Vol. 80, No. 54 (USPS 146-440) S t u d e n t N e w s p a ^ exas a t Austi n Friday, November 14, 1980 Twenty Cents Voyager 1 reveals startling Saturnian discoveries PASADENA, Calif (U PI) - The giant Saturn moon Titan resem bles “ a frozen earth with a dense atm osphere of nitrogen, so cold it m ay be liquid at the surface, a Voyager 1 scientist reported Thursday. The startling discovery was revealed as the robot spacecraft sailed away from the ringed planet and its moons, leaving behind what one scientist said was “ a state of euphoria over the information and pictures being sent 947 million miles to E arth. “ I think we learned more about the Saturnian system in the past week than in any span in recorded history," said Dr. B rad­ ford Smith, head of the science team interpreting the probe’s pictures at the Je t Propulsion Laboratory. VOYAGER WAS RACING away from Saturn at approxim ate­ ly 38.000 mph. sending back data from the dark side of the planet and m easurem ents of radio waves sent through the rings to determ ine their size. Its course will eventually take it out of the solar system into interstellar space. Dr. Rudolf Hanel of the space agency’s Goddard Space Flight Center reported that Titan’s atm osphere is mostly nitrogen — not m ethane as ea rlie r assum ed He said there apparently are sm aller am ounts of m ethane and other compounds, principally other hydrocarbons, in the the gases blanketing the moon. It was observation of the m ethane tra c e s that apparently fool­ ed scientists into believing the moon’s atm osphere was mostly methane. Scientists explained the nitrogen could not be seen in Earth-based observations. The nitrogen was detected by the sp acecraft’s ultraviolet spectroscope. HANEL SAID THE lower reaches of the Titan atm osphere are about as thick as E a rth ’s, or even thicker. And Voyager s instrum ents m easured tem peratures of approxim ately 330 degrees below zero Fahrenheit. If the tem perature is that cold, the chances a re pretty good the clouds would possibly provide droplets of liquid nitrogen," he said. That would raise the possibility of liquid nitrogen rain ­ ing on the hidden surface of the moon. Because Titan is so cold, said Dr. Andrew Ingersoll, there could be puddles, pools, drops or even oceans’ of liquid nitrogen on its surface, much as there a re oceans of w ater on the surface of E arth. Dr. Von Eshlem an of Stanford U niversity said Voyager I s reports show that Titan is more like a te rre stria l planet than moons of the outer planets. “ It just happens to be located out w here the gas giants a re ,' he said. The te rre stria l planets are the ones nearest the sun — M ercury, Venus, E arth and Mars. “ Titan may be considered a te rre stria l planet in deep freeze,” he said. Related story, Page 2 “ It developed along different lines because of this condition but it m ay hold clues for the early developm ent of the E arth ." Eshlem an said. He added that it stopped evolving because of its “deep freeze condition in outer space. F urther study of the data, he said, m ay show an atm osphere close to pure nitrogen and if so, its surface pressure ma^ be two to three tim es that of E a rth 's. We get a m ental picture of a murky swamp, a rather bizzare murky sw am p." he said, “ and the murk and the swamp are nitrogen.” SMITH SAID HE was “ stunned by the spectacular display of when V oyager the pictures received over the past 24 hours raced beneath the planet’s mystifying rings to a 77,000-mile close encounter with Saturn Wednesday. He said photographs from the c ra ft’s twin telescopic cam eras have been transm itted back in such quantities it has hardly been possible to concentrate on any single picture for m ore than a few seconds. “ I cannot recall being in such a state of euphoria for any previous planetary encounter." he said Titan, which is approxim ately 3,600 m iles in diam eter, is the largest moon in the solar system in volume and the only one known to have a substantial atm osphere. It holds still more puzzles for the scientists. They were studying to Saturn and the m agnetic field and charged particle interaction to determ ine how it has m aintained an atm osphere. its relationship Student collects autographs by mail Correspondence hobby nets letters, portraits, cards BOB DAVILA Dally Texan Staff students. Em pty mailboxes a re painfully fam iliar to most If a mailbox isn’t empty, it usually contains bills, maybe a letter from home, brochures from D illard’s or coupons from Pizza Inn. But for sophomore Mark Ranslem , checking the mail is a little more exciting. The return ad­ dresses read like an atlas index: Hollywood, Washington, London, the Vatican, Moscow, the Philippines, and every place in between. Ranslem , a government m ajor, has made a hob­ by out of corresponding with national and in ter­ national public figures and collecting th e ir autographs and letters. He usually w rites, asking about a topic relevant to that celebrity, and ends his letters asking for an autograph. Ranslem receives autographs signed on letters, cards and portraits. PR ESEN TLY HIS collection contains 520 signatures from a variety of form er and current public officials and personalities: m em bers of the three branches of federal governm ent, governors le a d e r s , pop es, fro m a ll 50 s ta te s , w orld jo u rn a lists and astro n a u ts, w rite rs, a c to rs, various other people in the news. “ Seeing (public figures) on TV, I thought it must be neat to be one of them, he said. “ I thought the closest I could come to them was by w riting them, so th a t’s when I started w riting. “ It used to be kind of an ego thing, being able to have their autographs. Now I ju st do it to keep up the collection. “ I ’d usually w rite about som ething they did or w ere fam iliar with, or I'd ask for biographical in­ form ation about them. I ’d ask governors and con­ gressm en about their states, their economies, or some piece of legislation, he said. “ Now I usually just tell them who I am, a little about me, and that I collect autographs.” RANSLEM BEGAN his collection in April 1975 with a letter to form er House Speaker Carl Albert. Besides receiving A lbert’s autograph, Ranslem corresponded with him for about a year and a half, during which Albert sent him two personal C hrist­ m as cards. “ If it’s somebody I like or adm ire, I keep writing him after he’s sent me an autograph, he said. “ As long as they answer, I keep writing. After a while, though. I ’ll stop. You begin to realize when they get tired of it, when you’re a thorn in their side Although postage can be expensive, finding ad­ dresses is easy, Ranslem said. “ If I don’t know som eone’s address, I ’ll just put down as much as I know. Like when 1 wrote to (Soviet Communist P arty Secretary Leonid) Brezhnev, I just w rote something like ‘Leonid Brezhnev, The Krem lin, Moscow, U.S.S.R. For celebrities such as actors, a rtists, w riters and other personalities, Ranslem relies on a book listing such addresses. Although he has w ritten approxim ately 1,000 letters, R anslem estim ates he receives responses in 50 percent of the attem pts. THE MOST DIFFICULT autographs he has collected are those of Supreme Court Chief Justice W arren Burger, form er President Richard Nixon, form er Secretary of State Henry Kissinger, form er Senate M ajority Leader Mike Mansfield, President Jim m y C arter and Je rry Brown, whose autograph Ranslem received in August after writing for four years. “ If I don’t get anything a fte r about three or four months. I’ll w rite them again,” he said, “ although usually, the m ore im portant they are, the better they are about responding. Governors a re the worst.* * Looking through letters and po rtraits he has received, Ranslem studies signatures, type and writing style to determ ine who personally wrote, dictated or signed le tte rs are w ritten by someone else and signed by a m achine called an autopen. letters. Some OTHER LETTERS a re w ritten in a m ore for­ mal style and contain signatures with all even­ sized letters or which look like a rubber stam p signature stam ped with unequal pressure. Some replies a re sent by aides and secretaries. D avid R o c k e fe lle r’s s e c r e ta r y w ro te th a t Rockefeller declines giving autographs, adding that Rockefeller believes he is ‘‘not the sort of celebrity or public figure whose signature is of significance in a collection such as yours.’ Mail from other world leaders has been opened by the U.S. government, Ranslem claims. “Someone opened the package I got from Brezhnev,’’ he said. “ It had a lot of dull stuff about the Soviet economy, industry and culture, with a signed picture and some other stuff, and it was in a plastic bag that had been ripped open and looked through. I really think the post office or someone else in the governm ent opened it." MAIL FROM FORM ER Mexican President Luis E cheverria was also opened when Ranslem received it. Several people to whom Ranslem has w ritten died shortly after sending their autographs. Among the signatures he collected only weeks prior to the person’s death were those of Pope John Paul I, Chicago Mayor Richard Daley and form er first lady Mamie Eisenhower. L etters sent to Alfred Hitchcock and P eter Sellers shortly before their deaths went unanswered. While collecting autographs of presidential can­ didates in 1976, Ranslem , who is an a rtist, was un­ able to get a reply from Jim m y C arter after several letters, so he drew a caricatu re of C arter and sent it to him. The picture was returned with both C a rte r’s and his wife Rosalynn’s autographs on it. Then in January 1977, a few days before his birthday, Ranslem received an invitation to C arter s in­ auguration. He raised money for the trip by draw ­ ing portraits. RANSLEM K EEPS his autographs in eight albums, divided into various categories of public figures. He also keeps new spaper and magazine clippings with some of the autographs. R anslem 's latest additions are the autographs of Lucille Ball and Brown. Ranslem has recently m ailed letters to Irving Berlin, G reta Garbo. Ver­ non Jordan, Charles Manson, Jack Nicklaus, R u d o lp h N u re y e v , L a u re n c e O liv ie r and Tennessee Williams. The value of R anslem 's collection continues to grow. “ I keep it under lock and key, he said. “ Some of these autographs are valuable, and as time goes on, they may become m ore ra re and worth even more. A few years ago I saw these cards with Suprem e Court ju stice’s nam es selling tor about $15 or $20. I don’t know what they’re worth now.” Mark Ranslem with some of his photos and autographs Jan Sonnenmair, Dally Texan Staff White refuses to review AUF distribution By JENNY ABDO Daily Texan Staff The attorney general s office once again has declined to issue an opinion requested by Rep. Wilhelmina Delco, D-Austin, on specifics relating to P rairie View A&M to the Available U niversity’s constitutional access University Fund The AUF is the interest from the $1.1 billion P e rm a ­ nent U niversity Fund, which is composed of the income from the U niversity’s West Texas land holdings, in­ cluding oil royalties. One-third of the AUF goes to A&M University and the rem ainder goes to UT Austin. Delco, the first black to chair the House Com m ittee on Higher Education, asked Attorney G eneral Mark White in a letter of Oct. 30 w hether the AUF has been diverted by the UT Board of Regents from its purpose set out in 1881 and 1883. The letter is one of many the representative has w ritten to the attorney general seek­ ing opinions on the issue. Delco’s argum ent is based on 1881 legislation stating that the Board of Regents use interest from the PU F for the m aintenance of its branches. In 1883 the L egislature passed an ac t providing for the PU F to be used by the University of Texas and its branches — including the branch for “ colored youths. In 1882. the state com ptroller ruled that P ra irie View, a predom inantly black college, could no longer share in the AUF as it had since 1879. This action has never been challenged. In a Nov. 7 letter, Susan G arrison, acting chairm an of the attorney general’s opinion com m ittee, wrote th at Delco s question is too “ broad and would require sub­ stantial am ounts of historical research. G arrison stated that if Delco narrow s the question, the attorney general will consider answering it. . Delco responded to G arrison s letter Thursday by say­ ing the question she asked the attorney general was “ sim ple.” Delco said she realizes answ ering it would require research. “ Our prem ise is th at we feel Prairie View should be able to p articipate (in the PU F) because it’s a constitutional branch of U T.” She emphasized that while fighting for P ra irie View’s inclusion, she in no way intends to bust the PUF. Delco said she is not in favor of giving all System schools shares in the endowment. During her year of research, Delco said in an earlier interview, she has repeatedly requested opinions from White on the issue, but he has refused to give a form al opinion because “ he is in a very difficult political position.” White, she said, knows the A&M Board of Regents is against making P ra irie View a p a rt of the PUF. R egardless of w hether White ever issues an opinion, Delco is preparing to file suit in federal court against the state. She is also drafting legislation that will be subm itted for consideration when the Legislature con­ venes in January. Hearing reveals duplicate voting charges By KAREN-ANN BROE Dally Texan Staff Several students told the Election Commission at a Thursday hearing that they know at least a dozen students who voted tv/ice as a result of last week s supplem ental referendum on student government. re s e rv e d T he e le c tio n w as for students who failed to vote in the first referendum because the Election Com­ mission had ruled the first election was prejudiced by voting irregularities. Although the constitution to revive student governm ent passed by a m argin of three votes in the first election, it was defeated when the two elections were combined for an uncertified vote total of 2,625 in favor and 3,237 against. Thursday’s hearing was called after filed the five w ritten appeals had been challenging supplem ental election the precedence of During the hearing, M argaret Ann Rose, a student delegate at last spring s constitutional convention, said she is protesting the election because she personally knows in principle nine or “ r ten” people who w ere able to vote tw ice in the election. No n a m e s w e re p ro d u c e d , but other students testified they had heard the same. “ If you made an e rro r for ten,its not impossible that eight or nine hundred could have voted twice, Rose said. “ Who knows how many would have tried to do it if they realized” they could have gotten away with it, she said However, commission m em ber Tom Kirkland said the com m ission could not invalidate the election unless com ­ plainants could prove “ the num ber of irregularites exceeded the results of the election. “ I don’t see how th e re ’s any way we could base our decision on speculation,’ he said. “ In the law school, its an honor code violation to vote twice. That kind of thing — putting their nam e on record — may be difficult to get people to testify to,” he said C om m issioner Sherry Foote said th e re ’s substantial reason to believe eight or nine-hundred people did n 't do it.” Foote said the nam es of students who voted in the first election were crossed off ro sters for the supplem ental election. “ Apparently a few rosters did not get completed. The hearing also brought a barrage of com plaints about the precedent and timing of the com m ission's decision to call the supplem ental election. “ It goes against A m erican politics, said Andy Mann, also a form er delegate at the constitutional convention. Mann said he favored a supplem ental just for students who filed election legitim ate grievances. The placem ent of voting tables — one at the law school and one on the Main Mall — was discrim inatory toward students with classes on those p arts of campus, he said Dave Weiser, a form er constitutional convention delagate. said the momen­ tum had turned against student govern­ ment and short notice of the supplemen­ tal election did not allow students to regroup. “ I do think it’s ra th e r unusual that these 1,800 people voted two m onths a fte r the constitution was printed in the p ap er,” he said. David Bright, chairm an of the con­ stitutional convention, said he favored a new election to a supplem ental election because “nothing short of a perfect election" will resolve the issue. “ If somebody com es up to me in a year. I ’m not going to be able to say w hether students wanted a student governm ent or not. This whole thing has been covered with mud ” he said. Amy Johnson, vice chairm an of the constitutional convention, challenged the legal precedent of the supplem ental election Kirkland, citing an Abilene case, said a precedent for the supplem ental elec­ tion was set in a referendum vote where irregularities were found in just one precinct and a new vote was held in that precinct only. “ Unfortunately, facts exactly vote at any table on cam pus, he said. it doesn’t fit our because students can Rocket fire spurs Persian Gulf fears BAGHDAD, Iraq (U PI) - Jittery oil states closed ranks Thursday, alarm ed at a wayward rocket attack which shook a rem ote Kuwait fron­ tier post and sparked fears the Iran- Ijaq w ar could yet spill over to neighboring P ersian Gulf nations. Kuwait blam ed the attack on Iran and quickly drew support from Saudi A rabia, Q a ta r, B ahrain and the United Arab E m ira te s for its denun­ ciation of Tehran. A uthorities in Kuwait said two rockets exploded near the border post of Al-Abdali Wednesday but that the attack caused no casualties or m aterial dam age. “ It was confirm ed later that the attack was carried out by one of the Iranian air force planes. Foreign M inistry Under S ecretary Rashid Abdel al Rashid told the Iranian am ­ bassador in lodging a form al protest In Iran, Tehran radio said prim e m inister Mohammad Ali R ajai m et Ayatollah Rtihollah Khomeini to dis­ cuss introduction of food rationing and draw up plans to stam p out black m arketeering, an apparent sign the 53-day-old w ar is taking its toll on the home front. Ira n 's official news agency P a rs said R ajai and Khomeini also dis­ cussed m atters be/ore the Supreme Defense Council, but gave no details On Tuesday, P a rs said the council was seeking clarification of Iraqi proposals for an end to the war. Iranian a rtillery pounded Iraqi troops besieging the oil term inal of Abadan for alm ost 24 hours and com ­ m anders again claim ed to have forc­ ed Iraqi troops to re tre a t “ several kilom eters,” Tehran radio said. The radio said Iranian jets again bombed Iraqi oil installations in the Gulf port of Fao. attacked the Um Qasr naval base in south east Iraq and destroyed 20 trucks, two mobile rad ar stations and a fuel train south of Basra in other sorties. An Iraq i MiG w as shot down Wednesday night by anti-aircraft guns a t the Persian Gulf port of B ushehr. Iran ian m ilita ry com ­ muniques said, Iraq m turn said “ two Iranian navy ta rg e ts” were destroyed a t the neck of th e d is p u te d S h a tt-a l-A ra b waterw ay and claim ed to have cap­ tured 14 vehicles, two arm ored per­ sonnel carriers, m ortars and a r­ ' m i l i t a r y t i l l e r y p i e c e s in operations’ of which it gave no details. An Iraqi communique said p art of an Iranian pipeline near the northern border town of Qasr-e-Shirin was destroyed and that a U.S.-made Ira­ nian Phantom jet was shot down over the northern Iraqi town of Pen- juin, Tehran radio later reported con­ tinued fighting west of Dizful and said two people w ere killed and 21 in­ jured in Iraqi a tr and artillery a t­ tacks on the city of Ahvaz. Baghdad's nightly m ilitary com­ munique said Iraqi helicopters hit Iranian targ ets in the northern and southern battlefields, and destroyed tw o six v e h ic le s and s e v e ra l ‘f o rtifie d defensive positions tw o field guns, t anks, It said Iraqi casualties included two Iraqi so ld iers killed the fighting and one civilian killed awl two wounded in Iranian air raids against the villages of Chuman and H ajj U m ran in Page 2 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Friday, November 14, 1980 GOP leaks staff chief nominee Reagan may select Jim Baker for White House post •1 9 8 0 The New York Times WASHINGTON - President-elect Ronald Reagan has tentatively selected Jam es A. Baker III to be his White House chief of staff with Edwin Meese III. his transition director, slated for a co-equal post working with the Cabinet, well-placed Republican sources said Thursday These sources cautioned that a leak to Th e Washington S t a r Wednesday saying that Reagan had decided on Baker may have been intended to stir right-wing opposition to the ap­ pointment and to persuade Reagan to change his mind The choice of Baker, a 51-year-old Houston attorney, was surprising not only because Meese had been widely considered the most likely candidate for the job, but also because Baker had worked against the Reagan camp for President Ford at the Republican conven­ tion in 1976 and for Vice President-elect George Bush during the 1980 prim ary cam ­ paign. “ Think of what a choice that is.” said one m em ber of the Reagan transition team “ It will m ake Reagan the first president in years to pick a chief of staff who dosen't come from his home state and his old gang It's a very healthy sign.” A form er undersecretary of com m erce un­ der Ford. Baker has a reputation as being more m oderate than m ost of Reagan’s long­ term associates from California. He won wide respect within the Reagan entourage and reportedly im pressed Reagan and his wife, Nancy, for organizing the campaign budget and managing R eagan's participation in both presidential debates this year. Reagan spokesmen Thursday sidestepped questions on w hether a firm decision had been made to make Baker the White House chief of staff “ I don’t know if a decision has been m a d e .” said Lyn Nofziger. R eagan's press secretary “ Baker did a hell of a job for us in the c a m ­ paign Clearly he will have a high spot in the adm instration, and I wouldn’t be surprised if he wound up in the White House. W hatever happens, the president-elect is going to have to announce it ” Several long-time associates of Reagan asserted that the Reagan blueprint envisioned two co-equal, top-level p residen tial sta ff positions. They said the president-elect s plan to do most of his policy making with an inner circle of his Cabinet would require a top-level adviser and Cabinet coordinator free of the day-to-day m anagem ent of the large White House operation headed by a chief of staff. These sources described Meese, who was Reagan’s staff chief when he was governor of California, as well suited for this substantive role by experience and close knowledge of Reagan s thinking and priorities. By contrast, they said, Baker is the better, m ore decisive m anager of the two. “ T h e re ’s going to be a need for two positions,” said Sen. Paul Laxalt of Nevada, one of Reagan s closest political friends and his campaign chairm an. Meese could not be reached Thursday. Baker, reached by telephone at his Houston law office, declined to say anything. “ T hat’s something I’n rn o t going to comment about.” he said, before leaving for a long weekend vacation trip with his family. A m ajor gathering of Reagan policy task force leaders is planned for Los Angeles this weekend to bring together policy advisers in 24 subject areas from the budget to the ad­ m inistration of justice. The Reagan headquarters here announced the names of new leaders of its agency liaison team s which are going into each m ajor federal departm ent and agency to review budgets, per­ sonnel and imminent deadlines for decisions. Tom C. Korologos, a 47-year-old legislative consultant and lobbyist, was named to head the congressional relations office. At a press briefing, Jim Brady, head of the Reagan transition office here, described the liaison team s as "technicians and not policy m akers for the incoming adm inistration. He also asserted that the current visit to Moscow by Lt. Gen. Brent Scowcroft, form er national to President Ford and a security adviser m em ber of one of the Reagan advisory panels on foreign policy, was not an official mission on behalf of Reagan. Brother, can you spare a drop Red-blooded Peaches Henry and Theresa Molina sing on the Main Mall hoping to entice prospective blood donors to the Alpha Phi Omega blood drive. UT scientists observe Saturn before Voyager 1 By MELISSA WARD Daily Texan Staff While the Voyager 1 gets a “ snapshot view of Saturn, University astronom ers have been obser­ ving through a 107-inch telescope for the last decade. the planet regularly Through ground-based studies, such as those carried out from the U niversity’s McDonald Observatory near Fort Davis, scientists already knew that Titan, Saturn’s giant moon, had a thick, hazy atm osphere containing m ethane, said Dr. Bill Cochran, a research scientist in astronom y. “ While Voyager 1 has been getting a snapshot view of Saturn, we have been putting together an overall picture of its atm osphere and seasonal changes,” Cochran said. A team of University researchers, which in­ cludes obervatory director H arlan Smith and research scientists Laurence Trafton, Edwin Baker and Cochran, have been studying the planet to see if Saturn, as the Voyager is observing it, is in its norm al state. But Voyager 1 data, which takes nearly one and a half hours to travel back to E arth, has pointed out some unexpected characteristics, such as the high concentration of nitrogen in Titan s atm osphere. “ There is no way of detecting nitrogen from the ground,” Cochran said. “ Titan is the last place left w here there is the rem ote possibility of some sort of life,” he said. Beneath all its clouds, there are hydrocarbons, the basic building blocks of life. If the tem perature were w arm er, there would be more chance for complex chem ical reactions to take place, but T itan’s dense atm osphere of nitrogen could contribute to the possibility of life, Cochran said. He would expect w arm er surface tem peratures than those registered Thursday by the Voyager because of pressure of T itan’s thick atm osphere. Another startling discovery the Voyager has made is the nature of Saturn's F-ring. Scientists expected the rings to be narrow, flat and circular, but Voyager's photos surprisingly show “ several strains of m aterials tw isted’' together on the F-ring. S a t u r n ' s r i n g s h a v e s e v e r a l u n u s u a l characteristics such as the “ spoke-like” features which radiate out from the planet. Cochran com­ pared Saturn's hundreds of rings to the grooves on a phonograph. “ Four Answer to Perfection in Fashion Anniversary Sale 25% OFF on all Fall Merchandise including Shoes Special 30% OFF o n lin o H a s p e l B la z e rs Come celebrate with Michelle's and save! 2514 Guadalupe 9:30-6 478-5077 H e a rt's desire. T h is delicatt looking solitaire diamond is cut into a precise heart shape. A n d then faceted to bring out its brilliant sparkle. Set in a one-piece mounting, this unusual ring says a very special “/ love you." One- quarter carat diamond ring, $ 6 9 5 . One-third carat diamond ring, $ 9 9 5 . O ne-half carat diamond ring, $ ¡7 5 0 . t h e S h e f t a l l CO. JE W E L E R S G E M O L O G IST S M em ber American G em Society 22 i 6 Guadalupe in the sann block .is The C o-op , Allandale Village, W estgate M ali .m d H ighland Mall. All m ajor credit cards accepted. Pictured larger than actual size. THE DAILY TEXAN E d ito r ia l A s s is ta n t I S S U E S T A F F N e w s A s s is ta n ts M ic h e lle R ob b erson . M ic h e lle L ock e K un io Ishida T r a c y H este r E n t e r t a in m e n t A s s is ta n t S a ra h W h isU er A s s is ta n t S p o r ts E d ito r R o g e r C a m p b ell S p o r ts A s s is ta n ts J a n a M uir B o b F i s c e ll a . R o s a n n e P a la c io s T om H a rtm a n M ak e-up E d ito r W ire E d ito r T im M a r tin d a le Copy E d i t o r s .................................C .R F rin k, L a u r e l S c o tt. A1 Z ucha M ik e F ry S te v e P u m p h r e y , R alp h B a rre ra A r tist P h o t o g r a p h e r s • PREGNANCY TERMINATIONS • Free P regn ancy Testing • C o n fid e n tia l C ounseling (2 1 4 ) 369-5210 N o r t h C e n tra l W o m e n ' s C e n te r D a ll a s , Te xa s 7 5 2 4 3 T E X A N P E R M A N E N T S T A F F E d ito r M a n a g in g E d ito r ’ M d r k M cK in n on J oh n H a v en s A s s o c ia t e M a n a g in g E d itorsL )on P u ffe r . B rian D u nb ar A ssista n t M an a g in g E d ito r s W endy E arb . C a r lo s S a n c h e z A s s is ta n t to th e E d ito r N a n cy W a lser J o e T ed in o N e w s E d ito r A s s o c ia t e N e w s E d ito r A lisa H agan A ssista n t N e w s E d ito r s D ia n e B a lla r d . P a tr ic k J a n k o w sk i R on S ev b o ld J im m y B urch S en io r C op y E d ito r S p o r ts E d ito r A s s o c ia t e S p o r ts E d ito r P h o to E d ito r A s s is ta n t P h o to E d ito r E n te r ta in m e n t E d ito r F e a t u r e E d ito r G r a p h ic s E d ito r I m a g e s E d ito r I m a g e s A s s o c ia t e E d ito r C a m p u s A c tiv it ie s E d ito r G e n e r a l R e p o r te r s R eid L a v m a n c e X a v ie r G a rz a T im W en tw orth M e la n ie H ersh on J e f f L a tch a m K aren H urley A lex P la za K e lly C ash Suzy L a m p ert J en n v Abdo K aren Ann B r o e . B ob E ld e r M ark H e n r ic k s M ary Ann K re p s. S c o tt L ind D a v id P y n d u s. G a r d n e r S elb y . K ath y S h w iff. M e lis s a W ard N e w s w r ite r s K lau s H errin g. D avid C od e t \ n d y S lo v a k S te v e V in son T E X A N A D V E R T IS IN G S T A F F K ath y B e g a la J o e l C a r te r K im C oop er L isa G e r so n . J a n e m a r ie H agan . L aura M an n in g . G in a M o n tg o m e r y . P e g M ood y. J a m e s T h e a ll. J im W e lls. J e f fr e y W h iteh ea d T h e D a ily T e x a n a s tu d e n t n e w s p a p e r a t T h e U n iv e r s ity o f T e x a s a t A u stin , is p u b lis h e d by T e x a s S tu d en t P u b lic a t io n s D r a w e r D . U n iv e r s ity S ta tio n . A u stin . TX 78712 T h e D a ily T e x a n is p u b lish ed M on d ay, T u e sd a y W ed n esd a y . T h u rsd a y , and F r i­ d a y . e x c e p t h o lid a y an d e x a m p erio d s S eco n d c la s s p o s ta g e p a id a t A u stin . T X 78710 N e w s c o n tr ib u tio n s w ill be a c c e p te d by te le p h o n e 1471 -45911. a t th e e d ito r ia l o ff ic e i T e x a s S tu d en t P u b lic a tio n s B u ild in g 2 122» o r a l th e n e w s la b o r a to r y (C o m m u n ic a tio n B u ild in g A 4 136 1 Iru iuiries c o n c e r n in g d e liv e r y an d c la s s if ie d a d v e r t is in g sh ould be m a d e in T S P B u i l d i * 3 200 1471-52441 an d d is p la y a d v e r t is in g in T S P B u ild in g 3 210 (471 1865) T h e n a tio n a l a d v e r t is in g r e p r e s e n ta t iv e o f T h e D a ily T e x a n is C o m m u n ic a tio n s and A d v e r tis in g S e r v ic e s to S tu d e n ts . 6330 N P u la s k i. C h ic a g o . IL 60646 T h e D a ilv T e x a n s u b s c r ib e s to U n ited P r e s s In te r n a tio n a l an d N e w Y ork T im e s N e w s S e r v ic e T h e T ex a n S o u th w e s t J o u r n a lis m C o n g r e s s, A m e r ic a n N e w s p a p e r P u b lis h e r s A s s o c ia t io n C o p y rig h t 1980 T e x a s S tu d e n t P u b lic a t io n s is a m e m b e r o f th e the th e T e x a s D a ily N e w s p a p e r A s s o c ia tio n and A s s o c ia t e d C o lle g ia te P r e s s , T H E D A IL Y T E X A N S U B S C R IP T IO N R A T E S O n e S e m e s t e r i F a l l or S prin g» 1980-81 B y m a il in T e x a s B \ m a il o u ts id e T e x a s w ith in U SA T w o S e m e s t e r s i F a l l and S p r in g ! 1980-81 B y m a il in T e x a s B y m a il o u ts id e T e x a s w ith in U S A 17 50 18 50 32 00 34 00 S u m m e r S e s s io n 1981 B y m a il in T e x a s By m a il o u ts id e T e x a s w ith in U S A S en d o r d e r s a n d a d d r e s s c h a n g e s to T E X A S S T U D E N T P I B L IC A T IO N S P O Box P U B NO 146440 D A u stin T e x a s 78712 or to T S P B u ild in g C3 200 t i l 50 12 00 GIANT TRADE-IN SALE A N D RECEIVE $000 BR IN G A PA IR OF YOUR SHO ES FOR OUR G O O D -W ILL BARREL OFF on your purchase of a new pair of shoes valued up to 4 9 .2 6 OFF on a new pair of shoes or boots valued 5 0 .0 0 and up FANFARES BASS S.R.O. NICKELS CHEROKEE A N D M A N Y M ORE ENTIRE STOCK INCLUDED SELECT FRO M THE FOREM OST BR AND NA M ES A N D NEW EST FALL STYLES A N D COLORS OVER 1000 BOOKS 80< Aunpd We're overstocked and they have to move before rush! •NOVELS •TEXANA •TEXTBOOK • ART •TEXAS PRESS • FOOTBALL O •HISTORY S ol* tiv » t h r o u g h I I 2 1 > 0 HURRY FOR BEST SELECTION! TEXTBOOKS Lower Level free 1 hr parking w $3 00 purchase World in Brief From Texan news services Soviets unwilling MOSCOW — A delegation of U.S. arms control experts, including a top adviser to Ronald Reagan, said Thursday Soviet o ffic ia ls have shown no willingness to renegotiate the SALT II treaty. The American includes Reagan group, which national security adviser Gen. Brent Scowcroft and former U.N. Am­ bassador William Scranton, also pressed the Soviets for explanations about their invasion of Afghanistan, their intentions toward Poland and their actions in the sphere of human rights U.N. elects Panama UNITED NATIONS - The U.N. General Assembly ended three weeks of political wrangling among Latin American nations Thursday and elected Panama to a seat on the Security Council. The decision was a compromise in a heated contest between Costa Rica and Cuba for the Latin American seat on the council. the race Both withdrew because neither was able to muster two-thirds majority the required from ¡ among assembly members. Arabs split BEIRUT, Lebanon - Iraq Thurs­ day rejected Syria’s call for a post­ ponement of the Nov. 25 Arab sum­ mit conference because of the Per­ sian Gulf war, but radical South Yemen backed the proposal, signal­ ing a further split in Arab ranks. Guerrillas bomb police SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador — L e f t is t g u e r r illa s T h u rsd ay detonated a mine under a truckload of policemen and hit it with bazooka fire in downtown San Salvador, kill­ ing as many as eight police and w ounding 10 o th e r s. E a r lie r , authorities had reported 13 slayings, three of them police agents, in the most recent outbursts of political v io le n c e th e C entral American nation of 4.8 million peo­ ple. Children poisoned lash in g PORTSM OUTH, E ngland - Police theorized Thursday that a cruel new twist had been added to Col. Moammar Khadafy’s deadly vendetta against Libyan exiles with the paralysis of two Libyan children who were given poisoned peanuts. A Libyan man who had been watching the 8-year-old boy and 7-year-old g i r l ’s h o u s e th e c i t y of in Portsmouth on England’s southern Channel coast was ordered to appear in court Friday to answer ac­ cusations of trying to murder them by giving them the poisoned peanuts Phantom jet crashes SARAGOSSA, Spain - A U.S. Air Force F-4 Phantom jet on a practice firing run Thursday hit a large bird and crashed, killing one of its pilots and injuring the other one. Neither pilot was identified. The Phantom, based in Spangdalem, West Ger­ many, was on a practice firing run at the Bardenas Realas range in Navarre province in northeastern Spainwhen the accident occurred. Judge stays suits SAN FRANCISCO - A federal judge Thursday issued a stay of 90 days (Hi suits against $500 million in frozen Iranian assets by 20 U.S. firms after reviewing arguments that such action could hurt the release of the hostages. U.S. District Judge Robert Peckham ’s order didn’t affect about 180 other such suits pending around the country, 96 of them in New York. Similar rulings, however, have been issued in some of those cases. Mafia trial undecided LOS ANGELES — Jurors in the murder-racketeering trial of five Southern California reputed Mafia leaders said Thursday they were making headway in their efforts to reach verdicts and the judge quickly in s tr u c te d to c o n tin u e th em later, deliberations. Two hours however, they reported they were still not able to reach verdicts on all charges. Transit out of gas BOSTON — The Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority has spent its 1980 operating budget and faces a weekend shutdown uhless the state chips in $41 million, officials of the nation’s oldest transit line said Thursday. Dow Jonot Avorago 30 Industrials Nov«mb«f IS. 1980 High ...984.64 Cio»«. lowT.... 982.20 Up..„ .982.42 .17.49 World &NationaJ U.S. blasts Soviet human rights repression Bell calls Moscow’s occupation of Afghanistan blatant violation of Helsinki accords MADRID, Spain (U PI) — The United States denounced the Soviet Union Thursday for its “ brutal repression’’ of human rights and for its invasion of Afghanistan. “ The Soviet invasion cast a dark shadow over East-W est relations which no m eeting, no pronounce­ ment, nothing in fact but the total withdrawal of Soviet troops can dispel,’’ U.S. delegation chief G rif­ fin B Bell told the 35-nation European security con­ ference. In a bid to rescue the conference from collapse, nine neutral and non-aligned countries sponsored a new com prom ise proposal for an agenda to break an East-W est deadlock over debate on human rights. The proposal would set aside the first five weeks for debate on im plem entation of the Helsinki ac­ cords, including human rights, and a sixth week for new proposals on European security, said Austrian Foreign M inister Willibald Pahr. F orm er Attorney G eneral Bell, echoing the words of the British delegate, called Moscow’s occupation of Afghanistan the most blatant violation of the 1975 Helsinki accords that assured basic freedom s. Winning prolonged applause from all but Com­ m unist delegates, Bell listed all those Soviet citizens imprisoned or exiled for trying to m onitor Moscow’s im plem entation of the Helsinki agreem ent. “ The reaction of the Soviet authorities was to sub­ he ject these brave people to brutal repression, said. American officials said the wording of the U.S. declaration was toughened to reflect Soviet refusal to accept a conference agenda th a t included discus­ sion of human rights. Soviet chief delegate Leonid I. Ilyichev was to have spoken right after Bell but withdrew a t the last minute to consult with Moscow. He now is scheduled to address the conference Friday. But the Soviet line was evident in a speech by Hungarian Foreign M inister Janos Nagy, who claim ­ ed w estern countries were using human rights and the Afghan invasion to sabotage new m easures on European security and cooperation. E astern nations “ are not afraid to discuss human rights,” he said, “ but are concerned that this noble cause will be used for confrontation, accusations and denigration.” E arlier, British M inister of State P eter Blaker also condemned invading Afghanistan, saying it “ has broken every one of the (Helsinki) principles.” the Soviet Union for But West German Foreign M inister Hans Dietrich Genscher, in a much milder speech, referred only briefly to the invasion, describing it as “ incom­ patible” with the Helsinki agreem ent. In the backstage struggle over a new agenda, w estern delegations expressed initial satisfaction with the latest com prom ise formula as it would meet the W est’s demand — rejected by Moscow — for full discussion of human rights violations. Abscam videotape seen in bribery trial NEW YORK (U PI) - Rep. John M urtha of Pennsylvania turned down a $50,000 bribe from FBI u nd erco v er ag en ts but said C ongressm en John Murphy and Frank Thompson “ expect to be taken c a re of, an A bscam videotape showed Thursday. The videotape w as played a t the bribery-conspiracy trial of Murphy, a New York D em ocrat, and Thompson, a New Jersey D em ocrat, who are accused of sharing in separate $50,000 bribes. It documents a m eeting last Jan. 7 betw een M u rth a , a P e n n s y lv a n ia D e m o c r a t, F B I a g e n t A n th o n y A m e ro s o , F B I in f o r m a n t M e lv in W einberg, and H ow ard C rid e n , a Philadelphia lawyer. Criden, convicted of bribery and con­ spiracy at an earlier Abscam trial, allegedly acted as a go-between for the congressm en and agents. During the meeting in a Washington townhouse, M urtha was offered $50,000 by A m eroso, who w ith W ein berg , pretended to represent two phony Arabs to the U nited seeking to e m ig ra te States. Ameroso took the $50,000 out of a desk draw er, and held it in front of M urtha. But the congressm an said, “ I ’m not in­ ICU . A HI Ov/i t J • • » v» v v * r terested, I ’m sorry ... a t this point He explained to Ameroso that he was on the House Ethics C om m ittee and said th a t, “ If you g e t into h e a t w ith politicians, th e re ’s no amount of money that can help ...” In his opening statem ent, prosecutor Thomas Puccio said Thompson had in­ troduced M urtha to Criden. He said Thompson told M urtha he could expect $50.000 in “ walking around money” from the undercover agents. And in another videotape played Wednesday Criden said Murphy and Thompson were “ supposed to get ten apiece” for bring­ ing M urtha into the conspiracy. s o u g h t At the meeting, Murtha, an unindicted co-conspirator, who Will testify as a g o v e rn m e n t w itn e s s , in ­ vestm ents by the phony Arabs in coal mining operations, banks and other businesses th at would benefit his dis­ trict. He said such investm ents would give the Arabs tics to the district and make it easier to introduce bills on their behalf. But he said of Murphy and Thompson, “ Now these other, these other guys are expecting, no question about it. They’re expecting some, ah ...” He added a few m inutes later, “ Let me m ake it very clear. The other two guys do expect to be taken care of. D v * Personal tragedy and loss UPI Telephoto Peggy Miller (r) weeps after being evacuated from her apartment complex in New Orleans, where a four-alarm fire fire broke out Thursday. One per­ son died after jumping from a fourth floor window. ^ ^ Iranian parliament meets but ignores hostage issue Decision may not come until end of year; initial reactions to U.S. reply negative demands included the freeing of blocked . . . ■______i. dem ands includ Moslem holy period of mourning, m ak­ Iranian assets, the return of the late ing it unlikely that any decision on the shah’s wealth and a pledge of non­ hostages would even be considered until interference in Iranian affairs. late in the month. nf thie ” thp Ari7nnn Rpnub lic of this y e a r,” the A r iz o n a R e p u b lic quoted Treasury D epartm ent sources as saying. reply . . * ALGIERS, Algeria (U PI) — Iranian diplomats said Thursday Iran had begun its studying demands for freeing the 52 hostages but that the initial reaction was not very positive. the American to One Iranian diplom at said officials in Tehran believed Washington was stall­ ing. O th e r w e ll-in fo rm e d s o u rc e s the country serving as in Algeria, in­ te r m e d ia r y b e tw e e n T e h r a n an d tney Deneveu uie shington, said W ashington, said they believed the American position would provoke a clash between m oderates and hardliners in the Iranian parliam ent, charged by A yatollah Ruhollah Khom eini with deciding the fate of the hostages. In Tehran, parliam ent m et Thursday but did not even mention the hostages, now in their 376th day of captivity. Hopes that the 52 Am ericans m ight be released before the end of the year were battered by several developments. P arliam ent was closing Saturday for to observe M oharam , a •------- - “ one week uuc wee* w A report published in an Arizona new spaper also quoted “ unim peach­ able” adm inistration sources as saying they did not believe the hostage negoti­ ations would make substantial progress at all this year. “ Our people do not consider it a t all likely that there will be an affirm ative response (from Iran) for the rem ainder They characterized the A merican rep­ ly to Ira n ’s four hostage dem ands as “ positive” but “ cool” and said it tried to explain to the Iranians that m eeting all the dem ands was “ impossible under American law .” The demand that created the biggest legal problem was T ehran’s insistence that all claim s against Iran pending in U.S. courts be dropped. The other Sources in Algeria, which passed along the bulky set of docum ents com­ prising the U.S. reply to Iran, had ex­ pressed concern the Iranians would not understand why their demands could not be met. That appeared to be borne out by to the set of initial reaction Iran's documents. - Lame duck Congress chips away at busy agenda WASHINGTON (U PI) — The lam e duck Congress, off to a fast sta rt with passage of an Alaska lands bill, chipped away Thursday a t an am bitious agenda that includes a budget and extension of revenue sharing for local governments. The House worked on the $4.6 billion revenue shar­ ing bill. The Senate considered an appropriation for the D epartm ents of State, Ju stice and Commerce. House Speaker Thomas O'Neill said House and Senate D em ocratic leaders agreed to aim for passage of a fiscal 1981 budget and all but three of the ap­ propriation bills that are necessary to fund govern­ ment. After that, they will do as much other work as possible before a Dec. 5 adjournm ent. Prospects for an im m ediate tax cut appeared dead since Senate D em ocrats decided not to consider it and there was little enthusiasm for the proposal in the House. O’Neill said appropriation bills that probably will be left to the next Congress include the largest of all money bills — covering the D epartm ents of Labor, Education and Health and Human Services. Two others not likely to be passed cover the legislative branch and foreign aid. Spending for those projects would continue until April at current levels under a resolution, O ’Neill said. . . . . i i The post-election session, which began Wednesday, got off to a fast sta rt when the House accepted a Senate bill protecting m ore than 100 million acres of pristine Alaska lands from development. President C arter received the bill and praised it. If the post-election session m aintains the mom en­ tum set during initial hours, several m ajor bills thought to be dead might see new life, including a “ superfund’’ to clean up spills of oil and toxic chem icals. However, tim e simply m ay run out on several others, including a m ajor rew riting of the lederal crim inal code. The crim inal code revision has support from such ~ - C *• 1 ______ ^ diverse elem ents as conservative Sen. Strom Thur­ mond. R-S.C.. and liberals such as Sen. Edward Kennedy. D-Mass., and Rep. Robert Drinan, D-Mass. But its size and com plexity work against it. C f T V l m a O’Neill said that in addition to budget and ap­ propriation bills, priority will be given to an un­ employment benefits bill nearing final form, an ex­ tension of the Economic Development Administra­ tion, and the “superfund” bill. Revenue sharing, Northwest power legislation, a transportation bill and a m easure to protect U.S. agents from public identification are scheduled for House consideration this week. a , .................... mu..................... .......................mm......... i............'mm........i............................................ mm..........................iiimmimiiiiiiini| Senate approves bill I House passes tend measure said in a statem ent. 1 WASHINGTON (U PI) — The Senate Thursday approved a strong statem en t against school busing th at would ban the Justice D epartm ent from going to court to end racial discrim ination through that method The 42-38 vote on the anti-busing m easure was a victory for Sens. Strom Thurmond, R-S.C., and Jesse Helms, R- N.C., who will be two of the new conser­ vative powers when Republicans take over control of the Senate in January. Conservatives and Southerners align­ ed to defeat an attem p t to nullify the am endm ent by w atering it down. Sen. Lowell Weicker, R-Conn., tried to void the Thurmond-Helms proposal with language th at said it would not app­ ly when the Ju stice D epartm ent sought to e n f o r c e th e F i f t h a n d 14th Amendments to the Constitution, which guarantee due process and equal protec­ tion of the law. “ What is at issue is not education or busing,” said W eicker, who was sup­ ported on the Senate floor by Sens. Edward Kennedy, D-Mass., and Jacob Javits, R-N Y. “ It is the ability of each of us to receive independent ju stic e .” But Helms countered th at “ innocent little children a re being used a s pawns in a shell gam e.” He m anaged to modify the Weicker am endm ent to rem ove bus­ ing from the list of rem edies the Justice D epartm ent can use to enforce con­ 1 s ti t u t i o n a l p r o te c tio n s , a n d modification was approved. th a t The House already has passed the anti-busing am endm ent, which w as a t­ tached to a bill appropriating 1981 funds for the D epartm ents of State, Justice and Commerce. The Senate am en d m en t contain s som ew hat different wording, however, and was subject to final passage of a Justice D epartm ent appropriations bill to which it was attached. W eicker said it is not the Senate s place to lim it rem edies that can be used by governm ent agencies in enforcing the law. But Helms said the issue is “ how much longer are we going to allow fe d e ra l b u re a u c ra ts a t the J u stic e D epartm ent to continue to torm ent the children of this country. T h u rm o n d , w ho w ill c h a ir th e Judiciary C om m ittee in the Republican Senate, agreed: “ We re not favoring discrim ination ... We re simply saying, Let the children go to the nearest school, w hether it’s all white or all black or w hatever. ” The House originally approved the anti-busing m easure before Congress recessed for the elections — forbidding the Justice D epartm ent from suing to enforce busing past the n earest school, except for the m entally and physically handicapped i *1980 The Washington Star 19.80..TI?.e. n! i„ ,t WASHINGTON — Bowing to the political realities of last w eek’s election, the House Wednesday passed and sent to President C arter landm ark legislation th at sets aside 104 million acres of A laska’s m ost spectacular land as parks, monuments, wildlife refuges and w ilderness areas The voice vote cam e a fte r less than a half-hour of floor debate and m arked a surprisingly quiet end to the con­ troversial journey of legislation that has been bounced around on Capitol Hill for the past nine years. The move cam e a fte r Rep. M orris K. Udall, D-Ariz., chairm an of the House Interior C om m ittee, dropped his pre-election plans to am end the Senate-passed version of the m easure and instead accepted the bill as it was passed by the Senate last August. “ This is one of the most far-reaching conservation decisions in history,” said Udall, noting that he has worked on the m easure for the past eight years. “ But we re now in the situation where we have to go along with the Senate bill — th a t’s realistically the only option. Udall said he would have preferred a m ore environm en­ tally oriented m easure, but Sen. Ted Stevens, R Alaska, said the House was in a take-it-or-leave-it position. Stevens warned that if the House m ade any changes in the Senate version of the legislation, it threatened to tie up the Senate in renewed filibusters that would have doomed chances of passage of the bill this year. “Fighting this thing another four years, maybe waiting for another Democratic president, just wasn t worth the candle,” said Udall. President Carter said he was “pleased and gratfied by the passage of the bill. “ Both houses of Congress have now endorsed the greatest land conservation legislation of the century, thus assuring that the ‘crown jew els’ of the Alaskan natural wonders are afforded protection, Carter s aia«kan natural wonders are afforded protection, 1 ....- Those on both sides of the Alaska lands issue said they Thnsp on both sides of the Alaska lands issue said they would have preferred a different bill, and both said they would attem pt to change the m easure in the new Congress. “ This falls far short of what we wanted, but it represents 85 percent of what I hoped to achieve in this legislation, ’ said Rep. John F. Seiberling, D-Ohio, who favored a bill the House passed last year th at would have given stronger protection to a total of 130 million acres. Environm entalists said they were pleased to see a resolu­ tion of the issue. “ We re clearly not happy with the final bill, but it’s good for the nation to settle this now, said Charles Clusen, chairm an of the Alaska Coalition, an um­ brella group of environm ental organizations fighting for the The legislation covers a land area as large as the state of California and will result in a tripling of the amount of parkland in the U.S. park system . It com pletes the land transfer m andated by the Alaska Statehood Act of 1954. The proposed legislation sets aside 43.6 million acres of new national parks, establishes 53.6 million acres of new wildlife refuges, puts 3.4 million acres into the national forest system , establishes 1.2 million acres of new wild and scenic rivers, and designates 2.2 million acres national conservation a re a s .” the p ro tected In addition, the m easure puts on some 56 7 million acres of land an additional designation as wilderness areas, which will prohibit virtually all develop­ m ent and motorized travel. For environm entalists, the most controversial provisions would perm it seismic exploration for oil and gas but no drilling — on 900,000 acres of land along the western coast of the William O. Douglas Arctic Wildlife Range — calving grounds of the largest caribou herd in America o . Editorials Opinions expressed in The Daily Texan are those of the editor or the writer of the article and a re n o t necessarily those of the University administration, the Board of Regents or the T exas Student PuDlications Board of Operating Trustees Reagan faces global economy By THOMAS BROM R onald R e a g a n ’ s e le c tio n eve prom ise to “ put Am erica back to work” capped a presidential campaign filled with the rhetoric of economic nationalism But much like a bare limb in the Victorian age, the revealed withdrawal of Reagan foreign policy adviser Richard Allen from the cam ­ paign provided a glimpse of the global economic reality of the 1980s. Allen left the Reagan camp after the Wall S t r e e t J o u r n a l revealed he was employed by the manufacturers of Dat- sun autos. The sam e day, Datsun an­ nounced it would build a $300 million in lig h t Tennessee, directly employing 2,200 workers near Nashville. tr u c k a s s e m b ly p la n t The twin events briefly cast light on the huge global economy — a network of multinational corporations, invest­ ment banks and m aster builders that threatens to overwhelm national boun­ daries. Brushing aside official attempts to regulate or control its activities, the global economy juggles capital, labor and raw m aterials across continents as easily a s sm aller businesses move across town. The problem, however, is that the whole notion of a stateless capitalist economy is difficult to sell to the American people. Politicians don’t con­ trol it, labor unions are only beginning to affect it and local people faced with closing factories and declining living standards can’t appreciate it. Yet the g lo b a l econ om y is e v e ry w h e re , ironically creating a last-minute scan­ dal in a Reagan campaign publicly com m itted to restrictin g Ja p a n e se vehicle imports. THE NEW LIN E of “ global c a r s ” is the best exam ple of m ultinational business and provides a model for other integrated international producers. Ford’s Fiesta has windshields from Oklahoma, carburetors from Northern Ireland, spark plugs from England, wheels from Belgium, bumpers from West Germany and is put together in Spain. Ford has 22 overseas plants, followed elosely by GM’s 21 factories in Europe alone. GM also has joint ven­ tures in Japan, Kenya, Korea. Iran, Yugoslavia and South Africa. The multinationals — European and Japanese companies as well as U.S. based — are putting most of their Euro­ pean investment in the less developed countries such a s Spain, Ireland, Portugal and Greece. Labor is cheaper, and the rate of market growth is greater than in Northern Europe. Roughly 40 percent of total U.S. foreign investm ent, however, goes primarily to 10 industrializing nations in the Third World. That is where the multinationals are taking U.S. capital and U.S. jobs. Given Ronald R eagan’s free market economic policy, the shift of manufacturing to the Third World should a c c e le r a te during his a d ­ ministration. AT THE SAME time, foreign mul­ tinational corporations are investing heavily in the United States. According to the Commerce Department, foreign direct investment in the United States jumped $5.7 billion last year. Foreign investors are coming for the rich U.S. consumer market, political stability — and to exploit our cheap labor. Average wages for manufac­ turing w orkers the Netherlands, Belgium and Sweden now exceed comparable U.S. wages by as much as 20 percent. The United States ranks a dismal seventh in global wage standards, behind much of western Europe. in G erm an y , The growth and direction of the global economy is alm ost completely unregulated. It is financed by offshore banks in Nassau, the Cayman Islands and Hong Kong that publish no records and have no reserve requirements to cover outstanding loans. The capital consists of Eurodollars — nearly $800 billion of in foreign banks — and petrodollars ac­ cumulated by the OPEC nations of the Middle East. This financial network is e sse n tia lly an “ outlaw banking system — and it works very well indeed for multinational business. investment funds held Ford, for instance, made 94 percent of its profits from overseas operations in the first three quarters of 1979. More than 70 U.S. companies conduct foreign business with sales in excess of $1 billion, and 11 have sales over $5 billion. And that doesn’t include export sales. AT A TIME when many Americans are frustrated and confused by a decade of inflation and economic stagnation at home, none of this plays very well in Peoria. President Carter and Ronald Reagan campaigned before people con­ cerned about high interest rates, un­ employment and inflation that takes away wage gains before the paycheck clears the bank. Global corporations shifting production from one continent to another is a different level of reality. Not surprisingly, none of the m ajor candidates chose to address the issue. Even Congress prefers to bluster nationalist slogans rather than face the implications of an integrated global economy. A recent report by the House ways and means trade subcommittee denounced commerce with Japan in flag-waving terms. “ We are Jap an ’s plantation,” the report concluded. -“ Haulers of wood and growers of crops, in exchange for high technology, value- added produ cts. We believe this relationship is not acceptable.” The Reagan economic plan echoes this cry of economic self-reliance. It relies heavily on traditional methods of stimulating the private sector — tax cuts, accelerated depreciation on new equipment, deregulation of business operations. R eagan’s “ supply side” economists passionately believe that the resulting business growth will more than com­ pensate for the immediate loss of tax r e v e n u e f o r s o c i a l p r o g r a m s . Traditional Keynesian econom ists believe just as passionately that the tax and economic stimulus will produce wild inflation and even higher interest rates. Neither set of advisers, however, publicly mentions the flight of capital and jobs abroad, or the real world in­ terdependence of the capitalist nations. OFFICIAL SILENCE could hardly ignorance of the global come from econom y. G eorge Bush, the vice president-elect, is a former member of the Trilateral Commission — a three- cornered organization of Japanese, European and U.S. leaders founded to stabilize the world economy. Jim m y Carter is also a member, as is John the global economy Anderson. Yet remained underground during the cam ­ paign debates. It may still be on the Reagan agenda to go public with the global economy, revealing its marvelous free market operation beyond s t a t e con trols. Richard Allen has already rejoined the Reagan staff, “ rehabilitated” much as disgraced Chinese leaders are later returned to power. However, it is far more likely that the domestic pressures to protect jobs, home m arkets and the health of in­ dustrial sm all towns will prevent the open celebration of the world economy. It will nevertheless thrive on Mexican engines, Brazilian steel, South Korean textiles and Spanish assem bly — all beyond the scrutiny of Am erican voters. c 1980 Pacific News Service Viewpoint Don’t know, don’t care A recent Gallup poll revealed a shocking result. When asked if they could briefly define the First Amendment, 75 percent of the respondents were unable to answer the question. Of those unable to identify the amendment, the m ajori­ ty were between the ages of 19 and 29, or over 50 years old. Perhaps the former is a case of ignorant bliss, the latter a case of mental deterioration, and perhaps those between 30 and 50 years of age who fared better more clearly remember the McCarthy hearings of the 1950s and the civil rights violence of the 1960s. Maybe the schools were simply more concerned with educating students about such fundamental subjects as the U.S. Constitution. In his recently published book, “ The First Freedom ,” Nat Hentoff, a com­ mittee member of the Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press and history teacher at the New School for Social Research and at New York Univer­ sity, recounts and analyzes what he describes as the tumultuous history of free speech in A m erica.” In the book Hentoff exhausts and details the past and current state of the F irst Amendment. It is interesting and notable that the opening chapter is on students, teachers and librarians and focuses on what Hentoff concludes to be a dangerous deficiency in education today because teachers are not taking the responsibility to make students aware of First Amendment rights. The long-term crises, Hentoff surmizes, is that because students are brought up in an environment where there is little or no attention paid to the Constitu­ tion or student rights, those students become accustomed to the status quo, ask few questions, make few demands and get used to the idea of having others make their decisions. Those are the symptoms. The disease is the current m alaise of apathy, disinterest, non-participation and the general attitude among students on cam puses today that their voices aren’t heard, or that when they’re heard they are not taken seriously and that it doesn’t make any difference anyway. Every time the government or the courts impose legislation or hand down opinions that attempt to excise rights that were considered important enough two centuries ago to include in the Constitution, and we quietly accept or ignore such activity, we become party to the force responsible for closing the academ ic windows which takes away the spark of curiosity, excitement and learning that once was reflected in the eyes of students. We don’t wish to suggest that student ignorance of constitutional rights is the primary condition leading to the educational crises in America today. There are far too many other societal and structural variables directly, if not more related to the issue. We do concur with Hentoff, however, to the extent that the condition is a recognizable ailment that can be administered to which might help relieve some of the general pain. Mark McKinnon Passenger may be flying tourist but luggage flies first-class By W ILLIA M F~ BUCKLEY, JR. My fast and abstinence on the subject of airline travel, which I had resolved to make last for one whole year, was broken in Mexico City under extrem e provocation. It is unlikely that your immediate plans call for flying on Varig Airlines (Brazil s) from Mexico to Rio, but should they do so, change these plans in­ stantly. In fact, if you plan to travel with something more than one set of underwear and a paperback copy of “ Gone With the Wind,” bring lots of money, because lots of money is what Varig desparately wants. A little history. With the development of jet travel, the air­ lines inherited a loophole: namely, an excess baggage rate fashioned with reference to the tiny little m arsupial cavities associated with propeller flight. For one pound of excess baggage, the airlines took to charging you one-half of the first class fare. Now this meant that if you were travelling tourist to, say, Rome, and you had 200 pounds of extra luggage, you were paying the airline one full first-class ticket, in addition to your turist ticket. If it happened that you yourself weighed 200 pounds, which isn’t all that unusual, you ended in the paradox­ ical situation of paying about twice as much for your excess luggage as for yourself, notwithstanding that your luggage received no free champagne, saw no movie on flight, and ate no m eals whatsoever. THE HERO in this situation is a young activist lawyer from Miami, F la., Mr. Donald Pevsner, who brought suit with the Civil Aeronautics Board charging the “ reasonable surtax’ on overweight permitted by the relevant conventions was not reasonable at all. After furious litigation stretching over a half dozen years, Pevsner and the people of America triumphed over the airlines — and the CAB issued a ruling that passengers would be given two suitcases, no m atter how heavy, free of charge; for each extra suitcase they would be charged a flatrate, once again per article, not per pound, because a jet air­ line is relatively blase about weight, which m atters hardly at all. It is the cubic footage occupied that m atters. Now the question then arose: how to make foreign airlines comply with the American rules. A tricky diplomatic business, but the CAB recognized a responsibility to protect American consumers, and therefore acted favorably on a suit the effect of which would be to deny landing rights to foreign carriers that continued to extort from passengers the usurious rate. Okay, easy enough when the question is foreign carrier X travelling from Rome to New York. But what about foreign carrier X travelling from Cairo to Rome to New York? Is it to be allowed to swindle you on the Cairo-Rome leg9 Or, for that m atter, if you got off in Cairo, and were swindled on overweight, would that carrier forfeit the right to land in the United States? That m atter is in negotiation. What is interesting, of course, is that simultaneously we are entered into the age of decontrol, and airlines are supposed to be permitted to give passengers any break they want to give them, which is how it ought to be. Enter Varig Airlines. WE (WIFE AND I) arrived with seven heavy suitcases for the Mexico-Rio leg of a business journey. We expected to pay $60 or so apiece for each of the three surplus suitcases.The lady behind the desk did a little calculating and informed me that I would need to pay Varig $1,295. I thought perhaps I was being sold some shares in Varig Airlines, and having nonesuch in my little port­ folio, the idea rather attracted me, however unorthodox the ap­ proach. But of course it turned out that she desired over $400 per bag for the nine-hour trip, which is approximately the annual per capita income of the average Mexican. Now the question then arose: how to make foreign airlines comply with the American rules. A tricky diplomatic business, but the CAB recognized a to protect American responsibility co n su m e rs, and th erefo re ac te d favorably on a suit the effect of which would be to deny landing rights to foreign carriers that continued to ex­ tort from passengers the usurious rate. I was convinced she had m ade a mistake, and the manager, Mr. Renato Rocha was summoned. Mr. Rocha is of that young breed of bureaucrats trained in the letter of the law and in the sweet fragrance of dissumulation. He told me that the govern­ ment of Mexico by law forbade charging less that the old excess rate. The laws of the government of Mexico are sacred on no other subject than airline overweight, I suggested, appealing to the objectively unreasonable suggestion that three bags con­ taining mostly books and papers should each have to pay $400 to hitch a ride to a friendly country down south. MR. ROCHA WAS adamant, so I crossed the aisle, spent 10 minutes with a most amiable lady from Eastern Airlines, who flew us to Miami, connecting with Pan American to Rio, where we arrived at the pleasant hour of 8 a.m ., only two hours after Varig’s flight, which arrived with two empty seats Mexico-Rio and two canceled seats from various points in Latin America to other points in Latin America over the ensuing fortnight. So: If you have any overweight, check; and avoid Varig, or any airline that continues the old gauge. And don’t forget, every now and then, to think gratefully about that energetic young lawyer in Miami. ®1980 Universal P ress Syndicate DOONESBURY PR PAN, LET ME SEE IF TVE GOT MIS STRAIGHT UIHAT YOU'RE SAYING IS MAT ME BEST REALES- 1u TATE INVESTMENTS ARE ™ IN DECAYING NEIGHBOR- / WOPS Í _ OF COURSE, SOME NEIGHBOR" HOOPS PROVE VERY RBSLUENT, SOfTS OFTEN NECESSARY TO v STIMULATE THE AREAS DECLINE I IN ORDER TO BRING DOWN ') LOCAL PROPERTY VALVES \ HOW PO YOU DO THAT7 HOMING HEAVY- HANPEP.UeMm, FOR INSTANCE, DISTRIBUTE SPRAY PAINT AND C m BARSTDTHE LOCAL KIPS. by Garry Trudeau m i, WITHIN YOU GET M M LIMITS. WE ASK TO VANDALIZE THEM NOT TO \ M IR OWN TOUCH THE COP- HOMES ? PER PLUMBING. Too much popularity spoils the chili By GEORGE KINNEY The truth, at last, must be told. For 15 years, I’ve kept my silence, hoping I was wrong, that things would change, Jiat there would open in Austin a Mex- can food restaurant which would withs­ tand the devastatin g and tasteless trauma of success. But noooooo. With popularity comes mediocrity, rhat’s the way it is. There’s something ibout tacky tacos and proprietors Cadillacs that go together like Exxon ind inflation. Oh, it starts out innocently enough — i cold enchilada, a chintzy chalupa, a warm mug of beer — but soon all is o s t . A o n c e co zy a tm o s p h e r e iegenerates into a m assive dollar- jrabbing, grub-groping den of run-’em- hrough-as-fast-as-you-can capitalists. The pattern is all too fam iliar. F irst you discover an out-of-the-way dexican food restaurant that vibrates vith arom atic, homecooked authentici- y. No doubt the owner will be in the Litchen doing the cooking or circulating imong the tables, cheerfully express- ng his appreciation to the patrons and constantly making sure everything is as t should be: “ Mas tortillas, senor? ’ode esta bien?” He m akes you feel so omfortable and at ease that you might ven venture an occasional “ G racias, ira d a s,” or “ Tráigam e otra cerveza •ien fria, por favor. IT’S ALL SO wonderful in the begin- ling, before the word spreads: Mexico s just a conversation away. I can emember ’em all before the Fall, fhere was Las Casuelas, with Mama ,ucille welcoming us with a big hug, isking us about the kids and how we’d >een. She watched over our table like a nother hen, and woe to the waiter who leglected us for a minute You’d never find a warm beer at t h a t table back then. not And, of course, there are m em ories of Matt Martinez at the old E l Rancho, wishing my wife a happy birthday and ordering her a m argarita on the house. Then there was Jo rg e ’s. At last, I thought, a place strong enough to take it and co m e out s m e ll in g lik e a hom em ade to rtilla . I r e c a ll with heartfelt nostalgia that cold afternoon I guess I could have kept quiet and gone on silently objecting for another 15 years, but when 1 was informed snobbily at Jo rg e ’s a while back that they no longer sold p itch er beer, that it was a buck and a quater a round or go thirsty — that did it. I cracked up. I made a scene. I swore I ’d tell my story.______ _ in January a few years back, when Jorge himself brought me a steaming bowl of his delicious, not-on-the-menu specialty — the best chicken and dumplings ever prepared on either side of the Rio Grande The man is a genius. But such excellence is short-lived. Soon the secret is out and every cosmic cowboy, darling debutante and big­ mouthed businessman is there, sporting their goddamn hats and Willie jeans, trying pathetically to rub som e TexMex into their sorrily sophisticated souls. I ’ve been there. F R O M a L O V E L Y S p a n is h - American hostess, sparkling with old world beauty, flashing a cheerful smile a s she instructs the busboy to pull two or three tables together to accomodate a large group, to a faceless yankee matron that willfully crowds a family reunion around a table built for four — I ’ve seen it all. Sure,there’s Tres Bobos and San Miguel’s, but that’s a whole ’nother basket of tostadas. I ’m talking soul — Pancho Villa enlistment posters ador­ ning the red, green and white walls, Perla and Carta Blanca neons in just the right places — yo hablando tex- icano. But it all disappears with the ad­ vance of digital cash registers and check-walking frat rats. I guess I could have kept quiet and gone on silently objecting for another 15 years, but when I was informed snobbi­ ly at Jo rg e 's a while back that they no longer sold pitcher beer, that it was a buck and a quarter a round or go thirsty — that did it. I cracked up. I made a scene. I swore I'd tell my story. B E FO R E THIS castigation gets out of hand, however, I m ust make the con­ cession that the above mentioned restaurant owners might well have perfectly sound reasons for changing their policies. I ’d drive a Mercedes myself if I could afford one The name of the gam e in business is survival, which demands profits and expansion, which demands organizational flexibili­ ty to meet new marketing demands. Great. All I ’m saying is that it just so happens that I’ve recently located a terrifically obscure M exican food restaurant that lives up to the high stan­ dards demanded by old tim ers like me with flying colors. You want to know where it is? Forget it, su ck er________ K i n n e y is a C o m m u n i c a t i o n s s t u ­ d e n t Viewers enshrine illusive images transmitted by television Friday, November 14, 1980 □ TH E D AILY T EX A N □ Page 5 the Drag. But my favorite place is the Union Building, which is practically an orgy of video consumption. Monitors everywhere! And if anything special is on, they’ll set up a projection screen or two. The big event last weekend, excep­ ting the ubiquitous football games, was the w ho-done-in-J.R. segm ents of “ D allas.” Not only did this rate a special screen, but people crossing the lobby would suddenly plop them selves down on the tile floor in front of the monitor there, which is something I hadn’t seen before. IT IS A D IFFE R E N T thing to watch “ D allas” with a group of people here than in Boston or Santa Monica, for ex­ ample. For those people, “ D allas” is creatin g a new, and m uch needed mythology. “ What is this new Texas, and why is everyone moving th ere?” The show only needs to satisfy these a u d ie n c e s ’ e x p e c ta tio n s fo r good general soap opera, with a few regional details added on. But we k n o w Dallas first hand. We dem and that the story they tell us about D allas be a lot like the story we tell ourselves about Dallas. Hell hath no fury like a Texan audience scorned. Witness “ Urban Cowboy.” Doomed to B status because Travolta had an unpardonably non-Texas hitch to his git-along. But “ D allas” works, and local audiences root for it to work even better. Suggestions for im provem ents are fired at the screen by the audience ( “ if only Sue Ellen had a show horse ...” ). We feel involved in this creation, or recreatio n , of Texan style and mythology for national consumption. its This attention to Texan style is one of the more curious things now happening in pop culture. I know this because “60 M inutes” picked up on it this week (I saw this at home, where TV was se r­ ving in my traditional function bachelor flat as the face across my dinner table). I suspect the timing of the “ 60 M inutes” piece was simply capitalizing on the am ount of press go­ ing to “ D allas” at the sam e tim e: a whole audience w arm ed up to Texas. The thrust of the show was the distinc­ tion between real Texas and fake Tex­ as. Authorities w ere called on to draw the line. WHAT THE OBSERVERS of this Texas craze seem to m iss is the odd in­ terplay between real (local) and fake (urban/N ew York) Texas. The last few years have seen a kind of shuttle stylistics, like shuttle diplomacy. New York designers picked up on cowboy clothes some y ears back. The clothes cam e back to us, through Scarbroughs and Foleys. We rejected a lot of that first batch, and kept some. We sent back the m eessage, along with a script for “ The Best Little Whorehouse in T exas.” They sent us a new improved fall collection, along with “ Urban Cow­ boy.” Deep-six “ Urban Cowboy,” but leave the Izods, if you please. Then we got “ D allas” and Ralph Lauren, which was a better batch, to be sure, but those New Yorkers never did learn how to make a boot ... and so on. The upshot of all this is the peculiar mix which now parades down the Drag in some combination of Ralph Lauren, L évi-Strauss, Addidas, Nocona and Stetson. There is a great cover on an old S m ith s o n ia n magazine that shows a tribesm an sporting an New Guinea e la b o ra te h e a d re s s m ad e out of feathers and Budweiser cans. He is, I believe, a real New Guinean. So too is this curious mix we now have, “ re a l” Texas. And the story people here told themselves about how Dallas really is, now becomes replaced with the TV show, which ac ts as an arena for negotiating our regional mythology. Critics of “ D allas” pay too much atten­ tion to the theatrical consistency of the show and its perform ances aren ’t going to have a clue as to why, or how people are watching interesting about “ D allas” isn’t the plot. it. W hat’s THE MOST INTERESTING thing to m e on the tube this week hasn’t been “ D allas” a t all. My personal favorite has been the Saturn shots from the Voyager probe. When TV is used as a great communal telescope, as it was the moon for landing, or for solar eclipses, it creates a very pure, very beautiful use of the medium. I realized this rushing to class past the KLRN-U lobby where a whole bank of m onitors assaulted with this single color image of about one-third of the planet, em ­ braced by its extraordinary rings. I stopped short For sheer graphic beau­ ty, I suspect TV is at its best with ex­ tra te rre strial im agery (m aybe the pop­ ularity of “ Cosmos” doesn’t have much to do with Sagan). On an entire bank of m o n ito rs , w ith th e s u b tle c o lo r variations each tube provides, the sight was thing transcendental. The only lacking was that this was not a live broadcast, but electronic reconstruc­ tions of p ro b e sig n a ls. As su ch , different channels showed the im ages a t d iffe re n t live transm ission from the moon, no m a tte r which channel you flip, the very sam e image of a heavenly body is glowing at you and all other viewers. That is a communal experience with religious overtones. tim es. D uring a r e c a l l of THE SATURN SHOTS lacked this. Although the image was able to trigger s e n s e of l i v e transm issions, the Saturn shots have to be judged on purely graphic, rath er than social, aesthetics. Their success as graphics, however, recalled the new t h o s e Sex ry\ H u k - f \ GOESS THIS IS V H A T THEV CfNLL f\N IMPRonPTU to do TV critics pretty much agree that the new season is a bust. Taking their word for it, I ’ve shifted my viewing habits. Instead of watching TV I've been watching people watch TV. The critics m ight be advised the sam e. Typically, their hit lists of program s are precisely the ones that rate high Neilsens. The shows the critics tell you to watch are those teddibly literary type ones: “ M asterpiece T h eater,” “ Lou G rant,” the ones that don’t do so well in the ratings. Clearly, critics watch TV differently from norm al peo­ ple. Don’t they ever wonder about that? UT offers an amazing number of places to watch people watch TV: the RTF lounge, dorm lobbies, eateries on Imperialist domination [ B y "L IN D A S U L L I V A N ~j Once again the invisible hand of the powers that rule this country m anifests itself via its com pradors at the Univer­ sity of Texas — this tim e by arresting a seller of the R e v o lu tio n a r y W o r k e r newspaper (voice of the Revolutionary Communist P arty ) while he was selling on c a m p u s , c h a r g in g him w ith “ soliciting.” Ju st exactly what is at stak e here d e se rv e s som e serious scrutiny. On the surface it appears to be just another case of the om nipotent University once again overstepping its boundaries, infringing on som eone’s “ freedom of speech” — that freedom th a t is so w idely espoused as th e greatest assurance of all th at freedom and dem ocracy are alive and well and shall never perish, and a re n ’t we for­ tunate to have a system of justice th at can keen these powers from getting too far out of line when they “ accidentally” exercise some form of repression such as this. F irst of all why does the U niversity have the power to suppress these so- called freedoms whenever they choose? Even if it w ere sim ply a case of viola­ tion of freedom of speech, one should them th e ir ask oneself who gives freedom it benefit the general student population as well as the m asses of people in this country (and the world) that they can attem pt ideas a re to control what allowed to be freely dispersed on cam ­ pus and what ideas are to be sup- to violate others? Does t h a t The ruling class if fully a w a r e o ur “ freedom of speech” is virtually u seless as long as they control the means to impart ideas on a massive scale ... learning? pressed? Is this or is this not an institu­ tion of (Obviously not. R ather it is a tool of capitalist rule which serves to shape the minds of the youth to serve U.S. im perialists’ in­ terests. ) to overthrow U.S. F R E E D O M O F S P E E C H is a freedom that is only enjoyed fully by those in power — those who own and/or control the m edia press, educational in­ stitutions, etc., in order to put out their ideology. The ruling classs is fully aw are that our “ freedom of speech” is virtually useless as long as they control the means to im part ideas on a m assive scale — thus controlling what ideas a re put forth to (and taken up by) the general population. UT is no exception. Therefore to believe m erely that UT is only denying someone their freedom of speech is to underrate the seriousness of their position in capitalist society. It is obvious that revolutionary forces have no freedom s a t all — especially the freedoms to build for and wage revolution, im ­ perialism , which is being called for in th e p ages of th e R e v o l u t i o n a r y W orker. Perhaps th at is why this p a r­ ticular a rre st occurred on the day it did — just before an anti-draft rally draw ­ ing hundreds of progressive-m inded people who already hate this system for one reason or another. What could be worse (to U.S. im perialism ) than to have the R e v o lu tio n a r y W o r k e r g et­ ting into the hands of large num bers of politically-conscious youth9 The fact that R W sellers a re on cam pus often without being arre ste d attests to the fact that “ freedom of speech’ has nothing to do with this arrest. It is the freedom to be heard and discussed and actively taken up by large num bers of people that the upper echelon fears and will resort to any act to prevent. L in d a S u lliv a n is an A u s tin r e s i ­ dent. Firing Line War exists everywhere Each generation of hum anity asks itself the question that never goes away How can WAR continue to exist? Last night I started to get an answ er: I saw w ar in m icrocosm . Out of curiosi­ ty I went to hear a talk given by three form er A merican POWs of the Vietnam war. The talk was sponsored by a group called Young Conservatives of Texas, but I went, naively, with no thought a t all of political implications. When I entered the room, I saw some fam iliar faces in the audience: people I ’ve talked to a t a couple of liberation-m ovem ent rallies and revolutionary-tone meetings. Given what I know of their political standpoints, I was surprised to see them here, am idst this crowd of blow-dried, three-piece-suited, conser­ vative business m ajors. I was very im pressed. I thought, What wonderful, open-minded people: they’ve come to listen to people with very different views and experiences than their own.” The second POW to speak was a m an with very “ right-wing’ political views, I d recognized so it didn’t surprise m e when one or two of the got up and walked out. But what I didn’t notice was that there w ere 15 or 20 peo­ ple seated together in a group, and th at they had rolled-up banners. At a signal which none of the re st of us anticipated, they rose in beautiful, preplanned syn­ chrony (obvious not having come for the purpose of listening a t all), unfurled their banners and started shouting, leaving the room in a group, with the ever- fam iliar, worn-out chants of “ A m erican im perialist: R acist: W arm onger!” etc etc. liberationists But that was only half of it. Their hatefulness was equally m atched by the right-wingers who filled the room, and w ere prom pt to c arry out their patriotic duty by shouting curses and obscenities back a t them. The whole scene was incredible. I w as appalled. Never in my life have I seen so much HATE concentrated in one place. Both groups of people were equally filled with hatred. I looked at the faces around the room, of both Communists and nationalists, and now I think I can say I know w hat the face of Hate looks like. The scene was unreal — like a horror movie in which all the people m etam orphose into m onsters. What w as most horrifying was th at both sides actually took a perverse pleasure in telling the other side to fuck off. The whole atm osphere sm acked of a pep rally or party of some sort. War is on, every time you and 1 try to force our opinions on each other. You and I are a t w ar every tim e I politely pretend to listen to w hat you are saying, all the while preoccupied privately with conjuring up ever more clever, sophisticated, “ intellectual” ways of telling you and your opinions to go fuck yourself. Ju st as am im m ature person with all the brains in the world can destroy himself because he is ruled by his emotions, so too can hum anity expect its own destruction, if, with all our sophisicated technology, we still allow our societies to be ruled by passions, rather than reason. So before you go off to either your pep or your peace m arch, stop and ask yourself: WHY? Search your heart sincerely, and see if there isn’t a tra c e of that ol’ C rusader sp irit in it. K athy Collmer C hem istry Union finalists I think it is im portant that the record be set straight as to the involvement of the six Outstanding Student finalists in the Texas Union Board of D irectors. Of the finalists, three — Jan et Bauerle, Ken Allen and Ronnie Barshop — are board m em bers. Janet and Ken have been extensively involved in the Union, while this is Ronnie’s first year. He com es to the job from the CBA Council, where he was president last year. E ric English, who was named outstanding m ale student (and who, I m ight add, received short shrift in the “ Around Cam ­ pus” article on Monday), has mainly distinguished himself as an officer in Omicron Delta Kappa and M ortar Board and through work in the Student In­ volvement C om m ittee of the Ex-Students’ Association. Elaine English (E ric ’s sister), is on the Texas Union Program Council, which is not the sam e as the board of directors. Elaine has chaired two Union com m ittees — Special Events last year when it began to do all-nighters, and this year, the new T heater Com­ m ittee. Finally, we get to me — president of the Liberal Arts Council. I have had no involvement with the Union, yet th at should not necessaruily set me apart from the rest. It is fair to say that the finalists are all people who have made special con­ tributions of tim e and effort to the University. That is not by any m eans to say that they are the only students who have done so. The fact that five of the six have been connected with the Union m ay simply be a function of the student organizational stru c tu re at UT. The Union has nine healthily budgeted com ­ m ittees which span the spectrum of student interest. Strong personalities are predictably a ttra c te d to involvement in this traditional proving-ground for stu­ dent leaders. It takes tim e and dedication for other organizations to achieve a campus profile such as that the Union has already established. Until this can be accomplished, it is likely that many outstanding student finalists will continue to have this p articu lar involvement in common. Julie Tindall Outstanding Student finalist Fiction born again Whew! F or awhile there I thought that the “ high a rt of propaganda” (also known as making up fiction and then presenting it as facts) was going out of style. Even dying out! But after reading the articles by the Muslim Students Organization Persian Speaking Group, I realized m y fears were groundless. Fiction lives! Thanks, guys. com m ercials ... P.S. If you ever need a job. I know this advertising company that does soap M a rk Chastain UT sta ff C O f S< oks like they’re going to be doing a lot more lis session.” Lawmakers submitted a total of 2,275 bills uring the 66th legislative session. This session’s crop of bills deals with a including such non- ariety of issues, traditional legislation <^s acupuncture, ways to keep unwanted solicitors from calling and conjugal rights for prisoners. O N E REASO N for the vast number of bills is the proliferation of proposed legislation coming from the office of Rep. Samuel Hud­ son, D-Dallas, who this week alone has sub­ mitted more than 40 proposals. Hudson’s bills teaching racial include tolerance in public schools, adopting a pilot day-care program for children, outlawing mask-wearing during public demonstrations and making economics courses mandatory in public schools. House B ill 1, the first bill filed Monday morning, would make it a crim e to possess paraphernalia intended for use with illicit drugs. Reps. B ill Blythe, R-Houston, Don Rains, D-San Marcos and B ill Ceverha, R- Dallas drafted the bill with an eye toward closing down head shops. The bill defines paraphernalia as any equipment, product and m aterial used, in­ tended for use or designed for use, essentially to produce, package, store, test or use illicit drugs. IT S P E C IF IC A L L Y lists such items as a scale, bowl, blender, capsule, balloon, envelope, bong and hyperdermic syringe as paraphernalia, but the sponsors emphasize that the intent to use these items in relation to illegal drugs is the determining factor. A number of this session’s bills w ill con­ cern state educators. One, sponsored by Rep. Paul Elizondo, D-San Antonio, would make a teacher or administrator, who is employed by a public school district and who registers for courses related to his profession, exempt from the minimum tuition payment. House B ill 46, submitted by Rep. Hector Uribe. D-Brownsville, would give state finan­ cial aid to school districts educating foreign- born children. Uribe is requesting that $30 million in state funds be made available to districts that receive state equalization money and have enrolled 1,000 illegal alien children, or have daily average attendance records that show 5 percent of the children are illegal aliens. Other House proposals include a bill which would transfer $15 million from the general revenue fund to establish plants to make fuel from renewable energy resources, and a proposal that would require judges to be elected as non-partisan candidates. A number of proposed bills would regulate obscene m aterial with regard to minors. When the 67th Legislature convenes Jan. 13, the House speaker w ill assign all measures to various committees. The bills will either die in committee, or go on to three readings in the House, where a simple ma­ jority vote can pass or kill a bill. If passed, the bill would then go through the same process in the Senate. announcing our second annual Someone has given blood to give you life. 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C Friday, N o v e m b e r 14, 1980 □ THE DAILY TEX A N Horns try to stop Frogs’ purple helmet streak Sports Page 13 By JIMMY BURCH Daily Texan Staff It w asn’t on national television and it didn t m ake the cover of S p o r t s I ll ust rated, but TCU took a page out of the Notre Dame playbook last Saturday in the Horned Frogs’ 24-17 win over Texas Tech. It w asn't a triple reverse, a halfback option or even a Hail Mary pass in the gam e’s waning m om ents that the Frogs borrowed from the Fighting Irish. They tried the old uniform switch before the game to help fire the team up. And it worked. Just as Notre Dame switched to green jerseys before rom ­ ping all over Southern Cal three years ago, the F rogs reverted to purple helm ets before the Tech gam e and received positive results. IT’S UNLIKELY that TCU coach F A. Dry will have any cosm etic changes in store for Texas when the Longhorns take on the Frogs at 2 p.m. Saturday in Amon C arter Stadium. However, he will have a potent passing attack that rolled up 252 yards and 24 fourth q u arter points against the Red R aiders last week “ They drop back, roll out, semi-roll out — just a little bit of everything,’ Texas coach Fred Akers said in explaining the TCU offense. “ If you m ake a m istake, they’ll take advantage of you. “ Like Utah State and Houston, they have excellent receivers. Those guys really can catch it in a crowd and take a hit. The “ guys” Akers refers to are split end Bobby Stew art ana flankers Stanley Washington and Phillip Epps. Stew art is the SWC’s leading receiver, with 36 catches for 532 yards and three touchdowns. Washington leads the conference in touchdown catches with five and has scored six TDs on the season. HE HAD two of those touchdowns against Tech, and shared Associated Press “ SWC Offensive Player of the Week” honors with Frogs quarterback Steve Stamp. It was Stamp who was on the throwing end of both of W ashington’s scores, including an 82-yarder with just 1:27 rem aining in the contest. “ I c a n ’t say enough about the effort of Stanley Washington on that last touchdown p ass,” Dry said. “ We needed something good to happen, and it finally did. I ve alw ays had confidence in these young m en.” MANY PEO PLE might wonder why Dry would be confident about a team with a 1-8 season record, 1-5 in SWC play. However, Akers is not am ongst that group. In fact, he wonders why the Frogs have only one win, instead of three or four. “ Unless they’re cutting out some of the film, they run up and down the field,” Akers said “ They’ve lost five gam es in the last minute or two. That m eans one break could have changed any of those gam es. And the team they beat (Texas Tech) beat u s .” Akers said the F ro g s’ defense could cause problems for the Horns’ offense, which will be without the services of running back A J. Jones and possibly Carl Robinson. At present, Akers has penciled in freshm an John W alker and sophomore D arryl Clark to sta rt in the backfield with junior quarterback Donnie Little against TCU’s 5-3 defense. “ IT’S A unique defense,” Akers said. They play an overshifted 5-3 and they ’re really goód against the run. They’re the only ones in this part of the country th at use it.’ Defensively for Texas, right tackle Mark Weber will again sta rt in place of the injured Steve Massey. For TCL, fullback Kevin Haney has been out with an ankle injury since Oct. 25, but is expected to see some action against the Longhorns. O ther than that, both coaches said their team s should be a t full strength for the contest. Dry discounted any possible letdown his team might have after its gut-wrenching win for last week s homecoming crowd that snapped a 13-game losing streak. “ I DON’T expect a letdown because I believe the win will give our youngsters confidence, Dry said. Texas has a fine football team both offensively and defensviely. “ I feel it will be a hard-hitting football gam e and I ’m confi­ dent our youngsters will play well. We have great respect for Texas, but we re not in awe The game takes on extra meaning for the 6-2 Longhorns because bowl bids can officially be extended Saturday. Scouts from the Sun. Tangerine, Fiesta, Bluebonnet and Liberty Bowls watched as the Horns whipped Houston 15-13 last week. However, Akers said he is unconcerned as to which bowl his team might go to. “ We’re concentrating on TCU right now,” Akers said. “ We need to beat them before we worry about any bowl gam es. The bowl games will take care of them selves if we win. The Horns will try to take care of winning Saturday, w hether Dry makes any new uniform changes or not. TCU’s Marcus Gilbert breaks through the Tech line. UPI Telephoto Texas slips past Windsor in mistake-filled game By REID LAYMANCE Daily Texan Staff On the Abe Lemons dull scale, Texas’ 77-71 win over the U niversity of Windsor Thursday night would rate a 10. in in form The Longhorns w ere true^ pre­ season the Special Events Center, com m itting 14 turnovers and 23 fouls. About the only thing that saved Texas was that the Lancers had just as many problems. Windsor made 23 tu r­ novers and 25 fouls. “ Dull would be ap p ro p riate,” Lemons said. “ That would probably be the dullest game. You have your highs and lows and this was a high dull Lemons, who shuffled players in and out trying to find the right combination, could only find two bright spots from the entire game. “ (R A Y ) H A R P E R WAS all right f o ra freshm an and (Mike) Wacker hustled.” Lemons said. “ Henry (Johnson) played w ell.” H arper, who played the most of any Longhorn with 33 minutes, scored 13 points from his point guard position but did not m ake any assists. Johnson was the Longhorns’ No. 2 scorer with 12 points in 25 m inutes of playing tim e. Lemons tried nearly every com bina­ tion of players in the game. “ You’re alw ays in trouble when you don’t know who your s ta rte rs a re ,” Lemons said. “ We’ll sta rt finding out next week if they don t all quit after tonight.” In the first half, the Longhorns led only five tim es while shooting 38 per- Women defeat Iowa, 82-62 By SUZANNE MICHEL Daily Texan Staff The Texas women’s basketball team out-rebounded, out- pressed and outdistanced the U niversity of Iowa Hawkeyes 82- 62 in the Longhorns’ second gam e of the season Thursday night in Iowa City, Iowa. Leading Texas offensively was starting post Cheryl H artm an. The 6-foot-l junior scored eight of the Longhorns’ first 10 points and finished the gam e with 22 points In the first seven m inutes of play, H artm an alm ost single- handedly controlled Texas’ offensive play. H artm an managed three inside bank shots and two foul shots, while intercepting two Hawkeye passes and tying up the ball three tim es with less than two m inutes in the first period expired. “ Cheryl H artm an had one of the best overall gam es of her c a re e r,” head coach Jody Conradt said. She played good both offensively and defensively.” H artm an said she was simply trying to prove herself. “ Ms. Conradt told m e that I never get ready for the little games, and I w anted to prove h er wrong, H artm an said. “ There are also three of us (forw ards) now, and I have to prove m yself.” Forw ard Nell Fortner, who was T exas’ leading scorer last year, followed close behind H artm an with 16 points, with m ost of the 16 coming in the second half. Two other forw ards who saw a lot of play — freshm an Cheryl Hauglum and junior transfer Lesa Jones — also scored 10 points each to reach double figures for the Longhorns. The Longhorns’ superior height was evident in the large number of rebounds they secured. Texas snatched 55 rebounds to Iow a's 32. Texas swimmers host Arizona ma m Jy IVAN MELTZER >aily Texan Staff The UT Swimming Center will be host o an explosive dual swim meet at noon laturday between Texas and the Jniversity of Arizona. The Longhorns finished last year’s :eason second in the country and the Wildcats proved strong, ending the season eighth in the nation. Texas head ;oach Eddie Reese feels that swimming igainst such a strong team so early in :he year will be a help instead of a hin- irance. “It is good for the kids to break up all this training with a big meet, Reese *aid. Reese hopes both teams will be ready for the meet. Both Arizona and Texas train similarly, Reese said. “They’re a hard working team, and we’re a hard working team; it ought to be a good m e e t” Training hard has been on Reese’s mind for more than two months. Starts and turns were a problem early for the Texas team, but after many hours of practice, including this past week of in­ tensified workouts, Reese said most of the problems have been taken care of. Problems will have to be solved as the Longhorns will be facing a team that is sure to improve on last year’s record. Arizona is returning 10 lettermen, in­ cluding a Pac-10 champion and two Olympians. Freshman Peter Evans won a bronze medal in the 100-meter breaststroke and also collected a 400 medley relay gold medal while competing for Australia, and Peter Morris placed fourth in the 200-meter butterfly for England this summer in Moscow. Reese also said he feels that the Wildcats have three of the best butterfly swimmers in the country. “There’s no denying they have a good team,” Reese said. The Longhorns, however, are not nearly ready to con­ cede the victory. “They are not as deep as we are,” “ And they are weakest in the Reese said. sprints.” The Longhorns have two Olympians of their own — Kris Kirchner and William Paulus, along with a number of con­ ference record holders. “This team has the best depth and versatility they have ever had,” Reese said. “And they’re going to be strong.” Tickets for the meet are available at the door Saturday. Prices are $2 for adults, $1 for students and children and free with a UT blanket tax ID. m m m No. 2 women swim against Tech By SUZANNE HALLIBURTON Daily Texan Staff The Texas women’s swim team, ranked No. 2 in the nation, will kick off its season when the Longhorns travel to Lubbock for a dual meet with the Texas Tech Red Raiders at the new Students’ Aquatic Center. Last year, in the first dual meet b etw een the tw o te a m s, the Longhorns swept the meet, winning 11 of 18 events, to score an 84-56 vic­ tory. This year, swim coach Paul Bergen is more wary of his oppo­ nent. “They’re a pretty good team. They’ve got a new coach, Sue Larsen, and they’re one of the up and coming Texas schools in swim­ ming.” Bergen said. Bergen also hopes to showcase some of his team's nationally known talent. Some of these swimmers will be swimming in events they’re not accustomed to swimming. “We ll be looking at our really good swimmers like Jill Sterkel, Kim Linehan, Dian Girard, Tenley Fisher and Cared Borgman,” Bergen said. “They’ll be swimming some off events. “We also want to measure some of our kids that aren't nationally known against some local talent. It will help their self-image,” Bergen said. This will also be Bergen’s first chance to see how some of the freshman swimmers perform in competition. “This event will be good for our freshmen. I think it’s a good chance to see how they swim,” Bergen said Sophomore Becky Kast, suffering with a shoulder cyst, will be the only swimmer «nit of competition. “W ere looking forward to this meet. It will be our first out-of- town trip, and our swimmers are really looking forward to it,” Bergen said.“We also have good relations with Texas Tech.” cent from the floor. Windsor led by as many as six points, 10-4 at 16:32 against Texas’ starting group of Bill Wendlandt, Ken Montgomery, Rob Cunningham. Virdell Howland and Harper. THE LONGHORNS RALLIED to take a 19-18 lead with 10.31 to play after Lemons had brought in a new lineup of LaSalle Thompson, D aryl Bushrod, Wacker, Johnson and Fred Carson. However, Texas fell behind again 26- 21 with ju st over six m inutes to play in the first half before the Longhorns final­ ly woke up. Texas outscored the Lancers 19-8 over the last five m inutes to take a 40-34 half- time lead. WINDSOR COACH NICK Grabowski said his Lancers had entered the game with the idea of just trying to stay in it. Texas defeated Windsor two years ago in an exhibition game. “ We rem em bered how bad we lost two years ago and we wanted ju st to stay close,” Grabowski said. “ At the end of the first half, I looked up and realized it was possible that we could do m ore than stay close ” The Longhorns finally put the gam e out of reach, outscoring the Lancers 19- 10 in the first eight m inutes of the final half. Texas took its biggest lead of the gam e with 6:32 left to play when Howland scored to give the Longhorns a 69-53 advantage. Howland finished the gam e with 13 points to tie H arper for the Longhorns high-point honors. Johnson scored 12 points in 25 m inutes of play. HOWEVER, THE HIGH scorer of the gam e was W indsor’s Stan Korosec, who finished with 22 points and a game-high 11 rebounds. The Lancers, whose tallest player is 6-foot-9, outrebounded the Longhorns 45- 44 L em on s a ttr ib u te d W in d so r's rebounding success the L ancer’s screening out. to “ We didn't screen anybody o ut,” Lemons said. “ When they don’t have a guy as tall as ours and they outrebound you ... If we don't get something out of the guys inside, w e’re in trouble.” Lemons said he hoped that Texas perform ance would get his players attention. “ We don’t have anybody who knows what they a re doing.” Lemons said. “ In practice, I ’m out there telling them what to do, but when I’m on the bench I can ’t be yelling at them all the tim e. “ We re still teaching from top to bot­ tom. I’m glad we got this gam e out of our system . It might get their a tte n ­ tion,” Lemons added. “ (Barry) Dowd is lucky, he gets to leave town tom orrow , I get to stay h ere.” AIAW National meet Cross country team travels By DIXIE GAIL PROCTER Daily Texan Staff With hopes of having a perfect end to a perfect season, the Texas women’s cross country team left Thursday for Seattle, Wash, to begin preparing for the AIAW national m eet this weekend. For the third consecutive year, the Longhorns, who hold both state and regional titles, have earned the right to test their skills against the most out­ standing team s across the country at 11 a.m. Saturday. The 1980 team is the first ever to finish the regular season undefeated and un­ tied. Not only has the team won every meet, but it has done so easily, with a t least four runners in the top 10 of all its meets. “ R egardless of the outcome, one must rem em ber the team is already a part of an elite group,” Coach Phil Delavan said. “ We will represent the University well, and you can bet that all seven will give 100 percent. If we could be in the top 15, we would be pleased . ” The highest the Texas runners have never placed is 16th in 1978. In last y e a r’s m eet they fell to 24th. “ The girls just went out too quick last y ear,” Delavan said. “ It was just an e rro r.” The favored team in this y e a r’s m eet is the defending cham pion, North Carolina State. Other strong opponents include Arizona, Tennessee, Oregon and Wisconsin. f e a t u r e of T h e p e r t i n e n t th e Longhorns is that they are a real team , not just a bunch of runners striving for individual gains. In the seven m eets the team managed to capture, it sported only two individual winners. S o p h o m o re K e lly W e lls c a p ­ tured the first individual win a t the Abilene Christian m eet in which Texas had a perfect score of 15, taking the top six places. Freshm an T erri Ebanks followed her the next week with an individual win at the UT Arlington m eet. Ebanks also led the Horns to win the Texas A&M meet, the North Texas m eet and the state m eet. The m ost recent leader of the team , how ever, has been freshm an Lori Nelson. She led the Horns to win the third place regional m eet with her finish. The way it looks now, the only thing that could prevent the Longhorns from improving from last year is the fact that several strong team m em bers have been down with the flu during the last week. All seven of the regional com petitors from Texas qualified for the state meet. Following Nelson’s third place finish were Ebanks in fourth and Wells in eighth ALSO FINISHING the 5,000-meter coi rse in Arkansas were senior Christy in 10th, sophom ore J a y n e G a rc ia Sweigart 11th, junior Maryanne Pils, 14th and sophomore Julee King 24th. .240 hitter clubs home run in draft as 12 teams pick Rangers’ Roberts NEW YORK (UPI) — Dave Roberts, lifetim e batting a catcher with a average of .240, hit a home run in baseball’s annual re-entry draft of free agents Thursday, but outfielder Ron LeFlore and relief pitcher Tug McGraw struck out. Roberts, who played last season with the Texas Rangers, was the first choice in the draft and was selected 12 times in all — the most of any player. Although he has never played more than 127 games in any major league season, he figures to reap the financial now benefits of the re-entry process. THE RANGERS, in search of help for their pitching staff, drafted Minnesota pitcher Geoff Zahn and longtime Dodger Don Sutton in the first two rounds In the third round, the Rangers picked Oakland catcher Jim Essian, possibly as a replacem ent for R oberts’ departure. Meanwhile, the Astros went into the draft looking for some power hitters In the first round, Houston nabbed San Diego outfielder Dave Winfield. In the n e x t th e A stro s took tw o ro u n d s, Roberts and then Sutton. But while R oberts, Winfield and Sut­ the most popular ton proved choices, LeFlore and McGraw were scorned. to be LEFLORE, WHO stole 97 bases for the Montreal Expos last season, was chosen by only the Chicago White Sox while McGraw, one of the Philadelphia Phillies’ World Series stars, did not receive a single bid for his services Since less than two teams drafted rights to LeFlore and McGraw, they are free to talk to any team but their asking price w ill undoubtedly com e down con ­ siderably. While the lack of interest in LeFlore and McGraw was not expected, neither was the great interest shown in Roberts. “ I was surprised that so many teams took an interest in Roberts, admitted Texas general manager Eddie Robin­ son. “ I guess because he’s a catcher and catchers are* so scarce that he was at­ tractive to a lot of clubs. ROBERTS’ AGENT, Jerry Kapstein, felt it was Roberts versatility that made him a popular choice Last season the 29-year-old Roberts played seven positions for the Rangers. He batted 238 with 10 homers and 30 RBls in 101 games. Winfield and Sutton undoubtedly will create the greatest competition for their services. Page 14 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Friday. November 14, 1980 NEW tóflRH 1914 Guadalupe < aero** from Dobie Mall 476-12IS By JOE MULRY Dally Texan Staff Eastern Style Subm arine Sandwiches ............. SUB SANDW ICHES 1. Fretted Horn............................................................... $1.40 j 50 2. Fretted Hom-Cheetc.................................................. f 40 3* Bailed Hoe Glleett ^00 4. Bailed HaenCliaete-Salaeii........................................ j_0O 5. Bailed Haei-Cfceete-Capecolic.................................. 4. Salaeii-Cbeete............................................................. I M 7. Salemi-Cheese-Copacado .......................................... 2.00 *• Baatt Beef.................................................................. 2.00 0. Boast Beef-Cbeete............................................... 215 5a- T***T ........ - 1.00 11. Terbay-Cbaete ........................................................... 1 t0 12. Terbey-Cbeete-Heni................................................... 2.00 13. Feppered Beef ........................................................... 2.00 .............................................. 2.15 M> Feppered ieef-Cbeese 2.25 15. Feppered Beef-Cbeete-Soleas! 14. Copecaüe-Cbeete 190 17. FepperaaiCbeete .................................... ................ 2.00 2.00 It. Fetfromi 100 10. All Cbeete 3.25 20. AN Stops ae tbe HTSW 2.00 21. Teeo 22. Fino Sob j.yg 1.00 23. Hat MeotboH W HOLE H A LF j t$ w f jo j | 5 1.15 , 1.15 1.15 1 70 1.05 , 10 I 15 1.20 1.20 1.25 , j 0 l . l f 1.15 j 1.75 1.15 _ _ S u n .- T h u r * . ' ' _____ f r i . & S e t. 1 1 a .m . M i d n i p h t ^ j K : ^ 9 S E f l 2 a m all suba fcarniohed w ith I r tl u r r . to m a to , o n io n , aa lt. a r r c s n o A o u r ow n t p r r i a l Ita lia n d m w in y S E R V E D : B r r r . W in r. O o ffe ,. S o ft D rin k » . C h r e t r r a k r , ( hip*. ( h r f Salad#, P irk le n . In? C re a m , a n d m o r e ! !! Ask A bout Our 2 - and - 4 Foot P a rty Subs. ÍZQDS By BRENDA KOPYCINSKI Dally Texan Staff Before the Arkansas game two weeks ago, Rice alumni to ld fo o tb a ll c o a c h R ay Albom to go out to Little Rock and “ make a good showing.” The Owls did m ore than just make a showing. They stole the the lim elight, b eatin g Razorbacks in a 17-16 thriller. Now, the Owls have another chance to steal the show, this tim e from the Baylor Bears. Baylor, undefeated in six conference gam es, has an 8-1 record and can assure itself a Cotton Bowl berth with a win ■MORE THAN 1500 SHIRTS 20% OFF 21 colors — 1 0 0 % cotton Also — Sweaters, Ve/ours, Junior Grade ■ ■ . ALL SIZES HANCOCK PARK GOLF COURSE E 4 n t q, RED RIVER_______________________ « 1 -0 2 7 6 H orns face toughest m atch o f season Texas' men s tennis team will face its toughest competition of the fall season in the this Westwood weekend at Westwood Country Club. Invitation al T ournam ent The Longhorns will get a good idea of how their opponents for the Southwest Conference will play, as the team competes in Austin for the first time this fall. The tournam ent, which sta rts Friday and runs until Sunday, will consist of players from Houston. SMU, TCU, A&M. Texas and Trinity. The tourna­ ment has all the makings of a great event with all the team s sending their top players. Texas coach Dave Snyder a n tic ip a te s some éxciting matches from the high caliber of competition. “ It is the clim ax of our fall. Everybody seems to be sending their top six players,” he said. Houston s David Dowlen is the top-seeded player in the tournament, with SMU’s Drew Gitlin being the No. 2 seed. Guillermo Stevens o f Texas is seeded sixth. However the seeding is not always relevant, tour­ nament director Dave Siverston said Dowlen and Nduka Odizor of Houston are the top-seeoed doubles team . John Benson and Charlie Honey of Trinity are the second- seeded doubles team. Benson is the All- the finals of the American who reached NCAA doubles last spring. TEXAS WILL send its top team of Stevens and Paul Crozier. The twosome played well in fall tournam ents, including winning the M cFarland Tournament in San Antonio, and is expected the Westwood championship. in contention for to be Crozier. a sophomore from Corpus Christi, has not fared as well in his singles play this season after qualifying for the 1980 NCAA singles championships. However, last week he got on the right track in the April Sound to Tournament by winning four m atches reach the semifinals. In the semis, he lost a close m atch to Benson of Trinity, 7-5, 4-6, 7-5. Despite the loss, Crozier was pleased with his performance. Sophomore Craig Kardon also lost to Ben son in a close m atch at April Sound, 2-6 6-3 7. 5. ’ ’ ’ Kardon has had a respectable fall, reaching the semifinals in a number of tournam ents He has not had the one big win to m ake the fall schedule complete. TEAMING WITH Kardon in doubles will be Ted Erck. Erck has been playing better ten­ nis in recent weeks He said he is trying to play a more solid gam e and improve on his ground strokes and returns. Erck said he feels he has been over-thinking his tennis game. Owls try to sidetrack Bears over Rice. B aylor has a d iffe re n t attitude in coming here than the last few y e a rs,” Alborn said. “ They have a chance to wrap up the conference ch am ­ pionship this weekend. Our job is to beat Baylor and keep them out of the Cotton Bowl. It will be a test for our people. “ What we re trying to do is ju st get positive thinking,” Albom said. “ When you've been down for so long, people think in term s of losing. We have to think in term s of win­ ning.” in The Owls are having one of their best years recent history, beating TCU, Texas A&M and Arkansas for a 3-3 c o n f e r e n c e r e c o r d , 4-5 overall. “RICE IS sound,” Baylor c o a c h G ra n t T e a ff s a id . They don’t make lots of m is­ takes offensively and th ey ’re solid on defense. They’re the closest thing to us in offensive thinking.” The Owls handily defeated LSU early in the season, 17-7, and got by TCU and Texas A&M by four p o in ts and Arkansas by one. Last week, however, SMU dominated the gam e in beating the Owls 34- 14. ‘‘Our ability to bounce back is im portant,” Albom said. Baylor can claim the con­ ference cham pionship out­ right with a win in Houston. The first and only tim e the Bears went to Dallas on New Y ear’s Day was in 1975 with an 8-4 record. They won the SWC crown in 1924, but that was before the Cotton Bowl game existed. “ THE SIMILARITIES in this team and the one in 1974 t h e a r e m a i n l y w i t h said . y o u n g s te rs ,” T eaff They have great character and attitude. This team has better talent, but everybody in the conference does. ‘‘The big difference is that this team led fom day one. and the team in 1974 was such a Cinderella.” Rice’s own revamped team has 23 seniors playing in their last home gam e of the season. Of those, quarterback Randy ru n n in g back H ertel and the lead Calvin Fance will Owls’ offense. “ H ertel’s doing a great job, s t a r t i n g or r e l i e v i n g — whatever we ask of him ,” Alborn said. “ Fance was the third leading rusher at the start of the season, but our line hasn't been able to block, so we have had to throw m ore.” B aylor will s t a r t q u a r ­ terback Jay Jeffrey and run­ ning backs W alter Abercrom ­ bie and Dennis Gentry. Aber­ crom bie leads the conference in rushing with 910 yards and a 100. 1 y a r d s p e r - g a m e average. In other SWC action. SMU m eets Texas Tech in Lubbock and the Texas Aggies travel to Fayetteville to play Arkansas. SMU is 7-2 overall and 4-2 in conference play, but Mustang coach Ron M eyer isn’t taking the Red Raiders (4-4, 2-3) lightly. Texas Tech m ay have lost a last, tough one to TCU but you can never take that lightly,' Meyer said. team The Red R aiders are also the sam e team that upset a Texas team the week before. So, there is just no question that Texas Tech has the people to beat anyone. ’ In the battle for the con­ ference cellar, A rkansas and A&M. both 1-4 in the SWC, need a win to salvage the season. t h a t ’s "I'm not happy with the si t uat i on, and the biggest understatem ent since Custer said, They look like friendly Indians’, ” Razorback coach Lou Holtz said “Cuss­ ing and hollering the thing to do right now. Our players are down, and there is no reason to kick th em .” isn’t Cross country squad readies for nationals By JANA MUIR Dally Texan Staff The Texas m en’s cross country team will compete Satur­ day in the D istrict 6 Cross Country Championships at Georgetown, and Coach Jam es Blackwood is expecting “the largest m en’s field ever assem bled to run a cross country race in the state of Texas.” More than 800 runners will be at the contest, including 120 collegiate athletes and six divisions of high school teams Blackwood said “ It is the high school state championships as well as being our regionals.” Forem ost in Blackwood’s mind, however, are his own runners, who stunned Baylor and the University of Houston by taking second place in the conference championships less than two weeks ago. Members of the top three team s ami four individuals with the next best individual tim es at the regional meet Saturday will travel to Wichita State University in Kansas for the national m eet in two weeks. Until the Texas Invitational Meet, it looked like Arkansas Baylor and Houston would go to Wichita, but a fine effort on the m en’s home course, Kurth Landrom golf course has changed all that. *I’m expecting a trip to nationals,” Blackwood said. “Of course, Baylor will be gunning for us, but it’s a two-way street. I d be disappointed if we don’t get to go.” Running for Texas this week will be Geoffrey Koech, se­ cond at the Texas Invitational behind course record-holder Ben M oturi; Pedro Rivero, third a t the Texas Invitational* plus Drew Daniels, Jason Griak, John Heimick, Richard Longoria and G.R. T arr. I think the guys are ready,” Blackwood said. “It all leads to Wichita. If we don’t perform Saturday, it’s all over. It’s been a good season,’ he continued. “They ail have a very good attitude; the best it’s been all year.” One tiling that will help the Horns’ scoring is that the state champion. M ark Anderson of Arkansas, is being held out of competition to rest before nationals. W ju u ti/te 704 W. 29th Tintó 474-9888 B E V E R A G E S Lone Star Longnecks i2o z.R etum abies 1 . 6 9 6 pi>&d«p Lone Star i2 o z . Can* COOTS 12 oz. Cant 1 . 7 9 6Pk I # 9 9 6 pk The Keg Specials Bud i 6 gal. Keg Schlitz 16 gal. Keg Schlitz 8 gal. Keg 2 8 * 0 0 & Dep 2 7 * 0 0 & Dep 1 6 * 5 0 & Dep " H o m e O f T h e F o u r-C a s e Q u a n t i t y D is c o u n t" n r O pe n 12-12 Sunday-Friday to or C o ld — S a m e Prices 10-1 2 Saturday •Specials good F riday, S a tu rday, S u n day % EXPLOSIVE. E A R L CAMPBELL THE DRIVING FORCE E a r l C a m p b e l l e x p lo d e d o n to th e p ro fo o tb a ll scene lik e no o ne b e fo re h im : NFL ru s h in g le a d e r, A ll-P ro R o okie o f th e Y e a r a n d M ost V a lu a b le P la y e r fo r th e H o u s to n O ile rs . He won th e H e is m a n T ro p h y as a U n iv e rs ity o f Texas L o n g h o rn . T he E arl C a m p b e ll s to ry is th e s tu f f s p o rts le g e n d s are m a d e o f. The e a rly y e a rs o f ru ra l p o v e rty , th e firm h a n d o f a lo v in g m o th e r, e a rly lesso n s in fa ith a n d c h a r a c te r h ave ta u g h t h im how to k e e p his b a la n c e in h is fast- P p ac e d , h ig h -ris k p ro ­ fe s s io n . Sam B la ir has w ritte n th e p o r tr a it o f a m a n , h o n e s t a n d s ure in h is loves a n d h is frie n d s h ip s , to u g h a n d u n s w e rv in g in u lt im a t e c o m m itm e n ts . ü WORD if b o o k s FLOMMa* This week Audio One it •tockod to the rafters for the holidays. And the selection w ill never be better, because we've got to sell it ALL by Christmas. So wé're starting now, with pre-seaaon prices you can't pass up! Shop sarly, get the best selection. H •nd SAVE! latrsdedag Roller Phone Stores Hiodphom* • Wf k f d H y store* sound | repr e dncH— • Ssp aref reh uís controls 95 f*r • Storeo indicator light • IxcdUnt skating. • M*d*l 200/ AM FM Storoo Muhigl*x R*4* jogging, F o r f i w l S a n y Panasonic o a ? 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Texas women’s tennis team to face tough test in Denton B y K E N N E T H R n n Q ir i iic - 7 B y K E N N E T H R O D R IG U E Z Daily Texan Staff nnntpnH^S?í? 1 exas women’s coach Dave Woods has Wood 1 Dpntnn t ' North ril North Texas State - without four of its top players. Plh„ ‘S his team s finest asset This weekend on Wl11 be Put t0 the test as his team travels to In the Talon Tennis Classic - hosted by ^ 00dS t e a m t0 p p e d T e X a S T e c h 7’ 2 in a d a a l m if tr h S i , ° f ,ts best Piayers “ sophomores Kirsten M r K p p ^ iía Ui IQ rr, h ! « e Johansen But this weekend the competition s much stiffer with Trinity, TCU and SMU among the top eight teams competing at the Talon Tennis Classic. McKEEN, WHO missed the Texas Tech match with an ear in- ection will return to her No. 1 singles position for the tourna­ ment. Johansen, however, who combines with McKeen to form lexas top doubles tandem, will miss the tournament with a sore tendon m her foot. Besides Johansen, junior Beth Ruman will forego the wee end classic because of a stomach virus, as will junior cap­ tain Cindy Sampson, who is studying for tests next week. hreshman Tenley Stewart, who played No. 1 singles against lexas lech Sunday, will also miss as she, too, is concentrating 6 on her studies. With Sampson. Stewart, Ruman and Johansen out, Texas’ -i10™ ™ not look Promising - at least on paper. I KNOW we won t be favored, that’s for sure,” Woods declared Trimty, if all their players are there, should be the avorite. r c u for sure will also be among the favorites. I think we could probably be in the top five of the eight teams com­ peting This will give us a good chance under good competition to check out our depth happens. I'm really anxious to see what And so are several other players who ordinarily would not be making the trip. W oods is calling on freshmen Chris Harrison and Diana Her­ nandez along with sophomores Mary Jo Giammalva, Karen Wilson and Lisa Hinojosa to replace his missing four Giam- team “ ;th freshman Vicki Ellis in doubles, Wilson with McKeen and Harrison with Hinojosa. All will compete in singles along with Hernandez. w,thGFnNSfT T P , AS Tech last week’ Glammalva combined with Ellis for the first time and won, as did Harrison and Hino­ josa. Wilson and McKeen, however, are playing together this y ng mgemer tnis weekend for the first time. I m looking for some good performances from them (the new players), Woods said. “ I ’m hoping that they’re out headhunting trying to make their mark. These girls have been playing well. They’ve earned the right to play.’’ mJr!»8 rai ° n Tf niVs Classic w*ll be a single elimination tourna­ ment with a feed-in consolations draw through the quarter­ finals. The eight schools competing will be allowed six singles and three doubles entries to accumulate points toward the team trophy Other singles players, like Hernandez, may also com­ pete. but any matches won will not be computed in the team totals unless the player defeats one of the top six players from another team. Horns hit fairways in Florida B y S U Z A N N E M IC H E L Daily Texan Staff Five strong Texas golfers will face Florida sunshine and a long list of tough competition in the Lady Gator Invitational tournament in Gainesville Fla., Friday through Sunday. “This is a good strong team ,” Longhorn coach Pat Weis said. “ I think all of our golfers are really on their game. looking forward to low scores and a good performance.’’ I'm The Horns’ strong lineup includes three veterans and one freshman, who have shot low scores all season. Leading the pack is Debbie Petrizzi, who placed fourth in the Lady Gator In­ vitational last year and has the lowest average on the team. Petrizzi also won medalist honors in the Susie Berning A l l - C o l l e g e the Longhorns’ first tournament this fall. C LOSE B E H I N D P e t r i z z i is sophomore Bari Brandwynne, the se­ cond ranked golfer on the team, and junior Cindy Figg. I n v i t a t i o n a l , Although freshmen Kim Shipman and Nancy Ledbetter have seen limited play so far this season, Weis said she is confident they will also perform well. Shipman won medalist honors at last week’s Temple Junior College In­ vitational Tournament with scores of 71 and 77 on a par 72 course. “ Kim has been playing real well,’’ Weis said. “But any one of these players has a good chance to rank high individually.” The only thing that might ruin the Longhorns’ chances for a top individual spot is the competition. Weis deemed six teams as “ certain strong contenders” for the tourna­ ment. INCLUDED IN THIS list are the University of Florida, host of the tour­ nament; the University of Tulsa, winner of the Nancy Lopez In ­ vitational; Florida State, champion of the Dick McGuire Invitational and the University of Miami. Weis said the University of Florida and the University of Miami should have an advantage because they will be playing in a familiar environment. I expect a lot of low scores in this tournament, with these teams,” Weis said, “ But I consider us strong con­ tenders too, if we can just put it all together.” The tournament will be played on the University of Florida golf course, which is a little different than the courses Texas is used to playing on. “ IT IS SHORTER than we re used to, Weis said. “ It has smaller greens and beach-type sand.” Weis said the course primarily con­ sists of par-3 and par-5 holes, with an unusually low number of par-4 holes and is 6,000 yards long. The weather in Gainsville has been good so far, but Weis said the forecasts for this weekend are not promising. “ The predictions don’t sound too good,” Weis said. “ They’re talking about heavy rain on Saturday and Sun­ day.” Weather permitting, Weis said if the Longhorns can shoot a team total under 300, they should do very well. 1 he C a r A lte r n a tiv e Tune-up, Clutch, Shocks Engine Repairs, Brakes, Accessories * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * fm?^?rseas En9ine Supply Datsun, Toyota, VW, Courier, B M W . 1003 Sagebrush ♦ * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * SPORTS & IMPORTS AUTOMOTIVE Service & Maintenance for Porsche • Audi • BM W Datsun • V.W . • Toyota • Honda In th e II.T. A re a 3005 G u a d a iu p e (r e a r ) 472-5469 Gilbert Valdez and Pedro Cue CHIPS BEER PRETZELS ASSORTED SNACKS PARTY SIZE CANS 5 0 % LESS S T A R C H -low calories P U R E C O T T O N S EED O IL -no preservatives H O M E D E L IV E R Y - N o r th of R iv er, E. 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B c ttio t .................................................................................. 6 P a c k l o O V REUBEN’S MORE THAN JUST A LIQUOR STORE Rare SPIRITS, WINES, Sc BREWS "M EX IC O 'S F A M O U S "S M O K E D TEQUILA' AHUMADO TEQUILA RARE GREENLAND VODKA SERMECQ VODKA 50 YEAR OLD ARM AG NAC from Baron de Casterac th e oldest D istilled S p irit in A u stin S 7 I 5 86 pr. 758 mL M ft. 75# mL $8* * * 4 9 ” ABSOLUT VODKA from Sw eden 80 pr. 750 ml 899 PATRICIAN AMARETTO THE O R I G I N A L THAT • R A N D S T A R T E D THE AMARETTO CRAZE. I D I S T I L L E D BOTTLED IN ITALY. Z. 1 0 49 REUBEN'S BARGAIN BINS RANCHO GRANDE TEQUILA •0 pr. M«xi3.00 OAuratl Entertainment Commrt*ei C H A R G E A - T I C K E T V I S A M a s t e r C a r d A U S T I N 4 7 7 6 0 6 0 S A N M A R C O S 3 9 2 2751 T EMPL E 7 7 4 9 1 7 6 K I L LE E N 5 2 6 - 2 8 8 1 r . Of T £ * 4 S 4 ! 4 e S ’ ~ T H c S P E C I4 L E V E N T S C E N T E O Page 18 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Friday, November 14, 1980 I I I I I I I I I1 I I Delicious Nachos Beans, real cheddar cheese and jalapenos. Regularly $2.00 50* w ith this coupon Cxpires N o v e m b e r 3 0 OPEN 3 :3 0 p .m .-2 a .m . M o n -T h u r W e e k d a y H a p p y Hour 1 p .m .-2 a .m . Fri-Sun 1 9 0 3 E. Riverside Drive 4 :0 0 - 7 :0 0 4 4 4 -5 8 1 8 Pul I-color copie» from original BhH H B drawing» or slides a* w ell aa H t-skirt transfers! C o m p le te co pyin g se rvice s o ffs e t p r ta t tag. p to to c o p y ln g , p o t t e r m a k in g , ty p e s e ttin g libas union ¡■■ Center Copy Call 471-5244 to place a Classified Ad in The Daily Texan Saturday, Novem ber 15 Tomorrow Night! THE COLD from New Orleans Hollywood primes itself for Christmas •1980 The New York Times W ill “ Popeye” or “ The Fo r­ mula,” “ Flash Gordon” or “ The Jazz Singer” be the big box office winner this Christm as? When summer was barely tucked away and everybody else was worrying about the first day of school, Hollywood was already buying its Christmas television commercials and predicting both the “ hot” movies and the failures. ‘‘We did our first interest study in Septem ber,” says M arvin An- tonowsky, a Columbia films vice president. “ We exposed people to the stars and basic story lines of 14 movies that were supposed to come out at Christmas. Now we’re doing interest iind awareness studies every week.” Although Christmas is still six weeks away, Columbia is confident that it has two Christmas successes in “ Stir Crazy” and “ Seems Like Old Times.” “ Stir Crazy,” a prison comedy starring Richard Pryor and Gene Wilder, topped the first poll, with 34 percent of those polled eager to see it. “ Seems Like Old Times,” with Goldie Hawn and Chevy Chase playing a battling former husband and wife, and the second Warner Bros. Clint Eastwood/Clyde the Orangutan comedy, “ Any Which Way You Can,” were neck and neck for second place with 25 percent. On the other hand, hardly anybody seemed to want to see “ The Lone ‘ ‘ F la s h G o rd o n ,” R a n g e r ,” ‘‘Heaven’s Gate” or “Raging.Bull.” Antonowsky is quick to point out that interest and awareness studies do not by themselves predict box- office success. “ That September study found out where the pictures stood before any advertising,” he says. “ Advertising can change people’s minds.” The rule of thumb in Hollywood is that for a picture to do good business in its first week, 60 percent of the movie-going public must be aware of it and 20 percent must be eager to see it by the time it reaches the theaters. However, for a movie’s future, the critical interest study comes the week after it opens, a study heavily influenced by word- of-mouth. “ That’s when we have to decide whether to continue suppor­ ting the movie with advertising d o llars,” says Steve Randall, C o lu m b ia’s vice president of research. “ We didn’t back away from a d v e rtis in g ‘ ‘E l e c t r i c Horseman” last Christmas despite the fact that it didn’t open par­ ticularly well because our survey showed that people were eager to see it. But it was only fourth on their list, so they didn’t get around to it until January.” Columbia’s most recent random- digit-dialing telephone survey, taken last week, showed that “ Stir C razy” and “ Seems Like Old Times” still top the list in terms of p o te n tia l au d ien ce in te re s t. Audiences were most aware of “ Popeye” and “ Flash Gordon,” recognizable names from the comic strips, but so far they have little in­ terest in seeing either. That will un­ doubtedly change for “ Popeye” when Paramount starts a $1.5 million saturation television cam­ paign the week before the movie opens. Inexorably, with daylight savings time and Halloween, come the cam­ paigns for next April’s Academy Awards. Universal is first out of the starting gate this year with nearly a dozen screenings of “ Coal Miner’s Daughter” for the academy’s ac­ tors, w r it e r s , d ire c to rs and members of the five technical branches. The campaign, which is only aimed at getting academy nominations , will eventually cost $ 120,000. “ Coal Miner’s Daughter,” starr­ ing Sissy Spacek as Loretta Lynn, was critically praised and did ex­ traordinarily well at the box office last spring, but academy voters have short memories. “ We must resurrect all those wonderful feelings from months ago,” says Gordon Armstrong, U niversal’s vice president of advertising and publicity. Helping the memory are $30 prime rib dinners preceding each screening of the movie. Whether stomachs full of Caesar salad and pineapple sherbet affect judgments is a moot question. However, 20th Century-Fox, the only studio to offer academy members sit-down dinners in recent years, did have three nominees for best picture in 1977 ( “ Julia,” “ The Turning Point” and “ Star Wars” ) and three more last year (“ All That Jazz,” “ Breaking Away” and “ Norma Rae” ). And as many as 140 people have made the trip to see “ Coal Miner’s Daughter” at Universal’s new Alfred Hitchcock Theater on some recent nights. In coming weeks, Universal will offer five other menus and six other movies. Academy members will be treated to stuffed breast of chicken, veal cutlet Oskar, veal piccata zucchini, roast sirloin of beef, and lobster Newburg, along with “ Melvin and Howard,” “ Resurrec­ t i o n , ” ‘ ‘ B l u e s B r o t h e r s , ” “ Xanadu,” “ Flash Gordon” and “ Somewhere In Time.” THE IN THE M 7 CLASSIFIED HOT LINE 471-5244 AMERICAN DEAF DANCE COMPANY Austin Civic Ballet November 14 & 15 Hogg Auditorium • 8 p.m. Presented by the Texas Union Cultural Entertainment Committee Performance includes new choreography by Eugene Slavin, Sharon Vasquez, Yacov Sharir x ^ - D A H & D A V I S a tu rd a y — I t f p h t n Dostar B and S u n d a y — Kenneth T h re a d » !! * Friend* N ever A Cover HELL or H IG H WATER Hook 'em Horns Carefree romantic looks — a soft perm Rich ologant stylos — an a tttactivo cut p.™. '30°° shampoo, conditioner & cut $ 8.00 Southern Hair Designs Northwest Hills Village 3563 Far West Blva. 346-1734 O p « n T u M -S a t 9 a .m .-6 p .m . offer e x p ir o » 12/5/80 Duke’s Royal Coach Inn 4th & Congress i Wop Lookinq-lts M inThe WAHT/wT Call the Classified Hot Une — 4 7 1 -5 2 4 4 * 3 .0 0 * Tickets: General Public. S7. S5. S3 CEC and groups. S5. S3 For information call 471-1444 This program made possible in part by the Texas Commission on the Arts the City of Austin, and the Dept of Drama College of Fine Arts. University of Texas at Austin * / \ ,rSer Our Entire Menu IsYoursTo Enjoy ro'> B U rir9 e r C hf feS ^ “ese Each time you visit Fandango s you re assured the finest quality food and drink, quickly served in authentic. Southwestern surroundings. Our entire menu is yours to enjoy, 7 days a week. 11 am till closing. Your satisfaction is guaranteed or it’s on the house. I 4 * >t" Chn Ve° *— s 'Ogs Cra,. ‘e'! 1.50 IAN! III! 7.95 r0ree tin, c 7 h ^ ' c t ! 7 ! 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Ser^ a 55Si< a,° aoo A Crea">y '*,u a<}| ■se **> 45 ? an.. — 3.9s 'gea Ch*o^ Chl1' "nth 9r' " e ^ o n Cs h**se £o*r, e e s h i b e ye ch^ r o ,lea° ? r’b*ye 9 5 7 ° ' cho J*<>r! ano 3 7 5 8 0 S". cheaaar B gc o n- 'Ch< r,eo t>ai ch*Oa, lu c e lorn, hebcla r bf) strips ¡ c h e e a t o e s, 'H a yo n 4.25 d9eo ’ - O r !®f'natetí C h >cken A b o n o l- 5 .4 5 S ' * a k 4 Ba(le harbro,lea , h o O 'b a k l r l0*aea „ llhk7 ho'*o ^ acbn 4 CA,eese s reai d chaogar sao, r'0 l n ser> e a 1 5 .9 5 Fresh SD7 laej ^ a c h Se„ baCo" Z 7 S^ e o « J - 2 5 3?S na‘9'et,ea n o use c~, Frersh "eoges 9 re e n s 'b u s h hornet cr*Ck, ,|_r,acle ° ' bacon^ Ss'°9 1 -5 0 ’ io rn a roorn$ s ° n e Of Oi s 'O gs O00** W p 1 *tie r * * * O n e n a n Ch*'*>r o.JT'hOol 4-4S 00 »ith c 00 »ith c,, ^es cn,ves a° « ^ e ” aa * 'r i e s - 7 * s T o £ ' " e s Z S,ng5 h a t t e r ” rHT)p 645 ct**ia,/ s '^ h ^ a a e A Te, M P e C l a l h 0 rn e rna Z 7 n a °> Our 5 S n * c k s D i s h C o * es Fir, *"h Z T 7 7 ’°Za C » . ’ "r-arn Ole M . « ^ a" s e 01 ‘ettuce s° u r * * ’» tos,aaoa ^ Mu* * o s ° c^eros 'Op^ o ' 7 n ? n'"á ¡o u , I Se' ^ 0 Aí,h aoc^ o S -, 3 2 5 :,e,r^ Z 7 ^ o n 7 ‘ " t o * * B0»l 1 Chu, F n , No.'"•m, r°»f,* a° Chlt S»uc» ’«-c, Oip 2 9$ «5 1-2S 3 50 150 Co, ftp p . , r»!e ^ O,*»o ’ ° 'P Pi, »Ha, 3 9S 3$ •arty Be, B»nCh Af>p• l i r a , Og,'r h a 01 c'aamy 7 Z ii ^ '’'«es sla» ’ *5 gi**- onto so, 3 7* Q u ic h e 1 _ -~ ra'°e ^ ' * o 7 7 in°«Sos 3 4 5 lO O a yT '' W* " POr. Y * 'or F»oa.'•”9 0 , **• F»rnc r0ar, ,u 3 3 SO iHt o, *9uir,t C * c f o j p C°°*, " o t h e r *Of>« O.I,iQ h t '" h a g , Ho horn Too ^ 3 7 3 3 hom Split Ban 'Vr, r° ta n "hpot Or* t Bou¡ G/.! ^•tar *« • I * , hoc*. 'ta g ’ *aa, ,rom 35 95 1 50 3 $0 175 3 so 3 so ■3 5 3 35 2S Anderson Lane At Burnet Road In West Anderson Plaza 11-11 Sun-Thurs, Til 12 Fri & Sat Happy Hour 4 7 M o n -F ri Visa. MC 50» ON YOUR TEXAN WANT ADS! If you are a student or a m e m b tr of tha faculty or staff of the University, you can save one-half on your T exan classified ads by coming in person to the TSP Business Office. TSP Building 3 200, end placing your ad You must have University ID, and the special is good only on ads paid in advance. FriSatSu Exhi bi ts TWENTY-FIVE NUDES: An exhibit of nude photographs taken by J. Rehm opens Sunday at the Darkroom, 4228 Duval St. CLAY WORKS: An exhibit by Austinite Paulina Van Bavel- Keamey of recent clay and pot works exploring the fem ale form opens Friday a t Laguna Gloria, 3809 W. 35th St. PHOTOS: An exhibit of photos by Austin photographer Alan Pogue is on display at the Bois D’Arc Gallery, 803 Red River St. THE BOOK OF DAYS: Photos chosen for the “ 1981 Book of D ays’’ will be exhibited at the Trinity House Gallery, 607 Trinity St. INDIANS OF ORINOCO: Photographs of native Colombian Indian tribes are displayed at the Texas M emorial Museum, 2400 Trinity St. JEFF ROWE: R ecent work by Austin photographer Jeff the Precision Cam era G allery, 3004 is featured at Rowe Guadalupe St. SCOTT MICHAUD: An exhibit of acrylic paintings by Austin a rtist Scott Michaud a t the Roberta Starr Showplace G allery in the Village Shopping Mall. The at e r ALL’S WELL THAT ENDS WELL: An updated version of Shakespeare’s classic comedy shows a t 8 p.m. Friday and Satur­ day at the B. Iden Payne Theatre. MICKEY FAUST SHOW: “ The Mickey F au stk eteers’’ and “ Jake Ratchett, Short D ectective” are two of the parodies in­ cluded in the M etro’s new show. At 8:30 p.m. Friday and Satur­ day at the Metro Theatre, 222 E. Sixth St. Local perform ers from E sth e r’s Follies and Shakespeare at Winedale will join the cast on Saturday to host a benefit for the a rtists who lost their work anJ m aterials in the Sixth Street fire. Admission is $3. Friday, November 14, 1980 □ T H E D A IL Y T E X A N □ Page 19 uncut version at 7:30 and 10 p.m. Friday and Saturday in the Academic Center. Discover primal dream therapy in The Discrete Charm Of The Bourgeosie, directed by Luis Buñuel at 7:30 and 9:30 p.m. Friday and Saturday in Batts Auditorium. Alex and his droogs cut a nasty trail in the futuristic horror story, Clockwork Orange, at 11:30 p.m. Friday and Saturday at B atts Auditorium Doc Savage, an incredibly cam p film about one of the greatest pulp fiction super-heros at 1 p.m. Saturday and Sunday in the Union Theater. The American Deaf Dance Company BEST LITTLE WHOREHOUSE IN TEXAS: Broadway’s hit musical details the story of the infamous “ chicken ranch’’ out­ side La G range a t 8 p.m. Friday, Saturday and Sunda at the Param ount T heatre, 713 Congress Ave. SLY FOX: A modern adaptation of Ben Jonson’s “ Volpone” at 8 p.m. Friday and Saturday and a t 2:15 p.m. Sunday at the Zachary Scott Theatre, Riverside Drive and L am ar Boulevard. ANDROCLES AND THE LION: Aurand H arris’ h eartw ar­ ming play based upon the tale by Hans Christian Andersen shows at 10:30 p.m. Saturday and a t 4 p.m. Sunday a t Center Stage T heatre, 320 E. Sixth St. OTHERWISE ENGAGED: British playwright Simon G ray’s intense dram a focuses on the plight of a man who has tim e to solve everyone’s problem s but his own, at 8 p.m. Friday, Satur­ day and Sunday a t Theatre in the Rye, 120 W. Fifth St. THE TH REEPEN N Y OPERA: B recht’s entertaining parody and hard-hitting exam ination of social and sexual attitudes. At 8 p.m. Friday and Saturday; 6 p.m. Sunday a t the Center Stage, 320 E. Sixth St. ESTH ER’S FOLLIES: E sth e r’s November show “ Recount” includes a perform ance by guest star Turk Pipkin, juggler, magician and m im ist extraordinaire a t 9 and 11 p.m. Friday and Saturday a t E sth e r’s Pool, 515 E. Sixth St. Dance AMERICAN DEAF DANCE COMPANY will perform jointly with the Austin Civic Ballet a t 8 p.m. Friday and Saturday in Hogg Auditorium. The event is sponsored by the Texas Union Cultural E ntertainm ent Committee and will feature new choreography by Eugene Slavin, Sharon Vasquez and Yacov Sharir. Tickets are $7, $5 and $3 Fil m UNION FILMS: Richard Gere stars as an obsessed man who can give but not receive pleasure in American Gigolo a t 3, 5:15, 7:30 and 9:45 p.m. in the Union Theater. Four people are caught in horrifying experiences — you relive m id-term s — in Robert Wise’s thriller, The Haunting at 11:55 p.m. F riday and Saturday in the Union Theater. Fiddler On The Roof, returns to campus at 3, 7 and 10:05 p.m. Sunday in the Union Theater. Back by popular demand, David Bowie is still the The Man Who Fell To Earth in Nicholas Roeg’s bizarre science film presented once m ore in its Music WOMEN’S CONCERT CHOIR: The UT Women's Choir per­ form s a variety of classical and popular choral music at 8 p.m. Sunday in the New R ecital Hall, 25th and Red River streets. THE STRING PROJECT: Students of UT’s nationally acclaim ed String P ro je c t perform at 4 p.m. Sunday in the New Recital Hall, 25th and Red River streets. UNION MUSIC: The Desires at 9:30 p.m. Saturday in the Tex­ as Tavern; Little Les a t 9:30 p.m. Saturday in the Cactus Cafe. CLEARLIGHT WAITES: Clearlight Waites, the King's favorite band from the Renaissance Fair, will perform at 9 p.m. Saturday at Maggie M ae’s, 323 E. Sixth St. E v e n t s EASTER SEAL SUNDOWN 8000 The E aster Seal Sundown 8000, co-sponsored by KLBJ Radio, Austin Sport Centers and Pizza Hut of Austin, features a 8,000-meter charity run and prizes worth m ore than $1,200 dollars. Top prize is a trip for two to the Cowboy/Eagles football game. Festivities begin at 4 p.m. Saturday at B ergstrom Air Force Base. HORSEBACK Trips Into MEXICO Leaving from LAJITAS, T exas FISH the RIO G RANDE via jet boats R egular trips are on HOLIDAYS, or schedule YOUR OWN! For more information, W R IT E : Rio G r a n d e E x p re ss 2 2 0 6 M is s io n Hill N o. 1 0 2 A u stin , T X 7 8 7 4 1 C ALL: Robert C h a m b e r s 9 1 5 - 8 3 7 - 5 7 7 4 A lp in e , T X L O O K I N G FO R Y O U R C A S T L E ? C h e c k t h e T E X A N CLASSIFIEDS (or re n ta ls fit for an y lord or lad y . HAPPY HOUR featuring JAV A JIVE playing the best of jazz. Today only, 4-7. < / / - <0® TOftlGHT U # V 0 “ - TEXAS TAVERN Texas LiDion u Introducing The $1.95 Luncheon Specials Chicken Fried Steak Steak Sandwich Fried Fillet of Flounder Fish Sandwich including a trip to our Salad Bar. Only $1.95 each Mon. • Sat. 11:00 a.m. • 3:00 p.m. Happy Hour 11:00 a.m. • 6:00 p.m. Mon. - Fri. fish e rm a n s tfe e f 8301 Burnet Road at Ohlen Road O pen 7 d a y s a w eek 458-6211 For a - i i m i t e d t i m e o n l y C ñ l c o n o f l i g h t ★ ★ ★ ★ "F r o m th e stark sim p lic it> o f th e o p e n in g cre d its t o th e sh a tte rin g c o n e l u s i o n , 'O R i ) I N A R Y P E O P U ' is a so u l searing, p e n e tra tin gly h o n e s t m o v ie , t m o t io n a lh stirring It e nearly im p o s s ib le t o l 8UWWET 80 4S4 4U7J (6:00)-«: 15-10:30______ CDMANN WESTGRTE 3 4608 W E ST G A T E B LV D 692-2775 (6:101-8:10-10:10 And la there was another movie. O OH, GOD! BOOK II HID (5:05)-6:55 . JILL CLAYDUR6HItslTX LTurK tB CO LU M BIA P IC T U R E S RELEASE 8:45-10:25 MANN 3 WESTCATE 4608 WESTGATE BLVD. 892-2775 Q A P a r a m o u n t Picture (5:051-7:30-9:55 G O I O IF H A W N as _ _ _ _ _ _ _ B E N JA M IN (8) (5:401-7:50-10:00 (6 : 101- 8 : 10 - 1 0 : 1 0 R E D U C E D ADULT A D M ISSIO N All Features in (Brackets) LIM ITED TO SEATIN G CAPACITY Daily Times May Vary L " ■ U V I N " STARRING. Brooke Wotl A O U I I * < *NI . COLOR '0 Á 0 * HUSTLER'S HIG HEST RATING! "It 's an all-star, all-sex fantas] that pulsates with rm tidsm “ -J e ff Ressner HUSTLER MAGAZINE S IARR|N<; A n n i.tik H avfn M o n iq i í C a r d in S erena i 7224 QUAOALUPE • 477-11 C t t l N A S I S T E B S WILL EXCITE YOUR SEN SES • t a r r i n g V IC K I L Y O N 8 J A C K W R A N G L E R M ID-NIGHT SHOW S FRI. & SAT. Featuring: ORMMTAL BABY Admission $3.00 A Porton H at* d X A d u lts < >nU M a U n e e s D a i l y N o O n e U n d e r 1 8 A d m i t t e d I a t e s N i w s F f i d n y A S a t u r d a y S u n d a y s O p e n Noon Please B f," q • D s R e g a r d le s s Q1 A ge Page 20 D TH E D AILY TEXAN □ Friday, November 14, 1980 i T ; I tu LLi I lL I l L l 11 i \ i'1'si i n ol 1 c\;is Department <>1 Dranui ¡ J ; I f J/Í/W t/J rr rrrrs/y Alls Well That Ends Well XovcmlK'i 11 X l.j, 17 Kwninus at H Maimec Xov, |,j 22 c^x . L. | l i i l l < I# ,< at 2 a Men I’ i >n, Theatre A l l 2.'h A ^ 171 i i u r p r j r j T ' i r p - r r m n r r r p r n ' 1 \ \ \ \ t * * ' 1 i ★ WANTED!! ★ SCRAP GOLD: RINGS, JEW ELRY, ETC. WE PAY CA$H FOR 1 OK, 14K, 18K DENTAL GOLD, PLATINUM ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ • A r $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ ^ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ AUSTIN GOLD A N D SILVER EXCH AN G E 458-2186 O N CITY BUS U NC W E BUY GOLD AND SILVER COINS AND STERLING SILVER tFTrd Coast Friday & Saturday THE LOTIONS (F a c in g K o e n ig b e tw e e n La m a r A G u a d a lu p e ) J 454-0511 5555 N. LAMAR I’m so proud of my boys they never forget their mama.' T h ere is a g r e e n recy cle box w ith in a b lo c k o f w here you are on c a m ­ pus. R e cy cle T h e D a ily T exa n . THE V A E s r r y i i 2402 GUADALUPE 474-4351 2JBAX2L O NLY ^ Fri. A Sat. EXTREME HEAT S u n BEATLES FILM NIGHT p lu s AUSTIN ALL STA R S g g K & fe » & : downstairs The R«nk Oriimzjlioo Prtwoti A NICOLAS ROEG FILM BAD TIMING/ A SENSUAL OBSESSION 7 5 0 0 .9 : 3 0 (ant 'su n ZO O .4 :3 0 ) , "Uncommonly bold... fascinating...wildly un­ conventional. Nicolas Roeg' s time has come around at last. "Bad Tuning' could be the long awaited break­ through that sends him into super-star territory. Art Garfunkel gives the best performance of his career." -N ation al Public Radio "Miss Russell, who has also made memorable appearances in 'Straight Tune' and 'The Last Tycoon' brings to her role a reckless physkaJity that is overwhelming." — New York Times "The sheer pleasure of watching Miss Russell in action...is enough...she ctunes through triumphantly." —Archer Winsten, N.Y. Post "As fascinating as it is striking about obsession with male possessiveness and female independence caught in erotic compulsion. Theresa Russell's por­ trait of a woman is stunning." -Ju d ith Cri*t. Saturday Review "The most demanding whodunit since Chinatown'." —Toronto Sun x- BRUCE DERN ANN- MARGRFT D O B I E 1 S l2 DOBIE M ALL • 477-1324 6 : 2 0 - 8 : 10- 10:00 JShowtown2 „ ¿ Outdoor Theatre *» y) HW Y 183 a CAM ERON 8368584 500 S PEASANT VALLÍ v NO 444-372? 6 :0 0 - 8 :0 0 - 9 :5 5 BO X O FFIC E O P E N S AT 6:30 Th i s picture c o n ta in s scen es ot a violent nature N o one unde, 17 will be adm itted u n le ss a c c o m p a n ie d by an adult ! R I V E R S I D E 1930 RIVERSID E • 441 5689 6 :1 5 - 8 :0 0 - 9 :4 6 j Showtown 2 .¿O utdoor Theatre R i t j H W Y 1*3 A C AM ERO N 8368584 BO X O F FIC E S O P E N S 6:30 jSouthside2 Outdoor Theatre »»■»/ 710 E B EN W HITE 4442296 BOX O FFIC E O PE N S AT 6:30 WINNER “BEST FILM” TORONTO FESTIVAL OF FESTIVALS T L - J F A T R F c ; H ^ t j TWI-UTI SHOW S1.7S. LIMITED TO SEATING. SPECIAL ENGAGEMENTS EXCLUDIO PRICES FOR STUDENTS I SH. CITIZENS WITH ARK CARD. T I M E S S H O W N T O R T O D A Y O N L Y N I C O L A S R O E G M A K E S M O V I E S T H E W A Y P A B L O P I C A S S O P A I N T E D P I C T U R E S . They are beautiful and bizarre, mysterious and enchanting, puzzling and haunting. Art Garfunke! displays a keen acting ability in the most challenging and complicated role any actor could undertake.” — Associated Press "The most thoroughly adult movie ever made in the English language." “ TO MISS ‘BAD TIMING' WOULD BE TO MISS ONE OF THE FIN E ST FILMS TO O PEN IN AUSTIN THIS Y E A R .” _ Mocintan'c U a n a im a -M aclean 's Magazine "Beneath beauty and luxury fester the insidious and sinister. No one says it better than Roeg." —Village Voice P A U L L IT T L E D A I L Y TEXAN SO U T H W O O D 2 A n a d u lt ta il o f m urder, m ystery, an d fo r b id d e n love. t*o (5.15/S1.751-7J0-M5 AQUARIUS 4 ! T h e r t 'i only o n t | w ay out, and 100 fools stand in the way! PENITENTIARY 4 4 2 - 2 3 3 3 >423 w ben w hite blvo THE PRIVATE EYES “ Jid*/51.75)4.404:55 ""___ [ 4 4 4 - 3 2 2 2 1500 S PLEASAM VALIEV RD jUf/nn/ F A G E CRAZY I h o t t im e In t h e h o t t u b MA* NGNRET T h e r e 'll be a b r u c e t o n lg h t l (54S/$l.7S)44Md5 H*h ( ^^*1—— I S £ r "fi, vfl becomes a fi j , m f j l km* story. ™___ (5:15/51.75)7:45-10:15 * W O R T H C R O S S 6 4 5 4 - 5 1 4 7 J e b e h a n t Ü H p b ü i J VP ! funny lo s t story | (6:15/51.75)4:15-10:15 » N08THC80II W ANOtWSON t ARE 4 BUWNCT 9 V ty * B < M fu g u a r< f 20th CENTURY FOX FILMS \we (5:15/$1.7S)-7:45-10:15 (5:30/51.75)7:45-9:55 PETER O TO O LE U T H W STUNTMAN 20th CENTURY FOX FILMS I A n a d u lt ta ll o f m urder, m ystery, a n d fo r b id d e n love. (5:15/51.75)4:00-10:45 vo (545/51.75)4:15-10:30 (6:00/51.75)4:15-10:30 THE PRIVATE EYES 4 5 3 - 6 6 4 1 2200 HANCOCK DRIVE' SPECIAL ENGAGEMENT Adult»................. S3.75 | $tud*nt» with AMC ID . . . .53 25 1 Children................52.00 Tw ilit*................ 52 00 NO PASSES OR (5JQ/52.00)440-10J0 disc^ n t tTc k e t s LATE SHOWS PLEASANT vAtLEY RP 89' j l-’i- ■ í,' "-?■ • > > L v - NIGHT Of TIN LIVING MAD lU Z IN G SADDLES GIMME SHELTEt TALES FROM THE CRYPT ■LAZING SADDLES GIMME SHELTER TALES FROM THE CRYPT NIGHT Of THE LIVING DEAD FLESH GORDON A Film by JO E CAMP C H EW CHASE and BEN JI are “OH HEAVENLY D O G ” Starrinq JAN E SEYMOUR I H‘, S AN! 4 BURN! • no «S4 St4T I i . l 3 ‘ l V U > m MN WH'lf ft.V0 «4? J GIMME SHELTER "As usual you can't take your eyes off Harvey Keitel when he's on the screen." — New York Daily News "Theresa Russell is un­ forgettably real. She is amoral, uninhibited and unpredictable sensualist who drives Art Garfunkel into a jealous frenzy." —Francis Herridge, N.Y. POST “ ★ ★ ★ ★ A striking meditation on love and pain. 'Last Tango' comes to mind. Roeg has a staggering awareness of how film works." —Newsday Keep your eye on Theresa Russell, igniting everything around her with raw magnetism, reminding me of Marlene Dietrich in 'The Blue Angel'." Rex Reed, Syndicated Columnist "Should enhance Roeg's reputation as a pioneer of erotkism on film. Theresa Russell graduates from promising starlet status to one of those pedestals reserved for overnight success." - B ru ce Williamson. Playboy I be Rank < bgani/,ilK«n Prevents \ N IC ( )L A S R O E G F IL M BAD TIMINGA SENSUAL OBSESSION AR T GARFUNKEL THEREJSA RUSSELL HARV1 Y K1 11KL DENHOLM KLUOTT in BAD T IMING/A SENSUAL OBSFSSION Dirrt ltiroi Hbiiitigrapliy Anthtmy Rahmnnd Onnlurui M ush R h Kard Hartley I dtlor Itmy I jwym A ssik tali- Prmlui,-r I un Van Helltni SCRI E N P L A Y BY Y A L E U I X )F F PR O D U C ED BY IER1 M Y 1 H O M A S D IR EC T ED BY N IC O LA S RO EG A Resurded PntureC itntpany PhtdutlHtn Tdmed tn let hntivtsHtn A Snodr* Caiman/Lhmm- \X4-sl«T«aard fAev.-ntatHm ££ AWK RLD NOR I HAL FILM I 'Ho m x J upon the He ot John Metre » tbe tie pb or" riot u poe Hnxxtwoy piov ot onv otttet fchoootoccount j 7:00, 9:30 (SAT/SUN: 2:00, 4:30) VARSITY 2402 GUADALUPE 474-4351 Exclusive! N0RTHCR0SS 6 yANOtRSON LANE A Boawtt 80 45* 5147J ¿ T i m e T H E A T R E S N O R T M C S O S S M A L I i w w m STUNT MAN /VÉLVM SIMONmnoumu RCHARD RUSHk- PETER O’TOOLE STEVE RAILSBACK BARBARA HERSHEY "THE STUNTJMAN” (5:15/51.75^-745-11:15 (5:15/51.75)4 K)0-10:45 FINDHORN Audio-Visual Fri. 7:3 0 p.m. Seminars - N e w Age Living • HIGHER SELF GUIDANCE Sat. 9 a .m . • MANIFESTING ABUNDANCE Sat. 2 p.m . 31st & W ashington Sq. • CO M M U N IC A TIN G W /NATURE Sun. 1 p .m . 1910 Justin A /V $3; Seminars $15 or 3 for $ 3 9 Jim M a yn a rd 4 5 4 -1 8 0 5 $1.50 FIRST MATINEE SHOWING ONLY H IG H L A N D M A L L I H 35 AT KOENIG IN. 451-7326 PRIVATE HKNJ.-tMINj £ 9 1:004:15-5:30-7:45-10:00 D a u g h t e r UNIVKK-SAI PICTUHt [PG] 1240-2^0-5:10-740-430 PRIVATE BENJAMIN’ is funny and Goldie Hawn is totally charming.” -vmciNTcanbvnewyohh Tiuf •n’/V 'teViusy - V l ' \ ' ’ givingg p l e a s u r e a c n m c ? G O L D I E H A W N PRIVATE BENJAMIN m MANN H A T q { • MANN WEST GATE 3l HIGHLAND MALL HIGHLAND MALL BLVD. 451-7326 1:00-3:15-5:30-7:45-10:00 4,-.0HWt»*UATt BtVO I COUNSELING SERVICES The Counseling and Psychological Services Center, 471-3515 or PAX 3380, provides a w ide r a n g e of co u n s e lin g s e rv ic e s to students w ith out charge. '*t . * ■ 'If, * I V,' \ x- . •*. Friday and Saturday Union Theatre 1.50 U.T. : > * , • \V-. r v • I! *'./ . * * -' /»• 3, 5:15, 7:30, ?:45 2.00 non-U.T. • r . I Friday, November 14, 1980 □ T H E D A IL Y T E X A N □ Page 2 ' ‘ i ' J ' ■ ‘Ví ' ;■ ‘ » v ; -r ' V; V'- 7;:, . ; i * ir* - ; ■ .* . I ; Before there was Star Wars ... Before there was Close Encounters There was THE MAN W H O FELL TO EARTH Now there is the complete, uncut version never before seen in the United States. Experience a sci-fi original as it was originally intendéd. @ ü i f i j. > /•VV. tT-V i*l>tLI ! :-V;, : “A FIRST RATE ACHIEVEMENT... BEAUTIFUL SCIENCE FICTION!” — New York Times George C. Scott 'Islands in the Stream' David Hemmings Claire Bloom Ooseo Upon The Nove’ 3y Ernest Hem ingw ay . U M l mtPiHKMriMrC I Peter Sellers p g Dvan Cannon MIDNIGHTER I KZZtlD rio e -ln x 385-7217 6902 Burleson Road New C in e -fi Sound S ystem Privacy of Your A uto XXX O riginal Uncut N ote T hea tre sound operates th ro u g h y o u r car radio If y o u r car has no radio, bring a portable ■ "'ww‘ £so-' “A SUPERSEXUAL O P f lD P L l E ID 1* "'w" 0'"'11 o u u n u n c n . monsoon* r ii KITSVSTORME MAE EAST EVERY MONDAY NIGHT t1 PER PERSON k - O P EN S 6:30 S T A R T S 7:0 0 THE HAUNTING D irected by Robert Wise Starring: Julie Harris and Claire Bloom From the Shirley Jackson novel LATE SHOW Friday and Saturday v v\v I Union Thaatra m u I 11:55 p.m. 1.50 U.T. 2.00 non-U.T. Academ y A w a rd W inner BEST FOREIGN LANGUAGE Film 1973 “Best Feature Film of the Year!” “One of the Year’s Best Films!" “Best Film of the Year!" A film by Luis Buñuel -t h e d i s c r e e t c h a r m o r THE BOURGEOISIE" *«*0 fcK.I 00«« • *»W99M« MAM •«•«« CAM■im) French w ith subtitles Friday, Saturday, Sunday 7 J0 & 9:30 p.m. Batts Aud. 1.50 U.T. 2.00 non-U.T. '¿■j •- t-Jr—. ,;A V’.v r>Wi S<ÍVV¡ fe ’iv iiWV v. i 4Í<&¡ P m - í- LATE SHOW V ‘ Friday Saturday 11:30 p.m. « « M -£Á :7 Vv i l l ' ' ; § ¿ w jn io r ;g: 130* if.lf 200 no°-UT- M . J B David Bowie m Nicolas Roeg's film The man who fell to Earth Also starring Rip Torn • Candy Clark • Buck Henry • from Cinema 5 Friday and Saturday Atodamk Center Aud. 7:30 & 10:00 p.m. 2.00 U.T. 2.50 non-U.T. Week End Fun Matin»» D oc S a v a g e (fAanoT Bronte) vv Saturday and Sunday IKK) p.m. Union Theatre 75' “THE BEST FILM OF 1980! A picture of such power, grace, sensitivity and hum an value th a t I have to rub m y eyes to m ake sure I ’m not dream ing.” — Rex Reed, Syndicated Columnist •x":vC*x' ><:xw l i “ ‘S antini’ is a film to w atch for... A striking and rem arkably fine film detailed with insight and with passion. —Judith Crist ‘ “ TJie Great Santini' is one o f the year's best...the audience becomes completely absorbed, thanks to the talents o f Duvall, Danner, O 'K eefe and Shaw. — Jerry M cCulley, Daily Texan ‘G et a m ove on an d go see ‘S a n tin i’!’ —Gene S h a lit, N B C -T V “To day S h o w '' £P■axyj ill ¡i li§i| IIt-X-X-i lyXyi J Ixlx . . .“AV VILLAGE 4 2 7 0 0 A N D E R S O N * 4 5 1 -8 3 5 2 M ROBERT DUVALL 1 :2 0 - 3 :3 0 - 5 ^ 4 0 - 7 i 5 0 n 0 ¿ 0 g A battle beyond time beyond space “Gena Rowlands delivers the kind of performance Oscars are made for ...tart, tangy and as butt-chewmg tough as Bogart in his heyday, she emerges as a remarkably believable gun moll.” _ P e o p le M a g a z in e “A t it a n ic e n te rta in m e n t t h a t w i l l malee y o u r h a i r stand on end w ith tension and excitement. Gena Rowlands flames, sizzles and explodes w ith energy, vibrancy and power. The picture seethes w ith h u m an ity and s p irit and the suspense is b reath takin g .” — REX REED S y n d ic a te d C o lu m n is t GENA ROWLANDS PG ( S A T - 1 2 :3 0 ) - 2 : 5 0 - 5 : 1 5 - 7 : 3 5 - 9 : 5 5 (Sat-12:30-2:5Q)-5:15-7:3 5-9:55 THE MOST DANGEROUS MAN IN THE WORLD. “D ire c te d and acted in th e b ra v u ra m a n n e r o f a ll M r . Cassavetes e a r lie r m ovies. Miss Rowlajids has a lot of tale n t and realizes it w ith gusto in ‘Gloria'.” — V IN C E N T C A N B Y . N ew Y o rk T im e s “Gena R ow lands is a m a g n ific e n t, e a r t h y w o n d er w o m an who is triu m p h a n tly real...they ju st don’t come any gutsier th a n the heroine of ‘G loria’, a gun-totin’ tootsie who declares w a r on the slim iest of New Y o rk C ity’s Mafiosi." — GU Y FLA TLEY C o s m o p o lita n “T h e screen is Gena R o w la n d s ’, and she runs w ith it.” T im e M a a a z in e VILLAGE A 2 7 0 0 A N D E R S O N • 4 5 1 -8 3 5 2 ¡¡¡¿Xvv: bXwXJ 1 1 1 / 7 tteiv TaJoocSLj, Allest {ibn StaAjJUuit /tf& H u o s U & i W ritten and directed by W oody A llen JE S S IC A HARPER Starring W O O D Y ALLEN CHARLOTTE R A M P LIN G T O N Y ROBERTS VILLAGE 4 ■ LAKEHILLS 2 7 0 0 A N D E R S O N * 4 5 1 8 3 5 2 ■ 2 4 2 8 B E N W H IT E • 4 4 4 -0 5 5 2 (Sat-2:10-400) 0 S : 5 0 - 7 :4 0 - 9 : 3 0 1 IB 2:10-400- f c : 5 l > 7j 4 0 - 9 ^3 The Bandit, Frog and Justice are at it again in the all new adventures of SISSY Sl’Al'KK IDMM'i li:K-K)Nh>- Y'OAI. M1NKHS IJAIK iHTKK' I t .rniur HKYKK1.Y DANUKU) LKVDN HELM Strwnplav by IXJM HICKMAN H u « k™ Kui-utw IVxiucer W>H LARSON PrtxKx-fd ^ Hi.R\ARDS( HWAfiTZ Dim.'tfd bv MICHAKL AKTE3) a w.kmkhsi hwakiv. __ t h nfiiwl .'‘■■miwH* » k * N» Ml A a. mv».hmi m-n k» ■ v » » , ‘rtLnv» «i»l !.«*»- . M U IIM I I M f l i m N At».HH.KTSKF.Sk.KV>J. » at [ I50CS PlEASAMT UAL I t y SO *** k tti^ 5 :1 5 -7 :4 5 - 1 0 :1 5 H IG H L A N D M A L L I H 35 AT KOENIG I N 4 5 1 - 7 3 2 6 1 2 :3 0 - 2 :5 0 -5 :1 0 -7 :3 0 - 9 :5 0 x :x :::x ;:::;x:::x VILLAGE A ■ LAKEHILLS 2 4 2 8 BEN W H IT E • 4 4 4 -0 5 5 2 | 2 7 0 0 A N D E R 5 0 N . 451 8 3 5 2 (S at-1:35-3:40) ■ ig r7 S f^in -Q 5 5:45-7.55-1o r a RIVERSIDE 1 9 3 0 R IV ER S ID E • 4 4 1 -5 6 8 9 ■ S a t - 1.-0 0 - __ SI 2:45-4:30) 6:15-8:00-9:41 R IVERSIDE 1 9 3 0 R IV E R S ID E * 4 4 1 -5 6 8 9 (S a t-1:30-3:30) 5 :3 0 - 7 :3 0 - 9 :3 0 RIVERSIDE 1 9 3 0 R IV ER S ID E • 441 5 6 8 9 MIDNIGHTER LAKEHILLS 2 4 2 8 SEN W H IT E * 4 4 A 0 5 5 2 (Sat-1:45-3:45) 5:45-7:45-9:50! REDUCED PRICES TIL 6:00 MON. — FRI. p | NO DISCOUNT MATINEES W E E K E ^ y i :ÍViVMÍ iWÍiiiWÍi^ T T Ü E lto lI^ fc X A N B _ l lL i— i* C Z . PHONE 471-5244 f~| Mondoy through Friday [~] 8 o.m.-5 P-m- FOR SALE FURNISHED APARTMENTS ■ FURNISHED APARTMENTS ROOMMATES ROOM AND BOARD SERVICES TYPING UT ARK A U nexpected Vacancies Hyde Park Apts, 1 BR FURN. $ 2 2 5 & E 4 5 th & S peedw ay 4 5 8 -2 0 9 6 Estrada Apts. Now Leasing 1, 2 & 3 b e d ro o m s Leasing from $ 2 ? 0 -$ 3 8 5 O n UT Shuttle 1 801 Lakeshore 4 4 2 -6 6 6 8 UT ARIA U nexpected Vacancies MARK X X APTS. 1 BR FURN. $ 2 5 0 3 8 1 5 G u a d a lu p e 4 5 1 -2 6 2 1 TRAVIS HOUSK APARTMKNTS 1600 ROYAL CRIST 4 4 2 -9 7 2 0 A ll N e w Leasing Prices S tarting a t $ 2 3 0 . 1st shuttle stop. H u g e floor plans. Free la u n d r y c a b le T .V . T w o rooms. Plenty of p arking . P r i v a t e b a l c o n i e s a n d patios. Come See Us. UT AREA U nexpected Vacancies EL CAMPO APTS. 1 BR. FURN. $ 2 5 0 plus E. 3 0 5 W . 3 9 th 4 5 2 -8 5 3 7 W A R W I C K A P T S . NO W L E A S IN G F u lly furnished efficien cy. B e au tifu lly landscaped, close to cam pus. C a ll 477-1630 2907 W E S T A V E . Now L e a sin g fo r F a ll B R O W N L E E F A L L R E N T S175 2 B LO C K S TO C A M P U S 2502 Nueces 477-2687 L A W S T U D E N T S G R A D U A T E S T U D E N T S U P P E R C L A S S M E N and e ffic ie n c y U n iq u e su ite s, t a s te fu lly d e s ig n e d w ith b u ilt-in b o o k­ cases and a m p le s to ra g e T re e c o v e re d g ro u n d s . W ith in w a lk in g d is ta n c e of c a m p u s . C o n ta c t D a v id S ta p le to n , 472- 0100 o r 345-0326. 1B R B a r r y G illin g w a te r M a n a g e m e n t C o m p a n y O L D M A IN A p artm en ts, 25th and P e a rl, 1BR, efficien cies Fou r blocks U T , shut­ tle, cable, pool. 476-5109 I M M E D IA T E M O V E - IN . 1-1, $195. Shut­ tle U T W est No pets, c h ild re n . 700 H e arn , 476-0953. ________________ _ fu rn is h ed or unfurnished, 1 ¿I?, 1BA, $ 2 3 5 . 4 5 0 4 A v e n u e A , C e l e s t e A p a rtm e n ts 453-3520 or 458-5301 E F F IC IE N C IE S A N D IB R 's a v a ila b le , $173 - $225 plus E . Cam pus area 478-5624 IB R . $275 plus U N IV E R S IT Y A R E A e le c tric ity . B alcony off bedroom . Call 474-9918 for ap p o in tm en t. IB R , $195furnished. 2800 R iO G R A N D E 472-2343 IB R A P A R T M E N T S W esterner, 2806 I X , 2803 H e m p h il l, 472 -0 6 4 9 . A c t ________________ H e m p h ill, 476-0411. furnished S U B L E A S E O N E bedroom th ro u g h M a y . a p a r tm e n t D e c e m b e r R iv e rs id e a re a , on shuttle. Call Sharon, 447-1694 R E N T O N E bedroom furnished a p a rt­ m en t m id -D e c e m b e r through M a y . 39th S treet. C a ll 459-8375. 1 8 R , A T T R A C T I V E A P A R T M E N T IF shuttle M id - nice neighbors, pool, D e cem ber through M a y . C all 453-2328, keep t r y i n g ! ______________ S U B L E A S E E F F IC IE N C Y . V e ry close to cam pus. A v a ila b le D e cem b er 1 or J a n u a ry 1. C a ll 474-1165 a fte r 5. a i s FREE - apt. referral service FEE PAID BY APT OWNER C L A S S I F I E D a d v e r t i s i n g C o n s e c u tiv e D a y R ates 15 w o rd m in im u m * E a c h w o rd 1 t.m e $ 37 E a c h w o rd 3 tim e s 5 * * E a c h w o rd 5 tim e s * 77 E a c h w o rd 10 t.m e s *5 ' 7 * 1 m ch 1 tim e 1 col * ' in c h 2-9 tim e s 1 c o l $4 * * 1 col * 1 inch 10 or m o re tim e s S-) 41 Si 00 c h a rg e to ch a n g e copy F ir s t tw o w o rd s m a y be an c a p ita l le tte rs 25 fo r each a d d itio n a l w o rd in c a p ita l le tte rs S T U D E N T F A C U L T Y S T A F F fa c u lty and s ta ff of S tuden ts the U n iv e r s ity m a y p u rch a se c la s s ifie d a d v e r t is i n g a* o n e - h a lf th e a p ­ p r o p r ia te ra te n d ic a te d abo ve Ads m u s t be p la ce d m person at the TSP business o ffic e TSP B u ild .n g 3 200 b e tw e e n 8 a m and 4 30 p .m M o n d a y th ro u g h F r id a y UT id e n tific a tio n and a d v a n c e p a y m e n t a re re q u ire d 50 c h a rg e to ch a n g e copy F ir s t tw o w o rd s m a y be a ll c a p ita l le tte rs fo r each a d d itio n a l w o rd in c a p ita l le tte rs D E A D L I N E S C H E D U t E M o n d o y T e . o n F r i d a y 2 0 0 p m T u e s d a y T u a n M o n d a y I I 0 0 a m W e d n e s d a y T e . a n T u e s d a y 11 0 0 a m T h u r s d a y T e s a n W e d n e s d a y 1 1 0 0 a m F r i d a y T e » a n T h u r s d a y 11 0 0 a m I n t h e e v e n t a f e r r o r s m a d e i n a n a d v e r - t r s e m e n l i m m e d i a t e n o t ic e m u s t b e g i v e n a s t h e p u b l i s h e r s a r e r e s p o n s i b l e fo r o n l y O N E m c o r r e t t i n s e r t i o n A l l c la i m » f o r a d - l u s t m e n t s s h o u l d b e m a d e n o t l a t e r t h o n 3 0 d a y s a f t e r p u b l i c a t i o n AUTOS FOR SALE ‘ VW E N G IN E S re b u ilt $459 installed, ex- • change G en eral V W re p a ir Reasonable ' rates 452-3821 W e buy b ro k e n ly Ws r 68 V W W IT H '71 engine Rusted body . No heat $500 452-7498 C all a fte r 5 and r on w eekends. __ ____ ' ?969 SAAB 96 W eil kept, econom ical ' tra n sp o rtatio n . $1000 fir m 442-5397. ! 1977 C U TLA S S SA LO N 2-door, 350-V8, cruise. A M F M cassette, pow er w in- i dows, Vi vin yl top $4150 476-6079. 1 T977~CELICA A ll e xtras, super condi- l i f t - b a c k , c o m p le t e • tio n , 5 -s p e e d , r m ain te n an ce records $4700 or best o ffe r. *452-3867 new tires, brakes; j 1973 M A V E R IC K ., standa rd , o rig in a l ow ner. Best offer. 477- *, 7684 day, 459-4169 a fte r 5 1 1978 J E E P CJ-7 G olden E a g le Black, • 304, V-8, loaded 27,000 m iles, A M / F M • cassette 476-7386 $7,000 • FO R S A L E '76 Sunbird. F iv e speed, 24 , mpg C a ll 477-3916 evenings • '75~SU PER B E E T L E ^ s u n r o o f, A M / F M - cas sette, AC, '75 - yello w , 38,000 m ile s , ■ P o rs che 914 '75 Olds < S ta rfire - sporty, econom ical, 4-speed, • 39,000 m iles, exc ellent, $2495. 453-7841 A M / F M cassette, a ir, $5995 low m ile s , $2995 ! 1963"C H E V R O L E T P IC K -U P tru ck. Six cylin der, standard , short stepside Runs , good $750 837 5677^ 7 6 P A C E R AT, AC, A M / F M , deluxe in- « terio r $1995. 346-3348 a fte r 2 p.m '71 D O D G E D E M O N A T /A C , Slant 6 225 V e ry clean, runs strong New tires, bucket seats, A M /F M , 8-track. I * 950 C a ll 478-7957 1974 " P L Y M O U T H D U S T E R m iles. $500 or best offer 472 4895 72,000 ' Í969 C H E V Y V A N , running $600 C a li >' D avid, 452-8201, a fte r 2 p.m , 1978 H O N D A C IV IC hatchb ack. AC, 4- speed. A M radio. E x c e lle n t condition i. 441 3895, leave message. 1972 V W S U P E R B e I t LE" E'xcelient condition Insld e/o ut, No dents, no rust, like new, good gas m ileage, in te rio r ’’ .* m ech a n ica lly sound $2,100 258-9292 '! 1979 T O Y O T A C O R O L L A SR 5 IlfT b ack . , Blue, AC, A M F M , 5-speed, 15,00 m iles, , exc ellent condition. 478-9755, 476-0048 • 1971 V O L V O W7LGOÑ 4-cyllnder, c a r- ■ bureted, 4-speed, rad ial tires, A M /F M , 813 S. L a m a r $1260. 443-4723 ,, C H E V Y B L A Z E R , i, au to m a tic . $2800. 474-9918 197 5 4 W D , '• 1978 S IL V E R C H E V Y Chevette, 4-door, ' au to m atic , $3500. M arlo n , 443-7711 ext. > 582 ( 7-5), 441-3364. FOR SALE M otorcycl*-For S a l * _____ M O P E D : 1979 red A M F R o adm aster, like new. $275 Cali_474-9076 1980 G l 1100 G o ld -W in g , 8,500 m ile s . E q u ip p e d w ith V e tt e r a c c e s s o rie s , stereo, extras $4500 firm . 443-8419. 1980 H O N D A CB750F T ra c y fa irin g , e x ­ tras Include N a v a helm et, w eath erp ro o f cover, tra v e l rack, tra vel tank bag, ra in - suit. Superb condition. $2600, negotiable. 478-1149 Y A M A H A 175 E n dure. 85 m pg, good con­ low m ileag e $250 C a ll F ra n k , dition, 385-0835 1979 K A W A S A K I 650 P e rfe c t c o n d itio n , 10,000 m ile s Q u ie t, p o w e r f u l. B e ll h e lm e t in c lu d e d A s k in g $1750 T om , 472- 7389, le a ve m essage a n y tim e . SACHS M O P E D S u perb c o n d itio n , e x ­ cellent m ileage, d e p e n d a b le t r a n s p o r ta ­ tio n . M u s t see $425, negotiable R o b e rt, 474-4562 to a p p r e c ia te 1979 P U C H M O P E D 2-speed, 800 m iles, B r o w n a n d g o l d a n d 150 m p g accessories 443-9387. P U C H N E W P O R T L moped (35 m p h ), 140-150 m pg, absolutely new condition (under 100 m ile s ). $500. 255-2380 1976 Y A M A H A DT-175 Good condition, low m ileag e $450 best offer. M ust sell. 447-6776 1978 Y A M A H A XT500 E nduro E x cellen t condition, fast. $1250 474-0792 an y tim e or 441-3355 a fte r 5 M -F . Í975" H O N D A ~Cl 360 7000 m iles great m ileage $700 458-2881, keep trying Bicycle-For S al* 10 S P E E D B IC Y C L E L ike new, must sell. C all A m ir, 442-0193 Keep try ing 'C O M P E T IT IO N G S and R A L E IG H T rek. Both th re e weeks old 23 i inch fra m e . Accessories 836-4918 io S P E E O M Ó T Ó B E C A N E N o m a d e E x c e lle n t condition, $55 441-9349 a fte r 5 p.m . Stereo-For Sat* C IR C L E S T E R E O , prom pt, reasonable a u d lo /vld eo service Useo equipm ent bought and sold P a rts and accessories. 1211 Red R iv e r 476 0947 S T E R E O 7 S A E p re a m p * 100; SW 7P p ream p $50 D yna ST 120 power am p $50. Bill, 459-4062___________ _____________ Y A M A H A CA 2010 integrated am p, M C head am p , 120 w atts/ch an n el R e tail $800, sell $600 C a ll John a n y tim e, 452- 2071 M usical-For S a l* A U S T IN 'S B E S T s e le c tio n of sonabooks and sheet m u s ic A lpha M u s ic C e n te r, 611 W 29th *77 5009. R E C O R D C O L L E C T IO N S ' A lien N ation Used R ecords has a tasty selection of bootlegs and q u a lity used album s 307 East 5th F rid a y , S a turday, Sunday 9-6 476-8348 Y A M A H A PM 430 8-c h a n n e l ste re o m ix e r b o a r d ; T a p c o 2200 1 0 -b a n d s te re o equ alizer B o th Im m a c u la te c o n d itio n . $850 459-9573 O V A T IO N V I P E R e l e c t r i c g u it a r B londe I I, P A F fin is h , D im a r z lo SO p icku p s, m a p le fr e tb o a r d , $250 471-7944__________________ lo w a c tio n : G E M E IN H A R D T F L U T E . E x el lent con­ dition $215 C all Becky at^443-5094 P L A Y E R P IA N O C o m p letely re c o n ­ d itio n e d , p e r f e c t c o n d it io n , s o lid In c lu d e d ' m ahog any 64 m u sic ro lls $2900 837-5677 B U F F E T C L A R IN E T old, used in concerts only $500 441-1303 I year 13 days E P IP H O N fjA C O U S T IC OüTtar, m ade in Kalam azoo 1965 $175 Theo, 472-6429, . leave message H E L P T n S T IL L R O A D M A S T E R p o r­ table, am p lifie d acoustic piano. F o rm ic a flight case w ith casters and handles; 16 tu n in g , ply pm b io ck beautiful sound; fir m , even touch; lik e new $1600, fir m 451-9649 GETZEN M B 443-94, F L U G E L H O R N $300 in su res sta b le Case P r Photography-For S a l* OM 10 O L Y M P U S , in clude s 50m m lens and c a m e ra bag C a ll a fte r 6 p .m . 346- 2959 _______________ Petf-For S a l* C U T E , H E A L T H Y litte r - tr a in e d k itte n s need a hom e. 10 w eeks o ld . 282-5037 eve n in g s b e fo re 10 p n r _________ P A R R O T S Y O U N G L i l a c C r o w n A m azon s $175 each 452-7883______ ___ C O C K E R S P A N IE L p u p pies w ith shots, $75 up 282-3009 Hom *s-For S a l* H Y D E P A R K re m o d e le d tw o s to ry 4-2, CA CH, new k itc h e n , h a rd w o o d s , th re e s ittin g areas, la rg e wooded lo ts 459-9468 $129,500 E N F I E L D IB R and e f fic ie n c y c o n ­ d o m in iu m s $25 000-$38,000 F in a n c in g W e n d a l C o r r ig a n 478-7005, A m e lia B u llo cx 346-1073 ______________________ I N V E S T M E N T . 3 /2 ' i c o n ­ G R E A T d o m in iu m , f u l l y ca rp e te d C e n tra l A C /h e a t. S o lar pool, la u n d ry s e rv ic e , c a r p o r t. $69,500 a p ­ p ra ise d $50,000 9j 4% in te re s t loan. 447- 7542; 751 E O lto rf. t w o s t o r y , la r g e ___ D U P L E X N E A R s h u ttle W e ll- k e p t, p riv a te , south lo c a tio n . F iv e m in u te s to UT C a ll fo r fin a n c in g d e ta ils . 474-2522, 441-8052, P a tr ic ia L in n R e a lto r O W N E R R E D U C E D p ric e , c lo s e -in lo c a ­ tio n , c u te 2BR 1BA c o tta g e l'/z b lo c k s B u rn e t R oad L o w e st p ric e in a re a . $34,- 950 O dus R e a lty , 454-4541 E N F I E L D . One b e d ro o m and e ffic ie n c y c o n d o m in iu m s F in a n ­ c in g . W e n d a ll C o rrig a n 478-7005, A m e lia B u llo c k 346-1073. $25,000-$38,000 W ALK TO CAMPUS 3 hug e b e d ro o m s, 2 baths, 1702 sq. ft. re m o d e le d c o n te m p o r a r y 2 s to ry hom e M o d e r n c u s t o m a p p l i a n c e s , b o o k s h e lv e s , s o la r w in d o w a t r iu m , h a rd w o o d flo o rs , fir e p la c e , hug e k itc h e n and c lo s e ts , d in in g ro o m , b r e a k fa s t a re a , s p ir a l s ta ir c a s e c u s to m lig h tin g , g a ra g e , s m a ll y a r d . S e xy! A s s u m a b le fin a n c in g 20% d o w n . B y o w n e r 477-1985 A p p ra is e d $106,000 H Y D E P A R K 3907 A v e . G . 3 B R , 1 B A , C A /C H , h a rd w o o d flo o rs , new c a rp e tin g . Close to U T . $79,- 000. P a t M a r c u m P ro p e rtie s . 458-8277, ask fo r T illie . For S a le -G o ra g e f u r n it u r e , B IG Y A R D sa le P o tte ry , t i r e s , r e c o r d s , b a k e d g o o d s , e t c . E v e r y th in g goes 1702 S. 5th. S a tu rd a y 9- 4 F IV E F A M Fl y g a ra s S u nday, N o v. 15-16, 9-: Ave. i sale S a tu rd a y - 1603 S w e e tb rla r N O R T H W E S T A U S T IN m o v in g sale. C lo th in g , g la ss, unused s p o rts a p p a re l, m is c e lla n e o u s . S a tu rd a y o n ly , 8-5. 8504 A lv e rs to n e G A R A G E B A K E S A L E Saturday, Nov. 15 9-5 at H A N C O C K G O L F C O U R S E 41st and Red R iver Sponsored by H A N C O C K N E I G H B O R H O O D A S S O C I A T I O N M iscellan*ous-For S a l* IN D IA N Is 25% off! S A L E ! Nelson's G ifts, 4502 S Congress. 444- 3814, 10-6, closed M ondays je w e lry th e H A V E Y O U F O R G O T T E N S O M E ­ r e m e m b e r in g of O N E ? L e a v e special occasions to us Fo r only $20 we w ill send 10 q u a lity b irth d ay, a n n iv e r­ sary, C h ristm as, etc. cards for you. Sim ply send nam es, addresses, age, sex, occasion, date and how to sign card along w ith your check or m oney ord er to All Occasion C ard Service, P.O. Box 5996, Austin, T X 78763. ________________ N E W T U X E D O . 43 sports w atch, $150 , 444-9680 long, $200 Seiko M A K E M O N E Y ! Sell your snow skis, IN S T A N T boots, p oles, c lo th e s a t for bargains! 5256 R E P L A Y See us B u rn et R oad a t N o rth Loop P la z a . T u e sday-S aturday, 10 a .m .-6 p.m . 451- 8081 leath er B E A U T IF U L G IF T S Q u ality key chains E n g ra v e w ith any logo or le tte r s U n b e lie v a b le g ro u p p r ic e s (fra te rn itie s , so ro rities). H a v e C h ristia n designs, verses. G re a t for C h ristm as. 459-7450 FO R S A LE R e frig e ra to r, good condi­ tion, cheap. C a ll 837-6047 betw een 5:30 p.m . and 10 p.m . R O S IG N Ó L SK IS , 170 cm , w ith c a rry in g case $100 Scott poles, 50", S i5 L ad ies' N ó rdica boots, 9 1 zN, $45 C all 447-1652, 443-2894 W A T E R B E D , G O L F clubs, scuba equip­ m ent, w a te r skis, bicycle 327-2765^ YE S , W E stock T exas flaps. Also J R E w in g O il Co m p any caps. T u rn e r of T e x - as, 837-9201 M A R IJ U A N A P IP E S , Chinese shoes, woks, n a tu ra l soaps, lib e rta ria n books. P a c ific Sunrise, 1712 S. Congress 441- 4565 L .L B E A N 2-m an backpack tent, green w fly and ground cloth. Good condition. $50 C all K im , 479-0534 M E X I C A N D R E S S E S and blouses Unique, a ttra c tiv e , q u a lity. Reasonable prices G re a t fo r C h ristm as gifts. C a ll 452-1650 W E B U Y A N D S E L L G O L D , S IL V E R , D IA M O N D S A N D CO INS W e pay cash C o n s ig n m e n t pf lew eiry w anted S A N D C L IF F S J E W E L R Y Second Lev el Doble M a ll fin e We bu y je w e lry , esta te je w e lry , d ia m o n d s and old gold. H ig h e st cash p ric e s pa id . C A P IT O L D I A M O N D SHOP 4018 N. L a m a r GOOD US E D F U R N I T U R E D ouble beds ■ $25 up 3 d ra w e r desks • $35 chairs $5 up, heavy drapes and bedspreads Good used carpets • $20 up, b athroom sinks - $10 each 474-5133 9 a m 6 p m 478 7029, 1-398-5091 FURNISHED APARTMENTS GOING BANANAS? We rent apartments, duplexes, houses all over Austin. F R E E Real World Properties 443 2212 South 458-6111 N o rth 345-6350 No rthw est F E M A L E O N E h a lf d o u b le v a c a n c y , H e lio s Co-op. 478-6763 f o r J a n u a r y O N E E F F I C I E N C Y t h ro u g h A p r il. C le a n and f u rn is h e d $2 0 0 m o n t h , u t i l i t i e s W a r w i c k A p a rtm e n ts , ne a r ca m p u s 478-81 A V E N U E F a t 48th. 2BR s e m ifu rn is h e d s t u d io a p a r t m e n t . $250, E Q u ie t n e ig h b o rh o o d . 108 E 48th 453-4189, T om . IB R $195 p lu s e le c t r ic it y . A v a ila b le N o v e m b e r 15. On IF s h u ttle 407 W 38th. C o n ta c t L in d a , 459-3538 I B rT s p AC IO U S , tw o m in u te s fr o m U T . $225 C a ll G re g g at 454-9794 o r S teve. 453- 8818 A L L B IL L S paid. M o d e rn , cle a n , f u r ­ nished e ffic ie n c y , c o v e re d p a r k in g . C a ll B a rb a ra , 454-3500, o r R ebecca, 346-1400 __ _ _ D O B iE G IR L 'S c o rn e r s u ite to sublease fo r s p rin g . C a ll B re n d a , 477-2301.______ A V A I L A B L E N O W : U T a r e a 1 B R , C A /C H $239 plus e le c tr ic ity . E v e n in g s , 452-2172 ________________________ E X T R A l a r g e c le a n e ffic ie n c y , nice c o n d itio n E a sy w a lk to c a m p u s . A B P e x c e p t e le c tr ic ity . C a ll 473-2549 o r 472- 2147 d a ys. _________ _ T R I T O W E R S c o n t r a c t A v a ila b le as soon as p o ssib le C a ll 473- 2171 f o r s a le L A R G E 2/2 a p a rtm e n t a v a ila b le fo r le a s in g D e ce m b e r 15th $365 plu s E . C lose to ca m p u s . D iane, 478-557J. O R A N G E T R E E c o n d o m in iu m s F u r ­ n ished fir e p la c e , pool D o u b le o c c u p a n ­ cy, $275 person. S tudious e n v iro n m e n t, close U T . 478-4414 UNFURN. APARTMENTS 1 BR - $225 S m a ll q u ie t a p a r tm e n t c o m m u n it y . L a rg e s tu d io a p a rtm e n ts a v a ila b le now . P r iv a te b a lco n ie s, T i baths. W a te r, gas, c a b le p a id . 701 W . N o rth Loo p. 453-2230, 451-6533 C e n tra l P ro p e rtie s In c. T I R E D O F L IV IN G w ith s tra n g e rs ? T r y us _ M ew M a n o r A p a rtm e n ts , a new age c o m m u n ity of frie n d s . A u s tin 's on ly c lo th in g -o p tio n a l a p a rtm e n ts h a v e a fe w m o re o p e n in g s. C lose to s h u ttle , w ine c lu b , v o lle y b a ll, hug e pool, c h ild r e n s p la y g ro u n d , la u n d ro m a t, te n a n t s e c u r i­ ty A ll b ills p a id e x c e p t E. $195-$250 2401 M a n o r R oad (7/1 0 m ile ea s t o f IH 35). 476-5875, 458-9042. S O U T H C L IF F A p a rtm e n ts n o w le a s in g b ra n d new 1BR u n its . $235 p lu s e le c tr ic i­ ty . 445-0551 G R A D S - Q U IE T , tre e s and w a te r. One b e d ro o m $240 plu s e le c tr ic ity . W est L a k e C ove A p a rtm e n ts , 327-0321._________ TW O B E D R O O M g a ra g e a p a rtm e n t $ 3 0 0 /m o n th ; gas, w a te r p a id . 4624C Depew , fa c e s E. 47th. CR s h u ttle on 45th D ave, 458-8919 a fte r 6. U p p e rc la s s m e n p r e fe rre d S P A C IO U S E F F IC IE N C Y , c le a n and c o m fo rta b le , on T o w n L a k e $175 plus e le c tr ic ity . H id e a w a y A p a rtm e n ts , 45 E a s t A ve n u e . 447-4400. 2BR, A B P , $41 5/m onth, on s h u ttle . M l A m ig o A p a rtm e n ts , 4505 D u v a l 451-4119, 4 5 1 - 4 0 3 7 . ______ UT A R E A N ew e ffic ie n c ie s , lB R s and IB R s w it h A v a ila b le fo r m o v e -in N o v e m b e r 15. F o r in fo r m a tio n c a ll 476-6227 lo ft s . N ic e q u ie t a r e a 1BR, A B P , $295/m o n th , on s h u ttle M i A m ig o A p a rtm e n ts , 4505 D u v a l. 451-4119, 451-4037. N E E D T O S U B L E T : 2BR, CA CH, d is ­ posal, d is h w a s h e r. M o v e In J a n u a ry 1 b u t sig n by N o v e m b e r 30 5106 N. L a m a r ( B r o w n s to n e ) . $265 p lu s e le c t r ic it y , s e c u r ity d e p o s it. C a ll P ete H o rr, 452- 5841 6-8 a .m ., 6 p .m .-12 m id n ig h t. 1BR A P A R T M E N T o v e rlo o k in g s w im ­ m in g pool. J u s t o ff R iv e rs id e , f ir s t stop on s h u ttle C a ll 443-5480 a fte r 6. 444-1845. ROOMS C O - E D D O R M n e x t t o c a m p u s . R e m o d e le d , new fu rn is h in g s , r e c re a tio n a r e a , s u n d e c k W id e s c r e e n T V , r e f r ig e r a t o r s 24 h o u r s e c u r it y No m e a ls . Taos, 2612 G u a d a lu p e , 474-6905 A L A M O H O T E L - " A n A u s tin E s ta b ­ lis h m e n t ." R e asonable and c o n v e n ie n t to c a m p u s w ith e x c e lle n t re s ta u ra n t and b a r 476-4381. S P A C E A V A I L A B L E In n e w l y r e n o v a te d b e a u tifu l o ld hom e. C a ll im ­ m e d ia te ly fo r s p rin g se m e ste r 473-2872. N IC E F U R N IS H E D room s. T w o b lo c ks U T , C H /C A $130 and up. U n iv e r s ity H ouse, 477-9388. R O O M IN house w ith fir e p la c e and g a r ­ den. 813 S. L a m a r, 443-4723. F E M A L E W A N T E D fo r fu rn is h e d ro o m . S h a re ba th , A B P 472-9325 a f te r 6 and w e ekend, 476-7211 e x t. 210 d a ys only_ S P R IN G S E M E S T E R v a c a n c y a t Taos d o r m it o r y fo r m a le S p ecial ca sh in c e n ­ tiv e a v a ila b le . C a ll G le n , 474-8223. C A S T I L I A N . T W O v a c a n c ie s s p r in g se m e s te r, fe m a le s o n ly 478-2276 o r 473- 2948. K e ep t r y in g , ask fo r M a rth a D O B IE D O U B L E a v a ila b le fo r s p rin g t e r m . C o n ta c t R a n d y , 474-9160. C a ll b e fo re 12:00 a .m . F E M A L E R O O M M A T E needed to sh a re la rg e fu rn is h e d 2 2 a p a rtm e n t on E R iv e rs id e $137 50 m o n th A B P C a ll 447- 8536 a fte r 5 . _____ _______ ____ TW O F E M A L E S sh a re 3-2-2 fu rn is h e d house H ig h w a y 183N Loo p 360. $175 A B P , $100 d e p o s it M a r ily n , 345-6969 9:30 p .m .-7:15 a m ., w e ekends a n y tim e . R O O M M A T E N E E D E D b y 15 fo r H yd e P a rk 2-1 n e a r stores, s h u ttle $133 plus 1 2 b ills B ill, 459-4062. I R O O M M A T E N E E D E D O w n $125 plu s 4 b ills . 447-5141. ro o m . R O O M M A T E W A N T E D N o n -s m o k in g fe m a le to s h a re fu rn is h e d 1BR g a ra g e a p a rtm e n t n e a r U T . $90, 1 z b ills . C a ll V ic k i, 928-2621, 926-6039 S H A R E 2 b e d ro o m house ne a r IF $150 p lus Vj b ills . S e rio u s s tu d e n t p r e fe rr e d 452-9713. R O O M M A T E W A N T E D m a le , ne a t n o n -s m o ke r to s h a re new m o b ile ho m e in N o rth B lu ff E s ta te s 515 0 /m o n th plu s share of food. C a ll a fte r 4:00, 441-6974 F E M A L E R O O M M A T E w a n te d V e ry nice cond o one m ile CR F u rn is h e d . W /D , pool, te n n is $175 plus r b ills Non- s m o k e r p r e fe rr e d . 459-1731. R O O M M A T E N E E D E D to s h a re ~ 2 B R 1BA a p a rtm e n t 1’ 2 m ile s f r o m c a m p u s Serious, e a s y -g o in g m a le g ra d stu d e n t, r e la tiv e ly neat, q u ie t n o n -s m o k e r seeks m a le o r fe m a le of s im ila r q u a litie s $145 plus 1 2 b ills . E v e n in g s 451-0355, 472-8140. f u r ­ F E M A L E R O O M M A T E nished c o n d o m in iu m . $ 10 0/m onth, s h a re u tilitie s . R oom opens D e c e m b e r 5. 454- 7867 to s h a re F E M A L E ~ L A ID - B A C K to sh a re 2B R a p a rtm e n t in s p rin g . C a ll Jan a n y tim e a fte r 5, 478-2213. r o o m m a te TW O F E M A L E S s h a re 3B R house 15 m in u te s U T, $135, $125 plu s 3 b ills . C a ll M s. A ltm a n , 926-7440, e ve n in g s . N E W G U 1L D Co-op has fe m a le and m a le va c a n cie s. 510 W. 23rd. 472-0352. V A C A N C IE S A V A IL A B L E at F re n c h s p e a k in g c o o p e ra tiv e . 3! 2 b lo ck s fro m ca m p u s F re n c h H ouse, 710 W 21st, 478- 6586 H E A L T H A N D n u t r itio n o rie n te d co-op seeks re sp o n sib le in d iv id u a ls We o ffe r q u ie t r e s id e n tia l n e ig h b o rh o o d n e a r cam pus, v e g e ta ria n s m o ke fre e e n v iro n ­ m e n t, sundeck, open fie ld and g a rd e n . F e m a le v a c a n c y R o y a l Co-op, 1805 P e a rl 478-0880. D O B IE M E N S ro o m a n d b o a rd c o n ­ tr a c t M u s t sell fo r s p rin g sem e ste r. S u ite conve nience s. C a ll 474-9516 D O B IE M E N 'S d ou ble, m u s t sublease f o r s p r i n g s e m e s t e r . N i n e t e e n m e a ls /w e e k . 478-5408, e v e n in g s, keep try in g . a l r - O N - C A M P U S P A R T I A L L Y co n d itio n e d w o m e n 's co-op. $145 per m o n th . C o n ta c t L is a a t 444-2320 o r 471 - 4942 D O B IE ” D cT Ü B L E a v a ila b le fo r one fe m a le . M u s t be s u bleaseu C a ll 478-8869 and ask fo r B a rb ra O N -C A M P U S A IR c o n d itio n e d co-op A p ­ p r o x im a te ly $160 per m o n th , m e a ls In ­ clu d e d . C o n ta ct M a ria , 471-4977. D O B IE M E N 'S side su ite . S u ble a s in g fo r s p rin g sem ester. 3rd flo o r , no e le v a to rs . C a ll M a rk or T h o m a s , 477-1195. TW O LE A S E S a v a ila b le on a g ir ls ' ro o m a t th e C a s tilia n . C a ll 474-1765 a n y tim e or 475-5621 b e tw e e n 1:0 0 -5 :0 0 . A s k fo r S ta cy . O N - C A M P U S P A R T I A L L Y a i r - c o n d it lo n e d w o m e n 's c o - o p . $145 m o n th ly . C o n ta ct L is a a t 471-4942 o r 444- 2320 UNFURNISHED HOUSES L O V E L Y 1BR a p a rtm e n t to s h a re w ith f e m a le C O N V E N IE N T to s h u t t le $125 ’ m o n th C a ll 458-1917 6-9 p .m . A V A I L A B L E N O W ! T w o and th re e b e d ro o m o ld e r hom es, a p a rtm e n ts C a ll now fo r 24 h o u r in fo r m a tio n . 452-5979 F E M A L E TO s h a re 2BR d u p le x clo se South. P re fe r o v e r 25. C a ts o n ly . $125 plus h a lf. 441-5115. Q U IE T O L D E R fe m a le s h a re ¡a rg e o ld e r hom e N e w k itc h e n , p r iv a te e n ­ tra n c e , b a th . Q u ie t s tre e t, w a lk U T $175, •/3 lo w b ills . 478-1340. S H A R E R E M O D E L E D h o u s e O w n room and sun ro o m , p r iv a te e n tra n c e , h a rd w o o d , b a c k y a rd S h u ttle w a lk $155, '/3 b ills . G as h e a tin g . 472-5162 R O O M M A T E N E E D E D T w o b e d ro o m a p a rtm e n t, fu rn is h e d , A B P a t B a rto n S p rin g s and L a m a r $122.50 m o n th ly . C a ll A m ir , 442-0193. Keep tr y in g O L D E R W O M A N , re sp o n s ib le , th o u g h t­ fu l 2BR house, $150 m o n th 451-7828 u n ­ t il 10 p .m . o r 474-7838 6-10 p .m . P a t S IN G L E M O T H E R lo o k in g Tor person ( p re fe r a b ly a n o th e r p a re n t) to fin d and sh a re house w ith . I h a v e fu r n it u r e . 447- 9026 a f te r 8 p .m . G R A D U A T E W O M A N h o u s e m a te - im ­ m e d ia te ly ! W ill n e g o tia te la te r m o v e -in . N e a r c a m p u s N o rth . $100, Mi b ills . 474- 6 4 7 6 . _____ ___ la rg e , N E A T , C O N G E N IA L fe m a le ro o m m a te to s h a re fu r n is h e d 2B R 2B A a p a rtm e n t $165 m o n th , V2 e le c tr ic ity . P o o l, w a lk U T N o n - s m o k in g u p ­ p e rc la s s m a n p re fe rr e d . C a ll N a n c y, 458- 3925. R O O M M A T E N E E D E D , p r e f e r a b ly m a le u p p e rg ra d u a te s tu d e n t, to s h a re 2BR 1B A a p a rtm e n t. $167 A B P . F iv e b lo ck s fro m c a m p u s . 479-0254, D a v e . K eep tr y in g . ______________ __ H O U S E M A T E N E E D E D . 2BR house, q u ie t s tre e t n e a r c a m p u s o ff M a n o r Road. P r e fe r m a tu re v e g e ta ria n s tu ­ dent. $155, y-i b ills . R ic h a rd , 472-7054, 926- 2811 6-9 P^nrv^ F E M A L E H O U S E M A T E to sh a re ro o m . W a s h e r, d r y e r , fre e z e r C A /C H . CR sh u ttle . A B P $125 454-9380 e v e n in g s . L A R G E H O U S E on L a k e A u s tin . O n 2'/2 a cres. F ifte e n m in u te s to d o w n to w n . C a ll P a m T „ 476-4873 or 327-6443 W O M A N G R A D U A T E s tu d e n t w a n te d . O w n ro o m , b a th , q u ie tn e s s M o d e r n k itc h e n . C ity bus o r c a r. $140 A B P A f te r 5, 452-6645J__________ M A L E R O O M M A T E w a n te d . D e p e n ­ d a b le and n o n -s m o k in g 2/1 a p a rtm e n t, R iv e rs id e a re a . C o n v e n ie n t to s h u ttle . $100 plu s 1 3 b ills . 444-4733. R O O M M A T E N E E D E D f o r s p r in g s e m e s te r. 2B R , 2BA a p a rtm e n t, R iv e r ­ side a re a Jo h n , 445-2914. R O O M M A T E W A N T E D L a r g e 3B R house on W. 26th a v a ila b le now . $117 A B P C a ll M ik e , 451-3307 N IC E P E R S O N To sh a re 3BR house. N e a r c it y bus, IF s h u ttle . $115, '3 b ills . 458-5762 S T U D IO U S F E M A L E needed to s h a re la rg e tw o b e d ro o m , tw o b a th ro o m a p a r t ­ m e n t. U T a re a . D ia n e , 478-5571.________ H O U S E M A T E N E E D E D ~~2B R f u r ­ nished house, u n b e lie v a b ly p riv a te , b ig y a rd . A v a ila b le Dec 20. $120, h a lf b ills . S h u ttle . C a ll 6 p .m -8 p .m ., 926-7274. LOST & FOUND F O U N D W A T C H ne a r B e n e d ic t H a ll. C a ll 445-2906 a f te r 2 p m . and d e s c rib e . L O S T P A S S P O R T w ith n u m b e r 489284 T h e re w ill be re w a rd . C a ll 473-8964 w ith n a m e M a s o u d E g h te ss a d . R E W A R D $500 fo r In fo r m a tio n le a d in g to r e c o v e ry of h a r d w a re ta ke n f r o m tu b in o ld house on R io G ra n d e . 474-5981. L O S T G R A Y m a le cat, E a s t R iv e rs id e a re a R e w a rd . C a ll P a ul, 441-8050. $100 R E W A R D fo r r e tu rn of or I n fo r m a ­ tio n le a d in g to th e r e tu rn of la rg e b ro w n tool box and its c o n te n ts ta k e n f r o m 2200 G u a d a lu p e 478-3509 3 B R -2 B A H O M E , I n t e r i o r e n t ir e l y redone, q u ie t n e ig h b o rh o o d . $400/m onth, f ir s t and la s t m o n th in a d v a n c e p lu s $100 s e c u rity de p o s it. C o n ta c t E d a t 459-8492, see a t 5307 R o osevelt. U T A R E A fa n s , s k y lig h t, Jac u zz i. $600 m o n th le ase, op­ tio n to buy. 443-8566 1920s 2-2, c e ilin g B R Y K E R W O O D S 3315 G le n v ie w 2-1,' ra n g e flo o rs , h a rd w o o d r e fr ig e r a to r , a v a ila b le D e c e m b e r 1st. Lease $425. 452-8542. 472-0966. ______ 5 B R H O U S E $185 N e a r c a m p u s , a v a ila b le now $135 d e p o s it 478-5337; la te c a lls O K . K e ep try in g . e a r ly N E A R B E R G S T R O M L a r g e c le a n r e d e c o r a t e d 2-1. 2207 H o e k e L a n e C o n scie n tio u s c o u p le $275. 472-2097, 478- 5739 F O R R E N T th re e b e d ro o m ne a r c a m ­ pus. $45 0/m onth. P ets, k id s ok. 642 W. 34th. __________________ U N IV E R S IT Y H I L L S " Lease to coup le, s m a ll fa m ily . 3-2-2, fir e p la c e , m a n y e x ­ tra s . $395, dep o sit. 928-1711. 3-2 1920s m a n s io n In U n iv e r s ity a re a F ir e p la c e , p o rc h , d in in g ro o m . A il a p p lia n c e s In c lu d e d . $600 928-1591. 3-1, C H /C A , h a rd w o o d , c a rp e t, range, fenced, q u ie t, w o oded, m ir r o r s D u v a l- K o e n ig : 303 Sky v ie w . $340 . 478-5563. 2 -s to ry hom e, 3 or 4 H Y D E P A R K b e d ro o m s , r e m o d e le d b e a u t i f u l ly A v a ila b le D e c e m b e r 1. $ 5 7 5/m onth. C a ll Doug, 458-8277 UNFURNISHED DUPLEXES 2B R , C A R P E T E D , C A /C H , d is h w a s h e r, c a r p o r t. 4707B, 4709B C a s w e ll. T w o b lo c k s U T s h u ttle T ra s h s e rv ic e paid. No pets. $265. 282-4644 282-1109 N O R T H 2BR AC $250, w a te r p a id No c h ild r e n o r pets. 478-6957, 836-4320. N E A R U T 2B R , ACT no pets.T 295. C a lj a fte r 6, 474-0635. Z IL K E R A R E A 2-1 C a rp o rt, W /D con- n e c t io n s , fe n c e d y a r d $ 26 5/m onth. A v a ila b le J a n u a ry 1 441- 1599 j é p .m .) . f i r e p l a c e , _ IB R W IT H a p p lia n c e s , c a r p o r t w ith IF , $195 F o r stora ge, n e a re st s h u ttle le a s in g In fo rm a tio n c a ll 928-1895, le ave m essage SO U TH , JU S T b u ilt. L u x u rio u s 2-1, deck, c re e k , c a rp o rt, c a rp e te d , a ll a p p lia n c e s $350 478-6641, 345-7801 PERSONAL H A P P Y T W E N T I E T H B IR T H D A Y , T W IN K IE . HOW A B O U T D IN N E R A R O U N D 7;00, T H E N M A Y B E W E CAN W U G G L E F O R A W H I L E . Y O U R O N E A N D O N L Y , N U T T Y B U D D Y . P R O B L E M P R E G N A N C Y 7 F re e p re g ­ n a n c y te s tin g and r e fe r r a ls . 474-9930. M E X I C A N S T U D E N T n e e d e d w h o w a n ts to e x h a n g e S p a n is h c o n v e rs a tio n f o r E n g lis h . F e m a le s o n ly , please. C a ll A v a , 472-2731, 443-0859 R A C Q U E T B A L L , F L A S H P A D D L E - B A L L P L A Y E R S w a n te d C a ll D ave, 838-3605 8 a m -5 p .m ., 346-5305 a fte r 5. A M A T E U R P H O T O G R A P H E R needs h irs u te , unsh a ve n fe m a le m odels. R e p ly to Box 9802 No. 178, A u s tin , T X 78766 FURNISHED APARTMENTS M FURNISHED APARTMENTS ■ UNFURN. APARTMENTS ■ UNFURN. APARTMENTS ^ 474-6357 3507 N. INTERREGIONAL Northwest Hills 451-2223 Riverside 441-2277 How to Afford Northwest Hills It’s easy when you live at Rxige Hollow, Northwest Hills’ most affordable apart­ ments Here s what you get for very reasonable rent Hilltop location Ftrcplaces Washer /dryer connections Balconies and pauus with storage Tennis courts Swimming pool Malls and shopping c entere Efficiency, I and 2 bedroom plans Come by tcxlay and see for yourself You’ll like the view from our hilltop And you 11 like getting your money I worth in Austin s nicest neigh bcxhood ■ 2 ..... s p a M ic o x n t» — y — — Ridge h a H a u i a**»#’ '•ntwfs 6805 W oodhoüow/ Ausun, Texas 78731 345-9315 c^ k Q u r ia g e c:H o u s e • E ffic ie n c y , 1, 2 & 4 bedroom s • F ro m $225 • On U T s h u ttle • Gas, w a te r and ca b le T V p a id • 2 pools, c lu b ro o m & g y m 2304 Pleasant Valley 4 4 2 -1 2 9 8 Barry G illin g w a ta r M a n a g e m e n t Co. The . C a s c a d e s i t ’s the w a y w e live... • E ffic ie n c y , 1, 2, 3 & 4 b e d ro o m s • F ro m $200 • 2 pools & c lu b house • 1st stop on s h u ttle 1221 Algarita 44 4 -4 4 8 5 Barry G illin g w a te r M a n a g e m e n t Co. THE ARBOR # • E ffic ie n c y , 1 & 2 bedroom s • F ro m $220 • 1st stop on s h u ttle • R o o m m a te s w e lco m e 1 5 0 0 Royal Crest 4 4 4 -7 5 1 6 Barry Gillingwater Management Co. PHOTOS for PASSPORTS APPLICATIONS RESUMES 3 m inute service M O N -S A T . 10-6 4 7 7 -5 5 5 5 THE THIRD EYE 2 5 3 0 GUADALUPE ORAL SURGERY PATIENTS S tu d e n ts in n e e d o f h a v in g th ir d m o la rs I W is d o m te e th ) re m o v e d a n d w h o w o u ld b e w illin g to p a r t ic ip a te m a n a n a lg e s ic d ru g s tu d y a t re d u c e d fees, p le a s e c a ll Donald R. Mehlisch, M.D., D.D.S. 451-0254 S u r g e ry c a n b e a rra n g e d to b e d o n e a t th e U n iv e r s ity o f T e xa s S t u d e n t H e a l t h S e r v ic e i f d e s ire d Thmtto, D ln o rta tlo n * é Prot— lorw l Roports ¡ n n y ; COPYING SERVICE J f 44 D ob ie M all 476-9171 P s y c h ia tric A s s is ta n c e If you ro anxious, doprossod or can t sloop, the Fabro C lin k o f A ustin m ay bo o b lo to hoip T ro a tm on t is froo for thoso w h o m oot s im p le e n try c rite ria base d so le ly on is m e d ica l e valu a tion s This o p p o rtu n ity a v a ila b le d ue re­ q u ire d by the Federal Law re g a rd in g the d e ve lo p m e n t o f n e w m edications For com ­ p le te in fo rm a tio n a n d to fin d out if you q u a lify , c a ll 4 7 7 - 2 0 8 7 testin g procedures to Be Prepared for Finals! Johnson'* W ake Up Service S p e cia l 2 w e ek in tr o d u c to r y o ffe r o n ly $5! F o r y o u r o w n p e rs o n a l W a k e U p c a ll b e g in n in g N o v e m b e r 2 4 -D e c e m b e r 10 Call 4 7 6 -0 9 6 5 (Day or N igh t) oHm r t x p i r M N o v . 21 P R O B L E M P R E G N A N C Y C O U N S E LIN G , R E F E R R A L S & F R E E P R E G N A N C Y T E S T IN G T ex as P rob lem Preg nancy 507 P o w e ll St M -F , 7 30-5 30 474-9930 A R T 'S M O V IN G and H a u lin g : a n y a re a 24 h o u rs , 7 d a y s . 447-9384, 477-3249 J E N N I N G S ' M O V IN G and H a u lin g D e p e n d a b le p e rs o n a l s e rv ic e , la rg e o r s m a ll jo bs 7 d a y s /w eek. 442-6181.______ ¡F R E E P R E G N A N C Y T E S TS C o n fid e n ­ t ia l c o u n s e lin g on a lte r n a tiv e s in fo r m a ­ tio n and r e fe r r a ls on w o m e n 's h e a lth c o n c e rn s W e re fe r to lo c a l re so u rce s. W o m e n 's R e fe r r a l C e n te r, 603 W 13th No 210, 476-6878, M o n d a y - F r ld a y 9-5. MS s h u ttle . __ fo r V E N T R IL O Q U I S T A V A I L A B L E p a r t ie s , b a n q u e ts , f e llo w s h ip s a n d m e e tin g s Ten y e a rs e x p e rie n c e , p e r ­ s o n a liz e d h u m o r. W a y n e , 835-2580. FURNISHED HOUSES R E C E N T L Y R E N O V A T E D c la s s ic old h o m e fo r re n t. H yd e P a rk a re a C a ll Scott, 452-0880 U n fu rn is h e d p o s sib le f u l l y e q u ip p e d h o m e in 4 B R 3 B A W e s tla k e , s p rin g and s u m m e r 1981. C ar a v a ila b le Id e a l fo r v is itin g f a c u lty . 471- 5291, 327-3237. TRAVEL t r ip s fo r g la m o r E X P E N S E S P A ID Is la n d d u rin g m o d e ls to South P a d re C h r i s t m a s h o l i d a y s f o r b e a c h p h o to g ra p h y . 451-0408. No a n s w e r, keep t r y in g R ID E R N E E D E D to B e rk e le y , C a l.f o r ­ m a, v ia T ucso n, A riz o n a . S hare d r iv in g expe nses L e a v in g N o v e m b e r 23. 255- 5501. 471-5905, Jeeva MUSICAL INSTRUCTION E X P E R I E N C E D P I A N O / G U I T A R t e a c h e r . B e g in n e r s - a d v a n c e d U T d e g re e . A f te r 1 p.m 459-4082, 451-0053. in vo ice P R IV A T E M U S IC In s tru c tio n a nd p ia n o te c h n iq u e ; in d iv id u a l lessons; m u s ic th e o r y o ffe re d ; 327-6281 B L U E G R A S S F I D D L E le ssons B a n jo lessons a ls o a v a ila b le . W eeken ds and w e e k d a y s a f te r 6 p .m ., 458-2085 TUTO R IN G M A T H A N D p h y s ic s t u t o r i n g . E x ­ p e rie n c e d , a ffo r d a b le C a ll fo r a p p o in t­ m e n t. V e te ra n s fre e 451-0571. _______ F R E N C H P R O F E S S O R w i l l g iv e lessons, a ll le ve ls. P a ris ia n c u ltu r e in ­ clu d e d 478-5239 TYP IN G T Y P I N G : M A N U S C R IP T S , th e s e s , resu m e s , g e n e ra l re p o rts . S l/p a g e . C a ll M a r ily n , 441-6941 M A R S H A 7^ T Y P IN G S E R V IC E q u a lity w o r k p r o m p t s e r v ic e . P ic k - u p a n d d e liv e r y , 9:30-5 30, M o n d a y - F r ld a y , 476- 6009 _ ________ E X P E R IE N C E D T Y P IS T a v a ila b le for r e p o rts a n d theses. F o r In fo r m a tio n c a ll 836 3320 a f te r 5 - F A S T , a c c u r a te s e r v ic e . IB M S e le c tric . B a rb a ra D a vis, ______________ T Y P IN G 85' page 451-3251 C O R R E C T IN G S E L E C T R IC D iffe r e n t t y p e s t y le s a v a i la b le P ic k - u p a n d d e liv e r y s e rv ic e P a tty , 345-4269 _____ ________ P R O F E S S IO N A L T Y P IN G IB M Selec t r ie M a n u s c r ip ts , lo ng re p o rts , e tc . C a ll ______________ D o ttie , 327-0754 h a p p y F IN G E R S - S e le c tric e x p e rie n c ­ ed E d itin g , p ro o fre a d in g , te r m p ap ers, re p o rts R e h a b ilita te d p ro c r a s tin a to r ; re a s o n a b le , b a r te r possible 451-6918. K A Y 'S T Y P IN G -1 d a y s e rv ic e , no e x tra c h a rg e N e a r Shoal C re e k and A n d e rs o n . 452 3438. 0 mP H I G A M M A D E I T A H O U S E 2 7 t h S T R E E T 7 f\c M Á fX J b iris 'jjL v fju ^ T Y P IN G P R IN T IN G , B IN D IN G The C o m p le te P ro fe s tio n a l FULLTIME t y p i n g s e r v i c e 4 7 2 - 3 2 1 0 4 7 2 - 7 6 7 7 2 7 0 7 H E M P H It l PK Pl enty of Parki ng • • • • • • • • v v * * * * * * * * * : econotype : : econocopy : T y p i n g C o p y m q , • « B i n d i n g , P r i n t i n g I B M C o r r e c t i n g Sel ect r i c R e n t a l & S u p p l i e s J • • 5 C copies ; N o r t h ^ Mort.-Fri 8 :3 0 -5 :3 0 • Sat. 1 0 :0 0 -4 0 0 37th a n d G u a d a lu p e 4 5 3 - 5 4 5 2 * Sout h M on.-Fri. 8 :3 0 -5 :0 0 I * E. R iverside a n d Lakeshore • * 4 4 3 - 4 4 9 8 ! • * • * • * • * # • • • • * • * • • M E L I N D A ' S T Y P I N G S E R V I C E 95c per page 15 y e a rs e x p e rie n c e E xcellence, style, q u a lity g uaranteed 458-2312 ( A n y !,m e ! WOODS T Y P I N G S E R V I C E W hen you w a n t it done r ig h t 472-6302 2200 G uadalupe, side e ntrance H O L L E Y ' S 1505 Lavaca 478-9484 Professional Typing Copying, Binding C o lo r X e ro x T Y P IN G T H E S E S , d is s e rta tio n s , te rm pap ers, re p o rts , e tc E x p e rie n c e d , IB M S e le c tric N e a r N o rth c ro s s M a ll 458- 6 4 6 5 .______ _____________ _______ C A L L D e A n n e a t 474-1563 8-5 M -F or 345- 1244, 453-0234 w e e ke n d s and e v e n in g s N o r m a lly 1-day s e rv ic e . ______________ P R O F E ÍS sTo Ñ A L T Y P IS T , e c o n o m ic a l - e x p e rie n c e d A ll ty p e s of w o rk a c c e p te d 251-4454 a f te r 6 p m T A Y L O R T Y P E S ; p r o f e s s i o n a l , te c h n ic a l, 1 d a y s e rv ic e U T d e liv e ry ^ IB M S e le c tric , c a rb o n rib b o n . 458-2649 a fte r 5 p . m . ___________________ _ _ _ _ _ T Y P IN G R IV E R S ID E a re a One d a y s e rv ic e Ire n e 's B u sin e ss S e rv ic e . 282- 5500 P R O F E S S IO N A L T Y P IN G - m a n u ­ s c r ip t s , r e p o r t s , s t a t i s t i c a l . G u a ra n te e d . Y v o n n e, 474 4863 lo n g K A T H E 'S Q U IC K T Y P E - sam e d a y o r o v e r n ig h t s e r v ic e M o s t c a s e s . N o ch ecks p lease 443-6488 }/\o a íÁ x A r m ' j c v ’d u j, sure w e DO type FRESHMAN THEMES why net start out wirtt goad gradas 2 7 0 7 Ham phill J w t North of 27th at Guadolupo 472-3210 472-7677 T Y P IN G S E R V IC E S p ecial p ro je c ts , te rm p a p e rs , speeches and so fo rth . 276- 7944 m o rn in g s , 474-5921 a fte rn o o n s . A sk fo r E v e ly n . N E E D A fa s t, a c c u ra te ty p is t? I ha ve a BA in E n g lis h , a c o r re c tin g S e le c tric and 12 years s e c r e ta ria l e x p e rie n c e . C a ll ________________ Ann a t 447-5069. in m y h o m e A C C U R A T E T Y P IN G M a n u s c r ip ts , r e p o r ts , e tc 6 y e a r s s e c r e t a r i a l e x p e r ie n c e S e lf- c o r re c tin g ty p e w r ite r . $ l/p a g e . K e n d ra M ., 478-1806 th e s e s , T Y P IN G B Y ex-sch o o l te a c h e r. P a p e rs , theses, books. A c c u ra te , d e p e n d a b le . $1.25 d o u b le space d page 444-8160 T H E T Y P IS T . F a s t, p ro fe s s io n a l, q u a li­ ty ty p in g w ith s a tis fa c tio n g u a ra n te e d IB M C o rre c tin g S e le c tric I I . H e len, 836- ___________________________ 3562 20 Y E A R S e x p e rie n c e ty p in g theses, d is ­ s e rta tio n s , p ro fe s s io n a l re p o rts , b rie fs , etc F a s t tu rn a ro u n d . B a rb a ra T u llo s . ________ ________________ 453-5124 _ A N D E R S O N T Y P IN G S e rv ic e 472-4196 RESUMES w ith or w ith o u t pictures 2 D a y S e rv ic e 2 7 0 7 H e m p h ill P a rk Just N o rth of 2 7 th at G u a d a lu p 4 7 2 - 3 2 1 0 4 7 2 - 7 6 7 ; TYPING TYPING MASTER TYPIST TYPING SERVICE We do RUSH Work! SAME D A Y /O N E DAY SERVICE Alto G r a d save S tu d e n ts y o u rs e lf Wordprocessing! DISSERTATIONS, THESES, PR* a n d LAW BRIEFS Rough D ra ft 50< a page (w ith this ad & a fin a l d ra ft) 25% or 100% cotton copies for 5‘ or 7‘ resp ective ly headaches, use You m a y u*e our w o rd p ro c e **o r* to t y p * you r o w n p a p e r DOBIE MALL NO. 36 2021 Guadalupe 472-0293 Haitian refugees leave Bahamas ~ , .................................. NASSAU, Bahamas (UPI) — A sickly band of 118 Haitian refugees, herded aboard a ship by club-wielding Bahamian police, headed back to Haiti Thursday, and Haitian President Jean-Claude "Baby Doc’’ Duvalier said they would be reintegrated into the "social life” of the island. Haiti is the poorest nation in the Western Hemisphere. The refugees were removed from tiny Cayo Lobos, where they had become stranded while trying to reach the United States. They were put aboard the Lady Moore, a 130-foot vessel expected to reach Port-au-Prince late Friday. American television crews in helicopters filmed the uniformed Bahamian police club­ bing and beating a group of the Haitians who staged a sit-down protest in an attempt to avoid removal from the island. One of the helicopters carrying three network newsmen and a pilot disappeared while en route back from Cayo Lobos. A day­ long serch failed to turn up any trace of the ' craft. Bahamas Police Commissioner Gerald Bartlett said he was "unconcerned” with news reports of police brutality on the island. He said the Lady Moore’s captain would not file a report on the incident until his return. "I am certain they (Bahamas police) have not committed any crimes,” said Bartlett in a telephone interview from Nassau, Bahamas. "I feel my men acted accordingly — we just got them (the refugees) off the island.” Bill Kalis, spokesman for the Bahamian News Bureau, said in Nassau "there was only minor resistance” during the evacuation of the refugees who occupied the coral-and-limestone island for 40 days with scant supplies. After meeting with officials of his govern­ ment, President Duvalier said in a statement released through his information officer that "these people will receive the same security and protection to reintegrate into the social life of Haiti without any type of dis­ crimination.” It is illegal for Haitians to leave their coun­ Tt is illpaal for Haitians to leave their coun- try without an exit visa. Haitian authorities have applied the law only when they actualty catch the refugees at the docks attempting to flee Haiti. In Miami Thursday, representatives from eight different organizations including the Friends of Haitian refugees, the Nicaraguan Support Committee and the United Farm Workers registered protest of the situation with the Bahamas consul. The representatives said the refugees should have been taken to the Bahamas and then to the United States. A spokesman for the organizations said they were prepared to send a boat to Cayo Lobos Wednesday, "but the o ffer w as refu sed by the B aham ian government.” United Nations High Commissioner Poul Hartling said the U.N. offered to help, “but we cannot do so uninvited. "We are not in a position to intervene in a country,” Hartling said. "So far there has been no response fom the Bahamian government.” City workers strike in Los Angeles ( U P I ) LOS A N G E L E S - Thousands of municipal employees Thursday struck the nation s third largest city, halting garbage collec­ tion and crippling several other vital services. City officials were not sure exact­ ly how many employees stayed home, but representatives of the three unions involved, representing about 10,000 blue-collar workers, said the walkout was a success. Authorities warned that if the strike continues for more than a day it could severely limit traffic con­ trol and operation of the city’s air­ port, jail and sewage treatm ent facilities. Police officers and firefighters, who belong to different unions, did not strike, but mechanics who ser­ vice em ergency vehicles w ere among those not reporting to work. City officials Wednesday tried to avert the walkout by making a last- minute wage offer and winning a court order outlawing a strike. "Union leaders have gotten their members so heated up they have no choice but to let them go (on strike),” said Keith Comrie, the city administrative officer, after the city made its latest wage offer. The workers are seeking a 10 per­ cent pay hike, retroactive to July 1, when their contracts expired. The latest city offer was a choice of a 9 percent retroactive pay hike or a 10 percent boost "with the starting date negotiable.” The walkout was in defiance of a court order. City officials served copies of the court order to leaders of the three striking unions, warning employees they faced a contempt of court penalty of a $500 fine and five days in jail for everyday they stayed off the job. Hundreds of m em bers of the Architects and Engineers Union picketed City Hall. Members o the other two unions on strike, the City the Los Employees Union and A n g e l e s a n d S u p e rin te n d e n ts A sso ciatio n , picketed other sites . S u p e r v i s o r s HELP WANTED HELP WANTED HELP WANTED HELP W ANTED WANTED Friday. November 14, 1980 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Page 23 End of airline fare war brings increased prices NEW YORK (UPI) - The 1980 transcontinental air fare war that enabled travelers to fly coast-to-coast for as little as $99 last spring is about to end. Holiday travelers can look for fewer discounts on all flights and increasing restric­ tions on fares that are offered. Beginning Jan. 1, Eastern Air Lines, United Airlines and American Airlines will return to pre-fare war prices — "the standard fa r e s ,” said a spokesman for Eastern, the first to take the step. Trans World Airlines, the fourth big carrier in the coast- to-coast competition, said it was studying the situation and "might not make any an­ nouncement until next week. " “Air fares are a whole new ball game,” another airline spokesman said. “Seats are priced according to competi­ tion, load factor and maybe special promotions.” The action on transcon­ tinental flights translates to a cost of $414 for a one-way coach flight between New York and Los Angeles and to $432 for one between New York and San Francisco, com­ pared with the current one­ way discount fare of $195 for both flights. Discount fares like “super saver” will increase also. The current $268 for a mid-week roundtrip flight between New York and Los Angeles will rise to $501 round trip. “ This returns the fare structure to normalcy,” a United spokesm an said. "Because of competition the coast-to-coast fares have not reflected the ticket price of other long-haul flights.” Henry Jicha, analyst for Bache Halsey Stuart Shields, noting that over 60 percent of sum m er fares w ere di s­ counted, said "it costs too much to do that. It’s mind- boggling to think you could fly over 2,000 miles for around $100 this summer when it cost $74 for a flight to Buffalo, a little over 200 miles.” Even though Thanksgiving and C h r i s t ma s h o l i d ay travelers will be able to take advantage of the discounted coast-to-coast fares they’ll find "super-saver” and dis­ c o u n t to o t h e r destinations will be harder to come by. f a r e s "There has been a general tightening of discount fares, mainly with reduction in deep- discounts,” a spokesman for a major airline said. "But ad­ vance purchase requirements and length-of-stay restrictions also have been extended.” “The holidays are one of the busiest seasons of the year,” another analyst said. "Why should the airlines offer dis­ counts when people who fly will fly anyway?” But Texas International, the granddaddy of discounters, said it was maintaining a 50 percent discount fare on 50 percent of its tickets. C H IL D S IT T E R fo r tw o c h ild re n , 11 and 8 2 30-5:30 M o n d a y - F r id a y . M u s t have c a r .’ 474 8826, 476-7085 e x t. 625 10-2. P h y l l i s . __________________________ _ L E A S IN G P A R T tim e , la rg e a p a rtm e n t p r o ie c t A p p ly 1901 E. A n d e rso n L an e M o n d a y th ro u g h F r id a y o r c a ll E th y l, 451-5541._______________________________ N E E D M O N E Y ? L o o k in g fo r a m b itio u s s tu d e n ts in te re s te d in sales e x p e rie n c e to do pho ne w o rk fo r A u s tin 's No 1 b u r g l a r b a r c o m p a n y S a la r y p lu s bonus P a r t - t im e 5 30-8:30. C a ll 385-9711, ask fo r R o y a fte r 5^30 P A R T - T IM E P O S IT IO N S a v a ila b le In pa w n shop, e v e n in g and w e ekend hou rs. A p p ly 5415 N. L a m a r . A sk f o r F red 7 Ñ E E D a re s p o n s ib le , m a tu re person to b a b y s it fo r IV j y e a r old and do lig h t h o u s e k e e p in g R e fe re n ce s re q u ire d . 477- 2 5 5 2 .______________________________ ____ W A N T E D - F U L L o r p a r t tim e h e lp f r o m N o v e m b e r 15 th ro u g h D e c e m b e r 31, s a la ry open C o n ta c t Red C o le m a n 's L i ­ q u o r a t (214) 363-5485. R A D I O N E W S a n c h o r / r e p o r t e r , a m in im u m of 3 y e a rs m e d ia m a r k e t ra d io n e w s e x p e r ie n c e p r e f e r r e d S e n d r e s u m e and ta p e to M ik e R ic h a rd s o n , o O B o x 1208, A u s tin T X 78767, o r c a ll (512 ) 454-2561. S .O .E . ____________ _ _ „ P A R T t i m é hotel g ift shop sales c le rk needed, e x p e rie n c e d . 478-9711 g i f t shop b e fo re 2:30 U n Tv E R S ÍT Y A R E A re s id e n t needs r e lia b le s tu d e n t f o r d o m e s tic w o rk . F le x ­ ib le sch e d u le , good h o u rly w a ges. 477- 6249^__________ _________________________ RE S P O N SIB L E S A L E S C LE R K n e e d e d . P a r t - t im e , f le x ib le h o u rs . A p p ly a t P r in t- A - S h lrt, 7112K E d B lu e s te in 928- 0512 11 a .m .-7 p m P A U L 'S IN T E R IO R S needs a p a r t-tim e s a le s p e rs o n f o r M -T -W -F 5-9 p .m ., S a tu rd a y 12 30-9 p .m . A p p ly in p e rson a t H ig h la n d M a il s tore, lo w e r le v e l. I 'L L P A Y $ 5 /h o u r fo r tu to r in g 610A (P ro fe s s o r B a ile y ). C a ll 474-4615 In CH Im m e d ia te P A R T T I M E M A N A G E R o p e n in g a t s m a ll a p a rtm e n t c o m m u n ity . 25-30 h o u rs /w e e k . Id e a l fo r g r a d stu d e n t. M u s t liv e on site. A p p ly In p e rson M o n ­ da y, W e d n e sd a y, T h u rs d a y a t 1000 W est A v e n u e P A R T T I M E s e r v ic e a g e n t nee ded E v e n in g s h i f t a n d S u n d a y s . C a ll A lrw a y s -R e n t-A -C a r, 476-3519 ________ _____________ P A R T - T IM E S E C R E T A R Y w a n te d to w o rk on South L a m a r . L ig h t ty p in g and f ilin g 447-8383 D IS H W A S H E R S 5-10:30 p .m ., 12:30 p .m . $3.5 0 /h o u r 474-9166 9 a .m .- A C C E P T IN G A P P L IC A T IO N S - d a y w a i t p e r s o n s , e v e n i n g c o c k t a i l w a itre s s e s 3-4 p .m . W e d n e s d a y -F rid a y . San M ig u e l, 2330 W est N o rth to o p . _____ R E L I E F D IE T A R Y s u p e rv is o r. P a rt- tim e (3:30-7:30 p .m .) . W ill w o rk e v e ry o th e r w e e ke n d . M u s t be ju n io r or s e n io r n u tr itio n stu d e n t. C a ll perso n n e l d e p a rt­ m ent, H o ly C ross H o s p ita l, 2600 E. M L K , A u stin , 78702, 477-9811 ext. 157 E q u a l O p ­ p o r tu n ity /H a n d ic a p p e d E m p lo y e r P A R T - T I M E C A S H IE R n e e d e d a t G am e s G a la x y , 1905 E R iv e rs id e . A p p ly 10 a .m .- l p .m . ______ W A N T E D FO R T h e O m e le ttr y : d is ­ h w a sh e rs C a ll o r co m e M o n d a y - F r id a y . 453-5062, 4811 B u rn e t ______ T H O R O U G H H O U S E C L E A N IN G ne e d ­ ed im m e d ia te ly . T w o h a lf d a y s w e e k ly , f le x ib le M u s t h a v e t r a n s p o r ta t io n . W e s tla k e a re a 327-5617. V E G E T A R IA N V O L U N T E E R S needed fo r g ra d u a te n u t r it io n re s e a rc h p ro je c t, ages 18-40 M u s t n o t e a t fis h , sm oke, ta k e m in e r a l s u p p le m e n ts o r o r a l c o n tra c e p ­ F r e e c o m p u t e r iz e d d i e t a r y t iv e s a n a ly s is and $15 If you q u a lify . 471-4287 ext 30, 10 a . m . -4 p .m . _______ _ P A R T - T IM E E X P E R IE N C E D b ic y c le m e c h a n ic /s a le s M u s t h a v e shop e x ­ p e rie n c e C a ll B ill, 451-8111.____________ B U D G E T R E N T -A -C A R needs p a r t - t im e s e r v ic e a g e n t A M , P M a n d w e ekend s h ifts a v a ila b le . 3330 M a n o r Road, 478-6430. F R E E H A IR C U T S fo r m en and w o m e n . C all H a ir N a tu r a lly b etw e en 8-5 o n ly . 258-6673. P A R T - T IM E C R E D IT m a n a g e r, n ig h t hou rs o n ly , th re e d a ys per w eek. P r e fe r business s tu d e n t fo r c r e d it a u th o riz a tio n w o rk 5 p .m .-9 p .m . G ood G P A m a n ­ d a to ry . M u s t be a v a ila b le fo r e n tir e h o li­ d a y season. P hone 476-6511, T o m m y D e a v e n p o rt, f o r a p p o in tm e n t. Y a r ln g 's d o w n to w n . _____________ A T T E N T IO N P R E - D E N T A L o r p re - m ed stu d e n t D e n ta l c lin ic on M L K needs a d e n ta l a s s is ta n t and re c e p tio n is t to w o rk e v e ry S a tu rd a y fr o m 9 a . m . -4 p.m W e w ill tr a in . F o r m o re in fo r m a ­ tio n c a ll 4 7 8 - 7 7 7 7 . __________________ W A N T E D P A R T tim e S anta m o rn in g s o r a fte r n o o n s . E x c e lle n t C h r is tm a s m oney W r ite D a lly T e xa n , Box D - l, A u s tin 78712. ______________ _ W IN E /L IQ U O R sa le sp e rso n fo r A u s tin 's la rg e s t v o lu m e In person. R e u b e n 's, 8311 R e search. liq u o r s to re A p p ly C LASS R IN G S , g o ld je w e lry , o ld p o c k e t w a tc h e s , c u r r e n c y , s ta m p s w a n te d . H ig h p ric e s p a id P io n e e r Coin C o m ­ pan y, 5555 N o rth L a m a r, B ld g . C-113 in C o m m e rc e P a rk , 451-3607. je w e lry , B U Y IN G W O R L D gold, gold s c ra p gold, o ld coins, a n tiq u e s , p o ck e t w a tc h e s P a y in g f a ir m a r k e t p r ic e . C a p ito l C oin Co., 3004 G u a d a lu p e , 472- 1676 P h ilip N o h ra , o w n e r. P O E T R Y A N D S H O R T S T O R IE S w a n te d fo r lo c a l a n th o lo g y . F o r I n fo r m a ­ tio n w r ite : L y n d o n S k illm a n , 2810 R io G ra n d e No. 101, A u s tin , 78705. N E E cT c h R IS T M A S m o n e y? B r in g y o u r b ike s to us fo r fa s t cash B o b's B ik e and Key, 5413 N L a m a r , 452-9777 W E B U Y c la s s rin g s , w e d d in g bands, gold je w e lry , s c ra p g o ld H ig h e s t cash p ric e s p a id . A & A P a w n Shop, 420 E . 6th St. 478-1558 JO a .m .-6 p .m . W A N T E D TO b u y . S ilv e r coins, g o ld rin g s and A m e r ic a n p o c k e t w a tc h e s . T op p r ic e p a id 472-7865. W E B U Y o r lo an on g o ld and s ilv e r in a n y f o rm . 5134 B u rn e t Road, 454-0459. HO US E S IT T IN G JO B w a n te d . M a tu re 29 -year-old fe m a le w a n ts to ho u s e s it fo r fa c u lty m e m b e r g o in g on s a b b a tic a l In s p rin g of th is y e a r. C a ll Susan, 473-2350, a fte r 5. W A N T E D T O r e n t/le a s e s ite fo r s m a ll a lte r n a tiv e p r iv a te school. R u ra l/u rb a n . C a ll 288-0945 e ve n in g s . MISCELLANEOUS $ T e x a s G old $ W e b u y Class rings, G o ld J e w e l r y , Coins, f l a t w a r e 4305 S. 1st 444-6500 $ $ fsTY O U R G R Ú U P , F R A T E R N IT Y OR CO-OP L o o k in g fo r a pla ce to liv e ? U T a t D O O R S T E P 6B R , 3B A , fir e p la c e , h a rd w o o d flo o rs , r e fr ig e ra to r s , w a sh e rs, C H /C A , stove, d r y e r s $750 d e p o s it, $895 m o n t h ly ($149.1 7 /b e d ro o m ). 452-1236 441-7235 Now we know you can’t do everything we ask. Sure we’d like you to live across the street from us and write our menu up on your sun shade. Sure we’d like you to come in for lunch and dinner seven days a week. But we don’t N A T I O N A L W E A T H E R S E R V I C E F O R EC A S T to 7 P m E S T 1 1 - 1 4 PEANUTS® by Charles M. Schulz Restaurant & Bar 311 W. 6th Open every day for lunch & dinner Happy Hour 2-7 Monday, you can bring your boss; Tuesday, your spouse; Wednesday night, your family; Thursday, when was the last time your old roommate wee here; Friday — HARRIET!! YOU'RE BACK.WOU FOUNP Ü5Í SEE, M E N ? HARRIET FOUNP HER WAY BACK BECAU5E SHE LI5TENEP TO MY L E C T U R E S .'___, w F . f TELL THEM, HARRIET..TELL THEM HOW W DECIDE WHICH PATHS TO TAKE... , /'T7A ( 1 m e a m A ( M l BESIDES A/ 1" A J ^ E56|NSi © 19S0 Untied Feature Syndicate, Inc b y jo h n n y h a r t 'SraflLrt the FECTuzets, we gOltPiMefe THE O P OXT HALL L ^ l r - . . . • LETS' WRECKIMC e s a k , S F A D E v G H P V e l , SEED AMD Or COUfKE,F£FTiLiZEJ? Ml ACROSS 1 Dull ones 6 US missile 10 Female 14 Poplar 15 UK river 16 Agley 17 Suicide site: 2 words 19 Servant 20 Draw out 21 Dormant 23 Opening 25 Woeful 26 Born 27 Grain ear 29 Fat 31 Careen 33 Card game 34 Track 36 Accepts 40 “ — Chris­ tie ” 42 Pluck strings 44 USSR river 45 Retreats 47 Man's name 49 King 50 Vessel 52 Transfer 53 Number 57 Furrow 59 Garment 61 N. Carolina cape 64 Wisdom deity 67 Parrot 68 Bootblack: Slang 70 At which time 71 Ripped 72 Construct 73 Withered 74 Close 75 Office items DOWN 1 Bundle 2 Greek coin 3 Changes 4 Chosen 5 Soap operas, 6 Indian cym­ e g bals 7 Hastens 8 Some exams 9 Iterate 10 Light source 11 Once more 12 French river 13 Bulrush UNITED Feature Syndicate Thursday's Puzzle Solved (9333 3333 □□□□□ 3330 3333 □□□□□ □33333033 □□□□□ 3 3 3 0 3 □ □ □ a a a a 3333339 3033 333333 □□□□□□ 339 3333a □□□□□ 3333 03a39 a93E 93330 30333 33U 333330 3D333D 3303 □□□□□□□ 3333 033 □□□□□ 33333 333333003 33333 33Q3 □□□□ 33333 3303 0333 43 Indian state 22 Redact 46 Certain 24 Runs 48 Was mad 27 Warmth 51 Salvos 28 Cornbread 54 Muscles 30 Architectural 55 Axe: Fr. 56 Anesthetic 58 Western lake 60 UK county 62 Pitch 63 Shore bird 65 Bottle part 66 Trickeries order 32 Skillet 35 Governed 37 Liquid fuels 38 Uniform 39 Greenish blue 41 Lawyer: U P I W E A T H E R F O T O C A S T 0 Austin sklss will bs cloudy with a allflht chanca of rain on Fri­ day, turning coldsr Friday night. Friday’s low will bs In the low 40a, ths high In ths low 70a. Winds will bs northsrly at 10 to 20 mph. Sunast Friday will bs at 5:35 p.m., aunrlas Saturday at 6:56 * T n ths nation, ahowsra will bs widespread from ths mid-Gul» Coast, northeastward through ths mid Mississippi Valley, ths Ohlo-Tsnnsssss Vallsy and Into ths lowsr Laksa arsa. Clsar to partly cloudy skiss should prsvall slaswhsrs. B .C . WtW WILL 1 MEED TO TEAR CX7WM a BUILDlMé- and PLANT LAA/M IN ITS PLACE P © F » e W e«terpr*»ee »*%e 16*0 ^ ^ — T A N K JF N A M A R A 90 YOU M I99EP TMPEP FIELP G0AL& SUNDAY. 90 PEOPLE TAKE PRO FOOT&AU 9EP1009LY INTM&TOWM. l i v i n g d i s a b l e d P E R S O N S i n ­ d e p e n d e n tly n ee d a tte n d a n c e P a r t - tim e , f le x ib le h o u rs , n o n - t r a d it io n a l w o rk . C a ll A u s tin R esources C e nte r fo r in d e p e n d e n t L iv in g , a tte n d a n ts ' r e fe r r a l d e p a rtm e n t, 473-2684 p a r t T IM E bo o kke e p e r, m o rn in g s o r a fte rn o o n s. C a p ita l T ra v e l, 458 8231 K I T C H E N H E L P w a n te d N o e x ­ p e rie n c e n e c e s s a ry . A p p ly in p erson, 1110W 6th. _ __________ M IS C E L L A N E O U S ” M A I N T E N A N C E needed a p p ro x im a te ly 10 hou rs w eek, fle x ib le . M u s t ha ve ow n tra n s p o r ta tio n and b a s ic to o ls C om e by 611 W 14th St, 1-6 p m a n d f i l l o u t a p p lic a tion. R E L A X A T IO N P L U S M assage is now ta k in g a p p lic a tio n s T he ho u rs a re f le x i­ ble. th e m o n e y is good, and you a re p a id d a ily A p p ly 2716 G u a d a lu p e , 476-5541 S T A R T T O M O R R O W 1 Need fiv e people fo r phone w o rk S3.5 0 /h o u r. P a rt t im e o r f u ll t i m e Ca ll M r . T e r r y at 451-3147 IF YOU h a v e a fun p e rs o n a lity , a re a d e p e n d a b le h a rd w o rk e r and can w o rk som e lu n c h s h ifts a p p ly fo r a w a ite r o r w a itre s s p o s itio n a t The Red T o m a to and B a nanas R e s ta u ra n t and B a r A p p ly in person, 1601 G u a d a lu p e , betw e en 4:30- 5 30 W A N T E D : R e s e a rch c o n s u lta n t w ith m a n a g e m e n t r e s p o n s ib ilitie s in s u p e r­ to d e v e lo p d a ta v is in g re s e a rc h s ta ff base and d o c u m e n ta tio n in s u p p o rt of ‘d e n tifie d le g is la tiv e , re g u la to ry a n d a d ­ m in is tr a t iv e e x c lu s io n of m ig r a n t and seaso nal f a r m w o r k e r s f r o m p r o g r a m s M u s t h a ve s tro n g te c h n ic a l b a c k g ro u n d in s ta tis tic s , so cio lo g y, d e m o g ra p h ic s and p o litic s B ilin g u a l p re fe rre d J o b is in A u s tin . O n e -y e a r p r o je c t; s a la r y to S21.000, c o m m e n s u ra te w ith e x p e rie n c e and s k ills . S u b m it to T e xa s Inc., 103 E a st T h ird , R u ra l L e g a l A id , W esla co, T X 78596 C a ll 474-0811 fo r m o re In fo r m a tio n . E q u a l O p p o r tu n ity E m p lo y e r . re su m e to W A N T E D : T e c h n ic a l w r i t e r / p u b l i c r e la tio n s c o n s u lta n t to a s s is t in w r itin g and e d itin g r e p o rts and to a c t as pre ss lia is o n fo r F a r m W o rx e r L e g is la tiv e A d ­ v o c a c y P r o j e c t . M u s t p o s s e s s e x ­ e m p la r y w r it in g and e d itin g s k ills and be a b le to those w ith u n d e rg ra d u a te d e g re e in jo u r ­ n a lis m o r E n g lis h and to those b ilin g u a l in S p a n is h and E n g lis h O n e -ye a r oro- ie c t, s a la ry to $13,000. S u b m it re s u m e to Texas R u ra l L e g a l A id in c ., 103 E a s t T h ird , W esla co , T X 78596. C a ll 4/4-08U f o r m o re in fo r m a tio n . E q u a l O p p o r tu n i­ ty E m p lo y e r . ty p e . P re fe re n c e g iv e n N E E D M O N E Y ? f o r a m b itio u s s tu d e n ts . o o k in g in - e re s te d in sa le s e xp e rie n c e to do phone v o rk fo r A u s tin 's No I b u r g la r b a r c o m ­ pany. S a la ry p lu s bonus P a rt-tim e 5 SO­ SO C a ll 385-9711, ask fo r Roy a fte r 5 30. T O M T H U M B F O O D STORE a r t- t im e c a s h ie rs needed M u s t be a b le p w o rk a f te r 4 p .m . and w e ekends A p p - ' in p e rso n . 206 E. Bee C ave R oad. 327- A L L Y O U F O L K S t h a t nee d e x t r a m o ney can sell flo w e rs w ith T he O rig in a l F lo w e r P eople P a id d a ily . 288-1102. tim e . H o u rs S C IE N T IF IC T R A N S L A T O R S . P a rt or f le x ib le , goo d p a y . f u ll Japanese, C hinese, H u n g a ria n , R u m a ­ nian. F in n is h , R u ssia n , G e rm a n and S c a n d i n a v i a n l a n g u a g e s . S e n d q u a lific a tio n s to T ra n s la to rs , PO Box 7552, A u stin , T X 787J2^_________________ P A W N SHOP needs d e p e n d a b le f u ll­ tim e help. B e n e fits A p p ly 500 C h icon, 476-7772 ___________________ P A R T - T IM E T E C H N IC A L e d ito rs need­ ed fo r c h e m is try , g e o lo g y and o th e r fie ld s . E d itin g to be don e a t hom e. Good p a y and e x c e lle n t e x p e rie n c e Send q u a lific a tio n s to T r a n s la to rs , P.O. Box 7552, A u s tin , T X 78712.______________ C R U IS E S . C L U B M e d ite r ra n e a n , s a il­ in g e x p e d itio n s ! N e e d e d : s p o rts in s tr u c ­ t o r s , o f f ic e p e r s o n n e l, c o u n s e lo r s E u r o p e , C a r i b b e a n , w o r l d w i d e ! S u m m e r, c a re e r Send $5.95 plus $1 h a n d lin g fo r a p p lic a tio n , ope n in g s, gu id e t o : C r u i s e w o r l d 189, B o x 601 29, S a c ra m e n to , CA 95860 N I G H T W A T C H P E R S O N P o s itio n s a v a ila b le a t o ff-c a m p u s d o rm . F u ll- and p a r t- tim e N ig h t and w eekend s h ifts . A p p ly in p e rso n M o n d a y , W ednes­ d a y and T h u rs d a y , 8:30 a .m .-5:30 p .m ., a t 1000 W est A ve n u e . W E E K E N D F OOD S E R V I C E S U P E R V I S O R C O M P E T IT IV E S A L A R Y . B E N E F IT S . ST. S T E P H E N ' S SCHOOL 327-1163 R E G IO N A L S A LE S O P P O R T U N IT Y FOR G R O W IN G P R IN T W E A R CO. f o r a n A n e x c i t i n g o p p o r t u n i t y a g g re s s iv e sales r e p re s e n ta tiv e to jo in a g ro w in g c o rp o ra tio n s e llin g im p rin te d sp o rts w e a r A s s ig n m e n t S o u th w e ste rn re g io n is a v a ila b le S a la ry and frin g e b e n e fits p a c k a g e Send re s u m e to The D a ily T exa n, P.O. B o x D -l, A u s tin , T X 78712 in p r o g r a m m in g N E E D P A R T -T IM E c o m p u te r scie nce o r e le c tr ic a l e n g in e e rin g m a jo r w ith e x p e rie n c e fo r m in i-c o m p u te rs , c o m p u c o lo r and dyna - b y te c o m p u te rs , u s in g C P -M and C b a sic D a ys and h o u rs a re fle x ib le . C a ll P a t B ro w n b e tw e e n 8-9:30 a .m . M o n d a y - F r id a y . 385-9700. P A R T - T I M E B O O K K E E P E R W o rk '/i da y, fle x ib le h o u rs, open 8 a .m - 6 p m P re fe r s tu d e n t A C C O U N T IN G M A J O R D u tie s in c lu d e : a n s w e r in g phone, ban k de p o sits, d a ily re p o rts , lig h t o ffic e d u tie s . A p p ly in Person a t . DO N W E E D O N A U T O C E N T E R 34th and G u a d a lu p e sin c e 1948 W E E K E N D COOK ;O M P E T I T IV E S A L A R Y , IN C L U D E D 327- B E N E F IT S 1163. C O V E R G I R L W O R K e v e ra l E u ro p e a n p u b lic a tio n s p a y to p f o r e x c e p tio n a l g la m o u r a n d >es r e p o r ta g e a n d h o to g e n ic aver g ir l w o rk If you q u a h ty a n d a re ite re s te d , k in d ly send nam e, a ta and re c e n t p h o to g ra p h t ° A 9 * n u ro p a , C /o P O Box 5302. A u s tin , T X 9763 t a le n t fo r Work hard, learn a lot, have fun S m all d y n a m ic je w e lry m a n u fa c tu re r ne ar c a m ­ pus needs e n e rg e tic peo­ ple fo r fu ll- tim e p ro d u c ­ tio n p o s it io n . N o e x ­ p e r i e n c e n e c e s s a r y . H e a lth in s u ra n c e , p a id va c a tio n a fte r 6 m on th s. Good fo lk s to w o rk and le a rn w ith . Call 472-0285 HELP WANTED HELP WANTED Pizza Restaurant Part-time, Evenings, & Weekends A p p ly in person 5 5 5 5 N . L a m a r 15 DRIVERS NEEDED NOW MAKE GOOD MONEY PART OR FULL t im e FLEXIBLE HOURS & DAYS MUST USE OWN CAR APPLY IN PERSON: 4115 Guadalupe 458-9101 404 W. 26th St. 476-71 81 • 2011 E. Riverside 477-6681 • 1 1 10 West Lynn 474-7676 Page 24 □ TH E DAILY TEXAN □ Friday, November 14, 1980 UNICEF combats hunger in Africa — — — — ■ " ■ 'a i'M ft1. (Left) KARAMOJA PROVINCE, Uganda: Pressing together for comfort and warm th, these starving Ugandan children wait patiently to be fed a t Kaabong em ergency feeding center in K aram oja Province. Uganda is suffering from years of drought and hunger with the m ost tragic results of civil strife and drought being felt in the nothern area of the country. The hardest hit province is K aram oja, where starvation is threatening 400,000 persons, m ore than half of them m others and children. (Below) JIGJIGA, Ethiopia: M eager huts of the Sheik Sherif shelter dot landscapes in this photo from UN ICEF. Drought victim s gather here for food and treatm en t. An estim ated 5.2 em ergency m edical in the nine eastern and southern million people regions of Ethiopia are suffering from a scarcity of food, w ater and shelter following years of w arfare and drought. Most of those affected are women and children, who are easy prey to m alnutrition and dis­ ease. This year, rains have failed, no crops have been harvested and 90 percent of the cattle have died. Photos b y U nited P ress In tern atio n al (Above) KARAMOJA PROVINCE, Uganda. M others feed their em aciated children a t the Kaabong em ergency center in drought- th is photo from UN ICEF. strick en K aram oja P ro v in ce U N ICEF’s m ajor efforts in Uganda a re directed toward em ergency relief and rehabilitation in fam ine-stricken K aram oja Province. The organization has helped establish 11 em ergency feeding centers and is providing basic foods, special rehabilitative foodstuffs and m edical supplies. in (Above) ADDIS ABABA, Ethiopia: A supply of drugs is loaded onto trucks a t Addis Ababa airport afte r being flown in from Luxembourg. The drugs w ere destined for em ergency cam ps in drought-affected areas. UNICEF assists program s in child health, w ater supply and sanitation, social w elfare and special drought aid. A ssistance includes training of several thousand health assistants, the provision of m edications for drought victim s, the digging of new w ater wells in drought-affected areas and the provision of equipm ent for thousands of health w orkers.