T h e Da il y T ex a n riT T IO iO W Student N ew sp ap er a t The University of Texas at Austin t i _ J U Cpan m ents: 471-4591 Vol. 75# No. 196 Fifteen Cents Tw enty Pages Austin/ Texas, Wednesday, April 14, 1976 Busir, igers Testifies in h M ale Art Professors Promoted Without PhDs By NICOLE BREMNER and DAVID GUARINO Texan Staff Writer University P resident Lorene Rogers testified Tuesday th at in 1970-71 when Janet B erry, a ss is ta n t a r t history professor, was refused promotion, only men held the rank of associate professor or above in the a rt education depart­ m ent, and none of th em held PhD degrees. R ogers’ testimony cam e during the se­ cond week of the landm ark sex dis­ crim ination suit filed by B erry and the Despite Citizen Ire Council Supports Davidson's Acts By DAWN TURNHAM Texan Staff Writer A closed door review session of Dan Davidson’s te rm a s c ity m a n a g e r ^suited in an unanimous vote of con­ sen ce for him by the City Council Tues- ay night. Councilwoman Betty Himmelblau said lie entire council spoke on various natters in the one-hour work session. The review, originally requested by >avidson, followed numerous citizen riticism s of the city m anager’s work nd handling of city affairs. E arlie r com- ilaints on Davidson’s work concerned he South Texas Nuclear P roject, the )ecem ber bond election and m inority tiring. Following the work session, Coun- illwoman M arg ret Hofm ann said it trobably would be quite awhile before my other citizens filed complaints. However, Tuesday afternoon before he council’s session a citizens group basted Davidson city departm ent heads md the City Council on their involve- nent of in the city’s affirm ative action >rogram and m inority hiring. Four representatives of the Ad Hoc Citizens for Responsive City Adm inistra­ tion issued a reort criticizing Davidson [or not reviewing the city’s affirm ative iction p ro g ram im ­ plemented it w as to see Davidson said, how ever, th a t two reports had been issued in the last eight months. “ I am very sorry the group didn't read the last report carefully for it contained some im pressive statistics,” lie said. Following the work session, Hofmann said D a v id so n h ad im p le m e n te d rem arkable changes in the affirm ative action program considering when the program was established. The program was approved by the council Dec. 12, 1974, with 90 days to develop departm ent plans. D epartm ent heads also were accused of not responding to the affirm ative ac­ tion program by group m em ber Linda McGowan. She said the hiring of blacks increased from 17.2 per cent in 1973 to in 1976 and the hiring of 18.1 per cent in 1976 and the hiring of Spanish surnam ed increased from 12.4 per cent to 14 per cent. McGowan also complained that no career ladders were established enabling an employe to advance from a lower to higher position. Davison said the city had a good record for ca ree r records. leads The handling of city employe com­ plaints to discouragem ent and eventual giving up, McGowan said. An employe with a com plaint m ust first go to the supervisor then the departm ent head, and then the personnel director. The final step is the city m anager. McGowan said only six com plaints had reached the city m anager, five favoring the departm ent and one favoring the complain tant. Davidson said the group’s grievance figures w ere wrong. Although he did not have the figures Tuesday night, he said he did not know where they obtained the figures. **I nor my office have talked to these people,” he added. T he g ro u p ’s re p o rt su g g e ste d a separate departm ent consisting of paid staff extensively trained in the field of employe grievance and discrim ination com plaints be established to handle the complaints. Davidson stressed this would only add m ore bureaucracy to the whole process. 4*A chance m ust be given to work with the new procedures,” he said. The lack of m inority employes earning m ore than 110,000 also was questioned. Davidson said, however, that from 1973 to 1976 the hiring of Spanish surnam ed employes increased 700 per cent for m ales and 528 per cent for females. Black m ale employes increased by 594 per cent and black fem ale by 1,100 pier cent, he added. The report stated that the lack of job descriptions for departm ent heads was the m ost flagrant case of discrim ination. D epartm ent heads are selected by the city m anager subject to City Council ap­ proval. Davidson said the group was apparent­ ly naive on the process of selecting departm ent heads because he always c o n d u c te d an e x te n s iv e s e le c tio n process. process. . ____a anH ~ D epartm ent of Health, Education and W elfare (HEW) against the University. The hearing, conducted a t Ashbel Smith Hall, will resum e a t 9 a.m . Wednesday. The men w ere “ outstanding perfor­ ming a rtis ts ,” and this was the reason for their promotion, Rogers said. ASKED BY Asst. Atty. Gen. William if A rts and S ciences Dean B ednar William Doty had told her th at the p r o m o tio n o f A rt H i s t o r y P r o f . McDonald Smith had been a m istake, Rogers answered, “ Y es.” 'S m ith was prom oted to the rank of associate professor of a r t history a year before B erry’s promotion was denied, in spite of the fact that he did not have a PhD and had not published any scholarly requirem ents which Rogers articles, testified w ere “ u n d ersto o d ” to be necessary for promotion. Rogers said Smith had been promoted on the basis of his teaching ability. However, Rogers also said she had un­ derstood teaching ability alone could not replace academ ic credentials. Rogers said B erry was denied promo­ tion because she had not m ade progress on a PhD or done any work in lieu of it. th at EARLIER, HOWEVER, Rogers said that Donald Goodall, form er chairm an of the a r t departm ent, had been hired as a full professor without a PhD. When asked if a PhD or term inal degree was required for promotion at the University, Rogers said, “ It is not re­ quired, but expected.” Rogers said she was not aw are of the e x is te n c e of a f o r m a l p ro m o tio n procedure in the a rt departm ent before Doty issued guidelines requiring a PhD five w eeks a f te r B erry w as denied promotion. Rogers testified th at she first m et Berry in July, 1971, when B erry and a group of women cam e to then Vice- P resident R ogers’ office to discuss a sex Lung Surgery Puts Hearst In Hospital REDWOOD CITY, Calif. (U PI) — Newspaper heiress and convicted bank robber P atricia H earst was hospitalized Tuesday night a fte r h e r rig h t lung collapsed a t San Mateo County Jail, her attorney reported. Defense atto rn e y Albert Johnson said H earst underwent surgery and was in stable condition. B ecause of the incident, he said, H earses trip to Los Angeles Wednesday fo r a r ra ig n m e n t on k id n ap in g and assault charges was canceled. H earst, reportedly so afraid of William and Em ily H arris that she refers to them as “ A” and “ B ,” was to have come face to face with her form er captors Wednes­ day. 7- discrim ination suit they had filed. Hisrrimination suit the! AT THAT TIME, Rogers w as ch air­ m an of the U niversity’s C om m ittee on the Status of Women and was charged by then President Stephen Spurr w ith m ak­ ing a report on the status of wom en a t the University and investigating sex dis­ crim ination cases. Rogers spid th at in September of 1971 she becam e aw are of the suit B erry had filed with HEW against the U niversity. “ I asked Prof. B erry to put off th e suit for a couple of weeks while we conducted an internal investigation,” R ogers said, but B erry preferred to have HEW handle the case. the Rogers conducted investigation anyway, at S p u rr’s request “ We found th at there was no evidence of sex dis­ crim ination in B erry ’s case,” R ogers . said. H O W E V E R , WHEN q u e s t i o n e d about the investigation by HEW attorney Carol Bueherens, Rogers adm itted that o n ly B e r r y ’s a n n u a l r e p o r t s of publications w ere used, not those of other professors in the a rt departm ent. ,. Rogers testified that com parisons of B erry ’s salary and teaching load were draw n from faculty files kept in the president’s office, but she adm itted that other professors’ annual reports w ere in the files and w ere not used. When questioned about the resu lts of h er investigation of the status of women a t the University, Rogers said women faculty m em bers tended to receive lower salary increases than men in 1970-71. Rogers also said, “ We found that women faculty tended to cluster in the lower, untenured teaching positions.” Judge William N aim ark said only two witnesses have not yet testified. Spurr and Goodall a re expected to testify a t a later date. So far, m ore than IOO separate pieces of evidence have been introduced in the hearing. - today - C l o u d y . . . Considerable cloudiness and a slight chance of a r e t h u n d e r s h o w e r s forecast for Wednesday c o n t i n u i n g t h r o u g h Thursday. There is a 20 p e r c e n t c h a n c e of precipitation. The high in Wednesday will be the lower to mid-80s and lo w W e d n e s d a y t h e in the m id-60's. night The sun rises at 6:05, sets at 6:58. Differences With Dad Don't Bother Jack Ford Mennonites Murphy (I) and Good leave courthouse. —UM T»t« p h o to Good Sentenced To 15-Year Term (U P I) SACRAMENTO, C alif. - C ultist Sandra Good, d eclarin g she wanted to be with jailed m ass m urderer Charles Manson, was sentenced Tuesday to 15 years in prison for conspiracy and threatening businessmen and govern­ m ent officials. “ Your head is in sand,” Good told U.S. D istrict Court Judge Thomas MacBride as she was led from the courtroom by marshals. The session was relatively calm when compared with the sentencing of Good’s form er roommate, would-be presidential assassin Lynette From m e, who struck a prosecutor with an apple when MacBride ordered her to spend life in prison. MacBride also sentenced codefendant Susan M urphy, 33, a self-described “ sister in Manson’s church,” to five years in prison cm a charge of conspiring to mail death threat letters. “ Both of you a r e d an g e ro u s to society,” MacBride said as he read a statem ent outlining his reasons for the sentence. Good, 31, could be paroled in five years, afte r serving one-third of h e r sentence. Murphy is eligible for parole in . . . . 20 months. At m idafternoon, they w ere whisked aboard an airplane a t Sacram ento and flown under heavy guard to the federal penitentiary’ a t Term inal Island in Los they Angeles where authorities said would undergo classification procedures in advance of receiving a perm anent prison assignm ent. MacBride was persistently interrupted by Good, who a t one point declared: “ My love and tru st are with Manson and the family — I want to be with them. “ In your civilized society, you do not believe in God anym ore. You will soon lose your m inds.” A ju ry convicted th e two w om en March 16 on charges of conspiring to m ail threatening letters as p a rt of their fervent cam paign to rid the ea rth of pollution. Good was also found guilty of making threats in telephone conversations with reporters for the D etroit F ree P re ss and in Altoona, P a., New radio stations Orleans, and Hamilton, Ont. w , / - rn n .. rh a m m v u r n i a Mn By DANNY HOLLAND Texan Staff Writer Six-foot-two, eyes of blue and oi’ Jack Ford can have whatever he w ants to, portrays the them e of the “ F irst Son s ” Austin debut Tuesday. Handsome, wholesome Jack Ford, campaigning for his father before Texas’ May I prim ary, descended upon the Austin scene in carefree but nervous fashion. Although he readily adm its some of his views differ from his dad’s, the 24-year-old Ford feels com plete agreem ent is not essential to supporting a presidential candidate. “ Anyone who thinks they ca n agree IOO per cent with a political candidate is fooling them selves. We have natural father/son differences of opinion,” Ford told a press conference before his B atts Auditorium appearance. The younger Ford has been in the limelight throughout his fath er’s presidential career for his outspoken candidness on the “ social issues” of the day. H is views have been somewhat out of line with the conservative constituency of the party his father represents, but Jack Ford says his answers to questions have to be what you can live with long after political life is over. FLANKED BY Secret Service agents, Ford preferred to enter B atts Auditorium via th e back door, while throngs of students, led by Student G overnm ent President Jay Adkins, chanted “ F our More Y ears.” F o rd s appearance on stage in the jam -packed auditorium was m e t with applause, sighs and gasps from the expectant hordes. E ven the University police turned out in full security fashion, rem iniscent of Stokely Carmichael s appearance a few years ago. Im m ediately opening up the floor to questions, Ford faced queries ranging from Cuban m ercenaries in Angola to his per­ sonal relationship with Bianca Jagger. “ I personally am for decrim inalization of m arijuana, but there is a h ard drug problem in the United States and we have got to deal w ith it,” he said. F ord ju st smiled when asked if his father has had any m arijuana flashbacks. President Ford has been criticized for moving too far right in his views (particularly in the a re a of defense spending) because of Ronald R eagan’s presence in the Republican presidential race. Jack disagreed. “I DON’T think we’ve been forced at all. We were pushing for increases in spending two y ears ago, Ford said. When R ichard Nixon was pardoned for his a lle g e d covert ac­ tions, Jack w as in California and had no knowledge of his father’s actions. But his thoughts on Nixon are much the sam e which charges Gen. Alexander Haig influenced G erald F o rd ’s which charges Gen. Alexander Haig influenced decision is a “ poor reference as far as w hat happened, F ord said, although he said he didn’t know who, if anyone, figured in the P resident’s decision. Ford felt that Senate Bill I, described by many to be a th re a t to civil liberties, needs to be am ended in m any areas, but he felt the “ need to reform the federal crim inal code is param ount to bringing it into present day needs.” “ Show m e a m an who hasn’t m ade any m istakes and I ll show you a m an who has done nothing,” Ford said in reference to Henry K issinger’s position as Secretary of State. “ Dr. Kissinger has trem endous power, but when decision tim e com es the P resident m akes the decision. Everyone realizes that when you spend a certain am ount of tim e (in one position) your con­ tributions become dim inished,” he added. IN TEXAS, Ford strategists have regarded the P resident as an underdog to Reagan. Ford felt this is because Reagan has spent m ore tim e campaigning in the state with a much stronger cam paign organization. . “ We are m ore interested in getting delegate votes. We m ight lose the popular vote in some states, but we have reached the point where the m om entum (of R eagan’s candidacy) has dim inished,” he said. ___ Jack Ford would like to see Sen. Howard Baker of Tennessee as his fa th e r’s vice-presidential running m ate, although he the Democratic doesn’t know his father’s preference. For nomination Jack w ants Milton Shapp, but he felt Hubert Humphrey would em erge as the D em ocratic nominee. What are Jack F o rd ’s political aspirations? “ To get through with this campaign. I ve learned I don t want to get into politics,” he said. . . THE PRIVATE life of the F irst Fam ily isn t exactly private, but Ford, pointing to the Secret Service agents standing a t the door of the press room, said he has become used to the ex­ . posure. “ I t’s good and bad. I ’ve taken the opportunity to m eet a lot of interesting people,” he said. When asked if the agents tag along with him on dates, Ford replied,” Only if they can get em. Ford challenged any person to “ take Dad on” in any physical e activity — a d irect reference to a media report calling P resident a klutz. The media “ sensationalizes” many reports about the P resident and “ generates the news rather than reports it," he said. Presented with a ‘ Jim Franklin T-shirt" before he left the stage, Jack Ford said his next stop was San Antonio and then . . Houston. “ But couldn’t I go with you,” many a new-found fan would . Fits father's “ I believe the sooner we put Richard Nixon behind us, the ask. caih R vrprnts from the book.“ Tile Final Days, I aaIt I 11 O I OlYlllo/1 Jack Ford — Texan Staff Photo by Larry Kolvoord County candidates Quinney, Wendler, Richards, Voudouris________ “ mam ■ ■ ■ m m U I O n C M l f rn I ^ O U H C I I On Antique Structure Grants m a i m * 90 m f MI I rn mm T 5 * m m .........................................................................Leona approval before changes are approval before changes are made to the property. Requests for grants to the C la r k sv ille r e sto r e C asw ell H ouse and the Moonlight Towers as part of the National Park Service come before City Council Thursday in its night session. Both the Caswell House, 1401 West Ave., and the Moonlight Towers, at the in­ tersections ai west L,yiu* «uu tersections at West Lynn and P ennsylvania and Leona Streets, are subject to receive a $50,000 grant from the National Trust for Historic P reservation if the city matches the grant. However, the council’s acceptance of the grant would require the city to meet stan­ dards of the federal agency, including the agency’s prior — ^ Groups Recommend Apartment Metering m. m *_ n ______^ i n n i A n An Plortrir In a joint session of the Mayor’s Commission on Electr*c Rates and the Energy Conservation Commission Tuesday the two groups agreed on proposals they will present to the City C^ he groups Allose two options: that all new apartments in Austin be required to have individual metering or all new com- Pl The8 w n tr a ^ m e te r ^ w o ^ n c lu d e corresponding individual meters so each apartment renter could pay his own electric bill. Representatives of the Apartment Owners Association said that if one of the proposals was to be implemented, it should be soon, for the new apartment building cycle they predict will begin again soon. Also at the weekly session, the council w ill receiv e proposals from the Austin Video Users Council (AVUC) for improving cable television service. An AVUC resolution of seven proposals includes the disenfranchisement of Capital Cable Company, the present city cable service, if the com­ pany shows an overwhelming refusal to accomodate public needs However, the AVUC does not recom m end tne city assume ownership and opera­ tion of cable television ser- vice. AVUC recommendations for the Capital Cable Com­ pany include the expansion of service incorporate a minimum of 20 television channels no later than Dec. 31, 1978. to Distribution of the channels would include; three channels local commercial broad- of l o c a l publ ic c a s t ; one lo c a l p u b !,. c a s t ; one broacast channel (KLRN- TV); two distinct commercial broadcast channels other than network affiliates; and eight channels dedicated to non- broadcast origins. The nonbroadcast channels would be offered to the school district, Austin Community College, the city, Travis Coun­ ty, state agencies, private c i t i z e n s p u b l i c and organizations. Designation of Austin Com­ munity Television (ACT) as the sole coordinator of public access programing in Austin w as AVUC recommendation with the stipulation ACT may obtain IO per cent of cable television revenues. a n o t h e r To regulate cable television, AVUC proposed th at the Tex­ as Public Utilities Commis­ sion a s s e r t its a u th o rity because many present cable television operators are not interest. the public serving County Hopefuls Discuss Issues By MARY DOYLE Texan Staff Writer County commissioner candidate Ann Richards attacked the record of her opponent, incumbent Johnny Voudouris, Tuesday night in a “Meet the Candidates”program sponsored by Com­ munity Education. Presenting their vie* on the issues to a small group at Matthews Communa school were candidates for tax assessor- collector Harry O. Quinney and Ed Wendler, and Richards and Voudouris. In her remarks Richards said, “I am not running against Johnny Voudouris but against his record.” Richards cited what she termed Voudouris’ unavailability to the public, his poor Commissioners’ Court attendance record and a general ineffectiveness in office as her reasons for enter­ ing the race. Voudouris countered Richards’ comments by listing what he said were his accomplishments in office during the last seven years including expanded law enforcement services, increased financial support to the volunteer fire departments and in­ creased parks and recreational facilities. ‘ While stressing the importance of county government, Richards continued her attack on the incumbent by criticizing his vote for a 20 per cent salary increase approved last year and the position of the Commissioners Court, which she termed “a "rubber stamp of the highway department.” “What we need to know is why they can continue in­ discriminate road building and vote 20 per cent salary increases for the commissioners when the county faces a $1.5 million cut for other county services, including budget cuts for Mental Health Mental Retardation (MH-MR),” she said. * Voudouris responded by explaining that MH-MR has con- —— *• tinually failed to provide the commissioners with a budget breakdown. “We can’t just issue a blanket budget.” Voudouris told the audience that he would be glad to meet with them on an individual basis to discuss his record. “All the .programs I have initiated or supported and my votes on these programs are public record and available to you if you wish to see them,” Voudouris added. Both candidates responded to questions concerning the recently criticized operating deficit at the city dump. TCiey both acknowledged the deficit, although Richards claimed it was ac tually $58,000 instead of $51,000 because the cost of renting a large pickups truck for eight months had not been included on the audit sheet. She also charged that when she visited the city dump, two of the listed employes were not there. “Who s min­ ding the store?” Richards asked. In response, Voudouris explained that county employes were rotated frequently to prevent anyone from having to work at the dump for more than a few weeks. “The dump is such a dull place to work that we try to route them every few weeks. That means that the person listed as an employe on one report might not be there several weeks later.” Voudouris added that the records at the dump were checked periodically by the county auditor. Quinney and Wendler addressed themselves to the issues of equitable property tax assessment and voter registration in their contest for tax assessor-collector. They promised to correct the current inequities in the proper­ ty tax but differed in their approach to increasing voter registration in the county. Wendler attributed the voter “overapathy to the current means of voter registration which relies upon volunteers. He promised, if elected, to utilize personnel in the office of the tax assessor to register voters. Quinney disagreed, explaining that he felt ^creased volunteer services in the area of voter registration would keep the community involved and overcome the voter apathy. ^AvT^lT^irGROUP^UGHTSt^^^ AUSTIN/LU XEM BO U RG VIA ICELANDIC/BRANIFF FLIGHTS CTCTM W Round Trip QPIusTax NY/IUXEMBOURG— ONLY $340 (RETURN ANY OAT VIA SAME AIRLINES!!!) Departures: May 20, 21, 22, 24 •Plus SIS Weekend Surcharge* Rates Include May JI Air fare Increases limited te UT Students/FoceNy NEW YORK GROUP FLIGHTS $ 167 59* I V # round rase ‘ Plus $13.41 ii net cenaectiug with international Hight Departures: M ay t, 13, 15, IO, 20 M ay 21, 22, 23, 24, 31 June 3, 13, 24 July 9, l l SPACE LIMITED! 478-9343 5428 G U A D A L U P E SINCE 1962 . T R A V E L H a i a s t v l i s Amo W * MCM W e Use and Recom m end REDKEN acid-balanced Organic Protein Products hair painting streaking & frosting Dobie Mall Lower Level - Whitis entrance No. 7 Open Mon.-Fri. 9 :30-5:30 Open Saturday* 9:30-4:30 For appointment please Call 4 7 7 -8 7 6 6 Free Parking in D ob ie Ga P a g e 2 W ednesday, A p ril 14, 1976 T H E D A IL Y T E X A N Reagan Met By Singing Cheering Fans By DANNY HOLLAND Texan Staff Writer Republican presidential hopeful Ronald Reagan arriv­ ed in Austin Tuesday night saying his forces “have a good chance” in Texas’ May I primary. Although Reagan is regard­ ed by some as a favorite in Texas, a loss here could be disastrous for Reagan s forces, who have claimed only one primary victory — in North Carolina. Arriving at Municipal Air­ port in a Hughes Airways jetliner, the former California governor met a crowd of almost 200 supporters waving s i g n s sa i d “ NO DETANTE” (sic) and sing­ ing, “We’ll Win in ’76.” tha t Reagan spoke briefly with i n d i v i d u a l s and si g ne d autographs, one on the book “Quotations from Chairman Bill, Statements by Bill Buckley Jr.” Reagan said he was pleased with his campaign jaunt through Texas. It s been just great. Just look at this,” he said, motion­ ing to the jubilant crowd. The Ford administration has been slowing negotiations in Panama, Reagan said, until after the election. He also charged the President with only going after delegates in Texas and not being concern­ ed with grass roots support of the people. One reporter asked Reagan if he intended to call former Texas Gov. John Connally when he goes to Houston late Wednesday. “Sure I will. I always have. We’re old friends and were governors together.” Reagan said he had asked Connally for support, but Connally said he was staying neutral. A private breakfast with campaign workers is planned for Reagan Wednesday at 8:15 a m. at the Driskill Hotel, where the candidate is stay­ ing. Reagan will then meet with reporters in the Senate Chamber of the Capitol at 9 a m. and speak at the LBJ Auditorium at 9:45 a m. Let’s Keep J ohnny Working for US V oudouris worked to preserve our hill country character by acquiring more parks, recrea­ tional facilities, wilderness areas and hike-and-bike trails. [vf V o u d o u r i s improved jail condi­ tions and supported construction o f the new minimum security facility and advocated expanded rehabilitation programs. * y ( V oudouris fought successfully to prevent construction of a polluting rock crusher in our county. V oudouris advocated legislative land-tise and efforts to obtain ordinance powers for our county. V o u d o u r i s backed such student projects as the Austin Commun­ ity Gardens, absentee voting substations, Middle Earth and Big Brothers. Vote Saturday May I for progressive government Johnny Voudouris Your hard-working Pct. 3 County Commissioner ISH. Nil' IM bv Nluilciils IU Kl' I kvi ViHHlimiiv inn Mill. ciHirJiiiiiiur, 19” Soul!* I IN . \umhi. ’ i o u r n Lockheed Acknowledges Secret Payment Charges WASHINGTON (UPI) — Lockheed Aircraft Corp. consented Tuesday to federal charges that the aerospace giant made more than $25 million in “secret payments” to foreign governme . . . ~ 0fS ! h ^ r a 1 s o 9a?cknowledged for the first time that some of the payments were made directly to government, of^ a1^ Previously, the company said it paid agents who claimed have made disbursements to the officials. . . No names were mentioned in the consent agreement, which is neither an admission nor denial of the charges^ Lockheed agreed to the charges brought by the Securities and Exchange Commission, which opened its case against Lockhee last June. In addition, Lockheed’s former chairman Daniel Haughton and former president A. Carl Kotchian consented to ~ the charges. .n and former president a . uari nou»w « Under terms of the consent decree issued in the U.S. D?stnc iinrfop tprms of the consent decree issued in the U.S. Disti Court here, Lockheed will conduct an investigation of its illegal activities and make a complete public report. The report, which is expected to take about six months to complete, will be filed with the court and the SEC. Lockheed suspended the improper payments la s t August ai the demand of the Emergency Loan Guarantee Board, a feaenu organization formed in 1971 to guarantee up to $250 million^ rn loans to avert Lockheed’s bankruptcy. The board is backing $195 million in loans for Lockheed. The judgment said Lockheed maintained a $750,000 slush tuna from at least 1968 through September, 1975. The slush fund, which Lockheed voluntarily disclosed last October, sometimes was used to make cash payments to foreign government oi- jidals ficials. FEO Compromise Reached Law May Save Candidate* From Financial Plight - .__ t i ____ tai tial aspirants are in serious financial straits without the bill’s provision for federal matching funds. A new FEO became necessary when the Supreme Court ruled March 23 that the previous panel was improperly con­ stituted because the President — not Congress — must appoint all the members. THE COMPROMISE makes the new FEC somewhat less independent and restricts campaign contributions and the manner in which they can be solicited. Under the bill, presidential candidates who get less than IO per cent of the pop­ ular vote in two successive primaries cannot collect further matching funds. Those who drop out would have to return all funds after campaign debts are settl­ ed. The commission could have all but its least specific decisions vetoed by Congress; FEC members would have to serve full time; and their actions would have diminished standing in court. CANDIDATES WOULD be under strict limitations on the amount of money they can receive from individuals and political committees; corporation and Dolitical committees; corporate and union political action committees would be stringently regulated on con­ tribution solicitations; and campaign treasurers would have to keep more detailed records and file more reports. President Ford had threatened to veto much more than a simple reconstitution of the old FEC, and his aides said later they preferred the Senate version. But the House version appeared to have emerged more intact from the con­ ference committee. Rep. Charles Wiggins, R-Calif., said he was surprised at the number of com­ promises the Republicans were able to obtain, and added “It s clear that the prospects of a veto are considerably dimmed by the conference.” The 12 conferees will not sign the agreement until April 27, after the Easter recess. Each house must then ap­ prove and send the bill to Ford. If he signs it, he must appoint the six commissioners — Ford has said he would name the same ones — and toe Senate must confirm them before the FEC can begin handing out matching funds. " WASHINGTON (UPI) — House and Senate negotiators agreed Tuesday on a compromise bill creating a new Federal Election Commission. But the agreement cannot become law before early May, and several presider Committee Sends Up Handgun Bill WASHINGTON (UPI) - The House Judiciary Committee voted 26-6 Tuesday to toughen federal gun control laws and ban the manufacture and importation of cheap handguns known as Saturday Night Specials.” The commute then voted 20-12 to send the bill to the House floor where op­ ponents vowed to offer amendments to substantially weaken its provision. The legislation approved by the panel on the first vote was a substitute offered by Rep. Tom Railsback, R-IU., which knocked out a ban on the sale of cheap handguns contained in the bill originally approved by the judiciary subcommittee on crime. Other chief provisions in the bill in­ clude stiffer federal license fees for gun dealers, mandatory sentences for crimes committed with a firearm and a minimum 14-day waiting period for anyone purchasing a handgun to enable a police record check. Approval of the bill represented a sharp reversal of committee sentiment in last month’s unexpected defeat, by one vote, of a broader handgun control measure. light of Opponents charged that the bill was being “railroaded” through the com­ mittee, while some liberals argued the measure did not go far enough. “This is not gun control in any sense of the word,” said Rep. John Seiberling, D- Ohio, “But it does move us a step in the right direction.” The manufacturing prohibition would use criteria presently applied to the ban on certain in e r t s . The bill would m s e existing $10 federal license fees for’jgsun dealers to $50 for retailers and $150 for wholesalers. The Railsback substitute knocked out a provision in the subcommittee version which would have established a handgun tracing center to aid law enforcement authorities. Under other provisions, crimes com­ mitted with a gun would be punishable by mandatory I to 10-year sentences for first offenders and 2 to 25 years for se­ cond offenders. Gun control legislation also is under study in the Senate judiciary subcom­ mittee on juvenile deliquency. ee l *u c* "fam ive i" Jimmy Carter for mad# a mistake, lf a man apologizes, this nation has no 'Shake It Off, Jimmy' —UPI Telephoto haslhfod so ^rfoct that ho has never protesting Cartor's eommont in Indiana last w o k . TAMPA, Fla. (UPI) - Thirty-three isoners returning from their dinner eak used a homemade key to break out the minimum security Hillsborough Minty Stockade in Tampa Tuesday ght, touching off a massive manhunt ith helicopters, dogs and police. Spotlight-equipped heilcopters buzzed overhead, and police and deputy sheriffs w ith d o g s p a t r o l l e d th e a r e a . C heckpoints w ith sh o tg u n -to tin g policemen ringed the surrounding sec­ tions. Little League games in the area were cancelled, and one high school called off its night classes. 'efo Expected lobs Measure Receives $2 Billion Increase WASHINGTON (UPI) — The Senate ted Tuesday to add $2.8 billion to a bill eating public works jobs, raising a rong probability that President Ford ll veto it. The vote was 48-32. The additional money includes $1.4 Ilion to help local governments balance eir budgets without having to lay off nployes, and $1.4 billion for water Elution control construction projects. IT WAS ADDED to a bill carrying oney to state and local governments r public works construction projects hich could be started within 90 days. he amount of money in the main bill ouId depend on the unemployment rate. This would be $1.1 billion under un- mployment rates forecast by the con­ fessional budget office, and supporters iy that it would create at least 100,000 >bs. Republicans said addition of the e *tra jnds made it a “Christmas tree’ which Ord in all probability would veto THE PRESIDENT vetoed a similar in ... works construction bill >lic works construction u... February after legislators added similar provisions to it until it reached $6 billion. The present bill, as amended, would be about $4 billion. Sen. Howard Baker Jr., R-Tenf|.t told the Senate . “ It’s my best judgement that if we add on this amendment he ll veto it. My best judgement is he'll sign it if we don’t.” Sen. Edmund Muskie, D-Maine, who proposed the additions on behalf of several senators, said the extra $1.4 billion to state and local governments would create another 100,000 jobs. Muskie said unemployment, although declining, is still too high and is costing the nation $50 billion a year in unemploy­ ment insurance, welfare and lost taxes. To critics who said his amendment add­ ed too much to the budget, he replied, “Ponder these costs — the costs of doing nothing.” He said recession now is forcing local governments to lay off employes at a time when economic recovery requires that there be more employment. . . news capsules is *11- MO U/AflrAfC Factory explosion Kills 43 Workers • Three hours after the escape, IO of the prisoners were reported back in custody. Sgt. Aubrey McDowell, in charge of the guard detail at the stockade, said one of the prisoners “walked right back through that gate over there. He went to the house of relatives two blocks away and asked his uncle to take him back because he didn’t mean to do it.” McDowell said the prisoners, all awaiting trial, were returning from dinner when they let themselves out of their cellblock wing through a “door they had to have a key to.” Once out the security door, he said, they kicked down another door and then scaled the barbed wire-topped security fence, McDowell said the fugitives ranged in age “ from juveniles upward.” Among them w ere two b ro th ers. Charges against the 33 ranged from grand larceny, burglary, armed robbery aad weapons possession to narcotics and heroin possession, parole violation, car theft and previous escape.” The e sc a p e o c c u rre d so m e tim e between 8 and 8:30 p.m. and was dis­ covered a short time later, an officer of the stockade guard staff said. An apprehended escapee told guards one of the fugitives fashioned a key to an out­ side door of their cellbox wing. One report indicated the escape was discovered when a group of children went to the stockade gate and reported they had seen a group of men stripping off their prison garb near a convenience store about a half mile through a wooded area from the prison. The stockade is surrounded by an eight-foot fence topped by three strands of barbed wire. It was not immediately determined how the prisoners got past the fence. incredible THU California ..a d o n . ho. teond o w ay ta how. hi. .o k . and J * . lh Nj* w in g hi. lob o. o 'poetry W P « -' ho «■">* *J0 » W a * l,,ivo,• partl“ ' which ha say* halp* pay hit tuition. —UPI Tti* photo latest leg of the record-breaking 8,800-mile hopscotch hijacking from Cagayan de Oro in the southern Philippines last Wednesday. Minot Residents Prepare for 'Greatest Crisis' entered the bank as she stood near the drive-in teller window and t o t she saw Soliah run to the front door, shouting obscenities and carrying a shotgun. Vengeful G unm an Slays Baltimore Councilman " BALTIMORE (UPI) — A berserk gunman apparently seeking revenge against city officials Tuesday shot and killed a city ^ I)cllm^J wounded three other persons, then was critically wounded himself HELSINKI, Finland (UPI) - A gu np ow de r e x p l o s i o n demolished an ammunition fac­ tory in western Finland Tuesday killing at least 43 workers and wounding 70 others in the worst industrial accident in the nation’s history. Most of the dead were women burned beyond recognition, a defense department spokesman said The state radio played funeral music to mourn the accident in Lapua, 246 miles northwest of Helsinki. MINOT, N.D. (UPI) — Minot speeded up the race Tuesday to evacuate more than 12,000 residents and their belongings from low-lying homes and finish 15-foot dikes before record Souris River floodwaters pour through the city Saturday. Officials moved up the crest forecast by another day — from Easter Sunday to Saturday — putting more p ressu re on residents to get ready for what the Minot Daily News called “the greatest crisis in the city’s 90-year history. — UPI T aphole Finnish survivors officials Refuse Hijackers' Pleas nPNPHAZl Libya (UPI) — Three Filipino Moslem hijackers landed in r J S S S H S Z tor asylum in retun. for their 12 hostages and an end to the longest ^ ^ c^ ‘"fally h e a t e d they would only allow the plane hijackers for hours into the night. But Libyan officiai , to refuel, tour n g o J J J Tegunm L or their captives off the plane. An 'airport official said a Libyan representing Filipino Moslems in An airport o „ Tripoli wou , mes peg landed at heavily guarded Benghazi Air- p o lf a n e r Tseven-hour, 3.500-mile flight from Karachi, Pakistan, the hazi to try to talk to the gunmen. y Soliah Identified by Bank Teller SACRAMENTO, Calif. (UPI) - An eyewitness Tuesday identified Steven Soliah, an underground lover of Patricia Hearst, as one “ se^ r® obscenity-shouting armed bandits who robbed a bank last April 21 in which a patron was killed. asr:^ It was the first time in the month-old trial that a witness ident front of the jury the husky 27-year-old housepaint*- as one of the par­ ticipants in the Symbionese Liberation Army-linked robb ry. Patricia Tommeraason, a bank teller, said four — UPI Taphole Relocating Dominie Levee. a pertly SO-yeer-eld tavern owier, died month for desecrating an American flag. Hopkins was fined ordered by a judge to fly the Stars and Stripes above his restaurant H e * * ,. “ ‘T on k in s 35, had ripped the flag from the city courthouse March 12 and set it afire to show his displeasure with city fathers over problems wi his restaurant lease. Late Trading Boosts Wall Street Gains NFW YORK (UPI) - With the aid of a last-hour bargain hunting spree, blue chipsscored their best gain Tuesday in nearly two weeks but the se­ cond slowest turnover of the year on the New York Stock Exchange kept Wall Street from cheering. The Dow Jones industrial average, after fluctuating most of the sessm. soared 12.99 pointe to 984.26, registering the best gain since it climbed 13 78 points to a three-year high of 1,009.21 on March 24. The blue-chip average managed to gain 2.99 points Monday ai er■ p>u g inc 35.81 points the previous four sessions in what analysts said signaled the beginning of a major adjustment from first quarter gams. editorial People-oriented constable candidates V " Constables in a metropolitan area are not what one would call hotbeds ‘ of political power. Still the duties these officers perform are necessary, r ‘ and the areas for improvement are infinite. Basically, a constable, who is elected from each justice of the peace precinct, serves as the executive officer of the JP court. Constables are '•if* empowered by the Texas Constitution to arrest offenders, take charge of » prisoners and maintain order. But their most important function is to " serve legal papers — eviction notices, subpoenas, restraining orders and , “ 4 other matters. , This does not sound like the type of position one would need to scrutinize . closely, but the qualified candidates running for constable need to be r**r* emphasized because of their innovative plans for the office. Precinct 5: John Milloy IN PRECINCT 5, a predominantly student precinct, we recommend ’ • • v ‘ John Milloy, a 10-year Austin resident and University graduate^ ! Milloy’s plans for the constable’s office are idealistic. But ms pragmatic approach to the problem is a sure indicator that many of his "■.«£ programs will become realities. A main goal is to take the deputy con » stables off the streets and put them into more practical use. For too long, ,lMji deputy constables have been allowed to cruise around Austin with nothing to do but listen to their CB radios and chase ambulances. Constables are *k not necessary when it comes to assisting the sheriff’s office or the Austin Police Department on regular crime or traffic calls. And they should not be used for that purpose. Since Austin is a growing metropolitan area, it already has consider overlapping of duties by the Austin PD and Travis County law enforcers^ It doesn’t need rookie deputy constables driving around with loaded guns trying to act like Matt Dillon. MILLOY ADVOCATES this position and plans to have deputy con- stables, both full and parttime, working on other matters like operating a v* social agency referral center or working on voter registration drives ’ ‘' when they are not processing legal papers. V ' - Furthermore, the American Civil Liberties Union Board member wants to see much of the operation of the constable’s office taken over by part- I endorsement > > This endorsement in no w a y represents the view s of the University ad- < ministration or the Board of Regents. i • ________________ ________ _ , time employes so that more people can have the opportunity to work in ^ H e ta also looking at hiring more parttime law students and others with . some legal training to handle the paper processing so that shifts can be . arranged to accommodate the 8 to 5 worker who needs to be served with a . »' > legal paper. ' ’ • Being practical is another Milloy asset. Instead of serving people a : ’* "work (in front of their employers) or lawyers who might be caught up in a Why not just use the phone and tell them to come . This seems like a simple enough task and busy day, Milloy says, *uZ„ by and pick up the legal paper « , „ will be a great savings to the county. IT IS IDEAS LIKE these which set Milloy apart from his opponents. The ability to take complicated processing office and make it a simple D i t t «•« o n H n r c i n a operation is a hard commodity to find in a candidate. But in endorsing Milloy, we think we have found just that quality. i • i i Precinct 4: A.B. Cantu The Texan also endorses Oswaldo “ A.B.” Cantu for constable Precinct 4, an area that includes the heavily student-populated Riverside apart "'o T a T u ie candidates, Cantu knows the area and the type of people"1 Precinct 4 the best. That is a true advantage if Cantu is to be a people- oriented constable instead of a law enforcement-oriented constable. CANTU PROPOSES among other things to inform citizens of the respective legal rights upon serving them with citations or legal papers. Also he plans to hire women as deputy constables. . . . A lifelong resident of Precinct 4, Cantu has worked * * tivities for more than 20 years, either as an employe and Recreation Department or a volunteer for the Golden Gloves program, senior citizens activities and Model Cities projects. ^ Cantu is a community-oriented individual, and we think this will make him a Qualified and competent constable. In the other precincts, either the lack of a significant student population or the similarity of candidates running, have negated any reasons for en­ dorsement. However, we do encourage students in other precincts to con­ sider the candidates closely and vote for constable on May I Carter is in se predating poor people from rich neighborhoods. low with his 'ethnic purity'... >....I The power of abstaining By NICHOLAS VON HOFFMAN •1976 K ing F e a tu r e s S y n d ic a te WASHINGTON - The New York Times reports students and other enthusiasts are failing to volunteer for this year’s political campaigns by the thousands. Since the three immediate past Presidents are widely seen as a satyromaniac, a megalomaniac and a in­ kleptomaniac this outburst of difference shouldn’t surprise us. But disillusioned people are vulnerable to manipulation. They still carry the faith within them, as they make clear when they say “if only’’ we had a can­ didate who was sin cere, honest, courageous or the possessor of any number of other virtuous attributes. THESE DISILLUSIONED Diogenes are relatively easy to trick. The original model went about with a lamp in the daylight looking for his honest man, meaning either that he claimed unique powers of moral perspicacity for himself o r, a s w a s th e c a s e , he w a s demonstrating there was no such person to be found SINCE, EVEN IF you could define it, there s no way in the world you can tell whether another person is sincere or un­ selfish or dedicated to the public in­ terest, the game consists in figuring out ■ what outward manifestation of behavior will sucker embittered idealists into im­ agining they have found their man. Will it be Gov. Jerry Brown, going home every night to his unfurnished apart­ ment, his bowl of brown rice and his pallet of straw after eight hours of work serving the people? Will it be Jimmy Peanut testifying that, as he prayed on his knees in the Georgia governor’s of­ fice as William McKinley once did in the White House, he struck up a personal, even intimate relationship with his savior? Or will it be the thought of Jerry Ford overcoming every physical and mental handicap to attain the dignity and the fatherly judgment that comes to one whose Secret Service retinue is large enough and who appears nightly on the television in a dark suit next to the Great Seal of the Republic? JERRY FORD has reminded us that praiseworthy character doesn t have much to do with anything in a president. Personal probity in high office gives us the same good feeling we have after we get our teeth cleaned. A madman in the White House might push the red button if his aides let him, but other men, who’re adjudged quite sane, offer themselves as candidates and talk about the possibility of doing just that all the time. i u.. * u ~ We are so impressed by the power of the presidency it doesn’t occur to us the office may dominate its occupant. The constant plaint of recent Presidents is that they can’t get much done, that the huge structures which they administer in law they don’t administer in fact, that they are gulled, fooled, tricked, misled and misinformed by their subordinates, that their orders are ignored. WE MIGHT PONDER how ceremonial and illusionary the office may have become. Is the President more of a good­ looking corpse than a chief executive, an American Mikado whose omnipotence is limited by one proviso, that he never use his power? For a president to function as we’ve been taught to think he does, he would have to stage a sort of coup d'etat against his own government. If we set aside the appalling vision of government that Nixon nourished, we can see that is what he was trying to do ... function presidential^. In so doing he appeared to us to be a coupist, a man conspiring to sabotage his own government. If Nixon failed to run the government for evil purposes — or, to be fair, what many of us think are evil purposes — what makes us think that another man can run the government for better ones’’ It would be closer to the mark to think of a president as one who presides, who can a Dresidei unleash his Mikado’s power only for policies and directions over which he has no control and only marginal influence. THE FAILURE of so many p o litica l to keep so many campaign promises can’t be owing only to their rascality. There’s no reason to think our generation of politicians are more corrupt and dis­ honest than they were in Grant’s ad­ ministration IOO years ago. If the crimes are bigger today, it’s because the government’s bigger. But the troublesome figure isn t the crooked politician, it s the honest ones, the men and women elected to office who could not keep their promises, who failed They offer the best reason for not volunteering, not contributing money, not voting When honest, energetic and intelligent people can’t do the job, perhaps the fault is with the job Then the wisest course is to stop electing peo­ ple to these offices, to stop telling each other if only we could find the political equivalent of Jesus he’d oass a miracle and make the damn thing work. Apathy, laziness and disillusionment aren t tht only reasons for refusing to vote. In cer­ tain circumstances abstention can be a powerful political statement, much more powerful than participation X toe r n m B imm Ke* l r * > B y JANIS PALMA The issue of racism in The Daily Tex- ;*>n is far from dead. On the recent (un- C^covered) Chicanos in the Media ’.•^Conference, sponsored by Chicanos ♦I^nteresados en Com- !;-unicaciones ^ C I E C ), there was a •^workshop dedicated I ^^exclusively to this t r o p i c — “ Racism gfend The Daily Tex- wfen.” JJj A presentation of »*«the evidence of this I R acism was done by Davis Riojas, from * IM A YO, and the issue was discussed by •’ -all present. The simple fact that the i*^conference as a whole was not covered lljby the Texan is a clear example of the ‘•Irlack of awareness among Texan ‘•Staffers for minority interests, and that •in c lu d es all, not just chicanos. VERBAL INTEREST in covering y te s e type of events has been taken to remedy the situation. This is in detri- «r*ment to all of the campus community, JI specially nonchicanos, since chicanos t \ always have a way to find out about what’s going on for or about them, and Ii keep informed through the Center for Mexican American Studies, MAYO, Chicano Information Center, MACC and other offices or groups. Events such as the Chicanos in the Media Conference is something of in- faculty, staff, terest to students, J* chicanos and nonchicanos. It should be r\ emphasized, whenever a happening like *' this is taking place, that a person must Si be appointed to make sure the event is ii covered by the Texan - whether that f person is a PR person from the event, *• or an editor from the Texan in charge i \ of minority events specifically and J» solely. it is sad enough to present the public »i J 1 with images of chicanos that are ?! stereotypical (take a generalization as ij a norm) and leave it at that. This only I' perpetuates a false concept which few «! take the bother to confirm or deny. At *! times stereotypes have been offensive V to those being stereotyped (chicanos, ... , Two viewpoints on Awareness needed media conference Chicano vendidoism? women, blacks, gay, whatever), and it s very easy to file the controversy away when it doesn’t affect you direct­ ly. BUT IT TAKES an awareness on the part of nonchicanos, as well as chicanos, for positive action to take place. The Texan staff, predominantly white, gabacho, or Anglo, whatever you want to call it, can no longer overlook the campus population that wants to hear about chicanos, what they are do­ ing, and by that I don’t mean rapes and murders. If the Texan is an on-the-field train­ ing experience, this pertains not only to the mechanics of how to write a good story, but also who you write about, and who writes under what perspec- tive. Surely, a chicano/a will have a different perspective when he/she covers an event relating to his her culture, since the culture is within that person, not around. In this, as in any other case, objectivity is subjective. TALENT AND ABILITY abounds in each chicano individually. Much has gone to waste for lack of opportunity. Right now, on this campus, chicano writers and journalists are concen­ trating on alternative media, like the paper El Despertador, which reaches chicano audiences m ainly. It shameful that the Texan has deprived the rest of the campus audience from the information that El Despertador carries. With such powerful weapons, talent and ability, chicanos must all come forward and be confident that the “great white walls’’ will not be able to hold back what you have to share with all of us. I CHICANISMO is covering a broad range of fields, and the more time that goes by. the more we all lose. I urge the Texan, in the name of all those in­ terested in broadening and enriching their cosm ovision, to take three positive steps: I) put an immediate stop to stereotyping remarks, be they drawings, photographs or words, in news, editorials and ads; 2) campaign for recruitment, not just an ad in the paper at the end of the semester, but go and look for the people who can write and bring them to the Texan; there is no way tokenism can happen if this is done; 3) start covering chicano cultural events, and for that matter, all minority events which pertain to this University. Otherwise, the Texan should change the heading to read: The Daily Texan, White Students Newspaper at the University of Texas at Austin. By MARK VILLANUEVA If this column reads like it needs some work, it probably does. It was written early Saturday mor­ ning (about 3 a.m.) while riding to San Antonio with a friend to visit a friend in the newspaper business. We never found him, not ev e n at h is favorite drinking place on McCullough Street, but that is beside the point. What I wanted to discuss in San An­ tonio was last week’s Chicano Media Conference, probably the first such conference ever held in this country. Really, the members of Chicanos Comunicaciones Enteresados en (CIEC), a University chicano media group organized last October, deserve a great hand. They were responsible for making the conference a success I must warn you now, however, that this column is not a PR release. I’m not in that kind of business. IT WAS A LONG conference, but it was worth the three long days because many positive seminars were held. One seminar, however, that of racism in The Daily Texan, was fairly negative. It has been seven long months since the Texan, according to the Mexican A m erican Youth O rgan ization (MAYO), ran some alleged racist advertising in the advertising columns. Apparently, the advertising was alleg­ ed It seems there are several “ex­ perts’’ on racist advertising walking around on this campus. None of them, however, have any empirical evidence that racist ads actually exist. We are a nation of ethnics. It is not surprising that there are considerable differences in the facial and structural appearances of many people. Not too many chicanos, for example, can be confused for an Irish American or a Polish American. WE CANNOT all appear, talk, act and be the same. Advertising men 1: th e s e d if f e r e n c e s realize this and they make it a point to e x p r e s s in nationalities If an ad is racist because a caricature is depicted as wearing a Mexican sombrero, charro attire and having an accent, then do we expect a Mexican to speak English with a Ger­ man accent? Furthermore, sombreros and charro pants are found in Mexico. aren’t they? After all, the alleged racist ad was a tequila ad. I don t see why UT chicanos, a small handful of them, would get so uptight about the ad. There is nothing chicano about tequila. All of the tequila brewers are Mexican, not chicano. But so much for racist ads. This column was not supposed to take this angle What I really want to talk about is about the d efeatist attitude of some active (or inactive) UT chicanos This self-destructive attitude apparently has afflicted a relatively small group of about IO or 12 chicanos (mostly MAYO members). Fortunately, not all UT chicanos suffer from this "mental” disease. AFTER REALIZING that the racist seminar was being conducted in a negative manner (no constructive criticisms and no positive proposals were being offered) and because many people were discussing the need to con­ trol our own newspaper on campus, I suggested that a newspaper, sponsored by the Center for Mexican American Studies and published by Texas Student Publications, was in reality, a feasible proposal that CIEC and/or MAYO could concentrate their efforts. The MAYO members protested on the grounds that they did not want to go through the bureaucracy. They rationalized this decision on the grounds that the bureaucracy channels were too difficult to penetrate. They also said that an ad hoc com­ mittee, to investigate and ascertain the possibilities of publishing a newspaper with University funds, which I had suggested, would take too much time. TOO MUCH EFFORT? Too much time? They are right An ad hoc com­ mittee would Uke some time and ef­ fort It would also necessitate going through the bureaucratic channels However, I've never heard of chores being accomplished with a minimum of effort and time. Bureaucratic channels? There are some obsUcles to overcome, but how did CIEC manage to get $2,000 (this amount makes CIEC the wealthiest chicano group on cam pus) this semester to coordinate the media con­ ference? Not by protesting and crying about obsUcles, I can assure. And how about chicanos who work for traditional media? Some MAYO members claim they are sellouts because they don’t work for chicano news media (which include mostly newspapers) or cover chicano-oriented events. These chicano reporters have worked long and hard, like their Anglo colleagues, to reach the goal of being respecUble and credible journalists MOST OF THEM have parents, (or brothers, sisters and/or wives husbands) to help financially Spending their good time working for small pecuniary gain is just too much of a luxury that they cannot afford. Don’t get me wrong. I perceive the need for alternative journalism. If I had an alternative, I d rather work for an alternative publication because I’m a utopian idealist, a dying reminder of the dynamic 1960s THIS COUNTRY NEEDS more alternative publications. The major newspapers are not doing their jobs. I’ve read just about every article on the underground press, counterculture press, the New Journalism, the alter­ native press, advocacy journalism, in­ vestigative journalism, the newsroom revolution and chicano journalism. Chicano journalists simply cannot af­ ford to spend their time in alternative news media, however. It is a matter of economics. We have to make a living. Perhaps, and I hope, that our sons and daughters will have the luxury of work­ ing for alternative news media 30 years from now. THE DAILY TEXAN .ta.. - J •» Th. Itete.rsM y e t Terne, e t A e , H e emS Aum tim S tu d e n t ...Scott Tagliarino Nick Cuccia ..Sally Carpenter EDITOR....................................................................... — - ......................... MANAGING ED ITO R ASSISTANT MANAGING EDITOR................................... NEWS EDITOR.................................................................... " L Jeff Cohen roleman SPORTS EDITOR......................................... ..................... _ . S S = ent^ G E N ™ REPORTERS Joy Howell, Ron Hutcheson, Beth Mack, Dawn Turnham, Todd Katz reditob S' ISSUE STAFF „ „ Assistant News Editor..... News Assistants................ ................................. Karen Tumulty Bill Krull, David Guarino, Linda O. Ramirez, Keri Guten, Anne Garvey, Ramiro Burr, Kathy Spitz, Mary Doyle Mark Villanueva Editorial Assistant.................................................... ^nn ^jjeeiock Features Assistant...................................................... ^ B o b Steinfeld, Laura Turns Sports Assistants.................................................... David Rose M a k e - u p Editor......................................................................................Ginny Greene . . , , ^ ir8 ™ !°r«................................................. . . . . . . . Bill Wicker, Marcie Gugenheim Gary Marshall, Novy Viamonte Copy Editors............................................ Steve Willgren p h o s p h o r s : : : : : : : : : : : : * * * » • * * * K olvoord Opinions expressed in The Daily Texan are those of the editor or the w riter of the article and are not necessarily those of the U niversity administration or the Board of Regents The Daily Texan, a student newspaper at The University of T exas at A ustin, is published by T ex a s Student Publications, Drawer D, University Station, Austin. Tex 78712 The D aily Texan is published Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, and Friday, except holiday and exam periods Second cla ss postage paid at Austin. Tex N ews contributions will be accepted by telephone (471* 4591), at the editorial office (T exas Student Publications Building 2 122) or at the news laboratory (Communication Building A 4,136* Inquiries concerning ^ liv e r y and classified advertising should be m ade in TSP Building 3 200 (471 5244) and display advertising in TSP Building 3 /1 0 1471-1886) . _ _ The national advertising representative of I he Daily Texan is National Educational Advertising Service. Inc.. 380 Lexington Ave , New York, N Y . 10017 The Daily Texan subscribe* to United Press Inter­ national and New York T im es News Service The Texan is a m em ber of the A ssociated C ollegiate P r ea s. the S o u th w est J o u rn a lism C o n g r ess, the T e x a s D a ily N ew spaper A ssociation , and Am erican N ew sp a p er Publishers Association SUBSCRIPTION RATES THROUGH AUG 12, 1978 Picked up on Campus (Students, Faculty and Staff) Two sem esters (Fall and Spring) Summer session Picked up on Campus (Non Students, Non Faculty and Non Staff) Two Sem esters (Fall and Spring) Summer session By Mail in U S Two sem esters I Fall and Spring) One sem ester (Fall or Spring) Summer session Outside U S, (Surface mail only) I 3 30 I I 00 $12 OO I 3 75 $17 OO $ 9 OO $ 5 75 Two sem esters (Fall and Spring) One sem ester (Fall or Spring) Summer session $34 00 $18OO $1150 Send orders and address changes to TEXAS STUDENT PUBLICATIONS P O Box I). Austin Texas 78712, or to TSP Building C3 200 ' P a g e 4 W e d n e s d a y / A p r i l 14, 1976 T H E DAILY T E X A N .* se* * JC - - guest viewpoint The facts: „ Journalism 's public responsibility W W W - By JOSE M. FLORES (Editor’s note: Flores is a former Daily Texan staff writer.) Upon seeing the headline on Ju d y T a y lo r W illia m s ’ editorial (April 7), I must say J was very much interested in what she may have had to say. Objectivity aside, if there is such a thing, facts are facts and one gets damned tired of scanning the local papers and coming up with so much non- commital prattle. Much is * written, but little is said. Reporters tend to go too far or not far enough. Ms. Williams, how far in­ deed should we go? F ar enough to report the facts? But what does that say about a person’s attitudes? The way a public servant views himself and his role. More important­ ly, the way he or she may view their constituency? Yes, most of us have felt the “ misery of failure” in our lives at one time or another and damned if any of us would have wanted our reactions published. But then again, many of us have never been pie president of a country. Many of us did not lie to the citizenry. Many of us did not have the capacity to ruin people’s careers. Many of us did not seek the public trust th ro ug h p e rse c u tio n of political opponents and public dissent, nor did we seek to nullify the rights of the com­ mon people to pursue a kingly crown. Mr. Nixon’s dilemma was that of a child caught in a lie. Little wonder his reactions, according to Woodstein. I would have needed a drink, too, with the common rabble 1 at my door, screaming for my blood. How far should a journalist go? As far as necessary, Ms. Williams. The byline is that of the reporter, the banner is that of the publication. Every time a publication hits the streets it sticks its neck out. The reporter knows this as does the publishing editor, and both are aware of the libel laws. They do not expect our political leaders, of which we as Americans have the finest money can buy, to be perfect Christians, Jews or Druids. They expect them to be damn well responsible for their con­ duct while serving in an office granted by the public trust. Reporters are not supposed to be interested in whether or not they are respected, Ms. Williams. A good reporter 4Ua oo Koat as he Of does the job as best as he or she can, “period,” for respect is relative and there are some persons whose respect one might be able to do without. If there is a limit to public responsibility may it never be reached. Responsibility does not end at 5 o’clock. If Mr. Nixon is predisposed toward suicide he’ll end up that way through his own fault. No one asked Richard Nixon to run for public office. He is out of public office now, so let it lie? For the sake of history, Ms. Williams, we dare not. There are many who would be king, and the people must be kept aware of this, regardless of how pleasing to the general public this or that candidate may be. Julius Caesar we can learn much from, but remember the fate of Rome. * JC J c p f wrn «* *rn r- dc F z % V 0* . w Br pc *■ J* A J * S- *■ 'pc J t IA* f W w y 1» r.,fb & 0 i i Gay rights firing line our Spanish-speaking countries, is Castalian. It is Castillian because Spanish royal policy in the 16th Century allowed no other of the languages spoken in Spain to cross the sea. In 1836 and 1845 the um­ bilical cord was severed. Since then, without formal the language, schooling, limited to the home, was pass­ ed from mouth to mouth. What this means is that the local Spanish language was cut off from its evolutive development. For instance, mecha is good chicano (the candle and kerosene lamp), but conmutador is unknown. Why? Simple, no electricity existed in 1836 and 1845. The time is here for the c h i c a n o s r e t u r n to premeditatedly to the main str eam of the Castillian language, all the way! Then, ghts we can think of creating profound chicano literature. Nicaragua, a country, at that time, of about one million, gave us a Ruben Dario. take Chicanos, it from there, la bola anda suelta en tu lado de la cancha. Joel Quinones Garza Staff Writer Carrasolendas Kudos, Texan To the editor: The use of Spanish in the Texan adds a welcome dimen­ sion to the publication. For the reasons you mention in the editor’s note, Janis Palma’s decision to write her editorial is very a p ­ in Spanish propriate. A regular contribu­ tion in Spanish belongs in the Texan. The same factors you enumerate in the editor s note make it highly probable that such a contribution would be greeted with approbation and enjoyed greatly by a large n u m b e r of U n i v e r s i t y students, if it could be presented frequently. I would like to applaud the Texan, and I hope that the use of Spanish language con­ tributions will become a regular practice of your publication. Snowden McKinnon Guns To the editor: I’m against crime, too, but I don’t spring blindly to the sup­ port of every crackpot notion labeled “Crime Prevention Measure.” Emma Lou Linn wants to reduce in-city crime by regulating in-city gun purchases. This cannot work unless her ordinance will regulate gun purchases by th e s l i g h t e s t city dwellers. But gun stores abound just outside the city limits (e.g. The Gun Rack, Oak Hill Gun Shop). No Austin dweller will experience any b u t i n ­ convenience in evading the city ordinance, and would be completely within his legal rights in doing so. QED, baby. The parallel with alcohol sales is striking: (to pick an example) Lubbock tried to regulate in-city alcohol con­ sumption by regulating in-city sales. The success of that program is notorious. I don’t see why anyone would support an ordinance that will cost tax money, con­ sume police time, harass law abiding citizens — and won’t m work. Robert K. Szabo Linguistics department was reached without so much as listening to oral arguments against it. The opinion con­ sisted of one word. You might think about that kind of judiciary action in combina­ tion with something like Senate Bill I. If I go to jail tomorrow, whose turn is it the day after? Sex is not the only , sin. David Morris _ Spanish To the editor: Mexican born and literary bent, I found Janis Palma’s “Espanol Chicano” of great interest. In fact I believe I can add a footnote. Chicano Spanish, despite what chicanos have been told, on one hand by Anglo Spanish scholars unable to understand the spoken language, and on the other by jingoist super purists in Mexico and other d o o n e s b u r y m s CALLED AND LGSXX) TANO, THAT SR.—"THE HALL WBR OF HAPPINESS THERE? TH LON- ‘ / GEVfTY. * I sum rn )H G THE CHINS DYNASTY, /T M S BURNT TO THE OROW BY \ ALLIED EXrmVNXRY FORCES IN SEO! REMET BY EMPRESS HU HSI, IT WAS RAZED AGAIN BY THE IN /900! I REALLY? THEY BURNED THE PLACE Dom YES, 'THE HALL OF BENE- - m i, TM SURE THEY HAD THEIR REASONS. WHATS THAT?. IT.. m iITY Super Scientific. ■ — c o m m o d o r H I mf1 n* XI'' O O G O G ^ CSP © CSS © ® 0 0 ( 9 0 0 O G O O G> x. O O O ® •/: o o o es The deluxe personal scientific for student The deluxe personal scientific for J and professional. Compare its features and price — with any other calculator in its class. • 10-digit Mantissa with 2-digit Exponent. • Parenthesis. • Exponent increase and decrease. • All logs and antilogs. • Standard and Mean Deviation. • All Trig Keys. • Two storage memories. • Memory Summation. • Polar/Rectangular — Rectangular/Polar. • Degree — Radian. • Pi and all Power Keys inc). X Root of Y. • Rechargeable Built-in Ni-Cad Batteries. • AC/D C Adapter-Recharger included. • One Year Guarantee. Commodore C O O to ® . Y .: , t | I S l| S R 41488 ^Rechargeable SSiStisC IEN TIFIC NEW LOW PRICE!59 2200 Guadalupe • Lower Level 477-9658 M R . C A L C U L A T O R count. So you see, Steve, gay rights could be your rights, too. They can just as easily be taken from you as from me. Senate Bill I should be proof enough. Dan Hardy Graduate student Speech Communication Who's next? To the editor: I’d like to thank Steve Olaf- son for last Friday’s column, “ Defending Gay Rights.” As much as I appreciated it, there are a couple of points I d like to add. His defense rests on the fact that most homosexuals are no different important in any way from anyone else; it is a fact and it is relevant, but it is insufficient. It’s too easy to argue, as latterday moderate gay activists tend to do, that drag queens, for example are atypical and should be judged separately from gay people in general, who are tolerable because they fit unobtrusively into polite society. Disapproval of drag queens is u n d e r s ta n d a b le only because ifs universal. When it comes right down to it, what reason is there, other than a familiar kind of visceral revulsion, for the scorn shown them? How can we loath drag queens and be tolerant of the politically, economically and sexually superbutches who oc­ cupy positions on the totem pole far higher then you, me or the queens? Drag queens are harmless. They are no real threat to anyone. The revulsion is pavlovian, not rational, and differs only in the prejudice degree from in agai nst homosexuals general. If they jail the drag queens today, then it is all the more likely they will jail Steve Olafson’s gay friends and me tomorrow. What’s more, heterosexuali­ ty may not be cause to feel too secure. The Supreme Court decision which upheld the con­ stitutionality of laws against private, consensual, adult sex Orange Blossom, a symbol of your love. E x clu siv e ly at Sheftall Jewelers. Choose from dozens pf exciting designs from the traditional to the one-of-a-kind. Styled in 18 kt. white or yellow gold. Radiant with the fire of the w orld's most precious stone. And of course/ Sheftall's assurance of a greater diamond value. From $250. M astercharge, Bankam ericard/ and ex­ tended term s available. (Ab) ON-THE-DRAG | 2406 GUADALUPE H I , : 4 . \ Pfh# Lifetime full velue trede in Free insurance for the 1st .year Original designs Greater value Up to 36 months to pay VBring s On-the-Drag extends en invitation to you... A complimentary skin analysis on the famous Clinique computer CHniqua't system of skin r r r . je s s e ^ us*. C o m s In today. '" J * ^ b l0ading derm atologists. Y our answ er • 't th /c lh i^ l'c o u n w .'o u r * your *..< *. *. « « * « « . 2236 Guadalupe 9-6 • Alhandal* village 9-6 • Westgate Moll 10-9 doily Wednesday, A p ril 14, 1976 T H E D AILY T E X A N Page 5 ) the editor: This letter is written in tsponse to Steve Olafson’s >lumn on gay rights. My >sponse is also tempered by poem called “ Polemics I / Honor Moore, a poet who gently appeared here in the merican Poetry Festival. Polemics I” asks for women > write, to write as women, > stop their male approval esire. I would say, if I wrote ach a poem, “Come out, gay rothers and sisters, come ut! Get rid of your straight pprovai desire.” This is not o say that we don’t ap- reciate straight people’s sup- ort or approval. Or, in the ase of friends and family, heir love. For we do. However, when we speak of [ay rights, we often mean the ame rights that black people lave had to fight for, the same ights Chicanos must fight or, some of the same rights vomen are fighting for. The •ight to be free, unharassed jse of public accomodations, the right to nondiscrimination in employment and employ­ ment advancement, the right to live our lives, as much as possible, in the way we the right to self­ choose, respect — to name a few. I guess what I really want to say is “Thank you, Steve, for your support.” But what I want is more gay people s support. I want more gay peo­ ple saying, “These are our rights, straight Supreme Court judges, and you do not have the right to take them or give them.” According to most statistics, there are at least 20 million gay men and women in the United States, closeted or otherwise. They are teachers, lawyers, doc­ tors, ministers, politicians, dancers, actors, singers, p r o f e s s i o n a l a t h l e t e s , soldiers, students, you name it What I want is for these gay people to say, “Straight folks, we don’t care whether you tolerate us. whether you approve of us, whether you hate us or love us. Because we like ourselves, we approve of ourselves, we are proud of ourselves. What we want from you, straight people, is simply this: the admission that gay rights are the same as your rights.” Just remember that your best friend might be gay, your son or daughter might be gay, your husband or wife might be gay, you might be mistaken for gay, or you even might be pretending not to be gay. Remember that gay people, unless they choose to make themselves visible, are not as easily recognizable a minority as blacks or chicanos. Gay people are like the Viet Cong. Often you can’t distinguish them from the “friendly” pop­ ulation. If anyone ever wanted to eradicate gay people, it would be difficult. And lots of innocent bystander straights might be part of the body vector 5 Fem ale (col rossword Puzzler 3 Slip away **s:=r' R O S S R 4 Swedish lo­ be it1 apon n m eplay- on -Beback lia n of lobes ttledrum am rn away loq ) 6 Above 7 Recent 8 E ngineless 9 Furnished with money 10 Negative votes 11 B ib lica l weed boat 16 Century m plant 18 G irl's name 22 Pen 23 Decorate 24 Mature 25 Temporary bed 27 Poem 29 Reverence £312 h e h e o ygra HCdooKiz) H o r a a s u raaa] aaaao aa a! i g s Qgig 233 auh acsaao 3a aaa aM_Hj SKiraDGL S O O S O S a a ls qui* aaa© BQanre aaa , mum® Baraga Sac U O E3L2 raaj H O SEIN H B d 30 Church bench 35 Reach 36 Bright stars 37 Insect eggs 38 Prim 40 Forays 42 Part of face (pl.) 43 Quarrel 44 Alms box 46 Ireland 47 Sow 49 Dine 50 Succor 53 B ehold1 . ggish un h card ar away akan ceed ificial guage •noun jefe letter •cf ndensad nsture act seball im iphist- iheles avy lumes ud ,e confi- nce iur-tem- *ammedan I w at Lake es Into HH latch IWN ja ­ ded ar- * rn rn * 1 ‘ ( *'r ' t € -< I'*I tf»« .TUC I "i* < 'n' )' ; i •» *' »4*. *■ <*m5 s ii •L'Wii vU". . w ^ ' t i , I, . t i 7 , M . r- I TV , FD JS»- *.» ; i . 1 h, it:-' .i ' I * .* 3 I *•» . C f mm A** rn PSW f t Hva*** pm* A 3 5 Ii’ Ii* , » ♦ 5 | mi ‘**o : j ? n *;*ur ^ ( C R o j£jan C lar M n»«th --Cr a ‘I-al a ^4 IX*0§&C # a • - • - * - ’ss’ln ' n % re rn # sp [I a1 Ii w] ( . k« 11•; M t i Cl Si ai t: M te cl Ii11 et I; th ii I bi I cc f: p« V OI ol I II SC 0 st a P« tfi >! ti I ' tc limn Seniors Have 2 Days To File Degree Cards Safeway To Pacify Neighborhood Groups It may be too late for graduating seniors to order caps and gowns, but there’s still time for them to complete their paper work before the Friday deadline — if they hurry. Preparation for graduation varies among colleges and according to the degree sought, Don Hanzel, assistant registrar, explained, but the basic re­ quirements are about the same. When a student reaches the second semester of his junior year (or when he has completed approximately 72 hours of work), he should file for a degree card at the registrar’s office. The degree card includes a photostatic copy of the applicant’s record. The photostat and degree card application are forwarded to his dean’s office where a degree card is prepared. The student is then notified of the courses he has completed and those he still needs to satisfy his graduation re­ quirements. “By Friday, seniors should have com­ pleted a final degree application and filed it with their dean’s office,” Hanzel said. In some cases, the degree checkers in the dean’s office will be able to tell the stu­ dent when he files a final application whether he has fulfilled his requirements. For other students, the final degree check might Uke a few days, he said. ...... Former Mayor Dies -Sketch by William Hilliard F o r m e r Austin Mayor Harry Akin died Tuesday mor­ ning at 72. Akin served as mayor from 1967 to 1969. He owned the c h a i n of N i g h t H aw k restau ran ts and also was p r e s i d e n t of the Texas R e s t a u r a n t Association (TRA). Mayor Jeff Friedman, who supported Akin in his un­ successful bid for re-election, said, ‘‘He was the first social­ ly aware mayor of Austin. “ One of his g r e a t e s t achievements was the passing of the Open Housing Or­ dinance in 1967. That one act alone speaks very highly for him. “He was probably the most liberal mayor the city had up to that point.” Another former mayor, Roy Butler, who defeated Akin in the 1969 mayor’s race, said, “I am very distressed to hear of Mayor Akin’s death. “He was a personal friend as well as a fine mayor. I think the community has lost a fine citizen.” University History Prof. Joe Frantz said Akin worked as a road show actor in the late Twenties. “He worked washing dishes and Uking other odd jobs in Los Angeles, waiting for his big break in acting,” Frantz said. “ Finally, he returned to Austin in an old Model A with $150 and opened Frisco’s, a three-or-four-stool affair sell­ ing hamburgers made from quality meat. This grew into the Night Hawk resUurant chain. “He was a businessman in the best sense of the word,” Frantz said. As president of the TRA, Akin did more to integrate restaurants than anyone else in the state, Frantz added. Funeral services will be at 3 p.m. Wednesday at Weed- Corley Funeral Home. Akin is survived by his wife, Lela Jane, and three step­ children, Victor, Karen and Cindy Sumner. T he C o u n s e l i n g a nd Psychological Services Center p r o v i d e s i m m e d i a t e professional service without charge to all students. 471-3515 or PAX 3380. Counselors are available at West Mall office building 303 for help in career planning, studying, emotional and social adjustment. No ap­ pointment is necessary. s a i d E i g h t h S t . , the neighborhood was already served by another Safeway and a Big Bear Mini-Max grocery. “I do not feel the need for a Safeway store in our area,” he said. “We’ve concentrated on the store and not on the community,” he told the board. Mrs. Don Bedinger, 2413 Marlton Drive, said she op­ posed the store at first, but “the more we asked, the more they gave us.” Bedinger said her opposition stemmed from the legal ambiguity of the University over the lot. She said the residents were hemmed in by the University property and the adjacent Municipal Golf Course. However, she said the store would be convenient for students at the junior high and for a number of senior citizens living nearby. By DON SHARON The new Safeway store to be built on University property on Lake Austin Boulevard will have to add more hedges and trees on the lot to pacify neighborhood groups, Robert Sneed, attorney for Safeway Stores, Inc., said Tuesday. The store will have to add divider lines between the parking spaces and “ the neighbors wanted more trees than what the plan shows,” Sneed said. The architectural planners are adding the features and will allow neighborhood groups to view the design changes, he said. Safeway took the original plan before the City Board of Adjustments Monday night to seek approval for a 10-foot set­ back instead of the 25-foot set­ back required by city or­ dinance. The board approved the shorter setback, at the rear of the store along West Eighth Street, as well as a short setback to allow for a canopy extending to Newman Street to provide cover for a bicycle rack and sidewalk and 60-degree parking stalls, each 18-feet wide. Safeway will pay $60,000 a year for a 20-year lease with two 10-year options, Sneed said. City ordinances normally require 162 parking spaces for a commercial building the size of the proposed Safeway store, Building Inspector Jim Bennett said, but the board waived the requirement to prevent the company from having to mark off spaces at 90-degree angles. A glass-enclosed atrium will be located within the main building to protect an old tree. The store will be “the only store in the United States thai has a pecan tree in the middle of it.” Sneed said. Approval by the board ol adjustments cleared the way for construction, Sneed said The City Planning Commis sion ea rl ier approved 1 special permit to erect the building, allowing advertising only on the structure itself and City Council approved a zoning change from residen tial to office. Board of ad justments’ approval was re quired only for the reducec setbacks. The store was opposed ai the meeting Monday night by some residents. William G Van Hemert, 2608 W.8th St. said the Safeway would cause continuous noise and light dis traction despite plannee barriers. “ The 25-foot setback ii there (in the ordinance) for 1 purpose,” Van Hemert said. He predicted increased traffic along Newman Street, a mail artery to O. Henry Junior High School. Sneed said his company planned to lay sidewalks aion* Newman and denied that the store would create excessive traffic congestion Rodney Webb, 2315 W. ^ e n i o r s ^ n r G r a d u a t e s ] Th# southwest office of Red Carpet Realtors is accepting applications for a position in reel es­ tate sales. A career in reel estate offers greet challenge end tremendous rewards. Business major helpful but not required. Much of your success will depend on the training you receive to compliment your formal education. We offer one of the finest training programs available. Call Ken Harris for an appointment. 444-2626. COCBUhS book “The Sale Book Store > •. FALL UT COURSE £9 SCHEDULES A f WITH $5.00 PURCHASE WHILE THE SUPPLY LASTS! Also Available at our Rivertowne Mall Store 2302 Guadalupe 474-2982 Open 7 Days a Week SAVE MONEY SAVE COUPON GOOD BETWEEN 11-4 PM SAVE (I aff any 16" pizza except cheese 50* off any pizza except cheese or SAVE 75* off any 14" pizza except cheese One coupon per p ix ie Offer voids others J N am e--------------- / P h o n e -------------- To validate coupon name and .phone ^ number. IIN i , p i,., 4 -1 M i USE OURS: BETWEEN 11-4 PM With inflation these days everybody could use a break now and then ... so why not take a break with Domino's Piz­ za and save money at the same time? Discount is only good between the hours of 11:00-4:00 p.m. DOMINO’S PIZZA FREE DEUVERY IN S la v ic s ASIA 476-7181 It is exasperating to be called so persistently when the last thing we want to do is to get up and go but God elects to keep on haunting like some holy ghost. “The Great Intruder" From YOU! JONAH! by Thomas John Carlisle Wm. B. Eerdmans Pub. Co. MISSIONHURST . . . 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Approximately 300 participants, some from faraway places such as Sudan and India, are expected to attend the conference. * * * * * University Government Prof. Armando Gutierrez and Donn Davis will join Joe Feagin, professor of sociology, in discussing minority politics in America on ” 200 Years, a weekly radio program of the University. The award-winning ” 200 Years series, broadcast internationally, is coproduced by the UT News and Information Service and KUT-FM. The program may be heard on KUT at 6:30 p.rn? April 23. * * * * * University Prof. John Roueche was elected president of the Council of Universities and Colleges at the council’s national convention in Washington. sities that sponsor graduate programs in higher education and community college education. It maintains liaison with other national organizations involved with com­ munity colleges. Roueche is a professor of educational ad­ ministration at the University and is director of the Community College Leadership Program. * * * * * For the second year in a row, a student has been awarded a fellowship for a year’s study at the Free University of Brussels in Belgium. The scholarship is awarded by the Belgium-American Educational Foundation. Receiving the scholarship is David Rigney of Beaumont, a graduate physics major. Rigney was graduated with highest and special honors in physics in 1972. He is a member of Phi Beta Kappa and studied non­ clinical biology at the UT Health Science Clinic Center in San Antonio from 1972 to 1974. * * * * * Alan Bean, Apollo 12 astronaut, will be the principal speaker Wednesday at a University ex-students meeting at the Villa Capri Motor Hotel. Bean is a 1955 graduate. Bean was the lunar landing pilot of the Apollo 12 mission and the fourth man to take “ a small step for man but a giant leap for comprises univer- mankind” on U.S. Military Position Declining Ex-Intelligence Chief Attacks Soviet Spending. Detente Lt. Gen. Daniel O. Graham defined the balance of power between the United States and the Soviet Union as “ simple, stark and profoundly distur­ bing” in a speech to the Austin Rotary Club Tuesday. Graham recently served as director of the Defense Intelligence Agency before requesting relief from his post to protest the discharge of Ja m e s S c h le s in g e r as secretary of defense. “ If they didn’t need Jim Schlesinger, they didn’t need m e,” Graham said. His resignation became effective Jan I. Supporting his contention that U.S. military power, in relation to the Soviet Union, has declined drastically over the last IO years, Graham offered the following findings taken from a recent con­ gressional report: • In Intercontinental mis­ siles, the United States has -- ... . . , gone from 600 ahead to 600 behind. • In Po laris- typ e sub­ marines, the United States has gone from 16 ahead to 13 behind. • In ground force divisions, the United States has gone from 130 behind to 150 behind. • In strategic defense mis­ sile launchers, the United States lags behind 10,000 to zero. • In antiballistic missile launchers, the United States is outnumbered 64 to zero. Also, Graham said the men- under-arms category stands at 2.1 million Americans to 4.8 million Soviets. “ The Soviet Union is out- spending us on m ilita ry capabilities by $50 billion a year,” Graham said. “ It ’s difficult for me to un­ derstand how anyone can look at these facts and state that our military power is ‘second to none,’ ” he said. mu. alen lead the The Soviets also lead the United States in civil defense, Graham said. “ The USSR has been expending a great deal of resources and effort to protect both population and in­ dustry in the event of nuclear war,” he said. “ They have come up with a system of evacuating citie s by a ll means, including by foot. As a result, Graham said that in the event of nuclear war, IOO million Americans w ill die as opposed to IO million Russians. “ As for industrial protec­ tion,” he said, “ they are building blast shields to pre­ vent the destruction of key machinery.” The Soviets spend 20 per cent of their Gross National P ro d u c t on th e ir w a r machines while the United States spends 5.4 per cent, Graham said. “ In 1938,” he said, “ just prior to Hitler’s assault on rcuroDe. Hitler was spending Europe, Hitler was spending 15 per cent.” Graham feels this situation is a result only in part of the efforts of the USSR. “ Detente, by whatever name you wish to call it, has contributed heavily to our dis­ astrously declining military position.” Graham said that pursuing detente would force the United States to trade away its military advantages and settle for terms which allow Soviet military plans to go forward unchecked. Graham, after saying he was glad to be in Austin, said, “ It cheers me up to get out of Washington.” He s a i d W a s h i n g t o n reminds him of a log, with a nest of ants on it, floating down a river. “ Each one thinks he’s driving,” he said. Kesey: Fre Leary PALO ALTO, Calif. (U P I) — Ken Kesey, author of the Academy Award-winning movie “ One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest,” said Tuesday he is launching a campaign to get former LSD guru Timothy Leary freed from prison. Leary, former associate professor at Harvard who once counseled youth to “ turn on” to drugs, is serving a 10- year sentence in federal prison in San Diego on a 1965 conviction of possession of about two ounces of mari­ juana. “ He’s done years for just two roaches,” Kesey said. “ He is caught like a bone in the throat of the prison system — they can’t swallow him and they can’t spit him out.” SPJA JA £J % •v Tr $ * a *• Sr * / I .CLU To Represent Kindergartener o Contest Hair Length Expulsions rn rn u ____________ .. J B y MARK THOMPSON I Five-year-old Heath Miller gras fro m e x p e lle d kindergarten recently. He was lot expelled for throwing Ipitwads, sticking a girl s hair n an ink well or talking back lo the teacher, but for having long hair. Heath does not understand. Although it probably will not be in time for Heath to start the first grade next year, the Texas branch of the American C ivil Liberties Union (ACLU) hopes to use new federal regulations to prevent similar occurrences in other Texas schools. HEATH was expelled from the Jim Ned Independent School District in Lawn, a Ismail town near Abilene, on [March 8 and has been atten­ ding a private kindergarten since then. Nancy Peables, Heath’s mother, said she received three letters from the school saying Heath’s collar-length hair violated the district’s dress code. The school board upheld the suspension and the Peables’ lawyer sought a temporary in­ junction that would allow Heath to return to school from a state district judge in Abilene. The judge refused to grant the injunction. The A C LU , which had secured a lawyer for the Peables, filed an appeal of the case with the Texas Educa­ tion Agency (T EA ) April 8 on the basis of allegedly violating Title IX of the Educational Amendments of 1972. Title IX bans sex discrimination in all appearance restrictions. in stitu tio n s nnnearance restrictions. in stitu tio n s A,i../.atinnai educational receiving federal money. “ TITLE IX specifically prohibits discrimination on the basis of sex in a school’s appearance code,” John Dun­ can, executive director of the Texas ACLU, said Tuesday. Duncan said TEA has con­ tro l o ve r a s c h o o l’ s appearance policy but in the past has upheld the individual school board’s right to set If TEA does not reinstate Heath, the ACLU plans to file suit against the agency and the school district alleging violation of Title IX , Duncan S THE ULTIMATE sanction for noncompliance with Title IX is loss of federal funds. “ There is no way TEA can face its fed eral losing money,” Duncan said. The ACLU hopes its ef The ACLU hopes its efforts „_}ii r<,«niit in the abolishi will result in the abolishment of hair restrictions in all Tex­ as schools, Duncan said. A M I D A L L the le g a l ramifications of the case is Heath. “ He just does not un­ derstand (why he had to leave school),” Peables said. He will attend first grade in a private scnool if the case is not resolved in his favor, she said. WE'RE LATE BU, w . huv. - r n . opPo r,u n U i« fo.L,b: ..l „ . * » « . in May. door M io * personnel. W o oH»r Caro ministration, and Marketing. Tho tr* ” n® responsibility, high. and W Claim . Ad- -« mn,*h *n iiv i Tho prospect* for oubotontiol otitivo. ThoiobsorolocotodinToxas. lf offer^ record of success in your academic and par- IN T E R V IE W S ON A P R IL 22 CRUM A FORSTER INSURANCE COM PANIES THE POLICY MAKERS. An Equal Opportunity Employer 0Wc* p c m f m b M o u r p r e v i o u s w a r e h o u s e s a l e s ? WAREHOUSE SALE W id e Selection of D iscontinued Textbooks & ■ N e w H a rd b a c k s $ 2 .0 0 N e w P a p e rb a c k s .79 U sed H a rd b a c k s $ 1 .0 0 U sed P a p e rb a c k s .49 on new and used discontinued textbook U n b e lie v a b le D isco u n ts!!! the W a re h o u s e , in the a lle y b eh in d the U n iv e rs ity Co-Op ( 2 a - 0 f i 9.902 and counting U niversity CREDIT UNION .VU MC n mini*ut I? * " i i i . \ t i ' • t 1 1 1 Art Nouveau Sports-Fantasy Series or more Maxfield Parrish Harper's Bazaar (matted, 18x24) reg. 5.00 3.89 Canvas aa. 6.00 Fine Art Postcards & Notecards reg. 6 0 % 75 6 C M IHI BY JIM DALGLISH Two-dollar bills are in de­ mand, and the U.S. Treasury Department ensured a good- supply by releasing 225 million “ deuces” Tuesday. So far, though, the demand has come mainly from in­ dividuals. Spot checks with local retailers revealed none who had ordered the twos for change. “ Sm aller banks haven’t even inquired about the two- dollar bills,” Carol Holley, balance control analyst at Capital National Bank, said. “ We have had a lot of customers asking for the two- dollar bill. I think probably for collector’s items,” Katherine Brack ett, head te lle r at University State Bank, said. The Guadalupe Street bank had gone through $1,000 worth of the new issuance by I p.m. Tuesday, she said. The demand “ is quite heavy. They have really been coming in looking for them,” Dayton Pehle, head teller at Assistant Attorneys N am ed City Atty. Jan Kubicek ap­ pointed three University- trained assistants Tuesday. They are Karen Parker, John Meinrath and Pamela Reed. Parker, 30, earned her BA in German and her JD at the University. She has had two years experience in private practice. Meinrath, 28, earned a BA from Washington and Lee University in Lexington, Va., a master’s in urban planning from Texas A&M and his JD from the U n iversity law school in 1973. He was former­ ly assistant city attorney of Houston and worked on draf­ ting ordinances and legal Opinions concerning land-use regulations and litigation in­ fo r vo lvin g co lle ctio n s damages to city property. Reed, 24, is a candidate for a law degree at the University in May. She received her BA In psychology from the University of Colorado at Boulder. She took the Texas State Bar exam in February and has served as a trial clerk for the last three years with an Austin law firm. Kubicek said he will make two more appointments but he does not know when. The three appointments Tuesday bring the number of assistants to IO. Three work in the Municipal Court division, prosecuting m ostly m is­ demeanors, and seven on research and prosecution of other cases. $2 bill is equivalent to $1.15 in the 1966 money —Photo by Will Van Overbook Erwin's Trial Set for August 1974, by Austin police who allegedly found him driving down a one-way street the wrong way and weaving over the yellow stripe on a two-way street for five blocks. Erwin was acquitted of a DWI charge in 1972 after hav­ ing his trial moved to Belton. At the time of his arrest Erw in refused to take a breath analysis test. Under Texas law, the Department of Public Safety and the county attorney’s office can request that a driver’s license be suspended for refusal to take the breath test. Erw in’s trial was moved to Corpus Christi by City Judge Brock Jones in February, 1975, after a week-long change GOOD HAIRCUTS F o r G ood People W et Cut & Blow Dry $6.00 4 7 8 -6 7 6 4 2408 San Gabriel of venue hearing in which 48 witnesses testified about the possibility of Erwin receiving a fair trial in Austin. Augustine said he presumes the case w ill be tried in August as scheduled, although he noted that there have been three continuances since the change of venue hearing. Augustine added that another continuance could be granted if one of the m a te ria l witnesses is sick or if one of the attorneys is unable to appear. ★ A full length book over 40 Full Page Illustrations ★ Learn While You Have Fun ★ Trick Shots you have never seen before ★ Complete details on Billiard equipment including sizes, lengths, weights, etc. HLU«TRATfO Thousands Won and Lost Thoso Trick Shots it The only book of its kind ★ A R T W O R K IN BOOK BY H ER B M A IR E U N IV E R S IT Y OF HOUSTON O R D E R F O R M Name. Address. City____ The d riv in g w h ile in ­ toxicated tria l of form er University lobbyist and regent Frank Erwin has been set for Aug. 2 in Corpus Christi, Roy Minton, Erw in ’s attorney, said. The case, based on charges of driving while intoxicated, will be tried in Nueces City Court No. 2 by City Judge Hector DePena. The pretrial hearing has been scheduled for July 22. Erwin was arrested Oct. 8, Open A ll Day Friday, April 16 Join Your University Credit Union Now University CREDIT UNION W. 30th at Cedar 4 7 6 -4 6 7 6 Come by M F 9am -4pm Thurs. till 7pm • N C U * J State. Zip. $2.95 Per Copy Post Paid in U S. with this Ad and the name of your school Rick Publishing Co., P.O. Box 908, Alief, Texas 77411 • INNER SANCTUM • UNIVERSITY CO-OP .RECORD TOWN • DISC RECORDS Appearing APRIL 15, MUNICIPAL AUDITORIUM, AUSTIN The release of each new Boz Scaggs album is an eagerly anticipated event. “ Silk Degrees” is an amazing record, even for Boz. Sure it’s soulful and mellow, but it’s also the rockingest, most innovative album Boz has ever done, and his writing and singing are stronger than ever. lf you’re already into Boz, you know exactly what we’re talking about. lf you’re not, you don’t know what you’re missing. Boz is back—Pass it on. Silk Degrees.” On Columbia Records and Tapes * today is the LAST DAY to apply for the following TSP Editorships: — Summer Session Managing Editor The Daily Texan — 1976-1977 Editor Cactus Yearbook — 1976-1977 Editor Peregrinus Yearbook — 1976-1977 Editor PEARL Magazine Applications Available - TSP 3.200 Today is the DEADLINE! A ll completed applications must be in TSP 3.200 by 4 :3 0 p.m. Texas Student Publications W O CAN SAY? ALL KINDS OF GOOCH ES FOR YOUR MINDIBODY 'won •from O A T W IL L IE 'S 1610 S a n A n t o n i o ^ U K F rHOFF D yn o -m ite T - S h i r t s , ^ iffy TLH fyk i f ieevM Page 8 Wednesday, April 14, 1976 THE DAILY TEXAN Dorms: What Suits Your Fancy? ™ large and imposing to quaint and homey. Not all dor­ mitories have lounges on each floor. The lounge is “ the hub of programing and the heart of each floor where the residents get t o g e t h e r , ’’ Kat hl een Mayne, head resident at Kin- solving Dormitory, said. One final factor in selecting a r e s i d e n c e hal l is t he movability of furniture. Fur­ niture that can be rearranged mU.swa flin t n o n Ko m a T T H T 1 0 PA lends itself to personalization Built-in furniture leaves no flexibility for individual desires and tastes. Powers suggests that “new t o be r e s i d e n t s n e e d aggressive enough to take to help t hei r own s te p s t h e m s e l v e s a d j u s t , ” no m atter which residence hall they choose. Austin Driving Course May Replace Fines Instead of paying a fine for a moving violation, a traffic offender can be allowed to take an approved defensive driving course, Municipal Court Judge Jerry Harris said Tuesday. The offender has a choice between pay­ ing the fine and having the offense on his record or taking any certified driving course and having no record of a citation against him, Harris said. A course offered by the American Automobile Association (AAA) has been used in Houston for the past three months under guidelines established by Texas House Bill 1907, which granted municipal judges authority to adopt a defensive driv­ ing program to replace traffic fines. However, municipal judges are still proceeding on a case-by-case basis in Austin, Harris said. “ The statute sets no standard on whether to let people take the course after each and every ticket,” Harris sa id .‘ It is really a vague and wide-open statute,^ so we are treating each case separately. “We allow an offender 90 days to pre­ sent proof of completion of an approved defensive driving course,” he added. The Houston course, a series of IO one- hour sessions with films, lectures and te sts, costs $10, G eorge G ustafson, general manager of the Texas Safety AQQAf*iat.ion S3 id. Persons toking the course are entitled to a IO per cent reduction in insurance premiums if they are covered by a com­ pany regulated by the Texas Insurance Commission, Gustafson said. Herpes Virus Cause Said Misunderstood there was a history of Herpes II at the site.” Duff criticized the news media for distorting the true story on Herpes II. “It has become the ‘in’ thing in publications to call herpes the new venereal disease,” he said. “The best thing to do is to get off the sexual im­ plications of the disease " By JUDY MORRISON H a v e you e v e r t r i e d brushing your teeth at 7 a.m. in unison with 15 other people? Would you like to meet your friends in a dormitory lounge that looks like a furniture showroom or would you prefer talking to friends in a room re m in is c e n t of g ra n n y ’s parlor? T hese a r e fa c to rs one should consider when choos­ ing a dormitory. The Univer­ sity’s residence halls range from the small and almost quaint Littlefield to the tower­ ing high-rise buildings of Jester megadorm. “The dormitory experience — the residence for many students for a year or two their college time, and the locale for most of their time and energies and activities can have definite effects on the resident and should be chosen carefully, writes Dr. Martin Heilweil in “ Environ­ ment and Behavior.” Perhaps the first decision to be made when choosing a dor­ mitory is whether to live in a high or low-density residence hall. High-density living can be a p o sitiv e o r n e g a tiv e e x ­ perience depending on the resident, says Mickie Powers, assistant director of student life at Jester. “ The p o s s i b i l i t i e s of anonymity are g reater at Jester, but the larger size can contribute to feelings of g r e a t e r p r i v a c y s i n c e everyone on the hall won t know what you’re doing,” she explained. a n d Although a resident may feel he is only one of 3,000, someone who is relatively in- f o r m s d e p e n d e n t friendships easily should do well at Jester, Powers added. “There is a wider variety of persons with whom to in­ teract, and many students c o n sid e r t hi s a posi t i ve aspect.” However, studies done in 1972 a t the University of Massachusetts at Amherst, Smith College and the Univer­ sity of Pennsylvania by Dr. L e o n a r d B i c k m a n , a n associate professor of social psychology, concluded that students in the higher-density d o rm ito ries rep o rted less trust, cooperativeness and t h e i r r e s p o n s i b i l i t y v in residence halls. Furthermore, students in the higher-density residences behaved in a less “ socially responsible m anner” toward other dorm residents than students in the lower-density dormitories. The h i g h - d e n s i t y d o r ­ mitories were evaluated as more impersonal, unfriendly and cold by subjects in the Bickman study. After selecting a dorm, one must choose either communi­ ty or connecting bath. t h e r e “ In community bath, the in­ teraction is m ore natural, a l t h o u g h i s n o t necessarily more interaction overall,” Powers said. She believes the community bath becomes “ more than a center of hygiene." Although a connecting bath may provide greater privacy, the two ends of the floor are not as likely to meet, Powers added. The option of “ special" floors is also a factor to con­ sider. Special floors now offered at Jester include 24- hour quiet, community in­ volvement, graduate students, fine a r t s , f r e s h me n e x­ perience, traditional women, coed, science and mobility- impaired. "The advantage of living on a ‘special’ floor is living with people with a common pur­ pose or interest,” Powers ex­ plained. It also can be helpful in a tutorial sense as well as i n t e l l e c t u a l e x p a n d i n g l e n d i n g h o r i z o n s emotional support, Diane Saxe, coordinator for Jester West, said. a n d A disadvantage she noted was the narrowing of perspec­ tives or developing "tunnel vision” through limited con­ tact with varied types of peo­ ple. Residence hall lounges and lobbies are important factors for social in dorms. Lobbies, vary from inter-action The genital virus Herpes II is causing more than cold sores and fever blisters, ac­ cording to Dr. Fratis L. Duff, director of the Texas Depart­ ment of Health Resources. Duff said Tuesday recent m isinform ation about the virus has led to instances of marital squabbling and suspi­ cion. “ Imagine a man who goes to his dermatologist and dis­ covers that he has Herpes II. If his wife has been reading the recent flurry of reports about the disease, she will im­ mediately suspect him of be­ ing unfaithful,” Duff said. “ E rroneous inform ation that transmission of this dis­ ease is due solely to sexual contact has resulted in many instances of marital discord and heartache.” Sexual contact is not the only way for the virus to s p re a d . W hile it can be through sexual transmitted contact, indirect there are methods to contract the virus. Sym ptom s will generally occur within one week after exposure to a person with an active infection. In women, small and painful blisters form around the vagina and soon break into open lesions. They can also occur in the anal area or on the cervix. In men. the sores develop on the penis or around the anus. Ad­ ditional symptoms in both men and women can include painful urination, generalized aching and fever. These symp­ toms can last two to six weeks before healing spontaneously. Dr Hal McCuistion, a local derm atologist, said herpes can be contracted by handling m o n e y , p u b lic u s in g restrooms or simply by shak­ ing hands with someone who is infected. McCuistion has treated 5- year-old children for the virus. “ I have even treated a nun for Herpes II,” he said. “Can you imagine what her Mother Superior would say if she knew ab out it a f te r reading all the misinforma­ tion about the sexual aspects of the disease?” McCuistion said he has seen many cases where he was cer­ tain the disease was not con­ tracted through any sexual contact. Duff and McCuistion also were concerned about misin­ formation concerning the con­ nection between Herpes II and cervical cancer. McCuistion said he has received a rash of calls from worried women who "have usually read some e rro n e o u s a r t i c l e a b o u t Herpes II.” Duff said he felt it was im­ portant for him, as the state’s chief health official, to make clear "there is no conclusive evidence that cervical cancer is a result of Herpes Simplex Type II infection." "Cervical cancer develops slowly over a long span of years. B efore the actu al development of cancer, abnor­ mal changes can be detected in the cervix with a Pap smear.” Duff recommends women have a Pap smear an­ nually to be safe. for the co n n ectio n between Herpes II and cer­ vical cancer, McCuistion said, "I don t recall ever seeing a case of malignancy where As Venetian glass Easter bunny pendant. 3 days. ; ■ . - j I c p y ■ I IS M S Ha (or ih>.m th* caw m«y ba) charmer, with a body of o^or-rtdj V enetian glass from th* I” *** Zn Murano. A fetching Easter gift. $ 1 6 .0 0 oho* account, or use o; f J S'NCf W L • HIGHLAND MALL (phone 4 6 4-48 6 1 I • 809 CONGRESS (phone 478 64961 Old, traditional gopher. New, improved Suzuki Go-fer. r is'ter. A fun-loving street-legal Suzuki ideal for scurrying around town. As rn G c ( ! i r ; i t ^ a * . t o m n a s f a r a s 1 0 1 miles on a gallon of gas. Reliable. Easy to control. Very lovable. T h e care and feed in g o f a Go-fer. A Suzuki Go-fer requires very ta l e attention The dependable two-stroke. 98cc engine has a tiny appetite. A nd he two-gallon gas tank stores enough fuel to take it a long way between ■ meals. All the Go-fer needs is a little corner of the garage. O r any dry, out o the way spot. Important: To make your Go-fer really happy, take it out tor a romp at least once a day. ' , T h e route o f th e Go-fer. :arrymg books, sandwiches, purse, swimsuit, etc. Free with every Go-fer sold before 5/1/76 Forget your troubles. Get a Suiuki Go-fer. $ . ka i ear « r o o s t e d retail pr.ee e xclu d in g dealer p r e p p ie state.an d taxes D& L Motorcycles, Inc. 7535 North Lamar, Austin I campus news In brief Python Attack Reptile keeper Stephen Mc­ Ewen struggles for his life after being enwrapped by a 15-foot python he w a s helping shed its skin in a reptile park near Sydney, Australia. With the aid of park keeper Erie Worrel, Mc­ Ewen disentangled himself and survived. J a n n o u n c e m e n t s com m unication COUNCIL is accepting a p p lic a tio n s fo r ca n d id a te s for positions on the council for the 1976- 77 academ ic year through A pril 23. Applications are available on the door of the council office, C o m ­ m unication Building A 4.124. DIVISION o r RECREATIONAL STOTTS will sponsor one-day canoe trips A pril 24 and 25. Cost is SS per person, which includes equipment, transportation and leaders. The division will also sponsor a weekend backpacking trip to the San G abriel R iver on A pril 24 and 25. The cost is S16 per person, in­ cluding equipment, transportation, leaders and most food. Signup for these trips is in Bellmont Hall 104. DEPARTMENT Of CHEMISTRY will sponsor two lectures by Sir Derek Barton, 1969 Nobel laureate in chemistry, Wednesday. The first, "In v e n tin g Useful R eactions," will be at 5 p.m. in W elch H a ll 15. Th e second, "C r is e s , " will be at 7:30 p.m. in Geology Building IOO. INTERNATIONAL PROGRAMS AND STUOtRS COMMITTEE is sponsoring an inter­ national predissertation fellowship com petition designed for m iddle level graduate students who can profit from a short period of inten­ sive research abroad. Application deadline is Friday. Fo r Information, contact Joyce Brewer, international Student and Faculty E xchange Of­ fice, H a rry Ransom Center 3.366, 471-4968. M CD IC Al C O U IG I A D M ISSIO N S H S T PREPARATION is the subject of a R A SS L course at noon Wednesday in Jester Center A332. TRST PREPARATION AND TBT TAKING are the subjects ot a R A S S L course at 3 p.m. Wednesday in Jester Center A332. STUDENT HEALTH CENTER will sponsor the second annual health fair from IO a.m. to 4 p.m. W ednesday in the lob­ by of the Academ ic Center. There will be 38 booths providing health in­ formation on a large range of topics. TIXAS UNION IDEAS AND ISSUES COMMITTEE will sponsor a public lecture by Ronald Reagan, form er governor of California and candidate for the Republican presidential nomination, at 9:30 a.m. W ednesday in L B J Auditorium . A dm ission is free. TEXAS UNION IDEAS ANO ISSUES COMMITTEE will sponsor a sandwich sem inar on " F a m ily Financial P ro b le m s" at noon W ednesday in the Dobie Center Conference Room, and, In conjunc­ tion w ith Stud ent G o v e rn m e n t W o m e n 's A f f a ir s C om m ittee, a sem inar with Pat Kruppa discussing the problem s of history and w om en's place in it, at noon W ednesday in the recreation room of Carofhers D o r­ mitory. There will also be a sem inar on "H o w To Plan a W e d d in g" at 8 p.m. W ednesday In the Highlands Room of C a stilia n Dorm itory TIXAS UNION MUSICAL EVENTS COMMITTEE will sponsor a panel discussion on "T h e Austin Jazz Sce n e " at noon W ednesday in the Dobie Room , fourth floor of the A cadem ic Canter. TEXAS UNION RECEEATION COMMITTEE will sponsor a Pong tournament from 4 to 6 p.m. W ednesday in the Texas Tavern. Sign up in the Texas Union P ro gra m Office. TEXAS UNION THEATRE COMAAITTB! will sponsor a. film discussion with Pen­ ny M a rc u s and Robert Hill from 3 to 4 p.m. W ednesday in the T e xas Tavern, and the film "In d is c re e t " at 7 and 9 p.m. W ednesday in Jester Center Auditorium . A dm ission to the m ovie is Si with U T ID, SI.50 for others. UNION OF GRADUATE STUDENT WORKERS will sponsor a talk on " U T and In Higher E d u ca tio n " af Trends Drinking Extension Denied for Tavern U n i v e r s i t y P r e s id e n t Lorene Rogers, without dis­ closing her reasons in a letter received by the Union Board Monday, has refused to extend the drinking hours of mixed drinks in the Texas Tavern. Rogers vetoed the minutes of an April I Union Board meeting which included the for extending su ggestion drink in g hours of m ixed drinks from l l a m. Monday through Friday until closing time, which is midnight Sun­ day through Thursday and 2 a m. Friday and Saturday. C u rren tly , the T avern serves mixed drinks Monday through Friday from 5 p.m. until midnight and beer and wine from l l a.m. until mid­ night. n o o n W e d n e s d a y t h e Congregational Church, 407 W. 23rd St. a1 WOMENS’ RESIDENCE HAUS STUDENT G O V E R N M E N T w ill s p o n s o r a ballroom dance lesson at 8:15 p m. W ednesday in the recreation room of Carofhers Dormitory. YOUNG UBERT ARI AN AIDANCE will sponsor a talk by E d Carofhers on "H o w could people survive without govern­ ment c h a rit y ? " at 7 p.m. Thursday in P a rlin Hall 101. M8CTINGS C H IC A N O S I N T E R I S A O O S EN COMUNICACIONRS will meet at 5 p.m. W e d n e s d a y in C o m m u n ic a t io n B u ild in g A5.202B to a s s e s ? the results of the media conference and plan for the rest of the semester. DIVISION OF GENERAL AND COMFARATIVE STUDIES COUNCIL will meet at 4 p.m. T hursday in the Plan ll conference room, first floor of the West M all O f­ fice Building, to elect officers and discu ss changes in the constitution and council goals. OEAOUATR STUDENTS meet at noon this a n d e v e r y W e d n e s d a y in the Catholic Student Center for an infor­ mal lunch and discussion. N A T I O N A L HEALTH C H I C A N O ORGANIZATION will meet at 7 p m. Th ursday in Jester Center A215A to elect officers and discuss the N C H O E a s t A u stin C om m u nity Service Proje ct with Dr. Santos Reyes, director of the Center for M exican- American Studies. •hansom WRITERS will meat at 3 p.m. Wednesday in Calhoun Hall 419 to read and discuss original writings. Pl SIGMA ALPHA (GOVERNMENT HONORS society) will m aet at 4 p.m. T h u rs­ day in Burdine Hall 136 to elect new Pl MU EPSILON (MATH HONOR SOO ETY) will meet at 4:30 p.m. T h u rsd a y In Robert Lee M oore Hall 5.104 to hear student speakers and alae! new of­ ficers. UNIVERSITY UNDERWATER SOCIETY will meet et 8 p m. T hursday in Robert Lee M o o re Hall 4.102 to view a m ovie on oil rig diving, "T h e Steel Reefs, and slides of the recent Gulf dive. COLLOQUIA department o f physics Will hold a collo­ q uium w ith Pro f. J.AA. Z lm a n , F R S , U n iv e r s it y of B r is t o l, England, al 4 p.m. W ednesday In Robert Lee M oore Hall 4.102. Zim an " R e l i a b l e w il l I s S c ie n c e To Be K n o w le d g e : B e lie ve d ?" t a l k a b o u t SEMINARS INSTITUTE OF HUMAN DEVELOPMENT will hold an interdisciplinary sem inar from 3 to 5 p.m. W ednesday In G r a d u a t e S c h o o l of B u s i n e s s Building 2.116. The speaker will be Dr A rnold Buss, talking on "T h e D evelopm ental A sp ects of Self­ consciousness." — UFI Telephoto Brackenridge Tenant Alleges Apartment Wiring Unsafe J T . . U . P - , DARDEN AZ By MICHAEL CARDENAZ Substandard wiring, unsafe electrical connections and the lack of independent grou n din g are e le c tr ic a l s a fe ty p ro b lem s fa ced by r e s id e n ts of Brackenridge Apartments, Thomas Shelton, vice-president of the Universi­ ty Apartments Tenants Association (UATA), said Tuesday. Shelton and Fred Marshall, UATA president, met last Friday with Dr. Robert Cooke, director of housing and food, and associate director Nevada Blackburn to voice their complaints. Blackburn said Tuesday the matter would be looked into and checked with the University safety office. A Friday morning meeting between morning meeting between Cooke, Shelton and two people from the safety office has been arranged. Cooke, Shelton, a graduate m echanical engineering student, examined the light fixture on his porch last week, and found it contained 14-gauge wire which he alleged was a violation of the national electrical code and a safety hazard. The wiring was installed in Ju­ ly, 1974. Blackburn said the assistant director of property and maintenance is check­ ing the wiring and will make a report to Cooke, probably by Friday’s meeting. “At the present time, no wire is being bought or installed that does not meet national electrical code standards,” nationalI electrical c she added. Marshall told the Texan neither the D eep E ddy A p a rtm en ts nor the Brackenridge Apartments had indepen­ dent grounding since they were built before electrical codes were in effect. Current codes do not have to be en­ forced retroactively. Independent groundings have a half­ moon hole in the socket which is the built-in ground. Non-independent grounding requires large appliances, such as refrigerators, to be grounded to a cold water pipe. This increases the chance of getting an electrical shock, Marshall said. Special WEEK-END Offer W ednesday-Saturday SKIRTS Regularly $17.00 Easy Cera Featherweight Polyester Gaberdine Button Fronts Beck Wraps Five Beautiful Colors Biset 6-13 6.99 Shoe Shop W a make and repair boots sheas baits laathar SHEEP SKIN RUGS $ - #( „----- i s Natural I laautiful Colors ★SADDLES ★ ENGLISH - WESTERN goods Capitol Saddlery Austin, Texas 478-9309 1614 Lavaca STEVE -iiieiifte of the Peace If the J.P. Court is the people's court, a, Justice of the Peace should be in­ volved in the community. STEVE RUSSELL: • W a s a founder of Middle Earth Drug Crisis Center o Did legal and organizing work for the United Farm Workers in Austin and in the Rio Grande Valley o Founded the Committee to Oppose Racism and Apartheid w as active with the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee Vietnam Veterans Against the War. o Worked as a cooperating attorney with the ACLU. That's why the following community groups endorse Stevel Russell for Justice of the Peace, Precinct 5: T R A V IS C O U N T Y D E M O C R A T IC W O M E N C A P IT O L CITY Y O U N G D E M O C R A T S A U S T IN B U IL D IN G T R A D E S C O U N C IL A U S T IN A F L-C IO L A B O R C O U N C IL A U S T IN C IT IZ E N S FOR C R I M I N A L J U S T IC E R E F O R M UT Y O U N G D E M O C R A T S S T U D E N T A C T IO N C O M M IT T E E N O R T H E A S T A U S T IN D E M O C R A T S C O A L IT IO N FOR P R O G R E S S I V E G O V E R N M E N T B L A C K V O T E R S A G A I N S T P A T E R N A L I S M BECAUSE HE IS THE MOST QUALIFIED CANDIDATE AND THEY BELIEVE HIM. eee Students for Steve Russell, Lyn Breeland, Treasurer P a g e IO W e d n e s d a y , A p r i l 14, 1976 THE DAILY TEXAN Start w ith a skirt — and g o places! 2322 Guadalupe JOE KOEN & SON Since 1888 Jewelers 'Where A u s t in it e s Shop with Confidence 611 Congress Ave. Nonheroes Mall People don’t realize it, but some of the music they’re hearing today is making their minds shallow. Most of the rock music you hear is based on two chords.. It doesn’t give your whole body a chance to react to beauty.’ Rahsaan Roland Kirk (the 5,000 lb. m an) THE WARNER BROS. $ 4 ) Q Q JAZZ SERIES J * * PER DISC 6.98 LIST NOW ON SALE Dh M Santera T attle OH Includes Butterfat Black L ^ Funky Banana , The Whispers* /A GEORGE ROMON B R E E Z I N Includes Thn Moscpjerode Six lo Four/AHrmohon/ Lady RAHSAAN ROLAND MRN TNE RETURN OF TNE 5,0001b. MAN Georgia Brava Laving You Giant Steps \ 1 J C E COLI HANK ETERNITY r t K i k - i • 1...I H i n u i l t h ,F S .'| K --ri» M i n i m } ! W a r s h ip \ W L * n t u ' Rtf MARTINO/SIARBNGHT [VM O NEWMAN Mr FATHEAD Includes O e n c e W ith M o S n * ! £boM.m IU>veMu‘.*. MIROSL AV VITOUS m a g i c a l s h e p h e r d " Includes Fbi/Eye?/Metered/Okie Macaw WHOLE-BODY MUSIC FROM WARNER BROS. T H E S A L E N E V E R S T O P S ^ V T E RECORD TOWN UPPER LEVEL DOBIE MALL (NO. 38) 2021 GUADALUPE 478-6119 A O P E N s r i ? TU J a i M O N . Thru SAT. _ _ — BawkAmericabh mammam m S Z ( S t O FREE P A R K IN G IN THE C O V E R E D DO BIE G A R A G E DO BIE G A R A G E Horns, Trojans Split Doubleheader Reichenbach Knocks in W inning Runs in Opener By U N LO FLEY Texan Staff Writer The Texas Longhorns and the Southern Cal Tro­ jans divided a doubleheader Tuesday night at Disch-Falk Field, Texas winning the first game, 4- 2, and losing the nightcap, 4-0. Texas’ twilight victory came on the arm of Don Kainer with hitting help from slump-ridden Mickey Reichenbach and a mental error by USO pitcher Charles Phillips. Kainer and Phillips each started shakily, Kainer giving up three hits and two runs in the first inning while Phillips yielded two hits and a single run. But after the first frame the two pitchers dominated play in the rest of the seven inning af­ fair. Kainer was to give up but one more hit and Phillips, while handing out five more safeties, had a great deal to do with Texas stranding seven more men in the remaining sixth innings. Except for one inning, the two hurlers contained the hitters completely and, in the end, Phillips downfall was his own doing. Longhorn leftfielder Johnny Olvera was hit by a pitch to lead off the fifth inning and moved to se­ cond when third baseman Joe Ayers walked right behind him. Centerfielder Charlie Proske follow­ ed with an attempted bunt single down the third base line, but by the time Phillips fielded the bunt and threw to third, Olvera was sliding in and the bases were full. i u t ! _________ a m a A n i n r A / i a a / 1 . ed to strike out rightfielder Karl Pagel and designated hitter Wendell Hibbett. But with first baseman Reichenbach at the plate, Olvera faked a dash from third base and drew Phillips into a balk in the most hotly disputed call of the twinbill. “ He jerked his leg while he was standing on the rubber,” said Umpire Jon Bible. “ That’s a balk, no doubt about it.” USC Coach Rod Dedeaux was not so certain: "W e teach our pitchers that when that runner takes off like the Texas runner did they should just step back off the rubber. That’s what Phillips did, and I don’t believe it’s a balk.” But Texas Coach Cliff Gustafson felt that from his own particular vantage point the call was “unquestionably” correct. Phillips then turned to Reichenbach, who at the time hadn’t had a hit in more than 20 times to the plate. Reichenbach proceeded to drive a sharp single to right-center scoring two more runs, and that was the game. At the end of the inning, Bible shortened the game by a couple of innings for USC Asst. Coach Justin Dedeaux, who sufficiently warned, con­ tinued to dispute the call. Justin Dedeaux is the oldest son of the USC mentor. In the nightcap, Trojan freshman Rodney Box- berger stopped the Texas batters on two hits and benefited from four Longhorn errors on the path to his 4-0 victory. Boxberger got all the help he needed in the first inning when Texas pitcher Boh Houck walked two men with one out and another reached first on a Reichenbach error. All three runners scored when third baseman Bob Hertel’s routine line drive to leftfield was misjudged by Olvera, ending up as a double. Heuck did an excellent job, yielding but one more hit, but the Texas batters ended up with just three in the game. The freshman’s worst inning outside the first was the seventh, when he walked centerfielder Bob Mitchell, sent him to third with a bad pickoff throw and let him score on a wild pitch. “ Heuck pitched well enough to win,” said Gustafson, “but our fielding was poor and our hit­ ting was just as bad.” Heuck could think only of what might have been: “It would have been nice to score some runs.” Texas hitters never really figured Boxberger out, although seven walks on the Trojan freshman’s part helped the Longhorns leave seven men stranded. , „ . Boxberger finally loaded the bases in the ninth on a pair of walks and a Garry Pyka single before Ernie Mauritson relieved and got Ayers and Proske to strike out. For Gustafson, whose Longhorns play Houston in a crucial Southwest Conference series this weekend, the loss was not heart-breaking. “ It just bothers me that our top four RBI men had about three hits among them in this series.” Dedeaux and Phillips dispute Bible's balk call. Texan Staff Photo by lorry Kohroord Longhorn Golfers To Face Top College Competition who won medalist honors in the MWI, will be one of several All-Americas in ac­ tion Wednesday. All-America Keith Fergus will lead the Houston team into the tourney, and Phil last y e a r’s AAI Hancock, runnerup, heads the team from Florida. Texas will send All-America senior Randy Simmons and sophomore Lance Ten Broeck. Simmons finished seventh in the NCAA championships last year, and Ten Broeck is the the defending champion SWC, the only freshman ever to hold that honor. in Texas also will enter senior Tim Wilson, who was the runnerup in last year’s SWC championships, senior Jim junior J a mi n Mason and Swantner. Swantner has been a sur­ prise for the Horns this year, holding the best stroke per round average on the team at 71.2. He won his first tournament April 4 at the Woodland Hills in I n t e r c o l l e g i a t e Nacogdoches. Simmons February, this year, Houston dominated play by trouncing everyone. Texas finished se­ cond, 18 strokes back of the Cougars. Houston has defeated Texas on two other occasions this s e m e s t e r , and OSU e m ­ barrassed the Horns on their home course March 28 by win­ the M orris Williams ning Intercollegiate. OSU’S 18-STROKE victory over Texas marked the first time in four years that an out­ sider has won that event. The Cowboys’ Lindy Miller, Coma to IDAHO for an unforgettable peck trip by horseback thru the Idaho Wilderness Ares. Enjoy the majestic beauty, clean air, and pure water of the rugged Rocky Mountains. Unspoiled by civilization, roads or motorized vehicles. W a ara offering spacial environmental 6 day pack trips every Monday starting May 31 thru August for $196.00 par par­ son plus 3% sales tax. W a supply horses, meals, tents, guides — everything except your sleeping bag and personal gear. Coma alone or form your own group. Reservations should be made now. Cell or write PECK'S PONDEROSA P.O. Bai 57 licensed S t Bended C h a lk , Id. $3226 (308) 879-2303 THE DAILY TEXAN sports entertainment features Bobcats Top Horns In Women's Track Abernathy placed second with a 2:16.5, while Sue Davis came in third with a time of 2:31.7. Davis cam e right back to capture first in the 400- meter hurdles in 68.5. Then little Julia Campbell rolled to a first place finish in the two-mile in 13.37. Texas’ Bing ran a 13.41 and Romero ran a 13.47 in the two-mile run. IN THE TWO-MILE relay, Texas won the event with a time of 10.54. The Longhorns then placed second in the one- mile relay with a time of 4:05. Southwest Texas dominated the 440-yard relay with a first and second place finish. The Bobcats also won first and se­ cond in the javelin with the best throw being 94-11. Texas’ Louise Marshall came in third with a throw of 91-10. In the long jump, Carothers reached 13-8 for a third place finish. Clare Edwards of Tex­ as won the pentathlon easily, while Denise Krawczyk threw the discus 77-3 and Marshall 75-0. TLC jumped 4-8 to win the high jump event._________ The depth of Southwest Tex­ as State University proved too strong for the Texas women’s track team as the Bobcats captured first place at the Texas Association of Inter­ collegiate Athletes for Women Zone Championship M eet T u e s d a y a f t e r n o o n a t Memorial Stadium. The Longhorns came in se­ cond place with 56 points, while the Texas Lutheran College track team came in third place with 42 points. SWT totaled 84 points, qualify­ ing 23 runners for the state meet. Fifteen Texas and 12 TLC runners qualified for state. F ir s t, second and third place winners in each event advances to the TAI AW State meet in College Station next week. TEXAS DOMINATED the distance events as Celina Romero won the three-mile run in 26:59.9. Rebecca Bing of Texas cam e in second, and Julia Campbell placed third. Texas’ Carol Sheffield easi­ ly won the mile run in 5:15.2, while Bing came in fourth with a 5:55.3. In the 440-yard run, Debra Carothers came in fourth place with a time of 62.4. In the 880-yard run, Susan By JE R R Y BRIGGS Texan Staff Writer In an effort to save face among old nemeses, the Texas Longhorns will be out to prove they “can beat anybody” at the 22nd Annual All-America Intercollegiate Golf Tourna­ ment in Houston Wednesday. To do that, they will have to beat some of the best teams in in c lu d in g th e c o u n t r y , regional rivals Houston and Oklahoma State, in the three- day event. Although Texas has failed in 1976 to defeat the Cougars or the Cowboys, Longhorn Coach George Hannon still contends his team can play with anybody in the nation, with a good chance of winning. “ All three (Texas, OSU and Houston) are good teams. Any of those team s can beat anybody else on a given day,’’ the coach said. IN ADDITION to OSU and Houston, T exas will face S o u th eastern C on feren ce heavyweights Alabama, LSU and Florida, plus all seven Southwest Conference schools in a 24-team field. Hannon a ck n o w le d g e s Houston will be the favorite because the tourney is being played on the Cougars’ home course, the Atascosita Coun­ try Club. “ Playing on their home course has got to give them the advantage. But we’ve played the course pretty much also,” he pointed out. The last time Texas played in e a r l y a t A t a s c o s i t a , r Spring/Summer Special Volkswagen— Toyota— Datsun Domestic Cars I 0 % off Total Repair Bill To All IIT Students, Faculty A Employees with proper ID Bring This Coupon - Good A n y South Side Motors 2617 South l* t St. Sat. 8 - 1 :0 0 Mon.-Fri. 7 :3 0 to 6 4 4 4 - 4 5 2 9 Open A ll Day Friday, April 16 Join Your University Credit Union Now Horns' Davis enroute to first in 400-m eter hurdles. — Texan Staff Photo by larry Kolvoord Astros Take Second Straight; Ranger's Barr Four-Hits A's HOUSTON (U PI) - Back to back run-scoring singles by light-hitting Skip Jutze and Roger Metzger in the seventh inning Tuesday night lifted the Houston Astros to a 2-1 vic­ tory over the San Francisco Giants. The Astros’ Bob Watson led off the seventh with a single, moved to second on catcher Mike Sadek’s passed ball and took third on a long fly. After a conference on the mound, Giants’ loser John Montefusco walked Greg Cross, and Jutze and Metzger followed with sharp singles. ★ * ★ (U P I ) ARLINGTON - Southpaw Steve B a rr, a c ­ quired by Texas in the trade that sent Ferguson Jenkins to limited Oakland to Boston, four hits Tuesday night, pitching the Rangers a 3-1 vic­ SKEEBAU PRIZES DISCONTINUED Redeem coupons now I tory over the A’s. B arr did not surrender a hit until the sixth, and Oakland’s only score came on a solo homer by Sal Bando in the seventh. f ' . Texas Union Musical Events Committee Panel Discussion THE AUSTIN JAZZ SCENE Featuring Glen Daum. conductor of the UT Jazz Ensemble; end M ike M or decal of Fable Records/BBA Management end trombonist for Starcrost Le Fun 2200 Guadalupe Today, 12 noon to I p.m. Dobio Room, 4th Floor, Academic Conter jUMIIHHHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUIII YOUR BEST TEQUILA BUY INCREDIBLY COMFORTABLE AND DURABLE Ioy ^ I /oa^cs WHOLE EARTH pro v isio n COMFANY £410 AAM ANTO NIO JST-AUSTIN ~4 7 fi-l5 7 T PARKING THURSDAY NIGHTS { SATURDAY PLENTY G O L D M E X I C O SILVER PH.*)* ^ t e q u i l a tlf U niversity CREDIT UNION R f S c * * VV. 30th at Cedar 4 7 6 -4 6 7 6 Coma by M F 9am -4pm Thurs. till 7pm • NCU* Wednesday, A pril 14, 1976 THE DAILY TEXAN Page ll Texas Football Recruits: 30 Healthy Freshman Prospects To Provide Depth By DAMOND BENNINGFIELD Texan Staff Writer “Speedy” is the best way to describe the 30 high school football recruits who will join the Longhorns next fall, Texas Coach Darrell Royal said. “This is one of the fastest groups of recruits we’ve had in a while,” he said. Johnny Jones, a halfback from Lam­ pasas, leads the way. Jones, a Class AAA all­ stater with Lampasas, also in th e o f f ­ ru n s tr a c k season,and this spring has set state records in the IOO- and 220-yard dashes, with times of 9.2 and 20.7 respectively. The . latter mark was only one- - tenth of a second behind the national high school record. Jones and 29 other recruits, • particularly running backs '-and quarterbacks, are becom- ; ing increasingly important • considering the flood of in­ standings AMERICAN LEAGUE By United Press International W I Pet. OC I .750 - New York....... 3 I .667 Vt Milwaukee...... 2 I .500 I Detroit ........ I Boston......... 2 2 .500 I Baltimore ...... 2 3 400 I '/i Cleveland....... 0 2 OOO 2 Watt I Pct. oa x-Chicago....... 2 Texas.......... I Oakland........ 3 Kansas City..... I Minnesota...... I California....... 0 X-Games behind based on 1st place team Twiday'c I Multi 0 .1000 — I M O - 2 600 '/ii I .500 I 3 . 250 2 4 OOO 3 Boston 7 Cleveland 4 Chicago 4 Minnesota I Milwaukee I Detroit 0 Texas 3 Oakland I Kansas City 7 California 4 New York 7 Baltimore I Wadnacdoy't On ma* (All times EST) Oakland (Blue 22-11) at Texas (Perry 18- 17), 8 :3 5 p.m. California (Tanana 16-9 ) at Kansas City (Leonard 15-7 ), 8:3 0 p.m. Chicago (Forster 3-3 or Kucek 0-0 ) at Minnesota (Decker 1-3 ), 2 :1 5 p.m. Cleveland (Bibby 7-1 5 ) at Boston (Jenkins 17-18), 3:0 0 p.m. (pnly games scheduled NATIONAL LEAGUE ♦ ♦ By United Press International I (West Coast game not included) * East VV I Pct. 0 8 Pittsburgh...... 3 0 1.000 — Chicago........ 3 I .750 'A ♦Jew York....... 2 2 .667 I '/ii Montreal ....... 1 ‘St. Louis........ I •Philadelphia Wax w Cincinnati ...... 4 Ban Francisco ... 2 Atlanta........ 2 Houston ........ 2 San Diego ...... I Los Angeles..... 0 2 .333 2 3 . 250 2 '/ii 0 2 OOO 2 'A I Pct. oa 0 I OOO — 2 500 2 2 500 2 3 400 2 '/a 2 333 2 '/ii 2 OOO 3 Ty— day*» (Multi Pittsburgh 14 St Louis 4 'Chicago 5 New York 4 ‘Cincinnati 6 Atlanta I Houston 2 San Francisco I San Diego at Los Angeles, night .(Only Games Scheduled) WednMdey i Oam — (All times EST) New York (Seaver 22-9 ) at Chicago (Bonham 13-15), 2 30 p.m. San Francisco (Montefusco 15-9 ) at Houston (Dierker 14-16), 8 :3 5 p.m. San Diego (Jones 20-12) at Los Angeles (Sutton 16-13), 10:30 p.m. Philadelphia (Peed 13-13) at Montreal (Rogers 11-12,) 2 :15 p.m. I I I I I 3I I line days dollar The Daily I Texan I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I U nclassifieds Com e by TSP Bldg. Room 3.200 and place your Unclassified A d students only prepaid no refunds 25th & W hitis ll I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I ju ries the Longhorns have sustained in spring training. The top two fullbacks and two of the three halfbacks with substantial playing time last year have missed all or part of the spring practices. The in­ consistency of the Texas quarterbacks also has placed th e r e c r u i t s in a m o re challenging position. JONES, HOWEVER, is but one m em ber of the swift group Longhorn coaches sign­ ed in February. “ Lynn Miles (from Irving Nimitz) runs the IOO in 9.7, and Derrick Hatchett (San Antonio Jay) has a 47.1 in the 440,” Royal said. “Jon Aune, a q u a rte rb a c k from D allas, runs the hundred in 10-flat. That’s not a great track time, but it’s a darn good football tim e.” Aune, b ro th e r of Texas golfer Warren, is a quarter­ back, while the rest of the group are running backs. Jones, who rushed for a total of 1,338 yards last season while averaging 11.6 yards per c a rry , will be joined by another all-state back, John­ nie Johnson from La Grange. Johnson rushed for 1,347 yards while leading La Grange to the Class AA state cham ­ p io n sh ip and s c o re d 18 touchdowns. D efensively, Johnson picked off in­ terceptions. but Texas defen­ s i v e c o o r d i n a t o r Mi k e Campbell said Johnson will probably stay with the offense this fall. l l “ HE IS AN exceptional run­ ning back, who had a real fine year. He has a lot of ability,” Campbell said. Both Jones and Johnson, in addition to making the all- state teams, were named to the Dallas Times Herald blue- chip list. The blue-chippers were elected by seven of the n Soap Creek Saloon GREEZY WHEELS T O NIGHT I Tequila Night - still 40' a shot Com ing Thursday-Saturday STEAM HEAT 7 0 7 B e e C o v e s R « L 3 2 7 - 9 0 1 6 A _X_ ★ S H IN E R N IT E^ 4 PM TO M ID N ITE 75' PITCHERS Ft— M u sk by Jack Sh Blues Band Taco Flats S213 N. Lamar RESTAURANT A GARDEN StgleDining in an Old ‘Rustic House* Wednesday-Thursday 6pm till SUNSET SUPPER Prices range from $2.75 to $3.50 Lone Star Beer - 25' a can 282-2017 3 miles south of Austin on IH-35 at the Slaughter Creek Overpass What could you do in a Warehouse??? T e ll us in 25 w o rd s o r less an d w in a Free dinner for four • T H I OLI) Y o u r own im a g in a tio n is the key to this F U N con test' Example: T o n y B enn e tt left his heart "IN A W A R E H O U S E " Weekly winners1 No purchase necessary A nyone can enter Winners selected on originality. H ere’s what I could do in a warehouse: (Use separate sheet if necessary) Names Zip Code Mail or bring in _ A ddress__ Phone 117 West 4th Street (Between C ongress & Colorado) 476-4059 Dallas, Houston, Austin & O m aha Jones ...9.2 »p««d. Martignoni ...top linobackor. Johnson ...goos both ways. McBath ...Wishbone OB. on m o v i n g h i m linebacker have to wait until fall. f r o m to fullback will Three new quarterbacks will be fighting for a backup p o s i t i o n : Au n e , D a l l a s Hillcrest; Mark McBath, Cor­ pus Christi King; and Richard Slaydon, Bridge City. AUNE, THE biggest of the three, ran the most balanced attack, rushing for 737 yards while passing for 792. McBath had two years of experience running the Wishbone offense and rushed for 984 yards last the season. Slaydon was leading rusher of the three, picking up 1,107 yards and 15 touchdowns. Defensively for Texas, two linebackers will be joining Martignoni: Ron Bones from Pueblo, Colo., and Lance T a y l o r f r o m E l P a s o Coronado. Taylor, 6-2, 215, was a blue-chipper and all­ stater for Coronado and made 101 unassisted tackles. “ I ’ve never seen Lance play,” Campbell said, “ but from what everybody says, he eight Southwest Conference coaches. Only Royal refused to participate in the voting. “I f s not fair to somebody else to single out players as the best,” Royal said. “The other players would think we had made up our minds about who we’re going to play, and they wouldn’t see any use in even trying.” “ Right now they’re all still suspects,” he added. Suspects a t the running back positions with Jones and Johnson a re M iles, Mike Lockett, Jim m y Johnson and Alvin Cartwright, a 6-2, 210- pound fullback from Conroe. CARTWRIGHT, a Class AAA all-stater, rushed for 1,- 470 yards with a 6.5 average for Conroe, and offensive backfield coach Don Breaux said he has good potential. “ H e’s a bullish r u n n e r , ” Breaux said. “ He doesn’t have Campbell’s breakaway speed, but very few runners do.” M a r k M a r t i g n o n i , a linebacker from Kenedy, may al so be gi ven a shot a t ful l back, Campbe l l said. “ We’ve been looking for a backup for Earl, and Mark might be able to give Boyd Gray some competition for that job.” Breaux said Mar­ the size and tignoni has quickness they are looking for in a fullback, but any decision SKYLINE m m CAS Tonite Longneck Nm* IMT 1-9 pm Music by THE COUNTRY EDITION H IM N. lomor IM-MIS! for old gold high school rings, graduation rings etc. CHARLES LEUTWYLER J E W E L E R S S E L F -S T O R A G E U N IT S The Storage Stall 1710 S. Lamar 441-2343 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiitiitiiimiiiiiiiiiii NEW BEGINNERS CLASS SELF DEFENSE I TAE KWON DO f I Limited to IO Members I FOR APPOINTMENT C A U I 4 7 8 - 1 9 6 6 I KOREAN TAE KWON OO INSTITUTE = 4 0 4 W. 3 0 th St. I iiiiiiiiiiiHHiiiiiiiiimiimiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiifl Tonight JOHNNY RODRIGUEZ & BALCONES FAULT Thurt.-Sat. Pavlov's Dog Coming: 23-24 Journey 29th Rusty Weir 30-1 st Doug Kershaw S 2 i ON’ W EDNESDAY All Day. EXH IBITIO N A N D SALE OF O R IG IN A L G RAPH IC ART. Ferdinand Roten G alle rie s, Inc. w ill be co­ sponsoring this exhibit and sale of a p ­ proximately 600 original prints. The public is invited to browse through this o u ts ta n d in g collection of o rig in a l graphics. Texas Union South room 110. Fine Arts Com ­ mittee. 12 noon to I p.m. Panel Discussion: THE AUSTIN JAZZ SCENE. A discussion featuring Glen Daum, conductor of the UT Jazz En sem ble, a n d M ik e M o rd e ca i of Fable Records/BBA M anagem ent, trombonist for Starcrost. Dobie Room, 4th floor Academic Center. Musical Events Com ­ mittee. 12 noon to I p.m. W om en's Sandwich Seminar Series: PAT KRUPPA. Pat Kruppa is a history professor with the Univer­ sity of Texas. She will address herself to the problems of history and w om en'* place in it. Carother's Recreation Issues Committee and the Student Room. Ideas and Government W om en's Affairs Committee. 12 noon. S a n d w ic h Se m in a r: F A M IL Y F IN A N C IA L PROBLEMS. Dr. Pat Fitzgerald from the Home Economics Department will give an informal lecture on family finan­ cial problems. Dome Center Conference Room. Ideas and Issues Committee. 3 to 4 p.m. Film Discussion: PENNY M A R C U S A N D ROBERT HILL. A discussion of French and Italian cinema by two professors teaching classes on the subjects. The Texas Tavern. Theatre Committee. 4 to 6 p.m. P O N G TOURNAM ENT. Sign-up in the Texas Union Program Office, 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. The Texas Tavern. Admission: 25'. Recreation Committee. 7 and 9 p.m. Film: INDISCREET. Cary Grant and Ingrid Bergman are together again in the Stanley Donen social comedy. Jester Auditorium. Admission: $1 with UT ID; $1.50 for members. Theatre Committee. 6 p.m. SE C O N D A N N U A L AU STIN JAZZ FESTIVAL. The se­ cond annual event featuring 47 Times Its O w n Weight, Nova, University of Texas Jazz Ensemble, The Point on W ednesday night; and The Electromagnets, The Jazzma- nian Devils and Carnival on Thursday night. Paramount Theatre. Admission: $2 with UT ID; $3 for general public. Musical Events Committee. Tickets on solo at Hogg Box Office. 8 p.m. Evening Seminar: H O W TO PLAN A W EDDING. M o l­ ly Sparger, Bridal Consultant for Joske's will present a presentation and answer questions about different aspects of planning a wedding. Castillian, Highlands Room, 11 th floor. Ideas and Issues Committee. must be some kind of fine linebacker.” CAMPBELL SAID he had never seen the three defensive backs coming to Texas next fall e i t her , but Fr e d d i e Bradshaw, Ricky Churchman and Jim m y Thompson are “ supposed to be real fine players.” The Longhorns did not get many linemen, Campbell said, but the ones they did get were “ top quality.” “ We got a real good defen­ sive end, Henry Williams, but we may look at him as atight end,” Campbell explained, “ Wesley Hubert (a blue-chip, all-state center from South Houston), is another good one. From what everybody says, he must be quite a football player.” ‘Quite a football player” or not, Hubert and the rest of the freshman class will have a hard time breaking into the starting lineup at Texas. “ A freshman can help the d e p t h of y o u r t e a m , ” Campbell said, “ but it would be hard for one to start, ex­ cept maybe for a great run­ ning back. I just don’t see a in and f reshman com ing beating out somebody with two or three years of work at a position.” Still, freshmen have started in the past (Earl and Tim Campbell are two of the best examples), and this year’s crop certainly has the poten­ tial to edge out the more ex­ perienced players. As Royal put it, “ They all look great on paper.” Italian F ood & D rink L u n c h o r d in n e r it’s a n ic e a p la c e 16th & Guadalupe 476-7202 M EC H A Third World Film Series LUCIA April 14th 7:30 p.m. AC Auditorium Sponsored by Mexican-American Studies Center Coordinated by M E C H A F O R S A L E M ix . - For Solo TOP C A SM YO® tPAPAt U vCAM SKI PPJ *• k ' 3 « 8 | : A , > t A * ’ I i t l l tup L*ct-«*% awe r— i Mr t o w * ow* tee* rn bas in urn ^ ■ -J— BM CO M A L S T i l f r * a *a I-" v . r . r ># i . * OMO*'-**#-* V S * * * - • J ■ s r ’ B o a * .* * ; , VOV* T H E ES' A B L I S H M E LABOE EFF IC 'ENC ut* » plus e *400 AVE B *r*L* *5 S'Oi SMU r% ti# .*<>• TS tot/< PPM Cos* *##©* Abp 44 T H E D A I L Y r. • ,ha? 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FEATURES —I JO— —3J0— - 5 :3 0 - —7 JO— —f JO— I Iii nill . 11 It j f -I ti V r i l l 1 >i i in,ii BILLY JACK y COLUMBIA n C T V U S ant BA STA * NCT U H S fo ts e r* "ROBIN AND MARIAN" Mfc. 0 ^ a RICHARD LESTER rn* P G I A MAY ST A B *-B K M ASO S H iF M fB P rmtww_____________f A CRES OF FREE LIGHTED PA RKIN G SCREENS rati hours m dom gouge OOM MALI 477 1124 ■ WINNER OF 4 ACADEMY AWARDS G E N E R A L C I N E M A T H E A T R E S | ALL C IN E M A S - EVERY D AY ’TIL 1 :3 0 P .M .-$ 1 .2 5 j TODAYI 12:00.2:30-5:00 7:34-1000 f a t L TODAYI 1:10-3:20-5:30 7:40-1:50 C A P IT A L . P L A Z A 452-7646 • IH 35 NORTH “All THE ■ ■ REDFORD HOFFMAN* I I PRESIDENT’S MEN’ I NO P A S S E S * * . w i - v .- .Q h i g h l a n d m a l i . 451-7326 • IH 35 AT KOENIG IN. ALFRED HITCHCOCK'S Buffier PLOT KAREN BLACK BRUCE DERN BARBARA HARRIS WILLIAM L£\ANE A U N IV E R S A L PICTURE H IG H L A N D M A L L 491-7326 - IH 39 AT KOENIG IN . Ends Thursday! 12:1 $-2:35-4:55 7:20-4:45 They had more than love- they had jun. © A B H a n d _____ l € M E A F D p ijy r d b y IAM ES W K A IN oral III I t L A Y » * C H SEE IT T O D A Y I a HA H IG H L A N D M A L L 451-7326 • IH35 AT KOENIG IN . ADULT : MO V IM I 'ZZ t m f A lf A Y I ZONCA ,n On every street in every city I I nobody who dreams oi being country *^ere s a » — l l somebody. H e ’s a lonely 8 forgotten man desperate to prove that he’s alive. CO LUM BIA PIC TURES presents * ROBERT DENIRO : TAXI DRIVER 2 * . . l*uduiiK«i Serving by I IPW HrAy Bepill WIERDAYS AT 4.-00-1:00-10 PM ADULTS $1.75 Hi 4:15 M A N N T HE A T RE S FOX TWIN 6 7 S 7 AIRPOST BtVO 1454 27111 •MCU IH I I IM* ULNdlMS O ur Is Net Limner Ami i f i; STAHLEY KABRICK ,‘IQ>N O HUU—‘MARJ£A WENSON* THE MOST BEAUTIFUL FILM EVER MADEI 2 00 6 :1 6 4 30 (BS FEATURES $1.25 111 660 — $1.50 attar MIDNIGHTERS: $1.25 (Fri. 6 Sot. - $1.50) MIDNIGHTER MIDNIGHTER "...A beautiful film It's what love is all about' STARTS TODAY EXCLUSIVE! T R A N S * T E X A S 22?4 Guadaluoe St — 477 1%4 DOORS OMN 1:45 $1.50 til 6:00 PIATURCS 2:00-5:35-5:10 6:454:20-9:55 A zany peek into the bedrooms of the future. T R A N S ★ T E X A S l I I J . U J I t l . . . ORI i n i l l T a l k l a l I. n . : . . . I4 A A H JC O m i 2200 Hancock Drive—453 6641 12:1 Ame FiATURiS 12:45-360 5:15-7:45-1060 REDUCED PRICES TIL SJO (MON.-SAT.) For the first tim e in 42 years, O N E film sw eeps ALL the rn M A J O R A C A D E M Y A W A R D S BEST PICTURE B EST A C TO R Jack Nicholson B E S T A C TR ESS Louise Fletcher BEST D IRECTO R Milos Forman B E S T S C R E E N P L A Y (ADAPTED FROM OTHER MATERIAL) Lawrence Hauben and Bo Goldman * & The story of a w o m an ’s outrage * and a w o m an ’s revenge. a b c ) I N T E R S T A T E ^ j VARSITY. 4 0 0 (.(J A O Al ' 'OE S ' R I f T INSERTS g t S J S T Richard Drayfvss H E L D OVER SUNSHINE S PARTY Tonight B rad B arto ll B a lla d e r* Thursday T . G o i n t y T h o r n t o n Happy Hour 2-7 Pitchers $1.50 Mugs 30* 2610 Guadalupa 472-0078 FEATURE THUS 6:00-6:30 DM tUUMI IMklf «OA» *44-00 RATURf TURKS 166-3:1S-SJ4-7:46-fJS Out of his violent past came America's greatest mask, FUMO IN AUSTIN ■ LEADBELLY I» *►*»»•««« »**!>#* DPIVE ins ' 8 3 6 - H O RIVE in s I HMM-2296j I C olor or in t* bv M ovialab HUS Mourning Boa )ines Electra HY E I M ^ n e o ' ^ i l/ . A T R IU K .Y \ V I DINO DE LAUREHTIIS Presents a FREDDIE FIELDS production L ip s tic k It is n 't always an invitation to a kiss. Introducing MARG AUX HEMINGWAY Starring CHRIS SARANDON PERRY KING and ANNE BANCROFT TECHNICOLOR “ A PARAMOUNT RELEASE r S ta rts F R ID A Y ! Page 14 Wednesday, April 14, 1976 THE DAILY TEXAxN i i O B A N A N A S Or: What does a used car salesman •ell in a world without cars? % C*ic X WK jf|^ r Tresthicti d ^ i ** «*# >3 rn s act TH GREAT ^ United Artists B A N A N A S Starring Philippe G A S IK * Anne LIBERT• Malisa LO N G O * Nanette CORREY • Yvonne OLECH and Jean PAREDES • Written and Directed by JEAN FRANCOIS DAVY • Produced by SND Contrechamp and Mont! Film • k ‘ I ll H i I \l H III III Ii '> I Zilker Hillside 'Showcase for Best Performing Arts' Porks, Recreation Booker Loughrey Details Summer Program Preparations By NICOLAS BUSSELL (Editor’s Note: Terry Loughrey works for the Parks and Recreation Department. He is in charge of booking and scheduling entertain­ ment for the department’s summer perfor­ mance series.) Loughrey. Tasting, tasting. Where’s the speaker? Texan. Here. Hot day. L. Yes. T. Too short a winter. Summer is going to be long. That’s why the Parks and Recreation Department puts on the summer concerts, right? L. Why do we do concerts? Do you want to know just about the concerts? Because we do a lot of other stuff too. T. Let’s talk about it all. L. Zilker Hillside began about 17 years ago. It was a showcase for anyone who wanted to perform. Two years ago we changed the philosophy of the Hillside. What we are trying to do is provide a per­ formance showcase for the best of the performing arts in Austin. Free. We’ve tried to better the quality of the summer musical. We’ve introduced S hakespeare in the P a rk . We’ll do “ Two Gentlemen of Verona” and “Julius Caesar” on alternating nights for two weeks. Six perfor­ mances of each. Monday off. T. When will that be? L. The middle of August. T. When does the “season” open? L. May 8 we’ll open with the Friends of Traditional Music. This is the first year we’ve run the Hillside in May. The demand is there and the talent is there. The thing about quality is impor­ tant. This year the symphony is also going to per­ form for two nights, a Saturday and Sunday even­ ing. T. Do the bands or different groups work free of charge? L. No. I f s confusing. Most of them .... The city through its service contracts supports cultural organizations and the various arts institutions, one of which is the symphony. And as part of their service to the city, I was able to work out with John Tabor an appearence out at Zilker. While the symphony doesn’t get money directly ... T. They are indeed supported by the city. L. Yes. I f s the same thing with the Civic Ballet which is supported by the city through the Parks and Recreation Department’s budget. They’ll do a weekend of two performances as will the Austin Ballet Theatre. T. Who finances the plays? L. We budget the production expenses but the ac­ tors don’t get paid. They are actually Park produced plays. Not an outside group. T. And the music concerts? L. We’re running three series. In May, a t Wooldridge Park we’ll have nonamplified music. I am booking chamber music groups and also a Dix­ ieland band. In June there will be rock concerts. There will be four a t Zilker Park Hillside on Mon­ day nights and at Northwest Park on Wednesday nights. T. Who, what bands? L. Last year we booked Greezy Wheels, Denim and Steam Heat. We are trying to get those groups back, but nothing is definite. We try to select the best bands and book ’em. T. Do the bands get paid? L. I audition and if a band I book is a member of the musicians union then they are eligible to get some m oney from tru s t fund. Otherwise, they play for free. the union T. Unless they belong to the trust fund. L. No. They don’t get paid unless they belong to the local musicians union. I f s not much. It’s minimum union scale. But the advantage to groups who play is substantial. We work closely with KNOW radio. They get a lot of promotion from it. In addition they get publicity through the city. I think the smallest crowd we had last summer at a concert was 1,500 and there were several with 3,000 people. Unless a band is very well established it isn’t often they get to play ■J,' $ R a , * 'The best of both worlds is a marriage between the public and private sec­ tors/ before that large a crowd. They dig it. It’s all a combination, a mix. I’ve got a publicity resource, a facility, the musicians union, KNOW and we put something together that benefits an audience, a band, KNOW gets a promotion vehicle for themselves, are able to satisfy FCC requirements for community involvement and Bill Peck at the musicians union is delighted because it is good use of the trust fund which he administers. Everybody benefits. T. How do you view government support of the arts? L. It’s essential. There’s been a swing and i f s on all levels. I f s the combination of municipal, state and federal. There is no way to get around it. The nature of the performing arts being what it is, you it. One can introduce can’t m ass produce economies of scale only to a point. But there is no way to preserve the product because as soon as you do, it stops being a performing a rt and becomes video art, or film art. Even music, when you put it on tape, the performance is lost. T. Financially it can’t support itself? L. It absolutely must have outside support. The best of both worlds is a m arriage between the - public and the private sector. I wouldn’t like to see the government support the arts to the sion of the private sector, but realistically there must be a significant contribution by government. The strongest cultural institutions a re well balanced. . T. Did you ever go to the programs in Central Park, the music and Shakespeare? L. Yes. And a lot of my view is colored by what Joseph Papp did. On the basis of one fundamental thing, he built his empire. Shakespeare in the Park. Free Shakepeare in the Park. That was where he started and what he created was a revolution. ’ T. That was during Lindsey’s administration in the days they called New York “Fun City.” L. Right. And Papp fought the political battles, too. He was under tremendous pressure every year when the budget came out to charge adm is­ sion. At least a small fee. When a push cam e to a shove, he said, “I ’ll close it down before I charge for it.” He believed that passionately in the premise of free admission for that type of a program. T. You do that here. L. We do. The cost per exposure to our program s for Austin citizens is very cheap when you draw 900 people to Shakespeare and 25,000 for concerts. Those are a lot of folks. Many of whom would*! t have the opportunity to see the symphony or a play, don’t want to go over to Municipal Auditorium, but they’ll go out to Zilker and eat ZZ fried chicken. T. Do you go to the programs? L. Oh yah. I run em. (laughs) I got to be there. And I get off to it. More and more, I find ifcysg$ becoming a supervisor. Which I guess is the logical evolution of things. You start putting deals together on a different level. And I ’m looking forward to that. ^ l If I’ve got a talent, that’s what it is. Being awe to sit down with people one and one and .... I had* friend who was a salesman. He used to say whenever you put a deal together, what you need to find out is the other person’s “moose call.” What his problems are. Then you try and solve bis problem. That sounds a nasty, calculating sort of a thing but in a positive way that is what I do. I work for a municipal bureaucracy! I was reah ly freaked out a couple of years ago when a ta g e M I’m going to work for Parks and Recreation. But it s been fantastic. Parks and Recreation is an in­ stitution. The University is an institution. All tits arts groups, in one form or another become in­ stitutions. You have to understand how they work structurally and how the are made to work by the individuals within them. That’s it. It ain t easy. But it ain’t really difficult either because there are people who are trying to put deals together that are good for them. I f s just being straight with them. Loughrey —Photo by Nicola* Rutted Noche de Salsa Unifies Cultures By JANIS PALMA Texan Staff Writer (Editor’i Note: The next Salsa Night is at ft:30 p.m. Wednesday in the Texas Tavern. Records will be played.) T here is no m istak e , this a western tavern. But in one corner there are seven men sitting at a table, all speaking Spanish. Sudden­ ly you realize the crowding of the tables; six, eight, twelve people at each, most speaking Spanish, a large number Portuguese and some English A sign at the e n tra n ce says “ Noche de Salsa ” A bang from the that the loudspeakers indicates event is about to start. Ricardo Ray (Cuban) and Bobby Cruz (Puerto Rican) get everybody’s attention. You hear the table to your left start following the rhythm with a pen and a glass pitcher that once contained beer. Next, a Merengue from the D om inican R ep u b lic. The ice breaks, and before you know it there is no more room on the dance floor. Of course, if you really want to dance — and after a while, who d o e s n ’t? — you w ill m anage somehow to make room for you and your partner. to Mexico From Argentina to Puerto Rico, every country has a representative on one of the most heterogeneous m eetings to take place on this campus. Salsa Night brings together blacks, whites, mul­ attos, chicanos and just about every conceivable color on this earth. A truly unique sight to catch on those nights is the Oriental students dan­ cing salsa like the best Latin dancer would. The general mood is that of “ let’s have a good tim e.’ On this m agic night you go through the Texas Tavern door and you enter Latin America. You feel a bond between all the people. The music and a desire to dance are all you need to enter this small fraction of Paradise-come-alive. The best part is that you don’t need to know how to dance salsa, or cumbia, or samba. Others who know will carry you away in their joy and excitement. Put your best foot forward ... and you end up dancing. THE ORIGINS OF salsa cannot be traced with a ruler, but modem salsa is a mixture of African beat and rhythms from most of the Latin American countries. The most ex­ perimental performers, like Eddie Palmieri, include jazz, classical and baroque music, and just about anything that will sound good (yes, rock too). Santana is one of the most well known links between salsa and rock. Stevie Wonder puts salsa and soul together beautifully. Ricardo Ray has in c o rp o ra te d one of Stravinski’s compositions into one of his own (with due credit of course). The result of all this is a completely new sound that anyone can enjoy and relate to in one way or another. On Salsa Night, people are so friendly they’ll start talking to you ju st because indiscrim inately, you’re standing or sitting next to them. It’s a good place to meet en­ joyable people. If one of them speaks Spanish and the other Por­ tuguese, no problem, they’ll use sign language and move right into that crazy space called dance floor. Enjoyment and laughter are univer­ sal. That is all you can see on a Salsa Night at the Tavern. This music has been receiving boosters lately at the University from three people in particular. One of them is John Wheat. A DJ at KUT-FM; he became a fan of salsa, and of all Latin American music, back in 1961 when he visited Colom­ bia for the first time, and heard the cumbias. Then there’s Pat Crum horn, sound engineer at KUT-FM; he fell in love with salsa about six years ago in Puerto Rico. PAT AND JOHN are in charge of selecting the music, as well as play­ ing it and commenting. The infor­ mality of the night is obvious when you hear John making jokes over the microphone while Pat changes the record. The Tavern doesn’t have a disco set-up with the two turntables, where one piece blends right into the other and you just keep on dancing. With all this practice P at says he can now take one record out and put the next one on in about eight seconds. Their only problem has been the enthusiasm of the audience. They bring in their favorite records and want to play them , disru pting whatever organization John and Pat may have had set up for the night. “ It s a miniature OAS, ” says John Wheat, “ that’s why I like to call roll for each country represented, at some point of the night. We all like to be recognized as Venezuelans, or Chileans, or Brazilians when we are away from our country. It makes people happy; it gives them a chance to shout and jump and let all that nationalism come out freely.” is Andrew Forsythe the per­ son responsible for bringing these salsa nights to Austin’s campus. A law student and committed fan of this type of music, he wondered why there was none here. He approached Hal Weiner, who is in charge of the Texas Tavern events, and Wheat, because he knew John played salsa on his daily radio program. The first s a l s a e x p e r i m e n t w a s l a s t December. Because of its smashing success, Noche de Salsa No. 2 came into being. Now it s on its way to becoming a fam iliar sight at the Tavern. There are plans for bringing more live bands to future events. “ I ’ve heard there are several conjuntos in Austin that play music from all over Latin America,” Forsythe says. FORSYTHE SAYS HE would like to see local talent promoted, so they would get the first offers. The response from the students has been overwhelming. From 9:30 until l l p.m. people wait patiently outside to get in. Fire regulations do not allow over a certain amount of people inside the Tavern at one time. Everyone, inside or outside, agreed that Salsa Night was one thing Austin needed. No doubt that music is a fool-proof way of bringing cultures close together. If you know that feeling of being at home, among friends, you know the feeling that travels from person to person in those nights. Who knows, you too may end up playing the “cencerro” (cow bell) while a reco rd of E ddie Palmieri is on your turntable, and the neighbors wonder “what in the world is that music?” 4 / vtk- A live Salsa Night -Photo by Lynn* Mom!na ABC Drops Crime for Comedy A D / - > u a p » r i a h f • T m , , / T T n t \ a . k U I > i r A n i r NEW YORK (UPI) — ABC, which guessed very right this year and presented a serious challenge to CBS as No. I in the Nielsen ratings, next fall will downgrade law and order in favor of comedy and variety. The network has announced its new schedule, dropping nine shows and replacing them with four comedies, two variety shows, one cop and one private eye show and a dramatic series, which may or may not be “ Rich Man, Poor Man.” t h i s Some top entertainers will join the schedule, including Bill Cosby, Nancy Walker, Tony Randall and Robert Stack. Nine shows have been scratched — “ Marcus Welby,” “ Harry O,” “ Swiss Family Robinson,” “On the Rocks,” “The Rookies,” “S.W.A.T.,” “ Good Heavens,” “ Almost Anything Goes” and “ D’Angelo-Superstar.” With all the talk about bringing back the Western, and with two ballyhooed pilots in “ Young Pioneers” and “ The Macahans” with James Amess in a version of “ How the West Was Won,” no cowboys and/or Indians found a home on the ABC fall range. Most of the new schedule is straight replacement, except that “Starsky and Hutch” will move to 9 p.m., Eastern time, on Saturday nights, which traditionally is disaster night for ABC. Here’s a rundown on the new slots in the ABC fall schedule: Sunday, 7-8 p.m., Eastern time: The Bill Cosby Show, with Cosby in an audience-oriented variety show calculated to draw the youngsters away from "Disney” on NBC. Monday, 8-9 p.m., Eastern time: Captain and Tennille, a husband-and-wife team, who will combine music and comedy, including comments from the couple’s pet bulldog. Tuesday, 9-9:30 p.m., Eastern time: The Nancy Walker Show, starring Miss Walker in a Norman Lear-developed comedy s t r i p e a h n n t a w o m a n t r v i n f f t o f i l l t h r e e r o l e s — a s Drofessional series about a woman trying to fill three roles — as professional talent agent, ls mother to a prodigiously procreating daughter, and as wife of a recently retired naval officer. Tuesday, 9:30-10 p.m., Eastern tim e: The Tony Randall Show, with talented Tony as a judge muddling through domestically in what sounds like “ Father Doesn’t Know Best.” Tuesday, 10-11 p.m., Eastern time: ABC will continue either “ Rich Man, Poor Man” or “ Fam ily.” Since “ Fam ily” rated only respectably in the Nielsens, while “ Rich Man” won big, the network must have hit a snag here. If “Rich Man” gets the nod, the network says it “ would be set in the early 1970s with continuing characters from the initial episodes ... but also focusing on the next generation of Jordaches and their absor­ bing lives.” Wednesday, 10-11 p.m, Eastern time: “Charlie’s Angels,” the detective show about three female private eyes, shown earlier this year as a pilot. One of the trio is Farrah Fawcett-Majors, wife of Lee Majors, the “ Six Million Dollar Man.” Thursday, 10-11 p.m., Eastern time: “ Most Wanted,” another pilot that survived, starring Robert Stack as a homicide detec­ tive. Saturday, 8-8:30 p.m., Eastern time: “ Holmes and Yoyo,” a comedy about a police officer and his partner, a robot. Saturday, 8:30-9 p.m., Eastern time: “Mr. T and Tina.” a comedy about a widowed Japanese businessman living in in­ scrutable Chicago with a scatterbrained American governess for his children. Saturday, 10-11 p.m, Eastern time: “ Feather ami Father,” with Harold Gould as a one-time conman, who uses his dubious talents to help his daughter, gorgeous Stefanie Powers, a defense attorney. Wednesday/ Aprl 14, 1976 THE DAILY TEXAN P a g e 15 Ferry Hill I* W u r o d In ' Donee rffert a variety of donee »tyle» and 1776-1976,” which is choreographed by the University drama department. The show is per­ formed at 8 p.m. and will run through Saturday. IOO Years of Dance Broadway Musical Evolving Into Gypsy xDancicaT SP By CLIV E BARNES •19^6 N.Y. Times News Service NEW YORK - Is th e Broadway musical a valid art form? Does it matter? Would anyone c a r e it san k decorously into the Hudson with massed bands playing selections from “Oklahoma!” on one bank and from “Hair” on the other? Rem em ber “ Oklahoma!” ? Remember “ Hair” ? if Certainly the musical has changed over the years. Even the genre’s history is as rewarding as it is fascinating. It started out as a hybrid of European operetta, vaudeville and th at special kind of A m erican e x tra v a g a n z a typified by “ The Black Crook.” It developed into one of th e m o s t i m p o r t a n t elements of the American theater; indeed, the magic word “Broadway” is probably m o r e t o e v o k e m e m o r i e s of G e o r g e Ger s hwi n t han Wi lli am Shakespeare or even Eugene O’Neill. For years, the pop­ ular American theater has largely been the musical. l i k e l y It is important to remember that lo r many years the musical represented the best in the popular music of its day. There was very little dis­ tinction to be made between pop music and show music; it was a perfectly homogenous musical culture. Probably no one can say for sure when the split came between pop and Broadway, but it was most likely around 1956; with the emergence of rock ’n’ roll and El vi s P r e s l e y , and the deveining influence of the recording industry. Ten years la ter,. there was really no similarity between the two kinds -of music. Once in a while, the new pop would make forays onto Broadway — yes, in “Hair” or, for that m a t t e r , “ J e s u s C h r i s t Superstar” — but these were essentially flirtations. Perhaps the split was in part a generational issue. The consumers of pop music tend a couple of phrases — is vast. When Joe Layton - an out- s t a n d i n g B r o a d w a y choreographer — a few years back attempted to work the City Center Joffrey Ballet, the re su lts were not happy. Michael Bennett is said to be contemplating a ballet for Jof­ frey, but thus far there is no indication that he has the creative range to do so. He is, of course, one of the most b r i l l i a n t l y i m a g i n a t i v e t he at er di rect ors of our generation. Of a ll th e new dance musicals, “A Chorus Line” is definitely the most unusual; it makes the most persuasive use of dance that has ever been seen in the musical theater. Indeed, the show is all about dancing. Certainly in this neo-jazz Broadway style, which is choreographically undemanding and not even particularly inventive, Mr. Bennett is a master. The ac­ tual choreography in “A Chorus Line” appears perfect­ ly tailored to its purpose, as is Fosse’s choreography in “ Pip­ pin” and “ Chicago.” But t h e s e a r t i s t s a r e not . . . n l l !___ Balanchine, Ashton, Robbins or Tudor, any more than Stephen Sondheim is Gustav Mahler. This does not mean that even Robbins (who is the only great choreographer with real experience in this field) is the equal of Bennett on what has becom e Bennet t ’s home ground. Robbins could no more have choreographed Donna McKechnie’s “Chorus Line” solo, simple, even stereotyped, as it is, than h a v e B e n n e t t choreographed They are totally different t a l e n t s j o i n e d only by ‘ ‘Interplay c o u l d nnmmnn ciiprpcc seemingly common success. Of course, Bennett would not be Bennett (or at least not be this Bennett) had he not had Robbins as a guide, for Rob­ bins did once create a special style for the Broadway dance- -musical. That appears to have been a passing phase for Robbins, and he has returned to the more imperatively creative world of dance. Yet, his influence has been con­ siderable. Today’s Broadway musical is fundamentally a dream first envisaged by Rob­ bins - a concept of superior dance often set to somewhat inferior music. THE PENNY and BOB SHOW An Informal discussion of French and Italian Cinema with Dr. Penny Marcus and Robert Hill Today, 3-4 p.m. Two* Tovorn Texas Union Theatre Committee choreographers — Michael Bennett, Bob Fosse, Joe Layton, Ron Field, Gower Champion, Don Saddler, Geof­ frey Holder — none of whom, with the sole exception of Saddl er, have come up through the ranks of a classic ballet company. Dancing in musicals has become both dominant — so dominant that it is now usually considered dangerous to separate the functions of choreographer and director — and self- generating. The old idea of dance being a divertissement in a musical — something like an opera-ballet for the masses — has long since gone. It was De Mille in her “ dream b a l l e t s , ’ ’ in “Oklahoma!” who first used dance as an integral part of the story line. But dance, more often than not, is the generating force of today’s musical. s t a r t i n g A P A R T from the con­ tributions of such composers as the ever r ema r kabl e Sondheim and presumably the still fecund Richard Rodgers and Leonard Bernstein (both of whom have musicals currently on their way into town) it is the dancing and the staging you remember in a musical today. You just go out humming the dancing. The difference between art dance and pop dance — to coin Z A C H A R Y SC O T T T H E A T R E C E N T E R IN T E R A R T W O R K S A C T V P R E S E N T S REFLECTIONS FROM THE SPEEDW A Y B A R B ER SH O P April 13, 14 Curtain 8:16 R e servations A d v ise d 478 -0 64 1 The Cultural Entertainment Committee of the Texas Union presents In cooperation with Paramount Theatre ___ The Return of DAVE BRUBECK with TWO GENERATIONS OF BRUBECK the ranks of classic ballet or occasionally modern dance. Not nowadays. This new generation of choreographer- directors simply has found its feet on Broadway. Thus, today the Broadway musical is a dancical. T he f i e l d is t o t a l l y i t s by d o m i n a t e d Dancers from 'Cabaret' and remembers. But what has really happen­ ed to the musical is that it has become more a branch of dance than of pop music. It is a gypsy encampment and sometimes just a gypsy camp. The dancers have taken over t he — l e a s t a t choreographers have taken over. o r and d a n c e r Some shows, such as “A Chor us L i n e ’’ or even “Chicago,” actively celebrate th e t he choreographer. And it is no accident that almost every major director of musicals to- d ay a choreographer. Once upon a time, these choreographic directors, such as Jerome Robbins, Agnes De Mille and Michael Kidd, would be drawn to a Broadway musical from f i r s t w a s to be young, whereas the patrons of Broadway tend to be m i d d l e - a g e d . The Broadway audience knows what it likes in popular music, and what it likes leans toward the conservative. As a result, the Broadway musical has moved into strange areas. There is the concept musical, usuall y a s s o c i a t e d with Harold Prince acting as a kind of Diaghilev-style artistic director, and with Stephen Sondheim contributing the most sophisticated music and literate lyrics that Broadway has ever known. Then there is the nostalgia musical that might be summed up as “ No, No, Irene.” There is also the pastiche musical, such as “Shenandoah,” and the black musical, such as “The Wiz” or “Bubbling Brown Sugar.” And there is the sing-along musical where you get four or five stars, hopefully twinkl­ ing, and have them belt out the songs of yesteryear while the audience swoons, moons I PRODUCTIONS PRESENTS LEON SPENCER A N D HIS TRIO FRIDAY, APRIL 16 8:00 P.M. MUNICIPAL AUDITORIUM SPECIAL GUEST: THE OTHER FIVE TICKETS $4.00 in advance, $5.00 af the door Tickets available at A B C House of Music, Inner Sanctum, Caprice Lounge Texas Union Musical Events Committee The University of Texas at Austin present S e c o n d ^ d n n u a i ^ d u d t i n ^ a z z f e s t i v a l Wednesday and Thursday, April 14 and 16 8:00 p.m. Paramount Theatre r/^u6tln l THURSDAY, APRIL 22 10:00 PM SHOW - RESERVED SEATS CEC TICKET HOLDERS - $2.00 Draw Date Begins Tuesday, April 13 at Hogg Box Office GENERAL PUBLIC TICKETS: $6.50, $5.50, $4.50. 7:30 Show Only At: Inner Sanctum, Disc Records, Paramount Box Office \ Th* Cultural Entertainment Committee of the Texas Union presents SERGIO MENDES and BRAZIL 77 Monday, April 19 Municipal Auditorium, 8:00 P.M. Ticket sales begin Thursday, April 8 Hogg Box Office, 10-6 weekdays $.60, $1.00, $1.50 with Optional Services Fee General sales begin Thursday, April 15/$4.50, $5.00, $5.50 No chack* accepted Bus schedulei Jester. Kinsolving, Co-Op 6:15 P.M. Continuous Service CEC ID's must be presented at door tor CEC tickets No cameras or tape recorders STEVE FROMHOLZ AND MOTHER OF PEARL EASTER SUNDAY ZORRO A N D theBLUE FOOTBALLS ISI Cary Grant Ingrid B e rgm an in Stanley Donen's INDISCREET 7 and 9 p.m. Batts Auditorium $1.00 UT ID $1.50 Members Tomorrow: TRISTANA & HAMLET Tonight Only! presen ts FE DE HICO F E LLIN IS S T R A D A Wednesday. April 14: Thursday, April IS : 3 Own lAJeiyht 47 Climes D L P oint T U D L Ifniveriitu of De*ai J/azz ^ J h e E le c tr o m a y n e t A D L S Iiz z m a n ia n D > eoiL > I I a r n iv a l . featuring Peggy Lauren Tickets tor each evening are $2.00 for UT Students, Faculty, and Staff. S3-00 for General Public. Available beginning April 8 at Hogg Auditorium Box Office and at the door. No Reserved Seats. Auditorium 7:00 A 9:00 p.m. Admission: $1.25 Service of the R-T-F Dept. Page 16 Wednesday/ April 14, 1976 THE D A IL Y T EXA N ^ I 4 Solar Energy May Serve UT Housing By PA U LET T E KULH AN EK Residents of 12 units at the University Married Students Housing complex may depend on the sun in the future for their heating and cooling needs. The University Center for Energy Studies w ill submit a proposal to the national Energy Research and Development Ad­ ministration (ER D A ) later this month for the installation of a solar heating and cooling system at the complex, Dr. Ray Hurd, a consultant for the center, said. The proposal answers requests by ERD A and the U.S. Depart­ ment of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) for solar demonstration projects, Dr. Gary C. Vliet, the center’s solar energy program coordinator, said. ERD A is in charge of the overall demonstration project program, particularly those pro­ jects involving commercial and institutional buildings, while HUD oversees projects for residential buildings. The University center originally submitted its proposal last fall, but it was not among the 55 projects chosen to receive ERD A funding. Nearly 250 proposals were submitted, and the University project was within five or IO places of being selected, Vliet said. A PPRO X IM A TELY every nine months ERDA funds a new set of projects. The next group would be funded sometime this summer, he said. Both Hurd and Vliet estimated the cost of the project would run in the neighborhood of $150,000 and would take about a year to install. The system would provide IOO per cent of the hot water needs, 90 per cent of the heating needs and 55 per cent of the cooling needs of the 12 units chosen for the project. “ There’s no way you can justify doing this to save money,” Hurd said, however. He estimated that the solar energy system would save the apartment units $2,691 in fuel costs, but he said that “ nobody’s going to pay $150,000 to get $2,691.” TH E U N IV ER SIT Y proposal is one of several that w ill be submitted to ERD A this time around. Dr. W R. Wakeland, 9,902 and counting University CREDIT UNION Married Student Housing may get solar heating and cooling. m o n o f n r thp solar enercv Droiect at Trinity a solar heating and cooling demonstration project in the east u Z r s U y ^ T t L ^ h ^ , t a a so J r wing ofTaylor Hal..W her S dormitories r c a m l SUPP‘y H aoDrovS me p ro i^ tT u ld supply a large portion of the r ls ln for W .dm g theTaylo?H aUfacility, though is “ for us to test the collectors, heating and cooling units and enerw S s of S X a l T s r fth e Trinity campus, but means of storage," he said The campus system can be vaned Wakeland adds it would not be economically efficient to meet all the energy needs of that area. to test its performance under different conditions. gym“ — Sketch by Byron Sewell According to Vliet, heating water with solar energy is •economical, and space heating may be economical in some places but probably not in Texas. Space cooling is “ not really economical” either, he said. Last year a student team representing the University at the national Student Competition on Relevant Energy won the award for the best cooling system with their solar heating and cooling unit. Team captain Michael Hart, a graduate student in mechanical engineering, has done some additional work on the system for his master’s thesis when the project was returned to the University. In addition, mechanical engineering students are working on Attention Social 81 Behavioral Science Majors and Faculty The Social & Beh. Sc. Council presents The SPRING WINE & CHEESE PARTY April 14th 4:30-6:00 p.m. Leila B. Etter Alumni Center The Teacher Excellence A w a rd w ill be announced! mm Wk p . Pl__ - — -Si - r _ For the woman who has everything: something to keep it in. Princess Gardner’s Stashed Checkbook Secretary has a place for everything inside. Checkbook. Pen. Credit Cards. Bills. Pictures. Notes. Outside, there’s a beautifully handy purse fo r your change. In dazzling styles, colors and leathers. iiu\(ivss (;.\iii)\Kir available at the Je w e lry counter reg. $15.00 $10.88 each A* Vv/ r , H "V* - >1 Hry* - & . a v-j* y ,50*0* \b TO**' '■ Sh a-Jz, 4 s • ii' *•*- irk it*- •'nit* b It's Not Too Late /ith the Bedfellow entry deadline close at hand. Pearl Magazine office, were .w arm ed with .resonating underachiever, .b a fflin g !M r feat I had to at- grumbling such lame excuse, a . I my grandmother*, funeral.” and "I broke my ■ playing croquet.” Bedfellow , are of course .resonators par excellence. So. ifi th.i true fellow spirit of ambivalence, w e have extended deadline to Friday. April 16. To enter, submit an ..M y of sorts describing w hy you or your nominee is an undeserving Bedfellow , and include name, address, and phone number. Entries should be dropped off at the Pearl Magazine editorial offices, C4.104, Texas Student Publications Bldg. Entrants must be students. For more information consult the current issue of Pearl Magazine, available at the Student Publications Bldg. You Too Can Be A PEARL Bedfellow Texas Student Publications 1 V 7 Order YOUR Copy NOW TSP BUSINESS OFFICE, ROOM 3.200 TSP Building, corner 25th and Whitis 8:30 a.m. - 4:30 p.m. A Myriad of Memories... only $ ^ 4 5 another publication O 'W Texas Student Publications Wednesday, April 14, 1976 THE DAILY TEXAN Page I i I t i '•e T h e D a i l y T e x a iv i C l a s s i f i e d A d s P H O N E 4 7 1 - 5 2 4 4 M O M . T H R U F R I . Q sO O -SsO O FOR SALE FOR SALE FOR SALE FURNISHED APARTMENTS Mi*collanoou*-For Solo Miscallanaous-For Sal* FURNISHED APARTMENTS ■ FURNISHED APARTMENTS ■ FURNISHED APARTMENT S C L A S S IF IE D A D V E R T IS IN G R A T E S IS word m in im u m J 12 E ach word one tim e Each word 2-4 t im e s .................. $ l l Each word 5-9 t im e s .................. J .09 E ach word IO or m ore tim es S 08 Student ra te each tim e ...............S 90 S3.58 I col. x I inch one t im e I col. x I inch 2-9 tim e s S3.22 I col. x I inch ten or more tim es $2.90 DEADLINE SCHEDULE M o n d a y T . x a n F r id a y .................. 2 :0 0 p .m . T u e s d a y T . x a n M o n d a y 1 1 :0 0 a .m . W e d n e s d a y T e xa n T u e sd a y ... 1 1 :0 0 a .m . T h u rs d a y T e x a n W e d n e s d a y .. 1 1 :0 0 a m . F rid a y T e x a n T h u r s d a y 1 1 :0 0 a .m . " I n th e e v e n t o f erro rs m o d e in a n a d v e rtis e m e n t, im m e d ia te n o tic e m u st be g iv e n a s th e p u b lis h e rs a re re s p o n sib le fo r o n ly O N E in co rre ct in s e rtio n . A ll c la im s fo r a d ju s tm e n ts s h o u ld b e m a d e n o t la te r t h a n 3 0 d a y s a fte r p u b lic a tio n ." LO W S T U D E N T R A T E S S 90 15 word m in im u m each day Each additional word each days .06 I col. x I inch each d a y S2 90 "U nclassifieds" I line 3 days JI OO (P rep aid , No Refunds) S tu d e n ts m u s t show A u d ito r 's receipts and pay in advance in TSP Bldg 3 200 (25th & W h itis) from 8 to 4:30 p m . M onday through a m F rid a y . AUTOS FOR SALE 1972 V O L K S W A G E N Super Beetle for sale. 477-2744 or 454-1734.______________ '68 C A M A R O convertible 396, autom atic, $750 negotiable. 477-6666.________ _ 1975 V W V A N . Customized for cam ping. W ell loved and cared for. 20,000 m l. $4,- _______________ 500. T ra c y , 452-7845. '68 F O R D F-100 tru c k . 6 cyl., standard, reb uilt engine, new transm ission, clutch. $950 or best offer. John, 472-4068, 476- ____________ ____________________ 3095. 1968 M E R C U R Y M o n tc la ir. Good condi­ tion, best otter. C all Teddy or M a rk , 443- 9276, 6pm to 12pm.__________ __________ '70 V W B U G C onvertible. New paint. E x ­ cellent condition. $1100. '65 Bug, good condition. $600. 477-6666.____________ 1970 F O R D L T D . One owner, a ir, power, lis t $1150, $895. M u s t s e ll. G r e a t transportation. 345-7624.____________ 1974 PO R S C H E 914/2.0 Im m acu late con­ dition. Orange w ith alloys. AC. Stereo. New tires. Perform ance, economy. 477- 3100.__________________________ _ H O N D A C IV IC H atchback. 1974- CB in sta lled . Super condition. antenna $1850 385-4100, extension 2314; a fte r __________________ 4:15, 385-0854. 1972 O P E L R A L L Y . Radio, AC, radials. ii,7 5 0 . C all 454-9159 a fter 5 p.m._______ '74 A L F A Convertible. A M /F M . M ag wheels. Excellent condition. $5500. 452- __ 1066. Y E L L O W 1974 V W T H IN G . 24 mpg. Hood m ounted spare, r e a r m ounted errycan , wired fo r CB including anten- nae. A M radio. 453-6468._________ 1970 P O R SC H E 914, 5-speed, Michelins, A M /F M cassette, m a ts ^ x tr a c to r 44,000 documented m iles. $3,200. 453-5792 a fte r _ 1947 C H E V R O L E T P ic k -u p . Good, classic transportation. N ew 235 engine, solid body. $450. 477-7212 a fte r 2._______ T H IN K IN G A B O U T a new car but dread the hassle of dealing w ith a new car salesm an? Come to Capitol Chevrolet, 5th and L a m a r, and ask for Bill W ard. No hassle. _______________ __________ '69 B U IC K S K Y L A R K 2-door coupe V-8, auto, power, a ir. Best offer. 441-3290. ________________ Keep try in g . 1966 V W , good body. E xcellent engine. Runs perfect. $700 firm . 477-4367, 1210-D B rackenridge A p a rtm ents. 1975 G R E M L IN , new brakes, new tires. Contact Chester Evlns: 8-6, 454-9561; a fter, 453-0253 Good deal. _ _ 1966 VW runs perfect. N ew : tires, In­ terior, brakes, tune-up. $690 fir m . 443- 6645, G a ry . ______________ _ _ _________ 1972 P IN T O R U N A B O U T . Low m ileage, excellent condition. Radio, autom atic. Best offer. Call Carol, a fte r noon, 459- 0120 B E A U T IF U L 1964 M O B convertible; overhauled engine, transm ission; new paint, rad ials. Runs great. $875 or best offer. M oving. 385-4661.___________ _ 1966 D O D G E D A R T convertible, good condition V-8, A T, good rubber, heat, radio. $495. 474-8008 evenings^_________ low C H E V E L L E SS, '72, A CT 4-speed, m iles, good condition, two new tires. $2200 478-7986 a fte r 5:00.______________ '66 V W V A N , just rebuilt, save gas. $800 447-7036 before I a .m . Keep calling. '71 S U P E R B E E T L E . A utom atic. A ir conditioned. O range color. Excellent condition. 43,000 miles. About $1400 Phone 453-5722. FOR SALE Motorcyda-For Sob fa irin g , luggage Y A M A H A 350cc I. E x c elle n t condition. Phone 453- 72 H O N D A 450 CB. Excellent condi- >n, new re a r tire , rack $625. Call Bruce ter IO p.m . 474-9797. DR S A L E . 1974 Honda CB360. Luggage ck, 5000 m iles, excellent condition. 50 443-5728 . BSA. 500cc Royal Star, chrom e lu g g a g e r a c k , n d e rs , w in d s h ie ld , Im ets $440. M ik e M c A n ally , 475-6451, 7-0653. 15 S U Z U tO ~ G T 550 Street b ike /lig h t jr e r . H igh w ay use m ostly. Conscien- lUSly c a re d fo r. $1300. 477-8162._______ 70 T R IU M P H 650. $150 worth extra rom e. Engine reb u ilt last July. $900 7-5438, 452-8161 ext. 235, 472-6138. Tom - 1- ...------------------------------- ■ ^ S S ic T w B M W R69US. F a irin g , 6'/a 'lion tank, e x tra wide seat. Super C on­ don. 454-5379. AUTOS FOR SALE (JI ontinrntal (taro 4 5 4 -6 8 2 7 72 Isr*?— . S2450 74 SSr s i - $3750 72 r^ r£ .Z ~ J $ 6 9 9 5 « « NfM r LM S«4ax ' ^ $7995 74 S T E * :!..... $2895 73 S £ T .!!^ ....$1995 72 S S * ........... $3295 |(^iG H lA N D |c7 rO T A I Norrt>u4« (MM U»»4 C.f OM 454-6827 Motorcyda-For Sal* 1973 H O N D A 500-4. Runs excellent, looks gre at, header, windshield, crash bars, just tuned. 711 W. 32nd, No. 113. '73 Y A M A H A 250 M X , b ra n d new overhaul. $495. 804 Nueces. 447-7964. A fte r 5:00.____________________ _ 1971 H O N D A CT90, new engine, tires, 8 speed tran sm is s io n , m ust sell. Best offer. 452-9595 day, 472-5847 nile. G O O D R E L IA B L E T r a n s p o r ta tio n . Classic '64 Honda 90. Runs w ell. 478-9057 or come by 1607 N ueces._______ _______ ______ Stareo-For Sait______ D A L Q U IS T S P E A K E R S , list $840, $475. Stands, w a rra n ty . M a ra n tz 250 Am p, list $575, $250, perfect. 345-7624.____________ receiver harm ony m an­ SANSUI 551 tu rn ta b le , T e e c 450 dolin, G a r ra r d cassette, U tah speakers. Reasonably priced. 451-3441. __________________ __ SON Y PS HOO turntable, $65. Realistic Solo-3b speakers, $75 pair. Lafayette stereo a m p lifie r, $25. A rcher a m p lifie r, $8 E lco A M /F M tu n e r, $8. M u r r a y speakers, $5. Raw speakers, $8 each. B argainable. 471-3770, 471-3129.________ P A IR EO I 1253W speakers, one year old! E xcellent condition. M u st sell. C all 474- ______________ 5626 anytim e, E rl. P A N A S O N IC SE1099 stereo system . F M /A M radio, 3-speed changer. E x­ cellent condition. 8100. 472-2547.________ D B X 119 exc. condition, plus Sony TC377 reel to reel tapes, de-m ag, extras. 478- 5593. _________________ Musical-For Sol*______ L E B LA N C Noblet B -flat tenor Sax­ ophone, w ith Selm er C double star and Berg Larsen m etal mouthpiece. Pads in excellent condition. 20 years old. $225 ____________ fir m . 836-3503, 453-3850. factory second D IS C O N T IN U E D and speaker models a va ila b le d irectly fro*?] fu ll A u d i co ______________ w a rra n ty . 451-1653. G O T S M A L L H AN D S? Fender M ustang bass with A lam o am p and box, cheap. 478-9057, 1607 N ueces._________________ B A B Y G R A N D P IA N O . O rlo I na I K C Bay. E xcellent condition. $950. 345-0000. In c . L im ite d q u a n tity , F E N D E R PR O A M P , Tweed 1951 Ser no. 40. Collector's item ! Reasonable, sell _____________ or trad e. 471-2575. Pats-For Sal* T H R E E M A L E G o ld e n R e tr ie v e rs , Seven weeks, sire 1975 Texas A m ateur Champion, shots, weaned. $150. 452-3030. ______ Hom*f-For Sal*______ n o r t h e a s t . Large 4-2, three living areas, only $1550 down, loads of extras. $32,600. Call 452-7923.__________________ In- D U P L E X , w a lk in g d is ta n c e to tra m u ra l Field and shuttle. * B R /l Bath, each side. Price m id 20 s. Call Louise Feather, R ealtor 472-1466. S O U TH , 1550 sq. ft. T h re e bedroom, two bath home. W alking distance to shuttle and city bus. Large 27 x 17 sq. ft. living a rea. 444-7022. D E P A R T IN G U T P R O F 'S H O M E N O W F O R S A L E W IT H C U S TO M F E A T U R E S FO R C U S T O M P E O P L E Fo r those who seek the unusual, the con­ te m p o rary cedar 2 story beamed living room is just that! 1827 sq. ft. of living a re a in this 3 bedroom, 2 bath home with 2 bedrooms downstairs bath has sunken tile tub. O ther features of this com plete­ include a complete ly carpeted home w a ll of custom built bookshelves in liv ­ ing ro o m , new scre e n s , s k y lig h ts , Solarian flooring in the kitchen, and cen­ tra l heat and a ir. Y a rd enclosed by a newly painted cedar fence. F u ll grass lawn and trees, trees, tree s !! Lots of priv a c y on a Quiet cul-de-sac. Only a few m inutes fro m downtown and U T . Priced in the low 40's. Call Nash Philllps-Copus Balcones N orthw est office, 345-9480 for W ill Richardson, or 24-hour phone, 453- 6342 reservation Mi$c*llan*out-For Sal* N E L S O N 'S G IF T S . Established 1945. Indian Largest selection jew elry. 4502 South Congress. 444-3814. C losed Mondays._______________________ T A P P A N GAS R A N G E with autom atic pilot on oven $100. 451-4646. A fter 5 p.m . 447-8111. __________________ FURNISHED APARTMENTS ANABLEPS ANABLEPS fo r y o u r convenience as of A p ril 1st w ill be located at 507 W. 17th 477-7115 Guitar Strings Save 20% on all g u itar string sets AM STER M U S IC INC. 1624 Lavaca R O L L E I 35mm c am era, 40m m f3.5 - tiny zone focus with case; Skylight filte r six months old, $90. Canon F L 28m m f3.5, $65 Yashica E lectro-X 35mm S LR , with 50mm f 1.4 Pentax lens, $125. R andy, 477- 9030, 476-1086 a fte r seven. ____________ LA W N B O Y Power M ow er. Adjustable with or without bag. 2 years old, fine con­ dition, $100. 6-9 p.m . only. 451-4475. C. IT O H 23" bicycle, I m onth old. Toe clips, chain, lock. $80. Come by and see, 4210 A ve. H., evenings.________________ FOR- S A LE . His and Hers m atching IO speeds. New, $90each. 327-1756 a fte r 8:30 p.m.___________________ _______________ F R IG ID A IR E R E F R IG E R A T O R . 17cu. like new. Auto ft. W hite, 3 years old, defrost, w orth over $500. M u st sell at $275. A va ila b le A pril 30. 6-9 p.m . only, 451-4475. FURNISHED APARTMENTS M O T O B E C A N E Grand T o u rin g , 21", $100. 8 m m W o llensak, d is p la y case. B itte r C reek, 447-7964 a fter 5:00._______ L A R G E M E N 'S IO speed bike . Needs some re p a ir. $40 or trad e fo r s m a lle r ____________________ bike. 477-8897. M O V I N G . M o d e r n M e d it e r r a n e a n bedroom suit, mattress, box springs. M ust sell. $200. A fter 6, call 447-7949. H O O V E R portable washing m achine. Good condition, $85. No checks. C all 837- 5162. _________ _____________________ 16mm B E L L A N D H O W E L L 70 D R Pro m ovie c a m e ra . Angenieux lenses, v ie w ­ finders, case, etc. $400. 478-2674._______ B IC Y C L E S : 2 4 W ' W indsor P ro DB throughout. C am pi, $350. 22" Schwinn 5- speed, excellen t condition, $50. 478-2674. little - save a T R U C K L O A D P L A N T S A L E S , San lot. M arcos. D riv e a B luebonnets a re b e a u tifu l. H an g in g baskets, pots, supplies. Corner U n iv e rs i­ ty 'n E d w a rd G ary, next to M u rra y 's . Wednesday, Thursday. M IN O L T A 35m m SRT100 e x c e lle n t con- dition. W /case. $175. 928-4034 before A pril 18. N IK O N P H O T O M IC F i n / F 2 /M D - 2 N ikko r 50/1.4 55/3.5 85/1.8 35/1.4 200/4. Robert P ierce, 471-4148, 327-3313. Leave message. F R Y E L A C E -U P S . 7B. W orn tw ice. $50 cash. 477-4750 a fter 5:00. ___________________ ______________ FURNISHED APARTMENTS E F F IC IE N C Y , $125 plus E . Pool, on shuttle. Also leasing for s u m m er a t $105 plus E . 46th and Ave. A. 454-8903. 1-1. $135 P L U S E. Laundry, T V cable, clean. Preleasing for su m m e r. Parco Plaza, 711 W. 3 2 nd. 453-4991.___________ FURNISHED APARTMENTS On Shuttle El Posado/EI Cortez TMs Summer from SIM pies I UM. 45 3 -7 9 1 4 4 7 2-4 162 Barry Qillingwatar Co. FREE FREE APARTMENT LO C A TIN G FREE PARKING FREE FRIENDLY SERVICE HABITAT HUNTERS specializes in apartments close to the shuttle. Let them find your next apartment for you. Call today. HABITAT HUNTERS 8A LOWER LEVEL DOBIE MALL 474-1532 J E R R IC K APTS. Walk to UT FANTASTIC REDUCTIONS on summer lease $20 to $30 off 104 E . 32nd Apt. 103 477-2552 4105 Speedw ay Apt. 203 458-4323 A LSO L E A S E FOR F A L L V IP Apartments 33rd & Speedway Quiet, e le g a n t and secure living in two- level studio a partm ents designed for 3 to 5 m a tu re students. 3 BR, 2 bath, with e x ­ tra s to ra g e 8. w alk -in closets Also In divid ually kingsized one bedrooms. controlled A C. Pool, cable TV . Now leas­ ing for s u m m e r & fall. Reduced sum m er rates. C all 474-2212 or 478-4964 until 8:30 p.m. T H E V IL L A OF E N F IE L D r u s t i c a n d C a l i f o r n i a h i l l s i d e , l-b ed ro o m s. B alconies, red ec o ra te d cable T V , pool, shuttle, near town, shop­ ping, bus a t door. 2 weeks fre e rent on 1- y ear lease or 6-month lease a t $130-$145. E ve ry th in g paid except e le c tric ity . 1510 West 6th and West Lynn. Look a t model a p a rtm e n t no. 102 and call 474-4848 for details (24 hours). M a n a g e r's job also available. T R A V IS H O U SE A PTS . 442-9720 One block south of R iverside at 1600 Royal Crest D r. Spacious one and two bedrooms. Furnished and unfurnished. Q u ality you can afford. F R E E STUDENTS M a n y beautiful com plexes on shuttle to choose from . F re e leasing for fall Free service and even fre e transportation. F R E E C all N ancy in A p a rtm e n t Living Locators 6000 N orth L a m a r 452-9541 345-1645 FURNISHED APARTMENTS ■ FURNISHED APARTMENTS All Bill! Paid Walk to Campus If f . $139 N m I U $225 AIU 476-4093 472-4162 2110 Rio G ra n d * larry OiNingwator Spend Your Summer et Innsbrook EH. $1 15 plus El Br. $125 plus E Near Shuttle 4 7 4 -1 1 0 7 472-4162 Barry Qillingwatar Co. On Shuttla EH. $105 plus I Furn. I Br. $115 plu$ E Furn. 407 Wast 38th El Choparral/Redweed Square 472-4162 451-1353 Barry Qillingwatar Co. Wfe’l l find you an apartment free. r n I T I A n r iiiH 'iil Selector 3507 N . 1-35 474-6357 O ffic e s throughout Texas PLANTATION SOUTH APARTMENTS • fun. ar * laundry Reams o I g 7 Mr. • Peels Prices Shirt et $119 7200 Pleasant Valley Rd. 442-1298 472-4162 The Castile a Tropical Garden Pool, Sauna, Moor Shuttle Enfield Area Summer prices from $130 4 77-7794 472-4162 Barry Qillingwatar Co. Tho Ham let On Shuttle All Bills Paid I Bdr. from $175 452-3202 472-4162 Barry Qillingwatar Co. LH US MAKE Your Next Wove Enjoyable Call us for FREE RENTAL ASSISTANCE J.B. G oodwin A p t. Locators 8 3 7 -2 0 3 0 (North) or 8 9 2 -1 7 4 5 (South) W h e n c Y o u r e ^ e a d j r t o c T V l o v c O u t y ° u r T e l e p h o n e ‘T J o o t h l w S C a l l V A T ADAR TMFNT filNQERS SERVICE Summer places at the lake. From $110. GREENW OO D TOWERS 1800 Lavaca I and 2 bedroom fu r­ A va ila b le now, living nished or u n furnished. L a rg e room, w alk-in closet, carpet, drapes, A B P . W a lk to U T cam pus or Capitol com plex. C all M anager, 476-9710. $155 F U R N IS H E D L a rg e I BR, living/din ing , com plete GE kitchen, large bath, drapes, carpet, CH and a ir, laundry room, 6 m onth Ilease, $50 deposit, on shuttle bus route. W alk to Concordia College. C all todav. C R E S R E A L T O R S 452-6407 ____________ _ SU CASA APTS. 203 W. 39th 451-2268 1 BR, 2 BR, 2 bath$, and 3 BR, 2 bath$. S um m er rate$ start at L a r o e $ 1 4 5 ap artm ents, w alk-in closets, d is h w a s h e r, b a r and shag carpet. Pool, gas g rill, green IF co urtyard . 1 01 , 9- 5 S h u t t l e . A p t . weekdays, noon-5 weekends. I block fro m p l u s E . NOW L E A S IN G furnished 2 bedroom a p a rtm e n t *200 A B P . W alk to U T . 472-. 5134 Also leasing for sum m er.________ L A R G E I B E D R O O M Apt. 5 blocks to cam pus $125 plus bills. A v a ila b le April 15 477-1897^____________ H U G E O N E B E D R O O M for sum m er 2 blocks cam pus. Big enough for 2. Quiet. 4777629;_______________________________ E F F IC IE N C IE S Clean, m odern apt. Shag carpet, frost free re frig e ra to r, dis­ h w a s h e r, d is p o s a l, w e lk -in c lo s e t. C A /C H Laundry facilities on prem ises Close to downtown and shuttle bus $125 plus E 447-4947 TH E W ARW ICK 2907 W est A ve . Luxuriousefflciencles, I bedrooms end 2 bedrooms Super sharp garden complex within w alking distance to U T. Starting fro m Sl30/m onth Call John, 474-1712 LA FIESTA- 400 E . 30th Super Sum m er Rates 2 blocks fo U T. 2 bedroom /2 bath, C A /C H , cable T V , pool, laundry fa cilities, huge w eik-ln closets, plenty of perking, quiet end congenial atm osphere. H U R R Y W H IL E T H E Y LAST 478-2297 T H R E E ELMS 400 W . 35th Leasing for sum m er end ta ll Furnished - unfurnished 2 BR, 2 beth. I BR, I beth Shag carpets, dishwasher, range, dis­ r e t r I g e r a t o r , c a b le , pool p o s a l, Convenient to shuttle Laundry room, quiet S um m er rates 2 BR, 2 bath, fur- nished, $192 50 plus alec 451-3941___________ ""s l im m e r r a t e s NOW One and two bedroom apts. fro m $145 Tennis courts, pool, luxurious apts 1200 W . 40th 451-3333 M A N C H E S T E R SQ U A RE APTS. SU M M ER RATES $109.50 plus E L arge efficiency apartm ents, close to shuttle, city bus route 4100 Ave A, Apt 106 Hancock I I I A partm ents 459 9279 L E A S IN G FOR S U M M E R 108 PLACE E F F IC IE N C Y # , I-B D R M APTS . Dishwasher * Disposal • Sw im m ing Pool • P atio I Barbeque • VI block to shuttle bus • individual Storage • Bookshelves • Cable TV • Resident M anager * 1 2 0 /m o . p lu s E , I b d rm : E f t ic : S I4 */m o . plus E 108 W 45th 452-1419 or 443-2771 N O W L E A S IN G TOW ERVI EW APTS. Close to Campus One Bdrm s Sum m er $120 F a ll $145 Owner pays gas, w afer, cable TV . One block from Law School, LBJ School Quiet, com fortable piece to live. Oldham St at 26th Come by or call 476-0339 _ ^ N EED A GREAT PLACE TO LIVE? BLACKSTONE A PA R TM EN TS Now at Sum m er rates! Share a large apt. at $55. mo furnished, a ll bills paid. B ring your own room m ate or we w ill m atch you with a com patible one. This is economy and convenience e t Its best. Only 200 yards from U T campus. 2910 Red R iver 476-5631 A PA R A G O N P R O P E R T Y $117.50 ABP I BR Apts. Efficiencies and P o o l , c o v e r e d p a r k i n g . Shuttle or w alk to U T. 2408 Leon 476-3467 K E N R A Y A PAR TM EN TS 2122 H ancock D riv e N ext to A m ericana Theatre, walking dis­ tance to North Loop Shopping Center and Luby's. N ear shuttle and Austin tran sit. Two bedroom flats, one and two baths A vailable townhouse w ith patio, I turn C A /C H , dishwasher, unfurn 8. disposal, door to door garbage pickup, pool, m aid service if desired, w a i t e r la In com plex See owners, Apt. 113 or call _______ 451 4848 b a l c o n i e s WINDOWS TR EES Brand new I bedroom a p a rtm e n ts under construction a t 4205 Speedway. Leasing f a l l s e m e s t e r . f o r s u m m e r & fro s t-fre e P ro fe ss io n a lly d ecorated , no re frig e ra to r, self-cleaning oven, lu xu rious c a rp e t, w a x " w allpaper, rough cedar accent walls, m arb le lavatories, wood fy /n ifu re ' ln- dividual w ater heaters, vaulted ceilings. No pets. flo or v in y l, 453-1903 CAMERON A P A R T M E N T S ( I ) C O M F O R T A B L E L IK E O LD SHOES la r g e (2 ) A N D L E V IS P L U S . carpeted (3) U T shuttle bus (4) c ity bus line (5 ) 3 m a jo r shopping centers (6) fle x ib le lease (7 ) even pets and children are ok. W hat m ore can you ask for? I bdrm $120, 2 bdrm $140. Get In touch w ith m anager a t 1200 E . 52nd St., Apt. 102-A, 453-6239. LANTANA A PA R TM E N TS Not a p a rty com plex. W a lk to campus. le a s in g fo r s u m m e r a n d fe ll. N ow Special sum m er and y ea r lease rates. A B P No pets 1802 West Avenue. 476-7473 I BR $107.50 No Lease L u xu ry apts., dishwasher, AC, pool, carpet, fully furnished Shuttle bus 2222 Town L ake C ircle, 444-2070. 5 BLOCKS W E S T OF C A M P U S S u m m er Leasing N e w effic ie n c ie s . P aneled living room, offset bedroom a kitchen Cable, weter, gas (stove) fu r­ nished $121 • $125 477 5514 476-7916 Red Oaks Apts. riel 2104 San G a b rie l __ IOO* R etnll 453-5764. 2 B LOCKS TO UT. N ic e one bedroom a p a rtm e n t. Shag c a rp e t, A C , pool $137 50 W ator and gas paid 474 5385, ____ _____ 258 33*5, 258-5555 Q U IE T A R E A near cam pus I B R , $18$. 911 Blanco 474-2535.________________ __ F U R N IS H E D OR U N F U R N IS H E D On I and 2 large bedroom. Capital shuttle V illa A V A IL A B L E NOW. Clean efficiency, SUO Bills paid Block to UT 472-5134. Now leasing for sum m er E fficiency end ___________ __________ rooms. C E D A R R ID G E A partm ents O ff North L a m a r Close to H ighland M a ll. One bedroom furnished. $14$ plus ele c tricity. New fu rn itu re, quiet, sw im m ing pool No c hildren or pets Ceil 459-7605 mornings, _ _________ a fter I p rn. 454-3426 _ F A N T A S T IC L O C A T IO N Near campus - La w School LBJ L ib ra ry , St Oavld *, IH-35 Luxurious 2-2's Ad appliances, pool, sunback, cable Now leasing SHO A B P G re a t Oak A partm ents, 477- __ __ “>&• N OW L E A S IN G S u m m er/F a ll/S p rin g Fantastic location N aa r c a m p u s M S up D oris Apartm ents, 478-1580. 477-C T I. E F F IC IE N C IE S , close to cam pus end shuttle Pool, storage closet*, laundry, dishwasher, cable, C A /C H . $135 plus e le c tricity 305 W 35th 4S4-9I0*_______ 2/1 C L E A N , w alk to U T Pool $200 plus E P erco Plaza, T\\_ W 32nd 453-4991 l a r g e O N E A N D TW O Bedrooms. D isposal, dish w a sh e r, C A /C H , poot, laundry, shuttle. A B P Sum m er from *175, F e ll fro m USS No pals. Versailles A partm ents, 4411 A irpo rt Blvd 452-*315. S P A C IO U S 2 end J bedrooms. HOO sq ft end up N ew ly redecorated $185 end up plus E Bonus tor ail leases llo n e d before June I C all 444-3411 or come by 1201 Tln- nln Fo rd Road. Apt 113 Town Lek# __________ ______ A rea L A R G E I B E D R O O M C A /C H , disposal, laundry room , study desk, carpeted. cable TV , g re et location Sum m er and fa il leasing $150 ABP 2812 Nueces. 472 6497 ___________ _____________ NOW l I a S IN G for sum m er end fe ll 2W block* UT Law School Large pool, shut­ tle R ate * Sum m er, $ 13S-$200 plus alec F a ll, *160 *235 plus alec 3212 Red River 477-21*4.________________ _______________ $105 P LU S E Sum m er rate. L a rg e e f­ ficiency for quiet student N ear shuttle. 41 l l A ve A. 454-4467. S U M M E R R A T E S L a rg e 2 bedroom CA, disposal, laundry, pool, w a lk cam ­ pus 1230 ABP No pets R iver Oaks, 3001 Red R iver. 472-3914. S U M M E R O P E N IN G S Efficiencies and one bedrooms from SI37.$0 to *180 Base utilities paid, pool, laundry, cable TV, three blocks to cam pus 477-20*2, 2503 P earL_________________________________ W A LK TO C A M P U S . A ttra c tiv e 2-2's, I- i s, efficiencies All appiieence*. pool, leasing Voyageurs cable ABP Now A partm ents 311 E 31*t_ 478-6776. F A L L L E A S IN G Sm ell furnished e f­ f i c i e n c y , n e a r s h u t t l e . R a n g e , r e fr ig e r a to r , huge closet. $115 4501 Speedway 451-81/8 UN FU R N . APARTMENTS THE VILL A OF E N F IE L D r u s t i c a n d C a l i f o r n i a h i l l s i d e , red ec o ra te d 1-bedrooms B alconies, cable TV, pool, shuttle, near town, shop­ ping, bus at door J weeks free ren t on 1- lease or 6-month lease, e t $130 • year $145 E verything paid except ele c tricity. 1510 West 6th and West Lynn Look at model a partm ent no 102 and cell 474- 4848 for details (24 hours). M anager's job also available I i $130 PLU S E. Laundry, T V cable, clean. Preleasing for sum m er. Perco P laza, 711 W 32nd 453 4991. N E A R UT Rooms, $65 A BPL E fficient cie*, $95 plus e le c tricity See m anager at G a ra g e a p t., 901 W 29th. B arh a m Properties 926-9365.___________________ FO R R E N T $40 cam pus 477-2210, keep trying. *1207 bill* paid. Near F A L L LE A S IN G E fficiency. I bedroom, near shuttle. Small, quiet com plex H I S ­ S E S . Redwood North 459-7555 G R A D S T U D E N T S , faculty, s taff only. tw o S t r ic tly q u ie t e ffic ie n c y , on e, bedrooms $95, $145, $185, plus ele c trici­ ty Scenic location No children, no pets. 1801 W estlake Shown by appointm ent. 327-0479, 6-9 p m TRAVEL W E S T E U R O P E , Russia. Slavic coun­ tries. IOO days *2,950, a ll bills paid. 458- 1095 after 10:30 p m I N T E R E S T E D I N N O ­ F R I L L S L O W C O S T J E T T R A V E L ? to Europe, A frica, the M iddle East, the F a r East? E D U C A T IO N A L F L IG H T S has been helping people tra v e l on a budget with m ax im u m fle x ib ility and m in im u m hassle for six years For more info c a l l toll free 800-223-5569 E U R O P E * 2 w e I*VS. A M ^ 800 325-4867 UnsTravel Chaffers 4 7 2 -4 1 6 2 ASPEN WOOD APTS. Preleasing Summer & Fall Summ«r 1 BR Film. $139 plus I 2 BR Furn. $159 plusE Foil $170 plus E $215 plus I Select your Apartm ent Early • Shuttle Front Door • Intramural Fiald across •treat for your sports • 2 Large pools 452-4447 4539 Guadalupe STOP Think before You Rent... Large I & 2 Bedroom Apartments < Furnished or Unfurnished On City Bus Line or Ride Bike to Campus £ FANTASTIC STUDENT RATE FROM *95 UP 4 7 8 - 8 8 4 8 or 4 7 7 - 1 0 6 4 The summer places? Three o f A ustin s nicest a p a rtm e n t communities. Pleasant Valley, London Square, W illo w cre e k. The lake? Austin's own Town Lake. Beautiful. Serene. A n d only five minutes from the University. W it h shuttle busses at your door. # f From $110, one b e d ro o m unfurnished, to $/ 3V, three bedroom s furnished, excluding e le c tric ity . A block o ff Riverside Drive. A block away from Town Lake. Pre-lease fo r summer or fall to d a y . A n d reserve your place at the lake. Pleasant Valley Enates London Square 1300 Pleasant Valley Rd. 7400 Town Lake C ircle 443-5341 442-8340 Willowcreek 1911 W illowcreek Dr. 444-0010 Page 18 Wednesday, April 14, 1976 THE DAILY TEXAN HELP WANTED HELP WANTED TYPING SERVICES Handicapped Go Different Route “ This campus, or any campus laid out in nice square street blocks, is not too hard to learn,” he said. TRUAX EMPHASIZES that all mobility starts out with that concept of a “ straight world.” Working with a con­ genitally blind person until he has an unconscious orienta­ tion ability may take more than nine months. He careful­ ly distinguishes between this movement and that of a “ route traveler,” one who just knows his way from the dormitory to his class and back. Some type of personal ad- i m i i o i A proved volunteers read music and foreign language books, describe econom ic flow charts and supply and demand curves as special tapes are made of required course tex­ ts. “ We generally have 40 to 50 books in progress at a time,” Sue Poole, director of Texas Recording for the Blind, said. Math and law books might take IO to 15 pages per hour (there is a law student who needs such legal tapes), but a specialized agricultural book once crawled through a recor­ ding session at three pages per hour. dent teaching. H a n t t a a e h i n f f d e g r e e AND SANTOS has just one l eft on his ye ar ’s work m a s t e r ’s in mechanical engineering. San­ tos, while working on his thesis on “a chair that won t break down,” hopes to im­ prove t o d a y ’s stan d ard wheelchair, a 200-pound, $1,- 500 electric chair which can­ not be taken out in rain (one drop of water in the module box will short-circuit the $300 part); with parts which must be ordered specially from California, and a frame not built for a rough campus en­ vironment. By SUSAN LEVINE Texan Staff Writer Directions to the Main Building from Jester Center are relatively simple: down Speedway to the Business- Economics Building hill, up the long slope to the statues, then onto the mall. Right. Wrong: if your constant companion is a 200-pound steel chair, you travel, in the street, straight for another two blocks, turn at Robert A. Welch hall, again before Painter Hall, finally meet Inner Campus Drive and follow it to the back of the Main Building. Tony Santos used to leave 30 minutes early to reach class on time. University enrollment for this spring rests just under 40,000 students, and of these more than 75 qualify as mobility impaired. Almost 40 have motor disabilities; 45 are considered legally or totally blind. LIMITED IN some way, whether by sight or motion, they can be identified by their canes or wheelchairs. Either handicap forces an individual to readjust to life, in general, and a college environment, in particular. The University campus, for instance, sprawls across eight blocks from Martin Luther King Boulevard to 27th Street and extends from Guadalupe Street to Red River Street. On the grounds are more than 75 buildings constructed anytime from 1911 to 1976. It was not until 1970 that Texas law detailed provisions concer­ ning special building features for the mobility impaired. It was fall, 1971, Santos rem em bers, before any restrooms on campus were modified to include longer stalls and handrails. In spring, 1972, after fracturing his neck in a car accident, he returned to the U n iv e rs ity as a quadriplegic and discovered that “ on the whole campus, there were no sidewalk ramps.” SENATE BILL 111 provided for such inclines and required that they be within a certain degree of slope (12 feet long for every one foot high), ex­ plained Physical Plant Direc­ tor William M. Wilcox. Wilcox supervises the accommoda­ tion of old buildings and, aided by student suggestions, removes dangerous dropoffs and physical barriers to both wheelchair and blind students. “ I don’t know of any building we have now that’s not accessible,’ Wilcox said. M obility hazards pose different worries to the stu­ dent lacking his legs or eyes. “ I have to make sure all buildings are accessible and have an elevator, but even then, not all classes are accessible,” Barbara Liska said. A birth defect that “ sort of got worse” forced her to a chair 12 years ago, yet she retained significant use of her hands and arms. B L I ND A paraplegic has strength only in his upper extremities, whereas a quadriplegic is un­ able to use any of his limbs. S T U D E N T S , however, may face more problems getting to a building than getting into class. Un­ seen environmental hazards, such as posts or signs, may block their path; almost “ anything head high that does not extend to the ground” con­ stitutes an obstacle, Scott Truax, special education graduate student and mobility orientation instructor, said. All mobility relies on con­ cepts, concepts of a person’s body id e n tifica tio n and manipulation in relation to the environment, he explained. “ In itia lly , most blind students are fearful (of the University) because people talk of how big it is,” he said. S P E C I A L P E R S O N needed part tim e to serve Austin's finest beer clientele. Must be a va ilab le through sum m er and be able to work both 3:30 p.m. and 8 p.m. shifts as needed. Apply in person only after 4 p.m. The Draught House, 4112 M ed ical P a rk w a y. P A Y A B L E S B O O K K E E P E R Experience necessary in double-entry bookkeeping and payroll. 8-5, 40 hour week, $2.50 hour plus insurance. Start im m ediately. Please call 474-1411 on weekdays or come In person to 2806 Real. Ask for Susie Schaffer. A P A R T M E N T M A N A G E R for small 22- unit apartm ent complex. N ice ap art­ m ent plus all bills in exchange for managem ent and minor maintenance and apartm ent get-ready. Pool, laundry room, shuttle, all conveniences with cen­ tral location at 1510 W est 6th and West L y n n . B o n u s a n d i n c e n t i v e p la n availab le. Phone 474-4848 for details (24 hours). Model apartm ent No. 102. APT. M A N A G E R Responsible graduate or law student needed to manage 29 unit apt complex. Begin Ju ne 1st in exchange for I bdrm Individual must be neat, clean, apt motivated, m echanically inclined, and highly responsible. Send resume to: 108 W. 45th, Austin or call 452-1419 or 453-2771 for appt. G R A D U A T E , S T A Y IN A U S T IN W o rk for a local re a l estate firm . Representation city-wide, both residen­ tial and com m ercial, with emphasis in what you know - mid-town, UT area. West Austin. Ask some of our sales associates who are UT graduates. John Sanford, UT '72 M ike Schroeder, U T '71 Cathy Jennings, UT '61 C O N S O L ID A T E D R E A L T Y 1603 La v a ca Ed d ie Pierce, Sales M anager, 474-6896 W A N T E D N U R S E S 7 A I D E S L V N 7s and R N 7s N urses' aides, L V N 's and R N 's wanted on 3-11 and 11-7 shifts. Come to Four Seasons Nursing Center, 2806 Real or c a l l S u s a n S c h a f f e r , 474-141 1 on weekdays P O S IT IO N A V A IL A B L E F O R S U M M E R C A M P IN N E W M E X IC O D ram a instructor; g irls' cabin counselor • d a n c in g In s tru c to r; b o y 's cab in counselor - swim m ing instructor; boys' cabin counselor - art instructor Inter­ vie w A p ril 14 Confact Ed ucatio n al Placem en t Service, 471-1511 for appoint­ ment O V E R S E A S JO B S S u m m e r / Y e a r - r o u n d E u r o p e , S. A m erica, Australia, Asia, etc. All fields $500 • $1200 monthly. Expenses paid, sightseeing. Fre e Inform W rite: Inter­ national Jo b Center, Dept T E , Box 4490, Berkeley, CA 94704 HOUSE" P A R E N T S Unusual opportunity for flexible mature m arrie d couple with no children to live as house parents in a home like residen­ tial facility Position involves parenting 4 adolescent boys (14-18) tem porarily placed aw ay from their own fam ily. S itu ation exposes couple to vary in g therapeutic experiences and offers good le a rn in g e x p e rien ce s for those in ­ terested m social services field and seek­ ing ch a n ce for in d iv id u a l g ro w th. Benefits include salary, room & board, am ple tim e off and vacations Contect The Settlement Home, weekdays, 836- 2150 R E D C A R P E T R E A L T O R S at 9513 Burnet Road will train you in proven techniques to put you in the $30.00/year bracket In 6 months Spring and summer graduates, any field, are being interviewed Call M r Mounce at 837 4970 Next Red Carpet training class it on A pril 19, at night P A R T T IM S H E L P W onted Tower R estaurant 2809 San Jacinto A ID D R IV E R to work with fem alecllent in Cerebral Palsy program, M F, 7:30- 2 30 477 6515 447 8027 ROOM AND BOARD F L O W E R P E O P L E need people to sell flowers. Highest pay paid d ally. 282-1102. W A N T E D P A R T T IM E help In the even­ ing. Good atmosphere, easy work. Call 474-1064 for Interview. W A N T E D : E x p e r i e n c e d c lo t h e s salesperson to work sum mer through fall-spring semesters. 476-5477. A P A R T M E N T M A N A G E R for sm all UT complex. Apply Box D-5, Austin 78712. S P E C I A L E D . T e a c h e r w a 'n ted . Em phasis learning disable for private boarding school near Santa Fe, New Mexico. Interview 4/14. Contact Ed u c a­ tion Placem en t Service, 471-1511 for ap­ pointment. N E E D A P A rT m e n T m a n a g e r for small complex near UT. Call 454-3857. N E E D P E O P L E to strip paint and paint my house (in te rio r); work your own hours; $2.10 hr.; I can provide transpor­ tation. 476-4725. B A B Y S I T T E R N E E D E D M o n d a y , Wednesday, Frid ay, 10-5:30. Car re­ quired, transportation cost paid. Place at home in W est Lake Hills. 327-2574. Call between 9-10 a .m._______________________ D E S IR E H O U S E K E E P E R . Lib eral en­ vironment. Close to Law School. P a rt time or full tim e student acceptable. Wednesday and Thursday off. Call Ken, 472-7009.__________________________________ R E G U L A R W E E K E N D g a rd e n e r- helper. $2.25. M r. Lockhart, 477-3644. DOWN T O W N E R R E S T A U R A N T under new m a n a g e m e n t. H ir in g host or h o stess, $2.20 ho u r. W a lt e r s and waitresses, $1.40 hour. Fu ll and part time. Apply in person only, lit h and San Jacinto. Ask for Cathy or Sandy._______ S U M M E R W O R K . N ationally known company interviewing college students. Must relocate and have entire summer free. $840/mo. Call 472-8977 for interview times. ROOM AND BOARD N E W M A N H A L L Women's Dorm S U M M E R R A T E S $42 up weekly Sm all, quiet, friendly, excellent food, double/single rooms, maids, parking, l a u n d r y , k i t c h e n e t t e , c l o s e to e ve ryth in g . Room /board, 19 m eals. C a th o lic / n o n d e n o m ln a tlo n a l. 2026 Guadalupe, 476-0669. T H E C A S T I L I A N Co-Ed Dorm SU M M ER R A T ES $244 double $341 private 6 weeks session 15 m e als per week w ith u n lim ite d seconds, m aid service, free covered laundry, pool, parking, kitchenettes, recreate 2323 San Antonio tional facilities 478-9811 IN N S T E A D CO-OP Single room, board. $121 mo 1919 Robbins Place. 477-8682. IN N S T E A D CO-OP Sum m er Vacancies. 1919 Robbins, 5V> blocks west of campus on 22nd. 477-8682, 474-1397. FOR RENT F O O S B A L L T A B L E S Rent your own table for a fraction of the cost of playing at gam e rooms. 474-6960 Free Installation T H E R A M P A R T A P A R T M E N T S now preleasing for F a ll 1976. One and two bedroom apartments, furnished or un­ furnished Fro m $129 plus e lectricity 1230 E 38VY 454-0202 __ _____________ C A R P E T E D O F F IC E S P A C E , parking, close to U T . $50 and up, A B P ., Tri Towers Complex, 478-7411.______________ B E A lJ f T F U L D U P L E X one block south Westgate M ali $200/month plus b ills K W R e a lty, 451-6079 O F F I C E S P A R E A V A I L A B L E . A p ­ proxim ately 500 so. feet $100 month. U tilitie s Lo cated second le v e l, re a r of Y a r ln g 's store, 2406 Guadalupe P riv a te entrance oft San A n­ tonio St Contact W alte r Young, 476-6511. ______________ furnished LOST A FOUND R E W A R D Lost Sat. 4/3/76 at A r ­ madillo H eavy silver Afghani bracelet, Cornelian stones Suxy, 472-7720, 288- 0793 ROOM AND BOARD Attending the Su m m e r S e ssio n ? WHY NOT TRY THE BEST! ★ The Best Food in Town ★ 5 Day Maid Service ★ Sun Decks ★ Private Pools if Shuttle Bus at Front Door accepting contracts for Su m m e r MADISON HOUSE 709 W. 22nd St. 478-9891 478-8914 Madison-Bellaire Apts. F O R FA LL MADISON HOUSE & DEXTER HOUSE (M eals optional at Dexter) Just North of 27th at Guadalupe 2707 Hemphill Park M B A , T Y P IN G , P R IN T IN G , B IN D IN G T H E C O M P L E T E P R O F E S S IO N A L F U L L T I M E T Y P I N G S E R V I C E 472-3210 and 472-7677 A t o Z Angela Zarcaro Secretarial Service 109 E . 10th St. 512/472-0149 Austin, Texas 78701 B R O K E N W IR E, M E T A L F R A M E S , OR NOSE PADS ON Y O U R G L A S S E S ? Diversified Unlimited 815 Brazos Room 1006-B (International Life Bldg.) for complete welding service S O U N D U N L I M I T E D ! M ake your dance a sure success with our mobile disco music systems. Quality, professional service, lowest prices in Austin. 454-2088 451-5957 T H E F I N E S T SO U N D IN TO W N R O Y W. H O L L E Y A U T O M A T IC T Y P IN G T Y P IN G & T Y P E S E T T I N G C O P Y IN G & P R IN T IN G B IN D IN G 1401 Mohle Dr. 476-3018 A L T E R A T I O N S We are now doing O U T S ID E alterations expertly & prompt­ ly. B O B E L L IO T T 'S The shop for guys and girls. 2426 Guadalupe, On-the-Drag G I N N Y 7S C O P Y I N G S E R V I C E INC. Free Parking 7am - 10pm M F 9am - 5pm Sat. 44 D o b ie M a ll 476-9171 ON T H E R O A D O R IN Y O U R D R IV E W A Y W IL L NOT R IP YOU O FF Mobile Car Repair W e charge 70% of garage rate by coming to you. Don't tow it — Call us, 443-2719 MISCELLANEOUS I N N O ­ I N T E R E S T E D F R I L L S L O W C O S T J E T T R A V E L to Europe, A frica, the M iddle East, the F a r E a s t ? E D U C A T IO N A L F L IG H T S has been helping people travel on a budget with m axim um flexibility and m inim um hassle for six years. F o r more info. ca ll toll free, 800-223-5569. S T U D Y IN E U R O P E At Sch iller College - Europe U niversity in Heidelberg, Strasbourg, Pa ris, Lon­ don, M adrid. B A., B B A,, B F A. and M A cu rricu la Academ ic year abroad, i n t e r i m an d s u m m e r p r o g r a m s . Am erican system of academ ic credit. Language of instruction: English. A c­ credited by IC A I. W rite for brochure: Sch iller College, U S Office, 429 N .W . 48th Street, Oklahom a City, O K 73118. F O R H E L P with an unwed pregnancy call E d n a G ladney Home, Fo rt Worth, Texas, toll f ree 1-800-792-1104 __________ D E P A R T IN G B IG B R O T H E R desires student with two years left in Austin to befriend precocious nine-year-old. Call Lee, 472-3893 anytim e. ROOMMATES ________________ 2 B E D R O O M Spanish style unit of quadruplex. Yard, patio. Enfield. Your share - $112 50 A B P . 476 3596.___________ W orking or grad preferred F E M A L E Luxury, furnished A B P , 2W, shuttle. Own room, $110 Broadm oor. 454-1209 F E M A L E R O O M M A T E . S u m m e r and or F a ll No dope or dogs. $105 A B P . E a st Riverside. After 4:30, Kathy, 443- 3730 N E E D F E M A L E R O O M M A T E . 2 blocks campus. Shuttle Share large room. F u r ­ nished house $57, 'A bills. Fenced back _____________________ _ yard_477-5436 H O U S E M A T E , 2 Bd, AC, fenced yard, pets O K H ardw ood floors. Close. $100, V* bills 474-9816._______________________ _ U B E R A L R O O M M A T E 2 bdrm duplex furnished $75 plus bills. No deposit or lease Rick, 451-4340. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ F E M A L E S H A R E 2 bedroom house near Eastwoods. $67.50, Vi bills. Fireplace, piano Diane, 476-6734 afternoons F E M A L E G R A D S or student teachers n eed ed fo r r o o m m a t e (s ) s u m m e r through spring. Townhouse o r ap art­ ment. 441-1529. H O U S E M A T E W A N T E D . L ib e ra l. 3 bedroom, fenced yard, $75. Call Tim, W e n d y, 454-0186, or com e by 5307 Roosevelt. ____________________ M A L E A T T O R N E Y , 34, seeks to move into, as of M a y I, furnished house, duplex, o r a p a rtm e n t o ccu p ie d by fem ale. No children. W ill share rent and bills. 472-65TV____ _______________________ 2 B R T f O R S U M M E R . Pool, A B P Fro m M a y 15th or Ju n e 1st. Call L a rry , 454- 1621 (afte r 9 p .m .). UNCLASSIFIED Clock rad ios, hair dryers fixed. 452-4406. T I N K E R 'S D A M F ix it S hop 452-4406 B e lly dance instruction. 472-3344._______ Wedding Photography ssless 451-0021. D ylan/M itchell P ro f'! Photos. 477-7065. Cash for used bicycles. 477-3002 U fa n tia group atter 5pm 282-1872__ B S R 810X turn. Pert. 447-4076 flites W ant World Books? Call 454-0064.____ Wedding organist reasonable 472-0558 '68 A H Sprite good engine 443-6136 House tor rent M ay. 452-4668 Used drawing table. $30. 451-7230. IO speed Schwinn $50 . 477-8540 Pio neerY s2 5 carspkrs $20 477-6389 c7lToh23"acce* $80 421 OAveH eves. D u p le x igre e n h o u se $ i8 5 re n t4 4 7 -8 0 8 2 Shepherd-mix pups $10 477-7383 '69 G ran P rix Classic 345-1755________ Good used green couch, $25 . 443-6430 1950 C h ev. P U , '62 engine 928-3750 '66 V W van parts 447-8082. 443-5808 F M stereo/tape/spkrs $50 477-3063 K a y F-hole guitar $40 478-2674 King watbed$50 BW TV»25 477-3313 Fnd-P scp sngls Pease P a rk Pax 982 F a n c y Mex.coffeetable$40ca 476-5559 FURNISHED HOUSES T Y P l N f l I I r i m e IS* . * H - D Y SERVICE Reports, Resumes, Theses, Letter-. All U n iversity and business work Last M inute Service Open 9-8 Mon-Th & 9 5 Fri Sat 472-8936 DobieM all Ju st North of 27th at Guadalupe 2707 Hem phill Park Yes, we do type Freshman themes. 472-3210 and 472-7677 R E P O R T S , T h e s e s , D issertations, books typed a c c u ra te ly , reaso n ably. Printing, binding. Oft 24th Street. Mrs. Bodour, 4 7 8 - 8 1 1 3 . _________ ________ V IR G IN IA S C H N E ID E R Typing S er­ vice. G rad uate and undergraduate typ­ ing, printing, binding. 1515 Koenig Lane. 459-7205.__________________________________ E X P E R I E N C E D A N D F A S T Typist T heses, d is s e rta tio n s , p ro fe ss io n al reports, law, etc. Printing, binding. B a r ­ ________________ bara Tullos. 453-5124. C R O C K E T T C O M P A N Y . Typing, copy­ ing, word processing. IB M M A G C A R D ll, M em ory T ypew riter for autom atic typing Typesetting, copying, printing, and binding. 5530 B u rnet Road, 453-6385. T 'T p T n g ^ E x p e r i e n c e d , n e a t , reasonable rates. Call after 5:30 and on weekends Bobbie's Typing, 30th and Duval, 477-8376. m s S E R T A T I ON S,^Theses, reports, and la w b r ie f s . E x p e r i e n c e d t y p i s t . Tarrytow n, 2507 Brid le Path. Lo rraine Brad y, 472-4715. ________________ T Y P IN G . Fast, reliable, experienced. All kinds Also autom atic typing tor m ul­ tiple originals. B ill Heaton Enterprises. 535 E a st Woodward, 443-1739.___________ C A L L M E F O R Fast, accurate typing of theses, dissertatio ns, reports, te rm papers. Linda Woodland, 444-9158.______ T Y P T n G . P r o fe s s io n a l q u a lit y a t reasonable rates After hours service. Correcting S ele cte e ll. Call Helen, 451 - 3661 F A S T T Y P IN G Personalized service for theses, term papers, dissertations, etc. M rs B e tty Jackson. 442-8545 ______ ________ _____ i l l u s t r a t i o n s , T y p i n g , P h o to g ra p h y and L e ro y L e tte r in g . Reports, d issertatio ns, publications. Correcting Selectric ll. Reasonable. Call Darlene, 478-1472.________ ______________ T Y P I N G in m y home. 70Vpage for pc per. 80* for theses Call Gretchen, 452- 3469, 451-2332. __ M A B Y L S M A L L W O O D Typing Last m inu te, o v e rn ig h t a v a ila b le . T e rm papers, letters. theses, dissertations, M a sfe rC h a rg e, B a n k A m e ric a rd . 892- ___________________ 0727. T H E S E S , D IS S E R T A T IO N S T Y P IN G 2 IB M Selectric ll $1 page, day service $1 50 page tables, equations. Suzi P a tte r­ son, 471-7213 G uaranteed 75<-«0> P E R P A G E . IO years experience High quality guaranteed. Call after 4 weekdays All day Saturday-Sunday. ____________ 476-0411. F R A N C E S W O O D S Typing Service. E x ­ perienced Law , theses, dissertations, manuscripts. All work guaranteed. P rin ­ ting, binding 453-6090 B O B B Y E b l L A F I E L D IB M Selectric, pica/elite 25 years experience Books, d i s s e r t a t i o n s , r e p o r t s , mimeographing. t h e s e s , Ju st North of 27th at Guadalupe 2707 Hemphill Park IT^jJux fiym R E S U M E S with or without pictures 2 Day Service 472-3210 and 472-7677 ROOMS F U R N IS H E D , alt bills paid. Quiet, walk to U T M ale or fem ale. 306 E a s t 30th. 472- 5 1 3 A _________ _________________________ t h e B r o w n l e e ! P o rn . rooms, $99.50 A B P , CA /CH 2502 Nueces, Apt. 200. 478- 1704,j8-1:30.______ " W A L K TO C A M P U S . Furnished, sm all complex. Pool $95 A B P . Voyageurs. 478- 6776 N IC E L Y F U R N I S H E D rooms for man, within walking distance to UT. Plush carpet, c e n t r a le r , and kitchen. Priva te . $47 50 double. $84 single. 2710 Nueces. 477 9388 ________________________ A/C F U R N I S H E D bedroom In quiet home City-Shuttle bus, p riv a te en­ trance M ales. 608 Blanco. 478-7900 l a d y I d e a l F U R N I S H E D R O O M for w ork­ P r i v a t e b a t h , q u i e t in g neighborhood. Room for car. 10:30 or 4 30, 476 9051. T E X A N D O R M Doubles $199 Singles $359 per semester 1905 Nueces. D aily m aid service, central air. Refrigerators, hot plates allowed Pa rkin g available. Two blocks from campus. Co-ed. Resident managers. 477- 1760 WANTED in te re s te d P I O N E E R S . Sincere, conscientious In­ d iv id u a ls in b e tte rin g Mankind Please call Bruce, 10:30 a m., 2:00 p.m. Mon.-F rl. 4 7 6 - 4 2 4 6 ._______ U N F U R N I S H E b l l o O M for studio. Ap­ proxim ately IO' x 15'. Can pay $30 a month 476-1086, after 7:00 p.m.________ F E M A L E R O O M M A T E . M a le attorney, 34, seeks to move into, as of M a y I, fu r­ nished house, duplex, or apartm ent oc­ cupied by fem ale No children. W ill share rent and bills. 472-6571 WANTED W A N T E D Your Savings EARN 6% U n iv e rsity a nnua,,Y CREDIT UNION UT fwvhy 'Buildings are more accessible now .7 justment training such as this (offered as a college emphasis course by the Criss Cole Rehabilitation Center) is usually advised for mobility impaired persons, especially new students or those retur­ ning to school. There are not only mobility and time adjustments, said John Flowers of the Texas Rehabilitation Center (TRC), but also academic and social ones. “ Academic pressures are intensified by the fact that the student can’t write or writes slower,” he said. Basic classroom skills such as typ­ ing, taking an exam, or simply turning the page of a textbook are also impeded. TRC O PERATES a branch agency on campus, as does the Texas Commission for the Blind (TCB). Both offer assistance and counseling to clients and direct students to S p e c i a l a University-based office sup­ ported by federal funds from the Department of Health, Education and Welfare (HEW). S e r v i c e s , Recorders, tapes and readers, for example, are provided by TCB in conjunc­ tion with Texas Recording for the Blind. Listen to a blind student: he will speak of “ reading” the issue of most re c e n t Newsweek or the last chapter of his chemistry homework. The book or magazine, it is usually safe to say, is a “ talk­ ing book” (record) or tape furnished by the national Recording for the Blind. Their New York office houses 35,000 titles for school or work use. BUT TEXAS also enjoys a unique service through the state chapter, which main­ tains a recording studio in the old University Kirby Hall. Ap- If academic aptitude is dif­ ficult to achieve, social ad­ justment is often even more so. Jester Center is the only University dorm built to house the mobility impaired. Larger toilet stalls and wheel-in show ers stand in the restrooms, and lower room shelves are more easily reached by w h e e lch a ir students. All mobility im­ paired students live on the first floor which is complete with ramps and slopes. FLOWERS THINKS Jester is fairly good for handicapped students because of its barrier-free surroundings. TRC pays not only for a mobility impaired student’s room and board, but also for the living expenses of their roommates, or attendants. However, Dan Kessinger of TCB feels the special dif­ ficulties of a blind student do not adapt so easily to Jester. He cites the large, noisy numbers of people, especially in the everyday cafeteria situation, as impersonal and disturbing to someone who uses hearing and object perception as a main source of orientation. The ultimate goal, of course, of most mobility im­ paired students is complete physical independence and self-reliance. Liska long ago “ learned the tricks” of her wheel chair, and, while she lives alone in Jester now, looks forward to the day when she will have her own apartment. Excitedly she talks about the driving course she w ill be taking this summer, though the driver s license w ill come, in one respect, too late. Now she still has to ride with another teacher to McCallum High School where she does her stu- —Sketch by Stay* WWgr*n “It should be built like a jeep,” Flowers complains, “not like a delicately tuned car.” The long distances a han­ dicapped student often have to travel on and around campus has raised questions on the need for some sort of shuttle bus system. THE CAMPUS servi ce fraternity, APO, sponsors a wheelchair pushing service, but Student Government’s Student Services Committee, researching the feasibilities of a transportation system, has investigated such alter­ natives as modifying shuttle buses with motor lifts and wider aisles or running a separate van for mobility im­ paired. One concern among mobili­ ty impaired persons, students and administrators seems to be how they are perceived by others. Don Knaphede, who could onc e s e e , now a bl ind rehabilitation counselor at the Un i v e r si t y of Houston., l a c k of c r i t i c i z e d the knowledge and awareness present in public attitudes and admitted, “When I had my sight I didn’t know what to do, what not to do, so I stayed away from them (the blind.)” B.A. Acevedo of Special Services emphasized the han­ dicapped wants to be treated as an individual first, es­ pecially not as a physically handicapped individual. “The basic thing is the way one things,” Santos says. “If a handicapped student thinks positively, he’s got it made. Otherwise, he’s gone. “ That’s the di fference between a crippled and a dis­ abled person. The cripple finds out his class is on the thi r d f l o o r and g e t s hysterical.” Indians Smoke Peyote Legally F A C U L T Y - S T A F F : A H O U S E A L L Y O U R O W N . 4 rooms, one bedroom, quiet, secluded, walking distance c a m ­ pus, enclosed garage, no pets. $125. 459- 5336. __________________ ON C R S H U T T L E B U S , greenhouse, fe n c e d y a r d , new p a in t an d t ile , availab le Ju n e I, $315. Rob, 459-5406, nights 453-5778. ____ _________________ JU S T N O R T H of Highland M a ll. 3-IV*, all appliances, dishwasher, fenced yard, CA/CH. A vailab le Ju n e I. $295. Call Rob. 459 5406, 453-5778. UNFURNISHED HOUSES A V A I L A B L E M A Y I N. 2-1, air, CH, carpet, fenced yard, garden. Shown A pril 16-18 472-5771. T W O B E D R O O M , appliances, fenced yard, trees, garage A vailab le Ju ne I. $185 5305 Chesterfield. 451-3249 BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES P H O T O G R A P H E R S E A R N $$$ You do o n ly c a m e r a w o rk , cu sto m co lo r laboratory w ill do the rest You keep 75%. Rem esat Photo Color. 453-2030 TUTORING P IA N O IN S T R U C T O R Beginner, ad­ vanced G uitar also, folk-classical UT area, U T degreed teacher. 459-9642 L E A R N TO P L A Y G U IT A R Beginner and advanced D rew Thomason, 478- 2079. MIRANDO CITY (U P I) - Each spr­ ing the cactus begins to bloom and law officers start looking for hippies and drug traffickers who flock to the U.S.- Mexico border searching for peyote which grows wild in the area. Some are caught and jailed for possession of peyote, which contains the hallucinogenic mescaline, such as a California man caught with 500 pounds at Jourdanton last week. But one group conducts the biggest peyote party in the nation, and it is all legal. Indians who are members of the Native American Church are exempted from the law and gather each spring to send up prayers in huge puffs of peyote smoke. State District Court Judge James Hazen of Laredo handed down a land­ mark decision in 1969 ruling the In­ dians' use of peyote was legal and that laws preventing it ran counter to con­ stitutional guarantees of freedom of religion. Since then, he said, the Texas Supreme Court upheld the opinion and federal and state laws were amended allowing members of the church with proper identification to legally use peyote. In gratitude for the ruling which preserved the peyote rituals Hazen said predated the Europeans landing on this continent, the Indians made the judge an honorary “ brother” of their church. Contrary to some reports the Indians each year get “ bombed out of their gourds” on peyote and leap and dance through the night, Kazen said the religious use of the cactus variety was subdued. He said representatives of various American Indian tribes that attended the springtime ritual general­ ly were elderly and mostly sat and chanted all night. “It s a solemn affair — beautiful,” said Kazen, who has been invited to at­ tend the yearly ritual in a huge teepee the Indians bring with them. “It lasts from sunset to sunrise. “This (Webb, Zapata, Starr and Jim Hogg Counties) is the only area in North America where peyote grows. Representatives from tribes from all over the country come down and then they gather the peyote. They have it (ritual) out on their sacred grounds where the peyote grows. They bring their own church which is a big teepee and it opens at the top. They build a fire so that the prayers go up in smoke at the top of the teepee to heaven. It s very interesting, really.” Kazen researched the history of the Indians’ annual trek to the peyote fields and said they eat the peyote raw, smoke it and brew a juice for drinking in the same manner wine is used as a sacrament in many Christian churches. W ed n esd ay/ A p ril 14, 1976 T H E DAILY TEXAN P ag e 19 I t Sacking contestant grapples with snake before dropping it into burlap bag held by partner. Snake, Rattle and Sack The weather was hot, and the unfortunately, so were sn a k e s a t th e N a tio n a l Rattlesnake Sacking Cham­ pionship at Noack. The 80- degree Central Texas heat which permeated the small outdoor arena and snake pit brought with it the aggression and quick striking capabilities of the diamondback rattlers. As a result, the best time recorded in the sacking com­ petition was 1:22 minutes, 30- seconds off the usual winning times. The -object of the competi­ tion is simple. Execution is not. Teams of two persons, a sacker and a catcher, are re­ quired to pin IO snakes and deposit them in a burlap sack as quickly as possible. Four judges, provided by the Taylor County Jaycees, who sponsor the annual event, observe the contestants closely and assess five-second penalties for im­ proper pinning, stepping on the sn a k es or b ite s and scratches received by the en­ trants. Bo C arter, a student at S o u th w e s t T e x a s S t a te University and veteran snake sacker from Elgin, was bitten slightly by the fifth fanged creature he pinned and sack­ im ­ ed. He w as tr e a te d m ediately, how ever, and didn’t know he was bitten until the judges inspected his hands and informed him. Carter said the bite “ stings a little.” Most snake bites a re n ’t fatal. There is plenty of time for treatm ent if necessary. Wilford Webb, a hunter and Dallas business executive, said, “Snakes are not really as dangerous or aggressive as most people believe.” He said is because of apprehension “ fear of the unknown.” “ Hunting snakes like learning to swim. At first you are terrified of the water. But later, when you learn about it, is respect replaces fear. It’s the same with rattlesnakes.” Snake hunts begin around the first of November when the rattlers seek shelter and “den up.” Hunters stalk their quarry from sunup until late afternoon and m ay cover several square miles in the process. Five or IO snakes constitute a good hunting day, but often none are found. is R a ttle s n a k e h u n tin g becoming a “very popular sport, at least around here,” Taylor Jaycee and contest ju dge G ene R aesz said . “ We’ve got a group of six to eight guys who hunt avidly. These guys do it for the thrill of the sport, not to see how many snakes they can kill.’’ The Society for the Preven­ tion of Cruelty to Animals (SPCA) and other ecology- minded organzations have spoken out ag ain st com ­ petitions such as the sacking championships, citing cruelty to an im als and upsetting ecosystems. B ut, R aesz c o u n te re d , “ People around here kill ’era in their backyards when there is really no need to. Civiliza­ tion has killed more snakes than h un ters have. More snakes are killed in the streets by cars than anywhere else.” Story and Photos by Mike Smith Snakes were not milked for competi­ tion so they are as fierce as they look. Gene Raesz, Taylor Jaycee and contest judge, holds this rattler up tor closer rn- The percentages caught up with Bo Carter, who sustained spec t ion. a minor bite. Rage 20 W ednesday, April 14, 1976 THE DAILY TEXAN * t i