te r fo r d o w n stre a m agricultural and industrial users. LCRA officials also contend the pro­ ject would impound about half a m illion acre feet of water and would divert ap­ proximately 191.000 acre feet each year from the chain of lakes. In its protest against the application, LCRA says the project would im pair th e a u t h o r i t y ’ s w a t e r r i g h t s downstream granted under a dozen per­ m its and l l certified filings. The commissioners briefly conferred a fte r hearing both the LCRA and CRMWD attorneys and ruled that Hardeman's past representation would not bias his judgment on the CRMWD’s present application A fter the commission’s ruling of Hardeman s qualifications attorneys for the LCRA and the City of Austin asked for a delay in the hearings until they had additional tim e to study pretrial materials. The commissioners approved the request and scheduled further hearings on the proposed dam application for July ll. C A N YOU SPARE S5000 FOR 6 MONTHS? WE WILL PAY YOU . . . . P a g e 6 □ T H E D A I L Y T E X A N [J T h u r s d a y, J u n e 8, 1978 d o n t LOOK NOW ... BUT I T S T R A D E - I N TI ME 'ill A ¥ I Ii AUliuUUliUi Him lot* jSprin&stoen I a u to m u m OnTheEdjft O f ’l b w i i WH KtthlHJ »*»«>»• M AH Nmhl Hotoarx U H * tngkt t h * tMrtNrt t h * PltMtMMHl I and Attorn Him m h I AV mi MTUME KISS THIS WORLD GOODBYT •minding JWBiPufVHn I h t C l u w l Q t i foVim I unfcyCon«l«Mal : rn ''ST. DERRINGER l l I NM K l V I SO KO M W I K r i ) SI IO O I MM tot hiding H A i r t I F u n n y M k k u g M H u m ) r n * * * . (to n. A ikI CH t iw a ft/ Ac hon I P o A n n tf "V fe U la u a A d H ELECTRIC GUITARIST •TH kntovg Nam A xk Or. 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ONLY I, SHARE N E W A T U N I V E R S I T Y C R E D I T U N I O N J U L Y CERTIFICATES r a t e CERTIFICATES OF DEPOSIT, i n t e r e s t e a r n s f r o m d a t e OF P U R C H A S E , P A Y S Q U A R T E R L Y . * ( S U B S T A N T I A L f i x e d f i x e d t e r m , a r e P E N A L T Y F O R E A R L Y W I T H D R A W A L ) University V j W . SOTH A N D C E D A R STREETS 4 7 6 - 4 6 7 6 ® NOM SERVING UNIVERSITY FACULTY A N D STAFF REG ULA TtONS R R O H IB IT ^ P A Y M E N T O F D IV ID E N D S IU O F A VA H A B L E E A R N IN G S Author lauds Texas Regional writer heads conference By STEVEM L. WOOLARD Dfltlfy Texan Staff T h a t p a p e r w a s In 1963 th e New Y ork T im es said he w rote w ith “ stu d ied a rtle ssn e ss but sophistication keeps popping th ro u g h ." t a l k i n g a b o u t W illiam A. O w ens, a so u th w e stern w rite r of no te who h as since ed u cated his co llea g u es of th e N orth in the a r t of T w a s sto ry te llin g to I n s t i t u t e A native of Pin Hook ( L a m a r Coun­ ty). the p ro fe sso r e m e r itu s a t C o lu m ­ bia U niversity has r etu rn ed this state to conduct the Southwest Writing Workshop in th e College of H um anitie s S l i m m e r in L i t e r a t u r e , through Ju ly 14 th e *4T h e c o u r s e w ill d ra w c u ltu ra l re so u rc e s of T exas and the S outhw est a s su b je c ts for w riting, fa m ilia r ground for O w ens w hose m a ­ jo r w orks a r e se t in those regions His le ctu res, d ealing w ith the c r a ft of fic­ tion, w ill be open to the public fro m 8:80 to IO: OO a rn ev e ry T hursday. fro m T he g r a y - h a i r e d a u t h o r s p o r t s a generously rounded m id sectio n , has a firm handshake and w alks w ith unusual confidence and ag ility for a m an of 73 I ve fo r u sin g “ T exas has the ric h e s t c u ltu ra l co m ­ b in a tio n th e found m a te ria l of a re g io n ," O w ens said, “ but one sh o u ld n 't ap p ro a ch w riting about a region to exploit th a t reg io n ," b u t th e u n i v e r s a l c h a ra c te ris tic s of m an i l l u s t r a t e to As a p ro fe sso r a t C olum bia during the 60s. O w ens had a firsth a n d look a t stu d e n t a c tiv ism w hen stu d e n ts evicted the p resid e n t of th a t u n iv e rsity from his office, one floor above O w ens’, in 1968 F ive y e a rs la te r , one of those stu d en ts who w as on th e o th e r side of the b a rric a d e rev iew ed d an Ow ens book, “ A S eason of W e a th e rin g ." and re fe rre d to those rio to u s d ay s by sa y ­ ing. " I w as im p re sse d by th e im p o r­ ta n c e he placed on th e U n iv ersity , not n e c e ssa rily on ed u c atio n p er se. but r a th e r the sig n ific an c e he saw in the in­ stitu tio n its e lf." to a O w ens has done ex ten siv e stu d ies on the Anglo and A fro c u ltu re s in T exas, and th e Cajun- le sse r ex ten t F re n ch , T exas-M exican. Czech and G erm a n c u ltu re s “ T hese all com e to g e th e r to m a k e th e rich n e ss th at I ’m talking about, he said, adding th at w h erev e r you h ave tw o d iffe ren t ethnic groups you h av e a p o ten tial for con flict a s w ell a s a beneficial m ixing of cu sto m s and values. O nce he u n d ersto o d the values he in­ h erited cu ltu ra lly , he began to see and un d erstan d th e ex iste n ce of sim ilia r values in o th e r c u ltu re s. O w ens sa y s O w ens is w ritin g an in troduction for a book on th e Big T hicket, an a re a of virtu a lly unspoiled T ex as b eau ty w hich is being in­ te re sts. th re a te n e d by lu m b e r His happy, w ea th e re d fa c e show s c re a s e s from th e y e a rs of long nights of uncom prom ising w ork, but W illiam O w ens, a T ex a s w rite r, is still going stro n g Rights to memoir settled Haldeman book excerpts stir dispute ® 1978 New Y ork T im es N E W YORK - N ew sw eek and T he New Y ork T im es Co. have rea ch ed a s e ttle m e n t in th e ir d isp u te o v er N ew sw eek s e a rly re le a se of e x c e rp ts of H. R. H a ld e m a n ’s m e m o ir "T h e E nds of P o w e r." O fficials of both co m p an ies d eclined to give d e ta ils about the ag re em e n t. ‘ By a g re e m e n t, w e have m ad e an a m ic a b le s e ttle m e n t,” said Sydney G ruson, ex ecu tiv e vice p re sid e n t of T he New Y ork T im es Co It s an a m ic a b le s e ttle m e n t,’ said M ark J . M eagher, p re s i­ dent of The W ashington P o st Co. T he d isp u te involved pre-p u b licatio n rig h ts to th e book, w hich was published by T im es Books, a su b sid iary of The New Y ork T im e s Co. T hose rig h ts had been sold to 30 n ew sp a p ers in th e U nited S tate s and to N ew sw eek m ag azin e, w hich had re p o rte d ­ ly signed a c o n tra c t for $125,000 to publish 30,000 w ords in tw o in sta llm e n ts beginning Feb. 20. T he pre-p u b licatio n rig h ts included a c la u se insuring con­ fid en tiality of th e m a te ria l until th e p ublication d a te . H ow ever. on F eb 16. the W ashington P o st, w hich did not h ave a c o n tra c t to p rin t the e x c e rp ts, published a long re p o rt about the book, scooping N ew sw eek an d the o th e r p u b lic atio n s T he W ashington P ost n ew sp ap er is a division of th e W ashington P ost Co., w hile N ew sw eek is a w holly ow ned su b sid iary of th e p a re n t com pany L a te r th a t day. N ew sw eek re le a se d its 300.000-word e x c e rp t to v arious new s ag e n cies. The T im e s a p p a re n tly contended th a t th is w as a b rea ch of th e c o n tra c t and th a t it would h u rt sa le s of the book P ublished e s tim a te s sin ce th en h a v e placed the losses to The T im es in connection w ith th e book a t betw een $350 OOO and $500,000 O ne of the issues betw een N ew sw eek and T he T im es, a c c o r ­ ding to M eagher, p re sid e n t of th e P o st Co., w as w h eth er N ew sw eek would a d h e re to th e o rig in a l te rm s of the c o n tra c t or w h eth e r it should be m a d e to pay m o re b ec au se of its e a rly re le a s e of the m a te ria l. He d eclined to sa y how this had been se ttle d . M ore than 400,000 co p ies of "T h e E n d s of P o w e r" w ere se n t out to bookstores, ac co rd in g to a sp o k esm an fo r The T im es, who said th a t sa les w e r ^ ex p e cted to be aro u n d 300.000 copies ... ■ Ll Soviets bla U.S. for cooperation lap ( I P I ) MOSCOW T h e Soviet U nion re a c te d sw iftly W ednesday to w hat it called P re sid e n t C a r te r ’s " s tra n g e " challenge, saying it had long ago decided to seek co o p e ra ­ tion over co n fro n tatio n b u t in W ashington " th e choice has still not been m a d e ’ T he o fficial T ass new s agen- p rio rity w ill be to fill th re e full tim e fa c u lty p o sitio n s opening Sept I.” she sa id W e re going to spend a lot of tim e re c ru itin g .is soon as “ Since possible, th e re a r e so few schools that o ffe r d o c to r a te s in a d v e r Using. I a m going to h a v e to look out fo r the lew q ualified people th e re a re D r C unningham rec eiv e d a in m a s te r s an d d o c t o r a te m a rk e tin g fro m M ich ig an S ta te I nivei sity, a law d eg re e from the C atholic U niversity of Sao P au lo . B raz il, an d a m aster s in m a rk e tin g fro m the School of B u sin ess Ad m in istra tio n of th e G etulio V argas F o undation H er husband, Dr W illiam C unningham , is tin* a s so c ia te dean for g ra d u a te p ro g ra m s in th e U n iv e rsity ’s G ra d u a te School of B usiness look issue point-by-point cy with C a rte r s policy speech to the g rad u a tin g c la ss of the ll S N aval A cadem y in An­ napolis, Md. The tone of th e a rtic le was defensive THE QUICK resp o n se to. Carter’s r e m a r k s w a s u n ­ usual T he Soviet leadership^ generally tak es se v eral days* to fo rm u la te a rep ly to a ma-* jo r U.S. policy s ta te m e n t. a In f r o m d i s p a t c h Washington. T ass said C a r t e r had “ laid a spacial acce n t on r iv a lry ’’ betw een th e super* powers and devoted m uch of his speech to “ propaganda in­ ventions in o r d e r to justify the U S A s and NATO’s c laim s t o r o l e of a g l o b a l t h e polic em an ," CA R T E R TOLD the Naval A c a d e m y th e S o v ie t t h a t Union could "c h oose e ith e r confrontation or coo p e ratio n " but that the U nited S ta te s w as p r e p a r e d to m e e t e i t h e r choice In answ er, T a ss said: t h e to s a y " T h i s s t a t e m e n t s o u n d s s t r a n g e , le a st. I n d e e d , P r e s i d e n t C a r t e r knows well th a t it w as the Soviet Union that chose long ago and Irrevocably the road of peaceful coexistence, the road of deepening th e r e la x a ­ tion of tension and th a t it has been upholding th e se a im s consistently and un dev iatin g ­ ly. (In W ashington, N ational, S e c u rity A d v iser Z bigniew the- Br z e z i n s k i d is c o u n te d l a s s re p o rt He said the re a e -' tion had been "q u ic k " and i t would ta k e som e tim e for th e S oviets to digest the sp eech, w hich h e c h a r a c te r iz e d aa " b a la n c e d ." ) T ass ad m onished C a rte r for failing to m ention proposals by the S oviet Union and o th e r nations b e fo re th e c u r r e n t Special Session of the U N I G eneral A ssem bly on D isa r­ m a m en t m i g h t It dism issed h ts c h a rg e s of an ex c essiv e buildup of S oviet a n d m i l i t a r y the S oviet alleg a tio n s U nion sought its f o r m of g o v e r n m e n t a s "in v e n tio n s." to ex p o rt that ( ARTER, IT said, was " p u ttin g (he the b la m e a t w rong d o o r" by alleging the S o v ie t a n d C uban iii A frica w ould h a rm the canst) ra c ia l’ of ’» ju s tic e in dependence and ro le "B ut, evidently in the ruling circles of W a sh in g to n th e Choice h a s s t i l l n o t b e e n m a d e ’’ In A frica, T ass said. “ T h e ' U nited S ta te s is known to take in v a ria b ly th e r a c is t r e g im e s ." the sid e of William A. Owens Ad department gains new head D r Isabella C unningham , a s so c ia te p ro fesso r of a d v e r­ tising and a sp e cia list in inter national m a rk e tin g an d adv er t i s i n g . b e c o m e w i l l I n n e r c h airw o m an of s ity ’s D e p a rtm e n t of A dver tising Aug I, su cceed in g Dr W illiam M indak the A n a tiv e of B razil, Clin third Hingham beco m es w om an to hold a d e p a rtm e n t c h a ir position a t the U niversi ty. th e " I grew up an d w orked in a m an s w orld all m y lif e ," sh e said. I w as th e firs t w om an to g et a P h.I). from M ichigan S ta te I w as the only w om an in m y first m a s te r s p ro g ra m in B razil, and so far w h ere I have w orked I have been th e o n l y w o m a n r e a l challenge." It s a C unningham has se rv e d a s acting dean of the C e n te r of B usiness A d m in istratio n and a s s i s t a n t p r o f e s s o r ot m a rk e tin g at St Edward’s U n i v e r s i t y , a s s i s t a n t p ro fe sso r at th e V arg as F o u n ­ dation and as a high school in s tru c to r in B razil. She n o te s t hat “ o u r to p 1978 TEXAS UNION SUMMER CLASSES Registration for Summer classes w ill be held in the Texas Union Ballroom on: Thursday, June 8 Friday, June 9 9 a.rn.-9 p.m . 9 a.rn.-4 p.m . CROCHET DANCERCISE DEFENSIVE DRIVING DISCO DANCE DRAWING ENERGY CONSERVATION EXERCISE FOLK DANCE FOREIGN CAR REPAIR FRENCH FOR FUN FRISBEE GOURMET COOKING GUITAR HATHA YOGA IMPROVISATION & CLASSES: AEROBIC DANCE AMERICAN CAR REPAIR ASTROLOGY BALLET BANJO BARTENDING BASIC DARKROOM BELLYDANCING BICYCLE MAINTENANCE BILLIARDS BLUES HARMONICA BOWLING BREADMAKING BRIDGE BUYING & OW N IN G A CAR CAMERA BASICS CERAMIC SCULPTURE CHA YON RUY COLOR PROCESSING CONVERSATIONAL SPANISH COOKING WITH FRESH FOODS LANDSCAPING POPULAR MUSIC JAZZ DANCE JEWELRY CONSTRUCTION JUGGLING Kl AIKIDO KUNG FU LIFE DRAWING MODERN DANCE NEEDLEPOINT OKINAWAN KARATE PERSONAL FINANCIAL PLANNING PERSONAL JOURNALS PRACTICAL LAW SAILING SCUBA DIVING SIGN LANGUAGE SKILLS IN LIVING ALONE SKYDIVING SUCCULENT PLANTS TAP DANCE TOUCH DANCE 20TH CENTURY MUSIC VEGETARIAN COOKING WATERCOLOR WINE INTRODUCTION WINES OF CALIFORNIA WINES OF FRANCE For inform ation on which classes are closed, call 4 7 1 -3 6 5 4 . Ageless and Forever...Evergreen Orange Blossom has created a tim eless m asterpiece for you an Evergreen bridal set, with a co m p lim en ta ry diam ond “engagem ent p en d a n t ' just for selecting this beautiful set S elect the diam ond size and gold color y o u ’ll cherish for a lifetime .. and remem ber, O range Blossom fully warrants your rings .. fo r o ne full year after purchase Evergreen ageless and forever _________ ___ SAIL THROUGH THIS SUMMER i L e a r n to live a h i g h - e n e r g y life w i t h ease. Workshops available in: Yoga & Guided M editation Esalen Massage & Sensitivity Training Therapeutic Pressure Point Techniques Rapid Learning & Concentration Nutrition THE HUMAN GROWTH STUDIO A holistic health center 706-B West 34»h Phone: 452-6053 Special student rates for massage: $12 per hr. $8 per M hr. (with this ad and student LD.) LUIGI'S restaurant Pizza - Spaghetti - Salad Sandwich - Beer - W ine Let us pay for part of your next pizza *2.00 OFF ANY LARGE PIZZA OF YOUR CHOICE v al id thru June 18, 1 9 7 8 21 OO G uadalupe 4 7 2 -2 3 2 1 IMAGES b y B o b E lliotts 2 4 2 6 GUADALUPE, ON THE DRAG Disco C l o t h e s f o r th e Fashion M i n d e d — Th e S h o p f o r G u y s & Gals. m uum uu* We do free alterations. Open 11-5:30 18K Gold with Flawless D iam ond Engagement Ring from $620. On th e Drag 9-5 A llen d ale V illage 9 5 Westgate Mall IO 9 Va CO-OP PARKING LOT SALE Saturday, June IO 9:30 a.m .-5:00 p.m. 23rd at San Antonio Street JUST BEHIND THE UNIVERSITY CO-OP BUILDING Clearance Sale of Odds and Ends — New, Old, Damaged, Demonstrator, Good, Bad and In­ different Merchandise. At Low, Low Prices — All Sales Final — As Is. Good Items - CHEAP! Bad Items - CHEAP, CHEAP! Dawgs - RIDICULOUS! White Elephants - M AKE US AN O FFER ! Co-Op Parking Lot Sale Conditions of Sale All sales final — no refunds, no exchanges. Nothing guaranteed by the Co-Op. Check condition of item before you buy. A ll items sold "as is." Cash, Co-Op charge, Master Charge, or Visa. Check accepted for amount only, if approved. Page 8 □ T H E D A IL Y T E X A N □ Thursday, June 8, 1978 ARE PEOPLE LIKE YOU SLAB SLICED BACON FAMILY PACK PORK CHOPS CEMTERS ANO ENOS MIXED $429 POUND DECKER DUALITY POUND | CENTRAL AMERICAN V BANANAS GOLDIN YELLOW POUND 20 BANQUET FROZEN S S K m DINNERS CHICKER NOODLE. MACARONI I BEEF OR SPA6HETTI ANO AMAT BALLS ll OUNCE SIZE 43 FROZEN OKI© SPEC! alchem SPECIAL SPECIAL HI-DRI TOWELS ROYAL MAIO COTTAGE CHEESE LARDE AID SMALL CURO I 'A S LOW FAT OR HOMO MILK IBF- $«39 PARK MANOR c SINGLE K NOLL K 12-02. JAMON 1 4 9 SAVE WITH H.E.B. LOW PRICES BALLON J O B .... VIUAG ! PARK TUNA CHUNK HARTIX CUT H OZ. GREEN BEANS un GREAT WESTERN (EANS " 59 25 33 RANCH STYLE ii! 1 VILLAGE PARK JU OZ. BOX M ACARO N I DINNER 20 55 PUFFS IOX OF 200 FACIAL TISSUE PLAZA POUND SALTINES .ii PETER PAN PEANUT BUTTER VILLAGE PARK SUGAR s.. PARK ROYAL FLOUR SLB BAG PARK LANE Prices G o o d Thursday June 8 Through S a tu rd a y June IO ALUMINUM FOIL i m ' 39 S105 S I OS 59 37 Copernicus ... 'Continued from Page I i The HHC will advertise the book as missing in a journal of rare book dealers to warn them against purchasing it. Leach said TMK MOST EXPENSIVE works at the HRC. such as Poe s Tamerlane, valued at $125,000. are kept in a safe, Leach said When you consider that a great number of our manuscripts are valuable, you cannot put them all within a vault,” she said You have to put them in the stacks ” Theft of these kinds of collections items has become a major Eldon Sutton, vice president for research, said “ It problem may be that we have to beef up security " Such added precautions against theft might force a diversion of funds from other activities at the library, Sutton said. However, John Payne, acting director of the HRC, said security at the HRC is adequate and the book probably was not stolen During the five years that HRT collections have been housed in the Harry Ransom Center, books have been moved at least six times as a result of different cataloging procedures, he said. "MY THEORY IS that it simply has been missheived because of the reshuffling of the collections,’' Payne said. Of the 713 books reported missing from last year’s inventory, about half were later found by searching the shelves, Leach said Leach speculated that many of the books determined to be missing from the HRC would not have been if there were enough staff members to conduct a continuous shelf check Most libraries use ongoing shelf checks, but two years ago the lack of staff capacity forced HRC administrators to begin an­ nual one-week inventories during which the library is closed, Payne said In addition to using television cameras in the reading rooms, the HRC currently guards against thefts by obtaining multiple records of checkouts and by having a receptionist inspect materials leaving the library. Payne said ‘New’ liberal arts college Silber criticizes changes In 1970 Dr John Silber, the dean of the largest college in the University, locked horns with Fran^ Erwin, then a regent, in a battle over management of the College of Liberal Arts The fracas which ensued resulted in the firing of Silber and the split of the College of Arts and Sciences into the College of Humanities, the C o lle g e of S o c ia l and Behavioral Sciences, the College of Natural Sciences and the Division of General and Comparative Studies Eight years later the smoke has cleared and the passions have cooled And out of the ashes of the College of Arts and Sciences rises a College of in Liberal Arts, starting September Next fall the Colleges of Humanities and Social and Behavioral Sciences, plus the Division of General and Com­ parative Studies w ill be reunited in the new College of Liberal Arts With the excep­ tion of the College of Natural Sciences, the College of Liberal Arts contains the same entities Silber ran when he was dean But is it the same? I think they are totally different,’ Silber. now presi­ dent of Boston University, said in a telephone interview with the Texan ‘T m so far from (the situation) to ade­ quately comment on it, but without the sciences, a liberal arts college cannot be a true liberal arts college. "The study of science was the first humanity to balance theology ... It is very much a part of liberal arts,” he said. When asked if the inclusion of the College of Natural Sciences would make the new co lleg e d iffic u lt to ad­ minister. Silber replied, " I see no problem with the size of the programs. The difficul­ ty lies in articulating the lines of administration within the college. “ A broad general education is essential to be qualified for life, to enjoy life fully,” he said, "and I think no one is qualified without studying history, literature, philosophy or science. “ Liberal arts are here to stay," Silber added. “They may wax and wane from time to time. but they’re like a gib­ bous moon: you may only see a crescent, but give it IO or 12 days. It will come back.’’ Water plan accepted West gives mixed approval *1978 New York Times D EN V ER — President Carter seems to have managed the difficult feat of shaping a national water policy that does not infuriate anyone in the West The reactions of several western gover­ nors could even be categorized as “ mildly pleased, with reservations ” But western environmentalists were more critical of the policy announced by the president Tuesday than were their eastern counterparts, and there was some concern that the new policy will adversely affect agriculture. Gov Richard I) lam m of Colorado said. "The West can definitely claim a limited victory . ” Of the 104 proposals originally considered for the new water policy, he said, 30 would have had negative implications for the West. He said that only two or three of those 30 negative" proposals remained in the policy as it was announced and that the western governors would continue to oppose them GOV. EDWARD HERSCHLER of Wyoming said, " I ’m pleased to see that we western governors had some in­ fluence on the final decision and par­ ticularly pleased to see that one state­ ment that the federal government will not pre-empt state or local water responsibilities " Hersehler s chief reservation about the policy concerned future inter­ pretations of it by Washington bureaucrats, who, he said, are fre­ quently not fam iliar with western problems. Gov Bruce Babbitt of Arizona said, "It s a hell of a lot better than the original proposals. My one big disap­ pointment is that they really have to go a lot further and a lot more quickly in quantification of federal water reserve rights There’s no reason they shouldn’t get that done The lack of progress there is disappointing." Babbitt said he liked the part of the plan that increases federal funding for state water plan­ ning by about 10-fold, or $25 million He said Carter’s proposal to have states share the costs in federal projects — IO per cent of potentially profitable water projects and 5 per cent of the others — will have no significant effect in Arizona. HOWEVER, there is a distinct split among western governors on the cost- sharing proposal, with the poorer states disliking the idea. Some western governors seem to like the idea of being able to "vote with their dollars” on which projects they need most and want started first. But Stephen E . Roberts, state water engineer for New Mexico, said, "This is going to be very difficult for a state like New Mexico with small population and small revenues. This puts us at a hell of a disadvantage." When told that other states liked the idea, he said. "Sure, California. That puts them in great style. They’ve been getting the lion's share of water pro­ jects for years anyway.” Roberts is also suspicious of the new federal plan­ ning money to be made available to the states He sees it as a potential "wedge” to encroach on state water administration. GOV. JOHN EVANS of Idaho said he is both pleased and disappointed with the policy. He said he is especially pleased with its endorsement of state water rights and its emphasis on con­ servation. "But my acceptance of the policy ends where discussion of the states’ shared funding of federal water projects begins, he said, adding that the is IO p e rc e n t p ro p o s a l "unreasonable and therefore would be almost unattainable without implemen­ tation of some long-term federal loan program.” ‘ I H a rris Sherm an, d ire c to r of Colorado’s Department of Natural Resources, expressed the long-term view of many of the West’s more serious environmentalists. He said, “ Conservation, consistency, discount rates, all these other almost technical points are not goals in and of themselves. It s nice to have all the regulations of a ll the d ifferen t departments in accord, but that doesn’t set any water goals. Growth, land use, the kinds of institutions you want to en­ courage and discourage, those are the kinds of questions water policy needs to address.” Gov. Scott Matheson of Utah was one of several officials who expressed con­ cern that the president’s proposal for a final federal review was sim ply another layer in the bureaucracy and i6 unnecessary. U SE T E X A N C L A S S I F I E D S CALL 471-5244 Free delivery L a rg e st a llo w e d o n c a m p u s Shoe Shop e m a k e a n d e p a ir boot] GENUINE SHEEP SKIN RUGS BtauttM Colors MO00 Natural & ★ S A D D L E S ^ E N G L IS H W E S T E R N C a p it o l S a d d le r y 1614 L a v a c a A u stin , Texas 4 7 8-9309 THREE CU. FT. *24 FOR ENTIRE SUMMER UNIVERSITY REFRIGERATOR 474-1492 >7n » n » n 7>rr » n Hillel Sum m er Program s Classes begin M onday, June 12 M o n . 7 pm 8 pm Pottery C lasse s D ra m a G ro u p (R eader's Theater) W ed. 7 pm Critical Issues Facing the C on tem p orary Jew: W h o is a Jew, The Right to Die, H o m o se xu a lity Fri. 7:15 pm S h a b b a t W orship Services (every w eek) for more information on all programs call Hillel 4 7 6 -0 1 2 5 2105 San A ntonio » f i 7 >rr » n » n » n BURNT O RA N G E UT S H IR T S A U S T IN & T E X A S S O U V E N IR S H IR T S A R M A D IL L O S H IR T S L A D IE S S U M M E R T O P S ! ti Ii * u r * i n f a n t a d u l t X L T. Schert alto has: Vartoty of S H O R T S P R O T E A M C A P S C A N V A S B A G S penoruilizeit gifta DOBIE M A U 477-H S 2 The Economical Gourmet Menu. Thursday, June 8, 1978 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Page 9 It features Eagle Bonded Beef. W e d are you to c a ll it stew . The Cordon Bleu chefs have a great respect for food ... for the texture and the flavor of fresh garden vegetables, for instance. They know that it simple twist on an old recipe can make a world of difference.They also know that the eye must be pleased with a dish before tile stomach can be satisfied. The Cordon Bleu of Paris, France has enjoyed an enviable reputation as the training school for some of the best chefs in the world. Their reputation has been growing since before the turn of the century. And you can get their secret for a sublime version of beef stew which they call Boeuf Mode (BUFF' MOD), just by picking up a free recipe card at our meat counter this week. A sim p le shopping list. If you purchased beef bouillon last week for the Boeuf en Daube, you may still have enough in the cupboard Check to make sure there s at least a cup and a half left. Hut he sure to pick up cubed beef for tile stew, fresh stringbeans, carrots, small onions. W e’d suggest the small white boiling variety. Parsley, hay leaf, a pinch of thyme, a sprinkle of flour. Oil for browning the beef is an important ingredient, since it too lends its flavor to the final dish. L e t your budget m ake the choice. Obviously, a dish like this, which serves six, is kind to your budget. But then, so is most everything you purchase at Eagle. From our Bonded Beef, which is so good it met the standards of the Cordon Bleu ... so good, in fact, that we guarantee it for your satisfaction or your money back ... on through the fresh produce and all the name brand groceries, you’ll find our discount pricing policy at work ... plus a variety of ways to help you save money. Key Buys, unit pricing, our guaranteed value per measure program which assures you that the larger size of any item is always the better buy, and many more, which make shopping at Eagle a unique experience. So even though surveys have shown Eagle to be the consistent low price leader, we invite you to compare for yourself, using your own shopping list. That simple test will prove to you that Eagle is what discount is all about. Com e in now for your free copy of our exclusive Cordon Bleu recipe of the week (Build a full set of 12. Find them only at our meat counter.) The Beef that meets the standards of the Cordon Bleu. BLADE CUT CHUCK STEAK HEAVY MATURE BEEF . . . LD j|09 DONELESS CROSS RID ROAST HEAVY MATURE DEEF CHUCK..........................LD 2 0 9 DONELESS STEWING DEEF LARGE END RIB STEAK HEAVY MATURE DEEF . . . LD 7 BONE CHUCK STEAK HEAVY MATURE DEEF . . . LD LARGE END RID ROAST HEAVY MATURE N E F ......................... 7 DONE CHUCK ROAST HEAVY MATURI DEEF......................... 119 lo 1.98 LD 1.19 T OONE STEAK HEAVY MATURE REEF LOIN...................... IO 2.48 1 O d . ID 1.78 2.29 ID 2.19 LD 1.85 E-Z CUT CUDE STEAK HEAVY MATURE DEEF............................. DONE IN SIRLOIN STEAK HEAVY MATURE R E E F .................... DONE IN ROUND STEAK HFAVY MATURE R E E F ........................ TOP ROUND STEAK HEAVY MATURE DEEF DONELESS....... EXTRA LEAN GROUND DEEF . 2.05 . 0 lo 1.4V The evaluation and approval by the Cordon Dleu extends only to Eagle Donded Dee) products in this advertisement LD Fresh Meats Fresh Meats PORK LOIN SPARERIDS COUNTRY STYLE RID ENO........................ LO PORK LOIN ROAST SIRLOIN CUT AVG VT 3 LO S................ LD SLICED DEEF LIVER SKINLESS................................................... 1.55 1.55 to .77 Our P ric e Protection Policy guarantees these prices to be effective from Thursday, June 8th, through Wednesday, June 14th, 1978 Copyright 1978 by Lucky Stoles Inc All Rights Reserved Atees ore discounted except on government controlled items Limit Rights Reserved on Commercial So es SMOKED SAUSAGE HILL SHIRE PORK G DEEF.......................... LD SLICED DACON ROEGELEIN OSCAR MAYER SLICED DACOJ (THICK 2 LD PKG 3 88) 1 LD PKG 1 LO PKG 1.79 ^ I . 0 4 LADY LEE SLICED DACON ............... 1 LO PKG ¥.95 . , I . 4 1 Canned & Packaged Canned & Packaged POLISH DILL PICKLES I VLASIC . . 46 OZ JAR .99 J HUNTS I I HUNT S FRUIT COCKTAIL Qty 1 5 01 CAN HARVEST DAY COOKIES 5VARIETIES ...............12 0/ PKG • V I - \ A KETCHUP .............. 32 OZ DU .65 n I ,4V n A 24 OZ DOX 1 .UC A _ yr)/ DOX.OO 0 7 24 OZ OTI I .ZZ r MARS FUN SIZE CANDY A 3 VARIETIES 16OZ PKO p POST GRAPE NUT CEREAL A r CAKE FLOUR A WANSOOWN p LOG CADIN SYRUP A , COMPLETE PANCAKE MIX A AUNT JEMIMA r KRAFT PRESERVES A APRICOT Oft Pf ACH I HUNT S TOMATOES A |TAt IAN STYLE 1 8 OZ JAR .VU 0 14 0 / 1 AN • 4 mL 32 OZ OO' . C l A Q I ,4 V JD O / AN KOOL AID DRINK MIX I 10 QUART C, VARIETIES r WOLF DEEF STEW o ............. f KRAFT MAYONNAISE J 2 ^ . ....... 24oz can . 7 j J / J AR 1 . 1 4 SHASTA DEVERAGES f 16 varieties A REGULAR OR DIET ICHOW MEIN NOODLES CHUN KING a a 12 OZ < AN . I O 3 O Z C A N .38 0 r HARVEST DAY POTATOES A VHOtf r UPTON ICED TEA MIX A e RAMEN NOODLES A MARUCHAN < *• KEN 15 OZ C A N . 2 . 4 . QO )6< >/ CAN I .CV Ors ) OZ PKG . Z U PORK OR DCC F r veg-all vegetables 0 MIXED 1 DREAD/DUTTER PICKLES ^ F a n n in g s I 6 oz CAN .OU - - 14 i a r . O C [ LADY LEE ONIONS " M NC ED. r DLUE RIDDON RICE A f REALEMON LEMON JUICE 601 JAR .VV Q 26 0/ DOX. 4 V GLAD GARDAGE DAGS S M A L L ................................3 0 0 PKG . / V CORONET P A P E R T O W ELS 65 SF ROU . 49 SRO/ ( * N , Z O PRISSIES CAT FOOD UFFET 5 VARIETIES PRINT TOILET TISSUE ADY YOTT JPK, DYNAMO DETERGENT LIQUID.................................. GAL ort 4. OO COLD POWER DETERGENT A 112 SF PKG .4 / ...................... 84 OZ OO* 2.09 Delicatessen Health & Beau ty Aids ^ L A A L Z I L L L m LADY LEE X MEAT FRANKS Q < . 12 0 / PKG O « U U HUNGRY JACK ROLLS witsouRY cinnamon CREAM CHEESE PHILADELPHIA 110/.AN./V ft oz pk< > A j . 0 1 6 NA TURI SCENTS I DATH DEADS QQ pnutri plus vitamin d-i , 77 loos I * / / . 16QZ . V Y 1(X M,‘ rNUTRI-PLUS VITAMIN D-6 0 „ A ,f)0MG [ NUTRI - PLUS GELATIN 'O'. (CAIN ( AF* iou , 0 . 2 9 - „ 10*)S 2 . 2 9 SLICED AMERICAN CHEESE 1 / 0 / PKG KRAH SIN-.I I WHAP . o n I . O V v7Z.{,ZZ> I w U U t e 1 KRAFT SWISS CHEESE natural aged LADY LEE DOLOGNA SUCCO ........ . 6 0 / pkg 1.05 ” 7 3 7 7 7 ^ 7 7 7 1 GREEN BEANS a a O Q 6 OZ PKG - - YOUNG6 TENDER . / a ___________________ IO SLICED SMOKED MEATS UU0OICS Of (I OR HAM 5 0/ PKG . O O D airy & Frozen p PEPPERIDGE FARMS CAKES Q O I POUND Oft rARRO. IOO/ PKG . V V a CHEEZ WHIZ SPREAD 4 KRAFT CHEESE RI GUIA FT OR O C 4/1111 jai min' I 6oz iar . O'■J n 7 * H O K l F Y n F W n v j N L T U L W LADY LEE ORANGE JUICE CONC I N IRA IF NATURAL SUN LEMONADE CONCENtRAil Rf GULAR OR PINK . . 160/ C A N .V / MELONS WONDERFUL ( A U N G r\A 6 OZ CAN . Z I A f PA RKAYMARGARINE --------------------- MANGOS Health & Beauty Aids monctf''°M I . O t CIN . 0 4 . . . . _ . . . FRESH T W M LOOSE CARROTS A IL U S. NO 1 ................ LD • FRESH CANTALOUPE f UU OF FLAVOR - l U I .......................... (A • V — ----- ----— W —— V w .............................ID % M m M -........................................... CLOSE UP TOOTHPASTE 6 4 0 / FU DI ~ I . U Y p PRE HEAT CONDITIONER . A JERGENS 6OZ ASSORTED PLANTS I . U U 4 P O T S . . .............................. E A , , D 7 ^ “ J O Q T I the Lowest Food Total * Purchase 25 different items or more worth $20 or more. Only one item of each type may be used for the purpose of this comparison. Then take your shopping list to any other store of your choice Com pare item for item. price for price You don t have to buy anvthmq a second time If the other store s total is lower W E ll R E F U N D Y O U D O U B L E T H E D IF F E R E N C E O F T H E T W O T O T A L S ________ _ Hrs: M on.-Sat. 9 am-9 pm Sun. IO am-7 pm HOSE HANGER MOOED HEA TY GAUGE STEEL. ............. 2 PLY GARDEN HOSE VINYL . . . . . . GRASS SHEAR FORGED SHEARED .99 ... 3.19 3.74 HAND GARDEN TOOLS TROWELS WEEDER OR CULIIVAIOR................... LAP TRAY G R E A T f O f t S E R V I N G IN D E O SKEWER SET 6 PIECES ...................... IGLOO PLAYMATE ICE CHEST DUDDY L. 1-39 CUSTOM VAN 0 1 7 M LOOKS JUST LIKE A RL Al VAN..................... Mm .VO BOAT-TRAILER SET MADE OF DUBAOLE c o l o r ful p o l y ................. t%A 7 « J GRAND SLAM BAT & O O BALL SET \ M \ M INCLUDES DAI AND 2 CALLS....................... • Ar M 5555 NORTH LAMAR BLVD. AT KOENIG, AUSTIN THE GREAT SUMMER SALE & WATERMELON THUMP AT DOBIE MALL FREE W A TER M ELO N whUIe they last J U N E 8 & 9 '■n. . "X BK99ELL9 L l* B ' V ¥ || I V-% T d o s ,. of tjpu tfuit brlyui thus ad, d ir t with ana c purchase at Russets ou wilt 6c alien itour xfioit wice of ifdtt \ varieties ot uv vtu z painted 1 4 » . »13** V \ SALE T M T - 4 0 % Off LADY TENNIS 1 6 91 Free nylon stung* w ith p u rch a se of a n y to n n it I . /&* / I »£ Bf r a c a u a t I I
  • FREE W A T E R M E L O N w h ile it lasts TO APPEAR JULES CAPLAN Magician BEN HOGUE Austin Guitar M aker C OFF ON ALL PLANTS Thurs., F ri., Sat. v a n r . <•»¥» ‘m an pP*tb»nwKe a n d * a* * ev «*vw xi c wc.M*t* rn the* a b a h • I, ** f Im m m 4? amt ab a* • Ch n1 * o f < to • A- '* A..! m h o i t fio o cum# I cir P C m rin Afton ,i ■».♦>■ ■*>*!>*’ with AB 4 6 ami AB*Mi tvifctff »c*fivw on AH AU Iyr s u if A 33..................... .*34” AB46..................... 60” AB56..................... 83” Reg. SALE •26*° 4 8 " 6 5 " C A N O N BELLO W S M 34” C A N O N BO O STER f/FTb 00 C A N O N DATA BA C K A 83” C A N O N Speedlight 133D 59” CAT. System Auto Tuning B2 Set 2 5 " 4 5 " 6 5 " 3 9 " 10% off O N A N Y CANON or NIKKOR LENS ( I N STOCK) M a llo r y a a (4 p a c k ) b a t t e r i e s Reg. >2” S A L E *2” SUPER CAMERA BAGS Reg. Mod 118 Mod 128 Mod 200 Mod 265 SALE *17” *14” 22” 1 9 ” 23” 1 8 ” 6 8 ” 54” BRAUN No. 42 VC FLASH Reg. *1 2 0 " SALE *73” PERRIN (The Sportsman) PERRIN (NO. 9) COASTAR (US 13) COASTAR (US 17) VIVITAR (No. 900) Reg. ‘35” ‘33” ‘34” ‘ 79” ‘24” ‘ 13” SALE •24” * 2 2 " • 2 1 " • l l " •18” rn oe« ■ ILFORD Discovery Kit IN C L U D E S : paper/filters/chem. KODAK Dissolve Unit •245” • IO O " Get the feel of high performance photography! NIXON FE Reg. '373" SALE! * 329” Dana 472-7753 Tim 452-4406 V ivita r Autom atic Electronic Flash Units • Bass-reflex - ■ A u ssp jn */ PL-112................IOO. HPM-40 .............. 300.. TOTAL $$25. tu rk ta iie w cartridge RENT THIS SYSTEM ^50^° MONTH THEN IF YOU UKE, RENT-BUY B E D s m c r ' " ’- 2 2 3 4 G U A D A L U P E • 4 7 6 - 3 5 2 5 5 1 3 4 B U R N E T ROAD • 4 5 4 - 6 7 3 1 3 4 NOMURA 95 TELECONVERTERS ( O L Y M P U S & P E N T A X M T S . ) Reg. *47 SALE *25°° 10% oft on ALL (IN STOCK) HALIBURTON CASES GITZO TRIPODS OLYM PUS ZUIKO LENS NIXON EL2 Reg. S393.75 SALE! * 9 9 e o o w rn* J } EL NIKKOR 135 5.6 ENLARGING LENS R e g $182 75 S A L E * I 5 0 " IKON BELLOWS PB5 Reg. $93.50 SALE *75” Prices Effective Jun e 8th thru 10th, 1978 Limited Quantities M an y Unlisted Items Are Available At Low, Low Prices At The Jun e IO Parking Lot Sale • P a g e I2JD THE DAILY TEXAN □ T hursd a y , Ju n e 8, 1978 Austria edges Sweden BUENOS AIRES (UPI) The underdogs turned the fo rm upnde down in a day of Wednenday World Soccer Cup sen tat Kins when only three goal* were scored and only - one team fin a l q u a lifie d round Au at ria the fo r I M f yini? all the odds, Spain held Brazil to a OO tie in Group 3, enaurln# a c liff hanging climax to the b a ttle the second qualifying sprit fo r IN GROUP 4 , the 5.000 I outsider Iran forced a I I tie w ith d e m o ra liz e d Scotland, and m ig h ty Holland was held 0*0 by Peru The results left the group wide open with any of the four teams liable to qualify and Peru best plac­ ed to do so. The one clearcut victory of the day's four games was A u str ia 'n convincing I* 0 defeat of Sweden, which meant it graduated from Group 3 and joined Arg en tiru ami Italy in the final eight Of the 16 finalists, Me* h o, Hungary and France are out The day did not produc e the feast of goals ex pc*.qed 3 against Tuesday * 14 and was also notable for the* first own goal of th* tournament BIGGEST UPSET came at Cordoba, where the doughty Iranians took on the u n in s p ire d S cots, them, •Cored a goal for then erne themselves for and held out for a crucial point Scotland never got it team together against a that would have trouble b e a tin g an a v e r a g e lum pen first division side* Arc ho* O m m ill ran a lot but rn little purpose and a measure of 'oarh A lly MacLeod's desperation wjs his substitution of striker Kenny Dalglish, on his day the he st man in the team with the ponderous Joe Harper Scotland went ahead luckily in the 43rd minute when Andanarik Eskan- darian collided with his goalkeeper and then hook **d the ball into his own net F IF T E E N M IN U T E S into the second half, [raj Danalfar hustled the hall from a Scots* defender ami angled it past Alan Rough with a left foot shot Whether or not Scotland was s u f f e r in g p s y ­ chological a fte r-e ffe c ts from W illie Johnston s fo r drug- b anishm en t ta k in g th is gam e did nothing to refurbish its ta r­ nished reputation Peru, which has proved the jo k e r of the pack, defended stubbornly for 90 percent of the game to Uke a point from Holland The D u tc h m e n th r e w everything they had into attack and for long periods the hall scarcely left the Peruvian penalty area But in p a r­ with ( humpitaz fo r m , t ic u la r ly good Holland was unable to penetrate Peru’s iron-clad defenses Rangers, Royals rained out Expos shut out Padres, 4-0 Ranger* rained oat ARLINGTON, Texas (UPI) - The scheduled game Wednesday between the Kansas City Royals and the Texas Rangers was postponed because of rain and w ill be made up as part of a double- header Thursday Expos 4, Padres 0 M O N T R E A L ( U P I) — W ayne Fwitchell and B ill Atkinson combined on a four-hit shutout ami Tony Perez hit a home run Wednesday, leading the Montreal Expos to a 4-0 victory over the San Diego Padres in a game con­ tinued from Tuesday night when it was suspended because of a power failure at Olympic Stadium Braves 0, Cardinal* 0 ST LOUIS (U P I) - B iff Pocoroba hit a grand slam homer in a five-run first inning and Phil Niekro tossed a four-hitter Wednesday night to lead the Atlanta Braves to a 6-0 rout of the St. Louts Cardinals Phillies S, Giants 4 PH ILA D E I PHIA (U P I) - Pinch- hitter Jose Cardenal’s long single with the bases-loaded and one out capped a two-run ninth inning rally Wednesday night which gave the 'Philadelphia Phillies a 6-4 triumph over the San Francisco Giants for their sixth con­ secutive triumph Angels 4, A’s I OAKLAND (U P I) Left-hander Ken Brett, making his firs t start since May 20 pitched a two-hitter for seven innings Wednesday night and sparked the California Angels to a 4-1 triumph over the Oakland A ’s in the first game of a doubleheader. Mets 3, Dodgers 3 NEW YORK (U PI) - Ron Hodges’ slow roller to second base drove in Steve Henderson with the winning run in the eighth inning Wednesday night and Pat Zachry fired a three-hitter to lead the New York Mets to a 3-2 victory over the Los Angeles Dodgers. White Sox 8, Twins 3 (UPI) - A BLOOMINGTON, Minn tw o -ru n s in g le by H e n ry C ruz inning highlighted a six-run second the Wednesday night which carried Chicago White Sox to an 8-3 triumph over the Minnesota Twins for their 10th victory in their last l l games Tigers 8, Brewers I MILW AUKEE (U PI) - Rusty Staub drove in four runs and Jim Slaton came back to haunt his former teammates for the second time in a week Wednes­ day night when he hurled a five-hitter in pitching the Detroit Tigers to an 8-1 victory over the Milwaukee Brewers Yankees 9, Mariners I SEATTLE (UPI) - Reggie Jackson hit two home runs and unbeaten Ron Guidry won his ninth game on a six- hitter Wednesday night, helping the New York Yankees snap a four-game losing streak with a 9-1 rout of the Seat­ tle Manners. Red* 9, Cub* 6 CHICAGO ( U P I) — Dave Concepcion had a single, double and triple and scored thiee runs Wednesday to lead the Cincinnati Reds to a 9-6 triumph over the Chicago Cubs that gave un­ beaten B ill Bonham his seventh vic­ tory. Seattle Slew vs. Affirmed: not in the spirit of the sport At I Im* advanced age of 4, Scuttle Si«*w is taking it easy After th re e h ec tic years of training and rac in g , his tune is spent galloping rn i peat etui pasture, interrupted only by visits from admiring fans and comely marcs It sa good life, but all that could change Slew doesn't know it yet but breathing down his neck is a youngster named A f­ firmed who has a better than decent < hance of becoming the lith I nple ( rown winner, the second in as many years ORDINARILY, that wouldn't make much difference in Slews relaxed lifestyle Secretariat, Slew's predecessor as Triple < rown winner didn t go into fits of paranoia or anything when Seattle slew became a household word But that was Kist year, and this year is different, because, recognizing a good thing when they see it, some New York promoters have derided to stage a head-to-head race between Seattle Slew and Affirm ed ilia t is if Affirm ed wins Saturday s Belmont Stakes and causes the Triple ( rown to be won two consecutive years Imagine the publicity tor the first tim e rn history, right on this very track two T riple Crown winners, the best horses in the World, w ill face each other in a head-to head competition. SINCE SLEW hasn t been in training for a while, it would take softie lim e for him to get back in shape That means fre­ quent reports and status checks, just to make sure the old tim er inn t sloughing off It also means time to print up "Seattle Slew versus A f­ I - flirt s and posters to he sold at every grocery and firmed department store in the wot id Just n*> the hor ses w ill not forget what they are training for, they w ill occasionally be brought face to face (or muzzle to i i i their own way, trade All-like insults muzzle), so they c a n TO INCREASE th** suspense when racetime comes. Slew w ill bi* ridden bv Far rah Fawcett, while Suzanne Somers w ill be astride Affirm ed All in flu* interest of sport, of course And just to make sure the audience is in the right frame of mind for ttit* race it w ill be preceded by a pre-recorded tennis match touch football game, poster contest and bathing suit con- test between Farrah and Suzanne So things w ill be strictly legitimate, Shaun Cassidy, O. J Simpson and John R itter w ill serve as judges. In other words, the sport of kings could easily become a trash sport, just one more inane invention of television ex­ ecutives to fill a ir time on a Sunday afternoon. IT DOESN’T have to be that way; it could take after an earlier challenge race This one, in 1975, pitted Foolish Pleasure, winner of two of the Triple Crown’s jewels, against Kuffian, regarded as the nation s finest filly . Midway through! the race, a bone in Ruffian s leg snapped She fought all efforts to save her and had to be destroyed the next morning No race was worth that kind of suffering — not laura tuma for the horse or her owners Maybe Affirm ed and Seattle Slew s owners are intelligent and maybe realize the folly of such a scheme. Again, maybe they don’t AT ANY RATE, there is one thing they w ill certainly realize. And that is that a race between the only two consecutive Triple ( rown winners in history would make money Lots of money And money talks I nfortunately, those days it virtu a lly screams. As a result, many sports have lost the pride and beauty they once had. Instead they have become merely another form of recreation, designed to help mindless television viewers while away a bor­ ing afternoon And that's not what sport is about. 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Telephoto Sl ew: out of retirement? TYPEWRITING BY ELECTRONICS T y p e w ritin g classes by electronics w ill b eg in M o n d a y , June 12. Classes for b eg inn ers a re scheduled a t 1 0 a .m . a n d a t I p.m. A class for those w h o typ e b ut w is h to increase th e ir typ in g speed is scheduled a t 11 a .m . These classes w ill meet Monday th ro u g h Friday for th re e w e e k s in room 5 5 2 of the Business-Economics B u ild ing . G o to th e Education A n nex B u ild ing , Room A 2 9 , 1 9 1 0 Red River S tre e t, to register. The cost is $ 2 3 , inclu din g instru ctio nal m a te ria ls . C all 4 7 1 - 5 6 1 6 for a d d itio n a l in fo rm a tio n . tus) cac’ tus (kak’ n.; pl. cacti (-ti) ( D A comprehensive yearbook for The University of Texas at Austin featur­ ing issues of the year involving the total student experience. Requires only a mark on the Optional Fee ( ard at Freshman registration. (2) Any plant having fleshy stem s and/or branches with thorns instead of leaves. Requires little moisture and heavy direct sunlight. « The CACTUS Yearbook gives definition to your freshman experience. N e w students! You can reserve your copy of the 1979 CACTUS Yearbook by marking your Optional Fee Card w hen you go through freshman registration. The cost is $ 1 0 .0 0 plus 50* tax, to be billed along w ith your other fees in the fall. Another Publication of Texas Student Publications fi I sports shorts----- Spann, Nenon sign with UT I Auburn transfers Scott Spann and and Phillip Nenon w ill join r r eam, next year Under C°ach Eddie R eese bu will be redshirted until the 1979-SO season. Spann ^ o -t im e NCAA cham pion in the 200-vard individual nu^dley and the WB top national 200-yard b r e a s t e r . won the nationals !*n '.Apri L 10° “yaPd bUtt6rfly at the AAU the 200-yard backstroke in the m eet. plf ! d lenth >n the 10°-yard backstroke and eighth in * AAU track field set LOS ANGELES (U P I) — World record m arks are alm ost sure to be broken in the National AAU Track and Field Cham­ pionships Thursday through Sunday at UCLA’s Drake Stadium AAU champion Don Quarrie, who blazed to a record IO 12 clocking m the 100-meters in last y e a r ’s m eet, will be challeng­ ed by Houston McTear, Harvey Glance. Clancy Edwards Jam es Lofton. Steve W illiam s and Steve Riddick h r ^ ChWllkinS’, 27' lh e 1976 01ym p,c 8 ° ,d m edalist, is out to E u r o p e ^ t r r SCUS W° r'd r6C0rd ,232« ) b e,ore a Four-tim e Olym pic cham pion Al Oerter, m aking a com eback at age 41, said he is in great shape, has regained his world-class form. and could pose a stiff challenge to Wilkins I ( LA s Mike Tully, who would like to settle his disputed world record pole vault of 18-8 L», w ill soar with vaulters Larry J essee . Jeff Taylor, Earl Bell, Ralph Haynie and Don Baird Women tracksters w ill also be show cased, with the field led by F r a n c e Larrieu, Sharon Dabney, Evelyn Ashford Sue Brodock and Jane Maist Knicks, Nets discuss deal NEW VORK I U PI) — The New York Knicks and New Jersey N ets appear to be clo se to a deal in which they w ill exchange picks in b riday ’s NBA draft as part of a settlem en t that w ill ex­ cuse the N ets from a $3.2 m illion debt to the Knicks. If the deal is com pleted, the Knicks will choose fourth and the N ets 13th in F riday’s draft. Mike Burke, president of the Knicks, said Wednesday that no deal has been signed as yet. We m ight have one but there is none y e t,” Burke said. “ Our law yers have been talking for a couple of w eeks trying to reach som e kind of agreem ent, but we haven ’t signed any deal with them as y e t.” In addition to the swap of draft picks, other provisions that have been discussed are for the Knicks to receiv e the first of the N e ts’ tw o opening round picks in the 1979 draft, and for the Knicks to give the N ets a player they have under contract who is not on the a ctiv e roster, m ost likely Ticky Burden. As collateral on the $4 m illion they still ow e the Knicks for m oving from Long Island to N ew J ersey last year, the N ets will put up their share of the new four-year television package. P ay­ m ent on the $4 m illion is not scheduled to begin until the N ets m ove to the N ew J ersey M eadowlands in 1980. USO in A l AW tennis finals S A L ISB U R V , Md ( UPI ) — T op -seed ed U n iv e r sity of Southern California breezed by fourth-seeded U niversity of F lorida. 9-0, W ednesday to advance to the finals of the A ssocia­ tion for Intercollegiate A thletics for Women large co lleg e ten­ nis cham pionship. USC, which now has a 16-0 record this season and a 36-game winning streak, faces the winner of the m atch-up betw een second-seeded Stanford U niversity and third-seeded U niversity of California at Los A ngeles. The cham pionship m atch at Salisbury State C ollege is scheduled for Thursday with open sin g les and doubles com p eti­ tion beginning Friday and ending Monday. Thursday, June 8, 1978 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Page 13 dyer electronics warehouse VEHR m a tin UBL I The most popular speaker EVER! JBI Century 10O Studio Monitor WAS *354. NOW ONLY WHILE THEY LAST! *#•># rn * *•*$»» IHI - I I I M S -7000 ***’ I* • t i *4 en »,>* NT* I**' In-dash AM-FM Cassette Car Stereo w ith 6 x 9 Speakers CLEARANCE PRICE $7978 ‘'" '-O ' "O''"- (y) P IO N E E R BIG MARKDOWNS In -d a s h A M -F M S te re o 4 0 -c h a n n e l CB B eau tifu l stereo music plus 4 0 -c h a n n e l CB — All the dash. D ig ital read o ut a n d stand-by. in G u a ra n te e d in stallatio n availa b le . CLEARANCE PRICE Some as above plus pushbutton tuning M odel G T -6 6 0 0 l 78 S te re o Frequency E q u alize r G et any sound you w a n t from any system you have the "Sound Shaper w ith Tw o" by ADC. M atch your speakers to your room and tailor the music to fit your personal preference. Even put your "personal" sound on tape- at this low, low CLEARANCE PRICEI tap* CLEARANCE PRICE I *248 dyer electronics warehouse W e In s ta ll C ar S tereos O p e n 't il 9 Bank American 3 9 2 5 N. In te rre g io n a l 4 5 1 -8 2 8 8 Page 14 □ THE DAILY TEXAN 3 Thursday, June 8,1978 USC downs to meet Sun North Carolina, Devils in finals OM AHA, Neb (U P I) - Larry Fobbs scored on John Well** sa crifice fly in the inning Wednesday to ninth edge the U n i v e r s i t y of Southern California to a 3-2 victory over North Carolina in a fourth-round game at the 1978 College World Series D e f e n d i n g c h a m p i o n Arizona State defeated Miami of Florida 11-3, in the first game of the series’ fourth round Wednesday, advancing the Sun Devils into Thursday's championship round against Southern California USC remained the only un­ beaten team in the series, while Miam i of Florida and North Carolina became the fifth and sixth teams sidelined in th e N C A A d o u b l e ­ elimination tournament Southern Cal, which has IO tim es, won the series scored its winning run in the last inning t r o j a n s e c o n d baseman Fobbs singled, mov­ ed to second on a wild pitch, stole third and scored on W ells’ sacrifice fly for the winning run North Carolina opened the scoring inning in the first when Mike Fox singled and came home on Roy Clark s double. C lark tripled and then scored on Jim Atkinson's single to extend North Carolina s lead to 2-0 in the sixth inning T r o ja n T im T o l m a n ’ s groundout in the eighth scored Doug Stokke, who earlier walked A passed ball on catcher Lloyd Brewer later scored C hris Sm ith, who reached base on a single, to tie the game 2-2. USC southpaw Je ff Wick pitched two innings of shutout relief to raise his record to 2-0 on the year NORTH CARO LIN A right hander Greg N orris, who entered the series with a 14-0 record, took his second loss of the series. Norris shut out Southern Cal until he gave up two runs in the eighth inning Southpaw Casey Lindsey won his second series game and Bob Horner broke the R B I record Wednesday in pacing Arizona State to its 11-3 open­ ing w in o v e r M i a m i of Florida Lindsey. 7-2, only struck out two batters but held the Hurricanes to two runs and six hits in seven innings. Ea rlie r in the week, Lindsey- posted a 13-2 victory over St. John's. The Sun Devils struck for four runs in the sixth inning. L a r r y E i l e r started the onslaught with a double and then scored on Ed E rvin e ’s single Homer knocked in a run on a fielder's choice to tie the series R B I record of IO. H O R N ER AND Chris Bando combined to drive in four runs in a five-run ninth inning to n a il down the v i c t o r y . Horner's run-scoring single gave him a record-breaking ll R B I for the series Bando brought in the Sun Devils’ final three runs on a double to left field UT rates in NCAA 13th golf After the first day of com­ petition in the NCAA golf tour­ nament. Texas is “ in the mid­ dle of the pack,” Coach George Hannon said In 13th place with 295. Texas is ahead of Houston by three strokes and behind Texas A&M by the same amount. A total of 28 teams are com­ peting in the tournament, which lasts through Saturday in Eugene, Ore. Jo n Chaffee scored the lowest for Texas with a 71, followed by Tom Cornelia, 74; P h il V e s c o v o , 74, D a le B la ckb u rn , 76; and P h il Blackm ar, 77. “ I thought Jon played real well, ” Hannon said. “ I was disappointed in the 77 for ( P h i l ) Bla ckm a r. H e ’s a better player than that. He needs to play better.” Hannon was o p tim is tic about Texas’ chance for im ­ provement in the remaining three days. “ I think we’ll move up in the field,” he said, adding with a sm all laugh, “ We have three more rounds. I don't think we w ill play worse — let me put it that way. “ I don’t want to stay in the middle,” he repeated. “ I ’d move up to No. I if I could ‘Your goal is always to win. If we finish in the top IO, we ll h av e p e rf o r m e d to our capabilities.” he said. Oklahoma State sophomore Rafael Alarcon shot a near flawless opening round to push his team into a first day lead with a total of 280 A lar­ con scored five birdies in shooting a 67 round to put the favored Cowboys one stroke ahead of Georgia. Oklahom a State's Lindy M iller shot a 70 while team­ mates David Edwards and B ritt Harrison fired rounds of 71 and 72, respectively. Twenty-nine players out of 186 were under par after play­ ing on the 6.908-yard, par-72 course Arizona State and Stanford were tied at 283, while UCLA and Oral Roberts finished in a fifth place tie with 287. Wake Forest was seventh with 288, Weber State eighth with 289 and Brigham Young. Florida and North Carolina were in a three-way tie for ninth place with 291. D e f e n d i n g c h a m p i o n Houston closed the day at 297 and host Oregon had 298 32“ 34“ 36; # '8 c y l PARTS AND LABOR INCLUDED GUARANTEED 6 mo./6,000 mi. 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Technics by Panasonic 0 HITACHI SU-7300 41 watts/channel integrated amplifier with lighted power meters Add the ST 7300 tuner to match Both come with wooden cabinets $149 FOR BOTH EA $289 SL-2 20 The latest belt drive turntable by Technics Semi-automatic with innovative front controls, for easy operation $109 Receivers Priced to Move. 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Recent technology has produced higher quality cartridges which cost no more than replacement stylus. $3495 S A V E * 30 OO ATS010 Manual Ciao Cteanar OPEN THURS AND FRI. TIL 9:00 VISA one LAYAWAY FULL SERVICE DEPARTMENT FINANCING AVAILABLE m ---------- vvvvr-............. 3701 Guadalupe 459-0044 BERKITI M I S t h e s t e r e o s t o r e SSK* Wx w s • 4 7 6 - 3 5 2 5 2 2 3 4 G U A D A L U P E 5 1 3 4 B U R N E T ROAD • 4 5 4 - 6 7 3 1 Austin Folk Festival to begin Friday c r o w n e d Saturday. T h e festival will bt' open from 6 p rn until midnight Friday and S aturday, and from 4 to IO p rn Sunday Advance pm sales good for a dm ission to the festival d u r­ ing its e n tir e three da vs a r e av a ilable for $1 a t a l f S ears stores, Austin National Bank, Bank of Austin B eall's in N o r th o t o s s a n d W e s t g a t e m a l l s , S c a r b r o u g h s in Highland Mall and downtown, tho the m a in office of and Austin P a r k s and R ecreation D e p a rtm e n t T ickets p urchas cd at the g a t e a r e good for one day only and cost $1 SO foi a d u lts and 50 c e n t s f o r children By LINDA TOBEY D aily T e x a n S ta ff Want in t e r ­ to ta k e an national tour? Visit the annual Austin F’olk F estival F’riday through Sunday at F’ie sta Gardens on Town Lake t h e One goal of the festival is to prom ote pride not only in the heritage and culture of each individual, but also to foster understanding and tolerance o f a n d backgrounds of others. Inter­ national festivities, such as m u s i c a c c o m p a n i e d b y folk traditionally costum ed dancers, will highlight the festival h e r i t a g e i n s t r u c t i o n ARTS AND CRAFTS also will be woven into the a c ­ tivities. with public participa­ tion encouraged. Artisans will i n o f f e r b ask etw eavin g, cr o ch etin g , leathercrafting, m etal sculp­ ting. pottery making, soap­ making, whittling and wood craftin g The fe stiv a l w ill offer the chance to exp eri­ ment with jew elry and doll making as w ell Dancing will begin at 9 p m with Alvin Crow and the P lea­ sant Valley Boys on Friday and Raza 11 urn tide on Satur­ d a y . M o d e r a t e l y p r ic e d c ul i na r y d e l i g h t s r angi ng from baklava to shishkebabs to kolachcs will supplem ent the night's activities P RI VAI K collectors will present antique photographs as well as historical records and other m em orabilia in the Ethnic History building Miss Austin Folk F estival will bt1 Lynn m T T * dances Wl,h James Haile (Mercutlo) and Terri Lynn Wright (Juliet) in Austin Ballet Theater's production of the world-renowned ballet. Set to Prokofiev's music, the dance will be presented at sunset Friday and Saturday at Zllker Park. ‘Romeo and Juliet’ By Bill Records r Round Top Festival spins off B Steven De Groote, grand prize winner of the 1977 Van Cliburn International Piano Competition, will begin the five w eekends of festiv ities at the eighth Hound Top F estival with a solo recital on the Mary Moody Northen Pavilion at 8:15 p m. Friday. D e G r o o te 's p r o g r a m w ill in c lu d e Beethoven s “ 15 Variations and Fugue in E flat Major, op 35.’ the first volum e of D eb u ssy ’s “ I m a g e s ,'’ B artok 's “ Out of Doors in C Major. op. 15, D. 760“ by Shubert. and F antasy The 1978 Concert Series continues at 8:15 p .m . S a tu rd a y w ith a p e r fo r m a n c e of -cham ber m usic by pianist Jam es Dick, violinist Young-Uck Him and cellist Yo-Yo Ma. To be presented on the D alles Frantz the concert w ill Chamber Court, include in B fla t, K. 502“ and M ozart’s “ Trio T chaikovsky’s “ Trio in A minor, op 50." Sunday afternoon will feature a perfor m ance by the young artists of the Round Top Festival-Institute. These pianists, violinists and ce llists w ill perform a variety of solo and cham ber works in the first of the Clayton House Afternoon Interlude Series The 4 p rn. concert in the W illiam Lockhart Clayton House is given Admission for all con certs is $3 50, $2 for children under 12. R eservations, necessary for the Sunday afternoon program only, m ay be m ade by calling (713) 249-3129 STUDENTS PRICE SPECIAL OFFER *2.25 PER MONTH Paid Per Semester The Houston Chronicle Now Delivered in Most Areas Call 477-4485 Texas Union Events ^ I his monkey doll, made by women at the Old Bakery, will be for sale at the Austin Folk Festival. T ES. & T H U RS. * STUDY BREAK^ Just bring your student _ ID to MOTH® (MTH & get in FREE! 4431695 THURSDAY A ll Union H ouri. M IXED MEDIA EXHIBIT. The exhibit w ill display paintings, drawings, and sculpture by professional artists of the Texas Commission on the Arts and Humanities' ‘ Artists in the Schools" program and their students. Through June 15. Union Art Gallery. Fine Arts Com m ittee. 6 .3 0 to 8 .3 0 p m. THE INTIMATE THEATRE OF POETRY AND PROSE. Grady Hillm an, recognized for his work as a Russian translator, a professional actor, and seasoned poet, w ill recite and perform works from his repertoire of original poetry. The Cafe w ill open at 6 :3 0 p.m. for those who w ould like to purchase food and beverages. The performance w ill begin at 7 p.m ., w ith audience discussion following the show. 7 .3 0 and 9 :3 0 p m. Film: IN SEARCH OF TUBULAR SWELLS. Union Theater. $1.75 w ith UT ID. 1978 Summer Pool Leagues offered by the TEXAS UNION RECREATION CENTER if you're not Minnesota Fats or Willie Join now! Even Mosconi, you'll have fun, improve your pool gam e and meet new friends by joining a Pool League at the Texas Union Recreation Center. Individuals or groups are welcome. Cost for participation is only $1 per night. 8 :3 0 p.m. Performance: STRANGER. This popular band plays Yes, Genesis, and others. Texas Tavern. POOL LEAGUE SCHEDULE: FOR ADDITIONAL IN FO R M A TIO N C A U 4 7 1 -5 6 5 3 All leagues are coed unless otherwise noted. PUT IT BLH1ND YOU \ i '■ - i k '-'Av J ® I . . V s V ; . , . rn . v a i % —s ‘-i 'A v BOOK./ B IK E / DAY PACKS tr&'Z t ■ . WHOLE. EARTH PROVISO 2410 S A N A N TO N IO ST 4 7 8 -1 5 7 7 MONDAY 5 p.m. 7 p.m. TUESDAY 4 p.m. NINE BALL POOL LEAGUE. Skill is of no matter in this coed league for faculty, staff and students. TEAM 8 BALL. A Pool League for dynamic duos! Men & women are invited to join. 8 BALL POOL LEAGUE, lf Mondays aren't for you, then try Tuesdays. Skill is of no importance! WEDNESDAY 6:30 p.m. 14:1 STRAIGHT POOL. A chance to play the game that made Willie Mosconi famous. Who is Willie Mosconi?? Find out at the Rec Center. THURSDAY 6:30 p.m. SHOOT OUT. Each week a match will consist of 8 Ball, Nine Ball, and Straight Pool. SHARK SHOOT. Every other Saturday beginning June 24 at 6 p.m., the Rec Center will feature "SHARK SHOOT." Lowest score wins. Prizes and Fun galore! 8 BALL POOL TOURNAMENT. Tuesday, June 20, at 7 p.m. Men's and women s division. First place for each division will be a cue and carrying case. Minimum of 15 entries. Tournament positions will be listed on the Center's Pool Challenge Ladder. Entry Fee, $2. Sign up now! For more information call the Recreation Center at 471-1944. $50 SSK JRBW LAST NIGHT TO ENTER - THURS. JUNE 8 ■ / .. — — ucs /^ n tsts/ qtnccfc $ianr moocKj ac aes / je:wvBill Lancaster produce ^Michael Ritchie FEA: 4:40-6:30 8:20-10:10 WANN THIAI.es FOX TRIPLEX I n L E X | Q stMM»Mi 1454 2711 a r FRA: 1:00-2:50 4:40-6:30-8:20-10:10 T H E S T K M M S STEREO 1 OO 3;1S-5.307:4S-10:00 1 30-3:40 5:50-400 10:10 PG ISan R u i H j f h a r r i e d 7 t w - m a n /"lh S I i usa sos 5 JO 7 35 9 SS V IL L A G E A 2700 ANDS ASON • ASI ( I S I i?Z s4 I U >*rrv WM) Paw FoW* (saw found |l—92t£! mw w-N w Tai tho* Tructw .ugli BALUN* i r m rnwrw n n m n 9 PETH PONDS KURN REED IO©** I 3 0 3 1 0 5 307 304.30 R I V E R S I D E I930AIVERSUH • 441 S U A I J 30 2 45- 5 007 15 9 30 in a gain SPRING SHING EVENT CRAM) BALLROOM I T friday, June ■ IWO Sensurround I i f l i r t y H T . I I ) . S I . M l (>en'L A d m is s io n - $2.00 ■ B R E W S T E R j J t W f . < c f r v Rob#r1 Altm nn . i r v e Loved A ive VARSITY - 2402 QUAOALUXg « 474-4381 1 Sr#w*f#r: 8:00, ! 0.-05 lovtd On#: 7J 5 Thursday,_Ju_ne_ 8, 1978 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Page 17 texps union preseiits I A I J U U l V d U V u SIVELLS THEATER TWO FULL LENGTH COLOR SOUNO FEATURES hot surf movie ... pecked with Juice ,. end • A good good stoking surfing ** Surfing Magaiine., Ah unusual new film that explores the limit* of parlor- In Australia. Indonesia, Hawaii, and m *ic e surfing South Africa a group of imaginative young surfers is radically changing our concept of wave riding. These sur fers perform their dance on tubular swells that yester­ day's heroes would not even have attempted. 3 4 5 - 2 1 8 7 TONIGHT COCONUTS Pool with Com plots Bar Facility Bar-B-Que Canoe Rental Complot* Party Service J VALUABLE C O U P O N A jt f a ^ ZA “ I I I I I I 213 E. 6th 478— 0243 O P E N 24 H O U R S! BOOKSTORE LA R G EST SELEC TIO N O F MA G S FILMS BOOKS SEX TOYS IN AU STIN ARCADE LARGEST 25c ARCADfMAMTEXAS eJt Tonight 7:30 and 9:30 p.m. Texas Union Theater $1.75 with UT ID Produced aud Directed by Roger Graef staring M ON TY PYTH O N kin Cima Michael Pahn Grahwn Chapman ta d (SveAri kny S i i S ferry .Imps BT YOND THE FRINGE Ifetpi I w i n ' .km#th#n Mtllt'i Alan Ifennet .intl THE fiOOOIES D O B I E I B E D O B IE M A L L • 477-1324 STARTS TOMORROW! H i s n a m e is M o w , i'Ji and hewas raised by wolves L O V E A N D D E A T H L IV E S ID E B V S ID E IN T H E P E A C E F U L F O R E S T . “ O ne of the best m o v ie s I have ever se e n .*1 I urn Buriuel. 19JI THROUGH THE •A high-hudget production aimed at the same sophis­ ticated couples market thai was attracted to last year's Em mamie I let y Oui Magazine THE LIFE & TIMES O F X A V I E R A H O L L A N D E R starring S a m a n t h a M cLaren uncensored Si«nng C A T H A R I N E b u r g e s s Q) L A U R A N I C H O L S O N presents TONIGHT ONLY! In Burdine Aud. 7:OO only DOUBLE FEATURE BEACH M R 1Y TH WALT DISNEY’S SHINGLE BOOK W ith h i e v o c e tijn m fs Phil HARRIS, S e tx js tio n CABOT, I ou ts PRIMA. G e o r g e SANDT RS, S te rlin g HOLLOWAY 'ZZ* RUDYARD KIPLING fa) t e c h n i c o l o r * — ; r . * : v r . ; r r r . V IL L A G E A ■ LA K E H ILLS 2 7 0 0 ANDERSON • 45 1 8 3 5 2 H 2 4 2 0 OIH WHITE >4 4 4 .0 5 5 2 OPENS TOM O RRO W AT BOTH THEATRES! I MPW! SA C IN I MA INTL H NAIIO NAt PHES t N I S A JOSE LUIS BOHAU IH M po RTH/03 (poachers) 4 D O B I E 1 G l 2 mmmm I V A mm ta# ■ MHM D O B IE M A L L • 477-1324 STARTS TOMORROW! :■■■■* Starring Frankie & Annette With: "love The! Boo" Cummings "The picture is loaded with music and his fingerl I Dorothy Peyton Place'' Malone! "Z e n Judo" and songs, the kind young people enjoy." Harvey lemheckl _ C le m W illia m s Film s Plus: THE BLOB Horror Film Classic of the Fifties! Starring: Steve McQueen! AT 8:45 only C iN ! M A W E S T t i n S. ( • « « , » , • r S M l r t * p * n l l A M • 4 4 7 i n t Please Bring ID, Regardless of Age M atinees Daily No One Under 18 Admitted _______ Late Sh ow s Friday A Saturday SHARP COMPACT REFRIGERATOR RENT $20 PER SUMM ER 6 WEEKS MS00 R e n t i t , t h e n if y o u u k e it , YOU CAN RENT-BUY IT B E R K m n n s t h e s t e r e o s t o r e M I M M * * S A S I # ; A U # I NC A O S ' * M A I I N D t # S 0 H I A M I 4 H U M M I * 0 S u m e n s S d n u t i n W L A I l i I M I U l t S H U M n e x u s U K S M I J O m h e u n i r STU0ENTS w,TH a m c c a r o » » J I , ^ . . THE END I 45 (TI S 4 OO) 6 15 8 30 IO 45 ( R i c o r v e t t e s u m m e r I JO (TLS*3~45> 6 OO 8 15 IO 30 COMING HOME 2 15 ( T L S 5 OO) I 3 0 IO 15 ( R ) W A R L O R D S OF A T L A N T IS I OO ( T L S 3 15) 5 30 7 45 9 55(P G ) IN S E A R C H OE THE C A S T A W A Y S I 45 (Tis 4 OO) 6 15 8 30(G ) HIGH A N X IE T Y 2 OO ( T L S 4 OO) 6 OO L ^RiOUCIO LOUI 11 StUOERT rHICES EON TIS TtCIfTS 8 00 9 55 ( P G ) A UMtTEO IO SEATING ^ - Pagt 18 D THE DAILY JKX AN □ Thursday, June 8, 1978 ■ f j 1 9 H C I A1.r. f f l f o A p V t « / • $ ! * ' , F O * S A U i f w ord m in im u m 1} | f #< h w h o un# torn# ic i f *< h w ,,#* I tim e * j ; t f i d * M d } tim e s | I *< h wr>'d IO tim e * 41 I OO '"<»<**»" re»# n U rn * * 4 l f I (Art • ) |«r h e n * U n.* I eof * < i*h b 7 * ♦ rn ** | j *1 I < nj x I KH ft ten & m **« i i i f l t i i i ?f Ut A tH IH I V m o u lt fan#* )» * # f I m « 4 *| I » im M **4 « f Ww4***4er f#»#« !..•**»» IkutHtof I**(MI W#e»a»4#y #*M#y % va p m l l OO • » l l OO • «*• l l M a * l l OO • - In lit* • • • „ • »< «•••>■ „ * * * „ „ #g»**i.**m##u immMkMtc (MHM* >..,«»( Im I*. * ..* « »« iK* * »Mn*i. . l ### • " l f 'A l f -it #♦«#.! inM'iMtM All • 1... . , I*. «g(l#*)mi«n*t tlwvM M ».«*• .... w<*. •Awn iO A*** nth#. in.lr*■•••Mn J t U f J f NT I A C U ! l l S I A t I • A l i i I ‘> WOId (•. n im ./i- I I t oi * 1 im h •# , ii nay I *0 ii a d d itio n a l w>,>4 a *.» d a y * ck * 1 Of I (in* , o a r 1 »' AO UA# ( * it> f.* d t •*> # o * r Nu R efund** Students i» t t j l t f a nd i**M m u ll (>r* •ani • 1 ra m # ll. 'Achill*, Ma> I fir } * * 'rpm 1 ii gmj p#, IM * K illy 1/00 f i l t h A lo 4 H | m i n , i f l a m f t M * i Ii I, V I A t U t W N i R i f ' • # # < ! * m ine r AT. body mot * H M C or tw it Off or *4 4 too* i l l . V I * I lr ai » I l l ItTO fa ir'a n a need* i«ma AAU! I f t l l »*► Ben niftr *41 fail, i i i Hat IO U P IN T O k 1 IN A n o n T 4*01 a i t 1 . Mu ra y '7* MSG* NI V moil lait ffui wa** hlea I f * IO Man 47) I (ft With ad o ptio n * 4 * | l, 4 *4 aa? j noun A tt f * C U T I A i l 4 door aula, ai*. P i m a roo n Ma, * 5# OOO m ila i *)kx> f t * * w ork 83/ OOI 1 evenings I'M IMI t i M A ) UA ana 7 (Simi engine a u to m a tic . 40 OOO m n #* yond I OIH)III.)f. 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(XX) A lia . a 41/ 410) i f m l f*H t»y t * * fl P A I * a a ( i I *• a lla n ! to m ) " to n N ard IK a* ra d ia to r IWX) i i i §t>*f artar a im . %*» a tt in M a no r Md f N '. i N I ta fa O H f M i i n W hite A t C laan g«M>d i o n d " ion one owner f i t I M ) )/OOO m iles t i VK) * 1 1 H O I t o t h a t " n a g n * 4 *i>*#<< A M I M 1100 tsast) a l f M T* a v a ilin g , and f t V IN I imlfod At m il# * naakand* 19)1 CAPH I nim w in roof for tale *4*1 or h a*f offer a ft / ii* P VTN a u f Per let I me< h a n lce i to n d i Non »)a*0 or h e n Offer lean 4*) 4 /4 * ala tau horn# L I K E N E W ll T 1 9 7 6 F I A T IJ J O NI V 1400 M i • 4 dr • f M AM • AC • M # l« ll|, H ip * M U M M I I I M M I P l A f I I y _____ I A l I 444 M J I t o n S A U Motorcycle For Sole r n , M r ,,! *„g tao) m i Strung fu n n in g , e a t ai la " I I m KAWA sa m I ! fr a il ew e r IVW a ff * * / / atter * ItTJ Y AMANA IOO with helmet On end " ti ‘ ii**** 'ey*1 tived rendition look* a f f LOO *J0 ) IYT) H O N D A *00 4 l f OOO m ile * 4t4 * f | f pf a t* %4*a Bicycie-fer Sal* IT C 40 to i i e o u ti em *• S H I i n s y amene too a m owadaiwpe J SRS S t> H A L I I O H bu j i i* I , i e tie n t cendttlen One jeer md * P C a lla * / /M f bateman a IO p rn SiaiaeT a i Sale 'T t H O ra m irt all typa* of *teta© equipment vw buy and tall weed aqutpman! *n,» van iteieo pert* and atce»»oria* 4f»o*a/ u n Had Hi va* ACC H i f t I/O P#, AC H I M l k y i * h a a d p he n a * * / l V im a M a s t O c a r * ) / ootl T rid a a * 1 * 1)1 f t 4 ) w e t k a ve nin e * YAMAHA c HMfJO I *,#■,#< v PU* turn ta b le Supe* la r fr .d g # NSaft) »!« *«**•* * t i t f 444 m s* tv a n in p ¥ 400 • v a » * # tte S o u g h t N tt*N f Sole TH S I TO g,M>d hom e Or*# h aa lth v le i PIV* fbi a* ane n a** uw m etier kitten* a?I a f /1 aff a a h Seta NOH W§ IC* IAN I Ik hound Puppy ternate »t*ot* AHC h P v ie b ruk#n M a * * an uffa i n e - u s a N i n o t o Cr I v t a w a y h e e le n o hair n h ite c a f* I i i v e e r* old Shot* c u ff am iHr not **i*h to *a p a r*te Them Can 4f4 Ila # atter a *0 e rn im nn a d ia iaiy Anliqwek-fof Sole je w e lr y l a n a l f y ' Ct and '.It) geld H y l t * | l < a ik a t f a f a r try Ai a rf arr p f if OI paid C A P I T O L D I A M O N D S H O P 4 0 ii N L a m a r f U a N I S H I O » * A » T M « N T * 5 B L O C K S W L S T O K C A M P U S War.m er ( t a w to ry # a ff«tlar*ci#* oar-# ad Ait, i,0 i. r> thee I ' M * 14/ Ii* , ny m o m o ff vat oedroorr. «r<4 co b le aaaffH «oa f *t..*e , t , j, J M g a h A p n TIO* i e * Ira til lei 4/a / t i * F le u r De Lls 404 I 30th I B R , s u m m e r r i t e * , L o v e ly to q u ie t e t m o ip h e r e , w a lk c a m p u s , s h u ttle , d is h w a s h e r, cnbl# TV P h on e 477 5217 IBR *1 9 0 W a lK t o C a m p u s H aaw tifui n a n b u ilt in k itc h e n Cm CA pool aet ti a p ' pa»i<« n a iar g a , < a lii* paid H ire r a/a a* id a ft a i l ) fu rn itu re *n OOM la rg a Ib r I la * p lu t I 4 f| W A L K TO UT 105 E. 31st E x t r a n i c e e f f i c i e n c y , d i s * l a u n d r y , d i s p o s a l , h w n s h p c , c a b l e G a s b e n t a n d c o o k i n g S U S p l u s r a t e 4 7 7 0 8 5 9 s u m m e r 6 , V I E W P O I N T S U M M E R S P E C I A L L U X U R Y APTS. * 1 5 0 l a r g e p o o l • 5 b lo c KS t o ( a m p u l • • S u m m e r A f a l l l e a s i n g 2518 Leon 472 9981 S U M M E R R A T E S urnlthed c a l m abay a ttle te n , y c a rp e l ACT H I 4)1 / Speedway H W end t i * ) pier* I m enage. 4 v t 0*40 AC r IV JUD Had River t u t p lu t I m a n e g e ' 4)4 I U * ACT v t We" M e m ph u i *14* p lu t I m anager 4T4 MSO A l I V U /OO* W h ".» *14) pip* e manager 1)4 u si a c T t a /m u H e m p h ill t i * ) p iu * f m anager 4)4 ta x i Three O ak* 4d * W N th 114) p iu * I m a n a g e r 4 VI I MM Th* VNe, ’ pi tier TM* H e m p h ill » D ) and *1)5 p iu * I m anage. 4/,’ M f H e m p h ill P a rk A p l* i n I * j r n H e m p h ill S D ) Phi* * ttiiin p g p t A ff tided A tte re n tin g for ta t! L O R A P v.1 T T AU M i) RUE'S ANTIQUES A n fiq u a i l u r n l l u t # q u a iiiy w o»d W >a**nar* e n fm itc e lia n e o w * t r ic e d fee Tight b u d g e t* I b r p o o f s u m m e r p a i d S p e e d w a y & 43rd • 451 2614 2106 S L a m a r 442*9304 478 2775 2505 E N F I E L D l a u n d r y c o u r t y a r d , S1B5 a l l b i l l s r a t e ta lac lio n r**erv*!,gn M it c a li a n e o u t F o r S a te NSC SON 5 O I ) TS C ltiW ik H e d 1*4) In d ia n L a r g e ti la n e lfy 4)07 South C ongreet 444 )414 Cto te d Monday* Q u iS N S l i t m atti a*, (foam), bo* apr Ina* and tram# * 12* * ) g t U 3 work I3f got J evening* I I T H L L ? C f * K T y p e w rite r beige iypev»r.»er Ift J UhderwcHHi electri* *H S Both ve ry good lU n d iflW l 4 ft M W H IO S A m o s o t * R ocker n foot»!uo> * ) ) Hatuging SIS. 4l»f*gg> i h#*t * « AAI U h * 2 )0 b a n u i & 4 B L V J N G M A T E h T a c b oard* con ihatva tfandaid* S S S M I w * cr* t n * * " tv f N E W W AVE HE ST W ATE HBE O Top •me m o de l, half pnca P in e ** co m B o rw d c factory wood tra m # 474*4*4 before t Jo « m C X TH A LONG d o u b le m a ttret* b o* ape mg* MS 4 )* ) ) 1 2 47l l )A) Lynn • ) S * L * * W f 4 8 M N I ■ |L £ i- ' aph recorder t i * 'A S lA ^ a ’ fc camera iw.veirockar Margaret S U P ER S U M M E R RATE Ib r /b r ip * i * v n. cabi# T v, pool lawn ta i " " . e t huge v u n # !* p le n ty pf W a lk in g d is ta n c e to UT cam pus. .’ tv* d ry p a ttin g q u ie t 4 co ngenial a tm o sp he re 472*5332 478 3303 T H U N D E R B I R D A P T S 4510 D u v a l St i A, r m * fr o m M i A m ig o A p t* I • u rn .*heo e ffic ie n c ie s w w ater .la id by le n d 1 Ord fe n a i" Av# op # new S U ) sum m er r<«H 'r n My tut J by I l a ) r * ti 478*7355 ‘ 140 A P T S f o u n t a i n t e r r a c e tu rn ,s h e d carpeted L a rg e sp) # 4,i walk in c lase' dtvpovai , aine T c cook l"g ii on ga, walk lo UT s w im m in g pe a l m a in te n a n c e m a n q u ie t a t m o tp h e re No in .id » e n rsq oets Now leasing 610 VS 30!h 477 8858 IJJ.ITIHil l.f.TJ.T W!l ITH* Need NI t a r * arm tim im , bio. * fro m B L A C K S T O N E A P T S 7 9 1 0 R e d R i v e r 4 7 6 5431 dr# ami naif. /b n * " J a fc o m m a ta to l f * r * • • p e n * * * A ft V5 rr .< I* A i! S ill* ■ a w A P e r goon P ro p e rty Diplomat Apts. S u m m e r Special I BR furnished ‘ 1 5 5 Walk to Campu% 4 7 6 - 8 2 7 3 CHEZ JACQUES — Summer Rate — • I BR Furn $ 1 7 0 • W alk to Cam pus • N id i Pool - Patio 1307 W. 24 472-TOf EL CID Student Special I BR Furn. $ 1 5 5 Shuttle Front Door Fad Looting Alto 3 7 0 4 & pood w a y 4 5 3 - 4 8 8 3 M ARK X X * Summer Special - I BR Furn. $ 1 6 0 • • 2 BR Furn. $ 1 9 5 ■ Shuttle 2 Blkt. • Nic# Pool - Patio ■ Fad L4Kifing Too 3 8 1 5 G u ad a lu p e 4 5 2 -8 4 0 9 THE RETREAT ’130 — Summer Rate — Large Furn. EH, Nice Pool - Patio 4 4 0 0 Ave. A 4 5 4 - 8 1 6 3 Avalon Apts. . Summ er H a i t i - EH. turn. $ 1 3 0 1 BR Furn. $ 1 5 0 2 BR t u r n $ 1 8 0 f a l l Leasing Toe 477-0010 2207 Leon Apts. - Sum m er SpecialI - • I BR Furn. $160 • 2 BR Furn. $230 • Walk to Campus • Hico Pool A Patio 9 Fad Loosing Too 2207 Leon 478-5057 VILLA SOLANO APTS. Summ er Special > I BR Furn. $165 » 2 BR Furn. $185 1 Shuttle Corner 1 Intramural Field Across Street 51st & Guadalupe 4 5 1 -5 8 6 5 Hyde Park Apts. — Summ er Rates — ► EH. Furn. $129 * I BR Furn. $139 * 2 BR Furn. $165 * Shuttle Front Door > City Tennis Courts & Pool Across Street 4 4 1 3 Sp eedw ay 4 5 8 - 2 0 9 6 A S P K N W O O I ) \ P T S . ^releasing Summer ill t all Summer 1 BR Furn. S I 6 0 Plus E 2 BR Furn. $ 1 9 0 Plus E Full IBR $ 1 9 5 Plus E 2 BR $ 2 4 0 Plus E Jette# yOur A p a r t m e n t f o r t y f i n st B e f e l > S h u ttle T re n t b a a r 1 1 2 L a rg a P W * I n i r a m v o f P la id a e r# * * S fra e t fa# y o u r s p o rt* 4 5 2 -4 4 4 7 4 5 3 9 G u ad a lu p e s p ­ i t SO M M O ® R ATES. I Wack UT, F ir, C A ­ c a r p e t la u n d r y , d is h w a s h e r C H . covered p a rk ng A tt I Af. Ast e r n J E R R I C K A P T S . F a n t a s t i c R e d u c t i o n on Summer Prices NOW S129-S142 104 E 32nd M a n a y e r No 103 476*5940 W a l k to C a m p u s 4105 Speedway M a n a g e r No 203 458 4037 I F shuttle F a ll Leases A v a ila b le C A S A D E S A L A D O 2610 Salado 'ro m < a m p u l NC Shuttle Pool 4 6 « Ca c m paid f *fj r- rtdry, o ff street p e rk in g We tseve an unexpected vecan cy a /b r a p ' fo r sum m er and fa il Cad 4)7-25)4 or com e by m a n a g e r’ s apt Kb, lie Continental Apts. - Summer Rate — 2 BR Furn. $ 1 9 5 Shuttle Corner Nice Pool - Patio Fad Leasing Too 9 1 0 E. 4 0 4 5 1 -4 1 3 7 LA PAZ APTS. Summer Specials I BR Furn. $ 1 6 0 • • 2 BR Furn $ 1 9 0 • Shuttle I Blk • Nice Pool, Patio • Fall Leasing Too 401 W 39 451-3362 E L CAMPO Summer Special • I BR Furn. $160 9 2 BR Furn. $190 9 Fad Leasing Too 30S W. 39 452-8537 e e e e e - - - w a e e e e e e e F r e e Service Parking T 'asportation HABITAT HUNTERS , f e a p p t lo c a t o r s e r v ic e *p p c im h r in g in c o m p lm * * s with • c c m w to s h u t tip ■releotmg for Summer A fo il 7411 n ig h ts ren o v a tio n study d r 2-7 FOR RENT M iN t- S ^ O R A G E S O U T H C o n c re f b lock c o n s tru c tio n security p a tro l * up m o nth ly 444-2411 W >odiand'$ AA M in i Warehouse UNCLASSIFIED Hesse, cai. m e Roger * 5 ; 1352 Gas D ry e r J o M d e A R e d U a . 926-2235 F R E E Adorable K itte n s *26-2235 Tl^xlia j4nn 'Vitfj, r o m e t o K in g s g a te , th e u n iq u e a p a r t m e n t c o m m u n i t y w e c a r e O u r e n d le s s s o c ia l a c t i v i t i e s in c lu d e r a c q u e t b a ll a n d h a n d b a i I c o u r t # , p o o l p a r ­ tie s , f o o t b a l l te a m s , s l im o a s t i c s . t r i p s a n d m o r e O u r v i b r a n t y o u n g p e o p le fo u n d w h a t th e y w e r e lo o k in g f o r a t K in g s g a t e — c o m e s e e f o r y o u r s e lf d . IT S I A N O I B fD D O O M I J A F A i T M I N T H O M IS - ® A From $ 1 4 2 -5 1 7 4 l n l « . r v g « 5 f C 3 t 2005 WILLOW CREEK 441-5465 LEASING OFFICE ANO MOOI IS APARTMENTS OPEN 7 DAYS □ UNFURNISHED DUPLEXES SOUTH S H U T TLE , lu x u rio u s /b r jo e n tw c a f oe- drapes ai. a p p lian ce s CA­ ST# c * tf 'n«s y a m m e.nta.ned, *255 Also Ib r 3ba very .arge '>rep.ace garage a v a ila b le June I «43-4«*7 Hearings to consider school policy changes Thursday, Ju n e 8, 1978 □ T H E D AILY T EX A N □ Page 19 / Ok Ai TW 15 15 YOUr\ I FIRST FLI6HT AS A (^CARRIER Pl SEON J /1 ulANT YOU TO Fiv\ FROM HERE TO (A lc COURTHOUSE J TODAY’S MOSSWOOD PUZZLE ACROSS 42 Danish king UNITED Feature Syndicate Wednesday s Puzzle Solved W --------------- - V * * * * I .a , ^ .Nr ■ 'i*» Wets N ew wsSmm «c M \ % & 14 Old woman teem (UlElL. IF YOU START \ TO cET LONELY JUST V^OME ON B A C K . J I C P M - I A---- ..= ----- ----- r?—- —\ • i .. - A V J . DOONESBURY by G arry Trudeau iiM u,rr$A i I CERTAIN, y m s U M H wu. A m t c m WR jo HWtNt Therm pear h o o k JO I.HIK JORE m r s a \ FORMARO DOUR i n u t c h a i i . < Hi HO' PICK you fit** W R (WOS MMR SiACtAtyrR 00H7 WO? FROM JH/$ ' TH CAMPUS RAD*} I I . STARON* I cf I A u h I ie (Hi 6 T w ilit* s lit ft*n«i IO Skin erup turn s h 15 Gelatin sub •6 was a stitute lady 17 One o f the w ile s folks ;> 18 Bail g«m« Jesuit w olds 20 Tigers *' I Scot nver 72 W as con CS’I nod 23 Malay sarong 26 S ingularity 2 / Novel set ting 30 Dead drunk 31 Make •mends 32 Negative con tractio n .13 Heavenly body 36 A m el in wen tor 37 lo o k in tensely 38 Tree knot 39 Young m an 40 U nctuous Slang 41 de ie Matinee of old 44 Th'obbed 45 Quartz al Bite n ic k 47 China Comb 48 Horseman 49 Once around the track W A t one a end 64 Pre A irm ail • abroad unit 2 words 67 Practice 68 N um erical prefix 69 B rou ght to m a turity 60 fu r n a tio n Com b 61 Shred Pl 62 Small hors*1 63 S prinkle fo rm D O V 'N I I evanti ie ketch 3 M s Pavlova 3 Slope 4 Y ukoners neighbors 6 N ot yet o ld 6 A ft gallery 7 Opposed D M , 8 R oland's destroyer 9 H em atite 10 f tx a Wicker i hair c a u d a u u a a a ® u u u a n i n o n Q n o n * IC a In ~JT * tv ft I3*r 11 M uch loved people 2 words 12 Begets 13 Pays a tte n tion 19 D istinctive odot I I Gam bling cube 24 Brewery product 25 Eared seal . t i Not any 27 Asian nation .V M i H arhach 29 Corm spondmg exactly 30 Adapt to fit 3? Declare .14 f thine group 16 Propagated 37 I go 38 Electric unit 40 I xpresa scorn 41 Paronoma sia 43 A dm inisters extreme unction 44 Orange seed 45 Had w eapon 46 Ms Dors 47 A bounding •n grits 49 le g a l hold 61 Building beam 62 M ,ih|ong piece 63 Arrange neatly session 66 btl P a s t 67 Greeting cries HELP WANTED t e c h n i c i a n *5 .3 0 / hr. The U niversity of Texas at im m ed iate Austin has an vacancy for an Instrument M aker I. This is a half-time 20 hrs./wk. position. Required completion of high school and y e a r 's e x p e r ie n c e as a machinist or in scientific in­ strument repair. Must have ability to use lathes, milling machines, and hand tools for fabrication, assem bly, and repair of instruments. Star­ ting salary is $5.30 per hour plus excellent fringe benefits. To apply contact: O F F I C E O F P E R S O N N E L S E R V I C E S A N D E M P L O Y E E R E L A T I O N S 2613 W ichita Austin, Tx. 78712 Ph. 471-3656 AN e q u a l o p p o r t u n i t y a n d A F F I R M A T I V E ACTI ON E M P L O Y E R Apply in person, 12-2:30 pm m o t h e r E A R T H For Cocktail help and floor- man. 1907 E . Riverside Dr. A C C E P T IN G a p p l i c a t i o n s Pa rt time evening help 5 pm-1 am. 2, 3, or 4 shifts a ween apply at 2805 Rogge Lane, Stop N Go M arkets An Equal Op­ portunity Em ployer HOW DO YO U T H IN K YOU W O U LD LO O K IN T H E H A L F S H E L L ? On The H a lf S h e ll is now tak in g applications for wait-people and kitchen help Apply in person, 3300 Anderson Lane, after 2 pm T R A N S P O R T A T IO N E N T E R P R I S E S INC. Transportation Enterprises Inc is now accepting applications for shuttle bus d r iv e r s for su m m e r e m p lo y m en t Qualifications at least 21 years old and "OOd d riving record Apply at 1135 unter or call 928 2801 for information. 2J H A M B U R G E R S Taking applications for per­ manent full and part-time help. M any company benefits. C lose to U T and A u s tin busline Apply in person. 3918 N Lam ar, between 2-5 p.m. N E E D E X T R A m o n e y ? The flo w er peo­ p le n e e d p e o p l e to s e l l f l o w e r s , Thursday-Sundav H ig h e st com m ission paid d ally, 288-1102. W O R K W IT H kids - r a r e opportunity for m arrie d couple w ith no ch ild re n to w ork and live w ith ad o le scen ts in a hom elike residential tre a tm e n t fa c ility . Position in v o lv e s h e lp in g a n d p a r e n t in g 6 adolescents (13-17). Situ a tio n otters ex ­ cellent learning e x p erien ces for those in­ terested in So cia l S e rvic e s field and seeking ch an ces fo r personal grow th Be n efit* include s a la r y and paid vaca- tlon.,Ca(l the S e ttle m e n t Club Home, 9-5 weekdays, 836-2150 A P T m a N A G E R : l e v e l h e a d e d , energetic p e rs o n (s ) to m an ag e la rg e stu­ d e n t c o m p le x . N o c h il d r e n , p e ts . R esu m e to P r o p e r t y M a n a g e r , 4307 M ountain P a th D r., A ustin, 78759 C L A R K S V I L L E C R E A M Shop Part- ♦ime help w anted, afternoo n and e vening Shifts a v a ila b le A p p ly in person, 1200 W e st Lynn . N E E D E D N O W depend ab le nursing stu­ dent for p a rt tim e c a r e of paralyz ed older m an N o rth w e st hom e $3 00/hr References O w n tra n sp o rta tio n C all for appo in tm ent, 345-9190 A P P L I C A T I O N S N O W being accepted for p riv a te s e c u rity o ffic e rs T ri T o w ers North, 801 W 24th St. N ig h t w ork only. Apply in person. B r in g recen t photo for file w ;a p p lic a tio n E m p lo y m e n t w ill be tor su m m er and fa ll sem esters. A ll applicants co nsid ered for em p lyo m ent local police w ill be ch eck ed through flies, lf you q u a lity c o n ta ct sec u rity of­ ficer in ch arg e, IO p m -2 a m. Ju n e 5- Ju n e 16. W A N T E D F O X Y lad ies for dancing, hostess positions E a r n *350/wk. and up. E x c e lle n t benefits A p p ly in person, 1516 South L a m a r , 442-9033 a fte r 8 p.m. P O S I T I O N O P E N f o r 2 g r a d u a t e engineers (o r som eone w ith 3 y e a rs ex­ p e r ie n c e ) f u llt im e , p e r m a n e n t em ploym ent. C o n ta ct F r e d T rim b le for a p p t, Capitol C ity Steel, P .O . Box 3195, Austin, 78764, E O E . fo r B R I C K L A Y E R ' S H E L P E R needed ”im- m ed iately w ill tra in . Sta rtin g s a la r y *3 per hour. C a ll a fte r 5 30, 926-4060 B L I N D S T U D E N T needs good p a rt tim e readers $2 00/hour. C a ll 474-6229 D R I V E R S W A N T E D fo r D o m in o 's P IZ Z A Good pay, F le x ib le hours. A p p ly 404 W . 26th, 1 U 0 W Lyn n , 2011 E R iv e r ­ side. N A T U R A L F O O D S o pportunity. W o rk w ith n a tu r a l m in d e d people Co-op benefits. A p p ly a t the Ju ic e F a c to r y in person. F U L L O R P A R T T I M E he!~p D esk Clark. A pply at 4800 N In te rre g io n a l. T H U N D E R C L O U D " S U B S So uth has p a rttim e openings for lunchtim e, a fte r ­ noon and e vening shifts A p p ly In person, 201 E . R i v e rsid e b e tw een 2-4. E A R N E A S Y M O N E Y th is su m m er j e l l ­ ing flo w ers. Stu dents w e lco m e H ighest com m ission paid d a ily 476-3070, 453- E X P E R i E N C E D P E R S O N needed to clean d o cto r's hom e P a r ttim e , *3/hr 454-8696____________ P E R M A N E N T E M P L O Y M E N T fo r responsible m a tu re person to o perate a bookshop. H ou rs 9-3, M o n d a y thru S a tu r ­ da y C a ll for a p p o in tm en t 444-1273 I N T E R E S T E D IN g ain in g va lu ab le ex ­ p e r ie n c e in y o u r m a i o r ? P o s itio n a v a i l a b l e f o r p a r t t i m * s t u d e n t oookkeeper. C a ll Su z an n e 472-7000 T H E P O S S E now h irin g , fle x ib le hours. 'OI W . 24th St. W A N T E D W E E K E N D w ork ers, con­ s t r u c t io n t y p e w o r k , f u r n i s h o w n t r a n s p o r t a t i o n L e a v e n a m e a n d num ber. C a ll 258-5973 P a r t -t i m e i n s t r u c t o r needed. August Se p tem b er to teach college level ch em istry, physics, biology, m ath 476- 1542 M O D E L S f o r g la m o u r assignm ents, no •xperla n ce or w a rd ro b e n e cessary, ex ­ cellent pay, send short resu m e to Box ]4)5, A ustin, Tx. 78767. V O L U N T E E R S N E E D E O ! B o b *7t*97t C a m p a ig n 614 W . 6th TUTORING tu to r A ll E X P E R I E N C E D M A T H S.°Yr * f i V ets fre e A n ex-prof can help t a l l B ill D ie tric h 443-9354 LOST & FOUND L O S T R ew ard , 1-214-278-7174 co llect r i n g w i t h i n i t i a l s J N W MISCELLANEOUS C L A S S I C A L G U I T A R ” i n s t r u c t io n , “ • g i n n e r s a n d a d v a n c e d D r e w Thom ason 478-0650 WANTED "C A ^ S R IN G S , gold je w e lry , old pocket c u r r e n c y , sta m p s w a n ted " e t c h e s •Oh price s paid P io n e e r Coin Com- *555 N o rth L a m a r , B ld g C-U3 In to tn m e rc e P a r k . 451-3607 Two public hearings on proposed State Board of Education policies governing suspension of students and placement of handicapped students will be held at 8 30 a.rn Friday. The hearings w ill determine how changes made bv the Legislature in 1977 w ill be im ­ plemented at the start of the n ew in September s c h o o l y e a r The proposed policy for Generic drugs hearings on suspension of students will be considered first. The policy w ill apply to all students once adopted The proposed policy concer- ning p la ce m e n t of h an ­ dicapped students is designed to bring special education r e g u la r in to s tu d e n ts classrooms wherever possible and for as long as possible If adopted, the new policy would m ean “ special-ed students would no longer be in an education iso lated program,” said Marj Wight- man, public information of­ ficer at the Texas Education Agency. Lo ca l school d is tricts would also be made more responsible in the education of h an dicap ped s tu d e n ts .” Nightman added The hearings will be at the I LA office at 158 E Riverside Drive The board w ill act on the proposals Saturday follow­ ing the public hearings. FDA to insure quality WASHINGTON (U P I) - The Food and Drug Administration Wednesday signed a landmark agreement with New York state to guarantee the quality of the cheaper, common-name drugs it w ill buy for its health programs in place of more expensive brand names. The agreement, first of its kind between the federal government and any state w ill allow New York to ask for FD A assurance that the lowest bidder offering to supply it generic drugs meets all the FD A standards for quality. New York buys $18 million worth of drugs each year for its hospitals and other uses. Sen. Gaylord Nelson, D-Wis., who has been pushing for generic drugs for years, said the agreement would set a pattern for the other 49 states. Nelson said some surveys indicate the prices of generic drugs range from only one- third to one-30th that of comparable brand name drugs. P D A Commissioner Donald Kennedy, who signed the one-year pilot project agreement with New York Gov Hugh Carey, told reporters the PDA is not talking with any other states about sim ilar arrangements just now. But he said he hoped this agreement would stimulate curiosity. PDA enforces a single standard of quality for all drugs sold in this country,” Kennedy said We regularly inspect all drug process­ ing plants to be sure they meet these strict standards.” Carey said New York may save up to 25 percent on its drug bill, but a spokesman for the Pharm aceutical Manufacturers Associa­ tion said he doubted the price difference would be more than 15 percent. The PM A also said it hoped the PD A would include information for New York on drug recalls, 70 percent of which, it said, involve drugs made by non-PMA members who might be submitting cheaper bids. Scientists ponder fuel The water in Lake Travis contains enough hydrogen that can be converted into fuel by the fusion process to match the Middle East fuel reserves, said Dr. W illiam E . Drum­ mond, University professor of physics. Drummond spoke Wednes­ day night to approximately 500 high school juniors and teachers on the problems and promises of nuclear fusion. His talk was part of the 18th Texas Nuclear Science Sym ­ posium for High Schools. The symposium’s purpose is to give the students educational experiences in science beyond the classroom and to en­ courage them to continue studying science and to ex­ pand scientific understanding in Texas. Drummond’s speciality is plasma physics. Plasm a is the fourth state of m atter beyond solids, liquids and gases. Plasm a physics began in 1958. The field is so new that our ignorance is very deep,” said Drummond. In the mid-’60s, the slogan for the University was, Drum ­ mond said, “ Let us get a faculty the football team can be proud of.” Drummond add­ ed that Gov. John Connaily began to pump money into the U n iv e rsity and bought a physics faculty. As a result, Texas acquired one of the most highly qualified staffs in the country, if not the world, he said. T h e w o rk on fu s io n progressed through the ’70s to match the Russian fusion machine, TOKOM AK. After lobbying, the University was awarded a grant to build its own form of the TOKOM AK and became the international center for fusion research. The University is now building the most sophisticated fusion machine in the world, said Drum m ond. The m achine should be ready in 15 months. Drum m ond said fusion should be the fuel for the future. With today’s methods of electrical production, one out of three units of energy is sent down the wire to your home while the other two un­ its are wasted in the form of heat, or thermal pollution. With fusion, said Drummond, two out of every three units of energy can be utilized while only one unit is wasted. Drummond concluded by saying there are no secrets in fusion research. The Soviet Union is just as open with its TO KO M AK as Am erica with its. Drummond said is W ed n esd ay m o rn in g ’s sessions were opened with an overview of nuclear power by Dr E. Linn Draper, U niversi­ ty associate professor of mechanical engineering. The nuclear fuel cycle was then discussed by Dr. Harold Forsen. vice president and general manager of the laser enrichm ent departm ent of E x x o n N u c l e a r C o r p . , Belleview, Wash. He discuss­ ed the steps nuclear fuel goes through from the mine to the reactor. Dr. Earnest F. Gloyna, dean of the Co l l e ge of Engineering, then outlined the processing of nuclear fuel from the reactor to the recycl­ ing and storage of nuclear wastes. He also discussed n u c l e a r w a s t e s t o r a g e facilities At 8:30 a m. Thursday, solar and geothermal energy w ill be discussed as well as fossil fuel energy resources. Friday at 8 30 a.m.. the environmental effects of energy production and the environmental con­ siderations of strip mining w ill be discussed before the symposium adjourns. ROOMMATfS S H A R E F U R N I S H E D hom e 2 p riv a te bedroom * Ju n e (m a y b e lon ger) *180 ea ch A C / C H 837-6041, 8706 R ed fie ld S H A R E H O U S E su m m er G ard e n , bus, la rg e ya rd , dishw asher, *105/monfh plus b ill* D a n iel, 471-3176, 454 4316 M A L E R O O M M A T E share 3br house *90, m o N e a r I F shuttle route 454-3810 W A N T E D : O N E or two people to sh a re co n do m in ium fo r su m m er and/or fa ll C a ll 447-7616 I need a fe m a le ro o m m ate to H E L P ! m o ve In now 2 br, 2 ba apt *137 50 A B P C a ll B a r b ie 441 0884 W A N T E D ro om m ate to sh a re nice 2 br house Q u ie t n eig hb o rho od E n f ie ld a re a Shuttle, *107.50 P e te 476-0387 W A N T E D g ra d u a te or la w student to s h a re n e w ly re m o d e le d H y d e P a r k *125 plus b ills, n o n ­ H o m e S h u ttle sm oker, 459 8028 S H A R E 3 bdrm 2 ba duplex 3 blk* fro m L a w School P r e f e r upper division g rad . 875 plus Vt b ills S te v e 478-8228 G O O D N A T U R E D non-smoking ro o m ­ m ate. 2 b drm , A C , pool, IO m in U T '/a E N a n c y 472-0790 IN N I C E house for quiet 2 R O O M S f e m a le g r a d s tu d e n ts S h u ttle , a ll p riv ile g e s no deposit, S H S A B P 928- 2475, 475-5070 M A L E W A N T E D sh a re 2br, 2ba plush apt 5 m in w a lk ca m p u s w e shuttle, *122 50 plus E 476 5654 F E M A L E H O U S E M A T E n e e d e d Su m m e r lease S135 plus m in im a l bills 801 B W ^ 28th^ 474-8434 or 478 T O A D . F E M A L E N O N - S M O k T n 'g housem ate su m m er o nly *70 p lus W b 478-4958 O N E F E M A L E to share 3 bdrm apt for su m m er w i ll h a v e own bath C a ll 478 4596 H O U S E M A T E - W A N T E d T o share half big house A v e F . H a lf ren t *120 partial- ty fu rn is hed s te ve 453-8154, 327-1872 N O N - S M O K IN G serious fe m a le student over 23 to sh a re qu iet apt *85 A B P , 4209 A v e B No 202 F E M A L E T O S H A R E 2bdrm 2ba apt w i t h t w o o t h e r s O w n b e d r o o m a v a ila b le R C shu ttle 443-3125 G R A D AAA L E sh a re beau tiful 2 br duplex 3 blocks north cam p us *145. Va pills E v e n in g s 477-5554 H O U S E M A T E N E E D E D share three bedroom house South A ustin M a n y con­ veniences, low ren t 447-6008 M A T U R E W O M A N n e e d e d - L a r g e room, A C , heat bath, closet N o rthw est location *110, 1 *3 bills 454 5569 M A L E R O O M M A T E needed sum m er, J bdrm apt *105 p lus Va E Non sm oker, on shuttle, c a ll 477-9147 evenings H O U S E 'M A T ¥ 1 T e E D E DToTtTne hom e summer, v e r y close U T 472-6374 F E M A L E , 2 B R / 2 B A a p t A B P , *120. C a ll a tter 5 30 S H A R E A N O L D 2 story house, large yard, porches, frees $90 bills. 451-4832 I F shuttle P E R S O N TO Share 3-bedroom house w ith a nother F e n c e d b a ck y a rd . Pets ok C a s u a l g ra d or o ld er stu d en t much p re ferre d Near N o rth Loop *l00/mo. half u tilities Bo b 452-4059. CA PCO approves project funding By JANN SNELL Dally Texan Staff ( apital area planning committees approved budget application requests Wednesday for four programs designed to service different aspects of the Austin community. The Government Applications Review Committee approved applications for an airport site selecton study, a community development grant and the continuation of a special student Ju s tic e System s Com m ittee program . The C rim in a l recommended a grant for handling of habitual crim inals. The two committees are part of the Capital Area Planning Council. The committees send their recommendations to the ex­ ecutive committee of CAPCO, which makes its recommen­ dations to different federal agencies for grant money. THE APPLICATIONS review committee approved a request from the City of Austin Aviation Department, which is seeking a total of $115,000 for an airport site selection study — $103,500 of which w ill come from the Federal Aviation Administration and the remaining $11,500 from local funds. At present, Municipal Airport is rapidly outgrowing its capacity and needs a much larger facility, including additional runway space, to serve the airport s 800,000 customers, according to aviation reports The review committee approved a $6,080,000 application from the City of Austin for a Community Development Block Grant. The entire amount w ill come from the Department of Housing and Urban Development. C ity Council member Lee Cooke, who serves on the applications review committee, said the grant request is designed to meet the “ philosophical and policy” standards ask­ ed by HUD in the area of economic development. THE APPLICATIONS review committee also approved an application for $159,962 by the Austin Independent School D istrict to begin the fifth year of a program reaching students with learning disability, drug or behavioral problems in regular classrooms. The program helps more than 400 students now and is funded in part by the Department of Health Education and W elfare ($71,983 of the total requested now by A D IS). A project designed to e fficie n tly deal with ‘‘career crim inals was approved by the crim inal justice committee, with $175,000 provided by the federal government and $17,500 provided by Travis County The project would elim inate bond for habitual crim inals, speed the trial process and give them longer prison sentences if convicted. The Travis County district attorney’s office claim s this program w ill speed up the present case load by giving career crim inals a quicker hearing process and keeping them off the streets for longer periods of time. B . C . v o y e u r a v e a " b i t " Fofz a m e cf- T P te < s e r* »«*«• swfieeenat mc .*9# T H E W IZ A R D O E ID T H I S d U V & b l H p L p u f~ ” T H E E G / c p U t P F ! p p b y jo h n n y h a r t r T fd e n / r o u r IN MY \7E£>AS AC T a m p H A D 'EM ‘- C R O L L I N G IM A 1 T H E A I S L E S . fo x . b y B re n t p a r k e r a n d J o h n n y h a rt nm o r a T ’fY t/ S A N D M Y r> 4 n > £ > i p >n r o t v t M e m y TANK MCNAMARA by J e f f Millar & Bill Hinds weather N A T I O N A L W E A T H E R S E R V I C E F O R E C A S T i o 7 P m { S T 6 - 8 - 7 8 J J 'J U 5 0 7 7 V Y , / / " “ , « . . . m u SAN FRANCISCO AL LOS ANGELES Vs / - ^ d a l l a s IG H IS T TEMPERATURES 70----- - 70 n 90 \ 29 77 NEW ORLEANS - * MIAMI . . . . . . . LEGEND J __________ (H H ), r a in SNOW *7 7 " y n AIR A I R / A S H O W E R S * * F t O W ne U P I W E A T H E R FOTOC AST ® In Austin, considerable log Is expected Thursday morning. 8kies will be partly cloudy Thursday and Friday. Tho low temperature Thursday will be In the upper s o t. The high temperature WHI bo In the upper sot. Friday’* high Ie expected to be neer 90. Winds Thursday WHI be from the south at 5 to 10 mph. The tun will aet Thursday at OI p.m. Friday It will rise et t:2« •*m. end aet at 0:32 p.m. S h o w e r s a n d thundershowers, moving acrose the East, will stretch from the Gulf Coset into the North Atlan­ tic states Thursday. Scattered showers ere expected over parte of the Orest Pleine end Rockies. P age 20 □ T H E D A IL Y T E XA N □ Thursday, June 8, 1978 Illinois defeats ERA; vote falls six short S P R IN G F IE L D , III (C P D The Illinois H ouse W ednes­ day d e fe a te d a reso lu tio n to r a t i f y th e E q u a l H ig h ts A m en d m en t, se ttin g back e f ­ forts by pro-E K A fo rc e s to g e t the a m e n d m e n t added to th e 1 S C o n s titu tio n by th e M arch 1979 d ead lin e Hie reso lu tio n fell six sh o rt of the 107 v o tes n ec essary for p a s sa g e The final vote w as 10144 is th e f o r i n d u s t r i a l la s t m a jo r Illinois n o r t h e r n s t a t e which h as not ra tifie d ERA T h at h as m a d e it a pivotal s t a t e t h e p r o p o s e d a m e n d m e n t's c h a n c e s of u l­ tim a te ra tific a tio n I h i r t y fiv e s t a t e s h a v e ratified EHA and th re e m o re states a r e needed to ra tify it tim e received the sa m e JOI ‘ y e s ’’ votes in th e Illinois H ouse it g ot la st Ju n e on a te s t vote Lack of support fro m black Chicago D em o c rats a p p a re n t­ ly doom ed the resolution T h e m e a s u r e th is S en D .iw n N e ts c h , D - Chicago, one of the le a d e rs of th** pro-EK A m o v em en t in th e S e n a te , said , “ The b la c k s didn t v o te ’ as ex p ected would h av e voted a g a in st it, too '* i n t o In his floor speech, M adison im plied th a t b lack s h av e not b e e n b r o u g h t t h e le g isla tiv e p ro cess and have not been consulted on m any i s s u e s “ We h a v e b e e n co unted on, ’ M adison said, “ but not included " b e c a u s e Hep Ronald G rie sh e im e r a r g u e d E R A w o u l d a c ­ ' ' a b s o l u t e l y c o m p l i s h t h e r e n o t h i n g a l r e a d y a r e f e d e r a l la w s w hich co v e r d isc rim in a to ry ac tio n s He said it would a t ­ tack the fam ily and sex u ality in th e nation and p ro m o te h o m o sex u ality and b isex u ali­ ty in H ouston R ep E d w ard B lu th ard t said he voted “ n o ” b ecau se he w as “ tu rn ed off by a w o m en ’s convention la st y e a r and a convention b o y co tt in C hicago by v ario u s gro u p s until Illinois p asses the E R A filled and groups for and a g a in st ERA flanked the e n tra n c e to the H ouse ch a m b e r. G re im a n said he rec eiv e d a call fro m The g a lle rie s w ere fi rst lad y R o sa ly n C a r te r T uesday night th an k in g him for his effo rts The d ead lin e for ra tific a tio n is M arch 1979 but e ffo rts a r e under w ay in C o n g ress to e x ­ tend the d ead lin e sev en y e a rs The m e a su re la st p assed the Illinois H ouse in 1975 by a vote of 113-62 It h as not p assed the Illinois S en ate sin ce 1972, the firs t y e a r of voting on th e co n ­ tro v e rsia l co n stitu tio n al q u es­ tion Jo ck ey in g on th e a m e n d ­ fo r m e n t h a s b een h e a v y m onths It p eaked th is week w ith Gov J a m e s R T hom p­ son p r o d d in g G O P H o u se to vo te fo r ERA , m e m b e rs ca lls by l l m e m b e rs of th e Illinois co n g ressio n al d e le g a ­ t i o n f o r T h o m p s o n a n d C hicago M ayor M ichael Bilan-' dic to apply p re s s u re and a c l a i m by t h e L e a g u e of Women V oters th a t E R A has h ad m a j o r i t y b a c k i n g in Illinois sin ce a t le a st 1974. P r e s i d e n t C a r t e r u r g e d ratific a tio n of ERA in a r e ­ cen t sp eech b efo re th e Illinois le g isla tu re. — UPI T elep h oto Butch Cassidy and the U.N. A c to r P a u l N e w m a n , far from his d a y s in su c h violent ro le s a s C o o l H a n d L u k e .” liste n s atten­ tively to d e b a te at the U nited N a tio n s W e d n e sd a y . N e w m a n is o n e of the U .S. d e le g a te s to the U.N. sp e c ia l s e s s io n on d isa rm a m e n t, o n e of the sta r’s lo n g -tim e interests. . UPI T»lf*r)hotO E R A opponents rejoice In Springfield, III. Bran iff fights S W route Rival service request stalled T h r h a r i n g ( i n tr tor Southwett A irlin es request to wtv#* the A m a r i l l o nod P o r t A r th u r itoftum ont wrens w a s re»«*t for A u h TM th e T ex a s Aeronautics Commission in by A ustin M o nd ay t h e M o n d a y m e e tin g w as o r ig in a lly scheduled a s u n o ffic ia l h earin g b ut the sta tu s was chan g ed becau se of H raniff A irw ay s' to p ro te st ag a in st S o u th w e st'! ap p lica tio n w rv e A m arillo Also a t the p re h e a rin g dead lin es fo r prese nting d ire c t te stim o n y ex h ib its w ere set for July 7, with re b u tta l ex M bits due Ju ly 31, H ea lin g examiner Bob C ro ss said so m e s u rp ris e w as ex p ressed by p reh e arin g par* le*xas In tern atio n al A irlines d o p a n t s w hen dni ne»t p ro te st South w e st's pro p o sal T ex as International th e past has been a “ vigorous o p jam en t" of in c re a se d S o u th w est se rv ic e in T ex as, C ro ss said In H raniff, w hich dews not se rv e the P o rt A rth u r B e au m o n t a r e a , d id not o p p o se S outhw est'* bul for Port A rth u r and Beau m ont, C ro ss said Firm denies UH defrauded This is a s u r p ris e ," she said “ W e’ve g ot to reth in k th e w hole thing We c e rta in ly ex p e cted it to p a s s ." s u g g e s tio n s " Hep A lan G re im a n , th e chief ER A sponsor, sa id five b l a c k D e m o c r a t s g a v e th e y w ould vole for the m e a su re e a r lie r hut then did n ot He said he thought tw o o th e r m e m b e rs of the ( h ic a g o D e m o c r a t i c o rg an izatio n would h av e voted fo r it if th e ro llcall h ad been c lo se r Jury hears Hughes case LAS VEGAS, Nev ( UP I ) — E ig h t N ev ad a ju r o rs began d e lib e ra tio n s W ednedsay to d ec id e w h eth e r H ow ard H ughes w ro te a will elev a tin g a U tah se rv ic e sta tio n a tte n d a n t to an ov ern ig h t m illio n a ire T he U n iv ersity of T ex as, one of four u n iv e rsitie s n am ed as b en e ficia ries, also sta n d s to b en e fit to th e tu n e of $50 to $100 m illion, if th e will is ju d g ed a u th e n tic H o w ev er, a H ouston ju ry ru led e a r lie r th is y e a r th a t T ex as was H ughes legal re sid e n ce T h at decision, w hich w ould con­ flict w ith a fav o rab le ru lin g on th e w ill, could lead to a d isp u te b efo re th e S u p rem e C ourt. L aw y e rs ta lk ed IO full d a y s to su m m a riz e and re fu te ev id en ce in th e I tah tria l, possibly th e ric h e st an d lo n g est ju ry p ro b a te c a se in the co u n try , th a t b egan seven m onths ago. To rea ch a v erd ic t, six m e m b e rs of th e fiv e-m an th ree-w o m en panel, s a tu ra te d w ith life of H ughes, his m issp ellin g s and h is h an d w ritin g q u irk s m u st a g re e on w h eth e r the w ill is a fo rg e ry te stim o n y ab o u t the b iz a rre LOS A N G E L E S A TTO R N EY H arold R hoden, su b stitu te ex ­ e c u to r of th e will for ag in g N oah D ietrich , told th e ju ry it w as ironic th a t D ietrich w as helping H ughes p ro b a te h is will D ietrich w as H u g h es’ top co n fid a n te fo r d ec ad e s u n til the re la tio n sh ip w as b roken in th e la te 1950s in a fin an c ial d isp u te. HOUSTON (U P I. An in v esto r te stifie d his • oin p an y , Coving ton Knox In c., e a rn e d th e U n iv e rs ity of H o u sto n m o re rn ill Ion a n d l l should not fjr in re c e iv e rsh ip as a re su lt o f alleg a tio n s th a t th e the co m p an y d efrau d e d School th a n We h ad a g o o d t r a c k r e ro rd w ith th e U n iv ersity of H ouston,” sa id B o g er Knot, S3, a co founder w ith P a tric k .Sullivan of C ovington Knox , a s e c u ritie s in v e stm e n t Im 11 rn* rex as a tto r n e y g e n e r a l OHOd the com pany for alleg ed ly sc h em in g w ith then univer sity financial a n a ly st S am u el H arw ell ami Harwell's half b ro th e r. S ullivan, to sw indle the* school in securities d a n suctions S ta te D istric t Ju d g e W yatt H eard p laced lh** co m p an y in |,,st te m p o ra ry re c e iv e rsh ip m o n th but held a h e a rin g to h ea r a rg u m e n ts Puesday for ending th e ban T he suit said Knox ea rn e d $500,000 in com m ission s from t r a n s a c t i o n s s e c u r i t i e s because* of his frien d sh ip w ith H arw ell, who was fir***! Nov 2:> Knox te stifie d he thought re p o rte d his c o m ­ H arw ell th e u n iv e rs ity to m is sio n s reg e n ts He also said he m a d e no k ick b ack s to H arw ell th e “ T h ere a re m en ap p a re n tly in this G en e ra l A ssem bly th at w ere w illing to say th e hell r ig h ts of o th e rs w ith in ­ b e c a u s e of th e ir p e tty fig h tin g ,” G re im a n sa id “ I voted fo r a lot of rig h ts for a lot of people and I’m re a lly in shook o v er th a t.” One black la w m a k e r who did vote for th e m e a su re a t Je s s e th e last m in u te. Hep M adison, said a fte rw a rd s , “ If I h a d n 't given m y w ord, I We’re building a reputation not resting campus news in brief Union to present poetry I T he T ex as Union will p re ­ sent “ T he In tim a te T h e a tre of P o e try and P ro se a t 7 p m. T h u rsd ay in the C a ctu s C afe G ra d y H illm an, recognized f o r w o r k a s a R u s s i a n tra n s la to r, w ill re c ite and p e r ­ form his re p e rto ire of o rig in al po etry . T he c a fe w ill open a t 6 30 p m . for those who w ish f o o d a n d to p u r c h a s e b ev erag es. A udience d isc u s­ sion will follow th e show A N N O U N C E M E N T S T E X A S UNION FILM C O M M IT T E E will pre sent “In Search of Tubular Sw ells' in the Union Theater al 7 30 and 9 TO p rn. rnnrsday Admission is $ 1 TS with UT IO UNION M U S IC A L E V C N T S C O M M IT T E E wit’ feature Stranger in the Texas Tavern at 8 30 p rn Thursday This band plays Yes Genesis and others U NIO N PINE ANTS C O M M IT T E E writ spon­ sor a mixed media exhibit in the Union Art Gallery through June 18 Paintings drawing# and sculpture by profesaionai artists of the Texas Commission on the Arts and Humanities’ "Artists In the Sch o o ls' program and their students will be on display C O L L E G E O f P H A R M A C Y will p re s e n t a seminar titled "Structure and Function of Neuronal Membranes" at I p.m Thurs day in the conference room at 2601 University Ave Dr Steven W. Leslie, assistant professor of pharmacology, will speak AA8SL/LEARNING ) S E R V IC E S will enroll students through Monday for tree classes including G R E preparation, speed reading and writing skills Students may e noil at Jester Center A 332 from IO a rn to noon and from I to 3 p m D E P A R T M E N T O f P H Y S IC A L HEALTH ANO ED U C A T IO N will provide students enrolled in HED 333, self-paced, who missed the required orientation lecture, a tape of the lecture The tape will be available rn the audio-visual section of the Academic Center it is essential that students be oriented to this course by Monday M E E T IN G S U N IV E R SIT Y U N D ERW A T ER SO C IE T Y will hold its regular monthly meeting at 7 30 p rn Thursday in Robert Lee Moore Hall« 102 There also will be a free show­ ing of the film “Steel Reefs." 1978 Summer Bowling Leagues offered by the TEXAS UNION RECREATION CENTER Join now ! League registration is u n d e rw ay now in the Texas U nion Recreation Center for Sum m er B ow lin g Leagues. In ­ d iv id u a ls or g ro u p s are w e lcom e . There are no skill qualifications. All th at's necessary is that you like to b o w l1 ' B O W L IN G LEA G U E SCHEDULE: All leagues are coed unless otherwise noted THE L U N C H B U N C H . Lunch w ith the Bunch that Bow ls! M O N D A Y M IX E R S . An e ve ning full of enjoym ent a n d fun for fac u lty /sta ff couples. 7/ M O O N LIGHTERS. Bow l w ith the lights dim m ed. A le agu e that is strictly for tun a n d relaxation. 1 B E G IN N E R 'S LUCK. Spend your lunch hour learning h o w to bow l. An instruc­ tional le agu e for b e g in n in g a n d interm ediate bowlers. L O N G H O R N J U N IO R S . A n A B C tp on iore d le agu e for UT faculty, sta ff a n d students children. Free instruction a n d coaching. H A P P Y D A ZE . Tired of those H a p p y D a y s " reruns? Sp e nd a n evening b o w l­ in g instead. ^ P R O H IB IT IO N LEAG U E. A le agu e for beginners a n d interm ediates. Special in­ struction a n d coaching from Rec Center Staff. D OU BLE TROUBLE. Join w ith a friend or fellow em ployee. Tw o person team s. BEST BALL DO U BLES, lf you miss, there is a lw a y s your partner to rely on in this league. G E N E R A T IO N G A P A dult/Junior League). M o m a n d /o r Dad, bow l w ith the kids this sum m er! M ID W E E K E R S . A d d spice to your life! Som e th in g new a n d exciting for the m id ­ dle of the w eek. DIETER S DELIGHT. Enjoy your friends, eat lunch, a n d exercise! A gre at new w a y to w ork off those extra calories. N E W C O M E R S LEA G U E. Especially for students, staff a n d faculty w h o are new at UT. TERRIBLE T H R E E SO M E . Tw o gu y s a n d one g a l m ake the scene for a n in ­ teresting e ve n in g of b o w lin g. M O N D A Y N oon 6:15 p.m. 8:15 p.m. TUESDAY N oon 2 p.m. 6:15 p.m. 8:30 p.m. W EDN ESD AY N oon 6:15 p.m. 6:15 p.m. 8:30 p.m. THURSDAY N oon 6:15 p.m. 8:30 p.m. FRIDAY Noon 5:1 5 p.m. LEARN AT LU N C H . Learn h o w to b ow l during your lunch break! Free lessons in a le a g u e form at. T.G.I.F. Enjoy h a p p y hour in th® Roc Center. Tw o for O ne. G re at w a y to un w in d from a lo n g w e e k on tho job or hitting the books. For more information, call 4 71-1944 or come to the Recreation Center located on the 1st level (basem ent) of the Texas Union. J