x i Q f r s s l 9GtrStr XOa ' B v i n v a 0 d H31N3D WlIdOHDIWe Da iiy Texan S tudent N e w s p a p e r a t The University of Texas a t Austin Thursday, August 12, 1982 Twenty-Five Cents Vol. 81, No. 201 (USPS 146-440) Explosions rip Iraq embassy, Jewish offices PARIS (UPI) — A powerful car bomb exploded outside an Iraqi Embassy complex Wednesday only hours after a blast damaged a building housing Jewish firms. Seven people, in­ cluding three children, were injured in the two attacks. The Movement of Islamic Action of Iraq telephoned a French news agency to claim responsibility for the bomb that set fire to the Iraqi cultural center and injured six people on tree-lined Rue General Appert in a luxurious western residen­ tial section. The car in which the embassy bomb was planted was blown apart. An embassy bus and two cars parked in front were charred, wrecked hulks. They caught fire and their gas tanks exploded, leading police to initially speculate more than one bomb was involved. Direct Action, an anti-Semitic leftist group, took responsi­ b l y for the predawn blast on fashionable Rue de Faubourg, in the St. Honoré area, that seriously damaged an eight-story building housing Jewish trading firms. A woman who had been walking her small black dog only blocks from the presidential Elysee Palace was found lying with blood gushing from her face while her uninjured pet barked. The two bombings followed Monday’s attack on a Jewish quarter restaurant that killed six people and injured 22. Firefighters fought for an hour to extinguish the flames inside the Iraqi cultural center, across the street from the embassy medical center and other embassy offices. Black smoke poured into the neighborhood as firefighters put up tall ladders to evacuate diplomatic personnel, and some of their children, trapped inside the building. Three children were injured, one of them taken to the hos­ pital along with an injured adult. Iraqi Cultural Counselor Chesir Alfannarrai said that just before the bomb exploded, “personnel of the center saw a man arrive in a small truck, leave it running in the middle of the street and then run away.” “The vehicle exploded a few moments later probably thanks to a remote control system.” The caller who claimed responsibility for the attack said the Shiite Moslem faction named the operation “Khaled A1 Islambouli” in honor of the chief of the commando squad that assassinated Egyptian President Anwar Sadat last October. The bombing was meant “to warn French authorities against furnishing military aid to Iraq,” he said. But police said they could not confirm the claim was au­ thentic and speculated the attack could have been from Syr­ ians or others quarreling with Iraq. Israel-PLO resolution expected By United Press International U.S. envoy Philip Habib Wednesday moved Israel closer to agreement on a peaceful evacuation of Palestinian guerrillas from Lebanon and returned to Beirut predicting a final solution “very soon,” reports said. “ All we have to do is work out the details,” Lebanon’s state-run television quoted Habib as saying upon his return to Beirut from a day of talks with Israe­ li Prim e Minister Menachem Begin and other Israeli leaders in Jerusalem. “ The political solution will be very soon.” Habib’s upbeat assessment to end the 67-day-old Israeli invasion of Lebanon and stall an all-out assault on Palestine Liberation Organization garrisons in be­ sieged west Beirut was echoed by Israe­ li leaders “ There is reason to believe we are close to reaching agreem ent,” a senior Israeli official said following a second discussion betwen Habib and Begin. “I t’s a m atter of a couple of days.” A spokesman for Begin said “prog­ ress is continuing” and that some out­ standing Israeli concerns “have been solved.” Habib was expected to confer Thurs­ day with Lebanese President Elias Sarkis, Prim e Minister Chefik Wazzan and Foreign Minister Fuad Butros on his talks in Israel. Officials said they expected Habib to obtain from the Lebanese leaders and PLO intermediaries “ answers to some points” Begin raised in the talks and transmit the replies either in person or through aides. Despite the reported progress toward peace, Israeli jets, tanks and gunboats bombarded PLO targets in west Beirut for a third straight day. The PLO retali­ ated with artillery blasts into Israeli- held east Beirut. Late Wednesday, war jets made 40 bombing sorties that left west Beirut under a curtain of smoke t £• n UPI Telephoto Paris firemen and rescuers survey damage after terrorist-planted bomb exploded near the Iraqi Embassy. j Meiszer budget has lower tax rates despite higher city operating costs By SCOTT WILLIAMS Daily Texan Staff City Manager Nicholas Meiszer’s proposed 1982-83 city op­ erating budget calls for a 14 percent increase in operating costs over the current fiscal year, but Meiszer said Wednes­ day city property tax rates will decrease. Meiszer’s balanced budget, to be presented to the City Council Thursday, calls for $682.4 million for all city opera­ ting funds. Property tax rates will be 56 cents per $100 assessed prop­ erty value compared to the current rate of 62 cents. Meiszer said the tax rate could be decreased even though operating costs are increasing because of revaluation of property in Austin for the next fiscal year. Under revaluation property taxes will actually go up 4 cents per year even though the rate per $100 valuation will be lower. The fiscal year begins Oct. 1. Meiszer said the increase in property tax revenue will be $9.6 million. The budget must undergo a six-week review process in which the council can add or subtract from it before Sept. 27, when it must be formally adopted. Included in Meiszer’s budget is a 6 percent, across-the- board cost-of-living wage increase for city employees. Peter Fears, business manager for the American Federa­ tion of State, County and Municipal Employees, expressed disappointment Wednesday at Meiszer’s proposal. AFSCME had requested a 9 percent cost of living raise. AFSCME officials had met with Meiszer as late as Friday and had been told a 9 percent pay raise was “reasonable,” Fears said. “If that’s the case, then 6 percent is unreason­ able.” Fears said city employee wages have fallen 12 percent be­ low the cost of living over the last three years. “We can’t afford to have another year of falling-behind politics,” he said. AFSCME members will meet next week, Fears said, to plan a program designed to lobby council members for a larg­ er increase. Meiszer said employee wages “are not keeping up (with inflation) but getting as close as we can.” Also included in the budget are employee dental benefits, service incentive pay after three years of service and merit pay hikes from 1 per­ cent to 7.5 percent. “We re pleased the manager included dental coverage,” Fears said. From each 56 cents collected from property taxes, 20 cents will go toward repayment of bonds and 36 cents for operating costs, Meiszer said. Another reason property tax rates will decrease is that only 2.7 percent of the 14 percent increase in costs will be in gener­ al fund operations. The general fund pays for the day-to-day costs of running the city, such as police and fire protection and street paving. Money for the general fund comes from property taxes. The remainder of the increase, 12.2 percent, will be for the utility funds of the electric and water and wastewater depart­ ments. Revenue for these funds is generated from the sale of services to area residents. “The vast majority of the increase is in the utility funds and the vast majority of that is in the cost of fuel,” Meiszer said. General fund appropriations total $122.9 million, with a pro­ jected ending balance of $6.3 million. A total of 186 new posi­ tions will be created, 118 in departments that operate under the general fund. Meiszer said not all projects needed by the city were fund­ ed in his budget. “There are a number of very worthwhile programs and requests not recommended for funding,” he said. “We could not fund them within the revenue picture.” He said projects not funded will be listed for the council should it choose to insert them into the final budget. The budget, which Meiszer described as lean, is based upon the assumption that all 25 propositions on the Sept. 11 bond ballot are approved by voters. He said the assumption was not unreasonable. “I’d rather call it being optimistic. We have planned on their passing, but it would not be difficult to re­ fund in those areas,” he said. Meiszer said he anticipates no cuts in the budget. “In order to reduce the budget you would have to reduce services the community has come to expect,” he said. The council will decide Thursday on a schedule of budget- related meetings and work sessions, which will begin next week. Israel said nine of its soldiers were wounded. Beirut Radio said PLO shell­ ing of the eastern half of the Lebanese capital killed six people and wounded 17 others. Nobel Peace Prize winner Mother Teresa arrived in Lebanon as the per­ sonal emissary of Pope John Paul II and said her message was “Love each other as God loves us.” It was unclear if she would attem pt to travel to west Beirut. Israeli Foreign Minister Yitzhak Shamir told Israel radio after Habib re­ turned to Beirut the last obstacles to an agreement were Israel's opposition to the participation of U.N. observers in an international peace-keeping force and when the contingents would move into Beirut. “ Israel’s stand on these two issues is just and vital,” Shamir said. “ I hope Habib understands that and will find a way to take care of our interests.” Israel wants most of the guerrillas to leave before the peace-keeping force sets up because it fears the PLO will use the foreign troops — about 2,000 American, French and Italian soldiers — to stall its exodus. In an interview with the Israeli news­ paper Yedioth Ahronoth, Begin said, “ We are all satisfied with Habib’s plan. If everything goes accordingly, the evacuation could begin next week al­ ready.” Defense Minister Ariel Sharon said he believed the guerrillas are “about to disappear from Beirut.” But in an omi­ nous portent, he reiterated Israel’s de­ sire that 40,000 Syrian troops stationed since the 1975-76 Lebanese civil war in the eastern Bekka Valley also with­ draw. He said Israel would not leave Leba­ non until the Syrians did and noted that with Israeli artillery located only 15 miles from Damascus ‘‘the Syrians will have to decide what they prefer.” British workers strike A member of the National Union of Public Employees pickets outside Tooting Bee Hospital in London Wednesday, showing support for the union's salary hike demand of 12 percent. The government Increased Its original offer of 6 percent to 7Vi percent, page 3. UPI Telephoto Regents to discuss changes in student constitution " — By FRANK JANNUZI Daily Texan Staff The UT System Board of Regents will decide whether to send the Students’ Association constitution back to the UT student body, for what could be the fifth student government referendum in four years, at a bimonthly meeting Thursday and Friday in San Antonio. Donation of land for the completion of MoPac Boulevard, authorization for the University to condemn East Austin land and a host of appropriations for the Centennial Teachers and Scholars Pro­ gram also fill the regents’ agenda. The amendments to the constitution, reinstituting student government, were approved by students in March. They were then submitted to the University administration, which made several “non-substantive changes,” said gov­ ernment sophomore Meg Brooks, who campaigned for the amendments. The administration’s changes include requiring candidates for student office to have a 2.5 GPA and striking a clause that would have provided for the vice president of the student body to serve as chair of the Senior Cabinet. The amendments, as approved by stu­ dents, called for a board of five UT law professors to decide if any changes made by the administration were in­ deed “substantive” and required ap­ proval by the student body. However, UT President Peter Flawn has called all changes “substantive,” bypassing the article that would have required committee review of the revi­ sions, and opting instead for a vote on student government in the fall. Regents will hear testimony from Brooks and Jim McCormack, second- year law, who will ask the board either to approve the constitution as is, with­ out another student vote, or allow a committee of law professors to deter­ mine if the changes in the amendments are substantive and must be approved by students. “They (the students) have already voted on this document,” said Brooks, who says she hopes the board will ap­ prove the constitution without calling for a referendum. In other action, regents are expected to donate 42 acres of North Austin land for right of way for MoPac. The land, part of an undeveloped tract adjacent to the University’s Bal­ cones Research Center, is part of a trade-off in which the University gains access to the MoPac frontage road, Bob Neely, spokesman for the Austin dis­ trict office of the state Department of Highways and Public Transportation, said Wednesday. “The UT System and the regents have been deeply concerned (with Mo­ Pac) since the beginning,” said Neely, adding, “It has always been the as­ sumption the highway depart­ ment)” that the University would con­ tribute the land. (of Neely said “land for service trade­ offs are not uncommon occurrences among state agencies, and the exchange would have been completed earlier if construction of MoPac had not been de­ layed. G Charles Franklin, UT vice presi­ dent for business affairs, said the Uni­ versity acquired the land adjacent to the BRC “with the intention” of provid­ ing a right of way. He said, “There is a need for improved access to that area (North Austin).” The northern extension of MoPac will pass by the BRC on its way from U.S. 183 to Burnet Road. Regents will decide whether to for­ mally grant the University authority to condemn East Austin property if neces­ sary to complete acquisition of land for a 10-acre maintenance facility. Frank­ lin said. He said the University is still negotiating to acquire the land without condemnation. Other items to be discussed by the board include a three-year housing sub­ sidy for new faculty that would effec­ tively lower mortgage rates for recruit­ ed faculty to 11 permit. The subsidy would be renewable for another three years if interest rates stay above 11 percent, Franklin said. Regents will also award contracts for interior furnishings of the VIP seating section on the ninth level of Bellmont Hall. cloud* & sultry sunshin* The forecast for the Austin area calls for partly cloudy skies and a diminishing chance of rain. Overnight lows will be in the mid-70s with afternoon highs reaching the upper 90s. Winds will be from the south at 5 to 15 mph. Partly cloudy skies and hot, sunny afternoons are expected through Monday. National weather, page 19. today’s high . . . . 99 tonight’s low . . . . 75 Page 2 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Thursday, August 12, 1982 DURHAM-NIXON CLAY COLLEGE INTENSIVE Enroll now for datLot beginning August 23, 1982 -TOEFL/University preparation -Nino month comprehensive course -Short courses and private instruction -Small classes/conversational method -Auth. under federal law to enroll non-immigrant alien students (1-20) Registration hours: 10 am to 2 pm & 3 pm to 5 pm 8th and Colorado/2nd floor 478-3446 Air-conditioned classrooms \ Just Arrived Mexican Embroidered Dresses Hundreds o f them! 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W e’re available to each days, evenings, or weekends according loss of study tim e when center's schedule. No working out of town. (Transfers available to any of our centers in the U.S. and abroad, at no ad­ ditional charge.) f /isit Any Center And See For Yourself Why We Make The Difference KAPLAN EDUCATIONAL CENTER TEST PREPARATION SPECIALISTS SINCE 1938 Call Days Evenings & Weekends IN AUSTIN: 1801 Lavaca, Suite 104 AUSTIN, TX. 78701 512/472-8085 IN DALLAS: 11617 N. CENT. EXPRWY. DALLAS, TX. 75342 214/750-0317 T h e E h iiv T e x a n PERMANENT STAFF E d ito r .................................... Lisa Beyer . . . Maoreco Paskla Maaaglag Editor . . George A niiU at MaaagUf Editon Voodracek, Doog McLeod—M— Assistant Editor...................David Tecce Newt Editor Mark Stott . Associate Newt Editor................... David Woodraff News Assignments Editor . . . . Lyaa Eatley . . . . . . General Reporten. . . . Jim Julie Cllat, Frank Jamnnxi—39—, Jimmy McKeaaa Featnret Editor. . . Mike S m mermas Sport* E d itor...................David McNaM Entertainment E ditor.....................CM* Image* Editor. . Pamela McAlpia 39 Associate Image* Editor...................Tim O’Leary—JO— Graphics Editor....................... Roa Gota* Associate Graphics Editor . . . Martin Torree ISSUE STAFF News A ss is ta n t Laura Fisher N e w sw rite rs.................. Scott WiUiams Becky Cabaza, Julie Vowell, Brian Dunbar—30— Editorial A ssistan ts.........................Mike McAbee, Amy Mashberg Entertainment A ssistant................ Brent Gruike Sports Make-up E d ito r................Richard Stubbe Sports A ssistant.................. Lisa Ralston Mark Mems . . Make-up Editor . Wire E d ito r...................... Charles Bestor Copy E d i to r s .................... Helen Hulme, Casey Dobson Photographer...................... Curt Wilcott TEXAN ADVERTISING STAFF Tom Bielefeldt, Calise Burchett, Laura Dickerson, Cindy Filer, Debbie Fletcher, Ken Grays, Cheryl Luedecke, Carolyn Mangold, Heidi Reinberg, Jay Zorn The Daily Texan, a student newspaper at The University of Texas at Austin, is published by Texas Student Publications, Drawer D, University Station, Austin, TX 78712-7209. The Daily Texan is published Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday and Friday, except holiday and exam periods. Second class postage paid at Austin, TX 78710. News contributions will be accepted by telephone (471-4591), at the editorial office (Texas Student Publications Building 2.122) or at the news laboratory (Communica­ tion Building A4.136). Inquiries concerning delivery and classified advertising should be made in TSP Building 3.200 ( 471-5244) The national advertising representative of The Daily Texan is Communications and Advertising Services to Students, 1633 West Central Street, Evanston, Illinois 60201; phone (800 ) 323-4044 toll free The Daily Texan subscribes to United Press International and New York Times News Service. The Texan is a member of the Associated Collegiate Press, the South­ west Journalism Congress, the Texas Daily Newspaper Association and American Newspaper Publishers Association. Copyright 1982 Texas Student Publications. THE DAILY TEXAN SUBSCRIPTION RATES One Semester (Fall or Spring).....................................................................................124.00 Two Semesters (Fall and S p r in g )............................................................................... 48.00 i j .qo Summer S ession.............................................................................. One Year (Fall, Spring and S u m m e r ) .................................................................... 60 00 Send orders and address changes to Texas Student Publications, P.O. Box D, PUB. NO.146440 Austin, TX 78712-7209, or to TSP Building C3.200 CAREER CENTER The C a re er Center offers assistance to students by providing: a lib ra ry containing inform ation on various oc­ cupations and job trends, vocational tests to help w ith your selection of a m a jo r, and counselors to teach you how .to job hunt effe ctive ly . Jester C enter A115A 471-1217. 1* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * f t * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * j * 1 in Quality G Service Com plete Nail Care 15% off Nail Tips w/this ad! Tues.-Fri. 9:30-6:00 Saturday 9:00-1:00 (512) 452 0336 Expire» Aug. 31, 1982 ! 4501 Guadalupe j Austin, Texas 78751 u | ■ V V MM UU lA i It U V tf lAtf I ñ f WM V U V U VM V U V U V U V U V k f WÜ U tf'o s Eyewitness leads off testimony in first day of Ruiz robbery trial By JIM HANKINS Daily Texan Staff A nine-woman, three-man jury heard two hours of testimony Wednesday afternoon in the first day of the aggravated robbery trial of prison lawsuit plaintiff David Ruiz. The testimony came from Edward Watts Jr., one of four witnesses prosecutors will call to attempt to identify Ruiz as a participant in the Nov. 15 robbery of the Scoot Inn, 1308 E. Fourth St. Watts, a 26-year-old city employee, spent most of his time on the witness stand answering questions from defense attorney Bob Looney, who was attempting to point out inconsistencies between Watts’ testimony Wednesday and his previous descrip­ tions of the robbers. Under questioning from Wilford Flowers, Travis County as­ sistant district attorney, Watts said one of the robbers was approximately 5 feet, 3 inches tall, wore a stocking over his face and carried a sawed-off double-barreled shotgun. Watts then pointed to Ruiz and identified him as the shotgun- wielding bandit. He described the robber’s two accomplices as men with dark complexions, wearing bandanas over their faces and carrying handguns. Ruiz’ nephews Alfredo Ruiz and Jef­ frey John Ruiz are also suspects in the Scoot Inn robbery. Asked by Flowers why he had previously said one of the robbers was black, Watts said, “The place was dark, and he (the robber) had a stocking over his face. It made him look darker.’’ But under cross-examination, Watts admitted he had recent­ ly said two of the robbers wore stockings over their heads, that he wasn’t sure whether the robber with the shotgun was Hispanic or black and that one of the other robbers might have been black. Judge Hume Cofer of 98th District Court sustained prosecu­ tors’ objections when Looney tried to question Watts about his previous criminal record and about his brother, who is now serving time in a Texas Department of Corrections prison. Looney has accused TDC officials of trying to frame Ruiz in the robbery. Cofer had earlier refused to grant a delay so defense lawyers could get transcripts of Watts’ pre-trial statements. Looney said he needed the transcripts to help him in cross-examining Watts. Immigration Law All phase > Permanent Visas Student Matters Refugee Matters Labor Certifications Citizenship Visa Information Jim B. Cloudt Attorney a t Law Free consultation Free parking 3810 Medical Parkway Suite 231, Austin (512) 454-1438 COST OF CROIX CONDOMINIUMS IN HALF. (0•No O Ü O * TM $ 1.00 oH an/ ' e , pizza. O n e c o u p o n P®’ p E x P 'r e $ ® fast, oe'werv C ^ epick-up s e rvioe- o r e » * ° b if l i n 'd 1 ■ z rtfrr © '9 8 ' Dom."oS Fast..Ffee Delivery V ) o 5 N Off Q O . 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The amendment, offered by Sen. Ste­ ven D. Symms, R-Idaho, reaffirmed the Monroe Doctrine and pledged “ to pre­ vent in Cuba the creation or use of an externally supported military capabili­ ty endangering the security of the Unit­ ed States.” “That is the only language the com­ munists know,” said Sen. Strom Thur­ mond, R-S.C., a supporter of the amendment. “ It is the only language the Soviets know, and it seems to me we ought to take a firm stand here, not equivocate, not offer some weaker reso­ lution which does not carry any strength to it and any firm ness.” The Symms amendment, which was approved 68-to-28, is not included in the House version of the supplemental ap­ propriation bill and thus must survive a House-Senate conference if it is to be included in the final version. the The amendment also pledges United States to work with the Organi­ zation of American States and with “freedom-loving Cubans” to support self-determination for Cuba. The Symms amendment was intend­ ed to reaffirm a 1962 law authorizing the president to use force against Cuban subversive activities and to prevent the use of Cuba as a base for Soviet offen­ sive weapons. The Senate tabled the proposal when Symms made it in early spring. its language, described Critics of the amendment, who were defeated on two bids to sidetrack it or weaken the amendment as a “ Caribbean Tonkin Gulf,” a reference to the 1964 measure that formed the legal basis for the con­ duct of the Vietnam conflict. The debate was marked by strident remarks on both sides, with supporters of the amendment calling for a strenu­ ous response to the “Marxist Castro re­ gime in Cuba” and with opponents voic­ ing the fear the amendment would provide a “ blank check” for military action. Sen. Jesse A. Helms, R-N.C., dis­ missed charges that the amendment was inflammatory. “ This does not rattle any saber,” he said. “ It has America acting like Amer­ ica again.” Reagan pushes tax measure in Montana • 1982 The New York Times BILLINGS, Mont. — President Rea­ gan warned Wednesday that a failure by Congress to approve new taxes would lead to “ larger budget deficits, higher interest rates and higher unemploy­ m ent.” In his strongest exhortation yet for the three-year, $98.9 billion tax bill, Reagan friendly told a boisterous, crowd of 12,000 that most of the in­ crease would arise from correcting “unintended tax advantages.” These, he said, had accrued from “ sloppiness” in past tax bills, including the tax cut measure he pushed through Congress last year. “ The bottom line is this,” he said. “ Would you rather reduce deficits and interest rates by raising revenue from those who are not now paying their fair share? Or would you rather accept larg­ er budget deficits, higher interest rates and higher unemployment?” For Reagan, Wednesday’s speech marked a first for his presidency: An open declaration favoring increases in at least some taxes. Appearing some­ what uncomfortable in this role, Rea­ gan discussed the tax bill in a flat, somewhat defensive fashion. Most audi­ ence applause, in the main speech he gave Wednesday, was in response to his customary one-liners and crowd-pleas­ ing jabs at Washington, D.C. “If I could correct four decades of fiscal irresponsibility in one year, I’d go back to show business as a m agician,” Reagan declared as his audience burst into cheers. “ You know, it might be more fun pulling rabbits out of a hat than jackasses out of the way in Wash­ ington.” Waving a gray Stetson, Reagan rode for five minutes around an indoor sports arena on the outside seat of a bright red Wells Fargo stagecoach. The audience cheered and confetti floated from the ceiling. Four balky chestnut horses pulling the stage were considera­ bly less pleased by the crowd’s roar than Reagan, who beamed and laughed. Later Reagan spoke at a fund-raising luncheon for Larry Williams, a Republi­ can challenging Sen. John Melcher for re-election. There he repeated his ex­ hortation for the tax increase. Williams is the author of the best-selling book, “ How to Prosper in the Coming Good Years.” In his speech at the arena in this ranching and farming area, however, Reagan showed that he realized that the good years had not yet arrived. “ You don’t know how much I wish I could stand up here today and say the pain of the unemployed would be over by Labor Day,” he said with some feeling, noting that unemployment rose to 9.8 percent last month. At Williams’ luncheon, he said the tax increase was “ the price we have had to pay” for support in Congress for further spending cuts. Earlier, he said: “In order to get $280 billion in reduced outlays over the next three years, we had to agree to the added revenues of $99 billion. The ratio of reduced outlays to revenues is three to one.” He avoided any mention of the fact that most of those reduced outlays would have to be enacted by a new Con­ gress in 1983 and 1984. One of the big­ gest obstacles to passage of the tax bill is opposition from conservative Repub­ licans in the House of Representatives, who fear that new taxes would actually lessen the pressure to cut future spend­ ing. The tax bill, now before a House-Sen­ ate conference committee, would raise taxes on tobacco and telephone calls. It would also, in what is seen by Reagan as a compliance measure, require with­ holding of a portion of a person’s in­ come derived from interest and divi­ dends. The bill would also reduce some accelerated depreciation and other tax benefits for businesses. Showing his discomfort with the tax r 4 UPI Telephoto Ronald Reagan bill, Reagan said Wednesday: “ I don’t like giving the federal government one penny more than necessary. But I have endorsed the Senate tax bill now before Congress because it’s essential to our economic recovery program. British strike escalates into confrontation with government LONDON (UPI) — The strike by Britain’s hospital workers expanded Wednesday into a confrontation which threatened not only a legal showdown between Prim e Minister M argaret Thatcher and left-wing unions but also the shutdown of all Fleet Street news­ papers. The five-day strike which began Mon­ day has forced 1,500 hospitals nation­ wide to treat emergencies only because of a walkout by nurses, cooks, porters and laundry workers. The strike escalated Tuesday when members of Fleet Street’s left-wing electricians union staged a 24-hour walkout in sympathy with the nurses and thereby stopped all national news­ papers appearing in London Wednes­ day. The electricians’ action defied a high court injunction banning any such sym­ pathy strike by newspaper unions. On Friday, electricians’ union branch leader Sean Geraghty will face a con­ tempt of court charge that could result in his being sent to prison because his members defied the court ruling. The case will be an important land­ mark for Thatcher in her fight to curb union power. In 1980, the Conservative government passed a law making such sympathy strikes illegal. Other left-wing unions, such as the miners, have already rallied to the elec­ tricians’ cause in what they see as the start of a political move to topple Thatcher. The electricians said they will shut down all Fleet Street newspa­ pers again if Geraghty is jailed. Thatcher, who in the past two years has scored notable victories over unions such as the steelworkers, civil servants and more recently the train drivers, now will be looking for the power of the law to complete her sweep. The catalyst to the confrontation, however, remained the strike by hospi­ tal workers who ironically are not all that happy about newspapers being shut down because they feel they need pub­ licity. The nurses and other hospital work­ ers say they have considerable public support for their cause. A junior nurse takes home just $76 a week and is ask­ ing for a 12 percent raise. The government, which is offering 7.5 percent, said the strikers were putting people’s lives at risk by their action. The nurses said the government was us­ ing their dedication to their patients as a tool to keep their pay low. But there is more to the hospital strike than money and the moral debate of using patients as pawns. Britain’s National Health Service, un­ der which everybody is treated almost free, cannot cope with current demand. Many Britons have joined private medical insurance plans that guarantee treatm ent when they become ill. The strain between the two medical sys­ tems, many doctors say, is diverting so many facilities and qualified personnel away from the National Health Service that its collapse is imminent. Some strikers see the current show­ down as a crucial test to see if the gov­ ernment will put more money into the National Health Service to ensure its survival or ignore the pleas and effec­ tively begin its takeover by the private sector. PLO evacuation plan faces pitfalls BEIRUT (UPI) — The complexity of the agreem ent to evacuate 6,000 to 9,000 Palestine Liberation Organization fight­ ers is fraught with potential pitfalls, any one of which could foil the plan. By far the most serious Israeli con­ cern is that the PLO, which has repeat­ edly voiced its willingness to leave the Lebanese capital, will try to establish new strongholds once it has lost Beirut. With Syrian agreement to take an un­ limited number of fighters, a signifi­ cant number of the PLO will be travel­ ing overland via the road to Damascus. That would take them through the Be- kaa Valley, the long strip of land run­ ning down the center of Lebanon where Syria established missile bases during the glory days of its influence with Yasser Arafat. Israel fears the PLO may stop in the valley and regroup its forces. To prevent that, at least 40 Israeli tanks and trucks Wednesday moved into position on the Aqoura highlands that command a view of the valley and from which salvos of artillery could be thund­ ered on the guerrillas. The second Israeli suspicion is that some of the PLO might be left behind in Beirut to keep the organization alive, if not active, in the capital. In addition, Israel has demanded a full and de­ tailed list of the names of each PLO member and his destination. the PLO leadership knows that the people of Beirut, desper­ ate after 68 days of war, want an end to the violence and will probably not sup­ port an underground PLO network. The composition, role and deploy­ ment of the multinational force that will in theory keep peace once the Is­ raeli occupation force controls the en­ tire capital could also present a road­ news in photos block. Israel has demanded the force’s man­ date be no longer than 40 days. But so far no permanent arrangement has been made for the protection of war ref­ ugees when the force departs. The three largest Palestinian camps — Chatila, Sabra and Bourj Barajneh — will probably be reduced to dust by Is­ raeli warplanes, tanks and gunboats. Most likely — but still problematic for the Israelis — is the possibility that the transported PLO might try to re­ gain its organization in Syria or Iraq, which appeared to be the nations where the m ajority of the guerrillas will find new homes. Syria’s new turnaround and its an­ nouncements that it will receive as many PLO members as necessary is certainly intended to balance an identi­ cal gesture by its arch enemy Iraq. It is also calculated to keep Syrian influence with the Palestinians high for future possible use. Senator says citizens should give up rights WASHINGTON (UPI) - Sen. Jerem i­ ah Denton, R-Ala., said Wednesday Americans should relinquish some of their individual civil rights to protect the nation against domestic terrorists. Denton, chairman of the Senate se­ curity and terrorism subcommittee, called for relaxing the 1976 Justice De­ partment guidelines that limit FBI in­ vestigations of domestic groups that have not shown criminal tendencies. Attacking “ so-called liberals” and the news media, Denton recalled that mail and news censorship was imposed during World War II and suggested that “perhaps the pendulum may have swung too far” since then. “ Whether we like it or not, there are elements in our society who are com­ mitted to violence, subversion and ter­ rorism ,” he said. “ Now, we can either sit back and hope that they will go away or we can wait until events occur before responding.” Denton spoke at the opening of a hearing where Secret Service Director John Simpson called for greater FBI power to investigate such groups. “Such intelligence collection is all the more important in a highly mobile and open society such as ours in order to ensure that it remains open and free and is not subtly destroyed because of governmental inaction borne out of a narrowly focused concern for individual civil rights,” Denton said. “These rights are important, but at times, other considerations such as na­ tional security must not be overlooked. In some cases, circumstances dictate that the national good is best served by a limited relinquishment of some indi­ vidual civil rights.” news in brief From Texan news services Explosion hits 747 nearing Hawaii; 1 killed, 14 hurt HONOLULU — An explosion rip­ interior of a Pan ped through the American Boeing 747 as it approached Hawaii from Tokyo with 285 people aboard Wednesday, killing a youth and injuring 14 others. The FBI, which took immediate charge of the investigation, said it suspected a bomb but could not confirm the explosion was deliberate. With the passenger cabin filled with smoke, the crew brought the plane in for a safe landing — on time — with the structure of the jumbo jet intact but much of its interior shredded. Pipeline bill opposed WASHINGTON — The administration warned Congress Wednesday a bill to revoke President Reagan’s embargo on the sale of U.S. technology for the Sovi­ et natural gas pipeline would lift pres­ sure for an end to political repression in Poland. The House Foreign Affairs Committee voted 22-12 Tuesday to res­ cind Reagan’s ban on the sale of equip­ ment manufactured by U.S. firms, by their foreign subsidiaries or under U.S. license. The measure now goes before the House. 2 nuclear planta shut down ZION, 111. — A fire in a diesel genera­ tor serving Commonwealth Edison’s Zion 1 nuclear reactor forced the utility to declare an alert and briefly power down the unit Wednesday. In New Jer­ sey the Nuclear Regulatory Commis­ sion and the FBI were investigating Wednesday the cause of the power fail­ ure which forced a 20-hour shutdown of part of the Salem Nuclear Generating Station, officials said. ABA changes stand SAN FRANCISCO — In a suprising turnaround, the American Bar Associa­ tion Wednesday revoked its stand that private clubs used for business should not discriminate against minorities and women. The effort to rescind the anti- discrimination motion passed by a 58- vote margin in the 387-member House of Delegates, which includes only 21 women and five blacks. Women and black lawyers called it a serious set­ back for civil rights in the 280,000-mem­ ber organization. Official citas pot problems WASHINGTON — Calling marijuana a “major public health problem,’’ Sur­ geon General C. Everett Koop urged the nation’s doctors Wednesday to warn their patients of the weed’s dangers and urge they stop using it. Koop, citing the government’s annual report on mari­ juana and health sent to Congress in March, said marijuana impairs short­ term memory and slows learning, dam­ ages lower sperm count in men, interferes with ovulation in women and prenatal devel­ opment, and may affect heart function. lung function, leads to Police continuo questioning HOUSTON — A bus mechanic diag­ nosed as schizophrenic who confessed to killing nine Houston women may be questioned about as many as 31 more deaths in Texas, Michigan and Canada, authorities said Wednesday. Homicide Detective Tom Ladd said Houston po­ lice were working from a master list of 33 unsolved killings and wanted to ques­ tion Coral Eugene Watts, 28, specifical­ ly about 18 other local deaths. Killing tuspoct confess*» FORT WORTH — A 25-year-old man suspected in the grisly slayings of five people — one of them decapitated and castrated — orally confessed to the slayings, waived extradition Wednesday in Wichita, Kan. and returned with homicide detectives to Fort Worth. Lar­ ry Keith Robison, 25, was arrested Wednesday on a weapons charge after Wichita police found him sleeping in a car belonging to one victim Robison was carrying the wallets and identifica­ tion of two of the victims. Police have not determined a motive for the at­ tacks. Btocks down again NEW YORK — Extending one of its sharpest declines in recent years, the stock market continued to retreat on modest trading volume Wednesday. In its seventh setback in a row, the Dow Jones industrial average slipped 2.09 joints, to 777.21. This brought its aggre­ gate loss since Aug. 2 to 44.90 points and let a new 27-month low Death penalty foes protest execution RICHMOND, Vs. (UPI) - Death peaalty protesten await the execatiea ef Fraak Cap* pels late Tuesday outside the state pealteati- ary la Rkhmoad. Coppola's body was takes to the medical examiner's office la Rich­ mond. Spokes mas Wayae Hu finer said Cop­ pola’s eyes were donated to a local hospital as he wished. 4th star for black Afghans celebrate asylum decision WASHINGTON (UPI) - President Rea- gas nominated Lt. Gea. Roncee RoMasoa Jr. to become the Army's first Mack fear-star general and the second in the military. SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) - Part of a gronp of 29 Afghans who fled their ceaatry celebrate after immigratioa Jadge Bernard Horn bach granted them political nsytasn over the objections of the U.S. government U.S. aathoridea originally ordered the rnfa- gees expelled after they arrived aa a flight from Iatia with fake docameats. UPI Tetophoto UPI Telephoto UPI Telephoto Page 4 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Thursday, August 12,1982 m m O pm o-s expressed n The CteOy T « a n are those o ' « S *y or the «*-**■ o» the a r< « ano are -e 3&a'0 o' ^ege-ts ex the T«*as Studem ^ c a n c r í Beard c ' O c e 'r -g "’’astees editorials viewpoint Send the book banners home H earings on adoption of Texas public school text­ books began Monday in Austin. On hand at these m eet­ ings w ere Mel and Norma Gabler, the infamous couple who have been attem pting to ban certain “ objection­ ab le” textbooks for the past 21 years. Apparently the Gablers find several books objectionable for many rea­ sons, ranging from telling students they are expected to make their own decisions about smoking cigarettes, to using the word “ adult” instead of "parent.” Book banners are not a new or original occurrence, but recently the Supreme Court handed down a ruling regarding the role these people should play in selecting books for public schools. The court ruled school boards should have “ significant descretion” in choosing books to be used in their schools but that it would not tolerate the rem oval of books for “ narrowly partisan” reasons. The Supreme Court for the past few years has been stepping on eggshells to avoid any expansion of the powers of the court, and this ruling is no exception. The phrase “ narrowly partisan” can be interpreted in many w ays. But if the State Textbook Com m ittee m em bers have any sense at all, they would see that if “ The World According to Mel and Norma Gabler” does not qualify as “ narowly partisan,” then nothing else does. The executive director of the People for the Am eri­ can Way, a group that cam e to Texas to fight the G ablers’ book banning efforts, put his finger on the problem when he said, “ It is important that Texas citi­ zens, as well as citizens around the country, begin to act to to preserve independent thinking and a ccess to free id ea s.” Sheltering so-called children from the outside world has never w orked; the world will still be out there when a child gets older. The decision the State Textbook Com m ittee must make is whether students should be informed or ignorant when they do encounter problems. The Gablers can tell the com m ittee a hundred tim es that they represent the view s of m ainstream Am erica, but in reality the G ablers’ opinion concerning what is offensive is only the idea of two people out of touch with life in the m odem world, nothing m ore or less. David Teece between the lines "All m e n live by truth and stand in need o f expression. In love, in art, in avarice, in politics, in labor, in gam es, we study to utter our painful secret. The m a n is only half himself, the other ha lf is his e x ­ pr e s s io n .” Ralph Waldo E m e rso n For a student at the University of Texas, no place offers a forum for ex­ pression like The Daily Texan. As we send our last summer paper to bed, we realize it is time again to look beyond the bowels of the TSP Building to find a few new faces to brighten up the place. Perhaps yours is one of those faces. Each semester at the T exa n we wipe the slate clean and start all over again. All of the jobs, except the editor’s, are open at the start of each semester. The old staffers switch positions, or gradu­ ate or move on, and a whole slew of new people crop up to find out what the Tex- an has to offer. This transition period always sends the Texan into a tailspin, but it is always the most exciting time at the paper because it is then that the paper’s course is charted for the up­ coming semester, and it is then that we all come to realize this campus is a wellspring of talent just waiting to be tapped. We’d like to tap into you. We are now accepting applications for full-time and part-time staff posi­ tions. Applications are available in the Texan offices, in the basement of the TSP Building at 25th Street and Whitis Avenue. You don’t have to be a journalism student to work for the paper; in fact, you needn’t have any journalistic expe­ rience whatsoever. We’ll teach you ev­ erything you need to know in a week of workshops beginning Aug. 16. Although many of the top managerial positions will be filled at the end of this week, most of the positions will remain open lisa beyer until two weeks after we start publish­ ing again on Aug. 24. During those two weeks, everyone, including those who weren’t able to attend the workshops, is welcome to work for the Texan on a trial basis. Even after the hiring is done, any stu­ dent is welcome to contribute to the pa­ per as a volunteer. We sometimes can’t pay workers who aren’t actually on the staff, but the experience is invaluable. We also encourage writers who aren’t interested in holding a staff position to contribute articles for publication. We’re always looking for talented new writers, and many of the pieces we pub­ lish come from non-staffers. In fact, most of the material on the editorial, features and entertainment pages is so­ licited on a free-lance basis. So if you stand in need of expression, come on down to the T exan offices. firing line W e ll , f m u s A re CoMfrf&f Who’s G ot Tint To Trff. — No quotas needed In the July 29 edition of The Daily Texan, Jim Hankins wrote an article concerning the $10,000 scholarship given by the UT Ex-Students’ Association. This scholarship is also known as the “Excellence Award.” Not meaning to insult anyone’s intel­ ligence, but excellent according to Webster’s Dictionary means “outstand­ ingly good of its kind.” Excellence has no quota to fill. My point is that this award is for five promising University- bound high school students There is not, nor should there be, a quota con­ cerning women or minorities. The es­ tablished quota removes the “ excel­ lence” from the award. It isn’t fair to the “true” top five winners. Minorities and women are given many scholarship opportunities and privileges, but for once it would be nice to compete for an award on an even level. It would mean more to anyone to know they won this prestigious award without any “rules.” I am so pleased Elspeth Rostow was “wholly comfort­ able” with the evaluation; she should be. Congratulations, Mr. Cozort, Mr. Du- Bose, Mr. Wade, Mr. LeFlore and Mr. Cochrum. Good luck! Diana Gonzalez Alice, Texas Hit law prevails The person is Enten Eller. The sub­ ject is non-registration for the draft due to religious beliefs. I admire Eller’s de­ cision to trust God for deliverance in his trial for non-registration. I do not believe it will do him any good, howev­ er. Don’t misunderstand me. Jesus Christ is my Lord and I know He hears the cries of the righteous who trust in Him. I also know He says, “My people are destroyed for a lack of knowledge,” (Hosea 4:6). I am, of course, assuming _ 1 Tetw, tlti that Mr. Eller’s belief in God includes acceptance of Jesus Christ’s sacrifice as the only way to enter into God’s pres­ ence. If that is not the case, this letter is unnecessary and Mr. Eller is trying to pick himself up by his own bootstraps. to Mr. Eller’s lack of knowledge ap­ pears include R o m a n s 13:1-2, which says, “Let every person be in subjection to the governing authorities. For there is no authority except from God, and those which exist are estab­ lished by God. Therefore he who resists authority has opposed the ordinance of God; and they who have opposed will receive them­ condemnation upon selves.” Only those who are lawbreak­ ers should fear the government, for it is a minister of God, an avenger who brings wrath upon the one who practic­ es evil (R o m a n s 13:4). It is only as those authorities enforce laws contra­ dicting the scriptures that they are to be opposed, as Paul states in Gala­ tians 5:1. Concerning the draft for war, God is the same yesterday, today and forever. Just as He required the Israelites to fight in the Old Testament, so we are at times called to fight. In L uke 3, Jesus told the Roman soldiers to not take money by force or falsely accuse any­ one, but to be content with their wages as soldiers. He did not tell th e m to stop being soldiers! As things now stand, Mr. Eller is faced with a trial, the accompanying court costs and lawyers’ fees. Because Mr. Eller chose to rebel against the es­ tablished rules for lodging objections, God Himself declares that Eller will receive condemnation on himself. The proper path is to register for the draft and then begin preparing to file for con­ scientious objector status. What Mr. Eller and others with simi­ lar religious beliefs should do before de­ ciding on anything is first pray to learn God’s will « i the matter. God’s answer MOW HOW YOU MUST FEEL— I WAS A TERRORIST, MYSELF,., ONCE!' Dow in forefront of safe disposal Dow Chemical has cleaned up its act. Instead of dumping its toxic wastes into unsafe landfills, Dow incinerates, recy­ cles or reuses reportedly 99 percent of its waste. If more companies followed Dow’s example, festering Love Canals would be a thing of the past. This may strike you as slightly unbelievable. Isn’t Dow Chemical the notorious company which made millions during the Vietnam war from the sale of deadly chemicals like Agent Orange and napalm0 Yes, it is. But forget, if you can, about these sins, for Dow has in part redeemed itself. As far as safe disposal of hazardous waste goes, Dow is the corporate front- runner. Dow's leadership is timely. Today more than ever, chemi­ cal manufacturers need to show a little social responsibility. Sure, putting forth the extra money to minimize external costs cuts into profits, but most consumers will gladly pay an extra 1 percent for the freedom from cancer, nervous disor­ ders, etc. Americans, in this “the chemical era,” are hem m ing in­ creasingly concerned about hazardous waste. Currently, about 130 billion pounds of toxic waste are generated each year in the United States, of which 80 billion are dumped primarily in landfills. Disposing of toxics in landfills is a dan­ gerous affair, mired in a time when land was plentiful and people were few. For years waste generators have indiscriminately dumped their poisonous by-products into the nearest open pit, water­ way or hole in the ground. The conventional “method” was motivated by profits; disposal of wastes in landfills costs only 3 cents per pound, as opposed to 15 cents by alternative meth­ ods. Dow Chemical has had to pay a high price tag, but in the long-run, it’s worth it. Most waste generators contract dispos­ al companies, like Browning-Ferris Industries, to get rid of their waste. Although for small companies this is the only economical option, large companies like Dow can easily af­ ford the added costs of on-site incineration, recovery or neu­ tralization. Today we are seeing, smelling and, for some of us, dying roger worthington daily texan columnist from hazardous wastes inappropriately disposed of in the past. And even now, over three-fourths of all toxic waste goes into landfills. The prevalence of toxic chemicals in our soil, air and water ranks hazardous waste as the greatest threat to human survival next to nuclear war. Congress has responded to the threat by creating a $1.6 billion “Superfund,” financed largely by a tax on chemical feedstocks. The fund has spurred a boom in the new waste clean-up business. Such companies are scrambling for a piece of the cake and already reporting huge profits — profits which consumers pay for but which could have been avoided. The Superfund is definitely a big step in the right direction, although you still cannot get very excited about cleaning up after someone else’s mess. Moreover, the money available will barely dent the toxic monster seething in our land. Right now, most of the money goes to containment — walling or covering up open pits — not to cleaning them up. Americans cannot for long be depended upon to foot the bill every time a chemical company decides to spill a few thou­ sand tons of corrosive crap into every ditch along the road­ side. We cannot suffer this brand of corporate socialism where the costs are borne by the many and the profits by the few. It’s hard to believe that the same company which tricked the military into buying tons of allegedly benign Agent Orange, whose napalm inflicted savagely cruel bums on so many Vietnamese children, is now in part vindicated by its leadership in the safe management of toxic wastes. But, to prevent future and clean up existing Love Canals, chemical companies are going to have to follow Dow’s commendable example. Worthington is a Plan II student. * Congress at root of Reagan’s failure hale cullom daily texan increases. Just when the government most desperately needed money, taxes were slashed and the Federal Reserve refused to finance the debt. The result is the current mind-boggling deficit. The great truth of the current eco­ nomic situation is that Sir Ronnie took a mighty swing at the dragon — and missed. The Reagan promise to deliver economic prosperity has failed. Even if some recovery is seen before the No­ vember elections, the Republicans will probably lose at least 20 seats in the House, After that, chances of Reagan working productively with Congress are practically nonexistent, as the Demo­ crats will simply stall Reagan’s at­ tempts to continue his programs until the 1984 elections. The great drag on the economy is, of course, the huge budget deficits and the accompanying high interest rates. Lest fingers begin to wag at the president for producing such huge deficits, it must be understood that the main responsibility for the current mess rests with Con­ gress. The difficulty with this budget, and all those of recent years, is that deficits are built into the system. The deficit cannot be blamed on so-called discre­ tionary spending — pet projects of con­ gressmen such as dairy-price supports, water projects, subsidies and other pork-barrel projects that popular misconception attributes deficits to. These projects make up only about 20 percent of the budget. The really big bucks are in the so-called entitlements, which comprise approximately 50 per­ cent of the budget. Entitlements are benefits which any qualified citizen has a right by law to claim — this money does not have to be appropriated. These programs just grow au to m a tica lly as the need for them grows. They are a part of a vicious circle — the worse the economy gets, the more demand for un­ employment compensation, Social Se­ curity adjustments, Medicare, etc. Tliis problem started during the 1970s, when Congress indexed Social Se­ curity, Medicare and other entitlements to increases in the cost of living. With the double-digit inflation of the late '70s, the growth in the budget produced by these programs became uncontroll­ able. Congress then compounded the prob­ lem by extending the coverage of cer­ tain benefits — mainly Social Security. As long as high economic growth con- doonesbury m i.ir s w . O W 3A3Í m i YOU CAN STOP M&MN6 will always agree with what He has al­ ready said in the scriptures. Religious beliefs concerning God carry no author­ ity and are deceptive if they have not been given by the Holy Spirit and scrip­ ture. Obeying the knowledge given by the Holy Spirit will cause a person to abide in Jesus and will result in eternal life (I John 2:25-28), as well as result­ ing in prosperity in our present spiritual life, physical health and material needs (M a tth ew 19:28-29, 3 John 2). Roy P. Behymer Tech Staff Assistant III Multi-Media Auditoria Bergman and comedy One small correction to Steve Davis’ otherwise accurate review of Woody Al­ len’s new film (Texan, Aug. 10): “Smiles of a Summer Night” is not, as Davis says, Ingmar Bergman’s “only comedy.” The recently retired maestro of Swedish cinema made at least five other comedies (and I’m probably miss­ ing some): “Secrets of Women” (1952), “A Lesson in Love” (1954), “The Dev­ il's Eye” (1960), “About These Wom­ en” (1964) and, of course, “The Magic Flute” (1975). Bergman’s brilliantly successful ca­ reer, not only as a film director but as a director of opera and theater produc­ tions in Sweden, was more varied than is generally recognized in this country. As a film critic, Davis ought to know better than to fall for the popular misconception of Bergman as “mirth­ less.” Anyone who has seen these films knows what I mean. But there’s the problem: these films are never screened in Austin. The Var­ sity Theater and our campus film soci­ eties, when they present Bergman films at all, keep showing, year after year, the same old masterpieces that gave Bergman his lopsided reputation: “Sev­ enth Seal,” “Persona,” etc. If KLRN had not shown a series of “obscure” Bergman films several summers ago, I doubt I would ever have had a chance to see than at all (in Texas, at any rate). It’s high time that the people who bring “art” films to the campus area realize their obligation to show us the other side of Bergman. Alan Fear Graduate, English tinued, with inflation pushing an unpro­ testing public into higher tax brackets, bringing in money to fuel the programs — the extension was acceptable. The public, however, got tired of being milked for taxes, and this, plus the slow growth and tight money caused by the OPEC oil crunch, spelled disaster for the budget. This should have been the signal to put a rein on mushrooming entitle­ ments. Ceilings should have been set, but this was political dynamite, espe­ cially after Watergate. Rather, the problem was ignored, even worsened as Congress tried to soften the impact of bad times after the oil embargo by e x ­ tending still fu r t h e r the already over­ loaded safety net. Enter the Federal Reserve. Congress in effect “passed the buck,” hoping the Fed would finance the debt by boosting purchases of government securities, which would drive interest rates down and produce growth, inflationary growth, which would enable business to continue as usual. But the Fed was dedicated to f i g h t ­ inflation, keeping interest rates ing high and growth slow. This was the re­ sult of OPEC and the oil embargo. It also produced politically unpopular re­ sults, such as unemployment. So, the Fed was bearing less and less of the Treasury’s debt. The stage was set for Ronald Reagan, a president elected by a middle class sick to death of taxes. Reagan immedi­ ately delivered on his promise of re­ duced taxes. Reagan tried to make budget cuts, too; he took off after dis­ cretionary spending and was initially successful. But there was another prob­ lem — the disgraceful neglect the de­ fense establishment had suffered since Vietnam. Remedying this ate up the budget cuts. Entitlements, spurred by a weak economy, grew out of control, budget cuts were wiped out by needed defense The treasury must cover the deficit somehow, so the government goes to the private money markets and borrows by selling 90-day treasury bills and bonds. In doing so, it crowds out private business trying to borrow to sustain op­ erations or finance growth. This is why interest rates are so high. No recovery can really get started because business can’t borrow enough money to get going again. Clearly, drastic action is needed. Someone must lead the attack on the runaway entitlements, and it certainly won’t be Congress, which is too cowed by the immense power of the entitle­ ment lobbies. Only the president can supply the needed leadership. A couple of constitutional amend­ ments would be helpful too, but the cur­ rent balanced budget amendment isn’t one of them — Congress is full of law­ yers who can find a way around that. An amendment giving the president an item veto — allowing him to veto spe­ cific portions of spending bills — and restoring the presidential impoundment powers would be a start. An amend­ ment to increase the terms of House members from two to four years might make representatives less susceptible to re-election pressures. A tax on imported oil would have two beneficial effects: It would raise badly needed revenue and provide incentive to disentangle ourselves from OPEC oil as soon as possible. There is something to be said for de­ centralization, the “New Federalism.” Some functions of government should be turned over to the states, but they must be financed as well. Perhaps a “value-added tax” for certain goods and services could be instituted. One thing is sure, the United States can no longer afford the business-as- usual attitude that has gotten us into this mess. It’s high time the politicians stand up and fight the entitlement lob­ bies and special interests — or we are all in deep trouble. by garry trudeau TM AfMD I m tfS T O P M F m until THERESULTS APE IN. ANP E M IF I CHECKOUT, U N IH M E TO START MORRHNG ABOUT PRE - NATAL care JW & EROSEANP P ier ANP NUTRITION. / Everyone eventually leaves home [ |tim oleary associate images editor Ah, m y —30— column. Equally as elu­ sive as graduation, I thought the day would never dawn. H ow ever, regard­ less of m y reluctance to accep t it, both have arrived far sooner than expected. m e in aw e. I w as dumbfounded when he said that I too could easily becom e a grizzled new spaper reporter a la Lou Grant. A poet in the newsroom ? At any rate, since tim e w aits for no man, the hour to depart m y home-away- from-home, T h e D a i l y T e x a n , is now at hand. I w ill attem pt to keep m y acco­ lades of appreciation brief. To the teachers of m any lessons, those at the T e x a n as w ell a s m y pro­ fessors, I humbly offer m y m ost sincere thanks. Due to their instructions, I have becom e w ell versed in the w ays of writ­ ing, editing and, m ost im portant of all, humanity. To those who have gone ahead, upon whose shoulders w e now stand, and those who follow, the paths have re­ mained rem arkably the sam e. Although these paths have been tread by the likes of Willie Morris and Thom as Thomp­ son, there is still much to be done and much to guard against. While at this point the T e x a n ’s fu­ ture appears secure, it rem ains, after all, a news organ indirectly attached to the great State of Texas. And while few exp ect hard-hitting and investigative work from P r a v d a , the T e x a n reader­ ship dem ands that it faithfully serve Austin as its second m ost widely read newspaper. T he T e x a n cannot sim ply rest on its laurels as one of the best college newspapers. And though it d eserves much praise, because it is indeed your newspaper, T h e D a i l y T e x a n , as w ell as the Uni­ versity, stand in dire need of constant review and criticism . Although som e steps are being m ade to becom e inte­ grated with the Austin com m unity as a whole and not just the preppie princes and princesses, the isolationist trend, in the newsroom and academ ia, is m ost alarm ing. However, the ball is now in your court; this paper’s future rests in your hands. While w aiting to finish m y course work, during m y last few days in Aus­ tin, I have often thought back to m y ori­ entation as a UT transfer student. I held the graduating journalism student and outgoing T e x a n w riter that counselled Can we please be serious? pamela mcalpin images editor I really w as going to w rite a very serious colum n about som e of the observations I have m ade over the years. You know, som e of that bleeding-heart-liberal philosophizing that seem s to have becom e a lost art. However, after five sem esters in this cavern called T h e D a ily T e x a n and because I ’m going to save the aforem en­ tioned essay for another m arket (hopefully a better paying one), I would like to finish off m y stint in this p lace w e loving­ ly refer to as “The H ellhole” with just a few rem em brances and a few thank-yous. I’ll never forget the first tim e I set foot in the T e x a n offices, dragged in for a tour by an instructor I hated in a course that only confused m e. The tired m anaging editor w as obviously giving his 1,000th tour as he waved us through the various offices. It w as then that I first heard a phrase I’ve com e to detest, sim ply b ecau se it ’s been used ad nauseam on every intra-office m em o I’ve yet to behold — “ Be there Aloha.” YUCCCCKKKK. But that first visit imbued m e with a curiosity about how a newspaper runs and how people actually get from event to the printed word. A chain reaction had begun, because that curi­ osity led m e to others of greater and lesser m agnitudes. Now, I’ve been through num erous editors as a w riter and numerous w riters as an editor; from them all, I’ve learned som ething. In som e cases, that som ething has been don’t w rite for th a t editor or don’t accept any article from t h a t w riter, but there’s alw ays som ething. It’s alw ays hard to sum up exactly how an experience has affected you (even w orse for m e, as those who know how long-winded I usually am w ill certainly a ttest to) or why it has affected you. It’s hard to explain why the T e x a n offices are so addicting, why I’ve spent breaks between cla sses, lunch hours, evenings and entire weekends down here. P er­ haps it ’s because, if som ething happens in the city or the nation or the world, I want to know — n o w . Of course, the cam araderie between staffers is a pleasant addition. There is one person I would really like to thank, for two reasons. One, I’ve never told him just how im portant his as­ sistance has been over the last two years and, two, because I have to finish this p iece soon, before I get extrem ely maudlin. I can ’t even rem em ber what position Brian Dunbar held when I cam e to the T e x a n as an eager copy editor. But, from his patiently showing m e how to use the VDT to just as pa­ tiently rejecting m y headlines when he was m anaging editor, Dunbar has been one of the m any people who have contribut­ ed to m y sticking around down here (much to his regret). Anyway, thanks, Brian. M c A lp in r e a l l y is s e rio u s. - 3 0 - I guess that just goes to show that life is what you m ake of it. You’ve just got to grab it with both hands and w restle it like the devil him self. In closing, to individuals such as Scott Lind, C.D. Lunan, Sylvia Bravo, Gary Rasp, Brian Dunbar, John R oss, professors Tom F ensch and Warren Burkett and others far too numerous to m ention, I owe m uch. Many thanks, friends; your efforts w ill not be forgot­ ten. And perhaps, hopefully, I’ve left som ething behind m ore substantial than m y scraps of graffiti on the m en ’s room wall. W a t c h i n ’ th e f u l l m o o n r i s e o v e r th e m o u n t a i n s ; C a lifo r n ia i m m i g r a n t , S a n t a B a r b a r a b o u n d — b r i d g e s b u m i n ’ b eh in d. S w e e t 709. _________________________ - 30- __________________________________ O ’l e a r y w a s th e g u y on th e Im ages c o v e r . E xcuse us for a m om ent while we practice self-indulgence. This page is the T e x a n ’s traditional —30— columns page. Each of the seven writers, for reasons as diverse and strange as the people the D a i l y T e x a n forever. P lease under­ stand, and if you know any of these poor souls, congratulate them. them selves, are leaving Don’t worry too much, it hasn’t changed yet david elliot newswriter Don’t read this. It m ay bite you. days of rage, past and present. Muck­ raking at Great White U. I ’m not a sen­ ior, I ’m not graduating, and I shouldn’t be writing this column. But I am leaving. You see, when I got here they told m e this university’s col­ ors w ere orange and white. Since then, I’ve learned that they’re really m ostly white. F act is, this is not a school that w elcom es diversity. Oh, that’s not really why I’m leaving. Human beans can adjust to anything. They can even adjust to a university that has established an atm osphere con­ ducive to the advancem ent of racism , sexism and homophobia. This thing called college is not so m uch a struc­ tured approach toward education as it is an educational approach toward structure. What is college if it is not an atti­ tude? And if that’s the case, why not pick a college whose attitude is m ost in line with your own? I’m not saying anything. You can’t in a —30— column. say anything Blabbering nonsensical. Som etim es I feel that I and m any of m y colleagues are gazing at life through ... som etim es translucent, a window som etim es opaque, rose-tinted, with our backgrounds providing the depth and degree of the filter. Som etim es, w e’ve been kicked so much w e ca n ’t see that that’s just the way it is. Som e­ tim es, w e ’ve kicked others so m uch we think they have it com ing for not stop­ ping us. P eace in Beirut ... ... little p ieces of peace, that is little children are peace ... little pieces of little children blown up by little bitty American bombs. Its not our fault though — we only sell ’em ... quit criticizing — you don’t know how lucky you are .... Do I have to believe this? I a m o l d e r th e n I o n c e w a s A n d y o u n g e r th en I ’ll be, T h a t ’s not u n u su a l No, it i s n ’t s t r a n g e th a t a f t e r c h a n g e s u p o n c h a n g e s w e a r e m o r e or le ss the s a m e a f te r c h a n g e s w e a r e m o r e o r le s s the s a m e . It’s been a long year. R acist sorori­ ties, a redistricting rapist, an under­ ground parking lot under Calvary Cem­ etery that died and a T e x a n walkout to boot. I liked Don, Gardner and John, and I like Lisa. I ’ve alw ays maintained that w e wouldn’t have so m any prob­ lem s down here if they took out the flu­ orescent lights and put in black lights and silveresque Bow ie posters. For col­ lege students, w e sure take ourselves seriously. Loosen up, T ex a n . Y ou’ve got a good thing going. And I ’m not writing anymore. N ever again. N ever until tomorrow. - 38- ___________________ E lliot w ill now s e a r c h f o r s o m e F a ls ta ff beer. Finally: the end is within sight lisa black editorial assistant Finally, alone with a typew riter in an air-conditioned room. “ M ake-believe B allroom ” on the stereo and a sunset through the window. Finally. Orange sunstreaks across the orange kingdom and nothing to tax the mind save the steady clicking of m y own thoughts on the keyboard. No one even to hear my tapping echo in the hall. God! No ciga­ rette sm oke, no artistic cussing, no chatter or patter or loom ing deadline. Just m e and the Selectric and Benny Goodman. What strange w ays w e find to relieve the tensions of this chaotic world. Lose the stress of an office by typing, ease the overworked m u scles by running, relax the tired ey es by read­ ing. And breathe, “ F in ally.” their 8,000 m iles east they’re shooting at barbed-wire hospitals and children who wander away sum m er from cam ps. 4,000 m iles south they’re shoot­ ing peasants for being peasants, som e­ thing they never wanted to be anyway. 2,000 m iles north they’re w riting law s that take away freedom s the people don't even know they have. But here in the home of Texas Student Publications it’s just m e and IBM’s baby and the big band sound. And I know very w ell when my freedom ’s gone. This morning, the world w as bursting at its m eridian. Someone raped a nun in the deep south and som eone found a dead journalist’s socks. Someone didn’t turn his stories in and som eon e’s car got towed. This morning, the typew riter lay silent while I scream ed and Cactus Pryor reminded us all that A m erica is still the land of the free. But the tin box touted 100 d egrees to­ day and no one died of heat stroke. The work load stopped counting calories and Thursday, August 12, 1982 □ TH E DAILY TEX A N □ Page 5 A tribute to my husband for putting up with this crap. Short and sweet: Goodbye, ya’II susan allen-camp “Do it and don’t look back,” is what m y father alw ays said. So, I did it, and now it ’s tim e to m ove on. It w as real, and it w as fun but it w asn’t real fun. Thanks to all for the experience. But an extra thanks to m y husband, Carl, for continuing to sm ile at m e through all of this. I know it w asn’t easy. I love you. Travis and Ken — keep the faith. Mom and Dad, you’re the best. (P lease don’t edit m om and dad out; if it w eren’t for them I wouldn’t be here.) A Lisa Beyer “ Aloha” to all. Don’t kill each other next fall. We m iss you, Larry Kolvoord. Bye, Sylvia. photographer - 3 0 - S u s a n h a s h a d m a n y n a m e s , in ­ c lu d in g S u s a n R u th A lle n , S u s a n A l le n C a m p , S u sa n A la n K a m p , S u ­ s a n A l l e n - C a m p . W e k n o w w h o s h e is. Oh, we’re off to see the wonderful wizard of Oz frank jannuzi general reporter This space is usually reserved for those teary-eyed departure dram as written by washed-up m em bers of T he D a ily T e x a n staff. Fortunately, I man­ aged to talk one of those shriveled-up form er new sw riters into donating his space to a worthy cause, namely m e. whom I spoke w as so non-opinionated, fair and objective. It w as a pleasure to speak to such open-minded, calm and responsible students. I have no doubt that as long as for­ eign students on the UT cam pus can re­ main so scholarly in their evaluation of foreign affairs (hom e affairs for them ) the conflict raging in the Middle E ast w ill be resolved with the alacrity of Vermont m aple syrup seeping through a Mr. Coffee filter. Well my space is gone, and I’ll not invade yours any longer. I’m off to find a place that has f o u r seasons, not just cool and hot. ________________ - 3 0 - ________________ J a n n u z i s p e a k s E n g lis h a s a s e c - doug mcleod assistant managing editor Each one of the group m em bers with ond la n g u a g e . Are you finished yet? You see, I haven’t had a chance to really speak m y piece about life in the depths of the T e x a n offices because I’m supposed to be “ob jective.” Always o b j e c t i v e . But now I have m y chance. The T e x a n w as m y first introduction to the m elodram a of writing for a daily newspaper. The m e l l o w part w as all right, but som etim es the drama be­ cam e a little intense. Take, for instance, my first big as­ signm ent: covering the regents m eeting in Port Aransas. Two days of fun in the sun it w asn’t. We (Lisa Beyer, David E lliot and m yself) sought to represent the U niversity and T h e D a ily T e x a n w ell, so w e showed up in our classiest shirts and ties, except for Lisa, who wore the sam e old stuff she alw ays wears. We barged into the m eeting late, making a grand entrance, and quickly noticed that the usually stodgy regents had doffed coat and tie in favor of alli­ gators and shirt sleeves. Then there was the fulfillm ent of a life-tim e dream : spending an awe-in­ spiring day with the Texas leaders of the Knights of the Knickity Knacks, or whatever they’re called. No offense boys, but your organization is in poor health. It’s white as a sheet. You need to change your color. Turn to a new con­ gressional page, as it were. But perhaps the m ost interesting tim e I had all sum m er was getting to know all of the representatives of any organization that has even a rem ote in­ terest in the Middle East. Even the UT surf club probably has som ething to say about the needless red staining of all that beautiful sand. F r o m z e r o to —30— in j u s t en o u g h After t i m e to m i s s d e a d l i n e ... in three years journalism school and a year of playing reporter for the D a ily T e x a n , pernicious toy that it is, I am bewildered at how eva­ sive that basic, seem ingly sim ple trick of m eeting deadline is. Looking at it from a logical perspective, it seem s so easy. No problem. But som ew here along the way em otion and spontaneity squeeze into the realm of day-to-day life, and the pragm atic theory of cold logic falls by the wayside. Like a land­ slide, it falls, fast and far. Out of con­ trol (or so it seem s). More than once I ’ve found m yself buried under the heavy rubble of fallen, broken attem pts at maintaining a strict schedule. But som ehow a sem blance of "keeping it all together” rem ains (or so they say); striking a balance between illusions, creating a precarious and constant state of life on the edge. Edgework. What a m iserable thrill, seductive and addictive. And it becom es habit. And life’s never what it “ should be” (or so it seem s). I got into this discipline for just that it has — discipline. In som e ways worked, and in som e ways it hasn't. Seem s like deadlines becam e progres­ sively harder to m eet An ironic quirk in character (or so they say). Too many things going on. A splintered existence But it’s been fun, m ost of it Smattered scenes of hell here and there litter the path, but that’s part of the intensity. In Tense City — home sw eet home. Not a bad place, really. I’ve learned a lot Living with daily pressure, nearly in­ cessant tension, flirting with failure, you get used to it. Courting stress be­ for granted com es a given, Humans are amazing creatures, really taken clim bed on m y back for a ride. We tackled one m ore beast and survived. It’s all so so ft. Tonight, the world is a feather on m y toes. Tonight, it’s even s u b tle . Tonight, the world is just my rambling and Frank Sinatra's crooning. Finally. __________________________________— 38— __________________________________ B l a c k lik e s th e c r o w d s a t f o o t b a l l g a m e s THERMS A MISS K6P HERÍ, COMPtAIWIMS ABOUT SOME COST SHEEP AT OUR NEVAM TESTSfTE,,. P ressure’s on Up all night, again. I started this self-indulgent soliloquy in plenty of tim e to finish it (or so it seem ed' Now I'm racing again st the deadline, late for a m eeting, trying to finish up my coursework. wondering how I ’m going to pull it all together Sounds fam iliar “ Where’s your - 3 0 - colum n D oug?” Ah, such com forting words D on’t they know by now? - 30- ~ M c L e o d m i s s e d ~ d e a d l i r i e ~ b y ~ 2 4 h o u rs a n d 55 m i n u t e s . Page 6 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Thursday, August 12, 1982 White’s forerunners back Clements news rapcailpg By BECKY CABAZA Daily Texan Staff Four former Texas attorneys general, all Democrats, said Wednesday they would endorse Gov. B ill Clements for re-elec­ tion. Waggoner Carr, an Austin lawyer who served as attorney general from 1963 to 1967, said he supports Clements in his bid for re-election because he believes the governor w ill fight high­ er taxes and increased government spending. “ With the federal government cutting back on the amount of federal tax dollars coming to Texas, the demands on the next session of the Texas Legislature for increased spending and taxing will be unprecedented. Texas taxpayers are in for a jolting tax year unless we have a governor who is not afraid to say ‘no,’ ” Carr said. W ill Wilson, who served as attorney general before Carr, said he favors Clements over Attorney General Mark White, the Democratic gubernatorial candidate, because he considers White’s performance as attorney general ineffective. “ It is the privilege of the attorney general to direct the ener­ gy of his staff to areas that need legal attention. I can’t see that Mark White has done much with the energy of his staff,” W il­ son said. “ I believe in the Texas tradition of a second term as a way of saying thank you for a job well done,” said a third Clements supporter, John Ben Sheppard, who served as attorney general from 1953 until 1957. Gerald Mann, the fourth former attorney general to endorse Clements, was not present in Austin Wednesday when the en­ dorsement announcement was made. “ I ’m just one individual. I doubt if my endorsement w ill split the Democratic Party,” Carr said. “ If they’re (the Demo­ crats) going to beat Clements, they’re going to have to be unified,” he added. White was not available for comment Wednesday. Meiszer appoints 3 to city management posts By SCOTT WILLIAMS Daily Texan Staff Austin City Manager Nicho­ las Meiszer Wednesday an­ nounced the appointment of three officials to new posi­ tions in the city government. Jorge Carrasco was named deputy city manager, a spot vacant since the June depar­ ture of Tom Muehlenbeck, who went to Virginia Beach, Va. Carrasco, a city employee for eight years, had been serving as assistant city man­ ager of management servi­ ces. As deputy city manager, Carrasco’s job will be broad­ ened, Meiszer said. “ (His) new position will have broad­ er responsibilities including taking charge in my absence and assisting me in supervis­ ing the daily operations of the city,” Meiszer said. Meiszer said Carrasco will aid him in working with the City Council, selecting city executives and city-wide poli­ cy development and imple­ mentation. Meiszer also announced the appointment of city Hospital Administrator Bob Spurck to the position of acting assist­ ant city manager for health and human services. The appointment is tempo­ rary, pending the September arrival of Frank Hersman, whose salary as assistant city manager w ill be paid by the federal government under the Intergovernmental Personnel Act Grant. Frank Rodriguez was named director of manage­ ment and budget, a position he has held on an interim ba­ sis since the resignation of Lee Thomson in June. UGL plan* extended hours for finals Other campus events The Undergraduate Library w ill be open from 8 a.m. to 2 a.m. Thursday and Friday as students begin finals for the sec­ ond summer term. On Aug. 14, the UGL will be open noon to 7 p.m., and it will be closed Aug. 15. The UGL will begin intersession hours Aug. 16 and be open from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. The staff of the General Libraries said members of the facul­ ty and professional staff may renew library materials due Aug. 30 by presenting them at the circulation desk where they were checked out. Renewed materials will be due Jan. 17, 1983. Items not returned or renewed by Sept. 20 will be presumed lost. Voter registration deadline Thursday Thursday is the deadline to register to vote in the Sept. 11 city bond election. Voter registration cards, available at the post office on the UT campus and at various locations around Austin, should be mailed Thursday to the Travis County Tax Assessor-Collector, P.O. Box 1748, Austin, Texas 78767. Citizens can also register in person at the tax assessor-collector’s office in the courthouse annex, 10th and San Antonio streets. Marquardt to head UT speech center Thomas P. Marquardt, UT associate professor of speech communication, has been appointed director of the UT Speech and Hearing Center, effective Sept. 1. Marquardt will replace Gene Powers, director of the center since 1974, who will return to full-time teaching and research. Marquardt, a member of the UT speech communication faculty since 1976, has a 14-year history in speech pathology. Students Older Than Average (SOTA) w ill host a social hour from 4-7 p.m. Friday at The Posse, 701 W. 24th St. The Austin Society To Oppose Pseudoscience (ASTOP) w ill host a panel discussion on “ Science and Pseudoscience in the Public Schools” at 3:30 p.m. Sunday in Room A of the Austin Public Library, 800 Guadalupe St. Panelists w ill include Mary Long, a teacher at L B J High School; Wayne Schade, science coordinator for Austin Inde­ pendent School District; and Irwin Spear, UT professor of bota­ ny- The University Chess Club will hold speed chess tournaments during its meeting at 7 p.m. Thursday in Burdine Hall 228. The club will not meet Aug. 19 or Aug. 26, and beginning Sept. 2, club meetings will be in Cockrell Hall 1.214. For more informa­ tion, call Robert Jaster at 467-2372. The India Students’ Association will celebrate the 35th anni­ versary of India’s independence at 5:30 p.m. Sunday in Robert Lee Moore Hall 4.102. The group w ill screen the Hindi movie “ Upkaar” at the meeting. Admission is free, and all are welcome. For more information, call Binay Shrivastavaat, 474-1573. The University Folk Dance Society w ill not meet this week but will offer a free beginner’s international folk dance class at 8 p.m. Friday in Goldsmith Hall 105. Jim Hightower, Democratic candidate for state agriculture commissioner, will speak at the monthly meeting of the Uni­ versity Employees Union at 7:30 p.m. Thursday in Business- Economics Building 52. The Cartoon/Fantasy Organization w ill meet from 10:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday at 2217 Leona St. IMEKEEPER OF TRADITION The Cactus Yearbook is now available for distribution in the foyer of the Texas Student Publications Building, 8:30 a. m.-4:30 p.m. e Da il y T e x a n uper R u m m e r grab bag of prizes! W o o b y Audio One voon*o**t 281 5 G u a d a lu p e Panasonic EAB-69? 6 «9 Co-Axial Cor Speaken SI OO Value 7 /2 6 A Day in the Park IV (R e g is tra tio n at In n a r S a n c tu m ) Tickets to Touring Company Presentations Value $100 Plant It Earth WonBy D obie M a ll Up to $25 per Month in Merchandise Value $100 7 / 5 E lv a M o re n o Unicorn Gallery Dobio M a ll Citi c«»ifi IAJ z u LUNCHEON SPECIAL $2.95 lunch specials A A on.-Fri., 3 served d a ily 11 a .m .-2 p.m ., also; F rozen M a r g a r ita s 99*. FRIDAY NITE SPECIAL Served 7 p .m .-l a.m . 2 for 1. F a jita P late; w ith Pico De G allo, G rille d Onions, G u a ­ cam ole & T o rtilla . C oupon g oo d th ru S /2 S /S 2 FIESTA HOUR 4-7 p.m. “ F re e A n t o jit o s ” M o n .-F r i. All beer, Including Im p orts W in e High B alls M a r g a r ita s 75* 75* *1 50 S I.50 SATURDAY NITE SPECIAL Served 7 p.m .-1 a.m. S I.0 0 off of any m enu item . C oupon g o o d th ru S /2 S /S 2 SANTIAGO'S • 604 Ntches at 6th • 472-6439 P E U G E O T I p “Spik ' VÍ MOTOBECANE SALE FANTASTIC PRICES I - HI ÜÜÜ fir Austin's Only Authorized Peugeot Dealer H ■' ST , • k % Rainbow Jersey 705-C W. 24th at Rio Grande 477-2142 New Zealand Shorts owynsn an-cotton international snort* naye two roomy side pockets 4 a draw- *tnng/elasticiz.ed waist. They look. *o good and fit so well , you’ll want more chan one pair. Men's and womens sizes in many colors. Easy Parking at North Store between Lamar iburnct Rd WHOLE EARTH PROVISION COMPANY 24(0 S a n A n to n io 4 1 6 1 3 7 7 RfcSGAWCW 4 9 6 -C pS * * * — ■ * * u n n i I Applications are now available for fall Daily Texan staff positions. No experience is necessary for most jobs; we’ll teach you everything you need to know. The application deadline is 5 p.m. Friday, August 6 for permanent staff positions and 5 p.m. Monday, August 16 for issue staff positions. Applications can be picked up at the Texan offices, in the basement of the TSP Building on the corner of 25th Street and Whitis Avenue. T te: Q u iy T exan C e r t ifie d FURNITURE RENTAL 1001 East Anderson Lane Opon 9am-8pm 2021 East Riverside Drive Opart 9om-9pm (Ju ly Sopt Sp ecial Student Anna») 459-4241 SERVING STUDENTS FOR OVER 16 YEARS H - E - B FOODS • DRUGS H.E.B. People are on your sid e w ith Low P rices! (EMM 'V FO O D S ■ D R U G S H.B.B. is on Your Side w ith Q uality and V ariety! PRICES GOOD THURS.-WED., AUG. 12-18, IN: AUSTIN LIMIT RIGHTS RESERVED OLD FASHIONED FLAVOR BONELESS PITT HAMS DECKER, WATER ADDED HALVES.. (QUARTERS - ‘2.19 LB.) MEAT WIENERS OSCAR $ 1 FRANKS Sum m er Fresh Fruits... SEEDLESS GRAPES CALIFORNIA THOMPSON LARGE SWEET CLUSTERS58< LB. CALIFORNIA. BARTLETT ■ i » n i . M u i m i n , M r . . . • PEARS TEXAS SW EET I C A M O O V V C C I K q 0 CANTALOUPE ? Q 0 NEW CROP .......................LB. V W V IN E-RIP EN ED ................... LB. W W PORK ROAST FRESH BOSTON B U T T .............................LB $ ] 5 9 CALIFORNIA, FRESH NECTARINES R Q S W E E T ............................. LB. U W IMPORTED, TASTY 0 MANGOS LARGE S I Z E ...................... EA. 0 69 CALIFORNIA SW EET , CALIFORNIA FANCY PLUMS red LARGE S I Z E ...................... LB. U W Q Q O ORANGES VALENCIA ........................LB. W W E Q 0 AMERICAN SLICED SINGLES ROYAL MAID, 12-OZ LUNCH MEATS RANCHI COUNTR SLICED, BOLOGNA (REG., THICK, BEEF), LUNCHEON MEAT, SALAMI, 12-OZ SHOULDER R I B S ^ H CROSS CUT COOKOUT, LB........................LB U.S.O.A. CHOICE STEAKHOUSE BEEF $ ] 6 9 U.S.D.A. CHOICE, STEAKHOUSE BEEF BARBECUE RIBS LEAN & MEATY........................................... l b . $*|49 RANCH COUNTRY, MEAT SMOKED (BEEF - >2.09 LB.) SAUSAGE COOKOUT SHORT U.S.D.A. CHOICE RIBS STEAKHOUSE B E E F ..............................LB. $ ]9 9 „ , 99c NEW JERSEY FANCY acnoc. r n i i w WASH. RED DELICIOUS RLUEBERRIES Q Q c APPLES fiQ 0 LARGE S I Z E ...................... PINT EXTRA F A N C Y ................... LB. U W APPLE KIT CARAMEL OR CANDY ... EA. 69° MARIE’S PRESSINGS_________________________ RANCH DRESSING *129 ITALIAN GARLIC THOUSAND ISLAND $159 ITALIAN w,™».*. $159 $169 12-OZ. RLUE CHEESE < | C Q BLUE CHEESE DRESSIN G S169 LOW CALORIE O A C O , ^ $169 12 02 < « C Q NEW! 12 OZ AVOCADO DRESSING s lb3 CREAMY CUCUMBER A | r n $159 NEW AT L PILLSBURY ALL ^ READY PIE H .E.B. m CRUSTS FOR ADDED VARIETY! REFRIGERATED 15-OZ. PKG................ W $]39 FOR OILY HAIR ONLY SHAMPOO or CREME ¿neo * ¿ b3 RINSE z oz Bathroom Tissue WALDORF. 4-ROLL PLANTS & FLOWERS FLORIST QUALITY MUMS 5-CUTTING, 6-IN. POT GIANT LEAF. GOLDEN *4 9 9 POTHOS IVY $139 4-IN. POT, REG. *1.99......... I HANGING BASKETS 80ST0N FERN OR WHITE NEPTHYTIS. IO-INCH POT $ 0 9 9 9 Star-Kfrt IN OIL OR WATER WHEAT BREAD 0 H.E.B. THIN SLICED 24-ÓZ. LOAF .................... 65 CHUNK LIGHT - n 0 T U N A H S . / 9 ICED TEA MIX LIPTON, 32-OZ. 6 9 * 2 MILDEW REMOVER $ 2 3 9 DRY DOG FOOD REGAL REGAL DRY CAT FOOD UPTON. LOW CALORIE ICED TEA MIX UPTON INSTANT TEA S-LB. BAG 9 9 ° $]39 4-LB BAG $]99 4-02 JAR $ 2 4 9 3 1 -0 2 JAR ROYAL MAID. SM ALL OR LARGE CURO COTTAGE CHEESE 12-OZ CUP 7 9 ( , SHOULDER ARM D f l A C T U.S.D.A. CHOICE n U M O I ROUND BONE $ 4 89 STEAKHOUSE BEEF ...... ........... LB. ^ PORK STEAK FRESH BUTT C U T ................................. LB RIB STEAK U.S.D.A. CHOICE. STEAKHOUSE BEEF. BONE-IN ...................... LB. ^ CUBE STEAK J U.S.D.A. CHOICE. STEAKHOUSE BEEF, CHICKEN F R Y ................ LB. CHICKEN FRIED DECKER BEEF PATTIES STANDING RIB ROAST *0 , 0 U.S.D.A. CHOICE. STEAKHOUSE BEEF E.Z. CARVE. LARGE EN D ............................. LB V M / ¿ J ^ aiqq ,* 9* I 33 a | < « q .oz™5!33 AGAR HAM PATTIES SLICED LOUIS RICH TURKEY HAM SLICED LOUIS RICH SMOKED TURKEY . oz pxg LOUIS RICH n n TURKEY FRANKS zoz pkg O 9 BREAD N DUTTER PICKLES CLAUSSEN WHITING FROZEN FILLETS TRAY PACE 24-OZ. JAR 1 « 1 Q Q ie5l 33 <4/1Q $ 1 6 9 0 MARY ELLEN. PKG. OF I CINNAMON ROLLS mm n 7 9 C $J69 $ 2 7 9 $299 FRESH WATER CATFISH f S A V E ^ 5 C l b . O N H.E.B. .FAMILY PAK . 1 MEATS! 1 CHECK YOUR LOCAL H.E.B. FOR THE AVAILABILITY OF CHILL PACK SE A ­ FOOD THURSDAY FRIDAY. M 1 U M 1 *• S U N D A Y TALMADGE FARM FRANKS 6 9 C CHUCK CE"TER CUT STEAK — U.S.DA CHOICE STEAKHOUSE B E E F LB $-|59 BEEF PAniES FRESH GROUND $ 1 69 COMPARE THE QUALITY... LB. • 10% EXTRA DISCOUNT BUYS • ROYAL MAID. HALF MOON CHEDDAR CHEESE ROYAL MAIO. CHUNK CHEESE SHARP CHEDDAR ROYAL MAID. CHEESE MONTERREY JACK ROYAL MAIO. CHEESE MOZZARELLA MADE WITH CHICKEN. 12-OZ. PKG $]57 $]33 16-OZ PKG •-0Z PKG $ 1 2 5 B-OZ. PKG l-OZ. PKG * 1 2 5 # % A A MAOE WITH CHICKEN. 12-OZ. PKG. TALMADGE FARM B0L0GNa 6 9 ( KELLOGG S. 20-OUNCE BOX A — _ _ SUGAR FROSTED FLAKES 1 SUGAR SMACKS KELLOGGS GALA PAPER TOWELS GLAMOREBE RUG FRESH BLUE BONNET MARGARINE SPREAD ASSORTED VARIETIES. FROZEN BANQUET FRUIT PIES DOWNYFLAKE. FROZEN. 12-OUNCE 1 5'j-OZ CONTAINER tl-OZ. BOX B1 64 I 7 3 * R O U § W I 8 1 2 0 ! 64 S1I 1 4 4 c 32 OZ 1-02 HOMEMADE WAFFLES 7 8 ( TREE TOP. FROZEN APPLE JUICE HO RM EL FROZEN CORN DOGS VILLAGE PARK. FROZEN. 11-OZ 12 OZ • ^ 03 22 OZ $ 0 6 0 A i a < 4 _ A tt$116 76* 81 43| FRENCH CUT GREEN BEANS80C STEAK N TATERS ON STEAK N CORN. FROZEN. 7-QZ NIGHT HAWK DINNERS NICE N SOFT WHITE OR COLORS FACIAL TISSUE REG OR CONDITIONING SHAMPOO 7-02 LOTION OR 4-OZ Tlm( HEAD & SHOULDERS CREAM A COCOA BUTTER POND'S HAND LOTION AOUIT S O R MEOIUM OR HARO 81 971 * _ COLGATE T00THBRUSHESu78' DR. PEPPER SUGAR FREE Z. BOTTLES DEPOSIT KRAFT, PUUN OR JALAPENO CHEEZ WHIZ , $ 1 0 9 SANDWICH STEAKS STEAK-UMM. FROZEN. 32-OZ. PKG » E 99 KRAFT ORANGE GRAPEFRUIT OR FRUIT JUICESIORANGE PINEAPPLE 32-OZ 8 9 ° OENTLER. FRIEO OR BAKED CHEESE DOODLES VILLAGE PARK SALAD DRESSING MARY ELLER. BUTTERMILK POUND CAKE MARY ELLEN. I-INCM LEMON 2-CRUST PIE ™ 9 9 c ,o,89c $149 I * oz I $J59 MANY E U EN CHERRY STRUDEL $159 I B M I POTATOES SHOESTRING ORE-IOA. FROZEN. 20-0Z. PKG........... BURRITOS BEEF A BEAN PATIO. FROZEN. S-OZ. PKG................ PIZZAS ASST’D. VARIETIES FOX DE LUXE. FROZEN. 11 Vz-OZ PKG ORANGE JUICE TREESWEET. FROZEN. B-OZ CAN 89° 43c 79c 55c ITEMS COVERED BY BLUE LAW NOT SOLO SUNDAY • BANQUET, FROZEN. 2-LB. „ „ FRIED CHICKEN *2 6 9 BANQUET, ASSTD., FROZEN COOKIN’ BAGS 1-1,37 (U SD H .E .B . People are on your sid e w ith Low P rices! C Page 8 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Thursday, August 12,1982 Copyright* 1M2 by Lucky SIotm,’ Inc. AN Rights KHtnwd. Limit flights Rm nrM l on ¿ommorclal Sato. Get your pick of produce values at discount prices. Eagle is proud to bring you the freshest best value for your produce dollar, all year ’round. Fruits and vegetables are gathered from trusted growers in only the finest growing regions, then rushed to our stores, so you can enjoy them at peak flavor. With summer here, you can pick from a wide selection of vine-ripened melons and tropical favorites. And best of all, every item in our produce^, department is discount priced for basic value. % >V\ .\WNSI A Wi a V y .N dAM AR - 512 STASSNEY - 13450 U.S. 183N I; \ IN P R O D U C E IT E M S F R E S H M E A T YELLOW PEACHES California Large Size GOLDEN BANANAS Every Day Low Price BONELESS ROUND STEAK SlCyQ I 0 *7 Heavy M atu re Beef Lb | GROUND BEEF 3 Lb. Pkg. or More 1 1 8 Lb. .29 7-BONE CHUCK STEAK Heavy M atu re Beef Lb. I f l « 4 Z Q BLADE CUT CHUCK ROAST Heavy M atu re Beef Lb. *|09 RUSSET POTATOES U S. #1 5 Lb. Bag • M X J Qmmi Great in a Salad COOL AND CRISP Tangy b u t Sweet YELLOW ONIONS RED POTATOES RED RIPE TOMATOES GREEN CUCUMBERS .19 0 0 0■ 0 .33 GREAT IN POTATO SALAD .. 19 ..49 " 9 ft I EACH # LB.48 BARTLETT PEARS ROMAINE LETTUCE BELL PEPPERS S X A SWEET TREAT ALWAYS A FAVORITE la r g e size FRESH BEEF LIVER Sliced Lb. • h H TOP SIRLOIN 9 I Q STEAK ^ Boneless, Heavy M atu re Beef Loin Lb. BONELESS BEEF BRISKET ^ M Q I ^ Whole Cryovac Lb | FRYING CHICKEN LEG QUARTERS Bulk only, Approx 10 Lb Bag Lb. • C*1 FRYING CHICKEN WHOLE BODY COUNTRY PRIDE G R A D EA ....................................................I TOP ROUND STEAK BONELESS HEAVY MATURE B E E F ...................................LB Q Q | , Q J LEAN GROUND BEEF ' j MIXED FRYER PARTS FRYING CHICKEN COUNTRY PRIDE GRADE A ....................... lb . C Q PORTERHOUSE STEAK HEAVY MATURE BEEF L O IN ............................................ LB C Q FAJITAS (SKIRT STEAK) HEAVY MATURE BEEF PLATE S T E A K .............................. LB dm* I O Q BREADED CHICKEN HLLETS 7 Q 7 TYSON CHICKEN O U ICK............................. . . 12 02 PKC k j m ^ 7 / WILSON SMOKED SAUSAGE 2 1 9 ROEGELEIN SAUSAGE S U M M E R ............................................................. 1 LB CHUB HORMEL SLICED BACON <2 LB PKG 5 3 6 ) ............................ 1 LB PKG mL OSCAR MAYER BACON SL,CED..................................................................1 LB PKG HILLSHIRE SAUSAGE SMOKED. IBEEF, LB 2 2 9 ) ............................................ LB HEN TURKEYS LADY LEE FROZEN 10-14 LB AVC GRADE A ........................... LB CHICKEN THIGHS FRYING, COUNTRY PRIDE, GRADE A .........................................LB 1.89 7 CQ 2.79 2.29 1.89 .85 .89 Magna Pak for greater meat value. When you need to buy beef, pork, or chicken parts in large quantities, you can save 5 cents off every pound with Magna Pak Magna Pak offers the same quality meats you find at our everyday low price at extra savings © i n Juice; © Lady Lee 20 0 z . C a n # MLADY LEE 1 PINEAPPLE taPINEAPPLE 1 JUICE Chunk, Sliced or Crushed 65 46 Oz. Can • 93 14 0 z . Box • 97 ESS 89 ^MACARONI & 1 CHEESE DINNER © K r a f t D e l u x e © Tab or Sprite 2 Ltr. Btl. • j PLADY LEE COOKIES 6 SANDWICH CREME 5 VARIETIES..................... 32 OZ PKG A / I Q | • fKRISPY CRACKERS » S A LT IN E .................................................................16 OZ BOX * ^ C 7 fPILLSBURY BROWNIE MIX A 7 0 S ..................................................................... 22'/> OZ BOX I « f PLANTER'S PEANUTS 4> DRY ROAST, SALTED OR UNSALTED................ 16 OZ JAR O A 7 | ^ f TOMATO SAUCE &CONTADINA.............................................................. Q2 CAN 0 / 1 PHEINZ 57 STEAK SAUCE A » ..................................................... 10 02 BTL 1 , 0 / GERBER BABY FOOD STRAINED 41 VARIETIES............................................ OZ JAR E V E R Y D A Y LO W P R IC E S .25 1.10 2.17 HOMOGENIZED MILK LADY L E E ................................................................ GAL BTL KELLOGG’S CORN FLAKES 18 OZ PKG T-BONE STEAK HEAVY MATURE BEEF L O IN ........................................... 10 T C Q ^ C A N N E D & P A C K A G E D |REFRIED BEANS 1 Rosarlta 17 Oz Can.42 The larger size Is the better buy. BREADED BREAST PATTIES O Q 7 ^ / TYSON CHICKEN QUICK OR H O A G IES..................12 0 Z P K G I'RANCH STYLE BEANS 25 OZ CAN .61 We guarantee the larger size of any canned, bottled or packaged item to always be the bjetter b u y __________________________ _____ LADY LEE BACON SLICED REGULAR OR TH ICK.................. . 1 LB PKG ® .............................................................................. f Bitty Crocker Potato Buds q a BX. B f f Test taken July 26, 1982. Rosie Sykes T e s t ta k e n J u ly 26, 1 9 8 2 . Janie Murphy T e s t ta k e n J u ly 2 6 , 1 9 8 2 . David Barry T e s t ta k e n J u ly 2 6 , 1 9 8 2. Sally Kelley Saved $7.55 Rosie’s own week’s shopping totaled $55.05 at Eagle. The same or comparable items at the supermarket of her choice totaled $62.60. T hat’s a savings of $7.55 at Eagle! (D o c u m e n ta tio n on file.) Saved *9.83 Janie’s own week’s shopping totaled $45.99 at Eagle. The same or comparable items at the supermarket of her choice totaled $55.82. That’s a savings of $9.83 at Eagle! (D o cum en tation on file.) Saved s8.46 David’s own week’s shopping totaled $70.61 at Eagle. The same or comparable items at the supermarket of his choice totaled $79.07. That’s a savings of $8.46 at Eagle! (D o cum en tation on file.) Saved **6.25 Sally’s own week’s shopping totaled $69.92 at Eagle. The same or comparable items at the supermarket of her choice totaled $76.17. That’s a savings of $6.25 at Eagle! (D ocum entation on file ) , CANNED & PACKAGED DAIRY & FROZEN Put Eagle to the test. Your list: M ake out y o u r norm al w e e k ’s shopping list and bring it to Eagle. Your comparison: Shop for these items. Then, take this sam e list to the superm arket of your choice and note their prices on the sam e or com parable items. Your savings: Add up the totals for each superm arket. The proof of savings is in your own com parison! 1 2 3 taSTAR-KIST 1 CHUNK TUNA © Oil or W ater Pack 61/¡ Oz. Can IVEG-ALL VEGETABLES Mixed 16 Oz. Can KPAFT MAYONNAISE .81 .43 ■136 pSEVEN SEAS DRESSINGS ¿SALAD, 4 VARIETIES.....................................................8 OZ BTL Q C s j EVERYDAY LOW PRICES ROYAL OAK CHARCOAL ..............................................................................20 LB BAG 4 . 9 4 CORNED BEEF HASH LIBBY'S ................................................................. 15’ : OZ CAN FRENCH'S MUSTARD .......................................................................................... 9 OZ JAR ALPO DOG FOOD CHOPPED BEEF............................................................ 14’ j OZ CAN 1 . 1 8 . 4 5 . 4 5 CARNATION MILK NON FAT POWDERED..........................................20 OT PKG GENERIC ITEMS HOUSEHOLD & PET HEALTH & BEAUTY AIDS CHOCOLATE SYRUP GENERIC, SQUEEZE BOTTLE................................. 24 OZ BTL. GENERIC DOG FOOD LIVER OR BEEF FLAVOR........................................ , 15Vi OZ CAN • t L PINEAPPLE IN JUICE GENERIC; CRUSHED, SLICED OR CHUNK............... CRANBERRY COCKTAIL GENERIC................................................................. 48 OZ BTL MACARONI & CHEESE GENERIC DINNER.................................................. 1 • 1 119 23 20 OZ CAN • C31 147 25 | * ™ V / 7V. D7 RDV # *TOTINO’S I PIZZA’S '6 Varieties 11 Oz. Pkg ^24 pHORMEL CORN DOGS ¿ ..............................................................................11 OZ PKG pORANGE JUICE ¿MINUTE MAID CONCENTRATE......................... 16 OZ CAN HOMOGENIZED MILK LADY LEE VITAMIN D ......................................... HALF GAL CTN pBLUE BELL ICE CREAM ¿ WHITE RIM .................................................. HALF GAL CTN 1 . 2 9 1 . 5 7 1.10 2 . 7 5 DELICATESSEN ITEMS taROEGELEIN I LUNCH MEATS 3 varieties Bologna or 2 varieties Luncheon 16 Oz Pkg ■ Q taCHICKEN 1 FRANKS Holly Farms h M 12 Oz Pkg • pBORDEN'S LITE-LINE ¿CHEESE SINGLES COLBY OR SWISS.................... 8 OZ PKG I • A O Q s j 9 7 A A 9 I * I 4mm fWHITE CLOUD TISSUE ¿ BATHROOM. 4 P A C K ........................................... 210 S F PKG I f ADORN HAIR SPRAY 2 1 3 tflBOLD I DETERGENT Laundry 84 Oz. Box "9 -f Q ^ taPALMOLIVE SiAQ I LIQUID 1 ^ ^ © Dish D e te r g e n t 32 Oz Btl. I pBRIGHT EYES CAT FOOD ¿ ......................................................................................12 OZ CAN pKAL KAN DOG FOOD ¿BEEF OR CHICKEN.................................................... 23’/: OZ CAN • s j fGAINES CHEESE BURGER O Q Q ¿ MOIST DOG FOOD...............................................72 OZ BOX £m • A Q C Q pTWICE AS FRESH ¿ ROOM DEODORIZER, 4 FRAGRANCES..................... 95 s j Q Q OZ PKG • ^ s j A A C pTAMPAX TAMPONS ¿ORIGINAL, SUPER PLUS OR SUPER................. 4 0 CT BOX 9 7 C . s j s j pBORAXO HAND CLEANER A /YZ ¿ .......................................................................... 16 02 PKG 9 9 7 pLADY LEE DETERGENT ¿DISHWASHER......................................................65 OZ BOX 4 ^ • 4Lm U pPINE OPINE DISINFECTANT A Q Q ¿ .......................................................................... 28 OZ BTL pSOFT SCRUB CLEANSER ¿ .......................................................................... 26 OZ BTL pWOOLITE RUG SHAMPOO 9 CA ¿ S P R A Y ................................................................ 22 OZ CAN f c . V I I • s j A C 7 mean extra savings. rKey Buys K e y B u y s a re ite m s p ric e d b e lo w th e ir e v e r y d a y d is c o u n t p ric e s as a re s u lt o f m a n u fa c tu r e r s ' te m p o r a r y p r o m o tio n a l a llo w a n c e s o r e x c e p t io n a l p u r c h a s e s Y o u 'll fin d h u n d r e d s o f K e y B u y ite m s e v e ry tim e y o u s h o p Our Price P rote ctio n Policy guarantees these prices to tie e ffe ctive Wednesday August 11 th ru Tuesday August 17 1982 pAQUA-FRESH TOOTHPASTE A 7 Q ¿ .................................................................................. 82 OZ I • v j pMASSENGILL PACKETTES 9 AQ ¿POWDER DOUCHE..................................................... 12 PACK ¿ . a I pMASSENGILL DOUCHE A A H ¿ LIQUID ................................................................... TWIN PACK | * I / T 7 pISOPROPHYL ALCOHOL ¿ 5 0 % SOLUTION.................................................................... 16 0Z • s j / |BRECK SHAMPOO 1 . 6 7 pJOHNSON'S SHAMPOO ¿ B A B Y .............................................................................11 0Z A Q Q pDRY IDEA ROLL-ON ¿A N T I PERSPIRANT ................................................. 1 5 OZ A C Q |SILKIENCE CONDITIONER ^ 'J 5 9 PSILKIENCE SHAMPOO 7 OZ CAN • 4Lm W 29 49 GENERIC MUSHROOMS STEMS & PIECES ............................................... ____4 OZ CAN * ™ T ^ c o stly frills. IMITATION SLICED CHEESE A GENERIC SINGLES.....................................................12 OZ PKG pDANOLA DANISH HAM ¿ SLICED..................................................................8 OZ PKG pLONGHORN CHEDDAR ¿KRAFT HALF MOON CHEESE .............................16 OZ PKG I • s j / 9 T Q • s j s j 9 C Q No games or gimmicks. In s tea d of gam es, give aw a ys or g im m ic k s to a ttra c t cu sto m ers, w e o ffe r d is c o u n t p ricin g , assu rin g you a low er o verall fo o d bill an d no 8-10 PM DAILY 8-9 PM SUNDAY The Discount Supermarket, Page 10 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Thursday, August 12, 1982 TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE Summer Grab Bag of Prizes! Dahy TfcXAN SUPER SUMMER REGISTRATION FORM N a m e A d d r e n State Sponsor whore registering Drugs, alcohol linked to pool deaths By JIMMY McKENNA Daily Texan Staff Alcohol, drugs and Hamil­ ton Pool don’t mix, says a spokesman for the Travis County Sheriff’s Office. Drugs and alcohol can com­ bine to instill false courage in one’s ability to survive a dive from the 100-foot high cliffs surrounding the recreational spot southwest of Austin, said Sgt. Ray Cilek of the sheriff’s office. Early Monday, a 27-year- old Dallas man become the fourth fall-related fatality at the pool since 1980 when he fell 60 feet over a cliff to his death. Witnesses said Kenneth Ed­ ward Goodroe Jr., was walk­ ing along the ledge of the cliff when he slipped and fell over the edge, hitting his head on the rocky shore below. Goodroe’s death was appar­ ently accidental, but Henry Reimers, father of the pool’s the owner, said most of deaths and injuries occurring at the pool are a result of in­ experienced and intoxicated people willingly diving or jumping from the cliffs. He said the problem is that people don’t land right when they dive from the cliffs, and he added, alcohol and drugs are “100 percent of the prob­ lem.” “When you jump off a bluff 100 feet high and don’t hit right, you’re going to get hurt,” Reimers said. “If a person was sober then they might land right, but anybody sober wouldn’t jump off the cliffs,” Reimers said. He said he has seen people z>p| I I - watch a body being pulled from the pool and then go right back up and jump from the cliffs themselves. “We don’t like to see people get hurt and I wish there was a way to keep them from div­ ing, but there isn’t,” Reimers said. He said there are posted signs prohibiting diving from the cliffs and all admission tickets state the same thing, but people continue to dive anyway. Final Examination Schedule, Summer Session, 1982 Second-Term and Whole-Session Courses Friday, August 13-Saturday, August 14 ACROSS 1 1nsert mark 6 Complains 11 Received 14 Texas shrine 15 Confine 16 Exclamation 17 Berry 19 Canon 20 Braise 21 OGS units 22 Chaplain 24 Concept 26 Radiate 27 Fitted 30 Dhow 32 Make void 33 Cankers 34 Aperture 37 Roman date 38 Namely: 2 words 39 Kind of palm 40 Chop 41 Took chances 42 Silent ones 43 Turk 45 Square 46 Leeks’ kin 48 Twist 49 Fixed courses 50 Edenite 52 Anent: 2 words 58 Father: Arab. 57 Californian 60 Deity 61 Chemical compound 62 Tally 63 Comp. pt. 64 Respites 65 Bleachers DOWN 1 Closures 2 Agalloch 3 Vishnu incar­ nation 4 Retired 5 Dress up 6 Santa — 7 Circle 8 Cups 9 Piece 10 USSR prairies 11 California strait: 2 words 12 Scarlett or John 13 Pulled 18 Tail grass 23 Part of to be WEDNESDAY’S PUZZLE SOLVED J a n a j a j a a □ □ □ □ a a 3 J aatana a n a c a j a a a a a a a a □□□□ a a a a a a a a a a a c a a a a a a a □□□ a a a a a a a g a n a a a 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 Q 3 3 3 I 333 3333033 OQ! 03333 [11303 30QI 33333030 333301 3 0 3 a a a a a 3333333 3030033 3 3 3 a □ □ □ a a a o a o a 3330 33003 3000 3333 33333 □□□□ 25 Pa.’s neigh­ bor 26 Let it stand 27 Canvas item 28 Take apart 29 Awkward­ ness 30 Demean 31 Thirsty 33 Crake 35 Centuries 36 LPGA’s San­ dra — 38 Makes lace 39 Indian ritual: 2 words 41 Bureau 42 After Sun. 44 Road: Abbr. 45 Steerage 46 Tors 47 Vagrants 48 Conveys 50 Statutes 51 Mr. Harte 53 Portico 54 Bitter 55 Individuals 58 Ibsen woman 59 Letter INDEX TO EXAMINATION PERIODS Class meeting time: M TW ThF 7 -8:30 M T W T hF 8:30-10 M TW ThF 10-11:30 M TW ThF 11:30-1 M TW ThF 1-2:30 M TW ThF 2:30 -4 Late afterno on and evening classes Final exam ination tim e: Saturday, A ugust 14 Friday, A ugust 13 Saturday, A ugust 14 Friday, A ugust 13 Saturday, A ugust 14 Friday, A ugust 13 p.m .-10 p.m. a.m .-1 2 noon a.m .-1 2 noon p .m .-5 p.m . p.m .- 5 p.m . p .m .-10 p.m. Saturday, A ugust 14 7 p.m .-10 p.m. Final exam inations fo r classes m eeting at times which are not listed in this index are scheduled with classes m eeting at the tim e most nearly corresp o n d in g to the unindexed class time. For exam ple, the exam fo r a class m eeting WF 1-3:30 p.m. will be at the sam e tim e as exams for classes m eeting M T W T hF at 1 p.m. Q uestions about exam ination scheduling for specific classes should be directed to Official Publications. GRADE REPORTING SCHEDULE For exam ination on:* Friday, A ugust 13 Saturday, A ugust 14 G rade sheets are due in the d epartm ental office by 9:00 a.m. on: W ednesday, A ugust 18 T hursday, A ugust 19 •G rade sheets for classes having scheduled m eeting times but which indicated 'N o Exam ination’ will be due at the same tim e they would have been d u e had exam inations been scheduled. •G rade sheets for classes having no scheduled m eeting time are d u e in the departm ental office by 9:00 a.m ., W ednesday, A ugust 18, 1982. D IA M O N D S *78-4648 Quality Diamonds 50% off retail. */3 carat round. . . . $ 825 Vi carat round. . . . $1200 1 carat round . . . . $2195 1832 Austin Nat’l Bank Tower Congress & 8th \ W k . MATH TUTOR O v e r seven years o f p r o fe s ­ in h e lpin g U .T. sio n a l serv ice S tu d en ts m ake th e G R A D E !!! Struggling'/ ? F ru stra ted on Call or com a b y for a ppointm ent te sts / MATH: ■Ml/Ml •JM i/M S O Ml 1*8/1 PHYSICS: ravst imtmm/i M T M N /l W TW 7I/1 BUSINESS: icaii/ni STUM MIMA «4271/1 MAN MMSA/I «311 M3*n MSS CHEMISTRY: ami cum C N 8IM /I COMP SCI.: csm/m CS315 D on't p u t this o f f u n til th e night before an exam. I t s to o late th e n ... • Q o so to UT C A M P U S • Vary reasonable rates • lots of patience • In a la n g u a g e you'll und e ritan d tl%ii high getumt ro w rv * in I hi' aha I r \ukfrrO anti S t T & t.Ht H n inn Ptt liKay'i Tut*ring Strvict 600 W. 28th St. Off. 103 458-5060 477-7003 FACULTY MEMBERS H ave your books not a r ­ riv e d ? It's the last m in ­ really ute and you'd rather use your own text? Now you can provide your students with m a ­ they m igh t not terial otherwise have a v a il­ able to them. We work with faculty m em bers personally, and we are ready to a ssist you with difficult jobs. We find that personal service ensures the satisfaction of our clients. A s the au­ thor of your publication, you can be assured that the job will be done the w ay you w ant it done. Paradigm Books 472-7986 407 W. 24th CLASSROOM BUILDINGS U n d erg ra d u a te Library and A cademic C en ter A nna Hiss G ym nasium A rt B uilding Batts Hall Business A dm inistration-Econom ics Building L. T h eo Bellm ont Hall B enedict Hall Biological Laboratories B urdine Hall C alhoun Hall Jesse H. Jones C om m unication C en ter (academic) E rnest Cockrell, Jr., Hall Education B uilding Engineering-Science Building E xperim ental Science Building G arrison Hall Mary E. G earing Hall Geology B uilding Goldsm ith Hall G eography B uilding G raduate School o f Business B uilding H arry Ransom C enter Mezes Hall Music B uilding East and Music Building/Recital Hall T. S. Painter Hall Parlin Hall Petroleum E ngineering Building Pharm acy B uilding Robert Lee M oore Hall S tudent Services B uilding Taylor Hall W aggener Hall Will C. H ogg B uilding Robert A. Welch Hall F L oren W inship D ram a B uilding W. R. Woolrich L aboratories ACA AHG ART BAT BEB BEL BEN BIO BUR CAL CMA ECJ EDB ENS ESB GAR GEA GEO GOL GRG GSB HRC MEZ MRH PAI PAR PEB PHR RLM SSB TAY WAG WCH WEL WIN WRW CURTAIN TIME: Find them everyday in th e * am usem ent section of T h e * * Daily Texan. FRIDAY August 13, 9 a.m .-12 noon (Cluses meeting MTWThF 8:30-10) Grade reports for these c lu se s are due in the departmental office by 9:00 a.m., Wednesday, August 18. FOREIGN STUDENT GRADUATES Congratulations upon completion of your studies in the United States. If you desire information about visas for individuals with professions or skills in demand, call: PAUL PARSONS Attorney at Law 2 2 0 0 G u a d a l u p e , S u lfa 2 1 6 4 7 7 - 7 8 8 7 Free Initial consultation for UT ttudant» and faculty 14970 14980 14990 15000 15010 15020 15030 15040 15150 15170 15180 15190 15200 15610 15640 15641 15680 15681 15820 27130 27150 08940 10400 10450 29000 02880 02900 02901 02940 29490 29500 29510 29520 29521 29540 29570 40520 30490 30510 26150 26180 31290 31300 31310 31349 31470 29990 30000 30010 41290 41330 33830 31990 32370 29720 05950 06020 47170 47200 26610 32950 42226 E W321 E W321 E W321 E W321K E W321K E W321K E W321K E W323 W341 W345L W345L W345L W351K W306 W311 W311 W319 W319 W394B ECO S302 ECO S303 EDC S385G EDP S362T EDP S481 EUS S361 FIM S354 FIM S357 FIM S357 FIM S374 FR S 406 FR S407 FR S407 FR S310K FR S310K FR S312K FR S341K GEO S 404 GER S407 GER S412 GK W804 GK W412 GOV S310L GOV S310L GOV S310L GOV S312L GOV S333K, GRG S301C GRG S305 GRG S 335 H E S205 H E S322 HEB S712 HIS S315K I S S320 ITL S407 J S314 3 3 7 6 J L S S381 L S S382L LAT S507 LIN S306 II W806A . 1 1 0 .308 .118 .310 PAI 3 .0 2 PAI 3 .0 2 PAI 3 .0 2 ENS 302 ENS 302 ENS 302 ENS 302 WEL 2 .2 4 6 PAI 3 .0 2 BUR 136 BUR 136 BUR 136 ENS 334 ENS 637 WEL 2 . WRW 113 BEB 154 BUR 134 RLM 6 . BUR 116 PAR 203 EDB 526 BEB 261 EDB 284 ART 1. WAG 101 WEL 2. BEB 151 PAI 2. .48 PAR 306 PAR 1 BEN 212 BEN 318 BEN 116 PAR 101 MEZ 208 WEL 2. BEB 359 BEB 358 WAG 420 WAG 420 WEL 3. WEL 3. WEL 3. ECJ 1, CMA A 2.320 WEL 1 .3 1 6 ACA 21 GRG 316 BUR 216 BUR 106 RLM 5 .1 2 2 BEB 150 CHA A 2.320 PAR 204 CHA A 5.136 CHA A 3.112 E l» 464 EDB 468 WAG 208 PAR 303 RLM 4 .1 0 2 .502 .5 0 2 .502 .202 .312 02370 ACC S311 02400 ACC S312 02410 ACC S312 02460 ACC S327 02470 ACC S327 02480 ACC S327 02490 ACC S329 02500 ACC S329 02510 ACC S329 02520 ACC S329 02640 ACC S381 25340 ANT S301 25360 ANT S325K 13310 ARE W335K 13320 ARE W345 13440 ARE W385 18340 ARH S366 12997 ASE W362K 13000 ASE W369K 13010 ASE W369K 13040 ASE W379K 13050 ASE W380P 13211 ASE S327 36943 AST S302 01670 01680 03420 03606 03610 37390 BIO S301M 37400 BIO S301M 37410 BIO S301M 34720 BIO S301M 37920 BOT S419 14220 C E W310K 14270 C E W323K c 14290 E W329 c 14360 E W354 c 14450 E W362M 39260 CH W 3 9 1 CH 5301 3 9 4 9 0 39498 CH 5302 39560 CH S610B 39580 CH S618B 13820 CHE W317 CHE W363 1 3 8 5 0 CHI S507 33670 DPA S374 03840 28010 S306 E S307 E 2 8 0 4 0 28070 S307 E 2 8 3 » ) S325K E 28420 E S360K 14960 E E W321 S386T S388T S324 S363 S366 WAG 214 BEB 153 WAG 201 GSB 1 .2 1 8 GSB 1 .2 1 8 GSB 1 .2 1 8 ART 1 .1 0 2 ART 1 .1 0 2 ART 1 .1 0 2 ART 1 .1 0 2 GSB 4 .1 3 8 , 4 .1 5 0 WEL 2 .2 2 4 CAL 100 ECJ 5 .4 1 0 BCJ 5 .4 1 0 ECJ 5 .4 1 6 ART 1 .1 1 0 RLM 5 .1 1 8 TAY 207 TAY 207 RLM 5 .1 1 8 ESB 137 TAY 217 RLM 5 .1 1 4 BEB 166 HRC 4 .2 5 2 GSB 1 .2 1 2 GSB 2 .2 1 8 EDB 104 ESB 115 ESB 115 ESB 115 ESB 115 BIO 301 ECJ 1 .2 0 4 BUR 224 TAY 139 ECJ 1 .2 1 4 ESB 223 WEL 2 .3 0 4 BEL 328 BUR 212 WEL 1 .3 0 8 WEL 2 .2 5 6 BE8 152 ESB 333 RUI 6 .1 2 0 GSB 1 .2 1 4 PAR 301 PAR 102 PAR 206 CAL 100 PAR 201 PAI 3 .0 2 Thomas M. Booker IM MIGRATION LAW 3200 Red River 472-2431 FRIDAY Auguat 13, 7 p .m .-10 p.m. (Clauca meeting MTWThF 2:30-4) Grade reporta for theae clu aes are due in the departmental office by 9:00 a.m., Wednesday, August 18. 02877 01620 14250 14251 14440 14900 14940 15330 16400 43980 43990 44020 44030 44460 44680 44690 44700 44710 44720 44730 44780 44790 06420 ACS S325 B A S281S E W211K E V211K E W360K E W411 E W316 E W381K E W335 PHR W133K PHR W133K PHR W133K PHR W133K PHR W362L PHR W167M PHR W167M PHR W167M PHR W167M PHR V167M PHR W167M PHR W173L PHR W173L RTF S321K GSB 1 .2 1 8 GSB 1 .2 1 6 WEL 3 .5 0 2 WEL 3 .5 0 2 ECJ 1 .2 0 4 WEL 1 .3 0 8 ENS 308 WEL 2 .3 0 8 TAT 112 PHR 3 .1 1 6 PHR 3 .1 1 6 PHR 3 .1 1 6 PHR 3 .1 1 6 PHR 2 .1 0 8 WEL 1 .3 1 6 WEL 1 .3 1 6 WEL 1 .3 1 6 WEL 1 .3 1 6 WEL 1 .3 1 6 WEL 1 .3 1 6 WEL 2 .2 4 6 WEL 2 .2 4 6 CHA A 2 .3 2 0 SATURDAY August 14, 9 a.m .-12 noon (Cluses meeting MTWThF 10-11:30) Grade reports for these c lu se s are due in the departmental office by 9:00 a.m., Thursday August 19. 42227 42228 42290 42300 42310 42410 42780 42787 42790 42791 42840 42880 42920 42930 16280 16281 16290 16310 16360 16410 16450 16620 16690 17000 04380 MAN 04400 MAN 04420 MAN 05000 MKT 21240 MUS 43240 P S 43260 P S 11120 PED 17500 PEN 44050 PHR 44650 PHR 44750 PHR 44830 PHR 43770 PHY 34090 PRS 34100 PRS 34980 PSY 35010 PSY 05160 RES 35370 RUS 35702 SOC 07000 SPE 07140 SPE 36430 SPN 36480 SPN 36520 SPN 36570 SPN 04110 STA 04590 TR 38820 ZOO W808A W808A W808B W808B W808B W427K S301 S603A S603B S603B S305G S316K S340L S362K V311 W311 W311 W319 W324 W335 W339 W353 W366L S201G S325 5335 5336 S370 S411B 5303 5304 S376 S383 W341 W367 W368L W373N S302L S407 S312L S328K S352 S325 S351 S302 5305 S395H S406 S312K S312L S322K S309 S350 S316K RLM 4 .1 0 2 RLM 4 .1 0 2 GSB 1 .2 1 6 GSB 1 .2 1 6 GSB 1 .2 1 6 WCH 14 GEO 100 RLM 5 .1 1 6 RLM 6 .1 0 4 BUR 112 BUR 108 RLM 7 .1 0 4 RLM 5 .1 0 4 BUR 208 GEO 112 GEO 112 GEO 112 TAY 206 BEB 255 TAY 317 TAY 137 TAY 112 TAY 141 TAY 300 BEB 52 BEB 155 GSB 2 .2 0 4 BEB 266 MRH M3.112 RLM 8 .3 1 8 RLM 8 .3 1 4 BEL 204 PEB 311 BIO 112 PHR 2 .1 0 8 PHR 2 .1 1 4 BUR 220 PAI 4 .4 2 RLM 6 .1 1 4 RLM 6 .1 1 6 BEN 222 GAR 1 GRG 316 ART 1 .1 1 0 BUR 130 CMA A 5.134 RLM 5 .1 2 0 PAR 105 BEB 254 PAR 104 PAR 206 GSB 2 .2 1 0 BEB 161 PHR 2 .1 1 0 FRIDAY August 13, 2 p.m.—5 p.m. (C luses meeting MTWThF 11:30-1) Grade reports for these classes are due in the departmental office by 9:00 a.m., Wednesday, August 18. 02390 ACC S311 02430 ACC S312 45580 ARC.S435K 45590 ARC S856A 18330 ARH S302 12980 ASE W311 36940 AST S301 03430 B C S324 25990 C C S303 26020 C C S352 14390 C E W356 39670 CH S381M 03830 DPA S310 20440 DRN S313K 28190 E S307 S307 28200 E S307 28210 E S307 28220 E S307 28230 E S307 28240 E 28474 E S379N 15050 E W325 15120 E W232 15240 E W360M 15630 E W306S 15632 E W306S 15700 E W319S 15750 E W390E 27143 ECO S302 27160 ECO S303 10430 EOP S380P 02890 FIN S 354 02930 FIN S371 31320 GOV S310L 31330 GOV S310L 31340 GOV S310L 32000 HIS S315K 32020 HIS S321 04740 I B S370 47240 L S S388K 32630 LAS S322 32970 LIN S373 42260 W808A 42270 W808A 4 2 2 8 0 W 808A 4 2 8 2 0 S603E 42830 S304E 42910 S328K 16390 W328 16440 W338 16650 W366J 16740 W379N 04410 MAN S335 04430 NAN S336 33190 MES S321K 38390 MIC S361 04960 MKT S337 33510 OAL S341 43250 P S S303 43270 P S S304 11110 PED S360 34410 PHL S313 34430 PHL S329L 43930 PHR W320H 43970 PHR W333 44040 PHR W338 44060 PHR W141K 44070 PHR W141K 44080 PHR W141K 44090 PHR W141K 44420 PHR W359 44490 PHR W366M 44740 PHR W368K 44820 PHR W373M 34950 PSY S301 34990 PSY S339 35000 PSY S342 05170 RES S370 06490 RTF S370 35740 SOC S323 07020 SPE S319 07030 SPE S320K 36580 SPN S325L 04130 STA S309 .112 .316 .316 .316 WEL 2 .3 0 4 BEB 161 GOL 105 GOL 307 ART 1 .1 0 2 WRW 113 RLM 4 .1 0 2 BEB 153 GSB 1 .2 1 6 GSB 1 .2 1 6 ECJ 1 .2 0 4 WEL 3 .4 0 2 BEB 150 WIN 2. PAR 301 PAR 102 PAR 201 PAR 206 PAR 105 PAR 104 PAR 203 ECJ 1. .202 WEL 2 .2 2 4 RLM 7 .1 0 4 ENS 302 ENS 637 WRW 102 ECJ 1 .2 1 4 WEL 2 .3 1 2 WEL 2 .3 0 8 EDB 286 BEB 151 BEB 166 WEL 1. WEL 1. WEL 1. GAR 1 WEL 1 .3 0 8 BEB 155 EDB 464 BEN 222 PAR 203 RLM 6 .1 0 4 RLM 6 .1 0 4 RLM 6 .1 0 4 PAI 4 .4 2 PAI 2 .4 8 RLM 5. .1 0 4 GEO 112 TAY 212 TAY 217 TAY 139 GSB 2. GSB 2. PAR 203 ESB 223 BUR 106 PAR 203 RLM 8 .3 1 8 RLM 8 .3 1 4 AHG 20 WAG 101 WAG 201 ESB 333 PHR 2. ESB 115 BIO 112 BIO 112 BIO 112 BIO 112 BUR 116 BUR 208 PHR 2. BUR 112 BAT 7 ACA 21 EDB 104 BEB 155 CHA A 2.320 WEL 3 .5 0 2 BUM 136 BUR 108 BEN 222 GSB 1 .2 1 8 .218 .2 0 4 .1 1 0 .1 0 8 02380 ACC S311 02420 ACC S312 02440 ACC S326 02450 ACC S326 02530 ACC S360 02540 ACC S360 02550 ACC S362 02560 ACC S364 02570 ACC S364 02580 ACC S364 02600 ACC S364 02610 ACC S364 02649 ACC S382K 02660 ACC S386K 28650 AFR S374 25350 ANT S302 25370 ANT S348 13330 ARE W358 13450 ARE W385 13020 ASE W370K 36950 AST S309N 00530 B A W380N 01600 B S280S 01640 B S282S 01650 B S382T 01660 B S384T 03590 B S323 03600 B S361 37350 BIO S301L 37360 BIO S301L 37370 BIO S301L 37380 BIO S301L 26000 C C S306 26010 C S336 14260 E W311S 14300 E W331 14310 E W335 14330 E W344 14460 E W363 14470 E W374K 14580 E W397 14600 E W397 39630 CH S354L 39650 CH S380L 13840 CHE W354 45840 CRP S392 03820 DPA S310 20430 DRM S312L 20470 DRM S338 S306 28020 E 28100 E S307 28120 S307 28150 S307 28160 S307 28170 S307 28180 S307 28330 E S312M 28340 E S314K 28360 S321 28380 S323M 28460 S376 14910 W212 14920 W316 15070 E W331 15130 E W338 15140 E W338K 15650 E W311 W314 15660 E 15662 E W314 27139 ECO S302 27140 ECO S302 27154 ECO S303 27180 ECO S320K 27183 ECO S320L 27230 ECO S387K 08720 EDC S332S 10440 EDP S480P 29020 EUS S361 02910 FIN S357 02911 FIN S357 02916 FIN S367 02920 FIN S370 02990 FIN S 394 03000 FIN S397 29530 FR S310L 29550 FR S312L 29560 FR S324M 40550 GEO S307 30480 GER S305 30500 GER S310 31410 GOV S312L 31417 GOV S312L 31420 GOV S312L 31424 GOV S312L 31430 GOV S312L 31436 GOV S312L 31440 GOV S312L 31450 GOV S312L 31460 GOV S312L 30150 GRC S323E 41300 M E S105L 41310 H E S311 41320 R B S320 32010 MIS S315L 32030 HIS S325P 06000 J S 336 47220 L 8 S384K WAG 214 HRC 4 .2 5 2 WAG 201 WAG 201 GSB 2 .2 1 0 GSB 2 .2 1 0 WEL 2 .3 0 4 WEL 1 .3 1 6 WEL 1 .3 1 6 WEL 1 .3 1 6 WEL 1 .3 1 6 WEL 1 .3 1 6 BEB 52 BEB 257 GAR 1 PAI 2 .4 8 BUR 224 ECJ 5 .4 1 0 WRW 113 ENS 145 BUR 134 GSB 2 .2 0 2 GSB 1 .2 1 4 WEL 2 .3 1 2 BEB 261 GSB 1 .2 1 2 WEL 2 .3 0 8 GSB 1 .2 1 8 ESB 115 ESB 115 ESB 115 ESB 115 WCH 14 WCH 14 RLM 5 .1 1 4 ESB 333 ECJ 1 .2 1 4 ESB 333 ECJ 3 .4 0 2 ECJ 7 .2 0 2 ECJ 3 .3 0 2 WRW 102 WEL 1 .3 0 8 WEL 2 .3 0 6 ENS 637 GOL 307 GSB 2 .2 0 4 WIN 2 .1 1 2 WIN 1 .1 3 4 PAR 105 PAR 101 PAR 204 PAR 206 PAR 208 PAR 306 PAR 303 PAR 201 ACA 21 PAR 203 BEN 222 PAR 301 ECJ 1 .2 0 2 ENS 308 RLM PAI PAI BUR 108 ENS 109 ENS 431 BUR 208 WAG 420 BUR 212 EDB 104 BEB 251 BEB 255 EDB 370 EDB 286 BEM 222 BEB 161 BEB 166 BEB 154 BEB 151 BEB 266 GSB 2 .2 1 8 PAR 104 PAR 304 PAR 308 GEO 100 BEB 357 B ra 359 BUR 106 BUR 106 BUR 106 BUR 106 BUR 106 BUR 106 BUR 106 BUR 106 BUR 106 BEM 222 GEA 200 GEA 105 •UR 130 BBS 150 GOL 105 CMA A3. EDB 468 4 .1 0 2 3 .0 2 4 .4 2 .120 L S S385T LAT S312M LIN S 306 47230 26630 32960 42230 42240 42250 42320 42330 42340 42420 42788 42800 42801 42810 42850 42851 42870 42890 42900 16320 16350 16362 16420 16430 16550 16610 16640 17040 04390 28800 33210 17190 38380 04970 41970 21230 21250 21270 33520 11040 11050 17300 17498 34400 34420 44120 44190 44470 44760 44770 35750 07010 07130 36540 36590 04120 38830 W808A W808A W808A W808B W808B W808B W427L S603A S603B S603B S603B S305G S305G S311 S316L S325 W319 W320 W324 W336 W336 W345 W353 W365K S202 MAN S325 MAS S 310 MES S 325 MET S 320 MIC S 330 MKT S338 MNS S307 MUS S302L MUS S612B MUS S341 OAL S341 PED S311K PED S325K PEN W310 PEN S383 PHL S312 PHL S318 PHR W345 PHR W346 PHR W365N PHR W470 PHR W373K SOC S333K SPE S319 SPE S393F SPN S312L SPN S364L STA S309 ZOO S365N EDB 524 BEB 164 PAR 1 RLM 7 .1 0 4 RLM 7 .1 0 4 RLM 7 .1 0 4 WEL 2 .2 2 4 WEL 2 .2 2 4 WEL 2 .2 2 4 WEL 2 .2 4 6 WEL 2 .2 5 6 BUR 112 BUR 116 RLM 5 .1 0 4 BUR 136 RLM 6 .1 0 4 BEB 254 BUR 216 GEO 112 TAY 139 TAY 141 TAY 137 TAY 217 TAY 217 TAY 317 TAY 207 TAY 212 TAY 304 BEB 153 GEA 114 SSB 4 .1 0 8 ECJ 9 .2 3 6 ESB 223 GSB 1 .2 1 6 GEO 100 MRH 2 .6 3 4 MRH M3.112 GAR 1 SSB 4 .1 0 8 BEL 242 BEL 204 ENS 302 PEB 311 CAL 100 WAG 101 PHR 2 .1 1 4 PHR 2 .1 1 6 PHR 2 .1 1 0 PHR 2 .1 0 8 GRG 316 WEL 3 .5 0 2 CMA A 5.134 CMA A 3.112 BEN 116 BEN 212 BEB 155 WEL 2 .3 1 0 SATURDAY Auguat 14, 2 p.m.—5 p.m. (Cluses meeting MTWThF 1-2:30) Grade reports for these c lu se s are due in the departmental office by 9:00 a.m., Thursday, August 19. W304P W420 W369 S307 S337 S375L 13340 13030 00540 01630 01666 03592 37430 37440 37450 37460 13600 37870 37930 14400 39840 39963 39170 28300 28400 28450 14930 14950 15080 15160 15620 15670 15690 15691 27170 08860 08900 10390 10410 02893 02960 31380 31390 31400 41301 05960 47190 16380 16520 16700 16790 17020 17030 33200 05010 20650 21260 21340 43940 44170 44180 44400 44480 44540 44550 44560 44756 43800 03270 03276 06390 07040 04140 ARE W365 ASE W376K B A W380N B A S381T B A S385T B L S323 BIO S302 BIO S302 BIO S302 BIO S302 BME W385J BOT S311K BOT S320 C E W357 C S C S CH E E E E E E W316 E E W318 E E W331K E W345K E W306 E W314 E W319 E W319 ECO S303 EDC S382S EDC S3R4P EDP S332E EDP S371 FIN S354 FIM S390 GOV S312L GOV S312L GOV S312L H E S105L S320R S382L W326 W344 W366L E W384Q E S201G E S201G MES S322K MKT S372 MUS W605B MUS S221K MUS S687A PHR W231 PHR W145K PHR W145K PHR W356 PHR W366L PHR W266P PHR W266P PHR W266P PHR W369M PHY S609BI R E S358 R E S376 RTF S314 SPE S332K STA S384 ECJ 1 .2 1 4 WRW 102 BEB 155 GSB 1 .2 1 6 GSB 2 .2 0 4 3 .0 2 5 .1 0 4 ' BEB 166 GEO 100 GEO 100 GEO 100 GEO 100 ENS 615 BIO 112 BIO 112 ECJ 1 .2 0 4 WEL 1 .3 1 6 WEL 1 .3 0 8 WEL 2 .3 1 2 PAR 203 CAL 100 PAR 201 ENS 308 ENS 637 ECJ 1 .2 0 2 PAI RLM ENS 302 RLM 4 .1 0 2 RLM 6 .1 0 4 BEB 151 EDB 526 EDB 370 EDB 286 EDB 104 GSB 1 .2 1 8 ACA 21 WEL 2 .2 2 4 WEL 2 .2 2 4 WEL 2 .2 2 4 GEA 200 CMA A 4.204 EDB 468 TAY 212 WEL 2 .2 4 6 PEB 311 WEL 2 .3 0 4 TAT 300 TAY 304 WEL 2 .3 0 8 GSB 2 .2 0 2 MRH M3.112 MRH 4 .1 1 6 MRH 3 .1 1 4 PHR 2 .1 1 4 PHR 2 .1 1 0 PHR 2 .1 1 0 PHR 2 .1 1 6 PHR 2 .1 0 8 GEA 105 GEA 105 GEA 105 BUR 130 PAI 4 .4 2 WEL 3 .5 0 2 BEB 161 BUR 106 CMA A 2.320 GSB 4 .1 1 4 SATURDAY August 14, 7 p .m .-10 p.m. (Late afternoon and evening cluaes) Grade reports for these classes are due ia the departmental office by 9:00 a.m., Thursday Auguat 19. 14520 C E W388M BCJ 7 .2 0 2 GSB 1 .2 1 6 02980 FIM S394 CMA A 2.320 S333 05990 J thursday sports THE DAILY TEXAN Thursday, August 12,1982 11/ Bell’s single leads Rangers Medich goes to Milwaukee MILWAUKEE (UPI) — Buddy Bell’s third hit of the game, a run-scoring single in the seventh that ignited a four-run out­ burst, lifted the Texas Rangers to a 6-3 victory Wednesday over the Milwaukee Brewers. The Rangers bounced back from a 3-2 deficit in the seventh after Jim Sundberg and Mike Richardt singled to open the in­ ning. Sundberg was forced at third on Bucky Dent’s bunt at­ tempt and George Wright then struck out. But John Grubb, Bell, Dave Hostetler and Larry Parrish followed with consecu­ tive RBI singles to put the Rangers ahead 6-3. Held to three hits through five innings by Texas starter Rick Honeycutt, the Brewers took a 3-2 lead in the sixth. Robin Yount and Cecil Cooper hit one-out singles and Ted Simmons forced Cooper at second. Gorman Thomas then walked to load the bases and Ben Oglivie doubled off the right field wall to drive in all three runners. Dave Schmidt held the Brewers to one hit over the last 3% innings to gain the triumph. Milwaukee starter Moose Haas took the loss. After the game, the Rangers sold pitcher George “ Doc” Medich to the Brewers. Medich, who has announced that this is his last season as a player, was 7-11 with the Rangers and had an ERA of 5.06. Firing of no great In another b rillia n t maneuver by Houston Astros’ chairman of the board John McMullen, Bill Virdon was fired Tuesday as manager of the Astros. had days began The only real surprise re­ garding Virdon’s firing was the amount of time McMullen took in letting him go. Vir- don’ s been numbered ever since McMul­ len the A stro housecleaning project by dusting off General Manager Tal Smith after the 1980 sea­ son. Perhaps McMullen, a New Yorker, was inspired to can Virdon when New York Y an kees’ owner George Steinbrenner fired Gene Mi­ chael, his manager, last week. At least when the right op­ portunity (five straight losses to San Francisco) presented itself, McMullen didn’t em­ ploy the Eddie Chiles delayed- firing method to unload Vir­ don. He called Virdon in San Diego, fired him, and that was that. Virdon’s ouster signifies an important turning point in the Astros’ history: Aug. 10, 1982 marks the official beginning of the McMullen era for Hous­ ton. The last vestiges of the 1980 National League West champions are gone; McMul­ len can now play with his ma- jor-league toy in any way he sees fit. Who the Astros will hire re­ mains a mystery at this point, but McMullen is said to want a manager with “ fire,” so in­ terim manager Bob Lillis, whose approach resembles Virdon’s, will probably not merit serious consideration. Virdon surprise richard stubbe texan sport» writer If McMullen holds true to form, expect a name manager to take the Astros’ reins in 1983. Virdon rumors are already swirling around baseball. His success with the Astros — he has received almost none of the blame for this year’s slide — essentially allows him to choose from a number of managing jobs. Montreal has already sty­ mied one rumor by confirm­ ing its faith in manager Jim Fanning, although the Expos have not performed to expec­ tations. Baltim ore’s E arl Weaver is retiring after this season; Cincinnati, the Yank­ ees and Texas are all playing under interim managers. A reunion of Smith and Vir­ don with another pro club is unlikely at best. Smith is hap­ py in Houston and makes plenty of money arguing arbi­ tration cases and doing analy­ sis work for teams. What McMullen hoped to accomplish by firing the As­ tros’ most successful mana­ ger in history is uncertain, al­ though McMullen apparently fired Smith in 1980 because of the credit Smith received with the Astros’ rise to promi­ nence. He didn’t like the de­ sign of The House That Tal Built, so he razed it to the ground and now faces the task of putting it back together again. D Rangers catcher Sundberg throws to first to complete double-play in Texas’ 6-3 victory. , UPI Telephoto Saints pose pre-season test for Oilers By NANCY GAY Daily Texan Staff forget. The 1981 NFL season is one the Houston Oilers would like to Second-year head coach Ed Biles and his squad probably spent this past winter trying to forget last season’s nosedive into oblivion, when Houston slipped to a dismal 7-9 record after four consecutive trips to the playoffs, including two AFC cham­ pionship games. Biles still hasn’t shaken the shadow of Bum Phillips, his popular predecessor who guided the mediocre New Orleans Saints to a 27-24 win over his former team last season on na­ tional television. Phillips will return to the Astrodome Thurs­ day night when the Saints and the Oilers hook up in a pre- season game, the first for both teams. The ‘Luv Ya Blue’ of years past is quickly turning to ‘Hate Ya Blue,’ and Biles knows it. The Oilers rid themselves of few personnel — most notably quarterback Kenny Stabler and tight end Mike Barber. Both were replaced last season by the players who now claim both starting spots, Gifford Nielsen and Dave Casper. Nielsen is a competent, versatile quarterback who works well with both Casper and Earl Campbell. Biles hopes to diver­ sify the Oiler attack this season, combining both passing and the reliable Campbell running game into the offense. With Niel­ sen at the helm, Houston fans may see the balanced attack for the first time. The big trouble spot for the Oilers right now seems to be the offensive line. Tackle Angelo Fields was traded to Green Bay, and tackle Leon Gray is a question mark as he continues to hold out in a contract dispute. However, tackle Morris Towns, guards Ed Fisher and John Schuhmacher and center Dave Carter all return. Fullback Tim Wilson, who blocked for Campbell most of last season, is moving to tight end. Wide receiver Kenny Burrough is out with an injury received in training camp, and backup Mike Renfro will take over his starting spot. The defense looks fairly solid — most of last year’s starters are back, and the Oilers will once again run the 3-4 defense. Linebacker Gregg Bingham, who led the team in tackles (112), total tackles (172) and assists (60) is back, along with middle guards Mike Stenstrud and Ken Kennard, linebackers Daryl Hunt, Ted Washington and Robert Brazile, defensive end Jesse Baker, cornerbacks J.C. Wilson and Greg Stemrick, weak safe­ ty Mike Reinfeldt and strong safety Vernon Perry. Against New Orleans, Biles hopes to work a few of his rook­ ies into the lineup, especially offensive guard Mike Munchak from Penn State, the Oilers’ first-round pick in the 1982 draft. Biles also hopes to iron out one of the problems that plagued the troubled Oilers last season — that of careless mistakes in key situations. 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I H 3 5 603 E. Ben White Blvd. 8103 Research Blvd. 6601 Burnet Rd. Page 12 □ TH E DAILY TEX AN □ Thursday, August 12, 1982 sportswire From staff and wfra reports Wright chosen for NCAA committee Professor Charles Alan Wright of the University law school has been appointed by the NCAA to serve on its new Select Committee on Athletic Problems and Concerns in Higher Edu­ cation. The committee w ill examine such problems as institutional control and academic and recruiting abuses. The committee is composed of seven university presidents or chancellors, two citizens at large, two faculty athletic repre­ sentatives, a head football coach and a head basketball coach. Wright, a pre-eminent scholar on constitutional law and the federal courts, is chairman of the NCAA’s Committee on In­ fractions. Killingsworth lifts Lubbock to 2-1 win W ICHITA, Kan. — Rick Lindell fired a three-hitter and Steve Coleman socked a seventh inning solo home run to push Lub­ bock, Texas, past Madison, W is., 2-1 Wednesday in a second- round game of the National Baseball Congress tournament. Designated hitter Kirk Killingsworth of the University of Texas added two doubles in two at-bats for Lubbock. Lindell gave up a solo homer to Craig Casek in the ninth inning and singles to Casek in the fourth and catcher Terry Green in the eighth inning. Lindell pitched nine innings and surrendered only one walk while striking out 11. The only run he gave up was earned. Walton returns to play in Pro League LOS A N G ELES — B ill Walton, looking to return to the San Diego Clippers after being out of action with a foot injury, was scheduled to play in a Summer Pro League game Wednesday night, officials said. Walton, 29, played in an all-star game in Las Vegas, Nev., Ju ly 31, scoring 24 points and grabbing 21 rebounds while play­ ing 35 minutes. Walton’s teammates w ill include Kenny Carr of the Portland sportsrecord Trail Blazers and Kiki Vandeweghe of the Denver Nuggets. They w ill face a team that includes Buck W illiam s and Albert King of the New Jersey Nets. H ie game w ill be played at Loyola Marymount University. Ex-major leaguer Maglie recuperating NIAGARA FA LLS, N .Y. — Form er major league pitcher Sal “the Barber ’ Maglie was discharged Wednesday from a N i­ agara Falls hospital following a three-week stay for treatment of a brain hemorrhage. A spokesman for the Niagara Falls Memorial Medical Cen­ ter said Maglie, 65, w ill convalesce at his home on nearby Grand Island. Maglie was admitted to the hospital Ju ly 21 and underwent surgery Ju ly 23 to drain the brain hemorrhage. He was in criti­ cal condition following the operation. Maglie was the losing pitcher for the Dodgers in the 1956 World Series when Don Larsen pitched his perfect game for the New York Yankees. Expos planning to stick with Fanning M O NTREAL — W ill B ill Virdon, recently fired as manager of the Houston Astros, take over from Jim Fanning at the helm of the struggling Montreal Expos? Not according to Expos gen­ eral manager John McHale, who was reported to have given Virdon a friendly phone call Tuesday night. “ There is no question of replacing Jim Fanning this season,” McHale told the Montreal newspaper La Presse. “ Right now, we re trying to win a championship with Jim Fanning,” McHale said. “ There’s still six weeks to play before the end of the season. The possibility of a change exists but by all means we’re trying to win the title with the people we have in hand. “ Virdon is a very competent man, a friend, and a man I respect very much. But I repeat that we are trying to win the championship with Jim Fanning as manager. ” Royals, Angels stay tied; Giants win tenth straight By United Press International M IN N EA PO LIS — Don Baylor belted a grand slam to cap a five-run seventh inning and Minnesota pitcher Terry Felton broke a major-league record with his 14th straight career loss Wednesday night in the California Angels’ 6-3 victory over the Twins. Baylor’s homer, his 18th, sailed into the left-field seats with two out in the seventh. Tim Fo li singled with one out off Felton, 0-11, whose career record dropped to 0-14 to break a 68-year-old record for the worst career start set by Guy Morton in 1914. Felton was 0-3 in 1980 and did not pitch in the majors last year. Kansas City 8, Cleveland 0 KANSAS C ITY, Mo. — Amos Otis collected three singles, drove in two runs and scored twice to spark the Kansas City Royals to an 8-0 victory and a three-game sweep over the Cleveland Indians. W illie Wilson, George Brett, W illie Aikens and John Wathan had two hits apiece and Wilson scored twice to give the Royals their sixth straight home victory over Cleveland without a loss this season. Paul Splittorff, Don Hood and Dan Quisenberry combined to four-hit the Indians with Hood improving his record to 4-0 with five innings of work. Chicago 4, Baltimore 1 CHICAGO — Richard Dotson and Dennis Lamp combined on a five-hitter and Steve Kemp drove in two runs to lead the Chicago White Sox to a 4-1 victory over the Baltim ore Orioles and a sweep of their three-game series. Toronto 4, Boston 3 TORONTO — Damaso Garcia had two hits, stole two bases and drove in the tying run with a bases-loaded single and re­ liever Mark Clear walked home the winning run in the seventh inning to give the Toronto Blue Jays a 4-3 victory over the Boston Red Sox. It was Toronto’s sixth straight triumph, with reliever Roy Lee Jackson getting the final seven batters to gain the victory. Detroit 3, New York 2 D ETRO IT — Je rry Turner lofted a sacrifice fly with one out and the bases loaded in the bottom of the 12th inning, scoring Lou Whitaker from third base and providing the Detroit Tigers with a 3-2 victory over the New York Yankees. San Francisco 8, Atlanta 6 SAN FRANCISCO — Reggie Sm ith’s two-run homer with one out in the bottom of the 12th inning lifted San Francisco to its 10th straight victory, an 8-6 decision over Atlanta that dropped the retreating Braves to their ninth straight loss. Montreal 3, Chicago 0 M O N TREAL — Gary Carter belted his 22nd home run and Charlie Lea yielded only three hits in 7% innings to lead the Montreal Expos to a 3-0 victory over Chicago, snapping the Cubs’ six-game winning streak. Carter hit the first pitch leading off the second inning over the left-field fence off starter and loser Allen Ripley, bringing an end to Chicago’s longest winning streak in three years. Philadelphia 4, Pittsburgh 1 PH ILA D ELPH IA — Bo Diaz drove in the tie-breaking run with an eighth-inning groundout and G arry Maddox followed with a two-run single to lift the Philadelphia Phillies to a 4-1 decision over the Pittsburgh Pirates. Easier If Teklve p Lacy rf Pena c Berra ss Milner ph Rhoden p Davis rf 4 0 0 0 Diaz c 0 0 0 0 Maddox cf 4 0 3 1 RReed p 4 0 2 0 Vkovch rf 3 0 0 0 DeJsus ss 1 0 0 0 Rthven p 3 0 0 0 Gross ph 1 0 0 0 Monge p Dmiercf 3 4 1 7 1 Totals Totals P ittsb u rg h .................. 000 001 Philadelph i a .............. 000 010 E — Lacy. DP — Pittsburgh 2. Pittsburgh 8 , Philadelphia 7. 2B — Schmidt, Matthews. S B — Lacy Maddox. 4 0 2 1 3 0 23 0000 2 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0000 0000 23 4 8 4 000— 1 03x—4 L O B - Moreno, 2. S — IP H R ER B B SO Pittsburgh Rhoden (L 6-11). 7 % Tekulve..............% 4 0 4 0 4 4 1 1 7 1 6 0 1 Ruthven.................. 7 . 1 Monge (W 5-0) R Reed (S 7) . . . 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 2 2 0 0 0 1 W P — Rhoden. T — 2:40. A — 27,202. Chicago lorg 3b B O STO N ab r h M Remy 2b Boggs 3b Evans rf Yaz 1b Lnsfrd dh Gedm anc Miller cf Hofman ss Nichls If TO R O NTO ab r h bl 4 12 1 5 13 0 Garcia 2b 4 0 10 3 0 1 0 3 0 0 0 5 0 0 1 Bnnell cf 2 1 0 0 3 0 10 Brfeldrf 2 1 11 Powell ph 0 0 0 1 4 0 0 0 Upshaw 1b 4 0 2 1 4 0 10 4 0 11 Mrtnez c 10 0 0 4 1 1 0 Rberts dh 4 0 0 0 Adams dh 0 0 0 1 Woods dh 1 1 0 0 Jhnson If 10 0 0 Moseby cf 3 1 1 0 3 0 10 Grffin ss Totola 304 3 4 34 3 3 3 Totals B o sto n ........................ 000 100 200— 3 T o r o n t o ..................... 100 100 20x— 4 D P— Boston 1, Toronto 1. L O B — Boston 9. Toronto 7. 2B— Lansford, Miller, lorg. 3B— Remy. S B — Garcia 2. S F — Adams. IP H R ER BB SO Boston H urst......................1 Stanley (L 7-5). .5 C le a r ......................1 Burgmeier............... 1 Toronto C la n c y ...............6 % , 8 M u rra y ................. % Jackson (W 4-8). 2% 2 1 5 3 1 o 0 0 1 1 3 2 0 1 0 0 3 0 0 0 0 3 2 0 3 0 0 Stanley pitched to 3 batters In 7th. T— 2:28. A — 22,012. 1 4 1 0 4 0 1 CH IC A G O M O N TR EAL ab r h bl ab r h bl 4 0 0 0 3 1 1 0 4 0 11 3 2 2 1 4 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 3 0 10 3 0 1 1 3 0 10 0000 Sndbrg 3b Bowa ss Bckner 1b Durham cf Davis c Jhnstn rf Mrelnd ph Hndrsn If Thmpsn ph Knnedy 2b Wills ph Ripley p Mlnaro ph LSmith p Totals 3 0 0 0 Raines If 3 0 0 0 Yngbldrf 4 0 0 0 Oliver 1 b 3 0 2 0 Carter c Wllach 3b 4 0 10 2 0 0 0 Jhnson cf 0000 Speier ss 3 0 0 0 Flynn 2b 1 0 0 0 Lea p 3 0 10 Fryman p 1 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 1000 0000 30 3 7 3 30 0 4 0 Totals C h ic a g o ...................... 000 000 000— 0 M o n treo l...................... 010 100 01x— 3 D P — Montreal 1. LO B — Chicago 8 , Montreal 7. 2B — Lea. HR — Carter (22). S B — Youngblood. IP H R ER BB 3 0 R ip le y (L 4-5) . . .7 L S m it h .................. 1 2 1 2 3 1 o 4 1 Lea (W 9-6) . . . 7% Frym an ................. % Reardon (S 17) . % 6 0 0 3 o 0 2 0 1 0 0 0 H B P — by Ripley (Youngblood). W P — Ripley, L. Smith. P B — Davis. T — 2:30. A -25 ,14 0. 4 3 3 1 0 Major Laapuo Leaders By United Prese International (Through T uesday's Qamea) Batting (B aaed on 3.1 pi „ _______ number o« gamos each team has played) National League g ab p e t r h Oliver, Mt l . . . . 108 410 63 130 . . 112 426 Knight, Hou . 57 134 . . 102 390 Baker, L A . . 52 119 L.Smith, S t L . . . 108 411 90 125 Jones, S D .............. 89 323 58 98 Ray, Pitt. . . 111 453 63 137 6 8 123 Madlock, Pitt 109 407 Carter, Mtl. . 103 374 60 113 Durham, Chi. 105 384 57 116 Guerrero, LA 106 400 65 119 .317 .315 .305 .304 .303 .302 .302 .302 .302 .298 g ab r h pet . 86 372 53 129 110 426 83 143 103 434 72 140 .347 .336 .323 Yount, Mil. . . . 104 427 82 137 321 . . 108 465 70 148 .318 Garcia, Tor . . . 111 422 6 6 134 ,318 McRae, KC . .97 375 55 118 .315 . . Hrbek, Minn. .99 348 52 109 .313 . Murray, Balt. White, K C ..............99 362 51 113 .312 .309 Rice, Bos . . . . 103 405 58 125 Homo Runa National League — Murphy, Atl 29; King­ man, NY 28, Schmidt, Phil 24; Homer, Atl 23. Clark, S F and Guerrero, LA 22. American League — Thomas, Mil 28; Jackson, Cal 26; Thornton, Clev 25; Har­ rah, Cle and Oglivie, Mil 24. Rune Batted In National League — Murphy, Atl 78; Clark, S F 75; Hendrick, StL, Kingman, NY and Oliver, Mtl 72. American League — McRae, KC 97; Cooper, Mil and Thornton, Clev 87; Luzln- ski, Chi 79; Thomas, Mil 78. Stolen Beeee National League — Moreno, Pitt and Raines, Mtl 51; L.Smith, StL 48; Dernier, Phil 40; Sax, LA and Wilson, NY 39. American League — Henderson, Oak J.Cruz, Sea 28; 105; Garcia, Tor 36; Wathan, KC 27; LeFlore, Chi 26. Pitching Victories National League — Carlton, Phil 16-8; Valenzuela, LA 15-8; Rogers, Mtl 14-5; Welch, LA 13-7; Robinson, Pit 12-6. American League — Burns, Chi 13-4; Gura, KC 13-8; Hoyt, Chi 13-10; Morris, Det 13-11; Vuckovich, Mil 12-4; Petry, Det 12-6; McGregor, Balt 12-10; Stieb, Tor 12- 11. Earned Run Average (Baaed on 1 1nning x number of games each team has playod) National League — Rogers, Mtl 2.45; Laskey, S F 2.52; Candelaria, Pitt 2,54; Soto, Cin 2.55; Krukow, Phi 2.72. American League — Sutcliffe, Cle 2.80; Underwood, Oak 2.98; Stanley, Bos 3.01; Hoy, Chi 3.22; Vuckovich, Mil 3.24. Strikeouts National League — Solo, Cin 194; Carl­ ton, Phil 188; Ryan, Hou 166; Valenzuela, LA 127; Rogers, Mtl 123. American League — Bannister, Sea 135; Barker, Clev 124; Beattie, Sea 115; Guidry, NY 111; Eckersley, Bos 106. Saves National League — Sutter, St.L 22; Garber, Atl, Minton, S F and Allen, NY 19; Hume, Cin and Tekulve, Pitt 17. ' American League — Quisenberry, KC and Fingers, Mil 26; Gossage, NY 22; Cau­ dill, Sea 19; Barojas, Chi, Davis, Minn and Spillner, Cle 15. AMERICAN LEAGUE By United Prees International (Waat Coast gam* not Indudad) East QB W L Ret 65 46 586 Milwaukee .545 61 51 Boston Baltimore .532 59 52 D e tro it..................... 57 55 509 New Y o rk ................. 55 55 500 Cleveland Toronto................. . 54 56 55 58 4% 6 8 % 9% .491 10% 487 11 Waat California................. 64 48 64 48 Kansas City . 60 51 Chicago 55 57 Seattle 50 64 Oakland 44 67 Texas 39 74 Minnesota .571 — 571 — 541 3 % 491 9 .439 15 .396 19% .345 25% Wednesday's Resulta Texas 6 , Milwaukee 3 Toronto 4, Boston 3 Detroit 3, New York 2, 12 innings Chicago 4 , Baltimore 1 Kansas City 8 , Cleveland 0 California 6 , Minnesota 3 Oakland at Seattle, night NATIONAL LEAGUE By United Press International (West Coast games not Included) East W L P ci GB 64 48 .571 — 1 Philadelphia St. L o u i s ................. 63 49 .563 5 Pittsburgh................. 59 53 .527 Montreal 5% .523 . New Y o rk ................. 48 63 .432 15% Chicago.................... 48 67 .417 17% West 58 53 Los Angeles.............. 64 50 561 — A tla n ta .................... 62 50 .554 1 San Diego................. 60 53 .531 San Francisco Houston.................... 50 62 .446 13 Cincinnati................. 40 3% 55 .522 4% 73 .354 23% 60 Wednesday's Results San Francisco 8 , Atlanta 6 , 12 innings Montreal 3, Chicago 0 Philadelphia 4. Pittsburgh 1 St Louis at New York, ppd , rain Houston at San Diego, night Cincinnati at Los Angeles, night Thursday's Games (All Times CDT) California (Tiant 0-1) at Minnesota (Viola 3-3), 12:15 p.m Toronto (Gott 3-7 and Geisel 1-0) at Milwaukee (McClure 8-4 and Lerch 7-7), 2, 5pm New York (Morgan 6 -6 ) at Chicago (Koosman 4-5), 7:30 p m Friday's Games California at Oakland Cleveland at Texas Seattle at Minnesota, night New York at Chicago, night Toronto at Milwaukee, night Kansas City at Detroit, night Baltimore at Boston, night Philadelphia (Christenson 7-6 and Farmer 2-4) at Montreal (Gullickson 8-9 and Burris 4-12), 2, 5:05 p.m. Chicago (Noles 8-9) at New York (Zachry 6-4), 6:35 p.m. St. Louis (Stuper 4-2) at Pittsburgh (Baumgarten 0-3), 6:35 p.m. Friday's Games San Francisco at Los Angeles, night Atlanta at San Diego, night Philadelphia at Montreal, night Chicago at New York, night St Louis at Pittsburgh, night Houston at Cincinnati, night CLEVELAND KANSAS CITY ato h bl ab r h bi 4 0 10 Wilson If 5 2 2 0 10 0 0 Wshngtn ss 4 10 1 3 0 0 0 Brett 3b 4 12 1 3 0 10 Cncpcn 2b 0 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 Otis cf 5 2 3 2 3 0 10 M cRae dh 3 0 0 0 10 10 Aikens 1b 4 0 2 1 4 0 0 0 Martin rf 3 0 0 0 4 0 0 0 White 2b 4 111 0000 1 0 0 0 Pryor 3b 0 0 0 0 Wathan c 3 12 1 2 0 0 0 Dilone If Harrah 3b Prcnte 2b Hrgrve 1b Thrntn dh Castflo rf Hayes ph Mlbrne 3b Mnning cf Hassey c Nhrdny c Fschln ss Totals 35 812 7 2S04 0 Totals C le vela n d ................ 000 000 000 0 Kansas City................ 320 111 OOx— 8 E — Milbourne DP — Kansas City 2 LO B — Cleveland 7, Kansas City 8 2B — White, Brett, Wathan 3B — Brett. S B — Dilone, Wathan. S F — Washington. IP H R ER BB SO Cleveland Whitson (L 2-2) Brennan Anderson Kansas City . Splittorff. . . Hood (W 4-0) . Quisenberry CALIFORNIA MINNESOTA Dwning If Bnquez If DeCnces 3b RJacksn rf Clark rf Baylor dh Lynn cf Grich 2b Carew 1b Foli ss Boone c Totals California. Minnesota ab r h bl 3 1 2 0 0 0 0 0 ab r h bi Wshngtn ss 5 0 0 0 Castino 2 b 5 1 1 0 Brnnsky rf 4 1 1 0 Hrbek 1b 3 1 2 0 3 0 12 4 0 2 0 4 0 0 1 3 0 0 0 3 0 2 0 5 1 2 1 4 2 10 0 0 0 0 Ward If 4 12 4 Gaetti 3b 2 0 11 Ldner c 4 0 0 0 Htcher dh 4 0 10 Mtchll cf 4 1 2 0 4 0 0 0 34 6 11 6 Totals 34 3 9 3 . 000 001 500— 8 000 120 000— 3 E Lynn DP — California 2, Minnesota 4 LO B — California 6 , Minnesota 9 2B — Hrbek 2, Brunansky HR — Baylor (18). IP H R ER BB 80 California Zahn ( W 11-5). Goltz (S 1). . Minnesota 6 % 8 2% 1 .5 % 6 . O'Connor . .1 2 Felton (L 0-11). L it t le .........................o 0 .2 % 3 Davis . Little pitched to 1 batter in 7th. W P — Goltz Balk — O'Connor 2:48 A — 14,115. ATLANTA 8AN FRANCISCO ab r h M ab r h bl Ryster 3b 6 0 10 Davis cf 5 12 0 Rmirez ss 6 1 1 0 Morgan 2b 5 1 1 0 Harper rf 6 12 1 Clark rf 5 2 2 0 Murphy cf 4 1 1 1 Smith 1b 6 2 2 2 Watson 1b 2 111 Leonrd If 5 12 0 Wshngtn pr 0 0 0 0 Evans ss 4 10 1 Chmbls 1b 1 0 0 0 O ’Mlly 3b 5 0 10 Hbbard 2b 5 12 1 Brenly c 5 0 11 Lnares If 5 0 11 Hmmakr p 10 0 0 Bndict c 5 0 10 Fwlkes p 10 0 0 Niekro p 2 0 0 0 Smmrs ph 10 1 1 Bdrsan p 0 0 0 0 Hlland p 0 0 0 0 Jhnson ph 1 1 1 0 Whlfrd ph 10 10 Garber p 0 0 0 0 Brning p 10 0 0 Horner ph 1 0 0 0 0000 Hrbsky p 1 0 0 0 Whsntn ph 0000 Diaz p Totals 48 811 8 One out when winning run scored Atienta................ 000 800 100 000— 8 San Francisco . . 100 103 100 002—3 E — Benedict, Davis, Hubbard. DP — At­ lanta 2, San Francisco 1 L O B — Atlanta 6 , San Francisco 7 2B — Clark. HR — Smith (12). S B — Davi3, Clark, Linares. 48 8 13 8 Totale Atlanta N ie k r o ...............5% Bedrosian. . . . % G a r b e r .................. 1 H rabosk y.............. 3 . . 1 % Diaz (L 2-2) 8an Francisco IP H R ER BB SO 6 5 2 0 2 1 2 o 1 2 1 0 1 0 2 1 3 0 0 0 0 1 0 2 1 . . 3 7 3 Hammaker . Fowlkes...............2 % H olland.................. 2 Breming (W 7-4). .4 0 1 2 4 1 2 0 1 W P — Fowlkes. P B — Benedict. T — 6 5 0 0 4 1 1 0 5 0 1 0 3:42. A - 22,940. TEXA8 MILWAUKEE * f h N ab r h bi 4 0 10 5 0 2 0 Mlitor 3b Wright cf 4 1 1 1 Yount ss 3 1 1 0 Grubb If 5 1 3 1 Cooper 1b 4 0 2 0 Bell 3b 5 0 11 Sm m onsc 4 1 0 0 Hsttlr 1b 4 13 1 Thomas cf 3 1 1 0 Prrish rf 3 0 13 4 1 1 1 Oglvie If Jhnson dh 3 0 0 0 4 0 10 Money dh Sndbrg c 4 1 2 1 Moore rf Rchrdt 2 b 4 0 10 4 10 0 Gantnr 2b 3 0 0 0 Dent ss Totals 31 3 7 3 39 814 8 Totals T e x a s ...................... 000 020 400—8 Milwaukee................ 000 003 000— 3 E — Molitor DP — Texas 2, Milwaukee 2. L O B — Texas 7, Milwaukee 5. 2B — Parr­ ish, Johnson, Oglivie, Cooper. IP H R ER BB 80 Texae Honeycutt. .5 % Schmidt (W 3-4). 37s Milwaukee . . 6 % Haas (L 9-7) Bernard............... 1 % Fin g ers.................. 1 11 2 1 T - 2:46. A 36,016. PITTSBURGH PHILADELPHIA Moreno cf Ray 2b Madlck 3b Thmpsn 1b ab r h bl 4 0 10 4 0 0 0 3 10 0 3 0 10 ab r h bl Rose 1b 3 0 0 0 4 1 2 0 Trillo 2b Mtthws If 4 1 1 0 Schmdt 3b 3 2 10 Thursday's Games (AH Times COT) Atlanta (Walk 10-7) at San Diego (Haw­ kins 2-2), 3:05 p.m. San Francisco (Martin 5-5) at Los Ange­ W P — Whitson 2, Hood. Balk Whitson les (Reuss 10-9), 3:05 p.m. T — 2 30 A — 27,540. 4 1 t 0 C N A T IO N A L W E A T H E R S E R V IC E F O R E C A S T to 7 PM E S T 8-12-82 3 0 0 0 / — a — * 3 ^ F S ir j 2.)j- V-M I N N E A P O L IS ' M Í I d A*.. S A N F R A N C I S C O m / D E N V E R ! ) I \ ^ inw r i / - L O S A N G E L E S j W y*\f 90 U PI W E A T H E R F O T O C A S T - Across tho nation, Thursday’s forecast calls for showar activ­ ity acroaa parta of tha mld-Plalns and Qulf Coaat, aa wall as in sactions of tha North Atlantic statas. Elsawhara, mostly fair waathar should pravail. Maximum tamparaturas will ba In tha 70a In tha North and on tha Wast Coast and in tha mid-80s to low 90s In tha South. flu outer on rue ter/ SINKLiY? /5THem/AL- eFFtas am mw FOR M CRA SH IN G - S fB C ttH IP 5C£N6 ? NO BULL! n ■ y 1 WMAT PLACES / P IP t o HAVE ^ iN MiND ? j ( t36RMUP\ /"maWA! 11 JA VU iC A , 7 -------- by johnny hart l'P UKE To U35£ A FEW SOT IN TAB ftetfT PLACeé 1 Tjüf C Ptete l e u ........ uw >taa .. ______________ ! s a l o a v | -— ------------ ---------"‘■‘’T . ni BLOOM COUNTY Summer Sale Special Prices on select models of: Trek Univega Puch Motobecane Fuji Centurion Lotus Windsor GUARANTEEING THE LOWEST SHOE PRICES IN AUSTIN, TEXAS 477-9187 24th AT RIO GRANDE 702 W. 24th St. at Rio Grande 472-5519 Clarity in the fog. Tha Studants' Magazina Coming August 30 to booths all ovar campus I arts & entertainment 13/THE DAILY TEXAN Thursday, August 12,1982 Betrock hits a bad note in story of girl groups By CHRIS WALTERS “Girl Groups — The Story of a Sound” ; by Alan Be­ trock; Delilah; $8.95; 175 pag­ es. This is getting out of hand. Books about rock ‘n’ roll, with the exception of quickie cut- and-paste fan publications, were such a bad commercial proposition just four years ago that a tome dedicated to a nearly forgotten genre like girl groups would have been out of the question. “Bom to Run,” Dave Marsh’s bestsell­ ing hosanna to Bruce Springs­ teen, decisively changed that situation. These days you can’t even turn around in a bookstore without bumping into this or that latest rock- book, and sometimes it makes me want to go for my gun. Why? Because the music book explosion hasn’t been ac­ companied by a concurrent genre’s final days in the mid- 1960s. We leam how the song factories worked, how Phil Spector’s astounding combi­ nation of chutzpah and genius took him to the top at 21 and how countless performers were robbed of their royalties and relinquished to obscurity after a brief ride on the charts. Betrock’s research, right down to exact chart po­ sitions and the names of all the Vandellas, is impeccable, making the book an invalu­ able reference work. The bad news: besides info, Betrock brings nothing to his subject save a lot of affection. The book is badly written, badly organized and sorely in need of a point of view. Con­ sidering the preponderance of male producers controlling female artists and the utopian romance at the heart of the form, some kind of a theory should have been forthcom­ ing, as well as a stronger sense of social context. As a critic, Betrock’s m ajor virtue is enthusiasm, not analysis, and a perfect opportunity to write about the sexual politics of rock ‘n’ roll has been missed. A collaboration with a more lucid writer would have been ideal; at the very least, a thorough editing was in order. For a concise essay on the whys and wherefores of the girl group sound, see Greil Marcus’ chapter in “The Roll­ ing Stone Illustrated History of Rock n ’ Roll.” And for the real crux of the m atter, see your favorite record store, where you’ll find a surprising number of girl group records are still available. Those songs are where the world of a girl, a boy and a perfect love still lives. The Ronettes with Keith Richards and Brian Jones upgrading of editorial stand­ ards. “ Girl Groups” is a per­ fect example. Written by a man whose credentials as an archivist are above reproach First, the good news: Alan and illustrated with dozens of Betrock knows his topic inti- wonderful photos, it’s never- mately and has packed the theless a botched treatment of a fascinating subject. And that makes it all the more frustrating. book with useful information and good stories. He tells us a great deal about how all the memorable girl group records came to be, from the day the form was bom with the Chan­ téis’ first single in 1957 to the Pop opera to premiere at Studio 29 By STEVE DAVIS Remember Oedipus Rex, the Greek tragic hero who ful­ filled every son’s Freudian dream of sleeping with his mother and killing his father? The Travis County Volunteer Opera Society’s new produc­ tion modernizes this classic tale of guilt and lust in an original pop opera entitled “ Oedipus Tex.” Set in a decaying town on the edge of a western prairie, “Oedipus Tex” is an ambi­ tious opera production that defies categorization. “ It’s not a spoof of it (the Greek dram a), and it’s not just a re- telling of the story set in the West,” says Neal Herr, who co-wrote and co-composed the opera with Brent Sanders. Herr describes the work’s lit­ erary illusions, Freudian and Brechtian symbolism structure as “ surrealistically theatrical” and is quick to qualify its tumbleweed set­ ting with the somewhat cryp­ tic qualifier used in promot­ ing the production on posters and flyers: “ ... it’s not that kind of Western.” The Travis County Volun­ teer Opera Society is no stranger to operatic endeav­ ors, having performed several productions at the Stonehenge Opera House over the past productions few years. Reworking old myths and legends seems to be a specialty of the troupe; past include “ Faustus Elektrik,” “ Beauty and the Beast” and “ Tarzan and the Iguana People.” The current production of “Oedi­ pus Tex” is a revised version of the opera society’s produc­ tion formerly performed at Stonehenge. Herr says the first version was technically rough and that in contrast, the new version is more polished and professional because of the infusion of a sturdier rewrite and professionally able technicians. “ Oedipus Tex” marks the first original production at Studio 29, the form er home of the Rome Inn at 2)00 Rio Grande St. If Studio 29 sounds like an odd milieu for an op­ era production, it’s not be­ cause the opera’s creators didn’t try find another stage on which to perform. “ We tried to get other groups to do our show, but no one wanted to do it,” Herr says. “ If you don’t have a name or any­ thing, people don’t look at you twice.” Performances of “Oedipus Tex” will be at 8 p.m. Fridays and at 8 and 11 p.m. Saturdays through Sept. 4. Tickets can be purchased at the door- O O S f L o ve A nd L o vvrs The Shangri-las Townshend cries on ‘Chinese Eyes’ By BRIAN DUNBAR “All the Best Cowboys Have Chinese Eyes” ; Pete Townshend; (ATCO). “All the Best Cowboys Have Chinese Eyes” is cer­ tainly Pete Townshend’s most successful solo album, and not just because it’s his least obscure. It presents a com­ pendium of the philosophical ideas and social commentary that Townshend’s been work­ ing on for a t least a decade. (“ The Thoughts of Chairman P ete” would be an apt subti­ tle.) That’s not to say the al­ bum is a rehash; the music is too vital, too forceful. It’s more a necessary re s ta te ment of purpose from som e one whose life is in constant flux. in London clubs Townshend has never been quite at ease with his transi­ tion from a hip teenage art student playing “ maximum R&B” to PETE TOWNSHEND, “ rock ‘n’ roll’s thinking m an” and prim ary force behind rock milestones like “ Tommy” and “ Who’s Next.” After more than a decade he feels stuck in the latter persona, though, and thus rips it apart in “ Stardom in Acton” : “ Stardom — I want a hit/ Want my cash, want my tan/ Want my innocence.” In “ Uniforms,” he’s back on the streets of London with the punks, the skinheads, the mods and all the other British music cliques, finding com­ fort in belonging to one par­ ticular tribe much more than in being a star. A spiritual side of Pete Townshend crops up on “ The Sea Refuses No River” and “ Somebody Saved M e.” Townshend’s theology envi­ sions no God a la Yahweh or Allah, but a spiritual bond among all humans, making each responsible for all the others. And the fourth, romantic face of Pete Townshend (“ Holy quadro- phenia, Batm an!” ). In “ Stop Hurting People,” he wishes “ May I be matched with you again/Without your match there is no flam e.” th e re ’s there them es The album’s capstone, “ Slit Skirts,” finishes the record perfectly, summarizing all of Townshend’s and focusing them into one seam­ less performance. And in the end, all of his ideas — love, God, identity — come down to our inability to deal with each other, because stardom, Pete Townshend of a simple, but very real, fear of getting hurt: A n d lovers now estra n g ed a vo id o th e r s ’ c a tc h in g eyes A n d girls who lost th eir children cu rsed the m en who f i t the coil A n d m e n not f i t fo r m a r ­ riage took th eir refu g e in the oil... Slit sk irts — Jea n n ie n ev er w ears those slit skirts A n d I d o n ’t ev e r w ea r no ripped sh irts C an’t p reten d grow ing old n ev er hurts K nee p a n ts — Jea n n ie n ev er w ears no knee pa n ts We have to be so d ru n k to try a new dance So afraid o f every new ro­ m a n ce Even if there’s nothing earth- shaking on the record, it’s Townshend’s most accessible, co m p rehensible work in years. And it’s very success raises more questions. The high quality of Town­ shend’s last two solo albums and the dismal failure of The Who’s “ Face Dances” leads one to wonder how much long­ er the band can hold Town­ shend’s interest. His writing may have become too subtle for Roger Daltrey’s vocals and the usual bombastic Who arrangements. Work has be­ gun on a new Who album, but Townshend has set an 18- month limit on touring with the group. The best rock ‘n’ roll band ever to blow out an amp may be running out of steam, but in the process, Pete Townshend might finally have found his own voice. TONIGHT AT 9 FRI9 & 11 • SAT 8, 10 A 12 SUMMERTIME FOLLIES Fun-filled Farce, Satire & Slapstick w / Sixth Street's Musical Vaudeville Comics TONIGHT • MARJOR B IIR K K 'f B LU M CO. FRIDAY - X-SPAND-X oom 515 E. Sixth 474-9382 2015 E. RIVERSIDE NOT YOUR ORDINARY TACO PALACE MARGARITA. $6.50 per 60 oz. pitcher Uncle m i5 d { Nasty s —ext1 M s M m U m I t t h St. T 9 * 2 c 606 Maidon La n o ________ 458-5950 World Famous Margaritas are Habit forming. $6.50 per 60 oz. pitcher Nasty Hour 5-8 p.m. Videos & Pool Mon-Fri from 4 p.m. to 2 a.m. Saturday from 6 p.m.-2 a.m. Nasty Habits 6 0 0 W .MLK 4 72-2155 Brief Af air S ta rrin g A nnette H aven WITH LONI SANDERS AND LISA DELEEUW ¡ PLUS: MASTERS AND MS. JO H N SO N x C IN E M A " W is T 2130 S Congret» • Open 11 a.m • 442-5719 There*» high flying Action when the pretty | little birde flock together.3 ehiobinsy] AMiniN HI MS PWSTNrS Como by and enjoy our gamos while Intoning to your favorito musk. POOL, DYNAMO FOOSBALL, PINBALL ELECTRONIC GAMES: ZAXXON, PAC-MAN, CENTIPEDE, MS. PAC-MAN, DEFENDER, RAPID-FIRE, THIEF Try Our Delicious Nachos! Open 2:30 p.m.-2 a.m. Mon-Thu 1 p.m.-2 a.m. Fri-Sun 1903 E. Riverside Drive Weekday Happy Hour 2:30-7:00 444-5818 NICK KRAU S P O D IU M AT lSYMPHONY SQUARE. ( FOOD AND DRINKS ) STARRING SAMANTHA FOX AND ARCADIA LAKE W PLUS: LITTLE ME a n d ! MARLA STRANGELOVE X | _sm _ Tonight: ERNII SKY & THE K-TELS featuring The M ig h ty B ig Horns 1101 Red River 477-6306 Are You Playing Games With Us? For eight years the Back Room has been know n fo r b ringing you tne best in live m usic every night. But we have also quietly m ain­ tained the finest game room in town All our machines are the latest models, and kept in top shape. If you d id n ’t know, come on in. If you forgot, come on back. 6 POOL TABLES • TURBO • MS. PACMAN (3) • TEMPEST • BATTLEZONE • RED BARON • GALAXIAN • OMEGA RACE • KANGAROO • FROGGER • QIX • CENTIPEDE (2) • STARGATE • ZAXXON (2) • DONKEY KONG • GALAGA (3) • MR. It MS. PACMAN PINBALL • RAPID FIRE • HAUNTED HOUSE • JUNGLE LORO • MEDUSA • TRON (3) • PACMAN • ALPINE SKI • DIG DUG • ROBOTRON • XENON It s the ulo - i MUNCH « 6 U Z Z U i FOB OM.T f U O • C o n i n s C h tc a g o -s ty k dcepdtsh ! p irra bs the s lu t ! n u ts lunch tor high-speed p t tu ! lovers, because it's reads when ! s ou arc Get the sliu at the • right poce, along with a dnnk ¡ just SI Sit with this coupon 1 So lortu bus todas Thi Slue As ailable from 11 j to 2, weekdavs only It's the ; best munch and guzzk in tow n ! And at the best pnce CXTer ex- i I pires August 13, 1982 l >ood ! with .ou p on ooK at 2h0h ! tkiadatupe and 1913 Riversidi MOW WE M AK E n M AK ES IT Cm EAT. G uadalupe and 1913 Riverside Page 14 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Thursday, August 12, 1982 AUSTIN 6 521 THOMPSON OFF 183 1 Ml. S. OF MONTOPOUS PHONE: 385-5328 24 HOUR ADULT THEATRE C O M PLEX VIDEO TAPE RENTALS & SALES LARGEST SELECTION - LOWEST P R IC E S S F f J P T C 5 M 0 v ¡ [ > \ S t P A R A D E S C R E E N S F O R T H E P R I C E OF O N E TAXI G IR LS DEBBIE D O ES DALLAS ALL MALE CAST DISCOUNT MILITARY • STUDENT • SENIORS • COUPLES R E D L I N E R S BEL AMI K £ 8 £ L D r i t t e - l n 6 9 0 2 B u rln s o n R o a d R a d io S o u n d S y s ta m 3 8 5 -7 2 1 7 P r iv a c y o f Y o u r A u to JL X X Q rio in a L U n c u t - | <1rvaAhi *¡¡¡í % D O N ’T M IS S IT! feoturlrvg San Francisco’s famous Carol Doda and Serena | OPENS 8-OOSTARTS AT DU SK j those who 11 k. t* to L!tM III c.irK o n r r THEATRES-AUSTIN R E D U C E D A D U L T 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 ITY ONLY | I | 454-2711 FOX TRIPLEX 16757 AIRPORT BLVD.] RICH ARD GERE D E B R A WINGER AN OFFICER ANDA GENTLEM AN E . A PARAM O U NT P IC T U R E * in E r r M t e w r S W T T ° Í N HAS MADE HIS MATCH HARRISON FORD I SiADE fíUnnEn O 0 .Double faflttfro STAR TREK II 1 1892-2775 H r m iJIV Jjt t C ir iM a 4608 W ESTG ATE BL. (17:45) 5:15 940 (440)440 040-1040 |12:20H2:40| 540-7:20 9:40 The Greatest Challenge ohm/oms [R O C K Y I I I (17:40)441 5:70-740 1040 > ^ ¿ i m c T H E A T R E S T IM E S S H O W N F O R T O D A Y O N L Y 1 / I I I « A n n S» TWILITE PRICES... LIMITED TO SEATING MON SAT. . . ALU SHOWS BEFORE 6:00 PM SUNDAY AND HOLIDAYS . . 1st SHOW ONLY 'S R | 1 1 || A M E R IC A N A ^453-6641 2280 h/wuc* owvt L E A P IN ’ L IZ A R D S ! . h ch tiin l 70mm Dolby A N N IE imciAi MtMNm (12:30-340-5:30/52.50)440 1 _ 1 g p j || A Q U A R IU S 4 (^444-3222 tsoos piiasant víuíy 1 B A C / D C L IT TMBM U ROCK! H U i P I R A T E M O V IE (1J04:30-5:45/$2.00) = = , # (140-340-5:15/52.00) 7 JO-945 040-9:55 E Q N IG H T S H IF T (g (240-540/52.00)-7:15-9JO Z A P P E D ! g (2:15-5:30/52.00)7:45-9-J5 IlNORTHCROSS 6 9r L md7 NOflTHCOOSS MALI 3 IH ' MOnSON ( BURNET E . T . T H E E X T R A - T E R R E S T R IA L mcmmuiv j;!. *í 2 JO N00.U.T. f ' i v V • h j í x 'J :• »!:♦»: ,1. 11-v ■ ' »r-.»• i i í ¡ . ' . i t . ' v j • '■ ' V / z i : f, ?\r ' TKmrmMUfsrwHimKcnMir___ k V > Forbidden Plonot LATE SHOW (1456) FRIDAY 4 SATURDAY B a m HaN Aad. 11 JO p .* . 1 JO U.T. 2.00 Nan-U.T. . 7'.-i FRIDAY & SATURDAY Union Theatre 2 1 7 :0 0 p.m. 1.50 U.T. 2.00 Non-U.T, W IN N E R ! 3|* c a d e m y ■ A W A R D S NCLU046 — BEST ■ ACTRESS!» KATHARINE iltll HEPBURN flH| P6TÉROTDOL6 ■ KATHARIN6 ■ H6PBURN m in FRIDAY A SATURDAY Academic Center A s i LION IN WINTER 7 JO p jL 1 JO U.T. 2.01 Nee-U.T. I t i e B e s i l e s Yellow Srfjtr-arirte FRIDAY A SATURDAY 1J 0 U.T. 9 JO 2J 0 Non-U.T Batts Aad Winú-Líon SUNDAY at 2 4 740 m l Union Tfcoatro 1 JO U.T. 2.00 Nan-U.T. TexdsUnton MARKHAMILL HARRISON FORD CARRICFISHCR ° *G U IN N C S S P€ER CUSHING Siomng Muse by Produced by 'Mmen and Directed by JOHN WILLIAMS GARY KURTZ GCORGC LUCAS RkNAVtSON* TECHNICOLOR* PRMT5 BY DC LUXE PG|w t a —Mg a—ma I ■*VMM* «** MDYM M liaf ’ CO3 McOon Me*«» CopgyQaaw<—I C«r*#y4on fim Co*> 9477 m CLUÜ6KM iro (LA) 9462 M PRESIDIO THEATRES TrOOAndRroon 4§f-83sT Starts Friday issn S n w h ifrT n s-o R T PRESIDIO THEATRES 11:15 1.50 U.T. 2JO N00-U.T. LATE SHOW FRIDAY 4 SATURDAY Thursday, August 12,1982 □ TH E D A ILY TEXA N □ Page 15 AUTOS FOR SALE AUTOS FOR SALE FOR SALE L& M V O L K S W E R K S . New and used in­ V W parts. Rebuilt engines 5629 stalled, exchange. We buy VWs, any condition. 251-2265 V O L K S W A G E N C O N V E R T IB L E white champagne edition, 1979. Excel-classic only, 16,000 miles. Sealed and garaged for three years. $9,000 or best offer. 454- 1119 evenings. 1976 PIN T O , air, less than 500 miles on rebuilt engine. $1,250. Call Les at 471- 5775__________ 1977 HONDA Accord Excellent condi­ tion. New paint, A M /FM , $3950. 837-7365 or 258-6368. '73 Toyota Célica. Original S P O R T Y paint, excellent interior, 2 owner. Auto­ matic, recent inspection and license. *1795, offer. Call 453-5140. '74 A U D I 100 LS. 103,300 miles, AC, AT, Alpine stereo. Mechanically sound. Los­ ing license, must sell. Make offer. 477- 9649 Bill. Keep trying! B L A C K C O N V E R T IB L E Volkswagen ¡975. A/C, excellent condition. $6,500. 472-6008 or 478-4876 '63 FO R D Van New engine approx 30,000 miles. Radials. 1 year old Die Hard battery. $475. Call after 1.30, 451- 0485.______________________ FO R D F A IR M O N T station wagon, 1979, 6 cylinder, excellent condition Leaving the country, must sell. 346-2246. 1975 F IA T X19. Excellent condition. $2450. Call 327-6811 evenings 1978 SCIROCCO. $4,250. For information call 444-8057. C H E A P ! 1975 V E G A station wagon. Clean $695 835-2597. '70 SA A B. Troublesome engine, rebuilt interior. Re- transmission, excellent buildable $400 476-9658 1976 PIN TO , no dents, clean, runs great, good on gas, A M radio, $1,450. Call 443- 2230___________________________ '77 VW D A SH E R . Fuel injection, AM/ F M stereo cassette, air, CB, hatchback, 4 speed, $1800. Call 447-8226. 1965 F O R D F A IR L A N E 2-door black sport coupe, auto, air, excellent condi­ tion. $1600. 471-7565, Robert Giddings. 1980 T O Y O T A 4WD pickup with air Red, like new $7000 473-2732 Motorcyde-For Sale 1970 R E D 2-door AC Mustang Very good condition. 63,000 miles. $975 Phone Dan, 454-4872, before 6 p.m. 1978 HONDA 550 G reat condition, 11,000 miles $1250 Original owner. 447-1567 be­ fore 10 a.m. 1972 TO RO N AD O Good condition* $800 Call after 6 p.m., 836-3478 1977 VW R A B B IT Excellent condition $2750. Daytime, 478-8585, after 6, 474- 54 6 3 .________________ '79 P E U G E O T 604. Fu lly loaded, auto­ matic, gas. 327-4101. '78 M G B . G R E E N , wire wheels, luggage rack, stereo, tape, low mileage. E x cel­ lent condition $4750.459-5116 1974 V O L K S W A G E N D A S H E R station wagon. $1800 or best offer. Owner mov­ ing to Europe. 472-2114, 473-9590 R A B B IT C 1979. BeigeTAC AM FM cas sette, excellent condition. $4600 or best offer Call Bill, 442-2188 Motorcycl*-For Sal* 1981 HONDA CB900F, excellent condi­ tion Sport kit, Koni shocks, 6,500 miles $2,900. Call 444-9649 Y A M AHA E N D U R O , 360 cc; '74; needs mechanic, TLC ; $150 477-9269 after 4:00 1974 HONDA 4-cylinder. Good engine - needs minor work $400 Dave 471-5581. 1981 YA M A H A 550 Maxim, excellent condition, 4100 miles $1800, negotiable. Call 478-5373 after 6 p.m. 1981 Y A M A H A D.T.100. Like new, good mileage, must sell. Call anytime 452- 0478 1973 SU ZU K I 550, 3 cylinder. Need to sell $500 478-7488 Bicycle-For Sal* B IC Y C L E - C H R O M E cruiser, great condition. $150 Call 477-5186 Stsreo-For Sal* J B L., L-100, 3-way stereo speakers, warranty included, excellent condition, $350 Call W illiam at 477-0338 CONDOS FOR SALE C O N D O S FOR SALE CONDOS FOR SALE C O N D O S FOR SALE ONLY 4 LEFT Elegant. Spacious. Established. And only a short stroll from the natural wonder of Zilker Park and Barton Springs. Visit and you’ll see why Barton Terrace Condominiums has sold 46 exclusive units in less than 2 months! Still available . .. LARGE 2 BED RO O M /1 BATH— $76,950 O N E BEDROOM/1 BATH— $53,950 Model Home Open. Weekdays/4pm-8pm, Sat S. Sun./12pm-8 pm EXCELLENT 10 >/z% ARM FINANCING JjAKTOTtTfcRISACE A B O V E - T H E - P A R K 1240 BARTON HILLS DR. AUSTIN.TEXAS (512)327-6880 MARKETED BY ). B. GOODWIN REALTORS PARKER SQUARE CONDOMINIMUMS S e ttle d in a beautiful wooded site ju s t o ff R iverside D rive in A u stin , affording splendid view s of the Capitol and dow ntow n office buildings. L uxurious, yet practical am enities for those w ith discrim inating tastes are included in each condom inim um home. , Presale Prices s ta rtin g at $39,950-$49,950 1 and 2 bad room units CALL TODAY! 476-2673 M arketed by Linda Ingram and Associates 1306 Nueces LANDMARK SQUARE Condom inium s 706 W. 22nd Eff. 1 & 2 Bedroom $39,950-93,950 ONLY 4 BLOCKS FROM CAMPUS! Located in the heart of the D o w n t o w n /U n iv e r s it y of A u stin , L a n d ­ m a rk S q u a re ha s a lively co n ven ien t n e ig h b o rh o o d that's near sh o p p in g , en terta inm en t a n d recreation M arketed by Linda Ingram 476-5673 A GREAT PLACE TO LIVE PEARL 1 0 % % ARM -GPM Financing Available Available for FALL OCCUPANCY Prices starting in low 40's — Security — M icrowave — Individual Storage — Covered Parking > H 12 One Bedrooms 6 with Lofts M arketed by Linda Ingram <£ A ssociates 1 306 Nuecei 476-2673 THE G AZEBO CONDOM INIUM S 2815 RIO G RA N D E The perfect h o m e for stu ­ dents, the b e s t in v e s tm e n t for M om o n d D a d R ig h t in the h e a rt o f the U T a rea, the G a z e b o is built a r o u n d o n in v it in g H ot Tub for a r e la x e d p e a ce fu l a t ­ m o sp h e r e In sid e , these sp a c io u s o n e bed ro o m p la n s offer a loft­ e d b o n u s room on se co n d in d i­ story units v id u a l st o ra g e o n d o m p le L a u n d ry , PRICES STARTING AT $39,950 MODEL OPEN DAILY 11-6 p a r k in g all ien c e sp ell c o n v e n ­ A n d there is sp e cia l fi­ n a n c in g to q u a lifie d b u y e rs M arketed by L i n d a I n g r a m I .’HIS Nueces Austin. Texas 78701 476-267:1 ONLY 5% DOWN EXCELLENT INTEREST RATE FROM $37,950 i m | nap- d o c K U S! CHANCE. TO BU Y A CONDOMINIUM NOW AND MOVE IN IN AUGUST From $34,950 with 5% down Marketed bv _________ PAUL S. MEISLER _____________ Properties 385-5840 4821 E. Riverside $8 9 5 MOVES YOU IN! with our new L E A S E P U R C H A S E PR O G R A M Call for Details! » M I s rhe Paddock Condominiums Location. Luxurv A n si re aso n ab le p rices These superbly designed condominiums h a ve it all A north central location midway b e tw e e n IH a ? and MoPat Lifestyle touches lik e te n n is co u rts S p o rt Lourts and a large swimming p ool P lu s p ru es to tit almost an\ b ud get See them today and get rid of that lease on vo u r lilt MODEL NOW OPEN. EFFICIENCIES, ONE AND TWO BEDROOMS. M A R K E T E D B\ J.B . G O O D W IN Ri \l TORS Multi-Housing Division (512) 327-6880 One block east of Burnet Rd. on North Loop DADDY'S MONEY A condo fo r you and a Tax break fo r Dad ONLY’* 5 TWO BEDROOMS LEFT! decorated. • Fireplace, microwave, below appraisal from rhe mid 80’s. It’s an investment for the future. Before you invest in a con­ dominium, visit Pecan Square. W hen you com­ pare quality, location and cost, you’ll be glad you looked at Pecan Square Condominiums. Location 2906 West Avenue • 6 blocks north of U .T . #5 blocks south of Seton Medical Center. • Quiet, secluded neighborhood. Features 2 bedrooms, professionally coo- T T ■ jr i quality appliances, energy saver features. • Patios. • Vaulted Ceilings. • 52" Ceiling Fan. • Land­ scaped pool and grounds. • Convenient and ample parking. • Security lighting. J Financing Excellent investment in dynamic University market. • Tax advantages. • 90% financing at 12Vi% interest A R M . • Priced Model Open Daily 11-3 M arketed by Linda Ingram & Assoc. 1306 Nu*c*« (512) 476-2673 Pecan Squafe CONDOMINIUMS Tierra West Developm ents CONDOS FOR SALE CONDOS FOR SALE CONDOS FOR SALE CONDOS FOR SALE AU TO S FOR SALE A Tree Grows in Austin MODEL NOW OPEN 11-6 DAILY —Private garage w/opener —Panoramic view of Shoal Creek —Split level hot tub —Fireplace —Microwave CONDOMINIUMS 2612 San Pedro is j u s t c a m p u s Condominiums with the luxury you’re accustom ed to. T he UT a w a y , so the pace is an easy one. Secluded on a hilltop in the heart of Austin. The Tree- house sets the standard for University living. Linda Ingrain A Aaaociataa 1306 Nuaca* A u itin , T axoi (512) 476-2673 six b lo c k s r Mw fctlw l fcy ^ 2 0 i/i V / r Q U A L IT Y C O N D O M IN IU M P R O JE C T Available for Fall occupancy Complete security system Fireplaces and ceiling fans Jacuzzi, sauna & fountain Microwaves, washers & dryers. The List goes on and on! You will find Pecan Walk offers everthing you want in your home. Don't miss Pecan Walk on Speedway next to U. T. campus. Come pick your color scheme. Call: 454-4744 ★ 442-5070 ★ 327-5550 f*\T H E O v e r l o o k K i L ’ h ' i * - r i > • : « ■ u i t i t ( c >r u i i t i n m i n t t ; h n r m " - h » ■ i 1 < 11:i i u * n nil'll hi II' I 'A 11 (nr: ‘A . 11 k l n ij i ] i -' i r 11 i . ,! I I Prices sta r tin g in low 10’s F a il u r e s - ____________________ 1 vV l! ticiji in un I ’nnl \ tint till) SccilM t\ v\sti'in M ini blind'. W . i ' l i i t i lr v c r M a rk e te d by: ^ Linda Ingram l toti N u e c e s 476-2673 I I / _£/ " ' , T / f ^ 5/ / i I ~. f ; 1 j 7. i-L j___ _ Hik ... U s,(l - - ? ' ~ j- * ■" . SAVE $20,000 Great Pool, Big Units, Carports, Hot Tub Only $67 per sq. ft. for new condos including refrigerator, micro­ wave, washer/dryer and miniblinds. Two miles south of Downtown close to the shuttle. Two bedroom plan perfect for roommates only $67,500 with over 1,000 sq. ft. 1 & 2 BR—$47,500 to $71,000 Travtoj. 443-9474 1474 W IN HIE WORDS OF A IT PARENT . . . “IS THAT WHAT IT COSTS TO RENT THESE DAYS ? ” ’Fraid so. And it’s not getting any cheaper. Fact is, rents arc- escalating rapidly in apartments, single family homes and dorms. That’s w hy we think one of the best investments you can make is to buy a place for your children to live while at­ tending UT. Especially if that place is an English Towne Home by Doyle W ilson. H ere’s w hy . . . The English Towne Series is an innovative new concept in affordable home ownership. It’s a single family attached home. This way you can purchase only half the structure and not be financially obligated to all of it. The design of each side has two separate master suites so that each has its own bath . . . perfect for roommate situations. Moreover, our excellent 107«% * financing with only 5% down means your child can move in without you moving o u t . . . to the poorhouse. And if you ’ve got several kids that w ill be attending U.T. over the next few years, it makes even more sense. The payments on a S42.950 home with 5% down are $495.00 per month. That’s less than many rentals and less than all condos in the immediate UT area. But the good part comes when they’re all finished with school. That’s the time you might consider selling it. And instead of having poured a lot of dollars down the hole in r e n t . . . you’ve got a return. All English Towne homes include completely land­ scaped yards, cedar privaq fence around the backyards and drapes. You just turn the key and move in. The English Towne homes are located in planned, secured residential neigh­ borhoods . . . Wyldwood in southwest Austin and West­ ern Trails in the north. Both are near convenient shopping, recreation and main arteries to IT. SPECIAL! FREE LAWN MAINTENANCE FOR 1 YEAR FROM DATE OF CLOSING! •1515 C a p ita l o f Teyys H igh w ay X 7 327-4192 *10%% GPM-ARM # Page 16 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Thursday. August 12, 1982 C O N D O S FOR SALE CONDOS FOR SALE T H E M { / J S ^ ' 1 COMM€CTlOM 3 0 7 W. MLK o l Lavaca W e ' v e Done Your Hom ework S e r v ic in g all of Austin , s p e c i a li z i n g in c a m p u s a n d I T s h u t t l e areas. W a lk over or c all for a p r e v i e w in g a p p o i n t m e n t r > A » T M « N T Í H 2124 Burton Drive SUPER FALL RATES • Efficiency $275 • 1 BR Furn $335 • 2 BR Furn $440-$470 • Large Pool-Patio vjt*0 MOVE IN TODAY Luxury Club Room 2 Shuttle Routes 444-7880 Davis A Associates Management Co. C) T R E E H O U S E C O N D O M IN IU M S 202 E. 45th Across from Shipe P a rk 1/1 -$46,500 Ceiling fan, mini-blinds, hot tub, lots of trees O N L Y 3 L E F T CREATIVE FINANCING $5000 lease option, spacious condo with 2 master suites. Pool - tennis courts. Easy access to any place. Off 1-35 N. Call for appointment. Barbara Mitchell, 451- 3412, 346-1073. Daniel L. Roth and Assoc. 480-8273 A M E LIA BULLOCK ÍAK KNOLL ^ 620 Sot Close to U.T. Close to Town Close to Perfect _ South First Street When was the last tim e you saw a condom inium w ith 1 bedrooms from $39,950 2 bedrooms from $49,950 Where else can you get a monthly note of only *499 that Includes principal and interest with a down payment as low as $2,500, How many other condo's can offer you 30 year fixed rate, non-escalating, and non-qualifying loans with V.A. and FHA Financing available Truly Affordable with City Views, Swimming Pool & More Csf far mora inltrfiwrltn M ark* ted by Linda Ingram and A h o c . 476-2673 FOR SALE FOR SALE FOR SALE FOR SALE Stor*o-For Sol* AURORA SPEAKERS, Pioneer drivers, 3-way, 50 watts each. Asking *75 for pair. Must sell. Call 480-9311 after noon. Ask for Jim. Muslcol-For Sol* BEATLES, SPRINGSTEEN, demo tapes at Alien Nation Records. 307 E. 5th. Thursday, Friday, Saturday, 11-6. 472-3058. FENDER VIBALUX amplifier. Excel- lent condition. Black face, 2 10" speak­ ers, footswitches. $335. 442-7338. GOOD PIANO *300. Call Paul, 477-0084. FOR SALE: Laubin condition, $1000. Call p.m. oboe. Excellent 474-1394 after 8 Photogrophy-For Sol* CANON AE-1 with 50mm, 1.8 lens. Less than one year old. $190 or best offer. 472- 1403. P«t»-For Sol* B E A U TIFU L KITTENS for homes. Calico and black, and white tiger striped. Healthy, toilet- trained. Call 474-1227. looking loving, and OLD ENGLISH Sheepdog - lovable in­ door pet - must place In good home. Call 8-10 p.m. 472-9182. _________ _ FREE PUP. Great Dane/German shep­ herd mix. Five months old. Friendly male. Shots. Scott, 477-8865. Hom*«-For Sal* NEW M OBILE home. 14 X 56. 2BR, 1BA, fu lly carpeted, $9985. 447-4947. NEW MH, 14 X 70. 3BR, l'/jB A , fu lly carpeted, $13,995. 447-4947. WHY PAY rent? 14x60 mobile home for sale. 1979 A rtcraft, 2BR 1BA, CA/CH, W/W carpet, extras, set-up In U.T. Stu­ dent lot. Nice. Good buy at $10,450. Must sell. 250-9778. Hom*s-For Sal* 14x60 MO BILE HOME. 2/2, center kitchen. CA/CH, pa rtially furnished with 10x9 shed. *9650, 8% assumable. 835-2439. UNIQUE, B E A U TIFU L home. Excel- lent condition. Walk to UT, park. 2 or 3 bedroom, V /i bath. Good financing. Mary Stephanson, Marsh and Box Com- pany. 472-1000,477-1571.____________ $10,000 NON/NON-assumption. UT area. Under 50 K. 3BR 1BA, large trees. Fields/O'Dell Realtors. 528-2539, 892- 1227. _________ VERY NICE 1978 Redman 14 by 80, par­ tia lly furnished, 3 bedroom, 2 bath, a ir/ conditioner, heater. Assume payments of $203.00 w ith equity of $6,500.00 or $19,500.00 outright. Abbie 836-1401. AVANT-GARDE "a RCHITECTURET Wood plank vaulted ceilings. Loft bed­ rooms, windows, 3-2, AC. Owner finance. See to believe. 476-9658. BRICK COTTAGE near UT. Assump­ tion with low payments. 3707 Robinson. Call Betty, JB Goodwin. 837-2030, 247- 3822. 8W% FHA. NORTHWEST. 3-1 plus farm ily room, ceiling fans, huge landscaped yard, $59,950. 1911 Cullen. Ellen, 471- 4206, 458-5559. DUPLEX, UT area, $58,500. Great in­ vestment. UT east expansion area. Cute 2-'/2-l 2 story duplex. FHA financing, owner-occupant, under $5,000 down. Call Libby Boone, Marsh and Box, 472-1000 or 327-5206. Condos-For Sal* P A P E R CHASE New 2 bedroom 2 bath condos within walking distance of law school. Owner financing available. Come by our open house this weekend at 3207 Grooms, 1 block west of Duval near 32nd St. Hours 1-6 Saturday and Sunday. 474-5430 111/2% F IX E D RATE G uadalupe Square Condos 3316 G uadalupe • Walk to UT campus • One BR/One BA condo-$39,900 • All appliances included • B uilt In desk and chest • Hunter ceiling fans • Window treatments included • Colored bath fixtures • Marble vanities Carolyn Brown, Broker 327-3851 An Ed Padgett Co. Developer n r T U N H U N M r a w n s T m m Luxury and convenience ora only tw o roa- *>n» to com * Horn* to Hundred ®* LVn" Located block» a w a y from Mo- pac on the corner of Enfield and W eft Lynn, dweller» have the E.R. Shuttle. All home» include 2 bedroom, 2 bath» »tudy c?. y . » — ■«« trHfc omonor. ft^an pill7 M ng ovallabl,^ M M a r k e t e d b y Linda Ingram A A iio cia te i 1306 Nuecei __________ 4 7 6 -2 6 7 3 2313 LONGVIEW Unlike any other condominium homesite In Austin, 2313 LONG! VIEW Is intim ate rather than intlm ¡dating. This small site of only 7 con dominium homes starting In the ml 50's. One bedroom units comes wit,, a loft and two bedroom are also available. 1 0 % ARM -GPM Financing A vailable. M arketed by Linda Ingram and Associate* 4 7 6 -2 6 7 3 1 30 6 Nuece» RIVER WALK CONDOS G raof loco Non o n the Lokol tmege m m b e d ro em , mm b o th , g ro u n d Hour, M m v ie w , p o o h ld e . CIom to UT i h v t l h and D o w n to w n . In v o o to r'i D e lig h t — a f t f f f o n to », coding ta n , m k ro , lig h t fittv re e . dococ — Mif t tool 858,500, good omoHy. J u d y Koy, 451-2342 or 476-0224 tor ap­ point moni. RE*WSK REALTORS* B ES T B U Y IN G R E E N W O O D T O W E R S Large 1 bedroom 1 bath. Non-escalating 11%% assumption, $10,000 equity, owner w ill carry $5,000 at 12%. *50,000. B.J. Hopkins, owner/broker, 345-3832 or 345- 2100. 1 B E D R O O M A N D L O F T Lovely and ready to occupy. Loaded with all the extras. W asher/dryer, cell­ ing fans, fireplace, security. Only 2 left. Francis Johnson, owner/agent. 346-5000, 345-1552. CONDOS FOR LEASE CONDOS FOR LEASE Time, Trouble & Money *Save yourself a ll of those with just one call to tho professionals. CONDOMINIUMS HUMS * (J 1101 SHOALCREEK • 9.9% 3 Y E A R F IX E D R A TE • 3 M IN U T E S F R O M U T & C A P IT A L • U N IT S F R O M $79,950-5105,950 F U R N IS H E D M O D E L O P E N 11AM -7PM Toll Free 1-800-531-5244 345-8741 OWENS#* B e tte r DEANE ■ t, M B COMPANY. H o m e s 8 I ■ ■ A A. a n d G a rd en a 1 FURNISHED APARTMENTS | FURNISHED APARTMENTS ■ FURNISHED APARTMENTS • 2 Bedroom, 2 bath units with 950 sq. feet • Furnished & Unfurnished • From $390 plus electricity • Shuttle Bus Route • Shopping & Entertainm ent 2304 Pleasant Valley Gillingwater Management Company 442-1298 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 $58,950 that are loaded with an impressive array of amenities. Come by and tour our furnished model today. OPEN Daily 11 -6 or call us at 474-1761 or 476-2673 114 E. 3 1 st Street Just 5 blks. North of Campus Hydeikfe Oaks 31ST A N D G R O O M S M arketed by r Linda Ingram & Assoc. 1306 Nueces One bedroom, one bath............................................................. fee, $46,500 ONLY 3 UNITS LEFT Spacious units featuring living area ceiling fan, m ini blinds, a hot tub on the third flo o r sun deck, huge trees and an excellent Hyde Park location one block from a shuttle bus stop a nd across from Shipe Park. 95%, 3 year buydown financing $2500 discount for all cash sales (512) 480-8273 F in d the a p a r tm 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 tm e n t G u id e has been used by thousands in c itie s across the c o u n try and is now being pub­ lished fo r you, the A u stin a p a r tm e n t s ee ke r. To re c e iv e y o u r FREE copy, c a ll o u r o ffices a t 512/454-0215 o r send a self-ad d res s ed s ta m p e d envelo pe (w ith 70* p o stag e) to H aa s P u b lis h in g Co., 8220 R e s e a rc h B lv d ., No. 148-E, A u stin , T e x a s 78758 ALSO AVAILABLE AT: 7-Eleven Convenience Stores, M ilita ry Bases, Motels, and Hotels, M a jo r E m ­ ployers, Realtors, Banks, Moving Companies, Schools, Chambers of Com­ merce, and Airports. WE’VE GOT A ll THE ANGIES. INCLUDING INVESTMENT. • Now Leasing for Fall Session • Walking Distance to UT - 4 * ‘V £ * % | | J i t : * ; j h f* I.: • 2BR • Newly Renovated Interior • Security Offered For Your Protection 801 West 24th St. 476-7636 The sloping roofs and obiique balconies of Habidad are an impressive sight, rising up from the hills above Bar­ ton Creek iust ten minutes from Downtown Austin and the university But an even more impressive angle Is the investment opportunity they represent. Habidad Is an ideal home for serious students and an Ideal Investment for value conscious parents Habidad The latest condominium community to otter this uniquely desirable location so easily accessible to MoPac and other m aior thoroughfares, close to the city yet surrounded by an area of natural beauty carefully portected by law from future development Imaginative personal homes, with angled walls, wrap-around w in­ dows, skylights in vaulted ceilings and multiple private decks Special interior touches include tile-hearthed fire ­ places, Hunter1 ceiling fans, recessed and track lig h t­ ing, Jenn-Aire* ranges, ceramic tile bars, and luxurious master bath suites. Energy-conscious contruction means lower living cost for you, private garages are another special convenience for Habidad owners. These are the kind of homes that w ill be in even great­ er demand in years to come: exciting In design, superior in construction, w ith the special advantage of an ideal location so close to the heart of the city. Habidad Is the perfect choice It's the comfort, the security and the per­ sonal freedom you want In your lifestyle. And It's the solid investment you want in a residence. For more inform ation on the new community of Habi­ dad, please call 327-8550, or 327-2469 or visit our on-site sales offices from 10-7 Daily. HABIDAD 1707 Spyglass Drive • Austin, Texas 78746 • 512/337-8550or 327-2469 Construction by Charles Marsh Builders, Inc. Marketed by Marsh & Box Company — Sales — Leasing — Property Management Ingram & Witt The Condo Specialist 1306 Nueces 476-2673 NOW LEASING FROM $550 PER MONTH Only minutes from downtown near south Lamar and Del Cuno. Condominium concept with privacy fenced yards and maintenance service. Beautiful landscaped pool. Two master suites in every hom e. . . perfect for roommate. Fireplaces, microwaves, walk-in closets, covered parking and more. Summer* KRASOFF BUILDERS FOR INFORMATION, CALL 478-8369 Weekdays— 8 a.m .-5 p.m./Sat. and Sunday— 12-5 p.m. 1 FURNISHED APARTMENTS | | FURNISHED APARTMENTS Tangle wood Westside Apartment — Fall Leasing — Run, don't walk — tomorrow will be too late for these choice residences. I I I I I I I | I l I l ^ 1 4 0 3 Norwalk Lane Gas & Water is PAID by Owner Shuttle Buss at you r Front Door 1 Bedroom Furnished $280-$310 472' 472-9614 I l I I I I 1 l l l l ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ a * * * * » * * < THE ARBOR 1500 Royal Crest • Walk-in Closets Summer Leases First Stop on RC Shuttle • Pool Balconies Fireplaces • Laundry • Gas Paid Gillingwater Management 444-7516 DON'T WAIT A few choice apartment locations are still available — but they are going fast. Aspenwood Apts 4539 Guadalupe 452-4447 Signing Fall Leases 1 Bedroom Furnished $315 Shuttle Bus at front door! Intramural Fields across street £ • NOW LEASING • ESTRADA A PA RTM EN TS Summer Rates and Summer/Fall Rates Studi»*, 1 * 2 Badroom* FROM $296-$462 PER MONTH 1801 S. Lakeshore 442-6668 • Shuttle • Shopping • 3 Pools • Lak* viow • Profeeeiemaiiy Managed by Martin* Propertiee. ¡me. & W £ £ £ S £ £ : . £ S & ¥ £ ; » £ £ £ ¡ & ^ ^ > > > X«>x«:»>X;ffi^oxc»:»2»>x»;;y; :j FOR SALE FOR SALE FOR SALE FOR SALE 2704 S A N P E D R O . Best financing possi­ ble with $30,000 down. 2 B R 2 B A condo within w alkin g distance UT. Elegan t in­ terior. $125,000. Call F lo A nn Randle, agent, 476-4725 or 472-1000 Tickats-For Sal* O L IV IA N E W T O N -J O H N tickets. Floor 4th, 9th, 11th row. Best offer. 443-2441 Miscaltonaous-For Sola 1B R C O N D O S available One~bTock”UT. Pool, Jacuzzi, security, several choices in the 50s. C all F lo A n n Randle, agent, 476-4725 or 472-1000. F I N E S T A M E R I C A N Indian jewelry plus 2,500 gifts, retail and wholesale. N e lso n 's Gifts, 4502 S. Congress, 444- 3814 G O V E R N M E N T S U R P L U S jeeps L ist­ ed for $3196 Sold for $44. F o r directory (312) 888-4347 ext. J-77 ( 1977) C O L O R P O R T A B L E TV. P retty picture, nice exterior. $135. A sk for Cal, 452-4892 CO MP US OUR CE . - C O M P U T E R S , p e r i ­ pherals, floppies (Televideo, A L T O S , C.IT O H , Elephant, Maxell, etc ) Low prices without m ail-order hassle. 327- 5925 FOR SALE IB M E X E C U T I V E typewriter, 10 ye ars continuous m aintenance old, agreem ent. $300. 477-6111. under G O L F C L U B S , brand new. Call 476-9779. S A L E F O R cheap! R e frig e ra to rs, stoves, tables, chairs, lamps, gas heat­ ers, aquarium , couch, student desk. 476- 3459 w iin Lom TO fiff Dual turntable, Kenwood amp, SO re­ cords stand, total $175. Airline ticket to St. Louis or Washington or Connecticut or Denver, cheap. V W Bu g '69, S1000. Student desk and filing cabinet, $40. Call ______ Bert, 454-6299. C O M P L E T E B E D R O O M suite. Ranch style dresser with mirror, double bed with half moon headboard, night stand. $125. Call Nancy Hobbs at 444-3257, 443- 9522 after 6 p.m. UNFURN. APARTMENTS UNFURN. APARTMENTS UNFURN. APARTMENTS UNFURN. APARTMENTS Thursday, August 12,1982 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Page 17 FURNISHED APARTMENTS ■ FURNISHED APARTMENTS TO PLACE A C L A SSIF IE D AD CALL 471-5244 ► ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ A TIMBERWOOD ♦ APARTMENTS Fall Leasing • Large Eff. $310 • Finest Location in UT Area • Shuttle or Walk 2207 Leon Apts — Fall Leasing — • 1 BR Fum. $315 • 2 BR Fum $480 • Walk to Campus • Nice Pool & Patio 2207 Leon 478-1781 SEQUOIA APTS. - Fall Leasing - • Luxury Eff. Furn. Only $265 • Friendly Complex • Water, G as Pd. By Owner 301 W. 38th 452-4965 MARK V APTS. Signing Fall Leases 1 BR Furn $315 • Wate & G at PAID by Owner • Shuttle Bus • Small Friendly Complex 3914 Ave D 453-5983 THUNDERBIRD A PA RT M EN T S - FALL LEASING • Eff. Furn. $270 • 1 BR Furn $310 • Small Friendly Complex 4510 Duval 458-3607 BARRISTER MANOR - Fall Loosing - • 1BR Furn. $315 • Small Friendly Complex • Shuttle Corner • Walk to Law School 3301 R*d River 477-2859 FOR SALE R E A D T H E T O W ER CLO CK • 11%% Assumption • W alk to cam pus • Tower and pool view • Security • End units • I» 2, and 3 bedrooms For more information call La rry Führer. 479-6618 The Condo Connection 307 w. M L K at Guadalupe Q U IE T , S P A C IO U S one bedroom in Northwest H ills near M o P a c . A ll brick with no com m on walls. $46,500 with ex­ cellent financing. Owner-broker, M a r y Nunnally, 345-2071. G R E E N W O O D T O W E R S . 2-1, beautlful- ly decorated, good financing. M a r s h and Box, V irg in ia Flem ing. 472-1000, 454- 0118. M A U N A K A I, by owner. Efficiencies $19,500 to S29,500. Two blocks to U T shut­ tle bus, pool, very nice, good ow ner fi­ nancing. 2 0 % discount for cash. 405 E. 31st. 472-2147; If no answer, 346-0979. CIRCLE VILLA APTS Fall Looting 1BR $315 • Water & G as PAID By O w ner • Shuttle Bus 2323 Town Lain Circle 442-4967 LA CANADA APTS Fall Leasing — ALL BILLS PAID — • 1 BR Fum. $390 • Walk To Campus • Nice Pool - Patio • Tonnis Courts Across Street 1300W. 24 474-6500 VILLA ARCOS - Fall Leasing - • 1 BR Furn. $325 • Water & G as PAID • Shuttle Front Door 3301 Speedway 478-9555 HYDE PARK APTS — Fall Leasing • Eff. Furn. $260-$270 • 1 BR Furn. $280-$300 • Shuttle Bus at Front Door • City Tennis Courts Next Door 45th & Speedway, 458-2096 VILLA NORTH APTS. — Fall Leasing • Large Eff. Furn. $260-270 • Big 1 BR Furn. $310 • Roomy 2BR Furn. $380 • Water & G a s PAID by Owner 4520 Duval 458-3607 Preleasing for Fall WALK TO CAMPUS OR SHUTTLE BUS 1 bedroom, 1 bath, sh a g carpet, C A / C H A C T 111 4312 Speed w ay 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 ill 476-0411 A C T V I I I 2808 W h itis 474-5650 A C T IX 2803 H em phil! 476-0411 A C T X 301 W. 29th 474-5650 Three O a k s 409 W. 38th 453-3383 P ecan Squ are 506 W. 37th 459-1597 W esterner 2806 H e m p h ill 472-0649 2711 & 2721 H e m p h ill 472-0649 Ed Padgett Co. 454-4621 S T U D E N T C O N D O S for sale starting at $29,500. $5500 assum ption. 250-9591. D R Y C R E E K W E S T CondoTrorrT$48,950 10% A R M - 5 % down. Located In a greenbelt section of Northw est Austin. 1 m ile west of M o p a c on R M 2222 and D rycre ek Road. Sw im m in g pool, fire­ place, w/d, d ishw ash er and more. M o d ­ el open 11-6 daily. F o r m ore Inform a- tion, 454-3366.___________ E F F I C I E N C Y C O N D O for sale near W. 6th. G reat price and terms. Call Alan, owner/agent, 474-2922 days; 478-8918 evenings. L O F T A N D skylight, near shuttle, p har­ m acy and Ice cream parlor. Enfield Place. 1610 W aterson off W. Lynn. $83,700. F in a n c in g available. Com e by afternoons or call 474-0118. 1BR L U X U R Y condo, furnished, 3000 Guadalupe Place, $33,500 cash; call Bill K. 346 2475 or 478 1500. FURNISHED APARTMENTS MARK VII1 T APTS Fall Leasing — • 1 BR Furn $325 • Shuttle Front Door • Water, & G as PAID v 3100 Speedway ! I 476-3441 ♦ I I ♦ f f f I f f f ♦ VILLA SOLANO APTS. Fall Leading • 1 BR Furn. $315 • 2 BR Fum. $410 • Shuttle Corner • Intramural Fields Across Street 600 W 51st 459-1684 FURNISHED APARTMENTS DIPLOMAT APTS. - Fall Leasing - • 1 BR Furn $300 • Water & G as PAID • Shuttle Bus or Walk to Campus 1911 San Gabriel 476-7399 MARK XX APTS. Fall Leasing • 1 BR Furn. $315 • 2 BR Furn. $410 • Shuttle 2 Blks • Water & G as PAID 3815 Guadalupe 451-2621 SU ROCA APTS. — Fall Leasing — * 1 BR Furn. $325 ■ Water & G as PAID » Walk to Campus 2400 Longview 472-8502 UNFURN. APARTMENTS UNFURN. APARTMENTS Pre-Lease for Fall NOW! Efficiencies, 1, 2, 3, & 4 Bedroom avail­ able for move in Today. Starting at $260. 4 swimming pools, 4 Laundries, 2 Shuttle Bus Routes, Convenient to Shopping & Entertainment and Cable T.V. is Optional. Open 9am-8pm Mon.-Sat. River Hills Apts. 1601 Royal Crest Dr. 444-7797 FURNISHED APARTMENTS ■ UNFURN. APARTMENTS SUMMER RATES Close to C a m p u s on S h u t t l e ■ I B R f r o m $ 2 2 5 & E t o $ 2 4 0 A E • 2 B R ( r o m $ 2 6 5 A E t o $ 2 9 5 A E ' A l l s m a l l c o m p l e x o . ' l a u n d r y r o o m . ' P o o l s F I < 11* 3 7 0 4 S p e e d w a y 4 5 9 - 0 2 6 7 H I I O R W M I 3 5 0 1 S p e e d w a y 4 7 2 - 4 8 9 3 F rn fetxio n a ly m a n a g ed by A m eric a n Real F atale CONTINENTAL APARTMENTS 910 E. 40 FALL Leasing NOW ! • 2 BR Furn • Water, & Gas $410 PAID • Shuttle Corner 451-7718 LAKE VIEW Apartments Available • Convenient for UT students • Easy access te IH35 • Lake views • Clese to restaurants, shopping • Built-in dresser/vanity • Carpeting w all to wall • W all to w all closets Summer leases AvaUabh 300 E. Riverside Dr. 444-3337 GU U ngvattr M anagement Co. With minimum three months at $49 per month. If you think it takes big bucks to furnish an apartment, come to GranTree Furniture Rental and think again. We’ll show you how to fill a four room apartment with some of the classiest furniture you ever laid eyes on. And do it for peanuts. Because you don’t buy this furniture. You rent it. And listen to this. From now until October 31,1982, with a three month minimum rental of $49 a month, we’ll knock $25 off your first month’s rent. Actually, with the rising cost of tuition and books, renting furniture is the only sensible way to go. And you won’t find a bigger selection, or more reasonable rates than at GranTree. But remember, this offer is good only until midnight, October 31, 1§82. GrañlreeiíÜi FURNITURE RENTAL [| lll costs enough already. 8965 Research Blvd. Austin, Texas 78758 (512) 837-7170 “Watch for our new showroom opening soon!” 1818 West Ben White Blvd. Stewart Plaza Shopping Center Austin, Texas 78704 (512) 441-9381 (No other offers apply.) B U D G E T R € N T S F U R N IT U R 6 SPECIAL! University of Texas Discount Furniture Packages FREE DELIVERY! $35.95 One Bedroom Package (living room, dining room, bedroom) 49.95 Two Bedroom Package 65.95 Three Bedroom Package 77.95 Four Bedroom Package Next Day Delivery Month-to-Month Rental N o Security Deposit Televisions Open 7 days! BUDGET RENTS FURNITURE, INC. 6015 Dillard Circle Austin. TX 78762 461-7551 (Off Airport Bfvd scross from Highland Mall) Page 18 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Thursday, August 12, 1982 FOR SALE FURNISHED APARTMENTS ■ FURNISHED APARTMENTS ■ FURNISHED APARTMENTS ■ UNFURN. APARTMENTS ROOM AND BOARD ROOMMATES F U R N I T U R E L IQ U ID A T IO N O U T O F B U S IN E S S STOCK F A C T O R Y CLO SE O U T M ust liq u id a te S50,000 of m erchandise. M any item s are 1 of a kind and prices m ay never be this low again. H u rry , best deals go firs t. SAVE 20%-60% 5 piece dining set-879.95 Sofa and chair-8149.95 4 d raw e r chest-S39.95 F u ll size m attress set-889.95 4 piece bedroom set-$169.95 Bed rails-$9.95 Complete bunk beds-S 179.95 Recliner-$99.95 Texas F u rn itu re O utlet 1006 S. Lam a r (L a m a r Plaza) Best P rice F u rn itu re 6535 N L am a r ------------ D IN IN G RO O M $79.95 B eautiful wood grained ta b le w ith 4 up­ holstered chairs. Tables have stain and heat resistan t tops. Best P rice F u rn itu re 6535 N. L am a r Texas F u rn itu re O utlet 1006 S. L am a r (L a m a r Plaza) A K A I • VCX 1 color cam era. Auto focus, auto zoom — $800. • VPS 7351-Dolby stereo VCR, 2-6 hour, fra m e , double freeze speed, playback — $950. SONY • HVC 2000 color cam era. 6-1, m otorized zoom, ele ctro n ic view fin d e r — $850. • HVC 2010 color cam era. 3-1 zoom, o p ti­ cal view fin d e r - $500. • SC 5600 VCR w ith Betascan, 2 week/4 event tim e r. — $600. • SL 5800 VCR same as 5600 plus slow m otion and freeze fra m e . — $770. • SL 5000 VCR w ith Betascan, fro n t loading, 24 hr. tim e r — $635. • AG 300 Betachanger fo r models 5600 and 5800 — $85. • Close out on all Sony color T .V .'s in stock. P I O N E E R • VP 1000 laser disc pla ye r w ith special effects and rem ote control — $525. JVC • GX 68 color cam era 6-1 zoom w ith electro n ic view fin de r. — $650. • GX 66 color cam era 6-1 zoom w ith ele ctro n ic v ie w fin d e r — $650. A U D IO V ID E O 459-1371 R O Y A L A D M IN IS T R A T O R se lf-corre ctin g fo r tw o m onths. 472-2114 e le c tric typ e w rite r, $199. Used ROOM AND BOARD 1 i-------------- ----------------- -— — FOR SALE X -F IR M M A T T R E S S S E T $89.95 in L im ite d qua n titie s, new fa c to ry w rapper. F u ll size X -firm m attress set. 2 piece set only $89.95, but h u rry. Texas F u rn itu re O utlet 1006 S. L am a r (L a m a r Plaza) Best P rice F u rn itu re 6535 N. L am a r USED F U R N IT U R E - warehouse fu ll. 10-6 M onday-S aturday. Sunday 1-6 The C ountry Junction, 11423 N. L am a r. One block north B ra k e r Lane. 836^647. stand, T E L E T Y P E W IT H ro lle rs, $150. Set barbells, new, 110 pound, $18. R e frig e ra to r, $200. 327-6445 lig h te d CONDOS FOR LEASE NEW L U X U R Y CONDO 4 BLOCKS TO CAMPUS L arg e bedroom w ith w alk-in firep lac e, w as h e r/ closets, d rye r, ideal fo r 2. $650/month. 264-1829 P E R F E C T FOR students! 5 blocks to UT cam pus. B rand new 2-1. F u rn itu re negotiable. $800 fo r 3 students, $875 fo r 4 Grace H a ll's, 472-7201. NEW L U X U R Y condo. 2-2, 1100 sq. ft M icrow a ve, Je n -A ire ceiling fans, fir e ­ place, parq u e t flo ors and carpets, w /d connections. E n fie ld on shuttle. A B P ex­ cept e le ctric. A v a ila b le August 15. $900/ month. Suuitable fo r 4 people. 258-3073. FOR R E N T or sale. E fficie n cy a pa rt- m ent/condo on Town Lake near M a gic Tim e M achine, shuttle. P e rfe ct fo r investor, student, or single In d ivid u al. $335/month or $34,000. Financing a v a il­ able. 327-3262. FURNISHED APARTMENTS T E L L U R ID E A P A R TM E N TS 1 BR and IB R 's w ith lofts in a quiet com ­ plex in Hyde P a rk. A ll apa rtm e n ts are a ttra c tiv e ly furnished and have com ­ plete kitchens. IB R 's re nt fo r $310 plus E. L o ft a p a rtm e n ts re nt fo r $355 plus E. Come by 4100 Ave. C o r ca ll Hugh, 459- 9592 OLD M A IN A p a rtm e nts, 25th and Pearl. 1BR, efficien cie s. Four blocks UT, shut- tle, pool. 476-5109_____________________ F A L L A N D A ugust to campus. Larg e efficiencies, 2BR-2BA e f­ ficiencies. Shuttle and c ity bus, pool, furnished o r u nfurnished. 472-2147. leasing. W alk ROOM AND BOARD 2026 Guadalupe 476-0669 Small, Quiet - All Women Double A Single Rooms Available for Summer and Fall Summer Rates Double Single Per Session $325 $465 15 moah included FREE Private Parking BEST MEAL P L A N ON CAMPUS!! Sw im m ing p o o l Maid service S ecu rity HBO & Cable available 2 & 3 B edroom Suites Walking distance A m ple parking Full m eal plan L aundry room s U.T. S h u ttle ROOMS ROOMS 1 MMtIn, l«m 7>7QS 474-SSOS NOW LEASING FOR FALL * Double Occupancy *210/m on th Co-ed dorm across the street from campus at 27th St. Efficiently furnished including a refrigerator in each room. Student-priced restaurant located in building. Sun deck, study room, recreational room, wide-screen T.V., laundry room. 24-hour security. 1 B E D R O O M $289 Close to cam pus and shuttle, b e a u tifu lly paneled, carpeted and draped. B u ilt-in bookshelves, large bedroom w ith w alk- in closet. C A/C H, w a te r and gas paid. 4307 Ave. A. 459-1571. Central Properties, Inc. ___________451-6533___________ 1 Bedroom $299 In Hyde P a rk on shuttle. L arg e pool, fu l­ ly carpeted and draped. L arg e bedroom w ith w alk-in closet. B u ilt-In kitchen, CA/C H, w a te r paid. 4209 Speedway, 458- 2367. Central Properties, Inc. 451-6533 ALL BILLS PA ID E F F IC IE N C IE S $306 In Hyde P ark, close to cam pus and shut­ tle. Pool, fu lly carpeted and draped, b e a u tifu lly paneled. A ll b u ilt-in kitchen, C A/C H . 4000 Ave. A, 458-4511 C entral Properties, Inc. 451-6533 1 B E D R O O M $270 V e ry close to cam pus and shuttle, sm all, quiet com plex. L a rg e bedroom w ith queen size bed and w a lk-in closet. B u ilt- in kitchen, C A/C H , w a te r paid. 202 E. 32nd, 474-4518. C entral P roperties, Inc. 451-6533 E F F IC IE N C Y & 1 BED RO O M $270-5306 Close to campus and shuttle, pool, fu lly paneled, carpeted and draped. A ll b u ilt- in kitchen, C A/C H, large bedroom w ith w alk-in closet. W ater and gas paid. 4200 Ave. A, 451-6966. C entral Properties, Inc. 451-6533 B EE H I V E A P A R T M E N T 4209 Ave. B Large, w ell lit e ffic ie n c y near UT and shuttle. D ishw asher and w alk in closet. Some w ith p riv a te patio. $265 plus E. 451-5586 453-0298 Q U IE T E F F IC IE N C Y $235-245 plus E. We are looking fo r quiet, conscientious, non-sm oking students in ­ terested in a larg e e fficie n cy. 1 ye ar lease, sm all quiet com plex near shuttle. C A/C H , laundry, dead bolts. No pets. SPANISH TRAILS LEA SING FOR FA LL 1 and 2B R. Shuttle bus, pool, to Hancock laundry. W a lk Center. 458-2488 4520 Bennett 459-1948 $200 Plus E L arg e efficiency. Student spe­ c ial. G illis P a rk A p artm en ts, 2523 Durwood near W . O lto rf & S. 1st. 444-6440. E F F IC IE N C IE S $306 ALL BILLS PA ID Close to campus and shuttle, pool, pan­ eled, and draped. A ll b u ilt-in kitchen, C A/C H . 4206 Ave. A, 451-6966. Central Properties, Inc. 451-6533 1BR H Y D E PAR K, new carpet, ceiling fans, pool. $295 plus E. Call 451-9444. F A L L L E A S IN G . 2800 Rio Grande. 1 BR $260, e fficie n cy $240. Close to campus. 477-6560._____________________________ F A L L L E A S IN G . Brownlee efficiencies, 2502 Nueces. $220 ABP. 478-1532. V IE W P O IN T A P A R T M E N T S , 2518 Leon. L a rg e efficiencies, $275-$285 plus E. Pool and lau n d ry, ciose to shuttle. Call 476-7205. M a na g e r A p a rtm e n t 119. LAR G E E F F IC IE N C Y ! A ll b ills paid. $195. Call now. Home Finders, 1912 W. Anderson Lane. 454-4684. Fee. (ZX4) 302 W. 38th. V arious sizes availa ble . 1 block shuttle. O w ner pays gas heating and cooking. F u rn ish e d /u nfu rn ish ed . Pool, a ll appliances. 453-4002. N ICE 1 bedroom old e r style. Roomy. $450.1902 Nueces. 480-9461. E FF 'S . C L A R K S V IL L E area. $275, all bills paid. 808 W in flo. Call 480-9732. FOR RENT FOR RENT b i r d 'SPECIAL 3 • R O O M a P A C K N E W V • Hi-style sofa and chair in the living- room plus three tables and two lamps. N E W • Chrome and glass dinette for the dining room. C O N T E M P O R A R Y • Double dresser, m irrornight- table, head board and a full-size box spring and mattress plus an extra lamp for the bedroom... A L L F O R ... 95 9 s0 2 LOCATIONS 11421 NORTH LAMAR 2108 W ANDERSON LANE Phone 836-6801 452-5055 edT T ark FURNITURE INC No Security D eposit with copy o f this ad. SERVICES SERVICES FILM PROCESSING SALE 24 exp, dev and print $ 4 .9 0 36 exp, dev and print 6 .6 0 at the Texas Union Film Service in the Texas Union Information Lobby. 471- 4114. M-F 10:45-3:30 p.m. Please present coupon. One coupon per per­ son. No other discounts apply. V a l i d t h r o u g h A u g 3 0 , 1 9 8 2 UT CLOSE. L arg e 2-2. W asher, d ry e r, only $425. R ental-A id, 476-4684. 3004 G ua­ dalupe. Fee. Open ve ry day. (T E X 5) to ex- F E M A L E S TU D E N T w anted change fre e room fo r some ch ild care. M ust have ca r. C all 345-6490 a fte r 5. L A R G E 1BR a p a rtm e n t in UT area. Pool, lau n d ry, room , w a lk -ln closet. IF shuttle. S325/month plus E. 415 W. 39th. 453-8)48. W A R W IC K APTS. Pool, ce ilin g fans’ DW 's, disposals, new ca rpe t. W a lk to WC, campus. 1 B R 's ($325 plus E ), e ffi­ ciencies ($235 plus E ) fo r AUGUST, F A L L . 2907 West Ave. 477-1630. NON-SMOKERS O N LY . E fficie n cie s, $240 plus ele ctric, $150 deposit. Sm all, q uiet com plex, convenient to Hancock Center, golf course, jogging path, c ity and UT bus routes. No pets. C all T e rry . 451-6380.______________________________ 1 BEDROOMS. Quiet, pool, cable, laun­ d ry. W alk shuttle, UT. $280 plus E 473- 2592 a fte r 1 p.m. N EAR U N IV E R S IT Y . 1BR, AC, pool, laundry, vaulted ceilings, $285-305 plus E. 1007 W. 26th. M g r. No. 207. 477-2696, 327-2740. FU R N IS H E D E F F IC IE N C IE S . 45th St. near shuttle Cable and gas paid. Washer and d rye r. $240 plus E. 4415 Ave. B. 458-9929 a fte r 6 p.m. U T CLOSE. 1BR, $225. Gas, w a te r paid. R ental-Aid, 476-4684 . 3004 Guadalupe. Fee. Open ve ry day. (T E X 4) UT W A LK . 2BR $290 ABP. M a ny UT rentals. A ustin Home Rentals. 3709 N. IH 35. 476-8056. Fee (TX10) LA R G E 2BR 1BA, w a lkin g distance to cam pus. G irls only. 478-9891. N EAR CAMPUS, on shuttle. E ffic ie n c y $195-215 plus E. 1 bedroom $240-260 plus E 451-8532, 442-4076. N O R TH EAST E F F IC IE N C Y . V e ry p ri- vate and quie t neighborhood. Furnished, a ll u tilitie s paid. S w im m in g pool p r iv i­ leges. $225/month, $100 deposit. 928-2088 o r 444-2621 ext. 281.____________________ W A L K UT. CA/CH, appliances, c a rp e t­ ed, a ll b ills paid. $245. Hom e F in de rs - 1912 W. A n d e rso n -454-4684 -F e e . (U T-1) A V A IL A B L E FOR Septem ber. Large 1BR a pa rtm e n t. 2nd stop on shuttle. Saxony Apartm ents, 1616 Royal Crest D r __________________________________ N E E D TO sublease a b e a u tifu l a p a rt­ m ent at Tri-Tow ers, im m e d ia te ly fo r next year. Large suite w ith kitchen and liv in g room . Ask fo r Shannon 473-8501 fo r info, or an appointm ent. L A R G E 1BR a p a rtm e n t in UT area. Pool, lau n d ry room, w a lk-ln closet. IF shuttle. $325/month plus E. 415 W. 39th. 453-8148. Q U IE T E F F IC IE N C IE S in a residential neighborhood. W alk to shuttle. Sum m er and fa ll leases. Call 474-9052, 346-7231. 1115 W. 9th St.________________________ SPACIOUS 1BR T a rryto w n . Pool, laun­ d ry, shuttle. $360 ABP. 2606 E n fie ld . 474- 5930. LA R G E 1-1 availa ble now. Option fo r fa ll. $290 plus E. One block law school, L B J, shuttle. A fte r 5 p.m . 476-7951. C H E A P R E N T . Sm all e fficie n cy in o ld­ er com plex. Near shuttle. $100. 451-8122. W est W orld Real Estate. 1BR F U L L Y furnished; gas, w a te r and cable paid; CA/CH, pool and laundry. W ith in tw o blocks of shuttle and c ity bus. E xce lle n t location a t 45th and Du­ val. Ideal fo r students. Spanish Oaks A p a rtm e nts, 447-9845 days, 467-0698 evenings and weekends. N E A R CAM PUS. F re sh ly painted and carpeted. Share shower w ith m ale g ra d ­ uate. Lease. $190 ABP. A ppointm ent, 926-7243. WE H A V E a few of the nicest e fficie n cy a p a rtm e n ts near the UT cam pus s till a v a ila b le fo r the fa ll. M a ny built-ins, fa n cy kitchens, carpeted, C A /C H . $375- $435/m onth. Howell P roperties, 477-9925. A V A IL A B L E IM M E D IA T E L Y . Large clean e fficien cy. A ll b u ilt in appliances. C A /C H ; TV, gas, w ater paid. V e ry near dow ntow n a t 1115 W. 10th. See m anager No. 204 or c a ll 477-3461. No pets. U N E X P E C T E D VAC ANC Y, 1211 W T Ith St. E ffic ie n c y . $215. Shuttle bus W ater, gas, cable paid. F u ll kitchen. L au n d ry. 474-1107.______________________________ S M A L L E F F IC IE N C Y detached fro m fro n t house. N ear shuttle. Appliances. $205 plus u tilitie s . 451-8122. West W orld Real Estate. L A R G E 1BR w ith study $290 plus E. W e're looking fo r a quiet, conscientious, non-sm oking in d ivid u a l o r couple In te r­ ested in a sm a ll com plex near N orth- cross. P riv a te patio, fu lly carpeted, draped, C A /C H , laundry, dead bolts. No pets. 458-2488. UNFURNISHED HOUSES A V A IL A B L E NOW tw o and three bed­ room old e r homes, apa rtm e n ts. Call now fo r 24 hour in fo rm a tio n . 452-5979. S E P T E M B E R 1ST. 3BR, appliances, fenced ya rd . R ental-Aid. 476-4684, 3004 Guadalupe. Fee. Open e very day. (D T- 4) NORTH CAMPUS, 2BR $325! O ver 500 properties A u stin Home Rentals, 3709 N. IH 35. 476-8056. Fee (TX -2)._________ 1BR UT $ 220/m onth! A p p lia n ce s, fenced, shuttle. A ustin Home Rentals, 3709 N. IH 35. 476-8056. Fee (TX -1). NORTH UT. V e ry nice 3BR-2BA. C A / CH, q uie t neighborhood. Shuttle. A p p li­ ances, w asher and d ry e r. No pets. $540. 452-4330. Afternoons and nights. FO R M E R F R A T E R N IT Y HOUSE, 6-3, fire pla ce , hardw ood floors, C A/C H , lo­ cated across fro m law school/physics at 608 P a rk Place. $1400/monthly, $1000 de- posit. 441-8379, 441-2594.________________ UT 3BR, $450!’ Over 600 rentals. A ustin Home Rentals, 3709 N. IH 35. Fee (T X 9 ) NORTH U .T. V e ry nice 3BR-2BA. C A / CH. Q uiet neighborhood. Larg e kitchen. Shady ya rd . No pets. $540. 452-4330. A f­ ternoons/nights. 5BR 2BA. M ost desireable home. UT, quiet, Serious students. Lease, $1500. 478-1078. 6BR 3 B A . S T U D E N T S P E C IA L ! furnished. R ental-Aid, W a s h e r/d ry e r 3004 Guadalupe, 476-4684. Open every day. Fee. (TX-20) A V A IL A B L E S E P T E M B E R 1st. On shuttle, 305 W. 55th, 2-1. $325. T ra vis Heights on Stacy P ark. 601 E. L ive Oak, 3-1, $450. D rive by. Call evenings 476- 3838 H YD E PAR K 1-1. AC, appliances, car- pet, $325 plus u tilitie s . 451-8122. West W orld Real Estate. H YD E PA R K . 4610 Ave. B. 2-1, »/a block shuttle. $375/month. A va ila b le August 16. 452-4421 m ornings. FURNISHED HOUSES UT C O TTAG E. 1 BR, AC, appliances. Only $220. R ental-Aid, 476-4684 . 3004 Guadalupe. Fee. Open ve ry day. (T E X 2 ) 1BR F U R N IS H E D cottage. A ir, a p p li­ ances, only $220 Home Finders -1912 W. Anderson Ln. - 454-4684 - Fee. (UT-2) NOW A C C E P T IN G in d ivid u a l and group applicatio n s fro m women fo r gracious liv in g in TH E SPRUCE HOUSE. This lovely 2 sto ry home west of the UT ca m ­ pus w ith b e a u tifu l grounds and am ple parkin g accom m odates 12 women. $250/ month per person. ABP. H ow ell P ro p e r­ ties, 477-9925, or M rs. Behne, 345-2099. 2BR F U R N IS H E D house. $448 plus u tili- ties. Just north UT. No pets. References. 478-5850. UNFURNISHED DUPLEXES S U M M ER O N L Y Gorgeous, spacious duplex w ith bay w indow and nice yard to sublease Off 38V2 . 2-1. $375. A va ila b le June 1. 454-2835. UT CLOSE 2BR, 2BA. AC, appliances. $350. R ental-A id, 476-4684 . 3004 G uada­ lupe. Fee. Open e very day. ( DT-9) M A R K T W A IN . F a ll leasing, w a lk to cam pus. M odern, sm all, q uie t com plex, f a c ilitie s . $320. 451-8122. la u n d r y W estw orld Real Estate. NE L A R G E 2-2. Fireplace, vaulted c e il­ fu lly carpeted, a ll appliances, ings, If beep, fenced ya rd. $370. 479-8100. leave name, num ber. UNFURN. APARTMENTS HEADACHES from Moving? call MIKE S MOVING Hauling A Delivery 479-8939 Reasonable Rates Quick, Careful, A Courteous S U M M E R C R E E K V IL L A S NO W L E A S IN G F ro m $550. O nly m inutes fro m dow n­ tow n N ear S. L a m a r and Del C urto. C o n d o m in iu m concept. Lan d sca pe d Pool, tw o m a ste r suites in e very home. P e rfe ct fo r room m ates. F ire p la ce , m i­ crow aves, and closets. F o r in fo rm a tio n ca ll Stevie, 478-8369. K rassoff B uilders. C E N T R A L L Y LO C ATED N EW L U X U ­ RY C O N D O M IN IU M S N E A R H A N ­ COCK C E N T E R - 1-1, appliances, C A/ CH, W /D connections, carpet, fire p la ce , larg e trees. Adequate storage. $295. 345- 9643. LE A S E OR purchase o p p o rtu n ity. 2-2. $325 plus e le c tric . 458-1847 or 459-4936. P R E L E A S IN G FOR fa ll — e fficien cie s $200 plus E. 1 Bedroom $250 plus E. 5101 E vans. 459-7785, m gr. The E llio tt Sys­ te m . W A L K UT. AC. $195. Gas, w a te r paid. R en ta i-A id, 476-4684 . 3004 G uadalupe. Fee. Open ve ry day. (T E X 3) E N F IE L D A R E A . No pets. $300.’ 1 bed- room a v a ila b le Septem ber 1. In q u ire at 1301 E xp o sitio n , A pt. B. c e ilin g s , AN TO N H E IG H TS townhouse studio. 2- 2Vi, fire p la ce , ce iling fan, C A /C H , v a u lt­ in ed porches, tw o blocks fro m Town Lake at 708 S. 1st. $450-$475 plus u tilitie s . Call 453-4784. Leave message fo r a p p o in t­ m ent. balconies, fenced SPACIOUS E F F IC IE N C IE S a n d T b e c T room s conve n ien tly located near shuttle in nice com plex 451-4206, 442-4076. E X T R A " N IC E IBR s, $245-250 plus e " C onveniently located in q u ie t com plex near shuttle and shopping. 441-8365, 442- 4076. E N F I E L D G AR AG E apartmentTTBR^ appliances, hardwoods. H u rry ! Home F in d e rs -1912 W. Anderson Ln. - 454-4684 -F e e . (U T-3)_________________________ A V A IL A B L E FOR Septem ber. L arg e 1BR a p a rtm e n t. 2nd stop on shuttle. Saxony A p a rtm e nts, 1616 Royal C rest D r ___________________________________ N E A R LAW School on shuttle. Larg e 1BR in sm a ll quie t com plex. P releasing to r Septem ber 1. 442-4076, 474-1240. O L D C A S TLE H ill Condos. 1113 W. 10th. E ffic ie n c y , a ll appliances. Sayers and Assoc. Inc. 478-9991. IF S H U T T L E . Brownstone P a rk, 51st and N. L a m a r. 2BR a p a rtm e n ts in p a rk setting. $370. Septem ber 1 m ove-in. 454- 3496 SPACIOUS 1 and 2BR T a rry to w n , pool, lau n d ry, shuttle. 2-1 $500 A B P ; 1BR $360 A B P . 2606 E n fie ld . 474-5930. 2-1, 12 ft. ceilings, new hardwood floors, g ia n t frees, $295/month. 2023A E. 1st 443-3401. LAW SCHOOL - G ia n t 2-1 w ith bonus rooms d ire c tly across new law lib ra ry at 610 P a rk Place. $750 m o nth ly, $500 de­ posit. 441-8379, 441-2594. TR A V IS H E IG H TS . 1BR $’Í85. Gas, wa~ te r paid. R ental-A id, 476-4684. 3004 Gua- dalupe. Fee. Open ve ry day. (T E X 1) 2BR 2BA~$350! 1BR $185. A ustin Home Rentals. 3709 N. IH 35. Fee (T X 8) H ARDW O OD FLOORS. N ew ly re m od ­ eled 1BR duplex w ith hardw ood floors, lots of w indows, quie t atm osphere. $250- $265. C onveniently located o ff O lto rf a t 2606 W ilson. C all 443-8366. E N F IE L D 2-1, C A /C H , hardwood floors, a v a ila b le im m e d ia te ly . $449/month. 479- 6571. W A L K U 7\ 3BR, appliances, AC, o nly $375. R ental-A id. 3004 G uadalupe, 476- 4684 Open e ve ry day. Fee. (TX-21) ROOMS CO-ED D O R M 1 block fro m cam pus. P riv a te and shared rooms a va ila b le fo r sum m er & fo r fa ll. 474-6905. ROOM A N D bath, p riv a te entrance. Q uiet neighborhood near u n iv e rs ity . ABP. 478-8850 a fte r 6:30 p.m . P R IV A T E F U R N IS H E D room s co-ed house near UT. K itchen privileg e s, u tili­ ties paid. F a ll ra te s: $155-200. Call 477- 1529. NE U N F U R N IS H E D . C lty/C R shuttles. NW F U R N IS H E D B E A U T IF U L L Y . TV, k itc h e n /p a tio p rivile g e s. No drugs, smokes, pets, w aterbeds. 346-4513. ROOM FOR rent, good neighborhood, $200/month. A B P . 451-4693. F U R N IS H E D ROOM, $200 m onth. 11x11 w /d ou b le bed, n ightstand and desk. larg e house w /couple. 5014 W. Share P a rk (about th re e m ile s fro m cam pus). Nonsm okers, graduates p re fe rre d . D a­ vid o r C indy, 454-2368. F U R N IS H E D ROOMS "and efficien cie s near UT cam pus. $160-$260 AB P . 480- 0766, 459-0156. furn ish e d W A L K TO cam pus. Larg e room , shared bath, u tilitie s paid. $130. 451-8122. W e stw orld Real Estate. WE H A V E a few p riv a te room s fo r men in two excelle nt areas and sh ort w a lk fro m the UT cam pus. C A/C H , carpeted, ABP. $185, $190, $215/month, depending on location. H ow ell P roperties, 477-9925. ROOM A V A IL A B L E , N orth A u stin con­ do. $145 plus b ills. Fem ale nonsm okers only. 836-3507. D O B IE SID E suite, 19 meal plan, new reduced rates fo r 82-83 school ye ar plus Va o ff deposit fo r a to ta l savings of $515. Call K ris ti a t 474-0901. FURNISHED DUPLEXES 2BR $275, g a s /w a te r paid ! G uaranteed, o ver 500 properties. A ustin Hom e Rent- als, 3709 N. IH 35, 476-8056. Fee. (TX -4) 2 ROOM fu rn ish e d duplex. Six blocks n orth UT. $240 plus u tilitie s . No pets. References 478-5850. F A L L HOUSING A PR O B LEM ? D on't settle fo r your a un t's spare bed­ room . T ry co-op liv in g and dining. Col­ lege Houses Co-ops o ffe r single or dou­ ble rooms, 19 home-cooked m eals a week, extensive educational and social program s, and a w hole houseful of frie n d s together. C ontrol yo ur own life. liv in g and w o rkin g GO CO-OP! C all 476-5678 fo r Info rm a tio n. W OM EN A R E ASSETS TO CO-OPS The ICC co-ops a re looking fo r s few good people to f ill su m m er and fa ll va­ cancies. Rates s ta rt as low as $183. Please c a ll us at 476-1957. SA N D IA COOP: B e a u tifu l 9BR house near east cam pus; sem l-vegetarlan, seeking m a tu re m ale s/fe m a le s. 473- 8513, 472-6091, 474-1397. CO-ED DORM tw o blocks fro m campus. 2 and 3BR suites a v a ila b le . F u ll m aid service, se curity, s w im m in g pools. 478- 9891. F R E E ROOM and board in Round Rock to a m a tu re fe m a le nonsm oker fo r lig h t duties such as occasio n ally tra n sp o rtin g m ild ly handicapped young adult. Day, 836-3523; night, 837-5795. DEUTSCHES HAUS, 2103 Nueces, has fa ll vacancies fo r fe m a le G erm an and Spanish speakers. Come by fo r dinner at 6:00 or Call 477-8865. ROOMMATES A 473-2800 Start here... \ / R oom m ate y je tw o m / You won’t be sorry ^ Good for Fall A Spring Semesters 2813 Rio Grande So. 206 j Thank you Austin for our 3rd year \ / C f $ eg R IG H T M A T E ROOMMATE FIN D IN G SERVICE $25 CALL FO R APPT. 302 W 15 473-6851 Solve your Roommate Problemg today with ROOMMATE CONNECTION • Fast • folia bi* • Guaranteed 836-7756 L IB E R A L H E A L T H conscious in d iv id u ­ al share 2-2 N orth A ustin. G ra d u a te /u p ­ perclassm an, $180 plus to. M ike, 467- 8578. N E A T H O U S E M A T E w a n te d fo r C la rk s v ille 3-1 on M.S. M u st have Jacuz­ zi, sailboat and tru s t fund. 474-0159. F E M A L E R O O M M A T E w anted to share large 1BR a p a rtm e n t. $150 plus to u t ili­ ties. Single bed only fu rn itu re needed. 459-4454. N E E D E D : M A T U R E , dependable w om ­ an, em ployed or student, to share quiet, co m fo rta b le home w ith active, a le rt eld ­ e rly lady. 327-0086. R E S P O N S IB L E , M A T U R E fe m a le ro om m a te to share g re a t 3/2 house In T a rry to w n . $200 and b ills. 472-3209. F E M A L E R O O M M AT E sta rtin g end August. Large, luxu riou s, 1BR, 1BA con­ do m in iu m located a t 2404 Longview . West Cam pus shuttle, six blocks fro m cam pus. Pool, to b ills. 345-6936 or 477-2195._______________ __ la u n d ry. $220, T H R E E G IR LS need one g ir l room m ate to share larg e 2BR 2BA, w a lkin g dis­ tance to cam pus. 478-9891. F E M A L E R O O M M A T E needed"for fa ll In nice 2BR apt. C all J u lia a t 478-8744 a nytim e . C H R IS T IA N R O O M M ATE needed.” ^ sponsible, conscientious, studious and clean. M a le ro om m a te needed to live in a 4BR, 3BA b e a u tifu lly furn ish e d house w ith o ther U T A u stin students. A ll u tili­ ties paid. CR sh uttle . Call co lle ct 575- 8514. 2 N O N SM O KIN G fem ales to share 2BR 2BA condo m iniu m on CR shuttle. Secur­ ity, pool, hot tub, m icrow a ve, a ll b ills paid. $225/month. C all 473-2089 a nytim e . M A T U R E , N O N SM O KIN G lady (p re fe r- a b ly law student) w anted to share hous­ ing on sh uttle w ith mid-20s m ale fo r fa ll, possibly spring. A ll conveniences, ve ry reasonable. " M " 480-8529. H O U S E M A TE W A N T E D . Gay m a le /lib - eral fem ale to share 4-2. Studious grad o r upperclassm an p re fe rre d . $150 plus Va. N ear school. Sm okers w elcome. 480- 9447._________________________________ N E E D F E M A L E g ra d u a te student. Q ui­ et, ve ry pleasant surroundings, shuttle bus. 441-0822. M A L E R O O M M A T E . W alk UT, m odern 3-story duplex, p riv a te , w a s h e r/d ry e r. $200 plus b ills. C all 8-10 p.m . 472-9182. R O O M M A T E (S ) W A N T E D : To Share 3- 2 duplex in S. A u stin . P re fe r nonsm ok­ ing m ale stu d e nt(s) o ver 21. $200 plus to b ills o r $130 plus to b ills . A va ila b le Aug. 30th. 442-3837 a fte r 5 p.m . Bruce._______ F E M A L E . F A L L te rm , conservative nonsm oker. Share 2-2 fu rn ish e d m obile home. L u x u ry p ark, N orth A ustin. $165 plus to b ills. 837-6403. R E S P O N S IB LE , C LE A N , quiet M /F share 2-1 home. $165 plus to b ills, 10 m ins. cam pus. Im m e d ia te occupancy. 473-2361 6-10 p.m .______________________ SE M I STUDIOUS m a le ro om m a te need­ ed fo r larg e p a rtly tu rn . 2-1, fire pla ce , balcony, c e n tra lly located. A va ila b le 8- 22. 8180/month plus deposit. R ick 473- 2447, leave message. N O N SM O KIN G F E M A L E to share nice house. P re fe r g rad o r w o rkin g person. Renee: 445-1289; 477-1484 (evenings) HELP WANTED HELP WANTED HELP WANTED HELP WANTED Now leasing for fall! • Swimming pool • Courtyard • TV lounge W alking distance to shuttle • Study room . Parking available Enjoy the non-regim ented lifestyle a t Plaza 25 412-0100 P ro fe ssio n a lly m anaged by G illin g w a te r M anagem ent Company 2505 Longview WANTID COOKS and DELIVERY PERSONS NOW Cooks can start at $3.50 per hr. and drivers can make $6-$7 per hr. gross with tips, mileage and bonus using your own car. Apply at 404 W. 26th from 9 a.m.-9 p.m. oz /a E. (214 ) 349-2459. HELP W A NTED J U A N G O L D S T E I N ' S C A V I A R BAR is now accepting applicatio n s fo r p art tim e help as co ckta il persons, b arten­ ders, kitchen persons. No calls. 404 E. 6th P H O T O G R A P H E R S N E E D A F A L L JO B ? Photo-Tech is now accepting applications for candid party photographers. Must have 35mm SLR, be clean cut and personable. Call from 10-5: 474-4879. M E N T A L H E A L TH W ORKERS W IT H SIGN LAN G U AG E SKILLS The Ranch Treatm ent Center of the Brown Schools has immediate openings for mental health workers with ASL skills. Variable shifts available, excel­ lent benefits. Apply in person, 1106 Ditt- m ar. ' EOE T E M P O R A R Y F A L L JOBS C O M M EN C IN G AUGUST 22 University Refrigerators needs students for order taking, delivery, and clerical jobs for about two weeks, 8 a .m .-8 p.m. Work your own schedule - full or part time 7 days per week. M inim um $4/ hour. Call 478-9000 for appointment. Ask for M r. Wells. B A R T E N D E R N E E D E D ( P A R T T I M E ) 1 Y E A R E X P E R I E N C E Good starting pay for person­ individual. able/dependable in person at Barton Apply Springs Country Club. B U D G E T RENT-A-CAR Now has the following positions open: • Full tim e counter agent/receptionist to work M -F 4 p.m.-midnight. • P art tim e counter agent/receptionist for weekend work. Apply In person 3330 Manor Rodd or call 478-6437 for more information. Permanent evening positions available in a fast paced fam i­ ly restaurant. Ideal for stu­ dent schedules. Cashier and hostperson. T errific work en­ in person vironment. Apply only between 5-6 p.m. 4705 E. Ben White Blvd. C A T F IS H P A R L O R ________S O U T H __________ PAR T T IM E $4-$6/HOUR Start im mediately. Pleasant, indoors, any schedule, cool, easy. Apply after 1:00 pm, 600 W. 28th St. Suite 107. Bean's Restaurant and Bar is looking for neat, friendly bar­ tenders. Must be experienced with references. Apply be­ tween 2-4 p.m. M -F . N O C A L L S 311 W. 6th Bean's Restaurant and Bar is looking for dependable experi­ enced line cooks. Must have references. Apply between 2-4 M -F . N O C A L L S 311 W. 6th W AITPER SO N S Bean's Restaurant and Bar is now tak­ ing applications for experienced walt- people. Only dynamic energlc people need to apply. Appointments made be­ tween 2-4 M -F. NO CALLS 311 W. 6th HELP W ANTED SPANISH TEA C H ER for private school, teaching classes K-6, 3 sessions weekly. Graduate students. 327-0369. D AYC A RE TEA C HER S for afternoons, 5 days/week, 3-6 and 2-6 to organize and execute activities. Starting August 23 P a rt tim e. 327-0369. ” STUDENTS A L T E R N A T IV E to paying rent is working 15-20 hours per week Call 472-8626. S TU D E N T FOR after school care of two independent children (7 and 10). 3-5:30, 3x / week. Some light housework. $3/ hour. 476-1568 evenings. RESPO N SIB LE M A T U R E IndlviduaTlo care for infant In my home part time. 327-0210 or 327-0523. W A N T E D . RESPONSIBLE, enthuslas- tic wait people. Will train. All shifts. Dining room/banquets. Apply Bradford Hotel, 7th and Congress. SAN DW IC H P R EP fo r fa ll semester. F u ll o r p a rt tim e . M u st be fre e fro m 10am-3pm d ally. M in im u m . A p p ly in person, Posse East, 2900 D uval RAM ADA INN Capitol has Im m ediate opening fo r short order cook. 4-10 pm 5 nig h ts/w e e k. E xce lle n t pay. A p p ly In person, 300 E. 11th St. N E E D E D - LIQUOR store cle rk p a rt tim e. College students prefe rre d . No ex­ perience necessary. Hours, 3pm-9pm Call 452-8861. E X C L U S IV E FITN ESS center in West­ lake H ills needs dependable person to operate sandw ich bar evenings and Sat- urdays. C all Kay, 10-3, 327-4881. PA R T T IM E evening w ork and Satur­ day m ornings. E arn up to $5/hour or m ore. Easy office w ork. Students w el­ come. No dress code. A p p ly 7113 Burnet Road Suite R110, or c a ll 454-8501. PA R T T IM E re nta l agent needed, 20-25 h ours/w eek. 2-3 evenings and Saturday or Sunday. A irw a ys Rent-A-Car, 476- 3519.___________________ N E E D E D : P E R M A N E N T p a rt tim e cle rk. M ust be a vaila ble evenings and weekends. E xperience p referred. Apply at Tom Thum b, 7101 N. L am a r. F U L L T IM E counter person nights and weekends. M u st be experienced. A pply in person. A irp o rt A uto Supply, 4803 A ir ­ p ort Blvd. E X P E R IE N C E D M A IN T E N A N C E per- son fo r ch ild re n 's home. H eavy clean­ ing, lig h t ca rp e n try. 20 hours/week, m ornings. $3.65/hour. A p p ly at 3804 Ave. B 9-5 M o n d a y-F rid a y. FAST G R OW IN G h e a lth /n u tritio n com ­ pany expanding a ll areas. Top position, high earnings. Call Sandra, 789-6215. BAN ANAS A N D The Red Tom ato res­ ta u ra n ts are accepting a pplications fo r all positions, e specially cooks. M ust be able to w o rk some lunch and some d in­ ner shifts. A p p ly in person between 4:30- 5:3 0 p.m ., 1601 Guadalupe C ASH IER A N D hostperson, restaurant, A M /P M shifts. A p p ly personnel, The B ra dfo rd H otel, 7th and Congress. B A R T E N D E R AN D w aitperson p art tim e . M u st be a vaila ble both 3:30 and 8:30 sh ifts and weekends as needed. W ant a guy and gal to serve A ustin 's fin ­ est beer clientele. A p p ly between 3:30- 6:30, The D ra u g h t House, 4112 M edical P a rkw a y. PAR T T IM E d e liv e ry help fo r UT area. A pply in person. Eldon Powell F lo rist. 2001 Guadalupe. PA R T T IM E office cle rk. Beginning 4:30 each afternoon M o n d a y-F rid a y for about three hours/day. J im Forbis, 472- 2681. PAR T T IM E help w anted fo r reception­ ist position at fitness center. M ust be f i t ­ ness oriented. Call Nancy at 327-4881. T E L E P H O N E SALES openings. F le x i­ ble hours. Call R ick at 478-4732. L O V IN G A N D re lia b le s itte r needed fo r afternoon care of m y 4 year old son in m y West A u stin home. M ust have re fe r­ ences and own tra n sp o rta tio n . Call 451- 6971 a fte r 5 p.m. IM M E DI ATE OPEN IN G T l a lad" prep persons and clean-up. M u st be depend­ able, able to m eet people, and w o rk in­ dependently. A p p ly In person, Green- Goes Salad Bar, 17th and San Jacinto. fo r single L IV E -IN H O U S E K E E P E R m an; no ch ild re n ; lig h t cleaning, lim it­ ed cooking, iro n in g and personal e r­ ra nd s; hours e xtre m e ly fle xib le . Room and board. E xce lle n t fo r student. Mo- Pac and 2222 area. 473-4477 (days), 453- 7857 (evenings). PAR T T IM E housekeeper fo r U n ive rsi­ ty re n ta l p rop e rty. Call 477-1529. S E C R E T A R y T AFTER N O O N S M , W," Th, F. Good c le ric a l skills, typ in g 60 w pm , S4/hour. Z ilk e r P a rk area. 444- 9192,_________________________________ M IK E A N D C h a rlie 's needs lunchtim e w aitperson. A p p ly in person 2:30-5 p.m. 1206 W. 34th. NOW H IR IN G experienced line cooks. A M and P M shifts. A p p ly between 2 p.m. and 4 p.m . Tu e sd ay-F rid a y at 2912 Guadalupe. M u st have good w ork expe­ rience. NOW H IR IN G d rive rs. M u st have own insurance. A p p ly 616 E. O lto rf a fte r 4 p.m . T u ck's Pizza, 442-1492. CHEZ F R E D II now h irin g experienced bakers. Good pay, hard w ork and good w orkin g conditions. Call fo r an app o int­ m ent, 346-7060. We w ill be baking E u ro ­ pean breads and pastries. A p pointm ent set between 2-4 p.m. th is F rid a y and n ext week M o nd a y, T uesday and Wednesday. R E S PO N SIBLE PERSON w ith trans- p o rta tion needed to take care of boys (8 and 11) a fte r school and occasional evenings. Live -in situation is a possib ili­ ty. References required. West Austin. Call 474-4695 a fte r 6. D E L IV E R Y ^ sT I n -HOUSE w ork fo r fa ll semester. F u ll tim e days. Service Typesetters, 322 E. 5th, 478-8300. FOR RENT FOR L E A S E : sm all cottage near South Congress and M onroe. Carpet, AC, re ­ frig e ra to r, gas range, wood heater, fenced ya rd, tw o storage b uildings and chicken house. $240-$290 (depending on te rm s ). Two people m a xim u m . 478-0686 fo r in fo rm a tio n , or (713) 864-1819. EN CLOSED S IN G LE oversized garage w ith workshop benches. Lease $100. Ap­ pointm ent, 926-7243. N ear campus. C L IM A T E C O N T R O L LE D storage. Two blocks fro m cam pus. Lease $90 . 926- 7243. SERVICES TRAFFIC TICKETS ^A ffo rd ab le* Professional Defense fo r your t r a f fic violations. ★ F irs t Offense D W I ^ A T T O R N E Y : E D I T H L. J AMES CALL 477-8657 Legal Fees: S55 per c ity tic k e t $83 DPS 306 E ast 11th, Suite L-7 F A L L RUSH '82 Some temporary positions still available for our fall rush. Stop by personnel off­ ice for schedule. University Co-Op, 2246 Guadalupe. EOE Responsible and energetic person to handle sales, consignment and some paperwork in clothing store. Duties In­ clude answering phone, hanging up clothes from dressing room and greet­ ing customers. Should have knowledge of women's fashions. Tuesday, Thurs­ day, & Friday. Hrs flexible, possibly from 11:30 a.m .-2 p.m. $3.60/hour. Call 451-6845. SECOND T IM E A RO UND 3704 Crawford_________ DESK C LER K , motel, part-tim e, 9pm- 7am every other night. Applicant must be available through summer and fall semesters. Apply In person - mornings. IH35 and Airport West Winds Motel, Blvd.________________________________ F U L L T IM E cashier position available. See Cindy Berkowltz between 2-5 p.m. M -F. 2406 Guadalupe, Yarlng's UT. LO OKING FOR sharp, ambitious per­ sons to m arket and distribute new line of sports wear. Full or part time. Call Ron Sims, Highhorse Sportswear, 836-9530 or 836-8331. BABY S IT TE R needed for 5 year old 2:30-6:30, 5 days/week my home Oak- hlll area. $140/mo., extra for light house cleaning. References requested. Mrs. Ward 288-3216 after 6 p.m. LOS TR ES Bobos is now hiring and tak­ ing applications for kitchen positions, wait positions, and cocktail positions. Please apply in person at 1206 West 38th. W A N TE D : L IV E -IN attendant fo r3 0 y r. old m ale quadriplegic. Must share du­ ties with other attendant. Room and board plus salary. 835-2269. P E R F O R M IN G A R T IS TS ~H ere's your chance for exposure In the Austin enter­ tainm ent circle. Comedians, musicians, magicians and single act performers are welcome to audition. For screening call Scott Walsh, 458-9317._____________ G O LD EN SPUR Night Club is now ac­ cepting applications for waitpersons and bartenders To apply come to 336 E Ben White after 6 p.m. See Butch or Bill. D A Y T IM E C H IL D care wanted. 6 months old. M y home. Flexible sched­ ule. 327-3869. E X P E R IE N C E D B A B Y S IT TE R to care for my babyglrl Tues, Thurs afternoons, fall semester. Paulette 471-4240 morn­ ings, 454-8862 home. COORDINATORS FOR after school ac- tivity. Program to plan and organize all activities. Elem entary group, another for preschool Starting August 23rd. 327- 0369_________________________________ PE M AJOR needed to plan and execute athletic programs, games, etc for after school activity program at private school. 5 days/week, 2-6. Starting Aug­ ust 23 327-0369 ' t i n t N E E D A fa st a ccurate ty p is t7 I have a BA in English, a c o rre c tin g Selectric and 12 years se cre ta ria l experience Call Ann at 447 5069, 8-6 PHOTOS f o f PASSPORTS AP PLI CA TIO NS RESUMES 1 m i n u t e s e ' v i c e M O N FRI 10 6 SAT 10 2 4 7 7 5 5 5 5 THE THIRD EYE 2 5 3 0 G U A O A L U P E t A F F O R D A B L E WORD- PROCESSING? $1.3 5 /p a g e Professional form at and qual­ ity bookface print: Theses, law b riefs, dissertatio n s, lists resumes, PRs, mailing and personalized form letters. HOUSE OF T U T O R 819 W. 24th • Tri-Towers 474-4723 TYPING, PRINTING, BINDING The Complete Professional FULLTIME TYPING SERVICE 4 7 2 -3 2 1 0 472-7 6 7 7 2707 HEMPHILL PK. Plenty of Parking Master Typist The computerized TYPING STORE AFFORDABLE WORD PROCESSING Specializing in Term papers, Theses, Dissertations, Resumes, Professional Reports Law Briefs WE DO RUSH WORK 47 2 -0 2 9 3 Same Day A One Day Service Free Parking D obie M a ll 2021 G uadalupe T.E.C.S., Inc. Typing Service 1005 E. St. Elmo Road "O ffering Professionalism w ith a Personal Touch" PICKUP POINT * M a in Office 8-5 Daily * G reenw ood Towers Suite 80 9 5 :3 0 -7 :4 5 p.m . Term Papers, Theses, and Dissertations as low as $ 1 .2 5 page Professional Proofreading included in cool por pago So I ho work you receive h o i ulroady boon chockod lor orron an d It guaronlood Corroctl 443-4433 RUSH T Y P I N G O P E N ' T I L M I D N I G H T House of T u to r 819 W. 24th T ri- T o w e rs 474-4723 WOODS T Y P IN G Service - when you w ant it done rig h t. 472-6302, 2200 G uada­ lupe, side entrance. T Y P IN G -C O R R E C T IN G S elecTric, o ve rn ig h t service, pick-up a v a ila b le till 11:50 p.m . Experienced, professional. P a tty, 345-4269 till m id n ig h t. PR O FE S S IO N A L M Á Ñ Ü S C R !PT TYP- ING. Guaranteed. A ll fields. 5 page m in ­ im um . Yvonne 474-4863. T Y P IN G FAST, professional. 10 years com bined experience in engineering and accounting fields. S. Austin. $!/p a g e. M illie , 447-5906. C O M P U T E R IZ E D T Y P IN G . Fast, ac­ curate, easy changes, re vie w copy, high q u a lity fin a l copy. Experienced. Call M a rg a re t, 837-2440 TH E T Y P IS T Professional q u a lity ty p ­ ing. S atisfaction guaranteed. Campus pick-up, d e liv e ry IB M co rre ctin g Selec­ tric . Helen, 836-3562. L E G A L A N D p ro fe ssio n a l ty p in g . Kathe's Quick-Type. 15 years e x p e ri­ ence. IB M II I. 282-6139. South Austin. T Y P IN G /P R O O F IN G nonpareil. T erm papers, reports, theses, etc Near South L a m a r/M a n ch a ca . Call Joe, 447-2552. T Y P IN G FAST and accurate. $ l/p a g e ($1.25 fo r te ch n ica l), spelling c o rre c ­ tions included. Resumes com piled. Call Candy or leave recorded message, 451- 9596 sure we DO type FRESHMAN THEMES wfcy net start avt with gaad gradas 2707 Hamphill Ju t) North of 27th ot Guodolupo 472 -3 21 0 472-7677 IN T E L L IG E N T , ACCU R ATE typ ing . Reports, resumes. H igh lite ra c y ; cus­ to m e r m isspellings corrected. Rush ser­ vice a v a ila b le . T u to rin g C re a tiv e Services, 2420 Guadalupe, 478-3633. E X C E L L E N T T Y P IN G ~ re p o rts , dissertations, resumes, etc. C orre ctin g S electric. 836-0721. ACC UR A T E , PROF ESS IO N AL ty p mg $1.00/page, m ost cases Campus p ic k ­ up, d e liv e ry , o ve rn ig h t service. Janie, 250-9435. In te llig e n t, G R AD U A T E STU DENTS typ in g . S p e llin g /p u n ctu atio n a ccurate perfection, academ ic UT fo rm a ttin g as­ sistance. B.A. 100 w pm , IB M III. $1 50. P a tric ia Henderson 467-0167 (B u rn e t/ K oenig). I f f I - Q U A U T Y T Y W M G . Professiona I cient IB M III Reports, theses, d isse rta ­ tions Pica $1.10 page E lite $130 page 477-5139 10 a .m .-8 p.m. A F T E R HOURS professional ty p in g 90- 100 w pm . A va ila b le fo r resumes, re ­ ports, accounting statem ents, etc Call Jane fo r schedule of charges 258-3907 T Y P I N G E N G L I S H T U T O R I N G M a u d e C a rd w e ll, P h . D . M any years experience teaching college E nglish and typ in g . E le c tro n ic ty p e w rit­ er Campus p ick up and d e liv e ry $1.25/ pageup 479-8909 RESUMES w ith or without picture* 2707 Hamphill Park Ju*t North of 27th at Guadalupo 472-7677 472-3210 Auto insurers seek 33% rate hike ence or attachment to the pro­ fessional world,” says Walsh. Jo Parker, former PRSSA president, says, “Dr. Walsh has a beautiful awareness of the limitation in a classroom, and as a result he stresses ap­ plication.” their public Walsh says corporations ex­ pect relations people to w rite well, know how to edit and do lay-outs for publications. is The public relations person who works for a non-profit or­ ganization to w rite news releases, update policy statem ents, design bro­ chures slide shows, Walsh says. and present expected “ Good writing ability is critical for a PR person,” says Walsh. Having 10 years experience as a rep o rter for a daily news­ paper and as a public rela­ tions person for a large corpo- r a tio n , W alsh s a y s he switched to teaching so he could associate m ore with people. “ I was an investigative re­ porter. It was a very lonely p r o f e s s o r ’s p o d i u m incom plete w ithout som e strong attachm ent to public relations professionals. He defines PRSSA as an or­ ganization that provides “ net­ work connection,” which gives students opportunities to m eet professionals and m ake connections before they s ta rt job hunting. “ Professionals are g reat t e a c h e r s ; b e c o m e th e y coaches to whom students can listen. “ I ju st don't believe stu­ dents can wait until they graduate and expect to easily find a job without any experi­ By JULIE CLINT Daily Texan Staff The Texas Automobile In­ surance Service Office has recommended that the State Board of Insurance raise per­ sonal automobile insurance rates an average of 33.2 per­ cent, nearly twice the amount the board’s staff proposed last week. The board’s staff had pro­ posed a rate hike of 17.3 per­ cent in automobile insurance rates, which would cost insur­ ance policy holders about $306 million in premiums. A TAISO spokesman said the office believes it is justi­ fied in its proposed rate in­ crease because it is based on the industry’s 1981 loss expe­ rience, medical costs, the number of claims and the av­ erage cost of those claims. By ANNEY KU A public relations profes­ sional needs more than an “I ’m good in meeting people” attitude, says Frank Walsh, coordinator of the public rela­ tions sequence in the D epart­ ment of Journalism. Instead, jobs in public relations re­ quire an understanding of dif­ ferent groupings of people and the ability to communicate, he says. Walsh, ah associate profes­ sor of journalism and sponsor of the UT chapter of the Pub­ lic Relations Student Society of America, also says the aca­ demic curriculum for public relations students would be TYPING su mWe do Term papers, Thesis, D isserta tio n s, Resumes, Professional Reports, & Documents THE SECRETARIAT Word Procesing Service 346-3553 specializing in Professional Quality Á Fast Service TWO PARK NORTH Suite 395 Located in N o rth w e s t A u itin (N orthw est corner of Mopac A Slock) EC O N O TYPE/EC O N O C O PY Inc. Serv­ ing UT since 1976. Fa st accurate profes­ sional typing needs 2 locations: 3701 Guadalupe, 453- 5452, 1705 R iverside and Lakeshore, 443- 4498 fo r A L L your typ ing , NOW THAT WE PON'T HAVE A FIELP TO PLAY BASEBALL ON, I HAVE TO BOUNCE A 60LF BALL AGAINST THE STEPS... B.C. by johnny hart CÁAftSe fO K PUM ? B l& Y Yfc? CLAMS FfcK ftx ) 1 O ZF.. w — /¿ E P U Q tl f 54LOH VI f * C'MM me «3 ----- ■ 0/1 BLOOM COUNTY c A c S v Ia lR \y y MY VEAR SIR,..IN me CREPIP5 F O R "6 .R - m EYTRfl imaTRlAL PENGUIN " YOU HAVE ME USVcP A5 A ' SPECIAL effecT...: m m w o o p ." R O m .'b lM M lP S ' s p e a & t ff e c f t'M p c m itF o im ib N / m i m r s o t f c c x m / REASONABLE WIN L6MME JUbT WOVE VA RIGHT UP HtP£ . I V APRECIATE THAT. b y Berke Breathed CONDOS FOR SALE CO N DO S FOR SALE CONDO S FOR SALE iust a brief walk from the U T campus, Tom G reen C ondom inium s offer nineteen distinctive home designs in an intim ate condom inium com m unity for uncom prom ising tastes. Private decks, Saltillo tile fireplaces, and covered parking are only the beginning. For more inform ation, please contact Frances Jackson, Sales Manager: 346-5000. 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