T h e Da il y Sixteen Pages Vol. 78, No. 203 Copyright 1979, Texas Student Publications, all rights reserved (USPS 146-440) Student Newspapei a t The University of Texas a t Á O U T Austin, Texas, Friday, August 17, 1979 Young predicts minority tension UNITED NATIONS (UPI) - Andrew Young said Thursday his resignation as U.N. ambassador will temporarily create confusion among black African leaders and tension between American blacks and Jews But reiterating his resignation was “entirely voluntary,” Young said he planned to make a trip to Africa before he leaves his U.N. post to assure its leaders that U.S. policy toward them will not change. He also said American Jews need to know that American blacks are not “anti-Jewish,” but that U.S. interest in the Middle East might be better served by being more pro-Palestinian in ways that it hasn’t been before.” SPEAKING TO A crowded news con­ ference at the U.S. mission to the United Nations, Young repeated that he had ' no regrets” or apologies to make over his secret meeting last month with Zehdi Labib Terzi, the Palestine Libera­ tion Organization’s U.N. observer. He acknowledged the meeting which led to his resignation was held in viola­ tion of U.S. policy. But he said his duties as ambassador to “best serve American interests” would make him do “exactly the same thing all over again.” Asserting that one of those duties was to be well-informed on sensitive issues, Young said “no one would raise a ques­ tion about a CIA agent infiltrating the PLO or talking to the PLO. “I DON’T think the CIA should have more freedom than diplomats operating openly. The job of an ambassador is to be well-informed.” Young hinted he might see Terzi again if the PLO representative came to him not as Ameritan ambassador, but as the president of the Security Council for S e p te m b e r . “ It w ou ld be un­ conscionable for me not to receive anyone (in the Security Council of­ fice),” he said. Young said he felt he could have kept his job had Israel “not chosen to make a public issue” out of the meeting, but reiterated that the decision to quit was his alone — made “for my own tactical reasons.” “I could have explained that I was meeting (with Terzi) in my capacity as president of the Security Council. I could have taken that copout. ”... I was not reprimanded and I was not forced out. I resigned for my own tactical reasons because I did not want to become an issue myself,” Young said. “THE IMPORTANT issue is to find ways of easing the tension between Israel and her Arab neighbors. For me to have remained in the center of this controversy would only have confused that issue.” Young added that his resignation would create “initial confusion and possibly even resentment” among black African leaders who, in the words of one senior U.N. diplomat, “befriended Andy Young like no other American am­ bassador before him.” Related story, Page 3 He said he planned to travel to Africa “before my resignation is finalized” to explain to its leaders the circumstances of his decision to quit and to “assure them that U.S. foreign policy has not and will not change.” APPLAUSE RESOUNDED through the crowded conference room on the 12th floor of the U.S. mission as several dozen of the ambassador s aides, a few of them with tears in their eyes, gave Young an ovation when he walked in with the Rev. Jesse Jackson, a Chicago black leader. Young and Jackson met for 30 minutes before the news conference and later the ambassador was asked if he agreed with Jackson’s prediction that the r e sig n a tio n w ould p o la r iz e American blacks and Jews. “No, I don’t think there will be a polarization but I do think there will be something of a confrontation as friends,” Young said. “The issue is not between Jews and blacks. It’s the Middle East. As long as tension and crises exist in the Middle East, it's going to have an economic im­ pact on the United States.” Fifteen Cents News and Editorial: 471-4591 Display Advertising: 471-1865 Business Office and Classified: 471-5244 Slick grows More Gulf pollution foreseen CORPUS CHRISTI (UPI) — Scientists Thursday anticipated larger oil globs from the Mexican spill would wash ashore in the next few days and would plague the Texas coast through the fall. After a heavy influx of oil early next week, there will be a lull that will give anti-pollution teams time to strategize, said Dr John Robinson, head of a team of scientists from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. But before the slowdown, Robinson said he anticipated more beaches at Padre Island would be covered with oil in the coming * days. It s going to increase its coverage. We’re probably going to have larger waves each day than we had the day before for a while,” Robinson said. After that surge of crude is played out, however, Robinson said the pace of incoming oil would slow but would continue to roll in through the fall. WE DON’T have anything that we can see down south that will come up in the next several days, so we re probably going to have a little relief and only have to deal with problems along Padre Island and this one large patch headed toward Matagorda Bay,” Robinson said. The Coast Guard’s immediate concerns, Robinson said, were 113-mile-long Padre Island, 9 miles of which have been struck by waves of oil, and Matagorda Bay. which is in the path of a 37-mile by 2-mile slick, the largest yet to make itsAvay to the Texas coast. A large strip of oil sheen from Brownsville to Port Aransas — a distance of approximately 150 miles — has been sending patches of oil, the largest one 5 miles long, onto the sandy beaches of lower Padre Island since Monday. Related story, Page 2 A week before the first crude hit beaches, millions of tar balls washed ashore. THE LATEST globs washed ashore Wednesday night and covered a strip ranging as wide as 3 yards on eight miles of beach near resort hotels on South Padre Island at the southern tip of Tex­ as. There also had been large waves depositing a 1-inch-thick ribbon of oil on a 5-mile stretch of Padre Island National Seashore south of Corpus Christi and coating a 2-mile beach area at Port Aransas. Ralph Thompson, head of the South Padre Island Tourist Bureau, said the oil slick had caused a 30 percent decline in hotel occupan­ cy, which would cost the industry millions of dollars. We’ve got a lot of money at stake. From now until Labor Day business normally would be running at absolute capacity,” he said. “Business is down at least 30 percent but you couldn’t put a dollar figure on it yet. You’re talking about an industry down here that represents close to $50 million a year and when you lose two weeks out of the peak season, you’re talking about losing millions of dollars.” COAST GUARD Capt. Roger Madson, head of the oil slick opera­ tion that will have cost $2.2 million by the end of August, said weather conditions had prevented aircraft from checking progress of the large front of oil near Tampico. Madson said he hoped the large area of oil could be examined during the next several days. Sail away, sail away . Larry Kolvoord, TSP Staff The surf 3 up, but this wind-surfer is utilizing a colorful sail to propel him and his craft across the smooth waters of Lake Travis. LOT© n 0 ROO © rs UTs fir?*woman president, who began Job amid controversy, five-year reign after meeting goal of upgrading faculty By LAURA TUMA She could well be the most hated woman in University history, stirring a depth of emotion un­ equaled in recent times. Yet as she prepares to leave the position of power she has occupied for the past five years, she does so, as the poet said, not with a bang but a whimper. Lorene L. Rogers, the University’s first and only woman presiden», ascended to her post in a spectacular way. After serving a turbulent year as president ad interim (following the firing of her predecessor, Stephen Spurr) she was appointed permanent president on Friday, Sept. 12, 1975. Reaction was immediate and violent. “THE UNIVERSITY has been dealt a death blow,” proclaimed a front-page editorial in the next day's The Daily Texan, “The appointment of Dr. Lorene Rogers as permanent president ... does untold damage to the institution, damage which may well be irreparable. “ By all the ways and means, we refuse and will continue to refuse Rogers as our next president, and in so doing we hope to retain what little of the University’s character and integrity it has left,” the Texan editorial concluded. The list of Rogers’ detractors grew quickly. Calls for her resignation poured in. A president not accepted by students, faculty and maybe by the deans should recognize she’s not the person for the job. I hope she would resign,” said Dr. James Kinneavy, a professor of English and chairman of the advisory committee charged with choosing a pool of candidates from which the regents would select a new president. Much of the controversy surrounding Rogers’ appointment dealt with that little word advisory. Because the committe served solely in an ad­ visory capacity, the Board of Regents was not bound to choose from among the candidates it presented. THE ADVISORY COMMITTEE, composed of students and faculty, rejected Rogers as a can­ didate several times, but the regents obviously did not. A coalition of student groups formed to protest Rogers’ appointment advised students to boycott classes. Faculty members, who admitted they were required to meet their classes, vowed to take no retribution against students who decided to boycott. General Faculty members voted to boycott all official University functions, leaving Rogers a president virtually lacking a constituency. The mood of the campus was restless and unsettled, reminiscent of the 1960s — a decade for which protest became a trademark. BUT THROUGH IT ALL, Rogers was unflap­ pable, unperturbed and unconvinced she should resign. Observers differed on the base of her aplomb, some attributing it to a calculating per­ sonality, others to grit. The controversy cleared and Rogers remained in her post. She will step down Aug. 31 to make way for Peter Flawn, a less controversial presi­ dent selected by a less painful method. e * * Rogers was born in 1914 in Prosper, Texas. She attended North Texas State University, where in □ 1934 she was awarded a bachelor’s degree in • English. After receiving the degree, she taught for one year, then married a chemist. They moved in 1940 to New Jersey, where he was killed in an explo­ sion a year later. Rogers, widowed before she was %0, decided to go back to school. She chose Columbia University, where she began working toward a graduate degree in English. “This was during the war, and we were arguing about whether Shakespeare wrote this play in that year or the year before. It just didn’t seem to matter very much,” she said. SO SHE DECIDED to try to find something which did matter. She came back to her home state and decided to find out a little about chemistry, her husband’s love. “I’d always been interested in the things I heard them talking about,” she recalled. She was awarded a master’s degree in organic chemistry in 1946 and a doctorate in biochemistry in 1947. Rogers taught at Sam Houston State College for three years before returning to the University. She returned to UT in 1950 as a research scientist at the Clayton Foundation Biochemical Insitute, where she worked until 1964. She became a lecturer in the chemistry depart­ ment in 1963, but upon learning that the depart­ ment had no intention of granting a professorship to a woman, was transferred to the Department of Nutrition, in which she is still a professor. IN 1964, she became the University’s first woman dean (as associate dean of the graduate school) and in 1971 she became UT’s first woman vice president. Rogers never intended to be an administrator, much less a university president, but she always wound up being at the right place at the right time, she said. Even with fate on her side, she hesitated before (See UT’s, Page 7.) Friday FBI captures slaying suspect. . . YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio (UPI) — Melvin Bay Guyon, sought in the killing of an FBI agent, was shot in the arm and captured Thursday night as he left a phone booth in Youngstown, culminating one of the most intensive manhunts in the agency’s history. He was hospitalized and listed in good condition. The bureau searched doggedly the past week for the suspected slayer of agent Johnnie L. Oliver, 35. FBI Agent David Cosgrove of the bureau’s Cleveland office said Guyon, 19, was found making a telephone call in a booth at a Youngstown streetcorner. When the suspect tried to flee, an agent fired at him. After being wounded, Guyon gave himself up to agents. Apparently Guyon did not fire on the agents, Cosgrove said. Cosgrove declined to provide further details on how Guyon was captured except to say he was taken to the Youngstown’s Southside General Hospital and is in “ good condition.” Guyon eluded capture for a week after allegedly shooting the agent last Thursday mor­ ning, when he was cornered in the bedroom of a public housing project in the heart of Cleveland’s inner-city. Same old Texas weather. . . Austin skies will be partly cloudy through Saturday. High temperatures Friday and Satur­ day will be in the low 90s, with a low Friday night in the 70s. There is a 20 percent chance of rain on Friday. Winds will blow easterly at 5-10 mph. The sun will set Friday at 8:11 p.m. and rise Saturday at 7:16 a.m. Missing . . . T h e D a ily T e x a n will temporarily cease publication with this issue. The Texan will resume printing Aug. 28 Ciao. Break alters UT facility hours Most University facilities will either close or alter their ser vices during the break between the summer and fall sessions. University residence halls will close at 9 a.m. Tuesday. The last meal served in their cafeterias will be dinner Monday. Regular fall semester check-in for the residence halls begins at 9 a.m. Aug 26. The first meal served will be breakfast Aug. 27. Any student with a residence hall contract may check in early if he pays an additional fee — $26.03 (meals included) or $11.70 (meals not included). The first meal for early check-ins is breakfast Aug. 25. The Texas Union will close at 5 p.m. Friday and re-open Aug 27 at 6:30 a.m. Perry-Casteneda Library and the Undergraduate Library will operate on an inter-session schedule beginning Monday when the PCL closes at 7 p.m. and the UGL at 5 p.m. From Tuesday until Aug. 24, the two libraries will be open from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Both libraries will be closed Aug. 25-26 and Sept. 3. On Sept. 4, the two libraries will resume their regular hours. The general fall registration process begins Aug. 24-27, when students may pick up registration materials in the Academic Center between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. Academic advisers will sign course cards Aug. 28-29 On those two days, general registration will be held at the Special Events Center. Students pay their fall fee bills at the SEC Aug. 29-30. Registration for handicapped students is Aug 27 in Main Building 16. Fee payment for handicapped students is from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. in the SEC the following day. f1 all classes begin Sept. 4, but late registration continues from Sept. 4 through Sept 7. The School of Law will not close during the break. The freshman law class attends orientation Monday. Fall registra­ tion for law students is Tuesday and classes start Wednesday. Texas gasoline supplies ‘look good’ Fuel inventory G asolin e w ill be more readily available in Texas this weekend than last week, according to the American Automobile Association’s weekly sur­ vey. “It looks good for Texas this week,” said Nancy Riviello, a travel consultant for the AAA’s Austin office. The report indicates supplies have in­ creased, even though dollar-a-gallon gasoline now appears in at least one grade of the fuel in 2 percent of the 422 stations surveyed These include five Mobil, two Texaco and one Shell station. But you don’t have to pay that much if you look around,” Riviello said All areas of Texas show an improve­ • 87 cents for regular • 90.9 for unleaded • 92.5 for premium Austin averages are as follows • 87 cents for regular • 90 for unleaded • 92.6 for premium In Da lias-Fort W’orth and Houston, twice as many stations are open after 8 p m on weekdays — 12 percent — com­ pared to 6 percent last week Thirty-six percent of the stations in these areas will be open on Sunday, ac­ cording to the survey The price of diesel fuel has decreased from 92.1 cents per gallon last week to 91 6 cents this week, according to the survey ment over last week’s supplies — except for Amarillo, which has slightly tighter supplies this week Average prices around the state rose 1 cent this week, with the following statewide averages at self-service pumps: Page 2 □ T H E D A IL Y T E X A N □ Friday, August 17, 1979 Citizens want KLRN/U audit By DIANE JA N E MORRISON Daily T exan Staff The Committee to Save KLRN /U sent a letter Thursday to Jack Lewis, chairman of the Southwest Texas Public Broadcasting Council Board of Trustees, requesting that the council call a special meeting to deal with budget and management problems at the station The committee requested that the . board conduct an audit of the station to “ determine if it can function for the • next 12 months.” Jack Hopper, a committee member, said an audit would provide ‘‘public assurance” about the status of finances at the station. “IT IS POSSIBLE that K LRN /U will not have the funds to continue its current hours of broadcasting and that morale and turnover of station per­ sonnel may affect the quality of programming, ” according to the letter. If there is a lack of leadership at the station — and there obviously is — there are bound to be problems with getting outside funds,” said Hopper “ This station is highly dependent on grants and outside cash inflow.” Hopper said the committee is con cerned with upcoming management turnover at the station because of the resignation of General Manager Harvey Herbst. “ I would think the people coming in would want to know what the financial situation is,” Hopper said “ Something needs to be done in light of the manage­ ment turnover.” THE COMMITTEE also is concerned “ that the council has lost all control of management with the resignation of Mr. Herbst. We are also concerned that management decisions made in the present chaotic circumstances will im­ pair the station’s ability to operate.” Correction The Daily Texan Wednesday incorrectly reported that library books checked out for the summmer by faculty members are due Sept. 28; the actual due date is Sept. 18. Faculty members will be billed for any University library books not returned or renewed by that date. We m ake and repair boots shoes belts leather RUGi SHEEPSKIN COW & CALF ★ SADDLES ★ ENGLISH WESTERN Capitol Saddlery 1614 Lavaca Austin, Texas 4 7 8 -9 3 0 9 3 LOCATIONS TH U N D E R C LO U D S U B S The Best Sándwich In Town" PHONE ORDERS WELCOME] 32nd & Guadalupe 4 5 2-5010 1608 Lavaca 478-3^81 201 E. Riverside 441-5331 The Doily Texan will cease publication today, August 17, 1979, and resume publications for the 1979 fall semester on Tuesday, August 28, 1979 Texas Student Publications S e lf-S to ra g e Ro oms R e n t b y M o n t h 8710 Burnet Rd. Z im m e rm a n f8 DISCOUNT FLORIST LONG STEM ROSES doxen Elvis tribute draws 200 to Memphis M E M P H IS , Tenn. (U P I) - About 200 Elvis Presley fans burned candles on the front wall of Graceland mansion Thursday in a tribute to the rock star who died at the es­ tate two years ago at the age of 42. Pre s le y ’s fam ily marked 1 the occasion with a brief I c e r e m o n y at p r i v a t e Graceland and about 700 other I fans gathered at Memphis | State University for a day- 1 long salute to Presley, featur- I ing a showing of many of his 1 old movies. The burning candles were placed along the wall of the 14- acre estate at midnight and were kept burning throughout the day. I I | I The estate was closed to the 1 public so the family could I gather in private, but, starting 1 Friday, visitors again will be ■ allowed to walk up the win- 9 I ding driveway to the garden- cemetery where Elvis and his I parents are buried. PRESLEY DIED at the I two-story mansion Aug. 16, ■ 1977, of hypertensive heart M disease. His death triggered 8 world-wide mourning. One- 8 hundred-thousand fans, many 8 from outside the U nited 8 States, poured into Memphis 8 for his funeral. About 10,000 fans returned 8 to E lv is ’ hometown to observe 8 the first anniversary of his death last summer, during a m police and fire strike. Less ¡1 than half that number came « this week. Included in this year’s group m w e r e P r e s l e y f an cl u b 1 members from England who b traveled to Memphis to linger 9 in front of Graceland, snap- 9 I ping photographs and picking up souvenirs I in sever al memorabilia shops that have 8 taken over a small shopping 9 center across Elvis Presley Boulevard. I ‘‘I ’ve been to Graceland 9 every year since ’72 and I ’ve 8 seen him onstage 23 times,” 8 of 8 P e t e r s a i d Manchester, England. ‘‘I ’m m already booked to come (back 9 to Memphis) next August.” R e i d Tie Oxford in m edium brown M ary Jane Slipper in m edium brown and tan. Lace-up Oxford in tan or rust a _ i . . . An oil-covered seabird gets a bath in Corpus Christi. UPI Telephoto MSI team heads for Gulf The D aih Texan, a student newspaper at The University of Texas at Austin, is published by Texas Student Publications. Draw er D, University Station. Austin, T X 78712 The Daily Texan is published Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, and Fri- day except holiday and exam periods. Second class postage paid at Austin, Tex News contributions will be accepted by telephone (471-45911. at the editorial office Texas Student Publications Building 2 1221 or at the news laboratory (Communication Building A 4 1361 Inquiries concerning delivery and classified advertising should be made in T S P Building 3 200 (471-5244) and display advertising in T S P Building 3 210 (471-1865) The national advertising representative of The Daily Texan is Communications and Advertising Services to Students, 6330 N Pulaski, Chicago, IL 60646 The Daily Texan subscribes to United Press International and New York Times News Service The Texan is a member of the Associated Collegiate Press, the Southwest the Texas Daily Newspaper Association, and Journalism Congress, American Newspaper Publishers Association Copyright 1979. Texas Student Publications. THE d a i l y t e x a n s u b s c r i p t i o n r a t e s Summer Session 1979 B y mail in Texas B y mail outside Texas within U S A One Semester F a ll or Spring) 1979-80 P u ked up on campus — basic student fee B y mail in Texas B y mail outside Texas within U SA .... Two Semesters (F a ll and Spring) 1979-80 B y mail in Texas B y mail outside Texas within U.S A $ 9 50 10 qo t 65 16 qq 17 ^ / $29 00 31 qq Send orders and address changes to T E X A S S T U D E N T P U B L IC A T IO N S . P O Box P U B NO 146440 D. Austin. Texas 78712. or to TSP Building. C3 200 ■ ■ ■ H I 9 9 9 2 9 I f Jones Rd. ( W e t t g a t e M a ll A r e a ) FALL S H O E S BY Focus on . . . Nightlife Dressy clothes are back and Climax has fashion­ ed soft, silky Silesta polyester into flowing drapes, side slit skirts, wide belts, braided tie belts, criss-cross backs. In feminine turquoise, plum, and wine in sizes 5 to 13, 40 00 to 46.00 I I f | 14 M M v / i o b i . MaWVppe 2406 G U A D A L U P E O N - T H E - D R A G on the-drag at 2 4 0 6 Guadalupe E d d g k A u a g t 17, 1979 □ THE D AILY TEX A N n P»r * Young’s resignation draws world reaction By United Press International personal against Mr. Young. The Soviet Union Thursday said Israel blackmailed President Carter into fir­ ing U N. Ambassador Andrew Young in one of the biggest political scandals of the Carter administration.’’ Britain s former U N. ambassador. Ivor Richard, said it would have been “ very difficult” for Young not to talk to the Palestine Liberation Organization. \ OUNG RESIGNED amid a storm of protest after he met with PLO observer Zehdi Labib Terzi. Israel charged he broke a U.S. commitment to avoid con­ tact with the PLO until it recognized Israel’s right to exist. The PLO said the episode was an “ assassin ation of dem ocracy” and “ m en tal Isra e li t e r r o r is m .” An spokesman said that his country was more concerned with U.S. policy than with Young’s problems. THE SOVIET TASS news agency noted Young was chairman of the U.N. Security Council for August and said he thus had every right to meet with the PLO’s U.N. observer “ But this routine meeting provoked a stormy reaction from Tel Aviv, whose protest was accom panied by un­ concealed blackmail,” Tass said. “ Such actions by Israel cannot be qualified as anything other than unprecedented in­ terference in the internal affairs of the United States.” In London, ex-ambassador Richard said in an interview with the British Broadcasting Corp. that he himself had had contacts with the PLO. There has been a lot of diplomatic maneuvering at the U.N. about the Mid­ dle E ast situation recently,” Richard said. “ It would have been very difficult for Andy to avoid talking with the PLO. IN TEL AVIV, a foreign ministry spokesman said in a telephone inter­ view, “ The whole story of Young’s relations with the Carter administration is none of our business. We have nothing “ The only matter which is of interest to us is U.S. policy toward the PLO.” N ew sp ap er e d ito r ia ls re fle c te d widespread concern in Israel that the United States was trying to build a bridge to the PLO to secure Palestinian recognition of Israel, despite seeming White House anger over Young’s ac­ tivities. IN BEIRUT, the PLO said Young was forced to resign. “ The PLO ap p reciates Young’s courageous stance and regrets that he has paid the price of his faith in our just cause,” it said. “ Forcing Young to resign represents the ugliest form of mental terrorism. ( I t ) sh ow s how d e m o c r a c y is assassinated bv blackmail.” IN SOUTH AFRICA, a frequent target of Young s criticism, there was no of­ ficial comment but delegates inter­ viewed at a Durban congress of the rul­ ing National Party all made it clear they were delighted. Said W.K. Botha. “ I couldn’t care less about what the Americans do in general, but what I think about Young is unprin­ table.” But black leaders expressed dismay. Said the Rev. Sam Buti, president of the South African Council of Churches, “ It is regrettable that a man of his caliber should resign at this time. He is a man who wanted to see blacks get their civil rights. We are sorry he has left.” A GOVERNMENT spokesman in Zimbabwe Rhodesia, whose recent switch from white-minority rule was strongly opposed by Young because it did not go far enough, said few people there ‘will shed any tears after the political demise of Andrew Young.” But Jam es Dzvova, an official of the Rev. Ndabaningi Sithole’s opposition party, said the resignation would be received throughout the world with “ utter dismay.” “Young will always be remembered as a champion of the underdogs ... there is no doubt Africa will be the poorer without him,” Dzvoza said. Repeat performance Octuplets born in Italy NAPLES, Italy (UPI) - A 29-year- old woman who bore sextuplets three years ago gave birth Thursday to oc­ tuplets — three boys and five girls. One of the infants died seven hour¿ after delivery, hospital authorities said. Doctors at the Naples Hospital for Incurables said Mrs. Pasquilina Chiasnese, wife of an insurance salesm an, had been undergoing lengthy fertility treatment. All six infants in 1976 died within hours o f birth. “ It’s the will of God,” Mrs. Chiasnese said Thursday after being wheeled from the delivery room and recovering from anesthetics. “ I’ve wanted to have children since 1976 when the six from my first delivery died,” she said. “ I didn’t think I’d ever have more than that,” There is only one previously recorded instance of a woman delivering eight live infants. Mrs. Katerina Zerbini, 31, gave birth to three boys and five girls in A the, ,3 , Greece, July 9, 1977. All died within three days. A hospital spokesman said Mrs, Chiasnese was seven months preg­ nant but that the multiple births came naturally and a Caesarean delivery was not considered despite the expected multiple birth. The babies ranged in weight at birth from 15 ounces to 2 pounds, 3 ounces The infant girl who died seven hours after delivery was the lightest of the eight, the spokesman % said. Shortly after their birth the infants were taken to various hospitals in the Naples area for special intensive care. “ We figure the odds on sextuplets are about 262 million to one,” the hospital spokesman said, Ncbody I know has ever figured the odds on oc­ tuplets.” Not fired up ON MOSCOW’S evening television news, commentator Valentin Zorin said Young’s resignation was “ one of the biggest political scandals in Washington the whole of the C a r te r a d ­ in Fira and Rescus s«ml™ included many live demonstrations of fuel fires ministration.” :::• L Z o c Z l n Z n TJZVl??XCZg T " T * " T bys,anders a n ^ through tite sam^ * All sailors accounted for in race tragedy Final death toll at 17 in history’s worst yachtinq disaster ^ ^ saidLT h ^ J v Hth M gl.anf thUPi) " Yachtin8 officials in t h J Adm irar? r ia s to f^ e ™ ssln« ge[>'llcmcn sailors for and n u t th e He rh S L Í", race at 17, including two Americans . ?» f6" death toll for disastrous last leg of the ‘‘Everything and everyone’s been accounted for. No one is missing,” a yacht racing spokesman said Thurs­ day afternoon, more than 48 hours after hurricane force gales swept through the more than 300 boats racing from the southwest tip of England to Ireland in the worst disaster in yachting history. TWENTY-FOUR BOATS worth up to $11 million were abandoned or sunk in the choppy seas and “ salvage pirates' — mostly Cornish fishermen — were out in force, trying to spot and put a line on damaged vessels. “ I ts a nice catch, better than fish," said a spokesman for Lloyds, the underwriters. -People who salvage a vessel can claim a third of its valaf“ a>>d some of those bigger yachts are worth 600.000 or 700.000 pounds ($1.32 to $1.54 million).” Related story, Page 10 THE DEAD INCLUDED two Americans, two Dutch and 13 Britons. Fifteen of the dead were competing in the race and the other two were aboard a trimaran ac­ companying the flotilla. The dead Americans were identified as Frank Halli- day Ferris and Robert Robie, both residents of London, who perished aboard the Ariadne, which was lost. “ Heavy rains and strong winds buffeted Plymouth when the Dutch destroyer Overijssel arrived carrying 15 survivors of the race and the bodies of two who drown­ ed. A MARINE GUARD of honor piped the coffins ashore as the Dutch sailors stood at silent attention along the decks. “ We were really moved by how much it mattered to the Dutchmen to save u s,” said one survivor, who described an ordeal in a lifeboat so packed that “ when we hit a wave all our heads banged together.” The Royal Ocean Racing Club said an investigation would be begun immediately into the disaster — the worst in yacht racing history. Government withdraws Park indictment WASHINGTON (UPI) - The Justice Department Thursday dropped its 36- count indictment against Tongsun Park, apparently ending the government’s in­ vestigation into alleged South Korean influence buying in Congress. Justice Department officials also rul­ ed out the possibility of perjury charges against the Korean rice merchant, bas­ ed on information currently available. D EPA R TM EN T spokesm en had said such charges were being con­ sidered because of alleged conflicts in Park’s testimony. It was presumed that dismissal of the in­ indictm ent m eans no further dictments will stem from the three- year-old probe of alleged Korean part of the immunity agreement. Hill. PARK, WHO WAS granted immunity from prosecution in return for his testimony, was in Seoul Thursday. His lawyer, William Hundley, represented him in court and said only that he would be “ more than happy not to oppose” the motion for dismissal. Park, alleged to have been a central figure in the scandal, told the Senate and House Ethics Committees last year that he passed about $1 million in “ con­ tributions” to his “ friends” on Capitol t e s t im o n y He p r o v id e d th a t helped prosecutors bring bribery in­ d ic tm e n ts a g a in st fo rm er R ep s. Richard Hanna, D-Calif., and Otto Passm an, D-La., and a perjury indict­ m ent a g a in st fo rm e r Rep. Nick Galifianakis, D-N.C. Hanna pleaded guilty. Passman was found innocent at his trial in Louisiana. Only one Korean-born individual, Lanham. Md., businessman Hancho Kim, was convicted a s a result of the probe. He is appealing a conviction on charges he conspired to pass $600,000 to c o n g re ssm e n . P ro se c u to r s n ever provided any evidence he actually delivered a payoff. JUSTICE DEPARTMENT officials did not preclude prosecuting Park if new information is developed indicating ne was not fully candid about his in­ volvement with congressmen. inform ation But Robert Stevenson, a Ju stice Department spokesman, said: “ Unless is received, the new Department of Justice does not con­ template bringing any charges against Park relating to his testimony given during the Department of Justice and congressional investigations.” 1.4 percent increase Income keeps pace with inflation second time this year a M WASHINGTON (UPI) — Americans apparently gained a WASHINGTON (UPI) — Americans aDDarentlv gained a notch in July in their race to keep personal income up with infla­ tion, new government figures indicated Thursday. The Commerce Department said the combined personal in­ come of all Americans rose 1.4 percent in July — the biggest monthly increase this year. GOVERNMENT FIG U RES on consumer prices for July won't be available for another week, but they are not expected to increase as much as 1.4 percent. If that turns out to be the case, it would be only the second month this year in which personal incomes rose faster than prices. The other month was March Frnnnm ids n a v o i n c o o t f o n t i n n Economists pay close attention to the two figures because Americans buy less, production slows and people are thrown out of work when personal incomes fall behind inflation. i n The F ederal Reserve Board said Thursday industrial produc­ tion — the output of the nation’s factories, mines and utilities — slowed 0.1 percent in July, the sam e rate of decline as in June. A SHARP DROP in automobile production outweighed gains in other parts of the economy to bring about the relatively small drop — so small it represents virtually no change. The industrial production index stood at 152.1 - compared to a base of 100 in 1967. Another Commerce Department report said housing starts dropped 7 percent in July to 1,799,000 private units, a trend noted throughout the country and in every type in unit. Except for June, housing starts have declined every month since late 1978 Building permits for July also declined 7 percent. THE GOVERNMENT said much of the July increase in per­ sonal income was due to a 9.9 percent cost-of-living rise for recipients of Social Security and veterans’ benefits. The cost-of-living boost accounted for $10.7 billion of the total $27.2 million increase in personal income — which includes wages, salaries, rents, interest received, dividends and other income. Americans not drawing Social Security or veterans’ pensions didn’t fare a s well against inflation as the overall figures shov Wages and salaries increased only 0.7 percent. ALSO, BEN EFIT increases such as the cost-of-living ris tend to produce an exaggerated effect on the percentage figure the first month they take effect. The race between incomes and prices is a tough one fo Americans to win for another reason — higher incomes in tur cause higher prices. Alfred Kahn, President Carter’s chief inflation adviser, ha: been telling Americans the only way to beat inflation am achieve real income increases is by producing goods more ef ficiently. News Capsules By United Press International Passenger and crew foil hijack attempt MIAMI ~ A ‘strange character” with a knife hijacked an Eastern Airlines jetliner with 91 people aboard Thursday and got as far as a landing pattern over Cuba before a passenger and a crewman overwhelm­ ed him. E astern ’s Flight 980 from Guatemala City landed safely at Miami, its original destination, about 90 minutes late with the hijacker tied up with neckties and a seatbelt. M arket falls after five upward sessions DOW J O N E S A V E R A G E 30 I n d u s tr i a l s Closed at 884.04 smmm NEW YORK - Stocks, which reached a 10-month high the day before, fell Thursday for the first time in five sessions in heavy in­ indicated stitutional trading and the so-called Volcker rally may be at an end. The Dow J o n e s in d u s tr ia l average fell 1.80 to 884.04. The Dow had risen 17.56 points in the previous four sessions and about 60 points sin ce Ju ly when Paul Volcker was tapped to head the Federal Reserve. Shanghai residents spared disaster at last minute as Typhoon Irving veers north, moves out to sea SHANGHAI, China (UPI) — Typhoon Irving, packing winds of more than 100 mph, veered north late Thurs­ day, sparing the world’s largest metropolis from the brunt of the storm. The Central Observatory said the typhoon, the season’s ninth storm that was reported headed toward the mainland early Thursday, has moved farther out to the China Sea. IT SAID THE storm, carrying maximum winds of more than 100 miles an hour but weakening, is 220 miles northeast of Shanghai, the world’s largest metropolis with a population of 12 million people and 18 million others living nearby. Only drizzling ram hit Shanghai, with the storm ap­ parently causing no serious damage. A radio alert earlier Thursday said Typhoon Irving was packing a “maximum wind velocity of force 12” — at least 96 mph, and possibly much higher. THE BROADCAST warned residents in Shanghai, Jiangsu and Zhejiang provinces to be prepared for torrential rains. agricultural crops. Low-lying areas in 26 towns in the rice-producing central Luzon plain north of Manila were flooded by several days of rain. Gov. John Carlin of Kansas, heading a trade delega­ tion from his state on a tour of China, received an apology from his Chinese hosts for the bad weather Thursday. The floods, which washed away roads, bridges and Himsy houses, also triggered landslides on the hairpin curves snaking up to Baguio City, isolating the mountain resort 120 miles north of Manila. That s all right, Carlin said, “ we have a bit of wind in Kansas, too.” Weathermen said Irving on its erratic course sucked in a rain-laden monsoon and sent flood waters ram ­ paging through the Philippines “ rice bowl” region. The Red Cross said at least six people were killed there and 67,500 persons forced to flee to higher ground. FLO O DS S W E P T THROUGH the P h ilipp in e lowlands, breaking dikes and inflicting heavy damage to Heavy rain gouged craters in Manila’s asphalt streets, tying up traffic for hours. And officials said although the floods had receded in the Philippine capital, the down­ pours kept schools closed and skeleton staffs manned government and private offices. IRVING’S TORRENTIAL rams also triggered floods in Taiwan Police said there was no report of casualties but they had to rescue some 200 people trapped in waist- deep floods in suburban Taipei. Parole officials order arrest of con artist Estes DAI LAv (UPI) — Federal parole of­ ficials Thursday ordered the arrest of legendary Texas con artist Billie Sol Estes, the first move in an attempt to revoke his parole in After appearing federal court, E s t e s w as a r r e s t e d by fe d e r a l marshals, taken in handcuffs to the Dallas County Jail and put in the ja il’s infirmary because of a previous back condition. AP PE A RI NG S U BD UE D , E ste s arrived at the jail wearing the same blue pin-striped suit he had worn during his recent trial and sentencing on fraud and income tax evasion charges. He was given a 10-year prison sentence on those convictions Estes, 53. was arrested after U S District Judge Robert Hill rejected E stes’ motion for a new trial on a recent conviction U.S. PAROLE Commission officials 10 Dallas at first refused to talk to r e p o rte rs L a te r , a fte r c a lls to Washington, spokesman Wayne Algood said the parole commission had issued a warrant accusing Estes of parole viola­ tion A hearing would be held within 90 days, Algood said, and Estes would re­ main in federal custody in the mean­ time and would likely be turned over to a federal prison after a brief stay in the Dallas County Jail At the formal parole revocation hear­ ing, the parole commission spokesman said. Estes could have his attorneys pre­ sent and had the right to contest the move Young’s method belied intent Jr± < 3 D -me t*u.Y tckan Although the international and national news media have given every possible statesman, political faction and many “people in the street” the opportunity to comment on Andrew Young’s resignation as U.S. am­ bassador to the United Nations, Young has put it best himself. In a news conference Thursday, Young stated: “The important issue is to find a way of easing the tension between Israel and her Arab neighbors. For me to have remained in the center of this controversy would only have confused that issue.” The controversy which has resulted in Young’s resignation involved his having “discussed matters of substance” with an official of the Palestinian Libera­ tion Organization on July 26. The meeting took place at the New York apartment of the Kuwaiti ambassador to the United Nations. The three men talked about postponing a Security Council debate (then scheduled for July 31) on a Kuwaiti-sponsored resolution to create a Palestinian state on Israeli-held territory. THE UNITED STATES has not granted the PLO of­ ficial recognition, and it is against official policy to carry on ‘substantive discussions’’ with any represen­ tative of the organization. The policy is based primari­ ly on the PLO’s refusal to recognize the state of Israel’s right to exist. Therefore, for whatever reason, Young acted against policy when he agreed to meet the PL )’s representative knowing what would be discuss­ ed. That transgression would not have been so signifi­ cant, though, if Young had given the State Department a full and accurate report of his discussion. He did not. By misrepresenting his actions to the State Depart­ ment, and thus to the president, Young irrevocably un­ dermined his own credibility as a diplomatic represen­ tative of the United States. But Young has stated: “I could not say to anybody, that given the same situation I wouldn’t do it again almost exactly the same way.” Young felt that he was acting in the best interests of his country in meeting the PLO representative on July 26. He could well be right, and that is the unfortunate, but inevitable, irony of his leaving the United Nations. The W ashingto n P o s t’s assessment of Young’s tenure at the United Nations in an editorial Thursday helps point out that irony: “...He (Young) made some truly valuable, out- sized contributions to American diplomacy. He helped to establish vital links between this coun­ try and other countries that had never before been either hospitable or comfortable with American policy...” Obviously, Young was only trying to “establish (a) vital link” with the PLO. He realized that it is that task of the United States to set the stage for an ongoing dialogue between the principal warring parties in the Middle East, the Israelis and the Palestinians, and that, until the task is done, there will be no significant progress at easing Middle East tensions. It is now up to the Carter administration to follow through on what Young attempted, but to do so in a way which is consistent with other national foreign policy objectives and standards of above-board diplomacy. Harvey N eville ©W, Bey rf brand, mr to y to r tty birthday/ ■'A a t . fL A W N 9 ACXiCW FIGVRT/f R A N G O N A ST C 'A N 'LEI tit GOT RID O f T kii5 CM) PVTTET- Rizzo stands for police power Some question lawsuit, cite ne&r-end of mayor s tenure By Edward Schumacher PHILADELPHIA — The picture said it all. Frank L. Rizzo, then the police com m issioner, was on the front page of most of the local newspapers, dressed in a tuxedo with a nightstick tucked in his cummerbund. He had darted from a social affair to be on hand, as he liked to be, at a dis­ turbance involving his men. That was 10 years ago, but this week the law-and- order ardor of the man who is now mayor has com e back to haunt the city. The Justice Department filed an un­ usual suit in U.S. D istrict Court here M o n d a y , a c c u s in g th e c i t y o f widespread police brutality. The suit said that police department policies fostered and covered up abuse, much of which, it said was directed against black and Hispanic people. RIZZO HAS BEEN setting the law- enforcem ent policies in this city for 12 years, beginning when he becam e police com m issioner in 1967 — a tim e when city hall leadership was weak — and continuing after his election as mayor in 1971. T hose p o lic ie s are unabashedly designed to protect policemen. At a news conference Monday, Rizzo said, “I’ll continue to protect them for doing something wrong when they think they are doing something right.” R izzo r e fu s e d to su sp e n d s ix homicide detectives who were found gu ilty tw o y e a r s ago of b eatin g witnesses in a firebombing case until they signed statem ents that led to a wrong conviction. Two other men have since been found guilty of the five deaths in the firebombing, the convic­ tion of the six detectives has been up­ held by a federal appeals court and the detectives are still working in their jobs. It is in the black and Hispanic in north and w est neighborhoods, Philadelphia, that many of the com ­ plaints of police violence are heard. Lee Benson, a historian at the Universi­ ty of Pennsylvania, attributes this to that deep-seated racial anim osities trace back to the early 19th century, when, despite Philadelpnia’s liberal and Quaker traditions, white mobs lynched blacks and burned down Aboli­ tion Hall. DURING THE RACIAL disturbances of the 1960s, Rizzo preached law and order. As a candidate he has consistent­ ly pitched his appeals to white voters. And now he contends that the Justice Department suit is an attempt by the Carter administration to win the votes of blacks and liberals. Indeed, there are those who question whether such a lawsuit accom plishes anything else. Rizzo is in his last five months of of­ fic e . P h ila d elp h ia n s, by a 2-to-l margin, voted last year not to amend the City Charter to allow him to run for a third term. All three of the major candidates for mayor pledge that one of their first actions in office would be to dismiss all the top police officials and reform the department. “ It makes no sense why they are fil­ ing this action at this tim e,” said David W. Marston, who was dism issed as U.S. attorney last year by President Carter and is now a republican mayoral can­ didate, UNDER MARSTON, a federal grand jury was impaneled two years ago sole­ ly to investigate illegal police violence. Twelve policemen were indicted in the first three months. Since Marston’s dis­ missal in January 1978, however, there has not been a single indictm ent, although the grand jury continues to in­ vestigate cases. One reason was tim e lost in the tran­ sition to the current U.S. attorney, Peter F. Vaira. Another, according to Vaira, is that many of their cases were undermined by cover-ups in the police department. Critics such as Marston and many civic groups, however, contend that the office has simply lost its steam in pur­ suing abuse cases. They say, alm ost agreeing with Rizzo, that this w eek’s suit is a move to make up for that. Drew S. Days, assistant attorney general for civil rights, said that politics did not enter into the decision to file the suit. He said that abusive practices are so ingrained in the police department that a change of mayors may not be enough. ®1979 New York Tim es Return Olympic Games to Greece permanently r,_______ progressed, little flam e quickly snuffed out by the icy breath of harsh reality. its . . , . pia ^ Editor’s note: Helen Vlachos, r s note. Helen Vlachos, e d i t o r a n d p u b l i s h e r o f Kathimerini, an Athens daily, is a guest columnist for The New Y Times. By H«l«n Vlachos ATHENS — Every four years, as the day of the inauguration of the Olympic Games draws near, we here in Greece suffer from a recurrent cr isis of nostalgia and frustration. These Games w ere born and reborn in Greece. They started way back in 776 B.C., one of the first exact dates accepted by the historians. And they went on, for very nearly 12 centuries, at regular intervals without interrup­ tion, linking the sacred site of Olympia wit., the youth of a young world — an athletic event of such importance that athletic event of such importance that wars stopped when the Games \ irt due. IT TOOK A Byzantine em peror, Theodosius the Great, to decide after the 287th Olympiad to condemn the Games as corrupt and professionalized and stop them. The Dark Ages were coming and civilization was losing the philosophy of life of the Golden Age. To beat this extraordinary record of longevity, the second era of the Olym­ pic Games, reborn in Athens in 1896 will have to run right into the thiru milleneum. But as things stand now, the Games are already in trouble. The Olympiad that will be held next year in Moscow will wear the number 22, although it is in reality only the 19th. Now it is the Games that stop when the modern world is fighting ana the 16th, 12th and 12th and 13th O l y m p i a d s w e r e casualties of the two world wars. i a t h n i v m n i . H c At present, the Games are nearer to suicide than death by imperial execu­ tion or war. They have taken such monstrous proportions, have become so expensive, that even the super-rich superpowers can barely afford them any more. And they are suffering from the sicknesses of our times: discrimina­ tion, politics, terrorism. ivod now at this point, let me com e back to Greece where in reaction to the nostalgia and the frustration there is an optimistic dream: Why not bring the Olympic Games back to Greece? To Olympia. Permanently. THE IDEA HAS been formulated many lim es by politicians, by roman- tics and by businessmen but has never • «IOI The Academia Waltz ...A m m r u u L a s c i / x m HMymiuS are OcuornK f i / P H L t A w x u s n a r u s . . a Ncrmi Mies of ucrni m r m f i M , m il l m m u n t t x h i m A M K a x b e i w AN l U C i m i ’ Mrru/noc I S A / ii/ r a n U V c.P pe7JENW TO... By Berke Breathed e\'HA m 'A T : m r y a " v ¿ o r m . US AT i 7T y o u c m ... i JEM... (M F U l m m mm... In G reece0 Out of the question! Where will you find the money, the space, the organization, the necessary accom m odations, the stadium , the arenas — the everything? Quite right! It appears to be an im­ possibility. But what about a new for­ mula? For instance, inviting all the competing nations to com e and build their own pavilions and also contribute in the building of all the necessary in­ stallations. How often during this century have whole towns been built for world ex­ hibitions, only to be pulled down after a few months or, at most, a year or two? Why not build a new Olympia, somewhere in the vicinity of the an­ cient but living presence of old Olym­ Jirin g line ------------------------------ — .....- X — NEW OLYMPIA could start by play­ ing host to one of the future Olympiads, say the one in 1988 or in 1992, giving it a new character, a new purity of spirit, a glamor inherited from its past, and then remain as a unique world sports center. Greece would offer the site — one of the most beautiful, the m ost peaceful and harmonious on the sm all planet Earth — underpopulated, unpolluted, with a year-round mild clim ate, near th e s e a , t he Peloponnesus^ where nature has staged its best settings upon a human scale. t h e h e a r t of in An airstrip would tie New Olympia with all the world, welcoming all races, colors and creeds, wholly dem ocratic, and free, as much as possible, from today’s invading com m ercialism . Can you J im agine a reai marble stadium, white and gleam ing pure, without the unacceptable background of clamoring advertisements? Is it so impossible? There are rich men around us, Greeks as well as citizens of the world. There are foundations, and there are organizations that could undertake to create New Olympia and very probably also make it pay. With the whole world on a traveling spree, more and more people constant­ ly “getting away from it all” and going som ewhere else, New Olympia could become a magnet for the young, offer­ ing together with all the facilities for gam es and sports an atmosphere of rare serenity, a quality of sky and air and light that has to be seen and felt and lived to be believed. ®1979 New York Times \teicwii ro MfflINé. ¡M ¡ m u \ a i i n m c ;34C \ me T h e D a i l y T e x a n Editor Managing Editor Assistant Managing Editor Assistant to the Editor News Editor Associate News E d itor.............. Sports Editor Arts and Entertainment Editor Hhoto Editor Images Editor Campus Activities Editor General Reporters Beth Frerking Melissa Segrest Mark Dooley Harvey Neville Charlie Rose ..................... Walter Borges Jeff i,atcham Marion La Nasa Keith Bardin Anne Telford Suzy 1-ampert Jenny Abdo. Marilyn Hauk, Mary Ann Kreps. Diane Morrison, Shonda Novak, Dianna Hunt. Joe Tedino, Joel Williams Issue Editor...................... News A ssistants............. Entertainment Assistants Assistant Sports Editor Make-up Editor................. Wire Editor........................ Copy E d itors...................... A r t is t s ................................. Photographer .................... .....................................Clara Tuma .... Lisa Gameche, Mike O'Neal Kelly Cash. Randy Ormsfcy .........................Robert King ..................................Susie Grubbs ............................Beverly Palmer Pat Vznaga. Martha Sheridan, Nick Chrtss, Robert Hamilton, Scott Bieser. Joe Vissers ........................... Jan Sonnenmair Student PuO*>cat»on$ Reproduction of any pan ot Copyright 1979 ** protMtMsd * m out m e exp ress p r m w w ol m e D oty T«*«n editor '«s put)1 cm on ..■i tons ««pressed r» -e Da r ’ e*an are those ot the «o ’.or o* the mr *er ol the arti­ cle j j are not neceesaruy those of the University q> edm irstra to r me Board c- RegentS or r e exas Student Pu«tc«>ona Board oí Opere* og Trustees Vi ar over civil rights in Ireland The national news on Tuesday described two tragedies, the ship-wrecking storm off the south Irish coast and the sporadic fighting between Catholics and Protestants that marked the tenth anniversary of the intervention of a British peace-keeping military force in Northern Ireland. It is now alm ost 200 years since Theobald Wolfe Tone, the Protestant graduate of Trinity College, Dublin, Uunded in Ulster the Society of United Irishmen, aiming to secure “a brotherhood of affection and communion of rights and a un­ ion of power among Irishmen of every persuasion.” Tone led two unsuccessful French invasions of Ireland, one in 1796. which was broken up off the Irish coast in a December storm, and one in 1798, which ended with his arrest and sub­ sequent death in jail. Americans are not always aware of the efforts throughout history of Irish Protestant patriots to secure civil rights for all their countrymen Jonathan Swift, the Protestant dean of St Patrick s ( athedral, Dublin, fought with his pen. His e s­ say, “ A Modest Proposal,’’ was alm ost prophetic by 200 years of m an’s inhumanity in the Nazi concentration camps. Swilt s ironic final solution to the Irish problem was to trim the problematic native population by fattening Irish babies to make a tasty dish, “whether ^tewed, roasted, baked, or broiled,” in “a fricassee or a ragout.” Conditions have improved considerably in the Republic of Ireland since the tim e of Swift and Tone, and in Northern Ireland for the Catholic minority since 1969 Though referred to as a war between Catholics and Protestants, the struggle in Northern Ireland is not about religion, but about civil rights, which in the past have been weighted heavily accor­ ding to a person's religious affiliation One hopes that a solution to the problem will soon be found in a brotherhood of man. not by calling in the aid of English , soldiers or, as in centuries past, a French or Spanish Ar­ lone Malloy mada. English S elin e’s colum n ‘stum bling rhetoric’ The literate public may never know whether Richard Sel me has any political insight, but we can make an educated guess. (“Confused concepts: Carter manages, fails to lead,” Texan, Aug. 8.) “Seline is a government student.” So what? Your tactful biographical apology is not sufficient excuse for sputtering, stumbling rhetoric. “Confused concepts” — that’s a flattering title for this indecipherable verbiage! Please, a little editorial discretion in the future. __________ ____ ____ Kirk Mitchell Humanities C reative Writing Letters & colum ns T h e D a i l y T e x a n e n c o u r a g e s its r e a d e r s to s u b m i t g u e s t c o l u m n s or l e t t e r s to t h e e di tor on a n y s u b j e c t . ( o l u m n s a n d l e t t e r s m u s t be in good t as te , a c c u r a t e , f r e e f r o m libel, m a l i c e a n d p e r s o n a l c o n t r o v e r s y . S i n c e u e r e c e i v e m a n y m o r e c o n t r i b u t i o n s t h a n can be p r i n t e d d ail y, l e t t e r s a n d c o l u m n s m a y be e d i t e d f o r b r e v i t y a n d clari ty. ( o l u m n s s h ou ld b e ¡0 t y p e d li nes (60 c h a r a c t e r lines) or less; l e tt ers , 20 t y p e d lines. Al l m a t e r i a l s u b - n u t t e d f o r p u b l i c a t i o n on the e dit or ia l p a g e s m u s t i n ­ c l u d e the a u t h o r ' s n a m e , c o l l eg e s t a t u s a n d t e l e p h o n e n u m b e r . Ma i l c o l u m n s a n d l e t t e r s t o the E di to r, T h e Daily I e x a n , PO B o x D, A u s t i n . T e x a s 78712, or d r o p t h e m b y t h e b a s e m e n t o f f i c e s o f t h e T e x a s S t u d e n t P u b l i c a t i o n s B u i l d i n g at t he c o r n e r o f 25th S t r e e t an d Wh i t i s A v e n u e Friday, August 17, 1979 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Page 5 Ask Air. Dan By Dan Barton One o f the w a y s in w h ich I f i n d The Daily T e x a n lacking is th at it does not run an a d v ic e colum n. No Dear Abby or Ann Landers... not e v e n Hints from Heloise. So, I took it upon m y s e l f to s ee i f I could b e c o m e U T s ow n M iss L on elyh ea rts. I placed a f e w d iscrete ads and s e n t the w ord around to s o m e fr ie n d s , and w ith in a f e w w e e k s I had a h e f ­ ty s ta c k o f m a il f r o m peop le w ho had poured out their p r o b le m s to m e in hopes o f s o m e solace. I 'v e l e t t e r s r e p r i n t e d h e r e along w ith the replies I se n t b a ck w ith th em . DEAR DAN: My girlfriend and I had been living together for two years until last week. I left town for a three-day weekend and came back to find she had moved in with my best friend. She refuses to explain her actions and won’t answer my calls or letters. I am being tom apart by this. Can you think of any reason for her actions? the b e s t Signed, Alone Again Dear Alone: Women are like that. You just have to get used to it. DEAR DAN: Our son Harold w as a straig h t-A m ed ical stu d en t until this summer. Then he went on a weekend retreat and became a m em ber of the Hare Krishna movement. He has quit going to classes and is in danger of flunking out. His mother and I try to reason with him, but all he does is drib­ ble vanilla frosting on his nose and ask us for spare change. We would like to hire someone to “deprogram ” our son and give us our Harold back. Would you recommend such a procedure? Signed, H arold’s Parents Dear Parents: The brutal physical and psy­ chological tactics of deprogramming produce questionable results at best. Some friends of my family had their only son rescued from the M oonies and deprogram m ed, but three months later he became a DeMolay and now rides around the countryside on a m ini-bike with a fez on his head while his mother and father cry into their pillows at night. DEAR DAN: A few months ago my girlfriend gave me a baby chick to raise on my own for my birthday. She told m e that as the chick grew so would her love for me. Last night she fed it to a boa constrictor. I cut the snake open with a steak knife but it was too late to save my baby chick. So I stuffed him with papier mache and showed him to my girlfriend, saying “ Look, dear. Little Ed­ mund is not dead. He is only sleeping.’’ She still wants to break up. What can I do? Signed, Anguished Dear Anguished: Obviously you’re not be­ ing romantic enough about this. Naii little Ed­ mund to her windowsill and play a tape of "Listen to the M ockingbird” nearby. She’ll love you for it. DEAR DAN: My husband and I are holding a fam ily reunion next week and a re som ew hat con cern ed o v er th e sea tin g arrangem ents. Our two families have never gotten along and we want to make sure no one feels slighted by who is put where. Can you give us any advice on the place settings? Signed, Contused Dear Confused: Haven’t you heard about the Boat People in Vietnam? They’re out there on the water with no place to go — starving, cold, homeless — and you’re worried about your lousy place settings??! You bourgeoise PIG!!! You and your kind should be taken out in the streets and strangled with piano wire!! There'll be no place for you in the New Order, I can guarantee you that. DEAR MR. DAN: Please help me with something that has been bothering me for a long time. I am 10 years old and go to Sunday school every week. Last time we learned that Jesus was a Jew, all the saints are Catholic, and only people who a re saved get to go to Heaven. But what about the animals? They are all good and are a lot nicer than most of the people that I know, even though they’ve never been to church. I ’m worried about my dog. Copper, and whether I ’ll see her when I get to Heaven. What religion are dogs? Dear Timmy: Baptists, mostly. Signed, Timmy Depressed? Anxious? Worried? School got you down? If you’re too much of a nerd to work out your own problems, write to DEAR DAN, c/o The Daily Texan, PO Box D, University Station, Austin, Texas. 78712. Barton is a T exa n s t a f f colum nist. Cross winds in Nicaragua 0 7 / 7 V r i T* L” T he N e w Y o r k T i m e s rF i r v i / i d s a i d in an e d i t o r i a l on W ednesday, Aug. 15: Specific deeds, not cloudy slogans will clarify the nature of the revolutionary regim e in Nicaragua. In the first weeks of Sandinist rule, officials and the press have referred sharp­ ly to “ Yankee im perialism ” — w h ile a p p e a l i n g fo r A m e ric a n ec o n o m ic and military assistance. The con­ tradictions, and the resent­ m ent, a re inevitable. The deposed Somoza dynasty was installed by the United States Marine Corps and for 40 years was regarded as an American vassal. Among the deeds that will better define the direction of the revolution are the removal of press restrictions and the release of political prisoners. The ruling junta has said it is about to remove controls over all the news media, and the in­ dependent daily La P r e n s a is expected to reappear any day. That will be an event of sym ­ importance. The 1978 bolic > _ i • < a m m *« murder of the paper’s editor h e lp e d tu rn a g u e r r i l l a struggle into a national move­ m ent. L a P r e n s a will be published by the slain editor’s brother, who says he will sup­ port the new government and stress the need for pluralism . The main test of the Sandinist regime will be its tolerance of political opposition. O ther Latin American countries will feel betrayed if the sham dem ocracy of the Somozas is replaced by a one-party leftist dictatorship. im p e ria lis m .’ BUT PLURALISM also im ­ f o r t h e p l i e s f r e e d o m including revolutionary left, to d enounce the freedom “ Y ankee ’ N ic a ra g u a ’s re v o lu tio n a ry ferm ent has already attracted Cuban Communist visitors as well as European Socialists and Latin American Christian Democrats. The most visible Sandinist spokesman is the in­ terior minister, Tomas Borge, an avowed Marxist. But he is turning to Washington for m ilitary aid and explicitly denies that he will appeal to Cuba or Russia if the United States says no. His Marxism a p p a re n tly fa lls sh o rt of zealotry and his colleagues, in any case, include a Catholic priest as foreign minister and an American-trained chief of economic planning. No o n e c a n s a y t h a t N icaragua will not go the Cuban route, but it is signifi­ cant that the junta is pressing for American economic help. The legislation needed to ex­ pand American aid program s must pass a Congress in which diehard Somoza supporters command key committees. Doubtless they will cite every outburst about “ Yankee im ­ p e r ia lis m ” as proof th a t Nicaragua is undeserving, in leftist turn confirming view that America is an im ­ placable antagonist. It will be a test of American m aturity to keep extrem ists on all sides from fulfilling their own dire prophecies. the ®1979 New York Times MOM ANP PAP PIPN'T RAISE HQU To se A PE5ERT RAT... YOU'RE WASTING YOUR LIFE... a S » ««at® S j O IC H !' Gloomy prospects in French politics By Flora Lewis PARIS — Some suggest it’s part of the seasonal doldrum s, the psychologically disconcerting effect of August torpor and an eccentric sum m er that bounced from broiling heat one day to down­ pours and Novemberish chills the next. Others say the politicians have just discovered that practical­ ly anything can make the front pages in these dog days and are taking advantage of the chance for extra publicity even if scarcely anyone is paying attention. In any case, it is the silly season in France and politicians have been the voice of it. Whatever is impelling them, it is a reflection of a sense of un­ derlying futility in the political struggle for the years ahead, after a period in which it was felt that the stakes were tremendous and the game was to be taken with gravity. NOBODY REALLY supposes that anything short of an unforeseeable disaster is going to shake the rule of President Valery Giscard d’Estaing for most of the next decade, although a change of prim e m inisters is expected late this year or early next year to give the appearance of refreshm ent and change. Against this background, the Socialists have been indulging in a running battle with the police over clandestine broadcasting. Radio and televi­ sion in France are completely state-owned and state-controlled, and the opposition has long com­ plained that incumbent power abuses its authority for self-enhancement. To dram atize its grievance, the Socialist P arty has mounted what it calls “ Radio Riposte,’’ il­ legal broadcasts to present its views The broad­ casts have been countered each time with police raids, provoking indignant outcries about the violation of the traditional sanctity of party premises. The Socialists say they plan more broadcasts, from Montpellier next time. The police obviously plan to respond; the partisan press obviously plans to express outrage. ONLY PIERRE MAUROY, the mayor of Lille, has noted the nonsense of it all, pointing out the contradiction of a party whose platform firmly endorses the state monopoly of broadcasting non­ etheless sponsoring illegal programs. The Communists are sitting out this particular series of incidents, but are launching their own high-decibel campaign on the economic fro A Their leader, Georges Marcháis, caoie beck from a vacation in Yugoslavia and proclaimed that he was ready to “ unite with the devil’’ to fight what he called the “ most ferocious class policy applied in France for a long tim e.” He didn’t specify which devil he had in mind, an enigma because the Communists broke with the Socialists two years ago and have been attacking them as well as all the other parties with un­ restrained fury and an apparent delight in isola­ tion ever since. Marchais’s announcement provoked Bernard Chapuis, whose task is to inject Le Monde with a daily bit of humor, to comment that whatever the Communists had in mind “ our new Doctor F aust” was unlikely “ to escape the dreary purgatory which French political life has become.” THE BITE OF the government’s tough policy has become real enough. Unemployment is up to 1.4 million and still growing. Prices are rising a good bit faster than wages now. Social security taxes have gone up an additional 1 percent, cost- of-living increases are running at an annual rate of 11 percent, and gas and electricity have just been raised by 7.5 percent. Cigarettes have gone up again (American brands now cost $1.20) and so have bus and subway fares. Heating oil, now at $1.07 a gallon, has increased by 33.7 percent since the first of the year, and gasoline, now $2.55 a gallon for regular and $2.74 for premium, has gone up nearly 15 percent in the same period. Interest rates are also up. Prim e Minister Raymond Barre has promised some relief for the poorest people and some help for the construction industry and public works by next month. But for the bulk of the population, he said, the question is not whether they will get an increase in purchasing power and improved living •US) standards, but whether what they now have can be maintained or must drop. He blames nrimarily the rise in oil prices, to bring a balance-of- which are expected payments deficit of $1.2 billion to $2.5 billion this year, after earlier painful austerity m easures had managed to produc a surplus. France cannot avoid a real transfer of wealth abroad equal to 1.5 percent of its gross national product this year, he said, and cannot expect a growth rate above 2 per­ cent. this “THIS IS NOT austerity, is highway robbery,” retorted Georges Seguy, head of the Communist-dominated labor federation, promis­ ing an all-out union fight against the government as soon as the workers come back from holiday. The Communists insist that it is not only oil costs that are responsible but a Government policy that they say is aimed at helping the bosses and keep­ ing the workers down. Marcháis estim ated that the latest official measures will lop $1.5 billion off private purchasing power. the sound of The public discontent is also real, but the predictions of mobilized confrontation and up­ heaval have toothless barking because the unions of various political allegiance are too intent on their rivalries to act together, and there is a general awareness that all the noise and demonstrations in the world will not revive prosperity. The one thing everybody agrees about is that the prospects are definitely gloomy. There is a cer­ tain indulgence for silliness now, since nothing but bleakness lies ahead. An ideological “ new right” has emerged, exer­ cising intellectuals in wrathful debate, but one of its protagonists suggested that the com m entators were only carrying on so heatedly because there is little other news and nothing much interesting to talk about. Perhaps the clim ate will change with the brisk air of fall. For now, France is only slumping with grumpiness. °1979 New York Times IT'S NOT TOO LATE TO MAKE SOMETHING OF YOURSELF... COME HOME WITH ME..IIL HELP YOU... WHAT PO YOU SAY? DOONESBURY LISTEN UP, PEOPLE, UJE HATE AN AN­ NOUNCEMENT! 11 SHOULD BE PANON! PANC/N'.. J PANON'!" by G arry Trudeau SlUPfO 54 UKLL ONLY BE xTM A APM/TT1N6 CELEBKTTIES PANON' TONIGHT, SO THE REST M N OF you CAN ALL 60 STAYIN' BACKTOBROOKLYN. ALIVE ' / UtLL ALL FAMOUS PEOPLE PLEASE CQPB TO THE HEAP OF THE UNE FOP TOUR VCKETS.. y j -j -j -jive ta lk in '.. * THOSE CELEBS m O PONT LOOK UKE THEMSELVES, PLEASE HAVE XXJP CUPPIN6S KEAPY, / DOESN'T LOOK GOOD, ZONK.. / / F t VE, FEET. TAKE By William F. Buckley Jr. Muggers and muggees Family court judges should walk unescorted he circulated to officials of the family court. A number of letters cam e in, and one of them was from a young man serving the sum m er between graduation and law school as a guard at a reform school of sorts. He had been assasalted by a 1 5 -y e a r-o ld w h o se description matched that of C ostikyan J r . ’s a ss a ila n t. Could it have been the sam e boy? Edward Costikyan, a prom i­ nent New York lawyer who managed the 1965 campaign of Abraham Beame for mayor, is a stuobornly inquisitive man who said recently that in his opinion when you lose con­ trol of the streets, the society is going down. He was making more than an abstract judg­ ment. forcement officers are not asleep! The four young men were kept in jail two entire weeks, which was cruel and unusual punishment, since it was Christmastim e. One of them was then permanently released, for lack of convin­ cing evidence. Another was tried last week. He was given a sentence of 60 da vs. I wasn’t there, but 1 assum e the judge gave him a very stern lecture, and perhaps extracted from him a promise not to kill any other boy for a whole year. Two other of the assailants have not been sentenced yet. If their plea bargaining is as successful as that of their con­ federate, they can hope to get 60 days. I wonder: Can you for unemployment qualify benefits when you are in jail? le a s t we have If not, at som ething the D em ocratic national platform can go to work on. Years ago I remarked in- to W h itta k e r so u c ia n tly C h a m b e r s t h a t A r th u r Koestler seemed to be spen­ ding an inordinate amount of time on the subject of hanging (he was opposed). Chambers remarked, kindly, “ I guess you ve never been hanged ” It used to be safe to say that most people have never been mugged Less safe nowadays. All judges who preside over fam ily c o u rts and before whom the muggers appear should be made to walk home at night unescorted I know a bar in Flushing where one of those judges should be invited to stop and have a beer on his way home. ® 1979 Universal Press Syn­ dicate I 1 ---I S z o j I —Y| O Im WSj NATIONAL CFFO&T ¿ j . í> Trm Carwou catch Leviathan rnith o f ishhook T j o b h v i What other newspapers say N ashville T ennessean: The General Accounting Office has deter­ mined that foreigners own nearly 10 million acres of U.S. farmland, an area three times the size of Connecticut. this is a minuscule part of the nation’s 14 billion acres of farmland. But ...twice as much as agricultural experts expected...and much of the land... is in some of the most productive acreage in the country. AGRICULTURE SECRETARY Bob Bergland says he does not regard the present level of foreign ownership as a menace to the national security. But it is causing concern among farm ers and farm state congressmen and could to great changes in the agricultural economy. lead ...foreign ownership of U.S. farmland could force more and more farm ers off the land and speed the disappearance of the small family farm Foreign investors with an abundance of oil money or other U.S. dollars can buy up large tracts or land with cash, while native farm ers are struggling to pay for their farms with the small profits they make off the land Large land purchases by wealthy foreigners are sure to raise the price of land and make it for p ro sp e ctiv e young m ore difficult American farm ers to get a start. GEORGIA STATE Sen Bill English believes that once the land is sold to foreign interests “ the chances are that it will never be owned by an American boy or girl.” Many ..purchases by foreigners are being made by holding companies and other con­ glomerates and multi-national firms for hidden owners. This makes it difficult to find out who does own the land. A growing num ber of agriculturists, politicians and ordinary citizens are becom­ ing worried about the increasing foreign ownerhip of U.S. farmland But the question is what can be done about it It is not against the law for a foreigner to own U.S. land. ONE THING THAT is being tried is repeal of an exemption for foreign owners from pay­ ing a capital gains tax when they sell their U.S. farmland A bill putting an end to that advantage is now pending in Congress. But even if it passed, that legislation will only affect a foreign owner who sells his land, not one who buys it and keeps it. It will be more difficult to halt foreign ac­ quisition of U.S. farmland, even if this step is desirable This question needs further debate by Congress and the public ... ® 197t United Press International A couple of years ago a very young man — a big boy is a more accurate way of putting it — assaulted Costikyan’s son and attem pted to blind him. It turned out that was the third mugging for this little veteran that sam e day, which shows that there is some industry left in New York. A little in­ vestigation revealed that the boy-mugger was up for three raising previous muggings, the interesting question, what was he doing roaming Second th e 70s u n ­ A venue an d looking for fettered, while to young boys whose eyes gouge out? l e a r n i n g COSTIKYAN wrote a piece about his son’s experience th e a p ­ u p o n prehended crim inal was again out on the streets. In the first draft of that article, he ven­ tured to predict that by the time the piece was published, the mugger would, at the rate he was going, have assaulted a fifth or sixth victim But he persuaded himself to cut out that sentence, since it sm ack­ ed of sensationalism , and Costikyan is a careful man New Y ork's corporation counsel was much struck by the magazine article, which th a t Indeed it w as, and the reform school punished the assailant by dismissing the guard. The boy convict’s story th e g u ard had was assaulted him. The guard’s defense was he; was protecting himself Those who looked disinterestedly on the conflic­ the ting stories rem arked guard weighed 145 pounds, the convicted mugger 250 pounds. Oh yes, the m ugger was scheduled to be let loose in less than one year. Without checking with the actuaries, I figure at his current rate, he can probably mug 242 people before he retires on Social Security. IN THE m ail th e re ’s a l e tte r fro m a w om an in Flushing, New York, Her son went to a lonely bar last December, looking for a cou­ ple of friends who w ere’t there. Waiting for them, he had a beer, than wandered out. There, arm ed with clubs, were four young gentlemen — who began assaulting him A half hour later his mother was informed an ambulance had taken her son to the hospital. There he lay for two weeks, finally dying of internal in­ juries. But the police captured the four assailants! Our law en­ Page 6 □ T H E D A ILY T EX A N □ Friday, August 17, 1979 FREE IQ TEST THE AUSTIN TEST CENTRE ' o ffers for a lim ited tim e free in te llig e n c e and p ersonality tests Your IQ . person ality and a p titu d e d ete rm in e your future K n o w . th e m . No obligations. 2 8 0 4 Rio G ra n d e Austin, Texas S / u n i s f u r i i h \ t h r h i s f t n f i u i n h o f S i t r n t o l o p s CLOGGY II starring S o’western Stallion & Talla Shoe TH E S T E P S C O N T IN U E... Citizens react Police brutality protested Members of the Brown Berets and the Black Citizens Task Force staged a peaceful demonstration on the steps of police headquarters Thursday, The coalition of approximately 35 chanting citizens occupied the office of Austin Police Chief Frank Dyson while carrying a coffin in commemoration of Orel Couch, who died Aug. 1 while being arrested by Austin police officers Claude Hooker and Dunny Donovan The red-and-white message on the cardboard coffin read. “ In memory of all the victims who died at the hands of APD. We do not deserve to die because we are poor or minorities.” The Rev. Dennis Brown led the group in a prayer upon enter­ ing Dyson s office After the prayer, the Rev Brown said All that we that are here today want is a small thing — justice. “ We are not asking for justice — we are demanding it,” Brown said. “ We have been victimized, and we are tired of it,” he said. “ The mayor, the Austin Police Department, the F B I and the Justice Department have put justice in the hands of minorities. “ We need to dismantle the police association — Davidson, Dyson are all puppets on a string,” he said. “ If you don't stop and be with us now, how in the hell will you be with us in 1981?” Brown said the daily demonstrations on she steps of police headquarters are to demand Dyson’s resignation, dismantling of the police association, action from the mayor and Austin City Council members and creation of a citizens review board. “ When they take someone’s life, they should be suspended,” shot in stitch-o-vision DAILY 18 99 N O W SH O W IN G AT THE Brown said. N EA R If YOU z J “ People must realize we are not only protesting for Couch’s death, but against police brutality,” said Dorothy Turner, presi­ dent of the Black Citizens Task Force. “ Couch was the s t r a w that broke the camel’s back.” Paul Hernandez, president of the Brown Berets, said negotiations with city officials thus far have been “ political rhetoric.” Closed meeting Free Fountain Coke! 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Jan Sonnenmair, Daily Texan Staff Dyson, city officials discuss police practices Austin Police Chief Frank Dyson met with city officials in a closed meeting Thursday but said he has not decided what action he will take concerning the death of Grel Couch. In e a rly August, 41-year-old Couch, a black man, died of a frac­ tured larynx while being arrested by two Anglo police officers. Despite protests by East Austin citizens, Dyson refused to suspend the officers, saying he does not con­ done an autom atic suspension policy. City Council members Jim m y Snell and John Trevino met with Dyson and City Manager Dan David­ son Thursday and said more such meetings will be held. Snell said suspension, policy­ making and the possibility of creating a citizens review board were not discussed at the meeting. “ I don’t know what direction the chief will take, but I ’d like to see him handle matters with the citizens in mind.” Snell said. After the meeting, Dyson said. There will be policy changes — I ’m asking the city manager to review a number of things, but I ’m not ready to talk about them now.” Snell said. “ It might be that we’re reacting rather than acting, but Johnny ( Trevino) and I were ap­ pointed to meet every so often about police issues. We intend to meet more often.’’ Snell said he will be meeting in the “ near future” with citizens who protested Couch's death and asked for Dyson’s resignation because he would not suspend the officers in­ volved in the incident. ’ S O N M O D I A Z Z I P B B E A U T Y B E C O M E S YOU n i t h in (li i idualized skin carjp bv Erno Laszlo C r,i/\ jo e s is m a k in g i <)im i tor fh e n < ‘ v\ t.ifl fashions .it 11\ m i; ( I, ilk . N< >v\ v c uj (tin < m a te th.it sp(M ml lo o k tro m top fa sh io n a n d d e s ig n ­ er la b e ls in o u r g reat s e le c tio n of sale m e rc h a n d is e . Y ou w o n ’t b e lie v e th e lo w p r ic e s ’ Sale Sale Sale mi R e m e m b e r . 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(Continued from Page 1.) deciding to accept the invita­ tion to become University president, she said. “ (The regents) finally came to me and said they didn’t know what they were going to do if I didn’t accept,” she said. Once she made her decision, neither outraged students nor angry faculty in the state could make her change her mind. “ I N E V E R considered step­ ping down at all. I did not sleep at all, except fitfully, for two nights after I accepted. But once I took it, I wanted to keep it. “ I thought the worst thing would be to take it and then step down. I knew what I ’d be facing, but it seemed to me there were few alternatives for the University. This is my school and I wanted to do my best for it.” So she closed the door to her house, m oved in to the p resid e n t’s mansion and began the business of running the University. Transition from turbulence to tranquility did not come quickly, or instantaneously. Rather, it took a gradual course, she recalls. But in a year, hostility about her ap­ pointment waned and UT got back to business as usual, she said. S H E A D R O IT LY ticks off the accomplishments of which she is proudest: • Improvement of the facul­ ty, including the importation of such giants as Nobel Prize- Campus News Brief Red heed pin bowling offered today at Union The Texas Union Recrea­ tion Center will offer red head pin bowling from 11:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. F r i­ day. ANNOUNCEM ENTS TEXAS UNION FILM COMMITTEE will at 8 and 10:15 the Texas Union present p.m. Friday Theater. Admission is $1.50. in M EETIN GS LONE STAR CHAPTER OF MENSA will meet at 8 p.m. Aug. 24 at Farm and Home Savings Association N o rth B ra n c h , S h o a l C re e k Boulevard at Anderson Lane. Mike Steiner will perform a magic show. L E S A M18 D E L A L A N G U E FRA N CAISE will meet at 6:30 p.m. Friday at Les Amis restaurant for French conversation. Look for the table with the miniature tri-color flag TA8LETO P G EN ER A LS will meet at noon Sunday in Beilmont Hall 204. Everyone in simulation gaming is invited. interested winner Ilya Prigogine and Ein stein com patriot John Wheeler. • Upgrading of University buildings.“ Pm much more of a people person than a building person.” she said, but if you are going to get good people, you need good facilities.” • Acquisition of successful coaches in both football and b a s k e tb a ll who brought national attention to the University. • O v e rs e e in g huge in ­ in m i n o r i t y c r e a s e s scholarships. Just as adroitly, she admits her greatest disappointment is that faculty salaries con­ tinue to lag and that the 5.1 percent salary increase ap­ proved by the Legislature will cause the facu lty to fall further behind in its buying power. T H E R E G E N T S invited Rogers to keep her post after her 65th birthday this year, but she declined, saying she thought it was time for for her to step down. Now, her spacious office on the fourth floor of the Main Building is nearly devoid of personal mementos; the fur­ n i t ure and most of her b e l o n g i n g s h a v e been transferred to her new office on the fourth floor of the Academic Center. 1 just shut the door four years ago when I moved into the president’s house. Pipes need to be repaired, the yard needs to be replanted. ... I ’ll just stay at home awhile.” She also will be sorting through papers she left pack­ ed away when she was asked to be president ad interim, and decide which are still im­ portant enough to keep. Paintings and pieces of sculpture which she displayed in the president’s mansion lay on a table, waiting to be returned to the art museum which loaned them to her four years ago. Most of the plants will stay in the office; only one, a gift from a former student and ad­ mirer, will go to the new of­ fice. IN T H E M ID ST of the tran­ sition, Rogers is making plans for the future. She will take a year s leave of absence, much of which will be spent taking care of her house. Then she will decide what to do next. She jokingly said retirement sounds pretty good right now, but she quickly added she has been offered numerous jobs — from the presidency of other univer­ sities to advisory posts in Washington — but has yet to choose one. Whatever happens, she said she would not change anything during the last five years. She added that she is pleased with the way her presidency is end ing. This is the way I wanted it 1 11 just fade quietly away.” Gays’ conference set Friday Lesbian actress and comedienne Pat Bond and former Air Force Sgt. Leonard Matlovich will speak Friday at the sixth annual Texas Gay Conference. Lucia Valeska, newly named co-executive director of the National Gay Task Force, also will speak at the conference at Austin’s Sheraton Crest Inn. “The goals of the conference are to bring people together to exchange ideas and set statewide goals,” said Wcíody Egger, con­ ference coordinator and former member of the Texas Gay Task Force. Workshops at the conference include in Enriching A Single Lifestyle, Gays Literature, Gay Parents and Custody Issues Gay Minorities in Christian Churches and Parents and Friends of Gays. August 17, 1979 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ 7 / j F • G f • I • ENTIRE STOCK OF SUMMER DRESSES • s p e c ia ls 40% off prices start at *9.60 Friday & Saturday only \ The VISA & MatterCharge W elcom e Appainell Slnop %tcvenUtu 1 hr. free parking w /$ 3 .0 0 purchase first level t weve rounded up 1:' a herd of | t¡ Levi’s* corduroys ¡§¡| ...each one is at a low sale price I shelves, size and color are a matter of choice, not With this many Levi's® corduroys stacked on our\ 3f if chance. Choose from our assortment of 21" bells iljjl in a multitude of colors. Cotton and polyester for ' 1 long wear. Let Levi's® corduroys put you in the 4 j seat of comfort at special savings. Also available in preps' sizes 25 to 30; 1 reg. 13.99................ 11.99 IN GEAR. FIRST FLOOR. LOW GEAR. SECOND FLOOR. FOLEY'S IN HIGHLAND MALL. SHOP MONDAY THROUGH SATURDAY 10 A M TO 9 A M I ÍL Page 8 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Friday. August 17. 197Q Austin police searching for couple Officials believe husband, wife conspired in two rapes B y J O E T E D IN O Daily Texan Staff The Austin Police Department is searching for one man and one woman in connection with the rape of a 24-year-old University staff member. The pair allegedly conspired to ab­ duct and eventually rape the woman. The incident occurred Monday in a field 14 miles outside Austin in east Travis County but was not reported to police until Tuesday afternoon. The complainant told police she was abducted at gun point at Highland Mall Monday night by the man and his wife, said A PD sex crimes detective Gerald Raines. P o lic e and B a stro p County s h e riff’s o fficers also are in ­ vestigating the rape of a 22-year-old woman that occurred Wednesday, reportedly under s im ila r c i r ­ cumstances. Raines said he believes the two cases are related. In the first of the two cases, the victim said she was approached in the Highland Mall parking lot Mon­ day night by a woman who asked her to help her start her stalled car, Raines said. The woman’s car was parked at the Hilton Inn, 6000 Middle Fiskville Road, he said. When the victim arrived at the woman’s car, a man holding a pistol confronted her and told her to get back in her own car. The man told the victim his name was “ Bobby” and he had just been released from the Marine Corps, the victim told police. The man drove to the end of a dirt road somewhere in east Travis County, where he stopped the car, led the victim down a cow path into a field and raped her, she said. The man told the victim he was going to drive her car to Houston, but instead drove back to the mall, where his wife was asleep in her car. Raines said the assailant left the victim's vehicle. The man reported­ ly left a kinife in the victim ’s car. Raines said the victim obtained the lice n se p late num ber of the assailant’s car. Policeman quits job in face of charge I day with aggravated assault with a deadly weapon after he allegedly pointed his revolver at a Kansas family in a downtown Larry L. Bird, 24, who resigned from the force Thursday mor­ ning, was charged with the third-degree felony before being released on $10,000 personal bond. Austin Police Chief Frank Dyson had said he intended to fire - motel. Bird. Bird, who was off-duty Wednesday night, was inside one of two rooms at the Ramada Inn, 300 E. 11th St., which were registered to a family from Kansas, said Lt. Roger Roundtree A P D information officer. Bird pulled his revolver and threatened the man, his wife and their two children, Roundtree said. The man ran downstairs and called police. Bird reportedly told police he does not know how he got to the motel or what he was doing there. Bird had been at a party with fellow off-duty officers Wednes­ day night at a public facility in the area of the Ramada Inn Dyson said. Lt. Roger Napier, A PD homicide detective, said “ there is an indication (Bird) had been drinking.” Bird had been a patrolman for less then three months Round­ tree said. D- VTDK A 'i£ O T D K ORIGINAI _ _ _ _ _ ASKING PRICE $3 09 BUNK CASSETTE BARGAINS!! Stock up on those and Save! TDK DC-90: Low noise ferric oxide tape in blank cassettes. E C l O ) ^ ■ o r i g i n a l ORIGINAL A SKIN G I PRICE: ALTEC L_A(Nl«SINIO $119 ^ ■ a s k in g ■ PRICE $39 95 LUXURY-LISTENING SAVINGS ■Headphones wffi 3Vi” cone drivom I K O SS KO/727B: Adjustable b e a d -» band, foam-filled ear cushions. H |STEP UP TO ALTEC SPEAKERS» Art on these baroMns for Mg savings ALTEC-LANSR4G DESIGN 5* 3-way speaker with 8 " woofer, two 3 ” [tweeters c r e / x i c PUT A CONCERT IN YOUR CAR!! 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A SK IN G PRICE T E C H N IC S P R O D U C T S HAVE NOT B E E N R E D U C E D 1 2 BUT R EFLECT TRUE S A V IN G S ASKING PRICES ARE OUR ORIGINAL ASKING PRICES FOR THESE ITEMS INTERMEDIATE M A R K D O W N S M A Y HAVE BEEN TAKEN CUSTOm hi-fi Discount centers THE DAILY TEXA N Friday, August 17, 1979 Page 9 ‘Surprised’ Graham leads Westchester HARRISON, N Y. (U P I) - Australian David Graham, still on a high following his PGA Championship, surprised even himself by shooting a flawless 6-under-par 65 Thurs­ day to take a three-stroke lead over Mac McLendon after the opening round of the $400,000 Westchester Classic. Playing his first round since beating Ben Crenshaw in a dramatic playoff at Oakland Hills two weeks ago, Graham sank birdie putts of 15, 20 and 40 feet, and completed the bright day without a bogey. “ Winning the PG A has made me feel I can win anywhere, anytime,” the 33- year-old Graham said. But he conceded, “ I really thought I d have a little problem this week. I ’ve had no chance in the last five-six days to prac­ tice. After the PGA I went home (Delray Beach, Fla.) to absolute chaos and I didn’t have a chance to hit a ball for the first three days. “ I’M STILL IN the period of the PGA sinking into me. I really thought I might have had a little problem as far as my concentration goes.” The slump-ridden McLen­ don, who failed to survive the cut in his last three tour­ naments, eagled the fifth hole to stand alone in second place at 68. and in a group at 69 was Tom Watson, within range of becoming golf’s first $400,000 winner for a single year. Watson, starting his round on the backside, as did Graham and McLendon, sank a 60-foot birdie putt on the 15th hole and eagled the 18th when his 4-wood carried within 12 feet of the pin. ALSO BUNCHED AT 69 in quest of the $72,000 first prize were George Burns, Tom Kite, Bob Eastwood, Mark McCumber, Bob Byman and Jack Renner. Lee Elder, the defending champion, manag­ ed only one birdie and wound up at 75. Even with his first major championship behind him, Graham says he still has to prove to himself that he’s mentally capable of following it up with another victory. I “The biggest mistake could make would be to slack off, he said. “ I have too much self-pride for that, and it would be a very personal achievement for me to win here.” Tomjanovich’s case finished with testimony HOUSTON (U P I) — A judge and lawyers Thursday prepared to let a jury decide whether the Los Angeles Lakers must pay damages because Kermit Washington delivered a crushing blow ín ií16 ^ace Houston's Rudy Tomjanovich during a December 1977 game with the Rockets. U.S. District Judge John Singleton sent the jury from the courtroom and took lawyers into his chambers to discuss the jury instruction he will deliver at the time lawyers make final arguments to the panel in the $4.4 million damage case. After arguments, the five-man, one-woman panel will decide first whether the Lakers are — as Tomjanovich and the Rockets charge - responsible for Washington’s punch causing Tom­ janovich a cracked skull, broken jaw and nose and other in­ juries. IF THE LAKERS are held liable, then a separate hearing and jury deliberation will be held to determine how much money the Lakers must pay. Washington is not a defendant. Testimony in the 10-day trial has conflicted and much of it has focused on Washington’s intent as well as whether the Lakers u í u ^ *13Ve keen more diligent in discouraging violence Washington said there was never any formal admonition against violence. One piece of evidence excluded was a Sports Illustrated arti­ cle about National Basketball Association “ enforcers,” which included Washington in its list of physically intimidating players. Washington said Laker publicists encouraged him to help with the article as an incentive tn tirirú cai«c Connors advances in Stowe," Borg in Toronto quarterfinals Q w I I n i t A H D p a a a By United Press International « STOWE, Vt. — Jim m y Connors easily advanced to the quarterfinals of the $75,000 Stowe Tennis Grand Prix Thursday, putting away hard­ hitting Australian Colin Dibley, 6-4 6- 2. The other seeds had a con­ siderably tougher time. Eighth-ranked B illy M artin of Palos Verdes, Calif., was an upset victim as Anand Am ritraj of India rolled to a 6-3, 6-1 win. Johan Kriek of Austria, ranked fourth, dropped a set before coming back to defeat un- seeded S te v e K r u le v it z of Baltimore, 5-7, 6-4, 6-3. Connors, who won the inaugural edition of the tournament last year, got off to a quick start against Dibley and never looked back — winning the first three games of the first set. DIBLEY WAS the second-straight big server Connors has come up against. He defeated Steve Docherty of Portland, Ore., in first-round play Wednesday and he felt that helped him prepare. “ I went out there today, and because of yesterday’s match, I had . t_ . i t . my rhythm from the beginning,” he said. “ I played some pretty good games the first couple of times he served.” Martin looked and felt sluggish in his match and Amritraj took advan­ tage of it, winning four of the first five games. ‘‘He played pretty well and I just didn’t compete,” said Martin. “ I just didn’t feel like playing.” Most of Martin’s trouble came from Am ritraj’s service — which he had trouble returning all day. The four remaining seeds will play in Friday’s quarterfinals. Connors will take on Amritraj; No. 2 seed Tim Gullikson of Boca Raton, Fla., will face B ill Maze of Carmel, C alif.; Kriek will square off against Fritz Buehning of Short Hills, N .J.; and fifth seed Tom Gullikson of Palm Coast, Fla., plays Mike Cahill of Memphis, Tenn. ★ ★ ★ TORONTO — Bjorn Borg toyed with 19-year-old Frenchman Yanick Noah Thursday to register his third straight-set victory of the $210,000 International Cham­ Canadian pionships, scoring a 6-2, 6-4 triumph and advancing to the quarterfinals. In a match that took just 55 minutes, Borg unnerved Noah by breaking serve in the first game of the first set, then quickly drew the inexperienced youngster into a volley game by playing to his weak backhand, Borg wrapped up the first set in 22 minutes passing Noah down the line in the seventh game and taking the eighth with a overhand smash BORG, PREPARING FOR the upcoming U.S. Open, was not dis­ pleased that his oppostion has been so '^ me in the first thre* rounds “ I like it like this. Straight sets are just fine. I want no problems,” said the 23-year-old Swede, the top seed in the battle for the $28,000 winner’s purse. Seventh-seeded Gene Meyer of Wayne, N .J., won the dubious honor of facing Borg in the quarterfinals by charging from behind to take a third-set tie-breaker over San Diego’s Brian Teacher, 3-6, 6-3, 7-6 Fourth-seeded Vitas Gerulaitis of New York advanced with a 6-1, 6-3 victory over South African David Schneider. Connors challenges Dibley’s serve. UPI T elep ho to Brewers top Texas; Bosox gain on Birds — 3?— 19— — — m— rm i ...... — — — .. runs Thursday to pace a 17-hit attack and lead the Chicago Cubs to a 14-4 rout of the San Francisco Giants. The firs t nine Chicago batters in the seventh inning reached base safely during an eight-run outburst which nail­ ed down the triumph for Lynn McGlothen, 10-8, who went eight innings, striking out six and walking two. Standings NATIONAL LEAGUE AMERICAN .EAGUE ■y UnlWd P r«M International Root W L Pet. QB Pittsburgh................... 70 49 M o n treal.................. 64 51 Chicago .................... 63 54 Ph ilad elp h ia............... 61 59 St. L o u is .................... 60 58 New Y o r k .................. 50 66 588 — 4 .557 6 .538 9 ^ .508 9 V , 508 431 18V4 West Houston ..................... 70 51 C in cin n a ti.................. 66 58 San F ra n c is c o 57 64 Los A n g e le s............... 55 85 San Diego ................. 53 69 A tlanta...................... 47 74 .579 — 541 4 V, .471 13 458 14V4 .434 17Vfc 388 23 Thoraday't Baeults Chicago 14, San Francisco 4 Pittsburgh 5, San Diego 4 New York 6, Atlanta 3 Los Angeles 4, St. Louis 2, 15 innings ■y United Preee International Keet W L P e t OB Baltim ore .................. 78 40 .................... 74 44 Boston Milwaukee 54 New York D etroit........................ 62 58 59 Cleveland 82 Toronto 71 50 64 61 38 861 — 4 827 8 V, 587 542 14 517 1 7 508 18 .317 41 West C a lifo rn ia ................... 87 54 M innesota................... 63 58 Kansas City ............... 62 58 61 Texas 87 Chicago 71 Seattle 85 Oakland Thursday's Results 60 53 ................. 50 36 554 — 529 3 .517 4V, 496 7 442 13 V, 413 17 298 31 Boston 7, Chicago 5 Kansas City 4 . Baltim ore 2 Minnesota 5, New York 1 Milwaukee 4. Texas 1 steal home but the Royals were awarded the run when Baltimore pitcher Dennis Mar­ tinez was called for a balk by third base umpire Steve Palermo, Weaver objected to the call and was ejected from the game. He then filed a formal protest due to a difference in interpretation of the balk rule. Twins 5, Yankees 1 N EW YORK - Geoff Zahn allowed only five hits in eight innings and Ron Jackson delivered a two-run double to highlight a three-run eighth inning Thursday night in leading the Minnesota Twins to a 5-1 victory over the New York Yankees. The Twins’ victory, which ended a three-game losing streak, moved them to within three games of the idle C alifo rn ia Angels in the Am erican League’s West Division race. Zahn, 10-3, got credit for his first victory since July 27 but gave way to Mike Marshall in the ninth. Jim “ C atfish ” Hunter, lasting until the Twins took a 2-1 lead in the sixth, absorbed his eighth loss in 10 decisions. Cubs 14, Giants 4 CHICAGO — Je rry Martin had three hits, including his 16th homer, and drove in four By United Press International M IL W A U K E E — Gorman Thomas ignited a three-run first inning with a two-run double and Lary Sorensen checked Texas on eight hits Thursday night when the Milwaukee Brewers posted a 4-1 victory over the Hangers. Trailing 1-0 in the first, the Brewers scored two runs on a walk to Don Money, and doubles by Cecil Cooper and Thomas. Thomas scored the third run of the inning on a passed ball by Texas catcher Jim Sundberg. Sorensen gave up Texas’ only run in the first when Bump Wills singled, Mickey Rivers walked and Buddy Bell delivered an H B I single. Sorensen allowed only four singles and one walk the rest of the way in boosting his record to 13-12 with his 14th cmplete game. Milwaukee scored its final run off rookie Texas starter Brian Allard, 1-1, in the sixth on a single by Sixto Lezcano, a stolen base, a throwing error by Sundberg and a sacrifice fly by Paul Molitor. Lezcano and Cooper had three hits each. Red Sox 7, White Sox 5 BOSTON — Bob Watson drove in four runs with a homer and a single Thursday night to power the Boston Red Sox to a 7-5 triumph over the Chicago White Sox. Rob Andrews Barry Foote. Fred Lynn led off the fourth inning with his 35th home run to bring the Red Sox within 4-2 and after a single b y'C a rl Yastrzemski, Watson tied the score with his 11th home run. In the fifth, Carlton Fisk and Lynn singled and Jim Rice walked to load the bases before Watson delivered a two-run single. Alan Ripley, 3-0, came on and pitched the final 6 1-3 in­ nings to record the win. Mike Proly, 1-5, suffered the loss. Royals 4, Orioles 2 BA LTIM O RE - Paul Split- torff tossed a four-hitter and Todd Cruz drove in two runs leaps s lid in g ' c L T Thursday night to pace the Kansas City Royals to a 4-2 victory over Baltimore in a game played under protest by O r io le s ’ m an ag er E a r l Weaver. Splittorff, 12-12, struck out three and walked two in going the distance for the ninth time. Gary Roenicke’s 18th homer in the second inning and a run-scoring single by Lee May in the sixth ac­ counted for the Orioles’ runs. It was a balk call which triggered the protest by Weaver. Kansas City second baseman Frank White had been thrown out attempting to HOUSTON ROCKETS vs SAN ANTONI SPURS P salm s 2:1 and A c ts 4:25 “AND THE WORLD PASSETH AWAY, AND THE LUST THEREOF: BUT HE THAT DOETH THE WILL OF GOD ABIDETH FOREVER,” 1st John 2:17. It has been well said that there is only one road In this Ufa: Heaven at one end, and Hell on the other and. The raai Im­ portant thing la which way ara you going, which way ara you traveling? In The Sermon on The Mount Christ said the way to Heaven was “atralt and narrow and faw thara ba that find It”; but tha way to Hall waa “broad and wida,” and crowded H ave you ever definitely “turned about” - that la tha meaning of conversion - and begun to “fight the good fight of faith" to walk the narrow way to Heaven? Hear the Word of The Lord found in Luka 13, “Than said one unto H Im (Jesua), Lord, are there faw that ba aavacf? And Ha said unto them, STRIVE TO ENTER IN AT THE STRAIT GATE: FOR MANY, I SAY UNTO YOU, WILL SEEK TO ENTER IN, AND SHALL NOT BE ABLE. WHEN ONCE THE MASTER OF THE HOUSE IS RISEN UP, AND HATH SHUT TO THE DOOR, AND YE BEGIN TO STAND WITHOUT AND TO KNOCK AT THE DOOR, SAYING, LORD, LORü’ OPEN UNTO US: AND HE SHALL ANSWER AND SAY UNTO YOU, I KNOW YE N O T AND, BEHOLD THERE ARE LAST WHICH SHALL BE FIRST, AND THERE ARE FIRST WHICH SHALL BE LAST.” (I hopa to coma In from tha west “When the saints go marching In, Lord, I want to be In that number.”) A few years back It waa often that such paaaagaa of Scrip­ ture as Just quoted ware the subject of preachers’ and evangelists’ sermons. It appears now that moat of them "don’t do that any more.” What Is more Important In this life than making your “calling and election aura” for eternity? Tha A postie Pater said at long at ha was living ha thought It Important to stir up his brethren to this and - 2nd Pater 1:10, ate. I n recant years have often heard preachers and evangelists who seamed to ba greatly concerned about getting church folk to feel and believe they ware saved. M ayba they are not In view of tha passage quoted above from L uke, and In view of the lives and conduct of many. This pas­ sage from Luke does not contradlctRomans 8:35: “Who shall separate us from Christ, etc.” Rather, It throws light on tha true Christian who cannot ba separated. Nor does this pas­ sage contradict Ephesians 2:8,8: "For by Grace are ye saved through faith; and that not of yourselves: It Is tha gift of God not of works, last any man should boast” Rather, it magnifies the Grace of God In producing a fruitful faith! Turn your face towards Heaven. Don’t look back. Use the meene of Grace: Search tha Scriptures, they testify of The L ord Jesus Chrtst P ray, and faint not, H onor God on H Is Day - consider Isaiah 58:13,14, on how to keep tha Sabbath, and not tha Ideas and notions that savor not of God, but of man. Honor God’s House, tha dedicated place of worship. Man looks at tha outward appearance, but G od looks at the heart - 1st Samuel 16:7. “ STRIVE TO ENTER IN AT THE STRAIT GATE,” continue faithful In wsildoing, and In duo season you will meet The LordHlmseH In the Way. and come to rejoice In His Salvation and Presence: “IN THY PRESENCE IS FULNESS OF JOY, AND AT THY RIGHT HAND THERE ARE PLEASURES FOREVERMORE!" Psalm 16:11. P. O. BOX 405 DECATUR, GEORGIA 30031 T a o s ■ 2612 guadalupd austin, taxas 78705 4 7 4 -8 9 0 5 /4 7 8 -4 7 4 7 T H E N E W D O R M O N T H E B L O C K Our aim is to give the mature and independent U.T. student a special kind of place. I aos v\ ill be a ( ( >nc ept housed in a virtually new building designed with the feel and facilities we think you might be looking for. • tree from shuttle bus or car hassles, w ere literally across the street from campus at 27th St. • we re very affordable, especially since there's no need to buy expensive meal plans that may not fit your style or schedule. • practically a new facility with tasteful, efficient furnishings and color schemes designed to give a luxurious feel you'll find surprising for the cost. • a floor designated for graduate students and, overall, an aim toward making a building comfortable tor modern students trying to strike the balance between serious study time and needed relaxation For example, we'll be offering both a comfortable study area and a relaxing sun deck. D E S IG N F O R L IV IN G I N T O T H E B O 's T a o s 2 6 1 2 g u a d a l u p e I George Gervin—N B A s Lead in g Sco rer Moses Malone—-NBA's M o st V a lu a b le Player it s a n o th e r exciting N B A battle b e tw e e n these great C e n tra l D ivisio n rivals! W e d . Sept. 26 7:30 P M $6.50 $4.50 $3.50 Ju n io rs 16 & u n d e r & UT students w ith I D $5.00 $3.00 $2.00 Tickets o n sale M o n . A ug. 20, ,0:00 a.m. SEC R ed R iv e r box office. Roast Beef Dinner & all the trim m ings for $7.50 (tax & tip in c lu d e d ) Cash b ar available to m eal ticket h o ld ers b e fo re th e gam e, at haltrim e and after. A rriv e early for d in n e r & find a b etter parking place. d i a l -a - t c k e t Austin 4 77-6060 THE UMinERSITK OF TEX4S V f 4USTÍNI SPECIAL EKENTS CENTER High winds, shallow seas cause disaster Page 10 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Friday, August 17, 1979 Shydive this weekend! train and jump in one day $75°° call 459-0710 I du/tin I parachute ■ center ■ I AC 5121 *1979 New York Times N E W Y O R K - At the Fastnet race, which has become the worst disaster in the history of yacht racing, the tumultuous seas off southern England are sub­ siding. It’s the questions that are on the rise. Why are 17 sailors dead and 25 boats, worth close to $4.5 million, sunk or abandoned? In an age of s a te llite The Texas Cattle Company Bring this coupon for our Chopped BBQ Beef Dinner includes your choice of tw o fixin's (potato salad, cole slaw or beans) plus cold drink *2.19 1 1914 Guadalupe 4 7 7 -7 8 1 0 J w e a th e r m aps and sophisticated marine radio communications, how did a storm swoop down on an inter­ national fleet of yachts and cause such havoc? Although the nature of the hull and rigging failures that led to the loss of life and boat is not fully known, what is ap­ parent is that the force 10 winds 165 mph) and the Irish Sea proved to be a deadly combination. In boating, there is an in­ herent element of risk each time one leaves the dock, and this risk tends to become greater the farther one goes from land. Yet force 10 winds are encountered periodically by yachts on ocean crossings and survived without incident, although the London Weather Bureau said winds of such force had never before been recorded in August. T H E D I F F E R E N C E in the Fastnet race seems to be the effect of the Irish Sea and the fact that the boats were being pushed to their limits because they were racing. The Irish Sea is a relatively shallow body of water, with a maximum depth of 600 feet. When a strong wind passes over shallow water, it changes the shape of the waves, instead of being long rollers, they become steep and run close together. When driven by force 10 winds, the tops of the steep crests are blown forward. “ A boat sailing downwind in such sea conditions would climb up one side of the wave, but when it reached the top of the crest, there could be nothing underneath it and the boat could drop 10 or 20 feet,” explained Roger Marshall, an English yacht designer who lives in Jam estow n, R I. Marshall is a veteran of four Fastnet races, two as a member of the British Ad­ m iral’s Cup team. “ T R Y T O S A I L up these waves in the daylight and it’s not so bad because you can see the crest,” he observed. “ You have to be able to see when to head off diagonally to the crest so you don’t go whizzing down.” The impact of falling 10 or 20 feet from the crest of a wave into the trough is a prime cause of hull and rigg­ ing damage. In the case of the Fastnet fleet, the storm began at dusk Monday and continued to pick up strength until, by 2 a.m. Tuesday, it had reached force 10, said a spokesman of the Royal Western Yacht Club in Plymouth, England. And through the night the fleet continued to slide up and plummet down the steep waves that reached a height of 30 feet. T H E P E A K of the storm, according to the National Weather Service in New York, occurred 350 miles west of the southern tip of England. “ In high seas, it’s very hard to know what’s going on, es­ pecially in the darkness,” said Marshall. Force 10 is a designation on the Beaufort Scale of Wind Force, which runs from zero for a flat calm to 12 for a hurricane. Force 10 is a storm with 48- to 55-knot winds. The waves are “ very high with long overhanging crests. The in great resulting foam patches is blown in dense white streaks along the direc­ tion of the wind. On the whole, the surface of the sea is white in appearance,” according to the “ P i l o t i n g , Seamanship and Small Boat Handling” by Charles Chap­ man. book T H E F A S T N E T disaster again brought into question the design and construction techniques for modern racing yachts, which some people have criticized as being too light. To halt the trend toward the construction of ultra-light boats with tall, fragile rigs, the International Yacht Rac­ ing Union last year revised International Offshore the Rule, the handicap system for Grand Prix yacht racing. The changes penalize boats with these features. However, during the last Southern Ocean Racing Conference, two crewmen died in heavy seas. One was struck and killed by a boom and the other was lost over­ board. “ I T ’S N O T the fault of the rule,” said Marshall. “ The boats are lighter and faster. It ’s a whole different type of sailing. “ It ’s like racing cars. In stock-car racing, you know if you smash a fender, nothing much will happen, you can keep going. That’s the way it used to be in yacht racing. To­ day, though, the boats are like the Formula One cars. There are no redundant parts.” As Marshall sees it, the problems arising from the Fastnet are not caused by the way the boats are built, but the way they are sailed. “ Peo­ ple with too little experience in heavy weather are pushing too hard,” he said. Deserted ship UPI Telephoto A winchman is lowered onto the deck of the South Hampton-based Grimalkin. The vessel was found abandoned and adrift after a storm turned the last leg of the Admiral’s Cup classic into the worst disaster in yacht racing history. Sports Shorts By United Press International Pastorini pulls muscle HOUSTON (U P I) — A doctor Thursday said Houston Oilers quarterback Dan Pastorini suffered a pulled muscle, not a rib or shoulder injury, in his right arm and the team listed the nine- year veteran as doubtful for Saturday’s game in Dallas. Dr. Tom Cain ordered Pastorini hospitalized for more tests until FYiday when his release was scheduled. Pastorini, 30, flew to Houston from San Angelo training camp Thursday after saying he “ popped” a muscle in his shoulder cluiche JL during a drill Wednesday. X-rays at San Angelo disclosed no bone fractures and the arm was placed in a sling. Pastorini was unable to play against Dallas in last year’s pre­ season game because of a pulled hamstring. Backup quarter­ back Gifford Nielsen led the Oilers to a 27-13 victory in the game last year and will start again this year. Astros call up Ladd 1 HOUSTON — The Houston Astros Thursday placed right- handed relief pitcher Bert Roberge on the 21-day disabled list and acquired the contract of pitcher Peter Ladd from their Columbus, Ga., Southern League farm team. Roberge, 3-0 in 24 games, was suffering from strained ligaments in his right elbow. He last pitched Wednesday night but was removed from the game because of soreness in his arm. Ladd, 23. was acquired by Houston in the trade that sent veteran first baseman Bob Watson to Boston earlier this season. Before the trade, Ladd was 3-1 with nine saves and a 0.62 ER A at Bristol. At Columbus he was 6-1 with four saves and a 2.63 ERA. L I.»-» V tn is Si¡an V n t o n i o M eagher breaks world record FT. L A U D E R D A L E , Fla. — Fourteen-year-old Mary Meagher broke her own world record Thursday in the women’s A WALKING SHOBTS COOL., COMFORTABLE, ANO TRAIL TESTED FOR DURABILITY 100 % COTTONS AND COTTON/POLYESTER DLENOS MENS $ $ | 0 2 ? TO *2 Z SJ> WHOLE LARTH PROVISION COMPANY 2410 3AN ANTONIO 5 T - A U S T IN ~ 4 7 S '1 5 7 7 PLEN T Y VF PA R K IN G TH U RSD A Y N I6 M T S ¿ SATURD AY TH E Jf79 CACTUS IS HERE. 1 T h e y e a r 1979 m ark s the end of a decade. Sp ark your m em ories of these exciting ye a rs at the U n iv e rs ity w ith the 1979 C actus Yearbook, an in fo rm ative and exciting record of the good tim es, the hard tim es, tim es forgotten and tim es rem em bered. R e liv e the exciting Texas Independence D ay celebrations, the ups and downs of Longhorn sports events, and the co ntro versial appointm ent r m i l I f | § * ™ of a U n iv e rsity president — her ^ m in is tr a tio n , retirem en t and return to the classroom . These events and m ore are recorded in the 1979 Cactus Yearbook, a com prehensive, concise re v ie w of the assing decade. Graduate Students.... considering a career in the public sector? pursuing a M aster's degree in: I Government Economics Public Affairs ( l b j school) Management, interested in a specialization to make you v : i more employable? The Human Resources Professionals Program offers: a concentration in human resources manage­ ment w ithin your existing degree program requirements; c\. workshops w th associated faculty, researchers and professionals in the field; internship experience m inistration; and, job placement assistance. : in public sector ad- For further information, contact: The Human Resources Professionals Program The Center for the Study of Human Resources 107 West 27th Street (on cam pus) Austin, Texas 78712 (512) 471-7891 If you rese rved a 1979 Cactus Y earb o o k, you m ay now pick up your copy in the Texas Student P u b licatio n s B uild in g, Room 3.302, from 8:30 a.m . to 4:30 p.m . Photo I.D is necessary to c la im your book. 200-meter butterfly with a clocking of 2:08.41 Meagher shaved 1.36 seconds off her old record. Meagher, the Pan American Games gold medalist, was swimming at the Hall of Fame pool in the first day of the National AAU Senior Long Course Championships. Meagher, a 5-5, 120-pounder, was just graduated from the eighth grade at Holy Trinity Elementary School in Louisville. Besides her Pan American medal, she won gold medals in the 100 and 200-meter butterfly events at the U.S.-West Germany dual meet in April. Charity gam e proves costly HOUSTON — A charity basketball game featuring NBA stars Julius Erving, Elvin Hayes, Moses Malone, George Gervin and others took in $44,619 last week but left promoters with a $4,184 deficit and an amateur boxing club empty-handed. A spokesman for the Arena Operating Co., operators of The Summit and co-sponsors of the Pro Superstars Basketball Classic, said 5,570 tickets were sold for the game but listed the following expenses: $4,343 to the city for parking; $5,000 rental for The Summit; $10,000 on advertising; $1,313 for ticket com­ missions; $2.000 for miscellaneous expenses such as game of­ ficials, trophies, food for the news media and uniforms; $4,647 for security and maintenance, and $21,500 for players’ transpor­ tation, lodging and performance fees. 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PEARL CANS * C a n * PABST CANS 12 C a n * SPECIAL EXPORT 6 N I B a rrio * 7 5 0 M L 7 5 0 M l 7 5 0 M L S th « P A C K 4 P A C K 12 P A C K 6 PA C K I A U SPECIALS C A S H O * C W fC * I New Wave revives veteran British rockers “ Lucky D ay" ; by Alan Price; Jet Records JZ-35710. “Repeat When N ecessary” ; Dave Edmunds; Swan Songs SS-8507. By SCOTT BOWLES Outside their current pop­ ular and critical acceptance, two veteran British these rockers have a lot in common. B o th i n t e n s e l y r e g io n a lis tic p e r fo r m e r s (P r ic e - Y ork sh ire, Ed­ a r e m u n d s — W a l e s ) w ith backgrounds in late ’50s-early 60s rock. The difference, of course, is that E dm unds has been able to cap italize on the energy of the New Wave while P rice has been washed over by it. Which is really too bad. With the c u rre n t revitaliza­ tion of B ritish Invasion music (The Kinks a re m ore popular than ev er.), one would figure in in P rice, i n t e r e s t w o u ld be t h a t the lik e w is e re n e w e d Animals and the group s driving force. But ap­ parently not, not even h e re in pop-astute Austin, w here his poorly p ro m o ted S atu rd ay night gig has been canceled, seem ingly from apathy about the musician. th e d e m is e of Alan Price from ‘01 Lucky S in c e th e Animals, P ric e ’s c a re e r has been checkered — some p re t­ ty easily disposable work on his own and with the Alan P r ic e S e t, a s h o r t- liv e d a s s o c ia tio n w ith G e o rg ie the F am e, and ev en tu ally s o u n d t r a c k f o r L in d s a y Anderson’s “ 0! Lucky M an.” His work in “ Lucky M an” the seemed brink of m a jo r s ta r statu s; the to put him on AND I T WOULD have been interesting to see P rice in con­ cert, to see w hat h e ’s doing. Man’ m usic w as e x c e lle n t, and m ore im portant, conspicuous, playing an im portant part in a highly acclaim ed film. Only thing is, the m ovie bombed in the U nited S ta te s, as did P ric e ’s following album , the uneven “ Betw een Today and Y e ste rd a y ,” and suddenly, Price w asn’t on a U.S. label anymore. All of which m eant nobody to speak of heard his next two albums, “ M etropolitan M an” e n te r ta in m e n t THE DAILY TEXAN Friday, August 17, 1979 Page 11 ‘K id’ aimless and unfunny “The F risco Kid” ; written by Michael Elias and Frank Shaw; directed by Robert Aldrich; starring Gene Wilder, Harrison Ford and Ramon Bieri; at N ortherns 6 and Aquarius 4. The Frisco K id” is a sw eet little movie, full of lovable ch a ra c te rs who m ake com ical, yet profound rem ark s in d esp erate situations and who, a t the film 's end, a re m uch b etter persons for the wisdom they have gained along the trail. R obert Aldrich has been e rra tic in recent y ears, but “ sw eet” movies these days? I m ean this is the guy who gave us “ Kiss Me D eadly,” W hatever Happened to Baby J a n e ? ” and “ U lzana’s Raid. G reat stuff, brutal stuff, but never sw eet. W hat’s this guy think he’s doing, anyway? WELL, UNFORTUNATELY, it seem s a s though Aldrich doesn’t have a good idea of what h e ’s doing these days. His re ­ cent w orks like “ Tw ilight’s Last G leam ing” and “ H ustle” look­ ed all right but them atically struck out every which way and w ere p retty m uch reduced to macho self-righteous babbling. On the o ther hand, som ething like “ The Longest Y a rd ” was straightforw ard dram atically but was slopped together so haphazardly it looked like the editing had been a Goodwill In­ dustries project. And “ The F risco Kid” has got a little bit of both problem s. Visually, the film ’s awful. R obert B. H auser shoots the movie on grainy stock and sm ears the Vaseline on the lens often for the film ’s gooey m om ents or for when Aldrich is trying to look like Sergio Leone, a contradictory effect a t best. O therw ise, Aldrich can t decide w hether this com edy-adventure is m ore comedy o r m ore adventure and hedges his bets, going for the broadest slapstick gags and the m ost graphic violence. All of which is disappointing. Aldrich is too slick a directo r to be m im icking Mel Brooks in “ Blazing Saddles” (why anybody would w ant to copy th at graceless work is an o th er good ques­ tion) or Sergio Leone from “ Once Upon a Tim e in the W est.” And he’s too old a d ire c to r to radically change course and now sta rt trying to m ake com edies. ALDRICH QUITE SIMPLY does not know how to set up a gag or when to stop beating a joke to death, and m ost of the film ’s comedic m om ents a re painfully unfunny. And th a t’s m ost of the movie. But the biggest disappointm ent of all with this film is w hat it could have been. The story had all sorts of possibilities — a young rabbi im m igrates from Poland to take a synagogue in San Francisco and m ust jo u rn ey across pre-Civil War America un­ der th e guidance of a fro n tie r outlaw. The choice of actors m ade it even m ore tantalizing — Gene Wilder, who exudes charm ing innocence as the rabbi, and H arrison Fo rd , an understating young acto r who relies heavily on cinem atic archtvpes as the outlaw. But the M ichael E lia s/F ra n k Shaw screen p lay — the w orst of any movie I v e seen in th e la st couple of y ears — doesn't develop any of the them es im plicit in the idea. T here’s nothing about the foreign/Jew ish culture coming into conflict with the American fundam entalist one — W ilder ju st learns to curse in Am erican, “ Oy, sh e it!" T h ere’s nothing epic about the journey — W ilder and H arrison just happen upon a group of cute Indians, followed by a group of cute Catholic m issionaries, ad nauseam . In short, this is a movie which begs for foundation in the m ythic literatu re of the A m erican W estern, and th e w rite rs try to copy “ Blazing Saddles” instead. AND THE ACTORS get th e very w orst of it, caught, as they are, betw een w riters who c a n ’t w rite and a d irector with no feeling for comedy. W ilder’s the sort of a c to r who’s only good when h e ’s working with a strong director w ho’ll ride him and curb his self-indulgence. Aldrich, a t least when it com es to co m ­ edy, isn t th a t sort of strong d irecto r and W ilder quickly flies off on his usual histrionic schtick (though, to A ldrich’s credit, the c h a ra c te r developm ent in th e E lias/Shaw screenplay is totally unconvincing and virtually non-existent). Ford, if anything, gets it w orse. He is an ac to r who’s at his best while underplaying everything. Since A ldrich’s idea of com edy is sim ila r to killing ants with a brick, Ford has to do a lot of scream ing and hopping around and gives the first bad p e r­ form ance of his film c a re e r. I’m probably unjustifiably harsh with this m ovie. I t ’s not th a t bad, o r at any ra te , it ’s not offensive, despite am ple opportunity to resort to cheap ethnic jokes. But it should have been a whole lot better. A directo r of A ldrich’s sta tu re should realize when h e ’s not the person for som e project. —S.B. ‘Hidalgo’s Beard, A California Fan­ tasy” ; Conger Beasley Jr.; Andrews and McMeel Inc.,$9.95. By ANNE TELFORD “ Y o u h a v e a p o o l ! ” “ O f c o u r s e , d e a r i e . T h i s i s S o u t h e r n California, i s n ’t i t ? ” Im agine a 27-year-old m an who lives at the bottom of a sw im m ing pool in Palm Springs, Calif. Im agine that this man has by an “ ac t of w ill” tran sfo rm ­ ed him self into a fish. If you can buy that prem ise, you’ll believe a n y t h i n g and you'll probably enjoy “ Hidalgo’s B eard.” Navvy D ype’s fath er is not happy about his son’s am azing tran sfo rm a­ tion. He takes him to Dr. Bilkstrode. who e x p l a i n s , “ m y p r e l i m i n a r y diagnosis is that you a re suffering from a ram pant horm one im balance which is causing your skin to harden and your eyes to g a p e .” Bilkstrode labels Nav­ vy s m alady “ Evtuffel Syndrom e” and attributes it to stress. AN OLD WOMAN named Hetty sym ­ pathizes with his predicament and sends him on a journey to “ learn how to communicate with all creatures, living and dead.” Navvy’s odyssey takes him through La Jolla, Calif., to Ensenada, Mexico, in search of the folds of a s ta tu e ’s beard for a scrap of paper holding the se crets of com m unication. The beard belongs S h o u ts A c ro s s th e a n d the best work he’s Street, two done on his own. The re c o rd s m ark the fu rth e st developm ent of P ric e ’s brand of w hite, urban rock, with m etropolitan despair lyrics akin to Jackson Browne circa “ The P re te n d e r’’ LP, except the sickening self- without Pity. WELL, HE followed that (released with Alan P ric e ’ the d o m e stic a lly ), one of w orst album s of the decade, on which he strives to be a Las Vegas lounge singer He then went to Holland and recorded Two of a Kind” with Rob H o e k e a n d a b u n c h of Dutchmen and moved back toward rock again. “ Lucky D a y ,” o riginally released in Britain six months a g o a s “ E n g l a n d , My E ngland,’ (the title change for A m erican distribution is designed to tie in with “ 0! Lucky M an,’’ the la st signifi­ c a n t w o r k A m e r i c a n s r e m e m b e r P r i c e d o i n g ) , so un ds th re e different a rtis ts . There are i t ’s by lik e th re e so n g s pro d u ced by Bones Howe (who produces Tom W aits) th a t have a disco feel and are p retty forgettable and a bunch m ore of the sort of terrible, gooey love songs which m ade “ Alan P ric e ’’ so horrible. And then th e re 's som e stuff on side two, “ Citizens of the World U n ite," “ Pity the Poor Boy a n d “ E n g la n d , My E ngland,” which burst with the G eordie w orking c la s s pride of P ric e ’s finest work. A couple of chronic P rice flaws, strict MOR sound and produc- b u l l d o z e s t i o n w h i c h everything a re largely m is­ sing; P ric e alm ost rocks out, and the horn breaks sound clean On the other hand, anybody who saw Dave Edm unds live with Nick Lowe and Rockpile two weeks ago at the Ar­ madillo knows where h e ’s at - h a rd -d riv in g , h ard -co re rock n roll. Edm unds, unlike Price, has absolutely nothing to say (H e doesn’t w rite any songs on this re c o rd .), satisfy ­ ing him self with the role of consum m ate pop craftsm an. A nd “ R e p e a t W h e n N ecessary” m ay be the con­ sum m ate pop album of the year There are no bad cuts on the album, just as there a re no slow ones. However, a couple and “ Craw l­ ing From the W reckage” — do stand out (and a re worth the price of the record alone). Girls Talk t h e GIRLS TALK,” the Elvis Costello song which opens side one, is played by Edmunds in a near- 60s bubblegum style whi ch b e l i e s ly r ic s . G raham P a rk e r’s “ Crawling From the W reckage” which follows it is the most good- natured piece of rock ‘n’ roll this y e a r, even it bizarrely extolls the virtues of automobile crash es though In short. Edm unds’ finely crafted album is one of the y ear's best, an excellence that was underscored by his live perform ance. P ric e 's record is frankly three-q u arters aw ­ ful. too bad we couldn t have seen him p e r­ f o r m so w e could d e c id e whether to give up on him. It s j u s t Impressive first novel surfaces B e a sle y ’s fantasy mirrors at his best m any supernatural W esterns.” As unbelievable as it all sounds, the book works. Conger B easley's first novel is as enticingly silly and wonder- f u l l y t r a n s c e n d a n t a s R i c h a r d Brautigan a t his best. He has a habit of restructuring the C alifornia landscape to fit his them atic concerns, but that hardly interferes with the rollicking plot. BEA SLE Y’S PROSE IS clean and sharp, with liberal infusions of poetic and philosophical descriptions of what it’s like to live underw ater. “ T h ere's no special m agic to it. You ju st get into the w ater and sink down. The deeper you sink the m ore re c e p tiv e you becom e You discover you’re a bundle of highly sensitive nerves and tissues the sam e as any other organism , and that, when divested of the inhibiting presence of your ego. your body em its a sound frequency that blends perfectly with all the other sounds of the un­ iv e rse .” Even if you’ve never sought peace and quiet a t the bottom of a swim m ing pool, listened to the stran g e aquatic bubblings or contem plated what it would be like to breathe like a fish, in you 11 I t ’s appropriate and relaxing sum m er reading. If you’re careful, you can even take it in the tub _________ H idalgos B eard.” find s o m e th in g like to .....JVU._________________ Conger Beasley Jr. to “ the face of one of Mexico’s great heroes - Miguel H idalgo." Along th e w ay N avvy ru n s into assorted crazies: Leo, th e neighbor who com es to the pool in th e middle of the night to pour out h is troubles; Anza, a glider pilot who dispenses cyanide capsules, “ in case th e re ’s no wind when the winch catapults us o v er the a n d “ a g e n e tic m u ta tio n c l i f f ; ’ nam ed” Manny E ffrita, an incredibly energized kangaroo r a t - “ veteran of ......... -..— --------- - Tonight DAN AND DAVE S at. LITTLE IM O Long»»t H appy Hour In Tow n Doublo Shot* — 2 for 1 — 11 a m -8 pm NEVER A COVER CHARGE resen ts * T on igh t1 * TIM CURRY The B erserko Bros. ★ T om orrow N ight ★ COOL BREEZE Free! In The B eer Garden * T hursday, Aug 23rd * The Kenny AcosTa Band * Saturday, Aug 25th * MAGAZINE Standing W aves * F riday, Aug 31st * MARC BENNO F eatu ring The Cain S isters Plus THE BUGS H EN D ER SO N G ROUP BARTON SPRING S R D . 4 7 7 - 9 7 6 * French Cuisine & Libations Continental Steaks, Fish & Chicken Entrees Crepes, Quiche & Delightful Pastries Open 11 a m until Midnight Open early—Sat. & Sun ( 9 a m ) for Breakfast Open late till 2 a m , Fri & Sat nic^its at The Bakery' for pastry ________ 310 East 6 t h . _______ Soap Creek Saloon 1 TONIGHT URANIUM SAVAGES SATURDAY ALVIN CR6W COMING NEXT THURS.-SAT. DOUG SAHN V 11306 N. LAMAR This weekend at Symphony Square. Friday H eritage Cham ber Ensem ble Cuissical woodwind quintet Saturday St. E lm o’s Fire P<>/> rock featuring memorable vocals Box Office opens 8 p m. Performances at 8:30. $ 2 Friday. $3 Saturday. N e w Orleans C lub open during performance. Quorum Restaurant serving drinks an Intermission Arbor. SYMPHONY SQUARE AMPHITHEATRE ELEVINTM AT RfcD R I V ER Reprinted by permission of Tho Daily Texan from an August 13 review by Ellen W alley. T h e r e m u s t c o m e a t i m e in e v e r y acto r's life when he ta k e s a d eep breath, squeezes his eyes shut a nd leaps g id d ily into i m p r o v i s a t i o n a l a cting. H o w he gets to t h a t point is anyone's guess. It m a y c o m e w ith his firs t f o r a y into p e r f o r m i n g . A f t e r a ll , i m ­ p rovising looks like so m u c h fun. O r it m a y c o m e at some point In his c a r e e r w h e n he just gets stuck — s ta le m a te d by the g l i t t e r and t r a p ­ pings and the burden of t h e a t e r tr a d itio n to w h ich he m u s t live up. in, fo r And so he strikes out, or s o m e th in g else, s o m e th in g th a t w ill give h im m o r e ro o m to be. And he finds It in im p r o v is a tio n a l p e r f o r ­ If he's v e r y fo rt u n a te , his m in g . th e la n d e d h i m f i r s t p lu n g e ¡ G a s lig h t T h e a t r e 's p ro du ctio n of the M a n h a t t a n P r o je c t's version of “ A lic e in W o n d e r l a n d . " in U n d e r the w ise g u id a n c e of d i r e c ­ the e x p e r t tor Lou M o n t g o m e r y , cast of six w r ig g le d fr e e of r e s t r ic ­ tions, le a v in g p le n ty of space, m o r e than enough, r e a l ly , to r e - e x a m in e w h a t was th e re. In the f i r s t h e a d y m o m e n ts of 1 h r M a n h a tta n P ro je c t's A lice in W o n d e rla n d For “ k id s " o f all ages Aug 10 - Sept. 1 Wed - Sat. at 8 Sunday at 2 Call 4 7 6 -4 5 3 6 (or reservations Air-Conditioned Parking 200-seat house M t A Fourth & Lavaca lot co uld h a v e gone f r e e d o m a w ro n g . The p e r f o r m e r s could, for instance, h a v e gone th e ir s e p a ra te the p ro du c tio n a ways, m a k in g sure flop But each one recognized th a t th e re w as only f r e e d o m w ith in a b ro a d e r nebulous l i m i t . And w h a t l i m i t w as th e y did w i t h i n tig h tr o p e p e r fo r m a n c e c r e a t e a th e m w e r e w i ll in g to th a t a ll of w a lk , a fa n ta s t ic journey th a t took us w ith th e m e v e r y b re a th ta k in g inch of the w a y . t h a t — Advartismrrfnt — f M I f ) [pi p M M p i i p in T h e r e w e r e a d d i t i o n s to t h e j L ew is C a r r o ll version, one of th e m , a c h a r a c t e r called L e w is C a r r o ll , p la ye d by E d N e al. R a t h e r th an d is ru p t o ur rig id concept o f w h a tj " A l i c e in W o n d e r l a n d " should be, he ro unds it out. W e w o n d e r w h y he the o rig in a l. in clud ed w a s n 't l i t t l e y e l l o w - H e ' s j u s t w h a t ( J u H e W h i t e ) p i n a f o r e d A l i c e n e e d s — a s o m e t i m e s - f u n n y , s o m e tim e s -lu s ty d a d d y to e x p la in |this o th e r w o rld to her is Of course A lic e th o ro u g h ly b e w ild e re d . W ho w o u ld n 't be, when faced w ith the m a d d e r - t h a n - M a d H a t t e r (B o b b y C l a r k ) , th e w a c k y the! D uchess s n e a k y , s l i t h e r y C h e s h i r e C a t fe e l ( B a r r y E i s e n b e r g ) ? W e A lic e's confusion b ec a use w e a re A lice — t i m e is out of k i l t e r fo r us, too, and e v e r y th in g is too z a n y to believe. ( P a t E p s t e i n ) , o r Just like Alice, we a r e s w e p t ¡nto¡ the set design's b illo w y folds f r o m j the s ta r t and c a r r ie d t r i u m p h a n t l y through to th e end, w h e n A lic e i m ­ p lo r e s K orts). P le a s e no m o r e W e un­ d e r s t a n d . W e c o u l d n 't possib ly take any m o r e e ith e r but we'dl w illin g ly go on th a t jo u rn e y ag a in . th e W h i t e K n i g h t (J o e ! A u stin A cadem y o f B allet Official School of t he A ustin C ivic B allet A rtistic D irectors; E u gen e S la v in A le x a n d r a N ad al T w o L o c a tio n s : 3 8 1 0 Sp eed way 3 0 6 E. B ee C aves R oad (Westlakt Square) I P 7 9 R e g i s t r a t i o n for both locations at 3810 Speed wav A u g u s t 2 3 -3 1 Mon. — Fri ,/10;30 AM — 6:00 PM Register at VVestlake* 1cm ation August J 5 & JH) from Noon to o i*\t only, on August J 7. 2H. to, A M , «ill M odem s m u s t register io sj K‘<‘cHvov lo c a tio n . Speedw ay L o c jg f|a : Pre-ballet; Graded c lanses lor child; through ad van i c*L Morning exercise classes; A d ult e v e n in g Jpsses. P o in te; P a s d e D eu x . adults, beginner W estlake Locution: Pje-ballet; Children's clashes; M o r n e x e r c i s e classes; Adult evening classes Fall S em ester: Sept. 4-D ec. 20 For m ore in fo rm a tio n , call: 454-0625 Pag e 12 □ THE DAILY TEX A N □ Friday, August 17, 1979 c ^ A m u n d to w il J T W IN D R IV E -IN V Show t o w n USA I Soirrhsick 710 E B«n White * 444-2296/ ^ * BOX-OFFICE OPEN, 8:00 -PLUS— K m iW TO FfíE H S O M •rré CON VO Y « » > n o ftiin g o n n a in th e ir m a y ' 4 United 1*1» SHOWTOWN-WEST SOUTHSIDE-SOUTH GEORGE HAMILTON V * V V E ■ ■ a tT Ú * t3 d fe | IM il - - P L U S - or it; Around Town is a list of a rts and entertainm en t activities in and around Austin through the end of Aug. F rederick Hill will present a ¡enior composition recital a t 8 p m. F riday in the Music Building Recital Hall. Admis­ sion is free. a p r e s e n t As the culm ination of a five- week workshop in dance, the students of Sharon Vasquez w i l l l e c ­ ture/dem onstration and p e r­ form ance a t 8 p.m. Friday in the D ram a Building T heater Room Admission is free to this special show case fe a tu r­ ing an analysis of creativ e processes in dance, as well as p e rfo rm a n c e s of re p e rto ry studied during the workshop. F r ie d r ic h D u r r e n m a tt’s “ T h e M e t e o r " w ill b e presented a t 8 15 p.m . T hurs­ day the through Sunday a t T heater in the Rye through Sept. 2. An exhibit of docum entary Photographs of the Texas Prison Rodeo by Mike Murphy and Bill Kennedy is on display at Laguna Gloria a t the F irst Federal gallery. The UT Opera Theater will present fully costum ed and staged e x c e rp ts fro m fiv e # operas at 8 p.m. F riday and Sunday in UTOPIA T heater, 20th S treet and San Jacinto Boulevard. All the excerpts will be sung in English and a c ­ com panied by two pianos Ad­ mission is free. P eter Fram pton trie s to prove th at th ere is indeed life a fte r trip le platinum F riday a t M u n ic ip a l A u d ito riu m . T ic k e ts a r e a v a ila b le a t R a y m o n d ’ s D r u g s a n d D iscovery Records. The m usical spoof, “ Once Upon A M attress” will open at 8:15 p.m. F rid ay at Zachary Scott T h eatre C enter and run through Sept. 8. Call 476-0541 for reserv atio n s or inform a­ tion. M e l o d r a m a T h e a t e r presents “ Robin Hood: A Sort of Rom ance,” opening F rid ay in th e V illa g e S h o p p in g C en ter, 2700 W. A nderson Lane. P erfo rm an ces will be given each F riday , Saturday and Sunday through Sept. 30. Call 454-2591 for reservations. TIM CURRY, b e tte r known from g a rte r-b e lt fam e in the “ R o c k y H o r r o r P ic t u r e Show” and on B roadw ay in th e T o n y A w a rd -w in n in g “Travesties,” will app ear a t the A rm adillo a t 9:15 p.m . Friday. C u rry ’s second album for A&M R ecords, the re c e n t­ ly is released “ F e a rle s s ,” described by som e as an “ u r­ ban n ig h tm are.” KLRN/KLRU-TV begins 10 days of special program m ing F r id a y n ig h t a s p a r t of Summerfestival ‘79. A wide array of d ram a, docum en­ taries, m usical specials and sports program s will highlight the festival ending Aug. 26. Consult schedule for tim es and program s. Paul Tovar, owner ol the Rocking M Club on Lockhart H ig h w a y , r e p o r t s th a t a benefit dance will be held Saturday for Flaco Jimenez, lo st a ll h is who re c e n tly m usical in an automobile accident. Call 477- 8198 for m ore inform ation. in stru m e n ts The cultural a rts section of the Austin P ark s and R ecrea­ tion D epartm ent p resents the Genesis P la y e rs’ production of S h a k e sp e a re ’s “ Twelfth Night” a t 8:45 p.m. Tuesday through Aug. 26 a t Z ilker Hillside Theater. Admission is free. on A ls o T u e s d a y , Melodrama Theater will hold auditions for six men and five women to take p a rt in the m usical “Stuck Fast at Old Texas Bay.” All actors m ust be 18 years old. Auditions begin at 7 p.m. in the th eater, 2700 W. Anderson Lane. Bring a prepared song; an accom ­ panist will be provided. Aug. 23: Rory G allagher p la y s a t th e A r m a d 'llo . Tickets a re $5 in advance, $6 a t the door. Aug. 24: C learlight W aites will p e rfo rm a c o n c e rt of M edieval and R e n a issa n c e r e p l i c a t e d m u s ic on s tru m e n ts a t 8:30 p.m . Symphony Square. in ­ in Aug. 25: Laguna G loria Art M useum presents the opening of “ U r b a n P r o j e c t s : A Survey.’’ a m ajor retro sp ec­ tive by the a rtis t Christo, on view through Oct. 14. Com­ p o s e d of s c a l e m o d e ls , d r a w i n g s , c o l l a g e s a n d photographs, the exhibit su r­ veys C hristo’s work in both project and actu ality over 18 years. Aug. 25-26: Ja m e s Dick will in a g u ra te an “ A u g u st to A pril” series with a solo piano c o n c e r t a t th e F e s t i v a l - Institute at Round Top. P e r­ form ances begin a t 4 p.m. each day, with a m inim um donation of $5 per person. Ac­ tivities also will include a gourm et Italian dinner a t 6:30 p.m. Saturday and country lunch a t 1:30 p.m. Sunday. Aug 26: Foghat, Rush, the L i t t l e R i v e r B a n d , P a t T ravers and Point Blank will bid “ Farew ell to a Texas Summer” a t the Cotton Bowl in Dallas. More than 80,000 fans a re expected to burn out in the last blast of the ’70s, p re se n te d by F e y lin e and E aton-Page Productions. The event sta rts a t 3 p.m . and tickets a re available in ad­ vance for $13. For ticket infor­ mation, call (817) 335-5777 or (214) 692-8878. R£S£L Drive-In 6902 Burleson Road New C ine-fi Sound System 385-7217 Privacy of Your Auto t i i m a c i M K.(I ( I N I R 4 I I m o m A AN H H .A N I C H U N K O f H (KN If n « c o r r a d i o b r i n g a p o r t a b l e fo r t e t r a d Opens 8 Starts Dusk Bruford group fuses jazz, rock at ‘Dillo Tim Curry is at the ’Dillo Friday. By G E O F F R E Y M A R K S Bill B ruford, form er d ru m m er for Yes, King Crimson and U.K., brought his own group to the A rm adillo Tuesday night and delivered a powerful hour and 15 m inutes of jazz-rock fu­ to an enthusiastic, good-sized sion m usic crowd. The group, g u ita rist John Clark, keyboard player Dave S tew art and bass player e x tra o r­ dinaire Jeff B erlin, followed a tightly stru c ­ fo rm a t — m ore tu red but w ide-ranging cerebral than m elodic — difficult to describe but not a t all difficult to appreciate. the show, Backstage a fte r tired but a r ­ ticulate, the tall, athletic-looking Bruford held forth on a variety of topics, from his ever- evolving c a re e r in the m usic business to the nature of art. AT THE AGE of 13, his life was forever the G raham Bond changed when he saw Organization, jazz/blues group which featured Jack B ruce on bass and Ginger Baker on drum s. Another early m usical influence was jazz percussionist Roy Haynes, especially his cym bal playing. the early B ritish Bruford joined Yes a fte r a phone call from I Drink o f th e Day Friday & Saturday B.R.T. Bloody Red Tomato Our F an tastic B lood y Mary “ A COCKEYED MASTERPIECE!” — J o s e p h M o r g e n s t e r n . N e w s w e e k M ASH O t i K In ) by S o r e n p ljy by ¿ R 0 & R T ALTM AN RING LA R D N ER Jr Friday O nly At 8 and 10:15 p.m *1 .5 0 w ith UT ID Jon Anderson and Chris Squire in response to his new sp ap er w ant-ad. He su b seq u en tly played on the “ Y es” album and also on “ Close To The E d g e.’’ He describes the perform ing philosophy of Yes as being “ e n te rta in m e n t” oriented, in ethical term s no different from the Osmonds. U.K., Bruford thinks, was based on the dangerous notion that w hat A m erica needed was a new B ritish a rt rock supergroup, a su r­ rogate E m erson, Lake and P alm er. Such prepackaging by record com pany executives, he contends, usually obstucts a rtistic expres­ sion and should be avoided generally. A rtistically, he felt m ore a t hom e with the eclectic R obert Fripp and King Crimson. Music, thinks Bruford, is to be found in the challenge and stim ulation created by the in­ terplay of m usicians. All else — staging, solo­ ing, im age cultivation — is secondary. King Crimson broke up when F ripp decided to take a year off, possibly out of the fe a r th at the group’s growing com m ercial success would com prom ise his creativ ity, and Bruford ex­ pected this to occur before he joined up. CONCERNING HIS p a rtic ip a tio n w ith G enesis on its “ A Trick Of The T ail” tour, he said he felt “ no em otional involvem ent.” It was a case of taking two days to learn his p a rts and then repeating them when required. His cu rren t tour has stayed in the m ore in­ tim ate atm osphere of large clubs like the Bot­ tom Line in New York and the Dillo. Although the group s m usic is “ about 90 percent stru c ­ tu re d ,’ spontaneity being re stric te d essential­ ly to instrum ental leads and solos, the inspira­ tion which com es from feeling good still m akes the difference between a good night and a bad one. On a good night, when everything seem s to jell, “ I feel a physical tingling up my spine,” says Bruford. At that m om ent a rt takes over from craftsm anship, and although he claim s that the tingle didn’t com e to him at the Ar­ m adillo Tuesday night, I for one think it couldn t have been very fa r away. our expression consultants o mm PG Factura Tima» 17 50 3*0 5 10 77M J 0 (CAUDIENCES W ILL SIMPLY CHERISH ‘ BREAKING AWAY’ .” Richard Sc h ic ke l, T I M E M A G A Z I N E BREAKING AWAY 20tfiCenturyf«ResenB A PETER W ES RLM “BREAKING AWAf OENNBOWIDPHER DENNISQUAiD DANIEL STERN i t JACKJE EARLE HALEY atoara) BARBARA BARRI R U L DOOLEY m ix *.] ROBYN OOUGLASS ftuducedarilüteciBdby PETER W ES Wmenby STEVE TE9CH Viia Aúaphi’ ^ÍWRlCKVVlüAMS C o r t i m j try LIONEL NEWMAN OOLORBYlM iJXf * v < me « * i P G l W i m GUQMCt sueasno -X&- « o í m MTwi rom Btkbm m fio** features Today — 4:15-4:15-4:15-1 (hi5 2:15-4:1S-A: 15-8:15-10:1S GQ Sat. and Sim. - M A N N TH E A T R E S MANN WESTGATE 3 4 6 0 8 W E S T G A T E B l V D 892-2775 ‘Breaking Away’ Epday^ u s t 17, 1979 □ THE D A ILY TEXA N □ Page 13 Summer sleeper elicits cheers T O D A Y ’S C R O S S W O R D P U Z Z L E UNITED Feature Synd icate T hursday’s Puzzle Solved: “Breaking Away” ; produced and directed by Peter Yates- written by Steve Tesich; with Dennis Christopher, Dennte ’ Daniel Stern and Jackie Earle Haley; at the Westgate. u By LOUIS BLACK This,is Jt’ the critical sleeper of the summer, but “ Breaking Away ,s something more as well. For this is a film that excites auiences as well as critics. At the screening on campus the audience kept bursting into spontaneous applause. By the end they were standing up cheering. Breaking Away" is a funny, beautifully done film that is about growing up. about small-city America, about the abuse of privilege, about the nature of competition and totally about life. And yet it just isn’t doing that well at the box office. WHICH IS A SHAME. It is a film about four boys growing up in Bloomington, Ind., home of Indiana University. They are not A C R O S S 1 C reate 5 Inclined 10 Sorghum 14 M an ’s name 15 R esu m e 16 Persia 17 Rung 18 C elsiu s 20 Corridors 22 Middle: Pre­ fix 23 Sc ra p e s 24 Sen io r 26 Reading mtl. 27 — barom ­ 48 Within: fix 49 C hem ical prefix 50 B e rlin 's “ Blue — ” 53 Balsam 54 Utter 58 English 61 Faint 62 Lure 63 Color 64 Level 65 Kind of nail 66 Sh u te ye 67 Hollow sure what to do with their lives and they are alienated from the privileged college students who are everywhere in their hometown. The college students are also a constant reminder of a lifestyle to which these “townies’ are not privy. rhH.ft T r\ mHre 0r l8SS Centers around Dave (Dennis Christopher), a bicycle racer who spends a healthy part of the movie pretending he is Italian. Mike (Dennis Quaid) is a former high school quarterback who not only is still caught up in his moment of stardom but painfully aware that he is. Cyril is the íkm ^ emb? c 40f the qUartet but because of the ^markable skill of Daniel Stern, there is also a pathos to his character that is touching and gut-wrenching. Finally there is Moocher, played by Jackie Earle Haley, who is broke, unemployed and getting ready to marry his girlfriend All of them are wrapped up in the quagmire of what has become a stilted small-city existence with only Dave having a chance to break out. SO “BREAKING AWAY” is not doing that well at the box of­ fice and, given what it is about, it is understandable. It is dif­ ficult to describe the characters or situations ir this movie and convey how humorous and wise, painful and tender a film this is. At its most basic. Breaking Away’’ is a funny and very ex­ citing movie. Yet there is so much more going on. eter 30 A m assed: 2 words 34 Tendons 35 Q ueue 36 Spanish queen 37 Skim 38 Tertiary 40 Hit hard 41 Alw ays: Poet. 42 Fortress head: Sp ., var. 43 Shrew d 45 Augers 47 Swizzle stick The acting is uniformly excellent with all four of the leads be­ ing outstanding. Both Barbara Barrie and Paul Dooley as Dave's parents are nothing short of brilliant. Peter Yates’ direction is smooth yet powerful. Yates always has been an ex­ cellent action director ( “ Bullitt” ), but in this film he not only beautifully handles the action sequences but manages to give a genuine feeling for his characters and their lives as well. He is aided in this by Steve Tesich s excellent script. The film never settles for the obvious (except for one un­ forgivable instance of stereotyping), nor does it wring the melodramatic potentialities of the script. Instead it is a surprisingly intelligent film that provides the viewer with a lot of feelings and information about the characters and asks him to understand and react to the lives he sees on the screen. It is a sports film and a comedy. It is a story of growing up, of family and of romance (though there is surprisingly little for this kind of vehicle). Finally and most of all, “ Breaking Away” is a film on which to take a chance. It goes well with a quiet summer evening. WINNER C ACADEMY AWARDS IN C LU D IN G : BEST PICTURE BEST DIRECTOR • BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR BEST FILM EDITING • BEST SOUND ROBERT DE NIRO A MICHAEL CIMINO FILM T H E ¡t?T?T3 iC i& jK P i I m The racer, Dennis Christopher VM9ITY $1.50 FIRST MATINEE SHOWING ONLY T rip l* F to tu ra THE LAST REMAKE o f BEAU GESTE M a r t y F e ld m a n , M ic h a e l York 6:00 plus T H E E E O E E C E E * Directed by M e l Brooks G e n e W ild e r, Zero M o s tel 7 :3 5 plus THE RULING CLASS Peter O 'T o o le 9 :1 5 1 P a y » O n ly f t * tu r # T im e s 12:7*2:45-5:19-715-10:00 In space no one can hear you scream. A L I E N H I G H L A N D M A L L IH35AT KOENGLN. 451-7326 N 17:40 1 00 S 20-7 «0-1040 HORtimiD&lMS i. ~ forty " •" 11 f w t u r # T im e t 17:50-140 5:10-7:70-» 10 4 M H R p a í h f r j c a h J U v i k ^ rjR A F E T T T I t . . . . ......... . g e n e r a l . c i n e m a T H E A T F t f e S AMERICAN MULTI CINEMA ADULTS S3 00 STU DEN TS f, SR CITIZENS W ITH A M C CARD $2 50 TWI L.TE SH O W si 50 CHILDREN $1 5 0 - SPECIAL E N G A G F M LN TS EXCLUDED A M E R I C A N A mm ¡11 tai BWííSl Fx;x:x m m r.'.'.S.Ém P r e s i d i o t h e a t r e s AOOITS OflLY @ COLOkCjJUJ L L Ü L ^ G O O . « , sto rn n g^ n rffT T F HAVffl A B IG A IL CLA YTO N * AMBER. FlUflT D E S IR E E fxf introducing tkt flEW ORJfNTAt ¿tftSATIOn T lflA O R C H ID plus -------------------------- ~ THEGí ALS IN 1HE0 4 ÑD ■■ 7k e y # S7cü/ y JUNGLE BOOK (G) VILLAGE A 2700 A N D E R S O N . 451 8352 LAKEHILLS 2428 BEN W H I T E - 4 4 4 0 5 5 2 UFO - 1 56 6 :4 0 -9 :3 0 12 2 0 4 06 JUNOLE 7 60 RIVERSIDE 1930 RIVERSID E • 441-5689 DOBIE "t&S DOBIE M A LL • 477 1324 PARKING DOBIE GARAGE m r IJ UuvJ/ mm $3.00 ad mission Reefer Madness Norma Rae 5 :4 5 - 7:45 9:45 MIDNIGHTERS VILLAGE ¿X 2 7 0 0 A N D E R S O N * 451 8352 1:15-3:25- 5:35-7:45-9:£ m m t A t K1 V I 01 iv ll R ;,Page 14 □ THE D A IL Y TEXAN □ Friday, August 17, 1979 FOR SALE H om *t-For S a l* T O W N H O U S E B Y O W N E R , West l-35on E O ltorf 2 BR, 11 a BA, indoor pool, private patio, covered p a rkin g A ssu m e loan $49,000, 453-7441. 28' M A R A N D E R m obile hom e A cZ C H , carpet, excellent condifon, will relocate, econom ical $5,500 Call A n g e lo 478-9438 3-2-2 C A /C H , spacious, carp et/te rraio floors, fireplace, large yard, quiet 6305 W alnut H ills, 926-3189, ow ner F o r S a l e - G a r a g e C L E A R A N C i S A L S 1014 E a st 38th, S a t u r d a y , S u n d a y , A u g u s t 17 18 E v e r y t h in g m ust go. N o th in g costs m uch M i s c e l l a n e o u s F o r S a l * Estab lish e d 1945. N E L S O N 'S G I F T S L a rg e st Indian lew elry 4502 South C on gress. 444-3814 C losed M o n d a y s reservation selection S I L V E R F O R sale; " A le x a n d r ia , " by Lunt, d esign Four piece table setting, plus extra pieces 327-1780 B A T T E R Y O P E R A T E D e le c tro n ic w heelchair L ike new ! $995 345-1140 1977 A D M I R A L 1 9 " B /W , $75. 1977 M o n tgo m e ry W ard sew ing m achine, all attachm ents, $100 478-6717 after 5 and weekends. 16' R O G A L L O W IN G hanggllder, prone harness, helmet, in structio n m anual, $170 4 58 3410 K iN G S IZ E S I M M O N S B eau tyre st with fitted sh e e ts, d u a l c o n t r o l e le c tric blanket, and cover $250 441-5043 F U L L S I Z E D m attre ss and box springs. V e ry cheap. Call 477 6769 after 5 00 15' F I B E R G L A S S B O A T , tilt frailer, 35hp Johnson, electric start, top, con trols, windshield, rebuilt car., tune-up, good condition, ski or tish, m o v in g must sell $625 474-1017 N IC E H ID E A B E D sofa $40 and dining table $15 C a ll 476 3420 M u s t sell by Saturday. C O U C H M A K E S into bed, $30, 2 B/W T V 's $5 and $15. Pio ne er Centrex stereo $130 firm, large desk $135 453 3505 6-9 p.m. 30 IN C H electric stove B e tw e e n 8 00 and 5 00, 471-4395 after 5 00, 459 8315 V A S Q U É H E A V Y h ikin g boots, ladles size 7Ví Good condition, $45. 472 4559 i_ew elry, e s t a t e W e b u y jewelry, diamonds, and old yold Highest cash prices paid. C A P I T O L D I A M O N D S H O P 4 0 1 8 N L a m a r FURNISHED APARTMENTS E F F I C I E N C Y A P T , S I6 5 / m o. A ll utilities except electricity paid Now accep tin g ap p lications for su m m e r and f a l l s e m e s t e r . V i l l a E s p e r a n z a M a n a g e r, No 111. 454-1416 C A M P U S E N V IR O N M E N T S E F F I C I E N C Y 2609 W oodrow , fu r n is h e d ..............*175 31st St. C onverted g a ra g e apt 304 E. 34th St. A B P , fu rn ish e d *180 *190 O N E B E D R O O M 4715 H arm on , pool, g a s p a i d ‘195 615 W. St. Jo hn s unfurnished, pool . *195 1402 E. St. Johns, pool, unfurnished *200 304 E 34th A B P , f u r n is h e d ........... ‘250 T W O B E D R O O M 5609 W oodrow fu rnishe d ............... *220 115 W Koenig, S h a lim a r V a lle y ‘250 115 W. Koenig, tow nhouse .............*275 C all for further listin gs of hom es an d duplexes F L E M IN G , N IC H O L S , A N D R O L E Y INC. E F F I C I E N C Y $210 A L L B IL L S P A ID H yd e P a r k area, beautifully paneled, fu lly carp eted , all b uilt-in k itchen, C A / C H 4200 A ven ue A 451-6966, 451 6533 C E N T R A L P R O P E R T I E S IN C . $210 E F F I C I E N C Y A L L B IL L S P A ID L a rg e apartm ent, fully shag carpeted, C A CH, all built-in kitchen Convenient to cam p u s In H yd e P a r k a re a 4000 A ven ue A 451-1422, 451-6533 C E N T R A L P R O P E R T I E S IN C . TOP MANAGEMENT FANTASTIC RATES PKIME LOCATION N O W L E A S IN G F O R FALL F u f i s h e d L u x u r y O n e * • a ' i ■drriMii v\ th the goodies 4 1 0 3 - 5 S p e e d w a y M g r N o 2 0 3 4 5 8 - 4 0 3 7 4 7 6 - 5 9 4 0 T a o s The New D orm on the D rag H as F a ll Openings 145.00 per month. Shared ro o m s with h an d so m e fur­ n ish in g s refrigerator, study area, sundeck N o m eal p lan s 2612 G uadalupe P le a se call first for Inform ation & appointm rnt. 474-6905 478-4747 r i i i i i i i i i i i i I I I I I I I I I I I C L A S S I F I E D A D V E R T I S I N G R A T E S 15 word m u n m u m s 14 E a c h w ord one tim e $ 32 E a c h w ord 3 lim e s $ 39 E a c h word 5 lim e s t 64 E a c h w ord 10 tim e s $ 90 Student ra te each time $4 39 1 col * I inch one time 1 col * I inch 2-9 lim es S3 96 1 col * I inch 10 o r more times $3 75 DÉADUNÉ SCHÉDUIÍ 7 00 p m Monday Ttian Friday 1 I 00 a m Tuotdoy Texan Monday Wodnetday Texan Twoiday I I 00 a m Thursday Texan Wodnexday I I 00 a m I I 00 a m Friday Texan Thwrxday "In the event of arrorx made in an advorlixemonl immodiale notice mutt be givon ax the publiihort are rexponxibio tor only O N I incorrect meortion AM claimx for ad|u*lmentt xhould be made not later than 30 dayx alter publication S T U D E N T F A C U L T Y / S T A t F R A T E S 15 w ord m in im u m , each d ay S 90 Eac h additional w o rd eac ti d a y i 06 S3 15 1 col x 1 in ch each day "U n c la s sif in d i" I line 3 d a y s SI 00 'P re p a id , No R e fu n d s) Students, faculty a n d staff m ust pre sent a current I D and p ay in a d ­ vance in T S P B ld y 3 200 (25th «, W h itisi fr o m 8 a m to 4 30 p m M o n d a y through F r id a y ' 7 8 8 ' 7 9 M O D I L S AUTOS FOR SALE FOR SALE Featuring GM Products AV A ILA BLE 1 2 M O N T H / 1 2 , 0 0 0 M I L I S P E C I A L '79 C am a ros '79 M u sta n gs L I M I T I D W A R R A N T Y ASK ABOUT OUR TRIAL FURCHASt FLAN 8 6 0 6 R e s e a r c h 4 5 2 - 9 5 6 4 '76 M P G , M U S T A N G m anual, A M - F M stereo, m u st sell "-Co.;. $1950 or b e st offer Call 443-7527. fair condition, in ■ "1*73 P L Y M O U T H 400 en gin e G ood con dition^ $400 call 472-0228 C L A S S IC '67 A u stin H e a ly Sprite. E x - * tellen t condition JI400 442 4641 Í 9 7 6 V O L K S W A G E N , ,S u n roof, A M F M tape L o w miles. John 453-7740 after 4 1972 A M C A M B A S S A D O R . AT, > S , P B , „ AC, radio. R un s well $490 478 8224 '68 C U T L A S S S autom atic, A C , original owner, lo w m ilag e $595 o r best offer C all 474 2400 V W '68 B U G Clean, ..re g u la r m aintenance rebuilt engine, $850 firm 477 7272, leave m essage day/nlght ’197Í O L D S M O B I L E V ist a c r u lse r wagon, autom atic, air, power, n ew w ater pump, * tvneup, brakes. R e g u la r gas, m oviny, , m u s t sell, $750 4 74 10 1 7 '72 I M P Á L A 2-dr 73,000 M ile s fire s, battery, ge n e ra to r all n e w $230. Starts t .well, needs rep air 477-1983 1970 D A T S U t is iO sedan. Two door, A T . Excellen t condition C a ll 474 7680 after 5.00 '69 F IA T 124 co nve rtib le Not running, for p a r t s ^ r restoration. $250 447-5666 L E A V I N G U S m ust s e ll 1973 A ustin M a r in a Super g a s sa ve r! G re a t b u y 1 SI 100 only^ 477-0572, 474-2272 A ndrew . '72 V E G A runs go od G o od gas m ile age V e r y dependable car $600 C all B rian 458-7335, after 5, 443-2292. 1972“ S IX C V L D U S T * * / A T , * S , A C , good condition, good g a s mileage, low m ile a ge 471-1)28 478 4859, 476 0353, D a v id 1972 A U T O M A T IC B ritish C ortina sporl series 61,000 original m ile s Exc e lle n t running condition, rear sligh tly dented M u st sell to go to school. $700. will guarantee. Call 477-9274 o r com e and see at_300l D u v a l No 304 I ' M S U R E R B E E T L E S u n B ug special edition N e w seats, paint job m uffler, and many other p a r ts A s k in g $2600. Call 476-4309 FOR SALE Motorcycl*-For Sal* ___ 1976 H O N D A CB4O0F S u p e r Sport, 15 000 m ile s, e x c e lle n t co n d itio n K o n is, D u n lo p K81s, oil cooler, m any extras $1,100 firm 444-9649 H O N D A 550 8.000 m iles, tw o disc brakes, , lu ggag e rack, b ack rest, K81 E xcellen t condition $1,050 W ork 471-3161 ask for Dom inic. H om e 472 7480 M O P E D 1978 T o m o s 2-speed Autom atic excellent condition Low m ile s w ith rain cover P r ic e negotiable 471 5497. 1978 S U Z u k i G S 10008 excellent condi­ tion $3000 Seriou s inquiries, please 385- 9957 or 385 4100 e x t 3371 Ask for D ave Jackson. Bicyde-For Sola ____ 1973 R a l e i g h 5-speed, rid e s w ell 471 1128. 476-0353, 478-4859, S u sa n G O O D C A N A D IA N 10-speed, $70. 477- 2153 ______ Sferec-For S a l* C R O W N 800 senes reel to reel tapedeck, used less than 20 hours. E x c e lle n t condi- P 8W- P n c e negotiable P h o n e 345-8356 S O N Y HP-218 stereo A M - F M receiver, L e a v in g tu rn ta b le , 8 -tra c k p la y e r Austin, m ust sell $150 00 4 76 3047. Mu$ical-For Sal* M U S T S E L L ! W ood-carved V ictorian u pright piano. $295 indo-Oriental 10' x 12' handw oven, negotiable 476-324 2 451- 7672 S L I G H T L Y U S E D Bundv closed hole silver flute Excellen t condition $175 or best otter. 512-352 3350 x * b á l d w ¡T T ’T l e c T r o p T a n ó 7 1 ü ñ ~ keyboard, a m p lifie r plugs earphones for silent practice Like n e w $695 Call 926-4720 after 5 30 p m A L V A R E Z S T E E L string guitar mint c o n d it io n . E x c e lle n t s o u n o G o o d D argain 478-3731 a fte " five P h o t o g r a p h y fo r S o l e C A N O N F T B body only G ood condition $85 447-5666 P * l$ For So le pm f l u f f y l o n g h a i r e d kittens Free | » O r * n g * end white, b o x trained C eil 442 4097 after 6 30 p m S A M O Y E D P U P P I E S A K C , registered, snots and dew excellent b lo o d lin e claw ed One male, on e fem ale left. Call 452-5010 477-9111 evenings Hom«s-for Sat* M U S T s e l l new 14- Mllje m obile h om e N e v e r hveo . s e r \ ie e o ffe re d ) o u r T Y P I N G a n d 504 W . 24th 4 7 7 - 6 6 7 1 “ Htffwit Qvclity A$Miwtth> G'3 b ills 458 5419 R O O M M A T E N E E D E D to sh a re two bedroom tow nhouse on T o w n L ak e . $175 plus V» E . D on, 451-1416. F E M A L E G R A D h o u se m ate w anted. $80, 1 3 bills, deposit. C lo se to c a m p u s L ib e ra l, n o n s m o k e r, 476-3835 K e e p f r y ­ in g W A N T E D L I B E R A L m a le ro o m m a te to sh are one bed roo m a p a rtm e n t for Sept 1st 441 9122 N O N S M O K I N G F E M A L E stu d e n t to sh are 1 B R a p a rtm e n t w ith sa m e . Cheap. $87 50 E R onda, 1-713-464 5419 H O U S E M A T E W A N T E D 2 B R duplex, StOO'm onth plus V«j b ills C a ll 452-0048 or 453-5503 e v e n in gs A sk for M ic h e á l M A L E H O U S E M A T E s h a r e c o m f o r ­ table se m i fu rn ished d uple x n ear In te r­ m u ra l fields, shuttle $120, »/a b ills 458- 2704 F E M A L E , M A L E ro o m m a te needed to sh are 2 B R on 39th n ear Sp e e d w ay . D a y s 471-3027, n igh ts 463-0631 N E E D E D - TWO OUTGO’NG, non­ sm o kin g, C h ris tia n fe m a le s to sh a re ow n room and bath in m y hom e. $125.00 p lu s '.i bills each. N e a r H a n c o c k C e n te r 153- 0695. 476-4552 H O U S E M A T E W A N T E D o u t g o i n g C h r is t ia n fe m a le , n o n s m o k in g . O w n room and bath On P a r k B lv d . n e a r H a n ­ cock Center $200.00 p lu s V5 bills, 453- 0695, 476-4552 IN T E L L IG E N T in ­ O P E N M I N D E D d iv id u a l needed to sh a r e W e st A u stin sp a ce C a ll 474-7495 Y O U N G L I B E R A L fe m a le lo o k in g for fe m a le ro o m m a te w ith se rio u s stu d y h a b its 928 4124 R E S P O N S I B L E L I B E R A L m o d e r a t e fe m a le to sh a re 2 B R house Sh o al C re e k neighborhood. 9-1 N o n sm o k e rs. $140, V5 bills. 459-1002 N E E D N O N S M O K I N G r o o m m a te for 2 B R apt. Nice, sm a ll, co m p le x . R a m s e y P a r k a re a 9-1 $118/mo., W E . 459-1002 W A N T E D F E M A L E r o o m m a te to sh a re 1B R a p a rtm e n t off R iv e r s id e D r. W a te r, ga s, and c a b le paid C a ll L is a at 447 9245 R N O N S M O K I N G , T W O B L O C K S I sh u tt le $125 p lu s V» b i ll s D u p le x . G ra d u a te preferred B ill, 478-3668, 442- 2188 2 B R , 2BA, $132 50, C A / C H , a p a rtm e n t In nice c o m m u n ity . P e ts fine. 5 m in u te * to shuttle. 346-5921 M a r y Jane. R O O M M A T E W A N T E D to Share 2-2 ap artm e n t on South side S147.50/month plus bills. N o n -ciga re tte sm o ke r. 442* 2565 R O O M M A T E F O R fall 2 story, 2 B R d u p le x $150 00 a ll b ills paid. 452-6869 e v e n in g s. s o p h is t ic a t e d , D E S I R E M A T U R E , r o o m m a t e N Ic # h o u se re s p o n sib le , south C a ll M a r k , office 443-2226, hom e 441 6454 t h r e e H O U S E M A T E N E E D E D b ed roo m C lo se fo c a m p u s C a ll E lle n 472-3990 after A u g u st 25th. Sh a re house R O O M M A T E N E E D E D 'Cj ne a r u tilities N o n -sm o k e r p referred 459-4587 after 5 I n t r a m u r a l f ie ld s $90 plu$ R O O M M A T E W A N T E D t o s ha re 3B R house on 2 a c re s in W estlak e. $130.00 a month, pets ok Send reply, P O Box D 1 R O O M M A T E W A N T E D to s h a r e 2 bedroom duplex. $75 p lu s Va b ills and deposit. 7-9 30 p m on ly 345-4357 N O N - S M O K IN G F E M A L E To sh a re one bed roo m a p a rtm e n t C o n ta ct T e rry at 443-1331 or 454-7621 P re fe r sc ie n ca stu­ dent. f e m a l e R O O M M A T E needed I m ­ m e d ia te ly for fall se m e ste r to sh are nice In H y d e P a r k . 2 b e d r o o m h o u s e N o n sm o k e r, e a sy -g o in g rathe r studious. C a ll P a u la 451-3261 R O O M M A T E N E E D E D H e lp find 2 B R fu rn ished a p artm e n t, n e a r c a m p u s or shuttle, Sept 1/earlier Studious, par- tygoer, no frats. E d, 444-3590. 4?)-4568 (a fte rn o o n s). 3 F E M A L E students need n o n sm o k in g fe m a le for 4 B R , 2 B A R iv e r s id e a p a r t ­ m en t $115/month, V* e le ctricity C a ll D e b b ie collect 214-475-2806 H O U S E M A T E W A N T E D m a ie / fe m a ie to sh are la rg e three b edroom , tw o b ath It interested c a ll house on M a n o r R o a d 476 9335 evenings. N E E D T W O ro o m m a te s 3 8 R fu rn ish e d condo. 2 2 2 2 area. $160 m onth, Ms b ills 453-8333 w eekends. L O O K I N G F O R a hom e Instead of a d u m p ? If so, fe m a le needed to sh are 2 B R d u p le x. $155 m o. p l u s ' i bills. C a ll K a t h y co lle c t a n y t im e 512-732-4535 F E M A L E R O O M M A T E needed to sh are sp a cio u s duplex on S R shuttle 2 8 R , 2 B A , h u g e y a r d N e e d to f u r n is h bedroom . $137.50 447 6864 K eep callin g. f u r n i s h e d F E M A L E T O in south A u st in . P r iv a t e to w n h o u se bedroo m and bath $135 plus ' 3 of bills. 443 8795 s h a r e Se rio u s student F A L L H O U S E M A T E SlO O /m on th p lu s u tilitie s. p r e fe rre o R o o m y t h r e e O w n r o o m , C A ' C H bedroom house in quiet neighb o rhood N e a r 45th an d M o P a c . Steve, 451 8539 J E W I S H U P P E R c la s s m a n se eks to sh are m odern fu rn ished a p a rtm e n t on 28th St with orthodox J e w ish student 342-1958, Sa n Antonio. P E R S O N " w A Ñ T E C flo sh a re 2 B R duplex a p a rtm e n t Shaded, q u ie t n eighb o rhood $125 m onth plus 1 3 b ills O n C R shuttle 451-4298 ________________ H O U S E M A T E W A N T E C f e m a Ie or m ale, senior or g ra d u a te student. $150 p lus ; I bills 454 7907 F E M A L E S W A N T E D to Share a part- m en i N o rth ca m p u s, sh uttle route 2 B R , fu rn ish ed C o n ta ct P e g g y , 471- A B P 5488 _____________________ N O N S M O K I N G H O U S E M A T E P re fe r u p p e rc la ss or gra d u a te student, or In­ tellectual w o r k in g person. F irep lace, la rg e back y a rd N e a r c a m p u s $140 plus 3 bills. Allen, 474-9955 N E E D H O U S E M A T E for m od ern 3-2 house N o rth e a st L ib e ra l, resp on sib le no tobacco $125 plus halt 926-3006 after 8 p.m. ROOM AND BOARD M E N a n d w om en su m m e r on ly G ood m e a ls 1905 Nueces. 2 b lo c k s fro m c a m ­ pus 478-0470 S E A Q U I L A c u a rto doble en D e u tsch e s H a u s c o o p e ra tiva S# re q u ire a b ilid a d a v a n s a d o p a ra h a b la r esp añ o l 477-8865 S E N E C A C O O P 2309 N u e ce s 1 $ lo o k in g for f e m in is t w o m e n to fili fo u r f a il v a c a n c ie s 477-0225 4 7 4 «652 PERSONAL D O M I N O 'S P I Z Z A has new hour* of o peration S u n d a y T h u rsd a y 4 p.m to 12 p m F n d a y a n d S a tu rd a y 4 p m . to 1 a m H a v e a good day* G E N T L E M A N L Y G R A D U A T E student 32 qu/et oaid an d bearded, d e sire * te e s r a o i u h f r ie n d s h i p w it h a m i a b le a d y lik e w o m a n W rite John, P O Box D ? 78712 TUTORING B u s i n e s s l a w tu tor in g a v a ila b le by law school g r a d E x p e rie n c e d teacher re a so n a b le ra te s 474-8742 i 1 LA PAZ APTS. El Campo Apts. Signing F a ll Leases • 1 BR Fum. $220 1 BR FURN. $220 • W ater & G a s Paid • Shuttle Bus • Q uiet Com plex 401 W. 39 452-5491 • 2 BR Fum. $280 • Water & gas pd. • Shuttle 1 Blk. • Quiet Complex 305 W. 39 452-8537 . J i— . Going BANANAS WE RENT APARTMENTS ALL OVER AUSTIN, FREE R E A L W O R L D P R O P E R T IE S *443-22 12* campus • 4115 Guadalupe 458-9101 • 2011 E. Riverside 447 6681 APPLY AFTER 4.00 . . - - . . . * V I u S E R V IC E S S E R V IC E S Lj *5 BONUS (on first donation only) BRING IN THIS AD & I.D. WITH PROOF OF AUSTIN RESIDENCE, OR STUDENT ID Austin Plasm a Center 2 8 0 0 G u a d a lu p e 4 7 4 -7 9 4 1 ‘8.00 — First Donation ‘10.00 — Second Donation ‘10.00 — Bonus on 10th Donation U N F U R N . A P A R T M E N T S ■ U N F U R N . A P A R T M E N T S Ridge ■Hinllniu SPECIAL CONSTRUCTION RATES AND STUDENT LEASES AN ALL ADULT, OWNER MANAGED APARTMENT COMPLEX IN BEAUTIFUL NORTHWEST HILLS. EASILY LOCATED ACCESSIBLE TO DOWNTOWN. CONVENIENT TO ALL OF NORTH AUSTIN'S MAJOR SHOPPING AREAS, INCLUDING TWO LARGE MALLS. ALSO AVAILABLE • TENNIS COURTS • CLUB ROOM • W ASHER/DRYER CO NN ECTIO N FIREPLACES S W IM M IN G POOL • LARGE BALCONIES & PATIOS WITH STORAGE CLOSETS SMOePUXC I CIMIf* I W O O D H O U O W I I BALCONES D« mop«< I BURNET«0 TO ST STI CW »ITOl A DOWNTOWN N O tT W C tO » m