•wmmsmm -i --, i .. --w­£';--«• r.v.--l-Vwjj­yife-\ ' " ' \fl r---: <-$7 % ?v^ SB? *te.-.-,.­ J? •i|. •;.v *1 •^i Passes, 28-10 '.3© WASHINGTON.:: (AP)-~» Expanding its-formal-accusations^; — Defenders oLthePresiderit contended the wiretaps were bas--.-anti-impeachment bloc argued that there was no' proof Nixon tiorv " * " -^ -against. President Nixon, the House Judiciary Committee • ed upon legitimate n&tional security considerations,. pne^ofHheiili^al^ctiyities^-liis:s'ub«M-{iinat€!ST--^-T—^ • That the-President misused-the-PBI^and4he-Secret Serviceadopted a second impeachment article Monday nighi^cbarging . ..Hours before Monday night'js vote, the committee's ranking) % _ The-first oT a'sferfesof motions to drop allegationswas beaten ; by-directirig-the-agencies to wiretap government employes and./him with broad misuse of federal agents and agencies*-• Republican said in an interview' that he now believes the full 28-10 in a vote indicating the second article. would have'even. private citizens. : --_ . .. •n;The .vote was 2ffT0 with seven Republicans joining all 21 •; .House probably will vote impeachment. .piore Support than the first.. • .. • That he authorized forihation of the White House special in-••Democrats in accusing Nixon of ordering or condoning wiretap-' THE COMMENTS of Rep. Edward Hutchinson of Michigan,k p Agaift leadirig-th^ fight in Nixon's defense was Hop. Charles vestigations unit."known as the plumbers which engaged in il­ Pin6t private peeks attax rcturns-andother activities"violating ,; one of the President's foremost 'defenders on _the panel of *, 'Wiggins, R-Calif., who opened the debate by attempting to have legal; activities. "• ihe constitutional rights.qf. pUizqng." •• • • lawyers; contrasted sharply with Nixon^s p^edictioffh'e will win •:rjthe-entirearticlethrownout:on a pbint-of order—thsiitdidnot • That-he-iaile4^.to adhere to hi?constLtutional oath tp take The bipartisan majority was^orte vote "greater thah"on:satar; v vindication from the House: , . ~vdirectiy_.involve."impeacbaMe"::©.ffe^^^ was care that the laws be faithfully executed after he learned of the jfay night, J when the committee voted 27-11 a-first article And Speaker Carl Albert refused Monday-to comment on-a immediately rejected without .a fbrmal vote.' Then Wiggins' involvement of White House and "campaign aides in the'-recommendin& NixotiiB removal -from office for ohstritcting. prediction that the House will voteimpeachment by a margin or.",MO'fered amendments aim6d at narrowing Hie charges; -' Watergate cover-up. 7V|g| ijjustice-in the Watergate cover-up. • • . ->' BY A VOTE of 28-9, the committee rejected Wiggins' motion That he-misused the power of his officeto interfere With.the Mm " The additional vote m support of the second article came . (Reldled Stories, Page 3.) -to include in the specific allegations the words "acting with his 1 investigations of the FBI, Justice Department,' special •^1 K^from Rep. Robert McClory of Illinois, second-ranking • -•—: —; ^,.^(Nixon's|.luiowledge and pursuantvto his instnictSons" where Watergate prosecutor and the Central Intelligence Agency.; ­ ^ Republican on the-commlttefe, -about 70 votes, saying he does not think it proper for.'a speaker ..-:they refer" to actions by presidential aides"' ' " : ;" rM '-Other articles„expected to. be offered before the committee ? t f id Thecommitteexecessed immediately after the vote until9:30 to deal in such predictions. • - The impeachment'bloc opposedtheproposed change'on the'­. completes its! Monumental deliberations would charge the ,a.m. CDT Tuesday. House Majority Leader Thomas. O'Neill Jr. made the es-' greunditcould eliminate actions which the.President approved ' Pr'esident with ordering iilegai bombing .of Cambodia and with j",* STILL TO come are proposed impeachment articles based on timate.; -a'.after fhe'fact even if hie had no prior-knowledge. personal tax violations. " ,•Nixon's refusal to heed congressional, subpoenas, his secret A .majority House vote would place Nixon on trial in the'. •, As'wittt the:first-article, the second cdftcliided: -Meanwhile,'Senate Majority Lfiader MikeMafis_Oeia D-Mont/, ­bombingofCarnbodiaand i'rregijlarities in his personal taxes; , Senate; where.a twotlhirds margin is required to coriflct and ."Wherefore Richard M.Nixon,by such fiondpct, warrants im " met with Minority Leader Hugh Seott, R-Pa., tfwfirffb'hnal f#i inesewjll be-tal&n upjiiesday when tile,coinmittcc holds-its— rpmovp him froni office. . . . ' "pedchment and trial, and removal from office " V; ."S?I planning f«5r a possible impeachment trial. Ssixth --and perhaps final — day ot nationally televised debate. : The Senate-took its firststep earlier Monday to prepare tor a -It included five numSered-paragraphs containing specific "We feci, we have nn nhnieft hirf to rhrf prppintiwic " gain 7^Compared^wttlrSaturday's^rimrtear-«voking drama,th6 roll possible'trial qf'Wi^o^^prpving ^ltoout debate a i^olution--. ^allegatibns: --1 Al^nsHeld-just before the; meeting; . •'"call on the secondarticle-was almost anticjimactic. Throughout directing its rules committee to preview all precedentSTt^otT^x • That;the President-acting personally and through swbor­r;:The.House isexpected to vote:on impeachmdit late in August:.­ a day of sometimes desultory, sometimes barbed debate, im­since 1868 has a presidentiarimpeachment, proceeding gone so dinates bought to obtain confidential information from the A% majority vote in the House would send the charges to the peachment advocates had easily turned back the maneuvers of far. . • . ; Internal Revenue Service and also attempted to get the agency Senate for trial. A two-thirds majority would be required for-' '-Nixon's outnumbered defenders. . -. • AS THEY HAD done during debate on the first article, the to audit'the tax returns of political opponents of the Administra­ conviction of the President and his removal from office — ^s53?U -1 1 Sf «­eFs? 2^ Studeht Newspaper at The University of Texas at Austin A Mr1 f 74," No. 31 Please Recycle This Newspaper AUstin, -Texas/.-'Tuesda :JuIy 30, 1974 Ten Cents: Fourteen Pages 471-4591• ">%Xr K ^ tv ~h Attorney Jake Jacobsen Alsp Charged in Milk Scandal rnmh).. Connolly Indicted By FederqI Grand Jury v ;-• ,>t -V By DAVID HENDRICKS milk price; support,level be fixed by. the co-conspirator in the chargeagainst Con­'approached by Jacobsen, "and"they had'-nally has been and is a friend of mine for Texan Staiff Writer 'secretary of-agriculture, -announced on a nally for allegedly conspiring to commit' ^.talked about winnmg reversal of an Ad-many years.'This is a great tragedy: I John Connally,' fbrmer Treasury March 28; 1971." perjury and obstruct'justice.-• "minisfration decision against increasing am sick to my boots." t ^ ­secretary, was indicted by a federal The .charges against Connally bVeak Jaeobsen allegedly testified, earlier the Dnce silDftort fnr.milk Connally . became the fourth former * _grandjury Mondayin Washington on five ' down to two counts of accepting, an ^ "counts"of^perjufy, WibeT?"atid, obstruc­riie^al payment-under-bribery-statutes^ inr| tion of justice. • . one count of conspiracy to commit per-producers — that the milk price support~ Watergate 'I changed his testimbny-.to claim Connally • scandals aiid related-investigations. >v Also indicted was-Austin lawyer Jake* -juryTind obstruct justice and two counts should: be increased. Whilethe. said he Former Atty" Gen. Richard Kleindienst : • Jacobsen on one count ot giving^iliegai——^ accepted the money, then .returned -it relayed this, view 'tonothers' in the Ad­funds\tO a'public official. (Related Story, Page 2.) ~ .-after the investigation of the milk price infiltration, he denied being-.a pnme .1. pleaded guiltjLto.testifyinginaccurately; , before aSenate committeeabout the ITTss'# % THE INDICTMENT said Connally,-a 1 : ; 1" Wfls stdrtcd mover in President Nixon's_ultim"ate former Texas governor and, 'in 1938-39, >1 -of making false declarations before the CONNALLY DENIED any guilt in the decision to increase pric? supports. matter,.Former Atty, Gen. John Mitchell and former Commerce m\ "TSreSidGntofthe^UntversRyistudent-bodyT— matter. In a statement released thrbugh Hector de'Leon, a former University il Secretary Maurice Stans were indicted accepted $10,000 in cash from Jacobsen, • .JACOBSEN,-an official of Associated his Houstoii'iaW ofllce. lle ^>aiii, "For :SUbpeonaed I -4i Milk Producers Inc., (the largest milk monl-hs there ^ave been leaks, rumors' ~but :wefe foundi'innocent-in-the Vesco­ a milk fund official, in ^exchange for ^ testify in the matterlast March, said he : case in New York. '* • • ' recommending that federal milk price " > cooperative in the nation) and a longtime and speculation concerning my role-in was surprised by-the indictments. De supports be increased". . -. "-Texas colleague of Connally-s, was in-the 'milk support price increase in Leon apparently had been: called to MITCHELL also bas been, indicted in . Jacobsen was charged by the grand : sSdicted -earlier this year.on a charge of March, 1971. Washington because last.October he had --.-the-,Watergate cover-up and goes to trial in September, . y S|fesiSg*2 jury' with paying Connally for "^official -.; : jnaking a false declaration to tl\e grand • ""The matter is now in the open,"* he chauffeured Connally around Austin dutf­acts performed by him-, to wit, his '•wjury.about his:handling of a $10,000 pay-; . continued, "where it can be dealt with 4ng a short visit.' ;Connally, a three-term Democratic T«l«pnorp recommendations in hisofficial capacity ment to a publjc official. _ •' •honestly and fairly. I again deny that 1-^? De L^on said ;.-t^ie---grai^d--jur-y-fieyeripar of_Texas, joined the Republicans John B, ConndHy concerning: an increase in the federal -Jacobsen was named as-airunindicted,' -a " «!.> am-guilly of any wrongdoingrand I am -V'-proceedirfgs' reminded him-of witch Party last year duririg-Qie Height of the7^ r* --i • _ _ . i^6'"mm " r ^bnfident: thatr.l-will be completely yin-hunt. "They Were grasping at straws -^^rgateinvestigation. 'rl-r' ~r • ^ dicated o£ these-charges.", ......... ?t,arg?s-• v,.-^— t—•_ 1 —;_L. ' •„ . -• < ' .;-. • JL , • j>»reaching out for'anyclue whichmight tie' Gennally, 57, faces up to 19 years im-5£?|,The.grand jury .charged that Connally1:?^him in." he"said. --­ prisonment arnjla possible $50,000infin'es?as received ?5;000 on.May 14,1971, and 55,"" U.S. Rep J.J. ;iJake" PickleofAus'tin Carrasco Continues Holaout; if convicted on all counts.. The indict-. ^ P00 on Sept. 24,1971, while ConnaHy was said, "It is always'an unhappy moment ment was submitted to Chief U.S. Dist..--:.s8 Treasury secretary. .. . .'':^when,a friend i£ accused in a judiciary Judge George Hart Jr..in a 90-second Connally has told investigators he was Wffiproceeding: In this instance', John Con­ Pfoceeding-in open court. ... By JIM HILL_ mm Prison officials said lateMonday he was coming'out of shock -m w¥:ond • ;and sedation satisfactorily,* and "peo$e ~are~ftlking~to~hinr~ MARY WALSff now. Texan Staff Writers tnturrotm T J-' Ron Taylor, prison public affairs-officer, said "Negotiations ** -HUNTSVILLE —^^Fred Gomez Carrasco eontinued-tohold out ^ the library " area are Continuingand arf at a point now.where -r *_ -"Monday inside the Walls -Units at the state penitfentiarv: in basically we a rp at a 'standoff stage: *, Huntsville and refused to acc^ptprisonofficials' offer of super­ «CAIUlASdO*is aware that his demands wiirhdt be-met," I vised surrender;;. •fm ".Taylor cohtinu'ed,."But has not. seen fit to surrenderor give up ? v Officials characterized negotiations a§ in a-'.'standoff stage,'' rhis hostages."— '®f -saying they would not meet Carrasco's demands'for bulletproof :-"Hireiebullet-proof helmets an<|three walKie^iauues'have been vests, rifles and ammunition.' ' delivered te Catrasco,'tutTaylor said no more-of.thedemanded-.1 Texas Department: of Corrections officials have made two -f .-. items will be turned over. ' m ; proposals tp Carrasco. He can either surrender peacefully iin-­ ata point where we are hot goingioconcede to cer­ _ der view of the.media oc under the supervision of his attorney. aretain demands, nor we going j(o.take aggressive actions -PRISON OFFICIALS withdrew'their offer-of-transponation-• acainct tho nnit-" T^y 1 " 1, y for Carrasco, ,late Monday, but the-two previous surrender He add^d that CarrSSco is '.'up and:dOwn in mood — angry atoffers of supervision by the press or his lawyer, Ron Taylor, m -^times'and\almatothers. vSi i still stand, a prison public affairs officer said. ' -'A£n,S-«.-. l I .-"He will get out of'this aiiye if he surrenders peacefully^lffi Monday was marked by an early morninfe escape from the -y Taylor s'a'id." ; --.. .-^w capture area by one inmate hostage and the release of another sfe THE .DECISION to-release Carrasco or give in to further •'•••• •• -'"• '• •••' -••.-"••••••• • •. -r demands will be an administrative decision made by TDC . Director J.W. Estelle, he continued. (Related Photo, Page 14.) Carrasco, an underworld narcotics figure, is^ sefving a life ^sentence for assault witH intent to murder a San'Antoniodetec­ hostage who apparently suffered a heart attack. tive.°He seized 15 hostages at gunpoint Wednesday in the prison Before negotiations resumed Monday morning, Henry i.library. .Escamilla, 40, crashed: through a oneTquarter-inch;thick glass/'J®. One hostage, Glennon Johnson, 51, an educational consultant .door and crawled to ihe safety of the main prison' building. for TDC, suffered a heai;t attack and was removed U a hospital t # .'.v^?S?v5 . Texan Staff Photo By Stord«y Farrar Later in the afternoon, • Carrasco reported that prison Wednesday. * ' -RepresentativesLargue over adjournment at Monday's session. librarian Aline House, 61, was sick-and needed assistance^ -. Prison Chaplain Rev. Joseph O'Brien, who had been serving • HOUSE WAS moved from the-library by-inmates from the"& as a'liaison,-became "a voluntary h'ostageiTKursday morning -prison hospital and was rushed to-the-Himt^Ie'lK^ital-.'irii^u^wfaen Carrasco told him he could see him at the library but" t she was reported toiiave suffered a heart attack;Her condition;^could not return. . ' . _ • * v?as described as stable late Monday. ^ Gov. Dolph Briscoe has been in dally contact with prison of-?-•&? • derwent Escamilla; surgery who.was for damaged servinga tendons in five-year sentence his shpulder for theft, and for un-J^tioialsand hostages and has canceled all engagements hostages until speak Ihe ^ By ANNE MARIE HILDAY -• - — situation is^resolyed. Carrasco has been letting host h'-h When the motion to reconsider Resolution 16 prevailed, Rep.;-; . severe lacerations. ±' " with their families and the media.^vr^ -Texan Staff Writer .-Craig, Washington of Houston told the convention, ''Anybody^, Delegates to the Constitutional Convention failed Monday to who votes against this resolution cannot say they.are for cont»§ *5':' af:~ m come up with a compromise to submit to voters for approval,. stitution^l revision;Resolution 16,. whicii-containedo.only_the:$•A-­, :.:With-the statutory deadline of-the convention only hours away. text of die constitution and no separate proposals, received 92 Prison Director Denies I® .i, Working under a "call on the convention,^the l^aTegislator-aye's and 85 noes on the adoption vote. . -: " ^ Sm ^delegates defeated the 23rd resolution of tlig'CorHrnlttee-ottSttb— -—The convention-also voted to reconsider Resolutions iff and 20'. =.. .mission and Transition";"100'ayes tov78-noes. Hiecall on the con-* bift -failed to give them-two-thirds on-the adoption-vote.-Both. *. mim GuniSmuggling Claim Hot --vention required all of the delegates present to remain-behind resolutions received ^4 ayes and 84 noes on adoption votes.. . the locked doors of the convention hail to recortsider all of the • < The-reconsideration of Resolution 23 was the turning p&int.in. ­ S?5f Tuesday \vll1-be. hot: •,'vm previous.resolutions -which had-failed to receive the two-thicds-the session. Washington of Houston macje the'motion and then.,^ ^-'"ftUNTSVILLE (AP) — The state's "Estelle, in a statement to newsmen^ witjh a 20 percent-vote required to submit the constitution to voters^ ' L -rose to speak against the resolution. " • ' prisort director angrily refuted Monday said, ''Evennow.we areinvestigating the 'm Monday morning the cpnyention president_Erice_Daniel Jr. "After 22 consecutive votes, we immediately voted qn recon­the claim of convfct Fred' Goiftez";'^,circumstances under which these cha'nce of showers. i'i jsaid, "If no package gets121votes by 5 p.m.;the only thfngto' d(T sideration motions. But now the leadership of 'this convention-: t Carrasco that his, escape'Attempt,-^weapons were so tragically introduced TJi.e high will be inthe k yvoirid be to shut the convention down " has fetired to the president's office to see what they can dd to „ weapons were provided by prison securi-*' into the prison, and the Investigation' in-y<"-Monday night, after thecontention hadreconsidered and fail-run ffii? resolution over you," Washington said. • '* miiJ-^s with the low .ty chief Maj. Andrew J, Murdock Jr. + indicates there, is not the slightest v-,Aed to approve-each of the resoliitions pr^pos^ iby tlie Com-• • -"After:Washingt6n's reconsideration motion received 101 ayes* ­X"-"It galls, me to see a man Jwho_has,^'possibility to the truth of the allegations.. in" the "low-70s. « ^ to 77 noes, 23 speakers rose to urge adoption of tfie resolution! • dedicated'his adult life to the service'of; '.'.made by Feed'Carrasco." ,-. f Meanwhile, delegates.™,eetlng in themember's lounge joitied . (Related Stories, Paget J sTs.) . ^Ifis-najion and •theState of T^xas tobe so; j>.1• j[ distinctly recall responding 'to one Rep. Neil Caldwell of Arigtetoji in singing "barbershopquartet" , ^maliCTied by one of almost totally op-;*'Jof my staff at the time I heard of this ; tunes; and Rep.: Kky Bailey.of Houston joined in a bridge game —rBosiffcharacter-and background," saldL-i ihat-hP. fCarV-a^ni'mipht well""have" mittee on"SUbnussion and^Transition, Daniel said, "At -this with delegates' wives tn women's to&nge.-• •rvW-J-. Estelle-Jr., director of the Te*asn.,.A"accuse3 "my-own mother of furnish&ik ybmtrtfte^onsti^utional-OpnventioiHfrpver-as^ar asdrafting a • • Rep. Sarah Weddington of Austin told the delegates,--Vl-donUm department Coscections ' ' nejv constitution goes;The oddS;afe heavy -we:vyon't get a new-• seevajiy more hppe 'for a compronusepTKSSfPf"you asking for­ lepartment of Coccections. . ,; him'these weapons," Estelle said. Carrasco, 34, who along wjthrtwopjtherfe. "it is a matter of record that Maj. constitution,^ -compromise, are-really' asking fdr ijiore- time^.Weil, we don't -"' — , p aV^Mnrdoek's accuser has uSed the same Daniel at^ribuled,'the.convention's failure to the ^"right to , have more"time This is it ' ^TeAaa Ulii.ua unit lliiiu mU ill ^" work" proposal -contained in many of the resolutions ,as $ ; Rep. Jarrtes.Raster of El Pasq said;"For many yearsTwas"a~-­ -Wednesday;toldaSan Antonioradlosta-^Guadaiajara, Mexiw" ' fetLSfiParate Brgtmsal "OiBa^ged~labor^eems^iead'set andJielL^lWKnerlil-director, and embalmer, but I got out of the-business ­-*r?Li ^ Wfek that the three .38-caliberVa| According to actpunts iirSan Antonio^1 ^bent-pn defeating!this constitution^1 Uamei said •• 5-^eca^usel didn'tliketg^EtetJunerals.Well.l hayjjhe^prriblg^o • jtjsWlsTte if using were smuggled to Mmf^Carrasco, wrote"Me*io&n auflrorities-f^ •fyr* Rep RoaJRarfe Austih urged the delegates to reconsider feeling I'tn about to/attend tne mneral of the-esteaH=8f^ihe==i_ • ^feyMurdock. ,""• . . -i v^aming^guarlsjwhd alle^e'dly.'h^ped in tp-do to8ay is ' 'membefis of the Legislature jn ihe6yes of the people of:Texas^bis r^Carrosco said he had given Murdock" T3ovembrrr^972perc^~tTOnrthff~ . < mnro thari anvtiitn^weMl.rihihp.rfisSnf tvnt-nnlitipgl On the reconsideration vote, Resolution 23 nk»ived 100 ayes and J|»J»OJ(LflmyggieJfl.tte.guns . ^Mexican Drisbn. , lives, ^Earle said. " ... r; 79-noesr21H,ot€S short of-the-neCessary iwMFird^, "" " '' sasl gillf H&­wfZ-A #p. mm .ras: S •*6*'-[»W5 Wi­lis pniwHU«w»mmflninnmimtiiHiiiiinni)imHiniinnniiMtiiunutti(iitiHiiiuiiiiiiiniiHiiiiiiiiiiiniit(iinunliimiiii;uiiiiimmiintiiininiiiiiiaHiimiiiiiiiiiiiiHu ."••1Bentsen Views Indictments ,v,» $5v •: lf'9% Reaffirms Political Hopes Tipsf Millican Decisions Moved to Later Datei ffcwl By ROGER DOWNING cannot personally afford to " the HowsoH House in"the 700 "'-~k"ndi!vri" Wheffier "the "co I «feKfete~ ->Tve.almiys1u^wti*^ol^Cto^Q^rie^.'libii(^lfr:min-rr'' Connally's indictment, mqde legal contributions to all three , Texan Staff Writer move the house. He an­block of "San Antonio4 Street, will"approve the fimds.-1 t w»' *« John Connally has been a friend of mine for a long time,"U:S. major Senate candidates m Texas four years ago. The Landmark Commission nounced that "under certain the Caswell House at the .' ^ROBERT PETi;US, dfi • j>< * • Sen. Lloyd Bentsfen, D-Tex., said Monday concerning the . V'They.contributed t« Ralph Yarborough. to George Bu$h and < "voted Mpnday~to-postpone conditions^-! -will donate the southwest £0fuer_ of West ;iif. theMillicap Hoiise, J&Lc: former Texas governor and secretary of "the Treasury. • to me," said Bentsen. "It. was all fully reported in your decisionon whether to recom-i Tips home to a charitable Avenue and 15th Street arid the zoning changedConnally was indicted Monday on five counts of perjury, newspapers There is nothing wrong with contributions ... what mend zoning the 97-year-old foundation which is willing the .Millican House at' 1606 jresidential so Ire fan op Tips jHouse. as a.historical Sf bribery arid obstructing justice by a federaf grand jury In is wrong is when there is a quid pro quo... there wasjkx quo pro and able to move thehome in-West Ave. landmark. .tact," Washington' , . Y quo (in the Senate contributions)!" The commission Voted un­immediate l neighbdr§ • unanimous he to BENTSEN, a longtime Connally friend, said the Indictments Bentsen said he has heard ntrsenator comment as to how he" By vote," the He added felt a„' animously to recommend isf- ported rthe. zoning chail 1 i would have '.'no effect at afl!'.on his own political plans. He' is would vote o'n impeachment of President:Nixon and added, "I commission .decided to hear chaytabte organization would • the, Planning*Committee an |%v stating tHat^pastownerso| continuing to sample nationwide opinion as a possible don't think they should because that,is the most important vote the Tips House .case at-a have a better chance of get­•'H" zoniqg for the Howson , house had let it' • fail Democratic presidential' candidate. Connally, prior-to: his re-he will cast." > - special session to be held at 5 ting the city and the phone House and the Caswell House. "disrepair..and disrepu'1 ceptJlifficullies, had been an'active contender' for the. GOB; The junior senator. from Texas predicted the House would' p.m. Aug. 5. company to -waive ; their It also voted unanimously• to One neighbor stated t "nomination. —" j_ _ Vote impeachment, although he has no inside knowledge bf the: The Tips House, 315 W. charges and strict building postpone a decision :on the former residents had In his Austin news conference Monday morning, Bentsen lineup on the issue. ~~ Seventh St., is owned by ;odes. -Millican"House-until the Aug. ptarited .marijuana plani stated he-is i 'IN HIS RACE .for president Rpnt<;pn will rwoiuo a nporfprf Aus'tin attorney Robert TOM TIEMANN, legal 5 special session. • her flower'bed. ' 'Fowler, while Uw laud' Uie poll. 'name identification boost Wednesday when the senator will . Joe Morahaii, Austiitis. He refused to comment fuilhei on Connally's-indictmeats—speak-in-rebuttal -to Nixon's, recent economic messaged house is-on was sold by ; stated that Lamar bas no public property manager, said > "I am so elated at because he had not seen-the charges and would not talk about Bentsen was chosen by Democratic caucus colleagues' to -Fowler to Lamar pavings and ^-specific -plans-and -;is^ins .-it is-being-recoramended.that prospect of having •them until he did. answer the President's proposals-after-he and others asked forJ .Loan Association. Fowler and terested in saving tlie house. ' City Council approve $20,000 .gentleman living tfierej" J ~ Bentsen added milk producers, whosecontnbutions figured in the honor. . . •. m, '; -T-aitiar have an agreement The-commission also1 yoted for exterior restoration on the Geofge Shelley; the neiglthat if the house is not moved Bentsen,"chairman of theSenate FinanceCommitteesubcom­on whether, tozone,three other Caswell House. He added Wat . who had the cannabis grow mittee on economic development, said he would make specific by Oct. 1, Lamar will become old'houses as."H". These are within two monthsit'"should be in-her "flower bed, said;. anti-inflation proposals in his Wednesday night address; "in-: owner of the house. " \sys?, mm eluding ways to get interest rates down. FOWLER OBJECTED at Dean Keeton 1#>5 DENVER W. LACKORN, D.D.S, Bentsen S.aid Nison is the first President to propose $200 the commission meeting"to,: e$r announces the opening of his i billion and $300 billion budgets. He said Nixon has recommend­having the Tips Housfe zon^feiff : • office for the prectice of ed more deficit spending than any President since World War "H" because he said it "will general dentistry-II. -merely, apply more time at pressure to moveor demolish .Rv ifrs-p mputmam before the demolition permit,^ "«"But I still .think they'll interested citizens," Flav 605'East Bee Caves Road m-8 niHsout' TOe historic zoning As probably'find a way to. vote a said, "I just can't believe the near Mon­ • Hours: 8-5 Mon. thru Fri. procedure cannot roll back constitution out." • won'-t come up witl day for the submission of • time; undo legal transfers and a• PHONE: 327-3184 •j new constitution to the voters . A constitution Should'limit something." decree that the. home shall Keeton called the work­' of Texas, two members of the itself to placing governmental , stay where itis. I&sk, ins{eadt revision commission express­restraints and establishing a . the convention delegate!that we all work together to ed disappointment with the decision-making structure,-acceptable "up until they go| successfully move the home TOnvention's work. . % , Keeton .said. Public issues into this tangle." He thin intact to a site where -it can .' "They've gotten into a such as right to work laws their work has improved .Ihil live forever." . A "Taiigle ovet matters that "don't'belong in the constitu-suggested revisions in som^ • -'ysi'. F.owler said becauseof cost--ought-not-to_be-in-a-cbnstita tion at all." he added. area's 'and fallen short of theiq ly barriers placed on moving jjicniuul in ullieis. 41 tion anyway;, that's what'ji so the Tips House by the cityand Dr. Peter Flawn, president disappointing'," University "On the whole it's infinitely the telephone company, he of San Antonio was also on the than the oidl Law Dean Page Keeton said.; better •revision commission. constitution," Kenton said. Noting the-"time, effort and • VI supposed .if-they dol interest pp the past 6f a large (agree on a charter) I'll vote! PANATELA for it."-. number of public officials and .'v.. LEVIS V3 Off •JM­ SH? 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THE 10 LOCATIONS ARE ft • TOWNES HAII s Live LikeYou Feel, • UNIVERSITY CO-S A lot ol |,I.\(VS iioiiblr i i im ti\i^ ,\H tin ,, ,\p.vrlmrnts , mu! smtfs Ik-<.vusv jstpg « 24TH AND WHITIS thoy mure lh .,n tin-v n r.-.\IK wurth. Al l h.-C'o.m.-ssa w »• lonr, timr Ami lh.\! it VV v ( h.\ (•«(.• vt.ti-.1 J,\u i»ri( r St,nil l.vr wil K us . Ami1, it :;i,(!u'S • 26TH AND WHITIS • -f ii srnsi Krversity-' C^OpV' Wl' d p,vrU,n«. hv(-rntrrt.v.n- 4mf| nu-.xls, < v.v.-n Ur.ui„ • ACADEMIC CENTER S<76V€$9El Ii­ tv.i-iM. tw.r,t\ -lour hour si-', urilv, [.wye livii^u , t h Iwti h. iu-tt, s. ;,lus ,\i f "Stereo Shoo • ! l\." usu.vls. Am! >.ur (>ru .-s dua t uo up |ust b,-, .uisc it •, a Ul-u s« im stn Ki• • • ROBERT LEE MOORE • IfMi -.Corner 23rd andGvadalupe i\u|s>' we re trying to U|, tor ,\l! t!-.e ompiy beds Ti\ev dun t h,»v.-to (Formvly PMA Bldg.J -.Open Thur*. and Fri. till ^s30-P.M.r •LITTIEFIEIDFOUNTAIN On« hour fr«e parkifltf with purchati cf '$2T00 ir 24TH AND SPEEDWAY nwr«, BankAmericard and MatUrCharfl* w«lcom«. 270l» Nu«-« k's AusMn. Tvv.^, 7H70*> '•i JESTEB WOMEN'S DORM;.: Wv rv • 2TStSND SPEEDWAY ~ w- * * »A-IV W V S" ' ' sponsored by TEXASSTUDENTWJBl3CATIONS STlinRNT flOVT.^ Kvf * -v v. ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECT,i w 1 •"** t"1'1 •• v •* - - ^ IS 7, —J mmm "Ipl;.-; timsm Nixon w %,7;^V Aide Counters Resignation Talk ~3pWl WASHINGTON (UPI) -President peached. • 'i?-> v~i- iN.(UPI) — President' peached." •#?* fe. '' ' tn' smmfrii. m*oit1aHMt ed to squelch, speculation about the':' Nixon said througha.spokesman Monday But should the House vote for im-• possibility of Nixon's resignation he has no indention "of-resigning,if the* peachment,. Warren told reporters in a •4?\- triggered by White House Chief of Staff v< y < ''jftsvfec!?' » -">«s »i" « House of Representatives impeaches briefing: "I do not see that as a set of Alexander Haig's statementSunday thathim circumstances which would causehim to the President had suffered "some very 4& Gerald Warren, the President's deputy resign. He dies not. There is no set of severe losses" in his battle against im­press secretary,once morestressed Nix­circumstance^ which he can foresee, orI peachment during the last week. on's belief that the full House will not-can-foresee,-ithat would-cause him to- WARREN SAIQ. the Whjte House at agree to recommendations by its resign." . • -this point was neither conducting a lob­Judiciary Committee that he be-im-L, Warren's comments appeared design-bying campaign to ^influence undecidcd members of the Judiciary-Committee' nor keeping any systematic, head count of their attitudes-The committee Senate Panel Starts recommended its first article of im­ peachment Saturday.. He also refused tp comment on the in-: dictment Monday morning, of former ions Treasury Secretary John Corinally on -"J five counts of perjury, ... f , ' ' -V trial will beintroduced in the nextday or Nixon's schedule Monday included a , . r :r It. approved without debate a rtsolu-two and alsowill bereferredto theRules meeting witli-special White House|%s;,tion introduced .By party leaders direct; Corhmittee for consideration. "; counsel-James StiiClair and Watergate-lu ting the Senate Rules' Committee to ' He S£|id TV coverage, if approved by lawyer J. Fred Buzhardt to review the'i#e^ew; alj rules and precedents with the Senate, will be tinder very strict first batcfyof Ji&WWatergate tapes to be' jfaflpfesbeCt rules.--He. said the cameras/would be surrendered as a result of the Supreme ^ I ITie committee is to report to the focused (H| the well of the"chamber, Court's order.^gSenate'by Sept.. 1..,'\v iV ;V where trial proceedings would take, But Warren portrayed the President," The resolution was ^introduced and place, with no painoranUc shots ofthe whoreturnedSunday night from a.JWay -M |f§adopted immediately after Sens. Mike , Senate as a .whole permitted. ,r working vacation in California, as "^Mansfield7 aiid -Hugh Scott, , the -The party leaders said there was no primarily conducting the nation's Democratic and Republican leaders,and ' " discussion a£ the meeting of whether a business as usual.? their assistant leaders, ^Sens; Robert. Senate trial-could carry over from the. DURING THE morning, he-said,-Nix-. Byrd, D-W. Va.i and Robert Griffin^ R-• present Congress to the next oiie. on reviewed-the veterans' education billMich., met for nearly two hours to dis-' But Mansfi6ld emphasized that "I and other domestic legislation with his _ T«l»phot» cuss steps-to prepare-for a Senate trial. want it behind us this year." aides and studied the Cyprus situation 'Dennis Caravannii (I), dreek ambassador to the United *. £puneil Monday nigfit on the Cyprus question. The " Mansfield said they were passing no-Andther ' issue not fdiscussed at -the and the progress of the Geneva peace Nations, addresses qn emergenty-session of the Security^ meeting w6s called at the request of the Soviet Union. judgment on-wliether the House will vote meeting,the leaders said, was how much talk? between Greek and Turkishto ihipeach Nixon. S .time the'Senate will allow the President * negotiators. •'He and Scott told newsmen earlier • . to prepare.his defenseiftheUouBe votes "We, of course, hope the parties 'will •tljat, in lightof the House Judiciary uom-STtifipeach him. " . • — ' ouicklv reach-a-snlution of tho ifcjies in- mittee's vote reconunending impeach­This will be-a declsioii for the Senate volved,".Warren said. . Stall ment, they, had no choice but to begin as a whole*; as will t>^ others questions He alsoi' saki Nixon'stills hopes to ^^preparations• for a possible, trial in th.e relating to rules and procedures gover-^',d,:become the first American president to"^Senate.'""'"'""^"^''—•— .. . '.. mng a trial, they said. _ . ^iyigit Japan at the end of the year. • . The resolution the party -leaders -'in­ troduced was Approved with only seven senators on the floor. It directs theRules . ^ si-*.-*-. . •'.-.Jh.f, Committee to recommend-any revisions By The,Associated Press afe^avcountfies said' they had agreed-on a Cypriots. . ,i '.?«'& , • it find?necessary in existin'g rules if the The Cyprus peace talks inTieneva" ; provisional solution to"enaimijtarycorF-; rimtiaHy-Bcevtt-had—agreedr-to*4hp•; v ? S«pato. is callow npnp tff_fCTflucL9Jrial. were stalemated again .Monday' as • -frontation on Cyprus, with hopes of legitimacy of the constitution provided The committee review, which is^CS- Turkey and Greecacontinued todisagree, holdihg a second round of-talks next that it would be strengthened to protect"" ' take" into consideration changes in the overjhe status of Turkish trobps on the r week. -the Turkish Cypriot minority. In a-r. ieaeral rui«^f-"civii-and-crfahinal- m 'Or 'Mediterranean island. . 'Contents-, of the tentative -document sudden switch, the Turkish governments^ procedures sincethe last impeachment: c The foreign ministers ofGreeqe,-were notmadepublic, but when it,was -insisted that Uie^ection on the constitu-% trial of a prpsi^ient more than 100 years ' —Sv, ®y FRANK CORMIER < aboard the plane -lurkey-fllliLikiUin adiottmed-teeir^—sept-to.Jmkara. Turkey's cabinet ap-' tion is deleted. ^fss ^rit®r DurinS the samef flight, press ago,; is to be conducted behind closed WASHINGTON (AP) — President Nix*ss« secretary Ronald Ziefeler acknowledged sessions Monday night after near agree-* -' parentry^ef^l^pi^simtsxtmwrning-r ,on's top aides, casting.aside-the rose "this^is-aytough time." , Ziegler's : _ ment had been reached on a provisional the Turkish invasion fprce on Cyprus, solution. . „ , In Ankara, Turkish Premier Bulent "tiiiled giassesr-wiUi-whieh—they—had--restraintiseemed uncharacteristic: He publicly viewed the impeachment scene, British. Foreign Minister Jqmes ' :.Ecevit declared ihat the presence and appeared friendlier and more relaxed" now seemreconciled to the uncertainties than during much of Nixon's 16-day Callaghan said the talks were adjourned size of the Turkish force cannot be dis­ Reinecke Won't Leave * • ) that lie ahead for their boss. . .California stay;for a night of reflection. cussed at the i Geneva conference and After weeks of issuing • optimistic . Greek "Foreign Minister George that a reduction of the force would be . Barely a week fearlier, Ziegler had statements that many observers felt produced presidential counselor Dean MaVros was less optimistic, accusing considered only "when thetime comes." • -• ' were tinged With unreality, Jhey • In Spite of Conviction Turkey of negotiating at gunpoint in an fiurch -for ^ news, conference at which Neutral observers on Cyprus said, that acknowledged fhe- ^ fe Gov. Ronald Reagan> who -handflicked .proval. .-iSMImultimember-Housedistricts in 19761 deserve this kind of break -after having, ^ California, He:did so immediately after in Cyprus and' unspecified routine S§?|| -Reinecke ashis No.1aide in 1969, would ?. The Committee on Submission and and preservesexisUng elderly exemp-; worked so hard/"», -> having "a lengthy session" with Nixon-business.' --s>» Transition prepared a number of com-• 1' tion?.-Separate -submis^ipns on.; •promise packages for consideration. limited coiihty home rule, prohibitioitl . Saturday. Following -are summaries of newscopsules the proposals in each package and the' gSil t^rm^,;:;HmltationJof;state:^ttxes to 9 k v ? -" votes of the Travis County delegates to percent of personal incotne-; and ma the convention: • 3;.welfareceilingat2:.5 percenfofstate MM m 'mmmri'r m /ti, •Resolution 13: Defeated 96 ayi§^to-78 2 Republicans Report Thireols After Vote ' Stoclks Fall Agaih noes, Friday. Contains > chaRgg" i'ri ~ ie^wf; ;f?dfna 1v^' YES Ear» -> .v.' — WASHINGTON (AP),— Two of the sixRepublicans who voted to recom-NEW YORK (AP) -Stock H.Y.tE. NWJtNBtVaWE . Education Article substituting the • HEET.fund for the SHPAF fund;.'eit-' : Resolution 20: defeated, 85 ayes to 59 .mend President Nixon's impeachment say telephone threats have been market prices took their third ViIim Mfilt 31 ta William Gohen of Maine said his office received a threat'Monday' uneasiness over impeachment- DOWN limited county home rule and right to morning that he would.lie shot. Cohen said-thfe threat was made by a man ; The Dow Jones average of 30 work. Sgf 13.68 NOi Bales. Ooggott/ Weddlngton . provision' on felon's right to votej in a telephone call from Maine. i industriajs felI13.68 to 770.89 to. 1^-:c; YESi Earie, Foreman ^ preserv.es exisUng elderly exemp-" :The congressman said he a'lerted the FBI but did not ask for,^extra&if produce a -loss since last -net WIT 21,1174 ^-Resolution.14: defeated, 47 ayes to 95 3,-c t.'ons' Separate submissions on .protection at Monday's House Judiciary Committee session."'."!^ Wednesday':'s close of nearly'35 m ;? noes, Saturday.. Nb text-or transition 'limitedcouhtyhoiTierule,prohibition| •Rep. Thomas Railsback, R-Ill., saicj his staff received wKat it"con­ ^ xtanges from Resolution13. Separate of-p^ri-mutuel;enterprises', four-yedr| points. sidered a threatenipg.telephone warning that the congressman had better submissions on limited county home ;^g:;ternM;:irig|)fjltaJwoflt:and tiyo-thiHs — rule and right-to work. ',^ each?H0use for ffiomii tfe1 .checThis mail carefully. . Plastics Firms To Begin Issuihg Warnings fi ^ ' NOi Weadlnflton Si {JOi Doggott, vyeddlngton Cohen, Railsback and the other four Republicans on the Judiciary Com^ Was. • .Wr Por.em»fliS3'-i"«'•if-i-.y-.: • |t0f. WASHINGTON (Upi) — The plastics industry Agreed Monday to ^tart NOTVOliNOi Earle mittee all said theyreceived I that plastic, building materials promoted^for the last .cRe?°l„ution 21: defeated, 44 ayes td 116 Saturday night to recommend Resolution 15: d'efeated^39ayesto*ri2 . safe and fire-resistant are really flash fire hazards that^ noes, Saturday; Noltext or transition give off poisonous gas when they .burn.. j -­ s^;^^Wtial|qpj»i^n^ie^OT^ex-^ Cass Elliot Found Dead cIiangcsfromTlesolutiOn 13. Separate" The materials' involved are formed plasties' such as polyurethane and V Submissions on parl-mutuel enter^ LONDON (AP^ -"Mama" ^i:qiQlystyrene, an estimated one billion pounds of ijwhieh were sQld in the • prisesandlimited countyhome rule. years, deletes transition'prov'ision on , Gas's"Elliot, one ofAmeriCa's top ' NO? Balti, Weddlngftn, Pqranr^an <.1 - (United States in 1S72. Their uses raqge from-fiUipg^n furniture cushions "YHi Oogoatt, Ear|e ^ 'i felons; right to vote,. preserves exv ' pop singers, died Monday in a T And bedding-to wall panels and household cabinfets. ^ i:istihgleldwlye)^ptions.:Sepaititejte ' Resolution 16: defeated, 60 ayes to03 luxury London apartnrenC'police Toxip.gases released from fast burning firef involving these plastics noes, Satur4ay. No text or transition •reported. Her physician said the 1 have,been blamed for jthe 1970 dance hall fire at Grenoble, France, where , - ..changes, no separate submissions^' :'v singet-. probably, choked'to death .'rait NOi BolBS^.ForelcisTi, Wrddlngton prises, four-year terms, tjTO-thirdss'^ 145 persons cjlied;. the 1967 Apgllo 1 fire, which killed three astronauts; and , YWi Oaggtll. Earlo on a ham sandwich, but he did a 197.3 blase inside a liquid gas storage tahkion^taten Island that^ook 40 I.TVesoluflonlTr defeated^4(hayes-UrHS "Portlma'hjW^d.inot^ not rule oat the possibility of a r v lives - "yr-itioes, Saturday,, No te^ct or transition Resolution 22: defeated, 74 iyfes tc?84;/.„-3 hearFaferolc: it* >««.? ui. • woes-.r Saturday. Changes fUxt t<^-&" '^changes.-, Separate submissions on The, 83-year-old star died, as Kem6r Starts Thtee-Year( Prison Tetm-^ • trfour-yeatttrms^' ^'.y<'$ provide for elderly.exemptions basedr^. shQ lay in bed' watching'tetevi­ y»BMM,B5ro^Swetfdina(»n . on ^eegr^tse-buliding upe fea'at six6?£ __ i LEXlifcTON, Ky. (UPI) ^Former Illinois governorand federal judge -otigQitt,Eario ^ yearsj-pre^Verexistlne elderly exjy,.-; -?'~&)3StE3£fiEner-became federal1prisoneE>lo^0Q0a7-123 Monday when he surf ' ft^toluifon 18: -defeated, 48 ayeSto112'4^' -f Her physician,, Dr. Anthony iU rendered to y.S, marshals and bfigatr^ervrng a three^year sentence, ofj'a" ~nqes,.Satutday,:No 6iheenburg, told a late night variety of charges; dealing with race track stock transfers: ,-f$| ,'bhanges. Separates, news conferejnce,''She-had been, * Hmited"«ourity. home ^ .. KerKer, who wjU.be eligible fof parole In October, arrivedat Uie federal'^ dea^ for a considerable tune, .-work and four yuai-&ro&;— voter-required for income tdrt. ?; * minimum security prlson~s!x miles west of here accompanied by two"; ' -beto're-'her bod^.Was feun^^ CatiBIWrt marshals* |?gl m^m fmv-% er£M* union secunt r> %.te*5£, 'SSSKSFi' W^- fcs«ISll V-°^'?=•."'•» T^"^, 5»^® §Se , >-.wr each individual worker should negotiate -Hubbard:defeated incumbent President'" _ .Union must by law bargain'for. all-.legislatures. : his own contract with General Motors, • Roy Evafts knows "that a spirited. employes, members and "free riders'." Kl'-But-what-about a separate sub: -V i-and strike by himself if his demands are democracy is alive and well in-the Texas-Union shop or agency-shop agreements :"let the people decide;" etc.? PUJ5 ml • not met. Strikes are immoral, they say, labor movement;, there are, as yet, no do not happen automatically whpn not I fail to see the dfemqcracy in wI "m ••;;>and the National Labor Relations Act' recognizable autocrats. ; -prohibited;-they are part of a negotiated a •the anionsget buried under anava' jsftamounts to legalized extortion.Vniey are 3 Unions in Texashaveonly atprecarious -&f corporate money, all in the rtaji contract between the union and tile -T: •;sientitled;to their opinions, but noKLn the toehold, and so-called ''right to work"-is • employer. . . ;i freedom*fbr workingpeople. ^V '^ '*;TTexas'€onstitution,T one of the reasons. I have been personal-i ''Is it not a novel position 0, •' Y6s, I'm going to talk about so-Alled ly involved in two organizing strikes that ' worker Join the union if wages areZv,w°nt antWQnteto to labor's 'M tf'right to work," Reluctantly, beca* took approximately three years to settle already excellent? » . . " to aBsumethaf}heyareadvocates.fiwf^ -&;<£the phrase has about as much to do wifl -after the unions involved won represen­But a union's power is limited by its defenders of the rights and the Ubfprf" reunion security agreements as "right to) tation j^fctions fair and square. Finally, . ability to make an effective strike, and ties of workmen? The mere ataten^Uj .i >.life"has. to dowith recent reformsin ou after Jmanagement's appeals were ex­as-soon as'the union has insufficient is. of such a position demonsttvt$»g0$l'Zi • . J -. j. . "I --- - $&»medieval abortion laws, hausted, those workers who were able to Inembfership' to:i.— * shut'-down 11. — plant,--I ^dhypocrisy'.4mikinnAMtni and/iMf{. absurdity.e+ -. the i " In one.study of the magical effects of' . hold out returned. In bothcases^ more workers' benefits and privileges wilb,r .y ,Samuel Gomjlanguage, 12S Northwestern University thanVour-fifths of the workers struck, vanish like scab lettuce at a Republican|t|jlaw students were asked if they favored. buyfnany of the original strikers were dinner. ^ ^ g When someone starts playing you stater "right to work'.'-laws. Eighty! -noft around to go back in. . While ''right to work" laws are evil in>;:Mold "right to work" ditty, ask himi' answered yes, the restnoj Buried in the* 'The: remaining workers were scabs ^themselves, at leastin totally unorganiz-was thelast timehe walked'a picket:} '4>v Lawmaker on the make ?'V.. By NICHOLAS VON HOFFMAN "whereupon, she says; ''Thecongressman: ;m the office were required to complete °1974, King Features Syndicate i>,-r called me into his officeand said,'WdlA foursomes which included other con- WASHINGTON — Out-of-town celebn" everyone is r6ally upset. Is there any • gressmen or mayenslrom-the home dis-.­ty.; hunters,:may recognize the good--trouble about your job? We'll have trict. "If he didn'thave a regular date, it looking: women dining:with their talk about it, but I don't have the time . was established that we would liave to representatives under the blind -eyes of right ntiw. I want you to pick me up _ go," Jennifer recalls-. "We weren't even Sen. Roman Hruska^ and the other tomorrow, because my caris in theshop:^'allowed to-question it. That was part of. -worthy mediocrities painted on the es-and we'll talk about it then.' ~; j-!the job." "Tablishiueiil's walls. • ^ • "At 7 n'rlockj.in-the morning I went On being challenged, this man^whose; m Whether the boys are doing someold-over there'. He answered the door in his name is on no^Tefislatioh"and~who~is fashioned wife cheating or are seeking bathrobe and .said-lie got up late so he equally unknown to. his -cqnstituents, some quick solace from the imp^acHIng"^ wasnt diessedyel.... Ileput-two eups'of--once-expTained tn Jennifer."How can beat of the Washington summer, thereis coffee down on the table and asked,^ you -walk into a place in Washington by no doubt^that the pulchritude count in«3 -;What-s the trouble with -your job?' I yourself? You walk in with a couple of: and.around.bur nearly^U-white,5 male# ^saidi 'I'm not getting the legaj work you . cute thickson your armana they'll think- Congress is very high. Thpre may be no promised me. vl am not a .secretary. I you're somebody." truth onCapitol UUlv but Uiere is Deauty —He—may -be r-ighi—at—the—Palm—3 ! Not all of these young women arestgr-.. like to know if it's going to"change.' He' Restaurant, -and, if he is, it would help struck, legislative groupies from-was silent and he thoughta minute. Then explain why so little takes so long to get Ashtabulay Ohid. One whp isn't is Jen-, he-came over and sat down next to me. I . done around here. Wecan hope that most nifer,: in; her early 20s with a master's^, was sitting on the; couch. He put his arm' congressmen have devised ,better "ways degree in the • social sciences:: She is j "around, me arid then the other arm of using-the power and'prestige of their angry enough and willing to have hers -proceeded down my blouse. .t-office..: than, Jennifer's-boss*: Still, name used tyit, to protect the privacy o^iSSj "I said, "WBafareyou doing?' Hesaid|f ; :• America sends enough men 'like him io :third'-'part(es.-:'^ie:ai>d' the:.«ongt!essinai^yWeIlr Ithink we can work thisout, donlt Washington so that a number .of other ­she works for are disguised here, v frT-5on?' Then he's making this big pass. I. , female employes are a\so faced -With ­""Jennifer saysshe was'hired to betrain-j^^said, 'Stop,' andhe^aid, 'Why not?'.-p., ;.:what.Jennifer calls',"The^optionuof put-: ed for the position of legislative assists "I said, 'First oJE iall I am. going out-•ting out or getting out." 7 think we took o wrong turn somewhere back there tant, but after a couple of months shei^with a very good guy. Second of all I found she was running the robo'machinem> don't want any part of* this. You're and acting as a .receptionist, secretary^,piarriedi' Then ;he took his. hand away '3? ' tsmm'M firing line •*"" and general go-fori Any; legislative work|w?and said; *No;big deal, no big deal,' and •s3$i she got to do wasafter hours on-her ownM.;?twent into thebathroom or someplace, to time-Finally she ilew her stack^ 'get dresspd/­" 1 * Jt "Then he came out and said, 'I don't BjgBaflUHWmiiiinniiBiiiHmnmiini . ^ally wAy oiwOiking Uus uut. Do you-think we could Work this out?' I said, 'Well, Iguess not.'So liesaid, 'Whydon't To the editor: ^ e ^ the-richer departments, how ap-sSSwatching it"audibly" or watching: it vote of its membership. M&M^ttersJo the edi M9Ft.'.'hwkiiig for a job, and we'll Inflation.has hit the most stable SUIH preciative the secretaries.should be of '** ''olfactorily." That's a small price, to' As the editorial woiild"Bave it,", I I I " " looking • for someone to replace' stance in the state. Nobody*thinks about faculty members who-perform ad-": pay tor oilr weekly dose of political-. stitutionai adoption * of: 'EesoljUtion We the local dealer anymore. ^You^ simply ministrative duties a'sJa ""favor," and%:;Sfparanoia: wouldexcHiae-many^lower^nWme '•' and in the car be said,."Rie reason that can't njake a living selling lids at $10 how lucky the-secretaries were not to be wewere. I guess we^hisfirst articlgthls^nmmep. when ufUaF=fmk;tion-with the PermanentUnivergii you said.' But I was in shock. I was Today you can'teven keep a place tolive were too busy noticing the things we^trying to convince us that Austin'?-largely"responsible for the e, ^.Wshocked. I couldn't handle looking-, at: on the measly profits off a couple TOmplained about.low pay,^inequities ln^^liberal-r, political-activists^constitute—a-~--.istehce of^JT-eollegesandunlversities j . " him." .. pbunds. r-workload, demands by professors for,|t^'machine," he referred in a later, such places as Dallas, San Antonio, Be.-25 lintt or lets. Th« Taxan rasarvet.While this does prove a congressman . Are we about to see the end of an era? secretaries to perform personal errands,^/./paragraph to the group as a.'"coalition.'^ Paso, Midland, Odessa and Arlington! j;, riflhl to edit tatters for length. can be decisive about something, it is .-The end of the $10 lid may be in sight. discriminatory practices in rights to?,^Others, like Bafes'and Green, lament his : :WittoUt|theS%C^^MS!^^ •(i n,. . . . , depressing to hear Jennifer describe her And that's a crime"!, take classes,-no voice indecisionsdirect-^i-factual .inaccuracies, like his reference individuals, unable to-afford living avtra boss' tacky shenanigans/ . -Name withheld by request ly affecting our jobs, treatment as cog^J|gito: the.libera^ ''maehine', having had its; from tbe horne and family, would: ]One of tlie women on the staff who' in a machine, lack of access to people iniugjstart jn,.197ii_Men the_blg.Jocal liberal_ I'^gprived of-a low cost education, Indude name, addreu; and phone couldn't afford to.lose her job lost her Racism and sexisrm authority. ' gains started at least as early as 1971. '• i^ Fi.Truman iRanda11, resident pdliticpl ^number of contHbutor^^ ftgp boyfriCTd bewuse hewouldh'taccept the we'll all appreciate thef:"'But let us notexpect too much; after all, ". analyst at.The Texan, has been the-bu i To the editor: j I'm sure i m she had to goout to dinner with generous offer by the administrators to We:are-dealing with The T-exan. I of. coiteiderable.Student-criticism in j : I was very unhappy to read on this, maker-of, laws. According to Jen­ let us meet once a month. durin'g our B.D. Stewart ' "Firing Line." Whife;it is thie that 1 Wednesday's front page (Ken McHam) Moil letters to The Rring-Une.-Th^Daily nifer,,other staff members were assign­ •lunch hour, to discuss problems. Aren't" 1312 San Antonio St. Randaillls penmaristiip is'coitiparable' ; '.'Mexican-Am&ican'' ^ffi|jTexaii, Drawer D, UT Station, Auttin, Tex. ed to babysit for one of the coh-about the man . we lucky to have a funch hour to give?. .' aNoim&b^monologue^andhisA^ .: and his son who are supposedly causing %S78712; -or bring 'leffers to the Texan of-gressmah's'girlfriends so they could go. ; . Name withheld by request-V ' Texan vacuum a rival te the cdmic 'character1 o| so much trouble at Wilding: Apparently, §g{i.flce», ba>emen», Texat--Student out together. Texan no policy concerning ^ - : "the 1976 governor's race when^there will filling a knowledge vacuum. * MANAGING EDITOR BJ Hefner "raciaftaias thin already exists here.' ' ynotbesucharacadQiesnofmeanthattlie. In.general, the editorial is crit!cal"of I am. properly chastened by the let ASSISTANT-MANAGING EDITOR I.-' Lynne Brock from loail .EMTs and concede without jv And speaking o( discriminatioh^ I ahi :;fellow-is-mixed.up. We aU have our bad Fleming^'^sition on,the extension of NEWS EDITOR Richard Fly. really getting tired of .reading about Ms. ' days. the transition period between regental qualification that they have a bettw^i medical vocabulary than I. If by beco I) --ing their villain I can advance the caul ASSISTANT ,T0 THE EDITOR : ^Dave Risher So-and-so. When a man is mentioned in v; After all, he dbes supply an element of'.• cQptrol of thef building use fee and state 1 -J-SPORTS EDITOR -Larry Smith an article, he is never referred to later humor. Like when he suddenly diverted * control of appropriations for educational of improved e©erjgency medical s< "v from a 'discussion of Bales'1 trouble"with' facilities. But the extension period, £r- AMUSEMENTS EDITOR....-,: ^....^..Paul Beutel. as "Mr.",»»'. , v women politicks to " . bitary as itis, is butane issue.dealt with . vices tiieri so be it; TOiisy should 4uide: -' ItSfiSfev Rosemary Gordon . a discussion of how PHOTOGRAPHERS .r............Stanley Farrar, Marloij Taylor 1500 Mohle Drive ; sex is supposed to be pleasurable except in Resolution ^2 of the proposed state tand, however, that my purposes"are n$L 'fii /f % ' - inimical to. theirs,;and by personalizi^|.l^ ^5^ (Editor's note:it has been TheTex-. for-Puritans. The transition was weak, constitution. The Texan would better ISSUE STAFF,, > "I' ' their, reactiohthey,inhibit^a cause whif®^ an's policy for a number ol years not and the prose sophomoric, but we ought --; serVe its student constituency were-the- City Editor.,..;.,.'., M U'y-fto identify race in a-story unless tiiat--.; :n?t be-overly demanding oT our locals. entire -resolution opeiie^ fot: public dis­is important, to us both. , General Reporters*....,3 |l& ..V.T... •Bryan.Brumley, Ken Mcriam, '^-description is necessary to the story. • ! talent. * ..-_ cussionrelayve'totheletitire;body of the : .The -issues, I submit^ transcend .litelevlsion'Habits a*n3i my-knbwledgi, •t ^ ^'. Anne Marie Kilday, David Hendricks $,^??In this case, "Mexican "American'' '1^0 And if there were no Randall, how proposed constitution "(which is the; -News Assistants ..Tj.lf.v.-i-r-'— ..... Susan Lindee, Jim Hill, their technical vocabulary; although «%was used threetimes.Once-it wasin a |ifii?t^'^§et;dur^ manner, in which, our convention' , v Roger Downing, Mike Morrison, NancyJWills 'iyftj'quote. But the other two times It was ? ''conspiratorial, Machiavellian' world of' delegates and eventually the state -' experience with £MS issomewhat moi Editorial Assistant..., ! Steve Russell %^not/'and the tenn should have been citizenry mustview it) , i .solid than that-A city the Sizeof Austu IfM Assistant Amusements Editor. .-.iv.irtiviv.v; -Bill Darwin •i'5SAdefeted.~ «VjState'and localpolitics?What^ould we But moreimportant tbah tliesubject of \rtth the public resources availablfchei lip5f Assistant"Sports Editor .u> Johnny Campo: As fpr The Texan's use of * v do without those dmoral descriptions of the editorial, The Texan, once again In ' ; should have'eiASEge'ncy medfcal servli jW® ' th£ state lei Make-up Editor .Claude Simpson Mm a dew policy as o! tills ©^'politicians' repertoires'of strateeif DeU of an adequate knowledgeof the sub-on a level above that of •Wire Editot-John Fuller ject.matter, has based>it^editorialconfef minimum. That end, In,my opinion, Desk Editors ,..... ....Sandy-Hall, P. Piahe Copeland, Colleen Doolin, ment off conjecture ^nd inaccuraricesig; only' be.achieved. by_public 'i*autivrTtl-ViiTbOf=ii ••• TOe rftllyTemi,»ttodcit je»»p«per *t.WOgMrkily' ot Texal A«iUn. l* pwbli«bed by Texas Student Texan I* tittkntl Erfucafkiml AdycrtUtof Stfrtdg; lac;. To the cdit6rr~— T^.V"^if5'^int^Btisi<»^Ki^ent)tivif;:^diisftracr. dozen«f3)H!KEB^nber8 df tfie TSL7^iEM^m^gen»yjnedlcal;service. iP# •:9S0 UxJnjttoo Avie.t New'Yehll,l( ' m .'7t71t 'nie Dal)]' Tetan ia. puKttstwl itoaity, Tnesdir.' f^M-joleaulknal and Paci(U!NewiS^rvi^Tbc --We^leaday. .7?mn^y, arrf-ft^fept«ml)«,Uu^ush U«Tttehtf*rx*3-D*fly­ :«S^»'2KfcSSS5r;.BSS.1SB cJls»Dotia«»aMatA#stto,Teli. new^aper miocihuoij . „ f -- R«jdia« tUbons fdr U# newtpuper ir« at PMA departmental administration: Those " apparently unique ^xpejrienct:"of sent; much lebs< voting, xnuchvless .xip--sjiljls atJd dgdltfati5nT5f-_the .ftiew v i • t I -i .... -.•-•• gl i , A. ~ Jwun. r-l»i"T tdqHteofr.OTfr gBtkHng. Litlteftdd FmiiiLiin, HUi t»iaYVth>d the vmi^laiHts" wiU^. ^w^tt'iiiiig. i'uiiwis iloat'Hiver thi X'exaa signed:'the Jetter-h^ ^ HaZi/ Uf^iveriity &H>pv S4Lh yosed to flemfagfg 'position.' What, is. ^l4|^g «id WtaU», Mtirjnd WWUnaadtl» statements about,/how plucky;;tlfe>,;/?iHousebegii)s> "watch "it visually.'! tbe By STEVE RUSSELL,, • "1,.' >_ same questionnaire was this query-during the strike, though many of them ed-states^;even: those;who . w, , • "I think fa is a fair judgment t6& ,.1'.K :a :company and a union agree' joined the union when given an -un­-statutes should.have enoug'h-sehse to make that a free, active, progressiva' • *: yoluntarily that all employes coerced vopportunfty.But, subseguent • -they have no place in a constit||iGni:^iftfe|trade-union moven^ent stands for «|g. represented by theunion in the plant: employes come; toa-plant with substan­Dean Page Keeton was quotedfree, active, progressive country." j.§ should become members Of the union, tially better thairaverage wages (wages £ort Worth Star-Telegram as^Jllng — John F. Kennedy ?-• should such.an agreement be permitted-having beeTf'substandard before-the un-sertion of a "right to work" clausein the-j It took a long, bloody struggle to make." by law?" Eighty-four yes; 41 no. ion): Havtngno previousexperience with-charter "sheer folly " "This document < ; unions marginally -acceptable in thii'y Proposition: who controls the vstate-unions, and living in a state where "free. must be good for generations: to come j country, and the fight is still not over/; ment of the.question controls the'out-enterprise";is required by law to.be .Keeton said, "it should ; flirt be;| There are still those who argue, as Shell h come. Query: who favors "right to taught in the schools; why-should anew burdened with pelicy matteri'i^hich / Oil/Co.-did-last year, work" and how much media,can they af ­^should concern the Legislatures^.be ? j that workers have no-U ford, compared to Texas unions? • Closed shop —.only union members fought out from time tp time."',te4S'!' business . telling an te " The tag "labor boss" has been bandied : may be hired, —illegal under federal-Si&a Qf theistates._which have­employer-how to pin about quite a bit lately, and my law. work".— mostly in the Deep Sou@^F^l|^ . his plant — after all,: colleague, F. Truman Randall, even " "• Union shop — new workers must ^^exceot Nevada areeconomic bacl^tete . the employer owns applied it to Texas AFL-CIO President join the union r-legal under federallaw; •;for working people. In.Nevada, t®ppjt»sp| it! — and therefbre Hhrry Hubbardr-'Hpil, there, aren't illegal in ,Texas. •Cipal business is vice. whieh-|f| jlot* unions should not enough union members in Texas to make-. Agencyshop --new workers need organized— by unions. Whethe^Hjghtv —pasn-sealut and'safe^ ~— • Athens, our sources say, -. If NAJTO would withhold its The -Transportation Department ^ toppled before the end of June "We high-level State'Department of­suggested the docu-was created seven years ago, from~T cooperation, *«*£ missed the date by only 23 d&ys. ficials the idea he federal agencies handling highways, ' snickered at , ment, "not only, will the alliance Our prognostitation was based -might retufn to power. airways,-railways-, subways andj gain enormously in prestige, but . upon the observations of experts iri-" Karamanlis' relations with the from'that time the days of. the die---' their . social, envirbnmenlal _gn_d.(. side Hie "State'Department, Central United States, therefore, probably cultural impact. "Thus, the depart­ tatorial regime will be numbered."' Intelligence Agency and: Pentagon; %uawill:bfe restrained and businessliket-But no one in' Washington was ment-touches part of every • -, A confidential May, 1974,, report to ' If Washington wants to'maintain listening. Now the United States American's life. X&tt£ ent the North AtlanticAssembly, for'ex-. .... ..bases there, our sources Say,"they blamed by many Greek "people*for' "The principal need (is> to im­ returns < ample, reviewed the Greek situation will have to pay for the privilege." prove the way in which the depart­ keeping the dictatorship in'flower. sSfc'-i and offered this conclusion:' Analysts are still wondering how Footnote: There was rejoicing in: ment is managed over-all," the - "Many observers predict that the :?S>%inuch power the new'.civilian Washington as well as Athens upon report states. The problems extend most affected classes, supported by government in Greece reAlly has. from Brinegar's office throughout mM Karamanlis* return from exile. For senior military officers shocked by ••••• Some predict that the military willi yearsr a small but determined band his. sprawling, brawlin'g, • the junta's primitive terror tactics,' , -keep a wary eye on events to see . 'of antijunta Greeks-had lobbied day--bureaucratic empire. ' ^ ^ to Greece «Vi "tte ^, --• may "move into open revolt soon." > : .that they don't-get out-of hand. -•and night for ;the • restoration of • . For instance, the department hassat® r ^ • & our May column, we, warned ; -_L^ According to/our sources, democracy in their fibrtelaijd'. They.--. • wasted millions.on impractical pro-Is that a Greek revolt-might bring, to .^however, the Karamanlis~govern-"T ~ i nc1 ii,de:? ,-jo urna1is t—-Eli^a -jects such as a personal kittycair5^ -r~«4 tf*0* power hostile forces whocoidd deny, *£f?ment won't "be hobbled by the Demetracopoulos, Profs.; Ted transport system in Morgantown, . m the United States the use of its ,military. On the contrary, these • Couloumbis and John Nicolopoulos, ' • , W.Va.,.an aircpshioned passenger-'military and intelligence -in­j^pources say that a specialcourt will parliamentarian John Zighdis and • train and a superbus that -runs on*a no thanks to U.S.• •• stallations in Greece. he convened to try the deposed Gen. Orestes Vidalis. , •' , magnetic rail. But it has failed to As. Uie dust -settles in Athens, ^ strongman,. Gen. Dimitrios-Ion--•TRANSPORATION TFfOUBLESS provide,a proper mix between air, >m •'+t*Vfr* however, "the sijlnatimi appears-less iiuaes, and "his band',of-political The taxoavers-spend SB r hillinn a auto, hiis and rail service. C -f, i ^drastic—The-new pfemier, Constan-primitives. yea'r for a Transportation Depart­The, report attributes this failure • • #*# tine Karamanlis, has ;been a.friepd-|^ W-One of those who will feeVthe ax., ment that*is fragmented, wasteful' to lack of -"^lear-ciit rationale" at» 'fti' of the United" States. Still, he isn't sources be ;*•" «»A our predict, will the and often misguided.' the top. "There was no sufficiently-: : 5a5i{"fe --i /* fi likely to forjet his years:in exile in Greek ambassador to Washington, ; This is the confidential conclusion: disciplined process," states the •.Paris, struggling toobtain the ear of •, Constantine.Panayotakos. a consulting firm, McKinsey &' ... -the Office of -i.^ of report, "to enable Secretary of StafeHenry Kissinger." -v „V->3y&. •>?> **£$• ^ Unfortunately,-: Kissinger ignored Co., which • has just produced a-the Secretary .. to evaluate the t'-:• £2£& Kafamanlis and othe^ exiled pfe&appe^ls toend U.S;cooperation with . detailed report for Transportations programs and"decide orf further ac­»;'•<'.•551B«v Greek -leaders pleaded in vain for I"4 Jthe Greek -junta. At least one con-^Secretary Claude Brinegar. *• tion. Therfe is a growing sense of -, U.S. help in restoring democracy in . fidential 'document predicted ViT The study cost thfe taxpayers groups working_at cross-purposes." I-% Problem Pregnancy Counseling Service y o mmi Crossword Puzzler -AnawafRrYesterday^PuQie.:-.­ u» Student Heafth Center • THAT,SIRL ACROSS • 3 Originate • qqbh E-iaan assi 105-W. 26th St; (4th-Flobr-^outh)_ _ • •*&* DfON'T WANT 4 At this place aaas -T0AflM6lze 1 Ory.cs wine •5" Before '• m#• sisaia saaa Confidential counseling with all alternatives discuss­ ' oh laara "4 Listento-— 6 Attack ed and referrals made to appropriate resources. Call 8 Solicitude v 7 Happen again ,h nsns Hos'as 12 Equality 8 Hors TO ME7. Backpacking for 478>5?11> Ext. 26,vfor an-appointment.'Individual aaQHuraas sa 13 Gaelic ; d'oeuvres I*'.^-appointments Tuesday 1-5 p; ote of scaler'i aan taa aaigmaii 21 Symbol lor; 22 Lie A great looking canvas SHE JUST UANTEO TO 5EU. tellurium 24 Conjunction aiBH HQS1H afflHH ~4AtVt-M-NO~ :ww£L MP 'MUP fi.gr ^miiT 22 Evergreen 25 Slave . sarapa asiaa aorsa • tote that is a back-pack M>mP.THIS HERE Nouwetst t'Msnu. cooicresi —~TT5B 20 Rip. ^6-eompass 43.Spanish fat—J -—aruLmlh_a quick snap of , SHOM HA& A DANDY tveHAD LAWYERS A LAYMAN 23 Btird 27; Girl'sname point "yes" FRI6NP/ l$N'T. 5HB? /> STUDY ROOM. Bemer-meY WHEN tr^' 27 Mature 28"Manner of-37 Portionof 44 Act the straps converts to a !A SAY.fWCM suem/et&zY .GOMESjw* 29 Be ill v-*,. 4 running medicine < 45.Region smmnr , 'V -30 Brief.-. ' "* 29 Ventilate 38 Well-man-' 46 Period of time shoulder; b~ag. Water, 31 Note of — i30-Scottieh cap nerad. _ 47 Greek letter lining...available AtmMsr « . scale -i32 Began again 40 Singing voice -48 Tennis stroke ' tjroof 32 Bone o( 33 Emerge vie-41 Compass • 49 Anger in assorted colors. Onlybody > 'i torlous < -point 50' Golfmound 1 • 33 Existed i'Si 34 A continent 11 (abbr.) 35 Underground u WHAT 00 worker . I You havetd 37 Qbscure 14^ 38 Through ie sweet: 5AV-F0R— WlKSEtf? •sop ;" 40Measureo(^weight <> — S8 H 25f 41 Negative ;> " 42 brt^loys ~ 44 Procrastination 31 ! 32 47 Cutout 51 Angfff. . ; YOU 13Z­ 52 Ripo€d r-' 53 S-stiaped' TAKE ANY ru GET COURSES HEATT molding IN IT? / >v» 54 Social 42 44 I I'll gathering 43 46 JAKE THE 55 Ihbt COOKIES!' 56 Musical in­48 4? SO strument . 57 Organ of 32 " -hearing 55 ^ T " DOWN 1 Resorts ; Distr. by United Featurt Syndicate, Inc. 2 Every % ON-THE-DRX6T 2406 G UADALl U P"E 3 m§$ u/fl rapsis^^iis We •M~-i ^ V--:; *—• ~~SZmT­ *#•$> «r. > Wm - . t r Th^ Classic in Barely there harness leather;: straps on wood 3, i platform. - Vf t-N. Natural— 20.00 •White Brown*® ^3u Navy S$s»\ * 21.00 fe-yrfrri- Zi. ­ ^>1 • 'HBjs mm -=3 fM-.i rv^r A<­ y < -f- f. •>„_« *i •4? A* id ass p . ' 6^?' 1| »£>% "• '• "•'«•"'' '"^ Ipu •J. -; ••• i v-•: ^ -rB Major League1 1Baseball *.*•••;••. .v.-, -•:« >»«• f S?»^^ _ Vs^. . i-r '.•' *k<-'-ATO •'*!'•• ••V* v. *"# •f1 i"? .j , ,Jvi .•&£raxfc !tv * \„ >. >•I ;UW :700 CHICAGO (AP) -Lou victory^ ai}d " Bobby .Bonds scattering nine hits The fourth sij;h th_ mning'"Monday­. Brock stole the 7Q0tb base of sparked two thfee-run rallies. Braves got a run in the first The Padres' other run came powered ^e; New York Mets 1 his career, singled .twice and With a single and triple tolead when Ral^h Garr tripled and in the second on Clarence to their fburth straight'vUft* ^ "scored twice Monday while tliA Cnit ITMtinimA iniscoredCPrtroH nn HflnlfHank Aaron's^Afirntl'tt Gaston'sfTocinn'c butit, &4 throwingthrAurin^l ^nnttory, 1a 4^-34.Qvinnmn)itriumph ntiarover the hllVtf ^tta the San Francisco Giants to a on in the Milner's two-run homer m the two runs back, in thp fourth. •parade with 892. -nm-of-the-seasbnr}ielping-the • • • • John Curtis, 5-10, coasted to -Los Angeles Dodgers snap a I PHILADEtPHlA^TAP)~=v • his second, complete game of three-game losing streak with v Mike Schmidt hit a pair of i -the year. a 10-2 triumph over the Atlan­^"".two-mn homers, ?nd Steven standings Andre Thornton.had to leave. ta Braves Monday night.- a-?,Carlton pitched a two-Ritter AMERICAN LCAOUK ;»'-the game ui the fourth inning : Wynn's two-run homer off r," ''for his 13th victory of, the . fas* » when he collided with umpire starter Ron Reed,.6-6, follow-f • -W L MOa season as the Philadelphia > Billy Williams and suffered a ed Bill Buckner's single and Boston . '54 46 .510 -'v "Phillies beat the Pittsburgh Cleveland.. -. 51 49 -'^concussion. -Williams alsolelt gave the Dodgers a 2-1 lead in sit' • Pirates 1?-1 Monday night. • Baltimore .. 51 49 the game. the third. He singled .home a JJew York..-.v. .50. 50.. »o 4 •ysl Schmidt gave Carlton a 2-1 Milwaukeev 51-; •k-k .1t run in a five-run fifth and had ua !^Airst-inmng lead with his l21st DeTroi! .U . 4ff 52 HOUSTON (AP) ;:J-' Ed; a sacrifice fly in the sixth Writ ;. rr[' homer, afid blasted No. 22 in a HalicH scattered 10 hits to : Meanwhile,' Don -Sutton Los Angeles -J 59 ;584 •• • ' five-run sixth. * | , 66 .37 OaklandKni:-42 cnotch -his-first major league:. evened Jus.:record at 8-8 by Clncinnatrp . 61. fy Cariton gave up a run in,the v Kan City , .. 50 49 .505tfB-JdouifOff — 54 49-. • Chicagor. ..5a .49 .505 8 Jirst on a pair of walks and ­ Atlanta ; 53 50 Texas-. 52 51 .505 6 San Fran V "4r 57 4so tow R»chie Zisk'i1lBT.singIerthen~ Minnesota ... 49'. 53 San Diego : 44 61 . California. 40 63 .388 2a|.,-;iset down 17 of the next 18 ; FOREIGN AUTO PARTS? Mofidoy*! Oetnms Mcndo^i Go/HW New York 4, Montreal 3 ^ v batters. The only fait in that Baltimore 6, MUwaukee-2 REPLACE PARTS FOR IMPORTS touts It,Chicago 4 •'.jOelroit 8; Cleveland 2-Q§£~_, .span was.a single by Zisk in St Los Angeles.^ 10. Atlanta 2,. • '-Boston 1New York 1 the fourth,.and h6 was erased INCLUDING PINTOS AND VEGAS Phflade/phla Ji, "Pittsburgh ! Texas 10,v Kansas City ) „ SailDie^b.3, Cincinnati 2 Chicago-at Oakland, N .v . y&ZA* ;in a double play. > San Francisco 7,Houston 2 rssftL&'t. % 2 Other clubs not.scheduled -Specialty .SU-^igg fa^iionsfor •men and . , ""'1 Photo Service . • women Phillies' Mike Schmidt leqps.over Pirafes' Gene Ciines. 222 W. 19th & 5324 Cameron Rd Shoe Shop *SALE * TO PLACE A ' OUR SPECIALTY ^RESUME'.; & ­ i*-1 ^ We make and SHEEPSKIN liCLAS^lFIED V.W. TOYOTA DATSUN .repair. boots.i IDENTIFICATION TYPE RUGS AD """" VOLVO FIAT MGB shoes belts $coo " Many PICTURES . ..v Beautiful Colors " 1 & leather SS GALL j • • •tEATHER SALE • |p---5' trd inwkrw thir* goods ---i-.' .• ^^yaridui kind>,. colors. * 7JS' per ft. INTERNATIONAL ^Dayr -.Af.qUa 471-524-4 iitHUniUMQ Quick. Reliable Service A Capitol Sadc]fery~ CARPARTS ... wv»j4V«cr>if-X;^, --A. You're looking . JSbtAao.. 2848 GUADALUPE 474-6451 *r- r4*-izn 1614 Lavaca 'TSCuStI'li/TexaS-^ *7tt-Q?09 for a new laparfmenr... iff EARN.CASH WEFKLY Blood Plasma-DonarsJNfeeded­ -\. , . , ,, > .f " Jill ^Men~& Womenr ^ gARN $10 weekly IP CASH PAYMENT FOR DONATiON iiiriin tiDtinnui Consider ifrv quiet pnv$cy'­Austin un,der tttB spreading oah trees of our one bedrooit^i Bloocl Components, Inc; apartments for $165 A // sm -BtJisPatd. OPEN: MON.&THURS. 8 AMto JP.M, SAVINGS ACCOd 31V -V.. mu TUES. & FRl; 8 A.M. to 3 P.M. f?,^ If all you need this fall is a little • room (withf...!j-tT.:ACa and' $%> kraWs' . " CLOSED WED. & SAT. • sii? carpeting), maid service and all the good home-cooked Palo BlancoL fV* ~ food-yoircan-eatrperhaps-you should-eonsider-the— 409 W. 6th 477-3735 911 Blanco'll' 472-1030 tssf&k** Barrone. At $117 50 a„month (installment rate) you 7> c ^ """" can't iQse." -' ­',:Ji • ' /And yoircan take all yourteft-over-bread-and ,irt»i/%ofvi+ In: y^'^m ..mwiUiwiUll ^ I !I._.-_^i. ' v invest'it rp sorhethmg worthwhile. Like yourselt. ^ your ch!ck^ i­ . TTT^--, 5 -- ••• -• ...—C'1' —. ^ • h,'M. . lifplflpi The BaiTone. Two and a half blocks from campus^ . AMERICA S FAVORITE PIZZA Member FD1C -- 1as? r W4 »<' m?. 2700 Nueces 472-7850 -IIP One Sn3fr r fjl •« »• V . ///rVit iii^ See CouponOfferBelow; \M'M _-STr||feN5Wi^ ? ^ ' -usage P,zia ^'35 S -t *. ' 4 *°^PIB / BtJy fK' ant ° vtW-coupo" total ^7^ - *vL t/tSK V'i t h M-f-i. o ^ t Large pizza "al_ J-.'V ; (Tax ano_u —^ ' j•«*" sH K ^ *1" »2S vis,. TV " \ *• 'i' t J * s ..." iSBBBOT BRING THIS COUPOIW3S888858888S888888888! m wg* 'Ms? HrM* IKH' With this qoupon, buy ijf • Hi 14$ i.-v v-xWg'i -Vvi--"L (41 I.M ttM-M any fiiaot, large or v'* 9MM&mSt. medium pizza at i» >1* 3M »>• [-regular prics artd: / >« :UI. .» M IV . t"if • receive one pizza of ,1»» .I.M )M, p •:•«.»• -Ui the next smaller CMMdiM# MO size with aqua) numbsr '0-}» > 7 ^ 5 ill ttt 9M. One.cpuppn'pe/ visitS Mi. JM please. Chtpprt •'• ».»» 145 'i.il­ $HC f«9»W*n<1 r'v*. ' I II 141 . ' S'u.I »•» »•> i« ; lit' l*\ !*" VAUD THRU AUG. f, tW i'.IMP wrt»fNM >• M -.Av.'W .• .... . ... „ „ __ JH00GUA0AIUK VJ.3697 1401 BURNtTRD/ JS1-7571 <"*-3^ IQnn^uniair . 177^751 ,-t; ,f!M09 iin -"^7^wr^i^rTilR5Dr r r.'J v j.^...^.^.^••.:^., v.; -1 ['.-Mr'', ">V.'v.1*.? V"--­ eg?s llHi© tessy® s% PIKafV, DetroitCoach JWfflt. ^ii%>ai The El Ejoradoettes are .on their way to the state stow-pitch softball cham­pionships. This is happening-thanks to the efforts of 1?! 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-itack-Johnson.John­son, aldng-witii Arthur (Toose) Fowler, coaches the El Doradoettes. , , . \MfaC Champions Johnson and Fowler's' team won. the Rosewood and the city league AUivision of the Texas Women's* Athletic Federation SlowrPitch 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 conuTbut to root for their mommies^Their husbandscheer for them, -too," he said. Johnson feels the secret to the success of hif Wam,"which"has only beenestablish­ed one year, is "a lot of team effort, "they never have any arguments, and • they do what their coaches tell themjo," he said. > -Johnson thinks it is-much' easier coaching a women's team than one con­sisting of men. "Women are more apt to • do what you say than menare. You don't, find as many of them wanting* to be superstars. —^Most-oMhm-really-do-noUknaw-ihe. game asr well-as'-men. When/we first started, some of them couldn't judge things too -well. But several of our _ .•0X. regular:softball; Th^re are.seven innings; . or 50 to 55minutes, whichever comesfirst, 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 10 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 pinion .that­women try harder than men. "Oh', of-course .they are. more emotional, very much so. Tliere is more of.a team spirit. _Ttey really keep, the bench alive and are consfanfljrshtiuttng'something.——— ks "The::men may -say something, like, viftqpme•on baby' but thfey 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 Gi^ens sloW­ " pitch 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 Auston parks. Coach's Comments "We have a good chanceof at least plac­ing 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 havealways had a "Strong offense.'* The El Doradoettes never get mad at their coaches but have a iot oi respect io£ them. Johnson's wife, Bettyj.ihiiicentally ;;«is third -baseman.. "That's no problem; members have been playing for a number k»f£thottgb," he said. "I treat her just like Ido , of years on other teams." •-~"therest of the wbmefl. But if 1didn't; then ^TjigjTilesdiffei^omewhaUromt^^ High School Basketball :-rrr. All-Star Boycott Urged ..-.HOUSTON (AP):,— Conc&ne Basketball _haye been named a long time ago," said Fans-qf-Houston,-Ef-localJ>1 up_callfid_ •Ralph Cooaer. a swSesmanfor the group. Monday for a boycott of the .'Texas High ; The organization is calling' on: £Ee blackSchool Coaches • Association all-star' basket-community-to stay away from Wednesdayball .game, accusing the selection committee night's basketball game, scheduled, to _ I—of discrimination injseLectipmf its coaches" Hofheinz Pavilion, by .distributing leaflets -and players.-- .. afid .through radio appeals., _Melvin Hobbs, who said he was the group's k Cooper said Houston Wheatley Coach . treasurer, questioned the THSCA's selection Jackie Carr often took his team to the state - J'-Jb v . v r't ' «fjr "M" n a,w players r»v^mg^H02st°f. basketball-championship, and yet he-had were picked for Wednesday's-all-star game^—-never-been selected ha« neve« !^L'^Vnlblack ^. A spokesman for the THSCA, Soapy Joh* selM^taUieorganizaUons 42-year Wstory.^son,said coaches selected tocoach in the all- If the (selection committee) would look at; •> star gamehad to be members otTHSGA,and ­the coach s record instead of hfsskin colororj%^ playersitad to btrnominated by theircoach'to his personality, then a black coach would be considered :.The THE MAXl-1. A new concept-in-one levels, urge be12:00 ALL THE SPAGHETTI fo* CAN EAT ONLY Serving Austin's Fiiieit Selection of Puxa,Sicilian Pie Sandwiches, Antipastoj Salads, Spaghetti r& .' Beverages." ­ Complementary Glass of . Wine With Each Purchase 23rd & PEARL ST. TWO -HQ.UKS ntB PARKING r i#. TO HIRE -iK |C^lvAW tJW F*!& IF you have ... something to SELL WM an apartment to RENT -.ft to BUY ia stereo-^1" ~ J i a house to LEASE, to find a JOB need to'HIRE someone • r-v ft S A 17 V1-« n54 ' VC' ,471-5244 and place your W k '?£% CLASSIFIED AD ' k^mmAn svnx .1-, THe ^AlLY TEXAN * t>. I 5 THE DAILY TE "'S-.t Student'Newsptiper at The University of Texas at Austin 'I 1 ?«jj <­ -• f-Sa r..~-sv n • , '.i?« iS?~-­ They'll Get Your -'Message!I" : " . * J • > •• -Tuesd^y. Jul/ao; 1974'THE DAaY TEXAN Page. 1 ' "'-"r -" WZi sfilW, •»,W «wte iiMiM ^iSF Takeoff Motorcyclemato-crost races wer« part of tlie1prafestival ©v«nti of (he Austin Aqua Fe»t during thji weekend. This isa seen*fromlast year's rate; Festival events this *(&• Week will be an adult ten* nis tournament, amateur golf( tournament, skeet shooting, kayak races, motorcycle races and a multihull regdHa. rvK ** . TEXAN ADVERTISERS-. & * 0*^ X* [•* ~ FOR YOUR ADVERTISING W, 1*7 PROGRAMT 'AIMED AT THIS 'AST-UNIVERSITY^MARKET SHOULD BEGIN WITH j^deni Newspaper of TIfe~University of Texas at Austin be published m AUGUST 9th 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 isrthe a&LX — Htudent markeTWpryourf^re^omi ^45,000,000 to be-spent this year. Give us a • S BIG SECTIONS! ' : ? " 70 Q&-MORE~PA6ii!lg v *• i * " t * r f p* < t I;T^S(^^u^0cW4JraEttoAIL^^ i Sfg w mp W&-? Women GainAthletictl~wf?! V"'-By LARRY SMITH salaries and will enable many give scholarships. requires equal funainJ&forjT On the other hand* •. 3U ,Texan Staff Writet-• of the teams to get uniforms i vv-a>v.-.. v The first 10scholarships for for thfe first time. schools as Trinity University woraeffs sportsTThe act'fenot­ -women athletesat Texaswere -• • The -money also' will go­have been giving women .a lawyet,.howeVer,.and&aoy approved Friday for the 1974-toward hiring -a director-for~ scholarships for years. c parts of it are unclear, J 75 school yea£ by University women's athletics. Hiisfall, a > Spurr's decision to commit "We.were all awareoEMiat1 President Stephen Spurr. temporary assistaht to Betty the 'University ,;to an Title IX was," Jeffrey -said, -•^Although he is unable to -Thompson,""director of aggressive athletic program, "•But we didn't make^ . recreational sports, willbegin budget funds for more than which will include open recommendations because of work, .with the n.ew director one year at a time, Spurr also recruiting, followed last it. We based our proposalslou; taking over in 1975. gave tentative consent to a week's recommendation by what we felt was morallyaw program .of expansion which The .funds for the program his Advisory Committee on ethically required.'' % will corffe from the$2 optional ii i would increase women's Intercollegiate Athletics for It is because of bne sectibtfv. feefor.women's^thleticsand Women. of T-itlelXthaMootbaliis5^' "President Spurr has been eluded when comparing access. Long the number (excluding .foot-?ccess: very supportive to the coun­number of scholarship has not bgen determined. cil," member Robert Jeffrey, between men and women; ' "I'm all for the ball) of male athletes' on scholarships and is. the limit 'chairman of the speech com­^ act excludes those sports scholarships,'? men's and; alltfwed by the Asso^ation for munication department; said. operate at a profit. tip*! ltatercollegiate Athletics for "I wasn't at all surprised that Jeffrey pointed out thi women's •. Swimming Coach Pat Pattersoft'said. -'We have Women. he approved the recommen­matters such as new coach) . a fewgirls that can really use dations." an>*' come^>ut here for that reason. Oakland. Monday thru Fndqjg£^, > I wouldn'i.-do that to anybody.' ^ "It depend^ on.how the arm , "I coidd Work but in Dallas, is," he said. "I've thrown the but to' me: that doesn't ac-equivalent of four or fivedays w £• iA SI. Wt» 5W »AH mgttrilk AID ' Cowboy camp to 13. Uu(JL Opp~l—-"IgOtmy timing COVERED PARKING Roger (during drills in jC, ]+Kis surif*mr wtHI! -Dallas h21—ssrid— Richards, " tool:.z&, "Now I need the book learnine-iv^ US! ^ HUGE CLOSETS .ofKaaror SHWASHER/DISPOSAL idrmk witKtKia xne cowDoys. draued .me>,;­2810 RIO GRANDE jfiouporiand pur-! when I had my leg in a-cast' I ehaafi. of a iand*' last year so.they showed good -® 'slink-_ t t faith with me.". ^ ELPATIO 'deli » 476-4095 I J m 471-5244 i Good FoodStores 4' "VK-T"-fl a *«• ?%': NaturalFoods^ B &' WEEKLY SPECIALS * ... No.limUsr—Specials good through Sunday NATURAL VITAMINS WTO A.D.L. Brand • S 10%off *' . dollar! !V The 1-iV HRODUC targe Daily California Peaches Texan 290lb. California Nectarine |Unclassifieds 390lb: !:: «oomaStf I , and place ' |* ' your Laroe Avocadoes Undauifhi . I gtudentsonlv^?' I Five Convenient tocationgf - 1_1101 West 5th at Baylor . " pre-paid r2. I23TEast NSHFrToop^m nolrefunds a 900 West 29th at Pear)-. ; Interregional at Ruridbera. 25th & Whitls wrm fHi •a • -gj'. sPB • aaaB.s jm? 1 l' ' . • . • . -V llIsS j: (Residents Desire Zoning Shift\ Austinites Challenge . ' • ' ,W I--• ' <*& w II ^rj By MICHAEL ETCHISQN said. deteriorated at-the same time and both .owners* Texan Staff Writer Many of the houses in the area, which extends ^willing to sell or:redevelop at the.same time. Tljg . Permit '"s' (Editor's note: this is the.first iff a three-from Lamar Boulevard to West Lynn Street and 'fact that a majority of the single-family/duplex part'series on zoning in Austin r centering'on a i. Sixth-Street to 10th Street, Were built in the.last development is well-maintained makes this even fiy SEN McHAM „ Recently,. Austin Savings THE CITY is withholdingsproposed zoning rollback west of downtown.). century. More" than 50 are candidates for zoning, more-difficult."• _ Texan Staff Writer-^ lr and Loan has developed three . approval of further construc-'Thursday,.76 Old*West Austin residents will ask under Austin's historic zoning ordinance. Nearly "We-aren't saying that Old West Austin has to A City Engineering Depart-subdivisions, partially within -tion in Las Cimas-until the- City Cpuncirto change the zoning of their proper­, one-fourth of the single-family houses haVg been be purely residential," Weinstock said. "There • ment-.-.permit for the the Walnut." Creek 25-year channelization is complete. ty. ' / -built since the 1931 zoning. • . are a lot of businesses that would fit in well with channelization of Walnut flood, plain, (largest land area Austin homeowners will be in­What makes (his request unusual is that the 76 1 ' "NO ONE has formally applied for a commer­what is . already; here, but the aoning Creek \yas appealed Friday by covered by a flood in 25 years) eligible' for. federal flood in-. are not trying to open a little, or ev/fen a big, cial or office'fsoning in that area," Duncan .Muir, classifications make it impossible.'-' . 12 Northeast Austin families. — Chimneyhill north of U.S. ' suranc'e unless the city • business .They: are now ?oiipd ''B''and want .to bCi city zoning administrator,said. "Informally,I un­ONE EXAMPLE she cited was an application Highway 290 and Las Cimas prohibit? .construction' within'rezoned "A" (residential). , ••••; derstand' that some people are consfdering-it" •for a-change,.by.a man who .wanted to open a The appeal wili be heard' by and Crystal Brook South 61 the 25-year flood plain by July ..-Jhe.last such zoning rollback in thearea, accor­Twro attorneys, Laird Palmer and Trev restaurant. Under the present'Austin zoning--the PJanitfng Commission, but • 290. w * 1, 1975. .; , -yding to a city report^ was ln:1959, when two blocks--Seymour,Jiave boughta;large hduse.at501iBaylor ;jijpaiicei he needed a "GR"zoning.-He-told-usehe.,: rib. hearing date-has been set; I*3* near now-MayorRoy Butler's house werechanged JSt. "We'd like to have oiir.office there. We don't hadn't"ever runa. restaurant befdre. If he failed, A majority vote Afc-the. sixri ~THE-TWELV£.Jamilies .._Ghannelization and dikes from "B" to "A." 'think we'd be bad neighbors-We-wouldnM-have -rany-Qtherl'GR'.1use could have come'in." :-member .Commission may" V a ppea1in.g the creek, are under' construction up-Generally, "A" zoningallows single-unit houses 0 any feason to be," Seymour said, " Other '-'GR".-uses include car washes, auto repeal or uphold the pecmit. channelizationlive in.Grystal stream in the Chimneyhill. • and duplexes, private schools and private clubs.-; • v;; Johb Galler-y, Univ.ersity assistant professor of repair shops. ambuldnce services, billboards, On fiirtfieF appeal, City Coun-•Broofc, whicli is totally wiihin development; and Head City"B" zoning allowseverthing that "A" allows plusi architecture, said, "Often what happens is .that department stores, motels, theaters and frozen ' cil may-reverse or affirm the the 25^-year flood plain.Austin Engineer;Charlie Graves said apartments. -, -i •-^peo'pl<^buyjnto an old neighborhood because they .food lockers. • , . ' commission's decision. Savings iiopes to. confine the additional Walnut Greek -J V-" . According to a survey by the city's Planning "like-the ch'arm for their office. Aftera couple of -The total of 85 original applicants,for the Old wider creek r ' ­ THE-PROJECT, which the flopd level to; a ^alteration will be required on Department, 67 percent' of the land in the area is .years theyjdboide. that that old: residence won't West Austin rollback-had dropped to 76 by this .,city environmental office op­channel, thus' removing-ffW •' •a*i,500-foot section below the ­occupied by a single-unit and duplex buildings work as an'office and want to tear, it down."-week. Some discovered their request could not be posed "until it. is the flood plain part of Crystal contested • Channelization pro-' with 437 housing units* Apartments with 307 units The Planning Commission got 29' letters op­• considered because.they..were. behind on' their-Brook and all' of Las Cimas. ^ject. demonstrated occupy less than 9 percent of the land. posing the applications, and 14 spoke against it. •property taxes. Others got pressure from poten-there, are no feasible alternatives," would"NtfBODY REMEMBERS why-Hhis'f "Thty.'re all:realtors,'' Weinstock said. However,' tiaLbuyers. widen and-straighten the neighborhood was zoned 'B' in 1931,"says Sandra;; after a campaign lasting several months,.she had If the'applications are approved, only the7 76 ; channel and remove the treesWeinstoCk,.wljp led the effort to enrollapplicants; • only signed up 85 residentsoutjpf more than 300 in. applicants will be directly affected. The ,im­and vegetation along a 4,000­"We think-that if its stayed residential for 40 the area. . plications of the change, however, wilTaffect not. . foot sectioh of the creek northyears with an apartment-jmning, the CityCouncil NOT ALL the land "zoned for apartments xould . Only their, neighbors but all of Austin. of Decker Lake Road.., oyght to zone us residential." -. .actually be u^edior them. Streets too narrow-for .THOSE WHO make the decisions >— the Plan­ (6UA0AIUPE LOCATION iCouncilmen Bob Binder,:Berl Handcox, Lowell apartnjent traffic make up 29percent of the total. ning Commission-and City Council — must coii--Walnut Creek runs east of ONLY) Lebermattn and Jeff Friedman are expected by Many, lots are too. small-by'themselves"to-hold"'' •sider~ti»Seimplications aswell as the arguments dnd generally parallel,to Ed orie person :_close to the issue to approve, the apartments. on a particular charge. Bluestein Boulevard in East applieationV which hasalready passed 'the Plan; Combining those small lots to get large enough (Wednesday:-Whoare the people whodecide .Austin. The. land,surrounding TUESDAY SPECIAL _ning Commission.! The other three councilmen's lots is:not qs easy as it might seem. As the City zoning matters in Austin? What do they think the-creek south of Decker attitudes are not-known. Butler and Binder will Planning, Department staff, report said;'"it re^ -zoning;is supposed to do,-and how.well do they Lake -Road to the Colorado ^probably miss Thursday's meeting, thissource quires that both neighboring properties must-be think Austin is doing?) jf-H,r j • River is relatively un­ developed. Bad Check Offense Redefined rcnt •Tht n"ft Um" yrn -pnid with a bad check t200,. confined to county jail tion (a misdemeanor or writing-a hot check for .last could .be prosecuted: only un­mofith's rent — just to get der sections 'dealing with amount of the check),­even with that "lousy" "issuance of a bad check,.".: --. -• Under the. new ruling, the landlord .-^consider, the con-now section 32;41 arid state has the option of pequences first. punishable, as a Class C mis­prosecuting under section Under a recent attorney demeanor. If convicted, ^he '32.41 (a misdeftjeanor) or un-' ^ a, general's ruling, a person in­person could be fined up to der the "theftof service"sfec-) CHICKEN FRIED STEAK TUESDAY tentionally writing a . bad LARQE CHICKEN .FRIED check to pay rent can be FEED A FRIEND FREE STEAK, BUTTERY BAKED prosecuted for "theft of ser­POTATO. OR FRENCH FRIES vice", and punished for a 2 FOR 1 SPAGHETTI HOT-TEXAS-TQAST. AND felony if. the.check or checks CRISP TOSSED'SALAD amount to $200: ift!Y "Under (theft provisions ot !1.39 3flP«ew?Benab€oAaf -nf falsa tOKpn"iS-inultV ;..m our Boat Moc_The hottest 2815 GUADALUPE :Shoe in the U.S. Brown leather of theft of"service,the opi­-Wrttv-WtHta—rubber snlo. Ritpc ­ 478-3560 1 nion issued last Thursday 6-9 »17. •n» -• ieads^euusy—TT*~—r : Apartments west of Ziiker Rark. "Theft of $200 or more is a 2100-A GUADALUPE NO TIPPING ~ telony-offense. Under -con­Jeflerson Square­solidation provisions, if 474-2321 several bad checks, totaling $200 or more, are written, the writer Is a felon." -­ FACULTY -s. Formerly, a person, who • ' I Xj HOW YOU CAN PUT YOUR Lt"f * campus ~ "flj O.R.P, MONEY IN AN news AUSTIN BANK, %SSl i, A In brief . cut out tobea millionaire? ' METTINOS V-,' i DtAO VINOOKS ASSOQATION Will meet CALL: 836-8230 >^ 6 p.m. Tuesday inIheMethoditt Stu-1 ^-dent MCLUB will meet «t 7p.m. Tuesday 1n~tHe'Union Ju'nlor iff*' the grand opening celebration-of 2^ Wffile you're"her§, you'll notice ST. our new bankVWHM inMl Capital Plaza.IU4.W. 4 that we'rew*; IC nowIIWVV twice the bank. Our ^ I IIICXI IIIC UdlllN. UUI if * ip' TTiiTr~^ si Citizens is giving away a week's^ J Main Building and the Citizens West W • Intorocf nn Q; mlllinn Hnlloro Cirniro ' KniMirtn n'mA i iA m GROUP HILARION FLIGHTS I# •m CENTER to New rout- from AUSTIN-' AlJ ciyiuuciuo. _ ii ,^ & dblldlU lUf yUUf lilUney.-• &5M _ , ^ Leava with a group Beginning with the grand opening 1 Visit during the Qpening or any • Return any day. &OOKSELLERS'/Nr ^ Doparlum: -i:iS festivities, July 27-31., 9 million -" "day . you're worth a million to •,Catholic Christianity , Aug. 10 M51 V / -dollars in cash will, be on display in Citizens National.^p^^p^ Aug. 23 . Aug. 31-Mli ii SM«KCh«: »' Mysticism • Astrology ^ . 'p''-"-the lobby during regulaVbank hours. • Comparative Religion :[[ Come in and tour the exciting QP ' WtltiVrn!W9%W new Main Building: See the HARWOOD .. /i'' mon^y, receive a gift, then_. CitizensNational HourslO-6 TRAVEL 1008 WmIAve. 472^0014 2428 Guodolope This time, rent a & neighborhood - instead of an .S-:• apartment; /—WW" -->• ?-« ^ ** ,1^,<3, 4 % > 4 ^ ^ Cf; SS • I­ •3b • {*&$£, N 'S K-fl «m^ , A nelohboitwod U people --people ill(e^»a.K:v^K> '.metlnaManoiher.In lh«Planfe«on;,.•: South ofiflhbomood,you cUrtrrve*typurneighbon alltwImpr9wlv»ancl penonable recreation A • s^»n»r^t^e<*'nfwiM90e9fliOlwwo(themonthlygath«{lno»,oron vourowntimeantHnyout^~:--­ =«»>Jsafc_/.7,' y-'^-y< u'" ­ 0ut.tt)e ("tanJoHon,south nelghbortioodhaiapartment tervicei,too -«u ily-fSiinraut lalntenartce and t»otoMlonal mamiBement , malnteoarice • -•' X^r«r uu. ' * "> Moil importaM now tor a SeptemberrrKitf»toirie Plontatton;Soolhneiahbot; iie«»tbon^/ouarepOylno(fcwterlww:spaitmenf. >*ri iliiit exas Opry House 1; 4 * Jennings' Shows By MARK PEEUT^-rofling. They arc about the best copy ... , , the jLP-^-!!,. "Buddy was softa grooming me,to Texan"Staff Writer Wand around and do some good" Ramblin' Man,' is also a single out be his protege," Jennings said' "lie Waylon Jennings put on two of-the original material, also. 1 now that is doing well.-Also.from tlte produced 'and " played on my first " best shows he, has ever, performed Jennings 'was backed up, as'usuql, new album came Jenmngs' tribute to record arid was really pushing me v.t.;:;Fridav and Saturday' nights at the7 by the Waylors4 comprised of Duke Bob Wills,''Bob Wills-is Still King in along when he was kHleki.'" Jennings J-Texas Opry House, but. he did not Gbffon bass, Larry Whitmore playing Texas," and Greg. Allmap's great said be plans to..use half of his./text'-receive a singlestindipg ovation.until•. rhythm .guitar^ Richie Albright on _;'Midnight Rider." album after.'.'Ramblinr' Man" for the . the close ofSaturday night's set. . drums, Don Brooks on harp and, j WITH NELSON, Jennings did Holly tribute. With the .originaL" However, all it took for the people without a doubt one of-the best steel "Good Hearted Woman," which the . . . , Crickets, Jennings has already In the audience to go e^azy was-Jen-players today, Ralph Mooney. For his twu of them wrote, and then turned it -recooled '• Doesn't Matter Any -twngs to say.'T'nvgoKfta^SskTitfriend. Usffc. tjrp;albums,.'"Honky -Tonk-:_ ®vef:.10 Nefton who did sevenwfc.hts -More*' "That'll Be-the Day" and .a. _;of • rnine to come' out'and help' me Heroes". Snd'"TUs'Time,'Jennings-o\vn"songs,'.'Jennings came back out, ' TO-rnioutfe'medley*of other Holly hits. • v some Willie^'come on/* Out strolled i i j •-in-..i ---" and the two closed out the showcjomg has been ableTif^SB'the.^Waylors in-, ;... . .... ..... ... „ JENNINGS also said'.that he.had ; Willie Ntlson and the.whole place stead of studio' musicians for back up, "Heaven, and Hell,'.' "Big Ball's in been writing more these days;, that: v«e;swaS.on lis feet and the. result is "a -more cohesive Cowtown" and "It's Not Supposed To. ( his writing seems to come-and 'go in not to take anything' away sound from stage to vinyl. Be That Way," which/was" a fitting, ."ipeUsy He recently purchased a new r-~Jrom Nelson — he's one of:the best-BOTH NIGHTS,, the order of -songs conclusion. ,..... .. '..-. Silver Eagle bus. that has been out-: " i-V 'pprformers ground and ip Jenning's Jennings' played' was basically rthe Between shpwsT^jennings^tajjf^or^fitt^ci-for touringr-Unless^i-performer---­ ", . -K)pinio4>th& best.songwriter—. hut_ same, ashe opbned with"Only Baddy. the. Buddy Holly tribute he is doing v has his own jet;a bys iike "Jennings'-is & Rliridv WfiTll/ trihuta ho ic' ^Ainn' Imc hic mim rat-*» kite lilr<\*.TAi%i4'innn< in .. Softer all,-this was supposed; to have That'll Wall4^6. L}ne,'' followed-by" .• Jennings was the-bass player forBud-* . the only way to go. • • been tlie Waylon Jennings show: '~ "Ask Me^o^'-^Lqiiisiajp ^Voman" *dy Holly and theCrickets for the short When not on stage. • Jennings is Zl: THE WARM-UP both nights was and • Sir -Arthur Conan Coyte, time from December,-1958, until never stilh Up and down, hp doesn't "The Edwardians" was s^iopm ' Billy Ray Reynolds, who used to play • creator of the-, detective Jennings pfayed all of his stahdanJ Holly's .tragic death in February, stay in :• one place more than a few. produced by the BBC. 2nd ^by:;,^,-> • 7 Movie: TnplePeotuccf-"Friend? for Jenhings.:Kriday night, Wild Bill fa'vorites (tjjere must be 50 of . 1959,'even though thfe two had played minutes. However, once on stage, he Sherlock Holmes, "tries "iis WGBH, Boston, for tranSmiS-'V/ jnj Lovers. "Oom.nlc's Dream*' and his Buffalo Yankees , from Buf-them) and some of the songs from his hand at some _ real-life together for several years in and •is all performer and a. good onb at sion on the Public Broad-and • Th? F<.S5 Porker show % .falo. N.Y.. did a short set toget things .newalbum which will be released in a. around Lubbock. i,~~/ that sleuthing in the-Masterpiece casting Service. 9 p.m. Theatre Presentation of "The ^ You Owe It to Yoursetf '­ •7 JHcc Haw . • ft , Egwantons.-''.at 1 p:m.Tues- 24 Marcos Welby, MtD *­ . 9, 36 (Jews ^ Village day and 10;30:p.m...Friday on- * ? 36 Police Story !! ?4.l Drefrm o/ JeannieVt^y • ^ > ... -'it. f NBC films Movie in Indiana 1 1 ^ J4* channel 9 , " .t/.9:30 • .-'.J: '-10t30 p m — 7 Hawaii Rve-0 • •••••­FEATURE TIMES ' 1958. • -The reason appears.Jo...be. , :The cast includes Richardi the man was innocent. When 9 eye tp€.y« — /TaKe^r,-"y->;.-.rv-'. • 7 Muviej •-Ttie.F.ivnd Who Walked • 1J0-U0-SJ0-7JM30 The 1,200 residents of partly increased 'sbphistica-• r-Crenna-as ia veterinarian, Lee' the" Home Office refuses to •. the West"-. •-* ^ BOM THEATRES 24 Movie t hc-'iGiiin and the Veyay, 20 miles up river and tion iii the southern Indiana Remick as. his wife, Cloris compensate the man for this # ,.vVp»frsbwrgh: A Festivat o? FoK ' v. Pxilpif, ' $t&rr4ng -Mario«" Gortfter, 1/I0th thesizeof Madison, are hill country ancUheabsence of Leachman as' a tough old miscarriage of justice, Doyle Estcile Par&ons, SJi'm Pickeirs/ 24 Wide Worl^j of Myitery j THE mm : pleased that 20th Century-Fox a celebrity comparable, to moonshiner called Old Mam lakes his campaign to the 36 Faraday -and Qo . ... : , 36 .The.Tonight Show -' "" . chos^ theircommunity for thfe Sinatra, in the "Son^Came; -.and an 8-year-old Indianapolis press_ _ ^ _P You Owe it to yourselffilming, of "A Gir.l Named girl, Susan Deer, as Sooner. R unniq^"' company >of 16 Nigel fravenportvplays Sir "• .. .24 Marcos Welby, M Dv •••fe.v.A r Sooner." It means, extras' 'years agd! ' " • Arthur, and Maria Ailken -: 36 PoIice-Stof-y y .-AAluinwi •. jobs for about 7S people. - • It is another of the recent-. plays Jean Leckie._ ' Relets Unilke "Some Came. Run­ 9 Wftars the Big Idea? ^ ^ > 710 E. B«n Whltt »444.2»6/'* BUT THE level of excite- rash of nostalgia: pieces, this ning," produced primarily for -"Conan Doyle'5 was "Written BOX OFFICE OPEN B:00 , ment iii V.evay is not much., one set in 1937:after the great by Jeremy Paul and directed .. theaters, J'A Girl Named ^UNCLASSIFIED" SHOW STARTS DUSK- Ohio River flo&l of. that year by Brian Farnham. The'TRANS, LAST DAY SI JO HI i P.M.. had receded,," " ~ Masterpiece -; CLASSIFIEDS "CAPT. HVkO" Theatre^ series FEATURES " T&~~1 WmH OWN 1:45 1«3 W.'Ba MWf »*L—MM331 2-4-M-10 21st & Guadalupe Second Level Dobie Mall 477-1324 | FEATURES'Starts TOMORROW! 7:00-8:45 BSESSSSSSSSSE BEST PICTURE LAST after your "WOW! A ­SOCK-SHOCK Miisi mmmEmmm DAY] ElRNi­ m what next? VERY BLOODY!­ --zrr^From-tM-msn-w.hc -Salnotgi. WWS Hadki RESTAURANT ; *--•* brought you -i l t • FISTFULLQF * / OPEN 24 HOURS DOLLARS' -2 Game Rooms J | PAUL : Pool>Foosballe w.Ue.sl p^ .451-9151 A-xJ o'V of ftic (urnesi -tntt»rv*w .. ROBERT fnUttul A FILM BY WEXANOflOJOOOflQgSKV Asrtkci FILM rfH? •'H'aniSl Anw.-rir,"'fP. foB j|v V ^sn/rw; j AinJalusmn Dcxj -IVw Wig wn*' $ C33QMII SCREEN 1 sr A GEORGE RQV HItL.FIlM J WffM DJViNE D*vd Lc.:K*-y Mtnl Stole M,fli THE STIWr." 3:)5-5:30^1.25-7:45-10:00$!.50 CWrtrd JoinWiten r»color bomBlrig GULF STATES DRIVE-IN ISCREEN 2 LAST DAY $1.25 for One " \710 E. B«n $2.00 for Both Riverside TwinCiivcnva nnui­ HI-568^ ?930 KivcrsicU* Drive NOWI OPEN 2 P.M. ON ANY SUNDAY FEATURES -'" E 2:00-5:30-8:50 2:30-5:00-7:30«9T45 A MCSST JMPpRTAN"? AND Z200H»aC9UDrm WitA\ RBTUCED PRICES TIL 5:15 ' and . ^CrTiNC5:^tMx8APl;ANOS (SHUOav Eff£Cmfg^UMASHi ^amfXTowr is-anuottDiNAim IT NfY 'KM6S BgPW ROMANTIC, FUN, MYSTtRIOUS. CYNICAl AND BKllUAMTT — Brig»I Byrnm, lot AngelasHerald examiner __ Md-Brooks "StJMM£R­ • 3:50-7:10.-10:30 M1DN1TE TONITEM" bC| [11 $13C >i! 6 p,m. H«ld Over / Graof Weqk( —'. COUHTYj UNE TECHNtCOtOR" ftWVHOfr I AfWWKIUNTfWa^IOl OPEN AT 8:001 FIRST FEA. AT 9:00 r?* TRANS*TEXAS |lwJH6W0 Bumei Road — <85^933 . HURBTI 1AST 3 DAY5I 51.50 Til SHOWTIME ' -maoMM tat name7 ACADEMY AWARDS PAUL /EWMMN/REDFORIA ROBERT SHAW | • IAST DAY 12.-00 ^ jSl7P£R FLYj * • • f I 2 LAST DAY 12^0 -1 -AGEORGE RCY ! "THE STING" TECMMtOUXI» AL»«VfRSALHCTUR£ |Fp *20th Centgry-Foxpresents PIUS! "PETE & TlLLIE"dt IT-JO LAST DAY "BUSTER AND BILL1E" TRANS „ NOW SHOWING/ ' OPBN1-.4SMI fCATURlS V 12224.Guadalupe St—477-1964. 2-4-6-8-70 littleAVRBEI* COLOR by DELUXE9 Starts TOMORROW! Sonof TRIPLE BILL " STARTS TOMORROW Hfiidrix alhis |«vk .. .... th<-hijtoru licrki-U'v Oirnt'it. ' -™"808®" -" — •'A.must'sw tor .ill Hoodrixjdn.UKS ,in' /••'*« '.'MS IS^TEXAS In «-«>lor trom Niw LincCimin,). PUIS! -REDUCED PRICES ipAl 1500 S. PLEASANT .VAUEY RD ... JMST OFF EAST BIVERSIM-DftlVP 444-322? ., nt'6 PM;MONNTHRU SAT. •­.^ o ^ GODARD .*2.00 x ""•iTURES -2:50 > WILLIAM PETES BLATTYS THE „*V;50til 6 p.m.FEAlUgES -J •iOHNWAKVK "TFENRIST "SympmhYiorth^" Devil (1+lfi -5,40—-­7:35 9,55 NO PASSES MO CHILD IINDtR M VtK 2:50 4R35 6:25 8:10 10:00 & ' U .If WllhOUt V -C»nD».NV TIMES lio» Ctofunq. tptp ' *** )"h\i I5sr • DaileyHeadline 'Majestyk'FaiIs To Rel —SfcS CDP Vir^?11 ,®3Mey»:' -Cgf DAILEY has most recently been seen by Austin audiences in By DANIEL D. SAEZ '• man named Frank Renda, played to -the two TV series,..'"The-,Governor and JJ".and."Faraday & Com­•••-'•' Texan Staff Writer bloody hilt by Godfather" alumnjjs A1 Let­pany." v'1" -­ . First we had."Billy Jack.:" next we were tieri. Ttie only"labor racketeering apparent Simon's seventh comedy hit details the misadventures of treated to "Walking Tall." The producers of in the fi|m happens-at the beginning,, when A three Widely different couples as they face crucial", thQuglftem->~ M^jestyk" would want us to believe.. Majestyk kicks an-assortment o£scab pickers• ,-;ji^y."nioments--m-their respective lives. The three one-act plays . their.effort.at social commentary belongs in off his. watermelon patch. The reason — he- are linked together by all opcurring in Suite 719 of New York;?' the. same .league. Don't believe it for. a has already hired, his own crew of underpaid' . jninute. . . • pickers _ ___ sjrenowned Plaza Hotel. I -[ ; iS Dailey has spent the greater part of his life in show business WANTING only .enough picjcers to harvest A .. ''Majestyk," the storyof a watermelon rM-and has-appeared in practically,everyj)haseof it: Beginning in" his crop, Majestyk . if .forced.-to retaliate .. rancher• in Colorado, is, like its. star Chajlfes r W vaudeville, he got his first break on Broadway'in""Babes in against Renda's intimidation of his tcrew in • Bronson, short-on subtletyand longon action. -M Arms." While playing the juvenile lead In "I Married an self-defense rather-than for "altruistic-'® •--ynder Richafd FleiscHer's aiiectidntBron-" Angel." he was discovered by an MGM talent scout, which,led_ rrreasons. •; • • son as Majestyk gives' Kikusual tough-as-Tiails* to a long and successful movie carefer. , performance, forsalaHg^iiaiieeof inter(Jreta-• With only-this cursory aside to the labortion for btunt, cudgel-like:reactioh jHIS FILMS include ''Give My Regards toBroadway/' "The • problem, Majestylt's motivations for fighting Girl Next Door," "There's:No Business.Like Show Business," .. back seem more economic tjian "Si BRONSON'S APPEAL rests Tii his­ "The Best Things in.Life Are'Free;.'.1, "Pepe," "Chicken Every humanitarian. A "Billy. Jack" it's not ' j presence. With a face like a windbl&wn rockfl; Sunday" and tn&v more. resting on a'pair of .iinbqwjed shoulders, he.?<© Linda Cristal as Nancy Chavfez ("no rela- Sharing the stage .with Dailey will be Bethel Leslie, whose TheGallimaufrey Pfayers-(f-r back) Erie Sparks,' Stephen Syman; fl.r personifies Screenwriter Leonard's idea of a ^tion'to the other Chavez, but I did walk m a : most recent credits include two and a half years as Dr.Mggie-, Henshaw, Karen Jones, Debra Voss, Scott Christopher Mclntyre. ' • I' strong-willed, no-nonsense Westeroer. picket line with him," "she chirps) and Lee . Powers on NBp's daytime soap opera "The Doctors." |~ Dailey also is directing the playhouse production. The set is . , designed by resident stage manager Leonard Wittman. -- Zilker To Present ^Errors' , The show runs Tuesday through Sunday, with a.matinee Sun-& day. Reservations are necessary and may.be made by calling| _ the theater at 836-5921." ' ­ If You Need Hfelp,-y w,t5 performances, a citynotedfor,magicians and -or • of .1he Com_edy of-Erroi^" in mountebanks. The plbt' isfjas-"" Just Someone Who Will listen ; the free Zilker Hillside ed on mistaken and' totally -Telephone 476-7073 At 'Any-* Time The Telephone Countellng and Referral Service- Your Complaints are just) a -ViS? |Si."V phone call away! 0 University Co-Op ^ Consumer Action Line 47M436--Mon.rFxi,_8i3Q-5:30 SHAKEY'S Prevents UNCLE WALT'S i--TONIGHT THRU SATURDAY • Serving your favorite Beer, Wine Coofen,. . -Sangria, anH-lXvathties of Pizza, 476-4394­ 291,5 Guadalupe 4w * 505 NECHES V "Block W. of Red River 472-0061 This Week POSSUM DELIGHT Tuesday is Tequila Solo & Sunrise Nite ArmadilloWorld Hdqtrs. presents KEN THREADGILL : .. & —-. h§F>$­ The Velvet Cow Pasture in the Beer GardenV Springs Rd. NO'COVER 477-0357 EVEY TUESDAY TRY A Ro>fRogers RESTAURANT HAMBURGER WITH ALL 'HE TRIMMINGS FRENCH FRIES and A LARGE SOFT DRINK Theater program. ' confusing identities-involvingPerformances will begin at two gets of twins, a wife wlto 8:30 p.m. Thursday, Friday-cannot tell her husband from; and Saturday. "her broth'er-ih-law. and many­"Gallimaufrey "an others. \ Elizabethan term for mixture . The Zilker Production-tifill. or medley.applies to both the be a' mixture of Several play andthe playersin this un­..theater styles^.including in-• ique production. f 1uences of the circus,­ LAST CHANCE -^TONIGHT JiMlfiJAMM THE TEX-MEX TRIP PLUS BOCKDANCErS CHOICE r J707 Bee CavesRd. 3^7-9016 —~t *.•••• •• — TQNIGHhSATURDAY PLUM m NELLY HAPPY HOUR 7-8 tap NO COVER Nf.WWlO.CK r lIVC FROM DALLAS FANCY SPACE ANDTHE R0CKIN RHYTHM DADDIES FEATURING BUGS HENDERSON • (AU«f«snu ATOtDHUCtS) „ i\ DOORS OPEN: ft HAPPY HOUR: 8-9 914 N. LAMAft S FIESTA NITE FREE TAMALES , TEQUILA. 50^-A SHOT^ LIVE ENTERTAINMENT ^;F FROM HOUSTON /. the modern American" musical. •The Gallimaufrey Players­ : are a new theatrical group in-Austin under the direction of Dr. Stephen Coleman 6f the University drania depart­ment,.Coleman describes the independent company as 6e­ , jng composed of yourig actors .with a vast range of • ex­' perience in professional and •community theater. LAGUNA GLORIA ART MUSEUM ^ustT^lmPfogram; August 1 A dancer's World: Martha Graham :-;J)ance!-GIeri-a3etley. Wa1 ker EvansHis Presence, His iSileiice August 15 19th Century European Art: ~ -Constable, Degas, ' pauguin and Atget . '^;lS ­ Films begin at $:30 p>m. by the Lagoon. ..'r' FREE! x , Call-452-9447 INTERSTATE THEATRES DOORS OPEN 7:45 PARfliVIOUNT 472-sin. FEATURES 8:00-9:50 713 CONGRESS AVENUE -THErQNE^MOyiEJy.QU SHOUtP SEE!1 Eg| United'flrtists 20-10 Col orfay D^L^e*'AnAJlli«4 Artista 51.25 till; 2i30-3:5 VARSITY 6:45-8:10-9:35 2400 GUADALUPE STREET AKn SktfkiFHii 3 DAYS! Riverside •J GULF STATES DRIVE-IN V Twii> inoiwrmvoumc oriw " ' 44146M IT'S A ^ BRAND NEW —TRIP with that DIFFERENT­BREED OFCyVTt Held Over^ theNINE r'l0v,& i°n. !tle lofeeo inferjetlion for ex- ploitation purposes of the farm workers'"- -.movement. In Hollywood lingo it's called "the continuing, cause cBeTjre^n^SThenca's' southwestern states — the confli'ct between . altruistic leaders-and unscrupulous labor , Menddzai is Ingratiating lo a fault But even withsp6c4i' 1— • ­ spectacular shootouts and cha£e scenes that have to be the most expensive commer­cials' f6f Ford pickups ever made, "Mr-Ma­jestyk." unfortunately, .is sUU onlv half a harvest ' 2oq*CAi)EMy TONIGHT " ANNEX: SUMMERFiELD SliovvTovvTvj USA Hwy.mv4Qm«6w »&36^$84/^> HIGHLAND MAUL. at 451-7326-IH 35 AT KOENKSIN. 1:00,2:45 ;"S5:I 4:30-6:15-8:00-9:45 ^..Boisterously funny old-time farce... For all loveh..^ 12:45-2:30-4:15-6:00 7:45-9:30 |1 Hurrti 452-7646 • IH 35 NORTH ENDS THURSDAYI CAPITAL PLAZA Academy Award Winner 1.-0«:4«as fcOS-fcO-f:» THE CHEAT AMERICAN COWBOY LARRY MAHAN Village SSEfSf VtlUGE_| Cinema -JPour t§ ,y~Jy 2700 W»il AnltraM L«m 4SI-MS2 MMEvmnEit mice»n ,.:MARRV (>EtAFON¥E 2nd ; As Geechie Oar» ~ _ - Wwkl^ssask. —- . They.get; funny when you mess -withlhsiL , money 12:15-2:15-4:11 »:I5-8:15-10:15 PASSES-SUSPENDHD i PHICtS Til 12:1S MON-FRI. " ». ». ••• "• 6ATIJKUDAV MI6NT •••• r* .,v» .••• Held • Over 2nd'. We«kl j 12:15-$1.00 2-40 tl Cfl T2ii-;5'-50 ...allit takes is ,, R«dat*d Pritti Moo-Ftl a little Confidence: P6 ••Over­4th Week ** ^ Ladies VS Price Ticket All Times ^ -Passes Suspends} • Reduted Pr)t«s HI 12^0 Mon-FiT K50-2:JS4SPBSaSHCTart0r TVV'i' " $>2.00 1 ',,•»"$ 1 lifen.loye„Sury(vaL.Tha Greatest Adventure Of All.. We will trado you>a mug of beer for your o/d. op Cci» bj ' Fraternity or Sorority composites, paddles or THEWHITE BEfcR » FOOSBAlL • PCNG usabla decoration.. Open til! 4 a.m. FRITZthiCAT THE BUCK£T v Paste*Suspended.(R) I Corner ]9?h & Guodniupe 477-6829 FROW HAR0fN-N08ffl HRS.'lRIE PACKING ^Kmv^mmwagiiCKM Reduced Prices til 1:30 MomFri UO-3.M-SJO-7JO-9JO r" ' " ' 30,-1.974-THE^IL^TEXa^age^lJ7; \ lii»li§»i fgp^ 'E-.kv;.1^* CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING •.: FURN. APARTS. FURN. APARTS. FURN. APARTS. RATES r,; HELP WANTED TYPING IS word minimum-" v. .1 -Each-word one time v^J&vi,*..'.. $ -.10 'Each word 2-4 times..V;.::.v...v$ ,09. • Musical-For Sale SUMMER* RATES NO.WI Six blocks - $130 up • from Law School,', ShUttle-bUs. One FROGS DON'T FLY Just North of 27th Each wetd 5-9 times....:.'.. 5 .07. . WE .REPAIR, air.sfrlng.Instruments, WALK TO CAMPUS bedroom ;M30: Efficiency ;»no;--AC. :Each word ID or more times ..$ .06 V -1 BR Furn. -i -Now Leasing for Sept. BUT: CRAZY CAPTIO.NS DO Student rate each time.75-' gulta'r*, . violins, & bah|os, etc. EFFICIENCY carpet/'dlsnwaiherf disposal, walk-in. , CATCH THE EYE -Guadalupe , , DulcJmers made to Order/$39 arvd up. closets, 32nd and Interregional. 477-0010 , Classified Display . coJ. x 45eoff Menke/1624 Lavaca, 478-7331 ^JTanglewood • 1 BR -$145up orOLMHt. ..." ' asViLarpeefficiency,-paneling, built-in 1 inch one time..........$2.96 sv.*!kltehins, furnished, CA/CH.Very ctwe ,_c U\pAA Atn ^yL"*cot x 1 inch ten or more timQ&$2.37 • GUITAR guitar, mandolin/ STRINGS...Save and ban[o 20% stnttgs.. on atl « Annex 2 BR ~ $180up . -|vJoammijvV, >10 W. Wh St. ' LARGE tmfuroUhed. . 1 & Shag, 2 Bedroom wet.bar, furnished private and' club offjcevflve frlindly atmosphere, aiys a-week, Jutr *ree.parking, ohaart tlme,' . \. ^ / (J A • 1. col, x I inch i^9 times-::....S2.66 13J5 NORWALK LANE a AC Paid J47J-45W • rooms, , from—bonuMs^plu«-:^alarles;^cklL451*2357 M.B.A. • Amster Muslc,-1624 Lavaca. 476-0948 on shunt*;;-]^^ bedroom.. _ " B A * Central Properties " S149 50 ABP.. 2 bedroom SV69.50 ABP. between 9 a.m. and1p.m., or between 5" —-;-;Typinj>.MUU»ltlhing;.binding' 1 --'MAOUNE schedule PIANOS AVAILABLE_fbr. studtnt 1200 .Broadmoor 454*3885, 476-3633, p.m. and 9 p.m. Experience pays more;.-. __ SHUTTLE BUSCORN]ER ' rehtfll, $85 for 3 months. Amster Music, Tanglewood North Barry Gllllngwater Company..: . but not. necessary^ • • The Complete Professional ? Ttrttdey Tixta Moodoy...y.; HtOO o m .1624 Lavaca. • " , „ NOW LEASING POft SEPT. =MVj,'T • WALK-TO CAMPUS FULL-TIME Typing i_ 1020 £. 45th ^ i Wednesday T«xon Tw*«4oy., VI:00 o.m. FRQM S79 ALL BILLS PAitX EXCELLENT -SUMMER RATES on 1 452-0060 •" spacious one and two bedroom service , t Thurtday Texan Wtdntt^ey. 11:00 o.m.: . ; Misc. -For Sale .. .. Shutlle Bus Corner ' vRooms, Efflciencies,l& 2 tedroon^ apts. . apartments;Fall rates reasonable. Call ~W­ $125 plus E ,We are remodeling these apts. just for AAacDonald'sC-RESUMES " 1 . Friday Texan Thondtfy 4-\ 1:00 o.m. •Colorful ShagCarpet • . Check Our gu^mbr Rafes { • r rt;.-: ••4S4:?475.-;V :• V/. ^ . you. New shag:carpef and drapes. AU TOP CASH PRICES paid tordlamondi; . NoW hew. unit in Oobfe withor wiWiout pictures. buIIHn kitchen,.pool, CA/CH, Oid New hiring, for. ouir 'old gold. Capitol Diamond Shop, 4018 n. .. * Central Air ENFIELD AREA. Two bedroom with f-ull part-time positions. Lamar, 454-6877. • •, v . '. •every extra. FurWshed or. unfurnished 2 Day Service .Orleans Style, ind-.sb close' to campus, Center, or • Pool Warwick Fall Rates 311 E. 31st St. frpm $t5Z .plus electricity.. 807 West ; available. No experience necessary. . 1 In the • event of *npn mod*' in. cm:. LARGE INNERTUBES for swimming • Shuttle Bus 3 Blks. LUXURY 1 BR' 478*6776 ' : 451-6533 Lynn; Barry GHUngwaJer'Company,477-Apply, in person' at Obbie Center 472-3210 and 472-76721,| «dTMtt«*m*n|L bnmedtol* notice mutt*be or kiWng:AW sizes to choose from. $3JOO . . Central Properties 7794, 472-4162. ; . :. . MacDonald's. S*ee Brad Waits. Monday*: 2707 Hemphill Park • 9h*»at the pubfoberao/« rmentlbl* for up.' 2201 Airport Blvd. -" RETREAT Friday, VamrViam only, -r-v. ontf ONCiMiHTOct insertion. All doiim for 7 LARGEt ONE BEDROOM. to $160 2 BEDROOM Walk od|vihbenh • should bo -mode no< fete* BA-CICYAR-D.-,PLANT SALE, school, study-area,: carpeted, disposal, lhoni30 deft phir publication.'"* APIS. -Easyliving6 blockscampus $225* ALL'BILLSPAID : cable TV. ,sun deck, CA/CH, > laundry, , L BromeUads, .Orchids and some 4400 AVE. A 459-0058 474-1712-2919 West Ave. • shuttle, great location, ABP, summer ­ • tropicatj. 4407 Ave.'hf. E^sf of EUsabet ; Large 2 bedroom, apartment,, shag . • Neyfytyseum. .1 . .. . ctfrpet, all bullMnkitchen, CA/CH,pooC .rates, .Fair Leasing. 2812 Nueces. 472-PART-TIME I CHRISTENSON &~V" lots .of trees. Each -apt. has' Its . own -• :6497.. • STONCAGE .. LAPIDARY, art* ~ NOW LEASING POR ^EPT.. privacy fenced patio or balcony. Walkto ASSOCIATES • HELP . campus. LOW STUDENT RATES JEWELRYCRAFT/-Unusual. gifts -and ONLY THE BEST COMPLETE LUXURY,' Two bedroom • 15 word mintmuOT each day ...» .75 Utilities paid. 2 BORM -7. Bath. Shag and efficiencies. Fall. Rates. 24 Flats Waitresses/Walters^ Bus & Kitchen. 5:00 A TYPING SERVICE 100& W. 25W Each additional word each diyfc .05 supplies. Good selection :of—semi- carpet, panoled, walking distance to uf. . .«• p.m. •. 110:30. p.m. Friday and Saturday.. precious states and mountings: Rough and Capitol.:JJ70-S3J6,--v-.j 478-5592, , • 451-6533 Apartments.-15]5 PalmaPlaza. 474-4322, .1,1:50 a. a.m. -10:30 p.m. Sunday. Specializing in 1 cot. x 11nch each day.;$2.37 rbek,lumblerxjbooks.' Open9:3p -5:5) IBedroom Furnished . 'Central Properties 474-2163. Shuttle .bu^. corner.. ..Unclassifieds" 1 line ^ days ,SV,00 Also/ private,BDRM A. BalK {m chok­ .. 5915 aurnetjtcadIrrNortftwexfShopptng —• Catfish Barn • tP.*e,paidr No'Refunds) Walk to .Class . ingI for one person. Mo/mo. ' : — RIO HOUSE one-bedroom apartment ; —Theses and dissertationstp: Center. 459-6531. Restauraht -.r.. • >\ 'Students must'show Auditor's . Study: rooms, laundry room, beautiful -1 BEDROOM -fro.m..tl2p • $140, furnished 3blocks from . jLaw briefs receipts and pay;)ft advance in TSP versatile .LONGHAVEN courtyard and plenty of parking.'1802 campus. Large poollirbeauttfulsetting, v 288-2899. : '; MID-TOWN COMMERCIAL * 11—Term papers and reports Bldg. 3.200 (25th A Wnms} trom 8 building, 2400 square feet Adjacent 37th : 477-5662 • West Ave., Suite 100. S150 ALL BILLSPAID Call 472-1238 or come by 606 W. J7th at % a.m. to 4;30.,p.m; Monday,, through , and GJAialupevShop* warehouse-retail SHUTTLE BUS CORNER 476-55(56 . , Lots of glass, unusual floor plan, over-Rio Grande; SELL FLOWERS.Make M0-WOworking" Frldiyr : ; ; v ; • cafe/rLease Sa?5, 5^1^.540,006. „ sized pool, on shuttlebus, fully carpeted, 4 peaceful days a week. Thursday, Fridayatternobn-s. Sa^da"^ ''•—J—-•»S^y.Vl Prp^t. Professional ! riday •"»•'»»»•" EFFICIENCIES $115 plus etectrlcttv, ~*y6J95'.~ • NOW-LEASING. FOR SEPT-. pool, ac< pels. r :• • ' • Consolidated Realty, Jack Jennlng$r474- CA/CH, kitchen appliances, cable TV. day.; top commission: Paid daily. 476-&j@&r . -.bfifVICG - -= 4209 SbeeQway cflrpet, paneling, no % WILLOW 3060, 453-1508,.453-2761. / • ;• • 453-8101 FOR SALE. W9i< 451-5433 Huntington Viiia^ 46th and Ave. A. 454* '• MINOLTA AUTOCHORD, 2V4x2fc, Central Properties1 8903 perfect, s70. Leica*type.35mm, pertect, . 1?icl<-ufc,$ervice Avalfable ' -" wanted -ARARjMENT^MANAGERi 1 -*,VK ^¥aMawic SAN JACINTO ARMS,.170^ San Jacinto " Prefer married; Send resumes to Box --4 .$40. .Winchester <22 -match' grade air Walking distance University> Capitol. 1> ' :$70. Sanyo:portable I3f B8.W TV; new, $160 CREEK 1668, Austin, Texas:. > '.;.j • Auto -For Sale rffJe, perfect; $30. 474-4738.s 1 Bedroom NOW LEASING FOR SEPT. 1 BEDROOM 2 bedroom, 1r2 bath, CA/CH» tarpeted; ­water^ gps. cable paid.'No bets,$U5 up. ROOM, BOARD for. long session 1974-75 1hAll Brlls Paid -ss-r IBORM , 2BDRM 476-0920,4724838. ' -* -in exchapge^fOr helping .disabled Jit'71 OATSUN J40-Z, AC-mags; excellent '"l",7i,pL,A.X?0X' "°u'%• Walk to Campus ":i'~ $154."%LLBILLSPAID student. Anyone Welcome to apply. Call TYPING . Reports, Resumes f. funning, .hail damage.' S3400' or will' ' men'l/£°yfclothipg^sizes^ Husky, 18- $175 . $220 Close to'campus and shuttle bus, Mr. John Ffowerv 476-7374.; Rich S99J0. DARLING EFFICIENCIES-full -Theses, Letters •; negotiate. 454^S3tt b^fe 10:30,.after ?*?*> Miscellaneous.­ Buckingham Square wood paneling,. bullMn booksheives, kitchen, quiet residenffai neighborhood. All University and . ALL BflLLS PAID 711 W. 32nd : carpetiog.throughout( CA/CH, all built-walking .distance ' least .2 . ^ V .,'70 VW; runs good. new starter, radial vg^-il-_.,e'_ _J.'I>>1—•— Shuttle, downtown. NEEOvTECHNICJAN .with at bujlqess work ' : t2res, heeds eh/t«hatdlustmenf. 5875.447-' ENGAGEMENT RING,Center dlarnond • • 454-4917 • . Dishwashers • 2 Large'Poois • in kitchen. 4307 Ave. A • ^ Alsoleasindlor fair.-V11l West10th, Apt: -.years experiencel^repalrof hi-fi. Apply ute Service ' '4849. surrounded-by smaller ones* Karat, 5EE OUR SUMMER RATES-- 1 : s ^Security .• 454-0173 • 451-6533 106. 476-2155. >p person Sf^fertlhg : Electronic?; 1712 Mon-Th & , . new J270-.Self S225. 476-3347 after 5:30: > Ctubroon^ Votteybali Court • Central Properties -Layaca. 477-5866. 9 5 Frl-Sat v: ^ ­ -1 BLOCK from Law School. Tower View K\ MOV£ JN TODAY SI& or^st orter^r^T^O.1600 wa3°°' M^HOME-BUlLT Sailboat-with trailer. : NOW LEADING FOR SEPT. , Apartments. Large;-nitely decorated, : .NEED .INSTRUCTORS ; (n exercise, !., •: • -$150. Call 447-8528. 1901 Willow Creek ' gas/, water, cableTV paid.*135. #o pets. dance, preschoolers sports, art, crafts, 472-8#36~--• 3ilA Dobie Center EFFICIENCIES. I and 2 BDRM from ^IT2-0191: gymnastics.-Call Pam, Austin '67. FORD GALAXte 500. Good, Wean -444-0010 Recreation Center; 476-5662. $-l?2. Beautiful efficiencies, ai$o 1 and 2 NEAT, ACCURATE afld Prompt typing.' ­ ;$i45 ; car, AC, radio, new tii^s.CalJPam. iSOO. EL£-CTROPHONIC ' AM/FM 478-4029. -• ».v; player/recorder, 1150; 18" 1M,W TV, ! BR Furn ' bedroom apts, Heavy wood paneling, THREE.BLOCKS 1o campus. Rooms; 2 60 cents per page. Theses 75cent*. Call.. J5Q;. Decca 8tk. player^ S23; .unused -/ -.fully carpeted, a(l built-in kitchen, open.' and-3 bedroom, £pecious->older ASSOCIATE^ .TEACHER (afternoon), 447-2737. A'. ' 1968WILLISJEEP,17mpg,Vinyl; metal camp stove 115; T.M.C. tenhls racket, beam ceilings, CA/CH, pool, easy i apartment building..'1 ABP. to $240* aide (morning) ; for church day-care $120 ABF "'QSi'maoSr G60.X)res^2wheei drive. 451* 11^441^79(0.. Tanglewood West -' NOW LEASING FOR S6PT . bicycle dlitance to campus and close to plus bills 1902 -1904 Nueces. 476-3462, center. 453-1M7 or 472-9400.; DISSERTATIONS, theses, jreports,.and v shuttle. 4200 Ave A 476-8683 law brjefii-Experienced typist, 472-9614. 476-0948 :4544423 -454-6533 SWISS WATCHVH00 value, brand new, DRUMMED for'versatile group, Tarrytowh. 2507 Bridie Path Lorraine:; 1403 NorWatk Lane ' y '63 PO'RD nAmLAMC. CleanrUo*-.. .. shuttle Bus Corner automatic .calendar. S75. Clnetli steel Central Properties AVAILABLE NOW $110 -summer*.fall -progressive country-western dance. No • Brady. 472-4715 btne kgHetTTnew, make uffer.-^71 4M3>" tondon rate $129^0,Vary near UT.One bedrbom--hard rock.-Must be dependable. Bret • — mileage, vlery dependable, good daytrme. 478^062 p.m. Oale. • NOW LEASING FOfTSET -apt ,•-air -conditioned, .carpeU paneling, Liming; 4S4^82K v STARK. TYPING. Experienced theses.:' wul. Water, nas paid-dissertations, PR's, etc Printing-and.' 71 GMCl-tonvaa V-».automatic,r«no,-Jp-sP«Ep 31CVCLE...Raleigh Grand $195. EFFICIENCTETS' . in luiitie heii condition. AC, Cail 472-4356 after 5. . 377-1355, 454-3164, JDbNi d N.»tw:-o«t»ratii-.-iulii»f^ti-in7.-~ Prix.-2i.-ftame^E»ce|lent condition. : with childrenan44ldhMwusewoH«H. -2 BRrPtfRNI LARGE CARPETED EfflcJehw: 2700 , someohe.he re; mb sf 'weekends. 7 -fciMi h»»fw-P^nwmii-. ­ after 5. •. • ••••••••• Att^BillsPaid 'xwltnar Ma^It I .u.--ion ^References required.; Please call' 476-'HOLLEY'S^TVPIN<5 SERVICE "Atrtr-frltL5-PA^D &1973 PLYMOUTH SEBRING Pius, has NIK.ON PHOTOMIC FTN camera body. v. Summer Rates Start Today •complete service from typing through, .•* everything. Fm'^tered taper nice: Red, --Perfect; condition,-justrcfeanedr; — Antilles Apts. ­ .1 BR, I BA • 2 BR;X BA -3 SR.3 BA -seed furniture, bug, NEAR CENTPte: s • w/ANTEB SERVI white. $2665. Danny, 472-7664. unwarranty. $250. Call Tom; 441-W36. ~ trees. 4504 Speedway NJEAR HANCOCK CENTER, 2 bedroom WANTWStKviLfc Airendanttor loSl j ExUijei^edTnelHW^^ar^mpu^a , 2204 EnfieldRd. -— town house, $160 CA/CH/4708~Depew ' — — ^ -•'• MM'Mdhte BrBw?-«waMl -I^^A^^-bpetttlj^^tMslOQ/hbur.. 452-4252 ~ 47856439.: SCHW1NN Varsity ments bicycle, . . 472-1923 h' tbtotK east of Red River). 453-4253.'­ *1972 HONDA 600 Coupe (car). 13,000 LARGE POOL-ALL BILLS PAID Central Properties metallic green, physically and SHUTTLE BUSFRONT DOOR * FRANCESW/OOOS TYPINGSERVICE. ' NOW LEASING FOR SEPT. T • miles, radios $1,500.-474-4176. • '• •mechanically exquisite, $85: 478-0849. %g& PART TIME {fELIVERY and Experienced, -Law, Theses,­6 00 -ft 00 p m only warehousing far liivenlt, furniture and Dissertations, Manuscripts. 4534090. MOVE IN TOPAY Best Rate on the Lake j ^ EFFICIENCY ROOMS •toys. "20-25; hours/week. 3»th at N. ..GOOD USED gas stove and refrigerator -, /'" Central Properties -Hang It OnIn Highland Dupllpat lng "Service— Theses.« PONTIAC ' NIKON F2 body; Al( bills Mali.:Apply 10 a.r•m. -% p.m.. Monday • : dissertatlSns, .'papers of all kinds,li 7 TO N Lamar 478-7225 lens Cash only Other accessories. 472-paid. 6 blks from campus. Fraternity •' Saturday. • . resumes. Free' refreshments.-442-7008,1 -$155 . 5721 House. 477-4355 or 477-4981. • 442-lM6i • 'it NOW LEASING FOR SEPT. • EMPLOYMENT ,A.T After-School. GREENGLASSHOUSE plants for cool •r 1 BR Furn . r;r 2 BR -$.184 >414 Arena Drive " -V,i3684, 476-2^51. • Extend-A-CareJ 478^842 . mlmeograt^ilng. 442-71M t* 1972 HONDA SL100, Betor Shocks, 1200 3100 Speedway 2 Bedroom-From$210 •* miles, excellentcondltipn, orange,adult- v'^"ONE ROOM in house for rent. $75/mo 3 MICECH1LOREN:Housekeeping. 8:30 owned. $4)0 Firm. 474-5617. TRADE OR BEST OFFER: 27" Kuban; 4 477-1685 "Furn .All Bills -Bus ' VIRGINIA SCHNEIDER DWtrsltled Sieu sew*up4 Rims for Alloy-clinchers. MARK X>C 5s ^ Slh * •^uH of h0o$e' 406 w*st 5;30 Monday. -Friday. Thru Aug. Call Services.-Graduate and undergreduat«< Share labor cost 472-3323 •••.,•• ,454-3953 ...• 452.5093 " SHUTTLE BUS CORNER Mgr. 442-4124 Anne Barnstone after6or weekends. 477­ NORTON 850 -$1595. Honda's: 450 - W98. •• 4 ^3815 Guadalupe IBM Electric typewriter.. Very clean,. AW CONDITIONED, furniihed room, mTr^^'iS^Vurr5' S-L 350' ^ P*'-d' 155 EXPERfENCED M7.1>75, SECRETARY. M»S, SL 125 .$550, CB 100 -t Mihi-Apts. Ss34 River, 476­ Papervtetten,. envelopes, prootb SERVICES '282-2038.' JERRILK I ..reading,:'ttrammaflcal-correctib __ :tionsv*» All BiHs-Paid^ ATTENTION " HsrPak •StNGfcE-RQOMS-foc-meiu^tudgnt<, ^ accurate. -SO «apld, cents/paoIT' ' '"•'.HONDA 360. Excellent condition. FALL LEASES Large jjtJcjiujcles -cl'dse to.shuttle bus and 148 Call 478-8290: Gtelchen^452-3>69; 4S1«2332. ^ SeeH^ndrlvewaY of 207 W 33rd or calL STUDENTS«i|ii Color-coordinaled, open-WSm celling^. —^ 1 • - From $128 ? 4- Bedroom- FuHy-tlwalcarpeHd. All bulH-ln NICE SINGLE air cnndltlnnM rftrtm. GINNY'S XyPIW5-PRlNTINGrBINDING Theses;^ p D Q Service Company, 5444 Burnet kitchens CA/CH, pooU _ 7 JW/monthrSSO# WhitiSi-477-7558. — 1»»4 YAMAHA RD-250 street bike. 305 ' 4000 A*e A Il I BR Luxury • :v-hw Road, 453tf788,* nas r at end< 'of term; Specializing ,.in UNF. APARTS. 'SERVICE • Walk or Shuttle . & AUSTIN ^SECRETARIAL SERVICE; refrigerators.and deep freezesv-All ser­~=^-vlceW$S12:00; Ako--weJ&uy.*ppHen«rs _ ^ . to UT i --/ INC. 180? Treadwell. Street.Typing,: dictation' ~ Stereo -For Sale ---APTS. by shorthand jr-your machlne. themes, : working or not.-.-• .E.FF, src',l,,K;Wr•l• 7* MODULAR STSREO SYSTEM by BRAND NEW EFFICIENCIES : blie,5«!j?* ' no'atY - Catallna. Includes turntable, AM/FM 708 W.-34th -FACULT Y ONL-v' MP?m&mz Jep* playet/recorder, 2i large speakers, VACUUM, SCfE^TIFIC,-4544294 $105 ABP 1906 Peart 332T5obie.Mall_ 4/6-9171, bepuflfut In perfect condition $350,442-LABORATORY," .WEATHER ; .: 2 Bedrooms, 2 bathrooms, ABP. Cable; —1700-Nueces BEAUTIFULPERSONALTYRING.AII Close to pampuau Beautifully furnished."" •l.end 2 bedroom $152.50 up. Shuttle, Free Parking your University worki Fast, accurate,, 4943 after 5-30 EQUIPMENT & Shuffle Route. Roommates furnished.--laundry, pool, ,Jrost>free irlg;, garage reasonable. Prjntlng-BJndlno. Mrs. AM wtth big balconies for your plants. INSTRUMENTS-v ^parking, elevator. Involvement with ' 7 a.m. -10 p m M-F ' Bodour. 478-8113. ' $150 Sommer piers'electricity., and WALKING DISTANCE UT,' 2408 Leon .r large student co-op optional. '•zszt'.v . 9.a.m. • 5 p.m; Sat. Pets -For Sale WE WELCOME SPO.T deposit ". . bills paid,. AC, -paneled, -" 476-3467 Rent Is negotiable^...WM MIDNIGHT-SPECIAL Typing Service. Manager • Apt 201 PURCHASE .BIDS. FAST carpeted, TrtJol, no pets. 2 Call 478-7833 i-' Experienced,, all kinds of typing. Low 478-9058 r -WISH SETTERS* Beauty, character, SERVICE rates; .FAST SERVICE, Correcting companionship, absolutely .the finest in bedroOm,:H90. 1 bedroom; ' Selectrlc Piqa/EMe. 837-S2421. • ' 1and 2 -championship breeding $l50/pup '• '-'J2703 Research Blvd.. S145-S150.301lWhitis",NO.105, includes shots, worming, registration, 258-2023 -... KENRAY : 2 BEDROOM, 2 BATH/1200.jpuare feet, VW REPAIR pedigree. 476*0139 after 5 Mon.-FridayrAfter JO... BEDROOM J Jusf-North of 2?th & 45,*76,4f 'Quality work at reasonable prices; We , ' APARTMENTS \ a m weekends, -J-' >-«M9T9ln?5{S91NO,'m A.Ui"n- -caji give youbetter service fromour new. WISH SETTER Puppies. AKC, fine from $135 . Guadalupe* i, ^ . _ ' -Furnished, paneling, allbuilt-in kitchen, . s^op.at 1003 Sage Brush. Freediagnosis, m* champion bloodlines (pedigrees CASUALLY YOU. ?I22 HancockDr. • compressionVchecks and esflnmfes. on.shuttle bus, poof, and sun-deck. Shag available). Born July 14, 1974; deposits Tune-up on starKiar^; VW;-$10.50 plus * now accepted Males $100^iemales.$90,: . ^ Creative OutdOor Portraits.. : . Next to Amerfcano'ffieatre. walkingdis-carpeting/ CA/CH, Individual outside UNF. DUPLEXES parts. 836-3171. Please Try us 837-6724. tance to North Loop Shopping *C£nf*r ' "• THE storage. 392 West 38th St. %^/cJuk Awn -•73?.-Save-VsrNow—rr— and Cuby's'one half 6lock-fronr$huttle-' 451-3154 : 451-6533 ' Overseas Engine & Supply FREE PUPPIES! Settervmlx. AN >"iji Visit Our Studio P.'"; • and ''Austin transit 2. bedroom • "BLACKSTONE'^­ i—i—^CentralJPropertles * DUPLEX SOUTH, contemporary, >2,'. tv -* . ^ shapes and sizes. Gait477-6251days: 452-townffouses. extra large Tvoo bedroom -'^•••-•AHORTlOfj ALTERNATIVE. Pregnant Apartment . living ' block ' -l' and durressed? H«)S-H is-/ie»rai your ' .-..YES/.wedptype . •8637 evenings Craig. ROYCE PORTRAITS , flats, one and two baths, CA/CH/ dis­$'50;0D/month ^•an^AvKabl'e Aug^8 from ...r 2420Guadalupe -472-4219 hwasher, disposal, door fo door garbage • campus, WALK TO CLASS • telephone. pco-Life Advocates S10 West pickup, pool, mard service if dislred, individual; applicants ?.E LWS badroom duplex, AKC DOBERMAN Pups;black and rust, matched with compatible ?JSfrl?9^ 26th, 472^198. Freshman themes?' * room- champion bloodline. 926-71*2. v ' • washatetia In-complex. See owners. Apt. • mates.. OLD MAIN APARTMENTS ©five, unfurnished,' 113 or call 451-4848, . New one bedroom and e^flcrency apts. Keep • CA/CH, $135 plus bills. 444-4296 • SWIJWtlNG ¥*< . IRISH SETTERS AKC.Champion -2910 Red*Rivcr » ' —476-5631 Now leasing for suirnmer. and" fall •tying. • LESSONS: Experienced, Certified Instructor. All abilities Why not start out with ! Father from Colorado, luxuriously FURN. APARTS. A PARAGON PROPERTY VU •1Be9,n"6r semesterJPrTce_rangei fromJ120...>165.... ACROSS FRIOM TENNIS courts and 5! Senior:Uf»>;.My pool or coated and'large boned. Quality-trophy WE RENT See et 2503 Pearl, Apt. 4 V yard, ^.good grades! shuttle. Three bedroom,-fenced y?.ur'-ProuPV Private. 478-M01. »».ui .vi.ced yai•winrting mother..Pups sele0fVely bred ^•77-3264 -• dishwasher. S94A nin« iitiiitta* • -• :. * CA/CH, dishwasher, $240 plus utilities. for rich coat and calm temperament. • 258-6252 after 5. Ready for adoption August 25. Reserve AUSTIN-COMANCHE ROOM & BOARD :'^472-3210 and 472-7677 M now. 377-1875 APTS, •-1­ 2707 Hemphill Pirk GERMAN 5HORTHAIR Pointer, Furnished 1 bedroom >& Eff. Apts-l'V puppiei, JO weeks, shots, wormed, HABITAT S&isi ' xM Your time is valuable " blocks irom Law. School. $110 -BELLSON-OORM for Men. Excellent pointers, .retrievers, companions. $25. -*-Our service is free $135/month plus eiecfr'cMy^Gas, Water/ FURN. HOUSES meals.: Air-conditioned, home cooked -HUNTERS SOUTH v> ROOMMATES .459-6684 evenings. - Cable furnished. CA7CH, pool and laun-* NEED AN APARTMENT ~7. PARAGON " .2800 Swisher ^ SHORE " ­ BOXER PUPPIES -AKC Reg 8 weeks F-OR FALL? . LAKE AUSTIN • 15 minutes VACANCIES Summer/Fall. HOUSEMATE;' WANTED: Share two ; 472-5369 . .444-5233 or 892-0743. • • • GIVE US A CALL! ' '^PROPERTIES 'APARTMENTS campus/downtown 1, 2, 3 bedroom Male/Female. Also Vegetarian. Cheap! bedroom laroehouse, 503 Texas. Couplesold. Flashy; Fawruand-white. $85 -up­ 585 $140. Contact Inler-Cooperanve Qouncil COT^sldered; Celling.fan^'flraplace. 472-g l Habitat Hunter* is FREE apartment-mobile hornet. to Mack's 476­locator service, located in the.lower Marina. 327-1891, 327-1151. • Homes -For Sale • levehof Dobie AAall; We specialize in stu­^ 472-4171 S'St S? H).,-;-^3202, 472*4162. Barry Gllllngwefer Com-• University areaMpply bymaltfo 6005-A 1, CA/CH,.carpeted. Huge trees $1500 The South Shore's central -location Shadow valley Cove, AuMIn, Texas. LOST & fOUriD . ROOMMATE WANTED. Own room, down, under $156/month4 Owner/agent provides easy access.to U.T>» 28M299. * « 1^ Park near. S45 plus bills,Mike; 4^94937,. . iLOOK UT STUDENTS J" Come by and see our new efficiency and ­ COMMUTING FROM San Antonfo • 2802 Whltli• Walk to Campus.2bedroom Austin.-Need ride Immediately, willpay •'.LOST,CLASS RING,? reward, 477-0368, FEMALE TO -SHARE nice I bedroom s I bedroom apartments on the banks of FORMER UNIVERSITY lessors 4 . MOVE TODAY Town L^ke.. C-omplete with shag ask for Chris. evenings'" t efficiencies,-large bath,kitchen for 2or 3. gas! Diana, 512?736-4943 (Sfen Antofflo). apf. beglnnlng-Septr--J77.50" ABP, near $119 '' bedroom,.2 bath, library sound proof. Enjoy tcnots court, swimming pool; gas carpeting,, accent -wall, modern fur- Near campus. *35,000. $3,000 down' yiHs. lovely courtyard. Four-color-1 Bedrooms -mture, plus an individuald#ck Overlook- persons. $165 for ? persons, $190 for 3; -campUMniUmittle.Wrlte: Diane,-916N.­ persons, plus elec. Parking,, maid. ix Jefferson, Mt. Pleasant/ Texas 75455;' . Owner, carry balance, reasonable scheme*, sea blue, sexy leopard; orange r Shag»Paneling ' jng the water. ^ __ interest. .No agents. p;0. Box O-l. and ;otA"T : Auguif . first of sooner. 444-6825. . Carpet, porch. 478-6844: partially furnished, washer/dryer. . .1907 San Gabriel: ' " 1 bedroom; airconditioned. Efficiencies . ' HEPLIN -> A i $130 .plus -electricity.. Parkfrtg/ mard' - ,i:r. ..lW' RICHARDSON Mobile Home. -FACULTY ONLY. Central heat, AC, University Trailer c .INTERNATIONAL service/ nicely fuCQlshed, 4Mi blocks to: -SOUTHERN ESE . f«rlf. Lot Np 65 Available Sept J 477-. «lngh> and . double t'oom campi/s, shuttle service; 1?06 Pearr -NEED' ROOMMATESK-oneand^two • 1870, after 6 and weekends °««* an<» (or fall wrth or 453-3235 Top of 4 story building' -»225 ^ -APTS. , ^ t, »room apartments, from 165 Afrr 6. to see without board 20 meals per week On ID bedrooms^J baths, ABP, short lease« -Loti of'ti'eei bdoI' 'AC bMm'r*Minnt ' blocks to-campus.' 4764467, i. •' 1—rfi.'?JSSW» rolile. Pool,: parking. FromK Cable, pool* elevator; garage parking. P»Ei INSTRUCTORS ' S97/month All Bills Paid-• ' • ' . ,.;f-Ell^Ei4^aM^lc«ion«;bedroom -3-TV2-Cul-de-sac-2505 Lon^gylew • .Call 476-7833 r^ g WcJtyiT llWP'g'elom^.^oiu_ihtJt»te^^poQif_ 1007 West26th i-" 459-0007 For/ Poverty—schools . Huge,fenced yard Good comblnatWn for courtyard, laundrv/ample (antmBrbills ^J^jL-TOWH^IlQWSE^offRlverslder^ throughout m. Nice paid. S145. 2505 -Enfield Road;-.4ft^l7f' r hC. smaft famffy freVs A modest «Wf!,7,|!M7 rSap^-loOLCome. Mexicafi-AmericanZ^^^lf^^lpftil^ listed . jo hurry • home, but so's the price ((23.950) Just {after 4 00 p m.7. , ­ __6* Children ... You oet-S75/mnnth. .rrtnrnp,3 Large I bedroom, dishwasher/ disposal/ dishwasher, sl59rplus electrldfy. :)7r7 bCdfOOfltxflnartiMMt..' mIp ,rAiullilHM^­Lee Phillips, Realtor, • cable, pool gas & water paid;-' Enfield BLoeKS' we-st op " boa'"d/ transportation,Ujisur,ai)cs? Irf­478-976/ (after 4:00 p,m.)P. and^javpald $129 j •472.343» » 454 2054 Large, new 1 .bedrdom-tfudlosi tl»g, ,fOf FALL very near UT. S129 50, one CA«SE,T : .2 bedroom fownhoAe-$170^: Newi^ 0| OP. ServLc£LMT]TTTra--r^r irl^' decorated, «j)uffle bus-1 »• .-r"- New; large ^efffcfericfes/;' living, -room, APARTMENTOR+IOU5EHUNTJNG? ' MUJT^SUBLEASE; apartment Dy Aug. of,i,tbeJre^Wtfe.^vJX' volunteers^~^^ --<1^ s-t.; -<-rr,...nw... wr offsef bedroom8> kltchen, table./ " -.J*}'V!!L1 -'r stay wlfh— US whlfiji y»u look.' Fm) " I*J-476-3757. Anytifrie A^onday -Fr'' FURN. DUPLEXES . Anytifne/Monday-FrJday^ Ga> lurnlshed.;Summer!-$l2V.OO GASA-POf^A j •" ; .ftfrnltfiiwt, kitchen, color TV. J""r 5.D0 p.m„anvtlme weekends. "" weekends 472^514 ? -Call 472-1784 service, feleahom.' DaliY' end'wttkW: .APARTMENTS > end * RED OAK AWV~ rates*472-1571.. 1302Park ^ -v1 STUDENTS SEE THIS.Waterloo Flats• " 'kerLane 2104 SAN GABI^llC' .Garage.Sale -For Sale ' o*,i Sorm/1--Ba>h. iFurnlshed or" SOUTHoverlookJng w . ,TWO . -SINGLE BEDS'/ desk, fA5'45!t?e LIS* 404 SWhrMafure Sullt-ln^applfeflcefi/^Alt.eiecfric, ' ?»» »ble, walk-lns,pool. ^ -;iI MiVf:noih'iriS( pogi/ • -•• — ~ 11 wl vliv,v/r''-WW'complefr kitchen.-Closeto si ^r-^a}la«o«.49(» RoMl^gwood-DrJv. ^utlre'^'TSte^ wether/rfryer-c< • „ lon<. 'Carpeted,. Town (.Mce From 8 " •Xjj^«f^l«tc TtfSs >?.f x-*; _ "ora similar material stretch-etfery foot it drops in theair\. ' .. _ »v$ j' .—^ >^i"*- Yamaha Guitar PG150 $ns: 4S9-93SB MISCELLANEOUS ii Jewelry;. African and Mexican Imports. . 46)2 South CongreM. 444-3814,-Closed HL Monday* __ ^ii:EARNTO PLAYGuifar.-Beolnnar nnd Advanced. Drew IbdoWiflli, 4/a-2U79. ­BUY WELL PLAYBOYt Penfhoule, etc. Books, records guitars, Tewefry, radios, stereos;. Aaron's; 320 Congress-,downtown.. . , ^ i4i SAILBOAT »ndir«iier.-sioop ri99eSTUDENT PUBLICATIONS c_ ».> ^"1 and , ' jS^vf ST0DENTWVtrENVmONMENtAL:PROTECTr COMM aTS# ^ said. He hopes to organize'a hang gliding. "meef-sometime in thelatter part of the summer where fan's can vie for flying' awards. ­ •T A GROUP of aerospace engineering students at the University recently corn­pteted a morecomplex type of hang glider called an Icarus. C "% •&£ & v^4^£-& Structural Mechanics. laboratory. 'cil's decisions, which are reached in private*;.';;. • .t "Over the^earsvwe.haye:feltthat we are only a • without exposure to public view," -->• z, universit policy -and budgetary recommending group,'* * 'VrO: Shultz, Oniversity Systemattorney,-said he=. Thompsonsaid; The, council advises the regents on -. Jiatiadvised Thompson-council meetings were not?:' dispensation of the fijughly $3.3 milliorf annual in-subject to the provisions of the act. He refused to " come of University intercollegiate athletics v comment further on-the legal reasoning because Thompson said the "athletics department must the attorney general's/opinion had been,requested. ­pay $1 million-annually to ether college athletic^' ''' »he open meetings bills was passed in 1967 and;­.departments whose teamscompete at theUniversi-^~<" amende?! in. the spring of 1973, The afltiendmenfcx-', ty. The council advises the regents on the remain-"-defmes "meeting" as "any deliberation between a---' ing $2 to 2.4 million, Thompson said ' . «vr q«Joruij»-of • members. (academic); ' CMB,-Communication Building (studios); CSC, Catholic Strident Center; DRM, Drama Building; EDA, Education Annex; ENL,En­giiieering laboratories Building; ENS, Engineering-Science Build­jpsr; EPS.jEv^P. Schoch Laboratpriesj..ESB, Experimental Science Building; EXB, Extension Building;'FLC,; Foreign Language Edu­cation;Center; GAR, GirrrisOn Hall; GEO, Geology"Bmlding^ GRE, 1 Gregory G—:—'— """" " ' — . — Economics manities R Journalism Building; LBC, I^itteran Bible CJiair; ECG,'Little' Campus^ Buildihg_ G;* LTH, Laboratory Theater; MBE, Music Building East; IffiZ,-Mezes Hall; MUS, Music Building; NUS, Nursing Building"(1700 Red RiVer); PAI, T. S. Painter Hall (for­merly the Physics'BuUding); EAR, Parlin Hall; PBC, Presbyterian-Bibl^. Chair: PEB, Petroleum Engineering Building; PHR, Phar­macy Building; RAS* Russell A.' Steindam Hall; REH, Recital . Hall; RLM; Robert Lee Moore Hall (formerly the Physics-Mathe­matics-Astronomy Building); RRN, Rifle Range; RTB,< Radio­TeleVisio'vBtiil.ding; SPE, Speech Building; Sim, Sid Richardson Hall; SUT, Sutton Hall; TAY, Taylor Hall; TBC, Texas Bible Chair; WAG, Waggener Hall; WCH, Will C. Hogg Building; WEL, Robert A. Welch Hall (formerly the Chemistry Building); WOH. Wooldridge.Hall. • ', ... Tvnwv Tn RVAMTNATJOV PRRinng • MTWTHF7-8:30: Tuesday, August 6,9-12 a.m. MTWTHF8:30-10: Monday, Augustsj 2-6p-.nv.-~ - MTWTnj'!40-344aai-Sa.tmYlgy,. Angnmt 3,9-Tg"g~m.v ; : : ­MTWTHF11:30—1: Monday.August 5j9—12 a.ni.1^; * MTWTHF1-2:30: Saturday, August3,2^ p.m. -z~ MTWTHF 2:30-4:Tuesday, August 6,2-Sp.m. , • • Late afternoon tlnd evening classes: Mondays August 6, 7-10 p.m. MWm?i i.t SATURDAY . ,, " August: 3, 9-12 a.m • . Grade reports for these classes* are due in thedepartmental office by noon, Friday^August 9. 07760 C Sn310: PAI24. 07796 C Sn348: RLM5124 07800C S-nS52: WEL313 • 01390.E n392M: PAR8B 1097trECOil387tT-BEB-865' 02080 FR n391K: BAT 318 02700 GERn393K-:BEN302 13380 LIN n394: BUR 232 10H0-PHY n352K: REM 6112 m V MONDAY August 5, 2-5 p.m. (Classes meeting MTWTHF— . 8:30-10) , Grade reports for these clashes airedUe in the departmental office by noon, Friday, August 9. * 4.if 05380 AST n367M: RLM 6104. 07836C Sh375:'%LM 6116 27590 CHE n384:TAY 141 09350 Mn381D:RLM 6124 " 0993ffP S n367M: RLM 6104 ^ .05040 SPN n391; BAT318 15000 VC n380:PAR 201 . MONDAY August 5, 7-10 pjn. . (Classes meeting late afternoon and evenings) . Grade reports for these classes are duein the departmental office , by npon. Mdayj August 9. 10268 PHY n396T: RLM 6120 • TUESDAY August 6, 9-12 a.m. (Classes meeting MTWTHF . 7-8:30)­ Grade reports for these classes- are duein the departmentaloffice by noon, Monday, August 12. 09400 M n393G: RLM 6126 TUESDAY ,'• • August.6, 2-5 pan. " Grade reports tor.these classed -are4ueanthejepflrtnjental.office_by noon,.Monday,August 12. M 0T750 C Snl05: BEN 222 07790 CS n340: PAR 201 02690 GER n39^: BEN 302 14150 SOC n384K; BUR 228 :No;jtna?am. They're better. ' Remember the times when you. used to catch a lot of flack for short dresses?,Now­^ adays, ypu can stroll (rather quickly of f^v -f course) across campus carrying your short dress. And nobody minds. And remenxberwhen male visitors in your qiiarters were athing of the future?; the future is no\^,and it has been for two years, at Tri-Towers North. Once upon a time we had male visiting regulations in all our towers. But no longer. sv; • W? ' ftk fi ^ how,Jimes have;changed. For you and youran.801West24th — 476-7636^man. 1 '::|i W ' * ' VJfsJi l^s-,are the same. For instance, our prices haven11 gone U]Msince 1969. Ana we're still located in the heart of the student neighborhood.just two and a half blocks west df campus on24th street. V L ^ •Vo if, j^ £ m * r zlJUl » mm ;'"il ^1—jviB -•" T V' |p ;• • • — i WSSM imimmmmmmmmm ;"'ri"^--.TO!?^-:'.?^^ rM; ";^llKittllSiiS^^S^ jggpga BbmVwr»a»! _1 -~ ssssssKsssr Wmt^, wE^esw "*'* 4 -§*? 'i^ft I * ^ " l^T"'TT <*"*VV' sspi ®S»8IS 1* Women's?*Unity Debate a1 r SSPSssfffifS TWPC Venders future Goals, Pf6blems'7'M By SUSAN LIN DEE"r?^. .'.'I don't -think wotrianhood feminists. What the move­ "Our goals require Chang^Texan Staff Writer « mafes a.person any more ment-needs, in" another view,'" mg attitudes,"jshe said.' " t®5'One of the major problems qualified than another person." •is' a .hroad-based polftical Ernestine GlossbrenneryJ the Texas Women's Politic&l .Honesty is what is impor­system "16 support its can­ chosen as the caucus'' Woaia'n^ Caucus-faces is -the., basic... tant,.".. one, Austin delegate^ didates ' , of the Year, said women n&ve^b . political differences •• among said. / - AT tHb" FRIDAY meeting had a hard time reahzing-tt&jfef iwomen and the difficulty of This disagreement on even Hickie spoke at length on the cannot always agree. ; i^^o5! defining goals which apply to the mostbasrcfoals mayhave superiority of "women in are. Bot-shock proof. Democrats and Republicans, resulted in-a continuing politics, an attitude which has must accept each other as * bla,c&$-and whites and young decline m membership^ historically been the downfall are," Glossbrenner said. 1 S^ and, old.. -JJonvention-attendance ,yas< .of womeri's movements. She Plans fpr the next year iAt its convention during fchfe JesyWaTTKalForiast year's, their turned -around lo in--,-dude ipassiva, member: weekend in Dobie Center the and some of' the unsolved troduce memoers of her Staff, ' drivp's as the caucus tries caucus 'decided to conduct,a. issues could...weaken: the including after-each mtroduc- SC" become representative of --statewide• -survey,of. women;s.^_organizatifln!s.pollUoaJ-effec-v -tion "the "numlwr • of children: things wfiich'sre ihinorta«t3£&m feelings about governirient tiveness IBat pereonTfea " -'"S • • s=,s>m •• k'-.TV-T and political involve.ment. •i&.c&$X?#m SO-FAR, .Texas....Mary Louise Smith,-vice-Members may take ihfe a^® MEMBERS HOPE that by Constitutional Convention -chairperson of the National -vice of Tucker who skikeepinjg in touch wifh the delegates are stiU Hstenipg4o^^epttbIican^mmitte&^spQkei-^!i!h^: 0f snrressf^ SlSifSI , "average woman";they can what the caucgs .ha? tos»y. to the group Saturday;-about Dolitics isrfo^ make^ their organization a When "a . Constituti wfkal' the problems of a Republican constituency. ;The-purpdsfiT^fe purpose ujtemore .potent 'force in state­Conventioin.reportwas releas­woman, in-poll tics; _Shesaid not.to.lake a.^tand for orlti politics. • ....... • ed Friday, containing a com­she accfepts . the lack of against impeachment Atten­ The Texas caucus-is "com­ of prehensive analysis Republicansm the National tion to those issues can only5posed almost completely of • delegates^ votes on key Woman's Political Caucus as sharpen our awareness of thei white Democrats,, and -this women's. • rights issues, reflective of the generaj differences between women.' situatiori has grown" more1 .delegates who were listed as-• dearfh. of Republican's < troublesome in the last year. • being against the caucus»- "They-are'listening to us yourself with the party ofyour -( library or; any Wfiaf Carrasco Wants..r this caucus is, to survive, it now, ahd that is an-important choice,.even if you use the I branches areofficial Oniver must Spealc-to the issues-that---step,'-'-Hickie-said,.~. ..^ t TNati.onaJ: Women's' PoliticaFT Guards carry supplies to meet Fred Carrajeo's demands administration building as thiTinmate keeps his 13 cap-i" are-important to women," ^ity. .<^wiiwlM'Wwi»:-r^au|ri :and guns int&tKe mqm entrance of.the Hurntville prison .tiyfcs under tlose guard in the librory.-. . But some of the;«wfucus Caucus as a, vehicle ta-lfarn"" Ing immediate aHentian^ j keynote speaker C. Delores leaders' rhetoric isconsidered about politics," Spiith said: i; T uck er, Pen nsylva niia ' by some as enqugh to drive • Smith recognized the need secretary of state, said Satur­ Gos Lease Case away all but the-most radical to define goals'for the caucutf. ; day." ' • v.' Issues such as child care," equal pay, faircredit lawsand May Swell Fund Barton Creek Park tough rape'laws relate tb all • wom^^and;T*these~:ire the 4 By BRYAN BRtlMiLEY Shivers, assistant attorney leased for oil and gas prbduc--'brought against Mobil Oil Co., issues ''behind . which we Gets Council OK Texan Staff Writer generator.natural resources fion. should unite",-Tuck& said. Sun Oil Co., Texaco, Inc., t '< kind" lease case ag^nst-a:; Amaco Production Co. and the City Council at its Thursday njeetingr -• < The settlement*of an. "ili-'! and energy, said. The state THE MARKET value of the TEXAS CHAIRPERSON -;One of Austin's largestpark acqnisitteffl's was approved by now will negotiate contracts. petroleum on which the state Jane Hickie said the Gulf Oil Corp.­ Midland gas partnership could : The proposed park' covers more tha« 200 acres in the Bar- On oil and gas producing lands ' receives royklty is set by the organization's main 'goal is to ... provide an . additional J1 every year, he said. Federal Power Commission ,Th« Austin'chapter of --get women in political power; tort Creek Area. City Manager Dan Davidson said the park; million .for:. the' Permanent is intended to preserve the creekbed in the area. Most women could do a' ' University Fund Atty. Gen. A similar case,was resolved ,-^15 ra'es. °" the Red Cross Is seek-, . The land is part of a proposed.greenbelt area from Zilker better ]ob in, positions of Wednesday against the Exxon maW °' the leases were set fog volunteer drivers John Hill announced Friday. t povJer than tjneri who hold • Park -to Loop 360, .Jack-Robinson,; 'director of the Austin before the oil -shortage es- 1 ; ,.l y The case, against BTA. was Corp; The: settlement coufid to'transport disabled ~ those positions now," Hickie Parks and Recreation Department^ said Monday. calated the market' value, il, the sixth* settlement of 27 result in a ^million increase' persons. Drivers may' .; The council,authorized the city to begin making offers to which has been raised iJy the sald:4 -J? cases -filed' by the attorney in .the" Permanent University 1 . use Red Cross cars or the; seven property owners of the proposed park area. FPC. • But this, is-another' issue ~ ; general sinceMay, 1973, toob-Fund. . ^ . ifheir private vehicles. ' which divides thegroup.Some ; Davidson said it is too early to-know when the park will :,_lThe_suits are_ based on _a_ ~— ^ainJsjnjTi^rkpt prirpsor pay­Tfte casei were brought by " U.S:. Supreme Court ruling memberssaid Hickiehad mis-_ •open, what its name,will be or what facilities will be "Interested? Call-478­ ment in Irinri frnm nil untt fffl" the attorney-general,on oetfaif -available. — --— -„_L that oil and-gas coippanfM" -16(H —sed-the^pointproduced on leased state' oi tne university Texas' sftould pay royalty on th^ es^" lands^Since the.beginhing oT ^System, the StateSchoot-fcand- BaaullluMBlt onltl bands xamisdeci market value at the the year, an estimated $15 Board and Ijahd Com- anlwlne a brilliant round diamond time of production: They were" -million ;.Twlrl" -madeexclusively -against-27-companies-i LOUtS E BUCk by Orange Blossom_ revenue has been indicated hy portion of the;'Exxon suit; leasing 95 percent of the state, AHNOUNCESTHE TRANSFER the settlements. relating to the school board is lands involved .'in oil and gas ' OF THE 1616 Royal Crest ADDED INCOME to the still.awaiting disposition in • production, v Permanent University Fund district court; . . .. eases-',have been settled AAAA VETERINARY PRACTICE 444-6631 HOUSE CALLS A leading choico .oPthe Riverside will resulj. from increased . From teh' unsettled leases, against. •Shell Oil Co/, $3.3 Dr. apartments because we offer i'4~p royalties and the ability of the the state receives a one^sixth million; Atlantic Richfield, TO * . extra-spacious living and-diroct m-J state, under the settlements, royalty onoiland gas private-$2.8. million; Aluminum Corn- DR. ROB ABRAHAM iKsw;*' access to the 'Shuttle blis. -to-receive gasJor. lease; payt. ly produced on its lands; Of FOR APPOINTMENT _pany of America, $1 million;' 1-1 $165 ^ ment instead of mone^r. The the 2.1 million acres^owned andGetty-Oil Company-$700,--- CAIL472-5879 TONTHMU^ state couldsell thisoil andgas 2-1 185 AlUNMU VftlAM under the'Permanent "Univer­000. • -mt 9OAMM0I J7W worfT». .on-the open market, Linward sity Fund, roughly half are •• . Additional" suits have-been­ !&S; TUESDAY SATURDAY James"taytor WfeMngMan VV\ID(>»r H>S Hiosom HAS HERBIE MANN lmltulc-». \iJa m« SOUTHER HILLMAN *l.uJ.imv Itiilii11 lij REGGAE .-toSaW — FURAYBand i.» It.i^ i.ii.t rautesAtomJ MyGuHar< Daddy 'sBaby Air)iNo Song-Facing/W*ay * •&/ 1 asylum j: FRANHIE MILLER'S HIGHLIFE BLUE MAGIC Incijdes &jc*yofdBkjes/n "fetea MototS- MICKEY NEWBURY &0crah&ocrah0i6tdSff5" I Came to Hear the Music Bridge wbtcrw lncmd«D«yol|hee»d8 ' TtwFodmdM./AbouttoS,#, LadyLove Mmmm & ir^f%W BOB EVLAN/TH6BAND P ANO RAGS ~ Before the Flood BysCOTTJOPUN" IntoJn _ VOUJMESUJI Sr«W^r(»Ufy7H/»r. ReGorttedllvn JOSHUA RIFKIW.PiAlin. '"" d'Mss 5, Per Disc Per Disc **ho sa List 698 st""98 -By bo on an CO l-'mrmi I* ICK '.an „ n 'ti HOURS I MON,-THURS. 2310 GUADALUPE . fir •M *' x 1 1?RI. ^ SAT. 478-1674 m< -mwdnn 'Hi ^ag^-lilyesday^K/iyJO, 1974 THE DAILY TEXAN" * " r Mf.C ,7«u