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 T w e lv e Pages Vol. 76, No. 185 News and E d ito r ia l: 471-4591 A u s t in , T exas, W ednesday, Ju ly 20, 1977 $ £ Z S L xx aux x° t ’OM mxT?oi^xw F ifte e n Cents )la y A d v e rtis in g : 471-1865 j a n d C lassifieds: 471-5244 Superport remains afloat on sea of Senate support By EARL AUSTIN State Reporter Senators approved a m easure 23-4 to provide state support for a deepw ater “ superport" Tuesday, w hile the House Health and W elfare C om m ittee passed 7-0 a proposal to establish stricter nursing hom e regulations The Senate superport m easure, sponsored by A R • Babe" Schwartz. D-G alveston. authorizes the state to assum e the federal licen se for construction of the $700 million Seadock project if the current private venture fails Exxon, Gulf and Mobil, representing 52 per cent of the superport s funding, have withdrawn, blaming e x ­ cessiv e federal regulation The sta te stands to lose 150,- 000 jobs if the project is halted, Schwartz said Gov. Dolph B riscoe would be authorized under the bill to establish the D eepw ater Port Authority, which would issue revenue bonds to finance construction of the super- port about 27 m iles offshore from Freeport. MEMBERS OF THE House State Affairs C om m ittee Monday had voiced som e opposition to the superport m easure Rep. D R “ T om ” Uher. D-Bay City, com ­ m ittee chairm an, said he wanted to hear testim ony from U.S. Departm ent of Transportation officials con­ cerning state obligations to the project The com m ittee could not obtain a quorum Tuesday, but a spokesman said the group probably will approve a proposal when it reconvenes at 9 a m Wednesday. In other business, debate in the House com m ittee on nursing hom e regulation centered on whether m edical and quality of care functions should be left with the Department of Public W elfare (DPW ) or transferee to the Texas Departm ent of Health R esources (TDHRV The final version placed the authority with the TDHR, as did a Senate proposal passed Monday by the Senate Human R esources C om m ittee House committee m em bers heard almost five hours of amendments to the original proposal, including e s ­ tablishment of a TDHR rating system for Texas nursing homes and deletion of a provision changing venue for judicial review proceedings to Travis County. THE HOUSE VERSION allows the nursing hom e licensing authority to suspend licenses and order im ­ m ediate closing of violating homes Increased penalties are provided for substandard homes and for any nursing home em ploye who assaults a patient. The legislation stem s from reports in the Lufkin N ew s, substantiated by a investigator, of patients in East Texas nursing homes being beaten, starved and given improper medication federal Vote due soon U.S. withdraws UN veto of Vietnam U N ITED NATIONS (U P I) - The United States form ally dropped its op­ position to V ietnam ’s m em bership in the United Nations Tuesday and pledged to work toward “ a new era of peace and cooperation” w ith its form er foe in In­ dochina V ietnam ese representative Dinh Ba Thi looked up from the back of the Security Council cham ber and grinned b r ie fly a s A m b a ssa d o r D o n a ld F McHenry, the deputy U.S. represen­ tative, read a short statem ent announ­ cing the United States no longer opposes the adm ission of Hanoi, kept out of the UN until now by an Am erican veto United Nations this fall, one m ore nation will join the ranks of this organization and the principle of universality will be further advanced “ WE LOOK forward to working with Vietnam, as with all nations, to bring about a new era of peace and coopera­ tion. not only in our bilateral relations but in our work together in the United N ations.” McHenry said. The Security Council's certain ap­ proval of V ietnam ’s application was ex­ pected to com e after a luncheon adjourn ment and the conclusion of 33 scheduled speeches sus, or general agreem ent, instead of recorded vote Diplom atic sources said the 14 other m em bers of the Security Council and Vietnam had “ tentatively agreed" to the U S. request for a consensus to spare it the em barrassm ent of having to abstain or vote in favor of V ietnam ’s adm ission. THE UNITED STATES vetoed Viet nam ’s entry into the United Nations last Novem ber because of Hanoi's failure to account for American servicem en m iss­ ing in action in the Indochina war It agreed to drop its veto last May after the V ietnam ese prom ised to supply m ore information on American MIAS, “ When the Socialist Republic of V iet­ nam is adm itted to m em bership in the As a concession to the United States, approval w as expected to be by consen­ Soviet Ambassador Oleg Troyanovsky, who had favored putting the Am ericans on the sp ot with a recorded vote, reported ly softened his stand at a m eeting Monday night after the Viet­ n a m e s e a c c e p t e d th e c o n s e n s u s , diplom atic sources said But Troyanovsky lashed out at the United States during the council session for re jectin g H anoi's req u ests for reconstruction aid. “ As the ones who unleashed destruc­ tion in Vietnam, any attem pt by the Am ericans to shrug off responsibility for reconstruction is m orally unjustifiable,” Troyanovsky said. After clearing the Security Council, V ietnam 's application m ust be put to the the General form ality of a vote A ssem bly. in —Texan Staff Photo by dobra Ralnyold Zesty zinnias A spray of summer flowers can brighten even a poor scarecrow’s life. 50 years’ injustice righted for Sacco, Vanzetti families BOSTON (U P I) — The S tate of M assachusetts Tuesday ad­ mitted that shoem aker N icola Sacco and fish peddler Bar­ tolom eo V anzetti — their nam es long associated with injustice, prejudice and anarchy — w ere denied a fair trial which led to their executions nearly 50 years ago. Sacco and Vanzetti died in the electric chair on Aug 23, 1927, following a m urder trial and seven years of appeals which cap­ tured worldwide headlines and sparked protests and cam paigns to win the pair a new trial. FOR YEARS the ca se has been disputed by legal experts, Italian A m ericans and others who claim ed that Sacco and Vanzetti w ere denied a fair trial because of the post-World War I cam paign against Com m unists and radicals. Gov. M ichael S. Dukakis Tuesday signed a proclam ation rem oving “ the stigm a and d isg ra ce” attached to the two men convicted of murdering a p aym aster and his guard during a $15,677 robbery in South B raintree, M ass., on April 15, 1920 TTie proclam ation, signed in the State Senate cham bers with Nicola S acco’s grandson, Spencer Sacco, present, declared Aug.23.1977, “ N icola Sacco and Bartolom eo Vanzetti M emorial D ay.” SPEN C ER SACCO and Franco Di Bruno, Italian consul- general in Boston representing Vincenzina Vanzetti of Cuneo, Italy, a sister of defendant Vanzetti, accepted cop ies of the sign­ ed proclam ation which does not overturn the convictions of the two avow ed anarchists. “ It’s a terribly joyful m om ent. The fam ily is w ell pleased, said Spencer of Newburyport, M ass. The grandson said the fam ily would have rejected a posthum ous pardon “ because a pardon would be an adm ission of guilt." “ We are not here to d eterm ine whether these m en w ere guilty or innocent,” said Dukakis, but “ to remind all civilized people of the constant need to guard against our susceptibility to pre­ judice, our intolerance of unorthodox ideas and our failure to defend the rights of persons who are looked upon as strangers in our m id st.” “ SACCO AND VANZETTI would not have wanted to be par­ doned, even if it w ere possible for m e to do so," Dukakis said, “ for they m aintained their innocence to the end They asked not for m ercy or forgiveness, but for ju stice The proclam ation cited abuses by the prosecution, including “ m aking use of false evidence, m aking use of unfair and m is­ leading evidence, withholding exculpatory evidence and appeal­ ing to the jury’s prejudice and b iases." THE PROCLAMATION says the seven-year Dedham . Mass , trial and appeals process that led to the electrocution of the Italian im m igrants in Boston s C harlestown State Prison, was “ perm eated by prejudice against foreigners and hostility toward unorthodox political v ie w s.” “ The conduct of m any of the o fficia ls involved in the case shed serious doubts on their w illingness and ability to conduct the prosecution and trial of Sacco and Vanzetti fairly and im ­ p artially,” the proclam ation said. Mass. Gov. Dukakis signs Sacco-Vanzettl proclamation UPI T « l« p h o to wednesday Partly cloudy... Wednesday’s skies will be partly cloudy, with a slight chance of afternoon and evening thundershowers. Winds will be southeasterly, low 5 to 10 m.p.h. The temperature Wednesday will be in the mid-70s, the high W e d n e s d a y and Thursday in the high 90s. The sun will rise on Wednesday and Thursday at 6:42 a.m., set at 8:32 p.m. NL wins... The National League con­ tinued its mastery over the junior circuit by edging the American League 7-5 in the 48th All-Star Game. Story, Page 7. Neighbor files suit to close Hippie Hollow Lawyer cites nudity, noise and narcotics By HENRY URICK A suit to clo se Hippie Hollow because of overcrowding, litter, noise, nudity and drug abuse w as filed against the Lower Colorado R iver Authority (LCRA) Tues­ day. Attorney Bill Lambert and his wife Lena of Comanche Trail filed suit in 98th D istrict Court for a tem porary injunc­ tion to clo se the Lake T ravis sw im m ing area until the LCRA can m ake rules to control the nuisances. Lam bert, who owns land adjacent to Hippie Hollow, said in the suit his com ­ is representative of others too plaint num erous to be named. “ We’ve given up any hope of any im ­ provem ent without a law su it,” Lambert said. Lam bert com plains in the suit of litter and defecation draining from the park into the lake and drifting onto adjacent property. Other com plaints w ere un­ fir e h a za rd s, r e s t r ic te d c a m p in g , “ tremendous noise" and “ lewd and lascivious acts in plain view of plaintiffs residence ” The suit also said, “ Without regulation and control the area has b ecom e known as the Travis County center for un­ lim ited supplies of illegal drugs and nar­ co tics ” “ The dregs of human ex isten ce that drift with the drug culture are allow ed to congregate, thus the undesirable name ‘Hippie H o llo w ’ has a tta ch ed to an otherw ise beautiful area of the highest quality,” the suit also said. said the necessary legal papers would be served on the LCRA late Tuesday a fter­ noon. “ It s a no-m an's land out there. I ve taken the responsibility as a landowner, Lambert said. He added he does not want to close Hippie Hollow perm anently. LCRA G eneral Manager Charles Herr­ ing said he had not seen the suit yet. Travis County Sheriff Raymond Frank “ People out there have been com plain­ ing about the skinnydippers for years," Herring said. “They want us to put them in jail, but we don’t have the authority," he added. “ We put out trash cans, but people don’t use th em ,” Herring said “ W e’ve organized groups to go out and collect the trash, and (w e ’ve) bought the bags The county is responsible for picking up the trash ” Herring explained the law requires LCRA to keep its lands open for the public to have a cc ess to the lake and the attorney general can force the LCRA to keep the lands open. Herring said. Sheriff Frank said the area is “ very unsanitary.” “ I think we, the LCRA and whoever we are, have an ob ligation to provide sanitary conditions for a place the public uses so m uch,” Frank said He added, “ I’m not taking sid es.” D istrict Judge Herman Jones set a hearing on the suit for 9 a m. Aug 4. is uncertain B ecause of vacations which judge will hear the ca se it In Mississippi Deputies slow farmworkers’ march The T exas farm w orkers’ trek to Washington, D.C. was tem porarily sidetracked by the Pearl River County, M iss., sh eriff’s office Monday. Forty-six m archers w ere stopped on U S. l l south of Poplarville, M iss . taken to the county courthouse and released a few hours later. to a f r ie n d o f A c c o r d in g th e m a r c h e r s , a photographer, Manuel (Chaca) R am irez, w as ap­ proached by an officer in an unmarked police car w hile taking pictures of the group and w as told he w as obstructing traffic Soon another unmarked car arrived at the scene O fficers arrested all 46 m archers for obstructing traf­ fic, the friend of the m archers said. Sheriff Lawrence Holliday of P oplarville denied the m archers w ere arrested. “ The farm workers w ere not arrested They w ere detained for a short tim e and then relea sed ,” Holliday said The friend of the m archers said R am irez and another man w ere jailed but w ere released two hours later when law yers from the Equal R ights Congress, T exas State Rep Irma R angel, D -K ingsville, and o fficia ls from the U S D epartm ent of Ju stice intervened on behalf of the farm workers The Ju stice D epartm ent is m onitoring the m arch and coordinating w ith local o fficia ls on the m archers' route to ensure the farm w orkers’ safety. "It becam e apparent they w eren ’t going to hold them when they started get­ ting c a lls ,” ltan gel said. "This area (P earl River Coun­ ty) is a D elta area. It’s notorious for Ku KIux Elan ac­ tivity. Back in the 1960s it was an area of civil rights struggles So, it’s kind of a dangerous place The farm workers are marching to Washington to pre­ sent President Carter with a petition for establishing a farm w orkers’ union in Texas. They are scheduled to arrive in Washington Sept. 5. P a g e 2 □ T H E D A IL Y T E X A N □ W e d n e s d a y , J u l y 20, 1977 * * ■ ' rn* ----- as" T; y T«*»n 8I»W Photo* by (I*b r* R*lng|©W Dog gone Th© wrecker driver d ec id e d that while upon this ride, he would rather not have thla hufle hound by h it side So p laced In the driver s seat of the car in tow, the dog w atched Fifth Street pass through the o p en car window W HY you should rent your next tuxedo from Al's Formal Wear Mayor: delay housing vote By KH IC H A R B I S O N C ity R eporter City Cornett might defer m aking a derision on the proposed Fair Housing Or* d i na nee until Aug ll if Mayor ( ,irole McClellan has her way T h e h o l d u p C o u n c 1 1 m em ber J im m y Snell is out of to w n on v a c a t i o n , a n d m em bers John Trevino and Betty Himmelbiau will be on vacation two weeks following the "Aug ll is the first oppor­ tunity to have all the counc il m e m b e r s p r e s e n t , ” s a id McClellan, who will be leav* mg town for several days Aug 13 Though she said she does not know whether the council will decide to vote Thursday full house, or wait for a McClellan made it clear she ‘ really would prefer that we not vote on this Thursday ’’ She has two reasons "The first of course, is that I really feel we sh o u ld st vote on an ordinance like this without the full council present " The second reason is that City Council will hold the first of a series of public hearings cm Im ­ this year s Capital provements Program (CTP) Thursday The num ber of citizens wanting to speak on the $527 million CIF budget p r o m i s e s l a r g e , McClellan said, and she would rather not vote on a major issue like the Fair Housing Ordinance " a f te r the heat and e m o tio n a lis m of a public hearing " to be Not all the council m embers agree it "I want to settle im­ mediately," council mem ber I have lob­ Ron Mullen said t h i s ’ bied h a rd T hursday w hether the full council is present, he said to s e t t l e The Fair Housing Ordinance bans housing discrimination on the basis of race, religion, sex, sexual orientation, age or occupation. The ordinance, postponed when it originally cam e before the council more than a month ago, represents this council s first major con frontation with the housing in­ dustry A number of realtors have argued the ordinance should not be p a s se d as it goes beyond federal discrimination laws Himmelbiau said she ex­ pects the council to vote on the ordinance Thursday " If vou wait for all the council all the time you ll rarelv get anything done," she said, ad­ ding that if council members want to vote on ordinances they should a r r a n g e their vacations accordingly Former professor dead at age 65 By SUZANNE H A RPFR Staff Writer Dr F r a n k L yell, 65, a fo rm e r U niversity English professor, died of a heart a t ­ tack at approximately 5 a rn. Tuesday in Jackson, Miss Lyell began teaching at the University immediately after World War II and retired this year, Louis Lyell, his brother, said Lyell was a (‘lose friend of author Eudora Welty. who also in Jackson and whom he had known all his life lives " I guess he knew m ore about her and her writing than anybody around," Dr John Varner, a former colleague of L y e l l ’s sa id " O f c o u r s e , Frank knt*w everybody." Welty dedicated one of her books to Lyell, and he was mentioned in Willie Morris "N orth Toward Home." Lyell received his BA from tho University of Virginia, his m a s t e r f r o m C o l u m b i a University and his doc torate from Princeton. He was a Phi Betta Kappa, as well as a m em ber of Kappa Sigma I,yell a l s o w r o t e book reviews for The New York Times Interim gas hike denied T h e T e x a s R a i l r o a d C o m m i s s i o n T u e s d a y denied Southern Union Gas Co an interim rate hike in Austin while the company awaits a decision on its request for a perm anant in­ crease than t e m p o r a r y Southern Union had ask­ ed for a m o re l l m i llio n i n ­ crease awaiting a com m is­ its $2 3 sion ruling on r a te million p e r m a n a n t hike T h e c a s e b e g a n in September, 1976, when the Austin City Council denied a $2 35 million increase. In January, 1977, a city con­ sultant recommendeed a $1 I million increase. Southern Union appealed to the commission, and a h e a r i n g w a s h e ld l a s t month No ruling has been given. V—■ UT power plant getting charge New generator will double output Bv JOHN B URNETT Staff Writer By i t s J a n u a r y . 1978. th e University power plant plans t o d o u b l e e n e r g y ca p a b ilitie s, adding 25,000 more kilowatts to its present output, Reuben Barr, assis­ tant superintendent of utilities and power plant engineer, said The $4 5 million, 130-ton steam driven turbo generator was ordered from General Electric in Massachusetts in January, 1974. but the Univer­ sity did not receive it until March "Tilings like this are nearly alw ays hand-m ade the You c a n ’t grocery store and pick one up. Barr said ju s t go to THE: NEW generator is "a s big as the other six generators put together," B arr claimed Sixty men working around t h e s e to s e v e n the clock a r e requ ired o p e r a t e generator*,n he continued T h e d e s i g n e r of t h e generator housing and piping is Pow er S ystem s sy stem Engineering of Houston, but University maintenance men a re installing the equipment "Our people get better ex­ i t p e r i e n c e themselves After all, they're the ones that a re going to be using it." Barr said i n s t a l l i n g The Hal C. Weaver Power Plant, built in the 20s, was ex­ panded in 1958 and again in 1970 to make room for more equipment A L T H O U G H th e p o w e r plant's fuel bill was $800,000 last month. B arr said main­ taining a source of energy on c a m p u s still costs half as much as buying it from the city would 6 % on SAVINGS CREDIT UNION M I KM V 6 b ? W , $<$* 4 47$-87a4• V \ X X Iv V TWF f i s t SUMMER SHOE CLEARANCE JV) Values to$44.00 • O VER A Q UARTER C l NTURY Of I XPf RTISfc AS M I N S F O R M A l Wf AR S P EC IA LISTS • VOTf D T H ! N A T I O N S I f A D IN G T O R M AI WEAR S P EC IA LISTS BY M I N SW t AR M A O A /IN 1 • I I AT URI S THI NATION S I AHGE ST Sf Lf C H O N OE Q U A I I f Y MI N S f O R M A l W f AR • A SERVICE ORI! N T I D C OMPANY THA! TAKI S PRIDI IN THI WAY YOU LOOK • S P f C I A t P R IC E S ! OR Wf UDING GROUPS AND STUD! NTS • OVE R SO LOCATIONS THROUGHOUT TM! SOUTH • OVER ONE MILLION SAT ISI IEO CU STOM ! RS Aik(ORAM I LVMR North ern ** M a ll • 2 8 2 9 Quart* 461 0 28 1 • 4 7 2 1697 V ’Vs* Steam turbine section of new University generator —Texan Staff Photo by Will Van Overbeek Balanced Way ^ NATURAL FOODS Yogurt - Pennon. A lta Pena. Continental Cosmetics - N atural Soaps. Lotion and Shampoos Supplements Juices Kefir lo ca ted in Bluebonnet Plaza 504 W. 24 St. 476-4038 free perking w ith purchase T he D a ily T e x a n , is pub lish ed bv T e x a s S tu d e n t P u b lic a tio n s D ra w e r D, U n iv e rsity S ta tio n , A ustin Tex 71711 T h e D aily T e x a n is p u b lish e d M onday, T u e sd a y . W ednesday. T h u rsd ay , and F ri d a y e x c e p t y a n d r u m p e rio d s Second c la s s p o sta g e paid a t A ustin, Tex ‘ r - r - — --------------- t — dont Mea s tu d e n t n e w s p a p e r a t T he U n iv e rsity o f I > xas a t A ustin ------------ holiday “ ** “ J " The * ~ “ --------------------- 5'ew s c o n trib u tio n s w ill be a c c e p te d by tele p h o n e (471-4551), a t the e d ito ria l office .Sews c o n i (T e x a s S tu d e n t P u b lic a tio n s B uilding 2 122 o r a t th e new s la b o ra to ry (C o m m u n ic atio n B uilding A 4 136' In q u irie s c o n c e rn in g d e liv e ry and c la s s ifie d a d v e rtis in g should b e m a d e in T S P B uilding 3 MO ■ 471 5244) and d isp la y a d v e rtis in g in T S P B uilding 3 210 Cl iuds) T he n a tio n a l a d v e rtis in g r e p r e s e n ta tiv e o f T he D aily T e x a n is N a tio n a l E d u c a tio n a l A d v e rtisin g S e rv ic e 360 L ex in g to n Ave , New Y’o rk , N Y 10017 Im ' , — ........ ' . . . . . . . The D aily T exan v u b s c n b e s to U nited P r e s s In te rn a tio n a l and New Y ork T im e s N ew s S e rv ic e T h e T e x a n is a m e m b e r of th e A sso c ia ted C o lle g ia te P r e s s , th e S outhw est J o u rn a lis m C o n g re ss, th e T e x a s D aily N e w sp ap e r A sso c ia tio n , and A m e ric a n N e w sp a p e r P u b lis h e rs A sso c ia tio n H IK DA ILY T E X A N SU B SC R IPT IO N R A T E S S U M M E R SESSIO N 1977 P ic k ed up on c a m p u s • U T s tu d e n ts fac u lty s ta ff P ic k e d up on c a m p u s g e n e ra l public By m a il in U S A .......................................... O N E S E M E S T E R KALL OR S P R IN G ) 1*77-78 P ic k e d up on c a m p u s b a sic s tu d e n t fee P ic k ed up on c a m p u s - I 7 T f a c u lty s ta ff P ic k e d up on c a m p u s g e n e ra l p ublic By m a il in T e x a s Bv m a il o u tsid e T e x a s w ith in U S A I I U0 4 OO 7 5 0 I 75 I 65 6 75 13 00 14 OO TW O S E M E S T E R S (FA U L A N D S P R IN G ) 1*77-78 I 330 P ic k e d u p on c a m p u s U T fa c u lty s ta f f 12 00 P ic k e d up on c a m p u s g e n e ra l public 24 00 By m a il in T e x a s 26 00 Bv m a il o u tsid e T e x a s w ith in U S A '(end o r d e r s and a d d re s s c h a n g e s to T E X A S S T U D E N T PU B LIC A TIO N S, P O Box P U B NO 146440 D, A ustin, T e x a s 78712. o r to T S P B uilding, CS.SOO ............................ ................ ______ _____ „ & ON-THE-DRAG $ J lpr. $ 2 pr. / / r n / D O E S IT FOR S H O E S L - A ll SALES FINAL PLEASE (Not all stock included) Yaring's makes fashion happen on the U.T. campus. Freshmen! Welcome to U.T., present your orientation in Y a rin g 's Sportswear Dept, on Yaring's second floor ... fill out a charge application and get your free gift. tag YARING'S ON-THE-DRAG 2406 G u ad a lu p e D O W N T O W N • H IG H L A N D M A L I • NORTH LOOP PLAZA • U .T W ESTGATE • S O U T H W O O D MALL Wednesday, July 20, 1977 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Page 3 O’Neill wants Jaworski to head ethics committee’s Korean probe WASHINGTON (U F I) — Speaker Thom as O 'N eill asked form er W atergate prosecutor Leon Jaw orsk i Tuesday to serve as special counsel for the em battled investigation of South House E th ics C om m ittee s Korean influence-buying in Congress ' The job is his if he w ants i t ,’' a source told U P I "H e s No I on the sp earker s lis t ." Sources said O ’Neill telephoned Jaw orski in Houston, where he is in private law p ra c tic e Jaw o rsk i was not im m ediately available for com m en t, and the sou rces said they understood the m a tte r to have been left open for the m om ent, with both men planning to talk again Wednesday O N E IL L TOLD R E P O R T E R S e a rlie r that he p er­ sonally had talked to one of about a half-dozen m en of "n atio n al s ta tu re " who w ere under consid eration to rep lace Philip L acov ara. who quit as sp ecial counsel Frid ay a fte r a fight with the panel s ch airm an O 'N eill declined to identify any of the individuals, but he and ethics ch airm an John F lyn t, D -G a., prom ised th at w hoever got in ­ dependence" to conduct a past-paced inquiry fre e of in­ te rfe re n ce jo b would hav e " t o t a l th e Jaw orsk i was nam ed sp ecial W atergate prosecutor Nov I. 1973, and succeeded Archibald Cox, who was fired IO days e a rlie r by fo rm e r P resid en t Nixon in the "Satu rd ay night m a s s a c r e ." CO X. L IK E JA W O R SK I, was said to have been among those mentioned as possible ch oices to lead the eth ics c o m m itte e 's inquiry O ther nam es w ere understood to include fo rm er Sen Sam E rw in, D-N C., who headed the S enate W atergate co m m itte e . Sam D ash, that co m ­ m itte e 's ch ief counsel; and John D oar, ch ief counsel for the House Ju d icia ry C o m m ittee in the Nixon im peach­ m ent proceedings But the sou rces said Jaw o rsk i was at least O 'N eill s top ch oice and predicted that Jaw o rsk i would get the eth ics c o m m itte e ’s approval if he agreed to take the job. E a rlie r, O ’N eill, under R epublican pressure to take the investigation away from the e th ics co m m ittee, m ade c le a r that he would give the new counsel any sup­ port n ecessary if fu rther problem s developed " W E ’R E GOING to have a man of national statu re and you can be assured th ere will be no co n flicts of per­ sonalities as has happened ." O ’Neill said in re fe re n ce to L a c o v a ra 's resignation "Y o u can be sure the sp e a k e r’s o ffic e will be watching the co m m ittee and its actio n s to m ake sure things a re moving without in any way in terferin g O ’N eill and F ly n t outlined the situation at a news con­ fe re n ce a fte r they, the rest of the House D em ocrat leadership and D em ocrats on the eth ics panel held a 90- m inute discussion of the problem s and c ritic is m s ste m ­ ming from L a c o v a ra ’s resignation. T H E ATTO RN EY had accu sed F ly n t of slowing e f­ fo rt’s to d eterm in e w hethei South K orean governm ent agents m ade payoffs to m em b ers of Congress in the influence U .S. econom ic and in an e ffo rt to 1970s m ilitary policy toward Seoul. Under an agreem ent reached at T u esd ay's m eeting, F ly n t said his com m ittee will be asked to approve a resolution sp ecifically guaranteeing freedom of action for L a c o v a ra 's su ccessor This new special counsel in­ dependence of conduct for the rem aind er of the in­ vestigation. Flynt said, "an d we have every reason to b elieve he will be an individual who will be applauded by you and the A m erican people " ... will have to tal E A R L IE R T U ESD A Y , Republicans challenged House D em o cratic lead ers to c re a te a se le c t panel to tak e over the K orean investigation and to allow quick floor action on a bill providing for appointm ent of a sp ecial p rosecutor even though P resid ent C a rter said Monday he thought that unnecessary "T h is is indeed an em ergency s itu a tio n ," House G G P L ead er John Rhodes said in calling for a floor vote on a sp ecial prosecutor bill now before the House Ju d icia ry Committee "T h e tim e has clearly com e to dispel those clouds of suspicion, doubt and m istru st in Congress by appointing J u s t i c e a s p e c ia l p r o s e c u to r to D e p a rtm e n t’s lobbyin g. Rhodes said in a statem en t issued jo in tly with Reps Jo hn Anderson. R ill . and W illiam Cohen. R M aine in v e s tig a tio n " of K o rean ta k e o v e r th e The House Republican P olicy C o m m ittee la te r voted unanimously to urge that C a rter appoint a sp ecial p rosecu tor, and Rhodes disclosed he had asked O ’Neill to nam e a Republican as the new e th ics co m m ittee counsel as well Jaworski’s help asked in Korean bribe scandal - U P I Telephoto ‘Gooey substance’beached K I R T ARANSAS (U P I) - A Coast Guard analyst said Tuesday a gooey sub­ stan ce dotting an eigbt-m ile stre tch of one of T e x a s ’ fav orite beaches definitely was not high-sulphur crude oil from a supertanker which unloaded in the T e x a s Gulf last week " I t s still under in v estig atio n ," Lt Cm dr Je r r y V ictor said "T h e substance is a heavy unrefined product, and it has v e ry T h a t l it t le su lp h u r c o n te n t elim in ates m ost of your Middle E a s t crude oil Most of your M ideastern oil has high sulphur content . ’’ H O W EV ER, V icto r said he had not the sticky the possibility elim inated petroleum substance m ight be a low- sulphur crude which spilled from a ship offshore and the sandy re so rt area on M onday's high tide floated onto "T h a t narrow s it down to two possible sou rces that is, possibly from a ship that is carry in g crude oil from South A m erica or Indonesia — sou rces w here they have low sulphur content — or it could be a natural crude from a seep age, possibly o ff M exico VICTOR SAID the oil, which am ounted to about 50 b a rre ls, did not spill from the S tav ros (l l,., th e la rg est supertanker ever to unload o ff T e x a s The C oast G uard o ffic e r said the S tav ros, which unloaded 2 4 million b a rre ls of P e rsia n Gulf oil to two sm aller ships off P o rt A ransas last week, was carry ing "so u r crude, which has a very high sulphur content. "T h e re a re ce rta in a re a s w here th ere a re blobs around in ce rta in shapes and sizes, say about the size of a dishplate a glob here and a blob there, a very sticky substance. REG A RD LESS of its sou rce, the sub­ stan ce co llected in pools on the sand, sticking to su n b ath ers’ shoes and feet and preventing from spreading them blankets on much of the beach in an area north of F ish P a ss Both the Coast Guard and a spokesm an fo r the Corpus ( hristi A rea Oil Spill Con­ tro l A sso cia tio n d iscou nted any e n ­ vironm ental hazard to fish or fowl but said the oil was m essy for beach visitors H ARRY FR A N K LIN , general m anager of the Oil Spill Control A ssociation, said he had seen results of M exico seepage in the form of heavy, tarlike blobs along the a re a 's b eaches for y ears He said he did not b elie v e the c u rre n t p etro leu m globules w ere from M exico becau se they w ere of a lighter nature "T h is p articu lar c a s e looks to me like the oil is a different type and is probably w eathered oil com ing from som e dum­ ping out in the Gulf, " Franklin said "T H E OIL has not penetrated or con lam in ated the sand itself. It's ju st sitting on top of the sand, a rath er viscous, tarry type oil so we can rem ove it with shovels very easily " F ran k lin 's association had 45 w orkers standing by with shovels to scoop up the oil blobs once c le a ra n ce w as issued by the C oast Guard in New O rleans "I im agine it ll take us a couple of days, m aybe three days, to rem ove the oil from the b e a c h /' he said "G e ttin g large m aintainers probably would result in removing too much of the sand from the beach So we want to rem ove the th e l e a s t a m o u n t of s a n d b e a c h ." f r o m news capsules Prisoners in Mexico could return by year's end M EXICO CITY (U P I) — U.S. A m bassador P atrick Joseph Lucey said Tuesday A m erican prisoners in Mexican jails could return home by the end of the year under a prisoner exchange treaty awaiting ratification by the U S. Senate. The form er Wisconsin governor, who presented his credentials to M ex­ ican President Jo se Lopez Portillo Tuesday morning, said he hoped the treaty would be ratified before Congress adjourns in October. Peru factory workers strike LIMA, Peru (U P I) — Striking workers closed down most factories and paralyzed public serv ices Tuesday in an illegal and som etim es violent 24- hour walkout led by pro-Moscow Communist unions opposed to a govern­ The strike seriously affected not only Lim a but Arequipa and Cuzco as ment au sterity program . well. 2 congressmen request Kent State mem orial WASHINGTON (U P I) — Sen. Howard Metzenbaum and Hep. John Seiberling asked the Interior D epartm ent Tuesday to consider declaring the site where four Kent State University students w ere killed a national historical landmark. The Ohio D em ocrats m ade the request as a way of preventing the un­ iversity from building a gymnasium on the Blanket Hill site, a p roject op­ posed by m any students and the parents of the four dead. Almost 200 persons w ere arrested last week a fter occupying the a re a for two months. Senate OKs B l bom ber research funds WASHINGTON (U P I) — The Senate Tuesday approved a $109.6 billion appropriations bill for the m ilitary containing no money for production of the Bl but full funding for research and development of the bomber as in­ surance against failure of the air-launched cruise m issile. The bill backed President C a rte r’s policy decision not to put the B l into production and shift to the pilotless, less costly cruise missile as part of the country’s strateg ic force. • The m assive money m easure will have to be reconciled with the $110 billion bill approved by the House which, acting before C arter announced his decision, includes $4.1 billion for production of the BL The House is e x ­ pected to go along with the Senate. Another mishap halts Alaska pipeline flow KAIHBANKS, Alaska (U P I) - A piece of heavy construction equip- ment struck and broke a check valve near the north end of the trans- Alaska pipeline Tuesday, reportedly sending oil spewing 50 to 75 feet in the air The mishap shut down the line less than 24 hours a fter it was reopened following an earlie r accident. A spokesman for the Interior Department, Arlan Kohl, said the oil flow through the pipeline could be resumed as soon as the valve was fixed, perhaps in a few hours. Stocks advance in active trading DOW JONIS AVIRAGI 30 Industrials 9 1 9 2 7 lilly IS is/; U i p . p r t ,il scored The Dow NKW YORK (U P I) - Stocks, advancing for the third straigh t their biggest session, gain in a month Tuesday as in­ vestors responded to strong e a r ­ nings reports with their heaviest buying in IO months. Jo n e s ind u strial average, which rose 4 65 points jum ped Monday, unofficially another 8 67 points to 919.27, the best gain since it climbed IO. 17 points Ju n e 14 The clo sely w atched a v e ra g e has gained th re e 16 28 p oin ts sessions la s t th e m a s s President Carter seeks 5-cent gas increase c New York Tim e* W A S H I N G T O N - P resid ent C a rte r agreed in­ Tuesday to seek an c re a s e of up to 5 c e n ts in fed eral gasoline ta x e s to tra n sp o rta tio n or fund g o v e r n m e n t o t h e r to p rogram s, accord ing A dm inistration o fficials The new tax proposal would rep lace a stiffe r standby gasoline tax that had been ad v an ced in April but re je c te d by the House Ways and M eans Committee in June That tax, which would have been trig g e re d by e x ­ cessiv e in creases in gas­ oline consum ption, could have reached 50 c e n ts a gallon by 1985. The new form ula is in­ t e n d e d a s a q u i c k , onetim e in cre a se in the cu rren t tax of 4 c e n ts a gallon U nlike the e a rlie r proposal, which w as in­ tended as a m echanism for cutting gasoline use, the new form ula would m ost likely be too m odest to have a significant effect on consumption Instead proponents of the tax , led b y T r a n s p o r t a t i o n S e cretary B rock Adams, hope to use the funds for transportation program s. the Based on C a r te r’s April calcu latio n s, a 5-cent tax would r a is e n e a rly $6 b i l l i o n a n n u a l l y and presum ably be retained by fed eral govern­ m ent. The P resid en t had intended to reb ate c o lle c ­ tions under the original form ula "p ro g re s s iv e ly .” T h e ch a n ce s for en act­ t a x a r e t h e m e n t o f p ro b lem atic, particularly in view of the opposition displayed in the Ways and M eans Com m ittee to both the P resid en t’s standby tax plan and a committee proposal of a 3-cont tax. However, strong con­ gressional support for a proposal s im ila r to that approved by C arter on Tuesday has com e from Rep T hom as L. Ashley, D-Ohio, ch airm an of the ad h o c e n e r g y com ­ m ittee. Ashley h as repeatedly stated th a t he fav ors a gasoline tax of 3 to 4 cents to be used for transporta­ tion, including m ass tran­ s it and carp o olin g ex­ perim ents. The ad hoc energy com m ittee, which its deliberations begins Wednesday, is expected to consider the gasoline tax on Thursday. The President’s deci­ sion, which was made at a meeting Tuesday after­ noon between Carter and top economic and energy o fficials, cam e on a proposal from Adams. O f O u O m T f i l l s Summer days -UPI Telephoto F o rest fires ravaged th o u san d s of a c r e s in the Indicated sta te s, and drought p ersists in o th ers. New York City, still reeling from last w eek ’s blackout, m ay fa ce an oth er on e a s pow er d em an d s, spark ed by intense h eat, e s c a la te . Coast Guardsman George Castillo collects oil deposit samples. - V •> -UPI Telephoto Kissinger on Vietnam: ‘We owe them nothing’ ( U P I ) W A SH IN G TO N - F o r m e r S e c re ta ry of S ta te Henry A. K issinger, c h ief a rc h ite c t of the tre a ty ending the V ie tn a m w ar, te s tifie d T u esd ay he know s of no s t i l l - s e c r e t aid c o m ­ m itm en ts to the Com m unist victo rs and in any event "w e owe them nothing." K issinger testified befo re a crowded hearing of the House Asian and P a c ific a ffa irs su b com m ittee about the 1973 le tte r from P resid en t R ich ard Nixon to North V ietn am ese P re m ie r P ham Van Dong offering up to $ 4.75 billion in postw ar reconstruction aid. K issinger said ch arg es of a cover-up w ere "e x tre m e ly u n ju stified .’ ’ "T h e r e was nothing to co v er u p ," he said stiffly , “ ...b eca u se it was not an unconditional o f fe r ." K issinger said he knew nothing of any other Nixon com m unication on the sub­ je c t of aid to Hanoi. " I cannot find such a docum ent, he said. “ P erh ap s in the give and take (of negotiations) som eone said th ere is a docum ent We c a n ’t find it. The D ep art­ m ent (of S ta te ) doesn’t have it, and I don’t have it. And if they don’t have it, I don’t believe it e x is ts ." Heat wave kills 7 fo u r of th em ST. LO U IS (U P I) - At least seven a re a re s id e n ts , living without a ir conditioning in an ap artm en t for the eld erly, died in the heat wave now in its second week, au th orities said T u es­ day. Fou r of the v ictim s w ere found in the 96-degree heat th eir room s a t an apartm en t in the c ity 's w est end T hree m ore deaths w ere reported in suburban St. Louis County. in The m ed ical e x a m in e r’s o ffice said in­ se v e ra l o th e r d ea th s a r e being v e stig a ted fo r p o ssib le h e a t-re la te d cau ses P h ysician s warned persons who have no a ir conditioning to avoid e x e r­ tion, drink fluids and stay as cool as possible. They also warned ag ain st keeping pets or children in locked c a r s with the win­ dows closed. D r. R. D ean W ochner, d irecto r of health and hospitals for the city , said that prolonged hot spells usually bring deaths and noted a nine-day period in J u ­ ly, 1966, in which the d eaths of m ore than 150 persons w ere traced to tem p eratu res of 90 or above. A u th o r itie s sa id G e o r g e T a y lo r , C atherine D orsey, Golden F o w ler and his w ife, B lan ch e, w ere found in their th e K in g s b u r y T e r r a c e r o o m s a t A p a r t m e n t s . T h e r e n t - s u b s id iz e d building is owned by the St. Louis Hous­ ing Authority and ch arg e s e x tra for air- conditioned room s. County au th orities said two men in their 70s died from h eat-related cau ses and a 36-year-old m an was found dead in­ side his hom e with a fan running and two em pty bottles of b eer beside his body N am es of the v ictim s w ere not disclosed. House members skeptical over economic plans for em ploym ent, WASHINGTON (U P I) — A dm inistra­ their tion o fficials Tuesday outlined goals inflation and econom ic growth over the next few years to s k e p tic a l H ou se m e m b e r s and generally friendly sen ators. M em bers of the House Budget Com ­ m ittee challenged Budget D irecto r B e rt L ance and C harles Schultze, ch airm an of P resid ent C a rte r s Council of E conom ic Advisers T heir questions included w hether the A dm inistration is doing enough to reduce e m p loy m en t — p a r tic u la r ly am ong youth in big c itie s — and w hether it re a l­ ly will balance the fed eral budget. Senate Budget C om m ittee m em bers who q u estioned T re a s u ry S e c r e t a r y M ichael Blum enthal w ere polite and generally u n critical Both co m m ittee s opened a second round of hearing on the fed eral budget Rep E lizabeth H oltzman, D -N .Y ., was unim pressed when Schultze p ro jected an econom ic growth ra te around 5 per cent tins year and next, a d ecline in un­ em ploym ent from 7 per cen t to about 6 6 per cen t, and less inflation. What does it m ean u ltim ately to have 5 per cen t growth but leav e our c itie s d ev astated 0 " she asked. She said looting d u rin g N ew Y o rk C it y ’ s b la c k o u t resulted partly from the g ov ernm ent’s failu re to deal with high unem ploym ent among urban youth. " I don’t see any program to deal with the high black youth unem ploym ent,” said Rep. Donald F r a s e r , D-Minn L an ce and Schultze said a new youth program is startin g When L ance said the A dm inistration still plans to b alan ce the budget by 1980. d espite a $48 billion d eficit this year and an estim ated $61.5 billion next, R ep O tis P ik e, D -N .Y ., said " I want to believe, but I have g re a t trouble believing .” Sev eral m em b ers of both p arties co m ­ plained that public serv ice and public works jo b p rogram s alread y approved a re startin g up m ore slowly than plann­ ed R epublicans said the governm ent is th e to o m u c h s t im u lu s g iv in g econom y, which they said is picking up on its own to editorials a t e * - THE DAILY TEXAN P a g e 4 □ W ednesd ay, July 20, 1977 CARTE POSTALE N O Jr. WWON bt j Jh&u&td ^~ ]o h m vu > w & K i) fo 3 n ? $ J lA CfnUj( fit f o n v » i * 2 - f a t S H A W * } L) - f h c U w o t f W NWS H0Cm,T>KE A TWrCATO..." Electoral College aids large states’ vote By Kevin Phillips WASHINGTON Conservatism, by its very nature, I* slow to promote or acct tit chan#** Often, this mindset is f i s t Occasionally, It is counterproductive Ongoing conservative opposition to abolishing the Electoral Collage falls in the second category. Unfortunately, the Electoral College method of chous mg a president has become almost an article of cooser vative faith Because each state gets two votes for each senator, in addition to votes based on population, the college is weighted toward small slates like Idaho, Nebraska, Vermont and South Carolina (and thus toward the conservative side in national elections I Or so the argument goes HUT LET ME suggest that while that analysis was valid six oi eight years ago. when conservatives had practical ho|M*s of building a grand ('oalitton on the sup port of the South ami the West, those circumstances no longer prevail Just scan a map of the IIT76 presidential results Dixie voted for Jimmy Carter, the Wejit for d With the two regions benefitting from the “ Adoral College overrepresentation of small states their choice, any structural bias was minimised, even negated splitting Will this happen again in IWO ’ Probably If Jimmy is the Democratic candidate, as we must Carter presume, he ll be the favorite In the South And given the unpopularity of federal farm, water and energy policy, his COP opponent may well be the favorite out West ALL DE WHICH should knock the idea of a South West coalition into a cocked hat and once again focus the strategy of major-party candidates on carrying the big urban states California, New York, Michigan, Penn Sylvania, Illinois, Ohio and so forth Whic h brings us to the actual and operational, as op posed to theoretical, bias of the Electoral College Ab­ sent a clear, cohesive and available southern western majority bloc the Elec toral College routinely serves to make the big states pivotal and critical That s logical enough the candidate who can shape a bare majority in New York receives its entire bloc of electoral votes, encHJgh to outweigh the entire eight state Rocky Moun­ tain region This operational bias toward the big states overbalances any slight mathematical bias towards the small states the way a boulder outweighs a cardboard box’ Now for Point Two Any IWW or 1984 candidate obliged to focus on the big states will, increasingly, be* obliged to Cater to the politic al desires of the important minority groups in those states And the big urban states also happen to be the parts of the country where minority populations are surging IN CALIFORNIA, black Lt Gov Mervyn Dymally says the minority population is increasing so fast that it will soon be the first * Third World state " Several weeks ago. Dymally. himself born on the Caribbean island of Trinidad, released a report saying that minorities (Mexicans, blacks. Japanese, Puerto Ricans, Chinese* Filipinos, Koreans, as well as other Latin Americans and Asians) had risen from 20 4 per cent of Califm ia’s population in 1970 to 34 7 per cent this year. And “ if the present trend continues,” the report speculated, “ by 1990 California minorities will comprise a staggering 60 7 per cent of the total population." Maybe Maybe not But Dymally adds that “ neither the media, the government, nor private interests are prepared for this emerging phenomenon," and in that, be s certainly right Clearly the conservative U.S. senators trying to maintain the Electoral College aren't prepared By working to keep the Electoral College system, they are also maximizing the future presiden­ tial selection influence of potential ‘ Third World” suites like California (and New York is not far behind). Retention of the Electoral College would probably guarantee a rmnority-ortented presidential selection process for the 1980s GETTING RID of the Electoral College, on the other hand, would open up U S presidential politics to a broad majoriterian appeal that would not have to worry about possibly losing California or New York by a few thou­ sand pivotal votes That support could be made up in Kansas or North Carolina But first, I think, U.S. conservatives — not least a dozen or so influential members of the U S Senate — must understand the political and population shifts tak­ ing place Times they are a-changin' c King Features Syndicate, Inc. Duping the people into accepting ‘lies’ By Jo hn Parker lim* might think that people who rely on wonts as heavily as politicians do would at least learn how to use them properly But on the contrary, the goal seems to be precisely the opposite the game the name of Fin all Nit Ila* very hest politicians or public figures al least occasionally sue Climb to that old devil demagoguery, in is to which restructure reality to the tastes of the a u d ien t, rather than to enlighten the audience as to the true nature of reality THIS IS NOT the classic cast* of the backwoods politician who wins the sheriff's race by truthfully claiming his opponent s wife is a Thespian Although tlu* principle is the sam e, modern political discourse has achieved a much higher level of sophistication The most outstanding recent example is the “ d iscu ssio n " sparked by the Supreme Court decision on abortion The the antiabortionists favor the ruling proabortlonists oppose it But actually the issue is not a pro or antiabortion matter at all It is strictly a matter of constitutional i e . does the Constitution require law the government to fund abortions' Hie court said no. it does not Is it not con­ ceivable that one could favor abortion aik! not find a requirement for federal funding thereof in the Constitution ? AFTER ALL, one might passionately feel “ Melancholy Baby" should be the national anthem, but even the song’s most ardent supporters would have a tough tim e finding a constitutional man­ date for it But the pro and antiabortion groups find it much more effective to scream ‘ b a c k r o o m b u t c h e r s " or a b o u t * genocide ’ After all, they’ve only got a couple of minutes on the evening news, and they've got to get their shots in while they can, right’’ Perhaps the greatest modern per­ sonification of this attitude is Andy Young and his International Racist Review Actually, according to Young himself in a “ Face the Nation” inter­ view, what he really means when he calls someone a “ racist is that they are ‘ ethnocentric," and thus insensitive to I V . I MIG. MI Av. t J I S f t C K l n e t .k'A i k'UGCX GVKI D ANI' . N A O M I i t t> OM I VII U 'H lT E MOOSh W A W . , - . . L iO t ^ — COS/t.S A. VOSS W i t . NA V IO N I WI V 'AWI U >/ t u t . W . t V I a i n ! k l G v V I I I " . IJ j l O O I S O G j O ' O f c ' S , ' V o n - , \ i i N e , v u > i L j U A l H i V I ' i Ai'.' - LY V* "kfc* VV**. >. Os •* v w-v i ut. v o m i t i i i A W N A t , \ V \ t AA W V A U K W I S V A N O R E VOW W W W I AV 'I w I n -NAK WI WO 'N A O 'A N W W S N A V l U N d u t I MA l l \ A i ’ AVO O L P NOT I O W O O P L V Z VT* X ///IJI «A 0 i^UN it va is. 8 other cultures. ETHNOCENTRIC indeed means just that — the tendency to judge other cultures by the standards of one’s own culture, with the implicit idea that one s own culture is preferable. “ Racism, its connotations of hatred and with bigotry, is clearly an inappropriate syn­ onym So why does he use it? Because, as he explained in the same interview, not enough people know what “ethnocen- tnsm means, but everyone recognizes racist " Other forms of this work of word- gaming are practiced by almost every political pressure group THESE GROUPS loudly proclaim they are fighting “ for" co n su m ers, or women, or minorities, or whatever, yet m any m em b ers of any of th e se categories within the general public are going to think any particular group is nuts But such groups continue, in an attempt to inflate their credentials, to claim to be crusading on behalf of people who are indifferent or opposed to them Yet after all. why shouldn’t one behave irresponsibly when the media and the public are such suckers for their hyper­ bolic con gam es? The media, trying desperately to com­ press the world into a half-hour news show or a five-mmute radio spot, will employ “ code-words like “ conser­ liberal’’ to describe almost vative” and any given political conflict or figure RICHARD NIXON, Milton Friedman and the John Birch Society are all known as “conservative." William Proxmire, Bella Abzug and Nelson Rockefeller are known as “ liberal these Obviously, terms are hardly definitive, but they are the media s stock-in-trade The media is only too eager to cut analytical corners by using imprecise but easily understood terms And last but far. far from least there is th** general public, knees primed and ready to jerk upon hearing the proper political code word The words, phrases and statem ents are designed specifically to appeal to the base reactionary in­ stincts of people, who are apparently to resp on d A m ore demagogue can t play to an audience that isn t there. than read y OLT OF self-respect, if nothing else. one would think people would refuse to be taken in by such oversimplification, distortions and outright lies But as long as that is all they are willing to accept, that is all they are going to get J o h n P a r k e r is a U n iv e r s it y rep orter f o r The Daily Texan (iud is a m e m b e r o f The Youny A m e ric a n s f o r F r e e d o m Policies needed now University faculty members should know what s expected of them when they’re being considered for promotion or tenure. Unfortunately, this in all the University s departments isn t the case A five-member Faculty Grievance Hearing Panel recently handed down a decision which says exactly that. The panel sent a letter of recommendation to University President Lorene Rogers recommending to her that the I Diver­ sity rehire Asst. Music Prof. Michael Nascimben for one year. The panel said he did not receive a fair tenure evaluation I rom his department when he requested it. After hearing two days of testimony, the panel concluded that Nascimben had not received a fair evaluation because the Department of Music, did not announce schedules, policies, procedures or guidelines for the evaluation of faculty service as it was supposed to do. Announced schedules, policies, procedures or guidelines in the college are required by Section 3.17 of the University s Handbook of Operating Procedures, which says: the dean of each college should prepare and distribute written criteria by which faculty will be evaluated. In Nascim ben’s case, his dean, Peter G a m e, could have simply failed to prepare such criteria—a clear violation of the University handbook. Or, it could be that the criteria simply ex­ ists and is not being followed. The first is as undesirable as the second. Naturally, the question arises: how many other colleges do or tenure follow established rules during faculty do not evaluations? Although we requested that information from the University administration more than a month ago, we haven t heard, and we don’t know. In any case, President Rogers has the Nascimben case before her — she’ll decide whether the music professor should be re­ evaluated. Whatever her decision is, it won t change the findings of the grievance committee: certain university departments simply don’t follow the University’s well established rules when it com­ es to promotions and tenure. for all departments, Without concrete, specific and proper tenure evaluation policies for academic excellence will, at best, be one that is slowed by ar­ bitrary tenure decisions of department chairmen, deans and University administrators. the University’s quest D.E. Business is dragging The People’s Renaissance Market, on 23rd Street between Guadalupe and San Antonio Streets, should be reopened to im­ porters and wholesalers. If two Austin men petitioning the City Council have their way, the Drag marketplace soon will be open to a wider variety ol peddlers, as it should be. Public hearings concerning the market are schduled for Aug. 4. Currently, only bona fide artists and craftsmen are allowed to peddle their wares along the Drag. The City Council banned im­ porters and wholesalers from the market on June 30, 1976. Presumably, the ban would eliminate overcrowding caused by the importers and wholesalers. SINCE THAT TIME, things just haven’t worked out like they should have. Or, in the words of one local peddler, “It s been go­ ing downhill ever since.” Boy, has it ever. The once colorful Drag with all of its furious energy, all of its bustle and all of its street people just ain’t like it used to be While the market does a thriving business during Christmas, and while things aren’t too bad on weekends, business is slow for the few artists and craftsmen working there during the summertime weekdays. The importers and wholesalers could, and should be allowed to move back in and take up the slack dur­ ing the slow sales periods. Some artists and craftsm en used to complain about the market being overcrowded and about how hard it was for their goods to compete with mass-produced items. Now some are complaining about the slow business. In fact, one artist who has worked on the Drag for four years says business is so bad that he’s moving onto better grounds in California. While a return to the old free-for-all system might cure these immediate problems, it would, more than likely, create some new ones. So, we suggest a compromise. Let the wholesalers and importers work the market when there s room for them and when business is slow, on a first-come, first served basis. That way, they’ll be able to expose their goods to the public, improve business along the Drag without seriously jeopardizing the op­ portunities of the artists and craftsmen. - D . M . , D E. .... Ronnie Zamora T h e D a il y T e x a n ............... PERMANENT STAFF Editor......................................................................... Managing Editor................................................................. Assistant Managing E ditors........................................... Assistant to the E d itor.................................................... News Features E d itor..................................................... Sports E d ito r............................. ........................................ Entertainment Editor....................................................... Photo E ditor........................................................................ Associate News Features E ditor.................................. Associate Sports Editor ................................................. ........................... R eporters .............................................. Dan Malone ............................................Gary Fendler ........................................... Carole Chiles. Glenn Redus ...........................................Dana Ehrlich ........................................... Gene Ashlock ............................................... Laura Tuma .............................................Carlos Osorio ...................................................Ann Tonal ..................................... Damond Benmngfield .......................................................... Earl Austin. Bill Cockerel, Erie Harrison. John Havens LeRoy Kleinsasser. John Parker. Stephen Pate. Susan Rogers. Doug Swanson, Gregg Weinberg. Debbie Wormser .......................................................................................... Steve McAdoo Issue Editor .......................... Jason Redwood. Suzanne Harper. Carol Coren News Assistants Editorial A ssistants........................................................... Ann Spillman, Laura Castro Assistant Entertainment E d ito r ........................................................ Elizabeth Logan Assistant Sports Editor ..................................... ................................ G Chris Chavez .........................................................................................Hick Thurmond Makeup Editor W ire Editor .............................................................................................. Bunny Coleman Copy Editors Artists Photographer Lucio Aguino. Cecile Hoilytield Mike Stephens. Gene Ashlock Steven Pumphrey ............................ . O p# uorw i.- m Tin* DOy ex irs oI Board o* fw aa a< a n a y y o* an cle m c -»• n acaau r , mos* o* tn> *■<* anc sec Page I Exploiting homosexuality fears By J a m e s Bagg, Jr. An open letter to Mayor McClellan: I ’m w riting to ask your support, and the support of the Council a t large, for the F air Housing Ordinance, and m ore specifically for retention of the con­ troversial sexual orientation clause. I would like to suggest th at the ordinance in its present form is not a t all un­ reasonable, unless one chooses to ques­ tion the broad principles behind all civil rights legislation. According to a la rm ist le tte rs sent out by local realto r Nelson P u ett, the F air Housing O rdinance “ prom otes homosex­ u ality.” This is nonsense. I am sure you and your colleagues on the council un­ derstand th at hom osexuality is not a dis­ ease capable of spreading from neighbor to neighbor (nor is it a disease at all, a c ­ the A m erican P sychiatric cording to A sso c ia tio n ). H o m o sex u al r e s p o n ­ siveness — in com m on with heterosexual responsiveness — is developed during early childhood and cannot th ereafter be changed, though its expression can be repressed. Y ears of concerted effort on the part of the Kinsey research team un­ covered no instances of “ c u re ” th at could be validated through scientific en­ quiry. is THE FACT THAT hom osexuality is an im m u ta b le c o n d itio n im p o r ta n t because it establishes gay rights as a legitim ate com ponent of the broader civil rights struggle. W hether or not one is an “ a p p ro v e s” of hom osex u ality irrelevant consideration of the condition, not one susceptible to change. There is no m a tte r of choice involved; once sex­ ual orientation has been established in is homosexual, early childhood, one heterosexual or bisexual throughout his life, ju st as surely as a black m an is forever black and a white m an forever to d is­ w hite. Society m ay choose is An crim in ate against the hom osexual, but society cannot change him (or her). im p o r ta n t c o r o l l a r y t h a t h o m o s e x u a ls do n o t a n d c a n n o t “ re c ru it” to fill their ranks (as Anita B ryant has claim ed). Once heterosexual orientation has been established — and this happens well before puberty — heterosexuals do not change, either. Even in ra re cases when young children a re seduced, seduction by itself is not likely adequate to a lte r the direction of sexual choice for a lifetim e. Sexual iden­ tity p attern s are the deeply-ingrained product of y ears of conditioning in the hom e, not of a single u n fo rtu n a te episode. M o re o v e r, s t a t i s t i c s show th a t hom osexuals a re no m o re prone to m olest children than a re heterosexuals. A three-year study by the C hildren’s D ivision of the A m erican H um ane Association indicated that IO girls are m olested for each boy, and that 97 per cent of the offenders a re m ale — which m e a n s t h a t c h ild m o l e s t e r s a r e heterosexual in roughly the proportion that society a t large is heterosexual. Since I do not know Mr. P u ett. I don’t know the extent of his prejudice against homosexuals. But I have strong reason to suspect he is exploiting public fear and ignorance of hom osexuality for what he conceives to be p ra c tic a l bu sin ess reasons. Mr. P u ett objects to any o r­ dinance that re stric ts his freedom to dis­ crim in ate as he sees fit. In 1968 he appeared before the council to oppose a fair housing ordinance which proposed nothing but an affirm ation of cu rren t federal law: “ He stated th at the o r­ dinance did not prom ote racial justice but was ra th e r a step tow ards turning ownership of private p roperty over to the governm ent,” (Minutes of the City Coun­ cil, 17 May 1968). ON THAT SAME occasion, “ Coun­ cilm an Nichols stated that Mr. P u ett and Mr Hub Bechtol had called clients of his to put economic pressure on him to vote against the ordinance. He denounced their actions and stated strongly that they would not sway his vote by such ta c ­ tics. “ On the preceding day, “ Mayor Akin stated that the Real E sta te Board had deliberately m isled citizens with the cap tio n ‘F o rced Housing O rd in ace' printed in an advertisem ent in the Austin A m erican,” (M inutes of the City Coun­ cil, 16 May, 1968). As you m ay know, such pressure as this was responsible for a recall o r­ dinance passed by the Council on Aug 12, 1968 And this m odest version of a F air Housing o rd in an ce w as re c a lle d by referendum on Oct. 19, 1968, by a vote of 13,913 to 10.391. I would like to suggest that Mr Puett has chosen to attack the sexual o rien ta­ tion clause because the Miami exam ple has shown him that hom osexuals a re still fair gam e in our society It is no longer fashionable to attack blacks, Jew s or women, and he c a n ’t with good grace a t­ tack the handicapped. There are IO to 20 million homosexuals in the country, the only large Am erican m inority upon whom it is still safe — even praisew orthy — to heap slander. This situation is changing rapidly, with public education and increased public sensitivity on In another decade people like Nelson Pu ett will no longer consider us safe targets. issue. the AUSTIN SHOULD BE proud of its record so far — we a re one of a handful of progressive Am erican cities to extend the protection of a fair em ploym ent or dinance to sexual m inorities. Now we have opportunity to pass a com panion o r­ dinance to sexual m inorities. I urge you and your colleagues on the Council not to be swayed by the hysterical argum ents of ill-informed or inconsiderate people. J a m e s E. B a g g . J r . is a n e d i t o r II a t t h e H a r r y R a n s o m C e n t e r . DOONESBURY see w h a t you're g e ttin g . SO WORKED UP ABOUT! IT'S NOT UKE I'M 60 n v-jri » n » n -JKn >?n HILLEL ANNOUNCES OPEN HOUSE EVERY WEDNESDAY 7-10 PM SHABBAT SERVICES EVERY FRIDAY 7:15 PM All Summer at Hillel For m ore inform ation call Frank 2 1 0 5 San A ntonio 4 7 2 -2 0 6 0 ,, » n Classical Guitarist Jim Lawrie Tue & Wed 9 p.rn.-11:30 p m. Enjoy a com plot* condlolight dinner or in e x p e rtly * lunch w ith a choice of 84 ite m * on our m enu including a choice of 9 loup* and san d w ich **. 3 7 0 4 Kerbey Ln.. 4 5 4 -6 8 7 2 1 1 : 3 0 - 1 1 : 3 0 p m Daily _____ MICHAEL KALMUS A Simpler Time A n e w s in g e r - s o n g w r it e r r ea c h in g o u t to th e future . W ith a h e a lth y respect for the past and s o m e k e e n in s ig h t s in to th e p r e se n t. M u s ic that co u ld w e ll be tim e le s s , from M ic h a e l K atakis. in These days, every copying town guarantees service graduate school standards for and Theses, Dissertations Professional Reports . . . , SAOOATF * PAPERS r Guarantee But a guarante e is td v as «(_-> the srryw »> behind it G IN N Y s e t »PN I V , stR V K I has over fise sears of ex p ec ter*e copying and binding final Graduate s< bool w o rt V\< us< o n l\ XI R< )X reprodul lion on K X I'. ( otton a w l e\« n, Final G raduate St bo ol order is i her ked and ret hot kist for copy quality anti io r r e tf margins At G I N X t S, w e know th** copying and b in d ­ ing standards and w e guarantee that your paper vs ill meet them if you tty that it in Final G raduate St bo id work and you allow U' 24 hours in c o m p le te it Ask the other to p tin g v *rv u es ahi nit their guarantees then have your paper i opted and bound at G IN N Y x All Day S e lf-S e rv ic e COPIES BINDING • TYPING • COPYING Complete Services UT GRAD SCHOOL 100% COTTON C O P IE S ....................6C BUCKRAM B INDING ..............................$7.75 KROYDEN or MARBLE BOARD $2.75 TY PING - - p e r pag e............................... 68 C 7:30am - 10.30pm M-F OOOem - 6 OOpm Sat. i. j. a n Sams 1800 LAVACA 476-6662 Michael K atakis tm w I & l l : A Simpler Time rn 4 Dote* seal I ai C o raw Aa#**** 400 Or Wa A***, x* ?r*a* On A&M Records and Tapes Available at I N N E R SANCTUM] RECORDS Page 6 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ W ednesday, Ju ly 20, 1977 ■■ ■ -v: v / . . » __ J Weary wizard tilts to bed atter pinball bout 1 W e a r e n o w d o i n g JEANS, SHIRTS DRESSES I A LT E R A T IO N S ^ I I I I I I IMACES h \ H u h t t h o u ’» OUTSIDE ALTERATION Exp*rfy a n d Promptly 2426 Quedelupe ^ Shoe Shop W e m ake and repair boots shoes belts leather goods GENUINE SHEEP SKIN RUGS N o t.r.i I Beautiful Colors I l f t O O I \ J ★ SAD D LES * E N G L I S H W E S T E R N Capitol Saddlery Austin Texas 1614 Lavaca 4 7 8 -9 3 0 9 owner of the Magic Coin in San Marcos, which sponsored the marathon contest entered by 17 young men " " M E N AND LADIES More than half a w****k at a pmbail marhina*’’ The bells must s till be rin g ­ ing and the lights flashing in Henry H a lm ire k ’s mind At 8 30 a rn Monday the S o u th w e s t T e x a s S ta te I Diversity jun ior completed 87 hours of pinball playing He was asteep at last report As fa r as we can te ll, he broke the p re vio u s w o rld record ” said Charles Ross, I-ast year someone in Cor­ pus C hristi supposedly lasted 86 hours, 33 minutes, Ross said Hut the 1977 edition of the G u in n e ss Book o f W o rld Records has no listing for pin­ ball So Ross plans to check w ith the Guinness authorities in Manchester, England RED WING SHOE STORE • Oil-Tanned Water-Re poi loot Leather • Sweat-Proof Insole^ • Stool Shook 20-MILE-A-DAY dttu SPORT BOOT n A A . LOCATION NORTH 5504 BURNET 454-9290 Dorm population to rise— Foraker Increase attributed to employes’ attitude change My C H C t . G W E I N B E R G I diversity Reporter University lower divisnm students were once m ju tre d lo live on cam pus, and residence halls were fu ll After those rules, re|H*al of the found o ff campus student* have housing more liking or lo easier on th eir pocketbooks, arni residence hall o< cupancy has sui fe n d Hut this year the tide is tu r ning for residence halls th e ir Mn Ii.iel F o ra k e r, d ire c to r of Jester ('enter and Mens Residence Halls (M H H ), said Monday hts staff is p re p u ilog fo r a ‘ fu ll house in the fa ll A fu ll house is 3.005 students He said MHH w ill be fu ll and he ex {reels tin VA«»rnen s Residence Halls to pack them in laist spring MHH and Jester ap proved a plan which raised the MHH room rates and kept Jester < enter's the same Foraker said the rate changes w ere fo r fairness hut the expected rise in o< cupancy is a long awaited result im plem ented "T h e philosophy of the Division of Housing and Food Service is that a regardless o f where he is student staying, ought the same amount of m.»ney as ,* like place," he saul adding that Jester s rates are equal to those at Kinsolvlng to pay Foraker said changes w ithin the staff have causal students to change then a t t i t u d e about campus living Those changes, he said, are an im provement in fix id service and a positive change in attitude toward Jester among student and career employes Acknowledging that a cityw ide, 15 jrei cent apartm ent rate hike has probably co n trib u te d the e x­ pected residency increase, Foraker said another cause is that Jester also is $150 cheaper than most off- campus dorms to “ I don’t think any one fa cto r has caused it, he said " I t s very sun lf U niversity rates are com ­ pie petitive, we It have our share of the student m arket " No changes in staff planned F o ra ke r said Hut tasks are the residency increase w ill cause at least one change A ll single rooms in Jester w ill be issued on a space available basis “ It s our responsibility to house as m a n y U n iv e r s ity s tu d e n ts as possible," Foraker said of the room restriction The rate for a Jester room w ith is $1,676 40 per connecting bath year A co m m un ity bath liv in g arrangement w ill cost $1,522 40 Both prices include meals Room rates at Kinsolving and Moore H ill Hall are equal to those at J e s t e r r o o m a t A s in g le B ra * ken r id g e R o b e rts d o rm s , nonair conditioned men s dorms, costs $698 Bogus Bevo Texas A&M regent given bum steer Aggie* ami Okies usually are not so generous to the U niversity At a n*cent auction on the V O Ranch near K e rrv ille , T S U I AAM Regent John R M io c k e r b o u g h t w h a t he believed would the next T exas L o n g h o rn m a s c o t, Hevo Im* When he found out he was bidding against a U niversity graduate for the prue steer, the price clim bed {last $2,000, past $3,000. p ast $4 OOO Blocker eventually bought the animal fo r $4,700. reportedly the most ever paid fo r s I a mg horn While Miocker becalm* the prom! owner of the auction s grund champion, the $4,700 ended up in the coffers of the U n iv e rs ity o f Texas Ex* .Students Association via a donation from the Longhorn's owner, Dr Chester Eastin of San Antonio, an OU alumnus As Texas ex field represen it, tdtive John M orris tells Eastin is the only member of the U niversity alum ni group who the is a graduate of U niversity of Oklahoma “ He attended a few (Texas! football gam es," explained M orris, adding, "H e joined as a life member (of the Texas- exes) never having attended this school “ "W e got an OU-ex, a Texas A & M -e x and a T e xa s-e x together and we wound up w ith $4,700," M orris said. i t was a unique g ift of the kind we m ay never receive again," he said, adding that E a s tin had requested his donation be used to create an endowed scholarship ^ ' O t C P 5 ^ > S a J u ) l C /U JjldcUru //I //)£ ~/rc€5 b&htncL ^i/i/nrjs "/fie. c/r&a .J3 ^ o n d a d u tu T c J s \ jj' Q R O O T S L A S T S A L E ! ! F r o m J u l y l l t h - J u l y 2 3 r d mrs on ii *» rough funning bases when the sun <* got you best Cool off at Vai s Happy Hour. *65 days a year U s a steal' THI CMK AS TOU Att . VALENTINES U S t t M U U f T M I B M The Texan Ombudsman for th e f a l l 1 9 7 7 semester will be appointed by the TSI’ Board during the first week in August. If you're interested in applying, please pick up an application form in the TSP Business Office. TSP 3.200, and return before noon Monday. August I, 1977. h ollowing are the qualifications: (a ) The applicant m u tt have com pleted tw o semesters or one sem ester and a summer session of news or editorial e x ­ perience on The Daily Texan. (b) The applicant must have passed the en­ trance exam for J. 3 1 2 , (c) The applicant must have com pleted at least three semesters of college English or the equivalent. (d ) The applicant must be a student in residence at U.T. Austin at the tim e of filing and during the term of office. ( • ) The applicant must have completed at least tw o semester! at U T. Austin at the tim e he or she begins the term of office, (f) The a p p lican t must list all of the student organizations in which he or she has the previous been a m e m b e r during year. TS K AS UNION 8 a .m . to % p .m . S IG N -U P FOR IN N E R T U B IN G TRIP D O W N GUADALUPE RIVER. Trip w ill U a v a Union Patio 9 :3 0 a m. S atu rd ay , July 30 ; roturn at 8 p.m . Cost it $4 SO por parson, plus $3 for innortubo; d in n er it included. Student Activities Conter 4 3 0 0 ). N o o n to I p .m . Sem inar: UT S FOLKLORE LEGACY. Dr. Richard B au m an , Director of the Conter for In tercultu ral Studies in Folklore a n d Ethnomusicology, w ill speak in 2.102. 9 p .m . to m id n ig h t . Perform ance: THE THRILLS. Rock 'n roll band Texas Tavern. Admission is free. FOR ADDITIO NAL IN F O R M A T IO N C A U 471 5 6 5 3 I I I I I I I J / A f • H i e k /r U tt . . . . S P I ( . I A I 725 W. 23rd D e a u l a r , I t w i w . n *,o G r a n d , A V , 9 477 0191) D i n n e r T*c* Ck* I hki lmMU< A CM* Can Ow*** • 2 .4 0 THURS SPECIAL C o m b in a tio n Plat# Im n« I i n , * I a d o . » I IrHfciWa A CHA. c»"Ow * 8 2 .3 0 AM Atmud w>«iw4* ta* A 4*««*n £j?_ t . C xco llo n t M e x ic a n F o o d i S e a fo o d S p e c ia lt ie s — F u ll S e rv ic e B a r ___ __ N a p p y H o u r 4-6 p .m . f e a t u r in g H o u s e S p e c ia ls M a r g a r it a * SO* • P in a C o la d a s 60* • T e q u ila S u n ris e s SO* I N i t Ti m Parking Uptlai'i in Tri-Ta*»ar« dotage f i ­ st* ®»* -»<*• 0«*4*lv*» T -In ■p I i > * - ! C o m p le t e C a t e r in g S e r v ic e Parties Banquets Anniversaries Barbecues L u au s Cocktail Parties 5 -1 0 ! I EARTH SHOE CLEARANCE SALE A l l S h o e s, Hoots R e d u c e d to C l e a r J u ly 18-30 S a n d a l s 1 6 . 8 0 o d rf lax 8 . 8 0 n of styles & colors lo < f'li'h ra ti u l t f tension and make room for additional stock we are '4ig|>nn sale ever. We’ re about to grow and become h H O O T Q E A R Hie home of casual, com fortable footwear of all kinds. So cm i«e ‘n*u id save a lotta loot on a pair of Roots. This is Roots last sale. ) 'it definitely not the last sale of a pair of Roots. Not by a long shot! OPEN 10 8 everyday of the sale Free parking 22nd and San Antonio 2200 GUADALUPE AUSTIN, TEXAS 78705 512 472-9433 Butcher Block Storehouse really has butcher block. Genuine hard- rock m aple tops, chop blocks, and tables. Shown, are our country kitchen tables which come in 6 sizes and 2 heights for either working or dining Prices start at $134 Old-fashioned chop blocks come in 4 sizes, square or round, from $169 Butcher block table tops come in 20 sizes to com bine with the base style of your choice Prices be­ gin at $44 Storehouse is the butcher block store. .M J I F r o m SIO I p Master Charge. BankAmericard or charge plan EARTH SHOE STORE 1 6 1 0 Lavaca Open Thursdays until 8 p m 4 7 4 -1 8 9 5 storehouse Highland Mall, lei. 459-3161 Jones reflects on travels ‘We were all so well received’ sports T h e D a i l y T e x a n W ednesday, J u ly 20, 1977 □ Page 7 By G. C H RIS C H AVEZ Sports Reporter Texas resident track star. Johnny Lam Jones, says it is good to be home again A whirlwind European track tour with the Muhammad AU Track Club would tire anyone, right? Wrong Jones feels his summer “hasn t started yet,” and he is still keeping the same pace he became accustomed to during his European jaunt. “ The trip was great,’ Jones said “ We were always go­ ing from city to city, always on the move . although we did stay in London for a couple of days more ” Perhaps those “ couple of days” helped Jones, because he broke out of a three-month slump he had been in, a slump that had cost him the NCAA crown in the 100-yard dash “ T H E B E S T T IM E I had while I was there had to be when I won in London,” Jones said “ It had been three months since I had won a race, and I was excited. “Oh, sure I had tied or had gotten seconds, but it sure felt good to win again ” Jones said the victory was not made particularly delicious because he had beaten Houston McTear, a runner who had consistently defeated Jones in every race that the two had run together. “ I was happy that I won the race,” Jones stated. “ I didn t look on it like I was beating Houston.” Jones says that the press “ made up the riva lry ” between McTear and himself and that it was “ simply not true.” “ IT I never forget, I saw one Austin paper that said “McTear buries Jones.' You know, they forgot to mention the other guys in the race that Houston beat, too.” JO N ES IN SIST S that there were never any hard feelings between the two runners and that their friendship grew as the tour progressed. “ It wasn’t like a grudge match at a ll,” the 1976 Olympic gold medal winner said “ We were roommates during the entire tour.” Jones won a gold medal for his contributions to the 4 100-yard medley relay team. Jones received a place on the squad after a Florida teenager pulled a hamstring in his leg and was unable to make the trek to the Olympics. The Florida teenager was McTear. Elaborating further on the squad’s London stay, Jones says the enthusiasm for track is higher there than in the United States. “ We were all so well received, I still can’t get over it,” Jones commented. “ I really think those crowds (London) were more enthusiastic than the people in the U.S. Of course they have track meets any day of the week all year, not like here where the meets are held in the spring on weekends.” JO N E S IS H O P E F U L he w ill be invited to make the tour again next summer, and as a member of the track club already it is almost a certainty. “ I have a full year ahead of me, but I hope that I am in­ vited to run with the squad again next year,” the Lam ­ pasas sophomore said. “ I am going to be working out in a different area soon, but I am still looking for next summer.” Jones said no one tried to persuade him to change his mind about giving up football and that he has “ never even —Texan Staff Photo Jones considered it.” “ I don’t think football will hold me back from any other track offers,” Jones said “ No one has tried to change my mind because they know I am satisfied where I am ” With a gold medal, a European tour and many other adventures awaited, who would not be satisfied? Shavers flip-flops on contract N EW Y O R K (U P I) - Bet­ ting action w ill no doubt be heavy if Muhammad AH and k a y o s p e c i a l i s t E a r n i e Shavers ever step into the Madison Square Garden ring for their signed Sept. 20 cham­ pionship fight. But here’s one bet everyone can count on — a fierce legal battle w ill be fought first. Shavers, the 31-year-old fifth-ranked contender who originally agreed to a $200,000 purse with the Garden and then signed with Top Rank, Inc , for $300,000, pulled a “ flip-flop” Tuesday and sign­ ed a $300,000 contract with the Garden. Ali, who signed a contract in May with the Garden to meet in a n atio na lly S ha ve rs televised bout, has been promied nearly $3 million, and an attorney for the Garden said Tuesday “ only a few minor wrinkles remain to be worked out” with the cham­ pion. Courageous crippled N EW PO R T , R I. (U P I) - A broken head stay crippled the 12-meter yacht Courageous on th e s e c o n d le g of an A m e ric a ’s Cup tria l race Tuesday, but skipper Ted Turner refused to admit his luck has changed. “ W e ’re s t i l l in th e re smokm, pal,” the fiesty Atlan­ ta Braves owners aid as his million-dollar sailing machine was towed back to Newport Harbor. Courageous was 12 seconds a h e a d of W e s t C o a s t challenger Enterprise at the sports shorts second mark of a six-leg race when she suddenly turned into the wind and let her sails flap. Race officials fired three gunshots, halting competition. Nets move studied N E W A R K . N J . ( U P I ) - A federal judge reserved deci­ sion Tuesday on what court should decide if the New York Nets have the right to move their basketball team from the Nassau Coliseum on Long Island to New Jersey. U.S. D istrict Court Judge Curtis Meanor said he w ill probably rule by Friday on whether to dismiss or transfer the case to U S. D istrict Court in Manhattan T h e c a s e i n v o l v e s a territorial dispute between the Nets and the New York Knicks, which have challeng­ ed the Nets’ right to move their home to the Hackensack M e a d o w l a n d s S p o r t s Complex On Monday, U.S. D istrict Court Judge Robert Carter in New York said he believed that he has the exclusive jurisdiction over the case since he presided at the m erger of the A m erican Basektball Association with the N atio n a l B a s k e t b a ll Association TANK MCNAMARA by Jeff Millar & Bill Hinds HAVE YOO EVER SMOKE? A HAVANA7 CUEAPAT THE PRICE, CHIEF CHEAP , AT THE P R IC E ... i a m c A cm f i A BADEAU FAN,BUT GOOP GRIEF1 VOO THAPEP JOHNNA BENCH TO HIM FOR A CA%- OF CICN&?!7! LOOK, I'M AU. FOR iMPRCUlMG RELATION WOITH CUBA • NL All-Stars rap AL N EW YO RK (U P I) - The National League shellshocked three-time Cy Young Award winner Jim Palm er with its heavy artillery Tuesday night, using home runs by Jo e Morgan. Greg Luzinski and Steve Garvey to defeat the American League 7-5 in the All-Star Game for the sixth consecutive year. The NL, winning the mid­ summer exhibition contest for the 14th time in the last 15 years, dominated the game from the first inning when it rattled Palm er for four hits including a and four runs, leadoff solo homer by Morgan and a tw o -ru n sh o t by Luzinski. G A R V E Y S B LA ST , also off Palm er, gave the N L a 5-0 lead in the third inning and for a w hile it appeared the Nationals might force the es­ timated 48 million television viewers into switching their sets to another channel. Behind the pitching of Los Angeles’ Don Sutton, named the game s Most Valuable Player, and San Francisco’s Gary Lavelle, the N L blanked the AL for five innings and. ironically, it was not until the appearance of baseball’s best pitcher. Tom Seaver, that the A L managed any kind of offensive threat Given a two-minute stan­ ding ovation by the crowd of 56,683 when he was introduced at the beginning of the game, Seaver’s first return to New York since his trade from the Mets to the Betis last month was hardly auspicious The 32-year-old rig h t­ hander entered the game in the sixth inning and in his two- inning stint was tagged for four hits and three runs Yet, with a little better defensive support, he could have es­ caped without allowing any runs S e a v e r’s ineffectiveness was about all the AL fans had to cheer about, however, until the ninth inning when Boston’s George Scott, the American League s home run leader with 25. made the game in­ two-run teresting w ith a homer that closed out the scoring box scores * 1 U n ite d Pra aa In te rn atio n al A N ■I I t 3 I 2 0 0 0 1 I I 3 0 2 0 0 I 1 3 0 I t I 0 I 1 I 3 1 0 0 0 2 I I 2 2 2 2 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 I I 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 a 0 0 0 0 0 0 a 0 0 0 2 0 ll 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 i 0 0 0 0 0 0 I 0 0 0 0 9 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 I I T Am erican Car*** S n * IB Randolph 28 Rout 38 Campman P * aittV PH Lyle P Munson PH Yaatriem aki CF I yon CF I i*K i f Singleton RF Jaeltaon RF Rica L F F isK C Wvnegar C But'••ton S S Cam panella S S Palma* P Kern P Jon#* PH EckartM y P Hurt# PH I atocha P haiti** .18 Total* .......... NATIONAL M.wgan .')> Tuft,i C>«tv»y IS M,VUan*,' IB R f Templeton S S fo*tei CF Morale* CF luunakt LF Wmftekl 11 Ca* 3B S**V#( P Smith PM Schmidt PR Schmtdt PR FT*u*chet P Steer n*C Bench C I avell# P Po** 38 Concepcion S S Valentine RF P Situ mon* C Gvwutge P Total* National A m a * lo an «!*... . . . . . . . ..................... R I 3 2 I $ 0 2 0 0 0 I 0 0 0 i 0 2 0 I 1 0 3 0 0 0 2 0 * 0 2 I 0 I 0 0 I ' 0 0 0 0 0 I N B l I 0 t 2 I I 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 2 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 I 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 • 0 I a 010 —. J a 101 - ____ ...... t I ......... 0 ......... 0 ... 0 , „ llv I Campbell eager for By JA Y A L L EN Sports Reporter Since arriving on the Texas football scene in 1974, Longhorn f u llb a c k E a r l Campbell has rushed for 2,699 yards during his three-year career, has been named to the coaches' All-America team in 1975 and has been an AU- Southwest Conference selec­ tion in 1974 and 1975. While most athletes would foam at the mouth at the thought of possessing such statistics, to Campbell, they simply are not enough After a disappointing 1976 season when the injury- plagued senior from Tyler gained only 653 ya rd s , Campbell is more devoted than ever to having an out­ standing year in 1977 under first-year Longhorn Football Coach Fred Akers. AS A M A T T E R of fact, C a m p b e l l h a s a l r e a d y forgetten about last year’s poor season. in “ Last year is over, and you can’t change what happened,” Campbell said. “ It's like what Ken Norton said after he lost to Muhammad A li — There s no sense lick in g your wounds. It ’s over, and there’s nothing you can do about it.” looking ahead, and he likes what he sees for both himself and the Longhorn team , especially since he has finally recovered from a knee injury that bothered him much of last year. Campbell is only “ I W O U L D N 'T want to predict anything, but I know we ll be doing cur very best,” he said. “ I ’m in great shape, \97w o 6 0 7 w 2 * t h * th e Considering lo w -co st a v a i l a b i l i t y o f s c i e n t i f i c t im e c a lc u la to r s a n d savings one can yield, no stu ­ dent or professional can afford not to own one That's C o m ­ m o d o r e 's o f f e r — m o r e calculating power and tower prices. The Comm odore S R 4 14 8R has a bright rad LED display w ith a l O digit mantissa plus a tw o digit pow er of tan expo­ nent And, in­ crease and decrease functions allow you to display the m an­ tissa w ith whatever dace power fin d m o s t u s e fu l v ia you modified scientific notation. the exponent C o m m od o re features and M r. Calculator prices m ake this purchase easy to justify. IV ! R . C A L C U L A T O R Lower Level • Dobie M a ll 477-9658 • Hours: 9:30-5:30 Mon-Fri 10-5 Sat. t i NI O N IM I K IN A l I . 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Our New Low Price $99.95 AUDIO n n K o e n ig at Guadalupe in Commerce Park 459-1371 entertainment ‘Girl Friday’ liberated □ THE DAILY TEXAN Wednesday, J u ly 20, 1977 P a g e 8 Mayall plants new roots in high heels She literally tackles ill her vu tim on the sidewalk to get a statement for her story' Hildy realizes that, according to so* tai mores she should want a man to take care of her. to "hang out diapers on the line ’ But Hildy s coworkers bet that she will not choose the "easy lif e ,” they feel her talents would be wasted if she retired Hildy agrees TODAY'S FIL M S portray women be­ th e ir s ex u a l ing held back by weaknesses Female characters are deterred from their goals by their sex­ ual attachment to men ami eventually relinquish control The Deep, Jacqueline Hisset plays a character who starts out on in equal footing with her costar But the director has her sexually molested in the middle of the story to point out that she can easily be controlled In Today s film direetors. mostly men, continue to show women as indepen­ until they are dent and intelligent and then they revert fared with men to total submission Directors then take one further step and show the women enjoying it Perhaps, as a result of the growing competition between the two sexes in is subconscious most professions it wishful thinking by the male directors of today s films. His ( iirl Friday is a refreshing es­ cape to an old movie where a woman is they do not not threatened by males even slow her down By RAY HELM ERS Staff W riter John Mayall is a prime ex­ ample of a musician who has moved away from his roots Ihiring the 60s and into the early 70s. M ayall was a prime influence on the blues scene with his always-fresh jazz. K&R and mixture of blues Mayall was always ex­ perimenting with blues ideas using different instrumen­ tations in different formats. Mayall s concert at the Ar­ ma d 11! o M o n d a y n ig h t demonstrated how his latest experiment has moved him far away from the original four- ideology The Mayall piece band played loud, up­ tempo rock tunes that were generally simple in structure and easy to move to In fact, except for the band s preci­ sion. which comes from three months of constant touring, most of the songs could have been played by a local dance band lX*spite the relatively sim­ ple nature of the music, Mayall put on an entertaining. lasted fast paced show that about an hour and a half The British musician s biggest problem turned out to be his incompatibility with the Tex­ as c lim a te He appeared onstage minus his shirt and perspired profusely from the In spite of opening notes on that, M ayall held nothing back; he gave the audience a IOO per cent effort Though known more for his blues harp playing than for anything else, Mayall did take excursions on both guitar and davinci, most of which he in unison on harp played Mayall stayed primarily with clavinet, prefenng to provide tive bass lines while Richard­ the band along son pushes j a z z - wi t h his influenced style. f l o w i n g , M ayall showed another change in style, or a change in heart, by playing several of In the past, his old songs. Mayall has criticized even the request for an old favorite, priding himself on always forward musically looking His harp playing was featured f r an t i c version of on a Parchment Farm " and, as a surprise to everyone, played probably his most popular tune, "Room to Move.” As a showcase for Smith s talents. Mayall dug up one other oldie, the late Freddie c o m p o s i t i o n , K i n g s "Hideaway ” Smith seemed right at home with the quick, bouncy beat as he duplicated some of the Erie Clapton lines and expounded on others. Mayall played many songs from his upcoming album, "A Hard Core Package.” Most of them have a strong, danceable beat and a couple have traces of disco influence After the show Mayall proclaimed that being danceable was one of the music’s main functions. " I want people to dance to it." Mayall said. “ I ’m trying to get these people off their asses and dance. It's dancing music, really. The gigs where people just sit there drive me crazy. I mean, how can you sit still for it?” The crowd was a mixture of old Mayall freaks and young teenagers who have latched on to his last few albums. Half seemed inclined to sit, while the other half seemed inclined to dance Whatever they ac­ tually did, it was clear that they had a good time doing it. Texan Staff Photo by Ray H o lm a r* Mayall and Smith the harmony and let his new the guitar discovery play embellishments Mayall s new discovery, in the form of guitarist James Quill Smith out of California (form erly with D r John, Three Dog Night, Dobie Gray and Roger MeGuinn), turned out to be one of the highlights of the evening He unleashed searing licks time after time, breaking up the heavy, almost hard rock, sound of the band with his smooth, bluesy solos. Smith, who has been playing for days w ith num erous physical problems, including a linger cut almost to the bone is ob- and an injured back, viously enjoying playing blues with Mayall. is “ I finally have a chance to I want to play, play what that,'' Smith said which after the show. "A lot of times I played in bands like Three Dog Night and those kind of bands where they lift a lick note-for-note off the record, which is bullshit that'll drive you crazy.” The rest of the band was fill­ ed out by bassist Steven Thompson, a v etera n of several Mayall bands, and drummer Soko Richardson, who has appeared on M ayall’s last few albums. The two form a strong rhythm section fingering with Thompson reliable and sometimes inven- T R A N S * T E X A S a n t a 2200 Kiowa Dem - 4M ton NOW! OPEN 2 P.M. FEATURES 2:20-4:10-4-00-7:50-* 40 Reduced Prue* 6:15 (Mon-Sot.) HELD O V ER 6th Week Grant petmg newspapers In the city examine hei stoi les ami admit to themselves she is a better writer than they They ir e continually afraid Hildy will "scoop" them on news stories, which she does TUERK is NOT one reference to her long legs or pretty fare. she is judged by her c oworkers on Pm merit of her work Further she do* not have to resort feminine tricks" to get the to any story When the reporters race out to interview. Hildy the streets for an hitches up her skirls and outruns them HASSLES WITH THE UNIVERSITY? % CALL THE UNIVERSITY O M BUDSM AN fur OLD SPEECH BUILDING a s s is t a n c e it adv ice Room 10G n J S iJ r V a .- 4 71-3825 THE PARAM OUNT THEATRE PRESENTS ★ * W ed N ile Special J ★ J Beer - 64 O I . pitchers Schlitz O O I J a I -A At J Food - Hobo P la t. - a full meal Q O ( • * J Music - Free Live Music - No 6 to 8 pm O Y Shiner W W 4 pm till midnite Cover * I .* TACO FLATS ^ -H ILTY O H M U 'f R COLLEEN ALIEN Kl A,LIN m I CRTS KAN SWON MAGOUN Ct WLL WALKEN DEWHURST S / ' L JAM r 'N J 'ANNIE HALE United Artists A JACK ROLLINS Chaoush PRODUCTION Wnfien Cst WOOP1* Al 11N arc MARSHALL brahman • Over ted by WOODY AUEN Produced hv Thao* V h jOFff FRIDAY, JULY 22 8 :3 0 p.m. ndteltt $3.35, $6.35 at lh# Paramount, Innor Sanctum, and Disc Rocordi in Highland Mall A j Q U T H W I S T C O N C 1 R T S P R O D U C T IQ M I M I M ( >X I ;i ieee FEA rums -2:30-5 30-6:30 — HO REDUCED PRICES - V I L L A G E a Poe a*olevo* - es i n u . I 30-4 00- 6 30-000 ________ A great new COMEDY SWITCH! WALT DISNEY f w h u m FREAKY FRI DAV B H H 1:00-2 45-4 30- 6:15-8 00-9:45 ® SM, # R I V E R S I D E >tjo B vtevot . eel UM 12:40-2:55- 5 10-7:25-0 40 i i i ™ Juiejih I Levtnr I The Royal Ballet -•*. Margot Fonteyn R u d olf Nureyev Romeo & Juliet V I L L A G E <1 J ’ac ANOtfVO et-es* lit) RED UCED PR IC ES TK 6 OO MOH FRI presents TONIGH T ONTY AIR FORCE (1943) D ire c te d by H o w a r d H a w k s Pecan St. Cafe’s Gourmet Entrees Supreme a la Parmesan chick#/) broad* with par motor* sauteed in butler served with soup, salad & vegetable crept $5.95 Supreme a la Paprikas chicken br oast) poached in butler with paprika louts served with soup. salad 3 vegetable crepe $6.95 Poi $ ion Meuniere fresh fish filet sauteed rn butter with lemon |utce ond cream served with soup, salod 8 vegetable crepe $6.95 Steak Teriyaki sauteed in special marinade, mushrooms $ green pepped served with soup, salad 8 vegetable crepe $6.95 The Old Pecan a Cafe O U Lost 6rh Si. Steak German sauteed in butler, tarragon dill, fresh chives 8 chervil served with soup, salad 8 vegetable crepe $7.95 Steak Bordeaux sauteed in butler, red wine, mushroom* 8 onions served with soup. salad 8 vegetable crepe $6.95 NOW SERVING MIXED DRINKS O p e n I I a.m. til M id n igh t 7 D a y s A W eek D U R IK S C R E E N S SMI MMU IRC ie Boot URSU BOAM MMI 4/7 UM PETER SELLERS "THE PINK PANTHER STRIKES AGAIN P G 1 0 0 2 56 4 40 6 25 8 10 9 56 B r i l l i a n t n ew p o rn film N o o th e r flirt) Ie g o in g lo e q u a l t b ie o n e l l elm p ly h e e to he th e b e e t film „ h H a th e It ta f lu e n t b lu e m o v i e f ‘v e e v e r M e n i n v e n t i v e , o p u le n t , a n d h ig h ly e r o t ic " o f l » 7 « lO O V ’ > A rla m stc p ie c e o f e r o t i c a H . - , . J t Aft, t I tort, “M is t y Beethoven” X v Int rod wing C o n s t 0 4 * 0 0 M o n e y 3 * I 25 3 0 0 4 35 6 20 7 56 9 30 FEATURES $1 25 1*16 00 MIDNIGMTERS $1 25 (Fri 4 Sal — $1 50) $150 after x: x S i n t o n ! a n d The Eye of the T i d i e r THE ISLAND OF DR. MOREAU fedey el *144 ?44 444-444-444-4 SS TwO*. Stow Tm U h 514*44 l l 54 G o pci 0 CT T W , .t 11:14 I N 4 N A N I N It ll ^ lwr-U4. U rn Tm Eat, 4444 M SIS# T W , m 144144 544 I w i n . Show Tilto n 4 » S ,*4 l l H R O C K Y f e6vy et 124 4-2 J * 5 4 4 - 7 J K W S lord*. Stow Tull.#, 4 M 5 4 4 t i 54 REDUCED ADULT & STUPER! PRICES for TWI-IITE SHOW TICKETS LIMITED ta SEATING G E N E R A L C IN E M A T H E A T R E S I S I SO 'til 1 3 0 PN I E X C E P T "S T A R W A R S " ! C A P IT A L P L A Z A 4 5 2 - 7 6 4 6 I H 3 5 N O R T H NO /ASSIS NO IAROAIN RU TINHS / ’A ’ J / J 1 2 : 1 0 IS STM 0 HAR C v J . w 't o r f I / T. ■ * t f N i . l . • a f H IG H L A N D M A L L I H 35 AT KOENKE IN 451-7326 R ID E IT IN c r A R r i m n A i i B i i i A r N . t « j v n n u u 7 Tedey et I2J0-2:JM:SS-7:IM-.2S H IG H L A N D M A L L I H 35 AT KOENIG IM 451-7326 5fk WEEKI no passes " T h e m o v i e t h a t w o n t h e w d r B u r d m e A u d i t o r i u m 7 : 0 0 f t 9 : 1 5 p m Admission $1.25 DEEP ELECTRIFYING!" N Y Daily N ew s * ? \ ROBERT SHAW JA C Q U ELIN E BISSET LO U IS GOSSETT - J [ l l WALLACH — CART toe — CONTAINS t e r t i a l SCIN!* I • * ' » or ASNORM At FR AC TtCIS TOO TNTINSI SOR TMI (MOTIONAUV IMM A TURI’ Z V I I SEXUAL My, MIDNIGHTS — S T A R T S F R ID A Y — 'SUVER STREAK'' / "SWASHBUCKLER' fYikLf DISNEY PROOUC nows ^ FOX TRIPLEX gist Nitro*' It VO I4S4 271 11 TKMNKOtQ*' CARLO G r f * MAnt* IHA *f»*I 7 FOX TRIPLEXSD Page IO □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Wednesday, July 20, 1977 K " ’ r , ? ' /S 'y y V : ' ■■ i ■ ' FO* SAI* ■ FURNISHED APARTMENTS M fVRNlSHED APARTMENTS J FURNISHED APARTMENTS ■ FURNISHED APARTMENTS ■ FURNISHED APARTMENTS ■ FURNISHED APARTMENTS I * * * f O V O I A •ra i t a u lu *400 1*71 a n y .na I a ll 47l **14 f ir a * Knifer V W 1*70 SBSA, color T v Q u i * * ' 1* a TOI) val u u m 1 1 a # ,w i k e n m o ,a ISO 441 4N I ( * ’. 111* -I 0 AU V* <4 I ■ '(.N I, ma r * & l l m< t a mio.r#iir a tim # . ; irn h un# t»m# I i n I f>< I 7 * lim # * . 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I D u v a l A P a r k B ir d I S Wed f r i U S S al Hqmq*-Fof So)* I GLOM T V be ng given aw ay r H I t w lh any m obile home put chared d c , n u dab g r a n d o p e n « ,g A e yt e m H o m e r * ! * A B e n A h u * L O O K I N G FOR A H O M E IN W E S T A U S T I N ? f 0*3 lu t in g * in W e h a v e acc e ra to over A re a IB L e a r th a n h a lt ut th e re a re rn th e M u lt ip le L u i - n g S e r v e r B * th e t m# you r e a d th ia ad 4 or S w it h a v e aotd and w e m o / h a v e a d d e d a cou ple m o r e o n o u r c o m p u te r ,*# d in v e n to ry o f rq atdon Ita l p ro p c -rb e r N o one y»ays on top o f the lik e w e d e P ic k wp rt*e m a r k e t in pTrone a n d g iv e us a b y RS ho e s * •’ A eat A u atrn P r o p e r ! »e* IB Homo*. 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Af# ha va le v a , *1 a lf, •< tin g h ,*»*et n a # , 1 a m p m w ith *(>#, ai a p p *# i t„ r ttirrtant* ta, uity or i t a f t A im «.■ ,,n u *u # i oppor •u n it, to ow n or ba pat i 1 in a high loc an o n d u a lity bahar y in a b b i v i t p e r . a i A i n , a n a * , b y a n d v a r y ra a ta v r a n t A lin o n * of the vary b e lt 1 # | i a n , a n i b a r t on U h l f i a il wa H ill S m ith A A him a t * * b a a ifo 47/ M i l M i a r a l l u n o o u * F o r Solo (alb t i B H ib ii a h i d u t 1 v o n s IM S in d ia n I ai g a it la w a iry 4*0 ; v » r tti C o n fr aaa *44 t a u C braid V a n ,l a , » t a i * Mon 1 •*#> »#tton I (H IH IN «. * Nu obi retain h o o k out cd p rin t book* A lla y R,*»k 1A I /* * > ta b o o la a i Soar t IW O la rg e (talk 1 h a,, aas B iti I O I O b T V 1 o m p h a li T 411 aals V I M S J * IO i p a * d lig h tw e ig h t IAU a l lu d e * * l f * 414 1/ 4(1 I y r * o ld lh , a * tit a w e , * v 111 f M t i 17* rn la VI tf laiitnoat tiber g i a n 17 1 ft t a il buat tra d e r day la liar t a l l a i l 4407 m o rn in g * e v e n in g * M U M RI l l d ia llin g la b ia and t h a i , *70 t a ll 411 4407 I M A I 1 , atu n e!* dom m a k e * la r g a d e tk h a d in g lag* la d d ie * 4i day 47> I la * John I Kl T **n a v ,b n 17 ra t y good I m u ll *#11 *}40 or beat o f t * , I* A I MT A l l B f 111 aa, h cod al t h # * ! 140 v a n ity *10 i w a i l an tiq u a , hair *7 so 417 JOI I eve n in g * IO R P I I OR m an t ( t u n * ! *a% TOI I e v e n in g * w om an * b a ia ig h 170 , .* * ,) very MHI# 41/ P o t ! P o l i t O p la n t t 1 a i l e d p o t * P l , , * c illa n e o w t S a turda y m ot m ug ROIA I im wood l a i r H a n d , m il li n g m i l f riday a f f a , noon it e m * d b A N O NT At m g allo n a q u a riu m * * t ut ■ u iu t,tate OOt/BR Shoal C reek 4 I * 1 p ric e d im e by and la # S O F A A C M A I R 1139 95 kVhy ra n t whorl yow 1an buy a new io ta and t h a n le t at t h ii low pr n e * W h i c h you t an k e e p or r e t e ll Sat fe a tu r e * voile! tr a m # d u ra b le Nm colon c o v e r* ■ak idOTlme g, a i n l y , U N I T I l> t UM N I I l i b I * 11' N I a m a. O pen * * V S I A I I R M A T T W I SS S i TS F U I L 5 6 * n st TS th e * # r i t r a l i r m * * 1* h av e m e n u t a i lu re gnat an te , a n d a r e p m ad to le t! f a it A l i n or fh o t» # d i( v e i l y p f ic # a tt m e * furniture# V M I w ith Rave on a ll your U n ite d I cir HI lu r # Sot#* A ' l l N Open * v V I I a m a r l e w e b r W e b u y * d - a m e n d r a n d a id go pi a t a (caid id H ig h e st c a m C A P I T O L D I A M O N D S H O P 4018 N L a m a r FURNISHED APARTMENTS I B E D R O O M *160 W A L K T O L A V P O i fur fu tu re and d ta i-« r B e a u tifu l n#w t ach B u ilt m k itc h e n ■ p a r tm e n t h o t d r earn Balcony or pai-c t glly i ar pated water gar c abl# paid HOI b e d S u e r 477 I BJ IS I *S W I a n tr a l Mr ope, fie * inc L A C H pool 2 B E D R O O M S S T U D I O $200 lbs sh u ttle P f is ate p a lie r and b a n o n tea. tre a t tre e r#tr> g erato r b e a u tifu l pop- i A i m a n b u lt! in tc -ilv s h a g cO rp q T o d Ktb Nan W afer c a b le M u d 71)4 B u r'o n lh se 444 ’ M i ' 411 s u i Control P- cB'#' b e t inc F A L L L E A S I N G I l a * p lu r I bf I b id i a t r o t , , IF S h u ttle I U * p u r et#* e l * \ l r ic I IR t m tty le V a r ijir e r W W 14’ h a ll J IM a t i l t e m * P A R K S I D E APTS. (TOT Ben#! Rd I A te n n is i m F u rn is h e d and u « b r L a rg e h yt-ed P la y lh # a fr e e t >n H a • ,* # , P a r k a. i d * * tteo ai'nobi# ro te s no pef r no c h ild re n Idea- bu sn de d * #»d r*c . is Now le a r m g Uk rn * ta d re -’ -eyte- i w i m a n d tog 4 5 2 2 6 2 2 4 5 4 3251 4 5 8 8 0 5 4 B R O K E N A R R O W A P T S 2220 L E O N 477 4942 V e ry rsne IB N IB A S u m m er #v# tt#b *e a t f ia t year a r e te s v f em qc , c » h > , they re still h e re TOWN L A K E A R E A E xtra large 2 B R E tats »# « r o m a tis ta » /io 477 714/ M n n d h a 11 c o u r t s , g « t m # r * * m t h * m o s t b e a u t i f u l p o o l a n d • v a t1 B t v # r * * d e d o w n i h o p p m g |u * T t h # a lr o o t G r o a t r o o m - m a t a p l a n T o k * O i t o r f t o 2 0 0 5 W i l l o w C r o o k K i n g s g a t e A p i a 4 4 1 . 5 4 6 5 o r 4 7 6 2 6 3 3 B a r r y 6 i M n « < i# lM Ce. J E R R I C K APTS F At L Lf; ASI NG i M # m r RO M S149 a>4 t 47* 1*40 4 1 0 1 1 Speedw ay 41* «o 1/ W A L K TO l l T l f S H U T T L B SI IO SI GO I- ' . I i i f b i t IT Y O N I V s t la rg e bedroom apt and on# e tfK ie n ■ now a v a il# bt#, wot* in > ituet, Tully a P#tad (arg# * w im m m g pool q u ie t at .■richer# w alk in g (j>r’ # n (# to l l t No I, id#an no p e t* S U M M E R R A T E S loth f! A 477 W S I H i S ! O i A L I N T O W N apt 1 a v a n a b ta A v a ila b le A u g ,,*! < S aptam bor 1 apt I ioj I * pct* it ion in a t w a u fitx l I afie ld a r# # N ear ih u ttla b u * t o , r e m ,,.* h a rd w o rk in g upper < lay* or t o u p ie g r a d u a te 2 p re fe rre d la rg e Br w ith a m p le t io *e t* la rg e c a rp e te d I w m o d ern a 'a c tr ii kitc h en I N a r r bath W ell insulated b le d tub o il y!<, - • p a rkin g 11*7 RO I e m f * * Ai b n I d r«, m a r r ie d a i , fu rn is h ed ( ail wn#r 4/9 411* i ii.d e n t I lean « I AMGI R O O M Y I a 7BM ap*,imam* 1140 A * 1*6 P M alo* i r a and aas CA CH 12n d s h u t! i# s h o p p in g , e n te r I U / A 4V I t i l I* A p l I TOO f FURNISHED ARARTMSNTS V il lo g a G l e n A p t * th * ehw# ie ba #w aiv#>kMt# lawn# k<*>u~ rn #kn • •«, «4 iw m i fkv e**#r(*4k ••«* •• iv # A v a tty# ti,-V I 2 1 0 1 B u r t o n D r 4 4 7 4 1 2 0 o r 4 7 2 4 1 6 2 B e w ry a a t U f l V i C e HUNTINGTON VIUA C S S * A V E A lAttmt Bim BdMMweol 7 Nae lee I mf for »umtfs*f K ite tm, y I I I * V der I J e u n n i M i p>«d I V shuttle 4 5 4 8 9 0 3 4 5 4 6 8 1 1 LUXURY EFFICIENCIES VIEWPOINT 5 Blocks to Campus Summer & Fall Leasing 2518 Leon 4 7 2 - 9 9 8 1 # # # # # - • • • • • • • # # # # 1 Free Service F o r k in g Transportation HABITAT HUNTERS F r e e a p t A l o c a t o r i 4 f w c i i n c o m p I m a e * wrfTl tpe< m i f f i n g a c c e * * t o i h u t t l a y o w I aahing For S u m m a r A F a ll 01*4* + AB*// /#• HA 474 153? e o o o e o o o o a e o o o o r WHEN YOU W A NT IT! STUDIO, I , 2 BED RO OM S CABLE TV C n j j l i s h A i r e Pools 1 9 1 9 B u rto n D r. 4 4 4 1 8 4 6 sr Shuttle Bu* Tennis Courts Handball Courts Stop Going Around In Circles ; I Circle Villa Apts ; Bot h F u r n i s h e d & U n f u r n i s h e d ; Apartments I & 2 Bedrooms ; si ss : ! I Bedroom Unfurnishe d $185 : ; I Bedroom Furnishe d ................ $180 i ! 2 Bedroom-2 Bath ; Furnishe d .................................. $220 : W at er A Gas Paid J ; Cable Paid by Owner Shuttle Bus at F ro n t Door I 444-5003 ! D O N ' T W A I T few choice a p a r t m e n t A locations are still av a il ab le — but they are go­ ing fast. {•pruny ’ • f U M M New Aspen wood Apts. 4 5 3 9 G uadalupe 4 5 2 -4 4 4 7 I Bedroom Furnished s 1 8 5 A f 2 Bedroom Furnished s2 2 5 JR T. Shuttle Bu* at front door! ‘i -U I n t r a m u r a l Fields across thm itrmmt — ^ M r I I I I I I I I I I I I Tanglewood Westside Apartments Run, don't w alk - tomorrow w ill be too late for these choice residences. 1 Bedroom Furnished $ 1 5 5 -1 7 5 2 Bedroom Furnished $ 2 4 0 -2 5 0 Gas A w a te r is p a id b y o w n e r. T V. C able Tool Shuttle buses at your fro n t door. Signing To ll I m m i New 1403 Norw alk Ln. 4 7 2 -9 6 1 4 Don't let the sun go down w ithout seeing these. You'll be glad you did! {•gning /ail lea*#. New Sunnyvale Apis.' I 304 S u m m it 4 4 7 -7 8 0 7 2 Bedroom Furnished * 2 I 0 . Unfurnished * 1 9 0 W ater A Gas Paid Cable Paid Avoid the Last Minute Rush — Prime Locations Available Willow Creek Apts 191 I W illow Creek 4 4 4 -0 0 1 0 4 4 4 -0 0 1 4 U n fu r n is h e d — Furnished Large A p a r tm e n ts I Bedroom F u rn -$ 1 8 5 2 Bedroom 2 Bath Furn. -$ 2 5 5 2 La rge Pools Signing f a l l Prime Locations Available H o p to i t ! Don't be caught out of pocket London Square Apts. 2 4 00 Town Lake Cir. 1 Bedroom Furn $194 2 Bedroom Furn $255 3 Bedroom Fu rn $360 S h u t tle B u t • Front A ll A m e n it i e s 4 4 2 - 8 3 4 0 U n f u r n u h e d also Signing Fall teasel Now University professor's predicts shortage of apartments. research' D aily T exan H e a d lin e July 15, 1 9 7 7 M oral: Early bird gets the w orm . Signing fa ll I m m i N o w Pleasant Valley Estates 44 3 -5 3 4 1 1300 S. Pleasant V a lle y Rd. U n fu rn is h e d I Bedroom $ 1 5 0 . U n fu rn is h e d 2 Bedroom 2 B ath $ 2 1 5 S h uttle bus a t your fro n t door I block fro m b e a u tifu l Tow n Lake ROOM AND BOARD ROOM AND BOARD Limited space is available for the Fall term in three of the most convenient residences in the University of Texas area. Located at 2706 Nueces’ th ree blocks from cam pus and on a shu ttle bus stop. N in e te en delicious m eals per w e e k , m aid service, parking, s w im m in g pool, lounges, m any extras. C o ­ ed. 2707 Rio G rande. ©B'NTESSr W e S* Convenient to sorori­ ty h o u se s and s h o p p in g , p a rk in g on premises, maid service, nineteen meals per w e e k , p o o l, s u n d e c k s and lo u n g e s , kitchenettes in each suite. All women. mu/s 2700 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 477-9766, or come by 2706 Nueces. W e think you'll be glad you did! O nly 33 ahopping d a y * Iqft to fin d your a p a r tm e n t for fa ll. Lot u t help O ur buainaa* it a p a rtm o n t* Apartment hinders Service 472-4164 if* f r [£ A C iv of Barry G illingw ater Co. 2700 Guadalupe July 6 6 12 17 16 19 20 22 ii I ^CNJf5t br-»Hc*'l !! 26 27 26 iMJi 31 Lu. Af ca I IxK R irv August 77 NO W LEASING FOR FALL DEXTER HOUSE — First Class Accommodations — Private Rooms, Semi-Private Available at Reasonable Rates — 5 Day Maid Service — Swimming Pool — Optional M eal Plan at Madison House W here Food Is King Apply at: Madison House 709 W. 22nd Call 478-9891 478-8914 E ■FURNISHED APARTMENTS ■ FURNISHED APARTMENTS ROOMMATES HELP WANTED HELP WANTED TYWNO Wednesday, J u ly 20, 1977 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Page l l S170 - SI50 P L U S E L E C T R IC IT Y O N L Y t u if y a rp e 'e c ca b le T V elbe e-n v arge Large one bedroom c lo s e ts d s pose I gas a n d w a fe r ta rn is h e d s w im ­ m in g pool m a n on d u ty a a m m g d is ­ ta n c e to u T No c h ild r e n no pe ts a v a ila b le n o w and ta n 77 F O U N T A IN T E R R A C E A P T S 610 VV 30th 477 OSSI S m a r t M o v e - T H E I RO NGATE L u x u ry Livin g F ire p la c e s , y a -d s , p a tio s la rg e c lo s e ts A s m a ll c o m p le x w ith a cle a n q u ie t en fr ie n d ly m a n a g e ­ v ir o n m e n t E f fic ie n t m e n t A b o u t I 2. 3 b e d ro o m fia ts a n d fo w n h o m e s 1725 W e s th e .m e r i m ile fro m CR s h u ttle 454-2636 L E F T BANK sum m er 1&2BR furnished fro m s 145 fa ll 1&2BR furnished fro m $185 2408 Longview 476-5691 I Bedroom $145 V e ry clo se to c a m p u s and s h u ttle bus B e a u tifu lly p a n e le d f u lly c a rp e te d a ll b u i l t in K it c h e n C A C H , b u i l t - i n la rg e clo sets, w a te r-g a s - bo o k s h e lv e s , c a b ie p a id 4J07 A ve a 459 1053 451-6533 C e n tr a l P r o p e rtie s in c C O N V E N IE N T s h u ttle I 1 w a te r aas p a id c a b e pa J No pets c h ild r e n 700 H e a r " U IS 476 0953 4 T M V 22 4 72 *648 2 a p a r t m e n t s 905 tv 22 j St a th in w a lk m g d is ta n c e o f U T 836-4415 C O N V E N IE N T S H U T T L E N o p e ts c f J r e - Q u ie t c o m p le x 700 n e a r n S' J2 *76 095J 4 76 8v 22 472-8640 rat: s p r , na A V A IL A B L E A U G 22 • w a lk u n iv e r s ity 1 No p e ts . h itd re n 304 E 33rd lease *147 478-6 928 4 72 8648 B E A U T IF U L L O C A T IO N n e x t to Man co c k p a r k E ffic ie n c y A u g u s t ra te SITO p lu s e le c tr ic F a ll 1145 C a ll 4524371 1135 P l u s E L E C T R IC , fa it ra te w e are •ookm g to r q u ie t c o n s c ie n tio u s s tu d e n ts who a re nterested in a la rg e effic ie n c y 2 lo c a tio n s near c a m p y * C A C h d r y d is p o s a l 476-2112 la u n ­ IN T O D A Y S u blea se M O V E o f I b f a p a rtm e n t 4 bsk* w e st of c a m p u s th r u A ug 31 st on y $70 j E C a ll n o w 47* 6237 U N IV E R S IT Y C A R R E L S f a n ta s tic lo c a tio n S h u ttle L a rg e , d e a n , a c 1-1 c o v e re d p a rk in g c a b le J I7 0 p lu s e le c ­ t r i c it y 28)2 Nueces *72-6497 S U M M E R L E A S IN G E ft ic e n c le s $120 SHS la n d s c a p e d y a r d w in d o w s , la u n d ry c a o le . 3 b lo c k s c a m p u s 807 W 25th 4?? 208.' 'B R J150-$ 170 P ool UNFURN. APARTMENTS W O R L D F AM O U S Liberated Space L a r g e pool, c lo th in g o p tio n a l, s e c u re r e la t iv e ly fre e c o m m u n ity e n v iro n m e n t r e c e n tly re m o d e le d c ro s s v e n tila tio n a r c o n d itio n in g on p re m is e s s e rv ic e s s e c tio n s fo r p a r ty in g , c h ild r e n , q u ie t C o n v e n ie n t to c a m p u s I 8, 2 BR $140-$165 p lu s E 477 1898. T e r r y P a r k e r N E E D TO S A V E A N D S T IL L BE , B L O C K F R O M C A M P U S BLACKST O NE APTS 2910 R E D R IV E R 476 5631 W e w i ll h e lp you fin d a r o o m m a te to s h a re e x pe nses 174 SO a m o n th a ll b ills p>aid A P A R A G O N P R O P E R T Y G R A D U A T E S T U D E NTS, f • c u t t y , s t a ff o n ly S tr ic tly q u ie t I b r 2 b r B e a u tifu l s c e n ic lo c a tio n N o c h ild r e n . N o p e ts $175. $ 2 1 5 plus e le c tr ic ity I BO) W e s tla k e 327 0*79 fo r a p p o in tm e n t I B L O C K F R O M L a w School 808 E 30th C h a rm in g IB R a p a rtm e n t, h a rd w o o d flo o rs , m o d e rn k itc h e n a p p lia n c e s , d e c k o v e rlo o k in g W a lle r C re e k $ 2 IS /m o n th p lu s u t ilit ie s $50 d e p o s it, I y r lease 477- 44J9 L U X U R Y FOR S U M M E R E fficie n cie s I & 2 BR fro m $135. Large Pool, w a lk to campus. W a r w i c k Apts. 2907 W est A v e 474-1712 T H R E E -O H -F I VE APTS L a r g e c o n t e m p o r a r y e f f i c i e n c y a p a rtm e n ts , S135 a m o n th s u m m e r & rio s e ts , o u ts id e e l e c t r ic i t y W a lk - in s to ra g e a re a , pool, c a b le T V , la u n d r y , C A /C H , d is h w a s h e r. O n IF s h u ttle stop, 6 b lo c k s to c a m p u s 305 W 35th 454-3945 A B P S U M M E R RATES fr o m $138 00 E ffs IB R 'S fr o m $175 OO C A /C H , poo l. 5 m in u te s to d o w n to w n a n d M o p a c W a lk to c a m p u s T H E C H A P A R R A L 2408 Leon 476-3467 5 BLOCKS WEST OF CAMPUS S u m m e r lease, new e ffic ie n c ie s p a n e le d liv in g ro o m , o ffs e t b e d ro o m and k itc h e n , c a b le w a te r g a s (s to v e ) fu rn is h e d , $131 and $136 R E D O A K A P T S 477-5514 2104 SA N G A B R IE L 476-7916 f a ll le ases M I A M IG O S u m m e r and a v a ila b le E ffic ie n c ie s , ' & 2 b e d ro o m fla ts , I & 2 b e d ro o m s tu d io s F e w le ases f o r 2nd s u m m e r s e s s io n s a v a ila b le S e c u rity g u a rd , s h u ttle bus, saun as, ex e r c is e 4505 D u v a l, 451 4119 451 4037 ro o m , c lu b ro o m , p o o l T h e W IZ A R D O F ID ROOM AND BOARD N E W M A N H A L L W OMENS D O R M Summer Rates $42 up weekly f r ie n d ly , e x c e lle n t S m a ll q u ie t, fo o d , d o u b le s , sin g le ro o m s , m a id s , p a r k in g , l a u n d r y t o e v e r y th in g R oom boa rd , 19 m e a ls k i t c h e n e t t e , c l o s e 2026 G u a d a lu p e 476-0669 W O M E N A N D M E N L a r g e ro o m s , good food I b lo c k fr o m c a m p u s C le a n , n e w ly c a rp e te d Com e v is it us a t L a u r e l H o u se Co op 2612 G u a d a lu p e . 474-2743 N E W G U IL D Co-op v a c a c ie s s in g le s d o u b le s , m ale, fe m a le , now , f a ll, 510 W 23rd, 472 0352.____________ G E R M A N H O U S E . S u m m e r s in g le s $155- m o n th T a k in g a p p lic a tio n s fo r f a ll Stop by 2103 N ueces 477-8865 E X P E R I E N C E C O - O P 11 v l n g a f A r r a k is S m a ll f a m i ly e n v ir o n m e n t. R o o m to s u b le t second s u m m e r session, 472 2292 __ S H A R E E X P E N S E S in s tu d e n t co ops F rie n d s , r e s p o n s ib ility fre e d o m , In te r-C o -o p C o u n c il, 510 W 23rd, 476- 1957 fun. FURNISHED HOUSES in a N ic e g ro u p ty p e re n ta l s itu a tio n fu rn is h e d house, e s ­ c o m fy cozy 2BR p e c ia lly a c c o m m o d a te d f o r s tu d e n ts , p a r t ic u la r ly 2 o r 3 c o e d s , p r e fe r a b ly g r a d u a te s tu d e n ts la w , m u s ic , lo u rn a lis m , or e v e n a m a r r ie d Couple N ow as a s p e c ia l o f fe r I m o n th s r e n t F R E E fo r f ir s t and la s t m o n th s p a id in a d v a n c e plus d e p o s it. N o B P C a ll S h e ffie ld , 478-0412 o n ly b e tw e e n IO a m a n d 6 p m w e e k d a y s in n u r s in g , i f Y O U N E E D a r o o m m a te to share an a p a rtm e n t ; b lo ck f r o m c a m p u s *74 SO p e r m o n th a b p m a le o r fe m a e c a ll R ic h a r d 476-5631 F E M A L E T C s h a re 2br 2ba u n fu r l- used a p a -tm e n t N e ar s h u tt e H a s poo l L in d a 443-5133 M F 6 IO e v e n n g i N E E D TO SU B L E A S I I igr s tu d io N ic e a p a r tm e n t b e a u tifu l v ie w $130 a b p T o s h a re A ith a n o th e r g - r t Ca I 454-1451 o r 444 1663 R O O M M A T E N E E D E D A u g u s t U t T a o b e d ro o m * 195 A B P n e a r J S th a n d S p e e d w a y C a l) J im 4S4-34S3 F R E S H M A N E E s tu d e n t nee ds ro o m ­ m a te fo r r e g u la r se s s io n $t0S m o n th ly c a ll N e al WTI U S S 2 *2 * L I B E R A L A C C O U N T A N T m a to r needs to f*n d a n ic e house to r e n t o r s h a re A ith ser ous a tm o s p h e re t o r ta u C a ll 472 4024 a f t e r 6 OO R O O M M A T E N E E D E D h o u s e A , th y a r d near 45th and S p e e d w a y $117 p lu s b ills 453 3045 a t t e ' 6 M A L E R O O M M A T E w a n te d $60 for re s t of J u ly $75 s u m m e r plu s e le c tr ic ity $97 SO t a ll p lu s e le c t r ic it y 476-09*6 c a ll a f t e r 6 p m W A N T E D F E M A L E h o u s e m a t e , g r a d u a te s tu d e n t o r w o r k in g w o m a n p r e fe rr e d $95 plu s 3 b ills A u g u s t 1st 459 9652 s h a re 2 -b e d ro o m a p a rtm e n t M O V IN G T O H o u s to n " ^ R o o m m a te w a n te d S p r i n g B r a n c h g r a d u a t e p r o fe s s io n a l p m $150 m o C o n s e r v a t i v e life s ty le C a ll B o b a fte r 6 a c c o u n t i n g 1711 468 5719 - U T UNFURNISHED HOUSES 4 B D R M , 2B H O U S E One b lo c k to shut tie s h o p p in g New a p p lia n c e s CA CH R e s id e n t.* 1 n e ig h b o rh o o d $325 258 5805 W A N T TO T R A D E 2 B r house 4402 S p e e d w a y f o r la rg e e f fic ie n c y o r I B r a p a r tm e n t c a ll 459-9025 H I G H L A N D M A L L a re a . e x t r a mea 2-1 h u g e den. liv in g ro o m , a ll a p p llc a n c e s , f u ll y c a rp e te d , s lid in g g la s s d o o rs le ad to p a t io s h a d e d by h u g e tr e e , C A /C h A v a ila b le A u g I 400 D e nson $275 258 4444 a tte r 6 p m and w e e k e n d s UNFURNISHED DUPLEXES L U X U R Y C O N T E M P O R A R Y N o rth in W e s to v e r H ills 3-2. lo ft d e c k s on 3 le v e ls , fa b u lo u s v ie w o f H ill C oon t r y , p r iv a te fe n c e d y a rd , f ir e p la c e g a r a g e . 25 f t v a u lt e d c e i lin g , b u i lt - i n b o o k s h e lv e s , c a rp e t, s to v t, r e fr ig e r a to r , q u a l i t y d i s p o s a l , d i s h w a s h e r , n e ig h b o rh o o d , A v a ila b le c u t d e sac n o w $395 442 2002 258 3385 N E 2 I N O c o m m o n w a lls K id s , pets o k , c a rp e t d ra p e s w d c o n n e c tio n $179 p lu s b ills R e a lty W o rld In v e s tm e n ts , 443- _____ 2212 L U X U R Y D U P L E X W e s to v e r H ills 3-2,’ C A / C H a l ' a p p lia n c e s , f i r e p l a c e , c o v e re d p a tio fe n c e d y a r d g a ra g e c u l- de -s a c $360 327 4085 447 3979 N W , Q U I E T , 2 b r , s e p a r a t e h o u s e , p r iv a c y fe n c e S m a ll pet o k c a rp e t, s to v e , r e fr ig e r a to r C ity bus $180 p iu s u t ilit ie s 452 3481 a f te r 4 WANTED I W A N T YOUR HOUSE M o v m g o u t of y o u r d u p le x o r s m a ll house'-1 N eed s o m eone to m o v e in ? I ll ta k e it ! I need a fu rn is h e d p la c e in N o rth o r W e s t A u s tin , f o r USO o r u n d e r, a n y t im e a f t e r A u g u s t C a ll 452-0830 b e fo re 9 30 a rn or a t te r 7 30 p rn. W A N T E D m e c h a n ic E X P E R I E N C E D b ic y c le f u ll tim e , 451 8111, 9-5 30 LOST & FOUND LO S T S A T U R D A Y , J u ly 16, c a lc u la to r E N S b a s e m e n t P le a s e r e tu r n B a d ly needed C a ll Ju a n 453-6123 a f t e r 6 keep t r y in g H A L F W A Y HOUSE A D M I N I S T R A T O R The Brown School is now ta k ­ ing a p p lications to r a position as H a l f w a y H o u s e a d ­ m in is tra to r R equirem ents for th is p o s itio n th e fo llow ing in c lu d e 1 B A le v e l o r a b o v e 2 P re v io u s e x p e rie n c e tr e a tm e n t in r e s id e n tia l 3 A p p lic a n t m u s t be m a r r ie d a rith no c h ild r e n A d m in is t r a to r a n d spouse W itt be r e q u ire d to re s id e a t H a 'tw a y M ouse 4 A p p l,c a n ts m u s t ha v e a c a r a v a ila b le fo r use th ro u g h o u t th e day Call D ire c to r fo r R e h a b ilita ­ tive Services at 478-6662 9 5. A p a r t m e n t Man ag er M a r r ie d c o u p le no c h ild r e n , no pets, to liv e in and m a n a g e s m a ll s tu d e n t c o m p ie x n e a r c a m p u s A p p ly a t 1*02 N u e c a s H E L P W A N T E D B U R G E R K IN G 2700 G u a d a lu p e H ir in g now fo r f a ll s e m e s te r p a r t tim e and f u ll- t im e p o s itio n s a v a ila b le on a il in p e rs o n b e tw e e n 2 JO s h ifts A p p ly 4 30 ARTISTS L o c a l s c ie n c e fic t io n p u b lic a tio n needs s ta ff a r tis ts B o th fa n ta s y and h a rd SF a r t to g e n e ra l s p e c ific a tio n s N o t m u c h m o n e y b u t go o d p u b lis h e d e x p o s u re S c u lp to rs m a y be In 1978 m in ia tu re s p r o je c t W r ite B o x 15346, A u s tin , 78761 In te re s te d B A R T E N D E R A va ila b le afte rno on or even­ ing s h ifts as n eeded. The D rau ght House, 4112 M edical P a rkw a y. A fte r 4 p.m . N E E D M O N E Y 5 The F lo w e r P e o p le need p e o p le to s e ll flo w e rs T h u rs d a y . F r id a y , S a tu rd a y S u nday H ig h e s t c o m ­ m is s io n p a id d a ily 282-1102 A P A R T M E N T M A N A G E R M a tu r e , n e a t, ex r e s p e c t a b le , d i p lo m a t ic p e r ie n c e d u n e n c u m b e r e d M a i l re s u m e B ill B e rg s tr o m 1212 G u a d a lu p e No 412. A u s tin , 78701 T E L E P H O N E S A L E S M o n d a y t h r u F r i d a y , 5 45 to 8 45 p rn., s a la ry p lu s c o m m is s io n good w o rk in g c o n d itio n s The A u s tin C itiz e n 453 6651 D R IV E R S W A N T E D fo r D o m in o '* P iz ­ za M u s t h a v e ow n c a r, fle x ib le hou rs, good p a y A p p ly 404 W 26th o r 2111 E R iv e r s id e D r T R U E V A L U E H a rd w a r e S tore needs m o rn in g sa le s p e rs o n w ith h a r d w a re and h o u s e w a re s s a le s e x p e rie n c e C a ll 478- 9672 ______________ _______ m a r r i e d C O U P L E p r e fe rr e d , liv e in as h o u s e p a in t * , r e w a r d in g w o rk w ith boys S a la ry , ro o m and b o a rd , b e n e fits C o n ta c t M r B e r r y , T e x a s Y o u th R a n c h , M F . 9 5. 926 5833 F A L L A P A R T M E N T m a n a g e r fo r 20 u n it u n iv e r s it y a re a c o m p le x A p p ly re g a rd le s s of m a r it a l s ta tu s o r sex P O Box 49196 A u s tin , 78765 p e rm a n e n t boo kke e p e r P A R T T IM E S a tu rd a y and S u nday o n ly IO k e y r e ­ q u ire d C a ll fo r a p p o in tm e n t 476-2779 M - F f r o m IO a m to 4 p m a s k fo r M r B itte r E q u a l O p p o r tu n ity F m n in v o r b y B r a n t p a r k e r a n d J o h n n y h a r t hAfter ThIS \ 'WANTerP R I S T e R '\ IN The P O ^ T OFFICE J P u t t h ie ie a P ic tu re OF FARRAH FAWCETT. VMO COULP R ?eei0iY WANT HER?3 ( I A W V a s . TODAY’S CROSSWORD PUZZLE ACROSS Y e s te rd a y 's P u zzle S o lv e d I Females 6 "Beat it 1 10 Hit hard 14 Encourage 15 Northern U S. city 16 Sinuous 17 Canada's Welland 18 Canape Var 20 Bus abbr 21 Perceive 23 Prefix w ith dome and naut 24 Public vehicles 26 Seals on letters 28 Dependable 30 Kayak 31 Listens 32 Permitting abatement 36 Jackie's husband 37 Instrum ents 38 Educ. group 39 Beverage residue 2 words 42 Harness racing horse 44 Colorado park 45 Bookies business 46 Hardened on the surface 49 Nonmetallic 49 element 50 French income 51 Tall, thin and ungaily 52 Tilt 55 Elucidate 58 Containing the NH group 60 Golda Israeli leader 61 Strong brown 62 Churches’ central parts 63 Female animats 64 Comply w ith an order 65 Eminent _ s L A V _r X I _L_ L I P A D 0 I E N I "Vt 75 L 7 N F s L T T C T s rn 1 D F A_ C_ 0 rn T r n S T x R JF JR N_ F_ Ii I Ny--. 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Sues TV comedian C h in e s e r e g io n Greek letter Picks out Photos N e w s p a p e r material Electrical unit Golf course area R u s tie s , a s some fabrics S qu an der Ward off 13 Novices 19 Mexican food 22 The ultimate 25 Request 26 M ilitary establish ments 27 Black cuckoos 28 The further one Not well done 29 30 Beak parts 32 Was incoherent 33 Motivation 34 Turn 35 Cranium parts 37 Emotion 40 Canada's Mr Pearson, et al 41 Chemical compound 42 A u to ist*' problem 43 Gone by 45 Came in first 46 RCMP and FBI concern 47 Revive 48 Remove strings 49 Insane 51 -•-* majesty Treason 53 Notion 54 Mail 56 Supporting 57 Difficulty 59 M onth Abbr TYPING P R O F E S S IO N A L T Y P lN G s e iv . e e dis s e r ia tio n * m a n u s c rip ts , resumes etc C a ll a n y tim e 444 1134 t n p i n g L T C c h e a p fa s t a c c u ra te near campus 6 * 1 0 page Can Suzi P a tte rs o n 474 2439 a fte r 5 p rn E X P E R IE N C E D A C A D E M IC nea r c a m p u s t a t i o n s r e s u m e s A d deane 4’ .’ »6*8 a t te ' I OO p m p a p e rs , th e s e * d i n e r l h a h use r ip r if * ty p in g I R I t P I C K g p a n d d e l i v e r y P rofessional prices 24i 1672 a lm o s t a n y tim e Cynthia typin g at i b m correcting setectrlc reasonable te ll f a m t y p i n g p e rs o n a liz e d s e rv ic e to r theses te r m p a p e rs d is s e rta tio n * etc \ t . s H e fty ja c k s o n U2 8 * 4 5 T Y P IN G T H I S t 5 d is s e r t a t io n s s p o rts 6* i em s page Jon. Ti bb# t i 1017 n S x k w o o d L n N e ar Northcrojs vsaM 452 8326 PUBLIC NOTICES N O T I C E OF P U B L I C H E A R I N G to im p r o v e m e n t T he S 'a te D e p a r tm e n t of H ig h w a y s a n d P u b lic T r a n s p o rta tio n w i lt c o n d u c t a p u b ii* h e a rin g on W e d n e s d a y , A u g u s t 17 In the M a r t in J u m o t 1977 a f ? 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I I in brief Exam credit deadline Friday D e a d l i n e r e p o r t i n g f o r cre d it ea rn ed by exa m ina tion to the reg istra r is 5 p m F r i ­ day’ P e tition! su bm itte d to the M e asurem ent and E v a lu a ­ tion ( 'e n te r (MEX!) a f te r the deadline will be processed d u r i n g th e fall s e m e s t e r . P e tit io n s a r e a v a ila b le a t MKC, 261 ii Wichita St , and at t h e G e n e r a l I n f o r m a t i o n B(X)th in the Main Building The mailing address for MKC is PO Box 7246, Austin, Tex 78712 Students who plan to g ra d u a te this se m e s te r should a t ta c h a note to that effect to t h e i r p etitio n s MEX will notify their d egree c h e c k e r! in f o rm a tio n the who need before the official MEX' report is rele ase d C E N T E R F O R AN NO U N C E M E N TS I N T E R C U L T U R A L I N F O L K L O R E A N O S T U D I E S ET M N O M U S IC OLOGY rn iqunce* Dc Rh haul Bauman, director of I ba center will S(XI«ck Of! UT’* I vilkl i> I ttyrt, y al noon Wacjn»»<1ay rn Union B u ild ing IO.’ Uauman win dtacuM th# major figurine involved in Taois loiktora and .to*. ntMv th# currant siam of 'oikiora ac livity al the University TEXAS TAVERN will '.'.it,,ie musical antal (ba Thrill*, a rock 'n' roil from 9 p m to m idnight W adna* tainm ani by bond day Admission is Inca YO UN G SO C IA LIS T A L L IA N C E will spun sol a lac lum by Jerwica star on Why Amar ic a Should H o Hoc. ml,*1" ai / JO p rn Wednesday in Union Building 4 J;YI interested pnrtoiiH era invited kl anend O H A R M A O H A TU will ip*victor „ * ummer ninety program at 8 p rn Wednesday al BOB Baylor s t with a disc u*»ion and le> lure on Myth of f reedom ' by the Van ( I logy em Trungpa Ft in p i x he Admission is $1 donation M EETIN G S TEXAS J U O a L IN G SO CIETY will meet et 7 IO p rn W ednesday in Russell A Stem to p ractice Juggling dam Mali 112 I var ye via is awned I or intnrrmsSt* i call 920 4 4 4 / D E P A R T M E N T G E R M A N I C O F LA N G U A G E S JO U R N A L C L U B will sponsor a Ini lur# by Rainer Schulte, editor of Translation Review at J p rn Thmsday in Baft-' Mall ,’0 t The topic will ba New A p p ro a c h e s Im a g in a tiv e I nnchm enl ot the Sc holarly Tradition’' (pra ttle al aspe ct* ot translating and publishing) M E X I C A N A M E R I C A N Y O U T H O R G A N IZA T IO N will meet al ’> p m Wednesday in Mexican Amani an Biddies ( amar M U S L IM STUDE NT A S S O C IA T IO N will meal at I p rn I riday Hi Austin Mosque, I HO® Nuecas St tor a I nday prayer end lo hear a Saudi Arabian counselor H E I D A R I DE I N e ed h e lp d r i v i n g ' c ab 451 2437 t r y in g W e 'll g e t you to g e th e r k e e p MISCELLANEOUS F OW H i LM W I T H a n u n w e d p re g n a n c y , c a ll E d n a G la d n e y H o m e , F o r t W o rth , I exas t o ll tre e I 800 792 1104 The Student Attorneys of­ fice is in the b a s e m e n t of the old Speech Building, Room 3, 471-7796 or PAX 2648. T he of­ legal a d v ic e fice p r o v id e s representation and re fe rra l. r i ■“ I i i ■ i & Cinem a Austin Adult Book M art I I I I I I th e | I | I i I i | 802 Congress Ave. 477-3708 | | IO am-12 pm Mon.-Sat; 2-10 pm on Sundays | i | Private m ovie rooms largest screens in Texas. featuring LASSOED ADVERTISE! ORDER BLANK T h e Daily T exan S7UOINI NI WtPAXIS AT TMI UNIVIISirr OI TI XA* At AUSTIN W B ifc fliflg ra a WRITE YOUR AD HERE! E U L L T I M E p o r te r $2 30 p e r h o u r a -w a y s R e n t a C a ' 4?e ss IO 'if\tk \d u x p L M A R R IE Q C O U P L E to m a n a g e s tu d e n t d o r m it o r y m U T a re a F u r n is h e d I B ' a p a rtm e n t p iu s sa a-> no i V i D o n a ld D e m p s e y 4 4 4 *6 JI d a y * 32? 3*92 e v e n in g s in fa n t o k p a r t t i m e H E L P weekends good pa y with i haute tor more hour* in ta < 4\4 6#08 b e tw e e n 12 6 pm Ask to r M a n a g e r SERVICE C O P I E S w h e re you h a v e a ch o ice TOP Q U A L I T Y Good Q u a lity or 3‘ B u dg e t Copies (u n c o lla te d loose sheets 48 h o u rs ' Q u a lity V e rs a tility Speed Convenience £ G ra d School Q u a lity g u a ra n te e d w o rd p ro c e s s in g f u ll s e rv ic e b in d e ry G I N N Y 'S C O P Y IN G S E R V IC E 7 a m -IO p m w e e k d a y s , 9 5 S a tur Jay 44 D o b ie M a n <76 9171 ’ 08 C o ngress 477 9827 C O P I E S 3 £ (u n c o lla te d loose s h e e t: 48 h rs ) S E L F -S E R V 4‘ C O P IE S A N Y T IM E T Y P IN G * P R IN T IN G * B IN D IN G I N T E R C O N T I N E N T A L CO PYI NG SERVI CE 1800 L a v a c a 476 6662 F re e p a r k in g on to p le v e l o f G re e n w ood l i t h & T o w e r P a r k i n g G a r a g e , G u a d a lu p e 7:30 am-IO 30 pm M-F 9 am 6 pm Sat 3 C C O P I E S tat Guadalupe store 6 8 pm on our Savin 7501 4 C C O P I E S for 50 or more copies Self-serve or 24-hr service Just N o rth of 27th at G u a d a lu p e 2707 H e m p h ill P a rk I M BA T V Pl NC- P R IN 'IN C . B IN D IN G sr THE C O M P LE T E PR O FE S S IO N A L F U L L T I M E T Y P I N G S E R V I C E 472 3210 and 472-7677 T Y P I N G T ni versify ,110 b u s in e s s w o r c I Spa u*h typing I ast rn H te se ts ic e t r t e p a r k in g OIH’ - 4 8 M o n Th A 9-5 R y S E R V IC E *■ SM 472-89J6 D o b i c M a ll H O L L E Y ' S T Y P I N G S ERVI CE Copies Theses Dissertations Resumes T e r m papers 1211-A W . 34th 451-7303__ WOODS T Y P I N G SER VIC E 7 0 7 W e s f M L K B lvd. 472-6307 T h e m e s theses d is s e rta tio n s la w 14 y e a rs e x p e rie n c e a ll w o rk g u a ra n te e d F r e e P a rk in g 3701 Guadalupe E < tO N O < tO P Y and now E < tO N O < tO P Y R I V E R S I D E 453*5457 I R iv e t s id e a t L a k e s h o re M Th 8 30 8. F ri 8 30 6 443 4498 Sat >0-4 d is s e r t a t io n s , R E P O R T S T H E S E S b o o k s re a s o n a b le P r in tin g b in d in g O ff 24th S tre e t M rs B o d o u r, 478 81 13 ty p e d a c c u r a t e ly B O B B Y ! D E L A F I E L D IB M S e le c te e p ic a c lite 30 y e a r s e x p e rie n c e B ooks d i s s e r t a t i o n s r e p o r t s m im e o g r a p h in g 442 7184 t h e s e s , V I R G IN IA St. MNE I DE R T y p in g set v ic e G rad uate - a n d u n d o gr a d u a te ty p m g, p r in t in g b in d in g ISIS K o e n ig L an e 459 7205 A R T 'S M O V IN G a n d M a u lin g a n y a re a 24 hours, 7 days. 477 32*9 W E M O V E T O s u it y o u r e lia b le m o v e rs r a te s P a t 477-4180 o r r e a s o n a b le W illia m 345 8781 r e m o d e lin g P L U M B I N G R E P A IR S L o w r a te s M a s te r p lu m b e r O ld e r houses s p e c ia lty 441 3684 $2 50 o ff w ith All V O L K S W A G E N RE P A IR P e rfo r m a n c e m o d ific a tio n s a n d s to ck e n g in e r e p a ir W o rk g u a r a n te e d Tune u p $20 OO R o g e r F u n n e l!. 451 1803 I N D E X I N G B Y q u a l i f i e d M L S g ra d u a te s F a s t, a c c u ra te a ffo r d a b le P O B ox 7476 A u s tin 787)2 a fte r 5 478 1 121, 447 31 12 BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES F R O Z E N Y O G U R T S O L A R I U M F u lly e q u ip p e d , s m a ll in v e s tm e n t, lo w re n ta l, p r o f it a b le bu s in e s s E x c e lle n t op r e s p o n s i b le o w n e r - p o r t u n l t y o p e ra to r P h o n e 476-6511 W a lte r Y o u n g f o r B E G IN N IN G P R O F E S S IO N A L S d o w n to w n o ffic e sp a c e L it t le f ie ld B ld g a t 6th an d C o n g re s s V e ry re a s o n a b le ra te s 476 3905 Just N o rth of 27th at G uadalupe 2707 H e m p h ill P a rk 7 )\t\A lJ u X J Y U I n v / f u RE S U M E S w ith or w ith o u t pictu res 2 Day Service 472-3210 and 472 7677 you can a ffo rd E S 9 0i ii \) i Vi PRICE ii/ ^ I 1 Vl PRICE |ii ► Vt PRICE It VS PRICE I ^ V S VS PRICE ! ’( > vs PRICE iJ ) OF i * s 0 1 PRICE ii‘I 1 2 FOR I J PR //#155 SUITS SPORT COATS SWIMSUITS SHOES TIES WOMEN’S CLOTHES DRESS SHIRTS 12 SOCKS O n S t i n t i I n n »«** I **>*• US fit! pot* It M • * * look to the paramou ut Al Jarreau sat. for ^1.00 REGRETS: 1. A L L SA LES CASH ONLY 2. ALL SALES FIN A L, NO EXC H AN G ES OR REFUND S 3. ALTERATIO N S EXTRA ON i PRI CE M ERCHANDISE J' Brittons N ON THE D R A G ' J . • . ■ ; ) 0 j 1 k r * N i » I S i V I 1 I 6\i I I 3 S I ' - - 1