T h ir t y - T w o Pages Vol. ll, No. 148 C o p y r ig h t 1978, Texas Student Publications, a ll rig h ts re se rve d T h e Da il y T e x a n S > v d , n t N , w , p a p „ at Th, U ai at Au,tin Austin, Texas, Thursday, M a y 4, 1978 Sun Day Fair celebrates solar enerav Rain hits New Orleans, Page 11 By MIKE MORRISON MIKE MORRISON it Writer Staff Writer After a week of cloudiness, the sun came out Wednesday morning perhaps in recognition of National Sun Day. And to help celebrate the occasion. the Austin Solar Energy Society is spon­ soring a Sun Day Fair in Zilker Park to make people aware of solar energy possibilities I he fair, which began Wednesday with a sunrise service at which Sen Lloyd Doggett, D-Austin, and state Rep. Dan Kubiak, D-Rockdale. spoke, will run through sunset Saturday U.S. Rep. Jake Pickle, D-Austin, and state Rep. Bill Reese, D-Somerville, will speak at 4 p m Friday followed by a “Solar Soapbox at which Austin citizens may speak their minds on solar energy SATURDAY afternoon, solar pioneer the “Sky- inventor of Harold Hay, Therm roof pond solar heating and cooling system, will deliver the keynote address. The fair closes Saturday with a Sunset Solar Music Spectacular.'’ Throughout the four-day fair, there will be booths concerning solar energy and demonstrations of solar-powered equipment. Musical acts scheduled to appear are Beto and the Fairlanes, Taxi, Kenny and the Jets, Clearlight Waite and Bobby Bridger. Other events include a “Solar Ballet,’’ Most Unique Suntan Contest,” and bus tours of solar energy systems at work in Austin. THE FEATURED stop on the bus tour will be a stop at the College House Cooperatives, 2000 Pearl St. College House, which uses $150,000 of equipment to track, concentrate, store and utilize the sun’s energy, has been in full operation for only a week “We do everything with solar energy you can do,' Bob Russell, member of the Solar Energy Society, said. “We heat the building, heat domestic water and we cool the building,” he added. Most solar energy systems are less extensive than that at College House, Russell said. “THERE ARE about IOO systems this size nationwide,” he said, “ though several are larger.” The College House solar energy system utilizes 2,300 square feet of glass collectors’’ which track the sun across the sky and by use of prisms, concen­ trate the sun s rays onto a copper pipe inside each collector. Water flows through the pipes, is heated and then enters a 6,000 gallon energy storage tank, Russell explained. Three separate systems then provide heating, cooling and domestic water, he said. Scattered throughout the solar energy system are 46 sensors which monitor its performance. Information from these sensors runs through a computer, into a telephone line and into another com­ puter in Huntsville, Ala , Russell said. THE SOLAR energy system was financed by a grant from the Depart­ ment of Housing and Urban Develop­ ment and is one of only 26 residential projects across the nation that will be monitored. The sensors measure a variety of items such as water flow and hot water temperature, Russell said. Once the information has been fed into the computer in Alabama, both I <’liege House and HUD “ can get a pret­ ty good view of how things are working overall.” Russell said Since the system has only been in full operation for about a week, it is too ear­ ly to estimate how much will be saved in energy costs. THE PROJECT has been completed since Oct. I, but because of a number of in the system, full operation has not been possible until now, Russell said. big bugs The first problem occurred when the tracking system s motor would not work We had to replace all 16 tracker motors,” Russell said Once the motors were replaced, trou­ ble with the valving system began. PAUL LUPA, engineering student at the University and resident of College House, is primarily responsible for get­ ting the system to work, Russell said. The system is now functioning very well, Lupa said. Lupa added that the system, based on computer projections, will provide about a 45 percent energy savings, but Russell added that the system will probably do better than you think.” Several other solar energy proiects are going on in Austin. “THERE IS more going on (solar projects) in Austin than you’ll find in most cities. Austin always has been a little more up-to-date,” Russell said. One Austin company, the Radian Corp , was the first solar heating and cooling unit set up by the National Solar Heating and Cooling Demonstration Project. Approximately $60,000 worth of equipment is used to heat and cool the company’s office building on Shoal Creek Boulevard. Dr Gary Vliet, associate professor of mechanical engineering, is in charge of one of several solar energy projects at the University. Vliet, also associated with the Univer­ sity^ Center for Energy Studies, is in­ stalling solar collectors at the Gateway Apartments on West Sixth Street Once installed the collectors will provide heating, cooling and hot water for the complex. ONE REASON for the recent surge of solar energy projects is an increase in congressional backing. Solar research and development budgets have been in­ creased every year for the last five years, with the number of solar heated houses subsequently doubling every eight months since 1973. Rep Jake Pickle initiated the idea of using solar energy in congressional of­ fice buildings and in 1977. the House of Representatives passed Pickle’s bill to establish a feasibility study to examine the practicality of installing the solar energy units. If we are to make progress in solar energy and reduce our demand for fossil fuels, then we are going to have to put it on the buildings which are already here. We can t wait around for these buildings to be replaced by new ones before we consider solar energy,” Pickle said. The recently released results of the feasibility study show that Pickle’s proposal would save $4.5 million over 20 years _ I * VV i i i f m i •ATT;’- A rc h ite c tu re s tu d e n ts fro m M ichael G arrison’s A lternate Technology class construct a solar energy greenhouse (right and directly above) as their contribu­ tion to the Sun Day Fair at Zilker Park. The completed project (top) is in contention for a Guinness World Record as the fastest built greenhouse. — Texan Staff Photo* by debra Reingold sc ZU xx‘**n?3 X O S * 0 OUI . ( J O I Fifteen Cents News and Editorial: 471-4591 Advertising: 471-1865 id Classified: 471-5244 leys arms deal Soviets ® 197$ New York Times WASHINGTON — The Carter ad­ ministration. in a compromise on one of the last remaining obstacles to a new strategic arms accord, has tentatively decided to accept a proposal by Moscow that would limit the total number of Soviet and American missiles and bombers to 2.250 through 1985 The tentative decision, which would provide for equality in the size of the two sides strategic arsenals for the first time, was apparently made last week in the wake of Secretary of State Cyrus R Vance's visit to Moscow Of­ ficials said the administration is ready to agree on the Soviet figure for missiles and bombers, if Moscow is prepared to agree to a ceiling of 1,200 for land and sea-based missiles equipped with multi­ ple warheads THE OFFICIALS said that Moscow bas indicated it is prepared to accept this arrangement and. accordingly, the officials expect formal agreement on the two ceilings in the near future Both limits would be incorporated into a trea­ ty through ivSyl. limiting strategic forces With these questions close to resolu­ tion. officials said that only two signifi­ cant issues stand in the way of a com­ pleted arms agreement And they said one of these — how far each side could go in modernizing strategic arms - stands a good chance of being resolved in coming weeks. This would clear the way. the officials said, for a summit meeting this summer between Presi­ dent Carter and Soviet President Leonid Brezhnev in which the two leaders could focus on whether and how the proposed accord would limit Moscow’s new bomber, known as the Backfire Die Soviet Union possesses a total force of 2,500 strategic missiles and long range bombers, 400 more than the United States is now permitted under the terms of 1972 arms accord Thus, un­ der the proposed new ceiling, Moscow would be required to retire 250 missiles or bombers while the United States would not be affected Officials said that this fact promises to be an impor­ tant selling point in gaining Senate ap­ proval for the proposed treaty. However, the proposed ceiling is higher than that originally sought by the administration in the talks and thus Is still likely to a ttract criticism on Capitol Hill. THE QUESTION of what overall ceil­ ing would be placed on strategic arm s has been a sensitive one since the first arms agreement was concluded in 1972 In that agreement, the Soviet Union was given a potential 40 percent advantage in missile numbers, which led the Senate to insist that any new accord provide for equal numbers. In November 1974, President Ford and Brezhnev met at Vladivostok ami agreed to place ai. equal limit of 2,400 on each side’s total number of missiles and bombers. Following the Vladivostok meeting, former Secretary of State Henry A Kissinger said the United States was determined to seek a reduc­ tion in these levels, but negotiators fail­ ed to reach agreement on the details of the proposed accord In an effort the arm s deadlock, Carter last spring proposed that each side undertake “deep cuts” in their strategic arsenals, to a level of I,- 800 m issiles and bom bers. Soviet negotiators quickly these num bers but indicated they were prepared to accept smaller cuts. to break rejected Daniel, White split over coal tax suit (Editor s note: This is the first of a two part series profiling candidates for attorney general.) By JANN SNELL Stall Writer The c o n te s t b etw een two Democratic contenders for attorney general boils down to a battle of words th e Price Daniel J r and Mark White have ( lashed directly on two issues who has served best in various state offices and what to do about Montana's severance lax on coal Daniel, speaker of the Texas House from 1973 to 1975, points to his record as .speaker for the best example of his qualifications ‘WE PASSED the reform legislation: legislation, ‘ we passed program s of adult and bilingual education: we passed the con­ sumer protection act; we passed the shield bill only to see it die in the senate we passed the first law requiring ... affirm ative action and hiring of minorities and I could go on and on and on.' Daniel said But White claims Daniel was neither unique nor effective as speaker. Everyone was a reformer back then they all ran on reform platforms, Bill Hobby, Briscoe,” White said. He brags about reform legislation, but what about civil rights — why didn't he get a better bill,” White said “ Or what about police brutality, or equal op­ portunity employment?” (Please see ATTORNEY, Page (Please see ATTORNEY, Page I.) Raza candidate sees rthursday victory in November De Leon hits adversaries with community campaign a m a • ___________ By MIKE STEPHENS State Reporter His party has always been a distant third in statewide races, but Raza Unida gubernatorial candidate Mario Com- pean hopes the D em o crats and Republicans will cancel each other out after the Saturday primaries, leaving him enough votes for victory. Compean believes the “ radical im­ age of his party is no longer a factor and gives himself a 30 percent chance of winning the general election, with his chances increasing as the Democrats and Republicans battle it out. His total budget for the campaign will be less than $240,000, compared to several million for the two major party can­ didates “WE NEED a governor who will make genuine change.” Compean said Tuesday, adding the major difference between himself and the other can­ didates is that traditional politicians consistently make the same promises over and over " They promise to hold the line on taxes and run an efficient ad­ ministration Compean said. Although Raza Unida will present ballots in only 20 counties for the primary, there will be a part) ballot in every county in the general election Compean promises to “watch the public treasury . ’ claiming that the re­ cent scandal in the Governor’s Office of Migrant Affairs indicates a “clear mis­ use of funds ” HE LASHES out at Gov Dolph .... Bnscoe, attaching the term criminal to the projected $17 billion fwphn But be sees little difference hrfimm Briscoe and his mam opponent — • J Mild Thursday will be warmer, fair and mild, with a high in the upper 70s and light winds. More Weather, Page 31. D r a f t . . . The Atlanta Falcons made Alfred Jackson the first draft pick of the seventh round Wednesday. Stories and photo, Page 17. Galapagos ... Jim and Carol Greenwood discovered last year there still remains a land uncon­ taminated by civilization — the G alapagos Islands. Feature, Page 32. By MARK DOOLEY By MARK DOOLEY c i . . . State Reporter Luis Diaz de Leon plans to use $100,000 to do what others want to do with as much as $3 million — he plans to win a U S Senate seat. De Leon is the Raza Unida candidate for the job held by Sen. John Tower, and just as Tower in the Republican primary, de Leon is unop­ posed in 20 counties (including Travis) conducting a Raza Unida primary. is unopposed In the general election, he will face the D em o cratic nom inee — Bob Krueger or Joe Christie — in addition to Tower, and possibly independents Jim Vallaster and Henry C. Grover, De LEON says he hopes Krueger wins the Democratic primary because “ I would rather deal with another conser­ vative.” He says Krueger “plays in­ tellectual gymnastics” and is “very bung up on academic achievements ” and therefore could be defeated more easily than Christie He also says he hopes Grover remains in the contest, since 26 percent of the vote is sufficient to win a four-candidate general election, whereas 34 percent is necessary for victory three- candidate race in a At any rate, de Leon says his can­ didacy is a serious attempt to win a Senate seat, although he realizes victory would constitute a major upset I hope to give them hell come May 7, he said Monday “ I think ITI be the winner,” he added De LEON labels himself a liberal politician with Raza Unida orientation and says he has middle class values” and “ roots in the struggle of my , . J.P can did ates P un * I J p- candidates. Page 3. Absentee voting stopt, Page 7. people ” However, he readily admits his political experience is limited He now the works as a c o n s u l t a n t for Educational Service Center in Austin and formerly directed the Community Action Agency for the Laredo-Webb bounty Development Corporation He also directed what is today the Texas Migrant Council and was a Kleberg County juvenile and adult probation of­ ficer De Leon says he is a “people-oriented con­ and — con- power candidate’’ and a “candidate of sinners,” while Tower, Krueger Grover are * one and the same servatives representing the structure.” His opponents rely on “ big money from big companies,” de Leon adds while his campaign has a “ grass roots orientation.” HE SAYS his support is strongest in Laredo (his hometown), parts of the Valley, urban areas such as Houston, Dallas and Austin, and West Texas, where he receives church support from a “ rebirth of Christianity” movement. He campaigns as a World War ll veteran and hopes to receive support from World War II and Vietnam veterans, as well as people who opposed American involvement in Vietnam The “main thrust’ of de Leon s cam­ paign is his “five e s ” platform — education, economy, employment, en­ vironment and energy. He says people are tired of the status Luis Diaz de Leon quo in each of these areas. “We have reached the level where people are just fed up with it. We want change,” he said. ECONOMIC STAGNATION, con­ tinuing devaluation of the dollar and im­ position of excessive taxes on the mid­ dle class are the most significant problems facing Texans, de Leon says. Recent Senate votes on the Panama Canal treaties signify another problem Texans face, he adds, pointing out that Sen Lloyd Bentsen’s votes in favor of the treaties were neutralized by Tower’s opposition “I am for the treaties” and favor “respecting self-determination,” de Leon says. Energy legislation is the first issue he (Please see De LEON, Page C.) Mario Compean the Democratic nomination, for torney General John Hill. At- He charges Hill has used his office for “ uncovering as much dirt as he could on his political opponents” and claims the image of Hill as a consumer advocate is a facade. Compean believes a change in the governor s seat is the most important issue in the race. “Even a change to a Republican governor would be healthy,” he said, adding, “I would love to be governor, bid what s the next best thing? Change.” ALTHOUGH his campaign budget is considerably smaller than his opponents in the general election, Compean con­ te n d s R a za U n ida ’’m o re sophisticated in terras of experience (P lease See RAZA UNIDA. F i f e C.) is ‘ i m r . 1M M .V t k x a n T h u rsd a y, M a y 4 IV / 8 Yom Hashoa Holocaust Memorial Service M ay 4 8:00 pm Ms. Paulina Stark w ill chant the liturgy Professor Steven W ym an w ill read the poem "Babi Y a r" I 1 * 1 1 I 09 Hillel Foundation 2105 San Antonio Show and loll Slum and It ll' t run hilt! it *» garm* < hark1 I ............... , "»• Texan editor target of guerrilla theater By T O M S W IN N E A t, ru e r ti I R epo rter A ‘ xmall spectacle" to protein r**eent ar U vt ties of D a ily Texan e d ito r Dan Malone turned out to be just that small Four Daily Texan reporters a television reporter and cameraman and fevn-r than IO students were at the south steps of the Main Building at 12 15 p i Wednesday to watch two members of the Student Activities Network !><*sign organization dressu-d in gorilla masks drop a fake shrunken head at the feet of David Mitcham, third year law student and spectacle organizer The head was symbolic of Malone s head. Mitcham ex­ plained After dropping the head, the two gorillas releas­ ed black balloons and walked away The head was stuffed with seven leaflets which Mitcham said were symbolic of the seven days of repression of our free speech (by Malone) ” M itcham , dressed in a Groucho Marx mask and a leather hat. said the guerrilla theater was necessary to tell Hie public about Malone s re cent refusal to run a column by fellow SAND member. E rie Samuelson The column dealt with events a week ago * h e n M a l o n e s t o p p e d Mitcham from distributing handbills which contained reprinted Texan articles Malone claimed distribution of the leaflets was an infringe- " l e n t of t h e T e x a n s copyright Malone said he would run the column, but later refused because of length restrictions. Mitcham said He also said the Texan news story of the event distorted the facts The column was his way of telling what really happened he ex­ plained We tried to play ball with Malone Now he s trying to suppress the story,” Mitcham said Malone said Wednesday afternoon that he offered Samuelson and Mitcham “ a s t r a i g h t f o r w a r d l a i r , proposal for space in the paper, but the article ran over the agreed upon length They can hold all the rallies they want aud call for my head from now on out. They can sue the (Texas Stu­ dent Publications! Board We ve talked to law ,-ers and we think we re right.' Malone said Subject to amendment Co-Op to comply with act ( o-Op, To have (Treater I Ini***—aa« . ________ To have greater University community participation in the activities of the Universi­ its board of directors voted ty Wednesday to comply with an as yet un­ amended version of the Texas Cooperative Association Act of 1975 Board members voted 7-1 to comply with the act if suitable amendments are endorsed by the next session of the Legislature At its board meeting a board attorney in­ formed members the Co-Op need not comply with terms of the act since the Co-Op had originally been formed as a co-op under the rexas Non profit Association Act However, board members have been con­ cern*^ over the lack of input from Co-Op members presently made up of University faculty, students, staff and Co-Op employees the Cooperative Act board members felt, would increase Co-Op ( urn pl lance with C o -O p p ric o su rvey, P a g e 1 3 . member participation since greater numbers of the University community would become involved in the election of board members. Presently, the board of directors is made up of nine voting members, four elected stu­ dent representatives, four University ap­ pointed faculty members and a chairman of the board Two non voting board positions are held by Co-Op employees ( nder the present wording of the new act, the board of directors would be comprised of the greatest number of members of the Co- Op The resolution passed by the board calls upon board members to seek a legislative amendment to the Co-op Act for college cooperative associations that would provide more equitable representation on the board. campus capsules- Graduate elections slated Election of officers for the Council of Graduate Students and student representatives to the Graduate Assembly will be at 7:30 p m. Thursday in Union Building 4.206 Any member of the council or any five graduate students may nominate student representatives to the assembly, who will be elected by council members Any graduate student in good standing is eligible to run, and two graduate students from each of three divisions will be elected. The assembly, deliberative body of the graduate faculty, is investigating dissertation requirements, the administrative structure of graduate studies and intra-departm ental academ ic grievance procedures For more information, contact council member Maureen Walker at 471-4991. Washington interns to meet A meeting of students involved in the Ex- Students' Association’s Washington internship program will meet at 7 p.m. Thursday in the Nowot- ny Room of the Lila B. Etter Alumni Center, 2110 San Jacinto Blvd. Anyone who is going to be in Washington this summer is invited to attend the session for informa­ tion about transportation, housing and entertain­ ment in the area. For more information, contact Teri Wenglein at 471-3891. Union to keep snack shops open The Union's Forty Acres Room and the Sweet Shop will be open until 3 a.m. Monday through May These facilities will be open late during finals week so students will have a place to buy snacks while they study, Peggy Liddle. chairwoman of the Union Board of Directors, said. Bottomless* cups of coffee will be sold for 19 cents on these nights, she said. “ If it goes over we might open the University Cafeteria next semester (during finals),” she said TO: CO-OP MEMBERS RE: Patronage Dividends tor 1977-78 J u n , w in declared^ h o w e v^ „ T r t a i? r Co' 0p ,or ,he ,iscal year ending wn un,il ,he audlt is completed ° r •» * « '''« • " « T °,b^ e ,l9J b,e to recc?' vc a dividend on purchase made Ju ly cash l i S t S * * rah?* 3?' 1978, members m ust submit their cash register receipts tor audit by Ju n e 30 1978 1.1! "• * ,0TheC0'O|)-p° B»«»»■ S K w They m ay turned in at the ticket window on the second Your Student F a cu lty I.D, is required. Rem em ber the deadline: June 30, 1978 Co-Op NAVAJO WEAVINGS m WH i n I A n c SPECIAL COLLECTOR'S SHOW & SALE I hursday through Sunday M ay 4th, 5th, 6th & 7th — IO am to 7 pm Fine old and antique N avajo rugs and blankets pi ized for their craftsmanship and beauty NI-WO-DI-HI GALLERIES specialists in fine American Indian art 9th & Rio Grande Austin, Texas 78701 512-472-3049 EVERYTHING GOES! «"ra>s SIOW * Cm, „ JEANS SHIRTS ^ I t l l pf Colors * Variety af Styles BOOTS 20% 50%OFF SHOES GIRL'S TOPS & SHORTS ♦ C a t e S e l e c t i o n ★ Short Sleeve KNITS ★ Dress PANTS ★ Frat alterations OVERALIS JEANS W M / /0 L Clothes for G u y s and Gals IMAGES by Bob E llio tts Sale continues thru finals 4 2 6 G u a d a lu p e 0 n th e D fa g Staying up Late? So are we. 2am weekends and lam weekdays. Call us and survive the late night hungries Campus 476-7181 Enfield 474-7676 Riverside 447-6681 Guadalupe 458 -9101 Now open „ I e*an a stud«>t newspaper at The University of Texas at Austin i . 7 Cexas S,lK,ent Publications. Drawer D, University Station Austm T . i '8712 The Daily Texan is published Monday . Tuesday Wednesday Thursday day. except holiday and exam periods Second class posUge ^ d T l A S n Tex ' i tt ■»ews contributions will be accepted bv telephone ( 471-45011 at th*, Bu,ld,"«2«> S advert i si ng should be Building 3 200 <471-5244< and display advertising in T S P Building 3 210 made rn T <471-18651 ti* P Communications and Advertising Services to Students. 6330 N Pulaski Chicago. Copyright 1078 texas Student Publications O N E S K M K . S T K H X r r s S . r , J irked up on campus basic student fee Picked up on campus - U T faculty staff Picked up on campus • general public By mail in Texas BV bm‘1. outside Texas within U S A TW O S E M E S T E R S (F A L U AN D S P R IN G I 1977 78 Picked up on campus - U T faculty staff Picked up on campus general public By m ail in Texas S U M M K R S E SSIO N 1978 outs|de Texas within U S A " - r . p - ' L o c S £ " , T E S I 75 I 65 6 75 13 OO . 14 00 I 3 30 12 OO 24 00 26 00 Picked up on campus - I T students faculty staff I I OO Picked up on campus general public 4 OO B y mail in Texas 8 50 B y mail outside Texas within U S A 900 Send orders and address changes to T E X A S S T U D E N T PU H I R a t i o n s p n i V . ......... Au*t,n T” as 78712 or to T ? P Bu,Wing. CS 200 U t P U B N O ° 14£ ^ SALE 1 0 % — 7 0 % o f f EVERYTHING Sasson French Cut Jeans 25% off Accessories 30% off Je w e lry 40% off Dresses 10%-60% off specially reduced Swimsuits 20% off I nique clothes for the unique you Sale M a y 1-5 l f ! 14 M I I The Roman is the super adjustable BirKenstock with three buckles to ad­ just to your foot and stay there. The heat and pressure sensitive toothed moulds to the contours of your feet. In tan smooth lether, only at Footgear, and we resole and rebuild them, too. FOOTGEAR Home of Roots, B irk ensto ck and other incredible footgear *200 Guadalupe Austin. Texas "trO-S H ou rs i'hur.s .VI un Fri Sat IO A M HR\t IO A VI -6 PM ^ FVec Parking at 22nd & San Antonio ^ “k V- \— V . A- A- A , A- A . A . V- A W A Y J J J J J J J J J J J J I T hursday, M ay 1 9 7 r n t i U.N. increases force after Lebanon fighting From Texan New* Service* From Texan New* Service* , T \ RE, Lebanon - The French command of the United w ^ n « SHPeaC (I J Spencer i i a senior Minority problems By Jim Ms Ht only part of whole - that imply that white financial tnsecun ty does not lead to academic insecurity, or is he saying thai minorities are generality more insecure than whites Perhaps a more accurate statement is that financial insecurity may lead to academic insecurity Hie problems incurred by the (man dally insecure are not exclusive to blacks and Chicanos, they are commot! to all in that situation In your article, one response read "It s a shame how few if any white students that did not receive notice that their loan had come through and alt the black and Mexican-Americas students that I know of were not notified " It in te re stin g to see the would be 1 , . . ANOTHER response t'MWiiwltinl V' respondent s survey and its breakdown Ile is a racist and I do not like the environment in which my financial state depends on so much As a m atter of fact, of the employees that have worked at the financial aid office since September, 49 per rent have been minorities That at­ is mort* equitable than the mosphere in ‘‘atmosphere general According to your figures. there are unix 2,875 minority un dergraduates on this campus, or 7 per cent of the student population the University of Racial d iscrim in a tio n " implies that one person ta m in o rity) was denied an Hem for a reason based on race, white T h e D a i l y T e x a n In response to the Daily Texan article on May 2. Report Shows Minorities Perceive you say: "In addition, many Chicanos and black> feel racial discrimination at the financial aid of­ fice " And again you say ” . a signifi­ cant number said they felt disorinuna lion at the financial aid office ” The report shows, out of 401 responses "34 singled out the financial aid office, and 9 pointed to the financial aid staff ” That "many" and "significant number" is ll per cent IN YOUR article. Qui tan Vargas states. Minority financial insecurity leads to academic insecurity ” Does E ditor,..,. ............................ Managing Editor ........ Assistant Managing Editors Assistant to the Editor .... News E d ito r.................. Associate News E d ito r........ Features Ed mu ................... Sports Editor Assonate Sports Editor Entertainment Editor Photo Editor ....... .. . Dan Malone Kam i Hastings Dana Ehrhch. Victoria to e Harvey Nev ilk Laura Tuma •..... - Nan Bowers Ray Helmers ................ Jay Allen Da mood Benningfieid City Editor News Assistants ................................. Marilane Nether I’d) Iona I Assistant Assistant Entertainment Editor Assistant Sport* Editor Sports Assistant Features Assistant Make up Editor Wire Editor ('ops Editors ............... Robin Scofield, Donna King, Steven Fay. Mike Morrison ..................... Cindy Marshall Mikel Longoria -30- Jim Lefko David Gruber Sandra Lynn Fails-30- Anne Garvey -30- ...................... Carl Hoover Shay Lamped Jan Slayman. Steve Dillon. Karen Rosen. Kent Anschutz . Joe Vissers Scott Bieser, J C Larimore Berke Breathed ^ r a Reingold. Jim Thomas "V ., *.... , . Artists Photographers mvrttfhi 1 * * * * * wiUkMti th. I rn vow! J X E T n T E J S S S £ £ £ .* ■ * “ ** "*** ** m,,wi ** ,h* *“•* to *** •**» ">•* Mfvviih Md * ftr Tri*, van. I’M*, of** ,d -I** I* I viil < EST ............................. z::::;:::: Moi X* S u p p l a n t s E d itor......................................................... Campus Activities E d ito r.. .............................................................. G in** B enin Bob Bersano, Cathy Brooks Carole Chiles, S£*rfc Dooley General Reporters Beth Frocking, Christy Hoppe. Mary McMullen. Michael Petri Charlie Rose. Melissa Segrest, Mike Stephens Tom Swtnnea Janet Wilson. Debbie Waraise* Marne White: a legal leader By Mark White The Daily Texan is commended for ottering this forum for me to express my views on the race for one of the most crucial offices in state government, at­ torney general C e rta in ly , I was disappointed that the Texan e d ito r ia lly e n d o rse d my Republican opponent although he has no experience or familiarity with state government Actually, he is more at home with the Nixon-Ford Cabinet or in the board room of the state's largest bank-holding company, but he and I will start matching our qualifications on May 7 TEXAS IS AT a critical juncture in our history. I he person we choose Saturday to be the state s lawyer will play a critical role in deciding which path we take. It I am elected attorney general. I will take affirmative action to make certain that the already over­ burdened utility consumers of Texas are not forced to continue subsidizing the consumers who in non-energy live producing states Perhaps the most serious issue in this entire race concerns a possible prece­ dent set by the State of Montana in levy­ ing a 30 percent severance tax on coal shipped to Texas for conversion into electricity I have said throughout the campaign that I would challenge such an outrageous, rip-off tax as an undue burden on interstate commerce. Last week, my Democratic opponent said that, after consulting with his advisers, he saw no legal grounds for such a suit. This is very dismaying to me and to those with a minimal knowledge of the law who can point to ample precedents. But I ani certain it is even more dismay­ ing to the utility customers of Texas who will eventually foot the bill for this severance tax unless it is blocked. Certainly, it will be a tough legal bat­ tle but even my opponent admits there is a chance for a successful challenge. I think that Texans deserve an attorney general who is willing to fight the tough battles and who is not so willing to throw in the towel just because the odds may be against him Wh i te is a c a n di d at e f o r s t a t e a t ­ tal rieij gener al in the D e m o c r a t i c p r i ma r y . _ , M C LASTLY.. DANNY MALONI ars IHE ' 'A W l/L D O tX X R * , AiJAHD FOA UNITING OVE A IOC E t) I JOA TO/TO#I ALT.... ...M H O C X EVER (M er RIYEALIHb HIS MOAT THAN MODEST LEANINGS TOU AND FLAGRANT SUI SM, THE YOUNG REPUBLICANS AHO Ronald reagan. . ,,'Z .ms. f J / U /0 . KO TT r u e Vi t s NOY THAT Funny, b u t n J US T HAO To Bf DONE I Mark White our erorr I uesday s Page I story on the county commissioner s race was inadvertently run without a byline The article was written by Lisa Berres Wednesday's profile of Sen. John Tower contained two errors. The Lone Star Steel Political Action Committee donated $2,500 to Tower’s re- election campaign, not $25,000 as reported Secondly, only $211,000 of Tower’s 1978 itemized contributions ($6 1 1,1 3 5) are i ontributtons of $100 or more; con­ tributions of less than $100 comprise the remainder another person (a white), the same circumstances was the item Nowhere in the report or the arti­ cle is there evidence to that effect. under given However, there is indeed discrimina­ tion at the financial aid office Discrimination in favor of those in need of financial assistance and against those that are not is the basic premise of all aid programs Any problems that occur rn dealing with the financial aid office are not problems of minorities They are not racial problems They are just plain problems. It is not c o n re d to assume that a minority’s difficulty is a racial difficulty It is a difficulty and that is all M a h e r is a business s tudent SALT ll: A analysis of arms call to Helmut Sonnenfeldt is a visiting scholar at the Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies and former counselor of the State Department By H»lmut Sonnenfeldt WASHINGTON — Cautiously positive Soviet and American statements since Secretary of State Cyrus R. Vance’s Moscow talks indicate that there may be fresh momentum in the strategic arms limitation talks. Perhaps paradox­ ically, if we are indeed coming closer to completion of a second SALT treaty, the president s leadership may be heading toward his most severe challenge. Regardless of how favorably the remaining issues in the negotiation may be resolved, the agreement as a whole is at best likely to produce only a modest improvement in the United States strategic relationship with the Soviet I mon. Whether it actually does so will be hotly disputed THE ADMINISTRATION will have to defend a complex package of com­ promises and will have to demonstrate that U.S. security will be served at least no less well by such an agreement than without it. To contend that the agreement re­ presents a more ambitious curtail­ ment of strategic weapons than that attempted in 1975 and 1976 is unlikely to be persuasive if the result leaves the U.S. strategic posture unsatisfactory compared to a situation without agree­ ment. But the agreement will have to be judged not simply in terms of the weapons it permits, limits or prohibits, and whether these measures represent a greater burden on the United States or the Soviet Union. A careful assessment must ask. and answer, whether at various points dur­ ing the life of the agreement and at its terminal point U.S. strategic forces will be able to meet requirements in the face of what the Russians will be able to do within the treaty's terms. IN GIVING an affirmative answer, as it must if it seeks ratification, the ad­ ministration has made its case no easier by cancellation of the B-l bomber program and the consequent heavy Thursday, M a y 4^j978 □ T H E D AILY T EXA N □ Pag e 5 NO FA IR ./ Y o u r , m i s s i l e ’s & I6 6 E R THAN MINE reliance on air-launched cruise mis­ siles, and by its lack of clarity about the future role and effectiveness of land based ballistic-missile forces Since all strategic forces remain the backbone of the strategy and military posture of the Atlantic alliance, the ad­ ministration will have to demonstrate that the agreement adequately projects alliance interests. The issue is not only whether options for cooperation with allies in such matters as cruise-missile development and eventual deployment have been safeguarded According to reports, the so-called "noncircumvention'' clause now being worked out with the Russians would not inhibit these. EQUALLY important is whether the overall U.S. the issue strategic rn posture permitted by and resulting from the agreement will continue to play its assigned role in the a llia n c e 's deterrence and defensive capacity But the agreement must be judged in the still wider context. The basic pur­ pose of strategic arms limitation for the United States has been to make U S - Soviet strategic relations more calculable and stable over time, at lower force levels than would be the case without agreement But strategic relationships are defin­ ed not only by the types and levels of strategic forces maintained by the two sides, but also by the broader geopolitical context in which these forces exist. In this respect, we face not only the disturbing imbalance of forces that has evolved rn Europe but qualitively more ■ ambitious Soviet activities in the world at large, notably in Africa IT is frequently argued, with some historical justification, that Soviet gains m Third World areas have proved for the most part transitory Certainly Soviet staying power, in a number of in­ stances, has been short-lived But we have had no experience thus tar with the kind of operations that the Russians in conjunction with the Cubans have mounted over the last two years in Africa, where tens of thousands of J uban troops, augmented by smaller hut not insubstantial numbers of Soviet personnel and equipped with un­ precedentedly large-scale amounts of Soviet materiel, have been operating It would be foolhardy to suppose that at this is a temporary phenomenon least as long as it remains unchalleng­ <*» lung as ii remains unchalleng- ed. Hie effect on the international geopolitical situation could be ss great as some U.S. disadvantage in this or that type of strategic weapons. I bus. a strategic arms agreement cannot be treated as an isolated event. Its terms must of course be judged on their specific merits, but beyond that it must be seen in the context of the total I S defense posture over the next several years and as an element in a worldwide geopolitical situation mark­ ed by Soviet capabilities and actions that are more venturesome than at any time in the past. If the negotiation of SALT II is com­ pleted, the ratification process will en­ tail. and indeed ought to. the most serious examination of our security situation in a generation. c 1978 New York Times ® 1978 New York Times Gays psychological bondage B v S D a r k y P h i l l i n . By Sparky Phillips We have seen on the editorial pages of Tile Daily Tex­ an in recent weeks a plethora of articles and letters ad­ vocating that gay is okay," that homosexuality is no more abnormal or wrong than preferring chocolate over vanilla and that the gay lifestyle is harmless to the in­ dividual and society. A trickle of letters from the Bible-believing Christian community has railed against such a platform, and the writers have used the Bible to buttress their contention that homosexuality is not only deviant in the sight of m2iiuW ,eI ible as sin in the eyes of a h°*v God WHO IS right? The facts prove that the Christians are I he gays have maintained that their "difference” is not so unusual, and that even if it is, they can’t help it We were born this way." many of them contend 1 ll.0 leSt an authority than the great sex researcher of the 1950s. Kinsey himself, has said, "There is no need of hypothesizing peculiar hormonal factors that make certain individuals especially liable to engage in homosexual activity, and we know of no data which prove the existence of such hormonal factors There are not sufficient data indicating that specific hereditary factors are involved.” AH BUT homosexuality is not a sickness or mental disorder, say the gays, because the American Psychiatric Association no longer lists it among its list of pathologies. Look again For 23 years, homosexuality was con­ sidered a behavioral disorder by the APA; but in ecember, 1973, the board of directors of the association (not the membership itself) succumbed to massive lob­ bying efforts by militant gays and voted homosexuality into a non-pa Biological status But by no means was the membership of the APA enthusiastically behind such a move New York University psychiatrist and APA member Dr Charles Socarides said at the time, "It is Hying in the face of the one fact that we know, which is thill IHal^ .‘m il f. . m a l . . . . r o that male and female are programmed to mate with the opposite sex, and this is the story of two and a half billion years of evolution and any society that hones to survive." _____________I a Socarides called the vote "the psychiatric hoax of the century And a recent survey of the APA reveals that 69 percent til its members believe homosexuality is a pathological adaptation as opposed to a normal variation." IN OTHER WORDS, homosexuals are not born they are made - which is precisely the reason Anita Bryant elected to fight the Dade County ordinance (and then tight similar laws nationwide). She has said that because the insidious nature of homosexuality is to recruit "new members" from the ranks of the adoles­ cent, homosexuals have no more right to be teaching in a public or private school than a convicted child molester. "Preposterous!" say the gays "We don't seduce kids Maybe not Yet in a 1972 study of homosexuals by Masters and Johnson, the premier sexologists of our time, 43 percent of those homosexuals had had their first homosexual experiences before they were 12 years old This does not mean that all had had their* first homosexual experience with an older counterpart but Kinsey provides sobering evidence that such initial ex­ periences are very often permanently damaging- "The man whose first mature sexual experience is homosex appears to be marked by it, even though he switches to heterosexual lovemaking. There may be some pattern imprinted on his behavior that’ cannot be erased." ANOTHER more recent group of psychologists put it bluntly: "heterosexuality is the biologic norm and un less interfered with al) individuals are heterosexual." It is naive and dishonest, then, to posit that an avowed homosexual who teaches impressionable adolescents will not have some permanent impact on them, whether or not he makes sexual overtures And, indeed, a refomied homosexual is quoted in psychologist Dr. John W. Drakeford s recent book saying that "the adult homosexual often finds something attractive about younger (teenage) partners." But does this mean there is no hope of escape from homosexual bondage for the gay person? No, the same group of psychologists cited in the preceding paragraph po rn out that "all homosexuals remain potentially ^ heterosexual Then why d t the role of homosexuali­ ty*** (hr fall of the Roman Empire is still a sub- jet I of interest, and that, as usual, the discussion is a tat short on facts To set the record straight, if that s the word, let me mention a few The empire was more or less thought up by Julius Caesar (dictator 49 to 44 B.C.), a Roman general and political genius whose soldiers sang obscene songs about his homosexual exploits. The great age of the empire, however, came more than a century later in the reigns of Trajan, Hadrian, Antoninus Pius and Marcus Aurelius; and if from this period we were to choose a single figure as the embodiment of everything that was admirable in Horne it would presumably be Hadrian, a notorious pederast, so far dead to the < fauns of the Rev. Harold () ( ’hester’s morality as to offer divine honors to his catamite after the kid got himself drowned in ISO A D None of this has much to do with the fail of Home however. Constantine may have become a Christian at the time of his death in 337. Five years later laws against homosexuality were in­ troduce! Theodosius I (emperor 379 to 395) con­ demned homosexuals to burn In 410 Rome fell to the Goths, and in 476 the last emperor of the West was deposed It would, however, be going much too far to at­ tribute tfu* collapse of the Roman Empire to homophobia and to ignore economic, political and ecological factors Gibbon, for his part, saw the fall of Rome as the triumph of Christianity and barbar ism Most modern scholars, however, think that Gibson was much too hard on barbarism, Jack Thornburg Staff Bode’s zoning As a Citizen concerned for some time with planned growth in Austin and Travis County, I am surprised that the Texan has chosen to support a candidate in the District 37-B race whose chief financial backers are realtor* and developers. In contrast, Rep Bode has consistently taken a sii orig position in favor of a county ordinance- making bill which includes a vital county zoning proves - Her opponent, while paying lip service to environmental concerns, has said he would op­ pose any county zoning plan In other words he would gut the ordinance Those who have fought for the protection of neighborhoods and the preservation of the central city know that zoning alone will not cure all woes, hut it does give concerned citizens a fighting ('fiance Rep. Mary Jane Bode offers the voters a (ca! chance for honest, straightforw ard le adership in this area of importance to us all. v . Yahoos Jim Kieke PCL Staff I was dismayed by the May 2 front page picture chosen by the Texan staff to characterize the May Day festivities held between Calhoun and Parlin Ralls May I The photograph portrayed the ac­ tivities as an event resembling Eeyore's Birthday Party. But it was not a beer-bust for a jack-ass. Instead, it was a thoroughly researched re­ enactment of the Renaissance tradition celebrating spring rites, complete with Morris dancers, poetry reading, mummers and a maypole I was a member of the mummers play c ast. and if the Texan photographer had bothered, he would have discovered that the unidentified mummer. James King, was sipping on water, not merriment The bottle served as a prop for the character of Mother Dolly, an alcoholic peasant woman It also confounds me that the Texan chose to run this particular picture when May Day offered such an array of authentic Renaissance costume*, The photograph selection suggests to me the level of imagination .sported by the Texan staff I certainly hope* those who attended May Day will spread (fie true spirit that was successfully con­ veyed during the celebration. In the true Yahoo fashion, the Texan has managed to say the thing that was not. Joe Youngblood English . Parimutuel I rn amazed at all the opposition I ve been see­ ing lately to the upcoming parimutuel betting referendum In Wednesday's paper Carl Hoover maintained that we should vote down this proposi­ tion because of increased illegal gambling ac­ tivities isic! and because the vaunted monetary aggrandizements said to accrue from parimutuel fretting would not be forthcoming. Hut these questions miss the point entirely. Thi* is riot a question of economics but rather one of rights These people are trying to protect us from ourselves. To gamble or not to gamble is a matter for the individual to decide and not the communi­ ty One should be able to do what one wants with one s own money. Gambling laws are just one more example of governments giving in to pressure from organized religious groups and legislating morality to its citizens. The contention that illegal gambling activities will increase is also easy to deal with by the ob­ vious and just action of making all types of gambl­ ing operations legal, much to the chagrin of the deviant elements of our community that feel it their moral obligation to tell the rest of us what we can arid (’annot do These moral crusaders seem to think that although you obviously don't know what s good for yourself, as shown bv your support of parimutuel betting they know exactly what is in your best in­ terest I urge everyone to vote for the parimutuel betting proposition, whether you are a gambler or not. to insure our freedom of choice in these Allen Mauisby Government Our “FINALS” Offers! Kent State Classes {Attorney... Page 6jg ,T H E DAILY TEXAN □ Thursday. May 4, 1978 .'i'i. 'A v •■) i s f* t** * * " * ' * N00H-3RM. May 8-12 G E T A R E D H E A D P IN S T R IK E & G E T 50$ OFF tex a s union ^ ^ n t " 3 " l 0 n 0 "SSS" 2 ns-$ 4 Sat. May 13 1-3pm & 4 -6pm M f . c . i v n r i n M WE'RE "ROUNDING OUT” REGISTRATION I a n d m o v in g to th o f l i t S P E C IA L E K E N TS C E N TEP Wbf I* n f lti f W—T (««<|| iIm NR. • ( m I t .Wirt* RUI m i R#4 Ri*«r hmm !•*»•# ( i n t l Wk** pm ** Hooted toffetw tai. tot* NM al Nm hmm bam rn thrn ram barb * I—MMI SUMMER, 1978 B e g in n in g O f f ic e o f f/i#* R e g is t r a r W ould You Poy $ 5 0 0 . for a I carol Diam ond? I How about a on# c a r*! diamond for I WOO? w en, how do you decide Z m l J I n tth Th * d,* mond? 11 * diamond offered to you et 20% off IT! 21 the te llin g price? ( It certainly c o u ld s t tw worth the «»king price or it would have been to ld et that price ) There is io o ie d i V r n l n ! * ,UT h , , C # h 0 n three a lT T f ll , , f Jh* f,al1 fa m ily ha» been te llin g diam ond! in the aM OV#r Aui1,n 0 u r one c a ,e t ii!2 T tu !\5 » W et *1500 O th e r t i l e ! a n d g r a d e i ara a v a i la b le fr o m * ° r d l i c o u n t i n y p r o p e r ly p r ic e d F o r n e a r ly A T? s r . & r ! i §| ' h* , , m * p ,ic * ■ vour com p* " ' ° " to halt on Thursday K E M O h io hf,,N I O h io * I I* I » — Sinfonia and H lA raU Sinfonia and Chorale t f P I ) i . C larie s H ill tx* canceled and norm al a c tiv ity w ill come to a halt on the Kent stat* ! ’Inver- ta rn pus T h u rs d a y as s it) fa tu ity and student* rem the a ntiw ar move­ Hants til ment m ark the eighth an­ niversary of the Kent State shootings On M ay 4 im. four Kent student* were kille d and nine o t h e r * w o u n d e d w h e n National Guardsmen opened f i r e d u r i n g an a n t i w a r demonstration on campus T h is y e a r's o bse rva nce was et per ted to be fa r calm er last ye ar’s when hun­ than dreds were arrested during demonstrations protesting the construction of a gymnasium near the shooting site The u n iv e rs ity th is year canceled classes on the an­ niversary for the firs t tim e ainee the shooting The Kent State faculty and a dm inistra­ tion issued several statements calling fo r calm There w ill be a fa c u lty - sponsored convocation on the U niversity Commons Thurs day morning featuring a com ­ m em orative dance, a speech by Dr la w re n c e Kaplan, a Kent history professor, and a p erform an ce of Schubert * Mass in O ’ by the university A g r o u p k n o w n as the M a y 4 T a s k F o r c e has scheduled a program of ac­ tivitie s w ith the permission of the university A candeltght procession and all-night vigil was organized the task force's observance late Wednesday to sta rt Task fo rce leaders said the gym construction project. now n e a rin g c o m p le tio n . would not be the center of the day s a ctivitie s Instead the events w ill focus on the upcoming re tria l of a $46 m illio n federal c iv il suit brought by the parents of students kille d and wounded . I... 4k. t i i by the National Guard Defen ‘tents in the case include Gov fames A Rhodes and Ohio National Guardsmen The re tria l resulted from a 6th t S C ircu it Court of Appeals ruling overturning an original federal ju ry verdict in favor of the defendants the those scheduled Am ong to speak at force task obsevance were D r Daniel Kllsberg, attorney W illiam K unstler. A m e rican Indian le a d e r Vernon M ovem ent B e l l e c o u r t a nd f o r m e r Students for a Dem ocratic So c i e t y P r e s i d e n t C l a r k Kissinger TV actors sought l f you a r e a M e x i c a n Am erican in your early 20s, you m ay get a chance to appear in a Public Broadcast System educational television series Austin s Southwest Center fo r Educational Television the Educational F ilm and Center in Springfield, Va are f o r e i g h t m a j o r l oo k i n g characters four shows, fo r said Wendy Wilson, a casting d ire cto r for the Educational F ilm Center P re lim in a ry casting w ill t h e b e g i n M o n d a y a t S o u t h w e s t C e n t e r f o r Educational Television, 4600 Burnet Rd Those wishing to try out for a part should call Wilson at 451-7226 PBS w ill a ir the series June It and July 1979. Wilson said w ill consist of 20 half-hour shows and w ill feature five fam ilies, she said Wilson is in Austin to find the “ Sanchez f o r a c t o r s f a m i l y , ' she said. C ontinued trom Page I * then And last night the the session he pl ayed the school of p o l i t i c s w i t h children, White continued There was a tie vote and he ran from the podium and he refused to vote fo r the MS m illion legislation knowing at the tim e Briscoe wasn’t going to call a special session,” White said ’ ’He won t debate anymore he didn t win any of them (six p re v io u s d e b a t e s ) . ” W h i t e s a i d * B e f o r e a women s group in San Antonio he was cut short because he fai led to help wom en as speaker ” Daniel to answer White s allegations, " I refuse to get down in the gutter w ith h im ,” Daniel said refuses “ H E ’S B E E N saying this throughout (the allegations) the campaign but they’re ju s t too they're not worthy of comment because the record is there.” Daniel said ridiculous; I w ill a dm it that we did n ’t solve every problem in the state of Texas when I was speaker of the House — we had only 140 days,” Daniel said ‘ ‘ I d o n ’ t wan t to sound bragadocious,” Daniel com ­ l aws m ented, would never have come about w ithout a lot of hard work those “ But L e o n mo rn paign (Continued from Page I.) w ill deal with as a senator, de I*eon says, explaining he ad­ vocates deregulation o f oil and natural gas outside Texas with reasonable, not e x­ travagant” rates He favors reg ula tion o f o il and gas w ithin the state PREDICTING VICTORY despite a 175,000 to $100,000 budget, de Leon says, " I know the government issues.M I know Now in debt appro xim a tely 13,000. dc Leon says he plans to $3 m onthly to solic it $2 pledges i n d i v i d u a l s throughout Texas to finance his general ele ction cam - f r o m If he wins the election on his shoestring budget, de Leon revolutionize campaign w ill strategy as he becomes the firs t th ird -p a rty U S senator. At $3 a shot, de Leon needs 25.000 to 33,000 benefactors to raise the money he seeks. To unseat incumbent John low er, he also nt»eds a lot of votes Raza Uni da ... T H E S I6 U S OU OU' - - c j (n kPBRRV School rodeo* M P V 5 ^ G * R a c e h o r s e Chiut C o o k o f f UK* F a r r e l l ^ C a l l ^ M o e B a n d y jtaJfaRss Shoui i t * * c o w ^p o k j v R f l c e j , I A Y I O * t i A M E R I C A N J U N I O R R O D E O a s sa s a n c t i o n e d r o d e o “ 1 6 What do W i l l i a m R a n d o l p h H earst, Joan D idion, Ernest H em ingw ay and Jack London have in com m on? They began their careers writing for newspapers. So can you. he D o ily T e x a n is a c c e p tin g s u m m e r a p p lica tio n s fro m e d ito ria l colum n ists, sports, e n te rta in m e n t and fe a tu re w rite rs this week. Apply at the Texan e d ito ria l o ffic e s in the basement o f the Texas S tu d e n t P u b lica tio n s B u ild in g . 2 5 th A * h it is o r ca ll $71-$591 fo r m ore in fo rm a tio n . 2 2 3 6 G u a d a l u p e 9 -5 . A lle n d a le V i lla g e 9 -5 W e s t g a t e M a l l 1 0 -9 d a ily AUSTIN GEMSTONE FINE GEMSTONES AND SETTINGS ANTIQUE AND MODERN JEWELRY 3004 Guadalupe 478-2275 ^ u*!?or stresses regional writing By M A R G A R E T WATSON Shelby Hearon is not the frowsy, free-spirited, wryly unfeminine mother or even the “frizzy-haired, washed- out princess looking for a that the first person prince narration in her books would lead you to expect Instead , she d escribes herself as a “ feminist who goes all the w ay," and a closet social scientist. She talks like a Texan and she writes about Texans - her five novels are rooted in Central Texas I ’M FR O M Kentucky, you know. Hearon said ‘ I went to 13 elementary schools — my father was a geophysicist. W e moved around a lot. I mov­ ed to I exas when I was in high school Maybe that's why I can see the effects of growing up in one place in Texas, in be­ ing from Texas ” I nderstanding force that time and place wield in shaping the individual is the basis of regional writing, said Hearon. explaining that all writing is essentially regional. the Minors using fake IDs face possible prosecution By A R L E N E YO UNGBLOO D Fake IDs may be easy to come by, but under-age Austin drinkers who want to crash the nightclub scene should be aware of the hazards In the first place, managers of local bars say they keep a close watch for false iden­ tification We turn them around.” said John Hansen, assistant manager for Christopher’s at 2003 E Riverside Drive. “ And if thev don’t have two valid IDs, that’s it.” A SPO K ESM A N for The Greenhouse at 3500 Guadalupe St said, “ We have a number of students who try to get in with public paper ID Our basic policy is not to let them in ” Buddy Crohn, executive vice president for Chelsea Street Pub at 2525 W Anderson Lane said. Basically, we’ve had it (forgery of identification) attempted but Texas driver s licenses are hard to forge. We refuse service to those customers.” How does one obtain a fake identification card or a driver’s license? Postal Inspector Jim Temmons said most forms of ID can be purchased on the street If someone were to take your student ID, block out all the information and take it to a photocopier, you could put in other infor­ mation,” he said. Fake identification sales on the street are not a problem in Austin. However, they are in Houston or Dallas, Temmons said. Another means of obtaining identification cards is through the mail. For example, Eden Press, a company in Fountain Valley, Calif., sells ID cards. And high school students or anyone who wants to get admitted to taverns can send off for these cards. The charge is 25 cents and the sender receives details on how to get an identifica­ tion card. The cost of the card is $5 Last year. a suit was filed against Eden Press in Orange County alleging “ unlawful business practice.” said Je ff Roel. Orange County deputy district attornev. The form of cards led someone to believe that it was an official ID card,” Roel said The cards looked legitimate because thev included the name of the state at the top. an expiration date, a seal and a registered “This gave the seven- digit number. appearance of an official identification card, he explained The court ruled that Eden Press change the form of the cards.” he said. Under Texas law. a minor using a false ID to buy beer, liquor or wine could be charged with possession of alcohol, a misdemeanor, said Robert Howelton, district operator for the Alcoholic Beverage Commission. And the penalty for owners who serve alcohol to minors is a Class C misdemeanor, which carries a fine of $100 to $500, he said If the club owner has had several violations, we revoke his license,’’ Howelton said. “The only thing for the licensee of the club to accept is a valid Texas driver’s license,” he said But if an owner unknowingly accepts a false driver’s license that says the person is 18 he isn t held responsible, Howelton said If the minor using the false ID were caught drinking alcohol, he would be charged with possession of alcohol and falsifying iden­ tification. The Texas Department of Public Safety issues driver s licenses and identification cards for non-drivers. Richard Grinnett, D PS public information officer said, “ There have been IDs that close­ ly resemble a driver’s license,” he said lf the minor is falsifying information, he will be tined $200, Grinnett said. since all writing is tied to time and place She taught a course on the subject in the Universi­ ty American Studies Program this spring Faulkner s novels could not have taken place in Penn­ s y lv a n ia .’ i l ­ she said, lustrating her philosophy. H EA R O N W R IT E S what some c ritic s of women's lite ra tu re c a ll “o v a ria n lite ra tu re ’ ’ Though her stories deal graphically with women and their bodies - miscarriages, menstruation, sex - she is not simply engag­ ed in feminine consciousness raising of the touchy-feely. our bodies-ourselves sort. She is concerned with power — with women who direct their own lives and with women who don’t I want to say what it is really like to be a woman Women have written the same p h a llic books men have always written, the “ Madame type, the way men Bovary think women behave and think ” own life, I don t tw ist f a c t s ,” Hearon said “ No one rides off into the sunset with a placard But Avery is as liberated as New Braunfels allows . , I ’m tired of women as victims.” H EA R O N recently com­ pleted a non fiction book on a woman after the feminists’ heart, a Texas woman who successfully wields power without a husband — U S Rep Barbara Jordan. The book alte rn a te s a narrative history by Jordan, derived from months of taped interview sessions, with a third person description of the world and scene at the time I left the discrepancies in If. for example. Barbara said on the tape. “I wonder what happened at that caucus meeting,’ I dug around, found out what happened, and reported it in the third person description. I didn t try to make a coherent body of what she knew and what I knew ” Jordan explain her decision not to run for re­ election? Does Read the book,’ Hearon teased, Though not formally con­ nected. Hearings five novels form a mosaic of women liv­ ing in the mire of family ties and parental domination, and of local mores on sex and sex roles in the 1960s and '70s The time context is very impor­ tant, Hearon said. “ SO M E O F M Y feminist friends were angered by the wa.v Hannah’s House’ ends — Foster (the mother) is about to remarry I tell them I ’m sorry, but it s not my fault. That’s what a woman of that age in that place and time • early 1970s) would do every time.” is “Pseudo-emancipated” how Hearon describes her ch aracter Foster. Hearon breaks from the feminist genre because she refuses to make her ch aracters ex­ amples Her latest novel con­ ce rn s a w om an in N ew Braunfels, who, like Foster, is seeking marriage, but who makes things happen in her Absentee balloting CGases Wednesday was the last day to vote absentee. Travis County Clerk Doris characterized Shropshire absentee voting in the county as about normal for a primary election. As of Wednesday afternoon, 3,755 had voted in person The county clerk’s office mailed out 563 ballots, increasing the potential return to 4,218. During the last presidential primary in 1976. 4,905 voted absentee The last guber­ natorial primary in 1974 had an absentee voter turnout of 3,118 Widen Your Horizon.... - liiS I™ ° Z f _ ™ « y _4, I WB O T H E D A IL Y T E X A N n P . h p TAKE SOME UT WITH YOU. Ar i \ t hpi J J. U .;. : H O C ‘L M h o k n *>i f I y Texas Union General Store Mon-Fri 8 am-5 pm Harry Ledbetter s Money Management Program As a fiscal conservative, I have developed a comprehensive program to effectively manage the S. Billion dollars on deposit m the State Treasury Hen.' an aspects of it J Rote o f Return, rho Slaw Treasurer should mu play polit*, with our lax money I pledge lo oui s money to work earning the hii/hrst interest available Cash flo w Forecasting: Hone modem nun- agement techniques, we can accurately determine how much money the slate needs in liquid funds inc state s obligations must he paid on a timely has,s *“ minimum administrative cost w People ell over Tones ere responding lo my cam- tho public Irusl must beM u r l / r t r e f y° Ur ,u p p o " 1 knOM M s y V l l , T . J J ’ * resp o n sib ility I K e e p ! I ash t o , H K HIP’ neighbors to upte jo r Harry Ledbetter to, S t!? . F Z s J Z t t £ share my concerns, encourage your friend* and ^ Fen® lu r narry Ledbetter It — - Democratic primary election May 6th h a r r y LEDBETTF.P for State Treasurer Iou rIon t he vt to h a rt a famous name to he Sr,./- r„„._ Iou don't bar, lo have a famous name lo he Stale Treasurer — in Our Vertical Hideaway. SPRINGBOARD IN T E R N A TIO N A L PRESENTS. / FATS WALTER IG INAI SESSIONS 1943 N N / / o SPECIAL IMPORTS FROM FRANCE! f th e ART TATUM TRIO 1955 • 1956 JOHN COLTRANE/ ERIC DOLPH Y Two Giants ToqelhBf • IQfi? rn 'n j LIONEL HAMPTON AND MIS ALL STARS 1%fi NAT KING COIF T R I O A N D B I G B A N O F V I THE GREAT CONCERT Of CHARLES MMGUS This fabulous SALE ends M ay 1 1th, 1978 so hurry and SAVE NOW ! JUDY G flR LflflD her greatest hits 798 LP Series NAT KING COLE 32 LIVE Q RIGINAI S O N G S r n I 1198 Lp Series 3-Record Set CHARGE IT! • s s 898 Lp Series lr I «r bN i k1* iii llJlr records • 2310 Guadalupe 478-1674 Mon.-Th. 10-9 Fri.-Sat. 10-10 I / Here, at Tri Towers North, you'll find yourself living perpendicular to where it's at. That's because we've figured all the right angles for carefree living. We provide groundfloor basics like the convenience of living close to the campus, laundry facilities on each level, twice-a-day mail pickup. Even optional maid service But we also rise above the mundane by giving you a pool to play cool in, a 10th floor lounging deck, and even a party/meeting room you can reserve without charge. From where we stand things look great We bet you'l share our view. ■ I N R sot W f S T 2*T H AUST N IEX AS ’ - ’ CS O T H V 1 (5I2) 47fc 7636 With Prices This Low Perfectly matched, h /g h le r f t r m ^ t c ^ n IF C , ^ N I C S " C r e d i b l e S y s t e m ! Cr vs tm h ne C rysta llin e M in d -B lo w in g Pow er a n d the F le x ib ility to C uJtJJL JU D r i v e S e m i - A u t o m a t i c t u r n t a b l e is a n E x q u i s i t e E x e r c is e i i ? r f ' 9? * » " * c o m e s c o m p l e t e w i t h b a s e , d u s t c o v e r a n d S H U R E 9 0 8 r J t f !J T n f } lB ae J )n a r e t h e S B 6 0 0 0 A L i n e a r P h a s e T O U R S t a r t s w h e n y o u b r i n g h r n * " 0£" C M u s ic a l C r e a tio n s theV m 2 7 0 A M /F M hl M0SToA F F 0 R M B L E PRICE! R ece iv^r. 35° Watts o f ? s o u n d s - The S L 2 3 B e /t - F u n c t i o n a l E x c e l l e n c e ' o , - ^ „ Bf a D e s / f f n S p e a k e r S y s t e m s . 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We don’t fool you with pretty store fronts, flashy fixtures and expensive frills, that add to the cost of buying. We don’t have all that expensive overhead, so you don’t pay extra for frills. 617 West 29TH St. 472-5471 104 East Huntland 454-5474 CUSTOM HI-FI Discount Centers Discount Prices Make Us The Great American Custom P ^ a g J ^ Q J H E J > A IL Y T E X A N □ T h u rs d a y , M a y 4, 1978 Language professor cited for contribution to bilingual education Andftr*son. Univer»ity p r o f f e r of Spanish and Portugueiw* was honored for his contribution* to the field of hll ritual f*ducation at a recent annual I n t e r n a t i o n a l B i l i n g u a l E d u c a t i o n referen ce in San Juan, P uerto Hico E ach year the conference sponsored by the N ational Association for Bilingual Education, honors a person for o u tsta y ding work in bilingual education, Dr George Blanco, assistant professor of 'd u ra tio n said the Bilingual Education Student O rg an za university itu d e n u from lion attended the conference Sofia Huron secretary of the student org an izatio n , said th e re would be a m e. tmg to elect officers for 1978-79 at noon Friday in Education Building 558 Voting will take place nest week Any g ra d u a te or u n d e rg ra d u a te in­ terested the promotion of bilingual 'd u ra tio n is urged to attend M eetings are held monthly in Advisers for the organization a re Dr I h e re to Escobedo, assistant professor of 'd u ra tio n , Dr Rudolph M artin, assistant professor of education and Blanco Texas Union Events T H U R S D A Y l n ? ° ^ ° U£ N 7 OM .-on C.Z, 7 a m ta t a . l h * . Art O olU ry ,h ,OUBh M ay I , K to m id n ig h t I ih ib it; STUDENT SCULPTURE Th* •■ K IU * " ° ' P' r PO° ' ' 0r 1 h#“ ' d u " " » ’h * P # n S f "d°y M oy 5 M a y 8 12 »J.a. ^ b* ° n d',p ,°>' . l l 7 5 °w ith UT M)m Wlm W ,U SUCCISS SPO' 1 * OCK H U N T f'” Theater. ” c : r , , W " B° ~ ' * " * M P* ' ■— T“ **4a y a n d T h a t.d a y .Sir ssrSSrS'.fKrs ** saws* .•sssr: szswftjs— ^ r - 7wh;.:r r K I D A Y CINCO O f M A Y O D A N C t w ith TORTILLA t A n n a v ..h o o t y . a t a n d Cinco do M ayo w ith a d o n e . $3 UT IO* i i " * M ain B allroom C hicano C u llu t. C o m m i t ,.; r i t . . ' M * . . I ’h * I Oft ADDITIONAL INFORMATI ON C A U 4 7 1 - 5 6 5 3 SLEEPING AROUND... Iscoe Community Dr Ira Iscoe, form er director of the Counseling-Psychological S e r­ vices ( enter and director of the Community Psychology Training P r o g r a m , m a y be th e I m versity after 25 years le a v in g in I have been offered se v e ra l positions in d iffe re n t institutions in­ c lu d in g u n d e r s e c r e ta r y th e federal governm ent, but I probably won t resign this y e a r,” Iscoe said in a p h o n e f r o m Washington He It on sabbatical to the National Institute of M ental Health as a visiting scientist i n t e r v i e w "IT IS very flattering to have these offers, but leaving now would may leave University psychology head considers Penn State not be fair to my students, 1 he said The Com m unity Psychology T rain­ ing P rogram which Iscoe founded draw s SO g rad u ate applicants for four positions each year Iscoe said re p re s e n ta tiv e s of Pennsylvania S tate U niversity are negotiating with him its faculty In considering a job, he add­ ed, he is m ost interested in vigorous teaching responsibilities to join I rn too old to be a m essiah and build new program s, but I love the thrill of running into som eone 15 years aftei I ve taught them and hearing how much they enjoyed our c la ss.” he said D ire c to r of th e c e n te r u n til last fall, Iscoe said his IO y ears of service was a ‘m agnificent pen^d in my life During that tim e he becam e nationally recognized. Iscoe said he likes Austin but add­ ed that ‘Washington is great ” We have a beautiful house across from A merican University. We re renting it from the world s forem ost evolutionary chem ist, a man from Sri Lanka, ('e y Ion And these em bassy parties, you would not believe,” he quipped At the Institute, Iscoe is studying m ental health delivery system s for children and vouth. prevention and intervention and issues of m ental health in children and their fam ilies. Being here has shown me that our com m unity psychology program is the best in the co u n try ,” he said. Iscoe spoke fondly of his U niversi­ ty friends and of the contributions he has m ade I here is one m ore thing Iscoe would like to do when he retu rn s to Austin in June “ The U niversity would do well to put up a sign saying, ‘The U niversity of Texas at Austin. W elcom e.’ It would certainly help the im age ” he said Faculty await leaves of absence A t t h e e n d o f e v e r y academ ic year, m any Univer say professors decide to take a leave of absence to work on p r o j e c t s o r t e a c h a t a different school for a year M any r e c e i v e g r a n t s o r Service slated to remember Nazi victims A m em orial service will be l l held T h u rsd a y fo r million people (6 m illion Jew s and 5 million non-Jews) killed between 1938 and 1945 during the Nazi holocaust. th e The service will begin a t 8 p m a t the Hi Ile! Foundation. 2105 San Antonio St. Stephen Wyman, assistant the professor of dram a a t University, Pauline Stark, Dr Law rence (iretsk y and Rabbi Neal Borovitz will speak a t the service. I believe it s im portant for all of us to worship together and affirm to ourselves and to God that we will never again perm it genocide against any people,' Borovitz said The public is invited scholarships This y e a r is no different, as professors from departm ents throughout the U niversity will fie taking leaves of absence during the 1978-79 academ ic year. They will be heading to all p a rts of the United States and Europe Although a com plete list of f a c u lty m e m b e r s ta k in g leaves of absence during 1979- 80 was not available, several faculty will be taking leaves of absence this year. D r. T h o m a s M c G a n n , p r o f e s s o r of h is to r y , w ill teach su m m e r c o u rse s in Latin A m erican history a t the in Salt University of Utah Lake City, and then in the fall will begin teaching a t the U.S. A ir F o r c e A c a d e m y in Colorado Springs, Colo. He is the first person to be ap­ pointed a s a distin g u ish ed v is itin g p r o f e s s o r th e D epartm ent of History a t the academ y. in THIS GIVES m e an oppor­ tunity to expand m y teaching horizons.” McGann said “ I have already done educational work for W arsaw College in D C . (W ashington) which is a institution, and m ilitary it was very beneficial to m e ,” he added. McGann will retu rn to th e sum m er of 1979 th e U n iv e rs ity in R ic h a rd P e lls, a sso c ia te p ro f e s s o r of h is to ry , w ill the U niversity of teach at A m s t e r d a m t h e i n N etherlands next fall but will return to the U niversity for the 1979-80 school year. He has been aw a rd e d a F u lb rig h t senior lectureship scholarship to teach in the N etherlands large accounting firm A m em ber of the m usic departm ent faculty also will be on leave for a year Bans Dietz, professor of m usic, will go to E ast G erm any for six in m o n t h s -S eptem ber and then w ill spend the next six m onths in Spain. b e g i n n i n g I WILL BE doing research on m anuscripts found in these countries, and also I will be the re se a rc h in g of im p act symphonic m usic on the young contem porary generation in E ast G erm any and Spain,” he explained. Leo Hughes, professor of English, will spend much of his tim e traveling while he is to le a v e . H e w ill go on libraries in California, New York, Washington. D C . and Europe, looking for inform a­ tion on 18th century prom pt books. D r. K e n n e t h K n i g h t , p ro fe sso r of m a n a g e m e n t, will take his leave in Reno. Nev w here he will teach a t the U niversity of Nevada and also work on a research pro­ je c t for a year. IV E B EEN here seven years and this is an opportuni­ ty to get a break and revitalize m yself, and it also gives m e a t o w o r k on m y c h a n c e research project which in­ volves the innovation service se c to r,” Knight said Mi k e M o o re , a s s o c i a t e professor of accounting, will teach a t all during his not leave Moore will work for A rthur Andersen in Chicago, a Fulbright-Hays award goes to ex-student B arbara Lynn Charpenel, a U n i v e r s i t y g r a d u a t e in d ram a, has been aw arded a Fulbright-H ays g ra n t to study t h e a te r fo r c h ild re n and c reative d ram atics in Lim a, Peru, for a year startin g in August. C harpenel, who graduated from the U niversity in 1976 with honors, now lives in Salt Lake City. She went to Utah to p articip ate in U tah ’s R eper­ toire Dance T heatre concen­ trating on creativ e dance and ch ild d ra m a She a lso is teaching children’s creativ e d ram a the M ulticultural D epartm ent of the Salt Lake Ci t y I n d e p e n d e n t S c h o o l D istrict. in Charpenel is the d aughter of D r. M a u r i c i o C h a r p e n e l , a s s is ta n t p ro fe sso r of the B icultural Bilingual D epart­ m ent of the M ultidisciplinary Studies Division a t UT San Antonio. d&T- , 7/’- r I l ' : v 1 ;* J / -• I “I 5* '.It* -t • a 1^ XAS' TWL ANLRICAS. e u r o p e . - \ \ ANY'wTJE-RE. WL CARRY t r o p e s . D L S L R T S - n e a r l y f o r t y d i f f l r l n t ^ WrL%uE? 1,- ? ^ ? R A DE-s '2N S. _ „ l u r l k a . NORTH FACE. GLRRY. RIVE.NDELL. TRAILWI5L , JAN SPORT t * \ , A WHOLE EARTH PROVISION CD 2410 SAN ANTHIS! IA QT A i I oft i ki a 2410 SAN ANTONIO ST AUSTIN - 47H-|«s77 ^ T O ID f f — ............. \ 1 . MMtta VTrr * BURNT ORANGE UT SHIRTS AUSTIN & TEXAS SOUVENIR SHIRTS ARMADILLO SHIRTS LADIES SUMMER TOPS! all t i t , , tn/anl admit XI. S c h *rf a lto h a t: Variety of SHORTS PRO TEAM CAPS CANVAS BAGS personalized gifts DOBIE M A U 4/M M ? Announcing a BOARD MEETING Tonight May 4 6:30 p.m. TSP Photo Studio TSP 4.122 Im p o rtan t to A ll Texans! Experienced Leadership For Our Most Vital Industry 5 1 5 E. 6 th l a s t Ni ght! DANIEL LLANES ii., M ILAG RO S A Dance of Celebration & Magic 4 0 5 VV 2 G u m b o , P o b o ys, a n d th e N e w O rlean s Burger! Tonight BETO Y10S FAIRLANES Solso under the Start CAN YOU GET A W A Y TO LAKE TRAVIS O N WEEKDAYS? T h e n c a l l us a b o u t o u r s p e c i a l S U N D A Y and W E E K D A Y discount plans. Yo u'll be pleasantly surprised. We are located on FAA 2322 (2Vi miles o f f H i g h w a y 71) n e a r L C R A ' s P A L E F A C E P A R K on Lake T ra v is . Only 30 miles f r o m the Capitol. Com o a nd look us over. B-CLIFF MOTEL & CAFE 2 6 4 - 1 4 9 4 South Austin Evening LIONS CLUB Annual Lunch ttmr m t hr pat to af m r Le Ro jew distillery, When on r workers sit down to In neb they sit down to a tradition. • 9 1When ^lev I,lake Cuervo Gold its the same. n r ~ ^ n ? t u an 0t juStf b°?,f eky en thc wives from tequila lunches, n i t , a t the( l u r e o d i s t i l l e r y bearing t h e i r h u s b a n d s ’ Lum lies hi'l795 that hare been lovingly prepared in manner since men first began here & It is this same pride in a job well-done that m a k e s ^ trie world. I# • l l CuervuThe Gold standard since 17% CUC AVO I STH C u t e 'tCXJILA t M P W r t O A N O a O T t l t O B Y r j 9 7 'H £ u a t O N IHC WARTFOftO CCW * REAGAN V. BROWN Te x a s C o m m i s s i o n e r of AGRICULTURE y T ' d,ai A *» Cold ted briny you back too time when quality ruled r u ' ° n , »»* A*.culture Men o' th# Vee • 2 *> A I m A A M • $ th* 86ST '**«»* No* head, ‘f l i r t rim I)i * > n c v >n C on surn * ' R 'O te c t.o n don drink it, Cuervo .° *: u 3 <»ve,comet* * County A |r»cuitu«al D e a r # * T e « .« * St ona 'T » » m a * * t A - Arts & Crafts Charity Show Municipal Auditorium Saturday, Way 6, 1978 10:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m. Nothing Over MO00 C Y T O A / • U i B f - r EXTRA C HARG E FOR FRAME PERMITTED _____ __ t Z Z Z Z Z Z T ' *-» - «• ■ v o .. v P w t o . »o« SJ.-S ADMISSION ADULT $1 OO CHILDREN UNDER 12 . FREE PROCEEDS GO TO LIONS CRIMPED CHILDREN S CAMP LIONS SIGHT BANK UONS EYE BANK, AND M A N Y OTHER LOCAL CHARITIES T hursday, M ay 4, 1978 □ THE DAILY TEXAN n P a g e 11 Tornado, snow hit Texas as May storms sweep U.S. which began disrupting the state Tuesday. Meanwhile, a howling May snowstorm surged out of the Rockies and swept across New Mexico and the southern Plains Wednesday, burying some areas under a foot and a half of snow and snarling traf­ fic in a w ide area p o r t i o n s Pp to 17 inches of snow of b u r i e d northeastern New Mexico, closing roads and making travel hazardous over much of I S 80-87 between the area Raton and Clayton was closed for a time Wednesday. U>ng stretches of IR 25 and IM 40 were closed temporarily I uesday when the snowstorm first hit New Mexico Scores Of motorists were stranded in northeastern New Mexico towns Tuesday night. In New Orleans, a downpour ‘Sun D ay" that dampened with nine inches of rain in five hours Wednesday created a flash flood that stranded thousands of workers in their downtown office buildings and made canoes and rafts th<£ only means of transportation * on interstate highways. One-third of the police force: was kept on overtime to copt* with flood waters that rose as high as four feet in some areas of the city The streetcars are sitting: there and people are driving* their cars on the streetcar! tracks to get through the’ s a i d w a t e r / ’ L y n n Pendergrass “ I talked to a guy out there who said his car is almost under w ater." By I oiled Pres* Internationa! A small tornado struck the west business area of Beau­ mont Wednesday, damaging numerous buildings and litter­ ing the streets with fallen power lines and tree limbs There were no reported in­ juries Meanwhile, snow was fall­ ing in the Texas Panhandle while the Rio Grande Valley was basking in an overnight low t e m p e r a t u r e of 76 degrees The Beaumont tornado, which spun out of a 500-mile line of violent storms that moved diagonally across the state toward the Gulf late Tuesday and early Wednes­ day, hit the business section about I a m Po lice said the tornado bounced through the city for about five miles, shattering windows, damaging roofs and leveling trees along its path The twister was just a con­ tinuation of the violent storms SPECIAL Most Items Reduced 20%Thru M ay Texas leading tra d itio n a l sp ecia lity shop 3 fo r m en. " University Shop 2 3 5 0 G u a d a lu p e “ O n t h * O rc a " 4 7 2 - 8 1 0 4 . V i l l a g e S h o p p in g C o n f e r 2 7 0 0 W A n derson In . 4 5 4 - 3 5 7 6 UPI Telephoto* free parking a t 24th A San Antonio Af tei four years of a col lege dorm and a roommate you re ready for a place of your own* town is visit The Apartment §tOm .tf TOH Southwest I mew,iy (p e t at Bellaire^ Ste si. ill at The Apartment Store will h e lp yo u c h o o s e ,i HH e p ig apartme'it in the mea at lf City yOo want to kve wort" indeojpy and they ii m.m,, i arfstff th ti your new pi.ii e h,»s at) the features ,og need to live the good Mf* They ti ever, yOU f)fl , f l f ,f son,illy guided tour cit The I and mark Apartment ('nmmun tir you wan} to v is it saving you tim e .md m o n e y m finding a n ;,irtf nm When you ye lou'-d your petter I apartm ent they it letroi lur e yr Hi to 'he apartm ent e..e ,end help / cmI straighten oui the details so th a i you c a n move lo . n g It ie g o o d lite rn , i ,e d m , irk Apartment ll you re loc iking lur y ,„ ,[ p|<1( to liv e in H o u s t o n lo o k f e s t a l Th e L a n d m a r k Apartment S t o r e or look fMfAPAmm u STr Alf At Th( > L.i'vlmarfc Apartn,.,,t Sic'** ,!tu ii tx line lo pie * ie, features you wan! fat)rn "vt,1 1fj OOO individual apartm ent m more than ‘X) separate l and mar* Apartment Communities lo c ated rn the great nmghbOfhocxlti How a hoi ii an apartment that CGtnes auth a membership in a p r iv a t e te n n is c lu b w ith lig h t e d ' oohs 1 tennis pro wb< gives tree e s v > n s t o u r n a m e n t q n .itrty c o u r t s n e ts .m d M n c iM m e n s a n d a monthly sc he dole of planned st (iv itll-, 1 V is it T h e A p a t In tent S to r e Live where you want in a Landmark Apartment 1 a n t im a n * has a p a r t m e n t s to c a t e d th r o u g h o u t H o u s to n in th e ptdi e s e x t w a n t to l w «m m m gp o o f '’ C o m e to The A p a r t m e n t S t o r e WOti' J you like to live in ar '♦par*'* e< f community within** f,‘ rtu re to m s lik e A n t s e H a ll a- i I t e e t o f a r 1 a v a i l a b l e o n h o n 1 • t e le v is io n ■>C o m e lo T h e A p a r tm e n t S t o r e e < I w e ll e n p ia in h o w < e t hen L a n d m a r k A p a r t m e n t s r e c e i v e C h a t 1 lei J. th e e n t e r t a i n e r st S©fVf< <• w 'Itch gives yr nj major f e a t u r e to m ;, on h o m e te s ty , ion u* ,r,u- a- ! unintem jpS" i by c o n e n als I Md ny I un fjm&fk AfMrtmyodh 'emu ut* kitty ecjutppe f he#tm out)', #hwe yo cm .jet ti ,-fty he#t Sduna car. How the Apartment Store ran help you live the good hie lf you want to live the pest (de possible us Houston the fir;,! thing you should to when you gat to Landm ark M an ag in u n t I Ik * sij»n of I iv inn. J A D W Y , J P H O N f D U M B ! ft * * Landmark * T h e Apartment th e R ain and snow h it thunder­ Southwest as a storm deluged a woman's car in downtown New Or­ leans (above). A student in Amarillo (far right) pedals to freak snow­ school as a storm had dumped 11 in­ ches of snow in parts of the Texas Panhandle. In Santa Fe, N.M., the snow Wednes­ day didn’t deter 13-year-old Sean Christen (right) from enjoying the weather. container, Each V a u lt >Qff c; L&f Hpritirk Ap&ftfT'Ht>rtf% come #tfh fern n% c tut)* M uch cdf et J Astr/# variety af on^ court &ncj off-court A CAREER IN LAW without law school After just three months of study at The Institute for Paralegal Training, you’ll have a career in law or business— without graduate school. You’ll be work­ ing closely with attorneys and business people performing many of the duties traditionally handled by lawyers. You’ll be well paid, and working in the city of your choice in a bank, major corpora­ tion or private law firm. You can even choose a specialty— Corporate Law, Criminal Law. Employee Benefit Plans, Estates and Trusts, General Practice, Litigation or Real Estate. The Institute was the first school of its kind in the country and is approved by the American Bar Association. Since 1970, The Institute has placed over 2,500 graduates in over 85 cities nation­ wide. lf you’re a graduating senior with above average grades and interested in a challenging career, send the coupon. We’ll send you our new course catalog and everything you need to know about an exciting career as a lawyer s assistant. in The Institute for P aralegal Training’ 235$outft 17th Sire** Hkfadetphui Pa 19103 215 732 6600 Send me your new catalog and Information about an exciting career as a lawyer’* assistant. Classes begin soon, so hurry HAWE DATE OF GRAOOATfQh Q T hursday, M a y 4, 1978 WHAT DOES EVERY RECORD IN RECORD TOWN HAVE IN COMMON THIS THURSDAY AND FRIDAY? TOOO RUNDGREN H erm *! O f M ink H o llo w mr.Iud#* AB rHoOMkttfffi «H»«g D*t#fmrtAKtn ft.vji.wty t#i*. AM4y 7 1 * B W A N H Z A P P A Zappa In Now York mr.***** IV * va WH** Vj* ^*9 f WTV4I TH# Purim Impwm rn G EO RG E B I NSON w l w ' n d in L A . lf* I. #V*. 11». ■• *, * o f " * I i . ■> ,V U s H t , D I S E A L S A * C W ) ! T S (akin'll buy Int bklr* I Aw M n * I mm M*J»ugH (Our W ar th, |,M *A» ak mf In A iv*. J N*W | l r . . . . . . ^ W aM ng Tor Columbus Include W*n SBfftnS*m I*HMFar.* BfKHIMi 3oaf**bMoon «*•) f**ur*» lh* Aw*I -Ha a Ow*,,.,mmHtde WH*1 M p n . 'vml SU..Wf fa ,,*r fa,..,,,, I’n W W H , , < l« *fa« M lk *m n l Hmm, A m n d laA r* >»***,, **„,*,», OwVwiW JN B <* M*» W**« W * AAakk, *i*n vfcw « v ..t MAMA MUUMUU Sw tktniW indi fcttMm I Got A Mon D va» II*# * % y lo** it Ajih ib M oon VAN H A H N inc lo d o t Vou Steady G o t Mo Jo rm o A C fytn Ruonm W « h Tho O w Tool Vbu* Lovo Tonight * M mA ‘ r i T ^ b \ THEY ARE ALL ON SALE!! RECO RDS (inc luding imports) /3 Sticker price LIST PRICE $6.98 *7.98 *6.98 *7.98 *8.98 *9.98 *11.98 REG. PRICE *5.88 *6.68 *5.88 *6.68 I *6.88 *7.88 *9.98 | SALE PRICE *3.92 *4.46 *3.92 *4.46 *4.59 *5.26 *6.59 ■6f Wj& M A D L E E N K A M E Rough Diam ond mc Hadnt C fit Si Bam f#V*« RHM.'A My fte.wt H I N H A N D Y l r <•«The Koala inttfctetk** N U VVm^N ! Ha’ I \ SuiftttlM I Jfcx rn I ita 4 G O R D O N L IG H T F O O T E n d le v * W I r r It* M f** IVyl^hi lay V v w , *»»•■> U h * ' ! Meal liar I (Sir AV»v*« - r n & UNDA CLIFFORD H M y W e n d i G o u ld S e e M r N o w ItH k id rs R X I A i r R x i A i r C*Vl>vy I VV my IV m irv gf W a x * I .IVV In '.,; V a v i S ' I o U h M s MICHAEL FRANKS Burchfield Nines A* Hat** W ir t lk t A I tv* Nod* Girl V I**** »likin g In $#**vh 0* T x * IN» Ak I Sh#«AX*o * ' *wwm I V U ha h I Va xa im ^ STEVE MARTIN “ L t U i n S n a i l " lifaHkH' \,^a»* NikAatj I VIIM \t» SUI a VK SUK,, SA LE LASTS THURS & F R I ONLY I Budget & Cut-outs not included. Hot check recovery grows Most esses settled out of court O fficials in the county at­ torney s office said Wednes­ day they had collected more fro m hot c h e c k s m o ney in w r it t e n previous years - an amount totaling more than 1340.000 in 1977 th a n C o u n t y A t t o r n e y J i m M c M u rtry said the money I $343,057 I r e c o v e r e d represented 70 percent of the hot checks turned over to his office In 1976. 56 percent of the hot checks were collected. The attorney’s office uses the m o n e y to re im b u r s e merchants who lose money from hot checks Sylvia Arhos. a bookkeeper in the hot check division, said the increased recovery rate may be because of an increase in the number of hot checks written. Handy W alk er, assistant county attorney, said a vast m a jo rity of the hot check cases get settled outside court Persons usually con­ tact us before it goes to court and som ething is u su a lly worked out,” he said. If a m erchant receives a returned check, he is required to send the customer a letter notifying him of the amount due and the time in which he has to pay If the customer still does not respond, a certified letter is sent. giving him IO days to make restitution before the case is referred to the county attorney's office The cer i if led letter must be presented to the county attorney before action can be taken it is a If the check iv for more than $200 fe lo n y and punishable by a two- to 10- year prison term, in addition to a fine not to exceed $5,000 Hot cheeks between $20 and $200 a r e ( ’ la s s A rn i s - demeanors with a fine up to $2,000 and or up to one year in County J a i l C lass B m is­ demeanors are bad checks totaling between $5 and $20 with a fine up to $1,000 and or no more than six months in County J a i l C lass C m is­ demeanors are hot checks less than $5. punishable by a fine no more than $500 and no jail term Shooting victim Injured TA A graduate student in petroleum engineer­ ing. seriously injured in a weekend shooting incident and now in Brackenridge Hospital, is in need of blood donors David Bruce Leach, a teaching assistant in petroleum engineering, was shot in the park­ ing lot of a local club early Saturday morning Leach. 26, a native of Australia, lost a kidney, his spleen and part of his lower in­ testine as a result of the incident. His condi­ tion was listed as stable Wednesday bv Brackenridge. Two other men also w ere injured in the shooting, which occurred at 12:25 a .rn Satu r­ day at the Doll House South, 3615 S. Congress Ave The shooting reportedly was the result of an argument over a parking spot W illiam Anthony Turow ski, 910 E ch o Lane, was arrested afterward and later released on p er­ sonal recognizance bond. No charges have been filed against him. Lt. Fred M axw ell of needs blood the Austin Po lice Department said. Leach, member of a local rugby club, was attending a stag party for another club member whose wedding was to U k e place Saturday. The groom-to-be was one of the three men shot The Department of Petroleum Engineering is helping organize students to donate blood, a d e p a rtm e n t employee said Wednesday. A pproxim ately $150 in cash has been collected in the department, Tim Taylor, petroleum engineering assistant instructor, said Bruce has no insurance and his only source of income is his TA s a la ry .” Taylor said He is looking at another two to three weeks in the hospiUl and surgery again in a couple of months. ” Blood m ay be donated in Le a c h ’s name at the Travis County Blood Bank, 4300 N. La m ar Blvd . and cash donations may be made in Leach s name to the department campus news in brief San Marcos water sports scheduled T h e * D i v i s i o n D i v i s i o n of of K w rea tio n a l Sports will spon­ sor a one-day snorkeling trip on the San M arcos R iv e r Saturday A fee of $7 pays for use of equipment, transporta­ tion and the services of a guide A canoe trip on the San Marcos and Upper Guadalupe rivers will also be sponsored on Saturday and Sunday A fee of $9 pays for the use of canoe­ ing gear, transportation and guides Call 471-1093 for more information, or go by B e ll­ mont Hall 104 to make reser­ vations. A NNOUNCEM ENTS D E P A R T M E N T OR S P A N I S H A NO PO R T U G U E S E will tponso, ■ snowing of a film on tm Spsmah Civil War D*»am» and Nightman#." by its director •od producer Am Osmrott, at 3 p rn Tburadsy rn Buam aaa-Ecobom iea Building 151 BOUR ANO SANDWICH SEMINAR Will Mi S O U P ANO S A N D W IC H S E M IN A R will b l sp o n a o n d by tm Disciples Student F wowsh.p at noon Thurtdsy in tm Nor­ ton Lounge Student Cent*, 2 u t street and University Avenue Or J ernes L Kmneavy. protector of Englteh end education, will up*air on "Qree« Rhetoric and Christian Faith " D E P A R T M E N T OB C H E M IS T R Y will spon­ sor a lecture on "Combuetion Chamiatry" by University Professor W C Qardimr jr at 3 30 pm Thursday in Watch Hen t04W t h u r s d a y n ig h t a t t h e p h y s i c s F IL M S will m presented it S o n m Painter Hall 442 D E P A R T M E N T OF A S T R O N O M Y will spon SOT a lecture on am Hercuiis A Magnetic Won*shop" by Dr Peter Stockman. Steward Observatory, at 4 p m Thursday rn Robert i ee Moore Hall 15 216B YO UNG L IB E R T A R IA N A L L IA N C E invites Anyone who wishes to help with tm lib er­ tarian Party ballot drive this summer to go ny tm literature table which will be set up from IO a rn to 4 p rn Thursday on tm West Mall, Of call 478 0623 L B J S C H O O L A N O G R A D U A T E IN C O M M U N IT Y ANO P R O G R A M RE G IO N A L P L A N N IN G will eponsor a conference horn 8 30 a rn to 5 p rn Fr> day on tm fourth floor of tm Academic Career ............ j* im v i ■ C E N T E R F O R M E X IC A N A M E R IC A N S T U D IE S will sponsor a poetry reading and singing by Casa and Lucha, Chicano artists at IO 30 a.rn Thursday in tm Union s Eastwoods Room C H IC A N O C U L T U R E C O M M IT T E E will sponsor a dance in celebration o( Mex- 'can independence Day with Tortilla Fac­ tory from 9 p m to I a.m Friday rn the Union Ballroom Admission is $3 with UT ID $4 general admission Tickets are on >aie m the Ballroom Box Office C H IC A N O CU LT U R E C O M M IT T E E will sponsor a performance and lecture on History of Musics Mexicans" from 7 30 to to p m Thursday in tm Cactua Cafe Bar C hunky Sanchez, Chicano culture consultant to the Institute ol Cultural Pi ural ram In California, will sing and show a slide presentation T E X A S TAVERN will host a surf stomp from H TO pm to midnight Thursday Dance to the best in surf music Admission is tree with UT ID T E X A S U N IO N FILM C O M M IT T E E will feature Will Success Spoil Rock Hunter" at 3 7 and 8 45 p m Thursday in tm Union theatre Admission is $t 25 with u t id, $1 75 general admission m e e t i n g s M A Y O will hold tm final meeting of tm year at 6 30 p rn Thursday in the Union’s Chicano Culture Room B IL IN G U A L E D U C A T IO N S T U D E N T O R G A N IZA T IO N will meet to nominate officers for next year at noon Friday in Education Building 558. All members are urged to attend UT D A N C E T E A M will meet to elect officers and collect money for costumes Thurs­ day m the Car others Rec Room Bring your checkbooks Officers will meet at T 30 p rn and the general meeting will begin at 8 30 p m U N IV E R SIT Y U N D E R W A T E R S O C IE T Y will meet to elect new officers and sea the film "Reefs" at 7 30 pm Thursday in Robert Lee Moore Hall 4 102 NEW A M E R IC A N M O V E M E N T will meet for breakfast in celebration of human rights at 9 a m Sunday at Town Lake Park, across from Municipal Auditorium, Bring your own breakfast A Baptist minister will lead a prayer C O U N C IL OF Q RAO U ATE S T U D E N T S will meet for elections at 7 30 p m. Thursday in Union Building 4 206 ^ A B L B TO P G E N E R A L S will meat for wargammg at 12:30 p rn Saturdays and Sundays in Bellmont Hall 204. Table Top Generals will continua to meat an summer and everyone is invited TE RTU LIA will meet to have informal c o n v e r ­ sation at 7 30 p rn Thursday in Batts Hall Representative Bode '78 State Rep. Mary Jane Bode I We Students, F a c u lt y and Staff W H O L E - H E A R T E D L Y E N D O R S E the re-election of Rep. Bode. H er seventeen years of experience as a thaePbr°eadth'nfEd,t0r ^ 35 assistant to A t t V- Gen. John H ill give her the breadth of exp erien ce necessary to be an effective advocate for our c o m m u n ity . She was fir s t elected with our support and she has gone to w ork for us ... let's keep here there Lewis L. G o u ld N o rm a n D. B row n W illia m R. Braisted H o w a rd Miller Clarence Lasby E d w a rd Rh oads Richard Pells Roger Louis Tom Philpott Pat K ru p p a Stan d ish M e a c h a m Richard G r a h a m T hom as F. M c G a n n Jim K in n e a vy Jim D aniel Irw in Spear C arolyn Boyd M ich a e l G . H all Len G illm a n Efraim P. A rm en dariz Don Ed m o n d son Larry Tom assini Forest G. Hill Stephen M c D o n a ld C a lv in P. Blair I.B. Helburn Niles H an sen Eugene W isd o m C arey C. T hom pson G la d y s G a rc ia -G in n Judy S p a ld in g John Ram sey M ik e D eStefano G e orge Hill M a rk Zion Lyn Breeland Eileen Sh a n n o n Bruce Elfant A n d y Siegel Alice Rich D ian e W alters Keith G ib b o n s A la n G u ttm a n C ra ig Brau m s Steve Krupp R h on da G r a ff Lena Guerrero R a y m o n d G o n z a le s A la n G ru n d y Kevin W illis M a rk H. M cC ulloch D avid G a v e n d a Jo A n n e H a w k in s Philip L. W hite G e n e v a Pilgrim D onald Sellstrom W a lly Fowler Richard Kraem er D avid Prindle Frances Hill Isabel Pritchard Henry Dietz Fred Ellison Roy M e rsk y Richard M a tz n e r Peter Riley W.R. Coker A.W . N olle W m . D. M cCorm ick Charles W . Scherr Bryco De W itt J.C. Thom pson D avid Blach G a in e s Post, Jr. M a rsh a ll Johnston Calvin M c M illa n Jam es B o g g s Dan M o r g a n VOTE SATURDAY Pol. ady paid lo, by Students to Reelect Rep. Mary Jane Bode, W263 Jester Austin Co-Op survey: Spot checks show V I mm. I t h . £ t h # n H r * A ft A t I Thursday^ A A a y 4 , 1978 □ THE DAILY T E X A N Q Page 13 A prices competitive with Bree stores I i i , , I h n n ^ * ,lo r t m ,h* D r .* ’ To find oui. the r e p o n e n , al) J o u n .lt,rn JU ltUd en t. to ^ ^ e w " « ? e , V ' r “ * lBg ,r ° m * * > *» C™1 t d P* ^ m fK ed * U ,‘ * lo -o p and priced the ta m e item s • " " • b l . . . the in other stores herever possible, prices w ere sought on identical llem 8, ®Ucl1 a i notcbo«k ' C0mp* r ' d Pr,CM 0B •"* “ « ZUT*0B ,h( — A“ pa per ^ the shoo01'1*6* F°i * 7 S S i$ J lfiZ u ty J v S Z Z X X By SARAH L. DURDIN and TOM BOWER The $64,000q u estio n : P ric e s at th e Co-Op a r e . a) out­ rageously h ig h e r than other a re a sto re s , b) ridiculously low er than o th e r a r e a sto re s c ) c o m p e ti tiv e w ith a r e a sto re s or d ) none of the above. T he tw o-bit a n s w e r: P ric e s a t th e Co-Op a r e co m p e titiv e w ith o th e r a r e a sto re s In a r e c e n t s u r v e y c o n ­ la b j o u r n a l i s m d u c te d by stu d e n ts fo r T he D aily Texan. Co-Op p ric e s fo r groom ing needs and a r t su p p lies con­ sisten tly ran k e d n e a r th e m e­ ite m s surveyed. dian in all c h a i n - o w n e d d r u g s t o r e s ( S o m m e r s . S k i l l e t s a n d E c k e r d D r u g s ) h a d c o n ­ sisten tly low er p ric e s than the Co-Op The sm a lle r, p riv a te ly o w n e d d r u g s t o r e s ( R a y ­ m o n d s and Nau s i usually had h igher prices. Baby pow der provided the best ex a m p le of p ric e v a r ia ­ tion The Co-Op ch a rg ed $1 45 for a nine-ounce c o n ta in e r of J o h n s o n ’s B a b y P o w d e r , w hile E c k e rd D rugs ch a rg ed $1 19 and J e s te r ch a rg ed $1 75, only o ne c e n t h ig h e r th a n R a y m o n d ’s. R EPORTERS doing the com pariso n shopping began w ith a i t e m s l i s t o f 18 to m o st stu d e n ts n ec essary The ite m s, all a v a ila b le a t the Co-Op, a re s ta n d a rd sizes of nationally sold b ran d s i n t o t h r e e c a t e g o r i e s : b e a u t y a n d groom ing needs, a r t supplies and school supplies. I t e m s f e l l THE STORES su rv ey e d for school supplies and groom ing needs w ere: The U n iv ersity Co-Op, 2246 G uadalupe St. The N ecessity Shop, 2021 G uadalupe St. (D obie M all) E c k e r d D r u g s , 2 9 2 7 G uadalupe St. J e s te r C e n te r S to re , J e s te r C enter G ab rie l St. G ra n d e St. Nau P h a rm a c y , 2406 San R a y m o n d ’s D rug, 2706 Rio Ski H ern’s D rug S to re 2338 G uadalupe St. S o m m e r s R e x a l l D r u g S tore, 2324 G u ad a lu p e St. W a lla ce’s Book S to re , 2244 G u ad alu p e St. P ric e s v arie d w idely for ite m s. The m o st groom ing JESTER C en ter S to re flu c­ tu a ted m o re th e o th e r than sto re s in re la tiv e pricing. In th e Co-Op. to c o m p a ris o n J e s t e r ite m s w e re p ric e d h igher ju s t a s often a s they w ere p riced low er J e s te r w as the sa m e as th e Co-Op only in t h e C a r t e r t h e c a s e o f H ig h lig h te r m a r k i n g p e n , w hich co st 49 cents. is su p p lie s, it sch o o l W ith th e th a t p ricin g a p p e a rs sa m e fo r m o st of th e sto re s fo r d esk su rv e y e d . P r ic e s m a te r ia ls w e r e n e a r ly th e sa m e in all c a se s and th e Co- c o m p a r e d O p f a v o r a b ly . H o w e v e r w i t h lo o se -le a f p a p e r , th e m o s t co m p etitiv e ite m , th e Co-Op w as the m ost expensive. p r i c e s ART supplies did not e x ­ hibit a tren d of any so rt e x ­ ce p t th a t in m any c a se s s to re s had th e sa m e p rice s. In not one c a s e did the Co- Op h av e the le a s t ex p e n siv e p r i c e f o r a n y o n e i t e m . H ow ever, the Co-Op usually gives a re b a te w hich ca n be co n sid ered a discount. Star ac A TV TOK SA CK) C it M lt * Sony AB 1 512 TV SX-550 receiver 1120 w/o cartridge S u r e M91EO c a r t r id g e 2 9 9 199 00 56 00 25 OO _ _ ^ Audio Co-Op AAA Appliance# Video Auottn Sound Sockmen a Beet Cue tom MI-El Oyer Clee lr onice ? 39 2 29 360 00 354 95 364 67 170 00 plus freight 199 00 67 00 25 00 364 6 ' 245 00 100 00 25 66 169 00 ! '9 0 0 66 (X) 6 9 OO Beauty end Grooming Supplies Sure deodorant, • a i Super Dry, unadorned Johnson* Baby Powder le a . Revlon Tie. Conditioner regular. I* oz. Johnson s Baby shampoo 11 oa. Lava Soap 4 OI 200 count 125 count I 89 I 45 1 79 2 35 36 Co-O p Sommers Skillema boater Raymond's Nau Eckerd I 79 I 75 I 99 2 37 26 59 55 I 29 I 93 59 59 1 96 I 74 1 55 2 05 4 I 96 1 20 I 6.’ >60 35 54 >09 I 69 39 59 59 School Supplier Carter Highlighter marking pan Typing paper IS art. bond. 25% rag L o o m leal paper 200 aho**. 3 hole No. 2 panes Sic pan Liquid Paper correction fluid Scotch Magic Traneparent Tape 12 50 yarda Co-Op 49 98 I 79 07 25 I IO 55 .feater Conter Store 49 I 34 10 19 69 75 WaNece’a Book Store Sommer* Ro i all 49 I 80 175 07 25 I IO 49 07 25 1 OO 49 SMItern’e Nau Raymond** Bokard Dobte 49 I 49 I 55 07 25 I IO 5? 49 1 25 I 25 25 i IO 66 OB .'5 1 49 09 99 56 13 25 I IO 63 Photo Equipment Kodak Salanium Kodak Poiycontraat •ingle weight Can »n AE chroma camara body Co-Op Capitol Camara Elllaon Photo Studora Studtman’a Camara Taiaa 2 20 2 12 17 95 ie ai 20 90 I 80 2 75 18 SI 18 96 242 95 242 00 252 OO 257 95 234 11 239 00 By STEVE DILLON and TIM WENTWORTH . . . A d is c rim in a tin g s tu d e n t m ig h t shop a ro u n d b e fo re m aking a p u rc h a se a t th e Co- Op. a c c o rd in g r e c e n t p r ic e surv ey conducted for the D aily T exan to a In a survey of 12 la rg e ite m s and th e ir a c ce sso ries, th e Co- Op sat c le a rly in the m id d le on m o st p ric e s S hoppers c h e c k ­ ed p rice s in sp orting goods, c a m e r a e q u i p m e n t a n d stereo-T V item s With fo u r e x ­ ceptions, ite m s w ere p rice d above $10 T h e T e x a n s l i s t la r g e - i te i n i n c l u d e d s h o p p i n g p u r c h a s e s of e q u i p m e n t stu d e n ts would p resu m a b ly buy only once ii television o r a c a m e ra ), and ac c e sso ry eq u ip m en t (such as c a s s e t t e ta p e s a n d p h o to p a p e r). (su ch a s STO R ES fro m all o v e r A ustin w e re included in the surv ey of higher p rice d ite m s. p r i c e s w e r e O o - O p significantly hig h er on the ste re o re c e iv e r, color te le v i­ sion and c a s s e tte ta p e used in the s a m p le C u sto m H i-F i O ffered th e P io n ee r SX-550 ste re o re c e iv e r fo r $169. $30 loss than th e Co-Op’s p rice A Sony KV 1512 television w hich sold for $380 at th e Co-Op w as p ric e d a t $354 95 a t A&A A ppliances a d iffe re n c e of m o re than $25 A MUCH less expensive ite m , alth o u g h o n e w hich som e stu d e n ts buy freq u en tly , w as th e I DK SA-C60 c a s s e tte It sold for $2 99 a t the tap e Co-Op and 70 c e n ts less, $2 29, at Custo m Hi-Fi, IN TH E c a m e ra c a te g o ry , the Co-Op hung in th e m iddle. S tu d (m a n P h o to sold th e Canon A K I c a m e ra body for $234 11 The Co-Op sold it for $242 95 S tu d tm a n 's w as ag a in the le a st expensive on Kodak R a p id S e le n iu m T o n e r a t $1 80, a s co m p ared to the Co- Op s $2 20. Hut, the Co-Op w as the c h e a p e st on photographic p a p e r a t $17 95, 86 c e n t, c h e a p e r than th e n e a r e s t co m p e tito r in sporting goods, th e Co-Op rankl'd e ith e r second o r th ird lowest on the p ric e s of m os{ items check ed T he C o-O p’s f o r a H e a d M a s t e r p r ic e racket, u n s tru n g , w a s th d sa m e as se v e ra l o th e r s to r e s ($40 R ooster A n d re w ’s p ric e w as $38). H ow ever, th e Co-Op gives $9 c re d it to w ard strin g s,’ ONE JUSTIFICATION th** Co-Op gives fo r its a v e r a g e ! p rice s is its re b a te , w hich i s ! * ta n tam o u n t to a disco u n t. R e m a r k i n g o n p r i c e s , ? W a l k e r t h e C o - O p f g en e rally trie s to p r ic e co rm ! p etitiv ely w ith s to re s in th e ! a r e a * im m e d ia te c a m p u s Perhaps one a d v a n ta g e th * J Co-Op has is th a t s tu d e n ts and* faculty can p u rc h a se sp o rtin g * goods, c a m e r a e q u ip m e n t, stereos and te lev isio n s e ts in one place No o th e r s to re s c a rrie d the v a rie ty of goods the Co-Op did s a i d I . . J m r n . From The CxStudents' Association, who brought Z u, fr*‘ 'eaZ t '^ ra tio n , scholarships, c a r.* , con­ fact*, tho Washington Internship Program, and more: j GOOD NEWS FOR GRADUATING SENIORS! I I I I I I I S up p ort those p r o g r a m s , and get m a n y m o r e | benefits, JUST BY TRANSFERRING YOUR $10 UT PROPERTY I ?(f PO*,1T T0 THE EX-STUDENTS' ASSOCIATION. Stop by | the A lu m n i Center to authorize the transfer, and I L c « o « P C f ,r ty wHI be applied for ONE YEAR'S ■ MEMBERSHIP in The Association.* DON T SEND M ONEY Special note: In order for you to q u a lify for football ticket priority w e I m utt receive your authorization from by June I, a n d the Ticket O ffice | must have your ticket order by June 5 p ' op* " y • '• p<” i’ f* — • STOP BY THE ALUMNI CENTER AND JOIN US FOR A "FREE" YEAR! _ __ ■ i • i IjU IN J E SSENCE... Classics Ymi Can Afford! CHARGE IT! ecordse 2310 Guadalupe 478-1674 Mon.-Th. 10-9 F r i . - S A t . 1 0 - 1 0 City to sell revenue bonds to help subsidize projects Revenue bonds totaling 178 Revenue bond* totaling *78 m illio n w ill be sold at Th u rsd ay s C ity C ouncil meeting, and Mayor Carole McClellan said Wednesday she is optimistic the city will get good bids The mayor traveled last month to New York, where Austin was given the same A* plus, A l rating it received last year “ I feel good about the rating I hope the bids r e f le c t th a t,'* she said Wednesday. Austin can probably expect bid offers at around 6 percent interest, McClellan said TMK BOND package in­ cludes 143 5 million authoriz­ ed in 1973 to cover construe turn costs at the South Texas Nuclear Project The pro­ ject’s scheduled completion date is 1981 Another $29 5 million will be sold to cover Austin s share of the construction, transmis­ sion and distribution costs at the coal powered F a y e tte Power Plant in La Grange Fayette is expected to go on line next year. The remaining $5 million in „ h,,h revenue bond, revenue bonds which were authorized in 1976. will be used for water system and sewer improvements M em bers of the Texas Mobilization for Survival, an anti-nuclear group, held a press conference Monday to protest the bond sale and to urge the council to reconsider city participation in the pro­ ject AUSTIN should abandon its 16 percen t share of the nuclear project before in­ vesting any more money. Rick P iltz , spokesman for the group, said Construction cost overruns at the plant are expected to force the council to seek an additional $47 million in bon­ ding authority this fall. However, the bid invitation requires prospective buyers to bid on the e n tir e bond package, and the $47 million targeted for the project could not be left out, City Attorney Je rry Harris said. The bond sale is scheduled for IO 30 a rn. At l l a m , the council will hold a second public hearing / f e w M E N 'S W EAR 2222 Guadalupe OPEN EVERY TH U RSDAY Till 8 p.m. Mon.-Sat. 9-5:30 _______ to discuss how $6 million in Housing and C om m unity Development funds should be spent In conjunction with the city’s revitalization program City Manager Dan Davidson has proposed that one-third of that money - $2 million - go toward downtown economic development. •Several g r o u p s h a v e c r i t i c i z e d the proposal, though sa Vina if rould severe ly limit programs in more economically deprived sec­ tions of Austin Also Thursday the council will discuss the optimal role, composition and size of the Brackenridge Hospital Ad­ visory Board. The council voted to revamp the board after deciding to retain con­ t r o l of the c it y - o w n e d hospital. Citizen’s guide available for $2 Austin League of Women Voters has released an up­ dated edition of the •‘Citizen’s Guide to Austin and Travis County The University Co- Op and other Austin area bookstores expect to receive the book, which will be sold for $2. sometime next week. The 100-page reference guide contains information on county government, school districts, parks and history. The book d e t a ils past government structures of Austin and describes the func­ tions of city and county departments Election laws, voter registration procedure and the duties of elected of­ ficials are also listed. Editor M arilyn Simpson says the book may be used in the school systems to teach city government or by com­ panies to introduce new employees to the city. New residents may find the section on the area’s parks and recreational facilities and the chapter on the Travis County independent school districts specially useful. This y e a r ’s edition in ­ troduces chapters on the city’s latest projects in en­ vironmental protection and on public and private construc­ tion regulations There is also a new chapter dealing with input into decision t itizen making which tells how to get on the agenda for city, county or school district meetings. Drag theater to have ‘blue' films new owner, Students who prefer color movies to be flesh and blue will not have to travel so far to have their tastes satisfied An all X-rated film slate will replace the current mix­ ture of general interest films being shown at the Texas Theatre on the Drag. The t h e a t e r has been purchased by U n iv e r s a l Amusements Co., Inc., of Houston. The company also owns the C in e m a W e s t Theater, 2130 S. Congress Ave., which shows only X- rated fare The new film policy will begin Friday. THE MASTERS TOUCH ON MACE RECORDS A Musical Library Of The Great Composers! P j f l g ± < J 3 THE DAILY TEXAN □ Thursday, M ay 4 , 1978 t h ARE U.T. PEOPLE TOO Your fellow students invite you to "H O O K EM over to H.E.B. for all your shopping needs at H .E.B/s low, low prices. / / CHUCK STEAK BONELESS HEAVY BEEF FOUND BLUE BONNET OLEO POUND QUARTERS TOTINO'S FROZEN PIZZA ASSORTED IO INCH SIZE SPECIAL! DECKER FRANKS ALL MEAT 12 OUNCE PKG. DR. PEPPER SUGAR FREE OR REGULAR 32 OZ. BOTTLE CARTON OF 6 PLUS DEPOSIT PARK M AN O R MILK H O M O G EN IZED PLASTIC GALLON JUG CHARLESTON GREY WATERMELONS I 1 9 9 RED RIPE 18 POUND AVG. EACH VILLAGE PARK ORANGE JUICE $ 1 09 CHILLED Vi GAL. BOTTLE COMPARE H.E.B. LOW PRICES I PLAZA I SALTINES I PARK M A N O R ASSORTED MELLORINE * omCT» SARA LEE FROZEN POUND CAKE 3 9 ' PARK M A N O R BISCUITS IO C O U N T TUBE 5 9 ' PARK M A N O R ^®BS G RADE A DOZEN $1 23 CHEF DELIGHT CHEESE FOOD „ o x uc o 6 5 ' | $159| HOT DOG THEY'RE HERE! ~~1 THICK AND SOFT UPPTRS AND A U -VO IR STRAW INS01ES AND BOUNCY BEACH COMBER BOTTOMS IN ASSORTED C010RS, WOMEN S SIZE: S, M A XI SAVE 11.07. YOU'U lOVE'M. REGUIAR SJ.W .... Prices Good Thru Sal. M ay 6 in Austin, Taylor, Round Rock, and Georgetown everyday prices are LOUI prices! 1098 Series . .. 5— Record Set 1098 Series . .. 3—Cassette Set S A L E E N D S M A Y H T H , 1978. H U R R Y & S A V E N O W ! CHOOSE FRO M T H E SE AND M AN Y M O RE IN TH IS F IN E C O LLEC T IO N ! CHARGE IT! w „ 2310 Guadalupe 478-1674 Mon.-Th. 10-9 Fri.-Sat. 10-10 Cook with the beef that meets the standards of the Cordon Bleu \t For almost IOO years, the prestigious Cordon Bleu Cooking School in Paris, France has served as the training ground for some of the worlds greatest chefs Its outstanding reputation has made it synonymous with the finest in French cooking techniques. It was here that IOO lbs. of our Bonded Beef was put to the test. And the overwhelmingly favorable reaction of the Cordon Bleu staff prompted them to develop a dozen different recipes just for us. Eagle’s Bonded Beef was now deemed worthy of being proclaimed the beef that meets the standards of the Cordon Bleu. From them...to us...to you. Since the policy of the Cordon Bleu has always been to carefully protect their cooking secrets, we felt extremely honored and privileged that they would share their exclusive recipes with our customers. And now you’re fortunate enough to receive a new one absolutely free each week, just for stopping off at our meat counter and picking one up. Theres no purchase required. One, two, three you’re a gourmet! This week our recipe is POT AU FEU A LA FRAN C A ISE, (pronounced Potofer). Like all the Cordon Bleu recipes we offer, its easy to prepare You'll need either a boneless tip or a cross rib roast, plus lots of vegetables like carrots turnips, leeks, celery, onions and garlic. Collect the complete set of twelve Cordon Bleu recipes and enjoy a dozen ways of serving your family the beef that meets the standards of the Cordon Bleu. Look for the gold label on packages of our Bonded Beef. Its your guarantee of complete satisfaction or your money back. From delicious Cordon Bleu recipes to great everyday low prices on a wide variety of foods, at Eagle, that's what discount is all about Fresh Bonded Beef I I., fv.-t I Ii.ll Mo n I >h Stolid,mu Of Tin Cordon Bleu CROSS RIB ROAST HEAVY MATURE DEEF CHUCK BONELESS BLADE CUT CHUCK STEAK HEAVY MATURE BEEF LB RID EYE FILET SPEN C ER ' BONELESS TIP STEAK H E A V Y MATURE B E K R O U N D GROUND DEEF ID PKG O R MORE ID 176 105 lb 3.37 lo 2.29 LD .88 Meat Items SLICED DEEF LIVER SKINLESS PORK LOIN ROAST S IR LO IN CUT 3 LO A V G WT PORK SPARERIBS COUNTRY STYlf RIB END "O R K LOIN PORK LOIN RID CHOPS LOIN PORK CHOPS TEN D ER LO IN CORNISH GAME HENS G R A D E A 20 O Z F A C H JIMMY DEAN SAUSAGE ^ B K CURE 81 HAM HALF H O RM EL B O n & E S S FULLY C O O K E D 1 LO RGU. LO IB LB LD tD T-BONE STEAK HEAVY MATURE BEEF LOIN 26 2 LB BONE-IN SIRLOIN STEAK HEAVY MATURE BEEF LOIN LB 7-DONE CHUCK STEAK H E A V Y MATURE Of EE LARGE END RID ROAST H E A V Y MATURE BEEF LARGE END RID STEAK H E A V Y MATURE B f EE 97 1 LO 1.15 l b 1 . 8 8 LB 2.05 HORMEL SLICED BACON LADY LEE SLICED DACON THICK I . LB 2 04 I LB f * G 1 . 69 . 1 LD PKG 1 . 3 7 Canned & Packaged GREEN GIANT PEAS _ O O 17 OZ CAN • JLm M I I DOLE PINEAPPLE LIN SYRUP 3 VARIETIES 20 0 2 CAN .55 I GROUND BLACK PEPPER M c C o r m i c k 4 q z c a n . 8 7 I SEASONED DREAD CRUMBS „ 15 O Z C A N . 7 3 FROG RE SSO Come in now for your free copy of our - exclusive Cordon Bleu recipe of (he week. (Build a full set of 12 I iud them only Mf our meal c outlier ) XI O I BH . 7 1 Dairy & Frozen I I I I I I Canned & Packaged f la d yu eeT I MAYONNAISE O O 32 OZ JAR • M W © WAGNER ORANGE DRINK 5 4 O I BIL . 6 0 HEINZ KETCHUP PINTO DEANS HARVEST DAr , / < AN . 2 7 VANILLA WAFERS SUNSHINE 11 QI TREESWEET JUICE G R A P E F R U IT P IN K HUNT S TOMATO SAUCE 4 6 OZ CAN .58 .67 .30 I OZ an . 2 7 1 NIBLETS CORN DEN V M O tf KERNE I n f HEINZ D.D.Q. SAUCE I V O n io n REGULAR OR HICKORY r WORCESTERSHIRE SAUCE 6 LEA 6 PER RIN S f TUNA TWIST t u n a t w ist 6 EY VJJUfnrxt; (3 VARIETIES J TACO SHELLS 6 OLD El PA» ... DEL MONTE PICKLES 16 OZ till .59 ,UOZ . ■ .83 * « <- .......49 I V OZ DO/ ! o n* .59 Canned & Packaged f CRISPY RICE CEREAL 6 IAI* IU J DEL MONTE PEACHES I T 13 OI {KVR, 7/ ■w CLING O R HAL v I 1 J KRAFT GRAPE JELLY ® TSR (A i if f REFRIED DEANS « . I C * Ii P FRUIT DIE MON COCKTAIL CAN .39 .al .62 AN .59 AN .61 r PEPPERIDGE FARMS CAKES t r LEMONADE ^ NA ftift Af Sd (hi f it (. a zn j- . . . . NATURAL Sun REG i JR Pin I MAZOLA MARGARINE otfcw i 1.39 T .79 v i n r PARKAY MARGARINE C t .64 Health & Beauty Aids I JERGEN S LOTION S OZ C IN ~ 1 . 5 9 R ( * l A GEE SHAMPOO (RY I r BUDDLING BATH DEADS A ir ‘ AGREE CONDITIONER •/oz 1.85 , .99 7 Pp 1 6 7 1.29 , GERITOL Delicatessen OSCAR MAYER BOLOGNA SI IC IO 1? O I PKG I „ „ I r OSCAR MAYER WIENERS . „ _ I ti C)/ PKO 1 . 0 9 A ME Al R hill JT OSCAR MAYER HAM ® M X I 0 C O O K E D 6 O Z Pk g h a r v e s t d a y d is c u s s BUTH RMH K O R S W H TMRK ft O Z LA N AMERICAN CHEESE . . . I - i i i - K H I Lr 1.49 17 . _ . 1 . 1 / CHEDDAR CHEESE CRA' KH .ARRI. SHARP KRAFT SWISS CHEESE si le i o . _ . ll OZ SI K 1 .53 a o z p k g . 9 7 Household & Pet f CAT LITTER & :»nmiu f CLING FREE SOFTENER A 'AWK )/, (I [JC i f HEFTY TRASH DAGS A f PINE-SOL DISINFECTANT <=» f TADDY TREAT CAT FOOD JpfPWiiGHf 'S H txn 1 . 9 9 . o r . Ifs ciI BH 1 . 3 V . 1.99 . c - J , J O . „ Produce FRESH STRAWBERRIES PINT * 3 9 o r BASKE r • W 9 LOOSE CARROTS (IRM ANO FRISH IU . 1 8 BULK TURNIPS CRISP AND IANGY LB . 2 9 TEXAS ORANGES I UIL OF JUICI 5 IO UAG . 9 8 TEXAS RUBY RED grapefruit REFRESHING A O I l f I ACH • ASSORTED PLANTS 3 INCH POI I A M .49 ll Eagle Guarantees * the Lowest Food Total ‘ Purchase 25 different items or more worth $20 or more Only one item of each type may be used for the purpose of this comparison Then take your shopping list to any other store of your choice Compare item for item, price for pnce You don't have to buy anything a second time lf the other store's total is iower W E H REFUND YO U D O U BLE THE D IFFEREN C E OF T H E TW O TOTALS. IGLOO 25 QUART ICE CHEST m a d e O f pla st ic WON I RUST O R CHIP ^ 8 4 IGLOO 2 GALLON COOLER WON T RUST O R DF NT RUSTIC IN AND OUT IGLOO LITTLE PLAYMATE HOLDS 9 CANS OF BE /ERAGF VI Th (Cf 19 PATIO TABLE ROUND A V / X U I c> CO: O RS PATIO CANDLE C*K* TR O N I 11 A G A N O I 654 2.48 .68 WEBBED FOLDING CHAIR GRF AT FOR BEACH on. b a c k y a r d ^ ^ 0 74 OUTDOOR THERMOMETER . ‘AIM ' M r A NUW _ 2 . 7 9 COOK ’N CARRY HIBACHI s i 1 I. * 4 . . 9 9 DISNEY FREEZER POPS FROZEN POPS WITH DISNE Y DE CORA I IONS A I 16 3-PC. BBQ TOOL SET CHROMf Pi Alf D HARDWOOD HANDLES 2 66 5555 NORTH LAMAR BLVD. AT KOENIG, AUSTIN Hrs: M on.-Sat. 9 am-9 pm Sun. 10 am-7 pm HOW TO DISCONNECT OR DISPOSE OF ONE OF MOTHER’S OWN. Ma Bell has some advice about how to disconnect your phone service and save a call. If your phone is a port­ able model (installed under the "Supermarket Plan"), unplug it and bring the phones to the specially staffed offices and receive your $5 credit and a mother's gratitude. Very simple. If, on the other hand, you have a permanent phone, cut the cord near the connection at the base board and bring the phone with you. However, do not remove a wall phone. Bring yourself and your phone to this office and arrange for disconnection. Southwestern Bell So before going home to Mom, bring your phones home to Mother. And save $5. The easy way. Think of it as a short distance call. DOBIE MALL STUDENT PHONE CENTER STORE Dobie #30 2021 Guadalupe 9 am to 5 pm Weekdays Closed Memorial Day "Take me home to Mother n S p o r t s T lI E D a i l y T e x a n — — _ _ _ _ _ _________ T h u r s d a y , M a y A, 1978 □ P a g e 17 Falcons select Jackson Wide receiver c/eimed in round 7 By TOM KLECKNER Sports Reporter “ * « 7 'P l« y e r selected Wednesday in the se- , . National hootball League draft bv the Atlanta ‘ s ' " ™ 1 * - “ “ « « « “ in J ACf KSO* SA,D THINGS Rot so had he considered tran sfers iW Reason ^ t L Ja c k so n said " * " earh<,r' bul “ w asn r ^ • A m e tfl warned o S i T t i ' ™ I kL h k? been happening to Texas athletes ’* * * ,'A,lanU) called "><■ a "« -aked ; ra" ^ J® p|a> J . was ™ " y getting worried It I was gon- because some really strange thirds have "WASTIyK^SSMyris S ^^ssatK R sa a r ——«iasaa.sas ‘‘I WAS REALLY figuring to be called by LA, and say Hev ,or getting me drafted." Jackson said*” responsiblt' * tTAaN a l D l f l 6 S t I CS S * l f l l /A M Basso I w ' f c * rt « i\*U tlS flo w n , ult" lUid ^ * _ J* . * oeen drafted Tackle David Studdard was the fourth and hut nmth mund W ^ n e ^ V W40,000 top prise t h r e e | s h e r 0 ( i a r y p | a y e r G a r y P layer is here, but his three ( h lH I — - b ' tournament winning streak has been broken and his momentum may be gone TOM WATSON IS here, but he has not been ripping it up lately Ray Floyd is back to defend his championship and Ben Crenshaw, who finished second to Floyd, will also be around. So will Lon Hinkle, who won his first tour­ nament ever in New Orleans tost week to break Player s streak. The only big-time star misting ii the biggest one of all - Jack Ntcklaus. Among the group on hand, Crenshaw, playing before home folks, sounded about a s optimistic as anyone I THINK I WILL play good here, * said ( renshaw, "this is a good golf course and there is a premium on putting. I feel my putter is coming back. I putied well last week alto that gives me to n e con­ fidence. And I’m playing better now than I t h * ^ P r f T did when I was runner up last week.** A ri whf‘n * was runner up last week.’ h ACAD EM Y’S APPRECIATION c a i it WE WISH TO THANK YOU. THI? D VAH V r A C I __________________ Save on jeans for men w om en and children — dozens of styles to choose from including Levis and Lees — all at the lowest prices in town Choose from the largest assortment of canvas shoes for m en, w om en and children — high top, low quarter and slip ons and s a v e u p fo s a v e u p fo . 0 5 & Famous brands such as Converse included Save on the biggest assortment of ice chests styrofoam and metal Colem an cooler, s l i g h t l y i r r e g u l a r . No. 7 0 4 , m ade g to sell for $18.00, appreciation price I 1 A 3 9 All other ice chests including Igloo and Insul-Pak of the lowest possible prices Large capacity plastic trash can — mode to sell for *4 00, appreciation price 7 8 Save on inflatable boats, vinyl and rubberized n y lo n __ 1-2-4 & 6 m an sizes. For instance, 2-m an rubberized nylon boat m ade to sell for $ 4 0 .0 0 , appreciation price just * 3 2 7 8 Save up to 50% on luggage, trunks, footlockers and all size suitcases. A huge selection ^ A c a d e m y . Save on I s h ir ts a n d t o p s I for m en, w om en and children, a t the biggest savings in town — dress or sports shirts, w estern shirts, plain or printed T-shirts, shells of all types. Come and see for yourself ■ Jogging suits nice colors to choose from' m ade to sell for $ 2 5 .0 0 , appreciation price lust 7 8 _ Colem an No. 7 0 4 9 m ade to sell for $25.00, appreciation price ju s tse 0 3 9 Save on your b a s e b a l l n e e d s , bats, balls shoes and g l o v M at the lowest prices in town. Double Hibachi 10"-17" — m ade to sell for $ 1 2 .0 0 , appreciation price * 7 7 8 Shop our large assortm ent of back packs, canvas or nylon, with or without homes, just • 2 and up Choose horn a largo assortment of C oast Guard approved live vests and save, just $3 7 * and / Save on air mattresses and floats, vinyl or rubberized canvas - small or large v in y l a i r m a t t r e s s e s m ade to sell for $ 3 .0 0 , appreciation price just * 1 7 8 Save on tg n n ls n e e d s — rachets including Spalding and Wilson, wood or mo tai, just se«s • and up 'ast received a new shipment of SO-gallon Sarbegue-Smoker grill, m ade to sell for $50.001 lust • 3 2 " Repeat of a sellout - come early, don’t miss this time - home type wheelbarrow fish in g Shop A c ad em y's d ep artm en t and save on lures, hooks, rods, reels, line, etc. Famous brands a n d imports. regular $16 OO just * , 2 3® Z e b c o r e d a n d r e e l c o m b in a t io n made to sell lot $15 00 Save on all types of s a n d a ls for men, women and children la s t IT Thousands to choose from. Academy has a s le e p in g b a g you need, small, medium, large , and extra large a ll a l p r ic e ACADEMY 4 Big Stores to Serve You You The Most Interesting Store Open All Day Sunday 1 0 % Discount to Retired Senior Citizens J4 1 0 3 N . I H 3 5 603 E. Ben White Blvd. 8 103 Research Blvd. 6601 Burnet Rd. lw»#i I the OTHER SIDE C hoice B e e f S a n d w ic h e s Fruit K ab o b s Delicious S a la d s W in e - Beer A ro u n d the corner on 21st a t G u a d a lu p e D A ILY T EX A N □ Thursday^ M a y 4, 1978 & Yaz still enjoys baseball after 17 years L ? eveL i ? l } ired A aYs oldest American League player . By TOM K L E C K N E R Sports Reporter A R L I N G T O N C t r l Yaitrzcmski is still sleek and trim after 17 seasons in the major leagues, all with the Bottom Red Sox Only some grey hairs on his chest and in hi* sideburns give away his ag** At IM, Yastrzernski or Yaz as he is more com m only known is the oldest regular in the American league second only to 40-year old W illie Met ovev of San Francisco in the majors Neither of the* two true superstars show their age on the field, though In 15177 Yastrzernski hit 296 with 28 home runs and 102 R B I s, scoring to runs and stealing ll bases Playing mostly in ieftfield, ahead of slugging Jim Rice (25 home runs), Va;, went through the season without making an error and became the fourth oldest player to drive in IOO runs in a season ti..* . j of double headers has never bothered me But a day game atter a night game is a little rougher on me ” in To s t a y s h a p e . Yastrzernski works out in Florida his winter home He hits three times a week and diag* flies all this before spr­ ing training when most players are touring the ban­ quet circuit D e s p i t e t he w o r k . Yastrzernski s rhythm was S t i l l off at the start of this season I ve struggled up un til the last couple of days,' he ■aid Saturday I haven t been very comfortable at the plate I rn waiting for my groove.” H K M A Y H A V K found his the Texas groove against Rangers in the Red Sox s re­ rent series in Arlington Play­ ing the f i r s t ba se f or temperamental George Scott, Yastrzernski went five for 12. raising his 1978 average to 286 lie even stole a base oft of Jim Sundberg Y ASTRX KALSKI attributes part of his success to keeping (it I never get tired Never Maybe it s because I enjoy the game and never let myself get out of shape he said recent­ ly open I don’t get tired in early season when you have so m a n y d a t e s , ” Y a st r z e r n s k i c ont i nued * When you start playing 20 games in a row like you do in the summer, that’s different Flaying the second games Yastrernski did this even though he was not supposed to play in the series Against Milwaukee on Wednesday, he had been hit by a pitch on the forearm However, right when Scott said he couldn't play first base against the Rangers, in stepped Yaz That’s part of the game, playing with in ju rie s ," he said. slightly chiding Scott Yastrzernski has suffered only one serious injury in his In 1972, he tore c a r ee r — UP I T e le p h o t o Yastrzernski ligaments in his left hand. which robbed him of much of his power Only 5-11 and weighing 190 pounds, this was disastrous for Yastrzernski, who gets much of his power from his hard, uppercutting swing “I couldn’t roll my top band, he explained Before (be injury. Yastrzernski rolled his top hand and hit 40 or more home runs three times Since then, his high before last year, was 21 Y A S T R Z EM SK I HAS hit 300 six times in his career, compiling a 290 lifetime average with 366 homers, 25th all-time In 1967, he was nam­ ed the American League s Most Valuable Player as he led the Red Sox to the pennant and won the triple crown | 326, 44 homers, 121 R B I ’s) The next year, Yastrzernski hit 301 to repeat as the bat­ i~..___* tho tine rh am nion ting champion the lowest winning mark in major league history With 2.745 lifetime hits, Yaz has a good chance to reach the 3.000 career hit total, which only 12 other players have done I don t really worry about things like that,” Yaz says with a degree of sinceri­ ty His earnest, low voice makes it clear he means what he says lf that’s gonna happen, it will take care of itself ’’ Yastrzernski is equally un concerned about being voted into the Hall of Fame " I ’m not worrying about that while I m still playing,” he said with a slight smile Y A S T R Z E M S K I W ILL con tinue playing through at least the end of next season as he -____*». recently signed a two-vear contract with the R ed Sox Right now he is unsure of how much longer he'll play I haven t decided yet,” i ll wait Yastrzernski said till after next year.” ^ A S T R Z E M S K I would prefer to end his career play­ ing Ieftfield for the Red Sox. a position he took over from Ted Williams when he retired in 1961 Although he's spent some time at first the last few years. Yaz prefers Ieftfield because "it s natural. I can play it instinctively.’’ Yastrzernski says it only took a day for him to learn how to pl ay the G r e e n in Fenway Park. Monster I ve always been able to play it, I don’t know why.” he mus­ ed. "Instinct. I guess.” Yastrzernski has been try­ ing to teach some of that in­ stinct to Rice, who lead the American League last year with 39 homers Like everyone else. Yaz is impressed with his power and potential He s (R ice) gonna have a helluva ca re e r.” he said He s improving every day as a hitter and a ballplayer. The biggest thing is, he un­ derstands his abilities to the utmost IOO per cent." An awesome hitter. Rice is expected to take over for Yastrzernski Ieftfield whenever he retires The way Yastrzernski is playing now Rice may have to wait vet a few more years in Spinks misses hearing; judge grants new date ST LOI IS (I P I) — Leon Spinks failed to appear in court Wednesday on a charge of driv­ ing the wrong way on a one-way street, but a new hearing for June 8 was granted Spinks was represented by attorney Larry Townsley, who appeared to request a con­ tinuance •Judge Thomas B Hayes granted the con­ tinuance and set a new hearing for June 8. Spinks. 25. is recognized as world heavyweight boxing champ by the World Box­ ing Association but not by the rival World Box­ ing Council Spinks was arrested on March 19 for driving the wrong way and for not having a driver s license. Spinks attorney was not present for the scheduled 8 a rn hearing but appeared at ap­ proximately IO a m. to request the con­ tinuance Summer Jobs In The Austin Area Full or Part Time Positions Flexible Hours 9 5 -* I 9 0 per week to start in person at the Ramada- Apply Gondolier Inn, Suite 228, South IH 35 at East Riverside Dr. (Exit Riverside off 35) May 7, 3, and 4 (Toe*, Wed, and Thor) 9 am, 11 am, I pm or 3 pm only. Absolutely no phono calls accoptod. Summer Jobs W e ' re Looking for Counselors* Camp Olympia is looking for summer counselors lf you enjoy the outdoors and the rewarding ex- penence of working with and teaching children recreational activities, visit Jester Center for an in­ terview . . 'CS) fm p ia Friday, M a y 5 with an O lym p ian representative. C h n * G ilbert O w n o r T o m m y F o r g iv e n Director C o rb y R ob o rtto n, Jr. O w n e r Route 2, Box 25-B Trinity, Texas 75862 SIGN UP FOR AN INTERVIEW .... AT IHE CAREER CENTER, JESTER A 115 A l positions for female counselors have been fill- HOW WOULD YOU LIKE TO HAVE PLATO SHAKESPEARE OR EINSTEIN AS YOUR TEACHER? “ n,* R f- ^ ew Mexico, and Annapolis, M aryland, is built on original sources often referred to as the "G re a t tradition^ books' writte4n by the greatest minds of our ii lf,Is In ♦' ak 0ur br.im a ry teachers. They are books which ff?e Persisting questions of human experience Can 9' Ve students a Perspective on their h U Jit jives MATURE COURSES...Em phasis individual participation in discussion classes of 12 to 20 students led assistant^ . The firs?, and only ?n (effectual community in the history of Am erican hiaher education/' For many this has been the answer; over 40% W r?,e r ii John'* College, Santa Fe, New Mexico 87501. Or call (505) 982- ? ? y -has fa n s fe rre d from other schools Admissions Office, Box 364 St - S Cal,e9e ••• Founded 1696, Third Oldest College ?n Women Sant* N° n*Df.norr,inaf'onal ... For Men and M ^ h T r w T Scanta £ e' New Mexico, and Annapolis, M aryland ... Equal Opportunity Institution s^ n tIEF j B? O K ! v T!'e program at st. John's College in Kick on your Scholl Exercise Sandals and make a wish. Heres a chance at making your wildest dream come true! WHOLE LARTH PROVISION COMPANY , M IO SAW AN TO NIO 5T - A U S T IN 111— JI *r m a k in g thursday nic* t» 47ft 1577 I t SAT I) W QAY a* JIO J J CUUUm & BORER sporting goods M B I A RACQUET ON CAM PUSES Enter the Scholl "W ish Come True'’ Sweepstakes. k n t e r ‘ n # o u r S w e e p s t a k e s is almost as easy as kicking on a pair of Scholl Exercise Sandals. A ll you have to do is stop by your favorite drug or discount store and pick up an official entry blank (complete with contest rules). I hen, in 25 words or less, send us your wish by August 31, 1978. If you dont have a special wish, may we suggest a few? How about flying to Paris and selecting an original designer outfit? O r riding an elephant in the grand circus parade? O r sailing away on a wind­ jammer cruise for two? O r just taking off for anywhere on your very own moped? Winners will be chosen in a drawing to be held October 31,19^8. First-prizewinner w ill receive a wish worth up to S5,000. Second-prize winner, a wish up to S 1,500. And five' (5) third-prize winners will each receive a wish worth up to $500. Heres wishing you luck. Scholl Better than barefoot S f t w p s u k n von! w herever prohibited or restricted bv la Sa (xiii rwem-v the right to 'i htitutr cash tor am w in n in g e o tn Lim it one m m per contest aru- , Vi ,<£ 2 £ £ L ENTRV BLANKS AND CONTEST DETAILS AVAILABLE AT TKF SCI IO! L EXERC ISE SANDAL DISPLAY IN YOUR FAVORITE DRUG OR DISH TI a tt STOPP OR W RITE: W ISH COME .RUE. P.O. BO X 30+1. GRAND CENTRAL STO IO X NEWf YO JttC^aflO O l? C 19 ’8 SvhoU, Irk , P* Nv» 3063-15? 30ttiU&4 | - \ _ Thursday, M ay 4. 1978 □ THE: DAILY TEXAN □ Page 19 Denver ousts Bucks; Thompson hits 37 ........t.... .a . ..... •way early in the fourth quarter when rhev « ic i *. , and physically fatigued thai S S S S S * ! V S £ * i he Sk,ppfd a !eam practl« “ ruer a *am eh'* h 57 points and rookie Anthony Roberts z ~ David Thompson, Who was so mentally ! * " who was semen tally finished with IO for the Nuggets, who had Im! ton airs,oh. finished With IO for the Nutlets, who had lost two straight games to the Burks, the Cinderella team of the playoffs after jumping to a 3-1 lead in the playoff series o w thl M S S * * R h the D*nV" Nu“ ets 10 a Conference finSu “ 'n “ * NBA W“ ‘*rn and * The 6-4 Thompson, who scored 22 in the first half showed no h ^ ^ t ^ t h e N ^ w hlm 10 m‘SS 3 Practl^ ’T'^sday as he directed the Nuggets to victory in the last game of the best S F T C ? co S tZ l! of The Rucks down by as many as 16 points early in the final * * * ,n “■ ,irs' ^ n ffw in t f h„T I 'i " 1 lh W Wlth 35 seoonds ,0 * ° 0R 3 5h°t throws k S h throws by Bobby Wilkerson and Bobby Jones to ice the same scor,d th(‘ next three points or free ( enter Dan Issei scored 14 points. Wilkerson had ll and Jones The Bucks, who had not been expected to make the playoffs and won a berth on the last day of the regular season, were led h> VS inters with 24 points and rookie Marques Johnson with 22 Also scoring in double figures for Milwaukee were Quinn Buckner with 19. Alex English with 14 and David Meyers with Denver took the lead for good early in the game after the Bucks Meyers tipped in a shot with 9 39 to go to give Milwaukee a 9-41 lead The Nuggets then scored ll unanswered points in a 34-minute period - with 4 points apiece by Thomp- and Roberts - to take a lead they never relinquished Nuggets, who dominated the backboards and were cheered by a sellout crowd of 17.838. appeared to be moving 78crs HO. Bullets 104 s H 'S ” ™~ ■ " s s * s s - s e s s TJie best-of-seven playoff moves to Landover Md for tho ( \fl I rn s" AI Ty" Ula|yy.n ’Kh' “ nd lhe fourth «*me Sunday. Collins. Mi* .md Erving paced a third quarter comeback with eight points each as the 78er, overeat^ a w i w nt h llih , deficit to lead 84 76 entering the final period ^ ha'f“ me These O yer D ea ls are FREE CAN OF WILSON TENNIS BALLS WITH PURCHASE OF A PAIR OF TENNIS SHOES. WNI. SuOPN USU St!* rums no! ,f>c md*) I / Big sound from the people that made power boosters famous! Full 12 watts per channel continuous makes your present car stereo a Power play. Save now at this special price! Integrated Amp and Stereo Tuner — U P I Telephoto Rhiladelphia 76ers’ Henry Bibby leaps off the floor in an attempt to block a shot by Washington’s Tom Henderson in the first quarter of the Sixers victory. THE "IXfiiTHS, SERVES YOU WORLD TEAM. TENNIS ________ M AY 5 -8 :0 0 PM I hi* Friday. May 'ah Ihe I'nivrraitv of T oxbr S d-, jai bv-nt. rn” " WmM t ~"> T « wm* m a ™ y o u w *'• » -“ » » » -im ..ara' l aky a ™ ( UHLS FA RHT. K O S IK C A S A IS . L IF F D R Y SD A LE. M A R K COX. 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JO P M j Billy Hunter: By JA V A LLEN Sport* Reporter ARLINGTON Bill Hunter lifted through the top of his crowded desk in Arlington Stadium found what he was looking for and pulled it out of the pile He had just been ask­ ed if his Texas Hangers berauw* of an early season losing streak had given up too much ground to the defending American league champion Kansas City Royals Hunter explains that the object of his search, a white piece of paper with the word Cheer written at the top, will do a good job of conveying his thought* on the Hangers current situation that being a fourln place stan­ ding JI the AL West ' We put ourselves in a bit of » h o le ,” H u n ter said However, there s a little thing someone sent me today Take a look at it Among other things the little thing,'* written by lawrence Hawthorne, said. There Is little satisfaction to Im * gained from doing things that hold no diffic ulties, it's the tough old task that brings a keen sense of worth and power to the man who wins the fight His failures test his courage and his problems prove his might ” A LREAD Y, H U N TER has plenty of opportunity to prove his might The Hangers after being picked by many to win the Western Division crown lost nine of their first ll games All this came on the heels of a strong second place finish last year and the addi­ tion of several established players during the off season High priced players like Michie Zisk Al Oliver, Doc* Medic h and Jon Matlack were supposed to be just enough to pull Texas past Kansas City Hanger owner brad Corbett even added an upper deck at Arlington to make room for all those pennant-crazed fans who would certainly turn out in droves to w atch the Hangers run away with the division Zisk, however, has been the only one of those players to produce Oliver and Matlack have started slow ly and Medlch who signed a million dollar contract with Texas has been exiled to the bullpen "T H E ONLY THING that surprised me was how poorly we played the first ten games of the season,” Hunter said last weekend while his team was busy sweeping the Boston His! Sox Actually, that's not even true We should have taken two of three from New V ork and Boston, but we were swept We played bad in Cleveland bul we should have won three from Detroit and we only won one Really, we re not hitting as well as we re going to,’ he continued I know we re go­ ing to hit and we re playing a little better defense than we w ere e a rlie r also Our pitching has been superb the whole homestand If that con­ tinues, then we ll have a lot of fun this summer " OI course. Hunter had quite a bit of fun last summer. It just didn t last long enough Hunter took over the Hangers, a team that had been through three managers in less then two weeks, on June 28 and made them contenders Texas even led the division in late August but a Septem ber swoon, coupled with the Royal's September surge ended all the fun Under Hunter, the Hangers were 60- 33 That works oui to a win­ ning percentage of 645. AND IF H U N T ER could lead the 1977 Rangers to a 60- 33 record, just think what he could do with the renovated 1978 version Or so everyone thought During spring train­ ing, Hunter was even quoted as saying he should be fired if the Rangers didn't win the division Certainly, colorful JUTES GREAT AND TretKSFILLING. I ALSO UKE THE EASY-OPENING CAN!’ Bubba Smith Former All-Pro Lineman Manager thinks Rangers can catch KC once pitching and hitting come around i t — " ( B P M ® * quotes like that make rn teresting reading but there is one slight problem Hunter never made the statement I didn t say that,” he said in an annoyed tone “ I said if we don t win it s my fault Somebody added I should be fired I'm not that stupid to make a statement like that.” Hunter will, however, say exactly what he's said all along — the Hangers are legit, “ L E T M E T E L L you .something, he said sternly. ‘'Nothing is ever as bad as it seems when things are going bad And you can turn that same thing around and say everything is not as good as it seems when things are going good But I ve been in the game long enough to know talent and we’ve got super talent on this club We re just starting to jell right now There s no reason we can’t keep this up all year long I know we're not going to get the kind of pitching we've gotten recently but I also know we're going to hit and we won t need as good as pitching as we've been get­ ting from some of these guys ” Despite the recent rash of good Ranger pitching, talk persists that the team is after another relief pitcher. Inex­ perienced Len Barker, who won four games for Texas last year in 15 appearances, most of them out of the bullpen, I reliever became the No. when Adrian Devine was trad­ ed to Atlanta. But Barker, who struck out 51 batters in 47 innings last year, has not lived up to all his preseason billing In fact, earlier this year in B o sto n ’s F e nw a y P a r k , Barker threw a pitch so wild it landed on top of the screen behind home plate Recently, the club activated veteran left-hander Paul Lindblad and purchased Reggie Cleveland from Boston. Still, the trade talk remains. JIM K ER N OF Cleveland and former 20-game winner Don Sutton of Los Angeles are two of the more prominent names that are being tossed around Apparently, the key to any deal is 22-year-old Danny Darwin, who was 13-4 with the Ranger's AA affiliate in Tulsa last year. But Texas is in no hurry to deal off Darwin, or “ ' A A * -Texan Staff Photo by Mlk* Uur Hunter makes his point with an umpire in : the Yankee series. anyone else for that matter. Right now, we’re playing very well and there doesn’t seem to be any particular hurry to do som ething,” Hunter explained “ We’re still looking to improve ourselves pitching wise, maybe another infielder. But I don’t know when something like that might happen.” Actually, there s no telling what might happen to Texas this year. Not after what has already happened. Besides Barker’s exploits in Boston, Roger Moret went into a catatonic trance before one game in front of his locker, holding a shower shoe of course, and had to be taken to a pshychiatric hospital for a mental examination. Now, three weeks later, he’s work- mg out again. And recently, pitcher Doyle Alexander, who has never been one to let his feelings go unknown, has decided his huge contract doesn’t require him to talk with the media. So he isn t. “ W E L L , B A L L P L A Y E R S are getting stranger,” Hunter said matter of factly. “ They just do and say strange things I don t care anything aboijt that stuff. It just means you have to go about it in a different way, that’s all. ‘‘All I care about is what happens on the ballfield,” bt continued, pointing in the direction of the field. “ And I think everyone knows I ’m gib­ ing to run what s out on the ballfield.” They do. NSTANT C for old gold high school rings, graduation rings etc. CHARLES LEUTWYLER ELERS { S U P E R S A U ! ! ! £ ^ ^ 0 % C ^ F F V e n tu ra & A ustin electric g uitars ^ ^ © f f G u ild , O v a tio n , & Y a m a h a g u ita rs ^ ^ 3 0 % O F F G allien-Krueger & Road am p s ^ 2 0 % O F F Songbooks, M ethod Books, & m o s t i ” accessories * J String Sale: B u y o n . ^ G et the 2nd set for only $1,00 ^ prjc. J ot M 1402 S. Lam er 444-436r M t i e ^ on SAVINGS r , > . r 11 W * " TN£* WU KMT! HAU* rn *.*™ __ — ff= - WSO S H O P C ie e H R R S ALAO AVT# PARTS. W I I n U ) (ana *3*~47)« * C M M O m a h i c * A M M U . >60* May ?*0 *«< R M M • EAST S IM A VTO PARTS «**>*O J i * V * e « U « A * P A # T » * -------- h o i Sa * » ** * 7* se * M - 3. 4T*-*10a W U **<*•**•" L*"* M I Van J a m , HS* ______ THE BEST PART OF A PEANUT SURE ISN’T THE SHELL! Jus! Ilk.- the best part o f a party isn t the room that surrounds it. Seems pretty logical, doesn't it? We al T he Castilian think so. In feet. we pay as much careful attention to the music and snacks for a parly as we do the rest o f the services we provide. It makes you wonder what’ s so special about an apartment clubhouse. I f y o u 're looking for only the shell call them. Hut if you want more, stop by to see us ... We'll be glad to show vin, around. J The Castilian a privately owned coed residence hall in the heart o f the student com m unity 2323 San Antonio St 478-9811 B M S .2? 9 J H S D A IL Y T E X A N O Thursday, M ay 4 1978 Frisbee Master Scherotter puts studies before ‘fropies’ By DK BR ll-; MA! MKH By D E B R I E M A I R K H Sport* Reporter * * * 4 " f on|urs up though!* al pigskin*, quarterback*, cheerleaders and Pac 6 Hie IO championship football game* #porU fan* ^ But gay Rote Bow l’ to a Frisbee fanatic and sound* of the Beach Boys Endless Summer'* will fill every c rack of the mind with visions of California sunshine bronzed legs, sweeps airbrushes, body rolls, macs and knapsacks filled with assorted frisbees and colored T shirt* This y e a r* Rose Bowl Tournament will not echo sounds of kill em Michigan, crush em Washington ' Instead it will A V MIA ^ '" " ‘ r tv* ‘■,n ,,'rn" r" 01 t s r - 2 5 ® * : A W n S J a W S F romp',,n* your bwt g & u : “»»' * £ frwpl* ,H 5 Pl* y a i^ tle c o o p * w,th p,rtur« <* B~ketb.ll StHhserotter found , , ,, '1'™ ,d';r; : r 1,' !2 ! * ‘’'’’“ •“ t"' Wlt,> irf.bee,” Scherotter I really loo. forw.rd to a throwing date I get hvrrer explained * < nyps r and think of if constantly •• A R EC EN T TCX AS MONTHLY article ttascrtbed Frltbee «SrSchZrrUH*»' ',Mp' ',,n0l,*r, and vr*rm O' nigh k. S< hr rotter admits tho drv rlption in nomewhat accurate lh.- ."Mi’Z ' l i l ll'* ,-‘'1 ,lur‘," i lh* and was equated with tm anti establishment and anti war cult Frisbee could Im. played anywhere It wa, ,ne.p.n.fve S tit w S T b S S S ! from the normal sport, The same people who wouhf haJe demolish ated in the OO, play Frisbee now " Ss-heroller s u i ha : z : T r « r'm« ,mt ,or ,nsb~ »<• avera'O*.0 J J v .. •S^y. <*o4 •I BUYS MORE vtvUventiAu f TEXTBOOK DEPARTMENT « BASEMENT P *9 eJ j P | H E J A I LY TEXAN □ Thursday, May 4, 1978 • IO * N ^ fll* way a R i t t m a n , ^ V * •* CONJUNCTION wit^t SY M P H O N Y SQUARE M r i i . i i IN CONCERT JOE VAL ENT!N E ANO Tnt IM PERIALS -H iltt. JM C !» v » u f . i| "* HARNETT BROS. AT IV M N M O N V & O U A M £ M T H • N f O N U C * A O M f s Of, I R E C O M M E N D " A G r e a t H e a ta u ra n t C h o i c e " T b e & StRVm Tl ^9. - R e cllo m a to Q u a lit y It a lia n l o o d I l h 1 1 0 7 I M H ( r u e r j e l u p r TUES. &THURS > . . STUDY BREAK Just bring your student ID to MOTI-IQ (-MTH & get in FREE! 443 1695 WELCOME, JOHN DENVER John Denver I Want To Live i Hear the songs (rom John s latest album I WANT TO LIVE, including his new single IT AMAZES ME, plus "How Can I Leave You Again,’’ and the title tune "I Want to Live." . •SWM®/ n m ...M i. A* I I .’ *>.'1 -* *««* •» .■*»**» i Aril KMM a h i r n » Swaa I »*»*> ■ » . . . A» n O M * ROA n o co rd s Inner Sanctum University Co-Op Reed Music Co. Disc Records Discovery Records Zebra Rangers edge Orioles, 2-1 J ew * Hanger, to their aevonth itra.ght Victory, a U sum over the Baltimore Orioles Hight hurter Do vie Alexander 2-1, three hit the Orioles runs battt?d-in total to 22 Ztsfc singled in U Bump W ills with the tie breaking run in the eighth inning off losing pitcher Don Stanhouse after W ills had coaxed a walk U M S U n h tu t^ l’o w ^ t h T m Ut T S * * * * * * S T ° Ut U Wa* the f,rsl < ™ * * \ iU v e scoreless Z iik 's sixth inning double, off starting pitcher Jim errand* S t ' * * * * * * * H a V g T ^ singT by a^itctT 10 MfCnd Whf" J,lh" l~ " S J j g J S P r * * * * « *" U » Oriole second mning and •cored on Hick Dempsey > single Palm er went s u inning tm " Z tZ t& r * ' r*POrt' dly Wt lhe « *"* Bx pot l f Astros 3 M O N T R EA L (U P I, - <;arv Cartel hit hi. fir., m .i hviguo gr.MKl slam home run and ariled a double for five HHK while R o m G rim sley recorded his fifth straight w 7 n w l£ ~ aas:** ™»*> - »—-££ !ed off the inning with a single, Warren ( rom anie sin. 2 and pave Cash walked It was the first grand slam filth y • k n a k rt in r T a,t. th*‘ 0lym >,ic S'adlum C arter s double ( n . n T T ” " w h 0 had triP l« l >” the fifth ss N A T IO N A L L E A G U E B f U n ll * d P r e s s international A M E R I C A N L E A G U E A f U nited P r e * * in (ar national E a M DttKHI Nfifk Vofie Boeton M •iKkrtuRfin’ BaWmore Oakland Ramuu < ay • aidorma 1 .*« ( i>" ago M nfi«-so!a Se i-t .• w IS ta L 5 9 IO »3 11 to IO 12 9 13 H 15 18 5 14 8 14 9 IO IO J 13 8 17 8 20 Act 750 591 565 h i . 409 346 783 6.36 609 500 150 3^0 286 O B I J 6 7 8 7 I i 4 6 hr 9'rr 11 1? ■» Wear W ednesday's R eau rte New York ft - i-s a * City 5 morn fa w n 2. Bani "lore t, mght B o m -.- ' I Minnesota 9. night M /.-I ib m 4 ChK ago 0, nigh! ■ tevaland IO. Sealtto 5. night Oakland l l Toronto i -iigm L»lr«jrt T. California 4 n ght A / S-*. Ta ;k ' I K f t M I 2 , L = ‘Lam ’ faces Dickey By J E F F W A L K E R Sports Reporter If the World’s Fastest Aggie raced the World s Fastest Longhorn, which one would hit the tape first? AU joking aside, a LOT of people care who hits the tape first Gargantuan Curtis Dickey of Texas A&M and sleek O lym pian Joh nn y “ L a m ” Jones w ill pit their distinct sprinting styles against each other in a pair of races Thurs­ d ay night in M e m o r ia l Stadium T H E SW C’S fastest foot­ ballers — who ve only met once this year with Dickey powering past a classy Texas Belays 106-meters field — w ill go at it again in a 6 p m four- team meet that includes Rice and TOU It w ill be the first time Jones has run four races — if he indeed runs all four — in a track meet since injuring a hamstring in the Cotton Bowl more than three months ago* He’s entered in the IOO and 200 meters and the anchor legs of the 400 and 1,600-meter races “ I ’m just hoping he CAN run all four," said an anxious but understandably concerned I exas track coach Cleburne Price. " I think he can. He’s had good w o rk o u ts this week." B U T “ L A M S ” b e s t workout w ill be in the IOO meters and 400-meter relay anchor slot where he w ill test his recovered leg and gliding running style against the ex­ plosive, brute strength of Dickey • Dickey, who stands 6-2 and looks like the weighs 225. after-pose of a Charles Atlas ad when he stands next to Jones, who looks like the before-shot That analogy pretty much sums up how A&M looks teamwise next to Texas or anybody else in the SWC, ac­ cording to Price " I T H IN K A & M ’s going to dominate the m eet," Price safely predicted They re the most I ve impressive team ^een in the conference in the last few years." Impressive is not what Tex­ as has been this season After winning the SWC outdoor title the last six years, the team this year has failed to win a meet and many tim es an event at some places. losing), It s not a pleasant feeling I guarantee you," Price noted It wouldn’t be so bad, but this year we don't even have an outside chance of winning (the SW C title )." O N E TEA M which has an outside chance at winning the conference outdoor cham ­ pionship is Rice But the Owls aren t bringing a full squad to T h u r s d a y n i g h t ’ s quadrangular because of exam conflicts It s going to be a good, Price added quality meet. Johnnie Sprinter Johnson w ill try the hurdles; an event he hasn t run since his high school days at LaGrange Distance man Mike Burley will run the half and footballer Mike Lockett, who “ looks good. says Price, w ill run the IOO and 200 meters to give the Horns needed depth for con­ ference Field events are scheduled to start at 6 p.m. while run­ ning events get the starting gun at 7:30 p m. Frisbee ... (Continued from Page 22 > the small ones make great coasters "T H R O W IN G R E A L L Y CO M ES naturally for me, but I can’t figure out where the naturalness comes from. I can juggle now a" drlth? fee' ,n« s great. ;■ he said " I think Frisbee s an ideal r basketball players in the off season cause it’s sf)° marvelous for coordination " I he newest technique this spring is called the nail delay and Scherotter is always anxious to learn and teach the newest r risbee sensation. I taught Frisbee at a camp in Malibu, California, last summer and I ll be teaching it again this summer in Richmond texas, Scherotter said " I see something new and I get real excited and start masturbating, it s a gieat feeling " Scherotter is also a professional folfer (Frisbee golf of course), and has played in competitions for cash •TM AG A IN ST C O M P E T IT IV E sports," Scherotter said I d much rather compete against myself, and the whole low- keyed nature of F risbee and folf allows me to do that I ’m not typical of a player at the World Frisbee Championships but I ’ve never been rejected because of it ." A true-blooded Frisbee player never admits to playing ball games, and if they do they never use the word "b all " In Frisbee the word is “ sphere." " I have friends that sometimes play basketsphere or softsphere, but it s just something they don’t admit to doing • very often I KNOW P E O P L E WHO have sent their wedding an- noucernents on printed Frisbees, but I ’m not that extreme I ’m only thinking about sending my graduation announcements out ° n uFu * *s ** I decide to send any at all. 6S ~ Wherever I go. educationally or occupationally, my World ass b risbee plaque w ill hang on the wall at an equal level with egree, Scherotter said. That may sound childish, but a fhin ”° r 3 P dlspiay their tr° P h »es - if s the same MOTHER'S DAY MAY 14 (Steamboat! I Springs I p r e s e n t s rn I 5 T h u r s .S a t . I COCONUTS I I § S J I La Promenade Center = = 711$ Burnet Rd. 459-4318 = TiUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMmilllllllllllllllllllf? Free Parking in Tri-Towers Garage 5.29 4.29 15.99 13.99 6.39 5.99 1.19 Monogrammed Smock $15 M 2900 W . Anderson Lane Canoe the W hite W ater of the Texas Hill Country Located on the G uadalup e R iv e r for re se rv atio n s call 24 hrs. in A ustin 477-1239 D o n t IO yr. old qt. 86° l f " r n : / Celebrate the End-of-Classes B a c a r d i qt80. G ilb e y s V o d k a q, 80 J & B Vi g a l. 86° C h iv a s q(,86. B e n c h m a r k qr86. R on L la v e R u m * pt 80. 729 W. 23rd. Kitty Litter Ricki Ernestine a n d Jessica Landon of Cuddles cmjN T H E B A R w i t h A H E A R T 705 HEO RIV ER 4724X18 Sensurround A F T E R H O U R S Friday & Saturday Good Morning, Austin! v - « ' erL’,nK S '> * * « « * « « * •*. — A T , m ZZ "m ^ rZ:T'z:.T'^ ^ S i s _ _ 0 0 4 JUAREZ TEQUILA Wh»n you r* gtvmy • party... Why not be th* smarty... & plan a F IE S T A W IT H P U N C H ! Then your fronds vwon’t be tardy.. And they ll drmk hale and hearty Caus# J U A R E Z is the ' B E S T A T H E B U N C H ” ! GOLD OU SILV ER NMmaDtecrm.Eo*' r(OL>.«M.«o O .JUS «t A ) T h e D a i l y T e x a n Thursday, M ay 4, 1978 □ Page 25 entertainment ‘RasputirV succeeds with rock, ballet mix By MARY DAY Entertainment Writer F O R T W O R T H - in tw o e n th u s ia s tic a lly re c e iv e d p e r f o r ­ m ances last weekend, several a rtistic entities banded together for the m oun­ ting of Jim d o u s e r s ' ‘R asputin This cleverly designed collaboration proved again what m any of us have known since the first production of d o u s e r s rock ballet “ Caliban* ; this idea of rock music and ballet working together re a l­ ly has m erit. FIRST OF ALL, Lrik Bruhn prin­ cipal guest a rtist of A m erican Ballet Theatre, danced the title role - which may have been the prom inent drawing card of the production. Dancing with him, m em bers of the F ort Worth Ballet and Space/D ance/T heater provided the stage-full of dancers that d o u s e r s ballets thrive on. Equally as vital as the m ovem ent, however, is the original score perform ed live on stage bv St Elm o’s Fire. One cannot underestim ate the draw ­ ing power of this m usical kaleidoscope; considering St. E lm o ’s regional follow- mg land some national notoriety), it is likely that just as m any people w ere in attendance to hear them as to see one of the superstars of dance W hatever the case. the event a ttra c te d large audiences, as well as the attention of the New York Tim es and Rolling Stone F or anyone who had not seen one of C louder s rock ballets ( “ R asputin" was produced last spring at U niversity of Houston a t Clear Lake), he now had the chance to see the m ovem ent that has becom e distinctively d o u s e r s. If the novice viewer could wade through the heavy story of lust and politics in Mother Russia in the early 20th cen­ tury. plus keep the o v erabundant ch aracters in their proper relation to the story, he could im m erse him self in the rush of m ovem ent and intoxicating music. CLOI SER HAS a knack for m aking a stage appear as a single unit and then breaking it into a m ulti-faceted view of the original m ovem ent them e. When dancers fill the stage, they begin with a pattern of m ovem ent in unison; from here thev stop and only one section of the group begins the sam e sequence, followed in a few counts by another sec­ tion and then another Finally the en­ the tire ensem ble original them e is again dancing Bruhn took‘the role of Rasputin and brought it to life (when interpreted by the choreographer at C lear U k e , it schemed dark and sluggish) As the young hedonist who is a t once like an adolescent and an om nipotent leader, Bruhn sailed through leaps and turns with dim e-stop ease It seem ed such an uncharacteristic role for a dancer of the classics, as is B ruhn’s reputation — perhaps that is why he seem ed to enjoy it so much. The standing ovation Bruhn received at Saturday s perform ance ended the evening on an optim istic note: hitting 50 m ay not be so bad a fte r all. R a s p u t i n " wil l be p r e s e n t e d al Mi ll er O u t d o o r T h e a t e r in Ho us t on at 8 p m. M a p l l , 12 a n d 13 St. E l m o s F ir e will p e r f o r m af the B o o n d o c k s Cl ub a t 9:30 p . m . h r td ay a n d S a t u r d a y . A d m i s s i o n is $3. At Armadillo All Stars to perform Vocalist and d ru m m er Levon Helm will bring his RCO All S tars to Arm adillo World H eadquarters for two shows a t 8 and ll p.m . Sunday. The RCO All S tars include electric g uitarist F red C arter J r . ; g uitarist, w riter and producer Steve C r o p p e r ; e l e c t r i c b a s s i s t D o n a ld Duck Dunn; and keyboard, percussion and g u ita r a r tis t M ac “ D r. Jo h n " Rebenneck. Backing up Helm and the RCO All Stars will be the All S tar Horn Section, composed of Howard Jones, Lou M artini Jr., Tom Malone and Alan Rubin. Opening both shows a t the Arm adillo reco rd in g a r tis t will be C ap rico rn Delbert MeClinton, long a fam iliar nam e in Texas ro c k 'n ’roll. Advance tickets for the perform ances may be purchased until 6 p.m . a t Oat W illie s, In n e r S anctum , D iscovery Records, You Scream Ice C ream , Zebra Records and the Armadillo. K e m bl ; ? m ^ M . Ec S e M ^ r,: E" 8 C' a'9 Calve^,• Damian Ha» la’ Schools vie in play contest Students attending the 52nd annual U niversity Interscho­ lastic League One-Act Play Contest m ay not te e a Richard Burton delivery, but som e of the p e rfo rm ers m ay end up on the silver screen The c o n te st, which co n ­ th ro u g h S a tu rd a y , tin u e s presents the top 40 Texas high school dram a groups over a five-day period The groups w ere selected in past com peti­ tion. said Lynn M urray, d ire c ­ tor of the UIL com petition. E ach day the best actor, best a c tre ss and outstanding p e r f o r m e r w ill r e c e i v e aw ards, and $500 scholarships will be presented to the best actor and a c tre ss of each day by th e U n iv e rs ity d ra m a departm ent. THIS YEAR, three C entral Texas schools a re am ong the c o m p e tito rs. B astro p High S ch o o l a n d C a n y o n H igh School, of New Braunfels, will give their perform ances at 4 p.m. Thursday and 7:30 p m Friday, respectively, a t Hogg Auditorium Tuesday the Texas School fo r th e B lin d p r e s e n te d “ Sparkin' “ and two of the cast m em b er! w ere nam ed to the all-star cast “ I imagine a lot of these students might go on to m ajor in d ra m a tic s in college, then m ake it a c a re e r," M urray said But acting does not have to be the only area they will go into Many can go into writing or a re a s like lighting, he said ACCORDING TO M urray s research, m any fam ous movie and television personalities began their c a re e rs in UIL c o m p e titio n . W e ll-k n o w n s u c h a s D e b b i e s t a r s Reynolds, Sissy Spacek, Eli Wallach and P at Bingle all cut their teeth in UIL com petition across the country O th e r p e r s o n a litie s who were once involved in UIL com petition a re Sandy Dun­ c a n , D an B lo c k e r, and I- arrah F a w c e tt-Majors. Admission to the com peti­ tion is $2 for adults, $1 for students. Levon Helm THE BEST OF ELEKTRA-ASYLUM TO YOU BLIM PIE BASE Buy One, Get One Free Special The World’s 2nd Best . Taste Treat Al lU>v in TV* Tri i p W LE i i A DIVISION O f THE FUTURE AMW!*001 MI* J r n EACH I I ALI T»l£ VU AIL- \> V M ay 4 Thursday No. I & No. 2 M ay 5 Friday No. 3 M ay 8 Monday No. 4 & No. 5 474-1864 2120 Guadalupe s s ,.t — v \ \ I*' JU X t T ’- ' N ' - Now serving the campus vicinity MAMA'S PIZZA Now Delivers Call 472-3693 1507 Lavaca ITS FREE DELIVERY MONDAYS Delivery Hours: 5-11 Mon.-Thurs. 5-12 Fri. & Sat. 5-10 Sunday COUPON Yr'J ST \ . l l on a M A M A ' S and Large Pizza or W off on a Small or Medium Pizza with this advertisem ent. Open Sunday noon-10 p .m ./ll a .m .-ll p.m. Mon.-Thurs./Till Midnight Fri. & Sat. VOm u a v , * ' f ' ’ Z | | VISA Z f . IDRA th e record Si ta p e sto re 478-7311 1712 la v a c a \ - - IO am-IO pm Mon. through Thurs. IO am -Midnight Fri. and Sot. 'T V [urn Pj £e J A g jT H JL DA IL V T E X AN □ Thursday a/, y 4 1978 Weak ounci J ; " Ttoatrc . , * f l rE y * •* * » •» JcwiMW; Written by J o t SJr,v e ,frr SuM oot; t u r r l a g S u i lout, Rod M oiled* Dillon; at tb t America aa By STEVE1 DAVIS E a te rta la m e a t W riter N/m-vm Fi 1 s T W 0***1 y°« up fo r a film with em rgy N orm an Je w iso n 's film prom ise* much with ita four* r f tr r acronym tu la but it h a t all the punch of a broken thumb B etw een trying to present an epic overview of the American labor m ovem ent in the 20th century and attem p the only thing ting t o ci c a l e a m odem tra g ic figure, ? T E S E 1! i ln F 1 S’T " ,# « •* * "• pretension IU *® * l m P | , f U c a i • i i * t h « ' • < * « history book and IU tragic sen*e com parable to a Harlequin rom ance In a rg u a b le "F I H T ” is hardly a knockout ° !r " F I S T " h o r a film with a historical perspective and one that alludes heavily to real m en and events. P I S T " never anchor. "»<■» rn cradlM lltjr .( a n d . for Uw F fd rriU o n of I n f e r n a l T ru ck er., a union with blatant : : T , r ~ r ion into a giant of orgam tnd labor la Johnny Kovac a ch aracter m odelled a fte r Jim m y Hoffa P , ™ ? . F , U 1 ****** Hiree decades. Beginning in 1W7 s c re e n w rite rs Joe Cleveland, d ire c to r Jew ison and E s ;te rha* and the audience with th e ln ju stlc e s suffered by f>epres»ion e ra blue collar w a k e r s The*#? injustices grow until the men Join a union under the leadership of Johnny Kovac NO I ___ ACADEMY AW ARD W INNER S i SO til 3; IS p m h i g h l a n d m a l l I H 35 A T K O E N I G L N 4 5 1 -7 3 2 6 GUT-W RENCHING TIRROR 1:00-J:15-5:25-7:35 M S r t , : . , i ^ t n t r g . s sib...THE FURY l#K D O UD LAI JO H N CASSJCVl TI S ( H u n w i IN G A G E M E N T 1:15-1:25-5: 35-7:40 * 59 rw J The V' WfUMfttT silvtT siriK k k'nld ,J SILVER BEARS MICHAU CAIN! CYBUL SHEPHERD ^ [PG] CINEMA TEXAS HAS CONTEMPT FOR YOU! Tonight only, in Jester Aud. at 7 & 9 Brigitte Bardot, Jack Palance, & Fritz Long in ean-luc Godard's only Hollywood film. RIVERSIDE “A TREAT FOR EVERYONE WHO LOVES MUSIC AND WHO LOVES DANCING.” — G e n e S h a li t W N B C T V A n e xcitin g sto ry told by P R IN C E SS GRACE OF M O N A CO THE CHILDREN OF t h e a t r e ! L s t r e e t " ^ ■ V A R S I T Y a P ep p erco rrv W o rm sei R e le ase An Earle M ac* ru m ENDS THURSD AY! 6:30, 8:15, 10:00 2402 GUADALUPE • 474-4381 tekrs union preseiits V ALU A B H C O U P O N W M H H N M H i ■ f>/M I I I THEATER TWO F U L L L E N G T H C O L O R S O U N D F E A T U R E S 213 E. 6th 4 7 8 -0 2 4 3 O PEN 24 H O U RS! BOOKSTORE LA ROEST SELECTION OF MAGS FILMS BOOKS SEX TOYS IN AUSTIN ARCADE * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * WILL SUCCESS SPOIL ROCK HUNTER? - X T h . '.credible J a y n e M a n s fie ld a n d T o n y R a n d a ll sta r in a— th is 1 9 57 satire on a d v e rtisin g a g e n c ie s a n d m o v ie stars “Frank Tashlin has n o t renovated the H ollyw o o d co m ed y He has done better. Tashlin, in o th er words, has not renewed b u t created A n d h e n c e fo rth f when yo u talk about a com edy, d o n 't say. I t ’s C hapitlesque'; say it loud a n d clear, 'I t ’s Ttuhlinesque. - J e a n Luc G odard Today at 3, 7 and 8:45 p.m. Texas Union Theater $1.25 with UT ID ♦ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ T F * * i f * * TF * * * * * * * l f * TF TF * TF TF TF TF TF >F TF TF TF * TF LARGEST 25c ARCADE IN TEXAS I ■ ■ ■ ■ WM tm V ALU A B H C O U P O N nm • f AM ERICANA _ I jill MMCIX! Cl..! IU H i' Reduced Price* Til 5:15 I Did you ever heat I the words SYLVESTER STALLONE F I S T Untied Artist'. ““ i;l IIL' d l U t i U U L Try to remember... your life may depend on it Reduced Price TH * P M * FEATURES -2:09- 3:39 -5:95 OPEN 5:30 Reduced Prices til 6 p m -5:40 R E A T U R E S The care for Saturday Night Fever” is to see it again. Southwood 1*2 Reduced Price* TH A ACAD EM Y AWARDS WINNER 4 | ■ 52.00 TH 4 P M 1.09-2:54-4:40-4:25-4:15-1945 D IA N E K E A T O N W O O DY A L LE N A N N I E HALL' C S S M G M - O ' U n tie d A r t is t s - C O I N S ' makes “C A R R IE ' took like an angel! ■ [ I tmtmmrm Page 28 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Thursday, M ay 4, 1978 * ' I m V f ! B k ^ t j v. v ■ V- , F U E N I S N F D A P A R T M I N r V « F U t N t S H E P A P A R T M I N T S ■ M M M i A R A R T M I N T S FU R N IStW Q *P *« T M *W T S ■ FU KH ISH « D A P A K T M t N T S ■ FURN ISHED A P A R T M E N T S S U M M E R R A T E S 2br, *185 plus E • Pool • Covered Parking • Sm all Complex LA C A S IT A APT S. 7900 Cole (3 O IH Law School) 327-2239 W O VV 351!) Three Elm s F urn.ch*# Uhiurnrch*# /hr /ba #ft.« large r«rpat rang# a,! rr rafrigaratpr f> .yet* I''1'n d>I' va pal.«) G x water y*c ra o tf pal# laundry room r;ony#ni*^r »o *huf (vxx •>i and * am p .» '.urnmar rat* m g 4 g a -Vo # a i,ny for tall ast m i ’ GG vt *.'f G r .vt ST '1 1 *|iyr gay cabl* d>tpc>cai paid Nu pat* children t il too imam 4J* OOI) P O P O L O V I L L A G E A P T S S U M M E R R A T E S Nf’ w. breezy, shuttle front door, 3713C E D A R ST. & 38TH at ut | #ry# /or fiat m attractive old Ste .ion Apt •'jnat par*<,*! win ap peer .-ala $740 pin* ut.id.#* t*02 Nuacav 4 J* MA I J f S U M M ! ft artic anc.#* S125 plus ddubf# bad ga % »tovt JbC$ a , * ft ail- >?!$ 144 >2*9 r — ■•UVV-f * T » a r e v T b l a c k u t . for, c a l aundry disnnashar car pel h Overed parking 4/J s iii 45.' 0/JV C L A S S I F I E D A D V ! b f t t i N G • A t t I l f word min mum f ack avord on# tim # t l l t ack ward J fim #l » rn f ach w .r a $ tim#* i f f Cack ward lg N m #! I *t $fud#' i rata a a m tim# I 90 t eel y I inch on# lima §4 H t caf • I inch } 9 fim#} t i H I < ii’ * • mc ft fan cr mac# • m # * |) /$ fo r SA U IOC* Mf.,HOA /VO iv©*' ipofl and if ft *,V; tx. lh a ttfmltmnf . bhd lion 4-41 J /»> 04*1 I*/* MONDA f ap##**, JOO mil#* a i f >t*nl I arni, t ton UMI W'd*. a.i>|nir yr .ll* VAH »JJ$ 441 VOO J Rte ye U t o r S o l * t Aa AHA /1 ,f.< ft lr am#, gixxj r.v,«g;fxx *YS I Ad l l * 99/i MAIM IHI K H I (KHI , H.*n HmH.it t«»*» M**a«, I OO p rn 11 Ob a m WHn^a, IMM lua*4mf t I OO • an l l OO • an ThB.M*„, CMM* W»#n>«4« y I i OO • m J..# ., Co m m In I** ••••ii al •••»•■ n a l. in «» • l M H a . n i '•#« a. Ma *AMa>i ••• >M#*a«W. Im a-ty O M m a iM i in**ii«*.. AH tUxmi Im »dft,«tm* M t iN«i/U ba -«•#• m I*.*. •Aaa IO Oaf. al.** * *#ft.oti*n t V U O l NT f At Ut f y / | T A I A wa rf I Ii *'.• 0 mn. mum *.' h (J*, | lf I ai h add itll,. i«i mo. .J aa, n cia, t cm ii or 1 vol * i me ii ut n oo v ' UfK laviiUadl I im. I d i n *i (JO I Prepaid No ftafimd*) $fud#nft I*. Milr **0 Oat) muff a van! a iiim irt ( (j * ,„j par MI a wlpa« Non sjaOO a w f*x mu hall* 4$C aam h #o F a l c o n w a u o n sjoo t an a j j J* * ' attar J pm IWO C H * V V t M * A l A t ut lorn avialian t condition b#»t otto. C all A m ir a j i u s * ftr 4/1 SOOS J I A I sr»o It I coppa convortlftt# rand#, damaga tort av l * J ! 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Sum# damage ,w body For leaving in# tuu»u> 1 hay# to WM ti UNO ar batt#' artar Can 44) JJ?0 •nytim * mu , HJO OPT I GT nitft eln yl tap and s a r * bor * vee!lent g at muaaga 4Ja IOT} TO VO T A Lander uitar h a * prop leap i b iib of k n h u u ca i* * ia a i 44? net amovatM# t t y ! # 4 W O beton H J J c a p n i v * rabuilt anginabkcattant condition ll| * S 4$taUH Ma n H J J L A N C IA K O N N iO N option* Comr#' It bt# baauiitui cond 1 KXI ovomngv Ilk* now all 'e a u .'a Ptr# iil* « J$ * 4 * « 411 A A U J I CANN 1 good condition nan brake* and in te rio r Air vumoot good ti ra t * luead SO OOO nm 11*00 Par Motol# CJ* *10/ _ H J4 O O O G I C H A N G E N P l PH Air ©WNI* IP>od nxieag# aicaiient condi Non. one owner |«7TS 44* J J M *TJ V W § KC t L U NT condition good rune great * is J i as# m o look* H J J C u t l a s s SALO N u lva . * bn# top m r# wheat* AM P M tap# angina conto)# #u regular iv tar v iced and pampa*ad, im m aculate mutt tau J I 4 so m ottiy go ng back re *ch oo i high way m .ia* tssoo 4 J» a * n a it JJT N H I I I F O R S A L I MotfrcycithFor Sol# *7J SU Z U K I GT, TSO V#r» ion m il,! W o rk 4 Jo AWO 14$ a a fj ■ H J J SU Z U K I GS MA *KC#ti#nl condition Can D avid TM JOSS attar a pm 75 HONOA L i JAO T p#rf#ct condition. AOOO nu G reat tor *fr##t highway jo lt tuned *aJ5 firm 4 S JA JJJ HONDA E M P R E S S front and rear basket aica iie n t condition WOO 4 JJ M JI H JS N O R T O N ISO Roadster AMO m .i«* nm# paint clean lust tunad SHOP Can 4J}-044J evening* H JS H O N D A T L baiiavabia power ffbft, SJW Af# /HO IJS, d irt blk# un- im m #cu!ata cond* B i t / C LE L IQ U ID A T IO N an t».« y< (av mu*t g*.11 ypard. buy now and va <* a lot IO vpaadv IS WOOD'S HONDA FUN CENTER rw v n I am ar as* i i i ' S l c r t a N t S o l a C i* c I I I T * N S O rap#l r i all typav af itarpb Oduipmant w* u.y ann *#n ,lMK| aqxipmant and van vfarao p a rti and arr avion#* I J* 004/ U H bad A lvar 1 N IS I I I I DCC A AVA, |>.if>y Son y SCU (JOO vpaahary i f J m f S H A P P P I idOO i aw * ll* ii*.;,* w ' Dalby t»av ynilrhinu A P I I - #it*nr rand! lion I JS AZC M I ) M u i l t o l - F o t S o lo M O V IN G M U S I *aii' I #fi nandad Oulld IJ »lr .ny a. bx Vt it guitar with cava I JOO 4 J J //SA Kvan.ng! P h o t o g r a p h y For S a l # I I J r J I N I* UN J4 l l l l CS JOO lam liar far I tip yr adnation Hobart P|#r> a J J J J J I J bt SM I p J JC II n t h $0 co and carn#r» mint Ii'. J ACO any r. mr Fdtc-For S a l # A F G H A N p u p *, pat, mow and r *. my prnvpa. t, i ,u»k rotory an# gold* JO#van#w a J U M S ) I J J JOSA M IN * I arrat with *uppli#« M » |t vail, aiiargi. m al* IO na#* v movt im m unif * Ion bought IC I val* 14$ 441 JO*/ M o m # * f o r S o l o C O u W tN V mni v a* V tn (onvan.ant Nor th watt U u aiity , a* tom d#lign on h#av>iy w.iotlad I I 4< i t * pi iv#ta dr iv* jl/4 !.| ti r.u (.tty into. Mound k iK i vc boul* Vr«i bar lu a p U , * «,#4$ 1 ar yay 1 *«••< turn ravarvObon indian lanai! y 4VU Un,in ( ,.ngr#w 444 14)4 f 'OV4rd M onday! M A U N O tlA $k I MOA I 404) p I virir od# ropav f a g . na Tro tter w a t a r t k ic n )# v * !l! nan flotation tulhlony I nm piai* i n coot I JOO M N D I I I lean, .a ll 4$) J/ f j aflat $ to *)$ ISI D bx t a u Uvad a montft* O U I I N I t l l W A T I M H M ) iiaro# m a itra w nagotiabt# Can 4$* 00/ 1 I.nae «.„1 p#g *j* inc Iud#! iN D lV tO u A t a a iiin g aarly 1000 t d raw Ail t a i* and am tx oid arad col w a rt sm all i l i a 4$i JASS O CSK gtnxi condition pun naiad tor HIO w ill vail tpr »$o M in 1 to in « att 4VI »Q/4 M O V IN G m u ll U U M il*, hi toto. t v . Vim under n a n (inly a w a iia n i iondi lion $JJ$ ( all 44 I OJI* M N C . U t * w a la r b a d co m p ia t# learn# m a U ra w M a la r Ulnar pan *IJ$ ( all 4$ 1 Ja il t i n t S i l l H LD . good (i#ancondition * montftf old M u ll van moo 441 SOO) P A A S H l Aft airftruvh r*#n rag ciao IM n th * VIOO US J4#0 an ylim * (a w a ir y W a b uy diamond* and old gold High#*! cath pure* paid fa w b iry a v t a ta C A P IT O L DIAM OND SHOP 4011 N. La m ar FURNISHID APARTMENTS S U P E R S U M M E R R A T E Walk.ny OlVtarx# I# US t amiKt* Jo* .Pa /tx I Cwt .a th tabla Tv Duo! lawn let mu** boga t Ipval* plant! at dry King Q f at A tunganlal #»mo»fU%#r* 47. 5332 . t i .1303 T B R $190 m i k to C rm p u t baautitul nan furnitur* and d ' apa* built in kiH nan C A i H fully cfttpa'ad pm* 1 aa. n apt ha* if* awn bide any or M U A n a U * gat , abl* pe d LIOI Mad Atter 4/4 CMO 4)1 A D J C tntral Prope/rtips 1717 EN FIELD RD Summtr ti Fall Leasing t U rb niv* atticNWkcv and large Un studio beginning rate tie s plot t 47R 9fi7 327 0064 D E L M A R C fi WY beaut.ti att;, anv .** thai realty are attic tent* Shag carpal largo . lover double b#d tut! kitcne** g at and cable pan) Sm all and guift compl#« ranting for lum ina* D IO pun t as I a Jo 1 ary *?"$ 444 ;*so W A L K TO UT 105 E. 31st. E x tr a nice efficiency d is­ hwasher, disposal, laundry, cnPie, gas heat and cooking SU S plus E sum m tr rate 477 0&S* 327-0064 F A N T A S T I C LO C A T IO N G R E A T OAK APTS. Aero** N om Law School and J shunt# l f la rg e *G’P> Oui#* lu v u rtg u t cab'# ho» not#, hit Sc nom k po«x *1 UNM IMO Pfuv t .YD) Swyhe* 477 im 404 & S02 W. 35th On# b ed ro o m *tu o a a p a rtm e n t* ba#utiNfi color-co oadmateo wallpaper and furniture o ffin g 'ah Sum m er rat# S H S pius i L a r g a luvurio u v e t f .i e n c if * full kitchen ce.l.ng tan *utnm#r .« i« i i i * P*u* I AW J g j i 4W -W J1 *44 JJN? L A R G E t O O M V I A } » « apar im#..tv u s a a $ 1 JO plus at#! tr h and g a s CA cm IO.* UMHNk g c e n t e r D W E S/nd Ap* tall SD S plus I NOIA L E A S IN G lb»$ cum me* * tao I ihraik to L B / Library L a w School on ch u ttie I p h x k east pf Red R ive r on Jam Tower v ten A p ii 4J 4 im u fa t 1 L u a u r ie u t C A S A D E S A L A D O 7610 Salado N un tig- ny « ant#a t f* for Cummer and * rn ma* I br apar Im am * 4 hirx *c n u t of < ampty* on j a Cm pool paid v t ' 'Abl# T v lewndf r raoni oft G raal par* tug Can I J J JS M or com# by M#r»ag4tr ! apt No HO chut ti* rout# 1 BR I Bath 2 BR 2 Bath 3 BR 2 Bath 1802 Wast Ave. ABP, Pool, Parking Walk to U T CRIS R e a lto rs 4 7 4 - 6 4 0 7 MARK V — S u m m e r Pate — • I BR Furn. $160 • Nice Pool - Patio • Shuttle Corner • Foil Preltosing Too 3914 A vo . D 459-8083 SUMMER RATES EH. & I Bdrm M39-M49 I M I. 3?ndt (Wnili or Shutfl#) Mono ga r No IO ] 476-5940 4 '03'S Spa ad way Meno gar Na 703 458 4037 Imato now tor toll Free Service Parking T r a n s p o r ta t io n HABITAT HUNTERS 4 time apt locator i #/vrc# ip ai'ra/ ifrn g ta com pitum I wrrft airan to • buff J# Ftmlmoting for Sum m er I foil chub* w . >. aa 474 ISS? 2 3 0 4 P lea sa n t Valley K d . r o o m i n o v a r y Mao w ilful c lu b ro o m w i t h h tapioca Two sw im m in g p##J* l a u n d r y building W an ly of tan va m an t parking G a rn# roam w ith peal tai ba A tannic fob!* Or* UT shuttia bu* rbwta G a * looking hoofing A hat w a fa r f .callan t shopping n aarb y tfticiam i#* on# four badraom * Fried* start a t $ 1 4 7 A f Furniture a v a ila b le tw o an d 4 4 2 - 1 3 9 * O r C u m k msr Summer Student Special Tanglewood North Apts. • We Pay Your Air Conditioning • Shuttle Bus Front Door • 2 Large Pools • Signing Fall Leases 1020 I. 45 452-0060 El Dorado Su m m e r Special • I BR Rim. $140-155 • Shuttle Front Door • Nico Pool - Patio • Fall Loosing Tool 3501 S p e e d w a y 472-4893 ’ 1 3 0 S u m m e r Special THE ESTABLISHMENT Large Efficiency N ice Pool A rea 4 4 0 0 A v e . 8 451-4584 M A R K X X - S u m m e r Special • I BR Furn. $160 • 2 BR Furn. $195 • S h u ttle 2 Biles. • N ice Pool - Patio • Fall Leasing Too 3815 G u a d a lu p e 452-8409 The Embers Apts. — S u m m e r Pate — * I BR Furn. $145 ' Sh u ttle Front Door ' Fall Leasing Too 3100 S p e e d w a y 477-0784 Circle Villa Apts. S u m m e r Special • I BR $140 & E • 2 BR $170 & E • Shuttle Bus • Fall Leasing Too 2323 Town Lake Circle 444-5003 La Canada Apts. • S u m m e r Ro tas • All tills Paid • I IR Nm. $195 • 7 I R Fur*. $230 • Nit. Paul - Patio • Walk la (ampul 1300 W. 24 4 7 2 -1 5 9 8 2 2 0 7 Leon Apts. • S u m m e r S p e c ia l • I BR Furn. $160 • 2 BR Fum. $230 • Walk to Campus • Nice Pool A Patio • Fall Leasing Too 2207 Loon 478-5057 LA PAZ APTS. S u m m e r Specials I BR Furn. $160 • • 2 BR Furn $190 • Sh u ttle I Blk • N ice Pool, Patio • Fall Leasing Too 401 W 39 451-3362 THI RETREAT $130 — S u m m e r Pate — Large Furn. Eft. N ice Pool - Patio 4400 Ave. A 454-8163 Su Roca Apts. Su m m e r Sp e cial I B R Furn. $165 W a lk to C a m p u s N ice Pool - L a w n Fall Leasing Also 240 0 Longview 474-8041 Avalon Apts. - S u m m e r Pates - iff. Furn. $ 1 3 0 1 BP Furn. $ I S O 2 BP Furn. $ 1 8 0 Fall Leasing Too 477-0010 VILLA SOLANO APTS. S u m m e r Special 1 BR Fum. 5165 2 BR Furn. $185 Shuttle Comer Intramural Field Across Street 51st & Guadalupe 4 5 1 -5 8 6 5 Hyde Park Apts. — S u m m e r Pates — • EH. Fum. $129 • I BR Fum. $139 • 2 BR Furn. $165 • Shuttle Front Door • City Tennis Courts A Pool A cross Street 441 3 S p e e d w a y 458-2096 “ M A RK I VII APTS. Su m m e r Special • I BR Fum. $160 • Shuttle Front Door • 2 Pools • Fall Loosing Too 31 OO Speedw ay 477-0784 Villa Arcos • S u m m e r Special - • I BR Fum • Shuttle Front Door • Hico Pool - Patio • Fall Loosing Also 3100 Speedway 474-94B6 • Fireplace* • Balconies & patios • Gas cooking & heating • Pool with waterfall • IJT shuttle • Laundry room • Ice machine • Ample parking • One and two bedrooms furnished & unfurnished 1500 Royal Crest 444 7516 THG 4RBOR J Tanglewood Westside! Apartments j I I | Summer Special I Run, d o n 't w a lk — tom orrow w ill be too late | for these choice residences I I I I I I I 1 Bedroom Furnished $135-165 2 Bedroom Furnished $210-220 G a s A water is paid by owner. T.V. Cable Tao! Sh u ttle buses a t your front door Signing Fall l#as«s Now 1403 Norwalk Ln. 472-9614 I I I I I I I A void the Last M inute Rush — Prime Locations A va ila b le Willowcreek Apts. 1911 W illo w c re e k 444-0010 SUPER SUMMER SPECIALS 444-0014 Unfurnished - Furnished Large A partm ents I Bed ro o m F u rn . $160-165 2 Bed ro o m 2 B a th F u rn . $195 2 Large Pools ALSO PRELEASING FOR FALL NOW n , . ^ 3 S B S S B B & CAMINO REAL APARTMENTS 2810 Salado 4 7 2 - 3 8 1 6 4 blocks from campus N o w Leasing for S u m m e r I BR $15700 & E 2BR 2 Ba $220 & E. fully furnished W e pay gas, w a te r & t.v. cab le gas stove, oven & w a te r heating system pool w ith w a te rfa ll, clubroom lighted courtyard w ith B B Q pits 2101 Burton Dr. 447-4130 1 BR from *149“° 2 BR from *17900 3 BR from *29500 t. (kung. ..ilk.ut nett.a S I W I M H R I wiMMi aaait • J ligkra* team* learn Skuttl. bul ira* . ! l(l leuagry ..ami I, K A S I: P R O G R A M A N A R A R U : Klenly ai parbmy (■trxi* rooms . Hit A kart leunot • luimih.d A unlurniik.ll • KreUm.nal mana**ntent * Kutttn* |raen A s k « ilk >iif o u r " S u m iiK T O DAY.* I Ob art I I 6 7 ~ | Rf * I 4 j I (iv*, od* I UM4& Come lo Kingsgate, the unique apartment community ... we care Our endless social activities include racquetball and handball courts pool par ties football teams, shmnastics, trips and more Our vibrant young people found what they were looking for at Kingsgate - come see for yourself S u m m e r R o te s b u m m e r K a t es From $142-$! 74 . i m ' AND 2 M 0*OO* apartment homes J , 2005 WILLOW CREEK 441-5465 LEASING OFFICE ANO MODELS APARTMENTS OWEN 7 DAYS Rivgftstcc o jr v 's R , c ‘ ^ Chuttie kin lei ^ L i]m , j . i i r f r t , a a a C B a a s B s n j n n a a c h i h ED APARTM ENTS ■ F U R N IS H E D A P A R T M E N T S BALCONIES, WINDOWS, T R E E S » B R I I V | 2 ! 5 plus £ . now leasing for S o m m e r F a it and Spring Rpyah cedar acc en t w a iii, fro st tre e re fr.g , r v cabs* continuous cleaning 0ve„ dishw asher <205 S p e e d w a y SK A N SE N a p t s M anage'- 451-6672 Mc BOI 478 U U est 0141 No pets E F F . , I & 2 BR F r o m $150 ABP 5 b lk *. fro m Campus now leasing for su m m er and fall V IE W P O IN T S U M M E R S P E C I A L L U X U R Y APTS. 7 WO B E O R O O M a p a rtm e n t a v a ila b le tor s u m m er $225 pius E 2709 Sa adc Cai; 474 laos 47? J953 n eg otiable ra te s I ba a p a rtm e n t foe re n t W alk N CC 2 b* to U T $245 pius E S u m m er only 476 /O I* S U M M * R LE ASE 2 2 A 8 P C,'#n W I block fro m L e w 476 LJ1 ‘>r 2408 L eo n 476:3467 108 Place Furnished E fficien cy Apts. • D ishw asher Disposal • S w im m in g Pool • P a tio Barbecue • in d iv id u a l storage • Bookshelves • J block to shuttle bus • Cable T V • L au n d ry fa c ilitie s • R esident m an ag er . Swmrn« f fa te 1135 plus E 108 VV 45th __________ 452-1419 453-2771 F L E U R DE LIS 404 E .3 0 t h I and 2 br, su m m er Lovely rates, quiet atm osphere, w alk to c a m p u s , s h u t t le , d i s ­ hwasher, cable T V, phone- 477-5282. MA LINA KAI 405 E.31st w a lk to cam pus, shu ttle and c ity bus, 2br 2ba effic ie n c y Single efficien cy A c ­ com m odations for 1-4 people R enting for now or s u m m e r rates 472-2147 V I P APTS S P E E D W A Y & 33rd S P E C I A L S U M M E R RATES L u x u ry liv in g tor 3 or 4 m a tu re students m studio ap t w ith 3br and 2ba also Ib r Shuttle a t door, pool, w a lk -ln closets. fre e cable, new fu rn itu re , quiet eleg an t a tm o sp h e re Lease e a rly tor s u m m er and fa ll 476-0363 or 476 0067 2 BR STUDIO to U n i v e r s e i * . W a lk in g d is ta n c e large tra m u ra t F ield s, s m all com plex, y a rd a re a s w im m in g pool, c a CM dis­ f u r n it u r e h w a s h e r , d is p o s a l s u m m e r ra te s S705 furnished. 1195 p a r­ tia lly fu rn is h ed n » c t 452-7910 N E A R UT I BR le a s in g fo r 1 170-* 175 p lu s E Now fro s t free s u m m e r U n iq u e design, r e f r ig e r a t o r , T v c a b le d is h w a s h e r. b u ilt m desk professionally decorated, I block m a r b le v a n ity 2410 Lon gview , east of 24th and L a m a r M es q u ite T ree Apts s s a s M i v * * 4 5 ,6672 A p ,3 w 478 O N L Y 3 TO R E N T F O R S U M M E R 2 BR-$250 5 blocks to cam pus. 2518 Leon 472-9981 2 BR TO W NHO US E N E A R H A N C O C K C E N T E R S IM s u m m e r, S22S fa ll N e a r shu ttle C A /C H . Phone 926-1219. CASA D E L R IO A P T ? 3212 Red R iv e r d /v Sfar° iC?impw.* & s h u t,,e - Pool and lau n ­ d ry fa c ilitie s . L ea sin g for s u m m er and Ib r SUO plus E S u m m e r I ba S2I0 plus E 2br, 2br, 2ba S230 plus E F a ll 2br, I ba S245 plus E 2br, 2ba *275 plus E Ib r, s ISS plus E 477 2104 L A RG E E F F I C I E N C I E S S U M M E R R A T E S R E N T I N G FOR S U M M E R l a r g o e f f i c i e n c y , s u m m e r CA CH carp e ted , 4310 A ve B, 459 8018 r a t e s , U T & C ity bus routes Hancock III Apts. 452-6071 4100 A v e A Apt No 106 N E E D T O S A V E A N D S T IL L BE 1 2 B L O C K F R O M C A M P U S 5 B LO C K S W E S T O F C A M P U S S u m m e r lease, la rg e efficiencies, p an el­ liv in g room , offset bedroom and ed fur kitchen, c a b le -w a te r-g a s pished (sto ve! SI 36-$142 Red O ak Apts 2104 San G a b rie l 477-5514 476-7916 K I N G S W O O D P L A C E 4318 Bull C reek Rd. S u m m e r leasing now l a u n d r y . W o o d p a n e l i n g Ib r, $170 plus E and up 2br P o o l , thro u g h o u t S22S plus E 454-7500 S U B L E A S E F O R S U M M E R 3 2 duplex CA CH , shuttle, no pets *290 plus E 471 2521 B E A U T IF U L lu x u ry townhouse M a y 28- Aug 12, 3 br 2 ba g a m e room , 2 pools, 2 tennis cou rts 345 5395 Long Haven Apts. — Sum m er Rates — » I BR Fern. $150 ► 2 BR Furn. $195 ’ Walk to Campus 4 7 2 -5 9 7 4 B L A C K S T O N E APTS 2910 R E D R IV E R 476 5631 W e w ill help you find a ro o m m a te to share expenses *79 50 a m onth a ll bills paid A P A R A G O N P R O P E R T Y UT APTS. FOR YOU 2br, Ib r, effs. . .,38th St. (on shuttle) 26th St. (on shuttle) 453-4002 472-6589 453-7136 H ighland M a ll) G u a d a l u p e S t. ( N e a r 452-4158 F O R $134 D E L T A IN V E S T M E N T S la rg e I br, c a rp e te d , dishw asher, A P B disposal CA CH , shu ttle or w a lk to U T 5199 2212 San G a b rie l 477 8511, 474 7732 EL CID Student Special I BR Furn. $155 Shuttle Front Door Fall Leasing Also 37 04 Speedway 4 5 3 -4 8 8 3 CHEZ JACQUES — Sum m er Rate — * I BR Furn. $1 70 * W alk to Campus * Nice Pool - Patio 1302 W. 24 472-2929 VUU NORTH Sum m er Special • Iff. Furn. $125-130 • I BR Furn. $155-165 • 2 BR Furn. $180-185 • Fall Leasing Tool 4 5 2 0 Duval 451-5641 E L CAMPO Sum m er Special • I BR Furn. $160 • 2 BR Furn. $190 • Fall Leasing Too 305 W. 39 452-8537 — Continental Apts. Sum m er Rate - • 2 BR Furn. $195 • Shuttle Corner • Nice Pool - Patio • Fall Leasing Too 9 1 0 E. 40 4 5 1 -4 1 3 7 l h stride NEW LUXURY IBR FURN. APTS. F a ll leases from $195 41st & Ave. C 477-6311 ss Si ASPENWOOD APTS. P releasing Sum m er & Fall Summer 1 BR Furn. $ 1 6 0 Plus E 2 BR Furn. $ 1 9 0 Plus E Fall IBR $195 Plus E 2 BR $ 2 4 0 Plus E S e / a c t Y o u r A p a r t m e n t f o r t y • Shuttle front Door • Intramural field across Street for year sports • 2 Large Peels 4 5 2 -4 4 4 7 4 5 3 9 Guadalupe ‘ 1 5 0 • 5 blocks to cam pus • L arg e pool • S um m er & fa il leasing 2518 Leon 472*9981 E L C H A P A R R A L S U M M E R S P E C IA L I BR - $125 407 W . 38 th 451-1353 O N L Y 3 T O L E A S E . O N E B E O R O O M furnished a p a rtm e n ts S u m m er rates SI25 SUS *007 W 26th 477 1325 toto VV 23rd v e ry nice I br apt a v a ila b le lune I CA CH S its P M E 7b ' ba ap t I CA CM $27$ plus f a va ab e June 472 2273 M ! br F u R N ap t w a lk in g distan ce $140 cam pu s w ate- anc gas pa d 345 1552 2104 San G a b ' el 3 rm A P A R T M E N T 6 biks W cam pu s ternate g rad p re fe r r e d No We shu ttle 47* 1232 a fte r 5 'I T 0 * '" 9 S 160 p lu s D ill* M U N I C I P A L A U D I T O R I U M a r e a tw o P a t es bedroom $19$ pius E now an d s u m m er O ak k n o ll 620 S 1st 444 I Tat balconies L u x u ry trees R O O M A N D BOARD C H I M N E Y S W EE P A few S u m m er V acancies L eft r n *v r > * 4 HELP W A N T E D WORK, LABOR TOIL, ENDEAVO R, EXERTION Make *3500 TRAVEL PROFIT LEARN EXPERIENCE EXCITEMENT This Summer CALL 459-5773 FOR INTERVIEW Clerk Typists SCHOOL S OUT KELLY IS I Nil lf yeu've been leaking for summer employment ... talk with Kelly. We can keep you as busy os you want to be. Geed Hourly rates ... end never a fee, 111 W. Andersen Lit. Suite ?1« 451-6525 KELLY GIRL k Otvtwcn t i (Catty SnvK ti. Inc Mat an ofancy Nava, a fa# (qual Opp®,turin, Im ploy*. M f NEED A JOB THIS SUMMER? W . H Poy You To Try Army ROTC. over $400 plus room, board and transportation costs to Fort Knox, KY. 3 0 M a y -6 July 19 J u n o -2 7 July 17 J u ly -2 4 August NO Military obligation limited openings C AU NOW! 4 7 1 - 5 9 1 9 fall opening as camp leader with tbe Houston Independent School District Outdoer Education Center en Lake Livingston. Duties involve instruction A assignment typically associated with a camp counselor. jobs Permanent A seasonal available. Sign up for interviews at the teacher placement service, EDR 294, Thursday or career center, Jester Center, Friday. 4 a » ; * A ' f i n , 4 , W J 'e n * * I * ' 6T U w i t * * ? * 2 7 0 6 N u t c t i 4 7 7 -9 7 6 6 Coed residence, supervisor on times. Security duty at all guard, carpeted & air con­ ditioned suites. 15 meals per week, parking and maid ser­ vice included. On W.C. shuttle route. Swimming pool and tundecks. Color T V. and study lounges $ 3 0 0 par session • double $ 4 0 0 per session - single Umttmt MNK* aho a retie h1* tm M f Coff rn w ota tm frw fiw r* SUMMER & F A U VACANCIES AT ARK and 21st St. COLLEGE HOUSE C O E D COOPERATIVES Self-governing solar powered AC, 19 meals a week, single & d o u b l e r o o m s , p o o l . Educational A social communi­ ty friendly people. Flexible summer contracts. Come visit us at 2000 Poorl or 707 W. 21st St. d isposa l, shag IF shu ttle corner Ib r S145 m onth CA CH . d is h w a s h e r c*h p et pool 5175 m onth plus E E ft plus E 105 VV 38th’ i St. 454-8483 E F F , I BR, 2 BR Apts. W alk to cam pus, all features, s u m m e r & fa ll ra tes , 2907 W est Avenue. 474-1712 F E W S U M M E R CHOICES L E F T • R E S E R V E D P A R K IN G • ON S H U T T L E • F R E E P A R T IE S la u n d ro m a t, no nets I and 2 hrs, pool. please * I TO and up, a il b ills paid except C O C K T A I L THE SPAN ISH T R A I L 451-3470 4520 Bennett C O O L E F F IC IE N C Y E N C L A V E $128 plus ELEC. 4204 S P E E D W A Y ON S H U T T L E 452-2239 2 2 0 0 SAN G A B R I E L Casbah Apts. I 8, 2 br a v a ila b le d ish w a s h e r/d is p o s a l color co o rd in ated fu rn itu re ceilin g tuns B B Q oits O ff street p a rk in g CA CH and co v ered p a rk in g Now leasing for the su m m er. $235-240 plus E but negotiable ___________478-1749 SI 40-$ 160 Fountain T e rra c e Apts. Ib r , fu lly c a rp e te d , L a rg e w alk-in closets, cable T V , d is­ posal, w a te r and gas, s w im ­ m ing pool, furnished. W alking distance to U T . No ch ild ren, no pets. 610 W. 30th Apt. 134 - m a n a g e r 477-8858 lo o kin g * 120-*130 P L U S E , s u m m e r rates. W e fo r q u ie t, co n s c ie n tio u s a rc students in te re ste d rn a la r g e effic ie n c y 3 locations near cam pu s C A /C H , la u n ­ 2812 R io d r y , d e a d b o lts , d is p o s a l G ra n d e, 476 2812 P E R F E C T L O C A T IO N ' L a rg e Ib r, ca la u n d ry room , s e p a ra te ch, disposal, study a re a c a rp e te d sundeck Cable, w ate r gas paid W a lk to cam pu s or shu t­ fa ll $175 tle No pets S u m m e r USO, C a rre ll Apts 2812 Nueces. 472-6497 f o r s u m m e r a n d N O W L E A S I N G t h e r e a fte r R e s e rv e y o u r 1- 1'* now F ro m s 137, w a fe r gas c a b le disposal paid W alk UT — 304 E 33rd, 478-6928 472 8648 Shuttle U T w est - 700 H e a rn , 476-0953 L A R G E 2BR in old house S u ita b le 37710- $285 plus B W u tilitie s 453-3537 14th A p p o in tm e n t ID E A L L O C A T IO N , nice, cool e ffic ie n ­ f a n , cy H a rd w o o d fire p la c e $205 plus e le c tr ic ity 104 w 35fh 345 1273 or 452 2853. flo o rs , c e ilin g E F F IC IE N C Y F O R sublease, June to August is F u rn is h e d , a ir con ditioned N E W M A N H A L L W O M E N 'S D O R M S u m m er Rates $45 up weekly S m a ll, q u ie t, frie n d ly , e x ­ cellent food, doubles, single rooms, m aids, parking , lau n ­ to d r y , k itc h e n e tte , c lo se ev e ry th in g . R o o m /b o ard , 19 m eals. 2026 G u ad alu p e 476-0669 W O M E N A N D M E N , la rg e room s, good fro m cam p u s L a u re l m eals, House Co-op 2612 G u a d a lu p e 476 5154 or 478 04 70 I block S U M M E R s i l l - s u e / m o F a l l $145 SIES m o S h are food, w ork, expenses In te r-C o -o p Council. 510 W 23rd, 476- 1957 fro m cam p u s O p p o rtu n ity D E U T S C H E S H A U S Co-op C o e d ) U s to blocks p ra c tic e c o n v e rs a tio n a l G e rm a n and Spanish a t supper B o arders w elco m e 477 8865. 474 1397 R O O M A N D B O A R D fo r p a rt tim e child - ca re , som e cooking, 2 young boys. Sue 441 4041. 474 5034 f u r n is h e d duplexes S U M M E R WOR K WE N E E D TO H I R E IO Q U A L I F I E D P E O P L E T O I N H O U S T O N W O R K D O I N G O F F I C E S A L E S W O R K . S tartin g pay $860/m onth. C all for in te rv ie w G ordon M c K e n ­ n a , 7 1 3 -6 5 4 -9 8 4 8 o r s e n d G o r m a n r e s u m e to In c . 4775 S. P r o m o t i o n s F re e w a y , F o r t W o rth , Tx 76115 (817) 921-5111. You say you w a n t to spend a sun tille d su m m e r In A u stin but the folks a r e n 't w illin g to f 'n a n ce your tan n in g oil h ab its W ell, h e re s the an s w er to your p ro b le m jo b * N o w d o n 't sto p H o w a b o u t a re a d in g W e 'll be h irin g bus persons 8, h o s tpersons w it h no e x p e r ie n c e r e ­ qu ired W e pay a good h o u rly w age w ith frin g e benefits a n d have a g re a t softball te a m A p p ly in person M o n th ru T h u n fro m 2 4 LOCK, STOCK & B A R R E L 2700 W. Anderson Lane 451-7521 476 2900° LaW Scho<>1 f?ent S U M M E R L E A S IN G , w a lk U T . spacious I A 2 BR , e x c e lle n t storage, s w im m in g lau n d ry, fro m $175 476-7614 459- pool, 0156 I BR, $200, 2 BR , CA, CH, A B P , pool, S260 W a lk in g d istance U T G ra d u a te students p re fe rre d No pets 3 0 U W h itis L A R G E 2B R apt $240 su m m e r, $250 fa ll plus u tilitie s 1007-A W 22nd, 453-3537 tor ap p o in tm en t S U B L E T F O R S U M M E R B e a u tifu lly furnished IB R a p a rtm e n t C o m fo rta b le L R w ith big desk $185 m o., includes a ll u tilitie s , linens, AC, etc W a lk to c a m ­ pus Phone 453-1635 E N F I E L D A R E A nice 2b r tu rn , CA, pool, cable, shuttle, $180 plus E 1311 E x ­ position 477-6850 AC, F U R N room S h are baths, A B P $80 3310 Red R iv e r 476 3634 S T U D E NT'S T H E B ro w n lee (2 blocks fro m c a m p u s ) now takin g deposits S tu ­ dent s u m m e r rates, S 9 0 m o n th , u tilitie s paid A ir con ditionin g, phone plugs, la u n d ry room , shag c a rp e t, study tables and double bookshelves 2502 Nueces No IOO C a ll 477-1379 a tte r 5 pm S U B L E A S E O N E bedroom , one bath fo r s u m m er $135 p ius e le c tr ic ity Close to cam pu s 474-7874 A C T N O W TO get A ct ll s u m m e r ra te s E ffic ie n c y a v a ila b le M a y I, $145 plus E a t 112 W est 38th C a ll 345-7406 S U M M E R R A T E S one bed ro om C A /C H , on shu ttle and bus * 155 plus E 407 E 45th, 454 0767 S U M M E R L E A S IN G w alk U T , s m all e f­ ficien cy hot plate, re frig e r a to r , $125 Pius e le c tric B A G P ro p e rt.e s 459-0156 34 5 3853 S U B L E A S E to r s u m m e r. I bd $190 A B P , to cam pu s C a ll fu rn is h ed ap t W a lk a fte r 5 pm 478-1031 L A R G E I b r ap t N ic e pool an d c o u r­ ty a rd A a l" to cam pu s $125 pius E for M a y $140 pius E , r e m a in d e r of s u m m e r, Casa De; Rio. 3212 Red R iv e r 477 2104 N E E D TO S U B L E T p leasan t fu rn is h ed a p a rtm e n t S u m m e r, b a c k y a rd , porch, near L aw School, p a rk SISO pius D i lls Ben 478 4353 W A L K IN G D IS T A N C E TO UTT very nice e ffic ie n c y a p a rtm e n ts 5 blks west of cam pus, balconies, skylights, q u ie t neighborhood $150-155 mo C a ll Ted at 478 7564 I br $ 162 SO-S190. O P E N F O R S U M M E R e fficien cy $145-5160 40 d iffe re n t floo r l a u n d r y , p l a n s W i n d o w s , p o o l, landscaped 3 blocks U T 807 W 25fh No 30 477 2082 $140 E F F IC IE N C Y . J blks U T Pool, la u n d ry 709 W 26th St 477 2082 or 472 1561 S T O P Do All These Ad* Drive YOU BANANAS? IV# Rent Apartments, Duplexes, Homes 24 hoar*//days/All aver Austin Real World Properties Campus 443-7212 free locating Service North 3454350 P L A Y B O Y 'S • 2 BR • V au lted beam ed ceiling • H ang ing fire p la c e • P aneled w alls • T e rra zzo floors • Furnish ed • C o m p lete kitchen D u plex near U n iv e rs ity $ l8 5 /m o June- August, or S eptem b er M a y D eposit of I m o n th 's re n t re q u ire d with *185 plus lease 3408A W est A venue F o r re n ta l, please c e il M rs P itc h e r in San A ntonio # t 512-224-1871, 9-5, M o n d a y th ru F r id a y f i r s t s u m m e r s e s s io n S U B L E A S E d u p lex, nice yea rd , $92 50 plus b ills 458 34132 Of 443 8119 S U M M E R S U B L E A S E . I b d rm M a y 15 Aug 30 AC 7 blks W est U T W indows $175 plus b ills 477 9935 la rg e spacious, four blocks CL O S E 2 I to taw school and on sh u ttle to© $235. call 472 5216 K eep try in g L A R G E one b ed ro o m d u p lex, p a r tly f u r ­ nished $140 p m onth plus bills 28th and R.o G ra n d e, 476 9318 S U B L E A S E fo r s u m m e r 3 2, CA , CH , shu ttle no pets S290 plus E 471-7571 TO P L A C E A C L A S S I F I E D A D C A L L 471-5244 HELP W A N TE D B A K E R Y D E L I im m e d ia te opening for say tim e h elp 345-0346 S W I M M I N G days w eek C a ll Nancy, 444 6672 te a c h e r fo r ages 3-7. 2 A B P E F F IC IE N C Y CA C H , Shuffle or w alk to U T size 2215 Leon, 474 7732 S E A M S T R E S S needed im m e d ia te ly to m a « e c h ild re n 's costum es 454 5349 451 F O R T H E S U M M E R tw o bed ro om tw o b a t h A B P on $325 m onth C a ll 478-6315 t h e s h u f f le r o u t e I BR anes E f f i c i e n c y ' s ) IO-$130 plus e le c tric ity I M ock fro m cam p u s, shut­ tle cable 2800 Sw isher 472-5369 N E A R C A M P U S c o rn e r 25th and San * tao A ntonio One bed ro om a p a rtm e n t C a n 477-3690 a tte r s a p p l y N O W for s u m m e r neip Posse £ ast. San J a c in to a t O w vai A p p ly m per son S U M M E R W O R K A U S T IN a re a fu ll or p a rt lim e $95 t)9Q w ee* to s ta rt A p ply inn, in person a t R a m a d a G ondolier Suite 728 South iH 35 a t E R iv e rs id e W ednesday or T n u rs d ay, 9 a m , l l a m , I pm 3 p m only N o phone c a lls accepted LOCK, STOCK, & B A R R E L is now accepting app licatio n s for lunch host/ hostesses. A p p ­ ly in person, 2-4 pm, M -T h u r., 2700 W Anderson Lane. M O T H E R E A R T H Needs co cktail help. Apply in person, 1-3:30 p.m . 1907 E. R ive rs id e Dr. W A IT P E R S O N A N D K IT C H E N W O R K E R Both s ta rt M a y IS A p p ly today, 4-6 pm LES AMI S S I D E W A L K CAFE 24th & San Antonio A re You S U P E R S P E C IA L ? The most b eau tiful wom en a re for nude m odeling. desired O pportunities a re endless for the rig h t g irl. Send personal in fo rm atio n and photo to Box 18981, Austin 78760 BEAT T H E S U M M E R RUSH FOR JOBS I M M E D I A T E O P E N I N G S l l pm 7 am , paid w hile being F u ll tim e to fra m e d store F u n tim e e m p lo yees q u a lity for a ll co m p a n y ben efits $3 15 hou r when assigned P a r t t,m e - 5 p m a fte r I am , A p p ly a t 2805 Rogge Lane S T O P N G O M A R K E T S E q u a l O p p o rtu n ity E m p lo y e r f ir m H A L F - D A Y in te llig e n t ty p is t needed to learn c o m p u ter data e n try . fe a tu rin g S m a ll C P A re la x e d atm osph ere under im ­ m ense pressure (do not expect im m e d ia te fa m e a n d /o r fo r­ tu n e ). C a ll Donna at 474-6261. E q u a l O p p o rtu n ity. "H O L ID A Y HOUSE N o. 3 2606 G uadalupe a r e t a k i n g W e f o r c a s h ie rs . a p p lic a tio n s M u st be able to w ork noon sh ift, nights and weekends a v a ila b le . W e w ill tra in . F or in te rv ie w , call Roy R ivers a t 476-0545 n o w T y_. A, 1978 □ THE DAILY TEXAN p Page 29 HELP W A N T E D SERVICES ■ a r c h e o l o g i T a l F I E L D A S S IS T A N T S Applications tor s u m m e r e m p lo y m e n t as Archeological P ie ta Assistants ar# now be ng taken bs Tex as P a rk * anc vs a v D e p a rtm e n t 4700 S m ith School Rd P r e . o u i a rch e o lo g ic a l e x c a v a tin g exp erien c e cm histo ric sites p re fe rre d An Eq» ai O p p o rtu n ity a f f ir m a t iv e Ac hon E m p lo y e r A T T E N T I O N M R O R M R S P R O F E S S O R , ng C o ndom iniu m * * *» » •& » • im m e d ia te ly * T o c®v e r* 0 w o r r i t * p ark and Ch a m ir C a ll M a r y Lou Sh irer C R S 345 2375 S U M M E R JOBS D a lla s -F t W orth M e tro p le x S5 hour. F u ll or p a rt tim e. M a le or fe m a le C a ll (214) 328- 3077 or ( 2 U ) 271-3671 fro m 12 noon to J pm only. (Cut o u ’ and S ave I N E E D L M R A m o n e y 5 The Flo w er People need people to sen flo w ers t h u n ’M l 102' h,gh<‘' , 1 AtnrrsissJon paid d aily W O R K W I t i l kids 1 ar<* o p p o rtu n ity for m a r r ie d couple w .th no 1 h ild ra n to w ork and iivo w ith ado lescents In a h o m elik e re s id e n tia l tre a tm e n t f a c ility Position in v o lv e s h e lp in g a n d p a r e n t i n g 6 adolescents 0 3 17' s itu a tio n otters r * t r lie u t lear mug e x p o n e n t * * tor those in field and terested in Social s e r v ic e * seeking chances tor perso n al grow th Benefits include s a la ry a n d paid vac a hon c .*11 the S e ttle m e n t C lu b n o m # « s w eekday s Sift 2150 c o o k s A N D W A I t i n R s o N s needed f u l l or p a r ttim e W a g e * a n d benefits f r e n c h Onion 7005 | R iv e rs id e 441 8895 I R A V I I 1 F O R E IG N s h ip * 1 wood p a y 1 No exp e rie n c e M e n w o m en stam p ed long envelope G lo b e tro tte r Box 1766 C 4 K ansas City M o 64)4) J O IN T H I W h at a Tea m af W h at a to B u rg e r W e o fte r m o i it flex ib le h r * m o n th ly bemuses $3 25 hr it you l 4 f , * orK g it'flt p ie c e to w ork 6106 noons Ap ply 65J9 Bur o a t Rd C a m e ro n Rd 951* n L a m e r 1810 VU k and 7.10k Burleson Rd No phone ta ils please r a is e * p a r t I M M ! D I A K lim # help N f i l l M o rn in g s and afte rn o o n s Hours tle x i hie betw een 7-6 p m M a rt tim e now I e p e rg n e # w ith to n fu lltim e sum m er t ir e s e r v ic e p r e fe r r e d s tru c tio n or P e rr y Rose T ru th T ire S e rv ic e c e n te r 2201 A irp o rt ( S A R T I N O E R t X P E R i f N I T O w a itp e r son and cook A p p ly in person 900 Red R iver C a ll M a r t e l V ic to r tor an poinfm erit 472 6779 l e v e l h e a d e d a p t M A N A G I R energetic p e rs o n !s I to m a n a g e la rg e $tu d e n t c o m p le x N o c h i l d r e n p e ts to P r o p e r ty M a n a g e r , 4307 R e su m e M o u n ta in P a th D r A ustin 78/59 N I 1 D p a r t tim e e m p lo y m e n t atte r in te rio rs noons and niyhts for P a u l * W estgate M a ll store P r e fe r c r e a tiv e and h a rd w o rk in g salesperson Apply P a u l s in fe rio rs , 5909 B u rn e t Road fo r m e d ic a l P A R T T I M f O p e n in g tr ansi r iptionlsf M u s t ty p e 75 w pm C a ll Personnel for a p p o in tm e n t E D E 452 0361 in W A N T f D M A 1 I or fe m a le fo r p a rt tim e local m a n u fa c tu r in g f ir m position M u s t be sharp, h a rd w o rk in g w ith a s t a b le b a i k g r o u n d C o m e by M IU B o okb in d ery Inc a f 2409 M a n o r Rd for a n in te rv ie w c o u p le to M A I U R I R E S P O N S IB L f m an ag e a n d m a in ta in studen t d o rm in U I a re a M u st be a b le to h a n d le m in o r re p a irs W ife m u st not w o rk or go to In fa n t o k No p e t* F u rn ish ed school a p t plus sala ry S ta r t M a y 16 C all M r D e m p sey, 444 6671 D R IV E RS W A N T f D for D o m in o s P U f le x ib l e hours, / a M ust have ow n car good pay Apply 404 W 76th Street W A N T E D a t t r a c t i v e w aitp eo p le, some e x p erien c e h elp fu l, w ith a b a lr for the exotic Apply a n y tim e L a Fonda de la Noetic, 2405 Nueces E X P E R I E N C E D P A I N T E R 'S h e lp e r 259 0613 a fte r 5 p m TI R f O O T TMOSf tor su m m er e m p lo y m e n t > C a ll 476 6534 " W e ll < a ll you lis ts " I ake ai tion I A R N *180 W f E K spare tim e af hom e tree d e ta ils , send self ad G u a ra n te e d dressed stam ped tony e n v e lp e to B ill Tay lo r, P O Box 694, B a strop . Tx 7860J P A R T T IM E stockers w an ted , 4 IC e v e n ­ ing shut M onday th ru F r id a y , 8 hour sh ift on w eekends (h o u r* w ill vary on w eekend s) Apply R y la n d e r 's No J 206 E Bee C aves Rd busers needed P E L IC A N S W M A R I im m e d ia te e m p lo y m e n t $3 75 per h o yr an d up A p p ly d a ily . 9 12 AS S IS T M A N A G E R . V a rs ity T h e a tre W o rk p r im a rily on S a tu rd a y and Sun im m e d ia te ly d ay M u s t be responsible and outgoing P er conal inter view beld Tuesday. M a y 2nd a t th e a tre betw een 3 5 pm $150 m o S ta rtin g O U T D O O R S U M M E R T hr illw a y W ater Slide, 782 3348 jobs w ith Aqua to r e m p l o y m e n t , is now accepting L 0 5 T R E S BO BO S to r a p p li c a t io n s kitc h en help, bus help, hostess/host, c as h ier, and w aitperson s, A ll serious In q u irie s m a y apply in person at 1706 W 18th in the 26 Doors Shopping Center T E L E P H O N E SO! IC IT O R , N o rth a re a E venlng w ork No sellin g $2 so hr F o r in te r v ie w a p p o in tm e n t, c a ll 837 5608 M o n d a y f rid a y , noon 9 pm if all IS T H IS THE s u m m e r you get learn , exp e rie n c e to g eth er? Trave l, en d eavo r an d m a k e $3500 C a ll 459 5773 to d ay! P A R I T i M t e xp erien c ed s e rvice sta tion afte rn oon help and a ll day 3016 G u a d a lu p e Taxaco station M f t p W A N T E D, nig h t w atc h p erso n , 7901 S IM 35 712 3341 t M M f D IA TE o p e n in g p h o to g r a p h e r , S a la r y o p e n N o rth e a s t Texas w e e k ly n e w s p a p e r Send resu m e to Th# G iltn e r M ir r o r PO Box 750, G ilm e r Tx 75644 r e p o r te r L a r g e to r T Y P IS T S 75 wpm a n d a c c u ra c y , f le x i­ ble hours . good pay T w o location s C all 443 4498 or 4 5 3-545? to r N O W A C C E P T IN G a p p l!, a tto rn /V aitpersons, re s ta u ra n t e m p lo y m e n t b a rte n d e rs , b arba cks, and k itc h e n per sonnet A p p ly G u a d a lu p e B a r and G rill, 17th and G u ad alu p e, 8 arn 5 p m S U M M t R JOBS 8 m a k in g s o la r codec tors m e c h a n ic a l a p titu d e but no e x ­ p e r ie n c e r e q u ir e d C a ll C o le S o la r System s, 444 7565 P H Y S IC A L ! . V h a n d ic a p p e d stu d en ts a r e now in te rv ie w in g to r p a r t tim e attern 40f*ts^as w e ll as liv e In a tte n d a n t c a re NE E DE D teacher d r iv e r fo r a fte r school ch ild re n 3 hrs a day, th ru M a r then f u ll­ l l tim e s u m m e r C a ll 477 3437 before a m C A R P E N T E R S h elper basic tools need­ ed P a y based on a • p e n a n c e 34 5 2056 GE NE R A I L A B O R E R M is c e lla n e o u s w ork aroun d con struction $7 75 to s tart 345-2056 to C O N S C IE N T IO U S m a r r ie d couple assist m a n a g e r for p a r t ia l r e n t 5 blks 79! # C o m p l®* v la r 9® e ffic ie n c ie s 476 S E R V IC E a g e n t n e e d e d p a r t tim e S o m e n ig h t s a n d w e e k e n d s A p iy B u dget R e n t A-C ar 3330 M a n o r Rd I N T E R E S T IN G S u m m e r 10b w ith good p a y fun or p a rt tim e fo r mature depen d a b le h a rd w o rk in g p erso n in M adison S q u a re G a r d e n s P r o m o tio n D e p a r t ­ m e n t M u s t have le tte rin g a n d c re a tiv e a r tis tic ta le n t C a ll D ic k or S u zanne 477 7000 A T T O R N E Y needs p a r t Across stre e t speakin g p re fe rre d 477 7887 typ ist fro m c am p u s Spanish tim e e x p e rie n c e d b a b y s itte r p a r t T IM E w an ted for J m onth old in fa n t C a re for m m y o ffic e b u ild in g a d ja c e n t t*> u t te m p u s M a y 8 June J C a ll 478 5693 d a y tim e ) o r 836 9701 (e v e n in g * ) S U M M E R O P E N IN G S re n ta l c le rk s and s e rv ic e a g e n ts A M and p m sh ifts A irw a y s R e n t A-C ar, 35f5 M a n o r Rd F U L L t i m e m a rk in g and re c e iv in g p a r ­ se/ n for r e t a il clo th in g store $3 start in s u r a n c e a n d h o s p it a liz a t io n p iu s ben efits V e ry p le a s a n t w o rk in g con for person who p refers difions, d ea l (40 hrs w e e * J C a ll M r w o rk in g alo n e H e n sh aw . fo r app t 452-1610 Bo Peen 3830 N L a m a r / / A N T E D d ishw ashers an d bu$per$on, d ay and n ig h t shifts, w o rk now an d th ru s u m m e r No e x p e rie n c e n ac e s s a ry T a k ­ ing ap p licatio n s fro m T J s, Sth a n d G u a d a lu p e l l 4, S a tu rd a y w h e re you have a choice C O P I E S T O P Q U A L I T Y Good Q u a lity or 3* Budget Copies uni ©Hated loose sheets 48 hours) 0 u« ,ify v e rs a tility Speed Convenience G ra d School D u a lity g u a ra n te e d w ord processing fu ll service b -ndery g i n n y s c o p y i n g S E R V IC E 10P'” w e e k d a y * 9 5 S a tu rd a y . . l f * a i t ! * M * " vt 71 108 C o«yra»$ 472-9027 INSTANT PASSPORT I AP P LIC A TIO N S Whita You Wait R o y ( <> S t tt< li 2 4 2 0 G uadalupe 4 7 2 -4 2 1 9 E*.(*.<% » 7| p i.,, bill* 474 *714 # " # f « tu 'fim # * • J VAt t fatly 'pommel# wan! md ivtntntt i n t . p t n * , , * HOU*# 477 l*«7 J I ' / N J 'B l » < t i A N ta**'#'* ro o m • C r «*APta4 tor *./** **^t* n <• 7 I apt * ti** ♦*..-** A* ,«•'« 44 ! *777 Mf O P A D U A T I tij I B o ra r tn f.'t. o w b»*troorn **. *N a m t ( i m i v t t r u c e N T wa*, to 4 'a n 4 7 * ) 1*7 M A T U R I MOU J V A T . 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M plus bitte No animala HOO dtp a v a ila b le a f a r )u n # U t 7707 Stanford t an# 47* 7*** R e m o d e le d , d e a n TO P L A C E A C L A S S I F I E D AD C A L L 471-5744 BUSINESS ORRORTUNITIIS I -tr-ng P>< *•;<■#. I v’a- 'ad * Strt«r*P44 I monfBp ago w*»B » h *7|f HOC pp.*pt Vow can too I tail a«d Vrp'ybody lh# ’o##t if’t an 4*10 mat Irpmad w bam 'a n e n d ra rd 'own- ram piano 4J3 4(0* a f a r $ pm BUA N MOU JC 7 oadroomt 12 Mkt N o rfn U T 1741 ptyt o f it d ip t, AC C m Be tp o n tib t# a d o lft no pats 47* ip m UNCLASSIFIED M A . B f r P y f sr S T P A I W tho p 452 4404 D i g i t A l ClOCS R e p a ir thoo 45? 4404 J'a r a o S a i 1 ■ t ra a t tf 1 a t t 459 0454 f l a t ra.'-.r re p a ir $-7 pm 44 ! 7$p$ 7 4 T o y o ta C a lica C ifa >t7)M 474 4733 P r . v a 'a plan# tr.p V a * .c o 447 /070 C»ood72Vay#riCkJ$00rrii ar 47449*2 lOJiif* kaGood Condi'iontM 474 74*4 f o r * C d o r T V w ork t G r a a 719$ 4747644 7 and berg Sac 1700 I on t 474 9775 FOR RENT ST O R ERO O M S CLO SE TO C A M PU S la r g e storeroom s a v a ila b le for $20 or $30/month, 24 hour access 477-9275 between 6 and 9 pm M I N . S T O R A G E S O U T H C o n e r# *# b io ;* c o n ttru c 'io n te c u n ty p atro l HO up m on thly 444 2411 W o o d la n d ! a a a Mini Wareiioute FUBUC NOTICES Th# T r a v i t C o u n ty D em o c re tie E * #r uftee C o m m it'# # win hold a public I h f r**U 0 ' * * * * , h * A u t o m a t i c ° * Tabulating aqutpm enf to be u tllu e o in 'he P r im a r y a l a d d i n on M a y 4, 1974 on Sa tu rd a y , M a ; 4, 1978 at 6 OO pm I L ? A u d io M u n ic ip a l B u ild in g |?4 i ! W e t ' 4fh 2nd floor A ny in terested per ton m a y atten d tb it p u b lic »eu K en W t n d le r , T r p y it C o u n ty D e m o c ra tic v n#if TRAVEL M A IL B R I T A N I A ' And IU about tim # we had < h eap London fa re * B u t can you a v o id TH# a irlin e rip-off fro m th e r e ? B o r s e n ta 'io n a iy p m #d o v p rte p t tra v e l, c a ll or w rit# P lig h t M untert, in c 1353 6 a t t 87th St B ro k ly n , N V LONDON 'hit lummir Gradual* ttu- irn t w anfpd to l i a r * a p a rtm e n t near M a r b le A rc h 474 4944 (212) 763 7894 on SAVINGS m Revitalizing Austin via private sectors possible alternative Editor's note: This is the fourth of a five-part series on downtown revitaliza­ tion A two-day “ Austin I'ptu rn ” sym­ posium begins Monday to plan the revitalization program. By C A R O LE C H IL E S City Reporter If efforts to revitalize Austin’s core areas are to be successful, city officials have said, the private sector must be encouraged to in­ vest downtown. To stimulate private sector involvement in revitalization, the city has created an Office of Economic Development. The office also will serve to coordinate the city ’s efforts, City Manager Dan Davidson said. The office w ill consist of a director, an ad­ m inistrative assistant and secretary, and w ill cost the city $833,067 from May 1978, to September 1982 Davidson said he hopes to have the office tem porarily set up in city of­ fices by the end of May. The permanent office in the central city w ill be operating by Oct. I, he estimated in a report to the City Council. M ayor Carole M cClellan and council member Lee Cooke have spearheaded the council s interest in economic development. However, their terms expire next May, and with a new council, city interest in revitaliza­ tion also may expire. Encouraging on-going revitalization efforts even through a possible change in city ad­ ministrations — also w ill be a m ajor goal of the office. ’ That is one of the features the mayor and M r Cooke talked about (in instructing David­ son to set up the o ffice),’* the city manager said. Convincing the private investor that the city is not going to drop revitalization efforts after he has started putting money into down­ town may not prove easy. We re going to have to produce,” David­ son said. City production includes budgeting money for Capital Improvements Projects in the core area Davidson said the Planning Com­ mission is looking at a number of C IP recommendations to support the revitaliza­ tion program. Recommendations include building an ex- lb it center and an arena, renovating Municipal Auditorium and completing a drainage program for Congress Avenue to stop businesses from being flooded, Davidson said The city also must make sure it is suppor­ tive of any development projects, he added. (Next: The private sector responds to City Council’s efforts at revitalisation.) Head resident criticizes unreasonable red tape K v P H I I I P R R E C u r o By P H IL IP B R A S H E R • Bein g a head resid e n t m eans fighting too much U n iv e rs ity red tape, Rob McCommon, Sim kins H all head resident, says. The mass of paperwork and the flood of memoranda he has to contend with keep him from doing an effective job, he said. “The biggest complaint I have about this job is the amount of stuff coming down from the (M en ’s Resident H all) coordinator’s office,” McCommon said “ I just don’t have time for the other things I would like to do.” M C C O M M O N , a sen io r petroleum land management major from Snyder, has lived fiv e y e a rs in U n iv e rs ity residence halls, two of them as a resident assistant before becoming head resident at Simkins He receives $200 per month and room and board in his position The “ other things’’ McCom­ mon is responsible for are: training PA s, keeping dis­ cipline within the dorm and re q u e s tin g m a in te n e n ce orders I would like to have more time to work in the dorm ,” he said There are too many meetings that I don’t need to go to,” he added. One area he would like to spend more time with is in training RAS. “ I WOULD like to see a counseling course for head residents to assist the R A s,” he said. “ Not a real big thing, but maybe a couple of days so that we can help them.” McCommon said he has been kidded for living five years in a dorm, but said he does not regret it. In fact, he said he is trying to sell the idea to his younger brother, who is planning to transfer to the University in the fall. “ W e g ive e veryb o d y a chance to be a stud’ in something, a chance to ac­ complish something outside of school while they are here,” McCommon said. t r y in c u l t u r a l to p r o v i d e W e recreational, progrjm s s o c i a l , and educational areas for the re s id e n ts ,’ ’ he said. M cCom m on added that residents are not forced to take part in any programs but are free to do as much as they want to. W e’re here for the benefit of the guys, not to throw things at them,” he said. Nevertheless, many do par­ ticipate. “ In fact, a lot of guyi here think it’s a lot better than a fra te rn ity ,” McCommon said. McCommon adm itted he does not like his present job at m uch as that of an R A because of the paperwork it requires. As a result, he does not have a chance to get to know the residents as well. However, he said he is able to get some sa tisfa ctio n , i r o n i c a l l y , by h e l p i n g residents cut the red tape he said he is tied down with. ; Carriage House has the rtment you'll want to liv > SUMMER. FROM *147. & E Gas paid by owner Shuttle bus Pretty laundry rooms Professional management Two pools • Gameroom • Clubroom • Water Volleyball • Planned activities • EH., I, 2, & 4 BR's Lease today! Don't wait! L _ _ _ _ . A - U P I Tvl.ptw c M ay 4, 1978 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Page 31 ( I oO T AN “A O N (AW 'N r-N O O P-1 j iI -— ----- w / I / dECAUSc V0U u£££ SOCH A 3tc HELP I M GOING TO TnEAT HOU TO A N IC E-C R EA M CONE TODAY’S CROSSWOBD PUZZLE UNITED Feature Syndicate Wednesday s Puzzle Solved a/ . . " ' - 0 r.t v - , \ a FLAVORS ( 40U U N S EN T IN A T ^ \ J 3 l6 A ^ ACROSS ’ Grotto 5 Tfa - - 9 SnaKe 'A E Indian vine l l Plural of the 1(5 Softly Mu r sic 17 Sites 19 Impede TO fc go‘Shaped ?t Fetch 23 Survey for a ?4 Looks after crime again tion 27 London sec­ 29 Points of disputes 31 Hard fat mixture 35 144 Abbr 37 Forefather 39 Black more s Loma 40 Uncles wife 42 Weak Pho netics 44 Herb genus 45 Dormancy 47 Kind of nose 49 Beetle 50 Human being 5? Fits out again 54 Rush head long 545 Expanded 59 Nae I 62 Racket 64 Resin 65 Hit with the fist 67 Face blem­ ishes 2 words 72 TO Kind of clay ?t Indian lan­ guage up Become happier - Alaska 73 74 Info 75 Certain beans DOWN 1 Tinge 2 As peace ful as * 3 Cruise pas sengei 4 Encourages 5 Hawaiian garland • at it 6 Have 7 Wish ear­ nestly 8 Horses rel­ atives 9 Monkey 10 Stain 11 Statistics 12 Biblical name 13 Lasso 18 Verb form 22 25 Not bright . up Count 26 Jewish feast 28 Possessed 30 Senorita s parent 32 Nighttime nuisance 2 words 33 Aware of 34 Waste away 35 Breathe convulsively 36 Straight ridge 48 Radio an­ nouncer Ken — 51 Arrest Slang 53 Lively dances 55 Moved rap­ idly 57 Polishing material 58 Phonograph records 59 Mange in animals 38 Composed a 60 Noted limerick 41 Chemist's container words 43 Hindu gar ment 46 Amor au (hor soprano 61 Glance 63 Corrida star 66 Strew for drying 68 Golf hole rim 69 Scot river ' \ Reporters want protection from intelligence agencies U t u r n s Be a n y t h in g I f7-r= L A et5e' stR7 DOONESBURY by Carry Trudeau Gambling opponents file appellate court brief By I nited Press International B>Inned Press International Randall .. . in Texas have asked Opponents of Saturday s statewide legalized horse race referendum on gambling the courts to determine if backers of the move illegally manipulated state laws to have the issue put on the Democratic prim ary ballot The .Jrd C ourt of Civil Appeals earlier 'turned down attempts by the group to block Saturday s vote on the issue Representatives of the Anti-Crime filed a new brief ( ouncil of Texas Wednesday asking the appellate court to send the issue back to a Travis County district court to determine whether signatures on petitions forcing a vote on the issue were valid, and what defense a p o litical party has against invalid petitions. Randall Wood. attorney for the op­ ponents of parimutuel betting, said a sample showed 35 percent of the signatures on the petitions could not be validated as those of registered voters. I don t want to keep people of Texas from registering their opinion on parimutuel gam bling." said Harold Hammett of Fort Worth, one of the plaintiffs in the original suit to keep the issue off the Democratic ballot The real question is whether a political party is defenseless to prevent a raid of its primary election ballot in the form of petitions signed by people not registered to vote as required bv la w " Wood said the civil appeals court t el used to block a vote on the issue because the election process already had begun but said the court had not rul­ ed on the merits of the suit challenging the validity of the petitions We feel the case should be heard because Texas voters have a right to know if the election process has been il­ legally manipulated," Wood said. State law requires a political party to put a referendum proposition on' its ballot if presented petitions signed by 5 percent of the number of voters in the previous race for governor I bt1 parimutuel issue was put on the Democratic primary ballot through the petition process, and Wood contends if 35 percent of the signatures cannot be verified as those of registered voters the petitions were about 20.000 names short of the number required to force a vote (U P I) told WASHINGTON (UPI) - W ASHINGTON the Three reporters In tellig en ce Com­ Senate th a t m itte e W ed n esd ay Congress should prevent in­ telligence agencies from us­ ing journalists, but it cannot write a law stopping reporters information from gathering from the same agencies. Daniel Schorr, former CBS News re p o rte r, N icholas D an ilo ff of U nited Press In t e r n a tio n a l and Jack Nelson, Washington bureau chief of the Los Angeles Times, read statements, then answered questions. S c h o rr, who was sub­ poenaed by the House Ethics Committee in 1976 after he published a secret report of the House Intelligence Com­ m ittee , said although he “the s tro n g e s t f a v o r e d provisions to keep intelligence from utilizing the agencies I w o u ld oppose p re s s , anything that hindered press access to intelligence agen­ cies for information-gathering purposes.” „ "Between the two lies an ambiguous area,” he said. I would caution you "B ut against allowing your zeal to protect us from going so far as, unwittingly, to infringe on our First Amendment rights and responsibilities.” „ lim its „ He said he favored putting to the m edia o ff American intelligence for in­ telligence work or as cover but did not agree with the prospect of putting the CIA, FBI or other agencies out of bounds to reporters. There are two categories of activities which, I believe, are permissible." he said. in fo rm a tio n e x ­ change’ and "extraordinary service." public " It is typical of journalists that they believe they may talk to whomever they wish, whenever they wish and about whatever they wish," he said. As to "extraordinary ser­ vice," Daniloff said in past crises journalists occasionally in ­ “played t e r m e d i a r y , passi ng on from one hostile messages side to the other ... I see no reason why the United States the ro le of should deprive itself of this type of conduit in times of crisis. ” Nelson took a similar stand, saying he did not believe an exchange of information "in any way makes a journalist a government agent " It is a time-honored way of the journalists going about business of finding out and reporting on what is going on in governments," he said H a rv a rd c h a n g e s s ta n d a rd s CAMBRIDGE, Mass. (U P I) - In its first major revision of undergraduate education in more than 30 years, Harvard University has adopted new requirements to earn an un­ dergraduate degree. The core curriculum endorsed Tuesday by the Harvard Faculty of Arts and Sciences the existing General Education replaces Program established in 1945 by the late H ar­ vard President James Bryant Conant. The non-concentration requirements are designed to equip undergraduates with “ a critical appreciation of the major approaches to knowledge and "basic literacy in major forms ol intellectual discourse,” a faculty statement said. The new standards are to be phased in over a four-year period before full implementation in September 1983. A Standing Committee of the Core Program will oversee the transition. Students will be required to select courses from five categories to fulfill their non­ concentration requirements. Students now the select courses the humanities, from social sciences and the natural sciences. Under the new guidelines, study will be re­ quired in literature and the arts, history, social and philosophical analysis, science and lauguages and mathematics, and foreign cultures. During the phase-in. the faculty said it will consider changes within the body of the new requirements as long as the alternatives do not reduce the total courses required. Beneath the umbrella panel, seven subcom­ mittees from the academic disciplines in­ volved in the new requirements will be es­ tablished to make recommendations over the next four years. U S E T E X A N C L A S S I F I E D S T H E W IZ A R D O F ID T H |^ F lg X T jim * RWsr rtziz? in THE SPfciN6 c e , it A u n e C U T O F F sJLs C A F'NATIOH'' * V by B rant p a rk e r and Johnny h art w i t h SW S f k X T ra o V e w t r t n o j T z Z p ftl N6» \ C V TANK MCNAMARA WNWWAT TRE 3AME 1EAM w ith a 017 RECOR? JfcAR f O t p &MPLY OIAM6E l f * NAME IO T u b COWGIRLS, WEAR UNIFCRM4 WifH PICTURES OF TU e l - J, PALU6 ©UI0OV*' Ctf60?lEAfl0?S OM TAC by Jeff Millar & Bill Hinds WOOOEgg, MAM, WHERES f a l t e r THAT S H l I T T ? / ! 7 weather 30 24 30 0 0 •WI » . ‘im, MINNEAPOLIS C H IC A G O * BOSTON FAIR *•„ NEW VORK •2y 77 SAN FRANCISCO I' Vr f ~ • LOS ANGELES tow H I O N I S ! TfM Pf RAT O M S tow DALLAS 6 0 7C U P I WEAT HER FOT OCAST NEW ORLEANS r n - IE G E HO ~ MIAMI .(HH) • K * m m \ SNOW T T *r- / / / SHOWERS ^ F l 0 w AIR Rain and thunderstorms a r th # O h io • x p a c t a d o v a r Tannaaaaa Vallay and savers midwest and southern statal Sklee will be moetly fair ovar thi rest of the nation. Auetin sklee will ba fair ant mild. Wlnde will be light ant variable. The low tem peraturt will ba In tha upper 40a Thure d a y m o r n in g w ith a h lg l tem parature Thursday after t h a u p p e r 7 0 s n o o n Thursday's sunrise will be ai 6:45 a.m. and aunaat at 8:10 p.m Sunrise Friday will ba at 8:44 a.m. I n ■Ti Galapagos under guise of writer. ‘You have to really look at things. It’s got to be a con­ scious effort.’ f i r s t g l a n c e , J i m At Greenwood looks the part of the 3f>-year-old University stu­ dent — jeans, hockey shirt, beard. His speech, with its it, Texas accent, ‘‘th at’s f o l k s , ” and ‘‘f o r g e t it, Charlies,” colors the picture. But as he talks, a rarer quali­ ty surfaces — the childlike ability to get excited about things. “COUSTEAU’S Galapagos’ about cinched it. So we said the heck with it, we’re going to head for the islands So we sold a fine house, a fine sports car and gave another car to some friends,” Greenwood said. Now the Greenwoods must organize and find a publisher for the book that was their ex­ cuse for the trip. the Greenwood describes his surroundings with contagious enthusiasm: ‘‘look of wonderment in the blue-footed booby bi rd’s e y e s , ” the “amazing character of the land iguana,” his “incredible respect for the pineapple.” “You have to really look at things.” he said. ‘‘You've got to try and see something.” G R E E N W O O D ’S l i f e reflects his philosophy — to do and see as much as possible, even if it means straying from the beaten path. Admitted in September as a University junior in electrical engineering, he has run an in­ teresting gamut of roles: join­ ing the National Guard in the ninth grade sifting through i college majors to become a ■ clinical pharmacist, chunking it all for a venture to the I Meanwhile, Greenwood has had two major adjustments to make — becoming a father and returning to “starving student” status. While Greenwood com ­ in electrical pletes his BS e n g i n e e r i n g , C a r o l Greenwood works at IRS to support the family. “ IN A WAY I d like to say the heck with it and just work. But you can't live to work. That s a pretty screwed up ex­ istence ” Greenwood intends to go into biomedical engineering after completing his degree at the University Hopefully after graduation in two years, he will work for a corporation developing electronic devices for medical uses, ly, the crew lasted 22 days, six islands and 900 negatives worth of exploring Normally, the day started the Greenwoods and with often the captain arming them selves with food and starting for the islands in the early morning. i t was pretty primitive. We got tired.dehydrated. The sun really beat down And there ain t no shade, folks. Even the trees have no leaves ■ There was never a day when our tails weren't drag­ ging But it makes you so up­ lifted to the hardship because of what you see ” s o to do But the Greenwood’s sur­ vived to tell the tale and in­ t e n d a guide reference book about the islands Meanwhile, they do their share of promoting the Galapagos by word of mouth. in “ I would hock my soul if it would make my litte girl see the Galapagos There are some things she will see — the Louvre, the Pyramids. But first, the Galapagos Those are achievements of man; this is an achievem ent of nature and that comes first.” ‘The blue-footed booby bird is my favorite. The look of wonderment in his eyes is be­ yond description. I can’t say enough about the boobies. On some islands they’re everywhere. You have to brush them aside to make a path to walk. They have no innate fear of man. They sit there and look at you, you stand there and look at them. That’s what the Galapagos are all about — seeing animals that aren’t afraid of you.’ features ‘There was never a day tails w eren’t when our dragging. But it made you so uplifted to the hardship be­ cause of what you see.’ The G alap agos Island s boast few guide books, no hotel-lined streets, no tourist magazines on motel dressers So. when Jim and Carol Greenwood decided to play Jacques Cousteau and head for the islands, no well worn path stretched before them. we were serious,” Greenwood said “Later they believed I was an author But they didn t do anyt hi ng o v e r ni g h t . Everything moves at a slow rate over there It took them a week just to type and sign the letter ” When their plane landed on Baltra Island, all they had was four suitcases and the hot midday sun on their backs — no contacts, no place to stay. c h a n c e . by Greenwood stumbled c h i the estate of Equations n Jimmy Perez, who took the travelers under his wing P a r t l y The next hurdle fell more slowly Since the islands are jointly controlled by the Natu*nal Park Sen. ices of the Toited States and Equador and tourist traffic is carefully restricted, the Greenwoods decided to play literary Jac­ ques Cousteaus They asked permission to lour the islands freely to gather information and photographs for a book they planned to write Initially they dtdn t think Through a local folk hero, G us A n g e r m e y e r . t h e Greenwoods were able to charter an old converted fishing boat from a local merchant As part of the deal, the merchant provided a captain. a mannero «captain’s helper) and food and supplies for the journey For the next month, the boat served as transportation and home for the Greenwoods, not always to their liking “ Man, that's a long time, folks, on a converted fishing boat, ' Greenwood said “It w a s g r o d y ; cockroaches and fleas were not beyond the realm of possibility .” p r e t t y Although the boat traveled too sl owl y and the food provisions dwindled too quick- ‘Th# bird life is incredible. Not like birds you see here. Big things. With the flamingos you try to hold everything that rattles and hope you don't startle them and you probably will anyway. So you wait an hour until they come back and you do the same thing.* ....... T h e Da il y T e x a n Page 32 □ Thursday, M ay 4, 1978 ‘Beautiful is a weird term to apply to an is­ land in the Galapagos. They’re basically just big hunks of lava.’ Land formations in the Galapagos range be­ tween smooth rock, jagged lava beds, beaches, forest and desert. lands was difficult. Some islands were sur­ rounded by reefs, another rose in sheer cliffs from the water. Since the islands were re­ latively untouched, the Greenwoods had to make their own paths through the rocks or un­ derbrush. ‘There’s lots of places on the Galapagos to In most places, access to and around the is­ get killed. That’s just the way it is.’ Story by Sandy Fails Photos by Jim Greenwood is ‘The m a rin e ig ­ in fin ite ly uana m o re su ited as a sym bol of the is ­ lands than the tor­ toise (that the is­ lands are named af­ ter.) 'T h e r e 's s o m e ­ thing very p reh is­ toric about the ig­ u a n a . T h e y h a v e character, they realty do. An agelessness, a timelessness. ‘We watched this land iguana eat cac­ tus, spines and ail. He just garfed down this cactus like it was candy. It cracked us up, it really did.* The Galapagos Islands: ‘They still belong to the animals’