T h e Da il y T e x a n The U ni ve rs i ty of Te x as at A u s t i n Studt Vol. 72, No. 162 Ten Cents ^ < 7 / A P R IL 3, 1973 Fourteen Page! 471-4401 Local bo, coft Impact Slight 1r*°JnT» ny MARY BA R N ES Texan Staff W riter A ustin m e a t r e ta ile r s a r e being affe c te d b y th e m e a t b o y c o tt, alth o u g h only a few a r e e x p e rie n c in g la rg e d e c r e a s e s in sa le s , a sp o t s u rv e y show ed M onday. of th e T h r e e s to re s c o n ta cte d nine r e p o rt e d d e c r e a s e s in m e a t s a le s M onday a p p ro a c h in g 25 p e rc e n t. T h r e e o th e rs said th e y h a d n o tic e d only a slight d e c re a s e . T h e final th ird s a id th a t M o n d a y 's b u sin ess w a s n o rm a l. All of th e sto re s sa id they' w e re e x p e c tin g to b e co m e c le a r th e effe c t of th e boy co tt by W ed n e sd a y . “ W e c a n ’t tell fo r a c ouple of d a y s y e t," sa id R a m iro D iaz of G u a j a r d o s C ash G ro c e ry , “ M on d ay is tra d itio n a lly a slow d a y .” m a n a g e r L a w re n c e H e rn an d e z , of L a u r e n c e ’s S u p e re tte , s a id . " T h e h igher the p ric e d c u ts a re a m o re e co n o m ica l c u ts like g round beef a re holding u p .” little off, though Eight b o y c o t t e r s picketed the S a fe w ay S to re on 35th S tre et for an h our M onday afte rn o o n in an effort to convince s h o p p e rs not to buy m e a t. J im Cox, th e s to r e ’s m a n a g e r, e x p la in e d th a t th e p ic k e te rs w e re not a sk in g th e s to re to sto p se llin g m e a t. “ J four th em a s r e g u la r c u s to m e rs ." h e sa id . of “ We g a v e th em coffee an d soon a fte r th a t, th ey le f t." recognized C ox’s sto re , w hich 25 e x p e rie n c e d in m ea t s a le s M onday, p e rc e n t d e c re a s e s e rv e s stu d e n ’ c u sto m e rs, though h e d e sc rib e d the boycott a s b eing “ p re tty u n iv e rs a l. I t ’s not lim ite d to a n y one g ro u p .” n u m b e r la rg e of a a A w ait-a n d -se e a ttitu d e h a s d e v elo p ed a t K in so lv in g D orm ito ry ’, w h e re 217 coeds h a v e sig n e d a petition p led g in g not to c at m ea t d u rin g the w eek-long b o y c o tt. “ I re a lly c a n ’t tell yet less m e a t,” M rs. G e rtru d e s u p e r v is o r if th e g irls a re r i p e r , for K insolving, se rv ic e s e a tin g food sa d . “ W e did cut back on th e a m o u n t of m e a t u o b o u g h t," sh e a d d e d , noting th a t c h e e se and fish s u b s titu te s a rp being p ro v id ed for bo ycotting re sid e n ts. th at throughout T he T e x a s Union will continue to se rv e m ea t th e w e e k ’s boy co tt. Ron M ancuso. Union dining s e rv ic e s m a n a g e r , th e re h a s been no n o tic e ab le said tho U n io n ’s in s a le s d e clin e re s ta u r a n ts o r c a fe te ria s . He a d d ed th at the p u rc h a s e of m e a t w a s not cut dow n in a n tic ip a tio n of th e boycott. in m ea t a t e “ P E O P L E WHO u su a lly buy th e h igher p rice d c u ts se a fo o d .” m a n a g e r H e rn an d e z said . “ We h a n d le fresh seafoods, too, and w e ’ve been se llin g m ore of th e m .” sw itching to S om e r e ta ile rs e n co u ra g ed the b o y c o t’e rs thp rising th e ir effort to stop to continue p ric e s of m e a t. “ It w ill m ak e people c o n sc io u s of the situ a tio n ,“ D iaz sa id “ I t’s a v is c o u s c irc le , b u t to stop so m e w h e re . H opefully, the boycott will slop the p ric e s from going u p .” it h a s R e ta ile rs on the whole w e re p e ssim is tic alxm t the lo n g -term e ffo rts of the b oycott. Early Ballot Deadline Today T u e s d a y is th e last d a y for voting a b se n te e and the d e a d lin e SVD c a r s a r e m a rk e d w ith la :g o o ra n g e p o ste rs ta p e d to the fo r c h a n g e s of a d d re s s to vote in th e r e g u la r c ity election S a tu rd a y . c a - sides. L a te M onday a ft e m o n v o te rs w ere the stre e t w a itin g to vote. C ity C lerk E ls ie Woos ley sa id 1.413 votes w e re c a s t M onday, m a k in g a to ta l of 3,534 a b se n te e votes cast so far. lined up into K in so lv in g D orm itory’ w ill be added in th e S tu d e n t V oting D riv e ’s to th e T u e sd a y pick u p (SV D ) a b se n te e voting lo c a tio n s c a m p a ig n . L ukm G illilan d , SVD p e rs o n s w e re tak e n to th e city’ c le rk s office fro m a r e a by th e g ro u p 's v o lu n te e r d riv e rs . le a d e r, sa id M onday a p p ro x im a te ly 500 the c a m p u s O th e r pick-up a r e a s a re th e L ittle field F o u n ta in and the U n iv e rsity Co-Op. “ T u e s d a y w e hope p e o p le will sto p o u r d r iv e r s an y w h ere they T h e d e a d lin e for a b se n te e voting is 4:45 T u esd ay . C hanges in a d d re s s m ust be m a d e bv 5 p.m . T u e s d a y to vote S a tu rd a y if a p e rso n h a s c h an g e d p re c in c ts sin ce th e N o v e m b er electio n s. A d d re ss c h a n g e s may be m ad e at the C ounty T a x Of f i ce in th e County' C o u rth o u se a t 10th and G u a d alu p e S tre e ts . C ounty T ax A ssesso r-C o llecto r F ritz R obinson sa id the p ro c ess Is slow , “ a lth o u g h a person sh o u ld n 't h a v e to w a it in line m o re th an two o r th re e m in u te s ,” One p e rso n who c h an g e d his a d d re s s M onday sa id it took “ only about five m in u te s .” P e rso n s w ho h a v e lost th eir v o te r re g is tra tio n c e r tific a te s Issued la s t y e a r c an a p p ly for new o n e s a t th e C ounty T ax O ffice. H ow ever, those w ho do not h a v e v o te r re g is tra tio n c e rtific a te s w ith th e m .S aturday will not be k ep t fro m voting. Robinson sa id e a c h p re c in c t ju d g e w ill h a v e a list of eligible h a p p e n to be to c a tc h rid e s to v o te ," G illilan d sa id . v o te rs in his p r e c in c t. “ I th e ir e atin g h a b its, ess people b e c o m e m o re r i n s e r v a t i v t l a 'h e effect will in e n tire ly te m p o ra ry just lasts a w e e k , lf it th e d em a n d for m e a t will be c re a te d a g a in a n d th e p rice s will go u p .” Cox explainer!. ★ * * B v T he A ssociated P re s s W hile national c o n su m e rs h a v e b e en ( a i m e r s c o m p la in in g of high p ric e s, J ’.S. p ro te s te d de lining p ric e s hy t e m p o r a r y w ith h o ld in g th eir liv e sto c k from the m a rk e t la s t w eek. to “ A c o n su m e r b o y c o tt can do a b so lu te ly su p p lie s of q u a lity in c re a s e n o th in g m e a t .” said the K a n s a s the p re sid e n t of L iv esto ck A ssociation. W illiam G. A m ste in J r . W ithout su p p lies, he s a id , p ric e s will sta y high. in c re a s e d “ BOYCOTTS CAN o n ly d is ru p t n o rm a l m a rk e tin g p a tte rn s a n d m ost d efin itely will e x p a n sio n d is c o u ra g e p la n s ." A m stein sa id , c la im in g th a t d e m a n d a n d a r e re sp o n sib le for the h ig h e r re ta il p ric e s. piTwiucfinn in T ea se d liv e sto c k in d u s try cr -is T exas r a t'Ie feeders, also upset by the b e e f boycotter.*?, j lined in a c o u n te r b o y c o tt m o v e by th e c ity in v itin g B a sil R usso, fro m C lev e lan d , Ohio, w h o c o u n cilm a n sp o n so red a re so lu tio n p ro c la im in g A pril “ hovel " bf 'f m o n th ,” to h e ro n e a b u s in e s s p a r tn e r with th em . “ F IR S T , you shf uld b e a w a re of th e rs fc In v o lv ed .” a to R usso sa id . “ A 650-pound fe e d e r s t e e r a t to d a y '1? p ric e of 55 c en ts p e r pound w ill cost $357.50, te le g ra m “ Tile s te e r n o rm a lly w ould sta y on feed 150 d a y s, du rin g w h ich tim e , it w ould g a in ab o u t 40ok into h irin g a p riv a te c o n s u lta n t'’ r e ­ g a rd in g th e c h an g e . T he p a y ra is e m otion will ra is e co u n ty c n m n iis io n e ts ’ s a lrie s fro m $15,248.50 p e r y e a r to $18,500. S a la rie s for the sh e riff, cou n ty a tto rn e y to ju d g e also will be ra ise d and c o u n ty $18,500. Tile S tu d en t H ealth C e n te r is out of c ru tc h e s . Jo h n W ilson, a ssista n t d ire c to r of the h e a lth c e n te r, ask e d T h u rsd a y for lo n g er n e ed s h e a lth a n y o n e who no to return r e n te r c ru tc h e s to R oom 226 th e c o n te r a s soon as possible. th em in “ U nless w e get som e m o re , th e s tu ­ d e n ts will h a v e to rent c ru tc h e s from local d ru g .stores, an d they a re v e ry e x p e n s iv e ,” he sa id . from C ru tc h e s the h e alth c e n te r re n t for 75 c e n ts the first w eek and 50 c e n ts e ac h w eek th e r e a f te r . At one local re n ta l s e rv ic e they coni fo r $3 the first w eek a n d $1.50 ev ery w eek th e re a fte r . M rs. O. D ean S q u y re s. a d m in is tr a ­ the h e alth c e n te r , tor* a s s is ta n t af sa id so m e c ru tc h e s a i r on o rd e r but m ay not be h e re for th re e w e ek s. Slip sa id th is v the first tim e this th at a b o u t 73 or h a s h a p p en ed and 80 p a irs a r e on loan. T he a th le tic d e p a rtm e n t is a ls ) out of c ru tc h e s b e c a u se of th e n u m b e r of in lured football p la y e rs, M ichael K. s a i d S te p h en s, T h u rs d a y . a s sista n t tr a in e r , T hey a re ev en h a v in g to b o rrow som p from th e h ealth c e n te r, h r said Absentee Voting in City Election Ends Today A Look at Proposed Charter Amendments Amendment No. I .controversial ^ Amendment Mn. I, th*' m o st <'limner revisions, is the soc* led six-five plan. It would enlarge th11 City Council to ll members from Hie present seven. Six members would so- vc districts of equal population, lour others and the mayor would be elected at-large. Th* controversy arise* between those who !.kc ilo p '-sen! system ar.d th we A ho don't Bill Youngblood, Charter Study one who Committee c h a i r m a n 'he way they arc. lik*s things T " th o arnendmen' o p p o s e s district system tends to promote le a d b o s s is m , J l>etw eon p o l i t i c a l councilmen,'’ Youngbkxxi said i foi "The system might abow f Put r c< im ii to go fry mand'T distru ts c a n tradrouts aru i “ I think should M Its. KM M \ M IN G , a ' amor like c o u n c il member, doesnt things as they are. do we e v e ry th in g jx'ssibie to ti tke die council m em bers focus m more il i a I Issue* at all times personalities^* M;s. “ This system Will toward that end mer (tug Mayor Roy Butle! pt esent et- nut met tiling “ For one ti it chamite! s aren't lar a comm date oilmen.” the mayor prim arily I am tippet *■.er serving on the W'rto r resjxonsible Austin ” is to every ta f i e r i erson to serve on the council “ because of civic duty and love of Austin, rather than or pay. raising Many opp*nenfs of ti e p hat the mutt ‘ii von Id be a prelude to professional council. Ult! ans on in foe] s pay ha v mg the The mayor, for one, fears that people would for office because “ they ,canted a job, not because they can help the ritv .” run “ It would be difficult for anyone to enjov much affluence In a [>ositiOn that pays Si .W I per ye ar,” White said. ( H I M ( I M W J E F F Fried man said the raise is in order since it would he!;> fief ray some of the costs of boing a cairn- oilman. “ I would like t" see people with n > “ varied ba kgiDUnds ain th* City Council,” Friedm an added, Amendment No. 3 T ic 'bird amendment on Sa tut day s ballot would allow' ihe City Planning members of Commission to be nonproporty owners. At pi esent. all planning com­ mission member* must own real property. The a mon'! merit also require* that memlters have resided in th* city one year, that at least four members must not he directly or indirectly connected wa lh real estate and land development. T H E P L A N N IN G c o m m is s io n recommends zoning ordinance* to the City Council, It is responsible for the orderly growth inside city limits and tip to five miles out­ side The board is appointed by the council. Proponents of Amendment No. 3 point : i the grow ing number of apartment dwellers who are not property owners but still have an interest in the city's future. White, Hie rn >st v* *• . > • . ><• Iv i v i ’ n* S c v* t/f who I u ' » i l p » » * H o i 9 0 B o h # r r . * N * * » Y o r k 1 1 7 1 f t*r 6 yr. ■ I si ■ ,r-Bnt R* sp*?? totnor or net to-nor a lh '» road trap Q P form n O' - • '••• I Stswit, ray. J'P- 19 2-A So you plan to spend the S jrrtmer in Europe this year. Great. Two things are mandatory. A ticket to Europe. A^d a Student-Ra pa: a. The first gets you o ve 'tk e re ’.he second g c * . Class ra trave modest $150 n A istr a Bn g jm, Denmark, France Germany, Holland, Ha y, Luxerr no to Norway. P o t .ga!, Spa n S.ved- ” , . / ■ *ed Se two end S a tzer and! A! ,( J need lo I ; qualify s to be a ful tim es’ .dent ,o to 25 years of age reg Ste’od at a North Am erica”: school, co ege or university. And the Ira i s of Europe are a sen^at O' a way to trave Over 100,000 miles of traCK links cities, towns and peds a ; over Europe, The trains are fas* t some over lO O rp f frequent, modern, clean, co: ;e .em B and vc be. So really is ii Eurocna r on* fort ab n. They have to i I n eel us on our trains, it ne way to get to know is in Europe, nl there’s one catch. You your S ’ jdent Railpass in must buy North A t 'm e a before you go. They’re noton sale in Europe because tv ey are meant strictly for visitors to Europe-hence the i'-mer; b / low price. Of course if \ ■- . re aded y c j can buy a regular Eura lpar‘S meant for visitors of all i* a .en , age that’s what you want. .ins* Class travel if I 'nor way if you're going to zip c f to Europe, see a Travel Agent before you go, and in the meantime, rip off the coupon. It can't hurt and it’ll get you a better time n Bure possible. c than you ever thought P a y e 2 T u e s d a y , A p r i l 3, 1373 T H E D A I L Y T E X A H tend to be better qualified to serve on the planning board because they would be more fam iliar with Austin's growth pattern.” “ This makes the auditor’s boss someone other than the head of the department being audited,” Butler said. Amendment Amendment Amendment No. 8 No. 4 No. I Amendment No. 1 is not ex­ pected to receive much opjxisition a* the polls. H ip proposal gives Municipal judges a two-year term the than serving Court rather “ at Amendments Nos. 7 through It are among those Mayor Butler considers “ noncontroversial" and are supported by himself and the entire City Council, he said. Butler explained as “ housekeeping Items which will tnem required number of signatures, the petitioner now has IO days to gather more signatures and file a supplementary petition. Then the clerk has IO days to certify tre supplementary petition. The amendment, Kubicek said. would provide 30 days for the clerk to certify the first filing of the petition, 15 days for the petitioner to g a t h e r more signatures if the petition is in­ sufficient, and 15 more days f ° r the clerk to approve or reject the amended petition. The amendment would not change an important part of the section which says that lf the amended petition is still lacking the clerk shall in signatures return the petitioner, to “ without prejudice to the filing of a new petition for the same purpose.” it Although the vendors’ drive Illustrated the necessity of this amendment, Butler said it was recommended by the Charter Revision Committee long before the vendors’ petition was cir­ culated. IT IS A “ purely clerical amendment.” Butler said, which will allow time for the city d ark to verify the names. The amendment will “ provide a fair and equitable way to ex­ to tend the city clerk’s the certify the signatures and petitioners time to gather,” Mrs. Long said. tim* she hoped S H E S A ID the vendor petition had brought the problem to the attention of the Austin voters sufficiently to in­ sure the amendment’s passage. Amendment No. IO Amendment No. IO deal* with nepotism, which the city fathers sought to prevent by prohibiting anyone related within tho fourth degree by affinity (m arriage) or consanguinity' (blood relationship) to Ihe mayor, any rn em lier of the City Council, or the city manager from holding any appointed of­ fice, cler kship or other .service. Amendment No. IO projioses that this provision, which is in­ cluded in a section dealing with Improper acts of officers, he changed: to prohibit relatives of the second, rather than the fourth degree, from holding city jobs during their relative’s term as mayor, councilman or city' man­ ager. the R E L A T IV E S O F fourth degree include anyone up to third cousins, Mrs. Long explained, W'hile second degree relations extend through first cousins only. Butler said the amendment was designed to make the whole issue more realistic, by no longer excluding distant blood relatives through and city marriage position* while their relations arc city officials. relatives holding remote from Mrs. Ijcmg said the Charter Revision Committee that “ when carried out to the degree of excluding the third or fourth cousin from a job the whole issue becomes ridiculous." felt S H E S A ID T H E intent of the nepotism rule was to “ keep city government from becoming a fam ily affa ir” and the amend­ ment wmuld still effectively fight that by prohibiting relatives through first cousins from ob­ taining city jobs. all She pointed out that because tho city manager theoretically appoints employes, responsibility is placed on him for determining who is restricted from of relatives being in office. positions because city The mayor and councilmen have no power to put a relative, or anyone else, directly into a job, sh* said, and that is the primary safeguard against nepo­ tism . But, she said, city managers have been known to enforce selectively the nepotism rule and it is not always rigidly im ple­ mented. T H E A M E N D M E N T will correct the problem, which has surfaced occasionally in th* city's history, of hiring qualified people, training them in a long expensive apprenticeship, only to discover they are ineligible for the job because they are the mayor's third cousin. that leave Mrs. Long agreed the amendment un­ does touched, a* doe* the charter, the problem of using political office to get jobs for friends. This is often more of a threat in city government than the hiring of relatives. The amendment will not affect the charter's provision that the nepotism section does not apply to persons employed by the city for two or more years before the mayor, city councilman manager to whom he is related is elected or appointed. or Amendment No. It Amendment No. l l , which low'ers the age requirements for city councilmen from 25 to 21 years and reduces the residence requirements from 3 years to 12 months, is merely a voter con­ firmation of .state law which Is already in effect, Kubicek said. Butler agreed that the whole issue is really a moot point, as the requirements will b* changed even if tho vote goes against the amendment, the to charter’s compliance with state law’. insure Kl BK E K E X P L A IN E D that the Texas Election Code of Aug. 30, 1971, says, “ no city shall restrict from running for office a person 21 or over who is a qualified the elector and has exceeded state’s residency requirement.” Tile amendment also w ill provide that the section in Article II which pertains to the council, will no longer stato that a can­ didate “ shall be a taxpayer in the city.” Kubicek said this will proride compliance with the state law by omission, because cannot require the person to be a state election code does not mention it as a requisite. taxpayer when city the the Kubicek explained that if the Legislature ha,* made a clear statute, a* in the election code, it takes precedence over any city law. T H IS P R IN C IP L E is based on a court decision (Yeti v. Cook) oiled in the beginning of the City ( ’barter which says, “ A city’ charter cannot contain provisions which are contrary to or in conflict with general state law's on the same subject matter which apply to all cities.” is actual!' So although it appears the City Council or tile Charter Revision Committee recom­ mending the lowering of ag* and residency requirements, Kubio-k said, they are merely bringing the charter into harmony with existing lawn. Tlte election code rules are already in effect in this election, Kubicek said, so a* not to violate state law before the charter is changed. T H E A M EN D M E N T will leave unaltered the requirement that a council candidate, in the event he is a taxpayer, “ shall not be in arrears in the payment of any taxes or other liability due the city.” Also, the charter will continue to require that a member of the council moving the city during his term of office w ill immediately forfeit his position. from In the aftermath of women's p r o t e s t s for equality and recognition, the Charter Revision Committee in Amend­ included ment No. 8 an acknowledgment of women's city government. rights in The amendment proposes to delete all references of masculine gender in the section describing th* appointment and duties of the city clerk. T H E S E C T IO N , which is found In Article I I of the City' Charter, now reads: “ The council shall appoint the city clerk, and his assist ants, if any, W’ho shall serve at the pleasure of the council. The city clerk shall keep records of the council, and shall have such other duties and respon­ sibilities as m ay be assigned to the him by council.” this charter and The amendment suggests the w'ords “ his” before “ duties” and “ to him ” after “ assigned” be omitted. And because of the need of all contemporary' city clerks for assistants, Kubicek explained, “ if any” will be the words dropped after “ his assistants.” the words and Both Kubicek said the changes w ill be in the language of the section only, not the substance of the clerk’s appointment or duties. Kubicek Butler agreed that this was a logical amendment, mainly because the current city clerk, Mrs. E lsie Wooslev, has been evidence for years that the office is not closed to women charier as suggests. the for BITI,ER ACKNOWLEDGED liberation that the women’s the movement had provided impetus the charter com­ mittee to present th* amendment. n o discrimination had ever been used in determining the holder of the office. a d d e d t h a t H e Mrs. Long said the commitiee felt it was “ in line with present trends” to change the language of the charter and added that any in something like a city charter was “ just a male chauvinist thing” that no one really ever paid any attention to anyway. to gender reference Amendment No. 9 The need for Amendment No. 9, which provides the city clerk an additional IO days to deter­ mine whether an initiative or referendum petition Is .signed by the required number of qualified voters, w'as clearly demonstrated by th* recent vendor drive to place the an ordinance on referendum ballot. T H E F R E N Z Y surrounding the push for extra signatures after the clprk found the insufficient shows the need for the second part of the amendment, which provides the peHtioner an ad­ ditional five days to ga thor more names sup­ to plementary petition. first petition A N I) and file a Finally, the amendment gives the city' clerk five rn or* days to the certify supplementary petition. the sufficiency of to The charter presently deals with this matter in the article p e r t a i n i n g Initiative, Referendum and Recall. It says that within 20 days after an initiative or referendum petition is the city clerk must determine if it is signer! by the qualifier! required number of the voters. Ten percent of qualified last the voters election must, sign the petition. filed, in I F T H E P E T IT IO N lacks the FOR UNITY AND BALANCE AS PROGRESS CONTINUES . . . RE-ELECT Berl Handcox CITY COUNCIL -P LA C E 6 Pd. Pol. Adv. Re-Elect Handcox Comm. Bennie Washington, Chrm. On Saturday s Ballot Fourteen proposed charter amendments will appear on Saturday s city election ballots along with Drag vendor referenda. The Texan looks at Hip first 11 amendment* In this set of stories bv Jim 0 # s e and Jennifer Gordon. Wednesday , the remaining three proposed amendments and a synopsis of the Drag vendor question will appear on this page. The Tex in will follow that Thursday with a look at the candidate* for mayor, and Friday's edition will contain a list of the [tolling places. pleasure of It the provides for removal of judges only for cause or disability. council.” T H E A M E N D M E N T also reduces the requited residence of judges from three to two years, and requites them to have been licensed attorneys for two years. The amendment was submitted by and the bar association re eei red no opposition during C h a r t e r Study Committee meetings last summer. Mrs. Ixmg said that while shp supports all charter amendments, she sees no “ particular reason for initiating this one." The former councilwoman said the amendment was placed on the ballot to reduce the possibility of political the Municipal Court judges. influence on Amendment Nos. 5 and 6 T h e s e amendments are “ housekeeping” items according to members of the Charter Study Committee, and will not change the operation of city government. Amendment No. 5 w'ould permit Hie Municipal Court clerk to hire any deputy clerks needed. U N T IL NOW, the responsibility to appoint clerks has been the council’s. However, the council usually clerk’s r e c o m m e n d a t i o n without question. Most approves groups citizen have the favored passage of this item. Amendment No. 6 sets up a separate internal auditor for the Finance Department. Although is done auditing routinely now. it is not required except at the discretion of the city administration. City Attorney Don Butler said the amendment would provide for auditing to be earned out on a regular basis. “ T H E S E TIVO amendments (5 and fit would merely bring the the to date with charter up practices of the city agencies involved,’’ he said. Amendment No. ti also makes the auditor responsible to the city manager rather than the finance director. make the charter of the city fit the times." He emphasized that the charter has not been revised drastically since 1953. He does not foresee any op­ position to them from any sector of Austin voters, including the Austin Charter Committee, winch is fighting Amendments No. I and No. 2. Amendment No. 7 deals with the creation of a new office of internal auditor in thp Finance Department of the city. The auditor will have his respon­ sibilities outlined by the City Council and will be accountable to the city manager. Amendment No. 7 completes the division of financial duties in Amendment No. 6, explained Ja n city L. manager. Amendment No. fi provides for a director of finance. assistant Kubicek, T H E A M E N D M E N T will create an in-house auditor as a separate office, Kubicek noted. Currently the financial auditing [ww'ers are all d i r e c t i o n culminated single financial director. under and a charter Amending to the provide for a director of finance internal auditor will and an clearly separate the [tower of financial control from the actual paying of bills. TTI is will remedy the seemingly inconsistent situation of a man auditing his employer, said Mrs. Long. The proposed section says “ the I n t e r n a l auditor shall be responsible for the audit of all bills, invoices, payrolls, charges and other financial records of the city, including the administrative procedures in connection with the same.” T H E N E W A U D IT O R will he hired by the city manager and to him responsible will ho prim arily, but the council can call into question his fulfillment of his duties since it has outlined them, Mrs. Long said. for The Charter Revision Com­ mittee feels the amendment will provide long-needed .separation of powers in the city’s financial department and a more in efficiently general. run department a choose your own life style at CncilisijAire A P A R T M E N T S 2101 BU R T O N D R IV E “ ^ \ 444-1846 • 12 and 3 BEDROOM ArAR I MINTS • FURNISHED .md UNI URNISHI I) • S A U N A S • I A l M IR V rn G A M E R O O M • TEN NIS C O U R T S < * • I SIRI ISI ROOM • Pl I M M , (.RI I N t \ I V 1 • I S W IM M IN G P<>01 S • ( RICK E f Cl I It Dijiount lo Residents On the Shuttle r. . t ie Insurance Approved G ayness: N o t 'N o-Fault' By rho Associated Press nonrecord vote. The State B a r of Texas’ an sw er to no­ fault c ar in s u ra n c e was approved by the House M o n d ay , despite an objection th at it wasn’t r e a lly a no-fault bill at all. House m e m b e rs voted 116 to 24 to send th e Senate, w here law y ers are the bill to in the m a jo rity . “ There is absolutely no no-fault in this bill," a ss e rte d R ep. Don Cavness, D-Austin, an insurance a g e n t. THE RILL would autom atically add to liability policy—unless every T ex.!- au to rejected in \v n inc by the custom er—$2,500 on personal injury benefits which would be paid by o n e ’s own insurance com pany without re g a r d to blam e for an accident. But. u n lit;1 Included w ould be replacem ent of w ages I.'a during hospitalization or Convalescence. tru e no-fault plans, tho bill preserves th e lig h t to sue tho other d riv e r— something T e x a s lawyers want to p reserv e. to add an am en d m en t Cavness eliminating to sue for am ounts under $2,'OO, bul failed by an overw helm ing trie d th e right the cost of H E ESTIM ATED th e a d ­ ditional co v erag e a t betw een $21 and $35 a y e a r. C avness said th a t except for lost w ages, "anybody th a t w an ts this kind of co v erag e can get. the it m ed ical p ay m en ts provision of the sta n d a rd T exas c a r in su ran ce policy. rig h t now" in than is w orse "M r. C avness would have us p ass a bill the national no-fault two y e a rs ag o ." said R ep. th a t bill proposed Jon Newton, D-Beeville, a law yer. in th e p relim in ary debate on th a t one reaso n for the bill w as to do T ex as’ bit to head off fed eral no-fault legislation by passing a sta te law. the m easu re F rid a y Newton said T he House ten tativ ely approved on a nonrecord vote a bill elim inating the need to buy auto license p lates every y e a r. INSTEAD, T ex an s would buy five-year p lates, then u p d ate th eir auto re g istratio n s an nually with a c o m e r tab such as 36 sta te s now use. O ver a 10-year period, the m easu re would Legislative Roundup Campaign Funds Limits Proposed M em bers of the House C om m ittee on Flections h e a rd testimony Monday on tv.o bills to lim it cam p a ig n expenditures of state political c a n d id a te s and sent both m easu res to su b c o m m itte e for study. House B ill 323, authored by Rep. Joe Pentony of H ouston, would lim it advertisin g expenditures of candidates for sta te office. Under P e n to n y ’s proposal cand id ates would Ire H r b ed to IO cents per registered voter for th e d istric t involved in the race. for in­ lesser sta te offices, C andidates cluding s t a t e representatives, would be hmited to 5 c e n ts {ter registered v o ter p er district. The bill would also limit advertising to 60 to broadcast statio n s th e amount p erm itted can­ expenditures percent of didates, Dr. H. C lifton McCleskey, professor of the University, ap p eared governm ent a t the before m easure. M cC leskev said, "I think the body of politics w ould be better if th ere w as a little m o re com petition." com m ittee favor of th e in "The h ig h cost of cam paigning drives the m a rk e t­ the possible c a n d id a te s out of place." M cC leskey continued, noting rising co sts of m a ss media cam paigning. "This bill sh ifts the emphasis aw ay from the m ass m ed ia. Tile cam paign should b e a tw o-w ay process," M cCleskey com­ mented. The m e a s u r e was referred to a sub­ com m ittee ch a ire d by Rep. L ane Denton of Waco. A second b ill authored by Flop. Fid H arris to a of G alveston w as also su b co m m ittee beaded by Denton. frrw arded House B ill 1550. af fording to H a m s , has one p u rpose— “ to regulate the am ount of money co n trib u ted by any one je rso n to in any perso n T exas." running for public office The leg isla tio n would put a $1,000 ceiling on each p e rs o n ron'ributing to a can d id ate's cam paign. T ile candidate’s fam ily would in cam paign con­ be tributions lim ited +o $15,000 Denton a ls o spoke to the com m ittee in favor of tw o of his bills to fu rth er election inform ation in state voters. House B ill 1545 will provide for 15 m inutes of sta te w id e television time purchased by the state fo r each m ajor candidate for the lieutenant governor U.S. S e n a te , governor and general the prim ary elections. and in the for Funding Inform ation Television ’ bro ad casts would be provided by ap p ro x im a te ly $30,000 from the sta te 's general re v e n u e fund. Denton said. "V oter The seco n d of Denton’s bills, House Bill In­ 1529, w ould provide for a “ V oter form ation P a m p h le t" to be m ailed each reg istered vo ter in the sta te with im p o rtan t election c an d id a te sta te m e n ts and qualifications. req u ire m e n ts an d One w itness ap p e a re d before th e com ­ m itte e to a sk th at rep rese n ta tiv es provide an identical publication in Spanish to the nonEnglish sp eak in g r e s i d e r s of th e sta te then co m m ittee u n d er the lead ersh ip of Ironton. Tile bill w as forw arded to sub­ * + le g isla to rs w ere u rg ed Monday to take decisive step s tow ard cleaning T ex as a ir in a report from th e Senate In terim Com­ m ittee on E n v iron m en tal Affairs. recom m endations T he co m m ittee’s In­ clude suggesting th e establishm ent of m otor v ehicle the D e p artm e n t of P u blic S afety and re g u la r em ission resting a s p art of the s ta te ’s m otor vehicle inspection program ,. stan d a rd s em issions by A1 so recom m ended is the establishm ent of a single sta te environm ental control a g en cy which would consolidate p resen t pollution control agencies. stu d y recom m endations O th er m a jo r Include: • B roadening tile scope of th e Air Control B o ard 's au th o rity . • Making Im pact study on all p ro jects for which sta te funds a re used. en v ir nm ental an assistan ce • Offering rn leg islativ e u n iv ersities and re se a rc h organizations to develop sol'd w aste m an ag em en t p ro g ram s. for p reserv in g w ildlife in eq u al am o u n ts a s that destroyed by c o n stru e ion. • A ppropriating land • Giving tax credit to b usinesses and in d u stries which voluntarily install pollution control devices. DALLAS (A P )—R esidents in four sections of T exas—D allas-F o rt Worth. Austin-W aco, to San Antonio and FII Paso—m ay have cu t down on the use of th eir c a rs if those regions a re federal clean a ir stan d a rd s, according to an E nvironm ental P rotection Agency (E P A ) study. to m eet T he four regions a re in addition to the H ouston-Galveston a re a which an e a rlie r study had alre a d y judged as in need of "tran sp o rtatio n co n tro ls" to m eet d ie clean a ir stan d ard s. The new study, conducted for th e E P A — Texan Staff Photo by h \ R L \ WILKS. Three Musketeers Law D ea n Page Keeton, University President Stephen Spurr and LBJ Library Di­ rector H a rr y Middleton were auctioned off M onday night as bartenders in the an­ nual K L R N -T V benefit auction The $200 bid for the trio went up when the auction­ eer asked "does anyone have a kid at the University who needs to graduate? ' Mrs. J o h n DeFord will usa the three at a party next month. In the cost th# the sta te MO.5 million save of m a tori ;ds, shipping an d postage, L egislative Budget B oard h a s estim ated. Rep. C harles T upper, D -El Paso, th e sponsor, said It would b e to counterfeit th e corner tab s. C ounterfeiting w as one reason T exas sw itched to one-year p la te s in the 1940s, he explained. im possible R ep, Jim Clark, D-Houston, said th# T exas D ep artm en t of C orrections w as " v e ry p ro u d " of using prison in m ates to sta m p th e license plates. "P riso n e rs ra n be put in o th er jobs th a t will be m ore beneficial to th em when they get out In society b ecau se th e re isn’t m uch dem and for license p late sta m p e rs ," T upper said. (rubella) T H E SENATE ten tativ ely approved a bill re q u irin g G erm an m e a sles im ­ m unity testin g before a n y w om an u n d er 50 can b e m a rrie d . Sen. Bill P a tm a n , D - test to se# G anado, lf a w om an w as im m une or susceptihl# to rubella would cost $7 to $10. Rubella Shots would not be req u ired . the sponsor, said a P a tm a n estim ated th e m ea su re could sav e th e s ta te $46 million, but Sen A.R. Schw artz. D-GaJvoston, sh o t back th at this w as "sim p ly not tru e ." P a tm a n said th a t w as w hat a rubella ep id em ic cost the sta te in the 1963-65 period becau se of b irth defects. IV OTHER ACTION M onday the House passed a bill authorizing creatio n of m utual law enforcem ent task forces by cities and counties. to Rep. C arl P a rk e r. D -P ort A rthur, said he would m ove T uesday to accept Senate am en d m en ts th e H.onuse-parsed bill expanding the open m eetin g s law to apply to the L egislature. P a rk e r moved the changes Monday but w ithdrew his motion a fte r Rep. Dewitt H ale. D-Corpus C hristi, objected thing M onday m orning before we a re all a w ak e.” to acting "First for co n cu rren ce in " I w ouldn't w an t to do anything w hile you a re still asleep ," P a rk e r said. UT By BETSY HALL Texan Staff Writer ..(E d ito r ’s Note: This is the second of a five-part s e r ie s examining the University budget.) Tlic D ep artm en t In tercollegiate A thletics is one of the la rg e st d ep artm en ts of the U niversity, but it is alm ost totally self-sufficient. of "A thletics doesn’t re ceiv e an y sta te aid af n il,” J a m e s Colvin, U niversity v ice­ p resid en t last the sale week. " I t s money com es from of tickets an d the allocation from blan k et ta x e s ." for business a ffairs, said A ccording to J . N eils Thom pson, civil engineering professor and chairm an of the A thletics Council, the d e p a rtm e n t's budget Is c o m p o se d of two p a rts —income and o perating expenses. “ WE CAN’T LET an y money from anyw here eslse," Thom pson said last w eek. "W e’ve got to earn o u r w ay. From an o p eratin g standpoint, v c carry' our load, an d we pay our costs." In terco lleg iate ath le tic s sh a re s its by TRW. Inc., s ta te s th a t cu rren t clean a ir p lan s developed by the S tate of T exas reduce adeq u ately to a re nor atm o sp h eric hydrocarbon levels in the four regions. sufficient This, according to E d d ie T.ee of the E PA office here, m eans th a t those regions " o r p a rts th e r e o f’ will h av e to institute som e type of transportation controls. "T h e whole idea is to cau se a reduction In th e vehicle m iles tra v ele d p er y e a r," said Lee. T he re p o rt say s th a t In each of th e four regions, au to em issions c a u se a sufficiently larg e p ercen tag e of to m ak e transp o rtatio n controls an effective m ean s of reducing the total am ount of d irty air. th e a ir pollution T he report said reduction of em issions from stationary' sources will be required In tw o o th er regions—Corpus C hristi and sou th eastern T exas (th e O range-Port Ar thur-B eaum ont a re a ). Tile report re c o m ­ m ended "m o re strin g en t . . . reg u latio n s" on and pc t rochem i c a ls. industry, p a rtic u la rly refining T ex as h a s until A pril 15 to develop a tran sp o rtatio n control p ro g ram for th e four regions, plus ti e H ouston-Galveston a re a , w hich re q u ire it. H earings on m ethods on controlling the use of autom obiles and th e ir em issions a re scheduled for W ednesday in D allas, Houston and San Antonio. T>ee said to develop if th e s ta te fails a tran sp o rtatio n control plan for the a f­ fected regions by April 15, then the E P A Is req u ired by sta tu te to develop su ch a p ro g ram . T ran sp o rtatio n controls could in clu d e such things a s restric tin g p ark in g in downtown a r e a s ; restric tin g freeway traffic to only' those c a rs c a rry in g m ore than erne person, th e reb y encouraging c a r pools; eslablishing sa te llite park in g lots to lim it the n um ber of c a rs downtown, an d increased use of m a ss tra n sit system s. Tee sa id the p ro g ram could also include periodic inspections to a ssu re auto em ission equ ip m en t is working p ro p erly . Possible C a r Use C o n t r o ls Clean A ir Viewed Free Bees A sw arm of bees is rescued from a tree outside the Jo u rn a lism B u ild in g b y K irk B ro a d d u s of Posse Bee Farm s. The bees had sp lit fro m th e m ain beehive in th e B io lo g y B u ild in g b e cau se o f a c o p u la tio n e x p lo sio n an d w ere s e a rc h in g fo r a now hive. B ro a d d u s kn o cke d th e m ain group o f b e e s in to a c a rd b o a rd box an d the n sm o ked th e b ra n c h w ith a tin b e e-sm oker to e n c o u ra g e the s tra g g le rs in to the box. H e p la n n e d to take P o p p a M a x ' th e b e e s to H a y n e s C o u n t y w here he an d B ach o fe n , a 7 0 -y e a r-o ld bee k e e p e r, have 250 other bee­ hives. U n a la rm e d by the bees fly in g all a ro u n d him, B ro a d - ' Bees w o n 't stin g you unless you th re a te n dus e x p la in e d , 'h e n . H e sa id th e sw arm o f 3 ,00 0 b e e s was o n ly m e d iu m - size and 'h e y h a d co m e o u t e a rly b e c a u se o f th e w arm w e ath e r. B ro a d d u s and his p a rtn e r sell th e ir b e e s' h o n e y in A ustin. T his is th e first s p lit in th e c am p u s b e e h iv e in a t le ast IO years, S te v e B ra tte n g , g r a d u a te b o ta n y stu d e n t, said. Athletics the P hysical facilities w ith Instruction D ep artm en t. “ When a facility is first in­ stalled, we m ight sh a re the initial cost." the ch airm a n said. ‘T o r exam ple. 2,000 surfaces people (A stroT urf) at in­ tercollegiate ath letics daily, but w e pay the bulk of the expenses. syn th etic the stad iu m besides use th e Interco lleg iate a th letics does, not pursue donations from alum ni, nor does it solicit funds from outside. Thom pson said . About for voluntary $5,000 scholarships each y ear, how ever. to $10,000 Is given “ lf you w ant to win, if you w ant to be at the top rf the heap, you have to com ­ p e te ,'’ Thompson noted. " If you want to recru it, you have to a w a rd scholarships, and those expenses a re h ig h ." estim ated INTERCOLLEGIATE ATHLETICS has a total for 1972-73 of incom e S1.S28.750. of which $1,229,000 com es from football. Budgeted to ath letic scholarships services to is (scholarships-1, $231,500. $277,000 dining and T ravel, scouting and m r u it in g a re alloted $93,800, and even the U niversity c h e e rlead ers a re looked a fte r with a $2 OOO subsiily. Almost $600,000 is allow ed for w ages and sa la rie s, and sa la ry sc a le s a re se t a r ­ co rf ling said. "W e consider w hat it tak e s to get a good coach a n d w hat it 'a k e s to keep him .” to com petition, Thompson SDM!. COACHES WORK only p art tim e intercollegiate a th l e t i c and p art-tim e for instruction departm ent. for the physical Til ere a re about 25 full and part-tim e coaches. coach H ighest paid intercollegiate ath letics football is D arrell Royal, head coach and ath letics d irecto r, who e a rn s $10.00(1 a y ear. in In this capacity, Royal cannot lie fired by the U niversity because he is technically not a U niversity em ploye. However, he as m ild be pro fesso r an physical h o n o rary tid e he receiv ed a fte r Texas won from bis post instruction, rem oved of a national football cham pionship in 1963. R oyal does not teach any classes. Royal has a co n tra c t w ith in tercollegiate a t h l e t i c s for a set period of tim e, vary in g from five to eight y e ars. Thompson said. According to R ich a rd Roldt, a ssista n t b u s i n e s s m a n a g e r of intercollegiate athletism, m ost of th e other conches " h a v e an inform al verbal c o n tract from y e a r to y e a r. - ll S T L I K E one big kit added, I "W E RE fa m ily ," B< Thompso C o u n c i I U niversity corning pc w ell as negof "W e have pointed out th a t the Athletic to m ak es P re sid e n t Stephen S p u rr con - a s recom m endations of coaches salarie s, hie dism issal hating conche* a v irtu a lly ex cept H the coac tennis (Assistant, stab le coaching (W ilm er) n of staff, w ith i—who recen tly Allison—the Football Coach resigned, and E m o ry ) B ollard, who went to (T exas) A&'M (U n iv ersity ),’’ Thompson said. is considered < )bviously Royal the b est coach Hie U niversity has, and his salary' is set accordingly. T hat football is expected to is interco lleg iate evident becau se of the rest of the coaching staff, the a ssistan t football coaches receiv e the next, highest pay, ath letics support Closest to approaching th e s a la ry r a te s paid to football co ach es is H ead B ask etb all Coach I .eon B lack, who en ny $17,500. the m e re ly BLACK ll VS COME u nder much criti -ism Longhorn av erag e o ver basketball te am s he b as produced, but Thompson refuted this as “ com rig up w ith institutions a r e joyous ev ery coach. Most o ver a 50-50 seaso n ." to Thompson a ttrib u te d this y e a r's m ediocre season the loss of s ta r p la y e r L a rry Robinson through injury, and justified not spending m ore m oney to im prove b ask e tb a ll because "fo r all p ra c tic a l pnrp >ses. it b r o k e even (financially) the first tim e ever " e th e r sports b esides b asketball h av e m e a g e r o perating budgets, and oth er h ead last y e a r for news capsules M a r k e t D r o p s in Y e a r ’ s L o wes t V o l u m e NEW YORK (A P )—Stock m arket prices did a nosedive Monday in tile l i g h t e s t trading on the N ew York Stock E xchange this year as the m arket continued lo react lo in vestors’ fears over the state of the econom y. The Dow Jones a v erage of 30 industrials fell 14 83 to (GG.IS. volum e on the B ig Board w a s a light total of 10.66 m illion sh ares, the N Y S E ’s low­ e s t volum e since Oct. 9 w hen it w as 7.95 m illion. S u p r e m e C o u r t Si dest eps P i p e l i n e C a s e WASHINGTON (AFD The future of the controversial trans-M aska oil pipeline rested with Congress M onday after the S u p r e m e C o u rt d e ­ clined to enter the ecological and leg islative tangle. The high court, without com m ent or dissent, refused to interfere with a low er court decision blocking construction of tho pipeline to bring oil from A laska’s North Slope to the seaport of Valdez. T he U.S. Circuit Court here ruled in February that the Mineral L eas­ ing Act of 1920 provided only 54-foot rights of w ay for pipelines ov er public land. Since the trans-Alaska project would require MG-foot widths in som e p la ces, the Circuit Court prevented the soeretarx of tim inte­ rior from issuing the n ecessa ry perm its S hu l tz O p p o s e s Price Freeze Sill WASHINGTON (A P )—A bill to freeze prices and rents would be counterproductive and probably subject to a m to by P resident Nixon, T reasu ry Secretary G eorge P . Shultz said M onday. “ The P resident is strongly opposed to it, and I wouldn't be sur­ prised" at a veto, Shultz told the House Banking and Currency Com ­ mittee, where there is strong backing for die legislation. co. i!'hes receive <01311 sa larie s. Both H ead T rack Coach C leburne P rice and H ead B aseball Coach Cliff G ustafson c a m $14,000 p er y ear, while H ead T ennis Coach D ave S nyder m a k e s only S3,1 OO a y ear. “ TIlese p erso n s are v o lu n tary a ss ista n t co ac h e s." Thompson explained. "It add# * T ex as to co ach .” to sa y th ey ’re th eir p restig e 'Vime - {xii) s. such as tennis, have a h e a d coach a n d an a ssista n t, Thompson said. T his assista n t Is som eone from th e p hysical instruction d ep artm en t w ho gets free p a s s e s it to gam es and o th er frin g e imnofits bu: not ac tu a lly on th e payroll. ‘Ti. He persons arc voluntary a s s is ta n t add# to sa y th e y 're a T ex as Thompson explained. “ It p restig e m a c h o to theii m a c h ," TH E BIGGEST PROBLEM in terco lleg iate a th letics faces is b ringing in m oney, an d fo-otball se em s to be th e an sw er to th a t problem . “ We h av e to pc- about $1.5 million to o p e ra te .' Til om pron said . " T h a t m o n c r com es from sp ectato rs com ing to see gam e* th ey like and enjoy. S p e c ta to rs rom e when football. Tile re s t w e win, and w e win rh# of blanket tax allotm ent." the m oney ($441,000) come* from I I I : The highest paid U niversity P a r t faculh.) 7on«no Change Denied As SUN Claims Victory v o n area neighborhood neighborhoods their in ca so® integrity" A dvocates of single fa m ily dwelli? cs and th e no ncom m ercial to Universe y "m a in ta in at M onday n ig h t's m eetin g of th e City P la n ­ n ing C om m ission s Zoning Com m ittor. to denv re q u ests U r rozoning changes a t 29th and P e a rl S tre e ts and at 3407-3413 C ed ar Street.. G ra n tin g of tho req u ests would have p e r­ m itted construction of business offices at the 29th S treet location and an ap a rtm e n t c'.Triplex at the C ellar S reef site. C o m m ittee m e m b e rs voted Howie W att, i St 'N) attem p t th ird -v ea r Univorsitv law student, re p resen ted S av e U niversity N eigh- berhoo "s to bleed re a lto r R oger H anks' p r nose! t > ch an ce the s ta tu s of the 29;h S treet location. He cited th# City C ouncil's 7 in 0 v ote last W ednesday im plem entation of a new stre w to delay p lan in th e w est U niversity neighborhood a s an to p - co en o any changes the area until th '1 a poco va I of a new c ity m a s te r plan. indication of the council’s wish in W att also v t d to g ra n t Hanks* ‘hat re most could resu lt in a "dom ino e ffecf." O' nine for m ore co m m ercial expansion if co m m ercial o perations began ti i'A the w ay The .-nmm it tee decision to deny Hanks* re ".'est w as unanim ous. The C e d a r Street nu em ion how ever, wa# decided b y a alo se th re e -lo tw o vote. < >o\>os’i'i in to d o rf most of Ted L. E d ­ this fur m ultiunit housing w ard s d r. ru'oa cen te red around th e issue of in cre ase d traffic. in Dr. F re d B ullard, U n iv ersity p ro fesso r e m e ritu s of geological scien ro s. said con­ struction of an a p a rtm e n t com plex would in crease congestion 34th S ire e t.” "n a rro w on stabilization of He a lso told the co m m itte e th at th e ap . the U n iv e rsity 's paren t enrollm ent and in a p a rtm e n t com plexes in th e U n iv e rsity a re a should p reclu d e a n y n e ce ssity fo r a d d itio n al com plexes. the ex istin g v a c a n c ie s T h e DARY TEXAN Tuesday, April 2, 1973 Page T h e D a il y T e x a n S t a f f e d itorials and o p in io n s Dick Benson former Student Government With his term now officially over, left l)ehincl several r e s t and President Dick Benson has earned a in d e e d m u s t, be carried on programs and interests which should, by his successors. And his imagination and hard work deserve congratulations from students and other mem bers of the University com munity. The list of his major accomplishments is impressive and speaks well of his year. Benson took a concept established in California and initiated the Texas Student Lobby to represent the interests of students across die state at the Texas Legislature. In Austin, Benson and his staff organized the City Council Lobby to speak for the community at City Hall. Too, Benson envisioned and laid the groundwork for the University Economic Community, an organization that will assem ble financial resources of this community for the benefit of University students. W'hile th o se three programs are s till having birth pains, they are viable and, in years to com e, will reap benefits for students at the University*. Tile list, how ever, does not end there. Benson also has led the fight for creation of a single-mem ber legislative district in Travis County comprising the University community. While that fight is not over, he has been invaluable in efforts to preserve the student precincts intact together within one legislators district, thus Increasing the op­ portunity for a student-oriented voice at the Capitol to speak on tuition, fees, University appropriations and other education legislation. At the c a m p u s level, Benson pushed through the first Student «lovernment budget Increase in three years. Regents have already given tentative approval for an increase from $53,000 to $72,000. in­ c lu d in g $40,000 for the offk e of stu d en ts* attorney. Part of that increase will provide funds for a s e c o n d attorney to aid students having legal d iffic u ltie s . T liis list is im pressive a n d contains programs that will benefit the entire ct immunity. If there I- one criticism to be leveled at Benson, i f s that he m ay have divided his attention among too many program s to concentrate enough energy on any one. But there is only so much one individual can do. Benson did a groat deal. Frequently, xx-' and other students deride campus figures, par­ tic u la r ly student officeholders, for th e ir lack of initiative and absence of s u b s ta n c e . While that remains a valid charge against most student I* bt leos, Benson has demonstrated it is not a universal malady. In­ deed, he is the exception to the nile that brings relief from the hijinks d j s,f) i pq j* }\* of hrrs , MI in all, Dick Benson, and every other student, had a very good y ear for hi 1 tine in office. Exercise your rights Today is the day, the last day to vote absentee in the City Council election. If you are leavin Austin for spring \ anat ion and will not lie here Saturday—election day*—then vote absentee, Today. If your plans are uncertain for Saturday, then play it safe and vote absentee. Today*. MI absentee balloting takes place at the Municipal Building as the corner of West 8th and Colorado streets. Transportation will be provided from campus, and the process itself Is simple. Numerous Texan staffers went through ti all Monday. Student Voting Drive xviii have free rides available to the Municipal Building at Littlefield Fountain from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Tuesday. Rides ba* k to c a m p u s a ls o w ill b e p ro v id e d . Once at th e M u n ic ip a l B u ild in g , 40 : est fluor. T h e r e m ax b e a line. but ex e n t, thf xx ait is w o rth it to tile c ity < le r k 's o ffic e on th e it s h o u ld n ’t b e too lo n g . In a n y Y ou m u s t b e r e g is t e r e d to v o te in Travis County. And you must take with you your m ost recent voter registration certificate. You w ill vote on th e county’s n e w punchcard voting devices, w h ic h are s im p le and e a s y to o p e r a te . There are three main sections on the ballot. You m ay vote for six s e a ts cat the City Council, d e s ig n a te d b y p la c e s , and in the mayor’s race. You may vote for one of three proposed ordinances pertaining to th* I )ra g v e n d rs. D ie T e x a n c a n n o t r e c o m m e n d p< In0 a 1 < andidates. But w e can, and do, urge you to vote FOR all charter changes, particularly Nos. I 2 a n d 3 F u r th e r m o r e , T h o T e x a n r e c o m m e n d s you vote FOR vendor Ordinance No. I, which will allow the Drag vendors to move off their reservation on 23rd S tre e t a n d b a c k o n to Guadalupe Street. A fte r y o u ’ve v o te d , d ep o sit th e b allo t and ballot stub in their i es p o et iv e D >\es. R d e s b a c k to c a m p u s w ill he a v a ila b le V o tin g is im p o r ta n t fo r th e fu tu re of this community. You have in te re s t in v o tin g in the Austin municipal a r ig h t a n d a le g itim a te e le c tio n E x e r c i s e v.»ur rig h ts . \ a te a b s e n te e . T h e D a i l y T e x a n Student Newspaper at UT Austin E D IT O R ............................................................................................ .. David Powell MANAGING EDITOR Tom Kleinworth .ASSISTANT MANAGING E D IT O R S Marcia Aronson, Steve Renfrow NEWS EDITOR .................................. ........................................... Karen Justice ASSISTANT TO THE E D IT O R .................................................. Quin Mathews SPORTS EDITOR . . . . Kirk Bo his AMUSEMENTS EDITOR ............................................................... Cicely Wynne FEATURES EDITOR ................... ............................................. Jane Chesnutt ................................................ ...............*.......................................... City Edit 1 Bill Bray Reporter* Alison Smith, Jamie Carter Rouble Marshall. Robert Faulk, Mark Heckmann News Assistants . .............. Editorial Ass. tart ........ .................................................................... Randy Fitzgerald Ginger Morrow Assistant Feature Editor Buck Harvey A . tam Sport-- Editor Makeup) Editor ............ John Tilly ti..' Page Editor ... ......................... .............................................. Harriet Hubbard < Editi s ....................... Curtis Leis nu Gary Sweet, Susie Stoler, Michael Parker Jay Miller, Karen Wiles .graphed; .............. ! Ui Ti • tor or th l i v r e ‘V 1 * o n o r V'\: T a. i o f J.- I t x ' of ti - rd ' • ritr y ' -en, -t is p«r I 1 ..I .dent rn w*p ;>er a ■•'vs al •icnt I ’uMteations, ij.a , A i s t i n Ti - us, TST 12 pi t. .shed M - .. . l a y i- period s Aug vt- 4* p a id a t A> v T y a n d rev . • ’ * e- " ' I ■ p K I t-y ■ I nf! e •.? ;nr t . p MJ I C l . n Cl ■ iv r . - i M c . s V C T In .I it: *n:.l ad v ertisin g a n d i-i.'tii.-ni B u i l d i n g VU ( T K . : h > . I - i n d i a * C ' T i i ; rn rep resen tativ e of The i.< - National Educational Ad* t w rtisin n Sen «?, Inc.. 360 Lexington Ave., New V - i k , N V , 10017. Texan > I ti \ in s ib s c n b e s to The As*®. TI a -I t* New Y o lk T u n e s N e w s Se® * and m o d P res* International T elephoto s -T v lre . T h e T e x a n Is a m e m b e r c t the Assn- th** S ou taw ett Joum a- rh* T o is D aily N ew® ale .1 t answers. lf divisive tactics are continued, the loser in tlw fa d xxiii bo tho city as a whole. to Austin is m ade find that at-large system a way of m aintaining control of the council through Hie high cost engendered by a citywide campaign. right Tile six-five system is a good com­ promise. It doserv'es the united support of the University community. Hopefully you xxiii vote for all 14 am endments to the City Charter. L arry Sands \ ice-President, FTY Dr Bit confused To the editor: After reading M ary Walsh’s guest viewpoint in last Monday’s Texan, I was a bit confused about her great concern over the third alternative offered by tile City Council in the upcoming city election on the stre e t vendor issue. IT HOI ED SEEM to mc that the council is splitting up the opposition vote and not the vote of Hie street vendor supporters. Why then is the third alternative causing such a commotion? I join Ms. Walsh in her condemnation of tile m anner in which the council has the allowed Fred Young’s ordinance on ballot, but I don’t understand Hie xvailing over the third alternative. Could it be that the vendors a re trying to justify a possible losing vote ev en before the election? Lee!and Craig N a k e d p ru d e ry To the editor: incipient N u r s i n g our indigestion, augm enting it with coffee and our usual fare of Daily Texan, we discovered an article on Page I of Monday's issue: tile one narratin g Mrs, Charles LeM aisire’s the pristine laudable efforts purity of the environment of Comanche Trail. As one young man and one young woman who have “lounged around” a t Lake to protect Travis, we would like to her complaint as folloxx-s: to take exception A) She does not own the cove, contrary to her statem ent, since under the laxvs of the state, public waterways are public property. B) In consideration of the fact that her husband is a medical doctor, it strikes us as rath er odd that she would be concerned to keep ber children ignorant of the fact that people really do have bodies under their clothes. the aw ard In dosing, we would like to m ake this an open letter to the selection committee for for Resurgent Victorian P rudery and nominate Mrs. LeM aistre for the Coveted Shriveled Fig Award of 1973 (don’t w orry, it comes xxrapped, but you have to, blush, pert it; yourself). Monty ITnnihlr Kathy Crouch Plan TI Junior Fellows M e n ' s lib To the editor: I am sick and tired of hearing about Women’s Lib! Don't get me wrong; I ’m really quite finally glad women speaking out on job discrimination, but any good thing can be carried too far. a re I Id W E WORKED on campus for some time, but due to budget difficulties I had to move from one departm ent to another last August. I applied to several different departm ents before I xx as finally hired, and received the sam e response everywhere: My God! You can’t be one of the girls! You're a guy! Y ’see, it’s just as hard for a m ale to break into a predominantly women's field as it is for a woman to break into a m en’s. Can I help it if I’m a secretary? P eter Stew art Jordan Secretary College of Pharm acy L o y a lty first Ta the editor: Please allow me to say that not all “ die­ hard Nixon loyalists” are turning on their President as you suggested in your M arch 30 editorial. Perhaps Sen. Buckley and Sen. Tower seek a complete investigation of W atergate to show that President Nixon involved. Also, by the way, Sen. is not Buckley is a m em ber of the Conservative P arty . is not a Republican. He Let’s w ait until Nixon Is proven guilty before condemning him. Paige Massey Accounting major Stu d e n t discrimination To the editor: these things: Nothing is easy, but it would be nice to do lives with dignity' and rent money. However, some obstacles set before us by the University are impossible to hurdle, as tilings stand now. live our those who, by all For exam ple, those of the a rt departm ent, xvith whom I applied to be a life’s drawing model—only to be regretfully sent away. I am a student, th a t's xvhy. I can un­ derstand this denial to a point. Many fresh­ men and women discover they can earn $2.50 an hour modeling. Many respective parents then become angry and indignant with the departm ent for asking daughters and sons to be nude awhile. All right. So they m iss the point. But w hat of legal standards, a re “ of age” (21 or over, I ask )? Surely these1 folks are responsible enough to freely decide a few things for themselves. Seeing as how m any of them have been selfsupporting since they entered college anyway. And seeing aa how these are tile people, I feel, who have earned—by setting graduation dates back another four years, conditions, compromising precious tim e till blue-green, and tolerating humiliating grade points—yes earned the right to the only decently paid jobs on this campus. (I tried to be free and vend, but that gritty reservation is a deliberately contrived wind tunnel where a few money spenders go, where no vendor has an easy tim e of it. Vote, for Ordinance No. I, thoughtfully.) nervous h eart and I ve one m ore point to m ake d e a r. There is a great discrepancy existing here. I was recently hired to model for one of the a r­ chitecture school’s life drawing classes, no questions asked, thank you. But never­ theless. it ain’t right. It just ain’t right! Ervin Renews Arrest Warning A n d e r s o n supplied The Associated Press with a copy of the alleged memorandum, but identifying any signatures or marks removed, been making it impossible to verify its authenticity'. had IN NEW YORK, Republican National Committee Chairman George Bush said the President has frothing to hide, but his ef­ forts to cooperate have been “ drowned in a stream of leaked innuendo and hearsay.” Frvin also said Monday he has accepted an invitation by Atty. Gen. Richard G. Kleindienst to give committee members access to Hie F B I's own Watergate in- v\ -ligation. He said this access includes raw F B I files which he said would be safeguarded from public exposure and would not them­ selves be placed in evidence. ERVIN C ALLED Nixon’s claim of executive privilege “ spurious ” in He said it does not apply situations where are allegations of illegal or unethical conduct. there Calling Nixon’s extension of the doctrine ‘‘executive poppycock,” Ervin said, “ I think he’s shooting the so-called executive privilege doctrine way out past the stratosphere.” Ervin said if he wore president, “ I would fire in not than two minutes any aide that would not go down there and testify.” Ervin refused to comment on reports that convicted Watergate burglar Jam es W. McCord told could corroborate the Senate committee last week h e ids testimony that former Atty. Ghn N. Mitchell and ch e r key N i x o n prior knowledge of the break-in and w i r e at Democratic National Committee headquarters. advisers had attempt tapping IN S E E K IN G TESTIM O N Y from White House aides, Ervin said he issue first would “ engraved Invitations.” Those w ill be followed by subpoenas and then a a n c t ignored, warrants Ervin said. if they are request for He said there are “ multitudes” of cases upheld by the courts in which the Senate has issued such warrants and tried persons for contempt. Thieu Arrives for Talks With Nixon in California SAN C LEM EN T E, Calif. (A P )—President Nixon and South Vietnamese President Nguyen Van Thieu pledged a joint effort Monday to build a lasting Indochina peace, then began discussing Saigon’s plea for stepped-up U.S. economic aid. After the leaders completed an initial 90- minute meeting at the Western White House, officials indicated Thieu had collected Nixon's pledge for an infusion of U.S. aid for postwar reconstruction. But indications were that Nixon was frowning upon a Thieu request for a specific in­ U.S. guarantee of tervention if North Vietnam blatantly violates the still-fragile cease-fire agreement. renewed m ilitary As he gave Thieu a full m ilitary welcome, Nixon voiced hopes their two days of summit talks would produce “ great steps forward in building the lasting peace, the real peace that we have fought together for . . Thieu responded bv expressing “ heartfelt gratitude’’ for past U.S. assistance and said he hoped the summit would bring “ a con­ solidation of peace in Indochina and a new era of in peace among all parties concerned.” (constructive cooperation A fter the tw o le a d e rs’ opening m eeting, White House press secretary Ronald L, Ziegler said they had reviewed the situation in In­ dochina and had “ stressed the importance of agreement implementing” signed two months ago in Paris. cease-fire the The two presidents, Ziegler said, “ reaf­ firmed the continuing strong friendly ties” between their countries and discussed the development of their postwar relations. He said the leaders were discussing “ in depth and in detail” such other questions as efforts to account for U.S. troops still missing in action, infiltration by North Vietnam and the presence of North Viet­ namese troops in Laos and Cambodia. reported As he gave Thieu a red carpet welcome to the Western White House L u r days after the United States officially ended its decade the of Vietnam Vietnamese now “ have the strength to defend their own independence and their right to choose their own government . . involvement, Nixon said: ” . . . We hope from this day. as a result of our talks,” Nixon said, “ will come great steps forward in building the lasting peace, the real peace that we have fought together for, and that now we want all of our people to live for.” Ex-Market Head Discusses U.S.-European Economics Kennedy Round of Genera! Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT) negotiations in Geneva. Rey was president of the Common Market from 1957 to is now serving as 197U. Hp chairman of the Organization of E u r o p e a n Cooperation and Development's (OECD) group on trade and related probles. Holy Cross Brothers I ' M T Y - m em bers sharing a life of p ra y e r for a common cause: and w o rk < 'hrist, D I V E R S I T Y - in d ivid u al efforts meeting w id e­ spread needs <. K \ I RONI TY tim e . — R is in g la b o r, possessions to others In this land and abroad. l f Interested, w rite to ' B ro th e r M a rk , < S C . Box I S I St. K d w ard s Univ. Austin, T ex as 7S704 is T h e international currant the most monetary crisis important problem 10 be solved former Jean Rey, this year, European president of the Common Market’s executive body, said Monday in a campus lecture. Rey .spoke on “ The Common Market and the United Skates.” The lecture was sponsored by the University’s European Studies Program. Dr. George Hoffman, professor of in­ tend u^ed Rey. geography, trade The Belgian executive spoke of relations with the and international monetary U . S . European countries current crisis. Rev is a leading figure in the negotiations scheduler! next fall in Ethiopia for a new internation­ al monetary system. “ U.S.-European trade relations are not as good as before," Rey said. LOWERING T A R IF FS a n d quotas may alleviate the current trade relations in the world, Rey added. The F e b r u a r y devaluation of the U.S. dollar has made American products less expensive in Europe and has created some impact on trade relations. recent flexible The monetary system should be made ad­ justments, Rev said, commenting on possible changes the present system, for any for Stable rates should be the base of the new international monetary system, Rey added. Tho Belgian E c o n o m i s t has been attending worldwide conferences in an effort for an agreement the monetary problem and its solution. on Rev praised the United States’ efforts to curb inflation. He noted inflation rose 3 percent in this country while it soared 6 percent In Europe. economist The noted com­ the U.S. balance of mented on on situation and payments agricultural trade between the United States and the Europe marked. The United States w ill p r o b a b ly turn more of its attention to the that monetary crisis now its involvement the Vietnam in conflict is over, he speculated.’ \ ll NSH’ (H AN G E in world affairs today is the assembling of countries forming (-on ti non ta I negotiating bodies. Rev said. together Tho son of a Protestant pastor. Rey received a law degree from the University of in Belgium and practiced law. He was elected the Belgian to Parliam ent in 1939, Liege After the war, Rey was elected the Belgian Chamber of to Representatives four times. He was later a deputy delegate to the Third Assembly of tile United Nations in 1918. REA' SERA ED VS minister for reconstructvin in 1949. He joined the Belgian Cabinet in 1954 as minister of economic affairs. the H e became Belgian member of the European Com­ mon Market in 1958. From 1964 to 1967, he headed the Common the delegation Market's to ( HE, , ANA« * . MV SlO . £ IS SO STI Pf I CAN'T .CATCH THE PAU-1, X that's Bucare vtxi haven't USE? IT ALL WINTER ..TRV RI/B61N6 TIE NEAT'5-FOOT OIL INTO IT supply. WASHINGTON (A P )- Sen . Sam J. Ervin Jr., D-N.C., Monday rejected a White House effort to obtain for presidential aides in the Senate's investigation of the Watergate affair. treatment special E R M N repeated his vow he w ill seek the arrests of White House aides if they do not honor .subpoenas to testify under oath in formal private and public sessions. He also told a news conference he believes White House counsel John W. Dean I I I was involved In a “ conflict of interest” because he apparently represented key presidential advisers while trying to learn if they were involved in sabotage and espionage at­ tempts. LATER MONDAY, Ervin and the special Senate investigating heads were committee c r i t i c i z e d by president ial press secretary Ronald Ziegler. investigation, The Watergate he Ziegler said, has been “ plagued by irresponsible leaks of tidal wave proportions" and Ervin should “ get his own disorganized house in order so that the in­ vestigation can go forward in a proper atmosphere of traditional fairness and due process.” L a t e r , E rvin 's Watergate committee scheduled a Tuesday to discuss ways of meeting closing off leaks. Another leaked story appeared in Monday morning papers. Jack Anderson said Columnist convicted Watergate spy James McCord had given the committee a written memorandum in which he quoted another convicted burglar, Gordon Liddy. The memo said Liddy related that the bugging of Democratic offices had been planned in the John N. office of Atty. Gen. Mitchell by Liddy, Mitchell, Dean and Jeb Magruder, a Nixon campaign official. Crossword Puzzle ACROSS Answer to Yesterday’s Puzzle 3 Symbol for calcium 4 Monster 5 Brief 6 Returns 7 Native metal 8 Be defeated 9 Man's nickname IO Lawmaking body 12 A continent (abbr.) 14 Roads.de restaurant 17 Dolphins* cetacean 20 Certain 23 Note of scale 24 Bone 25 Poses for portrait 27 Lampreys 30 Look sullen 32 Seeds 35 Sea n ymphs I And so forth 4 Old Testament (abbr.) (abbr.) 6 Parts in play l l Fruit 13 Worn away 7.5 Greek letter 16 Comeson the scene 18 Symbol for nickel 19 Conjunction 21 Slave 22 Verve 24 Burden 26 Ireland 28 Devoured 29 Denude 31 The sweetsop 33 Teutonic deity 34 Short jacket 36 Sluggish 38 Negative prefix 40 Petitions 42 Saccharine 45 A state (abbr.) 47 Journey 49 Pierce 50 Lamb's pen name 52 Organs of hearing 54 Saint (abbr.) 55 Three toed sloth 55 One first in rank 59 Exists 61 Diatribe 63 Occupant 65 Rise and fall cf ocean (pl.) €5 Latin conjunction 67 Mohammedan title DOWN 1 Vast aga 2 One who shirks d.jtv 37 Dampens 38 Mental images 39 Widow 41 Thailand 43 Dining 44 Tuberculosis (abbr.) 6! Imitated 53 l et it stand 57 Female ruff 53 Printer's measure 60 Music: as written 46 ( ■ rnese rmle 48 Talk idly 62 A state (abbr.) 64 Cooled lava 1 2 3 4 5 • X y 7 8 I 9 6 ',3 i ’• - I 17 10 I 14 18 !•>! 12 16 X v 19 20 21 22 23 25 26 E v 27 v A , rsrri 34 33 39 40 41 OTT* 42 y e 30 47 31 P 35 36 v X 48 32 33 i v v - 28 37 ' s s K 46 62 51 52 56 57 49 I r n 53 m» r c . \ 67 I v I r I : y : 63 66 Distr, by United Feature . i ndicate, Inc. 11 15 l y e 24 29 45 50 55 61 65 Se w j j g 43 44 ... ■to I59 UTAH SPEAKER SPECIAL W h en and if you buy a Utah WD-90 speaker for the normal price of $89.95, Music Room One w ill sell you another one for only 51 OO. W h ich ’ means you can get a pair for $90.95. Plus your dividend. But there’s only a limited F O O T IT ,' I MATE ALLPORT WHERE HOU HAVE TO TAVE CARE . O f VOUK EQUIPMENT' T ach c *v ■Site-* - . A v o i d C h a r i e r /?/s£s/| EUROP N□ I LEAVE BEFORE JU N E /R ET U R N ANYTIME N EW YORK/LUXEMBOURG $136 ALSO DALLAS/NEW YORK GROUP FLIGHTS M ay 28-30 (*?lu s Ta* where applicable) 20 For Reservations Call the O n ly Bonded Professional Travel A g en t on the Drag Ila rw o o « l T r a v e l 2428 G U A D A L U P E ST. • Pho: 478-9343 Round Trip* Youth f aro (To Age l l ) R e g u lar S rh rd iilrd Jo t I light* N P M U K A T K IN S IU • Hieh Com pliance W o o fe r; 12” diam eter. I V vo ice coil. I U lb. Alnico V m agnet structure. M id ­ range : S ’ dire t rad iator, protected from internal cabinet pressure b y sealed chassis. T w e e te r; 3'*>" treble control. Fre q u e n cy sealed chassis, response; 35-18,000 Hz P o w e r Handling; 30 w a tts (60 w a tts peak). C ab inet; genuine walnut veneer, on V stock hex hand rtib ly d oil fin is h Size: 14 x 23 x IO" deep. Im p e d an ce , - ohms. .Shipping W e ig h t; 33 lbs. includes FREE Shirt (r S -VN AN IT »NI< ‘ -The Texas b . .* -.i team will br seeing a Couple of now wrinkles sn the pan'.'' it has boon playing the last tun months, but fortunately it v :: (No |>o seem" the same old rattlers rn its doubleheader with S ’ Mary's nere Tuesday. I-’,; st, the Longhorns will be playing under the lights f<>r the first J me this season at V.J. Keefo Field, who rn the opemr.g seven-inning game begins at 5 p m. But unless that contest lusts unusually long, the Horns non'! to their night have to resort vision following nine- the inning nightcap, till Shoe Shop We make and repair boots and shoes * SALE * SHEEP SKIN RUGS M.ny B»r league ba!) players, except maybe the Rangers. St M ary’s might even Ire wise to use that 10th man rn the field also, si litre the last time the two teams met, the 'Horns shelled the Rather pitchers fop IR hits in shutting out the visitors, 1-0 and 10-0. St. Mary's get only one runner to third base all day and hit only six singles in the two games. As fur playing at night, Texas Coach Cliff CustaCon doesn't think it will affect the 'Horns that much, although they will have W hy does a college student need life insurance? (In c good reason—U demonstrates (inane iaf responsibility, A growing number ct emplo\ are looking tor this t barat teristic: in prospth t employ ens. There ore main other important reasons. The\ re all covcreel in a special booklet VVI ( ollege Students are Bun mg Lite Insurant c. a free ( ops al no obligation, write or <. all; Dan W . McAngm No. 32 Goble Mall Ayi+ln, Texas Phone: 476-7486 S o u t h w e s t e r n L ife H a p p in e s s is w h a t w e s e ll r i “ a little difficulty. Our players played night games all last summer.” What worries Gustafson more Is finding a leadoff batter that can get on ha so consistently. ‘‘We may just. skip die leadoff spot,” he joked. “ (Ken) Rape hasn't been (Charlie) Crenshaw isn t hitting and the rest of the lineup are not leadoff types. At least Pape can run if he does get on.” getting on. TO MARK M A TT ERS worse, K'V'fe Field is a tough park to In? in, with 325 feer to the fence down the lines and 400 feet to dead renter. The Rattlers can testify to that. As a team, they’re hitting a skimp; .160. Gustafson has a clear memory of the stadium himself. “ We won three down their last year in tha’ (NCAA district) tourney when we lioat Pan Am and Trinity. We swamped ’em (Pan Am), 1-0 and 2-0, and then we ieallv swamped Trinity, 4-3, in 14 Innings.” Aft. Volkswagen Owners Outstanding C o m p le te Autom otive S ervice Across from Gulf Mart G L 2-0205 CLOSED SA TU RD AY The Only Indepedent V W Garage in Austin to Guarantee Volkswagen Repairs Midi's Automotive Service 7951 BURNET ROAD SERVICING V O L K S W A G E N VEH ICLES IS OUR SPEC IA LTY that’s swamping if And someone, the Rattlers are so bogged down to begin with, they might as well not even come up for air. Asked who was St. Mary's top hitter, sports publicist Coit Butler replied. “ I Wish you hadn't asked that.” before finally (hind baseman saying senior is No. I at .252 David Medina catcher Fred though captain Clausen .250 average. Clausen leads (he team in RBIs with four. is next with a Texas’ leading R B I man is first baseman R ick Burley, who has 23, followed by Rudy Jaramillo’s 21 and Bill Borryhill and Keith Moreland’s IS apiece. But four R B Is is nothing to laugh about when you consider the whole R if f le r team has scored only 11 runs all year. Total. That’s it. Butler put it best when he said, “ We're very weak at the plate. W e ’re hoping to catch the 'Horns by surprise and get a hit or two.” Two, yet. R e a lly going out on a limb, lf St. M ary's is relying on its designated hitter for the both of them or just one of them, it might be barking up the wrong tree. Herb S m y rl leaves plenty to be desired as a DH since he’s .087 with two hits only hitting in 23 appearances. What St. Mary's needs is a designated team. ST. M VHT ’S doesn't exactly have a powerhouse to fill that spot, though, since the Rattlers have yet to record a home run. Texas, on the other hand, has 22 to its credit. Burley leads with Jaram illo has four and eight, R A F T T R IP T R A N S P O R T , v r o x . FO C !) A - E Q U I P M E N T $(>5 00 p»r pprvtn April 11-15 Contact Buen Viaje, Inc. 440? Ave. H Austin, Tr\;*s CA S5S0 Moreland three, Just to name a few. if its PH Texas could even u^o a pitcher for it wished and probably pet more production than St. Mary's. Rut Gustafson, who’s planning to split up the mound duty between several hurlers, will likely give someone else a chanco to hit. Bm Gustafson is not fond of the rule. “ I don’t like it,” he said flatly. “ I really prefer the old standard. I honestly don’t see how it’s going to help tho game. Tt the managnrial strategy and bunting aspects. takes cut “ IN C O LLEG E , many pitchers were top hitters in high school. They could become professional hitters but they may not make it as pitchers. Fans aren’t going to come out to the games just because of tile PH. You only have to win.” But that's easier said than done, especially for tho Rattlers, who have only won twice all year out of 14 games. And those vic­ tories carne on the same day, St. Patrick’s P a y against major power Northeast Missouri State. The Rattlers must have had a four-leaf clover in every pocket. starters junior for St. Probable Mary's are southpaw Bruce Vetters, 0-1 with a 5.63 KRA, and sophomore righthander Corky Saenz, who has a 1-3 mark and a 0.86 KRA. Gustafson plans to use Martin Flores and Eon Roznovsky in the opener and then Xane Grubbs, Burley and Jim Gideon in the second. To top it off, St, M ary’s Coach Elmer Kosub has lieen sidelined with the flu for the better part of a Meek although even Butler didn’t know who was going to lie (ho designated each . Unless someone can doctor up the Rattlers in a hurry, an ap­ pearance by Kosub just might give him a relapse. < D , ce upon a time, not so ver\ long ago. in the sleepy hamlet of Hardin, there lived a lonely Young Lass who was banished to the High Tower because she failed to heed the Royal I dict of His Ruthlessness, Duke Buck. There was this Rule, it seems, which forbade male guests in lovely young lasses’ quarters a f t e r t h e stroke of midnight on weekdays. 2 a.m. on weekends* Bu t back to our story. I here sat our Heroine, yvcek after week in that wretched Urn cr, w ith naught to do but sing old C arole King hits and comb her flaxen waxen. \nd comb it she did, so frantically and so furiously that soon she had the longest hair in the land- And the worst case of split ends since \ idal Sassoon. So there you have it—the merciless Duke, relentlessly main­ taining that she done him Wrong, and our Lovely Young Lass. whil­ ing ayvay lier time crooning tunes and splitting hairs. And she might still be there today, were it not lor a Strange Occurrence on the esc of her 21st birthday. Y ou see, a young weight- lifter and parttime hairdresser named Maurice was making his way through the Outskirts of I ow n when he spied a candle burning in the window of the High Tower, which loomed ominously above the sleepy hamlet in the moon­ light. Being the venturesome sort, Maurice turned his attention and his trusty steed toward Hardin. But alas, upon reaching the tower, he soon discovered there was no entryway save one —the yyindow high above him. Seeing no visible means of support, Maurice turned and reluctantly trudged aw av. T X > not give up Hope! Our ’j oung Lass was a light Lovely sleeper anti, upon hearing Maur­ ice s ankle weights clanging to­ gether, siie ran hurriedly to the w indow. “ W a it up, Handsom e Stranger!" she cried desperately. And Maurice, hearing this familiar signal, promptly lifted the neai cst durn belli w hieh.as it turned out, Wits none other than the Duke himself) over his head. “ Put me down!’’ the Duke demanded. “ But Sir, I thought that line about the dumbed took care of that!" countered our Hero. W ell, one pun lead to an­ other, and soon our Lovely Young I ass cs mid stand no mot e and pro­ ceeded to fling I terse lf bodily from the window, intent on ending her life. Or at least impairing her hear­ ing* But as Fate would have it, her hair, which had by now grown to great lengths, became entangled in the windowsill masonry and our Heroine came to an abrupt halt inches from the ground. W e pause here for a moment to expose .I subtle vet meaningful departure from the well-known Tale of Rapunzel (Circa Brothers Grimm). Whereas RapunzeLs wooer clim bed up to rescue his Beloved, our Lovely Young Lass jum ped down to within a few paces of the unsuspecting Maurice. O n e small step for Maurice, one giant step for W o m en s Lib! W ell. you can guess tile rest. Our Lovely Young Lass agreed not to sing any more Golden Oldies if Maurice would marry her and promise to mend her ends. M aurice consented eagerly, which came as a surprise to no one. And the Duke, bless his Black Heart, was overwhelmed by the Whole Affair, whereupon he publicly announced that the R u le forbidding male guests in young lasses' q uarters after m idnight, 2 a. rn. on wee kends, was he re by and forevermore Officially Amended as follow s: $•cm the 2nd day of Ju n e forward,” proclaimed the Duke, “ there w ill be No R estrictio n s placed on Hour of Departure in the High Lower (Tower A ).’’ .oral: W e ’ve let down o u r ITair at Hardin. Or, Today Tower A . . . Tom orrow W ho Knows? R u m o r has ii that th e author o f this F a iry I ale has successfully eluded the L ite ra ry Society and plans to release a S e q u e l within the w e e k .—Ed, M j HARDIN NORTH ■ ■ 801 West 24th Stied (512) 476-7636 Page 6 Tuesday, April 3, 13T3 T S E D A U T TEXAN kirk bohls You won't hear Muhammad M i going around town bragging about his Saturday boxing match with unknown Ken Norton for two reasons. one, All didn't win. And two, he couldn't brag about it if he had won. Because Ali broke hi.s jaw. In die first round, no less. That ram is comparable to Bob Hope breaking his nose, L ib e le e breaking ais fingers or G len Campbell breaking his hair. That's bet ausu Ahs mouth is his livelihood. Or if it wasn't, it may have to he now. Beeaa- his boxing days may he numbered. But then it depends who’s counting. Angelo Punner suggests that anyone who counts out Ali in the fu tu re rf boxing is a "jerk. We've already talked and he (All) asked how long if might he before he can get back in training.” However, its doubtful that Dundee can be entirely objective about the whole matter. AU Oops It might l>e different lf Ali had been beaten by a name boxer. In­ stead, Ali. a f tuner heavyweight champion, was defeated by Norton, a former (-parring partner for .toe Frazier, the last man to heat Ali. Ah. wh used t , “ fin a like a butterfly and sting like a bee,” made like a coco title fight with Frazier, Ali has fought l l times, working his way back up to the top. Such a busy schedule has tired Ali, © THEO RY KOI R —Ali's last opponent, the European boxer, Joe Bugner, knocked Ali senseless and he was still shoving the effects of that fight. That argument is senseless also, bul Ali fans used that same point in explaining Frazier’s less to George Foreman. • TH EO RY SIX Hypnotism works, Norton had been seeing a try to swing a fight and while Norton didn't hypnotist before the po k A watch in front of Ah, the at times until Norton woke him up. latter did seem to be sleep-walking • THEO RY S E V E N All wanted to lose so as to make FnrfjsiLn and Frazier overly cocky, With a guaranteed $210,000 beforehand, Ali had nothing to lese, Except his jaw, which would question such a theory. But then boxing is unlike baseball, tennis and other major sports whore a loam or iierson who loses is out of the competition and has to wait until next season or tournament. In boxing, a fighter can pick up where he loft off arri in one fight can become the champion of tho world (i.e. George Foreman). One thing Ali didn’t lose was his name. He's still the drawing card he was Im sore last Saturday and v ill ho as long as he chooses to remain in boxing. However, Foreman has the privilege of picking and choosing between tile i cst of the contendei-s. AU has nothing to hold over Foreman now that he's been beaten bv an unknown. Dream All Wet? So the dream fight between Foreman and AU could be washed up cr,- at least held cut to dry. The long climb back may lie ton long tor Ali. .And if that's the (ase, it would tie too had. And not because the world will miss his poetry, eilher. Ali's done a lot for boxing. He made it an art., something that tha youngsters in the learning stages could watch, admire and try' to copy, and finally something vibrant and exciting in an otherwise dull world. True, his methods are entirely unconventional, annoying to some, amusing to others but admirable by all. Always haughty', always talking, Ali has never left any doubts about anything whenever ba walks into a room. His captivating entrances onto any scene have always made him the center of attention. Stably any exit he makes will he the same. sssi* A g r e a t i night fo r I K entucky J Fried Chicken i I Visit the Colonel » I 2120 G U A D A L U P E I J I i I I r i m m g r O T M f M ' r n " mt -ni'ft i Pre-lease now for Summer. (At low summer rates) Share the way we live: For as little as $58.75 a month E X A M P L E : Four students can share the rent on: • 2BR, 2 bath flat at $58.75 per month • 4BR, 2 bath flat at $73.75 per month Y et all four have full access to all the things that make The Cas­ cades such an exciting place to live. • All furnished. All bills paid. At the Cascades. • Swimming pools, with w ater volleyball courts • Clubhouse with wet- bars, fireplace & spa or sauna. • Free icemakers. • Ample parking & laundry facilities. ^ ‘ Cascades 444-4485 On the shuttlebus route. 1221' Algarita From IH-35, take Oltorf exit to Algarita. turn right one block. Hannon Enters 'Other' Golfers For Longhorn In an effort to give some of his other golfers a chance to Texas Coach George play, Hannon has slated five younger golfers the Longhorn Tournament at Morris Williams Golf Course beginning Tuesday. compete to in “ We're not playing our .second string.'' Hannon said. “ We’re just letting some people play to give them some experience.” freshmen Three of the ’Horns’ six golfers are including Tim Wilson of Austin. John Paul Scott of Lovington. N.M., and Jim Mason of St. Louis, Mo. Junior Bob Harwell of Wichita Falls and sophomore David Narveson of Waterloo, Iowa, round out tho Longhorn team of six. The field of competition Is much more abbreviated than tho Morris Williams Invitational, held last week here. St. Edward’s, Huston-Tillotson College and Prairie View A&M are the other teams involved in the quadrangle >r ti urn; men . Tile 54-hole tournament will hr divided up over tw >-da\ period with 27 holes being played each day. the Asked whether this tournament would help work out a lien Crenshaw-less g if learn of 1974, Hannon said. “ We'll consider next year's problems no.v ye ir.” Lakeway for Friday Tournament The scheduled through Sunday has undergone a change of location and will he held in­ stead at Morris Williams. Snorts Shorts Up the Sandbox Mark Dubowy of Zeta Beta Tau takes a flying jump into the Memorial Stadium broad jump pit for a leap of 19-1 I X in the Texas Intramural Tract and Field Meet Monday right. Dubowy didn't win but placed a close second to J . S. Meng^o of the Jester Brewers and Jerry Barker of the Jester Zoom­ ed, who tied for first place with a mark of 20-4. Texas Hefters Sweep Tulane foam N EW O RLEAN S tennis fSpl)—Tho Texas finished successfully the first half of its journey into Louisiana .Nlfinday, bearing Tulane easily, 9-0, in losing only three sets all day, The ’Horns will attempt to complete the job on the Cajuns Tuesday against LSC, as Texas travels to Baton Rouge for a dual meet with the Tiger;. I Dan Nelson won the No, Davis from T .he • singles Henley, 6-3, 6-3, and from there Texas rolled on. Jim flay I ess, Graham Whaling. Ron Touchon Don Murray and Bill Fisher all followed Nelson with singles wins then Nolson-W haling, a n d Touehon-Bayless Dan Byfield Fisher all won in doubles competition to give the 'Horns the clean win. a ti d + * ■# Advance ticket sales for the Orange-White f ctball game, the Texas track meet this weekend Texas Relays in Austin v the athletic an* being ticket office. Tile Orangc-W tlse c nclud *s drills, is sc hod Thursday at Memorial Stadium and will he televised live by channel 7 in Austin. Tickets are i $2 for adults and $1 for high school students Admission is free to blanket, tax holders. Tile prices are the same for this weekend's track meet between SMU, TCL7 and Texas. During spring break on April 13 and ll, th° Texas Relays will lie held in Austin, Tickets are 54 reserved scats, $3 general admi,sMwi, $1 high s<: col general tax admission at d Si blanket holders general admission or reserved seats. 2200 GUADALUPE PLAZA ELEGANT OFFICES T W R K I N t ■ W A I ! . O H L E C A LL KEN C A R R — 476-701 I Records Fall in Intramural Track manage. Mark Cotlar Richard Given lime in Ute fraternity division. turned and in that the Lawrence Wild ran a 10.4 to take independent divisii n title, Raul Medrano had a 10.4 Joel the club division and 'n Morley turned m a 10.45 for the housing division crown. right’s In the 220-yard dash, a 23.3 by independent's James Moore was fastest. He was the running in a tough field, though, as Donald Johnston was right on his heels at 23.6, and Keith Neffendorf finished third in the race vi;h 23.8. They were all far behind the meet record of 21.6, set in 1959. In the softball throw. Philip Dyer f f I >elta Tau Delta woo with a tass of 306-11, far from the record of 550-10' set in i960. J S. Men gin and Je rry Barker wound up n a tie for the long jump title with leaps of 20-4. turned Then, in the final event of the the 880-yard relay. Pill night, Gamma Delta ran a 1:35.8 to take first place in the fraternity In the division. Akala se orb best time of the night, winning the club division race In 1:36.4. Tile running for events of the intramural meet will be held beginning at 6:30 p.rn Wednesday at Memorial Stadium. And the drams along­ side the track will still be there —-jur-t in case. finals the I1 Problem P P r o b le m P r e smarmy C o u n se lin g Se rv e S tu d e n t H e a lth C e n te r 105 VV. 26th S t. 14th F lo o r- S o u th ) < '^n ti dent c counseling with til a err.atives discu»*ed and r e f e r ­ ees r n d r to a p p - o p r.a te re s o rro - y o u n g o r E la t e # c l M r s S e r b ner 478-5711 E x t. 26 es M E X IC A N BUFFETS r f A D IV IS IO N O F PA M EX FO O D S, INC. LUNCHEON SPECIAL 7 LUNCHEON SPECIALS SERVED YEAR-ROUND ATSAME PRICE Mid- O n ly M o n d a y thru Sa tu rd ay . D rin k it ax lUNCHtOH Z TWI. I'M" • - r r s r - „ .ntf *«"•»• topp«<* >vc— -.4 *»»« wrtb ^«»t»4« ht r.e. : >M .«4 * * * ■ "5 £ a V - " « S r Davis, who was clocked in U T . But the record of 12.9, held by four men, was never in jeopar y, Jester 6 won Next to Malish’s rocordnsetting pa co In the 440, David Barnum the housing of in 52.R, while division heat Stephen Pearce ran a 53.0 to take second in his heat and third for the night. Sigma Alpha Epsilon took the quarter mile relay in the fraterni­ ty' division In the in­ in 45.6. dependent race, Broccoli turned in a 46.8 to nose out the Aard­ varks, who were clocked in 46.95, Akala took the club division title in 46.1 and Roberts Hall s 46.7 won in the housing division. Jon Levy had no trouble with the rest of the field in winning the 880-yard run for the fraternity division with a time of 2:05.0. Levy's closest competition for the night came from Mike Moehle of F E M . who took the club division 8^0 in 2:10.6 Moehle also finished behind Kanda in the mile with 4:46.6, Tn the 100-ya.rd dash, 10.4 was time anyone could the best TOMORROW J O B K E ’ SCBT Tit* Aft Special Guest Stars SKILES AND HENDERSON W e d ne sday, A p ril 4th, 8 P.M . Austin M u n ic ip a l A u d i t o r iu m C h arg e tickets Joske's H ighland Mall 4th floor customer service desk an d University C o-O p B y DANNY DDI GLAS Texan Staff Writer Tile University Intramural Track Meet may not measure up to the Texas Relays when it comes to prestige, but individual challenge of pride and competition is all there. the Tile intramural events give the ex-high school jocks a chanco to get out on the track and show how they once could do it. The times might be a little slower, the muscles a bit tighter and, as long distance running events reminds thorp are a the competitors, number of drains along the side of the track, just in case the stomachs get a little queasier. the starter the for Nevertheless, in the divisional events Wednesday night the races were dose and a couple of records were set in addition to t h e standards established in field event finals last Thursday. new two In the fourth race of the event, reeled off a 52.3 the fraternity division 440-yard dash, David Mali sh, of Delta Tau Delta, to establish a new record that was to stand all night. But then this was the first time the quarter mile has been a part of the in­ tramural meet. In die grueling mile it was Mitsu Kanda of AICHE all the way. He posted a 4:43.8 to become the meet’s first mile record-holder. Last Thursday the meet record was tied in tile high jump as Frank Fleming of P i Kappa Alpha cleared 6-5, matching the mark set by three jumpers in the 1971 meet. Mark Essert, unattached, tossed the shot 49- 10' . also setting an intramural record. Tile rest of the previously set marks were not even approached. In the fraternity 120-yard low hurdles, William Hale of Phi Gamma Delta turned In a 13 0 to nip Alpha Tau Omega's Pat Rodriguez Dedicates Golf Win to Roberto G REEN SBO RO , N.C. CAP)—-Chi Chi Rodriguez, a little clown turned dead serious, thanked God and then dedicated his victory in the Greater Greensboro Open gold tournament to tho late Roberto Clemente. “ I want to dedicate it to Robe:to," Rodriguez said M nday after his five-under-par 66 in the slop and goo of the Wedgefield Country Club course brought him the victory with a 267 total, 17 under par. “ I thought of him every putt I hit.” Clemente, a Hall of Fame outfielder for the Pittsburgh Pirates, was killed in an an airplane crash New Year’s Eve. Both he and Rodriguez were bt rn in Puerto Rico, “ I thank God for winning, for letting me win,” Rodriguez said. Rodriguez, who abandoned his role « f tour comic two years ago to concentrate entirely on his golf, scored by a single stroke over Ken Still and veteran Leu Graham. Still stormed into contention with a final round fi4 that included l l one-putt greens place at 275, winning $".,255. Texas-ex Tom Kite shot a TI Monday to finish in a fie for eighth IConsum er Protection *Lijual • /hts € d ith * Conservation H Pfe %***-*•»•' I C P Your needs are her priorities. Edith has time for Austin. W t j Sp*' 3318 Perry Lane Vote for Edith Buss 453-/9-3 F d , P o l . Ad b y s t u d e n t s f o r E d i t h B u z 3 FOREIGN AOORS 3 0 8 0 0 0 * 0 0 | K | 2 477-3594 HOURS'8am.-6 pm. MCN-FRI WORK ON AL BRITISH CARS • CARMAN CARS (EXCEPT WV] • ALIA ROMEO • AU SWEDISH CARS • FRENCH CARS $4.50 $6.50 $5.50 and $3.50 Tickets Available af Auditorium Box Office I 5800 BURNET ROAD PHONE: 451-2296 fi Houston Dallas to u t ems fbchirdson, fort North. Arlington, S i* Anton*. Austin El Paso, Cornus Christi, Longview, Albuquerque, Phoenix, Oklahoma City Bossier City, Baton Rouge & New Orleans. jaSkm > -i'ix s& d ? W tstSm f V h u s h i n g I o u c h e s f a t S p r i n g — BA G L E SH IR T S and T IES W H A T S r u a H T A f t o u T . . . MADISON M o o se D e x t e r h o u o b M a d is o n -Bella i ire A p t s 2 ) m e a l s ( t h e p e $ r < N T o w n J M A\t> s e f L v / c e - P r i v a t e t r a m s B L A T E P P c o L ‘> * S p o ^ H 6 p A c l ? office : ICfl \V, ZZ— 4-78 - ‘I B 0! I fall. ♦ vU u APPLY m l w The first scents with a power to stir up new beginnings. Wearone and evoke a primal response. Musk Oil Essence of ea rth i­ ness. Fresh as the first day of spring. A long-lasting scent with primitive ap­ peal. (Even better when ifs mutual.) Civet Oil Spirit of fire. A wild, free scent with a secret inner self, waiting to light up. (Ifs catching.) Ambergris Gift of the sea. A clean, forceful scent throbbing with unexplored depths. (C roon. Explore.) BY ALYSSA ASHLEY D1V. HOUBIGANT. IN G UNIVERSITY COOP Concentrated O J .25 F! O z . 3 0 Each scent also available in Spray Mist, Net U t. 2 oz. $5.00 Lett, color under control in a gin sham check b'uttondow n shirt of Durable Pi p <' I ester and cotton oxford cloth, half sleeves, straw­ berry and v. bite, blue and white, brown and white, yellow and w hite, 12 50; "finishing touches" solid tone ties, 6.50 to 8.50. Right dots wit 11 dash in small white pin dots on soft tone long sleeve shirts in blue, yellow tan, Durable Press p o llster and cotton Nantucket chambray. I LOO; the polyester seersucker plaid tie in assorted colors to complement the shirt, 0.50 to 8.50 u n v e r i t y r ; r - iUADALUf'E AT 24th S u i t i n g H «i b M r btodnrm z < - Jz LU Q . REYNOLDS T H E D a i l y T E X A N Tuesday, April 3, 1973 Page 7 Summer Energy Cutback Possible Bx CANDY KANE Austin has ne e n , . r g y . p . boon alerted ta ii mer. is r ..- - R.L. H unco Power I >epa:t Monday that 1 Producing Co., p ss for Austin' indicated cut! tb<'Sp e.vperie O' uld occur this summer. Hancock estimated gas ear* t.itlrnent w >ukl n >t lie rn e th. n 50 Dareful nttvjBins *ho dif* ference would be made up with fuel oil ' r a , "IN u <;i s r ft ; s Cos ( ; >s I ’ XX 1 iy>r. urn more Ai etxar.an’. m o n e y s , ” I t i ; Tile add.tio espied h lid brin na il i> ak v. hidi xx. ] b I ae fin IU LIBRARY FINES I ■ VT N’ d ic e s Library or any . f bs brat are official University t munications requirm:; mu tate attention. TO GET ACQUAINTED DOES YOUR LAST NAME START WITH "AT, "T", ct "O " l f a n . t h e n - ( u n l u n i h i« SI r e c u t * U t fir* i M i l t l l TS >-> • n l . - r t * I M M I O R I *• I I M V h u < - m r . o u i n m o c u - n c b u t l e ! m t i i r h - t i c . H o f t * t x x h u ' t i n t i n * VV* <4 I n o d f i t :i!l -t o l u r i t ONE-HALF PRICE O FFER G O O D A PRIL 2 T H R O ' G M APRIL 8 MUST S H O W Y O U R STUDENT O R STAFF I D. O FFER G O O D FO R IN D IV ID U A L O N LY Mi (OIC • I iSuCasa RI S T ARR W T S 504 E. 5th St. 2330 NO RTH LO O P Watch This Ad Each Week F< 476-4841 465-5449 reserve. to “ It pertains The reserve doe-; nut refer to natural gas or fuel oil, Hancock said. the gent ,’a‘ors and other equipment In the used by paver plants, event that some of the mat Hines fail, tlie reserve will guarantee full system's use facilities.” the of “ \\ K A R E IN go -I sh pc unless we have a fuel shortage,” tile clo -trie director said. " If there is a shortage of fuel, we can rely partially en lim Texas Interconnected System (T IS ),” he ad led. TIS is a statewide network of electric pawer transmission lines, A power plant on TIS which is having trouble meeting its own system's demands can borrow electricity from other companies on TIS. Hancock explore*! that. Coastal St aes G as Producing Co. sup­ plies five pitter companies in the Austin area of f ar of tile TIS. “ If Coastal States curtails oiw plant, they will have to curtail all the companies for an even balance,” he added. ‘‘Curtailing Austin would also effect the areas covered by the latter Colorado River Authority, City Public Services of San An; mo and Central Power and I,.gin in South Texas,” Hancock said. Austin power plants currently have a si wage Capacity of 4.4 million galli us of fuel oil. Han­ ce, k said that in an extreme case this of complete curtailment summer, plants would have to burn approximately one million gallons of fuel daily to moot the system’s demands. ‘•\\;ih a 30 percent natural gas curtailment. Austin could function for eight days without a cutback in the peak season,” Hancock explained. ] lower during “ At STIX CANNOT run on fuel nil alone. The o»il residue builds up inside the boilers and causes loss of heat energy.” Holly Three, one of the city’s most productive boilers at the plant on Town Lake, is an example of the residue problem. in lite tank was Tile preheat et corroded by oil during winter natural gas cutbacks and will not for operation un! ii ho ready September the because repairs. Hancock said. of Precautions are being taken to prevent future fuel shortage. Tho City Electric Power Department will request an additional four million gallons of storage at the Holly Plant and eight million gallons at the Decker Plant from City Council Thursday. approximately I I NHS FO R TH E tanks would $800,000, r u n Hancock said. The tanks would lie ready for filling in September and would be full sometime before winter. “ Of course this will not help irs this summer but will be of great importance for preventing another energy crisis the future,” Hancock said. in EDUCATION FOR AN INTERNATIONAL WORLD Degree programs in International B ig n e s s Administrate Modern Languages, Pol Soc Sciences, General tud.es (BAU Math,Science (BS). Computer Science. AMERICAN COLLEGE SF OF SWITZERLAND 1854 L E Y S IN ‘; 4 SW ITZERLAND U S REP. H.y? # SPEN G LER , 330 E 49, N EW YORK L * . Skiing at the doorstep. Europe-wide Field Research, Study Tours A LPIN E CAM PUS A BO VE LA KE GENEVA J " ] International Student Body Colloquium Speakers Soy C hiles Economy Improved By NANCY C R IP P S Texan Slaff \\ rifer Economic problems in Chile seem to be lessening, Dr. Michael Conroy, assistant professor of economics, said Monday at a Latin American colloquium. Problems the Allcnde regime lias been facing in improving economic conditions have been caused by external conditions rather than the Chilean revolution, Conroy said. Copper, tin' major export of Chile, had fallen In price in the last two roars on the world market because of less demand among other nations, Conroy said. When the Allende regime came Into potter, credit from hanks and other sources dropped drastically because of opposition to the new leftist regime. President Salvador Allende had taken this Into account. Conroy said, but he had counted on Socialist countries to compensate by of­ fering their credit. They were slow in coming through. Because of the amount of imports, particularly food imports, financial blockade, the was lessened greatly, Conroy said. These problems, adding to the high inflation, were all caused by external sources which Allende had no control over, he said. the recently disclosed concern of International Telephone and Telegraph Co. over Allene!c's taking office in 1970. Conroy did not mention In the last three months, the problems have lessened. Copper prices arc going up again, Socialist credit is growing, private investment is up, and consumer production is expanding. Ccnroy said. Richard Moore, in government, said at the colloquium, perhaps the notion of Allende's reg im- being unpopular is unfounded. graduate student The surprising event of the Allende regime, Moore said, is that the pr -salon! has held his own and increased his electorate. Allende does not have the majority of the electorate behind him, hut only one president since 1952 has had tho majority of the Chilean electorate, he said. 3 Fund Cut Halts Local Action By K IR S T IE G IL L E N Survival of several programs th? Community sp us! red by (CAB) depends Action Board the outcome of Satur­ upon (deetion. County Com­ day’s missioner David Samuelson, chairman of the CAB, said at a board meeting Monday night. Tile agency is struggling for existence because of federal cutbacks in Office of Economic Opportunity funding. (OKO) County commissioners and Citv Council members determine how revenue-sharing funds will be sjxenf. For 1973. Austin received $1.8 million in revenue-sharing. Austin OKO had been allocated $600,000 for 1973, all of which was recently cut by President Nixon. As yet, city officials have not decided how to spend the $2.8 million in revenue-sharing funds. Each year, elected advisory committees from each neigh­ borhood submit a list of priorities to the CAB, which in turn .sub­ mits them to City Council. Tile 1973 priorities are health, em­ ployment, neighborhood centers and child development. Death of the agency would for 340 mean unemployment The Premier Reading Of: BICK NIXON'S DREAM a collection of satirical poems and ether more pleasant poems by G eo rg e Nash Wed., April 14 8:00 P.M. Will C. Hogg Bldg. Room 14 sponsored by The University Poetry Society EARN CASH WEEKLY Blood Plasma Donors N eeded NOW ACCEPTING MALE & FEMALE DONORS CASH BONUS PROGRAMS FOR REPEAT DONORS Austin Blood Components, Inc. OPEN: 8-3 p.m. Tues., Thur., Tri. 8 Set. 12:00 N O O N -7 p.m. Wed. 409 W . 6TH 477-3735 UNIVERSITY COMMON CAUSE PRESENTS LOBBYIST BUCK W O O D S and HUMORIST JO H N HENRY FALK REFORM IN TEXAS THE NEED AND THE PRICE 7:30 Wed., April 4 Union 317 persons, many of them residents of the poverty target areas. of and Andy sponsorship Board members Mrs. Andrea Ramirez Beatty suggested a proposed 10-county manpower program could provide CAB with the funds necessary for existence. By April 27, the agency must present the Department of Labor with a draft for a transitional manpower program to receive funding for the program. Problems W ith the existing manpower program resulted from a lack of flexibility. ‘‘People were molded imp slots” rather than being in individualized programs set up to meet specific needs, Mrs. Beatty said. that categorical Department of Calor guidelines state training programs must be maintained until 1975, when a comprehensive revenue-sharing m a n p o w e r program will be instituted. is An added feature the provision that ijl> training cannot begin until an employer com­ mits a specific position to the trainee. One major problem with the present program is that it provided training ‘ and after the training, job,” LaSalle Burnett, a board mem­ ber, said. there was no community Another suggested means of saving CAB was soliciting aid from former board members and residents of the poverty areas. involvement A campaign, proposed by U S. Rep. J . J . “ Jake” Pickle to enlist help for tim program from Austin's west side, “ fell flat on its face,” Burnett said. Samuelson stated that CAB could gain “ IO to 15 percent additional funding if it is granted primo sponsorship of the man­ power program.” campus news in brief VI C H A E P S I L O N D I I I V v * at 8:15 p in. Tuesday in Calhoun Hall for a general meet inc H enry Renter! J r , M.D., w ill speak on the "Brackenridge Program ’’ I n u leo D E P A R T M E N T conference on w i l l A S T R O N O M Y continue the a ‘ * C a e b o n Detonation Model" Tuesday morning Thompson Con Ie rem e Center. The afternoon focus on session w ill ■ Supernovae. Nut lear Reel lions and < ibservations." Jo e 1 the in A S T R O N O M Y I sponsor a colloquium at 4 p rn T u esd ay in Fhysies-Math-Astronomy D E P A R T M E N T w a d v e r t i s e m e n t ’ l u k e Better I Heinies! A noted publisher in Chicago re­ ports a sim ple new technique in photography designed especially for the a m a te u r photographer to le t y o u e n jo y ta k in g b e tt e r pictures. W h e th e r you take a cam era along on y our vacation, take snapshots of your children, e n te r a m a te u r photo contests, enjoy photography as a hobby, these techniques will enable you to use your c am e ra m ore effectively to produce b e tte r and more sa tis­ fying pictures! To acq u a in t th e readers of this p a p e r w ith the easy-to-follow th e ir cam eras rules fo r using — developing th e ir own pictures — m asterin g photo techniques — im p ro v in g h o m e m o v ies — in short, m asterin g all phases of a m a te u r photography, th e pub­ lishers have p rin ted full details of th e ir in terestin g self-training m ethod in a new booklet, “ A d ­ ventures in M odern P h o to g ra ­ p h y '’, w hich will be m ailed free to anyone who requests it. N o obligation. Sim ply send y o u r re ­ quest to: P hotographic S tudies, 555 E . L ange S t , D ept. 941-30, M undelein, 111. 60060. A p o st­ 'll do. H A IM IS T S T I IM N I Ily a 4 102 With B u ild in g I ’ngogino. lie w ill speak oq "T im e , I Us ,ip,-it ai arui SI n u 'tare " D r. service, I M O S v. I > .eld a worship s c r\ ace and fe llo w s h ip fit t> 30 p in. T uesd ay in the B a p tis t Student U io on, "K o ln o n e a w ill be the w orship featu rin g “ Theophilus.” a singing group from S pi west Texas S la te I n lv c rs .ly v J sp Hsnr on info rm a’ tonal forum m ah P la c e A, t and 5 C ity Council ca n ­ didates Mid the m a y o ra l candidates fit *i p rn. Tuesday at the U n iv e rs ity P re sb y te r! tai Church San Antonio St S W I l ( in t o XKO 11203 COM H I N H I D IR I i i YC "H O N - et at 0 30 a in T u esd ay at 201 Anderson L a n e to hold * u a r tax ■•'•untcr- met mn. J I p.m. I R O U I TY P l VV Iii r i.v o n a t z p in. and Business- for I.(-hour course is .SIT. R e g .M e r I and I < ( I, \ s s I is 3 Ec o n o m ic s Buildin g 552, Cost the b y ca llin g 471-3300 between 3 p rn. Mi nday through F rid a y . Tin'*,day m T U I N ! I K I M XI K e l l \ N I ( | s e M IX XR W ill nu et at 4 p m . En gineering S ile n c e 'Tuesday ■ B u ild in g ditty I-:cie B. B e c k e r will speak on * M< thuds in Comp itatlonal !■ t acture M i I-hanie- '' E l RO P E AN s'l’i im < ( E N I E R w ill N azi sponsor propaganda film s at 7 p.m. Tuesday In Bu rd m e A ud it"! .urn. T h- re xxiii he ii . adm is. ion < iinrg. -hewing o f a D E I ' X IIT XI I N ; I ii “ T ile I. I O I.(M ,|( XL st l l M i x v. '■ mi *t at I p rn. T uesd ay in Geology Buildin g IOO to lie a r C h ai ii s A. Caughey speak F o rm a tio n a w u t (L o w e r Cretaceous) of N ortheast T e x a s: Depositional S yste m s and Reso urces*' and to hear R u s se l G S h e p h e r d • Backset S t r a 1 1 f i i- a t i ii n Developed E x ­ p e rim e n ta lly R eg im e I- Ii >w. discuss P a h \y L o w e r at Bl E X K XX X X II.U K XX O R G A N IZ A T IO N (M A Y O ' xx nj * Jo p.m. Tuesday H an Leu for a r< g ular m eeting. Y I) I T H I meet in Burdm e M I K I ! 'I v. ll 7 SO p .m . T u e sd ay in .Ti d e r C enter A 303A for a gen. i al meeting. n u - 1 1 BM S II A l, EX f N I s < 'O BIBill T E E .' ill present the Other Ja zz En sem ble arid the Sun of Ja z z En se m b le at, * p in . Tuesday the Union I heater. Admission is free in K A S S E W D E l B K A It X are . in how to write tim J y n b r J to I p rn, and 7 to 9 p in I N O E B C R X K I'A T B p un;.iring a lab in term papers, the Academic f y< r of inner T i n x-.' b i U M , < i.i it w ill m eet a* 7 TO p.m. Tuc.Mlny in d a m s o n Hall LKiO fo r spring break. lo discuss plans I N ( x E H M I Y W i l l H O R O L O G IC A L S O C IE T Y ' xx ill m eet at 7:30 p m . T u esd ay in Burdm e H a ll 208 ti) see an ethnographic film , "G rass,’’ CO.XI XI I T H t i o K I N IX I H SI l \ I N IT T O I \ ll -XI W O R K I R S xx ill m eet at 7:30 p.in. T u esd ay in the C ath olic a Student C enter re g u la r m eeting. for Kelly Camp T rails A lp en lite W h o le Earth Provision Co. 24th & San A ntonio Meet Bob Gray. Dedicated Longhorn Fan. Bob Gray didn t play football at the University of Texas. In fact, he didn t get to go to school there at all . . . or anywhere else. He had to find success the hard way. That's one of the reasons he is such an active and interested director of the Longhorn Club—to help other young men have an opportunity that wasn't his. (And that young son Mark, aged 3, may be a great quarter­ back someday!) Bob Gray . . . . a man who gives of himself to his community. Vote against the voice of the radical element. Vote FOR a moderate independent on the council! Join The Bob Gray Campaign. Come By Headquarters at 322 West Sixth or Phone 474-6271 r & o b Grayaam mw PLACE COUNCIL A BETTER CHOICE FOR AUSTIN! Page 8 Tuesday, April 3, 1D73 TH E DAILY TEXAN (Paid For By Bob G ra y C am paign C om m ittee, H ow ard Rose, Chairm an) ^ City Council Election Roundup ~ Hopefuls File Fiscal Forms is ­is Financial statements due Friday were filed with City Clerk Elsie Woosley Monday afternoon for City Council candidates Anmia, Roland DeNoie, Melissa Singler, Jam es Burfeind and Stephen Fuchs. “ Statements from Singles Burfeind and Fuchs, Socialist Worker Pa rty (SW P) candidates, were in the Monday mail and the other two were delivered Monday,'' Mrs. Woosley said. According to the statements, Aumla, mayoral candidate, and DeNoie, Place 3 candidate, spent no money campaigning. DeNoie listed a $50 contribution which was returned to the donor. The SW P candidates' statements were filed “ Tile candidates s h a re d office together. expenses, telephone, printing and other campaign expenses. Since they cannot he separated we have filed one statement listing all expenses together,” a SW P statement said. The SW P candidates listed $2,057.21 total campaign expenditures. Of this, $1,584 came from contributions and $500 from loans. Two forums for council candidates will be held on or near campus Tuesday night. At 6 p.m., Community Switchboard is sponsoring a forum for candidates for Places .3, 4, 5 and mayor at University Presbyterian Church, 2203 San Antonio St. Student Government is sponsoring a forum for candidates in Places 5 and 0 and the mayoral race in the Texas Union Main Ballroom at 7:30 p.m. At a joint press conference, tile Drag Vendors Association and the Friends of rho Drag Vendors erected a banner across E . 23rd Street “ to inform the people of Austin above the deliberately confused wording which the council approved on the election bailey” Ms. Sheryl Green said. The banner reads “ Vote for Ordinance No. I. ” Proposed Ordinance No. I would allow vendors to sell their goods on city sidewalks that are IO feet or wider. Citing “ hundreds of violations” of the current ordinance, Ms. Green said the current ordinance and the proposed Or­ dinance No. 2 “ w'ould prohibit many of the innocent and customary uses of sidewalks and streets by property owners. “ For themselves the vendors want only a reasonable .space in their neighborhood; but for the citizens of Austin the vendors want a restoration of the customary and reasonable uses of the sidewalks,” she stated. The Committee for Charter Revision announced its support for Charter Amend­ ments No. I and 2 a.t a press conference Monday. Amendment No. I calls for the election of six councilmen by district and five at-large. Amendment No. 2 calls for a minimum w’eekly pay of $100 for coun­ cilmen. Former Councilwoman Em m a Long and school board member Gus Garcia, co­ chairpersons of the committee, said tho group's purpose is to provide accurate information on the charter changes on Saturday's ballot. Despite claims by the opposition to Amendment No. I, “ ward politics” (which “ assumes that winning council candidates w ill reward their supporters with soft city jobs” ) w ill not result if the amendment passes, Garcia said. Answering die opposition to Amendment No. 2. Garcia commented the council has had the authority to raise their salaries since 1953. The longue of Women Voters supports Amendments No. I and 2, Mrs. Henrietta Oregon, the groups vice-president, said Monday. “ We think it is time for all ports of the city to have representation on the City Council, but think it is equally Important for some of to represent the whole city,” she said in favor of the first proposition. the eouncil members “ This more adequate compensation ($100 weekly minimum) might allow some more qualified persons to serve an the council who could not afford to do so now,” Mrs. Cragon said, in support of the second proposition. The Austin chapter of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (N A ACP) also favors passage of the first two City Charter amendments. President Velma Overton said. The Amalgamated Transit Union Local No. 1549 (shuttle bus driver's union) en­ dorsed George O livarrl for mayor, Mary Birdsong for Place 3, John Trevino for Place 4, Je ff Friedman for Place 5 and F/dith Buss for Place 6. Ten citizens from South Austin neigh­ borhood groups questioned candidate Bob Gray’s sincerity about the environment “ in light of his close ties to the Dahlstrom Corporation,” Betty Jane Whitaker, a group spokesman eaidL “ Mr. G ray’s campaign manager, Howard V. R o se , lobbyist for the Dahlstrom Corporation and has the fight for the rock crusher,” the citizens said. is the chief Rose said Monday night that he is not their lobbyist, but “ I am their attorney and have represented them in various proceedings.” A Councilman ne ain support. He has been receptive and responsive to our needs Naomi Foster Stella Mae Jackson Rod Thomas Jam es Huff Craig Johnson John Jam es Lewis Brown Walker Fix elm an Rick Yukes Tim Stephens Jack Clevelan M ark M allet Branham Small Randy McDonald Sandy Copesman Steve Waldman Jam es F. Erw in Betsy Wroe Steve T. Hukel David Butts Mark C. Evans Barney Dreiling Steve Grimes Robert Jew ell Michael Steward Rich Renanfl Charlie Neetles John Massot h SeAnn Davis Nanette Bordelen Linda Loyd Gail Frve Angela Brown Terri Farelli Mary Bettis Gary Lacy Gary S. limn David Shinn Richard Flowers Charles Borden Ch.as Sehreim Bob Ratliff Niel Goodrich Ronnie White B ill Rudd Irwin Blum Richard Kaplan Richard S, Nabotre Je rry Horowitz Darla Ballem Stanley Cash Cunningham Conway McDonald Beverly Weitzel Rill Blakely Keith Lomasney Glenn Chamberlain Barbara Aust W. W. Sullivan, Jr . B ill Brown Beth Voivan Kieth Harrison Betty Sue Diebe! Craig Buchele Barbv Glaze Jam es Hernandez Judy E . Keppler Terry Moffett Man- Nan Watkins Gary Gilby Tom Cochran Jo y Burleson Pat Swanson Kieth Karasek Arini Robinson Inzy Heitzeberg Debbie Lofton Jodie Beeson Ja r l Weeklies Beth Byl>ce Ellen A. Mathews Jon Burleson Linda Ingram Lynne Hollon Karen Watkins Kathy KJeimann Cher Prosta Carolyn Wilson Lana Jean Lawerence « Debbie Brom al Patrice Hegan Cenobe Shelton Delores Smith Jim Pennington Susan Rodney Ch ar I cr Dailey Linda Engels Daniel W. Jackson, I I I Jodie E . Paual, Jr . Bruce. Weinheimer Starrett Berry Mike Moffet Irw in Bl urn rn Pat Villared Ju lie Motheral Donna Sumpkins M ary V. Hunt Robert T. Kouneiie Carol Davis G ary H. Shahan Debbie Denton B ill Havnes Martha Warren J. G. Cash Cathy Bouch Steven D. Hahn Susie Crow Linda Port Carolyn Keenan Bruce Sifford M ary Jane Moody Mrs. Johnnie Ruth Game] Susan Richards Josie Thompson M are Tausrnd Leigh Sinclair Kim Woodland Paula McAlister Bonnie Burkhalter Winifred Reser Melissa Smith DeAnn Davis B ill Adams Sharon Kiemm Jim Bhu Liz Bueke Buddy Adams Mary K. Pratt Donald Kaelin Vicki White Nick Hein Becky Moore Bvron E . M iddleton Beverly Thompson Sammy Lindenberger Patti Terry Terr}' Lu! Icy Elizabeth Combs Donna Ferguson Denise Stowell Michael S. Martinez Cathy Hildebrand Pat Kelly Lenny Haddox Charles Harrell Io slie McKinley Tamshid Riahi Lisa Kohler Bruce Cannon Felicia Bond Robert. L. Manning. Jr. Susie Schram John D. Rope Spook Gordon Scott Currie Connie Webb Clan Keeter Dennis Morrison Tom Cookbum Steve Findley Charlie Plumhoff Paulette Toellaer Mike Gregory Brian Cloves Mike Crockett Craig Hilbum Sarah McMullen David W. Hawes Kay Harvey Dan L. Trew Robin French Anthony A. Amborsetti Tommy Graves Sarah Ann Carlisle Je ff Doumarv Chuck Fleming Tom L. Goman Melinda Fuzitt Robert Bell Hans R. F. Hilland Dick Bundy Steve Sockler Kenneth C. Pruitt R. Moore M urray Logan L. Loomis Paul W. Green Trey Dowdy Jam es Little Ronald Samackl Rill Lesikar Jim Fenner Mark Phillips Jim Strode Brad Beard E rie Hoffman Jam es Bine Robert M. O’Neal Jill Watson Jim Moronev Adrienne Goldberg Melissa Weine George B. Montague M ary Ford Melinda McCloud Gary Picken Los Klein Jim N. Scott Janice Holtzrran Cindi Bomeman Bobby Giles Darby Glaze Ja n Petit Nora LinJ LOWELL LEITERMANN CITY COUNCIL PLACE A Paid by Student! tor Lowe!!. Co-Chatrmcn: Jam es Little, Tommy Graves. v4r e a l __ i -fgra^ilr -V . “J.. ’ ^ '• x- v .... _ : - - ' - I” jrii - . t x " t r.::t£ -t t - T t t -cc? | : ct Bonnie Milvenan Isabel M artin Susan Wipperman Jane H. Smith I^slie M. Case Kristen Yates Franeie Brown M ary Helen Yarbrough Sazanne Bartlett Debbie W illiam s Barb Wasko Katharine Brown Leslye Lucas Becky Taylor Nan Avant Margo Gidel Lynn Fawcett Susan Knotts Beverly Cunningham Lucy Baker M ary Clare Benson Mary K ay McCullough Rebecca Russell Janet Johnson Ann Boston Ann Law Anne Caesar Ive! I a Winters Laurie Goodson Martha Upchurch Mane© Wade Harriett Hull Susan Stevens Franeie Brown Trieia E llis Louise Gose M erri Hanahan Nancy Cunningham Karol Kirk Gretchen Stewart Gay Northington Mary Cunningham Joy Bailey Jov Lock Allen Pitts Charles B. Galloway, Jr . Pat Hadspeth M arc Laird Howard Iowson Scott T. Morgan Charles F. Spencer Christie Wise Terne Feher Jackson Hooper Jeanne Viiim Jon Broods Bobbie Pamonis Scott Palm er Tommy Proctor Kevin Hodges L R Brown Jim Gouty Ja y Holland B ill Denton Tommy Delatour Craig Frederickson Kurt B. Cochra Meg Morris Mam McKean Vicki Moeen Gail Robin Connie M ills Mary Jo Campbell Shelly Holcomb Susan Keim Jan Lorraine Heath Candy Cloud Bronwyn Purcty Sharon Sadler Karen Lancaster Brian J. Mulvane}' Tom Sheffield Bruce R. Hinkle Stephen Beauchamp Wm. Michael Ore Rick Ray Mary Davie WE DONT WANT WARD POLITICS FOR AUSTINu sa The antiquated idea of dividing Austin into a half dozen political districts is presented as th e first of 14 city ch arter am endm ents to be approved or disapproved by voters on A pril 7. The proposal should be rejected for a num ber of reasons that cut across personality and party lines. Geographic representation is a throw back to the w ard system that Austin abandoned m ore than a half century ago. Reviving this relic of city governm ent does not represent progress of any sort. Sectionalizing the constituency would invite confrontations between north and south and e a st and w est. It would require com puter printouts and continual u p d a tin g to keep equally-populated d istricts. It w ould b rin g up the probability of boundary line d is p u te s and gerrym ander charges of unfair advantage. It w o u ld open th e door to machine-building and w ard bossism a n d influence peddling and other obvious excesses and dangers inherent in the m ethod. It would encourage polarization of opinions. It would not guarantee m ore m inority points o f view . The suggestion of increasing council m em bership to eleven se e m s to be an eerie echo of 1891 when A u s tin had eleven different w ards. In tho se d a ys, part of the 22 alderm en (excluding the m ayor) w e re e lected at-large and part by voters w ith in th e districts— am endm ent proposes. -just a s the “ new ’* — ■LI— 41--- ” W e did a w a y w ith w ards in April, 1909 and th e re 's no good reason to turn b ack the calendar 64 ye a rs and suppose th a t something outmoded then would be a dvisable now. O u r p re s e n t plan of e le c tin g seven councilm en to s p e c ific "p la c e s ” has se rved th e c ity e x tre m e ly w ell. It deserves th e support of liberals, m oderates and conservatives alike. W e urge y o u to vo te A G A IN S T ch arter am endm ent n u m b e r one. O r 'Ar Ii irised S a la rie s For City Councilmen! C h a rte r a m e n d m e n t num ber tw o is e q u a lly u n d e sira ble o r m o re so. T h is w o u ld " p a y each councilm an, Including th e m a y o r and m a y o r pro tem , $100.00 p er w e ek, o r such a m o u n t in excess thereof as m a y fro m tim e to" ti me "be e s ta b lish e d by actionTof the ' C ity C o u n c il.” T here is w id e support for th e belief th a t service on th e co u ncil sh o u ld be a m atter of civic pride and re s p o n s ib ility — not a full-time job w hich would a ttra c t m a n y ju st for the salary. B u t w h e th e r the m em bers get $10 (p resen t) o r $100 per w e e k is n o t as significant as the last p a rt o f the am endm ent sentence w hich provides fo r open-ended pay. This w o u ld perm it the councilm en to hike their salaries to $500 or $1,000 per week w ithout a n y referral to the voters. T h e re m u s t be a ceiling. N o em ployee gets a b lan k c h e c k to fill in his o r her own figure. W e a sk you to vote A G A IN S T charter am endm ent n u m b e r tw o . VOTE ON APRIL 7 AGAINST AMENDMENTS 1 AND 2 Paid political advertisement by AUSTIN CHARTER ELECTION COMMITTEE Wroe Owens and Dr. J. J. Seabrook, co-chairmen T h e D a ily T e x a n Tuesday, April 3, 1373 rage D u p l e x e s , F u r n . A p a r t m e n t s , F u r n . l l A p a r t m e n t s , F u r n . B l A p a r t m e n t s , F u r n . T y p i n g ceiling fun. 4 w orking condi­ N E A R U T like h i I! >rpmt. I'droom, ('A / .'■•.•rd, storage A p a r t m e n t s , F u r n . SIX AND T W ELV E W E EK C O N T R A C T S FOR SUMMAR Spacious depose y apartments, dishwasher, c a b * , c A / C H , trash service, pool and party '5 — b s pa d. sn.I'- a re n ground* room. $153, $: TO $ EL PATIO APTS. 2 - i 0 R o G rnn o* 2 hedrcom, 2 ra in furnished I bedroom, one bath — J '-r summer Le adry, pool, c a t '* TV I Is pa i LNC. liable si. SUMMER RATES N O W • Big, roomy furnished ap+s. • New pa *t • ‘hew carpet 4 5 4 ~4 "5 Manager Apt. 102 476-4095 • C lote to campus Just North of 27th & Guadalupe c t \ i n t i n e r t d i s a K VTI '' F n r h W o rd its w ii rd minim nm $ En- h Additional lim n ........... -* TIU' one ’ nip ......... ' J n il nd .btU o.i! w .rd . . ...... $ S ! ) i .0 s I . no lf* «<> I * n m "<> m o i 1 • ''I. 2 rn I. S m l. 4 rot C l a r i f i e d I < o h in in x urn' ti K » e h A d d itie i f • * I in r, nsocutn i .ti•* tim e % i . . . , V ,. s ii-.p for i n m u .in i NTfind O ' 11'\.\ T r,.'x ,!,v To \ n I ■ TS f i l i i ' xii.i) T h u rs d a y To u n A • ll J ' , (d a y T o t in t riday 'J..nil,i ;4;(.ti p rn, 11:10 a "I. I of " in f . it OO a m ‘Kl IT, •Mi I V ! ’ OO a rn, • i (H) si rn et rnt of rrrur* m ade In (semen!, im m n! ii* nntire liven rn th* t ubUshers e rr n for on*' < *N I ll* orreet Mi cl limn fur ad ill'treen ** *r titan 30 made aet . publii ition.” ..si .-.a J.p made for an • . L O W STUDENT RA T ES 15 w o rd s cr less for 75e th® first t'm » . 5c each edd i oael word. Stu­ receipt d ent rn,-st show A .d toe'I end p « * Journal sm Bldg IOT from 8 am. to 4:30 p.m. M o n d a y through Friday in advance in r a | A TS! R C L E S T E R E Q I N C . F o r S a l e E M I'U S O N E l ,ECTRI< ■a I .Odon Marios, tion. SN2. 4.V) 125,1 Kl R M T I ’ R E KOR. SAT E . Stove, good condition, SIA; if-in i mi. good single. box spring now m attress, K i ; chest of draw e rs tik e condition m irro r, $!<• flood o ar gains C a ll 174-428(1. S P R I N G S K I E R S b arg ain ; one p air Mustang wheels w ith snow tires, ex­ cellent condition, 472 2591. HEX V W B U S I Kine o ie rh at J1195 4(;: tll,n 46,Oho ne. Ie.’ recent en- ! AC, excciicr.t conclt- ■7778 c r 478-3365. K O S S 7 ;: JV I, 4 76 sit reo pi Cl! ii, 4 52-1 I'.rand new. • . , com pletely v- 'client 006 ft f L e M Irom : ca n m l p ar King, vt • .nlii $00 50 pl iv: for the but :*7 M ' rn bedroom luxury pool, adequate it .pus. 454-9751. TMO bed efficiencies 454- W est fu rn i t m inded student rs 311 E a s t 3! t autom atic $• i '*5 new. turntable, 476 COIT. recen tly rebuilt 1371 M A Z D A R X excellent ct',ndc C all P a s Id, 45V i s 13 (XKJ miles A M , $2,40(1 mix A F G H A N S all cr and pet quality, c irs and cham pe 6377. Siereo Shop S T E R E O S Y S T E M I >, Fish e r am rit! turntable Delta R. ’ • tdphi re s Pio neer tapedeck 630- P E recelver, speakers, T 47' -joyv vpk • T HOO ss all ct nt ' s Un decks 2 bedroom, new i at ic , s m a ll quiet PIO W e st 26th nit ■cly rf.ments. furnished, " ' " it c ’ c t j ’r r*'e*it | ■ rC '0 D s e c a n ts •• • ' t a $ t I s r st I 55 lr* $200 ». I $ 72 st $ 86 sd! ■'***» a-d mo-*! a r o n - p r o fih Co-op — f o r r e a l C A P IT O L C A M E R A R I N T S ' .V k a limit our Spring B re a k S p e c ia l! 476-3581. N O W A V A I L A B L E — 2 bedroom, wash- er-dryer. all bdls but e le c tricity paid .......... i C all 114-0810. K L i s t S t u d e n t C e n t e r R o o m m a t e s - e n d G u a d a l u p e i y, ’ y r i when you come! F E M A L E N E E T ) I pit ■, N rt'iea t, I iii $71 2,: M o n H I” ’. ( i.i ic ie r o p.m. S t ‘ ‘ ‘ E R R A T E S a r LA C A SITA (:> ? ■ to La -. Sc co l) -IVA A SH ERS M ; C A R P E l S VER ED PARKIN ,S PAID ■UKE, d raftin g table a n i 4ft hp outboard motor, 50 , 4,52 5051 M i n i F U R Y IT, A T . AC, . • t offer, ca ll 112 '.h i' E N T needs room and m ale ig S ndage, \ ,gcst. I - * ■ J ~-Je (I p ’L CL, i ti lo i s) - ; 4 7 6 4 0 3 8 3 2 7 -1 4 6 6 B-.v t lf 37237.. Vand erbilt. N ash ville , Tonrt. i ________ ________ _____ ______ _ : I: I F IC si >’I Y _ - * OUI f I NUW id ’ 't -h k m w IFjOO, AC, rafllals. R & If. ■ ’I, WY* mrisnt;1.in* 1 H\iyin« 200 2 'H I A fter 5 p m , 385-581 •*>, B & W I si- D H O N ? Y W I adrnm < Ti nj era. P e n ta x M IA , etc c h e a p : C all 454 8718 after 6 p.r H O I KSK F O R S A H * pus «around 32nd Ne c t rues $11,000. 2r\t and C al! close to ram - In te rre g io n al). 477-4869 after i ? S o. 47 K tt>*D M A R T IN CA I T A R TH art? ct • * fit ;.ip $ if Vi Cal I 474* n mode! D-12- ase beautiful It 29 (A T *1 TO I. C A M r R and 05mm cam el \ R f 'N T S I Sup er-8 nd lenses. 476- 47fH< S H U R E M91 E D , $27 new 47609-17 N Oil I yard r, . • neigh- invitf •! KA CK*: apartm ent at G I R L N E E D E D to share one britt nom several I tic* blocks fp rn campus for A p ril I through • rid ?4ay C all 476 2016 Ilou-e. M A L K T O S H M . E home. < A/CH pol­ io a m ia ■>* m ajor. 3 large mobile th upper class N E E D R O O M M A T E to v h. a re one b*dro bi ginni rn ap ar 452-3074 tor Ronnte F E M A L E R O O M M A T E needed now. I arg-* one bedroom ap rtm ent on shuttle bus mute, ISO month. A ll bills pat I. Cad K a ren, 476 5620 M ale ro o m m a'e w anted to share two bedroom, one bath ap artm ent fur $8-, a Including utilities rind phone. month. in quiet residential neighbor- I /Moated v. .. .i lr, pteus: pf <. UTO rn dings •• uh seti '• led In bai k pi p it and p rh *> , back yard { arkaig arca. Senior, G rad fern St id. ut L ilt <1 ' Hie,ms, Bob Ju ne residential t-iiis. C A / laundry, ties $1 IO.). I, icnfed at A B L E , one red parking, Groom s No S m a ll de. AC, >15 142- M ! diS- rtnients. ir 'priors bf I room elevated ■' in ca n i- ,Y A * t 4 pm I M ‘ bi * el (tit Call IN E X I ‘ im 1 2 1 1 E A S T 5 2 r d STREET I re In 77-3601 O N E BEDROOM $ 110.00-$ 155.00 i T W O BEDROOM $140.00 M LB. A. Typing. Mu I till thing, Bind in g Th9 Complete, Processional FULL-TIME Typing Service 2604 M anor Road l l l w s l i a h \c\ki. I *o r 4//-IU64 _________ I to tailored the needs of U n ive rsity students. Special keyboard equipment language, science, and engineer- jjig theses and dissertations. Phone G R 2-3210 and G R 2-7677 2707 H em p hill B a r k i t i ____________________________________________ Pool, paneling and plenty of room SPA N ISH VILLA NORTH , -ion m n A t IM , .o ca «d et Hwy. - a a . bedroom, one cath and two bedroom,! cents and two bath w - lei” en* and fireplace*. O n thutti route. 909 Re-s1; aa carpeting, built-in bul ‘ 454-9863 I IC O r . • E X C E L L E N T S E C R E T A R Y T Y P I S T .........- ■ faculty m em bers producing finest q uality typ v lur sti* in e e r y field for 15 years, w ill take nu f ca re to type Jan briefs, re s e a t’ b pap­ ers, B. C. reports, theses, and H sserta. finns accu rab tv. observing prop' r form. composition and spelling I (test m -drl I B M Ex e c u tive carbon ribbon typewrit* 478*1762. pius I cr, A ll work proof! cad. L A R G E E F F I C I E N C I E S . $115 e lectricity, pool, a ir conditioned, ca r­ pet, panelling, nu pet*. Huntington V illa, 46th at Avenue A 454-8903. T H R E E E L M S 400 W est 35th F irnished - Unfurnished 2 bedroom - 2 bath, ] bedroom - I bath Start $135 - $190. Close to campus, shuttle bus. extra large, shag carpet, dishwasher, range, disposal, refrigerator, larg e closets, pri­ vate patio cable, lau n d ry room, pool. storage cabinets, 151-11941 ties. m aul T W O B E D R O O M furnished W ash facili­ services, sw im m ing pool, shuttle at front door. W alkin g distance to U n ive rsity C a v a ­ lie r A partm ents. 307 E a s t 31st. 472-7611 Ja n ito r and THE C O N SU L Snrinq I:, ^ore fun on the lake I 2 and 1 bedroom townhouses l arge a • t I & 2 bedroom f ‘e*s vd*h great :e * t..-es. L'«* these — ca* qr.!'s, erg# re--''ebon for-rn, st .a y room, ca r e o* TV, d :s h v - , d ' .poi* . Hde/idua y control od C A / C H , shuts e but. Come bv Apt. I I 3 I 201 T inn in Ford Road 444-341 I A r f v * l o c # * w , V 4 7 6 - 9 0 9 3 t_. pi: ,*I "’»* p rif.tinct ** / • IA T * binding 420 w. riverside dm e S T A R K T Y P I N G : Experienced theses. dissertations, P .R .'s rte. P rin tin g and Binding. S p e cia lty : technical. Charlene Stark . 453-5218. Dissertations, theses, rad reports 250? B rid le Path , Lo rra in e B ra d y . 472 1715. A to Z SEGRE'/•AL SERVICE 109 f * U 10th St. 472-0149 Th eses, D is* P P .'S , BC Pep GI:.. O ' it; th - i, B nding t : f et, et f . eryti rig From A I 3 Z service T Y P I N G . A L L S I Z E I I Reasonanle rates. | typ e w rite r 1112220 after 5:00 p.m. Experience'! accurate, jobs One day fas'. IR M Carbon Ribbon S E R V I C E ' V I R G I N I A S C IL X E I D E R T Y P I N G and U n . t ndl-.g. d ereradu ate typing, pr nt: g, 1515 Koenig Dane. T r G rad ate 4 ■ " '■ POOL-FIREPLACE Efficiency Apts. i E n jo y y e a r around lu x u ry in your new Spanish decorated designed apartm ent. , l l A ll bills paid, furnished. Mexican tile fir e T A ' frrf> T -V - r *hh'- ,he Doors and ' , 'oors Bnd shuttle bus route. R e a d y to move In ° n , Does your e p a 'M er • have 7 raceme cs, I opossum, and 2 fro g s? Ours does, a ana with s me re' / sine apartment* Boogie on over to 1218 Baylor and meet the m ar agers t at mate these a part- 1 10°East 37th St. C all 478-1382. merits a Agreat place to live. 478-2026. a fte r 5 .and weekends 4305 C O Z Y C O M P L E X livin g in a large one nrriroom W a lk to shuttle. E n jo y wood paneling and larg e kitchens Huge clos­ et and cabinets m ake L.vdrillo Blanco a g reat p lace to live, 801 W est Lynn. 477-8871. W h y p ay m ore when you < an enjoy the atm osphere of Old Mexico for only $157 I (1 A L I, R I L L S P A ID , at E l Mon­ te rre y ? Cozy complex livin g with front and re a r entries, balconies and sw im ­ m ing pool furnish- jugs accent the shag caip oted one bed­ rooms. L ife can be a fiesta on Town Lake a t E l M o n te rre y ' 2423 Town l ake Circle 444-8118 Ex qu isite Spanish L I V E R O Y A L L Y ! R ig h t on shuttle. huge closets, clubroom, pool, one and two bedrooms from $145 with bills and cable paid. T he Saxony, 1616 R o ya l Crest. 441 6631. G R EA T O A K APARTM EN TS N e a r * LUXURY 2 BEDROOM, 2 BATH SUPER LARGE, FURNISHED ALL BILLS PAID ONLY $214 • Pool v/-h slid# a waterfa1! • CI|broom with bar • Often® room - For.'baii • Door to- loor garb3oe p-clt up • Sundeck • Underground parking • P J I compiment of appliance: • Beau' fu y furr *ned FOUR BLOCKS TO THE DRAG On Shuttle Bus Route 2810 Se’ado 472-3816 B H A N D N E W — $135.09 .Summer R a te s Now N e w addition to A valo n Apartm ents N e v e r been li\ed in I bedroom, $135 w / le a se E ffic ie n c y , $122 w /lease I \C. carpet, dishw asher, disposal, walk-' I in closets. 6 blocks fn .m la w school. 2 blocks from shuttle bus 32nd A RVI K R R E G r O N A L : 478-4963 453-2228 THE FRENCH PLACE 2702 French Place 472 8790 Large one bedroom Luxury ap artrer.ts F -ntsked cr Unf.trn’shed V / a ln .t p are ng, Shag C arpet, Pool, Laundry. $ 140 bills paid. UNIVERSITY A R EA SA N TA RITA APARTM ENTS 2PI9 R o G ran d e I bedroom epts - • $82.50 Double — $57.50 Eve ry-i’ng * irnished 472-7239 know ir the t. W e -int I or v =,nlA- ny — c t ■ X e r o x o r I B M 4c C O PIES K 9 c ..: ■ Cart x 36 M i P O N C E D E L E O N 150 P« / ' X X ■ t.l.c Iii f i g l o . n iJ F n ? D GINNY’S CO PYING SERVICE I LA FIESTA E. 304h 477-1800 ’S T A N G . \ J M VI M or .Phi! 47 42 Dobie Mo ! 476-9171 Free Parking Coen 75 hours a week U11 pi • : i iv cr. air, ex* sis LTO :'t S P F A TELUS f r ';i!e B f >k nu nth* ol *, Pl: iii- 471 price! <4> . 297 TY P l -A’,fE r r P S . s des. calculato rs rip-off l-'ree estim ates. 454 971; nights ad d e r', rf ntals. No R e t ai rs. ’O S';' •; ’I :* ir . a ’ r. 4 «peed, ’n’ 177-1961 S e e at 13th T H E B U G IN N Volksw agen Sh p. ‘ ' ' ' ngine work, general r» pa ii = flood Fre e Estim ate s. 30* Red R ive r, ; t Ice 11 - I 57 Cmr.e by. U M o. V e d B e r itereo ra To /F M per Ie IT fur sale el t P rim ro se yet- tlon. w ire wheels 'n an 1 s>. I n- \ er> lugr: gi­ helmets, RESUME' Serv "a $ 1 0 *?' ! po L a rn b < b 8080 — Dc FREE st prices derbies. E a s t 6th .S E W IN G M E N ’S and w om en's clothes like you w ant Coll Karen e x a ctly boids. ?; so i ifi!i Aa em e W yly , 4 .'2-4 db I IR Mf Austl! thine we Iv adver txjtnt pf -I ' you choose! 47? J F4 70 i apartm ents. A /Cl I. cable. ut In ! ram ir :i! ss e lectricity PEPPERTREE The ?• Down*-’ :wni 1900 Burton Drive C A SA BLANCA G o d re r u.-r,ir. bed Ail paid $ 124.00 474-5550 - - O. ■> VI I ' J Th 3x5 S IN dit I * e firs ted I res or,as \* 1972 Honda CB450 CUI , : q a Kirby 441 -2946 -cor group. R ’ Ho. \ S T 'n'- p pl .AC, radio, Pro St e t 1- ' * ;ys T u t o r i n g THE BLACKSTONE $64.50/monih S T A T 'IU T G R IN G . A il business math. G U E preparation. 451 4557. Apt Indl I V IV •--b-.x, w.u bv *; alii r n. I* '! R 1968 t iii V I ’ 1 E good condition, SS396 A sk 4-speed, t * rv 'or Mike, 447- m '5 * A CB350. T* condition, he Un ct. HON ) m il x j a 5 i: w 46 20 C H E M IS T R Y : In tro or O rganic. Call 411-2170 afte r 6 p m . C O M P E T E R S C I E N C E and statistics. Assistance w .th lecture nvitcrin l, pro­ gram ifpng and debugging: < ’all *,51-2164 ne! ire l l :(*0 a rn. Rf d P. .vt A Par-T- f m n hlich T I ’T O P N E E D E D D r C E 351. C a ll 39? L E luid mechnnU afte r 5 p m. t - is pipet A I M* S T B F ANT r o le r T V MW. ♦ ion , still in v. arr f o r s te re o systpn Page IO Tut,Say. April 3. UT3 T H E D A ILY T E X A N ft sm C * rn pus lh: ■ ed with Tate* 476 5631 f o r t y S one bed- d r i! air, on 5f) 11 $1 46 50 Grande. 477- U T ANT) D O W N T O W N are M A F,Y I, SM A T .LW O O D T y p cg S e rv ic e last minute and overnight ava ilab le. Just m in-1 892-0727 - 5001 Sunset T rad or 142-8545 - E. 5 I d i.t, rooms i- th built-,:: kitchens, carpeting dissertations, a w ay La rg e one and two bed- 2005 A rthu r Lane T e rm I pars, th* es. letters. M a s’, r C h ars# 454-1753 4 7 ? -5 1 1 9 and po,ii. Sm all com plex living in a I honored are • location 1 Oui W e st A ve 477-3945. Fro m $135 furnished PA S O 180$ W t H O U t A v i 'in g le . Carpeted Al E N S i,Dug vacan cies - L arg e d,, .bil­ rooms. C A /' ii io- . ach ic 11 it room, color T V in free p ark­ ing. V e ry dose to Unix c r • ity reb I feratoi s s o n lee, lounge, In $50/month — C all 4,.8-3917 S D M I T .TIN G T R E K E R E X T E ffic ie n c ie s with » levatcd separate bed­ rooms plus c y p u e re and ' " i i bed­ room '-ontem porary aids, v Ti c cry co r ta (lienee, furnished or un f< irnished is enviro n m e n tally ort D A K C R E E K 'r i c k that winds ented and offers a through tee • im m unity convenient to cam pus A shopping and c< c s enicn ty priced 'n rn $i :5. 45 4-6394 1507 Houston Street c r 476-4655 W E RENT AUSTIN Your time is valuable Our services free P A R A G O N PROPERTIES 472-4I7I S U M M E R R A T E S on 3 bedroom, 2 ic .nr pool. shuttle stop L A R G E E I 'F I C I E N C Y , close to cam ­ shag carpet, all built In kitchen, pool, sm all 'THO - I bids i ■ I \v* u u t apartm ents. 4200 Avenue A, 454- pus. wood paneled, C A C H . L e Font, 803 W e st 6423 hath. Sr. it f; ut 1 plaeo room rn Ii 28th 47'.: S4S0 ceiling, B E A U T I F U L M IN I- A P T S . Open beamed In kitchens, shag carpeting. CA-CH. pool, Close to cam pus and .shuttle A ll bills paid. 4000 A ve A 4 53-5526 476 4655 i dor coordinated, built SU C A S A 203 Wesf 39th 451-2268 til 6 ' -^~er & Fall ii eg , * r po r red apt*. I J ow I 3ea Til Q u d otmosphet* Sh ..rt'a on corne- :v o', pe-ty re - & Bar b o ,« (. ;r * .pe* s . i r . u r rates i f s 1 br, I ba 2 br, 2 ba 3 br, 2 ba $135 $ 2 0 0 $ 2 0 0 B E A U T I F U L T Y P IN G , theses, d isser­ tations, misc. F o rm e r legal .secretary. M rs. Anthoo.%. 4,54 3079 B i Al [ 'IM T , i nix < do; sour did* x 113. IT ll ISI (N A I, • r s 11 > work I. e to Rd ell m r. Just North cf 2" % r , H T r i RESUMES wiih or without pictures 2-DAY SERVICE Phone G R 2-3210 and G R 2-7G77 2707 Hi rnphill P a r k T Y P I N G E R R Y SERVI CE A l l UN' VER S TY P E T E R S LAST I.* N U T E S - - C E BM PX FC M A G - C /• R 3 for -ii R E P H C V E TYP ' . 3 S PEC A L T H E S IS RA TE 42 DO BIF COTTER 472 -936 B O B B Y E D E L A F I E L D , I B M Self- trb — p ica/elite, 25 y e a rs experience. 442- 7181. ROY W . HOLLEY: PRINTER 476-3018 SUMMER RATES for students Cloisters Apartments 1201 Town Creek 442-6333 HILLTOP APARTMENTS $ 129.00 — up e f f i c i e n c i e s ' ONE AND TW O BEDROOM APTS. FURNISHED AND UNFURNISHED Beautiful decor, !arge per.1, party roo”'- hills of South Austin off Riverside Drive Shuttle bus route EL CAPITAN APARTMENTS 1500 Reagan Hills Drive Large party room, large poo', shag carpet, G. E. kitchens 2 bedroom - 2 bafh I bath I bedroom - $134 up 465-8668 LA FO N T A N A $124.00 One and two bedrooms. Furnished & Unfurnished Close to Hancock and Capital Plaza Shopping centers, Easy access to 1H 35. Students and families welcome, 1220 and 1230 East 35'. ? Street 454-6738 smail deposit F I K N IS H E D apartm ent, G A R A G E N -rill campus, $115 plus bills De­ lease, no re 's . 476-8852 after 5 li- ‘ut. P rn. 442-9612 ON B L O C K from L a w School, Tow er V i w Apartments L a rg e nicely dec­ orated. / is-vm- r T V cable paid, $105 00- $122.50 476-3350 tu n and N O R T H W E S T H IL L S . B E A U T I F U L three bedroom Spacious apartm ents, ava ilab le). pool. laundry, carpeted. C A /C H . kitchen built in, Fro m $159 50. Im perial Nnrth- west Apartm ents, 345 2066. 476-4655. i unfurnished S H O R T W A L K to T ow er. Unusual npart- in c .t $120 up. 1903 Nueces, 476-3462, 476 8683. Typesetting, Typing. Prin tin g. Binding E X I* E R I E N C E D T Y P I N G , dissero tatlons, themes, reseatclM iapers, M rs. Peterson, 836-4818. M A R J O R I E D E L A F I E L D Grad ■, and undergraduate typ.ng: res imes 50c/page; m ultilithing. B a n k A m e ric ard and M a ste r Charge. 442-7(X)8 T W O B E D R O O M ap artm ent for rent. a month plus Fu rn shed $150.00 electricity. C all 444 0445 2288. E X C E L L E N T T Y P I S T fo rm e r secret ta ry -- a ll U T papers 50c/page 836- ti, CROCKETT c bas*, e f O ' t . a- fram es, diner-*- ms .rain * ; -n -,f ; p FAST X E R O X 4: OO M U LT I!.IT H , B IN D IN G 453-7987 5530 Burnet Road T Y P I N G — five blocks w est of cam ­ pus. T e rm papers, theses, d isserta­ tions. legal, other. 476-2407 327-2041. V I V I A N B R O W N . Professional T yp ist. Al! fields, N orth east area, near i l I 35„ 928-0991 afb r 2 p in. PROFESSIONAL TYPING IBM SELECTRICS Law, Res:*, d 'serial -- s P F i lo meet UT G uaranteed Barbara i ufos 453-5124 ; callo®* France ♦. W o o d s 453-6090 Just North of 27th & Guadalupe 7i\tvd/iA Am YES, we do type Freshman themes. Why not start out with good grades! Phone G R 2-3210 and G R 2-7671 2707 Hem phill P a r k S U M M E R A P A R T M E N T . I bedroom. cathedral 'T ilin g , garden, E R shuttle. no pets. M a y - A u g u st, $125. 478-5470 a fte r 7 ji rn. V.I.P. APARTMENTS 33rd & Speedw ay W alk t il or ” .the at door. S p ilt level lu x u ry living, 3 bedroom. 2 bu'ti. B e a u tifu l studio units designed for 7-5 m atu re students. N e w contem porary decor. W a lk Ins, pool, cable T V , shag ca rp e t Quiet elegant atmosphere K in g size one bedrooms also available, ce-' - ic . namer and f a ’ DrasbcaHy re d d e d Summer ra*e« 7 r n 1' before 8 DO £ ny 4 ’ T BS60 or 477 745 I E N F I E L D A R E A , shuttle, one bedroom apartm ent, dishw asher $143 Cheaper through May. rates. Le ase sum m er Cal 47' 1874 L U X U R IO U S , Q U IE T . 14 unit Casa Rosa, 4312 D uval One bedroom — $117.50) plus electrle- $140 (S u m m e r ity. ' 315-1322. 451-4919 R o o m & B o a r d S IN G L E - D O U B L E rooms, good Hood" w a lk to campus, m aid service. C A / CH. $110 $130/month. C all 477-8272 T y p i n g T Y P I N G D O N E I N m y home. 48 cent* p er page. 442-5693. Constitution Commission Will Tty H A ZEL HENDERSON U niversity Law Dean Page Keeton said Monday he is en­ couraged by progress of the Constitutional revision Com­ mission and is more optim istic than he was when the com­ the mission started state’s 97-year-old constitution. reworking “ At first I thought it was going to be too large a task,” Keeton said, “ but in light of a ll the w ork done In the IO to 15 revision projects In the last IO years in the country, I think It w ill be a m atter of choosing between various solutions suggested in studies done elsewhere.” Keeton is one of two U niversity faculty members appointed to the 37-member Tile other is Jan ice M ay. assistant professor of government. She w as commission. Preregistration Begins April 3 0 Gregory Gym on June 4 and 5. After obtaining class cards for the the courses he desires, student w ill report back to the gym for his b ill on the next day. A briefing session for staff members of the various depart­ ments is tentatively scheduled for A p r i l 26, the preregistration procedure w ill be explained and questions w ill be answered. in which For those wishing to test th ;r endurance, regular registrat in procedures for the fall semester w ill be held on Aug. 29, 30 and 31. Group Sets Visit 18 Cities; Keeton Public Meetings Optimistic About Revision unavailable for comment Monday afternoon. D I K IN G a two-day sem inar held last week, the commission heard testimony from nationally- known experts on revising state constitutions. constitutional Following the advice given by revision t h e specialists, members voted to hold public hearings in 18 Texas cities in the next three months. the The public hearings w ill begin A pril 25 in Am arillo and w ill continue in cities throughout tho state on weekdays. The last hearing w ill be June 29 in Austin. The commission also heard testimony last week urging them to im prove the language of the Constitution and Jud icial, leg islative and executive sections. George Braden, form er Y ale law professor and author of “ Citizen's Guide to the Texas Constitution,” told members to coneen'raIe on clear drafting and organization and to take a clear constitutional approach. He said the state's present constitution w is sloppily organized and overly restrictive.” AN W M AL legislative session to replace the prestnt schedule sessions was of legislative recommended by Frank W . E llio tt Jr ., Fullbright, Crook en and Jaw orski professor of law at the U niversity. “ badly w ritten, the told of form er T e r r e l l Blodgett, John assistant to former Gov. Connahy, lim ited powers of the governor under the present Constitution. He said the governor's chief management tools are “ a ll negative . . . the threat of a special session, a veto or the refusal of appointments.” Ju d icia l articles of the an­ tiquated document were criticized by Braden for their tremendous details. Associate Supreme Court Justice Tom reavley told the group it would not be practical for the commission to start out to plan a com pletely trying de ailed judicial system. last Wednesday T H E COM M ISSION passed a motion to establish study committees on l e g i s l a t i v e , judicial, local government, general provisions and education sections of the Constitution. finance, robert W. C alvert, chairm an of the comm im >n. said Monday he was still working on the ap­ pointments to the seven member study commi:t(*e and other staff positions as well. Jam es F. r ay, director of the Texas Advisory Commission on Intergovernm ental relations, was hired by the commission Wed­ nesday as executive director. The next meeting of the commission is scheduled for A pril 13 and 14 in Austin. Officials Preparing Report On Creek Wall's Legality Q ty of Austin officials are expected to report Wednesday on th e leg ality of a concrete retaining w all constructed along W aller Creek near Townes H all. for S p e a k i n g the C ity Engineering D e p a r t m e n t , d ia rie s Graves said Monday afternoon that he “ had just been out to the construction site and looked over the situation with officials from the parks depart­ ment.” When asked lf the w all was legal, G raves replied, “ That’s a value tough question—it’s a Judgment “ However, the contractor Is wrong in the plans as we have them ," he continued. “ Anytim e they make changes other than what was submitted to tis they are in the wrong." The 100-foot retaining w all Is seven feet high and nine inches thick. It w ill serve as a foun­ dation for the parking area of an apartment complex to be b u ilt last week to action over were sparked the construction of the w all, claim ing it w ill cause erosion of Environm entalists city parkland during heavy rains. Dr, Henry T. Owen, retired U niversity finance professor and property owner along the creek, earlier charged the construction company has “ moved down into the creek on 12 to 16 feet of public property When you have a flood, the water w ill gradually erode the city p ark." O f f i c i a l s for MacGregor- Construction Crutchfield raish Co., which built the w all, earlier that prelim inary city claimed land surveys were im properly carried out M i s c e l l a n e o u s H e l p W a n t e d EArN $'s W EEK LY Blood plaim a donor* needed. C a ih paid for *ervice*. Physician in attendance O pen 8 a.m.-3 p rn. Tues., Thun., Fri., & Sat. O p e n 12 r.oon-7 p.m. W e d . A U S T IN B L O O D C O M P O N E N T S . IN C ., 409 W e s t 6th. 477-3735. Help wanted female. Full time employ ment, 40 hour week. Must be able to work rotating shift. Prefer age 21 or over. mature, responsible, personality, attractive. Type, 10 key add, previous work experience desired. P a y commen­ surate ability. Interview - Call 478-6439. Interview — Ca'! 478-6439. Equal O p po rtun ity Employer S K Y D I V E ! Austin Parachute Center For information please call 272-5711 anytime S T O r E D ET EC T IV E or S T O r E P O LIC E Man or lady. Previous '-ecurity exparience or police work preferred, but not abso­ lutely necessary. Part time or full time. Appiy in person. 506 Congress, 3rd floor M r. Young Y A r IN G S ry ; African and Mexican N E L S O N 'S G IF T S ; Zuni Indian Jewel­ Imports. 4612 South Congress. 414-3811. Closed M o n d a y s . _____________ S W A P Y O U r apartment for ours In Houston for summer. 3811 Link V a l­ ley No. 4, Houston. 677-5853. LF .A r N TO beginning and Thomason, 478-2079. P L A Y Folk Guitar, Drew advanced. E L E G A N T Ir IS H Setters- A K C puppies siree by champion Lim erick Lane Tennyson O’Kate. Shots, wormed, 6 general ions perlgree furnished. ready for adoption April 7. reserve yours now. 327-1875. F r E E TO GOOD H O M E : Nine month old German Shephard. Good W a t­ 454-5131. chdog. Call 451-1737. I W A N T TO T A L K to someone who took Psychology 332 under Dr. Mor­ ___________ gan. 441-8829. 441-8778. IN T E r E S T E D life? lf «o, write P O . Box 1057. Liberal the swinging in minded couples only. H O LID A Y H O U SE No. I Part time ca r hops and production per­ sonnel needed to work noons and week­ end nights. Starting pay $1.60/tour. No experience necessary. App y at; Holiday House N o. I, I0C3 Barton Springs road. dependent DTD Y O U W A S T E last summer? l r Summer students Orientation Program - P a y $700 month - Call 454-6606 after 5 OO pm. - M A IL C A r r IE r S — part time. Hours adaptable to your studies. Details W A N T E D : P a rt time salesperson, male or female. Starlight Supply Co., Call Mel Kirk, 482-9511. P A r T O r F U L L T IM E dishwashers In person E l Toro needed. Apply restaurant, 1601 Guadalupe. S A L E S M A N - r E T A IL clothing well- jrroomcd. Medium long hair. fr-2 p m i , I Coll Bob. 4,'6-1339. Call 474-1379, leave call back. P H O T O G r A PH L U S N E E D E D for part time work M ust have transportation. G U A D A LU P E C A N O E rENTAL 2 to 50 miles of Guadalupe river mapped for float trios of 3 hours to 3 days. Beautiful untouched s e n e ry w ith Islands t c r c a m p in g . 2 children, ages 4 and 21?. 441-0151 rental fee for one canoe and on accessories is $10 tor 1st day and $7 each successive day . . . Con­ tact Daryl Crocker, 1-512-885- 4671, P.O. Box 8, Spring Branch, Texas, 78070. U.S. 281 at Guada­ lupe river. P A r T T I M E student, sophomore or and every" other Saturday 8-3. Call Astro Cleaners 442 4354 for appointment. ST U D E N T A V A IL A B L E from 10.15 a rn time outdoors to spend (weather perm itting) playing with my W A N T F O U r FU LT, or part time shop workers nt Capitol City Steel Co, Call Fred Trimble, 442-1481. junior. Hours 5-9 a n i -2 15 p.m. • r j E N G IN E E r IN G S T U D E N T — Junior or Senior for special projects et rap!- i to I r itv Steel - part time. Call Fred I Trimble. 443-148L SPrIN G BrEAK O N PADrE ISLAND make Jit o your fun in I ’ a u n Haad- o arter*. Groce riel, restaurant, bikinis, liquor and gate ne. Jito on Padre Island, Corpus Christi th" S O P H IS T IC A T E D S IN G L E S on campus who va lo r discretion and confidence, ell names ire coded and guaranteed privacy, a modern club devoted ta un­ usual, exciting correspondence with friends whose interests end desire* are sim ilar to yours and described sn Pent­ house Mage sine W rite for more Infor­ mation to Box 33;s Comstock. Michigan _ 49041. P r E G N A N T ’ F r E E prenatal class for ooupies in first 3 months of pregnan­ cy. April 5. 12, 19. 7 30-9:00 p.m. Call Jeanne Archer, rN. 441-7531 _ _ R o o m s TEXAN DOrM 19C5 - 1907 Nueces Fall, Spring Semesters, S46.S0 per mo. D aily maid service, central air, com­ pletely remodeled. Alan available — single rooms, parking, refrigerator, hot plates Two blocks from campus. Co-ed. rESIDENT M A N A G E r S 478-5113 PHOENIX 1930 San Antonio Singles $99.50 Doubles $54.50 redecorated, da / maid, , ec'or TV, w v ; er-dryer. and hefrigorefof avowed. Free parking ca* block from Campus, p;at 476-9265 477-5777 E YSTWOODS P A r K -G irls and-or boy*. $60 no each, all bills paid Also garage apt.. Duplex and garage aph Gr6-1700. rO O M S FO r M EN . One block south of Littlefield Fountain. Centra! air and heat card available The Clinton 105 W. 20th 478- 5846. and up Meal $52.50 W a n t e d ST. A U S T IN F L E M ENT A r Y S C H O O L 1911 San Antonio Street has teacher and ald openings In the following areas (some experience needed in Individualized In­ struction) and Junior High level teach­ ing positions In Art. Music and Math. Applicants are ta come by the school oftlce between 10-3 Monday through Frid ay or call 477-3751 P rim a ry level I. D. A wilt be I rink* applicants d irk g Soring break tor (s n full tim*' nos * ion * We need experienced multilith printer in t someone for general office work. Printing position requires st least two year* of commercial printing experi­ ence. W ill pay good starting salary General office requires selfing lecture notes, and typing Equal Op­ portunity Em ployer. Please call for ap­ pointment. 477-364L filing Warehouse maintenance, delivery, some In store stereo and T V ‘ ales. Must have some knowledge of stereos and TVs. 51 75/hour, 20-30 hour week. Prefer athlete or person strong enough for heavy lifting of stereo* and TVs. Also need 2 men to sci! or rent stereos, Tv s, refrigerators ta st idents or other per­ son-; outside of store Flexible hours Gall 476-9933 between 2 p .m .-4 p.m. only for appointment. Men, pert time, ever *g» and Satur­ day. C ar and re a l appearance nacei- iary. Long hair O.K. if neat. Minimum guarantee $60 for IS hour week. Can aam over $100 if you’re *ot afra:d to fait to girls. Apply, 3004 Guadalupe, Rear Suite 108. 4:00 p.m. only. COOK, P A r T T IM E nights, no experi­ ence needed. The Fortress Ste ale­ house. £92-0743 or 444-5233._________ 5 E L L ~ F L O W E R S part time. Erin, 27- 30rif. Average SIO to Sir. daily. Friday, Saturday Sunday. 451-1816, 282-0319 or comb by 4301 Guadalupe, weekend N E E D A L E N S ? 2lmm*800mm plus zooms. Capital Ci.mera. 476-3581. IjOST I XK I, $50 reward Collie. sabre and white, named •‘Orlon'’. return ta 2806 Nueces, A p t A or call 474-4300. LO ST: L A r G E light brown hound named 'Bonnie-No' collar W ack muz­ zle white chest. 476-8591 r E W A r D . IX )ST : G O LD and Jade bracelet be­ tween 261 h and Speedway and Jo u r­ nalism building. Contact Linda: 471- 22m ______________________________ LO ST S IA M E S E c a t male needs medi­ cation loved very much Lost in lake- I shore area phone 442-9584. $10 r E W A r D — grey Griped c a t 4 P E O P L E WHO N E E D photographic I white paw*, white under neck. Lost Answers to equipment we rent! Capitol Camera, around 43rd and Avenue 70-3531 476-3581. I “ B u s te r." 471-3246, 452-491,. ___________ ' W A N T E D TO B U Y - bonks, Playboys, all glrley magazines. stereos Penthouses, guitars. radios. records. Aaron s. 320 Congress. F o r r E W A r D ! necklace missed after party held 3/24/73. Please m ail or return. No questions' 40me bv its easy* pre, and the clubs s me evolving: Info eve the artist and the as a re I radio and dies I It’s a g re at • day for I Kentucky J F rie d C hicken J J i ' M n :! l" / / / / i ! Hit ' ,/i ’ T O D A Y AT— ! 2120 GUADALUPE I ‘Its. ficif i: r In kin good*’ * w e md kina faster, Ives were 35 feet ii ,f more shark fine HOR HEYL RDAHL r EXPEDITIONS Almost f w r y form of popular American music can I** founehind progressive country, but locally neither have developed into uniquely an Austin style. R e p r e s e n t a t i v e o f progressive groups Is Greezy Wheels, pertmps the most popular local band. Tliough they play some country like “ Orange Blossom Special.” the Inilk of their material is original standards BLIND GEORGE (NO COVER) Tonight at d3evo J WESTSIDE TAP ROOM 24th end Rio Grande MIXED DRINKS SOUTH SIDE NORI ll ‘Til I ROOM M M I s‘* •RMV M I v RI Ms’ ‘ I tnt s|\t,> TIU RI i r ■»" I ll I vt I HH I I I I ROO” -K SHOWTOWN U.S.A. “ I HI M l l ll WH ” ‘ lilt, M C (FCO a J / ; 4 • I \m nu hi i i v I III V II HI I I I I I RMM * I re it m ust see R A ! A n asto undin g (-life a d ven tu re a w h o le fa m ily ! LONGHORN **< \ re ll 52" r miC(’l> Hp IV? pi* *T R HA v KIN” _ Jd r T EX A S - -[.. T il ■ m i. * I nu * V l |l I i i Y i |I |] 1] - a bt* *>•» B'W - u : ,'j J U ' '■MB A N S * T E X A S Bnvi E s a * C l FOX T W I N ? 675/ AIRPORT BLVD. fmmmm , Motner of the Year. ATURES A ARI f \ f y lf you had a mother like this, who would you be today? AOB* Cornetcy I o« JQ A rsffN JE W OO DW ARD "THE EFFECTO GAMMA RAYS ON MAN TR TK .MOON Ti f* Paul Newman Production r>1 the 1971 P u litzer P rtz# *tnrv O-Of By De Ibm? » ,• play b b ' TO AY OPEN 5 ‘.5 1Ba3t Feat re 6 OO 8:00 - IO p.m. A C A D E M Y A W A R D S ™‘ M R " A NORMAN JEW ISO N ivm FILM ft . v * ' 'r f i d d l e r ^ o n t h e R o o f w .TOPOL NORMAN JEWISON C O L O R BY DELUXE United Artists SHOW TIMES---- it 8 :1 5 p in . T ON (G II I M a l i n e s I x r r v Med 'it 'sun : AST MAN COLOR R ' ’/ANTED n m i o e ’ s rK i d s I (rf*' T h n n h God- S h e o nly had tw o ! £U(£ THOMA' 22 MIRA THOMAS, IS Ay-- ■ TC r Rf - •'» H J AStABAB C«i« T P ' . N S A- T F X A S - T T T 3 $ 7 T m r * HI.DIO AT DUSK I OC SINGS the _ BLUES R O SS T h e S*e i e C u c k o o LIZA M IN N E L L I Pagt J J Tuesday, April 3, 1973 T H E D A IL Y T E X A N like •snugs lead guitarist Bat Pankratz's “ Cm airt* and Country Music.” Manager Gary Speers d e s c r I he s their sound as “ essentially country, hut much more lyrically advanced and a little more cosmic in sound.” H ie group stared when Close Hattersley, on f'>ur with Erie Anderson as a backup musician, lie decided to slay in \ustin. started a small group with Pankratz, Mike Pugh on bass and Tony la ird on drums that was folkish country. When Mary Egan Mas added on fiddle, the group progressed In terms of ''(''ting a s-yle and building a loving. sister. lass Hattersley, Cle was soon added as a vocalist, and Tony Arrollt as banjo play cr—filling out the band. TRO! B LK C W IK I st summer when Cleve, who v t *-s most of Greezy Wheels' m aterial, was busted on a manilla na charge and sent to Huntsville. Arrolli is temporarily filling O eve’s spot as a guitarist, bnf the bard hopes that Hattersley will be beck in his old plan' ‘-cor. M ary’s fiddling is one of the band's trademarks and con* ristontlv brings crowds to their feet. She is featured on Je rry Je ff Walker’s new album and jammed with Frank Zappa when recently performed at A r ­ he m adillo W o rld Headquarters. Miodier local group. Freda and t!:e Firedogs, developed a big enough reputation almost to get a recording contract with Atlantic as a vanguard for the label's entry into the country field, but neither party was completely satisfied with the other, and the plans were scrapped. Freda, whose real name Is Mat she Ball, heads the hand as lead singer and pianist. Bass player Bob Smith said when he first heard Marsha, he was knocked out and knew he wanted a band with her it. Toe others—Steve McDaniel, drums; John Reed, lead guitar and David Cook, pedal steel guitar—joined the Firedogs as the group was just playing around having a good time and realized they were good. in “ W K P L A Y more traditional country stuff than originals, and we do straight country rather than country rock,” Enid Smith. “ However, we don't feel that we have to copy the original and improvise within the country medium,” he added. Rat Creek Is a six-pie--e T R A N S -Hr T EX A S 16100 Burnt! Road — 46s 6933- STARTING WEDNESDAY W IN N ER O F 0 IN C LU D IN G 0 A C A D E M Y A W A R D S BEST ACTRESS n r r r n rn-— ’T ' progressive country band that m grated to Austin from Nash­ ville and Colorado because, “ The music scene in Austin seemed to be monger than anywhere else.” in Their music has coumry. but all of the band members have classical training, and a cello is featured in some numbers. its roots T IU )! (ill they have only been in Ausiin since January, Rat Creek bas developer) a good following here and in a few other Texas cities. Several solo artists have moved here be- ne e they found Austin but musically r e l a x i n g stimulating. Among tlie.se are Je rry Je ff Walker. W illie Nelson, Michael Murphy a n d M a r c Benno. However, tile grandpappy of Austin music and p^’haps the most colorful exponent of local progressive country is Kenneth ThreadgilJ. Thread gill opened his famous tavern in an old service station on North Lam ar Boulevard in 1933, serving £ good time as well as beer. the late Several big performers were encouraged by Th read gill in their careers before they saw fame. One of them, Janis Joplin, credited him as a major fnrce in her career and enjoyed him as a singer. She once said. “ He’d dose the bar down and lay his hands on his big fat belly and lean hack his head and sing like a bird—Jim m ie Rodgers songs— and he would yodel—God he was fantastic.'* Rock and Folk are a l s o popular here, appealing to a fairly different audience than she progressive country bands. The 13th Floor Elevators are undoubtedly the most popular local hard rock band, pushing a driving sound and some insane lyrics. Rokv Erikson the dynamo behind the band in terms of material and in front of the band in terms of performance. is Institute Tile Elevators were popular in Texas and California until 1%9 when Erikson was committed to Rusk Mental for m a r i j u a n a possesrion. Upon lie getting out last November, regrouped they began performing again. The manager of Mother Ka rill said last month they drew the club’s largest crowds ever. the band and AUSTIN HAS more than enough progressive country, rock and folk artists. Steve From hoi tx, Rusty Wier, Layton and John, Mateus, Krackerjack, Momma’s Cookin', Southern Feeling, Milton Carroll and Allen Damron—in addition to those already men­ tioned—just begin the list. With so many quality per­ formers. quite a few clubs are needed just to keep employment up for musicians. The most famous Is Armadillo World Headquarters, an obi armory converted info a music hall. The fire department has set the capacity at 1,500, but before the fire department’s action. Armadillo held as many as 2,000 for one show’ (R avi Shankar), Die management I relieves that Burt Reynolds is HOT! Ask Dyan Cannon! ~ HtlkU' UHpM I. y‘-T »"*.*■■ 4ni \t TUE BEST IN ART ENTERTAIN WENT TWO FEATURES CA II FOR HUES W X OPENs OHLY 12 en to o* ne I OO ON SENTI AA SHOO O FF W IT H TH IS AD PIUS "LAST SUMMER' OPEN 1:45 F?aTures 2*4-6-8-10 Reduced Price* ‘Til 6:15 (Mon.Frh) 2200 HISCOCK Dr-v*—<53 664* 4 A C A D E M Y A W A R D N O M IN A T IO N S including BEST PICTURE — BEST AC TRESS BEST A C TO R — BEST SC REEN PLA Y -.tfU dn tt* / MAU Production* ,Vh W E E * SOUNDER A Robert B . FUdnite/Martln R u t Kiln- G O' I OR SPTTT AI SI R E I SINGS * GROUP K i t ! ' , ( MI .IME lf > IU , 1.1, i MI 11 “ BEST P IC T U R E ” • “ REST D IR EC T O R ” “ BEST S C R E E N P L A Y ” • “ BEST A C T R ESS” MV I MAM SN INGMAR BERGMAN’S CR1ESAND WHISPERS ROGU3 CORMAN pres! a NEW WORLD Pl GTU I ELEASE R I texa s pr em ier e ENGAGEMENT Feature* 2-4-6-8-10 ripen 1:45 • St.50 Til 6pnt T R A N S lr T E X A S I --224 Guadalupe S t - 4/7-iS64 I N T E R S T A T E T H E A T R E S p i s s e s ^—v. I n t e r s ! Think o f th e p c LAURENCE OLIVIER *1.00 'TIL 2:30 FEATURES 2:25-4:50-7:15*9:40 Then go one ifep further. W " MICHAEL CAINE tw e n t ie t h crvnjnv-Rjf ^ v I n t e r s I a l e _ j _______ f o b c l f c J V I H ^ —X- 71<* CONGRESS AVENUE 51 OO TIL 7:30 Fe alure* 2 IO - 5:45 - 9:00 COLUMBIA PICTURES f” M WEITMAN air WM RWrOK Ie!COTTON 'n S : A - a) [PG; ® $1 Til 1:30j 1:00-3:10 5:20 7:30 9:45 A 1 "V Live Stage Shows Book Store - C O M IN G SO O N COUNCILMAN DICK NICHOLS APPRECIATION DAY FEA T U R IN G SUPER SPEC IA LS • W A T C H FOR IT MINUTE SK O AL I MOVIES M OH.. THU RS. 8 San Gabriel (4784)102) YO JIMBO 0961) directed bv Akira Kurosawa with Toshiro M ifu n s Jester Auditorium 75c «« L A S P A T C O M IN ® WED, •’APRIL FOOLS" T COLUMBIA PICTUneS Pr*»nts A BBS fWOOUCTlO** THE LAST PICTURE SHOW A Film By PETER BOGDANOVICH ACADEMY AWARD WINNER BEST s u E r a r r a u Acron B E N JO H N S O N BE ST surwjRTnre Acmes* I CLOF- .Ll AC MMAN & 1 NOMINATED FOP ACADEMY AW ARDS INCIUDING B E S T P IC T U R E cot -JMP:* pictures a bbs moo-. I '•*■* TMY BOTTOM-, i J f . l f i f . ; r , , , r C V B iU S H ■ .U R i m . I r C 8 , y« - !- " V - ’DYII D, LA PP, MCMURTRY/EMCI.' PETER 8OO0*NOVlCH/Sc- P-O0UCW BERT S- p, P f T fn BOGDA--' t N JONNSON f Cl OF** 3 l f ACHMAN arc -nnoF AV by LARRY M Mum OY and PETER BOGDAN' HOCH/Produced by STEPHEN J FRIEDMAN IBI $ S H O W S 2 - 4 - 6 - 8 : 10- 10:20 * | ADVANCE TICKETS ON SALE AFTER 2:00 P.M. 12:30 (N ight) M o n . - Thurs. M arx Brothers Duck Soup h i t t V A R S I T Y . , ^ 2 4 0 0 G U A D A L U P E S T R E E T ! $ I OO TIL 2:30 2:00 4:35 ? : I0 • 9:45 S T A M I O T K U B R I C K t ® 21 3 0 " L a s ! ® * ’ U te R e d trio! 4 L e v e r s ’" . .. PC, $1.00 TIL 6:30 S A M 6:00 - 9:40 L O V E R S 7.50 T W O G R E A T H I T S ! Paramount Pictures presents “ I I \ y i i i ( a i n , SAM" PG ' Technicolor* A Paremount Picture I j - y s t l X I X O - i . . t u g , a z i r a E X J U L M Seeing Austin Through a Strangers Eyes Balloon Salesman Talks About Buses and Cost of Living ^ meet your friends...^ FISH FRY • SPECIAL! ? w e By BILL CHILDS Texan Staff Writer S a u n t e r i n g along Barton Springs Road Sunday on my w ay to dinner, I was hailed by a short, stubby man sitting on a comer. He if be belonged to the carnival across the street, looked as "D o buses run at night?" " I honestly don't know. Sorry’." I came Walking back home, upon the stranger again. He had moved to the other comer and was leaning against the street sign post. " B ur still hasn't come'i’" "N a w ." " I didn't know there was bus service on Sunday.” "Oh, yea, the bus system here it on is good. You even have Sunday." " B I T NOT after six.” "T h a t's okay. At least you have if on Sundays.” His northern accent stuck out as plain as his oversized nose. He was holding a small bundle of wooden canes like you see sold at fairs and carnivals and a square cardboard box was stung over his right shoulder. A straw hat with built-in sunvisor on the brim covered a weathered head. Simple faded gray troupers with cuffs and black rounded shoes completed I thought he must be younger dian he looked, but I couldn't tell for sure. his wardrobe. "You from here?” "N aw , I ’m from San Antonio.” "W hat Austin?” doing you are in " I C A M E H E R E to buy some in San for a parade balloons Antonio.” A long pause as he spits into the street. "M oney s in balloons, ya know? Dollar items are hard to sell. People won't buy dollar hems. If they've got three or four kids, they’ll buy three or for a quarter apiece. Everything's so tight now.” four balloons Dusk had melted to a hazy darkness. The myriad lights from the carnival flickered and flashed behind us. Noisy traffic zoomed past. "Do you work carnivals in San Antonio?” "No, I don’t work with them," lie said, gesturing in the car­ nival’s direction with a thick half- burnt cigar. "T h e y’re okay, but I work by myself. I work in the neighborhoods." "Y O U W O R K door-to-door then.” "No. street." I just walk down thn "You have a fam ily?" "N aw , it's no good today, the cost of living and everything, you know? I get along best by myself. I know what I want. . . Nixon’s done all this, va see” '' He swings his 'eft arm and declares, "H e is the champion double crosser. He’s Tricky Dick. He's the same man he used to be, only a little more sophisticated. You don't think they call him Tricky Dick for nothing, do v a ? The price of meat now is so high." "Y e a , I know. The only meat I ’ve eaten lately is when I eat out. I’m already tired of fish and eggs. I just had a hamburger.” va " B U T T H E hamburger you had wasn’t meat—-it was mostly soya meal, know? Tile meat nowadays is very’ sim ilar to the meat Hitler advocated during Hie w ar to serve the German people. His scientists came up with a meat that had a lot of meal in it. Did you know th at?" for N o t waiting my acknowledgement, he went on. "T hey have a restaurant coming out soon that will have no ser­ vice—-no waiters, no help, no < ooks. no kitchen!—-just synthetic meat! I t ’ll cost five to six dollars a meal. "And potato chips. The potato chips >ou have down here aren’t the real thing. Mostly synthetic and they don't last in a package more than two or three weeks. The only real potato chips are found in . . . fa truck with a loud muffler rumbles past and I miss tile city), Kansas. Those are good potato chips." \ R E L A T I V E L Y quiet mo­ ment passes. "Y e a , Nixon is goin’ around thinking be got a mandate, but he didn't. Tile only reason people tv tonight "I- o rd L o s e a 10 rn p.m 5. lh M a u d e 12. 24 T e m p e r a I ii res R • 1 a 9 M e a a n d Id e a s 4. f >u<'k" l l P e ttic o a t Ju n c tio n fi. 36 M o v ie : 8 p rn S IO p m 9 B e h in d the I 'n e * ’ A W a r of C h ild r e n * 5. 7 M o v ie in P r o t e c to r s l l B e v e r ly H i! I b illie * 9 B la c k J o u r n a l l l M o v ie : ' M a d is o n A v e n u e 9 Son P c rn Ne tv. oi k IO, 12. I’ I M a r c u s W e lb y , M D. i 6, 36 F ir s t T u e s d a y 10 r m 9 C iv il W a r All O ther C h a n n e ls N e w s IO 15 p m i i M o v ie C o n tin u e d 12 24 Jack Cair 9 A n \ m e r ic a n F a m i l y 4 6, 36 T o n ig h t S h o w 7 , in M o v e ‘ *Th» R e c k o n in g " 11 30 r rn- Midnight o Y> ir P i e 1 t T o S a y It 11 M o y ie : F lu e s fo r I..on ens'* 9 M id m c h t S m a c k s : “ K in g of the ir m v a l M rn ie U n c le H a r r y ’’ Of special internet to University students Is Tuesday night's air­ ing of Men and Ideas. Charles LeMaistre. chancellor, will be the 7pm 6 Room 222 ll The Rifleman 9 N ew s 7 H ee H a w 5 Y o u A sk e d F o r I t guest on this presentation to be­ gin at 7 p.m. on channel 9. Several movies are also fea including i«e'e * tured Duck" to be seen at 7 p re on "G ird channels 4, 6 and 36. Roddy Mc* Dowall, Tuesday Weld, Ruth Gor­ 9 p rn don and Harvey Korman star in this movie in which a high school student uses hypnosis to control the love lives of his classmates. 6 3e pm. IO T e m p e r a ! a e s R is in g 36 T r u th c r Consequent es lg T o T e ll the T ru th 24 I D r e a m of Je a n n ie C L A S S IF IE D AD C A L L 471-5244 T O P L A C E A T EX A N • TONIGHT • CrI R L S ! g i r l s : G I R L S ! AMATEUR NIGHT T O N I G H T AT THE H O O K E M 3405 G U A D A L U P E N E W L Y REDECORATED AN D BEAUTIFUL . . . FRIST PRIZE SEC O N D PRIZE THIRD PRIZE $50.00 $25.00 $10.00 F OR I N F O R M A T I O N Call 413-9029 Af t er 4 p.rn. O U .illest XXX RATED BOOKSTORE M A G A Z IN ES NOVELTIES PAPERBACKS 8mm FILM EROTIC BOTIQUE 25c PEEP S H O W S Lavaca 477-0363 £ i r n £ 3 A T T E N T IO N L A D IE S F R E E B E E R 7:30-9:00 A L L Y O U C A N D R I N K Sen ing N O C O V E R C H A R G E — L A D I E S ’til 9 :0 0 A T MOTHER EARTH Boogie with "CHOCTAW' fro rn Dallas G U Y S ADMITTED AT 9:00 10th & Lamar OPEN 7:30 477-3783 voted for him was because they didn't want McGovern.” He spits a wad of rusty juice into the gutter and continues. "T h ey should've let the older politicians mn the election. They would’ve won it.” He interrupts the discussion. " Is that a bus coming?” We wait and watch the running lights of a tall vehicle coming toward us materialize into a dark blue school bus. " b 's a bus, but not the one you wanted. I ’d offer you a ride, but m y car's broken down." No reply. Then, "Y o u know, I f s not Austin’s a nice place. like Houston. Houston's too big." "B u t Austin's growing also. I f s almost gating too big for Austin, if you know what I m ean." "N O , A U S T IN ’S okay. You got a good bus syslem. Why, three years ago, you had eld beaten up school buses. Now, I ’m sur­ prised. You not only have good service and new buses, but you (are expanding. Most other cities are having problems, but not you. You know to cross Houston—ifs IR miles across; IA e covered it on too? and by taxi.” it e o s t s $35 "Houston's bigger than 16 miles across." "M ayb e if s grown since I was there." We argue briefly last over Houston's size. with neither winning his point. “ Yea, Austin’s okay. It has no industry, and as long as the in­ dustry stays out, Austin w ill be okay. Bur some of tho.se guys you have running for City Council have some wild ideas. See if that taxi will come over." \\ W E , W E BO TH he whistles—the taxi driver doesn’t appear to see us, hut .suddenly the orange car swerves sharply and .smoothly over to the curb. "Good luck to you.” Ile said something in return as he tossed his cigar stub onto the grass and clambered the back seat of the taxi, but I didn't hear what it was. into t o Vt MI IT. 2Mb 3721032 % ALL THE FISH YOU CAN EAT ONLY $119 * SPECIAL GOOD TUES. & WEDS. FROM 5 P.M. TO CLOSING ONLY OFFER INCLUDES FRENCH FRIES. COLE S L A W AND HOT R O LL O P E N ' IO A M r M. M O N D A Y th ru " V T I R D M S I N D A Y : 12 N O O N to ll* P M. IO lo ^ TRY OUR NEW GA M E ROOM — PINBALL * FO O SBAIL! daily horoscope A R I t 6 : Y o u rn v bn s a tis fie d Im la y vs ith th a t o f w hich than j e u a r e r e a lly c a p a b le . D o n 't se ll y o u r s e lf short. less f a r T A I R I *>: E x p e c t an e x c ite u d a y ' iii o f s u rp ris e s . Y o u h a v e a g r e a t d eaf to do w ith tho o u tco m e o f to d a y 's a c tiv itie s , so ta k e an a c t iv e p a rt. G E M I N I : T h e tim e m a y be he re to m a k e th a t m a jo r c h a n g e y o u h a v e been co n sid e rin g . D o n 't be su rp ris e d if y o u a re a c t u a lly p u shed into ii ( \x< I R : T h e help o f a frie n d ca n be a v a lu a b le a sset. D o n t d r iv e y o u r fa lse b r a v a d o s o f in d e p en d en ce . a w a y w ith frie n d s L E O : W e ll- w is h e rs and e n e m ie s a lik e th a t y o u 'v e to c o n c e d e w i ll h a v e d o n e it a g a in . D o n 't ru b th e ir noses in it. V I R G O : I f yo u p ro b le m to d a y, h a v e T h is J o u rse lf. is no tim e * spel t a n v .b ea l looked at. to be n e g le c tin g it L I B R A : A lth o u g h y i lly s h a r p to d a y, yo u m a y h a v e som e r a t e ■ tr o u b le fin d in g s o m e th in g on w h ic h to use it. R eco g n iz e t r i v i a l i t i e s and look beyo n d them . S C O R P I O : Y o u a re in o ne c f \ ,ur j p le a s u r e c y c le s . E it h e r w r i t e the d a y o ff and expect to g e t n o th in g done. o r ssark like th e d ic k e n s be the sp a rk p lu g S A G I T ! X R M S : L e a n h e a v ily • > r o w n in itia tiv e to day. Y o u w i ll h a v e the to o r g a n iz a tio n if a n y th in g is g o in g to get done. s o l i d \ P R I E U R Y : G o o d vvi ll guide sen se j o u r d e c is io n s to d a y D o n 't be a fr a id of bold, d e cisiv e m o ves. b u s i n e - ^ in ( ’’o r signalize r A t l i ' R H S : to d a y w ith a s m ile and d e a lin g s k in d w o rd . Y o u ’ll tie s u r p r is e d bow m u c h this c a n do fo r yo u . a ll > P I X IS S : D ic k bai k on so m e fond m e m o r ie s to d a y. T h a t a lo n e sho uld c o n v in c e yo u that to d a y is ju st as goo d a s y e s te r d a y , a n d to m o r r o w vv ill be b e tter, — M i K L A V I R E M E . ARBY'S HAM SANDWICH SPECIAL! FOR ONLY $ 1 0 0 REG. $1.68 VALUE SAVE 68c sappy Service "avant Atmosphere lean and Colorful ARBY'S FULL FLAVOR, H IC K O R Y SM OKED H A M PIPING HOT! GREAT SA N D W IC H . . . . JU ST LIKE O STEAM ED BIG ROAST AND BEEF SPECIAL G O O D TODAY THRU THURS. APRIL 5, 1973. 1705 Guadalupe 5400 Burnet Rd. 4411 W . Ben White 472-1582 451-3760 892-2058 472-7315 1411 LAVACA CASTLE S E H FRIEDA THE FIREDOGS $1 COVER CHARGE md TONIGHT CROSS WHEN (Formerly Bubble Puppy, Damion) SOUTH DOOR Under New Management TRY IT A G A IN , Y O U 'LL LIKE IT I 523 Tinnin Ford Rd. 4 4 4 - 0 7 1 1 TUESDAY-SATURDAY BRUSHY CREEK A Good T im e M il s ir G r o u p Lunches Served Daily I 1:30-3 Dinner 5-10 p.m. Daily H a p p y H o u r 5-7 p .m . 441-3352 • Steaks • Sandwiches • Seafood • Mixed Drinks M I c m F R T I E S A \\ E l l i r e APARTMENTS 2101 BURTON DRIVE SPECIAL! • Cheese Sandwich Amen an Cheddar Swiss Provolone Cole Slaw Iced l ea R e g u l a r $ 1 .0 5 Tilt* It lu M f jr n s s S o u n d o f T E X A S I \ S T K U M E X T S i l i r n W e d n e s d a y 2021 East Riverside at Burton NEVER A COVER ^ b a c k r o o m 441-4677 A R T S A N D H I L A I R E C O M M O I L E N/USELM WITHOUT iWMIS TONIGHT 7 and 9:15 P.M. Students, Fac., Staff .75 U N IO N THEATRE Members 1.25 T H E C U B IS T E P O C H Based An "T » C ubist Epoch a Na>v York Metropo1 ta.-- M s* rn Co,..nty Arf M ;se_m, r a t rn * 4 interiation a y known art Listeria! truant, bec inn "q in 10 C 6 w ’n P non'1 ( " I pa nt ob nets a trink t a tots departure from • a t • and ant in mobf • 0 ann freedom r ‘ tech r.q e Modern a tr-a rad-ca sp> * of Cub rn and Leger, and othe-s. ■* no *e-e* G ERM ANY— DADA Dedicated to a -rn der, a -* form s of a " 4 " d la m eted o 1916 to pro**-' ♦ ■ » - W a r I, and to emphasise I e I ca ,.r t. A 'bough Dadaists d>d demonstrate on# imi is rot d ep end an t upon ma-. * era true Dada st spirit, wi*h cameo ■ R ch tar a n d Rte • a'd rf ehenbe k record r-qs o‘ D ada m..sic end p their doc*' "e r.T n- c g na / <■- own et the of A rt a-d the Los Angeles s aery mn by D o . o es Cooper, e ra a -"00. T-« C ubist move . *s D em o!se es dAviq- asso i me-ked em, not as scient •'C pe-speo- t-ad ' o rs a n -0 end i"*rod .red a ne* — s * e k >aw • owes much to Gr>s, Picasso, Braq see *-»m • work .1 i~ort- veo rn- ■a*s . »-* -as of W o rld ic- s a ho * and art art, t-e r n a - '• c cree* on * fit rn captures the T H E OTHER PLACE 2 Dinners for Price of O ne (with this ad) Mon. - Fri. 4 • 8 p.m. ' B u c k e t LIVE! "Bits and Pieces" TONITE— FREE FOR LADiES 23rd & Pearl ACROSS FROM HARDIN NORTH U V E ! 3 HRS. FREE PARKING IN HARDIN GARAGE (3-7:30) HAPPY HOUR PRICES: $1.25 Pitcher (3-7:30) 55c Mixed Drinks 30c Glass T T o d a y only . th e Sam W itch sh op s ii ------------------------------------------------2 7 ^ Shop No. I 2821 San Jacinto Shop No. 2 2601 Guadalupe Shop No. 3 Dobic M a ll N o. 5 2021 Guadalupe 2nd Level Dohie Mall Phone I"2-5392 Free Parking in Dobie Garage THE DAILY T e x a n Tuesday, April 3, 1973 Page 13 Jail Improvement Package Recommended to Legis C s ture State Study Council Suggests Four Bills and Formation of Interim Committee on Cell Standards ‘•This situation ex cts because the jails in Texas range from IOO percent undercapacity, which means they hold no pt i son ors whatsoever, to RS percent over­ capacity,” the report said. T H U STI I d gives the repo: t of the Travis County gland jury of J inuary, IOU, which described as tho Travis County ‘'deplorable.” The grand jury report described various abuses of prisoners and stated. ‘‘There is little, if any, protection for the individuals in ja il.” Ja il institute 7 e study commends Austin, wi;ii ii Was the first Texas rit> to ’he personal bond program—releasing an accused person on his personal promise to appear for trial. The cost of the program, shared equally by the county and city. s ''ill 'Hid j>er year and, the “ good stufly sa vs, has been a investment” because the program has ‘‘incalculable” amount of money when one considers the < ost per day for housing a prisoner, the possible saved an loss of employment, and the ensuing additions to the welfare rolls ol the accused’s family. The that study found of prisoners in county jails. 7 pen-on t were awaiting appeals, 22 percent were convicted aid serving time, and 71 pere a t. were aw aiting trial. Frank said the percentage of Travis County prisoners was comparable and he holies os the bill designed !o transfer prisoners flip Texas Department of to are Corrections while he awaiting they would appel! beneficial to the prisoners. “ I have 17o prisoners. Eighty percent of their days are spent in idle isolation,” he said. I II E D EPA R T M EN T of Corrections offeis educational, psychological, psychiatric and vocational services, which county jails are unable to provide. said the although Frank facility could hold Huntsville 22.000 prisoners, currently holds only 16.300, and therefore. “ has plenty of room to absorb convicted felons.” it F r a n k also favored the establishment of a commission on jail standards. jail The commission would replace the inspections now con ducted by the State Depart me t of Health, which has no authority to enforce standards set by the present statute. The commission would have the authority to promulgate and en­ force jail standards in Texas. T H E O N EY weakness of tin; commission as proposer! is that it should als > hav--> the function of educating jail employes, Frank said. T e study was made under the direction of the council’s .study c mmitJre comp! sed of Rep. Hilary B. Doran Jr ., of Del Rio, chairman: Son. Max Sherman of Amarillo: and K/q>s. Carl Parker of Frank Lornbardino of San Antonio. Port Arthur and enmmittee met th > 'Pl i' twice to hear during t •■tummy r un experts. Council s iff members also Inspected sev eral Texas jails. interim has' D o r a n the ! dure to make the panel a Le i mil uing interim committee. asked Kress, McCarr Sworn In Monday Sandy Kress took office Monday, Sandy Krfess took office Monday, predicting the “ most productive w a r ever for students.” K r e s s and Vicepresident Cuppy M cC arr were sworn in at I p.m. by tannin Schooler, Student Court chief justice. ‘ We want to get a running start on tile programs we hare been ‘‘We talking about," Kress said want to show people that Student Covemment can and will a c ­ complish something.” A d v o c a t i n g in­ volvement. Kress said, “ We want to have an impact on current bills before the State legislature and any housing dei root s.” U n i v e r s i t y student He poin ed out od cr programs, such as expanding the student and lobbying of foil involving s t u d ( n I s the academic in decision making area as top priorities for the spring. "W e aiso wan’ the con ept of the student c a rp >ratii>n to see become a reality this .spring.” Kress said, "What we primarily want to do in this month and a the to half machinery.” set up is Kress said all of (he com­ immediately start and mittees v ill exploring programs of their specific areas. the problems M cC arr said he looks forward to working with Kress and the Student Senate, ‘‘There are a lot of things that need to be accomplished during the next year, and we will need as much student participation as possible,” he said. .started Rehire Schooler the ceremony in the Union Building, thanked Pat Macken, Bob lie Janet Burk, Charles Atkins, McClendon and Cindy Davis of the Flection Commission. “ All of the complaints were dealt with fairly and we would thanking be r e m i s s without them,” Schooler said. Use Texan Classified Ads HANK's GRILL Hank's Famous Chicken Fried Steak 2532 G U A D A L U P E 2 pcs. M eat, French Fries, Salad, Hot Rolls & Butter 5-9 p.m. only S i.2 0 Reg. $1.45 What Austm has is a good $3.79 Tope Store. Honest Injun! A t Rock-Ola tape store, you can get a gen-u-ine 8-track tape for only 53.79, $4.49 for doubles. Who knows, you might even get a cigar, Allman Brothers ’ Bcginnwqs" Rolling Stones "M ore Hot Rocks" Double Tapes $2.99 h TRA - I A*'! SI ORE The T w s Legislative Co* mr ii has cited overcrowding as t e main problem with county jails and recommended a legislative package tn im prow condWors, pl us creation of a conmixson or jail standards Xh0 1 d rapacity abri, :;c Do jails "I* I rod pi isoners. n embers and ‘.utng fit at of the department' s lf) women staff ’13 women faculty ere full\ sa t isI ic? 1 >n of r < nbors for | f I< thp tho rom rn ill p t . : the Senate voji of Miss F ir m Itll I rf ;\ I I-' VI. menthers < J or I their support >’s request, p m re rani to student members’} ip oi in t c<>mmittees gi rierai. the c or sen. p sip., ne any action until tt n findings ot a •• f-o\( !cd by the Senate inclu ;< I the adopt.,>p of a the University and I 'I' Svs'em ’ake all requisite silefts to eomtilete the Fen nit\ ( ’ct) tor at the earliest possible date.” t.urging “ that The Fen u p »]•lo I* (sse?I a re lic t on tea chi tig oftffH-fi? e:,e«s which proposes the e;uahlishntent of a mug ? (Mi’or lo aid to hnical leachers, gtvi­ g both and professior ai asxa.-'t i nee. Faculty Senate Hears Art Group rep resee n se lei the art Sc response to .Miss I lo rie s request for ’"omale representation on Senate committee. r cm tier Bill D Francis read a the o between th c v n { rn ai a I % pub Un S l e e p in g B a g s? A G O O D EM D CA’ O H I.'/ E IVA! '• [ ...................... II oz. Aerosol Bomb I nj 17 oz. Bottle u l Pkg. 3 ? ‘ i . HILLCREST Lb. Box S S c . . Quart 2 9 BATHROOM TISSUE HILLCREST ................................... ^-Gallon LADY SCOTT DUN C AN H INES .......................... 23 oz. Box 2-Roll Pack W ISH B O N E 8 oz. Bottle c c £c c A'Sc 9 C O RN BREAD ® C H IC K EN FLAVORED ..Pkg. 4 3 STUFFING MIX STOVE TOP HANOI WIPESN" °‘p™ Sc™. M.25 ALUMINUM FOIL Y C S r,?™ 59' PINEAPPLE d o " ' " n . u i c . 2 t o . 49‘ R C COLA, DIET RITE COLA 6-P.,cl IO O I. Bottles, Plus Deposit ......................... 3 9 f none noun Durns m n to savings WAFFLES"60..........................i 3 oz.pig. 39* PINEAPPLE CHUNKS DOLE,i - 3 7 * 7, t SUTTFED CABBAGE ROLLS I f SIC POCKET PEN „ „ WEIGHT WATCHER DINNERS ......................... 14 oz. Pkg. Ii • FLOUNDER O PERC H • SO LE . . . . 1 8 oz. Tray ii H O L L O W A Y H O U SE f W ith BA C O N 15 oz. C a n 2 , FOR I* •a A d i t i l TtHG ia n t Size RO v- Grade " A " M ed’um FIES Trom OK Farm';, Dn;/n c Ii COLORFUL SPRINGTIMF FRFSH O O U C F HOME GROWN SPINACH. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . CANTALOUPES new crop. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Pound 2 FOR 23^ GOLDEN BANTAM CORN LA R G E EARS . . . . . . . . . . . CARROTS I LR C ELLO BA G S ......................... 2 FOR 25* VALENCIA ORANGES N E W C R O P ......................................................................... * Pound 12^ 251 THESE PRICES G O O D AT ALL STORES TUESDAY, W ED N ESD A Y, AND TH U RSD AY 1221 W est Lynn • 3101 Guadalupe * 2401 San Gabriel 218 South Lamar * 3415 Northland Drive . s r - *rn