x i G t ^ G l 9G Í7G Í7 XQQ ' s y n i y a O B 3 1 N 3 D w n i d ü t í D I Wíhe Da ily T exan a Vol. 81, No. 165 (USPS 146-440) S t u de n t N e w s p a p e r a t The Uni versi t y of Texas a t A u s t i n Monday, June 2 1 ,1 9 8 2 Twenty-Five Cents Iraqi troops begin withdrawal from Iran after 19-month war (U P I ) — B E I R U T , Lebanon Ira q i P re s id e n t Saddam H ussein announced Sunday he had ord ered his n a tio n ’s a rm e d fo rc e s , which hav e su ffe re d m a ­ jo r s e tb a c k s in a 19-month w a r w ith Ira n , to w ithdraw fro m a ll Ira n ia n te r ­ rito ry w ithin 10 days, the o ffic ia l Iraqi new s ag e n cy INA said. T h e w ithdraw al will be com p leted w ithin a m ax im u m of 10 d a y s ," H ussein w as quoted a s saying. He said Baghdad w ill co n tin u e coop­ e ra tin g with A rab and Is la m ic m e d ia ­ to rs to re a c h " t h e ju s t and hon o rab le s e ttle m e n t (to the w a r) fo r w hich w e hav e ca lle d from the v e ry b e g in n in g ." H ussein said the w ith d raw al d ecisio n w as prom pted by the " d e lic a t e c ir c u m ­ s ta n c e s fa c in g the A rab (w o rld ) w hich resu lted fro m the I s r a e li o ccu p atio n of L ebanon and the th r e a t of liqu id ation fa cin g the P a le s tin ia n r e s is ta n c e m o v e ­ m e n t.” " T h is m a k e s it im p e ra tiv e fo r us to to a ll p o ssib le d ev elop ­ be v ig ila n t m e n ts ,” he said. INA. quoting H ussein in a sp eech d e­ liv ered in B aghd ad , said Ira q i m ilita r y units Sunday began to pull b ack fro m Iran ian c itie s and lands to the in te rn a ­ tional bord er. Iran re c la im e d its s tr a te g ic p o rt c ity of K h o rro m sh ah r a f t e r fie r c e b a ttle s last M ay. Iraq la te r announced it w as read y to a rr a n g e an im m e d ia te c e a s e ­ fire and pull out its tro op s fro m Ira n ia n te rrito ry in tw o w eeks. Although the Ira q i proposal coin cid ed with I s r a e l ’s invasion of L eb an o n , the Ira n ia n s reb u ffed the o ffe r, say in g it w as " to o l a t e ." H ussein said th e d ecisio n to w ithd raw his troo p s w as m ad e to te s t " th e re a l inten tio n s o f the (Ir a n ia n ) r e g im e ." He said the new Ira q i stand w as ta k ­ en a t a tim e of tu rm o il fo r the A rab world. I s r a e l 's a im . H ussein said , is " t o keep Ira q busy w ith th is w ar in o rd e r to let the Z io n ist en em y ( I s r a e l ) and o th e r fo rc e s c a r r y out th e ir s c h e m e s in L e b a ­ n on .” " T h e (A y ato llah R u h ollah ) K ho m eini re g im e h a s paid the bill to the Z ion ist en e m y by a c c e p tin g w eapons, sp a re p a rts , in fo rm atio n and e x p e r ie n c e ," H ussein said Guerrillas claim rout of Salvadoran armed forces SAN SA L V A D O R , E l S a lv a d o r (U P I ) — R e b e ls cla im e d Sunday to h av e killed o r serio u sly wounded 550 g o v ern m en t so ld ie rs and cap tu red E l S a lv a d o r’s deputy d efe n se m in is te r in the h e a v ie s t fighting of the th re e -y e a r civ il w ar. tillo , co n tra d ic tin g its e a r lie r re p o rts th at he w as killed when g u e rrilla s shot down his h e lic o p te r la s t T h u rsd ay If the g u e rrilla c la im is c o r r e c t, it would be the fir s t tim e in the w a r th a t re b e ls cap tu red a ran k in g o ffic e r . T he cla n d e stin e R ad io V e n c e re m o s said its fo rc e s cap tu red Col. A dolfo C as- V e n c e re m o s said its fo rc e s killed or serio u sly wounded 550 s o ld ie rs, includ- ing 12 o ffic e r s , during the re b e l o ffe n ­ siv e a g a in st ab o u t 5.000 g o v e rn m e n t troops. It w as the h ig h est c a su a lty fig u re e v e r rep o rted by the g u e rrilla rad io, its e lf a s the only S a lv a ­ which touts doran m ed ia o u tle t is not co n ­ th a t trolled by the go v ern m en t. It said g u e rrilla s had taken 43 p riso n ­ e rs and cap tu red 143 a u to m a tic w eap ­ ons, a s w ell a s a full ran ge of m o r ta r s , 9 0m m h an d -h eld g r e n a d e lau n c h e rs and thousands of rounds of am m u n itio n . c a n n o n , V e n c e re m o s said g u e rrilla s have c o n ­ cluded a " p h a s e ” of th e ir o ffe n siv e a g a in s t th e a rm y but did not s ta te if the re b e ls would pull out of s tra te g ic tow ns they h av e b een occupying. T h e re b e ls have con tro lled m u ch of n o rth ern M orazan prov in ce, with th e ir o ffe n siv e c e n te re d on the tow ns of P e r - quin. San F e rn a n d o and T o ro la. P erq u in has been occu p ied by g u e rrilla s fo r 15 days. they " F o r 15 d ays, (g o v e rn m e n t fo r c e s ) c o u ld n ’t ad van ce D e sp ite all the e x o rb ita n t a ir and a r tille r y support of they h a v e n 't ach iev ed th e ir o b je c t iv e ," V e n c e re m o s said . d ic ta to rsh ip , the V e n c e re m o s said that C a stillo , 47, had e sca p e d fro m th e w re ck ag e of his h e lic o p te r, planted h is m ilita ry id e n tifi­ ca tio n p a p e rs on the body of an o th e r o f­ fic e r killed in the c ra s h and tried to e s ­ c a p e to n e a rb y H onduras. T h e rad io said C a stillo w as cap tu red S atu rd ay but did not s ta te if he w as grab b ed n e a r the c ra s h s ite o u tsid e San Fern an d o . 70 m ile s n o rth e a st of the c a p ita l. V e n c e re m o s ca lle d for the In te rn a ­ tion al R ed C ro ss to re c o v e r the bodies of Col. S a lv a d o r B e ltra n Luna, c o m ­ m an d er of M orazan, and C a s tillo ’s bodyguard, both killed in the c ra sh . John David Fox waits at the door of emmajoe’s. Travis Spradling, Daily Texan Staff Benefit for UT sit-in students raises $100 toward expenses; victim s say protest a success Government soldiers travel to the eastern part of San Salvador to fight guerrilla forces. UPI Telephoto Common Market lifts Argentine import embargo L U X E M B O U R G (U P I ) - E u ro p e an E co n o m ic C om m unity fo re ig n m in is­ te rs Sunday decided to lift th e ir e m b a r ­ go on A rg en tin e im p o rts b e c a u se fig h t­ ing h as stopped in the F a lk la n d Islan d s and A rg en tin e troops have been w ith ­ draw n. T h e e m b a rg o w as im posed by the C om m on M ark et nations A pril 17 and extend ed ‘24 a s a in d efin itely M ay m ean s of p ressu rin g A rgen tina to end the fig h tin g and n e g o tia te a s dem anded by the U nited N ations. "T w o e ss e n tia l e le m e n ts of U .N R e s ­ olution 502 have been fu lfille d ," F r e n c h F o re ig n M in iste r Claude C h eysson said. “ W e do not see any reaso n to con tin u e our e co n o m ic m e a s u re s a g a in s t A rgen ­ tina n o w .” He said it w as ev id en t th a t A rg en tin e a g g re ssio n a g a in st th e B r itis h colony had not been rew ard ed . B ritis h o ffic ia ls pleaded th at the s a n ctio n s be continued until A rgen tina fo rm a lly an n ou n ces th at it w ill end h o s tilitie s a g a in s t B rita in . B e lg ia n F o reig n M in is te r L eo T ind e- m an s, who presid ed o v er th e m e e tin g , said the liftin g of the e m b a rg o w as co n ­ d itio n al. " T h e sa n ctio n s hav e been lifted in the presu m p tio n th e re w ili be no fu rth e r in­ c id e n ts of a m ilita r y c h a r a c t e r cau sed by the A rg e n tin e s ,” he said C h eysson, who m e t re p o rte rs a f t e r a g e n e ra l policy d iscu ssio n of co m m u n ity fo reign m in is te rs on the ev e of a reg u ­ la r co u n cil m e e tin g , said the d ecisio n to lift the s a n ctio n s would be fo rm alized Monday. He said th e re should be no m isu n d er­ in L a tin A m e rica about the standing o rig in al aim of the e co n o m ic sa n ctio n s. " T h e r e w as n e v e r any qu estion of ba­ s ic h o stility b etw een E u ro p e and L atin A m e rica , a s had been cla im e d h e re and t h e r e ," C heysson said . D utch P r im e M in is te r A nd ries van Agt. who is a lso fo reig n a f f a ir s m in is te r in the D utch in te rim g o v ern m en t, said the hold on E u ro p e a n a rm s s a le s to A r­ gen tina would not be lifted . The a rm s ban w as im posed s im u lta ­ neously with the tra d e e m b a rg o , but van Agt said it w as understood th at it would be m ain tain e d until the F a lk - lands c o n flic t w as c o m p le te ly s e ttle d . T he m in is te rs also d iscu ssed develop- m en ts in L eban on, but d ecided not to m ak e a new s ta te m e n t follow ing th e co n d em n ation of the invasion they fo rm u la ted la st w eek in Bonn. Is ra e li “ W e a r e frig h ten ed by w'hat can hap­ pen in the n ext d ays, if not h o u rs ," said C heysson. He added th e com m u n ity w as co n cern ed about re p o rts that Is ra e li o c ­ cupation tro o p s w ere blocking supplies of h u m a n ita ria n aid to v ic tim s of m ili­ ta ry o p eratio n s. " I f a b a ttle is s ta rte d now’ in B e iru t under the n a m e of a cleanu p o p eratio n , the w orst c a n be f e a r e d ." C heysson said. " W e liv e in the fe a r, if not even the panic, th at if what happened a t S aid a re p e a ts its e lf in B e iru t it w ill be m o re d ra m a tic and m o re b lo o d y ," he said. By J IM M Y M U N O Z Daily Texan Staff A b e n e fit fo r stu d en ts a rr e s te d during an April 19 sit-in a t the W est M all O ff­ ic e Building protestin g the d en ial of te n ­ u re for fo rm e r U T g ov ern m en t p ro fe s­ s o r A1 W atkins, w as held Sunday. A p p ro xim ately $100 w as ra ise d a t the ev en t, a t e m m a jo e ’s, 3023 G uadalupe S t., w hich w ill help U n iv e rsity stud ents R ich a rd R y an , philosophy ju n io r, Jo h n D avid F o x , business sop hom ore and S y lv ia A dam e, social work fre sh m an , pay fo r c o u rt exp en ses and law y e r fe e s th is su m m er. R y an , F o x and A dam e w e re a rre s te d along with 12 o th er stud en ts during the sit-in . T h e U n iv ersity dropped c h a rg e s a g a in st 13 of the stud en ts but continued to p re ss c h a rg e s on R y an and F o x accu se d o f refu sing to id en tify th e m ­ s e lv e s a t th e tim e of the a r r e s ts . T h e A dam e a r r e s t w as con sid ered a incid ent b e ca u se the Austin se p a ra te P o lic e D e p a rtm e n t has filed c h a rg e s a l­ leging th at sh e w as hindering ap p reh en­ sion of sit-in p a rticip a n ts. F o x and R y an a r e under suspension and a re b a rre d fro m the cam p u s fo r th re e m on ths. T hey have a lso been b arred fro m holding o ffic e s in cam p u s Marijuana farms become thriving Texas business By JIM H A N K IN S Daily Texan Staff C am o u flag e n ettin g , punji s tic k s , e x ­ p lo siv e booby tra p s, a u to m a tic r ifle s — it sounds lik e a sce n e fro m " T h e D eer H u n te r ." but it's going on rig h t h e re in T e x a s , in cla n d e stin e m a r iju a n a field s. M a riju a n a fa rm in g is an expanding b u sin ess in T e x a s. L a s t y e a r in B a stro p County alo n e, law e n fo rc e m e n t o ffic e r s c o n fis c a te d $15 m illio n w orth of hom e­ grow n ca n n a b is, m o stly high -quality se e d le ss o r " s in s e m illa " m a r iju a n a , valued a t about $2.000 p er pound A h ealth y , m a tu re plant y ie ld s to th re e pounds of m a riju a n a a t h a rv e st tim e. two A lth ou gh l a r g e - s c a le m a r iju a n a fa rm s h av e been thriving in C alifo rn ia sin ce the m id-1970s, law e n fo rc e m e n t o ffic e r s say th is type of " a g r ib u s in e s s ” has gained a foothold in T e x a s only in the p ast y e a r o r two. D iffe re n t o ffic e rs give d iffe re n t r e a ­ sons fo r the in c re a se in T e x a s m a r iju a ­ na c u ltiv a tio n S o m e say the qu ality of m a r iju a n a im ported fro m C olo m b ia and M exico h as d ete rio ra te d to the point into that T e x a n s have taken m a tte r s th e ir own hands. O th ers say tougher drug in C aliforn ia and F lo rid a have en cou rag ed gro w ers to m o v e to T e x a s . law s A nother exp lan atio n is th a t fe d e ral c ra c k e d down on a u th o ritie s have sm u g gling so w ell th a t i t ’s now s a fe r and m o re p ro fita b le to grow m a r iju a n a in th e U nited S ta te s . " I t ’s a v ery p ro fita b le b u sin ess, until they end up in j a i l , ” said L a r r y Todd, pu blic in fo rm atio n o f f ic e r fo r the T e x a s D e p a rtm e n t of P u b lic S a fe ty . Todd said T e x a s ’ w arm c lim a te and thinly populated co u n try sid e re m o te , m a k e it a p rim e lo ca tio n fo r m a r iju a n a cu ltiv a tio n — e s p e c ia lly the e a s te rn and c e n tra l portions of the s ta te , w hich hav e f e r tile soil and plen ty of tr e e s to hide the ille g a l c ro p s fro m a e r ia l s u r­ v e illa n ce . “ You could ju s t d raw a lin e down IH 35, and say ev ery th in g e a s t o f it — B a s ­ trop, S m ith v ille , L y tto n Sp rin g s — th a t’s id eal fo r grow ing m a r iju a n a ," he said. A lso, C e n tral T e x a s co u n tie s a r e c o n ­ v en ien tly lo cated n e a r p o ten tial big c ity m a r k e ts lik e A ustin, San A ntonio, H ous­ ton and D a lla s, Todd said. L o ca l s h e r iffs ’ o ffic e s h av e the p ri­ m ary re sp o n sib ility fo r finding m a r i­ th e se a g e n c ie s a r e ju an a fa r m s , but usually sh o rt on funding and under­ sta ffe d . E v e n though the D P S and the U .S. Drug E n fo rc e m e n t A gency help out with a e r ia l su rv e illa n c e and train in g , i t ’s im p o ssib le to k eep an e y e on e v ery land that m igh t be used for a c r e of grow ing m a riju a n a . "D e p u tie s c a n ’t w alk out e v e ry foot of ground in the cou nty , and it 's (m a r i­ ju a n a ) p re tty hard to s e e fro m th e a i r , " Todd said. R u sty E d w ard s, c h ie f deputy in the B a stro p County S h e r iff's D e p a rtm e n t, said the d e p a rtm e n t’s six d ep u ties a re only about h alf a s m an y a s it n eed s to c o v e r the 890 sq u a re m ile s of land in the county. E d w ard s w as in th e new s la s t y e a r when he and o th e r d ep u ties, w ith the help of law e n fo rc e m e n t a g e n c ie s from ad join in g cou n tie s, busted eig h t m a r i­ ju an a grow ing o p e ratio n s in B a stro p County. One raid in N o v em b er turned up th re e a c r e s of s in se m illa p lan ts, som e so la rg e o ffic e r s had to use a ch ain saw to cu t th em down E d w ard s said he d o esn 't think la st from y e a r ’s b usts w ill d e te r people trying to grow m a r iju a n a this su m m e r " I don’t think you put the f e a r into som ebody until you c a tc h th e m ,” he said “ T h ey alw a y s say I w ould n't get c a u g h t.’ ’ ’ E d w ard s said the people a r r e s te d in last y e a r ’s ra id s w e re m o stly fro m out­ sid e of B a stro p County He said the county has e x p e rie n c e d a population in­ flux fro m n earb y c itie s a s m o re and m ore ru ral land is developed into hous­ ing tr a c ts "M o s t of them im a riju a n a g ro w e rs) a r e n ’t hom e-grow n B a s tr o p ia n s ," he said " T h e lo ca l people a re d e fin ite ly opposed to it. " S o u rce s in the T e x a s law e n fo rc e ­ m en t co m m u n ity say m a riju a n a fa r m s usually o p e ra te w ith sm all n u m b ers of people — 10 o r less. S in ce th e ir aim is to produce s m a ll am ou n ts of high -qu ality weed, g ro w e rs usually s ta r t out with seed s fro m potent S ou th east A sian o r H aw aiian s tra in s . c u s to m e r s . B y using so p h istica te d g ra ftin g te c h ­ niques, g ro w e rs can produce hybrid stra in s ta ilo re d to the p re fe re n c e s o f c a s e s , th e ir g ro w e rs " b a b y " th e ir p lan ts, m ak in g sure they g e t ad eq u ate w ate r and f e r t i­ lizer and d estro y in g m a le p lan ts so the rem ain in g fe m a le s w ill prod uce few er seeds. In m o s t " A s long a s you put that m u ch c a r e in it, you m igh t a s w ell go with sm sem il- l a ." Todd said And b e ca u se gro w ers have invested so m uch tim e and m oney, th ey tend to take e x tr e m e m e a s u re s to guard th e ir crop Som e use guard dogs and a la rm s and post a signs around th e ir property. When o ffi­ c e r s raid ed a o n e -a c re plot in C aldw ell County la st S e p te m b e r they found 10 booby tra p s rigged fro m rat tra p s and shotgun sh e lls lot of "N o T resp assin g " T h e y ’re cru d ely m ad e, but they w o rk ," Todd said. " W e even found one th at had ra ttle sn a k e s tied up plot around it Som e of them h av e gu ard s sleep in g in a p e rim e te r — ju s t lik e in the m ilit a r y ." But one D E A ag en t who asked not to be id en tified said he thinks s t o n e s of booby-trapped field s m ay be put out by gro w ers to frigh ten would-be th iev es. " H e ’ll (th e gro w er) try to s c a r e o ff people by tellin g them h e 's got som e C la y m o re s frag m e n tatio n m in e s) planted on it. U su ally h e 's ju s t b lu ffin g ." th e agent said (m ilita ry Todd and E d w ard s said an innocent h ik e r or hu nter could get hurt if they stum bled on to a patch of m a riju a n a a t the wrong tim e , but both said they hav e not heard o f any such incid ent y e t. in D e sp ite som e cu tb a ck s fe d e ra l g ra n ts to s ta te law e n fo rce m e n t ag e n ­ c ie s . Todd said he thinks T e x a s w ill con ­ tinue to fund futu re D P S e ffo rts to c u r ­ tail m a riju a n a the D P S has a llie s like Gov B ill C le m e n ts and D a lla s m illio n a ire H R o s s P e r o t, who pushed for strong anti-drug le g is la ­ tion la s t y e a r. farm in g He said " I think th e L eg isla tu re re a liz e s the Todd the p roblem . sig n ific a n c e ot said organizations a s u n d erg rad u ates. The U n iv e rsity p laced the 12 o th e r sit-in p a rtic ip a n ts on probation fo r one y ear. D uring this period, v iolation of any cam pu s reg u lation could re su lt in a suspension. Also, they a re b arre d fro m holding o ffic e in stud ent o rg an ization s this y e a r. A fter the fu n d -raiser Sunday. R y an and F o x both said they b elieved th at the sit-in w as a s u c ce s s, even though W at­ kins did not re c e iv e a rev iew on the de­ cision to deny tenu re. "W e showed the U n iv ersity that th ere a r e stud en ts who w on’t sit down and tak e t h is ," R y an said. " T h e ad m in­ istratio n is u n cle ar about how deep stu­ dent sen tim e n ts a re I think it m ak es them n e rv o u s." As fo r fu tu re tenu re d ecisio n s, both R y an and F o x said th at stu d en ts need to look a t w hat the U n iv ersity does about tenuring p ro fe sso rs. "W e re not going to le t them fir e a p ro fesso r w ithout lettin g the students know w h y ," F o x said. Said R y an : " I ’m pleased th at we I could b ro ad cast student sen tim en t. think by our exp ed ien ce and a ctio n s we exposed the m on olith ic in sen sitiv ity of the U niversity a d m in istra tio n .” A m otion fo r a p re tria l h earing is e x ­ pected to be filed Monday fo r A dam e, while a p re tria l h earin g for R y an and Fo x has been set for Aug. 24 M alcolm G re en ste in , atto rn e y fo r all three d efendants, said Sunday th at the defendants had not fo rm a lly decided how they would plea. Band p e rfo rm an ce s a t e m m a jo e ’s Sunday night included the David R od ri­ guez Band. B e tty V orn b ro ck & Luke F a u st and C ocquesigrue. forecast partly cloudy, warm The forecast for Austin calls for partly clo u d y skies Monday and Tuesday, with high temperatures both days in the low 90s and the low M onday night in the low 70s. Winds will be variable from 0 -1 0 mph. Flash flood watches issued for parts of Texas over the weekend were canceled Sunday Watches were issued in the wake of a storm system that strafed northern Texas with tornadoes, hail and gale winds Saturday. National weather, page 11. . . . . 9 2 today’s high tonight’s low . . . . 7 3 Page 2 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Monday. June 21, 1982 ZJ-1 L . r . r ^ = -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- - .......... The Ovny Texan PERM ANENT STAFF . E d i t o r ................................... Lisa Beyer M anaging Editor . A ssistant M anaging Editors . Maureen Patkia . . George Vondracek, Doug McLeod A ssistant E d ito r.....................David Teece News E d i t o r ....................... Mark Stats A ssociate News E d ito r..................... David Woodruff Lynn . Easley . Jim Hankins, Julie Clint, F rank J a a a a ti, Jim m y McKenna News Assignments E ditor . G eneral R eporters. . . . . . Mike Zimmerman Features Editor . Sports Editor David McNabk Entertainm ent E d i t o r ..................... Chris Jordan Images E d ito r................ Pam ela McAlpia Associate Images E d ito r ................... Tim O’Leary . Ronnie Goins . Martin Torres G raphics Editor . Associate G raphics Editor . . ISSUE STAFF News A ssistants N ew sw riters . . G ary W arren. Jim m y Munoz, Dudley Aithaus David Elliot, Scott Williams, H ector Cantu M ark Barron Richard Stubbe Karen Sparks E ditorial Assistant Sports Make-up Editor Sports A ssistant Make-up Editor Wire Editor Copy Editors A rtist Photographers Mark Mems Richard Steinberg Michael Saenz, Helen Hulme, Jordana P rager Gilíes Chabannes Lisa Minkin. Travis Spradling TEXAN ADVERTISING STAFF T o m B ie le f e ld t , C a lis e B u r c h e tt. L aura D ic k e r s o n , C in dy F ile r , D e b b ie F le t c h e r . K en G r a y s . C h er y l L u e d e o k e . C a r o ly n M an gold . H eid i R e in b e r g , J a y Zorn T h e D a ily T e x a n , a s tu d e n t n e w s p a p e r a t T h e U n iv e r s ity o f T e x a s a t A u stin, is p u b lis h e d bv T e x a s S tu d e n t P u b lic a t io n s , D r a w e r D , U n iv e r s ity S ta tio n , A u stin , TX 78712-7209 T h e D a ily T e x a n is p u b lish e d M on d ay, T u e s d a y , W ed n esd a y . T h u rsd ay and F r id a y , e x c e p t h o lid a y and e x a m p e r io d s S eco n d c l a s s p o s ta g e p aid a t A u stin . TX 78710 N e w s c o n tr ib u tio n s w ill b e a c c e p te d by te le p h o n e (471-4591), a t th e e d ito r ia l o ff ic e i T e x a s S tu d e n t P u b lic a t io n s B u ild in g 2 122) o r a t th e n e w s la b o r a to r y (C o m m u n ic a ­ tion B u ild in g A4 136 1 In q u ir ie s c o n c e r n in g d e liv e r y and c la s s if ie d a d v e r tis in g should b e m a d e in T S P B u ild in g 3 200 ( 471-5244 1 T h e n a tio n a l a d v e r t is in g r e p r e s e n ta t iv e o f T h e D a ily T e x a n is C o m m u n ic a tio n s and A d v e r tis in g S e r v ic e s to S tu d e n ts . 1633 W est C e n tra l S tr e e t. E v a n s to n , Illin o is 60201. p h on e (800 ) 323-4044 to ll fr e e T h e D a ily T e x a n s u b s c r ib e s to U n ite d P r e s s I n te r n a tio n a l and N e w Y ork T im e s N e w s S e r v ic e T h e T e x a n is a m e m b e r o f th e A s s o c ia te d C o lle g ia te P r e s s , th e S ou th ­ w e s t J o u r n a lis m C o n g r e s s, th e T e x a s D a ily N e w s p a p e r A s s o c ia tio n and A m erica n N e w s p a p e r P u b lis h e r s A s s o c ia t io n C o p y rig h t 1982 T e x a s S tu d e n t P u b lic a t io n s THE DAILY TEXAN SUBSCRIPTION RATES O n e S e m e s t e r i F a ll o r S p r in g i . . T w o S e m e s t e r s (F a ll and S p r in g ) Sum m er Session O n e Y e a r ( F a l l , S p rin g an d S u m m e r ) .................................................... $24 00 48 00 13.00 60 00 Sen d o r d e r s and a d d r e s s c h a n g e s to T e x a s S tu d en t P u b lic a tio n s , P O B ox D , A u s­ P U B NO 146440 tin . T X 78712-7209. o r to T S P B u ild in g C3 200 . No charges expected from primary mishaps t h a t w i l l b p the end of it. th at will be the end of it.” cials will m ore By HECTOR CANTU Daily Texan Staff in The T ra v is County D em o­ c ra tic P a r ty does not expect any ch a rg es ste m m in g from voting the irre g u la ritie s Ju n e 5 D em o c ratic p rim a ry runoff to be filed by th e d is­ tric t a tto rn e y ’s office Mon­ day, an atto rn ey for th e p arty said Sunday. D i s t r i c t T om Blackw ell ord ered election b allots im pounded F rid a y a f­ te r county co m m issio n er ca n ­ didates W ayne Y elderm an J u d g e . . . .. and H elen C am pbell delivered eight a ffid a v its alleging elec­ tion frau d to D istric t A ttorney Ronnie E a rle . The d efe ate d candidates th rea ten e d to contest the elec­ tion sh o rtly a fte r the runoff when it w as rep o rted th a t sev­ eral v o te rs w ere discouraged from voting when polling places ran out of ballots and sign-in sheets. R eportedly, som e v o te rs ended up using unofficial voting m a te ria l while o th e rs left before the a rriv a l of e x tra ballots. “ He (Y eld erm an ) evidently i i * didn’t file any kind of con­ te s t,” Buck Wood, atto rn ey for the T ravis County D em o­ c ra tic P arty , said Sunday. “ If he didn’t file a co n test (for a new election), th e re 's nothing he could do about the contest (on June 5). I t's kind oí like saying. T here w as a problem , I kind of g o t b ea t but anyw ay.’ ” Y elderm an lost the election by m ore than 500 votes. Y elderm an could not be reached for com m ent Sunday. Incum bent County C om m is­ sioners R ichard Moya, of P re ­ a o f i n h n M i l l n v cinct 4, and John Milloy, of P re cin c t 3, defeated ch a l­ le n g e r s Y e ld e r m a n a n d C am pbell, respectively, in the June 5 runoff. D eadline for contesting the election w as Friday. The d istric t a tto rn e y ’s off­ ice could file m isdem eanor charg es if crim inal violations a re found, but a new election is unlikely, Wood said. “ I think the d istric t a tto r ­ ney will look a t the violations and see if they rise to the level of crim in al violations." he said. “ If th e re a re none, The problem s th at occurred in the June runoff. Wood said, a re problem s th at occasional­ ly happen the state. throughout “ The big goof-up that w as m ade is th a t we didn’t have enough ballots m ade. Wood said. “ They ran out of ballots all over ju st the city. w asn ’t Y eld e rm an ’s or Cam p­ bell’s race. It w as an incon­ venience and a m ess-up and everybody a g re es w ith that It As a resu lt of the alleg a­ tions, Wood said election offi­ the likely cials will m ore m ake sure th e re a re enough ballots at the next election. than “ Som ething like this h a sn 't happened in 30 years. Wood said “ T h e re ’s no reason to believe it will happen in the next 30 y ea rs D istric t or county atto rn ey s a re responsible for inv estig at­ ing any allegation s of election im pro p rieties than two affidavits a re delivered. if m ore Donovan case renews attention to government officials • 1982 The New York Times WASHINGTON - R e g ard ­ less of w h eth er R aym ond J. Donovan survives as se c re ­ ta ry of labor, the in v estig a­ tion of .accusations ag ain st him has soiled his rep u tatio n and raise d questions about the ju d g m en t of top officials a t the W hite House and the F ed ­ e ra l B ureau of Investigation. No one involved in th e m a t­ te r has so fa r been shown to h ave engaged in c rim in a l or u nethical behavior, but m any of the p a rtic ip a n ts have r e a ­ son to wish they had ac te d dif­ ferently. As the nation last w eek m ark ed the 10th anni­ the W aterg ate v e rsa ry of break-in, the continuing furor over D onovan seem ed to point up anew the value of post- W aterg ate law s enacted to r e ­ store confidence in govern­ m ent. A special p rosecutor a p ­ pointed under one such law is investigating corruption a lle ­ gations ag a in st Donovan and the possibility of ties to o rg a­ nized crim e figures. Even if the Ju s tic e D ep a rtm en t con­ ducted an ag g ressiv e in vesti­ gation of its own, it seem s un­ likely th a t its findings would readily as be ac ce p te d so independent, an of those court-appointed prosecutor. W hite H ouse spokesm en say P re sid e n t R eagan is not ready labor to abandon his sto re of se c re ta ry , whose cre d it w ith the ad m in istratio n is partly based on his having raised hundreds of thousands of dollars the R eagan for cam paign in 1980. So fa r the case seem s not to have done any political d am ag e to the president, but the likelihood of such dam ag e in c re ase s as it drags on At a m inim um . R eagan s aides showed a lack of curios­ ity in Ja n u ary 1981. w’hen they w ere told th at Donovan had “ close personal and business tie s” to organized c rim e fig­ ures. F red F. F ielding, the White House counsel, told a bureau official th a t it w as not necessary to question Dono­ van about a re p o rt th a t he had attended one o r m o re social events with organized crim e that figures. S enators F ra n cis M Mullen J r ., execu­ say exhaustive tive assista n t d irec to r of the FB I, w ent fu rth e r than n eces­ sa ry in assuring them th a t a in­ “ thorough, q u iry ” had turned up no evi­ dence to support the a lle g a ­ tions. As a result, Mullen s own nom ination to be head of the D rug E n fo rcem en t Ad­ m in istratio n has been put in jeopardy. T h e c a s e o th e r h ig h lig h ts , things, the lim its of the F B I’s “ special inquiries" to check the background of p resid en ­ tial nom inees. A gents p e r­ form a routine cre d it check w hile exam ining a nom in ee’s “ c h a ra c te r, asso ciates, repu­ tation and lo y alty ,” but they do not look into the sources of his incom e. D o n o v a n a m o n g The ca se also illu stra te s the “ s a t i s f a c t o r i l y lim its of the congressional confirm ation process. Senate D em ocrats la st w eek called for Donovan to step aside un­ til the c h a rg es against him w e re r e ­ solved,” and Sen. O rrin G. H atch, the U tah Republican who heads the Senate Com ­ m ittee on L abor and H uman R esources, expressed doubts that Donovan could survive the calls for his resignation O ther m e m b ers of the co m ­ m ittee who voted to approve his nom ination la st y ear com ­ plain now th a t FBI w itnesses w ere less than candid in their testim ony. L ate in the w eek, the R e­ publican and D e m o c ra tic leaders of the S enate said the bu rea u ’s investigation should itself be the su b ject of a full- fledged inquiry. But som e a n ­ aly sts note th a t Congress is a coequal branch of govern­ m ent, has subpoena pow er and could have m ounted a m ore rigorous investigation of the p re sid e n t's nom inee. There w as clea rly little ap p e­ tite for fu rth e r inquiries in the ex citem en t of Ja n u a ry 1981, when R epublicans w ere taking control of the S enate and a new R epublican ad m in ­ istration w as com ing to pow­ er. The handling of D onovan’s nom ination has now becom e alm ost as m uch of an issue as the tru th of the alleg atio ns against him . Fielding and F B I officials do not criticize each other, but th e ir sta te m e n ts suggest th a t they a re tryin g to avoid blam e. r 1600 W. 35th 452-3225 2500 Guadalupe 470-5400 Hunting Bead Bargains... LOOK NO FURTHER 14K GOLD-FINE QUALITY Super Summer Grab Bag of Prizes I I MUNCH A GUZZLE FOR ONLY $L 50 UoiM D i ( ’h i u g i H t y l p iz za b \ tlu s l u e It’s ! m a t e lu n ch tur high -: ! lo v e r s , b e c a u s e i t ’s re a d y w h e n ¡ y o u a r e . C iet t h e slic e a t t h e r i g h t p r ic e , a l o n g w ith a d r i n k . (list S I .5 0 w i t h th is c o u p o n S o c o m e b u y to d a y . | ! ¡ I T h e S lice. A \ ailabic (r o m 11 ¡ to 2 . W eekd ays o n ly . It’s th e ! b est m u n ch an d g u z z le in t o w n . ! A n d at th e b est p u c e . O tter i \ - I p ires A u g u st 13. I9K2. 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This Unicorn A Gallery and Gift Shop : CALL ! 4 7 1 - 5 2 4 a j THE i DAILY I TEXAN . world & nation 3' / THE DAILY TEXAN J Monday, June 21, 1982 Israel continues shelling of PLO positions news in brief From Texan news services Thousands gather for peace march in Paris Sunday through Paris Sunday PARIS — Tens of thousands of people marched in France s largest peace demonstration in recent years. Communist-dominated groups participating in the march from the Montparnasse railway station to the Bastille estim ated the crowd at 200,000 people. The ruling Socialist Party refused to endorse the march. It was led by 100 prominent personalities in the arts, science and politics and sup­ ported m ainly by Com m unist-led unions, the Communist Party and other far left groups. Talks on Gibraltar to begin MADRID, Spain — Spain will not end its 13-year-old blockade of the British colony of Gibraltar unless London agrees to discuss Spanish sovereignty claim s over the rocky peninsula, diplo­ m atic sources said Sunday. Talks origi­ nally scheduled for April 20 were post­ poned until June 25, along with Spain’s promised opening of the m assive iron gate sealing Gibraltar from the main­ land, after Britain turned its diplomatic efforts to the Falkland Islands crisis. Spanish officials said private talks be­ tween British Secretary Francis Pym and Spanish Foreign Minister Jose P e­ dro Llorca Monday in Luxembourg will decide whether “ the atmosphere was right” for a lifting of the 13-year block­ ade. Soviet hunger striker freed MOSCOW — One Soviet hunger striker left for the United States Sun­ day, his prized exit visa in hand after a 26-day fast, but another man lay starv­ ing for the 42nd day. Andrei Frolov and Yuri Balovlenkov are both married to Americans, but Frolov’s is the success story of the Divided Fam ilies Group which went on a collective hunger strike May 10 to press for reunification with spouses in the West. The 51-year- old journalist received his visa and flew via Frankfurt to join his wife, Lois, in Chicago. Pope proclaims new saint VATICAN CITY - Pope John Paul II proclaimed the first saint of his pontifi­ cate Sunday in a solemn ceremony in St. P eter’s Basilica. About 20,000 people gathered largest in Christianity’s church for the ceremony that elevated 17th century Capucchin brother Crispi- no da Viterbo to sainthood. Crispino, born in 1668 in the central Italian town of Viterbo, worked as a cobbler, cook and barber during his life and sym bol­ ized the simple values of goodness, John Paul said at the ceremony. The late Pope Pius VII beatified Crispino da Viterbo in 1806. Beatification is the first step to sainthood. Priest arrested near Dublin DUBLIN, Ireland — An Irish-Ameri- can Catholic priest charged with the illegal possession of weapons will ap­ pear in court Monday to seek bail, po­ lic e said Sunday. Father Patrick Molon­ ey, a 50-year-old New York resident, was arrested Friday after police report­ edly found an Armalite rifle and 646 rounds of ammunition in his possession in the town of Limerick, 125 m iles south of Dublin. A court in Dublin remanded him without bail up to July 7. He was arrested in Limerick after police shad­ owed a container cargo from Dublin docks to the Irish provincial town. Postmaster expects surplus WASHINGTON — Postm aster Gener­ al William Bolger expects a $400 million surplus this year — triple the original projection and only the second tim e since World War II the Postal Service has been in the black. Bolger also said he is optim istic the service will not have to raise the price of the 20 cent first-class letter until 1984. On another subject, Bolger said he is still pushing for a nine-digit zip code and expects the concept to be vindicated by a General Accounting Office report in December Shuttle prepared for launch CAPE CANAVERAL. Fla. - Spa­ ceport workers geared up Sunday for a week of frantic activity to get ready for the space shuttle Columbia’s scheduled blast off June 27 on its fourth and final test mission. While most of the ground crew had a rare day off, a skeleton team of about 100 workers made last minute preparations for the start of the 90-hour countdown, set to begin at 4 p.m CDT Tuesday. By United Press International Palestinians accused Israeli troops of shelling wide areas of southern Beirut Sunday, breaking a fragile three-day cease-fire diplomats hoped would buy them enough time to save the Lebanese capital from devastation. Shortly before midnight, the P ales­ tinians said Israel broke a renewed cease-fire com m itm ent by bombing wide areas of southern Beirut, including som e residential districts. The Palestinian news agency WAFA said Palestinians fighting "behind ene­ my lin es,” south of Israel-occupied Ain Zhalta in the Shouf mountains, am ­ bushed an Israeli foot patrol, killing three soldiers and wounding four oth­ ers. Syria earlier said it would accept an international peace-keeping force to su­ pervise an Israeli withdrawal, and Leb­ anese leaders held the first m eeting of an em ergency com ittee to find a solu­ tion to the conflict. Israeli Prim e Minister Menachem Begin predicted peace between his country and Lebanon “ in a very short tim e” and said Israel did not intend to invade Beirut or capture P alestine Lib­ eration Organization chief Y asser Arafat. But D efense Minister Ariel Sharon said, “ Beirut, as a m ilitary and politi­ cal center of the terrorist organization, is an objective that cannot be left alone as is .” vowing to fight to the death rather their arms. surrender Egyptian President Hosm Mubarak of­ than fered the PLO asylum in his country, but the suggestion drew little support from the Palestinians or Israel. In New York late Saturday, the U.N. Security Council unanimously appealed to all nations fighting in Lebanon to re­ frain from violence against civilians and take “appropriate m easures” to al­ leviate their suffering. The 48-hour cease-fire arranged by U.S. presidential envoy Philip Habib ex­ pired Sunday morning, but the Israelis said they would extend the truce as long as the PLO held its fire. Israeli Cabinet spokesman Dan Mer- ridor said in Jerusalem the cease-fire in Lebanon “ has not been given a limit of tim e.” “ There were incidents of infringe­ ments by the other side and we reacted. This still is the situation now,” Merri- dor said after a m eeting of Israel's Cab­ inet. All seven com m ittee m em bers at­ tended the session at the presidential palace in Baabda. D etails were not re­ vealed, but Lebanese political sources have said repeatedly that one solution under consideration called for the Leba­ nese Army to take over security duties in the capital and negotiate an arm s re­ duction by the guerrillas. Syrian M inister of Inform ation in Iskander Ahmed Ahmed said Dam ascus his government — whose 25,000 peacekeeping troops are still in Lebanon — would accept an internation­ al peacekeeping force to supervise the Israeli withdrawal from Lebanon. Israeli troops ride in traffic of Christian-controlled East Beirut Saturday. British troops reclaim last of islands, capture scientific team * 1982 The New York Times LONDON — Britain said Sunday that it had reclaim ed the last of its South Atlantic possessions from Argentina without a fight. It said troops based on the Falkland Islands swooped onto Thule, the south­ ernmost of the rem ote South Sandwich Islands, and captured a team of Argen­ tine scientists. Britain said the scien­ tists w ere there illegally, but Buenos Aires, which confirmed the takeover, said an agreem ent had been reached years ago authorizing their presence. The A rgen tin e high com m and charged on Saturday that British heli­ copters had machine-gunned "defense­ less scien tists” on Thule, which is situ­ the ated 1,275 m iles Falklands off the coast of Antarctica. According to the Argentines. 10 scien­ tists w ere presumed to be British cap­ tives. southeast of Foreign Office officials said the Ar­ gentines were discovered on Thule in 1976 and that their presence had been protested at that time. The officials insisted that negotia­ tions about scientific projects in the South Sandwich archipelago had been held but that no agreem ent was reached. British m ilitary sources said as many as 70 Argentines, m ost of them naval personnel, had been on Thule. Argentina, still smarting from the British recapture of the Falklands a week ago, condemned the helicopter op­ eration at Thule, describing it as “ a fla­ grant violation” of the United Nations resolution calling for an end to all hos­ tilities in the region. It said the scien­ tists on Thule had been studying the weather. After refusing to comment on the Ar­ gentine charges for almost 24 hours, the Defense Ministry said in a statem ent Sunday afternoon: “ At about 1:30 p.m. London tim e to­ day, the Argentines on Thule Island, part of the South Sandwich Islands, sur­ rendered to British forces.” There was no explicit denial of the Argentine assertion that British heli­ copters had machine-gunned the scien­ tific base, which is known as Corberta Uruguay. But it seem ed clear that there had been no resistance by the scientists. Prim e Minister Margaret Thatcher said last week that Britain would re­ claim all South Atlantic territories seized by Argentina. Royal Marines re­ took South Georgia, which is situated between the Falklands and the South Sandwich Islands, in late April. Meanwhile, ships are shuttling be­ in the Falklands, and tween Stanley, Puerto Madryn, in the Patagonian re­ gion of Argentina, repatriating m ost of the 12,000 Argentines captured in the war. Budget plan to cut spending by $7.7 billion ® 1982 The New York Tim es WASHINGTON - The 1983 budget plan that was approved early Friday by a congressional conference com m ittee makes substantial cuts in the projected growth of domestic spending and feder­ al benefit programs. But in choosing between the House and Senate alternatives, the panel gen­ erally endorsed the version that made the sm aller reductions. The House budget resolution, passed on June 10, made deeper cuts than the Senate did in five major benefit pro­ gram s for the poor: Medicaid, welfare, Supplemental Security Income, food stamps and child nutrition. In each case, the conferees approved the Senate spending levels for the fiscal year 1983 and the next two years. Cuts for those five programs, under the Senate resolution and the confer­ ence accord, total $7.7 billion over the next three years, as opposed to $17.5 bil­ the more conservative lion under House-passed resolution. However, the cuts approved by the House-Senate con­ ference com m ittee would affect many of the people who were affected by last year’s reductions. In setting expenditure levels for the 1983 budget, the House made the more modest reductions the health insurance program for the elder­ ly, and the conferees accepted those proposals. in Medicare, Despite the cuts, federal spending on Medicare would continue growing at an annual rate of about 16 percent, from $49.6 billion in 1983 to $57.5 billion in 1984 and $67 billion in 1985. Medicaid, which provides health care for the poor, would grow by 9 percent from 1983 to 1984 and 15 percent from 1984 the agreem ent. Spending on welfare and food stamps would be stable from 1983 to 1985. to 1985 under Rep Thomas J. Downey, D-N.Y., a member of the House Ways and Means Committee, said that panel, for exam ­ ple, would probably not make all the re­ quested cuts in Aid to F am ilies with De- the main welfare pendent Children, program, and Supplemental Security Income, which pays benefits to poor people who are elderly, blind or dis­ abled. The anticipated savings are based on detailed assumptions about changes to be m ade in federal benefit programs. However, com m ittees with several pro­ gram s in their jurisdiction have som e leeway: they may increase spending on one program and reduce outlays on an­ other if they achieve the net savings or­ dered by the conference com m ittee. One of the most telling indications of the budget’s effect on social programs is the amount of savings in such "non­ defense discretionary program s” as job training, subsidized housing and federal secondary aid schools. In this category, the confer­ ence agreem ent calls for savings of $6.3 billion in 1983 and $35.3 billion in 1983- 85. elem entary and to This virtually splits the difference be­ tween the Senate and House proposals, which called for savings of $27 billion and $44.9 billion, respectively, over the next three years. For subsidized housing, the Senate would have provided $17.4 billion in new the sam e amount budget authority, granted this year. The House accepted President Reagan's proposal to provide no new budget authority in 1983 and to rescind $5 billion of authority previous­ ly granted. The conference compro­ mised on a figure of $10.4 billion in new authority. The conferees also made recom m en­ dations for savings in the guaranteed student loan program, which costs $3 billion this year. The recommendations would save the government $59 million in 1983, $574 million in 1984 and $804 m il­ lion in 1985. Congressional budget ana­ lysts estim ate that even with those sav­ ings, the program would grow at a rate of 10 to 15 percent a year. news in photos Quake hits San Salvador, Guatemala Presidential hopefuls meet for Democratic conference WASHINGTON (UPI) - The Demo­ cratic Party opens its mid-term confer­ ence in Philadelphia this week — a pa­ rade of presidential hopefuls and a debate on issues sure to focus on the “ unfairness” of President Reagan’s econom ic program. Past party conferences have turned into shouting matches with Democrats battling each other instead of the Re­ publicans. But national chairm an Charles Manatt has scaled down the size of the m eeting and believes he controls the agenda and the votes sufficiently to avoid another party bloodletting Manatt has told Dem ocrats he will do everything possible to “ avoid an all night issues freak-out.” The conference opens Friday with a keynote speech by House Speaker Thomas O’Neill Then follows, one by one, six of the party’s early presidential hopefuls — former Vice President Wal­ ter Móndale, Sen. Edward Kennedy of Massachusetts, Sen. Fritz Hollings of South Carolina, Sen. Alan Cranston of California, Sen. John Glenn of Ohio and Sen Gary Hart of Colorado. Former Florida Gov. Reuben Askew, another possible contender, will attend the conference but did not ask to speak. The three-day session will cost the party $400,000 and the city of Philadel­ phia nearly the sam e amount. It will attract 6,000 persons, including 1,000 m em bers of the news media — out­ numbering the 897 delegates. In the past, many of the delegates were elected in district caucuses, bring­ ing a wide and often vocal variety of viewpoints to the meeting. But the Democrats changed the rules to provide control of the conference, with the delegation now largely com ­ posed of mem bers of the Democratic National Committee, elected state offi­ cials, those hand-picked by Democratic state com m ittees and 100 at-large cho­ sen by Manatt. congressional The conference also will kick off the 1982 campaign, with many of the party’s new candidates participating in the issues workshop, which will occupy most of Saturday. Sunday will be devoted to adopting poli­ cy positions that Manatt hopes will be general enough to avoid major fights. The theme of the conference will be "fairness,” — an attempt to focus pub­ lic attention on how Democrats believe Reagan’s programs have hurt the poor and benefited the rich. Prelim inary discussion papers for the for “ the conference blame Reagan deepest economic crisis of the last half century.” "This administration has drawn a safety net of privilege and special ad­ vantage around a sm all, wealthy minor­ ity.” the paper said. “ All the sacrifices in the Reagan program have been drawn from those who have the least and those who suffer the most from past, and continuing, discrim ination,” it said. SAN SALVADOR - V irginia C oitata, 101 y ea rs old, and her grandchildren sit in the rem ain s of their house, w hich w as de­ stroyed by an earthquake which struck her house Sunday m orn­ ing. The quake, which hit G ua­ San S a lv a d o r, te m a la and cla im ed tine liv es of 14, injured hundreds and left m any without a hom e. R elief op eration s w ere in the Salvadoran under w ay town of San M iguel T epezon tes, 21 m ile s sou th east of the cap- tial, w h ere resid en ts w ere using their bare hands to help rescu e w orkers digging the rubble. through UPI Telephoto Vietnam threatened by Pol Pot ® 1982 The New York Times BANGKOK, Thailand — In the three and a half years since Vietnam invaded Cambodia, a stalem ate has developed between Hanoi and m ost other govern­ m ents around the world, which have ad­ amantly refused to accept the inva­ sion's legitim acy or results. Vietnam, with as many as 200,000 troops in Cambodia, maintains a gov­ ernment in Phnom Penh and says it li­ berated the country from the atrocious rule of Pol Pot. It defends its occupa­ tion as a necessary defense against Chi­ na and has often termed its action “ ir­ reversible.” With China’s aid. however, Pol P ot’s guerrillas still opppose the Vietnamese from strongholds on the Thai border. The United Nations continues to seat Pol Pot’s representative in the General Assembly. An international conference on Cambodia has demanded that Viet­ nam withdraw its troops and let the United Nations supervise a Cambodian election. And since 1979 Vietnam ’s crit­ ics — including the United .States, much of western Europe Japan and, not least, the non-Communist Association of Southeast Asian Nations — have de­ nied it the economic aid that it wants. R ecently international pressure, threats, frustration and diplomatic ini­ tiatives have shown signs of jiggling the Cambodian chessboard One of the m ost closely watched of th^se developments has been the growing evidence that Vietnam is starting a full-scale diplo­ matic initiative designed to advance its view on the Cambodian question. Whether Vietnam’s efforts can suc­ ceed is unclear. But that they have al­ ready made a mark became clear last week when m ost of the ASEAN foreign m inisters announced they w el­ comed — though in some cases skepti­ cally — a proposed tour of non-Commu- mst Southeast Asian nations later this summer by Vietnam s foreign m inister, Nguyen Co Thach. that Saturday, in a statem ent monitored here, the Vietnam press agency de­ nounced ASEAN’s pledge of support for the coalition of resistance groups, say­ ing “ the ASEAN countries are doing only harm to their organization. ” The effect of these developments on Cambodia may not be known until Sep­ tember, when the General Assembly will again vote on whether to seat a Cambodian government that does not govern By then, Vietnam ’s critics hope, Pol Pot will have gained m ore standing through formal ties with na­ tionalist leaders who a ie untainted by his murderous record Page 4 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Monday, June 21, 1982 Opinions expressed in The Deity Texan are those o1 the edilor or the writer of the article and are not necessarily those of the University administration, the Board of Regents or the Texas Student Publications Board of Operating Trustees viewpoint Get sexism out of the ‘Texan’ Hail to the Review Committee of the Texas Student Publications Board. The committee has ruled that the advertisement placed in the May 5 Daily Texan by Texas Information Brokers was sexist. The half-page ad included a com­ puter-generated illustration of a nude woman with a caption that read: “Take me home for process­ ing.” The ad beckoned: “ Look this over. See if there isn’t something that sparks your interest.” This kind of advertising appeals exclusively to prurient interests, and for no reason except to entice the reader — nude women have ab­ solutely nothing to do with comput­ ers. But worse, ads of this nature cast women in a role inferior to men. They perpetuate the stereotype of women as sexual playthings. The fact that in the May 5 ad the woman appears nude is offensive enough, but worse is the subliminal m es­ sage contained in the ad. The image of the woman was made up of small dots and the letters H, I and M re­ peated, as if to say, “ H ere is this woman — she’s all for HIM .” F u r­ ther, the ad was obviously m eant to appeal only to men, as if women have no business in the com puter industry. Of course, ruling the ad sexist af­ ter it has been published doesn’t undo the harm done. The ad should never have been accepted in the first place; the TSP Handbook, our bible, states, “ No advertising will be accepted which subjugates ei­ ther sex to an inferior ro le.” Before the ad was run, the two people re­ sponsible for accepting or rejecting ads — TSP Advertising D irector Jim B arger and General M anager Loyd Edmonds — realized the ad m ight be regarded as sexist, but de­ cided not to withhold it, despite the fact th at each tim e a blatantly sex­ ist ad has run in the T e x a n our staff and readers have raised unmi­ tigated hell. As with past incidents, w e’ve this won't happen been assured again. The Review Com m ittee has directed the T e x a n advertising de­ partm ent to “ use this decision as precedence for any future advertis­ ing of this n atu re.” But w e’ve heard that song before. Unfortunately, there is little reason to believe sex­ ist ads will be rejected by TSP m anagem ent until people like E d­ monds and B arger develop a sensi­ tivity to issues that go beyond bal­ ance sheets. they go In the m eantim e, we will try to keep a cap on sexist advertising by checking ads before to press. However, any objection we have to an ad m ust be m ade to the Review Com m ittee, and in the late- night heat of trying to get a paper out, there is rarely tim e to call to­ gether a three-m em ber com m ittee, which has 24 hours to m ake a deci­ sion anyway. The night before the May 5 ad ran, then-Texa n editor John Schwartz objected but was told it was too late to yank the ad. So, should another of these offen­ sive ads crop up in your paper, we encourage you to voice your objec­ tions LOUDLY. Sixty people re­ sponded to the May 5 ad with a peti­ tion urging the T e x a n to stop the “ exploitive reduction of women from people to playthings.” Appar­ ently it takes this kind of reaction to wake TSP m anagem ent up to the fact that sexist advertising is offen­ sive and that T e x a n readers will not stand for it. We also encourage you to boycott Texas Inform ation Brokers and any other company that stoops to ex­ ploiting women to sell its wares. Lisa B e y e r Israeli invasion is national suicide The Isra eli invasion of Lebanon has again put th e Middle E a st into the headlines. The Israeli attack, sw iftly execu ted w ith grea t dash and efficien cy , d em on strates yet again the skill of the Israeli D efen se F o rces. If reports are to be be­ liev ed , the Isra elis have w iped out the PLO in southern Leba­ non, given the Syrian Air F o rce a beating and roughly handled Syrian rock et b atteries and ground troops. At first glan ce, Israeli p rosp ects for the future look good. The C am p David a ccord s g a v e Israel a sep arate p eace with its m o st pow erful en em y, E gyp t, enabling the w hole Israeli arm y to be con cen trated in th e north for action in Lebanon or on the Golan. H ow ever, long run p ro sp ects a re bleak. Israel still has not m an aged to solve its gra v e eco n o m ic problem s — inflation runs a t o ver 100 percent; bone-crushing ta x es stifle grow th, m aking any kind of econ om ic headw ay im p ossib le This is the resu lt of being in a continual sta te of w ar sin ce 1948. Israel w ould n ot be able to function w ithout huge A m erican grants of aid. T h is aid is n ecessary for Is r a e l’s su rvival But this is post-1973, not 1948. and the U .S. im ports m uch of its oil from a ca r te l held by the rich est Arab pow ers — w hich have sw orn to Is r a e l’s d estru ction D esp ite the recent oil “ glut, m ost ob­ s e r v e r s a g r e e that the price of oil w ill rise again, and keep rising. L ittle real p rogress has been m ad e in the U nited S tates or E urope toward phasing out im ported oil, and so the p o litica l le v e r a g e ex ercised by the Arab oil s ta te s m 1973-74 still e x is ts. T he A m erican a b ility to support Israel in tim e of g rea t c r is is is thus called into doubt W ithout A m erican aid, Israel w ould collap se. Bv comparison, the Arab sta te s have un lim ited manpower^ money and time The A rabs can lose one, ten, a hundred wars and rise again; Israel cannot lose even on ce Although e a c h Middle-Eastern w ar h as seen the Arab a r m ie s h u m iliat­ ed th ey learn a little m ore each tim e, the Israeli m argin of hale cullom daily texan victory grow s sm a ller and sm a lle r E ach d efea t m a k es Arab hatred m ore im p lacab le and stiffen s their d eterm in ation to h ave reven ge at any p rice. Israel has alm o st no friends, no country that it can u n reserved ly rely upon for aid or p rotec­ tion. In the end, it is the J e w s alon e, as it h as a lw ay s been. Israel is believed to have n u clear w eapons, and its lead ers are d eterm ined that 'M asada sh all not fall a g a in .’’ The atom ic shadow loom s over the M iddle E a st m uch m ore dangerously than it d oes over the U nited S ta tes or the Soviet Union. For the Arabs w ill soon have their own bomb. The m ad Col Khadafy of Libya has d ed icated his cou n try ’s v a st oil w ealth to producing an “ Isla m ic B o m b .’’ He d o esn ’t se e m to have su cceed ed — y e t . E ven tu ally, he w ill probably g et his bomb; K hadafy is too rich, d eterm in ed and cunning not to su cceed If not the Libyans, then the Iraqis, the Saudi Arabi­ ans, the Iranians or som eon e e ls e w ill co m e up w ith a bomb. An “ Isla m ic B om b ” is one of the few things in the M iddle E ast that is in evitab le. This is why the Isra eli intervention in Lebanon or anyw here e ls e is not national p reservation , but national suicide. It is in ev er y o n e ’s b est in terest that th ere be p ea ce and that the P a l­ estin ian p eo p le’s d esire for a sta te be accom m o d a ted so m e­ how N o m ilitary victory w ill sa v e Israel from even tu al Arab reven ge Further, there is litera lly no tellin g w hat len gth s the Isra elis would go to if faced w ith an im m inent d efeat. Without p eace, a holocaust that could engulf the w orld is nearly a certa in ty . C u ll o m i s a T exan e d it o r i a l a s s i s t a n t Impress all of your friends! Buy a chair for your innards I striking ground. The he< ' 1 A « . . n l t i A n n n r l n m o a H l ann levin — ---------------------------------------------- t t _ 4. „ If you can picture your k n ees restin g on a bench and a cushion underneath your rear so that a t one and the sa m e tim e y o u ’re kneeling and sittin g , then you ’re looking at the design for a ch air ad vertised in last Sunday’s paper. This N orw egian gizm o is ca lle d the “ B a la n s” b eca u se by straigh ten in g out the spine, it prom otes good b alan ce. The a d v ertisers cla im that w hen seated on it, y o u ’ll have “ am p le room for the inner o r g a n s.’’ With all due resp ect to N orw ay , I su s­ pect that m y g ib lets alread y h a v e p len ­ ty of room . At lea st the la st tim e I looked down m y throat w ith a m irror, I didn’t n o tice anything trying to slip by my ton sils. M aybe if the ad had cla im e d that W arren B eatty u ses the d e v ic e to keep his hair fo llic le s h ealth y, I'd h av e been m ore w illin g to sh ell out the $194 (sa le p rice). But su gg estin g that I should con ­ sider m y innards d oesn 't m a k e m e w ant to rush out and order a few . Buying furniture is a trick y affa ir an yw ay. Who should one listen to o n eself, o n e’s m oth er, on e's inner or­ gans or the cat? I ’m inclined never to d iscou n t m y c a t’s opinion sin ce she u ses the furni­ ture in m ore cre a tiv e w a y s than I, like snoozing on the dining room tab le and crash in g out under the bed On the other hand, if Mom ab so lu tely daily texan columnist adored a certain floral-p attern ed love sea t, she could probably con v in ce m e to buy it, if only for the ca t. But rarely have I purchased anything b esid es M aalox w ith m y inner organ s in m ind. I don’t w ant to be o verly cr itic a l of this ch air m ak er, though, sin ce furni­ ture d ea lers aren 't the only on es who m ak e you feel guilty about m istr ea tin g your body. Shoe m an u fa ctu rers are w orse — like the ads w h ere they c ite the en orm ous str e ss you in flict on your tarsi, m e ta ­ tarsi and p h alan ges ev ery tim e you hit the p a vem en t. N ow w hat other kind of .p ressu re are fe e t supposed to endure? C ertainly th ey ’re no good at playing poker, an sw erin g the telep hon e or filing an in co m e tax return, though if your blender broke down, they w ouldn't be bad at pureeing tom ato sau ce. I ’m su re the foot h andles the im p act of w alking and running b etter than the elb ow s or head would in the sa m e situ a ­ tion. Crania do not skip w ell over park­ ing lots though m an y bouncers b eliev e they do. N e v erth eless, so m e y ea rs ago a c o m ­ pany crea ted a sh oe to co u n tera ct the supposedly harm ful e ffe c ts of th e foot supposedly harm ful e ffe c striking ground. The h eel w a s low er than the so le , m aking you fe e l, they a s­ serted , a s if you w ere stridin g barefoot on sand. Why anyone w ould w ant to fe e l she w ere sa u ite r in g along the sh ore when in fa ct sh e w as cro ssin g the b u siest I don’t in dow ntown D a lla s, street know. Ju st as you w ere diggin g in to return a v o lley b all serv e, so m e irate cab d riyer w ould try to run you down. B esid es, had the C reator m ea n t for us to dally on the beach all the tim e , He or She would have m ad e P ort A ransas a lot b igger. is ad van ced. T his R ight now , I ’m holding out for a shoe still being tested . I t’s con stru cted of the lig h test, m o st supportive m a ter ia ls around. The in step is revolution ary. The lacing footw ear should reta il for ju st under $ 1,000. Why the high p rice? E n g in eers h ave sc ie n tif­ ica lly d esig n ed it to m ake you fe e l as if you ju st con su m ed a six pack of beer, a sen sation than strollin g through gen tly lapping w aves. even m ore relaxin g But until the product h its the m arket, I ’ll se ttle for beer. And if so m e ad­ v e r tiser a c c u se s m e of abusing m y fe e t ev ery tim e I put one in front o f the oth er, I ch a lle n g e him to invent a drive- through su p erm ark et so a person can pick up all the fixin gs for nachos and never h a ve to le a v e the car. The rise of the computer whiz kids ® 1982 The New York Times NEW YORK — It is a cu rio sity unexplained by sc ie n c e that A m erica n s now adays are born understanding co m p u ters. You con stan tly read of tots w ho h av e plugged in to gian t in stitu ­ tional com p u tin g sy s te m s and tran sferred m illio n s of d ollars to S w iss bank accou n ts or w iped out en tire elec tro n ic filin g sy ste m s. As one who has n ever learned how to m a k e m y $29 c a lc u la ­ tor do long d ivision w ith a d ecim a l point in th e d ivisor — a s one w ho isn ’t even su re w hat a d ivisor is — I m a rv el at th ese pre-p u b escen t g en iu ses, but do not en vy them . They ju st happen to have been bom at a tim e w hen m o st new b ab ies c a m e equipped w ith com p u ter know -how. In a tim e long gone m o st children w ere b om know ing how to kill an a n telop e w ith a hurled sp ear. N ow ad ays hardly anybody can do that. C ertainly nobody thinks it rem a rk a b le th at c h il­ dren could on ce do it w ith g rea t sk ill. N e c e ssity is th e father of a r tistic sp ear-tossin g , as the ph ilosop h ers sa y . S till, the p resen t c a se of the p reco cio u s com p u ter gen era ­ tion ra ise s question s that s c ie n c e h as not a d d ressed . W hat, for ex a m p le, exp lain s the g en eratio n a l sh ift in natural sk ills? Sixty y ea rs ago m o st A m erican boys w ere b o m w ith an un­ derstan d in g of au tom ob iles. I t ’s m y th eory th at th is natural aptitude for the internal com b u stion en g in e w a s th e m ain reason the A xis w a s d efea ted in World War II. In that highly m otorized w ar ev ery A m erican unit had h alf a dozen m en who, w hen th in gs broke dow n, could g e t the w h eels spinning or the tank tread s rum bling again a fter 30 m in u tes of tinkering. T his skill has now been a lm o st en tirely bred out of the A m erican blood. E ven licen sed m ech a n ics h a v e trouble fixing a broken-down car in le s s than 48 hours. When th ey do th e r e ’s a fair ch a n ce it 11 break down again b efore you get it to the battlefron t. E veryb od y sa y s this is b ecau se our in ternal-com bustion m ach in ery is far m o re c o m ­ p licated than it used to be w hen gran d fath er could repair the tin lizzie at the curb w ith a screw d riv er, a p air of p liers and a m onkey w rench. W ell, it's com p licated all right. T he A rm y’s new M -l tank is so bew ildering that if it b reak s down in b a ttle it w ill have to be sen t back to the factory for rep airs. But th is, I su g g est, is b eca u se A m erica hasn't bred a new gen eration w ith a natural understanding of m ech an ized co m p lica tion s. Instead, it has bred a gen eratio n w ith a natural grasp of com p u ters. Surely the a v era g e com p u ter is far m ore co m p li­ cated than the m ost baffling in tern al-com b u stion m ach ine the P entagon can d ev ise, and y e t y ou n g sters so young they still russell baker the new york times think ice-c r e a m sod as are b etter than v in ta g e B ordeaux can fix the com p u ter w ithout c on su ltin g th e M a ssa ch u setts Insti­ tu te of T echn ology. For gran dfath er repairing h is F ord a t the curb, the autom o­ b ile w a s a lo t m ore co m p lica ted than th e h orse, a conveyance w ith w hich h is fath er w a s ex p ert. T h ere w a s no p lace on a h orse w h ere you could u sefu lly apply a m on k ey w rench or screw d riv er. When g ra n d fa th er’s daddy sa w his boy w alk in g tow ard the M odel T w ith a pair of p liers, h is natural im p u lse w a s to ask, “ You going to pull its te e th ? ’’ About th at tim e great-gran d fath er found it w as getting harder and harder to find anybody this sid e of th e veterin ari­ an w ho could repair his horse. S e v era l g en era tio n s that had been born understanding h o rses had d isap p eared b eca u se of th is stra n g e n ew g en etic m u tation that produced only children w ith au to m o b ile know-how. T here w a s a h isto rica l b a sis for th is, sin ce th e autom obile could perform a lot of the sa m e ta sk s a s the h orse if one first provided for it by crea tin g a sy s te m of h igh w ays. I t’s my theory th at h istory had reach ed a sta g e of d ev elo p m en t that cried out for h igh w ays, and the only w a y to g e t them w as to produce th e autom ob ile. The a u tom ob ile cou ld n ’t be brought to full flo w er, though, until the h orse had b eco m e ob solete. T h erefore, it w a s a b iological n e c e ss ity that people who un­ derstood h o rses would have to c e a s e being b om and a new generation that understood a u to m o b iles w ould have to e m ­ erge. A d olescen ts w ho on ce needed the ca r to g et into trouble on Saturday night a re alread y ab le to sit hom e and g et into plen­ ty of trouble by tapping into big fancy com p u ters and flirting w ith felony. In short, biology is responding to another great h istorica l d evelop m en t. As it a ss iste d the au tom ob ile in elim i nating the horse, biology is now helping the com puter bury the au tom ob ile. If m y th eory is co rrect and b iology u nderstands the trends of history b efore hum ans do, th e exp lanation for the sudden flow erin g of com p u ter w hiz kid s is q uite sim p le The com pu t­ er is nothing m ore than an ele c tr o n ic m od ifica tion of the horse. doonesbury srpo u r vert simple. trap, HE'S A ZEALOT HE RALLY BEUENES HES ON A MISSION FROM GOD \ S Á M M W T K X 7 ^ \ rr$ MADE HIM VERY HIGH STRUNG a n p brittle. t yer notice how HE LAUGHS A1 ALL JHt WRONG TIMES, JHt WAY NIXON USED TO7 YOU HAVt JHt SENSt Hi COULD BREAK AT ANY MOMENT YEAH. BUT INHYIS HE TAKING IT ALL OUT AGAINST THE ENV1R ON ME NT 7 \ \ by garry trudeau doonesbury HJEU, I HEARD THAT WHEN HE LUAS TOUR, HE WAS ATTACKED BY A FLOCK OF STARLINGS ' AFTER THAT, HE INCREDIBLE■ NEVER REAUYBE­ TTS ALMOST UEVEP WHERE HE LIKE BIRDS STOOP ON THE FOOD HAYF A SPE­ CIAL SENSE I WONDER f WE SHOULD f BE TURNING ’ BACK, TUCK : \ NO, LETS GO A UT- TIE FURTHER, THAP IVUKETDLOGA pelican o o r v if I COULD v TVS NOT OFTEN WE GET TO BIRD tN SUCH PRISTINE SUR­ ROUNDINGS. TTTS HARP TO b e lie v e n c r e s o c lo s e TO CIVILIZATION \ I KNOW PO YOU REALIZE W tYE WALKED FIVE HOURS WTTHOUT SEEING A SOUL7 INCREDIBLE, tS tfT I f f by garry trudeau OREASE SHUT GREASE n ¿ Y R F 'EM' uppjRD ! TRIBEPO you THINK THEY'RE ’EM1 NOTIN G r a n g e 1 gktm.sir7 é-19 Monday, June 21, 1982 □ THE DAILY TEXAN O Page 5 Argentina deserves disgrace; military, news media to blame e 1982 The New York Times JT* WASHINGTON - P russian o fficers, after G erm an y’s de- m *urned for an alibi to the D olch stosslegen d e, a *evf ^ l e *n which the w arrior Siegfried w as stabbed in t back. H itler later revived the sam e D olch stoss in den u s’n& {he J ew s as a scap egoat for G erm an y’s lo ss of World War I. This ancient ex cu se — “ w e w ould have won, had w e not been betrayed — is now being used by the A rgentine junta, eeking to avoid responsibility for d efeat, the junta is fanning hatred for the U nited States. Responding to this, both A lexander H aig and Jeanne Kirk­ patrick are urging P resident R eagan to do by telephone w hat he would not do face-to-face with P rim e M inister T hatcher at the V ersailles su m m it m eetin g: pressu re her to go e a sy on the A rgentines, to be “ m agn an im ou s in v icto ry .” In this w ay, w e w-ould p resu m ab ly get cred it in Latin A m er­ ica for saving A rgentina’s face, and, our State D ep artm en t hopes, d isso cia te ou rselves from the resen tm en t L atins fe e l at the B ritish for com m ittin g the sin of winning a fair fight. william safire the new york times That is p recisely the w rong p olicy; it feed s the D ol­ ch sto ssleg en d e. What the people of A rgentina need now is to wake up to reality. They have been fed phony d ream s of glory; they w ere told they w ere w inning when they w ere losing; they have been lied to by th eir lead ers and their new s m ed ia. Even now, the junta seek s to p reserv e u n reality by p retending the surrender of all its fo rces w as a m inor setb ack in a grand cam paign, and by darkly hinting that the U nited S tates w as th e villain. The sh a m e of A rgentina is not in d ip lom atic m isca lcu la ­ tion, nor in losing a m ilita ry action. The dishonor lies in the way an ordinarily in telligen t and civ ilized pop u lace perm itted jin goism and false pride to blind it to reality. F a ct: The ju st-resign ed P resid en t G altieri, for all his stars and ribbons and sa sh es, wra s only an a rm ch a ir general; he is better equipped to be a doorm an at a fancy hotel His diplo­ m a tic stra teg y w as all bluff, his m ilita ry ta c tic s inept and even when d efea t b eca m e apparent, he did not have the se n se or cou rage to cut his losses. F act: The A rgen tin e ad m irals — the firebrands who talked the loudest b efore th e firing began — turned out to be u n w ill­ ing to fight. Nobody can claim this is a Latin trait; the g a lla n ­ try of the A rgentine p ilots p roves ju st the opposite. Y et a fter the sinking of the G eneral B elgrano, the A rgentine navy — in terror of two su b m arin es and in d ereliction of duty — put its tail betw een its leg s and let the other arm ed se r v ic e s fight the war. F act: The A rgentine arm y has co m m an d ers who m ak e an ­ nouncem ents but not war. At G oose G reen, a spirited A rgen­ tine d efen se would have endangered the B ritish flank th ru st­ ing tow ard P ort S tan ley, but the A rgentines g a v e up to a fo rce half their size. At P ort Stanley, a larger force a t lea st as w ell- fed and w ell-supplied a s their B ritish a tta ck ers never coun­ terattack ed ; th is is evid en ce of an a rm y trained only to fight civilian s. Let us not. then, seek to soften the blow to A rgentina’s national pride That m isp laced pride co st a thousand lives and d ese r v e s a blow If w e a re to treat A rgentines a s adults and equals, w e should urge them to throw out the rest of their beribboned and braided doorm en and to ex a m in e the real ca u se s of the collap se of their national standing. The w a y for Argentina to stand tall am ong nations is not to build an arm y and buy arm s with who h to threaten its neigh­ bors and subjugate its own people. The w ay is to reorganize its econ om y and polity to take ad vantage of its great human and natural resources The ob ject of U.S. policy at this m om ent should be to help the A rgentines fa ce the co n se­ q u en ces of their self-delusion One day the new D esap a recid o s w ill co m e hom e — the sold iers who w ere m ade to su iter in ca p tiv ity by a [• ralyzed junta afraid of the im pact of their return. Then th ere m ay be an accounting. In the m ean tim e. A rgen tin a’s friends should do nothing to sa v e the fa ce of any reg im e that avoids de­ served d isg ra ce by claim in g to have been stabbed in the back. T here is no “ debate on abortion. The word “ debate" Right to life not without limits michael godwin ic rea lity — w e have to work for a liv ­ ing. or at least find som eon e to support us. Talking about lib erty as if it w ere a natural right d o esn ’t work any m ore than talking about the right to life in th ose term s. im p lies a give and take of id eas which has never really occurred in the abortion con troversy. But you c a n ’t exch an ge id eas if you ha­ ven t questioned your own assu m p tion s, and neither side has. If they had, they iron ically, m ight have realized that, both sid es tend to base their argu m en ts on the sam e philosophical foundation: the “ natural rights" doctrine of th e 18th century E nlightenm ent. What is a “ natural rig h t" 9 To E n­ lightenm ent philosophers, it w as a priv- ileg e you didn't have to earn — you got it just by being a human being. T he no­ tion's not out of style; now adays, lots of people b elieve they have natural rights to all sorts of things. Most A m erican s had this notion of righ ts drum m ed into their heads by jun­ ior high civ ic s teach ers. R em em b er the Independence, w hich D eclaration of sta te s that “ all Men" (today w e would sa y “ all P erso n s" ) are “ endow ed by th eir Creator w ith certain unalienable R ig h ts” ? Jefferson and his crow d w ere tellin g us that God had provided us w ith a w hole set of natural righ ts, including “ Life, L iberty, and the P ursuit of Hap­ p in ess." W’hat do th ese rights have to do w ith abortion, you ask? L e t’s con sid er “ L ife" and “ L iberty." P eop le who u se the term " R igh t to L ife" are, w hether they know it, invok­ ing the E n ligh ten m en t's con cep t of life a s an “ u nalienable right," expanded to its m ost e x trem e conclusions. L ife at any d egree of d evelop m en t b eco m es sacred , to be preserved at all c o s ts — rega rd less of w hat dem an d s this puts on " arouriD THe wont?' V guest column pregnant w om en. life a re Those who in sist on this ab solu tist in­ terpretation of the “ unalienable" right to ignoring both the sim p le facts of nature and the estab lish ed v a l­ ues of our cu ltu re. If there is a God who provided us w ith a right to life, H e c e r ­ tainly didn't g iv e this right the sta tu s of natural law , no m a tter w hat the D e c la ­ ration sa y s. L ife is cheap in the natural world; p rem atu re death, w heth er of is com m on. And if man or m icrob e, w estern so c ie ty w ere really co m m itted to human life a t any co st, there would be neither neutron bom bs nor cu ts in social w elfa re program s. Abortion proponents w ho dem and the absolute freed om of a w om an to “ con­ trol her own body" could be said to be re-assertin g her “ R ight to L iberty." C ertainly, a state-en forced pregnancy could at lea st be seen a s “ involuntary servitu d e," w hich has been ex p licitly outlaw ed sin ce the 13th A m endm ent. But (of co u rse) our right to lib erty isn ’t ab solu te eith er. O utside of the m ore obvious ex cep tio n s (e .g .. the draft and crim in al this so-called right, our lib erties are also restricted by irreducible con strain ts like eco n o m ­ law ) to And even if w e ch o se n on eth eless to regard natural rights a s som e sort of eth ica l p ricip les, lib erty and life con ­ flict w ith each other w hen taken to their fu rth est ex trem e. A bsolute liberty a l­ low s no restriction s on taking life, ju st as an ab solu te right to life n ecessa rily dem an d s restriction s on liberty. So the w rangling about w h ere human life be­ gin s or w h ere freed om ends really m is s e s the im portant issu e; w e have to drop th ose u se le ss ab solu tist argu m en ts and m ak e a p ractical d ecision , rather th eoretical pronouncem ent, than about w hat lim itation s of each ought to be. the a In th is con text, liberal abortion law s se e m to be the m ost reasonable and m ost hum ane ch oice. Once you realize that to a ssert an ab solu te “ right to life" is un reason ab le, it no longer m atters w hat anyone sa y s about “ when life b e­ g in s .” The criterion b eco m es the q u a l i ­ t y of life you w ant to estab lish for your­ se lf and your society. The ch o ice is clea r In an overpopu­ lated w orld, w h ere a forced pregnancy in flicts in estim ab le m isery on both m other and child, and w h ere the co st of unw anted p regn an cies w eigh s on so c i­ ety a s a w hole, in sistin g on som e “ right to li f e ” is. sim p ly, in sen sitiv e and irre- sp on sib le.______________________________ G o d w i n is U T m ost m a n a y m g e d i ­ tor. 11 THe economy" U.S. economy tied up for short run ® 1982 The New York Times NEW YORK — With so m uch e x c ite m e n t around the w orld — Isra elis battling Syrians in Lebanon, the B ritish rounding up A rgentines in the F alklands, the b iggest crow d in the h isto ­ ry of the nation callin g for a n u clear freeze — the eco n o m ic story has been driven off page 1. P resid en t R eagan hopes it w ill stay off. The recessio n has slow ed to a w alk. The industrial produc­ tion index fell only tw o-tenths of 1 percen t last m onth, and so m e eco n o m ists thought that would be the last d eclin e b efore the econ om y sta rts to craw l upward. But nobody e x p ects a strong recovery. In terest ra tes re­ m ain high and h ave been edging higher The stock and bond m ark ets a re still w orrying about the im p act of the big budget d eficits on in terest rates and, even m ore, about a liquidity crisis. B rid gew ater A sso cia tes n otes that liquidity is at its low est level sin ce 1929. The in v estm en t ad v isers c ite as com p on en ts of th eir calcu lation the low ratio of current a ss e ts to current lia b ilities of non-financial corp o­ rations (1.4), the high p ercen ta g e of corporate debt that is short-term (42 p ercen t) and the ratio of co m m ercia l bank loans to d ep osits (about 80 p e r c e n t). And corp orate borrow ings are a ccelera tin g , but not be­ ca u se com p a n ies are adding to in ven tories or in creasin g in­ v estm en ts; on th e contrary, they h ave been cutting stock s and trim m in g cap ital spending The r ise in loan dem and — by 18 percent sin ce th e start of th e year — is due to the effo rts by com p a n ies just to pay their bills. The m oney supply has been grow ing fa ster than its ta rg et range of 5.5 p ercent, cau sin g the m on etarists to warn of a revival of inflation But Paul A. V olcker, chairm an of the F ed eral R eserv e Board, has told C ongress that the grow th of m oney should not be restricted by rigid targets. The F e d ’s c r itic s think that V olcker has renounced m on etarism too late, contending that the cen tral bank has alread y been far too rigid and has brought on a liquidity crisis. The rela tiv e o p tim ists sound like p essim ists. Otto E ck stein , p resid en t of D ata R esou rces Inc., says, “ While th ere are g lim m er s of revival in con su m er spending that still ju stify a forecast of recov ery beginning at m id year after the tax cu t, the outlook for business cap ital spending is d eterioratin g ” T his, he adds, is p articu larly ironic “ sin ce the focu s of the R eagan program w as to boost the in vestm en t rate to h isto ri­ c a l peaks in order to revive the p rod u ctivity trend and m ak e A m erican industry m ore co m p e titiv e in international m a r­ k e ts .” leonard silk the new york times Thus the K eyn esian s regard supply-side eco n om ics as d is­ cred ited . th e supply-siders regard m on eta rism a s discred ited , and both the supply-siders and m o n eta rists regard K eyn esian ­ ism a s d iscred ited P ra g m a tism , an all-purpose but n o n sp ecific creed , e m ­ erg es trium phant. V olcker, on ce the op eration al m on etarist, has rejoined the p ra g m a tists. And M urray L. W eidenbaum, chairm an of the Council of E con om ic A d visers and a blender of supply-side eco n o m ics, m on eta rism and K eynesian eco ­ n om ics, a p ragm atist par e x c e lle n c e , sa y s he never prom ised anyone a ro se garden, but still thinks that “ durable im p rove­ m en ts in the econ om y w ill c o m e slo w ly ." H ow ever, he adds, “ th ese real b en efits w ill not be the resu lt of pronouncem ents by eco n o m ists or p olitician s. " C ertainly the ingenuity and resou rcefu ln ess of the private secto r should never be u n d erestim ated , neith er in the United S tates nor, for exam p le, in India. P ro fesso r S. Prakash Sethi, d irector of the C enter for R e­ search in B u sin ess and Social P olicy at UT D allas, forw ards a report from T h e H i n d u in P atn a, India, th at gangs have sprung up w ho kidnap elig ib le b ach elors for m arriage to im ­ pecunious m aidens w ho cannot afford to pay dow ries. “ Dur­ ing the current m arriage sea so n ." sa y s T h e H i n d u , “ at lea st 100 elig ib le bach elors from M onghyr, K hagaria and B egusarai d istricts have been kidnapped by m e r cen a ries at the bidding of g ir ls ’ p aren ts and forced to m arry at gunpoint. " A so cio lo g ist in P atn a, in p raise of private in itiative, sug­ g ests that this m ay be a very good thing: “ T his m ay be the only w ay to rid our sick so c ie ty of the m a la ise of d ow ry.” The eco n o m ists of the R eagan ad m in istration are also hopeful that, though their form al th eories and pronounced p o licies have not w orked as th ey had planned, th e free m arket will repair the failin gs of govern m en t, at least in the long run In thq, short run, h ow ever, they a re still counting on the stim u lu s of the July 1 tax cut and the ea sin g of m onetary policy. If they did not p rom ise anyone a rose garden, at least they did p rom ise a stron ger secon d -h alf eco n om y to the man in the R ose Garden Is this w aitin g for Godot? RSST..THINK THERK ANYIHIN&TOTWS NFL tm BUSINESS.,? Southern Baptists at it, again W ell, you 've got to g iv e them cred it; the Southern B a p tist Convention fin ally attacked som eth in g w ith r e a l pow er — the N ational F ootb all League. D eleg a tes to the organ ization ’s con ­ vention in N ew O rleans Thursday passed a resolution which said, “ The N ational F ootball L eague has been in­ sen sitiv e to the sp iritu al n eed s of the scheduling of Sunday nation g a m es at tim e s w hich would c r e a te such a con flict w ith teleca stin g r e lig ­ ious se r v ic e s to the h om es of our na­ tion." its in The resolution w ent on to say that NBC and C B S’ pre-gam e b road casts, w hich often begin a t 11 a .m ., have cau sed local station s to drop Sunday re­ ligious program s. At first, the resolution se e m s rather humorous. One rem em b ers gettin g out of Sunday se rv ice ea rly b ecau se the Cowboys played at noon But this is m ore than ju st a b attle betw een the opening kickoff and the benediction. The SBC se e m s to have forgotten that If m ore ratings rule the air w aves daily texan view ers are turning on Brent Mus- berger and P h y llis G eorge than Oral R oberts and Jim m y Sw aggart. NBC and CBS are going to g iv e the people w hat they want. R eligion is m eant to be a sm a ll-sc a le personal exp erien ce, shared with oth­ ers. not a slick packaged program on Channel 6 w atched from an easy-chair. By stayin g hom e to w atch the N F L , the public has m ad e a sta tem en t about re­ ligion In other w ords, the SBC should mind its own business. But of cou rse, m inding every on e e ls e ’s business is what the SBC does b est. If the public won t lea v e hom e and co m e to church, by God (no pun intend­ ed ). the church w ill go to the hom e OK. it ’s really no big deal — the SBC has w anted to m ove N FL star ting tim es back for quite a w h ile and TV ev a n g el­ ism did not begin y esterd a y at 8 a .m ., 9 C entral, but this s e e m s an ex trem ely poor tim e to attack som ething as rela­ tiv ely unim portant a s the N FL Over the past five y ears, the SBC has fundam ental b eco m e m ore b ib lically and p olitically co n serva tiv e E veryone knows co n serv ative religiou s groups ( I ’m not nam ing n am es, Bro. Jerrv) w ere very helpful to Ronald R eag an ’s cam paign in 1980. N ow . two y ea rs later, as the presid en t's econ o m ic program s se ttle in and “ N ew F e d e r a lism ” be­ c o m es m ore than a buzz word, the SBC could be using this convention to prove w hether the p olicies o f the ad m in istra­ tion it helped e le c t can work. V o l u n ­ t e e r program s to help the down-and-out should be the m am topic of discussion for the SBC, not the N FL and television scheduling._________________ M c A b e e is u T exan e d i t o r i a l a s - s i s t a n t . S ex and g o re at your local th e a te r The accen t of m o v ies th ese d ays s e e m s to fall h eavily on sex and blood-n-guts. By that I’m not talking about “ F riday the 13th" P a rts One through E igh t in clu sive, or even the n ew ­ e st teen screa m . “ Slum ber P a rty M a ssacre" ; w e ex p ect sex and blood-n-guts from those, sin ce w e know beforehand that all they are a r e sh o w ca ses for H ollyw ood m akeup m en and P e n t h o u s e m ag azin e rejects. I'm talking fa m ily film s here, people. H ave you seen “ Star Trek. The W rath of Khan" y et? The television se r ie s, and even “ The M otion P ictu re" settled fo r a few green b lotch es on the face and hands to c r e a te the desired e ffe c t The only real horror of "The Motion P ictu re” tak es p lace in the transporter room , w here two people are only halfw ay beam ed aboard and are sent back b efore they can form . The au dience d oesn 't se e a thing. in (an for G en e R oddenberry But here co m es Jack Sow ards (a m odern screen w riter) filling old-fashioned screen w riter) on the new screen p la y , and the blood flow s freely. You h av en ’t lived until y o u ’ve seen R icardo M ontalban with half his fa ce burned aw ay. It’s fun to w atch a slim y brown thing craw l into W alter K oen ig’s ear and com e back out an hour la ter w ith blood and brain m atter follow ing it. You even get to se e P au l W infield d isso lv e slow ly and painful­ ly from phaser fire. Y owza. A new m ovie due out soon. “ Tron, ’ d eals w ith an en gin eer who g e ts trapped inside a vid eo g a m e sy stem . He g e ts to outrun F rogger and everything. But when “ robots" explode, th ey’ll really e x p l o d e . Who’s putting out this m essy fare? Why, Walt D isn ey Studios, of course. Sex is big on the big screen , too. The radio ad for “ Slum ber P arty M assacre" (h ow 's that for a k eep -n o-secrets title? ) includes a g ir l’s v o ice saying, “ The football tea m 's gonna gary wiener guest column crash the party, girls, and w e re all gonna sco re tonight.” Oh, w ow Which brings to mind a question about teen screa m s. Why do people only die bloody deaths when they're having sex? I ad m it, it ’s a hell of a w ay to go, but why? And if that holds true, w hy does the killer alw ays go a fter the film ’s virgin la st of a ll° Food for thought. When I w ent to se e “ Wrong is R ight." I exp ected a little gore a s part o f the storyline. I can handle gore in the right con text, but I c a n ’t handle it for the sak e of dislodging m y lunch So I take m y se a t in the th eater and prepare for the com ing a ttraction s. For the first tim e in m y life, I saw a p review with the w ords THIS HAS B E E N A PP R O V E D FOR R ESTR ICTED A UD IEN C ES. Good thing I hadn't bought pop­ corn; the preview w as for D eath S c rea m s.” That four-m inute p review m ust have shown ev ery nude love-m aking scen e in the picture and half of the killings. I sat there, exp osed for the first tim e in m y life to the teen scream m entality. I had previously planned never to voluntarily go to a gore flic k ; sin ce that preview . I have taken a blood oath. After the film I headed for hom e to the r ela tiv e sanity of my TV screen . L a t e N i g h t w i t h H a n d L e t t e r m a n w as com ing on and 1 had just enough tim e to catch it. His gu est w as John C arpenter, who had brought along an exp licit clip of his la test film . “ The T hing.” Y ow za. Gar y likes to wat ch “Green Acres. _1_ The draft and pacifists: a place in the Army mark leon guest editorial N early 10 years a fter V ietnam the m ilita ry draft is again an issu e. R ea s­ suran ce that it is only registration does little to rem ove the u gly sp ecter of in­ voluntary con scrip tion . The govern ­ m ent is plainly statin g that it ex p ects young m en to fight and die in any war it fan cies, declared or oth erw ise Such blatant rides roughshod over the con scien ce of any free-thinking individual In this con text, the statu s of con scien tiou s ob jector be­ co m es im portant national patern alism The con scien tiou s objector has never had an easy tim e of it, and it appears this is not about to change Dr. Warren H oover, ex ecu tiv e d irector o f the lnter- religiou s S erv ice Board for C on scien ­ tious O bjectors, sta te s that new ly pro­ g o v e r n in g p o s e d con scien tiou s ob jectors are rep ressiv e r e g u l a t i o n s and “ turn back the clock to World War I.” According to Dr. Hoover the draft agen cy will consider co n scien tiou s ob­ jecto rs as part of the w ar effort They will be inducted into non-com bat priori­ ty w ar m obilization jobs Such regulations m ak e a m ock ery of the en tire concept of co n scien tio u s ob­ jection There are m any valid rea so n s for claim in g statu s as a CO. P a c ifism , the total opposition to v iolen ce and w ar, is one Objection to a sp ecific w ar on m oral or philosophical grounds is anoth­ er. E ven though Ronald R eagan cla im s the V ietnam war w as a noble endeavor there are still m any d e a r th inking in­ telligen t people who strongl\ d isagree. There is only one real ju stification for rejecting all claim s to con scientiou s ob­ jection . and that is the absurd cant “ My country right or w ron g.” Y et that is p recisely the position the governm ent se e m s prepared to take. A CO m ay be placed in a non-com bat position , but that is of little con sequence if the job en tails war m obilization Of course the underlying is^ue is still the draft itself. How can a nation m ake any cla im s to freedom when its govern­ m ent a sserts the right to enslave--eiti- zens? __________________ _ r j **» L e o n is a g r a d u a t e m a t h e m a t i c s s t u d e n t . Page 6 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Monday, June 21, 1982 Low franc draws tourists to France PARIS - Armed (U PI) with w allets full of dollars that carry record-high pur­ chasing power, A mericans have launched a sum m er in­ vasion of France. Their hosts are welcoming them with open arm s and cash registers. The devaluation of the French franc last week was followed by two events, both to the advantage of visitors from across the Atlantic. F irst, the French govern­ m ent froze the prices of all consum er goods from pota­ toes to perfume. Then, when money m arkets opened two days the U.S. dollar soared past 6.7 francs. Some bankers say it could top 7 francs by the end of the sum ­ m er. later, To top off the good omens, the sun that had been hiding above rusty gray clouds for the past two weeks broke into the open again. “ W ere expecting a block­ buster sum m er,” said Susan Durst, m arketing m anager of American Express Co. in P a r­ travel is, largest U.S. agency devoted to handling foreigners in France. the She predicted 50,000 foreign the tourists — m ost from United States — will book trips to France through her company alone between now and Septem ber, the end of the vacation season. “ Obviously the weakness of the franc makes France more attractive now, and we’re as­ suming it’s not going to get stronger for a while French businesses are ap­ parently making the same as­ sumption. When Martin Devine of Philadelphia made a purchase at a Paris boutique, he re­ m arked that it was less ex­ pensive in dollars than he'd expected. “ The I salesm an should come back next year, when the dollar will be even stronger,” said Devine. “ I plan to do just th a t.” said Tt all depends on what street you walk down, or what store you go into," said Cindy Taulbee of Knoxville, Tenn. “ I've been eating in little bis­ tros, so it hasn’t been that ex­ pensive. But in general, it's still pretty expensive." “ Compared to London, it's g re a t," Jenny Clark of Abing­ don, Va , said of the prices. “ But compared to home it's terrib le.” All three Americans in P a r­ is said they would have made the dollar was if the fetching 5, 6 or 7 francs. trip “ But I’m not complaining about this ra te ,” said Devine Law forbids sales on public streets By JIM M Y McKENNA D aily T exan Staff Reaction from local ven­ dors to a new city ordinance prohibiting unlicensed the selling of m erchandise from public property has ranged from whole-hearted support to angry criticism . The new ordinance specifi­ cally prohibits vendors from soliciting m otorists on public streets, placing any item s on the right of way and selling their goods from public prop­ erty without a city license. The police, according to a news release, have been issu­ ing warnings since June 1, but starting July 1 citations will be to non-complying vendors. issued However, one police officer on patrol in the west campus area who wished to rem ain unidentified said Friday he had not issued any warnings to vendors because he was not aware of any such ordinance. Austin police Lt. Roger Na­ pier said the departm ent has letters to officers sent out advising the ordi­ them of nance and instructing them to start issuing warnings to non­ complying vendors It is possible some officers don't know about the ordi­ nance. he said. “ We re in the process of moving from the old building to the new build­ ing and that particular offi­ c e r’s letter may be in his old (m ail) box and he just hasn t checked it recently,” he add­ ed. Terry Irion, assistant city attorney, said the city has al­ ways had an ordinance prohi­ biting vending on public prop­ erty without a license but that mobile food vendors were ex­ em pt from this ordinance. Consequently, it was diffi­ cult for police to enforce the ordinance, so no one obtained a city license, he said. The new ordinance re­ moves the mobile food ven­ dors’ exemption and provides “ a reasonable and fair ordi­ Irion said. nance to enforce, “ I suspect we’re going to sta rt getting applications for licenses now. They’ll be site- specific, meaning they can sell in one designated place, he said. “ We’re going to have much greater control over who is vending on public prop­ erty, and w here.” The city is not trying to put anyone out of business or raise money, he said, but it wants to stop vendors from soliciting passing m otorists and causing traffic hazards. Tom Ragland has been a for The carnation vendor Flower People since Febru­ ary and usually works the in­ tersection of 38th Street and North Lam ar Boulevard. He PERMANENT RESIDENT VISAS PAUL PARSONS Attorney at Law 2200 Guadalupe Suite 216 477-7837 Fres in it i a l c o n s u lta tio n fo r U T i t u d o n t i I f a c u lty } § piT& FREE SHOW 1811 Guadalupe, Austin, Texas 476-0631 What a deal! A great Pizza H utH meal plus free entertainment. Join us! MONDAY JUNE 21 Movie “ ON GOLDEN POND” 7pm and 9pm TUESDAY JUNE 22 Live Entertainment “ PAT MEARS” 7 :3 0 p m -10:U0pm WEDNESDAY JUNE 23 Movie “ URBAN COWBOY” 7pm and 9pm Texan Kle McCasland (r) wears his native headgear in the streets of Paris. Like many other Americans, he and his grandfather Bill Hogge and brother Craig are vacationing in France, taking advantage of the devaluated franc. with a smile. Almost every aspect of va­ is cationing for Americans looking up this year. Airlines are offering New York-Paris round trip fares for well below $500. A survey of 10 top Paris ho­ tels shows they all have va­ cancies during the sum m er months. Three-star restaurants like the Tour d ’Argent still have like 300 eye-popping prices francs a person, but that tran ­ slates into $45 for an evening at the world’s most famous eatery. The m onetary devaluation is the second in eight months for France. Because of a new city ordinance, vendor Joanne Ogg won’t be able to hawk flowers at Manchaca Road and Ben White Boulevard. said that in the past he would stand next to the curb and so­ licit sales and during red lights he would walk car to car in the street. Now, he said, he stays 10 feet from the curb on private property because of the ordi­ nance. “ It's m ore com fort­ if I'm able and profitable close to the street. It's easier to get people’s business that w ay," he added. Ragland estim ated the re- strictions of the new ordi­ nance have cut about $2 from his $8 a day sales. “ I'm not a traffic hazard," he said. “ There haven’t been any wrecks as a result of my selling flowers. I think Austin m otorists are capable of han­ dling the situation." Alan D. Legg, a vendor for the Long Beach Eggroll stand at 26th and Speedway streets, said: “ I think they (the City Council) know what they’re doing. They know what the public needs and I ’m all for the ordinance as long as they get the specifics down right, once. Glenn Rothelle Jr., selling imported Mexican dresses from his van at 29th and Sala­ do streets, said Friday: “ The is what small businessman makes America great — if they crush him, well, th a t’s it.” TSP BOARD MEETING TODAY TSP CONFERENCE ROOM Phone counseling moves to 471-2255 The Telephone Counseling and R eferral Service, which offers 24-hour daily assistance to UT students, staff and faculty in personal crises, has changed its phone number from 476-7073 to 471-2255. The service, part of UT’s Counseling, Learning and Career Services, assists with personal and relationship problems, c ri­ sis consultation and current personal crises. Torah, Talmud study set for Tuesday The Judaic Summer Studies Program , sponsored by the Cha- bad Jewish Student Center, will have Torah and Talmud class­ es Tuesday night at 2101 Nueces St. Torah studies will begin at 6:30 p.m. and Talmud studies at 7:30 p.m. For additional information, call 472-3900. 2200 Guadalupe Monday-Friday 7:00-11:00 311 S. Lamar Mondciy-Friday 8:00-11:00 TSP BUILDING 5:30 PM BREAKFAST SPECIAL Tujo eggs, our ouun hoshbrouuns or grits, toast or hom em ode biscuits with jelly or cream gravy. 1.85 CARRY OUT O N LY VISA' Environmentalists protest Groups angered over proposals to loosen laws By DUDLEY ALTHAUS Daily Texan Staff A re a e n v ir o n m e n ta lis t groups voiced their opposition to proposed changes in feder­ al legislation affecting the en­ vironment and perform ed a short skit to illustrate threats to the environment during a press conference a t the Capi­ tol Sunday. of th e M embers of the Audubon Society, the Sierra Club, Wild­ life Rescue and other “ con­ cerned citizens” used the oc­ 200th c a s io n anniversary of the selection of the bald eagle as a symbol of the United States to draw attention to threats to the ea­ gle in particular and the na­ tion’s environment in general. “ When over 80 percent of the public strongly supports the Clean Air Act and the and C le a n W a te r A ct overw h elm in g ly su p p o rts other environmental m ea­ sures, then why does our gov­ ernm ent act as if it were the other way around?” asked Greg Farm an, president of the Travis Audubon Society and the groups’ spokesman. The figures cited by F a r­ man are from a survey of A m ericans’ attitudes toward environmental issues, con­ ducted by national opinion surveyor Lou Harris. The groups particularly op- for coal-fired pose the loosening of emission automobiles standards and ind ustrial plants and the proposed am endm ents to the Clean Wa­ ter Act that would elim inate regulation of dredging and land-fill activity in ecological­ ly fragile coastal and interior wetlands. Richard Hughes, a m em ber of the executive com m ittee of the Austin chapter of the Sier­ ra Club, said increased auto emissions and the burning of coal with a higher sulfur con­ tent — such as the lignite mined in the Bastrop area — would seriously affect the health of thousands of Ameri­ cans and could cause the pre­ m ature deaths of persons who already have respiratory ail­ m ents. Hughes cited a recently re ­ leased Audubon Society study which claim s to have found “ strong evidence” the weakening of the Clean Air Act could cause the deaths of 2,200 people annually in the western states alone. that The study said as many as 800 of those deaths would be in Texas. According to the the m ost d ra stic study, change in air quality in the im m ediate future can be ex­ pected in the West, “ where the shift from oil and natural gas to coal is already affect­ ing a ir quality.” The environm entalists also oppose an am endm ent to the Clean Water Act that would require­ perm it elim inate ments for dredging or filling in wetlands areas. Federal perm its are now required before any dredging or land-fill operations can be undertaken. The wetlands — the na­ m arsh areas along tion’s coast and in areas of the upper-Midwest — are m a­ jor spawning grounds for fish and the principal nesting areas for large num bers of m igratory birds. Hughes said unregulated land-fill and dredging would seriously threaten these frag­ ile and ecologically im portant areas. M embers of the groups — variously dressed as an eagle, a tree and two humans affect­ ed by bad air and w ater — performed a short skit in which they voiced their oppo­ sition to the proposed changes to the Clean Air and Clean Water Acts and to the opening of m ore national wilderness areas to com m ercial logging and strip mining. “ The Interior D epartm ent wants to open up wilderness areas to extensive strip min­ ing and other m ineral explo­ ration,” said Lea Stone, who was playing the role of the tree. “ The Forest Service may want to double or even triple the number of trees cut down on your public lands. How would you like to visit one of your national parks and see trees being clearcut and beautiful vistas being ravaged by strip m iners?” DPS to to raise By HECTOR CANTU D a ily T exan Staff alcohol-related Because of the high number of traffic deaths on Texas roads, the le­ gal drinking age should be raised to 21, the director of the state D epartm ent of Pub­ lic Safety said Friday. In an address to the Mayors Advisory Com m ittee to the Governor, Col. Jim Adams, DPS director, said he would ask Gov. Bill Clements to sup­ port several bills during the 1983 session of the Legislature designed to curb traffic fatali­ ties in Texas. One of the bills proposed by Adams would raise the legal drinking age from 19 to 21. The 67th Legislature passed a bill which raised the drink­ ing age from 18 to 19. “ When you take an 18-year- old, he has a low threshold of m a tu r ity ,” A dam s said . “ H e’s inexperienced as far as ask Legislature drinking age driving in a car. Ten percent of high school seniors are on drugs and another 10 percent are alcoholics or have al­ ab u se p ro b le m s. coholic T herev no question that you have a ’ving time-bomb out on the highways.” Adams, who heads the gov­ task traffic safety e rnor’s force, said force task the would also recomm end to the governor for stiffer those convicted of driving while intoxicated. fines “ The big problem we see is there is no deterrent (for DWI offenders),” he said. “ The m ain thing we are going to try to do is to restore the certain­ ty of punishment for repeat offenders.” Adams said weak enforce­ m ent of DWI laws, including penalties of deferred proba­ tion, has resulted in offenders being arrested up to 15 tim es without being punished. there’s no “ Even if you get convic­ tions, record,” Adams said. “ Our first em ­ phasis will be to try to shut some of those back doors. “ Texans can get very upset over the fact that we had last year in Texas about 2,400 peo­ ple m urdered," he said. “ But they have not gotten con­ cerned up until now that we killed 4,701 on our highways and city s tre e ts.” About half of all traffic deaths occur in cities, he said. “ The public is finally con­ cerned about these deaths,” he said. “ I feel a different cli­ m ate two than years ago.” there was Adams said C lem ents’ tra f­ fic safety program will receive the sam e priority giv­ en the 1981 War on Drugs. “ Our main job is to tell improve the highways," them what would driving on Adams said. Union says election policy violates rights; hearing set By SCOTT W ILLIAM S D aily Texan Staff City M anager N icholas M eiszer will have to wait un­ til Tuesday to find out if the city ’s policy of prohibiting its employees from participating in city election cam paigns will be allowed to continue. Attorneys the 1,500- for m em ber Austin local of the A m e ric a n F e d e ra tio n of State, County and Municipal Employees are seeking a tem ­ po rary ag ainst injunction M eiszer because they say the policy violates their basic freedoms. Friday, Judge Harley Clark of 250th D istrict Court post­ poned a tem porary injunction hearing until Tuesday at the request of city attorneys. The tem porary injunction last until Septem ber would when a perm anent injunction hearing is scheduled. Austin is operating under a form er initiated by policy City Manager Dan Davidson prohibiting employees from campaigning in city elections, attending fund-raisers, plac­ ing signs in their yards or put­ ting bumper stickers on their cars. The policy does not extend to national, state, county or school board elections, and police and firem en, as civil servants, are exempted. Last year Jorge Zapata, president of AFSCME, sued the city when Davidson issued a memo stating that any city employee campaigning in city elections would be fired. “ City workers should not be discrim inated against for ex­ ercising their rights of free speech, press and assembly, so long as they are off duty and out of uniform ,” Zapata said. Two weeks ago, Clark is­ sued a tem porary restraining prohibiting Meiszer order taking action against from employees participating in city election campaigns and continued the restraining or­ der until June 28 at the re­ quest of AFSCME attorney Ben Sarrett. to campaign Zapata won a restraining order last year allowing city employees in City Council elections, but the order expired the date of the elections. Zapata said he is seeking a perm anent injunc­ tion to keep from going to court every tim e there is a city election. M eiszer could not be reached for comment Sunday. New court nominee picked By GARY WARREN D aily Texan Staff D istrict Judge Bill Kilgarlin of Houston Saturday became the D emocratic nominee for a seat on the Texas Supreme Court. Kilgarlin. unanimously se­ lected by the 62-member state D em ocratic Executive Com­ m ittee, replaces form er Asso­ ciate Justice Jam es Denton of Lubbock on the November general election ballot. Den­ ton died June 10. Gov Bill Clements Thurs­ day appointed D istrict Judge Ruby Sondock of Houston to serve in Denton's place until January when the winner of the November election is sworn in. Kilgarlin, who has no R e­ to publican opposition, Denton by less than two per­ centage points in the May 1 prim ary. lost During his campaign, Kil­ garlin promised that if elect­ ed he would use his authority from the Texas Supreme Court to speed the appeals process in crim inal cases. Kilgarlin, 50, is backed by campus m em bers of his par­ ty. John Adamo, vice presi­ dent of the University Young Democrats, said: “ We have supported Kilgarlin from the beginning, and we’re looking liberal to a more forward Texas Supreme Court K ilgarlin, who becam e judge of the 215th D istrict Court in 1978, graduated from the UT School of Law in 1962. law enrolled school, Kilgarlin served as a state from representative 1958 to 1960. While in f t ROSE SPECIAL ROSES W RAPPED Summer Grab Bag of Prizes! e Da i lv T ex"a n SUPER SUMMER REGISTRATION FORM $ 7 9 5 / dz. June & July Special BELDING FLOWERS H I EAST 5th ST. D o w n to w n a c ro s s fro m Austin N at'i Bank 478-6444 RIVERTO W NE FLORISTS 2007B EAST R I V E R S I D E DR. in R iv e rto w n e Mall 443-4535 S ponsor w k # f« r t 9 « i t g r i n f C ity B p VISAS P E R M A N E N T T E M P O R A R Y S T U D E N T M A T T E R S C I T I Z E N S H I P L A B O R CER T I F I C AT E S JIM B. CLOUDT ATTY AT LAW 3 8 1 0 MED IC AL P A R K W A Y N O 2 3 1 , A U S T IN TEXAS N o f m A d d r a ti S to t» H ie n « monday sports 7 1TH E D A ILY TE X A N Monday, June 21, 1982 Dramatic chip at 17th wins Open for Watson P E B B L E BEACH, Calif tU P I) — Tom Watson, labeled a “ choker” early in his career because he twice let the U.S. Open title slip away, holed a spectacular chip shot for a birdie on the 17th hole Sunday to win a stirring duel with Jack Nicklaus and capture the most prestigious championship in American golf for the first time. pressure shots in the history of golf. Using a pitching wedge, Watson popped the ball over the six feet of rough he had to carry to reach the green and the ball ran straight for the flagstick. Nicklaus finished all alone in second at 284 Bill Rogers, Dan Pohl and Bobby Clampett tied for third at 2-under-par 286. Watson, who fired a 70 in the Open's final round for a total of 282, thus deprived Nicklaus of a record fifth Open champion­ ship. It was Watson’s sixth major championship He has won three British Opens, including his thrilling decision over Nicklaus at Turnberry five years ago, and he has captured two Masters. Rolling in putts on the back nine that were made for the drama of the Open, including a 35-footer for birdie from the fringe of the 14th green. Watson opened a two-shot over Nick­ laus down the stretch. But that lead melted away on the always treacherous closing holes of the Pebble Beach Golf Links when Nicklaus birdied the 15th and Watson bogeyed the 16th. Then, with Nicklaus already in the clubhouse having holed a nervous three-footer at the home hole for a par and a round of 69 for a 72-hole total of 284. Watson hooked his tee shot at the demonic, par-3 17th into the rough alongside the green — rough that is a trademark of an Open course. Needing to get the ball up and down to stay in a tie with Nicklaus, Watson hit a shot that will join the other famous And Sunday's win eliminates whatever bitter memories Wat­ son might have left over from 1974 and 1975 — years in which he seemed on his way to winning the Open only to fade in the pressure. The fourth round at Pebble Beach saw four different players hold or share the lead during the day, but down the final, dan­ gerous holes at the gorgeous oceanside course it was left to Watson and Nicklaus, who birdied five holes in a row beginning at the third hole to set up the thrilling scrap with his friendly adversary. Finishing four shots back of the winner came Bill Rogers, who began the day tied for the lead, Clampett and Dan Pohl. Rogers slipped to a closing 74 while Clampett and Pohl had 70’s. m ocha alm ond chocolate cake Les Vinis CafeJ 21th & San Antoni# sW d y p r ó V l e m s? ............... R A S S L is technically a “ reading and study skills lab", but if offers lots of help with writing, math and graduate exam prep, and has tutors for m any courses, too. To find out more, drop by A332 Jester, 10 to 5 Mon. through F ri. or phone 471-3614. UPI Telephoto Watsomits shot out of sand in final round en route to birdie on Pebble Beach’s second hole. Astros sink Padres Twit»’ homers finish Rangers, 4-1 By UnltecTess International the Cincinnati Reds. three Dickiflhon had three hits, drove runs and scored ree times Sunday night tifilp the Houston As­ tros pc«an 8-4 victrrj over the Sariego Padres Winr M ike LaCoss blankeshe Padres over the final 2*nnings t0 niove his record[2-l while San Diego startefJuan Eichelberger strugl through seven inn­ ings £*ell to 5-8. Ai llanta, Jack Clark drovqtwo runs with a ho- a sacrifice fly and jan added a two-run help Bill Laskey to victory and lead the icisco Giants to a 5-3 triutiover the Braves. JcfReuss, supported by solopers by Ron Roenicke andi Cey, outpitched Tom Sea fit Riverfront Stadium to e the Los Angeles DodS their sixth straight vie, a 4-2 decision over At St. Louis, John Stearns’ one-out triple in the 10th in­ ning scored pinch runner Rus­ ty Tillman and Joel Young­ blood Sunday, lifting the New York Mets to a 5-4 victory over the St. Louis Cardinals. Pittsburgh catcher Tony Pena drilled a two-run double in the eighth inning to sink the Philadelphia Phillies 3-1, and Montreal routed the Chicago Cubs at Wrigley Field, 11-5. • • • Dave Engle blasted a two- run homer, Gary Ward added a solo blast and Brad Havens and Ron Davis combined on a seven-hitter to lead the Min­ nesota Twins to a 4-1 victory over the Texas Rangers. Havens, 3-5, scattered six hits, walked two and struck out four in seven innings to get the victory. Davis hurled the final two innings to earn his fourth save. Frank Tana- na, 3-8, was the loser. At Detroit, Ben Oglivie hit home runs in his first three at-bats and drove in five runs Sunday the Milwaukee Brewers to a 7-5 victory over Detroit and hand the Tigers their seventh loss in a row. to power Oglivie smashed two-run shots in the second and fourth innings and followed Ted Sim­ mons’ game-tying homer in the sixth with his 15th homer of the year. At New York, pinch hitter Joe Nolan hit a two-run, 11th inning homer off Rich Gos- sage Sunday to lift the Balti­ more Orioles to a 5-3 victory over the Yankees. Ron Hassey’s single lifted the Cleveland Indians to a 14- inning, 5-4 decision over the Boston Red Sox in Cleveland and Dave Stieb tossed a sev­ en-hitter for Toronto to send the Oakland A's reeling to their ninth home loss in a row, 3-2. (lifers finish 2nd at AIAW B y t E M c A B E E DaSxan S ta ff ¿É a season filled with stHMividual performanc­ es few shining moments to?, entire squad, the Tex- asiten s golf team turned onjuice to finish second in Safiy’s final round of the Afiational tournament. ifi turned in a four- r jtotal of 1.205 to cinch tti\W championship. The l j Hurricanes also won ttfAA title this year, be- ( ,g the first team to win bfational championships ilsame year. Texas was strokes back at 1,208, two shots up on Florida. Georgia had a 1,214 and SMU a 1,222 to round out the top five. Host team Ohio State finished sixth while TCU and Texas A&M came in seventh and eighth, respectively. rainy Texas opened the tourna­ in ninth ment Wednesday place after a first round. The Longhorns recov­ ered Thursday and began moving up through the pack. After moving into sixth after 36 holes, Texas made the cut alter Friday's third round easily, tied for third. SM U’s Amy Benz shot a fi­ nal-round 73 to win her third tournament of the year with a 290 72-hole total. Georgia's Cindy Pleger took second with a 296. Texas sophomore Nan­ cy Ledbetter was one of three golfers at 298 along with SM U’s Cathy Hanlon and A&M’s Shirley Furlong. Ledbetter was the only golf­ er to hit par on the 5,900-yard Ohio State University Scarlet course in Columbus, Ohio dur­ ing Saturday’s round, which was marked by intermittent rain. Other Texas golfers were freshman Sherri Steinhauer, 75-304. senior Cindy Figg, 79- 305, junior Jackie Daiss, 79- 309, B a ri and Brandwynne, 81-309. senior the HtkCKY SACK footbag cWE’VE GOT IT! A unique new game! O rig inally developed as a warm-up and conditioning exercise for athletes in training — it's now a popular sport in itself. P la y alone or with others, indoors or outdoors, for fun or exercise. S cien tifically designed. Handmade with complete internal stitching and 100% leather. T ry the New Am erican Sport. Reg. *7” Only s6 50 Prico e ffe c tiv e th r o u g h 6 / 2 5 82 T itU v e w d y free 1 hr. p a rk in g w / $ 3 purchase we cut hair for uour ego not our/. UJHAT15 a JVpCfCUt ? o supercut 1 / Cu/tom De/igncd a supercut i/ Preci/ion Cut a supercut u a Pini/hed Product a supercut i/ for fTten & Women supercut i/ Beautiful and., a supercut y aluiay/ TELEPHONE : COUNSELING* This service provides an* immediate and confiden-* tial source of assistance 24» hours every day, including* h o l i d a y s . T r a i n e d * counselors are availab le to* d is c u s s issu es r a n g i n g * from personal crises to in-J f o r m a t i o n a b o u t t h e * U niversity and referral to* various com m unity agen-J Jc ie s . Call 476-7073. • • • • • • • • • • * * * * * * * * * * University Co*op STARRING Novels, Romance, Sci-Fi, Westerns, Foreign Language, Textbooks, etc. SH O W T1M E S - MonrFri. ¡Oojn.-7p.rn. S a tu rd a y JOa m - 4101 G u a d a lu p e 476-7211 ext. 2 9 5 SALAD BAR a n d SOUP Vi LB. HAMBURGER & FRENCH FRIES 1.89 M o n -F ri 9 a . m . -9p.m. S a t 8 a . m . -7p.m. Sun. 10-3 S h a m p o o a n d b lo iv c l'v in ' ava at a d d J i o n . v < o s t Ho Appointment/ 3025 GUADALUPE 476-4278 C 14 ’ 9 t M R A C O R P O R A T IO N 2815 GUADALUPE 478-3560 OFFER GOOD MON & WED. lla m -9 p m TUE.( THUR., & FRI. 1 1 om-4pm Page 8 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Monday, June 21, 1982 sportswine F ro m sta ff a n d w ire r e p o r t s Volleyball recruits set for tournament The Texas women’s volleyball team will get a chance to see how its new recruits, freshmen and sophomores stack up against the recruits of the nation's top collegiate volleyball teams when it plays in the Junior National Championships which begin June 27 in Lysle, 111. The Longhorns, who are one of 40 teams participating in the three-day tournament, left Monday for Illinois Benedictine Col­ lege. The tournament is sponsored by the Amateur Athletic Union. Only players 19 years of age and under may compete, which gives the coaches an opportunity to get a preview of their new recruits. Texas coach Mick Haley said this tournament has two pur­ poses. “ One, to give the younger players a chance to play,” he said. “ And two, to help select the starting lineup for next fall. “ At first I was a little worried,” Haley said. “ I thought we hadn’t done as good a job recruiting as I thought we should have. But the younger players are doing really well. They are going to be challenging the juniors and seniors in the fall.*' The group of players who comprise Texas’ squad have only worked out together for two weeks. Before starting tournament play, the Longhorns will scrimmage with teams from South Bend, Ind. and Northwest­ ern University. M cEnroe to defend title at Wimbledon W IMBLEDON, England — Although many of his cohorts are among the missing, big, bad John, the baddest dude around, is back in town. And lest he wonder, the town hasn’t forgotten. John McEnroe, after single-handedly trying to shout the archly conservative, tradition-haunted All-England Club to its knees last year, will play the honorary opening match Monday when Wimbledon begins its two-week run. On the same center court where he ended Bjorn Borg’s ma­ jestic string of five consecutive Wimbledon championships, McEnroe will take on fellow American Van Winitsky starting at 2 p.m. (8 a.m. CDT). In the absence of Borg, who refused to play qualifying rounds, and Ivan Lendl, who doesn’t like the grass surface, McEnroe is favored to make a successful defense of his crown. However, since winning the U.S. Open for the third time last September, he has been something less than spectacular, win­ ning only three tournaments — indoors in Sydney, Australia, last October and at Philadelphia in January, then on grass at Manchester, England, two weeks ago The 23-year-old left-hander has been bothered severely by an injury to his left ankle suffered while practicing in Belgium early in March, although he claims to be fit again. The women aren’t scheduled to begin until Tuesday, with two-time champion Martina Navratilova seeded No. 1 and Chris Evert Lloyd, who has reached the Wimbledon final seven times, winning three, at No. 2. Navratilova, who can guarantee herself at least a half mil­ lion dollar bonus by winning here, has reached the final of the last 18 tournaments she has played, winning 13 of them. “ I ’ve never been in better form,” Navratilova said after her 6-4, 6-3 victory over Hana Mandlikova at Eastbourne on Satur­ day. “ The past few months have been incredible for me and I just hope I can keep my form going over the next two weeks.” Fletcher retains U S B A championship ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. — Frank Fletcher once more lived up to his nickname of “ The Animal” Sunday, raging a savage war to retain his USBA middleweight title with a 12-round unani­ mous decision over Clint Jackson. Fletcher, 15-2-1, who was bleeding profusely from a deep cut in his left eye, led from the fifth round on. He gave away four inches in height to the six-foot Jackson, 18-2, but managed a to win a bruising battle. Fletcher, of Philadelphia, repeatedly rocked Jackson, of Nashville, Tenn., with powerful left hooks to the head. Jackson, the 1976 Olympic bronze medal winner in the wel­ terweight division, used the rope-a-dope through much of the fight. His occasional flurries off left-right combinations lacked Fletcher’s power. The victory moved the 28-year-old Fletcher closer to a title shot with undisputed champion Marvin Hagler. A verbal agree­ ment for an October date with Hagler had been reached las£ week, with its completion dependent on Fletcher’s beating Jackson. Ickx, Bell capture 50th Le M an s race L E MANS, France — Belgian Jacky Ickx and his British co­ driver Derek Bell won the 50th Le Mans sports car classic Sunday in leading the Porsche factory team to a sweep of the first three places. The victory, watched by 120,000 spectators, marked a record sixth title for Ickx at the prestigious French 24-hour race. It was Bell’s third title. The winning team drove a turbo-charged Model 956 T. M ets’ Allen enters hospital for testing NEW YORK — New York Mets’ reliever Neil Allen was admitted to Roosevelt Hospital Sunday to undergo tests for a stomach virus which had plagued the right-hander since last Thursday. Allen, who is tied for the National League lead in saves with St. Louis’ Bruce Sutter with 15, l&st pitched Monday and picked up a save in New York’s 2-1 victory in Pittsburgh. He left the club on Friday in St. Louis and returned home t( rest. In 29 games, Allen is 2-3 with a 2.17 ERA. Yarborough rolls to N A S C A R victory JACKSON, Mich. — Cale Yarborough held off Darrell Wal- trip and beat darkness by 15 minutes Sunday tovnn the rain- delayed $295,000 Michigan 400 NASCAR race at Mthigan Inter­ national Speedway. The race was delayed twice by rain for a total o three hours and six minutes, but the final 161 laps around the t’o-mile oval were run without interruption and only one yellowaution flag covering five laps. Yarborough picked up more than $20,000 for histfforts and won his sixth race at MIS, five of them in the Michigp 400 race held each June. sportsrecord Major Leagues NATIONAL LEA GU E By United Proas International East St Louis Montreal . . New York . . . Philadelphia. Pittsburgh C hicago . . W L 28 27 30 30 33 42 . . . 38 . . . 35 34 . 3 3 28 25 Pet. .576 .565 .531 .524 .459 .373 GB — 1 3 3 % 714 1314 Wsst . . . 39 Atlanta 35 San Diego 35 Los Angeles , 30 Sa n Francisco 28 Houston. . . . C incinnati. . . . . . 27 . . 25 28 32 37 37 38 .609 — .556 522 .448 .431 .415 3 14 514 1014 1114 1214 Sunday’s Raaulta Pittsburgh 3, Philadelphia 1 New York 5, St. Louis 4, 10 innings S a n Francisco 5, Atlanta 3 I os Angeles 4. Cincinnati 2 Montreal 11, C h ica go 5 Houston 8, Sa n Diego 4 Monday's Gamas (All Timas COT) Montreal (Lea 5-2) at New York (Zachry 4-2), 6 35 p.m. L o s Angeles (Welch 7-4) at Cincinnati (Soto 6-4), 6:35 p.m. Chicago (Ripley 2 -0 or Smith 1-1) at Pittsburgh (M oskau 0-3), 6:35 p.m. Sa n Francisco (Chris 0-2) at Atlanta (Niekro 5-2), 6:40 p.m. Philadelphia (Bystrom 1-0) at St. Louis (LaPoint 3-1), 7:35 p.m. Sari Diego (Curtis 5-4) at Houston (Sutton 7-3), 7135 p.m. A M E R IC A N LEAGUE By Unitad Praaa Intamational (Kansas City At Saattla Not Includad) East Boston . . Detroit . . . Milwaukee Baltimore C le ve lan d . New York . . . . Toronto California . . K ansas City . Chicago. . . Seattle . . . . Oakland T e xa s............ Minnesota. . W L 39 25 26 . . . 35 29 . . . 35 29 . . . 33 31 31 31 . 30 . . . 31 35 West 27 . . . 39 26 . 3 6 . 3 6 28 34 33 39 . . . 29 . . . 23 36 . . . 16 52 Pet. 609 .574 .547 532 .500 492 470 591 .581 .563 .507 .426 390 .235 QB — 214 4 5 7 714 9 _ 1 2 514 11 1214 24 Sunday's Rasults Milwaukee 7. Detroit 5 Minnesota 4, Texas 1 Baltimore 5, New York 3. 11 Innings Cleveland 5, Boston 4, 14 innings Toronto 3, Oakland 2 California 3. Chicago 1 Kansas City at Seattle Monday’s Gamas (All Timas CDT) Baltimore (D Martinez 6-4) at Cleveland (Waits 0-4), 6 35 p.m. Detroit (Petry 6-3) at Boston (Tudor 55), 6 35 p m. New York (Righetti 5-4) at Milwaukee (McClure 4-2), 7 30 p.m. Minnesota (Williams 2-5) at Chicago (Burns 7-3), 7:35 p.m. Texas (H ough 5 4) at California (Renko 6-1), 9:30 p.m. 9 35 p.m. Toronto (Leal 5-4) at Seattle (Moore 26), Kansas City (Black 1 -1) at Oakland (U n d ­ erwood 3-4), 9 35 p.m SA N DIEGO HOUSTON T hon ss Puhl rt Knight 1b at r h bl 5 0 0 0 4 0 1 0 5 1 2 0 5 2 2 1 Cruz If 4 0 1 0 Garner 2b A sh b y c 3 1 1 1 Scott cf 1 0 0 0 L a C o ss p 2 0 1 0 Howe 3b 1 0 0 0 Knpper p 1 0 0 0 LaCrte p 2 0 1 0 3 0 2 0 Cpzzll p 0 0 0 0 Wiling cf 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 ab r h bl 4 3 3 3 4 1 2 1 3 0 0 2 4 0 0 1 3 0 0 0 3 1 1 0 3 1 1 0 1 1 1 0 3 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 1 2 1 W ggm s cf R chrds If Tmpltn ss Lzcano rf Slazar 3b Bvcqua 1b Prklns 1b Pttman 2b Flnnry 2b Sw sher c Knnedy c Eclbrg p Sh o w p Drvcky p Ltbvr ph Totals San Diego . Houston . . 37 4 11 2 Totals 32 8 10 8 . 000 301 000— 4 . 210 010 13x— 8 E — Templeton, Swisher, Kennedy. D P S a n Diego 9, Hous- — Houston 1 L O B - ton 8 2B — Lezcano 2, Thon. 3B — Tem- pleton, Thon. S B — Scott, Thon, Garner, Eichelberger. S F — Thon, Knight, Puhl. IP H R ER BB SO 8 . . % 2 . . % 0 7 1 0 6 1 0 4 0 1 0 1 1 San Diego Eichlbrgr (L 5 -8 ). .7 Sho w Drevecky . Houston Knepper . . 3Vj 2 . L aC o rte . . . C appuzzello. . . .1 L a C o ss (W 2-1) .2 ) 1 1 1 0 Eichelberger pitched to 2 batters in 8th W P — Eichelberger, Cappuzzello Balk — 6 1 1 3 3 1 0 0 3 1 0 0 2 1 0 2 LaCorte T — 2:57. A — 15,984. T E X A S ab r h bl 4 0 2 1 Wrght cf 3 0 0 0 Richardt It 1 0 0 0 Bogener ph 3 0 0 0 Bell 3b LJohnson dh 4 0 0 0 Hostetler 1b 3 0 0 0 M IN N ESO T A ab r b bl W shngtn s s 4 1 2 0 Engle dh 4 1 3 2 Brunnsky rf 4 0 1 0 4 0 1 0 Vega 1b 4 2 2 1 W ard If 4 0 0 0 Laudner c 3 0 0 0 3 0 1 1 3 0 1 0 Sundberg c 4 0 1 0 Gaetti 3b 3 0 0 0 Mitchell cf Parrish rf 1 0 1 0 Mlbrn 2b G rbb ph 4 1 2 0 W agner ss 3 0 1 0 Flynn 2b Total# 33 4 11 4 33 1 7 1 Totala T a x a a ................... 000 001 000— 1 M in n e so ta ............. 002 100 01 x— 4 D P — Texas 2, Minnesota 1. L O B — Texas 7. Minnesota 6. 2 B — Ward. H R — Engle (3). W ard (8). IP H R ER B8 SO Taxaa T a n a nafL 3 -8 )3 Butcher 4 . Minnesota H avens (W 3-5) . . 7 6 .2 1 D avis (s 4) 2-3 7 1-3 4 3 1 1 0 3 1 1 0 1 3 4 1 2 0 0 3 Havens pitched T — 2:00 A — 19,010. to 1 batter in 8th. World Cup World Cup Soccar Standings By Unitad Praaa Intamational June 20 First round (Played at various sites In Spain) Group 1 W T L GF QA Pts. 2 2 2 2 1 1 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 Italy........... Peru . . . Poland . . . Cameroon. . W est Germany . . Algeria Austria Chile . . B elgium . . . Hungary Argentina El Salvador 2 2 2 2 . 0 . 0 . 0 . 0 Group 2 . 1 1 . 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Group 3 . 2 . 1 . 1 0 Group 4 . 2 0 1 0 0 2 0 1 1 2 5 2 1 1 2 11 4 1 3 1 0 5 0 5 2 11 2 2 2 0 4 2 2 0 4 England. . . . 0 5 1 Kuwait . . . . . 0 Czechoslovakia . 0 France 0 . . . 1 1 0 Group 5 Spain . 1 Honduras . 0 Nor. Ireland . . . 0 Yugoslavia . . . 0 1 1 1 1 Group 6 B ra z il............ . 2 Soviet Union. . . 1 Scotland . . . . 1 New Zealand . . 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 1 0 1 1 2 1 1 1 3 1 0 1 6 4 6 2 1 3 3 2 1 0 2 2 2 6 8 1 1 0 3 1 1 1 4 2 2 0 Friday's Results Italy 1, Peru 1, at Vigo Argentina 4, Hungary 1, at Alicante Brazil 4, Scotland 1, at Seville Saturday’s Results Cam eroon 0. Poland 0, at La Coruna Belgium 1, El Salvador 0, at Elche Soviet Union 3, New Zealand 0, at Malaga Sunday's Results West Germ any 4, Chile 1, at Gljon England 2. Czechoslovakia 0. at Bilbao Spam 2, Yugoslavia 1, at Valencia World Cup Soccer Schedule By United Press Internetionel Dsily schedule of first-round metches listing site, group number end kickoff times. (All times CDT) June 21 Algeria vs Austria, Oviedo, II, 10:15 a.m. France vs. Kuwait, Valladolid, IV, 10:15 a.m. V, 2 p.m. H onduras vs. Northern Ireland, Zaragoza, June 22 Poland vs Peru, La Coruna, I, 10:15 a.m. Belgium vs Hungary, Elche, III, 2 p.m. Soviet Union vs Scotland, Malaga, VI, 2 p.m June 23 Italy vs. Cameroon, Vigo, I, 10:15 a.m. Argentina vs. El Salvador, p.m. Brazil vs. New Zealand, June 24 Algeria vs. Chile. Oviedo, I! France vs. Czechoslovakia 10 15 a.m. p.m. H onduras vs. Yugoslavia, God Results By United Press U.S. Open At Pebble Beech, CelH. (Per 72) Tom Watson, $60,000 .72- Jack Nicklaus, 34,506 . 7 4 -7 0 -7 — 284 Dan Pohl, 14,967 . . .7 2 -74-71-286 Bill Rogers, 14,967. . .7 0 -7 3 -6 5 -2 8 6 - Bob by Clampett, 14,96771-73-71-286 Jay Haas, 8,011 . . . . 75-74-7C-287 Gary Koch, 8,011 . . ,78-73-69-287 David Graham, 8,011 . 73-72-69t287 Lanny Wadkins, 8,011 .73-76-67-287 Calvin Peete, 6,332 . .7 1 -7 2 -7 2 2 8 8 Bruce Devlin, 6,332 7 0-69 -75 2 88 . . . .7 2 -7 1 -7 52 6 9 Lyn Lott, 5,511 . 76-75-69289 Chip Beck, 5,511 Danny Edwards, 5,511 . 71-75-73-)j9 . 73-75-71-® o J C Snead, 4,661 .7 4 -6 7 -7 5-80 Larry Rlnker, 4,661 Scott Sim pson, 4,661 . 7 3-69-72-»o Fuzzy Zoeller, 4,661 . . 72-76-71- jo .73-76-72-21 Hal Sutton, 4,008 . 76-74-68-41 Ben Crenshaw, 4,008 74-72-74-^1 Larry Nelson, 4,008 . Joe Hager, 3.404 .78-72-72-72 Gil Morgan, 3,404 . . . 7 5-75-68-72 .72 -7 1 -7 7-72 A ndy North, 3,404 74-75-72-7? Gene Littter.3.404 . .7 5 -7 4 -7 1 -7 ? Mike Brannan, 3,404 7 6 -70 -70 -7 ? Craig Stadler, 3,404 John Mahattey,3,404. . 7 7 -7 2 -7 0 -7 ? Tom Kite, 3,006 . . 73-71 -75-7< PINBALL MACHINES VIDEO GAMES POOL TABLES \ % t c k S u m m er Grab B a g of Prizes! D a il y T e x a n SUPER SU M M E R REGISTRATION FOR/j After one week, World Cup still up for grabs. West Germany remains alive in W orld Cup MADRID, Spain (U P I) — West Germany, receiving a kiss of life from three goals by Karl-Heinz Rummenigge, defeated Chile 4-1 Sunday to remain alive in the World Cup. Rummenigge’s hat trick, which made him the top scorer in the 24-nation soccer tournament with four goals, provided West Germany with a lifeline and an almost certain second-round lerth if it can beat Austria Friday. While the West Germans were preoccupied with staying alive. England defeated Czechoslovakia 2-0 in Group 4 at Bilbao rnd Spain knocked off Yugoslavia 2-1 in Group 5. England’s win tllowed them to become the second team after Brazil to ad­ vance to the second round. Rummenigge, Europe’s top player the past two years, scored once in the first half and twice in the second against Chile, now’ certain of elimination, having lost its previous game 1-0 to Austria. England, the 1966 champions, deserved its victory against Czechoslovakia but needed two gift-wrapped goals in a five- niinute span of the second half. With the game meandering into a scoreless tie despite Eng­ land’s domination, goalkeeper Stanislav Seman let an mswing- ng corner kick slip through his hands in the 62nd minute and nto the path of a grateful Trevor Francis. Five minutes later, Czechoslovakian defender Jozef Barmos >tuek out a leg to deflect a shot from Paul Mariner and the ball landed in his own net. England advances to the next round regardless of the out- •ome of its final group game against Kuwait. Juke boxes got you down? Tired of canned music? Come let us en tertain you: especially on M onday, W ednesday & S a tu rd a y from 9 p.m . on. Nasty Habits P itch er8 $2.35 I I I I I I I | GAM EROOM ARCADE IN DOBIE M A I ' LOWER LEVEL 10 am 12 midnight Mon Sat e Daily Texa n 600 W. M L K 472-2155 expires Aug 14 1982 LIM IT ONE P E R CUSTOMER P E R VISIT E FR EE GAME 25' VALUE 606 M aiden Ln. 458-5950 Monday *s OVER $1,000.00 WORTH OF VALUABLE PRIZES! Summer grab bag of prtzesl YOU MAY REGISTER ONCE EACH WEEK WITH EACH Weekly Drawings to be held every Monday on COMMUNICATION PLAZA, 25th & Whitis at noon. All students, faculty and staff of The Uni­ versity of Texas at Austin are eligible to register for weekly drawings. Only O N E R E G IS T R A T IO N P E R W E E K at EACH SPO N SO R is permitted to any individual. The right to draw a prize from the Grab Bag of Prizes goes to the first eligible name drawn each Monday beginning June 21. Complete contest rules are available at the T SP Advertising Office between 8am and 5pm Monday through Friday. T S P employees, publications staffs and sponsor employees are ineligi­ ble to register. A u d io O ne 281 5 G u a d a lu p e P a n o s o n k f A i l - 6 9 2 6 * 9 ' C o - A * tai C o r S p t o k t n $ 1 0 0 V o l w * Dobie Theatres Dobie M a ll 50 T*ck«>s »• TK#a»r»s SlO O Vatw * >pIit Enz Concert Registration at Inner Sanctum ) k IiiN lo T#v»m9 C am pony r«»an»a!ior>« Vot .»• 11OO Plant It Earth Dobie M a ll Up lo $ J$ pa* i p M t r t h o n d n m V o 1 j . S I O C A M C Theatre* 2 5 2 5 W. A n é f t o o Lana 2 0 G v t t i P a w * . fa» » n y T K * o « r . M m i t ) V o » w a $ 1 4 0 Unicorn G allery D o b ie M a ll G.f* Valu* $100 Red T om ato/ B a n a n a s 1601 G u a d a lu p e F o o d a n d B a v v r o g t t Voluw $100 Varsity Theatre 2402 G u a d a lu p e 1 5 Patr» of Pa**ot »o b« U » « d o» W m n o r C h o o t o t V a l u a $ 1 0 0 Texas Textbooks 2064 Riverside Or Rivertow ne M a ll M o n h o n é t t o o f I h o W in n o r '» Cho«# Valwo $100 OF THESE CONTEST SPONSORS:------------------------- University Coop 2246 G u a d a lu p e O ly m p u s X A 2 C a m e r a w ith F la s h $ 1 2 0 V a l u « Texas Union 24th an d G u a d a lu p e C op«« s fro m T o x a s U n io n C o p y C o n t o r V a lu e $ 1 0 0 W hole Earth 2410 Sa n Antonio St. T r a ilw is o S m a ll C a r r y - A ll D v f f U ; S w ift A e ro lit* 7 * 3 5 B in o c u la r F$«ld G u»d « to B ird s o f T o * a t $ 1 0 7 . 4 5 To ta l V a i u a C inem a Texas Burdine A u d ito riu m /W W H 416 A p r i v a t . K m m n g for W in n o r a n d u p to 2 0 0 F r i. n d » i C hotea. w i d . i d t d n n of film » ) $ 3 0 0 V a l u a , Look for registration blanks in this and every issue of the Texan. You may register only once each week at each sponsor. Registration Forms Appear Daily in The Daily Texan & More Sure, Scherts ace is an easy one. Seclucd on a hilltop in the heart»f Austin. The Tree- houseiets the standard for Univaity living. Linda Ingram A Associate* 1 3 0 6 N u s c s * A u it in , T a xa » ( 5 1 2 ) 4 7 6 - 2 6 7 3 r , : b y LANDMARK ■SQUARE! Condominiums 7 M N .tM ft. 1 4 2 Bedroom $39,950-93,950 NLY 4 BLOCKS FROM C A M P U S! Loca in the heart of the Dow ntow n /U niversity of Austin, Land- m arquare has a lively convenient neighborhood that's near sho/sg, entertainment a n d recreation. M u t e d b y L i n d a I n g r a m __________________ 4 7 6 - 2 6 7 3 '-IE G A Z E B O C O N D O M IN IU M S 2815 RIO G R A N D E X p a r k in g all sp ell c o n v e n - ience. A n d there is s p e c ia l fi­ n a n c i n g to q u a lifie d b u y e rs. T h le c l h o m e tor stu- d t n ie b e s t in v e s tm e n t for m e d D a d . K iH th e h e a r t o f the UT cth e G a z a b o it built aroJtl in v it in g H o t Tub for o re laxed , p e a c e fu l a t ­ m o sp h e r e In sid e , th e se s p a c io u s o n e b e d r o o m p l a n s otter a lott­ e d b o n u s ro o m o n s e c o n d sto ry units. L a u n d r y , in d i­ v i d u a l st o r a g e a n d a m p l e PRICES STARTING AT $39,950 MODEL OPEN DAILY 11-6 I > . AUTOMOTIVE REPAIR AUTOMOTIVE REPAIR FAST CARS NEED FAST SERVICE. BMW owners rely on Phoenix ior routine maintenance, major projects, a n d a full line oí BMW parts an d accessories Call or visit—Phoenix BMW alw ays otters personal atten­ tion by reliable craftsmen at reasonable prices. PHOENIX BMW PRODUCTIONS. INC. The Independent Shop to Rely On 442-1361 1606 Fortview Road Terry Sayther GROUP IV M O T O R S E ffic ie n t* Personal Service SALES, MAINTENANCE AND CUSTOM FABRICATION FOR MOST IMPORTS 809 BARTON SP R IN G S RD • AUSTIN. TX • 512/472-1472 C O N D O S F O R SA LE C O N D O S FOR SA LE Slvfis/t bivina in sHaJow of ‘'ihcTowiu * C o n v e n i e n t l y lo c a t e d at M L K a n d R i o G r a n d e * 1 8, 2 b e d r o o m s w it h s t u d ie s * S e c o n d f lo o r u n it s h a v e 2 c a r g a r a g e s * B u y n o w a t p r e c o n s t r u c t io n p r ic e s * F r o m m id 7 0 's to $125,000 The Gables CONDOMINIUMS Jf7 MLK 479-6618 CAM PUS C O N D O M I N I U M S • H a v e y o u c o n s i d e r e d in v e s t in g in a c a m p u s c o n d o m i n i u m fo r the ta x a d v a n t a g e s a n d la t e r s e l lin g it to p a y fo r y o u r c o lle g e e d u c a t io n ? • A r e y o u a n d y o u r p a r e n t s a w a r e t h a t N O W is th e t im e to i n v e s t in th e r a p i d l y d e v e lo p in g c o n d o m i n i u m m a r k e t ? • H a v e y o u b e e n g o i n g f r o m o n e r e a lt o r to a n o t h e r ju s t to fin d the c o n d o m i n i ­ u m t h a t w a s e s p e c ia ll y b u ilt f o r y o u ? If to, than you should talk with RON HANNA & ASSOCIATES 3509 JEFFERSON W it h a w id e r a n g e o f p r ic e s w e c a n lo c a t e a p r o j e c t to fit a n y life s t y le W h e t h e r y o u w o u ld lik e to b e c lo s e to c a m p u s , a r o u n d y o u r f r ie n d s o r a w a y f r o m th e h u s t le a n d b u s t le of c a m p u s in a q uiet, s e r e n e e n v ir o n m e n t , w e at R O N H A N N A c a n g e t y o u in to y o u r c o n d o w it h e a se .______________________ _ _ _ _ _ C A L L 459-4892 T O D A Y Marketed by L in d a In g r a m 1306 N ue ces Au stin . T e x a s 78701 476-2673 An NAO OevttopmcfM No other UT Condo can offer you so m u ch fo r th is little . H yde P a rk O aks o ffe rs you an in c re d ib le life sty le w ith 1 b e d ­ ro o m s fro m $57,950 th a t a r e lo ad ed w ith an im p re s s iv e a r r a y of a m e n itie s . C o m e by and to u r o u r fu rn ish e d m odel today. ,¡j Í ': OPEN Daily 11-6 or call us at 474-1761 or 476-2673 174 E. 31st Street Just 5 bIks. North of Campus n m m m u n o m d w i s t l v n n L u x u ry a n d c o n v e n ie n c e a re o n ly t w o r e a ­ s o n s to c o m e h o m e to Fifteen H u n d r e d W e s t L y n n L oca ted bloc ks a w a y fro m M o ­ o n the c orner of E n fie ld a n d W e s t y n n , d w e lle r s h a v e the E.R. Sh u ttle . A ll h o m e s in c lu d e 2 b e d ro o m , 2 b a th s, s t u d y a n d t w o c a r g e r e f s i w l H i o p e n e r . Fitted R a te d F in a n c in g a v a ila b le . M o s t o l O p e n D a l l y 1 1 - 6 . M a r k e t e d b y L in d a In g r a m & A s so c ia te s 1 3 0 6 N u e c e s 4 7 6 - 2 6 7 3 O A K K N O L L L u x u rio u s o n e - a n d t w o -b e d r o o m c o n d o ­ m in iu m s st a rt in g in the m id -A O 's . M o v e in w ith le ss t h o n 5 % d o w n F H A a n d V A fi­ n a n c i n g is a v a ila b le . H u rr y b e c a u s e there a re d isc o u n t s o f u p to $ 3 , 0 0 0 to b u y e r t b efore o u r G r a n d O p e n in g , J u n e 2 9 . C l a s a t e t o w n , c l a s o t o T o w n t o l l » , d o n a t o p w H w c t . M arketed Linda Ingram A Assoc. 4 7 6 - 2 6 7 3 1 3 0 6 N u e c o t 2313 LONGVIEW o th e r a n y c o n d o m i n i u m U n l ik e h o m e s it e in A u st in , 2313 L O N G ­ V I E W is in t im a t e r a t h e r th a n i n t i m ­ i d a t in g T h i s s m a l l site of o n ly 7 c o n ­ d o m i n iu m h o m e s s t a r t i n g in fh e m i d 5 0 's. O n e b e d r o o m u n it s c o m e s w it h lott a n d tw o b e d r o o m a r e a ls o a a v a i la b l e ÍO'/S A R M - G P M f in a n c in g A v a ila b le M a r k e f e d b y L in d a In g r a m a n d A »»oootw « 4 7 6 - 2 6 7 3 1 3 0 6 N u o c o » HydcFhrk Oaks M arketed by Linda Ingram & Assoc. 1306 Nueces 31ST A N D G R O O M S r D A D D Y’S MONEY A condo fo r y o u and a Tax break fo r Dad ONLY S IX TWO B E D R O O M S STILL A V A ILA B LE ! It’s an investment for the future. Before you invest in a con­ dominium, visit Pecan Square. W hen you com­ pare quality, location and cost, you’ll be glad you looked at Pecan Square Condominiums. Location 2906 West Avenue • 6 blocks north of U . T. * 5 blocks south of Seton Medical Center. • Quiet, secluded neighborhood. Features 2 bedrooms, professionally below appraisal from the mid 80’s. Priced at $87,950 Cash Price $83,950 Model open daily 11-6 M arketed by Linda Ingram & Assoc. 1306 Nueces (512) 476-2673 decorated. • Fireplace, microwave, quality appliances, energy saver features. • Patios. • Vaulted Ceilings. • 52" Ceiling Fan. • Land­ scaped pool and grounds • C onvenient and ample parking. • Security lighting. Financing Excellent investment in dynamic University market. • Tax advantages. • 90% financing at 121/z% interest ARM. • Priced CPecmSfíum’e CONDOMINIUMS Tierra West Developments Condo>-For S a l* Tickets-For Sale Homes-For S a l* D U P L E X , $60,000, F H A f in a n c in g a r ­ r a n g e d . C u te , U T a re a , 2-1 2-1, C a l l L i b ­ b y B o o n e w ith M a r s h a n d B o x , 472 1000 fe n c e d W E L L - K E P T 3-2-2, b a c k y a r d I P / 4 % F H A a s ­ s u m p t io n . P I T I $502 m o n t h ly , e q u it y $14,000. S o u t h e a s t A u s t in . 445-0597 $53,000 o n f ir e p la c e , A s s u m p t io n . V I C T O R I A N U T T w o b lo c k s sh u ttle , H a n c o c k g o lf, v e r y la r g e 3-1, b e a u t i f u l ly fir e p la c e , h a r d w o o d flo o r s, s o lid c o n s t r u c t io n , C A / C H $93,650, a s s u m e n o n - q u a lif y in g , n o n ­ e s c a l a t in g $63,650 note, b y o w n e r 479- 6)53. re m o d e le d , N w ‘ 3-2, G A R A G E $87.900 f i r m $12,700 a s s u m a b l e ó ’-'j, $29,900 d o w n , o w n e r w ill c a r r y r e s t 345-9442 A U G U ST M O V E IN P E C A N W A L K 1, 2, a n d 3 b e d r o o m s , c o m p le t e s e c u r i t y s y s t e m fo r a ll u n it s - J a c u z z i a n d s a u n a Q u a l i t y c o n s t r u c t io n O n S p e e d w a y n e x t to c a m p u s P r i c e s s t a r t at $55,000 C a ll S t a n , 454-4744 o r 442-5070 $41,500 P o o l s id e 1 B R c o n d o c o n v e r s io n . N e w a p p lia n c e s , c a r p e t s , a n d f ix t u r e s . A ll b r ic k c o n s t r u c t io n , n e w r o o f R i v e r s id e / I H 3 5 a re a , n e a r s h u tt le E ll io t t S y s t e m , 451-8178. 9 5 % IN V E S T O R F IN A N C IN G U n iv ersity a re a condo 1 B R - 1 B A 346-4550 A g e n t G R E E N W O O D T O W E R S 2-1, b e a u t i f u l­ ly d e c o r a te d , g o o d f in a n c in g M a r s h a n d B o x , V i r g i n i a F l e m in g . 472-1000, 454- ______________________ 0118. S A N P E D R O S q u a r e U n i q u e se t tin g , la r g e l i v in g a r e a o v e r l o o k i n g G r e e n b e lt . 2 B R 2 B A , lo v e ly in t e r io r , n o n - e s c a la t in g $48,000 lo a n $118,000 F l o A n n R a n d le , M a r s h a n d B o x C o. 472-1000, 476-4725. H I T C H Y O U R w a g o n to a s t a r e v e r y n ig h t t h r o u g h y o u r o w n s k y l i g h t at E n ­ f ie ld P la c e . 2 b e d r o o m s , 2 b a t h s, a loft, f ir e p la c e a n d c e i li n g fa n c o m p le t e t h is s t u n n i n g c o n d o 2 b lo c k s f r o m E n f i e l d sh u t t le B r o c k - L a u d e r m i l k A s s o c . C a ll G w y n a t 474-0118 o r 458-4651. A g r e a t in ­ v e s t m e n t b u y a t $83,700 G R E E N W O O D T O W E R S B e s t b u y p er s q u a r e fo ot in U T a re a . F i r s t $54,500, $11,000 d o w n , o w n e r c a r r y a t 1 3 % . S e c ­ o n d u n it a v a i la b l e at $51,500, p a r t ia ll y f u r n is h e d , a s s u m a b l e $15,000 d o w n , n o te F l o A n n R a n d le , s e c u r i t y M a r s h a n d B o x C o. 472-1000, 476-4725. P o o l, 307 W. MLK Just w est o I Lavaca Condo*-For Sale Miscellaneous-For Sale S P A C I O U S o n e b e d r o o m Q U I E T , in N o r t h w e s t H i l l s n e a r M o P a c A il b r ic k w ith n o c o m m o n w a ll s $46,500 w ith e x ­ c e lle n t f in a n c in g . O w n e r - b r o k e r , M a r y N u n n a l ly , 345-2071. F U R N I S H E D O N E b e d r o o m c o n d o , m i ­ c r o w a v e , c e i li n g fa n, w a s h e r d r y e r , a s ­ s ig n e d p a r k i n g a n d fe n c e d p a t io M a n y e x t r a s $45,000 o r a s s u m e lo a n C a ll 459 1060, 471-5333, 1-295-2703, a s k fo r E l i z a beth. U T A R E A 2 B R 2 B A . O w n e r f in a n c in g , 1 0 % d o w n $69,900 L e a s e $325 o r p u r c h a se . 458-1847, 459-4936. W A L K T O c l a s s 1800 L a v a c a , 2-2, e x c e l­ le n t c o n d it io n , 8th flo o r vie w , p o o l $60,000 453-0091, 258-3554 J O H N D E N V E R O n l y th e v e r y f r o n t b e st se a ts , b e s t p r ic e s C a l l 447-9891 a n y ­ tim e . J o s e A S I A T I C K E T S . F l o o r a n d a r e n a s e a t s R e a s o n a b l e p r ic e s C a ll 447-9891 a n y ­ t im e C o n c e r t : J u l y I. J o s e Miscellan*ou>-For Sale C H I N E S E S H O E S - w o k s, n a t u r a l s o a p s , l i b e r t a r i a n b o o k s , s c ie n c e fic tio n , u s e d b o o k s P A C I F I C S U N R I S E , 1712 S C o n ­ g r e s s . 441-4565. j e w e lr y F I N E S T A M E R I C A N p lu s 2,500 g ifts , r e t a il a n d w h o le s a le N e l s o n 's G ift s , 4502 S. C o n g r e s s , 444 3814 In d i a n M A T C H I N G E A R L Y A m e r i c a n c o u c h a n d c h a ir , p la id , $75 452-2040 a fte r 7 p m - f lo p p ie s c o m p u t e r s , p e r i ­ C O M P U S O U R C E A lt o s , p h e r a ls , C . IT O H , E l e p h a n t , M a x e l l, etc ) L o w p r ic e s w it h o u t m a il o r d e r h a s s l e s 327 5925. ___________________ ( T e le v id e o , F O R S A L E : a p p r o x im a t e l y 125 b o o k s o n lin g u is t ic s , b il in g u a l e d u c a t io n , S p a n i s h a n d F r e n c h . A l s o r e c o r d s a n d t a p e s S 150 fo r a ll, o r m a k e o ffe r P h o n e (5 1 2 ) 398-2244 in L o c k h a r t . U N B E L I E V A B L E ! P E R F E C T C o n d i ­ tio n 30 g a ll o n t a n k w ith a ll p u m p s a n d f il t e r s fo r f r e s h o r sa lt w a t e r 478-9618 a fte r 2 p .m . u n t il 9 p .m . U S D I V E R S a l u m i n u m 80 ft tan k, r e g u ­ la to r, b a c k p a c k a n d g a u g e 327-6840 w o r k , 327-7714 h o m e . J im M a r t i n . G O O D C H E A P fu r n it u r e , etc. fo r s a le 473-8835, k e e p t r y in g . G O I N G I N T O th e s e r v ic e a n d m u s t s e ll! R a d i o S h a c k T R S - 8 0 m o d e l 3 m i c r o c o m ­ p u te r, t h r e e m o n t h s old, w it h m o d e l V I I lin e p r in t e r a n d a ll p a t c h c o r d s B e s t o f ­ fer. 478-6939 T E R M I N A L C O M P U T E R a n d M O D E M M u s t s a c r i f ic e f o r c a s h E x ­ In t e llig e n t c e lle n t c o n d it io n . t e r m in a l, S t a r m o d e m $475 fo r both. 471-4706, 447-7860 In t e r t e c C A N O E F O R s a l e 15 fo ot A l u m a c r a f t w ith p a d d le s . G o o d c o n d it io n , $175. 474- 2811. W A T E R S K I - O 'B r i e n t o r , " $165 327-8203. " T h e C o m p e t i ­ M I N I R E F R I G E R A T O R , O r ie n t a l r u g , b a r s t o o ls , a n d m i s c e l l a ­ n e o u s 478-7692 d is h w a s h e r I B M S E L E C T R I C T y p e w r it e r $330 00 E x c e l l e n t c o n d it io n C a l l 472-1238 A N T I Q U E D A R K O a k b u ffe t st e r e o c a b in e t , m i r r o r e d w a r d r o b e P n c e n e g o t ia b le C a ll A n n , 474-9950 a fte r 5 30 S E R V I C E F O R 8 - se t of C h in e , c o r s a g e p a tte rn , lik e n e w $35 459-1684 T O P Q U A L I T Y M e x i c a n d r e s s e s , e a c h , o n e s iz e f it s a ll 479-6756 $55 FURNISHED APARTMENTS 25% OFF l i t m o n t h 's lo w s u m m e r ro t o » w ith th n c o u p o n o n ly 3 0 7 W 3 8 t h L a rg o c o m p lo t w ith m a n y tmhoct Hoot p la n t to ch o o to from S t u d y A S u m m o r f u n d s w i m m i n g p o o l a n d all a m o n ltio s L a n d lo r d p a y s for co o k in g , h o o tin g , hot w a t o r a n d m u c h m oro F u r n ith o d a n d u n fu r n ish o d S t a r t in g from $ 1 $ 9 A Í ____________ 4 5 3 - 4 0 0 1 Y O U ' R E K I D D I N G ! ! W e h a v e f u lly f u r n i s h e d e f fic ie n c ie s o n th e sh u t t le r o u t e fo r o n ly $ 2 1 5 / m o n th a n d u n f u r n i s h e d a p a r t m e n t s fo r o n ly $200 m o n t h . C a ll J a m e s at 454-4915 a n d m o v e in t o d a y 1 N O J O K E ! J U S T F O R M E ? W e a r e n o w le a s i n g f u r n i s h e d e f f ic ie n ­ c ie s a n d 1 b e d r o o m s 1 m ile f r o m c a m p u s s t a r t i n g at $200 m o n t h . Y o u w o n 't fin d a m o r e u n iq u e a n d q u ie f c o m m u n it y . C a ll J a m e s a t 454*4915 a n d fin d a p la c e ju st fo r y o u ! $225-5265 P L U S E F O U N T A IN T E R R A C E A P A R T M E N T S 610 W . 30th E f f i c ie n c y a n d I b e d r o o m A C , c e ilin g fa n s , s m o k e a l a r m s pool. G a s , w a te r, a n d c a b le p a id C a l l o r c o m e b y a ft e r 3:3 0 p .m . M a n a g e r N o 134 477-8858 3000 G u a d a l u p e P la c e S u m m e r R a t e s 1 B e d r o o m 1 B a t h C o n d o m i n iu m s C e i l i n g F a n s W a lk to C a m p u s E D P A D G E T T CO. 454-4621 O L D M A I N A p a r t m e n t s , 25th a n d P e a r l. 1 B R , e f fic ie n c ie s F o u r b lo c k s U T , s h u t ­ tle, c a b le , p oo l 476-5109 S U M M E R R A T E S n o w o r s u m m e r r e n t ­ in g W a l k 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 u s, p oo l f u r n i s h e d o r u n f u r n is h e d 472- 2147 FURNISHED APARTMENTS ■ FURNISHED APARTMENTS T h e P r i c e I s $36,900 D I S H W A S H E R - M U S T se ll C a ll 478 9618 f r o m 2-9 1979 K A W A S A K I K Z 7 5 0 . M i d n i g h t b lu e C r a s h b a r s a n d s i s s y b a r . K e p t in g a ­ r a g e L o w m i le a g e M i n t c o n d it io n . $1600. 443-1875. 1981 H O N D A 125X L 479-6906 1700 m i le s $700 Bicyd*-For S a l* F O R S A L E 2 4 " M e r c l e r 300, 2 3 " A u s t r o - D a i m l e r in e x c e lle n t c o n d it io n . C a l l 480-0390 B o t h Stereo-For S a l* T W O A C O U S T A T s p e a k e r s , m o d e l 4 's , $1800, M c I n t o s h 2200 a m p , $900. 451-0702 ( d a y ) , 458-8786 ( e v e n in g ) . S T E R E O S 130 30 w a t t a m p , T u r n t a b le , s p e a k e r s ; c a s s e t t e d e c k G o o d R a d i o S h a c k e q u ip m e n t . M u s t se ll. 454-4203. A D M I R A L A M / F M r a d ¡ o / 8 - t r a c k , tw o s p e a k e r s , e x c e lle n t c o n d it io n . $50 445- 6094 ____ P I O N E E R R T -7 0 1 r e e l-t o -re e l, p e r fe c t sh a p e . I n c lu d e s t h r e e t a p e s . $335 C a l l D a v id , 477-1381 ____ N I K K O N D - 5 9 0 c a s s e t t e d e c k , fu ll f e a ­ t u r e s , o n e y e a r o ld $125. J im , 442-0718. Mu>ical-For S a l* T R U M P E T - B U N D Y L i k e n ew , $15(L 459-1684 Photography-For S a l* C A N O N C A M E R A 3 5 m m A - E l , 1.8- 5 5 m m $210 C a n o n f la s h 15 5-A $45 B o t h e x c e lle n t , B a r e l y u s e d w it h c a s e 476- 9162. ____________________________________ Pets-For S a l*________ E X O T I C S H O R T H A I R k it te n s , te re d , $50 up. 452-2166. r e g i s ­ B I R D S . B A B Y c o c k t la ls : g r a y $35, p ie d $50 F i n c h e s $5. 44 2-5 1 5 0 . ______ _ _ L H A S A A P S O p u p p ie s . A K C , 2 m o n t h s , d e w c la w s r e m o v e d , f ir s t sh o ts , $250 c a s h o n ly . G u a r a n t e e d . 258-5968 Hom*s-For S a l* 3 BLOCKS TO SH U T T LE A " G R E A T " h o u s e fo r a U T st u d e n t - 1 B R , 1 B A p lu s a la r g e b o n u s r o o m - lo t s of s p a c e fo r th e d o l la r P r ic e d in the $ S 0 s O w n e r f in a n c in g at 1 2 % . C a l l S u ­ z a n n e R o b e r t s o n , 472-5936, o r r e a lt o r s , 345-1030. O w n e r is a n x i o u s t o r a n o ffe r (6 3 ). Sheila Plotsky C O N D O S FOR SA LE C O N D O S FOR SA L E COMM€Ctron 4 7 ^ 6 6 1 8 We've Done Your Homework Servicing all of Austin, specializing in campus and U T shuttle areas. W a lk over or call for a p re v ie w in g a p p o in tm e n t A GREAT PLACE TO LIVE PEARL > 10 7/b % ARM-GPM F in a n c in g A v a ila b le Available for FALL OCCUPANCY Prices s ta rtin g in lo w 40's — Security — Microwave — Individual Storage — Covered Parking PARKER c o n d o m i n i M u m s Nestled in a beautiful wooded site ju s t off Riverside Drive in Austin, affording splendid views of the Capitol and downtown office buildings. Luxurious, yet practical amenities for those with discrim inating tastes are included m each condominimum home. 12 One Bedroom* 6 with Loft* Marketed by Linda Ingram A Associates 1 3 0 6 N u k m 4 7 6 - 3 6 7 3 Pro*ale Price* «tarting at $39,950-$49,950 1 a n d 3 b a d ro o m u n it * CALL TODAY! 476-2673 ^TM arhietedby Linda Ingram and Associates 1306 Nuece* ^ T H E S 'VER LOOK K i ^ h l u m 1 'lt ‘L M tit i i n d i i n i i n u i n i I m m r v l o c . i t r d i in ,i \ \ 1" iil<‘i I h i u l t w i t h i n u Ik m u ( i i 't . i n i r n i I T P ric e s s t a r t i n g in lo w 4 0 ’s ""h Iciltu It s 1 \ b r i l l iiu lt l I ’d ii I \ h r ! t u b S c c t i n t v s \ s t e m Mini blinds W . r d l r ! d i v e r ^ ^ M n r k c t e d b y : * L i n d a I n g r a m 1 3 (16 N u e c e s 176-2673 ..... FROM $52,950 IO '/2% ARM FINANCING Barton Terrace Condominiums. Elegant. Spacious. Established. And only a short Sunday stroll from the natural wonder and beauty of Zilker Park and Barton Springs. O N E & TW O B ED R O O M S. M O D E L H O M E S OPEN BELO W M A RKET FINANCING. 327-6880 c B 'A R T O n T t R R ’A C E f r / f < /c fn t / t t t r / N j a b o v e - t h e - p a r k MARKETED BY | B GOO DW IN REALTORS ( S I 2) 327 C>880 I 240 BARTON HILLS DR AUSTIN. TEXAS SUMMER RATES WALK TO C A M P U S OR SHUTTLE BUS 1 bedroom , 1 bath, s h a g carpet, C A / C H A C T 111 4312 S p e e d w a y 453-0540 A C T I V 3311 R e d R i v e r 474-8125 A C T V I 2801 H e m p h i ll 476-0411 A C T V I I I 2808 W h it is 474-5650 A C T I X 2803 H e m p h i ll 476-0411 A C T X 301 W. 29th 474-5650 T h r e e O a k s 409 W. 38th 453-3383 P e c a n S q u a r e 506 W. 37th 459-1597 W e st e rn e r 2806 H e m p h ill 472-0649 2711 & 2721 H e m p h i ll 472-0649 Ed Padgett Co. 454-4621 LEASING FOR SU M M ER & FALL! SU M M ER RATES Lighted Tennis Court* • 1, 2, 3, 5 Bedroom * • • Shuttle Bus Stop • Security Service • C it y T r a n s p o r t a t io n • P o o ls id e Ic e m a k e r • P o o ls id e R e s tro o m V O o ; 2101 Burton Dr. Exercise R o o m s /S a u n a s • Putting G r * * n • 2 Pools - 1 large, 1 huge • Furn./Unfurn. • W alk-in Closets Otón 447-4130 M IA M IG 4505 Duval 454-4799 NOW PRE-LEASING • Special Summer Rates • All Bills Paid • Exercise Room & Saunas • Pool & Clubhouse • Efficiencies, 1 & 2 Bedroom Call or Come By Today! FROM $265 Proftiiionally Managed by Martine Properties, Inc, Page 10 □ TH E D A ILY TEXA N □ Monday, June 21,1982 FURNISHED APARTMENTS ■ FURNISHED APARTMENT* M FURNISHED APARTMENTS B UNFURN. APARTMENTS ■ UNFURN. APARTMENTS FURNISHED HOUSES ROOM AND BOARD ON S H U T T L E . A B P , fr o m $100-$200 472-9325 a fte r 6 p.m . and w e ekends. A sk fo r R a lph. _ F R E E R E N T fo r June . S u m m e r e f f i­ c ie n c y , E n fie ld a re a F u rn is h e d , s h u ttle , pool. Phone and e le c tr ic ity a lre a d y c o n ­ n ected. A v a ila b le now. 479-8149 o r 472- 1737. ____ __ S U B L E A S E L A R G E one be d ro o m , f u r ­ nished. D is h w a s h e r, d is p o s a l, b a lco n y, s m a ll c o m p le x on D u v a l Close to IF , c ity bus. D e p o sit paid. $240 8, E. J u ly , A u g u st. 467-0524, 451-0984. E F F IC IE N C IE S IN g r e a t lo c a tio n ne a r U T cam pus. C a rp e te d , c e n tr a l a ir. N ice - $23 0/m onth. N ic e r $40 0/m onth. N ic e s t - $425/m onth. H o w e ll P ro p e rtie s , 477- 9925. _____ _ '/? B LO C K TO c a m p u s 1BR. sh a re show er w ith m a le s tu d e n t. Lease. $175/ m o n th , A B P 926-7243. 2N D S U M M E R SE SSIO N Lease J u ly 11 th ro u g h A u g u st 31. O ne be d ro o m , one sp a c io u s , b a th F re n c h doors, s k y lig h t, b a lc o n y . F o r in ­ fo rm a tio n c a ll 476-2481. F u r n is h e d . C le a n , E F F IC IE N C Y 7 n old house, p a r t ia lly fu rn is h e d . $195 plu s E 906 W 22nd No. 6. 251 2016. A v a ila b le J u ly 1 W A L K IN G D IS T A N C E U T. Close to s h u ttle . S m a ll c o m p le x w ith pool. $210 plu s E. 477-9826. Dan Joseph Co. G R E E N W O O D T O W E R S W a lk to U T. A v a ila b le th ro u g h A u g. 14. 1 b e d ro o m , pool, J a cu zzi, c o ve re d p a rk in g , s e c u rity , A B P $40 0/m onth. 4 5 4 - 0 7 8 2 . ^ _______ S U M M E R R A T E S . W a lk to c a m p u s. L a rg e e ffic ie n c ie s , 2B R -2B A e ffic ie n ­ f u r ­ cie s. S h u ttle and c ity bus, pool, n ished o r u n fu rn is h e d . 472-2147. 1BR A P A R T M E N T , $185 plu s e le c tr ic ity and gas 38th and G u a d a lu p e R eady now - w ill lease by m o n th 459-3538, 454 1360. 3000 G U A D A L U P E P la c e Condo. C e ilin g fans, w a lk to c a m p u s. $325. Special y e a r lease ra te . 476-1701, a fte r 6:00. L e a ve m essage. V A C A N C Y - 1 BR F u rn is h e d a p a rtm e n t, sublease. S u m m e r ra te . C a ll 452-3326. 1BR K Y D E P A R K , new c a rp e t, c e ilin g fans, pool. $230 plus E. C a ll 451-9444 E F F IC IE N C Y . 1-1, 2-2, 1900 B u rto n . 442- 9612. C E N T R A L L Y L O C A T E D N E W L U X U ­ R Y C O N D O M IN IU M S N E A R H A N ­ C O CK C E N T E R 1-1, a p p lia n c e s , C A / CH, W /D c o n n e ctio n s, c a rp e t, fire p la c e , la rg e tre e s. A d e q u a te sto ra g e . $295. 345- 9643. _ 1 A N D 2BR W a lk to c a m p u s or 1 b lo ck IF s h u ttle . N e w r e fr ig r a to r , AC, p a in t, c a rp e t, etc. W a te r, cable, gas paid. $225 p lu s E $450 p lu s E 478-6148. C O N D O FO R re n t. N e ar c am pus, 2110 R io G ra n d e $55 0/m onth. 1BR 1BA C a ll 478-7996, 472-4497. _ ____ B E A U T IF U L 1-1 condo a t S u n n yva le . L a u n d ry , pool, ne a r sh u ttle . $295 s u m ­ m e r. s350 f a ll le ase. 451-8178. E llio tt Sys­ te m . S P A C IO U S A N D a ttr a c tiv e one b e d ­ ro o m in s m a ll, q u ie t c o m p le x u p s ta irs . G ra d o r p ro fe s s io n a l p re fe rre d N o rth Loop a re a . $25 9plus E. 458-5638. UT A R E A . W a lk o r rid e shutTle. N ice 1BR, new c a r p e t and p a in t, a p p lia n c e s , C A /C H , e x tra s , $235 plus E . 1801 M a n o r. 474-2700, 928-0534._________ _______ ______ O R A N G E T R E E condo e ffic ie n c y w ith s k y lig h ts , c a b le , fir e p la c e and a ttic fo r s to ra g e . S e cure d u n d e rg ro u n d p a rk in g , n ig h t w a tc h m a n A v a ila b le second s u m ­ m e r session, fa ll/s p r in g . $39 5/m onth. 476-0604 C O N D O FO R R E N T . 1 BR, 1 BA, w a lk in g d is ta n c e fr o m c a m p u s, $375 plus A v a il­ ab le A u g u s t 1. (713) 668-1155. S P A C IO U S 2 8 R, T a rry to w n , $340 plus É o r $390 A B P . P o ol, la u n d ry , s h u ttle 2606 E n fie ld , 474-5930. _______ IF S H U T T L E , l and 2BR g a rd e n -ty p e a p a rtm e n ts a v a ila b le N ic e c o m p le x w ith tw o pools. F r o m $255 454-3496. G R E A T 3BR a p a rtm e n t th re e b lo c k s fro m U T ca m p u s . A v a ila b le fo r s u m m e r o n ly S 500/m onth A B P . 1BR a p a rtm e n ts on W est 45th S tre e t $225-285/m o n th . H o w e ll P ro p e rtie s , 477-9925. FO R S A L E o r re n t. L u x u ry 1BR 1BA condo, th re e b lo c k s fro m c a m p u s. C e il­ ing fa n s, b a lc o n y , a ll a p p lia n c e s . F i­ n a n c in g a v a ila b le . 477-4113. FURNISHED APARTMENTS A p a rt Selector® Fee Paid By Apartment Owner PY LOCATION Central Central 474-6357 Interregional 3507 N North 451-2223 8501-B Burnet Road South 441-2277 Riverside "Our Professional Service Also Includes Houses, Condominiums and Duplexes 4 7 fj.Barcelona Efficiency Special EXTRA LARGE PATIO DISHWASHER ♦ POOL SIDE ♦ 1 ONLY $225 PLUS E. ♦ 44 4-2468 ♦ ♦ 2201 ELMONT ^ P rofession ally M anaged by M artin e P roperties, Inc. ^ T O W E R S G R E E N W O O D a v a ila b le now 2BR, 1 BA , b u ilt-in , c a rp e t, s w im ­ m in g pool and J a cu zzi. L o c a te d nea r UT and d o w n to w n . $67 5 /m o n th plus d ep osit. A B P . C a ll Bob Lenzo a t C res R e a lto rs, 3 4 6 -2 1 9 3 .________ _____________________ A V A IL A B L E J U L Y 1, South of cam pus, spacious lb r ap t. in q u ie t h i-ris e $305/ m o A B P 480-0045. UNFURNISHED HOUSES A V A IL A B L E NO W tw o and th re e bed­ ro o m o ld e r hom es, a p a rtm e n ts . C a ll now fo r 24 ho u r in fo r m a tio n 452-5979, u f V IC T O R IA N - 2 b lo ck s s h u ttle , H a n ­ cock G o lf, v e r y la rg e 3-1, b e a u tifu lly r e ­ m odeled, fire p la c e , fo rm a l d in in g , g a ­ rage, C A /C H , stove, r e fr ig e ra to r , $795. 3901 W ilb e rt, 479-6153. ____________ N O R tT T u T . 2BR, a p p lia n ce s , AC, $325. R e n ta l-A id e , 476-4684, 3004 G u a d a lu p e . Fee Open e v e ry d a y (D T -2 ). T A R R Y T O W N 3BR, AC, g a ra g e , a p p li­ ances, $450 R e n ta l-A id e , 476-4684, 3004 G uad a lu p e . Fee. Open e v e ry d a y (D T - 3).____________________ 2717 R IO G R A N D E . $700. m o n th , A B P , fo r s u m m e r. One m o n th 's re n t fo r de­ po sit. 472-9281 ________ _ W A L K TO U T fro m n e w ly re m o d e le d house, s u ita b le fo r 2-3 people C e ilin g fans, H a rd w o o d flo o rs , AC, y a rd and p r i­ va c y fence. $500. 472-0194. C L O S E T O C A M P U S . 3 B e dro om , f ir e ­ place, a ll a p p lia n c e s $695 1006 W. 22nd. Sayers and Assoc., 478-9991. M O B IL E H O M E fo r re n t - South A u s tin . 441-5870 a fte r 6 pm . UNFURNISHED DUPLEXES A V E N U E A 2-1, good condition, all ap ­ pliances, $365. 454-3751 S U M M E R O N L Y . G orgeous, spacious d u p le x w ith bay w in d o w and nice y a rd to sublease O ff 38'/a. 2-1. $375. A v a ila b le J u n e 1 454-2835. 2BR ON L a fa y e tte ne a r U T and s h u ttle . N e w ly p a in te d , c a rp e te d , e x c e lle n t c o n ­ d itio n . C A-C H, w a s h e r, d r y e r , a p p li­ ances in c lu d e d . $35 0/m onth. A v a ila b le M a y 15. C a ll c o lle c t 214-341-0540 TA R R Y TO W N . 2 eTr ! g a ra g e , a p p lh anees, $310. R e n ta l-A id e , 476-4684, 3004 G u a dalupe. Fee. O pen e v e ry d a y (D T - 1). N E A R U N IV E R S IT Y 1BR d u p le x . See at 612 W. 31 Vi S tre e t ' 2 b lo ck o ff G u a d a ­ lupe. N e w ly re n o v a te d N ew c a rp e tin g , stove r e fr ig e r a to r , b lin d s and A C /h e a t­ ing. O ff s tre e t p a rk in g . $29 7/m onth, $297 de p o s it. W a te r p a id 9 m o n th lease re ­ q u ire d A v a ila b le S e p te m b e r 1. If in te r ­ ested c o n ta c t M rs . B a rne s, 1-224-1871, M -F 8:30-4:30. ROOMS A CO-OP S U M M E R ? You get an a ir-c o n d itio n e d p riv a te room , 19 m e a ls p e r w eek, a s w im m in m g pool, and dozens of new frie n d s . A nd YO U a re in c o n tro l. T r y c o -o p e ra tiv e liv in g a t T H E A R K , 2000 P e a rl, OR 21ST ST. C O L L E G E H O U S E, 707 W. 21st St. Com e by to see fo r y o u rs e lf o r c a ll 476-5678. C O -E D D O R M 1 b lo ck fro m cam pus. P r iv a te and s h a re d room s a v a ila b le fo r su m m e r & fo r f a ll. 474-6905. P R IV A T E RO O M S, co-ed house, k itc h e n p riv ile g e s , b ills p a id R a tes: $140-175. Phone 477-1529 N ea r U T . _____ 1904 N U E C E S C A /C H , A B P , $185/ m o n th . C a ll 472-7562 b e fo re 8:30 o r a fte r 4 p .m . ____ A B P P R IV A T E ro o m , tw o b lo cks fro m U T . Share b a th , $160; s h a re k itc h e n , $190. 480-0766. _____ P R IV A T E RO O M S in best w e st ca m p u s lo ca tio n s . N ic e - $16 0/m onth. N ic e r - $ l65-170/m on th. N ic e s t - $195/m onth. A B P H o w e ll P ro p e rtie s , 477-9925. CLO S E TO c a m p u s, ro o m , $120, $160 A B P . C a ll 474-5981. ro o m in g house 2BR. W A S H E R /D R Y E R , fenced, $375. R e n ta l-A id , 476-4684 3004 G u a d a lu p e Fee O pen e v e ry day ( D - l l ) . G IR L S , T H IS is it! We a re now a ccep t in g g ro u p a p p lic a tio n s fo r the p r e s ti­ gio u s S p ru ce House fo r the 82-83 school y e a r A c c o m m o d a te s 12-13 g ir ls in the fin e s t lo c a tio n w est of the U T c a m p u s. C a ll H o w e ll P ro p e rtie s , 477 9925, fo r le a s in g d e ta ils . A fte r hours, M rs . Behne, 345-2099, o r M r. W ilson, 282-1301 FURNISHED DUPLEXES L A W SC HO O L, ro o m , y e a r lease. $350. 926-7243. liv in g fire p la c e , s tudy, p o rc h s w in g la rg e b e d ro o m , M A L E , F E M A L E hou se m a te N ic e 2 b e d ro o m d u p le x H yd e P a rk , id e a l ¡oca tio n . 480-9644 a fte r 5 p .m . A v a ila b le J u ly . ROOMMATES R o o m m a t e , SJctworU M o s t c o m p re h e n s iv e se rvice of its k in d G e t a S u m m e r o n d , i f n e e d e d , a Fall r o o m m a t e all for o n e lo w price W e 'll t a k e care of f in d in g th e rig h t r o o m ­ m a t e for y o u T h is 7 for 1 sp e c ia l a v a il a b l e for a \ ' lim ite d tim e on ly. V i sa \ M a s t e r c a r d \ ! 4 7 3 - 2 8 0 0 2 8 1 3 Rio G r a n d e \ • • V R o o m m a te In c . When you need a roommate in a hurry call the profettionale. 4 * 2 - 0 4 2 0 W O M A N OR m o th e r, and s m a ll c h ild , s h a re house w ith sam e. 3/2, CR s h u ttle , fenced, W /D , d is h w a s h e r, AC, nea r p a rk . S hare re n t and b ills . C a ll E liz a ­ beth a f te r 5:30, 451-9613. R O O M M A T E N E E D E D s u m m e r, fa ll, s p rin g . 2B R 1BA a p a rtm e n t, $170 plu s 1 1 E s u m m e r, $200 plus 1 ? E f a ll, s p rin g . W a lk to ca m p u s, WC s h u ttle . 480-9406 M A L E , F E M A L E hou se m a te . N ic e 2 b e d ro o m d u p le x , H yd e P a rk , id e a l lo c a ­ tio n . 480-9644 a fte r 5 p .m . A v a ila b le J u ly .__________________ _________________ H O U S E M A T E N E E D E D to s h a re 2BR 1 BA house n e a r IF L a rg e y a rd , g a ra g e . $ 1 8 7/m o n th plu s Vi b ills . C a ll D a v id , d a y 471-3249, n ig h t 454-1601. F E M A L E R O O M M A T E w a n te d to sh a re house clo se to sh u ttle . $117.50 & '/3 E. C a ll 451-5693^ E Ñ t ¥ rT n G L A W s tu d e n t se e k in g e a s y ­ goin g , s ta b le , stu d io u s la w o r g r a d u a te s tu d e n t ro o m m a te , m a le or fe m a le , to Share tin e C la r k s v ille 2 -b e d ro o m up­ s ta ir s a p a rtm e n t w ith su n d e ck. R ent $22 0 /m o n th plu s b ills . A v a ila b le la st w e ek In June . C a ll Ja m e s a t 477-4540 a f­ te r 6 p .m . o r a t 472-7765 f r o m 9-5. L I B E R A L P R O F E S S IO N A L w o m a n w ith y o u n g c h ild w a n ts fe m a le (27-37) to s h a re N o rth 3B R tow nh ouse. 15 m in u te s fro m c a m p u s by c a r. O n ly b e d ro o m f u r ­ n itu r e needed. Pools, te n n is. $150 p lu s 13 E. A u g u s t 1. 346-2015 eve n in g s. F E M A L E N O N S M O K E R In la rg e house. T w o b lo ck s to EC . $110 plus 'M b ills . 4/8-4958 fo r ro o m N O N S M O K IN G F E M A L E r o o m m a te w a n te d . G ra d u a te s tu d e n t p r e fe rr e d S h a re n ic e o ld e r hom e on s h u ttle . $202/ m o n th plu s Vi b ills . C a ll 451-8520 be­ tw e e n 5 and 7 p .m . S T U D E N T N E E D E D to s h a re 3 B R /2 B A house on CR s h u ttle N ic e y a rd , f u r ­ nished, CA, CH, W A /D R Y SlSO m o n th plu s '/a u t ilit ie s . C a ll John, 452-2071. fo r c e n tr a lly F ^ E M A L E H O U S E M A T E lo ca te d 3BR house to Shoal C re e k ). P r iv a te e n try , h a rd w o o d flo o rs , g a ra g e . $160 plu s '3 u t ilitie s . C a ll 452- 9692. (c lo s e ___ N E A T , R E S P O N S IB L E fe m a le ro o m ­ m a te fo r nice, sp acious 3-2 d u p le x . F ir e ­ pla ce , g a ra g e , v a u lte d c e ilin g ; RC, SR. $163 p lu s E ; J u ly 1. 441-4060. R O O M M A T E N E E D E D . 2 B R 2 B A To w n - '/a e le c tr ic ity . hom e, $ 18 7/m onth plu s C a ll M y le s , 447-8816 W O M E N A R E ASSETS TO CO-OPS T he ICC co-ops a re lo o kin g fo r a few good peo ple to f i l l s u m m e r and fa ll v a ­ can c ie s . R ates s ta rt as low as $183 P lease c a ll us a t 476-1957. S E N E C A F A L L S F e m in is t Co-Op: open­ in gs now and f a ll S u p p o rtiv e e n v iro n m e n t, p riv a c y , co m p a n y. 2309 Nueces, 477-0225 FOR RENT S A I L B O A T RENTALS 12' B IC S U R F S A IL E R -$ 6 /h O u r 1 4 'S K IM M E R B O A R D B O A T - $6 hou r 18' V IC T O R IA SLOOP -$12 ho u r 23' SO N A R SLO O P - $17.50/hour 25 -36' C A B IN CLASS Y A C H T S C O M M A N D E R 'S P O IN T Y A C H T BASIC on L a k e T r a v is , 2 b lo c ks w e st of M a n s ­ f ie ld D a m on RR 620 T u rn n o rth on C o m m a n d e r's P o in t D riv e , 2 b lo c k s to o u r p a r k in g tot 266-1341 fo r re s e rv a tio n s L A R G E D O U B L E enclosed g a ra g e , Vi b lo c k fr o m c a m p u s. $75/m o n th , 926-7243, lease re q u ire d . [ e r a s P a t L u c e y ’s TUTORING SERVICE Experienced, professional tutors can help you m ake better grades. S truggling?? F rustrated on tests ? C o ll or c o m e b y for a p p o in t m e n t MATH: M 301 302 IB 1041 305G M 3I6K /L M 6034 B M 311 M M l * M 4 2 7 k/t M 60S « 3 2 5 M 3*2* PHYSICS: PHY 301 PHY 302k I PHY 303K./L PHY 327 k / l CHEMISTRY: BUSINESS: CM 301/307 CH 4104 8 COMP SCI.: ACC 311/312 STA 309 CS 301/302 (S 315 D on’t put this off until the night before exam. Too late then... • Close to UT campus • Very reasonable rates • Lots of patience • In a language you will understand Also high school courses and SA T , GRE R eview 600 W. 28th St. Office 103 458-5060 477-7003 M A T H T U T O R House of Tutor 819 W. 24th T r i Towers 474-4723 Ch 305 Q House of Tutor 819 W. 24th T r i Towers 474-4723 S IN G L E F E M A L E to s h a re 3 b e d ro o m house. N o rth w e s t lo c a tio n . A fte r 5, 467- 0660. __________ S P A N IS H G O T you d o w n? B ilin g u a l E n g lis h g ra d u a te w ill tu to r S p anish or E n g lis h s tu d e n ts . 474-8617, A lic ia . R O O M M A T E N E E D E D . S hare la rg e 3 b e d ro o m house. C a rp e t, AC . C a ll 467- 0307 fo r m o re in fo r m a tio n . DO Y O U speak S p anish? I tu to r E n g lis h . B ilin g u a l, e x p e rie n c e d . A d u lts o r c h il­ d re n . 477-5292 e ven ings. UNFURN. APARTMENTS UNFURN. APARTMENTS C A S T L E A R M S F u rn is h e d o r U n fu rn is h e d 1 and 2 Bedrooms for Sum m er 2 w e eks fre e r e n t w ith lease 31st and Speedway Ca l l 477-3210 E F F I C I E N C I E S ABP. Quiet location, sum m er rates. 808 Winflo 480-9732 L A N T A N A 1802 West Ave. 4 blocks fro m campus 1 and 2 bedrooms Sum m er Special Short te rm leases a va ila b le 478-7598 M A R K T W A IN W a lk to cam p u s. S m a ll, q u ie t, a t tr a c t iv e ly de s ig n e d c o m p le x IB R s - lB A s , v a u lte d c e ilin g s , fire p la c e , d is h w a s h e r S u m m e r r a te $305 plu s E. A ls o 451-8122 W e s tw o rld R eal E sta te . le a s in g J a c k f a l l D U V A L V I L L A , 2BR, p re le a s in g now fo r s u m m e r and sp e c ia l ra te s. D is c o u n t on fo r s u m m e r. S h u ttle , pool, c o n v e n ie n t lo c a tio n . 4305 D u v a l, 451-2343. leased le ases f a ll If 5 B L O C K S W E S T U T. E ffic ie n c y . Pan- eie d liv in g ro o m , kitc h e n , stove gas, r e ­ la u n d ry , clo se t, f r ig e r a to r , w a lk in ca b le , S210 plu s E. In q u ire Red O ak A p a rtm e n ts . 2104 San G a b rie l, 476-7916 4 B L O C K S w e s t U T. E ffic ie n c y , pan e le d liv in g room , k itc h e n , stove (g a s ), r e f r ig ­ e r a to r, la u n d ry In q u ire Red O ak, 2104 San G a b rie l $180 plus E 476-7916. W A L K TO c a m p u s . 1-1, AC, a p p lia n c e s . S u m m e r ra te s , $210 plus E. 451-8122. W e s tw o rld R e a l E s ta te W E S T C A M P U S . B ig 2B R In 4-plex w ith H o lly w o o d b a th . O n ly 4 b lo cks fr o m c a m p u s . C A /C H , q u ie t and cozy. $400 C a ll Ken M c W illia m s , 477-9937, 478-2410 a f te r 6 p .m . to c a m p u s o r 1 b lo c k IF 1BR, W A L K s h u ttle . N e w r e fr ig e r a to r , AC. p a in t, c a rp e t, etc. W a te r, cable, gas p a id $225 p lu s E 478-6148. G R E A T L O C A T IO N - 1 b lo c k to la w schoo l C lean, la rg e , 2-2, sun deck, pool. S u m m e r o n ly $400. 2900 S w ish e r, 477- 3388 U n e x p e c t e d v a c a n c y , w a lk in g d is ta n c e U T L a rg e 1BR S u m m e r ra te s . _______ 104 E 32nd No. 103. 476-5940. L A R G E E F F IC IE N C Y , s u m m e r and f a ll ra te s a v a ila b le . A B P 1708 G u a d a ­ lu p e . C a ll 478-3533. ______ A V A I L A B L E NOW . 2B R a p a rtm e n ts fu rn is h e d o r u n fu rn is h e d on s h u ttle . S u m m e r ra te s . 443-0051. 1515 P A L M A P laza, 24 F la ts . E ffic ie n c y a v a ila b le . J u ly 1 $245/m onth, $175 d e ­ p o s it. 2/1 a v a ila b le im m e d ia te ly $385/ m o n th , $250 d e p o sit. 397-2587 8-5, M -F . 303~W. 40th. L a rg e 2-1, c a rp e t, d ra p e s, C A /C H , pool and la u n d ry . $295. C a ll 452- 8 9 3 7 . ____________________________ S H A R E L U X U R Y 2BR 2B A cond o 5 b lo c k s fro m c a m p u s. P ool, hot tu b . $225/ p e rso n plu s de p o sit, plus E P lease c a ll K e n o r Bob, 327-5000, 477-9937. FURNISHED APARTMENTS ■ FURNISHED APARTMENTS, -SUMMER RATES- Close to Campus a n d On Shuttle ★ 1 BR from $225 plus E to $240 plus E ★ 2BR from $265 plus E to $295 plus E ★ All small complexes ★ Laundry rooms ★ Pools 3704 Speedway 459-0267 E L C ID 451-4255 401 W. 39th L A P A Z 452-8537 E L C A M P O 305 W. 39th E L D O R A D O 3501 Speedway 472-4893 P rofessionally m anaged by A m erican Real E state cQ k Q irn a g e cH o u § e • Efficiency, 1, 2 & 4 Bedrooms • From $220 plus Electricity • Roommates Welcome • Shuttle Bus Route 2304 Pleasant Valley 442-1298 G illin gw ater M an agem en t Co. THE ARBOR 1500 Royal Crest Summer Leases First Stop on RC Shuttle Balconies Fireplaces • Walk-in Closets • Pool • Laundry • Gas Paid G illin g w a ter M an agem en t 4 4 4 -7 5 1 6 ...................j ( • NOW LEASING • E ST R A D A A P A R T M E N T S Summer Rates and Summer/Fall Rates Studios, 1, 2, & 3 Bedrooms FROM $235-$475 PER MONTH 1801 S. Lakeshore 442-6668 • Shuttle • Shopping • 3 Pool* • Lake view • ;!/ ProfeBKionally Managed by M artine Propertiet, Inc. I | | | v ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ « ♦ < ♦ ♦ ' ♦ ♦ } i I ¡ SOUTH SHORE LAKE VIEW Apartm ents Available • Convenient for UT students • Easy access to IH35 • Lake views • Close to restaurants, shopping • Built-in dresser/vanity • Carpeting w a ll to w all • W all to w all closets Summer Leases A vailable 300 E. Riverside Dr. 44 4-3 33 7 Gillingwater M anagement Co. WANTED f/\p A t/u x WE WANT YOUR BIK ES! W e b u y , re p a ir, sell and tra d e b ic y c le s . BOB'S B I K E A N D K E Y 327-4034 452-9777 W e stw o o d S h opping Centei 5413 N. L a m a r IVER HILLS APTS. Pre-Lease for Fall Now! Efficiencies, 1, 2, 3 & 4 Bedroom Apts. Starting From $230. Cable T.V. Optional. Shuttle Bus. Don’t Miss Our 4 Pools...UT Orange with Graphics! 1601 Royal Crest Dr. 444-7797 ROOMS ROOMS 2012 ( *u*ttn, t«xa* ra ro s 4T4-eeo9 SUMMER RATES May 31 - August 14: Double Occupancy $ 3 8 0 Private Room $ 5 0 0 Also Pre-Leasing For Fall N o n -s m o k in g R E N T N E G O T IA B L E fe m a le la rg e b e d ro o m , 1 BA . F o r second h a lf of s u m m e r. 451- 9222 ro o m m a te , 2 ____ H O U S E M A T E 24-32. C lean, e a sy g o in g s tu d e n t P r iv a te ro o m . $160 A B P . 452- 4429, T o n y. G A Y M A L E to sh a re fu rn is h e d lu x u ry ho m e w a lk in g d is ta n c e fr o m U n iv e r s ity . C A /C H , fire p la c e , m a n y e x tra s . $225 plus 1 3 u t ilitie s . M u s t be u n u s u a lly neat. Box 9802-598, A u stlrW 876 6L _ Q U IE T . R E S P O N S IB L E g ra d fe m a le to s h a re nice hom e w ith sam e. $225 plu s E. C a ll C a ro l, 928-2475.______ TW O P E O P L E needed to s h a re la rg e hom e w ith tw o couples. F u rn is h e d 3-4, w a s h e r, d r y e r . W a lk in g d is ta n c e to U T . 892-3326. M A L E G R A D stu d e n t seeks ro o m m a te IF s h u t­ to s h a re 2B R -2B A a p a rtm e n t. tle , pool, and n e a rb y te n n is c o u rts . $155 plu s '/2 E. 451-9714. W A N T E D ^ R O O M M A T E to s h a re la rg e th re e b e d ro o m house v e ry clo se to c a m ­ pus $150 plus b ills . 473-2254 R O O M M A T E , Q U IE T g ra d s tu d e n t non- s m o k e r. 2-1 E n fie ld a t W est L y n n . Clean, sp acious Store, la u n d ry clo se by. S p lit $ 37 5/m onth, $375 de p o sit, b ills . Jon, 477-6002 e v e n in g s o r w e ekends. R O O M M A T E N E E D E D . G ra d u a te s tu ­ den t, n o n -sm o kin g , needed to s h a re 2BR a p a rtm e n t b e g in n in g J u ly 15 o r A u g u st 1 $175/m o. A B P V e rs a ille s A p ts on CR s h u ttle ro u te . C a ll Dan a t w o rk 474-4526 9-11 a .m . o r hom e 454-1478 9-11 p .m . R O O M M A T E N E E D E D fo r la rg e house on CR s h u ttle . W ash d r y , C A /C H , nice y a rd , tre e s, O n ly $141 66 458-9580 a fte r 5:00 p m . H u r r y . ro o m ­ N E E D R E S P O N S IB L E m a le m a te . 2B R -1B A a p t R iv e rs id e a re a J u ly 1st J a c k 443-8958 a fte r 5 pm . fo r J u ly 1 H O U S E M A T E N E E D E D m o v e -in . 2/1 d u p le x , fro m c a m p u s . M u s t be re s p o n s ib le and cle an. C a ll Lou a t 454-3307 o r le a ve m essage a t 471-1944. $142.50 plus 2 biUs._______ IVa m ile s M A L E R O O M M A T E fo r 3-2 house, o ff CR s h u ttle , $150, '/a b ills 452-8721 a fte r 3 :0 0 p .m . F E M A L E R O O M M A T E w a n te d . 2BR 1BA, a cro ss NR s h u ttle $155; '/a e; d e ­ p o sit. M a g g ie : 444-5290, m essages: 444- 0085 ________ F E M A L E G R A DU A T E stu d e n t to sh a re 2B R , 2B A u n fu rn is h e d a p a rtm e n t nea r Z llk e r . $ 21 0/m onth plu s b ills . C a ll M a ry 327-3940 a fte r 6 F A S T CASH We loan on most anything of value. N o rth ; 454-0459, 5134 B urnet Rd. South: 892-0019, 5195 290 West. BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES A R T S T U D E N T ? B U SI NESS S T U D E N T ? O w n an a r t g a lle r y and fr a m in g stu d io . In c lu d e s a 2 b e d ro o m a p a rtm e n t w ith in w a lk in g d is ta n c e of U T . $25,000 C a ll G le n M c C o m b , A ffilia t e d B u siness B ro ­ ke r. 454-3586 MUSICAL INSTRUCTION E X P E R I E N C E D P I A N O G U I T A R te a c h e r B e g ln n e rs -a d v a n c e d U T de­ gre e . A fte r 5 p .m . 459-4082. P IA N O LE S S O N S . B e g in n e r-a d v a n c e d E x p e rie n c e d , q u a lifie d te a c h e r. C la s s i­ cal and im p ro v is e d s ty le s . P hone 453- 9696. __________________________________ P IA N O LE S S O N S A ll le vels. In d iv id u a l p r iv a te In s tru c tio n . R e asonable ra te s. N e a r U T . C a ll B a rb a ra Irv in e , 454-0760 G U IT A R LE SSO N S , a lT s ty le s 7 E x p e r i­ enced re a s o n a b le ra te s . 476- 7830 te a c h e r, fo r b e g in n in g P IA N O I n s t r u c t i o n and In te r m e d ia te stu d e n ts C la s s ic a l and Im p ro v is e d s ty le s as w e ll as c o m p o ­ s itio n R e asonable rate s, close to ca m pus C a ll E ly s s e 474-8061, a fte r 1:00 M - F, S a t/S u n a n y tim e . ROOM AND BOARD ROOM AND BOARD M B A y é l 2505 LONGVIEW Austin, Texas 78705 5 1 2 , 4 7 2 - 0 1 0 0 NOW PRELEASING FOR FALL Coed Dorm Pool Relaxed Atmosphere F-R-E-E Refrigerator in every room Kitchen on each hall Private and Doublo rooms available 5 1 2 /4 7 2 -0 1 0 0 N e w m a n Hall-St. Austin Parish 2026 G uadalupe 476-0669 Small, Q uiet - All Women Double & Single Rooms Available for Summer and Fall Summer Rates Double Single Per Week $87 $100 15 Meals Included Private Parking Available TYPING TYPING MASTER TYPIST, INC. THE COMPUTERIZED TYPING STORE RESUMES SAME DAY 8. ONE DAY SERVICE SAVE YOUR RESUME ON COMPUTER FOR FUTURE UPDATING ALSO Dissertations, Theses, PRs, & Law Briefs Dobie Mall N. 36 2021 Guadalupe St. 472-0293 FREE Parking T c a C U I ^ * - O r U . T — f R t t W ALLTEX stretches out for the Longhorns. While a lim ited number last, move in w ithout a furniture worry in the world! Fully furnished apartm ents! Hur­ ry. They w ill not last long! 3543 Grey stone Dr. 345-4444 ) 7117 Woodhollow Dr. 345-8182 3607 Greystone Dr. 345-8848 COUNTRY ClUB LUXURY IN NEARBY NORTHWEST HILLS F ast fre e w a y m iles to the cam pus * E le­ g ant clubhouse e xclu sive ly fo r residents' e n te rta in in g * Lighted tennis co u rt * Pools w ith Jacuzzi fa c ilitie s and surrounded by redwood decking fo r sum m er sunning Balconies & patios for barbecuing and p ri­ vacy * SEE MODELS MON.-SAT, • 9-6 P.M. SUNDAYS *1-6 P.M. D . v . i o f » d t M a n a g e d b y TYPING W \ C"\ l i e ! Z I V I E Y $ / A / TYPING, PRIN TIN G , B IN D IN G Th e C o m p l e t e P r o f e s s i o n a l FULLTIME TYPING SERVICE 472-3210 472-7677 2707 HEMPHILL PK. P le n ty o f P a r k in g T.I.C .S. Inc Typing Service 1005 E. St. Elmo Rd. Pickup delivery point* SO c o p y re su m e p a c k a g e $1 2 . 0 0 T e rm P a p e r* Th e se s R u s h se rvice • D s t e r t a t io n s • T tch n ica l t y p in g • A i lo w a s $ 1 . 2 5 / p a g e 4 4 3 -4 4 3 3 Word Processing P ro fe s s io n a l f o rm a t tn d q u a lity book- fa c e p r in t Theses, c is s e rta tio n s , la w b rie fs , resum es, PR 's, m a ilin g lis ts and p e rso n a liz e d in fe rs . R e asonable Rates. fo rm House of Tutor 819 W. 24tt St. 474-4721 M E L I N D A 'S T Y P IN G SERVICE $1.35 per s t a nd ar d page 15 years experience S tr ic t ly p ro fe s s io n a l ty p in g g u a ra n te e d 479-8871 H o u rs : noo n-rm dnig ht V ic in ity of IH35 and 32nd St. T Y P I N G E N G L I S H T U T O R I N G Maude Cardwell, Ph.D. M a n y y e a rs e x p e rie n c e te jc h in g co lle g e E n g lis h and ty p in g . E le ctro n ic t y p e w r it ­ e r C a m p u s p ic k up and d e liv e ry . 479- 8909 N E E D A fa s t a c c u ra te typist? I have a BA in E n g lis h , a co rre c tin g S e le c tric and 12 y e a rs s e c r e ta ria l e x p e rie n c e . _ C a ll A n n a t 447-5069, 8-6. _ W O O D S T Y P IN G S e rv ic e w h en you w a n t It done r ig h t 472-6302, .200 G u a d a ­ _________ lu pe, sid e e n tra n c e . T Y P I NG - C O R R E C T I N G S e le c t r ic , o v e r n ig h t s e rv ic e , p ic k -u p a va ila b le t ill 11:50 p m E x p e rie n c e d professional. P a tty , 345-4269 t il l m id n ig h t . ____ _____ P R O F E S S IO N A L T Y P IS T A c c u ra te s e rv ic e , tu rn a ro u n d Theses, d is s e rta tio n s , p ro fe s s io n a l reports, etc. B a rb a ra T u llo s , 453-5124 fa s t E X C E L L E N T T Y P ÍN G -re p c r:i, d is s e r­ ta tio n s , resum es, etc. C o rrecting Selec- __ fr ic . 836-0721.__ ______ __________ P R O F E S S IO N A L M A N U S C R IP T T Y P ­ IN G . G u a ra n te e d A ll fie ld s . 5 page m in ­ im u m . Y v o n n e 474-4863. T Y P IN G B Y D E A N N E S p e c iiliz in g In te r m p ap ers, dissertations, theses, le­ IB M C o rre c tin g S e le c tric . R eason­ g al _ a b le ra te s . 447-7284. T Y P IN G . F A S T , p ro fe s s io n a l 10 y e a rs c o m b in e d e x p e rie n c e in engineering and a c c o u n tin g fie ld s . S. A u s tin , il'p a g e . M illie , 447-5906. T Y P IN G IN m y hom e N E Austin, re a ­ ra te s . C a ll P a t, 454 5124 No so na ble c a lls a fte r 10 p .m . ____ _______ C O M P U T E R IZ E D T Y P IN G . Fast, a c­ c u ra te , easy changes, r e v ie w copy, h ig h q u a lity fin a l co p y. E xperienced. C a ll M a rg a re t, 837-2440. sure we DO type FRESHMAN THEMES why net stort out with good g r*ki 2 7 0 7 H e m p h ill Ju*t N o rth of 2 7 th ot G u a d a lw p * 4 7 2 -3 2 1 0 4 7 2 7677 typing. I N T E L L IG E N T , A C C U R A T E R e ports, resu m e s. H ig h lite ra c y ; c u s­ to m e r m is s p e llin g s c o rre c te d . Rush s e r­ v ic e a v a ila b le . T u t o r in g . C reative S e rv ice s , 2420 G u a d a lu p e , 478-3633 T H E S IS , D IS S E R T A T IO N , resum ís, ie- g a l d o c u m e n ts , re a s o n a b le p ric e s deliv­ e ry n e g o tia b le , 1 day s e rv ic e . 473-7159, ____________ 443-4362. T H E T Y P IS T P ro fe s s io n a l q u a lity ty p ­ in g S a tis fa c tio n g u a ra n te e d . Campus p ic k -u p , d e liv e r y . IB M c o r re c tin g Selec­ t r ic . H elen, 836-3562. L E G A L A N D typing. K a th e 's Q u ic k -T y p e 15 y e a rs experi­ ence. IB M I I I . 443-6488. South Austin,__ p r o fe s s io n a l T Y P IN G /P R O O F IN G n o n p a re il. Term pap ers, re p o rts , theses, e tc. N e a r south L a m a r /M a n c h a c a C a ll Joe, 447-2552. E C O N o T y P E / E C O N O C O P Y , Inc Pro­ fe ss io n a l ty p in g and q u a lit y copying a t eco n o m y p ric e s 2 lo c a tio n s . 3701 Gua­ d a lupe. 453-5452; 1705 S L a k e s h o re 443- 4498 ___ RU SH T Y P IN G ? S U R E W E u O Kouse of T u to r w ill m e e t a n y d e a d lin e Tpen 't il m id n ig h t. T ri-T o w e rs , 474-4723. A C C U R A T E , P R O F E S S IO N A L ty p in g . $ l/p a g e , m ost cases C a m p u s pickup and d e liv e rv O v e rn ig h t s e rv ic e . Janie, 250-9435. T y p I N G . F R E E p ic k -u p a n d d e lh f f c S p e llin g c o rre c te d , d if f ic u lt fo rrr.u ts n o p ro b le m R easonable 263-5567. T Y P IN G - M Y hom e, e xp e rie n c e d , rea­ sonable. W o rk g u a ra n te e d C orrecting O liv e tti, pica type. 458-4993 W O R D P R O C E S S IN G , d is c s to ra g e and r ig h t p ro p o rtio n a l p r in tin g a v a i tiWe. G re a t te rm pap ers 20 page m in im u m , 182- 0500 theses, d is s e rta tio n s fo r - i l/tlp fid u K RESUMES w ith or w ithout pictures 2707 H em phill Park Just North of 27th a t Guadalupe 4 7 2 - 3 2 1 0 4 7 2 - 7 6 7 7 PERSONAL P R O B L E M P R E G N A N C Y ? F re e p n an cy te s tin g and r e fe r r a ls 474-9930 IN S T E A D OF a b o rtio n , c a ll 454-6127 F I L M S A L E . C o lor p r in ts , 24 ex $4.90, 36 expos $6 50, 20 c o lo r si $1 50 Pr esent coupon a t tim e of or The F ilm S e rv ic e a t T he G e n e ra l St V a lid -7 /9 ,8 2 LOST & FOUND LO ST, J E S T E R lo t: d ia p e r bag. Seek.r t u r n e s p e c ia l! b oo k w it h in , R E W A R D No q u e stio n s P lease hel c a ll 454-8862 a fte r I p m of TRAVEL* 1-3 T R A V E L IN G C O M P A N IO N S ed f j r U S A c a r to u r w ith 30 ye< g ra d stu d e n t. No tob a cc o . (817) 774 SERVICES J E N N IN G S ' M O V IN G and H a u lin g la rg e p e n dable p e rso n a l s e rv ic e , s m a ll jobs 7 d a y s -w e e k 442-6181 t A R T 'S M O V IN G anq H a u lin g any ar 24 hou rs, 7 d a ys. 447-9384, 442-0194 Rain, drownings daunt Mexia holiday iim n m m iHT ii i M B B H M Monday, June 21, 1982 □ TH E D A ILY T EX A N □ Page 11 From staff and wire reports less A smaller than expected than 1,500 crowd of turned out Saturday for Juneteenth festivities at Lake Mexia, scene of the contro­ versial drownings of three black youths one year ago. It was speculated the rainy weather and tragedy of last year’s celebration kept people away. In Waco, the parents of Steve Booker, one of the youths drowned last year filed a $4 million federal suit against Limestone County, Sheriff Dennis Walker, the State of Texas, the Texas Parks and Wildlife Depart­ ment, game warden Waylan Alewine and the three arrest­ ing officers for damages in the death of their son. Juneteenth commemorates June 19. 1865, the day slaves in Texas learned they were free. M em orial services and marches were also held in Dallas, Houston and Austin, all sponsored by the Coman­ che Three Committee — which took its name from the Comanche Crossing site where three youths the drowned. A spokesman for Black Cit­ izen's Task Force in Austin, who asked not to be identi­ fied, said Sunday that the Juneteenth celebration has permanently lost some of its meaning and that “ incidents like the drowning could hap­ pen again. “ It ’s been exactly one year ago that three of our youth were senselessly drowned by three killer’ cops and for this reason. Juneteenth will never be the same for any of us,’ said the spokesman. “ Until the police and the character­ istic violence that they breed are eliminated from our midst, Juneteenth will never be the same again. At last year’s observance deputies three arrested youths — Anthony Freeman. Lisa M inkin Two riders talk while waiting for rodeo events to begin Saturday. The rodeo In San Antonio was part of the statewide Juneteenth celebration. 18, Carl Baker and Booker. 19 — for drug possession They loaded the trio into a small motorboat to cross the lake to a command post, but the boat swamped about 50 yards from shore and the three youths drowned Limestone County officials said Saturday a man charged with aggravated assault in Friday's shooting of another celebrant was released on bond. The suspect's name was not available. Group OKs studies to solve traffic problems By JU L IE CLINT Daily Texan Staff The Austin Transportation Study Friday unanimously ap­ proved three studies of pro­ traffic to posals relieve congestion in South Austin and southern Travis County. The ATS is an 11-member body which must approve federally funded local high­ way projects. Members voted and made recommendations Friday on issues that are part of a five-year transportation for improvement program Austin and Travis County. One proposal to solve traf­ fic congestion in the area is the South Park Loop, a 12-lane expressway that would link Texas 71 near Del Valle and U.S. 290 near Oak Hill. The Texas Department of High­ ways and Public Transporta­ tion will begin feasibility studies on the proposal to determine cost and construc­ tion. The committee also recom­ mended studies on improve­ ment of U.S. 290 between Oak Hill and Austin and upgrading of F M 620 to four lanes west of Mansfield Dam “ We are now engaged in the southwest area study which will have a great effect on U.S. 290, Bee Caves Hoad and the South Loop.” commit­ tee member Joe Gieselman said. The highway department expects the extension of Mo- Pac Boulevard from Loop 360 to U.S. 290. approved by Aus­ tin voters in April, to help re­ lieve in southwest Travis County. traffic congestion An argument for the south­ that ern extension was it would provide easier access to the city for the increasing number of people who live in southwest Travis County and work in Austin. Opponents of the extension said it would en­ courage growth unnecessari- ly. “ One of the side effects of the MoPac issue was that the road (U.S. 290) couldn’t carry the said County Judge Mike Renfro, an ATS member. traffic,” Renfro said the highway de­ partment’s feasibility study must be in effect within two years or the whole area could be filled with subdivisions, making large-scale road im­ provements almost impossi­ ble. The ATS has tentatively scheduled Ju ly 29 to review projects suggested by the highwav department on pro­ posed road improvements. The South P a rk Loop project could be complete within 10 years if the commit­ tee and the highway depart­ ment agree on the commit­ tee’s recommendations. Cable workers offer ‘good faith’ end to strike By SCOTT W ILLIAMS Daily Texan Staff An eight-month-old strike by workers for Austin Cablev- ision will come to an end Mon­ day, when 75 to 100 striking employees return to work without a new contract. T.O. Parsons, representa­ tive of the Austin local of the Communications Workers of the America, said Friday technicians, servicemen, in­ stallers and customer service representatives will return to work unconditionally as a sign of good faith. “ Our members returning to work demonstrates their good faith, and we expect the com­ pany to reciprocate with a show of good faith at the bar­ gaining table,” he said. The strike began Oct. 27 when workers walked away from their jobs charging Aus­ tin Cablevision with unfair la- bor practices by failing to ne­ gotiate in good faith. Despite returning to work without a new contract, work­ ers feel victorious, said Ricky Martin, a striking Cablevision employee. “ I believe they re the ones surrendering. We re going back as winners and all the people going back feel like winners,” Martin said in service. Parsons said that when strikers return to work. Ca­ blevision subscribers will no­ tice a considerable improve­ ment ” B y and large there are 1.000 contrac­ tors they’ve had in here who do not know the city and don’t know what repairs need to be done,” he said. However, Philip Knudsen, Cablevision director of opera­ tions, said service will stay the same. “ Customers won’t notice any difference.” he said. Parsons said, “ Hopefully this (return to work) will re­ sult in the company returning to the bargaining table. Last time they onlv spent one hour, said no and left Parsons said decisions on a new contract will have to be made when the time arrives but added. “ If the workers are not happy they can still go back on strike.” The strikers will return to work, Parsons said, because the company has admitted the charges of unfair labor prac­ tices. “ We got a call from the National Labor Relations Board that they (company negotiators) were ready to talk,” he said, However, Charles Grim- lich, Austin Cablevision gen­ the eral manager, denied company had admitted any wrong-doing. “ All I know is 1 received a letter from the CWA (union) which has an un­ conditional offer to return to work " Guadalupe Ruiz, director of the National Labor Relations Board office in San Antonio, said no admission of guilt had been made by the company and said a trial date of Aug. 3 had been set. “ If they had ad­ they were wrong, mitted there wouldn t need to be any trial,” he said Ruiz said Austin Cablevi­ sion is accused of violating Section 8.a.5. of the National Labor Relations Act, which requires that companies bar­ gain in good faith. Another major complaint made by the strikers was the hiring of independent contrac­ tors by the company to handle work during peak periods — a practice the company has continued during the strike — instead of using union employ­ ees. Knudsen said the company will continue to use independ- ent contractors whenever the need arises. “ We've got a big job to do and it’s not a perma­ nent job,” he said. “ There s a big balloon of activity that will eventually go away. “ We don't like laying peo­ ple off. When we hire people we like to keep them on. Knudsen said. Because Austin Cablevision employees called tor a strike based on accusations of unlair labor practices instead of eco­ nomic considerations, Austin Cablevision must hold jobs open those on strike, strike coordinator Don Sen- terfitt said. for “ If the employees are not taken back in three to five days then wages will accrue.” Senterfitt said. Then, it the workers win their court case, they can collect the sum. he said. NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE FORECAST to 7 PM EST 6 - 2 1 - 8 2 I ’★K 29.77 30.00 PEANUTS® by Charles M. Schulz THAT'S RI6HT... SALLY C0ME5 HOME TOPAY FROM BEANBA6 CAMP S EATTLE SAK HELP WANTED C O N V E N IE N C E S T O R E . 24 hours, 7 days all shifts a vaila b le Two locations north and south. Call 452-9219. E O E ^ P A R T T IM E tem po rary em ploym ent with non-profit research organization for vigorous public spirited individuals. Duties include contacting com m unity minded people in Southwestern towns by phone S a la ry : hourly wage Monday- F rid a y em ploym ent needed, two shifts available 8:30 a m -12:30 p.m and 1-5 p m Fo r an appointm ent call 451-6459 E O E N E E D E D : C A T lover to keep m y kitten tor six weeks. 510. week I'll supply food, etc 471-1679. _ _ ______________________ G R A D U A T E S T U D E N T to look after 9 year old g irl. Hom ework assistance, cre ative a ctivities, tran.portation. F le x ­ ible schedule a must Start late August R efe ren ce s esse n tia l and w ill be checked. Top sa lary . Call Lois, 441 0988 M U S IC D IR E C T O R F irs t P resb yteria n Church 345-8866, or after business hours 345 9363 or 346-3231 C H U R C H N U R S E R Y worker, Sunday mornings 9:30-12:00 U n iversity Bap tist Church, 478-1066. W A N T E D C O M M E R C IA L tor advertisem ent M ichael 451-8746 illustrator C O N ST R U C T IO N C L E A N - U P , 15 h o u r s / w e e k M ust have own transpo rta­ tion Call T errie, 346-5405 _______________ E V E N I N G C A S H IE R . C R Shuttle. A p­ ply in person, Long Jo hn Silvers, 5403 Cameron Road ____________________ B A B Y S I T T E R F O R 2 children week- niqhts or weekends Transportation and references desired. Call 327-2870 afte r 5 p.m. ___________ L IF E G U A R D N E E D E D . Ex p e rie n ce necessary, W S I preferred P a r t time, S4 25 hour. Balco nes Woods Club Call between 12pm-10pm, 345-9015._________ P a r t M E D IC A L O F F I C E assistant time M ature, SO TA , flexible, person­ able E x p e rie n ce preferred Apply to Daily Texan, Box D-l, A uttln . T X 78712 B E R N A R D 'S C O F F E E S of the W o rld in Highland M a ll is now accepting a p p lica ­ tions for part tim e sales positions R etail experience preferred Apply in Person B E A N S R E S T A U R A N T and bar is a c ­ cepting applications for experienced part tim e cooks Apply in person be­ tween 2-4, M -F, 311 W. 6th P A T M A G E E 'S in H ighland M all is now accepting applications for part tim e em ­ ploym ent 451-4592 U P I W E A T H E R F O T O C A S T 0 The national forecast for Monday calla for showers and thun­ dershowers across portions of the Rocky Mountains, the west­ ern Gulf Coaat, the Great Lakee and northern Atlantic coastal states. Fair weather la predicted for the rest of the nation. High temperaturas will be in the 90s in the South and in the 80s in the North. B .C . ^ /v\AT6Y^ * mreÁ vom rut TA£ MAin3£ l A Ñ P w ap t/ BLOOM COUNTY TO PLACE A CLASSIFIED 6R6AT5C01T/ QUICK' 1H5 1He«UNG0N5 TORCeFI&05, ARC ATTACKING/ MR. STOCK/ / MSVf/ tW ltM fl FIFE PHOTON 70KP6P06S, X5AH/ mr.spock/ Fitem 1ST 5 STOCK/ 0Lf&T \ \ e m o rt! AD CALL 471-5244 Apparent prosperity conceals Britain’s ills * 1982 The New York Tlmee LONDON — To the casual visitor to this cosmopolitan city, signs of prosperity abound. Shoppers crowd fashionable Bond Street boutiques and make the aisles of Harrods department store virtually impassable on busy days. Prices in London re­ main high, and restaurants of even modest culinary preten­ sions seem extraordinarily expensive, even to New Yorkers. But such impressions belie the fact that Britain has shown only modest improvement in living standards in recent years and has slipped badly in relation to other countries. The crowd­ ed stores and imposing 19th century townhouses. symbols of past prosperity, bear little relation to the way of life pursued by most Britons today. Indeed. Britain has fallen to 10th of 15 major countries in standard of living, according to a recent survey by the Organi­ zation for Economic Cooperation and Development. The comparatively low standard of living here has resulted largely from earnings that are alm ost shockingly low by Amer­ ican standards. In Britain, the average wage for unskilled workers is $175 a week, against $255 a week in the United States. In addition, taxes in Britain are significantly higher than in the United States. Workers face a basic income tax rate of 30 percent with almost no deductions permitted. The “ free” Na­ tional Health Service is financed by additional taxes - nearly 9 percent of pay for the average worker. The slow growth of living standards in Britain represents the most tangible manifestation of the years of economic stagna­ tion and of the price of Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher’s efforts to restructure the economy. To the prime m inister, her policies represent the best hope of reversing the long-term trend. The modesty of the living standards of most Britons often becomes apparent alter only a short tim e here. To American eyes, a certain dowdiness pervades the country. Homes are often not repainted for several years, and even in fashionable parts of London plumbing pipes are often attached to the outer walls rather than buried within them. As of 1980, only 57 per­ cent of Britain's homes had central heating. A certain frumpi- ness and lack of m eans is apparent in the dress of many Brit­ ons. who in 1980 spent an average of $320 each on clothes and shoes. To be sure, British living standards in absolute terms are now higher than they have ever been as the rush, for exam ple, to buy video tape recorders and other new electronic item s suggests. All told, British consumers have about 12 percent more money left over after taxes and inflation are taken into account than they did in 1975. But in the United States over the same period, “ real disposable income” grew by 19 percent. In Britain, to a greater extent than elsewhere, individuals have been able to go on consuming in recent years only at heavy cost to investment — in effect, by borrowing from the future. Total capital investment, after adjusting for deprecia­ tion and inflation, has dropped from $18.3 billion in 1970 to $12.8 billion in 1980, the most recent year for which figures are avail­ able. The British government has been able to leave welfare and other transfer programs relatively intact because of the rush of revenue from taxes on the production of North Sea oil, a total of $11 billion this year. Since such transfer payments support consumption, the benefits of North Sea oil are being used to a considerable extent to protect British living standards. Renter support group celebrates decennial The Austin Tenants’ Council is commemorating its tenth year of service in the Austin area with Tenant Awareness Week, June 20-27. Tenant information booths staffed by paralegal aides experi­ enced in tenant/landlord law will be at Westgate Mall, 4521 Westgate Blvd.. Wednesday; Highland Mall, 6001 Airport Blvd., Thursday; and Northcross Mall, 2525 W. Anderson Lane, Fri­ day- Other events during the week include an ATC benefit from 5 p.m. to 2 a.m. Sunday at Liberty Lunch, featuring local m usi­ cians and entertainers. T-shirts designed by Pulitzer Prize winner Ben Sargeant will be on sale all week and at the benefit. The ATC, 1619 E. First St., offers a variety of counseling and mediation services, free literature on tenant landlord issues and speakers to citizen groups. For further information on the ATC or any one of its servi­ ces, call 474-1961. ACROSS 1 Fasteners 6 Collide 10 Im pudence to fetch 14 “ 15 C ircuit 16 Boast 17 Rhythm 18 Casino city 19 Sicily town 20 Was curt 22 Ideal 24 Fewest 26 Intrudes 27 W oodsm an 30 C om p pt. 31 Asian chiefs 32 Nova S co ti­ an, e g 37 US Treas gp 38 H obby fan 40 Greek letter 41 Practiced 43 Baked item 44 Perch 45 Puts back 48 Dor 51 Descend 52 In a body: 2 w ords 1 2 3 54 A llots 58 M ine tunnel 59 S tatue 61 Go q u ickly 62 Function 63 Biblical g iants 64 Erne 65 Teetotalers 66 NL A ll-S ta rs 67 S ailboat DOWN 1 C udgels 2 Agape 3 Asian fra 4 Im bibes 5 Hillsides 6 Pet foods 7 Utah native 8 Bill of fare 9 C om plaints 10 Rod 11 G olfer Palm ­ er, to friends 12 Asdic 13 Ballet birds 21 Ingest 23 A tta ck 25 Businessm en 27 Blondish FRIDAY’S PUZZLE SOLVED a a 93 aanaa a aca 3333 aaaan aaac a333 aaaaaaim aa aaaaa aaa aanaa aaaaa aaa aaaa aa a aan aaaa sa a a a a 330a aaa a ia a aaaaa aaoa a aa aaoa o caaaa a sa a a a a a aa a a a a aaa anaoa 30333 aaa aona 3 3 3 3 0 3 3 3 3 3 □ □ □ ¡1 3 3 0 3 3 3 3 3 3□□ 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 28 Monster 29 Skin problem 48 Goatee 33 Pedestrian 47 Hurls areas 34 Handy 35 Raison d ’ — 36 Informers 38 Goes under 39 Kind of well 42 Fortunes 43 Current 46 "M ay Day!" 49 Witch of — 50 A Bronte 53 Author Ferber 55 Kind of dancer 56 — contendere 57 Dance move 60 Grain 10 11 12 13 16 19 6 7 8 4 5 I 15 18 21 24 23 j■ 22 | 26 30 32 33 14 17 20 27 31 37 41 52 58 62 65 by Berke Breathed MR. STOCK M IL P06SNT 5W„ a (jj6 e "l£T’S &AST \/m , oMP/ were* TH0RBUNS I ^ UVING. OFF " I 39 | 38 42 B B S 44 48 40 50 ■PP J ■ 4J 47 46 1 | 46 L 53 ■ 60 h 59 ■ 63 I 66 ■ I" ■ 1r SERVICES TRAFFIC TICKETS ¿ A f f o r d a b l e * Professional Defense for your traffic violations. ★ First Offense D W I* A T T O R N E Y : E D IT H L. J A M E S C A L L 477-8657 L e g a l F e e s: $55 p e r c it y t ic k e t $85 D P S 306 E a s t 11th, S u ite L-7 * ^ i n i PHOTOS for PASSPORTS APPLICATIONS RESUMES 3 mimte service MON-fRI 10-6 SAT 10-2 477-5555 THE THIRD EYE 2530 GUADALUPE PROBLEM PREGNANCY COUNSELING, REFERRALS & FREE PREGNANCY TESTING Texas Problem P regn an cy SOT P o w e ll Street M-F 7 30-5 30 4 7 4 -9 9 3 0 SINGLES-COUPLES A unique wty to meet people with sim ilar sexial interests and desires. CAPtTOl SWNG ClUB is a com pletely confidentia introduction service. Send S2.0< to C S C , Box 3635, Austin, Tetas 78746 for details and a sample mzgazine ) V E R W E I G H T ? Volunteers needed Lifestyle S P C and W eig h t C linic 452-0082 breathing, Y oga-iV \editation W o rk s h o p s Deep relaxation with guided im agery, diaphragnatic chanting, yoga and stretching. The science of yoga and meditation presented in a practical and scientific approach. Offered at four workshops on Ju n e 22, 24, 29, and Ju ly 1. Board of Directors Room, Texas Union, 7:30 p.m F R E E . F o r m ore information contact Nandita Arnaud, 327-8475. Spon­ sored byAnanda M arga. P R IV A tT M A IL B O X E S for rent. U ni­ versity Mailbox Rentals, 504 W. 24th, 477-1915 55 off any rental with ad. E x ­ _____________ pires Ju jrT S U M M E R T IM E R O M A N C E - Call Ren- dezvousat 472-5283 and let us fix it so your patftA cross. SCUBaT e s SO NS. Professional instruc­ tion, a equipm ent provided Flexib le schedu’ng a v aila b le P A D I. 346-4406. Please ea ve message CO MPLETE G R E preparation course for !98?test. P ristin e condition. Includes study ¡uides, sam ple tests, and audio tapes Sought from publisher for 5163, _ will sen for 5100. Call 452-6536. TENNIS C L A SS ES , U ST A member 54 50 ¡ession. Also student apartment moversavailable, reasonable rates 441 2304 F A L L RUSH U N IV E R S IT Y CO-OP T em porary jo b s ta r tin g f ir s t part Of A u g u s t. Stop by Co-Op personnel o ffic e fo r sch e d u le s . E O E r e s e a r c h E N G I N E E R I N G / SCIENTIST A S S O C IA T E I for -"e-year tour in A ntarctica. Applied R% h c h Laboratories, The U n iversity of T«?s at Austin, has an opening for an mo'dual with an engineering or sci- en-,degree with experience in electron- ICi X im a r ily digital with some ana og, tc v station m anager ot a satelli e tracufhg station on M cM urdo Sound in A - 'rttic a This position is tor operation a, m aintenance of electronic equip- nert. M ust sign up for a tour of one year vitr. departure to be in October 1982 Vhiiiat the duty station in A ntarctica, hmlg and food are furnished at no nargp lottbn w ill end October 1983 P a y com- reJsUrate with background and e x p en ­ d í ) a I and psychological tests sched- 8»f r r Ju l y 1982. To apply, contact: O F F IC E OF P E R S O N N E L S E R V IC E S a n d E m p lo y e e R e la tio n s 2613 W ic h ita 471-3656 E O E AA ' ( A P T . M A N A G E R Responsive, neat, courteous, mechani- -j: y inclined and m otivated couple «¿did beginning Ju ly 12 to m anage 2 /lit ant. complex on shuttle route at 108 j 45'h in exchange for one bedroom nt and modest salary. Send r®sy|T’*' ° Jt f lO l, 108 W 45th or call 452-1419 or M J) for interview appt « t e l e p h o n e S A L E S Full and p art time sSPfiday-Friday 5:30-9:30 p.m. S5/hour C all 479-6219 W in d s Motel, _____ * C L E R K , mote), part-time, 9pm- ■jfTi e ve ry other night Applicant must $ iv a ila b ie through sum m er and tail ¿ m it e r s Apply in person - mornings^ IH35 and Airport r ,.. rd á ü O R S T O R E Clerk needed part H -~ A A ostly afternoon and evening (■ P LThu rsday, F r id a y and Saturday tujf h ave car M ust be able to taxe iitograph. Northwest Austin Apply m /«Ben, H olt's Liquor, 8030 M esa Drive, »S®794_________ _________ _ M i - S i T T E R N E E D E D Tim es va ry iifleld area, close to cam pus, shuttle < # ¡ 474 7008 before 5 p m ._____________ J B u u UJ» W A I T P E R S Ó Ñ to serve S B's finest beer clientele part time be a va ila b le 4 00 and 8 30 shifts as rftted including F r id a y and Saturday < #M rs. Overton between 5 and 6 30. aught House, 4112 M edical Park- . Page 12 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Monday, June 21, 1982 Mayors’ conference balks over HUD-proposed fund-cutting MINNEAPOLIS (UPI) — The U.S. Conference of Mayors Sunday urged President Reagan to reject a Department of Housing and Urban Development draft report recommending huge cuts in federal aid to cities. The “blockbuster” report, as St. Paul Mayor George La­ timer called it, sent angry mayors scurrying for copies of The New York Times, which reported on the draft in its Sunday editions. A White House assistant, Rich Williamson, tried to deflect criticism from the president, telling the mayors the HUD re­ port does not represent Reagan's official policy. Conference president Helen Boosalis, mayor of Lincoln, Neb., said she was “shocked and amazed” by the draft, which says even the most fiscally troubled cities are capable of finan­ cial recovery without federal aid. “I was stunned that I had worked one year with this adminis­ tration to improve policies with the cities and then saw these kind of statem ents,” Boosalis said. The N e w Y o r k T i m e s reported that the draft said federal aid had contributed heavily to the decline of American cities and suggested many grants should be eliminated. Boosalis said Williamson told the resolution committee of the mayor’s conference that Reagan had discussed the report with his Cabinet Friday and sent it back. Despite the White House aide’s assurances, Boosalis said the mayors were “stunned that that kind of report had been sent out by the Department of Housing and Urban Development.” Boosalis said she hoped HUD Secretary Samuel Pierce repu­ diates the report when he addresses the conference Monday. The resolution committee unanimously voted to urge Reagan to reject the draft, an action Phoenix Mayor Margaret Hance called a “knee-jerk reaction.” “It was extremely disrespectful and most unfortunate for our organization,” she said. “This can’t help but erode our credibility in the White House.” Lee Alexander, mayor of Syracuse, N Y., said the report confirms what many mayors have suspected all along — that the Reagan administration has a virulent anti-city attitude.” “The statement may not reflect the president’s attitude but it does tell us a lot about som e oí the people who have influence on h im ,” said Alexander, who is p resid en t of the National Con­ ference of D em o cra tic Mayors. Kansas City Mayor Richard Berkley, a Republican, said the draft “had been worked up by middle managers in the federal government,” and added that although he does not agree with it, the report “has been blown out of proportion — it is only a draft.” The report says some federal programs of the past two dec­ ades have transformed local o fficia ls “from bold leaders of self-reliant cities to w ily stalkers of federal funds” and have helped cause the poor to become the only class of Americans without motivation to move elsew h ere for better opportunity. Domino’s Pizza Delivers. ™ Lunch. Lunch need not be the same old thing. Domino’s Pizza offers a choice. We use only the best ingredients - you get a noticeably superior pizza! Domino’s Pizza is #1 for fast, free 30 minute pizza delivery. Now you have a choice. Give us a ca ll! 404 W. 26th Street Telephone: 476-7181 2011 E Riverside Telephone: 447-6681 HEY PLASMA DONOR! THANKS! M eet Eddie Kerouac, an 8-year-old boy with severe hem philia — the bleeding disease. Just a few years ago Eddie faced a shortened life filled with despair, severe pain, and extensive crippling. Y our plasma, and the plasm a from m any others just like you, has provided the desperately needed antihem ophiliac factor ( A H F ) Eddie needs alm ost daily, enabling him to lead a com pletely norm al and active life. Eddie has often asked us to thank you for your continued help. We would like to join him by saying " H e y Plasm a Donor! Thank you !" 2 free cups of Pepsi! 2 free cups of Pepsi with any pizza One coupon per pizza Expires: 7/15/82 Domino’s Pizza Delivers:.. Fast... Free. T E X A fJj J U N O R I I S W M W E A R , T HE ME S H O P , B A R T O N C R E E K S Q U A R E A N D HI G H L A N D Shoe Shop Rua* SHEEPSKIN COW & CALF W * make and repair boots shoos bolts leather goods ★ SADDLES ★ ENGLISH WESTERN 1614 Lavaca C apitol Saddlery Austin, Texas 4 7 8 -9 3 0 9 DURHAM-NIXON CLAY COLLEGE INTENSIVE ENGLISH Enroll now for Summer Session beginning June 28th -TOEFL/University preparation -Nine month comprehensive course -Short courses and private instruction -Small classes/conversational method -Auth. under federal la w to enroll non-immigrant alien students (1-20) -Student Health Insurance -Official TOEFL Testing Center ■ ' I I I I I I I I ^ V A N 7-v High Quality plants, pottery and accessories w ith low prices. Free information on plant care. Expires A u g . 14 , 1 9 8 2 Offer not good during other in-store specials , 20% off I a n y p la n t p u rc h a s e m w ith th is c o upon I LOWER LEVEL 5 M A DOBIE MALL | L L. 2021 GUADALUPE Í S H OPEN 10 am -9 pm J O P M O N D A Y M on.-Sat. I 4 7 4 -7 7 1 9 | I T Hl Registration hours: 10 am to 2 pm & 3 pm to 5 pm 8th and Colorado/2nd floor 4 7 8 -3 4 4 6 Air-conditioned classrooms M E X I C A N I 2801 Guadalupe Free Coffee w ith any broakfast purchat* of $ 1.00 or mora Mon.-Fri. only 5am-1 lam B reakfast Specials 3 Breakfast Tacos Served with hath brow n potato*» 2 eggs, hash browns toast or biscuit», gravy Abo vs breakfast with sausage or bacon $2.40 $2.25 $2.50 Happy Hour 11 am -7 pm Mon.-Fri. N e w Rem odeled, E xpanded Bar $ 2 .0 0 M arg aritas 8 0 ‘ D raft Beer $ 1 .0 0 Longnecks . SPANISH VILLAGE Jinn J o o d ut the Q u a in t Sii-t 'wundiAxjA afflfd V Itru e H a p p y H o u r M o nd a y - F r i d a y 4-7 F o r a real challenge & for a chinge t r y a Margarita J a i m e and G r e e n C h i c k e n E n c h i l a d a s m a d e \*ith im p o r te d T o m a t i l l o 1)5 ____ Open 11am -10pm Mon-Thurs 11am -11pm Fri & Sat All major credit cards accepted o R*d Riy.r Jamie's S p a n is h V illa g e CMgrati 4 7 6 -5 1 4 9 M I X E R F A C I L I T I E S ! 802 Red Rver Did you know that the average hemophiliac in the U.S. required 280 plasma donations per year in order to prepare his needed A H F concentrate. A severe hemophiliac could easily require over 700 donations per year! Perhaps now you see why the need for plasma is so great. Please donate plasma, and help these youngsters that once faced lifelong despair and crippling. Complete your Beatles collection, and get your free collector’s soundcard gLSgl AUSTIN BLOOD COMPONENTS 510 WEST 29TH STREET AUSTIN. TEXAS 78705 477 3735 Be a blood plasm a donor and save a life. You get $8.00 for your donation PLUS $5.00 bonus w ith this coupon (on your firs t visit only) and then $10.00 for second donation within same week. $5.00 $8.00 $10.00 $23.00 Cosh! Hours: Mon. & Thurs. 8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. Tues. & Fri. 9:00 a.m. to 3:00 pan. AUSTIN BLOOD COMPONENTS, INC. 510 W. 29th Austin, TX 477-3735 STUDENT LOANS Texas Guaranteed Student Loan Applications for F all 1 9 8 2 are now being processed at UNIVERSITY FEDERAL CREDIT UNION 4 7 6 -4 6 7 6 Applications are available at the credit union or at the U.T. Student Financial Aid Office. Save now on these top releases from the Fab Four. And when you purchase these or any other Beatles LP or tape in stock, ask for your numbered, Limited Edition Beatles Soundcard. (Soundcards play on your turntable ju st like records.) You get one Soundcard free with each Beatles recording you buy. Collect all three versions...each contain two cuts from the World’s Most Popular Band. SALE 6.99 SALE 10.77 SALE11.77SALE11.77 SALE11.7'i Double LP or Tape Double LP or Tape Double LP or Tape Double LP or Tape LP or Tape Save on other select Beatles LPs and tapes. UNIVERSITY CREDIT UNION 30th a n d C edar / A u stin . Texas 78705 / (5 1 2 ) 476-4676 Open Monday through Friday, 9.00 until 4:00; Thursday until " OO Serving IJT faculty, staff and full-time graduate students v n c u a Accounts insured up to 1100,000 by the National Credit Union Administration, a U.S. Government Agency. 2310 Guadalupe Street “On the Drag” Phone: 478-1074 Offer good through June 30, 1982. 390137-052 ‘W hen it com es to music, come to us.” STARTS WEDNESDAY! 25% OFF OUR ENTIRE STOCK OF JUNIORS’ AND TEENS’ SWIMWEAR! Get that eye-catching look and keep it all summer long with our colorful junior and teen swimwear. Dazzling stripes, bold solids or playful prints keep heads turned in your direction! Cotton/Lycra^" spandex and nylon/spandex. Junior, Sizes 5 to 13; teens' sizes 6 to 14. Shown are just a few from our collection: A. Rugby sweetheart bikini 14.99 reg. 19.00 B. Teens' rugby striped maillot reg. 27.00 C. Bandeau striped bikini 20.99 reg. 28.00 D. Belted rugby v-neck maillot 23.99 reg. 32.00 By Richard Stainberg many secret projects, but she remained patriotic and kept her tap shut. committee. A d ru m devoted to her country However after the war, Bertha was left with a In January 1955, the University acquired a treasure more rare and valuable than any old Gutenberg Bible — a “ Big Bertha.” Big Bertha? What exactly is a "Big Bertha?" I first heard the name back in junior high school, when my photography teacher referred to a large, intense lamp as "Big Bertha.” I’ve also heard cars, bombs and certain women referred to as “ Big Berthas.” At the University, there’s only one possible explantion: Big Bertha is a loveable, oversized and once-radioactive bass drum. Although Bertha is getting old, she is still able to keep on bopping. Built in 1922 by C.G. Conn Ltd., Bertha began her illustrious career at the University of Chicago. She had a few good years, but when U of C dropped its football program, Bertha was sentenced to storage in a underground room beneath the grandstand. During World War II, that same room was donated to the U.S. government for atomic research, and it became the Argonne Laooratory. There, Bertha got to observe little something to remember those glorious experiments by — radioactivity. Yes, Bertha had been a victim, but she gave it her all for her country. She was taken out of storage, decontaminated and was fortunately wanted by a loving family — the Texas Longhorns. In 1955, Col. D. Byrd, an ex-Longhorn Band member, bought Bertha and donated her to the University, and she’s been with us ever since. Don’t worry though: she’s safe, healthy and doesn’t glow in the dark. The eyes of are upon you Every Longhorn fan, whether apathetic or enthusiastic, knows the "Eyes of Texas." The song, in addition to being an inspirational cheer for many years, also has a shaky history of legal battles. In April 1936, Thorton Allen, desiring a copyright on the song, negotiated with the Phi Kappa Psi fraternity for the sale of the songbook containing the "Eyes of Texas." Defending the University in the argument was Ed Nunnally, chairman of the "Eyes of Texas" of cabbages and kings By Pamela McAlpin According to “ Webster’s New Collegiate Dictionary," subjects which are metaphysical are those "relating to the transcendent or supersensible; supernatural; highly abstract or abstruse." The Images issue which you are about to embark upon is an abstraction of the above definition. What began as an exploration of metaphysics mutated into subjects which may or may not be related, depending on whether the purity of definition is important. Sound strange? Well, we never promised reality. For this issue, our writers took quite a detour from their usual craziness to explore some serious topics. Even though there will probably always be those that scoff at the idea that a person’s hand can reveal information about health and personality characteristics, there are also many people who give a lot of credence to the lines and shapes of hands. Fatima Argun talked to one Austinite who has been involved in this particular subject for more than 40 years. In recent years, psychic locators have been in the news quite a bit; David Elliot, who reads a lot of news, talked with one Dallas psychic who, in addition to talking about his work, had some rather ominous predictions. It seems as though everyone we asked was familiar with the name "Eckankar," but no one could tell us very much about this philosophy. So we took Stephen Hansen off his grrnsmy store beat to explore this interesting subject. Because the Eckists prefer not to be singled out as spokepersons, the article was based on information obtained from conversations with local Eckists and from Eck literature. On the lighter side, one of our prominent field workers, Paul Sorenson, fias formed a new religion and we thought our readers ought to be warned ... uh, informed of this development. Our resident fatalist, Kenneth Wright, was anxious about the possibility of a nuclear attack on the Austin front. To alleviate his anxiety (and get him out of the office for awhile), we sent him over to the Dougherty Cultural Arts Center to check out what local artists nave created for the future. Steven Spielberg scared the hell out of a lot of people with his first summer blockbuster, “ Poltergeist." Just one short week later, Spielberg's “ E.T. — The Extra Terrestrial" hit Austin screens and has been showing to sell-out crowds since then. Most critics, including our own Steve Davis, agree that this film is well worth the price of admission — at least once, if not several times. And now for a few words from a writer who seems to have a true understanding of metaphysics: By Mark Leon "What is the meaning of life?" Religious people are chock full of serious answers and the rest of us have plenty of flippant or cynical replies. No answer can be totally satisfactory since there is no acid test for validity when fundamental issues like existence are at stake. Suppose the purpose of life is to have fun, be happy, etc. Maybe not, but one has to start somewhere. This game of metaphysics is like mathematics, that prince of sciences. One must start from first principles, axioms, postulates and unproven assumptions. So let’s assume the purpose of life is to have fun. Carry on. Let’s also assume "More is better, most is best." How can we get a handle on the “ most fun?” What does it mean to be as happy as possible? Sounds nebulous, but we’ve got to have something to work with here so try ecstasy. Ecstasy — free from all anxiety, timeless and perfect — is where that question, "What is the meaning of life?" is answered. There is a precedent for this concept of euphoric revelation. The Buddhists have a name for it — nirvana. Nirvana is really simple; it's the cessation of all desire. When there is no more desire, the candle of existence is extinguished. Outside of desire and existence there is only perfect ecstasy, the true meaning of life. Weighty topics like this deserve volumes of elaboration, but we’ll try to be brief. Nirvana is really unattainable for the average citizen. Years of meditation on top of the Himalayas won’t guarantee anything as far as nirvana is concerned. It’s a tricky business. How can one eliminate desire while reaching for absolute ecstasy? Just one of the many apparent paradoxes in Buddhist and others blue.” Only a few months earlier, the University Students’ Association settled a dispute over the song with Oscar Fox, a former director of the UT Glee Club, and the University was awarded the song’s copyright. Two other ex-basketball players, Ron Baxter and John Danks, insisted that they didn t have a chance to win unless they split an orange before every game. There’s nothing like playing a game without Fortunately for the University's sake, Allen some Florida sunshine. was unable to obtain a copyright. The song remained at home, where it belonged. Signs of the tim es Never play ball on Friday the 13th “ Superstition is the reiigion of feeble m inds." — Edmund Burke Superstition has long been the ruling force for many — including UT athletes. Basketball seems the hardest hit in recent years. Ex-UT basketball center Rich Parson once described some of his personal quirks: “ I used to go through the front entrance (of Gregory Gym) instead of the fire escape, where the others did ... I’d also wait for the end of the junior varsity game to be the last to get taped." Ex-coach Abe Lemons once told of the habits of some his players: "Some (athletes) have carried around white-speckled towels W ouldn’t you say that your average UT student is a pretty good drinker, that Austin could also be considered the beer capital of Texas and that a Shiner is a lot more important than going to your economics class? I think most UT students would be disgusted at a university which advocated a reduction or an elimination of the drinking of alcoholic beverages. (Kinda sounds like something those blithering Aggies would do) In December 1916, UT students voted overwhelmingly — an eight to one majority — to enact prohibition. If you’re counting, that was 1,033 for and 126 against. Soo-prize, soo-prize, soo-prize. Let’s have some protest: drink a beer and put a puritan to shame. esotérica, but it gets right at the crux of the matter. Any honest investigation into “ reality” is always riddled with paradox. For example, how can one actually experience nirvana if one must blow out the flame of existence to get there? Is it even worth the effort? The Buddhists assure us that nirvana is not obliteration into nothingness. Metaphors like a drop of water reuniting with the vast calm ocean are sometimes used to describe nirvana. While metaphors are entertaining, they are hardly a substitute for ecstasy. But no matter. We are dealing with the essence of modern ennui here. In the 20th century we may not get to experience much of the "real world,” but we can always read about it in the newspapers. COMING NEXT WEEK: Austin literati IN I9Z7 THE P h y s ic is t we ¡{her he i sen sere, WAS HE MO TO SAr.. THtOWm W H IC H lo o s e ly t r a n s l a t e d] STATES ^ r r T T ^ H í v i w g i . E that in the search f o r k n o w u o & e out smuLb Eventually 6 £ T AROUND T o ASK/WG WHETHER THERE ,IS IND[ 1 0 SOIAETHM6 TO KNOW ANO if THERE IS, CAN WE KNOW IT> AND If WE CAW, ARE THERE OTHER 1NM6SWE CAN'T RNOW ? m W W A R -C IN iTnt CENTURY FRANCE, R tN E D E C A ffE S * # S SORTING HIS S O C O WHÍM HE REALIZED - HtAwv p h y s i c is t s G u f f a v c o this,arguing t h a t L PR°VWCE OF SCIENCE IT WAS SJNlHY ACCEPTED | t h a t THiNts e a js t: DtSNTE THE &i*T h Of NfTAPHTSICAt RfAtlSM MARX IHCI.U0IN6 HÜNE.l-OCItf AMO IfR R E ltY COHORUfO TO 0OM»T t h e e x m E A IC * OF ANVTHIN6 EtcEAT POTATO 0 ARC ARES i' v E iW ^> T tM li*H |ie L ^ K A H T ASKED .. cam science or philosophy Ev eí~ 'v truly « v o w p o ta to Pancakes? , Editor Pamela McAlpin Associate Editor Tim O'Leary Graphic Design Martin Torres Photographers Ken Ryall Illustrators Ernie Gamble Edd Patton Contributors Fatima Argun Stephanie Canada-Worthlngton Steve Davis Charley Devany David Elliot Stephen Hansen Mark Leon Melinda Machado Marie Mahoney Paula Minahan Margaret Murnane Paul Sorenson Richard Steinberg Kenneth Wright 2ff THE LAST WAVE: (1978) directed by Peter Weir, with Ricnard Chamberlain and Olivia Hammett, will be screened at 7:30 p.m. Monday in Jester Auditorium and at 7:30 p.m. Saturday in the Academic Center Auditorium. THE ADVENTURES OF SHERLOCK HOLMES: (1939) will be screened at 9:30 p.m. Monday in Jester Auditorium and at 9:30 Saturday in the Academic Center Auditorium. GRIGADEAN AND FRIENDS: Grigadean and Friends will perform from 8 to 11 p.m. at Trudy’s Texas Star Cafe, 409 W. 30th St. NIGHTCATS: The Nightcats will perform from 8:30 to 11:30 p.m. in the Texas Union Tavern. GRAND OPERA: an avant- garde film by James Benning, will be screened at 9 p.m. at the Laguna Gloria Outdoor Ampitheater, 3809 W. 35th St. For more information, call 458-8191. FIVE EASY PIECES: (1970) directed by Bob Rafelson, with Jack Nicholson and Karen Black, will be screened at 6 and 9:30 p.m. in the Texas Union Theater. CITY LIGHTS: (1931), directed by Charles Chaplin, will be screened at 7:50 p.m. in the Texas Union Theater. THE BIRD WITH THE CRYSTAL PLUMAGE: (1969) directed by Dario Argento, will be screened at 7 and 9 p.m. in Burdine Hall Auditorium. 2 1 HEARTBEAT: (1979) directed by John Byrun, with Nick Nolte, Sissy Spacek and John Heard, will be screened at 8 p.m. in the Texas Union Theater. ALTERED STATES: (1980) directed by Ken Russell, with William Hurt, will be screened at 6 and 10 p.m. in the Texas Union Theater. ATTACK OF THE KILLER TOMATOES: directed by John De Bello with David Miller, will be screened at 11:50 p.m. Monday and at 11:45 p.m. Tuesday in the Texas Union Theater. IN A LONELY PLACE: (1950) directed by Nicholas Ray, with Humphrey Bogart and Gloria Grahame, will be screened at 7 p.m. in Burdine Hall Auditorium. THE LUSTY MEN: (1952), directed by Nicholas Ray, with Robert Michum, will be screened at 8:45 p.m. in Burdine Hall Auditorium. SECOND CHORUS AND THE BUCKAROO: "Second Chorus" (1940), with Paulette Goddard and Fred Astaire, and "Private Buckaroo” (1942), with the Andrews Sisters and’ Harry James, will be screened at 8:30 p.m. at the Zilker Hillside Theatre, 2100 Barton Springs Road. For more information call 476-6978 or 477-5824. ZutiAAu 22 CHICANO NIGHT: The Texas Union will sponsor “ Chicano Night" from 8:30 to 11:30 p.m. in the Texas Tavern. DOCTOR STRANGELOVE: (1964) directed by Stanley Kubrick, with Peter Sellers, George C. Scott and Sterling Hayden, will be screened at 6 and 10 p.m. in the Texas Union Theater. SWEPT AWAY: (1975), directed by Lina Wertmuller, with Giancarlo Giannini and Mariangela Melato, will be screened at 7:45 p.m. in the Texas Union Theater. YOU C AN T TAKE IT WITH YOU: (1938) directed by Frank Capra, with James Stewart and Jean Arthur, will be screened at 7 and 9:15 p.m. in Burdine Hall Auditorium. mi- 21 THE COMEDY AND PANTOMIME OF MARIO LORENZ: Mario Lorenz will perform at 9:30 a.m. at Symphony Square, 1101 Red River St. For more information, call 476-6064. APPLE CORPS: The Apple Corps will perform at 6:30 p.m. at The Metz Recreation Center, 2407 Canterbury St. For more information, call 472-4522. D-DAY AND MAX & THE MAKEUPS: D-Day and Max & the Makeups will perform at 7 p.m. at Auditorium Shores, South First Street and Riverside Drive. For more information, call 472-4522. BELLYDANCING: Bellydancers will perform from 7:30 to 8:30 p.m. in the Texas Tavern. TRIBUTE. Bernard Slade's “ Tribute" will be performed at 8 p.m. Monday through Saturday and at 2:15 and 8 p.m. Sunday in the Zachary Scott Theatre Center, 1421 E. Riverside Drive For more information, call 476-0594. SOMETHING’S AFOOT: A musical spoof of Agatha Christie’s Ten Little Indians, Something’s Afoot," will be performed at 8 p.m. Monday and Thursday in the B. Iden Payne Theater, 23rd Street and San Jacinto Boulevard. For more information, call 471-1444. COUNTRY WESTERN NIGHT: The Texas Union will sponsor Country Western Night” from 8:30 to 11:30 p.m. in the Texas Union Tavern. HEALTH: (1980), directed by Robert Altman, with Glenda Jackson, Carol Burnett and James Garrner, will be screened at 6 and 9:55 p.m. in the Texas Union Theater. DAYS OF HEAVEN: (1978) directed by Terence Malick, with Richard Gere and Brooke Adams, wil be screened at 7:50 p.m. in the Texas Union Theater. KENTUCKY FRIED MOVIE: (1977) directed by John Landis, with Donald Sutherland and Bill Bixby, will be screened at 11:40 p.m. Monday and at 11:25 p.m. Thursday in the Texas Union Theater. NIGHT AT THE OPERA AND DAY AT THE RACES: “ Night at the Opera," featuring the Marx Brothers, Allan Jones and Kitty Carlisle, and “ Day at the Races," featuring the Marx Brothers, Allan Jones and Margaret Dumont, will be screened Monday through Sunday at the Paramount Theatre, 713 Congress Ave. For information on screening times, call 472-5411. Members of Dance Repertory Theater 2S CHILDREN’S INTERNATIONAL FILM THEATER: Films featuring scenes of Africa and Australia will be screened at 9 and 10:30 a.m. at the South Austin Resource Center, 2508 Durwood St. For more information, call 458-8191. RIVER CITY SWING ORCHESTRA: The River City Swing Orchestra will perform at noon in Wooldridge Square, 10th and Guadalupe streets. For more information, call 472-4522. SPOON RIVER ANTHOLOGY: Edgar Lee Masters’ "Spoon River Anthology," directed by J. Robert Wills, dean of the College of Fine Arts, will be performed at 8 p.m. in the Drama Lab Theater, behind the Winship Drama Building, 23rd Street and San Jacinto Boulevard. For more information, call 471 - 1444. THE CONCEPT ORCHESTRA: A 17-piece orchestra composed of professional Austin musicians will perform at 8:30 p.m. in Symphony Square, 1101 Red River St. For more information, call 476-6064. EXTREME HEAT: Extreme Heat will perform from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. on the Texas Union Patio. WOMEN WHO MAKE MOVIES: "Untitled Train Film From Still Photographs" by Linda Klosky, “ Ciao Bella" by Betzy Bromberg and "Daughters of Chaos" by Marjorie Keller will be screened at 9 p.m. in the Laguna Gloria Outdoor Ampitheater, 3809 W. 35th St. For more information, call 458-8191. THE FOX AND THE HOUND: "The Fox and the Hound," featuring the voices of Mickey Rooney, Kurt Russell and Pearl Bailey, will be screened at 2, 6 and 9:55 p.m. Monday and Saturday in the Texas Union Theater. TIME BANDITS: (1981) Directed by Terry Gilliam, with John Cleese, Ralph Richardson and Sean Connery, will be screened at 3:45 and 7:45 p.m. Friday and Saturday in the Texas Union Theater. 10: (1979) directed by Blake Edwards, with Dudley Moore and Bo Derek, will be screened at 11:40 p.m. Monday and Saturday m the Texas Union Theater. OPERA PRIMA: (1980) directed by Fernando Trueba, will be screened at 7:30 p.m. Monday and Saturday in Burdine Hall Auditorium. PEEPING TOM: (1962) directed by Michael Powell, will be screened at 9:15 p.m. Monday and Saturday in Burdine Hall Auditorium. TINTYPES. This musical celebration of America at the turn of the century will be performed at 8 p.m. in the B. Iden Payne Theater, 23rd Street and San Jacinto Boulevard. For more information, call 471-1444. DRT AND FRIENDS: The University of Texas Dance Repertory Theater will join with guest choreographers and dancers to present an evening of modern dance at 8 p.m. in Hogg Auditorium, 24th Street and Whitis Avenue. For more information, call 471-1444. MICHAEL BALLEW PLUS KENNETH THREADGILL: Two Austin traditions join for an evening of music at 8:30 p.m. in Symphony Square, 1101 Red River St. For more information call 476-6064. WOMMACK BROTHERS: The Wommack Brothers will perform from 9:30 p.m. to 1 a.m. in the Texas Tavern. 2 7 TEX THOMAS AND HIS DANGLIN WRANGERS AND THE OCTAVE DOCTORS: Tex Thomas and His Danglin Wranglers and the Octave Doctors will perform at 3 p.m. in Zilker Park, 2100 Barton Springs Road. For more information call 472-452? ^ S, C lp CUIT Pf >ETRY READ,NQ: Sa" * a Lynn winner of the Dobie Paisano Award for Literature, and San Antonio poet Naomi Shihab Nye will read from their works at 7 30 d m at the yobb or 454-7183. 908d W 12th S t For mo,e ¡"formation, call 447- , BRUCELEVINGSTON: Pianist Bruce Levingston, soloist for the Austin Symphony Orchestra, will perform works by Chopin Liszt. Beethoven and Scarlatti at 8:30 p.m. in Symphony Square, 1101 Red River St. For more information, call 476-6064 FANTASTIC PLANET: (1973) directed by Rene Laloux, will be screened at 2, 7 and 10:05 p.m. in the Texas Union Theater OLIVER: (1968) directed by Carol Reed, with Ron Moody, will oe screened at 3.30 and 7 30 p.m. in the Texas Union Theater THE CHANT OF JIMMIE BLACKSMITH: (1978) directed by , Pred Schepisi, will be screened at 7:30 p.m. in Burdine Hall s 4 Auditorium. . j . i JUNE 27,1982 f f i NEW8 © NEWS / WEATHER / SPORTS 5:30 4 MOVIE ★A'/4 "The Survivor” (1981) Robert Powell, Jenny Agutter. A pilot survives a catastrophic 747 crash unscratched and searches for the man responsible © P R E S S B O X O S P O R T SW O M A N “ The Great Muppet Caper" (1981) Charles Grodln, Diana O © R A PA R O U N D 0 © THE W O RLD TO M O RRO W 6 MOVIE Rigg. Kermit, Fozzie and Gonzo trace a fabulous stoien jewel to London. O CD SO U TH ER N BAPTIST CONVENTIIN © ® R O BER T S C H U LLE R © ( D KIDS A R E P E O P L E TOO Guests: John Schneider. Al Ubell, Richard Simmons. (R) © f f i REX H U M B AR D © © PTL C L U B (SPANISH) © NEW S / W EATH ER / SP O R T S 0 N A S L SO C C E R Vancouver W hitecaps at Tampa Bay Rowdies 5:00 6:00 6:05 6:30 6:35 6:45 7:00 7:05 7:30 7:35 8:05 8:30 O © LIGHT OF THE W ORLD O (D C A R L O S V E LA S Q U E Z f f l (I) G O O D MORNING C E N T R A L TEXAS © W EEK IN REVIEW 0 S P O R T S C E N T ER f f i B ETW EEN THE LINES © © IT'S YO U R B USIN ESS 0 ffi JIM B A K K E R © ® DIRECTIONS GD IT IS WRITTEN 0 (H) S A C R E D H EART f f i JA M E S ROBISON Q © f f i f f i JIM M Y SW A G G A R T O © AT H O M E WITH THE BIBLE 0 ( X JA M E S ROBISON O GD AUSTIN A N SW E R S © S T Y L E (!) CARTOONS 8:00 O dD O GD CD GD S u n d a y m o r n in g O ffi) THE FIRST TOUCH © (X) MISTER ROGERS (R) © ® REX HUMBARD 0 ( X JAMES ROBISON 8® LA VIDA EN CRISTO PEOPLE NOW f fi LOST IN SPACE O © LOWELL LUNDSTROM © ® SESAME STREET (R) n © ® BREAKTHROUGH © CD ROBERT SCHULLER © ® BAPTIST CHURCH © © ESFERA AZUL 9:00 O © MOVIE *★ '/i "100 Rifles’’ (1969) Jim Brown. Raquel Welch. An outlaw Indian, a black lawman and a female revolutionary help the Mexican Indians depose a cruel governor. O ® LARRY JONES ffi; MOVIE ★★★★ “ Far From The Madding Crow d" (1967) Julie Christie, Terence Stamp. A willful young farm girl betters herself, but destroys three men in the process. © ® ORAL ROBERTS © C D PEOPLE VUE © © EMBAJADORES DE LA MUSICA COLOMBIANA © NEWSMAKERS 0 SPORTS CENTER f f i LIGHTER SIDE OF THE NEWS 9:05 9:30 0 © PATH OF LIFE Q ® JERRY FALWELL O GD MOVIE ★ ★V4 “ Adam At 6 A .M .” (1970) Michael Douglas, Lee Purcell. A young college professor spends a summer in the Midwest as a common labor­ er © ® ELECTRIC COMPANY (R) © ® r r s YOUR BUSINESS © ® CASTLE HILLS BAPTIST CHURCH © ® BAPTIST CHURCH © ® THE WORLD TOMORROW © © ACTUALIDAD SEMANAL 9:35 ® MOVIE ★★★ "1776'' (1972) William Daniels, Howard da Silva. Am erica's founding fathers draw up a formal declaration stating their freedom from Eng­ land. 10:00 O (JD GOOD MORNING TEXAS © ® MATINEE AT THE BUOU Featured: “ Little Tough G uy” (1938), starring Huntz Hall and the Dead End Kids; a 1932 short; and Chapter 7 of “ The Phan­ tom Em pire” (1935). (R) © ® JIMMY SWAGGART ffi ® CAPITAL EYE © © LUCHA LIBRE © NEWS / WEATHER / SPORTS 0 UNLIMITED H Y D R O PLAN E RACING "Cham pion Sparkplug Regatta" from Miami, Horida 0 © FACE THE NATION 0 ® ROBERT S C H U LL E R © ® CHRISTOPHER C L O S E U P ¡23 ® THIS WEEK WITH DAVID BRINKLEY © ® PHIL ARMS © CNN SPECIAL REPORT 10:30 11:00 O © FORUM 0 © WORLD OF SURVIVAL m i m m r u ffT tu n n M T c h i t n r x © © HOY M ISM O © SP O R T S W E E K 0 G O LF HIGHLIGHTS “ 1973 British O pen” 11:30 O © 0 ® f f i ® M E ET THE P R E S S 0 (S3) I LO VE LU C Y O ® f a c e t h e n a t i o n © ® O N C E UPO N A C L A S S IC "The Leatherstocking Tales” Although Hawk- eye and Jeff Sweetwater are both in love with Molly, Sgt. Dunham admires Hawkeye and prefers him as a husband for his daughter (Part 4) (R) © (D INTERVUE © INSIDE B U SIN ESS 12:00 O © B U C K R O G E R S Three treacherous females kidnap Buck s robot drone Twiki. O (ED MOVIE ★ AVfe "Night After Night” (1932) Mae West, G eorge Raft. Based on a story by Louis Bromfield. A schoolteacher tutors a cabaret owner who is thirsty for knowledge and wants to better himself. O ffi) C AN T O DE T E JA S 6 MOVIE ★★★’A ‘Darby O Gill And The Little People” (1959) Albert Sharpe, Sean Connery. An old Irish caretaker who is about to lose his job to a younger man captures the king of the leprechauns and forces him to grant three wishes. •G' O (2) M A R Y T Y LER M O O R E © ® W ASHINGTON W EEK IN REVIEW (R) f f i ® THIS W EEK WITH DAVID BRIN KLEY © ® INSIGHT © ® YO U N G P E O P L E ’S S P E C IA L “ P R " M illions of Puerto Ricans migrate to New York City in search of the American dream; the lifestyles of both countries are seen through the eyes of Carlos as his family attempts to make it in New York f f i ® 1982 C O L L E G E RODEO FINALS © M O N EY W EEK 0 AU TO RACING ‘U S A C Sprints" from Odessa, Missouri. 12:30 O ffi) FIRST A M EN D M EN T , FIRST FR E E D O M S Dr. B. Robert Biscoe, lawyer William Ball and Senator Ray Taylor discuss the freedoms guaranteed in the First Amendment. O f f i B O B N EW HART © ® W A LL STREET W EEK A Summer R ally?” Guest: Leon G. Cooperm an of Goldman. Sachs & Company. (R) © ® N E W S M AK E R S © f f i W ESTER N O U TD O O R SM AN © N EW S / W EA TH ER / SP O R T S ® THIS W E EK IN B A S E B A L L © ® FU T B O L SO C C ER 12:35 12:45 1:00 O © O ® f f i ® W IM BLEDON TENNIS Coverage of early round matches (from Wimbledon, England). O CD b l i n d a t h l e t e s c h a m p i o n s h i p © ® FIRING LINE "How Much Is Secrecy Hurting The U .S .?" Guest: Dr. Edward Teller of the Hoover Institute. © ® E L K S H ELLD O R A D O D A Y S RO D EO Bob Eubanks and Larry Mahan host the 48th annual edition of this rodeo from the Las Vegas Convention Center in Las Vagas, Nevada © ® THIS W EEK WITH DAVID B RIN KLEY © ® LO NE R A N G ER © P E O P L E NOW ® O N -D E CK CIRCLE 1:05 1:15 ® B A S E B A L L Atlanta Braves at Cincinnati Reds 1:30 © 33) Q f f i W ES T C H ES T E R G O L F C L A S S IC Final round coverage of this $400,000 PG A Tour golf tournament (live from W estchester Country Club in 8a. N.Y.). ® LA W R EN C E W E L K “ Songs Of The Islands” 2:00 6 G O TTA DAN CE, G O T T A SING This retrospective look at movie musicals includes performances by Astaire and Rogers. Shirley Temple, Gene Kelly, M ar­ ilyn Monroe and Elvis Presley and clips from “ Carousel," “ The King And I,” “ West Side Story,” “ C abaret" and “ The Rocky Horror Picture Show .” © ® G R EA T P E R F O R M A N C E S "The Coronation Of Poppea” Rachel Yakar and Eric Tappy are featured in Jean-Pierre Ponnelle's production of Montever­ di's masterpiece set in first-cenfury Rome which tells the story of P oppea’s efforts to persuade Emperor Nero to place her on the throne and banish his wife Octavia. (R) f f i © S P O R T S B E A T © ® MOVIE terrified rape victim m istakenly identifies an innocent man as her assailant. © N EW S / W E A T H E R / S P O R T S “ Cry R ape” (1973) Peter Coffield, Andrea M arcovicci. A 2:30 f f i ® f f i ® A M ER IC A N S P O R T S M A N Johnny Rutherford, former Indianapo­ lis “ 500” winner, com pletes an Air Force pilot training program and participates In a mock dogfight; actor Martin Sheen observes the behavior of three trained African elephants as they are re-introduced to their Kenyan homeland. (R) © B EST O F FRED SA X O N 3:00 f f i MOVIE A A V i “ The Survivor" (1981) Robert Powell, Jenny Agutter. A pilot survives a catastrophic 747 crash unscratched and searches for the man responsible. © ® RO UN D C E R O © F R E E M A N R E PO R T S 0 L A C R O S S E “ W orld Cham pionship” from Baltimore, Maryland. © © P A R A G E N T E G R A N D E 3:15 3:30 O © M OVIE ★★ "Roll, Freddy, Roll” (1974) Tim Conway, Jan Murray. A divorced computer programm er tries to im press his son and set a new world's record for nonstop roller-skating. © 33) Q ® S P O R T S SU N D A Y 15-round W B C cruiseweight cham pionship bout between Carlos DeLeon and S T. G ordon (live from Las Vegas, Nev.); C ascade Run-Off Road Race (from Portland, Ore.). O ffi) f f l ® S P O R T S W O R LD International Cup Weightlifting (from Tata- banya, Hungary); Irish Sweeps Derby (from Dublin, Ireland); Survival of the Fittest, Part 4, with men's river-bridge duel (from New Zealand). © ® © ® © ® WIDE W O RLD O F S P O R T S Mario Andretti and his son challenge the LeM ans 24-hour Grand Prix of Endurance (from LeMans, France); U.S. Outdoor Track and Field Cham pionships (from Knoxville, Tenn ). f f i NEW S / W EAT H ER / S P O R T S ® CN N 2 CD ® MEXICO, M AG IA Y EN CU EN T RO 4.00 4:15 4:35 ® U N D E R S E A W O R LD O F JA C Q U E S C O U S T E A U Dragons Of The G alapa­ gos” Jacques Cousteau and his crew study the remnants of a reptilian order which ended more than a million years ago. O © 0 (0) n e w s O (3D f f l ® WILD KIN GD O M ‘In Search Of The Giant Arm adillo' Marlin captures a giant armadillo in a dense, unexplored jungle. (R) 6 MOVIE ★’/* "On The Right T rack" (1981) Gary Coleman, Michael Lembeck. A social worker tries to find a normal home for a train station shoeshine boy with a talent for picking the ponies. 'P G ' O © T E X A S C L O S E Ü P © ® N U M E R O UNO Olym pic gold medalist runner Peter Snell of New Zea­ land is profiled. (R) f f l f f i f f l f f i A B C NEW S © ® M A R Y T Y LER M O O R E ® ® H ER E IN AUSTIN "Legal A id ” f f i P R E S S BO X 5:00 5:30 O © O ® f f i ® N B C NEW S 0 © C B S N EW S Q f f i NEW S © ® CH E C K IN G IT OUT Teen-age jockey Antonio Velez, industrialist John Soto and N A SA scientist Nitza Cintron are profiled, q f f i © TO BE A N N O U N C E D © ® A B C NEW S f f i ® TH E M U P P E T S Guest: Dizzy Gillespie. CD © 300 M ILLO N ES ® ® TH E M E S S A G E OF E C K © INSIDE B U SIN ESS 0 H O R S E RACIN G W E E K LY ® NICE P E O P L E 5:35 EVENING 6:00 O © O ® © ® FAT H ER M U R P H Y Father Jo e Parker quits the priesthood and takes a job at a frontier saloon. (R) q 0 (0) O © 60 M INUTES © ® M ISTER R O G E R S T A L K S WITH P A R E N T S A B O U T M A K E-B E LIE V E Fred Rogers discusses how parents can encourage their children's capacity for imagination and playfulness. © ® f f l ® M OVIE ★★ “ The Double M cG uffin” (1979) Ernest Borgnine, George Kennedy. A group of teen-agers becom e amateur secret agents to protect the beautiful leader of a small country from assassins. ® ® AUSTIN POLITICAL ISSU ES © S P O R T S SU N D A Y 0 S P O R T S C E N T E R ® W R ESTLIN G © © TO BE ANNOUNCED CD © ANTOLOGIA DE LA ZARAZUELA ® ® WORLD OF PENTECOST 6:05 6:30 7:00 O © O ® f f i ® CHIPS Jon and Ponch are baffled by a gang of crooks who use lasers to disable their victims. (R) O 33) O ® ARCHIE BUNKER’S PLACE Archie tries to get a sex education class at Stephanie's school dropped (R) 4 MOVIE ★★★ “ The Great Muppet C ap e r” (1981) Charles Grodin, Diana Rigg Kermit, Fozzie and G onzo trace a fabulous stolen jewel to London. © ® N O V A “ Locust: War Without End” Filmed in Europe and Africa, some of m an’s latest attempts to rid himself of the locust are examined. (R) n f f l f fi THAT’S HOLLYWOOD ® ® ALTERNATIVE VIEWS "Karen Silkwood vs. Kerr M cG ee' A discussion with Karen Silkw ood ’s lawyer, Gerald Spence. © NEWS / WEATHER / SPORTS 0 SPORTS TALK “ 1982 N BA Draft” ® N A SH V ILLE ALIVEI 7:05 7:30 0 33) O ® ONE DAY AT A TIME Despite a disastrous first date with Mark Royer, Barbara is unable to get him off her mind. (Part 2) (R) CD © SIEMPRE EN DOMINGO 8:00 O © O ® f f l ® THREE EYES Three owners of a detective agency are hired by an ex-girlfriend of one of the partners to locate her missing husband. 0 © O ® ALICE Mel is plunged into a state of depression when he realizes that he has no heirs. (R) © f f i MASTERPIECE THEATRE “F lickers” It looks as though A rnie’s movie may never be completed — money runs out and so does its star. (Part 6) n f f i ® © ® f f i f f i MOVIE - k - k '/ i "G o ld en Rendezvous” (1977) Richard Harris, David Janssen. Passengers aboard an ocean liner carrying a cargo of Sid are threatened by impending nuclear destruction. ® INSIGHT © NEWSMAKERS f f i W E E K IN REVIEW 8:05 8:30 O © O ® THE JEFFERSONS George, in the market for a snappy advertis­ ing jingle, learns he has to first cheer up the depressed jingle writer (R) ® ® BAPTIST CHURCH 0 POLO “ M ichelob International G old C u p ” 9:00 O © O ® f f l ® THE TEXAS RANGERS Two Texas Rangers use modern police techniques to capture a trio of escaped convicts. (R) 0 © O ® TRAPPER JOHN, M.D. Nurse R ipples’ job is thrown into jeopardy when her alcoholic brother re-enters her life. (R) 6 MOVIE ★★★ "S trip e s’" (1981) Bill Murray, Harold Ramis. A New York cab ­ bie looking for excitem ent convinces his best friend to join him in enlisting in the U.S. Army. ‘R ’ © ® FLAMBARDS "The Cold Light Of Day" William lands his first job as an airplane mechanic and Christina goes to work as a waitress. (Part 5) (R) □ © NEWS / WEATHER / SPORTS ® NEWS @ ® BA N N ED O @ O © 0 f f i O ® f f i ® © ® f f l f f i f f l ® NEW S © f f i DANGER UXB “ The Quiet W eekend” Susan returns home after spend­ ing the weekend with Brian to find an unexpected visitor. (Part 6 ) ( R ) n ® ® PSYCHIC SURGERY IN THE PHILIPPINES © SPORTS 0 SPORTS CENTER ^ 9:05 9:30 10:00 10:05 4:30 ffi; S N E A K PREVIEW Host Leonard Harris looks at the movies, specials and sports events coming up on Home Box Office. f f i JERRY FALWELL Eckankar path provides awareness through contemplation the god-worlds of Eckankar. It is the purpose of the Eck master to lead ready souls back to God, thus breaking the cycle of reincarnation. When a soul is ready to experience Eckankar, she or he receives the first initiation in the dream state, though sometimes unaware of it. If she or he is interested in becoming an Eckist, the first discourses, precepts and contemplations are presented for study, and the chela, or student, begins to explore the five lower planes of the god- worlds. A duality exists in these worlds — the universal concept of positive and negative forces — and it is from this negativity the chela needs the protection and guidance of the Eck master. The first, the physical plane, gives the illusion of reality, Eckists believe that if you totally immerse yourself in who you are and why you are here, it will bring more positive energy into the world and improve life for everyone. It is not the goal of Eckankar members to change the world, to overcome negativity, but to work their way through it. They believe the earth is perfect as it is; that crime, drugs and other social detriments are meant to be here so the soul may learn from adversity, and that through contemplations and the physical or mental chanting of mantras with uplifting vibrations, they rise above their emotions and intellect. Eckankar philosophy is often contrary to conventional religions, but again it isn’t for everyone. It is against Eckankar spiritual law to pray for another person without consent, for it would be an invasion of their spiritual space. Eckists believe that you are where you should be and that when you are ready for the Eck spirit, you will recogmze it. The Austin Eck Center is at 905 W. 12th St. and is open from 6 to 8 p.m. weekdays for reading and discussion. science, the physical body and day-to-day events in life. The second, or astral plane, embraces all of the planets and stars, and is the highest plane that can be reached by astral projection. The third is the causal, or psychic plane. All memories, karmic patterns and recalls of souls reincarnated from life to life i are here. It is from this "time track" we experience the flashes of the past or future 1 comm only referred to as "deja vu." The fourth plane is the mental, the seat of universal mind power, the source of philosophy, ethics, moral teachings and aesthetics. At the upper level of the this plane is the etheric plane, a thin sheath between the mental and soul bodies, for it is at that level the soul begins to experience self-realization, knowing itself for the first time as pure soul. From here the soul is able to continue alone into the higher god-worlds of Eckankar, to God. Eckists believe that man does not have a soul; rather, man is soul. Eckankar teaches personal responsibility for thought, word and action; all learning is done individually and from within. Few Eckists become involved in social issues because they believe they are a trap to distract them from who they are and what they are here to do. By Stephen Hansen Eckist Diana Stanley communicates from her soul her inner experiences: she paints the visions of her dream-state travels. These portraits are not easily understood by most people, but Eckankar is not for everyone. Eckankar embraces reincarnation as a regenerative learning experience. We are all put here to learn, and we have specific goals to attain in this and future lives. We have all been here before. According to Eckankar philosophy our souls begin their earthly journey as minerals and, through learning, progress until the soul experiences itself as pure soul. Eckankar, meaning "c o ­ worker with God," is an individual path to total awareness, a spiritual’ endeavor that leads to total consciousness, a teaching of knowledge emanating from God. It is neither a cult nor a religion, but rather a stream of life-force encompassing the essence and source of all things, the ancient science of soul travel. Eckankar is presided over by Sri Harold Klemp, 973rd living Eck master, who serves not as a dominating, worshipped figurehead, but as a guide, a protective force for those entering and exploring The U niversity of Texas at A ustin C ollege of Fine A rts D epartm ent of Drama P erform ing A rts Center /////y//////////////////////// \ three shows for eight bucks ! j 1 9 8 2 summer theater 3 0 P I 0 3 \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ ^ ^ ^ ^ Swordsman of the SUGMAD by Diana Stanley 707 W. M L K 472-7400 Super Su m m er Grab Bag of P rizes a- 5 I ! 1f 0 Z • 2 3 i' * s, * Is i l £ I 1 1 I 1 0 1 j HAIRCUTTERS PERMS, BRAIDS, FROSTINGS, PRE C ISIO N CUTS $ 2 o f f w i t h this ad. QUARTER POUNDER "On Whole W heat" COUPON REDEEMED IN STORE ONLY S av 99• 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. Daily • 3303 N. Lamar • 4 5 2 -2 3 1 7 ' Som ething’s Afoot M u s i c a l m y s t e r y m a y h e m I A m erry, t u n e f u l s p o o f o f A g a t h a C h r is t ie 's Ten L it t le In d ia n s June 23, 24. 30; July 3, 9, 15. 18 8pm. B. Iden Payne Theater Spoon River Anthology E d g a r Lee M a s t e r ’s h a u n t in g p o r t r a i t o f s m a l l t o w n A m e r i c a n a June 18, 19, 25; July 2 ,8 ,1 4 ,1 7 8pm, Drama Lab Theater Tintypes Tony a w a r d - w in n in g m u s i c a l c e le b r a t io n o f A m e ric a a t the tu rn o f the c e n t u r y June 16,17, 26; Ju ly 1,7, 10, 16 8pm, B. Iden Payne Theater Three o u tsta n d in g show s perform ed in re p e rto ry- the best sum m er e n te rta in m e n t bargain around! Students can see all three productions for only $8 ($10 public). T h a t’s the price of tw o movies, or half a co n ce rt! Season ticke ts available now at PAC T icket O ffice 23rd and East Cam pus Drive. H u r r y ! S e a s o n t ic k e t s a le s t h r o u g h J u n e 24 o n ly sin gle ticke ts $5 public. $4 stud ents on sale now at PAC, Erwin Center, N o rth cro ss ice rink In f o r m a t io n , 4 7 1 -1 4 4 4 /'* - - T : ~ u ~ é i 77 'e y ir u u n y y a a R f l ^ m f j f l f f & V la á n u n e WHEN: Wednesday, June 30,1982 W HERE: 900 West 29th at the Storefront F’erforming Arts Studio TIME: 12-1 p.m. or 6-7 p.m. COST: |33 for 6 weeks ■ É L j (512 ) 459-7775 jj^ a tty y ra m A p a r t it i ( ' o n van tio n á CAREER CENTER • • The C areer Center offers assistance to students by • providing: a lib rary containing information on various oc­ cupations and job trends, vocational tests to help with your selection of a m ajor, and counselors to teach you how to job hunt effectively. Jester Center A115A 471-1217. The Cutting Room FREE BEER JENNY & BRENDA Haircutting PERMS-$38.00 by appointment only Tuesday-Saturday 10:30-5:00 THETEXAS TAVERN 9BOBOSR Tuosdoy Chicano Night WMfnMdoy Country & Western Night Thursday Nightcats Friday Dancin9 Under the Stars Extrem e H eat $1.50 UT, $3.00 public Saturday Wommack Bros. Sunday Closed The Texas Tavern is located in the Texas Union on UT campus, 24th and Guadalupe, 471-5651 Facing past problems with Dianetics By Margaret Murnane Let’s turn the clock back to birth itself —• a physically and mentally painful experience for one accustomed to the warmth and security of the womb. Time progresses, the individual grows older, but only to lose a favorite playmate in a swimming accident. The memory of this event is stored in their unconscious mind and causes a reaction of fear and anxiety at the sight of water or cries of helplessness. In response to these traumas and similar circumstances, a program, Dianetics, was established by L. Ron Hubbard to provide counseling in overcoming these emotions and reactions caused by a particularly painful experience. Dianetics comes from the Greek words dia, meaning through, and nous, meaning mind. Dianetics is further defined as the effects of the mind on the body. Two major factors significantly differentiate Dianetics from psychiatric treatment: first, Dianetics avoids evaluating the individual, while it directs the individual to recall something. Second, it makes the individual responsible for his or her own problem solving. Published in 1950, H ubbard’s book "Dianetics: The Modern Science of Mental Health” incorporated philosophies of the Church of Scientology, which he also originated. Since Dianetics is not based on religious convictions, one does not have to be a member of the church to take advantage of the program. By attempting to uncover the particular experience which has caused unfavorable or destructive feelings, the therapy includes a safe voyage into the mind and the ultimate discovery of an individual’s full potential. Past actions are understood and the unknown fears which came in childhood nightmares are examined. Dianetics attempts to remove that pain and refile it in a conscious part of the mind where it may be treated and cause no harm. Hubbard suggests that if you are interested in dianetic therapy, you begin by reading "Dianetics: The Modern Science of Mental Health." The handbook discusses the skills required in both the handling of interpersonal relations and the self-treatment of the mind. Woods Honda announces big savings on small bikes. 1981 Express’1 SR *448 1982 Urban Express* *498 1982 Urban Express*" % Deluxe 1981 Passport*’ 1981 XL80S *598 Introducing Woods Honda's Two-Wheel Deal. Great sav­ ings on many of Honda's most popular motorbikes and light­ weight street bikes. Here's just a small sampling of the many bikes you can save big on. At these prices you can't a f­ ford not to own a Woods Hon­ da — Even if you don't need one!! HONDA. FOLLOW THE LEADER * e x c lu d e s ta x , tit le , lice n se a n d f r e ig h t . WOODS HONDA FUN CENTER 6509 N. Lamar (Between Airport & Koenig) a c o o o i i I I $12.00 451-4565 1981 Express* II 1981 Express* *298 5:30 (jji) MOVIE k k ' / i "Continental Divide" (1981) John Belushi, Blair Brown. A Chicago newspaper columnist travels to the Rockies to escape some political heat and interview a reclusive naturalist. ‘PG’ © WEEK IN REVIEW 0 RAQUETBALL "International Championships" Wendell Talaber vs. Don Thomas O ® R-F.D. 6 (D ® OOOD MORNING CENTRAL TEXAS © SPORTS CENTER ® VEGETABLE SOUP © f f l ABETTER WAY O ® MR. MOON’S MAGIC CIRCUS O ( D WOODY WOODPECKER © ® NEWSMAKERS © 8 PORTS REVIEW ® ROMPER ROOM 7 0 0 O © O ® © ® THE FLINTSTONES O © O ® f f l f f l POPEYE © © f f l CD SUPERFRIENDS f f l © TEATRO FANTASTICO © NEWS / WEATHER / SPORTS 6 PROFESSIONAL RODEO From Mesquite, Texas ® BASEBALL BUNCH O ® O ® ID ® SMURFS O O Q C D f D S ) TARZAN / LONE RANGER ® WIMBLEDON TENNIS HIGHUGHTS © © f f l ® THUNDARR / GOLDIE GOLD © INSIDE BUSINESS ® THE PARTRIDGE FAMILY 8:00 ® MOVIE ★ ★ “This Time Forever" (1980) Claire Pimpare, Vincent Van Patten. A French-Canadian girl falls in love with a brash American college student studying in Montreal. ‘PG’ © ® MISTER ROGERS CD © BURBUJAS © MONEYWEEK ® WAR AND PEACE © © O ® ID ® KID SUPER POWER HOUR Q (D) O ® f f l ® BUGS BUNNY / ROAD RUNNER © ® ELECTRIC COMPANY (R) © © © CD LA VERNE & SHIRLEY © CNN SPECIAL REPORT © ® SESAME STREET (R) Q © ® f f l ® RICHIE RICH / SCOOBY DOO CD © HO MISMO © ART OF COOKING © SPORTS CENTER 9:05 ® MOVIE ★ ★Vi "Barbary Coast" (1935) Joel McCrea, Edward G. Robinson. Red lights, gambling and boozing reign in San Francisco in the 1800s. © © © ® I D ® SPIDER-MAN © S T Y L E © © © ® © ® SPACE STARS $ WHAT ON EARTH Orson Bean hosts this fast-paced, fact-filled science series. © ® NOVA “A Field Guide To Roger Tory Peterson” A portrait of the man whose best-selling guidebooks on ornithology have played a pivotal role in turning bird watching into a mass sport is presented. (R) □ © © f f l ® FONZ / HAPPY DAYS GANG © NEWS / MOSCOW LIVE © NCAA INSTRUCTIONAL SERIES “Soccer: Goalkeeping" O © o ® © ® BLACKSTAR ■'6 WAIT UNTIL DARK Katharine Ross, Stacy Keach and Joshua Bryant star in Frederick Knott's suspense drama about a young blind woman terrorized in her Manhattan apartment by three men searching for hidden drugs. Taped at the Pepperdine College Theatre in Malibu, Calif. © © f f l ® HEATHCLIFF & MARMADUKE © CNN SPECIAL REPORT © ALL-STAR SPORTS CHALLENGE World Champion Boston Celtics vs. Dal­ las Cowboys of the 1960's © © © ® DAFFY / SPEEDY 0 O Q ( 3 TROLLKINS © ® SNEAK PREVIEWS Roger Ebert and Gene Siskel review "Annie," "Author, Author” and “ Firefox.” © ® © © f f l ® WEEKEND SPECIAL "The Contest Kid Strikes Again" A young boy wins a flock of chickens in a contest. (R) n f f l QD SOUL TRAIN © SPORT8WEEK © POLO "Michelob International Gold Cup Final" 11:05 ® MOVIE k k k ' / t “The Victors” (1963) George Peppard, George Hamilton. An American infantry platoon travels through post-World War II Europe. © © F-TROOP 0 ( 1 1 ) 0 ® TOM AND JERRY © ® DANCE FEVER © ® LAST CHANCE GARAGE Brad Sears puts some 1982 car models to the test and evaluates the results. © ® © © f f l ® AMERICAN BANDSTAND © NEW8MAKERS © © SHOPSMITH O © O ® KWICKY KOALA © ® HISPANIC JOURNAL © ® PRESENTE “ Economic Strength Through Unity” Highlights of the sec­ ond annual convention of the United States Hispanic Chamber of Commerce are presented. f f l ® THIS WEEK IN BASEBALL CD © MOVIE "Corazón Salvaje” Julio Aleman, Angelica Marla. © © BASEBALL Los Angeles Dodgers at Houston Astros f f l dD PINK PANTHER f f l ® f f l ® BA8EBALL Regional coverage of Los Angeles Dodgers at Hous­ ton Astros; Milwaukee Brewers at Boston Red Sox 6:00 6:05 6:30 6:35 7:05 7:30 7:35 8:05 8*30 9:00 9*30 10:00 10:30 11:00 11:30 12:00 12:30 ® MOVIE ★ ★ "The Hearse” (1980) Trlsh Van Devere, Joseph Cotten. A schoolteacher tries to recover from a nervous breakdown at her late aunt's home, which is besieged by demons. 'PG' © ® 30 MINUTES © ® QUE PASA, U.3.A.? © ® FORUM © ® MOVIE ★ ★ "It’s Alive!” (1964) Tommy Kirk, Shirley Boone. A lunatic’s twisted plot to barricade three strangers In an Ozark cave with a monster backfires when the monster turns on him. f f l ® MOVIE k k ' / t "Pony Express” (1953) Charlton Heston, Rhonda Fleming. A pair of cowboy heroes help to ensure that the mail goes through. © NEWS / WEATHER / SPORTS © WATERSKIING "Senior Women's All-American Championships” from Cypress Gardens, Florida. 1:00 O © MOVIE k k ' / t "Monster On The Campus” (1958) Arthur Franz, Joanna Moore. When a scientist becomes his own guinea pig and injects himself with the blood of a million-year-old fish, he is turned into a monster. © ® SOLID GOLD Hosts: Marilyn McCoo, Glenn Shorrock. Guests: Hall & Oates, T.G. Sheppard, Larry Graham, Joe Cocker, Haircut One Hundred, Karla Bonoff. © ® CAMPING © ® MOVIE ★ ★ ★ “Stand Up And Cheer” (1934) Shirley Temple, Warner Baxter. Following the dark Depression years, a presidential decree Is made designed to replace the nation's hopelessness with optimism. © PEOPLE NOW © ® INTERNATIONAL BYLINE 1:30 2:00 © ® MARY TYLER MOORE Ted falls in love with the daughter of the star of the "Chuckles The Clown Show." © ® BYUNE S © LO MEJOR DE ESPAÑA NEWS, / WEATHER / SPORTS 2:30 O (ED MOVIE ★ ★ "M a And Pa Kettle At Home” (1954) Marjorie Main, Percy Kilbride. The Kettles try to make their dilapidated farm into an efficient, model operation. ® MOVIE k k k ' / t "The Black Marble” (1980) Robert Foxworth, Paula Pren­ tiss. After working on an emotionally exhausting child-murder case, a heavy- drinking police detective is teamed with a policewoman to find a malicious dognapper. ‘PG’ © ® WESTCHESTER GOLF CLASSIC Third-round coverage of this $400,000 PGA Tour golf tournament (live from Westchester Country Club in Ftye, N.Y.). © ® A WORD ON WORDS © ® GREATEST SPORTS LEGENDS f f l © f f l ® PROFESSIONAL BOWLERS TOUR $110,000 Showboat Doubles Classic (live from Showboat Bowling Center in Las Vegas, Nev.). © 8 T Y L E © GOLF HIGHLIGHTS "1972 British Open” 2:35 ® MOVIE k k k "M y Six Loves" (1963) Debbie Reynolds, Cliff Robertson. A Broadway actress is adopted by six abandoned children she finds living on her property in the country. © ® VICTORY GARDEN © ® OUTDOOR LIFE CD ® ROCIO DURCAL © B E S T OF TAKE TWO 3:00 3:30 © © © ® f f l ® WIMBLEDON TENNIS Same-day coverage of early round matches (from W imbledon, England). O ® SPORTS SATURDAY 15-round WBC super lightweight championship bout between Saoul Mambry and Leroy Haley (live from Las Vegas. Nev.); Inter­ national Bicycle Classic (from Boulder, Colo.). © ® CINEMA SHOWCASE © ® SPORTS AFIELD © RODEO "Schrade Pro Team Semi-Final” 4:00 © dD ENTERTAINMENT THIS WEEK Interviews with Robert Young, Eric Estra­ da, Dennis Weaver, Robbie Benson and members of REO Speedwagon. © ® SOCCER MADE IN GERMANY © ® © © f f l ® WIDE WORLD OF SPORTS 10-round lightweight fight between Cornelius "B o za " Edwards and Roberto Elizondo (live); The Dream Mile (from Oslo, Norway), f f l © LUCHA LIBRE © NEWS / WEATHER / SPORTS TWO IN a BOX The mime team of Robert Shields and Lorene Yarnell sing, dance and perform mime in a series of sketches. ® MOTORWEEK ILLUSTRATED O d D NEWS ¿ MOVIE ★ ★ "H og W ild” (1980) Patti D’Arbanville. Michael Biehn. A high school campus becomes the starting point for wild pranks and hilarity when several clean-cut youngsters decide to take on a rowdy m otorcycle gang PG’ © ® SANFORD AND SON Fred buys a racehorse in hopes of breeding him. © ® MATINEE AT THE BIJOU Featured: "L ittle Tough G uy" (1938). starring Huntz Hall and the Dead End Kids; a 1932 short; and Chapter 7 of "The Phan­ tom Empire” (1935). (R) f f l © VOCES Y CAROL © ® WOMEN’S CABLE CONFERENCE HIGHLIGHTS © WEEK IN REVIEW ® WRESTLING 4:30 4:35 5:00 5:05 5:30 © © N E W S G © O ® (D ® CBS NEWS Q ® f f l ® NBC NEWS © © M * A * S * H Daily bom bing near the hospital by an inept North Korean pilot becomes the leading spectator sport at the 4077th f f l ® NASHVILLE MUSIC Guest: Don Williams © PRESS BOX 6:00 © © WILD KINGDOM "Arctic Adventure" Marlin captures a young walrus. (R) O © © ( £ © ® HEE HAW Guests: David Frizzell & Shelly West. The Shoppe, Million Dollar Band. © ® LAWRENCE WELK "Songs Of The Islands” O ® S ® NEWS © ® SOLID GOLD Hosts: Marilyn McCoo, Shaun Cassidy. Guests: Kool & The Gang, Franke & The Knockouts, Bonnie Raitt, Charley Pride. Moon Zappa. Bobby Womack, Garry Shandling. f f l © MOVIE "La Duquesa De Benameji" Am paro Riveltes, Jorge Mistral f f l ® AU8TIN CITY COUNCIL 8 8PO R T8 SATURDAY SPORTS CENTER ® BA8EBALL Atlanta Braves at Cincinnati Reds © f f l IN 3EARCH OF... “The Human Aura” 606 6:30 JUNE 26,1982 ® CONSUMER REPORTS PRESENTS "The Not-For-KkJs-Only Show” Prod­ ucts of special interest to children and adolscents are reviewed, including com­ parisons of blue jeans and oranges. o ® THE JEFFER80NS Florence wants to form a union for maids. © ® ONCE UPON A CLASSIC "The Leatherstocking Tales" Although Hawk- eye and Jeff Sweetwater are both in love with Molly, Sgt. Dunham admires Hawkeye and prefers him as a husband for his daughter. (Part 4) (R) r j f f l ® THE MUPPETS Guest: Lola Falana 700 O © O ® f f l ® A SHAUN CAS8IDY SPECIAL Shaun Cassidy takes a humorous look at his life on the road; Loni Anderson, Jack Albertson and the Crystalsguest star. O © O ® WALT DISNEY "The Little Shepherd Dog Of Catalina” A Shetland sheepdog is marooned on a small island off the coast of California. ® MOVIE ★ ★ "Goin' Ape” (1981) Tony Danza, Jessica Walter. Three orangu­ tans hold the purse strings to a $5-million Inheritance. ‘PG’ © ® TONY BROWN’S JOURNAL "The Other Battle” Tony Brown reviews black participation in the military. (R) © ® © © f f l ® TODAY'S FBI Maggie and another female agent go undercover as truckers to crack a ring of hijackers. (R) 8 NEWS / WEATHER / 8PORTS NASL SOCCER Vancouver Whitecaps at Tampa Bay Rowdies 7:30 © ® WITH OSSIE AND RUBY "Ghost Stories" E.G. Marshall joins Ossie Davis and Ruby Dee in a cemetery for a mix of grave robbing and ghost stories g 8:00 © ® O ® BARBARA MANDRELL AND THE MANDRELL SISTERS Guests Dolly Parton, John Schneider, the Krofft Puppets. (R) G O O ® MOVIE k k k ' / t "The Duellists" (1978) Keith Carradine, Harvey Keitel. Based on a story by Joseph Conrad. Two French officers continue their long-running feud during the Napoleonic wars. © ® MOVIE "Heart Of The Rockies" (1937) Bob Livingston, Ray Corri­ gan. The Three Mesquiteers try to halt a family's shady methods of rounding up cattle. © ® © f f l f f l ® LOVE BOAT Captain Stubing develops an unusual rela­ tionship with a woman, and a newly married couple meet up with a man from the groom's past. (R) r j f f l ® MOVIE k k % "Bhowanl Junction" (1956) Ava Gardner, Stewart Granger An Anglo-Indian girl living in Pakistan experiences an Identity crisis as she struggles to sort out her national loyalties, f f l © MANUEL Y MAURICIO © NEWSMAKERS 6:30 ® MOVIE ★ ★Vi "Continental Divide" (1981) John Belushi, Blair Brown. A Chicago newspaper columnist travels to the Rockies to escape some political heat and Interview a reclusive naturalist. ‘PG’ © © O ® NBC MAGAZINE © ® JAZZ AT THE MAINTENANCE SHOP "Great Guitars (No. 3)” Barney Kessel. Herb Ellis and Charlie Byrd perform from the Maintenance Shop at Iowa State University. (R) f f l ® © ® f f l GE) FANTASY ISLAND An answering service operator meets the three men of her dreams, and a brother and sister return to the house where their father died (R) n f f l © BOXEO DESDE MEXICO © POCKET BILLIARDS "Trick Shots" ® NEWS © NEWS / WEATHER / SPORTS 0 © Q ( £ D 0 ® 0 ® f f l ® f f l ® f f l ® f f l ® news © ® SNEAK PREVIEWS Roger Ebert and Gene Siskel review "A nnie ,” "A uthor, A utho r" and "F irefox." © S P O R T S © S P O R T S CENTER 10:05 ® WORLD AT WAR "P a cific" The Allies attack the Japanese in the Pacific and are surprised with the fanatical defense they meet from the defenders © f f l BENNY HILL Benny goes on a blind date O dD TWILIGHT ZONE In a hospital of the future, Janet Tyler is about to see the results of her operation. G ® f f l ® SATURDAY NIGHT LIVE Host: Blythe Danner. Guest: Rickie Lee Jones. (R) 6 WAIT UNTIL DARK Katharine Ross. Stacy Keach and Joshua Bryant star in Frederick K nott's suspense drama about a young blind woman terrorized in her Manhattan apartm ent by three men searching for hidden drugs. Taped at the Pepperdine College Theatre in Malibu, Calif © ® ALL IN THE FAMILY Archie is depressed because he did not get his usual Christmas bonus. © ® HIDDEN PLACES: WHERE HISTORY LIVES "B oom And Bust - The Mining Towns" Host Philip A bbott visits three surviving mining towns (R) f f l ® ABC NEWS © ® MOVIE ★ ★ ★ McCabe And Mrs M iller" (1971) W arren Beatty. Julie Christie Partners set up a business in a small mining town, only to have larger business interests move in on them f f l ® MOVIE ★ ★ ★ “ The Rainm aker" (1956) Burt Lancaster, Katharine Hep­ burn A con man posing as a rainmaker not only ends the drought in a small Southwestern town, but also brings needed romance and confidence to a spin­ ster © PRESS BOX 10:45 f f l ® MOVIE ★ ★ ★ Laura ’ (1944) Gene Tierney, C lifton W ebb While investi­ gating a young girl s murder, a detective falls in love with her portrait and then discovers she wasn't killed 1100 © © SATURDAY NIGHT LIVE Host Blythe Danner Guest Rickie Lee Jones (R) O © STAR TREK The Enterprise is sent to protect the planet Organia which lies in the path of the warring Klingons O ® MOVIE ★ ★ % "F light To Holocaust” (1977) Patrick Wayne, Chris Mitchum A team of trouble-shooters try to rescue the occupants of a plane dangling from a skyscraper © ® WORLD CUP SOCCER TOURNAMENT f f l © LO MEJOR DE ESPAÑA © FREEMAN REPORT8 © NASL SOCCER Vancouver W hitecaps at Tampa Bay Rowdies ® BASEBALL Atlanta Braves at Cincinnati Reds 1200 O © BATTLESTAR GALACTICA The hot-blooded commander of the battles- tar Pegasus tries to convince Adama to attack the Cylons. (Part 1) f f l ® f f l ® WRESTLING f f l © MOVIE "U n Fantasma Anda Suelto" Bela Lugosi, Leo Qorcey. © NEWS / WEATHER / 8 PORTS 1105 12:30 © © WRESTLING ® MOVIE ★ ★ "The Hearse” (1980) Trlsh Van Devere, Joseph Cotten. A schoolteacher tries to recover from a nervous breakdown at her late aunt’s home, which is besieged by demons. ‘PG’ 9:00 9:05 10:00 10:30 JUNE 25, 1982 DAYTIME MOVIES 7:30 6 A A "Saturday The 14th" (1981) Richard Benjamin, Paula Prentiss. ^ cou­ ple discover that the house they've inherited Is being occupied by vampires, ghosts and assorted monsters PG’ 8:05 (5) it it it'/t The Macomber A ffair" (1947) Gregory Peck, Robert Preston. Based on the story by Ernest Hemingway Murder strikes a safari in Africa's lion country 9:00 6 A A A A "Far From The Madding Crow d” (1967) Julie Christie, Terence Stamp A willful young farm girl betters herself but destroys three men in the process 10:05 ® A A "Cockleshell Heroes” (1956) Jose Ferrer, Trevor Howard. A handful of trained volunteers engage in a dangerous plan to blow up an enemy battleship in a French port 12:00 6 A A A "Silver Streak” (1976) Gene Wilder, Jill Clayburgh A mild-mannered book editor accidentally becomes involved in a sinister art thief’s bizarre plot during a cross-country train ride. PG’ 12:05 ® A A * "Enchantm ent" (1949) David Niven, Teresa Wright. An elderly man is reminded of his past romance when his grandson confronts him with his love story 2:00 6 A AVi "Zorro, The Gay Blade" (1981) George Hamilton, Lauren Hutton. The heroic son of old California's famous justice fighter is incapacitated by a riding injury, forcing his foppish brother to don the cape and mask. PG’ EVENING 6:00 0 3 2 ) 0 © © ® Q ® f f i ® f f l ® n e w s 03 ® OVER EASY "H earing" Guest: Florence Henderson. (R) n © 0 FAMILY FEUD ID ® LAVERNE & SHIRLEY & COMPANY Láveme challenges a wisecracking Shotz tour guide to a bowling championship. CD 3D EL DERECHO DE NACER 0 ® AUSTIN CITY COUNCIL © MONEYLINE © ALL-STAR SPORTS CHALLENGE World Champion Boston Celtics vs. Dal­ las Cowboys of the 1960's ® WINNERS 6:05 6:30 O © TIC TAC DOUGH 0 ( 0 THE MUPPETS Guest: Lola Falana. O ® FAMILY FEUD O (23 THE JEFFERSONS George adds fuel to the fire by setting Lionel up with a beautiful girl. (Part 2) © ® MACNEIL / LEHRER REPORT © CD © 0 P.M. MAGAZINE The wedding of magician Doug Henning; a family that owns and operates their own railroad f f i 3 ) M*A* S* H Frank throws his back out and applies for a Purple Heart while Hawkeye mourns the loss of a friend and sends an underage soldier home I D QD ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT An interview with Dennis Weaver CD 0 DIOS SE LO PAGUE © SPORTS © SPORTS CENTER (2 ) BASEBALL Atlanta Braves at Cincinnati Reds 6:35 7:00 0 0 0 ® © ® THE JAMES BOYS A divorced father attem pts to keep his job while trying to raise his 7-year-old son. 0 © O CD © GD THE DUKES OF HAZZARD Bo and Luke are accused of secretly taping a Mickey Gilley benefit concert and selling the tapes. (R) MOVIE A A "Saturday The 14th” ( 1981) Richard Benjamin, Paula Prentiss. A couple discover that the house they've inherited is being occupied by vam ­ pires, ghosts and assorted monsters. ‘P G ’ © ® WASHINGTON WEEK IN REVIEW © ® 6 0 33 BENSON Kraus falls for a government official and arranges a romantic weekend, unaware the man of her dream s is married. (R) Q © PRIME TIME NEWS © PROFESSIONAL RODEO From Mesquite, Texas 7:30 O 32) 0 ® € 0 ® CHICAGO STORY Megan investigates a gangland-style slaying with a surprising twist, and Joe breaks up an argum ent between two old friends over a woman. (R) © ® WALL STREET WEEK "A Sum m er Rally?" Guest: Leon G. Cooperm an of Goldman, Sachs & Company. © ® QD 33 MAKING A LIVING The players of a minor league baseball team start hanging out at the restaurant. (R) CD 33) SIN PRESENTA "Fortunata Y Jacinta" (Part 6) 8:00 0 0 O ® © ® DALLAS J.R.'s position as head of Ewing Oil is jeopard­ ized when an irate Miss Ellie takes m atters into her own hands. (R) © ® BUSINESS REPORT © 3® © ® TO BE ANNOUNCED 8:30 é MAC DAVIS IN CONCERT Taped at the Sporting Club in M onte Carlo, M ac sings, jokes and dances in a performance backed up by the talented singer- dancers of Strut. © ® THE LAWMAKERS Correspondents Linda W ertheim er and Cokie Rob­ erts join Paul Duke for an up-to-the-m inute summary of Congressional activi­ ties. CD 0 ROJO VERANO o 32) S.A.L.T. PRESENTS: DRACULA 0 0 O ® © ® FALCON CREST Em ma is kidnapped by Turner Bates, who tries to extort money from Angie. (R) O ® © GD MCCLAIN’S LAW McClain uses a police com puter to zero in on two young thugs who are terrorizing a neighborhood. (R) © ® LEONARD BERNSTEIN CONDUCTS The Boston Symphony performs Berlioz’s "Rom eo And Juliet: The Feast Of The C apulets” and M ozart s Sym ­ phony No. 4 in G minor. CD Ú 24 HORAS © CROSSFIRE © GOLF HIGHLIGHTS "1971 British O pen­ 6 SNEAK PREVIEW Host Leonard Harris looks at the movies, specials and sports events coming up on Home Box Office. ® NEWS CD © REPORTER 41 O 0 0 0 O ® Q ® © ® © ® f f i ® f f i ® NEWS 6 WIMBLEDON TENNIS HIGHLIGHTS © ® DICK CAVE 11 Guest: Kurt Thomas. (R) CD 0 WORLD CUP SOCCER TOURNAMENT England vs. Kuwait © SPORTS TONIGHT © SPORTS CENTER 9:00 s ' 9:35 9:50 10:00 10:30 6 MOVIE a a a “ Silver S treak" (1976) Gene Wilder, Jill Clayburgh. A mild- mannered book editor accidentally becomes involved in a sinister art thief’s bizarre plot during a cross-country train ride. ‘ PG’ O (D ALL IN THE FAMILY An innocent Edith is both the cause and the victim of a furious lover’s quarrel when her long-lost admirer visits with his intended bride © ® CAPTIONED ABC NEWS © ® © ® ABC NEWS NIGHTLINE © ® M* A* S* H The oppressive Korean heat gets to everyone, especially Klinger. © NEWSDESK 10:35 ® MOVIE "B u llitt” (1968) Steve McQueen, Robert Vaughn. A San Francisco detective tries to prevent the murder of a prospective witness for a political hearing 11:00 O (D MOVIE A A "The Psychic" (1979) Jennifer O’Neill, Marc Porel. A young woman foresees the circumstances surrounding her own death. (R) © ® WE DIG COAL: A PORTRAIT OF THREE WOMEN The first women coal miners’ struggle to get their jobs and their day-to-day lives in the mines are documented © @ MOVIE A * 1/! "Bhowani Junction” (1956) Ava Gardner, Stewart Granger An Anglo-Indian girl living in Pakistan experiences an identity crisis as she struggles to sort out her national loyalties. © ® CHARLIE’S ANGELS Kelly hires the Angels to investigate her millionaire father (Part 2) © ® FRIDAYS Host: Beau Bridges. Guest: David Grisman. (R) © TOP RANK BOXING From Atlantic City, New Jersey. 11:30 O © 0 ® f f l ® SCTV NETWORK (R) © WEST COAST REPORT © 0 ABC NEWS NIGHTLINE © PEOPLE NOW 12:20 6 MINSKY’S FOLLIES Phyllis Diller, Rip Taylor and Stubby Kaye join the Minsky Burlesque Troupe for a revue featuring baggy-pants comedy, striptease and production numbers. 0 0 WRESTLING © 0 FRIDAYS Host: Beau Bridges. Guest: David Grisman. (R) 6D ® MOVIE A A Vi "The Spy With The Cold Nose” (1966) Laurence Harvey, Daliah Lavi. A dog equipped with a transm itter serves as a spy after being given to a Russian. ® BASEBALL Atlanta Braves at Cincinnati Reds O 0 O ® f f i ® NEWS © SPORTS UPDATE O ® NEWS 1:20 QE MOVIE A A A * "The Last M etro” (1980) Catherine Deneuve, Gerard Depardieu. Directed by Francois Truffaut. During W orld War II, the proprietors of a small Paris theatre try to keep their establishment open during the German occupation. ‘PG’ 1:30 O 0 MOVIE A A Vi "Kiss, Kiss, Kill, K ill!" (1974) Michael Jayston, Helen Mir­ ren. A master of disguise who marries and murders wealthy women for their money finds himself falling in love with his next victim. 0 0 ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT An interview with Dennis Weaver. © OVERNIGHT DESK © SPORTS CENTER 0 0 NEWS © 0 SOLID GOLD Hosts: Marilyn McCoo, Glenn Shorrock. Guests: Hall & Oates, T.G. Sheppard, Larry Graham, Joe Cocker, Haircut One Hundred, Karla Bonoff. © REAL PICTURES © AUSTRALIAN RULES FOOTBALL © FREEMAN REPORTS 12:00 12:30 12:55 1:00 1:05 2:00 2:30 3:00 0 0 ) 0 ® © ® TONIGHT Host: Johnny Carson. Guest: Thalassa Cruso. 0 0 MOVIE A A A "The Paper Chase" (1974) Tim othy Bottoms, Lindsay Wagner A young law student attem pts to impress a tyrannical professor while unwittingly falling in love with his daughter. 3:35 6 MOVIE A A A'/? "A tlantic C ity” (1980) Burt Lancaster, Susan Sarandon. The estranged husband of an oyster bar waitress arrives with her pregnant younger sister and some stolen heroin, which he wants an aging hood to sell for him. ‘R’ Coming This Week M o n Tu b Thu W»d ERNIE SKY & K-TELS LEWIS & THE LEGENDS YOUR MOVE MORRIS CODE THE DEVILS OCTAVE DOCTORS W.C CLARK BLUES REVIEW Sun S e rf Fri com , UPP€iHei/ei D O DKM M L 1Q -9 i 442-9904 jj S. C ongress i I i r en I mil i ■ « 2015 E. R IV E R S ID E Timothy Leary: ‘Turned On’ in Austin By Tim O’Leary No stranger to this vicinity, Timothy Leary is once again bound for the “ Athens of the Sunbelt" — Austin. A man that seemingly defies both time and description, Leary’s past reads like folk hero material. A swashbuckling character that has alternately strutted and been dragged across the landscape of modern America, Timothy Leary has set the pace for contemporaries and following generations alike. Starting out as a Berkeley graduate turned Harvard psychology professor, Leary’s escapades with drugs led him in and out of numerous U.S. and foreign jails. And not surprisingly, his efforts since have expanded frontiers of many sorts. Booked into Austin June 25 through June 27, Leary’s primary focus will be a two-day workshop based on futuristic philosophies. Friday evening, Grok Books hosts an "author’s appearance" to present Leary's latest book, “ Changing My Mind, Among Others.” And beginning Saturday, the $90-per- person workshop entitled "Timothy Leary Turned On” will be held in a yet undisclosed Austin hotel or motel. Designed to follow an agenda that includes discussion on space migration, intelligence and lifespan enhancement, as well as how to avoid drug abuse, this engagement is the first of a series of programs planned by Future Trends, a tax exempt non-profit corporation. Other guest speakers may include Robert Anton Wilson, Francis Jefferies and Buckminster Fuller. Focusing on evolutionary changes, the workshop is expected to attract from 50 to 100 participants. Described as a "free-wheeling ideas and interaction” forum, coordinator Phil Sansone said the seminar is a "general introduction to futuristic thoughts." In a Friday telephone interview, Leary said he is again “ looking forward to visiting Austin.” This is his fifth trip here in as many years. The most recent, in October 1981, was devoted to another Future Trends program, "The Great Debate" — starring Leary and G. Gordon Liddy. By "trying to present at least 100 new ideas," Leary plans to give workshop participants their money’s worth by doing "my best to double the intelligence of everyone who comes.” Concerning the evolution of intelligence, the 61-year-old Los Angeles resident said “there’s new data from almost every science telling how human beings can evolve as a species and as an individual. It’s the duty and joy of any intelligent person to understand how things are changing. These powerful forces are the inevitable ways of change. We must go with them and learn from them and move toward the future." Due to the events that have helped shape this country’s cultural psyche, Leary said he believes "the last 20 years have been the most exciting." He urges those attending his lectures to "discover all you can to understand how evolution is working all around us. "There are 24 stages of evolution that we’re all going through. In order to master the new stages, people should know what stage they're in so they know what lies ahead," Leary said. Describing the Sun Belt as the "frontier of human evolution," this master of metaphysics and advocate of space colonization will soon be traveling from California to Texas, the two regions he considers the "centers of the new civilization." Taking into account Leary’s most recent visit, a wholesale infusion of futuristic influences upon Austin’s collective grey matter cannot be ruled out. And who’s to say, to those who believe so, space is indeed at our fingertips. Be here then: only on Sunday at the Lama Foundation By Mark Leon The Lama Foundation is in Lama, N.M., a few miles north of the D.H. Lawrence ranch and about 20 miles north of Taos. Established in 1967 as a spiritual retreat in the Hindu- Buddhist tradition, the foundation became nationally known with the publication of the book “ Be Here Now" in 1971. Chronicling Richard Aipert’s transformation into Baba Ram Dass, the book was a watershed for the spiritual tripster movement of the 1960s. Alpert was Timothy Leary’s former psychedelic sidekick, and with his metamorphosis an entire generation came to realize that enlightenmentNcould not be bought with an LSD sugar cube. * Vacationing in the beautiful mountains of northern New Mexico, I decided to make a slight detour to the tiny settlement of Lama. I had vague hopes of meeting Ram Dass, but beyond that I had no idea what to expect. Lama is marked only on the more detailed maps, and I was fortunate to have an excellent Newsweek atlas obtained through a TV subscription offer. It seemed appropriate to listen to the "psychedelic soul” of Jimi Hendrix as I traveled the winding dirt road to the Lama Foundation. After a few miles I came to a parking area where a sign informed me I had to walk the rest of the way. I walked about a quarter of a mile up to an adobe, geodesic- dome hybrid structure where several people were busy applying a new coat of mud plaster to the strange edifice. After several inquiries, I located the young man who seemed to be in charge. He introduced himself as Abd’al- Ahad. Abd’al quickly informed me that I could not stay. Lama only allows visitors on Sunday and Ram Dass very rareiy grants interviews I asked Abd’al where Ram Dass was and he replied, “ Oh, somewhere in the universe." Abd'al did offer to give me some literature. While he was gone, I began talking to a man named Will who was mixing adobe plaster. Will hadn’t been there long and could not tell me much about the place. After a few minutes, an Oriental woman who seemed to be the foreman told Will to get back to work. Then Abd’al returned with my brochures — the same set of pamphlets available at the Taos Chamber of Commerce. I asked a few more questions as Abd'al walked me part of the way back to the parking area — but with little success. He did tell me that Christianity, Islam and Judaism were well represented in the religious life of the foundation. I was surprised that he did not mentic Hinduism or Buddhism. Abd’a igam made it clear that it was time for me to leave. I turned for one last look and again noticed the sign over the entrance to the kitchen that said "Remember." Remember what? I wondered. Best Cheeseburger in Austin - “ G/M Steakhouse wins here, no competition.’’Daily Texan, Dining & Entertainment Guide, Sept. 23, 1981 “ The best slab of meat, the best cheese and the best price/’ Austin American-Statesman, O nw ard, Ju ly 21, 1981 u- V ’ G/M STEAK HOUSE “ Union members gather here several times weekly for the inspiration and energy the massive V2 pound burgers and thick cut fries provide.’’ Austin American-Statesman, Time Out, Sept. 12, 1981 “ Well, I never expected to find a Greek cheeseburg­ er place, for real, in Austin, It ’s Texas. But we have one. called the G/M Steakhouse...“ Austin American-Statesman, John Kelsa October 6, 1981 ken chlC Texas Union bur9er' Texas Union Garden Grille M-F 70:3 0 a m -9 :3 0 p m Sat. N oon-9:30pm O ffer expires June 25. One coupon per customer. You must present coupon k Supermarket books support, question psychic powers By Stephanie Canada- Worthington While buying groceries last week, something a bit odd caught my eye. Mixed in with those little 59-cent paperbacks on the latest hairstyles, between “ You too can look like Brooke Shields” and “ 5,000 Names For Your Baby," was a new item for the cheap read crowd — a book called "Yes, There’s Life After Death." There is plenty of money to be made convincing people that the impossible is possible, and that there is scientific evidence to support it. Just ask The National Enquirer. Actually, you don't have to convince anyone. Just assure, cajole and promise. A case in point is a book called "Phone Calls From The Dead" by D. Scott Rogo, who was assisted by Raymond Bayless. I did indeed pick this up at a supermarket, but I deeply repent my folly. The book does offer a few laughs at Rogo’s expense, but they don’t quite make it worth the price of $2.25. “ Phone Calls" would be much more entertaining if Rogo wasn’t alluding pointedly to his apparently impressive credentials, thorough reseach and absolute sincerity. Funny thing is. he’s about as discriminating as the host at a block party. Although Rogo insists that the people he has interviewed are reliable and trustworthy, it’s okay for him to have a few doubts. For example, a Dr. Gelb had an unusual experience. The phone rang, he picked it up, and someone called him by his first name, Lester. Dr. Gelb thought the voice sounded like that of his deceased mother, but he wasn't sure. Ah, but Mr. Rogo knows better. “ Nonetheless, it is hard for us to accept Dr. Gelb’s own explanation for his experience ... this was heard a stranger explanation for phenomena. Who or what makes these mysterious calls? Quoth Rogo, "However, we could not dismiss the possibility that some other type of parapsychical or extradimensional being — perhaps invisible denizens which co-inhabit the Earth with us or exist in some parallel universe — might be playing a huge cosmic joke on us. In short, we’ve come to call this explanation the EDB, extradimensional being theory." Do I hear an intergalactic chuckle? It’s always easier to tear down something you hate than it is to praise something you love, but I’ll try. "Paranormal Borderlands Of Science" edited by Kendrick Frazier is much, much more entertaining than “ Phone Calls" and well worth its steep cover price of $13.95 for the paperback edition. This book takes well- aimed swipes at every pseudo-science subject you can think of and leaves you laughing all the way. A compiliation of articles from The S keptical In q u ire r and other magazines for the discerning non-believer, it confSins thoughts from such w underkinder as Isaac Asimov and Martin Gardner. My favorite articles included one by Ray Hyman called "Cold Reading: How To Convince Strangers That You Know All About Them." I drove my husband nearly mad when I read "The Extraordinary Mental Bending Of Professor Taylor," by Martin Gardner, because I couldn’t stop laughing and didn’t want to stop reading long enough to explain. John Taylor is a professor of mathematics who was interviewed on a BBC program with Uri Geller and was "... so stunned by Geller's magic that he became an instant convert to the reality of extrasensory perception and psychokinesis.” Taylor was so inspired that he began testing children who “ developed” the ability to bend silverware using their psychokinetic powers after they saw Geller perform. Gardner relates one experiment, "They allowed six metal-bending children to do their thing in a room with an observer who was told to relax vigilance after a short time. All sorts of bending at once took place. None was observed by the observer, but the action was secretly being videotaped through a one-way mirror. The film showed ... ’A ’ put the rod under her foot to bend it, ’B,' ‘E’ and ‘F’ used two hands to bend the spoon, while ‘D’ tried to hide his hands under a table to bend a spoon.” The book goes on to attack astrology, psychic photography, the Amityville Horror, biorhythms and just about any other popular nonsense going around. Read it. obviously no normal phone call. It’s hardly likely that the call came from one of his patients, who certainly would not have addressed the therapist by his first name." Come on, a New York psychoanalyst whose patients don’t call him by his first name? Gee, they do it in the movies. My favorite sections were those that described Rogo and Bayless’ theories. I’ve never Les L. Crane DDS Inc. 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ALL BROOKS SHOES GREATLY REDUCED! * Excluding S a le Ite m s Sportinq Feet 1 ^ dobie m a ll 472-8610 C O M IN G UP THIS WEEK: Tues. June 22 LADIES NIGHT NO COVER & 50' HIBALLS for LADIES with T.C. THORNTON BAND Men - $2.00 Cover Wed. June 23 HAPPY HOUR ALL N IG HT ALL LIQUOR - 2 FOR 1 with THE MOODS $2.00 Cover Thure. June 24 Fri. June 25 5< BEER and HAWKEYE $2.00 Ladies $3.00 Men f u n 'l l C*otil $3.00 Cover Sat. June 26 NASHVILLE SOUNDS $3,00 Cover Vs DAYTIME MOVIES 5:30 6 * * V 4 "H e id i" (1979) A young girl is brought from her grandfather's Alpine home to live in the city. ★ ★ "G oin' A pe" (1981) Tony Danza, Jessica Walter. Three orangutans hold 6 the purse strings to a $5-million inheritance. 'PG' ★ ★ 1/2 Days Of G lory" (1944) Tamara Toumanova, Gregory Peck. The ® valiant Russian Resistance during W orld War II tries to hold back the invadina Nazis. ★ ★ My Cham pion” (1981) Yoko Shimada, Chris Mitchum. The true story 6 of a female Japanese running champion is told. ® couple get a divorce only to discover that they are still in love with each other. II To The Judge' (1949) Rosalind Russell, Robert Cummings. A (1981) Gary Coleman, Michael Lembeck. A social 6 ★ Vi On The Right Track worker tries to find a normal home for a train station shoeshine boy with a talent for picking the ponies. ‘PG' ★ ★ ★ Paula ® (1952) Loretta Young, Kent Smith. Following a hit-and-run mishap, a woman attem pts to assuage her guilt by acting as a speech therapist for her young, mute victim. 6 "C ontinental Divide” (1981) John Belushi, Blair Brown. A Chicago newspaper colum nist travels to the Rockies to escape some political heat and interview a reclusive naturalist. 'PG' 7:30 8:05 9:00 10:05 11:30 12:05 2:30 EVENING 6:00 © © © ( D O ® © ® © ® © ® n e w s © ® OVER EASY "The Future Of A ging" Guest: Congressman Claude Pep- per. (R) n © © FAMILY FEUD © ® LAVERNE & SHIRLEY & COMPANY The girls agree to let Fonzie throw a party at the Pizza Bowl. © Ó ) EL DERECHO DE NACER © ® IT'S PUNK I THINK © MONEYLINE © RAQUETBALL "International C ham pionships" Wendell Talaber vs. Don Thomas _ ® GREEN ACRES "G ive Me Land, Lots Of Land" 6:05 6:30 _ „ O © TIC TAC DOUGH © (D) THE MUPPETS Guest: Liza Minnelli. Q ® FAMILY FEUD Q ® THE JEFFERSONS War breaks out between the Willises and the Jeffer- sons, with Lionel and Jenny the first casualties (Part 1) © ® M A C ^E IL / LEHRER REPORT © ® © ® P.M. MAGAZINE The reunion of two orphaned sisters after 30 years of separation: a man who owns a 200-acre wildlife park in Florida, f f l (3D M *A *S *H Hawkeye writes to his father detailing, among other things. Radar's attem pts at passing a high school exam and a sudden cooling of affec­ tions between Frank and Hot Lips f f l ® ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT An interview with Robby Benson © © DIOS SE LO PAGUE © ® THE MUSIC OF ECK © SPORTS © S P O R T S CENTER 6:35 ® ANDY GRIFFITH Andy and Opie face the difficult problem of helping an old milk-wagon horse find contentm ent in retirement. _ _ 7:00 Q ® O ® 03 ® FAME M ontgom ery's m other (Gwen Verdón), a famous actress, helps the students with a show they are putting on for their parents (R) 0 B ) O 3 MAGNUM, P.I. Robin Masters offers to let a film company use his house for some location shots. (R) 6 MOVIE "H igh Risk" (1981) James Brolin. Cleavon Little. A trio of greedy friends plot the robbery of a million dollars from a South American drua dealer. 'R' © ® BUSINESS REPORT © X © © f f l ® MOVIE * * ' ? This House Possessed" (1981) Parker Stevenson Lisa Eilbacher. A rock singer has a nervous breakdown and goes to live in a sinister house with his yflung nurse and com panion (R) f~) © ® IT’S EVERYBODY’S BUSINESS © PRIME TIME NEWS © SPORTS FORUM 7:05 T MOVIE ★ A Skullduggery” (1970) Susan Clark. Burl Reynolds Anthropolo­ gists discover valuable mineral deposits and ape-like creatures while on safari in New Guinea. 7 .30 © ® TEXAS WEEKLY © © MIS HUESPEDES ® ® U.S. GOVERNMENT © AUTO RACING "USAC S prints" from Odessa, Missouri - _ 8:00 0 3 0 6 f f l ® DIFF’ RENT STROKES Unaware that his health club has a policy of racial discrimination, Mr. Drummond asks Willis and Arnold to meet him there. (R) n j O d l O ' 2 SHIRLEY MACLAINE: ILLUSIONS Shirley MacLaine and Gregory Hines illustrate the world of illusion through song and dance © ® GOVERNOR’S REPORT ® ® HERE IN AUSTIN "Legal A id " _ 8:30 0 3 0 6 ffl ® GIMME A BREAK The chief learns that his parents, who are about to celebrate their 55th wedding anniversary, are threatening to get a divorce. (R) 6 MOVIE ★ * "Goin Ape tans hold the purse strings to a $5-mi!lion inheritance PG' © © ROJO VERANO © ® A.I.S.D. VARIETY (1981) Tony Danza. Jessica W alter Three orangu­ a _ 9:00 O © O ® f f l ® HILL STREET BLUES The suspected killer of a public defender is released on a technicality and Grace Gardner wins the affections of a new man (R) © © 0 3 KNOTS LANDING Sid insists on undergoing an operation that could cure him of paralysis but may kill him (R) © ® AUSTIN CITY LIMITS "Charley Pride And Razzy Bailev" © ® © ® f f l ® 20/20 © © 24 HORAS © CROSSFIRE ® NEWS f f l © REPORTER 41 ® ® AN EVENING WITH SHAWN PHILLIPS AND FRIENDS O © O © O ® O ® © ® © ® © ® 0 9 ® NEWS 6 WIMBLEDON TENNIS HIGHLIGHTS © ® DICK CAVETT Guests Pete Maravich and Julius Erving (R) © © WORLD CUP SOCCER TOURNAMENT Czechoslovakia vs France © S P O R T S TONIGHT 0 SPORTS CENTER ® DUST BOWL BLUES 9:05 9:30 9:50 10:00 10:05 10:30 A Little Princess" (1973) Deborah Makepeace. Donald O @ O ® f f l ® TONIGHT Host Johnny Carson Guest Dolly Parton © © MOVIE Pickering A young girl is orphaned in a foreign city and left to fend for herself 6 MOVIE * ★ * "S tarting Over" (1979) Burt Reynolds. Jill Clayburgh After months of TV dinners and blind dates, a divorced magazine writer thinks he's found true love when a schoolteacher enters his life R O 3 ALL IN THE FAMILY Mike and Gloria happily prepare and their move to California. © ® CAPTIONED ABC NEWS © 3 ffl 3 ABC NEWS NIGHTLINE © ® M *A *S *H Newscaster Clete Roberts returns to the 4077th to update Korean War conditions (Part 2) © NEWSDESK for M ike's new job 11:00 O 3 QUINCY Quincy discovers that a rookie officer who killed a burglar lied about the incident. f f i ® PBS LATENIGHT Host Dennis Wholey f f i 5 (R) © ® CHARLIE'S ANGELS Kelly hires the Angels to investigate her millionaire father. (Part 2) © AUSTRALIAN RULES FOOTBALL Collingwood vs Fitzroy f f l J VEGAS A nun is kidnapped by a killer seeking a priceless cross ® MOVIE Stella Dallas (1937) Barbara Stanwyck, John Boles A wom- 11:05 an sacrifices everything for the love of her daughter _ _ ^ ^ _ 11:30 O © O ® f f l ® LATE NIGHT WITH DAVID LETTERMAN Guests Ted © W K T CCOAST REPORT 6 r' P0PC° rn km9 0 r v " ,e Redenbacker JUNE 24, 1982 ^ © ® ABC NEWS NIGHTLINE © PEOPLE NOW 12:00 1 2 :1 0 C9 < 3 MCMILLAN & WIFE A controversial anti-police author is murdered aboard a tram carrying several police officers, including Mac. to a convention (“ ) f f l ® ALFRED HITCHCOCK PRESENTS Two young men suspect one of their professors of m urdering his wife. 6 MOVIE * A small-town policeman investigates a series 0 * bizarre murders R ’ 2 Dead And Buried (1981) James Farentmo, Melody Anderson O S O ® f f l ® NEWS ® ® ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT An interview with Robby Benson a © G O L F HIGHLIGHTS 1971 British Open A nun ,s kldnaPPed by a killer seeking a priceless cross IR) 1:00 © © DARK SHADOWS To convince the sheriff of Willie s guilt Barnabas plants Maggie s ring in W illie's hospital room © © N E W S © SPORTS UPDATE ® MOVIE ★ Violent Playground" ( 1958) Stanley Baker, Peter Cushing A British policeman tries to stem the tide of juvenile crime that is running rampant in the Liverpool ghetto v ★ ★ much to the delight of Barnabas © OVERNIGHT DESK 0 SPORTS CENTER The shenff questions W illie and considers him insane 6 MOVIE "C ontinental Divide" (1981) John Belushi, Blair Brown A Chicago newspaper columnist travels to the Rockies to escape some political heat and interview a reclusive naturalist PG' — . ^ Q ® NEWS © REAL PICTURES © FREEMAN REPORTS _ © TOP RANK BOXING From Atlantic City, New Jersey t f m ^ ISS,0N: ,M P0SSlBLE The ,MF ,eam seis out to infiltrate a top syndicate 6 MOVIE (1981) James Brolm. Cleavon Little A trio of greedy friends plot the robbery of a million dollars from a South American druo » dealer R "H igh Risk 12:15 1230 1:10 1:30 1:50 2 . 00 2:30 3:00 . 3:20 3:35 If you’ve been told you can’t wear soft lenses, call us! WIDE LOAD Although our Chicago style deep dish pizza could never be considered fast food, t on ins’ delivery service should be remembered as the fastest wav to curb an appe­ tite. It you're in our delivers area, call us. We'll hit the ground running to deliver the goods, good n hot and loaded with all the best ingredients. Here’s w hat we re driving at: To ask for a lot at Conans. is not too much to ask. N or is it too much to ask us to get the load out and deliver it. 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R I V E R S I D E a t L A K K S H O K E 16-6 T u r-S a t 113-8163 d i s c o u n t o f f r e g u l a r f l2°° c u t . 18 JUNE 23, 1982 DAYTIME MOVIES 7:30 6 ★ ★ '/i "Chu Chu And The Philly Flash” (1981) Alan Arkin, Carol Burnett. An alcoholic former baseball player and a kooky street entertainer become part­ ners in a scheme to make money by returning a lost suitcase. ‘PG’ * * * Man With A Million ' (1954) Gregory Peck, Ronald Squire. Two 0D millionaires endow a bum with a million-pound note * i Valentino ® (1951) Eleanor Parker, Anthony Dexter. The amorous adventures of the legendary Rudolph Valentino make him a silent screen Idol and sex symbol to women everywhere. 11:00 6 * w The Hearse (1980) Tnsh Van Devere, Joseph Cotten A schoolteacher tries to recover from a nervous breakdown at her late aunt’s home, which Is besieged by demons PG' 8:05 10:05 12:05 * * * Palm Springs Weekend" (1963) Troy Donahue, Connie Stevens. ® Palm Springs is invaded by hordes of college students on their Easter vacation. . 1:00 6 ★★ “ This Time Forever” (1980) Claire Pimpare, Vincent Van Patten. A French-Canadian girl falls in love w th a brash American college student study­ ing in Montreal. PG’ EVENING 8:00 _ O © O (D) O ® O C D 0 D C D © ® n e w s © i f PRESENTE "Economic Strength Through U nity" Highlights of the sec­ ond annual convention of the United States Hispanic Chamber of Commerce are presented. © i f f FAMILY FEUD © A LAVERNE & SHIRLEY & COMPANY Laverne and Shirley wear stolen dresses to a fancy party. CD © EL DERECHO DE NACER 3$ ( S 'EL TEMPLO SINAI © MONEYLINE © SPORTS FORUM ^ y GREEN ACRES How To Enlarge A Bedroom " 6:05 « 6:30 _ O © TIC TAC DOUGH © 03) t h e MUPPETS Guest Beverly Sills 0 GB f a m i ly f e u d O GD t h e JEFFERSONS a mysterious midnight call causes chaos in the Jefferson household © l® MACNEIL / LEHRER REPORT Fishery» . .i Vrrtl C a \ ” . r-T< 95 * 6 95 S7 95 $2 -25 Luncft p s o t f . E S O tf S TH° Can AW f