T h e Da il y T e x a n S t u d e n t N e w s p a p e r a t The U ni ver si t y of Texas a t Austin Forty-Two Pages Vol. 79, No. 50 Copyright 1979, Texas Student Publications, all rights reserved (U S P S 146-440) Austin. Texas, Monday, November 12, 1979 Fifteen Cents News and Editorial: 471-4591 Advertising: 471-1865 id Classified: 471-5244 5vzsl x i ‘ s*n *a 9 ^ * 7 xo& *o*cJ tn-[TjoiDTW otj-j; U.o. urianeiiyed to use force in Iran From Texan News Services TEH RAN . Iran — Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, in a speech that stirred ex­ cited, widespread approval here Sun­ day, upbraided the pope, called Presi­ den» Carter “ an enemy of humanity” and challenged the I nited States to use either economic or m ilitary force to free the hostages held here by Islamic students in the American embassy. In Washington. Attorney General Benjamin Oiviletti reportedly ordered Immigration and Naturalization the Service to keep close inspection of all Iranians entering the United States and all Iranians on student visas to report to immigration offices for verification of enrollment in U.S. schools. “ We know how to fast,” the ayatollah said, dismissing the impact of any economic blockade of Iran. “ We will eat the wheat and barley we grow in our own country. We eat meat once a week. Eating meat is not such a good thing, anyway.” Addressing the threat of m ilitary ac­ tion the Iranian revolutionary leader said, “ We are a nation of 35 million and many of these people are looking forward to martyrdom, “ We will move with the 35 million. After they have all been martyred, then they can do what they want wiih Iran. We are not afraid of these threats. We are fighters.’ he said. As the captivity of approximately 60 in their own Americans and 40 other embassy dragged into its eighth day the ayatollah s speech - in effect rejecting the offer of papal mediation provided an insight into the moral absolutism that has helped to shape this bizarre diplomatic impasse. The ayatollah has brushed aside any offers of negotiation, savmg bluntly that the embassy and the hostages — seized last. Sundav by a well-organized band of students will be released only if the deposed shah, Mohammad Reza i ’ahlavi, who is being treated for cancer ;n a New York hospital, is turned over to Iran for punishment. At the embassy, the students, who call themselves the Followers of the Im am's I .me, announced they would goon a five- da\ last in support of the sentiments in ivatollah's speech. They strung up a new banner over the gate in Farsi and English saying: “ No Negotiations — Just Delivering Shah.” The papal nuncio, Monseigneur Anibale Bugnini, visited the hostages in the embassy Sunday afternoon at the in­ vitation of Khomeini, who said he mu d to assure him that they were be- in, well-treated according to the precepts of Islam. Bugnini said later R elated story, P age 3. that the hostages appeared fa irly healthy, but tired. But, Bugnini added, he was “ deeply touched” when several of the captives fell before him on their knees, asking for his blessing. A film clip of the visit, broadcast on the tate television Sunday night, show­ ed Bugnini shaking hands and moving among the hostages, who appeared to be kept in a series of offices, now decorated w ith p o rtra its of the ayatollah. The men were unshaven and wore rum pled clothes or M arine * fatigues. Dm woman described her condition m entally tired, physically okay. '(• uly to go home.” Another said, “ If ; us some more books, we a could . would appreciate it.” (See IRAN, Page 6.) Ed O’Malley (I) and Ted Kamel participate in an anti-Iranian protest on the East Mail Friday. Jan Sonnenmalr, Dally Texan Staff M onday Clearing and colder . . . Monday will bring clearing skies and colder temperatures, continuing through Tuesday. Monday's high temperature will be in the mid-50s with a low in the mid-30s. Winds will be light and southerly at 10 to 15 mph. Sunset Monday will be at 5:36 p.m. Sunrise Tuesday will be at 6:55 a.m. Austin Country owner linked to sex case By GARY FENDLER And MARK MCKINNON Dally Texan Staff The parents of two Houston youths, whose sons’ sworn affidavits forced a H arris County official to plead nolo contendere to three counts of sexual abuse with a child, were angry and sur­ prised Sunday when told of an alleged deal made by the Travis County district attorney’s office allowing an implicated Austin nightclub owner to avoid prosecution. “ Bunch” King Brittain, owner of The Austin Country, was named in af­ fidavits filed in the Houston district court cases against Pete Civitello, a Harris County deputy constable accused of performing oral sex on a 14- and a 15- year-old boy. According to one affidavit given to the Houston Police Department in October 1979, Civitello brought the boys to B rit­ tain’s home in Austin in August 1978. “ Bunch...cam e over to me and started sucking me off. While Bunch was sucking me, Pete started sucking off (the other boy). After a few minutes. Pete toid (the other boy) to go suck off B«nch, and (the other boy) did.” one boy wrote in his affidavit. A second affidavit, while describing oral sex acts among various persons, also named Brittain. “ Pete Civitello has taken me and a friend of mine to Austin on two different occasions. While we were in Austin, we went to a...club named ‘Austin Country and met a guy named Bunch that owned the club.” According to one source, the Travis County district attorney’s office failed to pursue charges against Brittain because he agreed to testify against Civitello; however, Brittain ’s testimony was never used since the Harris County official pleaded no contest. Travis County Assistant District At­ torney Phil Nelson said, T ’m not sure if anything was filed, quite frankly. And I really don’t know if I should make any comment in view of that fact.” Asked whether a deal was made whereby charges would be dropped against Brittain in exchange for his testimony against C ivitello, Nelson ■aid, “ It ’s the sort of thing that might have happened, but I cannot remember whether charges were filed or not." When interviewed by The Daily Tex­ an Saturday and Sunday, both youths in­ volved in the case easily identified B rit­ tain among 32 photographs displayed in a 1955 Cactus yearbook. They also identified Brittain ’s house at the corner of Ninth and Rio Grande streets among five photographs of Austin residences and picked out B rit­ tain ’s blue E l Dorado from three photographs of various cars. “ I think if there’s anything to it there certainly would have been something done about it,” Brittain said when con­ tacted Sunday night. “ If you want to talk to my lawyer about it you’re welcome to.” Brittain ’s attorney Malcolm Smith contacted The Daily Texan 30 minutes after the Texan contacted Brittain. “ You may have some affidavits with respect to some kids. I don’t know who they are, if they’re preachers’ sons or if they’re street-wise kids or what,” Smith said. “ But what I ask is that you not publish something involving Bunch.” Civitello, 36, who also works as an aide to Precinct 3 Harris County Com­ m issioner Bob Eckels and ran un­ successfully for state representative District 84 in 1974, is scheduled to be sentenced at 9 a.m. Monday on the sex­ ual abuse charges in Houston’s 179th District Court. Although Civitello faces sentencing, Mr. and Mrs. Smith and Mr. and Mrs. Jones (not their real names) cannot un­ d erstan d w hy B r it t a in w as not prosecuted by the Travis County district attorney’s office. “ I feel like they (T ravis County authorities) covered it up,” Mrs. Smith said. “ If it hadn’t been for the Houston Police Department the Austin Police Department would have dropped the case.” Mrs. Smith said she spoke with the Travis County district attorney’s office about the case, “ but they didn’t want to cooperate with us at all. I said, my son is a minor; at that time he was Í5 years old. You’re telling me there is nothing you can do? This guy had sex with him and I consider it like rape. If it was a 15-year-old girl it would have been rape. What would you do then?” she said she asked an assis tant district attorney. UT Iranians question Carter decision Move called ‘political "**v jt4 r By JENNY ABDO University Reporter The Carter administration's decision to check the im ­ migration status of all Iranian students in the country has spurred radical responses from some University Iranian students. The issue w ill supply University demonstrators with yet another reason to continue rallying as they did last Thursday and Friday on the U niversity’s East and West Malls. “ Carter is trying to save his face in front of the American people.” said Rafik, president of the Musiim Student Association. Rafik said the unspoken threat of deporting all students is “ a political game.” Massoud, another Iranian student, said, “ The Carter decision is to give him more votes for the presidential election.” Massoud said most Iranian students are ready to be deported anyway and that Iranian religious leader Khomeini and his ideals are more important than an education in the United States. Neither Iranian student wished to have his last name printed because of recent threats. John Canterbury, the president of Lambda Chi \lpha fraternity, said that all Iranians should be deported. “ The United States has put up with this it e protesting) long enough,” Canterbury said. But he oidded that deportation should occur only after home ” . hurt.” the crisis has been settled. Students for Safety of Americans Abroad rallied at noon Friday on the East M all where approximately 4 K) students converged waving signs reading “ Khomeini is a Crim inal,” “ Take a Bath Camel Jockeys” and “ The Ayatollah Sucks.” C.P. Phillips, a retired lieutenant colonel in the U S A ir Force, told the crowd that judging from his m ilitary experience “ it would be impossible to gel the hostages out of the U.S. embassy by force without getting them killed.” “ This crisis will pass. You can count on that, Phillips said. Phillips asked the crowd, prim arily composed of American students, if the American people wanted to “ continue to educate Iranians at the taxpayers ex pense.” “ No,” the crowd roared, and chanted, “ Iranians go Saved /eb'lu, w < :* o the few Iranian students at the from the crowd by University .. < who said, “ We want to make sure he doesn't get iv i think the U.S. government provoked the Iranian go. ernment by assuring them that the shah wouldn’t be accepted into the country. That’s what the issue is,” Zabihi said. Another speaker at the rally, Hank Cline, received »p¿ lau * from the audience by saying, “ Never, never, hold a grudge Get even with the son-of-a-bitches (the Iranians) and forget it.” Related story. Page 3. However Bruce Elfant, an American student at the rally, said students should be promoting prayer instead of racism. i think we should deal with it as an issue, not as Ira- roan people it is disgusting to put a rally together based on hate,” Elfant said. 0 ; he; American and Iranian students gathered on the W"st Mall to participate in heated debates that con­ tinued through Friday afternoon. Roy Minton: Guilt makes no difference By SHONDA NOVAK County Reporter • February 1966: A sensational murder trial closes in Austin. Defense attorneys win a victory when jurors assess James Cross, a 22-year-old University sophomore convicted of murdering one Chi Omega sorority woman and charged with strangling another, a life term instead of the death penal­ ty. • October 1978: An Alpha Tau Omega member and two pledges are indicted for assaulting a University freshman during rush week. Nine months later, the criminal case is dismissed following the private settlement of a $1.1 million civil suit which charged that the student was beaten, urinated on and forced to engage in unnatural sexual acts. • June 1979: A state official files suit to have a grand jury report critical of his office ex­ punged from the public record. The outcome will set a prece­ dent in Texas concerning the authority of grand juries to issue such reports. Intriguing as the cases are, they are no more so than Roy Q. Minton — the attorney who became involved in them through what he calls his “ affliction with an interest in the advocate system.” Long hours spent preparing cases and 18 years experience practicing law have given Minton his reputa­ tion as A ustin's best crim in al defense attorney. Some law yers, however, have questioned that reputation since the State Bar repriminded him in 1974 for suppressing information concer­ ning the whereabouts of a witness who was to testify in his client’s trial. Minton says he is unsure how the incident affected his reputation among his colleagues. “ It seems to me it (the reprimand) had none; I could never tell if that had any,” he said. The 48-year-old native Texan first attracted statewide publicity when he and two other attorneys defended Cross, charged with slaying two Chi Omega sorority sisters. “ That (the Cross case) made one hell of a difference in how well- known we (the defense team) were. All we were trying to do was keep him out of the electric chair,” Min­ ton said. Although some attorneys compare him to H ouston’s well-known Richard “ Racehorse” Haynes, Min­ ton said he generally uses no cour­ troom tactics nor does he weave in­ tricate defenses for his clients. “ If I do have some poise and presence in a courtroom i t ’s something God gave me,” he said. “ The only (tactic) I ’ve been accused of using is equating my personal ex­ perience with what’s going on with a ju ry.” For example, when trying a case in which a youth is accused of possession of marijuana or cocaine, he reminds jurors they may some day have children in a sim ilar situa­ tion (See M INTON, P a g e 6.) Roy Minton Page 2 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Monday, November 12, 1979 SENSATIONAL / GROUP OF BOOTS* ALL SIZ ES ALL COLORS Values to 68.25 I \ NOW ONLY H ot o ff tho Pro*»! 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WAKE-UP TO BREAKFAST AT BONANZA S tudent shooting investigated Victim's brother links death to religion By JOE TEDINO Police Reporter Although a ruling in the death of University student David Kimberly Burg has not been made, the “ preliminary is suicide,” said indication Norm Carmack of the county medical examiner’s office. Bryan Burg, the victim’s older brother, said the death last week was not a surprise and that the younger Burg had been contemplating suicide for almost a year. Burg, 19, was found dead in his apartment at 1403 Norwalk Lane Wednesday night by the apartment manager. He had been shot once in the head. Bryan Burg said his family had known “ for basically a year” that David was thinking of killing himself. “ He men­ tioned it in a letter (to Bryan) about a year ago ” David’s reason for killing himself, Bryan said, stemmed from his strong religious feelings. Because of his devo­ tion to God and his denuncia­ tion of sin, David determined that suicide was the only way to avoid temptation, Bryan said. “ He was a very religious person,” Bryan explained, "a born-again Christian. His problem was that he could not accept sin at all.” Rather than stay in this w o r ld , w h e re he w as vulnerable to temptation and sinful behavior, he decided to save his soul by killing himself at an early age, Bryan said. Although David was reared as a Christian, it was not until eight years ago that he was “ born a g a in .” H is faith became pre-eminent, Bryan said. Apartment manager Pat McGee found all of David’s belongings packed in his truck. Bryan said David probably packed everything to make it easier for his family to move it back to Dallas. “ He just didn’t want to be a burden anymore,” Bryan said. Students to rally Students for Student Government will rally on the West Mall at to noon M o n d a y publicize Thursday’s constitutional conven­ tion referendum to es- tabish a student govern­ ment at the University. University Professor of History Tom Philpott J . J . and U .S. Rep. “ J a k e ” P ick le , D- Austin, will speak and answer questions from students at the rally. “ Our goal is to inform people this week,” said S S G m em ber Am y Johnson, a sophomore in the College of Liberal A r t s . th in k “ We students are positive about student govern­ ment, and we want them to prove it by voting Thursday.” SSG also will hold a rally at noon Wednes­ day. UT blood donations increase 150 percent University students donated 2,575 pints of blood last week — approximately a 150 per­ cent last increase over semester’s drive, said Ed Triece, co-chairman of the Alpha Phi Omega. The Wranglers, Spooks and Gamma Delta Epsilon also sponsored the event, which donated the blood to the Texas C e n t r a l of Hemophilia and five blood banks. C h a p t e r The co-chairmen said they kept up enthusiasm for the blood drive by sponsoring competitions and advertising. Delta Tau Delta won the fraternity competition by hav­ ing a 84 percent donation rate from members, Triece said. Twenty-two percent of Pi Beta Phi sorority donated blood, he added. Pearce Co-op and Jester East sixth floor had a 100 per­ cent donation rate, Triece said. The University beat Texas A&M by having 6 percent of the students and faculty donate blood. Texas A&M donated 4.8 percent, Triece said. The chairman said A&M won last semester’s competi­ tion in both number and percentage of pints donated. ~H The Daily Texan Friday incorrectly reported that University law student David Haug will participate in a debate between pro- and anti­ student government forces to be held Wednesday night. Haug has not been asked to participate. Students for Student Govern­ It also was reported the debate is being sponsored by ment. Student League is spon­ soring the event. L S A T and G M A T A m ity Review Seminars 15 studant average class size Team teaching technique Convenient weekend classes EXCLUSIVE MATH REFRESHER 800-243-4767 The Daily Texan, a student newspaper at The University of Texas at Austin, is published by Texas Student Publications. Drawer D, University Station. Austin, T X 78712 The Daily Texan is published Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday. Thursday, and F r i­ day, except holiday and exam periods Second class postage paid at Austin, Tex News contributions will be accepted by telephone (471-4591), at the editorial office (Texas Student Publications Building 2.122) or at the news laboratory (Communication Building A 4 1361 Inquiries concerning delivery and classified advertising should be made in T SP Building 3 200 ( 471-5244 > and display advertising in T SP Building 3.210 (471-1865) The national advertising representative of The Daily Texan is Communications and Advertising Services to Students, 6330 N. Pulaski, Chicago, 1L 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 Journalism Congress, the Texas Daily Newspaper Association, and American Newspaper Publishers Association. Copyright 1979, Texas Student Publications. 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The State D epartm ent made c le a r it expects Iranian authorities to keep a public pledge to guarantee the safety of all A m ericans still in that country. “ We expect there is am ple authority vested in him (Khom eini) and those around him to handle this situation,” one official said when asked if Khomeini is in control of events in Iran. “ I would even suggest,” the official said, “ that he has the m oral authority to handle m ost of the dem onstration problem s elsew h ere.” The statem ent cam e shortly a fte r a group of d em o n strato rs, believed Ira n ian and Lebanese nationals, attacked the U.S. em bassy in B eirut. A departm ent spokesman said it was im ­ to be possible to say whether the dem onstration was spontaneous or in response to orders from Tehran. More than 60 Am ericans in Tehran remained the hostages of Iranian students who seized the U.S. em bassy a week ago. “ I don't want to try to give you any new rendi­ tion of what is an old and unhappy record. We con­ tinue to seek the release of the hostages through d ip lom atic c h a n n e ls,” a S ta te D ep artm en t spokesman gravely told reporters when asked to sum m arize the situation Sunday afternoon. He said he could not predict when the hostages would be released, “ nor do I have any expec­ tations on this at all so far as tomorrow, the next day or whenever. It is very difficult to read anyone’s mind on this su b je ct.” M ean tim e, P resid en t C a rte r co n ferred by telephone with Secretary of State Cyrus Vance, national security adviser Zbigniew Brzezinski and other m em bers of his Cabinet, press secretary Jody Powell told reporters at the White House. Powell said the president continues to rule out m ilitary force and added that he did not know what interpretation to put on the apparent failu re of V atican and P alestinian representatives to per­ suade the Iranians to release the hostages. Hodding C a r te r , th e S ta te D e p a rtm e n t spokesman, said presidential envoys R am sey Clark and W illiam M iller remained in Istanbul Sunday and the top U.S. diplomat in Tehran, Bruce Laingen, remained safe and in touch with Washington “ Presum ably authoritative officials have been quoted in Iran to the effe ct that no official or unof­ ficial A m ericans should be harm ed,” he stated. “ We accepted and welcomed that statem en t and we expect that statem ent to be honored in Iran and elsew here. “ We expect that that statem ent represents (Ir a ­ nian) policy and that it will be followed — not only for the Am ericans who are in Iran but in term s of any responsibility or activity outside Iran by of-’ ficially inspired people.” Hodding C arter said it is irrelevant w hether the United States is “ pleased” or “ not pleased ,” by treatm ent of the hostages — some of whom have been bound and blindfolded. “Our position is that under international law and treaty obligation the people in Iran inside the em bassy compound should be released safely and promptly. They have been seized illegally ... and they should be released .” Carter also called on prominent Am erican politicians and public figures not to capitalize on the Tehran hostage crisis through what could be seen as “ provocative or inflam m atory” actions. The statem ent to that effe ct was aim ed at California Gov. Edmund G. Brown J r . and ap­ fo rm e r S e c re ta ry of S ta te Henry parently Kissinger. Carter, in a meeting with reporters Sunday, again publicly asked Am ericans that “ there not be any kind of public activity which might result in* action which would be provocative or inflam ­ m atory.” E arlie r, Brown urged A m ericans to walk and pray together on Monday to show the Iranian v government the United States is “ a strong, in­ dependent force, not one to be pushed around or to be blackm ailed .” Asked about the S ta te D ep artm en t spokesman said he could not com m ent on Brow n’s “ particular prescription.” this, “ But I think, he said, “ it would be e xtrao r­ d in a rily u sefu l if p o litic ia n s and fo rm n e r statesm en could somehow refrain from attem p­ ting to capitalize in any way on this situation for their own advantage long enough for these people to get out a liv e.” Explosion forces massive evacuation Davis wealth cited Acquitted of murder plot F O R T WORTH (U P I) — M ultim illionaire T. Cullen D avis’ wealth gave the industrialist a courtroom advantage that m ost defendants lack, both defense and prosecuting attorneys agree. Davis was found innocent Friday of charges he tried to solicit the death of his divorce judge, Jo e Eidson. The trial was the second on the murder solicitation ch arg e; a Houston ju ry had deadlocked 8-4 in favor of conviction. Davis also was acquitted in A m arillo in 1977 of the shooting death of his 12- year-old stepdaughter, Andrea Wilborn, who was one of four persons killed at the plush Davis mansion Aug. 2, 1976. “ Cullen Davis had the financial resou rces,” said lead defense attorney R ichard “ R aceh o rse” Haynes. “ He was able to assem ble a staff of law yers and investigators who worked for months preparing for these tria ls.” But Haynes said D avis’ wealth was not the only reason for the innocent v er­ “ I believe ju rie s would have found a poor man innocent in these cases. P rosecutors found them selves forced to depend upon such witnesses as P riscilla L ee Davis and David M cCrory, and ju rie s did not want to convict on the basis of their testim ony.” D istrict Attorney Tim Curry said D avis’ wealth gave him a definite advan­ dict. tage. “ He was in a position to pay law yers who charge high fees for their services. And he had unlimited funds to pay for investigative activ ities. I doubt that we will ever have a situation again in which a man of his wealth faces charges of this ty p e.” Davis has declined to say how much he spent on his b itter and protracted divorce and on his three crim inal trials on m urder-related charges. After ju ro rs announced their verd ict F rid ay , D avis said only the trials had cost him “ a hell of a lot of m oney.” A D allas newspaper Sunday reported Davis, the w ealthiest man tried on a m urder charge in a T exas court, spent m ore than $5 m illion in legal and in­ vestigative fees. The report was based on court record s introduced during D avis’ divorce. Although all pending state crim inal charges ag ainst Davis have been dropped, he still faces civil dam age suits filed by the survivors of the mansion shooting spree. He also could fa ce a crim inal charge in a federal court. F ed eral officials had said they would consider charging Davis with posses­ sion of an illegal silen cer if he w ere acquitted of plotting E idson’s death. The silen cer was found in D avis’ c a r when he was arrested . Nuclear security studies may be too informative (U P I) WASHINGTON - The man responsible for safeguarding a number of A m erica’s nuclear plants is worried that public availability of som e sen­ s e cu rity stud ies w ill a s s is t sitiv e terro rists. M ichael V. Annast, a form er N uclear R egulatory Commission safeguards in­ s p e c t o r , is now s o u th e r n g ro u p safeguards m anager of Burns In te r­ national Security Services, d irectly responsible for security at eight plants and com m unications at another 36. His jo b gives him good reason for anx­ iety, without the additional w orries he has because of governm ent re le ase of som e studies on general nuclear secu ri­ ty problem s. He is pressing for new legislation to keep the documents under wraps. Annast visited Washington last week, to jo u rn a lis ts a v irtu al d isplaying lib r a r y of te c h n ic a l m a n u a ls and governm ent documents with titles like “ B a rrie r P enetration D atab ase” and “ Mindpt: A Code for Minimizing D etec­ tion P robability up to a Given Tim e Away from a Sabotage T arg et. ’ The literatu re — although prepared by prestigious think tanks and federal laboratories to enhance secu rity — could actu ally amount to a guidebook for terro rists. One even provides a list of tools — sle d g e h a m m e r s , b o ltc u tte r s , e x ­ plosives, saber saws — along with the nuclear plant b arriers they can be used to breach and the penetration tim e, es­ tim ated to the nearest second. Another, com plete with diagram s, analyzes p lant a la rm sy stem s and security m easures such as lights and fences. A third m ath em atically derives the best route for a saboteur to avoid detection using the highly sophisticated “ D ijk stra ’s alg orith m .” What upsets Annast is that all the docum ents a r e u n classified , e a sily available to the public and som etim es found a t document centers conveniently located by law near each of his nuclear plants and installations. “ I ’m concerned that release of the documents, put together, will a ssist terro rists to break into power plants,” he said. “ What we need now is som e legislation that would take ca re of this situation in the fu tu re.” Such legislation was submitted last spring as an am endm ent to the NRC authorization bill, but its fate rem ains uncertain. War’s peace UPI Telephoto Veterans administrator Max Cleland lays a wreath on the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier In Arlington National Cemetery Sunday. He dedicated Veterans Day to those who served In the Vietnam war. M ISSISSAUGA, Ontario (U P I) - A green-black cloud of poisonous chlorine gas spewed from a string of burning r a i l w a y in M ississauga, and police ordered the evacuation of 100,000 people, half the city ’s population. t a n k c a r s S u n d a y No deaths or serious injuries were reported. “ T h ere’s no doubt in my mind that this is the biggest evacuation in the history of North A m erica,” said police superintendent K arl Barnhart. A Canadian P a cific Railw ay freight train moving through M ississauga, a city 20 m iles west of Toronto, derailed about m idnight Satu rd ay , sp littin g several tanker cars containing chlorine, toluol, propane and cau stic soda. “ We a re continually monitoring the air and the latest information I have is that there are only tra ce quantities of chlorine in the a ir ,” B arnhart said. However, he added, “ The wind chang­ ed on us and increased in velocity and it was decided that an area of possibly 25 to 30 square m iles and the core of the c ity be e v a c u a te d .’ ’ W inds blew eastw ard toward Toronto at 10 m iles an hour. Authorities ordered half the popula­ tion of M ississauga, a city of 200,000, to leave their homes im m ediately. Most were expected to stay with friends but au th o rities also set up em erg en cy shelters in schools outside the danger zone. O n ta r io S o l i c i t o r G e n e r a l R o y M cM urtry called in troops to aid in the evacuation and guard against looting “ We have called in the Canadian a rm ­ ed fo rces and we a re expecting 200 troops from Camp Borden to aid us in the evacuation and to protect us against any looting,” said a spokesman for the solicitor general. More than 14 hours a fte r the derail- Auto union shocked by Kahn attack D E T R O IT (U P I) — The stunned United Auto W orkers union denounced as “ absolutely shocking” an attack by presidential anti-inflation chief Alfred Kahn on a scaled-down UAW co n tract with struggling Chrysler Corp. The tentative agreem ent, including more than $200 m illion in econom ic con­ cessions designed to bolster the finan­ cially ailing No. 3 autom aker, cu rrently is in the final stages of a ratification vote. But Kahn told a Washington news con­ th e p a c t w a s f e r e n c e S a t u r d a y “ o u trag e o u s.” He said it probably violates anti-inflation guidelines and could cost Chrysler urgently needed federal loan guarantees if not trim m ed down. Kahn, chairm an of the Council on Wage and P ric e Stability, said P r e s i­ dent C arter agreed with his assessm ent. UAW P resid ent Douglas F ra s e r and V ice P resid ent M arc Stepp took issue with Kahn in a sharply-worded sta te ­ ment. “ When we m et with V ice P resid ent Móndale and Treasury S ecretary M iller in Washington, they had the d etails of our Chrysler agreem ent and they did not in any way express any unhappiness with that ag re em en t,” they said “ In light of that m eeting, Alfred K a h n ’s s ta te m e n ts a r e a b s o lu te ly shocking and incom prehensible, as well as reck less and insensitiv e,” the sta te ­ m ent said. A UAW spokesman said F ra se r has ruled out reopening con tract talks with C hrysler, which expects to lose as much as $1.5 billion this year and in 1980 and could fa ce bankruptcy without federal aid. C h ry sler spokesm en d eclined im ­ m ediate com m ent, saying the company h ad n o t y e t e x a m i n e d K a h n ’ s statem ents. Kahn said the wage and price council will issue a “ notice of probable non- com pliance” Monday to Chrysler, say­ ing the con tract apparently exceeds federal guidelines. The adm inistration expects “ genuine from the contributions and sa c rific e s ’ UAW and Chrysler in exchange for $1.5 billion in loan guarantees, Kahn said. Ontario firemen fight chemical blaze. UPI Telephoto ‘ ment, M cM urtry declared, “ the situa­ tion is under con trol” but he said the evacuation area was widened as a precaution. “ You can be sure that we re going to e rr on the side of m ost extrem e caution,” he said. “ You can be sure that there will be the m ost thorough in­ in­ vestigation m ade of cident.” the whole An e s t i m a t e d 1 ,0 0 0 p e o p le a t in­ M ississauga G en era l H ospital, in­ in cluding newborn b a b ies s till cubators, and several hundred other patients at an extended ca re nursing home were among those evacuated. The first round of explosions late Saturday night shook houses in a five- m ile radius and sent flam es billowing hundreds of feet high and w ere visible for 25 m iles. Chem icals spewing from the ruptured tank included chlorine, toluol, propane and caustic soda. E a rlie r reports that cancer-causing P C B s were being re le a s­ ed were denied by police. B efore the second series of blasts, firem en had hoped the chem icals would burn them selves out. F rank Bean, chairm an of the P eel regional government, called for an im ­ m ediate investigation by provincial and federal authorities. “ If we a re going to be transporting th e t h e s e k in d s o f c h e m i c a l s , municipality should be aw are what’s on the train ,” he said. Bean added that railway officials w ere not initially able to pinpoint which cars carried explosive and toxic chem icals. P olice said the derailed cars were part of a freight train en route to Toron­ to from London, Ontario. The first blast, ju st a fte r midnight, shot a tower of flam e about 300 fe e t skyward, trailed by a rolling cloud of black smoke. Tw o m o r e e x p lo s io n s fo llo w e d seconds later, with flam es licking as high as 1,000 feet. “ I t ’s like daylight out h e re ,” one resi­ dent said shortly a fter the predawn blasts. “ The sky is all lit up, our house shook like an earthquake.” By United Press International Israelis ¡ail Arab mayor of West Bank city TEL AVIV, Israel — Israeli military authorities Sunday arrested and jailed the Arab mayor of Nablus until the Supreme Court rules on a government order to expel him from the West Bank. The Nablus City Council resigned en masse to protest the arrest of Mayor Bassam Shaka and the city of 70,000 Arabs staged a day-long general strike, shut­ ting down schools, offices and shops. were reported to have decided to hand in their resignations to the military governor immediately. The military governor asked the Nablus City Council to reconsider its decision, an. Israeli spokesman said. Some rock-throwing incidents were reported in Ramallah and Nablus but quiet was restored early in the day. No arrests were made. Shaka faces expulsion from the area because he allegedly told an Israeli general that he supported Palestinian guerrilla operations. of the $400 billion oil companies are expected to reap in unearned income as a result of higher world oil prices and his decision to deregulate domestic oil production.; His plan envisioned government income from the levy of $298 billion, which he wants used for develop­ ment of alternative energy sources, creation and ex­ pansion of urban mass transit systems and to help poor people pay their soaring heating bills. Last June, the House passed a windfall profits tax \ Arab mayors on the occupied West Bank met twice Sunday to decide on further action. All were con­ sidering resigning if Shaka is deported and at least two Struggle expected in Senate over windfall profits tax WASHINGTON — The Senate is expected to take up the controversial oil windfall profits tax shortly after Congress returns from its Veterans Day holiday Tues­ day. The bill, attacked by President Carter as “ a trillion dollar giveaway” to the major oil companies, faces a possible filibuster by Sen. Mike Gravel, D-Alaska. It also is the target of a tug of war between liberals who want to toughen the measure and conservatives who want to weaken it. Carter wants the tax to capture for public use some Public Workers Union strike brings trouble to paradise HONOLULU — The three-week strike by 7,700 government blue collar workers has coaverted beautiful Hawaii into filthy Hawaii. that would collect $270 billion. huge plastic bundles of dry garbage. Wet garbage has not yet become a problem as private refuse companies handle most of the hotel and residential collections. The state’s airports, beaches, parks, streets and public places are cluttered with refuse that grows faster than the lush tropical vegetation. The union said the monthly wage of the janitors, custodians, refuse collectors, food servers and practical nurses of its Unit 1 membership average about $840 a month, and it wants pay increases of $290 a month spread over the two-year contract. Only in the remote “ uncivilized” areas of the islands is the view unsullied with overflowing trash cans and First New York female Episcopal rector installed NEW YORK — A 34-year-old Episcopal priest who comes from a family that rarely attended church became the first woman rector in the city ’s history Sunday. “ I’ve gotten tremendous support from the male members of this diocese,” she said, sitting in the library of her Lexington Avenue apartment petting her cat, Zwingii. “ We've developed a good relationship through the years. “ First they looked at me as a woman, then a priest,” she said. “ At first it was a woman’s issue and then it wasn’t an issue at all.” The Rev. Carol Anderson, installed as rector of the Episcopal Diocese of New York at a ceremony in her upper Manhattan parish, said men in the ministry har­ bor no resentment over her appointment. Board seeks to delete homosexuality item from textbook AUSTIN — The State Board of Education has ap­ proved new textbooks for Texas public school students at a cost of $6.8 million but requested that a paragraph dealing with homosexuality be deleted from a health book State school officials adopted the new textbooks in six subject areas Saturday, voting to delete from “ Health and Safety for You” a paragraph asserting homosexuality is not a mental disorder. EDITORIALS ____________ V * # Iran government Moderates’ defeat detrimental While national attention is still focused on the plight of the American hostages in Tehran, other events in Iran have gone relatively unnoticed One such event was the resignation of P rim e M inister Mehdi Bazargan’s government after the Ayatollah Khomeini endorsed the em bassy takeover. The fall of the Bazargan government is a defeat for the moderate forces in Iran, but it com es as no sur­ prise since Bazargan never really enjoyed the Ayatollah’s support. His government was a sham, a m ere window dressing for Iran’s international image. The real power resided always with the Ayatollah. The lack of a secular power with which to deal leaves the United States in an undesirable situation. State Department officials now are faced with the prospect of negotiating directly with clerics inex­ perienced in diplomacy and wrapped in a rigid cocoon of Islam ic righteousness. These clerics are not likely to look beyond the immediacy of Iran’s parochial con­ cerns, nor are they likely to act as a moderating force since they them selves provoked the patriotic and religious fervor that spurs the revolution to its ex­ cesses. Washington policy makers and other Americans sen­ sitive to the Iranian situation long hoped the revolution would produce a stable government that would offer the Iranian people a life free from the abuses of the shah Because of these hopes, the em bassy staff in Tehran was maintained at a minimum level. But those who hoped did not take into account the high level of emotion released by the revolution and the inability of the revolutionary clergy to control it. There is no need for pretense now. In light of K hom eini’s arrogant rejection of appeals and diplomatic overtures from international represen­ tatives as diverse as the United Nations and the Vatican, there will be no accomodation of moderacy in the Iranian revolution. Instead, the foreign devils will be blamed for Iran’s problems. Although the United States must bear a large share of responsibility for almost 30 years of the shah’s mistakes, that is no reason to support the Ayatollah’s now. American policy makers appear ready to correct past errors, but not trade them for sim ilar ones in the present. liberal Evidently the kind of society Khomeini envisions is not easily compatible with those ideas nurtured by the American tradition which tradition — a stresses moderacy through pluralism of interests, structural balance and political compromise. Those qualities seem sadly lacking in most other non-western and non-democratic societies and cultures. They are not qualities that the United States should readily com promise for the sake of oil — or hostages. Walter Borges Student protesters turn Iranian crisis into pep rally, endangering hostages B y M lk « K a lle y ( E d i t o r ’s n o te : T h is co lu m n is reprin ted with perm ission of the A u s t i n A m e n e a n S t a t e s m a n . ) Two p ic tu res sta n d out to m e a f te r the p ast seven d ays a f te r the seizu re of our em bassy in T ehran. One is th e face of the fa th e r of one of th e h o s ta g e s. H is v o ice b re a k in g , struggling to keep back the te a rs, he says he ju st w ants lus little girl hom e The oth er, a photo of som e m em b ers of a fra te rn ity a t the U niversity of T ex­ as, th e ir faces sm iling, scrubbed, they a r e obviously enjoying them selves as they w ave the flag and hold up posters urging the Ira n ian s h ere to go home. My h e a rt goes out to the fath er I have not m uch s y m p a th y for la tte r citizens. They a re about to becom e part of a w ickedly difficult problem . th e C ong ressm an Ja k e P ickle w as telling one of my eo w orkers a couple of days ago th at he has not seen th e A m erican people so stirre d in m any y ea rs as by th e situ ation we have here. PEO PLE ARE angry. I am angry. But 1 am vastly m ore concerned about th e w elfare of those 60 or so people than 1 am about finding fresh w ays to h ara ss Iranian s in this country. T here is no question th a t m any Ira ­ nian stud ents in this country a re being less than gracious guests a t this point. th e T h e ir p a r a d in g ayatollah, while is holding A m erican lives for ransom , is boorish at best, c e rtain ly stupid and potentially very dangerous. in s u p p o r t of th a t m ad m ullah So is the random baiting of the first Iranian you happen to encounter w alk­ ing by T hat is happening on and around the cam pus of the U niversity of Texas is w hat T h e re a r e r e p o r ts of g ro u p s of students, standing outside cam pus-area w atering holes, drinking beer, taunting and jeering a t Iranian students and a p ­ paren tly having a high old tim e. F rid ay afternoon, five non-students showed up on the W est Mall to announce th a t th ey w e re “ looking for so m e Ira n ian s.’’ M agnificently m indless. In­ com prehensibly stupid. May I hold the pulpit ju st long enough to rev eal that this is not, rep e at not, a football gam e T hree-score A m erican lives a re in the hands of a senile fanatic. in M issouri, som e nut ALREADY, th e n a m e s of with a shotgun walked into the a d ­ m in istrativ e office of a university, I r a n ia n d e m a n d in g students there. He w as disarm ed and nothing ca m e of it It could have. It could here if the button-down sh irt and heavily-starched-m ind crow d continues its presen t course. Already, political n eanderthals a re urging th at we bomb them back to the Stone Age. K hom eini's m ind is in the Stone Age. He has dem o n strated no reluctance to shed blood. This whole a f­ fair is bizarre. Is it any m ore b izarre to suggest th a t the bom b ticking in T ehran could be set off by a fuse lit in Austin, T exas? I think not. The governm ent is trying to resolve the situation. Gov. C lem ents had the good sense and good g rac e to say th a t the governm ent should be left to handle it and th at no one e lse ’s in te rfe re n ce w as required. H e’s right. With luck, m aybe nobody will get hurt. H ere or there. Back off Cool it Let ’em alone. Anybody who w ants to turn this into a pep rally m ight consider inviting the father of th at girl I don’t think h e ’d c a re to attend. Not very funnv todav, huh? Sorry. Editorial pages a forum for all U niversity stu d e n ts m ight be under the m istaken im pression that colum ns, le tte rs and ca rto o n s on the Tex an s ed ito rial pages rep rese n t the p a p e r's editorial stand on those p a rtic u la r issues However, the Texan does not n ec essarily ag re e with view s advocated by local or sy n dicated colum nists and ca rto o n ists Since the Texan is a student new spaper p artially supported by m and ato ry stu d en t fees, we have a responsibility to use the ed ito rial p ag es as a forum for all view s We en­ courage students of every political and social o rie n ta ­ tion to subm it le tte rs and colum ns for publication. Sim ilarly, the editor and a s sista n t to the editor sign their editorials to rem ind re a d e rs th a t those edito rials do not necessarily reflect the view s of the en tire Texan staff. Unlike som e professional new spapers, the Texan does not have an editorial board which form ulates editorial policy. T herefore, ed ito rials rep resen t the opinions of the w riter. u m m m m HAÑ5 T(V- t il i f f ? ¿ m m e n i e M h e m o w 6W5 U M aW M J N éT- m m i. n t s r u w m A t t M M M U S .IIfH M tA M » W IK W LJJt'ü DO A fe u m jfi ttW 'K H O M flN in f/f iV /W « S í W ‘/ Í . W , , ^ i m m a it- S l& M I ftSHOUM m iO T lW : . M A w m f W K » a « . H E K jr ttf f li Macho CIKUS 1/AtóAS. ...... - J Í É á - .. -._....... T h e Da il y T e x a n E d itor Managing Editor Assistant Managing Editors A ssistant to the Editor N ew s Editor A ssociate N ew s Editor Sports Editor A ssociate Sports Editor Arts and Entertainm ent Editor Photo Editor A ssistant Photo Editor Beth Frerkmg Mark Dooley Steve \nton, Mark McKinnon Walter Borges Jann Sneli Clara Tuma Deborah Mann Dennis Roberson Steve Davis Lynne Dobson ....................... Jan Sonnenmair Martha Sheridan Harvey Neville Susie Grubbs Suzy Lamport Jenny Abdo, Diane Ballard. F eatures Editor Im ages Editor Im ages A ssociate Editor Campus A ctivities Editor General Reporters Dianna Hunt, Patrick Jankowski. Mary Ann Kreps. Diane Jane Morrison Shonda Novak. David Real, Joe i'edino, Joel Williams Kon St Pierre. Gardner Selby N ew sw riters Issue E ditor...... New s Assistants Editorial Assistant Assistant Sports Editor Sports Assistants Make-up Editor Wire E d ito r Copy Editors...... Artists P hotographers ................. ....... . ..................... Melinda Magee Alisa Hagan, Mark Henricks Carlos Sanchez. K ellie Cannon. Tom Baker .......................................... ... Cindy Widner .......................... Bob Gennarelli Brenda Kopycmski. David King ....................................... ........................ Vtcki Totten Chris Walters Susan Albrecht, Kellie Cannon. Scott Bteser. Berke Breathed Tim Wentworth, Howard Castleberry Terry Gregston R#p*vX}uct»0fi Q* i o* th# D#»fy part o* pybwcatx of 0 t tft# V \ ifChfOf Of I f * * f J.r»jversify ¿y BdmífiiStrttiOrt tf* SvWd ■ Board of Operating T?u*ws THE DAILY TEXAN Monday, November 12, 1979 Page 4 D£AQiTDlOiMlf Jirin g line Protests insincere, irresponsible F irst, I would like to say th a t I a m w riting this le tte r on Nov.9, and I do not know w hat the situation in Iran will be like in an hour or a day from now. Second, I pray th a t no deaths, e ith e r here or abroad, occur as a result of this en tire incident. F or m any y ears, the United S tates has fully supported the shah of Iran. I pose a question: Why? Could it be oil? No way the U nited S tates would not place th eir own econom ics ahead of m orality and justice. Could it be th a t Iran allowed us to spy on R ussia from their borders? Not th a t either. We m ust have supported the Iranian governm ent because the shah loved to to rtu re and m u rd er thousands of his own coun­ trym en. Anything which happens in T ehran will be a direct re su lt of w hat the United S tates has brought upon itself. When we sup­ port a m an like the shah, we m ust realize the repercussions that m ight arise from such action. If I w ere Iranian, I would also be m ad as hell. How can the U.S. have the unm itigated gall to call itself a “ cham pion of ju s tic e ,” yet a c t in a com ­ pletely hypocritical and two-faced m an n er by supporting such a to ta litarian ? P resid en t C a rte r is handling the problem in the best way conceivable — saying nothing publicly. He knows how wrong he and previous adm in istratio n s w ere to support the shah in the first place. He understands th a t taking any stand w hat­ soever will only cause trouble — eith er with Iranians, A m ericans or both. If C a rte r gets us out of this m ess without anyone being killed, he should be highly com m ended I would also like to add that those m em b ers of Pi Kappa Alpha who support the shah a re the biggest bunch of ani (plural of anus) th at I have ever seen. I can alm ost excuse those blindly p atrio tic Houstonians who also raised protest, for th eir IQs probably m atch th eir resp ectiv e shoe sizes; how ever, the supposedly “ college ed u cated ” people of this fra te rn ity cannot use lack of form al education as an excuse. If I felt that this fra t w as sincere in its beliefs, th eir actions would only be ignorant and foolish; how ever, I believe they a re about as sin c ere in these actions as th eir trying to bring about social change by throw ing beer or urine on people or sta rtin g food fights in public establishm ents. I cannot com ­ prehend how these people can a c t in such an irresponsible m anner. They only do it ju st to have som ething to do and cause m ore trouble (as if they have not already caused enough). Why cannot all anti-Iranian p ro te ste rs see that th eir actions a re not doing one iota of good? I can picture a riot breaking out betw een Iran ian s and A m ericans, and som eone getting killed. If the person who gets killed is I ra ­ nian, then the 60 A m ericans in T ehran m ight as well be dead. If an A m erican gets killed, other A m ericans will m u rd er Iran ian s in retaliation, and then the hostages will die as a result. Let us show re stra in t and patience. We m ight be able to get out of this m ess w ith no one being seriously hurt. I beg for all people to think seriously before staging any form of p ro test P lease, m e m b ers of Pi K appa Alpha, ju s t ridicule and h a ra ss the re s t of us non-frats as before and leave the Iranian students alone. I think th a t they have already gone through enough hardship. David Margolis Iranian students h ere on the UT cam p u s a re asking for ju stice to be c a rrie d out in the ca se of the Shah. The situation in Iran is certainly no indication of the sense of ju stice th at they hold there. I spoke to an Iranian student yesterd ay who told m e th at, in o rder to bring about “ ju s tic e ,” the A m erican citizens had to be held hostage in Iran. W hat is m ore unjust than to violate a hum an being's right to be fre e? The inno­ cent A m erican citizens in Iran have nothing to do w ith in te r­ national governm ental policies. W hat the Iranian people have done under the Khomeini regim e by denying the basic diplom atic im m unity of the am b assad o r and em bassy of­ ficials has shown the tru e c h a ra c te r of th a t “ m an of God. I find it u tte rly disgusting to disguise blackm ail under the nam e of justice. the m odern civilized w orld F or those of you Iranian students who ag re e w ith the K hom eini’s ideology. I ask th at you please re-evaluate your definition of ju stice , and that you stop being so anti- A m erican. We A m ericans m ust also a c t a s ju st people and realize th at not all Iran ian s a r e pro-K hom eini. A m erica, no m a tte r how im perfect, is our country and we love her. Louis Rodriguez Philosophy Iran ian s in U.S. could be in danger Today I observed the deb ates betw een A m erican and I ra ­ nian students on the West Mall and I ca m e to a conclusion F irs t of all I am not nor was I ever a su pporter of the shah, and that is not the purpose of my le tte r. I. a non-violent p er­ son, would like to give my Iranian friends a very serious w arning that I hope will not be taken lightly. The dem onstration a t the Iranian consulate in Houston on Nov 8 was very unusual in that it a ttra c te d everyone from hard hat to long hair, from M exicans to blacks, rich and poor, and they w ere asking for your blood. W hat your mad-dog leader in Iran has done is a diplom atic insult that has turned your chaotic Iran into a d isgrace in the eyes of everyone in the world. No one would blam e us if we w ent right over th ere and invaded your country. But I w ant to tell you a little som ething about the g re a t nation th at you a re currently being allow ed to sta y in. I have traveled in this world and I can tell you that no one is prouder of their country than we A m ericans. Throughout our m odern history we have taken slaps in the face from third -rate countries such as yours and we ju st turned the other cheek. However, your fanatical leaders, by supporting the illegal takeover of our em bassy, have broken the m ost fundam ental of all diplom atic is recognized in all civilized countries as a san ctu ary against violence. (In essence, your radical brothers and siste rs have invaded A m erican so il!) My w arning is thi§: if one drop of A m erican blood is shed in Iran, you a re going to see unleash­ ed a hate in this country the likes of which have not been seen since the Jap an ese attac k on P e a rl H arbor. The A m erican people will not stand for it, I can prom ise you that. the em bassy rules; I don’t w ant to see you injured, I truly m ean th at, but if a single A m erican in our em bassy is hurt, please don’t walk alone in our stree ts. T ravel in groups, lock your doors and sleep with a gun next to your head. I feel th a t you m ay need it. I am not speaking as an individual. I am speaking for every A m erican th a t you see, and if you feel th a t I m speak­ ing out of line, please take another look a t the size of th at pow der keg that you a re sitting on. Colom L. Keating Blacks need to evaluate leaders Society is suffering from a crisis in leadership, leadership a t all levels. Sen. E dw ard M. Kennedy offers leadership a t the national level. Will the black m asses have the foresight to back this m an w holeheartedly, or will they listen to the so-called black leadership? The so-called black leadership is owned by J im ­ my and his peanut farm . W hoever puts the m ost in their pockets gets th eir loyalty and support. This is the one iden­ tifying c h a ra c te ristic of the pseudo-black leader. When we see blacks like Je ssie Jackson, and w h at’s his nam e, oh yes, low ery, em barrassin g Y assir A rafat, we should realize th a t they a re speaking for no one, they have m erely been bought by the highest bidder. We h ea r the black elite voicing th eir support of P resid en t C a rter, but they a re m erely speaking to p ro tect th e ir self-interest, not for the good of the to tal black com m unity. It is tim e for poor blacks to re-evaluate the quality and c h a ra c te r of those m en they call leaders. Otis Ray Chappell Finance K K K ’s right to exist questioned When I was a freshm an, I took a course called The A m erican Experience. In the course of this class, the sudents w ere introduced or reacquainted w ith the activ ities of the Ku Klux Klan. I w as shocked and dism ayed a t the atro c itie s and savagery of people who com m itted th eir acts under the nam e of C hristianity. At the tim e, how ever, I had rationalized it out of m y m ind by telling m yself th at this had all happened y ea rs ago and th ere w as really no place for those things in today’s world. Now four y ea rs la ter, I dis­ cover that, not only is th e re a place for the Ku Klux Klan, but the m ovem ent is building. If allowed to continue, we m ay very well see m any m ore incidents such as the recen t killings in G reensboro, N.C. What can be done? I have no idea. Any m em b er of the Ku Klux Klan has as much right to his racism as I have disgust for it. But does an organization have a right to exist when it openly flaunts they will use violence if necessary to achieve their m eans? I ’d like to think not. P erh ap s it’s tim e we all thought about it. the fact th at Steve Frederick Accounting Crowded polls discourage voting It disturbs m e to see such total apathy in an institution as large as the U niversity of Texas. In la st w eek’s referendum on the Union fee increase, less than ten p erc en t of eligible student voters participated. But I wonder if d isin terest is the only cause of such a low turnout. It seem s to m e th a t m any people didn’t c a st ballots for the sim ple reason th a t the w aiting line w as too long. Many students (and a couple of m y friends in p articu lar) w ere unable to vote because they lacked, o r felt they lacked, the tim e to w ait in line. In view of the fact th at we will probably be having several m ore im portant votes in the near future (including a referen­ dum to form a constitutional convention for the drafting of a new student governm ent), it ’3 im portant th a t student par­ ticipation be m axim ized Although I have no q u arrel with the m ethod by which the voting w as ca rrie d out, I feel th at m ore polling places and m ore personnel would fac ilita te student involvement by elim inating long lines. Convenience in voting might be a good way to increase student in terest. Bill Holme* Plan II The Academia Waltz by Berke Breathed T errorists violate nam e of justice Tanning salons safe Monday, November 12, 1979 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Page 5 Sunlamps pose no more danger than sunlight By Don Fleming I do not feel like I could leave your article on tanning salons unrebutted. Of par­ ticular concern is the fact that I he Daily Texan has issued a tanning salon warning when the Federal Food and Drug (F D A ) has Administration found absolutely no grounds to issue a similar warning. We do not profess to be medical experts, nor do we feel that we are in a position to refute medical opinion. However, before we initiated our tanning salon business, we made a conscientious effort to determine the pros and cons of the industry. Our research into the matter put us in contact with the FDA, private universities and several private cor­ porations in the Netherlands and Germany where light research seems to be the most advanced at this time. As a matter of course, we also con­ local der­ tacted several matologists. It has come to our attention that the use of ultraviolet light seems to be a rather standard for dermatologic practice treatment of various skin dis­ orders. WE ARE IN no way, and have never told anyone, that we are a medically oriented organization. The data that we have available suggests that daily exposure to ultraviolet radiation equivalent to one m in im u m p e r c e p t i b l e erythema, which is roughly the amount of ultraviolet r a d i a t io n n e c e s s a r y to produce the first barely visi ble reddening of the average untanned skin, is sufficient for bodily health. The additional amount of ultraviolet ab­ sorbed to produce a tan is believed to serve no useful purpose beyond improving the appearance of the skin. The primary concerns about ultraviolet radiation, whether from natural sunlight or an ar­ tificial source, are premature aging and inducement of skin cancer We have been ab­ solutely unable to find any documentation that our ul­ traviolet lamps are in any way more dangerous than natural sunlight, and I doubt seriously if anyone can produce documented evidence of this phenomena. The wave length of light is measured in a unit called nanometers. The wave length of sunlight is about 300 to 760 nanometers. The ultraviolet wave length used in our lamps b e g in s at a b o u t 280 nanometers and produces a continuous radiation spec­ trum through approximately 380 nanometers. The UVA and U VB wave length referred to in the Texan article are defined by most sources as follows: U VB rays encompass the wave length of 280 to 315 nanometers while UVA rays encompass the spectrum from 315 to 400 nanometers. The ad­ ditional U VB available in our lamps represents the element which produces a rapid tan R e s e a r c h and m e d ic a l authorities have, to the best of our knowledge, been unable to find that the additional U VB is in any way more harmful than natural sunlight. WE ARE UNFAMILIAR with impending federal guidelines which are said in your article to be forthcoming later this month. The informa­ tion available to us from the Lowering standard of living expensive By Russell Baker Paul A. Volcker, chairman of the Federal Reserve Board, has sound advice for Americans who want to get the economy back on the tracks. Lower your standard of living, he says. Unfor­ tunately, he hasn't advanced any advice on precisely how to lower your standard of living, nor has anybody else ever come up with a foolproof method for doing the trick. You can always enter a monastic order, of course, or become a hermit and live in a cave, but at the price of real estate these days you would probably have to be a corporate executive to af­ ford the rent on a cave. Once you start up that ladder, your chances of lowering your standard of living are shot. What corporation is going to keep you on the executive payroll after you start smell­ ing of stalactites? LOWERING YOUR standard of living is one of the most difficult problems known to humanity, and the difficulty is not confined to the moneyed classes. Panhandlers who used to ask for a dime for a cup of coffee now ask for a quarter for a cup of coffee. Een at this wretched level of the economic scale the standard of living remains un­ lowered. The panhandler still insists on a cup of coffee though the price has soared to a quarter. He seems incapable of asking, “ Can you spare a dime for four-tenths of a cup of coffee?” Maybe he believes it would be a mistake to let philanthropists know he has mastered fractions. It might lead to a rebuke: “ Anybody who can do fractions ought to be able to get an honest job in­ stead of trying to cadge dimes on the street.” This sort of thing often happens when you try to lower your standard of living. There was a story in the papers recently about a man who had tried to lower his standard of living by wearing the same necktie for a year. Instead of looking like a prince of neckwear in a wardrobe of ties for every shirt, suit and occasion, this man slashed his tie budget to the bone and wore the same one month after month. IN A BUSINESS conference one day, his employer interrupted the meeting to ask why the room smelled so strongly of gravy. “ G ravy?” said a vice president. “ I would have said it smells of very old split-pea soup.” “ That’s odd,” said the personnel boss, “ because it smells to me like rancid mayonnaise on decay­ ing spaghetti sauce.” Aware that his lowered standard of living was jeopardizing his job, the one-necktie man took to buying expensive colognes to overwhelm the aromatic stains on his necktie. By the end of the year, he had spent as much to maintain a socially acceptable odor as he would normally have spent on a year's supply of neckties. A New York woman of my acquaintance en­ countered even graver costs when she tried to lower her cost of living by staying home at night reading instead of going dancing. A senior ex­ ecutive of a huge corporation and a sound-money Republican, she forced this policy on her unhappy husband after pointing out that a lower standard of living was the only thing that could save the dollar. Her husband did not work. He enjoyed keeping house and doing the laundry, shopping and cook­ ing. but he also enjoyed a good time in the even­ ing. Reading was not his idea of a good time. “ I was born to dance,” he told his bride when they were married immediately after his gradua­ tion from Yale. His classmates, who looked forward to high standards of living as bankers and consultants in legal tax avoidance, blasted him for choosing marriage instead of a career. He didn’t mind, not so long as he had a successful wife who was also a good dancer. A F T E R T H R E E weeks of not going dancing in order to save the dollar, he accused his wife of not loving him anymore and of never letting him have any fun. When she tried to explain that the lowered standard of living was essential to a sound dollar, he cried, “ To hell with the sound dollar' ” “ You wouldn't say that if you knew what the dollar was,'' she said. Next day, he met a classmate now in banking and asked what the dollar was. He was delighted with the news and called another classmate now in iaw, who explained how easily he could obtain several dollars. The lushness of his divorce award resulted from his wife’s insistence on an out-of- court settlement. A sound Republican, she could not bear having her bankbooks examined in the press. The husband now goes dancing every night and has raised his standard of living to five new’ pairs of dancing pumps per month, not to mention servants. The wife has learned her lesson about lowering her standard of living. Whenever a panhandler asks for a quarter for a cup of coffee, she gives him 50 cents. She figures the faster she can inflate the dollar, the faster it will crash, and after that lowering the standard of living will not be so ex­ pensive. ®1979 New York Times MASTERS A N D DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY DEGREES IN NUCLEAR EN GINEERIN G F in an cial a id it a v a ila b le far I n g i n a * rin g a n d S d a n c a M a j a r t fa r g r a d ú a la it u d y in N u cta a r (n g in o a r in g , F ution, a n d H e a lth F h ytict G r a d u a l * R e se a rch a n d T e a c h in g A t t i t la n lt h i p t lip a n d t r a n g * from $ 5 1 0 0 la $ 1 0 3 0 0 par year p iu t o u l - a f - t la l * tu i­ tion w a iv e r F r * « id * n t't F a ilo w th ip t far o u t s ta n d in g a p p lic a n t s p r o v id * a stip e n d o f S SO O O p * r y o a r p lu s full tuition w aiv e r Far in fo r m a tio n w r it * Oiroctac. Scho o l of N u d a o i E n g in e e rin g G e o r g ia In stitu te of T e chnolo gy, A tla n t a . G e o r g ia 3 03 3 3 . precision haircuts practical prices 478-6754 2408 San Gabriel ■\ IMMIGRATION Paul Parsons Attorney at Law Practice Limited to Immigration Member Association of Immigration and Nationality Lawyers 2200 Guadalupe Austin, Texas 78705 (512) 477-7887 Se Hable Español The B row n Schools w ill be recruiting for Mental Health Workers on Novem ber 13, 1979 Jester Center Call 471 -1217 for appointm ent • M u*t bo 21 • EOE IRaírtáúta Sa/sL Prices'T/loo-. 17 P E N T E L COLOR BRUSH a new system for creating water color effects. Tapered flexible brush tip with vivid liquid ink in a variety of colors. reg. $4.98 sale *4 . 7 9 PRANG TEM PERA 6 jars, % fl. oz. each reg. $2.10 sale $1 . 8 9 ilnnm1 If If If “ Ct d’-Q iO A t H I M » ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ 1 0 ) PRANG WATER COLORS 16 colors reg. $3.95 sale ‘ 3 . 6 9 472-6156 The Art Shop 26th & Red River ^ **0 Visa & MasterCharge W elcom o Welcome BURNET ROAD BUSINESS PARK 9705 BURNET ROAD 837-8686 FIRST MONTH FREE • ALL BRICK • OFFICE AC AND HEAT • FREE TRASH SERVICE • VATER FURNISHED nr, 5 c ao W *— QC . £ £ 9705 (N) BURNET ROAD (S) BR A N D N E W O FFIC E-W A REH O U SE PARK LOCATED AT 1 83 AND BURNET ROAD 837-8686 F D A suggests that such guidelines are in the em­ bryonic stages. in Ironically, the development of new procedures in medicine and dentistry have been in­ strumental initiating an attempt bv the Division of Biological Etiects, Bureau of Radiological Health of the Food and Drug Administra­ tion to develop recommen­ dations for ultraviolet ex­ posure. Medical phototherapy involving ultraviolet radiation exposure includes both ex­ posure of infants for the pur­ pose of reducing bilirubin levels and exposure of adults sensitized with psoralen to treat whole-bodv psoriasis. W E IX ) ACKNO W LEDG E that looking directly in the ul­ traviolet lights in our tanning salons will produce virtually the same corneal damage as one would expect from looking directly at the sun. However, our safeguards are more than adequate to prevent eye dam a g e . ______________ Fleming is from the Sun­ dance Group, Inc., in A ustin. T H E U L T I M A T E EY EW EA R E X P E R I E N C E 1/2 PRICE SALE O N E W E E K O N L Y F l RCHASi: ONE FAIR O F OUR l M Q Ü E EUROPEAN EYEWEAR \N D SELEC T \ SECOND PAIR OF EQUAL \ ALL E AT NO CHARGE! OPTICAL CO, ( UNUSUAL EYEWEAR) # 6 Jefferson Square, 06th and Jefferson * Austin, Texas • 451 -1210 LEGAL ADMINISTRATIVE AND PERSONNEL ASSISTANT POSITIONS O N CAM PUS INTERVIEWS A m a jo r H ouston law fir m is expanding its successful Legal Assistant P ro g ra m in v a rio u s are a s. R e q u ire m e n ts v a ry w ith specific positions. We have need of persons with advan ce d a c a d e m ic tra in in g in the Liberal Arts (M.A.s or Ph.D .s); persons w ith B.A.s, a 3.0 G .P .A . and paralegal training or experience; and persons holding B.A.s in the L ib e ra l Arts with excellent academic credentials and some w o rk e x p e rie n c e who a re willing to be trained. Our salary scale is co m m e n su ra te w ith the abo ve credentials. A re p re s e n ta tiv e of the Firm will be on campus to interview students in­ terested in le a rn in g m o re abo ut these positions on Monday and Tuesday, N o ve m b e r 19 and 20. P le a s e c o n ta ct the Liberal Arts and Sciences Place­ m ent O ffice, J e s te r A-115 (471-1217), to arrange interviews. For further in­ fo rm a tio n , c a ll D r. P a t r ic ia Holmes at 713-651-2213. | VALUABLE C O U P O N i Valuable Coupon! The 4th is Free when you pay for 3 Bring in your favorite color slides with this coupon and we ll have Kodak make four sam e-size KO D AK Color Prints for the price of three. You get one F R E E Hurry, this offer expires Novem ber 14, 1979. Stop in today for details. 3 ” x 5 ” PRIN TS O N L Y OFFER END S THIS TH U RSD A Y cP'Se'ft a.** VISA & MatferCharg# V L o w -u td tf (X o - O fc S u tJ plenty of free parkin g n l á i n l u a I I r A A a m i f L Í m m ** free 1 hr. parkin g w /$ 3 .0 0 purchate ENGINEERS! STRUGGLING TO STAY ON TOP??? IN CIVILIAN LIFE A COLLEGE DEGREE CAN GET YOU A STENO PAD AND A TYPEWRITER. IN THE NAVY IT GETS YOU A COMMISSION AS AN OFFICER. Private industry has no shortage of work for women. What's short is work that lets a woman use her brains. Sometimes a responsible job comes only after a long apprenticeship. In the Navy a woman doesn't have to wait to get responsibility. It's hers as soon as she's commissioned. She may work in cost analysis or defense funding, manage an office or supervise a department. If her background is in Math, Physical Science, or Business, the Navy has dozens of specialties she can work in — and advanced schooling she can qualify for. She can work in Computer Science or Laser Technology. She can even be a pilot. Women Navy Officers are based in over forty cities stateside, and more than 100 overseas. Their responsibilities are equal to a man's and so is their pay — with allowances for housing, food, and clothing, with medical and dental care free, and thirty days paid vacation a year. The Woman Navy Officer. She gets in months the responsibility other women wait years for. For further information contact your N a v y R e p re s e n ta tive in the B.E.B. Placement Office, Novem ber 12-15 from 9 a.m.-2 p.m. or call collect (512) 341-0224. Would a $8200 scholarship your senior year ease the pain somewhat? If you qualify, for the twelve months of your senior year, the Navy will send you a monthly check for $720, plus guarantee you empolyment in the rapidly grow­ ing field of nuclear engineering. Star­ ting salary of $13,827 plus a $3000 bonus for com pletion of nuclear power school. If this sounds like w h a t you've been looking for, contact LCDR Fred Sallee at the Engineer­ ing Placem ent Office, Novem ber 14 from 9 a .m .-2 p.m. or call collect (512)-341-0224. Page 6 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Monday, November 12, 1979 . ^ u ífr ip1^ — r^1—^ i r A ~ • Iran . . . ' i 3f ♦ *si - f • Brittons Brittons 3 DAY 3 DAY s, I 1 SALE SALE Suits ■ Blazers Sport Coats Tweed Coats Slacks i Dress Shirts Skirts Pants Sport Shirts Jackets Sweaters U ‘ .. 1 Shoes 4 - A ^ .f Coats L eathers i Suede Coats Sweaters Blouses Shoes K nits (Continued from P a g e 1 * In W ash in gton , C iv ile tti im m igration agen ts ordered to “ c a r e fu lly all in s p e c t Iranians en terin g the United S ta te s to m a k e su r e th eir v isa s are valid , ad m in istra­ tion so u rces said The so u rces said C iviletti also directed th e Im m igration and N atu ralization S erv ice to keep an accu ra te count of all Iranians en terin g and leaving the country A ction ca m e a day a fte r the White House, in an effo rt to c a lm d e m o n s tr a tio n s that co u ld je o p a r d iz e A m erica n h o sta ges in Tehran, lifted a six-m onth hold on deportation to Iran. INS ordered all Iranians in the U nited S ta tes on student v isa s, including an estim a ted in U S 5 0 ,6 0 0 e n r o l l e d co lleg es, to report to their im ­ m igration o ffices and provide ev id en ce they are property attending school. Those who do not report in the next few d ays could fac€ d ep o rta tio n , o ff ic ia ls said , d e p o r t a t i o n a l t h o u g h take p r o c e e d in g s ro u tin ely m onths or y ears. A h igh -level sou rce said that INS a g en ts at ports of entry throughout the country had been d irected to “ carefu lly in­ sp ect a ll Iranians entering the to d eterm in e United S ta tes w hether their d ocu m en ts are v a lid .” The sou rce a lso said, “ INS, a s of today, is now and w ill be counting all Iranians entering and leavin g the country to see how m any a re com in g and Minton . . . leaving and who they a r e .” The strict controls on m o v e­ ment of Iranians into and out of the country w ere believed to be partly aim ed at curbing t h e c h a n c e s o f m a j o r d om estic vio len ce that m ight pose a threat to the 60 to 65 A m ericans being held by Ira­ nian students in a tak eover the U.S. em b assy in Iran. In B eirut. Lebanon, Iranian students, chanting “ D eath to A m erican s’ and “ Long L ive K hom eini,” broke the garden of the U .S. em b a ssy S u n d a y , t h e A m erican flag and burned it. l o w e r e d into The students w ere la ter d is­ persed by Syrian troops o f the Arab L eagu e’s p eacek eep in g fo r c e . T he S yrian s o ld ie r s w ere rushed to the sc e n e after the 50 d e m o n s tr a to r s had refused to lea v e the em b assy grounds. When the unarm ed Iranians tried to resist the Syrians, the soldiers fired a few shots into th e a ir a n d b e a t a fe w d em on strators w ith rifle butts and c l u b s . T h r e e o f th e p rotesters rece iv ed m inor in­ including one of two juries, m u l l a h s , o r M o s l e m clergym en , w ho w ere leading the d em on stration. The Syrians, w ho are part of a 24,000-man fo rce sen t here during the L eb an ese c iv il war three y ea rs ago, blocked all en trances leading to the em ­ the bassy, which o verlook s M editerranean and is located in the M oslem sectio n of the L ebanese capital. (Continued from P a ge I.) ton charged. While m isd em ean or c a s e s can be ch allen gin g to try, Minton said, nothing is a s sa tisfy in g to a crim in a l la w yer a s arguing and winning a m urder c a se . “ The d efen se you need to d evelop (in m urder c a s e s ) is: ‘The bastard needed k illin g ,’” he said. “ T h ere’s no b etter d efen se in the world than to esta b lish in the m inds of th ose 12 jurors that su re, the d ecea sed is dead, but goddam n did he e v e r beg for it .” But rep resen tin g m urder defendants or a c lien t w h ose guilt is undisputed p artially con trib u tes to the p u b lic's n eg a tiv e a t­ titude toward la w y ers, Minton b elieves. “ P eop le think if you rep resen t som eon e w ho is gu ilty, y o u ’re doing som eth in g wrong. T h at’s a total m isu n d erstan d in g of the role of a law yer. “ The fact that you know a man is guilty d o esn ’t m ak e a damn bit of d iffe r e n c e ,” M inton continued “ Your job a s a d efen se a t­ torney is to do ev ery th in g within the law to rep resen t him and argu e th ere is rea so n a b le doubt th ere; and if the jury acquits him , the sy stem h a sn ’t failed — it ’s w orked. W hat failed w as the prosecution putting its c a se to g eth er.” Candid and outspoken, Minton is q u ick est to c r itic iz e the d is­ trict a tto rn ey ’s o ffic e w hen it prem atu rely se e k s an indictm ent and is later forced to d ism iss the c a se b eca u se o f insufficient ev id en ce or b eca u se an in vestiga tion w as c a r e le s s ly handled. The reputations of se v e r a l U n iversity p ro fesso rs and those of ATO and Kappa Sigm a fratern ity m em b ers h a v e all been dam aged by unw arranted a ccu satio n s of crim in a l conduct, Min- Like the Kappa Sigm a incident, Minton con ten d s that the ch arge in the ATO ca se, in which one m em b er and tw o p led ges w ere indicted for aggrav ated assau lt of a U n iversity freshm an last fall, w as in con sisten t with the evid en ce. A m ajor flaw in the c a se , Minton explained, w a s that the defendants had been indicted for aggravated a ssa u lt on the b asis of serious bodily injury d esp ite the fa ct the com plainant told police he did not need m ed ical help. “ Now how has the ju s tic e sy stem been ‘bought o f f if they in­ d icted them for having cau sed seriou s bodily injury to a youngster who said, ‘I h av e not been hurt; I don’t w ant to s e e a d octor’?” Minton asked, referrin g to su ggestion s the defendants had paid off the com p lain an t. Although a d in t ’s w ealth d oesn ’t n ecessa rily g u aran tee his freedom . Minton ackn ow led ged that a m u ltim illio n a ire like T. Cullen D avis, who paid a reported $3 m illion for his d efen se team , w ill naturally g et b etter representation than an indigent; that fact, how ever, does not m ean two d ifferen t sy s te m s of ju stice operate in so ciety . “ Equal ju stice under th e law d o esn ’t m ean w e ’re going to g iv e everyone the best la w yer, but that w e have a m inim um w e re going to provide and that that m inim um is going to m e e t w ith the due p rocess of law . “ He (the accu sed ) is not going to g et the b est law yer, h e ’s not going to g et the second best: h e ’s going to g et a com p eten t la w y e r ,” Minton said. Sho G Shop We make and repair boots shoes belts leather goods RUGS SHEEPSKIN COW & CALF ★ SADDLES ★ ENGLISH WESTERN C a p ito l S a d d le ry 1614 Lavaca Austin, Texas 478-9309 VfSA' THE AUSTIN TEST CENTRE offers for a limited time free intelligence and personality tests. Your IQ, personality and aptitude determine your future. Know. them. No obligations. 2804 Rio Grande Austin, Texas Sponsored by the Austin Church o f Scien tology (Winter ■?> - 1 Winner ot the No** Wuv ks t Jeraiur* Wonderments Published by Farrar Strauss & Giroux - 1 3 T Almost everything in the store I has been reduced fo r this i 3 -day special! Many items have been reduced for the first special sale ever in our new women's traditional shop. R em em ber, 3 days only! >■ j Brittons V ON THE D R A G 2346 G U A D A L U P E 4 78 3411 itls. rittons >» <5 4 7 8 681 7 ON THE D R A G • - 2 3 6 0 G U A D A L U P E C - C - ■ VISA* OLD LOVE Isaac Bashevis Singer On being awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature, Singer was cited for his “ impassioned narrative a rt which, with roots in a Polish-Jewish cultural tradition, brings the universal human condition to life.” His new book is a collection of stories. “ The love of the old and middle-aged is a theme that is recurring more and m ore in m y works of fiction,” Mr. Singer writes. “ Literature has neglected the old and their emotions. It has not been so obvious that in love, as in other m atters, the young are just beginners and that the a rt of loving m atures with age and experience.” This collection of eighteen stories again displays the author’s incredible range and un­ $10.95 predictability as a storyteller. THE OBSTACLE RACE Germaine Greer Germaine G re e r’s The Fem ale Eunuch was a landmark of modern feminist writing. Witty, vigorous, incisive and erudite, it spoke out for women no longer willing to accept a cramped and stereotyped role in a masculine world. Now she extends the argument, focus­ ing on the world of women painters to show how the im ­ position of traditional social constraints has robbed women in particular, and the world at large, of the chance of excellence. It is an answer to the question: If men and women are equally capable of genius, why has there been no female Leonardo, no Titian, no Poussin? Ms. G re er’s clarity of vision, reasoned argum ent and scholarly erudition will undoubtedly make the definitive book on the subject. 32 color plates, 160 black $25.00 and w h ite illustrations. this GIVING GOOD WEIGHT John McPhee For a couple of decades, John McPhee's readers have been treated regularly to the products of his wide- ranging curiosity, his apparent compulsion to discover and to share. The five pieces in this collection were written between 1975 and 1979. Three preceded and the two others have followed his projects in Alaska that resulted in the celebrated best seller, Coming into the $9.95 Country. books SECOND LEVEL VISA & MasferCharge tituvew if (Zo-Ofi free 1 hr. parking w / $ 3 . 0 0 p urc h a te Artist creates memorial sculpture Sunday Austin joined the ranks of the few American cities honoring soldiers who died in the Vietnam war with city memorials. A model sculpture submitted by Thana Lauhakaikul, U niversity assistant professor of art. won com­ mission Sunday afternoon at a reception in the Lyndon B. Johnson Library. The competition was sponsored by the Austin Chapter of Military Order of World Wars, the Austin Contemporary Visual Arts Associa­ tion. City of Austin, Texas Commis­ sion on the Arts and the National Endowment for the Arts, to create a memorial to those who served and died in Vietnam and was open to any artist in Travis County. Lady Bird Johnson made the presentation saying, “I am so pleas­ ed they asked me to be here today. Whenever there is an opportunity to express graditude to those who fought and died in Vietnam, I want to be among those present.” Lauhakaikul, a native of Thailand, has been at the University three years. Lauhakaikul said he worked with three or four different concepts before deciding on the final one only 15 days before the entry deadline. “For me this is no comment on the war," he said, “only life and death.” Lauhakaikul’s sculpture, a con­ struction of steel, concrete and glass, is entitled, “ For the infinity of Life. “ The model depicts 98 eggs on a black. 100-square grid. The grid, the author sa y s, represents a hundred years. The eggs represent the 98 Travis County citizens who died in Vietnam. Grass will grow in the two empty squares “as a witness of growing and ex­ istence.” The two squares with grass repre­ sent the plurality; and life ultimate­ ly is plural, not singular, he said. Lauhakaikul chose the grid to sus­ pend the eggs,- he said, because it symbolizes the earth suspended in the Universe. The m e m o r ia l w ill be a p ­ proximately two feet tall with glass underneath to reflect sunlight, Lauhakaikul said. Lauhakaikul will receive $20,000 to cover the cost of materials and construction Lauhakaikul’s sculpture was chosen by Ira Licht, the director of the Lowe Art Museum at the University of Miami and former director of the National Endowment for the Arts. The sculpture will be constructed in Waterloo Park and the arts com­ mission plans the memorial to be completed by Veterans Day 1980 Twelve of the maquettes, or small models, are on display in the Lyndon B. Johnson Library. Alter the official ceremony, Alan Pogue, a Vietnam veteran who serv­ ed as a medic, spoke up in protest, saying, “for the people who did not want to go to Vietnam and who died in vain.” ■ ■ I I I I I } I I I I Monday, November 12, 1979 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Page 7 y ★ FOR ENTIRE M ENU REFER TO THE STUDENT DIRECTORY ^ | | * •Hirgers ! FOR I Super-Bert 9 *2.19 | S a v e 4 9 ‘ | w/cheese ♦ COUPON REDEEMED IN STORE ONLY I 11-26-79 ^ 10:30 a.m. to 10p.m. Daily *3303 N. Lam ar • 452-2317 | , Special void on deliveries UT. Arf ° ° njY. fre e DELIVERY ( E ’ ^ 3 IU g icdj)hiC (Demons+rotio * Professor appointed to state project ovember vf* e c o n o m i c s U n i v e r s i t y professor Waif Rostow to par- ticipate in the study group. Clements said he also will ask Lt. Gov. Bill Hobby, House Speaker Bill Clayton, Ed Vetter, executive director of th e T e x a s E n e r g y and Resources Advisory Council and governor’s staff members Paul Wrotenbery and Doug Brown to join the project. Arnold said he hopes fun­ ding needs for the group will be minimal, if agencies and loan people to institutions share expertise. Arnold said f u t u r e f u n d i n g wi l l be available the federal government. from The Econom ic D evelop­ ment Administration provides “ 302 m o n ie s,” which are specifically earmarked for long-range planning. Clements said he also will i nvol ve ment seek public through the private sector. The group will provide data to the next legislative session. flllf Mwtb ~ Jftati (CTúbíb at tfielSct S h o p , (Co~Qp IÉ.09% iftioec treet £ZSÍe cocpy p full line of CO It W a fh Future needs study By J O E L W IL L IA M S State Reporter Gov. Bill Clements last week named Dr. Victor Ar­ nold. an assistant professor at * the L.B.J. School of Public Af­ fairs to direct a major study of the state’s future needs. C lem ents described the project, called “Texas 2000,” as “a far-reaching, long-term planning p ro ject for the state,” that will “help us con­ trol our own destiny.” “The first thing w e’re going to do is try to develop an infor­ mation base as to where we in Texas have been, where we are now and where we are g o i n g , ” s ai d Ar nol d, a specialist in economic growth and development. s t a t e , s h i f t s Included in the study will be such topics as population of th e in d e m o g r a p h i c s , p r o b a b l e f u t u r e n u m b e r s o f u n ­ documented workers, changes in education, energy produc­ tion and consumption levels, industrial and rural develop­ ment. “We hope to accomplish that we can anticipate some of the problems the state will be facing, rather than reacting to them after they happen,” Ar­ nold said. Arnold directed a similar study in Minnesota. Governments tend to react to rather than anticipate problems because of the nature of carrying on day-to- day business, he said. “It's very important in my mind that, while they continue to do that, they begin to an­ ticipate,” Arnold said. Texas 2000“ will serve state governm ent in this manner because the com ­ mittee will not be encumbered by daily “brush fires,” Arnold said. “I’ve been assured by the governor that we won’t be drawn into beating brush fires.” Arnold, so far the sole member of the “Texas 2000” project, said he exp ects members of a steering com­ mittee to be named this week. Clements said he will ask H A L R. M O O R E IV, D.D.S. announces his new office hours for the practice of G E N E R A L D E N T I S T R Y 711 West 38th St. Suite B*10 M E D I C A L S C I E N C E C E N T E R Office Hrs. Tues.-Thur. — By Appt. 454-2744 E D U C A T I O N A L C O N S U L T A N T S Announces A F IN G E R C A L C U L A T IN G W O R K S H O P For Teachers and Other Interested Adults Dec. 3-4 8:30-4:00 Ann Goldberg 345-6892 Enrollment Closes Nov. 29 ^TAKE THE v/> ' SHAKES I1’ OUT OF YOUR SHOTS- w ith 20% off all... STITZ Tripods while supplies last reg. $59.95 S A L E $47.95 reg. $50.95 S A L E $40.75 Sale effective thru 11/17 ASK ABOUT OUR TIME PAYMENT PLANS ; v V ISA & MasterCharge Welcome r O C vá u ve M ity (Z o 'ó flr^ Free 1 Hr. parking w/$3.00 purchase crepes Les A m is Sidewalk Cafe 21th & San A ntonio » n » n » n y ? n » n THE JEWS OF IRAN P resen ted by Dr. Herbert Paper Graduate Dean, Hebrew Union College, Cincinnati Tuesday, Nov. 13th at 8:00 p.m. at the Hillel Campus Jewish Center 2105 San Antonio t o r i ' by: B ' r ‘ B n l b H U k ‘ F° u n d \ V T - U h ’ n ‘ . « « . D ep t. «/L in g u is tic s , C o m er f o r M iddle Eastern S tu d ies, D ept, o f O rie n ta l an d African Languages. 470 0125 33R » r r >>» » r t » n » n crait’s fun irif 'k'k-k-k'k'kir'k'kiririr'k'k'kir'kieiririr'kirirJt- Ark* 'k'k * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * it’s wild, i t ’s THE UNIVERSTIY SKI CLUB I* I * I* * * * * * * I * * I * I * * I * I * I * * I * * * I * I * * I * I** I * I * * I * I * I* I * I * * * * * I * * TPTT ★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★■A ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ * * 7:30 p.m. "R A C IN G " Guest Speaker and Film ★ Deadline for Final Payment * Deadline for $25 damage deposit.____ Tues., Nov. 13 RLM 4.102 if paying by check. THE SALE CONTINUES ENTIRE STOCK NINA SHOES 16 OFF By K aravel — 2 348 G u a d a lu p e A lio shop Karavel stores in Northcross M a ll, W e stgate M all, D ow n tow n . V IS A an d M a ste rC h a rg e accepted. Am erican Express at Nortncross M a ll only. Rot 41 ALL YEAR ROUND. W hen everyone else is into winter white vou can still look young and healthy with a Tam que tan Tanique is the g reat new way to keep looking great se a r round. And it doesn't take a lot o f tim e o r money. Ju s t two m inutes in one of o ur private Tanique booths equals two hours in the sun Each booth has its own private dressing area, and o u r trained technicians determ in e just the right am ount of tim e for you A 20 visit Tanique m em bership is only That's less than $2 p e r visit. Com e bv today for a FREE TRIAL VISIT. The only thing you've got to lose is vour pale com plexion. 1 (irand Central Station Open Id a ni Research & Peyton (,in Road tii 9 p m u e e k d a w IU a m til V p m S atu rd a y tes-tost ....... . ... Penalties-Yards . Texas Houslon 15 42-175 130 47 8-22-3 7-26.8 2-1 3-15 14 59-195 75 72 . 7-13-1 7-36.1 2-1 . . . . 5-55 .................. 7 7 0 7-21 .................... 3 7 0 3-13 Houston — FG Hatfield 18 Texas — Little 5 run (Goodson kick) Houston — Clark 46 run (Hatfield kick) Texas — Jam Jones 6 run (Goodson kick) Houston — FG Hatfield 36 Texas — Little 15 run (Goodson kick) A — 53,650 the interceptions; I guess I should have lofted them over his head.” But H atchett was ready. “ I knew if they kept picking on me, I ’d pick on them a little too,” he said. “ If you play one-on-one long enough, you'll g e t e v e n t u a l l y s o m e if you keep (interceptions) your head in the gam e.” to limited But the defensive firepower w asn’t intercep­ tions. At the end of the first quarter, tackle Kenneth Sims blocked a Mark Ford punt and recovered it a t the Houston nine-yard line. “ It w asn’t a called block,” Sims said. “ I was the safety valve to m ake sure he kicked it, and his timing just got off.” Sims simply jumped over the halfback, threw up his arm s and hit the ball. “ I re m e m b e r w atching Houston last year against Notre Dame and thinking that their punts could be blocked, Sims added. But the offense could not cash in the opportunity when Herkie Walls’ halfback option pass was intercepted by Don­ nie Love and returned to the Houston six-yard line. Late in the first half, the defense came up with its se­ cond blocked punt as Ford barely had time to get rid of the ball before he was buried by six onrushing Longhorns Conny Hatch got the ball, and he chased it out of bounds at the Houston 27. “ That was the first tim e our specialty teams had broken down this season,” Houston coach Bill Yeoman said. “ I ’m n o t e x a c t l y s u r e w h a t happened.” NEITHER WAS Ford “ I can ’t really say what happen­ ed. I took too much tim e on th e f i r s t k ic k t h a t w a s b lo c k e d ,” he said. ‘ T h at number 77 (Sims) really tim ­ ed his jump right. I kept my head down on the second kick and I c o u ld n ’t s e e w h a t happened.” What everyone was sure happened was that six plays later, the offense took advan­ tage of the break with a six- yard sweep by A.J. “ J a m ” Jones into the Houston end zone. The offense had its share of big plays as well, m arching 77 yards in 13 plays in the first q u a rte r to go ahead 7-3. Q uarterback Donnie L ittle kept the drive alive at the Houston 30 with a third-down c o m p le tio n tig h t end to Lawrence Sampleton, and Lit­ tle carried the final five yards himself on a counter option play. JAM’S SIX-YARD run after the second blocked punt gave the Longhorns a 14-10 halftim e lead. “ All that offense was a sight for sore eyes,” Akers said. Houston had a little offense of its own in the first half, with Terald Clark’s 46-yard run up the middle giving the C ougars a tem porary 10-7 lead. “ That run was totally my fault,” Sims said. “ They trap blocked me, but it was still my gap. It was just one of those quick-opening things But the defense put a stop to the quick-opening things and the slow-opening things and the passing things in the se­ cond half, holding the Cougars to three points and 114 yards on offense. Brown completed three passes in the second half — two to Hatchett and one to safetyman Ricky Churchman. Substitute Terry Elston had Houston’s only real comple­ tion of the half with 1:10 to go in the game, and by then it was too late. The Longhorns added an in­ surance touchdown late in the game when they killed 3:39 off the clock and Little ran 15 yards on an option play to score. “ The blocked kicks were the most important plays in the gam e,” Akers said. “ That and th e o v e r a ll p la y of th e defense. W’e did play some defense, didn’t we? We had some offense, too. “ We’ve got to take care of our business now. We still have to take them one at a tim e,” Akers said. And hopefully foul them up one at a time. Standings Southwest Conference Standings By U nited P reen International CO N FE R E N C E Pet. T .833 0 833 0 800 0 667 0 417 1 400 0 0 .333 1 .250 000 0 T 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 1 0 Pet. 889 889 875 667 500 .444 444 278 .111 .............. Arkansas .. Houston ....... ............... Texas ........... ........... B aylor.......... ............. Texas Tech . .............. Texas A&M, S M U ............. ............. TCU.............. ............... ............. R ice.............. SEASON Arkansas Houston .. Texas Baylor......... Texas A&M . SMU Texas Tech .. TCU Rice.............. ............. ............. ............ ......... ............ ............. . 4 W L 1 5 1 5 1 4 4 2 3 2 3 2 4 2 4 1 6 0 W L 1 8 1 8 1 7 3 6 4 4 5 4 6 8 3 2 1 Saturday** Reeults Arkansas 29, Baylor 20 Texas 21, Houston 13 TCI 3, Texas Tech 3 (tie) SMU 34. Wichita 0 This Week’* Qame* TCU at Texas Arkansas at Texas A&M Baylor at Rice Texas Tech at SMU Blocked punts doom Houston By JIMMY BURCH Dally Texan Staff HOUSTON — Whoever put together the program for S aturday n ig h t’s Texas-Houston gam e m ust have had a premonition of things to come. Or a crystal ball. The lead story in the program was a three-page spread devoted to the a r t of blocking the punt, com plete with quotes from coaches around the nation and specific exam ples of gam es in which blocked punts spelled victory for the winning team . Had the program been printed a fte r Saturday night, the Longhorn-Cougar gam e could very well have been one of the examples cited in the article, as Texas converted one of two blocked into the winning Houston punts in a 21-13 victory the touchdown Cougars HOUSTON coach Bill Yeoman had expressed worries about his punting game earlier in the week when he said that punter Mark Ford had shanked some kicks this year, but that he was improving. Ford did shank two punts in the game — one off defensive tackle Kenneth Sims and one off linebacker Conny Hatch. Hatch's block in the second q u a r t e r l ed to T e x a s ’ s e c o n d touchdown, which gave the Horns a 14- 10 lead they never relinquished. On Houston’s first punt of the night, center Randy Swisher’s snap bounced once en route to Ford, but the Longhorns were playing for a punt return and didn't have anyone pressur­ ing the kicker. However, on every Cougar punt after that, Texas sent nine men to try to block the kick. “THE FIRST time they punted, the snap was bad, but we didn’t have the block on.” Texas coach Fred Akers said. “So, we decided to try to block it and went after it every time after that. It wasn’t anything we’d planned to do; it was a decision we made during the game." Akers credited assistant coach Mike Parker with the idea of going for the (See DOOM. Page 11.) Little cuts upfield behind Joe Shearin (74) as Houston defensive end James Wilson watches ‘Jam’ Jones during Saturday night action. Bears give Hogs early gift, blow big second half lead By BOB QENNARELLI Dally Texan Staff FAYETTEVILLE, Ark On a cold, clear November day, the Baylor Bears presented ninth ranked Arkansas with an ear­ ly Christmas gift. Baylor, which held a 14 0 halftime lead over the Razorbacks, had just upped the score to 17-0 after Robert Bledsoe s 27-yard field goal at 10:01 of the third quarter Then the roof fell in on Grant T ea ffs enjoyable Saturday afternoon in the Ozarks. Baylor’s freshman quarterback Mike Brannan threw two in terceptions and fumbled once, a fumble Arkansas recovered for a touchdown, as the Razorbacks, now 8 1 (5-1 in the Southwest Conference), staged a second half rally for a 29-20 win over the* 16th ranked Bears. “ I really respect the* way Arkansas came back," Teaff said after his Bears fell to 6-3, 4-2 in the SWC. “That’s the mark of a great team. They were down 17 points but came back and took advantage of our mistakes. “ I’M DISAPPOINTED for our team. They came into the hills and weren’t intimidated and played hard, Teaff added The Razorback defense will attest to how hard Baylor played The Bears took advantage of Arkansas' first-half mistakes as quarterbacks Kevin Scanlon and Tom Jones threw four in­ terceptions and the Hogs fumbled once Yet Baylor could have easily put more than 14 points on the board in the first half Split end Robert Mitchell dropped a touchdown pass from Brannan with 46 seconds remaining in the half and a 25-yard field goal attempt by Bledsoe sailed wide right early in the second quarter. Baylor rolled up 269 yards total offense in the first half (421 on the day), with 185 of that coming on the ground against the SWC’s fourth ranked rushing defense. The Arkansas defense was giving up 180 yards a game WALTER ABERCROMBIE accounted for 90 yards rushing in the tirst half and finished the day with 131 yards and Baylor’s two touchdowns “The\ have a real good defense,” Abercrombie said "This is a real tough loss We really had a howl chance if we won. But when we fumbled in the end zone we had a letdown It changed the momentum And Arkansas patiently waited for that change “ At halftime 1 tried to keep my voice down, but I just ex­ ploded.’ Arkansas coach Lou Holtz said “Then I realized that we were fortunate not to bo down any further, considering how badly we played “ I t’s the first tim e this team has ever been blown out in a half,” Holtz added. “ But Baylor has a great team I ’m really im pressed with them, in the second half they just m ade some mistakes that got us back in the gam e.” THE FIRST Baylor m istake cam e a fte r Scanlon connected with Bobby Duckworth on fourth down and five for a 32-yard touchdown pass. On Baylor’s possession after the Arkansas touchdown, Randy Wessinger intercepted a Brannan pass at the Baylor 28, retu r­ ning it to the 13. Baylor’s defense held, forcing an Ish Ordonez field goal as the Bears held onto a slim 17-9 lead. The Bears’ second, and biggest m istake was Brannan’s fum­ ble into the end zone Arkansas’ Danny Phillips recovered Bran­ nan s errant pitch for the touchdown a fte r right end Jeff Goff hit the Baylor quarterback ROBERT FARRELL then made a leaping catch for the two- point conversion that tied the score at 17. The Razorbacks got another field goal from Ordonez, this one from 40 yards out, and the Razorbacks led for the first tim e, 20- 17. “ Arkansas cam e back and executed b etter in the second half and we had a breakdown,” Brannan said. “ We didn’t play as well offensively (the second half) but we dominated the first half. We had á letdown after that first interception, but we never gave up." But the mom em tum shifted once again Baylor drove 61 yards before Bledsoe hit a 35-yard field goal with 4 46 rem aining in the game, tying the score at 20 “ 1 thought we were going to win after Robert s field goal. Teaff said “ I felt then we’d go ahead and win the gam e I really thought we had gotten the momentum back in our favor. NOT QUITE. Scanlon connected with F arrell for 60 yards and a touchdown on the Razorbacks next possession Arkansas then added a safety, catching Baylor punter Bubba Stowe after a bad snap. “ 1 feel like I’ve just coached my first basketball game, the momentum shifted so often,” Holtz said “ It was up by two, jum p ball, down by 12! “ The better the team s are the m ore often the momentum changes,” Holtz added “ Grant Teaff is class all the way. He has a great team and th ere’s no doubt his team should go to a bowl gam e.” ★ ★ ★ In other SWC gam es Saturday, SMU won its first gam e since (See BAYLOR, Page 10.) Arkansas end Jim Howard draws a bead on Baylor quarterback Mike Brannan, left, and sacks him for nine-yard loss during fourth quarter action. Jan Sornenmair, Dally Texan Staff Site changes, results same for Longhorn tennis team By JOE CHEMYC2 Daily Texan Staff Though the names were changed, the results were much the same as they have been all year for the Texas women’s tennis team. The site was changed to Conroe and the name of the tournament was the April Sound Open, but other than those two factors, all else was pretty much a broken record The Longhorns once again captured singles and doubles titles, bringing their record to seven championships out of a possible eight this fall. It has often been said many times that a good fall season does not guarantee a successful spring, but the future keeps getting brighter for Coach Dave Woods’ team. Top-seeded Shelly Hudson won her second singles title this season, defeating Jill Patterson of Odessa Junior College in a two-and-a-half hour “ battle of the baseline.” PATTERSO N, who will compete for Colorado next year, won the first set 6-3 and was up a service break in the se­ cond set when she began to tire. Hud­ son rallied to take the second set 7 5 and then went on to win the third set, and the championship, 6-3. Patterson, seeded second, beat Marilvn Hooten of Texas A&M 3-6, 6-0, 6-0 in the semifinals whle Hudson edg­ ed fifth-seeded Beth teammate, Ruman, 6-4, 6-1. Cindy Sampson and Kirsten McKeen made it four Texas wins in four tries in doubles as they teamed to beat Hooten and Terry Neutzke of A&M in another three-set match, 6-4, 4-6, 6-4. Sampson has now won three doubles titles this fall and been runnerup in the fourth, all with different partners. TO REACH the finals, Sampson and McKeen had to defeat Ruman and Mary Jo Giammalva in the semifinals, which they did, 7-5, 6-3. In the men’s division, it was Giam- malva's younger brother who provided much of the excitement as he captured the singles title. Sixteen-year-old Sammy Giammalva Jr., who was seeded fifth in the draw of 64, defeated David Dowlen of Houston for the title 6-3, 6-2. Giammalva was runnerup at the national 16-and-under championships this past summer and it was his im­ proving all-around game that took him to the title. “ Sammy catches the ball on the rise, much like Jim m y Connors, and he is constantly applying pressure,” men’s coach Dave Snyder said. “ Also, he makes very few mistakes during the course of a match.” S N Y D E R praised the play of Texas sophomore Doug Crawford in the three- day tournament. Crawford reached the semifinals in singles, despite being un­ seeded in the draw Among Crawford's victims were Rocky Royer (R ice’s No. 1 player), teammate Guillermo Stevens and Tom Judson of Texas A&M Giammalva added Crawford’s name to his list, though, beating him 6-3, 6-3 in the semifinals. Dowlen moved into the title match when Texas assistant coach Gary Plock retired after losing the first set of their semifinal encounter 7-6 to concentrate on the doubles final. Plock and partner Kreg Yingst, another" sophomore, finished second in doubles, losing to a team from A&M. The Aggie tandem of Alberto Jiminez and Reid Freeman capped the tourna­ ment off with a 7-5, 6-1 victory over the Texas duo. Jim inez and Freem an defeated three Texas teams in the event, in­ cluding the team of Stevens and Bill Berryman, who had beaten them a week ago in a dual match. In the semifinals, Plock and Yingst came back from a first set deficit to down Rice's Royer and John Albert, 3- 6, 7-5, 6-2. Hogs capture Georgetown meet By GARY STEPHENS Daily Texan Staff Cool weather and overcast skies provided ideal long-distance running conditions Saturday, but it didn’t help Texas’ cross­ country runners as they finished ninth in team standings at the NCAA District 6 meet in Georgetown. Arkansas dominated the meet, winning with 26 points as Razorback runners finished in five of the top 10 places in the 10,000-meter run. Ben Moturi of North Texas State University did deny Arkan­ sas complete domination by taking the 10,000-meter race in 29:55. His time broke the meet record of 30:55 set last year by Arkansas runners Mark Muggleton and Mark Anderson. T H E SECOND and third place teams, Houston and Rice, qualify along with Arkansas for the NCAA National Cross Coun­ try Championships, which take place Nov. 19 in Bethlehem, Pa. Texas runner Dave Finnestad, who could have qualified for the Bethlehem meet by finishing individually in the top four runners, ran his second fastest 10.000-meter race of his career at 31:41. But he placed 22nd and out of contention for the in­ dividual spots. After the race, which was held at Southwestern University’s Kurth-Landrum Golf Course, Finnestad expressed disappoint­ ment with his performance and added the cool weather was “ perfect” for running. “ This is the kind of weather I like to run in. I should have done better.” said Finnestad, who comes from Oswego, 111. Six other Longhorn runners finished at 40th, 52nd, 53rd, 56th, 60th and 66th place in the meet. They were Kevin Borg (32:47), Curtis Conaway (33.18), Chris Bucknall (33.20), Herbert “ Rab­ bit” Jackson (33:36), Larry Johnson (33:43) and Jeff Lindsay (34:05). FIN A L TEAM standings saw SMU (116 points) in fourth place; Louisiana Tech i 133 points) in fifth; Lamar (140 points) in sixth; North Texas State (143) in seventh; Baylor (185) in eighth; Texas (203) in ninth. Pan American (280) in 10th; UT Arlington (290' in 11th; and Texas A&M (297) in 12th. Moturi. by winning the race, will represent North Texas State at the NCAA Championship meet along with SMU runners Tom Marino and John Herbert. Texas Tech’s Greg Lautenslager also qualified individually for the Bethlehem meet. During most of the race, Moturi lagged a few feet behind two Arkansas runners. Muggleton and David Taylor. After making his move late in the race, Moturi edged ahead of Muggleton and won handily by six seconds over his rival. It was the second 10,000-meter race Moturi has won this season in Georgetown. He also took the Texas Invitational Oct. 18 on the same course with a slower 31:24 time. sTROMP THE TOADS U)i£aon ^ g- Football Special w off on all footballs in stock, while supplies la st; The Stabler, Griese, O.J. Simpson, NFL, InterScholastic, Duke J r ., & others — offer good until Nov. 17th V it a & M a * t e r C h a r g e W elcom e Sporting Goods second level (Za-OftJ Free 1 hr. parking ' w / t 3 f t n -- 1-- w / $ 3 .0 0 purchase JOBS FOR SPECIAL EDUCATION TEACHERS The Brownsville Independent School District w ill be interviewing Special Education teachers for the 1979-80 a n d 1980-81 school y e a r s on Novem ber 28, 1979, at the College of Education Placement Service, room 294. B R O W N SV ILLE I.S.D. O FFERS • Career oriented employment • Professional development opportunities • Equal employment opportunity • Credit union • $10,000 life insurance provided by the district • Professional liability insurance provided by the district • Attractive climate and geography • Competitive salaries Contact your College of Education Placem ent Service or w rite or call: Ronald Schraer, Ph.D. Director of Special Services Brow nsville I.S.D. 1102 E. Madison Brow nsville, TX 78520 (512) 546-3101, sta. 46 * LEADERSHIP RESPONSIBILITY MANAGEMENT EXPERIENCE EXCELLENT PAY & BENEFITS ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ 4- * * * * * * * * * * * If your goal is to become a professional, you owe it to yourself not to overlook any opportunities that will help you reach that goal. As a Naval Officer as soon as you earn your commission, you receive a job with responsibility. A job which gives you the opportunity to achieve the high standards you have set for yourself. One that requires skill and leadership. 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You’ll gain professional e x p erien ce w ith full-time sum m er and part-time w in ter assignm ents in Hughes engineering laboratories. R equirem ents: BS for M asters Fellow ship/ MS for Engineer or Doctoral Fellow ship /A ccep tan ce in a Hughes-approved g raduate school/ U.S. Citizenship Selection by the Hughes Fellow ship Com m ittee. For inform ation, com plete coupon or w rite today to: Hugh«s A ircra ft Company C orporate Fellowship Office C ulver City. C A 9 0230, Consider me a candidate for a Hughes Fellow ship (P le a se print) City State Zip I am interested in obtaining. D M asters □ Engineer □ Doctoral deg ree in the field of Degrees held (or exp ected ): BACHELORS DEGREE r Date Nam e Address School Field G ra d Date M ASTERS DEGREE School Field G ra d Date OTHER Hughes Aircraft Company, Corporate Fellowship Ottice Culver City, CA 90230 H U G H E S u.s. Citizenship Required Cree ting a new world with electronics An equal opportunity em ployer — M/F/HC * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * If * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * if * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * NUMBER1 The University Blood Drive Committee has challenged the entire student body and faculty to give blood. These people have met the challenge. Women's Co-Ops 66% Winning Co-Op Pearce 100% Carothers 38% Blanton 37% Winning R.A. Dee Dee Ramos 51% Moore-Hill 34% Winning R.A. Doug Walton 85% Prather 34% Winning R.A. Steve Wever 46% Simkins 33% Winning R.A. Buddy Wilburn 47% Littlefield 30% Winning R.A. Carylon Myers 34% Andrews 28% Winning R.A. Mary Crepon 36% Brack/Roberts 28% Winning R.A. Matt Crow 75% Kinsolving 26% Winning Section 1SW 82% Jester West 19% Winning R.A. Beverly White 63% Jester East 13% Winning R.A. Rusty Genson 100% Catsilian 15% Winning Floor 14th 40% ROTC Air Force with the highest % ABP vs. Band APO 67% Band 42% The following fraternities and sororities have tremendously helped the Blood Drive. Their support has been greatly ap­ preciated. Delta Tau Delta 8 4 % Sigma Nu 6 9 % Kappa Alpha 3 0 % Pi Beta Phi 2 2 % Alpha Delta Pi 19% Chi Om ega 19% All persons win when they meet the challenge and give blood. They win the satisfaction of knowing they gave the GIFT OF UFE. U.T. BLOOD DRIVE ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ Paoe 10 □ THE D AILY TKXAN □ Monday, Novem ber 12, 1979 f ~ — *9.00 C A S H " " " ' j s9.00 DOLLARS CASH! I I I ^ -’H I H H Í I You ton hm o lit* ky b« I ing o blood plosma donor ^ I» only fake» I '? hour*, I ond you con donate every | 7? hours. ■ You will receive 18.00 lor I your first donotion and ■ $10 CO lor o »econd dona ? tion in the same week 5 If you bring this ad in with - B you, you will receive a I s 1.00 bonus after your first donation I I AUSTIN BLOOD COMPONENTS, INC. I Phone 477-3735 | I 510 West 29th j | Hours: Mon & Thurs • o m.-4 p.m.; Tire». I M . • e.m.-230 p.m. M cG E O R G E S C H O O L O F L A W I U N IV E R S IT Y O F T H E PA C IFIC Accredited: Am erican Bar Association M em ber — Assoc lation of Am erican Law Schools SACRAMENTO, CALIFORNIA M a y 1, 1980 is application deadline for first year students seeking Juris Doc tor degree in 3-year Day and 4-year Evening Program beginning in September 1980. P r c w í j í i w D is c u s s io n f O R P R O S P E C T IV E S T U D E N T S D A T E : T h u rsd a y 11/15/79 T I M E : P L A C E : 10 a.m. - 1 p.m, F O R A P P O I N T M E N T O R F U R T H E R I N F O R M A T I O N K a re n B e a rd C a r e e r C e n te r m i ' V i ■"■rnmmm:.. Swimmers set two records Texas women defeat Tech in dual meet By BRENDA KOPYCINSKI D aily T e xan Staff Texas’ women’s swim team achieved its goal in a dual meet against Texas Tech Saturday, setting new school records in both the 200-yard medley relay and 200-yard freestyle relay. “ It was good to see the girls go that close to the American record in the 200- yard freestyle. ’ Texas coach Paul Bergen said. “ We have a real promise for the national championship. It was really, really pleasing. The 200-yard freestyle relay team of Tenley Fisher, Carol Borgmannn, Joan Pennington and J ill Sterkel set the new record with the time of 1:34.99. The previous record, 1:38.57, was set last year in Austin. Fisher, Jana Kubik, Pennnington and Brigitta Jonsson set the new 200-yard medley relay record with the time of 1:49.25. The previous record was set in Lubbock last year with the time of 1:50.43. FIS H E R , A freshman, was excited about breaking the relay records. “ It ’s neat." Fisher said. “ It ’s great. We talked about it (breaking the record) earlier in the week. It ’s a nice way to start out the year As the season goes on, we'll see lots of them (records) broken ” Texas won the dual meet 84-56. taking first place in 11 of 16 events. “ We swam pretty well Bergen said. “ We had a fine performance from Peggy Hollar. Jill Sterkel swam really, really w ell." Hollar placed second in the 100-yard individual medley, and Sterkel took first place in the 500-yard freestyle. The Red Raiders’ Sherry Opal placed in the 100-yard butterfly and first Dawn Pruitt took first place in the 100- yard individual medley. Texas Tech s Dorinda Jung placed first in the 200- yard freestyle, Laura Vierra took first place in 3-meter diving event, and Dara Hembree placed first in the 100-yard breaststroke. “ TECH HAD excellent races in the 100-fly and the 100 individual medley,’’ Bergen said. “ They had really good races. They might move ahead of A&M this year. I was impressed by Texas Tech. They improved their depth. “ Tech has a small team — smaller than us,” Fisher said. “ They did really well, considering." Texas’ Sterkel won the 500-yard freestyle with the time of 5:01.29. Dian Girard took first place in the 200-yard individual medley with a time of 2:12.08 The 100-yard freestyle was won by Fisher with a time of 53.88. “ It was lots of stress work," Fisher said. “ With time it will be better. I wasn’t satisfied with it." JOAN PEN N IN G TO N won the 50- yard backstroke with a time of 28.35. The 50-vard breaststroke was won by Longhorn Dawn Rodighiero with a time of 32.44. Erin Beiter placed first in the one meter diving Jann Girard won the 50-yard freestyle with the time of 26.39. The 100-yard backstroke was won by Kim Lacy with a time of 1:04.50. Jana Kubik won the 50-yard butterfly with a time of 28.47. The team will swim against the Canadian National All-Stars Saturday in the Texas Swim Center. “ It w ill be p retty much of a challenge." Bergen said. “ They have a girl medalist on the team. One girl won nationals in 1978. She is an excellent world-class stroker. It is a really fine, strong Canadian team. They are probably the strongest team in Canada. “ It w ill be our last meet until_ December, and might be one of the more important in the fall semester," Bergen added. ‘1 am going to swim the girls in their best events — in their strengths." Volleyball squad drops meet By ROGER C A M PB ELL Dally Texan Staff Although lackluster its q u ad ran g u lar m eet was meaningless as far as stan­ dings go. the Texas women’s volleyball team gained much in participating in Houston over the weekend, Coach Lin­ da Lowery said. And though Texas iost, it still proved profitable to the Horns’ cause as they approach next week's regional tourna­ ment, the last step in deciding what teams w ill qualify for the national meet in Carbon- dale. 111. “ I was really pleased with o u r o v e r a l l p l a y t his weekend," Lowery said. “ All the difference this weekend was in our blocking play.’ On the first day of competi­ tion, the four teams entered — Texas, Houston, Texas A&M and Rice, played in 20-minute scrimmages to seed the teams for Saturday’s short tourna­ ment play. T E X A S P R O V E D to be dominating against both the Aggies and Rice, as it easily took the first two games of each match to win, and ad­ vanced to the championship match against the No. 1 rank­ ed team in the state. Despite losing a tough match to the Cougars. 11-15, 15-17, a rejuvanated Texas team appeared to overcome the problems it had in last week’s disappointing state meet. In the game a g a i n s t Houston. Lowery sighted the two big gains that should help Texas in the regional meet in Arlington next week. “ I did a few switches in the lineup, since we were missing Donna (Benton, who is out with a sprained ankle), and I wanted to try a few things," Lowery said. THAT CHANGE was inser­ ting freshman Irma Sanchez into a starting role against Houston. It worked as Sanchez provided the spark for the weekend, Lowery said. “ She did real good. She got on the ball a lot," a pleased Lowery said. “ Her blocking was better, and it should be a big boost for us at Arlington (the site oi the regional m eet)," Lowery added. Sanchez, who has never started, proved to Lowery she will be a key part in next week s tournament. “ She's a bit weak on the backline, but she w ill be strong at the net.” Lowery said Since Texas played Houston much closer than the previous two times, Lowery said that was also a big advantage in preparing for the regional meet. Baylor . . . (Continued from Page 8.) beating North Texas State on Sept. 22 as the Mustangs downed Wichita State, 34-0. Running back E ric Dickerson rushed for 113 yards, his first 100-yard performance since SM U ’s opener against Rice. Emanuel Tolbert caught seven passes for 89 yards while also breaking former TCU receiver Mike Renfro’s career reception record of 162. Tolbert s seven catches gives him 163 in his four years at SMU. 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If a man should be an obvious Heisman Trophy winner, it’s Charlie W hite.” Purdue, its ranks depleted by injuries to key players, put together a patched up lineup and appeared to have a “ safe” 18 point lead early in the final period when Michigan fought back with two touchdowns and a safety. Twice in the final m inutes q u a rte rb a ck John W angler was sacked to stifle Michigan drives and preserve the vic­ tory for the Boilerm akers. “ Michigan cam e back like a great team should, but we cam e back, too,” said Purdue Coach Jim Young. MICHIGAN COACH Bo Schem bechler called it “ a lousy g am e.” “ Purdue played w ell,” said Schembechler. “ They gave us the gam e and we refused to take it.” Elsew here in the top 10, No. 1 Alabama squeezed past No. 20 LSU 3-0, No. 2 Nebraska struggled past Kansas State 21-12, No. 8 Texas upset No. 4 Houston 21-13, No. 5 Ohio State trounced Iowa 34-7, No. 6 Florida State whipped South Carolina 27-7, No. 7 Oklahoma blanked Kansas 38-0 and No. 9 A rkansas defeated No. 16 Baylor 29-20. A 27-yard field goal by Alan McElroy in the third period provided Alabama with its winning m a rg in ; defensive end Lawrence Cole returned an interception 60 yards for a to h ig h lig h t to u c h d o w n N e b r a s k a ’s tr iu m p h and q u a rte rb a ck Donnie L ittle scored to spark T ex as' v ictory over previously unbeaten Houston. touchdow ns two intercepted Freshm an linebacker M ar­ cus Marek two passes, recovered a fumble and partially blocked an Iowa punt in helping Ohio State to its 10th straight victory. Dave Cappelen kicked four lead Florida field goals State past South Carolina. to Billy Sims, the defending H eism an T ro p h y w in ner, rushed for 128 yards and one touchdown to help Oklahoma crush Kansas. In other top 20 gam es, 11th- rated Brigham Young beat Long Beach State 31-17, No. 12 to p p e d W est P i t t s b u r g h V irginia 24-17, 13th-ranked Notre D ame lost to Tennessee 40-18, No. 17 Clemson beat North Carolina 19-10, 18th- rated Temple ripped Akron 42- 6 and No. 19 Wake F orest defeated Duke 17-14. 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" t s Love a n d k iss e s , CXI GREYHOUND EVER ■N BYA KANGAROO? Actual Size. USC nails down Rose Bowl bid White's 243 yards paves way to Pasadena By United Press International It looks like roses again for Southern California, but, alas, only thorns for Purdue. T h ird -ra n k e d S o u th e rn California, led by All-America C harles W hite’s 243 yards rushing, virtually locked up its 10th Hose Bowl berth in the last 14 y ears Saturday by h o ld in g o ff 1 4 th - ra n k e d Washington, 24-17, in a Pacific Ten Conference game. The only way the 9-0-1 Tro­ jans could m iss out on a bid to the Hose Bowl New Y ear’s Day would be to lose their final gam e to UCLA and have a previous victory by Arizona S tate over W ashington be declared a forfeit. The NCAA is investigating a claim that Arizona State used ineligible players if found guilty, the Sun Devils could forfeit all their vic­ tories. this season, and THE OPPONENT for the P a c i f i c T en C o n f e r e n c e the New re p re se n ta tiv e in Y ear’s Day contest will be the Doom . (Continued from Page 8 ) block. “ The best call of the night was when P arker called the block,” Akers said. “ His eyes got real big and dialated when he saw that first snap, and he said, ‘Did you see that snap? We can get it.’” And get it they did. Sims blocked F o rd ’s next punt, se t­ ting the Longhorn offense up at the Houston nine-yard line. H o w e v e r, T e x a s did not capitalize on the break, as Herkie Walls’ halfback option pass was intercepted in the end zone by Houston’s Donnie Love. “I CAN’T really say what happened,’’Ford said of the punt blocks. “ We’ll have to wait and see the film. I took too much tim e on the first kick that was blocked. That number 77 (Sims) really tim ­ ed his jum p right. w inner of next S a tu rd a y ’s gam e betw een fifth-ranked Ohio State and 10th-ranked Michigan and that announce­ ment cam e as somewhat of a disappointment to 15th-ranked the P u rd u e , w hich u p se t Wolverines 24-21 Saturday to rem ain alive for a share of the Big Ten Conference title. Should Michigan beat Ohio State next week and Purdue defeat Indiana, it would give Michigan, Ohio State and P u r­ due identical 7-1 conference the Big records. However, Ten Conference has a specific rule in case of ties in which the m em bers of the board of team d ire c to rs select the w hich w ill the Rose Bowl. league Wayne Duke, the Big Ten C o m m issio n e r, said a f te r Saturday’s game it would be either Ohio State or Michigan even though Purdue hasn’t been to the Rose Bowl since 1966. re p re s e n t the in “ Purdue can’t go the Rose B o w l,” said D uke, to p re s u m a b ly b e c a u s e th e Boilerm akers are 8-2 overall. White, the nation’s leading rusher, darted and powered his way for 243 yards on 38 carries and fullback M arcus Allen scored on a 10-yard burst m idw ay the f o u r th p e r io d to s p a r k Southern Cal to victory. The Trojans, however, had to stop Washington four tim es from the 2-yard line in the closing minutes to preserve the vic­ tory. through White, who has rushed for 1,609 yards in 258 attem pts and has scored 14 touchdowns on the season, virtually locked up the Heisman Trophy with his perform ance. “ Charlie White made 240 yards against one of the best defenses in the country,” USC Coach John Robinson said. “ He just kept getting stronger and stronger... ‘‘H e ’s th e m o s t c o m - “ I kept my head down on the second kick, and I really couldn’t see what happened.” What happened was that Hatch and team m ates five m et in the Houston backfield and sm othered F o rd ’s punt. The ball rolled out of bounds at the Houston 27, and the Longhorns in from took th e re . A .J. “ J a m ” Jo n e s capped the six-play drive with a six-yard dash around right end for the touchdown. it The Cougars m anaged to get every punt off in the second half without incident, but the punting game still had one m ore chapter to w rite in the gam e’s final outcome. le a d WITH TEXAS clinging to a 14-13 th e fo u rth in quarter, Longhorn punter Ted Constanzo put the Cougars in a hole they never climbed out of. His 28-yard coffin-corner punt pinned Houston back at its own nine-yard line, and the Cougars w ere never to cross midfield again. S im s to ld of a n o t h e r premonition about the game, this one occurring on the Tex­ as sideline. After the first Houston punt, A kers g a th e re d his te a m together and m ade an an­ nouncement. “ Coach Akers told us that whoever blocks the k ick s should win th e gam e,” Sims said. Too bad they didn’t w ait to print the program until after Akers told the team that. 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Ben White Blvd............................................................. 4 4 4 -6 6 5 5 3000 D u v a l ..................................................................................... 4 7 7-6 751 2209 R iv e rs id e ............................................................................... 44 7 -6 6 1 1 7237 Hw y. 29 0 E a s t ................................................................... 9 2 8 -1 5 0 4 376 Landa / N ew B r a u n fe ls .................................................... 6 2 5 -7 3 1 4 749 North LBJ / San M a r c o s .................................................... 3 9 2 -8 1 9 3 D1STRIBUTÉD BY LONE STAR BEER COMPANY O í AUSTI P ag e 12 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ M o n d a y . N o vem b er 12, 1979 UNFURN. APARTMENTS SERVICES FURNISHED APARTMENTS H ROOM AND BOARD MISCELLANEOUS HELP WANTED TYPING 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 in im u m Each word I tim e Each word 3 tim e» Each w ord 5 lim es Each word 10 tím e» 1 col. x I Inch 1 lim e 1 col x I inch 2-9 tim es 1 col x 1 Inch 10 or m ore time» S .15 I 34 t 42 S 68 S4 70 54 24 14 01 S T U D E N T /F A C U L T Y /S T A F F R A TE S i 91 13 word m in im um , eat h day 1 0? Each additional word each day 1 col x 1 Inch ear h day S7 40 Students, faculty and staff must pre sent a current l.D arid pay In advance In TSP Building 3700 (25th A Whitl») to 4 30 p m M onday fro m 8 a m through Friday D SADON I IC H tO U U M d a y 2 00 p m Monday To.on Monday 11:00 a.m. Tuotday Toxan Wodrtatday Toxan Tua*4ay 11 0 0 a m Thursday Toxan Wodnooday 11 0 0 a m. Thursday HiO O a m Friday Toxan In tho ovont of orrorx m ado In an advor htomont, immodteito notteo must bo ffva a a t tho publteho»» oro rotpontlblo for only O N I imorroct Intorflan All d o lm t fat ad- jattm onlt thould bo m ado not lator than 30 day* altor publication AUTOS FOR S A li 1951 M f R C U R Y 4 door »edan for sale 1700 Call 472 746 ) I M ste re o 1975 V W D A S H E R . A M < ais e tte 46,000 m iles, Im m a c u la te io n ditlon, 4 speed, 12695 474 4464 evenings M A Z D A R X 2 1973 A t AC, excellent con dition, 11275, b«»t o tte r 477 1763 eve n ln g i, weekends '70 V W E x c e lle n t condition Come by and d riv e at 4208 R o ie d a le 452 8568 1976 M O B blue co n vertib le, top condi­ tion, A M h M tires, 24,000 tape, new m iles Good m py, 14IVS C all Chuck, 445 0468 1964 P L Y M O U T H V A I I A N T 2 door, V radio, 8, push button transm ission, AC bucket seats 441 7855 71 C H I V Y AT. PB PS, heating, AC C o m fo rta b le 1 O nly 1650 4/8 4974, keep try to fl. 1967 P L Y M O U T H F U R Y R e lia b le , •co n o m ic tra n ip o rta tlo n , 1400 C e ll 327- 3365 evenings 1971 M O B , m ileage, body Bob ( a r le r 478 9554 before 5 00 low In good condition C all r e b u ilt e n g in e ha» l ight 1967 V O l VO 1225. 4 door, stick green w ith green In te rio r M lc h e lln t ZX M in t $1600 neg otiable 477 6528 L o w 1978 C H E Y E N N E H I A Z E R m ileage, exc ellent condition, co m p letely loaded. 4 wheel d riv e »6800 459-4075. '74 C A P R I, V 6, standard , A M f M , 47, 000 m ile», new fires, brake», r u m great M in o r rust 11500 474 0857 7 3 K A R M A N N C .H IA E xcellent condl tion Low m ileage, new paint, red w ith black In terior 477 2198 453 1584 FOR SALE M o to rc y c U 'F o r S a l* 1979 SUZUKI GS 425, under w a rra n ty , 1100 m iles 11600 or b e if offer C all 444 *357. _________ FOR S A 1E B atavus m oped excellent condition, larg e g a l tank Evening», 452- 9615 452 3446 B icyclx-For S a l* lig h t w eight 10- A Z U K I, E X C E L L E N T »pd bike 1120,471 2319 C enter pull, high pressure tlr*S ___________ S fereo -Fo r S a l* P A IR N E W O M E G A m u s ic ) Z 6000 s p e akers R etail 1J95 Don 836 5487 (la s t w ord In 1295 cash. P A N A S O N I C C O M P A C T s t e r e o , A M F M tu rnta ble cassette, 4 speakers, 40 w atts RM S Good condition G re at sound, 1150 458 1680 a fte r 2 p m S T E R E O K I H s p e akers, Kenwood am p, G a rra rd tu rn ta b le 1200 474-5878 T W O O Y N A C O s t e r e o 70 am p lifie rs »70 each Stereo 35, 135 451 7 8 4V ____________ t u b e M u tic a l-F o r S a l* Y h E S T R IN G S H O P D isco unts on strings, new and used g u itars 911 W 24th, 476 8421 N E W K O H L E R 8. C A M P B E L L console piano w ith bench R e g u lar price 11830, selling tor 11400 441 7855 F E N D E R P R E C IS IO N bass Starburst. lit tle Also m a p le nec k. Used v e ry Y a m a h a am p 115 W distortion Both 1500 445 0468 Y A M A H A P 2H s tu d io p ro fe s s io n a l piano List 12650 M a k e o ffe r for quick sale 477 4563 P*f»>For S a l* W H I P P E T P U P S M in i a t u r e g r e y ­ hounds fot sale 441 0436 Austin Texas or l 996 3927 S to ikd ale Texas H om es-Fo r S o l* P R O F E S S O R S O W N E R w ill h e lp this H e m p h ill P a rk beauty fin a n c e cap able of producing $1000 per month rent Call agent 472 6796 or 474 4615 tor appointm ent C H A R M I N G V I C T O R I A N C OT TA G E 3 2 1. C A -C H C o m p le te ly resto red g i n g e r b r e a d p o r c h w it h s w in g h a n d m a d e n a r d w o o d f l o o r s tiled baths Two blocks tro m woodwork IH35 golf p a rk 60 s shopping shuttle 923 Fast 39th (west of IH3S> Bv owner 452 3564 V I E W Oh D O W N T O W N DO O V E R 'S D R E A M This could be a delig htful cottage View of lake and city surrounded by char m ing houses 3 m inutes fro m downtown t»ath downstairs, 1BR up Needs 1BR com plete facelift but potential is te rrific 14 2 7 50 F irst w ith c a s h and im a g in a tio n Sets it Owner agent C u r t is Jordan 442 833, 442 9323 or 288 2078 The Cullen Company M i » c * l l a n * o u t - F o r S a l * N E L S O N S G IF T S E stablished 1945 Indian L arg e st selection iew eiry 4502 South Congress 444 3814 Closed M ondays reservatio n U T -T C U G E N E RAL adm ission tickets 6 a v a ila b le In sei tion 102 M ik e W oodrutt 441 8069 471 3145 B IL L Y JO E L tickets »15 each Good seats 928 3071 63! W 34th G L A D RA G S Gypsy W ago St m ear G u a d a lu p e ’ V in ta g e clothes antiques, uniques H E W L E T T P Á C K A R O !9C p ro g ra m ­ m a b le c a l c u l a t o r w it h c o n tin u o u s m e m o ry end p rin te r 1175 478-2686 H P 67 C A L C U L A T O R , p r o g r a m s c h a rg e r , case O ver 1400 new W ill d e m o n s tra te use 1225 457-3*16 We buy jew elry, estate jewelry, diamonds, and old gold Highest cash prices paid C A P I T O L D I A M O N D SHOP 4018 N. L a m a r FURNISHCO HOUSCS FOR R E N T South Austin F u rn isn ed House m r ear *175 per m onth Phone 444 CASÁ B L A N C A Apartm ents, effic ie n ­ cies, one and tw o bedrooms Close to c a m p u t, near shuttle bus 474 5550 2BP, S L E E P IN G porch, 2BA, fireplace, large liv in g room and dining room, 1365 plus deposit 810 W 32nd 4513873,451 Sit*. _____________ t 1 on ) I N O R T H E AST 1195, 452-1891 shuttle 1185, 451 0458 2-1 on shuttle 1185, 451 0458 F NR Inc. 478 09H , 442 4807 T H E F R E N C H P la c e A p a r tm e n ts Spar io u i I I, u n fu rn iih e d , C A /C H , near U T , I b lo ck s h u ttle , d is p o s a l, d i s ­ h w a s h e r W a t e r , gas, c a b le p a id 1205/m onth 424 1240 a fte r 6 p m lease Need to find oc M U S T B R E A K cupants fo r 2B R. 1BA, R iverside area f all D a vid , 926-7249 IBR. D ecem ber N E E D TO ren t la rg e 1st V e ry clean, patio, 1215 plus E 441- 1929, 282 3300 F N F IE L D A R F A, near shuttle, city bus A v ailab le N o vem b er 18th Quiet, trees, 2BR No ch ild ren, pels 1303 Exposition, No I 478 8987 N E A R C A M P U S E ffh ie n c le s and 2 2 E leyant 3 -plex Q u iet y ra d -m a rrle d cou­ ple R ick, C e n tu ry 21-Johnson G roup 345 8980 ROOMMATES R E S P O N S I B L E F E M A L E S h a r e beautiful 2BR duplex South Fireplace, te r ra riu m , bar, yard, glass enclosed skylights 1185, V} bills 441-7056 lh a re 3BR, 3BA St M l l i BE RAL. TO T e n n li, s w im , con do N E A u s tin en g inee rs p r e fe r r e d R ick, 454-7134 an y tim e. __________________________ M A L E H O U S E M A T E needed O wn in p a rtly ' furnished house, 5510 room M anor Rd C a ll 928 3511 N O N S M O K 'N G G R A D U A T E preferred 2 RR duplex, t R, 1125 plus bills Call Bill, 478 3668. 442 2188 M A I E N i E D E D for spring m erit on P re fe ra b ly pre-m ed 453 8577 IB R apart I F , 1105 plus e le c t r ic ity I A R G E 2B R, IV jB A apartm ent S H A R t oft O ltorf, R C /S R shuttle 1160, Vi E Call 444 3392 SF M l L IBE RAL m a le needed share 2 I V illage G len, 1165, Vj E 442 2782, keep trying R O O M M A T E TO share a p a rtm en t close to cam pus, A B P , CR Call P e g g y /L li, 478 6141 _______________ " S T R A IG H T ," N O N S M O K IN G m ale 2BR 1135 plus E On IF Evenings 459 8 )02, 454 3270 M A T U R I H O U S E M A T E , m a le o r fem ale, for larg e, pear eful 2BR house near 45th and Shoal Creek 1147 plus V» bills John. 458 8451 IM M E D IA T E O PE N IN G for responsible student S h a re 3H R house, shuttle, 1150/m onth A B P 458 1528 fe m a le room m ate to L O O K IN G F O R share b rand new a p a rtm e n t Call Lynn, 459 4451 leeklng apart C H R IS T IA N F E M A L E m enf to sh a re or lom eone to look for a p a rtm e n t together 444 0899 N E E D M A L E ro o m m a te to lh a re f u r ­ nished r o n d o m ln lu m 1168/m onth plus 1 i bills 451888.) __________________________ S E N IO R F E M A L E needs responsible IB R , w alk or fem ale. S h are fu rn is h ed IF 1105/m onth, 1 v E 472-7345. Keap try Irtg. R O O M M A T E N E E D E D share big one ito ry hom e w ith fenced yard M anaged pet welt om e L o cated 5510 M anor Stu­ dent or nonstudent o k Room is u n fu r­ nished 1125 plus '/> E 928 3511 M A L E N O N S M O K E R share 2BR apart menf, E n fie ld at Robin Hood 1157 50 plus 1 1 u tilitie s 476 4666 afte r 9 p m ._ TWO H O U S E M A T E S w anted by senior U T real esta te student, to share rent on new 2 story In H ill C o untry near Lake Austin Steve. 263-2256 M AL E t O sh a re 2B R , 2B A Racquetball. pool, cable T .V , furnished apartm ent P ric e n eg otiable C a ll B rad F , 443-5639 or 478 0205 H O U S E M A T E C L E A N and neat, 24 of older, lib eral student P r iv a te room and bath. 1165 A B P 452 442* N E W D U P L E X in N o rth Austin needs two liberals to sh a re . $120, utilities. 10 m inutes fro m cam p u s. 837-0673, Steve F E M A L E T O share furnished duplex r own bedroom bath, 8112 50/m onth bills A v a ila b le J a n u a ry 1st 474 4342 I M M E D IA T E L IB E R A L studious m ale to share a p a rtm e n t n e a r cam pus $117 No tra ls , pets Andy, 474 8450 Keep call Ing UNFURNISHED HOUSES N L A M A R R u n d b erg 9415 re frig e ra to r, dtshw ashei patio garag e 8335 477 2602, 451 4385 No rth Creek I ' j B A carp e te d , fireplace, fenced yard, IBR la rg e 3-1, T R A V IS H E IG H T S a r e a hardwood floo rs stove W D connei flo n i 1375 plus dep osit 476-6201, 472- 6728 OLDL R R E M O D E L E D house 3-1, east of UT baseball s ta d iu m One block fro m shuttle 458 6111, S h e rri _____________ INSTANT PASSPORT RESUME APPLICATION PHOTOS W hile You W a it H o y re S tu d io s 2420 Guodolup* 472-4219 3 V i ' s ta n d a rd b o n d copies grad school g u a ra n f * * on 10 0 % * 2 5 % cotton Collation - binding, Soil sor vico, Stapling ovailablo kinko's 2 2 0 0 G uadalupe next to Ham burgers by G ourm et 476-4654 MOVING HAULING Student Rates • a p a r t m e n t » • d o r m » • «mail house* BOB'S VA N 4 5 8 - 1 4 3 3 7 to 7 e v e ry d a y C in n y 's C o p y in g S e r v ic e Theses, D is s e rta tio n * a n d P ro fe s s io n a l R e p o r tt. 4 4 D o b ie M a l l 4 7 6 - 9 1 7 1 P R O B L E M P R E G N A N C Y CO U N S E L IN G , R E F E R R A L S 8. F R E E P R E G N A N C Y T E S T IN G T exas P ro b lem Pregnancy, 600 W 28th, Suite 101 M -F , 8 30-5 00 474-9930 F R E E P R E G N A N C Y TESTS Counseling on all pregnancy a lte rn a f iv e s , b i r t h c o n tr o l m e th o d s a n d w om en's h ealth concerns W alk-in b a s il, M on F r i 9 5. W om en's R e fe rra l C e n te r, 1800B L a v a c a , 476-6878 A R T 'S M O V IN G and H auling any a re a 24 hours, 7 days 447-9384 477- 3249 R E M O D E L S A D D IT IO N S experienced w ith references Phone D a vid S ta rk 451- . 4632. A N Y T R E E c u t a n d h a u le d d a n g e ro u s w hen m ile a g e and dum p fee t ight hauling 327-5603 evenings i not t a il in g ) , »75 plus I re ta in wood IN S U R A N C E counsel I N T E L L IG E N T Insurance consum er. for the m a tu re Life, health, property, casualty 451 - 5875 V A N D R IV E R alw ays ready Special student rates Call 458-1433 P R O F E S S I O N A L m a l e R E L A X for m asseur does fu ll body m assage w om en to get in touch w ith your body C a ll 474-2*47 FOR RENT M IN I- S T O R A G E S O U T H C o n c r e te block construction 112 50 up m onthly, 444 2 4 1 1 . W o o d l a n d 's A A A M i n i W arehouse OF F IC E S U IT E i north) 50- square foot J a n ito ria l and u tilities paid. One w eek fre e re n t 453-53*7. 33 A C R E S O F land for rent $85/m onth, 45 m ile s northw est Austin on paved road 345 2290 UNFURN. APARTMENTS ■ UNFURN. APARTMENTS KINGSGATE “ Thanksgiving Special** 2 BR-2 BATH UNF. *275 & E. 2 0 0 5 W illow Creek 4 4 7 - 6 6 9 6 M - F 9 - 6 S A T 1 0 - 4 SERVICES F i.wt-1 *5 BONUS (en lin t donation only) BRING IN THIS AD & l.D. WITH PROOF OF AUSTIN RESIDENCE, OR STUDENT ID Austin Plasma Center 2800 Guadalupe 474.7941 *8.00 — First Donation *10.00 — Second Donation *10.00 — Bonus on 10th Donation GOING BANANAS? r e n t a p a r t m e n t s , We d u p l e x e s , houses al l over Austin. F R E E Real World Properties 443-2212 South 458-6111 North 345-6350 N orthw est U N I V E R S I T Y A R E A A B P Efficiencies $179, shuttle or walk to campus. AC. 2215 Leon 474-7732 $210 PLUS E. O N L Y F O U N T A I N T E R R A C E A P A R T M E N T S La rg e IB R a p a rtm e n t furnished W all to w all carpet Gas, w ate r and c ab le paid W alk to U T. No child ren, no pets. Now leasing 477 8858 610 W 30th St. A B P E F F . , 1 BRs F r o m $177.50 Leasing tor fall 5 blocks to cam pus, shuttle, pool. C H A P A R R A L APTS. 2408 Leon 476-3467 5 BLOCKS WE ST OF C AM P U S fu lly carpeted, gas L a rg e efficiency, (sto ve), w a te r, cable included Paneled living room , w alk-ln closet F a ll rate, 1185 476-7916 between 12 and 2 p m ., or 477-5514 between 5-7 p.m . E ff. $170 plus E. 1-1 $210 Furn ish ed plus E. F R E E Locating Service "Unique Liv in g " or 441-1773 926-7307 U N I V E R S IT Y A R E A 2BR, 2BA, ceiling fan, covered parking, spacious, 2 doors, vacancy now. 22nd and San Gabriel, $325 plus E. Affer 5, 478-1749. A B P I B R , c a r p e t , dis- L a r g e , hwasher, disposal, C A / l m . Shuffle or walk UT. $280. 2212 San G a briel 474-7732 I S. 2BR A P A R T M E N T S furnished and unfurnished fro m $215. 1919 B urton D r 444 1846 9-7 M -F , 9-6 Sat., 12-6 Sum__ 1-1 N O R T H C E N T R A L 451 6306 $175 F lem in g . Nichols, Roley, Inc. 478- 0911, 442-4807 - 2302 F U R N I S H E D E F F I C I E N C Y Leon, four blocks fro m cam pus 1175. C a ll Chris, 478-5489 O L D M A IN A p artm ents. IB R and e f­ ficiencies a v a ila b le now Four blocks fo r s h u tt le A ls o p r e le a s in g U T J a n u a ry . 478-1*71. im m e d ia te oc­ W A L K UT, $165, 1-1, cupancy No pets, children. 304 E 33rd 476 0*53 _____ A P A R T M E N T FO R rent. Two blocks cam pus, bills paid. 477-3809, 477-6459 U N E X P E C T E D V A C A N C Y . Furnished luxurious IB R near cam pus. A v a ila b le now! 476-5940. H A V E A P A R T M E N T to sublease s ta r­ ting m id -D ecem b er or Jan uary, A B P . 4505 D u val. 451-2600 or 459-1435 L A R G E IB R , $215 plus e le c tric ity W a lk or shuttle. 476-9462 fu rn is h ed , near IB R A P A R T M E N T cam pus 1130 a month plus u tilities. Call 452 5696 E F F IC IE N C Y $163 plus E, $100 deposit All e lectric Close to IF shuttle 451-8059 betw een 1-6 fo r info rm ation. S U B L E T 2-1 Aspenwood A p artm ents, I F s h u tt le S280 p lu s E CA C H . A v a ila b le Dec 1 453-3317. L A R G E E F F I C I E N C Y . S t p * r a t e bedroom , near campus, IF shuttle. 474- 9569_______ ______________ L A R G E M O D E R N e f fic ie n c y w ith l e a v e s e p a r a t e b e d r o o m , m u s t A v a ila b le im m e d ia te ly Speedway shut­ tle 474 -95 69.______________________ _ L A R G E IB R a v a ila b le Jan u ary. CA CH, fre e cable gas heating, cooking W a lk N o b H i l l U T t w o b l o c k s W C A p artm en ts 478-6301 afte rn o ons. S U B L E T D E C . 1, N e a t 1-1. 4 5 th , Speedw ay on shuttle near park $210 plus E 451-6039 ROOMS - F O R c o n v e n ie n c e , S T U D E N T S re m e m b e r the A lam o Austin's E u ro ­ pean style hotel M onthly, w eekly, days. _ _ _ _ _ _ R easonable 476-4381. ro o m in beautiful house by U T - 474- F E M A L E P R E F E R R E D a v a ila b le Eastw ood A v ailab le Decem ber 1395 M a rth a fo r to c a m p u s . C O - E D D O R M n e x t Rem odeled new furnishings, recreatio n a r e a , s u n d e c k , w id e s c r e e n T V , re frig e ra to rs no m eals 24 hour securi­ ty Taos 2612 G uadalupe 474-6905 in Dobie c o m e r S P A C E A V A IL A B L E Suite tor one or two g irls to sublease tor sprm g M ove in Decem ber K im , 477- 9362 in c o m f o r ta b le S U B L E A S E R O O M house W alk to cam pus M a tu re person 478 7633, M a rio , Ivan. W A L K IN G D IS T A N C E U T shag carp e t C A -C H K itchen privileges $115 m onth U n iv e rs ity House, 2710 Nueces C a ll 477* *388 UNFURNISHED DUPLEXES 2 - l - f N O R T H W E S T Nichols Rolev $285 Inc 478-3*11 442 4807 F le m in g N O R T h 72108 G ra n d Canyon Dr T h re e larg e bedroom s plus 837-0430 a fte r 5 00 $350 plus deposit S O U T H B R A N D new deluxe 2-1 duplex hom es Country ch a rm p rivacy city convenience spaciousness, trees creek fan»aStic storage sate»* energy co n ser­ ving fe a 'ir e s Under $300 345-Í36C PERSONAL IF v O U have the ao .iity and des re to be a mode! i can help ycc get s*ar , ed w ith vouf own personal portfo lio 458-8425 V i a H E L P S you m e e t th a t sp e cial then choose fro m someone P review videotape lib ra ry of people who'd like m eetin g you 454-3501 C A S T IL IA N V A C A N C Y , E x cellent food, pool, s e c u rity A v a ila b le for spring sem ester Call M arian n e, 478-1047 C O Ñ T E S S A W E S T vacancy for spring sem ester E x cellen t food, pool, security Call K athy, 478-4429 C O N T E S S A V A C A N C Y , food, security, laundry room , pool A v ailab le for spring sem ester 476-6503 A S A V IN G S of $100 to g irl who subleases room In C a stilian for spring sem ester. C all 478-6797 before Dec 1st ____ A R R A M S C O O P E R A T IV E has fem ale double a v a ila b le im m e d ia te ly We have spring sem ester openings, in­ terested in cooperative style of living, call A rra k is , 472-2292, or call ICC at 476- ________________________ 1957 D E U T S C H E S H A U S : two blocks fro m U n iv e rs ity , c o o p e ra tiv e ly m anag ed, pleasant atm osphere, good food, several gradu ate students. Spanish and G erm an spoken at dinner and in fo rm a lly . 477- 8865 too. _ if SKY DIVE T H IS W E E K E N D C A L L A U S T IN P A R A C H U T E C E N T E R 459-0710 C haracter and in teg rity are m ore im ­ po rta n t than experience, f l e e t m oped eaiee on a high com m iseion box i». Full or p a r t tim e . S e n d r e s u m e a n d referencet to M o p a d M a r k * ! 5341 Cameron Rd 78723 Austin, TX P R O B L E M P R E G N A N C Y ? F r e e pregnancy testing and re fe rra ls 474- _______ ____________ 9930. W H Y ~ N O T T R Y homestead fa rm in g as an a lte rn a tiv e to fu tu re shock? Closed In bio-cycle com plex now developing Northw est Arkansas Land a va ilab le in area Duston Austin Rt. 1, Box 28B, Subiaco, A rkansas, 72865. C R O S S O V E R R E S E A R C H Group, P .A .- offers services to students and faculty re s e a rc h w ith design, questionnaire developm ent, data processin g, a n a lysis, statistics, and technical w ritin g . Call 451-1534 re s e a rc h p ro b le m s : in popular G O O D B U S IN E S S opportunity. Kitchen tavern, built-in a v a ila b le Included custom ers. M ost equipm ent Some can be purchased fro m other tenants. Come by The D rau ght House, 4112 M ed ical P a rk w ay, afte r 4 p.m . T E A C H E R S , T U TO R S , babysitters: list your specialty In 1980 Parents' Guide to Austin D eadline Novem ber 30th. 327- 3588 A T T E N T IO N , S T U D E N T S ! Need ex tra C hristm as m oney7 We have several p a rt-tim e openings in the Town Lake area to sell new subscriptions to the Austin A m erican -statesm an . No ex­ is perience fit your provided F lexib le hours schedule For fu rth e r In fo rm ation call 477-7708 or come by. is necessary as tra in in g to 1912 E. R iverside Town Lake Branch Austin A m erican-S tatesm an * s y « M « r tr tc x u l s t x M * It you're anxious, deprottod, or can't sloop tho fabro Clink of Austin may bo able lo holp. Troatmont is troo tor I hoto who moot sirtsplo ontry critorro baiod toMy on modkal ovaluations This opportunity i* avoilablo duo to letting procedurei required by tho federal Law regarding the development of new medications for complete information and te find out if you quality, call 2 0 * 7 . TRAVEL H E L P ! T Y P IN G , P R IN T IN G , B IN D IN G Th e C o m p l e t e P r o f e s s i o n a l FULLTIME TYPING SERVICE 4 7 2 - 3 2 1 0 4 7 2 - 7 6 7 7 2 7 0 7 H E M P H IL L PK, P le n ty o f P a rk in g Don't tie up your cash in unused items around the house. Sell them in The D aily Texan! To place an ad, call 4 7 1 - 5 2 4 4 . W A N T TO F L Y ? A irlin e attendants earn to $25,500 y e a r ! T ra v e l! A irw o rld shows you How To Pass The In te rv iew s! For in fo rm a tio n send 15' stam p to fre e A irw o rld 189, Center Branch, Box 60129, S acram ento, Ca., 95860 L O V E T H E SE A? Jobs! Crulseshlps! S a ilin g exp ed itio n s. No exp erienc e. G ood p a y ! E u ro p e ! South P a c ific , B aham as, w orld! For free inform ation send 15‘ stam p to Cruisew orld 189, Box 60129, Sacram ento, Ca., 95860. W A N T E D F E M A L E beach bum to party w ith in Honolulu this Christm as. Free ap a rtm en t, life. Diane, 477-3437 location, night _____________ ideal A M E R IC A N A I R L IN E S h a lf p ric e coupon, $50 ( fi r m ) . Call 1-629-4660 (N ew Brau nfels n u m b e r). T E A C H E U R O P E ? England, France, S w ltie rla n d , P o rtu g a l! All levels/ sub­ jects C re d e n tia l/ no cred. E x p ./n o exp Send $4,95 for application and cu rrent listings to Teaching W orld, Box 60129, S acram ento, Ca. 95860 No language re­ quirem en t. MUSICAL INSTRUCTION P IA N O LE SSO NS All levels E x p erien c­ ed, q u a lified teacher. F o r inform ation, phone 451-3549. F ID D L E , G U IT A R , harm onica instruc­ tion All styles, beginners through a d ­ vanced. Reasonable rates. Call How ard, 476-8185 E X P E R I E N C E D P IA N O G U I T A R teacher Beginners-advanced. U T music degree A fte r 2 p.m . 459-4082, 476-4407 P R IV A T E V O IC E , piano, and music instru ction; study classical or theory p o p u la r m u sic, p e rfo rm a n c e opp or­ tunities. 327-1780. LOST 8$ FOUND In brow n L O S T W O M E N 'S glasses case. B rand D .V .F .; U n ive rs ity area. Becky, 445 2977 LO ST 3V / M O N T H m ale kitten b7ack w ith w hite belly. Speedway area Call le a v e J a c q u e , 476-8229, 471-1201 message. - LOST 2 R IN G S - M cDonald's^ Ben W hite Blvd R e w ard . C all 837-3757 or collect 713-921-5656 LO ST B L A C K b rie fc a s e W ednesday night by d ra m a building, im p ortan t con­ tents Please call 474-5451. TO PLACE A T E X A N CLASSIFIED AD C A LL 4 7 1 -5 2 4 4 HELP WANTED to m anage R E S P O N S IB L E C O U P L E U T a re a d o rm ito ry . One person must not IB R w ork or go to school Furnished a p a rtm e n t w ith utilities plus salary and com m ission. C all B a rb ara, 385-9700 F E M A L E M O D E L S needed fo r fre e haircuts Call H a ir N a tu ra lly , 443-1578 or 453-6694 _ H E L P W A N T E D , The Posse. Apply at the Posse E a st San Jacinto at Duval All hours needed. ______ M E R C H A N D IS E C O N T R O L supervisor. M ust be able to type and use calculator a cc u ra te ly . Accounting and supervisory experience helpful M ust have an un­ d erstanding of invoices and credits. App­ ly a t T h e U n iv e r s it y C o -O p , 2246 G uadalupe E . O E . _____________ _______ W a Tt PE R S O N S W A N T E D fu ll- or part- tim e Apply in person between 11 a m - 1.30 p.m M o n d ay -S atu rd ay. Vikashm o's R estaurant, 1405 E 6th. IN N Capitol now accepting R A M A D A for p a rt-tim e front desk applications clerk 20-25 hours week Apply In per­ son R a m a d a Inn C apitol, 300 E . 11th. B A R T E N D E R N E E D E D . Experien ce not required C all George or John, 4?2- _________________ 1082, 12-3 da ily . fiv e E X P E R IE N C E D M A I D needed days week M u st have own tra n sp o rta­ tion and references req uired. 474-1996. f i F T E E N S U P E R V IS O R S needed to fill positions w ith top m a rk e tin g firm . Top pay vacations, autom obile, insurance, and re tire m e n t. 345-3754 a fte r 3 00 N E E D T E N students to help in spare t i m e O p p o r t u n i t i e s , e x c i t i n g Scholarships possible F o r appointm ent call 385-2547 5-7 p.m . U P TO $200 30 w eekly tak.n g short phone m essages at home C all 713-762-3108 ext. ______________________________ 404 F R A M E D A R T com pany needs p art- tim e help Tuesday and Thu rsday, *-5. ________________ __ <836-45*4 ___ B A R T E N D E R D IS H W A S H E R , cashier A p p ly C a p ito l O y s te r B a r, 4-6 p m . M o n d ay -T h u rsd ay._____________________ f o r h o u s e w iv e s a n d I D E A L J O B s tu d e n ts H o urly wage plus bonus. F u ll- 0r p a rt-tim e 474-6264 ask for Stoney__ T E M P O R a r y p a r t and fu ll-tim e sub­ for prescnooi stitute teachers needed a n d s c h o o l a g e c h i ld r e n d u r in g T hanksgiving and C h ristm as holidays. Ex per ence p re fe rre d 444 7870 ____ P A R T - T IM E W O R K Ceram ics P r e*er technical e n g in e e rin g stu d en t V e ry work F le x ib le schedule on hours Shop located north p or info rm ation call Dee at 926 1272 10 a m -6 p m F an tas tic new product needs frie n d ly outgoing distributors. Be independent, choose your own hours. E venings un­ lim ited . Can earn $390 per m onth or m ore. W e tra in you. Call 836-3860, 10 a .m .-4 p.m . C om e d i> e o \e r fo r y o u rs e lf the e h e e rfu l atm o sph ere and professional sersiee o ffered fo r all s o u r T A P IN G and C O P \ I M i needs. P A R T - T I M E O P P O R T U N I T Y P a rt-tim e tem p o rary position a v a ila b le N ovem ber 15th until M a y 15th. F le x ib le hours in U n ive rs ity area w ith fre e p a rk ­ ty p in g , and ing L ig h t bookkeeping, o rg a n iza tio n a l skills a m ust. N eat, N O N S M O K IN G , self-starter w ith a con­ genial personality Call 474-7663 between 1 and 4 p m. M onday through F rid a y . REC SPO R TS P O S IT IO N Good atm osphere w orking with people at the Division of R ecreational Sports involving Senior cle rk typist position fro nt line receptionist duties, typing and light filin g. One year clerk typist ex­ perience, high school gradu ate and typ ­ ing 50-60 w pm . S a lary S668 per month. R efer to job num ber 91012069053 at the U T O ffice of Personnel Services and E m p lo yee Relations, 2613 W ic h ita, 471- 3656 An E qual O pportunity, A ffirm a tiv e Action E m ployer. A C C O U N T A N T Position now open for student interested in a challenging career. Need someone interested in w orking ap p ro x im a te ly 20- 30 hours per week under the supervision of a CPA Would be w orking w ith the Controller in the p reparation of m onthly fin a n cia l statem ents, w orking w ith a com puter system and various special proiects. Position requires m in im u m of two years college and com pletion of two sem esters of In te rm e d ia te Accounting. fo r C o n ta c t p e rs o n n e l d e p a r tm e n t fu rth e r inform ation. Shoal Creek Hospital 3501 M ills Ave. 452-0361 E qual O pportunity E m p lo yer A P A R T M E N T M A N A G E R R e s p o n s i b l e , n e a t , c o u r t e o u s , inclined and m otivated m ech a n ica lly couple needed beginning Decem ber 22nd to m anag e 29 unit a p a rtm en t com plex on shuttle route at 108 W. 45th in exchange fo r one b e d ro o m a p a r t m e n t . Send resum e to apt. No 101, 108 W. 45th, Austin, or call 452-1419 or 453-2771 for In­ te rv ie w appointm ent. NOW H I R I N G SCHOOL BUS D R I V E R S R e liab le w om en and m en needed. M ust be a v a ila b le 6:15 a .m .-8:45 a .m and 2 p .m .-4:30 p m. Starting pay $4.20 per hour Apply North 5901 G uadalupe, 452- 5007 South, 3300 Jones Rd. 892-2620. P A R T - T I M E JOB *5.25 HR. F L E X I B L E S C H E D U L E S P R O F I T PL AN A V A IL A B L E Call between 10 a .m .-3 p.m . only 4 5 9 -3 4 4 0 ext. 444 A L L Y O U F O L K S th a t need e x t r a m oney can sell flow ers w ith The O rig in al F lo w e r People. Paid daily. 288-1102 P A R T - T IM E COOK to prepare evening m eals for bachelor, eat dinner w ith him , wash dishes, stay a fte r dinner for dinks- conversation, and date on weekends Apply a fte r 5:30 p.m Thursday or a fte r 4 p m F rid a y , S aturday and Sunday. No tra n sp o rtatio n necessary Apply in p er­ son at Lot 79, 1301 W est O ltorf, Austin, Texas W A IT P E R S O N S W A N T E D at The Back Room. Apply between noon and 5:00. 441 - 4677. G O V E R N E S S N E E D E D fe m a le . References required. 474-1917 fo r you ng Y A R D P E R S O N needed fiv e days per week. E x perien ce necessary 474-1996. A U D I ¿ R E C O R D IN G engineer - m ust be experienced in m u lti-tra c k recording, s e c o n d a r y e l e c t r o n ic r e p a ir s an d m aintenance, as well as being able to lo n g a n d o d d h o u rs . M u c h w o r k em phasis placed on w illingness to learn, re lia b ility , and no sense of hum or. 478- 3141 N IG H T W O R K Cleaning and sweeping lots. M u st have good d riv in g parkin g record. F u ll- and p a rt-tim e positions a v a ila b le , S4 05 hour A pply at 7524 N. L a m a r No. l ______________ t a k i n g T O K Y O S T E A K H o u s e application s for buspersons and kitchen help. Good pay, short hours. Call 453-7482 a fte r 2:30 p.m . T Ñ W E D Í aY I F O P E N IN G S . Need a p ­ tra in . F u ll- or pointm ent setter W ill p a rt-tim e C all Cathy, 474-0100 D E L IV E R Y H E L P w anted M ust have own c a r Apply at Conan's Pizza, 29th and R iverside locations. - s u m m e r 'y e a r O V E R S E A S JO B S round. Europe, S. A m erica, A u stralia, Asia, etc All fields S500-H 200 m onthly. Expenses paid Sightseeing. F re e info IJC, Box 52-TE, Corona del M a r , W rite CA 92625 F O U R P A R T - T IM E tru ck tire changers neeoed. Hours flexible No experience necessary, we w ill tra in Apply In p e r­ son. P e rry Rose Truck T ire Center, 2201 A irp o rt Blvd. C H I L D C A R E W O R K E R w a n t e d p a r t fu ll-tim e positions. A dolescent tre a tm e n t center for em otio nally dis­ turbed chidlren Age group 13-17 years old Send resum e Settlem ent Hom e 1600 Peyton G in Rd , Austin, T X 78758 NOW A C C E P T IN G applications for s p r­ ing rush positions. Apply a t the U n iv e rs i­ ty Co-Op 2246 G uadalupe E O E . D E P E N D A B L E E N E R G E T IC person w ith car to care for two boys, 3 i 6 W eekdays 2 30-6 30 and cook s'm ple S t a r t in g d a te n e g o tia b le d n n e r R eferences required. $2 50 noiir. C all M c ln ro y 472-6387 F U L L - A N D p a r t -t im e r e t a il sales positions open in Northcross M a ll shop th ro u g h b e g in n in g N o v e m b e r 17th Chr s fm a s E v e Salary pluscom m ission Please ca ll 345-5172 for interview W A N T E D FO R The O m eiettry, one e x ­ f u ll-tim e p e rien ced b re a k fa s t cook Please call or come by M -F between 9 a m -12 noon 504 W. 24th 477-6671 ‘ " H ig to s f Q u a lity Absolutory Goerontoo^ ** WOODS T Y R IN G SERVICE When you want it done right 472-6302 2200 Guadalupe, side entrance Scientific and Technical Typing Transcription Theses and Dissertations QUALITY WOKK AT MASON A H t A AT IS 4 7 4 -7 5 2 6 1503 G uadalupe No. 2 02 ^ C J \ E A T I V E S E R V I C E S M ATUNAL N V M A T I O H • WRITTEN • EDITED • GRAPHICS • PROOFREAD • TYPED • PHOTOGRAPHY BETTER THAN A TYPING SERVICE 2200 G uadalupe • S uit* 2 2 * • 4 7 1 -3 63 3 T Y P IN G : T H E S E S , dissertations, term papers, reports, etc Experienced, IB M Selectric N e a r Northcross M a ll. 458- 6465 P R O F E S S IO N A L T Y P IS T w ith e x ­ perience and know-how. Dissertations, theses, professional reports, etc. B a r­ b ara Tullos, 453-5124. ___ G O O D C H E A P T Y P IN G : you nam e it, we ll type it. 451-3663 afternoons and evenings. N E A T , A C C U R A T E and prom pt typing, theses m y specialty. Reasonable rates. _______________ Call 447-2868 ________ C A L L DeAnne at 474-1563 8-5 M -F or 345- 1244 weekends and evenings. N o rm a lly 1-day service. P R O F E S S IO N A L T Y P IN G - IB M - lo w / negotiable fees - students, professors, businesses. Call 346-1724 a fte r 5 and weekends. T Y P IN G , A L L fields including science and most foreign languages, tra n scrip ­ tion, d ra ftin g . 477-1768, 472-4196 RESUMES w it h or w it h o u t p ic tu re s 2 Day Service 2707 Hemphill Park Ju s t N o rth o f 2 7 th a t G u a d a lu p e 4 7 2 - 3 2 1 0 4 7 2 - 7 6 7 7 T Y P IN G 70* per page Second drafts w ith m inor corrections 40* per page 476- 4835. t e c h ­ P R O F E S S IO N A L T Y P I N G IB M n ic a l/s ta tis tic a l exp e rie n c e on C orrecting S electric. P icku p /d e livery a va ila b le Reasonable rates. 451-4449 - C E R T I F I E D 1ST class advanced typing. P ica 85'/page. elite S l/p ag e. Evenings/ weekends, 472-4309 C U S T O M T Y P IN G , reasonable 444-6980. F a s t, acc u rate , typing P R O F E S S IO N A L Q U A L IT Y Satisfaction guaranteed Same day and IB M C o rre c tin g o v e rn ig h t s e r v ic e Selectric. Helen, 836-3562. T Y P IN G : T E R M papers, theses, disser­ ta tio n s , boo ks. E x p e r ie n c e d , v e ry reasonable. C all a fte r 4:30, 442-7360 T Y P IN G F A S T , professional, all types, theses, dissertations. S l/p a g e . 441-6657. P R O F E S S IO N A L T Y P IS T w it h ~ e x ­ perience Dissertations, theses, reports and legal docum ents. C all D o tlie Bell, 327-0754 ty p in g . E x ­ P R O M P T / E F F I C I E N T In d iv id u a ls / businesses. p erien ced . Rush s e rv ic e a v a ila b le R easonable rates Call 258-9521 or 836-3459 sure we DO typ* FRESHMAN THEMES wiry net start w t wfth feed fredes 2 7 0 7 H e m p h ill Jut! North oi 27th at Goodaiupo 4 7 2 -3 2 1 0 4 73 -7 87 7 WANTED CLASS R IN G S , gold jew elry, old pocke c u rre n c y , stam ps w anted w atches H igh pnces paid Pioneer Coin Com pa*-^ 5555 N o r *h L a m a r Bldg C- 113 ii C om m erce P a rk , 451-3607 jew elry, B U Y IN G W O R L D gold, gold scrap go¡c old coins antiques, pocket f a ir m a rk e t price. w atc hes P a y in g Capifoi Coin Co 3004 Guadalupe, 472- 1676 P h ilip N o hra, owner S T A M P S W A N T E D W e buy stam p letters collections accum ulations old w ith stam ps or postm arks Deaton's S tam p Shop. 206 W 13th. 474-9525 Y Y A Ñ T e D C O L L E C T O R w ants to buy ash trays with advertisem ents 443-4003 a fte r 5 00 f ™ * . ■ • a ■ _ Monday, November 12, 1979 □ THE D A ILY TEXAN □ Page 13 Pastormi leads Oilers past Oakland, 31-14 "H H H V —IC Y --------------- II a — il « / * . Chargers 2«, Bengals 24 CINCINNATI — Mike Wood kicked a 32-yard field goal with 19 seconds remaining Sunday to rally the San Diego Chargers to a 26-24 victory over the Cincinnati Bengals. Wood's field goal, his fourth of the day, climaxed a San Diego comeback from a 24-16 deficit in the closing minutes. The rally began when Dan Fouts fired a 32-yard TD pass to Artie Owens with 3:13 left to narrow the Cincinnati lead to 24-23. The Chargers got the ball back on a punt with two minutes to play and quickly moved 37 yards in seven plays to set up Wood's game- winning field goal. Dolphins 19, Colts 0 M IA M I — Bob Griese con­ nected with Nat Moore on first half touchdown passes of 18 and 14 yards and Uwe von Schamann kicked two field goals Sunday to lead the Miami Dolphins to a 19-0 vic­ tory over the Baltim ore Colts. The Dolphins, who lead the N FL in scoring defense, were the second team to shut out the Colts this year. The Kan­ sas City Chiefs did it in a 14-0 win in the season opener. The Colts had to play without Bert Jones, who has been hurting all year with a shoulder injury. Buccaneers 16, Lions 14 PONTIAC, Mich. — Doug William s hit Larry Mucker with a 23-yard touchdown pass with 3:20 to play Sunday to rescue Tampa Bay and send the Buccaneers to a 16-14 vic­ tory over the Detroit Lions. D etro it lost its seventh straight game and sank to 1- 10, the club’s worst record since the team went 2-10 31 years ago. Tampa Bay padded its N FC C entral Division-leading record to 8-3 by coming back from a 7-3 halftime deficit. NATIONAL FOOTBALL STANDINGS By United Pt m s International American Conference Eaat Central W 7 7 5 5 4 9 8 7 2 W 8 Central Waet New England Miami . NV Jets Buffalo Baltimore . . . Pittsburgh . Houston ....... Cleveland Cincinnati San Diego Denver ......... Oakland Seattle Kansas City . Dallas Washington Philadelphia . NY Giants St. L o u is ........ Tampa Bay Chicago Minnesota Green Bay Detroit New Orleans Los Angeles Atlanta San Francisco National Conference Eaet W L Pet. 636 636 455 455 364 818 .727 636 0 0 182 T Pet. .727 0 727 545 455 364 0 0 Pet. 800 636 600 455 273 727 545 364 364 091 .545 455 364 091 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Sunday, Nov 11 Miami 19, Baltimore 0 Buffalo 14, N Y Jets 12 Pittsburgh 30, Kansas City 3 Houston 31, Oakland t7 San Diego 26, Cincinnati 24 Tampa Bay 16, Detroit 14 Seattle 29. Cleveland 24 Washington 30, SI. Louis 28 New Orleans 31, San Francisco 20 Green Bay 19, Minnesota 7 Chicago 27, Los Angeles 23 N Y Giants 24, Atlanta 3 Denver 45, New England 10 Monday, Nov. 12 Philadelphia at Dallas. 9 p m by johnny hart M / 2 7 t r n u m ^ 2 By United Press International P a s t o r i n i HOUSTON — Quarterback D an t h r e w touchdown passes of 55 and 35 yards to Ken Burrough and passed for 208 yards Sunday to carry the Houston Oilers to a 31-17 victory over the Oakland Raiders. Safety Mike Reinfeldt’s in­ terception of a tipped pass — the first of two he had in the game — started the Oilers to a 14-point third quarter which allowed them to improve their record to 8-3. Oakland, now 6-5, used Lester Hayes’ punt block to get into position to tie the score at 14-14 before halftime on Ken Stabler's second scor­ ing pass of the day, a 3-yard throw to Dave Casper. But the Raiders added only Jim Breech’s 32-yard field goal in the second half as the Oilers sacked Stabler three tim es and cam e up with Reinfeldt’s critical intercep­ tion. R e i n f e l d t , the N F L ’s leading intercepter with 11, returned the pickoff 33 yards to the Raiders' 18. On third- and-goal from the 7-yard line, fullback Tim Wilson scored behind the block of Ed Fisher to put the Oilers in front for good. Seven m in u te s la t e r , Burrough split Oakland’s zone defense to catch a 35-yard pass and score untouched. Houston took the lead in the first half on E a rl Campbell’s 1-yard touchdown run and Pasto rin i’s 55-yard scoring throw to Burrough. Stabler passed 23 yards to Raym ond Chester for his team’s first touchdown, brief­ ly tying the score at 7-7 late in the first quarter, but with time running out in the first hall Chester, O aklan d ’s leading pass receiver, suf­ fered a leg injury. He did not return to the game. Houston kicker Toni Fritsch finished the Houston scoring by booting a 51-yard field goal with 3:43 to play. It was his 16th field goal in 18 tries this y e a r . R e i n f e l d t ended Oakland's final posession of the day with another intercep­ tion at the Oilers’ 23. L a s t M o n d a y n ig h t Pastorini had passed for only 25 yards as he completed six of ten passes in Houston’s 9-6 win over Miami. Sunday’s ef­ fort was the second best of the season for Pastorini. whose top yardage performance of the year was 212 yards against the New York Jets. Burrough caught three passes for 109 yards and split end Mike Renfro, who started his first game of the season because of an injury to Mike Barber, caught two throws for 83 yards. A 47-yard pass fro m Pastorini to Renfro fueled the Oilers first touchdown drive on their opening possession of the game. Campbell scored from a yard out on third down after being hit and knocked back by Raiders corner back Jack Tatum. Burrough beat Raiders cor- nerback Monte Jackson deep on both of his touchdown passes. Oiler running back E a rl Campbell went over the 1,000- yard mark — becoming the Soccer team pulls ‘impossible’ Houston’s Earl Campbell applies stlff-arm to Oakland Hayes during Oilers’ 31-14 win over Raiders Sunday. first AFC player ever to gain 1,000 yards in each of his first two seasons in the league. Bears 27, Rams 23 CHICAGO — W alter Payton scored on a 2-yard touchdown run with 1:12 left in the game following Virgil Livers’ in­ terception of a Je ff Rutledge pass Sunday to ra lly the Chicago Bears to a 27-23 vic­ tory over the Los Angeles Rams. Payton’s winning TD run around left end came on a third-and-goal situation and helped Chicago, which trailed 16-0, score its sixth victory in 11 games. The Rams fell to 5- 6 . L i v e r s i n t e r c e p t e d Rutledge’s pass and returned it to the Rams 35 with 6:06 remaining. The Bears winning drive took 10 plays and took nearly five minutes. Saints 31, 49ers 20 N EW O R LEA N S — Running back Chuck Muncie scored three touchdowns in a 24-point New Orleans first half Sunday to lead the Saints to a 31-20 victory over the struggling San Francisco 49ers. Muncie, who gained 117 yards on 18 carries, scored UPI Telephoto cornerback Lester first half touchdowns on runs of 2, 12 and 1 yard as the Saints, 6-5, retained a share of the N FC ’s Western Division lead. The 49ers slumped to 1- 10 . The Saints, whose lumber­ ing offense had scored just 3 points in the last six quarters, staggered the 49ers by scoring on f i v e possessions in the first half. fo u r of t h e i r Longhorns fall to SMU, 3-2 B .C . W H f t s vVlTH V T B e ffe M c iL r Q j r r To A f e '( k u c t o i i k b ? By W ENDY W O R K M A N Daily Texan Staff Texas’ men’s soccer team did the impossible Saturday afternoon as the Longhorns scored on eighth-ranked Southern Methodist Universi­ ty — not once, but twice. T h e r e w a s o n ly one problem : the Mustangs scored three goals to beat Texas, 3-2. S M U ’s defense is con­ sidered impenetrable by many coaches around the country who have had their offensive attacks foiled by top-rated goalkeeper Randy Phillips. The Mustangs have recorded 10 shutouts this season, so Texas’ scoring ac­ complishment was no small feat “ We outplayed them,’’ Tex­ as coach Alfred E rle r said. “ We played and moved the ball much better than they did, but we got caught in three mistakes and that resulted in their goals." T H E A G G R E SS IV E, hard fought match lasted close to three hours and was plagued with more than 30 fouls and five yellow warning cards to players on both sides. SM U opened the scoring within the first minutes of the game as fresh m an J e f f Culver, who garnered a hat trick with all three Mustang goals, took a hard shot from about 20 yards out. The ball rocketed into the right corner of the Texas net, beyond Longhorn goalkeeper Scott Brockett’s reach. Culver scored again ap­ proximately 20 minutes later on a breakaway down the left side of the field. Brockett ad­ vanced out of the goal box to defend and C u lve r’s shot found its way into the net once again. T E X A S R A L L IE D late in the first half with a quick, and questioned, goal. Several shots had been taken near the SMU goal and keeper Phillips appeared to have possession of the ball. Texas forward Benyoucef Saidani was in the goal area and headed the ball past Phillips on a bounce. ‘Phillips lost control of the ball and I went for it,’’ Saidani said. “ I headed it past him .’’ E r le r said the question about the goal was centered around whether Phillips had possession ot the ball before or after Saidani made a play for the goal and came down on Phillips in the goal area. The last-minute goal gave Texas an added impetus in the second half, as the Longhorns cam e out strong in an aggressive offensive attack. JIM P O L I N E R , playing again for the first time in several weeks after an injury, scored his first goal of the season in the opening minutes of the second half to tie the game. 2-2. SM U responded with its third and go-ahead goal 15 minutes later. Nasser Sabet- pour brought the ball down the far side of the field, past the Texas defenders, and passed to Culver. Culver challenged Brockett out of the goal and shot past him into the back of the net. Brought To You Every W eek By T h e U n iv e r s it y C o -O p It seems hard to believe, but Texarkana, Texas, is closer to Chicago, Illinois, than it is to E l Paso, Texas. The famous Leonardo da Vinci a lw ays wrote backwards, and his notes and letters can be read to­ day only by holding them up to a m irror. Columbus received pay equivalent to only about $300 for discovering Am erica. Oddly enough, K aiser W ilhelm of G erm any, King George V of England and Czar Nicholas of Russia, who led those nations in W orid W a r I, w ere all first cousins to each other; all were grandsons of Queen Victoria. W hat's the fastest moving thing in the w orld? Nothing can move faster than light. And, here's another interesting fact.... The Co-Op Ea st A rt Shop w ill host an hour-long calligrap hy d e m o n stra tio n by F r a n C h ib ib on T u e sd a y , November 13, at 2:00. W h ile you're there, you can look over our selection of pens, papers and inks for the calligraphic arts. V IS A M asterC harge ★ * ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ * ★ ★ A ★ * ★ Free 1 hr. P a rk in g w /$ 3 .0 0 Purchase MEDICAL SCHOLARSHIPS The N a v y ' s H e a l t h P r o f e s s i o n s Scholarship Representative will be con- d uc t i ng i n t e r v i e w s for m e d i c a l scholarships on campus at the Health Professionals Office, Room 234 in the Geography Building, November 12-15 from 9 AM to 2 PM. Call 471-3172 for ap­ pointment. T A N K M CN A M A R A IHEBALLOnI " ) by Jeff Millar & Bill Hinds MA'AM, HAVE YOU EVER N0TICEP HOW THE Atmosphere in o u r r o o m c h a n g e s w h e n IT'S r a in in g o u t s id e ? WITH THE LI6HTS ON IN HERE, A N P THE RAIN A N P RARENESS OUTSIPE THERE'S SORT OF A MEDIEVAL ATMOSPHERE. NO, M A ’AM, I DON'T KNOW WHAT THE CAPITAL OF NORWAY IS... DOONESBURY by Garry Trudeau n,r> wv/*AJn,s/ SKIPPING, m an? Does 1Í u ^ pin t' rrw H i m n ,0 N 3 NALS A Pew YEARS BACK, m iN mM 7 t BRENNER? 6 v sure, rightat the tdp. "JAN. 13,1975. APPOINT­ MENT TO SAMOA CAMP THROUGH. AM CELE' BRATING UHTH PART OF BRENNERS NEW i SHIPMENT OF AMYLS.: Ju . / TODAY’S CROSSWORD PUZZLE A C R O SS 1 Protective covers 6 Decom poses 10 Own 14 Torpid 15 S ta te Fr 16 Shortly 17 W itch ’s hom e 18 Slav 19 Eager 20 Harsher 22 W him 24 Austrian phy­ sicist 26 Ground 27 At what other tim e 2 words 52 Hundredth 54 Poser 58 Part of “ Q.E.D.” 59 G irl’s nick­ name 61 Hoist 62 Noun ending 63 English town 64 Lamps 65 Action 66 Bell sound 67 Showed interest: 2 words D O W N 30 Chill 31 Socks 32 Banners 37 Adv. cost info. 38 P om t-m akers 40 Outdo 41 Transitory 43 Asterisk 44 M an s nick­ nam e 45 Boneyard 48 Addison and 51 Early B aha- man 1 Row 2 Girl s name 3 Radicals 4 Fuel 5 Step 6 S ubduer 7 Am erican Indian 8 S teatite 9 M o re vapo­ rous 10 N etherlands city 11 Incus 12 Articulate 13 Concluded UN ITED Feature Syndicate Friday’s Puzzle Solved I a I b luis I e ■cJTTaTpI n ra n n n n n n ra n n n It |C I A j L I o a o o n a a n a ta □□□ ; & T i I v I e M t In I e i n Id ] □ a n a a a a n n n □ a n n a n a a n 21 Building sec­ ings tion 23 Type units 25 W ithdraw 27 Golly!'' 28 M ed inst 29 O T book 33 Liberating 34 Small: Suffix 35 Beirow 36 Brisk 38 Beam 39 Joined 42 Threw out 43 Sm all op en­ 46 C am bridge Univ. 47 Hardens 48 Velocity 49 Lead alloy 50 Efface 53 In — Entire­ ly 55 Quart part 56 Isaac's son 57 Breathing: 60 N egative p re­ Abbr fix "I'M ON MY FIFTH JAB ANP n LOOKS UKE TVS BEEN RJPPFP OFF AGAIN. IHtS STUFF IS SO BAD I'M NOT, EVEN SU6KTLY BtFFlE PfNKED!* ' IP THAT LE3BLE BIFF PECKER SNfT HE ALMOST FIDDLE-GANG, WHIMSICK RlPPtZ LUNGS OUT. 0 DIP TOO / Page 14 □ TH E D A ILY TE XAN □ Monday, November 12, 1979 U-STORE Self-S to rag e Ro o m » R ent b y M o n t h 8710 Burnet Rd. M a k e yourtelf heard — W rite a letter to Firing Line. Letters-to-fhe-editor should be addressed to Firing Line, Drawer D, Univ. Station, Austin, Texas, 78712 Letters should be typewritten and tr ple spaced, and no longer than 30 lines Football: 'Horna and their opponent» in the nporte pagea of The Daily Texan Keep up w ith the NOW | y I lio Sheft.ill ( ompany is now in Highland J L M all presenting remarkable gems, jewel­ ry, wauhes and gifts. O ur jewelers and gem- nlngjsts will show you die unique characteristics of r.u. h piet e. bet uusc, at I he Sheftal! ( < imp my, we believe there’s more to know' about jewelry than the price. t h e Sh EFTALL CO. IEWELF RS GEMOLOGISTS I iighluru! M all l>2>6 10 a.m. to d p.m. M onda\ through Satur*lay 1 ns also at 2d 16 ( ¡u uialupe, Allendale Villge and Westgate M all i l l l l \ / h i Sktftall (.ompatty ftesents a dxnamu boutique neated h\ ( artier. Designed Paris far those aha seek quality and style at pliers, h s mud t regarded as the fashion standaids I In "musts' to oxen. The originals. I hr ( artiers. f i t l l . \ Ic>/ mu/t dec performance ¡s 6 p m Sunday For -íabon can 4 '7 - i0 1 2 A CRY OF PLAYERS: opens Wednesday at me UT Drama Laboratory 'nearte '►* MFA Thesis Senes production begins at 8 p m and runs through Sa: day Tickets ,re $3 for me p u b ic S2 for students -o i reservations ca a " ’ 4 4 4 STUCK FAST IN OLD TEXAS BAY: s a M e'idram a "le a h e prodw” on fu iy 1 e-J Stuck Fas: in Old Texas Bay Or T h * Showboat Must Go On The production runs Editor Associate editor Assistant editor Assistant Contributors Vikki Barnaart Louis Black Hunt Blair G eorge Colem an C asey Cravens X avier Garza Harvey N eville Susie Grubbs Clare Hagerty Gary R eese Terry Gregston Larry Kolvoc rd Mark McKinnon Kathy Samor Steve Schmepp Jan Sonnenmair Jan Sonnenm air, Daily Texan Staff L o o k o u t-------------- 1 through Sunday at the Melodrama Theatre, 2700 W. Anderson Lane Performances are 8 p.m Fridays and Saturdays, 6:15 p.m. Sundays. For reservations calf 454- 2591 lectures music CREATIVE W RITING SEMINAR: will be given Saturday at the Elisabet Ney Museum, 304 E 44th St. Preregistration is required Call 458-2255 WATERCOLOR ART D ISC USSIO N : Michael Frary will give this discussion 10 a m - noon Wednesday at Symphony Square, 1101 Red River St GALLERY TALK: Dr Richard R. Bretteil, assistant professor of art, will speak on Chromolithography in Great Britain, 1830-1900 at noon Thursday in the Academic Center, fourth floor. STEVEN GOETZ: performs a preview of his Carnegie Hall debut at 8 p m. Monday in the Music Building Recital Hall He will play selections from Bach, Beethoven. Chopin, Piston and Prokofiev. Free admission. FESTIVAL OF TROMBONE M USIC: will be presented at 8 p m Tuesday in the Muse Building Recital Hall The program is under the direction of Donald Knaub professor in the music department, with faculty guest performer Dorothy Payne on piano. Free admission SAXOPHONE RECITAL: James R Warth will give a non-degree recJtai at 4:30 p m Tuesday in the M use Building Racital Halt Fiee admission DOUBLE BASS RECITAL: Lucy Ann Roberts will give a junior recital at 4:30 p.m Wednesday in me Music Building Recital Hall The program will include "A Suite in me Olden Style for Bass Alone" by Hans Frybe Free admission CELLO DOCTORAL RECITAL: Mary Anne Dresser accompanied by Debbie Overton and Leonard Giiiman on piano, will perform Beethoven's "Sonata m G Minor." Barber's Sonata " and Rachmaninoffs "Sonata m G Minor'1 at 8 p.m. Wednesday. Music Buildmg Recital Hall. Free admission. Symphonic Winds present the BRITISH BAND MUSIC: the combined UT Symphonic Band. Wind Ensemble and reserved elegance" of the music of Gustav Holst, ph Vaughan Williams, Aiun Hoddinot! and Gordon Jacobs m a concert bringing together 200 musicians, under conductors Thomas Lee and Jerry Junkm The program will begin at 3 p.m Wednesday m the LBJ Audrtonum. Free adm isso r ELECTRIC SINFONIA: features UT faculty musicians Albert Regm. saxophone, and E O» Antokoletz violin, performing McLean's Dimensions" cycle at 8 p.m. Thurs­ day n the Muslfc BuJdmg recitai hall Free admission LONGHORN SINGERS: present a program celebrating th International Year of the C h id at 3 p m . Fnday, Hogg Auditorium The program nciudes a Gershwm rre ce y. selections from Wait Disney movie songs, the Broadway version of he Muppet Movie and Barry Manilow Free admission Grease PIANO MASTERS RECITAL: Malcolm will perform selections from Mozart, Beethoven and Prokofiev at 8 p m Friday m the Music Building R ectal Hal. Free admission CELLO AND PIANO RECITAL: p au O e'sxy cello, and D a n n ie Mart"- piano wi perform this program as part of the Cacufty Arest Senes at 8 p.m Saturday in the M usic Bukc ig Recta -a ll Free admission U N C O LN CENTER PREVIEW CONCERT: Max Rabmovits, violin and Pam ea M.a Pa.. p.ano, w perform at 4 p m Sunday m the Music BuikStng Recital Hall F-ee admission. PERCUSSION ENSEMBLE: features Secvge Crumb Ancient Vo*c*s of Children 'h e O chestra « aisc looking for "terested and serous musicians Ba 'room 4 „ c to n s not reguir-ed The orchestra rehearses at 7 P m ^ u rs d e v s Pearce Jumo- H.gh Schoo. Cai. 926-5323. EARLY M USIC CONCERT: 'h « Larsor institute of - etoncai nstrument Technology c presents r e Austin Wmd Band piaymg i6th century German and Flemish n-usií 'Music For A While," some Elizabethan muse, and an EkzbeSwt vkX con­ sort at B p m "''day at r e Women's Federation Ha. 2316 Sar Gabnei St Adm®. S W s $2 SO. $2 for m e~oers CA TA TO N iC S n s -ock n roH band » p« ko m at the Maivnute Saloon o r Barton Strings Road across from the ''eehpuse 10 p m.-2 a m. Wednesday Aam®s>or s PHIL WOODS QUARTET: w perform at the A rr.a cfie 'hu-soav Advance hekete r e ava ab«e at the 'D«Ho Ca!' 477-9762. events POETRY AND MUSIC: -iyd-e Par» poets Miise Smith R D Taylor a id Roy G rr* m « perform a th m-js*c bv 3 'o~e»~euS B c . ” c S tm g Band a* S o rr Thursday — * : saoet Nev Museum 304 E 44m S' ARTISTS IN ACTION: a g ,e arts and carts de~ .'nst-atc~ s at the '•MCA r e V age I4 p .tr : Fr pay ■st me C - 'u 'a A-ts C e-te- n ART CLASSES; • gure draw ng andpam tng w be :~ e 'e d 3 a — ~inr~ nerfi M nnclij a mode prov dec $ ' 5C pe- sess-or Ca. 458-4342 . ig * ms c . t gs and act -•? e a - -g situet :-ns tar a age i o> r e Austin Pams a rc R e c e a rc - Depart—ient NATURE PROGRAMS » 'd „c s a-e offered through a * For ntormatxxi ca 472-3423 auditions HARMONY INC.: The Singing Noteabies. member of the International Smging Society of Women win audition singers 7:30-9 p.m. Mondays at St John's Methodist Church Choir room. BULLFIG HTING FILM: males from age 15-17 and females from age 14-60 with a ght or heavy Mexican accent are needed tor narration of this student film Vocal auditions are 6-9 p m Monday in Communication Building A, room 5 126 For more information call 454-7307. films ON CAM PUS " K>s wee* S stings com piled py Clare Eagerly and Louis B^ack IT HAPPENED ONE NIGHT, Monday, Union Theatre. Clark Gable stars as a wise­ cracking reporter who falls in love with the runaway daughter (Claudette Colbert) of a millionaire. RANCHO NOTORIOUS, Monday, Jester Auditorium Directed by Fritz Lang, this s one it stBrs Marlene of the most peverse. action filled and intriguing of all Westerns Dietnch as the head of CHUCK-A-LUCK. a ranch mat serves as a hideaway for out­ laws CO NFORM IST, ' uesday ^ - >o" 'nea tre Bernardo Bertc ucc¡ e rected m s ' - which focuses on a young follower of Mussolini. NIGHTFALL, CHINA GATE, 'uesday. Jester Aud tor-urr A dOvD e t by two of me most taiemed a n j ignored directors of the 50s Nightfai is a criminal thriller sterr ng Ann# Bancroft anc Aido Ray while “Cnma Gate' s an ear'y Vietnam f — with Ang-e Dickinson Tourneur is an exceptionally taiented director (“Nightfall") bu’ Sam Fuller Cnma Gate ' 5 is a major cmemebc gem^s ft about how much it hurts to eave. and how much it hurts » stay DEAD END. Wednesday Batts Auditorium This >s me fifth film n the Certe- 'or M j c e Easter- Studies ira -,an Fi,m Senes. F-ee aomission. KRAMER VS. KRAMER. .Vednesgay, Batts Audrtonum T h * new Columbia P u rge s ■ *m w prem.ere for students and faculty only, OnemaTexas *s sponsor r g me *ree sc'eening UT 0 re c - red for admission. STREETCAR NAMED DESIRE. A e c'asday ü^tor- Theatre E '8 Kaza- difec-ed this ~-t> -O s ca ' winning him *h tch stars Vivian _eig- and M a rc - Brande DUCK. YOU SUCKER. W e dn^day - me 60s Se^gic ^eone - - fo d -c e d me soaghem W aste'- Th® s one of the best and m^^iest of mat breed r 'ected by the maste' and star-ng Rod Steiger ano James Cot:urn jester Auditorium THE YELLOW ROLLS ROYCE. Thursday Union Theatre Rex H am sor and Shirtey Macuame star - this s ck drama nvorv'-g a ir o ot owners of a Rc s h o m e FROM THE HILL, ~n_-sday .ester A„ddor . ~ A peverse melodrama directed and star- ng 3 o o e r Mrtchum G ec'ge pe o o « d and Gecvge by . - ce -te m HamMon. RETURN OF THE D R A G O N ,' - _rsca. Batts Audaonum Bruce Lee Stars - ' - s k _ n g . c u t r t te r . Cn uck Norris co-stars. MCCABE AND MRS M ILLER, Friday Batts A , d * o r .m - o o e " Altman d rects th * a b o c a sm ail-om * g a - o e - * r c br ~gs p.easu-e to a w d weste-- - a - et Sta-s a a r e - Beam, an-d June Chnsce. TH^ LAST WALTZ, cr da. and Saktrday » - .-on "-« a tre ~ 'e Bare s ‘a-ewe perior- man :e — the. soirt jc arte' ‘ 5 years o> bnnging some ot - « best rocx music eve' wrrten Addrtd-a- performers - c .jd e Bob Dyian. Jon. Mrtche a rc Se Young JiM I HENDRIX. - x t i . and satu-'day Umon ''e a tr e Exce e - ' documentary on me te o# Sis exceptional rocx g,-ar>s* S L A 2IN 0 SADDLES, S a '.-tta . 9aBs Audrtonum Me B rnc-s directs a -c s'ars • m $ - a' r outrageous spoof o' mat g ea- Am-e^ca'- ta c t x x — the w es»m ~ r , « a.sc stars Gene W o e r SHOOT THE PIANO PLAYER, Saturday f —twoods Room. e- a ' :o.s ' ' u'feut d-'octec "ss se K o r - c f ' i i aoo'-t a otaras: n a ostro try --g tc forge* n * past as a cc-- c e r m usioa r Stars Shades Aznavour and M a r* Du B o * vxUNS OF NAVAROHNE, Sunca- a " s story r A. ed z o hew sianc m the Aegean Sea j - 'o r " eare Gregory Pec» a- ; A -m o - Guinn ancos aaempang a desoe-a» -aid t>- a 3 e - a - pe o'—ad C- L sion. —1 racily artists at 8 o ~ Sunday, Hogg Auditorium c-ee admis­ DISHONORED, "uesday. Union T-eatre Marlene Dietnch stars in m s e x c e -e " version of the Mata Han story AUSTIN CHAMBER ORCHESTRA CONCERT: at 8 c « TuN dSy - r e Union RAVEN’S END, Wednesday Union "'earn» W;GerPe-g s ; assic autobiographical f 0 (0) SACRED HEART 0 (O) PTL CLUB Q ® NEWSWATCH PRESENTS O ® LIGHT OF THE WORLD © @) DIRECTIONS 03 ® A LOOK AT AUSTIN O (5) CARTOONS O ® PTL CLUB CD ® THREE ROBONIC STOOGES © Q$ ROBERT SCHULLER 00 © th is is the life 09 ® IT IS WRITTEN O © CARRASCOLENDAS O ® DAY OF DISCOVERY © ® THE SKATEBIRDS 03 ©JAMES ROBISON 03 ® REX HUMBARD MORNING 5:45 6:00 6:30 7:00 7:30 8:00 8:30 O 3 DAY OF DISCOVERY © © Q ® f f l ® SUNDAY MORNING O ® JAMES ROBISON O © ®MISTER ROGERS (R) © ® TOWN MEETING © S® REX HUMBARD 03 ®THREE STOOGES / ABBOTT AND COSTELLO O 3 FOCUS ON THE FAMILY O ® REX HUMBARD O © ®ELECTRIC COMPANY (R) © ® DAY OF DISCOVERY 03 (DCREATIVE CRAFTS f f l ® HYDE PARK BAPTIST CHURCH CD © LA VIDA ABUNDANTE 9:00 O ® MOVIE ★ *V i "M r And Mrs. Bo Jo Jones” (1971) Desi Arnaz Jr., Chris Norris When a reluctant teen-ager is forced to m arry his pregnant schoolmate, they attem pt to overcome parental pressures and disappointm ent Q © ©STUDIO SEE Young ESP enthusiasts discuss their abilities at the Rhine Institute of Duke University. (R) © ® DIVINE PLAN © (T® ORAL ROBERTS 03 ©PEOPLE VUE CD © PTL CLUB (Spanish) 9:30 O © NEWSMATES O ® JERRY FALWELL O © ORAL ROBERTS O © ®ZOOM (R) © ® DAY OF DISCOVERY © ® LET THE BIBLE SPEAK © d© CASTLE HILLS 03 ®K1DS ARE PEOPLE TOO 09 ® THE WORLD TOMORROW 10:00 0 © NEWS CONFERENCE O © CARLOS VELASQUEZ O © ©FEELINGS "Living W ith Chronic Illness" Dr Lee Salk talks with three youngsters in an attem pt to find out what it's like for a child to live with chronic illness (R) © ® JIMMY SWAGGART © ® IT IS WRITTEN 09 ® CHRIST FOR THE WORLD CD © HOY MISMO 0 © HENRY B GONZALES 0 © FACE THE NATION O ® ROBERT SCHULLER Q ® FRED AKERS Q © ® FOOTSTEPS W hat's C ookin'? " An expectant m other tries to prove that foods which are nutritious can taste good too (R) © ® BAPTIST CHURCH © ® HERALD OF TRUTH ® 1® CHRISTOPHER CLOSEUP 0 ) ©ANIMALS ANIMALS ANIMALS The Penguin" CD © JIMMY SWAGGART O 3 WASHINGTON WIRE O 3 MEET THE PRESS Q © O ® TOM LANDRY Q © 1 MASTERPIECE THEATRE “ Love For Lydia" Remorseful after Alex s death, Richardson finds consolation in hard work at Tom s new farm (Part 8 of 12)(R) © © FIRST METHODIST CHURCH © 3 FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH 03 ©BAPTIST CHURCH CD ® BUM PHILLIPS O 3 O 1 CD 1 NFL '79 O ® O ® © ® NFL TODAY CD 3 FUTBOL-SOCCER AFTERNOON 10:25 10:30 10:55 11:00 11:30 11:45 12:00 NFL FOOTBALL Regional coverage of Ba t rr.ore Cods at O S © i New England Patriots. Miami Dolphins at Cleveland Browns 0 L i Q © © X NFL FOOTBALL Da as Cowboys at Wash q*or Redskins O X NFL FOOTBALL B altim ore Cotts at New England Pat'*ots Q © I WASHINGTON WEEK IN REVIEW (R) © © POINT OF VIEW Host © 3 NEWSMAKERS © ©INTER -VU E . ohr Whitson 12:30 O © © W A L L STREET WEEK Why Stocks Are Undervalued Guest Franco Modigiiar.* professor of economics and f m a n e e Massa­ chusetts institute of Technology (R) ® 3 03 © IS S U E S AND ANSWERS 1:00 6 MOVIE Fedora 1979) William Holden Marthe Kelle1- Directed by Sunday television 1:30 2:15 2:45 Billy Wilder. A film director chases after a reclusive form er movie star in hopes of persuading her to come out of retirem ent for his new project. (PG-1 hr., 54 min.) O © (©GREAT PERFORMANCES "Live From Lincoln Center New York Philharm onic” Zubin Mehta conducts the New York Philharmonic in a concert from Avery Fisher Hall, featuring Russian pianist Emil Gilels as soloist © ® WALLACE WILDLIFE © 3 INSIGHT 03 ©)COLLEGE FOOTBALL '79 Weekly highlights of key NCAA fo o t­ ball contests are presented. f f l ® JUKEBOX Guests: The Who, Ambrosia, David Bowie. © (T® MOVIE To Be Announced. 0 )® P O P I GOES THE COUNTRY Guests Barbara Mandrell, The Kendalls. 2:00 © ® MOVIE * * A "Seven Brides For Seven B rothers” (1954) How­ ard Keel, Jane Powell. A tro op of wild brothers decides to m arry after one of them takes the initiative. 03 ®MOVIE A A A 'Great C atherine" (1968) Peter O'Toole, Jeanne Moreau Fascinated by a newly arrived Britisher, Catherine the Great has him imprisoned and playfully torm ents him. CD © KNOCKOUT CD © EN EL MUNDO 0 © O ® © ® NFL TODAY 3:00 O 3 NFL FOOTBALL Regional coverage of Cincinnati Bengals at Houston Oilers; Denver Broncos at San Francisco 49ers; Kansas City Chiefs at Oakland Raiders; Pittsburgh Steelers at San Diego Chargers 0 © 0 ® © (3 FAMOUS CLASSIC TALES "G u llive r's Travels' Animated. An English sailor searching for his fortune is shipwrecked on a strange island inhabited by a race of tiny people O ® CD ® NFL FOOTBALL Cincinnati Bengals at Houston Oilers 6 MOVIE "H arper Valley PTA " (1978) Barbara Eden, Ronny Cox A very liberated mother intentionally shakes up the conservative stand­ point of the local school board (PG-1 hr., 42 min ) O © ®EVENING AT SYMPHONY Seiji Ozawa conducts the Boston Symphony Orchestra in W eber's O verture "T he Ruler Of The S pirits,” and the Pi3no Concerto No. 2 in B Fiat, Opus 83, by Brahms © ® MEXICO, MAGIA Y ENCUENTRO © 3 MOVIE To Be Announced 3:15 4:00 O © O ® f f i ® WHY A CONDUCTOR? In a concert designed for young people, Beverly Sills and New York Philharmonic conductor Zubin Mehta discuss and dem onstrate why an orchestra needs a conductor 0 © ®F1RING LINE "Is There A Role For The Private College?" Guest: B artlett Giamatti, president of Yale © ® LOST IN SPACE "Tw o Weeks ¡n S pace" A disguised quartet of monsters, on the run from Galactic Control, give Smith the idea to turn the Jupiter into a resort hotel © ©LAWRENCE WELK "Thanksgiving H oliday" 5:00 0 © NEWS 6 MOVIE “ Fedora" (1979) William Holden, M arthe Keller Directed by Billy W ilder A film director chases after a reclusive form er movie star in hopes of persuading her to come out of retirem ent tor his new project (PG-1 hr.. 54 min.) O © CBS NEW8 O © ®THE LONG SEARCH "The Land Of The Disappearing B uddha" Meditation, calligraphy, sword-fightlng, archery and the tea ceremony are observed in a search for the underlying principles of Zen Buddhism (R) © ® 03 ©ABC NEWS f f l ® DAKTARI "License To K ill" An ex-cham pion boxer is attacked by a crazed lioness on Wameru Compound and Dr Tracy must struggle to protect the valuable animal when the fighter gets a w arrant to kill her © 3 DANCE FEVER f f l ® 8IEMPRE EN DOMINGO Host Raul Velasco 5:30 O © f f l ® CBS NEWS O ® NEWS f f l 3 ABC NEWS 03 ©NASHVILLE MUSIC Guests Rex Allen Jr And Sr EVENING 6 00 O 3 O X f f l X THE LITTLE HOUSE YEARS M em orable highlights from various episodes of "L ittle House On The Prairie are featured in this retrospective in which the Ingalls family recount their hardships and joys to their adopted relative Albert 0 E O 1 ® I O © 1 MUSICAL INSTRUMENT MAKER f f l © F A DRY TCU Football Highlights" © 3 0 3 © T H E THIRTEENTH DAY - THE STORY OF ESTHER On via Hussey portrays Esther the Biblical herome who risked her life fo save her people 80 MINUTES f f l 7 GRANT TEAFF Bayior Football Highlights 6:30 invasion Of The Body Snatchers 700 0 3 0 ® ARCHIE BUNKER'S PLACE A rcf e s doubly shocked when Mike, Gloria and Joey show up on Thanksgiving and then tell him why they are there 6 MOVIE land. Brooke Adams Strange pods which take over the bodies of humans rain down from outer space, caus ng a San Francisco health inspector and his assistant to flee for their hves (P G -1 hr 55 min , O © ©CON N EC TION S AN ALTERNATE VIEW OF CHANGE Fat Drink And Be Merry James Burke uncovers the connection between Napoleon s need for an efficient way to store p ro v is io n s and the devel­ opment of modern day rocketry © 5. ® 3 0 ) 3.MORK & MINDY Mork s ser» ing alien figure (Raque* Welch) from a n ral planet f f l 9 TOM WILSON Texas A & M Footbai; Highlights (1978j Donald Suther orbit by a visit 7:30 f f l REX DOCKERY Texas r ech Football Highlights 8:00 O Ü O X ALICE M ei s fa m o u s ch il re o p e g e ts - m an a e xp e n se p a id trip to H o llyw o o d a n d an in v ita tio n to co ok up a b a tc h on Dmah S ho re s show 0 © © M ASTERPIECE TH £A TRE R ic fa rd s o r moves to London and Tom is overcome with guilt after the disappear­ ance of a neighboring farm er s daugh ter (Part 9 of 12) © 5 © 3 0 3 X t h e f r e n c h A t l a n t i c a f f a i r w*th off c a ts or both sides of the Atlantic scrambl r g to free the sn p. Dunieavy and the terrorists begin shooting passengers and preparing for the liner's final destruction iConclus-on) ove For 27 NOVEMBER 18, 1979 f f l (© BARRY SWITZER "Oklahoma Football Highlights’ 8:30 0 © SCARED STRAIGHT Peter Falk hosts this docum entary from Rahway State Prison in New Jersey dealing with a program that scares the crim e out ol juvenile delinquents O ® THE JEFFERSONS George s big m outh and ego are humbled when he is challenged to display his bbxing ability 9:00 O 3 Q ® 09 4j PRIME TIME SUNDAY 6 MOVIE "T he Wild Geese" (1978) Richard Burton, Roger Moore Richard Harris A group of daring mercenaries travels to South Africa in order to save a deposed ruler from the new dictatorship (R-2 hrs 15 min ) Q ® TRAPPER JOHN, M O. A 14-year-old boy's revelation that he is an alcoholic com plicates his m other's potentially serious illness O © ' EWORLD La Mai Vie An intim ate look at the lives hopes and disillusionm ents of two men who came to France from Algeria is presented (R) f f l ® THE CRUCIFIXION OF JESUS John Huston narrates this docu dram a of the m ost im portant historical event of the W estern W orld 0 © TO BE ANNOUNCED O 02 O 0) O 6; o x © (51 © 10 0 ) O 03 4 NEWS f f l ® MARY TYLER MOORE After 30 years have passed, Lou’s old flame comes back into his life, she was bad news then and she's bad news now O ® CBS NEWS CD 3 ; HENRY B GONZALEZ CD © EMBAJADORES DE LA MUSICA COLOMBIANA 09 ® EYE ON BUSINESS "W in ning" (1969) Paul Newman. Joanne Wood 10:30 0 3 0 9 ® NBC LATE MOVIE * * * ’/, The Prisoner O» Second Avenue" (1975) Jack Lemmon, Anne Bancroft A harried New York cou­ ple struggles to survive against the m ultiple challenges of urban living (R> O © MOVIE ward A champion race car driver, beset with offtrack m arital problems, is determ ined to win the Indianapolis 500. O ® GUNSMOKE M att hunts a gang that has shattered one safe after another with nitroglycerine (Part 2) O © freo AKERS © ® GRANT TEAFF f f l ® BOB NEWHART An attractive divorcee creates a feud between Jerry and Howard when she starts dating both of them © (T® MOVIE To Be Announced 0D ©)CHARLIE’8 ANGELS The Angels hired to learn who is threaten­ ing the life of a film lab owner, learn their ckent is a blackm ailing photo­ grapher (R) "T ortilla Flat O ® MOVIE * * * (1942) Spencer Tracy, Hedy Lamarr The poverty and suffering of Mexican peasants In California i t explored © ® COLLEGE FOOTBALL '79 Weekly highlights of key NCAA »oot- ball contests are presented f f l ® NEWS f f l © REX HUMBARD 6 MOVIE Ashanti (1979) Michael Came Rex Harrison A d e te r­ mined doctor sets off across the Sahara in hot pursuit of a group of Arab slave traders who kidnapped his wife (R 1 hr 57 min ) 0 X EMERGENCY ONE! Most Deadly Passage © ® NFL GAME OF THE WEEK (Part 2) O 3 IT'S YOUR BU8INESS O '3 0 ® PTL CLUB ® 3 COLLEGE FOOTBALL '79 Weekly highlights ol key NCAA fo o t­ ball contests are presented 03 ©«TAR TREK © f j THIS IS THE NFL 03 3,ABC NEWS 03 JjPTL CLUB O ¡J NEWS O I INVOLVEMENT SUNDAY'S SPORTS MORNING O 1 FRED AKERS 3 0 ? TOM LANDRY ® BUM PHILUPS O 3 O 6 09 * NFL '79 Q > i O 3 © S NFL TODAY AFTERNOON _ ^ _ O 3 09 4 NFL FOOTBALL Peg onai coverage of Ball m ore Colts New England Patnot* M,arr Dolphins „t Cleveland Browns 12:00 R edskJn ^ NFL FOOTBALL 0al,as Cowboys at W tth m g ti O 6, NFL FOOTBALL Baltim ore Cobs at New England Patriots 0 ) ^C O LLE G E EOOTBALL *79 Weekly highlights of key NCAA for ball contests are presented 1:00 © 3 Q X © 5 1 NFL TODAY 2 45 3:00 O 3 NFL FOOTBALL Regional coverage of C incinnati Bengals H ouston Oilers Denver Broncos at San Francisco 49ers Kansas C Cmets a: Oak . d Raiders Pittsburgh Steelers at San Diego Ct «rgers O 6 05 4 NFL FOOTBALL Cincinnati Bengals at H ouston Oilers 0 © FRED AKERS EVENING 10 30 9:30 10 00 10:15 10.20 10:25 11.-00 11:10 11:15 11:30 11:37 12:00 12 30 12:37 12:52 1:00 1:30 10:30 11:00 11:30 _ 26 N O VEM B ER 17, 1970 O © A BETTER WAY O 32) C AR TO O N S O ® A G RICULTURE U.S.A. O 32) 0 3 5» BAY CITY ROLLERS O ® NEW SW A TC H PRESENTS © ® N EW SM AKERS O 32) O ® 0 3 I DAFFY DUCK Q 1C O © CD ® m i g h t y M O U SE / H EC K LE a j f p k i p JECKLF © 3® 0 3 © S U P E R F R IE N D S O 12 O ® 0 3 4 j C ASPER AND THE A NG ELS © ® C ON G R ESSM AN M A RTIN FR OST ^ © D TIM E OUT _ _ ^ 8 S 4 FRED A N D b a r n e y O CD “ m Í s Í I r R c S f f ,SS OTNNY ' R 0 A D RUN K EB © ® W H A T A B O U T PEOPLE? © (To; 0 3 3 P LA STIC M A N 10 A USTIN C O M M U N IT Y C O LLEG E A d v e r t in g MORNING 5:30 6:00 6:30 7:00 7*30 7:45 8:00 8*30 9:00 S atu rd ay television O CD GUNSMOKE8' C'rCU" ,PG' ’ "r ' 36 mi" ’ O © © B Y -L IN E H ost G ene M o o re ® z T k MB ^ o o V t h e TreaS.UrHe o ,and (1972) 0 rs o n W el,es- W a lte r b ie za k Based on th e novel by R o b e rt Lou is S te ve n son A vounn bov w ith a se cre t m ap jo in s Lon g Jo h n S ilve r a nd his p ira te cre w to scout th e seas fo r sh ip s laden w ith va lu a b le c a rg o O © © W O R D ON WORDS _ _ 2*30 3:00 f ? 8 d 5?K,N T E.RQ A LA CTIC T H A *K S G IV IN G The music of John Sebastian Band h'9 hl,ghts this anim ated story of a pioneer i n f seje i c s 10 a p,ana' include am ateur h nvin n ! ? . ® ® p D R7SW O R LD Scheduled events irternatfonal 'it ? * ™ 0 ^ Bf X‘n9 C'Ub 3nd th® Mex,co Boxin9 Club international Barrel-jum ping championships from t h e C a t s k ills in ,ha i"hai>"a'''s« i S ™ m Q © © O N N ATUR E'S TR A IL " ta 9 e " ,f N EC TLO N S : AN ALTER N A 7E V IEW OF CHA N G E The t3keS 3 look af so m e m a te ria ls - disco ve re d b ! a r r í f ^ !,meS © ® 50 P L U S 68’9 " “ Wh'Ch altered ,he ° OUrSe ° f hlS,ory (R) to A U STIN C O M M U N IT Y C OLLEGE In te re st G ro u p s o s O ® 0 3 ® FLASH GO RD ON f f l 9, C O N G R E S S M A N C O LLIN S REPORTS © t0 0 3 '33SPID ER W O M A N © ® LOS TIEM PO S n 10:30 O 12. B ATTLE O F THE PLANETS 9 V ® ® FAT a l b e r t O ® 0 3 © G O DZILLA tThe CraSe ° f The Ancient Astronauts” Surprising S o ® Í S S w S S i i " ^ v,s" ° 's 10 Earth a,e ^ f f l 9 NTSU FO OTBALL H IG H LIG H TS © 'O f f l JjS C O O B Y AND SC RA PPY D OO m> i j Q © JASO N OF STAR C O M M A N D O 32) LO NE STA R SPO R TSM A N 1 ° ° O O ® HOT HERO SAND W ICH G uests Pam D aw b e r C h risto o h e r ^ f r . e M rs M a rtin L u th e rK m g Jr . Jim m y M cN ich o l. L ittle River Band I B ® © ® N CAA FOOTBALL H IG H LIG H TS S o u th w e st C o n fe r- ® a f a S 3 J W E E K E N D SPEC ,AL " The ln c re d ' b,e D e tective s A dog a n d c f ? CrOW reso,ve ,he,r jea lo us riva lry fo r th e ir m a s te r's a ffe ctio n m d him when he IS kid n a p p e d . o !? rce s to © 13 BURBUJASST C O N FER ENC E FO OTBALL H IG H LIG H TS O (3 ) C IR C U S ® 1 ! o ® TA RZAN / SU PER SEVEN 11,60 8 ^ CRC^ K E TT'S V|C TORY g a r d e n S S i S S m I G3 4 LO N G H O R N BASKETBALL REVIEW 0 0 1 8 ^ n 0 h '“ s ,a ,a 31 u ' * ’Ea" AFTERNOON O (5 i NFL G A M E OF TH E WEEK O ® IN V O L V E M E N T O © © B I G BLUE M ARBLE © ® B IS H O P CO LLEG E PRESENTS 12*00 « K e n fu° k y EQE B A S K E T B A LL H a" Fam e Tip O ff C lassic D uke f f l (ID LUCHA LIBRE MA ° y iE * * The Frozen G h o s t” (1945) Lon C haney Jr Evelvn w ork m a w a ^ m J S u m " " 8 ° f 3 56065 ° f 9riS'y m UrdefS When he goe s to O ® N E W SW A TC H PRESENTS O © 30 M IN U TES O © © S O U T H BY N O R TH W EST f f l ® VO TER S D IGEST 12:30 1*00 O 12 G U N SM O K E O ® EM ER G EN CY ONEI Q f f i BLACK SCENE Q © 8 G A R DEN SPO T S n i e w h I 7 t ' E C an did a,es" While running for class president, uenice learns what it means to be a leader (R) © ® N EW TO N / W EAVER HOUR 0 3 © W R ESTLIN G f f l © SA L Y PIM IENTA O © IN SEARCH OF... "W ild Children” O ® JIM T H O M A S O U TD O O RS 4:30 8 h <ü , Í FEELIN? S L'Vin9 W i,h Chr°n ic Illness Dr. Lee Salk talks with three youngsters in an attem pt to find out what it's like for a child to live with chronic illness 0 3 ® C A PITO L EYE O S B ® NEW S O ® TO M LANDRY SH O W O T j TALES OF THE UNEXPEC TED 5:00 O © © F O O T S T E P S What s C ookin '?” An expectant m other tries to prove that foods which are nutritious can taste good, too (R) f f l ® LAW R EN CE WELK “Thanksgiving Holiday” f f l 4 / W ILD K IN G D O M f f l I D LUCHA LIBRE ‘World Of The L a p p s ” (Part 2) ' O 0 3 f f l ® NBC NEW S O i O l f C BS NEW S O ® W ILD KIN G D O M O © © A N O T H E R VOICE 5:30 EVENING 6:00 O (3 ) TH E M U PPETS f * o ^ E HAW Gues,s Don Williams, Billy Parker 8 T O 6 DALLAS C O W B O YS W EEKLY INSIDE TH E NFL Pro football team s take part in gridiron action as 6 highlights of the week's m ajor m atches are presented by Len Dawson « i O ® 0 3 © N E W S DolPh,ns star Nick Buomconti O © © O N C E UPON A C LA SSIC The Old C u r io s it y S h o p Nell and scsssr/sykindiy © ® HEE HAW © ® TARZAN © (S) M A RY TYLER M O O RE f f l I D TELE-R EVISTA DEPORTIVA °«™ ^ _ O 12. W ILD K IN G D O M 6:30 SE2SS&2+Kah's,ud> ,ha ^ aaa -ÜEWSÍS Flamingos Of Lake Nakuru" Marlin Perkins O ® LET’S G O TO THE RACES hons?w h i^BthNE!F Hf n I B° b 3nd Em 'ly Su,,er international com plica- French psychologist in their home © @ EYES OF T ^ S vs° UR HEAL™ AICOholism A Fami'y Disease” f f l © T H E M U PPETS _ _ __ 7:00 ® ® 9 ® © ® C H IPS A strict new officer m akes life and work m iserable for Jon, Ponch and the rest of the staff oM m M A G ,C D RA GON Puff takes a confused little far!tac mysJ er,ous land to show ber the difference between harmless BbS fantasy and dam aging lies. S PUFF 6 M O VIE ''Pocket M oney” (1972) Paul Newman, Lee Marvin Two drifters in the m odern West try to stage a get-rich-guick scheme bv swindling a gullible rancher. (PG-1 hr., 42 min.) ® N ^ y A The Case ° f 7he Ancient A stronauts” Surorisina % * S ™ i e S ° f ancient visitors to Earth are offered (R) m S . ^ a P ® H S ! ,( 3 ' THE ROPERS Stanley's suspicions get him into H e'en disaPPe a fs with an attractive bacheloT who (1943) J o h n n y W e issm uller ® n c é s M G d f n r d * Í a TarZa\ TnUmphS F ra n ces G iffo rd Tarzan seeks o u t th e ju n g le o u tp o s t o f a g ro u p of f f l 13 FU TB O L-SO C C ER "C o p a A m e ric a n a ” C hile vs C o lu m b ia comes to the door asking for her © ® POP! G O ES THE C O U NTRY f f l © ( ® f f l © D E T E C T IV E SC HO O L Bunny 3 10:00 10:30 10:45 11:00 10-'XCS 12:40 1:00 1:20 1:30 2:20 S IP S . S JRDAy N ,Q H T LIVE Host Albert Brooks und®’^ a te '' kingdom that will control shipping lanes « ÍT G QD W ILD , W ILD W EST West is kidnapped by a m adm an who plans « G ® DALLAS C O W B O YS W EEKLY © © M O V IE + + * ' / 2 "The Big C ountry" (1958) Gregory Peck. Charl- on Heston. An Easterner becomes em broiled in a bitter feud between two Texas ranchers over w ater rights. S r r « Í ! 0 aVmE . ®r )r„ „ 9 ' The Naked Prey” <1966> Cornel Wilde. Gert Van °w hunters are killed by a prim itive tribe, a man is c n hunterl down by fierce warriors murrio 2 M cQ (1 97 4 > John Wayne, Eddie Albert. A police S e Pa r,m e r ,a l corruption when he discovers that his urdered partner was a m em ber of a crooked police ring The Pa®sa9 e (1979) Anthony Quinn, James Mason. A for- at-in n * 9 " S to help an American family elude their Nazi pursuers and escape occupied France safely by going through a treacherous snowy mountain pass. (R-1 hr., 38 min.) G?rd?n e ^ A Vm n t r * ,/! awaft the frn T h n y 9 T P await the final hours of a nuclear holocaust f f l 3D SA BA D O LOCO. LO CO 0 n < The Beach' <1959) Gregory Peck, Ava f tran9 ers 9 a ,liers in a house in Australia to xrrnr-, 8 a S m e r a'E * * 7 find^nn r e n n h rc°i^h finding Genghis Khan s hidden treasure 11:30 Mr M o ,° " < 1937) Peter Lorre, Sidney P! ° f J 8 are brou9 h1 together by the possibility of ^ S ? t(S j ,?O N S,D ,E A ^eteran PO,iCe 0 ,,'Cer ,S gui,,y of e n ,ra PTient when evidenc« to convict the dope pusher who hooked his daughte! ^ _ O 12, C OLLEGE W R ESTLIN G “Southwest Championships” O 6^ EM ER G EN CY ONEI The men of station 51 becom e concerned when their mascot becom es listless and refuses to eat 12:00 S l i a ^ ° VIE SeCret ° f The C hateau " (1934) Jack LaRue, Clair A 9 r°u P of house guests encounter m urder while while each one is out to steal the original Gutenberg Bible f f l 3D 3 00 M ILLO N ES © ® N EW S ' S a n Quentin" (1937) Hum phrey Bogart. Ann ® ® ^ M 0 ' nE * * + Sheridan. A convict s sister falls in love with the warden of the jail he's serving time in. ™ f f l © A B C NEW S Q 3D G U N S M O K E O © G U N S M O K E f f l ® N EW S G © NEW S SA TU R D A Y'S SPO R TS M O R N IN G ^ _ O 32) LONE STAR S P O R TSM A N 11:00 © ® © ® NCAA FO OTBALL H IG H LIG H TS “Southwest Confer- f f l © S O U TH W E S T C O N FER ENC E FO OTBALL H IG H LIG H TS _ _ _ 11:30 m 3 ^ ^ ^ J ? N CAA FOOTBALL Ohio S tate at Michigan f f l © LO N G H O R N BASKETBALL REVIEW AFTER N O O N « O 32) NFL G A M E OF THE WEEK © ® B ISH O P C OLLEGE PR ESENTS 12:00 « ® n ? u °k y EQE BASKETBALL " H a" Of Fam e Tip Off Classic" Duke « /-j-Y 3:00 include am ateur boxing ^ t w í e n T e RMS !F 0 R L D Scheduled ^ e n t s Í J ^ H n n a , “ uha7 ,.m ad A" Boxin9 Club and the Mexico Boxing Club YoFk anoth Bar' e '-1.um P,n9 championships from the Catskills ?n N e w O © THIS IS^HE NFL*18 1696005 ° ' B° W" n9 Ser'6S © ® © 3 $ f f l © N C A A FO OTBALL M iam i of Florida at Alabam a * * A b b o tt And C o s te llo M eet The M u m m y ” ( 1955) 'S 2 2 X S 2 S Z Tha * > » nv . J L S S 0 6. LITTLE RASCALS 8*00 5 ? ® C o “ H V ' LLE M U S IC GueS,S 8,11 A M e rs o '’ ' M cEntire, EVENING A h e ^ W n M v ? r 0 MSed Li9 h ,n m 9 ” (1977) R ich a rd P ryor, Beau B ridg e s o d W ar II, a ta xi d riv e r b e co m e s the firs t b la ck ch a m p io n in the S S J P a S n ^ a S ^ Í ND ™ E BEAR A C'rCUS Performer (Ab« Vigo- ’ ^ P ^ 1 h,s tw ° - * ° n elephant. M ary Ellen, who promptly e sc apes. —» O ® DALLAS C O W B O YS W EEKLY 10:30 _ O 32) CO LLEG E W R ESTLIN G "Southwest Cham pionships” 12:00 By Louis Black The opening shot of the m ovie is a robin ’s-egg blue sky — sh arp, beautiful and cle a r. A pigeon is flying a c r o ss the sky. Suddenly there is the sound of a shot and a t that m o­ m ent the fra m e fre e z e s a s the pigeon s t a r t s to fall. The word “ D ead a p p e a rs on the scree n The pigeon is fallin g and then the title ‘ P ig e o n " c o m es on. The bird continues downward, p assin g a stre e t sign , B e eth o v en strasse. The w ords “O n Beethoven S tr e e t” co m e on the screen ju st a s the bird lan d s on the sid ew alk next to a dead body. "D e a d Pigeon on Beethoven S tr e e t” h a s begun. It is the m id d le of a F re n ch N ew W ave film . T h e re is a couple a t a p a rty . M any of the g u e sts a r e talk in g to ea c h oth er about d eo d o ran ts and u n d erw ear a s though they w ere in an A m e rican telev isio n c o m m e rc ia l. The co uple m e e t á m an and a sk him who he is and w hat he d o es. He s a y s h is n a m e is " S a m F u lle r " and he d ir e c ts m o v ies. Th ey a sk him ab o u t m o v ies. H e a n sw e rs, "T h e cin em a is like a battleg ro u n d . L o v e . . . h ate violen ce . . . d eath . In a w ord emotion." . action T h e n a m e of th at film is " P ie r r o t le F o u " and it w a s d ire cte d by Je a n L u c G o d ard . The m an talk in g is S a m F u lle r an d he is d e sc rib in g h is film s. B etw een 1948 and 1963 F u lle r m a d e 17 m o v ie s (often prod ucin g and w ritin g a s w ell a s d ire c tin g ). S in ce then he h a s w orked on tw o film s, n eith er fin ish ed to h is co m p le te sa tisfa c tio n . He ju s t d ire cte d h is fir st A m e rican film in o v e r a d e c a d e . The B ig R ed O ne' which will be r e le a se d next y e a r. F u ller is sh ort and sm o k e s a big c ig a r and he m a k e s m o v ies like nobody e lse . U nlike oth er cult d ire c to rs, th ere is not rea lly one of h is film s th at m o st A m e rica n s o r even m o st d ed ica ted film g o e r s a r e f a m ilia r with U n like N ich o las R a y . who is a t le a st known for " R e b e l Without a C a u s e ," o r Don S e ig e l for " D ir ty H a r r y ," th ere is no well-known F u lle r film . Y e t he is a d ire c to r with an in tern atio n al rep u tatio n who h a s influenced both the w ay m o v ie s look and the to p ic s they touch. It can be sa id w ithout e m b a r r a ssm e n t o r e x a g g e r a tio n th at if the cin em a of S a m F u lle r did not e x ist, then " A p o c a ly p s e N o w !" w ould h ave been a v ery d iffe re n t m ovie. P e te r B ogdanovich n ev er would h av e m a d e " S a in t J a c k , ” and th at the F re n c h New film , W ave would not h av e been B r e a t h le s s " G o d ard p a y s h o m a g e to F u lle r s " F o r t y G u n s." N ew G e rm a n cin em a d ire c to r Wim W enders g a v e F u lle r a m a jo r role in "A n A m e rica n F r ie n d ," T ru ffa u t p aid h o m a g e to him in m an y m o v ies, D ennis H opper c a s t him a s the d ire c to r in " T h e L a s t M o v ie ," P hil K a rlso n and D o u g la s S irk d ire cte d s c r ip ts w ritten by him and, when in tro u b le on h is fir s t film , " T a r g e t s " young B ogd an ovich w ent to F u lle r fo r a d v ice . the s a m e In h is f ir s t B e sid e s all th ese trib u te s and a ck n o w led g em en ts of h is g en iu s ' the a b o v e b a re ly sc ra tc h the s u r fa c e ) , th ere a r e F u lle r ’s film s. H is a r e an g ry , tough, b ru tal film s which d e p ic t a w orld of p ro stitu te s, p ick p o ck e ts, co p s, sp ie s and d e te c tiv e s — h ard peo­ ple who h a v e been through it all It is a w orld w here love is tough "ion x ,s,rse than hei1 ,S sLom eth inR som eth in g o f the truth is nothm* prett***»' * te r r ib «y honest and m oving, * f llm s a r e b ristlin g and e x c itin g a s they sh e a r to v n f the < at o J hnn r I T e S? m e y e a r Id e as am l ,'ieo l° K ' in ,h<' lr wak<- S u ffic e M arxist-o rie n ted V en ice F ilm F e st iv a l c o n se rv a tiv e A m e rica n L egion t0^ a w a r d ’ ^ b e fd re o m p r n fUm He deaU w ,th ce rta ,n toP ^ lo" * m s T w o p * h ln ?m a k * r s r a c ism and the w a r in Indo-Uhina a r e l o t : T u esd ay night at 9 p .m . h is film "C h in a C a li i n w t l V ietnam wdl h ~ cu m p u s g if f -S ^ A m e n ca n fi,m on tb<* w a r in 1 I T ’" m J e s t e r L a te r in the m onth ‘ The N ak- v m a n y a s h ,s m a ste rp ie c e , will be shown on A triend w rote from P a r is say in g th at it w a s str a n g e to live in a city w here even ch ild ren knew who S a m F u lle r w a s Y e t he is w ithout honor in his own land, though m anv. m any of the film s he influenced a e re g a rd e d a s c la s s ic s . F u lle r 's vision is totally c in e m a tic in that it te a r s film a p a r t and p u ts it back togeth er F in a lly , and in trib u te to F u lle r s talen t, h is film s a r e ex citin g not only in w hat ta k e s p la c e on the sc re e n but b e c a u se of the ob­ v io u s g e n iu s an d a u d a c ity o f the talent behind the c a m e r a Black is business manager and a eo-director of ( inemaTexas. ELI'S CLUB NO COVER through 1979 For those 2 0 yrs old or over, or w ith U.T. ID, or unescorted ladies. 7 DAYS A WEEK SUN Legs Contest $ 5 0 1st prize MON-WED-THURS Ladies N ig h t Free cockfails for unescorted ladies. ELI'S 6 5 28 N. LAMAR 4 5 3 -9 2 0 5 Kent of Europe International H air Design * PRESENTS The N ew Spiral Perm Coiffures France The Latest European H a ir Designs and Precision Haircuts 454-4556 — — 5 8 0 6 W o o d ro w a t K o e n ig Ln. O pen L a te Thursday E ve n in g s U n til 9 0 0 Free H a ir A n a ly s is copies for i nicltel n lE COPY SHOP 415 W. 15th Street • 474-7992 For only 2V?C a copy. The Copy Shop will give you all the clear crisp copies you need Their location on 15th Street is convenient to the Uni­ versity, the Capitol, and downtown. If you need one copy, or a dozen, and don’t wont to spend a lot of time or money, come to The Copy Shop. This ad entitles the bearer to an unlimited num­ ber of copies for 21/?c each. Offer expires Dec 15, 1979. Free parking in the rear 24 Hourl<^rt«urant LAZY DAISY’S South Location SPECIAL Good for Today, N o v . 1 2 , 1 9 7 9 2201 Collage Ave. (S. Congress A Live O ak) Deep Fried Breaded Beef Cutlet French Fries, S alad, Rolls, Oleo With Supreme Sauce - G e t O n e Free Buy O n e $ 1 7 5 ( plus tag) Wi th Coupon Limit O ne Coupon Per Customer (D aily Texan Coupon) AFTER OURS ONLY CLU B IN AUSTIN WITH LIV E MUSIC A F T E R 2 a.m. M onday W.C. CLARK Tuesday SPECIAL JAZZ LATIN BLUiS w ith PRFEO w ith Bruce Truitt Chuck Pinell an d vocals by lu ia n n t Wednesday THE SCANNERS Thurs.-Fri.-Sat. W.C. CLARK B lu e s R evu e Sunday THE PROFESSIONAL GROOVE Jazz — From 9 p .m .-I a.m . BEST R & B and BLUES IN AUSTIN No Cover until 11 p.m . Mon.-Fri. 8th & Congress 4 7 4 -1 3 2 1 4 9 I South Lakeshore Laundromat F e a tu rin g u ash an d fo ld se n ire I f l l f O c l i A P A I BRING THIS COUPON FOR ONE FREE WASH LOAD from 8 :0 0 a .m .-1 2 :0 0 p.m . Mon.-Fri. offer expires N ovem ber 19, 1979 Hours: 7 :3 0 a .m .-3 :0 0 a.m . A tten d an t on duty — all hours 2 8 Dryers • W ashers 4 9 (1 4 lb .), 4 (1 8 lb .), 1 (5 0 lb.) 1717 So. Lakeshore Blvd. 447-9236 i > DANCERS PLUS Adult Classes C las sica l b a lle t • Jazz • T a p • D isco • G y m n a s tic s D an ce A erob ics Call now and check our low prices 4 5 8 -5 4 05 V DUVAL CLEANERS 4 2 2 0 DUVAL Dry cleaning by the pound Alterations “ S T R E B E L D r i o e l n x 6902 Burleson Road 3 8 5 -7 2 1 7 New C in e-fi Sound System Privacy of Your Auto XXX Original Uncut Note: T h eatre sound operates If yo ur car through your car radio has no radio, bring a portable E ve ry B o d y ne e d s to take a s o ft w a rm toy f SOA to b e d ! THW 4 4 2 2 3 3 3 F R I T Z L A N G ' S p r e s e n t s TONIGHT ONLY S in g in g, Dancing & Killing The M ost D e p ra v e d W estern Ever M a d e A MOST INGENIO US THRILLER' T I M E A F T E R T I M E MARLENE DIETRICH MEL FERRER ARTHUR KENNEDY M onday, N ov em ber 26 8 p.m. (5:45 51.5014:15 JESTER AUD. at 7 & 9 p.m . Only $ 1.25 IT S TWO TIMS IN ONE GREAT FUNFEST ! AMERICAN MULTI CINEMA ■ W l - L I T c S H O W $ 1 . 5 0 « s ., T i d d l e r on the R o o f (5:15/$ 1.50)400 M O W I N G L O R I O U S D O L B Y S T E R E O |C th e m an you thouqht you kn ew (5:15/$1.50)-7: JO (5:30/$l. 5014:00 M I C H A i l D O U G L A S Runnmn — (4:15 51.50)4:30 M A L C O L M M c D O W E l L T I M E A F T E R T I M E (4:00 51.50)4:30 w . * A M i. i . t •< ^ 444 3222 SYLVESTER STALLONE R O C K Y n (5:45/51.50)4:15 (4:15/51.501-1:15 (5:15 SVS0)-7:30 (5 30 $1.501-7:45 R u n n m G M I C H A E L D O U G L A S S U S A N A N S P A C H (4.-00 5 1 .5 0 4 1 5 SUS , the m an you bought you knew L \ ! U \ D . s (5:3C 51 50)440 (4:15 51.504:30 _ r f * P R E S I D I O T H E A T R E S ^ f - y i < O O L B > S T E R E O | j I *K3 « W K » WttCIA 1 2 0 4 20 7 2 0 10 10 M R .M K E ’S 5 JO 7 3 0 9 3 0 WHO HAS SEEN THE W IND El Plus 6 15 8 00 9 45 VILLAGE A 2700 ANDERSON *4514352 1 45 -3:45 5 45-7 45 9 45 RURT REYNOLDS d tU CANOtCC CLAYRURGH KRGCN ( >I»V m mhik lii.'N'l H IE A \ i m \ l L l > ORROR ■ - U*- ~ - - I P G S 3£37 30-9 30 LAKEHILLS 2420 U N W H IT I *4 4 4 4 5 5 2 j REDUCED PRICES UNTIL 6:00 MON THRU FRl "*| sexual space fantasy w w m EDDY b a r e . Opens 6 :3 0 Starts Dusk GREAT MUSICIANS SERIES 79-80 presents JESSYE NORMAN Magnifi ce nt S o p r a n o from Aug us ta who has gat her ed an international following: “ O n e of the few great singers. ( E d i n b u r g h ) H o g g A u d i t o r i u m , U . T . C a m p u s F o r ticket information call 171-14 f t T h e Coll ege of F i n e Arts Oitura/I Entertarmfintl CommrtteeSWII^ <3 S f & / r n X U A Ü ü i c . Get *1.00 Off ’•9 o rtt plut lot I With Coupon/ G ood M o n ., Tues., W e d ., Thurs. O N L Y 11 a .m .- 1 0 p .m . e x p i r a s N o v . 15 Deluxe D in n e r ...................... $3.95 n p « . Toce T a m o * C h r f. ImcK— do S o a r , a t * C M * c o r >«• wrtfc opr C u o ta -Vo*. Smoa r*o or Co**— I Oot—- Num ber 1 Dinner ............... $ 3.65 S p o c o m o to i o k * ’ o t o f o t h d o ó o t o o n , a t * t « s T o m a ta or C M * c o r Q p — e T— o r C o **— a t * C o t— Regular D in n e r .................... $3.35 a co l * * * ' 4e Deseed Combination D in n e r I r x r — ó o CStio S o a r , 0 - a * < • *0-00*0 0/ Chtto cor O w aaa $2.95 Coupon good at 23rd Street location only 725 WEST 23rd 474-1554 H appy Hours 7 Days-A -W eek 2 5 NOVEMBER 16, 1979 11:20 11:30 12:00 12:15 12:30 1:30 CD ® REPORTER 41 CD ® MOVIE "Fuera De La Ley" George M artin, Jack Taylor 11:37 f f i ® MOVIE * * '/ , "The Black W in dm ill" (1974) Michael Caine, Don­ ald Pleasence While on assignment, an agent finds himself betrayed and his son kidnapped 11:40 O 05 O ® CBS LATE MOVIE * A "F ire ” (1977) Frnest Borgnine. Vera Miles The lives and livelihoods of residents of a small Oregon lumber town are threatened by a huge forest fire O ' 5 0 6 0 9 4 MIDNIGHT SPECIAL 6 MOVIE "S tranger In The House (1975) M argot Kidder, Keir Dullea The residents of a sorority house are terrorized by a psychotic killer who specializes in obscene telephone calls during a Christm as vacation break (R -1 hr., 39 min.) © ® THE FBI C D ® NEWS 2 ) © P T L CLUB O 5 $1 98 BEAUTY SHOW f f i ® NEWS 1:38 G 05 MOVIE A'/s "Dead Man s E yes' (1944) Lon Chaney, Jean Parker In order to snare a murderer, a blind artist pretends that his sight has been restored through surgery Q ® NEWS EVENING 6:00 1:00 3:00 4:00 6:30 7:00 DAYTIME MOVIES (D ® ★ ★ ★ ' / * "N aughty M a rietta" (1935) Jeanette MacDonald, Nel­ son Eddy. Based on the operetta by Victor Herbert. A pretty French princess posing as a maid samples life in a big city in order to escape the trappings of matrimony. q © * ★ '/? "Fun In Acapulco” (1963) Elvis Presley, Ursula Andress A nightclub entertainer works as a lifeguard during the day and finds ample tim e for romance. 6 "Ice Castles" (1979) Lynn-Holly Johnson, Robby Benson A prom ­ ising young figure skater and her boyfriend find sudden success hard to cope with when she is chosen to train for a pre-Olym pic com petition (PG-1 hr., 49 min.) 0 ( 5 ) 0 0 1 ) 0 ® © ® © ® ® ® N E W S 6 INSIDE THE NFL Pro football teams take part in gridiron action as highlights of the w eek's major matches are presented by Len Dawson and form er Miami Dolphins star Nick Buoniconti. O © © Z O O M (R) (D ® BEWITCHED To get rid of Darrin, Endora produces a double for Samantha © 5® 0 9 ® NEWLYWED GAME O (5) O ® TIC TAC DOUGH O 0 5 © ® FAMILY FEUD O ® BOB NEWHART A 12-hour romance culminates in C arol's m ar­ riage to a handsome travel agent. O © ® M A C N E IL / LEHRER REPORT (D ® I DREAM OF JEANNIE Jeannie helps Tony and Roger pass a survival test. CD 0® P M. MAGAZINE f f i ® H A P P Y DAYS AGAIN Richie's friends are ordered to stay away from his party after he invites a black youth to play in his band 03 @ NEWS CD ® LA CRIADA BIEN CRIADA A Bridge Too Far O © O ® © ® MOVIE (1977) Sean Connery, Robert Redford. In the ninth day of Operation M arket Garden, with Allied troops a mile away from the bridge, mounting casualties cause the plan to be cancelled (Conclusion) O © O ® THE DUKES OF HAZZARD The Dukes move Boss Hogg into their own home to protect him from hit men 6 MOVIE "The Magic Of Lassie" (1978) James Stewart, Mickey Rooney The beloved collie helps to reaffirm a young boy's faith in humanity when she prevents several crises from occurring in a peaceful valley area (G-1 hr., 39 min ) Q © © W A S H IN G TO N WEEK IN REVIEW f f i ® © 5® ® © C E LE B R IT Y COMEDY FOOTBALL CLASSIC Two teams of celebrities including Wilt Chamberlain, Penny Marshall, John Ritter and Robert Urich are lead by two form er Super Bowl coaches in a game of flag football. QD ® GUNSMOKE Festus. mistaken for a hired gunman, is offered $300 to fight three sons of a man his cousin is accused of killing. CD © LOS RICOS TAMBIEN LLORAN 10 AUSTIN CITY COUNCIL frid ay television 7:30 O © © W A L L STREET WEEK "W hy Stocks Are Undervalued" Guest: Franco Modigliani, professor of economics and finance, Massa­ chusetts Institute of Technology CD © EDUARDO MANZANO 8:00 G O O © DALLAS Ellie learns she has breast cancer and needs a m astectom y but refuses to tell Jock for fear he will leave her O © © S O U T H TEXAS NUCLEAR PROJECT © © © d® © © T H E FRENCH ATLANTIC AFFAIR A passenger (Chad Everett) learns the ship's captain (Louis Jourdan) has agreed to Dunleavy’s demands and sets into action his own plan to free the ship and its passengers (Part 2 of 3) CD ® LAREDO CD © ESPECTACULAR 8:30 9:00 O © O ® 0 9 ® ROCKFORD FILES Two young detectives help Jim solve the mysterious slaying of a senator who was about to address a group of detectives 6 MOVIE "T om m y" (1975) Roger Daltrey, Ann-M argret Based on the rock opera by The Who A young boy struck deaf, dum b and blind by the sight of his father's murder becomes a modern-day messiah exp lo it­ ed by a greedy uncle and a worshipping public. (PG-1 hr., 50 min ) CD ® MOVIE ★ ★ ★ ' / * A irport 1975” (1974) Charlton Heston, Karen Black When the crew of a 747 is killed in a freak accident, the chief stewardess must pilot the huge jet to safety. CD © MAM A CAMPANITA O © (©SPORTS UNLIMITED 0 @ G ( H ) 0 ® © @ © ® © d ® f f i © 0 3 ® n e w s O © © D IC K CAVETT Guest A L Rowse (Part 2 of 2) CD © PECADO DE AMOR (D ® MOVIE (CONT’D) 9:30 10:00 10:15 10:30 Johnny Carson Guests Bob O @ O ® 0 9 ® TONIGHT Host Hope, Carol Neblett, Raquel Welch. G O O ® THE NIGHT STALKER Kolchak suspects a disturbed spirit from the 12th century of being guilty of several strange murders O © © C A P TIO N E D ABC NEWS © ® CHARLIE'S ANGELS The Angels, hired to learn who is threaten­ ing the life of a film lab owner, learn their client is a blackm ailing photo­ grapher. (R) (D dffi A D A M -12 Two officers are shot down in ambush by members of a militant group. 2 ) © M O V IE *v? "S ky H eist" (1975) Don Meredith, Stefame Powers Los Angeles investigators take to the sky in helicopters to track down a pair of gold thieves. CD © 24 HORAS 11:00 6 ON LOCATION: BILLY CRYSTAL The com ic who started nightclubs and then became Jodie on the hit com edy series "S oap returns to the stage with a riotous act O © © A C A D E M Y LEADERS The Bolero C oncert.” (R) CD © MOVIE * * '■ » Pardon Us Two men stage a com m otion in a prison mess hall © TO. STREETS OF SAN FRANCISCO A public defender almost loses her life when she believes her client is not a murderer (1931) Stan Laurel, Oliver Hardy, Leisure and The in O K M O L ( NB C ) San Antoni o G KENS (CBS) San Antoni o O KCEN ( NB C) Temp l e O KTBC (CBS) Austi n O K R L N ( PBS) San Antoni o © K W T X (CBS) Waco © K R L U PBS) Austi n Cable 5 Cable I I Cable ® Cable ® Cable © C a b l e ® f Cable © K T V T ( I N D . ) F o r t Wor th Cable ® © KSAT (ABC) San Antonio ( with ACTV) Cable ® Cable © © K V U E ( A B C ) Austi n Cable ® © K T V V ( N B C ) Austi n 6 HBO ( subscri ber s onl y) C a b l e © * - i2, Cable © io ACT V ^ c om mu n it y T V ) L a rry Hagman is d e lirio u sly rotten in “ D allas,” the soapy F rid a y night CBS dram a. On a special two-hour presentation, Nov. 16, E llie (B arbara Bel (¿eddes) dis­ covers a lum p in her breast and requires a m astectom y. Station* reserve the right to make last minute change* j Now Serving LUNCH CA CH RISTM AS I S . . . F A M I L Y Give your fam ily the gift of a lifetim e . . . a pictu re from Sundance Studio. Sundance has m any unique settin gs including Victorian or Western settin gs. Or we can create contem porary po rtra its, eith er studio or environm ental. 301 W. 17th 472-9610 f c n n v 'e ijv T 10% OFF W I T H T H I S A D UMIT O N f COUPON PÍ» SITTING 12-5:30 Tuos.-Fri. 9-1 Sat. a u m n m i i (Moose from Quiche, Soups, Salads, and the best (Meesecake in town! Open Monday through Saturday Open 1 1:30 a.m. until 1 a.m. West L y n n at 12th 4 7 2 -3 7 9 0 r h FRIDAY, NOV. 16 JOHNNY DEE & THE ROCKET 8 8 'S SATURDAY, NOV. 17 CALL CLUB FOR DETAILS 454-0555 7934 real Northern' . * * on AT * S N O S t H l f N S i L_ AN Of ft SON 24 N O V E M B E R 15. 1978 thursday television DAYTIME M O VIES f f i ® N EW S CD 0 ) E L C H A V O 1:00 ® ® A * "P ap er M an" (1971) Dean Stockw ell, Stefanie Pow ers A credit-card computer error results in three deaths and a traumatic co n ­ frontation between humans and machines 3:00 6 5 J ++'/, "G irl H appy" (1965) Elvis Presley, Sheliey Fabares The leader of a musical com bo is assigned to keep an eye on a club owner s daughter Matilda 6 luck theatrical agent finds the possible way to riches when he r i J L e í manage a boxing kangaroo (G-1 hr . 43 min.) (1978) Elliott Gould, Robert Mitchum A down-on-his- deC'deS t0 5:00 EV EN IN G 6:00 8 1 S ^ j S i ^ ° ® ® ® ® NEWS ® c ® '^ W ITCH SD " « * to land th . Chat Romani © 5® ffl ® NEWLYWED GAME O S O ® Ttc TAC DOUGH * 30 O (ED ' 10 share her I B 3® P.M . M A G A Z IN E ffli f f iH A P P Y D A Y S A G AIN Howard becom es convinced ,ha! his hie has been wasted and dec,des to run awav to Tahiti - « o n * Complete Printing Services Including Copying Multilith Printing Postermaking HOURS M-F 8:00-5:00 TEXAS UNION COPY CENTER w?*, ^ a ? 7:00 © 52 O ® f f i ® M OVIE + + * A Bridge Too F ar" (1977) Jam es In 1944 ° P era,,on M arket Garden, an Allied plan to end W orld War ¡I by capturing the six major bridges leading into G erm a­ ny, is put into effect (Part 1 of 2) © (ED O CD t h e B U G S B U N N Y T H A N K SG IVIN G DIET Bugs Bunny dispenses advice and carrots to keep his friends Porky Pig Sylvester aAnd. ^ l! i^ n^ eA?«bbovian rabbit ,rom overeating on Thanksgiving INSIDE TH E N F L Pro football teams take part in gridiron action as highlights of the week's major m atches are presented by Len Dawson and former Miami Dolphins star Nick Buoniconti O © ® T E X A S W E E K LY Host: Robert Davis. © 5. © 5® f f i ® L A V E R N E A SH IR LEY Laverne and Shirley quit their jobs at the brewery and join the Army. ( D 5) G U N S M O K E A vengeful prisoner poses a continual threat to the life of M arshal Matt Dillon CD 53) LO S R ICO S T A M B IEN L LO R A N 10 AUSTIN C O M M U N IT Y C O L L E G E Interest G roups _ 7:30 « © D. 8 ® C B S M O VIE "S ilver S tre a k ” (1976) Gene Wilder, Jill Clayburgh A peaceful publisher becom es involved with a secretary, murder, mayhem and a hip thief while traveling from Los Angeles to Chicago via tram Q © D O V E R E A S Y Guest: Maxene Andrews CD 53) L A C A R A B IN A DE AM B R O S IO 10 AUSTIN C O M M U N IT Y C O L L E G E International Trade 8:00 6 TIME W AS: THE 1920S Dick Cavett hosts a unique journal of the people places and events which made history in the "Roaring Twenties.” Q © D S N E A K PREVIEW S: T A K E TW O "O verlooked C lassics - Best Films Of The '70s That Nearly Everybody M issed ” Roger Ebert and Gene Siskei single out som e overlooked movie classics including “ The Late Show,' "Straight Tim e," "M ean Streets" and "Night M oves ” © ® © 5$ f f l ® T H E FR EN C H AT LAN T IC A FFAIR Craig Dunleavy (Telly Savalas), the ruthless leader of a religious cult, threatens to blow up a transatlantic liner and all those aboard unless the sh ip ’s owners pay a ransom of $70 million. (Part 1 of 3) Q ) ® M A R Y T Y LER M O O R E A quiet luncheon M ary hosted just for fe d and Georgette turns into an erratic spontaneous weddina CD 53 E l M U N D O DE LUIS DE A L B A 10 LA D E F E N S A DE N U E ST R O B ARRIO 8:30 O © 8 C A M E R A TH REE Philip John son " Rosam ond Bermer inter­ views the dean of Am erican architects from his office in the Seagram building, his famous "glass house" in Connecticut and his Manhattan town house (Part 2) CD ? B O B N EW H ART Emily is elected to fill in as receptionist at the office when C aro l goes on vacation CD 51) N O C H E S T A PAT IA S 9:00 O 1 2 O ® f f i ® Q UINCY Quincy tries to track down $500,000 in stolen money that was contam inated with a deadly disease by the thief before he died 6 RICH AR D P R Y O R IN C O N C E R T The well-known com edian shoots pointed barbs at alm ost every institution imaginable in this uncensored, no-holds-barred concert performance. Q © D E V E N I N G A T S Y M P H O N Y Seiji Ozawa conducts the Boston Sym phony Orcnestra in W eber's Overture The Ruler Of The S p irits," and the Piano Concerto No 2 in B Flat. Opus 83. by Brahms. f f l ® M OVIE ★ A "The P resident's Plane is M issing ” (1971) Buddy Ebsen, Peter G raves The Vice President takes over when Air Force One disappears with the President on board. CD 53) M A M A C A M P ANITA 9:15 9:30 10-30 10:45 11:00 10 EQUINOX SU N F E S T 10 SO M E TH IN G S P E C IA L 10:00 — 0 5 2 © ( B ) © ® e ® © ® © 5 ® © ® © ® n e w s 6 A L L -S T A R B A S E B A L L : A M E R IC A N L E A G U E V S N ATIO N AL L E A G U E The best players of both baseball leagues are featured in co v­ erage of a star-studded c onfrontation. O © i. D iC K C A V E T T Guest: A L. Rowse. (Part 1 of 2) CD 53) P E C A D O DE A M O R O 5 2 O ® © ® TO N IG H T Host Hackett, Steve Lawrence. © 53 8 ® C O L U M B O An actor (William Shatner) uses the plot of t3i5,ormer scripts as the method to m urder a former lover Johnny Carson. Guests: Buddy O © X C A P T I O N E D A B C N EW S ffi ® ffl (3. P O LICE W O M A N Pepper and Crow ley search for a psy­ cho attacking young female hitchhikers © 5® A D A M -12 Officer Reed gets needled by a fellow officer for his faith in man. CD 5D 24 H O R A S f f l ® N EW S O © 8 M A S T E R P IE C E T H EAT R E ‘Love For Lyd ia” Rem orseful after Alex s death, Richardson finds consolation in hard work at Tom ’s new farm (Part 8 of 12) (R) CD ® M O V IE * ★ * ’/, Escape From Fort B ra vo ” (1953) W illiam Holden. Eleanor Parker. Confederate sym pathizers find them selves sur­ rounded by hostile Indians after rescuing Southern prisoners from a Union fort © i0 ST R E E T S OF S A N F R A N C IS C O When an assaulted wife d isap ­ pears, the evidence points to her husband, known to becom e violent when drunk. CD 53) R E P O R T E R 41 11:20 11:30 CD 0 ) M O VIE Mi Mujer Necesita M a n d o " Flor Silvestre Carlos Cores. _ 11:37 UD 5 © 3 B A R E T T A Baretta finds himself in big trouble when he unwillingly trusts a young lady with a shaky past. (R) _ _ ^ O 52) © 6, © ® T O M O R R O W Guest host: Richard Valeriani. © 5® TH E FBI 12:00 _ 12:25 © II) O .2 B A N A C E K Banacek is hired to find a huge airplane that m ade an em ergency landing on a deserted field, then disappeared. - _ _ © ® P T L C L U B © ® f f i ® N EW S © (ÍJ) P T L C L U B Q ® N EW S 12:45 1:00 1:50 O K A A O L ( N B C ) S a n A n t o n i o Q K E N S ( C B S ) S a n A n t o n i o © K C E N ( N B C ) T e m p l o O K T B C ( C B S ) A u s t i n O K R L N ( P B S ) S a n A n t o n i o © K W T X ( C B S ) W a c o © K R L U ( P B S ) A u s t i n C a b l e 52 C a b l e (ED C a b l e ® C a b l e ® C a b l e ® C a b l e ® C a b l e ® f D K T V T ( I N D . ) F o r t W o r t h C a b l e ® © K S A T ( A B C ) San Ant oni o (witha ct vi C a b l e 5® © K V U E ( A B C ) A u s t i n ffi K T V V ( N B C ) A u s t i n * H B O ( s u b s c r i b e r s o n l y ) C a b l e ® C a b l e ® C a b l e ® to A C T V ( c o m m u n i t y T V ) (with yd C a b l e 5$ GETYOUR hair arm A TEACHER'S PET FOR The G raduate is the stud en t stu d io o f V ogue C ollege School o f Hair Design. Our hair cutter will be going to exp en sive studios to work after graduation. This is your chance to get a precision cut at a greatly reduced price. All work is closely supervised by a top notch professional instructor. No appointm ent needed. J u st com e in ... you ’ll be surprised! THE GRADUATE (ALL W O«K P E R F O R M E D BY STUDENTS) VOGUE COLLEGE / SCHOOL OF HAIR DESIGN / DEIW 00D CENTER / 3929 N. INTERSTATE HWY. 35 / 454-2781 Hr*. 9 :0 0 -3 :3 0 C lo se d on M o n d a y No Appointment Necessary 3 - AtiKli\ieR-s4R\J 10*/ -to 70’/ OIF KMeMBFR 12,-17 U PPER LEVEL DOBiE MALL 10 am 4o7pm HELO OVER! 7th Week THE EXOTIC CLASSICS! HOW FOR D O ES A GIRL HAVE T O G O T O U N TA N G LE HER TINGLE? % / / uncut uncentored GERARD DAFTUANO’S Deep THROAT EASTMANCOLOn (¿) ADULTS ONLY «ta rrin g L IN D A LOVELACE HA R R Y REEMS j ! you tfa\r to go to Hell «".A* * r7He 'D evi in Miss iones’ IHC MMKITY • • • 474 43b! • • • l« « t Actress «t Cammt Film Nsttvel FIRST MATM! SHOWING ONLY CHRISTOPHER CROSS FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16 9 p.m.—2 am TEXAS UNION BALLROOM $2 with student ID S3 without Entertainment y Committee arts, e n tertain m e n t. IMAGES. every Monday in the Texan. 0 c-~~. ^ J Ó Í 'S SHOE & BOOT ■ REPAIR T h is coupon is w o rth 10% o ff a n y re p a ir s of $5.00 o r m o re “C heck ou r p rices" 604 W. 29th 472-6179 J w ith V m w i u R td g rav * JaM FmMb 8:00 LAST MIGHT U T K X A s m m m n L M x YANKSR I! 1*!*SI«;#!M I Al Pacino AND JUSTICE FOR A L U (r, Call 4 7 1 -5 2 4 4 to place a Classified Ad in The Daily Texan TUNEUP HOUSE G A LLS Cars electronically tuned in your driveway from , included 385-0700 *Four-eylinder cars with d e c tro m e ignition only Six cylinder $33 00 Foreign cars it e ig h t- c y lin d e r m o st U S $35 00 F arts include plugs points, rotor and condenser when applicable. ~ y T W I N D R I V E - I N S ltO W T O W N USA 1 8 1 A C erner on « 8 3 6 -8 5 8 4 / ** BOX-OFFICE OPEN 6 :0 0 ROBERT BEST PICTURE _ WINNER D E N IR O T H E DEER HUNTER, ACADEMY I AWARDS SHOWTOWN — EAST TiLdííH) In Color R at last A t L a s t What Unspeakable Act V nleashed Her Animal Passions — I I l l — CONVENTION GIRLS BOX-OFFICE OPEN 6 :0 0 W alt D is n e y ^ A F P L E UMFLINti GANG % Ztde¿ f4cy:uM n - P L U S - Am ericas qreatesl skateboarders i f i x •> «BTEBOPR* SOUIHSIDE — NORTH BRUCE LEE GAME OF DEATH - P L U S - T H E STRANGER A N D T H E GUNFIGHTER Technicolor * Panavision * -**fP G It Happened One Night Starring: Clark G able and C laudette Colbert Winner of 6 Academy Awards In c lu d in g Best A cto r, A ctress, P icture Today Union Theater $1.25 with UT ID 3, 7 & 9 p.m. — ----------------------------------- j We ll make your buggy boogy at your bungalow I M H t l l f l s a m i m f f l a r l o t L , y $ & n d o ‘A man, a woman, a murder as only Lelouch could do It with wit, warmth and sophistication. ‘GAT AND MOUSE’ IS FOR ENJOYING.’’ ... — Judith Cost \ ‘A bubbling m ystery movie th a t’s sly and snappy fun.” ’ GenrStuw NB< Iv cJpggoi \ tpaiis MOUSE ■ 10 9:35 * X • •> L • x U lu la d A r tis ts (SAT 4 SUN, 1,30-4DC 1-4:30-9-00 FEATURES: $1.50 til 6:00, $2.00 after MIDNIGHTERS: $1.50 r x i r j CAT AND MOUSE H I T C H C O C K H A S C O M E U P W I T H D E C A D E " ________________ - " S U P E R I O R T O A N Y T H I N G I N T H E P A S T r í x REID A . ACTING OUT BACK BY POPULAR DEMAND MIDNIGHTER Matmees Daily No One Under 18 Admitted Late Shows Fr.day & Saturday. Sundays Open Noon • W a a e Bring I D s Regardless 01 A g e ' EsSsE 6 film s Nostalgic view of prairie life film for all ages “ Who Has Seen the W in d ” ; directed by Allan King; starring Brian Painchaud and Doug Junor; at the Village Cinema Four. By Casey Cravens One fault that often mars film s told from a child’s point of view is that they end up being lim ited to a juvenile audience and steeped in a schoolboy m entality that impedes them from becoming true visual art. “ Who Has Seen the W ind’’ manages to escape this stigma and consequently succeeds in entertaining adults as well as children. Director-producer Allan King has based the film on the novel by W.O. M itchell, which is in his favor. The in­ troduction to M itchell’s book stresses that the story contains a serious theme: “ Many interpreters of the Bible believe the wind to be symbolic of Godhood. In this story I have tried to present sym pathetically the struggle of a boy to understand what still defeats mature and learned men — the ultimate meaning of the cycle of life. To him are revealed in moments of fleeting vision the realities of birth, hunger, satiety, eternity, death. They are moments when an inquiring heart seeks fin ali­ ty, and the chain of darkness is broken. This is the story of a boy and the wind.” Brian Painchaud portrays the in­ q u isitive youth grow ing up in a Saskatchewan prairie town during the 1920s. As an actor, Painchaud is a child is so un­ prodigy; his ch aracter assumingly precious that he effortless­ ly becomes the audience’s darling. During the course of the film , he befriends Young Ben, played by Doug Ju no r’s performance rivals Junor. Painchaud’s as he depicts a Jam es Dean-ish adolescent who is more at home hunting on the prairie than “ lin­ ing up" at school. Thomas Hauf’s per­ formance as Digby, an amiable prin­ cipal, is also worth mentioning, as he sparkles with a taint of boyish charm, demonstrating that his heart is with his students. As a newcomer to the cinema, Allan King fares well in this production. For the most part he avoids relying on stereotypes as he recreates small town life. His characters are believable in that they are not as sim plistic nor as naive as many directors would have painted them in an attempt to obtain nostalgia. He also abstains from resor­ ting to cheap emotional response that could have turned his film into just another version of “ L ittle House on the P ra irie ” ; the story is told with con­ trolled empathy. Richard Lieterm an’s photography stresses the naturalistic nature of the movie as he artfully captures the golden hues of the prairie. His por­ traits of the children are another visual treat, many of them resembling figures from Norman Rockwell pain­ tings. In the current cinem atic m ilieu, with budgets and productions going to such ostentatious extremes, a film as earthy and as unpretentious as “ Who Has Seen the W ind” is a welcomed change of pace. It is not a “ children’s film ,’’ but rather a tale of initiation that rings universally true, conveying a story as lyrical and eloquent as prairie grass blowing in the wind. Elaine Powers N O V E M B E R 1 A * W E D N E S rtv! Hi Í ■■ * K f ' h : . ■ • -v.... .v- • m’ns • i K Í ! ... - • H ; . ^ Y<>u ili hi s h,. iv. ■ t.> K hivh o ia iw m lv r tu, I*uty and IvifHj unit nietxU M.vt < t r m%sruclnrv t hat lojumail th»’ tun Cometo mtvrs » ' .'ti tom l.ia ir v P o v .c i- ’’ an an y : Mll,'sN **'• 1,1 ? v .t future i o n t rol iH o q ra m Party Week Price / a m m o n th m o n th complete 4-month program program save O PEN SU N D A Y 11-7 Special for former members 6 M onths only $29.00 C a ll'lo c i. iv tot R e se i various! JSm m . T H E U LT IM A T E EY EW EA R EXPERIEÍNCE 1/2 PRICE SALE O N E W E E K O N L Y P I RCHASE ONE PA IR OF O I R I Ñ IQ UE EURO PEAN EY EW EA R AND SELEC T A SECOND PA IR OF EQUAL V A L I E AT NO CHARGE! OPTICAL CO, ( UNUSUAL E Y E WE A R ) te n o n Square, 00th ond Jefferson • Austin. Texas • 451-1210 FACE TREATMENTS FOR OILY & ACNE TROUBLED SKIN FOR DRY, SCALY, PREMATURELY AGING SKIN B R O W SHAPING, LASH/BROW TINTING MAKEUP DESIGN and INSTRUCTION MANICURES, PEDICURES HAIR REM OV A L (WAXING) RETAIL OF FINEST COSMETICS Elaine Powers Austin South 1922 E. Riverside 4 4 4 -2 6 8 3 Tow nlake Plaza & Figure Salons Austin North 5505 Balcones 4 5 1-641 7 Balcones Plaza HALINA EUROPEAN SKIN CARE 5403 Clav Avenue • Austin, Texas *512 452-3500 23 Years experience in Warsaw, Paris, Vienna, New York and Texas. W ed n e sd ay television DAYTIME SPECIALS 3:00 © ® © © £D ®AFTERSCHOOL SPECIAL “ The Late Great Me - Story Of A Teenage Alcoholic" A high school girl (Maia Danziger) finds herself changing from a closet drinker into an alcoholic. 4:30 6 STANDING ROOM ONLY: BARRY MANILOW One of the foremost names in the entertainment world today performs his greatest hits, including “ It’s A Miracle." "Mandy” and “ Looks Like We Made It." DAYTIME CHILDREN'S SHOW 3:00 © ® © ® © ®AFTERSCHOOL SPECIAL "The Late Great Me - Story Of A Teenage Alcoholic" A high school girl (Maia Danziger) finds herself changing from a closet drinker into an alcoholic. DAYTIME MOVIES 1:00 © ® A * “ Blondie Plays Cupid" (1941) Penny Singleton, Arthur Lake The Bumsteads decide to help a young couple elope 3:00 © ( D ) AAV4 “ Clambake" (1967) Elvis Presley, Shelley Fabares. A wealthy playboy in Miami, wishing to sample the life of one who works for his money, switches identities with a water-skiing instructor. EVENING 6:00 6:30 O © © (S3) O ® O ® © ® 03 ® n e w s O © DSCHOOL TALK © ® BEWITCHED Endora brings a toy soldier to life to babysit with Tabatha. © © f f i ® NEWLYWED GAME O © O ® TIC TAC DOUGH © © FAMILY FEUD 6 ALL-STAR BASEBALL: AMERICAN LEAGUE VS NATIONAL LEAGUE The best players of both baseball leagues are featured in co v­ erage of a star-studded confrontation. © ® BOB NEWHART Emily challenges Bob to switch family responsi­ bilities. O © (DMACNEIL / LEHRER REPORT f fi d ) THE PRICE IS RIGHT © ® I DREAM OF JEANNIE Jeannie s sister makes a play for Tony while Jeannie is locked in a safe. (Part 3) © © P.M. MAGAZINE CD ®HAPPY DAYS AGAIN Richie, Potsie and Ralph auction off their personal belongings to raise money for an Easter vacation. CD ( I ) NEWS CD 3 ) Ml SECRETARIA 7:00 O 3 ) O ® CD 4j REAL PEOPLE Reports on a skiing squirrel and a sand castle building contest are featured ® © O ® a l l QUIET ON THE WESTERN FRONT Richard Thomas and Ernest Borgnine portray two German soldiers in an adaptation of Erich Maria Remarque’s classic novel of the horror, desolation and disil­ lusionment of World War I O © ®ANOTHER VIEW © ® © 3® CD ®EIG HT IS ENOUGH Nicholas blames himself when, after he breaks a chain letter, Tommy is rushed to the hospital for emergency surgery. © ® GUNSMOKE Matt and his deputies have the grim task of hang­ ing a ruthless gunman. CD © LOS RICOS TAMBIEN LLORAN 10 WORLDS APART Isami Taniguchi’s Japanese Garden 7:30 O © ®GREAT PERFORMANCES "Live From Lincoln Center New York Philharmonic" Zubin Mehta conducts the New York Philharmonic in a concert from Avery Fisher Hall, featuring Russian pianist Emil Gilels as soloist. © © Ml DULCE CHARYTIN 10 EXERCISE FOR SENIORS 8:00 O © O ® CD ® DIFFRENT STROKES Willis asks a muscular man (Reggie Jackson) he sees at a health club to pose as his dad for a father-son athletic competition © ® © © f f i (DCHARLIE’S ANGELS Jill Munroe’s (Farrah Fawcett) romantic involvement with a foreign prince leads her into the dangerous world of international power politics and murder. © ^ ) MARY TYLER MOORE Mary and Sue Ann volunteer their ser­ vices as big sisters to two delinquent girls. 10 ALTERNATIVE VIEWS NEWS MAGAZINE "A Conversation With Ramsey Clark" 8:30 © © HAPPY DAYS AGAIN O ® CD ® BEST OF SATURDAY NIGHT LIVE Guests Elliott Gould. Chevy Chase, Peter Tosh, Mick Jagger © ® BOB NEWHART A minister makes a startling announcement after seeking professional advice from Bob © © FANTASTICO 9:00 © © BEST OF SATURDAY NIGHT LIVE Guests Elliott Gould, Chevy Chase, Peter Tosh, Mick Jagger 6 MOVIE "The Enforcer" (1976) Clint Eastwood Tyne Daly Dirty H arry" Callahan is joined by a female rookie in his pursuit of a group of California revolutionaries terrorizing San Francisco. (R-1 hr , 36 min ) © § © id f f i ® V E G A S Dan, tracking down the attacker of a go r­ geous superstar, is unaware the assailant is one of the lady’s body guards. © ® MOVIE ★ *'/? "The Androm eda S train " (1971) A rthur Hill. David Wayne Three scientists work to identify a deadly strain of bacteria in tím e lo save everyone from extinction. CD © MAMA CAMPANITA 10 BOTTOM LINE 9:30 O © 8 ,MONET French im pressionist Claude M onet's paintings are displayed at an exhibit in Chicago in the spring of 1975 (R) 10 DEATH AND DYING "The Dying Patient" O © O ® O X © S3 © ® © 3 f f i ® NEWS Q © ® D IC K CAVETT Guest: Yehudi Menuhin © © PECADO DE AMOR 10:00 O K M O L ( NB C ) San Antoni o O KENS (CBS) San Antoni o O KCEN ( NB C) Templ e O KTBC (CBS) Austi n Q K R L N (PBS) San Antoni o © K W T X (CBS) Waco © K P L U ( PBS) Austi n Cable © Cable © Cable ® Cable CD Cable ® Cable 3) Cable ® ffl K T V T ( I N D . ) F o r t Wor th © KSAT (ABC) San Antonio © K V U E ( AB C ) Austi n ffi K T V V ( NB C) Austi n 4 HBO ( subscri bers onl y) io ACT V ( c o m m u n i t y T V ) Cable ® * •>! a c t v ; Cable © Cable (33 Cable ® C a b l e ® (with i2, Cable f j | HALF-PRICE ■BOOKS! DT T\4T>T1? * , c Main Store 1^ 14 LAVAC4 H O U R S : M O N D A Y-5 ATURDAY 1 0 - 1 0 Sunday ¡2-6 Up cNorth: 6 1 0 3 BLRNETrd. ---------- S o. 10 B lim p ie ~ M edium B e st (sandw ich) & D rink (carbonatedj Good Through November 19 *1.79 with coupon p l f 0r tree rkrhmqr m o n D A v-Satu R D A Y ( 0 - 6 »2 6 H O U R S : SUNDAY Sun-Th 10:30 a m -Midnight Fri A Sat. 10:30 a.m.-l a.m. 2120 Guadalupe 474-1864 23 NOVEMBER 14. 1979 10:30 O © NEWS 0 (I D 0 ® BLACK SHEEP SQUADRON Pappy s men cause political havoc when they refuse to fly with the new squadron member, an admiral’s son O ® f f l ® TONIGHT Host Johnny Carson Guests Barry Manilow. Jean Marsh O © iJCAPTIONED ABC NEWS © ® f f l ® L O V E BOAT “Ex Plus Y” Loretta Swit, Richard Mulligan "Graham And Kelly” Kristy McNichol, Scott Baio “ Goldenagers" Charles Frank (R) © © ADAM-12 A simple traffic violation turns into a serious case that nearly leads to gunplay CD © 24 HORAS 10:45 6 MOVIE "Fedora ” ( 1979) William Holden. Marthe Keller Directed by Bitty Wilder A film director chases after a reclusive former movie star in hopes of persuading her to come out of retirement for his new protect (PG-1 hr., 54 mm.) 11:00 O ® TONIGHT Host Johnny Carson Guests Barry Manilow. Jean Marsh O © (Erro BE ANNOUNCED © ® NEWS © IT® STREETS OF SAN FRANCISCO A mobster’s son makes a deal with the law, but his father hires a hit man to finish him off CD © REPORTER 41 11:20 11:30 © ® MOVIE * * "One Deadly Owner ’ (1974) Donna Mills, Jeremy Brett After purchasing a second Rolls Royce a woman finds out that the car not only has a mind of its own but also a terrifying past CD © MOVIE Pane Verde Hector Alteno, Carlos Fstrada 11:37 © ® f f l ®BARETTA Baretta tries to save the lives of two poor, young actresses caught up ¡n a deadly extortion scheme (R) 11:40 reason © H O 5. HAWAII FIVE-O McGarrett’s efforts instead of force on a deranged psycho fail miserably when the man shoots a cop and kidnaps a teenager (R) to use 12:00 O 4. f f i 4 1 TOMORROW Guests TV and radio personality Joe Franklin; Gary Owens; 1978 Trivia Bowl Championship team; Spanky and Our Gang (R) © id) THE FBI 12:30 O 12., TOMORROW Guests TV and radio p e rso n a lit/ Joe Franklin Gary Owens, 1978 Tnvta Bowl Cham pionship team Spanky and Our Gang (R) f f i I j p t l c l u b 0 11, PTL CLUB O 2 NEWS © 9 f fi 4 ) NEWS 12:45 12:50 1:00 xXtX • :jxiíí i-jxix xXy m XxX x>X: O N SALE Willi# Nelson Tom Potty St «vi • Wonder Rufus t Cheka ZZ Top Styx Hoad last Sings Kristoffarson Damn the Torpedoes Secret life of Plants Masterjcm Degüello Cornerstone A Different Kind Police Police lagles Karla Bonoff Toto Steve Forbert Jane Aire of Crazy Regatta de Blanc Outkmdos d'Amour The long Run Restless Nights Hydra iackrabbit Slim And the Belvederes (Import) Pere Ubu New Picnic Time (Import) Gang of lour Entertainment (Import) 5.71 5.99 9.19 5.99 199 5 91 S. 49 5.49 5 49 5.71 5 99 599 5.71 7.49 1.49 1.49 TICKETS 12/5 Tori Potty 11/13 Ramones 11/15 PHil Woods Qua r io t 11/11 Commander Cody 11/19 I J . Thomas Opera House 7.25 A WHO 4.00 AWHQ 5.00 AWHQ S.00 *««. Ao4. 5.50/4.59 local and impot t new wave single* 5 0 4 W E S T S¿4thi S T 3 I §m m m 8 Xv? M m:X:X: m i H ÜI:X;X 1Ié3 X:X 22 N O V E M B E R 13, 1979 D A Y T IM E M O V IE S * * f f l GD Cotton Com es To H arlem " (1970) Godfrey Cambridge, Raym ond St Jacques A free-for-all erupts when a bale of cotton co n ­ taining $87 000 in extortion money is lost som ewhere in Harlem O © * + ' / * "C h a n g e Of Habit" (1969) Elvis Presley. Mary T y le r Moore. A young novitiate and a doctor becom e deeply attached while working together in a ghetto clinic. ",Ha rPer.KVaMe? PTA ( 19781 Barbara E de ". R ° ""V Cox. A very .berated mother intentionally shakes up the conservative standpoint of the local school board (PG-1 h r . 42 min.) 1:00 3:00 5:00 E V E N IN G 8:00 _ „ 0 3 0 ® 0 ® 0 ® ( D ( i a ) ©news O CD © Z O O M (R) ® ® B E W IT C H E D The queen of the witches abdicates and appoints Sam antha to succeed her © 35 CD ® N E W L Y W E D G A M E _ „ O Q . P O L IT IC A L P R O G R A M Q (Q) S H A N A N A O ® T IC T A C D O U G H w w n w 6:30 ^ p a r t ^ r j r l e n d ^ *^ 1 O © © M A C N E I L / L E H R E R R E P O R T © ® H O L L Y W O O D S Q U A R E S t3lKS B ° b ' n,° 9'V'n9 3 P3r,y ' n honor of a tuesday television © ® I D R E A M O F J E A N N IE Locked in a safe bound for the moon, Jeannie has many narrow escapes. (Part 2) © 3 5 P M. M A G A Z IN E 2 3 ® H A P P Y D A Y S A G A IN Richie seeks advice on self-defense from Fonzie after being em barrassed by two roughnecks in front of his date f f l ® N E W S CD © M l V IE JO Y YO 7:00 0 3 0 ® f f l ® S H E R IF F L O B O / B J A N D TH E B E A R Lobo and two other law officials (Slim Pickens. Ed Lauter), engaged in tough com ­ petition for a police award, race to find the loot BJ supposedly stole (Conclusion) O 1_L O G3D C A L IF O R N IA F E V E R Vince and R o ss accept a concert gig that turns out to be too good to be true 6 M O V IE Hom ebodies (1974) Ruth McDevitt. Peter Broceo. Faced with eviction because of urban renewal, six elderly people fight the establishment in m urderous w ays (P G -1 hr 36 min ) O © © C O N S U M E R H O T LIN E © ® © 3 5 f f l © H A P P Y D A Y S Joanie decides from to cheesecake when Chachi gets a job as a photoqra- shortcake to go pher s assistant. ffl ó G U N S M O K E Bull Bannock, retired heavyweight champion, tries to make a place for himself in D odge City CD © L O S R IC O S T A M B IE N L L O R A N >0 A U S T IN C O M M U N IT Y C O L L E G E The Nominating Process 7:30 O © © O V E R E A S Y Guest Dizzy Gillespie. f f i ® ® © 2 ) © A N G I E A n g ie 's unpredictable uncle (Danny DeVito), recuperating from an operation, m oves in with his bag of tricks on the formerly peaceful Benson household CD © E N R IQ U E E L P O L IV O Z 10 A U S T IN C O M M U N IT Y C O L L E G E Advertising 8:00 O 3 O © I D ® M O V IE * A * The Duchéss And The Dirtwater Fox (1976) George Segal, Goldie Hawn. A con man teams up with a dance hall singer to hold onto stolen m oney that he re-stole from care­ less bank robbers © 33! O © T H E S T R E E T S O F L.A. A woman (Joanne W oodward) outraged by a m eaningless and malicious crime sets out on her own through the Los Angeles barrios to catch the three hoodlum s responsi­ ble. O © 8 N O V A The C ase Of The Ancient A stronauts” Surprising explanations for stories of ancient visitors to Earth are offered. CD GD © 55 f f l 3 T H R E E S C O M P A N Y Everyone thinks C hrissy is a goner after she bum ps her head in the bathtub and ends up in the hospital. f f l ® M A R Y T Y LE R M O O R E T e d 's wish finally com es true when he ¡s invited to reign as Grand Marshal for the circus parade CD © IR IS C H A C O N '0 A L T E R N A T IV E V IE W S N E W S M A G A Z IN E "L o sin g Ground: The Fight To Save Barton C re e k" 8:30 © ® © 35) f f l © T A X I Latka blows his life’s savings on a luxurious penthouse after his flea-trap apartment is demolished, f f l ® B O B N E W H A R T Bob and Emily’s vacation to M exico has to be cancelled due to a slap on the back 9:00 6 M O V IE The Passage (1979) Anthony Quinn, Jam es Mason. A for­ eign guide tries to help an American family elude their Nazi pursuers and escape occupied France safely by going through a treacherous, snowy mountain pa ss (R-1 hr., 38 min.) O © 8 W O R L D La Mai Vie " An intimate look at the lives, hopes and disillusionments of two men who came to France from Algeria is presented © ® © 35) f f l © H A R T TO H A R T Jonathan and Jennifer become involved in a life or death struggle with a band of killers when their mansion is stripped by sophisticated thieves f f l © M O V IE * * "T h u rsd a y’s G a m e " (1971) B ob Newhart, Gene Wilder Even after the Thursday night poker gam e is discontinued, a pair of married men still insist on their "night out with the boys ." CD © M A M A C A M P A N ITA 10 B A R T O N C R E E K W A T E R S H E D S T U D Y 10:00 © © © ® O ® O © © ® ffl ® © 35 ffl © ffl ® N E W S Q © © D i C K C A V E T T Guest: Mary Soa m e s CD © P E C A D O D E A M O R CD © M O V IE (C O N T D ) 10:15 10:30 O © O ® f f l ® T O N IG H T Host: Johnny Carson. Guests: Richard Mitchell, Bette Midler, Arnold Schwarzenegger. O 33) O © B A R N A B Y J O N E S Barnaby is hired by a British intelli­ gence agency to track down an elusive East European agent (R) Q © © C A P T IO N E D A B C N E W S © ® f f l © B A R N E Y M IL L E R A shooting incident leads the detec­ tives to find out the difference between sex therapy and prostitution. (R) © @ A D A M -12 A bitter ex-cop and a Hollywood starlet present prob­ lems for Malloy and Reed. CD © 24 H O R A S 10:45 in 6 O N LO C A TIO N : B IL LY C R Y S T A L The comic who started nightclubs and then became Jodie on the hit com edy series " S o a p ” returns to the stage with a riotous act. 11:00 O © i® S O U N D S T A G E “The Doobie Brothers” The Doobie Brothers provide one of the se aso n ’s finest hours of televised rock music as they perform "M m ute By Minute," "Listen To The M u sic” and many others, ff l ® M O V IE * ★ " A Reflection Of Fear" (1973) Robert Shaw, Sally Kellerman A man and his m istress are deeply affected by the actions of the m an’s beautiful but schizophrenic daughter © 3 5 S T R E E T S O F S A N F R A N C IS C O A young ex-hooker returns to her former way of life to help Stone and R ob bins find the murderer of her friend. 11:03 © ® f f l © A B C M O V IE ★ ★ ’/* "C re sc e n d o ” (1972) Stefanie Powers, Jam es O lson While trying to write a thesis, a m usic student is trapped in a web of deceit and terror. (R) C D © R E P O R T E R 41 11:30 G ) © M O V IE "E l Hom bre Q ue Debia Una M uerte" Amelia Bence, C ar­ los Cores. © 31 O © C B S L A T E M O V IE For N o w " (1976) Elliott Gould, Diane Keaton Two unhappily married people find they can t live apart either and attempt a variety of m ethods to save their marriage. I Will. I Will 11:45 6 M O V IE Covert Action” (1978) David Janssen, Arthur Kennedy. A professional spy becom es involved in intrigue and espionage when he is handed a dangerous assignm ent in the Greek Islands (1 hr., 37 min.) O @ O 6 0 3 ® T O M O R R O W © © T H E FBI ff l ® f f l ® N E W S ff l © P T L C L U B © (Q) PT L C L U B O © N E W S 11:20 11:40 12:00 1:00 1:10 1:38 « r w Fernando Allende, Spanisb-language film star, makes his Am erican film debut in “The Streets of L.A.,” a dra­ ma about a woman (played by Joanne Woodward) who, incensed by a meaningless crime, embarks on a pursuit of three teen-aged hoodlums in a Los Angeles barrio Tuesday, Nov. 13, on CBS. (Stations reserve the right to m ake last-m inute changes.) © K M O L ( N B C ) San Antonio © K E N S (CBS) San Antonio O K C E N ( N B C ) Tem ple O K T B C (CBS) Austin O K L R N ( P B S ) Austin-San Antonio © K W T X (CBS) Waco Cable @ Cable © Cable ® Cable © Cable ® Cable ® ffl K T V T (IND.) F o rt Worth Cable ® © K S A T ( A B C ) San A nto nlo (w ith A C T V ) Cable 35 ffl K V U E ( A B C ) Austin Cable © ffl K T V V ( N B C ) Austin Cable ® 6 H B O (subscribers only) Cable ® 10 A C T V (com munity T V ) (with 12) Cable 35 THE BRANDING IRON Fri. & Sat. 6 p.m. on ... Beef & Beach Buffet Prim e Rib & You r Favorite S e a f o o d s ALL YOU C A N EAT • f 0 9 3 Prime Rib Boiled S h r im p Fried S h r im p Stu ffed S h r im p Stu ffed C r a b B a k e d Fish C a tf is h A l a s k a n K in g C r a b O y ste rs Scallops S h r im p Creole Frog Legs B a k e d Potatoes S a l a d Bar N O W S E R V I N G COCKTAILSf- 6 h. miUt past Oak Hill On Hwy. 71 West 263-2827 CHRISTMAS BREAK! DISCOUNTED GROUP AIRFARES Reserve no w — Lim ited seats available O W N ERS: Linda Daenzer Frank Beck STYLISTS: Silver Gay Krickitt David LOS ANGELES SAN FRANCISCO NEW YORK 5221.00 $223.00 5286.00 CHICAGO DENVER M IA M I 5207.00 5182.00 5206.00 $50.00 DEPOSIT FOR RESERVATIONS First C o m e First Serve call 4 7 4 -6 6 6 0 819 W . 24th 503 W E S T 38th H A IR D ESIG N S FO R M EN AND W OMEN _________ 451-8139 Concert to feature British composers The music of English composers will be featured at 8 the UT p.m. Wednesday when 200 musicians from Symphonic Band, the new the Wind Ensemble and Symphonic Winds perform at the LBJ Auditorium in a free concert. Conductor Thomas Lee describes the program as “ an evening of the reserved elegance of British band m usic.” The concert features the music of English composers Gustav Holst, William Byrd, Ralph Vaughan Williams and Gordon Jacob and Welchman Alun Hoddinott. Guest conductor Je rry Junkin will conduct the entire assemblage of musicians in Gustav Holst’s “ Jup iter.” from the suite “ The P lanets.” Holst’s “ Moonside M arch” will be played by the 40- m em ber Symphonic Winds. The Wind Ensemble will plav Holst’s “ Suite in E-flat M ajor.” Under Thomas Lee the Symphonic Band will play Gor­ don Jacob’s rendition of William Byrd’s 16th century music from “ The William Byrd Suite.” Two song suites for band from the music of Ralph Vaughan Williams, “ Folk Song Suite” and “ Sea Songs,” will be performed by the Symphonic Winds and the Wind Ensemble respectively. Alun Hoddinott s medley of “ Welch Airs and Dances” will also be performed by the Symphonic Band. An unusual addition to the evening program is an an- tiphonal brass choir playing the finale from the Kalin­ nikov Symphony No. 1” from the back of the auditorium. Go a n d e x h ila ra te yourself! To p u t it a s ju d ic io u sly as p ossible, A IN T M IS B E H A V IN ' h a s a fir s t a ct th a t will k n o c k y o u r ea rs o ff a n d a s e c o n d th a t will c o m e b a ck fo r th e rest o f you W a lte r K err, N e w Y ork T ie r e e A I N ’T M IS B E H A VIN ' is one o f th e m o s t en joyable e v en in g s I ve ev e r sp e n t in th e th eatre. P ick a n y o n e o f the 25 n u m b ers — a n d y o u ’ve p ic k e d a w inner. D o y o u rse lf a fa v o r - G O !” - G l e n n e C a r r ie . UPI u BEST MUSICAL The C ultural Entertainm ent Com m ittee of the Texas U nion presents 1 9 7 8 T O N Y AW ARD W IN N E R \ \ / TUESDAY, DECEMBER 4 MUNICIPAL AUDITORIUM 8:00 PM Ticket sales for CEC holders begin Tuesday, Oct 29 $ 9 ,7 .4 General public ticket sales begin Nov 1 $ 12 ,10 ,7 Hogg Box Office ! 10 6 weekdays ALL SEATS RESERVED For information call 471 1444 Cultural Entertainm ent. Committees f a n ta stic! A I N ’T M IS B E H A V IN ' is q u ite s im p ly a B ro a d w a y s h o w yo u w ill n ev er fo r g e t. A go rgeous, jo y o u s c e leb ra tio n !’’ - C lhre B a r n e s . N e w Y ork P o s t A I N T M IS B E H A V IN ’ is b la zin g ly en tertaining. A n im m e n s e ly a p p ea lin g h it sh o w w ith irresistible joy. g la d n e ss a n d en ergy. ” — Jack KroIL N ew sw eek 7 reminder . . . T h e deadline for applying for the position o f M a n a g in g E d i t o r o f T h e D a i l y T e x a n f o r s p r in g '8 0 is T uesday, N o v e m b e r 2 0. at 1:30 p.m. A pplication s are at atlable in T S P 3 3 04, a n d m u st be re tu rn ed co m p le te d u ith a le tte r o f application to th a t loca tio n by- deadlin e sta ted above. reminder If you reserved a copy o f the 1979 C A C TU S Yearbook, you ma) now pick up your co p y . C om e by Texas Stu d en t P u b lica tion s B uilding Room 3 . 2 0 0 betw een 8 : 3 0 a.m. and 1:30 p.m. M onday-Friday to claim your Cactus Y earbook. V ph oto I.D. is required. THETEXAS TAVERN Tuesday SOUL NIGHT Wednesday DISCO Thursday REGGAE NIGHT EXTREME HEAT $1 w/UTID; $2 Others Friday Saturday THE SCANNERS $1 w UT ID ; $2 Others Monday Night Football Each Week on the Big Screen at 8 PM 8:30-11:30 p.m. 8:30-11:30 p.m. 8:30-11:30 p.m. 9:30 p.m .-1:30a.m . 9:30 p .m .-l :30 a.m . y Texas Union ion lupe 24th & Guadalupe OH ---------------------------- N “Why didn’t I come here first?” 9: 30 -6:00 HI OH M E S A I) H U E A U S T I N 346-0131 cTc The Texas Cattle Company 477-7810 1914 G uadalupe “on the drag" Featuring “ the most w anted B B Q in A u s t i n *’ Convenient Drive-Through Catering for any size group WEEKLY COUPON SPECIALS M O N D A Y Chopped Beef Sandwich 2 f o r i 1 TUESDAY Sliced Beef Dinner $229 W E D N ESD A Y Chopped Beef Sandwich with Loaded Baked Potato $J99 TH U RSD AY Chopped B eef Dinner with free soft drink $ |9 9 FRIDAY Smoked Ham or Sausage Sandwich with one fixin’ $ |7 9 MON-SAT 11:00-12:30 SUN 5:00-11:00 478-8257 SOMETHING NEW FROM 2-8 OUR NACHO & BEER SPECIAL MON. TUES. WED. FREE PITCHERS of Soft Drinks or $1.00 PITCHER OF BEER with 15" Pixza FROSTED M U G S & PITCHERS DEE G EE’S PIZZA DOBIE MALL — LOWER LEVEL 2021 GUADALUPE 4. 1-' 5p m S a t tfíam 5pm S u n d a y • lor self-service h ) p n i - qinnys COPYING SERVICE jf TOP Quality FAST Service FREE Consultation With the Experts 44 D o b i e Ma l l 4 7 6 - 9 1 7 1 GUARANTEED Graduate School Quality for yo u r Thesis, Dissertation or Professional Report 25°/o or 100% cotton paper FREE Parking In Dobie Garage P L U S all the Required Bindings Along with our delicious Texas-sized cookies, we also bake seven different flavored regular cookies, fresh every hour. Just come on by and see the biggest assortment o f Austin's Most Munchable Cookies. ^ U p p e r Level — Highland Mall 458-3251 j ^ Open 2pL ; am ™ 3 5 0 0 G u a d a lu p e D ^ S c O T H E Q U e j 453 - 9331 ^ B U R G E R S V & BEER Sunday 6:30 - 8:30 \ All you can eat and drink Guys $3 Gals $2 v U N E S C O R T E D L A D I E S s e a te d at th e b ar 75 highballs $1 00 shake drinks HAPPY HOUR 2 : 0 0 - 8 : 3 0 [Roubles for the prce of singles F R EE hors d oeuvres daily 5 - 7 30 v Y j u d c c y ScjtU U tay Y SEXIEST fig u r e Content 50 - WflTfST $se Ccuplea. L A D I E S DISCO NEW YORK 5IYLE IN T|1 ~ rtc&-nw i DISCO MEW YORK STYLE **;Tm a ~ouch Of CONTEST :«C BECK ‘20 OSf -O TX M1NNCR m o n d a y television 21 NOVEMBER 12. 1978 1:00 3:00 4:30 EVENING 6:00 6:30 DAYTIME MOVIES f f l ® * ★ ’/» "C harlie Chan At The O lym pics” (1S37) Warner Oland, Katherine DeMiMe. When m urder interrupts the Olympics, Charlie Chan steps in. * * * Blue Hawaii' O 'ID (1962) Elvis Presley, Angela Lansbury When a soldier returns to his Hawaiian home, he takes a job with a tourist bureau against the advice of his parents "W ho Is Killing The Great Chefs Of Europe?” (1978) George Segal. 6 Jacqueline Bisset A fast-food chain king tries to keep his ex-wife from being the next victim of a killer who is m urdering well-known chefs in the same way they prepare their most famous dishes. (PG-1 hr., 52 min.) a @ O S O ® Q (3D CD (D 0D ( T jn e w s O CD 8)ZOOM (R) CD ® BEWITCHED Endora’s doctor cures Darrin's cold but produces strange side effects. © © 0 3 3 ) NEWLYWED GAME O S ) O ® Tic TAC DOUGH O © HOLLYWOOD SQUARES 6 HOLLYWOOD David Sheehan presents up-close reports on the people and events which are making news in the production and glamor capital of the movie industry. Q GB EYES OF CENTRAL TEXAS O CD ® M A C N E !L / LEHRER REPORT © 5 MATCH GAME © ® I DREAM OF JEANNIE Jeannie is accidentally locked in a safe destined for the moon. (Part 1) ® To) P.M MAGAZINE 2 ) CDHAPPY DAYS AGAIN When the boys stage a sit-in protest against a 10 p.m curfew, they w ind up in jail for breakinq and enterina © ® NEWS CD © EL CHAPULIN COLORADO 7:00 Q U O 6 © D LITTLE HOUSE ON THE PRAIRIE A con man (Ray Walston) attem pts to bilk money from the W alnut Grove residents by persuading them to bet on the new "w hite hope,' Jonathan Garvey ® i t O T, THE WHITE SHADOW Classroom theory gives way to reality when Reeves teaches about venereal disease and one of his players proves to have it 6 MOVIE "Tom m y (1975) Roger Daltrey, Ann-M argret Based on the rock opera by The Who A young boy struck deaf, dum b and blind by the sight of his father's murder becomes a m odern-day messiah exp lo it­ ed by a greedy uncle and a worshipping public (PG-1 hr 50 min ) O ÜD § SAN ANTONIO CITY COUNCIL REPORT © 5 © 10 © 2 20 / 20 © £> GUNSMOKE A young farm er’s ex-partner in crim e h¡c n¡ri#rior»H and his brother figure in the discovery of his forgotten past. CD © LOS RICOS TAMBIEN LLORAN 10 ACC SPOTLIGHT O © C5)OVER EASY Guest Aaron Copland. CD © e s t a NOCHE OLGA 10 ESPIRITU DE AZTLAN 7:30 8.00 O ® O ® © ® MOVIE * * * "The Ornen" (1976) G regory Peck. Lee Remick An American diplom at learns, to his horror, that the child he raised as his own is possessed by a powerful demon 0 0 O ® M T S ‘ H Charles returns from a wild binge in Tokyo positive that he had a great tim e but unsure of what he did Q © t j w o r l d "T he Real War In Space” The technology of space research and weapons development and the possibility of a real war in space are examined © ® © Cowboys (1967) Julie © ® MOVIE Andrews, Carol Charming A pair of newcomers to New York catch their landlady running a white slave ring CD © HOGAR. DULCE HOGAR 10 NOVELS ABOUT TEXAS WOMEN 8:20 €D ® N F L FOOTBALL Philadelphia Eagles at Dallas "T horoughly M odern Milhe” 10 LE MORT D’ARTHUR 8:30 O 53) O (3D WKRP IN CINCINNATI Johnny Feve' involves the station in quite a hassle when he jokingly tells his listeners to dump their ga r­ bage at City Hall and they do it. © © SUPER ESTELAR MUSICAL 10 RECYCLING 8:45 9:00 © IT O 5 ) LOU GRANT Billie finds herself in the protective custody of a male chauvinist policeman (Richard Jaeckel) because of what she knows in a grand jury case. 6 MOVIE "ic e C astles" (1979) Lynn-Holly Johnson, Robby Benson A prom ising young figure skater and her boyfriend find sudden success hard to cope with when she is chosen to tram for a pre-Olympic com pe­ tition. (PG-1 h r , 49 min.) O © 5 2 A N E FONDA Oecar-winning actress and political activist Jane Fonda is viewed through photographs, interviews and him clips from her work © 13 M AM A CAMPANITA 10 BOTTOM LINE 10 CAPITAL EYE O 3 0 n o i O ? © 9 © 4 NEWS O © 8 DICK CAVETT Guest Bernardo Bertulocci © 13 PECADO DE AMOR 9:30 10:00 10:15 © fj MOVIE (CONT O) 10:30 O © O ® © ® TONIGHT Guest host David Letterm an Guest Dr Wayne Dyer Patti D'Arbar.ville, Harry Chapin © 5 0 O ? HARRY O A wealthy man invites Harry to his home in tro ­ duces him to the family, then asks him to find out which one of them is trying to kill him €> © 8 (CAPTIONED ABC NEWS © 51) 24 HORAS © $J © ¡6: €D 3 NEWS 10:45 11:00 A HOLLYWOOD David Sheehan presents up-close reports on the people and events which are making news in the produt t on and alam or capital ol the movie industry O © 8 ¡MASTERPIECE THEATRE Poldark II" W arieggan hnds out about Morwenna and Drake's secret relationship, Poldark head', for France to rescue Dr Enys and finds Drake stowed away on board the rescue goes smoothly until they reach the Channel (Part 4 of 131 (Rl © $ RAY OLBURN "R ice Football Highhghts © 5 WILD, WILD WEST © '1Ü. A D A M -12 Malloy and Reed search for an elusive bar girl who can help to clear an officer of a blackm ail charge f f i 3 (STAR TREK © 13j REPORTER 41 8 MOVIE Ashanti (1979) Michael Caine, Rex Harrison A d e te r­ mined doctor sets off across the Sahara m hot pursuit of a group of Arab slave traders who kidnapped his wife (R-1 hr , 57 m in ) © ® NOTRE DAME FOOTBALL HIGHLIGHTS © TD MOVIE “Pájaros De C ristal" Meche Ortiz Alba Arnova 11:40 G 11 O 2 MCMILLAN A WIFE Mac mij Sally try to discover who is attem pting to convince a recant widow that her dead husband's spirit has returned to torm ent her. 11:45 © 10; STREETS OF SAN FRANCISCO A young g .rl s ¡ fe is endan gered when she witnesses the m urder of her mother s boyfriend 12:00 O >2 O 6 CD Í ) TO M ORROW -Guest host Betty Rollin Guests Author Norman Cousins, Jane Curtin. © 3,PTL CLUB 12:30 f f i J ) NIGHT GALLERY “ Dear Joan W e re Going To Scare You To Death Practitioners of black magic try to scare a woman to death 11:15 11:20 11:30 12:15 1:00 1:17 " _ O 6 NEWSWATCH PRESENTS © * © 4, NEWS G i i PTL CLUB ( J 5 j NEW8 O K M O L ( NB C ) San Antoni o Q KENS (CBS) San Antoni o O KCEN ( NBC) Te m p le O KTBC (CBS) Austi n O K R L N ( PBS) San Antoni o © K W T X (CBS) Waco © K R L U (PBS) Austin Cab¡e ® Cable 53) Cable ® Cable CD Cable (f Cable ® Cable f © K T V T ( I N D . ) F o r t Wor th © KSAT (ABC) San Antonio © K V U E ( AB C ) Austin © K T V V ( N B C ) Austin 6 HBO ( subscri ber s o n l y ) to ACT V ( c o m m u n i t y T V ) Cable ® nth ACTV , Cable 1® Cable CD Cable ® Cable r® with ti. Cable 5® 2 ] Icxas Union SANTA RITA ROOM O p e n fo r Lunch 11 -2 D a ily Texas U n io n T h ird Level Special every Monday: Soup and Salad Bar for the same price as the Salad Bar 0017’ f t I t * \ a * l n í u n D i n t r i g S * r v i « f THE GREAT ALASKAN KING CRAB FEAST 1 2 lb. Alaskan King Crab Baked Potato with all the trimmings Unlimited Salad Bar L hoice o f B ree rage 5 >.95 per person Sun., Mon., & Tues. evenings pelican'/ wharf Riverside Dr. at S. First, 478-5733 alanna P e o p l e >ri 11 ¿ lliei r f r i ei i ds to a n d no t ju>t Ixx • . f i t s m e n |k* 11 > 1 v< • • a use Aloe Vera Acne Care N atural and wonderfully soothing E v e r y product contains the remarkable Aloe Vera gel proven effective in the treatm ent of problem skin. Alanna also offers the amazing Aloe Vera \o n -S u rg ica l F a ce lift and complete line of sxin and haircare products. Call for a free gift and private demonstration 836-3860 10 a m -4 p.m. or visit our office salon in the Millican Building 400 E a st Anderson No. 304. r S u pie t A /a tu ta L ___ - , / — _ — 1—Tncxi S x e á ta u ta n L ^ ^ ^ "14P i HP 11^ i $// Ifou (?an £at Special - $1.75 1910 Whiti5 Ave (Near Dobie Mall] 476*71 38 20 O CD TOWN AND COUNTRY f f l ® COMMUNITY CALENDER 03 ® AQRI TODAY 0 3 © SENIOR FORUM 6:15 6:20 6:25 6:30 O (S ) TODAY IN SAN ANTONIO G (ED GOOD DAY, SAN ANTONIO! O ® LITTLE RASCALS Q C D NEWS © 35 GOOD MORNING SAN ANTONIO 3 3 © R E B O P (MON) f f l © Q U E PASA, U S.A.? 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S a tu rd a y ANGEL SUCIiERAS BAND Sunday ANGEL SUCHERAS COLA RODRIQUEZ ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ TOUCH OF GRASS N OW A P P E A R IN G T U E S .-S A T Michael Ballew Sun nights Major credit cards accepted Never a cover charge Banquet & party facilities ’ s 2700 W Anderson In In The V itla g e ^ *0" * ^ JOIN US FOR MONDAY NIGHT FOOTBALL p r e s e n t s ^ ^ Q ★ Tomorrow Night ★ THE RAMONES The Skunks ★ Thursday ★ A n Fuming with ... THE PHIL WOODS QUARTET ★ Friday ★ THE AMAZING RHYTHM ACES The Stephen Doster Band ★ Sunday, November 18th ★ COMMANDER CODY Whiskey Drinkin’ Music ★ Wednesday, November 21st ★ An Evening w ith .TT~ THE ART ENSEMBLE OF CHICAGO ★ Saturday, November 24th ★ ERIC JOHNSON VASQUEZ. . . (Continued from Page 9.) tion for \asq u ez s classes. These principles focus on specific physical laws, which include going with gravity whenever possible, knowing that for every cause there is an equal and opposite effect, and understanding counter­ balances, centrifugal and centripital force. is a ttra c te d Em otionally. Vasquez to Lewitzky “because there is a real affinity for the way she works in me — there is sensitivity to things around her She knows her body extrem ely well and is able to apply that knowledge in teaching.’ When she returned to Texas in the latter part of the summer, Vasquez conducted a six-week workshop which was heavily influenced by these principles The workshop was designed to “ feed the total dancer.” The sum m er program attracted dancers from the departm ent, the community, and other companies, drawing together different backgrounds and varying degrees of skill. Every day students had technique class, an improvisation class, a composition class, and a chance to perform original m aterial as well as m aterial by other choreographers in a performance in early September. Her dancers are not encouraged to mimic and copy; they are alloVed to explore and find their own dance vocabulary. She explains, “ We each have our own dance — we just have to find it Convincing students of this is how I approach choreography. If they would just listen, there is a dance inside. And then they can edit, shape, and apply that critic’s eye so that the final product is well crafted.” The result is a group of dancers who are guided toward an intelligent, sound understanding of their art form. Vasquez notes that “ m ore dancers now finish the four- year program than ever before because each year is a growing process.” Two weeks ago Dance Repertoire Theatre, sponsored by the D epartm ent of Drama, was formed. With 16 dancers and 16 apprentices (understudies), the newly formed company will build a repertoire of ballet, modern, and jazz pieces that can be retained each year, allowing dances to have a continued life-span For the first time. University dancers will have the opportunity to perform more often and to perform outside the University Vasquez s personal goals include compiling a paper on Lew itzky’s lectu re teaching philosophy, providing demonstrations in public elem entary schools, and con­ tinuing the sum m er workshop as an annual event. But top on the list is reinforcing the standards for perform ance excellence that she and other instructors of the dance program have set: ‘‘We have the facilities and the talent to help launch a stronger approach to dance. Dance in a university environment is valid." SIS*/, BARTON SPRINGS RD. 477*9761 17th a n d San A ntonio St. 474-9527 v / ' hours: 12 to 5 tues. ■fri. P E R M S & H E N N A H A I R S T Y L E S FOR G U Y S & GALS 114 E. S I X T H ST. Vi BLOCK O F F C ON GR E S S 476-8363 fo r a p p o in tm e n t television 19 Group demands tim equal as Redgrave *1979 The New York Times NEW YORK — Though production is scheduled to begin soon on a made-for-television movie starrin g V anessa R edgrave a s a survivor of the Auschwitz concentration cam p, the debate over that casting continues. In California an organization calling itself the Com ­ m ittee for Equal Tim e has been form ed, demanding that the Columbia Broadcasting System , which is scheduled to show the film , grant an equal amount of broadcast tim e to what is being called “ the other sid e .” It has suggested showing a “ R oots” type of program about Israel. While the com m ittee has denounced the scheduled program and has been joined by som e West C oast enter­ tainment figures, CBS has said it would stand by its casting decision. The network also ridiculed the demand for equal time, saying it could not “ return to an e ra when art and politics were inseparable.” Since the announcement that M iss R edgrave — a vocal proponent of the Palestinian cause in the Middle E a s t — would play the role of a half-Jew ish P arisian woman, Fania Fenelon, who escaped exterm ination at Auschwitz, there has been considerable pressu re directed at CBS to rem ove M iss R edgrave from the cast. The movie will focus on the life of M iss Fenelon, who is now living in Fran ce. She escaped death at Auschwitz when she w as picked to sing and play with, and tran scribe m usic for, an all-woman orchestra in Birkenau, which w as the exterm ination center at Auschwitz. The movie will be directed by Joseph Sargent, whose previous directorial assignm ents include “ The Taking of Pelham 1-2-3,” “ M acArthur” and “ White Lightning,” it was learned, although that selection has not yet been an­ nounced by CBS. In addition sources close to the production say that the a c tre sse s M arisa Berenson and Ja n e Alexander have also been c ast in the film , which is expected to go into produc­ tion soon in order to be broadcast over the network early next year Linda Yellin Productions will produce the film for the network. Though there has been a sm attering of support for the project since it w as announced m ost expressed reaction has been negative, and it has ranged from telegram s of protest to dem ands for M iss R ed grave's withdrawal and for equal time. Som e protesters have withdrawn p rojects from CBS. And the author and playw righ t Paddy Chayefsky has suggested that while he considered the casting “ a shabby thing for CBS to do sim ply to gain a look-in audience,” and that he w as again st it, he thought it “ m akes m ore sense to forget it because it’s not worth the attention.” Miss R edgrave has vowed to rem ain in the film , and Vanessa Redgrave as Julia Arthur Miller, who has written the script, said in an inter­ view that dem ands to have her removed were “ a s political a s when I w as blacklisted.” The Simon Wiesenthal Center for Holocaust Studies in Los Angeles has demanded that CBS “ apologize for the in­ sensitivity and has said it would cam paign to have M iss R ed grave’s casting reversed. David Wolper the producer of “ Roots, said he had cancelled a CBS p roject in protest and the Anti-Defamation League of B ’nai B ’rith protested the network s “ profound lack of sensitivity and un­ derstanding.’ Subsequently, M iss Fenelon m ade a special trip to New York to m eet with C BS o fficials to argue against the casting of M iss R edgrave. She also expressed disapproval of M iller's script, adapted from her book “ Playing for Time, a s one in which “ the whole a t­ m osphere is false. A sim ilar protest cam e from the Zionist Organization of Am erica On the West Coast, the C om m ittee for Equal Tim e was formed. It includes such entertainm ent figures a s Martin Balsam , Mel Brooks. Tony LoBianco, Harvey Lem beck, Ron Carey, Mel Shavelson and Steve Landesberg, and w as spearheaded by the producer-writer L arry G elbart and the producer Lila G arrett The com m ittee ran an advertisem ent in The Los Angeles Tim es, carrying 2,000 nam es and assertin g that, because of M iss R ed grave’s support of the Palestine Liberation Organization, her appearance in the role of a Jew ish heroine who survived the holocaust clearly becom es a political statem e n t.” It did not want M iss R edgrave rem oved from the film , the com m ittee said in the ad, because “ this could be con­ strued as blacklisting ” However, it wanted equal tim e for “ the presentation of a dram atic program of the sam e length in an equal tim e slot, by a top d ram atic w riter, em phasizing the other side of the question.” Reached in Los Angeles, G elbart said that in his view “ C B S’s insensitivity to the issue loom s larg er than the issu e.’ He added that it “ took < ourage for som e people to sign the ad ” “ You know,” he said “ there are only three buyers out here, the netw orks.” Yet he said, “ They did sign mainly I guess because they were asking. Who will speak for Fenelon?’ ” CBS, in a statem ent in response to the demand for equal time, said “ V anessa R edgrave w as recom m ended for her role in Playing for T im e’ because of her artistic abilities, not h*-r political views. C BS sincerely reg rets that this casting has offended som e people. However, this does not give rise to questions of equal time. We cannot accept this petition’s attem pt to return to an era when art and politics were inseparable, and where an individual’s personal views were seem ingly m ore im portant than his or her talen t.” THE DOLLAR g STRETCHER \ ONLY129 $ CHILI-CHEESE D O G S * y i p Ourspeciai.c! recipe a r d a slice c'f Americar cheese A moutc water eg combination Shoemakers to America How to go west without going wild. In a brand of western style boots Dred to go just about anywhere Dexters. With genuine leather uppers, ditched heels and a ook that tames the west. And puts it right at your feet. FOOTGEAR geared to comfort V v V V . V \ _- y_ , — ... y y ^ v ^ \ _ V V V v and quality Good only at participating locations 7 7 0 8 BURNET RD. 1 6 4 4 E. RIVERSIDE v Expire* Nov 18, 1979 Up to ftv« orehws with this coupon 18 Redgrave, CBS profane Jew s’ heritage By Louis Black T h e re a r e s e v e r a l p o in ts r a is e d by the c a s t in g o f V a n e s s a R e d g r a v e a s F a n ia P eelon th a t a r e w orth th in kin g a b o u t, none of th em h a v in g s im p le so lu tio n s. T o o m a n y of the p e o p le p r o te s tin g the d e c isio n w e r e a i o n e t i m e o r a n o t h e r b l a c k l i s t e d t h e m s e lv e s to w an t to open th a t p a r t ic u la r ­ ly v i c i o u s , n a r ro w - m in d e d a n ti- d e m o c r a t ic box. a n d See related story, Page 19. In discussin g the problem, however, there are certain annoying and potentially dangerous fac ts and ideas that com e to light, beginning with the castin g of R edgrave The debate h as sw irled around whether she should be allowed to play the role; not enough attention has been paid to why she w as offered it CBS rather blandly a sse rt; V anessa R edgrave w as recom m ended for her role in Playing for Tim e because of her artistic abilities, not her political v ie w s...” There is a certain tem ptation, based on a belief in the lim itless stupidity of television ex- ecutives, to believe that statem ent. It is a tem p­ tation easily resisted R edgrave is a British Protestant. And CBS would have us believe she w as the first and logical choice to play a half-Jew ish French w oman? R edgrave is a controversial ac tre ss who has done little television. And she seem ed such a natural for the part that CBS didn’t even think about her support of the Palestinian Liberation Organization? Come on, A m ericans are not the rubes that television executives would love to believe they are. With any thought on the question at all, it seem s quite evident that R edgrave w as c ast specifically because the deci­ sion would be controversial. to terrify in g The cold-blooded nature of this castin g is a lit­ tle think about, and b efore P a le stin ia n s and th eir su p p o rte rs ge t too righteous in their protests about R ed grave’s ob­ vious (though not to this w riter) acting talents, how would they feel about Lee Strasb erg or E li Wallach playing Y a ssir A rafat. The other p a rt of this problem is why Redgrave took the role. Outside of her com plete insensitivity to the com plexity of m ost political and social issu es there is a m ore insidious reason. Logically, by taking this role R edgrave that although she fe e ls the d e m o n strate s WU( íl a VWQIE OMELETTES, GINGERGREAD AND S ú t uluVi iy AKhS' COLD AND HOT SOI P DL JOIR, SANDW ICHES. O fER TIIrÍ I ¡11)1 / aR< AW IIOMEA1ADE PIFS AND CAKES< WITH NOTHING H olocaust w as wrong, the horror of the N azis’ attem pted exterm ination of Je w s is not really connected to the existence of the State of Israel. She is not alone in this attem pt to sim plify history. This is not to argue that because of the H olocaust Je w s are allowed to do anything they want. It is to suggest that history is rather in­ tricate and com plicated and it is somewhat ab­ surd to look at current happenings a s though they occur in a vacuum. The situation in the Mid­ dle E a st is painfully com plex The extrem ists on both sides, from the PLO to the m ore militant Z io n ists, a re playing with o pp ressio n and genocide a s though they were saintly go als or worthy ideals. But the situation in the Middle E a st cannot be dealt with without considering the Holocaust. The Holocaust m ay seem to be in the past to us, yet it occurred during the lifetim e of many residents of Israel. Intellectually, it is reasonably easy to rem ove that event from current politics. But having gone through or being aw a re of the n ear genocide of a people, rightly or wrongly, is going to affect contem porary attitudes. The adam ant position of the PLO toward the existence of Israel em an ates from many sim ilar fe a rs and traum as. By accepting this role, R edgrave is profaning the heritage of the Jew ish people a s she is im ­ plicitly implying that their past trau m as can somehow be divorced from Israel and their pre­ sent existence. She is an outsider to the situ a­ tion, both from the Israeli and the Palestinian side, yet she is sublim inally assertin g her right to in tim a te kin d s o f opinion. R ed grave's wanting to do this role would seem to argue that she can play it because she has com passion for humanity. the m o st But R edgrave is laying claim to a superiority to Israelis in believing she can act the role of a Jew ish heroine without bothering to indulge in the responsibility of trying to understand how the experience of the Holocaust would affect a person’s attitude toward survival. H er inhum anity, lack of se n sitiv ity and arrogan ce can only be m atched by the un­ (for ratin gs) of the ex­ believable av arice ecutives who offered the role to her. The real tragedy of this incident is that this story, which is supposed to be about the endurance and stren gth of hum ans, is so surrounded by evidence of their w eaknesses. Silver Dollar North 9102 Burnet Rd. Tuesday Student N ight Pitchers $1.75 Students adm itted free with current I.D. A LITTLE B IT O F T E X A S Silver D ollar South 5337 Hw y. 290 W. (Hwy. 71 W.) Thursday Student Night Pitchers $ 1 .7 5 Students adm itted free with current I.D. S IL V E R C R E E K ★ coming attractions ★ K O K E Appreciation N igh t Nov. 14 Silver Dollar South R a n d y B a r lo w M o e B a n d y N ov. 16th Silver Dollar North $5.00 advance $6.00 door 24-Hour Schedule Information 837-1824 THE KEG “A College Tradition” 7 2 5 W es» 23rd 4 7 7 - 5 5 0 5 M O N D A Y Rocky M ountain H igh $ 1.75 Pitchers & $ 1 .0 0 H igh balls (N o Cover) 3 Hour's Free P a r k i n g in Tri-Towers G a r a g e T H U R S D A Y Rock and Roll Night. $1.75 Pitchers & $ 1 .0 0 H ighballs (No Cover) Y W 9 D A 1P "T w o for Tu esday" All M ixed Drinks and Pitchers of Beer tw o for the price of one cdl night (N o Cover) v , %f sa /‘f-- v m. Wf»*. WEDNKSDAY College N ight The traditional 15* beer PR* and SAT. Ladies $1.00 The K e g ^ XSo Grand* l:v 23rd 24th G u a d a lu p e W ithin w a lk in g distance of UT. STEAKS COOKED OVER MESQUITE COWBOY STYLE! Feeding our Longhorn Fans after the games from 5:00 p.m. — • SIRLOIN STRIP • T-BONE • PORTERHOUSE OPEN 5:00 PM 7 DAYS A WEEK 2 6 6 - I 3Í 5, MAKE TOUR HOLIDAY'PARTY RESERVATIONS NOW. (CAPACITY 23 - 2500) 2 ú r é1 s 22¿2 I ' / ^ V TEXAS 1 TUMBLEWEED LIVE COUNTRY MUSIC WITH CARL HUTCHINS' BAND Jan Sonnenmair, Dally Taxan Staff Marcia Wallace TV success ‘fairy tale’ for actress By Steve Schmepp M arcia W allace headed for New York City on the afternoon of h er college graduation weighing an im ­ m ense 230 pounds and carry in g $150 in h er suitcase, with little idea th a t eight y ea rs la te r she would land a leading role on “ The Bob N ew hart Show.” Now, a fte r com pleting a six-year run w ith th a t show, W allace is in Austin for a three-w eek engagem ent with the St. E d w a rd ’s U niversity T h eater D e p art­ m ent in “ Light Up the Sky.” Originally from Crestón, Iowa, where her parents still live, Wallace says, “ I was a fat kid. I was a c h u b b e tte who looked a good 45. From the tim e I was a kid, people used to come to the door and ask, ‘Is your husband hom e?’ and I would say, ‘I ’m nine years old, give me a break, I ’m nine!’’ Wallace attended Parson’s College in Fairfield, Iowa and took a double m ajor in theater and English. “ At that tim e I was just a sight gag with very little training,” she says. After graduating from college, she went to New York for a career in acting and decided she had to lose some weight. “Clearly, I was not going to work fat because I was not a cute, adorable, roly-poly, little chubbo. I was fat. “ It was a battle, but I won,” Wallace says. “ I ’ve been on every imaginable, crazy diet. Diets where you had to wear rubber gloves to handle m eat and you couldn’t cross Sunset Boulevard past noon.” One of the diets apparently worked because Wallace now weighs 130 pounds, 100 pounds less than when she started. “ Food is no longer my life,” she says. “ I like Italian food, but I've never been a gourmet. A fat person doesn’t say, Oh, wait, I must have a Chateaubriand or I ’m not go­ ing to e a t!’ — you eat four packs of potato chips and 37 cheese puffs.” To support herself in New York, Wallace worked at odd jobs. “ I substitute-taught high school in Harlem, I sold bed sheets, and I typed the original score for ‘Hello Dolly.’ ‘I was later in a nude production of ‘Dark of the Moon’ ... I was not asked to take my clothes off. Only the witches were nude.’ During this tim e I was handing out pictures and resumes. I d hand them out on the street corners, ‘Here I am, take my picture.’” After two years, she was cast for a commercial selling Roman Ravioli. “ They warned m e net toIMfltor eat-thai stuff because I’d have to be doing it < jw aittM er, M l,-& learned the hard-w ay,” she says. “ I was later in a nude production of ‘Daric of the Moon’ . I was asked not to take my clothes off. Only the witches were nude.” Wallace began work with an improvisational group call­ ed “ The Fourth Wall” when a booker for the “ Merv Grif­ fin Show” spotted her. When she later went to California to do the show, a CBS talent scout saw her and offered her a role in “ The Bob Newhart Show.” “ It was a real fairy tale, but if it happened to me. it could happen to anybody. You just have to be willing to stick it out.” Wallace played Carole Kester, the sweet and friendly office receptionist on “ The Bob Newhart Show.” “ It (the role) always had a lot of me in it. She (Kester) was the hub of the office. Everyone knows a woman like her so when people meet me, they think of me as a friend. You get a lot of smiles and th a t’s nice. Working on the show was great — a terrific ex­ perience. Because of my exposure on television, I can now come out and do what I really love and that is th eater.” Wallace sees the job of an actor as a unique one. “ The audience doesn’t really care if you have a headache and you got a tooth pulled today or that you are grumpy. “ To get out on that stage night after night after night takes endurance and it takes discipline. People who make it are extrem ely professional. They show up on time. They know their lines. They do their part. taping a pilot series, W allace recently finished Characters, by the “ M*A*S*H” w riters. She has guest- sta rre d on “ C olum bo,” “ Love A m erican S ty le ,” Bewitched and “ The Love Boat ” Wallace also appeared in “ Lady Sings the Blues” with Diana Ross and has been a regular on the celebrity panels of “ The Match G am e’ and “ The Hollywood Squares." Her theater work ‘Because of my exposure, I can come out and do what I really love and that is theater.’ includes “ Plaza Suite,” “ Born Y esterday," “ A Streetcar Named D esire” and most recently, “ The Owl and the Pussycat,” “ Luv” and “ The Last of the Red Hot Lovers.” Wallace lives in Los Angeles, is single and enjoys scuba diving, reading and going to movies. She also m editates twice a day and likes to eat red hots. “ I quit smoking in January and I started eating red hots for something to do,” she said. When you go into that interview, you have to turn it on. “I want this job. I can do it, watch me. I can be 5-2 to 5-8 — you want tall, you want short, old, fat, young, green hair? — You got it! ’’’ What does Marcia Wallace see for her future? “ I ’d like to continue to grow and do a part which will make people say, Oh, I didn’t know she could do that. What I really love is the stage, so I want to do a Broadway play.” ‘Light up the Sky' misses sunrise By Vikki Barnaart being d ru n k .” “ I ’m never going to see this show again w ithout T hat unfortunate line com es from Moss H a rt’s “ Light up the Sky” — the la te st St. E d w a rd 's U niversity production. It sum s up m y feelings quite well about this p a rtic u la r show. The m ajor problem with the play is not the actors, the production, or the directing, but the play itself. The plot centers around the opening night of another play, the one you have to be drunk to see twice. The play tries to make a statem ent about theater people, but the characters in­ volved have the depth of paper dolls, and so does H art’s statem ent about them. The Director w ears a flashy smok­ ing jacket and swoons a lot with emotion, saying “ I couM just cryyyyy!!!” The Star of the Show is a self-centered shrew bent on making sure people see as much of her as possible the producer is a man who understands a rt only in term s of a buck; how much it will cost and how much it will make. These a re cliche characters with cliche lines, w ith ju»i piafar stupid humor looking as ravishing as possible, and The plot is as predictable as its stereotypes and just as thin and just as difficult to like. Act I serves only to in­ troduce the characters, with little finesse and less im­ agination. Act II is filler between Acts I and III. In Act III, the the easily anticipated denouement comes: playwright Makes His Statem ent; and everyone lives hap- pily ever after. In such a play, it is no wonder the acting is mediocre. Special notice should be made of Timothy Glennon, who played the rich New Yorker producer, the classic self- made man. Mr. Glennon s perfect New York accent worked well with his florid character and he was easy to like. He was also consistent throughout his role, which could not be said of the other actors. Ethel Little, as the colorful, outspoken stage mother of the Star, provided light moments in a play that badly needed it. Her role was “ a bit of foul a ir ” (to use words from H art’s script) in what should have been the magic tim e of the theater, but she consistently and obviously forgot her lines. Marcia Wallace, as the ’50s gangster’s moll who ice skates her way into the m arriage and money, was one of the more likeable people in the play. But Wallace was much more likeable and much funnier after the play was over, when she talked to the audience, thanking them for coming and chit-chatting about her stay in Austin The rest of the cast had problems of inconsistency, both in their respective mannerism s and their parts. Some of this could be attributed to opening night jitters, but it seem s more likely that the script lacked inspiration for tfte actors. The title of the play comes from a line where the producer says the play he’s putting together will put roman candles in the face of Broadway and light up the sky. “ Light up the Sky” doesn’t manage to put even a firecracker on the small stage of Mary Moody Northen Theatre. F in e P e w te r $ 1 5 .0 0 (OVER 1500 STYLES) PLUS BELTS, WALLETS, F E A T H E R H A T BA NDS A N D H A T PINS, WALL ETS, EARRINGS, A N D MORE. Dabby Joan Carol Suzy .4/ Texas S u p er st y les you ran trust o ur auard wi nning hai r stylists to ; keep you looking super! 817 W 2 4 th in T h -T o w a rs S tre a t L a val 477-3361 F r99 P a rk in g in T ri-T o w a rs G arag e books Alien souls saving Earth unbelievable “Strangers Among U s” ; by Ruth Montgomery; Coward, McCann & Geoghegan; 254 pp.; $9.95. By George Coleman The world as we know it is about to undergo one of the m ost d ram a tic changes it “ rum blings beneath the ea rth ... eruptions of ancient volcanoes, and tidal w aves of m onum ental scope” — all of which will p recip itate the m ost d estru ctiv e w ar of our tim es. in history, bringing with Ruth Montgomery believes these changes, as well as the en­ suing war, will happen because of an axial shift of the earth and there is nothing, absolutely nothing, that we can do about it. But take heart. While predicting this doom, Montgomery also assures us that we will not have to deal with these changes alone. There are “ walk-ins" among us — strangers from a world known as the “O therw here." These strangers are “enlightened beings who. after successfully completing numerous incarnations, have attained sufficient aw areness of the meaning of life so that they can forego the time-consuming process of birth and childhood, returning directly to adult bodies.” Montgomery says their goal is purely hum anitarian and that they are returning to earth “ a thousand a week” to guide us through the “ devastating turbulence of the axial shift.” Walk-ins, she says, have been among us since the days of Jesus (whose Christ spirit was also a walk-in) and have inhabited the bodies of both the obscure and famous after their own original souls grew tired or frustrated” with the lives they were leading. Among some of the more famous walk-ins of the past are Mahatma Gandi. Ben Franklin, Abraham Lincoln and Joseph of the Old Testam ent. Sound unbelievable? It is. Montgomery has m ade a fortune on books of this genre (and some were even adm irably w ritten) but this time, with “ Strangers Among U s” she has definitely gone too far. As she herself adm its, the very idea of walk-ins seems “ rather much to swallow" but nonetheless she swallowed it whole F irst of all the book is too pat Contradictions and serious questions are dismissed too conveniently with answ ers that are too simplistic and general. For instance, in pointing out signs of the New Age (which heralds the axial shift). Montgomery says. “ A new breed of young people is determ ined that, rath er than raping Planet E arth, we should be working in harmony with its energies. Many people are returning to natural things, using her­ bal rem em dies practicing holistic medicine. . . baking their own bread, giving birth to babies at home , and are trekking to meditation centers and communes in the United States, Europe. India and elsewhere to learn how to deal with universal energies But haven't people been doing that for decades? Cen­ turies? Montgomery defends UFOs and aliens from other worlds as being a part of the "energy flow . friends of the galaxy who have learned to understand and deal with vibrations and energies." and goes so fa( as to say that aliens are as capable of inhabiting our bodies as are walk-ins. Bugatte — Tumi — Pioneer W ear Leather — Golden Bear All Mean Quality Leather at JLesSter Ice Cream made dails with only fresh in-season fruits and oth er real flavors. S w e e te n e d on lv with h o n e y or fructose. I l n u r s \ o o n - l l >0 p n t - f i e r \ U a \ (2 H i nt k> \<>rth o f th e Foot ball Stadium) 2821 San Jacinto • 477-9965 Clothing, Headgear, Footgear Accessories and Unique Jewelry 1 0 % Discount to UT studants w ith ID and this ad until Sat., 1 1 -1 7 -7 9 . L o w e r L o v o i H ig hland Mali tnaar Fofay's) M r 4 5 8 -4 4 4 4 Open 10-9 mWm She says a “ spacem an” assumed a wealthy Mexican’s body and even cured designer Oscar de la Renta of a chronic backache, before retreating to a pyramid where his spaceship was buried But perhaps this is the most absurd of her statem ents. After all spacemen a re n 't the real problem in her book; structure is, and that is another m ajor criticism of “ Strangers Among U s.” The first half of the book deals alm ost en tirely with M ontgomery's theories and convictions concerning the existence of walk-ms, but then suddenly her emphasis shifts and the rest of the book reads like a “ Future Predictions” issue of the N ational E n q u ire r. The only factual evidence Montgomery offers to support her theories is the “ m essages” she receives "from two dead friends, known as her "guides." One of these, she claims, is the spirit of renowned psychic Arthur Ford (who dictates the m aterial for her books) and the other is a woman she doesn’t know. The very idea of a book w ritten “ through sp irit” was enough to push one of M ontgomery's previous works (“ A World Beyond” ) to the top of the bestseller lists, but the idea is about as dead as Arthur Ford Perhaps next tim e Montgomery will direct her energies toward something less “ cosm ic" - at least, le t’s hope B est Buns In Austin 2200 Guadalupe ( B a s e m e n t ) 4 7 6 - 8 7 3 2 1 705 South Lakeshore ( R i v e r s i d e ) 4 4 2 - 9 5 1 4 ( P Texas Union General Store Open 8 a.m.-5 p.m. M-F New stock of UT T-Shirts! Compare our Prices'. UT aaa Austin T-Shirts Sciioai Suppues Greeting Cards Coarse Schedules Candy Gift Items tmoo Food Coupon Books Sundries music 17 Does your waistline look like too many triple scoops? Modern music mistreated Sym phony's program poorly chosen By Gary N. Reese Igor Stravinsky once remarked that “ modern music has many friends, but few lovers.” lovers There were few indeed at the Austin Symphony O rchestra’s “ Twentieth Century C elebration" Friday night at Municipal Auditorium. But that was not so surprising. What is disturbing is the hatchet job its “ friends” inflict on it all too often. from ranging Conductor Akira Endo led the orchestra through a collection of proven crowd-pleasers, fatuous “Colas Breugnon” O verture by Kabalevsky to Janacek’s monumental “ Sinfonietta.” Crowd-pleasers are nothing to be sneered at (audiences frequently having m ore savvy than the musicians them selves) but, with the single exception of the Janacek, it was all lightweight orchestral works which m ade for a fairly un­ balanced and incoherent program. the The evening commenced with the Kabalevsky, which was con­ ducted with a good deal of swagger and coordination and finished off with a tight climax The Soviet composer is principally known in this country for his “ Comedians" suite, and this overture to his opera bears most of the sam e traits; it is predom inantly per­ cussive and them atically uninteresting It also goes far in confir­ ming that Soviet composers from Prokofiev to K hatchaturian are incapable of writing any music that is not loud and vacuous. the erroneous precept A much different work followed: the “ Adagio for Strings" by American composer Samuel Barber Originally the slow move­ ment of his string quartet which prem iered in 1936, the work is based on a single melody (itself centered on a simple three-note them e) and is treated canonically as the strings are carried higher and higher above the staff with each repetition. Perform ing this piece requires concerted virtuosity from the strings and sure dynamic control from the conductor. Aside from the slurred entrances and some messy work in the violas, the orchestra performed ably if not commendably Dynamics were totally lacking: the entire piece was played with the sam e volume and the final phrases did not fade out with the proper the this may be due as much diminuendo However, auditorium ’s lousy acoustics as to inadequate playing. to I am not about to m ire myself in a controversy over whether Leonard Bernstein’s "W est Side Story" is a great musical or an abysm al m usical; it is certainly an o v e r p l a y e d musical Berns­ tein has lifted some of the numbers from his stage work, farm ed them out to others to orchestrate and called the mishmash I really don't see how this has any place Symphonic Dances on anything but a pops’ concert; perhaps the symphony m anagem ent thinks it necessary to pack ’em in, especially for an evening of "m odem " music. Bernstein s music, though, is not as easy to play as it sounds Endo drove the orchestra through a pretty scattered reading, and at points during the “ Cool Fugue" section the orchestra threatened to come apart. The additional two drum m ers, snare drum s and rock band, seem ed to have dropped by at the last minute and the result sounded m ore like a gang w ar than the composer presum ably intended. The only substantial work of the evening, Janacek’s “ Sinfoniet­ ta ,’’ was simply too far beyond the grasp of the o rch estra’s capabilities The opening fanfare for 13 trum pets and trombones sounded sluggish throughout its variations and did not build to any sort of an apotheosis; neither here nor at the close of the finale did the fanfares announce the confident dynam ism and joyous energy that characterize this work. The sam e sort of anem ia perm eated the perform ance of the subsequent four movements. There was little variation of tem pi, except to slow down passages the trombones had difficulty ex­ ecuting This turned the lively accented rhythm section for strings and trombones in the third movem ent into little m ore than a musical exercise. Endo and his players had m ore success with the lyrical and m elancholic episodes, but these seldom occur in this work which Janacek intended to be the expression of the rousing optim ism of the “ new Czechoslovak nation ” The orchestra never once realiz­ ed the many sonorities of this m asterpiece. For the most part, trum pets bleated, trombones blared, strings squeaked and were only bettered by the execrable playing of the clarinets. Perhaps after this latest debacle and the mess made of the Prokofiev Fifth Symphony last month, Endo will realize that modern music is w o r s t served by inferior, lackluster perfor­ m ances that m ake patrons squirm and rattle their program s, confirming all their misconceptions about the music of our cen­ tury: that is is dreadfully dull and ugly, without any ordering principle whatsoever. Strauss Rosenkavalier Waltzes finished off the evening Like the "W est Side Story D ances,” this piece is compiled from the com poser’s well-known opera, “ Der Rosenkavalier.” “Com­ piled is perhaps too charitable a word. Often an indifferent composer, Strauss seem s to have taken the pages of his original score and cut and pasted a result that sounds m ore like an encore medley of show tunes than anything else He has simply distilled all of the saccharine from his perfum ed opera to produce a boun­ cy piece of musical fluff. And, on the whole, Endo kept the orchestra bouncing along during the waltzes, sending the good burghers of Austin out with a tune to whistle on the way home. Modern music need not be a b itter pill to swallow, not the cacophonous bother of Stravinsky or Bartók, or, what is even worse, Kristoff Penderecki If the Austin Symphony’s approach dem onstrates anything, it is that modem music can be like one of those sweet-and-sour bonbons — delightful for a few test licks but unpleasant once one really has to take a bite THE CONTINENTAL CLUB P resen ts Monday VAN WILKS AND FOOLS Tuetday SLOW MOTION W ednetoy EXTREME HEAT Thursday THE SKUNKS pitu D-DAY Frhkry THE BIZARROS 50* LONE STAR ALW AYS Happy Hour 2:30-7 p.m. ■ 131 1315 S. Congress V. 442-9904 v J t / 'n (K w I w . Ar ■ the Holiday Season. 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After all, being thin will make you feel better than any triple scoop ice cream cone ever could North 451-8258 r $50 South 441-6888 FALL SEMESTER OFFER Coupon fx pirei Nov 26, 1979 $50 Preton» »hi* certificate at the time of your con tu ltation, a n d y o u 'll receive a REBATE of $50 0 0 to w a rd your g u a ra n te e d w e ig h t lot* program . nutri/system weight loss centers 1 THE STALLION DRIVE-IN CAFE 5534 N. LAMAR 451-1626 FEATURING Seafood, Sandwiches, Steaks, Mexican Food, and Mixed Drinks Plus The Best Chicken Fried Steak In Town! Reg. Price — $1.75 Op«n til 12 midnight Sttn.-Thurs. / til 1 a.m. Fri. & Sat. But it was Billy Laredo all along He said, ‘ Care to try two today?' and who could resist? Flour tortillas, stuffed with subtly spiced meat and cheese, are deep fned to golden perfection. After all, if you've got it, flaui it Billy Laredo Flautas at Fandango's. The Hottest Thing in Austin since the Jalapeno Pepper. W A n d e rso n P la z a A n d e rso n I n at B urnet Rd O p e n 1 1-1 1 S u n -T h u rs til 12 Fri & Sat V is a M C A m e x co a cce p te d “ W S05 *-1*T • ' "FANDANGO’S THE NAME; FLAUTAS, THE GAME!” music f f a t S n a x e T y l l a D , n o t s g e r G y r r e T Blaze Foley Strange singer debuts in Austin By Mark McKinnon When he kicked off his Austin debut Thursday with a song titled “I Want to Go Home with an Armadillo,” the clientele at the Backstage Bar began to suspect that perhaps the man was not normal. After hearing other such notable Foley originals as “Cosmic Doo Doo,” “I Won't be Your Fat Boy Anymore,” “The March of the Sausage Army” and “Trouble in My L evis Blues Again,” the suspicions were confirmed. Blaze Foley (or Deputy Dawg, or Ezalb Yelof. depending on his mood at the tim e), “ bom in 1849 in a sm all fishing village on the coast of what is now Wyoming,” is not content with his rave status in several Serbo-Croatian regions and therefore has set out to conquer the domestic m arket. Form erly an obese insurance salesm an, who actually debuted Austin in 1977 as a lethargic carpenter’s helper, Foley’s unique songs and nefarious demeanor are a refreshing sand-bar for those who seek respite from N e w Wave. In the m ere two years since he discovered he could get paid for what he’d been doing for free in the shower, he has established a sincere following in Houston, landed a record deal with Zephyr Records and can be found at the Driskill instead of his old Austin hang-out — the Dempsey D um pster behind the Hole-In-The-Wall. Aided and abetted by the ever-scurrilous Gurf Morelicks (form erly of The Goats o f A r a b i a ) on bass and harmony and John Hill on drum s, Foley indoctrinated the audience with three absorbing sets complete with costume changes, props and music running the gam bit from poignant lam ents (“ If I Could Only F ly " ) to absurd parodies (“ Love is like a w aterfall or any large body of w ater except perhaps the Dead Sea” — a takeoff on B arry White, sung while wearing a neck brace, which Foley ex­ plained was the result of falling off high-heeled shoes at a disco). Despite Foley's tongue-in-cheek veneer, there is an intensity and air of conviction in his personality and songs that sneak up on you quietly and then punch your lights out. Lines which initially prom pt laughter later provoke social consciousness. Blaze Foley songs laugh to keep from crying. He surreptitiously whacks the funny-bone so he can get to the emotional nerve — laughter is the anesthetic for his brain surgery. Visually, he conjures thoughts of a cross between Lee Harvey Oswald and K areem Abdul Jabbar. Vocally, he presents a mix­ ture of Johnny Cash and Rod Stewart. If Mel Torme was dubbed The Velvet Fog,” then Foley could perhaps be nicknamed “The Satin Sleet.” For a man who “ was too poor to have paren ts” and has as his goal in life “ to live through it,” Foley proved that one can over­ come chromosomal damage, venereal disease and tooth decay and become a pill of society. Though he resents anything smacking of “ fad," unless Foley’s diseases term inate him soon, he may just become a fad himself. Because he will be recording for the next few months in Fredricksburg his Austin perform ances may become m ore fre­ quent. Check him out — he’ll be glad you did. Oh yeah, he said to mention that he is waging a w ar on drug abuse, so if you have a nasty drug affliction he advises giving him your drugs and he’ll throw them away for you. Honest. Texas B .G .’8 Jewels 1 14 Jit. Bevo and Star buttoi oi^Dall and post earriijgafl 2 Lrtttle 14 Kt. Bevo!r1>n golt /post earrinM^fZu.OO pr. V 14 Kt. Skrfof Texas Bevo f buttofion gold band, $90.00 .j and at the can be «ce» picked up < Toy C ompt 306 E. B le A u stin , T k O pen 10 oL H ome reca m essages I Cave R d., 78746 -6 p.m . j and a t 327-4104. Sheer IMAGES will dedicate the November 26 issue to local­ ly written poetry. Aspiring poets are invited to submit their best work for publication Accompanying art or photographs will also be welcomed. All submissions should be sent to IMAGES editor Harvey N eville, c /o IMAGES poetry, P.O Box D, University Station, Austin. 78712 All m aterial must be submitted by Mon­ day, November 19 books 13 Greene puts West Texas in comfortable perspective “ A Personal Country” ; by A.C. G reene; T exas A&M P re ss; 1979; 328 pp.; $12.95. By Hunt Blair I rem em ber my first trip to West Texas. Its im ­ pressions, along with those from numerous follow- up excursions, rem ain clearly etched in my mind. I had lived in D allas for only a few months, having em igrated recently from Ohio, when my Aunt Sally — also from Ohio, but who had m arried a boy from Albany and had com e to know West Texas well — insisted I visit “ the ran ch " im m ediately. “ The ranch,” I learned, belonged to my uncle’s mother. It sat in alm ost the dead center of Shackleford County, which is about as West Texas as you can get. That first trip, started too late on a Friday afternoon, was an endless rush against darkness. We hadn't gotten but five m iles west of F o rt Worth when dusk hit, and for the next 50 m iles we chased an orange and purple sunset across the sky and down the road. Those were pregas crunch days, and at upward of 75 mph. we waged a pretty good fight against the sun’s w esterly descent. All the sam e the afterglow had long since faded by the tim e we hit P alo Pinto. So, strictly speaking, my first view of West T exas was under a nighttime sky, but what a sky it was. What seem ­ ed like 10 trillion stars dappled a pitch black backing and the moon. . . . The moon lit up the prairie b etter than any spotlight could have dreamed of doing. “ Bobw ahr” fences and twisted mesquite trees stood in silhouette, occasionally accom panied by cattle or the insect-like wellhead pumps. It may have been dark, but I was hooked. To this day I cannot explain what it is in all that empty space that appeals, but it is something powerful because I ’ve made that drive out past M ineral W ells, W eatherford and Breckenridge, to Albany, Abilene and beyond tim e and again. West T exas ju st has that m agnetic effect. A.L. G reene’s book, “ A Personal Country,” is about that area stretching from F o rt Worth on the east to Snyder and Colorado City on the west. Guthrie and Archer City on the north and Brownwood and Ballinger on the south: West Texas. Greene w rites about towns, roads, rivers and railw ays and about the people and cultures that find homes within their web. I t ’s the author’s personal country — he was born in Abilene. He w rites with a love and understanding that touches everyone, no m atter where they com e from As G reene points out, West Texans a re receptive to newcom ers. As far as they’re concerned, any man or woman who lives in W est T exas for 40 years is a native, regardless of his or her original birthplace. “ A Personal Country,” part history and part anecdote, tells the story of one m an’s life and tim es as he wanders through West T exas. The m agnetism of the place would carry the book, even if the author did not. But happily, G reene does well with his subject. His writing reflects the book’s setting without being hokey, corny or provincial. His attention to detail — describing a courthouse square or a scene from his childhood — is exacting but never distracting. The style is smooth and flowing, carefu l and attentive to the reader. Finishing the book, I found I knew a great deal m ore about W est T exas, its people and its history, and about the author him self, but I do not rem em ber learning it. I ju st read and enjoyed, and as it turned out, picked up all sorts of things that draw m e even m ore to West Texas. Those who find the sophistication of Manhattan, or even Austin, m ore preferable to the sim ple, open atm osphere of West T exas m ay not see much benefit in G reene’s book, but anyone who appreciates the W est and open peo­ ple and places will enjoy “ A Personal Country.” F o r m yself, I ’m planning another trip out to “ the ranch.” I hope you’ll all do the sam e. Check us out... our labels are less! It TIO'S Restaurant & Bar COMPUESTOS CHILI RELLANO CHICKEN & CALABAZA These are just a few of our tangy, south of the border dishes tr a d itio n a l O ld S tyle u sin g recipes and prepared to perfec­ tion for your dining pleasure. Com e by today for a unique culinary experience. HAPPY HOUR Mon-Fri 3-7 Hi-balls & Margaritas $ 1 0 0 M O N D A Y S Pitcher Michelob Mon-Fri 10:30 a.m.-10:00 p.m. Sat until 11:00 p.m. Northcross M all 453- A f A S H I O N O U T L E T 14 B y Harvey Neville After a delay of m ore than a decade, one of the finest collections of 20th century A m erican art ever assem bled has found its rightful hom e. On D ec. 3 approxim ately 100 paintings from the Ja m es and Mari M ichener Collection will go on perm anent d is­ play in the M ichener G alleries of the U niversity's Harry Hansom Center. Jam es Michener, the famed author of “ Hawaii,” ‘‘The Source, “Centennial ' and more than 14 other novels and books on art and social problems, and his wife chose the University as the recipient of their prestigious 350-piece collection of American paintings after a nationwide search back in 1968. The University named a bi-level gallery in their honor. Although there have been frequent exhibits of selec­ tions from the collection, those temporary hangings con­ centrated more often than not on a particular period or style, rather than displaying the historical development in American art which the Micheners intended. In his essay. The Collector: an Informal M emoir” ( reprinted in the collection catalogue published by the U niversity), Michener wrote: This collection was formed by a professional writer who felt that he ought to know what artists living in America during his lifetim e were doing. Specifically, he wanted to see how they handled the kinds of artistic problems he faced. The collection was thus a studv in the creative process with constant focus on what the artistic intention had been when the artist painted a given picture, how he used his m aterials, what his at­ titude had been toward design color, and drawing, and how the end product fitted into his personal develop­ ment and the intellectual history of our tim es. ” 1 have profiled from having iived with these pain­ tings. From them I have learned much about my own work habits. And from the day I acquired my first painting, 1 have intended that the collection be handed over ultimately to some public museum where others might learn as much from it as I did.” Dr. Eric McCready, recently appointed director of the I diversity Art Museum, is in large part responsib e for the new em phasis on using University resources to the fullest extent The Michener Galleries, which have prin­ cipally housed traveling exhibits over the past few years will showcase the permanent displays of the Old Masters o? „ l!P 0n extended Ioan from the Sara Campbell Blaffer Foundation, the C.R. Smith Collection of Western Art the Battle Cast Collection, as well as the Michener Collection Major traveling shows planned by the Art Museum for the future will be exhibited in the Huntington Gallery. The p erm anent exhibit of the M ichener Collection will consist of the “ finest exam ples of a rt showing the growth and change in A m erican a rt between 1900-1970,” accor­ ding to M cCready. "S tudents from a variety of disciplines - a rt history. A m erican history and com p arativ e studies -* will be able to work w ith these reflections of society .” It will be so m arvelous to have these paintings available for teaching.” says Dr. Linda Henderson, an assistant professor of art history wrho is organizing the ex­ reflect hibit. The paintings in the Michener Collection the cultural history of their tim es." says Henderson' J his is particularly true for the 30s and the '50s The abstract expressionist movement was a product of the postwar period. ' One of the particular strengths of the Michener U.Elec­ tion is the abundance of abstract expressionists' works. Michener wrote. “ I find it easier to make up my nind about the purchase of an abstract painting than I do a figurative one. probably because my judgment is more secure in the abstract field, and certainly mv sense of em ­ pathy.” Michener Collection finds a home be put on permanent exhibit Fine survey of20th century art 15 ‘& ; r - . - v : i .v,J Courtesy cf the James and Mar! Michener Collection ■ . < - Tf’«rriÉfr j> i '¿nf¡¡ir . > •.* ’ *r!sk McCready points out that all of the Micheners- selections “ are an embodiment of In his essay reprinted in their ow n attitudes. the collection catalogue, Jam es Michener em phasizes how buiiding the collection was a joint process, an experience which he and his w ile shared Although the Micheners agreed on the purchase of many paintings, there were the inevitable diagreements: “ ...we have lost a few fine canvasses because we could not agree upon a choice; either we did not have time to visit a given gallery to confirm a choice tentatively made or we delayed so long in making up our minds that the canvas went elsewhere. A curious fact has been that my w ile, like many Japanese, has always objected to nudity in art and has failed to understand why it appears in all schools of painting. As a result, our collection has rather fewer nudes than a good one ought to have, but this was a sm all price to pay for fam i­ ly solidarity on more important artistic subjects.” There are som e technical and aesthetic problems which Henderson and McCready have had to work out in planning the perm a­ nent exhibition of the Michener Collection McCready says that one goal has been to leave the gallery space ' as open as possible so that visitors can take in the exhibit s range upon entering.” But. he says, “ it’s hard to hang paintings without walls. Many of the sm aller, earlier works can be “double-hung” but the mammouth abstract canvases do create problems for the exhibitors. Another major problem is a bit more delicate. A year ago the University ac­ quired a copy of the Gutenberg Bible for $2.4 million, and a $25,000 case was custom-built ... on the first floor of the to house M ichener G alleries. it W hen asked about the contrast between the >amous 15th century Bible and the permanent exhibit of 20th century American art to be hung around it, M cCready said it would be educatio n al.” He agreed w ith the observa­ tion that the Bible might draw som e people in who would not otherw ise com e to see modern art. H enderson, how’ever. pointed out another th e ju x ta p o sitio n of the a d v a n ta g e to M ichener t, o lle ctio n an d the Gutenberg Bible: a num ber of the paintings have a "m editative quality about them ” which will serve to emphasize the meaning of both the art and the Bible. As part of a six-part series related to the openings of the Michener, C.R. Smith and blaffer 0¡d Master Paintings Collections. Mari Michener will attend the official open­ ing Dec 3 and give a “ personal introduc­ tion American sculpter Herbert Ferber will give his personal view of the New York School on Dec 10. This series is sponsored jointly by the University Art Museum, the College of Fine Arts and the Division of Con­ tinuing Education. Courtesy of the James and Marl Michener Collection I T Wesselmann’s" Left. Franz Klines Blacx and White No. 2, 1960" Above: Thomas Hart Benton's "Romance," 1931-32 Drafor Still Life No. Counesy o' -he James anc Mar M ichener Collection