White House Admits Tapes 'Spotted' i (I’m ( I I L : , a ________ n n IT . . W A S H IN G T O N ( U P I ) — The W hite House dis­ closed in federal court Wednesday it was learned just two weeks ago there were a number of “ spots” on President Nixon’s W atergate tapes with “ no ap­ parent conversation ” Special presidential counsel J . F red Buzhardts contention that the latest discovery of faults in the tapes was “ not significant” was quickly challenged by the special W atergate prosecution staff, which promised to call technical experts to testify as soon as possible. Buzhardt attributed the newly disclosed “ blanks' on the tapes to the nature of sound-activated recorders in the W hite House, which presumably might have begun running a tape autom atically at the sound of a ticking clock or the r u m b le of a truck The W atergate prosecution said, however, that government technicians indicated the tapes con­ tained “ substantial m inutes” when no sound was recorded, either conversations or background noises. In the latest controversy over the long-sought tapes—turned over to U .S. Dist Judge John J S irica Monday at his direction— Buzhardt was not asked why the sound activated tape recorders did not also shut off autom atically once the abrupt noise that activated them was finished. Buzhardt said none of the newly reported blank port ions occurred on tapes of the seven subpoenaed Watergate-related conversations which the W hite House says were actually recorded and which President Nixon has said are intact. Buzhardt testified after Rose M a ry Woods, the President’s personal secretary, testified she did not know for sure if she erased any conversation from the 18-minute segment missing from the tape of a June 20, 1972, discussion between Nixon and former White House Chief of Staff H R. Haldeman She explained that she never heard a conversa­ tion to begin with during that 18-minute period, suggesting again that it was a taping malfunction and not an actual erasure of any portion of the Nixon-Haldeman conversation. Miss Woods was asked if she had ever heard any other gaps in the tapes which she transcribed, other than the 18 minutes of hum already disclosed she replied. “ No, I heard no gaps. Buzhardt, however, testified that the latest faults on the tapes were discovered Nov 14 and 15 when duplicate copies w ere being made of the secret tapes. Miss Woods, at the end of her two and one-half days of questioning, said she had no idea how 18 minutes of the Ju n e 20, 1972 White House tapes were obliterated. Miss Woods, frequently irritable under rigorous cross-examination, stuck to her earlier testimony that she might have caused a gap” of four and one- half or five minutes in the tape of a conversation Nixon had with H R Haldeman on June 20, 1972. by accidentally pushing a “ record button as she turn­ ed to take a telephone call while transcribing it last Oct. I ing But she insisted she did not “ erase the tape because she did not know ii ane conversation was recorded on it in the first place And she stressed she had not been on the telephone long enough to obliterate the 18-minute segment that now is m iss­ “ I again emphasize I was not on the phone for 18 I don’t have that and one-half minutes she said m i i p h lim e much time or five minutes at the most I U/ n l l l ( t PUCSS it was to I would guess it was four and one-half “ Have you discussed with anyone with the White House counsel's office or the Pre sid e n t—who caused that additional 13-minute gap9’ asked J i l l V e in e r. an assistant special W atergate prosecutor “ I have not.” Miss Woods replied. As she had said e arlier this week. Miss Woods said Nixon “ pushed the buttons back and forth while listening to the June 20 tape at Camp David, Md. on Sept. 29. But Mrs. V einer did not pursue this point or suggest that the President him self might have caused an erasure. The 18 minutes missing from the tape are from a conversation Nixon had with Haldeman. then W hite House chief of staff and his most trusted aide, just three days after the bugging arrests at Dem ocratic national headquarters at the Watergate. T h e Da i * Student Newspaper at T e x a n xnfI ' ^ 1 1 0 : , U 3 3 u I T J o j d TW V o l. 73, N o . IOO Ten Cents A u stin , T e x a s, T h u rs d a y , N o v e m b e r 29, iv/o 7 ‘ o»? Sixteen P a g e s 471-4591 Briscoe Urges Cutback On Energy Consumption By M A R K H E C K M A N N Texan Staff W riter Calling for the elimination of “ luxuries and trills. Gov. Dolph Briscoe Thursday urged texans to set their heater ther­ mostats at 88 degrees and proposed a 55 m.p Ii speed limit for all motor vehicles. At a C apitol press conference held in­ stead of a previously scheduled television speech. B risc o e detailed the energy problem and his solutions “ We are now using up our oil in storage faster than we are producing oil These stored reserves w ill be gone entirely by earlv next vear, the governor said The Arab embargo on oil shipments to the United States means a loss of two to two and a halt million barrels each day, he stated We are in an em ergency situation, and we must aet now.” the governor said. in “ U n le s s we put up w ith a few conveniences, we w ill put our jobs in jeopardy On that note, Briscoe outlined a 90-day emergenev energy conservation program. “ the m in im u m He c a lle d his plan response' that the state must make to ease the situation. . aa i_ __ — tv,,, hnorH onaari lim it A 55 m p h. across-the-board speed lim it the is recommended, he said, because President's proposed differential in speed lim its creates turbulent driving conditions and is essentially unsafe President Nixon, in his Sunday night recom m ended a 50 energy message, m p h. lim it for cars and a 55 m p h limit for trucks and buses. Speed lim its less than 55 m p h for trucks and buses, Briscoe said, would produce greater fuel consumption because ot gear ratios The Texas Highway Commission has the authority to reduce speed lim its under the same statute that was used to reduce speeds during World W ar ll. Briscoe add­ ed. H o w e ve r, “ W e w ill cooperate with national policy,’ ho added lf each urban household reduced its travel by one trip per day it would reduce gasoline consum ption by that household by IO to 15 percent and would save 8 percent ot all gasoline used in Texas, be stated. B r is c o e avo ided se ttin g any fuel conserving goals for industrial users say­ ing, “ E a c h industry has its own unique energy requirements and knows tar better than we do where it can effect savings The state administration, he said. wilt • Reduce the use of motor fuel bv all state agencies by 25 percent . Set thermostats in state buildings (ex­ . ieunennusicu, ... — ---»■ cent hnsnitals and schools) at 88 dei cept hospitals and schools) at 88 degrees tor heating and 78 degrees for cooling • Begin work on a car-pooling plan for state employes to provide parking incen­ tives tor participants, • Readjust the cleanup schedule in state offices so that only one floor will be lighted at a time in the evening and so that all floors will be dark after midnight • Purchase the smallest cars possible to do the job. • Reduce the use of fuel by the National Guard by 25 percent. • Coordinate an energy-saving program in the state's 1,133 school districts. To match the state nor suggested several policy, including • Adoption of more policies for gas and oil s efforts, the gover- ehanges in national realistic pricing • Creation of more incentive for gat and oil exploration. • Balancing ol environmental against ' compelling energy needs needs • Em ploym ent of experts to develop new sources of fuel, such as gasification ol coal, solar energy and fusion P it tv percent of all the energy usee in the state of Texas is used to produce more energy. Not just more energy for Texas but tor the entire nation. Vie have a right to expect the entire nation to work as we w ill work—to solve this energy crisis ■ ~ ■ ( U P I ) W A S H IN G T O N Sen H ub ert H that Humphrey. D-Minn , charged Wednesday President Nixon had not leveled with the Am erican people on the gravity of the energy crisis Humphrey said the programs put forward by N ix ­ on do not match what energy experts have told Congress is required “ The harsh prognosis of his energy experts, presented on Capitol Hill, and that of our nation s business leaders has not been reflected in the program announced by this A d m inistration, Humphrey said in a statement “ The President should talk to the public the way his advisers testified They reported that unless voluntary conservation and the mandatory alloca­ tion system works, we are going to have rationing The Senate, bogged down with Social Security- Medicare legislation, put off final congressional ap­ proval of year round Daylight Saving Time until sometime late this week The House Commerce Comm ittee meanwhile ended public hearings and planned ta start 1'hurs day on dratting its version ot Senate-approved legislation giving Nixon sweeping powers to con­ serve energy supplies, I rom fuel rationing to a ban on Sunday gasoline sales Senate passage ot a two-year daylight saving bill which cleared the House Tuesday on a 311-88 vote, was expecter! bv Thursday at the latest. Unlike the House bill which exempted H aw aii, the Senate v er­ sion would give the Pre sid e n t d iscretio nal \ Mrs. Briscoe follow s G o v, priscoe a energ y Briscoe's e n erg y speech Thursday. -T alo n Staff PHot* by Phil Hubar A 90-day basis, he said, would allow the state to re-evaluate its priorities ii the Middle Ea st situation improves and to readjust programs when it is found out /•--------------- hnw mu(,h energy 1S beinK saved how much energy is being saved Hum phrey Says Nixon 'Has Not Leveled on Energy J f t . . . fm m a pp. authority to exempt any state or region from a re quirement to advance clocks by one hour _________________ _ The W hite House has estimated that Daylight Saving Tim e could lower demands for e lectricity and heating by as much as 3 percent, especially in northern states In other energy developments: • The Defense Department said if fuel shortages continue long enough to threaten I S. m ilitary would not hesitate to divert further readiness, it would not hesitate to divert further . s u o D l i e s from the civ than m arket to meet its needs Nixon s fuel saving measures, ii unsu. r supplies from the c ivilian m arket to meet its needs under the* Defense Production Act of 1950 , a ministration has given “ the very highest priority , cavm£J measures ii unsuccessful, m inistration has given “ the very highest priority v . Nixon's fuel saving measures, ii unsuccessful frnm makim? windfall to prevent oil companies from making windfall “ niay soon be followed by gasoline rationing, profits from the fuel shortage. One possible solu­ although we certainly hope to avoid it. tion he said, would be a federal excise tax to offset higher prices. • The President signed a bill providing the Interior Department an additional $14 I m illion to operate the new mandatory allocation program tor propane and home heating oil • The Federal M aritim e Commission called on I S ocean ca rriers in the domestic shipping trade to reduce speed and utilize space to help meet the crisis. Transportation Secreta ry Claude Brinegar said • Transportation S ecretary Claude Hrm egar sam . Sen Thomas Eagleton, D-Mo , urged the auto insurance industry to reduce premiums for insured motorists because Nixon s 50 mile-per-hour speed limit had lowered the number of car accidents and their severity. • Asst Treasury Secretary Fred eric Hickm an told a Senate finance subcom m ittee the A d ­ .mu « - ' • A fter privately briefing the House Fo reign Af­ fa irs C om m ittee, S e c re ta ry oi State H enry Kissinger told reporters “ I do not think it would be helpful for me to speculate” whether the A rab oil embargo might be eased in the foreseeable tuture Morton A p p r o v e s O il S h a le D e v e lo p m e n t T ra n s - A la s k a n P ip e lin e P e rm it R e a d y To Be Issued ( U P I ) — W A S H IN G T O N Interior Secretary Rogers C B Morton gave the go-ahead Wednesday tor in itial experimental development of the federal government s vast oil shale deposits in the western states Morton also announced he is ready to issue a right of way permit for the trans-Alaska pipeline that w ill bring crude oil to refineries from the big new oil fields in northern Alaska Neither project w ill help the nation’s worsening iuel shortage for this w inter or even in the next few years But Morton said both would help the United States gain energy independence in future years supply. Construction of the pipeline is expected to be completed in 1977, and the first oil shale plants are expected to begin production by 1978 B u t Morton said any large scale shale oil production would be a d ecade or more after that Morton estim ated there are reserves of at least 600 billion barrels of crude oil in the federal shale lands, enough to last about IO years of supplying current total U S. consumption of petroleum Es tim a te s of the oil reserves in A lask a’s North Slope run as high as 30 billion barrels, a five-year Morton approved a prototype com m ercial leasing program lur six tracts ol federal shale land ot about 5,000 acres each, with two tracts each in Colorado, Wyoming and Utah. The first tract lease sale will be Ja n 8. with one each month for the next five The high risks and many uncertainties that at­ tend dependence on foreign supplies of energy make it im perative that we explore expeditiously all ol our promising alternative energy supplies. months. he said Morton said if the six facilities prove successful, additional leases w ill be offered for larger scale development. The basic process of shale oil extraction lias been proved in earlier pilot plants, but the prototype plants w ill determine if larger scale com m ercial production is feasible The oil is extracted by heating the rock like shale to 900 degrees Fahrenheit to convert kerogen, an organic m aterial in the shale to oil. which can bt: relined fuel and other petroleum products. into gasoline, heating today Austin Operators Haven't Time To Take Time To Give Time By L A M O N T W O OD now. he said “ Brother, can you spare the tim e? Austimt.es who ask this and sim ilar questions often come across a sm all but to them vitally important fact there is no telephone tim e service in Austin “ It s because of the amount of time involved that we do not allow our oper ators to give out the tim e, Jo e Riordan public relations manager for the Southwestern B e ll system in Austin, said Tuesday “ lf you took the IO seconds or so needed to give the tim e and m ultiply it times the number of calls that would be generated by such a service, you would be talking in terms of hours. . “ U sually a bank or someone will rent an a u f neuron machine and set up this service as a form of advertising, but as yet no one in Austin has paid tor this, he said. When asked if it would not be sim pler to give the customer the tune rather than explain all this, Riordan said, I admit it probably would, but the law says you cannot discrim inate against any customers, so ii we gave the tim e to one person we would have to give it to everyone who asked. The thing would snowball. It would be reflected back to the customers in terms of higher cost. Riordan explained that it was common i n give out the time free 20 years ago, bul the practice has died out " I dont believe there is an exchange system in the country that does it Interestingly enough, in many foreign countries the phone companies operate such a service In Mexico ( ity one i an gel la hora exacta by dialing 03 and in M adrid inform acion horaria can be reached at 093. In Naples one dials 16 for la ora esatta, and in most parts of England one can reach Hie Speaking < lot k at 123. In M elbourne, not only can one get int, tem perature at 8074, but one can also get Bib le readings, dial ring-a- a-prayer, track and stock m arket reports, the news. reeipe,” sports returns, “ amazing Bible tacts, th ea ter programs and music, all by dialing the right number tim e the In an effort to check out Southwestern B e ll's policy, a ( all was made Tuesday to a directory assistance operator “ Hello. Could you give me the tim e9’’ “ We don’t have tim e to give out the time “ You mean you don’t have tim e to do it, or you don t know what tune it is9” “ W e don’t have the tim e .” A ll right " An ordinary operator then was queried “ Hello Could you tell m e the tim e’' “ Sure. It s five till eight lie was live minutes off. Board Considers VSS €► i B y L IN D A F A N N IN Texan Staff W rite r E v e ry bit of energy saved in this tim e of shortages helps. According to Dr Ernest Gloyna, dean of tile College ol Engineering, the utilization of gas formed by the U rmentation of organic solids could provide up to two- tin rds of the energy needed to operate waste treatm ent plants. Gloyna, who also is director of the U n iv e rsity’s C enter for Research in W ater Resources, proposed a study of the possi­ ble uses oi sewer gas at the monthly m eeting Wednesday ol the Texas W ater Q uality Board After his presentation, the board agreed to give Hugh Yantis, executive director, authority to work out details of a $5,000 research contract with the center. “ The utilization of sludge gas is not new, Gloyna said Although Austin used recovered gas until 15 or 20 years ago, he said the operation was discontinued because natural gas was cheaper and Study readily available Even though the use of recovered gas has disappeared in the United States dur- past years, waste treatment plants, to Gloyna, are important in mg according Europe, The study, expected to last 90 days, may be followed with a conceptual design and a demonstration project which Gloyna said would be the' result of collaboration between the center and an engineering „ 30 ^ u ,irm - , “ The daily volumes ol gas and heat potentials from a sm all c ity of about 40,(HK) people might be expected to produce about million B T U s per day,' Gloyna said other business, the board routinely approved an application by the I niversit\ for permission to release swimming pool drainage and storm runotf into W aller Creek. In ---- The permit was granted to the I niversi tv on condition that drains which have been diseharging wastes into the t reek tie tied into toe city sewer system within six months rsS C . F a i r . . Weather will be fair and w arm er through F r i d a y . L i g h t and v a ria b le winds will become southerly 5 to 15 m . p . h . F r i d a y . Thursday's high will be near 70, low Thurs day night in the upper 30s. Funding for W om en's Sports Discussed ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ * * * * * * r * * * r w w ~ w " - - Gazers Get Staraazed This By K E N K L E IN Texan Staff W riter is one of the stories the students of Astronomy 308 and 350 heard Wednesday night at a “ star gazing party at Bee Caves Obser vatory on Bee Caves Road When .Jupiter seduced Callisto, his wife, Junc>, got so mad she turned Callisto into a bear To honor Callisto, .Jupiter put her up in the sky to become Ursa Major, the Big Bear ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ A r * ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ The party drew about 200 students and friends who came to hear stories about the galaxies and constellations, to look at the stars and planets through the telescopes and “ get a homework grade as one student put it. At the party, the stu den ts, led by Prof David N Schramm and his assistants, used portable telescopes to observe such celestial wonders as Jupiter, Venus, Saturn, Mars and the Andromeda galaxy. * * * * * * * * * * * * + * * * * * I * J * t * Num erous “ refresh m en ts to enhance the stargazing’’ were on hand also since is sometimes required to pick out the tigures in the constellations. im agination David Dearborn, a research assis­ tant and graduate student who formerly was an assistant at the G rif­ fith Park Observatory in Los Angeles, interspersed his descriptive narrative with risque myths surrounding the origin of the constellations “ Cygnus, the Swan, is in the sky because Jupiter, after he made love to Leda, turned himself into a swan. He placed a replica of the swan in the sky as a remembrance of Leda, he explained Dearborn pointed out the positions of the constellations with a flashlight and delivered his narrative “ These stars here. he said poin­ ting his flashlight, “ are supposed to ho Andromeda’s head These others represent her neck, and these two here are sometimes taken for a por­ tion of her upper anatomy, he told the crowd “ Over here on the horizon is Orion, the hunter You see he’s been chasing the seven daughters in Pleiades. Anybody who can t see him clearly better get some more mushrooms,” he said. Star parties for the astronomy classes are not new. One usually is held each semester for the classes. Students on the trip felt the party was a huge success. One said he kept seeing stars even while he was passed out in the back seat of his car. What do you see?’ asked a student of another who was looking through the telescope “ I see Jup iter’s stripes and its red spot,” he answered I want some “ Wow,” said the first.. of what you must have eaten to see that ” * * * * * ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ definitive action on an ex­ i n t e r c o l l e g i a t e panded program for women because of lunding. In a closed meeting Tues­ day. the Athletic Council dis­ c u s s e d a b u d g e t b u t recommended that tin* ad­ ministration survey other in s titu tio n s w here women a t h le t ic p r o g r a m s a r e operating in an effort to set guidelines for a program here. “ The needed tunds could i irjie from a $2 increase in the blanket tax. ’ Gary Holland, chairman of the student com­ mittee, said The $2 increase also was suggested by the Athletic Council, but the student group differed with the council in other budgetary proposals “ We suggest that a coach be provided for each women’s sport, with a $1 TMK) salary.’ Holland said The council had proposed spending $36,500 for three coaches and a s e cretary , amounting to half the total proposed budget. ‘Our first priority is th* student a th le te .” Holland said “ The council s proposal may alienate the volunteer coach The council also suggested that two women be added to the Athletic Council, but stu­ dent committee members feel that women should be taken into consideration as openings become available t h e " W e m u s t b u ild K a y program gradually,’’ N ix , w o m e n ’ s a t h le t ic s representative said. lint Holland said that some p ro g r a m w o uld be [demented by next year im Chicano W om en's Forum Discusses Plans, G oals By JA Y JO R D E N Members of a statewide chicano women’s movement ‘ ‘ M u je r e s P o r La R a z a Cnida,” discussed parallels the Anglo-Am erican with in a fe m in is t m ovem ent REJOICE! THERE ARE S I H I 3 DAYS IEEE IN THE SLIGHTLY FABULOUS UNICORN ART BA ZA A R & PRINT SALE UNICORN GALLERY at the Dobie 12-9 477-0048 I or u rn W e d n e s d a y night hosted by the Juarez-Lineoln C e n te r at St Ivd w a rd s University. Before the closed discus­ sion, Juarez Lincoln assonate director E v e y Chapa said. “ Our group is an informal forum formed to discuss p o litic s and c o m m u n ity e d u ca tio n p ro g ra m s fo r chicanos Some women from the University of Texas ap proached us and wanted a program started We felt there was a need for a discus M o n group M s C h a p a s a id ‘ ‘ 98 percent ' of the 30-member group have been involved rn previous chicano political causes. The group was formed four weeks ago and remains in the planning stages “ We arc- hosted each m eeting by different people who would like to precipitate chicano oriented discussions Marta Cotera, Juarez Lincoln infor rnation director, said Members will meet again Dec 8 to discuss “ Arc You a Chicano Feminist’' Tough Measures On Fuel Advised Student Senate Adopts Impeachment Resolution Bv J \N IC K TO M LIN Texan Malt W m er Despite fluctuating atten­ dance Wednesday night the Student Senate voted lo begin a massive letter writing cam­ paign encouraging impeach men! proceedings against President R ic h a rd Nixon tndore losing its quorum an h o u r a f t e r the meeting began The resolution which refers to Nixon as a “ perpetual the instigator of “ illegal liar and immoral acts and the ' ‘c o rru p t ad head of a ministration announced that th* Student Senate supports his immediate resignation or im pending im p eachm ent proceedings now under way in th* House of Represen­ tatives In th* pre sident s report. Sandy Kmss announced that V ie * P r e s id e n t C a p p y in Dallas remains McCarr e x p r e s s e d ( oncern about an d his health when he left Mr o y predicted it the Middle East embargo persists through 1974, the United States could suffer a $Hf0 billion drop in the (doss National Product and a 7 percent unemployment rate II the embargo lasts through April 1974, tin- natron would lose a total ol 360 million barrels of oil. he said Dov suspects the embargo is not yet causing any great economic distress in th** producing countries Doy s presentation was sponsored bv the I Diversity tor Middle Eastern C e n t e r the Energy Studies and Research < I roup NELSON'S GIFTS 4612 So C o n t r o l * Phono 444 3(14 » ZUNI AND NAVAHO INDIAN JEWELRY • MEXICAN IMPORTS O P E N I O o rn to 6 p rn ■•(.ll IS I H M I SCHNASE IN VA 1.1 IE " C L O S E D M O N D A Y ANNUAL CH RISTM AS CHT EDITION of Three superb novels by JOHN GARDNER -now specially gift-boxed Tor Christmas!*^** T h e D a i l y T e x a n TUESDAY, DECH,197 S t u d e n t N . w . p o p . , a t Th * U r n . t r n f f o f T * t a t a t A u ’ l l n w\ Tho D a ily Texan can d e liv e r you an au d ien ce of over 3 6 , 0 0 0 and a re a d e rs h ip of o v e r 9 2 % am ong som e 40,000 students, fa c u lty arid staff The D a ily Texan has w hat it takes to m ove your m e rch a n d is e in the U n iv e r s ity c o m m u n ity C a ll 471-1865 N O W and re s e rv e your a d v e rtis in g space. A D VERTISIN G DEADLINE: THURSDAY - 4:00 P.M. DECEMBER 6, 1973 Pag e 2 Thursday, November 29, 1973 T H E D A IEY T EX A N Treat yourself and all the very special people you Know Jo a priceless “ package” of entertainment for only $4.15: G R C N D E L “ A work of extra­ ordinary beauty." —S a t u r d a y H o v i e w (Single copy 95*) T H E W R E C K A G E OF A G ATH O N “ H i g h l y o r i g i n a l . " — New Y o rk T im e s (Single copy: $1.25) T H E S U N L IG H T D IA L O G U E S 14 weeks on the N Y. Times best seller list. FIRST TIME IN P A P E R B A C K . (Singie copy. $1 95) A LL THREE BOOKS, HANDSOMELY GIFT-BOXED: $4.11 Available now wherever paperbacks are sold (Tj^) BALLANTINE B O O K S , INC. I M T Y im mix t sharing a hic ol prayer and work It.i ,1 COTTI mon cause 1 brist DIVERSITY individual effort» meeting widespread needs giving time G K M K U S I I Y labor jtosscssions to others in this land anil abroad ll interested write to Hi other M a r k < S I Box ISI S I E d w a r d s I iii. Austin I ex.is 78704 Kubiak Speaks Fuel for Farmers Urged By M A R K H EC K M A N N Texan Staff W riter The Texas Railroad Com­ mission should use its power to aid farmers in getting the fuel that has been allocated to them, State Rep. Dan Kubiak of Rockdale said Wednesday. is available, but nobody can get it , ” he said, adding that farmers do not know where or “ I t ’s true (fu e l) it how' to get the fuel, because they do not know who has the final authority to allocate it. Oil distributors, Kubiak added, are acting cautiously with fuel distribution because they fear possible fines for misallocation. “ There s such mass confu­ sion in all of this since the the Rockdale beginning, Friends of Zilker File Court Suit By J E A N I E BLA LO C K A suit to halt relocation of the Austin Natural Science Center has been filed in 53rd District Court by the Friends of Zilker The suit is in response to a City Council decision Nov 2 to move the center from its present site on Deep Eddy Avenue to Zilker Park Numerous protests have been directed against the relocation The sud is styled Andrew Zilker Thompson. Josephine Brad ford and Friends of Zilker. et a1, versus City of Austin and the Austin Natural Science Association, Inc. (ANSA). The plaintiffs represented by attorneys Bob Gibbins and Broadus A Spivev, a l l e g e the deeds whereby the park lands were given to the city have been violated. The land originally w-as given to the city to be used as a park and playground Billy Jack Gregg clerk with Gibbins and Spivey explained. The plaintiffs are saying this does not mean giving the land over for a private group to use: it all depends on the definition of park lands and playground,” he said ANSA is a nonprofit organization which was founded as a sup­ port group to help the ( itv Parks and Recreation Department with the center and to publicize park progress. The Friends of Zilker allege ANSA has been acting for and in place of the City of Austin and the Parks and Recreation Department Gregg said. The suit further alleges a law requiring public election before land is given to any private group has been violated The elec­ tion is mandated by state and city law, Gregg explained This is especially important in the Zilker case. Gregg said because under this law, two previous elections were required when the people of Austin accepted the gift from the donor AUSAA WILL TRAIN RECENT COLLEGE GRADUATES DECEMBER GRADUATES TO BECOME COMPUTER PROGRAMMERS E xpansion w ith in our C om puter Services D ivisio n has ''m a te d an im m e d ia te re q u ire m e n t fo r college gra du ates /vith desire to become C om puter P ro g ra m m e rs Educa tion or experience in C o m puter Science p re fe rre d , but not req ut red P O S IT IO N S O F F E R • Four Dov Work Weak * P»rmonent Employment • Excellent Benefits Pockoge * Good Salary • Increases Based on Performance Sen d r e s u m e w i t h c o l l e g e tr a n s c r i p t a n d s a l a r y e x p e c t a t i o n to UNITED SERVICES AUTOMOBILE ASSOCIATION Attention: Personnel 4119 Broodway, San Antonio, Tx. 78288 Equal Opportunity Employor representative said “ The Railroad Commission has to take positive action They have the clout to come through and solve this dilem­ ma,” he stated “ Get fuel to the people that produce food and fiber, Kubiak urged “ Farmers are not able to get the necessary tuels to run tractors and get soil ready for crops Farmers must get their Ii quid fertilizers into the ground soon after it is purchased, he said, or those products will go bad.” These fertilizers arc applied with tractors The inability to get fuel in time could result in a loss of leases, he added. Already crop land is being turned into grazing land ' We ne<‘d to get it (the fuel i there when the weather is right,” he said The Rockdale rep resen ­ tative also questioned a recent ruling by Rai l road Com missioner Jim Langdon, who said the state could not pre vent oil lrom crossing stat** lines The state cannot force com­ panies to break contracts with out-of-state b u y e r s Ari attempt to do so, Langdon said, would be a violation of the commerce clause of th*- U S Constitution I don’t sec how a contract could be binding when i> bleeds the state to death, Kubiak said LIVE IN OUR TREES 2 bedrooms $189 minutes to Downtown, all the \atu rf 7 minutes to you ll want. I I ant O A K It K O L I. 6 2 0 S o u t h First (use T im b ercre ek e n tran ce ) 444-1269 MINORITY FELLOWSHIP OPPORTUNITIES IN GRADUATE MANAGEMENT ADMINISTRATION M r. B e r t K i n g w ill 1>< p o r t u n it ie s w it ll a d iscu ssin g f e llo w s h ip <»p- II in t e r e s t e d m i n o r it y s tu d e n ts o n . MONDAY, DECEMBER 3 from 9:00 to 5:00 in the I SPEECH BUILDING, Room 104 Work toward an M B A o r M S degree in m a n a g e m e n t at one of our ten m e m b e r fehools: H a r v a r d . G o m e l ! . C a r n e g i e M e l l o n . Stanford, C o l u m b i a , W harton, University of Chicago, B e r k e l e y . VHT, o r D a r t m o u t h . O n a b lis s f u l W e d n e s d a y a f t e r n o o n a r o u n d the f l a g p o l e the t im e a w a y w i t h a fris bee. The reality o f f i n a l e x a m s in front of the M a i n B u i l d i n g , S t a n l e y A l t e r m a n w h i l e s s e e m s a m i ll io n m ile s a w a y . W a s a Sunny Day . . . — T tio n Staff Ptvoto by David W oo Emergency Loans Available By B E T H BEN SO N As the Dec. I!) deadline for f e e spring preregistration paym ent nears students Austin Awaits The 'Whopper' Austin s never ending list of hamburger palaces will be ex panded again in mid I' ebruarv by the opening of the Burger King restaurant L o c a t e d at 27th and it will be one of Guadalupe over 1,300 stores nationwide J o y , director of Claxton A u s t in o p e r a t i o n s , said Wednesday “ Our master plan includes tour Burger Kings in the Austin area and the I iniversi tv location will be the first to open .Joy said It looks like Big Mac, .him bo Jack and Bonanzaburger haft better make way for the “ Whopper caught temporarily short of funds need not despair The Office of Financial Aids 2608 Whit is Ave , grants emergency loans up to $75 to assist students through just such emergencies Although there is no way to predict the number of students who will apply for loans, we usually do have more at these times of the year,’ Ms Iola Taylor, finan cia! aids counselor, said To apply for an emergency loan the student must com plete an application and iden tifv his e mer g enc y . Ms Taylor said We are concerned that the emergency be associated with the cost of the student s education she explained A student applying for a J® long Party Aprons V Old Fashioned Prints And Dotted S w iss- Assorted Colors Honk Amarnard & MoOtrCharge dehorn* Co-Op Apt. Shop Second Floor loan must not be on scholastic probation and must be taking at least nine hours ot un­ dergraduate work or six hours of graduate work Night school students and foreign students who do not have a permanent visa are not eligible There is a three-day waiting period before the student may [lick up his loan in the bursar s office in the Main Building Students have up to two months to repay the loans with 4 percent per annum in In terest. Ms Taylor said special cases determined by th e financial aids counselor, students may be given more time to repay the loan Emergency loans are just for emergencies, Ms Taylor stressed No more than three emergency loans a year will be made to one individual Special Funds Loans are available to the student the s a m e day he applies Payment is made at the financial aids office up to four weeks after the loan was granted Applicants for emergency loans should see Lola Parsons in Room 104 or Ann Vasey in the financial aids o f f i c e T H E E V E N T OF A D V E N T H E G IN S \X I T H CELEBRATION LEAD BY Y O U T H l l a .m . Dec. 2, 1 9 7 3 U N I V E R S I T Y P R E S B Y T E R I A N CHURCH 2203 SAN ANTONIO t e x a s 'mm Ideas A Issues C o m m i t t e e p r e s e n t s POETRY READING H e a d i n g (unit t he ir on ti w o r k s ii ill />c f i g h t (rut s t a n d i n g s e l ec t e d bs Prof essor l i m til ll f t ill I n i r e r s i t \ pin ts Today 3:00 P.M. Texas Union Room 202 EVERYBODY CAN WIN T R A N S A C T I O N A L A P P L Y I N G ANALYSIS TO EVERYDAY LIVING PUBLIC LECTURE BY MURIEL JAMES A u t h o r of Born to W i n , Born to Love, W i n n i n g P e o p l e TONIGHT AT 8 p.m. Lyndon B ain es Jo hn son Aud. (form e rly E ast C a m p u s Library A u d ) LB J Library, 2313 Red River Tickets: $2.00 - No Reserved Seats Ih e U n iv e r s it y C o Op, T ic k e t s m a y h e p u r c h a s e d at S c a r b o r o u g h s H i g h l a n d M a ll. T h e B a n k o f A u s t i n 2 5 0 1 S o u t h C o n g r e s s , T e x a s D e p a r t m e n t o f M e n t a l H e a lt h C e n t r a l O ffice , a n d a ll H u m a n M e n t a l R e t a r d a t io n D e v e l o p m e n t C e n t e r s o f th e A u s t i n T ravis C o u n t y M H M R C e n t e r in c o m m u n ic a tio n an d h u m a n D r J a m e s , a c o n s u lta n t relatio ns, is director of the T ra n s a c tio n a l A n a ly s is In stitu te in L afayette, C a lifo rn ia S h e h a s lectu red w id e ly an d led s e m in a r s in tra n sa c tio n a l a n a ly s is in the U S . E u rp o e, S o u th A m e ric a an d the O rien t T he p u b lic le c t u r e b y D r J a m e s is s p o n s o r e d b y th e A u s t i n T ra vis C o u n t y M e n t a l H e a lt h M e n t a l R e t a r d a t io n C e n te r. T e x a s D e p a r t m e n t o f M e n t a l H e a lt h a n d M e n t a l R e t a r d a H o n a n d th e A u s t i n M e n t a l H e a lt h A s s o c i a t i o n You Can Go Home Again. Cheap. lf you live in rh*- New York Chicago or Los Angeles areas now there s a w a y to get token there without getting taken Braley s Christmas Group Flights, most often referred to os The M o m an d Pop Hops Toke one home for Christmas They ll love you for it Available exclusively to students,facul ty, and administration of The University of Texas Christmas Group Flights C h i c a g o 132.28 Leave Dec-. 21 Return Jan. 13 N e w York 155.28 L e a v e ’ l i r e , 21 Return Jan. 12 N e w Y o r k I 55.28 Leave Der. 22 Return Jan. 13 Lot A n g e l e t 162.28 Leave Der. 21 Return Jan. 13 •MIL \\\^e CTC $9.99 Cape shawl, was 14.00 A lace s h a w l that looks like an heirloom. Beautifully d o n e in natural cotton, bordered in soft fringe. ( A great gift for your r o o m ­ mate, you'll love to w e a r it tooI) N o w , 9.99 h e J u a M j O N T H E - D R A G 2406 G u a d a l u p e lf you are planning to have Santa Claus deliver your Engagement Diamond, now is the right time to make your selection. from *;loo U n iversity Store 2236 Guadalupe Sheftdll Charge Mailer Charge A llandale Village 5726 B urnet Rd I ' V ( / V rn ) Layaway 512 476-7231 3 0 2 West 15 Street Austin, lexov 70701 512 4767231 BankAmencard 24 Mo. Pay Plan L C o m e to H o l i d a y H a p p e n i n g Y a n n g s O n - t h e - D r a g . first floor A n i n f o r m n l s h o w i n g of fe st iv e h o l i d a y I s l a f I I 3 0 o rn D e c wear Thursday, November 29, 1973 TH E DAILY TEXAN Page 3 comment The long green talks At least two progressive proposals come before the ( tty Council Thurs­ day both on issues vital to the University community though diverse in content both the Drag vendor and nuclear recall issues are where they are today for an identical reason the control of public affairs by Austin s downtown business community T H E V EN D O R IS S U E is long disputed The market once delighted thousands of \ust mites with an alternative market area, but the council moved the vendors along at the behest of Clyde Copus and some of the C i t y ' s biggest money Reduced at present to one side of 23rd Street, the vendors now face a tremendous lark of space I he vendor solution, a com­ promise one. would create a temporary vending area of both sides ot 23rd. It it acts wisely, the city will pass an emergency measure tor the ( hrist- mas season The second council issue a proposed third round rematch of the nuclear bond proposal should receive little favor from a council which only two weeks ago subsidized a single-sided propaganda campaign in the thousands Inextricably bound to a growth oriented tripled energy supply, the council would walk on water before submitting a balanced, democratic presentation to the voters t h e COMMON D EN O M IN ATO R in these city policies is the pervasive inevitable control of big money over public decision making. Austins banker realtor and contractor crowd seemingly has money to burn—they consistently do so for city elections In the fall. 1972 Drag vendor referen­ dum. the business interests came up with over $30,000 to keep the vendors off Guadalupe Street Greenback power again struck the balance with the nuclear issue the Citizens for a Planned Environment spent over $20,000; progressive groups could muster only slightly over $2,000 By outspending the opposition by IO I the pronuclear people spent approximately $2 Ta per media-manipulated vote. The spring City Council elections follow an identical pattern Before a runoff realtor-backed Dick Nichols spent $38,000 to Bob Binder s $8,444. comment Pass the buck After nearly five months of study and years of neglect, the University Athletic Council subcommittee on women's intercollegiate athletics final­ ly made its proposal to the Athletic Council The council predictably passed the buck Rather than act ing promptly on the subcommittee s proposal, the coun­ cil approved a counter-proposal calling for an enlarged program of inter- eollegiate athletics for women Hut the proposal was sent to the I niversi­ ty administration for study and action. It se e m s the council simply decided that setting up a program of inter­ collegiate athletics for women wasn't their responsibility. Rather than looking at tho hardships placed on the council and its autonomy bv expanding the athletic department to women's athletics, the council should have looked at its social and legal responsibilities. That means they should stop worrying about making money and start worry­ ing about the student body which it supposedly serves. Already, students of this campus have signed a petition calling upon the Athletic Council to take whatever steps necessary to create IM M E D IA T E L Y a complete, fully funded program of intercollegiate athletics for women. Also the student bodies of the other eight Southwest Conference univer­ sities have joined in the campaign at those eight schools And at the SWC meeting Dec 8 iii Dallas, the nine schools of the SW( will present a report to the SWC calling for a program of intercollegiate athletics to be implemented in the conference It s no longer a matter of why there should be women in intercollegiate athletics, but when there will be It s only a matter ol time until someone files a lawsuit When that happens, the Athletic Council and the University won t be able to take their sweet time basically because the Department of Health, Education and Welfare will order them to end discrimination President Stephen Spurr must feel this way and therefore should pass the buck back to the Athletic Council with the directive to move ahead to implement a program of intercollegiate athletics for women no later than September. 1974 If action is not taken by that time, it may be too late for the University to have any say in the matter at all The Athletic Council must meet its responsibilities and obligations to H E R K HOLLAND is that too much to ask'' the student body now Apologies in order Apologies are in order on behalf of Austin’s black community for the Travis County Democratic Redistricting Committee s Tuesday accep­ tance' of a voting plan that minimizes the voting integrity of blacks. Minority members Gabriel Gutierrez and Ray Dell Galloway voted against the so-called B variation plan, which was voted to passage by the five other members ot the committee. R E D R TRK T IN G IS an immensely important task especially tor communities that have long suffered legislative underrepresentation. As originally submitted Plan B would have increased the total black popula­ te rn over B variation by 8 of a percentage point a potentially critical margin in a district with a total population of only 75,000 people. Through de federal court s upcoming redistricting hearings the black c o m m u n ity has an excellent opportunity to reverse its long-standing un­ In the interest of maximizing the voting strength of d e rre p re s e n ta tio n \ustin s blae ks we encourage the NA AC P to submit a redistricting plan —M .E. s e o a r a t e from that of the Democratic Party H£K> Save- C . d G y .& y it 1. get Yoqb. pgessehs a pva6 vjeN dor, ! [- A V A . . ¥ Kerry Ai r gow n on t h e b £>e r Va t IOU', y / p o B S ? ? after the runoff Nichols’ expenditures topped the $50,000 mark. In a hysterical campaign against “ the voice of the radical element contrac­ ter Bob Gray spent $42,000. The council’s other incumbents shared equally well-stocked coffers: Lowell Lebermann spent $36,809 to John Trevino s $11,171; Bori Handcox’ $19,742 to Edith Buss' $3,900; Bud Dryden’s $5,963 to Mary Birdsong’s $922; Dan Love’s $9,598 to Roland DeNoie’s naught. T H E LOCAL C H A P T E R of Common Cause is working on a campaign limitation ordinance which, if passed, could advance Austin into the realm of truly democratic, unbought public policy We encourage Com­ mon Cause in its efforts; the people of Austin could do little better than move public decisions back to the people where they belong ' —M E . W h y boycott grapes and head lettuce? Because o n e o u t of ev e ry f o u r f a r m w o r k e r houses has n o r u n n i n g w a te r. S up p o rt th e U n i t e d Farmw ork ers U n i o n ( A F L - C I O ) firing Un© See Rocky for the details guest viewpoint Auto Co-op defines goals and priorities B y W A Y N E C L A R K At the last general membership meeting of the Auto Co-op. there was much confu­ sion and disorganization. One thing that was accomplished at the meeting was the creation of a comm ittee to study the problems of membership participation in the co op This special Comm ittee on Membership Participation has been study­ ing the problem for the last two months and has come up with a set of recommen­ dations. Although the list of recommen­ dations is quite extensive, they can be broken down into two m ajor changes Committees defined The first change is the restructuring of the co-op along tho lines of a committee C om ing together To the editor: This coming Sunday the friends of Richard Moya w ill hold an appreciation in honor of the county c o m ­ p a rty missioner. Commissioner Moya has served the peo pie of Austin with great sensitivity during his term of office There is no public of­ ficial in the county, I believe, who has a greater interest in providing social ser­ vices to the people than does Richard Moya He has contributed substantially to p r o g r a m s to r historical building preservation, mass transit, aid to the elderly and welfare and health services. [la rk d e v e lo p m e n t As far as the campus is concerned, the commissioner played a large role in the recent redrawing of justice of the peace d istric ts in T ra v is County that gave students a good amount of say for the first time in those districts The progressive citizens of Austin will gather at the New Latin Quarters Club at 4749 E . Ben White Blvd on Dee 2. from 5:30 to 8 p m Tickets w ill be available at the door ! encourage all students to come to this event honoring Com m issioner Richard Moya. Sandy Kress, President Student Government system Although committees have been provided for in the past their function and purpose have never been clearly defined The changes focus on the committees as the main vehicle for carrying out the co­ op s work The board of directors is chang od to reflect this altered emphasis F o r example, the communication com ­ mittee would be responsible tor notifying m em bers of upcom ing m e m b e rsh ip meetings Also committees would create new programs The education and con­ sumer at I airs comm ittee would be respon­ sible tor starting classes and researching consumer products The expansion com mittee would provide the co-op with new services. R ew ard system The second change is a mechanism to in sure* the im p lem entation of the first change. The committee proposes to in­ stitute a work requirement and to enforce it with a rewards system of discounts below those ol nonparticipating members M em bers w ill be asked to perform specif ic tasks like addressing newsletters. typing, rearranging the store layout, pain ting, research, etc Although all members are required to do their work, those who don’t will only be required to pay more for their goods and services General membership meeting of the Community Automotive and Stereo Cooperative will be held at 7:30 p.m. Thursday at the New Guild Co-op, VV. 23rd and Nueces Streets. Proposals affecting the future of the co op are to be con­ sidered. All members are urged to attend These two changes are only the most im ­ portant part of a number of recornmen datums that are going to be considered at the upcoming membership meeting ai 7 30 p rn on Thursday at the New Guild Co-op at 23rd and Nueces Streets ll you are in­ terested in the details of the proposals, drop by the co op office and pick up a copy of the report B e sure to come to the meeting there will be free beer for all members. Wayne ( lark is a member of the Auto ( o-op Board of Directors. — s T h e Da il y T e x a n S tu d e n t N«w«pop«r a l Th* U niversity a l l a t a t a l A ustin ...................................................... Michael Eakin E D IT O R steve Regrow M ANAGING E D IT O R Suzanne Schwartz, John Y e rn rn a ASSISTANT M ANAGING E D IT O R S N EW S E D IT O R .................................................................... Jeanne Janes SPO RTS E D IT O R ................................................................. Buck Harvey Betsy Hall A M U S EM E N T S E D IT O R Ken ASSISTANT TO T H E E D IT O R ......................................... F E A T U R E S E D IT O R ......................................................... Gayle Reaves PHOTO E D IT O R ..................................................................... 1>hil Huber Mc Ham IS S U E S T A F F Susan Winterringcr City E d it o r ............................................... Reporters ............................................................. M ark Dorsett. M ark Heckmann Ja n ic e Tomlin. Sandie .Jordan News A ssista n ts ...................................................... Mike IJllm ann C ontributors R ick Rosen Editorial Assistant .C ice ly Wynne Assistant Amusements Ed ito r inda Cannaday Make-up E d it o r ........................................................ V ick y Bowles W ire E d it o r ....................................... Lupe Canales, Jim Fuquay, Steve Burke Copy Editors. David Woo Photographer B a r y Ed w ard .Johnson Opinions expressed in The Daily Texan are those oi th. editor in the w tilii of tin- article and are not necessarily tho e of the t niversity administration 01 the Board OI Hcgcnts is published bv Tile D aily Texan a 'indent newspapei at The I niversity texas Student ut Texas at Austin I nivcisitv Station Austin Tex Publu . I l i o n Draw er I) 7871Z Tho O ath Texan is published Monday Tuesday \y . (lie .day Thursday and I' i alay except holiday and exam |H-| iuds August through May Second I lass postage paid at Vusltn lox Nt wx contributions will be accepted by telephone <471 texas Student Publications 45‘J I I at the editorial office Building h as. rnenl Houri .ii at tho rn v s label all i s nail -.in building 102' cl| 1471 - Inquiries concerning delivery and died adver 11 mg In add be mad. iii I .I ’ Budding ’ZUO 2 4 4 1 .md display advertising in I S P Building 8.210 .lout 471 IHI. The I exan is IMI Lexington Ave New York N A' 10017 national advertising representative of The Daily National Kdui aticn.il Advert iring Service the The Daily I o x .u i subsi rifles to The Associated P i ess I hi 'Sew York titties sews Servo ( ' itiii'd Pre ss International m d Zodiac News S e rv ice The Texan is a member ol the the Southwest Journalism A s s o c ia t e d Collegiate Press Congress and the Texas Daily Newspapei As elation regarded the Am erican people However no m atter how unfair M r Nixon has been with the people and the press, it is still the duty and responsibility of the press to print onlv la ir representations whether verbal or visual of Nixon s actions, words and appearance. To use a cam era to capture one uncommon split-second facial expression and to then present that as “ news seems grossly unlair since Nixon doesn’t norm ally appear that way. Surely a report containing his normal appearance and true words and actions are enough to condemn the man, anyway Why did you feel the need to resort to the unfair “ N ix­ onian practices of distortion and m is­ representation of the facts'.' The least you could have done was to include that picture on the editorial page rather than a news page. M A . Honk an d rage Honk for if you Love .Jesus, To the editor: You see a lot of them w hile driving between Austin and bort Worth, Fort Worth and Austin Stick-on signs of our “ Im p eachm ent w ith tim es such as: Honor, Im p e a c h m e n t, if “ Honk All noble messages to be You're Horny sure This letter is suggesting a new call to action for one’s fellow drivers. Not too succinctly it is this: “Honk if the Bastard who .Just. Passed You in a Big-Engined Car Was Doing More Than 55 M JH ! Honk twice and rage, rage at the passing of the car ii there is a U T parking sticker on the Honk rear window It. is had enough when a 50-year-ol not worth dis­ E v e r y e d it o r c u s s io n t e a c h e r and l i b r a r i a n publisher land goes in the through the same decision­ making process every day The Drakt board members still think they were right Vbe Rosenthal still thinks ho was right I think they both wen wrong But ii such dif­ ficult decisions are to be at­ tacked with snooty denun­ ciations. suppose we spread the snootiness around By JA M E S J. K IL P A T R IC K (cl 1973 Washington Star Syn­ dicate, Inc. WASHINGTON — Acting on instructions of the local school board, a custodian at the D rake. N D . high school recently burned 32 paper­ b a c k e d c o p ie s of K u r t V o n n e g u t 's The "Slaughterhouse Five incident set off a firestorm ol denunciation from liberal spokesmen, among them The New York Times P e rm it me to contribute a bucket of cool mg water n o v e l Mind you. it was a stupid thing that the school board did. It appears that a young in­ in E n g lis h had s tru c to r assigned the Vonnegut novel to his sophomore class. Tim was a reasonable literary judgment on his part Different opinion The school board did not sec it that way. By unanimous vote, the board ordered that the o ffe n d in g c o p ie s of "Slaughterhouse F iv e " be dis­ posed of "like other trash The custodian obediently them The Authors burned League, the American Civil Liberties Union, the National Education Association and The Times, in a snooty little e d it o r ia l, thereup on in ­ structed the school board of Drake. N D.. in the meaning of academic freedom and the rights of man Very well. I have been run­ ning these bases a long time Some years ago, a few of us at the Richmond (Va. > News Leader founded the Beadle Bum ble Fund When the school board of neighboring Hanover County undertook to ban "To Kill a Mockingbird, the fund, which exists to com­ bat the asininity of public of­ ficials, promptly offered a free paperbacked copy to am Hanover student who wrote in and requested one I am authorized to say that the fund now extends the same offer to sophomore students of Drake. N I ) . as to Slaughterhouse K I v e , The point worth making is that book burning goes on all the time The practice is seldom seen literally as in guest viewpoint Texan news coverage "one-sided" By N E A L G RAH AM The University has a news service supported by man­ datory fees, governed by a select board of students and capable of providing the University community with a complete summary of local, state, national and in te r­ national news Unfortunately this news service either can­ not or will not present the news completely I speak of The Daily Texan and its often one-sided and in­ com plete news coverage Often The Texan will com­ pletely ignore local news for coverage of a national or in ternational story True, we do need coverage of such issues, but should the expense of their coverage be that of a local concern? I think not Another point is the open political stands that are taken bv The Texan Not just those on the editorial page bu1 the slant towards one side of an issue in com ­ out of proportion CTO O N L S B I W parison to opposing views No coverage Just recently the Student Government held elections for three open Senate seats and a referendum en issues dealing with student a ffairs. No coverage was given to the results of the election or referendum and almost no publicity had been given to the subject beforehand Because of lack of coverage students didn t know about the election and many didn t vote fhis Letters to the editor Firin g Ling U t f g r * » h o u ld • B e ty p e d trip l*- » p o c a d • B e 25 lin e * or le t* T h e T e x a n r e t e r v e t th e rig h t to e d it le tte r* for le n g th • In c lu d e n a m e a d d re »» , a n d p h o n e n u m b e r of c o n trib u to r M a il le tte r* to The Firin g l i n e The D aily T e x a n , D r a w e r D UT S t a ­ tion A uttin, T X 7 8 7 1 2 : or b rin g letter* to th e T e x a n e tf'c e *. b a **- m ent, Te«a» S t u d e n t P u b lic a tio n * B u i l d i n g inform ation had been No given either in support or question of the 16 referenda points, and the same was true about the candidates and their platforms The Texan s inefficiency or reluctance in presenting both sides of a story is quite evi­ dent every day Recently the Ex -Stu d en ts' A sso ciatio n presented D istin g u ish ed Alumnus Awards to five per­ sons One recipient, George R Brown, was confronted w ith much c r it ic is m for business actions he had taken as chairmen of the board of Brown & Root Construction < o A protest rallv was held the night of the ceremony in front Of the L B J Library The next day front page space was given to the protest, its pur­ pose and outcome, while little • ir nothing was said of what went on concerning the Ex- Students event A political^ PEANUTS r a i l y i s m o t i v a t e d newsworthy but to .ill but lg nore the presentation os the Murnnus Awards is clearly i step towards one-sided jour nalism B iased The open political stands that are taken by The Texan, w h e t h e r s t a t e d on the editorial page or implied by biased news coverage, must be r e c k o n e d w 11 h A newspaper when backed by mandatory fees and in an educational atmosphere must strive to create an omniscient view in reporting the news The Texan has the duty and obligation to present the news It does not have the fully right to control its readers minds, social or political viewpoints Last week the president of our University rejected the action of the Union Board to boycott Time-Life magazines issues I have maintained He stated repeatedly that the University as an institution must main tain neutrality on social and political in order to preserve the vital rights of in­ dividual members of the University community to ex­ press divergent views. His action prevents the Union Board from determining the consumpt i on habi ts and political views of every stu­ dent using the I mon In doing so Dr Spurr was protecting the right of every student to agree or disagree with such issues The Daily Texan should be a f orum b r i ngi ng out al l variables concerning an issue It should be apolitical and take no definite stand for its readers to either accept or tolerate Rather The Texan should present the tacts and let the people decide tor themselves ( M ? i T S V E I W a » t f E T iF ^ CHARLIE DROUIN T E A M BJI IP S The ret SNOWMAN K'Oii IU IN . V Z ii? THE H A N D - M A D E C H R I S T M A S C A R D IS HERE. U N I C O R N G A L L E R Y at the Dobie 12-9 477-0048 ski aspen $119 a nd up m Sem ester Break Jan. 5-12, 1974 IN A BRA N D NEW L O C A T IO N : M e ritT rave l 2200 G u a d a lu p e S e c o n d Level 478-3471 colorado ski country USA i o h , CHON, hi a e OON'T s e a ie YOU se e c o r VtOUPStif. H C S IN HBte HAUNG 8Re AKP A b ' M U G , DID iOU HOAR. ote JACKSONS Mete; ABIB TO 6£T A t e c o o e e ? AUSi MY Ob AR i b f J 1 < 1 Y I ’ W : s It f t r n Tx I fI\ via r 21 I tfL -t r IT'S LUNNING HAi s. OUSTS o)HAT'5 THE SENSE OF PO.NO SOMETHING iF -fCX CAN T uAN : l‘D ?URE L:KE TG P.A K T H A ' T EA A Ff?CiV, TA. vuA N ! J J X * fh €> .a irAMB M IU IB 1 YOU P IP v t 1 A p i fu o e t ! (PJP RL a l AL- * * - . v. RAU I S ® ' ...-ti-?. t <7 Kip. * nr You LUCKY I P P ' S T i* > ;*.c( YOU d e r rep BBUt YI ft, TOOTS > - Lid - T P W U " !//: p ] r - f . crossword p u zzle Answer lo P u lll* No 167 ■ B i ' A PUBLIC LECTURE Sponsored h\ I hr < m in jot Isuin Stiiihrs by M r. F ra n k Bourne, - P r e s e n tly C h ie f of th e E a s t a n d S o u th A m o D ivisio n o f th e U n ite d S t a t e * In fo r m a t io n A g e n c y * R e se a rch S e rv ic e I H "OBSERVATIONS FOLLOWING IN SEVEN YEARS OF DUTY INDIA WITH THE FOREIGN SERVICE" Friday, Novem ber 30 Dobie Room (Academ ic Center 406) 3:00 P.M . 2 U S P r e * K U rn G r e a t D e p r e t t i o n 3 A r t ic le 4 I v e n in g in P a n * 5 P o e t S t e p h e n V in c e n t 6 G iv e n t h e o r t h o f o f f ic e ,2 w o t d*l A b n e r 7 8 A r m b o n e 9 R ig h t tid e I O S t a r c h y tu b er 12 R a d io lo c a t io n lab I (ab I 14 U S P H a n g in ’ in th e re I 7 S p a n is h for tie * * c o m m a n d e r 2 0 F o l lo w c lo s e ly (c o ll.) I'a u n e 2 3 2 4 A ft e r g ra d u a tin g (ab I 25 C u t 27 B e w ild e r e d 30 F a ll 32 S lo p e o f v ein or lo d e 36 R a d c l i f f * grad*, for e x a m p le I N o f c u y w . F . y i L . ■ H : A.NT.E4 37 USP the h ea viest 38 U S P C i v il W a r ga riara l O ld R o u g h a n d R e a d y ” 39 U S P 41 K K K 4 3 P o e t E d n a S t V i n c e n t 44 S a c k (a b I 4 6 P la y L i t t l e 4 8 A M ic h e la n g e lo m a tte r p ie ce 51 Hide 5 3 T h ir t t y 57 G e r m a n spa 5 8 Y a le U n iv e r s it y (a b .) 6 0 U n i t y 62 C h in a * * m ile 6 4 S y m b o l m a n g a n e te a r a n e e A C R O SS I E x c la m a t io n 4 S u b s t a n t iv e (a b I 6 N o is y ( w a llo w 11 U S P re s id e n t a fo u n d in g (a lb a * 13 U S P 14 p o in t* 15 It a lia n rive r 16 U S I* t ba G r a a l E m a n c ip a t e ! tita n iu m 18 S y m b o l 19 N V '* n e ig h b o r 21 Oar fiat# 2 2 G ra a l! h a r e 2 4 C e r ta in veg etab le* 2 6 W o m a n ’» n ic k n a m e 2 8 E u r o p e a n b a ttle g r o u n d * , fo r *h o rt 2 9 O v e r/ e e lo u * d u d e n t (c o ll I 31 B a k e d bean*, for e x a m p le 3 3 M o v ie B rid g e th e R iv e r K w a i 34 M o n e t a r y u n it o f I t a ly 3 6 C le a n 38 B r 4 0 U S P t h * e le v e n th 4 2 U S B fa ttie r a n d to n 4 6 S t r ik e a g a in * 4 / M a** 4 9 T r ib e o f W e ft A f r ic a 6 0 N a y * ' c o u n te r part 6 2 V u lc a n '* w it * 6 4 T im e lo a n (ab I 5 5 N e w L a t in (ab I 6 6 U S B Profilei in Courage 6 9 B e h o ld ' 61 C o lo m b ia n m o u n t a in 6 3 U S P a d o c t r in e n am ed fo r h im 66 W a i l ) lig h t ly 6 6 A l w a y * (p o e t I 67 C o m e d ia n L o u i t D O W N I E le c t r ic a l term lab I YAFers I Is th e re one a m o n g you w ith a g e n u i n e se n se of h u m o r ? Se n d h im g o o s e ­ s t e p p i n g o v e r to the P e a r l office, T S P 4.102. In s t r u c t h i m to a s k to in t e r v ie w w ith G r e g S m i t h for a job on THE DEADLY TEXAN SEMI-ANNUAL SHOE CLEARANCE v a lu e s to 35.00 now... 9.90 .18.90 choose fro m f a m o u s l a b e ls like... b a s s • c a p e z io • d a y b r e a k s • old m a i n • projections • s a n d ie r • m a n y m o re entire stock not included. Use Your B a n k A m e r i c a r d or M a s t e r C h a r g e HAL S BOOTERY 2300 G U A D A L U P E b y P u t / I* * , In c N o 168 Thursday, November 29, 1973 T H E D A I L Y T E X A N P a g e 5 Texas' basketball coach speaks oaf about the past a n d future record at Texas How do you feel about this'' Black I was not shocked with what they said We- [tad not been winning and winning t a k e ■ c a re- o f p l a y e r problems Whe>n you have- a squad ot 12 and you are not winning each one of those 12 fc-c'ls you could be winning if he* was playing Those? that are not p la y in g w ill h<- dis- enchantc-d T e x a n ; M a n y o f t h o s e players who were critical of you were starters. And also, the players said that the same poor communication was pre­ sent when Texas won the SWC’ title in 1972 How do you a c­ count tor this? Black I could have* told you long before you wrote that who the more critica l ones would be Those w ith the greatest potential vou want more out cif As a coac h you pre tty we-ll know what your 12 ine-ri c an do If they re ally give* an honest effort e-very day, they can form a fine- basked ball te-arri In order to ge*t as rriue-h as (ro m each playe-r. you ran s o m e tim e s you a lie n a t e yourself by pushing them too hard Sci I knew that we- would have- people that woulel not agree* with my philosophy that if you have it, give- it Everyone should e-ontrihute- to Hie program as best tfie*v e arl I expect from This is what the m Arid he e ause of this I have bael a communication problem with the- cine,*, that clo not have- my ame- philosophy I e-xan: That seemed to he­ lio- ke y weird in the- playe rs ’ c ritic is m com m unication Black on Black By HI C K H A R V L Y Texan Staff W rite r In the last couple of years Texas Basketball Coac h Leon Black has received! criticism about his coaching ability Last year The D aily Texan reported that more than half th*' Tc*xas b a s k e tb a ll of players did not get along with Blae k b**' a us»- of comrnunic a lion problems A couple of the < cities were- starters and said the same feeling was present w h'-n T e x a s w o n th< Southwe-st Conference title in 1972 But before Black cam e tc> T«*xas he- had a rem arkable c'cac hing c areer Ile had a 45- 17 two /ear record at Van High School and a 131 35 five* year m ark at Lon M o rn Junior College At Texas Black has not farc-d so wed I His first ,c-ar he ' arrie- within one- game of Ain ning the* SVM title and ’ha* was with .i c rippled team But from then- his teams have been hovering at the- 500 m a rk With wh-d most people would c all excellent talent A numle-r of people- have- a t t e m p t e d judge- h is to coaching This w rite r has ta-< n one- of these But during this period of Black never has c ritic ism spoke-n out This is his turn T exan F ir s t off W h at about the* criticism '' How do you fe-e-l about it and how has it affected vou'' Black I have gotten hurne-d lot Most roac b e s dei ge-t .•I burne*d sooner or late-r But when there- is comment I do I simply don t not agree with re-,if t Kvervone is entitled to the-ir own opinions tunately ire not ba sere! on fact so many opinions t rifejr I c an st ill look at you and I i .in still work with you I have­ rs anim osity not ill feedings You have a job to do and I h,ivc- a job to cie, arid we- can go it That is my about doing philosophy Of this game We­ are in Texan Why do you think the criticism has be en thrown at you, when at Lon M orris you were only praised? Black You e an almost have any record and tx- criticized John Wooden of t J I,A eve-n is i r die i/.e-d B y his players by the- pre-ss and by his fellow c oaches Ye-t he- probably has the- most phenomenal athletic roac bing re-e ore! eve r So you clon t h a v e to h a v e to c ritic iz e a jo ti fie ution coach Ju M ti»«- simple fact that we haven t had enough w in. is c ertainly basis for c ritic is m We haven t had e-nough w ins to suit me e ither But. to me coaching has u lot m o r e meaning than ju ,t tfie win loss column As long as I stay in it it will have tfi.it meaning o r I won t stay in it I e-xan Last ye ar the- I exan a rt ie Ie- (th a t d e a lt w ith critical basketball players) wasn’t based on your win loss with your ARE YOU UNHAPPY LIVING ACCOMMODATIONS? TRY US! W e w ill h a v e a f e w select v a c a n c ie s for m en a n d w o m e n for the 2nd S e m e ste r J a n . 74 , 21 terrific meals a week O u r Rooms come with: • Private Bus • 6 Day a Week Maid Service • Heated Swimming Pools • Sundecks H U R R Y ! A P P L Y N O W ! M A D ISO N HOUSE - DEXTER HOUSE M A DIS O N - BELLAIRE APTS. 478-9891 478-8914 S Say | “ MERRY CHRISTMAS > » w ith i> I U n iv e r s it y C a m p u s S n o w scen e U H K I S T M A S C A R D S ! Leon Black takes his turn. T e x a n S ta ff fb a t o b y H U I H u b e r the* Texas players Slime- of said you weren’t coaching on the-ir level, th a t you we re- s t ill coaching like- you we re- at l.on M orris h o you thin k that w a s true? Black That is probably the c ase* I dido t know that tfie-r«- we re- -.till riot young rne-ri like I roached at Loo the- ones M o r! i , We- won a lot of games at I,on M orris w<- shouldn’t have based cm talent They never gcit beat because* tfie-y (lido I give- an honest effort I found cml that Lein M orris i riot the- I ; diversity of Texas arid I riiversity cd is not hem M orris At 'I e x,i the- plave-rs cattie I ,on Moi re I fiat the- Shoe Shop W e m a k e a n d r e p a ir b o o t* s h o e s b e lts le a t h e r q o o d s * SA L E * I S H E E P S K I N % R U G S Many ll) ’• 5 ' lh- topfu l' olor %nj) * LEA THER SALE I i I rif lfi l, f o l o f t V u r i O u i A per ft Capitol Saddlery 1614 I r\ zo' ,j A u stin , Texri! 478 9309 \ V \ < V SP* Efficiencies and f Bedrooms from only M 39 ABP 1211 We-it 8th 474 1107 EATING ON T H E RUN ? J ’y K 3 - O - G s u i* . f I i -ii A i f LFT A BIG FL AMT K IS S I D BU R G FR TAKE CARF OI HUNGER, FAST! CLOSI TO CAMPUS, GEARED FOR I A S I SERVIC E, D E LIC IO U SLY 1 G O L ID A Y H e V S C r ai ►ll la-u u t if u I n a tu ra l In <r, handsom e dolt h ie f el I d c a r d s pe*rfe-< t g re e tin g frie nds or rela tive s A for 35 * o 'h p lu i tax OUR KNITS ARE WITTY rn fact they L jir i/ sparkle... 100% a c ry lic glinted with silver, the cap, 4.00, muffler, 7.00;gloves, 5.00. Our Jacobs glove (top) has a trick up it's sleeve, e ve ry finger is a different color. Splendiferous! 4.00 Our stripped/ mitten (b elo w ) is soft as a kitten and as w arm , 4.00. All from a clever knitty r oiler tion. available at: H e m p h ill’s, T S P B u s . O ff. 8 _ W a n d U n iv e r s it y C o -O p . tiy ftfg tfg g r.g r.g ff gff gffaFff sfr. a^r.^r.gf. gr.li P a g e 6 T h u rs d a y November 2V, IV73 T H E D A ILY T E X A N 2316 GUADALUPE 9 OO S 30 PARK IN OUR IOT U IRKTIY BEHIND IMT ( ADfAU .. there- for one baaketball reason to play But at Texas m any cif the; p la y e rs com e h e re for a numbed* 'el reasons, one* of whic h was basked ball But so m e * tim e s those- eithe-r reasons became more impor tant than basketball. Texan: But what c an you do lo change that? Black I kneiw basketball and I can teach basketball to anyeirie- who wants to !e*arn But I funnel out that you can indeed lead that horse to w ater but not m ake him drink I think I tried loo hard to make them weirk too hard to do what I thought was he-st As a r'-sult there was a breakdown I realized ve-ry gradually, that nei matte r how I wanted things, that wasn t e-nough The- players had to want it Them I be-gari to loeik at our recruiting and see* if we- were getting the- right people fsinc e- Paige is black), and he kneiws how they fe*e*l Texan; Have you had any the tro u b le d ealin g w ith blac ks here so far? Blac k No I have had an easy time talking with black players because they have the; same- philosophy I do Some of my white- players last year did not Today, without exception, our blacks and whites think basketball is ve-ry, very im ­ portant We- are going the right way Texan; Doe* this mean you ran now get the quality blac-k players from, say, Houston W heatley? is doubtful it Black No Until we- get into the ne-w facilities, we- cannot attract the- tug name* blac k basketball players Or leu that matter the big name players Texan: That brings up the la s t q u e s tio n . T h e new facilities are long in coming Du you feel basketball has bee n snubbed at the Colver Texan. That brings us to another subject; recruiting People- used to blame Ie*xas for not getting the- black athle te- What dei you have- tei say about that'' Black I have- ne-ve-r had a problem with any black We had recent recruiting succe ss w ith black re cru itin g Not many people- re alize- how hard we* have recruited for the black athle te- for the- last, four years Awfully awfully hard Texan; Heiw come last year was the- first year that blacks re-ally arrived ? Black The; proble-rri is Tex as at least now It is taught, in t fie- community The re-ason we- had such recent success is Rodne y Paige e>ur women’s insight Ile- has an lo a c h ■tty? Blae k You have aske-ei me uric- of the- difficult questions because- no one* has been in the- position I am in now and no one knows what it is like I e*xpressed c er tam If it would seem like a things negative answe-r It would se-e-rn that I was saying that in certain areas the- U niversity isnt job for basketball This would make it like- Coach Black is making excuses (hung a good look I can’t that be-cause I do the- people- ,ippre-< late- what fie*r< are doing to help I love* the-1 Iniversity of Texas It has I came; give-ri rn** e*ve*r vt fling f r urn b ehin d a plow T o criticize Texas would fee* .* tremendous conflict Sports Shorts Akers Rumored For Frog Post Texas Longhorn Olfemsive Back ( o ar Ii Fred Ake-rs is erne* of tx rrie-n sc fi«*dule-d to fie- interviewed by the Texas Christian I University lf) man c ommitte-e- attempting ter find a successor ter I ir ed < ouch B illy I ohill DI fie rn on t fi«- c ommitt.ee h list include Hunter Urns, a former I ' I star G II Bartosh a Texas A A M assistant Jim S h o fn e r an assistant for th** San Francisco 49ers e»f the* National Football league Jim Brow n and M elvin Brown TTM ends it season Saturday in Hie* Cotton Bowl against Southern Methodist K A N SA S < H Y 'A U i P h il Johnson an assistant coach and s' out tor the- ( b leu go Bulls was seder te*d Wednesday to take over the- head coaching chores of the- slumping Kansas < Tty Orriafia Kings in the National Basketball Ahvk nation a a a A A A BA LT IM I )R f . 'A U ) Al Burnhry of the Baltimore* Orioles was named Wednesciay by the- Base ball W riters Assoc ration of Am erica as the Americ an League s Kookie of the Year for 1973 The speedy outfielder a le-ft handed hatter hit 337 last casein while* playing mostly against right handed pitc hers and st erie- 23 bases DO YOU OWN A VOLKSWAGEN TOYOTA DATSUN MGB? INTERNATIONAL CAR CUNIC Is th e p la c e to h a v e it S e r v ic e d or R e p a ir e d D is c o u n t to S t u d e n t s on P a r t s W a r r a n t y o n A ll L a b o r a n d P a r ts 477-6797 1621 East 6th COH A B H O R ! Do y o u k e e p y o u r cohabitee awake all night with your jokes? Are you ready to move to the day shift, with the rest of us? Come over to the Pearl office, T S P 4.102, and ask interview with Greg to Smith for a job on T H E D E A D L Y TEXAN One More Time for Clark Field . because tile ri*-w baseball field will not be ready for this S o u t h w e s t s e a s o n ’ s Conference competition the decision was made not to use it at all until the 1974 season (lochs also said construe Hon should begin soon on th** $5,790,000 swimming facility at Sa n J a c i n t o and 19th S t r e e ts , adjacent to th*- old Junior High r D i v e r s it y form erly a School The site . . ( parking . . lot, has been fenced off but no excavation work has begun The fa cility, which will seat 2,670 spec­ tators for swimming events, w ill be built by th*- B L Met;*-*- Construction ( (> of Austin 'l h*- new swimming and div mg facility will house a 50 motor eight lane pool in addi Hon to a separate- diving area . . .____ _ Ar. with 11v<- diving platforms An electronic timing system will record elapsed times order of finish and lap splits accurate to I I.booth of a second (Mans still are being made tor lh*- Special Events ( enter which will be built on Red River Street between 16th and 18th Streets The c e n te r will .eat 17 200 I or basketball games and also will b*- used lor eritei tainmcnt events Wnrhs S.'jul T h a n e s Still a n ­ Kochs said changes still are tieing made on original plans and final plans probably will be presented to th*- regents soon Th*- regents will con Hider bidding for the construc­ tion of the c e n te r during their meeting rn M arch Construction is expected to begin on th*- $19 m illion center later in 1974 with completion in the latter part of 1970 Horns Rest Before Cotton Bow l Players E n j o y in g W e e k of R ela x atio n By J O E T T E M O F F E T T Texan Staff W riter A lter three months of daily workouts w e e k e n d g a m e s and night squad meetings the Texas football team has been enjoying a week * rf following th*- A& M game nothing The rest is just tor a week however Preparations for Texas New Year s Day gam*- the Cotton Bowl Classic, begin Monday Team mr-rn hers will run on their I* rank su p e rvise d by tra in e r ow n Medina until Dec 8 After joggingaw ay th*- soreness absence from the coaches organized procure takes up again until finals imposed by a week Then finals and th** Christmas break will put another trait to Cotton Bow l practices But Dee 26 all players report b.x k for a week of hard praetiee Aller I I I . . traveling to Dallas Der- 29 there will tx time tor two more short workouts beton* .... . I the game This on again off again practicing may seem more trouble than it worth But for most player s even a week of rest is a p p r e c ia te d So close to finals many of the players need this week to eat* ti Up on work they have been putting off I ll probably study dur ing the tim e w e usually prat said quarterback M arty Akin. H ee When I rn not watching Star 'Trek br­ added 'Then I * an go out every night and I vc missed all make up for what season Akins said 1 The layoffs are good bi-cause we can cur*- our bruises and bumps and have a good time F o r defensive back J a y Arnold let f W . l, I I . J . I ting Hr*' aches and pains subside rig companioned try a term paper want o catch up on m y pinball game Arnold said But pinball probably is lh*- most strenuous a c tiv ity he will make time for during his week of relaxation is be I Most players will not forsake exercise for ttic who!*- week T e rry Melancon defensive back played g*»lf 'Tuesday and might get in some basketball and tau*-ii football I don t think anyone w ill have time to get out of shape at least it wasn t that way last year he said Most Longhorns are interested in at least one other sport tint just have not had th*- time or energy lor it until now Tight end Tomm y Ingram wants to play basketball, Arnold m ay spend some tim e in th*- handball court and several players have lifted weights during th*- layoff SERVICE ON A ll TYPES OF STEREO EQUIPMENT WARRANTY STATION FOR: PIONEER. J.B.I., PANASONIC, TOSHIBA, & OTHERS. _ J 3925 N. IN T E R R E G IO N A L So u n d g a l l e r y 454-0133 FORMER NAVY $ 1,000.00* Part-Time • T ra ve l • E x c h a n g e • A d v a n c e m e n t • T ra in in g • In su ra n c e • R e tire m e n t D IA L 4 7 7 - N A V Y lA ppio/iniote A nnual Fum ing)) (E - 4 O v e r 4 y r * TO SPARE. O R TO SHARE.| Spacious Apartments I bedrooms - from STA9.S0 ABP 2 bedrooms - from SI74.50 ABP broaduioor 454-3885 1200 Broadmoor I ' m telling y a ', y o u 'v e o n ly go t till Friday! % By M A R K PEEL Texan Staff W riter The old Clark f ield baseball field lias received a stay of ex edition or destruction until at least next October because the facility tieing built at 19th and Comal Streets (-ast of H I 35 will not be used until that time T ti e n e w C l a r k F i e l d (although that is not what it will tie called) will br- finished sometime next summer The old field will ti*- used tor fall practice in 1974 A performing arts center will be built at R e ­ p resen t Clark Field site Uncle Chances arar go*id the new baseball field will be named Dis'• ■ti <„ Alpen '/ I IVC. I- v "PPI Alp* • O f /ll % Old!/-. I, I VV Hi i-f'jifr I V V * fJnr% )*j. A r n i ) ' . t u d f n H 9 .9 Annin 11,15, Alpen < lit Sign-/* IO, I r hijnyn . P f /fugit IV 15./ //*"•'. I VV, 4 Un i / -i CO" f ’% 15,1V Aguila / .ll j ," p a,. *5, A n i'I/ « r* \ 8,1? f loit Cl A l p h / i ( h i S i g m a 18, 1,7, A l p h a K a p p a B r n t t i e r I V <2. IS , S im k m s H , I V V M ot p>ocH IS, IS , A a f d v a t k % IO, H ( L'jn-jr* *, P i* /I ** jf‘ I S , I S , A I M 5,12 A lp h a f a p p * I*'*1 IS, I / . A lp h a C h i St herb holland rahs like everybody at A&M Ref ore I could answer, a guy dressed in the orange and white costume of a lexas cheerleader walked into the room and said 1 is there anyone here from le x a s ' “ Do you mean T U ,' one of the \&M students said The Texas cheerleader sat down and e n te re d into the discussion about Texas and campus life So you re from The Texan, he said to me I ve berm meaning to toll you that Huck H arvey is crazy and your sports sec (ion is too biased You don t show enough school spir it It didn t take long for the cheerleader and me to get into a battle of words and R ice oori had to intervene The cheerleader left and R ice said I ,ee what you m e a n about (fiat m inority on your campus The topic then turned to the football game, as it was nearly kickoff time However A&M fumbled on its first play from scrim m age Texas recovered the fumble deep in Aggie ter ritory and I went to sleep along witti the other sportswriters in the pressbox R ice continued to fell mc* about tun frustrations as a liberal student on a con servative campus You can t imagine flow hard it is for us he said .core another to do anything on campo hero as we w atched Texa touchdown Silent Leaders on t The adm inist r atmo tell us anything even it we a > and the student body docsn I really give a damn almost like Ignorance it tunnel vision here ti*- said W e call It 'That is nobody sees what goers on out side College Station and nobody cares Just so Aggie tradition is perpetuated lie said A&M was so far behind 'h i­ nnies ii really bas got birn down Do you know that we ju 1 recently had first panty raids on th*- women s our dorms'' he asked Have you ever noticed that an Aggie docsn t call attention to himself when lo­ in Austin'' That s because he s afraid ut all lh*- Texas people But when you corn*- t'» A&M you ll notice that everybody wears maroon That s to scare oft .ill the Longhorn' R ic e said .In ,i then Roo*evelt Leak failed to get uji I rom a tarklei s grasp arr*) th*- A&M fans went wild with excitement L*-aks was helped oft th** tudd and the Aggies had displayed great sportsmanship just like th*- week before at Rice You hav*- to tcall/*- R ic e said ipologi/mg lor th*- ai tion of the almost that w»- r*- so tat liehind the times (ans here it will Like a w hile to do anything constructive But we re going to do our damndest at th** Battalion Hang in there M ike_____________________ on Nov 22, 1971, I w as giv«*n an honorable discharge from tho I S A rm y and vow*-*! never to return to another m ilitary installation or anything close to that Hut ironically enough two y*-;ns later on Nov 22 1973 I returned to something close to that as I drove to College Station for the Texas-Texas A&M game It was one of the stranger and more Interesting days of my life At IO 30 a rn tho A&M Student (iovern in tIm• “ civilian ment held a brunch cafeteria A few people were th« r <■ in eluding Handy Ross A&M student govern merit president and Mike R ice editor of The Battalion A&M s student newspaper D is c u s s io n w a s on th e c a m p u s leadership at A&M and how it compares wit ti Texas ‘ How e.iri you get such a good political machine going at T ex a s?” ora- person ask cd me I said I wasn I a w a r e Texas was another Ta romany Hall Hut because* Texas was I figured there were such a large school n atu rally some people in polities However I found out A&M wasn't like that And fliere are a lot of Aggies in College Station interested People here are too interested in Uadi lion to worry w ith extracurricular stuff said R ice “ That s why the R ic e hand was n e arly m auled M o b A tt a c k The Marching Owl Band better known as th*- Mott cam e under attack from the fans when it spoofed the Aggie Band by do mg an offstep version of the Block T and th** traditional Aggie War Hymn Had it not been for th*- A & M yell leaders and local police angry A& M fans mostly alumni might have really done bodily bar rn to the Mob said R ic e I thought it (the Mot) s show) was real Iv funny But you vc just got to understand that nothing is more imper tin t to the student body her*- than preset ving tradition that of the- true Ag tile of fact R ic e said I matter students were opposed to any change because "I the image of the True Ag arui A&M tradition As From < oui*! you believe i f ' 'I be biggest issue *io campus around here was getting a gynecologist on campus said Bi* <• Arni we almost didn't get one either the dis* ussion it seemed as though everybody on th** A&M campus was either •> gung bo Aggie or a newspaper the e d ito r Aggie the ( orps Ru­ tland was mon- important to Iii*- mass ol A&M students than anything else the football t«-.*i i i th*- im a g e ol That is So you roust know what I rn up against when I trv to effect any kind of chang** through editorials lu r*- in the Battalion R ice said small minority of students are really rati But at 'I exa* it sc.-rn like the \ \ ANTIQUES SATISFY / / QlJISKiSHEKKY ANTIQUES at the b lin ker light in D R I P P I N G S P R I N G S , T E X A S “ S t? IN S U R A N C E ? . AUTO • MQTORCYCll • MOBILE HOM! • APT (O N T IN IS INSURED I ought to find samu reasonably priced insurance before / leave for the ho!id ny $ C A U M A R K O R M A R S H A L L A N Y T IM E OFFICE 451 '/ B V H O M E 45V 16V J I I OB W KOENIG or 451 Z B B / A l ALL R ISK IN S U R A N C E W . a r . y o u n g m . n w h o a n d . ' . ta m ! yo ur p ro b le m a n d r a n h e lp l o w d o w n p a y m . n i t a n d * m o ll n |o n >t d y _ r > U Y ^ * ^ _______ _ FIREPLACES spanish !Ulanorth from only $164 ABP ( a n d w e t h r o w in a h u g . a p a r t m e n t ( r o o ! ) 909 Reinli 454 9863 Studtman's Photo S e rvice 222 W 19th & 5324 C am eron Rd R E S U M E ' & ID E N T IF IC A T IO N T Y P E P IC T U R E S I -D ay Quick, Reliable Service N O W OPEN TOWN LAKE CLEANERS A N D LAUNDRY 2 0 1 7 East R iversid e Special good with this Coupon ONE SUIT or DRESS 99‘ good thru 12-31-73 I I I I I I I — J U I C Y S T R I P S IR L O IN HO T l f X A S l f /AST * F L U F F Y , P U T rf P Y B A K R ) POTATO C R I S P I O S S I D S A I A D r>, <» WI ^ •». . A*, A l l F O R ONLY I I I I I I I M M U SIRLOIN PIT 2815 G U A D A L U P E PH. 4 7 8 -3 5 6 0 NO TIPPING r /'COME AS YOU ARE' J That's right, meathead/ F rid a y 's the last day to enter Pearl s Photography Contest. So hurry up and show us what your idea of a fam ily is. And there's no limits to what you c an enter ..we'll even let you weirdos enter There are prizes for the three best photos and they ll be published in December's Pearl, too. So don't stifle yourself. Bring your pictures by the Pearl of fice ( T S P 4 102) by 5 p.m. tomorrow. T hat's only a day and a half away, so round up your fam ily and get them all in the picture. 4 PEARL Monthly Magatinm Supplement to the D oily i**,o n Thursday, November 29, 1973 THE DAILY TEXAN Page - W H rGroups Sponsor Rider Service By BO BBY HAWTHORNE Whether going home for Christmas to Yonkers N Y Steubenville, Ohio or Dallas the economical and patriotic thing to do is take along a passenger, split the costs and save the gasoline That s the reasoning of the Texas Union, Alpha Phi Omega 'APO ) and the Austin Ride t enter anyway The Union and APO sponsor the “ rides project, which is a service home whereby University students make themselves available as either riders or drivers en route to certain destinations The Austin Ride Center, working in dependently, is pursuing the same goal, which is to get as many people into as few cars as possible In making oneself available for the rides home” project the student must fill out either a rider request or a driver tag These tags are available at the pro- ject’s poster and map in the Union Main Lobby. The student, if requesting a ride, places the tag on the hook designated for riders below the map He then looks through the group of drivers going to his zone and copies down the information to get in touch with the person on the driver tag Finally, the two get in touch and make final arrangements. The student offering a ride follows almost the same procedure He fills out a driver tag and places it on the hook for drivers below the map. He then looks through the list of rider request tags and copies down information to get in touch with the person needing a ride Although the APO is co-sponsoring the “ rides home” project, it is not planning to organize a car pool for students needing rides “ We usually plan things about two weeks ahead of schedule and we haven t made arrangements to do anything along those lines,” an APO spokesman said Wednesday, “ We may look into it later, but nothing like that is being planned right now.” Meanwhile, the Austin Ride Center is available to students by calling 453-6200 between 9 a.rn and I p m and 5 to 8 p m., Monday through Friday. m Whereas riders with the “ riders home project may voluntarily donate money to assist in the travel expenses, the Ride Center charges riders $1 for trips of IOO to 150 miles plus $1 for every additional .>0 miles and $5 tor out-of-state_tri£S1_ _ ^ M|| Mortician 'Confesses' Burial Facts By M IK E I LEMANN Texan Staff Writer Although the first burials probably were efforts to protect the living from the dead, funeral costs in the United States have risen to an average of $1,100 a mortician said Wednesday Robert Creecy a representative of t ook Walden Funeral Home spoke on ' ‘Confessions of a Moi tieian at a sandwich seminar sponsored by the Union Academic Affairs deepest emotions The first burials were (rude efforts to protect the living from pints, he said Funeral are based on traditions and religious beliefs, ( r e e f y In some sections of the observed it was considered world he said highly dangerous (fir a pregnant woman to be close to or even to see a dead body, fsven in Austin today, families are reluctant to let the funeral home leave with the remains he said. ( reery said funeral homes are at (fie mercy of their suppliers lf the casket m anufacturers r a i s e the funeral homes must prices also r a i s e them. The average funeral cost in the United States is between $1,1 OO and $1 200, he said F o r comparison, he said tfie a v e r a g e price in Austin is $1 OOO to $1 2(H) The bulk of funeral expenses usually go to the funeral home (d e c ry said. This money covers both the casket price and service fees 'I he roost expensive casket in town costs $10,000 and is quarter irirh solid copper plated with sterl­ ing liver he saifl The most rx pensive one he had heard of cost $28,(HH) and weighed several thou sand pounds “ People ask why we need a half million dollar building to conduct a ‘‘The funeral,’ Creecy said But he answer observed if his company had a smaller less impressive building it would get fewer funerals is, we don’t ‘outside world Funeral homes are affected by to a greater the extent than one* might expect. ( reecy s company has just moved to keep up with Austin’s population shift to (fie north And with current world shortages manufacturers ire having problems getting steel for caskets ( reecy said cremation is not as popular as most people think ( (emotion requires the permission if the person's survivors, he said arid takes about two to three hours The?re is no preparation of the body required in Texas if final disposi lion will take place within 24 hours, but crematories require the txKly to be in some type of con­ tainer, Creecy said During cremation both the body and the casket are consumed, but by the time the relatives receive the ashes, only bone fragments and calcium deposits are left, Creecy said He observed that as far as the state is concerned, the cremation is the final disposition of the body and what is done with the ashes afterwards, such as scattering them from an airplane is up to the person’s survivors Creecy said the world of the funeral director is ( hanging For example he had on a grey suit at the seminar Only four years ago he said a funeral employe never would be hired unless his attire consisted of a white shirt and a black suit Today Creecy wears both [link and yellow shirts, and even owns a few striped ones T h r o u g h t h e L o o k i n g G l a s s T * « o n S l a H b v N a n t y Q « 4 Evans -lr , is s ai d H i g h l a n d M a i l presently negotiating with lh* IHM Corporation to obtain a highly sophisticated, highly tor the sp* cia 11 zed ( 'imputer purpose of conserving elec- ‘(ember Uh 11 L i b e r t y , an IH M lrk'-tirig i opr < ^entail ve ox nnod the • umputor is bo cd on lr oiling power < oti- motion during tx ak demand ’resen tly L ib o rtv said all r ti o 11 j.' ti I s . (’Sea la to r s , valor » and air candil loner s Highland Mall are turned at approximately th*- same H e said load on ! ITI ,o I Ti 1 ho moi nil >wor mg _ 7AN AFTER-CHRISTMAS SALE ^.BEFORE CHRISTMAS1,, V / k NEW T O R f A t l Entire Slock P A JA M A S & ROBES 40% 2 0 % 6 0 % OFF R e g . 5 9 5 0 to 8 0 OO I lf s u i t s ] : PATTERNS • SOLIDS BEAUTIFUL DOUBLE KNITS 1 0 %.. 5 6 % OFF ENTIRE STOCK Reg. 79.50 to 125.00 Leather Coats 25% OFF SPECIAL GROUP USE JACOBSON'S • BANK A M E RI C A R D . MASTER CHARGE • A M E R IC A N EXPRESS • LA Y A W A Y • CHARGE • OR JUST P L A I N O I D FASHIONED CASH DON’T MISS THIS SUPER GREAT SALE 0 SWEATER sh ir t s . t , V e l o u r s & OO OFF REG. RPICE C I M A H C d ENTIRE STOCK LON G SLEEVE DRESS SPORT WAIST BAND & REGULAR STYLES FAMOUS BRANDS 20%OFF r n . Many Unadvertised Specials U M B R ELLA S 388 S HORT SLEEVE SHIRTS 2.99 BALANCE OF STOCK sJ?■mukJr CUFFS KEYNOTE T v ? REVIEWS 1 rn CLIFFS NOTE', PROFESSION* (OUtlTION s t ilt ‘ HO O K S I I I I It HIGHLAND NP A Ll 452 5739 Call UC J BOW TIES 3 " C l i f f ' * C O U R S E 0UTI I N E S SIZES / to 13 LIMITED GROUP s l A C k s F L A R E K N I T S OPEN 9 A M. TO 5:30 P M DAILY TILL 8 P M. THURSDAY r CO . Siam « Amt *• '.WL _ j P a g e 8 T h u r s d a y , N o v e m b e r 29, 1973 T D K D A IL Y T K X A N 2222 Guadalupe Next to Texas Theater 'Spider' Brings Laurels to UT F a t h e r M a n n e q u i n : "I tel l y o u a bo u t t he b r o w n r e c l u s e sp i de r. You see, it's b l i n d e d b y it s m o t h e r j u s t a f t e r bi r t h a s a r e s ul t o f a n a c i di c f l ui d t h a t s h e u s e s to c l ean h e r infant. Because o f t hi s bl i nd ne s s , t h e r e c l u s e s p i d e r p r e f e r s d a r k , c ol d a n d s e c l u d e d p l a c e s of h a b i t a t i o n , /Ake t he u n f o r t u n a t e m a t e o f t he black w i d o w , t he re c l use s p i d e r f ai l s to sec t he poi s on of his i n v i t i n g lover. B u t u nl i k e the black w i d o w ’s v i c ­ t i m, the r e c l u s e s p i d e r does not die so easi l y. In f act , i f o n l y s l i g h t l y pr o v o k e d , the s p i d e r w i l l k i l t y o u . . . ” U n iv e rsity g ra d u a t e student David S ch m o eller w r o t e ” the th esis tor his m a s t e r ’s d e g re e in the a tt ic G ra n te d , the conditions in m o s t a t t i c s a r e not conducive to thesis p ro du ctio n but then this is n either a co m m o n attic nor a c o m m o n th esis S c h m o eller is an R T F student whose thesis production is the wr iting an d direc ting ol his own film which w a s shot in the a tt ic of the B rem o nd Mansion, a 19th C en tu ry Austin h o m e which now houses h e a d q u a r t e r s of the T e x a s C lassro o m T e a c h e r s ’ Association E n title d ‘‘T he Spider Will Kill You the film tells the story of one blind r e c l u s e (not a s p id er). J o n a t h a n who hides from the w orld in the c onfines of an aband on ed t h e a t e r s a ttic With only the visits from his friend G eorge to tie h im to r eality. J o n a t h a n c r e a t e s his own w orld with the help ai so m e old m an n e q u in s sto red in his loft h o m e w ho c o m e alive for him c re a t in g a world full of m a t e r n a l re lationsh ips, love s trif e and death The a u d i e n t e sees the m a k e believe world through th e ey es of its c re a t o r J o n a t h a and m ust c o n tr a s t his fan tasy e x is te n c e with the real world when G e o rg e appear H ow ever G eo rge leaving the au d ien c e to m a k e its own judgments too, b e c o m e 1 e ntang led in the web dividing reality fro m lam y T he JO m in u te * oior movie owns th#* distinction of being financed through a gr ant from the E d u catio n al and B enevolent F o un d atio n rd (fie D ire c to r s Guild of A m e ri c a which has tradition ally backed s tu d e n ts in ( alifornia film schools Tins y ear howevei it gave its largest prize of $‘2 *00 to Schm oeller tor his work a t T ex as Schmoeller won the* I K M a w a rd for his previous film Lora L e e s B edroom , w hich took top honors at the Midwe tern F ilm F e stiv a l and most re cen tly copped the C IN F G olden F o g ie Award The film i b a s e r I rat rn alleg o ry Schmoeller co n triv ed as a result of ‘ r>dd fir The title of th** erupt o c c u rr e d to h im first before th e story line of a c u m s ta n c o s blind m a n and th* Iii* rd J o n a th a n .o he n eeded so m e th in g to unit*- the two ideas In re searc biog spider S ch m o eller hit on the brow n re c lu se spider which has m a n y sim ilar c h a r a c t e r i s t i c s of the blind J o n a t h a n c h a r a c t e r , S c h m o elle r explained The brown re* lust- spider would b*- th* link b etw ee n th e d e a d ly spider and a blind m an living in f a n ta sy T he spider would be th* key to th** trunk w h e re blind J o n a th a n found th*- sting of d e a th I i Dancer Shirley Anderson plays the m annequin Christina. About th*' UGA aw ard Schm oeller .aid a step mo t dire* tor a re n d irector lot easier to w r i t e You r a n b reak right into the top as a w riter but d ir e c tin g take*- tim e T he UGA a w .o d also Inc the effect of indirectly recognizing T e x a s as a prorni n«*nt film school It t lucky a ste p in the door of bec o m in g a film enough to get He went on to add It s a Being a s u r re a lis tic d r a m a tile film req u ired e x ten s iv e special e ff e c ts that resulted in calling talent out of sev eral o t h e r d e p a r t m e n t s Art student L a rry H a r m o n cast and m ad e most of th*- m an n e q u in s c o m e s alive D ra m a s tu d e n ts Gwen West and G e o r g e Head mad*- up the a c to r s to re p licate exactly the mannequins from which they evolve in the film including the m a nn equ in Christ ma who la t e r Blind Jonathan (Robert Palter) rehearses a scene w ith his m annequin co-stars. The point of alleg o ry and of til*- film is tha t ii one is cru el w hether to him self (as Jo n a th a n is) o r to someone els* (as the m a n n e q u in ” U hristina is to J o n a t h a n ) he m r she) will lie han ded a n equally cru el fate S ch m o e lle r aid Schmoeller s facu lty adviser Dr Ronald Foil* v rem arker! D avid is plowing som e ground that w as previously plowed by th** e a rl y s u r r e a li s ts I think some of David s use of J o n a th a n s blindness and the b i z a r re n e s s that re s u lts c o m e s out of D avid 's ex per o ne*" at t ii*■ Austin State School B T F g ra d u a te student Ana L and ry e rved a producer w h ile fe llo w ITI I g r aduate student ’1***1 N icholaou was d ir e c to r of photo graphy Foi one scen e. a suspenseful cat and m ou se c h a s e b etw een ( h n s i i n a and J o n a t h a n on a the ater catw a lk t ii* • crew aband on ed B rem o nd House to film in th** at ti* and c a tw a lk s of Hogg Auditorium Shooting d a y s w e re Oct 29 to Tov H although with preproduc tion planning and film editing work on the film will add up to about four m on th s Th** film will be sent to th** m a jo r film f< .tivab tint that d o e s n t mak* it bad for til* au dien c e logically will probably walk out saying Boy that w as really a beautiful weird film of film th at will a p p e a l to festiv al v iew e rs T he ending doe sn t. seerri to work T he a udience It s the kind Policy riot*’*! is J o n a t h a n s m a n n e q u in Doctor * if philosophy <>nd history R o b ert P alter [Hays J o n a th a n Austin dan* et Shirley and Dr Donald W eism ann, Anderson professor of a r t s plays G eo rg e Vi* kl Low** serves both as c a m e r a o pe rato r and lh** von ** of th** moth* I m an neq uin w hile S chmoellei him self was the voice of th e father i i i R h * end tells the m ann equ in who was cast to re p re se n t David and who like David story of the brown reclu se spider and th** sting of (h ath lover C hristina S to ry b y C a r l W iem ers S t a f f Photos b y D a v i d W o o Schmoeller both wrote and directed the film Directing films (this is his second) 'takes more time than w ritinq to break into/ Schmoeller says Thursday, November 29, 1973 T H E DAILY T E X A N Page 9 Energy Policies Groups Urge Action Ii M< W D H an Stat) W riter lO H f lA S Rauf'S if H lr Off! Yip j th*’ ft'f F'Tj! t/md i ner g s joined lo r ' es Werjn* V? ' -I* / ’ OUM ii to act gv / cmaerva ti in jf k t > ^ * ' * * ti H mF lr K i t ! o the p re s t .i! rig Af re Dr ( eti v/-r si tv if /• s s o r til fl a /e|ton andI C ag e f.irri i' ' e*.'. fu lly in til*- re pa I goer] cr-ri' florid *-!« < tion Th/* Zither threz nu' i< ar f/iW/*r rra-ri w/-r/* opp'/ ./-d to 'ih< group /*;UprevvecJ /on fid/ fi'e tfia* a / ornbinaticif) of * n ct go re y m/*a a-.ures iri/1 full (ion w ill ' fti/erj t tit>fit-r ■> *•< ’ii* i urrent Au 'in through e n e rg i prohl/’rn J fin ti j i y I*1 r * " * { Jr orig run pf ohiz-rriH Hut th/? grou {i .id*!*-*! 'Tor ’ w ill not iu lfi the arid I ti I V e r Sit y < t , of A J lim irn us* dev iv* an < ra r g ', / on*.<*rv .d ion prog ram apid grow*ii ir* to re/Juz e Die r • a pi ta eri/*rgy u{-.«- {/*r or of public aed hnviiofs ^ * /< j1/ f ira! ' ban .i plum if ti ti of ( fur <• Aet< 'a n ' bi r ’ ti*- V b'/ii of f bar l/-s fir i,{ , , . ,,f rej»f‘- / ntirig f 3 < Fib ri f;d I /■ . (• ag/- *r y itv f *aa ti' iim an ■ rig** r.olutir>n i I o find long r ie ra-' ' '.nit y for they stressed U til* to ta ' X Ie p o liti/ ai v. ill problem with tie ne' en nary try leadership provided a n d » h <• C i t y C ount- ll technical stet!Ii re q u ire d to develop / orr.er v mon (»oliz I*--. for T o n ig h t Charlton Heston loan Hackett WILL PENNY ... flirt'd rtl h\ I'tin (/fif'1 fbi* group fa ile d on the 'o u ri'il to form a research program to provide th** infor ffi.ition and analysis required for der (ding on method* to < oil « r jc energy Sum m ing up the group * fje-.ire for the research Black the m o r e w e learn about said rn or e ( on se r v a ti on to e n e r g y we I! he a b le provide th e ll I /<• 11or. s t r e s tie d o I t h •* d * J c I o p rn ** n t H ii < h s a y in g v o t e r * p r o g r a m * should not fed /otTiplac or .it mg on H az#? I ton • th** statement V » demand for power is growing ? fir * < 'irrtf. faster than the population Population growth ti*- said is riot the big issue We mu ’ riot ignore the im POI ta re «• of the rising demand growl ti r on* for stir H a res**arr ti group w as e stim ated at $100 e ;ti< et m g. rn the fu tu re to assist ‘tie developm ent f an energy ' raiser vat ion re search program Response also was made to a proposal concerning the po u t i l i t y ti I h a v i n g a February eler hon to rederide A u s tin . in v o lv e m e n t tie South T ex a s I nuclear) fro in I " ' t W o l f e Institute I ta- proposal by Thomas pr e m den* o f th*- Isri for Advanced ironmental Studies was f all >d irnpractir al by Hazelton who aid tie doubted A u s tin •it} <■! to go would w a n t through the vo tin g arid den ion process again R e m a r k mg on Wolfe . desire for an e|e* lion without advertising or /-arn p a in in g he question < d how many p eople would go to the {/ills 'I h e p r o po s a l W i l l be t>, the c o u n c il p re s e n te d 'f bur aday by th*- criviro n m en tai group Wol f e is req u e stin g the m o . in ii ber aune he thinks th*- publo w as riot adequately /•'Iii' ated on tii<- rue lear issue in (tie [ll e VIOUH e|ci t ;/)ri U N I V ! I C S I I y o f Hi I A K I VII X I o l i f X A S (ll A M A v J » #r V "/ ¥ \ Cfi t A MJg A F R ID A f A N D S A T U P U A f N O T O V F P /I VERY SO I IM ) SYSTEM POOL • F 0 0 S B A L L THURS. & FRI. IU S A Z A SAT. P LU M NELLY 2 6 IO G U A D A L U P E N O C O V F P i J e '. t e r A u d it o r iu m j / and 9 p m I A d m i* .'.io n S i OO e r. t’ -t?fit/ bf fl il^/ Fie'vet*/ . ’I / ti . " t ,**r t #r> ' k l af Ut XA' ' h f .1 */ th J/ 4# ’ J#**'/ ffi** h# b*»f 'lf 4* i / h i / ,j t,e '/f h ‘ -rf wok Il iff ) v / r r n j / t f t i O f F ' > * * !' J f ' , r t h * f r f < h / r y frl'/w nikPt Hie v ,f El* r v < *“ / *. if 4 aff iy a* iftu* ta *til a) hut}/ I if, the JKJ#* / ■ * *. 'J it is it. e /*-- Kt.s M ' l f i t c i H at f'/f IL* haft* ft 41 fluffier JC ♦//)*/ sc- /^ c 4I of v .» * dlrV Ljrnewl ,/fS.s ‘.cr - i e I sr tm rMfK #fu0 grift*fi%'#4 ✓ fjdk ■ *.atilt it f I'ti \ Sr Fleer** */ .r rf ot*er f/>f t * Kl* r fh»% hit k r«4# pi*'a ft 1% hrs, film Southern Sunset ■ •••vt watt rrv*t* ixrvta A * m a n e r r a t a * p r o b le m a t t a r p ro b i r m r h im s e lf a n e ! a t / a im , s e r e n e a n d u n v a r y in g a t if t a n , a f e e lin g w h ic h t h e w o r ld , t o m e o f w h ic h e n d in t r it e * , n a t u r e r e m a in * w a * c a p t u r e d in tin * P o rt A r t h u r t u n t e t __________ UT Gasoline Supply Slashed I i y , i ( ' 1 w ill />f Hie shop that m a k «■ no d e l I ve t im. u n til Sa tu rd a y T h e I rn v e r s ! t y s n e x t m d 11 ar i/;r . {aer <•, pf equipm ent sue ti a . lo a d ers str < < t motor ' raries imugiit from tti*• (owe ti bidder on 1 contract aw arded by the w eeper a ir / compressor .tate B o ard of * oritrol firs t My M I H Y M O H IS L A N D The gasoline shortage int I nr/er .ily motor veh icles for tim e W e d n e s d a y the //hen .1 T ex a co distributor d elivere d /inly i OM gallons 'if g a so lin e lo the U n iv e r s it y ma i rite na ore .1 nr) repair shop 'f it*' T ex a co s e rv ic e agent 'aroon , supervisor ti,|/J < w d e liv e ry date is Mon/lay We s i vi' e arid m aintain .1 o p a l />f IV ) vehic les inc hiding /.irs pickups trucks and little ( ashman In .jflfliti'iri til/'1 niversity has 27 Sim'ins said M a in te n a ric < and 1 < p a n iricli* ate the a- .iio[i re/ orc!. I rn jct s ity vehic Ie* Ila JC (o n slim ed 7 t'Kl gallon 'if gas ohm- e v e ry //<-«•/ for the last five months Sim ons Wha * wz today Th< y / ll* us .aid in ha I f I dei not. know said / an cJ/> about 11 I bom i . c r o .son I rn //a a t.y p u t/ basing agent explain i d that t Inver it 7 ga olm/* is W hether tin vendors / an is lite / 'intr a* is or not till h ig h ly q u estio n ab le now / ros v in said 'A i - ar < .eeing t in- id fer I h 1 ii/■ of p a r ' im arig o tiier fu e I s h o r t a g e 1 n in ite m ' I ‘ii /sic ii W illia m W 1P 0 / dir«*/ lor of th/- said tie wa 1 not a w a re of tit'- / ur tailed .1 1 (or at. io n u n t i l ga sol I n< W ednesday night I 'lant iiittfafB iiiiBtfiiiBiaiByttfBiMfiiyttyiiii ^ ^ v n * Cl I HK HY STK I, El INN n 'e * #,,,t* I CCJ I Cf uarieilup*' 1601 MW 2468 r MI M M ft IONIC, Hr A f PID AY ASLEEP AT THE WHEEL PIUS D O A K S N E A D B A N D V SO (O V F P VS BUR AU HITI “A MASTERPIECE!” C A I JI ti //MMI C t/ / ti O r 't(I :t c. / ■ ■ A MMC c t " if a JC r 'it ! • t u t m il LAST PICTURE SHOW H 1*1 T E X A S U N I O N Ii -ii I until lilt mill Ihctiltc I nm iinlhi Friday and Saturday Sunday /, 9 I 5 p rn 7, 9 15, l l TO p m Union Th*at*r tHE SEA GULL N o v . 2 9 D o c 1 0 3 p m D o c . 1 & 8 • 2 p m T h e a t r e R o o m 4 7 1 - 1 4 4 4 T /ic ^ v r x a . s U11 toil Q ristm as ^Bazaar^ ''D e c e m b e r 5 7 (Jnior^Main cBallroom ttffl fku/td«/ 1 b tnUff IO pi ii % fit I i b u c k e t A o r / h v n n v d f f P r v t t v n i n IG N IT E HAPPY HOUR PRICES ALL NIGHT! H I O H B A 11 * 60 P IT C H E R S I 30 M U G 3 0 ' UVE MUSIC HT CITADEL DON'T FORGIT THI HAPPY HOUR BUIIFT PER PERSON 25' 23rd & PEARL ACROSS FROM HARDIN NORTH 3 ha. 6m parking in Hardin'* Garage . A I K ) Al D A N Y I D O M P A N Y O I M T X IC/ J “ F ie s t a F o lk lo ric^ )” in* i ■ >/! ah st mi i it.11 ann Mio til ut /» if>/*ncj) Vi DANO!R\ • MHO! Pb • MOMOIANO MARIACHI, MAPIMBA AND jAPf/.HO BANO'. , h ,. 3 R D 'lTf/AID M 7 I P iU M F 'H A M r Cl A P if I a i j'. r ire" i a / I • ria.an of zn I ll tm ill * I », lf e». o« BritB '. II I • lf ' O ' . . , I.. / . *» f»if IX i a * I I, tm / I ' i/. nir* r / f, ' /ii f m iss 1 i ■ V — f .. w m c a w ' ELP / / , V T A ..\ fr /lf* EXCITING, COLORFUL INTERNATIONAL FAMILY ENTERTAINMENT DIRECT FROM MFXIC0 CITY’S PALACE OF FINE ARTS 8 P M -MON., DEC 3. 1973 A U S T IN 'S M U N IC IP A L A U D IT O R IU M ref 'a ft ti It At I %t /• V'* T 1 nc.KI r. ON SA I t NOW • ( A n N S n u / f H S t i t i H t t t t i 'N t t r n n r n i m M f H i . ' / . X • r A M « *• m i o m i s m o m ai i • U N l / r P f S i T T t,t t t,%• TICKET OFFICE 6615 N LAMAR PH. 404 3681 FOR TICKET INFORMATION T H E G A N G ’S A LL H E R E ■MCD! O R ’ Friday, Saturday Nov. VI & Dec S11J ti t" ll I I / 30 K 9:30 Burdina Aud S I OO Prjgp IO ThurscJci/, No/orf.bor VV, 1973 THI*. D A I L Y T K X A N / RASSL Gives Final Studying Advice Quids 'I Ue lo' ii Save th** World rt*ffuiL»*r swopl through th** fmpoar h Nixon T *xan off ho furry mg ho von* I huwlrod pointorn .1 handful of Nu* lour Power Moratorium petitions nix It.ilpfi N'ador oxpono.H and 25 federal agents witfi oamora notebooks and Ir M a r y Wood *5 t;»{><• recorders 'apa th IM petition hollorod the recruiter in a von o (fiat sounded liko I (illy Graham in drag Several of tho .taff quickly pot tho obit 1 me religion punctuating t ti*- end of each of tho recruiter I scriterir oh w itti toll it liko it in brother right on and At ono point th o ro was .I Hound liko someone Speaking in tongue* Hut it to mod out to ho one of tho (od . tapo rof orders on t rowirid 'I ta- frenzy po ked up an tfio rot m iter proposed a marc fi on Spur r n 1,Hk <• Spun is in the hospital I *ol prisoner nover Pavo .1 air o day one reporter .aid responded our prophet Over fiy the GIM w in five or ax staffers were word whipping a guy who -od he ate iceberg lettino anrl shopped at Safew ay I 'ear o boor nod tho ror r iii tor and Was pone a-, quo kly as bo < ame leaving bohind two 'I rea airy agents wtio kept asking where they could hrid John < onrially I drove horn** w 11ti enough petitions and literature to iri ai la to my tiouno against tho rigors of th«* energy crisis Bed .md pold I.ill loaves '.kipped down tho street run roup before an Indian Hummer breeze hiderly couples raked leaves from browntop lawns into preen plash* haps A small pol darked barefoot into the ovenlnp Head har k she bourn ed anrl plided to the rhythm of tti* season I 'ear e Protection Plan For A n im a ls Set B y J A N K I . T O M L I N J cxan Stat! W riter !■ re Pm.in students quickly d r.'over that one 'om m odity nobody has enouph of is time I ti i n rh sr o v e r y 1H mo r e meaningful duririp final ex amn when prowinp stacks of unread m aterial seem to overwhelm even the most op timiHto procrastinator fteadirip and Study Skills Lab #HASSI#> field in Jester < enter A nix attem pts to sa Iva po t tie raw nerves of students who have .1 problem budgeting their study time or maintaining < on* entr-ition throughout 200 pages of < i im< arid I 'uni' iiment MASSI, emphasizes that two ma po 1 amos of poor con* en i n v o l v e excessive I r a t io n n o ise and a cri too c o z y vironrrient for studying o ffer lively < ontrollinp those factors is .1 difficult problem far mg fun loving freshmen and up per' la v .men Students need lo tr.on themselves to study in nllenr '• ok! solitude when 'Ii rn fir e t r a c t i o n s h e ro in e appealing than t ti*• bio lo po .11 st udy of t he one < ell amoeba and the Hor tai im plicati ons ol i t . mating habits Boredom daydreaming anrl worrying often are the down I ll d .1 W a y f r o rn I,ill of determined law .'Pool hopefuls Being No 403 Pl .'{302 in a class of IOO may make -I student slat k off both 1 n t ii e 'l a . ,r nom When tempt a hon sets in BASSI* advises a qui' k movie or .1 milkshake break providing th** student returns to fir. studies refresh ed and ready to work Set re,iii .Hr goals lor your .elf lf ASSI, advises md then live up to them tod 1 panicky I- in a lr, ominous in evitable present 1 challenge for KAS, I, suggests ',ettirig up targ* blo* k Of t one for pet ting down fonccpK and using * rammer Women's Leader Seeks School Board Position I certainly think teachers should bring grievances to tic* bo * r rJ she stressed Mrs Kelley a gradnate of -> 'I t h e U n i v e r s i t y I ea* hers are professionals .iud s h o u ld be p ai d as in response to professionals a que J IOU a hold pf '".frit teacher salaries Sh** pledged a f imp ugn impor ta riff ot filii' atom positive and stress'-d th** individual Mr K elley said sh*- wimlfl uppor t a four day s* teed /,' i-k if d ber a n c re ' essary ta * an .e id th** energy crisis A ir,tin f omnium!y College le ss to g iv e n no (lUblif should f-ntpha is • hart the a hoofs 11 ■< fiv e s ic s a d Mr", K elley is a member fit tic national I order < nee m the f ar 1 ut ti Admin!' dr a lr ti v I', It 'Her lion Building s a d 1 mg 111 effie atmo of I ta Blaff* X cc undead I lr I Hit A * alo ha , made OO (mille armourc errant of hi; in tent inns to r un rex) Apr ii Mr Kelley aid in one ' a .<• . tiler' ha been a he k in tic- pre a fit of ' ord cie re * a bool adm iru d ra t ion I know tiler*' are many people who have felt they n*- red ta mg treated pulper I y tor' '-merit habitat acquisitum .md improvement and edtc a tiori of th** pubic in the plight ol endanger ed spef ie-. I Ic* led ire hides the whoop to Own pelo an red wolf mg 1 1 a rc Arriere an alligator arid tit efot I fie Kndarigered spe*aes Af t floe not apply to < fiyote . cougar hole als JC or c flog*, or red foxes THE SAXON PUB T H I S W K K K UNCLE WALT S BAND ALSO AFTER H O URS JA M SESSIO N I O K M O K E I N EO ( A E E P E B 38th a n d IH 35 454-81 15 T M I L A M C A 47? 7 m i jtJCh • MXh ’ ****** *"** *** — ’ **“** TONI 71 SUN MASON WILLIAMS 6rly,in«»r] Ti»k*t* ol lnn»r SttflfttHH Ii Ou'ownl X»»ordt /S5|Sy%' / , J" * EA TIN G ON T H E E U N ? Ok ?*. ,V V -a W ' V | { f A B I G I I A M I K I S S I D B t lf* t*f M l A K f C A M I O I H U N G ! M. I A S I 1 N I G ', f rr> C A M f ' U S f *I A f d I i f O R I A M S I R V I C I B f I I C I O U S l f lieU D A V MOUSE *?//( J! (I MOTHER EARTH unescorted women F T F U E E ?5 BEER & 75 Wild Turkey ft ln% SWEAT HOGG O P E N 8 p m 1 0 th a n d L a m a r 4 / 7 J / 8 J tty S I I A I N I.N B H I f’ a r k. T h*’ T e x a n a rid W 11 d 11 f * I i p a r I rne n f presented .it ,t pubic h* .irmg Wednesday .1 lint of XC en to ta* hied dangered ".per ie with (tie it r f tar y of date . of f lf e lasting endangered pf' o is provided for by tti* Inn dangered Spe* ie". Act 1 new 'I exax statute c o m m e n t by "I ta- led w,i pre .ented tor 1 ti *• [in ti Ii * nong.onc pro rlepartrnent I tie pa I win* ti ' 'implied it Barks and W ildlib < 'inurns sion will review the l i t Ja n X4 in .1 pubic f .cm .md Iii' tfie final di aft in the i t t et,try (lf -date . nile e elf it (ive 4 'i days later to pf ot 1*' t W or k t tm e Spe* ie-, listed will f ort die Iff I by the deportment in f efi areas H U ' ti as f e n * af' ti law e n S U S m a n a g e m e n t It tier one ti* I lf I Iv y in h V A V ' - V .bort review period* before the exam Budgeting time 1 an make -i big difference tic night before t ic big 'lay BASSI* notes d is best if* avoid late hour . bennies arid ex to the * cs ive coffee pf co te st Making a record of ae tivities each Clay (tan .h o w .Indents where their tim* has gone .1 rid how mu* ii w a s wasted on mire' es .ary things B A S S I , warns th a t students should riot a t t e m p t to a l l o ' at* all H e n time and points out it , iiow you use your tin e that founts I n nor ga n I zed'' I >*■)*•' ted ' I lead tired'7 Before you turn in your droll ' jrd a r i d send laundry home cher k your A/itii BASSI, and revamp your study altitude' I r ant lf f i ammi rig only .cr vex to in ' r case t he feeling ,11 r i-ad y surf OU rid 1 rig u n prepared students B A S SI, contends Staying up all night keep one from thinking clear ly tic next morning f o l l o w ) n g I ii o c I Ii e BASSI, Time Schedule are given a generous f*f» hours of deep xl hours of gourmet din mg and a 20 hour allow.ire e for Classes arid I iiis leave, a grand total of VI hour . for IO hours a flay 1 to be Judy and divid'd between 1 ct 1 eat mn is highly ref 'unmended and 1 guaranteed riot to < reat** a walking robot J o hedu ling labs Move South for the Winter 1 & 2 Hndroorm from 1144 pit**, floe jiillniUld I DV lnmnr *.,(<* fKIS 11 NSI N S I I M O I S J a c q u es Lo u ssiER lm o lur;sd71/ I /ocornbor A Municipal Auditoriun 'A 0 0 PM (.rf ’,' if t*■* J i 1/ Si J • ' ! iii JC J] I f it* rd' JC lf I lf a it 7 ' ,*' if' .db ' lf B •' 1 < >’ ' re* ' >pti< *r ' J I ‘ cr I if ll* I* lf', li'-k* J < if'J z/c '.J I J* */'♦'' J J* •' 2 B I 11 ' ‘ d ' ii 7< •' Ti - V I S ' C l ! Vii*.*-. I K*/< 'ff. r* * a '•,(). I n - ' f< ff .i* '* f I 7 lf ■' J 4 / * 4 ''N Ic k* ■!',' j/< iii* ii ii* ' it t '■*x J', j !'/ */ 7 JffiC > 1 1 1 ■ < ! '' til / d /'I 1 4 4 4 W h y filii b r 'd ra * gel**z<* war I ten w om on tor <*.c.ti ^ * //ti/ d c] i ] B a ia tfo o p fr* . in v a d e their ow n b a s * / S T R A N G E I ('/Vt " is outrrigeous, daring, WINNER OF 60 INTERNATIONAL AWARDS " \ ) V inventivo, devilish, mat abre and scintillating c o m e d y ."" " I t is a w i l d l y " " " which sees the President of the United comic nightm are States .md the P re m ie r of tilt* Soviet Union cooperate in *» bizarre effort to save the w o r l d from tobi l disaster Peter Sellers Superbly plays the President, an im perturable British liaison of f jeer and an unreformed Nazi scientist But, as w i t h -7001 A Space O d y s s e y , D R S T R A N G E LOVE " e s s e n t i a l l y is another Y u b r\< V < mr*m«»t if triumph " D R S T R A N G E L O V E - " is the best . Saturday R e v ie w A m erican movie in y e a rs. * * Life M a g a n n e * * * Esqui r e M a g a n n e WITCHCRAFT THROUGH THE AGES t m A f , I W I T C H C R A F T T H R O U G H t /) 11 *, M>rri *?w b r r lr b t i/ O 'in *lo* ijrr*«ntrir y end til nmn firol rn it \ b a r r itll** f i n d l i n t I in * b i n g »* Anti - nut ' i t I t m tv I 'lf*. I **x r nill**, 'it Snlanl' '.f f'.'.i'i' n ♦* 1 Mi'M < A /*■*. iv n! one e t i i m v Iroj m o i C h rilt**'U f*ri crenU". n m 'jh trn n r >‘.1 yvorl'i 'it VllilfOiC# And f f c jtif i i rn v*’t n y n in v t n h i v t d * lf a 1 t m ' k ' j r ' i u r i ' l t « * r r if y ir m r>f th * * m o*,! <1 t o i l l i A n t l y ru n iininh I lh,, I natl* i A.C. AUDITORIUM FRIDAY & SATURDAY NOV. 30 & DEC. I STR A N G EIO VI 7:00, 8 40. 10:20 WITCHCRAFT 11:50 NORMIL BENEFIT Si OO Thursday, November 79, 19/3 THIN B A IL Y TK XAN Page ll T h e ir p e r s e v e r e nee and struggle is slowly rewarded and pointedly contrasted to th*' b e h a v io r of O s k a r ’s younger brother Robert, who goes to California to look for gold The Immigrants Troell conveys the spirit of an epic through a series of short episodes (connected less in plot than in tone Because possessed an inherent sense of move­ ment it yields to this techni­ que more easily than does which at tim es seem s d iffu se and which places more stringent plot-carrying requirements on the dialogue The New Land Both movies Weigh heavily upon the mind and resist facile encapsulation They are thought p rovoking w ith o u t forcing conclusions about life any more encompassing than what Sam uel Butler once Life is one long process said of getting tired I recoin mend both film s highly To Place A D aily Texan Classified Ad Call 471 5244 M*rrvo««4 T R A N S # T E X A S T U im Hancock Ona 453 664 I I REDUCED PRICES TU 5:45 p m ! STREISAND a REDFORD THE W AY W E W ERE NOW! OPEN I 45 p m ! EEA 130 3:30 5 30 7 45 IO OO p rn ! P G Leo Ahonen of the Houston Ballet Austin Civic Ballet To Stage 'Nutcracker' For some children The N u tc ra c k e r B a lle t is as much a part of Christm as as a visit to Grandma s or ‘The Night Before* C hristm as Hoping to establish s u e h a tradition in Austin the Austin C iv ic B a lle t w ill present T c h a ik o v s k y s T he Nut O R E N D O O R XX X ADULT M O V IE S 404 E. 6th Street "YOUR WIFE OR MINE" I Hour Shorts New Program Every Tri. Open 12 Noon 12 Midnite Daily 472-0390 c r a c k e r ” a t M u n i c i p a l Auditor nim Dor ii, 7 and 8 L e o A h on en p r in c ip a l dancer of the Houston Ballet, will be special guest artist in t fie grand pas de deux Ahonen has been principal dancer for th e N a t i c n a1 B a l l e t of Holland the Scandinavian Ballet the Finnish Ballet and I he Royal Winnipeg Ballet of Canada He has performed in 27 countries danc ing almost 300 roles A free children s matinee will he presented at 4 p rn the I lee 6, sponsored by Austin P ark s and Recreation Department Advance tickets should be obtained from the Austin recreation centers livening performances will be at 8 p rn Dee 7 and 8 Tickets ar e $2, 50 and $4 50 and are available at the* Lorelei Shop in Denmark K a r a - V c l H o g g s t o r e s Auditorium through Tuesday Tickets also will be* sold at the door a n d at Music for The Nutcracker Ballet w ill be provided by t h e A u s t i n S y m p h o n y O r c h e s t r a c o n d u c te d by Stuart Sankey ii'I f B*n"WhitT 'Land' Superior Bv L l T U E R S P E R B E R G “ The New L a n d ; " directed, photographed and e d ite d bv Ion T roell; screenplay bv Ja n Troell and Bengt I orslund. starring Max von S veins* and L iv I Itmann, at the R iv e r­ side I win ( inertia or We are all hunting rational reasons for believing in w r o t e Lawrence Durrcll. describing I my predicament perfectly must narc ti for the technic al justification to recommend a m o ve which wrenched me from my pettv travails and p I ,i y ed m y e m o t i o n a l h< artstrings as dextrously as irt when there in' th e a b s u rd rk of needs fie no defense True reasons enough can [ii.using Liv be found tor I Itm ann s and M ax von Sydow s acting or Ja n Troell s direction Fro m the flouncing innocence Of a lh-year old to *he weary dying of a woman aged by pioneer life Miss 1 lim.mn captures the essence id K ristina down to the ten tative wave of a hand and net von palpitation of her cheeks And von Sydow s performance as K arl Oskar is no less sterl mg The New Land Reminiscent in tone to Knut Growth of Hamsun s novel the Soil, traces the development and growth of Oskar and his farm Iv a fte r e m ig ra tin g Iro m Sweden to Minnesota in 1852 INTERSTATE THEATRES P A R A M O U N T *72 MU 7 1 3 C O N G R E S S A V E N U E l l OO fit 3 p m. Optimal* 7 30 6 OO 9 30 Sum" 4 70 /:S0 PETER S E IM S Meet Sam, the wonder man. GREAT DOUBLE FEATURE! i n i ^ Par u n 4 Pa u U im; rn PIUS! BOGART'S IDOL! THE EXCITING WOODY ALLEN! I I I ' l l V I S V v t ” V i ' s . It s s t i l l t h e s a m e o l d s t o r y , a f i g h t t o r l o v e a n d g l o r y . S T A T E E m vow, 7 1 9 C O N G R E S S A V E N U E St OO tti 3 pm Feature* 2:15 4:10 6 05 8 00 9 55 i m ; l U C l l A I U ) I I A I U U S l U M I T A Y U m n i l * I H v V I k L V n i \ ( K I : R S From W arn er B ro * o V A R S IT Y 2400 G U A D A L U P E S T R E E T SI.OO til 3 p m 2:30 4 OO 5 30 7:00 8 30 IO OO W hat do you M V to the na Wed truth? -*nfN»# ito imam ♦«*# r« a tmkra kMh$Jr~ A Ut M BV ALLEN FUNT HH I ntl Mufctor, Carnot ( STARTS TOMORROW ■ — v ■ THE OTHER Is So Terrifying The Author Of ■ Rosemary's Baby Called It - “Whirlpool of Oh-My-God Horror!” What Was The Secret c Of The Grave? is H o llan d terrified? Why does h e! W hy s c re a m ’ W h at evil lurks here’ Why did so' m any terrible and macabre things happen in the SU M M ER OF ‘35’ I t ’s P u r e H it c h c o c k F ro m “ S u m m e r O f ’4 2 ’ M a n R o b e r t M u llig a n 'M il* p*rfn1 d im l u r I or ttiU film. ll rfs a tour I* * SI M M U ! OL ll* \ M I M h i s t . B I M I X K H I ' 4 2 t h a i n o a I Ii * I f i l m r n a k r r < a n * if» I I I National I l/n^rirr vflUKT.i -jjuittiii :: ........... —v r v T e r r o r B e g in s FRIDAY PLEASE DON’T REVEAL TNE SHOCKING ENDING A U S T IN 46? HIO 2130 OO C O N G R E S S AVE JOHN WAYNE SI OO til 7 p m Feature* 6 00 7 55 9 50 A n Earnest Attem pt 'Action' Falters By P A U L B E U T E L Texan Staff Writer that raises issues which de­ mand further investigation “ E x e c u t iv e A c tio n ; ” directed by David M iller; screenplay by Dalton Trum- bo; starring Burt Lancaster, Robert Ryan and Will Geer, at the Fox. The W arren Com m ission report says that Lee Harvey O s w a ld a c t e d a lo n e in assassinating President John F . Kennedy. ‘‘Executive Ac­ tion'’ tells us that when the fire d . fa ta l b u lle ts w ere Oswald was drinking a Coke O s w a l d The movie would have us w a s b e l i e v e fram ed the v ic tim of an elaborate plot by a group of big. powerful businessmen who felt Kennedy’s elim ina­ tion would be in the best in terest of the* country. (These same men also speak of even­ tu a l plans to c o n tro l the* world’s “ excess population which generally means non whites.) th e In light ol W atergate and the subsequent political scan dais. the possibility of a con­ s p ir a c y behind J F K assassination seems all the more plausible* And now. IO y e a r s a f t e r th e D a l la s the timing of the tragedy E x e c u tiv e A r release* of I f s an Don earnest courageous m ovie is p e rfe c t im pact which Yet for all its .sincerity of purpose*, “ Executive A ction" is too flawed to hit with the dynamite its makers had expected. David M ille r's direction lacks the tautness and the* riveting ex (dem ent a first-rate thriller demands. “ Executive Action probably would have been far better serviced in the hands of J o h n a d i r e c t o r ideally, Frankenheim er, or Stanley Kubrick like* footage M ille r’s use of doc umentary footage often is awkward lie obviously tried to blend the old news film and the ne w, staged into a new cosmos, but the new shots arc* too slick-looking and the colors too vivid The whole thing would have been more believable it M iller had shot his new footage in a grainy b la ck and w h ite sto ck to match the Rim s The most gaping proble ms how ever occur in Dalton Trum bo’s script W e know that the conspirators get Ja c k Bu by to kill Oswald but we never lear n why How did they know Bilby, and what could they possibly have offered him t<» perform such a foolish task’ Fu rth e rm o re the film s “ Z ” in a elire*e*t ripoff epilogue* fro m sh ew s us 38 “ m a te ria l w itnesses” who met death within three years the a s s a s s in a tio n a f t e r Nowhere in t he course* of I fie* ii icjv ie* however, cl ie! we en counter any of these people Ju st who are they, anyw ay, and in what manner were they “m a t e r i a l w it n e s s e s ? in Although independently teresting, this epilogue in relation to the movie is both gratuitous and annoying Lest I begin to sound too negative about this film , let me reem phasize that Ex ceut,ive Action demands to be seen , its in s p ite of faults Am erican cinem atic m ovies ra r e ly handle con troversial political issues of such a large magnitude and our admiration must go out to those who had the courage* to see this project through Almost anyone connected “ E x e c u tiv e A ctio n w ith worked for a frac tion of their normal fees As a result the film was brought in for around $500,000 It s doubtful a movie of this tx* made for nature would Several stations television reportedly have refused to car t v ads for it Thus, the film reaffirm s the possibilities of movies as a volatile thought provoking medium Funt's Movie Bombs B y W H J J A M A S T O N E , J R Texan Staff W riter “ What Do You Say to a N ak­ ed L a d y ? ” d ir e c te d and produced by Allen Funt. “ What Dec You Say to a Nak cd L a d y ? , ’ A lle n F u n t s attempt to catch Am erica oft guard arid unsuspecting ven ttires into a relatively unex inquiry To plored area of whit how doc-s the average person react when confronted by a nude body in most com monplaee of surroundings (an elevator an a rt studio a classroom, e tc .)? Halfway through shooting I ' ant undoubtedly discovered the so m e w h a t d e fe a tin g answer to that question i e the average person doesn 1 say or do muc h of anything Funt filmed resorted IR* their Not to he* outdone* (or so he thought) to Phase ii Within this concept. Funt decided to show various parts ell his film to small then select audiences secretly reac lions to the film s content Their reactions, rather than injecting moments of light heartedness into an already drab movie took the form cd heated debates about what should cir should nett b< c ut from the film Phase* II had more or less developed into a banal disc ussion on the <*vils and virtues of sexual m orale f unt a p p a r e n t l y ty became hard pressed for a way out and He* tried to rem edy the situation With Phase III (the m an o b v io u s ly mined) His plan t h e n was to film interviews cif teenagers is deter talking about their sex lives and then later show these se quenees to tin* parents ol the youths to record then reac* I ions ( a n i c c a The success of the Fun! ( an concept, as exhibited in did it sc* 11 owed largely lo Uh* fact that his viewing audiences could east Iv identify with the* chagrin arni embarrassment of h unt s ‘victim s Naked Lady howevei provides its audience with lit if any. participation tie For a movie that strives a l m o s t p a i n f u l l y to be it humorous, is rem arkably I he s I y 11* and u n I iin n v I e c h n I quc* of ( a nd id have been mex Cam era (■usably neglected N a keel L a d y - i n k s sheepishly into the* c heapness of a dirty word scribbled on a bathroom wall and is infinite Iv less interesting I n t e r n a t i o n a T h e a t r e \ O PEN 7 D AYS A W EEK 5 p m 2 a rn M O N THURS MIDNITE SPECIAL I 2 M idnit* til 2 a rn $1.00 M O V IE S S T A G E S H O W S B O O K S and N O V ELTIES 25 PEEP SH O W S 2908 VAN GABRIEL A D O U B L E B A R R E L O F " T R I N I T Y " F U N ! H EID OVER "T h e y G a ll M e im T rin ity'^ u T R A N S # T EX A S ^ ^ v 7h It BM M? till ALI SEATS $1.00 til 6 pm Monday thru Saturday AVCO EMBASSY RELEASE p c ; OPEN 6:00 Em . 6:30 St OO til Showtime Drink* & Popcorn Joseph E. Levine Present* “T r in it y I s S t ill M y N a m e ” Aw Awe* liwkiBMy ftwUw** OPEN 5:45 Feature Time* 6-8-10 BADGE 373 IN S P !H U BY THE EXPLOITS Or EDDIE EGAN W H O 'S LIFE STO RY YO U S A W “ THE FR E N C H IN C O N N EC T IO N " Starring ROBERT DUVALL from THE GO D FATH ER'' H ENRY DARROW from HIGH C H A P P A R R A l" A P a r a m o u n t F u t u r e K ["RANS A TEXAS UARIUS Theatres IV R E O U C E O M A U N U P R IC E S CIL C V M O N tt*'u SAT 1500 I JUST S. PLEASANT VALLEY RD 444-999? OFF EAST RIVERSIDE DRIVE $ I OO til 6 p rn Feature Time* I 4 5 5 1 5 -8 4 5 wood' m a r v e l o u / N AT IO N A L O H '.TH V in K technicolor ' ore //ornor bm l l .OO til 6 p.m. Feature Times feu 2 40 5:05 7:30 9 50 WALKING $1 OO lit 6 p m Feature Time* 7 30 4 25 6 I$-8 IO 10 00 Joanne Woodward Sum mer Wishes, W inter Dreams [POI $1 OO til 6 pm. Feature Time* 2 4 6 8 IO HIGHLAND M A U OKE IM 35 of HI WAY 290 BARGAIN MATINEE $1 OO til I 30 I T h is cop p lays dirty CHARLES BRONSON Mil ,HAf The STONE KILLER S A M M A R T IN B A I Screenings at 1:35-3:40-5:40-7:45-9:45 R U H U H ) STOTTS MARSHA! MIDNIGHT SHOW FRIDAY ONLY DOORS OPtN 11:30 ALL SEATS SI.OO EDGAR ALLAN POE’S ULTIMATE ORGY BRIGITTE BARDOT ALAIN DELON JANE FONDA TERENCE STAMP PETER FONDA H e's X rated V A R S IT Y 2400 G U A D A L U P E S . H E F T FEDERICO FELLINI-LOUIS MALLE-ROGER VADIM H JOE DON BAKER ACRES OF FREE LIGHTED PARKING Page 12 Thursday, November 29, 1973 TMK DAILY TEXAN 'Serpent' Lacks Sting “ The Se rp e n t;" sta rr­ ing Yul Brynner, Henry D i r k a n d F o n d a Bog ard e; w ritten by ( l i l i e s P e r r a u l t and Henri Verneuil; produc­ ed and d i r e c t e d bv Henri Verneuil; at t h e Texas. B y W I L L I A M A S T O N E , IK Texan Sta ll W riter As far as spy flicks go The isn t as boring and S e rp e n t repetitious as one might ex­ pect The plot is fast paced (perhaps too much so) and un mistakably absorbing Although it is predictable at tim es i t ’s n e v e rth e le ss satisfying Director Henri V erneuil first allows his audience to sit back in their seats and feel ch eerfu lly clever for staying one step ahead of tfie story lin e then negates their smugness with Brynner, Fonda W a s te d an unexpected yet plausible ending The movie has two main ti.IWS. though It is grossly stylized On a ‘‘Serpent scale of realism lies som ew here between Dragnet and The Man from I N C L l s It even uses a Jack Webb trained narrator to overtone the precise time of day tor every major event The* film s villain himself a stereotyped victim of the film ’s overstylization cavorts around the world in black limousines and streamlined t h <• c r u i s e r s , w e a r i n g traditional black leather g l o v e s and e x t r a c t i n g flashy cigarettes m etallic case resplendent with an arch-enemy serpent insignia from a Secondly, the film totally wastes the not inconsiderable acting abilities of Yul Brynner and I lentv Fonda Brynner portrays a Russian military officer who defects to the I niter! States Fonda is cast as the director of the Central Intelligence Agency Nowhere in "Serpent is there an opportunity lot the two actors todisplay any emo lion whatsoever Fonda and Brynner mer**h are stone faced pawns manipulated and overshadowed by director Verneuil s emphasis on plot It is perhaps because of Serpent s elaborate st vliza lack of character don and development ttial if attains .1 suspense rating of negative three 't he f ilm is too intent on i t s pl ot f o r t h s e t t i n g lapid-lire in developments succession (in an attempt to r reate an atmosphere <*1 head spinning governmental in­ trigue no doubt 1 and forgets to capitalize on its vast poten tial for plot suspense and tense character interaction It Serpent is u n f o r t u n a t e that chooses to follow the stv Ie that it does What. could have been a tightly knit spv tht I Dei instead becomes a bullet which misses its target '[’tie viewer comes away from the theater with a rather h o llo w satisfaction s t i l l Serpent t he q u a l i t y of surpasses that of the majority of films released tins tall It s merely a shame it failed to achieve the poteri tial the others never had YES, VIRGINIA, THERE IS A UNICORN. horoscope A R IF S It' * -JC ft mr* /’n riff 'lf rf to t -ive 1 g ><1 fifty Just ‘.mile a 5 '.cc ti - A/ far tai* rig .r frin take you SAGITTARIUS Phony words .-c round y - 1, commy ever- from ;mople ye J P Might war# genuine May be it's time to re evaluate what's "real LIBRA /^nter brings hea/y < oat*, md t oaring Pre1, but it a.-. , " ‘-an . s ta y .j md-, • and finally getting down to studying PiSCfS Just floating through lite cs no way to l»ve f xistentiahsm aud alienation aside why not at least try to enjoy it, you have to be here any way AQUARIUS /ou have bec?, th? m r g yourself into your work to forget w e ucpha'.a' memories Just don't forget to relax arid make more memories HO You think that you are pretty good Maybe if you thought a ittle less of yourself you could see past the end of your nose GFMiNi C I ckJs, Mid. c d f ore < iouds today Don't take it too seriously T he world • f a r more ridiculous than even you could imagine CANCER After a1! the trash you ve had *0 wade through lately you are finally going ? > be rewarded for your perseverance TAURUS . X ness hides berend the ► '/UC Keep warn and drek off. ut orang* VIRGO Keeping your balance will be diffu ut’ the next few days Just try listening of (fie C S Department of H e a l t h , E d u c a t i o n and Welfare Mrs Cunningham urges all hearing-impaired persons to participate in the experiment by contacting tier at 442 7821 SCORPIO Quit kidding eve? your cs per tally / *ur self You ' a' outlive this depression E N T E R T A I N M E N T your ow n inner von es and you know it CAPRICORN f- wry th ',g that you have worker! fur will shortly per cup a re a tty Don let your new power go to your head, you must constantly re examine your motives Luis Bunuelo LOS OLVIDADOS (The Young and I he Damned) — .1. — n l r > > I -rn. a warn *. tm Iliff 1 tnt ll, I nil Buntal produced In Os "lr Dam,gets VI Inn Alt on ta photograph, hi Habile! hguerou intuit by I stria Infill Mi fit, III, tun Roberta Coho -111,am, Mc,,ti salioth,r TIntros Spanish K I M H Thur. Chicken Curry, salad SOAPCREEK Saloon T O N I G H T MAN MOUNTAIN and th* GREEN SLIME BOYS ; Ph 3279016 * 707 B E E C A V ES RD . M A N N T H I A FOX TWIN 14 54*27 H I th e SemrAVltch ehopa Doh.* RUH Ro $ I I H : J i ( , i l I O M I T H K A T E H H H E S K M T S A HORROR FILM SERIES nm I NOV IHE ORIGINAL UNCUT K IN G K O N G '' IV M IR IA M I WITH (AV WRAY IR U C f ( A K U COOM* "THE MOST DANGEROUS GAME' with K ill Mc (R A I BT IMUIX I IA T WRAY SH OIOSAC¥ WH. to SAI S I SUM TO HHS OK I ll wio IO SAI OK I ? IS "PHANTOM OF THE OPERA” "HUNCHBACK OF NOTRE DAME” " WHILE THE CITY SLEEPS” THE ORIGINAL DRACULA "N0SFERATU” "CABINET OF DOCTOR C A L L A R I'' WHITE ZOMBIE” m i r u ( u n > ' r S Y C H U * v a i u i d w . t k a n i m o m y M IK HY OY P M U M M S v i m aphis JAMIE IIIY.M I , K O M M JUH AN Milk IO N Y HANI V Ay W A H AYI W OOSH! Midi I OK (H A M IT I , HUTT JANY, Milk VI MC IM I M IK I I W MUHN A I, I , MUA Y .M I (lllll)t t M I H M W I I NI Milk M IA I I J I , USI HOUKE PH AMM Milk (O M S M IH O K • U A I UY.OSI I, SI ANH V RUARKK MHM 610AM c scon M H R S llllR S EDGAR ALLIN HOE 5 ’’THE BLACK CAT” N U D N IK SHOW DEC. 14, 15 "THE LAST PICTURE SHOW '' TUE VAGABOND TI I EATER CUSHION SEATS 521 E 6th(Formerly the Capri)___________ 472-/9/9 f t fV. .V . v S s -- I - w - T W ' • rm r * The Maltese Falcon Direct rd bx John n it It Drier Lorre Huston tV S i (I i i e v (, reenst reel " Itotfiu I i n I n s m o s t e x c i t i n g n t h - us S t u n S / H u h - n i m is u n a m b i g u o u s m i x t u r e of ai m i t e m u ! h o n o r , s e x u a l i t y ( m i l fear, l i n s b r i l l i a n t I n s t f i l m bs J o h n H u s t o n is b l i n i f u n i s e . n u l l ei o r u n n i i Pauline Kat*l New York Magazine FRIDAY, NOV. 30 7:30, 9:20, 11:05 JESTER AUD. IIO K IE S C R E E N I & 2 ?. I st & G u a d a lu p e Second Level Dob.* M a ll 477-1324 Screen I 1:00-4:00-7:00-9:45-$!.50 E N T E R O N C E A G A I N A W H O L E N E W W O R L D O F M A G N I F I C E N T M U S I C A L % C A M E L O T Wiota n o f 3 a TE C H N IC O LO R M P A N A V ISIO N * KS ' •‘• M ating W arner B u * ) $Oth Ann«v*»%*ry A W arren ation* ( , npai y 1.15-3.25-5:35 $1 7:45-9 55 $1.50 Screen i i L l REILLY DIG IN THE SPURS. MAV BE A BIE EBO MBCB EBB MANY PEONE. BB1 (BATS (HEIB PBOBIEM." ANDY warhoT sH ^ H I LONESOME COWBOYS I N I A C I M A N ( CH O h w ARSONS IJN0IE- H A MOI ADMI I IEI, F R I D A Y A N D S A T U R D A Y O N L Y C O M I N G S cre e n I 3 0 M i n u t e s A f t e r M i d n i g h t $1 25 IE O F A P IC T U R E ! G E N E H A C K M A N K A R L N B L A C K K R U . K R IS T O F F f R S O N C is c o p / K e - gVIVA H A R R Y D E A N S T A N T O N p. ,< a m o *1 ba § n an aa 'Ka p u b lia h ait s r* 'aapanubla la* only O N I *ngs ',a n d y s p d e * * * ir e b a ll c la s s , n u n . s i SOO a n d c a rb o ! *9 5 127 1875 F o r S a l e 4 s p e e d a u to 14 N E W s te re o cor **. e * e q u p p e d w th a m c m R a d o r a r o r d * h a n g e r, f u r e t s na c o n tr o ls f o r b a la i, ce. b ass ’ r e o 'e a n d A EC fo r d r i f t f re e P M r e c e p tio n b u ilt in a r it a n r a p lu s m a n y o th e r t e a ' re s T 'e v e s e 's a re t i rn sh e d ir h a n d - ru b b e d wa n u t *99 95, c a s h or t e r m s U n ite d F r e ig h t S ales, 6535 N L a m a r o r o u r r e * I OO* ', L a m a r ( L a m a - P a i a S h o p p in g C e n te r) 9 9 D a ily 9 i S at lo c a tio n a t B R A N D N E W SE VV N G M A ' H IN E S 3 n a t io n a lly a d v e r t is e d b ra n d s T ness a r * j i g ja g r* a n r,es c o m p le te w th ta i te r m s t o r y w a r r a n t y S49 95 r a s h o r T h ese m * c h m # s h a v e b u ilt rn c o n tr o ls t o r m a lt in g b u t t o n h o le s , h e m m in g . d e c o r a t iv e s titc h e s s e w in g o n b u tto n s , d a r n in g , m e n d in g a n a m a n y o th e r t e a ', r e * T h e y n a y be in * p * r te d a ' U N IT E tv F R E I G H T S A I ES 4535 N L a m a r o r 1006 S L a m a r L a m ia r P la z a i O p e n to P u b lic 9 to 9 d a ily 9 to 4 Sat o v e r c a s t ng T O P C A S H P R IC E S p a 'd f o r d ia m o n d s , o ld g o ld C a p ito i D ia m o n d S cop, 4018 N I a m a r 454 4877 1969 I N T E R N A T I O N A L S co u t 4 /J D m a g s v s M u s t see 471 7910, J o h n S t T OI P s y c h o lo g y T o d a y ;45 0990 4 T WF yt-a* s >M i BE I Did, p a r k e r g e s to r a g e m o b ne h o m e v e r y n ic e lo t >m a n d a ir co n ty a n d a s s u m e en S / i lo n th ly 892 0768 J 30A v e r. B S R ak o rs , 3 m o n th s S540 v a lu e f o r U A Iv M A R K I G oo d i B e st b o d y , o ff e r , 1 U 2 A W est 22nd / t i n g ti c o r d e r , - a r k e t , IO c e I t e r y , sc tie s 64 D O D G E AC SISO C l / A R T S la n t 6, 442-7628 or CC ” m e b y U M c A M A H A G U I T A R S A L E E r e * ca se W i t h e v e r y g u i t a r , A m s t e r M u s ic , 1624 L a v a c a 968 V W BEE I E A M F M s te re * id e r s , a u t o m a tic s tic k t-D t r y in g W E M E E T O R B E A T j i g s te r e o p ric e M e r a n t i. S o n / D u a l, A R . B S R , S h o re T L H 472 5471 the discount shop STE R EO & T V 3 Reasons T o Shop A f T H E D I S C OU NT SHOP 1 P e r s o n a l S e r v ic e 2 Q u a lit y Stereo C o m p o n e n ts 3 L o w o v e rh e a d , L o w p ric e s IO to 6 3 8 t h &. S p e e d w a y 477-0937 L E A V IN G J c o m p o n e n ts M ir a c o r o , So i T i n a n d * I J a n 74 S te re o in c lu d e H e a t b r if , 4 4 / 4087 a ft e r 5 OO p m , t j i T A R RE p a itv F r e 'f e d in s t r u m e n t o s to m w o rk a n d r e f in is h in g , q u a lit y ,sed in s tr u m e n ts e n d a m p s s t r in g s a n d ic c e s s o r .e s d s c o u n te d T he S tr in g Shop 1716 476 8421 Ib y - B N e w AF A Y E T T E G o o d s o u n d s a ll a ft e r 5 f o r id e m o n S ir a f to n 45►4-8895 K C tDAK 5>L i DE: F IL .AZ 3 5 m n \ 36e x p lin g K 11 K ¥ X S3 75 * f t h K o d a k p r 472 5770 AZA R U N 1 2- y r R ING ► g u it a r . 1720 E t i tM e n t l i m i 477 5244 az ode m o n w it h tr ase $375 AZO V F O AZ U S f SE L L b e a u t it u f A K C o ld I O e rrm a n 's h e p h e rd re q m a ie DosJ PA pie r s, h ou se HOO 478 2993 2 y r TW E E J f E x E P iP M O t/IE *1 3 0 c e ille n t V a rn a h a E O 180 g o tid ctjn d (io n w i th I tn- ed < ase S120 471 20104 i O n d 1110 n WI t h I R IN G c a s e R E L l J E- TMF y s ’ e r res ' o r a* JUS F iftie s ,! 1955 p e r te r t f o r r u i TS .n, *250 45'2 66 2 J 4li t e r 5 30 lo a d e d f- A B F f M A L E R E G IS , T I R L D S p f ' n g e t ye a rs o ld A M A R I h e a d e r s ll. $1800 451 I V , B S R c h a n g e r, i L O Y D 'S S I I R E O S Y S T E M w it h A M ta p e d e c k , tw o tw o w a y s p e a k e r s ri g h t w o o fe r, t h r e e " tw e e te r S215 R o n n ie W a lte rs , 447 3196 tv* s p e e d m e n 's B k l lik e n ew A K I r* m a t u r e D a c h s h u n d p u p p ie s , SI X w eek ■. Old 441 8964 68 F i a t 24 S p o rt 2 p lu s 2, 4 sp ee d, d u a l v e r y C H I 453 2043, 478 7149 e x c e l l e n t l y R u n s SI JO a ■ H A R I s k i s a r g p o le s C h e a p 472 8578 A K I CCK K E R S p a n ie l p u p p ie s 385 1191 M U S T SF L l I M M E D I A T E L Y ' B la c k S p a tm tiL c l l w it h th r e e T a k u m a r le n s e s M a k e o t t e r 1 A ft e r 6 OO, 454 8348 W I S w a le r sh t e n W O O D c o m p e t it io n S la lo m M a h a r a ia b in d in g s U se d ' S 120 n e w J 45 J 1078 r O n ly 570 T c p i: w r i t e . RS N E W , u se d , a n d re c o n d t io 'c d M a n u a ls *30 u p , e le c t r ic s *50 jp D a y s 4 /4 6396 n ig h ts 345 1297 / M O U T H R O A D R U N N E R 1970 383 I*. A . f a c t o r y a ir , p o w e r ste e r m g, to m ,i* A P m a g s a n d h e a d e rs G o o d c o n d itio n . f v c n y , 6 8 p rn , 327 2521 * 1 /0 0 A p a r t m e n t s , F u r n O N E B i Os K TO S H U T T L E L a r g e o n e le d ro o rn n e a r U T w t h A C . p oo l, a n d a il n e w f u r n i t u r e SI39 p iu s e le c t r ic it y E l I ' a p p a r a t 407 W 38th, 452 1501 N O W L E A S IN G n e w e f f ic ie n c y a p a r t m e r i t O n e s e m e s t e r o r l o n g e r I i 15 00 m o n th A ll b ills p a id 2700 M a n o r Rd 477 4118 2504 M a n o r R d , 474 2201 EF I IC it. NC Y A N D O N E B E D R O O M a p a r tm e n ts N e a r s h u tu p a rid U T A ll I, f'O -* S125 454-0047, 476-9279, 472 8253 Is p a id N E W A N D BF A U T I F U L o ne a rid tw o b e d ro o m f u r n is h e d a p a r t m e n t s O n ly 5 m in u te s to d o w n to w n a n d U T , c o v e r e d p a r k i n g a n d m a n y o t h e r e x t r a s Ju t a nn e, 1312 L a m a r S q u a re D r iv e 442- 0096 I I I IC .L N C Y O N S H U T T L E S129 50 ir, r i u d e * * h a g c a r p e t , f u l l k itc h e n , c e n t r a l a i r a n d n e a t S p e e d w a y 452-6595 C a s a F e l i c e , 4 2 0 4 N E W *135 n M a nor E I F I E NC y b ills p a id A l l e l e c t r ic 2504 474 2201 j 477 4 H 8 2700 M a n o r R o a d SOUTH SHORE AP AR T M E N TS E f f i c i e n c y , I, 2, and 3 b e d r o o m a p a r t m e n t s . O f f e r t h e s o l u t i o n to y our f al l housing. T h e S o u th S h o r e '* c e n t r a l lo c a tio n p ro v id e s e a s y a c c e s s to U T C o m e b y a n d see o u r n e w e ff ic ie n c y a n d I b e d ro o m a p a r t m e n t * on th e b a n k s o f C o m p le t e w i t h s h a g T o w n L a k e c a r p e t in g , a c c e n t w a ll, m o d e r n f u r n it u r e , p iu s a n in d iv id u a l der k o v e r lo o k ­ in g th e w a te r F r o m *145 — a ll b ills p a id 300 E a s t R i v e r s id e D r i v e 444 3337 > T M A S , n th ta m S M K V I I p re s s u re I (o r *110 W A L K T O C A M P U S 2 b e d ro o m , 2 b a th • tiff ic le n t y w it h A C, p o o l, s tu d y ro o m , ‘a n d p a r t y r o o m * !9 5 A B P M a u n a K a o 405 F a s t 3 Is l, 472 2147 L A N j U I 2 OOO A P F 2018 L H s e v e n te e n s p e a k e rs , rv r e m o te c o n tro l t v 454 M A t i , i t EV W A N T E D , < i t r e d u c e d re c n e a r U n i ve rs Ou p 11- s t, 20 o ne Sty 327 it * 26 i 2920 M er 78 I I I y* i i i 6396 W A T E R th e m a r R e a lty 892 2)5 452 4340 452 H H N E C E * o a d e d a r 1966 G I nu id s 88 O' i i s ' M e ly S 5 II 151 5619 i 65Qi < T R I U M P H B' 3 or 197 2509 K E A U S T I N R E T R E t o t a l p r e e , -TU sa 600 897 / 157 451 19 '2 or se t OOO u r it y R e a l A N T I Q U E J E W E L R Y S H I P M E N T F R O M G O L D T O O L ASS i R O M E L E G A N T ZIC T O R IA N TO C H IC A R T OE CO , , , , ir e d N e w Y o rk C it y to b r eg yoi S loe 444 092 '2 C B e s ' S T E R E O C E N T E R HAS T H E B ES T S T E R E O D E A L F OR Y O U . 203 East 19th 476-6733 E x r t -m d g o ld isses, f ille d 'e r a t ! y sd it ? ver iy o p e n s 'e w m o re h o p e yo u IO 6 OO I . T E R E xc c lie n t J,o p o w e r, n e w .St set *2700 cr 454 0366 a f e r 5, 2 M f 47) b e fo re , , b o y a s te riref. s y s te m 4 /4 2V36 6 Sac A atonic i sftd e q u ip m e n t w a r t a m iy i- u e 'e o a nd 977 D O DG E S P O R T S M A N R o ’ B B a /to , a r t ( 800 i n I B 200 4 /6 ‘,837 W O O D W A R D A P A R T M E N T S 1722 E W o o d w a rd O f fic e 107 444 7555 I, 2, o r 3 b e d ro o m s u n f u r n is h e d u t fu r n is h e d I r o m *140 *265 2 s w i m m i n g p o o ls , p l a y g r o u n d s , w a s h a te r ia , lig h te d g ro u n d s , 5 m in u t e s to UT m in u te s to B A F B . s te p s f r o m lin e B IL L S P A ID , F r e e IR S , on b u s c h a n n e l T V K e n r a y A p a r t m e n ts a n d T o w n h o u s e s un d«-r n e w o w n e r s h ip . 2 122 H a n c o c k D r n e x t to A m a r u a t a T h e a tre , w a lk in g d is ­ ta n c e o f N O 'th L o o p Shorn, no C e n te r a n d L u b v s O n e n a il b lo c k ( r o m s h u t t le a n d A u s t i n 2 b e d r o o m t r a n s i t to w n h o u s e s , e x tr a 'a r g e T wo b e d ro o m H a ts, one a n d tw o b a th s . CA C H d is h w a s h e t d is p o s a l, d o o r to d o t,r g a r b a g e p ic k u p POOF m a id s e rv ic e lf des re d w a s n n 'e n a Kl c o m p le x See o w n e rs . A p t M3 o r c a i! 451 4848 B R A N tv N E W fu r n is h e d s e lf- r e t r i g e r a t o *149 50 m o n th , I a ne 385 204 I p is h e d d u p l e / ■■ 2 b e d ro o m c o m p le t e ly r-a n in g sto v e , f r o s t f re e d i s h w a s h e r . *75 d e p o s it 1802 D a lt o n A ls o 2 b e d ro o m u n f .r s 385 72)7 S O M E T H I N G D I F F E R E N T E f f ic i e n c ie s w it h e le v a t e d s e p a r a t e b e d ro o m s p iu s e n o rm o u s one a n d tw o b e d ro o m c o n t e m p o r a r y a p t* w it h e n " y c o n v e n ie n c e , f u r n is h e d o r u n f u r n is h e d is e n v i r o n m e n t a l l y O A K C R F E K or en te d a rid o tte r s a c re e k t h a t w in d s t i -o u g h to c a m p u s 4 s h o p p in g a n d c o n v e n ie n t ly p ric e d f r o m *125 1507 H o u s to n S tre e t 454 6394 th e c o m m u n ity c o n v e n ie n t 476 4655 L A R G E O N E A N D T W O b e d ro o m on s h u t t le f u r n i s h e d o r u n f u r n is h e d , 'e a t u r ln g s h a g < a rp e t, w e t b a rs , 3 p o o ls , a n d 3 c t corr SI64 50 A B P B ro a d m o o r 1200 B ro a d m o o r 454 3885 ,b room s G A R I NE W O N E B e d ro o m a p h '! yrnber M a y t ile 444 9735 * 1 /0 o r e IE D R O O M r t f a ! h e a t, d is . i g d is t a n t e to 155 2919 W e st A v e ' / W a r w i 476 '8 36 G R E A T L O C A T I O N T H E C A R R E L S t o r s t u d e n t s P e r f e c t L a r g e o n e b e d ro o m , AC, s h a g , c a b le s tu d y d e s k * a n d b o o k s h e lv e s , d is p o s a l, su n d e c k c o v e r e d p a r k in g , s h u t t le O n ly S 155 OO, b ills p a id 2812 N u e ce s 472 6497 M I N I A P A R T M t N T O p e n b e a m c e il n y sh a g < a r p e t th r o u g h o u t a ll b u il t in ► t< nee, r o lo r c o o r d in a te d r a C H , p o o l, l i a r < a m p u s 4000 A v e n u e A *134 50 a ll tv11 pa cl 459 661/ 476 4655 *115 p lu s e le c t r ic it y f E I ic i f N O E S P o o l. AC, r a r p e t , p a n e lin g , n o p e ! ', H u n 11r p io n 2 i ie 46th a n d A v i A 454 890 i f u r n i s h e d S P A C IO U S 2 B E D R O O M a p a r t m e n t s G o o d lo c a tio n , n e a r c a m p o *, s h o p p in g c e n te r, a n d s h u t t le bus A ll b ills p a id F o r m o re in f o r m a t io n , c a ll 454 9475 C A P IT A L P L A Z A A R E A O ne b e d ro o m • u r n is h e d o r u n f u r n is h e d w it h d is h w a s h e r, p a n t r y F ro m S132 50 p lu s eleC f r i c i t y F I C o rte z . HOI C la y to n L a n e 453 7/95 T H E A D O B E Luxury Efficiencies F R E E ! • T V C able • Pool • B il ls • Gas B a r b e q u e • S h u ttle Bus • C A / C H HO E. 37th St. Cal l 478-1 382, 478-4210 Weekends 478-4210 N E W E f F IC I E N C IE S a n d o ne b e d rs rn p e a c e f u l W A u s t in C o lo r f u l s h a g c a r p e t, d is h w a s h e rs c o l y c o m m u n ity F r o m 5129 50 1211 W 8 th In n s b ro o k ( J u s t o ft B ia n r o ) , 474 1107 E L D O R A D O & E L C I D APTS. I Br F u r n . $125-5140 S m a ll f r i e n d l y c o m p le x , nice pool & p a t io a re a . 1501 S p e e d w a y 453 4883 477 4893 S H U T T L E BUS C O R N E R I b e d ro o m *149 50 A L I B IL L S P A I D f u r n is h e d , C A /C H , b u ilt in k itc h e n , n e a r ' a m p u s tt0 7 A v e n u e A 451 7878 476 4655 E F F - $105 I Bedr oom -150.00 A ll B ills P a id , M a i d Serv ic e , 6 blo ck s f r o m c a m p u s , R o o m ­ m a t e s fu r n is h e d . 476-3467 B E A U T I F U L 2 B D R M ' 2 B A T H F u r ru sh e d a p a r t m e n t to s u b le t 4 b lo c k s f r o m c a m p u s . D s h w a s h e r, A C , sh a g 4 /4 1719 U N F X P E C T E D b e d ro o m f u r n is h e d U T , on s h u ttle b us V A C A N C Y O n e W a lk in g d is ta n c e 'o ro u te 472 7710 a v a i l a b l e N O W L a r g e o n e b e d ro o m , C A , C h , g a r b a g e d is p o s a l, d is h w a s h e r SUO p lu s elc-< S at. G a b r ie l, 472 7746 f o r in f o r m a t io n The C o n q u is ta d o r, 2101 S ix B L O C K S f r o m L a w S ch o o l, 2 b lo c k s s h u ttle b us O ne b e d ro o m *135 A C, c a rp e t, d is h w a s h e r, d is p o s a l, w a lk - in in se t 32nd m d I n t e r r e g io n a l 472 3995 2 B E D R O O M S , b a th , p o o l, c lo s e to s h u t tie S 165 m o n th 258-2366 d a y s , o r 451 5870 n ig h ts , w e e k e n d s P R I V A C Y q u ie t s m a ll c o m p le x L a r g e tw o b e d ro o m a p a r t m e n t s S to ra g e , h u g e c lo s e ts f u r n is h e d B u s u t i l i t i e s 476 TA K E O V E R L t ASE O n e b e d ro o m R iv e r H ills P h a s e V *160 m o n th C a ll J im 441 3854 l e a s e ; ( n o S O O N ? N o d e p o s it m o n th ' ' C a ll 441 OOH M g r fre e re n t F O R S P E C IA L P E O P L E O N L Y lu s t o n e b lo r k ( r o m P e a se P a rk D is t in c t iv e or e b e d ro o m a p ts , s h a y , p a n e lin g , la r g e b a lc o n ie s , tre e s , g ra p h ic p o o l *144 1218 B a y lo r 478 2026 r ,>m r n u n 11 y I MF I F I D A R I A S m a ll B f A U T H U L F u r n i s h e d o n e a p t b e d ro o m s w ith b u ilt in s C e n t r a l A C, v a u lte d r f il i n g s *139 50 plu s e lf " t r i c l t y SOI W est I y rir 477 7794 i i P A N T H O V IL L A w e re a liv e to d a y , he l i v e a t E l M o n t e r r e y O n e w o u l d b e d ro o m ' f /rn is h e d w it h s h a g , N IC I S p a n is h f u r n it u r e , p a n e lin g , g ia n t w a lk m s. pool a n d b a lc o n ie s A ll f o r o n ly *155 A B P 2423 T o w n L a k e C ir c le , 444 6118 S A X O N Y APTS. 1616 R O Y A L C R E S T R ig h t on s h u t t le b u s , h u g e c lo s e ts , i Ii, b r n o m W i t t ' B B G , g ia n t p o o l a n d co u r t y a r d a n d a p a r t m e n t s t w o b e d r o o m O n e E r o m *160 up A ll B ills P a id C A L L 444-6631 T H E W I L L O W I C K L iv e n W o o d e d S e c lu s io n a e g e r A p a r t m e n ts w ith s h a g c a r p e t * ■ i,tie r! t . r n i t i j t e a c c e n t w a d a n d con u n fu r n is h e d *160 f u r n i s h e d Ic.' a tto n B e d ro o m 2 S e d ro A ll B d ls WE R E N T AUSTI N Y o u r t i m e is v a l ua bl e O ur s er vi ce is f ree P A R A G O N P R O P E R T I E S 472-4171 week day s 472-4175 weekends T H E B L A C K S T O N E *64.5 0 / m o n t h A p a r t m e n t liv in g j b lo c k f r o m C a m p u s i n d i v i d u a l a p p lu a n ts m a tc h e d w it h c o m p a t ib le r o o m m a te s 2910 R e d R iv e r 476-5631 A Paracion P r o p e r t y I iR E P L A l I m r g e 2 b e d ro o m w it h Shag, p a n e lin g , h u g e w a lk - in c lo s e ts a n d p ool O ne b lo c k to s h u ttle a n d H ig h la n d M a ll F r o m S219. A B P S p a n is h V illa N o r tti, 909 R e in li, 454-9863 l a rg e I a n d 2 N O L e a s e - f r o m *139 00 b e d ro o m s , p o o l, a n d lo ts of c a b in e t a n d ( lo s e ) sp a c e T a k e N L o o p to R o ose v e lt d r 5 60 6 i e N o r t h R o o s e v e lt 454 9848 to L e M i r a g e D U P L E X R O S E D A L F A R E A , n ic e ly f u r n is h e d , s p a c e o u s 1388' 2-2, C A C H , w a s h e r, d r y e r , b u il t Ins, c a r p o r t , p a v e m e n t, p r iv a c y *280 C a rp e te d 452 5401, 453 0583. 5 30 W A I K TO U T , un s h u ttle O ne a n d tw o b e d ro o m f u r n is h e d w ith c o v e r e d p a r k m g, d is h w a s h e r , p le a s a n t a tm o s p h e re s • 55 p lu s ele< t r i c il y , 3 1 2 1 Speed w a / . 477- 17 IO J U S T F O P S TU D E U I S , w a lk to r a rn - p us T w o b e d ro o m , 2 b a th In s m a ll c o m p ie / w it h b e a u t if u l t OU' ( y a r d , p o o h a n d f r ie n d ly p e o p le *740 a b p 80.3 W e s t v s th 47? 6480 SIDO M O N T H I ,g h t b lo c k s i N o 112 b e tw e t A B P 5 a n d I p b e d r n o m I. ms, 2211 rn ' I A R D F O N I b lo c k s N o r th 3708A T o m O r B l D R O O M a p a r t m e n t 7 *145 p lu s b ills , d e p o s it eof I, 4 /8 3264 I O V E R L n o m 7 b a th p r i c a te b a h on 459 7228, 1/8 3295 I L A S E dSth N I f D I O S U B ! I A SE la r g e e ft r j e n< y H u g e tre e s p o o l, ( o y r t y a r d , b e a r s h u t tie *125 r r io n t h I y A B P C a ll 4 7 / 3050 a f tm 4 OO o r < o m e b y 2505 E n f ie ld N o 2 ,8 1 A T ONE B f D R O O M , o u p le N o d e p o s it W a lk t( lin s e le c t r ic it y 476 9892 . ir t m e n t fo r a m p u s *155 JNE B E D 11r a n d le i " i! y a r d - e n t r a l id 452 C A ', t i l I A N r o o m J a n u a r / 1st C o n to No 2007 N I d a a t 4 /2 5711 o r F O R R I NT b ills p a id , n e a r c a n 477 3801 I t im a p a r I n * 'OO p e l I U R N I S H E D o TW O B E D R O O M f u r n is h e d a p a r t m e n t it , N e a r c a m p u s a rid o n s h u t t l e A v a (a b le s p r in g 477 2549 *2 10 a , n tb b u s 2 B l D R O O M , B A T H , d is h w a s h e r, c a b le T V p o o l, s u b le a s e Jan M a y , * ) 8 4 p lu s E 451 ‘,676 a f t e r 5 30 B R A N D N E W L A R G E o ne b e d ro o m a p a r t m e n t s G a s h e a te d , d is h w a s h e r, la u n d r y , n e a r d is p o s a l, sh a g < a rp e t, a nd M a li 409 S w anr-0 D r iv e 453 H ig h 3706 Theses & Di s s e r t at i ons Copied 100% c o t t on bond 6 per page Gr a d. School G u a r a n t e e (24 hr. Servi ce) , , ' S . t v V i G I N N Y ' S C O P Y I N G S E R V I C E s i s " B in d i ng Servi ces A v a i l a b l e 476-9171 42 Dobi e M a l l C O P Y SHOP ll R B C / B o n d P aper Super Copies i G u a d a lu p e a fte rn o o n s , ac P A R T T I M E T Y P IS T c u r a te 65 w p m , p le a s a n t, w il l w o rk w it h p u b lic , *2 OO h o u r S end r e s u m e to CC, P O B o x 4743 A u s tin , T e x a s 78765 P A R T T I M E S E L L p r e tt ie s t f lo w e r s in A u s t in T h u r s d a y a n d F r i d a y a f t e r ­ noons, S a tu rd a y a n d S u n d a y a ll d a y 476- 3060, 453-2716, 453-1508 N E E D S A L E S P E R S O N S a la r y a n d c o m m is s io n C o n ta c t C h u c k A n d e rs o n o r Jar k '. r h m id t , G r e a t W e s te r n T r a n s m is sio n Co 837-2054 *700 O V E R S E A S J O B S - A u s t r a lia , E u r o p e , S. A m e r i c a , A f r i c a , . Students a ll p ro fe s s io n s and o c c u p a t i o n s *3000 m o n t h ly . E x p e n s e s paid, o v e r ­ t im e , s ig h ts e e in g , F r e e i n f o r ­ m a t i o n . W r i t e ; T R A N S W O R L D R E S E A R C H D E P T . A5. P.O. Box 603 Corte M a d e r a , CA. 94925 to C O U N T E R HE L P W A N T E D M u s t be n e a t a n d p e r s o n a b le W o rk I 4 In p e rs o n o n ly M o n d a y F r id a y A p p ly J,I- k B r o w n s f a b r i c C a re , 615 W e st I9» , f r o m 474-1124 P ic tu r e s B in d in g K a lo g r a p h P r in t in g S ave T im e S ave M o n e y N e v i to G o u r m e t on th e D r a g PRESS ll We s p e c ia liz e le tte r h e a d s a n d e n v e lo p e s in re s u m e s , h a n d b ills , J ( her k o u r lo w ra te s 2200 G u a d a lu p e J u s t A c ro s s th e S tre e t P R E S S O N THE TEXAS UNION COPY CENTER X er o x M u l t i l i t h T r ansp ar en ci es M a s t e r - M a k e r Room 314 The Te xas Union M o n d a y - F r i d a y 8 am- 6p m S a t u r d a y 9am- Noon D A N " , a n d C a lc u la t o r s S ales, sec vice , r e n ta ls A ll r- ik e s 7408 San G a b r ie l. 474 6396 T Y P E W R I T E R S PE R S O N A L C O U N S E L O R A i l p ro b le m s , m a r r ia g e , s o c ia l, b u s in e s s I n t e r n a t i o n a l a u t h o r i t y o n P a r a p ­ s y c h o lo g y a n d E S P A p p o in tm e n t 258 1316 F R E E R I B B O N W ith a n y t y p e w r it e r o r a d d in g m a c h in e r e p a ir R e a s o n a b le ra te s S a le s, s e rv ic e , re n ta ls A B C T Y P E W R I T E R CO M a s te r Charge B a n k A m e r i' a rd B a n k A m e r l s te r C h a r a e 474 4239 605 N e c h e s B IK E B R O M > The B ik e Shop, 905 W e s t s4tF s p e ' la iiz e s in p ro fe s s io n a l r e p a ir s d id n e w b ik e s 453 6838 N IG H T HAW K FOODS tin s s e v e r a l v a t a e r ie * in its r e s t a u r a n t t r a i n i n g p r o g r a m T h e m a n a g e m e n t t r a in in g p r o g r a m r ig o r o u s ly p re p a re s n d lv id u a ls to r r e s p o n s ib le m a n a g e m e n t p o s itio n s w it h a m p le a d v a n c e m e n t op p o r t u n i t y in e x c e s s o f s i , OOO m o n th h a v e b e e n a tt a in e d w it h in one y e a r b y s e v e r a l r e c e n t tra in e e s We a re lo o k in g fo r h a r d w o r k e r s w h o a re ( a p a b le o f d ir e r t in g t h e ir e n e r g ie s to w a r d th e m o s t p r o d u c t iv e e n d s To d is ­ cu ss th e m a t te r f u r t h e r p le a s e c a ll V ie 'o r S u m n e r 444 6521 9 5 S a l a r i e s A L T E R A T I O N F I T T E R F U L L OR P A R T T I M E Pl e a s e a p p l y in p er s o n b e t we e n 10 OO a m. and 3:00 p. m. S A R A H G E E 2514 G u a da l u pe 477-6749________ D E L I V E R T E L E P H O N E □ A A I / C F U L L OR P A R T D A Y S M e n o r W o m e n o v e r 18 w ith a u to m o b ile s a re n e e d e d in A u s t in , L a k e T r a v is , I p a n d e r, P f l u g e r v ille a rid R o u n d R o ck D e liv e r y s t a r ts a b o u t D e c e m b e r l l Send n a n e, a d d re s s , age, te le p h o n e n u m b e r in s u r a n c e c o m p a n y a n d ty p e of a u to , h o u rs a v a ila b le on a p o s t < a fd to D D A B o x D 2 U n iv e r s it y S ta tio n . C o rp A u s t i n , A n E q u a l O p p o r t u n it y E m p lo y e r T e x a s , 78 7 ,2 C L U B M A N A G E R T R A I N E E E x c e lle n t S ta r tin g s a la r y if you a re a t lr a st 25, m a t u r e , n o t a f r a id to w o rk a n d w a n t to a d v a n c e See M a n a g e r a t M y -O M y C lu b , 1516 S L a m a r a tt e r 7 p m HOSTESS & GO-GO D A N C E R / / h o w a rd to a v a g e o v e r SIVO 00 per w e e k a n d a re a1 le a s t 18 F x p e r le n c e n o t n e c e s s a ry as we t r a in See a t t e r 7 p rn a t 1516 S L a m a r N E L S O N 'S G I F T S I n d i a n le w e lr y , A f r ic a n a n d M e x ic a n im p o r ts 4612 S o u th C o n g re s s 444 3814 C lo se d M o n d a y s _____________ Z u n i L E A R N T O P L A Y G U I T A R B e g in n e r a n d a d v a n c e d D r e w T h o m a s o n 4 /8 2079 S K Y D I V E ! Austin P arachute Center For in fo rm a tio n please call 272-5711 an ytim e JI N N Y A g u t te r is e v e r y th in g A T T R A C T I V E F U N L O V I N G c o u p le se e ks f r ie n d s h ip s w in g in g w it h o th e r c o u p le s G S P O B o x 12704, C a p S U 787 l l G A R A G E S A L E S a tu rd a y , D e c e m b e r J, to 5 p rn a n d S u n d a y , D e c e m b e r 8 a m 2, a t U n iv e r s it y U n ite d M e th o d is t C h u r c h F u r n it u r e , C lo th in g , B o o ks, H o u s e h o ld Ite m s to 5 p rn I P H O T O G R A P H S O F Y O U a n d y o u r c h ild r e n m a k e p e rs o n a l C h r is t m a s g ifts f a l l P a y fo r a p p t e v e n in g s 453 0038 N E E D M A L E f o r stud P a p e rs u n n e c e s s a ry , p ic k o f l it t e r 476 0020 ( H I H U A H U A T O G I V E A W A Y y e a r o ld m a le c o llie s p a n ie l m ix , goo d w a tc h d o g , g oo d w ith c h ild r e n , sh o ts , w o rm e d 2S8-5819, a ft e r 6 F U L L T IM E UT E M P L O Y E E d e s ir e s to f o r m c a rp o o l f r o m C a s tle w o o d F o re s t, 4 / i 4J4J, h o m e 282 1789 R o o m m a t e s F E M A L E . R O O M M A T E S p r in g lu x u r y s t u d io a p t P r i v a t e b e d ro o m SI 17 5 0 /m o n th S75 d e p o s it 472 6330 n e a r c a m p u s L I B E R A L R E S P O N S IB L E lo n g h a ir S h a re 12 (I e a v e m e s s a g e ) A t D u p r e e I g r a d u a t e I t h o u se n e a r c a m p u s 471 3322, 453 7341 E l M A L E R O O M M A T E N E E D E D , s n a r e tw o b e d ro o m a p a r t m e n t s79 50 m o n th h a lt re n t C a ll 451 6053 a ft e r six O N I O R T W O G I R I S tw o b e d ro o m a p a r t m e n t fo r s p r in g on F R s h u ttle 478 9923 to s h a re U R G E N T L Y N E E D F E M A L E to s h a re c e e 3 2 h o u se O w n r o o m S h u ttle S55 I ur y 454 7946 M A L I b e d r o o m o f s h u ttle s N o r m 444 3323 U P C L A S S O R G R A D O w n lu x u r y a p a r t m e n t la r g e f I M A I E. R O O M M A T E S p r i n g s e m e s te r o ne b e d ro o m a p a r t m e n t on T o w n L a k e , C A /C H *82 SO N R S h u ttle t o r, 44/ 3797 t I M A L E R O O M M A T E S n e e d e d tw o b a in I s l T w o b e d ro o m J a n u a r y ,'p a r t e e o f, *61 25 a ll b i l l * p a id SR S h u t­ tle 444 8316 H O U S E M A T E W A N T E D t h r i c b e d ro o m h o u s e c a c h y a rd ( a ll G a r y 928 1891 2901 N o rw ic h f o r s p a c io u s fe n c e d to s h a re L I B E R A L F E M A L E n e e d e d tw o b e d ro o m tw o b a th a p a r t m e n t , s p r i n y s e rrie s te ' C a ll Jan 471 2237 F E M A L E R O O M M A T E n e e d e d S h a re tw o b e d ro o m d u p le x , *75 H a lf re n t p lu s b d ls C it y b us 447 2651 a ft e r 6 OO p rr, F I M A I I R O O M M A T E IS ; n e e d e d F u r ru sh e d o r u n fu r n is h e d 2 b e d ro o m s , E n f ie ld s h u ttle , p o o l, p a tio B a r b a r a , 478 0583, 4 78 9921 F E M A L E R O O M M A T F n e e d e d Ja n I to r b e a u t if u l 2 b e d 17 b a th a p a r t m e n t *67 50 A B P 476 0094 I N e w tw o F I V A I L R O O M M A T E Jan b e d r o o m /t w o b a th A B P , n e a r c a m p u s *67 50 478 9012 I U R N IS H E D H O U S E th r e e b e d ro o m J a n u a r y , m a t u r e lib e r a l *82 p lu s b d ls , le ss it th r e e 444 0051 tie d 441 0302 T H E CONSUL ON TOWN L A K E I, 2, and 3 b e d r o o m L a r g e I a n d 2 t o w n h o u s e s a n d f i a t s w i t h g r e a t b e d r o o m f e a t u r e s I l k " these gas g r i l l , la r g e pool, t,tudy ro o m , c a b le T V , d is h w a s h e r , d is p o s a l, in d i v i d u r j l l y c o n t r o lle d C A / C H , s h u t t le bus. T u r n E a s t o ff IH 35 on E a s t R iv e r s id e D r i v e . C o m e by a p a r t m e n t I i i 1201 I m n in F o r d Road 444-3411 A p a r t m e n t s , U N F . j R f ST O f N I a rg e / b d r , A u s t in in le t Pi 0479 a d e r 5 / E M B E R R e n t F r e e b e a u t if u l v ie w o f L a k e its OK *160 p lu s cle e 127 L A R G E O NE BE Ej R O O M a p a r t m e n t on B u r n e t a n d N o r t h L o o p M u s t s u b le t D e i e m b e r in IS A p r ,I 30 B r a n d n e w ' a c h , d is h w a s h e r, d is p o s a l, e lu d e s ' a i l " sh a g a ru ! m o re *50 d e p o s it, *129 m o n th ly 159-6/85. D u p l e x e s , F u r n . O N I B f D R O O M c o u p le o n ly no p e ts , n e a r U n iv e r s it y , n e w ly pa rile d 476 0571, 451 i/8 0 C L O S E T O U T I wo b e d ro o m s a ll b r it k F ir e p la c e , c a r p o r t , s to ra g e , a ir c o n d a m n e d *120 452 6702 R o o m s O R N E R R O O M re p la c e s i 70 N o ’6 167 476 8681 A n o t h e r w ith 1902 N u e c e s ' / N I R A ' T I O R W a lk to 1 rr a ria g e r a m p u s 472 1941 S A L I S in g le r o o m In m a id s e rv ic e , q u ie t a ll ( a t! y 477 0368 o r t o r e n t I N D I V I D U A L I , L I B E R A L O U I I w a n t e d in T a r r y t o w n P r iv a t e b a th , p r iv a t e en tra n c e p r iv a t e y a r d R e f r ig e r a t o r a rid h o t p la te , AC (U L * 7 5 /m o n th C a ll P h il, 442 6733 f u r n i s h e d r o o m T E X A N D O R M 1905 1907 N u e ce s re m o d e le d A ls o a v a ila b le S46 50 m o n th F a t! S p r in g s e m e s te r D a ily m a n ) s e rv ic e , c e n t r a l n .r , r o m p u -te iy s in g le r o o m s , p a r k in g , r e f r ig e r a t o r . H u t P la te s a llo w e d T w o b lo c k ) p us CO ed RF S ID E N T M A N A G E RS f r o m c a m 477 1760 S IN G L E R O O M S C O E D H O U S E , A C , m a id , k it c h e n p r iv ile g e s , d is c o u n t on le a se s 2 4 ii R io G ra n d e , 202 /v< st 31 st r a . i l l 3671, 258 1902 O N f W O M A N s C a s tilia n c o n t r a c t to r sa le P o o l, s a u n a , p a r k in g , m a id s C on ta r t k a re n a l 477 3402 7 220 M E N S C a s t ilia n c o n tr a r ts fo r s a l e H e a te d p o o l, s a u n a , p a r k in g , m a id s , e lf C o r it a 't Je t! 4 /6 789/ You Belong At E n g l i s h A i r e Efficie ncie s, studios, I, 2, and 3 bedrooms, furnished or un­ furnished, and all the extras you expect like laundries, saunas, exercise rooms, gam e rooms, pools, putting green, PLUS a g re a t restau ran t A N D the Cri< ket Club Soon th e re 'll be a w a te r polo pool end ha nd­ ball courts, too Come loin us n o w ! F r o m $145 44 4 1846 2101 Burton Dr (off E ast Riverside) TW O B f G R O O M O N E B A T H C a s c a d e A p a r t m e n ts S u b le a se Der e m b e r t i l l /■ n y US * SGO 444 4370 a t t e ' 5 OO I p a r t t i m e lo g s e m e s te r JO B O P E N IN G S f o r S pr S k ille d in s t r u c to r s n e e d e d h ild r e n 's g y m n a s t " s a n d b a to n a fte rn o o n s A d u lt e x e r c is e a nd d a m e e v e n in g s A d u lt s b a d m in t o n a n d p re s c h o o le rs , w ith p ia n is t s k ills p r e fe r r e d m o r n in g s S a la r y f r o m *210 Vt t i Con ta c t A u s tin R e c r e a tio n ' e n te r 476 5662 A C C O U N T A N T Sn a il c o n t r a c t in g f i r m n ee d s g r a d u a t e to s tu d e n t w th an a c c o u n tin g d e g re e w o rk 20 IO h o u r * w e e k ly W o rk S’ h e d u le f le x ib le e n o u g h to be c o m p e t ib le w ith • la sses A p p lic a n t m u s t be a v a ila b le y e a r a ro u n d f o r a t le a s t 2 y e a rs ' a ll ’ ti 459 768/ G e o rg e ,u WE N E I D P E O P L E N e w 4 d a y w e ek S a t u r d a y , S u n d a y t f lie s t p a id c o m m is s io n or c o m e by 4301 G u a d a lu p e to s e ll D o w e rs th u r s d a y , F r id a y , L o w e s t p r ic e s , ( a l l 453 7156 / O U B f L IE VE in A m e r ic a n E n te r lf p r r . i a n d have a g o o d p a ir of t r u c k in g shoes th e n c o n t d 't m e to r a g r e a t p a r t in th e A u s tin U r n a re a , d e liv e r in g d o o r to d o o r a d v e r tiS triy C o m m is s io n C a ll 377 2270 a ft e r 5 OO 9 00 in c o m e o p p o r t u n it y I y P I ST N E E D E O C u ra te 2 to J d a y s e M u s t be fa s t. week 145 '2271 ac A F T f R N O O N H E L P 3 7 p rn f o r t o t h e r a n d son P o s s ib le p e r m a n e n t liv e In lo b fo r r i g h t p e rs o n 451 3390 B f ST P R O D U C T S h as 6 o p e n in g s fo r r e s t o c k e d . U p to *2 50 h o u r P a r t tim e flo u rs 7 p m m id n ig h t N o w th r o u g h r h r is t m a s A p p ly p p e rs o n 6301 U S 290 E P E R S O N W A N T E D t o d o h e a v y i d i t f h d ig g in g , 4 6 p m m a n u a l d a ily u n t il C h r is t m a s S4 0 0 /h o u r 454 9365 la b o r C O O K F O R D A Y C A R E c e n te r M u s t h a v e t r a n s p o r t a t io n E u lt or p a r t tu n e F It r a .nr y im p o r t a n t 836 1609 C O N S I R U T T IO N I A B O R w a n te d Con ta< t G r a n g e r M a r D o n a ld 454 8641 L o s t & F o u n d 'JS T F E M A L E G R E Y K I T T E N . 4 I a s t w o o d l P a r k re o n th s O ld, n e a r P le a s e r e t u r n , m a le p a r tn e r is g r ie v in g Can 472 1095 R f W A R D L e st g r e y w e im a r a n e r n e a r D o b i e 12 d a y s a g o f r o m G ra p e v in e , H ig h la n d V e t 928 2742 l a g s B f D R O O M u n fu r n is h e d O N I m u c k s *155■ m o n th a ll b ills p a id 4 //4 5 1 7 S even f r o m u t B e a u t i f u l v i e w , F O U N D D O W N J A C K E T a t I n t r a m u r a l I / n rus C o u r t r „ j | 4 7 * 2736 or e /f in in g s 474 4189, ask to r B o y d * 1 /8 u n f u r n is h e d * 198 f u r n is h e d D u p l e x e s , U n f . 600 f u l ly T H RE f B E D R O O M TW O B A T H *200 P r e fe r c a rp e te d , 231.JA L a C a sa f a c u l’ v o r g r a d u a t e B a r to n H ills a re a 1 74 47 I 7, 451 4945 Tanglewood East Apts. No Lease R eq u i r e d - Ail Bi l l s P ai d - 2 BR F u r n , - S185 I BR F u r n - $161 New shag c a r p e ' L a r g e b e d r o o m s R i d e B i k e t o U T H o u s e s , F u r n . r a t e s , 15 m i n u t e s liv in g , ' f . A U S T IN , q u ie t c o u n t r y t e r to c a m d o w n to w n N e w I 2, a n d 3 b e d ro o m *160 H o u s e b o a t f o r nl< h o m e s *75 i/ 7 - i BV I 327 *500 M -e M a n S' H O O L o ak . b a t h , , Id r o o m , I * 1 /3 m o n t h l / I " i e * f r o m A u s tin , 452-3747 M r s Da A p I I I b e r ■shed Q u et 1907 R o b b i j p a i d O ne b e d ro o m s p a c io u s s h o r t w a lk to is P la c e 4 /8 1841 2604 M a n o r Rd 477 10e>4 I O U R B l D R O O M , tw o b a ttu n o r th , w ith c e n t r a l a ir fe n c e d y a r d *289 fu r n is h e d , tai p u d P h o n e 452 4012 f ir e p la c e *12*0 477 296 j * BLS 472 v , f . 2 B i. D R O O M a p a r t '1 d s h u t t l e * 1 5 0 m o n t h u a r y 476 0372 is* Ca ve r, 40 r rn r av e o ffe r A ' j S n u g A s A B u g 1 V i l l a O r l e a n s A p a r t m e n t * art* well b u i l t N e a r u t R e a so n a b le I or 2 B e d r o o m F u rn is h e d or U n f u r n is h e d 4 5 2 ' H I 4 459 99/7 206 West 38 th S e e s ! C e s t o s ^ i n s i s t s I D E A L A D U L T E N V I R O N M E N T F O R f AC IJJ r /, G R A D U A T E S T U D E N T S A N D Y O U N G M A R R I E OS B ra , d rie w bm ts , d r a p e ' es (r e s tle s s r e f t t wo b e d ro o m u n it * , s h a g ■ f u r n i s h e d , d is h w a s h e r , d is ly e ' a to r , t o t a l (.‘ I t ' a te d n e a r H ig h la n d ' •*>«<** * 11 * 476 <>09 I t y p i n g printing binding I riverside drive 420 Each year the cancer soc ie tv selects several leading un (versifies to work on certain projects, and this advertising campaign is one such project, Mindak said M A R J O R I E D E L A F I E L D W R I N G S E R V I C E theses, d is s e rta tio n * , p ica e lite D u p lica tin g , b in d in g , open e v e r y d a y 442 7008 re su m e *, R e p o rts J u s t N o r t h of 27th 8. Guadalupe TflpM xAa f t n n f a s ' YES, we do type Freshm an themes. W h y not s ta rt out w ith good g rad e s! 472-3210 and 472-7677 2707 H e m p h ill Pan- B O B B Y E O E L A I ' E L D . I B M Setae tr ie p ica elite . 25 y e a r * e x p e rie n c e book*, d is s e rta tio n * , rep orts, m im e o g r a p h in g 442 7 84 theses M A B Y I m in u te p a p * '1., M a s t e r s h a r g e 0727 or 442 8545 S M A L L W O O D W p m g la s ' o v e r n ig h t a v a i l a b l e T e rm . theses d l l i e r t a * on*, le tte rs B a n k A rrie re a rd 892 “ t y p i n g i i A Responsive T ypin g Se rvice 2200 G u a d a iu p t AUTOMOTIVE TUN! UP M f CHAHICS* Sh^ 'TC „ AIR CONDITIONING I M F R I G l R M i Q N SERVICING" ' ’ V WELDING* t / d ' A A - V V DRAFTING ll to il K t l l # N i l M AH in! or if i i on OO M R I# Quality lo in tl 'OI I in| A Pl|tl*| >011 career ii I t l r t w i i lu ll C A U , w rit* #r trill! . . . 0 rt&KjtT CAPITOL CITY TRADE & TECH. SCHOOL Appro*## Ur V itira n Tram tnj P A I ! w H L L 205 E. Riverside 444-3257 Third A n n u a l J" I H O LID A Y M ARKETPLACE | J I Where you can bargain hunt for hand made | I gifts, great for Christmas A ll proceeds will rn ■ go to the residents who have made this day J | possible ■ j^ a t u r d a y , D ei. I 45th & Lamar 9-5 P M TEXAS I o i i m N I d e a s p u r l I ssues ( . m a t i n e e p r r ’s e nt s \ i Juvenile Justice" with Mr. Bob Provan Juvenile justice and child care in Texas will be the topic of a sandwich seminar Thurs­ day in Union Building 104 Bob Provan, a University law student, will discuss the role of law and justice as relat ed to j uv eni l es and minors. The seminar is spon­ sored by the Union Ideas and Issues Committee. L a w School A representative from the Southern Methodist Universi­ ty School of Law in Dallas will meet with groups of students in the Student Financial Aids Office, Boom 123, from 8:30 to ll a m. Thursday. The 20 minute sessions are designed to inform students about the law school s admis­ sion requirements and finan cial assistance available There is no limit to the number of students per group For more information and to make appointments call Bobbie Burden, 471-4396 or go BIKES can be registered with the University Police Monday - Friday, ll a rn - Noon at the bicycle rack on the north end of Bellmont Hall by Boom 121 in the Student Financial Aids Office, 2608 Whitis Ave. C o m et S em inar The Kohoutek Comet will be the subject of the University Christian Church’s soup ’n’ sandwich seminar. Ed lieder m an of th e U n i v e r s i t y astronomy department will be the speaker The seminar will be at noon Thursday at the University Christian Church, 21st Street and University Avenue C at Sought The Austin-Travis County is Health Department still looking for a medium-sized black eat with tour white paws and a white spot on her It is believed to be (hest is c a r r y i n g k i t t e ns and thought to have rabies Anyone seeing a eat of that description is asked to contact the Animal Control Division of the health department at 472- 5491 UNIVERSITY ANNOUNCEMENTS INTERNATIONAL FOLKDANCERS w ill teat ti St a n d in a v ia n d a n ce s and ta lk about St a n d in a v ia n c u ltu r e and m u sic at 8 p ft, T h u r s d a y in (br­ J u n i o r B a l l r o o m G u e s t u n i o n s p e a k e r w ill b e G o r d o n T r a c ie , kn o w n for his e ffo rts to p r e s e r v e the SHAKERS p r e s e n t s EWING ST. TIMES Tonight thru Sat., Dec. I Serving your favorite Beer and W in e Coolers, Sangria, and 7 I varieties of Pizzas 476-4394 291 5 Guadalupe [HAPPY HOUR DAILY 2-7 P.M. Serving: Cold Beer Wine Set-Ups A 3 ^ TOPLESS D A ILY AT 4 P .M . Happy Hour Prices All Nile Mondays NO COVER O P E N 7 D A Y S • 2-12 P M . 2 1 2 0 E. R iv e rs id e (B e h in d A b b e y Inn y t t n m x t w s f i H t x n m i l t U L C r a n S A S C H A S 311 W e s t 6 th - 4 7 2 - 3 5 5 6 The Finest in German and Russian Foods Cocktails - Pastries - Lunch Open Week Days 11:30 - 10:00 Friday till Midnight Sat. I 1:30 - 1:00 Sun. 5:30 - 10:00 Dinner 6:00 - 9:30 Closed Mondays E Q R R n n M n i L i a i i m m i i i i i K I N F O L K AND FRIENDS (BLUEGRASS MUSIC) c o o n l )HI \ KS I M I E X C E L L E D M I M FREE PARKING IN THE REAR AFTER 5 p.m. IPO JO sis coming! iTown Lake Plaza Riverside Drive CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING ORDER BLANK THE DAILY TEXAN CLASSIFIEDS CLIP AND MAIL TODAY! WRITE YOUR ADHERE A m o u n t Enclosed N u m b e r of Days M a i l to: DAILY TEXAN CLASSIFIEDS P.O. BOX D - UT STATION AUSTIN, TEXAS 78712 U se th is h a n d y ch a rt to q u ic k ly a rr iv e a t cost. (1 5 w o r d m in im u m ) No. W ords Cost per w o rd 15 16 17 18 19 Times Times Times Times Times I IO 1.50 1.60 1.70 1.80 1.90 2 18 2.70 2.88 3.06 3.24 3.42 5 35 5.25 5.60 5.95 6.30 6.65 IO 60 9.00 9.60 10.20 10.80 20 1.20 18.00 19.20 20.40 21.60 11.40 22.80 N A M E __ ADDRESS C I T Y ___ PHONE__ Thursday, November 29, 1973 THE DAILY TKXAN Page 15 F a s t Pro fessio n a l No H assles 474 , y / * Thesis Resum es Scien tific On thp D r a g N e x t to G o u r m e t M A G IC I IN G E R Y T y p in g S e r v ic e We do it a l l 1 S tu d e n t ownp-j and o p e rated 504 W est 24th U p s t a ir s 472 5687 F R A N T IS W O O D S ly p irtg S e r v ic e E > per lent ed, theses, d is s e rta tio n s m a n u s c rip ts 45(6090 la w B E A U T I F U I P f R S O N A I T Y P I N G A ll yo u r U n iv e r s it y w ork F a s t, a c c u ra te , r e a s o n a b le P r i n t in g B in d in g M m B o d o n i 4 78 8111 E X P E R I E N C E D T Y P I S T G r a d u a t e and Udder g ra d u a te WOr k C hun e of typ e sty le s and s u e s B a r b a r a Tu llo s, 453 5124 T Y P I N G W A N T F O N e a t, 50' p ag e 472 4212 Q U A L I T Y T Y P I N G S E R V I C E pe rie rtced B S B u s in e s s r arb o n M r s E x I B M E le c t r o rib b on, s y m b o ls R e a s o n a b le Jo n es 836 5231 ^ C R O C K E T T co T Y P I N G th e m es , theses, d is s e rta tio n s X L R O X C O P Y I N G P R I N T I N G O F F S E T c o m p le te set of O f F I C E S U P P t if S D r iv e th ru w in d o w for Q uick s e rv M * 453-7987 5530 B U R N E T R D J u s t N o rth of 27th & G u a d a lu p e /In n A/ H A V T y p in g M u lt iM h in y , B in d i n g The C om plete Pro fess onai F U L L T I M E T ypin g S e rv ic e ta ilo re d to the needs of U n iv e r s ity stud ents sper lai k e y b o a rd e q u ip m e n t for la n g u a g e , science, and e n g in e e rin g theses an d disser ta b o o s 472 3210 arid 4/2 767/ 2707 H e m p h ill P a r k Saxbe Bill Gains OK Of House WASHINGTON (U P I) - The Senate ap­ proved 75-16 W ednesday to override a constitutional provision preven­ ting Sen W illiam Saxbe from being con­ firm ed as attorney general. legislation The bill passed despite a warning from A sst. Senate D em ocratic Leader Robert Byrd that the constitutional obstacle w as “ com plete, final, absolute and beyond rem edy by leg isla tio n .” Byrd said C ongress should not “ attem pt to perform a Caesarean section on the C onstitution” just so that one of its own can becom e the nation’s chief law en force­ m ent officer. THE CONSTITUTIONAL im pedim ent to Saxbe is that he w as a m em ber of the Senate when C ongress raised the pay of the attorney general from $35,000 to $60,- 000 in 1967. The bill would allow Saxbe to serv e at the old $35,000 a year salary, a $7,500 cut from the pay he receiv es as a senator the bill, Before passing the Senate adopted a Byrd am endm ent assuring a quick decision by the Suprem e Court on whether Saxbe is eligible to serve. T he a m e n d m e n t a llo w s an in itia l challenge to be m ade to a three-m em ber fed era l co u rt w ith the appeal going straight to the Supreme Court PR E SID E N T NIXON has not form ally nominated Saxbe, a m averick Republican, aw aiting passage of the bill which still m ust clear the House. Solicitor Gen R o b e rt H Bork h a s been serving as acting a tto rn e y g e n e ra l since Get 20 when Elliot L R ich ard so n re s ig n ­ ed a fte r refusing N ixon’s o rd e r to fire special W a te rg a te p ro s e c u to r Archibald Cox. The 16 votes again st the bill w e re all c a s t by D e m o c ra ts . Saxbe, who listened to p art of the d eb ate , voted “ p re s e n t While Sen S am J E rvin J r , I) N C., and Byrd arg u e d th a t S axb e's nom inatio n was a d ir e c t violation of the C onstitution, the bill, which Republicans said th a t w ould d e p r i v e S a x b e of r a i s e , elim in a te s the objection. t h e The House P o s t Office and Civil S ervice C o m m itte e to hold la te r decided not h earing s on the m e a s u r e and asked the leadership to bring it to the floor for a vote next Monday or T uesday The lead ersh ip rep orted ly a g re e d H O U S E R U L E S require, how ever two- th irds of the c o n g re s sm e n p re s e n t in favor of bringing up the bill w ithout going through usual channels Rep T h add eus J Dulski, D-N Y said the Senate a lre a d y had estab lished the case in its h ea rin g s and no h ea rin g s a re n e e d e d ” by th e H o u s e C o m m i t t e e . R epublicans a g re e d to forego h earing s, he said. Arabs Issue Ultimatum W ithdrawal From Jerusalem D e m a n d e d By I nited P r e s s Inte rn atio nal it w i t h d r a w s A rab kings and chiefs of s t a te w arn ed Israel W ednesday th e r e can be* no Middle E a s t p e a c e u ntil fro m J e r u s a l e m and oth**r occupied A rab lands and the righ ts of the Pa lestin ian people a r e res to re d The A rab le a d e rs also pledg ed to kee p using oil as a political weapon Arab political sources said the heads of fighting to e sta b lish a in c a s e war again b re a k s out with st a te decided fund Israel The w a r fund decision w as p a rt of a s ecret resolution during the A rab s u m m it m eetin g w hich ended in Algiers Wednes­ day, the sources said the w a r P o litical sources said fund would be heavily su pported by the oil- producing nations in a m ov e to refinan ce E gypt and Syria in p a r t ic u l a r for their ti w ar losses in the Oct The su m m it lead e rs also decided to set up a second fund which would be de voted to the cau se ol propaganda prom oting the Arab cau se I s r a e l h a s long said the f u t u r e of J e r u s a l e m is not negotiable The u lt i m a t u m * a m e in a final d e c l a r a ­ tion from lh Arab chiefs of s t a te a t the th ree-d ay m eetin g conclusion of a in Algiers to c o o rd in ate s t r a te g y before the proposed Middle E a s t p e ace c o n feren ce in G enev a next month P r i m e M iniste r Golda Meir and IO lea d e rs of the- various factions within the ruling L ab or P a r t y headed off a potential split within its ran k s bv h a m m e r i n g out a c o m p r o m is e p la tfo rm th a t would retain the p re s e n t leadership and hold on to som e of the occupied te r rit o ri e s The c o m p r o m is e party s o u rc es said, e l i m i n a t e d any chance t h a t D e fe n s e Minister Moshe Dayan would be dropped from the party s list for the national e l e c ­ tions .scheduled for Dec 31 More than 60 party m e m b e r s including fo r m e r senior a r m y officers had signed a petition c a ll­ ing for Dayan’s resig na tio n, citing Israel s dleged u n p re p a re d n e ss for the O cto ber war and m i s m a n a g e m e n t of its conduct. A sta te m e n t, issued a f t e r an hours-long m eeting in Tel A viv. said Israel will s triv e for a p eac e a g r e e m e n t th a t will p ro m is e liquidation of all m an ife sta tio n s of hostili- t\ the blockade and the e m b a rg o , and d e f e n s i b l e b o rd ers thai will a s s u r e Is ra e l the possibility of effectiv e self defense I t ag ain st m ilita r y a tta c k or a t t e m p t s at b l o c k a d e a n d w h i c h a r e b a s e d on t e r r i t o r i a l c o m p r o m i s e ” s a i d , how ever. Is ra e l would not r e tu rn to the p r e l 9 6 7 w a r b o r d e r s , a n d a u n i t e d J e r u s a le m would be m a in ta in e d as its cap ita l It also said Israel r e j e c t s th e idea of fo rm atio n of an in d ep end ent P a les tin ian sta te on the Jo r d a n R iver th e w est bank of P re s id e n t A nw ar S adat of E g y p t and o th e r Arab le a d e r s alre a d y have talked of resu m ing th e w a r unless the deadlock a t the E g y p ti a n -ls ra e li m ilita ry talk s on the d is en g ag em en t of th e ir troo ps on the Suez front is resolved. In Cairo, d ip lo m atic s o u rces said the Knifed S ta te s is pressing Israel to soften its position They said W ashington would like to see a m e a s u r e of a g r e e m e n t in the K i l o m e t e r th e U.S.- sponsored peace co n fe r e n c e in G en eva, ex pected to begin Dec. 18 t a l k s b e f o r e IQI T he s o u rces said the beh ind -th e-scen es I S in tervention with Israel pro b ably w as the reason for I s r a e l ’s r e q u e s t for a 24- hour p o stp o n e m e n t of the c e a s e - fir e talks which had been scheduled re s u m e Wednesday. to SANTA MAY BE LATE THIS YEAR SINCE HE CAN ONLY GO 50 M.P.H. 3 Guerrillas Release Dutch Hostages, Jet BEI KI T P P I i A tr io of P alestin ian g u e rr illa s e xh auste d a f t e r a four day six s u r r e n d e r e d s to p h ij a c k in g o d y s s e y , W ednesday in the P e r s ia n Gulf sheikdom of Dubai releasin g ll h o sta g e s they had held on a Koval Dutch A irlines KEM j u m ­ bo jet The h ija c k e rs had br en rebuffed by four A rab count n e s in which they had sought to land and gain a sy lu m beton* ending their journey through the Middle East Not th Africa and the M e d ite rr a n e a n ‘Th*- c o m m a n d o s , a c c o m p a n i e d by their ho stag es, c a m e into Dubai airp o rt t e r m i n a l a f t e r the le a d e r of the operation a g re e d to s u r r e n d e r T he p rim e m in is te r, Sheikh M akhtoum Ben R ash id had given o rd e r s to all officia ls to t r e a t all of th e m well a Dubai g o v e rn m e n t s ta te m e n t said the ex plosives rn The c o m m a n d o s gave up th e ir weapons and their possession without any conditions or d e m a n d s The s u r r e n d e r op eratio n w as co m p le ted very easily due to the good intentions of all p ar ties A KEM sp o k esm a n in A m s t e r d a m had said earlier that the Sheikh told the hi­ j a c k e rs he personally would ' g u a r a n t e e their safe conduct th e ir ca p tiv es, The h ija c k e rs and IO c r e w m e n and A W W ithhold a vice- president, of KEM who offered him self a s a voluntary host age in r e t ur n for the r e l e a s e of 247 p a ss e n g e rs and eight s te w a r d e s s e s a t M alta, w e r e taken to a hospital for c h e c k u p s A Dubai a ir p o r t spo k esm an said the g ov ern m ent had re je c te d the h ija c k e rs d e m a n d s for a new plane and p a ss p o rts . loaded with eight The plant had been hours of fuel in p re p aratio n of a n o th e r takeoff before the s u r re n d e r c a m e . f l i g h t I lie terro r ists took o v e r the D utch p lan e Sunday night shortly a f t e r it left B e iru t on a t h e to T o k y o T h e y passenger s m ost of w hom wer e J a p a n e s e , to D a m a s c u s C y prus Eibya and th en to Valletta, Malta. f l e w The h ija c k e rs had d e m an d e d and re c e i v ­ ed pledges from the N e th e rla n d s c o n ­ sidered p ro lsra e li by the A rab s not to f o r S o v i e t J e w s p r o v i d e f i c i l i t i e s e m ig ra tin g to Israel and not to p e r m i t tr a n sp o rta tio n of a r m s or volunteers to the Je w ish s t a te M a ll Caroling Canceled For Christmas Season Bv BETSY HALE Texan Staff Writer At least one p re C h r i s tm a s E v e on the Main Mall will be m o r e silent than it is holy this season since E m v e rs it y choral o rgan ization s will not be p resen ting their annual carolin g p ro g r a m The co n c e rt, which w as can cele d q u ie t­ last spring by University P re s id e n t ly Stephen S p u n at th** re q u e s t of tho m usic d e p a rtm e n t, had su ffered from poor attcn dance for the last few y e a rs . Fine Arts Dean P e ter G a m e said The a tte n d a n c e had ju s t slipped and It tra ditio ns c a r r y on slipped and slipped just s e em ed to be one of those that stud ents didn t w an t to an y m o re G a m e noted But Dr M orris Beachy d ir e c to r of the U n iv ers ity 's nine- choral org anization s said The* annual c h r i s t m a s caroling trad itio n w as scu ttled s o m e ti m e last y e a r a ft e r it was d eterm in ed tha t the school had d if f ic u l ty r e l a ti n g re lig io u s p ro g r a m in a secular society to a S om e people felt that a s tate supported U n iv e rs ity should not support a religious p r o g r a m , Beachy said We even h ad tr o u ­ ble with p r e a c h e r s refusing to give the be ned ic tio n and invocation But the m a j o r re a s o n for the c o n c e r t’s ca n c e lla tio n to Dr Robert according Bays c h a ir m a n of the music d e p a rtm e n t, is the change in the c a le n d a r m a d e in 1970 en din g th e fall s e m e s t e r b e f o r e Yuletide season rath er than a f t e r it. th e •Students p artic ip a tin g in the p ro g r a m found th e m se lv e s und er extreme* p r e s s u r e trying to p re p a r e for both it and th eir finals, he said The c o n c e rt tra ditio na lly is p re s e n te d on the Sunday p rece d in g fall finals. When we realized the p r e s s u r e the p ro g ra m w as causing on the* stu d e n ts per­ forming Bays acknow ledged, we added up the* c ost to the U niversity and decided that with the s m a ll e r a tte n d a n c e prevail th e re se e m e d to be no m a n d a t e to mg keep the p ro g r a m Bays a d m i tt e d the m usic d e p a r t m e n t had initiated the* suggestion to d rop the caroling and said S pu rr ap pro ved the t h e c h o r a l s u g g e s t i o n M e m b e r s of organ izatio ns w ere not inform ed of the decision, how ever Dr Ronald Brown. U niv ersity v ic e ­ p re s id en t for s tu d e n t affairs , con firm e d S p u r r ’s ap p ro v al of the suggestion. Th*- ch oral o rg anizatio ns will continue to caro l inio rm ally cm c a m p u s , how ever, Beachy said. I t s u n fo rtu n a te th a t w e ’ve c o m e to th at we can t sustain this point in society such .i p ro g r a m B eachy la m e n te d . He? had been affiliated with the c o n c e rt for 17 ye ars rfieujs capsules South V i e t n a m e s e R e ta k e H i g h l a n d s C a m p SAIGON • I PI i South V ietnam ese troops Wednesday recaptured the strategic Central Highlands base (am p of Dak Song lost to the Com­ m unists three w eeks ago the government said The outpost, 120 m iles northeast of Saigon beside national Highway 14 and the Cambodian border, was retaken after heavy lighting. Et Col. Le Trung Hien, the com m and spokesm an, reported He gave no estim ate on casualties. Elizabeth Taylor U n de r go e s A b d o m i n a l Surgery HOLLYWOOD (I P it Elizabeth Taylor underwent two hours of sur­ gers Wednesday to rem ove a c y st from her right ovary and to correct an The cyst was not malignant and the 41 year-old actress, who had com- i * mal cram ps, was expected to be released from the •nt**r in about on** week. her right ovary rem oved, said a spokesman lor the bad an abnormal intestinal formation whieh was cor bing that was causing her a great deal of pain. She s doing intestinal disorder plained of ab* I ( LA Modi* ■ Sh*- had actress, “ ar.! r e e l e d beautifully sot MECHANIC OH DUTY BRAKE SERVICE WASH N LUB .batteries- A EEN s p o k e s m a n announced th a t Maj, G en A haron Y ariv , re p r e s e n ­ tativ e at the talks, a sked for the po stp on e­ m e n t early in the day and th a t his E gy p­ tian c o u n te r p a rt , Maj Gen M o h a m m e d G a massy, a g re e d . I s r a e l ’s The rad io said Israeli national the m eetin g w as d ela y e d a t E g y p t's req uest. T h e d i s e n g a g e m e n t of E g y p t i a n an d Israeli fo rces along the Suez front is the only one of th e six points in the a g r e e m e n t riot yet im p le m e n te d r e p o r t e d B oth s i d e s w e r e to h a v e ha rd en ed th e ir positions, and E g y p t a t ­ tributed the d eadlock to I s r a e l ’s refusal to a w ith draw to the Get 22 c e a s e f ir e lines m ove which would lift Israel s e n c ir c le ­ m e n t of Suez city and the E g y p tia n 3rd A r ­ my. —Taxon Staff Photo by Nancy Oaldfarb H P ) That's N o th in g To Ho, Ho, Ho A b o ut Yes, the fuel sh o rta ge is c a u sin g p ro b le m s for eve rybody. R um or h a s it th at S a n ta m a y h a v e to ex tend C h ristm a s Eve to tw o n ig h ts to com plete his rounds. But there is sp ecu latio n th at reindeer...u h ...dropp in gs h a ve gre at possibilities a s a future fuel source. S a n Antonio Heroin Bust Nets Carrasco Associate a c t i v i t i e s of C a r r a s c o o r g a n i z a t i o n m e m b e r s w h ile C a r r a s c o , n i c k n a m e d “ T he Old Man w as in jail in lieu of bonds of m o r e than $600,000 A uthorities believ e the IO pounds of w h a t a le d e ra l s p o k e s m a n called “ high g ra d e heroin w e re fro m Mexico. The seizu re w as m a d e w ithout incident a t a m otel along the P an-A m E x p re s s w a y on th is c ity 's e a s t side, a u th o r itie s said. O th ers besides J a r a m i l l o c h a rg e d in the T u esd ay night seizure w e re San Antonio residents, A ilu ro G o m ez, 41; R uben C o r­ nu. 23. V ald ern ar de lur G a r z a , 23, Robert G om ez Y ba rho, 21. Arnold R a m i r e z , 30 and Rudolfo G o m e z Ybarbo. 23 and I* rank C an ales 28. of D allas and Augustin B a r r e r a , 26, of F a lf u r r i a s . All nine m en w ere o rd e re d by U S M a g is tr a te s John G iles and k rank Baskin to be held under $500,000 bond each. ESTIMATES OF the s t r e e t value of the fro m $1 ranged bulk-packaged heroin million to a lm o st $2 million The Drug E n f o r c e m e n t A d m in istration said G erna is u nd er c h a rg e s of possession ot 1,300 pounds of m a r ij u a n a in Houston. Nashville Musician Found Slain SAN ANTONIO (A P ) A tte m p ts by a spunky South T e x a s n a rc o tic s boss to i m ­ p licate local police in u nd erw o rld violence w e r e j o l t e d W e d n e s d a y w h e n f e d e r a l au th o r itie s c h a rg e d one* of his ass o c ia te s in a million-dollar heroin sm ug gling ease. Daniel G J a r a m id o J r . 26, and eigh t o ther m e n w ere c h a rg e d with possession with intent to sm ug gle heroin A in f o rm a n t who s p o k e s m a n the fed era l i d e n t i f i e d J a r a m i l l o as last w eekend c la im e d in a s t a t e m e n t th a t two two San Antonio police o ffic e rs killed o t h e r t h e s m u g g l i n g org anization of F re d G om ez C a rra s c o . l i e u t e n a n t s in All of these* d ev e lo p m e n ts will no doubt b e a r on the credibility of the w itn ess, and I’m s u r e they will be co n sid ere d by the said B e x a r County Dist. Atty. grand ju ry , T e d B u t le r , w h o w a s t o p r e s e n t J a r a m i l l o ’s s t a t e m e n t to the g ran d ju r y in­ vestigatio n would continue into any a lle g ­ the April 8 ed police slaying s ot Agapito Ruiz, 46, and Roy C astan o , 32, tw o C a r r a s c o organization men O FF IC IA L S SAID, ho w ever, inv olv em e nt the in “ Good God A lm ighty. T h a t 's all we n e e d ,” San Antonio M a y o r C h a rle s B ec ker was qu oted as saying when he le arned th at J a r a m i l l o had been a r r e s t e d by ag e n ts of the D rug E n f o r c e m e n t A dm inistration B eck er had en co u ra g e d th** investigation of J a r a m i l l o ’s allegations. C a rra s c o , 33, now in jail on c h a r g e s of a s s a u l t to m u r d e r a p o l i c e m a n and m u r d e r of y et a n o th e r gang m e m b e r , led in v es tig ato rs to J a r a m il lo , police so u rce s said. An u n d e r * o v e r a g e n t d e s c r i b e d th** in t e r m s the C a r r a s c o W e d n e s d a y a s “ one of biggest to c o m e down th** pike of d ru g sm uggling a c ti v it ie s along Mexico-U.S. b o rd er FEDERAL INVESTIGATORS had been working for tw o m on ths on th e continuing NASHVILLE. Tenn (U P I) The coun­ try m u sic industry w as s ha ke n W ednesday by the second slaying of an e n te r ta i n e r in less than a month J a m e s I* Widener, 55. rh y th m g u ita ris t for Hank S n o w s band, and a C alifornia w om an w ere found shot to d e a th in an alley late T uesday. P o lic e said the ap- •parent m otive w as robbery. D etective Tom C athey said Widener and Mrs. M ildred L. Hazelwood of Laguna Hills. Calif , e a c h had been shot twice. “ F r o m the angle of the bullet wounds it a p p e a r s th ey m ay have been forced to lie on th** ground before being shot C athey said. On Nov l l , th** bodies of G rand Die O pry and “ Hee H a w ” c o m e d ia n David “ S t r i n g b e a n ” A k e m a n an d his w ife, E stelle, w e re found a t th e ir ru ral home north ol here Both had been shot, police said, a f t e r they a p p a re n tly su rp ris e d b u rg l a rs in th e ir home. t h e y h a v e P o l i c e s a i d fou n d “ no rela tio n sh ip ” b etw een the slayings o th er than evid ence rob bery w as the m o tiv e for each Snow said Widener had been with the and found her bleeding from the mouth. The playw right’s daughter, Mary Axelson Cropper, 44, of New York Ci­ ty visited th** hospital Monday about the tim e of the beating, police said. Joseph Mc A loon, adm inistrator at D octor’s H ospital, said “ before she died Mrs Axelson told police and hospital officials that her daughter had Int her She died before she could tell us how it happened and why. The Dade County M edical E xam in er’s O ffice said an autopsy showed she died from a brain hem orrhage caused by a blow to the head Mrs Axelson wrote the Broadway play, “ Life B egin s,’ which was later made into a film starring Loretta Young. Her first novel, “ A Child Is Born, was published in 1940 Sh** was adm itted to the hospital on Nov l l . suffering from leukem ia an often-fatal blood disease. S k y l a b Mi s si on Free From En e r g y Worries HOUSTON (U P I) S k y l a b officials decided W ednesday they have only a minor energy crisis aboard their orbiting spaceship and it will have lit­ tle e ffect on the planned 84-day research m ission Skylab program director William C. Schneider said m ost of the restric­ tions clam ped on m aneuvering the big space station in orbit to study the earth and cornet Kohoutek had been lifted Earth photogr aphy work would Stock M a r k e t S t a g e s Rebou nd , Closes U p NEW YOUK (AIG After several false starts the stock m arket W ednesday finally staged its technical rebound The Dow Jones average of 30 industrials closed with a gain of 22.05 points at 839 78 after se e sawing Tuesday and most of Wednesday Volume on the New York Stock Exchange totaled 19.99 m illion shares hand m o r e th an IO y e a r s Snow said, “ He was an easy-going guy, and I d hav e to d e sc r ib e him as a clean-living, hell of a fellow. “ H e w a s a l s o a p r e t t y g o o d b u sin essm an He w as m o r e or less m y road m a n a g e r on tours. I don t think he had an e n e m y in the world No a r r e s t s have been m a d e in e ith e r the Widener or A kem an slayings A F o r t C am p bell, Ky., soldier Spec 4 said Mrs Henry Lee Hazelwood, 19, Hazelwood w as his m o th er He said she had co m e to N ashville Mon­ in an a t t e m p t to get so m e songs day published O w n e r Denies Fire Started in Insulation By BILL GARLAND T ex an Staff Writer In s u la ti o n o r c o a t i n g m a t e r i a l had “ nothing w h a ts o e v e r ” to do with the b u r ­ ning T uesday of an unfinished a p a r t m e n t com plex in S o u th eas t Austin, the ow n e r of the s t r u c tu r e said W ednesday “ Insulation had absolutely nothing to do with the fir** T h e re w a s n ’t even any in­ sulation the building,” said Austin d evelo pe r C L R eev es, ow n er of the b u rn ­ ed com p lex w hich w as p a r t of E nglish Aire A p a rtm e n ts P h a s e III in to “ Any building you build out of lu m b e r is v e ry , v e ry v u l n e r a b l e f i r e , ’’ sa id R eeves, who h a s lost tw o o th e r m a j o r c o m p le x e s to fire in the la st th r e e y ears. “ It s a sta c k of dry stick s loosely in a pile I t ’s got a n a tu r a l d ra ft, and y e ste rd a y (T u e sd ay ) we had about a 40 m ile per hour he explained wind going The blaze s t a r t e d while a p lu m b e r w eld­ ed two pipes to g e th er, but r u m o r s had cir- eu lated th a t insulation or a p o lyu reth an e the f i r e ’s sw ift co n ­ coating fa c ilita ted sum ption of the building Although po lyu rethan e w a s p re s e n t in the f r a m e d s t ru c tu r e , it had a special a d­ ditive which m a d e it m o r e r e s is ta n t lo fire, R ee ves said He c om p lain ed the m ed ia had tried to m a k e m o r e of the fire th an the situation dem anded. The th r e e co nstru ctio n w o rk e rs who got off the top of the th re e-sto ry building only m o m e n ts before it collapsed only would have been h u rt if they had panicked and ju m p ed, he said P r o p e r eq u ip m e n t was p re s en t to handle the e m e r g e n c y , he e x ­ plained. The th r e e w ere hauled safely to the ground with a forklift R eev es had no m o n e ta ry e s t i m a t e of the loss Although the burned m a t e r i a l s a r e in­ sured, the “ loss of re n ta l, in te re s t and t i m e ’’ a re not, he said The p lu m b e r whose th e f l a m e s d e v i a t e d s p a r k e d p re s crib e d pro ced u re for welding fr a m e building, R eeves said. to rc h rep o rted ly fr o m a in a Jury Rules Entrapment In Drug Case Acquittal By CAROL BARNES T ex an Staff Writer A U niv ersity stu d en t indicted on a c h a rg e of selling m a r ij u a n a in April to Bon I) Nicholson, U niversity n arc o tic s u n d e rc o v e r a g e n t, w as ac q u itte d W ednes­ day in 147th D is tric t Court .Jack S tr e e ty G o r m a n w as one of 16 in a May 17 J e s t e r indicted stud ents C e n te r d rug raid. ju ry on G o rm a n p leade d not guilty before a 12- the grounds of “ e n ­ m e m b e r t r a p m e n t , ' ’ of having been induced by an official or p e rso n intentionally or u ninten­ tionally acting on behalf of an official The official r e f e r r e d to w as Nicholson, an u n d e rc o v e r ag en t sen t by U niv ersity police to find p e rs o n s using m a r ij u a n a . to J e s t e r Nicholson testified he w ent to J ester ( enter th e even in g of April 16 and m e t two told h im a b o u t J e s t e r r e s i d e n t s who and. a t his request, “ so m e good dope took him to G o r m a n ’s ro om Nicholson said he bought five lids from G o r m a n for $50 T he tw o resid en ts testified G o rm a n w as h e s ita n t in selling the dope b e c a u se it w as his r o o m m a t e ’s. The tw o told the ju ry G o rm a n had to s e a r c h the room to find the box con tainin g m a r ij u a n a G o r m a n ’s ro o m m a te , J e r r y D. H ardin, testified th at he had bought the m a r ij u a n a the night before with the intention of sell­ ing it to his lrie nd s and for his own use H ardin, who w as n e v e r indicted, added he in fo rm ed G o rm a n he had so m e m a r i ­ ju a n a but didn t give h im in structio ns to sell any. H ard in said when he r e t u r n e d and found G o r m a n had sold so m e he b e c a m e a n g ry b ecau se he had intended it for his own use G o r m a n ’s a tto rn ey , F ra n k Maloney, said G o rm a n w as induced and p ersua ded by Nicholson to do so m e th in g he n orm ally would not. « Miss Taylor but left bne fh actor Laurence H a r v e y , who died in London Sunday e n t e r e d the d u r i n g tin* hospital Tuesday for the exploratory surgery evening to attend m em orial services here for begin Thursday D a u g h t e r S o u g h t in P o e t - P l a y w n g h f s Death M I A M I AP P o l l e e Wednesday issued a second-degree murder warrant for the daughter of poct-playwright Mary McDougal Axelson 82 who died after being beaten in her hospital bed M r s Axelson died Tuesday 22 hour s after a nurse h e a r d h e r c r y for help P ag e 16 Thursday, N o v e m b e r 29, 1973 T H E DAILY TEXAN