T h e Da il y T e x a n Student N e w s p a p e r a t The University of Texas a t Austin F o rty -E ig h t Pages Vol. 77, No. 80 News and E d ito ria l: 471-4591 Austin, Texas, M onday, January 23, 1978 SZISL XI4**n * a * ° f l ‘ o *<* ur[?J0lc>T W • dux Fifteen Cents ' A dvertising: 471-1865 d Classifieds: 471-5244 Board favors 6.4% boost of faculty pay in 1980-81 By MICHAEL PER R I U niversity Reporter increase T he C o o rd in a tin g B o a rd , T e x a s C o lle g e and U n iv e r s ity S y ste m s faculty to recom m endation salaries only 6.4 percent for the 1980-81 biennium “ w ill probably ca u se the U niversity to fail behind as far as its p osition in the n a tio n .” U n iv ersity P resident Lorene R ogers said Sunday. U niversity salaries have been “ fifth or sixth in the nation among state- supported institutions and w e would like to m aintain that le v e l.” R ogers said. Agreeing with board m em ber Paul Teague, the president said the quality of education is dependent upon people, e s ­ pecially the faculty, and salary levels help to attract good faculty. THE FAILURE of the board to ap­ prove a recom m endation by the For­ mula Advisory C om m ittee for an ad­ ditional 5.5 percent “catch-up” increase “ w ill certainly not help the U niversity regain the com parative standing it held in 1969,” R ogers said. “ I’m disappointed the board didn’t go along with the recom m en­ dations of the advisory co m m itte e,” she that added. in stead The board approved the recom m endations for higher education funding form ulas m ade by the Financial Planning C om m ittee during its regular quarterly m eeting Friday The form ulas w ere approved d espite opposition from th e T e x a s A s so c ia tio n of C o lle g e Teachers and the Council of Senior C ollege P residents Acting as the chairm an of the council, E D. Walker, president of the U niversi­ ty of Texas System , told the board that th e s t a f f r e c o m m e n d a t io n s “fo r salaries and general operating expenses are below what they w ere two years ago ” THE SENIOR COLLEGE presidents “ support the recom m endations of the ad visory co m m itte e and that highest priority should be given to facul­ ty sa la ries,” Walker said feel Frank Wright of TACT indicated the 5.5 percent catch-up increase would not achieve parity with 1968-69 purchasing power and that total faculty com pensa­ tion, salary plus fringe benefits, “ lags further behind the national average than faculty salaries a lon e.” The approved staff reoommendatiO' » w ere introduced by B etty Jo Hay, chairwom an of the Financial Planning C om m ittee Calling for a general 6 4 percent increase in funding for public senior colleges and universities to a c­ in flation , the recom m en­ count for d ation s w ere based on the figu res recom m ended to the 65th Legislature in 1976 The total of $609 million approved by the board for fiscal 1980 was an increase of l l 2 percent over the $548 m illion ap­ propriated by the Legislature in fiscal 1979. THE FORMULA recom m endations for 1981 total $644 million, a 5.7 percent increase over 1980. Of these figures m ore than half. $325 m illion in 1980 and $346 m illion in 1981 would go to faculty salaries. Dr Kenneth Ashworth, director of the perm anent staff, said that a 5.5 percent addition to the salary recom m endations would add $33 million to the total in­ crease of $156 m illion over the bien­ nium. Teague, acknowledging the advice of (See COORDINATING, P age 12.) While the rest of Austin suffered chills from the cold, burdened. Sitting beside West First Street, on Town wintry winds Saturday, one young tree was especially Lake, the tree was a prime target for splashed water. Why me? Texan Staff Photo by Jim Thomao Shuttle bus service costs may go up By KENT ANSCHUTZ and CHA R U E ROSE S U ff W riters Shuttle bus service, which now uses one-half of the student serv ice fees, m ay claim two-thirds when the U niversity’s current contract with Transportation E nterprises, Inc., expires in 1979, a U niversity spokesm an said Sunday. T E I’s current three-year contract with the U niversity ca lls for $1.3 m illion per year from the mandatory student-paid fees, Mike Stone, chair­ man of the U niversity’s Student S ervice F ee s C om m ittee, said. The 1977-78 student service fee total w as $2.4 m illion. The fee s are collected by charging students $2 32 per sem ester hour, a total of $27 84 for a full-tim e student. INCREASES IN COSTS probably w ill cause the U niversity to pay at least 50 percent m ore than in the present contract to keep an effectiv e level of shuttle bus service, Jim Wilson, assistan t to the v ice president for business affairs, said at a F ri­ day service fee co m m ittee m eeting. The “ present level of service is the absolute m inimum (the U niversity needs) from this day forw ard,” Wilson added. The com m ittee will present recom m endations on the allocation of the serv ice fee to U niversity P resident Lorene R ogers later this week. It would cost the U niversity $6 m illion to $7 million to initiate its own bus service. Wilson said, adding that “ the U niversity doesn’t need to be a transportation company ” com m ittee for m ore funds next year, requesting $89,500, an increase of alm ost $11,000 over its current budget ( lidded Although he has never requested an audit of T E I’s records, Wilson said, “ They are doing what the contract requires I think w e ’re getting the best buy for bus service in the United S ta tes,” RISING COSTS, particularly resulting from e m p lo y e e r a is e s , c a u se d th e D iv isio n of R ecreational Sports to ask for m ore m oney in 1978-79, a spokesm an said. R ecreational sports requested $560,000, an increase of $46,000 over this y ea r’s allocation. T he s tu d e n ts ’ a tto rn e y ’s office also asked the Rising co sts n ecessitated the increase, which will provide students with current service levels next year, Students' Attorney Ron Shortes said While other units want m ore money from the com m ittee, The D aily Texan wants less INCOME FROM the student service fee m ade up less than 5 percent of the Texan's $1.6 m illion 1977-78 budget. The fees com m ittee w ill hear budget requests Monday from the other se rv ic e units, the Senior C abinet, Student H ealth C enter, Stu dents' Assoc iation and E lection Com m ission. The Daily Texan asked the com m ittee for $65,* The Senior Cabinet w ill ask the co m m ittee for OOO in 1978-79, $10,000 less than this year $22,000 in 1978-79. It recieved $20,103 this year. Texas Student Publications, responsible for financing the Texan, hopes to operate on “ a near break-even budget," Jeff Case, TSP president, said. “ TSP should ask only for what it n eed s,” “ I think w e ’ve cut back on everything w e ca n ,” and have a reasonable budget to subm it to the com m ittee, Mark Evans, cabinet president and fees com m ittee m em ber, said. Police charge suspect in ‘telephone’ rape case A 29-year-old construction worker has b een c h a r g e d w ith o n e co u n t of aggravated rape in connection with a series of a ssau lts in which a man posed as a telephone repairm an to gain access to residences. V incent Paul Jones Jr. of K yle was arrested early Saturday m orning on a warrant issued by Municipal Court J u d g e M ark S c h r e ib e r c h a r g in g aggravated rape. Jones w as arraigned before Ju stice of the P ea ce J a m es A. Holt Sr. in Kyle before being returned to the Austin city jail. Schreiber set bond at $50,000. A per­ sonal bond w as denied. A PD Sgt. T. Koehler said Sunday that Jones probably w ill be transferred to T r a v is C o u n ty J a il T u e s d a y and processed there. “ We are still in the process of in­ vestigation and there is still possibility other charges would follow ,” Koehler said. F iv e assault ca se s involve a man claim ing to be a telephone repair man wanting to look at telephone jacks. Two w ere rapes and three w ere attem pted rapes, Koehler said. Koehler advised wom en not to let strangers into their hom es. “ The telep h on e com pany u sually d oesn’t send a repairm an to a house un­ less they receive a com plaint from the resid en ce,” Koehler said r monday — Cloudy... M onday’s skies will be cloudy, with a chance of lig h t d riz z le and rain through Tuesday. The high temperature will be in the upper 40s, the low near 40. More weather, Page 15. Aggies ... Texas to College travels Station Monday for a rough basketball game against the Aggies. Story and photos, Page 9. Buat races revived East Austin protests By MARY MCMULLEN City Reporter E a s t A u stin r e s id e n ts a r e s t ill protesting the City Council’s 4-3 d eci­ sion to m ove boat races back to Town Lake A pproxim ately 20 citizens picketed a local hotel Saturday and Sunday, and other businesses can exp ect the sam e, one participant said Sunday. The two afternoon protests w ere the first of several planned against hotels and restaurants that benefit from the annual races, said John Moore, m em ber of the E ast F irst Street Center Advisory Board. The businesses picketed prefer the Town Lake site because of the trem en­ dous revenue the races generate, Moore said “ Big m oney interests are putting pressure on the council to hold the races on Town Lake,” he said T H E O R D I N A N C E p a s s e d at Thursday’s council m eeting requires that all boat activities end at dark and lim its the starting tim es and a ccess routes of the events Following the council decision, E ast Austin resident Paul Hernandez said he w a s d isappointed in M ayor C arole M cClellan’s determ ining vote “ M cC lellan has proven to be an irresponsible m ayor and insensitive to the people of this neighborhood. She has put us back five years In a single sw eep," Hernandez said. Traditionally, residents have com ­ plained about the added noise, traffic and litter the races bring, but the real concern is the council's apparent dis­ regard for E ast A ustin’s future, Moore said Many residents have left E ast Austin because of the boat races, the nearby transit system headquarters and power plant, Moore said. He fears a slum m ay develop. A l t h o u g h s e v e r a l p e r s o n s a t Thursday’s public hearing warned et violence at this y ea r’s races, Moore predicted protests will be peaceful. R esidents w ill picket the first boat race in April, Moore said, but he ex­ p ects no trouble. “ We’re going to try to m ake it uncom fortable for the boat race through people, but not necessarily violen ce,” he explained VV i ; * j $j’• I Program on smoking hazards offered UT and cancer society hope to educate public i i •w l \ i • t KAREN ROSEN Staff Writer A young boy sits contentedly at his father’s side, a pack of cig a rettes in his tiny hand Proudly he says, “ I can ’t w ait ’til I’m big and can sm oke just like you, Daddy.” The advertisem ents are countless, the pleas repetitive, and yet thousands of people continue to in­ hale the deadly fum es that surgeons warn m ay cause irreparable dam age. How w ill the public react to the picture of a sm all girl cradling her doll to her breast, a lone tear travel­ ing down her face*’ The sign below her reads, “ Once she had a m other; now she s all alone The answ ers to why so m any continue to sm oke baffle those working at the Am erican Cancer Society and it is in hope of solving this m ystery that the society, in conjunction with the U niversity, is in­ itiating a new program which they hope will educate the public about the hazards of smoking The program originated through the com bined e f­ forts of Dr Bill C issell, a ssociate professor, and Dr Marian Upchurch, an instructor in the physical and > m w w _ ak rn rn u • • • • • • • health education departm ent at the U niversity. By teaching Methods rn Community Health (EDC 371) ( H E D 370K) and C om m unity H ealth A n a ly sis together, they w ere able to recruit enough people to participate in the experim ental project. One of the purposes of the program is to provide students with an opportunity to apply the educational sk ills they learn in the classroom . “ By working in a program directly correlated with the cancer society, the student would benefit from both a ctu al field work and ed u ca tio n a l group p ro cesses,” C issell said Even though m em bership is sm all - - the total enrollm ent is eight - C issell fe e ls confident that once the program is fully developed, other cam pus organizations will want to participate. The program is designed to acquaint the general public with the possible d isea ses caused by smoking and with other program s offered by the cancer society. While program m ing is still in prelim inary stages, C issell has already begun training students for their roles as group leaders Students becom e qualified to run the program s after com pleting a seven-day training program . Once the leaders are trained, they will open the program to the general public. T entatively, eight session s are being planned — two session s a week for four w eeks — with the trained leaders organizing group dynam ic a ctiv ities, including trigger film s to crea te audience response) and film s (short program evaluations. “The program will use a light sensitivity method in making people aw are of the dangers involved, with much em phasis placed on educating the public," C issell said. P rogram s sim ilar to the sm oking sem inar have proved successful in the past and, although the number of people attending the program s rem ains low, the cancer so ciety feels that m ore people are b ecom in g in fa c ts and figures. in cr ea sin g ly in te re sted R ecent reports from the society indicate that of the 350,000 people who died of cancer last year, m ore than 100,000 m ight have been saved by earlier d etec­ tion and diagnosis. v/A' <"/ *///,/ / / / / / / / v v / / / s s s s / / " 'y 7 /7 '{ '/S /s s ' / / / j y l l iWi 11 I - H W 1 'VT P a g e 2 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Monday, January 23, 1978 Architecture teachers fired Married couple work with environment By BETH FRERKING University Reporter A m arried couple Involved in “ ap* p ro p ria te tech n o lo g y " was fired recently from teaching positions in the School of Architecture Assistant Professors Pliny and Daria Fisk have worked several years with t e c h n o l o g y , whi ch a p p r o p r i a t e f i n d i n g e m p h a s i z e s t h e m o s t econom ically feasible, sm all-scale solution to a problem while minimizing environmental damage. For example, the Fisks are advising officials in Crystal City on energy managem ent within the city and are install and usa* training citizens to wood-burning stoves and dom estic solar water heaters Harold Box. Dean of the School of A rchitecture, said their contracts simply were not renewed He also said their work in appropriate technology had nothing to do with the dismissals but refused to comment further The Fisks in Philadelphia before coming to the University He lived coordinated ecological Land planning and engineering for a new town of IOO,- OOO, while his wife worked at a private architectural firm Fisk and his wife came to the Univer­ sity in 1972 when Alan Taniguchi was dean of the architecture school Fisk said several new faculty members were hired then in “ an attempt by Taniguchi to get some exciUng things going on' in the school Taniguchi who now heads a Houston architecture firm, said although he was at the University when the Fisks inter­ viewed he resigned before they arriv­ ed to teach He said he did not specially recruit the Finks but had heard similar misconceptions" expressed before He did not comment on the firings. Pliny F isk 's two courses at the University included a seminar on ap­ propriate technology and an Integrated ■environments studio design class His wife taught a design course which emphasized user participation Neither had tenure Fisk said he worked with an ap­ propriate technology program at the University's Balcones Research Center but put together his own group, The C e n t e r f or M a x i m u m B u i l d i n g Systems, two years ago The non-profit organization is independently funded by various foundations “ There has been much interest in it ‘the organization),” Fisk said “ It s politically rather a delicate issue ” He said he did not know if their involve­ ment in appropriate technology had anything to do with the firings Fisk said much research on ap­ propriate technology has been done in the North and northeast states This week he will represent four states (Texas, Oklahoma, Louisiana and Arkansas) in Washington by testifying on appropriate technology before members of the new Department of Energy "We have every intention of staying in Texas and seeing what a regional lab in appropriate technology can do,” he said “ We’re not taking off to a bigger and fancier job somewhere else." AC door opens automatically Heavy steel doors need no longer be obstacles to students in wheelchairs if a new autom atic door opening device proves to be successful at the Academic Center The device, on loan to the University from the manufac­ turer for a trial period, has been installed in the east en­ trance of the Academic Center since December The device, a small blue and white steel box with s red button in the mid­ dle, opens the double doors automatically and holds them In place for about five seconds The student has time to back up and roll through the entrance before the doors close Ed Croslin, sn architect with the construction and maintenance department in charge of plans to alter campus buildings for the handicapped, said the advantage of the mechanism is that it can be installed on double doors This is leas expensive than widening narrow single doorways, he said “ A person in a wheelchair can only open one leaf at a tim e,' said Croslin, and that gives him just enough room to squeeze through So far, there have been no complaints or breakdowns concerning the device, he said The Academic Center is first on the University president’s im ­ list of buildings recom m ended for accessibility provements during 1978-79 The west entrance of the Main Building is one of the doorways to be modified in the near future,” Croslin added "Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 sets stan­ dards to make buildings barrier-free,” said Croslin "Some requirements will not be definite until mid-1978 " The Board of Regents must approve funding for an overall plan to improve building accessibility, Croslin said, before more door-opening devices can be installed on entrances A proposed plan has been submitted to President Lorene Rogers by Dr. Ronald Brown, vice president for ad­ m inistrative services. "In the meantime, other improvements are being m ade," Croslin said, "such as curb cuts, ramps, lowering of w ater fountains, widening of doorways, restroom modifications and elevator controls labeled in braille for the blind ” campus capsules UT graduate needs blood Sally Tullos, a recent University graduate hospitaliz­ ed with acute leukemia, is urgently in need of blood donors Her condition has weakened while undergoing chemotherapy at St. David’s Community Hospital, requiring her to receive up to 12 units of platelets and packed red blood cells daily Donors of any blood type are needed to help replace the quantity supplied to Tullos by the blood bank. Donations may be credited to her name at the Travis County Blood Bank at 4300 N. Lamar Blvd During her four-year battle with leukemia Tullos has insights to including spoken freely of her experiences and various audiences throughout the state, University classes on death and dying. Last March she testified before a state Senate com­ m ittee in behalf of the Natural Death Act, now a law which allows individuals to authorize the withdrawal of artificial life-sustaining procedures in the event of terminal illness or , ;ddent. Tullos participated in a workshop on death and dying with nationally prominent Dr Elisabeth Kibler-rtoss. Last August she completed her requirements for a degree in psychology in between trips to M D. Ander­ son Cancer and Tumor Institute in Houston She is con­ tinuing to take University courses as her health per­ mits. Professor to teach in Australia Lawrence Speck, University assistant professor of architecture and planning, is preparing to spend this spring and summer as a Fulbright Senior Scholar in Australia. Speck, 28, will leave Feb. 21 for the University of Western Australia, near Perth. There he will serve as curriculum advisor and lecturer. Speck seeks to in­ tegrate theories and characteristics of older architec­ tural styles such as gothic and classical with the characteristics of modem design. Speck was chosen for the award by the Council for International Exchange of Scholars. The selection was | I Order m w Im M IM U m I flit M m , I BAZANS BAKERY and DELICATESSEN u OFF 125%■ with tbit (MfNM I m sh march—din •xcapf wwMU« <«k«t I A tiff i n |T«fct Mf 4 dining m n 454-5131 NIW YORK STYLI BAKING ( d u n , p a s t r i e s , i m k , i m U m HIW YORK STYLI DILI K a s t o r s ty le m M i •Mf SS mnMHctoi 7Y5B Grnnt N o rd *rn Andnrsnn In. 4 Sheet (ra n t s i i a i i n s t l A i n a T O ^ t T Co -Op 3.80 ACTELEDYNE ACOUSTIC RESEARCH Co -Op $160. PR made jointly by the governments of Australia and the United States. Both countries are funding his six- month scholarship, which amounts to $15,000 in salary and expenses. ‘‘Australia was looking for a man in my field,” Speck said, referring to his specialization in older styles of architecture. “ I applied last June, and it sure was a long process of selection.” After returning from Australia, Speck will resume his position on the University architecture faculty. He is on leave of absence through the summer. Pre-law students plan tor mock LSAT The University Pre-Law Association is sponsoring a practice Law School Admissions Test from 8 a.m. to noon Saturday in the Academic Center. ‘ The test is administered prior to each regularly scheduled LSAT on cam pus/' said Mark Strachan, association president. The practice LSAT is given ‘‘familiarize students with taking the regular LSAT and some possible questions that they might face on the test.” Prior to the mock LSAT the organization will spon­ sor preparatory sessions to help students review. THE SESSIONS are from 7 to 9 Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday and will be held in Calhoun Hall IOO The three sessions are set up to assist students in different categories. "The first session will be on law, the second on English and the third on math, more specifically,” said Strachan. The sessions originated to refresh students on the test material and “ give them hints on how to go about answering different types of test questions,” Strachan said. ‘‘Professors will be there to help tutor students on technical and grammatical rules that may have been forgotten,” he added. The mock LSAT is available at no charge to associa­ tion members and $5 to non-members. Tickets will be available at any preperatory session or at the Academic Center the day of the test. — J The Daily Texan, a student newspaper at The University of Texas s t Austin, is published by Texas Student Publications, D raw er D, University Station, Austin, Tex . 78712 The Daily Texan is published Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday. Thursday, and Fri day. except bolide iv. except holiday and exam periods Second class postage paid a t Austin. Tex News contributions will be accepted by telephone 1471 AW I), at the editorial office (Texas Student Publications Building 2 1221 or a t the news laboratory (Communication Building A 4 IX Inquiries concerning delivery and classified advertising should be m ade in TSP Building 3 200 ( 471-5244) and display advertising in TSP B u ild in g 3.210 (471-1X5). _ .. ly .n The national advertising representative of The Daily Texan is N ational Educational Advertising Service. Inc , 380 Lexington Ave., New York, N Y., 10017 The Daily Texan subscribes to United P ress International and New York Tim es News Service The Texan is a m em ber of th e Associated Collegiate Press, the Southwest Journalism Congress, the Texas Dally Newspaper Association. and American Newspaper Publishers Association ONE SEM ESTER (FALL OR SPRING) 1077-78 THE DAILY TEXAN SUBSCRIPTION RATES Picked up on campus - basic student fee .............................................................. | Picked up on campus - U T facu lty /st-I f ............................................................ Picked up on campus - general public By mail in Texas By mail. outaide Texas within U S A............................ 75 j gg ..............................................................$ 7 5 ..............................................................................13 OO 14 00 TWO SEMESTERS (FALL AND SPRING) 1977-78 Picked up on campus - U T faculty staff ............................................................ y J x Picked up on campus • general p u b lic ...................................................................... 12 00 By mail in Texas By mail. outside Texas within U S A ................................. 24 OO x 00 SUMMER SESSION 1978 Picked up on campus U T students faculty s u i ! Picked up on c a ir -his - g e n e ra l p ublic ................................................................. 4 OO g so By mail in Texas 9 OO By mail, outside Texas within U S A Send orders and address changes to TEXAS STUDENT PUBLICATIONS, P O Box PUB NO 146440 D, Austin, Texas 78712, or to TSP Building, CS 200 ................................................................ I OO CLEARANCE Latest Styles CHECK THE GRAND OPENING SALE AT ALL SIX AUSTIN STORES. Movin On and Junior Jeans $9.99 Men’s Shirrs Kenning on and Brittania $7.99 Junior Tops one-half off (as low as SS. 991 2200 Guadalupe, Highland, Northcross, and Westgate Malls, and now Hancock Center. Also Austin Army Navy-412 Congress. Yarbrough trial begins today By United Press International Donald B Yarbrough, stripped of his position on the Texas Suprem e Court, Monday will face crim inal charges that led to his ouster Y arbrough is accused of forging a c a r title and lying to a T ravis County grand jury about the incident. The prosecution team , composed of D istrict Attorneys C arol V ance of H a rris County and Ronald E arle of T ravis County and assistan ts Phil Nelson of Austin and John Holmes of Houston, says it will concentrate on the p erjury charge Yarbrough, 36, will be represented by form er Attorney G eneral Waggoner C arr of Austin. THE PERJURY indictm ent evolved from a clandestine m eeting with form er business associate John W. Rothkopf at an A ustin m otel on M ay 16, 1977. R othkopf told o fficials Y arbrough attem p ted a t that m eeting to get him to m urder another form er associate, Bill Kemp. Yarbrough was elected to a six-year term on the Suprem e Court in 1976 but served less than seven m onths before being forced out of office by allegations against him He resigned July 15, 1977, as the Legislature began consideration of a resolution to oust him from office. Two m onths later, on Sept 2. he voluntarily surrendered his law license r a t h e r f a c e d i s b a r m e n t proceedings in Houston t h a n “ I think the fellow has suffered enough,” C arr said “ I hope enough others agree with m e .’’ CARR SAID Y arbrough is in debt and unable to pay his legal fees A second defense attorney, C harles M Hineman of A ustin, the ca se resig n ed from because he had not been paid Conviction on the aggravated perjury charge could bring a sentence of two to IO y ears in prison and a $5,000 fine for the ex-justice. Yarbrough, then a Houston attorney with little experience in politics, su r­ prised m ost observers with a landslide victory over longtim e appellate judge C harles W\ Barrow of San Antonio in the May I, 1976, D em ocratic p rim ary race for the Suprem e Court He was unopposed in the general elec­ tion. Carr (I), Yarbrough - U P I T«l*pholo Peace talks in Cairo stalled Egypt and Israel exchange accusations I JERUSALEM (U PI) — P rim e M inister Menahem Begin Sunday called off the departure of an Israeli delegation for peace talks in Cairo, blam ing Egyptian insults and ultim atum s. The move suspended all form al negotiations between the two countries. Egypt replied by accusing Israel of “ arro g an ce and obstinacy’’ and indicated it considered the peace talks now alive only in the legal sense. But an official traveling with Secretary of State Cyrus Vance Sunday predicted talks between Egypt and Israel would resum e in 7 to IO days, with the United States ac­ ting as m ediator. The official also said E gypt’s request for U.S. m ilitary aid would be considered. “ In light of the situa­ tion ... w e’d be willing to take a look at th e req u est.’’ IN THE PAST, Israel has reacted with dism ay w henever the suggestion of U.S. arm s sales to Arab countries was publicly raised. J D espite a unanim ous decision by the Israeli cabinet to postpone the delegation’s departure, Begin left the door ; open for a resum ption of peace moves, saying Israel “ continues to be in terested ’ in the negotiations He said the cabinet “ will in the near future again dis­ cuss the issue of the d ep artu re of the Israeli delegation" for the m ilitary talks that had been scheduled to begin this weekend But the official Middle E a st News Agency said in Israeli move reflected “ arrogance and Cairo obstinacy which is obstructing the peace negotiations." the In what was seen by diplom ats as an indication Cairo considered negotiations dead for all practical purposes, MENA said, “ The Cairo peace conference and the com ­ m ittees stem m ing from it a re considered alive in the legal (technical) sense " But it m ade no m ention of the talks being alive in p ractice AND IN ANOTHER sign that Egypt was not planning on a quick resum ption of peace efforts, officials an­ nounced that two of the E gyptian negotiators to the ad­ journed Jeru salem foreign m in iste rs’ talks planned to fly abroad within the next few days. In Cairo Saturday, P resident Anwar Sadat told a cheering parliam en t Egypt would fight Israel “ until the end of the w orld" if the Jew ish state fails to rem ove all its soldiers and civilians from captured Arab land under any peace agreem ent In D am ascus, S yria’s state-controlled newspapers said Sunday the rupture of Israeli-E gyptian talks m eant the failure of S ad at’s regim e and not even the United States would be able to prevent his fall from power. The S tate D epartm ent had no com m ent on the Israeli move S ecretary of S tate Cyrus Vance, who had been in both Israel and Egypt last week, was flying back to Washington from Athens Sunday when Begin m ade his announcem ent IN A RELATED developm ent, the weekly Egyptian Isra e li m agazine O ctober ch arg ed Sunday, authorities bugged all the rooms a t the Jeru salem Hilton hotel that w ere assigned to the Egyptian delega­ tion to the peace talks there. th a t The room s of E gyptian journalists covering the talks were also bugged, the m agazine said It said Egyptian security agents accom panying the delegation dis­ covered the bugging equipment. There was no com m ent on the report from Israel. M onday, Ja n u a ry 23, 1978 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ P a g e 3 Marston out Bell says political ties cost U.S. attorney job PHILADELPHIA (I PD U S At­ torney David W M arston said Sunday he will s ta rt looking for another job and he has no intentions of running for lieutenant governor of Pennsylvania M arston, 35, the federal prosecutor fired Friday by U.S. Attorney General Griffin Bell, will leave office Monday. Bell indicated he thought M arston was com petent, but his Republican affilia­ tion cost him his job “ I really don't know what my plans a re ," M arston said “ I would like to get a couple of days off, but I think I have to find a job first I haven’t received any o ffers,” REPORTS INDICATED Marston s ouster m ay have been prom pted by political pressure brought on the C arter adm inistration as a result of M arston’s investigation of Reps Daniel Flood and Joshua Eilberg, both D-Pa , for alleged­ ly profiting from a $65 million addition to a Philadelphia hospital. E arlier investigations by M arston’s office led to the convictions of two other pow erful P ennsy lv an ia D em o crats, fo rm er sta te Sen. Henry J. ( ianfrani and fo rm e r s ta te H ouse S p e a k e r Herbert Finem an Asked about published reports that som e sta te Republican leaders consider him a possible candidate for the GOP lieutenant gubernatorial nomination. Marston said, “ T hat’s news to m e ." —UPI Telephoto Attorney General Bell Marston said such a nom ination would only “ serve political needs” and “ I want no part of th a t,” I was both surprised and disap­ pointed by (B ell’s decision) because the most frustrating that he agreed with me on everything except that I should stay in the job ” thing was ‘Cold hearted’ weather closes Chicken Ranch (U P I) DALLAS The C h icken Ranch, T exas’ most renowned house of prostitution, had sought a second life, serving dinner and drinks instead of sex. last week its new im age suc­ But cumbed to cold w eather and sparse •rowds, d o lin g after four months of rehabilitation on D allas' restaurant- loaded G reenville Avenue “ We had a little slump during the holi­ day season,” said m anager Bill F air III, who helped organize the move of the building from LaG range “ The problem was there w ere no to add a d d itio n a l fu n d s a v a ila b le heating cap acity ,” he said. “ The place was inadequately heated Nobody w ants to sit around in a p lace th a t’s 50 d eg rees.” FAIR SAID the b ro th el-tu rn ed - restau ran t m ay re-open with a re stru c ­ tured menu. F arm ers, students, politicians and businessm en patronized the Chicken Ranch during its cathouse days, which may have gone back as far as 130 years. L o c a l a u t h o r i t i e s o v e r lo o k e d it s business as the house becam e a part of Texas lore until Gov. Dolph Briscoe closed it in 1973. Carter’s tax revisions studied Treasury Department says increase for poor, decrease for rich WASHINGTON (U P I) — The working poor will pay $11 m ore earnings would increase $1,029 in 1979 - the first full year that in Social Security and incom e taxes and the rich will pay $134 the C arter package would be in force if it w ere enacted a s less in 1978 under P resident C a rte r’s revisions, a T reasury proposed D epartm ent analysis showed Sunday. The president said the revisions in a tax reduction package of $24 5 billion proposed Saturday were designed to m ake taxes “ both fairer and sim p ler" for all classes. He said the cuts would help to offset the rise in payroll taxes th at took effect Jan I. BUT ENACTMENT of revisions for the final three m onths of 1978, as C a rte r proposed, would give tem porary dispropor­ tionate breaks to people with earnings of $100,000, the analysis showed. Sundlin said the total tax liability of those with $100,000 in The T reasury D epartm ent in response to requests provided exam ples of the im pact of the com bination of income tax reduc- tion, reform s and higher payroll taxes on a fam ily of four with one wage earner. THE ANALYSIS SHOWED that C a rte r’s proposal would m ake no change in income tax liability for a fam ily with a $5,000 income, which before and a fte r reform owes nothing. But the payroll tax for the working head of the family is up $11. The analysis also showed that the income taxes of a $100,000 worker heading a fam ily of four would be reduced $240 to $28 640 Documents reveal Jaworski dropped felony indictment against Kleindienst WASHINGTON (U FI) - Law yers in the W atergate special prosecu to r's of­ fice originally wanted to seek a felony indictm ent against form er Attorney G eneral R ichard Kleindienst on perjury charges, it was reported Sunday. But K leindienst’s law yers convinced special prosecutor Leon Jaw orski in the end th at to prosecute him for a felony would violate an agreem en t reached with his predecessor, Archibald Cox. T h e N ew Y ork T im e s a n d th e Washington Post reported the incident Sunday on th e b asis of W aterg ate prosecution docum ents obtained by the Fund for Constitutional G overnm ent, a th e public advocacy group, und er Info rm atio n Act. The F reed o m of papers included a censored version of a history of the Kleindienst case prepared in a 121-page, 1975 report by R ichard J. Davis, who took over the team that in­ vestigated allegations involving In ter­ national Telephone and Telegraph Corp. ACCORDING TO THE docum ent, staff law yers wanted to seek a felony in­ d ic tm e n t a g a in st K leindienst for a statem en t he m ade during 1972 Senate Ju diciary Com m ittee hearings on his nom ination as attorney general that the Nixon White House had not intervened in a case involving ITT. Jaworski at first approved the plan tc seek a felony indictm ent against Klein­ it sa id . B ut K le in d ie n st'^ d ie n st, lawyers thai finally convinced him when the attorney general first went tc Cox with in fo rm atio n abo u t White House involvement with ITT, he was promised favorable consideration if any case were brought against him Jaworski told his staff in M arch, 1974, he had decided to let Kleindienst plead to a m isd e m e a n o r c h a rg e of only “ refusal to answ er questions” from a congressional com m ittee Kleindienst did so and re c e iv e d a one-m o n th suspended jail sentence. “This is not a civil rights issue,” Miss Bryant said of gay activism. “ They (homosexuals) were not bom that way. They are not a legitimate minority group.” Vance returns from Greece; Cyprus talks 'fruitful' CordiaI communists —UPI Telephoto A group of Soviet Parliamentarians (I) visiting Washington begin their five-day tour of the United S tates, exchanging greetings with S enate Democratic right) and Brademas. Whip Alan Cranston (second from House D em ocratic W hip John news capsules Eastman Kodak to appeal antitrust violation ruling NEW YORK (UPI) — The giant Eastman Kodak Co. says it will appeal a federal court finding that it monopolized the amateur photographic business in violation of antitrust laws. The verdict was delivered over the weekend by a U.S. District Court jury that heard six months of court testimony from Kodak and the plain­ tiff, Berkey Photo Inc. The panel of eight women and two men found Kodak guilty Saturday in its eighth day of deliberation. Damages against Kodak will be set during a jury trial scheduled to begin Feb. 21. 'Sunbelt' states may gain 12 congressmen WASHINGTON (UPI) — Thirteen states could gain or lose con­ gressmen in the early 1980s if present population trends continue, the Cen­ sus Bureau reported Sunday. The 1977 government estimates showed the American population con­ tinuing its migration from the industralized Northeast and Midwest to the “sunbelt” states of the South and Southwest. Should the findings be confirmed by the 1980 census, it would mean a loss of 13 members by industrialized states since 1960 and a gain of 12 by “ sunbelt” states. ATHENS (UPI) - Secretary of State Cyrus Vance left Athens for home Sunday after a day of talks on bilateral “ fruitful” issues and the Cyprus problem. Vance received a promise from Prime Minister Constan­ that Greece tine Caramanlis would to genuine respond Turkish overtures for the settle­ ment of the Cyprus issue. Greek political observers saw Vance s trip as one of mediation between Greece and Turkey on the Cyprus issue and the Aegean Sea bed dispute that brought the two nations to the brink of war two years ago. National Park, but both sides angrily attacked the desecration of the trees. The Redwoods are preserved in groves along Highway 101, and the latest vandalism occurred Friday when four of the trees were chain- sawed and damaged on the Avenue of the Giants in Humboldt Redwood State Park about 55 miles south of Eureka. Farm supporters phone In mallgram ALBERT, Kan. (UPI) - Tim Schneider, his mother and another (arm strike supporter took turns Sunday reading 4,570 names by phone to a Western Union center in Missouri to get a 150-foot mailgram before national agriculture leaders Monday. Copies of the mailgram, containing the names of farm strike supporters from 25 states, should adorn the desks of President Carter, Agriculture Secretary Bob Bergland, Commerce Secretary Juanita Kreps and the agriculture committees of the Senate and the House sometime Monday. The more than ll hours of telephone dictation was the culmination of a project Schneider, 16, conceived during his Christmas break, most of which he spent in the American Agriculture farm strike office in Albert. ‘Protect American Children' campaign launched WASHINGTON (UPI) — Singer Anita Bryant Sunday launched a “ Protect American Children” campaign aimed at eliminating sex, violence and homosexuality from television programs. Miss Bryant said the effort, involving the monitoring of television shows, will try to counteract the pressure on networks from gay activists who want homosexuals depicted as an oppressed minority. Historic Redwoods mysteriously vandalized EUREKA, Calif. (UPI) — Authorities tried during the weekend to solve the mystery of who has destroyed or damaged 16 historic, giant Redwood trees, some several thousand years old and popular attractions for tourists from around the nation. The vandalism, which began Jan. 3, came amid a dispute between loggers and conservationists over a congressional bill to expand Redwood —UPI T*4#photo Hollywood ‘trick task force' cracks down Vance HOLLYWOOD (UPI) - A total of 37 persons were arrested on Hollywood’s streets late Saturday and early Sunday in the second night of a crackdown on prostitution. Police said arrests during the two nights of the sweep of Hollywood streets netted 77 arrests, with most of the suspects booked on suspicion of prostitution. A member of the Hollywood Division s “trick task force,” Lt. Steve includes three undercover Day, said policewomen, took the suspects into custody. the 12-officer team, which editorials State of the union: time of opportunity T h e re wa* no flourish of eloquence, no ca ll to arm *, no w arning of im ­ pending d is a s te r in P re s id e n t C a rte r * f ir s t S ta te of the Union m essag e T h u rsd a y night The nation is, a s th e p re sid e n t colored it, w ithout c risis T H E HIATUS O F in te rn a tio n a l and d o m estic c ris e s is a phenom enon re a d ily o b serv ab le to all w itn esses of th e p a st d ec ad e s tu rm o il. The pain and anquish g e n e ra te d by civil u n re st, V ietnam and W a te rg ate seem to be m o re a p a rt of our histo ry , than they a r e p a rt of o u r lives We now have a r a r e and p ric e le s s opportunity to a d d ress the p ersisten t pro b lem s which burden us as a nation and w hich b ecam e quietly w orse o ver the y e a rs ." T he p re sid e n t d esc rib ed those " p e rs is te n t p ro b le m s" and his plans for d ealing w ith them in his a d d re s s • T he econom y, though fa r fro m h ealth y , is reco v erin g from a long ii* I ness. U nem ploym ent and inflation have been stabilized, p a rtia lly in resp o n se to the C a rte r W hite House and p a rtia lly in response to the p o licies of F ord s a d m in istra tio n Y et both problem s a re no c lo ser to reso lu tio n than they w ere a d ec ad e ago C a rte r s public job p ro g ra m , his ap p e als for coo p eratio n from lab o r and business to control w age and p ric e in c re a se s and his a tte n tio n to foreign tra d e a tte m p t to nip the roots of un­ em p lo y m en t and inflation. • While o u r national a rm a m e n t continues to grow , we a re not a t w a r in any region of the world and we a re m aking m argial progress toward a lastin g peace. SALT neg o tiatio n s under th e C a rte r a d m in istra tio n have * been snagged but aim to w ard a reaso n ed and a tta in a b le b alance • Though our c itie s a r e plagued w ith p eren n ial p ro b lem s, th e co u n try is not ra c k e d w ith violence B elated ly , C a rte r will p re se n t the nation w ith a new ly developed, and hopefully co h e ren t, urban policy in M arch T hese p ro b le m s w e re not solved by the c ris is m o tiv a te d policies of th e S illie s , nor w e re the a m e lio ra te d by th e benign neglect of the Nixon and F ord y e a rs, T H E IM PO R TA N C E O F the p re s id e n t's S ta te of th e Union a d d re ss lies not w ith his an a ly sis of our p re se n t and p a st d ilem m a s, nor does it lie w ith his p re sc rip tio n fo r th e sp ecific p ro b lem s in o u r im m e d ia te fu tu re In stea d , it re s ts w ith the p re s id e n t’s u n d erstan d in g of th e role of g o v ern ­ m ent in d ea lin g w ith th e se problem s. A need for partnership T he m a jo r th e m e of the p re s id e n t's talk w as the need for p a rtn e rs h ip betw een p riv a te in te re s ts and the public good, betw een " th o s e who lead and those who e le c t " C a rte r c a lls for th e nation to re alize " g o v e rn m e n t c a n 't solve all our p ro b lem s, s e t all o u r goals, o r define our v isio n .” T h ere s a c e rta in irony in the fa ct th a t C a rte r 's em p h asis fa lls on the lim ited ro le of g o v ern m en t in th e planning, execution and ev en tu al su c c e ss of d o m estic policies — both econom ic and social. T H E P R E S ID E N T has often ca lle d fo rth the m em o ry of his " g re a t p re sid e n ts ’ — such a s ED R , H a rry T ru m an , J F R and LBJ (for his social p ro g ra m s ), Those le a d e rs, all D e m o c ra ts coincidentally, a re renow ned for th e ir e ffo rts a t d ire c tin g national re so u rc e s to u rg en t, national social and econom ic p ro b lem s — w ith m ixed su ccess. C a rte r a im s a t c a rry in g on th at tra d itio n but re alizes th at all th e m oney, good intentions and any am ount of fe d era l re g u latio n s will not alone solve anything "W e m u st m ove aw ay fro m c ris is m a n a g e m e n t and estab lish c le a r goals for the fu tu re w hich will let us w ork to g eth er and not in c o n flic t.” Planning for the future C A R T E R 'S CALL for planning and an ticip atio n , a call to fu tu re o rie n ta ­ tion, is tim e ly and a p p ro p ria te (W e w onder how m any of th e p ro b lem s o u r nation endured for th e p a st 15 y e a rs could have been m ad e less painful had our le a d e rs thought in te rm s of th e fu tu re ; in te rm s of th e co n se­ quence for th e ir actio n s, ra th e r than for som e im m e d ia te po litical b e n e fit.) N eedless to say. the m ost planning, th e m ost thinking and the m ost co n ­ s tru c tiv e legislation this nation needs, it needs for en erg y We grow daily m o re dependent upon foreign p e tro le u m re se rv e s and m o re w illing to fo rg et the c risis brought about five y e a rs ago by an oil em b arg o . OUR NATION CAN, w e believe, m a k e its en ergy p ro b lem s m an ag e ab le if it p lan s prudently now b efore th e c ris is , w hile th e re is tim e to think out and d iscu ss o u r p ro b lem s, a s the p re sid e n t su g g ested . P re s id e n t C a rte r s c a ll for a dialo g u e and co o p eratio n betw een all s e c ­ to rs to solve the n a tio n 's p ro b lem s and to plan for its fu tu re d em an d s a p o sitiv e resp o n se fro m all of us And Just a s the energy p ro b lem s can be controlled — not solely by th e g o v e rn m e n t — but by com m on reso lv e, so ca n th e o th e r issues w e fa ce be o v erco m e R esp ec tin g all d iv e rsity , the n ation should be a b le to m ap out a p ath based on com m on a sp ira tio n s and in te re s ts - D M , H S T h e Da il y T e x a n PERMANENT STAFF E d ito r ...................................... ....................... ....................... ...................... Managing E ditor. Assistant Managing Editors ...................................... Assistant to the Editor ................ ...................... News E d ito r..................................... ............................. 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Berke Breathed Ottawa* Ut TSw l U U y T h m ar* UMH al lh* r n lh* *rM *t al lh* artwH mu! *nr art wo*aaani> U M * at th*' U M m M f jwJHuaHtrattoh. th* SWM* al Raga** at Ok Thu* Stud***! fHhbcaiMM Bm* .* al itpr*atm * T»\uft**a T\jo mm w a s r n M om oar W a /m n 's m m of m m . WM tiliUM Foeti... Local Color... T h e Da il y T e x a n Page 4 □ M onday, J a n u a ry 23, 1978 sl6sk a w Toum sem ces . . AffC/WT TZiftfLZS... Marston massacre: Obstruction of justice the bottom tine By William Satire WASHINGTON — Nineteen hours after Jimmy C arter invoked an uplifting new spirit" in his State of the Union address, hts attorney general dutifully carried out a presidential order to fire a Republican prosecutor at the urgent request of a Democratic congressman under criminal investigation. The new spirit is not merely a presi­ dent breaking an unkeepable promise of appointing prosecutors on m erit The central issue is an attem pted — and in­ credibly, a successful — obstruction of justice, involving organized crime, at least two and probably more govern­ ment officials, and featuring the duping of the president Last year, a nationwide investigation was undertaken by Justice Department strike forces and several U S attorneys into kickbacks by M afia-connected businesses to government officials who steered public largesse their way. At least two grand juries were empaneled, in Philadelphia and Washington, work­ ing with law officers in Los Angeles. PENNSYLVANIA Democratic con­ gressman Dan Flood, a powerhouse on the Appropriations ( ’omrrutttee and the only congressman with the courage to sport a Simon Legree waxed mustache, has seen his aide. Stephen Elko, and family friend. Patricia Brislin, recently convicted on federal bribery charges for getting federally funded trade schools undeserved accreditation Granted im­ munity, they are now under pressure to sing about other congressmen as well as Flood At the sam e time, Joshua Eilberg, vice chairm an of the Pennsylvania Democratic Party and chairm an of House Judiciary’s immigration subcom­ mittee (the most powerful man in the nation on aliens) has to explain why his law firm took over $400,000 in fees in connection with the financing of the ad­ to Philadelphia's Hahnemann dition for the clim actic congressional struggle on energy legislation. With congressional massaging on his mind, the president put in a call on Nov. 7 or 8 to his attorney general, who was reached in his car after shopping (but not buying at Brooks B rothers in Washington.) Judge Bell went back to the store, called the president from the The central Issue Is an attempted—and In­ credibly, a successful—obstruction of justice, Involving crime, at least two govern­ ment officials and featuring the duping of the president Hospital, which the congressman’s of­ fice may have used its leverage to sw­ ing. Eilberg, long in the vanguard of grand jury reform, felt the hot breath of a grand jury poking into his affairs on Nov. I and 2 of last year. On Nov 4, he called P resident C arter. When his telephone call was returned, he told the president that Philadelphia U.S. At­ torney David Marston had to be replac­ ed by some Democrat, any Democrat. We do not know whether he invoked the nam es of any of his Pennsylvania colleagues in his request. THAT AFTERNOON, Nov 4, was an embarrassing one for Carter: he had just told national security adviser Zbigniew Brzezinski to pass the word that his foreign tour would be postponed so that the president could be on hand m anager’s office and got the question: why in firing Republican Marston? the delay Like a good soldier, Bell pushed the button, but nothing happened: his two top aides, P eter Flaherty and Michael Egan, who rarely agreed, agreed it would look terrible to fire this par­ ticular prosecutor, who was getting bipartisan convictions in a town whose p o liticia n s sp ecialized in g ettin g prosecutors fired. BUT WHEN Egan told Marston he was on his way out, thanks to pushing from Eilberg, Marston officially in­ formed his own superior, “ Tim " Baker in the Criminal Division that Eillberg was the subject of a grand jury probe. That raised the possibility of an obstruc­ tion of justice. Baker remem bers being informed, informing his boss, and remem bers Criminal Division chief Ben Civiletti, ol the “ problem." But here the chair breaks: Civiletti has had an attack ol forgetfulness, and cannot recall beinf informed; since Baker has just been ap pointed U.S. attorney in Baltimore thanks to Civiletti’s close relationship with Sen. Paul Sarbanes, we can expecl Baker to claim next he whispered the news to Civiletti in a noisy subway. Who in the Justice Department knew about this obvious o b stru ctio n ol justice, and who in the White House anc Congress knew? Does the House Ethics Committee, Leon Jaworski presiding think it ethical for a member undei criminal investigation to use his office to get the president to remove his tormentor? To whom besides Reps Eilberg and Flood was the Marston fir ing so urgent? BELL, AN honest man who does no: understand this is about an official crim e and not about patronage, ii hunkering down. The president has shown he is willing to duck, weave anc deceive on this subject at news con feren ces. T hat the Senate Judiciary Committee to dig into this case at the confirmation hearings ol Ben C iv iletti as deputy a tto rn e ) general. leaves Senators Thurmond, Mathias, Scott Laxalt, Hatch and Wallop should retain special minority counsel to prepare and conduct their “ side” of that hearing Too much White House heat has been put on; there has to be a motive. There’s more to the "Marston m assacre" than meets the FBI. « 1978 New York Times Man's migration to space inevitable ho you cone. O F T E R ? t t f c t U S . By R.J. Howe Jr. People today are seeking a different vision, a creative and elevative vision that will inspire us in new directions of constructive well-being and not leave us waiting apprehensively for the chaos and destruction that's sure to come if we don't expand our horizons Fortunately, a revolutionary move­ ment has emerged over the last few years that not only will help solve the Elsie problems facing human kind, but also offers the hope of a new age of tremendous prosperity, creativity and freedom This fledgling movement is the human colonization of space, utiliz­ ing the practically limitless m aterials and energy of our solar system to in­ itially build satellite solar power stations to supply much needed energy’ and at the same time to construct space habitats of increasing size THE BASIC unresolved impediment to beginning the migration to space is not lack of know-how but organizational Who is going to direct and finance such a monumental undertaking" My humble suggestion is to allow every person and organization that so desires, Ump chance to have a part in directing the venture, specifically an in­ tercultural space cooperative, financed, operated and controlled dem ocratical­ ly. by its members Membership would be based solely on the purchase of at least one share, affordably priced at, say. ISO apiece to allow people from all walks of life to join The best c u rre n t e s tim a te s put the cost of establishing the “ foothold" in space at approximately 90 billion dollars (or 600 million shares over the next 17-30 years before the initial solar satellites generate enough income to make the project self-supporting After that, the “ profits ’ will be distributed according to a formula based on length of membership multiplied by number of shares owned to help finance construc­ tion of new habitats for independent member groups desiring to collectively create their own socio-political reality. Since writing the above thoughts. I've come across Timothy L eary's just published book titled “ Neuropolitics: T h e S o c i o b i o l o g y of H u m a n Metamorphosis." “ LET US HAVE no illusions," he writes “ Space migration will produce the most intense ontological struggles our planet has seen since the reptilian- mammalian conflict long ago. Space migration offers our unfinished species the opportunity to create new realities, new habitats, new neural perspectives, territorial new worlds unlimited by o r g r a v i t a t i o n a l l o n g i t u d e s c h a u v i n i s ms . ( O) ne om inous .. possibility tis) the restrictive limitation of p o st-terrestrial reality by hard- headed bureaucrats openly opposed to enthusiasm, optimism, pluralism and poetic vision " Reactionary holdouts, take heed, for it will soon be considered that space migration is an inalienable right that shall not be denied The momentum of the extensive scientific, religious, cultural and evolutionary evidence that is propelling us into space is too great to be stopped It won t happen overnight, but through innovative thinking, hard work and generous financial support, the space migration movement will becom e a re a lity in m ost of our lifetimes Moire is a m e c h a n ic a l en gineering stu d en t at the I'n tversity Freedom arrested in Iran .j- ... ' r n . , , v " M onday, J a n u a ry 23, 1978 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ P ag e 5 By Bahman Khakpouri One of the most prominent novelists in Iran. Mahmoud Etemadzadeh i Behazin). was arrested along with his son by SAVAR (secret police) agents in Tehran Nov. 24, 1977 According to the Nov. 30 issue of the government-controlled Tehran daily Kayhan, Behazin and his son were arrested by order of Tehran Municipal Court on the charge of inciting hooligans and thugs to break windows of banks and stores ’’ Behazin, of course, did no such thing. He was arrested because, as a founding member of the Writers Association of Iran and a m em ber of its executive board, he has been in the forefront of the struggle against government censorship and for democratic rights. BEHAZIN’S record as an advocate of freedom of thought and expression in Iran is a long one Following the CIA-organized coup in 1953. which returned the present shah to the throne, Behazin was removed from his teaching post with the ministry of education and blacklisted by the government. He participated, along with other prominent w riters and in­ te lle c tu a ls, in the organization of the Writers Association of Iran in 1968 The Writers Association launched a vigorous campaign against censorship, but was forced to disband by pressures from the government. In 1971, Behazin was imprisoned by SAVAR for three months because of his defense of a fellow author imprisoned by the regime. With the re-establishment of the Writers Association in 1977, Behazin was a featured speaker at a public meeting in Tehran Sept. 19. He was scheduled to lecture on Freedom" at the University of Aryamehr in Tehran Nov. 21, but the meeting was attacked by the police and broken up. WASHINGTON Post correspondent William Branigin, repor­ ting from Tehran Nov. 22, described the scene: ‘‘Today's inci­ dent occurred after about 400 persons had gathered to hear a lecture on ‘freedom ’ by leftist w riter Mahmoud Baharzin (Behazin). But the gates were locked and a notice said the lec­ ture had been canceled for the second consecutive day. The dis­ sidents milled around quietly in front of the university for about an hour and were dispersing when they were attacked Some of the dissidents were cornered in alleys and beaten while others were kicked, clubbed and punched on the sidewalk ” Following the meeting of the shah of Iran with President C arter in Washington in mid-November, 1977, in which, accor­ ding to the White House press secretary, the question of human rights for Iran “ did not come up,” the shah unleased an un­ precedented wave of terror in Iran. ALL PUBLIC meetings, even for the purpose of reading poetry, have been banned Lectures on such topics as ‘‘Freedom ’ or “ Contemporary Iranian Theater” have been broken up by plain clothes police, “ brandishing wooden clubs, brass knuckles and chains and shouting ‘long live the shah' ” (Washington Post. Nov 22, 1077). Those protesting these acts of police violence have been badly injured or gunned down in the streets On Nov 16. a silent procession of students protesting such brutalities were attacked and at least 16 students were shot and killed The campaign against censorship in Iran is waged in a coun­ try where the government holds an estimated 100,000 prisoners of conscience, tortures these prisoners and. in many instances, executes them. IT IS IN this context of severe repression that the Writers Association of Iran is seeking official recognition The arrest of Mr Behazin, a m ember of the Executive Board of the Writers Association, is a serious threat to the existence of the associa­ tion and endangers the iives of those who defend human rights and freedom of expression in Iran. International public opinion must now be mobilized to win the release of Behazin and his son. Kaveh Etemadzadeh, from the jails of the shah. K h a k p o u n is a c h e m i s t r y stu d en t at the Universit y and a m e m b e r o f the C o m m i t t e e f o r A rtistic and Intellectual F r e e do m in Iran. Middle East ...■PSST... HELE COMELY THM PUSHY KID FROVn ACROSS THE STREET TO T E L L US VO HAT TO DO A I NJ 1 v 2 b f ; « s A WW*? ; SAVAT S h , f c f l v W i Etym .''4&49I Pf STUPOR BOWL r. - * By James Reston WASHINGTON — As a general rule in this city, nothing is ever quite as good or as bad as the prevailing mood of the moment. This is Murphy’s Second Law, and the wild swings of opinion on the Middle East suggest that Murphy had a point. The excessive hopes about the Sadat-Begin talks have been followed, as usual, by excessive fears. Suddenly, everything that was proclaimed to be “ wonderful” before Christmas, is now being denounced as being “ terrible” and even Henry Kissinger, an old buddy of Murphy, is recommen­ ding that we keep our shirts on. What has broken down in the Middle East is not “ the talks,” but the talking The negotiations haven’t ended, they haven’t really started Sadat and Begin haven’t failed, but their Super Bowl diplomacy, with TV cam eras and instant-replays in every dining room and locker room, has failed, and there is now a pause for reflection. SO THE question now is what the Israeli and Egyptian g o ve r n m e n t s , and the U.S. g o v e r n ­ ment, not just Begin, Sadat and Vance — are go­ ing to do with the pause, and this is now under serious discussion and even dispute, here in Washington. The prevailing view within the C arter ad­ ministration seems to be that Washington must use its influence on both sides to keep the “ momentum” going. But there is another view here that everytxkly’s dizzy with "m om entum ,” and maybe what the situation requires is a few days or even weeks of serious private negotiation, and if possible, a m o rato riu m on public pronouncements. Since neither side is ready to “put up,” according to this view, at least they should be willing to “ shut up” and let everybody firing line think before they begin talking again. Washington needs this pause almost as much as Jerusalem and Cairo. There is disagreement here about what Secretary of State Vance’s role should be after his recent mission in the Middle East. Some officials are arguing that this is a moment in the crisis between Begin and Sadat for the United States to keep intevening and defining the C arter adm inistration's recommendations for a compromise Others are insisting that the United States should stand aside for a while, and not try to get short-range compromises, but let Begin and Sadat consider the consequences of their dis­ agreements THERE IS reason for saying here that the C arter administration is beginning to listen a lit­ tle more to the people who are recommending patience and caution The suggestion that Begin and Sadat should fly here to argue out their differences with President Carter, for example, was quickly vetoed here, on the ground that it would be an em barrassm ent to C arter if Sadat and Begin had not agreed in private and in advance about what was going to be decided if they met with C arter The feeling is also growing here among the m a­ jor advisers to the president that it is wrong for Vance to get involved in settling tactical or procedural points with Sadat and Begin on such things as the agenda for their discussions. But in­ stead, this argument goes, the United States should stand apart on these preliminary questions and reserve its influence for the critical decisions on the territo rie s, boundaries and fate of Palestinians There is reason for believing that the C arter ad­ ministration does know what it wants to recom- mend, and what it will say to the Israeli and Egyp­ tian governments, but prudently, at the right time. THE OFFICIAL view here, as I understand it, is that Washington will say to Begin quite frankly: We support the United Nations Security Council Resolution 242, now as before and we mean what it says: it means giving up territories captured by Israel in the 1967 war, including the West Bank. It does not talk about the “ residents” of Samaria and Judea As one high official of the C arter ad­ ministration put it; “ It is territory we are talking about, not ‘residents ’ That is the West Bank Israel occupied, and the West Bank is part of Resolution 242 that the United States government supports.” The officials in Washington most concerned with this Middle East crisis recognize that it will be hard for Begin and Sadat to swallow the com­ promises the C arter administration has in mind, but they are not pessimistic about the prospects in the long run. THERE IS A feeling here that Sadat did not pull out of the Jerusalem talks out of pique or anger ai Begin's rebukes to the Egyptian foreign minister but that he was trying to bring the negotiations U a crisis and force the United States to pu pressure on Israel. The reaction here is fairly clear. Washington ii not going to play this game At some point it I clearly going to lean on Begin to accept U.M Security Council Resolution 242, and on Sadat t accept some interim compromise between sell rule and self-determination for the Palestinian*! But not now The feeling is growing here tha everybody needs a little time and a little silence ® 1978 New York Times Best of times? Worst of times? Give them time Open the diary To Monty Jones I want to say that I was glad to see your editorial on the controversial issue of whether or not the diary of David Berkowitz should be made public. This is an im portant social issue and it deserves the kind of sensitive thought that you offer us. I disagree with your view, however. I offer you the caution of reflecting on the feelings behind your wish to bar disclosure of Berkowitz^ dairy. Not in­ frequently the urge to censor what the public may see, hear or say stem s from projected fear of what may lurk in one s own inner world. Could the thoughts, feelings and fantasies in that world be too awful to be accepted by the pure and decent folks around us? But the fact is that fantasies have no moral value. Only behavior possesses that quality. By seizing upon the ex­ traneous m atters of “ sensational headlines” and “common gossip” you distort your valuable social concern in a somewhat grandiose way. You judge the use that others may make of this informa­ tion without pausing with us to weigh its im pact on you, per­ sonally. It would be more consistent with your concern for privacy if you were to concentrate on what the personal thoughts are of a man who is capable of wantonly murdering you or a loved one at a mom ent’s whim; and then get in touch with all your fantasies about that. Some clinical analysts will postulate that it is because Berkowitz^ fan­ tasies went unheard and unnourished as a child that they were able to build a violent momentum over the years, un­ checked by any reality testing; and that where the world of fantasy is so pervasively need-fulfilling, the blurred boun­ dary between fantasy and reality is easily crossed. Thus guilty and anxious withdrawal from viewing the pent- up debris of a psychotic’s mind may be one type of social stimulus that feeds a psychotic withdrawal and the acting out of violent fantasy. To determine if this view of the genesis of psychotic violence is correct, it will be necessary to test it in some way. And it seems that it would be necessary to begin reality-testing such a view in the public forum, by allowing Berkowitz, and other violent criminals, to be heard by anyone who chooses to hear them. (In a clinical sense, an important definition of reality-testing is to be able to represent fantasy, dream and feeling m aterial at a verbal, rather than acting-out, level.) If, after such a process has become commonplace for a carefully m onitored period, and the ra te of crim e and” perversion” is unchanged or increases, we might have a basis for saying that the public good is not being served by such disclosures. Until then, however, it may in fact be both unethical and unscientific for the public to fail to gaze into the face of the stark terror that so intimidates it. We must be careful not to rationalize the tear of our own inner demons away under the guise of ethics. The ironic con­ sequence would be to sabotage that which we seek to preserve — the integrity of our movement betwen inner and outer world. As for safeguarding Berkowitz’s right to an unprejudiced jury, I would point out that the contents of his diary would be made known to the jury in any case, and that no conclusive evidence has as yet been gathered that pretrial publicity has an effect on how jury peers evaluate the m erits of a case. Note for the example the trial of Cullen Davis. Mark Wernick Graduate Student Educational Psychology Mexican jails educational I would like to add a footnote to your article entitled “ Mex­ ico prison frees ex-UT coeds” appearing on page 7 of The Daily Texan Jan. 17 I will hazard the statem ent that none of the persons incarcerated in Mexican jails will undertake whatever covert activity they tried in Mexico again. They learned their lessons the hard way, and deserved what they got. I only wish that our American form of incarceration was as effective. GU Kuykendall BS 1951 Sold on the book sale I want to thank all those involved in the Students’ Associa­ tion book sale; those who organized it as well as those who p articipated. The Students' Association provided the students with the opportunity to sell their books at a price they wanted and to buy their books at a more reasonable cost. I hope students will continue to support future Students' Association projects. The Students' Association needs stu­ dent support and input so future book sales can be even more successful. Linda Goehrs History Lemons show a lemon I was glad to find out from Damond Benningfields’ article (Daily Texan, Jan 19) who is responsible for one of the most poorly produced television shows in existence — The Abe Lemons Show From the article, it appears that 23-year old Hank Bauerschlag's only experience in this area is that he is an engineer for KTBC TV and that he played basketball for UT from 1973-1977. From what I’ve seen of this year’s show, his experience is not adequate to produce a first-rate show for a first-rate team. To be more specific, why does Bauerschlag choose to shoot the game highlights from courtside? From that position, it is impossible to sec any sort of pattern to the action and the perspective does not allow the viewer to distinguish if Ron B axter’s jump shot was from IO feet out or from 20 feet out. How about “ lugging a 30-pound, 542,000 cam era-recorder” to the edge of the balcony, so that the viewer can see a total pic­ ture of the action, As producer of the show, I assume Bauerschlag is respon­ sible for the content of each show. I know sponsors are necessary and vital to the show’s existence, but why was it necessary to have the general sales manger of Lowell Leber- mann’s Lincoln-Mercury dealership on the show to describe to Coach Lemons how running a car dealership is sim ilar to coaching a basketball team? The least that could have been done is not to follow the “ interview” with an advertisement for Ixwell Lebermann Lincoln-Mercury! Is this necessary to get sponsors for the show? I hope not. The University of Texas at Austin is now gaining local and national recognition as having an excellent basketball program and excellent facilities for such a program. I only hope that the coverage of this rise in status will be accom­ panied by a rise in the quality of the presentation of the team 's weekly games Clyde W. Bennett BJ ’Ti Humphrey? Harrumph! It is reassuring to see that there stil remains at least one writer who is not intimidated by popular opinion. Robert Hamilton deserves the respect of the University community for having the courage and intelligence to deal truthfully with the record of the recently departed H. H. Humphrey. The “ Happy Warrior” was consistently at his happiest when passing new laws to control other people's lives. Rather than bringing dignity and self-respect to the “ poor, alienated and oppressed” he is reputed to have championed, he instead patronized them as helpless, stupid children who could achieve nothing without the supervision of a Big Brother federal government. As for the rest of the citizenry, he viewed them as greedy, evil, oppressing villains whose only socially useful function was to create a pool of wealth which the government could pillage at leisure to fund its paternalistic programs Humphrey ’s legacy is one of increased government control over everyone’s life and a philosophy which exalts collec­ tivism and subservience and attacks individualism and achievement. Humphrey was no champion of the human spirit, dignity or even justice; on the contrary, his legislative career consists of subjugating these values to the power of john Parker the state. Plan 0 v * 6 * on SAVINGS (MON TAKING THE LSAT? Join thousands of law school applicants nationwide in Amity's LSAT Review Seminars CALL TOLL-FREE FOR DETAILS ANO LOCAL SCHEDULE ^FORMATION. 800 243-4767 Ext76l III i bt. squash ball » Slazenger Dunlop squash ball 2 . 0 0 each IO k t. gold w/10 p t. diamond 145.90 No deposit required Use your approved Co-op c r e d it. Gran Tourer $174.95 Fuji's lowest price 12 speed bike. alloy 5-pin cotterless crank, alloy hubs champagne, silver, burgundy. Sizes - 19" 25", 19" and 21" stepthru. Colors * 21", 23", Co- O D Bike Shoo “ w , , v r 505 W. 23rd St. /S S K B L B T ttU u tm d u $174.95 retail w /approved credl $18.70 downpaym< $19.15 monthly lot 9 months ,0<7% annual p e rcentage rate Page 6 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Monday, January 23. 1978 M E X IC A N FOOD BUFFET Ka. 2.25 $ 1 J ! aper tai T h k m d tariff r u n In to d a y * * J o n m n o n ly , b o d ip a n d IM O th o w o o k a l J a n u a r y M W o n ly . N o h o d o r d o * * to g o . P o r tia * m oor a n n o t o U g lb J o h r ta m p o n SU CASA 5841. Sth 474-4041 ) »■»'*!<» a.. i «"• **• a* • K S , $6.00 CASH"” - I $6.00 DOLLARS CASHI Vavi con M o o a lit* fey OkiOM avafk OO * sj^ e ' p R ' U V * ' * ( * pp * * * It only takat donor I h Kaviro ond you con d o n o io e v e r y T I hour*. Y o u w i l l r e c e i v e OS OO aoch tim# yaw dana ta. l f yaw being th o od in w ith yaw, yaw w ill receive a l l OO ban wa a ft ac yawl tir o ! dana lion. AUSTIN BLOOD COMFONINTS, INC Phone 477-3735 409 W ill 6lh horn Aaa. A Tkerv I A N A M p m Twat A PH I A M I M P.M. | Workers support GOMA contract Letter to Briscoe asks for reconsideration By toited Pratt International Th* approximately 40 “ hidden employees' of the Governor's Office of Migrant Affairs have urged Gov. Doiph Briscoe to reassess his action in cutting their contracts The employees work for Counterpoint Systems, Inc , an Austin consulting firm , which has an indirect WOO OOO contract that payi them to work for GOMA Jim Funk, Counterpoint president, has said he w ill terminate the contract Don Adams, appointed acting GOMA director by Briscoe, has said he w ill terminate the contract if Funk does not In a letter delivered Friday to Briscoe, the employees criticized the governor for suspen ding without pay Boget to Perez, GO M A ex­ ecutive director, and program director Joa­ quin Rodriguez on Jan 5, the day after the pair the 5th Amendment at a Brownsville court of inquiry Both men have since been indicted by a Cameron County invoked grand jury on charges of witness tampering They also were arrested on forgery charges involving alleged misuse of federal Man­ power training funds. The letter also questioned whether Adams could run the migrant affairs office with the nine person staff that is on Ute state payroll. It is contradictory that even though Sen Adams has publicly stated he can effectively administer the agency, he nonetheless con­ tinues to utilize hidden staff,' ” the letter said The 'hidden s ta ff have become victim s of what seems to be an unrealistic campaign platform promising no in state employees, the letter said increase Funk criticized Briscoe for not recognizing Ute legitimacy of the employees’ work "They have continued to work, although they haven t been paid since late December,” Funk said “ I think tim 1COMA investiga­ tion) it an overrated witch hunt.” Postal service expands The Austin post office began Saturday service last week at two of its busier branches although not at the University station, The main office at 300 E Ninth St. and the northwest station at 2820 W Anderson I-ane now have window ser­ to noon vice from 8 a m Saturdays. Postmaster E G. Vorwerk said the service was begun because of public interest in Saturday hours at these locations Vorwerk said there are no plans to begin Saturday hours at the University sta­ tion. but " I f we have public demand for that, we w ill look into it ” H o r a t i o A ce vedo, a C o u n t e r p o i n t employee, said a high-level Briscoe aide has known of the Counterpoint contract ever since the employees were moved into the COMA field service offices. " I find it hard to believe no one knew about us, Acevedo said. “ If we are so hidden — if we don't work for the state — how did we come about having this?” he said, showing a state security pass UPI reported Friday that an anonymous letter delivered five months ago warned Briscoe that a scandal was developing in the GOMA office, but it apparently was dis­ regarded as a crank or unsubstantiated. The letter dated Sept. 12 said a "potentially p o l i t i c a l l y e m b a r a s s i n g p e r s o n a l relationship" existed between a high GOMA official and a key administrator in a GOMA- funded project. "A t any time, but most especially in this election year, it would be most unfortunate for all concerned if the reputation of GOMA were marred by a scandal more relevant to those Washington scandals Texans than centered around the T id a l Basin and Elizabeth Ray affairs,” the unsigned letter said Banker calls accused 'law-abiding citizens’ B ill Hayes, president of F irst State Bank in Austin. Friday testified that the principal figures in the Tejas Investment Corp. tria l had taken out loans at his bank and had a good credit rating. Hayes said Arturo Casillas had taken out approximately 12 loans for approximately $100,000; Roberto Amaya had six to eight loans for $35,000; and Fernando Hernandez had five or six loans for $20,000 to $25,000 Jose Aguilar had taken approximately 12 in­ dividual loans for $40,000 to $50,000, he said Hayes also testified the men had good in law­ reputations abiding citizens and that they had been honest in their dealings with the bank. their community as The men were associated with Tejas, which offered loans to disadvantaged minorities They are accused in 167th District Court of misappropriating federal funds. In further testimony, Omero Luna, another man charged, said he was aw are of attempts by the Executive Council of the Episcopal Church to get back its investment in Tejas and any dividends on that investment. ATTENTION REGISTERED STUDENT ORGANIZATIONS Reregistration w ill be January 26 & 27 Pick up registration packets by January 25 For inform ation call or corno by Student Activities and O rganizations Texas Union 4 .3 1 0 4 7 1 -3 0 6 5 IDA Lecture NOTE SERVICE New Location D O B IE M A L L 2021 Guadalupe at row from baker 'n Ihnen 472-4635 » n » n THE JEWISH FREE UNIVERSITY A n n o u n c e * It * Spring 1978 Course Offerings » n Sun. 1:30 p.m. • Pottery 7:00 p.m. - Israeli Dancing 7:00 p.m. - Sephardic Jewry 7:30 p.m. • Jewish Cooking 1:00 p.m. - Noodle point 1:00 p.m. - Chug Ivrit Wed. 7:00 p.m. - Hebrew Cooking 8:00 p.m. - Basic Judaism 8:00 p.m. - Yiddish Thurs. 7:00 p.m. - Middle East Crisis 8:00 p.m. • Conversational Hebrew REGISTER NO W 4 7 6 -0 1 2 5 Beginning Jan. 30th Hillel Foundation » n » n » n » n » n » n » n Buy your Hillal Activity Card $5.00 - students $ 10 OO * non-students ATTENTION GRADUATE STUDENTS Tuesday, January 24, at 5:00 p.m. IS THE LAST DAY TO FILE FOR THE SPECIAL ELECTION TO FILL STUDENT SENATE GRAD. SCHOOL PLACES 2 AND 5. THESE SENATORS ARE TO SERVE FOR TNE REMAINDER OF THE 77-78 SESSION, TO END APRIL I IF INTERESTED PLEASE COME BY UNION 4.304 or call 471-3721. HENRY JACOBSON’S SALE PRICE •vc* i i i iX v .v .v .n. v X 'X w . I H i n t k. l l l l l l W .NNNvc.:-NL.:.v.v.: : .AihHiiitAiiil I ii ti lit I M Silmarillion Tolkien Father Christmas Letters, Tolkien Giving Tree Sitverstien Mow Should We Then Live. Schaeffer Hobbit Desk Calendar Star Wars Calendal Limited Quantities 40% off only on Specially Marked Books 10 95 8 95 4 95 12 95 6 95 4 95 ALL SUITS ALL SWEATERS ALL LONG SLEEVES ALL KNIT SHIRTS ALL LEATHERS ALL WINTER COATS ALL FLANNELS ALL LEVIS ALTERATIONS EXTRA ^ fT C IV U f, -wv.w.y.v, :-:.S:XyX\yXyX*; TOVWAV, y d L c w d O K X s 2222 GUADALUPE • n e x t t o t e x a s t h e a t r e Texas grape growers expect to sell wines in liquor stores soon LUBBOCK (U PI) — D elegates to the Texas G rape G row ers Association say Texas-m ade wines soon will appear on liquor store shelves around the state At least by 1980, you should look for Texas wine in Tex­ as liquor stores, said Thomas Qualia, whose grandfather 1880s 1116 VaI Vefde Winery at ^ Ri0 in the early * / o [ ren tly ’ Texas wines are 801(1 at wineries, but Clinton M cPherson said Llano E stacado Winery on the High Plains hoped to place its four varieties in the hands of w holesalers within two years This does not m ean that every liquor store in Texas will c a rry Texas wines, the grape grow ers say. Their vision includes liquor stores stocking regional wines, those bottled from grapes grown in a 150-mile radius. I don t know if we ll ever look a t a m arketing schem e outside of T ex as,’ said George R M cE achem , an exten­ sion horticulturist at Texas AAM and secretary of the association. The initial b a rrie r for the Texas wine m akers is in­ c re a s in g to m e e t th e ir p ro d u c tio n su ffic ie n tly w holesalers orders W e're selling it com m ercially a t the w inery.’’ said M cPherson, who helped found Liano E stacado in 1976. W holesalers want g uarantees of about 10,000 cases a year, but the Llano E stacado, whose wine label appears in its English translation, Staked Plains Winery, made only 1,300 cases during its first year of com m ercial production. Our problem is bottles. We’re having a heck of a tim e getting b o ttles,’' said M cPherson. What the wine m akers a re counting on is that m any of the grape grow ers attending the second annual m eeting of the 130-member association will grow enough grapes to supply local wineries. •frt-TlZ % * J r. Dr afti ng s ca le by Tacro, $3.75 M onday, January 23, 1978 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Page 7 Appraisal change urged Farm amendment sought Texas F a rm e r Union delegates ap­ proved a 46-page docum ent endorsing the national fa rm e rs’ strike and calling fo r an a m e n d m e n t th e T e x a s Constitution that would allow farm and ranch land to be appraised at produc­ tivity value, ra th e r than m arket value. in a weekend m eeting in Austin to In a speech before the delegates Saturday night. Tony Dechant, presi­ dent of the National F a rm e r Union, called for IOO p ercent parity and for in­ creased U.S. agricultural exports “ W e c o n s i d e r p a r i t y to b e re a s o n a b le , se n sib le and e n tire ly ju stifiab le,’ Dechant said, adding, ' i f critics don't like it, I say com e up with som ething better “ We could e m u la te the e le c tric power industry and ask for a rate co m ­ parable to th eirs,’’ he said Dechant said critics of parity a re us­ ing "a ll kinds of scare ta c tic s’’ and denied a charge it would bankrupt the country. You use governm ent to do those things you c a n ’t do yourself. No one has su g g e ste d in su re farm ers an income, those a re just wild charges to discredit parity,** Dechant said th e g o v e rn m e n t Dechant criticized President C arter for not stepping up exports of U S a g r ic u ltu r a l goods and su g g e ste d prices be included in upcoming trade treaties Towns lose gas; face freeze GRANGERLAND (U P I) - Rural residents endured the a re a 's w orst storm of the winter by substituting butane ta n k s a n d w o o d -b u rn in g stoves for the free natural gas service they had enjoyed for 40 years. " I t s startin g to w arm up, the snow’s m elting,” Ruby G ranger said Sunday. “ Things a re under control h e re .” The Cham plin Petroleum Co. Friday term inated service a n d to G r a n g e r l a n d Wigginsville, 20 m iles from Conroe, IOO fam ilies without heat in 20- degree w eather. leaving about Residents, aw are the shut- tried to down was com ing, arran g e for tem porary a lte r­ native fuel sources including wood sto v e s a n d e le c tr ic h e a t e r s u n til p e r m a n e n t b u ta n e s e r v i c e c o u ld be arranged “ We knew it (the shutoff) was com ing.” Mrs. G ranger said, “ and we w ere hoping to get another gas system before they cut it off. But m ost everyone has been g ettin g a l o n g w i t h b u t a n e o r som ething else. T h ere’s a long waiting list for butane tanks,” Unseasonably cold w eather — tem p eratu res below freez­ ing for the past four days — elicited com plaints about the tim ing of the shutdown. The Rev C harles Fannin, pastor of the F irst Baptist Church of G rangerland. said the fam ilies unaffected by shutdown had opened their homes to those without heat. He said about 30 of the 130 fam ilies originally affected by the shutdow n a lre a d y had butane service During the oil boom days of the 1930s, Conroe and the unin­ corporated com m unities of G rangerland and Wigginsville m ade an unw ritten pact with Champlin in which the com ­ pany allowed them to tap gas from its lines — free Last year Cham plin sought the agreem ent and to end received a tavorable ruling from the Texas Railroad Com­ mission State D istrict Judge Lee Alworth delayed the ru l­ ing at the residents' request, but he withdrew the order F ri­ day, saying he had no jurisdic tion in the case. The cutoff o rd e r by the R ailro ad C om m ission was based on a finding that there were no odor devices to aid leak detection on the lines, thus causing a safety hazard An inspection report also in dicated some hookups like one house pulling gas through - w e r e a g a r d e n h o se dangerous TEACA -2340 The leader, alw ays has l*M*n. -+ IDA L ecture NOTE SERVICE N e w L o catio n DOBIE MALL 2021 G uadalupe across fr o m Maker'* D o te n 472-4635 U T. Shirt* W I Austin A Texas Souvenir Shirts Armadillo Shirts DOBIE M A U Ail file s in fa n t- a d u lt XL HELP WANTED temporary workers Part-time, needed evenings and weekendstj im-S fo r c le a n u p and setup mediately, at The Special Events j Center. Apply in person 9-12 noon, Monday through Friday, 5 1701 Red River. U N n r a n r or r e x .s st 4 u r r i n f l H H R L SPECIAL EKEN TS CENTI An AWrmoMv* Atttan-tpual Opportunity tm play mr If you’ve been w a n tin g to get th a t dem o reel to g e th e r, w ant no m ore. TF.At m akes a very affo rd ab le reco rd er th a t will help you get it down. On tape. Of course, it has Sim ul-svnc, so you can concentrate on each part o f th e tu n e, one tra c k at a tim e. Add echo, revise and overd u b u n til i f s rig h t fo r you. Mic line m ix in g , in d iv id u al level c o n tro ls . . .a ll th e e s­ sen tial fe a tu re s anil fu n c tio n s you need to express y o u r c re a tiv ity , to m ake th e m usic th e best it can be. We u n d e r s ta n d m u ltitr a c k re c o r d in g fro m th e b a sic h a rd w a re th ro u g h th e in te rfa c e g e a r -and w e’d like to d is­ cu ss w ith you a n d d e m o n stra te fo r you th e technology th a t m akes it possible. \o u tak e it from th e re , an d provide th e a rt. Ca - Oft Dr afti ng brush 891 STUDENTS V a PRICE SPECIAL OFFER *1.90 PER MONTH Paid Per Semester A-2340 6 3 9 . 9 5 T h e H o u s to n C h r o n ic le Now Delivered in Moat Areas Call 477-4485 WELCOME ABOARD S P R I N G B R E A K ' 7 8 PUERTO VALLARTA MARCH 20-26 MARCH1?*-*?5 *229°°* • Roundtrip airfare from Dallas to Denver • 7 nights lodging at Ramada-lnn Silverthorne Valla rte $209°°* • Roundtrip airfare from San Antonio to Puerta • Transfers between Denver and hotel • h nights lodging at Playa del Oro Hotel • Shuttle to Keystone, Breckenridge, Copper M f. Ski • Transfers between airport and hotel a r e a s *Ptr person double occupancy *P*r person triple occupancy LAS VEG AS MARCH 19-23 $ 2 4 4 O O * Roundtrip airfare from Austin to Las Vegas 4 nights lodging at Stardust Hotel Roundtrip transfers in Las Vegas SKI RUIDOSO S i x . 0 0 0 * MARCH 19-26 * 1 6 9 • Roundtrip airfare from San Antonie to ll Paso • Transfers from El Paso to Ruidoso • 7 nights lodging at Lookout Manor Condominiums • Daily transfers to Sierra Blanca Ski Area *Per person double occupancy ‘ Per person (occupancy depends en cheke el I, 2 ar I bedroom con­ dominiums) ; Deposits duo Jan. 31 Price subject to chang# ( >1A )EN W ( )RL[) IR /WEI. O N E LA P R OME NADE PLAZA 7115 BURNET RD. Phone: 452-2822 or 453-1111 «* C h g o ld 1 , 3 1 . 0 0 Y* J.Cf st)* T V B E A U T Y B E C O M E S YOU it i t l l u n lit ithiuHzt'd skin care bv E m u Easzln No. 5 Je ffe rso n Squ are call 4 6 2 8 8 4 6 I NOW IN PAPERBACK! A hauntingly violent and sensual novel from “one of Am erica’s most supremely talented and important authors”* A .ll.Mu] of ■ ■■ .'n i < .n:M< it, lib? .HM H w i t h n o < a r . ,! Mn.ll) ? ll.JU. v* MS !l' ■I ' hi A.'hit. 'Al >f I .!< -I MMI h< ‘ . IMW I M U ll •, "* thr ix-'.t'-"bi"'! I P I h a h ' a n ||||| hi.-a , I alk Hit a < lassi* . ai d . u m a l r . m t o m a k r ’ « SOMBRERO ■ fallo u t I mM B B B M B I B A J a p a n e s e N o v e l 5295 7 1 * A touchstone Book Published by Simon and Schuster ** ^Hudson Review re \ * 'c ; <* a*'6 YI4 ™ IO*' \N o * f\0V »6mNJif3H .O C £S E: & N G O K J , b OR. .. I— £ l.< & to t?1.75 I n - Combr-tior, J>Z50 I L , , . *- A -A \ ~ O h O E V Q S R A N C H E R O S - 1 .2 9 ^ -I- t r *WT?r / n \ U U i f c f r ... P l o p to ^ U S {UdkliQfpI ■ 3 0 ^ ) . > Q J rx t A,»^WSJIe *f)tLr MOTTy >P«*> Art Lr a VtbmL. - Use your approved Co-op credit P H IL IP S G A 4 0 6 P «n*l IJT hi< autem*hi npwntftori t (r arni I T tin manual oparatitv* I IMT unlit.* afNMCj* x m 46 lpm SfNNKl c*ltw«*on i $nm t J% OMI I •*§ (hurl () Btoofdi Num b* iii itco n li Man 5 Wtow «Kl IMH* la w Hum 0 t Tom) Burnt** Lets that* so OS rn*aam est accordtnQ to 0»arw>g OtfW DIN B Trucking amu I rn. st* mn (TV on T o r* ami fncWrt loss than SO mgt late* ai and vertical Sty km toro* rang** 04 pf Avlmst ii >i> Stet* Wvunt fTTfrtrwainri Adital Al il*» bt#* to* ap0*rii .if Arx! a fc p tk a l (b l I .X ii41) sty* Ton* arm cu* control vmooua damped Plan** M i* wa 11 'X* Ar#' SttObOKK tat lulu OC i^rvomoto hw tumtwbtednv* * » i Nquwx > ConkoHHdUM fat panar atar OC servo motor tor Sale prices on these two Philips turntables are good through Tuesday, January 31 or w hile supplies la s t $14095 Reg. $179.95 Use your approved Co-op credit TumtaW* apwKth 33* r 46 'tam SfcMtad oattoraion rang* t 3% Drift L*$« than 0 ?% Wow and Aura* less than 0 0 8 V Total AucMX* RumtoW l i m than 62d8 measured m.'K'i'/dtng to tune tog c o n * CMN 0 Armtangth. o w **! tm* Pivot to stylus 8'?* eflSOlNO moving mass Approx 2 tg Arm wsonancw 8 8 H? auth test cartfulge P H I L IP S G A 2 2 2 automatic turntable Tracing amor U M *VMO QU cm Ton# arm truman less t* wi .XI mat wttHrw ISMS tuft b mgTWmctl tarts <*no* * 0 3 gt admststxe 0 ‘5 iKxnmnwsrxMftl S *t* m u tt oompan&aKw* Tor* arm co* acorns V»*cou* damps*) in** aah.sttobiKscdixc wgs Motor OC t* tx- generate* froquwx-y comroAod Mane** ut p c ** 7? Motor spalls Suepty*»te 40P ,t * " 4t 3J'ft 640 rpm at 45 t90 v* dr OO Hr Ut app*ov*d Ai rm\m has* tncMWftmgoct s#na**e gray ftansparant v\se* (oov* dos*ti) * w h x..................................................... $$.»* • Holds.* Cossets s • Hangs on the wou • Cen be pieced on shelf • Sturdy Wack polystyrene • a lissom e r a t e • Pecked with to BASI Studio Sones BO-Mmute Cassettes st Specie) Saving* $ 27. 10 BASF Studio Senm 90-Minute C assettes 1 BASF Music Box C a sse tte Storage Rack LOOK AT THIS VALUE! REGULAR PRICE _ JIL____ ___ 41400 Total $ SAVE S ,5 4 ____ 24 C P Ca-Of -.Athlete's IG I A r O O L NORTHCROSS MAU 458-3454 A A B B A mm m f ■■ B B A l l mw ■■ mw * v T E X A S U N IO N MONDAY I O m .m . to m id n ig h t . SION UP FOH SUPMSTARS' COMPfTITION. Four-parson looms of two mon and two women may sign up in tho Rocroation Conter through Wodnosday. Tho two teams with tho highest combined scores in bowling, pool and pinball-video win gift certificates redeemable at the Texas Tavern. Qualification rounds begin Monday and run through Thurs­ day; finals are Friday, fntry fee: $1 per person. Recreation Center and Recreation Committee. 1 0 a .m . t a m id n ig h t . POOL LEAGUE SIGN UP. A variety of peal leagues are now forming at the Recreation Center and are open to all students, faculty and staff. League play begins January 30. For further information inquire at the Recreation Center or call 471-1944. 1 9 a .m . t a sssldssight. BOWLING LEAGUE SIGN UP. A variety of bowling leagues are now forming at the Recreation Center and are open to all students, faculty and staff. League play begins January 30. For further information inquire at the Recreation Center or call 471-1944. N a a n t a 1 p .m . LUNCH WITH T H I COACH. An informal gathering for students, faculty and staff with Head Basketball Coach Abe Lemons. A buffet lunch will be available in the adjoinng Santa Rita Room. Texas Union Quadrangle (3.30 4). Cosponsored by the Texas Union and Men s Intercollegiate Athletics. Wm Double Feature: TOMB OF UGEIA and DR. TERROR'S HOUSE OF 3 HORRORS. Union Theatre. $1.25 UT, $1.73 others. • p.m . Performance: THE ACTING COMPANY IN "KINO LEAR." The renowned company will perform Shakespeare's classic as part of a three-day residency. Admission: $2.75-$3.75 with CEC ID, $4.75-$6.75 ethers. Paramount Theatre. Cultural Entertainment Committee. FOR ADDITIONAL INFORMATION CAU 471-5653 I I I I I I I I I I I I I I 1978 SPRING BOWLING LEAGUES offered by the TIXAS UNION RICRIATI0N CENTER Join now I Langua registration i t underway now in th* Texas Union Recreation Cantor for Spring Bowling Longue*. Individual* or group* ■re welcome. There ere no skill qualifications. All that's necasery is that you like to bowl I BOWLING LEAGUE SCHEDULE: All league* ar* coed unless otherwise noted. EARLY BIRD MIXED TRIOS BOWL FOR LUNCH BUNCH BEST BALL LEAGUE MIXED AFFAIRS LEAGUE (faculty, staff, end spouses from th* Division of Student Affaire) INTERNATIONAL STUDENTS LEAGUE 6 p.m. 8:30 p.m. ESCAPE LEAGUE TUESDAY LAW SCHOOL LEAGUE Noon DOBIE CENTER COED LEAGUE 4 p.m. 6:16 p.m. TUESDAY NIGHT FUN LEAGUE 8:30 p.m. FIVE STAR LEAGUE WEDNESDAY IO e.m. MEN'S SCRATCH TRIOS Noon 4:30 p.m. WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON DISASTER DOUBLES 6:1S p.m. STRIKES ANO SPARES LEAGUE 8:30 p.m. GUYS ANO DOLLS LEAGUE THURSDAY LONGHORN COUPLES 6 p.m. 8:30 p.m. BOWLING SPORTS CLUB LEAGUE FRIDAY Noon BUSINESS SCHOOL LEAGUE p.m. HI-NOON DOUBLES HAPPY HOUR DOUBLES von MORE INFORMATION. CA U 471-IS M OR COME TO TNE RECREATION CENTER LOCATED ON TNE IOT LEVEL (CASEMENT) OF THE TEXAS UNION. J —sports shorts---------- Notre Dame beats UCLA ' l ' PI 1 - Do*** W illiams scored 19 points while Bill L aim beer added 14 Sundav lo lead N otre Dam e to a 75-73 victory over UCLA. i lnd It was UCLA s second loss of the season and their first in IO gam es. The last tim e they lost was a t Pauley Pavilion in Los Angeles a t the hands of the sam e Fighting Irish David Greenwood led the 13-2 Bruins with 23 points while connecting on 11 of 17 from the floor Ray Townsend follow­ ed for UCLA with 15. W ii ham s was high m an for the Irish while shooting 9 of 14 from the floor. L aim beer pulled in seven rebounds while num ber off the boards as P a ! 8i! I ! ?U co,lected t o ' he tallied IO points. N otre Dame took the lead at 9 56 in the first half on two free throws by L aim beer. which m ade it 20-19 The Irish held on for the re st of the half to lead 41-32 at halftim e UCLA cam e back in the second half to out score the Irish 16-6 in the first 7V* m inutes and took the lead 48-47 on a basket by Gig Sims Greenwood increased the advantage to 54-51 with l l 29 left. Laim beer connected one m inute later to put the Irish back in front 55-54. Both clubs exchanged four buckets each as the lead see­ sawed for the next six m inutes UCLA lost Sims with 4 46 rem aining when he com m itted a fifth personal foul. Kelly Tripucka put the Irish on top 63-62 with 5:19 left. Doug W illiams connected on a layup two m inutes la te r to put the Irish ahead 69-62. Soccer tryouts scheduled a n ? 1 wlJ Field iVe!iSlty SOf ? e r team wU1 open its Monday try0UtS 3t 5 30 P m at Fretomw The tryouts a re open to any interested student. Aeros beat Birmingham m mingham Bulls Sunday. °pUr c Ar l l (U PI) ~ Rich Preston scored two goals to t0 a 4‘2 WHA victory over * * Bir­ The win was H ouston’s fifth consecutive and broke a three-gam e B ulls’ victory streak. T erry Ruskowski and John G ray also scored for Houston and Ken Linsem an and Paul Henderson had goals for B ir­ mingham. Watson, Floyd tied for Crosby lead PEBBLE BEACH. Calif. (U PI) — Pebble Beach notorious over the y ears for breaking h earts, reached up and grabbed som e of the g a m e ’s best players Sundav and when the third round of the 1225.000 Bing Crosby National I ro Am was over, defending cham pion Tom Watson and Ray Floyd w ere tied for the lead N either distinguished him self on a bright, sunshiny day as m ore players backed up than m ade progress in the chase Spurs beat Portland, 106-95 I M A M rm W m / I T D I I . SAN ANTONIO (U P I) — George Gervin scored 34 points and the San Antonio Spurs played strong defense Sunday to hand defending NBA cham pion Portland its second straight defeat, 106-95, before the S purs’ largest home crowd of the season /-I • It was San Antonio’s third straight victory and lith in its last 14 gam es, during which the Spurs took over first place in the NBA s C entral Division with a 27-18 record. San Antonio’s Billy Paultz and Mike G reen alternated at cen ter and held P o rtla n d ’s Bill Walton to 14 points and the T railblazers leading scorer, M aurice Lucas, had only 17 points. The Spurs never trailed , leading 27-19 a fte r the first q u arter and 52-37 a t halftim e. San Antonio built the lead to 19 points twice in the third q u a rte r and held off a P ortland rally in the final period. The T railblazers cut the lead to 96-91 with 1:17 left in the gam e but could get no closer. Los Angeles 106, Houston 101 INGLEWOOD, Calif. (U PI) — Forw ard Don Ford scored four points and grabbed two rebounds in the final 39 seconds Sunday night to lift the Los Angeles Lakers to a 106-101 victory over the Houston Rockets. The victory was the third in a row for Los Angeles, which trailed by 12 points a fte r the first period, jum ped ahead by nine a fte r three quarters, and held off a late Houston rally. Philadelphia 99, Golden State 87 PHILADELPHIA (U P I) — Caldwell Jones pulled down a c a re e r high 22 rebounds and Lloyd F re e scored 20 points to lead standings NBA Sy United PrtM International Atlanta Houston 21 26 447 364 16 28 7 IO* Auantic O hr talon W I 30 12 Philadelphia Nan York ................. 23 21 16 25 Buffalo •oaten 14 27 9 36 Naur Jersey Central DWleion W L ............ 27 16 ....... 24 19 21 21 21 24 San Antonio Washington Cleveland New Orleans OI Pct 714 523 .390 13* 14 I 15* 200 22* Pct. OB .600 — 2 556 4 * 500 6 467 W Midwest Division L .............. 28 15 25 20 26 22 .............. 19 25 .............. 18 25 16 29 Pacific Division W L 8 35 .............. 29 15 .............. 25 21 ............ 21 23 .............. 20 24 Denver Chicago .. Milwaukee Indiana Detroit Kansas City Portland Phoenix Seattle Golden State Los Angeles Pet. 651 556 542 432 419 356 Pct. 814 659 543 477 455 OB 4 * 9 * IO 13 OB 6* ll* 14* 15* . the Philadelphia 76ers to W arriors Sunday. • a 99-87 win over the Golden State New York 143, Denver 141 DENVER (U PI) — C enter Bob McAdoo, held to only three field goals and a free throw in the first half, scored 32 points in the final two q u arters to lead the New York Knicks to a 143-141 overtim e victory over the D enver Nuggets Sunday. New Orleans 110, Detroit 97 NEW ORLEANS (U P I) — P e te M aravich fired in 30 points and Truck Robinson added 24 points and 18 rebounds to lead the New Orelans Jazz to a 100-97 win over the D etroit Pistons Sun­ day afternoon. Milwaukee 112, Chicago 96 MILWAUKEE (U P I) — Brian W inters scored 22 points, 18 of them in the second half, to give the M ilwaukee Bucks a 112-90 win over Chicago and end the Bulls’ five g am e winning streak The win was the fifth in a row at hom e for Milwaukee. Cleveland 93, Atlanta 89 RICHFIELD, Ohio (U P I) — A short ju m p er by Campy Russell with 2:12 left and a pair of foul shots by Foots W alker with five seconds rem aining sparked the G eveland Cavaliers to a 93-89 NBA victory over the A tlanta Hawks Sunday afternoon. Seattle 103, Boston 92 BOSTON (U PI) — G uard Gus W illiams netted 21 of his 29 points in the first half and the Seattle Supersonics w eathered a third-period swoon Sunday to defeat the Boston Celtics, 103-92, for their eighth win in the past nine gam es. Kansas City 105, New Jersey 97 PISCATAWAY, N J. (U PI) — Lucius Allen scored 23 points as the Kansas City Kings snapped a 14-game losing streak chi the road, capturing a 105-97 victory Sunday afternoon over the New Jersey Nets. Indiana 99, Buffalo 90 INDIANAPOLIS (U P I) — Mike Bantom tossed in 29 points and rookie Ja m e s E dw ards 26 as Indiana snapped a four-game losing streak Sunday night with a 99-90 NBA victory over the Buffalo Braves. Phoenix 114, Washington 101 PHOENIX, Ariz. (U P I) — P aul W estphal and Don Buse com ­ bined for 49 points and rookie W alt Davis added 22 Sunday when the Phoenix Suns defeated the short-handed W ashington Bullets 114-101. We program system s, not systems programmers. National CSS offers an environm ent geared to creativity and career developm ent Here, you ll find the excitem ent and vitality of a youthful, pow erfully m otivated co m p any on the way up. W e re an inform ation services com pany, specializing in translating data into useful business inform ation through the use of com puter and co m m u n ica tio n s technology. Technically. we are offering the m ost co m prehensive collection of prog ram s currently available in the industry We seek your help in continuing our aggressive pursuit of the growth opportunities available in the inform ation processing m arketplace At NCSS. system s p rog ra m m e rs are afforded a ch a nce to assum e a variety of responsibilities You ll be called upon to design, debug, code, test and docum en t functions within the operating system Additionally, your know how will be needed to analyze existing system s and p rogram m ing logic difficulties, and reco m m end better m ethods. In short, we re planning a future that will keep us am ong the industry s leaders and provide our people with rewarding careers For further information and/or prompt consideration, see our recruiter on campus Jan. 24 th. Arrangements should be made through the Placement office. 4g5 National CSS, Inc. A n E q u a l O pportunity E m p lo yer PIONEERw h e n yo u w ant s o m e th in g b ette r (19 AM /FM STERK) RECEIVER IS WATTS PIR CR. • Bass-reflex SX-450 ............. 225. Pl-112 .............. IOO. HPM-40 ..........,,300. TOTAL $425. i A I , M l t u * * t a i u * / c a r t r » « R E N T this SYSTEM $5 0 ° ° M O N T H THEN lf YOU UKE, KENT-BUY B ffiS E g D g P E lO 'D '® 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 I R ECO M M EN D “ A G rea t R estaurant C h o ic e " T V J , R e c l T b m A t o Q u a lity Italian F o o d I M H (> ii,* ii I tipi* 1 7 6 - 7 2 0 2 6%on VI NGS Higher Rates on Rasbook Savings than Bonks ar Savings & Loans T O J Monday, January 23, 1978 □ TH E DAILY TEX A N □ Page l l HANCOCK ^ -------------------------------- IF YOU HAVEN’T SEEN OUR STORE LATELY. YOU HAVEN’T SEEN OUR STOREI h m i WELCH'S DUNK CTR. OF 8-32-OZ. BOTTLES BUY ONE AT REO. PRICE d e p o s i t I RET OHE F R E E PLUS DEPOSIT DOWNEY HONEY BUTTER 7Vi-0Z. CART0R BUY OME AT REO. PRICE A BET ONE MORTON’S POTATO CHIPS AO* SIZE M O BUY ONE AT REO. PRICE A BET ONE FR EE BUY ONE GET ANOTHER TREE ITEMS AVAILABLE ORLY AT THE AUSTIN HANCOCK CENTER H E O. STORE MON.. JAN. 23 THRU SAT.. JAR. 28. ^REGISTER EICH (ISH FOR ■ O N E MONTH’S ■ SUPPLIES OF BR0CERIES ■MTU IT TM NIBGCCI CHTfl H i J. M PURCHASE MOMMY. TM MBI HVT M PMMHT TV VHI. UCH ■HMH MU MCCUE 4 - T ^ tt VTV MTY NEKNAMBE CUTMCATU FVI I TOTAL IF SIM M UCH CfOTIHCITE H m g m MEKMAMtSf IF TM M IM I ! CHOICE Al TM HAKKI Cf HTE! I i i . R U . EMPLOYEES. TMI! MA­ MMATE FAMIES, AM FAHTKPATHM CVMFAMfS AM ■VT UM M ! TV M I. SIMILA* TO ILLUSTRATION REGISTER EACH VISIT FOR I COMPONENT STEREO SYSTEM WITH TURNTABLE. AM/FM RADIO. 0-TRACN TAPE PLAYER AND 2 SPEAKERS ■■WM |RWf WIIRIWM l l w W W H I MV rn “ Mi •MwwMI IWV Resister for M s stereo component system el n e Hancock Coeur H J J . No purcNose necessary, von need not he present in win. H J J . employees. n o ir immediate laminas and partici­ pating cpm pinias ir a m l su n u p lo win. Winners must he ape IO or over. DRAWINOS HELD E ach S uhday thru F eb. 1 2 AT S K IM DRAWING HELD SUNDAY, FEO. 12 AT SJV PM REQISTER EACH VISIT FOR 4 -S U P P LIE S Sh eSSsN V MT AIL VALIN m n IA. Camtwr N U Ba i k k a i ii bmwcsam mw mM Mi N aiiH lS ■Mister it (Na IMN wHaar miv ch e iti ferwm a Mal at M Hams a t NtWd MMB NJ I MoaliMWft. r a * N N W I WWWW w m e P W W w WW V M I ■ WWFWWM W I WW WwWWWW WW WPMNNPM MPMWwMM* WBaMHiMPa WWWf^9WgWWWe ■MMV. U M P tm- I -VIM KVM. 2 - VOT HOMS. S SS* IIMM. 9 • 71* UNM. 2 • VV* UNK, i • 7V*M NMM. V * VV* H 2 - SI J 7 MHS. 2 - S1.17 NMM. 2 • VI* NMM. A • N ^ H M < 6 pc. Di s s ec t i ng K i t , $9.95 < s> everyday prices are L O W prices! Page 12 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Monday, January 23, 1978 409 W. 30th (I Oik east of Guadalupe) "SPECIAL - AFTER 5:00 PM " BIG 60 oi. PITCHER MILLER BEER ................ $1.25 (S e r v e d in "P re tty " m ug*) BEST GERMAN FOOD WEST OF MUNICH A ll Types Sa n d w ich e s - Germ an and Texan A t M o s t Reasonable Prices In Town H A V IN G A PARTY, RECEPTION OR SOCIAL, CALL AND RESERVE OUR "BEER G ARD EN " SPECIAL RATES FOR U R G E GROUPS PH: 477-9206 or 477-9335 *«WURST, WINE, BEER A ATMOSPHERE i t X-ACTQ woodcarving set, $26.99 T l t U v c n i t y art/engineering hdqtrs. I l f o r d Mu I t 1 grade paper, 8x10, 2b sheets-$6.15 sxfP i i hu*C1 Jetty C g -Ujp 100 sheets-$21.50 Il fo s p e e d developer, 16 o $2. 60 T h e D a i l y T e x a n CLASSIFIIB ADS OPEN 8:001* 5:00 MONDAY THROUGH FRIDAY To place your classified od, come by the TSP Betorn* Office, TSP 3.200, between 8 am and 4:90 pm, Monday through Friday. Or you can call 471-5244,8 am to 5 pm daily. And as a con­ venience, the coupon below has been provided if you wish to mail in your classified ad. W RIT! YOUR AO HIRE Us* this chart to arrivo quickly at cost ( 15 ward minimum ) IS Ba. ut Thae* I (ail pa nard J) Its SJI 1.21 IM 147 I* 1/ ll lf n ^ t i* IIM BJI HLS* S IM I* J I t is I J I 14* 1*4 I J I ISS lf ! i f f 4Jt HJJ 4S3 IM 4J4 ^Tj i U t* w lust n j * £ a ... IE - ] Sri B t Bi Bl s n a g Daily Texan facing lawsuit Coordinating (Continued from Page I > A suit filed by University Law student Howard Hickman questioning the legality of m andatory funding for The Daily Texan is scheduled for hearing this week Hickman claim s The Daily Texan im properly used my m andatory fees to support candidates for public office and pieces of legislation which I personally oppose * The suit, filed in 53rd D istrict Court, was originally scheduled to be tried Jan 5 but w as postponed a t the insistence of the a t­ torney g en eral’s office, Hickman said Hickman has subpoenaed Allan Shivers, chairm an of the Hoard of R egents. University P resident Lorene Rogers Loyd Kdmonds general m anager of Texas Student Publications; University Business M anager Bobby Cook; John Ross, circu la­ tion supervisor of The Daily Texan; Texan E ditor Dan Malone, Dr Dwight T eeter, chairm an of the D epartm ent of Journalism University R eg istrar Albert Meerzo; and U niversity student John Schwarts, son of sta te Sen. A R "B a b e ’’ Schwartz, D- Galvaaton. Hickman wants them to testify in the suit. Although Hickman would not disclose why he had subpoenaed Schwarts, he apparently is concerned with copies of the Texan which Schwartz distributed to Texas legislators. Sen Schwartz said his son took enough copies of the T exan's Nov 30 issue to send to every sta te rep resen tativ e and senator The senator said te a r sheets of the Nov. SO editorial page, which dealt with the fate of the Division of G eneral and Com ­ parative Studies, along with a le tte r by Schw artz and Sen. O scar Mauzy, D Dallas, were sent to every rep resen tativ e and senator in the state. In the past, Hickman has claim ed opinions expressed in the Texan violate the state law which prohibits use of sta te funds for influencing political decisions Hickman said a stipulation agreem ent between the attorney gen eral’s office and him self could get the desired testim ony without all subpoenaed p arties having to ap p ear a t the trial. A k A R IST A Azlon presents a dynam ic new sound that combine! the best dem enti of rock, pop, funk and r'n’b into an exciting IP . HH,Un ROCK S R O U G A A G f f l R C R t AM C lTV/SUM M ER tovl_____I 6.29 -A Walker and W right, introduced a motion to am end the recom m endation of the planning com m ittee to include the increase by saying, This is a very particular costly item* but even though it s costly it s rig h t.’’ E v ery budget co m p ro m ise is taking money out of the te a c h e rs’ pockets,” he said. Citing a process of compounding com ­ promise Teague said. * This is not too liberal a motion, we will not concede that the faculty is overpaid ” “ IF WE MAKE a com prom ise and the Legislative Budget Board m akes a further co m p ro m ise and th e L e g isla tu re m ak es another com prom ise, the teachers of Texas will lose thier place even in relation to other state em ployees,” he said ‘ I am sure they have som e faculty th at m erit both the cost of living increase and the catchup, but I know enough to realize that som e deserve only I p e rc e n t,” board rn m ber Harold Herndon of San Antonio said in opposi­ tion to T eague’s motion “ This is not an across the board increase, but a lump su m ,” he said, adding that deserving faculty will get an increase D ebate focused on the relation of the cost of living index to the actual costs in Texas and the political realities of recom m ending ap­ propriations for higher education to the 66th Legislature. “ An undue increase right now is som ething the sta te of Texas can’t afford.“ said Sam D Young of El Paso in sum ­ m arizing the opposition to the motion. Only Teague, Hay and Tony Bonilla voted in favor of the increase, which was con­ sidered separately from the other form ula rn recom m endations. THE LARGEST increase recom m ended was the $26 million for organized research, a jum p of 428 4 percent over the $4.9 million ap­ propriated by the Legislature in fiscal 1979. The $26 million figure was the sam e as that suggested to the Legislature in 1976 The size of legislative budget cuts during la s t biennium , Ashworth said. increase results from the the Faculty salaries and organized research a re the two m ost im portant budget item s for large universities, both Rogers and Walker said, but the board is also responsible for overseeing to sm aller the appropriations schools. Among these sm aller schools are the public ' junior and com m unity colleges. The board approved recom m endations of $142 million for these schools in fiscal 1980 and $151 million for fiscal 1981. IN ACCORDANCE with its other respon- siblities the board also approved 15 new degree program s out of a total of 27 proposed by public colleges and universities around Texas and rule changes governing eligibility for Texas Public Educational G rants and Tui­ tion Equalization G rants. These changes w ere to bring the board s rules in line with new federal regulations, Ashworth said. The loan lim its for certain students receiv­ ing Hmson-Hazlewood loans w ere increased. C riteria for the allocation of fiscal 1978 funds fo r resid en cy p ro g ram s, which fam ily l l positions a t Brackenridge provide for Hospital and 267 statewide, also w ere es­ tablished. Egyptian films to air; discu ssion will follow By MARK DAVIS Texan Staff W riter University students will have the oppor­ tunity to gam insight into the problem s of Egyptian society when seven highly rated Egyptian film s focusing on social protest them es begin in February. “ These are am ong the best realistic Egyp­ tian film s dealing with real social concerns, such as the problem s of women, peasants and the working c la sse s,” said Dr. Afaf Mahfuz, cultural counselor at the Egyptian E m bassy in Washington. MAHFUZ. FORM ERLY of Cairo U niversi­ ty, will be in Austin Feb. I to introduce the film series and hold a panel discussion after th e f ir s t film , en title d “ M a rria g e and D ivorce.” The first film, “ I Want a Solution,” (1974) deals with a w om an’s atte m p t to divorce an older m an to whom h er fam ily had arranged h er m arriag e when she was young. Screening is at 7 p.m ., F eb I Most of the m ovies a re in Arabic with English subtitles. Adults will be adm itted for $1; admission for children under 12 is 50 cents. All film s will be shown in Batts Auditorium, with tickets sold a t the door. G R O K B O O K S 5 0 3 W 17 L Discover 0 v V. U N C H Roc! Tomato Q uality Italian F o o d R J 1601 G u a d a lu p e l R e a so n a b le P ric e s 4 7 6 7202 J 4 I) I N N E Delivery to U.T. Cam pus Area Mon.-Fri. 6-12 p.m. Sun. 5-11 p.m. THUNDERCLOUD SUBS 1608 Lavaca 478-3281 NEWl Now Thundercloud Subs offer: GIANT BURGERS & DRAFT BEER Happy Hour 3-7 p.m. Schliti & Bud $1.25 pitcher Serving: HEINEKEN MICHELOB SCHUTZ SUPERIOR DOS EQUIS BUD FROSTED MUGS Hours: l l a.rn.-12 p.m. M-F12-7 p.m. Sat.5-11 p.rn, Try Our 2nd Location at 201 E. Riverside Sun. d i s c o t h e q u e M O N D A Y N IG H T l i l t W T S 4 /W CO NTEST open JC* DAILY S V 3 0 TIL 2 a.-n $100. To the Winners D r in k s for all E n trie s1 3500 G U A D A LU PE, AUSTIN 453 9831 Q O y R n E T >s * STEAKS • ch ic k en • CREPES . a u r e n e i i a f w w n w h t B a a r 314 I. 6H> I MOCKS EAST OF CONGEESS ( \ FINAL WEEK C L O S E m jT SALE! EN D S JAN. A ll Mexican Clothing and Gift Item s M ust Go! PRICES SLASHED TO THE BONE! The Gypsy Moth 1801 Nueces Mon-Sat 11-6 NOW OPEN TIL 8 P.M. THURS. 474-1487 t New electric more costs ; By CAROLE CHILES Q ty Reporter City Council’s unanimous approval of a new electric ra te stru ctu re and utility se r­ v ic e r e g u l a t i o n s m e a n s residents will pay alm ost the sam e utility bill this year as last, but a new $7.50 fee each tim e they move. The new s t r u c t u r e and reg u latio n s, which w ill be reflected in April bills, are based on the theory that those who use the most should pay the m ost for service IN ITIA TIN G i n d i v i d u a l electrical service cost the city from $3 09 (August) to $4.16 ( J u l y ) in 1977, G u y m o n P hillips, e le c tric se rv ic e s departm ent spokesm an, said a t the council m eeting early I* riday. The sam e cost is in­ curred when service is turned off. Phillips said service projec­ tions indicate each of Austin’s 144,739 m eters will be turned on L H tim es in 1978 'We would hit each m eter at least once,’’ Phillips told the council. M E M B E R S O F t h e S t u d e n t s ’ A s s o c i a t i o n City County Lobby called the $7 50 turn-on fee unfair and discrim inatory to students at a public hearing Wednesday night. C o u n c ilm e m b e r R ic h a rd G o o d m a n s u g g e s te d c e n - Chicano art displayed CASA offers seminars with the Austin Independent School D istrict in which children will do all types of a rt and writing to be exibited in a show during May. The project involves children in kindergarten through grade 12 and will include literature, sculpture, photography, music, painting and a host of other mediums. Another weekly project CASA will sponsor this sem ester will be free classes in Chicano literatu re and creativ e w riting These class include a sem inars a re open num ber of guest lecturers. to all and CASA m em bers also have been invited to speak on Chicano music and literatu re of T ex­ as a t the C entro Cultural de la Raza in San Diego during the last week of February. With no specified headquarters, CASA m em bers m eet w herever possible and collect no dues, although donations a re taken from the local business com m unity to fund the group’s projects. B ernardino Veraztique, along with other CASA m em bers, is working on a m ural pro­ je c t in E a st and South Austin. Veraztique painted the large m ural a t Juarez-Lincoln University and has received funds form the city and federal governm ent to com plete this endeavor. CASA functions, m em bers say, " to offer the com m unity the opportunity to be in touch with the a rtists, not a s ‘special people,’ but as t r a b a j a d o r e s ( w o r k e r s ) , c o m p a n e r o s (friends), who, in their a rt, offer their con­ tribution to the Movimiento del Pueblo.” By BOB BERSANO Staff Writer Chicano a rt and literatu re is being studied and developed through com m unity activities by Chicano A r i s t a s Sirviendo a Aztlan a local cultural group thriving in Austin. Originally founded in 1975 to offer U niversi­ ty students “ a cre a tiv e environm ent and an alternative outlet for the Chicano a rt student who otherw ise found g re a t difficulties in ex­ for hibiting and getting positive his efforts,” CASA has expanded to all latinos “ in an effort to bridge that space which sep arates school and barrio a r tis ts ,” Janis P alm a, a CASA m em ber said. feedback JUAN TEJEDA, a CASA m em ber, said the group frees the Chicano a rtist from re stric ­ tions the imposed upon a rt students at University D epartm ent of Art. M em bers feel that the U niversity has an intolerance for the Chicano cu ltu re ’s type of "revolutionary aesth etic” a rt which com bines a rt with politics. CASA offers both the University and the com m unity a num ber of a rtistic and cu ltural­ ly related activities. Music, a rt and literatu re a re covered in com m unity presentations by m em bers. CASA has produced a num ber of educational aids, including books, videotapes and slides, which a re distributed to local school and com m unity groups. The group is involved in a city-wide project P IO N E E R KD-12 PORTABLE CASSETTE RECORDER • Automatic and Manual Recording Level Automatic Shut-off (all modes) Built in Condenser Microphone 3 Way Power • Cue and Review Record Level/Battery Meter • Headphone Jack 1 Uses Four D Cell Batteries for Longer Life rn /■v ^ n M lOttotn&tiuCa - Oft Monday, January 23, 1978 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Page 13 means moving time tralizing turn-ons and ch arg ­ ing students less. " lf we re going to assess cost, let s assess it fairly," Goodman said M ayor C arole M cClellan favored a cost-based system , "W e m ay have a lot of elderly on fixed incomes who a re n ’t moving I don't think it s fair that we ask them to cover the cost of those who a re m oving,’’ McClellan said. t ur n- on fee ca n be avoided if a tenant reads his own m eter in the presense of his m a n a g e r or l andl or d, records the reading and sends it to th e ci t y. T he sa m e procedure would be followed when the tenant moves out. The T H E N E W S E R V I C E r e gul a t i ons c ont a i n so m e p r o v i s i o n s t h e hardships of paying electric bills. t o e a s e The regulations extend the paym ent d eadline from 15 days to one month and reduce late penalty charges from IO percent to 5 percent of the bill. The new ra te stru c tu re , designed by utility consultants Touche Ross & Co., form s 14 classes of custom ers ranging from residents to large in­ dustrial users R esidents will pay less for their electricity through the use of a differen­ tial which determ ines how much of the c ity ’s ra te of return should be paid by each custom er. Touche Ross recom m ended the city receive a 5 79 percent ra te of return overall. Large com m ercial custom ers will pay m ore than the 5.79 p e r­ cent ra te of return; sm aller custom ers will pay less City Council also approved a winter sum m er differential. A dem and charge will be placed on bills from May through Oc tober in addition to the base rate. The dem and charge is designed in ­ to cover creased cost of operating the t he s u m m e r pl ant dur i ng months. the CUSTOMERS who use m ore energy in the sum m er will pay it. E lectric bills m ore for probably will drop the the d e ma n d wi n t e r when in charge is taken off. In other action, the council; i t s m e e t i n g • R e v i s e d tim es City Council will meet at 9 a rn for the morning ses­ sion and I p rn, for the a fte r­ noon session on Thursdays On the third T hursday of the month, the council will m eet at 6 p m instead of 7 p m • Discontinued "C " clinic c a r d s a t B r a c k e n r i d g e Hospital and replaced them with appointm ent slips en­ titling medically indigent who live out of Travis County to one free follow-up visit The d o c to r will d e t e r m i n e if another visit is needed. • R a i s e d t h e m i n i m u m mont hl y c h a rg e for w a te r from $1 26 to $2 52 and for w a ste w a te r to $2 90 The resolution passed 5- 2. with John Trevino and J i m ­ m y Snell voting against it. f r om $1 45 • Approved forming a 16- m em ber board to recom m end im provem ents for Clarksville, E a st Austin and downtown a re a s and submit an applica­ tion for Economic Develop m ent Adm inistration funding BOURBON BROTHERS Longest Happy Hour in Town Double Shot* • 2 for I • 11 om-9 pm N ever o cover The COPPER DOLLAR 25* Boor Each Mon. & Tuo*. 7-8 p.m. 4* 2 3 ^ ,d to i f wi#} | 90 Student r» t# a#* a l.ff,# 94 ll I < ai * I IM) a r,f>« |-|fr,# t ' n ' » I (Of h j l Mw.#} l l 9* I ro t » I IMT A ten or m o*# i. m e t D I t (It A LM IHI V HtHMU I OO a m J Ma*#*, f#*»o M n ; l l M • « I a i l l t ; W H rxw la) (•«.,. tv##*## I I OO • * fkwi###, HM H w >#<•• u t* , 11 OO • * I OO • rn ».-*#, l i l t * t Mw*##, h . 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Br a n a t baa tar a c , a tr a iia m ta n d itta n taoo t i r a m t i V B a il a ir, AT new tlra *. tuna a tt H igh m I ta t but a ir alla n t o v e ra ll Staa< i MrwHI.4>M>ia COB V t / T i / t BO A ! i m t M 4 tpaed low m i e i P a n t aal n m * t f / t MONI (A CVC C, orange arith black inferior #0 OOO fin e * , m utt tan t/000 4 /* U t * a te * i W t o i l PONT (AC NOT ru nn in g m aka artar a // H I I a tta r A B m TI O B f M H N P J* giH.ui mu lot d ra t. *4 OOO rn 1 le t b a rg a in tfOO I / l l / t i l* /a ( O I I AST \u p r# m a B rougham a* c a lla n " co n d itio n m any a x ii a t low m iia a y# IM IM I* e v e n in g s w aokondl *44*o 4/1 4*4* 1 1 w eekday* / I V W S l/ P t B B B B I C l *0 OM m iia * ra d ia l tiro * tt * 0 or b a tt o ffa l a ff m i d ‘ / I S W M {OOI a m f M ( a n a tta tu r n e d AC, 4 tpaed, t a d e e alloy w heal} #» ca ll« m c o nd itio n 44J '/ l a l e v * aa u c OS N I N I T v B i g h t auto m atic power geed cond itio n C all a tta r 4 OO weakd « y t t i V t GA B f B U IC / angina new ( M c tv I zoo c a il a»a ; / / * good lir a * FOK SALI M e t grey cia - F o r Sola i*ZS a id Y a m a h a i undine., b e lt utter I ee»e nam e and num ber taimf iho p p e d good *»? cagi 4 /t IS I ] i k y < la Far I o l a M I N S J* TAK A B A , a lle y lig h t} IU a nte la rk b a tt otter C all a tta r A 44 i i H a lo tte rie s * . low m ile a ge H it t e r F U J I G R A N M atter« < end it.en SUL 41# BM* to u re r, IS burgundy in wa. te n ty e x tra s M f N S I M B * 8 t pearl good condition sat c a n 4/4 4 i» j St a ra d -Fat I o l a /too a m p u lla r * MB ZI M C IN T O S H tuner Babce ST / tu rn ta b le De non rec tfid g * w ith lr a n tle r mer p a rte d cond! Hon MS 41 t i A K A I C BIT P fig h t STBCX tape recorder and C /a lg e ig h t lr a. k <«pe der k tor »ar. AP# OI IO A lb tor Jett A X A I O a IM O reel to real tape der k an c a lla n t c o n d itio n a lt JSM / 1 I peak ar* P i o n * B B Pioneer P i.I TSO tut m a th * A sleet at taco Cal) Dave a i ut o/*J I X ase. lube F U R N I T U R E BARG AINS W arehouse f u ll a t good m ad tu m o u r# m u tt be vat ated ta tra p ra nt U n b e lie v a b le p r ic e * everyone e n o u g h fo r 3914 B W o o d b u r y ( I block N o rth at Bon W U* A ( a t t of I e n g ra ft I S a tu rd ay and Sunday I t f aah A C a rry only No Cha* k l I N D I A N J E W E L R Y tale* non at • .<’t»oi>av#b'e reasonable (ic., a* - C la ith design fro m th# Navalo. I .mi Mop* and Sarsie D om ingo in d ia n ! M e n d ) r a t t e d h a n d m a d e te e m e r g o o d * b a t k e tt p o tte ry and tendpeinlirH * fa s h io n * S TR A IG H T a p n o w I?/# N M a y * I t s #14* Bound Bock M iaia Mound Hot k Tea#} t e w e ir y w a b u y |a w e i. y, d ia m o n d * and old gold H ig h e tf « ath p r tr a t paid a t t e t # C A P I T O L D I A M O N D S H O P 4019 N L a m a r UNFURN APARTMENTS T R A V I S H O U S E A P T S . ICOG Royal C r t i t I end I BB, ( hoo t# Irony 4 floor p la n t c i i t f i w e t h e r g a r b a g e d is p o s a l, -a r p e t mg I A IM Boo' and p a rty room un s h uttle bus ro u t* lo t* ut storage and p e rk in g M n, «* star I at ti« 0 and we help tin tie , i. it iv Can 4 4 / */10 W O R L D FAMOUS L ib e r Blad S p e c * i - h> i c lothin g optio n a l L a rg e r?? atli r e la tiv e ly tre e c o m m u n ity e n v iro n m en t la te n tly rem odatad crass v a n l-ia iio n . air c o n d itio n in g on pr e m u # } ta r ell a t tee Hens tor party mg th iid * an quiet C onvenient to < a m p u l ta i or# I A / BW SISO t l /0 p lo t I 41/ U NI T e rry M arker NOB TM O N I baar aam e ffic ie n c y in* fre m u ra i H e id t on* m ile C ity b u t two blot k l *140 ABM 411 /t«S IB R UNF UR N I S M 8 O g e r» g # a p e rt m o ot quiet neightHir hood u tilI Hat p e ri ly p a id I H I m o C il l 4$a M 4* e ven m g t ar w aakandt C X C I U B N T DOW NTOW N On.et T re a t Oak K n o ll 410 S location I BB HOO p lo t e le c tric l l ! AAA 114* •FURNISHED APARTMENTS QUIET u n i v e r t i f y n e ig h b o rh o o d apt. SUO plus e lec tricity , 410 W 37th T im 453-2.144 K I NGSWOOD PLACE 4319 Bull CreaK Rd I bt (arg# enough fo r J doubt# bads. L A CH wood p aneling thro u gh o ut pool ia b l# p ig * B b rin g a frie n d and la v a haw 454-7500 F R E E A M P L I F I E R C L I N I C I hut id a y Jan 14 I J I pm F rid a y Jan I t l l 4 pm Any m ake or m odel Tatted re g a rd !* * * at w het# pure bata d Ne Com par t m u tt please H I G H F I D E L I T Y , IN C a /* %*m D IB L a v a c a Store Only Do AH T h a t# Ads D riv e You b a n a n a s ? Wk B ent A u stin F b i * 1 Can U t RE A L W O R L D P R O P E R T IE S I a m p u l AAI IJ H Nor in M i SJM A p a rtm e n ts O u p ie ie t H orn#* L U X U R Y A P A R T M E N T V I E W P O I N T 5 BLOCKS TO CAMPUS $180 2518 LEO N 472-9981 > • • • • • * * • • • • # # O O O # Free Service Parking Transportation HABITAT HUNTERS f o r v it a A h o * a p t tp a c ia h tm g m c o m p l a n t w ith a cc m tt to fh v t t la lo c a t o r H o w L o o t in g F o r S u m m o f A F o il O•#*# %#*/• •99 SA 474-1 SM O o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o r Retreat - M ove In T o d a y - • ie cg# efficiency him • walk Ie shuttle • small friendly complex 44100 Ave A 454-1163 La Paz - M ove In T o d a y - • I BR fur# S H S • Water, Gat paid • Shu til# I Ilk. AOI W. IM I 451-3542 2 3 0 4 Pleasant Valley R d . • B e a u tifu l c lu b ro o m w it h fireplace • Tw o tw im m m g poo Ii • r e a m la u n d r y building Ii* o v a ry k Plenty of convenient parking • G am aroo m w ith pool fotbe A tennis table • O n UT shuttle bus ro u t* • O a t coaxing h e atin g A hat w ater k Excellent chapping nearby • E ffic ie n c ie s a n * . tour bedroom ! I w * . a n d a Ewrnithad an d unfurnished • Br it e t start at t i 4 0 A I 4 4 2 - 1 2 H H C&rCerrinBr^/fonijp CASA BLANCA • Efficiency Apartm ents $ 1 1 0 Unfurnished $ 1 2 0 Furnished • S e p a r a t e s t o r a g e rooms for each apt. • Bus pass furnished • C onvenient to Cam pus • Water paid • Laundry facilities • Am ple parking Call 4 5 9 -1 3 6 5 - days 4 7 4 -5 5 5 0 • After 7 pm A w eek en d s ITA 4 P P R E C ! A TE Of H / / SA NTS 2506 Manor Road Fireplace* Balconies & patio* Ga* cooking & heating Pool w ith w aterfall V T shuttle Laundry room Ice machine Ample parking One and two bedroom* furnished & unfurnished 1500 R o y a l C re s t 444 7516 THG dRBOR , ll04s& M u » k a l- F a r S a k i H IW M U iic book* By A n e t C ootHtr Joe Walsh. Ted N ugani M a ry k e y B la re B andy N e w m a n Cutdv G ib b many m ore A lph a Mut '« ' e v e n .n o t I br apt. 3 b l k ! , t o L a w S c h o o l $175 plus E S m a l l c o m p l e x , p a r k i n g ; p o o l c o v e r e d LA CASITA APTS. 2900 Cole 327-2239 FURNISHED APARTMENTS Luxury Living in a Country Club Atmosphere Summer Special on 2 Bedrooms Furnished ar Unfurnished M old Sarvka Availably UT Shunt# But Service Cobia TV H andball, Tennis C a u m , Foals ffhctencies, Ona A Two Bad roams (fnalislAire APARTMENTS Comm loo a* O 'iv# South on IN 15 e t it a f O t t o r i Go E ast tu rn on Of to r i tw o M o c k * 'a rt on B u ria n O r-v# 'a llo w Our t- g m ^1919Burton Drive 444-1846 j A a s t i n P B b e s t # 2101 Burton Dr • 4474130 LOVE TO DRIVE? DRIVE FOR DOMINO'S N O W T A K I N G A P P L I C A ­ T I O N S A F T E R 4 P . M . M U S T B E 18 O R O V E R A N D H A V E O W N C A R A P P L Y 404 W. 2 6 T H , IM O W E S T L Y N N , 2011 4 4 1 5 E . G U A D A L U P E R I V E R S I D E , A R E Y O U A B O B O ? L o t T re s Bobo* R e s ta u ra n t is now accepting a p p licatio n s fo r ix o g r e ts iv t in d iv id u a ls interested in excelle nt w o rk ­ in g c o n d itio n s , good s a la r ie s a n d em ployee b en e fit* in ­ clude cashier, host person, k itch en help, bus person position, end w a itp e rto n E x ­ perience is not necessary Please app ly in person between 9-11 a rn o r 2-S p m. 1206 W 34th Street in th# 26 Doors Shop­ ping Cantar jo b s a v a ila b le E A R N $ 4 - * 8 / H O U R H ours to m eet yo ur schedule Be your ow n boss B e c o m e a F u lle r B ru s h D ealer No experience necessary, co m ­ plete tra in in g p rovided F o r in te rv ie w c a ll 454-1470 Mon F r l , between I em -lQ am or 12 30 pm-2 pm F u lle r Brush P ro d u c t* Canter ACCEPTING- APPLICATIONS p a r t t i m e e v e n in g h elp 5 pm-1 a m , 2, 3, o r 4 shifts a w e e k , $2 6 5 / h o u r . A p p l y a t 2805 R o g g e L a n e . S t o p N G o m a r k e t s . A n E q u a l O p p o r t u n i ­ ty E m p l o y e r . A L T E R A T I O N S P E P S O N n e e d e d lengths only Cash paid d a ily , Inquire w ith m anager, K ing of Jeans F U L L T IM E com m issioned salesperson needed to r re te ll audio shop Some sales experience d esira b le 459-0044 S E R V IC E S T A T IO N p e r t tim e help needed weekday evenings (5 or 4-9), soma Sundays S620 B u rn e t Rd fo r w o m a n F R E E RO O M B O A R D Com panion to w om an 76 Six nights, one day References 345*1114 L O V IN G PE PSON To care fo r 2 g irls , 7 and 4 Tuesday and F rid a y , 2 30-5 30 p rn References 42 00/hr C all P a l 451 - 6445 or 474-4739 to a rra n g e in te rv ie w TH U NOE RCLOU D S U B ! South" needs re lia b le help p a rt tim e a p p ro x im a te ly 70 h rs ./w eek A p p ly In person 201 E R iv e r­ side a fte r 3 p m a n d CAREER OPPORTUNITIES L a n d O 'L a k e s , one of the m o s t l a r g e s t p ro g r e s s iv e m a r k e t i n g and in food pro cessing in­ the w o rld , in d i v i d u a l s c a r e e r o p p o r t u n i t i e s . T h e s e o p p o r t u n i t i e s a r e w i t h a f i r m t h a t boasts ove r a b illio n d o lla rs a n n u a l l y in s a le s a n d e m p l o y s o v e r 7000 persons. f i r m s is see kin g i n t e r e s t e d O u r r e c r u i t e r w il l be on c a m p u s F e b r u a r y 2, 1978, seeking c a n d i d a t e s w i t h ac- f o r c o u n t i n g m a j o r s positions in th e f i n a n c e and a c c o u n tin g d iv is io n . Sign up a t the c a r e e r p la n n in g and p l a c e m e n t o ffice. 2 B R $225 On th u *tt# P f- v e t* patios and balcon!#* be a u tifu l poo1 fro s t free re frig e ra to r tuMy shag ce rpe tec CA CM ai- b u ilt .n kitch en W ater c#b'» pa-«J I I H B urton Or-v# 444 /SSO. 4$i *533, C an tre i P roper fie * tn r M A U N A K A I A P T S Wets to Campus 405 E I H I B a tt h o o tin g for U n iv e rs ity men ana I br *U 5 ABF” wom en Shuffle I but, tin g le e fficien cy, 1)49 50. Jbr jo e et' W e n c y 4/35 a c c o m m o d e tio n t fro m I 4 paopi • 477 214/ A L L BILLS PAID Eft. from $150 I bdrm, from $200 * blocks fro m cam pus near w e th u ttle , C A /CM 5 m in u te * to dow ntow n en# M o pee 2408 Leo n 476-3467 TAI SHAN l b r - $170 2 br - $195 1400 E . 51st 453-3306 N E E D TO SAVE A N D j BLOCK FR O M C AM PUS S T IL L BE BLACKSTONE APTS ?*I0 R E D R IV E R 474-ISSI We w ill help you fin d a ro o m m a te to th e re expense* W* 50 a m onth a ll b ills paid A P AR AG O N P R O P E R T Y L A R G E ROOMY I S. JBR a pa rtm e n t*, IIS C X SUO p iu * e le c tric and gat, C A/C H, shopping cantar, HOO E 52nd, A p t 102- A 453-473* r U B N OB U N F U K N an Shuttle. I and 2 la rg e bed ro o m s C a p ita l v i ll a IOO! R einit 453-5/44 E F F IC IE N C Y A B T. a va ila b le , s 145 per m onth A B P 47S-77S7 C L E A N ONE bedroom fu rn is h e d a p a rt­ m ent a v a ila b le im m e d ia te ly convenient to shuttle b ut, w ater, g e t, cable paid SUS 453 2201 f e m a l e S T U D E N T S a l f I c l anc le t, *105/m onth, u tilitie s paid, CA CH. 2 b lo ck* fro m cam po* 2507 N uacat No IOO 4/7137* a lte r 5 p m lb r w ater g a t N E A R CAM PUS larg e cab!# paid *1*0 2401 Longviaw , 472 *43*. 45*0154 I-!VR, SOUTH, fo u rp la x bedroom s u p t t a i r t , p r iv a t e p a tio , C A C H , a ll a p p lia n c e * fu rn is h e d o r u n fu rn lth e d *2/4 442-1*54, 442-0415 evening* f u r n i s h e d e f f i c i e n c y R iv e rs id e b e a u tifu l, tp a c io u t, th u ttle , convenient, 7 / t t W A B P ' Wl11 ® y# * ?5 ot (,#po* l , ' * 4*' I BR A P T a v a ila b le im m e d ia te ly on s h uttle route, nice, g a t heat and tto v e Spanish T ra il. 451-3470 la u n d ry , IB R A B P cable, th u ttle , SHS p lu t deposit, 2210 E n ­ fie ld , 47S-34I* Keep try in g tm a ll co m p le x , S H U T TLE E N F IE L D M o p a c - L ik f” A u tfln B lvd M , »I3* No pet*, c h lld ra n IOO H eard 474 0953 472 4444 G A R A G E A P A R T M E N T 471-0402. tO i Mf. 13th a v a i l a b l e TWO e ffic ltn c ia t d ire c tly o ff of IF , s u i plus a ia c trlc lty , p at* 453- 7137 o r 451 5414 C O U PLE OR S IN G LE w ith tfa y horn* w it* to m anage a p t* a d jo in in g U n lv a rti- ty Reference* 474 1454. 411 E 30th A lto a v a ila b le W a te rfa ll I. M t. Bunnell Rd ROOMMATIS N E E D F E M A L E lb r apt Two o th e r* u t# m a in ly (o r a d d r# ** v a ry cheap 452 4451 454 2444 th e re M A T U R E W O M A N to share la rg e house on park w ith th re e w om en Need fu r ­ n itu re *75 m o Ut b No pets 453 4454 M A L E STU D E N T needed to th e re 3br hoot# *135 ABP, 20 blo ck* fro m ca m pu * J im 451 4*54 IN TO D AY L a rg e 2 bedroom M O VE duplex lanced y a rd Short lire p ie c a , d riv e to s h uttle tio s plus Vi u tilitie s 924 $521 H O U S E M A TE N E E D E O to r tin e home V e ry c lo te U T C oll 472-4374 1004 w 22nd F E M A L E SU I T E M A T E w a n te d ttu d io u t, nonsm oker to th e re 2bd/2ba. *135 plus u tility , sh uttie bu * 441 2543. 444 7534 E A S Y -G O IN G F E M A L E share large, furnished, 2-1 *>x *140 Ih c lu d e t a ll b ill* Sm oker ok, CR th u ttle , 454 1209 N E E D F A IR l V neat. re a *o n a b ly sane ro o m .rial#. 2 bedroom on B u llcre e k U IS p iu * ' j E Robin 452-0X47 F E M A L E TO »hare tto n e garage apl H yde P a rk, *105 plus j b P re fe r no tobacco va g a ta ria n 451-7442 ONE B O R M in hou*a fo r Ten#* student C lo te to s h u ttle 451-3241 F E M A L E H O U S E M A TE wanted own room w alk s h uttle *4 7 50 pius 1 > b u l* 45* 4405 P e t* ok O N E R O O M M A T E n e e d e d th r e e bedroom house *70 m onth, 'a b ills C all M ik e 443-9744 N E E O H O U S E M A TE 3 b d rm N orth 277J and G uadalupe area House rn good co ndition, larg e y a rd trees *75 per m onth plus VI u tilitie s . C all *24 53*2 a tta r 5 IS p rn to share w ith responsible I B O R M APT ta m a le Shuttle J b lk * HOO plus w E 45* 7405 R O O M M A T E N E E D E O m a t u r e r responsible
1 bills, 204 Net ray. 451*094 BOO M W IT H bath, k itc h e n 3 blocks fr o m c a m p u s K a th y 471 3*44. HOO m onth W A N T E D ONE to share three bedroom house in South A u s tin *91 Cal! 443*9*2 ro om m a te TWO L A D IE S need one other to share n it# house T ra v is H e ig h !* 44I-4SU W A N T S O NON SM O KER lo Share 3br house on Av# F near ko*n>g |»S mo pius J b ills 453PJB0 ___ L IB E R A L R O O M M A T E to r 3-1 house *75 plus 1 •> b u ll 974 ?4*2 F E M A L E W A N T E O i h r t a bedroom townhouse *'3 J a m o nth A B P L ynd a o r M a rg . 4*3- '444 to s h a r# L U X U R Y TOWNHOUSE near sh uttle o n * ta m a it ro o m m a te *150 pius I» b 441- 3427 N E E D L IB E R A L , m a tu re ro o m m a te a« L o n d o n S q u a re , *53 a il b ills O w n bedroom Bent Kt, 443-4400 N E E D TW O fe m a le ro o m m a te * to r 3- badroom h o i se Rent MC pius b u lt Non­ sm okers Across fro m IF s o u ffle 453- 8X15 F E M A L E R O O M M A T E w an te d non­ sm oker i t beth. and 2 te r r ific room m ates. Close to cam pus end sh uttle 47*4332 ] bedroom f e m a l e t o S h a r e a ttra c tiv e Tty ib a a p a rtm e n t w ith I others RC shunt# 443 H is H O U S E M A T E s h a r e J b d rrn house * ! » m onth pius a w tttftfas 474-4*3* F iN E I B E D R O O M a p t to r 3rd m a t* ro o m m a te On Rtvers.de s h u ttle Own ro o m ava a tte *47-ais# L O C K , S T O C K & B A R R E L D ay door hostess, day dishw asher and b u sse r! needed Lock, STock and B a rre l R estaurant 2700 W Anderson Lane 451- 7571 N E E O E X T R A m oney? Th# F lo w e r People need people to sell flo w e rs T h o r* th ru Sun. highest com m issio n paid d a lly / M I 102 SHOR T O R D E R cook and w altpaople fo r L a F o n d a M e x ic a n e v e n i n g s R estaurant, a p p ly 9-12 evenings IF YOU CAN sell by telephone, you m ay have a job w ith the A u stin C itlie n c ir ­ c u la tio n d e p a rtm e n t sales cre w H ours a re 5:15 p m u n til 8:15 p m M onday th ru T h u rsda y P ay Is good fo r those who sell l f y o u 're Interested In try in g out. c a ll 453-4423 a tta r 4 p m . and ask fo r J e ff A bram son c a p T t o l c i t i s m Cb. Bf A u s tin , T x . w ants to h ir# ar. engineer or a rc h ite c ­ tu ra l engineer P rio r experience w ith s tru c tu ra l steal d e ta ilin g re q u ire d Con­ ta c t F re d T rim b le , 442-1441 EOE In W A N T E O : SOM EO NE hom e fro m 2 30-5 OO M u s t fu rn is h own tra n s p o rta tio n . S alary negotiable 834- 4555 a fte r 5 p.m . to b ab ysit Y AR INGS IM M E D IA T E openIhfl T o r h ard w o rk in g d is p la y person M u s t take p olyg ra p h C ontact R ica rd o G arza, 476- 6511 ext 70. F A N T A S T IC M O N E Y - " I D rea m of J e a n ie M a s s a g e " No e x p e r ie n c e necessary. F u ll - p a rt, p lenty tim * to study on lob. 454-3)61 S U M M E R C A M P counselor fo r p riv a te c a m p located In m ountains near Santa Fe, New M e x ic o C andidates should be p ro fic ie n t In one area of the p ro g ra m and w illin g to liv e w ith c h ild re n D ates of e m p lo y m e n t June 14, 1974 Aug 12, 1978 In te rv ie w s held In A u s tin Jan. 24 Con­ ta c t E d u catio n P lace m e n t Service 471- ISH fo r a p p o in tm e n t. D O R M IT O R Y P E R S O N N E L ? vo ce - tlo n a i a c tiv ity leader needed ■ p riv a te b oarding school fo r c h ild re n w ith le a r­ ning d is a b ilitie s No degree necessary. School located in m oun tain s near Santa Fe New M e xico In A u s tin , Jan. 24 C o n ta c t E d u c a tio n P lace m e n t Service, 471-1511 fo r a p p o in t­ m ent In te rv ie w s held C E R T IF I E D ^ S P E C IA L e d u c a tio n te a c h e r needed - p r iv a te school fo r c h ild r e n w ith le a r n in g d is a b ilitie s Positions a v a ila b le Sept 1974 School located in m ountains, 37 m ile s fro m San­ ta F t New M e x ic o In te rv ie w s held in A u s tin J a n . 24 C o n ta c t E d u c a tio n P lace m e n t Service, 471-1511 fo r a p p o in t­ m ent S P E C IA L E V E N T S Canter p a rt tim e position a v a ila b le barte nd e rs, w a lt p a r­ sons k itc h e n halp needed to w ork b an­ quets Those ln fe rt$ ie d a p p ly M on.-Sat., 9 am -5 p.m a t the V o lu m e S ervice offic e th * Special the m a in entra nce of at E vents Center, 1701 Red R ive r. D O M E S T IC H E L P w a n te d l i g h t housew ork In a s m a ll hom e *15 per a day re fe ren ce * required, 477-3*41 u n til 5, 444-4779 evenings N IG H T O P E N IN G F rid a y and S aturday l l 30 p rn.-7 30 a rn and m ore It desired Good s a la ry E c k a rd 's D rugs, $419 A ir ­ p ort L E G A L S E C R E T A R Y to r I la w y e r ot fic a Good o rg a n iz a tio n a l s k ills type 80 w pm S ta rtin g s a la ry *4S0 negotiable 474-4037 N E E O IN STR U C TO R S to r re c re a tio n a l classes In o u td o o r re c re a tio n , g y m ­ n astic*, yoga, g u ita r baton, judo A ustin R ecre a tio n Center, 1213 Shoal Creek 474-5442.______ M E R IC A N R E ST A U R A N T n e e d s w a itp e rs o n * p a r t and tim # E x ­ perience p re ta rre d Cook also needed 5 p m u n til closing A p p ly In person a t I I I * 5 L a m a r tu ll C H IU S C H IN E S E R e stau ra n t now h ir ­ ing k itch en help and dishw asher C all P h ilip Chiu 452-5703 a fte r 5:00 p.m . R E L IA B L E B A B Y S IT T E R w anted ta sit w ith 14 mon old, M -Th, 3 30-7 p rn also S itte r* needed fo r M A F . m others m o r­ ning e xercise class M u st have tra n s p o r­ ta tio n C all 451-4771 454-5349 S IT T E R N E E D E D fo r c h ild re n agas I and 9 2 JO-4 OO weekdays S w im m er p re fe rre d c a r necessary *2 OO hr. plus m lie e g e 471 5454 J4S-9137 C A S H IE R A N D kitc h e n h ttp w anted a p p ly a t Egg R oil Stand 2717 G uadalupe. 47* 0354 A A IT P E R S O N S A A N T E O by C h.ntsa re s ta u ra n ts A p o ly a t isiO Guadalupe. C anton R estau ra n t, 474 1750 a fte r 5 OO p rn, A tT e n T i ON l a w STU D EN TS Nolan w a ils C om m u n ica tio n , Inc. Is seeking a re g u la r p a rt tim # sa es r e p r e je n ta fU t hours fle x ib le between 4 em and 5 pm op­ p o rtu n ity to r fu ll tim # e m p lo ym e n t d u r­ ing vacations in te rv ie w s by a ppoint­ m e nt only fo r in fo rm a tio n C all 442 75## k I TC H E N ME L B w anted C all 474-7821 a fte r 5 T IR E D OF long hours and low pay? E sta b lish e d w holesale sa rv ic e business in A u s tin to r sa*# You a a m *11000 ye ar­ l y w o r k in g p a r t t o r housew ife re tire d person or student Ne expe rie nce necessary te rm s Cats O U) TKF ieee after 4 p m N E E O N E A T d ep e n da b le p a r t tim # w att per sorv-busper son A pply et 42! E 6th No phone c a lls *34 OOO id e a l t i m e N E E O SOM EO NE to help w rit# tow lave.' m a th »e*ts H o u r* fle x ib le but m o st m eat deadlines sem ester Certie by P A I 3 aas or can 472 3605 t JOO-1soc E X C H A N G E Y O U R cooking and clea n ­ ing s k ills fo r room ano boars M a tu re sta b le parson to ass st h an d icap p e d g ra d u a te stu d e nt ans c h ild N orthw est c ity bus. reference*. 437 2343 CM URCH N U R S E R Y *xW xnB gnt to r lie te n ts o r 2-5 ve er o d * on Sundays 14 30 a m 12 IX p m *2 43 h r 474-3X09 J u s t N o r t h o f 2 7 t h a t G u a d a l u p e 2707 H e m p h i l l P a r k ty rV 'J b liA Ann M B A . t y p i n g , P R IN T IN G , b i n d i n g T H E C O M P L E T E P R O F E S S I O N A L F U L L T I M E T Y P I N G S E R V IC E 472-3210 a nd 472-7677 • • • you can a ffo rd E f O N O T Y P E low -cost typ in g Ly experienced people who CARE about q u a lity B rin g u t yo ur thesis, disse rta tio n , m em o, brie f, re p o rt, le tte r, paper or w hatever 37th a t guadalupe 453 5452 M o n -F ri 8 30-5 Sat 10-4 E i O N O T Y P E R iverside E. R iverside at Lakeshore 443-4498 M F 8-5 Sat 10-4 T Y P I N G E R R Y SERVICE A ll u n iv e rs ity and business w ork T ypesetting L ast m inu te service F ree p a rk in g Open 9 8 M on-Th 4 9-5 F r i & Sat 472-8936 D o b ie M a l l P R O FE S S IO N A L t y p i n g service, dis se da tio n s, m a nu scrip ts, resum es, etc. C all a n y tim e , 444-1134. T Y P IN G , ETC. Cheap, fast, accurate, near ca m pu *. O v e rn ig h t service. Suzi P atterson 477-2147 keep try in g E X P E R IE N C E D A N D know ledgeable T h e s e s , d i s s e r t a t i o n s , t y p i s t professional re po rts, etc 7(7, page B a r­ bara Tullos, 453-5124 B O B B Y E D E L A F IE L D IB M Selectee, p lc a /a lite 30 years experience. Books, d i s s e r t a t i o n s , r e p o r t s , m im eo g rap h ing , 442-7144. th e s e s , - Just N o r t h of 27th a t G u a d a l u p e 2707 H e m p h i l l P a r k Jf^x/ux jTmJbvwj, R E S U M E S w i t h o r w i t h o u t p ic tu r e s 2 D a y S e r v ic e 472-3210 a nd 472-7677 A L L W O RK g u a ra n te e d , re aso n a ble prices 707 W M L K , 472 6302. Woods T y p ing Service. T E N D E R L O V IN G c a re fo r yo ur theses, d is s e rta tio n *, p ap e r* F a it, professional ty p is t (12 years expe rie nce ) P a tric ia , 472-3555, 6-9 p.m and w eekend*. P R O M P T - PER S O N A L a tte n tio n by p ro fe is io n a l ty p is t to ad yo ur ty p in g needs 40*/p a g e, 834-7873 T Y P IN G A N D e d itin g of any re po rt, thesis or d is s e rta tio n , sp ecializing in s c ie n tific , m a th e m a tic a l, and fo re ig n language w o rk . 477-5420 keep try in g Jus t N o r t h of 27th a t G u a d a l u p e 2707 H e m p h i l l P a r k Sure, w e do t y p e F r e s h m a n th e m e s . 472-3210 a nd 472-7677 l r UNFURNISHED HOUSES 6 B LK S UT, 4br, 2ba, fire p la c e , Ideal fo r 4 to 6 students, 3504 D uval, *450 By ap­ poin tm e n t. 345-1437 R E D E C O R A T E O F O R 3 m a t u r e students 3br, I ' jba , a ir, heat, Casa B lanca fan. hardw ood, ca rpe t, w /d con­ nection, stove and re frig e ra to r, fenced y a r d , n e a r A n d e r s o n L a n e . H U R ic h e reek *295 453-9709 LA R G E 3BR, 2BA, C A /C H , hardw ood flo o r*, fire p la c e , stove, re frig e ra to r, fu r ­ nished, convenient UT, *400/m o Call C a ttle Real E sta te, 327-27)3. W ES T C A M P U S a re a , spacious- #-#? h a r d w o o d flo o r s , h ig h c e ilin g * , 3 fire p la c e *, *525 BBG P rop. 459-0154, 345- S T O R E /H O M E , *300 near L B J, 1502 M a no r On jh u tt l* . *240, 304 W 41st Al R undell, 472-620). FURNISHED HOUSES C L E A N Q U IE T 3 bedroom house w ith fenced y a rd and p re tty trees a v a ila b le on o r about F e b ru a ry 3rd F u rn ish e d a* you like, *350 m onth Serious in q u irie s o nly, please 453-2201 o r 255-6145 ROOM AND BOARD N E W M A N H A LL W O M E N 'S D O R M S m a l l , q u i e t , f r i e n d l y , e x ­ c e l l e n t food, doubles, singles, l a u n d r y , m a i d s , p a r k i n g , r o o m / b o a r d , 19 k itc h e n e tte , m e a ls . 2026 G u a d a l u p e 476-0669 W O M E N L A R G E room s good meals, I block fro m cam pus L a u ra ! House Co-op, 2612 G uadalupe 476-5154 P E O P L E P LA C E S ! Share, save, have Inter-Co-op fun w ith frie nd s In co-ops C ouncil. 510 W 23rd, 476-1957. W O M B N H U R R Y "! S p r in g C o o p openings fro m *147/m onth room , b o a rd Inter-C o-op C ouncil. 510 W. 23rd, 476- 1957.____________ CONTESSA D O U B LE room . M e n '* con­ tra c t. Keep *50 deposit W ill pay you *25 per m onth C all 454-2945 a ft ar 5 pm. S IN G LE ROOM, i9 m e a l*/ weak, frie n d ­ ly e n v iro n m e n t * 1 l7 /m o n th Call 472- 5021 FOR RENT Rent A T.V. For tho Somostmr Color 6 0 .0 0 /to m B&W 4 0 .0 0 /to m From dol i vory Daily, Weakly, Monthly Rates Available 2 8 2 -3 2 5 7 F a i r v i e w T . V . R a n t e r s M I N I - S T O R A G E SOUTH C oncrete block co n s tru c tio n , s e c u rity p a tro l, JIO up m o n th ly C all 444-2411 W oodland-G oodw in ROOMS G O O D A LL W O OTEN, m a n '* d orm on d rag P riv a te , bath, balcony *145 A B P R ent now, keep *50 474-4548 FU RN I SHE D ROOM 2 blocks UT *95 bins paid, 477 7554. 2800 W h ltl* . F E M A L E UT students, single occupan­ cy room s, carpeted, a ir conditioned, v e ry close cam pu s, w a s h e r, d ry e r, k l i chen, 474-2710_______ H E M P H IL L P A R K ; p riv a te entrance, oath , ABP, d o s e U T. 476-0514 ROOM N E A R Lake A u stin . Reasonable rates, can w o rk out tra n s p o rta tio n a ft ar 4 p rn. 243-2726 ROOM AND BOARD ROOM AND BOARD Limited space is available for the Spring in three of the most convenient term residences in the University of Texas area. ($ tm V E S S f& Located at 2 7 06 Nueces. three blocks from campus and on a shuttle bus stop. Nineteen delicious meals per week, maid service, parking, swimming pool, lounges, many extras. Co­ ed. T T 6 w W E 8 8 s " V V b 8 T I 7 0 7 Ri0 Granda Convenient to sorori­ ty houses and shopping, parking on premises, maid service, nineteen meals per lo u n g e s , w e e k , p o o l, sund ecks and kitchenettes in each suite. All women. 2 7 00 Nueces' on the shuttle bus route. Small and quiet, no frills housing. M eals served at the Contessa, maid service and parking included. All men. For additional information call 476-4648, or come by 2707 Rio Grande. We think you'll be glad you did I COPIES w h e re you hove a choice TOP Q U A L IT Y Good Q u a lity or 3* Budget Copies (uncollated loose sheets i i hours) Q uality V e rs a tility Speed Convenience G ra d School Q u a lity g u aranteed w ord process ng fu ll s e rvice b indery G IN N Y 'S C O P Y IN G S E R V IC E 7 am -IO pm w eekdays, *-5 Saturday 44 Dobte M a ll 476-9171 IOO Congress 477-9827 Econocopy 4‘ all d ay Saturday 5* M o n .-F ri. Duplicating IOO copies per o rig in a l 3' SOUTH East Riverside 4 Lakeshore 443 4498 NORTH 37 4 G u a d a lu p e 453-54*’ EASY PARKING PASSPORT PHOTOS RESUME PHOTOS APPLICATION PHOTOS — Just Walk In — in 2 — R e a d y minutes THE THIRD EYE 2630 Guadalupe 477-5556 E ta la n tra in in g w ith em phasis on r e la x ­ atio n and ce n te rin g . R e g u lar classes I. S a tu rd a y workshop begin F e b ru a ry * J a n u a ry 28. 454-3994 A R T 'S M O V IN G and H a u lin g : any a re a 24 hours, 7 days. 477-3249 A L T E R A T IO N S , R E P A IR S , zippers and custom m a d e clothes C a ll P aula 458- 4047 A N T H O N Y 'S M U F F L E R Service, 6825 H ig h w a y 290 E a s t, 10% discount w ith student ID , 928-3390. In a D O N 'T B E C O M E a squ are peg round hole! R e tire d c a re e r consultant discovers your hidden interests before It's too late . 444-2573 w eekdays until 4 p.m. P R O B L E M S ? W O R R IE S ? L e t the T a ro t c a rd * help you. C a ll 837-4764 for appolnt- m ant. B A B Y S IT T IN G D O N E afternoons or evenings also occasional week-ends or o ve rn ig h t. C a ll 474-9901 a fte r 7:30 p m UNCLASSIFIED W a n te d : used V o lvo w agon 477-2797 T a k a It T o l (T in k e r 's D a m ! 14524406 H A IR D R Y L R R E P A IR S H O P 4524406 D ig ita l Clock R a p a ir Shop 452-4406 1 2-strln g g u ltar,ca se J140 452-7483 O R 7 0 x l4 ra d ia ls I pa I r$40 452-7483 F o x y " C h u b b y " fu r cheap 472-3608nts Stereo R e p a ir F r e e E s t. 459-0454 W a lm a r an e rP u p s F o rS a le 453 0338pm I clee ty p e w r ite r $90 478-3420 ~ IO gal. a q u a riu m SIS 472-5369 20 gal. a q u a riu m $25 472-5369 D o rm size r e frig e r a to r 454-01 t i MISCELLANEOUS I n f e c t i o n , C L A S S IC A L G U I T A R b e g i n n e r s a n d a d v a n c e d D r e w Thom ason 470-0650 S E M E S T E R P A R K IN G $45. One block fro m cam pus, spacious, n e a r 21st and San Antonio. C a ll 3-6 p .m ., 478-3049, keep try in g . B U M P E R S T IC K E R S custom printed H a v e a m essage fo r th e w orld? P u t In on a b u m p e rs tlcker. A n y th in g printed, $1.25 each B u m p e rs tlc k e rs , P.O . Box 18111, Austin, T x 78760 B O O K -H U N T IN G ? N o ob lig atio n book search. A r ja y Books. 263-2957. LOST & FOUND LO S T, F E M A L E puppy. E n g lish Setter, w h ite w ith o rang e flecks, fle a co lla r and tags, nam es A nnie, re w a rd , 472-6150 R E W A R D F O R re tu rn of c a lc u la to r T I la te N o v e m b e r around SR-50A. L o tt Science B uildings. 478-6022, G lo ria B O O K B A G - O L IV E d ra b canvas, lost at U n lv a rs lty Booksellers, last W ednesday noon. C ontains notebooks, books, p e r­ sonal pap ers. R e w a rd fo r re tu rn to M el E ly , C alhoun 501, o r c a ll M s . U n d e rh ill, 475-6565 IO F E M A L E S H E P H E R D 'H U S K Y , m th s, lost fro m H y d e P a rk , b la c k /w h ite , f a c ia l som e ta n , v e r y s y m m e t r ic a l m a rk in g s , n am ed C o ry e ll, 454-1357. UNFURNISHED DUPLEXES S O U T H S H U T T L E , lu xu rio u s 2br, 2ba, naw c arp e tin g , drapes, a ll appliances. C A /C H , v a u lte d c e ilin g , y a r d m a in ­ tain ed, $270. 443-4667. s u l t f J ' 1-1 D U P L E X 1409!^ N e w fie ld Lan e on E R route, unfurnished , com e a fte r 9 pm, 8185 plus e ll bills. 2B R , ivy BA, C A /C H , u n furn, w a te r paid, 1614B E lm h u rs t, $325, 447-4287 FURNISHED DUPLEXES 2B R D U P L E X a p a r t m e n t a t T r a v is H e ig h ts and R iv e rs id e $22S/m o. plus bills. 441-7458 a fte r 5. MUSICAL INSTRUCTION P IA N O LE S S O N S O penings in p riv a te piano studio near je ffe r s o n Square E x ­ perienced , deg reed te a c h e r Fe : or Infor- m etio n , c a ll 451-3549 G U IT A R , B A N JO , tru m p e t, drum s, and flu te lessons. A lp h a M u s ic C enter 451- •645 J A Z Z A N D Im p ro v is a tio n lessons, sax. flu te end c la rin e t. A lp h a M u sic Cantar, 6609 A irp o rt, 451-0645 E X P E R I E N C E D P I A N O t e a c h e r beginners, advanced, U T m usic degree G u ita r alsoalso F o lk - classical. 459-9642 or 476-4407 BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES long hours and T I R E D O F low pay? E s ta b lis h e d w holesale s e rvice business In A u stin fo r sale Yo u cen e a rn $12,000 for sew ife, re tire d person or student No farm s Sr ly w o rkin g p a rt e x p e rie n c e necessary, $36,000 C a ll (713 ) 780-3969 a tta r 6 p m Id e a l tim e sinai WANTED C L A S S R IN G S , gold ja w t f r y , old pocket w a tc h e s , c u r r e n c y , s ta m p s w an ted H ig h prices paid P io n e e r Coin Com ­ pan y, 5555 N o rth L a m a r , B ldg. C-113 In C o m m e rc e P a rk . 451-3607 TO PLA C E A C L A S S IF IE D AD CA LL 471-5244 SERVICES School of Nursing monday, January 23, 1978 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Page Autism workshop held U N I® CANT WALK TO SCHOOL WITH HOU TDCAV.. HE HAS A SORE THROAT I CAN'T WALK TD SCHOOL a l o n e ., t h a u k ? w h o s e ROLER I BORROWED WILL SET ME... TODAY’S CROSSWORD PUZZLE 51 Goblet sup­ UNITED Faatura Syndicate Friday'a Punta Solved [ m r c m port 52 Carta In .freshmen! gamttonoa 54 Lord Byron bask 58 Bm Ca 60 Light rain 81 Robes 62 Explosive 64 Personal achieve­ ment 66 Requiem 67 Ether 68 Female ruff 69 Fords 7 0 Bus coll sub) 71 Airline abbr ACROSS 1 Bad Prefix 4 Hid# 9 Porte prcxJ- uct 14 A dotted (at­ tar 2 word* 15 Rhythm 16 Declaim 17 Animal dis- aaaa 19 Whether - 20 Give per mission 21 Mena nickname 22 See Become lur lout 23 Look 24 Park and RLS character 26 Scoria 29 Bu* expert 31 Large bird 32 Describe 33 Damage 36 Steeps 38 “Down- Under' bird 39 Disturb 4 1 void 43 Indignation 44 Railbird 46 Elevates 47 Alert 49 Fabric 50 Fr summer DOWN a 1 Aa hatter 2 Senile 3 French City’s former name 4 Seethe 5 Pro --- 6 Sufficiently 7 Fast drivel 8 Equestrians 9 Rude per son 10 Slow down 11 Church festival I 2 No Amar indian 13 Mesh IB Male animal 24 Farm imple­ ments 25 Sews up Surgery 27 Singly 26 Flowers In­ formal 30 Papal name 33 Hardwood trees 34 Warrant 3 5 Foiled 37 Narrow atrip 40 Respires 42 Be in hiding 2 words 45 Sids by side 46 Arise 53 Italian poet 55 Or meeting place 56 Leas com­ mon 57 Questioner 59 Young males 61 Beginner Var 8 2 — Brunswick or York 63 m n Law ASSOC 65 Retreat B y D IA N N E S U L L IV A N Staff Writer ‘anagem ent The University School of Nursing con­ ducted a workshop Friday entitled "The A utistic Child; D ia g n o sis, R eferra l and to introduce valuable process tools developed for screening young children The National Society for Autistic Children defines autism as a severely incapacitating, life-long d evelo p m en ta l d isa b ility which appears during the first three years of life. It occurs in approxim ately five out of every 10,000 births and is four tim es m ore com m on in boys than girls. No known factors in the psychological en- vironment of a child have been shown to cause autism ." the NSAC reports. A C C O R D IN G TO th e R e n d le -S h o r t < heck list. som e of the behavioral signs of autistic children include difficulty in m ixing with other children, acting as if deaf, and resisting learning, ey e contact, and change in the daily routine. lf a parent or teacher is concerned enough about the behavior of a child that the suspi­ cion of autism arises, detailed, consistent behavioral recordings should be m ad e.” said Dr Jam es E, G illiam , assistant professor of special education at the U niversity. After a confirm ed diagnosis by a psy­ chiatrist or child developm ent sp ecialists, parents and professionals need additional referrals. "The best we have to offer anyone in Austin is the Austin chapter of the Texas Society of A utistic C itizens,” G illiam said. R esearchers like Dr Kaye Lewis, chief of the developm ental serv ices section at the Texas R esearch Institute of Mental Sciences offer som e hope for parents of autistic*. "We have dem onstrated cost-effectiv e m ethods of habilitating the developm entally disabled and multi-problem child." she said to f u r t h e r t r e a t m e n t a n d M A N A G I N G T H E d i s r u p t i v e a n d frustrating behaviors of an autistic child dem ands consistent efforts by parents and professionals "R elationship building is the k e y t h a t relationship doesn t com e easy," said Clay Hill, director of the A utistic Treatm ent ( enter in Richardson. "Consistently using constant reinforcem ent and having clear dem ands enables the child to learn," he said the the A utistic Treatm ent Center, in ten siv e play and ch ild ren r e c e iv e an socialization program Socialization’ com ­ munication and play are very interrelated for autistic children," Hill said At A child m ay be taught the nam e of an ob­ ject like a com b and instructed to repeat the name. The child then learns all the possi­ ble uses of the com b For socialization, the child m ay be instructed to com b his or her own hair and the hair of another child. A m ajor treatm ent focus in the future will be utilization of toys that stim ulate the child to play. Hill said. Soap bubbles, perfumed handkerchiefs, rocking chairs and spinning objects fascinate the au tistic child. "D im e stores are filled with the kind of toys these children en jo y ,” he said The nursing school has scheduled another workshop for W ednesday through Friday en­ B asic Workshop for Nursing In- titled, Service Educators — Part I .” Dr. Mildred Tapper, asso cia te professor of nursing, will conduct the workshop ' PO N T SUPPO SE" 15 A S O O D WAV OF I * PUTTING ITI DOONESBURY by Garry Trudeau rue s itte r m n mn, m r presl- rs Pue tooay? Dem. BUI I HAVENT HAP A CHANCE TD pr ic e An y ­ thing Yen i HAVENT BVSN S S N THIS K A #, CATALOGUES! V I KNOW, SIR. j called r n DEPARTMBCT secretaries, and jh e y u St 8RINL4Ml> TW M AMUSO / TODAY f tM l r m i, m l IW M V HURA!! I DONTKNOW how rn ear so FAR BEHIND! \ YRS, SLR SECRETARY BROWN'S AL­ READY HERE, T U SENO HIM IN .. / UH. . M TT A MINUTE. I DONT THINK TM UP TD STARTING MTH.. \ M R.PR£SW (P HASH I GOT A WEAPONS SYSTEM FOR iOU! J L E A R N MASSAGE Aged need meals fixed The Austin chapter of Meals on W h e e l s i s s e e k i n g volunteers to cook and deliver m eals to the elderly. Meals on Wheels, a national organization, is a division of United Action for the Elderly which c aters to those who a re unable to leave their homes. The Austin chapter serves the elderly in North, E ast and South Austin and in Manor, Del Valle and Pflugerville, said Ann Yett, receptionist at the Austin office. Volunteers a re needed on M ondays, W ednesdays and Fridays to assist in preparing a n d d e l i v e r i n g m e a l s . Volunteers receive in-service training and choose one day a week on which to work. If a volunteer cannot work on a regular basis, he or she m ay serve as a substitue w orker, Y ett said. She added th a t volunteers also a re needed to assist with office work T h o s e i n t e r e s t e d in v o lu n te e rin g m ay c o n ta c t Edna Youngblood, volunteer coordinator, at 474-6416. HRC collection grows: cataloguers fall behind T H M W IZ A R D O r ID i m - u yew P e o ria TO t o £ X P i s e r i t iM u e & A n a r! By MIKE MORRISON Staff Writer D e sp ite th e re c e n t d isc o v e ry th e H um anities R esearch C enter of a priceless m inature p o rtrait, HRC officials say that they know the contents of the collection and have access to it, even though much of their m aterial is still uncataloged. in The p o rtrait of lith century poet Andrew M arvell was known to be a p a rt of the HRC collection but, until associate professor of English Dr. Norm an F a rm e r realized th at it was only one of three portraits of M arvell in existence, the tru e value of the p o rtrait was not known. Much of the confusion about the HRC collection results from the fact that, begin­ ning in the early ’60s, the speed of acquisition of research m aterial fa r exceeded the speed a t which these m aterials could be cataloged, research librarian Ellen Dunlap said. “ The HRC has multiplied its holdings several tim es over in the last 15 years. A backlog has built up,” Dunlap said. Cataloging m aterial is a tim e consum ing process. The HRC m ay purchase a collection of m aterials by, for exam ple, the English novelist Evelyn Waugh. Within this collection m ay be first edition copies of the au th o r’s the author, novels, photographs of the novelist, m anuscripts of W augh's novels and personal a rtifa c ts of the novelist. to and from le tte rs Each of these item s m ust be separated and cataloged individually. However, the HRC book cataloging departm ent is not a p a rt of the HRC, but a d e p a rtm e n t w ithin th e G eneral Libraries. About 60 people a re paid by the G eneral L ibraries to catalog books for the separately funded HRC, Dunlap said. “ The project to catalog backlogged books began as a specially funded project th ree or four y ears ago. The project catalogs about 100,000 books a y e a r for the HRC alone,” Dunlap said. M anuscripts, photographs and personal a r ­ tifacts a re cataloged, not by the G eneral L ibraries but by HRC workers, Dunlap said. M a n u s c r i p t s a r e c a t a l o g e d by t h r e e professional catalogers on the HRC payroll who organize the m anuscript card catalog in such a way that cross-references to the author s other works can easily be obtained. “ We try to m aintain integrity (to a collec­ tion of an au thor’s work) through the card catalog We catalog item s with special a tte n ­ tion to personal nam es,"D unlap said. Thus, for exam ple, if a le tte r from Evelyn Waugh it is to another author is found, cataloged under both authors' nam es. The g re a t num ber of cross-references in the card catalog m akes it easy for students doing research to find m aterials At the sam e tim e it increases the am ount of tim e between the purchase of a book and the book being listed in the card catalog, Dunlap said. The cataloging departm ent is beginning to m ake a dent in the backlog. “ We have m ore than half of it cataloged but there a re som e things to be cataloged,” Dunlap said that don't need I t s such a kind of confusing place, you ( the research librarian) have to talk to the in­ dividual to find out w hat he's looking for. A lot of inform ation is by necessity carried around in one s head,” Dunlap added. campus news in brief Center has recruiter list The Liberal A rts P lacem ent C enter announces the s ta rt of recruitm ent season this week with Vanderbilt, Difco Labs, the M arines. Best Products and D illards A com plete list of com panies com ing this sem ester can also be picked up a t this tim e. Students in­ terested m ust go by J e ste r C e n t e r A115 f o r a p r e ­ interview session. A N N O U N C E M E N T * CEN TE R FOR A S IA N S T U D IE S /T E X A * C H IN A C O U N C IL anti present a lecture 'The Art and Ritual of PW and Nm on Chmaae Cult o tto # Dead" at T X p m Monday in BurdC»OM OC LA A SU BT AO rn* hold is first meeting ct toe year to make p ier* tor toe semester al 8 30 p rn Mon­ day m toe Car other* Dorm recreation room. STUDE NT EN G IN E E R IN G COUNCIL ma nota is Na? meeting of toe year from 7 lo B X p m Monday rn Ernest Cockrell Jr. Had I 214 A b ra ' overview oI toe coun- o f s pier.* for toe semester and planning toe Engineering Convocation and for Engineering Wee*. w* Be discussed It * important tost members abend UNIVERSITY CEILIDH SOCIETY; DA NC E S E S S IO N wa) meaI tor cones dancing to five traditional mm»c al A m a n a and toe et 7 30 p m Monday rn 8rush Russe* A S te '-d e r He* 213 Musicians and dancers, e s p e c ia l Begemera, we welcome TNE CZECH CLUB ww meet to m g Czech. Moranan and Slovak folksongs rn T X p m Monday © Calhoun Ha* 103 A * to- sweated persons we ©va*d lo anend b y B r a n t p a r b a r a n d J o h n n y h a r t -*XT- YYr W IU - C O Y E * t h a t IN M Y r n * T ..th e s & e FfR & cm & riH A T I& N 1 i z z j m u c h WHAT c & e i F*OCFA<-tTlNAT\C*l m z a n \' j - YANK MCNAMARA by Jeff Millar & Bill Hinds 50ME people say ITS Nor ^SHIN&TON'S Fin e ANI? - SUSFEffelON W HI SERVE N0T(CC P M C IU O BASKETBALL FOR VIOLENCE V) weather ! 7 w " ............................ d s e a t t l e I ' SK C - M W W * - O . S C . S T . , ( 5 , , „ Fslr wssthsr is sxpectsd Betorn th* nation, with Boma aho wen ovar tho Lowsr Misslsslpp Valley. in Austin, there will ba a 34 psreant charted of rain on Mon day, increasing to SO percon M onday n ig h t. Tbs h ig t temperature on Tuasday la on- psctsd to ba in tbs mid-50a. TIM sun will sat at • p.m. Monday, Tuasday, th# sun Krill ria# at 7:2t a.m. and sat at 0 p.m. NEW O ILC A N S v g MIAMI LEGEND SNOW SHO W ERS ^ a o * U P I W E A T H E R F O T O C A S T ® Shoe Shop Wa malts and repair boats shoat balls loather goad* G E N U IN E S H E E P S K IN R U G S N a tu r a l 4 Saowtiiel Colors JO00 ★ S A D D LES * ENGLISH WESTERN Capitol Saddlery Austin, Taxes 1614 Lavaca 4 7 6 - 9 3 0 9 IVEHEARPOFMIXED DOUBLES, BUT THI5 ? 15 RIDICULOUS I Peanuts is full af good sports. Se# them in the Texan. J P a g e 16 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ M onday, January 23, 1978 Bode’s staff *;•? <;'■? r Student liaison hired IP" Lena Guerrero, 20, a junior jour­ nalism major, ha* been named to the staff of Stat#1 Hep Mary Jane Bode, D Austin, a i her University liaison Guerrero will do research into issues the L e g isla tu re affectin g before in Travis college* and universities County She will gather student and faculty opinion* on the issues and, through Bode, supply this information to the Iai!gislature. "This is basically a itudent liaison position giving students an opportunity issue com to voice opinions and plaints " Guerrero said Aside from the funding, ever-present question of Guerrero is working on a grade point- average bill and the campus parking situation, she said The GFA bill will be introduced by Bode at the next legislative session and will allow a student to take a course over, hopefully for a better then have the second grade grade, averaged into the OPA and have the first grade rem oved," Guerrero ex plained "The first grade would remain on the student s transcript, but that grade would not count toward the G RA." she added Under current University rules both grades are included in determining the GRA Also, 1 11 be trying to find out about the situation with parking around cam ­ the L e g isla tu re do pus. and can anything about i t ," Guerrero said. Guerrero has served as president of Jester Center s student government the Young and D em ocrats S tate E xecu tive Com­ mittee is a m e m b e r of Citizens, faculty and especially to com m ent on students wishing legislation affecting the University are invited to contact Guerrero at 475-5975 Brackenridge to hire new EMS group By MARY MCMULLEN City Reporter team When Brackenridge Hospital drafts a new Emergency Medical .Services con tract this week the contract is ex­ pected to go to a California based doc­ tors group The Brackenridge Hospital Advisory the group s Board Friday praised professionalism, courtesy and modem practices The group, headed by Dr Karl Mangold, earlier received the Brackenridge Finance Committee's recommendation over a similar Dallas Neither group, however, currently handles as much EMS volume as B rack en rid g e, Dr Hubert T ate, Brackenridge chief-of-sUff, said Tate has requested the team be given full authority to run the emergency room, with the present EMS system in­ tegrated with the new City Council is expected to give final approval of the decision Feb 28, If ap­ proval is given. Brackenridge's EMS will be taken over by the California group April I Polar bears in disguise? —Texan Staff Photo by Jim Thorn* While most students curled up Indoors Saturday with a good book or TV show, these four nature lovers took to the water. University students (l-r) Chuck Crlsman, David Harrlaa, Charlie Raw! and (In back) veteran cold-water swimmer Jame Stewart Ignored the Icy weather and enjoyed a Barton Springs swim. COUPON ii SPECIALS GOOD THRU SATURDAY, JANUARY 28 GREY ATHLETIC SWEAT CLOTHING SWEAT SHIRTS $495 W ITH COUPON REG. 5.95 PANTS *4 ” WITH COUPON K EG. 5.95 HOODED SHIRTS W ITH COUPON R E G . 8.95 E X PIR E S JAM. 28 •ti I ss I i lr, 1 Od I i i I I I i I I I r i I I I I I I i I I I a EXPIRES JA N. 28 4 FT. PARTICLE BOARD SHELF 79 9 ITH COUPON KEG. 1.19 HOME LENTEN ANO HORNET KO. ONLY P X P l KES J A V, 28 EXPIRES JA S 28 PARTICLE BOARD CUBES n o N i m DOHM OH APARTMENT ORGANIZER $329 a ITI! c o l PON REG CVU E X P IR E S J 4 X 28 3X3 PARTICLE BOARD BOOKCASE EAM TO AftiKMBI I MIKjt IRKS NO NAILS OH GLUE, HOME I ENTER ANI) BURNET Mil ON L l $ 6 " H K . 8 IU 11 U H U H HHS REG. 4.99 IO LB. JUTE 4 , 5 A N O 6 P L Y a n $*J77 WITH COUPON EXPIRES JAN. ALL 59* BEAD ASSORT. MUNTS 39* a ITH c o t PON H O M E C E N T ER AND B l RNET RD O N LY E XPIRES JA V 2 8 MACRAME HANGERS ASSORTED STYLES A M ) COLORS. 0 9 7 a m i c O I PON R E G . LUS EXPIRES J A X 2 8 LIVE PLANTS EA SY c a r e :. L o a LIG H T, INDOOR PLAN TS DEVILS IVY SAUCONY 8 852 TRAINING SHOE FEATU RES DOZENS OF “ TH E G R IP P E R " MOLDEN R U B B E R STUDS PATTERN ED TO I M P A C T P R O V I D E D I S T R I B U T I O N AND U N P R E C E D E N T E D TRACTION A D D I T I O N A L I 9 9 5 W ITH COL PON RE G. 26.50 Hem PENN CENTRE COURT TENNIS BALLS $ 2 2 9 CAN OF 3 REG. 3.50 W ITH C O l PON EXPIRES JA X. 2 8 E X P IR E S JA N. 2 8 KNIT GYM SHORTS A V A ILA BLE IN MOST A T H LET IC COLORS PLASTIC SPOOL SHELF DIVIDER NOTHING P R ET T Y , OR FANCY DECORATE OR PAINT Y O U R SE L F. 99 a ITH c o l PON KEG. 1.99 E X PIR ES J 4 V. 2 8 I 1 1 1 1 1 I I I I I I I I I I 1 1 1 1 1 I I I I I I I I I REG. 9 5 * f t C l C a ITH C r KJ c o l p u s HOME C EN T ER AND B U R N ET RD. O NLY EX PIRES JA V. 2 8 W ITH col PON $ J 9 9 REG. 4 9 5 EX P IR ES JAN. 2 8 _J COUPONS GOOD THRU JANUARY 28 * HILE QI A M ITIE S LAST - SHOP EARLY FOR BEST SELECTION 317 CONGRESS AVE. PHONE 477-4442 8 A.M.-5:30 P.M. 49TH AND BURNET RD. HOME CENTER - 5501 AIRPORT PHONE 476-3506 9 A.M.-6 P.M. PHONE 476-6626 9 A.M.-8 P.M. Geography: not just maps By MARK DAVIS Staff Writer Dr. George Hoffman, the recently appointed chairman of the geography department, wants students to know that geographers do not specialize in c o l o r i n g m a p s wi t h crayons "Students know that when their parents took geography, it was the study of maps and memorization of c itie s," Hoff­ man said. "B u t we actually deal with some of the world’s most pressing problems, such as the decaying urban areas, population shifts, the energy crisis and the environment." H offm an s tr e s s e d t hat geo g rap h y is an “ i nt e r ­ disciplinary" study, which in­ tegrates closely such areas as sociology and architecture, politics. But despite the rich field of study offered by the depart­ ment, geography remains the University’s smallest depart­ ment In all, it has 80 un­ dergraduate students and 50 graduate students. "My number one priority as s t u d e n t is c h a i r m a n relations,” Hoffman said. "In the past we thought students would come automatically. I want to make more students aware of what geography is. Aside from the wide academic applications of geography, students may be attracted to the department for another reason — geographers can find jobs is not ‘ ‘ T h e r e o n e professional geographer with a d octorate in the United States who doesn’t have a job ," Hoffman said. "W e also can find jobs for our graduate or undergraduate students." Another priority of the new chairman is research. th a t Hoffman said, "W e musn’t teach ing and fo rg et research go hand-in-hand. A good teacher must acquire his knowledge through research, and a good researcher must the that knowledge in test classroom ." Hoffman, who was one the original four professo the departm ent w, when organized in 1949, began h ti term as chairm an at th e sp rir beginning of semester. He has written 12 books and more than 200 articles. He has been a visiting professor at in Munich and universities Heidelberg and has lectured t h r o u g h o u t e x t e n s i v e l y Europe. He also is a member of the Kennan Institute of Russian studies, a UNESCO commission and the board of d ire cto rs for Radio F r e e Europe and Radio Liberty. Possible rise in employment seen for Austin Austin, unlike much of the rest of Texas, should experience 1 slight decrease in unemployment during February if forecast! made by the Texas Employment Commission hold true. The TEC recently released statistics on employment, laboi force size and unemployment in 23 Texas cities for November 1977, and predictions for February. Austin is predicted to have 400 fewer unemployed in February than were reported if November. As of November, 8,300 Austinites, or 4.1 per cent of the Austir area labor force, were unemployed. That figure should drop tc 3.9 percent in February, TEC estimated. AUSTIN IS ALSO PREDICTED to outrank other Texas citie! in its labor force growth; TEC says Austin’s labor force will in crease by 8,000, from 203,800 to 204,600. The only other city foi which such a substantial labor force increase is predicted ii Houston, with 7,800. The percentage of unemployed in Austin for November is con siderabiy lower than the unadjusted rate for the nation of 6.< percent. The Texas rate is 4.8 percent. The predicted decrease in unemployment for Austin frorr November to February is attributed by the TEC to the return ol University students from winter vacation. Laredo had the highest rate of unemployment for the state ai of November, with 17.1 percent of the total labor force out 01 work. Next was McAllen and surrounding areas, with 12,191 people unemployed representing 13.8 percent of the labor fore* there Other Texas cities with an unemployment rate above th* national average as of November were El Paso. Brownsville Galveston and Texas City, San Antonio, Beaumont-Port Arthur Corpus Christi and Texarkana MIDLAND SHOWED THE LOWEST unemployment rate foi November, with 2.3 percent of the labor force, or 940 persons out of work Odessa and San Angelo were close behind, with 2.« and 2.7 percent of the labor force unemployed, respectively. Other cities with low unemployment rates for November were (with 3.3 Houston (with 4 3 percent), Dallas-Fort Worth percent). Amarillo, Abilene. Lubbock and Wichita Falls Almost all Texas cities are predicted to have a slight increase in unemployment for February, which the TEC says is com­ monly a "slow month ' The layoff of temporary workers for the Christmas holidays and cold weather are factors cited most often for this slight increase of unemployment. Austin, McAllen and Wichita F alls are the only cities predicted not to suffer an increase in unemployment for February Most cities recorded a decrease in unemployment from the previous year s statistics In November, 1976. 4.9 percent of Austin s labor force was unemployed, which was 8,900 more people than in November. 1977. Only the McAllen area. Galveston-Texas City and Abilene recorded an increase in unemployment over the past year. . J a n u a r y * I! iv' I Hilly I c x a u Our only world o & Th is Week ct )ver Michael Philip Manheim's photograph of East Boston, Mass , is one of the 113 on the subject of Our Only World, on exhibit at St Edward’s University The traveling photography exhibit is part of Documerica, an Environmental Protection Agency project. Page 16 exhibits 39th AHT FACULTY EXHIBITION. Works by University art faculty member*, including football photograph* of Gerry Winogrand and a bronze head of Farrah Fawcett-Majors by Charles Umlaut UT ART MUSEUM, through Feb 5 AMERICAN MASTERS IN THE WEST. Pain­ ting* by Remington, Russell, N C Wyeth and other*. Including many contemporary artist* MICHENER GALLERY, through Fab 26 HAN and TANO MURALS. Recreation* of an­ cient Chinese tomb mural*, from the People's Republic of China MICHENER GALLERY, through Sunday. HISPANIC CRAFTS. Folk art from the Southwest, with photomural* showing craftsmen at work MICHENER GALLERY, through fa b 7. SHAW : AN E X H IB IT . Docum ent* and photographs relating to the life and work of Britain’* second greatest playwright ACADEMIC CENTER, Leeds Gallery, through Fab 28 CARL ANDRE. Minimal sculpture by one of the country * best known, and moat controver­ sial. artists LAGUNA GLORIA ART MUSEUM, through Fab 19 FRANK BEAUGH; VISIONS et the TEXAS FRONTIER. A loan from the Humanities Research Center, presented by Laguna Gloria Art Museum FIRST FEDERAL SAVINGS, lobby, 210 E Brazos St, through March 9 from OUR ONLY WORLD. Photographs on the en­ vironmental crisis, th* Smithsonian Institution ST EDWARD’S UNIVERSITY. Minidy Hall Atrium Gallery, through Fab 4 CEZANNE: THE LATE WORK. An exhibit of in­ ternational significance, going only to three cities New York, Pan*, and. yes, Houston Begins Thursday, HOUSTON MUSEUM OF FINE ARTS t h e a t e r KING LEAR. A production of John Houseman’* Acting Company "’ARAMOUNT THEATER, 8 p m Monday, Tueaday and Wednesday HOW THE OTHER HALF LOVE*. British social farce by Alen Ayckbourn, directed by BHI Pfuderer ZACHARY SCOTT THEATRE CENTER, through Sunday. Reservations 478-0541 THE STAR BRANGLED GIRL. A Nail Simon Comedy directed by Tom Swtnney CREEK I t . Reservations THEATER, through Fab 477-8900 THE CURSE OF THE NINE ANGELS or H O L M E S , S W E E T MELODRAMA THEATER, through Fab 26 454-2591 H O L M E S SAT YOUR HEART OUT. Comedy starring Bob Denver COUNTRY DINNER PLAYHOUSE Reservations 838-5821. BETWEEN TIME ANO TIMBUKTU. A "space fantasy" by Kurt Vonnegut THEATRE IN THE RYE, through Fab 5 Reservations 472- 9733 BUBBLING BROWN BUGAR. Th# Broadway ha, featuring music from Duke Ellington. Cab Cauch*ay and Billie Holliday PARAMOUNT THEATER. 3 30 and 8 00 p m Sunday 472- 5411 ESTHERS FOLLIES. Topical re v ** at t i p rn every Friday end af 8 en 11 p m every Satur­ day ESTHER’S POOL. AUDITIONS. Austin Recreation Career win hold auditions from 6 to 10 p.m. Wednesday and Thursday tor toe musical "Gypsy Pern are ava labia tor children and adults, mal# and tomato Brog muse tor accompaniment 1213 SHOAL CREEK 478-5882 JACQUES BNCL IS ALIVE ANO WELL ANO LIVING IN R A M . Production of toe Mask end Wig P layer* SOUTHWESTERN UNIVERSITY, Georgetown Friday only. Reservations 883-8511, ext 329 KNOCK KNOCK. A comedy by Jutes Pedler, produced by toe Capitol Acing Con^any. 8 15 p m Friday and Saturday. CENTER STAGE. Balcony Theater Reservation* 477- 1012 POETRY READING. Randy Conner, Jose Flores and tries Hernandez Tovar Texas Cir­ cuit Readings 7:30 p.m. Sunday ESTHER’S POOL music PERCUSSION ENSEMBLE. Conducted by George Frock. 8 p.m. Monday, MUSIC BUILDING, Recital Hall. Free. VIOLIN RECITAL. Charles A Sanders. 4:30 p m. Tuesday, MUSIC BUILDING, Recital Hall Free MASTER CLASS. Conducted by Donald Gramm, bass-baritone 2 to 4:00 p.m. Thurs­ day, MUSIC BUILDING, Recital Hall Free and open to the public, CELLO RECITAL David Litten, 8 p.m. Thurs­ day. MUSIC BUILDING Recital Hall Free OONALD GRAMM end NEO ROREM. The Great Musicians Series. 8 p.m. Friday HOGG AUDITORIUM $1 CEC. $4 general public. MASTER CLASS. Conducted by Ned Rorem, com poser-pianist 10 am. to noon Saturday MUSIC BUILDING EAST, room 2 106. CHARLOTTE BYRUM. Guitarist and singer 9 to 1:30 a m Friday, UNION, Cactus p m Cate COLLIN A HAZEL. 9 p.m. to 1:30 a m. Satur­ day. UNION. Cactus Cafe. JOHN WHEAT I HIS LATIN CONNECTION. 9 p.m. to I 30 a m. Saturday. UNION, Texas Tavern. TRIUMPH. Thursday, ARMADILLO WORLD BT. ELMO'S FIRE. 9 p m Friday and Saturday HEADQUARTERS BOONDOCKS CLUB ALEX COKE. Jazz saxophonist 6:30 to 11 p.m., through Feb 3. CAPITOL OYSTEFt COMPANY. CONTRA DANCE BANO. Musicians are need­ ed to help form this group. Needed are ac- cordianists. fiddlers, flautists, callers, etc. First organizational meeting is at 8 p.m. Fri­ day. 4812 CAN YON BE NO CIRCLE. 892- 1574. OPEN MIKE. All performers welcome 10 p.m. every Wednesday. AFTER OURS ELVIS COSTELLO and THE WOMMACK BROB. Wednesday. ARMADILLO. BAM RIVERS end DAVE HOLLAND. Friday ARMADILLO. TOO SMOOTH, Saturday, ARMADILLO. ROY B U C H A N A N a n d T HE B U G S HENDERSON GROUP. Two shows. Sun day, ARMADILLO. HOUSTON GRANO OPERA. Alda’ directed by David GockJey, with Seta Del Grande and EI man no Mauro. Staged by Jack O'Brien (Porgy and Bess), conducted by John DeMam 8 p m. Friday. JONES HALL, 615 Louisiana St. Houston (713) 227-5277 t i I i i i OFF CAMPUS ACROSS THE GREAT DIVIDE, RIVERSIDE Family him features the great outdoors — • cheaper than building sets 2 stars THE CHOIRBOYS, HIGHLAND MALL. Author Joseph Warn ba ugh reportedly wants nothing to do with the funny but uneven Nm version of his novel about a group of copa who try to relax after hours, 2 1/2 stars CLOSE ENCOUNTERS OF THE THIRD KINO, CAPITAL PLAZA Fine so-tier written and directed by Steven Spielberg; fast- paced and entertaining whether you believe rn UFO activity or not 3 1/2 stars GARBY O'GILL ANO THE LITTLE PEOPLE, SOUTHWOOD Disney version of Irish folklore with Seen Connery 2 stars THE QAUNTLCT, FOX TRIPLEX, AQUARIUS im beaK C int Eastwood vehicle 1 1/2 4 stars THE GOOOBYE G IR L, SOUTHWOOD. VILLAGE 4 Yet another winner by Nee Simon, this odd couple played by Richard • • l l ' I I I M H I t I 111) I t I I , t I I Dreyfuss and Marsha Maaon (Mrs. Simon). 3 1/2 stars HEROES, NORTHCROSS 6. Henry Winkler dis­ plays his competence outside his Fonzie role, playing a Vietnam vet Some nice touches. 3 stars I N C R E D I B L E M E L T I N G M A N , NORTHCROSS 6 . Astronaut returns to Earth with strange skin condition which compels him to eat flesh. No kidding. Really. 1 1/2 stars LO O KIN G FOR M R .G O O DBAR , FOX TRIPLEX. Veteran director Richard Brooks has turned Judipi Rossner’s bestseller into one of the year’s best films Diane Keaton will be a strong Oscar contender for her perfor­ mance as a woman from a repressive background who teaches deaf children by day and searches for sex by night. 3 1/2 stars A MOUSE ANO HIS CHILD, RIVERSIDE Animated feature is winning critical acclaim. 2 1/2 stars OH,GOD!, NORTHCROSS 6. George Burns stars in the title role and John Denver is the man selected to convey His message 3 stars PARDON MON AFFAIR, AQUARIUS 4, TEXAS No info available about this French comedy. PETE’S DRAGON, HIGHLAND MALL. Much ballyhooed Disney pie with Mickey Rooney, Shelley Winters and an invisible dragon. 2 1/2 stars ROCKY HORROR PICTURE SHOW, Mid­ nights, RIVERSIDE. Long-playing flick has become a kind of cult film. 2 stars SATURDAY NIGHT FEVER, NORTHCROSS 6. John Travolta stars as a disco stud who achieves fame on the dance floor. 2 stars SEMI-TOUGH, AMERICANA. Burt Reynolds and Kris Kristofferson star as gridiron heroes searching for meaning in their lives in this big fumble by the usually dependable director Michael Ritchie. 1 1/2 stars 3TAR WARS, VILLAGE 4. The top domestic money-grabber of all time. Rather than its story and screenplay, however, its main assets are flashy effects and a zingy John Williams score. 2 1/2 stars TELEFON, NORTHCROSS 6. Action-packed though implausible film has Russian spy Charles Bronson and American counterpart Lee Remick joining forces. 2 1/2 stars THE TURNING POINT, VILLAGE 4 No need to be a ballet lover to enjoy this beautiful film by Herbert Ross ("Goodbye Girl” ) about two middle-aged women, one who opted for a family life and the other for a ballet career Oscar nominations should be in store for Anne Bancroft and Shirley MacLaine, 3 1/2 stars WHICH WAY IS UP?, NORTHCROSS 6. Richard Pryor plays a California fruit picker in this adaptation of Line Wertmuller's "The Seduction of Mimi". 2 1/2 stars THE WORLD'S GREATEST LOVER, FOX TRIPLEX. Gene Wilder comedy has an un­ even script but enough laughs to make it worthwhile. 3 stars YOUNG FRANKENSTEIN, VILLAGE 4 Mel Brook’s inspired send-up of the horror genre stars Gene Wilder, Peter Boyle and Marty Feldman 3 1/2 stars SMOKEY ANO THE BANDIT, AQUARIUS 4, NORTHCROSS 6. Country hokum but a bonanza at the box office Burt Reynolds, Sally Field and Jackie Gleason star 1 1/2 stars ON CAMPUS TOMB OF LIQEIA and OR. TERROR'S HOUSE OF HORRORS 3 and 8 p m Mon­ day, UNION THEATRE. A horror double feature. “ Tomb" is a tale of female evil and life after death. 2 stars. “ Dr," stars Donald Sutherland and Paler Coshing and concerns a fortune-teller who has bed news for his tram companions 2 stars ON THE WATERFRONT (19S4) 7 and 9 p rn Monday, JESTER AUDITORIUM. Marlon Brando, Eva Marie Saint, Rod Steiger and Karl Malden star in this compelling took at power, corruption and their victims among New Jersey dockworkers Eight Oscars in­ cluding Picture. Director (EU* Kazan) and Actor (Brando). 3 1/2 stars A NOUS LA UBERTE (1931) 3 and 7 p.m. Tuesday. UNION THEATRE. Rene Clair directed this fantasy that inspired Chaplin’s "Modern 2 1/2 stars PRETTY MAIDS A U IN A ROW (1971) 9 p m Tuesday, UNION THEATRE. Rock Hudson stars as a football coach who seduces and then kflis beautiful cheerleaders. Directed by Roger Vadim, produced end written by Gene Rockton berry 2 stars CITIZEN KANE (1941) 7 and 9 15 p m. Tues­ day. JESTER AUDITORIUM. Orson Wallas' bm Haney acted film based on to* We of William Randolph Hear*. Technically in­ novator* but overrated entertamment-wise 3 stars IN T H I NAME OF TINI FATHER 3. 7 and 9 p rn. Wednesday, UNION THEATRE. Authority, fascism and toe Cathode church are attacked in to * movie set in a boy’s prep school. 2 stars THC MALTESE FALCON (1941) 3, 7 and 9 p.m. Wednesday, JESTER AUDITORIUM. John Huston’s classic Sam Spade adventure with Humphrey Bogart, Mary Astor, Peter Lorre and Sydney Greenstreet. 3 stars THE CONVERSATION (1974) 3, 7 and 9:15 p.m. Thursday, UNION THEATRE. Gene Hackman stars in this mystery-drama by Francis Ford Coppola ("Godfather” I and ll) about surveillance and wiretapping in America 3 stars FRANTIC (19S9) 7 and 9 p.m. Thursday, JESTER AUDITORIUM. Plans for a perfect crime go awry in this suspenser with Jeanne Moreau. 2 stars A 8TAR IS BORN (1976) 7, 9:15 and 11:30 p m Friday and Saturday, UNION THEATRE. Third remake of old story — Kris Kristofftiison is a rock star whose popularity is declining while his wife (Barbra Streisand) reaches superstardom. Forget it. 1 1/2 stars THE LAST DETAIL (1973) 7 and 9 p m Sun­ day, JESTER AUDITORIUM Jack Nicholson and Otis Young are sailors assigned to escort recruit Randy Quaid to jail, but all three have a last fling en route Nicholson is super! 31/2 stars SHORT RUNS I NEVER PROMISED YOU A ROSE GARDEN, Monday and Tuesday, DOBIE SCREENS. Kathleen Quinlan and Bibi Anderson star in this drama set in an insane asylum. 2 stars FANTASTIC PLANET, Monday and Tuesday, DOBIE SCREENS. Animated sci-fi flick. 2 stars ID I A M I N DADA, M onday, VARSITY THEATER. Documentary about the notorious Ugandan dictator. 2 Vs stars MACBETH, Tuesday, VARSITY THEATER. Dark, horrifying and bloody version of the Shakespeare play by Roman Polanski (“ Chinatown"). 2 1/2 stars FANTASTIC ANIMATION FESTIVAL. Mid­ thru Tuesday, DOBIE SCREENS. from nights Collection of award-winning shorts around the globe 2 stars FREAKS, Midnights thru Tuesday, DOBIE SCREENS. Tod Browning’s unusual cult classic about the lives of real sideshow freaks 2 1/2 stars COUSIN COU8INE and AND NOW MY LOVE, Wednesday and Thursday, VARSITY THEAr ER. Two recent French imports. "Cousin" concerns an adulterous affair of two cousms-by-marriage and stars Marie- Christine Barrault. 2 1/2 stars "Love’’ is a 1975 Claude Lelouch film that received an Oscar nomination its story and screenplay. 2 stars for BLACK ORPHEUS and THE HARDER THEY COME, Friday and Saturday, VARSITY THEATER. ‘ Black" is Marcel Camus' moder­ nized version of the Orpheus-Eurydice legend. 3 stars "Harder" is a Jamaican film with Jimmy Cliff playing a country boy turned pop hero turned criminal 2 1/2 stars — Roy Alter index exhibits............................................ 4 theater................................................. 5 books.................................................jo 12 m usic................. Our Only W orld.............. 16 ...................................... ! .!!!” ! " 19 21 2 2 television................................. listings ...... staff ........ Monty Jones Editor Associate Editor Janie Leigh Frank Elizabeth Logan Assistant E ditor Issue Staff.....................Susan Allen, Rory Alter, David Stephen Calonne, David Chapin, David Connelly, Jody -enberg, Bill Edwards, David Hibbs, M.R. Katzke, Mike Laur, Victoria Loe, Sparky Phillips, Ebon Price, Mark Pritchard, Mike Smith, Russell Smith, Tom Swinnea, Henry Terrell. Jeff Whittington SQN/cm sss NO I V NO 2 . NO. 3 r -v. NO. 4 v ; < v ■ no. 5 WITH CHEESE \ •• NO NO ! NC I NO < OR NC JAL APENO BURGER MINI BURGER H A M SANDW ICH CHICKEN FRY SANDWICH FISH SANDW ICH VIAN • O M Vass « I t ’ S u it .a »i O' 7 • • * a • • S < • ONION RINGS FRENCH FRIES TATER TOTS 'J n to s IN CHIU PIE BURRITO With Chili A Grated Cheese ALL CONF VS ’M O E .VITH DELICIOUS ERL SH HIL) I 'n - J - FOOT LONG CONEY FOOT LONG CHEESE CONEY REGULAR CONEY REGULAR CHEESE CONEY CORN DOG ON A STICK FOUNTAIN FAVORITES HOT FRESH COFFEE HOT CHOCOLATE , MILK SLU SH H r lip p e r t «* COCA COLA SPRITE ROOT BEER Oiel Dr Pepper ORANGE SPA Pink Lemonade Polynesian Punch ICED TEA FLO ATS A FROSTIES HOT FRIED APPLE PIE Ala Mode M A L T S A SH A KES Ort* OI vanilla Dish of Choc tw*gt SUNDAES ■-’ » \ ’ • A a Att •U Y’ ! »\CO*Ct* *> mf Al HOT FUDGE 9325 N. LAMAR 837-1906 6208 CAMERON RD. 4S9-7740 2632 S. LAMAR 441-4113 IS IS AIRPORT ♦F M SI1 )745 J 0lT0RF 444-6066 SII SPECIA L Footlong Hot Dog Large French Fries Small Soft Drink Regular Value - M.79 Now only $1.5 0 w/coupon I I I I I I I I I I I T (’Happy (,Eating Bring this coupon to an y of the five Austin Sonic Drive-ins this w eek for a delicious H a m ­ burger, French Fries and Coke, all for only $1.25. Call in a d ­ vance for faster service. expires Tuesday, Jan. 31, 1978 Wiener King Sr W hat a deal! Our World Famous Foot Long smothered with mustard, onions & chili, a large order of delicious French Fries and a small soft drink for only $1.50. Come to Wiener King Today! C o o k e d Fresh lo T aste B e tte r — a t W iener K in g — 1805 Airport Blvd. (Airport at M .l.K.) offer expires Feb. 5, 1978 DO VOV KNOW WHAT IT MEANS I TO TASTE V vopenes FAMOUS FRIED CHICKEN ORLEANS? p o p e y e s c h ic k e n e a t e r s d o ! love that chicken! J Buy o h o of Popeyes 3 piece N o w O rleans style I chicken dinners an d receive a 2 piece dinner | absolutely free. Each dinner also includes your | choice of Popeyes rice dressing or french fries. I Taste N e w Orleans. Taste Popeyes fam ous fried I 1823 Airport Blvd. I (Airport at M.L.K.) I A i offer good only with coupon Jan, 23-29 chicken. 4 exhibits Hispanic crafts of a distinctive culture Bird necklace by Larry B. Martinez Photo courtesy of Humanities Ro m * reb Con tor BV SUSAN ALLEN An exhibit of Hispanic arts and crafts of the Southwest is on display on the second level of the Michener Gallery in the Harry Hansom ('enter through Feb 7. Examples of the nearly lost art of filigree jewelry, plus straw inlay work, furniture, tinwork and wood carvings illustrate the Hispanic artistic heritage which has been handed down since colonial times The isolation and rough physical en­ vironment faced by the early Spanish colonies produced a distinctive culture with unique forms of religious arts and domestic crafts European traditional styles had to be adapted to the new en vironment and m aterials The settlers made their own religious objects, tools, household items, textiles, clothing and fur­ niture. The Michener exhibit features a few exam ples of colonial cra fts and nu m ero u s w orks of c o n te m p o ra ry Hispanic artists Rio Grande blankets with their familiar colorful stripes or Mexican star and dia­ mond patterns line the walls In 1805, Mex­ ican weavers were brought to New Mexico to re v ita liz e industry. Thereafter, blanket making became a major craft and products were exported to Mexico and later to the eastern United States th e weaving Also displayed are C him ayo blankets which incorporate Indian motifs, including one particularly brilliant blanket with a spread eagle design in gray and black on a red background. Two circu lar woven pieces by Juanita Jaram illo are displayed, one using gray, blue and yellow wool yarn and the other using a heavier texture of orange, gray, blue and white wool on steel hoops. The exhibit features many examples of santos, carved wooden images of saints. This art had am ost died out by 1900 because of the popularity of commercial plaster the 1920s village In craftsm en revived the a rt and now it is again a popular form using native woods. Carvings of Our Lady of Guadalupe, St. Michael slaying a demon, St. Isidore with a team of oxen and St. Francis holding a im ages. cross and Bible, made from unpainted juniper wood, reveal the simplistic style of the modern craftsm en. Contemporary wood carver Luis Tapia’s work uses brilliant colors in a Noah’s Ark (complete with tiny pairs of kangaroos, skunks and gorillas), and The Last Supper. Religious paintings on wood panels, call­ ed retablos, were painted by folk artists in the late colonial period. Wooden boards were made by hand tools then coated with plaster and painted with tempera paints. Late in the 1800s the art died out when commercial prints became popular. Re­ cent artists have revived the art and three paintings by Linda Martinez de Pedro are on display along with an old retablos, Our Lady of Sorrows, circa 1825-1835. The furniture in the exhibit includes in tables, chairs and a door of pine traditional geom etric design. A large chest by Elidio Gonzales and Antonio is carved from walnut and Archuleta cedar with elaborate floral designs, duplicating colonial work. The ancient craft of straw inlay work used native m aterials in place of elaborate wood and mother-of-pearl which were not available. Straw is laid in patterns onto crosses, boxes and occasionally furniture, and coated with a m ixture of pine pitch and soot. A straw inlaid cross from the 19th century is on display as well as sconces and a cross by contemporary a r­ tist Star Tapia which use corn husks and wheat straw. A gold filigree hairpin made in 1895 is the oldest piece of jewelry in the exhibit. The in lace-like design was popular women’s fashions in the late 1800s In 1900 there were 50 filigree workers in Santa Fe alone. Other jewelry in the exhibit in­ cludes massive silver and gold necklaces with figures of an eagle, a scarab, a dragon fly and a phoenix; bracelets; pins; a rosary and a chalice made of silver, turquoise and coral. traders brought supplies The art of working tin came to the Southwest after 1846 when the U.S. Army and into the region in tin containers The Hispanic craftsmen reused the tm to make picture fram es, crosses, candle holders and chandeliers The a rt is still popular today and the exhibit features tin crosses with tin-framed m irrors and colored glass, pieces using embroidered cloth under glass. The long em broidery stitch called cote hei was used in geometric or floral designs on plain woven wool harking to m ake coverlets or wall hangings in colonial times. The overall design was changed in the mid-1800s when cotton backing was used and a more open design of floral embroidery became popular Modem cole ha work, still using the long stitch, is displayed on a black and white shawl, on wall hangings with animals, birds and flowers and on a table cloth. Art Faculty Exhibit Austinites view the Art Faculty Exhibit, on display at the Huntington Gallery of the University Art Museum through Feb. 5 In© exhibit includes paintings, drawings, graphics, jewelry, sculpture, photographs and works in other mediums by faculty members. The exhibit is free and is open 9 a.m to 5 p.m. Monday through Saturday. theater 5 The power of tragedy: ‘Lear’ evokes catharsis By E B E N PR ICE Aristotle can rest easy. His Poetics still inspire respect, and his theories on drama still cap­ ture the theatrical experience. Of course, Aristotle is lucky to have The Acting Company of New York help him make his points. Their current production of King Lear — in Austin Monday, Tues­ day and Wednesday, and seen by this review er last week in San M arcos — fills a playgoer with the pity and terror that the an­ cient philosopher thought essen­ tial to tragedy. Under the artistic direction of John Houseman, these men and women tour the country with the finest of the classical repertory, with “ cla ssica l” stretched to in­ clude playwrights from Marlowe to Saroyan. Houseman gracious­ ly credits the rise of the regional theater movement and other con­ tem p o ra n eo u s d evelo p m en ts w ith h e lp in g h is c o m p a n y prosper. A CTU A LLY , HOUSEMAN and company can take the full credit them selves, if all their presen­ tations are as accomplished as King Lear. L ear is, arguably, the greatest play in English language drama; certainly, is Shakespeare’s highest achievement. it L E A R ENCAPSULATES all the turbulence and fury of the Oresteia of Aeschylus, without relying upon any of the fripperies of Greek mythology. The psy­ chological entanglem ents ex ­ plored are worthy of Strindberg or O’Neill at the height of their powers, with none of their ram ­ pant self-pity. One leaves a good production of Lear feeling drain­ ed but also renewed. Plays of this richness can be mined for many types of ore, much of it fool’s gold. John Simon, in a rare instance of con­ laughed at structive savagery, o n e c r i t i c ’ s n o t io n t h a t , “ Shakespeare w as a B eckett avant la le ttre and that Lear is re a lly ‘ U r-E n d g a m e .’ ” Shakespeare can be accused of modernity but not of nihilism. the Peter Brook’s infamous film version of the play bears out this concept. Brook, the man who brought us the antic hijinks of “ M a ra t/ S a d e ,” m an aged to make Lear like a cross look between a Beckett play and a Bergman film, with the worst ex­ c e s se s of ea ch em p h asized . Anyone who can m ake Lear bor­ ing d eserves recognition, at least, for doing the seemingly im ­ possible. IT IS SMALL wonder that Lear attracts the d isciples of the Theater of Cruelty, the Theater of the Absurd and the Grand Guignol. Sister poisons sister with equanimity; brother forces brother to feign m adness; a man s eyes are gouged out on stage. Y et, when British playwright Edward Bond tried to make a crueler version of the play by es- the c a la t in g and u p d a tin g violence, he failed. The true cruelty of the dram a lies in the e m o tio n a l v i c i o u s n e s s th e characters show one another. th at Thankfully, the Acting Com­ pany r e a liz e s the p e r­ form ers must revea l human beings as w ell as m onsters, m adm en and m onarchs. The youth of the com pany’s members works particularly in their favor in this regard. As graduates, over th e fe w y e a r s , o f th e Juilliard School Dram a Division, they are mature in experience while modest in years. Many of the play’s most important figures are young people in transition, and it is refreshing to see actors of the proper ages in the parts. la s t The young players’ energy in­ tersects with the playwright's bountiful imagination. Lear is a virtu a l catalogu e of personal relationships, especially fam ily ties. Here is the reason the play will alw ays have the power to m ove us. One m ay never en­ John Houseman co u n ter the d ile m m a s o f a Hamlet, a Macbeth or an Othello, but one cannot escape involve­ least one of the m ent relationships depicted in Lear. in at th e s e t s FROM THE SIM PLE elegance th e s u b t le to o f the costum es, colorations of everything in this production works to underscore the shifting feelings of the characters In this play knowing where one stands with a relative or friend becomes a s h a rd a s ta p -d a n c in g on quicksand: facad es m ust be maintained at all costs for fear of f a l l i n g p r e y to a n o t h e r ’ s schemes. Trust becomes a lux­ ury. David Schramm dominates the proceedings with his gripping portrayal of the king of four score years. Although advanced in age, Lear first commands attention, then pitifully demands it and finally quietly earns it. Schramm invests each step in the decline and regeneration with ex­ traordinary resonance; the actor alw ays m akes one aw a re of where Lear has been and where he is heading. Kent and the Fool are the king’s most loyal friends, and each role presents a yawning pit for an actor. Jam es Harper neat­ ly sidesteps the trap, transfor­ m ing K ent from a m ere e x ­ positive device into a humbly great man. As the Fool, Dennis B a c ig a lu p i b e c o m e s L e a r ’ s erstwhile son as well as his alter ego, and his disappearance from the action of the narrative is moving and comic. One complaint often lodged against the structure of the play is that the “ Gloucester subplot” tends to throw the drama off its axis. F ar from deflecting the main force of the play, here the actors conduct their own fam ily business and nimbly integrate it into the affairs of state. s e q u e n c e FEW SCENES IN drama can match, for pure emotion, the reu- n io n b e t w e e n Gloucester and Edgar. Gregg Almquist embodies the good man caught by circum stances with restrained power. And Kevin Conroy makes the lunacies of his “ Poor Tom ” persona credible while alw ays revealing the noble Edgar behind the guise. Tom D onaldson m ilk s the audience like a stand-up com e­ dian in his early speeches as Ed­ mund, who bu ild s upon his powers of dissembling to create a place for him self in the hearts of Began and Goneril. As Regan, Patricia Hodges is all lethal sen­ su o u sn ess, w h ile M ary Lou Rosato, as Goneril, is a demon of passion. Cordelia is a role that occupies little stage tim e, but Frances Conroy exem plifies filial a ffec­ tion and personal courage with e x q u is it e g r a c e . A n d e rso n Matthews, as Albany, and Tom Robbins, as Cornwall, neatly pre­ sent the moral polarities of the play. John Houseman has directed this production him self, and his unassuming but persuasive shap­ ing of the m aterial allows both the p lay ers to the play and shine.The ea r is dazzled by b ea u tifu l w ords b e a u tifu lly th e c a s t h a s s p o k e n , an d f o llo w e d Jo h n d e f i n i t e t l y G i e l g u d ’ s d i c t u m t h a t a S h a k esp ea rea n a c to r should “ F in d -the m atter in the m eter.” Lear (David Schramm) cradles Cordelia (Frances Conroy) GREAT MUSICIANS SERIES S p o n s o r e d b y T h * ( u l t u r a l I n l e r l a i n m e n t C o m m i t t e e o f th e T e x a s U n i o n in c o o p e r a t i o n w ith the D e p a r t m e n t o f M u s i c / C o l l e g e o f Fine A r t s B o ro d in l lano In o W e d n e sd ay, Feb ru ary I H o g g A u d ito riu m , 8 :0 0 P .M . C I V Tm Let S a le s M o n d a y , l a n u a r y 2 3 St .X) w ith I 11 IO s ( N o tee ret eipto H>>., Ho* O th e r IO o w eekdays N o checks accepted ( -eneral i ’ubln TTikrts A l the d o o r N o i arriere* or tape recorders $4 00 Those w h o tail lo present C E C I D w ill be t hai wed ( .enera! A d m issio n For further inform ation please phone 471-5314 (C E t O ffice) 471 1444 (B o * O il ne) GREAT MUSICIANS SERIES S p o n s o r e d bv I he ( ti 11 ii r a I I n t e r l a i n m e n t C o m m i t t e e ' o f the I e x a s U n i o n in c o o p e r a t i o n w ith the C o l t o g * o f I in t A r t s D e p a r t m e n t cd M u s i c Donald Gramm Ned Rorem Ho** him owe I oMtrsccer peatier Friday, Jan u ary 27 H o g g A u d ito riu m , 8 :0 0 P .M . I E l T ic k e t sates W e d n e s d a y l a n u a n It* $1 OO w ith I t i ID s (N o tee receipts I -e n e ra l Public I n k e r * A t th e d o o r $ 4 .10 Home He's O ft He IO q w eekdays N o checks accepted N o cancel as or tape rec orders J h o s e w h o t a i l t o p re s e n t e t c I D w ill be i harked I -e n e ra l A d m i s s i o n F o r fu r t h e r i n f o r m a t io n p le a s e p h o n e 471 $ 3 1 * ( C K C hin e) 471 1444 (Boc CTune) Vw cWw... jo c j o j- m o v ? n e a | ' IHI CHOIRBOYS C R E A T I V E D R f l C E C E R T E R C A P I T A L P L A Z A I H 35 N O R TH 4 5 2 -7 6 4 6 * A U CINEMAS-EVERY DAY TIL 1:30 P.M .-51.50 H I G H L A N D M A L L I H S'. AT KOI NU -IN -I SI ? IM WALT DISNEY, PETE’S DRAGON i 17Jt-J:45-Sj85-7:J*-M8 H I G H L A N D M A L L I H 35 AT K O E N IG I N 4 51-7326 5 th Record Weeki BARGAIN MAT. $1.50 HI 2:15 PM N O PASSES DAILY at 2:15-4:45-7:15-9:45 ti ONE OF THE MOST SPECTACULAR M O V IES EVER MADE.” GENE SHAUT, NBC-TV OFFFRING INSTRUCTION IN CLASSICAL ANO CONTEMPORARY FORMS OF DANCE BALLET, MODERN, SPANISH FLAMENCO, JAZZ, TAP, M E X I C A N F 0 L K L 0 R I C 0 , AN D ENERGYZING EXERCISE ALSO...................... CHARACTER DANCING instructors: J A N E G R O O S H U M E N A N W O R K S R O D O L F O M E N D E Z C A T H L E E N W A L T E R R O S A M A R I A B A R R O N ALL INQUIRIES CHEERFULLY ANSWERED 451-8771 454-6349 CONVENIENT W. AUSTIN LOCATION ESSC X* P O R T R A tT of SE D U C T IO N PR EPA R E YO U RSELF TO W IT N E SS A S E Q U E N C E OF S E D U C T IO N S SO DEVASTATIN G . SO C O M P LET E ..SO U N FO RG ET T A BLE THAT . YOU WILL R E M E M B E R THEM EVERY TIME YOU ARE WITH A WOMAN...?” Joe Reno frolic Cinema Ne aaa under ll p. «dud TW Hee ce Mat IO Uncut Uncensored CLOSE ENCOUNTERS O F T H E T H R D K I N D IPU) ' hum hubs union presets DOUBLE HORROR V I C K * C'lWMA 'WIST R A T E D Q ____________________ V Also burring M O N IQ U E C A R D IN and R IT A S T O N E W UU R O B E R T C O L E and JEFFREY S T E R N : ' K l CdAfree* • Oa*. I» • rn • ■ H H A D U L T S ONLY I J’10 V A I S DUVAL CLEANERS 4770 Duval St. M O K H T O M V l i m o m u a * UTTON N M B MAM 'I I I I I I I d B I mJ N E L S O N S G IFTS „ H A S IN D IA N JEW ELRY I.V w HUE* CU/t> o h * 1*4 • MMM* • CLOSED M O NDAY* presents 0NIGHT ONlYi MARLON BRANDO I M Staffer Karl Mfllrlfn I m J. CsUb b v Marfa Saint U ELIA KAZAN'S ON TNI WATERFRONT 4 i 4 i A- "TO M B o r LIQCIA" ane "DM. TERROR'* HOUSE W. o r HORRORS." The lint I* Roo*. Corm *.'. J mmtwpiww adaptation of Edgw AU*. Ro*'. M * of re lam* . rn* m d IM. M i* dMth. "Even on tar wad- W 4 c dine niQht Mw m u* W ar. th. men ah. lewd with ^ 4 t L, m s rtfiwtu I rung iran lived in tit* Tomb of th# ** OM ta m *. Thing' that Hv*d in Mw Tomb of th. W' * * Cat I” Start Vincent Pries. XHB second Rim star* jc ponRfd Sutherland and Christopher U s in this ^ 4 t * 4 i 4 i 4 t 4 i 4 t * horror-fsotssY •bout a strange doctor who tolls men's fortunes on s train. * £ * A- A- A- A- A- Today at 3 and 8 p.m. Texas Union Theater $1.25 with UT ID w iener o r I * ca oust awards Mesic IT HONAN URNS TBH WRI TON RT M N SONIUBK PN0T0CRAPNT IT MRU KAUFMAN h Jastar A w ftU fU w vt 7 4 1 < * * 4c * * * * * * * * 4c 4c 4 c 4 i 4 i 4c * * * * * A A A A A A A A A A A ZACHARY SCOTT THEATRE CENTER PRODUCTION MANN TMI Af f t ! S W MK DAYS 6 05 * 05 10 05 H N I IT I I M H VMll V I I JO 3 23 5 40 7:30 AND 10:03 SH» ACTIOH WIIK CUNY EASTWOOD SNESKOP STOPPING ■ B o t th# on#-stop parts shop. Central Auto Ports. Th# single shop that offers manifold ports for your cor, and o service deportment to put them in. Central Auto Ports. The Ports Place. CENTRAL A U TO P A R TS 1001 N. LAMAR 477-3770 7923 DURNETRO. 432-9449 T D A I I C T C V A C T U C A T D f C » l l H I m m i M * AAU tm * 12}f CMAw I I H Im UM hmm I M . A : 4 5 4 8 1 4 7 NORTHCROSS MAH ANGI MSON TANI I RTI A N I T AO INQICAHS TWI UTI :,HQW TtCNIIS ON SAH JO MiNUTIS PRIOR to t i * (Mi, God! F u n n y ! w ay r n PRVQR PO (TIS-5 J I ^-7 4$ h (TIS-449M:IS ■ B V N e«ptosivf pt^tufT- fitihS-Mlld (TIS-5.45KMI henin WINKLER SALLY FIELD HEROES S a w n o n v ’ J F E V E R Q n i g h Tm l I*' (TIS-5:I$K745 THI INCREDIBLE MELTING M AN ... com # p r e p a r e d J * (TIS 543^41 N (TLS-SJD-7J I ms 4774114 theater ‘West Side Story’ timeless Sharks. A three-man orchestra provided a full 40-piece orchestra sound through use of drums, a piano, a trumpet and a Moog. The trum pet really shone in "Am erica ” "Gee, Officer Krupke” stole the show in the second act and was the first all-male number that sparkled. The lines "juvenile delinquency is a social disease,” and "w e’re sick, sick, sick” drew laughter, and Baby John’s (Leif Green) imitation of a social worker brought spontaneous applause in the middle of the number. The "play" gets serious at the rumble, the last scene of (See WEST SIDE, Page 9.) By M R KATZKE When the curtain opened on "West Side Story" at the Paramount last weekend, the audience was momentarily taken aback On the stage stood a group of young people, aged 15 to 21, dressed in black and white and standing in neat little rows. Instead of bursting into song and dance, they stood smiling while a spokesman pleasantly an­ nounced them as The Young Americans.” The Young Americans” are perform ers selected from all over the country for their combined vocal, instrumen­ tal, and dancing abilties, he explained The group is a non­ profit organization that is totally self-supporting. "We may offend some of you in the next two hours," the spokesman warned, and he went on to say that the problems dealt with in the play could have happened in Shakespeare’s tim e or now, though this particular story occurs in 1957. This timid and almost apologetic introduction affected the audience, and the play got off to a mediocre start. Both gangs were introduced in the opening number and the message was clearly ‘safety in numbers is the only way to survive.” “WEST s id e STORY,” taken from Arthur Laurent’s book, is about two street gangs in New York, the Sharks, composed of Puerto Ricans, and the Jets, lower class whites. “Everyone of us hates everyone of you, and you hate us right back,” they shout at each other. Chaos prevails as the two groups dart about the set until police break them up. Riff s (Gary Moss) solo in " Je t Song was muffled ami the words were not clear. At this point, the audience showed signs of disappointment and seemed to wonder if things would get better. Then Tony (L o n n ie V ick) a p p e a re d sin g in g “ Something's Coming” and assured us that the play’s slow start was misleading. Tony, a former Jet, tries to be neutral between two gangs and searches for something more - “ it s only just out of reach.” But Riff comes to him to ask for help and soon Tony agrees to go to the dance at the school in hopes of planning a "rum ble” with the Sharks the "THE DANCE AT THE GYM" was a colorful number displaying the excellent dancing and choreography ex­ pected at a musical. Now the show was in full swing, the audience was warm, and the groundwork for romance set. Tony meets Maria (Holly Hancock) here and, of course, it s instant love at first sight. The introductory comment about the timeless plot and possibility that it could have happened in Shakespeare’s time had prepared us for the obvious Romeo and Juliet" affair. A balcony in the ghet­ to s alley is the scene of Tony and M aria's next encounter after Tony’s fam iliar vocal,"M aria.” Their duet on the balcony was lovely, both of them convincing as lovers. The only distraction from the young lovers’ enchantment was the erratic follow-spot lighting which missed them completely at times. OTHER OF LEONARD BERNSTEIN’S m usical numbers deserving mention are "Tonight,” featuring Tony, the “Ballet Sequence.” and “America" with the Moods v COUNTRY-WESTERN NITE SHOTS OF TKQUILA40- Toeodsv 7 30 p rn IO p m. LADIES NITE (ladles only) EME OPEN BAR Wedaetday QUARTER BAR DRINKS 7 p m IO p m Ttrartday 25' Beer all night long Friday T.G .I.F. Party an night long Satanta? MOONSHINERS $2.50 A 32 aa. drlak in a quart Ball jar Sunday 7 p rn IO p rn. 25' BAR DRINKS * ¥ * * ¥ * ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ I t i - k ir 'it * * * * ^ AU ENTif I AINMf NT IS SCHCOUlfO HtOM 9 ;'■ I aUlULLLlIaL IA i J. i J. I J. H i ni„ j[ j j j Raul’s 2 6 1 0 G uadalupe 477-1431 This W eek 2 3 -2 9 Music 9 pm -1 a m nightly M onday - Disco S a ls a West Side ... (Continued from Page 8.) the first act. Riff, a Je t, and Bernardo (Terry Vitro) a Shark, a re nominated to duel for their groups, bare­ skinned. B ernardo tries to coerce Tony into fighting and when Riff steps in to defend Tony, he is killed Then Tony turns on B ernardo and kills him. The groups flee in fear, realizing their actions have gotten out of hand. Since B ernardo was M aria’s brother, she faces the em otional traum a of choosing her lover over her brother Ms Hancock dram atically conveyed her feelings in “ A Boy Like T h at’ and m aintained her mood until the end of the play, convincingly enough to choke up the audience The serious tone of the last three scenes displayed rem arkable m aturity for such a young troupe IN THE “ FIN A L E ,” Chino (Gabriel Archiniega) shoots Tony to revenge his friend s death and because he realizes Tony has his g irl’s heart. The th ree violent deaths affect the rival groups so much that they com e together to com fort each other in the touching last few m om ents of the play. This m usical is different from others because it deals with a serious subject and ends with a serious tone Three young people m eet their deaths at the hands of their peers. The groups have no real m otivation for their hatred other than blind prejudice A tragedy like death seem s to be the only way to reach them t h e “ Young A!!!!riCanS a m ^assa^ors of understanding and goodwill took their m essage to h eart and perform ed with conviction, as well as talent. as ‘Timbuktu’: Vonnegut as vaudeville “ Between Tim e and T im buktu;” a space fantasy by Kurt Vonnegut, J r. adapted for the stage and directed by E rn est G am ble; at Theatre in the Rye, 120 W. Fifth St., through February. By MARK PRITCHARD The script, such as it is, of Theatre in the R ye’s current production of “ Between Time and Timbuktu ” has a strange history. N ET (National Educational Television, now known as the Public Broadcasting Service or PBS) first constructed it in 1971 for a TV film, taking several unrelated incidents from Kurt Vonnegut’s novels and ty­ ing them together in an original framework. VONNEGUT COLLABORATED on the script, which was of a highly im provisational nature. The resultant film was shown on NET and has since been shown in theaters, m ostly on cam puses like the University where it shows up every few months. T heatre in the Rye adapted its version from an adaption someone else had done of the script as published in a paperback version, which director Ernie G am ble told m e h e ’d never seen. So it s no surprise that TITR’s production is som ewhat rough. A fter all, there a re obvious drawbacks to adapting a screenplay to the stage, especially in this case when the concept is highly cinem atic; that is, it has special qualities which a re done best on film and with difficulty on stage. THE FRAMEWORK of the play is this, a guy who is Mr. A verage Am erican, Stony Stevenson, wins a contest in which the grand prize is being m ade an astronaut and shot through a tim e warp. The tim e warp scatters Stony throughout tim e and space, leaving him unable to control his destiny ( “ I t’s a wonder I can control m y own the a d a p te rs of b la d d e r” ). This p re m ise allow ed Vonnegut’s novels to select their favorite scenes and have IEntertainment Jan. 23rd - Peter Beck 24th - Handy Ben Iptlef 25th . Bick N o t 26th - Lie kin Crtk ( f a in t ly Butch Stock and Jim Todd) 27 and 28th - Mfeh T M * 29th - Happy Hour M-F, 9-6 Pitchers $1.75 • Mugs 40* Cans 55* Stony sim ply visit them in his out-of-control travels Both the film and the play follow this form at, a fte r an entertaining prologue in which Stony is launched into space. It is this first segm ent of the play which is the most successful, dace Minor and Bill Fagan as “ Walter G esundheit and e x -a stro n a u t Bud W illiam s J r ’’ hilariously n a rra te Stony’s liftoff; M adeline Olds is flood as Stony s m om , a w elfare deadbeat. The rest of the play takes the form of a series of blackout sketches. Actors (who U ke several p arts throughout the evening) replay incidents from various nnegut books as Stony looks on o r com m ents on the ac- In ili h snatches him away. i? th6 Punch line is de,ivered- the tim e w arp THE RESULTANT PARADE of episodes becom es l ° \ Z T I a concert in which the sU r plays a long m edley of his hits. Most of the vignettes are re P ^ { ° u s- c ia llv K m iU S " in?aginatir special e ffe c ts'" ly: TITR is obvi°usly Anan- “ “ ‘“"ling, sets, lighting and Tuesday - closed However, one would expect the m ilieu of the various Scenes to be re c re ate d m ore effectively than it presently is not only through props and effects but through acting which on F riday was mostly on the level of vaudeville’ Exceptions w ere Minor, Fagan and G am ble, who as Stony was sufficiently confused m ost of the tim e it is The trouble with the play is that it is vaudeville onnegut s G reatest Hits. The howdy-doody c h a ra c ter of the script is the m ajo r draw back TITR has to overcom e nothin* ya nrir0Ughh m ° rf effective actin« < which costs nothing) and perhaps, if possible, through m oderate use m ulti m edia (which is fairly inexpensive). They have several weeks m o re to im prove, and what I saw F riday was prom ising enough for m e to believe that they can Wednesday - P r o p e l T e rro r Thursday • L ittle J im in y a n d t h * B a d B oys Friday - S a lo m o n Saturday ■ Chicano Band • V io la to rs T h e S k u n k s Sunday - S k y w a y (T ii C o m e by and e n jo y your f a v o r it e b e v e r a g e w h i l e you p la y pool, f o o tb a ll, s h u ffle b o a r d , electronic g a m e s or b a c k g a m m o n . A lto th ere s a 6 ft A d v e n t w i d e screen T V for your f a v o r ite T V sports 2 D R I N K S F O R G I R L S T H E P R I C E O F O N E A L L D A Y M O N D A Y it T U E S D A Y H ap p y H our 4-7 w eekdays d o u b le m ixe d d rinks (or price ol single O p en 3 30 P M ~ 2 OO A M 4 4 4 - 5 8 1 8 * FREECE ■ r n resUumnt&oar Quality Food at Popular «eB urgen Foetlong PoBoyt Tarty C W S * * ! SBM**) Happy Hour *.75 (m ort d rin k .) 2 -7 p a M y Entertainment Nightly (no Cover) Weekday Lunch Specials Meal . ti.69 lf "****4 drink * I.SO (most drinks) Monday Special: Happy H our All Nile For E veryone 1.75 Hihails $1.65 Beer Pitchers Playing Tonite: KIRK WH. L H MS 1903 E. Riverside River Hills Cenler a S g T t e v e f M d e i ■ m m IO books Truth stranger than fiction “TW Book of Sand;*’ by Jorge Luis Bor get; translated by Norman Thomas di Giovanni; K.P. Dutton, I7.9S. By DAVID STEPHEN CA LON NE in The bookstores keep Jorge Luis Borges' their fiction “ The Book of Sand" departm ents, which is somewhat mis­ leading Bookstores should put up a sign with the word “ fiction” emblazoned on it pointing to the outside world, and they should keep Borges' books in a special labyrinthine section labelled “ truth " These are the sort of vagaries this metaphysical magician provokes Borges has spent his life in the quiet pursuit of the truths of imagination He himself is the strangest of imaginary beings of whom he writes so lovingly. Space, time, motion, personal identity and reality itself are all the fictions of dream in the Borgean un­ iverse. Or maybe they are the truths of dream ; the m atter is complicated and contradictory, but that is the point At the conclusion of the essay “ A New Refutation of Tim e," Borges writes “ Time is the substance of which I am made Time is the river which sweeps me along, but I am the river; it is a tiger which mangles me, but I ani the tiger; it is a fire which consumes me, but I am the fire. The world, unfortunately, is real; I, unfortunately, am Borges.” labyrinths Truth He revels in the paradox of riddles, m irrors, is a fierce oracle. Like the soothsayer a t Delphi, like the Zen koan, Borges tells truth through the tension of apparent opposites. Har­ mony comes from the tension of bow and lyre. The first story in this collection, “ The Other,” is a treatm ent of one of Borges' Obscure lives: history, raw “This Is Texas;** by Mabelie tad St aa rf Purcell; Futura Press; IU. By MONTY JONES “This Is Texas'' is a collection of 78 short biographies of mostly rather obscure Texans It is half-way between being a series of footnotes to the “ real’' history of the state, and being the raw m aterial from which the “ real” history must be written It is half way between being a collection of notes on, at most, only moderately in­ teresting people, and being a valuable dotmment of social history One assumes books of this sort result in part from the wide spread feeling that the lives of the “ unim portant" people one knows somehow have significance beyond the personal level. PROBABLY EVERYONE has urged himself to make the difficult journey back to some scrubby, isolated ranch — or to make the much more difficult journey to one of those dark, acrid, cinder-block “ rest homes" — and talk to the obscure old people who survive from the past. Very few people ever act on these urges; fewer still bring out a book based on what they find It may trouble us that every day people whose lives may have been small but nevertheless worth noting slip away from the living. But it is also troubling that most lives are not all that interesting or important after all. beyond their interest im p o rtan ce to the “ im m e d ia te and family and close friends. So perhaps most lives are better left unexamined. For all that, many of the “ unimportant” lives detailed in this collection do have some m easure of appeal It is, for example, nice to have the name of one of th e c a r p e n te r s ( Wa l t e r G rim m er) who helped put up the grand Tips house, now a bank in South Austin. The Tips house is an enduring testam ent to the loving work of fine craftsm en, and in­ formation about the life of one of those craftsm en, however simple and however is not negligible informa­ uneventful,’ tion. AND IT IS NICE to have the story of Alec Mebane, fruit peddler, cotton ginner and developer of “ M ebanes Triumph,*' a variety of cotton that matured faster than the dread Mexican boll weavil and was, therefore, all the rage among farm ers in the early part of this century (In 1917, Lockhart and Caldwell County locals even held a “ Mebane Day" celebration to mark the pesky weavil’s temporary demise.) ‘‘Nice" seems to be the word for most of these accounts. If being nice were enough, this book would be all you would need. But it is not from some sadistic predilection that most historians concentrate on the un-nice; it is from a desire to be accurate about human life. This book studiously avoids that kind of accuracy, limiting itself to mostly happy lives and their small successes. SUCH LIVES are seldom recorded in the real history books for much the same reason that they are not reported in the daily newspapers. The happy ending is, after all, the stuff of fiction. But who is absolutely certain that that is the way it should be? Who can say that old Alec Mebane and his roadside fruit stand- botany laboratory is really any less a significant datum of history than Jack Pershing’s raid into Mexico or Henry Ford's brutal treatm ent of his assembly line workers, events contemporaneous with “ Mebane s Triumph"? An old history teacher used to tell us that the philosophy of history is an im­ possible field of study, since history isn t over yet. So who’s to say? Alec Mebane may triumph yet. favorite themes While sitting on a bench in Cambridge “ facing the Charles R iver,” he encounters “ a Doppelganger,” his form er self of many years ago. A bit dis­ concerted, Borges speaks to Borges then; “ If this morning and this meeting are dreams, each of us has to believe he is the dream er. P erhaps we have stopped dreaming, perhaps not. Our obvious duty, meanwhile, is to accept the dream just as we accept the world and being born and seeing and breathing.” found expression This is the mystical feeling which also in an earlier work, Borges and I.” There, after a description of the counfounding relationship of a lter­ ego to real self, the author concludes; “ I don’t know which one of the two of us is writing this page.” The fluidity of self and personality in­ t r i g u e s B o r g e s . As he a c c e p t s Schopenhauer’s theory that “ the knower himself cannot be known precisely as such, otherwise he would be the known of another knower,” so too he agrees “ the world is a fabrication of the will.” The possibility that he himself may be dream t does not prevent him from dreaming. The story “ The Book of Sand’’ concerns a book with an infinite number of pages. It is the latest in a series of stories about books and libraries. This is understan­ dable, since Borges was once director of the National Library of Argentina, and, as Andre Maurois has pointed out, “ he has read everything.” In a very real sense, books are the world to him. There is nothing musty or deadening in this fascination. His love of knowledge is a love of life’s lim itless potential for expansion into meaning. “There Are More Things’* is a delight­ fully horrifying tale, and my own favorite among these 13 stories. I will say only that it deals with an “am phisbaena.” But do not look up this word until you have finish­ ed the story, or the thrill will be gone. TheCastifian Before vow decide where you re coing to live this spring, we think you should know ss much ss possible about the various bousing alternatives in Austin We do because we dunk it s the only way you can make aa intelligent deer SKM And. because we think you'll be impressed when you compare our en vinmment to others you've seen After all. what other residence ball has in door parking and swimming, a game room, exercise room, and dining room all wider one rooT Just visit us i we re s half block from campus on Nth Street) or sw d for our free brochure It s fun to read and it s informative After that. it s up to you But at least you ll know what you re getting into ll Classical Guitarist Robert Guthrie Affiliate A rtist * 4 % 'f DEPARTMENT OF MUSIC m a M O N D A Y , J A N U A R Y 23 concerts PERCUSSION ENSEMBLE, conducted bv George F ro ck, w ill p e rfo rm rn the Music B u ild in g R ecital H all at 8 p.m . Program: To include S uite fo r Tam­ b o u rin e a n d Percussion Ensem ble b y Shelly Elias, Spanish Dance by Enrique Granados, Maple L e a f f o g by S c o tt J o p lin , and C oncerto fo r Tuba a n d Percussion O rchestra by W alter H a rtle y fe a tu rin g fa c u lty a rtis t Steven B ryan t, tuba. Free admission. T U E S D A Y , J A N U A R Y 24 T H U R S D A Y , J A N U A R Y 26 CHARLES A. SANDERS w ill present his ju n io r v io lin re cital at 4 :3 0 p.m . in the M usic B u ilding R ecital H all. Program: S onata No. I in G, Opus 78 b y Johannes Brahms, Sonata No. 1 rn g by Johann Sebastian Bach, and Scherzo Tarantelle, Opus 16 b y H enryk W ieniaw ski. Free admission. D A V ID L IT TR E LL , cellist, w ill p e rfo rm a re cital in pa rtial fu lfillm e n t o f the D o cto r o f Musical A rts degree at 8 p.m . in the Music B u ild in g R ecital H all. Program : Sonata No. I in d fo r C ello an d Piano by Claude Debussy, S u ite No. 6 in D fo r S olo C ello b y Johann Sebastian Bach, and C oncerto fo r C ello in e. Opus 8 5 by E dw ard Elgar. Free adm ission. PARAMOUNT THEATRE FRI., JAN. 27 8:00 PM R*Mrv«d Scaring S4.50-S3.00 Tickets Sold at Paramount, Josko's and University Co-Op r h . j j t s s X w, °"1 is aw die Arte ■an e m i# h i Ii lain I ll ii • Hew asnia, BT Bsbaaf a i Wee Ada, sad the Qty af Aeeaw * Charley Pride: By SPARKY PHILLIPS Friday night was like the first workout of spring train­ ing for baseball player-turned-country singer Charley Pride And you could tell he was enjoying it. Pride, whose show at Municipal Auditorium was his first after a two-month holiday layoff, overcam e some in­ itial synchromzational kinks with his band and turned in a warm and vibrant performance to an ecstatic full-house crowd. The show was short only an hour — but concentrated, and in the cml eminently satisfying The tall and hand­ some black man from Sledge, Miss , sang all the songs that have elevated him to a place among country music immortals, including the two smash hits off his recent LP. ’She s Just An Old Love Turned Memory” and ‘TU Be Leaving Alone.” music Ifs a long way from sharecropping to superstardom P rid e ’s rich baritone and sm ooth, folksy style were a welcome change from the country-pop hype of his warm-up group. Dave and Sugar, country music’s answer to Tony Orlando and Dawn. Their stint was mercifully kept to 20 minutes, but not before Dave had removed his coat during one tune, to the delighted squeals of maybe eight pimply-faced cowgirls and the unmitigated anguish of the rest of the audience Pride more than made up for them, though And the rapport that he developed with his listeners seemed to ig­ nite the singer, persuading him to do seven songs in his encore, which pleased his patrons no end and befuddled his band and backstage entourage One of the backstage group rem arked that he had never seen Pride do more than four songs in an encore. T H E R E WAS NO question that Pride was having fun. At one point, he brought Johnny Duncan (who appeared Saturday at the Silver Dollar) out from backstage to sing his hit.‘‘Stranger,” and then — out of sight of the audience — Pride danced a jig in the wings and chimed in with Duncan, note for note His energy never abated. Perhaps he was thinking of a time not 15 years ago when, as a zinc sm elter in Helena, Mont., the only future he even dared dream about was as a pro baseball player, and even that possibility was dim. It was 1963 For a decade, the m uscular Mississippian had knocked around the Negro leagues with varying degrees of success The high point had probably been a 1956 barnstorming tour he had made as a m em ber of the Negro League All-Stars, playing against a team of black major leaguers, including Willie Mays, Hank Aaron and Ernie Banks Pride, a pitcher, had beaten them 4-3 in a game played in Victoria, Tex , and later, in a 1-0 loss in Albany, Ga , bad struck out 12 of the pros But because of a string of misfortunes, he could not make it to the m ajor leagues. In 1959, besides his pitching prowess. Pride sported a hefty 367 batting average. But just before a St. Louis Cardinal scout arrived to have a look at him, Pride broke his elbow Two years later, in his first m ajor league tryout (with the expansion Los Angeles Angels), Pride developed a sore arm in training camp SO IT WAS that in 1963, Pride was making one last ditch effort to make the big tim e with a semi-pro outfit in Missoula, Mont., while working full-time in Helena as a sm elter He never thought of making singing a career. Oh, he amused his team m ates with some country tunes he had picked up while listening to his family’s old Philco radio back in Sledge. And he could play guitar pretty well (he had learned on a HO Silvertone, the only luxury he’d been afforded as a poor, Mississippi-delta sharecropper’s son). He d even begun playing a few Montana clubs, beginning in 1960. But it wasn’t until country veterans Red Sovine and Red Foley happened to catch his act in 1963 that Pride began to think of a career in country music Sovine told him after the show that he was good enough to make it in Nashville. IT TOOK ONE more failure with pro baseball (in 1964, Pride was cut by the New York Mets) before he took Sovine seriously. But in 1964, at Sovine’s behest, he cut a tape for a Nashville promoter, and it later found its way into the hands of Chet Atkins, who was then divisional vice president for RCA records. P ride’s baseball days were over, and country music superstardom was immi­ nent. Imminent, but not easy. Charley Pride was a black man singing a white m an’s music. (That is not entirely ac­ curate. Country music has always borrowed heavily from black music and musicians, and vice versa. But not since the antebellum South have their been any black country music perform ers, to say nothing of stars.) When Charley Pride got started, his first record was released without the usual photograph and biographical information. HIS PROMOTERS felt, quite rightly, that a low-key ap­ proach was their only hope to vault their client into respectability during the racially troubled 1960s. Soon Pride was not merely respected-he was revered. By the tim e his race was discovered, it was no longer an issue. Grammies, Gold Records and Entertainer of the Year awards weren’t long in coming Today, Charley Pride is one of the highest paid, most popular singers in the coun­ try music business. I* riday night in Austin, he displayed vivaciously that special talent that has made him great. It was a long way from a sm elter in Helena. Charley Pride THIS WEEK Texas Union Films Monday end l l . T U U R I MOTISI O I S A I p.m. Union Theatre A NOW LA USKKTt Union Theatre S A T p.m. P A T TY MANIS A U MI A M W Union Theatre 9 p m. Wednesday MI TMI NAMI O f TNC TATUM Union Theatre 3, 7 A I p.m. TMI COM VISAA TSON 3, 7 A *:1S p.m. Union Theatre A STAN IS SONN 7, 9:1S A 11:30 p.m.Union Theatre t i e m . Union Theatre TMI LAST M T AIL 7 A I p m Union Theatre Evening Entertainment 9 ta midnight Texas Tavern CMA SLOTT! SY NUM 9 p.m. ta I a.m . Cactus Cafe Aer COLM A MA ZSL 9 p.m. to I a.m . Cactus Cafe Bklr 9 p.m. ta 1:30 a.m. Taxes Tavern Twoodsy Thursday Friday At Saturday Saturday Morning Fun CK/b Sunday Tuesday Friday Saturday OPTICAL COi t UNUSUAL EYEWEAR I 10% OFF WITH DOCA COUPON NO. 8 JEFFERSON SQ 38th & JEFFERSON AUSTIN, TEXAS451-1213 13 Brewer & Shipley back in style By JODY DENBERG The first weekend of the spring sem ester attracted a flurry of concert activity to the Austin club scene, with perform ances by some of the M idwest’s best coun­ try perform ers. Along with Willis Allan Ram sey, Doug Sahm, The Flying Burrito Brothers and the Lost Gonzos, B rew er and Shipley returned to Austin for a two-night stand a t the Alamo Roadhouse. It was their second local appearance in four months, and judging by the crow d’s reaction they will return soon. The concert began at 9:30 p.m ., by which tim e an alchohol-induced easiness had spread over the club, an a t­ m osphere intim acy that certainly helped create an between those on stage and off. THE OPENING BAND, Kiwi, consisted of three singers, two of whom traded acoustic, rhythm and lead g u itar riffs, while the third concentrated on lead vocals and spoon-to-thigh timekeeping. Their hour set was pleasantly received although Kiwi’s rhythm was broken by two poorly interpreted Beatle songs. B rew er and Shipley finished off the evening easily and sm oothly. Their popularity has waned som ewhat since its peak in the late ’60s, but they do show evidence of revitalization. Mixing songs from their unreleased new album with old favorites, Brew er and Shipley sang tales of their Ozark mountain home along with their popular odes to drug abuse One of these tales, “ One Toke Over The Line,” was the pair s first, and biggest, hit. B rew er kidded the audience that the duo was considering changing the title to “ One Coke Over The Line,” to bring it m ore up to date. They played this and other old hits with both conviction and pride, helping to blend the older and new er m aterial cohesively. ON “ SHAKE OFF The Dem on,” the brisk rhythm ic chording and strum m ing by the duo was inspiring, with B rew er setting the pace and Shipley filling in the spaces with accentuating strum s. They didn’t use a lead guitar on this song, but its omission was inconspicuous. The overwhelm ing crowd response brought B rew er and Shipley back for two encores, an enjoyable surprise. Someone in the front row called out a song title, and although the pair had not played it for a long while they y pulled it off successfully B rew er and Shipley w ere crowd pleasers, and although there w ere other fine shows in town last weekend, none could have provided a b etter F riday or Saturday night es­ cape WWE RABBIT MSM HAPPY HAPPY HOUR SUN.-THURS. 7-9 ALL DRINKS DOUBLES $1.00 BEER - A BIG 14 oz. SO' ★ - EVERY - ★ WED. A THURS. BEERS - 14 OZ. 2 5 ‘ No Con COME BY A CHECK OUT W H IT E B A ftR IT SPRING VACATION GIVEAWAY! ON HOUSTON, JUST OFF LAMAR >PEN 7 DAYS A WEEK 6 p.m.-2 a.m. 4S1-91 IO Mike Brewer WE DROP PRICES, NOT JUST NAMES Across from Highland Mail • 6019 Dillard Circle 10-7 Daily • 451-2783 14 music New McCartney and Wet Willie By JE F F WHITTINGTON •Girl* School Paul McCartney & Every now and then something appears to remind us that there actually are e x B ea tties wandering around. R e­ cent efforts of Messrs Harrison and Starr haven t exactly been inspiring, Mr Len­ non has apparently forsaken us, and as for Paul — well, ' Silly Love Songs” isn’t ex­ actly up to the highest standards set by oiw of the best songwriters of the 60s and 70s Might our young people grow up thinking that the Beatles were a fluke? Fortunately, the Fab Four occasionally see fit to favor us with something that still partakes of the spirit and even the quality of Beatle songs “ Girls School” is the best record Paul McCartney has released since the "Band On The Run” days, four years ago, and it stands out on the radio like Beethoven a t a Schoenberg fest If this song is any indication of what the album will sound like, it may well live up to the “ hot rocking” promises broken by “ Wings at the Speed of Sound.” Tentative release date is February. “Street Corner Serenade,” Wet Willie. I ve always liked Wet Willie; any group with the character to cover Otis Redding’s “ Shout Bama Lam a” obviously has some degree of class They are also not the usual southern-fried rock band, as the new directions on their album Manorisms” will attest The directions on “ Street Comer Serenade’’ aren’t exactly “ new,” but they are among the most appealing old directions around doo-wop music is one of the more populist forms of musical art, as well as one of the more unaffectedly entertaining ones. While “ Serenade” is ly rically som ew hat following thin, s t a n d a r d i z e d n o s t a l ­ a it g ia /re m in isc e n c e song s tru c tu re , is done so un-self-consciously it that doesn't m atter. Wet Willie obviously have r a t h e r to its tially greater brightness and clarity of th a t al bum as opposed two predecessors. “ This sounds like the early Beatles,” one astonished witness rem ark­ ed True, except the Ramones have drawn from a wide variety of early '60s up-tempo rock sources, not just the Liverpudlians, and added a massive dose of 70s hard- Radio On the same love for this kind of music that just about anyone who listened to it during the old days must have, and it shows in all the right places “ We Will Rock You/We Are The Cham­ pions,” Queen. Nominally, “ We Are The Champions” is the A-side. That’s fine; all the top-40 stations in Pflugerville and Peoria will play the record and get it on the charts and in the stores, and then the real reason for buying the record will be available to all. “ We Will Rock You” stands just behind the McCartney entry as best single of the budding year, as well as one of the best songs in Queen s already- illustrious career — a heavy-metal novelty which proves that there still is life left in the genre. “ Champions.” on the other hand, is nothing that Queen hasn't already done better before. ” Rockaway Beach,” Ramones. Listen­ ing to the “ Rocket To Russia” LP again the other day, I was struck bv the substan­ rock sensibility and production techni­ ques. The result is a masterpiece, a two- minute distillation of the fun and excite­ ment of basic rock and roll at its best, and without the calculated abrasion that is often associated with “ punk-rock” bands. “Don’t Let Me Be Misunderstood,” San­ ta Esmerelda. And the good records just keep on coming! I would have called this “ a great rock record,” but it seems to be doing better on the disco charts than anywhere else. Do the disco-philes know something the rest of the world doesn't know? Apparently so, because this re­ working of the old Erie Burdon & the Animals tune is simply fantastic — if it isn t just a fluke, the full 10-minute album cut ought to establish Santa Esm erelda as an act to be watched closely in the future. The single was edited down severely from the original album track — it’s still good, but check out the long version first. “Why I was afraid to join a figure salon... and how Elaine Powers changed my mind.” F a n ta sy : All the members will know each other and VU fe e l uncom fortable. E specially if I have to wear a s k im p y little leotard! FACT: A n in s t r u c to r w ill m a k e y o u fe e l a t e a s e r i g h t a w a y . Y ou’ll fin d th e m e m b e rs frie n d ­ ly a n d e n th u s ia s tic . (A n d lo ts o f t h e m w e a r s l a c k s i n s t e a d of le o ta rd s !) £ 'J * J F an tasy: They l l put me on a strict diet and I won ft be able to eat any of the things I like. FACT: T he E la in e P o w e rs p r o g r a m is a n easy-to- follow , ea sy -to -liv e -w ith c o m b in a tio n o f e x e rc ise a n d se n sib le e a tin g . No d ie t—j u s t in te r e s tin g s u g ­ g e s tio n s o n h o w to e a t a little less. E njoyably! F a n ta sy: J c a n ! afford it. Those fancy spas cost hun­ dreds of dollars to join! FACT: C an y o u affo rd $ 9 .9 5 a m o n th ? T h a t’s all it c o s ts fo r E la in e P o w e rs’ fu ll 4 -m o n th N ew M em b er P ro g ra m ! (A n d y o u c a n u se th e s a lo n a s o fte n a s y o u lik e —s ix d a y s a w eek!) C ill Today for a Trot Salon Tour! ! W Row an - Soo t* V S Elaine Powers ^ Figure Salons W Keeping on the light side Austin North 5 5 0 5 I 4 5 1 - 4 4 1 7 Austin South m i I. Kvotk*« 444-2443 - J). Cai 5517 Ba ‘Aida’: grand but wobbly By DAVID CONNELLY The Houston Grand Opera has once again tackled that old warhorse, Verdi’s Aida, and the production is a bit wobbly and terribly tame. In this “Aida,” one takes a perverse delight in the eponymous heroine’s fate - she is sealed, alive, in a tomb. The plot is a characteristic one, derived from a story by Camille Du Lode after one by the French Egyptologist, Auguste M arriette Bey. Egypt and Ethiopa are at war and Aida, the daughter of Ethiopa’s king, Amonasro, is held captive by Egypt. While in the Egyptian court, she falls in love with Radames, who has valiantly defended his country and is chosen to lead the charge against the invaders. His vic­ tories win him the king’s daughter, Amneris, who is wild about the boy but sm art enough to realize his true affection for Aida. On one hand, the drama is pure camp, and the final scene serves as an excellent example. Amonasro persuades Aida to cajole a strategic military secret from Radames. He succumbs, is caught in the act and sentenced to death. When he is sealed alive in the tomb, he doesn’t think about his own life; he despairs of never seeing Aida again. Then, all of a sudden, he sees a vision, a phantom, only to realize that his eyes do not lie. Yes, this is Aida, who had a premonition about his death and sneaked in just in time. AMNERIS IS ALSO pure camp, un­ doubtedly the precursor of Bette Davis. She earns Aida’s trust, gets her to talk of her love for Radames and then delights in addressing her as a servant. She can turn warm and icy at will, depending upon the demands of the moment. If the drama, for the most part, leaves one faintly amused, there is still so much of “ Aida” that takes one’s breath away. The key rests with the fusion of the music and the libretto by Antonio Ghislanzoni. In “Aida,” there are very few sudden breaks for the big production numbers — the arias. Instead, there is a natural flow in the m usic and the dram a, with the recitative raised to new heights. This was chiefly Verdi’s doing, as he ruled Ghislan­ zoni with an iron baton. Then, there is the Egyptian flavor of the music. One believes in this music. It does not sound like an exotic contrivance, as did so much music and dance of the period. “EXOTIC” AND “GRAND” both apply Radames (Ermanno Mauro), Ramphis (Richard Gill) and priestesses in ‘Aida’ to the spectacle; perhaps that was Verdi’s greatest gift. He loved spectacle and knew how to use it. Rumor still has it that Alda was written for the opening of the Suez Canal Historians have proved the rumor false. The canal had been open for several months when Verdi received Du L ode s synopsis in the spring of 1870. Another rum or has it that “ Aida” was written for the inauguration of the Cairo Opera House, when the opera house had opened with “ Rigoletto” two weeks before the opening of the canal. The rumors, if false, are still understandable. Great a r­ tists always breed great legends. The HGO likewise has a knack for spec­ tacle . M ario C ristin i designed the monumental sets and Neil P eter Jampolis the properties The recreate the grandeur of the Egyptian monarchies. A boldly out­ lined, yet delicately carved frontispiece of Egyptian friezes heralds each act Gilbert Hemsley’s lighting design and Suzanne Mess costumes are the perfect com­ plements. And the use of the chorus — so many people on one stage, but never cluttered — is handled with ease. Director Jack O Brien deserves much praise for evoking the grandeur of an age, as much that of the 19th century opera world as of ancient Egypt, and for not overplaying his hand With so much beauty before us our senses demand an equal share from the principals and in the HGO production we are abysmally shortchanged. SETA DEL GRANDE, m aking her American debut as Aida, rushes through the text One gets tired just listening to her Furtherm ore, her voice is too deep to fully satisfy as a contralto. Del Grande's Aida never has a chance a g a in s t Joy D a v id so n ’s A m n eris. Radames obviously is suffering from Egyptian fever when he picks Aida David­ son’s mezzo is clear and strong, though in­ secure on the high notes She also knows how to move on stage, Erm anno Mauro (Radames) doesn’t. For the most part, he plants himself fir ly in one spot and concentrates on I music. But Radames is not a conc* tenor. He is a warrior, a man who shot pride him self on the physical. Wh Mauro does move, he moves stiffly — su a contrast to his expansive voice Richa Gill (Ramphis) has a commanding ba and stage presence, but William Just (Amonasro) could scarcely be heard times. John De Main capably conducted ti orchestra, in spite of an irritating trump section that periodically insisted on turn! i nt o f l a t s . Da n i e l Lewi s h a r p s choreography even fell below the usu mediocrity of opera divertissements. Ai 5 * * ? , certainly not least, is the matt. of HGG s programs. Instead of devotir space to such foppery as “ Exotic Europf J ? " * Ways to Wing It There Direct fro! IAH, Nonstop,” the m ajor arias could I listed. Thorough opera program s are necessity, not a luxury, for most in a audience, and HGO’s Perform ing An magazine usually discusses everything ui der the sun except the work. S I M O H E ’ S MID-WINTER SALE 20-50% OFF MEN'S & W OMEN'S SWEATERS DESIGNER ORIGINALS SILKS A N D SPORTSWEAR Rio Gr an de At Ninth 4 7 4 - 7 7 1 1 Austin, TX * I W W JOO Atadim 443-1591 1 Dancing all w aak in th* middle ballroom w ith Tm—day • Jan. 24 TMM! TRIAY WITH STURM VAUGHN thursday • Jan. 24 UAM. BAY A TNI COM AI Wednesday - Jan. 23 MOTHS* O f N A N tdday - Jan. 27 commy m u sic iiv m w Saturday - Jan. 31 JOHNNY OU A nu ROCKET SS'S k I { Our only world B y C A R O L Y N B U R N S “ Our Only World,” on display at St. E dw ard’s U niversity’s Moody Hall Atrium G allery through Feb. 4, is an expressive, technically superb show of photographs documenting the en­ vironmental crisis. The exhibit, a joint project of the Environmental P rotec­ tion Agency and the Smithsonian Institution, portrays the nature and scope of Am erica s environmental crisis and the efforts being made to cope with it. The photographers ex­ cellent execution m akes real to the view er how vital the preservation of the environment is to each of us. These photographs are poignant, ironic and often deeply disturbing. One shows a sign at a lake reading “ No swimming, no fishing, no skindiving,” while a sailboat glides peacefully in the background. Another is a portrait of a retired railroad worker in Bir­ mingham, Ala., who suffers from em physem a and must carry with him everyw here a supply of pure oxygen. Itr in­ fuses big city “ pollution a lerts” with a startling new reality. The exhibit certainly does not dism iss the environmental problem as hopeless. It also documents some things that are being done to help, such as the restoration of dam aged areas through landfill projects. In many of the photographs the subject m atter is less prom inent than form , color and technique. O rdinary buildings are transformed into striking geom etric forms, and a New York avenue becomes a bird’s-eye view of beautiful bending skyscrapers. But photography-for-photography's-sake is not the ex­ hibit’s m ajor theme. That theme rings out loud and clear: this is, indeed. “ Our Only World.” ■ r n * IT V ' --rn** Trouble on the Ohio River BUI Strode Oil slick surrounds Statue of Liberty in New York Harbor. Chaster Higgins Jr. Northern California Coast Thomas Sarwatt Above; Child of the streets in B i r m i n g h a m , Al a. ; left, Martin Pena area of Puerto Rico Above; Central Expressway left, and Dallas skyline; d i s c a r d e d b u r n i n g in autom obile batteries Houston Bob W. Smith 18 music Burrito Brothers fly at Armadillo By DAVID CHAPIN Elem ents of the old and new were pre­ sent in both the band and the auditorium Friday night when the Flying Burrito Brothers played Armadillo World Head­ quarters. Shortly before the Burritos (am e onstage the Armadillo s emcee observed generally, "Since 1971 we’ve gone through a lot of changes and they have too. but w e're all still here ” W hich is good for all concerned B esides the gradual progression of facelifts the Armadillo’s internal struc­ ture has gone through since 1971, a great number of the changes in the hall have oc­ curred since new m anagement took over last year. At that time AWH was wallow­ ing in a multitude of overhead costs ac­ cumulated from booking a great many big- name acts and keeping admission prices down th at Now the club is functioning somewhat more stably, the changes are most apparent in prices there As recently as a year or two ago. one would not have had to pay 14 SO to see the Flying Burrito Brothers, or |3 for a pitcher of beer t though Lone Star is still $2 251. Even the tradem ark handstamp, the caricature of an armadillo inscribed within an outline of the state of Texas, has given way to one reading simply "Armadillo World Head­ quarters " B IT THE ATMOSPHERE has remain ed the same and the Burritos parlayed it into a grand evening of the hot country Packin', for which the Dillo gained its national stature as chief promulgator of the progressive country movement. Though one may be tempted to throw in like Buffalo Springfield or the names Grateful Dead, the Burritos were the original driving force behind having the ti­ tle ‘ progressive’* added to traditional country and western music and were founded as such by a young man from Tennessee, Gram Parsons Major personnel changes began to occur after Parsons died on Sept 19, 1973, while rehearsing in the d ese rt outside Los Angeles (A week later his body was hi­ jacked and burned at the Joshua Tree National Monument by long-time friend road m an ag e r P h il K aufm an.) and Michael Clarke and Chris Hillman, both original Byrds, left, with Hillman joining Stephen Stills and M anassas Bernie Leadon left to take up with the Eagles, and the band has since gone through a raft of musicians THE ONLY ORIGINAL Burrito with the band Friday was steel guitarist Sneaky Pete Kleinow, whose performance ex­ hibited why his is the top name among pedal steel players Throughout the night he often took the lead riffs with his steel, as finely exemplified on a traditional up­ beat Burrito tune. "Hot Burrito No. 2,’* and on the ballad "Colorado," written by a one-tim e m em ber of the band, Rick Roberts. Otherwise, his breaks lent strength to every number. Two other musicians were no strangers^ to the band, however, and turned in equal­ ly impressive performances. Bassist Skip Batten, who played in the later version of the Byrds ‘and most recently with the new Riders of the Purple Sage, claimed after the show that he had always wanted to play with the Burrito B ro th ers" Fiddler Gib Gilbeau. who has been with the band off and on since before Parsons’ death, made his presence definitely felt as he lived up to his Cajun name on two Doug tunes, "D iggy Liggy” and Kershaw Louisiana Man " Gib also took the lead on fiddle for “Already Gone," a number written by lead guitarist Rob Strandland for the Eagles, giving the song a distinct but just-as-tasty flavor as the California rockers AS THE BURRITOS progressed through their two-hour set, Kleinow and Gilbeau alternately took the fore, with the rest of the band laying down tight rhythm back­ ing The big names were missing but the musicianship was not. After an opening, fast-paced instrumen­ tal on which Strandland provided some good country picking, the band moved through a range of songs including Merle H aggards "White Line F e v e r " which a p p e a re d on th e “ F ly in g B u rrito Brothers album; a "Scream in’. Lone- Star-Beer-dnnkin' ” song o i M "Rollin’ in my Sweet Baby's A rm s," and a couple of well-known truck driving songs: ‘Truck Drivin Man" and "Six Davit an I ho —TSP Photo by ira Montgomery Burrito Brother Gib Gilbeau Road," on which Sneaky P ete wailed his best steel lead of the night. Then on the Burritos* first encore, “Orange Blossom Special," Kleinow and Gilbeau shone together. Gilbeau lead in with the song s unmistakable start, sizzl­ ing as fast as Kershaw or Charley Daniels, and the two traded off breaks until ending in a furious crescendo of dual steel and fid­ dle leads. THE BAND CAME BACK for another encore performance, a trio of songs begin­ ning with a well-arranged rendition of Buck Owens* “She Thinks I SUH Care " following with "Big Bayou," a number the band had converted into a radio commer- r i a l n - i - n i n e i n t r t i f U k A n d « « . probably does as good as anybody, ‘Faded Love.’ ” At one point in the show, bassist Batten stepped up to the microphone and an­ nounced, " I t’s not very often that we or anybody else get to hear Sneaky Pete sing a song This was written a long time ago in Nashville and P ete’s gonna sing it. I f s called “What About You?’ " Considering the Armadillo’s shaky monetary situa­ tion and the oft-traveled nature of the Burrito Brothers, the song seemed most appropriate for performing this night, es­ pecially by the Burritos* sole remaining original member. And making the title applicable, it s good to see both are still carrying on a well-set tradition. d is c o t h e q u e 3500 Guadalupe • 453 * 9831 OMN DAILY 4JO m l TIL 2 UNESCORTED LADIES Seated at the Bar 50d Highballs/75d Shake Drinks $1.00 Ice Cream Drinks Thursday LADIES CONTEST loin A f r e e h a i r pes(on av COAOI 4 , S atu rday S u n d a y ^ ‘B urqers&‘B eer 6^ 3 0 t i l 8 ^ 3 0 / a U y° u c« h \ EAT;!’ DRINK V j t o l i m i t y a * * $ 2 .5 * G a lt C u r s e r s ‘ B e e r 6-3o Ll 5 ;3 o MR. SEX HAPPY HOUR Mon. - Ft*. 5-7:30 p.m. Doubles for the Price of Singles JJlonday rv; PINI*** C xm Jfo& t rr»* *«•. *50CASM p*t*e - . V ; T uesday Y lft& e x fty SEXIEST fig u re Contest C o u p ler MWE onrtsT "soCASH PIU2 C bs & i h i t i * $ . «•4 * 11 * f i i I U i i M U m l ) H i lf) Ney and Farrow’s new style By DAVID HIBBS Penny Ney and Liza Farrow sing well together in their unusual duo, unusual because a female duo is a rarity, and un­ usual because the sin g ers c o n tra st markedly with one another. Farrow, lead singer of Starcrost until that group disbanded recently, has a background of jazz and classical music, has studied music formally and sings in a high, sweet voice. Ney, in Austin since 1975. does not read music, has a lower voice, and has concentrated on folk-rock and country music. PLAYING TOGETHER allows the pair to trade influences and play new styles Ney said recently that Farrow has helped her to broaden musically, while Farrow said Ney’s influence in turn has given her “ m ore emotional depth and gut-level in­ terpretations than when I was working in the more precise jazz style.” Ney’s gut­ siness is especially apparent in her solo renditions of Bessie Smith songs The duo draws m aterial from many sources; their show last week at the Blue included Leon Russell’s “ This P arrot THE TWO FIRST MET in a studio doing background vocals Later they appeared on stage painted and in sequins, providing background vocals and stepping to music performed by the local rock band Gypsee Eyes. Ney and Farrow also did a brief Live and Local M asquerade,” Joni Mitchell’s “ Raised on Robbery” with live harmonies in place of Mitchell’s overdubs, “ Desperado,” the country-rock standard, and a number of lesser known songs found on records by Kenny Leggins, Nina Simone and others In addition, Ney and Farrow use a half dozen songs written by themselves (three each), plus unrecorded songs by Austin writers. happy hour s tin t a t the A llian ce Wagonyard last spring as the Fable Heart­ b re a k e r. They became a duo in earnest about two months ago, when Starcrost was abaut to break up “ We were both dissatisfied with what we were doing,” Farrow explained “ I love jazz, but at the same time I love to wail a ballad and sing simple harmonies ” Ney expressed a sim ilar love for country music coupled with a desire for more variety. VARIETY IS ALSO a consideration in how Ney and F a rro w a c co m p an y themselves instrumentally Farrow, an experienced pianist, contributes some nice solo breaks Her piano combines with Ney's acoustic guitar on most songs, while on others only one instrument is used “ We want to get a band together in a few lot of local m onths,” Ney said. “ A musicians have said they were interested in backing us up ” Such a band is indeed something to look forward to. Meanwhile, the duo can be found this Wednesday night at the Blue Parrot, West 15th Street near Lavaca Street, an excellent setting for the music. And anyone planning to be in Corpus Christi for the weekend can see Ney and Farrow there. Free-spirited student films By HENRY TERRELL Nothing is quite as condescending as an awards ceremony. From the Academy Awards to rock music awards, the elements are the same—tuxedos, judges and old people telling the young, “ Keep at it and some day you’ll be just like us.” Friday night’s showing in the Communication Building of films from the fourth annual Student Film Awards in Los Angeles was no exception. But the four award- winning films, one by a University graduate, made the “ fram ing” film — the awards ceremony and interviews — embarassing and funny by contrast. The University’s Frank H. Binney received an award for his documentary “ The Last of the Little Brew eries,” the most traditional and professional looking of the four films, and the best technically. In sharp color with excellent sound, it tells the story of K. Spoetzl, German brewm aster, who emigrated from Bavaria to make beer abroad. His travels took him to Egypt, Canada and eventually California, where the clim ate was well-suited for making beer After the earthquake of 1906, Spoetzl moved to Shiner, where the local Czechs and Germans had built their own brewery although “ they didn’t know how to make beer.” NARRATED BY Edward Taborsky, the local m anager of Shiner, Inc., “ Little Breweries” takes a humorous look at the people of Shiner today as they reminisce about Spoetzl, Prohibition and polkas. Binney’s attitude toward this unusual community is respectful. The film does not come off like a news report but like a pleasant story told by an old Czech gentleman. Binney does not intrude on his subject — the mark of a skilful d o c u m e n ta l. The second category of awards was animation, and “ The Muse,” a study of the creative literary mind at work, adds an energetic, simple work to that genre. Made by Paul Deymeyer, a Belgian studying at California Institute of the Arts, “ The Muse” explores the mind of genius. Each fram e is a free-hand line drawing with scribbled color, which gives the character, even when stationary, a certain livliness. The writer is alternately in harmony with and at odds with his own creative powers His in­ sp iratio n s com e jum bled and confused, and the frustrations of the writer are sometimes so great he scream s in anger. When the ideas arrive he writes feverishly, completing his masterpiece, which turns out to be nothing more than a long roll of toilet paper. THE SECOND FILM ends Cut to a spokesman from American Telephone and Telegraph Company. "You may wonder,” he says, “ why our company supports these young filmmakers. Well, this is just our way of saying we hear you.’ ” Unsettling. The award for experimental achievement was next, won by “ TRANSCENdance,” by Philip W.Pura of Boston University, a film that analyzes, breaks down and ex­ pands a single dance leap. Pura said he began with “dream s and snatches of dream s," and he uses film to ex­ press patterns and ideas that are not necessarily com­ plete. “ TRANSCENdance” begins with a dancer rising, run­ ning and leaping. Pura then inserts a series of optical variations on a theme, while a guitar in background does the same P u ra’s technical work keeps the film hypnotic and flowing “ Sixteen Down,” by Carol Dysinger, won the award for dram atic achievement and is the most involving of the four films It is the story of a girl from a broken home on her 16th birthday. Never m elodramatic, the film is carefully and realistically understated, with characters whose squabbles and conflicts strike very close to the heart. For Clare, the birthday girl, there is nothing magic about being 16 Her birthday is an em barrassm ent; she gets no respect or love, just worn-out traditions. DYSINGER, FROM New York U niversity, said, “There are a million reasons why I made this movie. In doing a film you come to understand how your way of communicating affects people.” Although obviously plagued by budget problems, “ Sixteen Down” shows Dysinger to be a fresh, skillful director. “The important thing,” Dysinger said, “ is to make a film look exactly the way I want it to look.” A sad fact made apparent by the replay of the Student Film Awards ceremony and the showing of the films themselves is that few people will ever see these fine works And if each filmmaker goes the studio route, where distribution is better assured, each talent may well be buried in a system where films are usually committee efforts. Before these filmmakers again get to the point where they can make films “ look the way they want them to look,” many long, frustrating years lie ahead. v * *s* ^ a r n / n o t a t e LUNCHEON BUFFET Soup, Salad, and Sandwich l l A .M .-2 P.M. DINNER 7 P .M .- ll P M. "The Beet Prime Rib in A u stin ...” LADIE S’ APPRECIATION NIGHTS ARE M O N D A Y AND T U ESD A Y 7 2 WITH HALF-PRICE DRINKS FOR ALL UNESCORTED LADIES. HMH tilh i ...a t th * C ab o ts th * whet* world to b*outMvll In the Heart af Downtown Austin, Texas — 6th and (razes 474-2169 20 TNI Juice factory 45th A Av*. A 7 day* a weak 454-0349 9 AM -9 PM NATURAL FOODS GENTLE FOOD FOR BEAUTIFUL PEOPLE & BOOK STORE OPEN 24-HRS. VA*, Bt.A*' " ★ Mt-loflgtfi Movie SKM Admission for Students Midnight-4 AM ★ Largest 25* Movie Arcade in Austin Ar MI Selection leeks - Megs Sex leys - IMM Rims 213 last Atli 47S-0243 f i l m Author Wambaugh not amused ‘Choirboys’ out of tune By RORY ALTER Probably the most telling feature of the current police film ‘ The Choirboys” can be found in the movie’s adver­ tisements: “contains stuff you won t see on TV.” This en­ ticing blurb both explains the movie’s greatest assets and betrays its greatest liabilities. Television’s “ Dragnet” or “ Adam-12” leave one with the distinct feeling that something is amiss — that not all police officers behave in the manner portrayed on those series The relationship between television and reality is extremely tenuous; other media that are less inhibited usually do a better job of being ‘‘real ” One author who has attempted to three-dimensionalize “ the cop” is Joseph Wambaugh. a former Los Angeles Police Department officer, whose books include “The New Centurions.” “The Blue Night” and “The Choir­ boys.” all of which have held high positions on best-seller lists THE “CHOIRBOYS” are a group of police officers who relieve the intense pressures of their jobs with late-night revelries that usually include women and gambling, and always include plenty of booze. If illegal activities ensue, certainly no one is going to call the cops This, of course, is what the film has going for it — scenes featuring human officers that the television viewer may be unac­ customed to. But the movie's creators have gone way overboard in their strivings toward reality. One can imagine director Robert Aldrich (who gained fame directing “macho” films like “The Dirty Dozen” and “The Longest Yard” ) banging his fist on the desk and shouting, “ What can’t be shown on the tube0 Then that's what I want in my film, dammit!” An “ R ” rating was inevitable, Aldrich seems to have thought, so why not stretch it to its limits by presenting the rowdiest behavior and the foulest language im­ aginable. UNFORTUNATELY, THIS approach prevents “The Choirboys” from being a very likeable film. In its headlong rush away from television content, the film has become simply a work of excesses. The police are too vulgar and boisterous , the captain is too narrow-minded; the rough cop is too sadistic. The movie is, ultimately, unbelievable. Thus, the purpose of Wambaugh’s book is defeated. » Aldrich and scenarist Christopher Knopf have excised most of the book's dramatic scenes, which examine the pressures and tense atmosphere of police life, in favor of what is, finally, comedy material. For example, in one scene a sadistic cop uses reverse psychology on a poten­ tial suicide, urging a woman to jump from a building. He persuades her, and she falls to her death — but the police react with comic expressions, playing the moment for laughs. A potentially realistic, and horrifying, scene is ruined AT ANY RATE, for those who simply like comedies, the film does offer some humorous goings-on (such as the antics at “choir practices” ) and droll characterizations (such as Burt Young’s rollicking vice squad sergeant.) The trouble is that there is little to bind these comic segments, so the script s unevenness and lack of continui­ ty detract from the comic aspect of the movie, too. Wambaugh is not amused by what has been done to his novel. He has initiated a lawsuit and wants to disassociate himself from the whole production. He is most displeased with the way the movie finale diverges from the book’s ending Aldrich opted for a “happy ending,” which emphasizes “The Choirboys” discordant note. The film could have been a funny and realistic look at policemen and their lives after hours. It is, instead, a mediocre police film, no better than its more cautious television counterparts. ‘Goodbye Girl’: simple fun By BILL EDWARDS The long lines at the theater aren’t for the popcorn: the word is out that a good, light-hearted film is in town From none other than Neil Simon, the genius playwright of so many creditable situation comedies, comes “The Goodbye Girl,” exactly what the doctor ordered for a dull winter evening in a long time. QUINN CUMMINGS PLAYS the cute, loving little pain- in-the-appendix who is Paula’s daughter. Quite grown up for her age, she seems to accept without batting an eye her mother’s involvements under their roof. Though somewhat unbelievable, Cummings comes off as a fairly typical Manhattan pre adolescent. Everything in this film is simple and fun. Marsha Mason < Mrs. Neil Simon) is absolutely flawless as Paula, an out-of-work chorus girl with a 10-year old daughter, who is faced with giving up her New York apartment when her former lover sublets it to a Chicago actor (Richard Dreyfuss). DREYFUSS IS BETTER than ever as Elliot Garfield, the crazy off-off-Broadway showman from Chicago who plays his guitar at 3 a m . meditates and chants at 6 a m and takes delicate care of his pudgy body, which he ironically describes as his temple.” As you must figure. Elliot begins sharing the West Side flat with Paula and her daughter From there the tearful comedy weaves its perfectly logical plot One can an­ ticipate the final scene almost before the first has faded out. but the pure Simon dialogue comes through and keeps us loving the characters whether we believe them or not. The story detours long enough for Elliot to begin rehearsals for Shakespeare’s “ Richard III,” which he has come to the Big Apple fully prepared to do But when the director (Paul Benedict) lets him know that be wants a homosexual interpretation of King Richard. Dreyfuss temporarily steals the movie away from Mason and gives us a great, fresh comedy style. His monung-after hangover, following the disastrous opening of the play makes Dreyfuss one of the most memorable movie actors Simon has always been at his best when writing one- liners. “The Goodbye Girl’ is no exception. Simon’s snap­ py dialogue is almost rhythmical. Visions of Simon’s Oscar and P elix rattle through one s brain as Mason and Dreyfuss take sides and come out fighting Within all this irritating warmth is Simon's best writing to date. Written expressly as a film for Mason and Dreyfuss, “ The Goodbye Girl” is so bright and good that one longs for another scene after Mason’s quivering voice chants “ goodbye.” TO SAY MASON IS GOOD is an understatement; she is exceptional As in Cinderella Liberty.” her soft features and the innocence of her incriminating circumstances leave you teary-eyed ami laughing. Herbert Ross directed this beaming, upbeat film at Warner Brothers when he and Arthur Laurents weren't busy over at 20th Century Fox with “The Turning Point.” How Ross had time in one year to direct two such outstan­ ding films baffles even the most serious movie buffs He has given Simon s screenplay just what it needed to make the dialogue pull at our heartstrings. The Goodbye Girl' is an appealing charmer Cone on — take your grandma; she may blush at Quinn Cum­ mings four-letter language, but she will be captivated by the kid s smile And don’t, nile out Dreyfuss for an Oscar either; my bet is his name is on the winner s list already. Texas Theatre Changing the fare By RUSSELL SMITH Over the last two years the venerable Texas Theatre on the Drag provided entertainment mostly for Austin’s soft­ core pornography aficionados, with only occasional showings of films that were not X-rated. The porno films at the Texas may have warmed the hearts of the theater’s patrons, but the theater’s selection of films and its promotion gimmicks, (a hot dog-eating contest preceded one showing of “ Linda Lovelace For President’’), also earned a “ Bum Steer’’ award from Texas Monthly and a goodly amount of ill-will from local feminists and others who found the movies and adver­ tising offensive. All of that has changed now, for a while at least. SHORTLY BEFORE CHRISTMAS the titles advertised on the old marquee began to show a radical change in the Texas Theatre’s programming. Old porno standards such as “ Anita. Swedish Nymphet,” “ The Joy of Letting Go” and “ Swinging Stewardesses” have been supplanted by Woody Allen double features and second or third-run stu­ dent favorites such as “ The Man Who Fell to Earth.” Earl Podolnick, president of the Trans-Texas theater chain, of which the Texas is a member, was unavailable for comment on the change, but Ann Anderson, Podolnick s longtime personal secretary, offered her opinions on the subject: “ Well, the Texas has been operated by Trans-Texas Theaters since 1952, and certain changes in the approach of a theater just naturally happen’ from time to time. Sometimes it’ll have to do with the availability of good films; we just sometimes have to settle for what we can get because what we want isn t available.” ANDERSON SAID THAT the change may have been related to a shortage of the “ right kind” of X-rated movies. Pat Edwards, who manages the Texas, consulted with Podolnick in the decision to change the format. “ He just called me up one day and asked me what I ’d think about making a change,” Edwards said. “ Yes, it could have had something to do with the kind of X-fiims available. We really do try to avoid showing what you’d call ‘hard-core’ movies here. There was one we rejected called ’Snuff.’ It was disgusting, very derogatory toward women and had a lot of things in it that were really perv e rte d Most of the films we get here follow pretty standard patterns They’ll usually have at least one orgy scene, maybe a scene between two women, but mostly the sex is between men and women And it s not really graphic like in some of the true hard-core movies.” THE X-RATED FILMS shown at the Texas almost always conformed to the well-known Hefneroid sen­ sibilities that define soft-core pornography: sexual en­ counters depicted were mainly heterosexual, with oc casional detours into female homosexuality, and with gay male sex hardly ever portrayed Women in the films were usually wives who experienced exotic sexual awakenings or had occupations that popular mythology tends to associate with arrant promiscuity, such as stewardesses or cheerleaders. Edwards vigorously defended both the artistic quality of the X-rated films that have played at the Texas and the social responsibility of most of the theater’s patrons. “ Some of those movies were really good by any stan­ dards. I believe the first X-rated movie (we showed) was ‘Last Tango In Paris,’ and almost all of them have been well-photographed and had surprisingly good acting.” EDWARDS SAID THE change to non-X-rated second- run movies is not necessarily a permanent change. He said that the Texas may again show X-rated films if they become more readily available. The theater may return to the porno films also if the present format proves un­ profitable. Recalling the sort of people who used to pay to see X- rated films at the Texas, Edwards said that they “ weren’t really weirdos like some of the really cheap places get. They obviously had some money to spend, were well-dressed, and came in couples. We got a lot of fraternity guys too They came in packs!” Were the patrons mostly students? “ No,” interjected concession vender Curtis Johnson, “ it was their mamas and daddies.” Lou Grant Newspaper drama By TOM SWINNEA Just as policemen seldom crash patrol cars in real life, television has rarely portrayed journalists in a true light. “ Lou Grant” is an exception. Film journalists of the past have tended to be larger than life: Bogart, Redford and Hoffman have all played crusading reporters. Even Raymond “ Perry Mason” Ironsides ’ Burr got into the reporting act with an inept reporting show last season that had him jetting to meetings in his private plane and shuttling to across-town meetings in his chauffeured car. With “ Lou Grant,” the reporters are human, with human frailties and feelings After getting the boot from new owners at “ The Mary Tyler Moore Show,” (Ed Asner) Grant decides to return to print journalism, his first love. He lands a city editor job with an ailing Los Angeles daily, and the plots have thus far been as varied as a daily newspaper UNLIKE SOME SHOWS, “ Lou Grant” does not topple presidents or solve unsolveable mysteries with every issue of the paper. The premier show, rerun during the Christmas holidays, was a good example. When a police reporter becomes too protective of his sources. Grant has to find a way to keep an otherwise good reporter yet still get a story about statutory rapes committed by policemen He shows the police reporter where he has gone wrong and saves a career from alcoholism He also gets the story. No crown prince was assassinated, and no million- dollar scandal was uncovered. A working person had an ethical problem, and Grant dealt with him in a humane, compassionate way Hie show told how people that write the news are frequently as normal as the next guy, with the same problems that other people experience. Asner gets the reporting help he needs from Linda Kelsey (B illie ) and Robert Walden (Rossi). Other characters are publisher Nancy Marchand (M rs. Pyncbon), managing editor Mason Adams (M r. Hume), assistant managing editor Jack Barmen (Donovan) and photographer Daryl Anderson (affectionately known as Animal). ONE OF THE SHOW’S weak spots is Rossi. Void of tact and short on class, anyone with as much gall as he is ascribed would be frozen out of a regular news conference in a few minutes. When a fully loaded jumbo jet is about to belly land at Los Angeles International Airport, Rossi is busy an­ tagonistically needling an airline spokesman This is where viewers enter the world of television, because any real reporter might fire off one cheap shot, but would never have the chance to do it again If the scriptwriters are interested in accuracy, they need to sit in with some working journalists to correct this mistake. Even Dan Rather could not get away with sarcastic questions at a Nixon press conference. After an exchange between the two during the Watergate era, CBS was inundated with letters doubting Rather* objectivity. The backlash caused Rather to be taken off the White House beat, a reporting plum for any journalist. Rossi is still in the bush leagues compared to Rather, and his superiors would probably deal much more severely with him in a real life situation. ANOTHER PROBLEM is Billie. For a reporter, she gets too involved with her stories to remain objective. When she tries to do a story on Chicano youth gangs and their effect on a boy in the neighborhood they run, she gets too involved to write a good piece. A good journalist would put feelings aside when writing a story and save comment for commentaries. Still, Lou comes across as the quintessence of a city editor The first draft of a story never satisfies him, and the fifth draft is just barely good enough to get in the paper When Rossi gets wit of line (which is often;, Lou is there to straighten him out. Grant comes back to the of­ fice when big news breaks and stays until the story is in. Perhaps he sees the importance the newspaper has for some people. No matter how good the news is today, the paper will line the birdcage tomorrow, t'i.v* i* ’ I*-- i *i -J** aw?*.:. v /i* re* rn rn- 21 O T T O I T J C l I J J t v I L u l SUPER NEWS FOR U.T. ... Old Favorites; New Place. N o n tin* I nivcrsity area Im* iii, own E l R an ch o Mr*- iran food restaurant. I h r m iiic great food you’ ve been enjoy ing for years, a la M a l t M artinez, in now in your own backyard. Sin ce no m any I T students, f a c u l t y , and Nlaff arc already our good friend* arid cuMtomer*, we have Opened a beautiful new location j u n I for you. A ll your old favorite* from the F irst Street E l HanchoN, now at a con ven ien t new place. Favo rite* like our specialty, Mexican Seafood. Hedfish a la M exicans. loNtadas Com pluvia*. Seafood Kneliilada*. W e have the Steak*, too ... ( arrie V*ada, Carne Cuizada Agujan. And our hou*e standard* ... I o*tado* Compuesta*. G uacam ole Fnehilada*. Mexican Pizza. ... Biggest Belt North of tho Border. O u r great new restaurant w o u ldn ’t hr- com plete without a great new bar to m atch. Appropriately, we’ve put iii a liar ilia! * second to none. All the regulars plus the M argarita that made Kl H ancho famous. And for a new kick, give our “ ju m b o H ita " a try. ! t ’« a giant 16H oz M argarita that we think is the bigged belt n orth of the border. W e ’ve got a Happy H o u r 1-8 p.m. daily with plenty of free hor* d’oeuvrea. ... We Make It Easy. Now that you know what we’ve got, listen to o u r co n ­ venient location W e ’re at 72.'» W . 23rd, right acron* from Tri-Tower*, next to The Keg. T h a t’s walking dintance from campus, hut in case you decide to drive, we’ve got *ix floor* of F K E E P A R K I N G in the Tri-Tow er* garage. W e want you to come get acquainted today. W e make ii ea*y and we make it cheap. Ju st bring this coupon in for one dollar o ff on any o f our M exican dinner*. Hasta luego. r — ^ Coupon ix p lro t January 29 $100 OFF On any of our Mmxicon (fin n an any Mon., W ad., T h an ., or Sun. only. Ona par custom#*. , anes Deluxe D in n e r......................... $3.55 C M * mm G um s G oatam al* Salad, l a * ar Cot*aa I Ow iirt Ir w M a d a . t a a n * a nd l h * » f t h oaf fa ts Tarnal*. C W . Num ber I Dinner................... $3.25 G u atem a la Salad, Ta t*. I ac M a d * t o a s t and t h * . Tarnal* st CMS* taw O v a **. I aa ar C otta* awd Ba** * rf Regular D in n er........................$2 .95 Tarnal*, M o n t , C M *. Ta* St C otta* and l a c * fW c M o d * U s e. C M can O v a ** ar f “ ------ " ■ * * “ Combination D in n e r l a t h Ha da, CHS*, to o n * a n d Ska. Tarnal* ar C M * ta n O v t w $ 2 .65 4 7 4 -1 5 5 4 725 WEST 23rd Lunch, Dinnor, and Drink* 7 Doy*-A-Wook ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ J | ' *rJ rs** * *00 8:15 8:25 8:30 8:40 6:45 7:00 7:30 8.00 8:30 _ 2 (E) C B S NEW S 10 © SA N A N TO N IO N ew sm akers (WED.) — © lf) A R C H IE S _ IL LU STR A TED (MON ) 10 CB CAPITAL EYE (TUE.) C lassroom (TH U R ) 4 © R O M P E R R O O M Q 6 D A Y B R E A K (M O N ..WED.,FRI.) R F D (TUE I Agriculture U S A (T H U R ) 8 © LILIAS. YO GA A N D YOU '10 CB C L A S S R O O M (WED..FRI.) 4 ] B S O U £4 O OB c d O 4) O 5)Cl o 3 , 10:30 CE) CIO © © FAMILY FEUD 0 6 C U © KNO CKO UT IQI Cl I LOVE OF LIFE IN-SCH O O L P R O G R A M M IN G (UNTIL 4 00) 11:00 CS © CE) £11 YOUNG AN D THE R E S T L E S S !V 4 ? , n f P Y R A M ID O 6 U © TO SA Y THE LEA ST IRO NSIDE ALL MY C H ILD R EN 11:30 CS O OB 11 S E A R C H FOR TO M O RRO W R Y A N ’S H O P E NEW S 6 © G O N G SH O W (8 (D NEWS 11 G O O D DAY CS O N EW S 8 ti2 AD ELAN TE s£8" 13 OD 10 CB OD G O O D M O R N IN G A M E R IC A 4 © ; 6 12 © T O D A Y $ i i 11 C B S N E W S c r ­ 8 M IST E R R O G E R S SL A M B A N G TH EA TER O S E S A M E ST R EE T $ O i l CAPTAIN K A N G A R O O op cb Co m e d y c a p e r s ( I o IN -SCH O O L P R O G R A M M IN G (UNTIL 4 OO) ( f OD D U S T Y 'S T R E E H O U S E 8:00 C l I B TATTLETALES I Ti © PHIL D O N A H U E SH O W a ) cs . 3 ) 0 I ? © SA N F O R D A N D RO N _ fife ELEC T RIC C O M P A N Y CD LEAVE IT TO B E A V E R I f fi M IKE D O U G L A S 8:30 10:00 I T O $ O B ) 11 PRICE IS RIGHT O T O 8 ( T ID THAT GIRL I i © H O L L Y W O O D S Q U A R E S £3 (18 CB © HAPPY D A Y S O 4 © T i l * © W H EEL OF FO RTU NE Cf O C A R R A S C O L E N D A S (M O N..W ED..FRI.) 8 CD F B I. AFTERNOON 12:00 (2 © T E N A C R E S (3 © A L L MY C H ILD R EN O U GONG SHO W 4 © CARO LYN J A C K SO N SH O W O O I)(8)£10 CD Cif © NEW S 5 0 NOON SH O W Cf © A N D Y GRIFFITH 12:30 S CT) © 8) (U © DAYS OF O U R LIVES (3 )O C R ) AS THE W ORLD T U R N S 8) O IN -SCH O O L P R O G R A M M IN G (UNTIL 4:00) j g CARTOON CAR N IV AL R Y A N ’s hope 1:00 ,2) (3 © IO © © ONE LIFE TO LIVE 6 © ELECTRIC CO M PA N Y 8) © MOVIE "Horizontal Lieutenant” (MON.). "Four Rode Out" (TUE ). "The Great Am erican Pastime" (W ED ), "A Man Called Dagger" (THUR.). "Blondie Br­ ings Up Baby" (FRI.) (13 © EL M A R IA CH I 0 4 © 6 X U © DO CTO RS O S O U G U IDING LIGHT CU © EN SA N ANTO NIO 3 ) J © (J O © © G E N E R A L H O SPIT AL O 4 O 6) (U © ANO TH ER W O RLD O 5 O 3 f ALL IN THE FAMILY CD O IN-SCH O O L P R O G R A M M IN G (UNTIL 4:00) 13 CD LA U S U R P A D O R A I 30 2:00 2:30 (EXC.W ED.) A B C 2X3) © JO © © EDGE OF NIGHT Q U G U N S M O K E i ^ CARTOON C O R N E R O CS) O JI) MATCH G A M E © C83 CO U R TSH IP OF E D D IE ’S FATHER (?) © POPEYE 3:00 3:30 c r ® O © l it t l e r a s c a l s ® © T H R E E ST O O G E S O f f J) BEW ITCHED Q ® G IL L IG A N ^ ISLA N D £8) CD FLINTSTO NES (10 © Afterschool Special (WED.) JD GD CEPILLIN LITTLE R A SC A L S 4:00 (3) O O CD J f © BRADY BU N C H O U MIGHTY M O U SE AND FR IEN D S 4; © G IL L IG A N ’S ISLAN D £ 5 ) Q G O M ER PYLE CR O S E S A M E STR EET CT © M ICKEY M O U SE C LU B CIO) © PARTRIDGE FAMILY (EXC.WED.) 1 ( f t © MA 4:30 GD ® O © BEVER LY H ILLBILLIES £3) © P A R T R ID G E FAMILY O ® © IU G ILL IG A N ’S ISLA N D £4) © MY TH REE S O N S O J f ODD CO U PLE © 6) E M E R G E N C Y O NE U f f i FAMILY AFFAIR J I © RINA 5:00 C T C T © © A BC N EW S © ® MY THREE S O N S 4 ) © H O G A N ’S H E R O E S 0 5 © J f N EW S CS) © E L E C T R IC C O M P A N Y J ) © I LOVE LUCY CU © M ARY TYLER M O O R E (It GD LA V EN G A N ZA CT 0 3 © © J I C B S N EW S GD © ANDY GRIFFITH SHO W 5:30 a O ® U H BC N EW S o S OVER EASYX C 'FR,,) W'ld K,n9dom (FRI ) ® ffi DICK VAN DYKE SH O W JO © A BC N EW S J t G D REPO R TER 41 © K M O L ( N B O San Antonio. Cable Channel © © K E N S (CBS) San Antonio. Cable Channel J U © K O E N (NBC), Temple, Cable Channe 6^ © KTB C (CBS) Austin. Cable Channel 2 (2 © K L R N (Public) Austin-S.A., Cable Channel (8 © K W TX (C B S ' Waco. Cable Channel 5 © K TV T (Ind.) Fort Worth. Cable Channel CT © K SA T (ABC) San Antonio, Cable Channel JO © K t ’V E (ABC) Austin. Cable Channel C T © K T V V (NBC) Austin. Cable Channel 4 © KW E X (Spanish) San Antonio, Cable Channel CU ACTV (Com Cable) Austin. Cable Channel VO ______________ 7,0 p-m m-f j Specializing in H um anities, Final Arts, and Humanl Sciences. V is it O u r N e w L o c a tio n in T a r r y to w n 2116 Guadalupe 477-97251 Now Open Sunday 12-6 p.m. /z off on all food with this ad Offer expires 31, 1978 Open 11 am -8 pm Mon-Thura. I I am -10 pm PH. 4 pm-m idnight Sat I I I I I I I I Vdlcfcit C Mexican Food Restaurant 1207 Rad Rivar I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I AMSTER MUSIC lf you want Recorders, Recorder H u sk, Irish Tin Whistles, Larin Percussion, Balalaikas, Sitars, Chimtas, Cuicas, Hand Drums, Talking Drums, Zali Drums, Os! Drums, Krimhoms, Kortholts, Bagpipes, Tables, etc., etc., etc., you have to com# to us. 1624 Lavaca St. 478-7331 monday television listings (2) CSJ O O CS) O (6) O OE) 9 3 Cit © (J* © NEWS [4 ) 0 0 NBC NEWS CS) O MACNEIL LEHRER REPORT GI) © b e w itc h e d 6:00 6:30 (J) (DQ) MATCH GAME C S )© BEWITCHED O 12 CANDID CAMERA GOODNEWS Q (TD HOLLYWOOD SQUARES (5) 0 9 0 ) © EYES OF TEXAS © C O ) CO) OD ADAM 12 G D O THIS WEEK 9® CD EL CHAPULIN COLORADO the o cca sio n of 7:00 C2) G3) © 9 3 © © ROOTS: ONE YEAR LATER The anniversary program w ill in c lu d e H a le y ’s triu m p h a n t return to the villa ge of J u ffu re , and a p ilg rim a g e by Louis G o ss e tt and LeVar B u rton to the unm arked grave w h e re both Kunta and F id d le r are b elieved to be b urie d . (60 m in.) O (4) O CO) 9 2 © LITTLE HOUSE ON THE PRAIRIE th e ir w e d d in g a n n ive rsary, On C aroline Ingalls re ca lls the circ u m s ta n c e s o f her m eeting C harles, th e ir aw kw ard c o u rts h ip and the o b sta cle s th e y overcam e to g et m arrie d. (60 m in.) © Cf) Q 9t) YO U ’RE A GOOD SPORT, CHARLIE BROWN C harlie B row n p u ts away his b aseball m itt and fo o tb a ll h e lm e t w hen he is ta lked into e n te rin g a ch arity m oto rcro ss--a m o to rc y c le race over a rough o bsta cle co u rse . CS) © CONSUM ER SURVIVAL KIT (CAPTIONED) "Cars, Feet and Life In su ra n ce " T his program loo ks at foot a ilm e n ts co m m on to fle d g lin g a d u lt a th le te s. It also d e b u n k s m ile ag e m yths o f the 1978 new cars and appraises ca m p us life in su ra n ce . [9} GD GUNSM OKE 93) GD MANANA SERA OTRO DIA 7:30 CS) Q TREASURES OF TU TA N K H A M U N F ifty-five years ago a rc h e o lo g is ts d is c o v e re d the 3.000 year- old to m b o f K ing Tut, fille d w ith va luable o b je c ts . This p rogram lo o ks at the p re s e n t e x h ib it c u rre n tly to u r­ ing the U nite d S tates, the d is c o v e ry o f the tom b and at the life o f King T utankham un h im se lf. 93 © E S T A NOCHE LUCIA 8:00 (2) GI) GD 90 CB f f i THE PRO BOWL ABC S p orts w ill p rovide live coverage of th is gam e from Tam pa Bay fe a tu rin g A ll-P ro p la ye rs from the NFC and AFC. © CID © Cl) 92 © THE BIG EVENT "The Dark S e cret Of H arvest H om e" Stars: B e tte Davis, David A ckro yd , (Pf th e ir I. of a Joanna M ile s. A su sp e n se dram a w hich c h ro n ic le s the events th at b ese t a N Y. co m m e rcia l a rtis t w hen he and his fa m ily m ove to a N ew England villa g e th ey tw o -p art travels. visited d u rin g episode; 2 hrs.) © d ) O 9D t h e DEFECTION OF SIMAS KUDIRKA Alan A rkin sta rs in the sto ry o f a L ith u a n ia n seam an who m ade a d a rin g , but a b o rtive , a tte m p t fo r fre e d o m by leaping from a R ussian sh ip to the deck o f an Am erican C oast Guard c u tte r in 1970 (2 hrs.) GI) © IN PURSUIT OF LIBERTY "The T ro u ble That Truth M ake s” illu s tra te s som e o f the p ro b le m s faced in so cie ty by fre e d o m of th o u g h t. (60 m in.) (J) © MY THREE SONS 93 © SUPER ESTELAR M USICAL § © BEVERLY HILLBILLIES 9 3 © CORAZON SALVAJE 8:30 9:00 8) © INNER VISIONS-BEAH RICHARDS A ctre ss and p la yw rig h t Beah R ichards g ives an in te rp re ta tio n of m aterials from her book, "A Black W om an S peaks And O ther P o em s," and also d is c u s s e s the w o m e n 's m ovem ent. 8 © MOVIE "A Song Is B o rn ” 1948 Danny Kaye, Virginia M ayo. G roup of p ro fe s s o rs c o m p ilin g a history of m usic b ecom e invo lved w ith a n ig h tc lu b singer w ho is h id in g from D A 's o ffic e . (2 h rs ., 15 m in .) 9 2 © PACTO DE AMOR 9:30 GI) © DANCE FOR CAMERA "G e o rg e 's H o u se " A suite of d an ces ch o re o g ra p h e d and dan ced by Dan W agoner w ith seven w om en d a n ce rs was sh o t on location at a 200 year-old fa rm h o u se in N ew H am p ­ shire. 10:00 © C 4 ) © G 5 © 6 © 9 © 9 1 9 2 © NEWS I 8; © D IC K CAVETT SHOW (13 © VARIEDADES DE M EDIANOCHE 10:30 © 4) © 6 92 © THE TO N IG H T SHOW G uest host: David B re n n e r. G u e sts: Lou Raw ls, Pete H am ill. (90 m in.) © (5) o 9D CBS LATE MOVIE ** "Case Of The B altim ore G irls " Stars: L o m e G re e n e , Kim H u n te r. A w ealthy b u sin e ssm a n h ire s an a tto rn e y to d e fe n d him aga in st a m u rd e r ch a rg e , w hen the young woman he m et th ro u g h a c o m p u te r d a tin g se rvice is found dead a fte r th e ir date. (8 © ABC CAPTIONED NEWS ( 2 ) C D © 9 0 © © N E W S GD © SOCCER MADE IN GERM ANY 11:00 © KMOL (N B O San Antonio, Cable Channel (T£ © KTVT (Ind .) F o rt Worth, Cable Channel CD © K E N S (CBS) San Antonio, Cable Channel (TD © KSAT (A BC ) San Antonio, Cable Channel (I® © K C E N (N B O , Tem ple, Cable C h a n n e l) O K T B C (C BS) Austin, Cable C h a n n e l GD 0 0 KUVE (A B O Austin, Cable Channel CD © KTVV (N B O Austin, Cable Channel ( 4 ) © K L E N (P u blic) Austin-S.A., Cable Channel 8) © KW EX (Spanish) San Antonio, Cable Channel 9 3 © KWTX (C BS) W aco, Cable Channel GD ACTV (Com Cable) Austin, Cable Channel D (1® KMFA*fm 11:00 THE MIDDAY PROGRAM LI82T, Grand Chromatic Gallop (3) MAHLER, Symphony No. 7 (79) 4 VIVALDI, Oboe Concerto in a (10) BEETHOVEN, Sonata No. 7 in C for Violin and Piano (18) 1:00 THE AFTERNOON PROGRAM RAVEL, “ Ma Mere I'Oye'* (29) MOZART, Serenade No. 4 in D, K.203 and March in D, K.237 (50) LAR880N, Pastoral Suite and "Liten" March (14) MUSSORGSKY, “ Pictures at an Exhibition" (26) BACH, “The Art of Fugue” (23) Piano Music of TCHAIKOVSKY (49) VILLA-LOBOS, Bachianas Brasiieiras Nos 6 for Flute and Bas­ soon and 9 for String Orchestra (18) “ Overtures to Forgotten Operas" 5:00 0IVERTI8SEMENT 7:00 MONDAY CONCERT Paris Conservatory Orchestra BIZET, “Carmen": Suite (9) FAURE, 'Pelleas et Melisande": Incidental Music (15) FAURE, Ballade tor Piano and Orchestra (14) IBERT, “ Divertisaemenr (15) DELIBE8, “ La Source": Excerpts (22) POULENC, Concerto in d for 2 Pianos and Orchestra (19) SATIE, “ Parade" (16) •:00 LEONARD MASTERS PRESENTS “Shakespeare in Music" — Part 9 KUT*fm 5:00 EKLEKTIKOS with John AMU PERGOLESI, Sonata No. 4 in G 6:30 News WIENIAW8KI, Concerto No. 2 in d, Op 22 PROKOFIEV, Sonata in D, Op. 94 SCHUMANN, 5 Poems of May Stuart, Op 135 WOLF, 6 Songs KHACHATURIAN, “ Masquerade” Suite • * 0 Newt MILHAUD, Second Concerto tor 2 Pianos and Percussion; Selections from “ Les Choephores” VIVALDI, Concerto in A 11:00 READING ALOUD with BUI Camass The Taies of E.T.A. Hoffmann. Episode 51. 1 1 :* RAUL HARVEY NEWS 11:45 TRANSATLANTIC PROFILE 1 2 *0 HORtZONTtS con John Wheat l> 0 O R T K )tll I I The Last Shanty men 3:00 CONVERSATIONS AT CHICAGO with Milton Rosenberg Creativity and Problem-Finding in Art. 3:30 NEWS 3:35 TEXAS TIMES: A Magazine of the Air Dr Charles White discusses myths and misconceptions about • growing old. 4K>0 OPTIONS IN EDUCATION with Marrow A Blair The Bureaucracy in Education 5 * 0 ALL THINGS CONSIDERED with Sternberg A Edwards • : * THE SPIDER’S WEB "Charlotte’s Web” by E B. White, episode 6 7 * 0 VINTAGE RADIO Gunsmoxe: Lynching Man 7 * 0 NEWS 7:35 THE INQUIRING MINO wMh Qtynto Crawford Smith 8 * 0 JAZZ IN AUSTIN wMh Fred Bourque 8 * 6 News 1 1*0 SOUL ON FM with John K. Dee Ja n u a ry 23, 1978 11:15 (9 © MOVIE **W "C h arlie Chan At The O lym p ics" 1937 W arner O land, Keye Luke D etective Chan solves a m urde r that a lm ost d is ru p ts the O lym p ics (90 m in.) M 11:30 (2) (3 ) © ® POLICE STORY "To Steal A M illio n " A police se rg e a n t is yo un g, a m b itio u s and im p a tie n t fo r a tra n sfe r o ut of the h ote l b u rg la ry d ivisio n . (10 © A D A M 12 [13 © 2 4 HORAS 12:00 © (4 © 6 ) 9 2 © TOMORROW H ost Tom S nyder. Guest: Edith B o u vie r Beale, co u sin of Ja cq u e lin e O nassis. (60 m in.) 10 © E M E R G E N C Y ONE [3 © PTL PROGRAM (9 © N E W S 12:30 12:40 12:45 1:00 ( 4 ) © NEWS © (6 ] NEWSWATCH PRESENTS NETWORKS AND STATIONS RESERVE THE RIGHT TO MAKE CHANGES TV COMPULOG SERVICES, INC. STAINED GLASS CLASSES A ND WORKSHOP Afternoon And Evening Classes Begin February 1st N E W LOCATION AND N E W PRICES Basic fiv e week course in stained glass covers, glassr lifting, soldering, the making o f sun ca tthers, window panels and “ T IF F A N Y ” lamp shades. For Information and Reservation call 477-4987 FISHER STUDIOS 1208 W. 4th St. Com plete line o f stained glass and supplies Hear* • Tees.- h i 1-4*0 Set 16*0-4*0 i j f r w n l|fi ii m » wi. i m % W THE BRANDING IRON I Fri. & Sat. 6 p.m. on ... Boof & Boa ch Buffet or 9 Prime Rib & Your Favorite Seafoods* AU YOU CAN EAT •7 .0 * Prim# Rib Boiled Shrimp Friod Shrimp Stuffed Shrimp Stuffed G a b Baked Fish Catfish Alaskan King G a b Oysters Scallops Shrimp Geol# Frog Legs Baked Potatoes Salad Bar Oh rn (let past Oak Hill On Hwy. 71 West 263-2827 CB i i OD NEWS January 24, 1978 3 0 0 5 O 6 0 ( 0 IO 11 GB NSC NEWS O M AC N EIL LEHRER REPORT OD b e w i t c h e d 6:00 6:30 LD HOLLYW OOD SQ UARES J ) BEW ITCHED Q l f IN SEARCH OF 3 5 © NEWS O T T NAM E TH AT TUNE * O M A R Y TYLER MOORE 0 6 9 ( D ADAM 12 8 O TH IS W E E K 10 © S H A ’ N A ’NA 13 f f i ENRIQUE EL POLIVOZ 7:00 — . Fr,n i i f f i) . 10 ® ® HAPPV DAYS Marion Fonzte 3 advice, turns the Cunningham home into a tr a n s o m s * ve,i«d beauty when she fears she might J * " "The A raban N,Bh,s" and 1 * lose Howard to a younger woman , 8k 12 ® T H E B ,Q EVENT The Dark S ecret n ? H 4 ° Of H arvest H om e" Stars B e tte Davis, David A ckro yd it is in Cornwall Coombe where Nick C onstantine at­ the tempts to w n sp e o p le He c o n fro n ts a w ido w w ho se s u p e r­ the natural pow ers and apparent dom inance traditional m ores of to probe the in ^ a g e ^ e aw esom e^tC onclud.ng episode; J hrs., »? n ? RTS f f e w The e co n o m ics of the New South rn New O rlea ns d o e s n ’t trea t som e very old social p ro b le m s. 2) Farm ers tu rn p o litica l a ctivists when faced w ith fin a n cia l w oe. 3) U pdate of "The CIA' leo • S e e r.. A r m y fin d s fo u r Cuban exMes m d.cted 8 O DAMIEN We L e p e rs ” T erence Knapp sta rs in this o rig in a l one-m an dram a a bo ut Father Dam ien de H a lla r ' a* r er,° 'C Rom an C a th o lic p rie s t w ho w e n t to Hawaii in the late 1800 s to work w ith le p e rs Father g3 © QUNSMOKEh e re ' 3 'eP6r h' mSelf' (90 min ) 13 GD M AN AN A SERA OTRO DIA 7:30 intl' MF?, 10 ® ® L A V ERNE AND SHIRLEY Laverne and S hirley w itn e ss the d e ve lo p m e n t of a m oving re la tio n sh ip w hen th ey allow Mrs. B a b ish 's "e xcep bona! d a u g h te r to go out w ith L en ny 13 GD ESTA NOCHE EUROPA 8:00 (2 © 5 © flQ ) ,11 M.A .S.H. Radar's im personation of a disc jockey, with old record favorites and ac- nryi n0 patte;,boosts morale at a time when an all-out Chinese offensive sends an excess of pa­ tients pouring into the 4077th. 3 Cfd Cb OD THREE S COMPANY C hrissy cran ks out am ateur m ovies of Jack and Ja ne t, and is rn sled into th inking she has a hit. 9 © M Y THREE SONS 8:30 2 0 5 0 ( 0 11 KRAFT 75TH AN N IVER SAR Y M em orable past p e rfo rm a n c e s ca p tu re d on tape and film . and in p h o to g ra p h s, w ill re ca ll m ile sto n e ap ­ pearances on K ra ft-s p o n s o re d sh ow s. P e rfo rm in g on B e riP P2 fJn i t re B° ^ HOpe' LeSl' e u 99 a m s * M ilto n c i f K ,n9 ' ancl m any o th e rs . (90 m in.) v3 © SOAP B u rt's stra n g e b e h a vio r leads the C am p ­ bell fam ily to have se rio u s d o u b ts abo ut his sa nity C orinne * * * S° me h e a rtb re a k in 9 n ew s for law on the citizens of French Canada Cl O ACTION: THE OCTOBER 1970 CRISIS Although little publicized in the U.S., the Canadian governm ent invoked the War Measures A ct” in 1970 to impose martial in response to political kidnapping and terrorism . This docum entary looks at the "Free Quebec" crisis (90 min.) 9 © B E V E R L Y H ILLB ILLIE S .10 © FAM ILY Sensing that her family no longer needs her, Kate volunteers to tutor a recently b lin d ­ ed college student and finds herself becomma a su r­ rogate mother. (60 min ) ,13 © C O R A Z O N SA LV A JE ' 9:00 RmhFrH R a J 6 N ,0 h t 0 f T he '9 u a n a " 1964 Tr? nn B u rt° " . Ava G a rd ne r. A d e -fro c k e d m in is te r acting as a g u id e to a gro up o f w om en on a M exican bus rip. in s p ire s the lives o f 3 w om en ; a te e n a g e r a h otel p ro p rie tre s s and a s p in s te r trave lin g w ith her aged g ra n d fa th e r. (2 h rs., 15 m in ) i n n e r (J D ffiP A C T O DE AMOR 9:30 IO f f i SOAP B u rt's stran ge b e h a v io r leads the Cam p- and FaTher T,maVhe S ef' ° US dOUb!s a b o u t h,s sa r" ^ S° me h M r “ >r« * i " 0 new s for C orinne 10:00 5 0 8 0 ( 4 (8 Q DICK CAVETT SHOW 13 © CARIEDADES DE M ED IAN O C H E 10:30 3 ( B OD TUESDAY MOVIE OF THE WEFK * * ia 12 •Two M ules For S .ster Sara" S t a r s S h ™ fy M a c h in e int Eastw ood. An A m erican m e rc e n a ry p la n n in g to help the J u a ris ta s of M exico ta ke a F rench g a rriso n loins a nun w ho reveals a h atred fo r the Ju aristas and Juar,stas a " d ^ p e n c h a n t fo r ciga rs and sw ea rin g 0 l4 ) © 6 Cia) 0 0 THE TO N IG H T SHOW G .ie et Taylor (go 'm in ’)8 ” 0 6 ’ ® e A i S ^ A C w om ATE ^ ° VIE "M cC ,oud: To 1 ne Alam o A w om an p o lice s e rg e a n t fin d s h e rse lf JO © A D A M 12 11:00 8 O NOVA The Green M a ch in e " W ith the heln of t h * g ro g ra m T fS d le s d ete cto rs, w ho b elieve s niantc pow ers. (60 m in .) to f f i EMERGENCY ONE 13 © 2 4 HORAS _ . 11:15 e x P®fis on lie P a " ,S have m 'n d -re a d in g , § i ® MOVIE "'h "It s A Dog s L ife " 19*5*; noa n i ger, R ichard A n de rson . S tory o f a bu 1 1 ^ , ! rises from d o g fig h ts to luxu ry. OO min ) _ O 4 © 6 1^ SB TOMORROW H o lt Guest: Dr. R o b tr . Linn. auYhor o f -? h 9 L° st c lit'. Diet. (60 m in.) C hance IO © F .B. I. 12:00 h9 ' O t3 CB © FAMILY Sensing that her family no ,2 longer needs her. Kate volunteers to tutor a recently blinded college student and finds herself becom m a a surrogate m other. (60 min.) 3 © P T L PROGRAM 9 © N E W S 4 @0 NEWS 12:45 1:00 © KMOL (NBC) San Antonio, Cable Channel (1$ 0 KENS I CBS > San Antonio, Cable Channel (TT © KCEN (NBC), Temple. Cable C h a n n e l O K T B C (CBS) Austin. Cable Channel2 2 O RLRN ( Public) Austin-S A , Cable Channel 8 © KWTX (CBS) Waco. Cable Channel CT © KTVT (Ind.) Fort Worth. Cable Channel r f ) f f i KSAT (ABC) San Antonio. Cable Channel 10 © K l VE (ABC) Austin. Cable Channel 3 GB R T W (NBC) Austin. Cable Channel 4 ) © KWEX (Spanish) San Antonio, Cable Channel 13 ACTV (Com Cable) Austin, Cable Channel IO Townlake Sailaway \ es, we are open. Come see us on weekends • IO a.m. til dark weather. If you missed fo r s a ilin g sig n in g up lessons at registration , come down to Sailaway and sign up at the student dis­ count rate. Look for our happy h our coupon in MARCH. TOWNLAKE SAILAWAY 1 8 0 0 L a k e s h o r e 4 4 2 - 8 8 7 2 11:00 TNE MIDDAY PROGRAM EiNEM, Bai (ade for Orchestra (15) Leon (3^' Sonata for Violin K LT V fm f iL NJ ' 8AENA8 * Symphony No. 2 in a (23) BAveH, = he Art of Fugue" (26) “ This Is Vienna” } 4:30 MUSIC FROM GERM ANY min. « 5:00 PIViR TISSEM EN T rSSXiZZSr* No-2 ,n 8"« a nn r u e , 80 Sprach Zararhustra" 9:00 THE LISTENING ROOM “ Picti roo * 10:00 A COLLECTOR S R E C O R D s T u BELLINI, "La Sonnambula" Memorial-* Maria Callas u „ Vercoe HORIZONTES con John Wheat More on *** News Business J o n SHM BSC SCIENCE M A G A Z IN E ^ 3:30 FOCUS OHM NATIONAL PRESS CLUB A LL THINGS CONSIDERED wM i e< • TO t h . SPiOeR S W H c T T r ^ T T ^ T ‘ NC . THM VINTAGE RADIO Cavalcade af a . episode 7 Sword T:36 NEWS TsSS THE HUMAN COWDtTlQu „ it . — SHM JAZZ IN AUSTIN «Mh F iH JIE L i i * , w o t o h Charlottes Web” by E.B. White, cavalcade of America: Mightier Than the * * * " M t h ----------- wednesday television listings 95 January 25, 1978 9 © F B I . 12:00 © ( 4 ) 0 8) (12 00 TO M O RRO W H ost Tom S n y d e r Guest: Althea Flynt, wife of H u stle r M a ga zin e p u b lish er Larry Flynt. (60 min.) 10 © F B I. 9 © N E W S 3 © PTL P R O G R A M 4 00 N EW S 12:45 1:00 6:00 (5) CS) O 0 CS) © 1 6 O © (10 OD CB 02) ffi N E W S ( 4 ) 0 0 N B C N E W S (8 O M A C N E IL L E H R E R R E P O R T ^ © b e w i t c h e d ® 6:30 (2) © f f i (JT) P R IC E IS R IG H T CS; © B E W IT C H E D O Cl?) A L L S T A R A N Y T H IN G G O E S (4) 0 0 N E W S (J) O M A R Y T Y L E R M O O R E © 6 ) CS) © A D A M 12 C S ) © T H I S W E E K (JO © M U P P E T S JO f f l H O G A R D U L C E H O G A R 7:00 CS) Cf) CE) CKI CB © E IG H T IS E N O U G H Tom is su sp e n d e d from h is job without pay after a c c u sin g c i­ ty officials and a g a rb a g e co m p a n y of corruption, and then re fu se s to reveal h is so u rc e s. (60 min ) 0 4 © Cf) CHD 0 0 L IF E A N D T IM E S O F G R IZ Z L Y A D A M S K e en a n W ynn g u e st sta rs a s a gullible e x ­ cavalrym an A d a m s fin d s roam ing the w ild e rn e ss se ekin g a plot of land for w hich he turned over his life savings. (60 min.) 0 (5 ) © Cli) G O O D T IM E S "W here there s sm o k e there s fire" as P e n n y painfully d isc o v e rs that s m o k ­ ing is d a n g e ro u s to m ore than o n e ’s health. 8 © N O V A "B lu e p rin ts In T h e B lo o d stre a m " e x ­ am in e s the p o ssib ilitie s for a new era of preventive m edicine w hen d o cto rs will be able to predict what d ise a se s a baby could contract d uring its lifetime, and then im m unize a g a in st them. (60 min.) 9) © G U N S M O K E 13 © M A N A N A S E R A O T R O D IA 7:30 Q 5 O CII S Z Y S Z N Y K N ick is attracted to a glam orou s sin g e r at H a p ’s Bar, but ru in s his c h a n c e s when sh e c o m e s out from behind her false front 13 © L O S COMPADRES 8:00 2) (3 CE) IO © m C H A R L IE ’S A N G E L S Sabrina is a quarterback, Kelly is a fullback and K ris is a lineper- son a s the A n g e ls join a p ro fe ssio n a l w o m e n 's team to find out w ho is trying to k n o ck out a female football league. (60 min.) © 4) © (6) !J2 0 0 P E E P IN G T IM E S C o m e d y special, television n e w s m agazin e s p o o f h oste d by Alan O p p e n h e im e r and David Letterm an. T here will be features on a n e ar-sigh te d bord er guard, a hospital that offers se lf-su rg e ry and a fellow w ho m akes "B igfo o t" tracks for a price. (60 min.) © (JI C A R O L B U R N E T T A N D F R IE N D S G u e sts: K e n Berry, Eydie G orm e. 8 © G R E A T P E R F O R M A N C E S "Paul G a lile o 's V e r­ na: U S O. Girl" S is s y Sp a ce k, Sally K e lle rm an and Howard D aSilva star in this dram atization of Paul G ailico’s short story "V e rn a ." The play re volve s from C h ic a g o w ho around an o b sc u re h oofe r ach ie ve s immortality as a U .S.O . perform er d uring World W ar ll. (90 min.) ( 5 ) © M Y T H R E E S O N S (J3)’ © N O C H E S T A P A T IA S 8:30 © m M O V IE ** "K a th e rin e " 1975 Art C arn e y, S is s y Spacek. A y o u n g h e ire s s b e c o m e s d isillu sio n e d with Am erican politics an d joins a g ro u p bent on c h a n g in g the syste m at any cost. (90 min.) 9 © B E V E R L Y H IL L B IL L IE S (13 © C O R A Z O N S A L V A J E 9:00 2) 3 © (10 © © S T A R S K Y A N D H U T C H Starsk y and Hutch try to protect a R u s sia n ballerina w h o se life is threatened, an d the c a se b e c o m e s p erso na l for Hutch w hen he falls in love with her. (60 min.) © .4) Q 6 (iSD 0 0 P O L IC E W O M A N A d e b o n a ir Arab college p ro fe sso r is s u sp e c te d by P e p p e r and Bill of being the m asterm ind of a white slave operation that lures yo u n g c o e d s into the h are m s of M id d le E a ste rn sh eiks. G u e st star; R o s s a n o Brazzi. (60 min.) 9 © M O V IE ** "T h o se M agn ifice n t M e n In T heir F ly ­ ing M a c h in e s " 1965 Terry T h o m a s, Sarah M ile s 1910- A w ealthy British n e w sp a p e r p u b lish er is p e rsu a d e d to s p o n so r an air race from L o n d o n to Paris. (2 hrs., 45 min.) 13 f f l P A C T O D E A M O R 9:30 8 ) © B O O K B E A T "Dear M e " by Peter Ustinov. 10:00 2 K 3 © 4 © 5 © 6 © 9 © 10 © 11 © I * © 0 0 N E W S 8 © D IC K C A V E T T S H O W J $ © V A R IE D A D E S D E M E D IA N O C H E 10:30 3) © m P O L IC E S T O R Y - M Y S T E R Y O F T H E 2 W E E K Police S to ry —"R ob b e ry: 48 H o u rs " V a rio u s m e m b ers of the robbery sq u a d g o about their routine duties, involving stake -ou ts, etc. (R) M y ste ry of the W e e k -"lf It s A Man, H ang U p " A fash io n m odel with c o u n tle ss m ale a d m irers takes drastic s te p s to d isc o u ra g e her other suitors. (R; 2 hrs., 30 min.) © (4 © (6) (12 0 0 T H E T O N IG H T S H O W G u e st host: David Brenner. G u e st: Ste ve Allen. (90 min.) 0 ( 5 O H i C B S L A T E M O V IE "Haw aii F.ve-O " A cat burglar strik e s the h om e of a p rom inent family, se t­ ting off a chain of e ve n ts that le a d s to death. "Kojak: S ie g e Of Terror" Stars; Telly Savalas, K evin D o b so n . (R) (8 © A B C C A P T IO N E D N E W S (10 © A D A M 12 11:00 (8) © S O U N D S T A G E "K e n n y L o g g m s, J e s s e W in ­ chester, M ich ae l M u rp h y " perform at R e d R o c k s, the natural am phitheatre high in the C o lo ra d o R o c k y M o u n ta in s to op e n the fourth s e a s o n of S o u n d s t a g e Concert. (60 min.) 30 © E M E R G E N C Y O N E (13 © 2 4 H O R A S © K M O L ( N B O San Antonio, Cable Channel 12 © K E N S (CBS) San Antonio, Cable Channel (JFT) © K O E N (N BC), Temple, Cable Channe 6 O KT BC (CBS) Austin, Cable C h a n n e l 2) © R L R N (Public) Austin-S A., Cable Channel 8) © KW TX (CBS) Waco, Cable Channel Cf" © K T V T (Ind.) Fort Worth, Cable Channel fg © KSAT (A BC) San Antonio, Cable ChanneKlO OD K U V E (A BC ) Austin, Cable Channel (3 00 R T W ( N B O Austin, Cable Channel s ) © K W E X (Spanish) San Antonio, Cable Channel T3 ACTV (Com. Cable) Austin, Cable ChanneKiO M O pro M F radio KMFA*fin(65) 11:00 THE MIDDAY PROGRAM BERLIOZ, "Beatrice and Benedict1’: Overture (7) HAYDN, Symphony No. 44 in E (22) LUTOSLAWSKI, Concerto for Orchestra (27) W.F. BACH, Concerto a Dud Cembali Concertanti (13) CHOPIN, Variations on "La cl darem ia mano" from Mozart's “Don Giovanni" (15) BRAHMS, Sonata No. 2 in F for Cello and Piano (28) 1:00 THE AFTERNOON PROGRAM DVORAK, The Slavonic Dances. Op. 72 (34) BORTKIEVICH, Piano Concerto No. I in B flat (29) MOZART, Serenade No. 7 In D, K.250 and March in D, K.249 BACH, "The Art of Fugue" (20) HAYON, String Quartet in E, Op. 54, No. 3 RACHMANINOFF, Suite No. 1 for 2 Pianos (23) LUTOSLAWSKI, Variations on a Theme of Paganini (5) BUSONI, Indian Fantasy for Piano and Orchestra (21) 5:00 DIVERTISSEM ENT 7:00 AT YOUR REQUEST We play listeners’ telephone requests We begin taking calls at 6.00 p.m. at 472*1257. 11:00 THIS IS MODERN M USIC DE LEEUW, “Abschied” (19) KETTING, "For Moonlight Nights" (19) KI T*fm 6:00 EKLEKTIK08 wtth John A M il DEBUSSY, “Nocturnes” 8'30 N tw t SCHUMANN, Trio No 1 in D, Op. 63 SCHUMAN, Concerto SCHUMANN, Concerto in A, Op 129 SCHUMAN, "New England Triptych” fkOO News BACH, Cantata No. 11 RE8PIQHI, “The Fountains of Rome;** “The Festivals of Rome:” “The Pines of Rome” 11:00 READING ALOUD wRh BM Ca tom s n a e p a u l Ha r v e y n e w s 11:45 THE M EXICAN AM ERICAN EXPERIENCE 12*8 HORIZONTES eon John Wham Z N OPTIONS A! Last A Plan to Bent Stagflation. s a l * 3:00 CO NVERSATIONS FROM W INGSPREAD The PTA. 3:30 NEW S 3:35 TEXAS WEEKLY wtth BM Anderson 4:00 CHANGE AND CONTINUITY Nixon Comes to Office: The 70s. 5:00 ALL THINGS CO N SID ER ED with Stiffibsrg A Edwards 8:30 THE 8PIDER’S W EB “Charlotte’s Web by E.B. White 7:00 VINTAGE RADIO Theatre of the Air: Waterloo Road. 7:30 LATIN AMERICAN REVIEW MOO A C C E S S wtth John Hanson Child Abuse: Is there a fc®0 JAZZ ALIVE! The Bracker Brothers and The Cathedral episode 8 problem? Throe. pp* is* v t J O O ? v - . 't 11*0 SO U L ON PM wNh John E. Ona nom*w»x vwwf* Vm.uk YJ3*tji r ***' sui. e»-r RESOLVE TO START THE NEW YEAR RIGHTI Take off all your unw anted hair permanently with medically approved methods. Bette Pritchett, Owner For Complimentary Consultation UNIVERSITY ELECTROLYSIS 1201 W. 24th, Suit* 105 ^ ® 12 0 0 CHIPS The th e ft of a vintage car Darenh?H Skyd,Ver a ° d an in fa n t * * » p V c ! d by h S S I m n i t r e 6 O ONCE UPON A CLASSIC "W hat Katy Did" tw o e ld e s t Episode Four. Dr. C arr se nd s his p,a° ue the CHP m m i" ) h®*001’ T h®re they m eet the stern headm,esrtrea^ aa J c ro s T th n h a i l .n?h c ro t? hety a ssista n t. D ire ctly across the hall is the room o f the son of th e p re sid e n t of a n e ig h b o rin g b o y s ’ sch o o l P resident 9 © G U N S M O K E O I © M ANANA SERA OTRO DIA 3 IO © © F I S H A hard b o ile d so cia l se rv ic e s in ­ sp ecto r g e ts his p rio ritie s scra m b le d w hen he w inds U_P 'h lh e k itc h e n w ith B e rn ice . .8 O WORLD OF FRANKLIN AND JEFFERSON A tumultuous tim e in our h is to ry is p o rtra ye d th ro ug h he e x p e rie n c e s of B e nja m in F ranklin and Thom as Je ffe rso n ,n th is film by C ha rle s and Ray Eames and d o c u m e n ts , Words, p h o to g ra p h s im a g e s, a ~ s o n W e U e s 1 ^ 33 ® LUCHA LIBRE * n a rra t' ° n by N,na Foch 7:30 8:00 •'•V I! -F u n ny Face" 1957 Fred A sta ire , t^ . de ey. h e p b u rn . Fashion m agazine p h o to g ra p h e r (2 hrs ) in t° sendmQ 0,rl from b00k sto re lo Paris. ® BARNEY MILLER A thorny problem precinct when a them with a highly h v s m n rm d e te c t,v e s O' ,he hysterical woman confronts unusual assault case. S J S L * i6 9 9 ® JAM ES AT 15 Jam es a ” d Sly bec orn • con c e rn e d w hen th e ir n o rm a lly re s tra in e d friend. M arle n e , falls hard fo r a charming vagabond r n£ ! ? A , ° , ? ,y in te n d s t0 e x p lo it her d e vo tio n Guest star: W olfm an Jack. (60 m in ) 0 5 ^ © Cl J BARNABY JONES T estim o ny he gave years e a rlie r lea din g to the c o n v ic tio n o f a k id n a p ­ ping su sp e ct c o m e s back to h au nt Barnaby w hen the co nvicte d m am s e x-w ife ca lls in. th re a te n in g to c o m ­ m it su icid e . (2 h rs.) Cl © ADVOCATES The firs t in a 26-part w e e kly I ! ! ! ! “ " e l a t i n g w ith -W o rld ." (a new d o c u m e n ta ry •C h „ ,^ ? . ' n ,? rn* " o n * ' » ” *" » > . o ffe rs the q uestio n Should the F e d e ra l G o v e rn m e n t End P rogram s of re a tm e n t fo r W om en and M in o ritie s ’ ” e re n tia l “ Fsneu *Hs I* 160 n l T ' ” 19 © M Y THREE SONS 8:30 ' ' r° m B° S,0" S hlS,oric .3 ,10 © © CARTER CO U N TR Y M ayor Teddy reg re ts s e n d in g C h ie f Roy and B aker into th e c e lla r o get his o ld e le c tio n ca m p aig n b u tto n s beca use they find an u n o p e n e d box of b a llo ts that m ay mean Teddy isn t m ayo r a fte r all 9 © BEVERLY HILLBILLIES Id © C O R A Z O N SALVA JE .3) cia REDD FOXX 9:00 s S p 4r .9 Q a 6 n i ^ o WHAT REALLY HAPPENED TO Steve A lle n sta rs as a te le v is io n ♦ it5 9 talk show host w ho g ives an a sp irin g co m ic a m ake- or-break opportunity. (60 min ) Cl) © ESP. POWER OF THE M IND 9 ) © MOVIE ** "For Love Of Ivy" 1968 S id ne y P o itie r A bbey L in coln . U p p e r-m id d le -cla ss suburban fa m ily gets a w e ll-to -d o black b u sin e ssm a n involved in il­ legal gam bling to w oo th e ir black maid so she w o n ’t leave them . (2 h rs.) 1 33) © PACTO DE AMOR 10:00 © © NEWS ° c5) ® 13 • [8 © DICK CAVETT SHOW 33) © VARIEDADES DE MEDIANOCHE ® W ® ® I R 10:30 ( 2 X 3 ) HD © STARSKY AND H U T C H -T O M A S tarskv and H u tc h - ”The S p e cia list" S tarsky and H utch f!nHe/h SUSPIC,0n ° f s h o o tin 9 an in n o ce n t b ys ta n d e r T o i i e n d a n g e re d . (R) T o m a ~ "ln d ic tm e n t,; Toma d isco ve rs a real e state fraud w hich leads to a (R 2 grand ju r y in ve stig a tio n of a c o rru p t p o liticia n ’ nrs , lo m in.) * ost. David B re n n e r. G uest: C haro. (90 m in I D6 14 ® THE TO N IG H T SHOW G u est 0 (.S) O I t CBS LATE MOVIE "VS "H ouse O f 1 finn D o ff," s ta rs : V in c e n t Pr.ce. M anna H ye ? A va ca,io n mg co u p le , frie n d d isco ve r a h ouse in the re d -lig h t d is tric t o f T an o ie rs w here p ro fe s s io n a l illu s io n is ts help ca p tu re urn VIC*,m s ,o r an in ,e ''na tio na l ring o f w h ite slavers the dea th of a in v e s tig a tin g (8 © ABC CAPTIONED NEWS 30 © ADAM 12 11:00 _ ^ GD O MASTERPIECE THEATRE "I. C la u d iu s" E pisode Tw elve. "A God In C o lc h e s te r" The re ig n o f C laudius e ve n tu a lly b eco m e s as c o rru p t as th o se of his p re d e ce sso rs. His w ife. M essina, ille g a lly divo rce s h.m to m arry the c o n s u l-e le c t, thus b rin g in g Claudius close to d e position. (60 m in.) j n an GD © MOVIE C raw ford. Fred M acM urray. Spy s to ry; tw o h o n e y m oo ne rs. lo o kin g fo r B ritish in G erm any ae a fm n ^t ca ptu re d . (90 m in ) " y ae a lm ° s t HO © E M E R G E N C Y ONE 3 1 ® 24 HORAS A bove S u s p ic io n " 1944 ^ 12:00 O CO © ,6 3 2 © TOMORROW H ost: Tom S n yd e r Equal R ights for P ro s titu te s . (60 m in.) (10 © F.B.I. C B )© NEWS 12:30 3 © P T L PROGRAM 12 45 1:00 4 © NEWS © KMOL (NBG) San Antonio, Cable Channel (t£ © K E N S (CBS) San Antonio. Cable Channel ( l f © K C E N (MBC). Tem ple. Cable C hannel8 © K T B C (CBS) Austin. Cable Channel 2 '2 © KLRN {Public) Austin-S.A . Cable Channel 8 GU KW TX (CBS) Waco. Cable Channel (5 ) ® KTV? (Ind.) Fort Worth, Cable Channel ( 9 © KSAT (ABC) San Antonio, Cable Channel (JO 2 ) Kl \ E 1 ABC) Austin, Cable Channel (3 © KTVV (NBO) Austin, Cable Channel 4) © KWEX (Spanish) San Antonio, Cable Channel 3 3 A CTV' (Com. Cable) Austin, Cable Channel JO Steve Allen and Michael Lem beck star in a dram a about Beet Harte High School's senior class comic who gets a chance at the big tim e on W hat Really Happened to the Class of '6 3 " 9 p.m. Thursday on NBC. 0:00 T f f i N B C N e w ? * 8 O MACNEIL LEHRER REPORT 9 AD BEWITCHED _ * 3 0 ,2 OD NAME THAT TUNE ,3 © BEWITCHED O U MATCH GAME 14 © N E W S O n $25,000 PYRAMID C f m MARY TYLER MOORE O 8 (9 CD ADAM 12 8 Q THIS WEEK WILD KINGDOM ELC H A VO _ 7:00 2 © 15 O CIO 11 THE W ALTO N S Jason J e iiflh te d to team up m u sica lly w ith his is ta le n te d tnn«»h ? i ? s h ‘ b u t w hen ,hey p,an t0 P,ay a d u e t to g e th e r at the s p rin g fe stiva l, the boys are con- (60 h o n te d w ith the fru s tra tio n s of d is c rim in a tio n (3) 10 CB OD W ELCOME BACK. KOTTER Mr. K o tte r takes a shot at the w orld of e n te rta in m e n t w hen he is nl hic tub audl" 0n * S 4 s,,n d -uP comic (or a local boorbuying K M C V I i i i 11:00 THE MIDDAY PROGRAM RACHMANINOFF, Symphonic Dances (34) IVES, Adeste f,delis" *n an Organ Prelude (4); Variations on "America" (9) CHOPIN, Sonata n G for Cello and Piano (27) PERGOLESI, Concertino No. 3 *n A ( 11) HAYDN, Cello Concerto »n C (26) 1.-00 THE AFTERNOON PROGRAM PIERRE, Cyda se et ie Chevre-P-ed" (45) SCHUMANN. Ceiio Concerto in a (25) f t ! 2 ! T£ * 0V,CH’ SYr71Pho°y No, 5 in D (46) BACH, he Art of Fugue" (24) BRAH“ S’ n°patar!jJC V ‘n E f0f 06,10 arKj Ptan° (25) utacqueitne Du Pre plays Cello Encores (26) The Renaissance Band” 5-00 DIVERTISSEMENT 8:30 THE NEW RECORDS 7:30 THE OPERA WAGNER, "Goenerdaemmerunp" K l T * l i n i , C^ l ^ ,lLrfK T ,K 0 S w,tf' JoN l AMW BIZET, The Pean F an era 8:30 New* WEBER, Concerto rn F, Dp. 75 HINDEMITH, Kammermysik No. 3, Op 36 No 2 STRAVINSKY, 'The Fairy * Kiss' GRIFFES. The Pleasure Dome of Kubia Khan" HOLST. 6 Mao eve Lyrics for Mens Voces J * * MORIZONTES con John Whom COUNCIL MBI M U . t o t W o n , I ^ I ™ T M AUSTIN CITY COUNCIL with MIA* W o !,* * * , . » TH * » m A . C, 0 i S. ' D M e 0 ISS « w i 0e 'U 0 '° Th* a m n s 7:35 IN BLACK AMERICA rnHh Bob Marten I1M0 SOUL ON FM wttn John E. * * V * J friday television listings ® © S I ® E W ® (®J ® ® Cf® « ® ™ © NEWS (8 0 MACNEIL LEHRER REPORT (9) (D BEWITCHED 6:00 6:30 (2) (E) t a t t l e t a l e s C D © b e w it c h e d O (52) g o n g s h o w G D © NEWS o (ft) FAMILY f e u d GD O MARY TYLER MOORE O l f Cf)CD ADAM 12 CS) © T E X A S WEEKLY CIO) © THAT NASHVILLE MUSIC Cl 3) OD LA CRIADA BREN CRIADA 7:00 CD 13) CB (JO A B © DONNY AND MARIE Guests: Bet­ ty White, Andy Gibb, Paul Lynde. (60 min O O 16 (1$ CPO SHARKEY Unable to m uster the courage to express any affection for his girlfriend. Sharkey enrolls in a group sensitivity session and is transformed into a pussycat. 4 03 EMERGENCY ONE O CD O Cit THE NEW ADVENTURES OF WONDER WOMAN Wonder Woman is pitted against a com puter genius who steals the electronic m em ories and pro­ grams of the w o rld ’s largest com puters, as part of his master plan to take control of the world. (60 min ) 8) O WASHINGTON WEEK IN REVIEW CD CD GUNSMOKE J I CD MANANA SERA OTRO DIA 7:30 O J I AMERICAN LIFESTYLE O 6 CHICO AND THE MAN Raul's aunt Charo pretends to fall madly in love with Ed to keep from be­ ing claimed by a matador to whom she was betrothed at eight. 18 O WALL STREET WEEK Host: Louis Rukeyser. "How N ow -T he Small Investor?" Guest: Reginald B. Oliver, Director of Research, Hershing and Co J I CD EL SHOW DE EDUARDO ll 8:00 2 C3 CE) CIO f f i 0D FRIDAY NIGHT MOVIE "Bermuda Depths" Stars: Burl Ives. Lee McCloskey, Carl Weathers, Julie Woodson. A team of governm ent scientists trawls the deep ocean trenches around Bermuda in an attem pt to explore the surrounding region, and what they find goes beyond all expecta­ tions. (2 hrs.) 0 4 0 6 H U © THE ROCKFORD FILES After Jim receives a death threat from a m ysterious caller, he deduces that the caller meant to contact a playboy in the whose name is listed next to Rockford s telephone directory. (60 min.) Q (D Q Cfi) FRIDAY NIGHT MOVIE "The World Beyond" Stars: Granville Van Duson, Barnard Hughes. Residents in a rural com m unity are terroriz­ ed by supernatural forces. (60 min.) 8) O FIRING LINE Host: William F Buckley, Jr. Guests: Phil Geyelin of the W ashington Post; Edward Yoder of the W ashington Star; and Charles Corddry of the Baltimore Sunn. 9 © MY THREE SONS OD CD BEVERLY HILLBILLIES l l CD CORAZON SALVA JE 8:30 labor 9:00 O 4) © I i ) J $ © QUINCY By reconstructing a skull found in the desert, Quincy reopens the case of a leader who m ysteriously disappeared, allegedly with $2 m illion in union funds. (60 min ) O D O (lf) REPUBLICAN’S STATE OF THE NA­ TION 810 SOCCER MADE IN GERMANY CD CD MOVIE *** "T here’ s A Girl In My Soup" 1970 Peter Middle-aged Hawn. life sophisticated gourm et colum nist disrupted when a kookie girl moves in on him. (2 hrs ) finds his Sellers, Goldie CD PACTO DE AMOR 10:00 6 ) 0 CD CE) Jtt CD CM ©CU © @0 NEWS ( 8 ) 0 DICK CAVETT SHOW J3) CD VARIEDADES DE MEDIANOCHE 10:30 2) 3) © 03 BARETTA "The Five And Half Pound Junkie" When a childhood friend is slain, Tony is fac­ ed with the task of tracking down the killers as well as aiding his friend's pregnant widow who is a drug ad­ dict. (R) O CD O CID J $ © t h e TONIGHT SHOW Guest host: David Brenner. Guests: Bobby Vinton, Helen Gurley Brown. (60 min.) O CS) Q JU CBS LATE MOVIE "MASH" Hawkeye writes home to his father, relating some of the more interesting incidents of the 4077th. (R) **Vi "Shaft" Stars: Richard Roundtree, Moses Gunn. 8) © ABC CAPTIONED NEWS no CB adam w a 11:00 [8 O GREAT PERFORMANCES "Paul G alileo's Ver­ na: U S O. Girl" Sissy Spacek, Sally Kellerman and Howard DaSilva star in this dramatization of Paul G allico’s short story "Verna." The play revolves © KMOL (N B O San Antonio, Cable Channel J ? © K E N S (CBS) San Antonio, Cable Channel (JI) © K C E N (N B O , Temple, Cable C hann e6 O KTBC (CBS) Austin, Cable C h an n el 2 © R L R N (Public) Austin-S.A., Cable Channel CID © KWTX (CBS) Waco, Cable Channel Cf) © KTVT (Ind ) Fort Worth, Cable Channel f9 © KSAT (A BO San Antonio, Cable Channel 1 <3> 0 3 Kl VE (ABC) Austin, Cable Channel (3 © KTVV (N BO Austin, Cable Channel 4 © KWEX (Spanish) San Antonio, Cable Channel J 3 ACTV (Com. Cable) Austin, Cable Channel rid 710 p m M F , 27 January 27, 1978 achieves im m ortality as a U S O perform er durmo World War ll. (90 min.) 9 © MOVIE ** "Operation Normal" 1972 Peter Falk, Martin Landau. WWII: A unit is commanded to pursue and destroy a battery of German guns. (90 min ) JO © E M E R G E N C Y O N E J I CD 24 HORAS 11:30 2) © MOVIE *** "Stranger On The Run" 1967 Henry Fonda, Anne Baxter A drifter, travels to New Mexico to deliver a note to a frie n d ’s sister in federal prison (90 min.) 11:40 3 © MOVIE ** "Planet Earth" 1974 John Saxon, Diana Muldaur. Set in the 22nd Century, the story revolves around the experiences of a 20th century man who has lived into the future through suspended animation. (80 min.) 12:00 O (4) © ( f ) (1Z 0 0 THE MIDNIGHT SPECIAL Host Aretha Franklin. Guests: The Four Tops, Dan Hill, Fred Travalena (90 min.) (10 © F.B.I. 12:30 O J I MOVIE •* "Dear Dead Delilah" 1972 Agnes Moorehead, Will Geer. (2 hrs.) ( 9 ) © NEWS (3 J © PTL PROGRAM (4 © N E W S 1:10 1:30 PAT PAINTER’S FAMILY rlAIRSTYLING CENTER MEN WOMEN CHILDREN 3 Locations to Serve You 454-0484 454-3676 6009 Burnet Rd. IO U E. 41st 258-6366 13216-8 Across from Scars Auto Fort! Pends Springs Rd. | — W ITH THIS COURON — J I INTRODUCTORY SPECIAL: I | Shampoo, Condition, Haircut & * Blow Dry; 2 for $14 (Bring a friend) I or I for $8. I I $5 OFF Pormanonts & Frostings Hm rm Wifi - i««rytU«f tf.78 *** I 0 J 10:30 AUSTIN SPEAKS 11 AO THE MIDDAY PROGRAM MENDELSSOHN, Overture, “The Fair Milusina" (11) MOZART, Divertimento No. 11 in D. K.251 BERLIOZ, Romance, Reverie and Caprice (9) BARTOK, Rhapsody No. 2 for Violin and Orchestra (11) LECLAIR, Oboe Concerto in C (15) John Ogdon plays “The Mephisto Waltz" and other "Satanic' Piano Music of Liszt (26) LALO, “Norwegian Rhapsody" I AO THE AFTERNOON PROGRAM A MOZART Birthday Salute RACHMANINOFF, Piano Sonata No. 1 in D (34) GRIEG, Sonata No 3 in C for Violin and Piano (24) MENDELSSOHN, Concerto in A for Piano and Strings (27) "The English Harpsichord" (31) MOZART Encores 5:00 DIVERTISSEMENT 7:00 THE EVENING PROGRAM A MOZART Birthday Salute A LALO Birthday Bellite 11A0 THE MUSIC YOU WANT radio KMFA*fm KUT*fm •AO EKLKTIKOS with John AMU STRAUSS, Overture to 'The Gypsy Baron; “ Emperor" Waltz •AO N ew HOROWITZ Redial Cant del ocells" and other Casals Favorites •AO NEW YORK PHILHARMONIC ORCHESTRA BRAHMS, Piano Concerto No. I STRAUSS, "Also sprach Zarathustra* HAO READING ALOUD MBI M ______ The Tales of E.T.A. Hoffmann, episode 54. HAO PAUL HARVEY NEWS H A S TEXAS BUSINESS REVIEW ISAS HORIZONTE* eon John Wheal Benny Goodmen. JAO PAULINE FREDERICK ANO COLLEAGUES JAO NEWS SAS PEOPLE ANO IOEAS with Bauleah Hodge UNIVERSITY PORUM U.S. Foreign Policy. Dr. Henry Kisenger speaks on foreign policy issues 4AS PLACES FOR PEOPLE MBI Paul IproUoiposi SAO ALL THINGS CONSIDERED whh Sternberg « Edwards SAO THE SPIDER** WEB Choices: Susan B. Anthony 7AO VINTAGE RADIO Sherlock Holmes: The Solitary CycUot TAO Howe 7 AS THE HEXT SOO YEARS wRh J. Rex W M •AO JAZZ IN AUSTIN WBS Fred Bourdue H A S BOUL ON FN w *h John E. Dee V' ’ t o 9 CD NEWTON-WEAVER WESTERN HOUR N E W ? (5 ° ® (11 BATMAN‘ TARZAN; IN THE 8 © QUE PASA, U.S.A. 0 « 0 6 ' 12 8 3 ADVENTURES OF MUHAMMAD 6:00 6:30 7:00 8:00 9:00 9:30 1 © F i m Ep L u s8TER’ M 0, "D’abet,c Eye D lsease" 10:00 ROCK0 ® ® KROFFT SUPERSHOW; SCHOOL. S A S 6^ 12 © THUNDER; JR. HALL OF FAME U 0 ^ A,NT AL° N G WITH NANCY KOMINSKY (9 CD CONGRESSMAN JIM COLLINS REPORTS (9 CD l is t e n 10:15 10 30 2| C t cs AD CB (II SPACE ACADEMY; IN THE NEWS 0 4 0 6 (i2 0 0 ALPHA TEAM ® © CONSUMER SURVIVAL KIT (CAPTIONED) ’ 9 I D WHAT ABOUT PEOPLE _ 11:00 1 S JL8 S S I ? SECRETS OF ISIS; IN THE NEWS 3 10 CD SD ABC WEEKEND SPECIAL 0 4 0 6 8 O FRENCH CHEF 9 CD LOS TIEMPOS [ I t 0 THE NATIONAL KIDS* QUIZ _ _ CD t im e OUT WITH SCOTT _ 11:15 11:30 9 2 8 ' 9 9 r 5R f? if? r V 1*cFw , ^ i ; BERT; ,N ™ E NEWB Q CROCKETT S VICTORY GARDEN CD PARENTS IN ACTION _ - 12 00 IN THE N E W S ® 11 W HAT' S NEW MISTER 3 10 CD SD AMERICAN BANDSTAND O J® MOVIE v 4 00 SOUL TRAIN 0 6 PERIODICO ,8 © C O M M U N IT Y CALENDAR 9 CD COLLEGE SHOWS 03 © LA VOZ DEL EVANGELIC Laura' 1944 Gene Tierney 6 © S O C IA L SECURITY IN AMERICA f W 3 s a t GROAY FILM FESTIVAL 12:15 12:30 1 3 © W R E S T LIN G © I i i KIDSWORLD © 6 RIFLEMAN v8 © STITCH-A-LONG VOTER S DIGEST INSIGHT I JACINTA PICHIMAHUIOA 1:00 MINORITY FORUM EYEWITNESS WEEK 0 i f MOVIE To Be Announced (5 © P A N O R A M A 0 6 BAYLOR BASKETBALL 6 O GARDEN SHOW I ) 0 MOVIE JO CB MOVIE I)* "Pirates On H orseback" 1941 "Tarzan s Revenge" 1938 1:30 (2 AB FILM ,3 © WORLD SERIES OF AUTO RACING O 02 NFL GOLF (LIVE) (4(00 _______ .5 © B L A C K SCENE NASHVILLE ON THE ROAD 6 NFL GOLF (LIVE) 0 GUPPIES TO GROUPERS 2:00 I JOURNEY TO ADVENTURE i SPORTS SCO PE i WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP TENNIS (80 min.) I JOURNEY INTO ART FANFARRIA FALCON T C B a n im a l w o r l d 2:30 O 12 NASHVILLE ON THE ROAD 4 0 0 MARTY ROBBINS SPOTLIGHT 0 5 0 11 NEWS © 6 NEWSWATCH PRESENTS 8 © PEOPLE AND IDEAS 9 © L A W R E N C E WELK SHOW 12 OD SAL Y PIMIENTA 1 9 2 2 ® P 1i C 0S NEWS 13 JO © © A B C NEWS n b c n e w s 4:30 5:00 5:30 6:00 ° S C H 00L TALK "Images And Things Inservice" 2 © H E E H A W J O 35 C D © LAWRENCE WELK SHOW 0 .12 NEWS ® , REE !^AW Guests: Roy Rogers, Dale Evans, * Alan Kinfl. (60 min.) .Gues,s: R°V Rogers. Dale Evans, R n K Alan King. (60 min.) (5 0 6 © G O N G SHOW , 8 ) © BLACK PERSPECTIVE ON THE NEWS (9) CD WILDLIFE IN CRISIS 1J GD LUCHA LIBRE 0 12 MATCH GAME T © WILD WORLD OF ANIMALS © .6 WILD KINGDOM "Pararie Spring" 6:30 i903?6O "Op ^ ELI\/ LHC? ^ AS REMEMBERS "Aviation H ighlights include the breaking of speed, altitude and endurance records, as well as .*? I i i e s ts d a tm 0 M elissa _ J © T H A T NASHVILLE MUSIC * 8:00 T T C B TO © © THE LOVE BOAT Three vignet­ tes. he congressm an Was Indiscreet" Stars Dick Van Patten, v.cki Lawrence. "Isaac's History Lesson* O KMOL (NBC) San Antonio. Cable Channel f* © K E N S (CBS) San Antonio. Cable Channel JT © KOEN (NBC). Temple. Cable Channe J ©K TBC (CBS) Austin, Cable Channel2 2 © KLRN (Public) AustiihS A., Cable Channel CT © KWTX (CRS) Waco. Cable Channel QP Stars: Vernie Watson, Scatman C row ers. "W inner marf J w m i n Maur een M cCorm ick, Bobby Sher- NBC SATURDAY NIGHT AT THE MOVIES /2 Stranger In The House" Stars: Olivia Hussey, John Saxon, Margot Kidder. The occupants of a sorority house in a small-town college are te r­ rorized by a m ysterious caller who follow s up his abusive telephone calls by system atically slaying one resident after another. (2 hrs ) B 5 o J® t h e JEFFERSONS Florence wants to household0 " ^ Succeeds in breakln9 up the whole 8 O TREASURES OF TUTANKHAMUN Fifty-live years ago archeologists discovered the 3,000 year- old tomb of King Tut, filled with valuable objects. This program looks at the present exhibit currently tour- » td S tates’ the discovery of the tom b and ?•# at the life of King Tutankhamen him self. (9 0 © MARTY ROBBINS SPOTLIGHT 8:30 ? 5 m ® i 11 MAUDE Everyone gets into the act when Maude recruits her family and friends to sing and dance for a questionable charity telethon. 8 © WORLD OF FRANKLIN AND JEFFERSON A tum ultuous time in our history is portrayed through the experiences of Benjamin Franklin and Thomas Jefferson in this film by Charles and Ray Eames images, docum ents, photographs and Words, and 0%aon WeSes * ^ 9 © PORTER WAGONER SHOW ^ * narrati° n by Nina Foch 9:00 P R E M iFR F^n ® ® FANTASY ISLAND (SEASON eTn h i u n FantasV ,sland" P eople's fantasies can be actually experienced, unfulfilled dreams can be attained and sought-after desires suddenly realiz­ e r Stars. Ricardo Montalban, Herve Villechaize (60 ® p 5v m K 0 JA K , K° i a k ’s anger at District At­ torney Tom Turner for letting a known kille r escape a in­ because murder com petence, causes enough reverberation that Ko- jak is suspended. (60 min.) of T urner’s conviction R8a r ? 1f i )UNDSTAGE Burton Cummings and Randy Wh0 " and C h m arnnUTS,CianSn°f the 9r° UpS "Guess w no and Bachman-Turner Overdrive" are reunited on Soundstage (60 min ) 100 J © HIGH CHAPARRAL 0 3 © BOX DE MEXICO 10:00 3 i A4BC°NE5W ? 6 ® ® 9 San Antonio, Cable Channel To © K U V E (ABC) Austin. Cable Channel T © E T W (N B O Austin. Cable Channel lf) © K W EX (Spanish) San Antonio, Cable Channel T I ACTV (Com Cable) Austin, Cable Channel CG -------------------------------- — ------------ — _______________________ 7 - t o » r n M F - D A V ID -** A N TH O N Y SP LYNN I 'MMF P u r l t 'H -M lH i NATURALLY. 10% OFF VITAMIN C AU BRANDS - AU POTENCIES NU-LIFI, KOVAC, THOMPSON Expires 1-28*78 NEW! Good Food Brand Natural MOLASSES $ 1 39 32 oz. $ 9 3 9 I O OZ. ■ itpirm I-JB-7B A FREE Good Food Brand SUNFLOWER SEEDS 4 oz. Reg. 5 9 * w ith 7.50 purchase Expire* 1*28*78 S A V E ? PEANUT BUTTER ARROWHEAD • DEAF SMITH THIS WEEK ONLY 21 ox. REG. 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IO AM-6 PM Free Parking at 22nd lr San Antonio r Th# System Contains • Yamaha CR820 Receiver • Yamaha YP211 Turntable • Audio Technic# Cartridge • Two Yamaha N S S Speakers Rsgular Price: 098.00 S Y ST E M P R IC E: 620.00 McDonald's caters to student body bodies. B H H W M H l M y — — — _ -- ~ mumm * * * * * * We ll teed the whole bunch tor you. Just phone your order in ahead of time and it ll be ready w hen you get here. In some cases, we ll deliver to your group. Call us at 476-7259 or 472-8632 and get the details. Wfe do it all for you 2021 Guadalupe Doble M all 2818 Guadalupe -