s*s e ¿ x i 's w jw a d 9 E tS t xoa O d 3 1 N 3 D U I I J O U D I W E DAIIY TEXAN Vol. 81, No. 166 (U SP S 146-440) S t u d e n t N e w s p a p e r a t T he U n i v e r s i t y o f T e x a s a t A u s t i n Tuesday, June 22, 1982 Twenty-Five Cents snaamc! Jury acquits Hinckley on all counts WASHINGTON (U P I) - A federal jury found John W. Hinckley Jr. innocent by reason of insanity Monday in the shooting attack that nearly killed President Reagan and crip­ pled White House press secretary Jim Brady. Hinckley, whose exploding bullets also cut down a police­ man and a Secret Service agent, was remanded to the custody of U.S. marshals and will be taken within days to St. Eliza­ beth’s mental institution in Washington for an indefinite peri­ od. The 27-year-old defendant clasped his hands, then wiped tears from his eyes with both hands as U.S. District Judge Barrington Parker read the verdict for each of the 13 crim i­ nal counts stemming from the shooting spree outside a Wash­ ington hotel. “ Not guilty by reason of insanity,” the judge repeated, again and again The verdict was a shocking and dramatic end to a 15-month legal battle that cost more than $3 million. The crime itself — witnessed by millions through television replays — was never at issue, only Hinckley’s state of mind. It was the first time in 150 years that a jury has acquitted a presidential assailant on insanity grounds. Hinckley’s com­ plex defense for the eight-week trial cost about $1 million and the jury’s decision is certain to trigger new controversy over the use of the insanity defense. Hinckley’s father, Jack Hinckley, an Evergreen. Colo., oil­ man, put his hand on his head and his mouth dropped open in astonishment. Then the elder Hinckley, a religious man, bowed his head as though to pray. Hinckley’s mother, JoAnn, burst into tears and hugged her husband joyously until a federal marshal moved in to quiet her. Parker said the verdict was reached at 5:20 p.m. CDT, after nearly 25 hours of deliberation. It was announced in court at 6:50 p.m. The jury of 11 blacks and one white, most of them blue- collar or clerical workers, spent four days weighing the evi­ dence before delivering the verdict in the first trial in 80 years of a man charged with shooting an American president. The White House had no immediate comment, nor did the Justice Department or the prosecution team. The jury foreman. 22-year-old Lawrence H. Coffey, was reticent when he returned exhausted to his three-story home, accompanied by a U.S. marshal. “ We made a decision, he said when asked about the delib­ erations. reached. Merryanna Swartz, 31, the only white on the jury, said, “ Sorry, no comment, no comment,” as she arrived home. Ms. Swartz has worked with disturbed teen-agers. Other jurors also offered "no comments” or could not be Hinckley stood and faced the jury as foreman Coffey, a hotel worker who graduated from high school at age 20, passed the envelope containing the verdict to the judge. yp\ TeiePhoto /; l ¿ / ^ i " * . # O r n - £> / r ' e i , ^ O f f A X- fj U', rf. • | .7 7 737- John W. Hinckley This note, written to actress Jody Foster, was used as evidence. Legislators reject ERA in Florida * 1982 The New York Times TA LLA H A SSEE, Fla. - The state senate took a little more than two hours Monday to serve notice that Florida would not ratify the proposed federal equal rights amendment. The amendment, which would forbid discrimination on the basis of sex, will not become part of the Constitution un­ less three more states ratify it in the next nine days. No state has approved it since Indiana did in 1977. r lorida was one of several states where amendment proponents mounted last-minute drives for ratification. As many as 5,000 people, represent­ ing both sides of the issue, crowded into the visitors galleries and hallways Mon­ day to see the proposed amendment de­ feated by a vote of 22 to 16. Hours earli­ er, the amendment squeezed through the Florida House on a vote of 60 to 58. As soon as the Senate vote was taken, crowds of angry supporters began chanting, “ Vote them out,” vowing to defeat lawmakers at the polls in No­ vember. Unusually strict security and crowd control measures had been tak­ en, and no serious incidents occurred. The outcome had been expected, based on repeated polling of legislators. The Senate has never approved the amendment in 10 years of deliberation, although the House approved it three times previously, the last time in 1979. The Legislature had been called into a two-day special session by Gov. Bob Graham, who wanted the lawmakers to reconsider the measure before it ex­ pired June 30. “ I contend that the laws of the state of Florida already provide for equality of all people,” insisted Sen. Dempsey Barron, a Democrat from Panama City. Barron, the most senior member of the conservative Senate, warned that “ those who would support the E R A here today would have us transfer 70 percent of the powers of the state of Florida back to the U.S. Congress. ” State Sen. Alan Trask, a Democrat from Winter Haven, whom a select Sen­ ate committee has accused of violating the state’s financial disclosure law, waited until just after he had cast his vote against the proposed amendment to announce his resignation. “ This amendment would totally re­ move from our hands the authority to control homosexual marriages or adop­ tion or anything else regarding that kind of life style,” said Trask. “ History records that Florida was not one of the states that ratified the 19th Amendment to the U.S. Constitu­ tion giving women the vote,” recalled state Rep. Elaine Gordon, Democrat of Miami, who has for years been the prime sponsor of the proposed amend­ ment in the House. “ Who now can be against lawful protection, against dis­ crimination based on gender?" Thirty-five states have already rati­ fied the proposed amendment, but the Florida action leaves little or no chance that ratification will come in three more states before the time runs out. The proposed equal rights amendment is still pending before the Illinois legis­ lature, which has rejected the measure twice since 1978. Eight women who have been fasting for more than a month sit daily in the capitol rotunda in Springfield. Lawmakers in Oklahoma have said they would reconsider the proposed amendment only if two other states ratified it. Israel breaks cease-fire, shells Beirut By United Press International Israeli artillery pounded Beirut Mon­ day, hitting a hospital and the Soviet Embassy in new fighting that broke the fragile cease-fire in Lebanon and killed at least 20 people. Convoys of Israeli troops were seen moving north toward Beirut, renewing Lebanese fears that forces surrounding the capital might launch an all-out as­ sault on the city where about 6,000 Palestine Liberation Organization guer­ rillas are trapped. Israel, which had observed a tenta­ tive 10-day truce with the PLO and an even longer cease-fire with Syria, shelled both Palestinian and Syrian po­ sitions in an assault that began over­ night. Prime Minister Menachem Begin, meeting with a grim-faced Ronald Rea­ gan in Washington, agreed with the president that Israeli troops must with­ draw from Lebanon “ expeditiously, an administration official said. But Israeli Defense Minister Ariel Sharon said Palestinian guerrillas in Beirut or elsewhere have no “ immuni­ ty” and Israel would continue to fight them “ with full force.” “ The achievement of the objectives of the ‘Peace for Galilee’ campaign has not afforded immunity to the PLO ter­ rorism, its command headquarters and bases wherever they are,” Sharon said. PLO chief Yasser Arafat predicted that Israel was preparing for a “ big battle” in Beirut and rejected any no­ tion of surrender. “ We are saying revo­ lution until victory,” Arafat told ABC News “ Not until death.” He blamed Washington for the con­ flict. “ It is not the Israeli war,” Arafat said. “ It is the American invasion ... The (U.S.) government (has) ... already destroyed all your interest in this area by this stupid, shameful and dirty work.” Israeli gunboats and ground artillery shelled refugee camps and residential neighborhoods as well as Palestinian strongholds in Moslem west Beirut. One shell fell just a few yards from the Commodore Hotel, headquarters for most of the foreign journalists covering the war. Police sources said a shell landed in the garden of the Soviet Embassy com­ pound in west Beirut, slightly injuring two diplomats. The Soviet news agency Tass said the shelling caused material damage to the embassy and said the Israeli govern­ ment bears full responsibility for the “ criminal actions. The Soviets had written to Begin ask­ ing for assurances that their embassy would be safe and the prime minister said Sunday he had guaranteed that the diplomatic headquarters would not be harmed. Israel also shelled Syrian positions to the east of the capital. Israeli forces, which have reportedly destroyed about 300 Syrian tanks in the war, said they had knocked out four more in a sudden exchange of fire. Official Beirut radio reported Israeli artillery attacks on Syrian-controlled the main Beirut- positions near Damascus highway. The Syrian Cabinet met in Damascus to discuss “ the direct American and Is­ raeli military intervention in Lebanon which is threatening the entire region with an all-out war that could begin any moment,” said a government spokes­ man Travelers from the south reported seeing major Israeli troop movements northward, including row after row of orange-red Israeli city buses carrying soldiers in the direction of Beirut. Lebanese politicians, trying franti­ cally to find a way to bring their frac­ tured government under control and save Beirut from ruin, met among themselves, with the PLO and with U.S. born into the royal family has been a boy and Diana’s is the eighth in a row A jubilant crowd of hundreds blocking the sidewalks of the working class Paddington district outside the hospital cheered the birth and celebrated with strawberries and cream sold by street peddlers. Diana's hospitalization Monday was a surprise since it had been expected about July 1 — her 21st birthday. On Sunday, the princess was said to have felt well enough to ignore the orders of the royal gynecologist, George Pinker, not to drive by insisting on chauffeuring her 33-year-old husband the 21 miles from Windsor to London on his return from a public duty in France. Sometime after midnight, she began to get the twinges heralding labor and with Charles at her side, she was driven from their London home in Kensington Palace to St Mary's. There she was taken to a functional 12 foot by 12 foot $227-a-day room, which is standard in the private wing It is decorated in pastel shades and has a picture on the wall and a TV set envoy Philip Habib. Israel said the new attacks were pre­ cipitated by guerrilla and Syrian shell­ It claimed it was abiding by the ing ct e-fire, which provided that Israeli troops would fire back when fired upon. Reagan, Begin confer/p.3 Bell seek?- rate hike from PUC B y JO A N C A R P E R Daily Texan Staff For the sixth time in seven years, Southwestern Bell Telephone Company Monday filed a rate increase request with the state Public Utility Commis­ sion. The 1982 request of $471.5 million, Bell’s highest proposed increase ever, would mean a 13.4 percent increase in statewide revenue for the telephone company. A monthly increase of $4.60 proposed for one-party residential users is neces­ sary because current rates are far be­ low cost, said Paul Roth. Bell vice- president revenue and public affairs. for “ The monthly cost of providing local residential service is about twice the basic monthly rate we receive for the service," Roth said. Increases in local residence rates ac­ count for $213.2 million of the total re­ quest, and increases in business rates account for $90 1 million. Any rate increase approved by the PUC would take effect late this year. PUC hearings on the rate increase are expected to be held the last week of August or the first week of September. Roth said Bell is asking the PUC to authorize a return on company invest­ ment of 13.09 percent. He said current telephone rates yield a 9.27 percent ie turn, below the 11.79 percent authorized by the PUC in 1981 If the rate request is approved. Aus­ tin businesses will pay an additional monthly rate of $6 10. Monthly business rates in smaller towns could go as high as $6.55, while the lowest proposed in­ crease is $1.55 per month in Houston. Roth said that the larger the town is, the lower the rates will be Under the proposal, residential cus­ tomers could pay as much as $95.50 for phoi * installation if they do not pick up a phone at a Bell PhoneCenter, and if they have to have wiring and a phone jack installed Such installation costs $68. Customers who pick up their phones and who do not need wiring or jacks installed will be charged $63 85 under the proposal $20 15 more than they are paying now. Roth said long-distance rates will not be raised under the new plan. “ It (long distance) does provide revenue in ex­ cess of cost," Roth said He said intra- siate rates bring in the largest amount of revenue for the company. Roth said competition in the long dis­ tance market is expected to bring the rate5: closer to the cost of providing ser­ vir and for that reason, it would be inappropriate to raise those rates even more. Long distance revenue now helps offset the company’s loss on below-cost local rates. Bell is also proposing a reduction in the number of free Directory Assist­ ance calls allowed per month from 10 to three Bell will continue to charge 25 cents for each call made in addition to the allotted number of free calls. Roth said because the number of peo­ ple using Directory Assistance service has increased, more funds are needed so more persons can be hired to handle the calls. B eil’s 1981 request for a $469.8 million rate hike was trimmed to $243.7 by the PUC. (otecast hoi and dry The forecast for the Austin area calls for partly cloudy skies Tuesday and Wednesday, with high temperatures both days in the mid- 90s with lows in the low 70s. Winds I ¡e -day will be light and variable from the s< uth and southeast with no chance of rain. National weather, page 10. today's high . tonight's low . . 94 71 . . . Jubilant crowds of well-wishers reach to shake the hand of Prince Charles Monday night outside St. Mary’s Hospital. UPt Telephoto An angry ERA backer yells 'vote them out’ after the Florida Senate rejected the amendment. delight from the royal family and cheers from the populace. The 20-year-old princess, who had hoped for a boy, gave birth to her first child after more than 16 hours of labor at St. M ary’s Hospital The boy weighed 7 pounds, 1V2 ounces and gave a “ lusty” cry upon leaving the womb “ The princess of Wales was today safely delivered of a son at 9:03 p.m. (3:03 p.m. CDT) Her Royal Highness and her son are both doing well. Buckingham Palace announced The palace said the child, the second in line to the British throne after his father, will be given his names — usually four for royal children — later in the week The baby will be known as prince (name) of Wales, not to be confused with his father, the prince of Wales. Prince Charles, leaving the hospital for the first time in more than 16 hours, said he has a couple names in mind for the royal newborn “ We had a bit of an argument about it," he said. “ We’ll think of one eventually I'm sure. Asked if he would have another child, he said. “ Give us a chance I'm sure if you ask my wife about it now she would not be too keen. ” He appealed to reporters to ask the crowd of 600 revelers to be quiet. “ Some sleep is badly needed," he said. “ I was relieved and delighted," he said of the birth “ He has fair hair. I'm sure it will go something else later, won't it.” The prince said becoming a parent is “ rather a grown up thing, 1 ve found. It ’s rather a shock. " A 41-gun salute had been scheduled but at the last moment was postponed until Tuesday. “ It’s rather late," said a royal spokesman, “ and we thought people might not like being awakened by the booming of cannon. Prince Charles, who had prepped for the royal birth by attending pre-natal classes, was the first royal figure to witness the birth of his child. Queen Elizabeth said she was “ delighted ” All members of the royal family were immediately informed of the birth, including Prince Andrew, a helicopter pilot with the British task force off the Falkland Islands Andrew now drops to third in line of succession to the British throne. Since World War II. every first baby Charles witnesses royal baby’s birth; Britons celebrate LONDON (U P I) - Diana, princess of Wales, gave birth to a son Monday with her husband Prince ( harles at her side The future king was greeted with ‘Texan’ editor says TSP board ruling on staff hiring ‘a form of censorship’ By DAVID ELLIOT Daily Texan Staff Texas Student Publications board members Monday stiffened enrollment requirements for The Daily Texan summer staff members and heard a committee report that said an advertise­ ment published in the Texan May 5 was sexist. Under current TSP policy, a person enrolled in residence, or a person accepted for admission or re-admission in the fall may serve on the Texan staff during the summer. However, board members Monday stipulated that only stu­ dents enrolled in class during the summer session or those preregistered for the fall semester may work on the newspa­ per. The board’s executive committee — if it so desires — may grant exceptions if a student is not enrolled in the summer and not preregistered for the fall, but plans to attend the University in the fall. “ The executive committee now has the power to tell us who to hire and who not to hire, which I consider a form of censor­ ship,’’ Lisa Beyer, Texan editor, said. A motion that would have allowed any student to be a staff member in the summer if he or she either: • is enrolled in the summer term, • is preregisted for the fall semester, • is accepted for admittance in the University for the fall semester or • has been a student in the spring semester and plans to be a was tabled after a five-to-five vote. Student members Kelle Banks, Rochelle Blaschke and Steve Rudner voted for the motion, as did faculty members Eli Cox and Isabella Cunningham. Two other students, Stuart Bailey and Dixie Procter, voted against the measure. Associate professor of journalism Warren Burkett argued that the motion would have discriminated against students tak­ ing classes during the summer. “ There are legitimate students working on the Texan being squeezed out by nonstudents,” said Burkett. “ I can think of at least three names of people who passed advanced writing and editing courses but were not hired as general reporters. ” But Maureen Paskin, Texan managing editor, responded, “ Just because someone is a journalism student and has taken all the writing and editing courses doesn’t mean they’re better writers than someone just out of high school. “ The decision (on who to hire) was made on the basis of the quality of their work, whether they were journalism students or non-journalism students, as are all hiring decisions at The Daily Texan ” If approved by UT President Peter Flawn, the motion would become policy in September. Earlier in the sparsely attended meeting, the TSP review committee reported that a computer company’s advertisement depicting a nude woman under a headline that read, “ Take me home ... for processing” was indeed sexist. Two days after the advertisement was published, a petition with 60 signatures was presented to the committee, urging the Texan to stop perpetuating the belief that “ women are merely printouts of nude profiles to be used in a ‘take-home ad and to stop the “ exploitive reduction of women from people to playth- ings.” “ It was a matter of opinion,” Edmonds said Monday night. Edmonds assured the board that every effort would be made to keep similar advertisements out of the Texan. However, no action was taken at Monday’s meeting. “ I’m totally dissatisfied with that,” said Beyer. “ It’s a catch-22 situation. If I find an ad that’s been placed in the Texan that’s sexist, I have to appeal to Edmonds, who has not demonstrated a real sensitivity to complaints about sexist ad­ vertising. If I’m dissatisfied with his ruling, I can appeal to the review board, which has 24 hours to make a decision. By then, the ad has appeared and our readers have been offended. “ It’s established in the TSP Handbook that we will not ac­ cept sexist advertising, yet the advertising department contin­ ues to do just that,” Beyer said. UT receives $3.7 million of computer grant to pay for equipment, research, 5 fellowships By JIMMY McKENNA D aily T exan Staff Computer science research at the University should “ jump forward” thanks to a share in a $12.5 million computer science research grant from the National Science Foundation, the chairman of the UT Department of Computer Science said Monday. The NSF will provide UT’s Department of Computer Science with $3,721,366 over the next five years to be used for experi­ mental research and development in areas of computer sci­ ence. Alfred G. Dale, UT professor of computer science, said he believes the University was chosen because of “ a recognition of the tremendous research strength we have, the perception of the NSF that the UT administration is prepared to put a high priority on computer science research and the recognition of the fact that we have a very good graduate and Ph.D. program. “ There has been an increasing need in the past for more money, and this grant will give us a jump forward in computer science research,’’ Dale said. Shalring in the grant will be the University of California at Los Angeles, receiving $3,672,892; Brown University, receiving $2,771,308; and Rice University, receiving $2,341,727. There was a deep concern in the NSF that the money be given to institutions where there will be an increased number of graduate students, Dale said. “ The money will be used to purchase equipment, to set up some staff positions for the professional research facility we’re going to put together, for the maintenance of the research equipment and to support five graduate fellowships a year for the next five years,” Dale said. On the national level, the number of people receiving docto­ ral degrees in computer science has been declining over the last several years and there aren’t enough graduates to fill the jobs available, he said. “ The grants will stimulate research and graduate student activity in leading computer science departments to change this (decrease in computer science graduate students),” Dale said. The five fellowships per year for the next five years will extensively help in the recruiting of the best graduate students in computer science, he said. EGG ROLL STAND Chinese Restaurant 2717 Guadalupe 478-0354 NOW OPEN TIL 10:30 p.m. OPEN 11 am -9pm daily Tuesday, June 22 9 :0 0 p m -1 0 :3 0 pm All Chicken and Pork entrees Buy one-get one FREE! Wednesday, June 23 9 :0 0 p m -1 0 :3 0 pm All Chicken, Pork and Beef entrees Buy one-get one FREE! Thursday, Jung 24 9 :0 0 p m -1 0 :3 0 pm All Chicken, Pork, Beef and Shrimp entrees Buy one-get one FREE! □I S O M M E R S AGREE Shampoo or Conditioner DR. SHOLLS Exercise Sandals D U e o u n t D u n g S f o f c e J 16 ox. 1 . 9 9 1 4 . 8 8 4 ox. oil or lotion 2 . 9 9 DIAL SOAP Bath Six# 3 / $ l . 0 0 4 ox. oil or lotion 2 . 9 9 "SVgi C I*- ,7 Hi PM 6 pk. 12 oz. can* 1 . 4 9 2 litar bottle 9 7 c Vi ox. Crystalline or Regular 1 . 3 9 2322 GUADALUPE 2 0 0 Shoot Filler Paper 9 9 < 477-6113 Price* Good Thru Sat. 6-24 ON-THE-DRAG Page 2 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Tuesday, June 22, 1982 q V A N /-. High Q uality plants, pottery and accessories w ith low prices. Free information on plant care. • - t R T Expires Aug. 14, 1 9 8 2 20% off a n y p la n t p u rc h a s e mm w ith th is coup on B «1 LOWER LEVEL DOBIE MALL 2021 GUADALUPE OPEN 10 am -9 pm Mon.-Sat. 4 7 4 -7 7 1 9 I I I I I Offer not good during other in-store specials. E M M 2801 Guadalupe Free Coffee with any broakfast purchaf of $1.00 or moro Mon.-Fri. only 5a m -1 lam The E&uy Texan P E R M A N E N T S T A F F Edito r M anaging E d ito r A ssistan t M anaging E d ito rs M aaree a P i skin Vondracek, Dong M cLeod D avid T eece A ssistan t E d ito r N ew s E d ito r A sso ciate N ew s E d ito r.......................D avid Woodruff . N ew s A ssign m en ts Edito r L is * B eyer . G eorge Entertainm ent F^iitor F e a tu re » Edito r Spo rts E d ito r Mike Z im m erm an D avid M cN abb Ckri» Jord an P a m ela M rA lpia M ark S tn ti A sso ciate Im a ge s E d ito r ........................ Tim D i e a r y Konnle Goins M artin T o rres G raph ics Edito r Lynn A sso ciate G raph ics Editor Im ages E d ito r. . . G en eral R ep o rters. E a sle y . Jim Hankins, Ju iie Clint, F ran k Ja n a a z i, Jim m y M cK enna . IS S U E S T A F F N ew sw riters Jo a n C arp e r. D avid Elliot, Ju lie Vowell, H e c t o r Cantu, L isa Van D riel G raph ic A ssistan t Ed ito rial A ssista n t En tertain m en t A ssistan t Mike M cAbee Wire E d ito r Copy E d ito rs Sp o rts A ssista n ts J e ff Edw ardson, R obert Smith M ark M em s C h arles B estor C asey Dobson, Helen Huime, Liz P atterso n Susan Allen C am p A ssista n t S p o rts Edito r P h otograph er R ay Y doyaga Jim m y C lem ett T E X A N A D V E R T ISIN G S T A F F Tom K ielefeldt, ( a lise Burchett. L au ra D ickerson , Cindy F iler D ebbie F le tch er Ken G rays. Cheryl L uedecke, Carolyn Mangold, Henii R einberg, J a y Zorn Breakfast Specials 3 B re akfast Tacos Servid with haah brown potatoee 2 eggs, hash browns Ioaat or bUctdte. gravy Above breaX/ast with earnmage or baron $ 2 . 4 0 W $ 2 . 2 5 _ _ T 5 2 . 5U ~ The D aily Texan, a student new spaper a t The U niversity of T e x a s at Austin, is published by T e x a s Student P ublications, D raw er D, U niversity Station, Austin, TX 78712 7209 The D aily Texan is published M onday, T u esday, W ednesday, Thursday and F rid a y ex cep t holiday and ex am periods Second c la s s po stage paid at Austin, TX 78710 . . , N ew s contributions will be accep ted by telephone (471-4591), a t the ed itorial office (T e x a s Student Pub lication * Building 2 122) or at the new s lab oratory (Com m um ca lion Building A4 136) Inquiries concerning delivery and c lassified ad v ertisin g should be m ade in T S P Building 3 200 ( 471-52441 The national a dv ertisin g re p resen tative of The D aily Texan is Com m unications and A dvertising S e rv ice s to Students, 1633 West C entral Stre et, Evanston, Illinois 60201 student in the fall semester Happy Hour 11 am-7 pm Mon.-Fri. 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C ity Z ip S p o n s o r w h e r e r e g is t e r i n g FUTURE TRENDS presents T im o th y L e a ry "TURNED ON" Spend the weekend with Timothy Leary June 26-27 Workshop Fee - *90 'Tax deductible donation Learn H ow To: • Prepare for Space M ig ra tio n • Increase Intelligence • Extend your Life Span Meet Timothy Leary at GROK BOOKS Friday, June 25 5-7 p.m. A uth or w ill au to g r a p h his n o w book C h a n g in g M y M i n d , A m o n g Others Ticket* a t GROK BOOKS 5 0 3 W . 17th Auatin, TX 78 701 4 7 6 -0 1 1 6 (Futuretrends i* a non-profit tax oxom pt corporation - a Grok B ook/N ova Com m unication* Life Enhancing Project) p ig g i iH H l FREE SHOW 1811 Guadalupe, Austin, Texas 476-0631 What a deal! A great Pizza Hut® meal plus free entertainment. Join us! TUESDAY JUNE 22 Live Entertainment “ PAT MEARS” 7:30pm-10:00pm WEDNESDAY JUNE 23 Movie “ URBAN COWBOY” 7pm and 9pm ALL SWIM SUITS SUGGESTED RETAIL $24.00-856.00 NOW S9.00-S27.75 T-TOPS AND S H O R TS ^ ^ $3.00-$4.00 SUQ. RETAIL $8.00-S12.00 BLOUSES $6.00-$17.25 SUG. RETAIL $14.00-S44. PANTS AND SKIRTS $7.00-$17.60| SUG. RETAIL $20.00-$39.00 MOPAC AT ANDERSON 454-5156 THURS. T IL L 8:00 26TH AT G U A D A LU PE 472-0928 M A STERC AR D AND VISA W E LC O M E D f world & nation 3/ TH E D A ILY TE X A N Tuesday, June 22, 1982 Thousands demonstrate at nuclear facility ¡m w:. in tw# F ro m T e x a n n e w s se rvices Salvador denies rebel capture of defense official SAN SALVADOR, E l Salvador - Of- fic ials Monday denied that rebels cap­ tured E l Salvador’s deputy defense min­ ister and the Red Cross offered to recov er the body of an arm y colonel killed in an ongoing m ilitary drive. The Red Cross said it was prepared to aid in recovering the corpses of Col. Salvador B eltran and the bodyguard of Deputy D efense M inister Adolfo Castillo, re­ ported killed Thursday when their heli­ copter crashed in the a rm y ’s biggest of­ fensive of the three year civil war. G u errillas occupying northern Morazan province near the site of the crash claim ed they shot down the helicopter and have offered to turn over the bodies to the Red Cross. Governm ent o fficials in M orazan denied Castillo had been captured and said the guerrillas were using his disappearance as part of their propaganda cam paign to dem oralize governm ent troops. Mercenaries admit guilt VICTO RIA, Seychelles - Four for­ eign m ercen aries pleaded guilty to charges of high treason Monday and fa ce a possible death sentence in an a t­ tem pt to overthrow the Sey ch elles’ So­ cialist goverm ent Another m ercenary pleaded not guilty to two counts of tre a ­ son. A sixth m e rce n ary ’s guilty plea was refused by the court. The four men fa ce a possible death sentence. The six originally w ere charged with treason and illegal im portation of arm s into the Seychelles, a tiny group of coral islands 1,300 m iles off the east A frican coast. More IRA weapons arrests the into NEW Y O R K F ou r men, including two brothers, were arrested Monday on charges stem m ing from undercover in­ vestigations smuggling of weapons to the Irish Republican Army, authorities said The F B I said the two brothers w ere linked to the sam e gun running case in which three men, in­ cluding a New YTork City priest, were arrested in Ireland last week by police acting on a tip from U.S. o fficials. The other two men w ere arrested a fte r they attem pted to buy Soviet- and A m erican- m ade autom atic weapons and surface- to-air m issiles from undercover agents, the F B I said, Supply-sider resigns WASHINGTON - Another prominent “ supply sid e r" within the ad m inistra­ tion, Norman B . Turo, Treasury under secre ta ry for tax and econom ic a ffairs, is leaving. Ture, with form er assistant s ecreta ry Paul Craig R oberts, formed the co re of “ supply-side” ideology with­ in the adm inistration. R oberts left the adm inistration Ja n 18. Ture denied he was being forced out or that he has a basic strong conflict with another Treasury personality. U ndersecretary for M onetary A ffairs Beryl Sprinkel. General sworn in WASHINGTON P resid ent Reagan John Monday welcomed Army Gen. V essey J r . , “ a sold ier’s so ld ier," as the nation's 10th chairm an of the Jo in t Chiefs of Sta ff and com manded him to “ keep us strong, keep us ready so we Following R e a ­ m ay kix sessions Monday in m oderately active trading. But utilities issues cam e under a ttack when the Su­ prem e Court agreed to decide whether states can ban construction of nuclear reacto rs until a radioactive w aste dis­ posal plan *s developed, ihe Dow Jones lost 2.86 industf ial average, which points Friday and 21 12 overall last week to a two-year low, managed to gain 1 33 points to 789.95 a fte r being ahead 5 points at midday. L IV E R M O R E , Calif. (U P I) - Four thousand anti-nuclear p ro testers block­ aded the nation's larg est nuclear weap­ ons research facility Monday before riot-equipped police arrested 1,300 of them. Som e w orkers at the Law rence L iv er­ m ore L aboratory were delayed for hours by p ro testers before finally gain­ ing a c c e ss to the plant. It was the big­ gest m ass a rre st ever in Alameda Coun­ ty. which encom passes the U niversity of C alifornia at B erkeley, site of many violent anti-w ar protests late 1960s and early ’70s. in the Daniel E llsb erg , who released the Pentagon P ap ers in 1971 which fanned the anti-V ietnam war fervor, was a r ­ rested on m isdem eanor charges of ob­ structing a roadway at the 640-acre fa ­ cility 45 m iles e ast of San F ran cisco. E llsb erg e a rlie r told reporters he hoped to be arrested so he could ch al­ lenge the nation’s nu clear weapons poli­ cy in the courts. P olice led, carried and dragged the p ro testers to buses for transportation to a nearby ja il. Among those arrested w ere a m inister, his wife and five ch il­ dren; a 77-year-old protester from San­ ta Cruz and a prom inent physicist. The dem onstration began ju st before dawn and dwindled as the day wore on. About 90 percent of the lab 's 6,000 em ployees reported for work, but about half w ere delayed about two hours. “ We have stopped the arm s ra ce h e re ,” said E llsb erg before being taken away with 100 others who had stopped four busloads of em ployees near the plant. “ Without L aw rence, the neutron bomb would not have been developed. The neutron bomb is a first strik e weap­ on. Producing a first strik e nuclear weapon invites attack — it is a lightning rod for foreign attack . E llsb erg said. from various jurisdictions made arre sts and patrolled laboratory fences. Two California Highway P atrol helicopters kept tabs of the moving groups of p rotesters a t the four main entrance gates in secu rity action co st­ ing nearly $1 million a day. P olice Rev. Cecil W illiam s, an a ctiv ist m in­ ister from San F ran cisco , arrived with 100 poor people from the c ity ’s tender­ loin d istrict who brought along and gave out free food. U niversity of C alifornia physicist Charles Schw artz, an expert on first- strike nuclear weapons, was one of those arrested. He said scien tists at the labs w eren’t ju st following production and design orders from the Pentagon “ The labs a re very active and e ffe c­ tive in promoting new ideas, lobbying new ideas and sabotaging arm s control e ffo rts .” Schw artz said. The protest caused a m assive tra ffic jam around the lab g ates and many em ­ ployees waited for hours before they could enter the facility . Some w orkers walked or hiked to their jo bs, but many turned and left to the ch eers of the dem ­ onstrators. Police take away some of the 1,300 protesters arrested U P I T e le p h o to Reagan meets Begin, wants troops out quickly - (U P I) WASHINGTON In blunt talks Monday with P rim e M inister Me- nachem Begin, P resid ent R eagan called for a quick Israeli withdrawal from Lebanon and said the United S ta te s is “ not en th u siastic” about com m itting a peace-keeping the w ar-torn Middle E a st. force to the In 50 m inutes of one-on-one talks and two m ore hours of discussions in the com pany of aides, leaders hashed out the problem s besetting the volatile region and concluded that som e kind of border buffer zone m ust be c r e ­ ated to ensure the secu rity of Jew ish settlem en ts in northern Israel two Following his talks with R eagan. B e ­ gin pleaded with m em bers of Congress not to oppose use of U.S. fo rces to help keep the peace in the Middle E a s t. He said the P alestin e Liberation O rganiza­ tion is being supplied by an internation­ al conspiracy of com m unist nations. But hours e arlie r. Begin was told by the president that the United States finds m ore m erit in standing by an ex ­ isting 7,000-man U.N. Interim F o rce in Lebanon than in com m itting U.S. troops to the area. An A m erican official who briefed re ­ porters with an understanding his iden­ tity not be revealed said the Israeli a t­ tack on PLO strongholds in southern Lebanon was forem ost on the agenda between Reagan and Begin. “ I would d escribe the talks in general as frank, bordering a t tim es on direct and even blunt, extensive and detailed as far as the Lebanon consideration is concerned ,” the o fficia l said. R eagan expressed ‘ deep concern that the hostilities in Lebanon be term i­ nated at the ea rlie st possible date, that “the withdrawal of Isra eli fo rces would be accom plished expeditiously and that above all in an urgent sense, that hu­ involved, m anitarian actions be taken im m edi­ ately to provide for the w elfare of non- com batants as co m b atan ts,” he said. c a lle d t a lk s “ worthw hile” ; Begin used the term “ very fru itfu l.” as well R e a g a n th e As he did in his m eeting with R eagan, the Israeli prim e m inister took issue with descriptions of the Israeli offen­ sive as an “ invasion . ” “ Israel did not invade any cou ntry,” he said. He said he expects Israel to withdraw from Lebanon as soon as possible, and he said “ as soon as p ossible" m eans: “ As soon as arrangem ents a re made that never again will our citizens — men, women and children — be a t­ tacked, maimed and killed by arm ed bandits operating from Lebanon and arm ed and supported by the Soviet Un­ ion and its s a te llite s ." On the overall question of the stalled Camp David peace process, the A m eri­ can official said R eagan made it c le a r he looks forward to a “ new degree of energy and em phasis on the road to peace. And he said the president suggested a “ com plete exam ination of the possibili­ ties of broadening this process to in­ clude other p o w ers." But the official did not elaborate on that point. With Reagan citing the argum ents made to him by m oderate Arab state s, Begin defended his decision to a ttack P a le s tin e L ib era tio n O rganization strongholds and said the offensive went farther than planned because of the in­ volvem ent of Syrian forces. He said the discussion “reflected a degree of sim ilarity between Israel and the United S ta te s " on the ob jectives in Lebanon, including agreem ent by Isra e l “ that it would and must withdraw from Lebanon.” It was also agreed that a buffer zone was necessary, but that it not fall under Israeli control or occupation, but under “ some kind of peace-keeping fo r c e ,” the official said. R eag an 's com m ents generally were confined to a restatem ent of U.S. poli­ cy. “ All of us share a common under­ standing of the need to bring peace and security to the M'ddle E a s t ." he said. “ I t ’s c le a r ." he said, “that we and Israel both seek an end to the violence and a sovereign independent Lebanon under the authority of a strong cen tral governm ent “ We ag re e that Israel must not be subjected to violence from the n orth ." Reagan said “ The United States will continue to work to achieve these goals and to sec ure the withdrawal of all for­ eign fo rces from Lebanon Gromyko reprimands Haig U N ITE D NATIONS (U P I) - Soviet Foreign M inister Andrei Gromyko se­ verely rebuked S e creta ry of S tate Alex­ ander Haig Monday the Am erican people a “lop-sided" account of recen t Soviet testing of stra te g ic weapons for giving a Giving ra re news conference abroad, Gromyko chided w estern na­ tions for “ attem pts to b e little " the So­ viet pledge made in the United Nations last week never to be the first to use nuclear weapons. “ The (Soviet) decision will one day be w ritten with golden letters in human h istory ,” he said. The Soviet official accused the R e a ­ gan adm inistration of destroying the few links that have been established be­ tween the two countries over the years. “ The present adm inistration is being very successful in destroying the bridg­ es built between u s ," Grom yko said. “ If it sees a little bridge still standing, it have never been banned,” the Soviet leader said. “They a re carried out by both the United State s and ourselves and they will go on being carried out as long as there is no agreem ent to ban th em .” Gromyko said H aig's statem ent over the weekend was an attem pt to ca st doubt on the Soviet pledge never to use nuclear weapons first that Gromyko m ade on P resid ent Leonid Brezhnev s behalf in the G eneral Assembly special disarm am ent session last week. The Soviets hoped the United States consider M oscow's would pledge and follow suit. Gromyko said. seriously “ We should hope that when it has a chance to study the Soviet obligation in a balanced, cool and level-headed m an­ ner, the U.S. adm inistration will take a more rea listic view ,” he said. If the other nuclear powers were to follow the Soviet exam ple the nuclear threat would be elim inated news in photos Soviet hunger striker, wife reunited Andrei Gromyko U P I T e le p h o to throws a bomb at it, he said. Gromyko said H aig’s statem ent that the Krem lin conducted an “ unprece­ dented” series of tests was “ lop-sided ’ “ There was nothing whatsoever un- precented about the tests. “These tests w ere of system s that CHICAGO (U P I ) - A n drei and L ois B e c k ­ e r F ro lo v a r e reunited in C h icag o. The F r o ­ lovs, who s ta g e d a 26-d ay hunger strik e , w ere reunited Sunday a f te r Soviet o fficials allow ed F ro lo v to le av e th e co u n try . M rs. F ro lo v , 29, a d o cto ra l can d id ate in R u ssian h istory, m et her husband when she went to the S o viet Union in the fall of 1980. The coup le m a rrie d quietly on M ay 19, 1981. H er v isa exp ired and she left the coun try Ju n e 18. T he F ro lo v s hailed a s “ f a n ta s tic ” new s that th e ir frien d. Y u ri B alovlenk ov, won p e r­ m ission M onday to leav e R u ssia. B alov len k ov, 33, w hose A m erica n wife and d a u g h ter live in B a ltim o re , w as seriously ill in the 43rd day of a hu nger strik e when he ob tain ed the p ro m ise of an e x it v isa from Soviet officials. U PI T e le p h o to Explosion in Paris An Iran ian stud ent is given firs t aid a f te r the bom b he w as c a rr y in g exploded . In v e s tig a ­ to rs say the stud ent w as th e v ictim of a plot. U PI T elep h o to Argentina’s military splits over presidency By U nited P ress In tern atio n al Argentina’s ruling junta, haunted by a humiliating defeat in the Falkland Is ­ lands a week ago, struggled within its own ranks Monday to choose a presi­ dent capable of presiding over the worst national crisis in six years of m ilitary rule. The manuverings to pick a successor to Gen. Leopoldo G altieri, whose short­ lived presidency ended four days a fte r Argentina’s Falklands surrender Ju n e 14, stretched into their third day despite the ju n ta’s original plan to announce a new president by Sunday night. P o litical in-fighting between Argenti­ na’s traditionally m ore powerful Army and the Air F o rce, the only service to leave the Falklands with its image en­ hanced, has the presidential selection process. M ilitary sources, however, said the junta has a l­ ready agreed to turn over power to c i­ vilians by 1984. reportedly clogged But a m ilitary spokesman said the Air F o rce could pull out of the m ilitary government if the Army insists on ap­ pointing a general, not a civilian, as in­ terim president. As late as Sunday evening, Argentine Air F orce Com m ander Basilio Lam i Dozo, a leading presidential contender, characterized A rgentina’s defeat on the Falklands as “ only a b attle” in a broad­ er war for the islands that Argentina will never abandon The surrender Sunday of 10 Argentine scientists manning a Navy research cen ter on the island of Thule, a F a lk ­ lands dependency, was “ another epi­ sode” in A rgentina’s war with B ritain, Lam i Dozo said. The sam e B ritish Royal Marines who nearly two months ago reclaim ed South Georgia Island, another Falklands de­ pendency. swooped in on the tiny ice- island Saturday, forcing the covered scientists the early hours of the next day. to surrender in B r i t a i n ’s M in istry of D efen se claim ed the scien tists were illegally on Thule, part of the South Sandwich Is­ lands ju st north of A ntartica, since 1976 Argentina said the unarmed scientists were there in accord with an agreem ent it signed with B ritain in 1977 “ The nut has been cracked without use of a sled geham m er,” the 50 B ritish m arines radioed their com m anders af­ ter the scientists surrendered peaceful­ ly Mrs. Thatch er told P arliam en t a week ago th^ A rgertines would be re ­ moved from Thule, the last Falklands dependency occupied by Argentina. In Luxem bourg, the European Com­ mon M arket form alized its decision to end its two-month ban on Argentine im ­ ports as of Tuesday, but threatened new trade sanctions fighting over the Falkland Islands erupts again. if Britain unsuccessfully pleaded for sanctions to continue until Argentina form ally d eclares an end to all hostili­ ties, which the ruling junta has been loath to do. A ban on arm sales to Argentina, decreed by some Common M arket na­ tions at the sam e tim e as the econom ic sanctions, was m aintained pending an official Argentine declaration that the w ar for the Falklands is over. Britain dec ided on its ow7n to m ain­ tain certain national econom ic m ea­ sures against Argentina “ for the tim e being.” an E E C statem ent said. In London. Thatcher, whose own pop­ ularity is at an all time high in the wake of the B ritish victory, wrote leaders of the Labor L iberal and Social Demo­ cra tic opposition parties announcing she will set up a top-level inquiry into the background of the F alklands con­ flict. Government officials said she indi­ cated its m em bers would all be privy councillors — senior politicians pledged to total confidentiality and that m ost of its sessions would be held in s e cre t. Mrs. Thatcher, who speaks to the U.N disarm am ent session in New Y ork Wednesday, held yet another m eeting of her war Cabinet to study la te st rep orts on this weekend s repatriation of Ar­ gentine prisoners and the retaking of Thule. She intends to brief P resid en t R eagan on the Falkland situation and the future the archipelago when she v isits of Washington Wednesday. Page 4 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Tuesday, June 22, 1982 Opinions expressed in The Dally Texan are those of the editor or the writer of the article an d are not n e c e s sa rily those of the U niv e rsity administration, the Board of Regents or the Texas Student Publications Board of O p e ra tin g T ru ste e s v ie w p o in t_____________ —— mmmm—mmm— f ——— ^ — fSSSBSiSSBSS5SS"Ml1 No method to this madness We do not live in a sane world. On the international f r o n t ... Despite a cease-fire with Lebanon and continued promises that they would not attack Beirut, Israeli forces bombarded the city Monday. They attacked a hospital killing six civilians, including three children. They shelled refugee camps and residential neighbor­ hoods. One shell landed in the garden of the Soviet Em­ bassy, despite assurances from Prime Minister Begin that the embassy would not be harmed. With actions such as these, the Israelis are making Yasser Arafat, who has aptly called the war “ stupid, shameful and dirty,” look like the good guy. On the national s c e n e ... The Equal Rights Amendment died Monday. The amendment was shot down in the Florida Senate, leav­ ing it three states shy of approval. The ERA was sup­ ported, according to a Harris poll, by 63 percent of the American people, yet it died because of nine legislative votes. John Hinckley was found innocent by reason of insan­ ity Monday of 13 charges associated with his March 30 attem pt to kill President Reagan. Clearly, anyone who trie s to win the affection of Jodie Foster by plowing down the president (along with his press secretary and two cops) with a .22 is insane. But that doesn’t neces­ sarily make him innocent. Monday night Hinckley was “remanded” to St. Elizabeth’s mental hospital in Washington. If his lawyers are able to demonstrate that he is no longer dangerous to himself or society, Hinck­ ley will be a free man. And who knows? Maybe he isn’t a danger anymore. Hinckley got what he wanted with- out actually killing Reagan; he’s said he has linked himself and Foster “in history forever.” A n d closer to h o m e ... The Texas Student Publications Board voted Monday night to adopt a definition of who is and is not a student that is more restrictive than the University’s. Previ­ ously, TSP has accepted UT’s ruling that a student is a person enrolled at the University or accepted for ad­ mission. This policy has allowed those of us who run TSP’s publications to hire staffers during the summer session who chose not to preregister for the fall or en-’ roll in summer school, as long as they intended to be enrolled in the fall. Because a good many of our talent­ ed people leave town for the summer on internships, or to make some real money, this policy has allowed us to continue producing quality publications during the sum­ mer. But the new policy requires that to work in the sum­ mer, students must either be enrolled or preregistered for the fall. The board will allow its Executive Commit­ tee (composed of three faculty members and two stu­ dent members) to make exceptions to this rule on a case-by-case basis, but essentially that amounts to the committee telling us who we can and cannot hire. The committee already has that power, to the extent that it must approve all staff appointments, but its ability to meddle with the internal workings of the publications is unjustifiably multiplied with this new policy. And it is at that point that T h e Dai ly T e x a n ceases to be a s t u d e n t publication. Lis a B e y e r firing line That’s just Clements Like Lisa Beyer and Amy Mashberg, I also watched Gov. Bill Clem ents’ tele­ vision interview covering the recent Su­ preme Court ruling in which the Texas school tuition law was overturned, but unlike them I failed to detect any “ ra c ­ ist undertone” (whatever that is) to his comments. He seemed to me to be sta t­ ing his position on a current issue in his usual, non-racist way (you really need to let loose of that business about Bill’s “ tone” — he always sounds that way). Whether one agreed with Gov. Clem­ ents or not, he at least appeared to be fam iliar with the salient details of the case. Not so Beyer and Mashberg. The Texas tuition requirem ent was imposed not on the “ children of illegal im m i­ gran ts” but upon illegal aliens — i.e., those foreign-born children of non-citi­ zens who have not acheived lawful resi­ dent status — quite a difference. Re­ gardless of parentage, anyone born in the United States has citizenship here. See U.S Constitution, Amendment XIV, Section I. If our editorial w riters would stay away from half-baked innuendo and stick to topics within the ambit of their competency — such as the mounting suspense over ratification of the ERA — we might all be the better for it. D a v i d S h a w U T L a w ’67 Headline a black hola Occasionally, journalistic license is abused so badly that it needs to be ealled down. The headline on page 16 of the June 18 T e x a n read, “ NASA de­ tects body beyond solar system .” Not true. Had anyone read the story, he/she would have discovered that it was only a NASA public relations flak job about how they just m ig h t possibly someday detect such an object, if it exists and if t h e i r spacecraft are not turned off. Such a body probably exists, but the dis- cusssion about dark stars and black holes was PR nonsense, and your head­ line w riter merely compounded the problem. The story was handled much m ore rationally on the front page of the A m e r i c a n - S ta te s m a n . J D e r r a l M u lh o lla n d A s t r o n o m y Wrath of reader Concerning the review of “ Star Trek. The W rath of K han,” I ’m sure you shall receive innum erable complaints from Trekkies of all sorts, but I ’m not one of them. My com plaint with the review is Brian D unbar’s lack of any critical abil­ ities. He seem s to delight in slamming everyone associated with the film, and yet tells us virtually nothing about how these people did their jobs on this piece. It’s a danger for film critics to go to a film with preconceived notions about it, even though this is what many re­ viewers actually do. But what, precise­ ly, was Dunbar expecting of this work? If he must have expectations about it, his job requires him to explain how the film lived up to or fell short of these expectations. A final point: any film that succeeds in delighting most of its audience has done at least one thing right, and it behooves the reviewer to determine what that thing is. Brian Dunbar failed miserably on this film. Sarah Beach M.A in English Israel article biaaad Matthew Sorenson’s prediction (“Is­ rael’s vicious circle of violence, (June 17) that Israel will have settlements in Lebanon within six months is totally un­ Q: WH3T do m e Granp canyon arip jeane wrKPanricK Have in common ? founded. Israel has invaded Lebanon in order to insure the safety of her citizen­ ry before and did not settle any territo ­ ry then. Israel has repeatedly stated that she has no territo rial designs on Lebanon, and there is no substantial ev­ idence that this is not true. The evi­ dence offered by Sorenson is not proof of anything except Sorenson’s personal bias against Israel and his willingness to replace fact with speculation, conjec­ ture and outright falsities. Israel may have overstepped the boundaries of justification in this most recent invasion of Lebanon; however, the reasons for it may include the chance Israel saw to rid itself and the Lebanese Christian population of the PLO th reat for good. Everything I ’ve read in the news lately suggests that this is the case. Sorenson has the audacity to liken the plight of the PLO to that of the civilian populations of Afghanistan and El Sal­ vador. He needs to be reminded that the PLO a re the sam e folks who executed the M a’alot and Munich m assacres of unarm ed children and Olympic ath­ letes. I contend that Sorenson is misin­ formed in M ideast affairs and that his views on this issue are both myopic and irresponsible. P a u l A r o n o w i t z G o v e r n m e n t Dooley doing homework After reading Mark Dooley’s excel­ lent report on the career of Secretary of State Alexander Haig Jr. (June 15), I was surprised to see such sharp pro­ tests by Jim Smith and Wayne Weber on June 17. Mr. Dooley has obviously done his homework, and M isters Smith and Weber have not. Mr. Haig was sold to the American public as a m ilitary man, yet his mili­ tary record, as Mr. Dooley suggested, is a questionable one. Haig did serve on Gen. M acA rthur’s staff in Japan after World War II. But what Mr. Dooley did not say is that Haig, because of his low class rank a t West Point, was not quali­ fied to serve under such a high com­ mand but was apparently assigned to M acArthur through bureaucratic error. Haig won a medal in Korea for running through enemy fire to blow up a tile bathtub he i'M constructed for a superi­ or. In Vietnam he helicoptered VIPs around. Later, at the National Security Council, Haig would run K issinger’s staff and continue his messenger boy work by driving Kissinger around Washington and showing K issinger how to w ear formal clothes. Haig’s service in the Nixon White House is significant for two reasons. First, Haig first made his m ark there, after years a t the Pentagon, serving as Henry K issinger’s deputy, where he leapfrogged over 400 men to rise from a m ere colonel to a four-star general. This is significant because it shows Haig did not win his stars commanding troops but rather helping to minimize W atergate dam age to President Nixon and Kissinger. Second, H aig’s service as White House chief of staff after H.R. H aldem an’s firing is coming increas­ ingly under probe, most recently by Seymour Hersh in A tla n tic M onthly, and could possibly bring H aig’s resigna­ tion before the end of R eagan’s first term . In short, the questions regarding H aig’s involvement in W atergate have not been answered. Haig was appointed NATO command­ er by President Ford, and in Europe Haig was most noted for ridiculing his com m ander in chief in Washington to foreign leaders, and leaking that ridi­ cule to anybody with a notebook. Mr. Haig’s disagreem ent with U.N. Amabassador Jeanne K irkpatrick is im­ portant because it shows that the man who is supposed to be our leading diplo­ m at can’t even bear to speak to the per­ son who answers for American policy before the world body. Furtherm ore, Haig could not get along with the previ­ ous national security adviser, Richard Allen, and has never gotten along with R eagan’s inner circle of Ed Meese and Jim Baker. Haig only gets along with the president. Mr. Smith asserts that Haig has earned the respect of Congress, the press and the American public. I ha­ ven’t seen any polls regarding these claim s recently, but I am doubtful. Since Haig lost his head during the attem pted assassination of President Reagan, I have been reading mostly contem pt for Haig in the press. It is my impression that congressional com m it­ tees which Mr. Haig addressses have been exasperated by his double talk. As for the general public, I never thought it paid too much attention to secretaries of state. Recently we have seen Mr. Haig’s a t­ tem pt a t diplomacy in the Falklands war. Nothing before and nothing then has led me to believe Mr. Haig is quali­ fied to conduct the foreign policy of the most powerful republic on the globe. H a n s e n A l e x a n d e r H is to r y 6 22. * o QUICK, REAP ME THAT SUPREME COURT RULING ABOUT ALIENS ATTENDING PUBLIC SCHOOLS,,, Nations forgetting pits of war * 1982 The New York Tim es WASHINGTON — Wars are over in a hurry these days, with all flags flying, not for long at half-staff. Governments make war but soon forget the people who have to fight them. We must think of the living and not the dead, they say, which is a good idea but a little late. “ In a patch of open land in the battle- scarred center of Sidon,” my colleague Eric Pace wrote from Lebanon, “ a dusty bulldozer was spreading dirt over the bodies of civilians in a pit 60-yards long. 10-yards to 15-yards wide and up to 15-feet deep. “ The Israeli civil affairs adm inistra­ tor for Sidon, Maj. Arnon Mozer, esti­ mated that the Lebanese civilian death toll in Sidon was 400 a t most. He indi­ cated that the plan was to bury them in the p it.” The Lebanese police, still digging through the rubble, put their dead at 9,583 and counting; their wounded at 16,600, and their homeless at 60,000, or was it 600,000 — they w eren’t quite sure. In the Falklands, the British estim at­ ed their dead at 243, with 333 wounded, and the Argentines at 700 dead, 342 missing and 106 wounded But the B rit­ ish added that their 15,000 Argentine prisoners were in “a sorry s ta te ” — many of them seriously ill with malnu­ trition, dysentery, frostbite and scabies — but that the Argentine government wouldn’t agree to end all m ilitary oper­ ations until the British pulled out and abandoned their victory. Meanwhile, the leaders of the world were gathered at the United Nations in New York proclaiming their devotion to peace — the Argentinians and the Is­ raelis justifying w ar in the name of self-defense, but saying very little from the podium about the bodies in the pit. One watches all this with sickening anxiety: so much longing for peace all Ija m e s r e s t o n the new york times over the world but so much official hy­ pocrisy. Arab leaders crying for the peace they have denied to the State of Israel. Menachem Begin, the old te rro r­ ist, denouncing terror, and demanding not “ an eye for an ey e,” but hundreds of lives for an eye. The Argentines ap­ pealing in their confusion to the United Nations, whose principles they defied and even mocked by their invasion of the Falklands. But we must rush on to other ques­ tions, we are told, even before the dead a re buried. Will Ronald Reagan m eet Begin in the White House, or like two- thirds of the delegations at the United Nations, not even have the decency to listen to him? What will happen in Argentina now that G altieri has been ousted? What is the political future of Begin now that Ariel Sharon has dem onstrated that he has the courage of his prim e m in ister’s convictions? All this is debated with the utm ost seriousness, as if the departure of these fading characters really m ade any difference. Meanwhile, is another and maybe more im portant question. What do the people think about this appalling spectacle, and what do they propose to do about it? It cannot be said that they have not heard and even seen the news. there Despite the British governm ent’s ef­ forts to manage the flow of information out of the Falklands, and the Israeli censorship in Lebanon, we have a rough idea of the facts, but between the podi­ um at the United Nations and the pit in Lebanon, we may have lost the meaning of the facts. One of our most distinguished A m eri­ can poets, Archibald MacLeish, who died recently, had something to say on this subject. We are constantly and justly being reminded in the United States, he said, that we are better in­ formed now than any other people in history, but he wondered whether we were really taking this torrent of infor­ mation into our minds. “ We are deluged with fa c ts,” he wrote in a study of poetry and journal­ ism, “ but we have lost, or are losing, our human ability to feel them .” MacLeish observed that Napoleon’s re tre a t from Moscow, if it happened to­ day, would be broadcast, m inute by minute, photographed, televised, edito­ rialized down to the last detail. It so happens that when Napoleon actully did turn back from Moscow, the news was brought to New York by M acLeish’s great-grandfather months after the event and was spread over the front pages of the New York newspapers with intense effect — all through one m a n ’s slow telling. “ We know with the head now ,” MacLeish concluded, “ by the facts, by the abstractions. Why we are thus im ­ potent, I do not know. I know only that this impotence exists and that it is dan­ gerous, increasingly dangerous. I know too or think I know, that, w hatever the underlying cause of the divorce of feel­ ing from knowing ... (that it is wrong to suppose) that man can live and know and m aster their experience of this darkling earth by accumulating infor­ mation and no m ore.” MacLeish, if he had lived, would probably have rejoiced to see three- quarters of a million people in C entral Park last Saturday marching and sing­ ing for peace — calling on the leaders at the podium to rem em ber the pit. Live from New York, Ratliff returns Sister/B rother A mericans — Answer $1,000 — lite wate — plastic — urban/suburban - electric car, hi-tech batteries perpetually recharge on its own motion, balances fam ily/national budget, conserves oil/iron core, abolishes noise, ends cancer inducing pollution, stops acid rain, reduces risk of U.S. involvement in war. The New H ydroelctric dam is outdated. Peru generates electricity from small stream s of w ater falling off Andes. United States has inexhaustive resource in its running w ater: to make ener­ gy, free of acid rain. Unilateral 1. Life never has guarantees 2. The w orst can happen anytime 3. E arth, powder keg of H-bombs, can blow up any moment 4. Reagan rhetoric lights the fuse 5. U nilateral disarm am ent is our best chance 6. And a helluva lot less expensive. Majority vs. minority 1. No minority, Jewish or black, can afford to support capital punishment 2. In bad tim es m ajority uses capital punishment to m ass execute minority. Ed Koch (mayor of New York) 1. His advocacy of death penalty is racist politics 2. Splits Jew s from blacks 3. Jew s/blacks need each other to defeat Nazi party,/Ku Klux Klan 4. If Jew s/blacks don’t hang togeth­ er, they’ll hang separately 5. Jew s/blacks must repudiate Koch at the polls. Perish All youth shall perish if they don’t stand together to defeat Reagan m ilitary registration Sat., June 12, 1982, NYC - 1700 hours Idle youth fill w aterholes along Columbus Avenue west of Central Park as Bill Smith, Reagan attorney general, searches and destroys (5 years prison, $10,000 fine) 18-year- old non-registrants. Fry Youth of 157 nations m ake them selves im potent to resist con­ in scription/w ar because their brains fry away they doonesbury FREEZE HO, THAPHJ5! RIGHT i THERE, : GRAMPS' RUN FOR IT! I'M TAKEN' HOLPIT.FOLAH1 GET BACK HERE, OR TOUR ML'S A DEAD MAN! h e n r y r a tliff guest columnist waterholes while piously declaring politics isn’t their thing. Reagan Again 1. Turns over SS/college loan debts to cutthroat private agen­ cies to collect: in phaseout of social program s 2. F ederal agencies collect federal debts. NYC 6/12/82 750,000 in history’s greatest peace dem onstration indicate people’s coalition (Women - blacks - Hispanics - Jew s - inde­ pendents - gays - priests - rabbis - preachers - teachers - labor - m ilitary industrial complex m oderates - police - senior c iti­ zens - students - a rtists - welfare clients - ex-cons - other) grows stronger daily. Olde Foikes (Senior Citizens) Turn away from casino gambling, stop getting drunk on wine, give up bingo, get out of bed and rocking chair, transfer mon­ ey from federal to municipal bonds, don’t participate Memo­ rial Day - July 4 - Nov. 11, m arch in dem onstrations, lobby Congress, picket White House, write letters to newspapers, register/vote, talk to people in people’s language: save grand­ sons/great grandsons from Reagan m ilitary registration - 5 years prison/$10,000 fine or death/disfigurem ent in another Vietnam. The hard way Must we see - smell - hear buzzing flies: unburied - stinking - maggot infested corpses all over America to develop hatred of war? Mystery How any veteran from battlefield of rotting unburied bodies cam participate in patriotic exercise is a m ystery no one _________________________________ ______ understands. R a t liff g ra d u a te d f r o m IIT in 1937 and has c o r r e ­ sponded f r o m N e w Y o r k f o r s e v e r a l yea rs. by garry trudeau u n n n H F * HEOUJEG W A i o r m JKl k s OF MONEY, JUST HARP I ASSUME. OF HEARING. Tuesday, June 22, 1982 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Page 5 TEC joins national program, plans to enhance veterans’ job opportunities statewide By JULIE CLINT Daily Texan Staff The T exas Em ploym ent Com mission h as joined fo rces with the T exas chapter of a national veterans p rogram to help v eter­ ans find employment. The A m erican GI Forum Outreach P ro gram , a non-profit group funded through the Departm ent of Labor, will com bine with the T EC to serve 11 T exas cities in an attem pt to enhance employment service efforts for T exas veterans. T EC com m issioners voted unanim ously F riday to provide the additional employment service to veterans. T exas ranks third among the state s with a veteran population of 1.6 million. There are approxim ately 30 million veteran s nationwide, said Richard Friedm an, service officer for the out­ reach program . C arlos Martinez, executive director of the national outreach program , said the program has a gran t of $200,000 from the T exas Departm ent of Community A ffairs through Sept. 30. He said the next grant will com e through the D epartm ent of L abor and will total about $300,000. According to the interagency agreem ent, nine T E C coun­ selors, who m ust be disabled veterans, will train and supervise outreach workers assigned to locations in Austin and other cit­ ies in T exas. The local job service resources will be used to m axim ize veteran job search capabilities. “ We are going to provide the people with supervision and the outreach program will provide the sp a c e ,” said Je r r y Biscoe, TEC public relations director. “ We are going to do everything possible to m ake it (the combined program s) beneficial to both our agency and to the veterans p rogram .” UT geographers not suffering from nationwide problems, department chairman says By JULIE VOWELL Daily Texan Staff While geography depart­ ments of som e universities are in financial trouble and face the threat of shutdown, the UT Departm ent of Geog­ raphy is “ alive and kicking,” George W. Hoffman, chair­ man of the departm ent, said Monday. In the p ast four y ears, en­ rollment in University geog­ raphy courses has doubled and neither Hoffman nor his successor a s chairm an, Paul English, foresee any decline in enrollment, Hoffman said. At present, there are ap­ proxim ately 70 undergraduate students and about 40 gradu­ ate students enrolled in geog­ raphy, and about 3,600 stu­ dents at the University take geography courses each se­ m ester. The University has 13 full­ time faculty m em bers in the geography departm ent, and there are many other geogra­ in other departm ents phers campuswide, such a s David J . Eaton, associate professor in the Lyndon Baines Johnson School of Public A ffairs, Hoff­ man said. By contrast, the University of Michigan recently elim i­ nated its entire geography de­ partment, and the dean of arts and sciences at the Uni­ versity of Pittsburgh has called for the closing of the geography departm ent there. The m ajor reason for the discontinuance of the geogra­ phy departm ent at the Uni­ versity of Michigan is the poor economic conditions in that state. However, all of the faculty m em bers except one in the University of Michigan’s now- defunct geography depart­ ment are still employed full­ tim e received appointments in other depart­ ments there. and have “ In Michigan it w as basi­ cally an adm inistration reorg­ anization,” said English, who will assum e the chairmanship of the UT Departm ent of Ge­ ography in Septem ber. The reason for the reduc­ in the geography pro­ tion gram nationwide, H offm an said, is that the first field to go when cutbacks are being m ade is the one that is the least known. But, “ we are n ’t in trouble,” he added. Geography is one of the so­ cial sciences that has grown m ore rapidly than others like anthropology, sociology and psychology because of the in­ crease in interest in the issu es of man-environment relation­ ships, English said. en d eav ors, G eographers at UT are p ar­ ticipating in m ore and m ore re se arch and graduates are finding jo b s a t local, state and federal levels. “ There are no unemployed (g e o g ra p h y ) g r a d u a t e s ,” Hoffman said. The University has not been troubled by cutbacks in its ge­ ography program because of the tremendous am ount of fi­ nancial and moral support of the University’s adm in istra­ tion, English said. Without the support of the ad m in istra­ tion, U T ’s geography d epart­ ment would be in trouble, too, he said. Many of the graduate stu­ dents in U T’s geography pro­ gram are involved in research at the T exas P ark s and Wild­ life Department. Others are involved in studying w ater re­ sources, urban planning, envi­ ronmental policy or research ­ ing energy, field of the English said. Geography graduates are “ very em ployable,” English said. G raduates will deal principally with those zones where human activities com e into contact with the environ­ ment. The UT D epartm ent of G e­ ography is the prim ary geog­ in T exas raphy departm ent and is the oldest and m ost e s­ tablished, with one of the only doctorate program s the state, Hoffman said. in Summer Grab Bag of Prizes! e D aily T e x a n news capsules Scholar to discuss Argusdas In Batts Martin Lienhard of the University of Geneva will speak on “ Critical Approaches to Jo se M aria A rguedas” at 3 p.m . Tues­ day in the Tobin Room, B atts Hall 201. The lecture, to be conducted in Spanish, is sponsored by the Departm ent of Spanish and Portuguese and the Andean Studies Com mittee of the Institute of Latin A m erican Studies. Contact Julio Ortega, 471-4936, for m ore information. Nursing school to sponsor workshop Childbirth education will be the focus of a continuing educa­ tion workshop sponsored by the UT School of Nursing from 8:30 a.m . to 4:15 p.m. Wednesday at the Nursing Building, 1700 Red River St. Sharon S. Humenick, asso ciate professor and nursing re­ search director at the University of Wyoming, will conduct the sem inar. Sessions include lectures, a slideshow, a dem onstra­ tion on childbirth education and presentation techniques. While the workshop is designed for experienced childbirth educators, anyone m ay attend. Written preregistration and a $25 fee are required. Call Joyce Hoover, School of Nursing director of continuing education, at 471-7311 for additional information. Beginning meditation class scheduled A series of yoga-meditation workshops will highlight the Ananda M arga Yoga Society’s beginning meditation c la ss, 7:30 p.m. Tuesday in the T exas Union Board of D irectors Room. F or details, call Nandita Armand, workshop instructor, at 327-8475. Group to use A&M computers for ocean regulation research By HECTOR CANTU Daily Texan Staff Texas A&M was awarded a $120,000 grant Monday for use of its com puters in research on the effects of government regula­ tions on use of the oceans. The A&M com puters will be used by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration to determ ine the effects of federal and state regulations on ocean activity, a p ress release from Gov. Bill Clem ents’ office said Monday. The analysis will com pare the cost of enforcing the regula­ tions to the protection they give to the ocean environment. The governor’s office w as informed of the grant by the U.S. Departm ent of Com m erce, which adm inistered the aw ard. A&M officials contacted Monday did not know they had received the money and said they did not know who would be in charge of the money if they had received the grant. Author says soldiers killed in warfare tests TOKYO (U PI) - American G Is were among the 3,000 hu­ man guinea pigs killed in World War II in Ja p a n ’s grisly biological w arfare experi­ m ents, a Jap an ese writer said Monday. The followed charges before the U .S. House Committee on V eterans Af­ fairs that the late Gen. Doug­ las MacArthur collaborated with the Jap an ese general in charge of the prisoner cam p to obtain valuable d ata on the research. disclosure “ More than 3,000 prisoners of eight different nationalities were killed in the cam p run by Lt. Gen. (Shiro) Ishii,’’ au­ thor Seiichi Morimura said in interview. The victim s an w e re m o s tly C h in e se , K oreans and White R ussians. “ But I have learned from various sources they also in­ cluded Britons, Dutch, Aus­ tralians, New Zealanders and A m ericans,” Morimura said. M orim ura’s Japanese-lan- guage “ D evil’s Gluttony,” a book on biological w arfare re­ search by Unit 731 of the J a p ­ anese Army in World War II, has becom e a best seller since its publication late last year. at n e a r H a rb in The book describes how Ishii’s som e prisoners c a m p in northeastern China were in­ jected with typhus, cholera and various other bacteriolog­ ical agents. Others were d is­ sected alive or frozen to death in sim ulated polar endurance experim ents. In t e s t s , s o m e flam eth row ers w ere used against tanks with prisoners inside. Grenades also were tossed into crowds of prison­ e rs clad in a variety of cloth­ ing from sum m er w ear to a r ­ mor. The com m ittee w as told that M acA rthur S atu rd ay gave Ishii and his sta ff im m u­ nity from prosecution in ex­ change for the d ata despite the knowledge that A m eri­ cans were am ong the victim s. Approxim ately 2,000 G Is are said to have been taken to Ishii’s cam p, but the number of fatalities among them is not known. said he M orim ura inter­ viewed 61 form er cam p m em ­ bers from 600 still living for his research. G reg Rodriquez J r ., chair­ m an of ex-POW Vision Quest, told the com m ittee hearing in Helena, Mont., that Am erican G Is captured by the Jap an e se in the Philippines in 1942 were transported to the biological testing site. “ Som e 37 years after the end of World War II, and a l­ though they are immune from prosecution, a great m ajority of form er unit 731 m em bers are still keeping their mouth tightly shut,” the w riter said. PERMANENT RESIDENT VISAS P A U L PARSONS Attorney at Law 2200 Guadalupe Suit# 216 477-7887 fr — initial eoniultation lor UT ntudont* A fatuity Authentic New Mexican Food and Great Margaritas Now serving smoked beef, chicken and cabrito tacos 11:30-10 Sun.-Thurs. 11-30-11 Fri.-Sat. Happy Hour 4-6 M o n .-F ri. Weekend Brunch 11-2 Sat.-Sun. 1728 Barton Springs Rd. 474-4452 | | ^ Susan Allen-Camp, Dally Texan Staff West Austin residents Liz Davis (I) and Stephanie ny on a porch swing Monday afternoon. The heat Schroeder enjoy the weather and each other’s compa- drove many Austinites outside to seek cool breezes. Report shows slight GNP recovery (U PI) growth WASHINGTON - The economy showed som e from April slight through s ix months of decline, a prelim i­ nary government estim ate of re­ gross national product vealed Monday. Ju n e , a f t e r White House spokesm an L arry Speakes hailed the re­ port a s “ an indication that the recession has reached the bot­ tom .” T reasury Secretary Donald Regan said, “ We can begin to see the vistas of re­ covery.” But a leading private econ­ om ist cautioned that the im ­ provement w as all in over­ seas trade — not dom estic business. The G N P — the value of the nation’s output of goods and services distributed through­ out the economy — increased .6 percent from April through June after adjustm ent for in­ flation, government econo­ m ists projected Monday. Two previous quarters of GN P de­ cline roughly m arked the ex ­ tent of the latest recession. The unofficial estim ate pre­ pared by the Com m erce De­ partm ent on the b asis of par­ tial second qu arter data is known a s the “ flash ” GNP figure within the government. It is used for internal fore­ c a sts until the first official reading issued a month from now. is M u rra y W e id e n b au m , chairm an of the president’s Council of Econom ic Advis­ ers, said, “ It m eans the econ­ omy is flat. When I said a few months ago the economy had bottomed, that’s the statisti­ cal verification of the econo­ my hitting bottom. “ I expect the third quarter sign ificantly,” will be up Weidenbaum said. But private econom ist Otto Eckstein cautioned against seeing the developm ent a s an economic turnaround. “ B etter a plus than a m inus,” said Eckstein, who heads D ata R esources, Inc., of Lexington, M ass. But he added, “ It does not by itself mean the end of the reces­ sion. Eckstein suggested “ one­ sided April-May fig­ u res,” which viewed one way trade showed the first trade surplus in nearly seven years, w as re­ sponsible for the increase in the value of the nation’s goods and services. “ If you talk to businessm en it’s pretty clear that things were getting worse during the q u arter,” he said. Aside from the unofficial “ flash ” estim ate, the Com­ m erce Departm ent issued its final January through March gross national product and co rp orate figu re s, p rofit showing the G N P decline to be 3.7 percent on top of a 4.5 percent drop from October through Decem ber. Corporate profits afte r tax­ es were down 18 percent, in­ stead of the earlier reported 17.5 percent, and remained the third worst drop on record. The criteria for the begin­ ning and end of a recession are set by an independent board of academ ic sp ecialists and professional econom ists who weigh in term s of unemployment, pro­ duction and sales losses, and other factors. the dam age Weidenbaum, in a speech to a Cham ber of Com merce group in Washington, also sin­ gled out for criticism the $3 billion housing aid program contained in a supplemental appropriations m easure near­ ing final Congressional p as­ sage. “ 70,000 He said the program would mean lucky people would get a subsidy.” A ssum ­ ing a m odest 1 million housing starts said, this year, he “ 930,000 other people would not get a subsidy.” 8 6% Real GNP G ro ss nations! p rodu ct— Seasonally ad ju sted annual rata P arcan tag aa reflect cnan ge from previous quar- 1 9 8 1 : 1 9 8 2 1.4% n ! ’ o.6% I 4th ¡ 1st 50 2nd 4 .5 % ! Austin to consider laser device as police aid From staff and wire reports The Austin Police D epartm ent will ask the city to purchase a laser that will be capable of finding fingerprints on clothing, skin, rough wood and other su rfaces previously believed use­ less sources in searches for fingerprints, Chief of Police Frank Dyson said Monday. If the City Council approves the $25,000 appropriation in budget hearings this sum m er, the lase r could be used by APD crim e an alysts as early a s Decem ber. “ The device could be helpful not only in m urder c a se s (in which it has previously been used) but in rape c a se s a s w ell,” Dyson said. The laser, developed by T exas Tech University physics pro­ fessor E. Roland Menzel, is im m obile and is “ approxim ately the size of a d esk ,” said Gus Rose, head of crim inal investiga­ tions for the D allas County S h eriff’s Departm ent, which has appropriated money to purchase a laser. The laser, first used in 1976, has recently gained momentum as an aid in solving crim inal cases. Two months ago, a fragm ent of a hand grenade thrown into a house w as exam ined by a laser m achine in Amarillo. A print found on the fragm ent led to charges being filed against a suspect. Rose said the laser can pick out a fingerprint regard less of how long ago the fingerprint was made. The Potter County Sh eriff’s Departm ent is the only law en­ forcem ent agency in the state that has purchased the new lase r crim e fighting equipment, but other police departm ent officials have shown interest. The D allas County Sheriff’s Departm ent has appropriated $28,000 for purchase of the laser and has offered police officials in 40 surrounding cities the opportunity to rent the machine. States’ right to ban nuclear plants disputed Supreme Court agrees to decide controversy WASHINGTON (U P I) - The Suprem e Court agreed Monday to tackle a crucial nu­ clear power controversy test­ ing whether states can ban construction of reactors until the government figures out how to dispose of radioactive waste. The politically explosive dispute could have a d ram atic im pact on the future of com ­ m ercial nuclear power in the United States. The c ase shapes up a s a m ajor confrontation between the multibillion dollar nuclear industry and at least seven imposed states that have m oratorium s on new atom ic plants until a m eans for per­ manent storage of high-level radioactive w aste is devel­ oped. The federal government has yet to create a method for storing such w astes, which can rem ain dangerously ra ­ to 250,000 for up dioactive years. The ju stices next fall will hear an appeal filed by two California utility com panies — backed by the R eagan ad­ m inistration — urging them to make an “ authoritative de­ term ination” a s to whether a state interferes with federal authority by establishing its own process for approving new nuclear facilities. Other state s imposing sim i­ lar restrictions on nuclear a r e C o n n e c tic u t, p o w e r M aine, Oregon, M ontana, Maryland and Wisconsin. In other actions Monday, the cou rt: its review of • Expanded the rights of illegal aliens, agreeing to decide whether U.S. citizens who are the chil­ dren of illegal aliens can be denied free public education. • Overturned, on a 7-2 vote, a that would have ruling forced people with civil rights com plaints against public of­ ficials to try to resolve them at the state level before suing in federal court. to • Ordered Connecticut justify the need for a written job promotion examination that w as failed by m ore black em ployees than white. The 5-4 ruling is a victory for four state workers who black failed the test and lost out on a chance for promotion DURHAM-NIXON CLAY COLLEGE INTENSIVE ENGLISH Enroll now for Summer Session beginning June 28th -TOEFL/University preparation -Nine month comproheneive course -Short courses and private instruction -Small classes/conversational method •Auth. under federal law to enroll non-immigrant alien students (1-20) -Student Health Insurance -Official TOEFL Testing Center Registration hours: 10 am to 2 pm & 3 pm to 5 pm 8 th a n d Colorado/2nd floor 478-3446 Air-conditioned classrooms ^ I£ T 5 t t n w n T s Mexican Dresses from Oaxaca Decorative Accessories Porcelain • Pottery • Pewter • Brass Silk Flowers • Custom Arrangements Oriental Incidentals FUjtAhJ. Westside Bar YOUR PLACE FOR QUIET EVENING COCKTAILS AND CONVERSATION SERVING TILL l:OOAM WEEKDAYS TILL 2:OOAM FRI. & SAT. 1206 WEST 34th ST. 451-5550 GO BANANAS LATE NIGHT By p o p u lar d e m an d for tasty food after 10 the kitchen at BANANAS will keep servin g its great an d tasty b u rg e rs, quiche, M exican sp e c ia ltie s, sp in ach s a la d , an d more until 11:30. For those on a liquid diet BANANAS barten d ers h av e a late night Happy Hour 10-11 T u e s .- S a t . nights, plus G O BANANAS H appy Hour 4-7 T u es.-F ri. G O BANANAS— lunch, dinner, h app y hour, an d now LATE NIGHT ^Parki ng 17th & G u a d a l u p e a n d Uni t ed Ba nk P a r k i n g G a r a g e 1TOO Id. 3 4 * AT JÉFFÉUStDN All SC IN Tit. 78703 RESTAURANT and BAR 1601 GUADALUPE 476-7202 tuesday sports 6 1THE DAILY TEXAN Tuesday, June 22, 1982 Rose ties for 2nd in career hits San Diego rallies past Astros, 7-4 By United Press International Philadelphia's Pete Rose had two singles in five at-bats Monday night against St. Lou­ is to move into a tie with Hank Aaron for the No. 2 spot on the all-time hit list with 3,771. Ty Cobb has the all- time record of 4,191. The Phillies lost the game, however, when Darrell Porter hit the first pitch of the sea­ son from Tug McGraw for a double with no outs in the eighth inning to drive in W illie McGee from second and lead the Cardinals to a 7-5 victory. At Houston, Terry Kennedy cracked a two-run double to highlight a six-run, eighth in­ ning that sparked the San D i­ ego Padres to a 7-4 victory over the Houston Astros. In other National League action, Cincinnati beat Los Angeles 10-2; M o n treal trounced New York 5-1; Pitts­ burgh edged Chicago 4-3 and Atlanta squeaked by San Francisco 7-0. In the American League, Boston walloped Detroit 5-1; Baltim ore shut out Cleveland 7-0 and Milwaukee crushed New York 6-2. Weltlich picked to coach U.S. team By BILL FRISBIE D aily T exan Staff Before UT head coach Bob Weltlich gets down to the business of seeking his first Southwest Conference basket­ ball title, there is one other championship he hopes to win — a world championship. Weltlich has been selected by the American Basketball Association of the United States of America to coach the American National Team at the World Basketball Championships in Bogota and Cali, Colombia Aug. 15-30. The United States is one of 13 nations in the competition. The decision to choose Weltlich was based upon sev­ eral recommendations to the ABAUSA which, in conjunc­ tion with the NCAA, controls international competition. “ This is a great opportuni­ ty,” Weltlich said. “ I ’ve al­ ways been interested in U.S. involvement in international competition.” W eltlich’s squad consists of 12 players selected by the ABAUSA. vakia. The tournament’s prelim i­ nary rounds w ill be in Bogota in which the 12 teams w ill be divided into three groups. “ Teams play through their own group, and the top two finishers in each pool go on to the finals,” Weltlich said. “ We re in Pool A with teams from Spain, Panama and Chi­ na.” Other teams include the U S S R . , Brazil, Australia, Ivory Coast, Yugoslavia, Can­ ada, Uruguay and Czechoslo­ The National Team will be­ gin practice Ju ly 24 at the University and w ill appear publicly for the first time in the Frank Erw in Center on Ju ly 30 against an AAU team. Other exhibition contests pre­ ceding the World Champion­ ships are scheduled for Aug. 5-7 against China. Canada and Yugoslavia in Knoxville, Tenn. Joe Kleine of Arkansas is the only SWC representative on the squad. “Adidas” TRX TRAINER Reg. 39” Now 28°° Jimmy Connors gets easy win at Wimbledon. UPI Telephoto McEnroe silent 1st round winner W IM B L E D O N , England (U P I) — John McEnroe, his game wide open and his mouth zipped shut, marked his return to the Wimbledon war zone Monday with an im­ pressive straight sets victory over Van Winitsky. The New Yorker opened de­ fense of his Wimbledon crown with a 6-2, 6-2, 6-1 victory, at one point winning eight games in a row. And in sharp contrast to last year, when he engaged in battle with officials from the very first match, McEnroe uttered hardly a disparaging word in the course of the one hour and 22-minute match. Also advancing with ease to the second round were second seed Jim m y Connors and No. 3 Vitas Gerulaitis. Connors routed Mike Myburg of South Africa 6-0, 6-2, 6-2, and Geru­ laitis beat another South A fri­ can, Brent Pirow, 6-4, 6-1, 6-1. •• •*• •• •• •• •• •• •• •• : THE TEXAS : UNION • J a s the campus com m unity the Texas Union •cen ter, ^provides facilities, services f o r U T • a n d p r o g r a m s J s tu d en ts, f a c u l t y , st af f , f r i e n d s . • a l u m n i a n d ^Located on the West M a ll, • the Union includes an infor- Jm ation center, student ac­ t i v i t i e s c e n t e r , T e x a s J C u ltu re room s, m eeting • rooms, T V rooms, a re crea­ t i o n center, an a rt gallery, • a copy center, 14 food ser- Jvi ce areas, the U niversity T e x a s • T i c k e t m a s t e r , • T a v e r n and the G en eral • Store. ••••••••••••••••••• NYLON RUNNING SHORTS Buy 1 pair, get the next « o . C^\vV Choose from: p a ir f° r >A p rice ! ' Dolfin Nike Adidas International Sports New Balance YOU CAN Cu t THE COST OF CROIX France wins while fists fly in World Cup M ADRID, Spain (U P I) - With players trading punches while an Arab sheik argued with a Soviet referee, the World Cup turned violent Monday in France’s 4-1 victo­ ry over Kuwait. But Austria helped restore normality to the soccer tour­ nament with a 2-0 victory over Algeria, which earlier stunned West Germany in one of the biggest upsets in World Cup history. The Group 2 tri­ umph at Oviedo virtually as­ sured Austria of a place in the second round. And in the final game of the day at Zaragoza, Northern Ireland and Honduras played to a 1-1 tie in Group 5 — the second consecutive draw for both teams. The Group 4 encounter be­ tween Kuwait and France at Vallodolid erupted with 10 left when Alain minutes Giresse broke through an im­ mobile defense to score what would have been France’s fourth goal. is Kuwait, whose squad known as the “ Camels,” in­ sisted it stopped play when it heard a whistle from the crowd. Referee Miroslav Stu- par refused to change his mind at first but was then confronted by an angry Sheik Fahd Al-Ahmad Al-Jaber Al- Sabah, an imposing man with an imposing name and flow­ ing black robes. When Stupar disallowed the goal, this brought on an irate Michel Hidalgo, the French manager. However, Hidalgo, wearing shorts and not look­ ing at all imperious, failed to reach the referee and was re­ strained by Spanish national police. Meanwhile, the players be­ gan fighting and it was five minutes before they were sep­ arated and Stupar could res­ tart the game. Oddly, no player was eject­ ed and the game ended 4-1. When it was over, the play­ ers amiably exchanged je r­ seys while Stupar had to be escorted from the field by po­ lice. Austria’s victory was keyed by Kurt Walzl, a second-half substitute who set up Walter Schachner in the 55th minute and Hans Krankl 12 minutes later. The Austrians, whose final game is against West Germa­ ny Friday, have four points from two games to lead the group. Algeria and West Ger­ many have two points apiece. If both win their last game, they will be tied with Austria at four points, leaving goal difference to break the dead­ lock. Shoe Shop . W . male. and repair boots SHEEPSKIN QQ^ & ^ ,h” ‘ b*1'* * SADDLES ★ ENGLISH WESTERN leather goods Capitol Saddlery Austin, Texas 478-9309 VtSA' 1614 Lavaca spinach crepes IN HALF, Les Amis Cafe 2 tth X San \ ntonio 2200 Guadalupe Monday-Friday 7:00-11:00 311 S. Lamar Monday-Friday 8:00-11:00 ONE F R E E GAME 25* VALUE BREAKFAST SPECIAL Tujo eggs, our oujn hashbrowns or grits, toast or homemade biscuits uiith jelly or cream gravy. 1.85 lAREZ TEQUILA ...stands above the rest G O L D on SILV ER i m p o r t e o » b o t t l e d b y t e o u i l a j a l i s c o s a S T L O U IS M O 80 P R O O F s ' 1 I I I I I I I PIN BA LL MACHINES VIDEO GAMES POOL TABLES GAMEROOM ARCADE IN DOBIE MALL LOW KK L E V E L 10 am 12 midnight Mon Sat I LIM IT ONE PER CUSTOMER PER VISIT E x p ir e s A u g 14, 1 98 2 TONIGHT • LEWIS A THE LEGENDS WEDNESDAY - YOUR MOVE ‘ B aick *015 E. RIVERSIDE oom p r e s e n t s DRT O F R I E N D SaGuest Artists I8 pm , S aturday, June 26 Kay Frances B raden Hogg Auditorium. 24th and Whitis Kate Fisher Joanna Fnesen Jim Fritzler R obin G arrison M a rio lilt. Jr P atty W illey ticke ts at the door $4 public $3 students Spaces m Transition w ill be pe rform ed outside beginning at 7 45 pm BUY ONE WITH A FREND. Just like a two-for-one-sale, only different! Two students can have a super condominium home for the price of one by buying together. And there’s plenty to share, like all the great amenities inside — a microwave oven, washer, dryer, fireplace, ceil­ ing fan with light, and more. Step out of your home to lush enjoy w aterscaped, courtyards, sparkling pools and refreshing spas. Croix homes offer a quiet study retreat right in the heart of everything — a short walk to campus, shopping, fraternity/ sorority houses, just about everywhere. W hat’s better than a two-for-one sale? A five-for-one-package sale. An ideal loca­ tion, terrific amenities, out­ standing quality, privacy plus the fun of sharing a home. W 26TH W 25TH Come by and see our spe­ cial homes today. And bring a friend! W 23RD t W 2 2 ' a NO W 22ND V ) UJ (/) O uj z o < " cc 2O z o E For further sales information call Martha Ing 5 1 2 /4 7 8 - 7 7 4 5 ___ CROIX CONDOMINIUMS 806 W. 24th Roomful: a night full of fun Tuesday, June 22, 1982 □ TH E DAILY TEXAN □ Page 7 rn o n n THEATRES-AUSTIN R E D U C E D A D ULT A D M IS S IO N A LL F E A T U R E S IN (B R A C K E T S )— C A PA C IT Y O N LY | By JAY T R A C H T E N B E R G Daily Texan Staff In case you missed it, the little big hardest-swinging band in the land. Roomful Of Blues, blew through the Conti­ nental Club last Thursday. Unlike so many other young R & B and blues bands on the road today that feature a sim­ ple front line of guitar, bass and harp or saxophone, this Rhode Island-based nonet’s basic lineup of boogie-woogie piano, blazing guitar and stan- dup bass is complemented by a five-piece horn section — creating a sound that recalls many of the big-band blues outfits of the 1950s. The group's archival re­ spect for roots is further ex­ hibited by their tremendous repertoire of rock, bop, swing and jump. A virtual who’s who list of the finest R & B art­ ists of the post-war period, Roomful’s two 90-minute sets included a variety of works by B.B. King, Johnny “ Guitar" Watson, Gatemouth Brown, Roomful Of Blues T-Bone Walker, Albert Collins and Eddie “ Cleanhead" Vin­ son (with whom the band has just completed an upcoming album on Muse Records). The band, while covering a broad array of regional styles, specializes in the full- Capra classic to screen in Burdine By LO U IS BLA C K and RAY Y D O Y A G A Daily Texan Staff “You Can’t Take It With You” ; directed by Frank Capra; with Jam es Stewart, Jean Arthur and Lionel Bar­ rymore; at 7 and 9 p.m. Tues­ day; at Burdine Auditorium. Summer is here, and the screens are rich in metallic glare, floods of blood, spec­ tacular ultra-violence and family entertainment so con­ sciously designed to be super- accessible crap as to make any reader of the Reader's is Digest rejoice. There something more to film than just that Movies can be rich, exciting experiences that are centered on the kind of people we know (well, at least some­ what) and the kind of life we lead. Imagine, for example, a Victorian house somewhere in New York populated by the most eccentric melange this side of California. Grandpa (Lionel Barrymore), you see, likes to encourage freedom and individual talent and so takes in every major misfit rummaging through the Big Apple. There’s Essie Carmi­ chael (Ann Miller), the frus­ in trated ballerina who's termi­ nally in her tutus, and her husband (Dub Taylor), who likes to print subversive pam­ phlets the basement; there’s Paul (Samuel Hinds) who likes to make highly vola­ tile fireworks and his pal Pop- pins (Donald Meek), who builds deranged and bizarre little toys; and there’s Penny (Spring Byington) who likes to write the longest unpub­ lished tomes in America. All together, the folks in the film manage to generate a tremendous amount of chaos, humor, romance and warmth (yes, folks, real genuine hu­ man warmth). This shouldn’t be a surprise as this wonder fully entertaining film was di­ rected by Frank Capra, re­ sponsible for the classic “ It's a Wonderful Life.’’ Admitted­ ly, Capra has something of a reputation for being a little too sweet/corny, but actually his films are quite ambitious. They manage to articulate and embrace the contradic­ tions of both American ideolo­ gy and human emotion. Hell, that may sound like intellec­ tual garbage, but Capra makes it believable on the screen. Hope is a kind of mag­ ic, as this film proves. horn riffing of early 1950s New Orleans swing and the Texas-to-Los Angeles guitar shuffles made famous by Walker, Brown, Watson and Collins. The group’s most re­ cent LP, “ Hot Little Mama,’’ on their own Blue Flame la­ bel, is a striking example of the vibrant music they recre­ ate so brilliantly. Among the high points of the evening were Porky Cohen’s swinging trombone workout on the Tizol/Elling- ton chestnut, “ Caravan," guest appearances by local blues stars Angela Strehli and Stevie Ray Vaughn and su­ perb guitar soloing by guitar­ ist Ronnie Earl reminiscent of Albert Collins, Guitar Slim and even the Fabulous Thun- derbirds’ Jim m y Vaughn. But what stood out most about Roomful Of Blues, what made them so unabashedly unique, was the sound of their five horns — alto, tenor, bari­ tone, trumpet and trombone — blowing through the roof in unison. AUSTIN 6 521 THOMPSON OFF 183 1 Ml S OF M0NT0P0LIS PHONE: 385-5328 24 HOUR ADULT TH EA TRE C O M PLEX V I D E O T A P E R E N T A L S b S A L E S L A R G E S T S E L E C T I O N - L O W E S T P R I C E S SEE UP TO 6 MOVIES ON SEPARATE SCREENS FOR THE PRICE OF ONE I x p e r i n t e n t in B lu e S W E E T H E A R T a m h r k a n D E S I R E IN SID E S EK A DISCOUNT MILITARY • STUDENT • SENIORS • COUPLES DEEP THROAT DEVIL b MISS JONES | | r f P R E £ ' £ ! £ l L t E A T R e s U i » I f / f Ste v e M a rtin T H I S IjO IV K í (5 0 ( 1 1 1 F H I 1 1 A Y ' 1:30-3:30- 5:30-7:30-9:30 5:40- 7:50-10.00 Gene Wilder Ralph Bakshi's WIZARDS PG A n E p i c F a n t n t y 1,2:55-2:30-4:05 2 2 n d Week ! Oa one 1:30-3:40-5:50 0 0 - 10:10 VILLAGE 4 2700 ANDERSO N • 451-8352 1:10-3:20-5:30- 7:40-9:50 It knows what scares you. 12:15-2:15-4:15- 6:15-8:15-10:15 A S t o v o n S p i o l b o ig film 12:50-3:15-5:40-8:05-10:30 r 4 f Acltm J Lcsvaisis. THURS! In Dolby Stereo t2^0-2:30- 4i5^0-7j1^9^C^ LAKEHILLS 2428 BEN WHITE • 444-0552 12:40-3:00-5:30 7:50-10:05 I (i Fox Triplex (5:30) 7:30-9:30 M a n n W e s t g a t e (1:30)-3:30-5:30-7:30-9:30 [ 454 2711 FOX TRIPLE 'É H É 6 7 S 7 A IR P O R T BLVD ] :M CHAR10TS°a ^jfesl.OFFIRFlgó] li" J Where the corporation owns your body and soul. B R A IN W A S H G ilda Radner flankyPaniy 1:45 3:45-5 4 5 - I z T k T i ^ ~ t — 1 | ■ ] = 8 < 30-3:30-5:30 Road Warrior TH E SU M M ER ’S B E ST '5f5S?!Ü?n^MATINEES MÓNbAY — FRIDAY FOÍl ¿HO W S s ! a RTING BEFORE 6 P.M. EXCEPT AS NOTED IN APT 77 // EXTRA-Tl Rh Dollar Day d is c o n t in u e d fo r the su m m er a t th e W e s tg a te . TUESDAY IS KLBJ NIGHT AT THE M O VIES - ALL SHO W S $1 AT LAKEHILLS AND RIVERSIDE. j M presents SEASON TICKET only $12, Good for the Entire Summer! FRANK CAPRA'S "A ca d e m y A w ard W in n in g " YOU CAN'T TAKE IT WITH YOU Based on the George 5. Kaufman & Moss Hart play about a family of eccentrics JEAN ARTHUR ANN MILLER J I M M Y STEWART LIONEL B A R RYM O RE SPRING B Y IN G T O N EDWARD ARNOLD BU RDIN E AUD. PIG G Y ’S BAR & GRILL Tuesday B o b D oyle & P a t M a lo n e 310 Congress 472-2789 ED De PRIEST PR ESEN TS WHAT HUSTLER MAGAZINE CALLS ■SHEER DYNAMITE' ANNETTE HAVEN AND LISA De LEEUW IN THE MOST S E N ­ SATIONAL ADULT MOVIE OF 1982. “SKIN TIGHT” X PLUS “ S W E E T S A V A G E " X CIN EM A 'W e s T --- 2130 S Conqress • Ooen 11 a m LYSA THATCHER AND AR CADIA LAKE STAR IN THE MOST ENTERTAINING ADULT FILM AUSTIN HAS EVER SEEN “A P IE C E OF A M E R IC A N P IE ” X PL U S “S H O P P E ! O F T l M P T A I I O N S " X REBEL Drive-In 385-7217 Privacy of Your Auto 6 9 0 2 B u r le s o n R o a d R a d io S o u n d S y s t e m X X X Original Uncut. HOT . ★ ★ xtA A A MON THRU SAI ill SHOWINGS MfORf 6P* ? 2 . 0 U sue IHOtlDAnfmST IAATtNII SHOW ONLY I HIGHLAND MAUCIi” V?A 451-7326 H IGH LAN D M A IL BLVD. TREK I I 7 0 m m D o lb y Sf»r»o 12 30-2:50-5: 10 7 3 0 - 9 5 0 I POLTERGEIST (P G ) 13 50-3 10 5 30 7 50-10 10 WMWWW! m C A PIT A L P L A Z A c Y Í « f A 452-7646 1-35 o tC A M E R O N HP. A U TH O R A U T H O R (pg) 1:30-3 30-5 40 7 :5 0 -1 0 :00 ■ ■ : I— ■ ¿¡me T H E A T R E S R E D U C E D TWI LIT E P R IC E S S2 00 M O N SAT A LL S H O W S B E F O R E 6 00 P M S U N & H O U O A Y S 1ST S H O W O N L Y L IM IT E D TO S E A T IN G E X C L U D IN G S P E C IA L E N G A G t ML N TS TIMES SH O W N FOR TODA Y ONL Y A M E R I C A N A ^ 4 5 3 - 6 6 4 1 2200 HANCOCK ORIVE J M B S S L h MM 4 M m II M M E x c lu s iv e ! 7 0 m m D o lb y Coll Theatre lor Twi Lite Polity 11:15-2:00-4:45-7:30-10:15 1 1 1 1 A Q U A R I U S 4 B A M B I 12:30-2:15-3:45-5:30-7:00-1:30 F IR E F O X 1:45-4^30-7:15-9:55 u PG W S " 4 4 4 -3 2 2 2 1500 S PLEASANT «PLIEV HO S T A R T R E K II 12:45-3:15-5:30-0:00-10:15 G R E A S E 2 12:15-2:30-5^0-7:30-9:55 PG pu N O R T H C R O S S 6 r 4 5 4 - 5 1 47 « « a K S S V .'S « ■« E d T . t h e E X T R A -T E R R E S T R IA L 1 1 Special Enaanemenf-No Passes E . T . th e e x t r a - t e r r e s t r i a l Spatial Engeeement-Ne Posses 1:45-4:15-4:45-0:15 G R E A S E 2 1240-2:30 5.40-7:30-0:55 ^ 12:30-340-5JM40-l0-.30 D A S B O O T 1:15-4:15-7:15-10:15 CON AN T H E B A R B A R IA N H 240-440-7:30-10:15 SOUTHW OOD 2 4 4 2 - 2 3 3 3 173* ben white blvo VISITING HO U R S W H f R f T H i M O T iR N G R O W S 5:30-7^5-9.55 1:31-3 JO SW O R D J. S O R C B IiR 240-4*0-4:00- 1:15-10:15 i i l l l i U i i i M I L C H 1 • PMW; «5 TODAY at 7:45 p.m. Union Theatre 1.50 UT 2.00 non UT TOM O RROW . Robert iltnum's Health & Days of Heaven Swept Away. by ;ui unusual destiny in the Nue sea < 4 aiiyrust Written and D*mc*d bt, U N A W L K I M U U i J i ™ m v W rm ^snd DwKTfd bv LINA W E K T M L U X R W n O T C M A S TODAY at 6 A 10 p.m. TODAY at 6 & 10 p.m. Union Theatre 1.50 UT 2.00 non-UT __________ ________ _— LATE SHOW 11:50 p.m. Union Theatre 1.50 U.T. 2.00 Non-U.T. % •/- . *' .* . • .7- / 7 ’v ' ' ’r ’-j W U w ^ S f c C vUW P a g g 8 □ T H E D A IL Y T E X A N □ Tuesday, Ju n e 22, 1982 AUTOS FOR SALE AUTOS FOR SALE C L A S S IF IE D A D V E R T IS IN G C o n s e cu tive D a y Rates 15 w o rd m in m u m $ 20 E a ch w o rd 1 tim e S 44 E a c h w o rd 3 tim e s . $ 54 E a c h w o rd 5 tim e s E a c h w o rd 10 tim e s 88 $ 1 col x 1 in ch I t i m e .................... $5 69 1 col x 1 in c h 2 9 tim e s $5 49 I col. x 1 inch 10 or m o re tim e s $5 20 $1.00 c h a rg e to c h a n g e c o p y. F ir s t tw o w o rd s m a y be a 11 c a p ita l le tte rs 25 fo r each a d d itio n a l w o rd in c a p ita l le tte rs . S T U D E N T F A C U L T Y S T A F F ( P r iv a te P a rty A d s O n ly ) C o nsecutive D a y R ates 15 w o rd m in im u m 17 E a c h w o rd 2 T im es 27 E a c h W ord 5 T im es .054 E a c h W ord F a ch A d d tl T im e 1 C ol. x I " , 1 or M o re T im e s 3 18 50' c h a rg e to ch tnge copy F ir s t tw o w o rd s m a y be a ll c a p ita l le tte rs . E a c h a d d it ona l w o rd in c a p ita ls , 25'. A ll ads m u s t be n o n -c o m m e rc ia l a n d p re p a id DEAdllNE SCHEOUtf M o n d a y T o x o n Tuesday Te*an Wednesday Texon Thursday Texan Friday Texan F rid ay 7 p .m Monday 11 a.i Tuesday 11 a i Wednesday 1 1 a 1 Thursday 1 1 a In th e e v e n t of errors m a d e in a n a d v e r ­ tisem en t, im m e d ia te n o tice m u st b e o iv e n a t th e publishers a re resp o n sib le fo r o n ly O N E incorrect ¡ m o t i o n A ll claim s fo r a d j ju stm en ts should b e m a d e no t la te r th a n 3 0 (lays a fte r p u b lico h an. 1973 S U P E R B e e tle E x c e lle n t c o n d i­ tio n . A M ; F M cassette , bike ra c k , r e b u ilt e ng ine, F r a n k , 474-5759. 1978 B U IC K E L E C T R A . L e a v in g U sT , m u s t se ll A ll p o w e r, f u lly loaded, exce l le n t c o n d itio n , $3900 or best o ffe r W 471- 7443, H 837-0900 69 R E N A U L T R10 30 m pg, M ic h e lin s Runs lik e a c h a m p , $1050 458-9736. 1978 F O R D F A IR M O N T O nly o w n e r. S ta n d a rd , 2-door, 37,000 m ile s. P o w e r s te e rin g , r a d io , h e a te r; new tire s , new b a tte ry (5 -y e a r w a r r a n t y ) . $2,500 ( lo w e r th a n b o o k ). C a ll a fte r 5 p .m 478 4547 1978 F O R D F IE S T A G h ia . F lip up ro o f. A M /F M , r e a r w in d o w d e fro s t A fte r 6 p m „ 444-4397 N E E D S NO G A S O L IN E E le c tric C iti- C a r B u ilt- in b a tte r y c h a rg e r A M F M ra d io , $2600 453-2461, 928 7382 1972 C A P R I 2000 H e aders, tra n s is to r ig ­ n itio n s y s te m , s w a y b a r, A M F M cas sette, new b r a k e s /c lu tc h , $1200 E rn ie , 473-3576, 472-0616 '65 D O D G E H A L F -T O N , e x c e lle n t 318 engine, new b a tte ry , tire s , brakes D e­ pe n d a b le w o rk tr u c k . $800 477-2367 a n y ­ tim e . 74 V W B U G 4 speed, g re a t co n d itio n , $1990. C a ll 327-058? f ir s t o r 451-0113 A sk fo r J a c k 1 975 F I A T 124 S p o rt coupe, 5-speed, AC, A M / F M , good c o n d itio n , reasona ble 452-8541, 452-6215. 74 M U S T A N G II. E x c e lle n t m e c h a n ic a l c o n d itio n . $750 o r best o ffe r. C a ll K e v in , 443-4289 CONDOS FOR SALE FROM $52,950 iOVi% 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. ONE TWO BEDROOMS MODEL HO M ES OPEN. BELOW MARKET FINANCING. 327-6880 R A E T p t r It R K A C E j IJ C f t < /c m S / f / ' / / / / / J a b o v e - t h e - p a r k MARKETED BY | B G O O D W IN REALTORS (S I 2) 3 2 7 -6 8 8 0 1 24 0 BARTON HILLS DR AUSTIN. TEXAS We've Done Your Homework Servicing all of A u stin , specializing in cam pus an d UT shuttle a re a s. Walk over or call for a previewing appointment A GREAT PLACE TO LIVE PEARL 1 0 % % ARM-GPM Financing Available Available f or FALL O C C U P A N C Y Prices starting in low 40's - Security ---Microwave — Individual Storage — Covered Parking 12 One Bedrooms 6 w ith Lofts M a rketed by 'Anda I na ram ad- J-J If so, th e n you should ta lk w ith RON HANNA & ASSOCIATES 3509 JEFFERSO N W ith a w id e ra n g e of p ric e s w e can lo ca te a p r o je c t to f it any life s ty le . W h e th e r you w o u ld lik e to be close to ca m p u s, a ro u n d y o u r frie n d s o r a w a y fro m the h u stle and b u s tle ot c a m p u s in a g u ie t, serene e n v iro n m e n t, w e at RON H A N N A can g e t you in to y o u r condo w ith ease CALL 459-4892 TO D A Y - p T J i : Eighteen elegant k | I I I*- condominium homes, located l \ / C D I on a wooded bluff within T y K K I A A / I X walking distance of I T Prices starting in low 40 fs Features: — 1 & 2 bedroom —F’ool & hot tub —Security system —Mini blinds —Washer drver FOR SALE Ph o to g ra p h y - Fo r S a le ____ C A Ñ O N C A M E R A . 35m m A - E l, 1.8- 55m m S210 Canon fla s h 155-A S45. B oth e x c e lle n t, B a re ly used w ith case 476- 916/ _____ E X O T IC S H O R T H A IR k itte n s , tere d, S50 up 452-2166. Pets-For S a le __________ r e g is ­ ___ B IR D S B A B Y c o c k tia ls : g ra y $35, pied S50 F in c h e s S5 442-5150. ______ L H A S A AP SO p u p p ie s A K C , 2 m onths, dew c la w s re m o v e d , f ir s t shots, S250 cash o n ly G u a ra n te e d . 258-5968 H om es-For S a le fin a n c in g a r ­ D U P L E X , 560,000, F H A ranged . C ute, U T a re a , 2-1 2-1, C a ll L ib ­ by Boone w ith M a rs h and Box, 472-1000. b e a u tifu lly U T V IC T O R IA N . A s s u m p tio n . T w o b locks s h u ttle , H a n co ck go lf, v e ry la rg e 3 I fire p la c e , h a rd w o o d flo o rs , s o lid c o n s tru c tio n , C A / CH S93,650, a s sum e n o n -q u a lify in g , n o n ­ e s c a la tin g $63,650 note, by o w n e r 479- 6)53. re m o d e le d , NW 3-2, G A R A G E 587,900 f ir m . $12,700 a s s u m a b le 612 , $29,900 dow n, o w n e r w ill c a r ry re s t. 345-9442. 3 BLOCKS TO SHU TTLE A 'G R E A T ” house fo r a U T s tu d e n t - 3BR, 1 BA plu s a la rg e bonus ro o m - lots of space fo r the d o lla r P ric e d in the $50s O w n e r fin a n c in g at 12%. C a ll Su­ zanne R o b e rtso n , 472-9536, o r re a lto rs , 345-1030. O w n e r is a n xio u s fo r an o ffe r (63). Sheila Plotsky Cortdos-For S a le Q U IE T , S P A C IO U S one b e d ro o m in N o rth w e s t H ills n e a r M o P a c . A ll b r ic k w ith no c o m m o n w a lls . $46,500 w ith e x ­ c e lle n t fin a n c in g O w n e r-b ro k e r, M a ry N u n n a lly , 345-2071. F U R N IS H E D O N E b e d ro o m condo, m i­ c ro w a v e , c e ilin g ta n , w a s h e r /d r y e r , as­ signed p a r k in g and fenced p a tio . M a n y e x tra s . S45,000 or ass u m e lo an. C a ll 459- 1060, 471-5333, 1-295-2703, ask fo r E liz a ­ beth. U T A R E A 2BR 2B A . O w n e r fin a n c in g , 10% d ow n. $69,900 Lease $325 o r p u r ­ chase. 458-1847, 459-4936 W A L K TO cla ss. 1800 L a v a ca , 2-2, e x c e l­ le n t c o n d itio n , 8th flo o r v ie w , pool. S60.000 453-0091, 258-3554 G R E E N W O O D T O W E R S . 2-1, b e a u tifu l­ ly d e c o ra te d , good fin a n c in g M a rs h and Box, V ir g in ia F le m in g . 472-1000, 454- ______________________________ 0118. SAN P E D R O S q u a re U n iq u e s e ttin g , la rg e liv in g a re a o v e rlo o k in g G re e n b e lt. 2BR 2B A, lo v e ly in te r io r, n o n -e s c a la tin g S48.000 lo an $118,000 F lo A n n R andle, M a rs h and Box Co 472-1000, 476-4725 G R E E N W O O D T O W E R S Best buy per squa re fo o t in U T a re a . F ir s t $54,500, $11,000 d ow n, o w n e r c a r r y a t 13% Sec­ ond u n it a v a ila b le a t $51,500, p a r t ia lly fu rn is h e d , a s s u m a b le $15,000 dow n, note. Pool, s e c u rity F lo A n n R andle, M a rs h a n d Box Co. 472-1000, 476-4725. 95 % INVESTOR F IN A N C IN G U n ive rsity area condo 1B R -1B A 346-4550 T h e P ric e Is $36,900 A g e n t 541,500 Pool s de 1BR condo c o n v e rs io n . N ew a p p lia n c e s , c a rp e ts , and fix tu r e s A ll b r ic k c o n s tru c tio n , new ro o f. R iv e r s id e / IH35 a re a ne a r s h u ttle . E llio t t S ystem , 451-8178. A U G U S T M O V E IN PECAN WALK CONDOS 1, 2, and 3 b e d ro o m s , c o m p le te s e c u rity sys te m fo r a ll u n its - Ja c u z z i and sauna Q u a lity c o n s tru c tio n . On S p eedw ay n e x t to c a m p u s . P ric e s s ta r t at $55,000. C a ll Stan, 454 4744 o r 442-5070. Tickets-For S a le JO H N D E N V E R . O n ly the v e r y fro n t best seats, best p ric e s C a ll 447-9891 a n y ­ tim e . Jose. FOR SALE Tickets-F or S ale A S IA T IC K E T S . F lo o r and a re n a seats R e asonable p ric e s C a ll 447-9891 a n y ­ tim e . C o n c e rt: J u ly 1. Jose. C H E A P T R IC K t ic k e t s ’ E x c e lle n t fro n t flo o r and a re n a s e a tin g . Best p ric e s a n y ­ w h e re . C a ll A u s tin a c io u s , 441-6675 A lso a v a ila b le : A sia , John D e n v e r, The W h is p e rs . __________ M is c e lla n e o u s -F o r S a le ____ C H IN E S E SH OES - w oks, n a tu r a l soaps, lib e r ta r ia n books, scie nce fic tio n , used books P A C IF IC S U N R IS E , 1712 S. Con­ gress. 441-4565. je w e lry F IN E S T A M E R IC A N plus 2,500 g ifts , r e ta il and w h o le s a le N e lso n 's G ifts , 4502 S. C ongress, 444- 3814 In d ia n M A T C H IN G E A R L Y A m e ric a n couch and c h a ir, p la id , $75. 452-2040 a fte r 7 p .m . _____________________ flo p p ie s - c o m p u te rs , p e r i­ C O M P U S O U R C É (T e le v id e o , A lto s, p h e ra ls , C IT O H , E le p h a n t, M a x e ll, e tc .). Low p ric e s w ith o u t m a il o rd e r hassles. 327- 5925._________ _______________ D IS H W A S H E R - M U S T sell. C a ll 478- 9618 f r o m 2 - 9 . _________ U N B E L IE V A B L E ! P E R F E C T c o n d i­ tio n 30 g a llo n ta n k w ith a ll p u m p s and filt e r s fo r fre s h o r s a lt w a te r. 478-9618 a fte r 2 p .m . u n til 9 p .m . GOOD C H E A P fu rn itu re , etc. fo r sale. 173-8835, keep t r y i n g . _________________ G O IN G IN T O th e s e rv ic e and m u s t s e ll! R a dio S hack TRS-80 m o d e l 3 m ic r o c o m ­ p u te r, th re e m o n th s old, w ith m od e l V II lin e p r in t e r and a ll p a tch cords. Best o f­ fe r. 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 ific e fo r cash. E x ­ c e lle n t c o n d itio n . in te llig e n t t e r m in a l, S ta r m o d e m . $175 fo r both. 471-4706, 447-7860. _________ In te rte c C A N O E FO R sale 15 fo o t A lu m a c ra ft w ith p a d d le s. G ood c o n d itio n , $175. 474- _ 281L _________ _ W A T E R S K I - O 'B r ie n t o r , " $165. 327-8203. ______ " T h e C o m p e ti­ IB M S E L E C T R IC T y p e w r ite r $330 00. E x c e lle n t c o n d itio n . C a ll 472-1238 A N T IQ U E D A R K O ak b u ffe t/s te re o c a b in e t, m ir r o r e d w a rd ro b e . P ric e n e g o tia b le . C a ll Ann, 474-9950 a fte r 5:30. S E R V IC E FO R 8 - set of C hine, co rs a g e p a tte rn , lik e new . $35. 459-1684. T O P Q U A L IT Y M e x ic a n dresses, $55 each, one size fit s a ll. 479-6756. FURNISHED APARTMENTS Y O U 'R E K I D D I N G ! ! W e h a v e f u lly fu rn is h e d e ffic ie n c ie s on the s h u ttle ro u te fo r o n ly S 215/m onth and u n fu rn is h e d a p a rtm e n ts fo r o n ly S 2 00'm onth C a ll Ja m e s a t 454-4915 and m o v e in to d a y I NO J O K E ! JUST FOR M E ? W e a re now le a s in g fu rn is h e d e ffic ie n ­ cies a n d 1 b e d ro o m s 1 m ile fr o m c a m p u s s ta rtin g a t $ 2 0 0/m onth. Y o u w o n 't fin d a m o re u n iq u e and q u ie t c o m m u n ity . C a ll Ja m e s a t 454-4915 and fin d a p la ce ju s t fo r y o u ! $225-$265 Fountain T e rra ce Apts. 1 BR a p ts . fu rn is h e d , w a lk -in clo sets, w a ll to w a ll c a rp e t, ca b le T V , pool, s m o k e d e te c to rs and c e ilin g fa n s W a te r and gas p a id . W a lk in g d is ta n c e to U T. 610 W 30th, A p t. 134 M a n a g e r. 477-8858 472-3812 3000 Guadalupe Place Summer Rates 1 B e d ro o m 1 B a th C o n d o m in iu m s C e ilin g F a n s W a lk to C a m pu s E D P A D G E T T CO. 454-4621 S U M M E R R A T E S now o r s u m m e r r e n t­ ing. W a lk to c a m p u s . L a rg e e ffic ie n c ie s , 2 B R -2B A e ffic ie n c ie s . S h u ttle and c ity bus, pool, fu rn is h e d o r u n fu rn is h e d . 472- 2147 FURNISHED APARTMENTS ■ FURNISHED APARTMENTS Barcelona Efficiency Special EXTRA LARGE PATIO DISHWASHER POOL SIDE ONLY $225 PLUS E. 2201 ELMONT 444-2468 ♦ P ro f e ssio n a lly M a n a g e d b y M a r t i n e P r o p e r tie s , Inc. FURNISHED APARTMENTS CASTLE ARMS Furnished or Unfurnished 1 and 2 Bedrooms fo r Summer 2 w eeks fre e re n t w ith lease 31st and Speedway C a ll 477-3210 E F F IC IE N C IE S ABP . Quiet location, sum m er rates. 808 W inflo 480-9732 O L D M A IN A p a rtm e n ts , 25th and P e a rl 1BR, e ffic 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 , pool 476-5109. M A R K T W A IN . W a lk to c a m p u s . S m a ll, q u ie t, a t tr a c t iv e ly d e s igned 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 plus 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 IL L A , 2BR, p re le a s in g now fo r s u m m e r and sp e cia l ra te s . D is c o u n t fo r s u m m e r on 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 leases t a ll if T b l O C K S W E S T U T . E ffic ie n c y . P a n ­ e led liv in g ro o m , k itc h e n , stove, gas, r e ­ c lo s e t, f r ig e r a to r , w a lk -in la u n d ry , cab:e, 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 st U T . E ffic ie n c y , paneled liv in g ro o m , k itc h e n , stove (g a s ), r e fr ig e ra 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 É . 451-8122. W e s tw o rld R eal 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 fro 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 r e fr ig e r a to r , AC, p a in t, s h u ttle . N ew 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 la w school. 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. ____________ _____ to 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 pe. C a ll 4 7 8 - 3 5 3 3 . _____ ___________ A V A IL A B L E ^ NO W . 2BR 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. T5T 5 P A L M A P la za , 24 F la ts . E ffic ie n c y a v a ila b le . J u ly 1, $24 5/m onth, $175 d e ­ p o sit. 2/1 a v a ila b le im m e d ia te ly . $385/ m o n th , $250 de 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- 8937. _____________ _______________ S H A R E L U X U R Y 2B R 2B A condo. 5 b lo c k s fr o m c a m p u s. Pool, hot tu b $225/ person plu s d ep osit, plus E. P lease c a ll K en o r Bob, 327-5000, 477-9937. O N S H U T T L E . A B P , fr o m $100-5200. 472-9325 a fte r 6 p .m . and w e ekends. Ask fo r R a lp h . ____ S U B L E A S E L A R G E one b e d ro o m , f u r ­ n ished D is h w a s h e r, d isp o sa l, b a lc o n y, s m a ll c o m p le x on D u v a l. Close to IF , c it y bus. D e p o sit pa id $240 8. E. J u ly , A u g u s t. 467-0524, 451-0984. E F F IC IE N C IE S IN g re a t lo c a tio n ne a r U T ca m p u s . C a rp e te d , c e n tr a l a ir N ice - $ 23 0/m onth. N ic e r - 5 4 0 0/m onth. N ic e s t - 5 42 5/m onth. H o w e ll P ro p e rtie s , 477- 9925 Vi B L O C K TO c a m p u s. 1BR, Share sh o w e r 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 Lea se J u ly 11 th ro u g h A u g u s t 31. One b e d ro o m , one s p a c io u s , b a th . F re n c h doo rs, s k y lig h t, b a lc o n y . F o r in ­ f o rm a tio n c a ll 476-2481 F u r n is h e d C le a n , W A L K IN G D IS T A N C E U T . C lose to s h u ttle S m a ll c o m p le x w ith pool. $210 p lu s E. 477-9826. D an Joseph Co. G R E E N W O O D f o W E R S . W a lk to UT. 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 c u zzi, c o v e re d p a rk in g , s e c u rity , A B P . $ 40 0/m onth. 454-0782 S U M M E R R A T E S . W a lk to ca m p u s . L a rg e e ffic ie n c ie s , 2B R -2B A e ffic ie n ­ cie s. S h u ttle and c ity bus, pool, f u r ­ nished o r u n fu rn is h e d . 472-2147. Tb¥ a p a ¥ t m e n t , $ 1 8 l plus e le c tr ic ity a nd 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 fa n s, w a lk to c a m p u s . $325 S p e cia l y e a r lease ra te . 476-1701, a fte r 6:00. Le a ve m essage. V A C A N C Y - 1BR 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. ÍB R H Y D E P A R K , new c a rp e t, c e ilin g fa n s , pool. $230 plus E. C a ll 451-9444. 3 B L O C K S to ca m p u s . 2B R, 1BA, s w im ­ m in g pool, cable, la u n d ry . $275 plu s E, _____ _______ 307 E . 31st 478-6808. r o o m y " E F F IC IE N C Y , w a lk /s h u ttle U T . S u m m e r ra te $200 plu s E. 473-2592 a f te r 1 p .m . 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 ­ RY C O N D O M IN IU M S N E A R H A N ­ CO CK C E N T E R - 1-1, a p p lia n ce s, C A / CH, W /D con n e ctio n s , c a rp e t, C re p ’ ace, la rg e tre e s A d e q u a te sto ra g e $295 345- 9643. 1 A N D 2B R . W a lk to ca m p u s or 1 blo< k IF s h u ttle N ew r e fr ig r a to r , AC a in t, c a rp e t, etc W a te r, cable, gas p a id $225 plus E $450 plus E. 478-6148 C O N D O F O R re n t. N e ar ca m p u s, 2110 Rio G ra n d e . $550 m o n th 1BR 1 BA C a ll 478-7996, 472-4497. B E A U T IF U L 1-1 condo a t S u n n y v a le . L a u n d ry , pool, ne a r s h u ttle S295 s u m ­ m e r, $350 f a ll lease 451-8178. E llio t t S ys­ te m . ____ S P A C IO U S A N D a t tr a c tiv e one bed ro o m in s m a ll, q u ie t co m p le x u p s ta irs . G ra d or p ro fe s s io n a l p re fe rre d N o rth Loo p a re a $259 p lu s E 458-5638 UT A R E A W a lk o r rid e s h u ttle N ice 1 B R , new c a rp e t and p a in t, a p p ’ ances, C A /C H , e x tra s , $235 plus E. 1801 M a n o r. 474-2700, 928-0534. C O N D O FO R R E N T . 1 BR , IS A w a lk in g d is ta n c e f r o m ca m p u s, $375 plus A v a il­ a b le A u g u s t 1. (713) 668-1155. ÍF ~ 1 h Ü T T L É T 1 and 2BR g a rd e n -ty p e a p a rtm e n ts a v a ila b le N ice c o m p le x w ith tw o pools. F ro m $255. 454-3496. G R E A T 3BR a p a rtm e n ? th re e b lo cks fr o m U T c a m p u s . A v a ila b le fo r s u m m e r o n ly . $ 50 0/m onth A B P . 1BR a p a rtm e n ’ s 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 Tb R 1BA condo, th re e b lo ck s fro m c a m p u s . C e d ­ ing fans, 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. T O W E R S G R E E N W O O D a v a ila b le now. 2B R, 1 BA, b u ilt-in , c a rp e t, s w im ­ m in g pool and Jacu zzi L o c a te d n e a r U T and d o w n to w n . $67 5 'm o n th plus d e p o sit A B P C a ll Bob Len zo a t C res R e a lto rs , 346-2193. A V A I L A B L E J U L Y 1, South of ca m p u s, sp acious lb r apt. in q u ie t h i-ris e . $305/ m o A B P . 480 0045. O R A N G E T R E E condo" W a lk To U T . L a rg e e ffic ie n c y , f ir e ­ place, m ic ro w a v e , W /D L o c k e d -g a te s e c u rity . C o v e re d p a rk in g . R e nt n e g o ti­ ab le . (713) 376 3887 th re e closets, H i w i U i l H i H . l . i m r r r a 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 m ce y a rd to sublease. O ff 38’ z. 2-1 $375. A v a ila b le June 1. 454-2835. 2BR ON L a fa y e tte nea r U T and s h u ttle . N e w ly p a in te d , ca 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 ry 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. T A R R Y T O W N 2B R , g a ra g e , a p p li­ ances, $310 R e n ta l-A id e , 476 4684, 3004 G u a d a lu p e . 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 a t 612 W. 31 Vi S tre e t > 2 b lo c k o ff G u a d a ­ lu p e N e w ly re n o v a te d N e w car p e tin g , stove, r e fr ig e r a to r , b lin d s and A C /* ,e a t­ ing. O ff s tre e t p a rk in g . 529 7/m onth, $297 d e p o s it. W a te r pa 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 rn e s, 1 224-1871, M -F 8:30-4:30. UNFURNISHED x - m m A V A I L 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 h o u r in fo rm a tio n . 452-5979. U T V IC T O R I A N - 2 b lo cks s h u ttle , H a n ­ co c k G o lf, v e r y la rg e 3-1, b e a u tifu lly r e ­ m od e le d , fo rm a l d in in g g a ­ ra g e , C A /C H , stove, r e fr ig e r a to r , $795 3901 W ilb e r t, 479-6153. fire p la c e , N O R T H U T . 2BR, a p p lia n c e 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 . 3B R , A C g a ra g e , app u- ances, $450. R e n ta l-A id e , 476 1684 3004 G u a d a lu p e . Fee. O pen e v e ry d a y (D T 3L______________ 2717 R IO G R A N D E ". $700 m o n th , A B P , f o r s u m m e r. One m o n th 's r e n t fo r d e ­ po sit. 472-9281 C LO S E TO C A M P U S 3 b e d ro o m , f ir e ­ place, a ll a p p lia n c e s . $695 1006 W 22nd S a ye rs and Assoc , 478-9991. M O B IL E H O M E fo r r e n t - South A u s tin . 441-5870 a fte r 6 pm . FURNISHED DUPLEXES M A L E , F E M A L E hou sem 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 . FURNISHED APARTMENTS ^ DO ALL THESE ADS DRIVE YOU a p a r t m e n t s d u p le x e s , & h o m e s all over BANANAS? WE RENT AUSTIN, FREE! SOUTH 4 4 3 -2 2 1 2 NORTH 458-6111 NORTHWEST 3 4 5 -6 3 5 0 PAUL S. MEISLER PROPERTIES DM 10-6 Dpily 479-6618 s - w • • I • . . CONDOMINIUMS 2612 San Pedro is Condominiums with the luxury you’re accustomed to. The UT campus just six blocks away, so the pace is an easy one. Secluded on a hilltop in the Wp heart of Austin. The Tree- house sets the standard for University living. A u s tin , T o o t (S,l) 476*,67i r Lind‘ Inn06™!. *»•«*•»•«»** M a rketed by Linda Ingram 1306 Nueces Austin. Texas 78701 476-2673 NAG Development r J L No other UT Condo can offer you so much for this little Hyde Park Oaks offers you an incredible lifestyle with 1 bed­ rooms from $57,950 that art loaded with an impressive array of amenities. Come by and tour our furnished model today «J %i, OPEN Daily 1 1-6 or call us at 474-1761 or 476-2673 1 1 4 E. 3 1 s t St re et Just 5 blks. No r t h of C a m p u s Hyde Park Wsffi Qahs 3 1 S T A N D ( . R O O M S T u M a r k e t e d by Linda Ingram & Assoc. 1 306 Nueces A Tree Grows in Austin Eff, 1 & 2 Bedrooms $49,950-$129,950 Private garage w/opener -Panoramic view of Shoal Creek Split level hot tub Fireplace Microwave F IF T E E N H U N D R E D W I f T L Y N N Luxury a n d convenience are o n ly t w o re a ­ sons to come h o m e to F ifteen H u n d re d W est Lynn Located blocks a w c y fro m M o - th e corner of Enfield a n d W est pac on Lynn, d w e lle rs h a v e th e E R S h u ttle All ho m es in clu d e 2 bed ro o m 2 b a th s study an d t w o c o r f a r a f t i w i t h o p e n e r . F itted R ated F inancing a v a ila b le M o d e l O p e n D a i l y 1 1 6 M a rk e te d by Linda In g ra m & Associates 1 3 0 6 Nueces 4 7 6 - 2 6 7 3 OAK KNOLL lu x u rio u s on»- a n d Iw o -b e d ro o m condo­ m in iu m s H a ltin g in ih • m id - 4 0 s M o s t in w it h loss th a n 5 % d o w n f H A o n d VA fi­ n a n c m g is a v a ila b le H u rry b e t a u l . I n e r t n a n c in g ,s a v a ila b le H u rry b e c o u te th » r» a re d is c o u n ts o t u p to $ J (0OO to b u y e rs b e fo re o u r G r a n d O p e n in g C loso to t o w n , clo«« to T o w n la b » , d o s t to p o r to c t. M a rketed L inda Ingram A 4**o< 4 7 6 2 6 7 3 ‘ J u n e 79 0 0 0 J, M , J 13 0 6 N u .c a s 2313 LO N G V IEW o th e r c o n d o m in iu m (J n iik e any h o m e s ite in A u s tin , 2313 L O N G ­ V IE W i$ in tim a te ra th e r th a n in tim ­ id a tin g . T h is s m a ll site of o n ly 7 co n ­ d o m in iu m hom es s ta rtin g in the m id 50 s One b e d ro o m u n its com e s w ith tw o be d ro o m a re also a 1 0 ’ > ARM G F M Financing a v a h a d l e A v a ila b le M a rk e te d by lin d a In g ra m a n d Associates 4 7 6 - 2 6 7 3 1 1 0 6 Nueces lo ft and 25% OFF 1*f m o n th 's lo w su m m er ro to * w ith th h coupon o n ly 3 0 2 W 3 8 th floor Largo c o m p lex w ith m a n y soio€t p la n s to choose from . S tu d y A S u m m o r fu n d , s w im m in g po o l a n d a ll am onitioB . Lan d lo rd p a y s for cooking, h o o tin g ho t w a fe r , a n d m uch m o re F u rn ith o d a n d u n fu rn ish o d . S to rtin g fro m $ 1 8 9 A i _____________ 4 5 3 - 4 0 0 1 _____________ SOUTH SHORE. LAKE V I E W A p a r t m e n t s A v a i l a b l e • Convenient for UT student* • Easy access to IH35 • Lake views • Close to restaurants, shopping • Built-in dresser/vanity • Carpeting w all to w all • W all to w a ll closets Summer Leases Available 3 0 0 E. Riverside Dr. 444-3337 G illingw ater M ana gem ent Co. F ind the a p a rtm e n t c o m m u n ity th a t is best suited to you w ith the Greater Austin Apartment Guide T h e A p a r t m e n t G u id e has been used by tho u san ds in c itie s acro ss th e c o u n try a n d is now being p u b ­ lished fo r you, the A u s tin a p a r t m e n t s e e k e r. T o re c e iv e y o u r FREE copy, c a ll o ur o ffic e s a t 512/454-0215 o r send a s e lf-a d d re s s e d s ta m p e d e n v e lo p e (w ith 70‘ p o s ta g e ) to H a a s P u b lis h in g C o., 8220 R e s e a rc h B lv d ., No. 148-E, A u s tin , T e x a s 78758 ALSO AVAILABLE AT: 7-Eleven Convenience Stores, M ilita ry Bases, Motels, and Hotels, M ajor Em ­ ployers, Realtors, Banks, Moving Companies, Schools, Chambers of Com­ merce, and Airports. — FURNISHED APARTMENTS ROOMMATES ROOMMATES ROOMMATES Tuesday, June 22,1982 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Page 9 HELP WANTED TYPING SUMMER RATES WALK TO CAMPUS OR SHUTTLE BUS 1 b e d ro o m , 1 b a th , shag c a r p e t , C A / C H A C T 111 4312 S p e e d w a y 453-0540 A C T IV 3311 Red R iv e r 474-8125 A C T V I 2801 H e m p h i l l 476-0411 A C T V I I I 2808 W h i t i s 474-5650 A C T IX 2803 H e m p h i l l 476-0411 A C T X 301 W. 29th 474-5650 T h re e O a k s 409 W. 38th 453-3383 Pecan Square 506 W. 37th 459-1597 W e s t e r n e r 2806 H e m p h i l l 472-0649 2711 & 2721 H e m p h i l l 472-0649 Ed Padgett Co. 4 5 4 - 4 6 2 1 ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ! • ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ THE ARBOR 1500 Royal Crest • : Summer Leases First Stop on RC Shuttle Balconies Fireplaces • W alk-in Closets • Pool • Laundry • Gas Paid Gillingwater Management 4 4 4 - 7 5 1 6 ffa Q rria g e cJ kni$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 anagem ent Co. -SUMMER RATES- Close to Campus and On Shuttle ★ Pools ★ 1BR from $225 plus E to $240 plus E ★ 2BR from $265 plus E to $295 plus E ★ All small complexes it Laundry rooms EL CID 3704 Speedway 459-0267 LA PAZ 451-4255 401 W. 39th EL CAMPO 452-8537 305 W. 39th EL DORADO 3501 Speedway 472-4893 Professionally managed by American Real Estate S Í : NOW LEASING • : E S T R A D A Summer Rates and Summer/Fall Rates Studios, 1, 2, & 3 Bedrooms FROM $235-$475 PER MONTH 1801 S. Lakeshore 4 4 2 - 6 6 6 8 • Shuttle • Shopping • 3 Pools • Lake view P ro fessio nally M an aged by Start in e P roperties, Inc. LEASING FOR SUMMER & FALL! SUMMER RATES > 1, 2, 3, 5 Bedrooms Lighted Tennis Court» Shuttle Bus Stop 1 Security Service • C ity T ra n s p o rta tio n > Poolside Ic e m ak e r » Poolside Restroom 2101 Burton Dr. Exercise Rooms/Sauna» • Putting Green • 2 Pools • 1 large, 1 huge • Furn./Unfurn. • W alk-in Closets an 447-4130 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 3:00 p.m . F E M A L E R O O M M A T E w a nte d. 2BR 1BA, across NR s h u ttle . $155; '/ j e; de­ posit. M a g g ie 444-5290; m essages: 444- ________________ 0085 F E M A L E G R A D U A T E stu d e n t to sh a re 2BR, 2BA u n fu rn is h e d a p a rtm e n t nea r Z ilk e r. $21 0/m onth plu s b ills . C a ll M a ry 327-3940 a fte r 6 _ N E A T , H E A L T H conscious in d iv id u a l to share 2-2 n o rth c e n tra l A u s tin . $180/ m o n th plus '/ t E M ik e , 467-8578. M A L E H O U S E M A T E needed. Non- sm o ke r 3BR IB A ne a r s h u ttle . $150, '/3 b ills 458-1088 even in g s, 459-2121 ex 6312 d a ily . T e r r y . H A M IL T O N P O O L Road 40 m ile v ie w M o d e rn 4BR hom e on 15 acres. M a le and fe m a le ro o m m a te s lo o k in g fo r second fe m a le ro o m m a te M u s t be lib e r a l b u t m a tu re . 459-1928 R E S P O N S IB L E , E A S Y -G O IN G fe m a le to s h a re c e n tr a lly lo cate d 3-1 house W / D, c e ilin g fans, s e m i-fu rn is h e d . W a lk to IF $250 plus '/3 b ills . 454-9419. _ _ _ _ _ N E A T , CO N SC I E N TIO U S b u t co o l ro o m m a te needed to sh a re 2-1 a p a r t­ m e n t w /p o o l $160, '/a E . C a ll M itc h , 443- 6121 H O U S E M A T E W A N T E D , la rg e house W a s h e r/d ry e r, AC , a ll b ills paid, $200 m o n th 837-2777. ROOMS A C O-O P S U M M E R ? You g e t an a ir-c o n d itio n e d p riv a te ro o m , 19 m e a ls per w eek, a s w im m in m g pool, and dozens of new frie n d s . And Y O U a re in c o n tro l. T r y c o -o p e ra tiv e liv in g at 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 or c a ll 476-5678 C O -E D D O R M 1 b lo ck fro m ca m p u s. P r iv a te and shared ro o m s a v a ila b le fo r s u m m e r & fo r fa ll. 474-6905. P R IV A T E ROOMS, co-ed house, k itc h e n p riv ile g e s , b ills paid. R a tes: $140-175. Phone 477 1529 N ear UT 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 room , tw o b lo c k s fro m U T S hare bath, $160; s h a re k itc h e n , $190 480-0766 P R IV A T E ROOMS in best w e st ca m p u s lo ca tio n s. N ice - $16 0/m onth. N ic e r - $165-170/m onth. N ic e s t - $19 5/m onth, A B P H o w e ll P ro p e rtie s , 477-9925. C LO S E TO ca m p u s, room , $120, $160 A B P C a ll 474-5981. ro o m in g house FURNISHED HOUSES 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 d a y ( D - l 1). fo r G IR L S , T H IS is it ! W e a re now a c c e p t­ ing g ro u p a p p lic a tio n s the p r e s ti­ gious 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 irls in the fin e s t lo c a tio n w e st of th e UT ca m pus. C a ll H o w e ll P ro p e rtie s , 477-9925, fo r le a sin g d e ta ils . A fte r hou rs, M rs . Behne, 345 2099, or M r W ilso n , 282-1301. ROOM AND BOARD W O M E N A R E A S S E TS T O CO-O PS The ICC co-ops a re lo o k in g fo r a fe w good people to t i l l s u m m e r and f a ll v a ­ cancies. R ates s ta r t as lo w as $183. P lease c a ll us a t 476-1957. FOR RENT SAILBO AT REN TALS 12' B IC S U R F S A IL E R - S 6/hour 14' 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 SLO O P -5 1 2 /h o u r 23' SO NAR SLO O P - $17.5 0 /hour 25'-36' C A B IN C LASS 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 B A S IN on L a k e T r a v is , 2 b lo ck s w e st of M a n s ­ fie 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 ck s to o u r p a rk in g lot. 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 , Vj b lo c k fro m c a m p u s. $ 75 /m onth, 926-7243, lease re q u ire d BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES AR T S T U D E N T ? BUSI 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 studio . 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 cC o m b , A f filia t e d B u siness B ro ­ ke r. 454-3586 LOST & FOUND LO ST, J E S T E R lo t: d ia p e r bag. Seek re ­ t u r n o f e s p e c ia lly . R E W A R D No q ue stions. P lease help, c a ll 454-8862 a fte r 1 p .m . b o o k w it h in , F E M A L E N O N S M O K I N G r o o m m a t e w a n te d G ra d u a te s tu d e n t P [ £ e r r * ° S hare n ice o ld e r hom e on s h u ttle . 5202/ ' h b ills . C a ll 451-8520 be­ m o n th plu s __________ 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 yard« ™ r- n ished, CA, CH, W A /D R V . 8150/m o n th p lu s '/s u t ilitie s . Ca ll John, 452-2071._____ fe m a le ro o m ­ ‘ N E A T , R E S P O N S IB L E m a te fo r nice, sp acious 3-2 d u Ple * - F ' r| p lace, g a ra g e , v a u lte d c e ilin g ; RC, s k $163 p lu s E iJ lu lv J L 441-4060. _______ 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 f te r 5, 467- 0660 _____ N o n -s m o k I ng 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 , I BA F o r second h a lt 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 s yg o in g stu d e n t P r iv a te ro o m $160 A B P 452- 4429, T ony._________________ ___________ G A Y M A L E to sh a re fu rn is h e d lu x u ry hom 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 p lu s '/a u t ilit ie s M u s t be u n u s u a lly neat B ox 9802-598, A u s tin 78766 ________ Q U IE T , R ESPONSIBLE g ra d fe m a le to sh a re n ic e hom e w ith sam e $225 plu s E. C a ll C a ro l, 928-247ÍL________ TW O P E O P L E needed to s h a re la rg e h om e w ith tw o coup les. F u rn is h e d 3-4, w a sh 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 to s h a re 2B R -2B A a p a rtm e n t. IF s h u t­ tle , pool, and n e a rb y te n n is c o u rts . $155 plu s 1 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 p lu s b ills . 473-2254. 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 s t 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 D an at 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 a s h /d ry , C A /C H , nice y a rd tree s, O n ly $141.66 458-9580 a fte r 5:00 pm . H u rr y . N E E D R E S P O N S IB L E m a le ro o m ­ 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 ve -in 2/1 d u p le x , fro m ca m p u s . M u s t be re s p o n s ib le and c le a n . C a ll Lou a t 454-3307 o r le a ve m essage a t 471-1944 $142.50 plus V2 b ills . l '/2 m ile s R o o m m a te Inc. When you n eed a r o o m m a te in a h u r r y ca ll th e p r o fe ssio n a ls 4 1 3 -0 4 1 0 R o o m m a t e , V J e t w o r k M o s t c o m p re h e n s iv e service o f its k in d G e t a S u m m e r a n d , if n e e d e d , a Fall ro o m m a te a ll fo r o n e lo w price W e II ta k e core o f f in d in g th e r ig h t ro o m - m a te fo r y o u . T his 2 f o r 1 s p e c ia l a v a ila b le fo r a \ lim it e d tim e o n ly V ,JO \ M a s te rc a rd \ 4 7 3 2 8 0 0 2 8 1 3 Rio G ro n d e 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, near p a rk . Share re n t and b ills . C a ll E liz a ­ beth a fte r 5:30, 451-9613. M A L E , F E M A L E h o u 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 loca tio n 480-9644 a fte r 5 p .m . A v a ila b le J u ly . ___________ ______ F E M A L E R O O M M A T E w a n te d to share house close to s h u ttle $117.50 L h E . C a ll 451-5693.__________________________ E N T E R IN G L A W s tu d e n t seeking e a s y ­ going, sta b le , stu d io u s la w or g ra d u a te stu d e n t ro o m m a te , m a le o r fe m a le , to sh a re fin e C la r k s v ille 2 -bedroom u p ­ s ta irs a p a rtm e n t w ith sundeck Rent $220 m o n th plus b ills . A v a ila b le la st w eek in June. C a ll J a m e s at 477-4540 a f ­ te r 6 p m . or a t 472-7765 fr o m 9-5. L IB E R A L P R O F E S S IO N A L w o m a n w ith young c h ild w a n ts fe m a le (27-37) to share N o rth 3BR tow nh ouse. 15 m in u te s fro m ca m p u s by c a r. O n ly b e d ro o m f u r ­ n itu re needed Pools, te n n is $150 p lu s 's E A u g u st L 346-2015 e ve 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 c k s to EC. $110 plus to r ro o m b ills . 478 4958 _________ R O O M M A T E N E E D E D . 2BR 2BA tow n- hom e, $187 m o n th plu s r i e le c tr ic ity . C a ll M yle s, 447-8816 TYPING TYPING MASTER TYPIST, INC. - THE COMPUTERIZED TYPING STORE RESUMES SAME DAY & ONE DAY SERVICE SAVE YOUR RESUME O N COMPUTER FOR FUTURE UPDATING ALSO Dissertations, Theses, PRs, & Law Briefs Dobie Mall N. 36 2021 Guadalupe St. 472-0293 FREE Parking UNFURN. APARTMENTS UNFURN. APARTMENTS IIVER 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. 4 4 4 -7 7 9 7 ROOM AND BOARD ROOM AÑD BOARD N e w m a n Hall-St. Austin Parish 2026 G uadalupe 476-0669 Small, Quiet - All Women Double & Single Rooms A vailable for Summer and Fall Summer Rates Double Single Per Week $87 $100 7 5 Meals Included Private Parking Available ■ 1 ■ a o s 201 2 guadatupa a u a tin , ta x a a 7 8 7 0 5 4 7 4 - 6 0 0 5 S U M A / M ay 31 Double O 1 E R R A T E S - August 14: ccupancy $380 Privati = Room $ 500 TUTORING MATH TUTOR O v e r s e v e n y e a r s o f p r o f e s ­ in h e lp in g U .T . s io n a l s e r v ic e S t u d e n ts m a k e th e G R A D E ! !! S tr u g g lin g ? ? F r u s tr a te d o n t e s t s v C a ll o r c o m o b y f o r a p p o in t m e n t MATH: «351/3*1 MMM/MSC M3IM/1 MIMA «4771/1 MAM PHYSICS: PKYMl MtTMM/l P M Y M M /l n « Y 1 7 7 I/l (MM A/I M i l « M 2 I «12$ CHEMISTRY: 00*1 CIOM C M I I A / I BUSINESS: ACan/117 5TA369 COM P SCI.: C$181/S82 C$315 D o n 't p u t th is o f f u n t il th e n ig h t b e f o r e an e x a m . I t's lo o la te th e n ... • d o t e to UT C A M P U S • V a ry r o o K m a b U r a to * • l o t * o f pat»«nc« • In a la n g u a g * y ou'R u n d e r s ta n d AUo htfih %< hl rtmneM in the above nubjrrt.% and SAT & CRF. Rrvirw Pat Lacey’s Teteriny Service 6 0 0 W . 2 8 th St. O ff. 103 4 5 8 -5 0 6 0 4 7 7 -7 0 0 3 Ch 305 Q House of Tutor 819 W. 24th T ri Towers 474-4723 RESEARCH E N G I N E E R I N G / SCIENTIST ASSOCIATE I fo r o n e -y e a r to u r in A n ta rc tic a . Applied R e se a rch L a b o ra to rie s , The U n iv e rs ity of T e xa s a t Austin, has an opening fo r an in d iv id u a l w ith an engineering or sci­ ence d e g re e w ith experience in electron­ ics, p r im a r ily d ig it a l w ith som e analog, to be s ta tio n m a n a g e r of a s a te llite tr a c k in g s ta tio n on M c M u r d o Sound in A n ta r c tic a T h is p o s itio n is fo r o p e ra tio n and m a in te n a n c e of e le c tro n ic e q u ip ­ m e n t. M u s t sig n up f o r a to u r of one ye a r w ith d e p a rtu re to be in O c to b e r 1982 W h ile a t th e d u ty s ta tio n in A n ta rc tic a , h o u sin g and food a re fu rn is h e d a t no ch a rg e P o s itio n w ill end O c to b e r 1983 P a y c o m ­ m e n s u ra te w ith b a c k g ro u n d and e x p e ri­ ence P h y s ic a l and p s y c h o lo g ic a l te sts sched­ uled fo r J u ly 1982 To a p p ly , c o n ta c t O F F IC E OF PER S O N N E L SERVICES and Em ployee Relations 2613 W ichita 471-3656 E O E /A A F A L L RUSH U N I V E R S I T Y CO-OP T em po ra ry job sta rtin g firs t p a rt of August. Stop by Co-Op personnel office fo r schedules. EO E APT. M A N A G E R R e sponsive, nea t, courteous, m e c h a n i­ c a lly in c lin e d and m o tiv a te d coup le needed b e g in n in g J u ly 12 to m a n a g e 29 u n it a p t. c o m p le x on s h u ttle ro u te a t 108 W. 45th in e x cha nge fo r one b ed roo m a p t. and m o d e s t s a la ry . Send re su m e to A p t. 101, 108 W 45th o r c a ll 452-1419 or 453-2771 fo r In te rv ie w ap p t MATH TUTOR House of Tutor 819 W. 24th T ri Towers 474-4723 T E L E P H O N E SALES F u ll and part tim e M o n da y-F rid ay 5:30-9:30 p.m. S5/hour Call 479-6219 S P A N IS H G O T you dow n? B ilin g u a l E n g lis h g ra d u a te w ill tu to r Spanish o r E n g lis h students. 474-8617, A lic ia . DO Y O U speak Spanish? I tu to r E n g lis h . B ilin g u a l, e xp e rie n c e d . A d u lts o r c h il­ dre n . 477-5292 even ings. WANTED WE W ANT YOUR B IK E S ! We buy, r e p a ir, sell and tra d e bicyc le s BOB'S B IK E A N D K E Y W estw ood Shopping C e n te r 5413 N. L a m a r 327-4034 452-9777 FAST CASH We loan on most anything of value. N orth: 454-0459, 5134 B urnet Rd. South: 892-0019, 5195 290 West. 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 in n e rs-a d va n ce d . U T de­ gre e . A fte r 5 p .m . 459-4082 P IA N O LE SSO N S . B e g in n e r-a d va n ce d . E x p e rie n c e d , q u a lifie d te a ch e r. C la s s i­ cal and im p ro v is e d style s. Phone 453- _________________________ 9696. P IA N O LE SSO 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 rate 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 NS , a ll s ty le s E x p e r i­ re a so n a b le ra te s . 476- enced 7830 ______________________________ te a c h e r, IN S T R U C T IO N fo r b e g in n in g P IA N O and in te r m e d ia te students C la ss ica l and im p ro v is e d s ty le s as w e ll as com po­ s itio n . R e asonable rate s, close to c a m ­ pus. C a ll E lysse, 474-8061, a fte r 1:00 M - F, S a t/S u n a n y tim e . HELP WANTED P A T M A G E E 'S In H ig h la n d M a ll is now a c c e p tin g a p p lic a tio n s fo r p a r t tim e e m ­ p lo y m e n t. 451-4592. ____________ P A R T T IM E p o s itio n a v a ila b le An ICF f a c ilit y fo r the m e n ta lly re ta rd e d has a w e ekend o p e n in g fo r a p ro g ra m aide E x p e rie n c e w o rk in g w ith the re ta rd e d is p r e fe rre d . C a ll D an a t 272-5994 w e ek­ d a y s betw e en 8-5. G /M STEAKHOUSE 1908 Guadalupe Cook and c o u n te r po sitio n s a v a ila b le F re e m e a ls A p p ly in person betw een 2-4 p m . H o u rs a v a ila b le 11 a .m .-5 p .m or 5 p .n .-1 0 p .m . S u m m e r he lp w a nte d. No phone c a lls , please D E S K C L E R K , m o te l, p a rt-tim e , 9pm - 7am e v e ry o th e r n ig h t. A p p lic a n t m u s t be a v a ila b le th ro u g h s u m m e r and fa ll se m e ste rs. A p p ly In person - m o rn in g s W est W in d s M o te l, IH35 and A ir p o r t B lv d . ________ L IQ U O R ST O R E c le rk needed p a rt tim e . M o s tly a fte rn o o n and e v en ing ho u rs T h u rs d a y , F r id a y and S a tu rd a y . M u s t have c a r M u s t be able to ta k e p o ly g ra p h N o rth w e s t A u s tin . A p p ly in person, H o lt's L iq u o r, 8030 M esa D riv e , 345-579A______ _________________________ B A B Y S IT T E R N E E D E D T im e s v a ry . E n fie ld a re a , close to c am pus, sh u ttle ro u te 474-7008 b e fo re 5 p .m ____ C O N V E N IE N C E S T O R E . 24~ hours, 7 d a y s - a ll s h ifts a v a ila b le . T w o lo c a tio n s - n o rth and south. C a ll 452-9219. E O E . __ te m p o ra ry e m p lo y m e n t P A R T T IM E w ith n o n -p ro fit re s e a rc h o rg a n iz a tio n fo r v ig o ro u s p u b lic s p irite d in d iv id u a ls . D u tie s in c lu d e c o n ta c tin g c o m m u n ity m in d e d people in S o u th w e ste rn tow ns by phone. S a la ry : h o u rly w age. M o n d a y - F r id a y e m p lo y m e n t needed, tw o s h ifts a v a ila b le : 8:30 a m -12:30 p .m . and 1-5 p m . F o r an a p p o in tm e n t c a ll 451-6459 E O E . N E E D E D : C A T lo v e r to keep m y k itte n fo r s ix w eeks. slO /w e e k. I ' l l s u p p ly food, etc. 471-1679. __________________ _ _ _ G R A D U A T E S T U D E N T to look a fte r 9 y e a r old g ir l. H o m e w o rk assistance, c r e a tiv e a c tiv itie s , tra n s p o rta tio n . F le x ­ ib le sc hed ule a m u st. S ta rt la te A u g u s t. R e fe re n c e s e s s e n tia l and w i ll be che c ke d T op s a la ry . C a ll Lois, 44 1-0988 M U S IC D IR E C T O R . F ir s t P re s b y te ria n C h u rc h . 345-8866, or a fte r business hours 345-9363 o r 346-3231._____________________ C H U R C H N U R S E R Y w o rk e r, Sunday m o rn in g s 9:30-12:00. U n iv e r s ity B a p tis t C h u rch , 478-1066.______________ ________ W A N T E D C O M M E R C IA L f o r a d v e rtis e m e n t. M ic h a e l 451-8746 illu s tr a to r E V E N IN G C A S H IE R . CR S h u ttle . Ap- p ly in person, Long John S ilv e rs , 5403 _____ C a m e ro n Road. B A B Y S IT T E R FO R 2 c h ild re n w eek- n ig h ts o r w eekends T ra n s p o rta tio n and re fe re n c e s de sire d . C a ll 327-2870 a fte r 5 p .m . U F E G U A R D N E E D E D . E x p e rie n c e nece ss a ry , WSI p re fe rre d P a rt tim e , $4.2 5 /h o u r B a lcones W oods C lu b . C a ll betw een 12pm-10pm, 345-9015. ____________________ ___________ M E D IC A L O F F IC E a s s is ta n t. P a rt fle x ib le , p e rs o n ­ tim e M a tu re , SOTA, able. E x p e rie n c e p re fe rre d . A p p ly to D a ily T e x a n , Box D -l, A u s tin , T X 78712 B E R N A R D 'S C O F F E E S of the W o rld in H ig h la n d M a ll is now a c c e p tin g a p p lic a ­ tio n s fo r p a r t tim e sales positio n s. R e ta il e x p e rie n c e p re fe rre d . A p p ly in person. B E A N 'S R E S T A U R A N T and b a r is a c ­ fo r e xp e rie n c e d c e p tin g a p p lic a tio n s p a r t tim e cooks A p p ly in person be­ tw e e n 2-4, M -F , 311 W. 6th. TYPING T . I . C . 8 . I n c T y p i n g f c r v i c s 1005 E. St. Elmo Rd. P ic k u p /d a liv a ry potnU SO copy ro tu m o pockogo $ 1 3 .0 0 Torm Pa p o rt T h o to t R u th torvico • D n to rta tio n s • Technical ty p in g • A t lo w a t $ 1 ,2 5 /p o g e _______ 443-4433_______ 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 r s e x p e rie n c e te a c h in g colle g e E n g lis h and ty p in g . E le c tro n ic t y p e w r it ­ er C a m pu s pick up and d e liv e r y 479- 8909 W ord Processing ° ro fe s s io n a l fo rm a t and q u a lity book- f a _e p r in t Theses, d is s e rta tio n s , la w b rie fs , resum es, P R 's , m a ilin g lis ts and pe rso n a lize d fo rm le tte rs . R easonable Rates House of Tutor 819 W 24th St. 474 4723 N E E D A fa s t a c c u ra te ty p is t'’ I have a BA in E n g lis h , a c o rre c tin g S e le ctric and 12 y e a rs s e c re ta ria l e xp e rie n c e C a ll Ann a t 447-5069, 8-6 WOODS T Y P IN G S e rv ice - w hen you w a n t it done r ig h t. 472-6302, 2200 G uada lupe, side e n tra n c e ________ T Y P I N G -C O R R E C T IN G S e le c t r ic , o v e rn ig h t s e rvic e , p ic k -u p a v a ila b le t ill 11 50 p.m . E xp e rie n c e d , p ro fe ssio n a l. P a tty , 345-4269 t ill 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 se rvic e , Theses, dis s e rta tio n s , pro fe s sio n a l re p o rts , etc. B a rb a ra T ullos, 453-5124 tu rn a ro u n d fa s t E X C E L L E N T T Y P IN G -re p o rts . d is s e r­ ta tio n s , resum es, etc. C o rre c tin g Selec­ t r i c 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 vo n n e 474-4863 T Y P IN G B Y D E A N N E S p e c ia liz in g in te rm papers, d is s e rta tio n s , theses, le ­ gal IB M C o rre c tin g S e le c tric R eason­ a b le ra te s . 447-7284 T Y P IN G FA ST, profe ssio n a l 10 ye a rs c o m b in e d e xp e rie n ce in e n g in e e rin g and a c c o u n tin g fie ld s S A u s tin $ l/p a g e M illie , 447-5906 T Y P IN G IN m y hom e N E A u stin , re a ­ sona ble ra te s C a ll Pat, 454-5924. No 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 . F ast, ac c u ra te , ea sy changes, re v ie w copy, high q u a lity f in a l copy E x p e rie n c e d C a ll M a rg a re t, 837-2440 I N T E L L IG E N T , AC CU R A T E ty pi ng R e ports, re sum es 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 to r in g C r e a tiv e S e rvices, 2420 G uadalupe, 478-3633 T H E S IS , D IS S E R T A T IO N ^ resum es, le­ g a l do cu m e n ts, reaso n a b le prices, d e liv ­ e ry ne g o tia b le . 1 d a y s e rv ic e . 478-7159, 443-4362 _____________________________ T H E T Y P IS T Professional q ua lity typ­ ing Satisfaction guaranteed Campus IB M correcting Selec­ pick-up, deliv ery t r ic . Helen, 836-3562. _______ _______ typing L E G A L A N D " professional K athe's Q uick-Type 15 years exp eri­ ence IB M I I I 443-64S8 South Austin. * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * / * * * * * * HELP WANTED HELP WANTED ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ATM DEMONSTRATORS TEMPORARY Earn Extra Cash $5/ho ur A t is v P ro gressive, established Savings and Loan ^ seeking e n erg etic, out-going in d iv id u a ls to d e m - ^ yC o nstrate A u to m a tic T e lle r M a c h in e s . ^ D ay, evening and w eek-end shifts a v a ila b le a t ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ A TELLERS/HEAD TELLERS * Part-Time & Full-time £ * * P ro gressive, established Savings and Loan now opening branches in the A ustin a re a . Seeking re- i ^ sponsible, b rig h t in d iv id u a ls w ith cash hand lin g e xp erien ce to w o rk day, evening or w eek-end * shifts. If you a re e n e rg e tic and like w o rk in g w ith the public, this could be an e x c e lle n t o p p o rtu n ity to becom e associated w ith one of the lead ers in the industry. F u ll-tim e em ployees w ill enjoy the fo llo w ing benefits: * At • Competitivo Salary • Health /Life/D ental Insurance • Convenient Location • Educational Assistance • Vacation and Holidays V For information or appointm ent qualified applicant* 4 7 7-6 55 2, Ext. 12 An Iqwat Opportunity Impiaya» M/9 4 - At At At At At At At At m ^ call: n v i í Y S 77th STRfET M B A y § TYPING, PRINTING, BINDING The Completo Professional FULLTIME TYPING SERVICE 4 7 2 -3 2 1 0 4 7 2 -7 6 7 7 2 7 0 7 HEM PHIU PK. Plenty of Porking T Y P IN G /P R O O F IN G nonpareil. T e rm papers, reports, theses, etc N e a r South L a m a r/M a n c h a c a . Call Joe, 447-2552. E C O N O T Y P E /E C O N O C O P Y , Inc. P ro ­ fessional typing and q u a lity copying a t economy prices 2 locations: 3701 G u a ­ da lu p e 453-5452 1705 S. Lakeshore, 443- 4498 R U S H T Y P IN G ? S U R E W E DO . House of Tutor w ill m eet any d ea dline Open 'til m id nig ht. T ri-T o w e rs , 474-4723.______ A C C U R A T E , P R O F E S S IO N A L typing. S!/page, m ost cases Cam pus pickup and d e liv e r y O v e rn ig h t service. Janie, 250-9435 tyaAtAn J n n j i d y , sura wa DO typa FRESHMAN THEMES why net start eet wNh t$ ei fredes 2707 Hemphill Jut) N*rth of 37th et Gv o é ot u p o 473-3310 473-7677 T Y P IN G . F R E E p ic k -u p and d e liv e ry . S p e llin g c o rre c te d , d ifficu lt fo rm a ts no p ro b le m . R e asonable. 263-5567. T Y P IN G - M Y hom e, experienced, re a ­ sonable W o rk g u a ra n te e d . C o rrec tin g O liv e tti, pica ty p e 458-4993. WOR D P ROC ESS IN G , disc storage a n d r ig h t p ro p o rtio n a l p r in tin g ava ila b le . theses, d is s e rta tio n s , and G re a t te rm p a p e rs 20 page m in im u m . 282- 0500. __________________ fo r _ q u a l i t y T Y P IN G P roficien t w ork. E lite $1 25 p e r page, pica $1.00 per page. C all 477-5139 10 a .m .-8 p.m . RESUMES w ith or w ithout picture* 2707 Hamphill Park Just North of 27 th a t G u adalupe 4 7 2 -3 2 1 0 4 7 2 -7 6 7 7 SERVICES TRAFFIC TICKETS ^ A f f o r d a b l e * Professional D efense for your tra ffic violations. ★ F irs t Offense D W I * A T T O R N E Y : E D I T H L. J AME S CALL 477-8657 Legal Fees: $55 per c ity ticke t $85 DPS 306 East 11th, Suite L-7 ' " i n i PROBLEM PREGNANCY COUNSELING, REFERRALS & FREE PREGNANCY TESTING T « x a i ProbW m Pregnancy 5 0 7 9o w «N Street M -9 7 :3 0 - 5 : 3 0 4 74 -9 93 0 J E N N IN G S ' M O V IN G and Hauling. D e­ p e n d a b le pe rso n a l se rv ic e , targe or s m a ll jo bs 7 d a y s /w e e k . 442-6181. A R T 'S M O V IN G and H a u lin g any a re a 24 hou rs, 7 da ys. 447-9384, 442-0194. PR I V A T E M A IL B O X E S fo r rent . U n i ­ v e r s ity M a ilb o x R e ntals, 504 W . 24th, 477-1915 $5 o ff a n y r e n ta l w ith ad. E x ­ p ire s J u ly 1. S U M M E R T IM E R O M A N C E - C a ll Ren- dezvous a t 472-5283 and le t us fix it so yo u r paths cross T E N N IS CLASS ES , ~ U S T A ~ m e m ber. $4 50 session A ls o stu d e n t apa rtm en t m o v e rs a v a ila b le , re a s o n a b le rates. 441- 2304 PERSONAL P R O B L E M P R E G N A N C Y ? F re e preg­ n a n c y te s tin g and re fe rr a ls . 474-9930. T Ñ S T E A D o f a b o rtio n , call 454-6127. F I L M S A L E C olor prints, 24 expos $4 90 36 expos $6 50, 20 color slides $1 50 P re s e n t coupon at tim e of order The F ilm S e rv ice at The G eneral Store. V a lid 7/9/8 2 TRAVEL B A R G A IN IM M E D IA T E L Y Round t r ip tic k e t to D a lla s, Houston, C orpus C h rlttl and o th e r c itie s C a ll 442-0006 PLACE TO A TE X A N AD CALL 471-5244 CLASSIFIED 2 5 0 5 LO NG VIEW Austin, Texas 7 8 7 0 5 512 4 7 2 -0 1 0 0 N O W PRELEASING FOR FALL Coed Dorm Pool Relaxed Atmosphere F-R-E-E Refrigerator in every room Kitchen on each hall Private and Double rooms available 5 1 2 /4 7 2 -0 1 0 0 t J V I I A M I G O 4 5 0 5 Duval 4 5 4 - 4 7 9 9 N O W PRE-LEASING ¿ • Special Summer Rates • All Bills Paid • Exercise Room & Saunas • Pool & Clubhouse • Efficiencies, 1 & 2 Bedroom C a ll or Come By Todayl FROM $265 P rofession ally M anaged by M artine t*roperties, Inc. I Also Pre-I .easing For Fall ^ various locations. m ■_ _ 1 S I ■ ' ----------------- _______- M ^ * i ^ For information or appointment call: J * 4 7 7 -6 5 5 2 , Ext. 12 H . An Iqval Opportunity Smpla y r M/9 U Page 10 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Tuesday, June 22, 1982___________ Canine virus believed linked to MS • 1982 The New York Times - EAST ORANGE, N.J. Five years ago, Dr. Stuart D. Cook, a neurologist at the V et­ erans Administration Hospi­ tal here, stumbled upon a pro­ vocative cluster of patients — three sisters, all of whom had developed m ultiple sclerosis in 1974. A fourth sister, a non­ identical twin of one of the victims, who had moved away from the parental home three y e a rs rem a in e d healthy. e a r lie r , Perhaps, Cook and his col­ league, Dr. P eter C. Dowling, thought, the three who be­ came ill had been exposed to a common factor the fourth sister had escaped because she had moved. As any good scientists would do in such a situation, they started asking focusing particu­ questions, larly on the years between 1971 the healthy sister had left home but before the sick ones w ere stricken. and 1974. after The questioning revealed an event that further pro­ voked their interest. In 1973, the fam ily dog had become ill with a neurological disease. Thus was born a new hypothe­ sis: th at m ultiple sclerosis m ay be caused or triggered by a common virus that in­ fects dogs — the canine dis­ tem per virus. If the theory turns out to be true, it would not m ean all dogs cause the disease, ra th e r only those suf­ fering from distem per, a sick­ ness that can be prevented by it proper vaccination. So could conceivably m ean m ul­ tiple sclerosis itself can be prevented by a program of universal vaccination of pet dogs against distem per. for The theory joined dozens of others that have been pro­ posed through the years to ac ­ count this m ysterious, progressive, crippling disease in which the transm ission of nerve m essages is disrupted Among the theoretical causes of MS have been m easles vi­ that the herpes virus rus, causes cold sores, smallpox vaccination, a genetic abnor­ mality, lack of sunshine and a diet rich in anim al fat. But none have received support in­ from rigorous scientific vestigation and all suffer fro m a n o th e r one shortcom ing as a possible ex­ planation. o r h a v e For exam ple, m ost MS pa­ in c r e a s e d tie n ts am ounts of antibodies to m ea­ sles virus in their blood, but though they have tried m ighti­ ly, scientists have been un­ able to establish a convincing link between m easles infec­ tion and MS. Not that there is a lack of tantalizing clues to the cause or causes of MS. The disease attacks mainly white, affluent people between the ages of 20 and 40, affecting 50 percent m ore women than men. It oc­ in colder cli­ curs mainly m ates. For exam ple, the prevalence of MS in the north­ ern United States is 50 to 70 100,000 people, cases per about three to five tim es high­ er than in the southern states. It is extrem ely common in Denm ark, Iceland and New infre­ Zealand but occurs quently in Japan and South Africa. Persons who move in early childhood from an area with a high incidence of MS to one where the disease is uncom­ mon acquire the low risk of their new location. Similarly, from a youthful m igration low-incidence area to a high- incidence area confers a high risk on the new resident. But if the move occurs after the age of about 15, the person keeps the risk level of the pre­ vious area of residence. This pattern has suggested that ex­ posure infectious some agent early in adolescence is responsible for MS. It seem s to occur anyw here from one to 20 years a fte r such expo­ sure. to in In the Shetland and Orkney islands off the Scottish coast, the rate of MS is higher than anyw here else in the world — afflicting up to 300 of every 100,000 people. Yet the nearby Faroe Islands, popu­ lated by genetically sim ilar people with sim ilar diets and clim ate, th ere have been al­ m ost no cases, except for a brief “ epidem ic” of 24 cases a fte r World War II. study second showed basically the sam e pattern — m ore patients had sm all dogs in the five years before becoming ill. And this tim e, m ore of the dogs had been sick with a neurological disease in that tim e period. sim ilar A Global stations to collect ozone data WASHINGTON (UPI) — Seven advanced sensing stations will be placed around the globe to provide b etter data on what is happening to the e a rth ’s ozone shield, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Adm inistration said Monday. The Com m erce D epartm ent agency said the new stations will supplem ent a network of 80 spectrophotom eters that m ea­ sure total ozone concentration in the a ir and a sm aller network of instrum ents with which m anual observations can be made. The new autom atic stations will provide higher quality data on vertical distribution than is possible with the m anual instru­ ments, emphasizing concentrations a t an altitude of about 25 miles. Prim ary funding for the project comes from the Environ­ mental Protection Agency, the Chemical M anufacturers Asso­ ciation and a United Nations agency, the World Meteorological Organization, a news release said. The three groups jointly will pick sites for the new equipment, which should be in operation within two years. keeps ultraviolet solar radiation from reaching the ground in harmful amounts, is in fact deteriorating, it is likely to be m ost noticeable near the top of the stratosphere, a cloudless layer extending from about eight m iles above the surface to about 28 miles. There is scientific controversy about w hether the ozone is deteriorating. Many scientists think the shield, created when ultraviolet radiation breaks up oxygen in the stratosphere, is being dam ­ aged by some aerosol can propellants, an industrial process and chloro-fluorocarbons in refrigerants. Based on com puter models, they estim ate the shield should have deteriorated by about 1 percent in the past decade. But governm ent scientist W alter Komhyr at the agency's environ­ m ental research unit in Boulder, Colo., said the deterioration has not been confirm ed by actual m easurem ents. Komhyr said the existing instrum ents have not provided enough specific data for a sm all change to be spotted. He said the new er instrum ents might be able to detect Scientists theorize that if ozone in the atm osphere, which changes over a 10-year period. UPI Telephoto Detroit Mayor Young (r), Nashville’s Fulton (c) and Peoria’s Carver listen to HUD secretary. HUD director censures urban policy report; Reagan pledges continued support to cities MINNEAPOLIS (U PI) — Housing and U rban Development Secretary Samuel R. P ierce Jr. Monday disavowed the lan­ guage of a controversial urban policy draft calling for m assive cuts in aid to cities but said he agrees with som e of the con­ cepts outlined in the report. Pierce, in Minneapolis to speak to the U.S. Conference of Mayors, said the docum ent, disclosed by T h e N e w Y o r k T i m e s Sunday, was not an adm inistration policy statem ent — just a staff-w ritten draft. “ This adm inistration is still in the process of form ulating its urban policy,” Pierce told the m ayors, adding the controversy fueled by the T i m e s repo rt w as “ all a little p re m a tu re .” “ It is a d ra ft.” P ierce told the m ayors. “ And, if I have my way, it will rem ain just th at — a d ra ft.” President Reagan issued a statem ent in Washington saying the draft policy statem ent has not been approved nor adopted as policy by the adm inistration. “ I pledge that the federal governm ent will not abandon its partnership with the c ities," Reagan said. The m ayors were upset by the docum ent, which blamed the decline of A merican cities on local governm ents’ reliance on federal funds. Thé draft, as quoted in the T i m e s , said federal aid has tra n s­ formed local officials “ from bold leaders of self-reliant cities to wily stalkers of federal funds.” “ I would not like to see that wording in the (final) re p o rt,” Pierce told repo rters after his speech to the mayors. Pierce said the 40,000-word policy statem ent was drafted by m em bers of his staff and White House staff m em bers but does not have the approval of any fop adm inistration official. “ The report has not been approved bv m e or the president or any m em ber of the Cabinet that would have to give approval,” he said. He said Reagan “ has not even seen it.” Pierce defended some of the ideas in the report, which calls for cutting back on federal program s as p a rt of the Reagan adm instration's effort to balance the federal budget. Secretary Donovan decries ‘cowardly’ attacks, vows to stay in Cabinet (UPI) WASHINGTON - Labor Secretary Raymond Donovan, emotionally assail­ ing “ relentless and cowardly attacks” that have tied him to organized crim e, vowed Mon­ day to remain in President Reagan’s Cabinet. Speaking a t the Labor De­ partm ent before an array of television cam eras and news reporters, Donovan did not challenge directly any of the allegations that he and the Schiavone Construction Co. had close personal and busi­ ness ties to organized crim e figures. Donovan refused to enter­ tain any questions after read­ ing the lVi-page statem ent in a forceful manner. As reporters shouted ques­ tions, Donovan turned and walked silently off the stage with his head slightly down­ cast. Indicating he will com m ent more fully a fte r special pro­ secutor Leon Silverm an is­ sues his form al report on a grand investigation of the alleg atio n s, Donovan said: jury “ I would, however, be less than honest — and human — if I did not state publicly my relentless disgust with that and cowardly attacks have been m ade upon me and the UPI Telephoto Raymond Donovan my company by an alliance of individuals who have a total disregard for the truth Donovan said he expects Silverman to issue his report “ in just a few days.” His brief statem ent con­ cluded: “ Ladies and gentlem en, I have every intention of serv­ ing as se cretary of labor and completing I was the asked to do. I look forw ard to m eeting with all of you again a fte r Mr. Silverm an’s report has been m ade public.” job Donovan changed the word­ ing of his w ritten statem ent, which said he intends to con­ tinue as labor se cretary “ so long as I can be of service to P resident R eagan .” The se cretary also chided elected officials who he said “are not content to allow facts to be determ ined in an orderly m a n n e r.” “ They seem m ore in terest­ ed in the wonderland school of justice th a t stands for judg­ m ent now, trial la te r,” said Donovan. E arlier, the White House repeated that P resident R ea­ gan is standing by Donovan. Asked if Reagan has full confidence in the secretary, presidential spokesm an L arry Speakes said, “ He has indi­ cated that, y e s.” He said re ­ ports that a list of Donovan successors has been draw n up are “ bunk. There is no lis t.” Silverman was appointed in D e c e m b e r by fe d e ra l appeals court to investigate allegations against Donovan. His report is due soon. a Donovan and the White House w ere responding to a new spate of reports about Donovan’s and his form er firm ’s connections with un­ derworld figures, and new calls m ade while the labor secretary was overseas last week for him to step aside un­ til an investigation is com ­ pleted. His com m ents cam e amid reports of an FB I memo indi­ cating Donovan regularly so­ cialized with reputed Mafia bagman Fred Furino, found shot to death this month in New York City; and that the FBI deleted from papers giv­ en to a Senate com m ittee an allegation that Donovan’s old New Jersey firm — Schiavone C onstruction Co. — w as “ closely aligned with the Vito the fam ily Genovese M afia.” of “ Everybody ought to keep his mouth shut,” Speakes said earlier, when asked about a N e w Y o r k T i m e s article that quoted an unidentified White House official as saving R eagan’s principal advisers least “ have decided, among them selves,” that Do­ a t novan should step aside. He said if Reagan were asked the sam e question “ he would probably state it m ore em phatically” than Speakes. But S enate D em ocratic leader R obert Byrd charged Monday that if recent dislo- sures are accurate, “ then the Senate as an institution, and the country have been done a terrible disservice.” He said the Senate, which confirm ed Donovan's nomina­ tion, was “ obstructed in the proper discharge of its consti­ tutional responsibilities” by the withholding of inform a­ tion about him. NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE FORECAST to 7 PM EST m f 3 0 . 0 0 ^ 29.77 6 - 2 2 - 8 2 SEATTLE T PEANUTS® by Charles M. Schulz s a l l y ! YOU’RE FAT!!. DON'T YELL AT ME! WHAT DID YOU EXPECT? A l l we d id f o r t w o WEEKS WAS LIE IN OUR 0EANBA6S, WATCH TV AND EAT JUNK FOOD... f UPI W EA THER FO TO C A S T <& The national forecast calls for showers and thundershowers across the central and northern Rockies, middle Mississippi Vallay region and parts ot California, Navada and Florida. Gen- arally fair weather Is axpactad elsewhere. High temperatures should be in the 90s and 80a in the South and in the 70s in the North. I c a n 't BELIEVE H A N b O N YOU'D DO THIS TO Y O U R TO Y O U R S E L F .', H A T ... . I 5I6NEP UP A éA lN FOR NEXT Y E A R ! — I B .C . by johnny hart ACROSS 1 Awaken 5 Indeed: Ir. 9 Diners 14 French river 15 Italian isle 16 Emanate 17 Speech problem 18 Elia 19 Lariat 20 Wine coolers 22 Releases 24 Clock part 26 Novices 27 Rime 29 Smite 30 Caen chum 33 Fruit 37 Axillary 38 Ammonia compound 39 Sedan 40 Extreme 41 Chase away 42 Win spot: 2 words 44 Crowbar 45 High peak 46 Fluency 47 Quick drink 49 Observe 53 “ K" in baseball 57 Drinker 58 Gazelle 59 Prune 61 Asian grass 62 Faithful 63 Adrift 64 Compound suffix 65 For rent: 2 words 66 Rearmost 67 Cubicle DOWN 1 Sturdy 2 Moment 3 Map addition 4 Chide 5 Entire 6 Yemen money 7 Confess 8 Tot’s toy 9 Edible root 10 Songs 11 Sanction 12 This: Sp 13 Seven — 21 Night sound 23 McCor­ mack’s MONDAY’S PUZZLE SOLVED a n n a □ □ □ □ 33309 naaa aaac 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 ( 3 3 G K ZH U Q 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 (9333D33 333 33 30B333 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 333 33 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 a □33 333 30 33 330 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 □□□□ 303 333 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 a c a a a 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 03 33 330 3 0339 333 3 3 3393 3333 333 3 3 33 3 3 3333 3 33 3 3 43 N. Carolina birth­ place 25 Curler’s cap 28 Mutual 30 Can. oil prov. 31 Cleo’s love 32 "Dies — Hymn 33 Insect 34 " A ” of "A L ” 35 Minute 36 Roman god 37 Figurative 40 Displeased 42 Ice mass river 45 Footwear 47 Blockade 48 Oklahoma city 50 Quickly 51 Stately 52 Auger 53 Seasoning 54 Music combo 55 Canadian rebel 56 Foulards 60 Pertinent BLOOM COUNTY THGfiB'S THAT AWRL CUTTER JOHN OOWNIN6 AROUNP IN HIS WH6&CHAIR AGAIN. fT'S P&PcClY m r n e w L . CP o siupir/swa • n w f c v w R w m r ry wíth S O M iR B F B H by Berke Breathed I THINK AN AU6N HA5 06AM6P A A0OARR KUNG0N/ / wu&y kungon/ US' WOOSH'S f j f '* # # * # / * * * m m l Jt_ THE EARLY j f L PREPARE FOR: MCAT 9-11-82 LSAT 10-2-82 Join our “ Early Bird” and Summer Classes In Preparation for Your Fail 1982 Exams M C A T CLASSES S T A R T I N G 7/3 & 7/13 L SAT CLASSES S T A R T I N G 7/14, 7/29 & 8/2 OTHER COURSES AVAILABLE SSAT- PS AT- SAT ACHIEVEMENTS • ACT GREPSYCH-GREBIO-MAT-PCAT VQE • ECFMG • FLEX • NDB * RN BOS SPEED READING Call Days Evenings A Weekends IN AUSTIN: 1801 L a v a c a S uite 104 A u s tin , T x 78701 512/472-8085 IN DAUAS 11617 N C e n t E x p r * y D a lla s , T x 75243 Educational Center T E S T H L E P A t A T I O N S P E C IA L IS T S S IN C E I M S