■sz x i. 's a liv a xoa o d N30 N lI dO tíO IUE DAIIY Texan vol. 81, No. 121 (USPS) 146-440) Student N e w s p a p e r a t The U niversity of Texas a t A ustin Tuesday, March 3 0 .1982 Twenty-Five Cents Court rejects GOP objection to redistricting From staff and wire reports The U.S. Supreme Court Monday denied a request made by a Republican group that the high court halt implementation of a state legislative redistricting plan — clearing the way for the May 1 primaries and guaranteeing that elections will be held under the federal court-drawn districts. Also Monday the U.S. Justice Department filed documents urging the Supreme Court to hear an appeal in the state’s con­ gressional redistricting case. Both cases involved the imposition of redistricting plans by three judge federal panels after the Justice Department threw out the congressional, House and Senate plans on grounds they did not accurately reflect minority voting strengths. Without comment and in a unanimous decision, the Supreme Court denied a request made by Associated Republicans of Texas that would have delayed the primaries and impeded im­ plementation of the legislative redistricting plan. Patricia Hill, a Dallas attorney representa ting ART, said that even though the court denied the request, the court still might hear an appeal. “The question of whether a court can implement a plan pre­ viously invalidated by the Justice Department needs to be de­ cided,” she said. “It would be mostly a matter of deciding whether a court can do it in the future.” Although an appeal will not affect the May 1 primaries, ART is appealing the plan because, in its view, the three-judge panel ignored objections made by the Justice Department in Harris and Dallas counties. The remap plan was handed down by the federal panel March 5. The panel became responsible for redrawing legislative lines after the U.S. Justice Department rejected plans drawn by the state Legislative Redistricting Board. The panel left the LRB’s plan for the state Senate virtually intact and altered the LRB House plan only for Bexar and El Paso counties. The panel said it was more important to hold the elections on time than how the district lines were drawn. After the LRB’s plan was approved, the Republican Party filed a suit alleging that minorities and Republicans were un­ der-represented in Bexar, Harris and Dallas counties. In the congressional case, a three-judge panel in Austin im­ posed a plan that radically redrew lines for four Dallas and Tarrant County districts as well as boundaries for South Texas districts 15 and 27. The Justice Department rejected the plan in January on the basis that it discriminated against minorities in two South Texas districts. In the papers filed Monday, the Justice Department asked the court to determine how much weight and effect the depart­ ment’s findings should have. “ Without finding a violation of the Constitution’s prohibitions against racial discrimination, the (Austin) court altered por­ tions of the state statute reaching beyond the two districts that were the bases for the attorney general’s objections,” said Soliciter General Rex E. Lee. Board dismisses election appeal By MARK STUTZ Daily Texan Staff The UT Election Commission Monday denied a final appeal by three students to declare the March 10 student govern­ ment referendum invalid, and will cer­ tify the election later this week. The appeal by Rob Walters and Ken Macdowell, second-year law students, and Neal Graham, a graduate business student, charged the Group Effort docu­ ment of amendment proposals could not be declared the winner because it did not win by a majority vote — a require­ ment in Section 7.2 of the Students’ As­ sociation constitution that left guide­ lin e s stu d en t government after it was abolished in 1978. r e in s ta tin g for None of the complainants commented on the decision after the hearing. How­ ever, that Graham, Macdowell and Walters might go to court to stop certification of the election. sources several said “I would say that I don’t think they have a case, because any court would have to give deference to the commis­ sion’s decision,” said Group Effort spokesman John Denson. “I can’t see them overruling a student government election ruling by a student governing body.” The Section 7.2 passage states: “A new governing structure may be insti­ tuted by a majority of the students vot­ ing in a special election called by the Chairperson of the Election Commis­ sion.” However, the commission in a 3-1 vote, said: “We rule that the grievance brought by Graham, Macdowell and Walters be dismissed on the following grounds. The intent of the construction of the ballot was ... if student govern­ ment passed in question one, then the number of votes for the proposal that prevailed in question two would be com­ pared with the no votes in question two. “If the winning proposal had more yes votes than the no votes, that would constitute a majority of votes cast in the election. This was always the intent as publicized prior to the election. We therefore vote that the majority re­ quirement of Section 7.2 was satisfied.” The dissenting vote on the commis­ sion was cast by Mary Beth Bradshaw, a sophomore business student and chairwoman of the commission. Said Bradshaw: “I did not feel that it was a clear majority; the fact that the results could be read so m any different ways could cause some problem s. The stu ­ dents spoke, but I don't feel we can determ ine how they voted ." Bradshaw was speaking specifically about several points raised by the three com plainants. Although Group E ffort am endm ent proposals won by 1.470 to 932 over Associated Students proposals, in the final tabulations of the 3.893 bal­ lots cast, Group E ffort had 91 few er votes than the total voting no, or yes without supporting either docum ent. The G raham appeal argued that those 91 votes should be counted against the Group E ffort docum ent, as specified in Article V of the UT Election Code M em bers for the G raham com plaint also argued that by voting no. 1,400 stu ­ dents w ere not given the right to choose between the two am endm ent proposals if student governm ent was reinstated. ‘If the winning proposal had more yes votes than no votes, that would constitute a ma­ jority of votes cast in the election. This was always the intent as publicized prior to the election. We therefore vote that the majority re­ quirement of Section 7.2 was satisfied.’ —Election Commission ruling However, the com mission decided that the only requirem ent in A rticle VII of the Students' Association constitution was a tabulation com paring yes votes on the issue with the total no votes — in this case 1.470 to 1,400. The com mission also decided, as Denson, a second-year law student, stated in addressing the ruling body, that the ballot form at had been d eter­ mined and announced long before the election, and any party could have raised the m ajority requirem ent a t that tim e, M em bers of Group E ffort were obvi­ ously happy with the decision “ I think the will of the students has said Will finally been approved, Wright, governm ent senior. it; “ I ’m happy with the Election Commission did a good jo b .’’ said Chris Bell, a senior broadcast journalism stu­ dent. Stormy weather A resident of Doble Center runs up the steps seeking better shelter than merely an umbrella. Thundershowers are predicted for Austin Tuesday morning. - - - - — — ................................. Susan Allen-Camp, Dally Texan Staff Shuttle in ‘camping mode’; a waits favorable weather CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (UPI) — The shuttle astronauts went into a “camping mode” Monday while officials sought favorable weather at three separate sites — including this spa­ ceport — to bring Columbia back from its pathfinder space voyage. The strip at White Sands, N.M. closed down by a blinding sandstorm earlier Monday, remained the target of choice for pilots Jack Lousma and Gordon Fullerton to touch down Tues­ day, said Eugene Kranz, director of flight operations at John­ son Space Center in Houston. Second choice was a transcontinental, sonic-booming dash to, the 3-mile paved strip at the Kennedy Space Center, five miles from the pad where Columbia thundered off last Monday on its weeklong third mission. The concrete strip at Edwards Air Force Base, Calif., was the third alternative, Kranz told a briefing. Mission directors said they hoped for good weather early in the day at White Sands, and that the outlook Tuesday morning at the Cape was for scattered clouds, ideal southeast winds and good visibility. However, potentially that project managers had wanted to try first on the unpaved run­ ways at White Sands or Edwards could well crop up at the Cape. tricky crosswind conditions The astronauts went to bed ahead of schedule so they could be awakened early Tuesday for new landing instructions. “ We’re in camping mode and w e’ve got everything shipshape,” Lousma cracked before he and Fullerton turned in. “ ... We’re not trying to rush, it all pays the sam e.” “If something doesn’t work out for us tomorrow, we can support a waveoff to­ morrow and Wednesday, if we got pushed into it,” said flight director Neil Hutchin­ son at a mid-evening briefing in Houston. “ We got lots of food on board, four ex­ tra days,” he said. “Plenty of food and water on board. We are intending to come home tomorrow. Each day we will try a little harder. “ Everything is going real well. The crew is in good spirits. We are ready to do it again tomorrow.” “ If we had a situation where Northrup is clearly untenable, would we strike right out for KSC?” said Hutchinson. “I sus­ pect we would.” H ie pilots had been told they might be landing at 12:07 a.m. CST, Tuesday at White Sands or 1:47 p.m. CST, at Cape Canav­ eral, or on a second opportunity at 1:41 p.m. CST, in New Mexico and 1:47 p.m. at the Cape. Fritz Widick, manager of orbiter ground services at the Florida spaceport, said, “We are ready. We really didn’t ex­ pect to land here but w e’re ready.” A landing at the Kennedy Space Center runway would mark the shuttle’s first use of a paved strip, and the first time a spaceship has returned to its launch site. The pilots were “waved off” from White Sands because of strong winds and near-zero visibility, but Kranz said m is­ sion directors were hopeful conditions would improve early Tuesday. had adequate fuel cell supplies for up to % hours m ore flying tim e under reduced power use if that becam e necessary. He said mission directors hoped w eather would be suitable early Tuesday at N orthrup Strip at White Sands, as it was Monday until the dust storm blew in just in tim e to scrub the scheduled 2:27 p.m. EST touchdown “The weather status is going to continue to change through­ out the evening and into the m orning,’’ Kranz said The basic feeling of the team for N orthrup for Tuesday and Wednesday is not particularly good. “ KSC (Kennedy Space C enter) w eather is good tom orrow and deteriorating Wednesday. " “I am not leaving E dw ards out' as an alternative spot, Kranz said, although there could be undesirable tailw inds there. The sandy desert strip w here Columbia lanced a fte r its two previous flights rem ained soaked from the rains that forced the switch to White Sands, but the concrete runway remained open. “The principal factor that would cause us to go into KSC,” Kranz said, “ ... is if you got to go one runway, you m ight as well go into the facility down th e re " — just three mijes from the shuttle refurbishm ent facility and five miles from the launch pad. The astronauts, adding hourly to the Columbia’s weeklong space endurance record, were getting a good night’s sleep be­ fore getting up early Tuesday to again await landing instruc­ tions. They were told they had enough hydrogen and oxygen for their fuel cell electrical generators to keep flying beyond “an­ other waveoff tomorrow and the day after that, if needed.” Kranz, at a briefing in Houston, confirmed that Columbia Inside1 Foreign students face uphill battle at UT International enrollment remains at 5 percent of admissions Entering freshman foreign students are required to take an English proficiency exam and must be in the top quarter of their academic class or have a solid B average to be accepted to the University. Foreign stu­ dents failing the proficiency must take a remedial Eng­ lish course. remain unidentified, said he has suffered cultural shock since he arrived in Austin. He said he is not accustomed to coping with noisy, inconsiderate neighbors, eating meat or facing discrimination as a foreign student. Although some UT foreign students call the Universi­ ty their “window to the world,” the pane isn’t always cloudless. By KEN FRITSCHEL Daily Texan Staff * Foreign students say they face many problems ad­ justing to University life — such as stiff admissions standards, housing problems, language barriers and cultural shock. * Bill Paver, director of international admissions, said about 6,000 foreign students apply for admission each year, although only 2,500 were accepted this year. Ac­ cording to statistics compiled by the Office of Institu­ tional Studies, the largest number of foreign students comes from the Republic of China with 363, Iran with 237, Mexico with 234 and South Korea with 147. Shan Chen, a first-year graduate student from the Republic of China, said learning English was his major dilemma in adjusting to American life. “ Even though English is my second language, in Taiwan it is very hard to practice (speaking English).” Joe Neal, director of the International Office, said his office offers an intensive English program to students unfamiliar with the language. The program costs $1,000 or $1,200 per sem ester depending on the degree of the •tudents’ knowledge of English, he said. Paver said the University has fewer foreign students than many other schools in the state because of more rigorous admission policies. He compared the Universi­ ty to Southwest Texas State University in San Marcos. While Southwest has an international student enroll­ ment “well above" 25 percent, the University’s re­ mains about 5 percent. Efren Abaya, graduate student from the Philippines, said he arrived in Austin without a place to live. The UT International Office referred him to the Madison House, where he stayed until a room was available in a University dormitory. Traditionally, foreign students who have difficulty finding a place to live have been referred to Madison House, a privately owned dormitory leased by the Uni­ versity. Last year, students paid $3,400 for room and board at Madison House. Madison House is owned and managed by Dallas-based Wallerstein Realtors. One South Korean engineering student, who asked to “ I believe all foreigners are more or less discrimi­ nated against. I am not able to get financial support,” he said. Foreign students pay from $6,000 to $8,000 per year to study at the University — about $500 per month — Neal said. Ninety percent of the foreign students at the Uni­ versity are graduate students studying engineering, natural sciences or business with the intent of returning to their country to teach in these areas, he said. Foreign students come to the United States to study for a variety of reasons. Abaya said he left home be­ cause colleges in the Philippines do not offer doctoral programs. “ It is also helpful if you know somebody, have people who can help you — especially during spring break,” he said of his relatives in Houston Santiago Barragan, graduate student from Mexico, said he cam e to Texas to learn to speak English and add prestige to his educational background. “ In Mexico, they recognize those who study in America more than others.” Henry Fonda and Katharine H epburn won Oscars Monday night for best actor and best actress in their roles in “ On G olden P ond.” “Chariots of Fire” won the award for best p ic ­ ture of 1981. Story, Page 12. Page 2 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Tuesday, March 30, 1982 Th e E^iiy Texan PERMANENT STAFF . . .........................Joba Srhwarti Editor . \ Managing Editor Associate Managing Editors . . . . Mark Dooley Jay . Hamlin, David Teece Assistant to the E d itor.................. William Booth News E d i t o r .................... Jennifer Bird News Assignm ents E d it o r .................Jodi Hooker General Reporters. . Tina Romero, John Ehlinger, Doug McLeod. Mark Sluti, David Woodruff . . Features E d ito r ................ Diana Moore Sports E d it o r .................. Roger Campbell Associate Sports E d it o r ..................David Mc.Nabb Senior Sportswriters...........................Steve C am p b ell, C harlie M cC oy, S a t ie Woodhamt Entertainm ent E d it o r ...................... Cindy Widner Associate Entertainment . . . . . Photo Editor Associate Photo Editor E d i t o r ................................. Chris Jordan Susan Allen-Camp . Travis Spradling . Richard Steinberg . C.R. Frink Pam ela McAlpia (iraphics E d itor.........................Ales Plaza Images Editor. Associate Images Editor . Assistant Images Editor . . . . A ssociate N e w s E d ito r Sp o rts A ssista n ts ISSUE STAFF N e w sw rite rs Steve V inson. Hector E d ito ria l A ssista n t E ntertain m en t Assistan t R ich a rd G oldsm ith K en Fritsche l, Cantu, C h r is M c N a m a r a L isa B la ck Dennis N ow lin Suzanne H alliburton M ak e-u p E d ito r W ire E d ito r C op y E d ito rs A r t ist s Jeff Stephens, Lan ce M o rg a n M e lis sa W ard A n d y N e im an T o m M au rsta d. C aro ly n M ay s. K a re n S p a rk s M ik e Fry . Sa m H u rt Su san Allen-Cam p. C layton B ra n tly Sports M a k e up E d ito r P h o tog ra p he rs TEXAN ADVERTISING STAFF Scott Benett ( alise Burchette Doug Cam pbell Joel C arter. K im ie C unningham . ( indy t iler C ath y Giddm gs. Claudia G ra v e s C h e ryl Luedecke, M arian n e Newton, K en G ra ys. J a y Zorn The D a ily Te xan a student new spaper at The U n iv e rsity of T e xas at A u stin is published by T e x a s Student Publications D ra w e r D. U n iv e rsity Station. Austin. T X 78712 7209 Th e D a ily Texan is published M onday. Tuesday. Wednesday. T h u rsd a y and Frid ay except holiday and exam periods Second c la ss postage paid at Austin. T X 78711) .News contributions will be accepted by telephone 471-45911, at the editorial office Texas Student P ub licatio n s B u ild in g 2 122> o r at the news laboratory (C o m m u n ic a ­ tion B u ild in g A4 1361 Inquiries concerning d elive ry and classifie d a d ve rtising should be m ade in T S P B u ild in g 3 200 471 5244 The national a d ve rtising representative of The D a ily Texan is C om m u n ication s and A d vertisin g S e rvic e s to Students. 1633 W est C en tral Street, E van sto n Illin o is 60201 phone 800 ' 323 4044 toll free The D a ily T e xan su b scrib es to United P r e s s International and N ew Y o r k T im e s New - Se rvic e Th e Texan is a m em ber of the A sso ciated C ollegiate P ress, the South­ west J o u rn a lism C ongress, the T e xas D aily N ew sp ape r Association and A m e rica n New sp ape r P u b lis h e rs Association C o p yrigh t 1982 T e x a s Student P ublications THE DAILY TEX AN SUBSCRIPTION RATES One Se m este r i F a ll o r S p r in g 1 Tw o Se m este rs i F a ll and Sp rin g) Su m m e r Se ssio n One Y e a r ( Fall. S p rin g and Su m m e ri $20 00 40 00 50 00 Send o rde rs and add ress changes to T e xas Student Publications. P O B ox D A u s­ P U B N O 146440 tin T X 78712 7209 o r to T S P B uild in g C3 200 STUDENT LOANS Texas Guaranteed Student Loan A pplications for Spring and Sum m er 1982 and Sum m er 1982 are now b ein g processed at UNIVERSITY FEDERAL CREDIT UNION 476-4676 Applications arc available at the credit union or at the 1.1. Student Financial Aid Office and must be returned to the Financial Aid Office bv June 15, 1982. UNIVERSITY CREDIT UNION 30th and Cedar / A ustin, Texas 78705 / (512) 476-4676 O p e n Monday th ro u gh Fridax. 9 :00 until t 00; ITuir.sdav until "" ()() S e rv in g I 1 'fu o ilt) staff and full tim e grad uate stu d e nts 0 N C U A \ Xctiiuttts insured up to 5100,000 b\ the N ational C redit I nm n A dm inistration, a I S G overnm ent Agency r HEY PLASMA DONOR! THANKS! M e e t E d d i e Ke ro uac , an 8-year-old boy with s e v e re h emp hi li a — the bleeding disease. Just a few year s ago E d d i e faced a shortened life filled with despair, severe pain, and extensive c ri ppl ing Y o u r pl asma, and the p l a s m a from ma n y others just like you, has pr ovided the des per ately needed a n t i h e m o p h i l i a c factor ' A H F ) E d d i e needs a l m o s t daily, enabling h i m to lead a c o m pl e t e l y n o r m a l and active life E d d i e has often asked us to t hank you for your c onti nued help. We would like to join h i m by s a yi n g " H e y P l a s m a Donor! T h a n k you!'" Did you know that the a ve r ag e hemo ph iliac in the U.S. required 280 plasm a donations per year in order to prepare his needed A H F concentrate. A severe hemophiliac could easily require over 700 donations per year! P e r h a p s now you see why the need for plasm a is so great. Please donate plasma, and help these you ngst ers that once faced lifelona de spair and crippling. 2Ta AUSTIN BLOOD COMPONENTS StO * f S T T fT M S T R E E T A U ST IN T f X A S 78/05 «77 3 / » Be a blood p lasm a donor and save a life. You get 18.00 for your donation P L U S $5.00 bonus with this coupon (on your first visit only) and then $10.00 for second donation within sam e week. $5.00 $1.00 $10.00 $23.00 CasM Hours: Mon. & Thurs. 8:00am to fcOOpm Tim s. 4 Fri. 8:00am 9a 2:00pm AUSTIN HOOD COMPONENTS, IN C S1 0 W . 29th Austin, TX 477-373S Candidate rejection confirmed By M ARK STUTZ Daily Texan Staff The Texas Student Publications Board reaffirm ed its decision not to certify W. G ardner Selby as a candidate for editor of T h e D a ily T e x a n , a t a special m eeting of the board Monday. With the decision, Lisa Beyer, jo u r­ nalism junior, rem ains the sole candi­ date for editor of the T exa n . Selby, a Plan II junior, lacks two qualifications for certification that can­ not be waived, according to the TSP Handbook of O perating P rocedures. He currently is taking a journalism editing course that, according to the handbook, he should have taken prior to filing for lacks another certification. He also editing and layout course required for certification. Selby asked the board Friday to certi­ fy him based upon his three years of experience a t the T e x a n and his work experience with other publications. Friday, the board originally decided by a 5-4 vote to certify Selby. However, afte r a board m em ber conferred with the adm inistration about the legitimacy of certifying a candidate who did not m eet all the board took a second vote and rescinded Selby’s certification, 6-3. the TSP requirem ents, At the Monday meeting, Betsy McCole, com m unication senior and chairw om an of the board, told m em ­ bers she had called the special meeting to clarify w hether ex-officio m em bers could m ake motions before the board McCole questioned whether the vote to rescind the certification violated “ Rob­ e r t’s Rules of O rder’’ because an ex- officio m em ber of the board — Maureen Paskin, graduate student and editor of U T m o s t magazine — moved for the second vote. The board decided that Raskin’s motion was in order when no specific passage in “ R obert’s R ules” governing legitim acy of motions by ex-officio m em bers could be found. In other TSP election news, Robin Redman, journalism junior, has with­ drawn from the race for TSP at-large Place 1, leaving Greg Spier, business freshm an, as the only candidate for the position. Around Campus Priest to speak on weapons | Catholic Bishop L.T. Matthiesen Ox Amarillo, the first Ameri- [ can Catholic priest to come out publicly against nuclear weap­ ons, will speak at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday in W.C. Hogg Building 14. Matthiesen is best known in Texas for his opposition to the Pantex nuclear weapons facility in Amarillo. He first became involved in the controversy when one of his parishioners asked him about the morality of working in the Pantex plant. Free movie to show at Union Two speakers, including Professor John Wheeler, and a film will be presented Tuesday as part of Natural Sciences Week. 13 00 Wheeler, professor of astronomy, will speak on “Uranium and Plutonium, from Dream to Dram a,’’ at 1:30 p.m. Tuesday in Texas Union Building 4.224. Roger Williams, of the Clayton Foundation Biochemical Institute, will speak on “Unified Edu­ cation” at 3 p.m., also in Union Building 4.224. The film “ Alien” will be shown at 4 p.m. Tuesday in the Union’s Texas Tavern. Admission is free. Solar cooling lecture planned Jack Howell, professor of mechanical engineering, will lec­ ture on solar cooling principles for active system s at 3:30 p.m. Tuesday in Taylor Hall 137. Howell has recently coauthored a book on solar engineering entitled “Solar Thermal Energy System s” and also has done t S3J PASSOVER SEDERS ■ | Wed. night April 7 I Thurs. night April 8 | at 7:45 p.m. Please make reservations by April 5, MondayB Meal plans available for entire holiday. I Seminars on Passover: Learn how to make the Seder Wed. Mar. 31 6:30 p.m. Thu. Apr. 1 6:30 p.m. I I J Chabad House Lubavitch Jewish Student Center at U.T 2101 Nuecea 472-3900 AN EVENING LECTURE with RABBI SAMUEL STAHL of Temple Beth-el in San Antonio Tues, March 30 8:00 PM JU D AISM A N D CHRISTIANITY: YESTERDAY, TODAY, A N D TOMORROW " cr) Hillel J ew ish Student Center 2105 San Antonio yyn y?n » n » n » n » n 476 -0 1 2 5 EMERGENCY: NUMBERS i tudent Health e n te r..........4 71-4955 ounseling ....476-7073 elephone ustin Fire ep t..............476-4333 niversity o lic e ............471-4441 or P A X 1031 ire, Traffic & Security (a n y cam pu s phone 1234 research in the field of solar cooling. The University Solar Energy Society will sponsor the lecture. Energy symposium slated Austin City Council m em ber Roger Duncan will be among the speakers a t a symposium on energy conservation in rental housing to be held from 8:30 a.m . to 4:30 p.m. Tuesday in the Joe C. Thompson Conference Center. The symposium, co-sponsored by the Division of Continuing Education, City of Austin, Austin Tenants Council, Austin Apartm ent Association and Central Texas Energy Association, will discuss ways to prom ote w eatherization and conservation in the Austin rental m arket. Registration for the symposium is $10 and is being handled through the Division of Continuing Education. Contact the con­ tinuing education office for m ore information. Weather delays carnival date The Interfraternity Council Round-Up Carnival scheduled for Tuesday at F iesta G ardens has been postponed until Wednes­ day because of inclem ent w eather. Bryan Muecke, IFC spokesman, said the tim e schedule for the carnival will rem ain 3 p.m. to midnight. Events planned for the carnival will also rem ain the same. Muecke said Monday’s rains have soaked the F iesta Gardens grounds, necessitating the delay. IMMIGRATION U.S. citizen spouses, parents or children (over 21 years old) of an alien m ay petition for the alien’s perm anent residency. For m ore information call: Paul Parsons Attorney at Law 2200 G uadalupe, Suite 216 477-7887 Free initial consultation for UT students and faculty AUSTIN BURGER WURKS When w as the last time you ate a Ham ­ burger, a small order of Fries, and drank a Medium Drink and then paid only 1.99 How about today? R e also serve chicken, burgers, and chicken fried steak, among othef'things. W e se n e good food 24 hours around the clock, and if you want, you can get it to go. I f you stay, y o u can play on our \ ideo Games until your foods ready, or watch our large color T. I . Stop on in. f o r S I .99, you can t go wrong. 300 W. MLK 478-9299 PERRY-CASTENADA LIBRARY Located at 21st and Speedway, the U n i v e r s i t y ' s M a i n L i b r a r y is a collec­ tion of m a t e r i a l s c h i e f l y in the hu m an it ie s and social sciences. It is the p r i m a r y res ear ch center for a p ­ p ro xi m at e ly two-thirds of the campus, e s p e c i a l l y for u p p e r d iv i s i o n and g r a d u a t e students. A n open shelf library, it contains the union catalog of c a m p u s li bra ry holdings, a complete photoduplication center and facilities f o r c o m p u t e r - b a s e d i n f o r m a t i o n searching. Oh, Muffy, it’s just divine! So utterly unlike any other condominium. Just notice the classic lines, Muff, the elegant Victorian architecture. It’s soooo exciting! So true, Buffy. Each and every home is positively unique. Just like . . . Wo/! It’s simply perfect, my dear. So different. so daring. so . . . so you. \ And only four blocks from school. What more could o n e ask? / So true. \ Buffy . . . so true. / A com m unity o f twenty-one unique condominium homes, from the $40$. f (1 y V W fl * Preservation Square is more rhan a condominium; it’s an investment with distinction. I i For information, contact Rtck Fjardin at (5 1 2 )4 7 4 -5 9 8 1 or come by the Ricardin Company offices at 22nd anJ Rio Grande. | ^ y y ^ PRESERVATION SQUARE. Tuesday, March 30, 1982 □ THE DAILY TEXAN World in Brief Moderate party takes wide lead World & National Page 3 From Texan news services Volcano erupts TUXTLA GUTIERREZ, Mexico — A volcano dormant for hundreds of years erupted without warning early Monday, forcing 20,000 people to flee their homes under a shower of ash and cinder that stretched 120 miles across southern Mexico. Offi­ cials in the southern state of Chia­ pas said the 7,300-foot high El Chi chon volcano erupted shortly after midnight near the town of Pichucal co, about 450 miles south of Mexico City. More maneuvers staged WASHINGTON - The Navy has scheduled two more major exercis­ es in the Caribbean Basin area, and Pentagon officials described them Monday as a “clear signal” of the U.S. intention to maintain a pres­ ence in the troubled region. Both maneuvers are set to begin next month and follow six naval exercis­ es carried out in the area since Oc­ tober. The increased U.S. focus on the Caribbean follows a military buildup in Cuba — which U.S. offi­ cials say received 63,000 tons of arms from the Soviet Union in 1981 — and general turmoil in the area stemming from guerrilla insurgen­ cy in El Salvador, revolution in Ni­ caragua and upheaval in Guatema­ la. Budget 'headway* seen WASHINGTON - Senate GOP leader Howard Baker feels House Democrats and the White House have made some progress in their budget talks and he will not seek immediate, unilateral Senate action on the budget, an aide said Monday. But a House Democratic aide, who asked not to be identified, said Baker was just trying to avoid the embarrassment of having the Sen­ ate pass a budget resolution that “goes nowhere.” Freighter capsizes HIGHLAND BEACH, Fla. - An old, wooden Haitian coastal freight­ er capsized in a violent storm off an exclusive condominium-lined beach early Monday, hurling its crew into the choppy surf where two drowned. Two others were missing. The 70- foot Esperancia, a motorized cargo hauler rickety with age, splintered into pieces while being tossed about in 10-foot waves shortly after mid­ night. Two Haitian women drowned, their bodies pulled from the surf by rescue workers before dawn. Six crewmen survived the swim to shore, but one was hospitalized in critical condition. River threatened UKIAH, Calif. — Work crews aid­ ed by state prison inmates sand­ bagged an improvised, rain-weak­ ened dam Monday to contain toxic formaldehyde that threatened to es­ cape into the Russian River. “We started losing some water wit of the ditch this morning,” said Mendoci­ no County Assistant Administrator Ernie Dickens. “They’re down there sand-bagging now to keep it out of the river. Maybe we’ll hold it, but we don’t think so.” Jury selection slow DALLAS — A judge said Monday he would require separate inter­ views of each prospective juror in the trial of three policemen charged with negligence in the drownings of three black teen-agers in their cus­ tody. Dallas County Criminal Judge Tom Price, who inherited the case after it was moved from three other sites, said the trial might take as long as five weeks. “This is a differ­ ent procedure for picking a jury," Price said. “ (News) coverage of this case makes it necessary for us to be careful in our selection.” Bikers blessed their MILPITAS. Calif - Nearly 200 mostly bearded, denim-clad bikers revved two-wheel chariots then bowed their heads for the first “blessing of the bikes” benediction by a Catholic priest. The Rev. Al­ fred Kelly, a priest from St. John’s Catholic Church, sprinkled holy wa­ ter over a parking lot full of Hon­ das, Yamahas and Harteys, then read passages from the Bible as 40 San Francisco Bay area motorcycle clubs convened for the bike blessing to mark the beginning of the spring riding season. “Help us to drive carefully and courteously,” the priest said from a pulpit in front of Das Gasthaus bar. Stocks mixed NEW YORK (UPI) - The stock market closed mixed Monday as trader hopes faded for an early end to the recession ami iower interest rates. Trading was the slowest in more than six weeks. The Dow Jones industrial average, fluctuat­ ing within 2 points throughout most the the session, picked up some steam at the final moment to spurt 5 90 points to 823 82. SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador (UPI) — The ruling Christian Democrats took strong lead Monday in election returns for a constituent assembly, but U.S. of­ ficials said extreme right-wing parties could still win by combining their votes and forming a coalition. While the outcome was uncertain, U.S. Deputy Assistant Secretary of State Everett Briggs estimated that 1 million Salvadorans — two-thirds of the estimated 1.5 million electorate — turned out to vote. If the estimate is confirmed, it will mean twice as many Salvadorans voted as U.S. officials said would be neces­ sary to regard the election as a success for democracy and a failure for leftist guerrillas who tried to disrupt the bal­ loting. The guerrillas stepped up their offen­ sive Monday, attacking the main army barracks in San Salvador and raiding a key provincial capital in a bid to disrupt the vote counting. With 182,278 ballots counted, the mod­ erate U.S.-backed Christian Democrats of President Jose Napolean Duarte led with 72,958 votes, or 40 percent of the total. The far-right National Republican Al­ liance, known as Arena, was second with 53,944 votes or 29.5 percent. The equally extreme right National Concili­ ation Party had 30,142 votes or 16.5 per­ cent and the moderate right Democrat­ ic Alliance had 17,185 or 9.4 percent, according to figures released by central election commission. Two other rightist groups and nulli­ fied ballots accounted for the remain­ der of the votes. U.S. Ambassador Deane Hinton said the right-wing could still win the right to appoint a provisional government if Arena and the National Conciliation Party negotiate a coalition. The Chris­ tian Democrats also stood a chance of forming a coalition with the Democrat­ ic Alliance and Hinton said the outcome would depend on a “process of negotia­ tion” between the parties. Whichever coalition emerges with a majority of the constituent assembly’s 60 seats will form an interim govern­ ment while a new constitution is draft­ ed. The United States was pinning its hopes on the Christian Democrats but Hinton left open the possibility of sup­ port for the rightists “if their program is the kind of thing, we, the American people, and Congress, can support.” Arena leader Maj. Roberto D'aubuis- son, who former U.S. Ambassador Rob­ ert White has called a “pathological killer,” has vowed to “napalm all com­ munists.” Hinton said he thought D'aubisson could be persuaded to moderate his views in exchange for U.S. support. “I’ve thought all along that Maj. D’au- buisson played by the game,” he said. However, Rep. John Murtha, R-Pa., a member of the U.S. delegation sent to observe the election, predicted a disas­ ter for American policy in El Salvador if the right wins. “If the right wins, the repression will start again and we will start all over again,” Murtha said. “We will have to pull our support out of here. I hope for a balance in the result." But everyone connected with the elections — the parties that contested it and the Americans who monitored it — agreed that the heavy turnout by voters who braved bullets, bombs and leftist threats to get to the polls in itself con­ stituted a major success. “It was a very extraordinary elec­ tion, a fair, legitimate and very moving election in seeing the turnout and the outpouring of determination for those who waited in line for hours to vote,"- said Sen. Nancy Kassebaum, R-Kan., head of the U.S. observer team, in an interview on ABC’s Good Morning America. “The people yesterday clearly said enough. Enough of violence,” said ob­ server Theodore Hesburgh, president of Notre Dame University. “We saw people threatened with death if they voted and they went ahead, literally stepping over bodies to go to the polls,” he said. “Duarte has not won. The people have won ... because it was a massive vote,” D’aubuisson told ABC. Leftist rebels, who succeeded in keeping people from voting in several parts of the country, stepped up their bid to sabotage the elections by disrupt­ ing the vote counting The rebels attacked the main mili­ tary barracks in San Salvador before dawn, engaging government troops in a two-hour battle The troops called in ar­ mored personnel carriers and helicop­ ters and forced the rebels to retreat, military sources said. There was no word of casualties. UPI Telephoto Salvadoran soldiers drag guerrillas’ bodies out of San Antonio Abad after battle Sunday. Haig happy with heavy voter turnout WASHINGTON (UPI) — Secretary of State Alexander Haig said Monday the Salvadoran elections provided such an over­ whelming mandate that the democratic parties may now “ hold out a hand of conciliation" to their enemies. In a rare appearance before reporters at the State Depart­ m ent’s daily briefing, Haig described a general administration feeling of satisfaction at the heavy turnout of Salvadoran vot­ ers Sunday, despite intensive efforts by leftist rebel forces to discourage voting. Haig called the big turnout as a victory “ for free peoples everywhere . .. an unanswerable repudiation of the advocates of force and violence .. . a military defeat for the guerrillas quite as much as a political repudiation." “ We are confident that the constitutent assembly, given the extraordinary mandate it has received from the Salvadoran people, will find ways to hold out a hand of conciliation to those adversaries who are prepared to take part peacefully in the democratic process now so encouragingly under way,” he said. A spokesman said it is still U.S. policy that power will not be shared “over the heads of the Salvadoran people,” but the Unit­ ed States fa /ors negotiations between the various forces “with­ in the electoral context. ” At the White House, presidential spokesman Larry Speakes said the voters in El Salvador appear to have turned out in “record number" and the result “ is a victory for the people of El Salvador.” The election turnout appeared to still some of the bipartisan criticism of the administration's Central American policy on Capitol Hill, although there remains heavy support for negotia­ tions with the leftist groups. Chairman Charles Percy of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee said the elections give the expected new coalition government a mandate to govern El Salvador. “ I would hope that it would have sufficient self-confidence now to seek a peaceful solution to the conflict,” the Illinois Republican said in a statement, repeating the proviso that con­ tinued U.S. aid will be linked to political and human rights issues. Percy also commended the Salvadoran people for turning out in large numbers "despite threats from the rebels who refused to participate in the democratic process and who tried to dis­ rupt the elections.” House Speaker Thomas O'Neill said the large participation “shows the masses of people down there appreciate the free­ dom of elections ... I just hope they can bring a majority party to power that can bring all factions together.” He reserved a decision on future aid to El Salvador, saying, “ We ll have to see who the victors a re .” House Democratic leader Jim Wright of Texas said Salva­ dorans "gave a convincing demonstration that they love free­ dom." and called on the new government to offer amnesty to the guerrillas if they lay down their arms. "The unprecedented numbers participating in yesterday’s election surely must prove beyond any doubt that the terrorists and guerrillas do not speak for the people of that nation, and that democracy can be made to work if given half a chance,” Wright said. Republican leader Bob Michel of Illinois also praised the elections and the way they were conducted. “History will record that for one brief shining moment amidst the darkness of war, the people at least voted in large numbers,” he said. President addresses realtors Short-term program of relief proposed “They are part of the problem, not the solution,” Reagan said. “The only hope for long-term improvement in in­ terest rates is for the Congress to join me in a bipartisan effort to cut spend­ ing.” WASHINGTON (UPI) - President Reagan Monday offered realtors short­ term relief for their ailing industry but rejected calls for a reduced defense budget that could shrink the federal def­ icit and lower mortgage interest rates. • Speeding up the processing of mort­ gages to encourage the private sector to assume the burden • Removal of restrictions on the ways in which real estate brokers can provide services to home buyers. The president, in an appearance be­ fore the National Association of Real­ tors, said, “I want with all my heart to balance the budget, and hold open the door for discussion with the Congress” to reach that goal “in a way that does not endanger our freedom.” Huge deficits — like this year’s pro­ jected figure of $96.4 billion — force the government into the nation’s lending markets where it competes with pri­ vate borrowers. To control the loan sup­ ply and to fight inflation, the Federal Reserve is obliged to keep interest rates high. The president delivered his speech at the Washington Hilton Hotel, where one year ago he was wounded in an assassi­ nation attempt. Monday’s trip was uneventful. Reagan told the realtors the three non-negotiable areas of his budget are defense funding, tax cuts, and spending reductions. “I have no quarrel with those who cry out every evening on the network news against the size of our projected defi­ cits,” Reagan said. “I abhor them too.” But he said he cannot understand how such congressional critics can then vote for even more spending. Reagan said a reduction in inflation and reduced borrowing by the federal government “are early harbingers of recovery.” The president, who has spent the bet­ ter part of the year attacking political foes, said, “We must gut aside our po­ litical differences if we are ever to set our economy to rights.” And he cited several examples of fed­ eral aid left in place in his budget as a rebuttal to those “screaming that w e’re throwing people out into the snow to die.” As part of his short-term program of relief for the housing industry, Reagan proposed: • Changes in the mortgage revenue bond program to loosen restrictions and broaden definitions of distressed areas so that state agencies can provide mort­ gage funds for 50,000 more home buyers at lower cost. • Removal of barriers under the Em­ ployment Retirement Income Security Act to free a flow of money from pen­ sion funds into lending. • A relaxation of guidelines to ex­ pand the number of potential home buyers who qualify for Federal Housing Administration mortgage loans The moves, some previously an­ nounced, touched on areas addressed by the realtors in their own multi-point plan for improving housing's short-term economic health, but fell short of the full relief sought by the industry. Reagan rejected industry calls for a mortgage subsidy program of up to $1 billion a year for five years, as Sen. Richard Lugar, an Indiana Republican, has proposed. “You recognize, as do I, that budget- busting bailouts will only aggravate the interest rate problem — the underlying problem in the housing industry,” Rea­ gan said. By and large, any negative reaction to Reagan’s speech was muted, possibly in an attempt to keep open the indus­ try’s line of communication to the White House. But Frederick Napolitano, president of the National Association of Home Builders, described the president’s pro­ posal as “too little, too late." “Those programs won t stimulate immediately the production of new homes and create the jobs needed to help turn the economy around,” said Napolitano. Ambushed settler shoots Palestinian TEL AVIV, Israel (UPI) — An Israeli settler on the West Bank shot and wounded a Palestinian Monday in fighting his way through a mob of about 100 angry demonstrators who am­ bushed and burned his car near Bethlehem. Six people, five Palestinians and one Israeli soldier, have been killed in 12 days of violence protesting the dismissal of three elected Arab mayors on the West Bank because of their PLO sympathies and refusal to deal with the region’s new Is­ raeli civilian administration. More than 40 people, Arabs and Jews, have been injured. In Jerusalem, Prime Minister Menachem Begin s coalition narrowly won a crucial parliament vote on an interim budget, assuring its survival at least through April 25, date of Israel’s scheduled withdrawal from the rest of the Sinai. The budget passed 59 to 57. Begin, who almost lost a confi­ dence test last week, had threatened to call new elections un­ less he won the budget vote. Parliament is recessing at the aid of the week, giving Begin a month’s respite from opposition attempts to topple his coalition, which clings to power with a one-vote majority. Violence in the occupied West Bank continued for the 12th consecutive day, although authorities said the protests were subsiding. In the only serious incident reported, about 100 Palestinians ambushed a car driven by an Israeli settler near Bethlehem on the road to Jerusalem, Israel Radio said The protesters showered the car with rocks, shattering the windshield, and hurled burning tires at it, according to the radio account The car caught fire and the settler, Yigal Dror, jumped out and opened fire at the protesters, wounding one of them, the radio said. Dror, treasurer of the Etzion bloc of settlements, was ques­ tioned by police and four Palestinians were later arrested and charged with assault with intent to kill Troops slapped a curfew on the village of Khader, site of the ambush, the radio said. or sealed off by troops. Seven other Arab villages were also either put under curfew A general strike, also in its 12th day, kept much of West Bank and parts of the Gaza Strip closed despite the arrests of hun­ dreds of merchants over the past week for refusing to open their stores. The conflict broadened this weekend with Israeli Arab organ­ izations declaring a general strike to begin on Tuesday in Israel proper in sympathy with the 800,000 West Bank Arabs Tehran takes on fresh look; country continues struggle to develop Islamic republic Editor’s note: Vincent J. Schodol- ski is the first UPI reporter allowed into Iran since July 1980. He de­ scribes some of the ways Tehran has changed — and remained the same — in the following report. (UPI) TEHRAN. Iran - The crowds are gone from Talaghani Street, so are the tea vendors and so are the 52 Americans who were held hostage here for 444 days. Three years after the revolution that toppled the late shah and 14 months after the release of the hos­ tages, Iran is still struggling to build an Islamic republic, and Tehran has taken on the look and feel befitting the capital of such a state. While the intensity of anti-Ameri­ can feeling seems to have lessened, the sentiment remains, and the ques­ tion most often asked a visiting American reporter is. “How did they let you back here? " Tehran is calmer, more orderly and quieter than it was two years ago when U.S. news organizations were banned. The tension generated by the hostage crisis is gone. The U.S. Embassy compound is deserted except for a few men in olive green fatiques who guard it stu­ They still call themselves the dents following the imam s line" and while they are no longer keeping anyone in, they are still keeping peo­ ple out “No, you can’t go inside,' one of them said when asked for permis­ sion to have a look Another lazily practiced with a soccer ball on the embassy steps The students, who have held the embassy since Nov. 4, 1979, appear to be using the building as a sort of anti-American showpiece The walls outside the embassy compound have been whitewashed and new anti-American slogans have replaced the old ones. It s no longer death to Carter, but death to Rea­ gan. Scrawled on the walls next to the embassy gate is an appeal to the mi­ especially norities of America, blacks and Indians, to read the Ko­ ran and rise up in Islamic revolution. A government ban on the use of private cars has eliminated the dusty, smelly traffic jams that once plagued the capital. Portraits of Ayatollah Ruhoilah Khomeini, Iran’s religious leader, still dominate the wide boulevards and have been joined by those of many of the nation's leaders killed in the past year of political unrest. Iranian women, from Iran Air hostesses to young students, wear traditional head scarves, and more and more women have adopted the full length black cape called the cha­ dor. On the doors of Tehran s main ho­ tel are signs warning women guests to dress in line with Islamic codes of modesty. While life in the city ap­ pears more normal than in the hectic days of the revolution, problems linger Lines still form early in the morn­ ing as people rush to get allotments of basic foodstuffs. Rationing is in force and controlled by local mosques A lively black market flourishes in everything from eggs to gasoline to soap powder. A pound of meat on the black mar­ ket costs about four times the offi­ cial price and American cigarettes, when available, cost more than $5 a pack. Rumors about the health of Kho­ meini come and go. Western diplo­ mats say the 82-year-old ayatollah is weak but able to carry out routine business between long periods of rest. They say there are no signs of a major power struggle shaping up as Khomeini gets older, but point out efforts are still under way to select a council of experts to choose his suc­ cessor. After selling recently published books containing U S. State Depart ment documents seized inside the embassy, the young man running the revolutionary bookshop offered his American customer a 10 percent dis­ count "See. Iranian people are nice. even to Americans,” he said Editorials THE DAILY TEXAN □ Tuesday, March 30,1982 Viewpoint Change the qualifications Once again the Texan is news; this time for the editor’s race — or lack of one. Two candidates had been gearing up for the race. Their first hurdle was getting certified by the Texas Student Publications Board. Friday night the board first certified both candidates, then de-certified one of them. Two days later they looked into the parliamentary validity of the decertification, decid­ ed they had been right in doing so, and adjourned again — leaving us with one candidate for editor. The board has a list of qualifications; certain journalism courses must be completed. Those courses are no secret, and anyone who wishes to run for office knows what they are. One candidate, journalism major Lisa Beyer, had completed all the courses. Plan II major W. Gardner Selby, the other candi­ date, lacked two courses. J314 (copy editing); and J324 (layout, graphics and editing). Both students have worked several semesters on the Texan. Qualifying statem ents These are the strongest arguments against Selby: why didn’t he get the courses; and if he was not going to take the courses, why didn’t he try to change the qualifications before the deadline? These problems no doubt influ­ enced several board members in their decision. But are these particular qualifications essential? Do courses alone qualify one to be editor? Though knowledge of newspaper design is important, should someone be denied the editorship because he can’t lay out a page? Further­ more, simply taking a course does not ensure proficiency, and work experi­ ence can be as valuable as a class. It is also harder to get courses in the crowded journalism department if you are not a journalism major — it’s hard enough for journalism majors to get in. Perhaps Selby could have gained admission by admitting he needed them to run for editor, but how much are we expecting? Several people meet the qualifications each year, but few want to run for editor. Only one candidate met all of the qualifications this year: could it be that we are qualifying ourselves out of business? When we do get students who want to lead, shouldn't we encourage them instead of turning them away? The TSP Bored Rules Was the board knuckling under to administration pressure Friday when they decertified Selby? Probably not; it was probably something worse. The TSP board was probably passing the ol’ buck straight on up to the administration to let higher-ups take the heat. After a reversal threat, de-certifying was easy. The Monday morning meeting was ludicrous: the board showed its usual slavish obedience to rules — the handbook requires that the board abide by Robert’s Rules of Order, but this time it was obvious that no one on the board knew the rules it supposedly abides by. That’s trust in rules over reason if ever it existed. In the end, Beyer s campaign manager was called in to find the Robert’s citation proving Selby’s decertification was valid. The meeting was quickly adjourned. The actions of the board were sinister, silly, stupid, shrewd — who knows? The most important thing is not what they did, but what they did it for: they protected the sanctity of the rule book. Getting down to basics This brings us to the fundamental question underlying qualifications: how rigidly should any qualifications be adhered to? One board member grouched, “I know what you want, John — you want no rules at all.” That’s wrong. Rules are not bad, but rigid ones are. (Were I an anarchist, I would simply skip the meetings.) It boils down to a distinction between law and justice. Some people feel that it is better for the law to be simple and solid; others feel that laws should be no stricter than reason allows them to be. TTius the first school trades off a measure of injustice for the security of rigid laws; without rules, they say, the structures ruled by them will fall apart. This absolutist form of government is good for children and idiots: they need their rules etched in stone. But for a society of thinking women and men, it is better to subject rules to a higher rule of reason. It can be said that those who favor more malleable rules open the law up to subjectivity and corruption; this is certainly possible. But for those of us who have seen subjective ends met through the application of rigid rules, the thinking answer is always preferable. And always include a good appeals process to clear up the mistakes. The essential question is this: what is more just? It is easy enough to see what would be fair to Selby, but what about fairness to Beyer? She, after all, did get through all of the courses. And what about fairness to the students who might have run for editor had they known qualifications could be waived? This mess no doubt prompted the buck-passing. Will we have laws and little justice, or justice but no law? Steer the middle course, helmsman, and let reason be your guide. Time for change The story is almost over; Selby probably will not appeal the latest decision. I am not saying I want Selby to be editor of the Texan, nor have I taken a stand supporting either candidate. But I do support Selby’s candidacy. Here's the point of this long tirade: Selby’s qualifications were close enough to be a judgment call. But the board has so straightjacketed itself with rules that it could not exercise that judgment — unless the rigid rules were an excuse to use that judgment against him. I say the board should have passed the buck — not to the administration, but to the students, whose right it is to vote for their editor. Students can decide whether they are willing to trade course qualifications for experience, and can judge the candidates by writing samples, discussion and debates, as is usually done. The editor qualifications must be loosened — not to lower the quality of applicants, but so as not to miss applicants of high quality who might not fit the journalism department mold. Qualifications should not be done away with completely, but should be made waivable by vote of the board. That would introduce some reason into the process. Politics is a very dirty business, and it brings out the seamy side of people who involve themselves in it. It is obsessive, like Tolkien’s ring: those that want to possess it find themselves possessed. It is sad to see them thus changed; it is good to see them return to normal after elections. It’s healing time again. Over m y typewriter there is a photograph o f a dead Salvadoran guerrilla, lying in the mud. His face has been blown away. It is one of the goriest things I have ever seen, and is totally unsettling to ev e ry ­ one who sees it The m an has a message: how im portant is the day-to- day when people die? There are many things in this world worth liinng for, and certainly things worth dying fo r There are things that live beyond us: ideas, causes, hopes and dreams. The Texan editorship is not one o f those things. It lasts a year, and the editor can only do so much to influence the University — or even the newspaper. Im portance is relative, p e r­ spective is most important. John Schwartz Page 4 Racial preferences in school admissions By LINO GRAGLIA Responding to my comments at the recent Human Issues Forum, Mr. Nolan F. Ward, chairman of the Texas Employment Commission, argued (Texan, March 10) that “affirmative action” in university and graduate school admissions can be justified as payment of a debt owed to blacks (Ward does not discuss “af­ firmative action” for Mexican-Americans) by whites for past injustices. “ Affirmative action” in granting admission to insti­ tutions of higher education means the preferring of some individuals over others on racial grounds by lowering or ignoring the usual admission standards for members of the preferred racial group. In practice it generally means, not merely bending or shaving, but virtually eliminating standards for persons of the pre­ ferred races in order to meet pre-set racial quotas or “goals.” In the famous Bakke case, for example, Mr. Bakke, a white, was denied admission to a state medi­ cal school — he was not even placed on the waiting list — despite his GPA of 3.5 and MCAT scores above the 90th percentile, while members of preferred races were admitted with GPAs as low as 2.1 and MCAT scores below the 30th percentile. Closer to home, at the UT law school the median LSAT score for whites is above 665 — about the 90th percentile — and the median GPA is above 3.5; but blacks and Mexican-Americans are regularly admitted with lower GPAs, as low as 2.1 and LSAT scores in the 400s (below the 35th percentile) and even in the 300s (below the 11th percentile). In a few extreme cases in past years, blacks have been admitted with LSAT scores in the 200s (200 is, of course, the lowest possible score); the law faculty has repeatedly rejected my re­ quests that any minimum scores be established for non­ whites. The law faculty is willing and, unfortunately, able simply to ignore the ordinary admission criteria in order to fill a de facto quota of about 25 percent for non­ whites, a substantial proportion of whom must be black. I never met a rejected white applicant or the parents of such an applicant who did not consider this unjust and violation of their civil rights. I can only point out to them that, unlike busing for school racial bal­ ance, this is not something that has been ordered by the federal courts — although the federal courts refuse to enforce the 1964 Civil Rights Act’s clear prohibition of such racial discrimination — and that the situation is within the power of the University president, the Board of Regents, the governor and the state Legislature to change. The basic defect of Ward’s attempt to justify racial preferences as compensation for past disadvantages is the basic defect of all racism: it ignores the individual and deals with people solely on the basis of racial groups. Apart from the difficulty of classifying people by race, it is inconsistent with the basic principle of democracy that all people are of equal moral worth, regardless of race. Even if this principle may now safe­ ly be ignored, the granting of racial preferences in ad­ mission to universities has little or nothing to do with compensation for disadvantage. Race is a very poor proxy for disadvantage; income level, for example, would be a better proxy if one were needed and appro­ priate. There are a disappropriate number of blacks, for example, among the poor (as measured by federal poverty levels), but there are nonetheless many more poor whites. There is today, happily, a large black mid­ dle class, and it is to these blacks, not to the children of fatherless welfare families, that racial preferences in university admissions are most likely to be granted. Blacks from middle, upper-middle or high income class families and with highly educated parents are regularly or automatically admitted while much better qualified whites from low income homes and with parents of lit­ tle education are denied admission. Mr. Ward, for example, tells us that his father is or was a university professor with four degrees from a major university — a family background that most whites, myself included, can only envy. If Mr. Ward was just graduating college, applied to the UT law school, and identified himself as black (which he would be asked to do), the ordinary admission standards would nonetheless be ignored to whatever extent might be necessary to admit him. Mr. Ward is highly educat­ ed, a high state public official and enjoys a higher than average income, but if his children, if any, should apply to the UT law school today they may confidently expect to collect further, if necessary, on the “debt” owed to them by the much less fortunate white applicants. Ward sees in this the hand of justice, merely the collection of his due and the UT law faculty for its own reasons, agrees with him; but not many of the rejected white applicants would agree. This reply to Mr. Ward has already grown too long for me to discuss here the question of how racially pre­ ferred law school students in the bottom half of all ap­ plicants can be expected to compete in law school and as jobseekers with classmates in the top 10 percent. The UT law faculty is not in control of admissions out­ side the law school — or the effects of racial prefer­ ences on the individuals preferred, on others of their race and on the general public’s perceptions in racial matters. _______________ ___ ______ Graglia is a professor in the UT School o f Law. "THE BASIS OF OPTIMISM IS Nail biters, imperialists will survive | By STACY MEIER 1 ■Boston Globe columnist Ellen| Goodman thinks the human race has I come a long way, but that we all — H the nail biters and the empire build-1 Hers — still have a long way to go.I HShe’s realistic She’s optimistic. And ■she writes with an eye for possibility, jj scribbling down her trust that we will H survive, that we will invent new for-j | Hmulas for a better wav to be. I She’s profoundly intelligent, with a I ¡¡teen-age daughter, a Pulitzer Prize] la n d a vegetable garden to her nameH I Her words float around inside my of«| ¡¡ten lazy mind, and they stay theH i I somehow: “I have never been espe-i Icially impressed by the heroics of the! |people convinced that they are about! I to change the world. I am more aw edl I by the heroism of those who are will j ling to struggle to make one small dif J I ference after a n o t h e r H l ^ H H K i The key reason that I read Good-i i man’s syndicated column is because| ■ she is a human voice whispering be-i tween the pages of city stabbings and ¡legislative yawnings. She makes! ¡news come alive because it's ou ri ¡news. She’s got the latest between ! i men and women, reporting about ¡deeper rift between men and womenfi ¡than pay scales or legal rights. A dou-H ¡ble standard of intimacy, of need for if ¡connections and sharing i And she’s got the scoop on spring.¡¡ ¡“Spring fever,” she wrote, “germi-ll ¡nates questions, not answers. It is all [great, amorphous, rebellious I At an Austin Women’s Group pres-II jentation earlier this week, Goodman|| I talked about the American need to g [hold onto traditions while trying tog ¡change. In her friendly northeasternj|| ¡accent, she summed up the conflict H |that “we want it all.” Women hi the [job market want a home too. Andfi [men, trying to make a reliable in-[| ¡come, want to be fathers too. T h e f ¡women want to prove their potential, || ¡and die men want “to be the kind of|§ ¡father they wish they’d had.” Good-¡i man underlined die improvements H she thinks, as an “observer,” diatjjg we’ve made and that we need to m make for a more communicative life-IS (style. Her insights were simple, lucidgf tand w elcom e^ .,. V~ • . MB ■But die best thing about EUenlj ¡Goodman is that die thinks we wiligj all survive. The preaching of world’s end, she wrote, is "the oldest cult on earth: every man for himself. And to my ear at least, that isn’t a sermon of jj survival. It’s the same old pathetic | | preaching of humanity's defeat.” ■ ■ I t seems so important to read anda remember words like that^ ^ H H B li M eter is an English stu d e n t i r i n g L in e It’s no handout This is directed to those students who are Like myself and receive Social Security checks. Along with your form checking on your attendance at UT, you received a bit of bad news This news being that even full time summer school students will receive no aid from Social Security during the May through August months. I don’t know about you, but four months with­ out Social Security checks puts a Large hole in my budget. On top of that, Social Security checks will be cut by 25 percent in September and eventually cut out completely within the next three years. I feel this is very unjust. The money I receive is money my father earned over a period of 28 years of hard work. He never received any benefits from this money because he died too young to ever receive Social Security himself. Reagan has no right taking away this money that I fully deserve. If you feel as I do, I urge you to write your congressman. It will only take a small amount of your time and may just help keep you in school. One letter will not do it, but there are thousands of students at UT who are receiving Social Security. And your one letter may turn into just one of many and that could lead to a change. T eresa R ivera C hem istry ’Winning nuclear war’ During the presidential election campaign, Mr. President made public his opposition to draft registration. Shortly after his election, he was silent. Later on, he became vague and evasive, saying only that “we will be dealing with th a t... down the road someplace.” What road? The road to El Salvador, Guatemala ... Carib­ bean Basin? The road that is mapped and navigated by Alexan­ der the Great Haig and Mr. Reagan is the road of political aggression, military intervention and physical confrontation. Like the road of President Johnson’s Gulf of Tonkin Resolution, President Nixon’s Guam Doctrine, President Reagan’s road to "military superiority” is the road to nuclear war and annihila­ tion. The notion that “nuclear war can bring victory” has come from Mr. Reagan’s foreign policy advisers (Mr. Colin Gray and Keith Payne). Mr. Gray is now associated with Herman Kahn in the Hudson Institute, a “warhawk Think-Tank.” Not long ago, a physicians’ committee brought to light the real absolute devastation of nuclear war. “In the event of war 80 percent or more of the people in the target area would die instantly, many of the survivors taking weeks to die would be screaming not for a doctor, but to be shot” as one person put it. No matter, 80 percent or more of the physicians would have died, and anyway, the hospitals, drugs and blood supplies would have been destroyed. This is what “winning a nuclear war” would mean, for vic­ tims and victor alike. Believing nuclear confrontation is tanta­ mount to WWI and WWII is like believing that the sun revolves around the earth. Reagan’s advisers’ idea overshadows the phi­ losophy of Hitler, who lacked the option of nuclear destruction and its dangerous view. A ustin Paregoric not funny Ronald Brown, vice president for student affairs, is to be commended for his liberal view of some of the difficulties a young college mother encounters arranging for competent child care while attending classes. I’m pleased the University has no written rule that prohibits babies from attending when mothers are unable to make other arrangements for their care. There was one statement, however, that perpetuates a haz­ ardous practice. Mr. Brown stated that the mother might want to give the baby a dose of paregoric to keep it quiet. Can all readers be counted on to recognize humor when they read it? Paregoric is a camphorated tincture of opium. It contains opium or morphine with benzoic acid, camphor and oil of anise. The alcohol content is about 45 percent. The opium group of narcotic drugs is among the most powerful, acting by pro­ ducing depression of the central nervous system. These drugs induce sleep and relieve pain. Even though opium has been used in medicine since the third century B.C., it is dangerously addicting. Drugs should be used when needed - not for the convenience of others. No child should be subjected to a powerful, addicting drug for the sake of “sleeping through the lecture.” B etty J. Dunn, RN, MSN A ssistant P rofessor UT School o f Nursing DOONESBURY by Garry Trudeau sbhajors.rmtyourb about to SEE BUT PRETTY. BUT 7?€HWW CDmMSTt&RS&ONNEmiS j MAT I HA^THBRRSTSLM^niASP m , oem & m isa STmnsovrm M -W X.G U I. ASTHtS0-2'6BNBNB?\ PH0V5HX6, ÍT15 BUTONB BLBMENTOF A m /* lam *s66i& m i$uuH p\ (JOERPHOlDSREYBAL tUNUM$BEJN6 \ \i£N 6w epio*xm iB m iw eM j \JEF5. FROM SUCH SJRTFS MCARA6UAH I PROB Cfth MOUNTSOtRET-BACtWMAOS HBRB UBSBB A NtCARAem m - 2 i STRAFfNO A U.S CRUISE SHIP.. h o w tt. 6BNBRAL. V r 1 330 Democrats challenge new rules By BRIAN DUNBAR i BRIAN DUNBAR Daily Texan Staff The Texas Democratic Party op­ poses part of a plan adopted by the Democratic National Committee Friday that would change the make­ up of delegates at the 1984 national convention, a party official said Monday. Joe Gagen, staff director for the state party, said Texas Democrats object to a section of the proposal that would allow states to choose delegates to the national convention in a “ loophole primary,” like the Texas Democratic primary of 1976. In the 1976 primary, Democratic presidential candidates were al­ lowed to field three representatives in each congressional district. The . . top three vote-getting delegate can­ didates in each district were then au­ tomatically seated at the national convention. Carter’s delegates received 48.9 percent of the 1976 primary vote while Sen. Lloyd Bentsen received 21.3 percent. Carter won 92 of the 98 delegate seats allotted to the prima­ ry, with the other six going to Bent­ sen. Gagen said the Legislature would be pressured to pass a bill allowing a loophole primary, but he did not say who would apply the pressure or who would be given an advantage by the passage of such a bill. “ It's hard to tell who would benefit. Everyone thought Bentsen would benefit in ’76, * * but Carter won all the delegates,” Gagen said. Unless the Legislature changes the law, the 1984 primary will follow the same guidelines as 1980. Under those rules, any candidate receiving 15 percent of the vote at any level of elections — precinct, county or state — is guaranteed proportional repre­ sentation at the next level of dele­ gate elections. The plan adopted by the national committee Friday also creates a pool of 550 delegates, to be appointed by state party officials, who will go to the national convention uncom­ mitted. Gagen said Texas' share of the uncommitted seats probably would go to state and local party of­ ficials and some of Texas' congress­ . .. men, such as House Majority Leader Jim Wright of Fort Worth Texas Democrats also object to a provision of the plan that allows the Iowa precinct caucuses and the New Hampshire primary to retain their positions as the first two delegate elections in the nation. Texas Demo­ cratic Chairman Robert Slagle, in Washington for the meeting of the national committee, said last week, “ I still have a problem on why New Hampshire and Iowa — which nei­ ther represent in microcosm the Democratic Party or the the popula­ tion of the United States — should have the privilege of going first, while the rest of us poor slobs have to wait. ” Tuesday, March 30, 1982 □ T H E D A IL Y T E X A N D Page 5 Don t miss J E R O M E COX at A L P H A O M E G A Ministries for Christ Campus News in Brief Study Break Tonight 8:30 Education Building Al Kiva Room 104 THE DEADLINE FOR SUBMITTING ITEMS TO CAM PUS NEWS IN BRIEF IS 1 P.M. THE DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION. NO EXCEP­ TIONS WILL BE MADE. EACH ITEM MAY AP­ PEAR ONLY ONCE. ANNOUNCEMENTS ORIENTAL A AFRICAN LANGUAGES DEPART­ MENT is sponsoring the film "The Siege" at 7 p.m. Tuesday in Burdine Hall auditorium. CAREER CENTER U.S. Navy will recruit students from 9 a.m to 5 p.m. Tuesday and Wednesday in Jester Center foyer and Jester Center A115. An interviewing workshop will be at 4 p.m. Wednes­ day in Jester Center 223. HEALTH PROFESSIONS OFFICE Harvard Medi­ cal School students will recruit students from 9:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. Wednesday in Geography Building 234. A focus group on dental school application procedures will be at 3 p.m. Tuesday in Burdine Hall 216. PRO 8CANDINAVICA is sponsoring the films “Vi ar samer" and Vi upplever fjaellet” at 3 p.m. Tuesday in Batts Hall 12. PERFORMING ARTS CENTER is sponsoring the play "Annie” at 8 p.m. Tuesday through April 4 in Performing Arts Center Concert Hall. C8ARDA8 is sponsoring international folk dancing at 8:15 p.m. Tuesday in Texas Union Building Quadrangle Room. MEETINGS PHI CHI THETA will meet at 6:30 p.m. Tuesday in Graduate School of Business Building 1.218. Pledges will meet at 5:45 p.m. AMERICAN MARKETING ASSOCIATION will meet at 7 p.m. Tuesday in Texas Union Building Quadrangle Room. UT ARCHERY CLUB will meet at 7 p.m. Tuesday in Anna Hiss Gym. LECTURES EDUCATORS FOR SO CIAL RESPONSIBILITY is sponsoring a lecture “The Nuclear Arms Race: A Threat to Us All" by Bishop L. Matthieson at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday in Hogg Building 14. ART DEPARTMENT is sponsoring a lecture "Ber­ nini’s ‘Speaking Marbles’: On the Development of the Italian Portrait Bust From the Late Fifteenth Century Through Summer 1623” by Irving Lavin of Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton, N.J. at 8 p.m. Tuesday in Art Building 1.102. The lec­ ture "The Joy of the Bridegroom's Friend: Smil­ ing Faces in the Renaissance" by Marilyn Lavin of Princeton University at 4 p.m. Tuesday in Art Building 1.120. M U SIC DEPARTMENT is sponsoring a discussion "Careers in Music" by David Baskerville of the University of Denver and recording engineer James Harmon at 10 a.m. and 2 p.m. Tuesday in Music Building East Recital Studio. C L A SSIC S DEPARTMENT is sponsoring a lecture “ Peregrination and Poetry: Thematics in Aristo­ phanes’ Frogs” at 3 p.m. Tuesday in Waggener Hall 116. ASTRONOMY DEPARTMENT is sponsoring a colloquium “ Gravitational Collapse, Neutron Star Collisions and the Generation of Gravitational Waves" by Stuart Shapiro of Cornell University at 4 p.m. Tuesday in Robert Lee Moore Hall 15.216B. GERMANIC LANGUAGES DEPARTMENT Jour­ nal Club is sponsoring a lecture "Anhleitungsli- teratur vom 17.-19. Jahrhundert" by Gottharde Fruhsorge at 4 p.m. Tuesday in Batts Hall 201 B’NAI B’RITH HILLEL FOUNDATION is sponsor ing a lecture "Judaism and Christianity: Yester­ day, Today and Tomorrow” by Rabbi Samuel Stahl at 8 p.m. Tuesday at 2105 San Antonio St. NATURAL SC IE N C E S COUNCIL is sponsoring a lecture "Unified Education" by Rodger Williams of Clayton Foundation at 3 p.m. Tuesday in Tex­ as Union Building 4.224. The lecture "Uranium and Plutonium: From Dream to Drama” by John Wheeler and Jane and Roland Blumberg will be at 1:30 p.m. Tuesday in Texas Union Building 4.224. The movie "Alien" will be shown at 4 p.m. Tuesday in Texas Tavern. The council will meet at 7 p.m. Tuesday in Hogg Building 100. MEDICAL ENGINEERING DEPARTMENT is sponsoring a lecture by John Howell about solar cooling, active systems at 3:30 p.m. Wednesday in Taylor Hall 137. LIBERAL ARTS COUNCIL is sponsoring a lecture "Astrology and Your Personality" by William Nethercut at noon Tuesday in Geography Build­ ing 230. A meeting will be at 6:30 p.m. Tuesday in Batts Hall 201. Friday is the deadline for any junior wishing to apply for a scholarship. Appli­ cations are at the West Mall Office Building 110. DURHAM NIXON-CLAY COLLEGE INTENSIVE ENGLISH Classes forming for March 29 — TOEFL/University preparation — Nine month comprehensive course — Short courses and private instruction — Small classes/conversational method — Auth. under federal law to enroll non-immigrant alien students (I-20) N ew registration hours: 10am to 2pm & 3pm to 5pm 8th and Colorado/2nd floor 478-3446 PIG G Y ’S BAR & GRILt 2801 Guadalupe Free Coffee with any breakfast purchase of $1.00 or moro Mon.-Fri. only 5am -l 1am Breakfast Specials 3 Breakfast Tacos Served with hath brow n potatoes 2 eggs, h a sh brow ns toast or biscuits, gravy Above breakfast with sausage or bacon $2.40 $2.25 $2.50 Happy Hour 1 lam -7pm Mon.- Fri. 00 Margaritas M r Draft Beer $1.00 Longnocks THE AUSTIN CLASSIC FEATURING NFL PLAYERS V -* rrL + _ J 1 i W orte On P ap er E x h ib itio n and S a le C u rren t Work by U n iv e r s ity o f T e x a s A rt S tu d en ts March 29 - A p r il 2 , 1982 T exas Union Eastw oods Room Sponsored by The Texas Union F in e A r t s Committee and The UT D epartm ent o f A rt Give us lhour. Well give you the way to higher grades and more free time. Would you like to: □ Raise your grade average without long hours □ End all-night cramming sessions. □ Breeze through al! your studying in as little as over texts. 1 3 the time □ Have more free time to enjoy yourself. □ Read 3 to 10 times faster, with better con­ centration, understanding, and recall Evelyn Wood works — over 1 million people, including students, executives, senators, and even presidents have proven it. A free 1 hour demon­ stration w ill show you how to save hundreds of hours of drudgery this year (as well as how to increase your speed immediately with some simple new reading techniques). It only takes an hour, and it’s free Don't miss it SCHEDULE OF FREE SPEED READING -LESSONS You'll increase your reading speed up to 100% on the spot? FINALS START IN 7 WEEKS TODAY 4 p.m. & 7:30 p.m. Reading Dynamics Cambridge Tower M.L.K. Blvd. at Lavaca (across from U.T. campus) - 9 *EVELYN WOOD RE AQiNG D y NAMlCS * U«S COMPANY EVELYN WOOD READING DYNAMICS NFL pro and former Texas Longhorn Doug English, with Lonnie Rodgers, 1982 Capital Area Chapu ter MDA Raster Cnil lild Tickets available now... $3.00 Don’t miss the chance to watch your favorite N F L players tee off at the Great Hills G o lf Club to benefit M D A April 3 and 4. Y o u ’ll enjoy a great weekend while helping the Muscular Dystrophy Association. The Austin Classic is presented by the Austin Jaycces, with all proceeds to benefit M D A. Two-day tournament tickets are available now for only $3.00 at all area McDonald’s restau­ rants. Tickets are also available for other Austin Classic functions including a Friday night banquet and Saturday night Country Western dance at the Double Eagle. Call 478-5666 for addi­ tional information. The Austin Jaycees also thank Southwest Airlines, The H yatt Regency and The Sail and Ski C enter for their support. Page 6 D THE DAILY TEXAN □ Tuesday, March 30,1982 \Jazz in Austin I I I,,, ' d I, •< k \<>n lnii It 11 ¡ h i m v f n+hDth i d i I d tu n ' i /< h \ h i : : Si n^ct ■■v»- W e e k n ig h ts . 8 p m - 5 a m S a t u r d a y s . 11 p m - 5 a m i I fVLit i Q n ^ i P ' j b * i r R d d t o » T h e U n i v e r s i t y o f Tp*¿»s a t A u s t i n KUT90.7Jm : SAVE ; MONEY : WITH : COUPONS T e x a n M a n y a d v e r ti s e r s in the r u n D a i l y coupons t h a t can save you m o n e y on m a n y products and services. Clip these r e g u l a r ly and s a v e y o u r s e l f s o m e money. FEELING OVERWHELMED BY STUDIES? RASSL/Learning Services is offering free, short, non-credit classes beginning April 5th. Enrollm ent is Monday-Friday, 9 a.m .-5 p.m ., in Jester A332 (471-3614). These skills can also be developed on a self-paced basis in our Independent Study Lab. Study Techniques College Reading Skills Speed Reading GRE V erbal Review GRE M ath Review LSAT Review Writing Workshop Reducing Test Anxiety Stop P rocrastinating Reducing Math Anxiety COUNSELING. LEARNING. A N D CAREER SERVICES * Married students form housing group By STEVE VINSON Daily Texan Staff University promises to study move from Deep Eddy complex give them inform ation in the quickest, easiest way for all involved. We’ll m eet with them in any sized group they w an t.” About 18 m arried student housing residents have form ed a group to air questions to U niversity offi­ cials about the coming relocation of residents from the doomed Deep Eddy complex on Lake Austin Boulevard to soon-to-be com pleted units nearby. The group appointed a com m ittee of three Deep Eddy residents and one Colorado apartm ents resi­ dent to approach University Housing and Food Ser­ vices directo r Robert Cooke with its concerns. The four, Claudia Barker, of Colorado, and Paul Goldborer. Tayoba Ngnenge and M ark P ierce, of Deep Eddy, w ere charged by the group with com ­ piling a specific list of questions and presenting them to Cooke. The group plans later to solicit problem s from other m arried-student housing resi­ dents and possibly to invite Cooke to address a fo­ rum. Cooke said Monday he would be glad to address such a forum and to help alleviate any concerns on the p art of m arried students. “ S ure,” he said. “ If they w ant inform ation, w e’ll But, he said, “ I would prefer to avoid the kind of m eeting we had when Brackenridge was closed, which turned out to be just an excuse to raise hell.” The m arried-student residents m et Sunday night a t Deep Eddy to exchange inform ation and suggest possible courses of action for the uncertain tran si­ tion period. Chief among the problem s discussed was w hat would happen if the Aug. 15 date for the move from Deep Eddy arrived before the new apartm ents w ere habitable. Debbie Almquist, wife of civil engineering Ph.D. candidate Charlie Almquist, speculated that those Deep Eddy residents who w ere assured housing might be asked to move to the Colorado or G ate­ way ap artm en ts for about two months until the new apartm ents w ere com pleted. They then would be asked to move again, she said. Students who signed m arried-student housing contracts before March 1, 1980 are guaranteed housing as long as they rem ain m arried students, but those signing contracts afte r that period did s< knowing that some housing was being removed o; demolished and that they m ight be subject to evic tion. Almquist said non-priority residents of th Colorado and G atew ay apartm ents m ight be asked' to move to m ake way for priority students from the Deep Eddy apartm ents who a re w aiting for space in the new complex being built on the site of the old Brackenridge duplexes. Cooke said there should be no problem with the new apartm ents not being ready in tim e for stu­ dents displaced from Deep Eddy to move in. “ We re dead on schedule,” he said. He said he is so confident in the ability of con­ tractors to com plete the structures on tim e that he has not even considered the possibility of students having to find tem porary housing between the time Deep Eddy is closed and the tim e the new apart­ m ents open. Nevertheless, he indicated he would be flexible. “ If they’re talking about a day or tw o,” he said, “ we re not going to inconvenience a lot of people. But if it's six months late, th a t’s som ething else.” Motorcycles, three cars damaged in accident By RICHARD GOLDSMITH Daily Texan Staff One woman was injured, and three cars and several m otorcycles were damaged a m an d riv in g a w hen battered Ford Ranchero had a string of collisions that began at Duval and 24th stree ts and ended at 24th and Whitis Ave­ nue Monday night, police said. U niversity police said the m an was arrested for driving while intoxicated a fte r a t­ tem pting to leave the scene of the accident. U TPD O fficer M ichael F ranco said the first collision occurred on 24th Street just west of the Duval Street inter­ section about 7:50 p.m. According to reports, the driver continued on 24th and several m otorcycles struck parked near the Texas Union Building and then clipped a in front of sign the guard booth at 24th and Whitis. His car then struck a second car, injuring one person, and then struck a third ca r that was parked, causing it to hit the car parked in front of it. Celebrate PASSOVER with th* Messianic Jews of Austin & Friends Seder & D inner W e d April 7, 5 4 5 p m University Baptist Church 2130 Guadalupe $2 OO person. M ake r e s e r v a t i o n » b y A pril 2. Call N ancy 4 7 8 -8 5 5 9 Immigration Law Immigration laws and regulations have become more complex than ever before and the end is not in sight. The release of the final Report of the Select Commission on Immigration and Refugee Policy and the pressure within the Congress for immigration reform will undoubtedly lead to further change. At the same time, the public is constantly confronted with sophisticated problems involving foreign investors, multi-national corporations transferring personnel to the United States, and fam ily relationships JONES & BENNETT Professional Immigration Representatives 208 W estgate BMg U22C olorado Austin. TX 78701 A ttorneys-at-law F re e Consultation Ph 512-476-0672 Jaime’s Spanish Village F ine M exican Food Open for Lunch and Dinner Happy Hour 4-7 M-F FOR A REAL CHALLENGE TRY A MARGARITA JAIME 8th & Red River Resv. 476-5149 by JUDI S H EPPA RD M IS S E TT yyn ?>n AN EVENING LECTURE WITH RABBI SAMUEL STAHL, s a n a n t o n io JUDAISM AND CHRISTIANITY: *V\LL YESTERDAY, TODAY AND TOMORROW" TUES., MARCH 30 2105 SAN ANTONIO S T i i > > n 8:00 PM 476-0125 PARSONS SCHOOLOF DESIGN In c o lla b o ra tio n w ith the Am erican College in Paris, Parsons School of D esign offe rs art stu ­ d ents from colleges and art schools thro u g h o u t the United States an op­ p o rtu n ity to live and study in Paris during th e ir sophomore year. Programs are offered in: ■ R N E AFTTS AND ILLUSTRATION ■ PH OTOGRAPHY ■ INTERIOR DESIGN The sophom ore rather than the more traditional ju n io r year has been chosen for this program because, fo r the art student, the co n tin u ity of the last two years of undergraduate study is particularly important. SOPHOMORE YEAR IN PARIS Students com pleting their sophomore year credits in Paris have a choice regard­ ing the rem ainder of their undergraduate education. They may return to th e ir home cam pus" for the c o m p le tio n of th e ir degree work, or remain in Paris and com ple te the Parsons B.FA. degree there. Students participating in the Parsons/American College in Paris pro­ gram live with French families; in independent rooms; or in apartments throughout the city. For a catalogue fully describing the pro­ gram, please call (212)741-8910, or send the coupon. A wild & woolly workout using jazz dance m ovem ents & swinging m usic for fitness, friendship & fun! CAMPUS AREA CLASSES Y W C A -l8 th & GUADALUPE SAT. 9 :1 5 & 10:05 10:15 & 11:05 APRIL 3-M A Y 8 CALL JUDY 4 5 4 -7 3 9 6 STUDIO 29-29th & RIO GRANDE M-W 5:30-6:30 T-Th 10:00-11:00am 4:00-5:00pm CALL VALIER 4 4 7 -6 7 3 3 A - V SteuKMt Qdfa* ‘Soyx, 512 238 487 0 H U N T , T E X A S 7 8 0 2 4 HAS OPENINGS FOR Gen. Counselors & Counselors for swimming archery horseback sports riflery camp crafts Meeting on: March 30 at 7:30 Delt House 2801 San Jacinto Any Questions Call: 478-9455 n a t u r a l s c ie n c e s MARCH 29 W fE K APRIL 2 TODAY 1:30 PM: DR. JOHN WHEELER, THE JANE AND ROLAND BLUMBERG PROFESSOR OF PHYSICS SPEAKING ON "URANIUM AND PLUTONIUM, FROM DREAM TO DRAMA." UNION RM. 4.234 3 PM: DR. ROGER WILLIAMS, A DISTINGUISHED RESEARCH SCIEN­ TIST WITH THE CLAYTON FOUNDATION, SPEAKING ON "UNI­ FIED EDUCATION." UNION RM. 4.224. 4 PM: FREE MOVIE - ALIEN TEXAS TAVERN SPONSORED BY NATURAL SCIENCES COUNCIL THE TEXAS WRANGLERS ARE ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS FOR MEMBERSHIP MARCH 29-APRIL 2 REQUIREMENTS: • GPA of 2.75 or above • Willingness to participate in campus and community affairs • Desire to excel in Intramural Sports FOR APPLICATIONS GO BY THE STUDENT ACTIVITIES OFFICE (4.310 STUDENT UN­ ION BUILDING). Name Address C ity____ w — •__» ¿ •» PARSONS/AMERICAN COLLEGE IN PARIS PROGRAM 66 Fifth Avenue, New York, N Y. 10011 Please send the Paris Catalogue to. State- -Zip_ 30 $51,343.71. Pac, $230.78. tatio n $5134.23. • Pro-M oPac South Austin for Mo- • Anti-MoPac Economical T ranspor­ for Austin N eighborhoods, • Anti-MoPac Coalition to Save B ar­ ton Springs, $1990.66. • Anti-MoPac Zilker P ark Posse, $1963.65. The last campaign spending reports to be filed before the Saturday referen ­ dum showed that pro-MoPac groups took in about $50,000 in contributions during the reporting period, while the about anti-M oP ac PACs $ 12,000. received Neighbors for MoPac received $41,560 in cash contributions of more than $50, and $3,209 in 69 cash contribu­ tions of less than $50. Industrial Properties Corporation of Dallas and Gerald D. Hines of Houston each gave $5,000 to Neighbors for Mo­ Pac, while Wells Branch of Austin gave $3,000 to the campaign to extend the ex­ pressw ay. The Neighbors for MoPac report also showed a $2,500 contribution from River City Excavation and Paving of San An­ tonio, and 10 $1,000 contributions from various other donors. Anti-MoPac groups received $3,823.50 in contributions of less than $50, and $8,755 in contributions of $50 or more. Austin voters will go to the polls Sat­ urday in a nonbinding referendum on whether to extend MoPac Boulevard north from U.S. 183 to Burnet Road and/or south from Loop 360 to U.S. 290. The reports, showing campaign spending from Feb. 23 through March 24, indicated that political action com ­ m ittees had spent the following sums: • Pro-M oPac Neighbors for MoPac, Armstrong blasts attorney general By JOHN EHLINGER D aily T exan Staff Land Commissioner Bob Arm strong said Monday that A ttor­ ney General Mark White has failed to adequately m anage the state s legal interests and that White is spending too much tim e running for governor instead of taking care of the attorney general’s office. Armstrong is running against White and R ailroad Com mis­ sioner Buddy Temple for the D em ocratic nor|ination for gover­ nor. "M r. White has proven incapable of handling the s ta te ’s legal problem s com petently," A rm strong said a t a Capitol news con­ ference. "Had Mr. White been in private practice, he would today be worried about being sued for malpractice. His re­ sponse, however, has been to ask his clients, the people of Texas, to overlook his shortcomings as attorney general and elect him governor.” Armstrong said White’s failure to appeal the annexation of an offshore well near Port Arthur is an example of incom­ petence. If it had wanted to annex to protect the environment, as Qalveston has done, Armstrong said that would be under­ standable. But, ‘ this is an inland city that just wanted a tax grab of that money out there in the Gulf,” he said. The well produces more than $70 million a year in revenue, and Armstrong said his concern was to protect that money for the Permanent School Fund. White was unavailable for comment. Call Days Evenings & Weekends In Austin: 1801 Lavaca, Suit* 104 Austin, Tx. 78701 512/472-8085 In Dallas: 11617 N. Csnt. Exprwy. Dallas, Tx. 75243 2 1 4 /7 5 0 -0 3 1 7 Educational Center CLASS STARTING THE WEEK OF APRIL 12th Hillel Campus Jewish Center 2105 San Antonio PASSOVER $ 10.00 w ith activity card, $12.00 w ith o u t Reservations m ust be made now Luncheon A dinner served a ll week KOSHER FOR PASSOVER Call 4 7 6 -0 1 2 5 for reservations Tuesday, March 30, 1982 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Page 7 TICKET WINDOW 55TH TEXAS RELAYS SCHEDULE M sm orial Stadium , U niversity o f Texas, A u stin , Texas Wednesday, M arch 31 1 00 p m Decathlon Thursday, A pril I 12 00 p m D ecathlon 6 00 p m. 10.000-Meter Run (Invitational) will be run im m ediately a fte r com pletion of D ecathlon Friday, A pril Z—M orning Events 9 00 a m Javelin , Collegiate. P re lim s and F inals U 00 a m. D iscus, Collegiate, P relim s and F in als FIELD EV EN T QUALIFYING 9 00 a m . Long J u m p —C ollegiate Shot Put-C ollegiate High J u m p —Collegiate 1100 a m Pole V ault, Collegiate RUNNING EV EN T PR ELIM IN A RIES 9 00 a m 400-Meter H urdles, Collegiate 400 Relay. Jun io r College 400 Relay, Collegiate Sprint M edley R elay, Women Sprint M edley R elay, Junior College Spring M edley Relay, Collegiate 110 M eter H urdles, Collegiate 100 M eters. Collegiate 1600-M eter Relay, Junior College 1600-Meter R elay, Collegiate 800-Meter R elay, Collegiate RUNNING EV EN T FINALS 12 00 p m D istance Medley Relay. Collegiate 12 00 p.m 3200-Meter Relay, Collegiate Friday, A p ril 2—Afternoon Events RUNNING EV EN T PR ELIM IN A RIES 2 30 p.m 400-Meter Relay, Women 400-Meter Relay-H igh School 100-Meter Hurdles, Women 110-Meter Hurdles. High School 100-Meters, Women 100-Meters, High School 1600-Meter R elay, Women 1600-Meter R elay, High School FIE L D E V EN T FINALS 2 30 p m High Ju m p , High School Long Jum p . High School Discus, High School Shot P u t, High School Friday, A pril 2 - E v e n in g Finals 6 30 p.m High Jum p , Women Long Jum p , Collegiate Shot P ut, W omen (P re lim s and F in als) 400-Meter Hurdles. Collegiate 400-M eter Hurdles. Women 3200-Meter Relay, Women D istance Medley Relay. Junior College 100-M eter Dash. High School 100-Meter Dash. Women Spring Medley R elay, Collegiate 3200-Meter Run, High School 5000-Meter Run. Collegiate 400-Meter Relay, UT G irls 400-Meter Relay, UT Guys 3200-Meter Relay, High School 800-Meter Relay, Collegiate 5000-Meter Run, Women Saturday, April 3—M orning E vents FIE L D EV EN T PRELIM S AND FINALS 10 00 a m Javelin, Women T riple Jum p. Collegiate Pole Vault, High School Pole Vault, Collegiate 11 30a m Discus. Women Saturday, April 3—Afternoon Events FIE L D EV ENT PRELIM S AND FINALS 2 30 p m High Ju m p, Collegiate 3 3 0 p m Shot P ut, Collegiate RUNNING E V E N T S -A L L FINALS 2 00 p m 3000-Meter Steeplechase, Invitational 2 15 p m 6400-Meter Relay, College-University OPEN IN G CEREM ON IES 3 00 p m 100-Meter Hurdles. Women 3 10 p m . 110-Meter Hurdles, High School 110-Meter Hurdles, C ollegiate 3 2 0 p m 100-Meters, Collegiate 100-Meters, Invitational 3 40 p m. Sprint Medley Relay, Ju n io r College 4 00 p m 400-Meter Relay, UT Co-Ed 4 05 p.m 3200-Meter Relay, U niversity 4 20 p.m. D istance Medley Relay, U niversity 4 35 p.m . Sprint Medley Relay, Women 4 45 p m 1500-Meter Run. Collegiate 1500-Meter Run, Women 5 00 p.m 400-Meter Relay, Junior College Clyde Littlefield 400-Meter R elay, Collegiate 5 15p m 1600-Meter Relay, High School 1600-Meter Relay, Women 5 30 p.m J e rry Thompson Mile, Invitational 5 40 p m 160OMeter Relay, Ju nio r College R e l a y ' C ° U e g l a t e W estern Auto Parts Sale! Save Today thru Sunday TICKET PRICES ALL SESSIONS MEET TICKET $8.00 (M u tt be bought prior to April 2) FRIDAY MORNING & AFTERNOON $3.00 for ovoryono FRIDAY NIGHT $4.00 Adults $3.00 kids thru high school and UT students with blanket tax SATURDAY $5.00 Adults $3.00 kids thru high school and UT students with blanket tax Decathlon is FREE! No Reserved Seats! Siftl Many ’60-'75 6 cyl. Fords. With exchange. 75-2009-1 R ebuilt A ltern a to r ' ' / A m p o , Many '62-71 f Buicks with- I M l a M ] 75-1303-9 b s S m c j í outA.C. Exch, O ther sixes 11.20 to 2 4 .00 o th e r sixes 2 0 .6 0 to 6 3 .2 0 M a c P h e rs o n S tr u t R e p la c e m e n t C a r tr id g e % & V* in. square drive. Reg. 7.99. Each. 45-5002,03 P u ro lato r Im port O il F ilte r Many popular sizes. 74-5300 ser. M 4 9 Six* F C 0 2 0 . 74-5303-8. 6 .9 9 P u ro lato r Im port A ir F ilter ^ 9 8 9 Trap dirt & b dust. Size a FCA24. P 74-5327-7 O t t o six ss 4 .4* i s 8 .4* Save 15%— Autotuna or B osch Tune-Up Kits on Sale! Each. 64-6500- 6614,75-2150-65 5 Pc. Ratchet Sot FitsSAE AM 6 metric. 2 9 45-2265-2 Your Cholea— B osch or NGK Spark Plugs Sure fire. Es. 76-2108 ser. 76-3150 ssr. i Impact Drive Sot M L 4 45-2775-0 * Electrical Test Kit For home & auto use. 45-4921-8 ^ F m 2 Ton Cable Hoist Use as hoist or m tolas 66 6¡ winch 9 45-6140-3 ■ J F 20% Off— Import Starter Exch. 75-3100 ser. Boech Distributor Cap and Rotor 76-2154 ser. Each. 81 -5500 ser. C m i v J d 0 8 1 R e p la c e m e n t M o to r M o u n t 76-9040-7 4 8 4 1 Other slsae 4 . 4 0 t o 1 6 .0 0 20 % O F F — B ra k e D ru m '78-'80 Omni, Hor- 4 0 4 0 izon. 76-1518-6 8 8 | O t h e r s iz e s 2 6 . 4 0 t o 4 4 . 0 8 20% Off—Disc Brake Rotors, Too 20% Off— M R i Holley Repair K it R j I»—~ Many '67-71 8 cyl GM cars. Ea. dPg 74-8777-0 20% Off— Head Gasket Aa Low As O t h e r s iz e s 4 .1 S t o 7 .7 5 Tough One Plus Muffler Original replacem ent quality muffler for m ost U.S. cars, light trucks. Ea. 77-5501-21 Fiberglass Belted Tire % W P 1 5 5 - 1 3 B la c k w e ll T u b e l e s s P i u s 1 .4 4 F.ft.T . E s. O O Csn UMswaS mm **»• , asstsest 155 13 P15S/S0RI3 P165/S0R13 AR7S13 P1S5/80RI3 CR78 13 P1S5/75R14 CR7Í-14 P 19V 75RI4 DR/ER7S-14 PJ0V75R14 FR7S-14 P21S/75RI4 GR78-14 PI1V75R15 GR7S i5 P22V75R15 HR7S 15 P2 35/7 5R1S | LW7S-15___ Magnetic S pars Key H older Attaches to any metal surface. 22-2603-3 AJI pnce* plus F I T igeebrMy no* *mp*'6d Sale prices good thru Sunday at the follow ing stores; Hours 9 to 8 Monday thru Saturday 10 to 5 Sunday O tootf a t C o n g r e s s R d 4 4 2 7851 7 th S t. s t P le a s a n t V a lle y . . . 4 7 A 7 2 8 4 2 2 0 5 A n d e rs o n L a n e ....................................4 5 1 -0 1 5 U In te rre g io n a l H w y. a t C a p ito l M s** . . . .4 9 6 -8 7 3 1 - - - T T O f f i 1 m m ^ e m A B d H h A - mlf » I «.■MnilUtP'dWiiCliMiiPUIcy.et.xMeuodKrUWMeMSPholzPwOMViwnAaneH t o e e n *» * * » r * 1 »« «* *» mmww» aw e • p u s * iK-ano far »• mm em w it M MW « h i p- a .. wcuy •* -ta x * R», N.. fa. *»' m s **e » gm j p * * m a H S M B d p K k w tx» cinnnct S» n w n i Sm I» I W l ess»SHw. i r f e f M l l r l l M s a * ato ■ ■ W O l C l I I f U l l l l t h e A uto & x n l v C o n z w iv company 1 "* Au®° —F Rfe 80 UpflCMM Tha foomy comfort of a L OmmWPnRmmyou iw b a j&MBMÉt iNou Ntaa. entertain - W É d l M . The (inset qaOtyMNfcucBon enhances g *to in o w *ieo 1 fu r Id nr 10 *4 .0 0 fo r p r i n t in g 10 n u n , , , 2 0 fo r L J J i t i o n J . a J t»r./« - your n.tnx* ,n 5 C ((U S I d i n i p jr., t In r .,rL, ly a ' t fur, L Pizza Inn It’ll cover you up. It’ll keep you warm Besides, it says you have good taste w hen it com es to Tequile Two Fingers. Order one up the Tequila and the Dorm Shirt. Just fill out the coupon below and send along $ 6 .9 5 for each shirt. The rest is up to you Send check or m oney order to Two Fingers Tequila Merchandise*Offer P O Box 0 2 6 0 9 . Detroit, MI 4 8 2 0 2 Please send m e $ 6 9 5 for each Dorm Shirt ordered Dorm Shirt(s) I have enclosed Specify w om en s size(s) Small Large M edium Extra Large A T A N am e Address City State Zip No purchase required Allow *1 6 weeks for delivery O ner good tn Coniinentai U S only Void w here prohibited by law Michigan residents add sa es tax 'Her expires A ugust 31. 1962 £ 1981 Im p o rte d by Hiram W alker 8 S o n s Burlingam e CA T equila 8 0 P ro of Product of M exico a n d b o t t l e d inc Two Fingers is all it takes. 3000 Duval 477-6751 TUESDAY NIGHT BUFFET ALL U CAN EAT 3.69 PIZZA-SPAGHETTI-SALAD BAR 5-8:30 r THE DAILY TEXAN □ Tuesday, March 30,1982 ‘Rosie’: a riveting look at wartime propaganda By MARIE MAMONEY Special to The Texan “Prelude to War"; su­ pervised and produced by Frank Capra for the United States Army; and “The Life and Times of Rosie the Riveter” ; directed by Connie Fields; at 7 and t p.m. Tues­ day in Jester Auditorium. After the United States’ en­ try into World War II in De­ cember 1941, the government and the media — particularly the motion picture industry — collaborated in an effort to counteract two decades of iso­ lationist rhetoric and to mo­ bilize all sectors of the nation for a war about which many citizens knew little and about which many had been taught not to care. CinemaTexas’ double-bill­ ing of “Prelude to War,’’ the first film of the Office of War Information’s “ Why We Fight” series, and Connie Fields’ “Rosie the Riveter,” a documentary about the role of women in World War II, shown together with three cartoons produced during the war, presents a sobering com­ the extent mentary on to which media was — and is — used to manipulate the na­ tion’s consciousness. to convince The “ Why We Fight” series was designed, ostensibly, to inform soldiers about the an­ tecedents of the war. But in practice, the “ Why We Fight” series, and “ Prelude to War” in particular, amounted to an attem pt the armed forces that the Earth could be divided into a “ Free World” and a “Slave World.” Connie Fields confronts one aspect of the government’s and the media’s propaganda during the war, the attem pt to persuade women to join the “ hidden arm y” of industry, in “The Life and Times of Rosie the Riveter.” Fields skillfully interviews with integrates lower-middle-class women, both black and white, who had been part of the work-force during the war, with newsreel footage and advertisements which depicted the female in­ dustrial worker as a well- pressed, well-dressed, well- coiffed white woman. The unavoidable conflict between the “real” Rosie, who worked to make a living, and her Madison Avenue and Office of War Information counterpart, who worked simply out of pa- t r 't i c fervor, fuels Fields’ film. sim p ly the course of Fields’ In film, is made the viewer keenly aware of the extent to which the government and media had been careful throughout the war to state that the women who were keeping the war industry in motion were not workers, but w ere d isp la c e d housewives. The connection between industrial work and housework was emphasized in one newsreel: drilling metal was “just like” punching holes in a tin of scouring pow­ der, cutting metal for shipfit- ting was “just like” cutting fabric for a dress, and so on. According to government and media propaganda, the patri­ otic female worker acknowl­ edged the “ fact” that her job really belonged to “ some sol­ dier” ; hence, she was willing to relinquish her job when he A scene from ‘Rosie’ returned. After the war, the media, which had previously “pooh- poohed” women’s concerns about leaving their children in day care centers, began to de­ nigrate women who “ sacri­ ficed” their children’s wel­ fare jobs and their suggested that the most po­ form of “ self-realiza- tent for tion" for women was child­ b e a rin g . W ith p a ra n o id vehemence, the media began to reinforce the notion that had informed their propagan­ da all along, that “ the family was solidly founded on the fa­ and th e r a s p a tr ia r c h breadwinner and on the mother as cook, housekeeper and nurse of the children.” Entertainment Page 12 Fonda, Hepburn, ‘Chariots’ win top 1981 Oscar awards HOLLYWOOD (UPI) — Henry Fonda and Katharine Hepburn won the Academy Awards for best acting in “ On Golden Pond” Monday night, a tribute to the ailing Fonda’s lifetime of creating classic American characters for the screen, and giving Hepburn four acting Os­ cars, making her the all-time Oscar champion. “ Chariots of F ire” was a stunning dark- horse winner of the best picture award, ex­ pected to be a contest between “Golden Pond” and Warren Beatty’s “ Reds.” Beatty won the directing Oscar for “ Reds” — his first award in 12 nominations — and Maureen Stapleton and Sir John Gielgud were named the best supporting players. “ I know that he’s watching you now and I know that he’s very very proud and very hap­ py,” said daughter Jane, accepting the Oscar for Fonda, who has been bedridden for months with a weak heart. “ Mephisto,” a Hungarian film about an ac­ tor in H itler’s Germany, won the foreign lan­ guage film awards. Dan Aykroyd, “Saturday Night Live” TV and movie partner of John Belushi, who died of a drug overdose March 5, managed to pay tribute to his dead friend on the nationally tel­ evised show — defying an order by the show’s producer not to mention Belushi. After Belushi’s death canceled their planned comedy routine, Aykroyd was named a presenter. Presenting the Oscar for best visual effects to “ Raiders of the Lost Ark,” he com­ mented: “ My partner would have loved presenting this award with me — he was something of a visual effect himself.” The show’s producer said he had extracted a promise from Aykroyd before the show “ not to say a word” about the death — arguing it would be an insult to memory of such stars as Natalie Wood and William Holden, who also died recently. John Travolta presented a special academy award to Barbara life’s work Stanwyck, a four-time nominee who never won. for her Stanwyck paid tribute to former close friend Holden, who died last November and whose career she helped launch in the film “ Golden Boy.” Roger Moore, latest of the actors to play Secret Agent 007, presented the Irving Thal- berg Award, for a lifetim e’s work, to Cubby Broccoli, producer or co-producer of the 12 “ James Bond” movies. Gregory Peck presented the Jean Hersholt Humanitarian Award to comedian Danny Kaye or his many years to raising funds for UNICEF. Rick Baker won the Oscar for best makeup — a new category this year — for the grisly on-screen transformation of a young man into a wolfish beast in “ An American Werewolf in London.” “Arthur’s Theme” from “Arthur” won the original song Oscar for the team of Burt Ba- charach, Carole Bayer Sagan, Christopher Cross and Peter Allen. “ Raiders of the Lost Ark" won the Oscars for editing, a rt direction, sound and visul ef­ fects. “Chariots of F ire” took the awards for cos­ tume design and original score. TONIGHT- LEWIS A THE LEGENDS WEDNESDAY- SWEAT A SLAPPY Miller times starring Miller High Life R o o iije 2015 E. RIVERSIDE How C o M tS M i a t R - ALVIN CROW Esra [SAUSAGE AVAILABLE Are You Playing Games With Us? For eight years the Back Room has been known for bringing you the best in live music every night. But we have also quietly m ain­ tained the finest gam e room in town. All our m achines are the latest models, and kept in top shape. If you d id n ’t know, com e on in. If you forgot, com e on back. Stargata • Astro Dlaator • Donkay Kong • D a fa n d a r(l) • Doluxs Astarolds • Omoga Vtaco • CHx(2) • Tamp sat (S) • Cawtipoda (3) • Oalaga (3) Pac Man (3) • Ms. Pac Man (2) • Rad Da ron • Oalaxlan (2) • Praggar • Pool Tablas • Pinball: Black Hala • Jungla Lord • Pira Pawar • Now Stylo Tornado Poos bal I R £ 8 £ £ Drioc-Jn x 6 9 0 2 Burleson Road Radio Sound System 3 8 5 -7 2 1 7 Privacy of Your Auto XXX Original Uncut STORM AUSTIN 6 521 THOMPSON OFF 183 1 Ml S OF M0NT0P0LIS PHONE. 385-5328 24 HOUR ADULT THEATRE COMPLEX V ID E O TAPE RENTALS Ef SALES LARGEST SELECTION - LOWEST PRICES S E E UP TO 6 M O VIES ON S EP A R A TE S C R EEN S FOR THE PRICE OF O NE MARACHINO CHERRY V-HOT ONE CALIFORNIA ■ GIGOLO ■ FANTASY WORLD D ISCO U NT M ILITA R Y • S T U D E N T • S E N IO R S • C O U PLES XAVIER HOLLANDER DEEP THROAT DEVIL b MISS JONES ................ m f i n r I i FOX TRIPLEX 454-2711 6757 AIRPORT BLVD * | R THEATRES-AUST1N1 i m m 3 w e s t g a t e B 892 2775 4608 WESTGATE BL. I | Chariots of Fire (pg) ( 5 :l5 ) - 7 :3 0 - 9 :5 0 MISSING (R) (5 :0 0 )-7 :2 0 -9 :3 5 RAGTIME (PG) 6 :3 0 & 9 :2 0 ON GOLDEN POND (PG) (1 :1 5 )-3 :2 0 -5 :2 5 - 7 :4 0 -9 :4 5 MISSING (R) ( 1 2 :2 0 )-(2 :4 5 )-5 :0 0 - 7 :2 0 -9 :3 5 RICHARD PRYOR LIVE ON SUNSET STRIP (8) ( 12:30)-( 2:1 51-4:00- 5 :4 5 -7 :3 0 -9 :1 5 - ■ C O M ING SOON-' SOME KINO OF HERO" AT WESTGATE, " C A T S ■ PEOPLE AT BOTH THEATRES & ' BLADERUNNER -FOX THE- ■ ■ I ATRE. TUESDAY DOLLAR DAY AT WESTGATE 1 • $ ALL FEATURES IN (B R A C K E T S )-C A P A C IT Y ONLY REDUCED ADULT ADMISSION I | | a m c THEATRES TIM E S SH O W N FO R TODA Y ONL Y A M E R I C A N A ! SCIENCE FU1ISIMNEHURE EXCLUSIVE ENtfiEMENT 1M D8LBY SIEflEO I n sncitl fM H U H N T N I IISCIDNTS 0» MSSIS 4 5 3 -6 6 4 1 7200 hancock orive QUEST for FIRE (S:1S /t2.00l-7:30-9:30 A Q U A R I U S 4 ROBIN HOOD (5 :3 0 /$ 1 .9 0 )-7 :3 0 GREAT WHITE (6 :0 0 /$ 1 .901-8:00 IMORTHCROSS 6 I RAIDERS °,jm LOST ARK (6 :1 6 /S I .901-7:30 MARIELHEMIflGWAY-SCOn 6LBM • N M E E H U T I. 4 4 4 -3 2 2 2 tso o s pleasant valley ho PORKY’S (6 :3 0 /$ 1 .901-7:40 S I OUGHT ¡SIN PICTURES „ (6 :4 6 /8 1 .9 0 1 -8 :0 0 4 5 4 -5 1 4 7 nonthcmoss k ARTHUR (8 :0 0 /8 1 .9 0 1 -8 :0 0 r 1« Y n . M m U f é * ««• R 4 b l - N I 0 4 7 8 * 4 5 0 4 Presents The Culmination of our JOHN H USTON RETROSPECTIVE Featuring Special Guest FRBI RICHARD MOORE, Cinematographer from “AN N IE ' N B I E S C R E E N S Timothy Hutton George C. Scott T o night's program begins a t 7 :0 0 p.m. w ith approx. 30 m inu tes of special clips from HUSTON's up­ com ing film , ANNIE. Follow ed by a question a n d answ er period w ith c in e m a to g r a p h e r , R IC H A R D MOORE. Then: A special free pres­ e n ta tio n of THE AFRICAN QUEEN M m TONIGHT THE TWISTER RETURNS. CHUBBY CHECKER & Special Guests $7.00 AT DOOR TOMORROW ZILKER PARK DSSE BENEFIT THUR: THIEXPLOSIVES FRI & SAT: THE 8KUNK8 4 -5 /6 : TIX ON SALE J A M If BROWN THI GODFATHER O f SOUL / "ONE OF THE YEAR'S TOP FIVE HIMS-EASILY. - Varnon Srart, UPI PAUL SALLY NEWMAN FIELD ABSENCE OF MALICE ^ 5 :2 0 -7 :3 0 -9 :4 0 is klbj NIGHT AT I ■ t u e s THE M OVIES-AU SHOWS $1 ,6 th A nnu al Reeky Horror Costume B irthday B oth A p ril 3. *kk e ts on ’ salo a t aN Presidio Theatres and the Param ount. E ntertainm ent by Esther's Follies. NEIGHBORS JOHN BELUSHI DAN AYKROYD Bogart end Hepburn Page 14 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Tuesday, March 30, 1982 J h L L U X U R Y I B R I B A 3 b lo c k s f r o m c a m ­ p us. C e ilin g fa n s, b a lc o n y , a ll a p p li ­ *37,500, f i­ a n c e s E x c e ll e n t c o n d it io n n a n c in g a v a i la b l e 477-4113 D O R M L I F E D R E A R Y ? Interested in a co n d o m in iu m ? T h e n d o n 't b e a t a r o u n d the b u sh , g e t the to P o in t e C a ll B o b t o d a y a t T h e P o in te C o n d o m i n iu m s 473-8602 o r 476-1509 910 D u n c a n L a n e O R A N G E T R E E C ONDO S o p h ist ic a t e d , u n u s u a ll y la r g e I B R p lu s s t u d y loft, L R w ith fire p la c e , s e p a r a t e d in in g ro o m , p r iv a t e b a lc o n y , o v e r l o o k ­ in g tre e -lin e d stre et, pool, 2 c o v e r e d p a r k in g s p a c e s, n ig h t t im e s e c u r ity . 476-7744 CAMPUS CONDOMINIUMS W e H a v e Them W e h a v e c o m p ile d a c o m p le t e lis t ­ in g of a ll c a m p u s a re a c o n d o s W e a re the C o n d o E x p e r t s R O N H A N N A & A S S O C . 3 5 0 9 Jeffe rson 4 5 9 - 4 8 9 2 G R E A T V A L I J E I B M M o d e l 'C ' e le c t r ic o ffic e t y p e w r it e r , e x c e lle n t c o n d it io n , a n d 7 c a r b o n r ib b o n s *200. <72-1321 _ f I T r J A C K E T N a t u r a l b e a v e r w ith le a th e r t r im , a p p r a is e d v a lu e *1,200, s e llin g fo r *30 0 472-1321. H P 38C c a lc u la t o r . 2 m o n t h s old. P e r f e c t c o n d it io n ! B e s t r e a s o n a b le o ffe r C a ll M a r k . P h o n e 477-2874. 16 B I T c o m p u t e r C A 21 6, 4 8 K B c o r e t h o r ­ o u g h d o c u m e n ta t io n . L o t s a s p a r e s *500. 5 M B h e a d / t r a c k d is c *200, 6 t r a c k m a g ta p e d e c k *150. 478-2054 Buy dir#c> Sava $ $ $ ^ Diamonds! $ ^ ♦ '/3 carat Bock ,>001 A n iw a r p carat carat carat R $350 4 $700 J $995 T $1895 1 H u n d r e d s of s e t t in g s a v a i la b l e a t Y w h o l e s a l e p r ic e s . E a r r i n g s & t D r o p s C a ll M r S t e r n t ' ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ^ 1832 Au»tin N a tio n a l B a n k T o w # r T ♦ 4 7 8 - 4 6 4 9 A p p o in tm e n t O n l y 4 4I r ( AUTOS FOR SALE FOR SALE FOR SALE FOR SALE FURNISHED *FARTM ENT$ TYPING Motorcvcl«*For Sal* Homes-For Sol* Condos-For Sal* Misc*llaneoui-For Sal* in c h 1 t im e *5 69 in c h 2-9 t i m e s ................ *5 49 inch 10 o r m o re tim e s *5 20 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 t iv e D a y R a t e s l t im e 3 t im e s .20 44 i .54 .88 ................ S ...........* 15 w o r d m in i m u m E a c h w o r d E a c h w o r d E a c h w o r d 5 t im e s E a c h w o r d 10 t i m e s ............... S 1 1 c ol 1 1 c ol 1 col 1 *1.00 c h a r g e to c h a n g e c o p y F i r s t tw o w o r d s m a y be .ill c a p it a l le tte rs 25' fo r e a c h a d d it io n a l w o r d in c a p it a l le tte rs. X X X S T U D E N T . 'F A C U L T Y / S T A F F ( P r i v a t e P a r t y A d s O n l y ) C o n s e c u t iv e D a y R a t e s 15 w o r d m i n i m u m E a c h w o rd , 2 T im e s ................... 17 ...................27 E a c h W o rd , 5 T im e s 054 E a c h W o rd , E a c h A d d t l T im e 1 C o l X 1 ", 1 o r M o r e T i m e s ...... 3.18 50“ c h a r g e to c h a n g e c o p y . F i r s t tw o w o r d s m a y be a ll c a p it a l le tte rs E a c h a d d it io n a l w o r d in c a p it a ls, 25* A ll a d s m u s t be n on c o m m e r c i a l a n d p r e p a id OCAOUNC SCHEOUIC M e fid o y Texan ................. Friday 7 p.m. Tuai d o y T e x a n ................ M o n d a y I I a.m . W e d n e td a y T e x o n ........... Tu e sd ay I I o.m. T hu rsday T e x a n ........ W e d n e s d a y I I a.m . Friday T e x o n .................. Th u rsday 11 a m In Ih e event ef errors m o d e In a n odver- tisem enl. im m e d iate notice m u st be giv e n as the pu blishers ore re sponsible for only O N f incorrect insertion. Alt d a im s h r a d ­ justm ents sho uld be rttode net b t e r t h a n 301 d a y s afte r publication. AUTOS FOR SALE L & M V o l k s w e r k s n e w a n d u se d V W o a r f s R e b u ilt e n g in e s *629 in sta lle d , e x ­ c h a n g e W e b u y V W 's a n y c o n d it io n 251- 2265 1976 G O L D D a s h e r w a g o n 64,000 m ile s, in e x c e lle n t s h a p e *2700 444-5156 a fte r 7 ____ ____ p m a n d on w e e k e n d s 78 M U S T A N G V6, A M - F M c a sse tte , A C , ___ o r ig in a l o w n e r. *3,200 474-7181. 7T f i a t l i T s C . 4 r e c e n t M ic h e i in X tire s, W e b e r 2 b a r r e l. G o o d b od y, r u n s se ll! 471-5048 a fte r 6 00 g o o d M u s t p le a s e 1977 D O D G E M a x i v a n C u s t o m in fe r io r a n d paint, V8, A C , c ru ise , A M / F M , 8- tra c k, m a g s 445-5273, a s k fo r P h il. 7 7 f ^ . A C , 7 s p e e d , w h ite , e x c e lle n t c o n d itio n , A M . 'F M 8 -tra c k . 444-9926 a f ­ ___________________ ter 5 p m 1973 M A Z D A R X - 3 st a tio n w a g o n A u t o ­ m a tic , r e b u ilt e n g in e R u n s go o d *1000 or b e st o ffer. C a ll 458-3625 7-10 p m 1980 D A T S U N 2 8 0 Z X , 2x2, G L , 5-spe ed , lo a d e d , lik e new , n e v e r b e e n hot ro d d e d , *11,000 458-1095. H O N D A , 1972 ^ m ile a g e , lo o k s a n d r u n s fin e b e st o ffe r 458-1095 C o u p e F a n t a s t ic g a s *15 00 o r 70 F I R E B I R D 375 hp, p o w e r s t e e r in g , d is c b r a k e s , 350 4-spe ed , A M / F M / C B ste reo , b oo ste r, n e w tire s, v e r y low m ile a g e , c a s s e tt e d ec k, n e w tire s, e x c e l­ lent c o n d itio n . 471-7911. 1976 D A T S U N B210. A C , 38,000 m ile s, n e w b a t t e r y 472-7532 a fte r 7 p .m . K a r e n . D A T S U N *4000. C a ll fo r in f o r m a t io n 453-1640. E x c e ll e n t 260Z c o n d itio n . 79 F I A T B r a v a A C , A M / F M c a s se tte , P S , 5-spe ed E x c e lle n t c o n d it io n *3,900 441-9180 G R A D U A T I O N B U I C K 81 L e S a b r e un- d e r w a r r a n t y , 8,900 m ile s, lo a d e d ! I m ­ m a c u la te , a s s u m e p a y m e n t s o r c a s h , 28 m p g ( h ig h w a y ) . M y job lo ss, y o u r g a in . 258 7757 1980 R E N A U L T " L e C a r " in e x c e lle n t c o n d it io n M il e a g e 13,800, w h ite , su n ro o f a n d g o o d q u a lif y A M / F M c a s s e tt e st e r e o P r ic e *3,000 a n d t a k e o v e r p a y ­ m e n ts, w ill n e go tia te . C a ll 445-5624 in the e v e n in g a n d le a v e y o u r n a m e a n d p h o n e n u m b e r 78 F O R D F ie st a , b eige , A C , s t a n d a r d , g o o d c o n d itio n . *3,200 C a ll 447-9176 a fte r 6 p .m . g a s m ile a g e , g o o d D I S P O S A B L E C A R ’ ! 74 V e g a , 128,000 m ile s F e w o r ig in a l p a r t s . R u n s w ell. *40 0 n e g o t ia b le M a r y 471-1216, 447-4296. 69 R O V E R TC2000, " T h e L it t le R o ll s R o y c e " 4 c y lin d e r , A C , n a t u r a l le a th e r in te rio r, c h r o m e w h e e ls, m a n y e x tr a p a r t s B e s t o ffer. 477-1982. F O R S A L E 1979 C h e v y M o n z a 2 d o o r c ou p e. Y e llo w , V-6, a ir, lo w m ile a g e . *3600. C a ll 459 3161 1978 T R I U M P H S p it f ir e 23,000 m ile s, n e w ste e l r a d ia ls , A M / F M c a s se tt e , lu g ­ g a g e r a c k . *4,200 472-3180 a ft e r 6. 76 P O N T I A C S u n b ir d , A C , A T , A M / F M , n e w tire s. *2,000. 474-7943. 1981 C I T A T I O N , A C , A T , c a s se tt e . S t ill u n d e r w a r r a n t y 8000 m ile s . A f t e r 5 p.m . 4 4 3-4117____________________________________ Motorcycl«-For Sal* 1978 H O N D A 75 0 F 11,000 m ile s . *1485. C a ll S t e v e 837-0398 b e fo r e 8 p .m . M U S T S E L L S a c h s m o p e d . C le a n , g o o d c o n d it io n . C a ll M i k e 454-2316. 74 Y A M A H A 500 T w in . G o o d c o n d it io n . *50 0 o r b e st o ffe r. 451-8553 a f te r 5 p .m . K A W A S A K I 7 M - N e w tir e s a n d h e a d e r. P lu s f a ir in g , sa d d le , b a c k , lu g g a g e B a ­ b ie d *2,000 o r b e s t 476-9267 E N D U R O Y A M A H A '75 off-on stre e t le ga l. R u n s g o o d , lo ts of fu n ! *385. 476-1499 100 P A S S P O R T H O N D ^ ' ? ^ t e 7 ~ t h a n ~ a m ope d , b u t n ot q u it e a m o to r c y c le . 1980, 6,000 m ile s, *450. 327-7104 a ft e r 6:30.___ 1979 P U C H N e w p o r t L m o p e d c o m e s w ith lo c k a n d h e lm e t. C a ll T e r r y a fte r 5 454-6092. M O P E D - P U C H M a x i II. A u t o m a t ic 2- sp e e d *40 0 n e g o t ia b le . 474-7725 e v e n in g s p le a se fa c e h e lm e t, W 9 ~ K A V Y a1 a ^ K Z 400: E x c T lle n t c o n ­ d ition , 75 m p g , e le c t r ic sta rt, b a c k rest, fu ll lo c k, n y lo n c o v e r *1295. A r t ie : 477-6856 ^ p ¥ d ~ Y A ^ h X ’^ 5 0 dVeat m ile ­ a g e Q u ic k . G r e a t o n h ills. L ik e n e w *400. C a ll M i k e 447-3465. 1980 P U C H M u x i M o p e d , lik e new , *450 C a ll 477-5539 o r 444-8248 a fte r 6 p .m 1976 H O N D A X L 3 5 0 , 9000 m ile s, 50 p lu s m p g , re lia b le , *6 0 0 441-2503 1973 H O N D A C L 1 2 5 , g o o d c o n d itio n , g e ts g r e a t m ile a g e , *35 0 C a ll B re t t: d a y s, 445-6910, n ig h t s, 442-0232. Im m a c u - 1981 H O N D A C B 7 5 0 C u s t o m , late c o n d it io n , lo w m ile a g e . *2,295 C a ll a fte r 7 p m . 476-4132 1981 Y A M A H A 550 M a x im , e x c e lle n t c o n d itio n , 3600 m ile s , w ith B e ll h e lm e t *2000 C a ll 478-5373, 474-9207, Bicycl*-For Sal* *5,0 0 off a ll u se d a n d S P R I N G S A L E n e w b ic y c le s . E x p e r t r e p a ir se r v ic e . S tu d e n t d is c o u n t s S o u t h A u s t in B i c y ­ cle s. 2210 S o u t h 1st. M - S a t 10-5 p.m . 444- 4819 a fte r 5 p m E X C E L L E N T C O N D I T I O N 12-speed, 2 4 " S c h w in n V o y a g e u r , M a n y e x t r a s *350 n e g o t ia b le . 476-9162. G r e a t c o m m u t ­ in g t r a n s p o r t a t io n 1 0 - S P E E D P u c h P a t h fin d e r . 2 3 " m e n 's , fu ll e x tr a s, e x c e lle n t c o n d itio n . *150 472- 1321. R O S S G R A N T o u r II 10-sp ee d b ic y c le . 19 in c h fr a m e . E x c e ll e n t c o n d itio n . *100. C a lU 4 5 - 0 1 3 L ______ St*r80-For Sal*______ F O R S A L E P o r t a b l e r e c o r d p la y e r, r u n s o n 220 a n d 110 v o lt s O n l y *35. C a ll 444- 2320. 1977 K A W A K H 4 0 0 . D e p e n d a b le t r a n s - p o r t a t io n fo r stu d e n t, a s k i n g *700. C a ll 478-2858 o r 441-2047, a s k fo r R u s t y . T E A C A -10 3 c a s s e t t e d e c k , V 4 m e te rs, b ia s, eq, g o o d c o n d it io n , *100. C a ll 445- 5 3 5 6 a f t e r 6 p m CO NDO S FOR SALE CO N DO S FOR SALE Musical-For Sal* A M P i x " P R -10 t a p e 7 e 7 o 7 d e r T 't r E /R / P , 'A tr P *35 0 478-2054. _ ^ G R E T S C H G U I T A R F o u r y e a r s old, e x c e lle n t c o n d itio n . T w in tw e lv e s c r e w p ic k u p s . C a l l 477-8170 a fte r 6:30 sa le fo r G U I T A R S - O R I G I N A L la te 5 0 's E p i- p h o n e e le c tric , c o lle c t o r 's , *225 Stra to - c a s te r " K u s t o m M a d e " o v e r *1200 in ­ ve sted , so lid -b o d y e le ctric , s a c r i f ic e *47 5 A c o u s t ic tw e lv e s t r in g " V e n t u r a " P e a r l i n la y h e a d -s to c k 13 5 4 8 0 -9 6 6 7 , k e e p c a llin g . _______________ *625, G ib s o n L6 -2 P E E V E E T-40 b a s s g u it a r , p e rfe c t c o n ­ d itio n *320. H o n d o I I P - b a s s c o p y a ls o p e rfe ct c o n d it io n *230. B o t h h a v e been p la y e d le s s t h a n o n e h o u r P r ic e s n e go ti- a b le C a ll B r u c e 444 5419 a fte r 4._________ C O N N T R O M B O N E . G r e a t b u y a n d o n ly *150. C a ll P a t 480-0925 T R O M B O N E B A C H S t r a d iv a r iu s M o d ­ el 42 E x c e ll e n t c o n d it io n w ith sta n d *650. 480-8632 e ve s._____________ A L I E N N A T I O N R e c o r d s . S p r in g s t e e n a n d B e a t le s B o o t le g s la r g e s t se le c tio n in tow n 307 E a s t 5th, T h u r s d a y , F r id a y , S a t u r d a y 11-6 p .m 472-3058 447-3633, Pets-For Sal* H A N D - F E D v e r y a ffe c tio n a te C o c k a t ie l w ith la r g e c a g e , *100. T o g o o d h o m e o n ly 458-4360 b e fo r e 5 p .m . M A L E G R E Y C o c k a t ie l a n d c a g e *100 firm . C a ll G r e g 472-4283 d a y s, 453-3317 e v e n in g s . F R E E T O g o o d h o m e -8 m o n t h o ld kitty. P la y f u l a n d o b e d ie n t E v e n i n g s p le a s e 474-7725 Hom**-For Sal* 3-2, O R 2-1 p lu s re n ta l, c h a r m , 1 b lo ck E a s t w o o d s P a r k 2914 B e a n n a *89,500 B ill S m it h a n d A s s o c 477-3651, J a n e t G illis, 441-0646. ★CO NDOS^ HOMES - DUPLEXES If y o u w a n t to liv e w it h in e a s y d i s ­ t a n c e of c a m p u s , c a ll the U T a re a s p e c ia lis ts , *39,900 to *120,000 The UT A R E A S P E C IA L IS T Jo h n B. S a n fo rd , Inc. 4 5 4 - 6 6 3 3 R a altora 4 5 1 - 7 2 6 2 to/nffare C ^ nd m iM tm s I t’s an investm ent for the future. Before you invest in a condominium, visit Pecan Square. After you com pare luality, location, and cost, you’ll be glad you looked at ^ecan Square. Located a t 2906 West Ave. 2 bedrooms available 6 blocks north of UT Quiet neighborhood Professionally decorated Fireplace & m icrow ave Swimming pool ' 52” ceiling fans c P e c m S i f l u i f e M odel Open 11-3 D a ily o r by appom lm ent contact L in d a I n g r a m & A i m c . 1306 N ueces 476-2673 fl||H |H b^ondom iniunis with the luxury you’re accustom to On a wooded hilltop in the heart of Austin, The Treehouse sets the standard for University living. The UT campus is just six blocks away, so the pace is an easy one. Starting at $52,500 —lY ivate garage w opener —Panoram ic view of Shoal Creek —Split level hot tub —Fireplace — Microwave M a rk e te d by Linda Ingram i:»6 Nueces 476-2673 M ille r A D ryd e n D evelopers C O N D O M IN IU M S 2 6 1 2 S a n P «d ro T H E G A Z E B O C O N D O M IN IU M S rf»» p m rhft horn* h i flu- th n ff, fh# b f l inv»»lm «ot h r M o m a n d D a d S i g h I in lha haarl of Iho UT aroa, Ih o G a io b a if built a ro u n d a n inviting H o i Tub for a ro h o o d , poag. W a lk to c a m p u s L a r g e e ffic ie n c ie s, 2 B R - 2 B A e f fic ie n c ie s S h u t t le a n d c it y b o *, pool, f u r n is h e d o r u n f u r n is h e d 472- 2147 S T I L L L O O K I N G fo r th a t p e rfe c t lo c a ­ t io n ? B r a n d n e w lu x u r y e f fic ie n c ie s f e a t u r in g C A / C H . a ll n e w b u ilt -in a p p li ­ a n c e s $ S l5 H o w e ll P r o p e r t i e s 477-9W 5 U N D E R W O O D E L E C T R I C t y p e w r it e r J u s t a s n e w *95 474-7181 M g r. No. 1 478-2775 Tuesday, March 3 0 .1 9 8 2 □ T H E D A IL Y T E X A N □ Page 15 Insurance grace period to end Police begin checking drivers Wednesday By HECTOR CANTU Daily Texan Staff A three-month grace period for drivers without auto liabil­ ity insurance w ill end Wednesday, and drivers with­ out proof of insurance will be subject to a stiff fine begin­ ning Thursday, police said Monday. Drivers caught without proof of insurance after Thursday face a minimum $81 fine. Drivers could be finco up to $200 if caught more than once, an Austin Municipal Court clerk said Monday. “ It (checking for proof of insurance) w ill be like a regu­ lar driver’s license check,” Capt. J.M . Cowan of the Tex­ as Department of Public Safe­ ty said “ If the driver does not have it, they will be fined.” Drivers who have bought, but do not have their proof of insurance when stopped by a officer, however, still will have a chance to avoid paying a fine, Cowan said. “ Those people who don’t have a valid policy, and they show one that was in effect when they were stopped, the judge will dismiss the case,” Cowan said. Cowan said drivers also will be subject to proof of in­ surance when applying for driver’s licenses. The grace period, which ran from January through March, went into effect short­ ly after the Texas Legislature passed a bill requiring drivers to have auto liability insur­ ance. “ There needed to be a time period for people to get used to it and for officers to get to know what they could do,” said Lt. Alvin Devane, of the Austin Police Department. “ If a driver gets stopped for speeding, running a stop sign or any traffic violation, it (proof of insurance) will be asked for.” HELP W A N TE D Prison system White’s motion discarded By JOHN EHLINGER Daily Texan Staff U.S. District Judge William Wayne Justice dismissed a motion Monday by Attorney Gen­ eral Mark White to fire Special Master Vin­ cent Nathan for misconduct. Justice appointed Nathan to oversee re­ forms in the Texas prison system that the judge had ordered in 1980. The state had alleged that Nathan and his prison monitors withheld evidence of weapons and contraband possession by inmates. The state also accused the monitors of encouraging prisoner disturbances. White requested that the state be allowed to withdraw the motion to dismiss Nathan, at a court hearing in Houston. “ The state and Nathan are pleased that these issues have been resolved without fur­ ther litigation,” White said. “ As directed by Judge William Wayne Justice, all parties in­ tend to continue to discuss the critical issues involved in this suit.” Justice had combined the state’s request with a hearing on Nathan’s charges that the building tender system was still being used in the prisons. The judge had ordered that the system in which inmates acted as prison guards and assumed administrative duties be abolished. “ The evidence, although obviously incom­ plete, suggests that the defendants have only recently begun to take any affirmative mea­ sures to effect compliance,” Justice said. “ It is most disturbing to learn that inmates about whom this court made express findings of abuse of authority are still seemingly function­ ing as building tenders.” Justice adjourned the hearing until April 15 when Nathan’s charges that the reform orders have not been complied with will be examined. R O O M M A TES RO O M M ATES SERVICES HELP W A N TED R o o m m a te , S J e t w o r k M ost com prehensive service of its kind G et a Sum m er ond, if needed, o Foil room m ate all for one lo w price. W e'll take core of finding the right room­ m ate for you This 7 for I special a v a ila b le for a lim ited tim e only \ Visa 473-2800 M astsrcard 600 W . 28th F E M A L E N O N S M O K E R share Travis Heights house. S175 bills paid 442-6B9L_ to C H R I S T I A N F E M A L E S (2) needed to I block from cam ­ s h a r e large 2 B R apt pus. Sum m er and/or fall. $125/mo. A S P P re fe r graduate student. Call Marsha after 6 evenings 458-6971. ÍB A H O U S E M A T E N E E D E D for 3BR house in Delwood. C R shuttle S120 month plus '-3 expenses. 454-8314 even­ ings. _____________________________ F E M A L E - S H A R E duplex south. CA/ CH trees, backyard A pril 1st S175/ m o n th plus bills M a r y E llen 441-7727 a f­ ter 4 p.m. __ _________________________ _ R O O M M A T E W A N T E D to share 3BR I 'j B A mobile home 20 minutes from campus P riv a te country atmosphere Call M arta 385-9122. R O O M M A T E W A N T E D to share 2 6 R house IF shuttle. S 175 plus 16 bills 459- 5142 afternoons 10:30 p.m. April 1. R E S P O N S IB L E F E M A L E share du­ plex P riv a te entrance, yard, near park. $150, 16 bills. 472-8615 after 5:00. R O O M M A T E N E E D E D to share North Austin duplex $122.50 plus Vt bills. Call 458-4887 anytim e after 9 p.m. R O O M M A T E TO share beautiful 4BR, 2BA home in N E Austin. Two living areas, backyard. $180/month plus V* bills Thru summer. 926-2448. 2 M A L E S seek third to share 3 bedroom apartment in Northwest Austin. $140 plus Vb E Need room m ate til end of se­ mester or beyond. Call E m il or Curt 345- 2 0 9 5 . __________________________________ S H A R E S P A C IO U S house in North Aus­ tin Private bath/bedroom. M ale gradu­ ate/senior, no pets. $200 plus 16 bills 837-3078, 476-9269 F E M A L E S U B L E A S E E to share lovely 23rd St. apartm ent with architecture grad. Nonsmoker, neat, quiet. $175 plus 479-6219 PERSONAL PROBLEM PREGNANCY COUNSELING, REFERRALS & FREE PREGNANCY TESTING Texa« P robU m Prognancy 507 P owoll St root M-F, 8 30-5:00 474-9930 B E A P A R T O F A W O R LD R E C O R D B R E A K IN G E V E N T Alpha Delta Pi and Phi Kappa Psi will have a Guiness repre­ sentative present April 17 to put your record in the book, if you provide the ideas, people, and supplies necessary to break an existing world record. Send your name, ad­ dress and record you the would like to initiate to 2206 Rio Grande No. 109, Austin, T X 78705. TRAFFIC TICKETS Affordable Professional Defense for your Traffic Violations ATTORNEY: Edith L. James Call 4 7 7 -8 6 5 7 Logal Fees; $ 5 5 por city Hckmt $ 8 5 DPS 306 E. 11th St. Suite 1-7 Austin, TX 78701 " l e n t PROBLEM PREGNANCY COUNSELING, REFERRALS & FREE PREGNANCY TESTING T«xa< P robU m Prognancy 507 P owoll Stroot M -F , 8 :3 0 -5 :0 0 474-9930 P R O B L E M P R E G N A N C Y ? Free preg­ nancy testing and referrals. 474-9930 IN S T E A D O F abortion, call 454-6127. M AN W A N T S mistress, 18-25. W rite Box 307, 4502 South Congress, Austin, Texas 78745 DIAL-A-Date — Austin's new and excit­ ing dating service For info, dial 453- 6928 Includes T-shirts P R O B L E M P R E G N A N C Y CO UN SELIN G , R E F E R R A L S & F R E E P R EG N A N C Y TESTIN G Texas Problem Pregnancy 507 Powell St M-F, 7:30-5:30 474-9930 OWN R O O M in 2 bedroom W alk to cam ­ pus. Pool, laundry, CA/CH. $180 plus E . Terry 472-9977. _ P O E T I- G R A M A new and different ser­ vice for any occasion For more infor­ mation call 474-5076, Bryan. S H A R E 3 BR house; quiet attractive neighborhood, yard $125/month plus bills 472-7054. C R A Z Y B U T clean! Roommates need­ ed, share 3BR 1BA furnished home. W/ D, fenced, CR shuttle. P refer females. $125. '/3 bills person M artha 926-9124. R O O M M A T E N E E D E D to share 2-2 A B P apartm ent, $175 per month Call 452-7788 R O O M M A T E- Sh are large F E M A L E bright a iry two bedroom apartment, on IF shuttle Pool. Pleasan t supportive en­ vironment 454-'080. F U N L O V IN G male housemates, stu­ dent and professional, in meeting Austin women Call 478-0470 for Mike, Tony, Johnny or David. interested H E A L T H Y , F U N loving, educated grad­ uate female wants to meet men with equal qualities. Reply D aily Texan, Box D-4, Austin 78712. SUSA N IN Undergrad Business School. How was Taos? Robertos? What about our rendevous? Call me! 467-2354. MUSICAL INSTRUC TIO N H O U S E M A T E W A N T E D . 3-1, large house, yard Close-in, E C shuttle. $132, V3 utilities. Robert, Steve 472-6544 E X P E R I E N C E D P IA N O / G U I T A R teacher Beginners-advanced UT de­ gree. After 1 p.m. 459-4082, 451-0053. TWO S T U D IO U S nonsmoking female students needed to share beautiful spa­ cious house with large yard, ceiling fans, sunroom, H BO , appliances. Off Cameron Rd. Sum m er, fall, spring Call Leslie 453-8943 F E M A L E R O O M M A T E needed Share 4 bedroom duplex. $150/month plus V* bills Washer, dryer, cathedral ceilings. 345-3538 H O U S E M A T E W A N T E D . M /F, 4-2, fire ­ place, fenced yard, carpet, cable, nice, share expenses 837-6831, keep trying. G R A D O R law student to live in spa­ cious house off Enfield. Call 480-0537. ro om m ate R E S P O N S I B L E , N E A T needed, prefer artistic female, 4505 Speedway, across IF shuttle. Creek, re­ laxed atmosphere. 459-8907. W A L K UT, M / F room m ate wanted to share house $170/month plus '/a bills. Call Hank, 478-3936 _________ F O R J U N E 1st M ale roommate needed now to co-lease large, unfurnished, 1BR apartm ent 6 blocks west of campus. A B P , pool, laundry, and nearby tennis. $137.50 each plus $100 deposit. No smok­ ing or drugs. Call Rom an at 480-0971. G A Y M A L E needed to share very nice 3BR 2BA house in Hyde Park. $191.67 plus >/3 bills. 458-1944 after 5:00. N E E D E D M A L E student roommate >r April, M ay in 2BR 1BA apartm ent Rent $180 plus E Call Chris after 6 00 p.m. at 459-5507.____ ___________________ W O R K IN G F E M A L E to share unfur­ nished 2-2 duplex northwest. No smok­ ing. pets. $145. 453-5746 after 7:30 p.m. N O N S M O K E R N E E D E D until M ay 31. F u lly Student preferred, Close to shuttle. After 8 p m. 467-9583. furnished P IA N O L E S S O N S Beginner-advanced. Experienced, qualified teacher. Classi­ cal and improvised styles. Phone 453- 9696 TUTORING E N G L IS H T U T O R IN G Improve your grades with the assistance of a college English teacher who has a Ph D and 23 years of teaching experience with a spe­ cialty in composition. 479-8909 LOST & FO U ND R E W A R D LO ST red longhaired dachs­ hund female "B o o / ' Lost in 26th and M edical Arts area. 472-1776, 452-5691. FOR RENT LO T S O U T H E A S T 5th and Walsh. About 200 sq. ft 1 year lease. 476-0009 TICKETS W A N TED W I L L I E N E L S O N ticket to April 2 con­ cert Not desperate or wealthy. Call 445- 0816. Ask for Jim . SERVICES JE N N I N G S ' M O V IN G and Hauling. De­ pendable personal service, large or small jobs 7 days/week. 442-6181 A R T 'S M O V IN G and Hauling: any area 24 hours, 7 days. 447-9384, 442-0194 CAR IN shop? Rent one from A A Rent A Car 201 E. 2nd. 478-8251. 8-6 Monday- Friday, 9-3 Saturday. SERVICES SERVICES The Laundry Basket 1634 E. 1st 474-2699 5 Blocks East of 1*35 On your way to campus, stop in and try our WASH & FOLD SERVICE. Cost is only 40* per lb., and we STEAM PRESS all pants at no extra charge. (S e r v ic e provided M on.-Sat. 8am-10pm) D O N ' T L E A V E T O WN ! F R E E P R E G N A N C Y T E S T S A N D R E F E R R A L S TO A U S T I N R ES OU R CE S Women's Referral Center 2404 Rio Grande 476-6878 4 blocks from campus P R I V A T E M A IL B O X E S for renf. U ni­ versity Mailbox Rentals. 504 W 24th, or call 477-1915. E X P E R T S E W IN G . Reasonable rates Ju lie 478-7517. O L G U IN T A X Services. Personal-confi­ dential income tax preparation, student, faculty, staff discounts 447-3079 after 6 p.m. B y appointment only, Jesse Olguin. B I C Y C L E , A P P L IA N C E and minor plumbing repair. Top quality work at reasonable rates. Call Bryan after 3 p.m. 474-5076. A S T R O L O G Y A N D Tarot intuitive coun­ seling. Computerized astrology charts (22-25 pages) are also available For ap­ pointment call 454-4060 A S T R O L O G Y A N D T ARO T C L A S S E S . Beginning Wednesday April 7th at 8 p.m. and Saturday April iOth (d a y). For information call 454-4060 and 447-3792 HELP W ANTED B u d g e t Rent-A-Car now has the following positions open •Full tim e service agent, l-9pm, 5 days/ week •Part tim e service agent, l-9pm week­ ends • P a rt tim e counter agent/receptionist, weekends only Apply in person at 3330 Manor Rd. or phone 478-6430. Plants Need person to care for plants in restaurant, approximately 10 hours/week. Apply in per­ son at 311 W. 6th St. LOS TRES BOBOS is now taking applications for hostperson, waitperson and cocktail waitperson. Please apply in person at 1206 W. 38th. Thank you. Word Processor Downtown firm needs law someone with top skills to work evenings and weekend schedule. Hours are flexible. Prefer experience on IB M Displaywriter. Pay negoti­ able, parking provided. Send resume to PO Box Dl, Austin, TX 78712. PAR T T IM E $4-$6/HOUR Ea s y , fun, casual atm os­ phere. S e v e ra l positions. Choose your hours. After 1 p.m., 600 W. 28th, Suite 107. P A R T T IM E F I L E C L E R K needed at downtown law firm to work afternoons. Duties will also involve e r­ rand running and answering telephone. M U S T know how to file both alphabeti­ ca lly and num erically. M ust be good with D E T A IL S . Need resume Parking provided. $3.45/hour Call Ju d y for ap­ pointment at 476-6003. M ale student or m arried couple needed for live-in position with widowed 66 year old retired gentleman in Northwest Hills, cardiac patient P riv a te room, bath, and board provided plus negoti­ able salary in exchange for evening cooking, light housekeeping and live-in situation Please respond with letter/re­ sume/references to D aily Texan, Box D- 3, Austin, TX 78712 The Austin Y M C A seeks the following Cam p counselors for their summer daycam p program M ay 31-July 9. C ur­ rent C P R and advanced lifesaving ce rti­ fication will be required $600 plus/ month. Also seeking swimm ing instructors for our summer swim program M a y 31- Ju ly 16 W S I certification required 20 hours/week, $4 50/hour Applicants for either position must be 18 or over. Experience working with youth preferred. Call 476-6705 (K a r in ). RO O M C L E R K S applications taken for two part time shifts from 2:30 p.m to 9 p m daily F irst shifts, M W F and Sun-26 hours, and TT and Sat-19 hours, a lter­ nating weekly Consider training per­ sons with previous business experience at m inimum wage M ust be available thru spring and summer terms. Apply in person, West Winds Motel. A irport Blvd. and IH 35 DO N 'T W A IT Now's the time. This is an opportunity to grab now. If you have the initiative, ambition, energy, and are looking for a challenge call 443-2839. P R I V A T E R E S I D E N T I A L treatm ent center for em otionally disturbed chil­ dren, aged 4-12, needs a responsible, caring couple to live in. Room and board plus monthly salary and regular days off. 459-3353. S U N B E L T B A K iN G Co needs part time packagers. Afternoon hours, Sunday, Tuesday, and F rid a y, $4/hour. .M ust have transportation and be dependable Apply in person, 7617 Metro. Call tor di­ rections, 385-4692 PROFITA BLE, E X C IT IN G Summer/ sparetim e Beat Reaganom ics! Don't w a it' W rite Lincraft, W279N 2907, Pewaukee, Wisconsin 53072. ¡obs S U M M E R JO B - Cam p Counselor. Working with physically and m entally handicapped near Dallas. Salary, room, board Openings for men. Fo r inform a­ tion call or write Camp Soroptimist, 74) I Hines Place, Suite 123, Dallas, T X 75235. (214) 634-7500 L E A S IN G A G E N T 20 hours'week. Sat­ urday, Sunday and Tuesdays. S a la ry plus commission. Call Cerelle at 451 - 4896 H O M E C O M P U T E RS company "needs ambitious individuals who are seeking either sum m er or career opportunities. No technical experience necessary, as our needs range from m arketing to actu­ al sales For interview contact Keith Wood 441-9192 W E N E E D graduate student note takers im m ediately for science courses. Must be able to type well. P a rad ig m Lecture Notes, 407 W. 24th, 472-7986 R A M A D A IN N Capitol, 11th and San J a ­ cinto has imm ediate openings for part time waitperson and full tim e bus per­ sons/room service attendants. Appli­ cant must possess skills necessary to deal with public be neat and profession­ al in appearance. Apply between 2:30 and 5 p m. No phone calls T E A C H E R S N E E D E D mornings begin­ ning in Ju n e Paren ts' cooperative day­ care near University Call 474-5 01 or 459-4577. C O N ST R U C T IO N C L E A N up,' 15 hours/ week M ust have transportation. Call Terrie, 346-5405. T E L E P H O N E A D V E R T I S I N G for home improvement products. $4/hour plus bonuses. If you're a highly m otivat­ ed individual who likes to m ake money call Tom after 3:30 Monday-Thursday or Saturday 10-4 479-8697 S E L F C O N F ID E N T hard workers need­ ed at Thundercloud Subs 290 and IH35 Days 10:30-3:00 and Saturday nights. 1-5 days/week. Apply before 11am or after 2pm. C H A U F F E U R W A N T E D M ust have li­ cense, good driving record. P a rt time. Call M ike, 472-4125. HOOK S S E A F O O D G rill now accepting applications for the following positions food servers, assistant food servers, pm cooks Apply in person only, 5122 Bee Cave Rd, 3-5 d m M onday-Friday. W A N T E D . P E R M A N E N T part time checkers-clerks. M ust be available evenings, weekends, and holidays. R e­ tail experience preferred. Apply in per­ son at Tom Thumb, 7101 N. L am a r. AC TOR S. SI NG E R S, ~ D A N C E R S and P E R F O R M E R S for Ausfin's original singing telegram service. M ust have own transportation. Call 3 Ring Service. 479-6501. P A R T T IM E activities assistant approx­ im ately 20 hours/week. Cantex Health­ care 474-1411. M A D DOG and Beans is looking for part tim e kitchen help for evenings and weekends. Apply in person, 512 W. 24th after 4 p.m. P A R T N E R W ANTED -duo. Progressive country, light rock, folk. Cape Cod sum­ mer. M ust sing harm ony and lead. Must play keyboards or guitar. 926-9622. S A IL IN G TÑ S T R U C T O R , sm all craft M- F afternoons. Low pay, fringe benefits. 442-8872 after 1 p.m. 43 Y E A R old established appliance com­ pany needs adm in istrative assistant part time. P refer sophomore or junior business m ajor with basic accounting knowledge. M ust be able to work year round, 20 hours/week Call Sam or Alex for appointment 454-4526. M c N a ir's Ap­ pliance, 6225 Burnet Rd. H A W A II JO B S ! Also, affordable hous­ ing and recreation information. Send $2 00 H aw aii Consumer Research, 1330 Heulu, Honolulu, H aw aii 96822. N E W B R A U N F E L S C P A firm is seeK ing M ay and August accounting gradu­ ates Send resume to Fred Matthews, 389 S. Seguin, New Braunfels, T X 78130. T E X A S C O M M E R C E Bank-Austin, needs one permanent part tim e clerk. W ill train. 10am-2pm or 11am-3pm M on­ day-Friday Need to be able to commit through Dec. 82. R eview in 90 days. Do not apply if you need full tim e em ploy­ ment Call or come by. 476-6611 ext. 2506. E O E / A A E G A G W R IT E R / h u m o ris t sought by c a r­ toonist. 926-5359 after noon. S T E R E O T E C H N IC IA N position a v a il­ able with E-Z Corporation Experience required. Benefits. Apply at 500 Chlcon. 476-7772. A ID E F O R private kindergarten school Westlake H ills House, 2-6 p.m. Call 327- 1530 after 5 p m T IT L E C O M P A N Y needs posters-tem- porary part time employment. 8 hour day or 4 hour day. Position requires m a­ ture, responsible individual with record keeping ability. Knowledge of legal doc­ uments helpful Legible printing a must. Apply in person M onday-Friday, 8- 9 30am, 3:30-5pm. 1300 Guadalupe Suite 101. B A N A N A S AN D The Red Tomato res­ taurants are accepting applications for all positions Must be able to work some lunch and some diner shifts. Apply in person between 4 30 and 5:30 p.m. Tues- day-Friday, 1601 Guadalupe. W A N T E D P A R T tim e secretary/recep­ tionist needed for real estate offices. Typing skills. 30 hours/week. 458-1554. JO N AH S R E S T A U R AN T, Austin's fin­ est seafood restaurant, Is now hiring cooks and buspersons. Please apply 3407 Greystone at Mopac 2-5 p.m daily P A R T T IM E cashier needed in womens' specialty store Apply in person to Cindy Berkowitz between 2-5 p.m. Y aring 's 2406 Guadalupe. W A N T E D TW O dental assistants/recep­ tionists One full-time, one part-time Pleasant, relaxed U niversity area den­ tal practice. Please send resumes to Daily Texan, Box D-5, Austin, T X 78712 A R T IS T W A N T E D Experienced"in il- lustration, paste up and design. Salary D O Q. Young and Assoc. 477-8375. I N T E R N S H IP . SellT A D V E R T IS IN G promote, and distribute the D.O.C.A student coupon book. Gain invaluable experience while earning money and college credit. 458-2223 for appointment. P A R T T IM E help wanted, S5/hour. Need graduate students for houseclean- ing service, flexible hours. M ust have own transportation and be dependable. Please call Susan, 458-3017. E X P E R I E N C E D S IT T E R needed NW H ills church, Tues 8:45-1:15, occasional evenings $4/hour 453-0295. NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE FORECAST to 7 PM EST 3 / 3 0 / 8 2 29 53 / 29.06 2 9 . 2 9 \ 29 77 30 00 \ I PEANUTS® by Charles M. Schulz LUCY, U/EVé GOT TO 6ET A RUNNER ON BASE... I PON T SUPPOSE YOU'P LET Y0UR5ELF 6ET HIT ON THE HEAP WITH THE BALL, W0ULP YOU? U P I W E A T H E R F O T O C A S T * The forecast for Austin and vicinity calls for thunderstorms early Tuasday morning with a clearing trand latar in tha day and tha afternoon temperatures in the mid-70s. The wind speed will range from 10-20 mph. Nighttime temperatures will be in the mid-50s. Nationally, tha forecast le rain for portions of the Great Lakes region, the middle Atlantic coastal states and parts of the northern Pacific coastal region. Soma snow Is expected in the northern Rockies. Elsewhere, weather will be fair. B .C . M at You make the 'V\jCRSr P R E S S E D 'U S E k k THE A C R L D FED ER A T IO N OF BOAT FBSPLE. T MAY You Be APR?i>ireD Trie C O M lééKTNER O F A & 0P IÍP THAT F & S E A R / rte S PREH ISTO RIC O M O . THIS 15 THE FIRST TIME I'VE EVER L00KEP PIRECTLY INTO THE EYES OF SOMEONE WHO 15 TOTALLY OUT OF HIS M IN PÍ ~~y by jo h n n y h a rt / r u e . Nv CU&SE / / excMANGE. \ r \ j u t by Berke B reathed BLOOM COUNTY m m e MJCHG ABOUTTHE 56NATÜR. 0Hves...wa¿ N 0 W ...U H ...I UOTEP we sm m -m xi use on we 8UDG6T... JCOURSe I TOP O'NEILL 1HAT I COULDN'T SUPPORT a m m je s il l WHIC WHICH... o O 5AY, WHAT WAS I TALKING ABOUT .^ oh ves. THAT WtP HARTYIN HeFNM'S MANSION LAST NeWttARS. / We also offer you DRY CLEANING, and with this ad you'll receive 2 0 % OFF. We have for your enjoyment a COLOR T.V. and several VIDEO GAMES. 30.00 Double Loaders at 50c per load T rip le Loaders at $1.00 per load G iant Loaders at $1.50 per load OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK 8am-10pm T U T O R IN G TU TO R IN G MATH TUTOR Experienced, professional tutors can help you make better grades. Struggling f f Frustrated on tests f Call or com* by for appointment. M-603a M-301 M-603b M-302 M-316k M-304* M-316L M-305g M-808a M-808b M-362k M-311 M-608ea M-608ob M-325 M427K-L ACC-312 Don't pu t this off until the night before exam. Too late then. STAT-309 ACC-31! • Close to UT campus • L ots of patience • Very reasonable rates • VA approved Also high school courses, SAT, GRE, and LSAT Review 610-5060 p _ f . ucev 600 «V. 28th f t . «77-7003 raT LuceY Office f 03 HELP W A N TED HELP W A N TED TOTAL IMAGE eed a job or extra money? How )out being your own boss with a ilid base California Co. now ex- tnding into Texas. High commis- ons paid on easy to sell reliable oducts that work. Company sup- ies free and complete sales & anagement training. You can in- *st as little or as much time and oney as you like. No warehousing quired. Call now. What do you ive to lose? Dora Northup After 1 p.m. 2 6 0 * 1 6 7 2 i m n s e I STUDENT M EM BERS You have a voice in the affairs of your UNIVERSITY CO-OP Through the Student Members of the Board of Directors Two Student Members will be elected on April 7. Platforms of the Candidates will be in the Texan Mon. & Tues., April 5 & 6. VOTE for TWO Wednesday, April 7 T H ER E W ILL B E N IN E VOTING LOCATIONS. West Mall/Main Mall/East Mall Fountain/Communication Complex Courtyard/Jester Center/RLM/Littlefield Fountain Vt day at Law School & LBJ School/Problem yoting-Texas Union (Those not listed on Register) SERVING LONGHORNS ACROSS 1 Tater 5 “ --------- , a bone...” 9 Flavoring 14 Beverage 15 Hindu tutor 16 Drum call: Var. 17 Monogram pari: Abbr. 18 Old radio union 19 Once more 20 Porch 22 Predicts 24 Verse 26 Carries on 27 Plant genus 29 Doze 30 Hard drink 33 Land masses 37 Erudite 38 Staggering 39 Letter 40 Charms 41 Indecent 42 Eeriness 44 Parcel 45 Thai tongue 46 Affirmative 47 Florida city 49 Alms seeker 53 Putrefy 57 Plow part 58 Day's march 59 Itemize 61 Bath's river 62 Atmospheres 63 Travel agts. 9P- 64 Touchy 65 Franz — 66 Obstacle 67 Potpourri DOWN 1 — cheese 2 Equine 3 Liaison 4 Exploded 5 Turkish noble MONDAY’S PUZZLE SOLVED 3 3 1 1 0 3 3 3 3 3 □ □ □ □ 3 3 0 0 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 □ 3 0 3 3 3 3 3 0 3 0 3 0 3 3 3 3 0 3 3 3 Í Q 3 3 E D 3 0 3 3 0 3 3 3 J J J 3 3 U 3 3 0 0 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 0 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 0 3 3 0 3 Q Ü 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 0 3 3 3 3 3 0 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 0 0 3 3 3 3 0 3 3 3 3 3 3 Q 3 3 U 3 0 3 3 0 3 3 3 3 3 3 0 3 3 3 3 0 3 3 0 0 3 3 E 3 Q 25 Cask 28 Toronto or Chicago 6 Sandpiper 7 Highway sign 8 Sureties 9 Declared 10 Attendants 11 Type style: Abbr. 12 Whorl 13 Periods 21 Danger 23 Self-esteems 30 Vex 31 Employs 32 Jumble 33 Shout 34 Mount: Pref. 35 Salamander 36 Society page word 37 Stemware 40 Cables 42 Bivouac 43 Beer parlor 45 Weakest 47 Gemstone 48 Oriental 50 Dance 51 Love 52 Renovate 53 Transaction 54 Fancy case 55 Coupes 56 This: Sp 60 Label Page 16 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Tuesday, March 30,1982 Advertisement TO EVERYONE WHO'S INTO SPORTS, THIS BURS FOR YOU. ANHEUSÍR BUSCH INC • ST LOUIS RKC SPORTS UPDATE is a prcr-ro rd ed broadcast by the Divi­ sion of R ecreational Spoils de­ signed to supplem ent the aW om a non on this page Inform ation for inclusion on tins 14 hour tape, which is recorded each Tuesday, should be forwarded to G regory Gym J3 Call REX' SPORTS UPDATE at 471-4373 Rec Sports Review Representing the Division of Recreational Sports The REC SPORTS REVIEW is a weekly production by the Division of Recreational Sports, designed to keep the university comm unity abreast of all recreational activi­ ties Editor is Steve Knight Assist­ ant editor is B rett Voss All articles for publication should be forwarded to Gregory Gym 30 by Friday of the preceding week Canoe, riding trips planned Next Thursday, April 8, marks the first meeting of a flyfishing clinic for beginners. Topics to be covered in­ clude equipment selection, casting techniques, knot tying, and a fly tying demonstration. Two nights are devot­ ed to practice casting in the gym and one meeting will be spent casting on Town Lake. The clinic meets April 8, 15, 22, 27 & 29. A $30 ($40 Non-UT) clinic fee includes flyrods, reels, line and instruction. Registration for all Outdoor Pro­ gram activities is in Bellmont 104. Call 471-1093 or PAX 2055 for more information. <‘j i > * - ■ | t ' v- . . *< * >%* >>4 u f t * . ? > ■ -I A Softball battles Mother Nature The Intramural Softball season moves into its third week of competi­ tion after a hectic week of cancella­ tions and rain-outs due to Spring Break and bad weather. Frank Haught and Tim Wilson the plate with two runs crossed apiece as PHI KAPPA PSI tripped the GIMPfRS 8-3 in the Men’s A Division. Scott Sewell and Gary Strawn led a 24 hit attack to aid the CARDIAC KIDS in a 17-8 pounding of the ZBT-A team, and the FOAMÉRS edged SIGMA PHI EPSILON 11-9. Pete Platt drove in Andy Atlas with the winning run in the seventh inning, and TRY IT AGAIN retired the side in order in the bottom of the in­ ning to defeat STRIKE FORCE 5-4 in Men’s B action. A 15-hit assault en­ abled THE EXPRESS to crush the ROUGH RIDERS 13-4, and Phillip Ro­ bins scored three runs to lead the ZBT YANKS past LAMBDA ETA CHI 17-12. Jeff Burger drove in two runs as he went 3-for-3 and Kent Myer excelled defensively to enable CHARLIE HUSTLE to get past the GDI HGHTIN' ARMA­ DILLOS 8-4 in the Men’s C Division. Bob Horne went 2-for-3 and scored two runs as MILLER TIME slipped by the PLAYBOYS 9-7, and the FOUL BALLS edged the PIKE MULLETS 10-9. In the Women’s Division, Toni Als­ ton, Bobbie Holt and Jean Johnston each went 2-for-2 and scored two runs as the COWGIRLS defeated KAPPA DELTA 9-6. Leslie Pettijohn went 3- for-4, hit a home run and scored two runs as the HEN HOUSE 5 egged the BLANTON BABES 8-2, while ALPHA XI DELTA pounded ZTA 13-5. Tim Wilson went 3-for-3 and scored three runs as DELTA GAMMA/PHI KAPPA PSI downed the VARSITY CAFE­ TERIA 8-5 in Coed action. Other games featured DELTA SIGMA PI/GAMMA PHI BETA slipping by the OREOS 11-9, and the FLY BALLS edging DRY ROT 7-6, as Andy Pantos went 3-for-3. In the Faculty-Staff/Law-Graduate Division, the LONE STAR LAWYERS hung the TURKEY BEARDS 9-8, while the ROUGHNECKS shutout the HAY­ WOOD AND BUDDY SHOW 9-0, and the FOOLS ON THE HILL edged LEON'S PEONS 10-8. Club Sports Cycling Club plans to reorganize If you’re into bicycling and want to further your interest in racing, tour­ ing, maintenance or whatever, you may be interested in attending the University Cycling Club’s reorganiza­ tion meeting set for Thursday, April 1 at 8 p.m. in the Texas Union, Room 4.108. The Club has been active now for a year or so, torn between the racing and touring facets of cycling. The meeting will try to help solve the dilemma and provide new direction for the Club. The meeting will cover topics such as future bike repair clin­ ics, group riding clinics, and racing and touring seminars. For more in­ formation, call Paul Tay at 454-8314. Fencing tourney for beginners Here’s your chance to discover Fencing without worrying about get­ ting impaled by a hot-shot fencer University Fencing Club is sponsor­ ing a Beginners Fencing Tournament Saturday, April 10 at 10 a.m. in Bell- mont Hall 302. Entries will be taken at the door before the tournament be­ gins. Entries must be accompanied by a $3 entry fee. The tournament will be scored visually until the finals, which will be electronically scored. A trophy will be awarded to the winner, and rib­ bons will be given to second and third place finishers. For more information, call Scott Berman at 258-8903. Benefit Dart Tournament If you like to shoot darts and like to help a good cause, the University Dart Association has a “special deal just for you.” The Association is sponsoring a benefit dart tournament to aid the Meals On Wheels Program April 2, 3 and 4 at the Texas Union Quadrangle Room 3.304. The competition is designed to keep everyone’s arm warm. Friday, April 2, a Mixed Triples tournament will get underway at 8 p.m.; Saturday, April 3, an Open Doubles competition begins at 11 a.m., followed by the 2 p.m. Women’s Doubles, the 6 p.m. Mixed Doubles and the 9 p.m. Cricket tournament; Sunday, the Women’s Singles tournament begins at 1 p.m. and the Open Singles competition gets underway at 4 p.m. Trophies will be awarded for the top four finishers in all the events ex­ cept for the Saturday night Cricket tournament. For more information, call George Kane at 477-6456. Women Gymnasts qualify Fresh from a first place finish in the Texas AIAW State Meet, the Uni­ versity Women’s Gymnastic’s team used the outstanding performance of all-around winner Cindy Greer to qualify for the regional competition in Memphis, Tennessee, April 1-3. The University team used their best ever team score (138.85) to place third in the meet behind Oklahoma State and Oral Roberts and advance to the regional competition. Cindy Greer led the way once again as she won the all-around title with a 36.15 score, edging out Lisa Hartmann from Oklahoma State. In winning the all-around title, Greer placed first in in the Balance the Vault, second Beam event, and third in the Uneven Bars event. Tennis Club tournament The University Tennis Club will sponsor an in-club singles tournament Saturday, April 3 at 1 p.m. at the 51st and Guadalupe site. For information about the tournament, call Patrick at 474-8042 or Vicki at 445-5688. The Club will also hold a general meeting Monday, April 5 in Gregory Gym B-3 at 7 p.m. Officer elections will be held for the fall semester. Call Lisa at 471-2092, or Syndi at 471-2791 for more information. Judo Club practices MWF The University Judo Club holds practices Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays from 5:30 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. in Bellmont Hall 966. Practices are open to men and women, beginners and advanced. The Outdoor Program at REC SPORTS is running at full throttle these days. A variety of outings are planned for this weekend, April 3-4, including canoeing, horseback riding, and day hiking. In addition, registra­ tion is currently underway for the next flyfishing clinic that begins Thursday night, March the 8th. REC SPORTS leads canoe trips down the San Marcos and Guadalupe rivers, both of which contain riffles and rapids, and slower paddling sec­ tions. No previous canoeing experi­ ence is required for the trip this Sat­ urday; experienced guides explain basic strokes on land before shoving off to insure that everyone gets down the river safely. A fee of $15 ($17 Non-UT) for the day trip includes transportation, canoes, instruction, and guides. Additional river trips are planned for April 11,18, 24 and May 2. This Saturday, April 3, REC SPORTS will be taking some folks out to Travis County Stables for an early morning horseback ride. Approxi­ mately one thousand acres of land are available for western trail riding and exploring. Gentle horses are available, so it’s okay if your only rid­ ing experience was 15 years ago on a Shetland pony at the carnival. Riding time and transportation are included for $15 ($17 Non-UT). For those who didn’t make it to the coast during Spring Break, REC SPORTS is offering a trip this week­ end. Saturday at the Aransas Wildlife Refuge, a group will be watching for whooping cranes, deer, javelina, alli­ gators, and other wildlife while hik­ ing the trails, bird watching from the observation deck, and riding the re­ fuge roads. Sunday will be devoted to swimming, sunning and beach comb­ ing on San Jose Island. Traditionally, the trip ends with a seafood dinner in Port Aransas before heading back to Austin. For $30 ($34 Non-UT), trans­ portation, guides, group camping equipment and two meals are includ­ ed. Another REC SPORTS group will spend Saturday exploring Pedernales Falls and hiking the backcountry trails at the state park. Transporta­ tion, park fee and guide are provided for $5 ($7 Non-UT). Water Basketball moves into playoffs The Intramural Water Basketball regular season concluded last week into the playoff and now moves rounds with quarterfinal games scheduled for tonight and semi-finals Thursday, April 1. In the Men’s League A, the SALADO CLIPPERS defeated the RAIL BARONS 9- 6 to finish the season with a 3-1 record, and now move on to the playoffs. In the semi-finals Thursday, the 4-0 PIKE QUA DUCTS will meet 3-1 AUEN SPACE PHLEGM, while the un­ defeated BARES take on the CLIPPERS. The WET MULLETS moved into the playoffs by beating TUBE E OR NOT TUBE E 40-19 in Coed League I. The HUGH BEAUMONT PLAYERS remained undefeated by crushing the DUNKS Si­ ll in League II, while the SEAHUNKS edged FREE BIRD 15-14 in a battle of the winless. In League III, the FLOAT­ the MADD ING BEAVERS handed DOGGS their fourth loss of the season 30-16, and the SHARECROPPERS earned a spot in the playoffs by drowning SCMEGMA KRAPPA 53-15. The BARES remained undefeated by sinking winless NAVY ROTC 43-29, while SPLASH SPUTTER SINK improved their record to 3-1 by thrashing LITTLE BRIAN DAILEY 54-23. The quarter­ finals of the Coed Playoffs will be played tonight at 8 p.m. in the Grego­ ry Gym pool. Track entries still open; Racquetball tournament tonight at Clark Entries are being taken right now in Gregory Gym 33 for the Intramural Track Meet for men and women. Entries close Tuesday, April 13 for the meet, which will feature team and individual competition in running and field events. There is no entry fee. Three dates should be ingrained in your mind if you plan to compete in the annual meet: Monday, April 19, and Wednesday, April 21 will feature the Men’s and Women’s preliminaries, with Tuesday, April 27 slated for finals in the Men’s, Women’s and Coed competitions. The schedule of events for all three nights goes like this: MONDAY, APRIL 19 5:30 PM — Field event check-in for Men’s Long Jump and Softball Throw. 6:00 PM — Final check-in for field events. Competition begins. 6:30 PM —• Check in for running events. 7:00 PM — Competition begins. Events as follows: 110-meter Low Hurdles (M), 400-meter Relay (M,W), 1500-meter Run (M,W), 400-meter Run (M.W), 300-meter Relay (M.W). WEDNESDAY, APRIL 21 5:30 PM — Field event check-in for Men’s High Jump and Shot Put, Women’s Softball Throw and Long Jump. 6:00 PM — Final check-in for field events. Competition begins. 6:30 PM —■ Check-in for running events. 7-00 PM Competition begins. Events as follows: 100-meter Low Hurdles ■ ¡ DiflmonDS Ho t Au s t in «entuman .«Mm* **» MM 4 5 4 -5 2 5 7 i DOBI€ MM.L UPPGR LGUGL 10*9 Page 16 Montage, Spring 1982 ph o to Ro ck y Knoton p h o to / R o c k y K n e te n fa sh io n s / P a t M c G e o < Stripes say it all. They’re fresh and contemporary and they’re ever-versatile for this season’s ac­ tive sportswear. phmto/Elisabeth Hovm fa sh io n s E liz a b e th C h ristia n •«?» " — > 5316 GuOdoKJpe 477 7276 I f you like our gif ts — you'll love our clothes. _____ i - * ^— . .. . i . i . - t wMJ" CONCEPTS IN JUNIOR SPORTSWEAR ’MJ" modern juniors' most exciting resource of spring sportswear components! This year's focus is on softened fulled skirts, flared for new-found freedom and mobility during an action-packed day Ruffled, pleated lines blouses and abbreviated jackets new spring perspectives in fashions, perfect for the all-important interview as well as for on-the-job activities! From an enchanting collection of updated basics jacket, $70; full skirt, $38, in rasm or natural linen/cotton; cotton blouse, $39 Foulard print cotton blouse, $36, matching skirt, $36 "MJ" Modern juniors thoroughly modern components for thoroughly modern juniors! $33-70 . Deep in the heart of Dillmft country a dazzling new Dillard s is open in Barton Creek Square Barton Creek M a ll 327-6100 Hancock Center 452-0311 Shop Mon.-Sat. 10-9 Use your D illa rd 's , M a ster Card, Visa, D ine r's C lub1 or A m e rica n Express Card®. ^ t. Qermaiíi 26 DOO RS 452-2636 BARBOGLIO Page 20 Montage, Spring 1082 THE PLASTIC HEAD IS DEAD By Stephanie Fragapane Hair trends have changed drastically last ten in the years. The plastic look of us­ ing hair spray is out and the natural look is taking over. This look is easier to care for and easier to manage. The color white along with lots of lace are the IN things this spring and the soft-curl cut brings this natural look all together. This is the kind of cut you can just wash and dry naturally, the free and easy feeling of not hassling with hot rollers. It is a more casual look. There are many reasons why hairstyles have changed Rolando, of Rolando’s Salon on Hancock Drive, feels the changes relate to the econo­ my. “Nancy Reagan is setting the trend. It’s a more woman­ ly look. Beautiful is in and the plastic look is out,” Rolando said. In the past women tried to copy the hairstyle of a famous actress, now they are coming out and creating their own styles. They are saying ‘I am comfortable with my individ­ ual look.’ “ Women were trying to be what consumers wanted them to look like. “ Each woman has her own personal look along with her own features to enhance her beauty, and each individual has what it takes to be beauti­ ful. I can bring these features out. “ Making wom en over comes natural with m e,” Ro­ lando said. Rolando spends anywhere from one to two hours with each customer, talking with them and explaining each step he goes through while cutting their hair. It is a very individ­ ual technique he has acquired during 16 years of owning his own salon. Here are some tips Rolando gives in getting and keeping hair in tip-top shape. • If hair is badly damaged have it analyzed by a pro­ fessional. • Regular hair cutting is a must! It should be cut eve­ ry 4-6 weeks depending on the length. • Hair grows twice as fast by just trimming the ends. • Hair can look good even while trying to let it grow out, in the inbetween stage, if it is properly cut. • Use a style protector be­ fore blow drying or using hot rollers. • Educate the customer be­ fore cu ttin g th e ir hair. • H air does not need to be conditioned daily, if it is in good shap e cu t back on con­ ditioning. • Only sham poo w hen h a ir is d irty , do not d ry out h a ir cells. • W ear a h at w hile tanning to p ro tect th e h a ir from the sun. • And m o st im p o rta n t — if you h a ir has the p ro p e r cut it will look and feel m uch h ealth ier. s r - ,e'' V ° I-'®* Co ° xe! ’V s Jacque St. James — Fashion Design by Local Talent by heidi reinberg Clothing is art. At least that’s the feeling of one young Austin designer, Jacque St. James. She’s one of a new breed of “artists” who are painting on canvases that are really skirts, jumpsuits and dresses. “Clothing is just wearable, functional art that can be worn on the body,” says St. James. “Each is intrinsic. You can’t separate the clothing from the body. “Clothing can decorate or just be weird.” To the designer, creating fashions is just like “making art. It’s a process of exploration. You find something and hit on it. “Art is really funny,” she explains. “If you do something that’s really good it’ll catch on to some universal idea.” The backdrops for St. Jam es’ paintings are usually natural fibres such as cottons or silks — although she admits to having a passion for leathers and plastics because of their moldable properties. Distinctive St. James designs include jumpsuits with “puff” — on the sleeves and running down the legs — or dresses with skirts that are wired to stand out straight from the waist. One of these, a half-black, half-white style, is based on the “foo-foo dust theory” of the moons of Jupiter, explains St. James. And indeed, it looks like something one would wear on Jupi­ ter, “or in Houston,” laughs the designer. The future shows up often in the St. James collection. She likes geometric shapes; one of her rare, repeated designs is a very square top with a boat- or modified boat-neck and cap sleeves. According to St. James, she also likes the particular styles of the Milan designers, as well as Willi Smith, Norma Kamali and Kenzo. “I like to design real simple, Kapow! stuff, real youthful things. But I also appreciate the elegant.” “Sometimes I have a specific idea. But I usually work from different points; I don’t like to be repetitive,” she explains. According to St. Jam es, there are about 20 fashion designers in Austin who make a living from that trade. Fashion shows, here, she says, are just now catching on, and she adds, “We’re just not real visible.” But St. James says that if they want to succeed, they will. “I think that everyone sets their own limitations. Perserverance is first, but there’s some magic element of nature that propells a person into a success.” The Austin scene is just not ready to really accept “weird” designs, and it probably never will be, says St. James. “Austin is a conservative place. No one will put themselves out on a limb fashion-wise.” “ But I don’t look at in terms of years that w e’re behind; I look at it in terms of consciousness. They just can’t accept (current clothing trends),” she explains. She attributes part of Austin’s limited clothing consciousness to the city’s limited growth ideas. “ It just pervades their whole way of thinking. It’s a safe type of environment — and it’s not really going to change.” “I’d like to see an overall acceptance of Austin for what it is.” Another factor which contributes to the lack of lesser-krfown designer sales in Austin is the economic one. According to St. James, Austinites just can’t afford to buy her fashions, al­ though at $18-$120, they’re a lot cheaper than your run-of-the- mill Calvin or Kamali. But St. James is always optimistic about the future; she plans to take her designs to Dallas and Houston, and she says, eventually, they’ll catch on in Austin. “ It’s more a creative endeavor than a business, anyway, although I strive to be as professional as possible,” she ex­ plains. “But basically, where I’m at is to be better! ” * 5* * * * l ^ c° v A 0 " & : T\\eS^ y \ ° ° r a i V * > ° - .s\e