Second Im peachm ent Article Passes^ 28-10 . WASHINGTON (AP) - Expanding its formal accusations against President Nixon, the House Judiciary Committee adopted a second impeachment article Monday night, charging him with broad misuse of federal agents and agencies. The vote was 28-10, with seven Republicans joining all 21 Democrats in accusing Nixon of ordering or condoning wiretap ping, private peeks at tax returns and other activities violating the constitutional rights of citizens.” The bipartisan m ajority was one vote greater than on Satur day night, when the committee voted 27-11 a first article recommending Nixon’s removal from office for obstructing justice in the Watergate cover-up. . The additional vote in support of the second article came ^ from Rep. Robert McClory of Illinois, second-ranking Republican on the com m ittee. The committee recessed immediately after the vote until 9:30 a.m . CDT Tuesday. STILL TO come are proposed impeachment articles based on Nixon’s refusal to heed congressional subpoenas, his secret bombing of Cambodia and irregularities in his personal ^ x es. These will be taken up Tuesday when the com m ittee holds its sixth — and perhaps final — day of nationally televised debate. Compared with Saturday’s grim, tear-evoking drama, the roll call on the second article was almost anticlimactic. Throughout a day of sometimes desultory, sometimes barbed debate, im peachment advocates had easily turned back the m aneuvers of Nixon’s outnumbered defenders. . . Defenders of the President contended the wiretaps were bas ed upon legitimate national security considerations. Hours before Monday night’s vote, the committee s ranking Republican said in an interview that he now believes the full House probably will vote impeachment. THE COMMENTS of Rep. Edward Hutchinson of Michigan, one of the President’s foremost defenders on the panel of lawyers, contrasted sharply with Nixon’s prediction he will win vindication from the House. And Speaker Carl Albert refused Monday to comment on a prediction that the House will vote impeachment by a margin of (Rqlafd Storie*. Pug* 3.) _____________ about 70 votes, saying he does not think it proper for a speaker to deal in such predictions. House Majority Leader Thomas O’Neill Jr. made the es timate. , . . A majority House vote would place Nixon on trial in the Senate, where a two-thirds margin is required to convict and remove him from office. The Senate took its first step earlier Monday to prepare for a possible trial of Nixon, approving without debate a resolution directing its rules committee to review all precedents. Not since 1868 has a presidential impeachment proceeding gone so f ar AS THEY HAD done during debate on the first article, the i mnooj - hmont hln*' a s no Droof anti-impeachment bloc arcuipd argued that there w was proof Nixon knew of the illegal activities of his subordinates. The first of a series of motions to drop allegations was beaten 28-10 in a vote indicating the second article would have even more support than the first. Again leading the fight in Nixon’s defense was Rep. Charles Wiggins, R-Calif., who opened the debate by attempting to have the entire article thrown out on a point of order — that it did not directly involve “ impeachable’’ offenses. That complaint was immediately rejected without a formal vote. Then Wiggins offered amendments aimed at narrowing the charges. BY A VOTE of 28-9, the committee rejected Wiggins’ motion to include in the specific allegations the words “acting with his (Nixon’s) knowledge and pursuant to his instructions’’ where they refer to actions by presidential aides. The impeachment bloc opposed the proposed change on the ground it could eliminate actions which the President approved after the fact even if he had no prior knowledge. As with the first article, the second concluded: “Wherefore Richard M. Nixon, by such conduct, w arrants im peachment and trial, and removal from office. It included five numbered paragraphs containing specific allegations: • th a t the President acting personally and through subor dinates sought to obtain confidential information from the Internal Revenue Service and also attempted to get the agency to audit the tax returns of political opponents of the Admmistra- finn tion. • That the President misused the FBT and the Secret Service by directing the agencies to wiretap government employes and private citizens. • That he authorized formation of the White House special in vestigations unit known as the plumbers which engaged in il legal activities. • That he failed to adhere to his constitutional oath to take care that the laws be faithfully executed after he learned of the involvement of White House and campaign aides in the Watergate cover-up. • That he misused the power of his office to interfere with the investigations of the FBI, Justice Department, special Watergate prosecutor and the Central Intelligence Agency Other articles expected to be offered before the committee completes its monumental deliberations would charge the President with ordering illegal bombing of Cambodia and with personal tax violations. Meanwhile, Senate Majority Leader Mike Mansfield D-Mont., met with Minority Leader Hugh Scott, R-Pa.. to begin formal planning for a possible impeachment trial. “ We feel we have no choice but to start preparations,” said Mansfield just before the meeting The House is expected to vote on impeachment late in August. A majority vote in the House would send the charges to the Senate for trial. A two-thirds majority would be required for conviction of the President and his removal from office T h e D a il y T e x a n Student N e w sp a p e r at The University of Texas at A ustin Vol. 74, No. 31 F ourteen Pages Ten Cents A u stin , T e x a s , T uesday, July 30, 1974 P le ase Recycle This N ew spaper 471-4591 Attorney Jake Jacobsen A lso C h a rg e d in M ilk Scandal Connally Indicted by Federal Grand Jury J —UPI Telephoto John B. Con n ally By DAVID HENDRICKS Texan Staff Writer John Connally, form er Treasury secretary, was indicted by a federal grand jury Monday in Washington on five counts of perjury, bribery and obstruc tion of justice. Also indicted was Austin lawyer Jake Jacobsen on one count of giving illegal funds to a public official. THE INDICTMENT said Connally. a former Texas governor and, in 1938-39, president of the University student body, accepted $10,000 in cash from Jacobsen, a milk fund official, in exchange for recommending that federal milk price supports be increased. Jacobsen was charged by the grand jury with paying Connally for “official acts performed by him, to wit, his recommendations in his official capacity concerning an increase in the federal . „ milk price support level be fixed by the secretary of agriculture, announced on March 28, 1971.” The charges against Connally break down to two counts of accepting an il legal payment under bribery statutes, one count of conspiracy to commit per jury and obstruct justice and two counts (Related Story, Page 2.) of making false declarations before the grand jury. JACOBSEN, an official of Associated Milk Producers Inc., (the largest milk cooperative in the nation) and a longtime Texas colleague of Connally’s, was in dicted earlier this year on a charge of making a false declaration to the grand jury about his handling of a $10,000 pay ment to a public official. Jacobsen was named as an unindicted Carrasco Continues Holdout; One Inmate Hostage Escapes Prison officials said late Monday he was coming out of shock and sedation satisfactorily, and “ people are talking to him now.” Ron Taylor, prison public affairs officer, said “Negotiations in the library area are continuing and are at a point now where basically we are at a standoff stage. “CARRASCO is aware that his demands will not be m et,’ Taylor continued, “but has not seen fit to surrender or give up his hostages.” Three bullet-proof helmets and three walkie-talkies have been delivered to Carrasco, but Taylor said no more of the demanded item s will be turned over. “ We are at a point where we are not going to concede to cer tain demands, nor are we going to take aggressive action against the unit,” Taylor said. He added that Carrasco is “up and down in mood — angry at times and calm at others. He will get out of this alive if he surrenders peacefully,' Taylor said. THE DECISION to release Carrasco or give in to further demands will be an administrative decision made by TDC Director J.W. Estelle, he continued, (R«lat«d Photo, Page 14.) Carrasco, an underworld narcotics figure, is serving a life sentence for assault with intent to murder a San Antonio detective. He seized 15 hostages at gunpoint Wednesday in the prison hostage who apparently suffered a heart attack. library. Before n egotiations resumed Monday morning, Henry One hostage. Glennon Johnson, 51, an educational consultant Escamilla, 40. crashed through a one-quarter-inch-thick glass for TDC, suffered a heart attack and was removed to a hospital door and crawled to the safety of the main prison building. Wednesday. Later in the afternoon, Carrasco reported that prison Prison Chaplain Rev. Joseph O’Brien, who had been serving librarian Aline House, 61, was sick and needed assistance as a liaison, became a voluntary hostage Thursday morning HOUSE WAS m oved from the library by inmates from the when Carrasco told him he could see him at the library but prison hospital and was rushed to the Huntsville hospital where could not return. she was reported to have suffered a heart attack. Her condition Gov. Dolph Briscoe has been in daily contact with prison of was described as stable late Monday. ficials and hostages and has canceled all engagements until the Escamilla, who w as serving a five-year sentence for theft, un situation is resolved. Carrasco has been letting hostages speak derwent surgery for damaged tendons in his shoulder and for with their families and the media. severe lacerations. co-conspirator in the charge against Con nally for allegedly conspiring to commit perjury and obstruct justice. Jacobsen allegedly testified earlier that he offered Connally the money, but Connally refused it. Reportedly, in the process of plea bargaining, Jacobsen changed his testimony to claim Connally accepted the money, then returned it after the investigation of the milk price was started. CONNALLY DENIED any guilt in the matter. In a statement released through his Houston law office, he said, “ For months there have been leaks, rumors and speculation concerning my role in the milk support price increase in March, 1971. “The matter is now in the open.” he continued, “where it can be dealt with honestly and fairly. I again deny that I am guilty of any wrongdoing, and I am confident that I will be completely vin dicated of these charges. The grand jury charged that Connally received $5,000 on May 14, 1971, and $5.000 on Sept. 24. 1971. while Connally was Treasury secretary. Connally has told investigators he was I i.1_ u __I approached by Jacobsen, and they had talked about winning reversal of an Ad ministration decision against increasing the price support for milk. BUT HE MAINTAINED his position already conformed with that of the producers — that the milk price support should be increased. While he said he relayed this view to others in the Ad ministration, he denied being a prime mover in President Nixon’s ultimate decision to increase price supports. Hector de Leon, a former University ombudsman who had been subpeonaed to testify in the matter last March, said he was surprised by the indictments. De Leon apparently had been called to Washington because last October he had chauffeured Connally around Austin dur ing a short visit. De Leon sa id the grand ju ry proceedings reminded him of a witch hunt. “They were grasping at straws, reaching out for any clue which might tie him in.” he said. U S, Rep. J.J. “ Jake” Pickle of Austin said. “It is always an unhappy moment when a friend is accused in a judiciaryproceeding. In this instance. John Con nally has Wbeen and is a friend of mine for many years. This is a great tragedy. I am sick to my boots.” Connally became the fourth former member of Nixon’s Cabinet to be in dicted in connection with the Watergate scandals and related investigations. Former Atty. Gen. Richard Kleindienst pleaded guilty to testifying inaccurately before a Senate com m ittee about the ITT m atter. F orm er Atty. Gen. John M itc h e ll and fo r m e r C o m m er ce Secretary Maurice Stans were indicted but were found innocent in the Vesco case in New York. MITCHELL also has been indicted in the Watergate cover-up and goes to trial in September. Connally, a three-term Democratic governor of Texas, joined the Republican Party last year during the height of the Watergate investigation. Connally. 57. faces up to 19 years im prisonment and a possible $50,000 in fines if convicted on all counts. The indict ment was submitted to Chief U.S. Dist. Judge George Hart Jr. in a 90-second proceeding in open court. By JIM HILL and MARY WALSH Texan Staff Writers HUNTSVILLE — Fred Gomez Carrasco continued to hold out Monday inside the Walls Units at the state penitentiary in Huntsville and refused to accept prison officials' offer of super vised surrender. M Officials characterized negotiations as in a “ standoff stage, saying they would not m eet Carrasco's demands for bulletproof vests, rifles and ammunition. Texas Department of Corrections officials have made two proposals to Carrasco. He can either surrender peacefully un der view of the m edia or under the supervision of his attorney. PRISON OFFICIALS withdrew their offer of transportation for Carrasco, late Monday, but the two previous surrender offers of supervision by the press or his lawyer, Ron laylor, still stand, a prison public affairs officer said. Monday was m arked by an early morning escape from the capture area by one inmate hostage and the release of another Prison Director Denies G un Sm uggling Claim 7 ' HUNTSVILLE (AP) - The state’s prison director angrily refuted Monday the claim of c o n v ic t Fred Gomez Carrasco th at h is escape-attem pt weapons were provided by prison securi ty chief Maj. Andrew J. Murdock Jr. “It galls me to see a man who has dedicated his adult life to the service of his nation and the State of Texas to be so maligned by one of almost totally op posite character and background,” said W.J. Estelle Jr., director of the Texas Department of Corrections. Carrasco. 34, who along with two other inmates has been holding hostages in a Texas prison u nit here since last Wednesday, told a San Antonio radio sta tion last week that the three .38-caliber pistols he is using were smuggled to him by Murdock. . Carrasco said he had given Murdock $25,000 to sm uggle in the guns. Estelle, in a statement to newsmen, said, “Even now we are investigating the circu m stan ces under which these weapons were so tragically introduced into the prison, and the investigation in d icates there is not the slig h test possibility to the truth of the allegations made by Fred Carrasco.” “I distinctly recall responding to one of my staff at the time I heard of this that he (Carrasco) might as well have accused my own mother of furnishing him these weapons,” Estelle said. “ It is a matter of record that Maj Murdock’s accuser has used the same tactics in an escape from a prison in Guadalajara, Mexico.” According to accounts in San Antonio, Carrasco wrote Mexican authorities naming guards who allegedly helped in his November, 1972, escape from the Mexican prison. today Hot . .. T u e sd a y will be hot w i t h a 20 p e r c e n t c h a n c e of s h o w e r s . T h e h i g h wi ll be in the mid-90s with the low in the low 70s. Texan Staff Photo by Stan ley Farrar Representatives argu e over adjournm ent a t M o n d a y s session. N e w Constitution 'Unlikely7 By ANNE MARIE KILDAY Texan Staff Writer Delegates to the Constitutional Convention failed Monday to come up with a compromise to submit to voters for approval, with the statutory deadline of the convention only hours away Working under a “call on the convention,” the 179 legislatordelegates defeated the 23rd resolution of the Committee on Sub mission and Transition, IOO ayes to 78 noes. The call on the con vention required all of the delegates present to remain behind the locked doors of the convention hall to reconsider all of the previous resolutions which had failed to receive the two-thirds vote required to submit the constitution to voters. Monday morning the convention president Price Daniel Jr. said, “ If no package gets 121 votes by 5 p.m., the only thing to do would be to shut the convention down.” Monday night, after the convention had reconsidered and fail ed to approve each of the resolutions proposed by the Com(Related Stories, P ages 2 & 3.) mittee on Submission and Transition, Daniel said, “ At this point, the Constitutional Convention is over as far as drafting a new constitution goes. The odds are heavy we won t get a new constitution.'^ Daniel attributed the convention’s failure to the right to work” proposal contained in many of the resolutions as a separate proposal. ‘‘Organized labor seems dead set and hell bent on defeating this constitution,” Daniel said Rep. Rem Earle of Austin urged the delegates to reconsider the vote on Resolution 16. “ What we are going to do today is more important than anything w e’ll do the rest of our political lives.” Earle said When the motion to reconsider Resolution 16 prevailed. Rep. Craig Washington of Houston told the convention. “ Anybody who votes against this resolution cannot say they are for con stitutional revision.” Resolution 16. which contained only the text of the constitution and no separate proposals, received 92 ayes and 85 noes on the adoption vote Hie convention also voted to reconsider Resolutions 19 and 20 but failed to give them two-thirds on the adoption vote Both resolutions received 94 ayes and 84 noes on adoption votes The reconsideration of Resolution 23 was the turning point in the session. Washington of Houston made the motion and then rose to speak against the resolution. • After 22 consecutive votes, we immediately voted on recon sideration motions. But now the leadership of this convention has retired to the president s office to see what they can do to run this resolution over you, Washington said. After Washington’s reconsideration motion received 101 ayes to 77 noes. 23 speakers rose to urge adoption of the resolution Meanwhile, delegates meeting in the member’s lounge joined Rep Neil Caldwell of Angleton in singing barbershop quartet tunes, and Rep. Kay Bailey of Houston joined in a bridge game with delegates' wives in women's lounge. Rep. Sarah Weddington of Austin told the delegates, I don t see any more hope for a compromise. Those of you asking for compromise are really asking for more time. Well, we don t have more time. This is it. Rep James Easter of El Paso said, “For many years I was a funeral director and embalmer, but I got out of the business because I didn’t like to go to funerals. Well, I have the horrible feeling I’m about to attend the funeral of the esteem of the members of the Legislature in the eyes of the people of Texas.’ On the reconsideration vote. Resolution 23 received IOOayes and 79 noes, 21 votes short of the necessary two-thirds. ___________________ uijiiiuu— i— iniii— 11— amarnaininim inirm rri Tri “ • B e n tse n Views Indictments! P 44* ■ ■ ti “ I ve always known John Connally to be an honorable man John Connally has been a friend of mine for a long tim e," U S. Sen Lloyd Bentsen. D-Tex., said Monday concerning the former Texas governor and secretary of the Treasury Connally was indicted Monday on five counts of perjury, bribery and obstructing justice by a federal grand jury in Washington BEN TSEN , a longtime Connally friend, said the indictments would have ’no effect at all” on his own political plans He is continuing to sample nationwide opinion as a possible Democratic presidential candidate Connally, prior to his re cent difficulties, had been an active contender for the GOF nomination. In his Austin news conference Monday morning, Bentsen stated he is up one percent in the latest presidential preference ^H e refused to comment further on Connally s indictments because he had not seen the charges and would not talk about them until he did Bentsen added milk producers, whose contributions figured in D EN V E R W . LA C K O R N , D.D.S. announces the opening of his office for the practice of general dentistry at ■ Connally’s indictment, made legal contributions to all three major Senate candidates in Texas four years ago. ‘ They contributed to Ralph Yarborough, to George Bush and to me.*’ said Bentsen “ It was all fully reported in your newspapers. There is nothing wrong with contributions what is wrong is when there is a quid pro quo ... there was no quo pro quo tin the Senate contributions).” Bentsen said he has heard no senator comment as to how he would vote on impeachment of President Nixon and added, “ I don't think they should because that is the most important vote he will cast ” The junior senator from Texas predicted the House would vote impeachment, although he has no inside knowledge of the lineup on the issue IN HIS RA C E for president. Bentsen will receive a needed name identification boost Wednesday when the senator will speak in rebuttal to Nixon’s recent economic message. Bentsen was chosen by Democratic caucus colleagues to answer the President’s proposals after he and others asked for the honor. Bentsen, chairman of the Senate Finance Committee subcom mittee on economic development, said he would make specific anti-inflation proposals in his Wednesday night address, in cluding ways to get interest rates down. Bentsen said Nixon is the first President to propose IMO billion and 1300 billion budgets. He said Nixon has recommend ed more deficit spending than any President since World War ll All SONY Solo • JL I ^ ^ m m T,P Sf Ml,,ican Decisions Moved to Later Date * 605 East Bee Caves Road Hours: 8-5 Mon. thru Fri. PHONE: 327-3184 mW • Historic Zoning at Issu H n n t* * F U ^ 9 a known whether whether thesdcouncil the HHowson House inin the the700 700 known Bv O GGER DOWNING cannot o w s o n House cannot personally personally afford afford to to the By RRO ER 't w u MDOWNING u n ,w w i u i u r * stre et w il aDDrove n d s .: will approve the the fu funds. block of San Antonio Street, move the house. He an Texan Staff W riter the Caswell House at the R O B ER T PET T U S, o The Landmark Commission nounced that “ under certain voted Monday to postpone conditions I w ill donate the southwest corner of West of the Millican House, w, decision on whether to recom Tips home to a charitable Avenue and 15th Street and the zoning changed t mend zoning the 97-year-old foundation which is willing the M illican House at 1606 residential so he can antique shop in the house, Tips House as a historical and able to move the home in West Ave. The commission voted un immediate neighbors tact.” landmark. He ad d ed he f e lt a animously to recommend to ported the zoning cha By unanimous vote, the commission decided to hear charitable organization would the Planning Committee an stating that past owners the Tips House case at a have a better chance of get “ H” zoning for the Howson house had let it fall special session to be held at 5 ting the city and the phone House and the Caswell House. “ disrepair and disrepu It also voted unanimously to One neighbor stated com pany to w aive th e ir p.m. Aug. 5. The Tips House, 315 W. charges and strict building postpone a decision on the former residents had even Millican House until the Aug. planted marijuana p la n ts ^ ! Seventh St., is owned by codes. TOM T IE M A N N , leg al 5 special session. her flower bed. A u stin a tto rn e y R o b ert - ■ Jo e M orahan. A ustin's Fowler, while the land the counsel for Lam ar Savings, “ I am so elated at tfcp house is on was sold by stated that Lam ar has no public property manager, said p ro s p e c t of h a v in g a ■I rn Fowler to Lamar Savings and specific ptans and is in it is being recommended that gentleman living there,’ City Council approve 120.000 terested in saving the house. Loan Association. Fowler and George Shelley, the neighbor for exterior restoration on the The commission also voted Lam ar have an agreement who had the cannabis growi|j! that if the house is not moved on whether to zone three other Caswell House. He added that ■a in her flower bed, said by Oct. I, Lamar will become old houses as “ H These are within two months it should be owner of the house. F O W LER O B JEC T ED at the commission meeting to having the Tips House zoned “ H” because he said it “ w ill m erely apply more tim e pressure to move or demolish By J E F F NEW M AN “ But I still think they’ll interested citizens,” Flaws) before the demolition permit Texan Staff W riter probably find a way to vote a said, “ I just can’t believe they runs out. The historic zoning As deadline drew near Mon constitution out.” wont c om e up w i t h procedure cannot roll back day for the submission of a A constitution Should lim it something.” time, undo legal transfers and new constitution to the voters Keeton called the work oft decree that the home shall of Texas, two members of the itself to placing governmental the convention delegate® stay where it is. I ask, instead, revision commission express restraints and establishing a acceptable “ up until they god that we all work together to ed disappointment with the decision-making structure, Keeton said. Public issues into this tangle.” He think* successfully move the home convention's work. their work has improved the' intact to a site where it can “ They’ve gotten into a such as right to work laws suggested revisions in some; “ don’t belong in the constitu live forever.” tangle over m atters that areas and fallen short of their Fowler said because of cost ought not to be in a constitu tion at a ll,” he added product in others ly barriers placed on moving tion anyway; that’s what's so Dr. Peter Flawn, president “ On the whole it’s infinitely the Tips House by the city and disappointing,” U niversity of San Antonio was also on the b e t t e r than the old the telephone company, he Law Dean Page Keeton said. revision commission. constitution,” Keeton said. “ I supposed if they do Noting the “ time, effort and interest on the past of a large (agree on a charter) ITI vote number of public officials and for it.” Dean Keeton s Constitution Disappoints PANATELA LEVIS '/3 Off at KV-1520R TRINITRON* REMOTE CONTROL COLOR TV KV-1201 T RIN IT RO N * COLOR TV • 12 -inch screen measured diagonally • Trinitron one gun/one lens system tor snare, bright, true-to-Me color • Push button automatic color and hue control • Solid state reliability • Instant picture and sound • No set up adiustments • Illuminated tuning dials • Top mounted handle • Charcoal gray cabinet with chrome lr rn University Co-Op • IS-inch screen measured diagonally • Trinitron one gun/one lens system tor sharp, bright Me-ttke color • Sony Remote Control Commander • UHF pre-select detent 8-channel tuning system • Automatic fine tuning, color and hue in one push button control lf the pants fit, wear them. 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Contessa 2706 N u eces A u stin , T e x a s 78705 W e ’re C o ed u ca tio n a l 477-9766 JI • UNIVERSITY CO-OP • 24TH AND WHITIS • 26TH AND WHITIS • ACADEMIC CENTER • ROBERT LEE MOORE HALL (Formerly PMA Bldg.) • LITTLEFIELD FOUNTAIN • 24TH AND SPEEDWAY • JESTER WOMEN'S DORM • 21 ST AND SPEEDWAY spon sored by T EX A S STU D EN T PU BLIC A TIO N S an d ST U D EN T GOVT. Page % Tuesday, Ju ly 30, 1974 THE DAILY TEXAN E N V IR O N M E N T A L COMM. PROTECT. I •»H Nixon Still Adam ant Aide Counters Resignation Talk WASHINGTON (U P I) — Presid ent Nixon said through a spokesm an Monday he has no intention of resigning if the House of R ep resentatives im peaches him. , , G erald W arren, the Presid ent s deputy press secre tary , once m ore stressed Nix on’s belief that the full House will not a g r e e to re c o m m e n d a tio n s by its Ju d iciary C om m ittee that he be im peached. But should the House vote for im peachm ent, W arren told reporters in a briefing: “ I do not see that as a set of circu m stan ces which would cause him to resign. He does not. There is no set of circu m stan ces which he can foresee, or I can foresee, that would cause him to resig n.” W arren’s com m ents appeared design- Senate Panel Starts Trial Preparations — UW Telephoto Dennis Carayannis (I), Greek am bassad or to the United Nations, em the Security n a t io n s , addresses a c a r d i t e * an an e rn ergency e itjw ..*T session—of--------------- Council Monday night on th e Cyprus question The m eeting w as called at the request of the Soviet Union. Cyprus Negotiations Stall O n Turkish Troops Status if By The A ssociated P re ss The Cyprus peace talks in Geneva w ere sta le m a te d ag ain Monday as Turkey and G reece continued to disagree over the status of Turkish troops on the M editerranean island. T he foreign m in is te r s of G r e e c e , Tu rkey and B rita in ad jou rn ed th e ir sessions Monday night a fte r near agree ment had been reached on a provisional solution. B r itis h F o r e ig n M in is te r J a m e s Callaghan said the talks w ere adjourned for a night of reflection. G r e e k F o r e ig n M in is te r G e o rg e M avros was less o p tim istic, accusing Turkey of negotiating a t gunpoint in an extrem ely c ritic a l situation. As the Geneva talks deteriorated, G reek P rem ier Constantine C aram anlis called for a m eeting of the United Nations Security Council as well as the NATO foreign m in isters council to dis cuss Turkey's “ unacceptable and non_ negotiable” demands. I 0 A Greek governm ent source in Athens said acceptance of the Turkish demands would mean the end of Cyprus as an in dependent s ta te . He ind icated that G reece may reso rt to m ilitary action if “ all our diplom atic e ffo rts bear no countries said they had agreed on a provisional solution to end m ilitary con frontation on Cyprus, with hopes of holding a second round of talks next week. Contents of the tentative document w ere not made public, but when it was sent to Ankara, T urkey’s cab in et ap parently rejected provisions concerning the Turkish invasion fo rce on Cyprus. In Ankara, Turkish P re m ie r Bident E ce v it declared that the p resence and size of the Turkish fo rce cannot be dis cussed a t the Geneva con feren ce and that a reduction of the fo rce would be considered only “ when the tim e com es fr u it....” SHORTLY A F T E R dawn Monday both Cypriots. Initially E ce v it had agreed to the legitim acy of the constitution provided that it would be strengthened to protect the T u rk ish C ypriot m in o rity . In a sudden sw itch, the Turkish governm ent insisted that the section on the constitu tion is deleted. N eutral observers on Cyprus said that there a re 25,000 Turkish troops on the island holding a 2 0 0 -square-m ile area stretching from the Turkish sector of N icosia to a 15-mile beachhead along the northern coast, including the city of K yrenia. Turkey previously had accepted a provision labeling the presen ce of the Turkish force on the island as tem porary. T U R K E Y ALSO appeared to stiffen its position as to accep tan ce of the 1960 Cyprus constitution as the basis for re a ch in g a solution to the p o litical problem s between G reek and Turkish Travis D e leg a tes How They Voted D e le g a t e s to th e C o n s t it u tio n a l Convention voted on a serie s of packages Frid ay and Saturday before reaching Monday’s deadlock on subm itting their proposed constitution to voters for ap proval. The Com m ittee on Subm ission and Transition prepared a number of com p rom ise p ack ag es fo r co n sid eratio n Saturday Follow ing a re sum m aries of the proposals in e ach package and the votes of the T rav is County delegates to the convention . Resolution 13: D efeated 96 ayes to 78 noes, Friday. Contains change in Education A rticle substituting the H E F T fund for the S H E A F fund; e x tends the building use fee to 1985 in the transition schedule. Separate sub missions on pari-m utuel en terprises, limited county hom e rule and right to work. NO: Balei. Doggett, W eddington Y85: Earle, Forem an Resolution 14: defeated , 47 ayes to 95 noes, Saturday. No te x t or transition changes from Resolution 13. Separate submissions on lim ited county home rule and right to work. NO: Weddington TIS: Doggett, Earle, Forem an NOT VOTINO B a le i Resolution 15: defeated . 39 ayes to 112 ; noes, Saturday. No text or transition changes from Resolution 13. Separate submissions on pari-mutuel e n ter prises and lim ited county home rule NO: B a le i, Weddington, Forem an Yf$t Doggett, E a r l" Resolution 16: defeated, 60 ayes to 93 noes, Saturday. No te x t or transition changes, no sep arate submissions. NO. Balei, Foreman, Weddington YiS: Doggett, E a rle Resolution 17: defeated, 40 ayes to 119 noes, Saturday. No te x t or transition changes. Sep arate subm issions on four-year term s NO: Balei, Forem an and Weddington YU. Doggett, E arle t % Resolution 18: defeated, 48 ayes to 112 noes, Saturday. No te x t or transition changes. S e p arate submissions on limited county home rule, right to work and four-year term s. NO: B alei Weddington t h Doggett, I arle, F o rem a n Resolution 19: defeated, 88 ayes to 73 noes; Saturday. Changes te x t to base elderly exem ptions on need; changes transition schedule, setting building use fees at six y ears, red istrictin g for m ultim em ber House d istricts in 19/6 and preserves existing elderly exem p tio n s . S e p a r a te s u b m is s io n s on lim ited county hom e ru le, prohibition on pari-mutuel e n terp rises, four-year term s, lim itation of s ta te taxes to 8 p e rc e n t of p erso n al incom e and w elfare ceiling at 2.5 percent: of state budget. doors. WASHINGTON (A P ) - The Senate M ansfield said another resolution deal took its first step Monday to prepare for ing with television coverage of a Senate a possible im peachm ent trial of P re s i trial will be introduced in the next day or dent Nixon. two and also will be referred to the Rules It approved without debate a resolu Com m ittee for consideration. tion introduced by party leaders d irec He said TV coverage, if approved by ting the Senate R u les C om m ittee to the Senate, will be under very stric t review all rules and precedents with rules. He said the ca m e ra s would be resp ect to trial procedures. focused on the well of the cham ber, The com m ittee is to report to the w here tria l proceed ing s would take Senate by Sept. I. place, with no panoram ic shots of the The resolution was introduced and Senate as a whole perm itted. adopted im m ediately a fte r Sens. Mike The party leaders said there was no M a n s f ie ld an d H ugh S c o t t , t h e discussion at the m eeting of whether a D em ocratic and Republican leaders, and Senate trial could c a rry over from the their assistan t leaders. Sens. Robert present Congress to the next one Byrd, D-W. V a., and R obert G riffin, RBut Mansfield emphasized that “ I M ich., m et for nearly two hours to dis want it behind us this year cuss steps to prepare for a Senate trial. Another issue not discussed at the M ansfield said they w ere passing no m eeting,the leaders said, was how much judgm ent on whether the House will vote tim e the Senate will allow the P resid ent to impeach Nixon. to prepare his defense if the House votes He and Scott told newsmen e a rlie r to im peach him. that, in light of the House Ju d iciary Com This will be a decision for the Senate m itte e ’s vote recom m ending im peach as a whole, as will be other questions m ent, they had no choice but to begin relating to rules and procedures gover preparations for a possible trial in the ning a trial, they said. Senate. The resolution the party leaders in troduced was approved with only seven senators on the floor. It d irects the R ules Com m ittee to recom m end any revisions it finds necessary in existing rules if the Senate is called upon to conduct a trial. The com m ittee review , which is to take into consideration changes in the fed eral ru les of c iv il and c rim in a l By FRA N K CORM IER procedures sin ce the last im peachm ent Associated P ress W riter trial of a president m ore than IOO years WASHINGTON (A P ) — P resid en t N ix ago, is to be conducted behind closed on’s top aides, casting aside the rosetinted g la sse s w ith w hich they had publicly viewed the im peachm ent scen e, now seem reconciled to the un certainties that lie ahead for th eir boss. A fter w eeks of issu in g o p tim istic statem en ts that m any observers fe lt w e re tin g ed w ith u n r e a lity , th e y acknowledged the seriousness of the P r e s id e n t’s plight a f te r the House Ju d iciary C om m ittee approved its first not com m ent on the m atter until talking a rticle of im peachm ent. to the lieutenant governor. But he has Alexander Haig J r . , the White House said that if he w ere in a sim ilar situation s ta ff chief, signaled the change in telling — convicted of a felony — he would newsmen Sunday night that very severe resign. losses in the past week m ake Nixon s The C alifornia code sp ecifies that any chance of avoiding im peachm ent by the officeholder is disqualified by conviction House m ore uncertain. of a felony, but a state attorney general While Haig continued to express con spokesm an said , “ Such rem ov al is fidence the House would vote against im predicated on sentencing by the ju d g e.’ peachm ent, he qualified his assessm en t White House Staffers Concede Uncertainty Reinecke Won't Leave In Spite of Conviction WASHINGTON ( U P I ) - C alifornia Lt. Gov. Ed R eineck e, convicted of lying to the Sen ate Ju d iciary C om m ittee, said Monday he will not leave his $35,000-ayear sta te o ffice unless legally ousted. “ I have no intention of resigning unless i f s n ecessary under the law ,” he said while preparing to return to the state cap ital at Sacram ento T h ere was som e confusion whether R ein eck e autom atically lost his post with his conviction Saturday on charges he lied about an IT T o ffer to help finance the 1972 Republican national convention. But a people’s lobby in C alifornia an n o u n c e d it w ill f i l e s u it to sto p R ein eck e’s salary. A spokesm an for the sta te con troller sa'd R ein eck e would continue to draw his pay until the C alifornia attorney general ru le s on w hether hem ust re sig n . A spokesm an for the sta te attorney general said R ein eck e apparently would continue to re ce iv e his salary until he is sentenc ed. The spokesm an said, however, that was not a form al ruling. Gov. Ronald Reagan, who handpicked R ein eck e as his No. I aide in 1969, would NO: Bales, Doggett, Fo rem a n , Weddington VIS: E a rle Resolution 20: defeated. 85 ayes to 59 n o e s , S a tu rd a y . C h a n c e s equ al educational opportunity, exemption fo r the e ld e rly b a s e d on n e e d ; changes transition schedule, setting building use fee at six y ears, deletes provision on felon's right to vote, preserves existing elderly exem p tio n s. S e p a r a te s u b m is sio n s on lim ited county hom e ru le, prohibition of pari-mutuel e n terp rises, four-year term s, right to work and two-thirds vote of each House for incom e tax. NO: B ales, Doggett, W eddington YCS: Forem an NOT VOTINO: E a rle Resolution 21: defeated . 44 ayes to 116 n o e s ; S a tu rd a y . C h a n g e s equ al educational opportunity section, ex emptions for the elderly based on need, sets building use fee at six years, deletes transitio n provision on felons; right to vote, preserves ex isting elderly exem ptions. Separate submission on lim ited county home rule, prohibition of pari-m utuel enter prises, four-year te rm s, two-thirds vote required for incom e tax. NO Bales, Doggett, E arle, Foreman, Weddington Resolution 22: d efeated , 74 ayes to 84 n o es; Satu rd ay, C hanges te x t to provide for elderly exem ptions based on need, sets building use lee at six y e a rs; preserves existing elderly ex emptions. S ep arate subm issions on lim ited county home rule, prohibition of pari-mutuel e n terp rises, four-year term s, w elfare ceilin g , two-thirds vote required for incom e tax. NO: Doggo!!. Earle, Foreman. Weddington YCS: Bales ed to squelch speculation about the p o s s ib ility of N ix o n ’s re s ig n a tio n triggered by White House Chief of Staff Alexander Haig’s statem en t Sunday that the President had suffered “ some very severe losses” in his battle against im peachm ent during the last week WARREN SAID the White House at this point was neither conducting a lob bying campaign to influence undecided m em bers of the Ju d iciary Com m ittee nor keeping any sy stem atic head count of th e ir a ttitu d e s . T h e c o m m itte e recommended its f ir s t article of im peachm ent Saturday. He also refused to com m ent on the in d ictm ent Monday morning of form er T reasury S e cre ta ry John Connaily on five counts of p erju ry , obstruction of ju stice and bribery growing out of con tributions by m ilk producers to the Nixon re-election cam paign Nixon’s schedule Monday included a m eetin g with s p e c ia l White House counsel Ja m e s St. C lair and W atergate law yer J . Fred Buzhardt to review the first batch of new W atergate tapes to be surrendered as a resu lt of the Supreme Court’s order. But W arren portrayed the President, who returned Sunday night from a 16-day w orking v a ca tio n in C aliforn ia, as p r im a r ily c o n d u c tin g th e n atio n s business as usual. DURING TH E m orning, he said. Nix on reviewed the v eteran s education bill and other dom estic legislation with his aides and studied the Cyprus situation and the progress of the Geneva peace ta lk s b e tw e e n G r e e k and T u rk ish negotiators. “ We, of course, hope the parties will quickly reach a solution of the issues in volved,” W arren said. He also said Nixon still hopes to becom e the first A m erican president to visit Japan a t the end of the year. U.S. Dist. Jud ge Barrington P ark er, who presided over the 12-day trial, Mon day set sentencing for Aug. 30. R einecke m et Monday with Ja m e s P ace , chief probation officer for the U .S. D istrict Court. No re striction s have been placed on R e in e ck e ’s m ovem ents except that he may not leave the country. R einecke said he would not take a leave of absen ce while his c a se is being appealed, a p rocess that may take up to a year. He said he talked to Reagan by phone and that the governor had been “ very depressed” and told R einecke he “ didn’t deserve this kind of break a fte r having worked so h ard .” with words of caution. If a vote w ere taken now. for exam ple, he said the out com e would be very close. Although Nixon’s press spokesm en, a t form al news briefin gs, continue to e x press unqualified confidence in the final outcom e, deputy press secre ta ry G erald W arren acknowledged Monday that the Presid ent fa ces “ a very serious and volatile situation” in the House — words he would not have used a week ago. Haig seemed positively eager to give five reporters aboard Air F o rce One his revised assessm en t of Nixon’s position during the P resid en t’s flight here from California. He did so im m ediately a fte r having a lengthy session with Nixon aboard the plane. D u rin g th e s a m e f l ig h t , p r e s s secretary Ronald Z iegler acknowledged “ th is is a to u g h t i m e .” Z ie g le r ’s restrain t seem ed un ch aracteristic. He appeared frien d lier and more relaxed than during m uch of Nixon s 16-day California stay. B arely a week e a rlie r, Ziegler had produced p resid ential counselor Dean Burch for a news conference at which Burch declared he would not be sur prised if all Republican m em bers of the H ouse J u d i c i a r y C o m m itte e voted against recom m ending im peachm ent. Six Republicans took an opposite position when the first co m m ittee vote on an im peachm ent a rtic le was recorded S atu r day night. An AP H ew s Anoly»«»_________ B u rch’s state m e n t, and others I i a like vein fro m N ix o n a id e s , had so m e onlookers sh akin g th eir heads and wondering if Nixon and his asso ciates had lost touch with reality. The P resid en t spent much of Monday on W atergate-related m atters. W arren said Nixon discussed im peachm ent dur ing the morning with Haig and Z iegler prior to an afte rn o o n session with lawyers Ja m e s St. C lair and J . Fred Buzhardt to begin a personal review of m aterials that will be turned over, under a Suprem e Court ruling, to U .S. Dist. Judge John S iric a . Warren said Nixon also dealt with legislation, the continuing tense situation in C ypru s and u n sp e c ifie d ro u tin e business. news capsules Stocks Fall A gain 2 Republicans Report Threats After Vote W A SH IN G T O N ( A P ) — T w o o f th e s ix R e p u b lic a n s w ho v oted to r e c o in m en d P r e s id e n t N ix o n 's im p e a c h m e n t s a y te le p h o n e t h r e a t s h a v e c en m a d e on th e ir liv e s . B u t th e s ix s ta te d th a t p u b lic r e a c t io n to th e ir v o te RX p W i l h a m C ^ C T o f M a in e s a id h is o f f ic e r e c e iv e d a th r e a t M onday m o r n in g th a t he would be shot. Cohen s a id the th re a t w as m ade by a m an in a telephone ca ll from Maine. The con gressm an said he alerted the F B I but did not ask tor e x t i a p r o te c tio n a t M ond ay s H ou se J u d ic ia r y C o m m itte e s e s s io n R e p . T h o m a s R a ils b a c k , R -IU ., sa id h is s t a f f r e c e iv e d " h a t it c o n s id e re d a th r e a te n in g te le p h o n e w a rn in g th a t th e c o n g r e s s m a n h ad b e t t e r c h e c k h is m a il c a r e fu lly . C o h en . R a ils b a c k and th e o th e r fo u r R e p u b lic a n s on th e J u d ic ia r y C o m m it t e e a ll s a id th e y r e c e iv e d s o m e tim e s a n g ry c r it i c is m a f t e r th e ir vo e S a tu rd a y n ig h t to re c o m m e n d th e P r e s id e n t 's im p e a c h m e n t Cass Elliot Found Dead LONDON (A P ) “ M am a” C ass E llio t, one of A m e rica 's top pop sin gers, died Monday in a luxury London ap a rtm en t, police reported H er physician said the singer probably choked to death on a ham sandw ich, but he did not rule out the possibility of a YORK MSI. VtliM Pritik MW IMES W IK E 31 liiutriait po in ts. Plastics Firms To Begin Issuing W arn in gs WASHINGTON (UPI) — The p lastics industry ag reed Monday to s ta r t warning con su m ers th at plastic building m a te ria ls prom oted for the last seven y e a rs a s safe and fire-resistan t a re really flash fire hazards that give off poisonous gas when they bum . The m a te ria ls involved a re foam ed plastics such a s polyurethane and polystyrene, an estim ated one billion pounds of which w ere sold in the United S tates in 1972. Their uses ran ge from filling in furniture cushions and bedding to wall panels and household cab in ets. . Toxic gases released from fast burning fires involving these p lastics have been blam ed for the 1970 d ance hall fire a t G renoble. F ra n ce , w here 145 persons died; the 1967 Apollo I fire, which killed th ree a s tro n a u t^ and a 1973 blaze inside a liquid gas sto rag e tank on S taten Island that took 40 lives. Kerner Starts Three-Year Prison Term h e a rt a ttack . The 33-year-old s ta r died as she lay in bed w atching televi sion. H er physician, Dr, Anthony G reenburg, told a late night news co n feren ce, “ She had been dead for a considerable tim e before her body was found.” (A P ) - S to c k m a r k e t p r ic e s to o k their th ird s tr a ig h t beating Monday a t the h an d s of in fla tio n w orries and u n e a sin e s s o v e r im peachm ent. The Dow Jo n es av e ra g e of 30 industrials fell 13.68 to 770.89 to produce a net loss since last W ednesday’s close of nearly 35 N EW I FXIN G TO N Ky. (U P I) - F o rm e r Illinois govern or and federal judge Otto K ern er b ecam e federal prison er No. 00037-1*23 Monday when he s u r rendered to U .S. m arsh als and began serving a th ree-y ear sentence on a variety of ch arg es d ealing with ra c e track stock tran sfers. K erner who will be eligible for p arole in O ctober, arrived at the federal m inim um secu rity prison six m iles west of h ere accom panied by tw o -UM Telephoto Cots Elliot m arshals. T uesday, July 30, 1974 THE DAILY TEXAN P a g e 3 The necessity of union security By STEVE RUSSELL “I think it is a fair judgm ent to make that a free, active, progressive trade union movement stands for a free, active, progressive co untry.” — John F. Kennedy It took a long, bloody struggle to make unions marginally acceptable in this country, and the fight is still not over. There are still those who argue, as Shell Oil Co. did last year, that workers have no business telling an employer how to run his plant — after all, the employer owns it! — and therefore unions should not _ push health and safe ty issues. And there are still a few Neanderthals who think each individual worker should negotiate his own contract with General Motors, and strike by himself if his demands are not met. Strikes are immoral, they say, and the National Labor Relations Act amounts to legalized extortion. They are entitled to their opinions, but not in the Texas Constitution. Yes, I’m going to talk about so-called “right to work.” Reluctantly, because the phrase has about as much to do with union security agreements as “ right to life” has to do with recent reforms in our medieval abortion laws. In one study of the magical effects of language, 125 Northwestern University law students were asked if they favored state “ right to work” laws. Eighty answered yes, the rest no. Buried in the same questionnaire was this query: "If a company and a union agree v o lu n ta r ily th a t a ll e m p lo y e s represented by the union in the plant should become members of the union, should such an agreement be permitted by law?” Eighty-four yes; 41 no. Proposition: who controls the state ment of the question controls the out come. Query: who favors “ right to work” and how much media can they af ford, compared to Texas unions? The tag “ labor boss” has been bandied about quite a bit lately, and my colleague, F. Truman Randall, even applied it to Texas AFL-CIO President Harry Hubbard. Hell, there aren't enough union members in Texas to make a gang — what do they need with a boss? And anyone familiar with the in-fighting at the Texas AFL-CIO convention where Hubbard defeated incumbent President Roy E vans knows that a spirited democracy is alive and well in the Texas labor movement; there are, as yet, no recognizable autocrats. Unions in Texas have only a precarious toehold, and so-called “ right to work” is one of the reasons. I have been personal ly involved in two organizing strikes that took approximately three years to settle after the unions involved won represen tation elections fair and square. Finally, after management’s appeals were ex hausted, those workers who were able to hold out returned. In both cases, more than four-fifths of the workers struck, but many of the original strikers were not around to go back in. The remaining workers were scabs during the strike, though many of them joined the union when given an un coerced opportunity. But subsequent employes come to a plant with substan tially better than average wages (wages having been substandard before the un ion). Having no previous experience with unions, and living in a state where “ free enterprise” is required by law to be taught in the schools, why should a new • Closed shop — only union members may be hired — illegal under federal law. • Union shop —■new workers must join the union — legal under federal law; illegal in Texas. • A gency shop —- new workers need 'not join the union, but must pay a fee for the union’s services — legal under federal law; illegal in Texas. Union must by law bargain for all employes, members and “ free riders.” Union shop or agency shop agreements do not happen automatically when not prohibited , they are part of a negotiated contract between the union and the employer. worker join the union if wages are already excellent? But a union’s power is limited by its ability to make an effective strike, and as soon as the union has insufficient membership to shut down the plant, workers’ benefits and privileges will vanish like scab lettuce at a Republican dinner. While “ right to work” laws are evil in themselves, at least in totally unorganiz ed states, even those who favor such statutes should have enough sense to see they have no place in a constitution. Law Dean Page Keeton was quoted in the Fort Worth Star-Telegram as c^Qitlg in sertion of a “ right to work” clause in the charter “ sheer folly.” “This document must be good for generations to come Keeton said, “it should not be burdened with policy matters which should concern the Legislature and be fought out from time to time.” Of the states which have to work' - mostly in the Deep Soutlgg- ail except Nevada are economic backwaters for working people. In Nevada the prin cipal business is vice, which organized — by unions. Whether to work" is good economic and policy is a question that should, as Dean Keeton said, remain open for future legislatures But what about a separate submission, “ let the people decide,” etc ? P u f W g t I fail to see the democracy in watching the unions get buried under an avaljiicli# of corporate money, all in the name of freedom tor working people. ‘7s it not a novel position for the worst antagonists to labor's in terests to assume th a t they are advocates and defenders of the rights and the liber ties o f w o rkm en ? The mere sta tem en t of such a position demonstrates its hypocrisy and absurdity.” — Samuel Gooajfers I <1 When someone starts playing yoif|t!|# old “right to work" ditty, ask him when was the last time he walked a picket line. Lawmaker on the make By NICHOLAS VON HOFFMAN o’lJ74, King Features Syndicate WASHINGTON — Out-of-town celebri ty hunters may recognize the good looking women dining with th e ir representatives under the blind eyes of Sen. Roman Hruska and the other worthy mediocrities painted on the es tablishment’s walls. Whether the boys are doing some old fashioned wife cheating or are seeking some quick solace from the impeaching beat of the Washington summer, there is no doubt that the pulchritude count in and around our nearly all-white, male Congress is very high. There may be no truth on Capitol Hill, but there is beauty. Not all of these young women are star struck. legislative groupies from Ashtabula, Ohio. One who isn t is Jen nifer, in her early 20s with a m aster’s degree in the social sciences. She is angry enough and willing to have her name used but, to protect the privacy of third parties, she and the congressman she works for are disguised here. Jennifer says she was hired to be train ed for the position of legislative assis tant, but after a couple of months she found she was running the robo machine and acting as a receptionist, secretary and general go-for. Any legislative work she got to do was after hours on her own time. Finally she blew her stack, Letters to the editor Firing tin * letters should: * Be typed triple-spaced. • Be 25 lines or less. The Texan reserves the right to edit letters for length. • Include name, address, num ber of contributor. and phone M a il (otters to The Firing Line, The Daily Texan, Draw er D, UT Station, Austin, Tex. 78712; or bring letters to the Texan of fices, basement, Texas Student Publications Building. whereupon, she says, “The congressman called me into his office and said. Well, everyone is really upset. Is there any trouble about your job? We’ll have to talk about it, but I don’t have the time right now. I want you to pick me up tomorrow, because my car is in the shop, and we’ll talk about it then.’ “ At 7 o’clock in the morning I went over there. He answered the door in his bathrobe and said he got up late so he wasn't dressed yet... He put two cups of coffee down on the table and asked, •What’s the trouble with your job?’ I said, ‘I’m not getting the legal work you promised me. I am not a secretary. I never pretended to be a secretary and I d like to know if it’s going to change.’ He was silent and he thought a minute. Then he came over and sat down next to me. I was sitting on the couch. He put his arm around me and then the other arm proceeded down my blouse. “I said, ‘What are you doing?’ He said. Well, I think we can work this out, don’t you?’ Then he’s making this big pass. I said, ‘Stop,’ and he said, ‘Why not9' “I said, First of all I am going out with a very good guy. Second of all I don't want any part of this. You’re m arried.’ Then he took his hand away and said, ‘No big deal, no big deal, and went into the bathroom or someplace to get dressed. “Then he came out and said, I don't see any way of working this out. Do you think we could work this out?’ I said, Well, I guess not.’ So he said, Why don't you start looking for a job, and we ll start looking for someone to replace you.’ We went downstairs, got in the car and in the car he said, The reason that you are leaving is because there is a difference of opinion about your duties, right?’ I answered, ‘Well, that’s what you said.’ But I was in shock. I was shocked. I couldn’t handle looking at him.” While this does prove a congressman can be decisive about something, it is depressing to hear Jennifer describe her boss' tacky shenanigans. One of the women on the staff who couldn't afford to lose her job lost her boyfriend because he wouldn’t accept the idea that she had to go out to dinner with this maker of laws. According to Jen nifer, other staff members were assign ed to babysit for one of the con gressman’s girlfriends so they could go out together. On other occasions, she says, women T h e D aily T exa n N m m tp n p m r •* O n h t r t H y • ( T**«« mf A m ,b n E D IT O R ..........................................................*................................. Buck Harvey MANAGING E D IT O R ........................................................................B J H efner ASSISTANT MANAGING E D IT O R ..........................................Lynne Brock NEWS ED IT O R ................................................................... ............R ichard Fly ASSISTANT TO TH E E D ITO R ....................................................Dave R isher SPORTS E D IT O R ..........................................................................L arry Smith AMUSEMENTS E D IT O R .................................................................Paul Beutel PH O TO G RA PH ERS.................................... Stanley F a rra r, M arlon Taylor ISSUE STAFF City E d ito r....................................... ................................................ Dick Jefferson General R eporters..................................... Bryan Brumley, Ken McHam, Anne Marie Kilday, David Hendricks News Assistants .......................... Susan Lindee. Jim Hill, Roger Downing, Mike Morrison, Nancy Mills Editorial Assistant........................................................................... ...Steve Russell Assistant Amusements Editor................................................... Bill Darwin Assistant Sports Editor.............. Johnny Campos Make-up Editor ................. -.......................................Claude Simpson Wire E d ito r.............. Johnrf uliler Desk Editors.................. Sandy Hall, P. Diane Copeland, Colleen Doolin, Rick Bonner, Nick Holzschuh. C. Russell Leigon O pinions e x p re s s e d in T he D e ity T e x a n a r e th o se of th e e d ito r o r Ute w r ite r of th e a r tic le and a r e not n e c e ssa rily th o s e of th e U n iv ersity a d m in is tra tio n o r th e B oard of R e s e a ts K , T he D a ily T ex a n , a s tu d e n t n e w s p a p e r a t T he U n iv ersity o f T e x a s a t A u stin , la p u b lish e d b y T exas S tu d e n t P u b lic a tio n s D ra w e r D , U n iv e rs ity S ta tio n A ustin Tex 78712. T h e D aily Tinton is pub lish e d M onday T n m a y , W ednesday, T h u rsd a y and F rid a y S ep te m b e r th ro u g h M a y . a n d T u e s d a y . W e d n e s d a y , T h u rsd a y , a n d h r i d a y J u n e th ro u g h A ugust, ex c e p t holiday and e x a m p e rio d s Secondc la s t p o s ta g e p aid a t A ustin. T ex m u m c a tio n B uilding A i l * ) In tw in e s c o n c e rn in g d elivery and r u s s i f i e d a d v e r t i s e should be m a d e rn T S P Building J 200 <47i =>244 > and display a d v e rtis in g in T S P Building 3 210 ( 471 1885) T he n a tio n a l ad v e rtisin g r e p re s e n ta tiv e of T he D aily ^ ^ N a ti0 n a i E d u ca tio n a l A d v e rtis in g S e rv ic e . Inc , m U x in ((W n Ave ^ y o rk . N Y 10017 Th<, j , a l ;y T ex a n sub scrib e s to T h e A sso c ia te d P re s s , U nited P r e s s In te rn a tio n a l and P a c ific N ew s S erv ice . The T ex a n iv a m e m b e r of th e A ssociated C o lle g ia te P re s s th* s o u th w e s t J o u rn a lis m C ongress a n d th e T e x a s D ally N e w s p a p e r A ssociation R e cy c lin g s ta tio n s for th e n e w s p a p e r a r e a t PM A N e w s co n trib u tio n s will b e a c c e p te d by telep h o n e <4?le d S o ffic e (T e x a s S tu d e n t P u b l i c a n * . B uild in g , b a s e m e n t t a r > « T a t th e B etis la b o ra to ry (C om - B uilding L ittle field F ountain, 24th an d S p eed w ay . J e s te r . l i s t an d S peedw ay Tow nes Hall U n iv e r s ity Co-op 24th and W t.iti- 2Mti a n d W h ite and th e A c a d e m y < en te r 4 59 n a t X Page 4 Tuesday, July 30, 1974 T H E DA ILY T E X A N in the office were required to complete foursomes which included other con gressmen or mavens from the home dis trict. “ If he didn t have a regular date, it was established that we would have to go,” Jennifer recalls. “We weren't even allowed to question it. That was part of the job.” On being challenged, this man, whose name is on no legislation and who is equally unknown to his constituents, once explained to Jennifer, “ How can you walk into a place in Washington by yourself? You walk in with a couple of cute chicks on your arm and they ll think you’re somebody ” He m ay be right a t th e P alm Restaurant, and, if he is, it would help explain why so little takes so long to get done around here. We can hope that most congressmen have devised better ways of using the power and prestige of their office than Jen n ifer’s boss. Still, America sends enough men like him to Washington so that a number of other female employes are also faced with what Jennifer calls, “The option of put ting out or getting out.” 7 think w e took a w rong turn somewhere back there firing line Inflation hits alltime high To the editor: Inflation has hit the most stable sub stance in the state. Nobody thinks about the local dealer anymore. You simply can’t make a living selling lids at $10 anymore. Back in ’67 it was no problem at all to make ends meet — go to school, turn on your friends and feed your face. Today you can’t even keep a place to live on the measly profits off a couple pounds. Are we about to see the end of an era? The end of the $10 lid may be in sight. And that’s a crime! Name withheld by request Racism and sexism To the editor: I was very unhappy to read on Wednesday’s front page (Ken McHam) about the “ Mexican-American” man and his son who are supposedly causing so much trouble at Wilding. Apparently, The Texan has no policy concerning racial discrimination. Regardless of whether Reynolds (of SL&L) described the man as Mexican-American, I see no reason for this to be emphasized (it was not stated once but three times) or even mentioned in the paper. The man’s race is of no relevance whatsoever to the un derstanding of the story, and this ap proach can only cause more unfounded racial bias than already exists here. And speaking of discrimination, I am really getting tired of reading about Ms. So-and-so. When a man is mentioned in an article, he is never referred to later as “Mr.” Rosemary Gordon 1500 Moble Drive (Editor’s note: it has been The Tex an’s policy for a number of years not to identify race in a story unless that description is necessary to the story. In this case, “Mexican American” was used three times. Once it was in a quote. But the other two times it was not, and the term should have been deleted. As for The Texan’s use of “Ms.,” we have a new policy as of this summer. “Mrs., Miss and Ms.” are used only in times of confusion (in a story of brothers and sisters, husband and wife) or upon request.) Psyched out To the editor: Psychology department secretaries met with their chairman and assistant chairman Thursday to present a list of complaints about working conditions and departm ental administration. Those men answered the complaints with sta te m e n ts about how lucky the secretaries were to be working for one of the ric h e r d e p a rtm e n ts, how ap preciative the secretaries should be of faculty members who perform ad ministrative duties as a “ favor,” and how lucky the secretaries were not to be at General Motors. It’s funny that we secretaries never noticed how “lucky” we were. I guess we were too busy noticing the things we complained about: low pay, inequities in workload, demands by professors for secretaries to perform personal errands, discriminatory practices in rights to take classes, no voice in decisions direct ly affecting our jobs, treatment as cogs in a machine, lack of access to people in authority. I’m sure we ll all appreciate the generous offer by the administrators to let us meet once a month, during our lunch hour, to discuss problems. Aren’t we lucky to have a lunch hour to give9 Name withheld by request More Randall To the editor: How dare Reps. Bales and Green criticize our resident political sage, F. Truman Randall? Just because he based an article on a bill having been defeated on the House floor when it actually had not been and just because he referred to the 1976 governor’s race when there will not be such a race does not mean that the fellow is mixed up. We all have our bad days. After all, he does supply an element of humor. Like when he suddenly diverted from a discussion of Bales’ trouble with women politicos to a discussion of how sex is supposed to be pleasurable except for Puritans. The transition was weak and the prose sophomoric, but we ought not be overly demanding of our local talent. And if there were no Randall, how would we get our weekly synopsis of that conspiratorial, Machiavellian world of bosses, machines and pawns, that is state and local politics? What would we do without those amoral descriptions of “ politicians’ repertoires of strategy ploys,” of labor bosses that whip dozens of Texas House members into line on the stroke of a wand, and other aspects of Randall’s version of Realpolitik? True, sometimes the prose leaves a bit to be desired, like an introductory phrase in Randall’s Friday article (which ended in a sentence fragment), "if past history is any indication....” That, of course, is to make clear that he is not referring to “ present history” or “ future history.” Another paragraph, describing Randall’s a p p a re n tly unique e x p erien c e of watching rumors float over the Texas House begins “ watch it visually,” differentiating, of course, between watching it “ audibly” or watching it “olfactorily.” That’s a small price to pay for our weekly dose of political paranoia. Of course there are other malcontents who complain of a certain lack of percep tion in Randall’s analysis. They point to his first article this summer, when after trying to convince us that Austin's liberal political activists constitute a “ m achine,” he referred rn a later paragraph to the group as a “ coalition Others, like Bales and Green, lament his factual inaccuracies, like his reference to the liberal “machine” having had its start in 1972 when the big local liberal gains started at least as early as 1971 But let us not expect too much; after all, we are dealing with The Texan B.D. Stewart 1312 San Antonio St. Texan vacuum TS * vote of its membership. As the editorial would have it, con stitutional adoption of Resolution 12 would exclude many lower income peo ple from the benefits of higher educa tion. But again, this is both speculative and inaccurate. Building use fees, in con junction with the Permanent University Fund, are largely responsible for the ex istence of UT colleges and universities in such places as Dallas, San Antonio. El Paso. Midland, Odessa and Arlington. Without these campuses lower income individuals, unable to afford living away from the home and family, would b i deprived of a low cost education. F. Truman Randall, resident political analyst at The Texan, has been the butt of considerable student criticism in the ' Firing Line” While it is true that Mr. Randall’s penmanship is comparable to a Norm Crosby monologue, and his logic a rival to the comic ch aracter of “Professor Wisdumb,” I submit that F Truman Randall is a master journalist compared to The Texan editorial staff. Bill Brock Business To the editor: Dr Herbert A. Simon of CarnegieMellon has stated, “ A knowledge vacuum is most often filled by demagoguery, by brief, frenetic public rhetoric and symbolic action ...” Clearly, The Texan editorial of July 26, en Toward an end titled “ Protecting student interest, Fleming’s way,” is just an example of To the editor: filling a knowledge vacuum. I am properly chastened by the letter In general, the editorial is critical of from local EMTs and concede without Fleming’s position on the extension of qualification that they have a better the transition period between regental medical vocabulary than I. If by becom control of the building use fee and state ing their villain I can advance the cause control of appropriations for educational of improved emergency medical ser facilities. But the extension period, arvices then so be it. They should unders bitary as it is, is but one issue dealt with tand. however, thai my purposes are not in Resolution 12 of the proposed state inimical to theirs, and by personalizing constitution. The Texan would better their reaction they inhibit a cause which serve its student constituency were the is important to us both. entire resolution opened for public dis The issues, I submit, transcend my cussion relative to the entire body of the television habits and my knowledge of proposed constitution (which is the their technical vocabulary; although my m a n n e r in which our convention experience with EMS is somewhat more delegates and eventually the state solid than that. A city the size of Austin, citizenry must view it). with the public resources available here, But more important than the subject of should have emergency medical services] the editorial, The Texan, once again in on a level above that of the state legal lieu of an adequate knowledge of the sub minimum. That end, in my opinion, can ject matter, has based its editorial com only be achieved by public operation ment on conjecture and inaccurarices. because, even with a subsidy, no private For example, The Texan leads us to system can (or should be expected to) believe that Fleming spoke for the new put the patient’s welfare and the stan version of Resolution 12 in a meeting of dard of service totally ahead of the need the Texas Student Lobby attended by to achieve a fair return on invested every school in the state, when in fact, of capital. Emergency medical service is the dozen or more members of the TSL, unarguably a public responsibility. only five, or six at the most, schools There are administrative alternatives to were represented. And of the schools the use of firemen as EMT, alternatives represented, contrary to the editorial, which could make use of the talents, the president of Texas A&M was not pre skills and dedication of the men who sent, much less voting, much less op signed the letter. posed to Fleming’s position. What is Robert J. Macdonald more, the TSL has yet to adopt an of LBJ School ficial position on Resolution 12 through a By JACK ANDERSON United Feature Syndicate WASHINGTON - We predicted on May 27 that “the military junta now in power in Greece will be toppled before the end of June. We missed the date by only 23 days. Our prognostication was based upon the observations of experts in side the State Department, Central Intelligence Agency and Pentagon. A confidential May, 1974, report to the North Atlantic Assembly, for ex ample, reviewed the Greek situation and offered this conclusion: “Many observers predict that the most affected classes, supported by senior military officers shocked by the junta’s primitive terror tactics, may move into open revolt soon In our May column, we warned that a Greek revolt might bring to power hostile forces who could deny the United States the use of its m ilitary and in tellig en ce in stallations in Greece. As the dust settles in Athens, however, the situation appears less drastic. The new premier, Constan tine Karamanlis, has been a friend of the United States. Still, he isn’t likely to forget his years in exile in Paris, struggling to obtain the ear of Secretary of State Henry Kissinger. Karamanlis and other exiled Greek leaders pleaded in vain for U.S. help in restoring democracy in Democracy returns to Greece — no thanks to Problem Pregnancy Counseling Service Student H e a lth Center 105 W. 26th St. (4th Floor-South) Confidential counseling with all alternatives discuss ed and referrals made to appropriate resources. Cal 478-5711, Ext. 26, for an appointment. Individual appointments Tuesday 1-5 p.m., Thursday 1-5 p.m., Friday 9-noon. Crossword Puzzler ACRO SS THAT S IR L S DIDN'T (JANT 1 Dry, TO A T O M IZE TO M E .. DOONESBURY WHEN IT'S ALL fainted, tm ho# SHOULD MAKE A PANDY 1 6 STUDYROOM> SAY, WHATCHA LAW. STUDYING ANYHOW? I WOULDN'T I'M STILL A LAYMAN WHENIT COMESTD HME THEHEAT LEASELAW. / SOBSOEF' LAW'OH, NO NO LAWYERS/ iv e HAD LAWYERS eem e> they SUE YOUEVERY SHE JUST WANTS? TD SELL ME SOME ©IRL SCOUT COOKIES! SHE'S HOUR FRIEND, ISN’T SHE ? f (JMAT DC ) W'OUHAVE TC r n FOR ^H ’OUKSELF.7 J PROMISE YOU WON'T TAKE ANY COURSES IN IT? WEH PROMISE HL SET HEAT? I TAKE THE COOKIES es wine 4 8 12 13 14 15 16 18 20 Originate 4 At this place 5 Before 6 Attack 7 Happen again 0 H o rs d'oeuvres 9 Conjunction 10 Fish e g g s 11 Goal 17 Negative prefix 19 Note of scale 22 Lie 24 Conjunction 25 Slave 26 Rip 27 Girl s name 28 Manner of running 29 Ventilate 30 Scottish cap 32 B egan again 33 Em erge vic torious Listen to Solicitude Equality Gaelic Later High card Abrogated Portion Subtle emanation 21 Sym bol for tellurium 22 Evergreen tree 23 Bard 27 Mature 29 Be ill 30 Brief 31 Note of scale 32 Bone of body 33 Existed 34 A continent (abbr.) 35 Underground worker 37 Obscure 38 r brough 39 The sweet sop 40 M easure of weight 41 Negative 42 Em ploys 44 Procrastination 47 C utout 51 Anger 52 Ripped 53 S-shaped molding 54 Social gathering 55 in bed 56 M usical in strument 57 Organ of hearing their homeland. But the Nixon ad m inistration preferred to do business with the military junta. Up until the day before Karamanlis was called to Athens, our sources say, high-level State Department of ficials snickered at the idea he might return to power. Karamanlis’ relations with the United States, therefore, probably will be restrained and businesslike. If Washington wants to maintain bases there, our sources say,“they will have to pay for the privilege.” Analysts are still wondering how much power the new civilian government in Greece really has. Some predict that the military will keep a wary eye on events to see that they don’t get out of hand. A ccording to our so u rces, however, the Karamanlis govern ment won’t be hobbled by the military. On the contrary, these sources say that a special court will be convened to try the deposed strongman, Gen. Dimitrios Ionnides, and his band of political primitives. One of those who will feel the ax, our sources predict, will be the Greek ambassador to Washington. Constantine Panayotakos, Unfortunately, Kissinger ignored appeals to end U.S. cooperation with the Greek junta. At least one con fidential docum ent predicted months ago that such action would bring down the m ilitary dic tatorship, with the United States getting the credit. If NATO would withhold its cooperation, suggested the docu ment, “not only will the alliance gain enormously in prestige, but from that time the days of the dic tatorial regime will be numbered ’ But no one in Washington was listening. Now the United States is blamed by many Greek people for keeping the dictatorship in power. Footnote: There was rejoicing in Washington as well as Athens upon Karamanlis’ return from exile For years, a small but determined band of antijunta Greeks had lobbied day and night for the restoration of democracy in their homeland. They include journalist El i as D em etracopoulos, Profs. Ted Couloumbis and John Nicolopoulos, parliamentarian John Zighdis and Gen. Orestes Vidalis. TRANSPORATION TROUBLES. The taxpayers spend $8.1 billion a year for a Transportation Depart ment that is fragmented, wasteful and often misguided. This is the confidential conclusion of a consulting firm, McKinsey & Co., which has just produced a detailed report for Transportation Secretary Claude Brinegar. The study cost the taxpayers $365,000. but the money will be well spent if Brinegar implements the hundreds of recommendations. The Transportation Department was created seven years ago from federal agencies handling highways, airways, railways, subways and their social, environmental and cultural impact. Thus, the depart ment touches part of every American’s life. “The principal need (is) to im prove the way in which the depart ment is managed over-all, ” the report states. The problems extend from Brinegar’s office throughout h is s p r a w l i n g , brawling, bureaucratic empire. For instance, the department has wasted millions on impractical pro jects such as a personal kittycar transport system in Morgantown, W.Va., an aircushioned passenger train and a superbus that runs on a magnetic rail. But it has failed to provide a proper mix between air, auto, bus and rail service. The report attributes this failure to lack of “clear-cut rationale” at the top. “There was no sufficiently disciplined process,” states the report, “to enable ... the Office of the Secretary ... to evaluate the programs and decide on further ac tion. There is a growing sense of groups working at cross-purposes. Answ er to Yesterday's Puzzle o a tas M u sa a n a □ B ae Q saa s a g araisoB os aga Backpacking for P H B B H B fflE g a g ‘ n o e s D D @ a@ H B Q H O fS O B H Q I a s bHasa o a o a s a n n itiQ K la n s a g o g arara ararao Baron 38 C o m p ass point 37 Portion of medicine 30 Well-r.iannered 40 Singing voice 41 C o m p ass point 43 Spanish for “y e s” 44 Act 45 Region 46 Period of time 47 Greek letter 48 Tennis stroke 49 Anger 50 Golf mound 5.00 (It s a shoulder bag, too!) A great looking canvas tote that is a back-pack and with a quick snap of the straps converts to a s h o u l d e r bag. W ater proof linin g...available in assorted colors. Only $5.00 DOW N Distr, by United Feature Syndicate. Inc. 1 Resorts 2 Every O N - T H E - D R A G , 2406 G U A D A L U P E tflu The Classic in harness leather 20.00 raps Barely there straps on wood platform. • Natural • White • Brown • Navy 21.00 Lightweight Heavy • Natural • White • Brown • N avy 20.00 The Flat Look in rubber and leather. • Red • N avy • Tan • White OO All over town Tuesday, July 30, 1974 THE DAILY TEXAN Page 5 Major League Baseball Brock Steals Base No. 700 victory, and Bobby Bonds sparked two three-run rallies with a single and triple to lead the San Francisco Giants to a 7-2 victory over the Houston Astros Monday night H a lic k i, 1-3, outdueled veteran Claude Osteen, 9-9, who was victimized by the Giants' three-run rallies in the second and fifth innings. It it 'it A TLAN TA (A P ) - Jim Wynn knocked in four runs, in cluding two on his 24th home run of the season, helping the Los Angeles Dodgers snap a three-game losing streak with a 19-2 triumph over the Atlan ta Braves Monday night. Wynn’s two-run homer off starter Ron Reed. 6-6, follow ed B ill Buckner’s single and gave the Dodgers a 2-1 lead in the third. He singled home a run in a five-run fifth and had ★ * ★ HOUSTON (A P ) - Ed a sacrifice fly in the sixth. M eanwhile, Don Sutton Halicki scattered IO hits to notch his first major league evened his record at 8-8 by FOREIGN AUTO PARTS REPLACE PARTS FOR IMPORTS INCLUDING PINTOS A N D VEGAS scattering nine hits. The Braves got a run in the first when Ralph Garr tripled and scored on Hank Aaron s single. ★ ★ ★ CINCINNATI (A P ) - John Grubb and Nate C olbert cracked solo home runs to help B ill Grief and the San Diego Padres beat the Cincin nati Reds 3-2 Monday night. Grubb tagged Clay Kirby, 76. for his sixth home run of the season in the firs t, and Colbert hit his 10th in the fourth The Padres’ other run came in the second on Clarence Gaston’s bunt, a throwing error by catcher Johnny Bench, an infield single by Dave Roberts and Enzo Her nandez’s two-out single. The Reds scored in the sixth on run-scoring singles by Dan Driessen and Dave Concep cion. Grief. 6-11, scattered IO hits. it ★ it N EW YO RK (AP) - John Milner’s two-run homer in the standings NATIONAt I i AOU* law W 53 Si 48 40 44 42 P H iia p m a St Louis P it t s b u r g h Montreal . New York. Chicago .. Wnt I « 50 S3 53 54 56 A M I RICAN LE AG U * Ia** 641 66 37 596 62 42 524 54 49 .515 53 47 57 .452 419 44 61 M o nd a y'* Gom o* N e w Y o r k 4. M o n tre a l 3 St. L o u is l l . C h ic a g o 4 L o s A n g e le s IO, A tla n ta 2 P h ila d e 'O h ia 13, P ittsb u r g h I S a n D ie g o 3, C in cin n ati 2 S a n F r a n c isc o 7, H o u ston 2 L o t A n geles C in cin n ati H o u sto n A tla n ta San F r a n Sat. D ie go 50 W I 54 46 , 51 49 51 49 50 50 49 51 48 52 Welt Rct.OB .525 .505 475 465 .44? .429 2 5 6 9V i B oston C le v e la n d B a lt im o r e . N ew Y o r k . M ilw a u k e e De tro it 4>--a 12 13 19' 3 23 O a k la n d .............. K a n C ity C h ic a g o Texas . . . . M in n e so ta C a l i f o r n i a ............ rn 59 42 50 49 50 49 51 52 53 49 63 40 Ref.OI 540 505 3 .510 3 500 4 490 ! 480 I 584 .505 505 .505 480 388 a a a IO 1 J 20 Monday * Gam#* B a lt im o r e 6 M ilw a u k e e 2 D e tro it 8 Cle v e lan d 2 B oston 2, N e w Y o r k I T e x a s IO, K a n s a s C ity I C h ic a g o at O a klan d , N O ther c lu b s not scheduled S t u d t m a n 's Photo Service 222 W. 19th OUR SPECIALTY V.W. TOYOTA DATSUN VOLVO FIAT M GB INTERNATIONAL CAR PARTS 474-6451 & 5324 Cameron Rd. RESUME' & IDENTIFICATION TYPE PICTURES e ig h t h in n in g M o n d a y powered the New York Mets to their fourth straight vic tory, a 4-3 triumph over the Montreal Expos. Steve Rogers, 10-13, took a three-hitter and a 3-2 lead into the eighth, but Je rry Grote singled and Milner hit his 15th homer of the season. Jack Aker, 2-2, the Mets’ third pitcher, got the victory. The Expos took a 3-0 lead off starter George Stone in the third inning but the Mets got two runs back in the fourth. ★ ★ ★ PH ILA D ELPH IA (A P ) Mike Schmidt hit a pair of two-run homers, and Steve Carlton pitched a two-hitter for his 13th victory of the season as the Philadelphia Phillies beat the Pittsburgh Pirates 13-1 Monday night. Schmidt gave Carlton a 2-1 first-inning lead with his 21st homer, and blasted No. 22 in a five-run sixth. Carlton gave up a run in the first on a pair of walks and Richie Zisk’s R B I single, then set down 17 of the next 18 batters. The only hit in that span was a single by Zisk in the fourth, and he was erased in a double play. Specialty fashions for' men and L a v women —UPI Talaphot* Phillies' Mike Schmidt leaps over Pirates' G ene Clines^ TO PLACE A * SALE* Shoe Shop - CHICAGO (A P ) - Lou Brock stole the 700th base of his career, singled twice and scored twice Monday while Ken Reitz and Joe Torre both homered in the St. Louis Car dinals’ 11-4 victory over the Chicago Cubs. Brock singled in the first in ning, stole his 65th base of the season and scored on a single by Ted Simmons, putting the Cardinals ahead to stay. Brock became the fifth man to reach the 700 mark. Ty Cobb leads the base stealing parade with 892. John Curtis, 5-10, coasted to his second complete game of the year. Andre Thornton had to leave the game in the fourth inning when he collided with umpire Billy Williams and suffered a concussion. William s also left the game. w S H E E P S K IN CLASSIFIED RUGS AD Man\ 50 $5 Beautiful Colors,‘7 OO ★ LEATHER SALE ★ - I-D ay Quick, Reliable Service V e n o u s kina*, colors - 75' per ft thats CALI 471-5244 m n. ghat, a n i cafcAxd imfcy 6a«xAm !*ICM0 lanai Capitol Saddlery 1614 Lavaca Austin, Texas 478-9309 2828 GUADALUPE EARN CASH WEEKLY You're looking for a new apartment... Blood Plasm a Donors Needed Men & Women . OPEN A BARRONE SAVINGS ACCOUNT. lf all you need this fall is a little room (with AC and carpeting), maid service and all the good home-cooked food you can eat, perhaps you should consider the Barrone. At $117.50 a month (installment rate) you can't lose. And you can take all your left-over bread and invest it in something worthwhile. Like yourself. Or your chick. The Barrone. Two and a half blocks from campus. Member FDIC Page 6 Tuesday, Ju ly 30, 1974 THE DAILY TEXAN * « EARN $10 WEEKLY CASH PAYMENT FOR DONATION Austin Blood Components, Inc. OP EN : MON. & T HU R S. 8 A M t o ? P. M. TUES. & FRI. 8 A M. to 3 P. M. C L O S E D WED. & SAT. 409 W. 6th 477-3735 C onsid e r the quiet privacy under the sp re a d in g oak trees of our one b e d ro o m a p a rtm e nts for St6 5 A ll Biffs P a id Palo Blanco 911 Blanco 472-1030 Forzano N a m e d Detroit Coach marilyn it Assistant Picked After McCafferty s DeathA native « _ regular softball. There are seven innings, or 50 to 55 minutes, whichever comes first, and a player cannot steal bases. “Most of the time the time comes before the seven innings do,” Johnson said ^ “ We mostly use a set of IO members,’’ Johnson said. The rover is the extra per son. She covers all the balls hit in the shorter ends of the field. Johnson also is of the opinion that women try harder than men. “ Oh, of course they are more emotional, vepr much so. There is more of a team spirit. They really keep the bench alive and are constantly shouting something. “The men may say something like, come on baby’ but they aren’t nearly as spirited.” Johnson also is a member of the Austin Warriors, a local men’s team. “ We’re pretty well established,” he said. “We have won the first half in the Givens slowpitch league and the first half in the Rosewood slow-pitch league and we hope to win the second half. Rosewood and Givens are two East Austnn parks. The El Doradoettes are on their way to the state slow -pitch softball cham pionships. This is happening thanks to the efforts of 17 black women and their coaches. ‘‘We are a united team — unity is one thing we strive to have — we don’t want any dissension,’’ said Jack Johnson. John son, along with Arthur (Toose) Fowler, coaches the El Doradoettes. C ham pions Johnson and Fowler’s team won the Rosewood and the city league A division of the Texas Women’s Athletic Federation Slow-Pitch League. They depart Friday for Arlington. “The team ’s name comes from the El Dorado Club, which partially sponsors us,” Johnson said. “Their ages range from, and I hesitate to say this, 17 to 38. Twelve of the teammates have children, and they really come out to root for their mommies. Their husbands cheer for them, too,” he said. Johnson feels the secret to the success of his team, which has only been establish ed one year, is “ a lot of team effort. “They never have any arguments, and they do what their coaches tell them to.' he said. Johnson thinks it is much e asier coaching a women’s team than one con sisting of men. “ Women are more apt to do what you say than men are. You don’t find as many of them wanting to be superstars. “ Most of them really do not know the game as well as men. When we first started, some of them couldn t judge things too well. But several of our members have been playing for a number of years on other teams. The rules differ somewhat from those o t Coach s Comments All-Star Boycott Urged i J . ..'Ai R ummer n 10*70 a id Ho d i d resigned iin 1972, csaid he did not sign a Lions’ contract as head coach. He said he was proud to be selected but that “I don’t want any congratulations because this is a very sad time in my life.” M cCafferty, som etim es known as “ Easy R id er’ because of his demeanor, in stalled a new play numbering system and made numerous changes when he took over. “ I really don’t want to change much of anything, said Forzano, who considers himself a stern disciplinarian. “There will be some changes, though, because I have to put in a few of my thoughts. N one of M c C a ffe rty ’s assistants was designated as top aide. « A « ifn iA y l HOUSTON (AP) — Concerned Basketball Fans of Houston, a local black group, called Monday for a boycott of the Texas High School Coaches Association all-star basket ball game, accusing the selection committee of discrimination in selection of its coaches and players. Melvin Hobbs, who said he was the group’s treasurer, questioned the THSCA s selection methods, saying no Houston area players were picked for Wednesday’s all-star game and that a black coach had never been selected in the organization’s 42-year history. “ If the (selection committee) would look at the coach’s record instead of his skin color or his personality, then a black coach would y v/\n n n m a ri A f ! O time 1 1 T T IP 3ago, 0 0 . have kbeen named aa Ilong said Ralph Cooper, a spokesman for the group. The organization is calling (Mi the black community to stay away from Wednesday night’s basketball game, scheduled for Hofheinz Pavilion, by distributing leaflets and through radio appeals Cooper said Houston Wheatley Coach Jackie Carr often took his team to the state basketball championship, and yet he had never been selected. A spokesman for the THSCA, Soapy John son, said coaches selected to coach in the allstar game had to be members of THSCA, and players had to be nominated by their coach to be considered. A of Akron, Ohio, Forzano began his coaching career in 1956 at Wooster College in Ohio. In 1957 he was an assistant under McCafferty at Kent State, then was a Navy aide from 1959-63. In 1964 Forzano was named Yankee Conference Coach of the Year while at Connecticut, and his 1965 team beat Yale for the first time in 90 years. He joined the NFL iin 1966 and spent two years under Coach Charlie Winner at St. Louis, then moved to Cincin nati for a year under Bengals Coach Paul Brown McCafferty died at a Pon tia c hospital several hours after suffering a heart attack Sunday while working in his yard. et SCHOOL BEER SPECIAL REVISITED Italian Food at its B est “ We have a good chance of at least plac ing in state,” he continued. “ We are a hard-hitting team, and our defense is real ly coming along. At first it was rather slow, but it has shown a lot of improve ment especially since we switched a few players around. Of course, we have always had a strong offense. The El Doradoettes never get mad at their coaches but have a lot of respect for them. Johnson's wife, Betty, indicentally is third baseman. “That’s no problem, though,” he said. “ I treat her just like I do the rest of the women. But if I didn’t, then we might have a littl^dissensioiL LUNCH & DINNER SPECIAL OPEN FOR LUNCH 11:30 - 2:30 FOR DINNER 4:30 - 12:00 ALL THE SPAGHETTI for $9 5 0 YOU CAN EAT ONLY L Serving Au stin 's Finest Selection of Pizza, Sicilian Pie, S a n d w ic h e s , THIS W IC K ONLY! TUBS.-THURS. SHINER BEER - . 1 5 / M u g . 9 0 /Pitcher ERI.-MON. MICHELOB BEER - .25 /M ug 1.50 Pitcher High School Bask etb all — — --— BLO O M FIELD H ILLS, Mich. (AP) - Rick Forzano and his assistants are “ still Mac’s coaches,” and Don McCafferty’s techniques ap parently will guide the Detroit Lions this season. Forzano, 45-year-old former head coach at the U.S. Naval Academy, was named Monday as in te rim su c c e sso r to McCafferty, who died Sunday of a heart attack. Forzano had been the offen sive backfield coach of the N ational Football League Lions, joining McCafferty before last season when a new staff replaced that of Joe Schmidt, who resigned. “The first order of business is to sit down with the staff U fl Tai*photo and discuss priorities, For Rick Forzano zano said. “We’re not going to season. say ‘win this one for Mac,’ but selected by W illiam Clay “ It’s still difficult to believe Ford, team president and Mac’s going to prevail over that Don McCafferty is dead,” owner, and General Manager this football team all year Thomas said. “ But we must long. No one’s going to have to Russ Thomas. go on with business.' Thomas would not say if remind them of that.” Forzano, head coach at Forzano would rem ain as Forzano, a veteran of 19 Navy from 1969 until he y e a rs in c o a c h in g , w as head coach th ro u g h the Good fill 11 p.m. Sunday-Friday 12 p.m. Saturday S p a g h e tti A J C om plem entary Glass o f IT m e IT u h Each Purchase Special good w/copY of ad I pitcher or 1 mug good w /each copy of ad "The different sandwich, pizza and Italian dinners restaurant SUN.-THURS. 11 tOO a .m . to I a .m . A n tip a s t o , S a la d s, B e v e ra g e s . R I . & SAT. 11:00 a.m. to 2:00 a.m 23rd A PEARL ST. TWO HOURS TRK PARKING 472-3034 i2801 Guadalupe \m trH MESSAGE IN A BOTTLE? iii ... we vc ye THE PACESETTER. The innate apartment. Split-level living in a two bedroom studio Downstairs, a fully electric kitchen with wa>k-in pantry and spacious living room for entertain ing Upstairs, two large bedrooms and bath with walk-ins. Free living at its finest THE MAXI-1. A new concept in one bedroom split levels Large bedroom and bath with a full study upstairs Downstairs, a spacious living area, en tertaining area and all electric kitchen See it to believe it. 444-7880 way e e e TO HIRE IF you have Pacesetter Apartments for Free-Living People. 2124 Burton Drive ... something to SELL ... an apartm ent to RENT ... to BUY a stereo NEW HOUSING POLICY!! DEXTER HOUSE .. to find a JOB .. need to HIRE someone 1103 W. 24th OCCUPANCY ONLY *60 Luxurious Private Rooms ‘ IOO Semi-Private Rooms as Low as per mo. per mo. • Maid Service • Heated Swim m ing Pool • R efrigerators • Intercom • Laundry F acilities • Vending Machines • Study Areas • 24 Hr. Desk Service • TV in Lobby • Off Street P arking • Close to Campus Spacial Package Deals (Room at Daxtar - Board at Madison) available as low as $145 N o w accepting Fall r/ ... a house to LEASE Contracts CALL 471-5244 and place your CLASSIFIED AD in THE DAILY TEXAN for U.T. M e n a n d W om en HOUSING O ff ICE 709 22nd St. 478-9891 - 478-8914 DEXTER HOUSE fie /v e ti/fo e /fo t fic/u m M /a y THE DAILY TEXAN S tu d e n t N e w s p a p e r a t The Un ive rs ity of Texas a t Au stin Come See - Come Live GET MORE FOR YOUR MONEY $ $ T h ey'll G e t Your "M essage! II Tuesday, July 30, 1974 THE DAILY TEXAN P a g e 7 Ai W om en G ain Athletic By LARRY SMITH Texan Staff Writer The first IO scholarships for women athletes at Texas were approved Friday for the 197475 school year by University President Stephen Spurr. a*. Takeoff Motorcycle mo»o-cro** race* ware part of the prefmtival event* of the Austin Aqua Fest during the weekend. This is a scene from last year's race. Festival events this w eek will be an adult ten nis tournament, amateur golf tou rnam ent, skeet sh ooting, kayak races, motorcycle races and a multihull regatta. XL a Ar K Although he is unable to budget funds for more than one year at a time, Spurr also gave tentative consent to a program of expansion which would in cr ea se w om en ’s scholarships to 76 by 1978. This is approximately equal to the number (excluding foot ball) of male athletes on scholarships and is the limit allowed by the Association for Intercollegiate Athletics for Women. i p S ^ r - ?;SaR -A-r*jSg- T EX A N ADVERTISERS: The scholarships, officially called grants - in - aid, are of $1,680 and will be divided among seven teams — basket ball, golf, gymnastics, swim ming, tennis, track and field, and volleyball. Individual coaches may award the grants in full or part, but in no case can a partial grant be less than the cost allotted for tui tion and fees ($420). IN AD DITION to the money for scholarships, Spurr ap proved a $57,760 budget for women for the coming year. Last year, women received about one-fifth this amount. The increases w ill allow coaches, who have been work ing with the teams without pay, to receive part-time salaries and will enable many of the teams to get uniforms for the first time. The money also will go toward hiring a director for women’s athletics. This fall, a temporary assistant to Betty T h o m p s o n , d i r e c t o r of recreational sports, will begin work, with the new director taking over in 1975. The funds for the program will come from the $2 optional fee for women’s athletics and other funds to which Spurr has access. Long range funding has not been determined. “ I ’m all f or the sch o la rsh ip s,” men s and women’s Swimming Coach Pat Patterson said. “We have a few girls that can really use them . Take for exam ple Beery Boggs. She goes to school, swims and then goes and works at Bonanza Steak House eight hours a day. A scholarship for her could definitely help to make her a better swimmer.” BOGGS WAS the leading swimmer on the team last year and this past weekend was one of approximately 30 to q u a l i f y for the AAU Nationals in the 100-meter breaststroke. She swam 1:20 while the qualifying mark was 1:21.4. Boggs' case is no great ex ception. as the University has had to turn down several out standing women athletes in the past because it did not Complete Research Service College Research Services h a s a com plete E ducational Research Service, Including 'term p a p e r Research, Etc. Also professional typing service a v ailab le. New sum m er session hours: 4 :3 0 to 7 :3 0 p.m. M onday thru Friday Qwck DoKvary & low P rk ii Callage Research Services 104 I 6th St. Suite SII UttiefieW Building Austin, Taxes 71701 Rhone: 474-1235 10,000 Research Tefks en file "All materials said far research and reference purposes only." WALK TO UT. ALL BILLS PAID COVERED PARKING anno V Morton Admits Staubach No. I THOUSAND O A K S, Calif. (UPI) - Craig Morton said Monday his decision to report to the Dallas Cowboys train ing camp was not accom panied by any delusions that he will be the club’s No. I quarterback this year. “I’m not naive enough to think that I’m going to be the No. I quarterback,” said Mor ton, who became the fourth veteran National Football League signal caller to cross the picket lines. “That s not going to happen. I wouldn’t come out here for that reason. I wouldn’t do that to anybody. “I could work out in Dallas, but to me that doesn’t ac- KilCATESSa HSl-WS I ST* anJ Grtud. lupe I COOL OFF wttti J*** !I “th is summer us? F 0 0 L FOR YOUR ADVERTISING PROGRAM AIMED AT THIS VAST UNIVERSITY MARKET HOULD BEGIN al ITH THE.. | Have a fret HUGE CLOSETS ^ 3 ^ DISHW DI SH WASH ASHER/DISPOSAL 2810 RIO GRANDE El a n n e ,of ttter or idrink Witt* Hue ICoupon and p u r- j .chaa®. a Sand w ich o r meat. ? 476-4095 2 - 8 so O'®The 9/e) Good Food Stores Natural Foods WEEKLY SPECIALS No lim its—S p ecia ls good through Sunday NATURAL VITAMINS 10%off T h e D a il y T e x a n PRODUCE Student New spaper at The University of Texas at Austin to be published Large California P eaches FRIDAY, AUGUST 9th • 5 BIG SECTIONS! * MORE PAGES! rn rnrn rn rn t i l A L B 1 - 1 0 0 « # F O R COMPLETE INFORMATION! CALL 4 # Page 8 Tuesday, July 30, 1974 T H E D A IL Y T E X A N 2 9 # lb . California N ectarines 3 9 # lb . Large Avocadoes 3for$l Five Convenient locations: I 2. 3. 4. 5. HOI West 5th at Baylor 123 East North Loop at Avenue F 900 West 29th at Pearl 9431 N. Interregional at Rundberg 2818 Hancock at Bullcreek Road complish anything. I get in volved with business there. I need the discipline here.” The man Morton and most everybody else assumes will be the club’s No. I quarter back t his year — Roger Staubach — remained in Dallas. Morton, who next season will report to the Houston Texans of the World Football League, said he felt he was in the proper physical condition to play in the Cowboys exhibi tion opener Saturday night in Oakland. “It depends on how the arm is,” he said. “ I’ve thrown the equivalent of four or five days in the past month. You can run around a track, but you have to get out here and throw, and I wasn’t doing that in D allas.” The arrival of Morton and second-year wide receiver Golden Richards brought the number of veterans in the Cowboy camp to 13. “ I got my timing down with Rog er ( du r in g drills in D a l l a s ) , ” said Richards. “Now I need the book learning and to put those things together. I just want to play. “ I could have struck longer, but football has been good to me. The city of Dallas, too. The C ow boys drafted me when I had my leg in a cast last year so they showed good faith with m e.” DELI A D .L Brand Your advertising dollars will be aimed at some 10,000 brand NEW STUDENTS! It’s your chance to tell them WHO, WHAT and WHERE you are! The Daily Texan is the ONLY way to reach this tremendous student m arket and get your share of some $45,000,000 to be spent this year. Give us a call today! requires equal funding for c o m p a r a t i v e m e n ’s and women’s sports. The act is not a law yet, however, and many parts of it are unclear. “We were all aware of what Title IX w as,” Jeffrey said. “ But w e d i d n ’t make recommendations because of it. We based our proposals bn what we felt was morally and ethically required.” It is because of one section of Title IX that football is ex cluded when comparing the number o f scholarships between men and women. The act excludes those sports that operate at a profit. Jeffrey pointed out that matters such as new coaches and distribution of scholarships still have to be worked out. But he said he feels this can be done before school starts this fall. give scholarships. On the other hand, such schools as Trinity University have been giving women scholarships for years. Spurr’s decision to commit th e U n i v e r s i t y t o an aggressive athletic program, which will i nclude open recruiting, f ol l owed last week’s recommendation by his Advisory Committee on Intercollegiate Athletics for Women, “President Spurr has been very supportive to the coun cil,’’ member Robert Jeffrey, chairman of the speech com munication department, said. “ I wasn’t at all surprised that he approved the recommen dations. ’” JEFFREY said that HEW Title IX had little effect on the council’s proposals. Title IX was part of the education amendment acts of 1972 and I To place an ad, call 471-5244. ■■ I I I I I I I I I I line I I I I I I I I days I I I I I I I dollar II I I I I I The I I Daily I I I Texan I I I I I I I I Unclassifieds I I I C om a by TSP Bldg. I I Room 3.200 I a n d place I your I I Unclassified Ad I I I I I students only I I I pre-paid I I no refunds I 26th & Whitis I I I I 3 I L______ I Residents Desire By MICHAEL ETCHISON Texan Staff Writer (Editor’s note: This is the first in a threepart series on zoning in Austin, centering on a proposed zoning rollback w est of downtown.) Thursday, 76 Old West Austin residents will ask City Council to change the zoning of their proper ty. What m akes this request unusual is that the 76 are not trying to open a little, or even a big, business. They are now zoned “ B and want to be rezoned “ A” (residential). The last such zoning rollback in the area, accor ding to a citv report, was in 1959, when two blocks near now-Mayor Roy Butler’s house were changed from “ B” to “ A .” Generally, “ A” zoning allows smgle-unit houses and duplexes, private schools and private clubs. “B” zoning allow s everthing that "‘A allows plus apartments. w According to a survey by the city s I lanning Department, 67 percent of the land in the area is occupied by a single-unit and duplex buildings with 437 housing units. Apartments with 307 units occupy less than 9 percent of the land “ N O B O D Y R E M E M B E R S w hy th is neighborhood was zoned B ’ in 1931,” says Sandra Weinstock, who led the effort to enroll applicants. • We think that if its stayed residential for 40 years with an apartment zoning, the ( ity Council ought to zone us residential.” Councilmen Bob Binder, Berl Handcox. Lowell Lebermann and Jeff Friedman are expected by one person close to the issue to approve the application, which has already passed the H an ning Commission. The other three councilmen s attitudes are not known. Butler and Binder will probably m iss Thursday’s m eeting, this source Zoning Austinites Challenge Shift Walnut Creek Permit »_a : _________ deteriorated at fKn the coma sam e tima tim e and and hftth both OWF16I owners willing to sell or redevelop at the sam e tim e. The Many of the houses in the area, which exten d s fact that a m ajority of the single-fam ily/duplex from Lamar Boulevard to West Lynn Street and development is well-maintained m akes this even Sixth Street to 10th Street, were built in the last . century. More than 50 are candidates for zoning more difficult.” “ We aren’t saying that Old West Austin has to under Austin’s historic zoning ordinance. N early be purely resid en tial,” Weinstock said. “ There one-fourth of the single-fam ily houses have been are a lot of businesses that would fit in w ell with built since the 1931 zoning. w h a t is a lr e a d y h e r e , b u t t h e z o n in g “ NO ONE has form ally applied for a co m m er cial or office zoning in that area,” Duncan Muir, classifications m ake it impossible. ONE EXAM PLE she cited was an application city zoning administrator, said, in form ally, I un for a change by a man who wanted to open a derstand that som e people are considering it. T w o a tto r n e y s, L aird P a lm er and T re v restaurant. Under the present Austin zoning orSeymour, have bought a large house at 901 Baylor dinance, he needed a "GR" zoning He told use he St “ We’d like to have our office there. We don’t hadn’t ever run a restaurant before. If he failed, think w e’d be bad neighbors. We wouldn’t have any other ‘G R ’ use could have com e in .” Other “ GR” uses include car w ashes, auto any reason to be,” Seym our said. repair shops, ambulance services, billboards, John Gallery, U niversity assistant professor of department stores, m otels, theaters and frozen architecture, said, “ Often what happens is that people buy into an old neighborhood because they food lockers. The total of 85 original applicants for the Old like the charm for their office After a couple of West Austin rollback had dropped to 76 by this years they decide that that old residence won t week. Some discovered their request could not be work as an office and want to tear it dow n.’ The Planning C om m ission got 29 letters op considered because they were behind on their property taxes. Others got pressure from poten posing the applications, and 14 spoke against it. “ They're all realtors,” Weinstock said. H ow ever, tial buyers. If the applications are approved, only the 7b after a campaign lasting several months, she had applicants w ill be directly affected. The im only signed up 85 residents out of more than 300 in plications of the change, however, w ill affect not the area. only their neighbors but all of Austin. NOT ALL the land zoned for apartments could THOSE WHO m ake the decisions — the Plan actually be used for them . Streets too narrow for ning Commission and City Council — m ust con apartment traffic m ake up 29 percent of the total. sider those im plications as w ell as the arguments Many lots are too sm all by them selves to hold on a particular charge. apartments. (Wednesday: Who are the people who decide Combining those sm a ll lots to get large enough zoning m atters in Austin? What do they think lots is not as easy as it might seem. As the City zoning is supposed to do, and how w ell do they Planning Department staff report said, “ it re think Austin is doing?) quires that both neighboring properties m u st be By KEN MCHAM Texan Staff Writer A City Engineering Departm e n t p e r m it fo r th e ch a n n eliza tio n of W alnut Creek was appealed Friday by 12 Northeast Austin fam ilies. The appeal will be heard by the Planning Commission, but no hearing date has been set. A majority vote of the sixm em b er c o m m issio n m ay repeal or uphold the permit. On further appeal, City Coun cil may reverse or affirm the com m ission’s decision. THE PROJECT, which the city environmental office op p o sed “ u n til it is demonstrated there are no feasible alternatives,” would w iden and str a ig h te n th e channel and rem ove the trees and vegetation along a 4,000foot section of the creek north of Decker Lake Road. Walnut Creek runs east of and generally parallel to Ed Bluestein Boulevard in East Austin. The land surrounding the creek south of Decker Lake Road to the Colorado R iv e r is r e l a t i v e l y u n developed. R ecen tly, Austin Savings and Loan has developed three subdivisions partially within the Walnut Creek 25-year flood plain (largest land area covered by a flood in 25 years) — Chimneyhill north of U.S. Highway 290 and Las Cimas and Crystal Brook south of 290. THE TW ELVE fa m ilie s a p p e a lin g th e creek channelization live in Crystal Brook, which is totally within the 25-year flood plain. Austin Savings hopes to confine the flood level to a wider creek channel, thus removing from the flood plain part of Crystal Brook and all of Las Cimas. THE CITY is withholding approval of further construc tion in Las Cimas until the channelization is com plete. Austin homeowners will be in eligible for federal flood in su r a n c e u n le s s th e c it y prohibits construction within the 25-vear flood plain by July I, 1975 C hannelization and dikes are under construction up s tre a m in the C him neyhill development, and Head City Engineer Charlie G raves said a d d itio n a l W aln ut C reek alteration will be required on a 1,500-foot section below the contested channelization pro ject. l l (GUADALUPE LOCATION 1 ONLY) Mi TUESDAY SPECIAL ii ii Bad Check Offense Redefined ^ The next tim e you consider writing a hot check for last month’s rent — just to get e v en w ith th a t lo u sy landlord — consider the con sequences first. Under a recen t attorney general’s ruling, a person in ten tion ally w ritin g a bad check to pay rent can be prosecuted for theft of ser v ice” and punished for a felony if the check or checks amount to 1200 “Under (theft provisions of the new Penal Code) section 31.04, one who secures the use of real property by deception, threat or false token is guilty of theft of serv ice,” the opi nion issued la st Thursday paid rent with a bad check could be prosecuted only un der section s dealing w ith “ issuance of a bad ch eck ,” n ow s e c t i o n 3 2 .4 1 a n d punishable as a Class C m is demeanor. If convicted, the person could be fined up to $200. confined to county jail for up to 30 days or both. Under the new ruling, the s t a t e h a s th e o p tio n of prosecuting under section 32.41 (a m isdem eanor) or un der the “ theft of service” sec A lA'vuiopm.'nt -I lagger Assfxiatei .12? JKJ?* FACULTY HOW YOU CAN PUT YOUR O RP , MONEY IN A N AUSTIN BANK CALL: 8 3 6 -8 2 3 0 meetings ST. HILARION CENTER GROUP FLIGHTS to N E W YO R K horn A U S T IN Leave w ith a g ro u p BOOKSELLERS IN: > Catholic Christianity M ysticism • Astrology Com parative Religion R e turn a n y d a y . S I C ! ■ Houndtrtp Mu, lo . * Search Chg Experts HARWOOD,,.,, TRAVEL Cist* I 2 4 2 8 G u a d a lu p e LARGE CHICKEN FRIED STEAK. BUTTERY BAKED POTATO OR FRENCH FRIES. HOT TEXAS TOAST, AND CRISP TOSSED SALAD $1 39 2815 GUADALUPE 478-3560 A p a rtm e n ts w e s t o f Z ilk e r Park. m a g VENOOHS ASSOCIATION will meet Bt 6 p m. Tuesday lo the Methodist Stu dent Center. The meeting '* o r * " only to those holding v a lid v e n d ii permits DOniCATI MIDGE CIUS will meet at 7 p m. T u e s d a y in th e U n io n J u n io r Ballroom J CHICKEN FRIED STEAK 6-9 S17. campus nouns In b rie f I B e an In-Sider . . . in our Boat Moo. The hottest shoe in the U S Brown leather with white rubber sole. Sizes “Theft of $200 or more is a felony offense Under con s o lid a tio n p r o v is io n s , if several bad checks, totaling $200 or m ore, are written, the writer is a felon.” F orm erly, a person who Aug. IO . - _ Aug. 23 Aug 31 I(a a m cH m pe a m iis d pe m a nn no ir or felony, depending upon the amount of the check). BOHSNZS SIRLOIN PIT j»63mS* D e p a rtu re s : ftio irm n Hours 10-6 10 08 West Ave. 472-0014 * 7 Je ffe rs o n S q u a re Areyou cut out to be a millionaire? Let Citizens National make you feel like a millionaire. It s all part of the grand opening celebration of our new bank in Capital Plaza. Citizens is giving away a week's interest on a million dollars. Figure it out. At 6% that’s one thousand, one hundred fifty dollars and sixty-eight cents. Beginning with the grand opening festivities, July 27-31, a million dollars in cash will be on display in the lobby during regular bank hours^ Come in and tour the exciting new Main Building. See the money, receive a gift, then ■ • _ IL , _ : in n register to win the interest on fthe million dollars. While you’re here, you ll notice that we’re now twice the bank. Our Main Building and the Citizens West building give us new banks on both sides of North Interregional. That means smiling people working twice as hard for your money. Visit during the Opening or any day . . . you’re worth a minion to Citizens National.. OP CitizensNational MEMBER FDIC ULI T his tim e, ren t a n eig h b o rh o o d in ste a d o f an apartm en t. a neiahborhood Is p eop le - peop le like you - who get to know one anomer In the ^antatian south n elah b oihood you can m eet your neighbors at me Impressive and p ersonab e ^ own way. But the Plantation South neighborhood has apartm ent services, too - such as twenty four hour m aintenance and professional m anagem ent Riverside on Pleasant Volley Road, P lantation S ou th 2200 Pleasant Valley Road > 442-1298 Tuesday, July 30, 1974 THE BAILY TEXAN Pag Texas Opry House Jennings' Shows Among His Best By M ARK P E E L Texan Staff Writer Waylon Jennings put on two of the best shows he has ever performed Friday and Saturday nights at the Texas Opry House, but he did not receive a single standing ovation until he close of Saturday night s set However, all it took for the people in the audience to go crazy was Jen nings to say, ‘T m gonna ask a friend of mine to come out and help me some Willie, come on.’" Out strolled Willie Nelson, and the whole place was on its feet This, is not to take anything away from Nelson - he's one of the best performers around and in Jenmng's opinion the best songwriter — but after ail, this was supposed to have been the Wavlon Jennings show THE W A R M - IP both nights was Billy Rav Reynolds, who used to play tor Jennings Friday night. Wild Bill and hts Buffalo Yankees from Buf falo, N Y did a short set to get things rolling. They are about the best copy band around and do some good original material, also. Jennings was backed up, as usual, bv the Waylors, comprised of Duke Goff on bass, Larry Whitmore playing rhvthm guitar, Richie Albright on drums. Don Brooks on harp and, without a doubt one of the best steel players today. Ralph Mooney For his last two albums, "Honky Tonk Heroes” and ‘This Time,” Jennings has been able to use the Waylors in stead of studio musicians for back up, and the result is a more cohesive sound from stage to vinyl. BOTH NIGHTS, the order of songs Jennings played was basically the same, as he opened with “ Only Daddy That’ll Walk the Line,' followed by Ask Me To,” “ Louisiana Woman” and Ain’t No God in Mexico.” Jennings played all of his standard favorites (there must be 50 of them >and some of the songs from his new album which will be released in a NBC Films V illag e Cinem a ^ND Four OM tUaSMTt V.‘.Ltr MMM4-MS 2700 West Anderson tone LIFF.. LOV L..SURVI\AL.THF GREATEST ADV LNTURES OFALX FEATURE TIMES i l^-JJJ0-S:»7J0-»30 I L BOTH THEATRES I THE WHITE DAWN LAST DAY "CART. NIMO" OPEN 1:45 FEATURES 2-4-4-0-10 Blvd - W 2333 Buddy was sorta grooming me to be his protege,” Jennings said “ He produced and played on my first record and was really pushing me along when he was killed.” Jennings said he plans to use half of his next album after “ Ramblin’ Man” for the Hoi Iv tribute With the original Crickets, Jennings has already recorded “ Doesn’t M atter Any More.” ‘ That'll Be the Day” and a 10-minute medley of other Holly hits. JE N N IN G S also said that he had been writing more these days; that his writing seems to come and go in spells. He recently purchased a new Silver Eagle bus that has been out fitted for touring Unless a performer has his own jet, a bus like Jennings’ is the only way to go. When not on stage, Jennings is never still. Up and down, he doesn't stay in one place more than a few minutes However, once or. stage, he is all performer and a good one at that. in Indiana M o v ie Sooner” will be a two-hour NBC television special. It probably will be distributed abroad as a feature movie. different than it is every year for the days of the annual Switzerland County 4-H Fair, which will serve as a focal point of the filming. The reason appears to be partly increased sophistica tion in the southern Indiana hill country and the absence of a celebrity comparable to Sinatra in the “ Some Came Running” company of 16 years ago. Unlike “ Some Came Run ning.” produced primarily for theaters. “ A Girl Named VEV AY, Ind. (A P ) - A movie company has begun filming along the Ohio River for the first time since Frank Sinatra shook up Madison in 1958. The 1.200 residents of Vevay, 20 miles up river and I 10th the size of Madison, are pleased that 20th Century-Fox chose their community for the filming of “ A Girl Named Sooner.” It means extras’ jobs for about 75 people. BUT TH E level of excite ment in Vevay is not much The cast includes Richard Crenna as a veterinarian. Lee Remick as his wife, doris Leachman as a tough old moonshiner called Old Mam and an 8-year-old Indianapolis girl. Susan Deer, as Sooner. It is another of the recent rash of nostalgia pieces, this one set in 1937 after the great Ohio River flood of that year had receded —n SIAO til A P.M. Btl few weeks The title of the LP, Ramblin’ Man,” is also a single out now that is doing well. Also from the new album carne Jennings’ tribute to Bob Wills. Bob Wills is Still King in Texas,” and Greg Allman's great ‘ Midnight Rider.” W ITH N ELSO N , Jennings did * (.nod Hearted Woman,” which the two of them wrote, and then turned it over to Nelson who did seven of his own songs. Jennings came back out, and the two closed out the show doing “ Heaven and Hell.” “ Big Ball s in Cowtown” and " I t ’s Not Supposed To Be That Way,” which was a fitting conclusion. Between shows, Jennings talked of the Buddy Holly tribute he is doing. Jennings was the bass player for Bud dy Holly and the Crickets for the short time from December, 1958, until Holly’s tragic death in February, 1959. even though the two had played together for several years in and around Lubbock. IM H O F S C R E E N I & 2 # VAGABOND 21 si & G u a d a lu p e Second Level Dobie M a ll 47 7 -1 3 2 4 821 Earn* SnHi Sir***- S ta r ts T O M O R R O W ! From the man who brought you FISTFUL!. OF DOLLARS" “ The E d w a rd ia n s ” was produced by the BBG and by WGBH, Boston, for transmis sion on the Public Broad casting Service. 7 Movie: Triple Feature: "F rie n d ! and Lovers," "D o m inic's Dreamful and ' The Fess P arker Show ." I 9 p m 9 You Owe ti to Yourself 7 Hee Haw 24 M a rcu s W elby M D 0, 36 News 36 P o lic e s t o r y 24 I Dream of Jeannie 9 30 pm 7 pm 24 H a p p y 10pm Days 7, 24 36. N e w s 36 A d a m 12 9 In s ig h t 7 30 p.m. 10.30 pm 7 H awaii Five-0 9 E y e to Eye 24 M o v ie Byline 9 9 M a n Solids, M a n D estroys 7 Movie F a k es" ' I ne G u n and " T h e F ie n d W ho Walked the West' the 9 Pittsburgh: A F e stiv a l of Folk Pulpit 1 starring M ar ice Gortner, 24 Wide World of M yste ry E stelle Parsons, Slim P ick e n s 36 The tonight Shew 36 F lr a d a « and Co. r 9 Y ou Owe ft to Yoorseii 24 M a r c u s Welby, M D J GULF STATES O RIVE IN S o t r r h s id E 36 Police Story *\ 7 t 0 E. Ben White e 444- 2296 9 W hat s me B ig idea? BO X OFFICE O P E N 8:00 SH O W ST A R T S D U SK 'UNCLASSIFIED" CLASSIFIEDS 7:00-8:45 472 7 9 7 9 Bi RESTAU RAN T -Sjkuui. WMS Radio VSS** LLEN KLEIN presents OPEN 24 HOURS 2 Gam e Rooms P o o lo F o o sb a lh P in b a ll, > “ ^ si ♦♦♦♦♦♦ _ PA U L NEW M AN ROBERT RED FO RD ROBERT SH A W *•0 The neares! American Nm lo punuefs AridaJusian Dog - New Vt** Magazine I FILM FILM BY ALEXANDRO JOOOROWSKY 3 5 0 0 G u a d a ll u p e t 451-91 Pm*nammqos isthesickes* movie ever -nade And one Pl the hjnmesl - Interview ___ P SERGIO LEONE jrwmt* 8.30 p rn FEATURES LAST DAY! “WOW! A SOCK-SHOCK WESTERN. VERY BLOODY!” ...w h a t n e x t? Sir Arthur Conan Coyle, creator of the detective Sherlock Holmes, tries his hand at some re a l- life sleuthing in the Masterpiece Theatre Presentation of “ The Edwardians,” at I p.m. Tues day and 10:30 p.m. Friday on channel 9. Doyle takes up the case of a man co n victe d and im prisoned for a crime he insists he did not commit. Doyle es tablishes beyond a doubt that the man was innocent. When the Home Office refuses to compensate the man for this miscarriage of justice. Doyle takes his campaign to the press Nigel Davenport plays Sir Arthur, and Maria Aitken plays Jean Deckle “ Conan Doyle” was written bv Jeremy Paul and directed by B ria n Farnham . The Masterpiece Theatre series A GEORGE R C * HILL FLM SCREEN I Star**: D IV IN E DvwdloeU* 3:15-5:30 $1.25 MwfcSwfc ted**wLci~|CW MA Directed bv JohnVALrtrn 7:45-10:00$! .50 xcotfr from FAm V S Sowrhsick ■a 1 710 E. Ben Whit* • 444-2296/^ S C R E E N 2 LAST D A Y $1.25 for One $2.00 for Both M o re ? ; ■ u n w it h I TR AN SA-TEXA S Uw _________ X 2200 Bin .ct* Dint - *53 6641 ON ANY SUNDAY) NOW! OPEN 2 P M FEATURES 2:30-5.00-7:30-9:45 REDUCED PRICES TIL 5:15 2:00-5:30-8:50 I a nd THE ENDLESS I SUMMER J 3=s> CHINATOWN" IS EXTRAORDINARY! IT IS M T H T DEEPLY ROMANTIC, FUN, MYSTERIOUS, CYNICAl ANO BRILL! AMTC' — AngelJByrn., Los A n g e le t Hero/d E x o m j M r^ J 3:50-7:10-10:30 'couhty4 UHE SI.SO til 6 p.m. M I DN I TE T O N I T E * 1 ” TECHWCOLOr PMMSOr APARAMOUNTPRESC«TAT»N ' T R A N S# TEXA S OPEN AT 8:00 FIRST FEA. AT 9:00 “ I E — 6400 Burnet Road 465 693 7 ACADEMY AWARDS HURRYI LAST 3 DAYSI $1.50 Til SHOWTIME I FOX TWIN [N I 67St USfOtT SIVB SUPER I4S4 2711 THE GREATEST l0VE~~~-*\ (BUG) STORY EVER TOLD! INCLUDING mi nou« PA U L /R O B E R T EW M A N / R E D F O R D R O B E R T SH A W HNdOwr'l t i c H r e a x o n e a u r w t e s A i p ic tu re iuds (tiff(RS. po, little PIUS! "PETE&TILLIE" at 11:30 m N O W SH O W ING ! n 1:00, 2:46, 4:35 t il COLOR by DE LUXE® O P E N J .45 6:20, 8:10, 10:00 2-4 -6 -8 -1 0 S ta r ts T O M O R R O W ! S o n of ^Dracula Hendrix at hi-, peak TRIPLE BILL STARTS TOMORROW I he h isto r t< Berkeley Com lit \ must or ii > r all Hendrix tanatii s and j nu L niuMi tans S T A T E S D R I V E IN * Camwon *836-8584/* LKNlAlWWAWIMUiVI* PGF ’"* TECHNICOLOR' BruisedbyBUTNAVISTADISTRIBUTIONCO NC C 1974WaHD>$neyProductions W AYNE ON W H E E L S ! OPEN 12:15 p.m. Features 12:30 2:20-4:10-6:00 7:50-9:30 p.m. MAHN THE.TUES ___ g FOX TWIN I 6757 SIVO______ J ■HOI4S4 nwmmar Q ll A M U S Theatres IV 1500 S PLEASANT VALLEY RO REDUCED PRICES TIL 6 P.M. M O N . THRU SAT. . . . nnnn JUST OFF EAST R IV E R SID E D R IV E GODARD "Sympathy forthe Devil ll+ir ^ o r ie l ■SHEER GENIUS.” NEWSWEEK D a y b r e a k • Remember * Jump Into I h e 1 ne * Down W ith o u t Y o u * Moonbeam • Ay My f root Door s THE SON OF DRACULA G ULF - TRA N S # TEXAS In < olor I rom Na-wline ( imwa PIUS! If i e F r s r . , j j a r r y K a s s o n K in f l ° S t ® " * BEN .MICHELLE JOHNSON PHILLIPS .CLORE LEACHMAN :? BOX OFFICE OPENS 8:00 SHOW STARTS AT DUSK BARGAIN M ATINEE MON-FRI BEFORE 1:15 1:15-2:45-4:15-5:45-7.15-8:45-10:15 N \ H iv a ld /# , e»- MonlUf-Friday DILLINGER S S h o w T o w N tlS A p it FRITZ IR FEATURES 477-1964 REDUCED PRICES TIL 1:00 flacon County Line^ (lolor byCFI an American International retea , "Another Place, AnotherTime composed andsung byBobbieGentry J MARTIN SHEEN SISSY SPACEK WARREN OATES IW e e K i presents PRODUCTIONS Staring I 4 th 20th Century-Fox “ THE S T IN G ” iu r ii T D isney Kit and Holly... in 1959, she watched while he hilled a lot of peopij 2 LAST DAY 12:10 A GEORGE ROY HILL a M W S T DAY “ BUSTER ANO BILLIE lamuel I Arkoff presents i Ma* Baer production LAST DAY 12:00 "APOCALYPTIC POLITICAL PORNOGRAPHY.” I Kid. Con*tad...Th*InnocentMad*Corrupt! J ^ j i From New Line Cinema, I MERLIN THE MAGICIAN Page IO Tuesday, Ju ly 30, 1974 THE DAILY TEXAN C » n b y ,N Y TIMBS $2.00 WILLIAM PETER BLATTVS til 6 p.m. THE EXORCIST FEATURES 2:50 5:10 7:35 955 N O PASSES $1.50 til 6 p.m. Features 1:05 2:50 440 6:25 8:10 10.00 Dittoed ^WILLIAM FRIEDKIN . . NO CHILD UNDER I? YRS. Mal Brooks' 'BLAZING SADDLES I VTI j I A V ', from WA*tvBf Bro# a war ruer Commun»c«t»oft« Company $ 1 .5 0 til 6 p.m. FEATURES 1:00 JOHNWATOE 2 :5 0 4 :3 5 6 :2 5 8:10 WO 10:00 Warren Gale*. Timothy Boltonia ami Loll Gmwett a* V haler* THE WHITE .TYY $ 1 .5 0 t il 6 ISSI PLUS CO-FEATURE Features 1 :3 0 3 :3 0 5 :3 0 7 :3 0 9 :3 0 -WI-A. TW HIT 30* CINTO#* IO* e*t«N»S John W ay n e 1 R ock Hudson 1the 4 Undefeated CQlO# ACRES O F FREE LIGHTED P A R K IN G Mum I 'Majesty!*' Fails To Relay Dailey Headlines CDF Production Social Drama, Sensitivity pany.” Simon's seventh comedy hit details the misadventures of three widely different couples as they face crucial, though funay, moments in their respective lives. The three one-act plays are linked together by all occurring in Suite 719 of New York s renowned Plaza Hotel. Dailey has spent the greater part of his life ta »ho«-busine® and has appeared in practically every phase of it. Beginn g vaudeville, he got his first break on ^ “f ^ . ' V r n S Arms.'’ While playing the juvenile lead in I Married an Angel,” he was discovered by an M GM talent scout, whitto a long and successful movie career. or Ju st Someone W ho W ill Litton Telophono 476-7073 At Any Time The Telephone Counseling and Referral Service Your Com plaints are just a phone call away! ip University Co-Op Sparks, Stephen Sym an; Christopher M cIntyre, The G allim aufrey Players— (l-r, back), Erie Henshaw, Karen Jones, Debra Voss, Scott S h a k e s p e a r e ’s versio n The Gallim aufrey Players will present “ Shakespeare in depicts the world of Ephesus, the Park” with performances a city noted for magicians and of “ The Comedy of Erro rs” in mountebanks. The plot is bas the free Z ilk e r H ills id e ed on mistaken and totally confusing identities involving Theater program. Performances w ill begin at two sets of twins, a wife who 8:30 p.m. Thursday. Friday cannot tell her husband from her brother-in-law and many and Saturday. “ G a l l i m a u f r e y , ’ ’ an others. The Zilker Production will Elizabethan term for mixture be a m ixture of several or medley, applies to both the play and the players in this un theater styles, including in fluences of the c ir c u s , ique production. fro n t), “ commedia dell’arte,” orien tal and medieval theater and th e m o d e r n A m e r i c a n musical. WANTING only enough pickers to harvest his crop, Majestyk is forced to retaliate against Renda's intimidation of his crew in self-defense rather than for “ altruistic reasons. DOUG SAHM J Presents UNCLE WALT'S BAND BUCKDANCER'S CHOICE 7 0 7 B e e C a v e * Rd. C IN E M A S EV ER Y DAY S1.25 T il 1:30 I ZOO AC A D E M Y LAGUNA GLORIA ART MUSEUM I A D ancer’s World: Martha Graham Dance: Glen Tetley A u g u s t 8 Daguerre: The Birth of Photography W alker E vans; His T im e, His Presence, His Silence August 15 19th C e n t u r y E u r o p e a n Art: Constable, D egas, Gauguin and Atget A u gu st KUS 2915 Guadalupe g e n e r a l c h »e m a c o h e o iia t io * August Film Program ANO THE T E X -M E X TRIP SHAKEYS Linda Cristal as Nancy Chavez ( “ no rela tion to the other Chavez, but I did walk in a picket line with him.” she chirps) and Lee Purcel as W ily are very decorative, and Ale jandro Rey as Majestyk’s compadre. Larry Mendoza, is ingratiating to a fault. But even with spectacular shootouts and chase scenes that have to be the most expensive commer cials for Ford pickups ever made. “ Mr Ma jestyk,” unfortunately, is still only half a harvest. What cheapens this otherwise excellent ac tion movie is the token interjection for ex ploitation purposes of the farm workers’ movement. In Hollywood lingo it s called “ the continuing cause celebre in Am erica's southwestern states — the conflict between altruistic leaders and unscrupulous labor The Gallim aufrey Players are a new theatrical group in Austin under the direction of Dr. Stephen Coleman of the U n iversity dram a depart ment. Coleman describes the independent company as be ing composed of young actors with a vast range of ex perience in professional and community theater. "LAST CHANCE - TONIGHT With only this cursory aside to the labor problem. Majestyk’s motivations for fighting b a c k s e e m m o r e e c o n o m i c than humanitarian. A “ B illy Ja c k ” it s not. B R O N S O N ’S A P P E A L rests in his presence. With a face like a windblown rock resting on a pair of unbowed shoulders, he personifies screenwriter Leonard s idea of a strong-willed, no-nonsense Westerner. I A ll Im CreekSaloon ^ Consumer Action Line 478-4436 Mon.-Fri. 8:30-5:30 3 2 7 -9 0 Films begin at 8:30 p.m. by the Lagoon. FREE! TONIGHT THRU SATURDAY Serving your favorite Beer, Wine Coolers, Sangria, and 21 varieties of Pizza. 476-4394 (l-r Zilker To Present 'Errors' Dailey also is directing the playhouse p r r ^ u ^ o m The st t is designed by resident stage manager Leonard Wittman. lf You Need Help In truth, “ Majestyk” is a story about Bron son’s attempts to elude a mad-dog Mafia hit man named Frank Renda, played to the bloody hilt by “ Godfather” alumnus Al Let tieri. The only “ labor racketeering” apparent in the film happens at the beginning, when Majestyk kicks an assortment of scab pickers off his watermelon patch. The reason — he has already hired his own crew of underpaid pickers. “ Majestyk,” the story of a watermelon rancher in Colorado, is, like its star Charles Bronson, short on subtlety and long on action. Under Richard Fleischer’s direction, Bron son as Majestyk gives his usual tough-as-nails performance, forsaking nuance of interpreta tion for blunt, cudgel-like reaction. HIS F IL M S include “ Give My Regards to Broadway, The Girl Next Door,” “ There’s No B u s i n e s s L ik e Show Business, “ The Best Things in Life Are Free. ‘ F epe. Ch ick e n Eve y Sunday" and many more. Sharing the stage with Dailey w ill be Bethel Leslie, whose most recent credits include two and a half years as Dr. Mggie Powers on N B C ’s daytime soap opera “ The Doctors. The show runs Tuesday through Sunday, with a m a B ^ Sum dav Reservations are necessary and may be made by calling the theater at 836-5921 racketeers to organize the chicano migrant farm workers.” “ Mr. Majestyk;” directed by Richard F le is c h e r; screenplay by E lm o re Leonard; starring Charles Bronson, Al Lettieri and Linda C ris ta l; at the Paramount. By D A N IE L D. SA EZ Texan Staff Writer First we had “ B illy Ja c k ;” next we were treated to “ Walking T all.” The producers of “ Mr. Majestyk” would want us to believe their effort at social commentary belongs in the same league. Don't believe it for a minute. Dan Dailey, star of stage, screen and television, will open Wednesday night in Neil Simon’s “ Plaza Suite’' at Country Dinner Playhouse with a benefit preview Tuesday for the American Heart Association. “ Plaza Suite’’ comes to Austin having just completed a sixweek run at the Dallas ODP. D A ILEY has most recently been seen by Austin audiences in two TV series, “ The Governor and J J and “ F’araday & Com Call 452-9447 7915 Guadalupe DOORS OPEN 7:45 FEATURES 8:00-9:50 P A R A M O U N T 4725*11. 713 C O N G R E S S T O N IG H T S A T U R D A Y A VEN UE THE ONE MOVIE YOU SHOULD SEE!! PLU M NELLY HAPPY HOUR 7-8 CHARLESBRONSON "MR. MAJESTYK” .j^^^^fHInitetlA rusts 2700 West Antiman Lana __________ 4 6 1 - 1 3 5 $1.25 til 7:00 p.m. 505 NECHES I Block W. of Red River TBL W LLP lGE V illa g e C in e m a Four 472-0061 6 I B N E Y This Week PO SSU M DELIGHT Tuesday is Tequila Solo 6l Sunrise Nite P O M A R R Y 2 __________________ IT IE R M U M S I A E O N IC As Geechie Dan They get ^ NO COVER C o lo r b y D e L u x e * A n A l lie d A r t is t s B e t e * * * , funny when you mess with their money NEW ROCK - UVE FROM DALLAS FANCY SPACE and™ ROCKIN RHYTHM DADDIES Armadillo World Hdqtrs. presents 2400 GUADALUPE STREETT A Km ShijKtt Film FEATURING BU G S HENDERSON 12:15-2:15-4:15 ti 4:15 8:15-10:15 I (ALL BEER ST IU AT OLD PRICES) vnx DO O RS O PEN : 8 H A P P Y KEN THREADGILL & The Velvet Cow Pasture HOUR: 8-9 ^ • T l i u t fcARTH _ 914 N. L A M A R 477-3783_________ I NO COVER HR te C l DAYS! a a Riverside in the Beer Garden 525 Vt Barton Spring* Rd. VARSITY $1 25 till 3:00 p.r 2:30-3.55-5:20 6:45-8:10-9:35 T w in 1930 EAST RIVERSIDE DR JUE 441 5689 477-0357 j stme*oi.ive.iN Show TOWN USA a a SUSPENDED S I REDUCED PRICES IU 12:15 MON-ERI. • a • a a • UPTOW N {SATURDAY Wild NT Hwy. 183 a Cjrowon *836-8584/^ Cs#rtwstr* bi Held Q O ve r 2nd EVEY TUESDAY TRY A Weak! Roy Rogefr RMTAURANT HAMBURGER WITH A LL.TH I TRIMMINGS FRENCH FRIES and A LARGE SOFT DRINK " 89' FIESTA NITE FREE TAMALES TEQUILA 5O' A SHOT UVE ENTERTAINMENT F e a t u r in g CIRCUS FROM HOUSTON THE BUCKET 23rd and PEAR! ACROSS FROM HARDIN NORTH - 3 HRS. FREI PARKING Corner 19th & Guadalupe _ I. ^ $ 1 .0 0 2:40 - $ 1 . 5 0 t # 7 35 - $2.00 10:00 Rsda