tfy DAILY TEXAN Student Newspaper at The University of Texas at Austin fo\. 74, No. 102 Ten Cenls Austin, Texas, Thursday, November 14, 1974 Twenty Pages 471-4591 UMW, Owners OK Contract Union Expecting Miner Ratification WASHINGTON (UPI) — The United Mine Workers Nicholas T Camicia, president of the Bituminous ing escalator clause and a $900 million boost in pensionunion reached tentative agreement with coal mine Coal Operators Association, said the pact "certainly contributions from coal royalties over three vears operators on a three-year wage contract Wednesday will alfect the price of coal" but that increased produc­ Noneconomic provisions included improved vacation night, and both sides said theyexpected miners to ratify tivity to be expected from it would help offset higher schedules, sickness and unemployment protection, it and end their strike within two weeks. wage costs clothing health care >afetv allowances, and re­The agreement, carrying a 15 percent wage increase The contract covers 1.200 mines producing 70 percent quirements spread over three years, was reached less than 48hours of the nation's soft coal. An estimated 12.000 miner jobs would be created un­after 120.000 UMW members struck soft-coal mines in 25 About 10 days will be needed for the union ratification der provisions specifying helpers must be assigned to states, causing layoffs in the steel and railroad in­vote, and the first step — summoning members of a 38­ mining machinery now handled by a single persondustries and promising further serious disruption of the member bargaining council to consider the agreement If the pact is approved as expected and the strike ends already shaky economy. — was begun right away within two weeks, no serious industrial coal shortagesUMW President Arnold Miller told a newsconference. Economic provisions of the tentative agreement in­ are anticipated although railroads and barge lines that "It's a very good contract. It's one I can sell to the cluded a 9 percent wage increase now. with 3 percent ship coal likely will continue layoffs until miningmembership." more in each of the second and third years: a cost of liv­resumes Mormon Missionaries Kleasen Charged With Murders By JANIE PALESCHIC another hearing may be scheduled later Fischer and Darley were reported mis­identified as stolen from an Oak Hill Texan Staff Writer Federal Dist. Judge Jack Roberts sing Nov 3. and Austin police began a dealership in 197,1 A convention-type Robert Elmer Kleasen, 42. was charg­ordered Kleasen committed for 90 days missing persons investigation. The name tag belonging to one of the mis­ed'Wednesday with capital murder in the to a federal hospital in Springfield. Mo . police discovered that the two men were sionaries was found in the trailer, rippeddeath of two Mormon missionaries who for psychiatric examination to have dined with Kleasen the night of by a bullet met him for dinner every Monday night. AFTER HE returns, the federal their disappearance. THE TRAILER was moved by the The two missionaries. Gary Darley. firearms charge must be dispensed with THEIR CAR, assigned to them by the Travis County Sheriff's Department to 20, and Mark James Fischer. 19. were before the state will proceed on the Mormon church, was found stripped in the Department of Public Safety crime last seen Oct. 28.a few hours before their murder charges Sanders said Kleasen the parking lot of an apartment complex laboratory Wednesdayusual appointment with Kleason has not yet been indicted on the federal at 2200 Dickerson in Austin. Kleasen was still in federal hands late Kleasen was accused of the slavings. charge, and it will be up to the I S at­Over the weekend a search throughout Wednesday afternoon, being held in said to have been committed during an torney when and if the case goes lo the Central Texas for the men was con­federal courthouse He is expected to be act of robbery, in complaint filed by a grand jury ducted by cooperating law enforcement moved to the Springfield hospital within Texas Ranger Wallace Spillar before McMurtry said when Kleasen is agt-ncies and members of the Church of the next week Justice of the Peace Jim McMurtry returned he will set bond at $100,000 for Jesus Christ of the Latter Day Saints The state warrant was served on The charges were announced at a each of the two counts of murder He Monday. Jim Collier, chief in­Kleasen after the press conference Wednesday afternoon press conference said for all practical purposes the bond vestigator for the sheriff's department, Miles said the investigation is con­with Austin Police Chief Bob Miles, who said mobile home had been tinuing. has been set Kleasen s said that no bodies — only body parts — were found. MILES SAID the parts have been Palestinian Guerrilla Leader positively identified as belonging to the two missionaries. The body parts were located Tuesday near Kleasen's mobile home west of Austin. Offers ^Terms' for Peace on —T#xon Staff Phato ivy Coral i Kleasen was arrested Nov 5 a UNITED NATIONS. N Y. < API — Guerrilla leader Yasir Arafat any part of Palestine. The PLO will not be forced on the Palesti­ charge of federal firearms violation. A carried his cause to the United Nations on Wednesday, offering the Tuned In preliminary hearing on this charge was nian Arabs." he said. world a choice of continued violence or of peace based on the crea­ISRAEL'S SEATS were empty during Arafta's speech, given intemporarily delayed Wednesday after­ Cognitive relaxation ihowi on the fac« of Wilton Wagner, freihmanpremed tion of a Palestinian state on Israeli-occupied land. Arabic and interrupted seven times by applause China. Cuba and noon by request of Kleasen's court- major, athe dealt a few minutesaway from studies to(it inthe Wednesday In an unprecendented appearance before the General Assembly, the Arab delegations boycotted Tekoah's reply appointed lawyer, Sal Levatino. Philip sunshine of the West Mall and listen to the radio. the head of the Palestine Liberation Organization urged In Washington. State Department officials took a dim view of Sanders, the U.S magistrate, said Americans and Jews everywhere to turn their backs on Israel Arafat's speech, saying it represented no change in the Palestinian Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin said in Jerusalem that Liberation Organization's policy of demanding a liquidation of Arafat based his speech on principles that threaten Israel's ex­Israel. istence but that the Israeli government must not abandon the One U.S. official added that Arafat's statement saying he did not arried Student Panel Blasts search for peace. wish to shed any more Jewish blood was only words. Arafat said the United Nations, swelled by the addition in recent In Lebanon, women and children in Palestinian refugee years of newly independent Third World countries, "more clearly camps huddled around wireless sets tuned to the Kuwait radio reflects the will of the international community'' than it did when broadcast of the Arafat speech Housing Head for Pet Stand men. Israel was created in Palestine. The Israeli command said Arabs presumed to be Palestinians By MIKE ULLMANN ZIONIST IDEOLOGY and Israeli leadership, he told the heavily- Housing that anyone found with a dog or day night that Cooke's decisions are fired rockets from Lebanon into two Israeli border towns about Texan Staff Writer guarded assembly, offer only "perpetual bloodshed, endless war cat or like pet on or after Nov. 1 would appealable to the dean of students, the two hours after the Arafat speech. Two hoiises were hit. and a The Married Student Housing Council have hiscontract canceled immediately. University Housing Committee and the and continuous servitude."' woman was reported wounded. voted late Wednesday night to censure Shaking his finger as he ended his speech. Arafat said. T have Although pets had long been prohibited vice-president for student affairs Dr. Robert Cooke, director of housing. come bearing an olive branch and a freedom fighter's gun. Do not at married housing, the regulation had not been enforced for some time. for his conductduring the continuing pet The University Housing Committee is let the olive branch fall from my hand."' controversy. charged with approving rules made by A holster and what appeared to be the butt of a pistol protruded COOKE SAID Tuesday there are The censure resolution was passed each student residence. Six students, from Arafat's right hip pocket when he clasped his hands over his several cases in which residents have five faculty members, the director of after residents of Married Student Hous­head before and after he spoke. ing told the council there are several housing and the dean of students make One of his bodyguards told a newsman it wasa gun and said, "it's been found with pets after the deadline. He would not discuss specific in­ avenues of appeal from up the committee. not only real, it's loaded." a decision by stances but said those found with pets Cooke, to terminate contracts'because of would have to leave married housing. Contract disputes, such as the pet Israel's U.N. ambassador, Yosef Tekoah. rebutted Arafat's one- pet ownership. "We're not trying to see how many cases, can be appealed to the dean of and-three-fourths-hour address in an afternoon speech to the 138­Major complaints were that Cooke did nation assembly. Tekoah called the PLO "murderers who have people we can kick out," Cooke said, ad­students and then to the committee The not inform residents of the appeal come to the General Assembly certain that it would do their bid­ ding he is dealing.with each case on an vice-president for student affairs may mm process and that he dealt irresponsibly individual basis. review the committee's decision ding." < with the council. "Israel will not permit the establishment of PLO authority in fmmm In one instance, a family that kept its a HOWEVER, all the members of the The council voted to send Cooke cat one day after the deadline wasallow­committee for hls-year have not been ap­letter giving specific reasons for the cen­ed to remain at Married Student Hous­ pointed. The Married Student Housing sure. ing. Council not In a letter dated Oct. 9, Cooke in­Residents from the University Trailer is yet represented on the committee, although three nominations formed residents of Married Student Park told the council meeting Wednes-been to University have sent the president's office. Since some student members have not mat? been appointed, residents at the meeting mmm today- argued, the University is not providing them with an appeal board. The council voted to recall the three Gusty . . . t nominations to the committee that were #msfi Fair skies are. fore­already made and nominated three other people to take their place. cast for Thursday .. Of those three, one person will be pick­ with gusty winds in ed by the president to serve on the University Housing Committee. the morning that will Although ,the committee is required to decrease by night meet once a month during the long ses­ fall. The temper­sion, it has not met since school started in September. — UPI Telephoto* atures will be cooler The council voted to publish and dis­ Yasir Arafat addresses U.N. Assembly . . while two youths, police fight outside. :.and"range, from the tribute the appeal proceedings to all married housing residents. mid-6ps in the after­ The vote to censure Cooke came after noon t.o the mid-30s a resolution criticizing him for "actions Thursday night. inconsistent with a responsible ad­Garrett Not To Seek Renewal ministrator concerned with his con­stituency" was turned down in favor of a Athletes Reinstated ... more specific letter tobe sent to Cooke. Of Term as UT System Regent Copke said Wednesday night he does Sprinter Billy Jackson and basketbatrstarter Ed John­not feel he should have told the residents By RICHARD FLY reappointment as s^lim officials rated Erwin's chances of son,were reinstated after being suspended Tutsday for they couid appeal his decisions. Texan Staff Writer Regent Dan C. Williams of Dallas, whose term also expires in ''IT'S VERY public information, and University System Regent Jenkins Garrett said Wednesday he January, said, "I haven't thought about reappointment and |;their connection with an alleged theft of a television it's printed in the General Information does not-intetid to seek reappointment to the governing board of haven't made any determination."*set. Both athletes worked out with their respective Catalogue and the Institutional rules," the state's largest university system. Askdd if he wanted to remain on the board, Williams, a director earns Wednesday, but it was learned that hurdler Ran-he said. "A six-year term is the proper term for a regent. I. feel that of Southland Life Insurance Co., would make no comment. He sa'id he would have too comment on there are other people who arc qualified," Garrett said. He did admit,however, that friends have mentioned reappoint­ ? ^ r. fm m •'Ol 5•5=V-:'S-*' '-A~^T~-?^^",!i'-A-.\-}.3::'' .JS.t;.'1 «%• t :-;< My Lai Cover-Up Charged Peers Report Concludes 28 Officers Involved WASHINGTON (UPI) -Army Callaway said the Peers text had been It also he countermanded the said "The massacre resulted primarily I from the nature of the orders issued by Secretary Howard H. Callaway Wednes­withheld thus far to protect the rigfits of order of a subordinate tosend a company •MM day released part of the long-secret the accused. Army sources, however, of soldiers back into My Laito determine persons in the chain ol "oramand within Peers Report which concluded that at said President Nixon's administration how many civilians had been killed Task Force Barker least 28 officers — two of them chaplains had insisted on suppressing the report "The task force commander's orderThe report then detailed 19 specific — contributed to the cover-up of the My and that after President Ford took office and the associated intelligence estimate acts of omission by Koster contributing Lai massacre. the wheels immediately began turning to issued prior to the operation were to the cover-up such as failure to tell The report, prepared by now-retired make the report public. embellished as thev were disseminatedsuperiors that the Vietnamese district Army Lt. Gen. William R. Peers, said IT HAD been reported that the Peers through each lower level of command chief had told him 500 civilians had been that the officers by either commission or material had been withheld for fear it and ultimately presented to the in­ murdered omission helped cover up the slaughter might prejudice the case of former Lt dividual soldier a false and misleadingof Vietnamese civilians in March, 1968. William L. Calley Jr., released Saturday The Peers Report said Lt. Col Frank picture of the area as an armed enemy Peers investigated the cover-up after after serving three years and four A. Barker, field commander of the My camp largely devoid of civilian in­published reports brought .the fiiassacre months on conviction of killing at least 22 Lai operation who was killed in combat habitants " to light, and announced on completion of . civilians at Vietnam. later, "Planned, ordered and actively As for the chaplains, the report said his report in March, 1970, that he had All 14 officers originally named by directed the execution of an unlawful r-eswell reported what lie knew to found "serious deficiencies in the ac­Peers were charged with crimes in con­operation." It charged Maj. Charles C Lewis but that he failed to report it as tions" of 14 officers from the rank of nection with the massacre. Only Col. Calhoun. Capt Eugene M. Kotouc and well through military channels. Lewis -i\<­ captain up. Oran K. Henderson, commander of the Capt. Ernest L. Medina with joining in was accused of limiting his action "to in­l*1 Callaway, at a news conference, unit that made the My Lai sweep, was the planning. formal discussions with various staff ofreleased two oT Hie four volumes tried oh cover-up charges, and he was THE PEERS Report concluded: ficers." prepared by Peers — one of which set the acquitted in December, 1971, after a number of officers involved at 28, in­four-month court-martial. cluding Maj. Gen. Samuel W. Koster, Callaway released Volume 1, the con­ commander of the Americal Division clusions and recommendations, and Cases Challenge whose units were involved in the air and Volume 3, the documentary evidence ground sweep through My Lai. amassed by the inquiry — but withheld f ALSO NAMED were Lt. Col. Francis Volumes 2 and 4, the voluminous text of R. Lewis and Capt. Carl E. Creswell, the testimony and investigative reports. chaplains who served in the division. He said the two sections were being 'V I * Callaway, asked by reporters if he withheld because they contained raw By AMY CHENG 4 Death Penalty Law for the defense argued that the Texas thought an incident such as My Lai might comments, "Many of them quite inflam­ Texan Staff Writer law violates standards laid down in 1972 recur, said after a moment's thought: "I matory. of without The first cases challenging by the L'.S many them any two con­Supreme Court don't guess anything is going to prevent backup." stitutionality of the new Texas death on behalf The appeals appeared of it. I do feel, though, that it isn't going to THE INCH-THICK Volume 1 said that penalty law were heard Wednesday William David Hovils. convicted ofhappen again." Koster — later demoted to one-star before the State Court of Criminal capital murder by a Dallas jury in the He said the training of today's GIs take general through administrative action — Appeals. slaying of Henry J. McCluskey jr., who , .My Lai into account, and the men are information VI. —UPI T«lephot» had from three different Claiming the present law still gives was abducted from his office June 27, , more carefully schooled in their respon­sources that civilians had been killed by juries too much discretion in deter­1973, and later found shot to deajh; andArmy Secretary Howard Callaway at netos briefing. sibility toward civilians. failed to report thisto higher authorities mining lifeor death punishment, lawyers Jerry Lane Jurek. who was convicted by a Cuero jury in the Aug. 17. 1973, slaying of Wendy Adams. 10, whose body was found the next day in the Guadalupe River. In 1972 the Supreme Court ruled WASHINGTON (UPI) -Nelson A big cash gifts to federal employes — ex­When word of this came out. Georgia's death penalty statute as Rockefeller Admits Testimony Erroneous said. anybody want an apple?" he said.Rockefeller told senators Wednesday he cept in "humanitarian" areas such as Rockefeller issued a statement denying But Byrd said he would vote "with HE DENIED there was any link "cruel and unusual punishment." but the bad to admit in humiliation and em­medical emergencies — if he is con­any culpability. He withdrew that denial some reservations'' to confirm between gift of $625,000 to Dr. question of whether capital punishment his barrassment that he erred in denying he firmed. at Wednesday's hearing, saying it had Rockefeller, and he predicted "as of is unconstitutional outright or merely un­ William Ronan and his appointment of had a hand in the publication of a book Nonetheless, he said there was nothing been based on wrong recollections. now" that the nominee would be con­ constitutional under the Georgia or Ronan to the Port of New York Authori­critical of a political opponent. wrong with the practices, he didn't want "I have done a great injustice to my firmed. Cannon reserved judgment. ty. similar statutes wasleft unresolved. The But, pounding the table, he heatedly to give up the generous habits of a brother who I love very deeply," he said. Rockefeller said he was not seeking to Supreme Court further ruled that He said Ronan "was the only one who disputed a senator's suggestion that his man embarrassed it, I'm lifetime and a has a right to do "I'm by and buy anybody's loyalty with the gifts and had the guts, the balls, you'll pardon the Georgia's laws gave juries too mudh dis­ part in the publication of the book about anything he wants with his money after humiliated as to what I said about my forgiven he out to cretion in determining death penalties. loans passed word" to fight for transportation policies Arthur J. Goldberg, his 1970 New York he pays his taxes. brother." associates over the years. He told Sen. that help the mass public. The remark Under the new Texas capital murder[gubernatorial opponent, was comparable Sen. Robert C. Byrd, D-W. Va., com­Cannon told Rockefeller he was still Claiborne Pell, D-R.I., he was in the brought a roar of laughter. law, the sentence of death becomesman­to the "dirty tricks of the Nixon era." pared. Rockefeller's role in backing the unconvinced. position of someone with a basket full of "You've been very colorful." replied datory if the jury finds the killing was At reopened and nationally televised Goldberg book to the Watergate scan­ "HOWEVER the cosmetics are applessitting arounda table with friends Sen. Harrison A. Williams Jr., D-N.J. deliberate and unprovoked and theSenate Rules Committee hearings into dals. He said Rockefeller's "dirty applied here — and they have been art­who had no apples. "I apologize for my language. Mr. murderer is likely to remain a threat to his nomination tobecome vice-president, tricks" and his "cover-up" were "at fully — the blemish still shows," Cannon "I'M SURE you would say, 'Doesn't Chairman," said Rockefeller. society if permitted to live. | Rockefeller defended the $2.5 million in least reminiscent of the things we've Claiming the law is "ambiguous, and gifts and loans he had given political gone through in the last two years." only ostentatiously limits jury dis­ associates during 15 years as New York "Mr. Chairman — I have to bitterly cretion," Jurek's defense attorney E.T. governor. object to that," broke in Rockefeller to Next House May Bar Press Summers attacked the three issues by He said his multimillion generosity committee Chairperson Howard W. Can­ which the jury is guided in its decision of was "the most natural thing in the non, D-Nev. By BILL SCOTT Though he hoped the proposed system would alleviate "that life or death penalties. world" and compared it to someone BUT ROCKEFELLER acknowledged Texan Staff Writer last hectic time prior to the end of any session," Clayton had no Summers argued that by reaching a sharing "a basketful of apples" with his that hetiad sent the book's backers to his Attempts to reduce confusion in the Texas House chamber illusions about guaranteed success. verdict of "guilty of capital murder'' the hungry friends who had no apples. brother, Laurance, who then put up $60,-during the upcoming January legislative session could result in "The Legislature is made up of 150 prima donnas, each with a jury has predetermined the two factors BUT UNDER pressure of questions, 000 to have it published by a corporation barring the working press from the House floor, speaker can­ pet project. I just want everyone to have an opportunity to be of deliberate and unprovoked murder. :kefeller promised he would make no set up only for that purpose: didate Bill Clayton said Wednesday. heard," he said. The remaining issue of whether the "We feel steps need to be taken to irtiprove the over-all criminal would continue to commit actsOther proposals mentioned include a communication system decorum in the chambers while the Legislature is in session." of violence if allowed to live. Summersby which legislators, through their secretaries, could initiate Clayton said. "A more orderly appearance could help in bring­ said, should not be left up to a jury com­ and receive outside phone calls at their desks on the floor, a Sirica Orders Doctors ing back respect and dignity to the legislative process." posed of laymen "Because few, if anypass system for admittance to the gallelV and improvedsecuri­ Clayton proposed the measure as part of a package which trained psychiatrists can evendeterminety in the chambers. would allow only members of the House on the floor while the that." Legislature is actually in session. ' "All of these proposals will require more legwork and input." To Examine Defending the present death sentenceClayton, who is expected to be elected to the speaker's posi­Clayton said.-"Any proposals will have to come up before the statute. Dallas Asst. Dist. Atty. William WASHINGTON (AP) — U.S. Dist. judge John J. Sirica appointed a panel of tion when the Legislature reconvenes next year, made the House and will be subject to committee hearings beforeany ac­ T Westmorland Jr. claimed that "the three doctors Wednesday to examine former President Nixon and determine if proposal at a Capitol news^conference. tion can be taken." jury does not have the discretion of he is able to testify in the Watergate cover-up trial. "I have been meeting with members whose votes are com­Clayton said a more dignified setting could help to cut down deciding life or death sentences," but is Sirica signed an order in which he authorized and directed the doctors "to con­mitted to me and visiting with them to get their suggestions on 'pranks by House members themselves. merely asked to pass verdicts on three duct such examination as they deem necessary and appropriate and, thereafter, how to remedy the constant movement on the floor," he said. "I hope we can achieve an atmosphere that won't lend itself issues. If the jury decides "yes" on all to advise the court: Clayton emphasized that no decisions have been made yet. to antics," he said. three counts, the death sentence is man­ "1) Wh§tlier Mr. Nixon is presently able to travel to Washington and testify as "These visits have been to formulate opinion oh the matter," Clayton said he would seek input from the press concerning datorily enforced, but if the verdict a witness...; he said. "If elected speaker, I want to carry out the wishes of the proposal to remove them from the floor. favors the criminal on any one count, he "2) If not, when, In their opinion, Mr. Nixon would be able to so appear and the majority of the members." Speaking earlierWednesday during a noon sandwich seminar is automatically given a life sentence. testify; Dayton said the decision, if it came, would not be a move to at the University, Clayton said the question of public school . A "friend of the court" brief attacking "3) Whether Mr. Nixon is able to appear and testify at a site near his home; "kick the press off the floor" but would be a part of the total financing will be "one of the hottest of battles" during the next the capital murder law was filed by both" "4) If nbt, when, in their opinion, Mr. Nixon would be able to so appear and decorum effort. session. •­ the NAACP Legal Defense Fund. Inc., testify; Clayton also proposed implementation of an allotmentsystem "The system needs to be revised," he said, "but the process and tke National Office for the Rights of "5) Whether, if Mr. Nixon is not now able to appear and testify in this case, for House members' office budgets which he hoped would will cost a great amount of money and "will affect each and the Indigent. either in Washington or a site near his home, he isable to be deposed by the par­simplify the complex cumulative system presently in use. every life in the state of Texas." ties in this case; "The accounting system now is so fouled up that it's un­The Spring Lake legislator proposed a uniform method of Physician Allows "6) If Mr. Nixon is not physically able at the present time to give a deposition, derstandable that members overdraw their accounts," he spid. evaluating real and personal property for taxing purposes when, in their opinion, he would be able to give such a deposition; Clayton called for an audit of the House budget in January and "We need to use a formula in figuring the economic index." Nixon Discharge "7) If Nixon is physically able to submit to a deposition, the conditions under a monthly budget for the body during the session. he said. LONG BEACH. Calif (UPI) ­which such deposition should be taken in order to avoid serious risk of injury to He hopes to include a change in the legislative calendar Clayton said constitutional revision "needsto be submitted to Richard Nixon will be discharged from his health.." system which would "give everyone a fair run with his the people" soon. the hospital Thursday to recuperate at The three doctors named were Charles A. Hufnagel, of Washington, the legislation." Though the rewriting effort earlier in the year cost the tax­home from surgery for a phlebitis condi­chairperson; John A. Spittell, Jr., of the Mayo Clinic of Rochester, Minn., and Clayton suggested a lottery drawing at the beginning of the payers "over $4 million" and produced "nothing," he said the tion. his physician said Wednesday night. Richard Starr Ross of Baltimore., -session-in which«achrnember would receive a priority number. legislators conveningin January "will have an expertise in con­Dr John Lungren also said he All are specialists in cardiovascular disorders. Bills would then come up beforelheljOdytirsequence, insuring stitutional law second to none " because of their experience at welcomes an examination of the former Sirica directed the doctors to reporttheir findings eitheron an interim or final an even flow of legislation. the ill-fated revision effort. President by outside doctors to deter-, basis by Nov. 29. "We want to smooth out the workload for the staff," he said. The energy crisis as well as the anticipated $1.5 billion State mine whether Nixon is well enough to The judge signed his order after a day In which a former New York police "One way to achieve this is to schedule all of the local area and Treasury surplus also will require legislative attention in the testify at the Watergate cover-up trial detective,and a Mississippi oil man testified at the Watergate*cover-up trial the consent bills in the earlier part of the session." next session. Clayton said. now under way in Washington. about their role in the attempt to contain the investigation of the Watergate break-in. _ . 6 ATOie trial, Fred C. LaRue of Jackson, Jtfiss., testified that twodaysafter the newscopsules June 17rl972 break-in former Atty. Gen. John N. MitchellsuggestedthatJeb Stuart Magruder burn files containing Information from bugs at the Democratic 'Panic Rush' Begins at British Service Stations New Car Sales Off Sharply headquarters. LONDON (UPI) — British motorists drained gasoline stations dry DETROIT (UPI) — General Motors Corp., the giant of the troubled Wednesday in a panic rush to fill up their tanks before a new tax hike auto industry, said Wednesday it will close three small car assembly Brooks Trial To Remain boosts the price by up to 15 percent next Monday. plants next week and idle another 7,175 workers temporarily. , Longlines of cars formed outside gasoline stations, blocking traffic on Hours after the announcement, the four major U.S. car makers main highways. reported their nfew car sales for the first 10 days of November fell more , "Motorists are trying to drain every garage in sight before Monday," J In City of Accusation than 38 percent from sales for the same period last year. David O. Brooks, HOUSTON (AP) — listened to Skelton's arguments. " said a spokesperson for the automobile association. 19, mustfstand. trial in the same city Hatten also granted a motionWednes- Draft Evasion Cases Ordered Reviewed where he^s'accu^ed of participating in day by Skelton forbidding lawyers on A Royal Automobile Club spokesperson said, "If they keep up the rush, the slay tags of 27 male teenagers, a dis­either side to comment about the case. some places will run short befotg tankers can cajlagain." . WASHINGTON (UPI) -Atty. Gen. William B. Saxbe Wednesday trict court Judge ruled Wednesday. Don Larabright, an assistant district ordered all U.S. attorneys to review the estimated 6,200 pending draft Chancellor of the Exchequer Denis Healey slappedfa new 25 percent tax Brooks,'-accused in four of tbe 27 attorney who is prosecuting, the Brooks evasion cases and dismiss all that do not appear to justify prosecution. deaths known fitTthe Houston mass on gasoline effective Monday in a crisis budget ptesfented to Parliament case.'tbldHatknhebelieves the publici­-Saxbe gave theJ4 U.S. attorneys until Dec. 11 to complete the reviews murder?, willl>e tried here Feb! 17, Dist. ty. In this situation Is as great as in the Tuesday. " .... -V -< Judge William Hatten ruled Wednesday. Henley case. _ - unless a given office has more than 250 cases to consider. In that event, Officials estimated the tax hike, coupled with price increases planned. . Hatten turned down a request-by the . "The.defendant feels hie can get a fair the deadline is Jan. II. \ : district attorney's office to hold a hear--trial,in Harris County (Houston) so^your by oil companies, willpush the priceof agallon of gasoline up 24 cents to Ing to seeilf the tri' ' " $1.53 a gallonas of Monday — a record high price in Britailfand a price in­Market Closes Unchanged N.Y.S.E. DOW JONES AVERAGE of-the cl' crease of about IS percent. • •. NEW YORK (AP) -The Volant Prolile 30 l»d»stri»|j average.. , ,. bears and the bulls each had •~HatteiUfuS&l „ Jobless Invbdihig Bowery District , , v. Closed n ^ptdefendant,—Elmer Wayne --successJuUy-to-excJude from evidence their moments, but heither could 659.18 NEW YORK (UPI) — The recession js driving hundreds pf jobless men Henl6y;U#i^8h6uld ^' statements made by Henley admitting make any lasting headway in the 6y;11#£should be/tried else^heft. UNCHANQIO | ey WstB^rifed In"San.Antonio on six,;'-complicity. ^ , • Jinto-Ne^ York's, seamy Bowery; district. Many are aggressive young ! stock market Wednesday. 436 ! UNCHANGED •"^Ipunlerandr^lv^sMii-year-!' i Brooks also gave officers a statement ; : v derelicts who terrorize older down-an&auters and drivejhem away from The-Dow Jones-average of 30"""" — ^—&^.wMchheadmltted]urtag youths,tb the --U>e flophouses and soup kitchens of Manhattan'? Skid Row. '« lawyer^ Will G ray,,and""" feome of S>eisiihJ\rpbrU, 33/&nd thert v "v industrials, in a statistical rari­ •jn Brooks SkeltoiTt had v4resei»t when they wfesfc hofnjraexually; ' If\^CEried..dty officials ponder how they'll be able, to feed and shelter ty, closed exactly unchanged, at. yenue Hqtten refused and nrtl^g^ BrboltS: everybody!wh^wintercomes:'; ^ 659.18; -W rtJeiraUon in I ,y Thursday,. Novefhber U, 1974 THE'DAILY TEXAN Page 3 vTC ®B It? • A V Page 4 Thursday, November 14, 1974 v • } • The presidential selection plans: mey stink There has been no concrete action to replace the vacancy opened when propriate. Another alternative istto return to the procedure followed in 1972, allow­Dr. Stephen Spurr was fired as president of the University, and it appears LeMaistre promised the Faculty Senate that there will be faculty and ing the campus to nominate the candidates, and the regentsto have the the selection process will at least take as long as it did in 1972: one year. student representation on the committee, and that provision will be made final decision. / ' "It will be done thoughtfully and done well," Chancellor Charles for a separate campus advisory committee. No nominee of the selection We regard both of/these processes as fair, and as ones that willLeMaistre has said, "and that takes time." committee will be presented to the Board of Regents until the campus eliminate-much of thef controversy that is bound to arise when the selec­ We see nothing wrong with a time consuming selection process. We committee has considered that person. tion committee nominates its candidate. ­ should definitely make sure we find a capable president Btit the \y&y the This is a fine gesture, but it is only that. The campus committee will selection process is set up right now, the selection of our next president have no veto power over the choice of the System appointed selection The chancellor is rpaking no moves to reconcile his position to the demands of the campus. He will meet with the General Faculty next could evolve into the most controversial issue this controversial campus committee. There is to be no provision in the regents rules to define the has ever seen. Wednesday to explain!the procedure to be followed, and we expect him to selection and role of the campus committee, and none to specify the In 1972, Dr. Stephen Spurr of the University of Michigan was selectedas means of determining the.faculty and student representatives on the stand firm with his uhrepresentative selection method. the second choice of a student-faculty selection committee. The com­selection committee. Until there is such a legal definition, the process of If LeMaistre and thjp Board of Regents do not provide for a division of mittee's first choice, Law Dean Page Keeton, was rejected by the Board ~ selecting a hew president will be open to the intrigue and political ploys power, and if-the selection disagreements do arise, we expect further in­of Regents. But the regents approved of Spurr, and the selection was one that have characterized it in the past. jury to the already tarnished reputation and quality of this university. The that most people were content with. The Faculty Senate has stated it favorsadopting the rules passed by the faculty, Who should be in a position to know,'claims that the academic But irfimediately following the selection of Spurr. the process by which General Faculty in 1972 for electing the students and faculty bo the cam­status of tfi6 University has fallen since the turn of the decade, anpl a president is hired was altered. In 1972, the Regents Rules and pus advisory committee. Under these rules, three students would be asserts that incidents such as the Spurr firing drive outstanding scholars, Regulations were changed to the following: the selection committee will chosen according to a process determined by the Student Government, and teachers from the University. be chaired by the chancellor, and members will include the deputy and nine faculty members would be chosen by the General Faculty to We do not consider it the duty of the regents and the chancellor to lower chancellor for administration, the vice-chancellor for health affairs, the serve as a campus advisory body. That committee would have the'power the quality of our education and to impose on the University a politicalvice-chancellor for academic affairs, two regents, three presidents of to veto the nominee recommended to the Board of Regents by the lackey as president. We claim the right to question their motives and theother UT campuses and "other persons" the chancellor deems ^ap­chancellor and the selection committee. rigjit to an equal voice in the selection of the next University president. firing tine Persistent spectre of racism To the editor people who smoke pot is enough for him they held the CEC fee. think or to check a few facts.'' but in­ The incident involving the two black to be put off the team. Thiskind of illogic Ordinarily, tickets to all our shows stead he has "irresponsibly and naively" Texas athletes proves once again that is ridiculous. It is more of an excuse for open to fee holders sevecal»days before proclaimed that Steve Gutow is "part ofblack people continue to bethelast hired his action than a reason. If Jackson had public sales begin (so that it can con­the problem rather than the solution."and first fired. In spite of all the so-been caught at something in the past ceivably sell out to CEC people only, as Certainly Hal has no idea of Steve's called progress, the worn-out cliches of then why wasn't he kicked off .the team Loggins arid Messina well may on history or he never would have made "if you are black get back" and "if you at that time? Furthermore, since when Thursday). In such an absurd statement. this case, since such a you right" remain are white are ac­did it become practice to punish a person limited -number of seats were available In 1968. Steve helped organize Eugene curate descriptionsof the way black peo­for the actions of his friends? and we are working equally with MEC. McCarthy's campaign in North Texasple are treated in this racist society. The case of Jackson and Johnson is the process had to be different. and was in Chicago when the blood ran.According to The Daily Texan, basket­very important for two reasons: first, I'm sorry that this fact was not better Since then. Steve has organized a Ed track ball player Johnscjjjf and their personal lives are disrupted and publicized in our ads, and apologize for volunteer youth corps in Dallas, worked sprinter Billy Jackson were suspended possibly ruined. They are athletes on the confusion; co-sponsorship is a way to with the Austin welfare rights group,from their respective teams after being. scholarships and .are therefore add another good program to our calen­spent a summer in the Valley as a legal accused by some members of the Texas vulnerable to the whims of coaches. dar of offerings. Thanks to those who assistant to the farm workers, droppedswim team of stealing a TV set Monday Jackson describes himself as coming called and came by to register their out of law school a semester to help runnight. Texas Coaches Leon Black and from a poor family, meaning his college reactions to our mistake — your letting McGovern's campaign in Dallas and has Cleburne Price will not comment on the career is at stake because he has been us know your opinions of CEC's helped .organize the get-out-the-vote ef­ specifics of the suspensions but term accused of stealing a TV setSecond, the programs and policies helps us in plan­forts for the victories of Bob Binder.them "temporary disciplinary action." University-of Texas has an image of ning ever-better presentations. Lloyd Doggett and Gonzalo Barrientos. (As I write this article no charges have racism in the minds of black people P.S. I'd also liketo announce that CEC If Steve Gutow is part of the problem,been filed against Jackson and Johnson throughout Texas and the United States. will present, as a special bonus event, a then I guess'we need more problems. with the University police or th? Austin This is why many capable black students performance by the Royal Shakespeare Robert Howardpolice). choose not to matriculate to this univer­Company (of Stratford-upon Avon) of Student Action CommitteeI believe the actions taken by 'the sity. The irresponsible action of the "The Hollow Crown," a Shakespearean in­Ode to the odious coaches against the athletes were coaches reinforces this racist image. anthology, on Tuesday. Nov. 26. at 8 p.m. credibly harsh and unjust. First of all, I am appalled at the actions of the Tex­Hogg — to To the editor: in Auditorium free fee what happened to the notion of being in­I'm writing to register my incredulity as coaches taken against these fine holders. Since the auditorium is small, nocent until proved guilty? This case at the University System's attempts to athletes. Suspension of Jackson and tickets will be limited and will be appears to me to be one of one person's i Johnson should be lifted immediately, maintain the Neeley Vending Co. available starting this Friday at Hogg's monopoly campus. work in Com­ word against another. It is more than and if it is not, the students of this school Box Office. on I that — it is a whiteperson's word against should rise ar­munication Center, and my job's hg^rs in protest against the Shari Friedland, chairperson a black person's word. The action of the bitrary and. racist action of Coaches Cultural Entertainment Committee require that 1 avail myself of the coaches indicates that they have taken Price and .Black. After all. if students scrumptious delights of the vending the word of the white athletes, not can protest the firing of Spurr, who did Right, Steve? machines. These facts should be brought to light: because of the validity of the evidence little for this school, they can protest the To the editor: but because of the color of the skin.of the suspension of two black athletes who Steve Gutow's pep rally for the "silent • The coffee machine will either drop^';\ accusers. This is racism in raw,form. • a cup and fill it with hot water, or pour have at least won ribhons in their name. minority" has been too long in coming. Jackson quoted Coach Price as saying the coffee without dropping a cup. At 2° Greg Robertson He must be commended for his in­ that even if he is not guilty of stealing a a.m.. this can be most frustrating, 'Sure, / knew the rich were getting, richer and the poor Senior, History novative solutions to the nation's energy TV set, Jackson's record at-getting • The sandwich machine is empty headaches. Federal-takeover of private 0 poorer — but I thought I was one of the richer ones.' caught at things and his friendship with Kottke tickets almost three fourths of the time (unless iili-enterprise is the only answer. I know To the editor: you like sausage and biscuits ...yucch!) once the boys and girlsin Washington get I'd like to explain some misunderstand • The snack machine takes, your their hands on the problems things will dings about the Nov. 24 Leo Kottke con­money and deposits it in the niche where guest viewpoint straighten out. After all, it worked in cert Which may have .frustrated many the snacks are. so all can admire it. Southeast Asia, it worked in Chile. It's CEC optional-fee holders in Tuesday's • There are stickers on all machines bound to work in America! Of course, I box office lines.,TheCultural Entertain­informing you to send complaints to the understand that Steve really hasn't ment ahdMusical Events .Committees, Communication Council office, which I an you studied the problems, (he isn't running are co-sponsoring his Appearance; each have never seen open. for office).'Like (herrian says, we need f By STEPHEN HALL of us' bought half of the two shows These complaints are just from the his fists, it took four people tocarry him or nearly fell on them while stumbling people to tell us what to do. Leadership.' CBA lounge on the fourth floor. I'm sure scheduled. CEC, as always, offered our ' (Editor's note: Hall is a student in the This country cannotsurvive If people are out by the arms and legs. across the crowded sea of floor sitters. half of the 2,600 total ticketsat a discount they can be multiplied considering the Department of Journalism.) expected to participate in the decision From my vantage point, if anyone had Such blatant inconsideration for others ($2) rate to fee holders, while MEC sold number of machines on campus. The Guest Viewpoint by McGonigle "well publicized good making process. Voting is hard enough. disrupted the is what should be condemned here. Had theirs at $3 for students and-$4 for the 1 realize very little can be done, due to j -'and Parke, "Armadillo Bouncers Not vibes" of Armadillo, it was this in­McGonigle Parke been there, Let's get the "say nothing" politicians and general public. The CEC tickets sold out the complex family relationships Too Mellow," failed to give a fair and ac­dividual who insisted on disturbing those perhaps they would have been better in­early, leaving many students unable to out of Washington :apd install some peo­(bordering on incest) between thecurate account of the incident. I was at around him when he blocked their vision. formed. ple who say something. Anything! A buy tickets for less than $3 even though regents and the Neclcy folks, but I ^ Armadillo that night and feel some more lawyer must be acut abovean astronaut. thought I should'put the obvious in printlight should be shed on the incident. Right. Steve? Eric Friar for posterity. I guess it's just another ex­• Shortly after Charlie Daniels started Government ample of students, faculty and staff be­ j/ -guest viewpoint j-, playing, a young man made his way to a Problem and solution ing inconvenienced in order to linepoint directly in front of the center of the To the editor: someone else's billfold. Stage and started dancing. His loose f, I am afraid that Hal Wylie has put his Pat Crumhorn gyrations seemed to indicate that he had foot in his mouth. He"hasn't bothered to -CMB 1.124 Let's issues •consumed an excess -amount of liqour. li Many of the people sitting on the floor By FRANK GILFORD pie. Israel must accept the fact that the allow the leaders,of the PLO to speak lor c^ould not see the band well. An employe THE DAILY TEXAN (Editor's note: Gilford is a member of "land of Israel" is the homeland of two themselves. On Sept. 26, 1974, Zuhier] : of Armadillo walked up to the man, talk- Hapkagsbimim, a student Zionist pcwples, not just one. Some signs .of Muhsin, a member of the PLO executive . • Zv 9t9w*p»p*r al Tit Umtnnttf *f r«x«i •» Awtffa ~ ed to him for a moment, and the man sat Movement.) progress have been seen; for example, committee, said, "Israelwill not remain EDITdR >4..'.:.... Buck Harveyf ' down. The Armadillo employe left. This There is an old Jewish saying which Aharon Yariv, Israeli'minister of infor­in any of itsparts, noteven In Tel Aviv." • • ; scpne was repeated at least two more ' MANAGING EDITOR 1 Sylvia Moreno goes something like this: the educated mation, announced that if the Palesti­ On April.23, 1974, Ahmed Jibril, a leader4 times, each time the dancer insisting on? man knows how complex things can be, nian Liberation Organization changed its of one fact&n within the PLO, proclaim­ASSISTAOT MANAGING EDITORS Lynne Brock J returning to that same spot directly in:; the wise man knows howtSimple things ideology dnd terminated its terrorist ac­ed, "The struggle between us $nd Israel Larry Smith • front of stage center to dance. He would truly are.The conflictin the Middle East* tivities, Israel would negotiate with will be to theend. It Neither weor-they. NEWS EDITOR Martha JP McQuade :> weave through the crowd seated on the is dgood example of this dichotomy. It'is them. Israel must1 change its posture, We will not allow American or Soviet J " floor, causing excessive, undue in-UNIVERSITY EDITOR Richard Fly possible to view the situation by taking • towards tjje Palestinians, but this can Jews to remain in Palestine. We will (]• '"'Convenience, and was asked by several SPORTS EDITOR Herb Holland into account all of. its diverse elements, only come about in conjunction with scatter,anew the Jesys who came frompeople to sit down. AMUSEMENTS EDITOR and uUhis way to becomeconfused.com-reciprocal.action on the part of the Arab lands." Paul Beutel*I Everyone around me seemed pleased pletely in -the-face'of contradictory • Palestinians and their chief "represen­A just peace in the Middle East will FEATURES EDITOR .. Clfutde SimpsonQ • •• when he was finally escorted peacefully propaganda. Discussions centering tatives," the PLG. ' dut of the auditorium by the single Ar­forever remain a dream as long as the r-PHOTO EDITOR • • • Marlon Taylor around such topics as ''historic rights," This past Wednesday, Yasser Arafat, PLO maintains this position towards ­ il':' madillo employe after yet another' imperialism, terrorism and colonization -­ head of the PLO, addressed the General ,Israel. A just peace mustbe based on iuk repeat. Scene. Several'minutes later, are intellectually stiinulating, but they / Assembly of the United Nations. The in-' ISSUE STAFF derstanding and a willingness to com­ I however.themancamebackin,weaved do not further.t||§ cause of peace. ternational recognition which was ac-promise, this is* totally absent within the Issue Editor .;v .....: Gail Burris his way tea spot in the centerof the ' It is possiMe'temtfenJret the situation ;'?dPitea thePalestiniahpeoipIel approve: PLO, A just'peace will come about only General Reporters. ..Irwin Speiier, Susan Lindee, David Hendricks I seated floor crowd, where his dancing in the Middle E^stin a "simple" manner of; however, I.do not understand how the through' a' fecognftioA of the validity of ;NewsrAssistefnts » Barbara Williams, Bill Scott, Christy Hoppe ;| blockedipore eyes than from directly in J -r ... front of. stage center. s I -alsp. The conflict,arose because two op­U.N. could invite a nepriSien&tive Of an 'the claims on both sides'of the conflict.-.Editorial Assistant .Bryan Brumley ,posing nationalisms, one being Jewish organization dedicated taiJiSdestruction ' The PLO has beat totally opposed to any Associate AmuseWents Editor . Chris Garrett it-1 I Soon the Armadillo employe returned and-the other Palestinian-Arab, claimed of'a U.N. member-state to participate in -recognition of validity~on the part of the Assistant AmusementsEditor............,..... ...!.......; Daniel D Saez with'two others. They tri^towajkliim same territory. It 3rose the because a U.N. session. The Palestinian national Jews, The stage is now set /or a change ; Assistaj^port^E(fi^pJj'.A,V.\./.,. :...... . ,( Bill Trott' out, but after the man started swinging. each sidedenied the validity of the other charter states explicitly:".'"-' • > in the positions of .both Israel gnd the ' Make-up Editor-,.............r.,.....:; : : Eddie Fisher side. Iiimy opinion,a solution tothe cop-Article , 20:Jltdaisfti^ being' .a PLO:' Negotiations resulting in an Israeli Wire; Editor.. RoeTraugott • Letters to the'editor • flict in the MiddleEast will come about' filigio'nT'ts tior'afr independent -withdrawal wuld provide the basts Of a ~ -Gopy EditorSi,..-,.,... Robbie Marshall, Jay -Jorden, Coll£en--Doolinft-:; BHitg line letters should: ~ ^ only afterboth sidearecognizeth^ 'vaEdi--nationality. Nor do Jew* constitute a formula: m : which Palestinian' self*, Photographers. .ivi,'(...-,.Vii;'/;...;..;;..jl.j:...'.^.:...Carol Jean Simmons. Mike Smith ­ j * B« typed triple-spaced.—-——J-ty of tlje othef side—•— v; single nation with an, identity: of tit determination could be expressed. In ft-) * B« 25 iinesorless. The TeXqif Until now, Israel ha$ not recognized ] ' ownj •' , . return Isfael would .receive guarantees , ' r^servpstKe right to .edit.letters, for. Athe existence: of a'separate Palestinian '-. Article 19:th? partitionofPalestine of peace and would be able to fully .editor or %.l»turaf.ai«.uti0t m.urUKtUmumUi-L llulldlnt: haum.ni "™'Wat£neinSr«S7(fcSl? M:->1; entity,,It seems that this tecognHipn , in 1947 and the estabUsMnerd 'of'the .develop-as at trtilyvjJewish state. The ; Vamcertfiig-dcliveiy M v would weaken Israel's position. This Is i-' J2* "J state • of Israel we entirely* illegal, 'alternative'is' Continued war:-1 believe ;> pBuijdlng ^ ^ r^rae!to decide if a.Palestinian nation -Article **f: The liberation i oft fctoW of absurdity. It is not up to S regardless of the passage of time. , Unit all Jiuman temn. be they Jew|& -Ar«b, or whatever, do not want"to live in ^7»711. The D«lly TBUti.lf vTtiMdfiy. Ttwiri Ij NaUwamiraUpnJl Mvtrililng Sfrtl™-Inc. does in fact exists that! pipblem has S Palestine ...aims'attheeliminationof an atmosphere of hate leading 'to c'ont'g'v ^ily:T«xahrOrtiwerD,{UTStofk)n, M KV MA; V ™ " ' '.-ralready been solved by the Palestinian Zionism" in^JPiUestlnei .United ^uiwuwicuibloodshed. iI beljeve^that a true.'.;':'. -' true'1;*' Austin, TX.'78712; or bring letters to < ..people. In addition, no iqatter what the*: -r ,u m . .« , * «*. ^,ArtlcU|Armed strugkUfts theonly (and just peafce, can be found, and tha|i| of Ihe AiKKflatwJ Coll tjpe .Texon offiees, basement,.:.Texas: 1 tk>jViiui ^-,clainijf of the Palestinians-arer-fli# fa j major banks would take a licking, coming Congresswill have the shippers who use the Penn but they should take a licking.last chance to disapprove the Central ... folks like General That railroad was famouslyplan to have the government Motors and Bethlehem Steel. mismanaged; charges have pay for the merger Of the Then there are the banks been preferred against two of Penn Central and four other who've been suckered into its former officers. It'? a bankrupt northeastern lending ' the railroad ?300 banker's business to know railroads into a consolidated million anS the unions that and lend accordingly. entity. The plan, already representing piany of the Under the theory of our tangled up in lawsuitsand am­railroad's 78,000 employes. system, bankers who make in­biguity, will cost the govern­ Against this lineup is judicious loans pay for them ment not less than |2 billion nobody in particular except -by losing their money; but and, very likely, much, much two competing and profitable v that isn't going to happen if more. railroads. The public we encourage them to make Nobody knows what the (whoever they are), which trashy, high-risk loans with final figure will be, just as objected to the Lockheed.deal, the expectation that govern­nobody knows where this is likely to go along. It's ment will reimburse them for railroad company, to becalled fashionable to be prorailroad their bad business practices. Conrail, is supposed to run. In and, besides, aren't they Unless banks aredisciplinedeffect the government is com­better for ecology? by suffering the economic mitting itself to a huge run­Moreover, the 'thought of consequences of their acts,ning debt of uncalculated size feeding a corporation the size we're going tochannel billions on the basis of plan that has of Penn Central to the fishes upon billions into inflationary,yet to be drawn. (For a lucid could cause massive psycho­unproductive, inefficient, lazy explanation of this mishegaas, social shock. Even those who and unprofitable enterprises see "The Penn Central have rio immediate interestin ' at a veryhigh social costto us Cliffhanger" by Joseph. subsidizing Penn Central are' all. Thesame holdsfor the un­Albright in The New York made insecure by the idea of ions. If they want to feather­ Times Magazine for Nov. 3. one of our hugh brand-name bed their employers into We could let the Penn.Cen-companies disappearing. bankruptcy with ruinous work tral complete the process of These trademarks are too rules, so be it; but if we sub­bankruptcy and allow it to be much part of our mental sidize such activities, we're turned over to its creditors. landscape. embracing the junk socialism Unhappily, there are a great Nevertheless, with the many powerful interests who proviso that the government l>» AM I S OKAY SIR 7^ TUlNKIHAVE Au. 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The Organization of Arab Students is sponsoring a lecture by Father Joseph Rayan on the topic: A PROSPECT FOR JUST PEACE IN THE MIDDLE EAST Thursday, Nov. 14, 7:30 pjn., BEB 166 Born in Boston, Father RAYAN entered the Jesuit in 1958 and was ordained to the priesthood in 1951. He has spent mosst of/ the last 29 years in the Middle East. He hecame the first dean of the College ofWiscfbm in Bagdad,and then ce academic vice-president until 1968. ­' He is a Resident member of.the center for the study of the modem Arab world at St.Joseph University in Beirut. Since 1971-he was a visitmg fellQ«L at the CambridgeCenter forsoda^tudies.Tnthe last few years Fathlf RAYAN has written * -number;of articles on Middle Eastern topics which have, appeared In stich journals as The National Catholic Reporter, the Christian Centure, The Journal of Palestinia Studies,M^ By JACK ANDERSON c 1974 United Feature Syndicate WASHINGTON — The fragmented Cuban organizations in the United States, joining together for the first time in over a decade, have quietly served notice on the State Department that they will wage underground warfare, if necessary, to thwart a detente with Fidel Castro. In their meetings in Washington, they have openly compared themselves to the Palestinian Liberation Organization, which has been carrying on terrorist warfare in the Middle East. Both moderate and militant groups have advised that they will seek a peaceful solution first but, if that fails, they will engage in "urban guerrilla action" within Cuba. The exile groups fear the Castro regime will be legitimatized by the Organization of American States and U.S. diplomatic recognition. Thus, the leaders of the largest antiCastro organizations met in Washington on Nov. 1 and formed an um­brella group called the "Cubania Beligerante.'' or Belligerent Cubans. Their numbers include a past president of Cuba. Dr Carlos Prio, plus an ex-president of the Cuban congress, businessmen, educators and former Cuban military officers. Following their Washington meetings, the Cuban leaders solemnly signed a declaration of common purpose. They then delivered a copy of the document to Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for Inter-American Affairs Harry Shlaudeman. THEIR COVENANT states that they "cannot coexist with dictatorship .... There can be neither peace nor freedom underof a country like England. the Marxist-Leninist definition of peaceful co-existence." One of the advantages of bankruptcy is thatit gives you Then\he document concludesenigmatically that "under cer­a chance to start over again tain intenial and international conditionsa new strategy may be fresh. The debt aftd disease is adopted td\reach the liberation of Cuba regardless of the con­cut out of the operation while sequences.'\The Cubania Beligeranteexplained that this means the creditors sell off or if all else'faiU, they will become a U.S.-based PLO dedicated to operate -the healthy parts. terrorizing Fidel Castro. That's what would happen with a Penn Central liquida­They will "campaign against Castro" in league "with tion. The creditors and the elements within Cuba and without CIA help," they advised major shippers would Washington. reorganize the thing, retain­ The fact that the antiCastro organizations have agreed oning those parts for which anything is an extraordinary event in itself. There are an es­ there is a profitable market. timated one million Cubans scattered across the United States, Again, why whould we sub­and they have formed several dozen exile groups. sidize Bethlehem Steel's freight bills? You can't operate a free DOONESBURY enterprise system in which there are only winners. Losers are needed, too. Without them VOUBET! I there is no incentive for ef­MICHAEL! UP YW JUSTSAW HIM ficiency, productivity or HEAR ABOUT me VSS M0RSHN6. UtTH A business creativity. Profit 6OOP&VE&NPS HEDRSPPEDBY PH0106­ NOVEL?! WAWeNMTH A KAPHER? without loss is meaningless. PHOID6MPHEF.I WHATPOR? ~ *./ ' light rum for plhn-''> what? HEUAST5 ; CLICK! TOBOBROUajR. 600P! I Enjoy it in Daiquiris SCENEK/ FOR. A j and Bacardi Gotklails. BACK JACKET I PHOTO- k And use it likegin or vodka in Martinis, Screwdrivers. Bloody Marys, tonic, bitter lemon. BACARDIsrum. v-iffS The mixaUeone. i0~ 90 »»30>. 10 a.m. -6 p.m. Tickets for Todd Rundgren. Tickets on sale at Hogg Auditorium Box Officelor the performance at 8 p.m. Friday, Nov. 15. Ticket* $1 and $2 for Optional Services Fee holders; $4 and $5 general admission. Cultural Entertainment Committee. 10 a.m. -6 p.m. Tickets for loaains & Messina. Tickets on sale in Hogg Auditorium Box Office for performance on Sunday, December 1, in Gty Coliseum. Tickets $2 for Optional Services Fee holders. Cultural Entertainment Committee. 9 a.m. -5 p.m. Sign-up for Afro-American Art Exhibit. Artists are invited to sign up to show works in an art exhibit scheduled November 18-22 in the Foyer of the Acaderhic Center. Entry fee ,of $1 for first four paintings; 25* for additional works. Sign up in Texas Union 114. Deadline Friday, November 15. Afro-American .-Culture Committee and Fine Arts Committee. 12 noon. Sandwich Seminar: '',1974 Election Results and the Perspective for 1976." Professor Samuel Popkin of the Govern­ment Department will speak. Tinker Room, 4th floor, Academic -| Center. Ideas "tand Issues Committee. 4-6 p.m. Faculty Fireside. UT Interaction Committee will spon­sor a Faculty Fireside With Mr. William Morse, instructdr in nch, in the Party Room, Hansel & Gretel, 409 W. 30th St. 7-9 p.m. lecture; "Alookat the Art of Black Americans." Dr. John Bigger, art professor from Texas Southern University, will present a slide show. Guild Room, Methodist Student Center.. Afro-American Culture Committee. i 7 A 9 p.m.FltM: "Anna Karenina." Stars Greta Garbo, Basil Rathbone, and Freddie Bartholomew, Admission $1 for UT students, faculty, and staff; $J.50 for members. Batts Auditorium, Theatre. Committee. • i.o:W. -. • ' •>•> a.m. Public lecture. James MacGregor Burnt, Pulitxer PrUe-wlnnirtB hittorian and political Kientist, will deliver a public lecture on "Should We Enmssulate the Presidency?'' Academic Center Auditorium. Free* Ideas and Issue* Committee. ' ^NUDAY 12 noon. Sandwich Seminars ;"Problem Pregnancy."­ jHalm Scrivner from. Student Health Center will »p«ak on thin Confer**' problem* and pregnancy program. Tinker Room', 4th floor* "Academic Center.• Ideas ana litue* pttnmUtee. VI Only half a dozen or so. however, are considered by U.S. authorities to be effective The usual pattern, one government official has told us. "is for the members of the group to fight, fragment and form new splinter groups." FOOfNOTE: Several weeks ago, we reported that CIA-trained antiCastro commandos in Miami have vowed to launch a campaign of terror within the United States if diplomatic recognition is extended to Cuba Some of these same militants, we have learned, have thrown their support behind Cubania Beligerante In their Washington meetings, however, the key exile leaders assured officials that they would not turn against the nation "which opened its heart and hands to us DEATH TRAPS:-Here is the second in the two part report, based on secret Navy documents, on the shocking deterioration of the helicopter carrier fleet The Navy's seven helicopter carriers are supposed to deliver Marine assault troops in case they should be needed in an emergency, say. in the Middle East. Although they cost millions and are still comparatively modern, they have been permitted to fall into such disrepair that thev no ionger are safe Secret surveys by the Navy's top inspector. Rear Adrn John Bulkeley. warn that the carriers could become death traps for the Navy crewmen and Marine fighting men who sail in them Fire is the terror of the sea. both in war and peace Yet on board the USS Okinawa. Bulkeley found that "the fire doors between the hangar deck and the vehicle storage area will not close fully." The pipes carrying highly-inflammable fuel are "routed through the ship's incinerator room" and "immediately adja­cent to the welder's table." Failure of some conduits "would cause fuel oil to flood the fire room bilges." warns Bulkeley's secret report. If the carrier should start sinking, the Sailors and Marines would have no means to save themselves "All the ship's lifelines, liferails and liferings." the report charges, "are con­sidered safety hazards." ATTENTION MINORITY STUDENTS! THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN GRADUATE SCHOOL RECRUITERS (Education, Social Work, Psychology. Law. etc.) will participate in the Graduate School Information Program sponsored by ETHNIC STUDENT SERVICES Office of the Dean of Students Speech Bldg., 1st Floor MONDAY, NOVEMBER 18 FOR AN APPOINTMENT OR INFORMATION Call 471-1201 k If & 5T0RYB00K GLAMOUR Romantic loveliness is yours in this ^enchanting gown ... clingy satin-finish enhanced with delicate lace sleeves and trim. A stunning chamber for your first holiday party. Sizes 5 to 13. $42. ON-THE-DRAG 2406 Guadalupe ^A9I4' THfe DAILY TEXAN Page 5'V s*. \J ^ fi -4 r i?" V 4 -* •# ~ lv^, VV ^vv^'r'.x ®g$ •tf f J« bp iihkp •^ww. -u" * ', J'I n^iini im , *v „ i), i ii ^ ii ', -i i i—•—• mm mmm wmmmmmmm ( yj^ , ( , '-•-*•> i*. •v ' h »J>') "I.-A" ?c,-«-i 1 !. * •C"'»"23C® -tVv^|# U 'rs\y , t J> ,',I-iiL 1 H"8 ^ Hurdler Lightfoot Dismissed for Visdplinary Reasons By HERB HOLLAND gery, Coach Dabbs saw me cumstances involved, saying had in the (fast yet still Texan Staff Writer light up and smoke Texas basketbajl player Ed cigarette. ' a only, "Randy's been dismiss­managed to run 13E6 at the Johnson and track sprinter "HE INFORMED me that I I ciplinary reasons." Drake Rlays and Was named St ed from the team for dis­to the Indoor All-AmericaBilly Jackson, suspended was no longer on the team and LIGHTFdOT, WHOholds or from their respective teams it was his recommendation team after winning co-holds national records in Southwest Conference Indoww Tuesday in connection with an that my scholarship be taken five age-class groups Iri.th? meet in his eventalleged theft, were suddenly away." 120-yard high hurdles, said he "He gaVe m^the same reinstated Wednesday "pen­Lightfoot underwent sur­ ding further investigation." gery two weeks ago toremove had no course to take other reasons for kicking me ofi than appealing to the Univer­ that he gave Billy (Jackson)"­ However, The Texan also a bone chip fron> his left leg. sity Scholarship Committee learned Wednesday of pother "I told him that' it that my name had been was a for his scholarship. "I won't mentioned too many times • track athlete dismissed by-totally unfair punishment, I ' be able to run for Texas this and things like that," Light, Coach /Cleburne Price for admitted I bad done spring, according to what foot said. "But look " disciplinary reasons." something wrong, but my God . ... as a Price says,and I won'tbe able Hurdler Randy Lightfoot. a — that's the most severe pun-freshman I ran consistently to run for anybody else," under 14.0 and scored thefirst senior, was dismissed by sihment a coach can give an Lightfoot Price last Thursday for smok­athlete," Lightfoot said. said. "The ohly point Texas scored in an ing a cigarette and will "Here I Lightfoot thing I can even see doing is NCAA meet in three years. As was in the hospital trying to retain my sophomore and probably lose his athletic right after surgery in the off a I got by scholarship." scholarship because of it. season — I wouldn't and ed and I was the coach then again placed sixth nationally. "When I went to Bellmont I'd certainly come up with Lightfoot was recruited in "MY JUNIOR year, I didn't couldn't be running for at 1971 after he set the national Hall to turn in my preregistra-least two months anyway, and another form of discipline," do so well outdoors but won he added. high school record in the 120 the SWC indoor meet and was tion last week. Coach Price I get kicked off the team for highs at 13.4 seconds for indoor All-America," Light­ called me in and asked me if I smoking a cigarette. to elaborate Price refused Plainview High School. Last foot said. "And the whole knew Football Coach Ken "Maybe during the spring on the status of Lightfoot's year as a junior, Lightfodt did Dabbs," Lightfoot said. "He season I could see him doing it dismissal or the cir­time, all I hear from the not have the kind of successhe (Price)s^aid that while I was but during the; off season — coaches is, 'are you smoking pot?'" in the hoSjtital after my sur-well, if positions were revers- Jackson and Johnson both were reinstated seemingly as- how they stand CaUfn C«*f«r*iK* quickly as they were suspend­ Alien tic DMaten ACCOUNTANT fet. ed from the track and basket­ fet. BuffoU ... Here's a super opportunity for a JSO Kentucky .. .917 ball teams and were woi Boston .015 New York.. 3VjNew York. .500 degreed accountant to gain valuable .600 out with the teams Wednes^ St. Louis . .400 6V5 experience. Applicant must .be PMtaphia . .417 Memphis .286 8 day. Central Drvtncn Virginia . . .2S0 8 "I have no comment on this Washington . 10 2 833 West Division available a minimum of 24 hours Houston 7 5 $83 3 matter — no comment atall," Cleveland... 6 5 $45 31? Denver . ., 11 _3 .716 weekly for at least 2 years, have some San Antonio 9 5 443 2 Athletic Director Darrell Atlanta 5 7 417 5 San Diego.. 5 b 45 5V» basic knowledge of computers and New Orleans ,077 Royal saidf "Coach Black and ) 12 ft, Indiana ... 4 7 .364 5W possess burning desire to learn. Utah .. 5 9 5Vj Coach Price handled this .357 M*dw**l OMiitn Detroit 8 6 .571 thing 100 percent." Wednesday's Resvhs 459-7687 i KC.-Omaha 6 7 .462 t'l Kentucky 132, New York 129,2 overtimes Price said the pair had been Chicago 6 7 .462 IV* Milwaukee l 12 .077 6' Big Big Apartments sid air radio BacMleid Kappa Alpha Z Kappa Sigma 1 Experience Hang-Gliding ^ VWIDS Dahny Smith (Sigma Phi Epsllon) PI Kappa Alpha Z Delta Tau Delta 0Backfleld Phi Sigma Kappa Z Phi Kappa Psl 0 ONE HOUR AND A HAIF OF DISSERTATION AND C0I0R FLYING 2-1 FURNISHED $200/ mo. Mark Monroe (Phi Gamma Delta) TOYOTA CORONA FILMS. CLUB APPLICATIONS WILL IE TAKEN. BackHeld 2 drill N Osa A Dalton Polasek (AiME) Backfleld Moore-Hill Z Jester Subs 0 CAPRI Richard Halden (Phi Gamma Delta) THURSDAY, NOV. 14 S 2-2 FURNISHED $220/ mo. B&cktleld ; BSU won by default over Shrewd 2 drht 4 spd 2000a oaftno Legalists SUBARU Pajr yoyr own electricity thit winter & save Mova in Now: 8 -9:30 P.M. Reserve your apt. for spring semester Come by ft theck' Ui out BEB Room 161 © QUALITY SERVICE 4305 Duval 454-9475-MR. EUGENE FLYNN BE THERE! YOUR AU FHORIZED DOWNTOWN Assf. Dincfor,U.S. CtniuiBureau, Dallas will be intwvhwfng on campus •VOL KSWAG EN DEAL E R 476-9181 Wayne McMichael, President CORNFf? :;-TH l A MAP MONDAY, NOVEMBER 18 for Mid-term Math & Statistics Majors CONTACT: Mi'. 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' v Melancon has started in the In a sudden move to bolster Jiat of the Jette started at defensive as last Sunday Texas defensive secondary a weak Longharn defensive coaches'had said some halfback at the beginning of since his sophomore year "in secondary after a lackluster changes would be made in the the season but was replaced 1972 against Oklahoma. He in­ performance against Baylor secondary, and that on Mon­by Mason during the Texas tercepted Alabama two last Saturday, Texas Head day, both he and Hartinger Tech game. .Mason had passes in the Texas' 1973 Cot­ Coach Darrell Royal has were wearing the orange started ever since. Hartinger, ton Bowl victory over shifted seniors Terry Melan-practice jerseys designated also a sophomore, has been Alabama, 17-13. con and Sammie Mason out of for the first team. the second team rover. the starting lineup. Mason and Melancon were , "Coach Doerr (Tim Doerr, wearing the white practice Texas defensive secondary Melancon will be replaced at safety by offensive half­jerseys of the second team,. coach) said he felt Mike and I back Raymond Clayborn and Jette added. could do as good a job as is Mason at defensive halftrack "I'm pretty sure Clayborn getting done in the secon­ will start at safety with Mike by both Paul Jette and Mike dary," Jette said. Hartinger. and I rotating at the other Melancon declined com­• Hair Styling halfback position. But it all ment on the situation but said. • Facial Baylor quarterback NeaT depends on how workouts go "When-Coach Royal is ready Jeffrey riddled the Texas • Manicures this week," Jette explained. for a statement to be made defense for 351 yards passing, Clayborn, a • Shoe Shines sophomore, then I'll tell the whole story." establishing a new passing started the first four games of Mason declined comment For Both Sexes record for a Southwest the season at safety before also. "I really can't say 2301 S. Congress Conference victory. switching tostarting offensive anything. -You've got to un­441-4151 Freshman Alfred Jackson halfback for the Oklahoma will continue to start at the garpe and has played that other halfback position aswill position ever since. junior Fred Sarchet at rover. Clayborn was an offensive When asked about the per­halfback all last year as a sonnel change. 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Navajo, a'nd Kahneete designs, 21.50 V TlXASllMONSQUTH _ UNJVERSITY...HIGHLAND MALL...CONGRESS AVENU^ ,i«a msa Thursday, November 14, 1974 THE DAILY TEXAN Pa Around the SWC Jeffrey Honored by AP ^wife By'The Associated Press mnri IwfnT-a hoiun't maf you're k.ki.Jbehind 14-7III? .4at 1halfin'time.. .... cond half before, haven't we? good," he said. Baylor quarterback Neal Let's go." •k it it Jeffrey was guest speaker Jeffrey * *• threw two LUBBOCK (UPI) -Texas Sunday morning at the Bever­passes and com­ DALLAS (AP) -The touchdown Tech Head Coach Jim Carlen ly Hills Baptist Church in Southwest Conference, in­ pleted 20 of 31 passes for 351 was with Red unhappy the Waco. yards to lead Baylor to a 34-24 Raiders' workout Wednesday, volved in one orits wildest The subject. "Not quitting victory and earn football chases in more than a & The and he also was worried about m life." decade, is flirting with an Associated Press Southwest the Baylor Bears' offense. .Jeffrey, a senior from alltime attendance record Conference Player of the I Overland Part. Kan.. ought to An average of 40,263 fans Week award. "Shoot, you've got to stay know. He and the rest Of his attended the four games last up nights to defense theirJeffrey, who has a speech Bear team{nates had every Saturday, pushing the offense," said Carlen, whoseimpediment that crops up reason iq the world to sneak season's home attendance Raiders play Baylor Saturdavwhen he gets excited, said, out of Baylor Stadium at half- average , to 38,902 for 38 in a crucial game in the "You know it was almost a time last Saturday. games. That's only 138 per­ Southwest Conference race. miracle that I didn't have any Texas was ahead 24-7. and sons under the record 39,040 trouble. I had some trouble We just didn't there were somefolks who ex­ average for the 1968 season. against Missouri andpected it to get worse Oklahoma State earlier this"Things looked bleak, but vear still we we really thought But It was like Jeffrey told Devaney Doubts could win," Jeffrey said. "We the folksat Beverly Hills Bap­sat around. Everyone was tist Church: "If you statt real quiet. Coach (Grant) something and have faith m it. Teaff walked in and said Oklahoma Move you shouldn't quit." "We've won games in the se- That also applies when LINCOLN, Neb. (UPI) -financial reasons. Switzer —'TriE Nebraska Athletic Director reportedly was unhappy with Bob Devaney said Wednesday conference sharing _ —T«tan Sroff PhoHibyCaxolJnn.Slmm«fu revenue he has heard no official over­arrangements between Texas swimmer Audrey Supple works on her bOtterfly stroke. ' tures from the University of member schools. Oklahoma about dropping out "I can see Barry's point of the Big Eight Conference:-* He's -disgruntled that the Supple Can't Quit Swimming - "Neither Athletic Director 'School can't be on TV or go to Wade Walker nor theuniversi­a bowl," Devaney said, By MARK McFARLANE are now her teammates at Texas. GROUP RATE ty has come out with anything referring to Oklahoma's Texan Staff Writer DINNER about it," Devaney said. -' "I am excited about this year's team but wish'there were NCAA probation. "But they're After talking to University jsomen's swimmer Audrey Sup­more girls swimming. There is a problem with depth That is •«• SMKioj. as 50 Devaney commented in the getting money right now from ple, one would get the impression that the energetic freshman • POTATO SAUP .BANS M T ~ the thing with any women's sport," she said • OMON • naat •MAD JTMTZ wake of news reports quoting other Big Eight schools even of Albuquertjue, N.M., wilVbe SWmming jost as hard when Swimming is a sport which demands continuous training Strwd Famify Slyh Sooner Head Coach Barry though those restrictions have she s 80 years old and wtien-mostpersons her age are ready to ..Presently,-the^women's team is workingout approximately four Switzer thatOklaboma might . been placed on them." retire to the old folks'home. ' ". •2330 S. Lamar • 444-8461 -Custom Cooking^— hours a day, including practice from 6 a.m. to 8 a m The early sever its conference ties for And Devaney noted that Supple frnds herself swimming almost every day of the year. workouts don't bother Supple because in high school she beganeven though Switzer may have • I can't quit swimming. I don't know if I'll ever be able to drills at S a.m. lofty thoughts on generating quit, ' she said. Distance swimming is Supple'sspeciality, but long races aremore funds for whathe claims However, Supple has not always reacted favorably to swim-' not included in women's competition,and she has had toadjust to be sagging athletic depart­ming. After she finished high school in Albuquerque last spring, Competing in the 1976 Olympic trials isa future possibility for ment coffers, the practical she thought about giving up the sport. But after a talk with Tex­ SKIPPER'S Supple. "It depends on how things go this year realities about dropping con­as Swimming Coach Pat Patterson and a renewed interest in Right now, I'm concentrating on Hie World Games coming upference ties would be harsh competition, she accepted a partial scholarship to Texas. Sup­in a year or sc." she said. IMPORTED AUTO PARTS ple and a teammate share the only scholarship available to the Supple admits swimming is an individual effort which bringswomen's team. self-satisfaction to the winner. "But it works both ways If youPatterson knew about Supple's swimming ability long before 452-0244 lose you're down on yourself. Unlike team sports, if you fail it's .What? he met his present pupil. Her outstanding high school career in­yor own fault," she explained. .fifth-place finish in the nationals in the 1,660-yanl cluded a "I like thecompetition. I like to see myself improve In fact, I •AinuraMKO freestyle. She also competed in the 1972 Olympic trials ( British) like to work out more than I do competing in a meet In pra'c- SipBacardi •AUM >HMAULT "I met Coach Patterson at one of the senior circuit meets in tice, you are working with pain and endurance. You really have •AOSVM Texas that I was swimming in. I saw him again last spring at to push yourself. The meet Is a mental thing; you swim one •MK1M-WAUY •JAGUAB befoivre the nationals m Dallas, and we talked about the possibility of short race, and it's over/' she said • BJMLW. •L.U.V.fChmvmUt) me attending Texas," she explained­ • CAM!(UnccJn/Mwcvry) Regardless of how short the races are, one has to wonder of IAM youmixit? At these meets. Supple also met some of the swimmers that Audrey Supple's swimming career will ever end •COW (Dotfgm) •ILG. IMA* • rCOMHUUhnf; •TOYOTA Shoe Shop •SALE* • CMCKir (Hfmovth) •NASI TOYOTA We make and •DATCON • VOLVO SHEEPSKIN •FIAT • VOLKSWAGEN Sure. 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Shlpplng*ndHandlinSJ4]B0EachS«uT6t«IS&h -« ' J WnoisMdenls addapplicabk sales tax « J ^6 AWU8T-" ",-T^ I >> ^ <-TOTALAMOUW "« ^ V y i'"f j ' r> 'PLUS!Send h i-vM n. /« • . f" |P 2414 STREET * /haek y, 477-4764 < OK• Qf^ASTER CHARGE P* looic F& fhll'Slor i v "• Ir. y-ii fja Tour Ntia ^OPPOBATK>N COMRftNY f njrhn*»%•&.}*,*>Yt J. J HMWrOhir^wA; V-il-V.'V 1 1 lr \ 1 . ^ j j" 1 ' " ; • f '1 ' ' 1 .P^ge S Thursdays-November 14, T974vTHE DAILY TEXAN , .. L , liA^_ v ^ «i -W s . • A uthor Burns To Probe Nixon By ANNETTE GABLE Union and the Department of History. Kennedy in the 1960 presidential race." Seventeen years ago, James BURNS, WHO SERVED afi a combat THE AUTHOR has formed some MacGregor Burns was touring historian during World War II, has strong opinions about American Leningrad when he chanced upon a written several books' and many, ar­politics in general. In a cover story for crowd of 6-and 7-year-olds on a ticles on -political issues. He .Was a national magazine in 1960, he stated sidewalk. Captivated by the sight, he awarded the Pulitzer Prize for his book American politics lacksthe cruciallink took a photograph and walked on. " Roosevelt: Soldier of Freedom" and between the nation's leaders and ski ROOSTER ANDREWS this season and get the best value in snow ski clothing, equipment, and shop service The picture hesnapped landed him in wrote the authorized biography "John voters. a dingy , police station within the hour, Kennedy: A Political Profile." Burns, active in Massachusetts and accused of illegally photographing a. national politics-since his Williams un­ Comparing Kennedy and former government building. He explained the dergraduate, days, claims political par-' President Nixon, Burn's has written, mistake; the-misunderstanding was ty participation leaves something to be' "One misses in Kennedy traits that straightened out. desired. He advocates the financing of N.iwm' has mastered — oversimplica- Confronted with now-placated parties by membership dues. But the Russians, Burns wrote that before he tion, repetition, the use of cloudy sym­ poor, he wrote, would not be requiredknew it, "I had given a speech on to pay dues. bols to obscure positions. One almost wishes that Kennedy would 'ham it up- tolerance and goodwill in a Russian He wants to establish a direct link police office—all before a captive between national and local politics. audience of police, officials and These wdrds were written before the Burns predicted in I960 that "America civilians. What more could acivil liber­1960 presidential election, in which is entering a most demanding decade tarian ask?" Burns felt laljso-that people would vote with a chaotic multiparty system of its Presently a professor of political own." for Kennedy largely to Vote against Nixon. science at Williams College in Nixon, Burns wrote in 1971, was the Williamstown, Mass., Burns will lec­Burns ran unsuccessfully for the U.S. most "introspective" President in ture at 8 p.m. Thursday in the House as a Democrat iiv 1958. "While history. Because his staff was not un­Academic Center Auditorium. The ad­Kennedy was campaigning for re-elec­ited in strategy, Burns predicted with dress, "Should We Emasculate the tion to the Senate iii Massachusetts. insight that the next two years look " Presidency?" issponsored by theIdeas-Kennedy supported Burns' candidacy" perilous ...Jor the tightrope walkers in and Issues Committee of the Texas and in turn, Burns campaigned for the White House staff." campus briefs Karate, Yoga Classes Begin Karate and yoga classes -"MANAGINGMANMHNOSIUOYSTIIOY !»«*>•«••TENSIONS" willwm!*<«•-bftdis­' ..... cussed A panel of former graduate students MEXICAN-AMERICAN YOUTH ORGANIZA­will begin Thursday at the . at 3 p.m. Thursday in Jester TION will meet at 7 p.m. Thursday in and their spouses will discuss con­ Austin Family YMCA, 1100 W. Center A332 by the staff of the Burdine Hall 108 to discuss com­ ditions In today's business world. mittee protects. Reading and Study Skills SEMINARS First St. Karate classes will MYTHOPOGC SOCIETY will meet at 7 p.m. be taught by LouisGonzales, a Thursday In Prather Dormitory J121 a stellar spectroscopy semfnar and to discuss Tolkien's "TheLord of the Laboratory (RASSL). O&ARTMENT OF ASTRONOMY will sponsor STUOCNT GOVERNMENT Minority an extragalactlc astronomy seminar Committee will meet at 7 p.m. at noon and 4 p.m., respectively, first degree black belt Affair* Rings" and other works of fantasy.professor. The class meets Thursday In Batts Hall IIS. The Ap­KE4AW STUDENTS will be able to meet. Thursday In Robert Lee Moore Hall from 7 to 8:30 p.m. Tuesdays propriation Committee will meet at with Prof. O.C. Lewis of Cas¥ 1S.216B. 4 p.m. Thursday in Union South 10S. DEPARTMENT will sprnsor Western Reserve University from OF PHYSICS aand Thursdays, and new The Communication Committee will 9:30 a.m. to 3 p.m. Thursday inWest solid state seminar at 3 p.m. Thurs­members may. join at any meet at 6:30 p.m. Thursday In the Mail Office Building 101A. Minority day in Robert Lee Moore Hall 6.112. Dobie Center Conference Room. TEXAS UNION IDEAS AND ISSUES COMMITTEEand women's groups may arrange time during the year. group meetings by-calling 471-4517. Nonmember fees are $20 per GOMMITTH will sponsor a lecture ' UNIVERSITY ADVERTISING CLUB will meet noon Thursday in the Tinker Room, month, while the cost to TEXAS UNION ANtO-AMEttCAN CULTURE will sponsor a sandwich seminar at from 1 'to 9 p.m. Thursday In the at 4:15 p.m. Thursday at the Ray Academic Center fourth floor. Prof. Methodist Student Center. Or. John Samuel Popkin will speak on 1974 Hall and Fitziarrell AdvertisingYMCA members is $10 per Bigger, art professor at Texas suite at the American Bank Tower, election results and the perspective month. Southern University, will speak on Sixth and Lavaca Streets, tor a tour for 1976 "A Look at the Art of Black UNIVERSITY CHRISTIAN CHURCH will spon­ and a presentation by Duplex Out­Americans." sor a sandwich and soup seminar at door Advertising. Club members Yoga classes will be taught TtXAlUNION THEATRE COMMITTEE will needing rides or information should noon Thursday at Nordan Lounge at at the ad show the film, "Anna Karenina," at meet club office at 3:40 the church, 2007 University Ave. 7 And-9 p.m. Thursday in Batts Ronnie Dugger willdiscuss hisbook.of Hatha Yoga. The classes for UT CZECH CLUS will meet at 8 p.m. Thurs­"Our Invaded Universities: by Larry Young, a professor p.m. Auditorium. Admission is si Form, will meet from 8:30 to 9:30 students, faculty and staff; 11.50 for Reform and New Starts." day in the Tobin Room of Batts Hall for a general meeting. members. YMCA will hold a seminar on "Breast M»NGS ...Cancer — Self Examination" at 7 p.m. Tuesdays. The cost' to WIVES AND WOMEN OF THE GRADUATE nonYMCA members is$15 and AtNT will meet at 7:30 p.m. Thursday at tUSINESS SCHOOL will meet at 7:30 p.m. Thursday atthe YMCA,1100W. p.m. Thursday at Farm and Home Hansel and Gretel restaurant for a First St. The seminar is open to the general meeting. public at no charge. $7.50 for members. Savings Association. 1400 LavacaSt. AMERICAN METEOROLOGICAL SOCIETY. City Closes Pool STUDENT CHAPTER will meet at 7:30 p.m. Thursday in Engineering Barton Springs Pool, flood­Science Building 637. A film will be ed by recent rains, has been shown. fKI COLORflDO ARCHAEOiOGICAL INSTITUTE Of AMERICA, closed for the winter effective CENTRAL TEXAS CHAPTER willmeet at 8 immediately. Dick Martin, p.m. Thursday in McMillanHail 210 at the Austin Presb£tjgjrl«n parks superintendent for the Theological Seminary, 100 £. 27th' Parks and Recreation Depart­St., for a public lecture by Or. Ned Nabers of the Department ot , BRKKenftiDGc/fliran ment, &id. Classical Studies at Vanderbilt Austin's winter swimmers University, entitled, "Paestum." *106.00 tlSS.OO may use Stacy Pool in South BAHA^i ASSOCIATION will meet at 7 p.mt Thursday in Jester Center A223 for; Austin from '1 to 6 p.m. discussion of the Baha'l Faith. Name weekdays and Sundays and CHI ALPHA CHRISTIAN FEUOWSMP willmeet'", at 7:30 p.m. Thursday in Batts Halt from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Satur­201. * Address days. CHRISTIAN SCIENCE ORGANIZATION Will meet at 7 p.m. Thursday in Russell ANNOUNCUKNTJ A. Sfeindam Hall 211 for a regular 1 CMEBt CHOK1 INFORMATION CZNTCK will organizational meeting. sponsor « workshop at 4 p.m. Thurs­EULENSPtEGaVEREiN -THE UT OERMAN, day In Jester Center 223 entitled, out willmeet at 8 p.m. Thursday In' FOR MORE INFO. "Interviewing Skills for Women." Batts Hall302for a programon wine Interested persons must go by and wine-tasting emphasizing .(for-, CUP THIS AD AND SEND TO Jester Center A11S-A to sign up man wines. An admission fee of 75 before attending. cents for members and S) for non-MERIT TRAVEL D&ARTMENT or OEOIOOY wilt sponsor a members will be charged to defray P.O. DRAWER "I' lecture at I p.m. Thursday In expenses. AUSTIN, TEX. 78712 Geology Building 100 by Daniel Ber» INDIA ASSOCIATION will meet at B p.m.: noulli on "New Views on Alpine Thursday In the Education Annex 478-3471 Tethyt evolution Based on Jofdes Auditorium at 20th and San Jacinto Results." Streets for an informal concert and M will sell UNICEF Christmas cards recital: through Nov. 22 at booths on the West Mall at 21st and Speedway Streets and at 24th Street and Speedway. - HEAITHROKSSIONSfROORAMSwilt spon­sor Informal discussions with Bryan HAMBURGERS BY Williams associate dean for student affairs at Southwestern Medical School, from 1:30 to4:30 p.m.Thurs­ day in Academic Center 406. GOURMET announces Be,an In-Slder Inflation Fighter Specials •••••••••••*•••••••••••••••••••••••••$•••••••••••••2 : Present This Coupon tor 25'Off : • OLD FASHIONED HAMBURGER, OUR NO. 4 HAMBURGER, COMBINES Vi ? ?LB. PURE BEEF, CHARBROILEO WITH SAlAb SAUCE, SHREDDED LETTUCE, ! • TOMATOES, MUSTARD, ANDPICKLES ON A TOASTED SESAME SEED BUN. I . OFFER EXPIRES 11-30-74; .,. In our Boat Moc. The hottest shoe In the U.S. Brown leather with white rubber sole. Sizes ONE OF 17 DEUCIOUSLY DIFFERENT HAMBURGERS MADE WITH 6-9. $17. GENEROUS PORTIONS OF PREMIUM QUALITY INGREDIENTS '1911 Andarson tan* 211 S. Lamar 2200 Guadalupe ' H7 Jofferson Square 454-5577 477-3422 OnTh* Drag 474-1086 U.N. HEPEXLS . ITSOWN . CHARTER B1' RECOGNIZING iv •» iiwi m\w "•I \ } -v* LIBERATIO SKI S wizzana OLINMARKI SALE$14600 BLIZZARD FANPLAST SALE$8800 9Q00 OLIN MARK li SALE$16800 BLIZZARD BUZZARD SALE5 9800 OLIN MARK III SALE$16800 BLIZZARD WIZZARD .... SALE5 OLIN MARK IV SALE$16800 BUZZARD FIREBIRD SALE$13000 ALL OLIN AND BLIZZARD SKIS ARE ROSSIGNOL AND SPALDING SKIS THIS YEARS MODELS AND CARRY FROM 1973-4 YEAR ALSO AVAILABLE FULL FACTORY WARRANTIES. AT TREMEMDOUS DISCOUNTS. WE DP ALL TYPES OF REPAIR WORK PROFESSIONALLY. SKI-WEAR SALE EARLY BIRD SALE ON ALL PARKAS AND STRETCH PANTS IN STOCK PARKAS FROM WHITE STAG AND RAY EGNER SALE! 20% OFF OF REGULAR PRICE all sizes and Styles available, our selection is excellent ALL STRETCH SKI PANTS FROM WHITE STAG ON SALE NOW. ALL PANTS ON SALE NOW AT 20% OFF REGULAR PRICE. (NOTE: THIS SALE IS NORMALLY HELD IN MARCH) BEST BUY OF THE SALE ALL TURTLENECK SKI SHIRTS FROM WHITE STAG, MUNSINGWEAR, ALLEN-A, AND DUOFOLD REGULARLY $6.00 -$11.00 SALE $5 SKI ACCESSORIES SEE OUR SELECTION OF'MEN'S AND WOMEN'S SKI GOGGLES, SOCKS. GLOVES, AND HATS. SALE ON , SPECIAL ASSORTMENT OF GOGGLES AND.GLOVES. / ANDREWS 3?01 OUADALUPE 454-9631 Uso YourBANKAMERICARD or MASTERCHARGE ! I *~n Vir E,-.kl.. ISllisi *Y,?fyl3 iT7*- •» •h. n1" •^nhiTv'JtiU l, } •-<»« «* -t\ ^ -1 ^ v r r^" • -'• >?. ' .^ . "~ 1 ^ -i "• .'. T' 1 'Vl~, '. Mi in Stay Short for Illegal By SUSIE STOLER for 66 illegal immigrants. brought to .the hospital after a hearings, Mack said. dustry or construction," he The California SupremeTexan Staff Writer Holding aliens has car wreck. Travis is one of 88 counties said. Court recently struck down as presented no problem to coun­"I understand that hospitals included in the San Antonio-A large problem to law en­unconstitutional state law for­ Express bus service is ty officials, Sheriff Raymond prettyin San Antonio have a based district which coversan forcement officers has been bidding employment of illegal Bit available between Austin and Frank said. bad problem, but then that's a area from Del Rio, north to the lack '' Austin by federalofficials, the County as In the San Antonio, office, The trend to ment, which Travis much as metropolitan is., expected to Rodino,'D-N,J., the bilkwouldAustin Police Department and other areas. tt)e illegal immigrants usually growth has made deportation issue a report by Dec. 15 on make aliens' employers sub­ /r Travis County sheriff's of­Few aliens apply forcare at have k choice of voluntary of aliens problem. Mack the alien problem in Texas. a ject to civil penalties. ficers, a federal spokesperson Brackenridge Hospital, Joan deportation or formal hearing said. Although there is strong Meanwhile, law enforce­said. Johnson, social services depending on any past record "Fifteen years ago, 95 per­sentiment among legislators ment officials apd federal director, said. or aggravated circumstances. cent of them were involved in for strict measures igainst agents must rely heavily on Aliens, the majority of Although the hospital does The district office process­agricultural work near the hiring of illegal aliens, the tips from Mexican-Americanwhom are Mexican nationals, not keep figures on alien ed 10,000 unwanted residents border, while currently,about constitutionality of such citizens about aliens who areare detained in the city or county jails prior to making patients, Johnson could during a 10-month period en­50 percent those processed in legislation has been challeng­adding to the unemploymentremember only one such caSe ding Oct. 31,. and only 800 the bus trip to the district of­ San Antonio this yearwere ed, a subcommittee rate by takingaway acitizen's fice of the U.S. Department of in six years whenan alienwas cases requested, formal employed in metropolitan ih-* ' spokesperson said chance for a job. Justice's Immigration and Naturalization Service in San •fgtrsi. Antonio, L.A. Mack, assistant director of INS investigation, said. . In August, September and October, City Jail housed 561 aliens for varying time periods before the INS ex­ mmmm press bus transported them to the district office. —Tb FHim*.by Coral Jmi Smmora The maximum incarcera­ Birdman of Gregory tion period is 48 hours, Capt. W.R. Swinney of the Austin University diver Fred Machell takes to the air after Police Department said. 305 WEST 19TH bouncing on a trampoline at the Gregory Gym pool. While the trampoline may not help Machell geit more For the same three-month HIGHLAND MALL 412 CONGRESS than a few feet off the ground, he hopes it will help period, the Travis County improve his diving form before swimming season. lockup was a detention center PRICES GOOD THROUGH NOV. 16 Police Explain Request For Moving Lot Cars Prior to football games in Saturday." He was parked on Eastman explained. Austin, the University police the largfe "C" lot behind Eastman added, "there is request students to remove Memorial Stadium. talk about planning to use the m their carsfrom the three main old Clark Field for a "C" Busch said in a letter to The "C " parking lots around-Daily Texan editor, "Whore parking lot, but how soon this Memorial Stadium to provide (the students) are will go into progress, I do not visitor parking space. we ex­ pected to park is not clear. know." "The request for studentsto Perhaps we are to quietlymove their cars-is a voluntary leave town or campus." A NEW IDEA wmm request and most students have cooperated. If students Eastman said students can IN HAIR DESIGN da not move their cars, we do park in lots on the west side of UNIQUE not tow them away Qr give San Jacinto Boulevard. East­ INDIVIDUALIZED tickets," University Police man said Lot 67 south of FOR MEN AND WOMEN Capt. Harry J. Eastman said. Jester and Lois 93 and 95 are Craig Busch. Jester resi­open to studfents Students can Richburg's dent. said for the last two park on^'G" lots on the east CALIFORNIA mmm weeks of home football side of campus and on faculty CONCEPT games, he hascome to his car spots during the weekends in theVillage on a "C" lot and found a slip after 10 p.m. on Friday $nd 2700 AndtriM in Sette 109of paper telling him to "get after 11 a.m. on Saturday. br cpprinluwul 452-067T off' before the game. Cars must be removed before During the SMU game, 7 a.m. on Monday. Busch said, "Friday at mid­"The main lots we ask night I found a slip telling me students to reserve for games to remove my car liefore are lots 69, 70, 80 and 81", Bacardi W '.msB dark rum for Recreation Committee presents BACKPACKING IN what? Navy Pea Coats Levi Blue Jean Jackets GUADAlUPi MOUNTAINS Enjoy it withcola ^ or your favorite Reg. price*35 Reg. and Long. Reg;Price Three days of extensive hiking during the Thanksgiv­ l mixer, like ginger ing holidays in one of America's newest national i ale. And use itlike pttrlcs. . * I whiskev in aun., uec. i Cost $10 per person to cover cost of gas TbgmixaMeone. i up begins Monday, Nov. 18 iri Program Cffi t,17'J imports, r«C . *i> . »u«* «o r«oor. Texas Union Sooth (behind Gregory Gym) & s. American Felt Western Hats. Reg. *30 Flannel Shirts 1.The appearance of a comb­ like protuberanceat the top 1 of the head. 2. A sprouting of suspicious' 3. A restless urge tor scratch looking feathers gravel. AUSTIN ARMY/NAVY STORE ONLY If thingsthi haven't gone thisfar, then youshould go to KFC # 6 at 2120; Guadalupe,for Crisp Chickenttiafs hard to get too Entire Stock of Dingo " much of. Ifyouare foofcingforiihange, a j „v v ^ ' »>remember ourflelicioU?sirttiky ..KFC# 6 is a pleas- Place fortiifferer# tastes. mt '* T-CA -h GoodSelection of Stylesand Sizes Council To Acquire New Home By IRWIN SPEIZER ing of the new auditorium site city got wasa two-story office overhead camera lights. . . ing the two existing buildings. Texan Staff Writer represent? a small segmentof building, a three-story The city manager also has a Deputy City Manager City Council will hold its the city's $3 million municipal warehouse with a loading control panel at his seat next Helper Reed put the final cost final meeting in the Electric complex project, which began and of parking to the mayor. He can control of dock lots remddeling at over $300,­Building Auditorium this as a council proposal two space. the camera and overhead 000. Original estimates put the week as workmen apply years ago. The two buildings face each lights, the podium mikes and a cost at $259»000. finishing touches to the coun What the city finally other across the loading dock projection screen. The new office buildings cil's new meeting place: a purchased in January, .1974, and an alley, so the architects In addition, each coun­will house engineering-related$137,000 remodeled loading was the entire block bounded designed a roof to span the cilman has a switch to cut his. functions of the city, bringingdock. by Guadalupe, Lavaca, First alley and put the auditorium own microphone off tem­together offices from five The purchase and remodel­and Second Streets. What the underneath. porarily. different buildings. , The auditorium is fully Council is provided with its carpeted, has 236 gold up­own chambers complete with The rest of the $3 million is holstered theater seats, bathroom, sink, refrigerator being used to purchase the next full block back to San An­tonio Street and another half City To Consider bifchwood paneling and a and a carpeted, birch-paneled, wonderland of gadgets. furnished living room. block between Second and The control room houses Original estimate for the Third Streets. master switches for overhead auditorium was $125,000, so Street Contract camera lights, house and the final cost was only $12,000 The objective is to own By SUSAN LINDEE council--lights, microphones over. -three full blocks for a pro­Texan Staff Writer pletely redesigned. and a stereo to pipe in music. The city bought the entire jected new municipal com­ A $146,000 contract bid for a Fran.Szarejko, acting direc­television are plus a block The media block quarter plex. Reed says if there is go­ project to improve East tor of the Community provided with a raised stage across the street for $1.4 ing to be one, it will probably Texan Staff Photos by Carol Jean Simmons Austin area streets comes Development Office which is at the back of the auditorium million last January and has be built bordering Town Lakebefore City Council Thursday, coordinating the project, said and their own switches for the so far spent $250,000 remodel­on First Street. New council room and private council chambersthe first such bid in the Beri securing an engineering firm Handcox plan initiated last to do the planning was also a summer. factor in holding up work. The contract with "We have been moving at a Friedman To Recommend Charter Revision Underground Utilities Co.will .steady pace, and now things ' City Council will take up pointed by council to look into amended again until 1967. be for theinstallation of water should be picking up," Szare-is including one to raise coun­THE PAY raise, in the form discussion of a charter revision possible City Charter cond reading of Mayor Pro pipes and sewage work, initial jko said,estimating a comple­Among the possibilities for cil pay to $100 per week. of a city ordinance, does not committee. at its Thursday revisions and make Tem Dan Love's staff physical improvements in the tion date of June, 1975. charter revisions are four-Council voted itself a pay in­require voter approval. meeting in the City Electric recommendations back to assistance proposal. development of the area. The Another problem has been year staggered terms for crease to $95 per week last Funding for council &ides, Building. council. The council then If the proposal gets the ex­ work in District 4 should be the clearing of utilities, councilmen, increasing the week, thus avoiding by $5 which was elimianted in re­ would hold public hearings on pected four votes, it will take completed by next summer. because the office had to work The newly remodeled the suggestions and decide number of councilmen and direct confrontation with the cent budget cuts, will come up one more reading to become The-jil^a is a new approach with so many different groups Municipal Annex at 301 W. Se­electing them by districts, and defeated charter amendment.-before council again in the se­ what amendments to place oncond St. will be designated as to community improvements, in the city. an ethics and financial dis­ a ballot. the future meeting place of as it was initiated by the City Charles Graves, supervising closure amendment. Charter amendments have" City Council. Council. Usually when a group engineer of the project, said increased in recent years, Friedman is working on an of property owners wants this is the first time so many Councilman Jeff Friedman with 14 appearing on the 1973 ethics and financial disclosure street paving, they make a—groups in the city have coor­plans to bring up the topic of ballot. Seven amendments ordinance, which he plans to Strait Music's request to the city, but in this dinated a project in one area. charter revision which hesays the 1971 ballot, present to council at its Nov. project the city took the in­"We have identified, a appeared on most councilmen and one in both 1969 and 1967. 21 meeting. itiative because of a recogniz­specific section of the city and acknowledge as a favorable The City Charter was radical­ ed need. determined to bring it up to Three amendments were measure. ly revised in 1953 and was not The area to be worked on standards with all sorts ofim­defeated in the last election — first is between Rosewood provements, including storm If the proposal is adopted, a GUITAR-AMP Avenue and East 14th Street. sewers, removal of substan­committee would be ap-The plan was approved by dard housing, traffic signals the council last summer, but and replaced utilities," ecial 12.90 more than a year as been Graves said. spent in planning and coor­The development office is MAX JONES WAREHOUSE dinating the projects. working in coordination with City Councilman Handcox, the Public Works Depart­JEWELER who made the initial proposal, ment, the Planning Depart­said physical factors, such as ment, the city engineers and SALE an inadequate sewage system the utility companies. which has to be replaced and There are 12 districts in the We buy old gold deficient-existing streets have East Austin area, but this held up the planning because project covers only two of mountings ONE-DAY-ONLY the water pipes hadto becom-. those districts. Diamond and silver Sunday, Nov. 17th RESEARCH NEW IN AUSTIN Thousands of Topics A unique approach for men BARING UP BEAUTIFULLY,..IN 1 p.m. til dark -$2.75 per page and woman's hair design Ph. 478-4286 NATURAL TOOLED LEATHER. Send for your up-to-date, 160-page, mail order catalog. Enclose $1.00 ASK FOR 402BR. lo cover postage (delivery time is Suite 210 1to 2 days). I*Richburfl's \'i Commodore Perry If you have been looking for a guitar or amp, but RESEARCH ASSISTANCE, INC. CALIFORNIA CONCEPT Bldg. ilisirjjosia uKMie inflation has you by the throat, then check these 11941WILSHIRE BLVD., SUITE #2 in the Village Austin, Texas 78701 LOS ANGOES, CALIF. 90025 (213) 477-8474 or 477-5493 2700 Andtrsoa U Svtfo Y09 ^^102 Highland Mall 234 Hancock Center^ bargains in our used Guitar and Amp Warehouse Sale. by apfWhrtRiMt . 4S2-M71. ' OUT rnwrch material It told for nmrch tttlttanct only. GUITARS List New Sale Ovation electric guitar The rain bombed us out! model 1235 $75.00 so here's Repeat Offer Gibson Blueridge w/case $558.00 325.00 Afro-American Culture Committee Fender jaguar 537.00 99.50 presents THURSDAY NIGHT (but priced even lower) Dr. John Biager, Art Professor Yamaha FG 170A 175.00 75.00 u.v Texas Southern University Cameo Banjo 5 string 129.50 60.00 Hi Waist SLIDE SHOW AND DISCUSSION ON THE Ventura Gibson copy (electric Brushed Denim solid body) 149.50 75.00 HISTORY OF BLACK AMERICANS IN ART To Sunburst electric guitar 90 99 Thursday, November 14 Guild Room (solid body) 119.50 25.00 for 7-9p.m. Methodist Student Center PANTS (Regular 13.00) AMPS Acoustic 270 top $780.00 $275.00 Acoustic 104 Bottom (6-10" speakers) 354.00 150.00 Alamo Bass Amp 459.00 199.50 2-Kustom 3-15" speaker Ouadalup* cabinets for PA. 99.50 each IMP 2-Blue Kustom vinyl PA cabinets w/2-15" 99.50 each Sho-Bud Twin lteverb amp 595.00 325.00 lifs Rheem piano Bass 125.00 is 'your lifestyle} I Also—large selection of used Combo Or­ hear ^ • ••, gans ranging from $150.00 on up to LhaHes Perns / $350.00. Huge inventory of drums rang­ sptak^ori d ^ SOFT TOUCH FOR THE HOLIDAYS ingfrom singlepieces on upto large sets. LKfktian kunttewvi -HOLIDAY;DRESSING '.v of , A crinkly soft nylon crepe is your Lrf shirt printed In-marvelous V? beiges and browns, 22.00, tucks into chocolate brown MUSIC COMPANY cbtton velvet-trousers; 32.00. x ^ Croat far an evening out, ( -biddy tiou.lS WAREHOUSE tWitious for arlj evening at-home. if -" Hm (DIM) 4M, Take Alley Just Northof 908 N.Lamar — Location to Rear of Building From Hiq Cadeau's collection XI--of. dothesforthe way you live. „ X *«. u*'—'"I t.—•My*1-. v, 1 1 jl v ftr" , . i-i*Wl«rch»rg« ' UjjjMEMURjl C \ « a yi tyiEstioris anii answers Award •—«-— $ stitiui toWe^t m^huh&ii ^ s/>& \ j y-U">w t vr \ iff r nr i ri~r ",f i, , '' -' >«rk l« oit Irt«»t«n btHid t>> Citu iiif _ 4 stt r«-H(£ IK ?t> tk > ->i / > i r4 i y* -"^1. *• t V vThursdav,November 14^1974 THfc DAILMTEXAN J>age 1 J, V 5' ; -7 f ^ \ -I v" w msm Mssm a?;S5 "f" -v I -• i * ;"r i.: 1/7 Students Threatened by Economic Insecurity m- N |4 4' I <; »'^ca -~~ By LYNNE BROCK Texan Staff Writer The Ford administration conceded Tuesday that the United States has entered a recession. The following are reactions from University students on how the recession is affecting and threatening them. Susan Beaver. 20, nursing major: "1 feel threatened by a recession because my father is an automobile dealer, and theauto industry hasreach­ed its worst point this year. J feel threatened mostly for my family.Since nursing is in pretty big demand, it should not affect my job market, but it may affect salaries." Gary Imig, 21, accounting major: "I think a recession is one of the ways to get us out of the mess we are in. Somehow, we are going to have to cut down on spending, and that is always going to cause a partial reces<> sion. I don't think we will ever gointo a depression again because we learned a little from the last orte»" David Gilliam, 21, RTF major: "I've felt threatened by a recession for a long time. Times have been bard for me fora long time, and they arego­ Gilliam ing to get a lot harder. I don't know ••••• ----— —|—i -M-11 —i rii—j-i i i.i i.i RONNIE DUGGER TO DISCUSS tw'OUR INVADED UNIVERSITIES" PUBLISHER OF THE TEXAS OBSERVER SOUP AND SANDWICH Noon Nordan Lounge UNIVERSITY CHRISTIAN CHURCH 2007 Univeretty Ave. • -'• ' „ •. ' :.• Just get Ford out of the office. David Leff, 19, undecided major: "I feel threatened by a recession just because the unemployment rate is go­ing so high, and because money is not worth anything and it seems like the country is going to be out of jobs really fast. I hate to see a depression, but it kind of looks like that. The recession has been going on for-a long time, and now they have finally admitted it." Tim Rogers, 18, undecided major''fir natural sciences: "I don't really feel threatened by a recession, but I am afraid that if nothing isdone that a very deepdepres-^ sion could be on the way." • Sue Stendebach, 20, sociology major: "I definitely -feel threatened by a recession. It seems already that infla­tion is taking hold of us. I'm working, and my wages hlven't goneup, butfood . has and everything else has. Things seem to be getting worse instead of better, and I'm pretty worried about it. Robert Daniel. 22, accounting major: "I'm not threatened by it; it's been going on for at least two quarters. It's nothing new. The announcement isn't Stendebach surprising. There will probably be less • Silver Fox Boutique • • 102 E. 31st 474-1278• • Mexican Imports £ • • Wrangler -Male -Lee • Landlubber • Rag-Time Bobbie Brooks • h X Come In and Look Around \ Open 10 a.m. • 6:30 p.m. Except Sunday fkfc, H's .... Yei^Earik-Y°° KWhtbeir. I'tH here io announce krto cc*cksj-f spof&x&l by CJ.T. Stodextftretectioh Cotimtiftee. leder^ogyBotni, (Mien fine A/rfsComnrtfee^ ewL • •1 *VAvs If fad I em -Hie Subject. „„, job offers and less money. David Anuforp, 27, pharmacy major: "It'sdifficult to say if it'sinflation or the recession that is most troublesome. Everything seems to be rising in price, and there seems to bevery little money to buy things with. As long as there is some money, and people can borrow money, I don't think it will get that serious." Daniel Randy Brown, 19, business prelaw ma­ s jor: "The inflation coming about through the recession has made th$prices out­rageous. I think a depression, with the United Mine Workers' strike, should come with the next five to 10 years, if not "sooner. Every depression we've had has been worse than toe last one." Mike Fleyzor, 26, accounting major: : Anufere "I'll be entering the job market in Governor's Campaign Briscoe Plans By BARBARA WILLIAMS Briscoe accepted illegal con­Texan Staff Writer tributions at an October, 1973, Gov. Dolph Briscoe is fund-raising dinner. scheduled to give a deposition Chairperson of the fund-Thursday in Uvalde inconnec­raising' dinner steering com­tion with Frances mittee, Jess Hay of Dallas, Farenthold's lawsuitcharging said ina depositionabout to be he accepted illegal campaign filed Uiat thex|10,000 in ques­contributions. tion was delivered to him In Attorneys for Farenthold cash on Dec. 27, 1973, by a will question some of the 100 representative of Cloyce Box, people listed as donors of a owner of the OKC Corp., a $10,000 cash contribution to Dallas-based cement com­Briscoe's 1974 gubernatorial pany-^ campaign. Box was allegedly on a 190­Farenthold, who lost to member committee picked by Briscoe in two Democratic Briscoe campaign officials to We.ll, more speo'iiotdti, JP,ek '* •' *"ASK A LAWYER"! 'Austin, OOR^ IIS PRE-EMPTED THIS WEEK i 4t "h'nter Z here been abused ty ***","^cnr - gubernatorial primaries, has raise $10,000 each — $1million filed a.civil suit alleging for the 1973 Briscoe apprecia­ Don't Make A Move Without CsWdq TMENT SERVICE A Free Sendee 24 Horns « Day 472-4162 AAA***************************** betutifK phcer on ne frfh "*> erfher plemel-cm cot^vro. BY | (Eve* if Ido •®Rf so utiyxelf) Sb she»u -fhejoed with ihf bttdj I SENATE HEARINGS ON $ Utf hcfiice me *nd "Uke Mj fxcfvme. for -those ofyou with 4 •ftiisk -far roles 4*d requUrtionts, h&e 4?€ 4 -feu/: {THE ROCKEFELLER! • Coniesf «open-fa CMivevsi'fy s+veteu+s 4*d-Qcutiy 3m NOMINATION « Photos am be bttckltwh'iie or color, ixlOor • Submit €nfn'«r"/o PEWc tfqecine,Tip BoiUity BEGINNING AT •-S&: Po. So* D,A>; 8 P.M. * • -Mte.htessqye it /iwipertW,fat ON I +ecAnf«f will be. jodyecf 4s <*#(!. * «fKLRN-TV * frizes will be <$8D -for -firtft J •for second, "These fhrfos4nd -Hieoue* . tohich receive bunotekle metd**! u/lH be Announced^6cetnber fssu* of V&W-4*d shortly -tiie*teffer appear on exhibit in -the :';'\ • • i,'I;. • •'•' # about six months,and if things keep go­ ing the way they are, it's going to be pretty rough to get a job." Debra Watts, 19, nursing major: "My financial situation is as it was, so I really don't feel threatened, I'm not at a loss for anything more than I was before the recession. In my major I'm almost assured a job, but I probabjy won't be assured a job where I want it. I'll probably have to look a lit­ tle harder than I would have a coupleof years ago." Tom Simmons, 21, finance major: "We'll be in a deeper recessioh until Americans change their consuming habits. As it appears right now, I think this will lead to a depression. I'll be go­ ing to graduate school, and hopefully in Heyior a couple of years the job market will be better." ition on Suit tion dinner-Wednesday from Austin. The Box could not be reached for four are all employes or ex- comment at his home in employes of the OKC Corp. Dallas Wednesday afternoon. Most of the OKC employes Original reports from unhappy about the procedure Briscoe's campaign listed were lower-level personnel. $10,000 in contributions from 100 persons. All the persons Billy V. Geerdes, a listed gave the company's ad­Woodward, Okla., truck dress as their own. driver, and John R. Hoods of Hay filed a supplementary Oklahoma City both said they report with the Texas had quit the company before secretary of state last month the donations were made. saying the money appeared "No way?" Geerdes said not to have come from the 100 when asked if he contributed individuals but from Box. the money. Hay's statement, dated Oct. Richard L. McGood of 29, says Box advanced the Woodward, a truck driver for money from his personal OKC, said he was unaware of funds to the 100, all of whom the contribution in his name are employes or associates of until a secretary in the Dallas th$ firm. headquarters called him.and The supplemental report others in the Woodward office showing Box as the source of last year and told him of it the money was filed. Hays "We were just informed said, because it had not been that $100 was contributed in shown that any of the money our name. None of us was hap­has been repaid to Box. py about it," McGood said. Four persons listed as J. Raymond Needham and donors to the Austin fund-Terence O'Rourke, attorneys raising dinner say theydid not for Farenthold, were un­make the contributions, The available Wednesday for com­Houston Post reported. ment. ENTRY FEES are now baing taken Mon. -Frt front 9 to 5 p.m. tor a,. "EXPOSURE OF BLACK ARTISTS" amateur art show being sponsored by the Afro:American Culture Comm. of the Texas Union to b* held Nov. 18-22. Entry blanks may be picked up at The Texa» Union Program Office. FBS: $1.00 tor four ar­ticles, 25' for others/with a limit of 10 to-be submitted. (only students may parUdpatm) UT Interaction*Committe* presents a Fatuity Fireside with MR. WILLIAM MORSE Instructor In f ranch Thurs., Nov. 14 from 4:00 -6:00 p.m. Party Room, Han>«1 & Gretel 409 West 30th St. -Aeidenic Cender, bm/n i» crossword birffsay-ftie A-C. MeR) ebmeiM**e "for *"<) orki beHi, lei be&re I$0* 4 It's an Investment hint en hou/ "fo iv/tij/ike -fhe De/pltic ^mcte vsecf'fopxnsoof ivitofestfe. Reify? The key -fo 4t>e whofe contest it ~fo (oofc 4t Me. &4rfh. Yoo n*uetnber. m 14'-, ®S-1 im FOR ENTRIES NOV; 25 5:00 P.M; #JfKp m Circulation: 37,500 Readership: 92%i among Students, Faculty and Staff Not api riot draw interest today? Advertise In the Daily Texan and its monthly mngazlmi supple- I M »#tll ment, Pearl. Give us a call, * S FOR ENTRIES ' '||:NOVR-25' ' j^>s; - 471-1865 S 5:00 P.M. i\* ^P:: THE DAILY TEXAN!?W f ~ U'btnbfttU,*,«*.,*, ' — §5 publicationsTexas Student Publications '<*1 ——--* I < ^ ., •' y ri JSSM&. By CHERYL GRESSER get people informed of their Persons wanting to know rights when they get arrested, their rights with respect to the and also how the bond and bail law can how go to a special system works," Elias Mendez law school. of Central Chicano said The Austin Committee for Wednesday. Justice is sponsoring a Com­There have already been munity Law School to help two meetings, Mendez said, educate minorities, students and response has been good. and other interested persons Around 25 persons have regarding what they need to attended each meeting. ^know about their legal rights. The community courses "We're really just trying to were originally a project of University Land Data Accessible to Public 1 The University must grant made for the bulk of the re­access to materialsand leases quested material" remaining concerning University-owned confidential but such a lands outside of the Perma­demonstration could be made nent University Fund, except for some of the requested for information related to material. competitive bids, Atty. Gem "Information pertaining to John Hill said. board authorizedappraisalsof System lawyers requested land, to the price which the the opinion after two aides of board deems reasonable, or to State Rep., Joe Pentony, D-the substance of sealed bids Houston, sought access to the themselves must be kept con­materials. Hill gave an opi­fidential to insure the integri­nion on an identical request by ty of the competitive bid­Pentony' in August ding," the attorney general At that time the University said in August and repeated in did not respond to the Open the current opinion. Records Act request within In giving the legislative the 10days provided in the law aides accessto the lease infor­and created' "an added mation, Hill said, "When in­presumption that theinforma-. formation is adjudged to be tion in question is public." public information, it matters Hill said, "A compelling not who requested access. demonstration has not been Access should be granted to any member of the public the seeking it." Bentwood Tavern the University agreed in June to disclose the leasesand contracts in question but refused access to pertinent correspondence, memoranda fthuffleboard and other instruments. English dam pool SUPCEEKTl 0 Salons BLUE'S NIGHT . 3510 Guadotu OUTHERI FEELING TACO CHEAP TEQUILA FLATS 1 nSSTMM HAPPY HOUR! \707iaeifB I )* A "PITCHER 4-6 MON-FRI 5213 N. LAMAR 3MORENITES OF autmktk BUM Early dining means BIIKKAWHm JUKI BOY BdNMW free wining. BILL HOLY and In Blank's film ­ If you will make your "A Wall Spent Ufo" reservation to dine, 8:30 -$2.00 during ourhappy hour, 5:3Q to 6:3Grpm, youwill receive acomplimentary Fri, A Sat. „BUKKAWHITV glass of fineimported JUKI BOY BONMtt wine to compliment our SAT. MIDNiTE SPECIAL continentalcuisine and recording artUt your good taste . BROADWAY 1ARRY AND FRflNDS JsNkioa Square.KortttyLv*at W.36m. show .•> :j A fantastic.serf $2.00 THE CENTER FOR ASIAN STUDIES H#»ts In Conttrt NIKHIL GHOSH u TRAYA" (Trio) ;Tabla, ':Sltar and Sdrangi arrangement* j featured in-a iecture-demonstrationon Hin­dustani music. ^ v sr: Open to the Public ' . • ' JESTER AUDITORIUM . 4:0d NOVEMBER 14, 1974 "I * „ i \rV Si ! the* National Lawyers Guild, !which has a chapter at the \ University law school, said iVerriell Pratt, a guild !mem|>er. The project began 'two years ago, ran for about a i year and was designed "to teach the law to any group that wanted to know." The project was resumed by the Committee for Justice partially in response'to recent occurences in East Austin. How long it continues will be based on demand and the in­terest generated, she added. Legal information will be provided by several lawyers and a group of interested law students. Pratt, who hasno of­ficial capacity with the pre­sent courses, has taught in past sessions and says she is available now if needed. "A course is offeredin what we call street law," she ex­—Photo by Jim Dochon plained; "Legal-people inform other people of what they can Patio Pickin' be arrested for,how long they Austin guitarist Kurt Van Sickle entertain! an ap­can be held without formal preciative crowd of students from the Academic charges and also prepare Center terrace Wednesday. Sponsored by the Union them for how they'll be Musical Events Committee, nis finger-picking style treated irrespective of what embraced the music of Leo Kottke and Manee the law says." Upscomb as well as originals. There's often a difference between what the law says and what really happens. ADULT MOVIES Pratt said. BUFFALO RATED X Persons attending the Not tvitabU for ywngp*n«m courses also are encouraged GAP Mutt bm It yn. to to discuss their own ex­Open 10:00 a.m. to 2:00 a.m. periences, she added. "We're presents Sun. 12 noon • 8 p.m. alerting people of how to Adult Bookstore assert their rights." 25' Arcade The next classesof the Com- EASY 2 Adult Shows W««ldymunity Law School are Call for Titles 477-0291 scheduled for 7:30 p.m. Tues­$1 OFF with this ad SfREET or Student ID day, at Palm Elementary 521 East Sixth School. • bsery Nqhf m m V r\es*ouranr • V 6Dot mS Food served 11:30 a.m, to 10:30 p.m. 505 NECHES Bar open 11:30 a.m., Monday -Friday ^ Blk W. of Red River Open 4:00 p.m., Saturday & Sunday TONIGHT THRU SAT. ENTERTAINMENT Thursday, Friday, & Saturday CEDAR STEAM MEAT FROST 35 mp9,> 4 tPMd. lutt good 47&4!lf arttr 5. •iriOPELGT. 4speed, 8track*m/ 16.900 milts. 12)50. 471-5717 after L 5ANSUI 7000 receiver 70/70 rmi. Ve#& powerful] Alto 100 watt tpMkert. SUf T«k« AH. 476.7902. ^ i-I vpool/TV t ??ie .NlTOWERS 5996 fmi and ins fhe baby Rolls sse 'orniihsd HMwnd.dr Irttffevt could ^tT»ent» stove P> M. TV cabl Mil «A'iy.T 454-1 ..worth, iiar.att. BLACKSTON piidtor-aiat SM.So/jnonth v:>U Fret c« P» Mv;!c, 16? »io Red RtwV. 4 . Typewriter, 1200 -FRBTTfcP ln< h acdlv j*sad^never A Paragon Prope*1 reasonable t*. DULC,«f* ducovM ASK-T M»TW MU»TC.| OUR ^ 2tmm f.2coated tent. One year.V I 'ye Got Mint sail lor S!S0. 47l-,fe e wwr treated at-ea/f j* conTmunlty convenient^ pping an^UDvenlently $169 47 HERE'S HOW YOU r CAN WIN THE SPECIAL! . Just come-by or call the fSP office and plac® your classified adl That's itl We do •" the rest —-randomly, we select an ad each ilay to be featured. I'o-v ' -' It's $90.00 wisrth of free adVertislnig. Give us d eal , 471-5244 5th and Whitis s're behina the biy rusty bldg: Prosecutor Predicts Closer Film Reviews By PAM McMICHAEL Norman Wells of Houston, owner of My-O-My ^The decision to halt prosecution of the Club and the Zipper Lounge, and Joseph movie "Deep Throat" will lead to more in­Lloyd Smith of Austin, former manager of vestigation and cooperation between Austin the club police and the county attorney's office, an In reference to halting prosecution of the assistant county attorney said Wednesday. film. Lowe said he doesn't believe there will "In the future we will review the films be any conviction. more closely before the police file the actual We've seen what the community stan­charge," John Wisser. a prosecutor forCoun­dards are with Deep Throat.' and they don't ty Atty. Ned Granger, said. lead to a conviction.' he said. He said that in the past the county at­Lowe said no conclusion can be drawn on torney's office has not been involved until future films based on Granger's decision not after the arrest. to prosecute "Deep Throat ' Obscenity prosecution of "Deep Throat'' Despite dismissal of criminal charges. was halted after juries in two trials could not "Deep Throat' is banned here because of reach a verdict. The second Travis County civil action in district court by Granger trial in County Court at-Law No. 1 in six The film was ruled obscene July 1 by Judge months ended in a hung jury Nov. 8. Tom Blackwell of 167th District Court He "We decided to halt the prosecution, further prohibited screening of it. because it wasn't worth our time," Wisser Smith plans to file a motion to dissolve the said. "After listening to statements jurors ruling on Thursday or Friday. had made, we believed further prosecution "I will try to handle this out of court if wouldn't do any good." possible." he said Wisser doesn't believe that the decision Wisser said "Deep Throat" probably will will open the door for other controversial be back in Austin, but not until December films to be shown in Austin. Smith said his client mentioned reopening "We didn't dismiss any other cases," he the My-O-My Club on Burnet Road if he had said. "We only asked the police toconfer with won an acquittal, showing movies like it had us in the future." in the past. He said the club is for sale at this "The Devil in Miss Jones," confiscated by time. Austin Police July 5, was scheduled to be Defense and prosecuting attorneysalso are tried Nov. 25, but Wisser said this will be awaiting results of a hearing Friday in postponed until after Thanksgiving. Houston where three federal judges are Hugh Lowe and Terral Smith were at­scheduled to discuss the state's obscenity torneys for "Deep Throat" defendants J. statutes. I nikon presents IMPRESSIONS OF SPAIN&PORTUGAL — Academic Center Auditorium November 18, 1974 7:00 pm Free Admission Presented by: Texas Union Fine Arts Committee starring DELORES TAYLOR and TOM LAUGHLIN PG Mft&TAlGU1DANG SUGGESTED­ Sound track album available on ABC records PREMIERE ENGAGEMENT FEATURES AQUARIUS IV 1:504^0-8:30 FEATURES 5:45-9:00 JiitBAMOUNT CINEMA II (San Marcos) ; NOW SHOWING ? (Pass Ust Suspended^ A Check Theatres for Show Times (No Discount Tickets) Thursday*J^ovfeTOber14, .1974THE DAILY TEXAN Page l3 ?4 m mm mis M Ink «xau£*sscrei:iu« «*?>*•» "?•" Gas, Electric Rates T6 JRise Vacuum-Go-Rounil A psychpanalyst I'm not: But I still should Lo-Vaca Adjustment Charges Fed to Consumers have seen by her maimer that it justwouldn't By SYLVIA TEAGUE fuel adjustment charge and the price the company paid in estimated the price-would be, alternative to natural gas work. .• :• ' • . if you thought the energy increased usage because of October. between $1.40 and $1.45 orte because th^y cost less. She peeked from the darkness through a bill crisis was no longer with us cold weather. The city averages the in­year from now. Hanccck es­Nuclear fuel isabout one-fifth slight'crevice bridged by a chain. A and were expecting prices to THE COMPANY figured crease over a six-month timated $1.50. the cost of gas. Pekingese dog feigned hysteria at the bottom starjtodrop, here's news: gas the total bill for Austin in period, so the customer is Hancock.said residential Southern Union is currently of the door, its pug hose barely fitting the gap and electric bills are going to dollars and divided by the charged one-sixth the amount consumers are now paying 75 seeking a 13.73 percent rate allowed by its owner. gorlond be higher. number of consumers to get to be passed for six months. percent more thanin 1972,and increase from the Railroad "Yes?" she asked in a drawn-out tone Both Southern Union Gas the average cost for gasin the The city fuel adjustment all-electric and industrial Commission. A hearing on. resembling a musical scale. Co. and the Cuy Electric cjlty. This average of $6 would charge is currently 1.26 cents users are paying 100 percent that matter is set forTuesday. "Hello, Ma'am!"Ispewed, confidentof the shop. I showed her how easily the suction^ Department are paying in­increase to about $20 in per kilowatt hour, in addition more. Brown said the company forthcoming delivery I'd practiced the night device rolled over the shag carpet, "getting creased costs for natural gas December, company officials to the regular base rateprice. HE SUGGESTED theuse of was just passing thegas along before. "I'm an impoverished student at the deep into the grain to remove that nasty dirt 'from Lo-Vaca Gathering Co., said. LO-VACA HAS increased its coal and nuclear fuel as an and not making any profit University trying to work my way through underneath the surface." and these costs will be passed According to the contract prices almost SO percent, school. You're my first customer, and I need She watched intensely for a few minutes on to the customer as a fuel with the city. Southern Union from 80 cents per thousand desperately to sell yoit oneof these absolutely before interrupting my spiel. adjustment charge. must wait two months before cubic feet in September to Griffiths To Talk wonderful for the price-Magneatoengulfer -"You should try using it on your hair," she Southern Union predicts the increase is passed on. $1.19 in October. vacuum cleaners. A sale tp you would give said. bills will be aboutthree times Therefore the increase m R.L. Hancock, city utility me enoughconfidence and money tocontinue I looked up without the least bit of surprise. higher, reflecting both the ^December bills will reflect director, said information my pursuit of a degree." Out of breath, I That the whole interchange should be takingreceived fromLo-Vaca had in­paused for her response, trying to look as place at all startled me enough. On 'Older Citizens' The sponsor of theTEqual Thompson Conference Center dicated there would be a needy as possible. . "On my hair?" Rights Amendment, U.S. Rep. 2.102. gradual increase in price over I had encouraged myself before ap-"Sure," shesaid. 'Anything would helpget Martha Griffiths, D-Mich., She also will speak at1:05 the next 12 months. "proacfiingTRe door By thinking that funnier" rid of that drab appearance it has now."-— will make two appearances p.m. in the East Campus Kenneth Brown, office sights than people running around with "Drab appearance?" I asked, turning off Friday at the University. Library Lecture Hall of Sid manager for Southern Union, vacuum cleaners were common in the sub-~ the Magneatoengulfer. / Griffiths will speak at 9:30 Richardson Hall. 100% urbs. Nevertheless, I felt-, like a combat "Definitely. I happen to be a widow rfho Hamburgers a.m. to studentsat theLyndon Her address, entitled soldier among .the Jrlmmed lawns and supports her two children by selling products Barnes Johnson School of "Legislation and a Better Life shurbbery, my "attachment carrier" looking for personal grooming. My Wonder-Lift Public Affairs-in Joe C. for Older Citizens;" will be like a grenade belt, my "easy touch exten­Shampoo would do your hair, well, absolutepresented day­ mustard as part of a sion" like a rifle, and the thick body of the wonders." long,wortcshop on "The Older Which machine like whatever else combat soldiers Now, ordinarily I would pay no attention to Texan and Governmental lettvct use in the demolition derby. Whistling the such an obviouslyamateurish approach.I had- Agencies," co-sponsored by Marine Corps theme came naturally. < noticed that verymflrning, tliough, that! was Bacardi MARTI'S the Research UtiiirationEto­ . She didn't say anything but left the door running low on my old nfand of shampoo, so Iject of the Governor's Com­ itelfan £«*tparajtt cracked. I began my auxiliary offensive. didn't object when she. went for a sample, ' mittee on Aging artd the LBJ for cola? "Though I appear decently dressed, these leaving me alone with a growling Sniffy. HOME MADE School of Public Affairs. 3 { ENFIELD-LAMAR FLORISTS I SpkMNM •# At MM are actually the only clothes that I own. My And I really considered it kind of a lucky She introduced the Equal >-! 1 (I2th & Lamar-Enfield -I LASAGNA Rights Amendment in 1971. It family is a commonwealth but considers me bargain when I left the residence with sham­:^| • SUPER PRE-HOUDAY SALE • >1. Bacardi dark SPAGHETTI guarantees that equality uncommon. I'm not smart enough for the poo and vacuum cleaner in tow. Still, though 3 •• Dried and Fall Arrangements 50% off 5 underplayed SCILLIAN PIE the law shall not be abridged "rum's smoolh. of scholarships, but posses? fine qualities such not a diviner, either, Icould at leastsee Ihad as the ability to juggle coke bottles." missed ordained I took I • Christmas Arrangements 25% off I flavor is perfect ANTIPASTO on account of sex. my calling. the * Gift4 withcola or The proposed amendment At this, miraculously, the chain slipped vacuum cleaner back to the shop and |5 20% off| for use like MANICOTTI AUSTttGOHY from its holder, and the door opened, expos­apologized "for my insufficiency with your whiskeyon (he was passed in November, ing a room lit only by the television set tuned rocks, in high­TRUE PIZZA Magnoeater," accepting derogation to the |J 10% off December Weddings with this coupon I 1971. by the House and in balls, Sours. to a game show. SALADS effect that the ' real world" was too tough for |-(Book Early) .. m.. Manhattans. March, 1972, by the Senate. AIm» Serving The woman-probably-had a very nice -me. Perhaps, I decided later, it's only IMTQKTB>WNBA BOSS Five more states must ratify too |r | appearanee. Curlers in her hair and white '•'real." 477-1153 the amendment before it can MARTI'S ITALIAN stuff packed on her face detracted from that Misrepresentation of alleged occurrences BACARDI _rum. tion. Approval of three-beauty, however. will never appear in this column without RESTAURANT become part of the Constitu­ m W. 23rd 476-1MC The mixableone. After hooking up some attachments and prior knowledge of the author, who hopes by fourths of the state NEXT TO THE BUCKET plugging in the machine, I immediately graduation to develop enough buffoonery for launched into the pitch they taught me at the work with Pentagon public relations. legislatures (38) is required for ratification. CrwdM's caatravcrsMl NELSON'S Austinites Wreck Plane; bestseHmg memoir... GIFTS wftfc 300 rare 441} S*. CMtgnu "Should We Emasculate Marijuana Confiscated OiMtrafiMS PImm: 44441)4 ­Two Austin men were in the East Side Drive, were treated • ZUNI AND NAVAHO Colorado County jail Wednes-. for minor injuries and jailed. INDIAN JEWELRY the Presidency?" ­ day chargedTViUrpossession--Qond-was $etat_$75,000 each, by Groucho Marx • MEXICAN of marijuana following the A1 Behrens, chief dispatcher and Richard J.Anobile IMPORTS crash of their rented airplane for the- Colorado County Of(N IP OJl I* ft p.m. Movie buff; rejoice! Only $5.95 for near Columbus west of Sheriff's Department, said. •"GIFTS THAT INCREASE this controveisal,uncensored, beguil- Public Lecture IN VALUE" Houston Tuesday night. No marijuana was found in ii% and absolutely authentic story of the irrepressible llan Sim. Told by Stephen Bodine Christian, the plane, but about 500 the master himself., two of his broth­CLOSED MONDAY 25, of 7101 Guadalupe St., and pounds was confiscated from er, and those who knew and worked • David Phillip Ischy.20, of 2112 a field in the vicinity. with the fabled,four. 300 splen r-I * • '• . . Songs, Guitar, & Lute ^ «—*• * • ~~ I iVf-NOVI4 I Y < TuesdaysNovember 26 ­ Friday, Nov. 15, & HoggAnditofhim,8:00P.MV& t- r&tt--.4 W >•, Municipal Auditorium, 8 PM ^ , 15-26,/Hogg BoxOfRce/lO'6 weekdays, ife'SpSS?1-00 & $2.00 with Optional Services FeeS^ n^erDrawing. Nov. 6-15, Hogg Box Office, 10-6 weekdaysGeneralSafcs:.N0v. 2^26/$3.00 -^General Sales: $4 & $5, Nov. 13-1S Cchc ciule: Jester. Kinsolving. Co-op 7:u077 'JNO cameras or tape recorders allov. j ——-N ID'S must be presented at door.isV4j5&&i ivV-y m-&kge'!4^hurs^a^^overn^r U, 1974 THE DAIiY TEXAN mkmm ""• V-'U4'^^>-v-"V-r-:v.-.«-.7.y,v: •• •..• : .Harry and Ton to;! * directed by Panl Mazursky; written by Paul Maxurskyand Josh Greenfield; starring Art.Carney; at the village Cinema IV. 5 By PAUL BEUTEL Texan Staff Writer "I know life Is confusing," Harry Coombes tells his son Bert at one point in "Harry and Tonto." "We're just try­ing to get on with it — that's all." Paul Mazursky's.new movie about the wits, wisdom arid; individuality " necessary for living is the mosf mov­ing, often beautiful movieto be seenso far thisyear. It'salso awarmly human comedy, conceivedwith the sharpestof insightsand presented with a stylethat is both subtle and deeply penetrating. Harry (Art Carney) is a 70ish widower-who undertakes a crosscoun­try venture with his spiritual colleague and confidant, an 11-year-old caJLnam*-. • —1—• . • • • • ed Tonto. Having just been evicted from his condemned New York apart­ment^ Harry: .visits his three, con­veijlently placed offspring: Bert (Phil Bruns), a successful New York subur­banite who is guilt-ridden with' respon­sibility to Harry; Shirley (Ellen Burstyn) a tough, bitchy survivor of four disastrous marriages, who runs a Chicago bookstore; and Eddie (Larry Hagman), a Los Angeles psuedo­playboy neurotically collapsing from ^ihess aiid marital failures. I USE THE term "conveniently placed" for the locations of these characters are a clever plot device which allows Mazursky briefly but effectively to cover the big three U.S. cities, plus numerous habitations and lifestyles in between. . With his New York home gone forever, Harry finds he must ex­ perience the rest of life to put down new roots. His open-mindedness and perception aid him immeasurably. We learn he was a teacher before retiring, and we suspect he must have been a good one. A toughness in spirit and a cat-like pride in independence help Harry to rise beyond his memories and make his way into the future. Mazursky and co-writer Josh Green­field have given themselves a virtually unlimited base in which to work, and indeed they manage to have Harry en­counter as much a sociological cross-• section of the country as a geographic one. Such is the basis for numerous, gent­ly satiric barbs, which Mazursky is a_ master at conveying. Elderly New Yorkers greet each other with "Did you see 'Ironside' last night? Some show!" Harry asks a newsstand vendor who the vice-president is for that week and the man. replies, "Who cares?" Arrested for drunkeniy urinating out­side a Las Vegas casino, Harry is plac­ed in a jail cell with, an old Indian (Chief Dan George), being held for practicing medicine without a license. "ESSENTIALLY.though, Mazursky is concerned with the themes of love, death and peace of mind which sur­round Harry. Each theme is carefully balanced in terms of memory and future expectations. Physical love is initially a thing which old men joke about on park benches, but Harry's ego isgiven an un­expected boost when he is seduced by a Las Vegas hooker. Spiritual love results from an understanding compas­sion which transcends any age barriers, as Harry demonstrates in his acceptance of his zen Buddhist grand->-™ — r— son or of a 16-year-old runaway who temporarily becomes his traveling companion. Death and suffering are an ever-present threat for a man of Harry's age. "The strangest thing about remembering your past is that all your friends are dead," he says. In the film's most poignant scene, Harry goes to an old-age home to visit his first love, Jesse (wonderfully played by Geraldine Fitzgerald). She has become feeble, and her memory of Harry is unsure. As they dance together slowly, Harry reaches the tur­ning point from a world of memories to one of a new life. The Jesse he loved is gone; the past is gone. Time to move on. Mazursky s ideas reinforce each other to tell us thatwisdom isa product of"• the•>-yearsv a i O ubutv spiritual securityJJ com­ "J uO es from both an acceptance of the pre­sent and independence. "HARRY AND Tonto" is an in­tricately complex movie in terms of theme and character, but the pieces fall perfectly into place. I suspect anyone who sees it will want to see it again, and there aren't many movies around which can provide that stimulus. Art Carney is superb — there's no other adjective for it. Having seen him only as Ed Norton on television's "The Honeymooners," I never would have guessed him capable of the depth of feeling he brings to the role of Harry, whether he is dryly tossing off a bit of sarcasm or quietly controlling his grief over the death of an old friend. Numerous reviewers have been touting his performance as Oscar material for next spring;he's certainly got my vote. |Indian Trio To Play] Russian MusicalCopies 'Superstar' Hie Nikhil Ghosh Troupe, a TheNikhilGhoshTroupe, atmosphere where top- „ncrnm „,Dt* d widely acclaimed trio of In­ranking musicians and MOSCOW (UPI) -Recor States, the musical is a stage a demonstration against Two "television an­ dian musicians, will perform musical :scholars were a dings of "Jesus Christ catalogue of cliches about the Pentagon. nouncers" act as narrators, at 3:30 p.m. Thursday at Superstar" fetch the ruble American life. regular partof their dailylife. The authors convey a hard­whose "newscasts" are in­ Jester Center Auditorium. equivalent of.$130 on theHack It includes a sop to detente Nayan plays the sltar, and line impression of the United terrupted with digs at Sponsored by the University Dhruba plays the sarangi. market here. by suggesting that some States — replete with Cosa American advertisingCenter for Asian Studies, the Together with their father, But rock fans can bear the members of Congress and of Nostra bodyguards, FBI techniques.tjrlo, comprised of Nikhil they represent the primeval music free when they see a the Administration oppose the agents in porkpie hats, ppwer-All this is a novelty to the Ghosh and his two sons, will duality of Tala and Raga, the, new propaganda musical here arms race. hungry generals and sadistic Soviet stage, even if the present a lecture demonstra­twin focal concepts of rhythm called "Rock and Roll at The play is preWatergate.It police. . propaganda line is not. tion on aspects of the Hin­and melody of Indian music. Dawn." The musical, written is rooted in the time of Viet­dustani musical heritage. The lecture-concert is open to by two editors of the Com­nam protest. It ends with the Nikhil, who plays the tabla, the public free of charge; munist Party newspaper shooting by soldiers of the is famousas a performing ar­Pravda, relies heavily on the heroine in an incident evident­tist as well as a composer and I The trio alsowill present an Superstar music. Thismay, in ly modeled on the Kent State Chamber part, account for its populari­ educator.. He has accom­informal concert at 8 p.m. killings in Ohio. panied all the great Indian Thursday in the Education ty at theGogol Theater where Much of the action isset ina Music musical masters of bis time Annex Auditorium (San Jacin­speakeasy called the Lotue it recently had its Moscow and is himself a distinguished to Boulevard and20th Street). premier. Club, run by a maoist agent in Celebration soloist. The evening performance will Although one of the authors, league with Pentagon -Bom into a family withfour be sponsored by the India Vadim Nekrasov, used to be a generals. generations of mirsical correspondent in New York The Chinese dispenses Association and the Asian, _G R E T A heritage, brothers Nayan and Music Society. A $1 donation and the other, Tomas cynicism, little red books and Dhruba were brought up in an is requested. Kolesnichenko, has traveled heroin. Finally, he betrays Americanfrequently in the United pl^ns of dissident youths to GAIWO 4­ FILM F E 5 TIVA L Armadillo World Headquarters Brass Quintet Urarsday / November 21 Tonight WW Auditorium / 8:00 PM Fancy Space "Describe the ideal in brass playing and ANNA KARENINA Preterit* Jazz on the Patio you're talking about the kind of sound and • Tomorrow ~ 47 T1M1S ITS OWN (1935) ensemble produced. . .by the American Michael Murphy Brass Quintet . . ,Su Fnuwbeo IHb wlm i NOW SERVING fOOD FROM OUR OWN Tonight $1.00 UT Students, For infor call477-0357 ISMlfS MTCHUt .50 with Optional Services Fee 7 and 9 p.m. Faculty, Staff 240S-A NUECES -2 Nln W«*» of Drag November 12-21 Batts Auditorium $150 Members Hogg Box Office / 10-6 weekdavs a; Sponsored by The Cultural Entertainment Committee of the Texas Union Mmdoy (t ima i ,& The Department of Music Theatre Committee Ufa night -no for itoo aum 75' tor high cvrat.Mm.-s** VAUNTMI \ UnMeort#d lodt*^'T HAPPY HOUR """. no covw and fs Show and Done* t 2 fin highball* ALL NITE LONG Happy Hr fe*: Mon.-Thun. LIVE ENTERTAINMENT FEATURING Mon.-Fri 4:00-6:45 Happy Ht. Mon.-Frt, 2 for 1 iz, ' 5:30 -7:30 ..... 2fo'1 Mm THE BUCKET 23rd and Pearl ^ .4.: , Ntxt Door to .Marti's Italian Restaurant -3Hr*. Free Parking 727 W. 23rd 476-0015 Mb29 W Bun Whit. introduces 3U ...llli v ' Saturdays, too. And if that'snot enough, bank all daySaturday "til 10 p.m.Four more windows aday,and eighteenmore hours a week than we hadbefore. f| Some Great Outdoors! Open'tillOp.mr We haven't skimped pn thehourseither.Ten p.m iswhen ouroutdoors closerDrive-in banking Nin» to1 beexact. will nowbe muchfaster THE CULTURAL B4TERTAINMENT COMMITTEE Ouroutdoorhanking and easier.You oandriven facilities have expanded thru ourbackyard off OF THE TEXAS UNION to sixdrive-thruwindbws 19th Street>orwalk-up in, plusthrde walk-ups. our frontyaird onthe • presents , ­ That tPa lotmore elbow drag, doyour budintiss i! -V room. andwhi&on, i v < t* •* j fit* \ »"i ^ -r ""* & MESSINA jliO } i I Theiitliebank foryour big ideas. Sunday/D«qamt>«ri/CHy^olissunr/7^0 pm fssmfr­ ~ 1^®* Sales:$2 with Optional S^rvricegSFeo/ Nov. 14-Dec.1 M- v i-' Afe • ft -tvV J. _ *- ^ \ • Hogg Box Office/10-6 weekdays ' / < -"A \ General Admission: $5/Nov. 26-27 * , '•* \ s \ ! ':^ ^Festival Seating: firing Blanket * ., > ~ v. ^ ID'Sn\usf be presented at door " No cameras or tape recorders allowed^, ^ Bus schedule: Jester, Iflnsolvlng. C<^op/6:30-7 pm­ 4 4 if - - 1 i" 1 ' 1 "? ;":f \ , rl * f L i M TJjiorsday, November DAILY TEXAN Page !5 H a a o UM-v.-i.'V.:1 'j n =—r*1 — W-— > /^T .J * / ' ' i ' > "T* r Harris: ^Children's Theater Maturing' By BETTY HOLMES awards and made the author "The problem wasn't whoto and figures of his life. Jen­remember back that far. But a moral and will transcend Texan Staff Writer America's most produced put in, but who to leave out," nings, an associate professor adults all realize that what is boundaries of .language; -Aurand Harris writes plays children's theater playwright. comments Harris. "A Yankee of drama, spent two years in . meaningful, funny and accep­ background, age $nd in-­ for children and obviously en-His "Androcles and theLion," Doodle is anyone who has New York and returned this the grown-up often table to terests. joys his work.—By-.-t.he t "Rags to Riches," and helped make and shape fall to the University bringing strikes a child quite different-THE CHILD'S^attention worldwide popularity of his "Pinocchio and the Indians" America." Harris along to help with ly- span for theater runs an hourproductions, so do children of have already been successful­ After 1927, America "Yankee Doodle's" preview. • Harris believes there are to an hour and a half, e$-' all agesand backgrounds who ly produced at the University"; progressed too fast and toofar Talking about Children's ' ' important qualities in four timates Harris, but he adds, come to see them. In addition, several of his for his play to keep up with the theater, Harris admits that it children's theater. First, the have "You can a-15-minute Hams is m Austin for the works have been translated many Yankee Doodles being is maturing, but he resents child must see it clearly. The play and have it dull." WliSil sMBsmrn-m preview of his newest play, into foreign languages. born, so Charles Lindbergh people who write "down" to action and dialogue must be the audience is bored an4'"Yankee Doodle.' being "I'm curious to see how the marks the end of the play. children, who make plays simple and direct Second, the fidgety, the blame belongs to SsSSM presented by the University lion roars," says Harris, The women in the cast kept "campy" just to keep the child must hear it Third, the the writers, directors and ac­Department of Drama. He has referring to the Hebrew requesting more parts, and children's attention with color child must relate to it tors, not to the children. spent this week working with translation of; "Androcles and Hmt|s was faced with a se-and motion. emotionally. That's what "Playwriting is marvelouseveryone involved in the the Lion." cb<4 • "problem. He realized "I write a play,that pleases theater is all about — it must because you act it in you? production, rewriting and "You either have a feel for histjjry had a bad habit of ig­me ... in context, in dlalqgue, entertain. And, finally, the mind — you direct it... When, adapting the play. When all children or you don't," com­noring the female when it in scenes... It neveroccurs to child must understand the you get through, you're notthose people arc happy with ments Harrison-on 4»is came to recording and honor­mC40M._J»wi RB3UCED PRICES TIL 5:15 the LBJ Auditorium. Flame" by Stanley Leonard, jected. Columbia told him to It's explained that each'piece Under the direction of Ann "Obelisk" by David Cope, and EXCLUSIVE LIMITEDENGAGEMENT ITONIGHT try once again, a company of clothing represents a year Bunyan, the 34-member "Gainsborough" by Thomassource revealed, but the se­in American history. When women's group will perform Gauger. cond mix wasn't much better. the clown gets down to his r WINNER 7ACADEMY AWARDS "Piping Down the Valleys" by The combined groups will bright red underwear. ,the i . w , . .. Karl Korte, Magnificat in the close the program with J " Presents" • ' Peters loved it, however, yearis 1927,and he is told Mr-Fourth Modeby Paiestrina. "African Welcome Piece" byBEST PICTURE/ BEST DIRECTOR • The famous Howard Hawks come upset about the cover of tain," jokesHarris. "Ten to20 Barber, "Set Me As a Seal" STATE3 D«IVt4WnC I WAR BRIDE (1949) Streisand's "Butterfly" years ago I -couldn't put that by JohaBodbim Kennedy, and ROBERT SHAW album which depictsa fly on a scetie in a play... That's what "Fancie" by Benjamin Sliou rows USAj Directed by Howard Hawks cube 61butter. Columbia call­children's theater needs — Britten. njiBt AGKMGeROTHU-F»M \ • With Cary Grant and Ann Sheridan ed it "just tacky." .more-innovation"-7';V'c<•: • The instrumental ensem­ "THE STING" TRANS TEXAS THEATtiwt Sp«iall • sle*B in accordance with the perforations of IBM men-IN 70MM and STOtCOmOMC SOUND Mm.$1.50 All TImM (Man-Thun). o^« t QKtptMMM-Wim -465033 • talities."—Andrew Sarris rM.«d»OnV . •200111 OH* STARTS mo*! •JESTER AUDITORIUM $1 7 & » P.M. I 1 a space odyssey WMt . THE STOKY OF A RODEO COWBOY'S TKOUBUS nrarnai • tmymSKmmm-­ a dusteatbr#Mell flght&r, Dynartte dude ' TO Ji« 0»wg» S»9^ |( Sliov\ iownUSA TEXAS THEATRE 11 _ I ' GUU STATO DWVE4M­ 21»l & Guodolup. SKend Uv»l Oobl« Mall 477-1334 I Souihsidi -6 p.m. y 4V KIRMITSCHAFBRt, ffcmpm VTIO1. ImWmw.BK/' SCRjEEN 1 ONE WEEK ONLY ~w , 3 nuTuifs m xONLY -2i00- , CHUHONMHTON •oxomci or«N6,3o Stompin.. STARTS TODAY! •*AV ^>30-. PARDON MY SHOW irAOTT.BiO' : . M *iM ft IOiIO -SiOO­ -6i30­ BLOOPER -*.00- li/l M ••>« pMY "hJO-• OF THE NORTH WWOTMtKB IKMKiO mco «CHWCOtOR«. ' TlttPJl : "m»fjt WilllfB* OE'IUXE*" MOM. mu SAT. MOM. THRU SAT. HUS CO-MT »IJO­ BARGAIN Tit« rjM. MATIMHf AND HATUXES PASSIS SUSHNDBD -iioo-: RATURCS IMPULSE mmpmrimmtuasMtt -J.-40--IjSO-­ -4:35­ •5:10­ WILUAMSHATNER RUTH ROMAN Biflfjack -6:10- •-R:30­ H«u-aidJob'8cwwn*ou>wmw : YouMI FEEL it: as well as see it! TECHNC010R '• FIATUKS • 1 1i45 •« a,00', 6)30 t:15 IOIOO NatwrM •1t00 3t40 4t3S MO 7iS0 9>n I 3:30 $125 8: •TriSr ..and futtfor the FUN of --V-,-i • — I |iili 1 -*1 Wjft DllWjfa |SCREEN 2 COLUMBIA FILM FEST tntures TODAY THtU CONTINUES TUiSOAY " aroun'witii.. 8S*>j .Qon'\n«ss AnEvent. . ffftJfWSM. T "Im" IM MI ItJt HI Mt p.at C0L0Kt|fHn«Mk4 MMrmi«TtgNM.ncMi •r \ mk 'vf t^?l'^ym/RMDYQtJAID^lrrO^JAMES;^ I He's a •CAROL KANE/io->w»R0BEOTT0WNEi*,M50AFinYU>GNIC8AN i lv\NB/to~>«f»ROBERTTOWNE'*,SS5OAfWYUPOWCfiANi skip tracer -•»JpHNNYMANOEL-~.«>.QEBALOAynES'»«».»HALA8H0V -| k thelast of "I' •«»•«»» mmuii FBOM COLUMBIA7PICTUftB.' |HJ-X1T=.T thebounty a " •<*-J A01VISION OFCOLUMBIA PICTURESINDUSTRIES. IN'I hunters.v-•f 2:00 -| N v^125 |7;I,4:00, V i START 1 TOMORROW , imMm msSmU David Hemmings-Joanna Pettet VARSITY L HMtOO .. 3<10 4:156:00 r£i4i " THLM^house UUMPOII ' 5) C«istrlianc.nfor , [LAW AND , IDWORDKII -n 1 akoi \n C-, 12 MIDNIGHT III!' HOItl.l) will! w hwv inu. ... :"'i vagr-« r...^ ^ •». •'%.' •".-.•AScir*". -"vUs'"-. ' v •'•ara^r^ '^^i-''»:•iSssfe*1'HSfc£\iv 1«.•' Book Satirizes 'Society' "The Glory of the Hummingbird;" by only one he hurts is himself, while What Peter De Vries; Little, Brown; 276 pages; makes the book seriously funny is that $7.95; copy courtesy of the University Co-Tickler is smarter than everyone else, a De "Guys and, Dolls;" book is particularly humorous as Peck" number is a strong Op. Vries portrait of the intellectual as a young by Jo Swerllng and Abe By MIKE SPIES fraud. Kelly playsSister Sarah under point of'the play with the girls Burrows; music and lyrics Texan Staff Writer This is a theme also explored in De Vries' the influence of a Jfew too bmping and griding terrifical­ iby FranLLoesser; many Bacardi milkshakes. ly-... Peter De Vries is one of the few American short novel 'The Cat's Pajaipas,'although the directed by Ken Johnson; Kelly seems a natural singer One in writers who works at-being funny. For that false move ending in this new book is not nearly soghast­ the choreographed by Ted and actress. • matter, he is almost singlehandedly keeping ly as the image of a man who gets his head otherwise inventive Priour; at Center Stage. Judy Stephens is the perfect choreography is an apparent alive the American tradition of the comic stuck in a two-way dog door and freezes to novelist, which goes back through Benchlev. However. De Vries reserves true com­ By BETTV HOLMES image of Adelaide right down direct rip-off in "Take Back death Texan Stiaff Writer to her red, satin peddle Your Mink"from Bob Fosse's Lardner and Twaih. ic absurdity for his characters' use of -Center Stage's productionof pushers. Her wide-eyed por­"Mein Herr" staging in In the field of the comic piece, De Vries has language. Tickler's mother (who speaks of "Guys and Dolls" is a super trayal of the character oc­"CabareC"~With the Hot Box cvompetition from Woody Allen and more in­"airo-disiacs" i the title character in "Mrs. show. For a community casionally reminded me of a girls dancing around and lean­frequently S.J. Perelman, who goes back to Wallop" and the mother-in-law from theater boasting 'amateur young Edith Bunker.Stephens ing back on their chairs with the wonderful era of James Thurber, Dorothy "Forever Panting" all exhibit a dazzling talent, Center Stage is sur­was a good pick for the part, one leg in the air, the associa­Parker, E.B. White and Robert Benchley. array ol modern malapropisms, though prisingly professional. language also flounders in the hands of those but my greatest disappoint­ tion is unavoidable. THESE WRITERS,like De Vries, marked who ought to know better. was ' off a segment of American life early in their ' The musical coitiedy is bas­ ment her interpretation The men of the production A De VRIES hero usually has a pedantic ed on Damon Runyon's tale of of "Adelaide's Lament." Cer­do. their best to bring their careers and continued to worry it for the rest tainly Adelaide's big spot in parts off, next the of their lives, leaving themselves open to be­fear of poor grammar and media cant; it's no but toBroadway: its viceand itsvir­ coincidence that the worst offender in "The the show, the song seems too shinging characterizations of ing called second-rate. It's surprising howtue. The plot, briefly, centers Glory of the Hummingbird" is Tickler's around agambler's attempt to played-down and does not live the dolls, they fall a little much of their stuff holds up, and it is to this up to its potential as a show—-short. The best male number tradition that De Vries belongs. father-in-law. an attempted politician. In the "cwTupt^-a-missionaryvand a stealer."""Adelaide's Second is "Fugue for Tinhorns," a uiitmate comment on political speeches. . show girl's struggle to marry His subjects are always middle-class from Tickler sleepwalks out of a political address Lament," however, is quite musical trio at the opening ofher fianceo7 lTyears, another their heads to the tips of their well-shined by his father-in-law. ruining his campaign, improved and matches the show. gambler. A bet and a floating Stephens' generally excellent * —Ttxori Staff Photo by Mlko Smtth shoes: the hero of "The Glory of .the Hum­not without justification considering the JIM McNABB as Sky crap game link everything mingbird" is noexception. He is Jim Tickler speech together. performance. Masterson and John Bernar-Kelly (I) and McNabb in 'Gu$s and Dolls' a smalltown Indiana boy who becomes an un­Although De Vries stays carefully on theENOUGH NICE things doni as Nathan Detroit have CREDIT FOR success of ashamed social-climber, a paragon of polite side of caricature, the distance makes for can't be said about the Hot their moments, but most of the play must go to the dolls. •Box girlsf. Though used mainly their scenes are with Sarah be bodies required to fill up hard on the number, the dance corruption with a desire to "glitter with the humor. Even his strong line of Dutch Kiiti Kelly,asSarah Brown,is the space on stage. No one does not really come off. glory of the hummingbird" in T.S. Eliot's Protestantism proves useful during a sweaty for musical numbers rather and Adelaide and it becomes as convincing in the stuffy than speaking-parts, each girl pretty obvious that the dolls particularly promotes per­Perhaps it is the cramped words, whose arrival into the ebulous ranks quizshow on the Bible, which is (naturally) confines of the Save-A-Soul sonalities, but settle for stan­stage area, but the number of the celebrated issymbolized in the book by fixed. Unfortunately, De Vries knows psy­ develops an individual are out-acting and out-singing mission asshe isswinging her character, adding tremen­the guys. ding there blankly nodding, needs some polish. a party at the White House. choanalytic explanations of humor — a dously to the success of the McNabb repeatedly strikes . Despite the occasional .hips and tossing her hair in a singing and speaking when BUT IT DOESN'T last, nor does Tickler ex­problem which older comic writers never had Cuban cafe."If I Werea Bell" necessary. pect it would. He merely goesas far as talent to face — and occasionally this slows him show. The "Bushel and a one pose— hiselbows crooked weaknesses, "Guys and and intelligence will take him, and what down. But these days, to be funnv at all is a and to his sides — which I have mixed emotions Dolls" is a pleasure to watch. makes this complete sell-out funnyis that the gift. reminded me of Marlon Bran­about the "Crapshooter's The play moves quickly, with do's portrayal ift-^the movie Dance." Although the the plot funny and enter­ television­ 36 Ironside 7 Big-Blue Marble version. choreography is superb and taining and the musical 9 p.m. 24 I Dream of Jeannle 9 Ask a lawyer The male chorus seems to the men obviously worked numbers outstanding. 36 Nem 24 Harry 0 36 Movln' r>n 7 pjt*. CASTLE 7 The Waltom 9:20 p_m. . . » Thtwar ltW»»: "Celtlci-Lakert 9 Heatth Hotline Championship" 24_The Undersea World of Jacques Cousteau 7,24,36 News 36 Sierra 9 Kentucky General Educational cam TONIGHT Development Series ?t90 pun. 1411 Lavaca 472-7315 9 Religious America 10:30 pjn. NO COVER t ^m. 7 Movie: "The Longest Night," TONIGHT -SAT. ROCK 'N ROLL FROM TULSA BY starring David Janssen, James 7 Movie: "Conquest of the Planet Farentlno of the Apes," starring Roddy , 9 SouthstageMcDowblt, Richardo Montalban" 24 wide World Special: oicfc Cavett GUY TWEED * Soul: "Shades of Soul part \" with guest Dick van Dyke 24 The Streets of San Francisco ,,. (NO COVER MONDAY THRU THURSDAY) 36 Tonight Show CLARK and bond DOORS OPEN: 8 HAPPY HOUR:8-9/ RCA Recording Artist I AltCINEMASEVERT DAYS1.2S'Tlt i:3Q| $2 Cover •THfcit tARTM at the door 914 N. LAMAR 477-37B3 I )PAY! w'aiVii?> UUKtlt 'StitOTiSS. 8i« " Les Wild Ones—This filmspeaks of a newgeneration BURTREYNOIDS /• |,V" which seizes upon constant motion and change as the only way to outrun corruptionand views sexual . «.<*•»TBCMMCCfcCM AMAAMOUNTACTUftE (SO 4ik WmU |||A0CE FWE'CARMEN MIRANDA"11 BUSBYBERKELW! satisfaction as the only human response worthy of trust. Like it or not, this film expresses—in an WIw"'"""'THEGANG'S lv extreme but uncompromising way—the feelings of aiihere many of the best and brightest young people in France today. It cannot be dismissed. An .a NEW film IN TECHNinoi OR' . —Paul D. Zimmerman, New»we«k Today at -WiOO­-liSS­-3:50­-5:50­ • 7:45. • 9:45­ T — AUNREIMICTURE'TGQNCOia^NWWKlN* Sunday Only Nov. 17 THE 7:258:55-10:20HIGHLAND MALL TODAY! 451-7326 (H.15 AT KOINIG IN. UUN Burdiire Aud. l:0MWO. MAW2X For Sia000they break your kmt Adm. $1.25 Por.(2QXX)0 thay.break yourlMi n. • Ax«jFreed OWC1$44000. , JamesCaan 'Vj;> w (WlinKtMNIII BECTHERS , TfeGombleh, their best film "v • 2nd WwlU -Inhlly iRjAywMWMCPIclnwnilUM Student Gov't.I Today at Theatres • J //.i.Aai: i RIVl RSI1)1 ( ILL AGE 4 VNM*T •MV* WIMIIII m IM «•»** * more savage A)neof the i«art in need Best Movies of 1974: I rOmttaM,NIC-TV s»«S MiOwl UNEQUALID 5th ADVENTURE Week , mom WAiroisNer A film by Bertrand Blier from CjRpma 5 Sits. <"'1 In French with subtitles with Gerard Depardi?u — i * fwlww­ wS S-Vju.&v ~ i Fri. & Sat. 7:25 & 9:30 Only ^9ar}ne Moreau Nov. 15-16 Bafts Hall Aud. Pt*tr,ck Dewaere Urjtln MattnM THESAVAGE Adm.$1.50 • , Miou-Miou HI UjO Men-Fri " Pnillit JACK NICHOLSON . fresented by Mod. Cinema SM-tM ISLOOSE n From the vvnW-direcfor Soott«nd IVishTan'Dev^re THKLAS1'DKTIlL Friday ... 11:35 Saturday ... Jl;35 o/"Blazing Saddles' Bafts Hall Aud. PETER FINCH ZEROMOSTEL RIMRSI 1)1 R i 1 r.RSIDl m Mel Brooks* WLLM^KI. m IV-Sunday 7:30 & 9:20 "the 5^ T . A.C. Au3. > ^•te^STHE-llABDICfVtlON „ producers" ^THEJ Adm. $1.25 T t •> £lj»-fe*»ing'Dick Shawn* ^ eomB Modern Cinema| 'Novemb^r-Hr 1974 THEtiiM^TEXAN Page­ ^ ^ -t . • it O —J | , * tf -x * , t CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING FOR SALE FURN. APARTS. • FURN. APARTS. 8 FURN. APARTS. SERVICES HELP WANTED RATES 15 word minimum Each wprd on* time t .n Each wort *4'times ' .s .10 Stereo -For Sale SUNNYVALE Each word S<9 times s m FISHER 2t custom stereo unit, FM/AM Student rate eacfc time s M Each word 10 or more times. .07 radio with stereo beam, excellent condi­APTS. Classified Display tion. with excellent speakers. 1350 or 1 BDRAAS130 best otter. Call 472-S06C ask for Ernest. Icol. a 1 inch7-9 times SJ.93 2 BDRAA $150 1 coi.jtlinch ten ormore timesQ.64 1 col. x Iinch one time SX25 SONY CASSETTE &M21 Auto/Manual CrOZ Volume leveiv pause, pioneer' V»« SUMMIT O1-05M PL50 with Shure M91EO. Excellent con­ 3 Blocks to Shuttle dition. 447-1234. PLAZA .UtOO 250 WATT ST6RHO SYSTEM VENTURA ..IttOO Earnovs AX/7900.Garrard stereos with Tired of small rooms & no closet space? AMVFM tuner, complete audlophllecon­Tired of asphaft& noise?Try Plaza Ven-, 11:00 trols, and gloanttcale suspension10-way tura. 1 & 2 Bdrm fwrn./unfurn. From ,...n:oo speaker system. These speakers come 1129.50 plus electricity equipped with a 10" duo-coned woofer, 3410 Burleson Rd. SUi mtdranga. and *4" tweeter. 1 year Barham Prop. guarantee on parts and labor/local ser­447-6571 926-9365 *"S» tW •*«* «t «mn Mrf* ta M vice. Regular retailprice 1529.(4) to sen adnrf|MMl| hMHtelMtiRMHlb at 1299. Hurry!I Cash or E-Z Terms. United Freight Sales KENRAY 6535 N. Lamar APARTMENTS . Monday-Friday 9-9, Sat. 9-4 2122-Hancock Dr. Next to Americana Theatre, walking dis­Uword minimumeach day ..% JQ Musical -For Sale tance. to Morth Loop Showing Center Each additional word eachday! M LOW-STUDENT RATES and Lubys. One half block from shuttle ]eoL *Much each dav *2.44 LEARN TO PLAY GUITAR-Beginner and Austin transit. 2 bedroom "UftcJessHfedi" ltine 5 days .*).» and advanced. Drew Thomason. 47* townhouses, extra large. Two bedroom (Prepaid. No Refunds) 2079. fiats, one end two baths. CA;CH, dis­Students must show Auditor's hwasher. disposal, door to door garbage receipt* and pay in advance inTSP FENOER SUPER SIX for sale.1350.00.6 pickup, pool, maid service it desired, BlOg. 13» <5sth & Whttls) from 8 10" speakers. 100 Watts. Like new. 453­ washaterta in complex.See owners. Apt to 4:30 p.m. Monday through * 1231. 113 or call 451-4443 LES PAUL. Gold finish; Standard model; Best deal In town. '472-4107.. WE RENT VENTURA GUITAR -six string. «x- FOR SALE cedent condition, must sell. Sft5 or best AUSTIN otter. 476-4929. LUOWIG Octa-Pius drums, stand, cym-Your time is valuable Auto -For Sale bals. and cases, black vinyl. 1150. Robert. 476-1459. Our service is free 1930 CHEVROLETIVi ton truck. Newln­terlor. Runs great. Needs bed and paint PIANO. Good tone PARAGON UPRIGHT and physical condition. Moving * must sell. $2*0 or make offer. 459-6961. tfso. omu. VOLKSWAGEN CONVERTIBLE,11250. PROPERTIES excellent condition, complete engine EPIPHONE classical guitar, new iltt. overhaui.radfo.efc Need money togo to sell for 1100. Fine condition. 451-291$ school. Catt 472-5306. 1217 Parkway 472-4171 after 5. weekdays 1973 SUZUKI JEEP. 4 wheel drive, low UNIVOX ELECTRIC PJano-Ciavtchord mileage* economical, top condition. Need to sell quick. 1225. 6 months old. S2S9S. Gene. 454-4454. 471-30Q. Call Davki. 475-8115. or Casey. 453-3676. 472-4175 MUST SELL wife's 1969 LTD. 2 door hard fop. Radial tires. Many extras.Ex* Pets -For Sale eellent condition. B36-5679. NEED A GREAT AKC COLLIES, sable and white, champion-sired, shots and wormed. PLACE TO LIVE? 1100. Pedigrees included. 477-4669 Gayle. evenings and weekends. TRY THE DALMATIAN PUPS—Purebred,SUPER ECONOMY. Ti Honda Coupe. beeuttfut spots, shots, wormed. £4-0574. BLACKSTONE APARTMENTS FREE SPAYED femat* bassett. Look­ing for good home. £all 444-1104. 19STBUICK SPECIAL. 6 cylinder, new Shirt • larg, room tor SMJS/mo. or transmission andbattery.1550.10 speed lak, an tntlr. room (or >112.50 hir­ ' AKC LABRADOR Retrievers. Yellows nlshM, all bill* paid.Maid aarvlc* once and blacks. Shots, de-wormed. Cham­ UN­ pions In Pedigree. 454-9757.175. BUS. Paneled, carpeted, recent Bring your oWn roommate or we will ynghie oveilieul Tiuety tlne tn every mattfi you with a compatible one. fay. SA5Q. 4S4«74. Homes -For Sale This Is economy & convenience at its best. PVIHG OVERSEAS. Ford Torino, LOOK HERE! Large older.home, fine ONLY 200 YARDS FROM UT CAMPUS t nice. *1350.451:6902. University area, zoned 8. tf Bedrooms. 2910 Red River 476-5631 • baths. Ample parking.Call Rosemary. 1*9 MUSTANG Fastbact VI, PB, PS. and Jennie Realtors at 451-7323. fadials. perfect condition?*™ or best jHer. Call 4S24M0, WILLOW IRENAUW-12. Station wagon. Low '•»ge. good condition, new battery; rtin radlals. Call 477-0046 after 6:00 2 BEDROOM HOME WITH DEN,living room and diningroom for sale by owner. CREEK Located north UT In 4000 Block Duval. 2 BR ALL BILLSPAID 1953 PLYMOUTH. Runs well. Needs Fenced back yard with garage. S2S.OOO. 2 Large Pools.Security, Volleyball Court tottery. RH.Good Tires. S200 or best Assume existing 7*4 loan, will consider 1901 Willow Creekjtftr. 472-7034. 3:30. second lien. 453-6072. 472-2273. or 441-444-0010 'i •3253. GENUINE BARGAIN. 1969 VW Squareback. Auta AC radio, 2 new wes, extras. Good order. Owner leav­ tog.!990.441-5J43. Garage Sale -For Sale MOVE IN TODAY V CHEVY TRUCK with camper shell. Good condition.-MOO-Cash. 451-3084. EL 01D GIGANTIC 1 BR FURN-$152.50 93 DODGE. good condition. Needs 150 frork. 1225 and its yours. Call John. 47t-GARAGE SALE 3704 Speedway 453-4883 0152. keep trying. . . Silver, china, crystal, (amps, linens, kiggege,picture frames,books, records, RIGHT ON SHUTTLE 72 VEGA OT.Excellent condition. 4 sp» Jewelry and clothing. Pair of skls, bike FM stereo, wide radial*. Great gas exerciser and lots and lots ot.nlce mis* cutaneous items, .2909 Kerbty Lane. MOVE IN TODAY Saturday 9 to 6. Sunday 1 to 6, Qilteage. 447-6736. . -W71 FIAT COUPE in good condition. 5 fpeed FM/FM, recent engine overhaul* *1400 firm. 451-2637. MARK VII Misc. • 1 BR FURN.-$155 T964 FORO VAN. Must sacrifice. Runs, looks excellent. Newly carpeted, TOP CASH PRICES paM for diamond!, 3100Speedway 475-0734 painted. Call 441-5073 after 5. old gold; CapitolDiamond Sboft. 4018 N. WALK -RIDE -SHUTTLE Lamar, 454-M77. • ^Motorcycles -Far Sale APARTMENT HUNTING? Sublet January * vantage jpofnt. location; shut­ SAVE MONEY! C*M us Mora buying tle. lSU5/mohtn ABP.14S>407V. Norl. THE NEW iftoforcyele insurance/ Lambert in-Keep tryfogt-V •, fcirancr Associate*. Inc. 4200 Medical Parkway. 452-2564. INWOOD BRAND NEW SERTA mattreisei and' box spfJngs at wholesalecost. Never w APARTMENTS 94 NORTON <50 Commando. Recently ed. I7»complete. Ceil 477r3H4.. tuned, extras. 447-3250. 2200i>igi<$pn * WE BUY OLO GOLD. Highest prices. (M00 SwthLamar)my NORTON 750. H7S or belt offer. Austin Trade Shop,211Uttlefleld,401'E. 1-2 bedrooms. Furnished «.unfurnished. Pavfa, m-9\79. New; rings, under 10.000 miles. Call 6th. 472-4944. From SI35 •sift.Large, shag carpel,gas w heat & appliances. Poot. Laundry, Pets QUEEN.•. tap-seam waterbed, raised, allowed. Student managed. No hassles. 74 KAWASAKI 3*0. F9.Excellent condi­ fine cherry red stained frame. Call tion, 3000 miles, 2 helmets. 1750 or best Wesley, 447-7317. After. 6. f Offer. 3SS-7499. 444-0094 i. TAPPAN STOVE, good condlfloa $40. 450 YAMAHA, high performance cam, wmte, 36" wide. gas. Call 4:00-10:00. . booker heedei*, custom paint. 6,700 1042 Broadview, 4S24SS1, LOOKING FOR •r»lfes; 11200. 305-4491. AN APARTMENT 2t".SCHWINM CONTINENTAL. <01 Efmwood, Apt. if befdre t:0Q psn.Mon­WITH CHARACTER? Stereo -day thru Friday Come by see our For/Sale and 1 bedroom at 1007 West LIQUIDATING: BeauUeui400l «uper • Sl35plusE. camera; Fender preelilon bats; Yamaha FG300 ftuifar; Eddy Merckx * apartments south at 910 West Oltorf. Manager 10li. 25" 10 speed bicycle. 474-4710. STEREO • ­ II15-5130. 442-9410, 476^335. LEATHER. SPORT COAT. Men's 3S' Fully lined. Worh-'Only twice. 1130 Negotiable. 441-7949. Most evenings. (RECEIVERS) WALK 1 TO CAMPUS, t FftB JO speed Wke for selr,:S50. Call LIST PRICE OUR PRICE anytime, «2-2152. bedroom efficiency. Full bath SANSUI 1500 S340. and kltchemNicely furnished, NEW U-TUBE quality northern goosedown bags «S up.Tim 377-CM4, Ed 472-maid, parking. No pets. 453­ f-60W x 2 RMS SANSUI ; 1380 S2W :,336ajtfter_4j3ft_ 3235.\ >..35W x 2 RMS JMIKKO $250 S1S9 WESTERN LEATHER JACKETlLevi's style). Size 40, brand new. 135 or trade .2SW x2 RMS for calculator (negotiable}. Cell Carlos,NIKKO *400 $279 45MC23. ' 5 -45W x 2 RAAS OAKCREEK ftlXKO . • S500 S369 APARTMENTS CASUALLY YOU , , • 45W x.2 RMS — : SONY ' J/"-S5S0 1399 AJh ^dfllraFtS Yfticarl share a1bedroom Witha friend. Must he takerr lmmedlately i 40W x 2 RMS ­SONY >280 $209 have gas heatand gasranges 1ohelp you ^20W x 2 RMS ­ Christmas delivery. . conserve. ShutW bus at tha Intramural1 Flefd. Catt 4544994. : Royce Portraits 2420 Guadalup^ 472-4219 DOKORDER ft REEL-TO REEL MOVE IN TODAY v Auto:Reverse, posh buttons, 1 BR -$125 i-r[* records both directions. ONE-OF CENffrAL List $600 Ours $459 TEXAS' PRETTIEST MARI&XX SPOTS 4-mu .. tiison SANSUI Beautiful: flowing creek borders this 3815Gvedalupe ;;i2?; secluded wooded fracf.-Aimoif 5 acres. Fish andSwim on your own land. Good LEAKERS Building Spot.& Garden Spot. * T J-WW ea. 12" 3-W 44K SANSUI *1M ea. $139 eq7 APTS. ~ IS' ANTILLES fcist S230ea„ will tell,for si69' 2204 6AfMtf' • 10" 3-W 1 FURN. APARTS. SEE US F&R QUOTESON i•, 2BORW $205ALTEC SPEAKERS AND,; .472-1923 PHILLIPS js ,J ; $125 . SHUTTL6 STOP TURNTABLES. * FOUNTAINTERRACES' APARTMENTS'' VERY LOW PRICE* OtMltfi . fON'CAR STEREOS. -;: patA taW,,-altpowl/TMiaM,, «a£ •: f~r jwlmmttw pool, (uri)I»l>«(.W»lkln(iVl»­ L_203 EAST 19TH vWest30thr 477*^150. j^JpS BlocKsJast droom -~ of the j3rag) All Bills Pairf is , 476^733 4764.19S NEAR CAMPUS, -SHUTTLE.; Fitri­nlshed, carpeted, one bedroom. s14S. All bills, deposit paid. 2408 Leon, 475-9756. Just-North ot 27th at WALK TO CAMPUS Guadalupe AND BEAT THE BUS LAR&E QUIET EFFICIENCIES. >I2S COPYING 2707 Hemphill Park Plus electricity, near shuttle. CA/CH. Two on* bedroomhirnljhMapartrn*nl>. ERVIC PH.D. 4111 Ave. A. 4S4-4447 al|er 5. Pool, cabla. taundry, quiet utllitg.six ­»IS<1 plus eleclrlolly at .commarclal s reserve Human Dignity -Our Theory srn PLUS BILLS. Furnished spacious Of Management,Rio Houta. 47MZW. 606 Wast lTtti attic apt. Newly redecorated* walking Jhe 2>J Team ? Be a Part of the at Rio Grande. distance UT. Available Dec. h 472K&3} OldesfxFast-F6od Restaurant In Austin^ \ . or 478-7912. ' 42 Dobie Mall 476-9171 Do You ye a Aright Smile and Want YES, we do type ALL BILLS PAID FULL LUXURY 1 bedroom. SIM ABP. ResponslJM Pay and Excellent Shuttle, shopping, parties. River Hills. Free Parking Benefits Whl Freshman themes. Pursuelng MINI EFF. $110 Bob. after < 447^1 " " ' * "M«7. • Learning? VVhy notstar) out with 7 a.m. • 10 p.m. M-F EFF. $125 9 a.m. • $ p.m. 5at. -OoodgradfiiL SUBLET. Available December 24. Lux­ If You Want to Belofa.with a Company ury apartment. 2 bedroom, 2 bath; good That Cares, Then ApplySn Per " -472-3210 and 472-7677 ;Person after 1 BR $145 location, across street shuttle. ABP. 5:00 P^A. at\ t.l./ il>i(l. inc. S21&. 4S2-1V20, . 2 BR $234 476-9093 2-J No. 1 d blocks to campus TTPINC •port . «340> Leon 47M<«7 ROOMMATES typing, 3918 N. Lamar Theses, Letters All University andprinting business work MALE ROOMMATE. One bedroom. Ail Last Minute Service Bills paid. S81.0Q. $ blocks to campus. '"1*^ binding Open *8 Mon-Th & 2 BR -$225 476-3467. z4QS Leon, -$3.50 9-5 Frl-Set 420 w. riverside drive LIBERAL'FEMALE'^iare nice two bedroom apt. Own roomtandbath. Walk 472*8936 Dobfe Mali 1 BR -$160 PER CLASS HOUR 6 blocks to campus, dis­to campus. Latana Apts. Ce!) 476-9456. AND UP hwasher, disposal, pool, etc. IDA Is,now hiring graduate level ?M_%rT4c ROOMMATE. 2/BR, ownroom, $15plus THE CROCKE 474-1712 4/8-3176 »/S*4 electricity. StartlnoStarting January. J3114312 ,. *elytffrtts for auditors for the spring ' the complete secret^) Duval. 454-64X9, Michael. GIRLING DAY semestc^. Call 477-3641 or dome by 901-TYPING • theses, mahuscrtpW.24th. MPtrs, resumes s. HOUSEMATE SHARE 2 btfdroom SCHOOL ~ AUTOMATIC TYPING -lettert and HABITAT duplex close to U.T. S7Q plus bills. 451-CREATIVE NEED EXTRAMONEY? Sell flowerson multi-copied originals \ 6671, Debbie. After 2. the streets or Austin. Thursday -Sunday, XEROX COPIES • S3.00 for 100 copies EXPERIENTIAL 476-9060, 45>150l. (per originals) LIBERAL HOUSEMATE. Free PRINTING • offset and.ietlerpress HUNTERS November Rent. Own bedroom. 5 LEARNING WANTED. Apartment managers. and NEED AN APARTMENT bedroom house. Shuttle, fireplace, trees. All Day or Part Day Prefer couples. Send resumes P.O. Box complete lines of office products saS/bills. 454-2918. 453-7997 .5530 Burnet Rd Ages 2-5 FOR FALL? Beautiful facilities-Tree Covered Yard. GIVE US A CALL! ANYONE LIBERAL PERSON. S60 1404 N. Loop workers needed at psy­ CHILD CARE Own roonr Habitat Hunters is FREE apartment Phone: 451-5983 chiatric child care center. Salary com-CHRiSTENSON & locator service, located In mensurete with experience. Write c/o Austin. 385-8905. Steve. level of Dobie Mall. We specialise in stt^ CONFIDENTIAL CARE lor pregnant Charles Van Scoy, P.O. Box 1248. Cedar ASSOCIATES dent complexes. LIBERAL FEMALE roommate needed Park, Texas 78613. for spring. s*8/monfh ABP. NR Shuttle. unmarried mothers. GladMy Edna A TYPING HABITAT HUNTERS 447-1840 after 5:30 p.m. Sheryl. Home. 2301 Hemphill, Fort Worth. Toll NEED 7AM <3PM Babysitter with car totree number l-*»-7VM104. Lower Level, Dobie Mall, ' care for two children. Need transporta­SERVICE Suite 8A • FEMALE CHRISTIAN roommate share tion to and from school. Part-time. 472­ apartment near campus. S77.50 plus CHAVOVA'S STRINGING SERVICE; 3147. 474-1532 electricity. Susie. 477-3484. Reputable racouetstrlnolnwndnetlp- Bins. Nyloni from M.OO.,Gut SHOOron Specializing in NEED SOMEONE who knows STUDIOUS MALE roommate. Share 2 up! IJ hour service. Phone stonemasonry to help me build a small Theses and dissertations 1 BEDROOM bedroom, 2 bath with3 others. 2 blocks to greenhouse. S4.00/hour. 258-1891. campus. S70/month. Call Bob, 476-4929. H a. R CONSTRUCTION CO. SpeCialU* Law Briefs — $154 ALL WLLS PAID ing in ailkinds of building; remodellrHL — Term papers and reports BUS PERSONS needed II a.m. • 2 p.m. MALE ROOAAMATE to share 4 bedroom and cabinets. build anything you Great location. Fully corp«t«t twautlful want. Free estimates. 447-4973. 111$ Tuesdey • Friday. Mary Kaltman's •Prompt, Professional apettment, own room. ABP, shuffle MerCo's. 9294616. paneling, bultMn booluhelvn, clou to Mjles Avenue. Service route. Starting January. s81/month. 447> campus. CACH. All Built-in kltdwn. 4877. Bruce. 453-8101 Cable TV Included. WAITRESSES ANO WAITERS wanted. MUSIC LESSONS. Bluegrasr banio, tX7 Ave. A • • A^l^ln grson-The 8ucfcet. 725 West Pick-up Service Available ONE LIBERAL ROOMMATE needed Finger-picking guHar. Night and Day. 4M-0I73 iS)-tS39 452-4892. 3102 Glenvlew for targe 3 bedroom house north. S100 ABP. No deposit. 452-2998. WANTED: Mature, executive type AAAX'S KOSM1C Tennis Shop. Quality ..(graduate student) for advertising MALE. NEED ROOMMATE for unfur- stringing andfast service. Staytlte nylon 1 BEDROOM salesman position with prestige publica­MRS. BOOOUR'S TYPING SERVICE. nished 2 bedroom. S75 plus electricity. S6.50. Call Max. 4514525. tion. Commission basis, arrange own Reports, theses, dissertations and books 453-0164. 521) Cameron Road No. 205. hours. Call 4790431between for in­typed accurately, fast and reasonably. EXPECTING UNEXPECTEDLY? Call $115. . terview, Printing and binding on request. Close Vlckl or Jane at 454-1795. They've been Small apartment community. Built-in 30, to share 2'} duplex. 185 plus Vj bllls. in your shoes and they tike lethelp. ..BUS DRIVERS NEEDED.-Man and appliances. Furnished. Water, gas and 1801-B vista Lane.!-5, 47»-4523. Female. women-positions. Now open. Call 'DISSERTATIONS.-theses, reports,.and Close to campus and shuttle. Secluded. MATURE ROOMMATE needed, age 25^ In. 4794113. ALTERATIONS. Men's; NATIONS. Women's, cableitv paid. Men's, TransportationEnterprises.929-T660. AA . law briefs. Experienced typist, children, * in. any kind. Experienced. 609 East 45th E13.00/month. ^ items « MBA Palmer pool cue S70. 20 ox. 451-2916. TYPING. PRINTING, BINDING lease for tgrlnj. 1206 Easf 52nd Street, 1 WOODTICKJ iree trimming, firewood Canon hand cafc. w/tabe *90 472-B44 seie. S60 cord. 130 half cord. Oak.cedar PNE BEDROOM, one bath. S160.00 plus THE COMPtETE mesqulte. if desMlute can iower price. . around the BellyDanclnginsfructlon. 472-3344] T" Delivered and stacktd. > 454-3846. 452*electr1-"--Apartments.• 20S electricity. Su• Casa — 1013, Oary Dugger. rt* • -^i PROEESSIONAU -WestJ »th. Before 5 pm, call W-72U Nd Houston Prior Sat 47MM4. Alter 5 pm,call 451-4J4J.On I.F. Shuttle, BUY.4ELL PLAYBOY, Penthoysi Jsevefe 1'.. houses FULLTIME «0mm Minolta mt. tens 3J. «I.J750. Books,-records, — -Kords, lewefry, gu/tart,ratio*, EFFICIENCY TO SUBLET. 4400 Aw. stereos ' A-H45MBP.. CA-CH, shuttle J blocks. Aaron's/ 320 Congress.' down> TYPING SERVICE \m Honda XUX.iSSO AS>-073I. : town. ' 454^4492. ­ / Sell them.; 472-3210 and 472 7677 Playboy old & new. M/dozen, 474-95N. PALMi STRY. Complete characterpeposiT FREE aparfmintf, Nt*a to •nalysls. Also willgiveprivate fessdns In >ub\tUiMbMroom lor sprlnoflf sooner. 10 speed ami biker WO. 47MSH, T palmistry. A ppointment only. 926-Wl9. , lIMOO/monttl pl«-E. 4 blocks from -camgus. 47S4WI. in ROOMS N^EO MONEY? Consign your old cam* TAKE UP LEASE on 2 bedroom, 2 bath :: oesr at . pins Wilderness/Whitewater IjjJllver HH's tor spring semester. Call , supply. You,set pr/c* C«ll 474*17W . 447'0M/, -• f . ;l\ LOST & FOUND The . LIVING QUARTERS' i FURNISHED APARTMPNT. Males on- Westlak'e HllllArea. Horntconveniently WHOE veR-PICKEDma Uphltcti-hlklno" FOR RENT ly.^f-Wpekt irom.campus. HO. Call 4M- located tor student with tar, who wants .pease r.lgrn: my eywlasses in soft ..8592 after 5^r1207X W, nv,. __w >; Daily comfortable and:b«autl(uli«c, clack case, Reward. fnfjSM. comodatlom with loti of prlvacy, :a . DONATE «50 DEposIT.Sublet medium Meath-taKlw view, KltcMn privileges. STUDIO for r.nl for teachlnp piano or . LOST,AT jexAS-BaylorgameJnWaco-In voice-J blocks from campus. 47I-20W. . Ali tor nominal amount o! mon.y. lf In­ • ft*]™*. Apartments; 2401 • , ope pair pf dotd'Tlmmep glasse ...^ glasses Ctrl* . L Texan! Leopoot)irown e»M. J Sllari: 472^ after jiye, ufl-STn, 4U-HU " girlsJn: Dobie." UNF. HOUSES is: ,ocr.ifaeArC. 'n•", .FANTASTIC «NE BEDROOM to^f-LOSr'oOLOWIRE-IllMMEOCSIeSieS; m.rtf, 'urnlsfted jr.5, on shutflr. .brown case. betweet/Heklftt Center and: „ -CASTILIAN CONTRACT tor n.»t 6SB 447W», 44J4W1 IflirlW V tn„ -ofJJ" *r" W"»' »ovel. Call MIkb, 475­ s ;TIR£D OP fME DORM?-^ come-Sy Rpoji; 14IJ.N ^^ ^PlBCTED VACANCV'.FBrtllslwK-!" then move. -. % •f\A i and in fh« country/Austln'so!country, Austin's oldest andfe^g?.. V" ^ fltai s«Kvjte^rov*n < j^*^5* fcedjoom near camux.' Rent reduc -^Cerrter Nm ii I y^anclesavalijbl *• A >C.,u hundred, of y^aoctt.avallaitl.In townt largest Rental Servtee^coven result*) JOB WANTED BWC^rMjjui;cAt iost vicinity. l»1.lt,;*lyersrd«Mm(1MnMvrnli SUBLEASE DBC.J MAY.Jbedi­ «M Sh«*l:CrNk.7Mi mMthf old. Uml morefui'Rlj^fMjIABPL444<44|9, ^5J?aSSt?u,4{4!^ ionV.he'lr, 0n*7wtt)|«".Whisker,'>CaMSj5l' r»»KV ilrvlca, ..V^.-rt-A DASLV^EEXANl {. \Health Information Center >1 s By ROBERT FULKERSON coordinator, said Monday! mon said. Professional statement signed by the stu­throughout Austin. Each a Answers Student Inquiries Texan Staff Writer "Included are thecounseling counseling is available. No dent. center has variety of Troubled' ^people seeking center itself, Reading and appointment is necessary Free Space, sponsored by specialists to treat adult Identifying student health tomy patients recover away," she said.help can obtain assistance Study Skills Laboratory and th6i« Is no charge. the University YMCA-mental health problems, needs, then following up with emotionally by talking to "Most of the people I talk to :from several Austin counsels (RASSL), the Career Center The Telephone Counseling YWCA, will help distressed drug abuse, family problems flexible programs, is the volunteers who have come to me for birth control ing agencies. Available On a and the Telephone Counsel-' and Referral Service is foi1 people. and alcoholism. primary objective of the Stu­themselves undergone the" counseling. Some of the most24-hour basis, these services • ing and Referral Services." "any problem," Harmon ex­Located in the University "Our purpose is serving dent Health Center's Health operation," Case said ) successful sessions are with are completely confidential ' THE COUNSELING and plained. Professional "Y" at 2320 Guadalupe St., anyone in town regardless of Information Service. Carol In response to this new j couples. I go over the types of and designed to help dis­psychological Services counseling is available 24 Free Space offers "para-their ability to pay, based on Case, health educator and HIS public awareness, HIS spon­birth control available, thentressed individuals. Center, located in West Mall hours a day;-seven days a professional counseling," their needs," Bill Schinder, director, said Wednesday at a sored nine clinicsOct. 30-31 on help the person arrive at a"The Counseling and Office Building 303, can., week at 476-7073. Cris Cunningham, director, director of the Austin Mid-sandwich seminar on health detection of breast cancer. decision." Case said.Psychological Services assist students with The Mental Health Section said. Cities Human Development care. "We examined 425 women. If a woman chooses birth Center is made up of four emotional and social of the Student Health Center FREE SPACE-WILL give-Center at 2818 San Gabriel Co-sponsor#a<%y Students 10 of whom we referred to a control pills. Case will discussareas," Marlene Harmon, a problems of all types, Har-provides counseling to help over the telephone but St., said, Older Than Average and the physician for more thorough possible side effects and reac­University students. "We'd prefer that theycome The center will not treat Women's Affairs Committee testing. We really tapped a lot tions, explaining how the pill "We provide counseling in in," Cunningham said. fulltime University of Student Government, the of people," Case said. works and how it must be general and psychiatric The Well, 509 W. 26th St., • students. seminar was organized by Students are often unaware taken. care, various kinds of group has volunteer Information and Case Frances Plotsky, of offered the 24-hour The and services by The health center can help therapy, marital counseling counseling services, Steve Crisis Center for Austin-coordinator of Services for health center, she said. students make arrangementsand problem pregnancies,". Daman, director of counsel­Travis County provides only Returning Students, as part of For example, the health for abortions through the Dr. Glenn Roarty, director of ing, said. telephone counseling at 472-Women's Health Education center hospital, a fully ac­Problem Pregnancy Counsel­the mental health section, "In addition to volunteer 2411. The center also can be Week which began Monday credited 50-bed hospital, can ing Service. The center, said. counseling, we have some found under different and will continue through Fri­do almost any type of minor however, does not perform STAFFED BY. psy­professional counseling telephone listings like day. surgery, she said. abortions. chiatrists, psychologists, available by appointment," Hotline to Help. "My office (HIS) was "We ihave a new surgeon on Case recognized the difficul­social workers and intern Daman said. The Well has "JjVe provide short-term created in September, and staff, plus a list of 120 Austin ty women have in receivingstudents, the mental health two trained, fulltime pastors crisis assistance like psy­right now we are conducting a doctorB-rtin courtesy. The gynecological services from section offers 24-hour and one fulltime layman'* chological services," a pilot program in health educa­hospital;fee paid at registra­the center'sonly gynecologist, assistance. No referrals are available to treat "any type spokesperson for executive tion. In the last two months, I tion covers 14 days of Dr. J. William Hearn. handled by telephone, Roark of problem," he said. director Ed Peters said. have seen350 men and women hospitalization and surgical " All physicians are said. ' "Basically, we deal with "We refer callers to other who had general questions fees, so thesurgery is done at qualified to do standard pelvic The mental health section any type of alienation," agencies. about health care and health no cost to the student," Case exams and Pap smears. One maintains student records Daman said. "Our volunteers are train­center services," Case said. said. of the major points we want to separate from the Student AUSTIN-TRAVIS County ed in active listening," the The Health Information Ser­The health center has 22 come out of Women's Health Health Center, Roark said. Mental Health—Mental spokesperson said. "We vice office is in Student doctors on staff and operates Education Week is that Information will be released Retardation operates five provide a sympathetic Health Center 342, open from a walk-in clinic with a physi­women should channel routine — Slrafctr by Marl* Valhrey only with a sworn, notarized out-patient centers listening ear." 8 a.m. to 5 p.m., Monday cian on duty 24 hours a day, gynecology through one of the through Friday. seven days a week. other staff physicians, taking Publicity from HIS-"Priority goes to students only serious gynecologicalsponsored seminars, with appointments, but a sick problems to Dr. Hearn," Case programs and clinics and student is never turned said. J referrals from health center physicians accountfor mostof By DAVID HENDRICKS dinner at the Villa Capri peachment of theivPresident Thursday at Joe C. Thompson research director of the the traffic through the office. Davidson Announces Jordan To Address New Legislators Texan Staff Writer Motor Hotel. "Students come Nixon. Conference Center. Tickets Federation of Tax-Ad­to us with U.S. Rep. Barbara Jordan, Jordan, 38, won national are $6. things like birth control and Newsweek magazine said ministrators. 17 City Appointments D-Houston, will address state recognition last summer as a weight problems. Sometimes The dinner will follow a day Thursday afternoon panel legislators and participants of member of the House Jordan "sounded the most memorable indictment of of panel discussion at the discussions will center on they just want to talk to Seventeen appointments to city positions were announced a pre-session legislative con­Judiciary Committee which in someone," Case said. Richard Nixon to emerge center on how to finance state Texas' property taxes. Speak­Wednesday by City Manager Dan Davidson, along with the ference at a 7 p.m. Thursday July voted to recommend im- Last month Betty Ford's from the House im-government with a treasury ing will be California tax ex­elimination of four budgeted jobs, "in order to save the tax­surplus. and Happy Rockefeller's payers' money." jmpeachment hearings — and pert Ronald Welch and UT Service Predicts rocketed to national Thursday morning, Oregon State Sen. Jason Boe. mastectomies brought women "In an attempt to bring more creative administration to prominence on its echo." the The conference will adjourn into Case's office to discuss the City of Austin, we have relocated people on the city staff legislators will hear the at noon Friday after a general breast cancer. in more challenging positions," he said. Soft Drink Price Hike Jordan, the daughter of a state's economic situation dis­ "Breast cancer (and at­ session on the restructuring of All but one position, an administrative slot in Davidson'sBaptist minister, has degrees cussed by Thomas Keel, Get ready. The 20 cent soft cans has risen from $4 to from Texas Southern Univer­budget of public school finance in Tex­titudes toward it have) finally office, were filled through internal promotion. Jorge director the drink you bought today may $4.25. as. come out of the archaic age. Carrasco will serve as one of Davidson's assistant ad­ sity and Boston University. Legislative Budget Board; cost you 25 cents tomorrow. "Since the wholesale cost The American Cancer ministrators. After unsuccessfully trying William Kelly, assistant vice-The three-day session began Society's new film, 'Breast Greg Soechting, manager of has increased, we should be The promoted personnel will serve in the Fire Depart­ twice to gaina seat inthe Tex­president of the Federal Wednesday, when recently Cancer: Where We Are,'isex­ Campus Services Inc.; said expecting the vendors to ask ment, the Public Utilities Department, the Parks and as House, she was elected to Reserve Bank in Dallas, and elected legislators were brief-cellent. Programs like Reach Wednesday students should us for a price increase also," Recreation Department, the Health Department, the Tax the State Senate in 1966, Leon Rothenburg of Chicago, ed on legislative rules. expect a price increase at Soechting said. for Recovery help mastec­Assessor's Department and in city management. becoming its first black campus soft drink vending "In January 1974, the member in this century. machines soon. wholesale price of raw sugar "We waited to change the was about $15 per 100 founds. In 1972 she was elected to prices on the campus Now, that same amount costs Congress -with 80 percent of machines for as long as we about $54. That's ap­her Houston district's total could, but by the first of the proximately three to four vote. She wasappointed to the year, 'students should expect times what we used to pay," House Judiciary Committee THERE IS A BETTER WAY to pay 25 cents for a Coke," Wall said. • in 1973 with recommendations said Buddy Wall, marketing Wall added information the from former President Lyn­manager of Coca-Cola/Dr company received Wednesday don Johnson. Pepper Bottling Co. indicated that another sugar Tickets to the conferenceSoechting said since July, price increase may be on the dinner may be purchased bythe wholesale cost per case of way.. " • "Ijif the general public before noon ... to send a Advertisers message IF you have .. something to SELL .. an apartment to RENT to BUY a stereo .. a house to LEASE' .. to find a JOB .. need to HIRE someone •,.,uK»ws­ and; place your CLASSIFIED AD DON'T BE LEFT OUT! in November deadline -Friday 11/15 THE DAILY TEXAN A ' I" . 71 $ f ,#n^k,your CALL 471-1865 ^ * • 1, •WW«r »pa(« reservaHonj THE DAILY TEXAN v -v \ -L. ' Z' -.iJ1 Student Nrwtpaper at-Th* (Miversity of Tei^a arAuilin „ _ _ -_ _ . >,t1, > !* ' The Montly_Magaiin« Supplement to the Dally Tfcxaiv They'llGet Your "Message it l» jpi*?*<5 #1 5*S6S®8*^^ <) •-N f ?Mi«M',''!'> r'" "* ' _«-t * *} 1 i T ,> * ' ' « * V"* * .'* " •*• ^ !-v ' :Students who want protection from the flu nurses are hesitant to give it to someone who I » get No Offers Made on Historical Landmark vaccine now, Has taken an allergy Shot the same day'or By BILL SC0T1 Texan Staff Writer There still have been no offers to purchase what remains of the partially-destroyed Shot Tower, the president of Capital National Bank said Wednesday. We've had no offers con­cerning moving the building." bank president Joseph Grant said. "No one at all has come in to inquire about buying the structure. Everything remains as it was—status December, if purchasers for the structure have not come forth. Grant estimated the cost of moving the building from its present location, between Seventh and Eighth Streets at Colorado Street, at $200,000. The president said destruc­tion of the building, would aid in "not predetermining utilization of the land" for the new owner. "Real estate agents who have analyzed the property tell us the land will be worth more on the market if the building is removed," Giant said. DESPITE PUBLIC outcry against the destruc­tion, Grant said Capital National has experienced lit-tie in the way of deposit withdrawals. "We lost some deposits from individuals and organizations, but this' figure is less than one-thirdof 1^ per­cent of our total deposits," he said. Grant called the decline"an immeasurable loss." According to the Bank's marketing department) de­mand and time deposits presently stand at *285,536,-919. A DECREASE of "one-third of 1 percent" amounts to a $941,611 loss in over-all deposits Ssa result of the con­troversy. Grant didn't feel the bank's stand has tainted the in­stitution's image in the com­munity. "In fact," he added, "we have had one substantial deposit added recently i in ,I?1 *?!IRSE REPORTED' because the individual con-1 students a^k for the.vacclne each day. stand " ' s.tation wi11 Pve ^V&ccine,which costs $2, toanyone who asks for it, but ass,sta.nt Erector Of the who already has symptoms of a cold. Student Health Center, said Wednesday. This year's vaccine is more refined and •ihe^worst months of the flu season are requires only onfe shot instead of two that December and January. he said.Theflu vac-were needed • for the Hong Kong flu. Few cine, whfch.isavailable.atthe nurses'station, patients have complained of side effects, a takes about six weeks to become fully effec-nurse at tl\e station said. U .. v Thestrain of flu most prevalent this year is nf, -? the .Port Chalmers, which is not deadly,of the flu, causing anybodies to be built up to Mitchell emphasized. The health center doi cfse'he explained. not expect an epidemic anywhere near the Jillheajth center hasseen onlya few cases size of the Hong Kong epidemic of two years V. fa.r.'a h?alUl ce.n^r nurse reported. About ago. At that time; the center i;an out of the curred with our stand," > , 1 '• ~-.fi vaccine but does not expect td this year. The number of cases will depend to some extent on the severity of the weather. quo." Demolition of the 100-year­old building, which reportedly was used to manufacture musket shot during the Civil War, began Oct. 2 but was IBSp wm i mmm 'halted after the Texas Historical Landmark Com­ mission sought a court injunc­ tion forbidding the destruc­ tion. Eg Judge Herman Jones, of 53rd District Court denied the request Oct. 7 on grounds that a1973 lawrequiring ownersof - recorded Texas Historical landmarks to give 60 days ­ notice to the commission - prior to altering ordestroying such structures was not retroactive to 1962. The shot Tower was designated historical in 1962 j c"^ V3•• I by the Texas Historic Survey "7 Committee, the predecessor of the Historical Landmark Commission. Howard Chalmers, a bank m B|•ii H mi a ' *SC®!|^^£3gmm M b«W&M marketing official with "media responsibilities,"said mm* the bank planned to destroy \T'S * L. 1BSrliV4 the building to "create viable WITT**®® options for the eventual Mv'.ll..KSi>gjS»»Ay«i5a purchaser of the property." "REALLY DON'T THINK the building itself is very historical," he said. "The issue seems to be thefact that some persons didn't like the way the affair was handled *e#Ho •SPSSST~~X£milSl illlili THB »"• S^:.« 1 NIIIUHII 11 MSU originally" ** > Historical Commission of­ ®E53 v ficials were unavailable for comment Chalmers said be saw no real community interest1 in saving the structure for historical purposes and described the present situa­tion as "one of those impasse things." Though Capital National reached an agreement with Texas Atty. Gen.' John Hill on Oct 3, allowing the commis­sion 60 days to try Vs>&nd a buyer for-.the building only,Grant said he saw little chance of the structure being saved from the wrecking crew. . "I have seen no efforts in community pmohg those who raised a stink about the destruction to tryand comeup • with the money to purchase and move the building," he said. uWN6St^ nnaQ .i-'JT™ ""o*** tr*cV •"-rJZZi*-xng5Y1WWO-, » — — — tabr»oU?ir ^otuZeBOlfiPC •5KJS&. •Itort* 'I ' V, -^5.00 ^ S.»; ^gSeiSmMii W$M\ yZtS­ Mm&ri Bp ^agg'^JEtedfrYr ^ t ^ fci ..So-tfe*,.!. , 1 1 • . * - »•% p