U3JLN33 W lId G d D IWE DAIIY TEXAN 'SVTIVa 9Cfrs^ xoa o d SfrSSZ XI Student N e w s p a p e r a t The University of Texas a t Austin The shadows of Bevo The afternoon sun provided this unusual view on the M e ­ morial Stadium astroturf of Bevo and his handlers Satur­ day. On the field, Texas notched its fifth win of the season against two losses by manhandling the Houston Cougars with a 50-0 rout. It was Houston’s worst loss e ve r and the Longhorns biggest win since 1977. Gam e story, page 10. Regents to consider HMO option for employees By JIM M Y M U N O Z Daily Texan Staff The U n iv e rsity S ystem B oard of R e­ gents will vote its next m eetin g in w h eth er to offer H ealth M aintenance O rg an izatio n s as a h ealth c a re option to UT S ystem e m p lo y ees, a System offi­ cial said F rid a y Ray R o b ertso n , UT S ystem a ssista n t personnel d ire c to r, said th at if th e re ­ g ents ap p ro v e th e HMO option for Sys­ tem em p lo y ees a t th e b o a rd 's Dec 2-3 m eeting m A ustin. HMOs could begin applying for adoption by System in stitu ­ tions as e a rly as F e b u a ry HM Os would be offered beginning Sept 1 if app ro v ed by the re g e n ts to a pprove H ow ever. R o b ertso n said U n iv e rsity o fficials would have the HMOs a p p lic atio n s for inclusion and would then look a t such fa c to rs as fin an ­ the HMOs and th eir cial sta b ility of a b ility they se rv ic e s pro m ise to offer th e Although R ob ertso n would not say if an HMO se rv ic e a re a w as a v a ila b le for all S ystem in stitu tio n s, he said 11 fe d e r­ ally a c c re d ite d HMOs a re o p e ratin g in T exas, and th re e m o re a r e developing Two fed erally a c c re d ite d HMOs th at o ffer se rv ic e in A ustin, P ru C a re and 1 e n tra l T exas H ealth P lan , could apply for inclusion of th e ir plans for UT Aus­ tin em ployees R obertson said HMOs offer an a lte rn a tiv e to tr a d i­ tional in su ran ce plans by using th eir own p hysicians and c lin ics and ch arg in g a m onthly fee for th ese se rv ic e s. Uni­ v e rsity em p lo y ees a re now o ffere d a sta n d a rd p rem iu m health in su ra n ce op­ tion through Aetna In su ra n c e Co. R obertson said UT S ystem o fficials' co n cern about HMOs s te m s from four p a r tic u la r c ases He said the b a n k ru p tc ie s of four T ex­ as HM Os caused bills to be se n t to c li­ en ts who had been re fe rre d to a p riv a te do c to r by the ag en c ie s The d o c to r’s se rv ic e s w ere supposed to have been co m p e n sa te d for by the HMOs. R ob ertso n said re p o rts of d is c rim in a ­ tion by HMOs also have been a concern of U n iv e rsity officials He said concern of HMO d is c rim in a ­ tion a g a in st the eld erly and c lie n ts w ith se v e re health p ro b lem s w e re co m ­ p lain ts U n iv e rsity o fficials have h e ard c o ncerning the health c a r e option He also c ite d an occasion in w hich an HMO se rv icin g p re d o m in an tly m in o rity c li­ en ts w as o ffering in ferio r h e alth c a re co m p a red to those se rv icin g p re d o m i­ nantly \n g lo c lie n ts U nder fe d era l law , U n iv e rsity offi­ c ials m ay be forced to o ffer an HMO option to its em p lo y ees if a local ag ency files a c o m p la in t w ith th e HMO division of com pliance. The U n iv e rsity fa lls un­ d e r a tw o-year-old law re q u irin g s ta te ag en c ie s to o ffer the h e alth c a r e option U nder the P u b lic H ealth A ct of 1980. fe d e ra lly a c c re d ite d HMOs m ay re q u ire th a t em ploy m ore than 25 em p lo y ees to provide an HMO option public e n titie s In a le tte r d a te d Ju ly 29, 1982 se n t to Rep G onzalo B a rrie n to s, D-A ustin, U n iv e rsity S ystem C h an cello r E D W alker said, “ A re c e n t opinion from the D ivision of C om pliance, O ffice of H ealth M ain ten an ce O rg a n iza tio n s of the D e p a rtm e n t of H ealth and H um an R e so u rc es a d v ises th a t th e UT sy ste m is included in the definition of public e n tity for the pu rp o ses of m a n d a to ry HMO offering ” Good H ealth Plus, a San Antonio HMO, w ants to be included in a h ealth c a re plan for UT San Antonio em ploy­ ees and has e x e rc is e d its m a n d a te pow­ e r to re c e iv e inclusion. In a le tte r sent to UT System o fficials in August, the firm th re a te n e d legal a ctio n if the Sys­ tem continued to re fu se to include it as a h ealth c a re option. R e p re s e n ta tiv e s of P ru C a re . an Aus tin HMO th a t h as been try in g to p e r­ suade U n iv ersity o fficials to include it as a health c a re option, said the U n iv er­ sity had given th em an indication it would d ra ft a p roposal for the inclusion of HMOs on the ag en d a , but said th eir firm would have to “ w a it and s e e .” I think i t ’s (th e HMO option) a thing we should h a v e ,” U n iv e rsity E m ploy­ ees Union m e m b e r C arolyn Wylie said Sunday. She said m o st s ta te em ployees of­ fe re d the option have chosen the HMO h ealth c a re plan, and said it w as quite likely em ployees th a t U n iv e rsity would re a c t the s a m e way. She said th e re g e n ta l proposals w ere "a p p ro p ria te b eca u se of the U n iv e rsi­ t y ’s th e 1980 P ublic H ealth Act inclusion under President Brezhnev (fifth from right) and other leaders watch parade celebrating 6 5 th anniversary of O ctober Revolution. UPI Telephoto Brezhnev threatens ‘crushing retaliatory strike3 * 1982 The New York Times MOSCOW — L eonid I B rezhnev used the 65th a n n iv e rs a ry of the B olshevik R evolution Sunday to renew the K re m ­ lin ’s c o m m itm e n t to d e te n te, but he w arned the U nited S ta te s th a t " a c ru s h ­ ing r e ta lia to r y s t r i k e ’ aw aited any " p o ­ te n tia l a g g re ss o r ” In an a llu sion to the R e ag a n a d m in is­ tra tio n , th e Soviet le a d e r added, "Our m ight and vig ilan ce w ill cool, I think, the h o th ea d s of so m e im p e ria lis t p o liti­ c ia n s ” B rezhnev s sp eech w as the second in 12 days in w hich he h a s adopted an unu­ sually h a rsh tone w hen speaking of the United States. The speech w as d e liv ­ ered at a reception in the K re m lin th at followed the annual m ilita ry parade through Red Square, m arking the anni­ versary of the Bolshevik Revolution of 1917. Brezhnev led other m em b ers of the ruling Politburo in the lineup atop the Lenin M ausoleum He rem ained there for tw o hours in sub-zero tem peratures as regim en ts of fighting m en, colum ns of tanks and rockets and th ro n g s of c i­ vilians paraded past. The lineup w as notable for the ab­ sen ce of A ndrei P K irilenko, 76. once favored a s B rezh n ev ’s su c c e sso r K irilenko has been in poor h e a lth for m onths, and his re sig n atio n fro m the P o litb u ro is ex p ected to be fo rm a lly a n ­ nounced a t a m ee tin g of the C om m unist Party’s C e n tra l C o m m itte e nex t week T he positioning of the le a d e rs also a p p e a re d to c o n firm the p re -e m in e n c e a f te r B rezhnev of K o n stan tin U C h er­ nenko, 71, a long-tim e lie u ten a n t to the Soviet le a d e r who has e m e rg e d a s a leading co n te n d er to succeed him C h e r­ nenko stood close to B rezhnev d uring the p a ra d e , w ith a n o th e r c a n d id a te for the top job, Yuri P. A ndropov, 68, next to C hernenko. B rezhnev, who will be 76 next m onth, rem ained a top the m au so leu m about tw ice as long this year as he did last, when the weather w as m ilder But he showed little anim ation and barely flanking him conversed with When he descended the steps at the end of the parade, he paused while an aide rem oved the tinted e y eg la sses he wore, apparently to fend off the sun’s glare those The sp eech es and a rticles m arking the anniversary of the revolution struck them es sim ilar to those Brezhnev out­ lined w hen he a d d re sse d a sp e c ia l m e e t­ ing of Soviet g e n e ra ls on Oct 27, an d by C hernenko w hen he m ad e a follow up speech tw o days la te r. a d m in is tra tio n ’s In those speeches, th e Soviet le a d e rs signaled a tw o-pronged re a c tio n to the anti-S oviet R eagan p o stu re and its d e fen se build-up They indicated th a t the K rem lin would m ak e w h a te v e r ‘‘m ilita ry p r e p a r a tio n s ” w ere req u ired to m e e t A m erican p re ssu re s, while re m a in in g c o m m itte d to n e g o tia ­ tions and to an im p ro v e m en t of r e la ­ tions w ith W ashington when its c u rre n t ‘ p rim itiv e a n ti-c o m m u n ism ” p a ssed Sunday, B rezhnev o ffered the Soviet d ig n ita rie s, d ip lo m a ts and v isito rs a t the K re m lin a speech th a t m ixed p ride m the a c h ie v e m e n ts of the Soviet Union with an ex p ressio n of reso lv e to reb u ff the c h allen g e s of the U nited S ta te s liv es The w orld now in no easy tim e s ,” he said in the tra n s la tio n given by T ass, th e o fficial new s a g en cy . The broad o ffensive on so cialism and th e n a ­ tional lib e ratio n m o v em en ts, unleashed by im p e ria lism in all d ire c tio n s, c o m ­ p licated the in te rn atio n al situ atio n But it is not the trad itio n of our p a rty , of our people, to r e tr e a t before the d iffic u l­ ties. “We shall do the u tm o st to see to it th at those who like m ilita ry ad v en tu res should n e v er tak e the land of the Sovi­ e ts u n a w are s, th a t th e p o ten tial a g g re s­ sor should know: a c ru sh in g re ta lia to ry the strik e will in ev itab ly be for him . Soviet le a d e r said “ O ur m ig h t and vigi­ lance will cool, I think, the hotheads of som e im p e ria lis t p o litician s He w ent on: ‘‘T he Soviet Union will continue p e rsiste n tly fighting for d e ­ ten te, for d is a rm a m e n t We shall be building up e ffo rts to a v e r t the th re a t of a n u c le a r w a r ” And he added The esse n ce of o ur policy is p e ac ea b len e ss the sin c e re striv in g for e q u itab le and fruitful c o-operation w ith all who w ant such co-operation Our profound belief is th a t e x a c tly such a way will lead m ankind to p e ac e for the living and would-be g e n e ra tio n s C ontinuing a p ra c tic e a dopted a f te r Soviet tro o p s in te rv en e d in A fghanistan in 1979, the U.S. a m b a ss a d o r, A rth u r A. H a rtm a n , sta y ed aw ay fro m the p a ra d e and sent two e m b a ssy c o u n se lo rs in his stead H ow ever, H a rtm a n did a tte n d the K rem lin rece p tio n ChlnwM ambassador attends/p3 David Sprague, Daily Texan Staff Jobless rate rises in U.S., highest peak since 1940 By PAUL DE LA GARZA Da iy Texan Staff with reports from UP! While national un em p lo y m en t so a red to a new post-D epression high of 10.4 p e rc e n t in O ctober, the T ex a s jo b le ss ra te dropped one-tenth of 1 p e rc e n t to 8.3 p e rc e n t, th e B ureau of L abor S ta tis ­ tic s and th e T exas E m p lo y m en t C om ­ m ission said F riday. The national u n em ploym ent fig u re ro se .3 p e rc e n t fro m S e p tem b e r b rin g ­ ing th e n u m b e r of officially unem ployed A m e ric an s to 11.6 m illion, th e w o rst un­ em p lo y m en t situ atio n th e U nited S ta te s in 42 y e a rs. The a ll-tim e high w as 25 p e rc e n t in 1933. in T e rre n c e T rav ian d , a s s is ta n t ch ief of the TEC econom ic re s e a rc h d e p a r t­ m en t, sa id th a t the sea so n ally a d ju ste d 8.3 p e rc e n t fig u re of 611,000 unem ployed T exans " is a v ery, very slight change and re a lly has no p a r tic u la r econom ic sig n ifican ce a t a ll .” The fig u res for T exas m ean th a t the effe c ts of the rece ssio n on the sta te , a t lea st m o m e n ta rily , have sta b .liz e d and the econom ic situ atio n has not d e te rio ­ ra te d o r im proved T rav ian d said H ow ever. T rav ian d said th a t the T ex­ a s unem ploym ent fig u res m ay be slig h t­ ly sig n ifican t because unem ploym ent ra te s have been clim bing fa irly sharply a and the fa ct th a t the r a te sta y ed on m o re o r less leveled plane .s p e rh a p s an e a rly sign th a t the recessio n is ab atin g slig h tly .” But ag ain , i t ’s too e a rly to sa y th a t for s u r e ,” T rav ian d said. “W e’ll have to observe this a while longer ” No fig u res a re av ailab le yet for the \u stin a re a , but h isto ric a lly A u stin 's econom y has fa re d well b ecau se of jo b s a t the C apitol s ta te a g en cies and the U niversity, T rav ian d said W hite H ouse s p o k e sm a n L a r r y Speakes said P re sid e n t R e ag a n is sy m p a th e tic and concerned about the those who a r e u n em ­ d ifficu lties of ployed’ but re ite ra te d th at the a d m in is­ tra tio n has laid the foundation for eco ­ nom ic th at will a lle v ia te joblessness re co v e ry cloudy and miid Partly cloudy skies and temperatures n the 70s are expected for M onday The low Monday night will be ir the 60s Cloudy skies will continue through Tuesday, and the high T u e s d a y will be m the 70s. Winds should be from the southeast at 15 mph Nat ona weather, page 16 today’* high tonight’s low .75 .67 Vo!. 82, No. 48 (USPS 146-440) Job cuts creating problems for seniors * 1982 The New York Times NEW YORK — T his y e a r ’s college sen io rs face the w o rst job m a rk e t in a t le a st a decade, w ith fe w er jo b s being offered than la s t y e a r and w ith little or no in c re a s e in s a la rie s , a cc o rd in g to college job p la c e m e n t o ffic e rs su rv e y ­ ing the em p lo y m en t outlook fo r next Ju n e The n u m b er of scheduled job in te r­ view s is down, fe w er co m p a n ies a r e re ­ c ru itin g on c am p u se s, and exp ected h ires a re down 16 7 p e rc e n t natio n ally , acco rd in g to p re lim in a ry d a ta .” said John D Shingleton, d ire c to r of p la c e ­ m en t se rv ic e s for M ichigan S ta te U ni­ v e rsity , in w hose su rv e y c o n ta c t w as m ad e w ith m o re than 500 c o m p a n ies around the co u n try than to u g h er tough y e ar, The c la ss of 83 is going to have a p re tty the c la ss of 82, and they had a tough tim e E v e ry e m p lo y e r is e i­ of it th e r m ain tain in g his quota of h irin g o r c u ttin g One or two, out of hundreds, a re in creasin g he said E ven g ra d u a te s in en g in eerin g , a in w hich job dem and had been field grow ing d e sp ite the re ce ssio n , a p p a r ­ ently w ill face to u g h er co m p e titio n for jobs next y e a r " F o r the first tim e since 1975, e m ­ p loyers ex p ec t to have few er job open­ ings for eng in eerin g g ra d u a te s than in the previous y e ar " a m a jo r su rv ey re ­ p orted last w eek The econom y is also a p p a re n tly hav­ ing a delayed e ffe c t on g ra d u a te s who found jobs last sp rin g I ’ve n e v er seen it like this before, and I ’ve been in the said V ictor R L ind­ business 25 y e a rs, q u i s t , f o r d i r e c t o r N o rth w e stern U n iv e rsity and c o o rd in a ­ tor of the u n iv e rs ity ’s annual job su r­ vey I have seen J u n e g ra d u a te s who w ithin six m onths have lost th e ir jobs b ecause of personnel cu tb a ck s in th eir org an izatio n s ” p l a c e m e n t Also, he said, m any o rg a n iz atio n s on job o ffers for th e firs reneged tim e M ore than 100 offer s w e re w ith ­ draw n last y e a r ” L indquist said his p re lim in a ry in q u ir­ this yea w ere re v ea lin g slightly ies few er job openings for g ra d u a te s next June he said My e x p e c ta tio n s a re th a t e sse n tia lly we a re going to be the sa m e o r slightly But I ’m su rp rise d in down som e situ atio n s a t how d ra s tic the c u t­ backs a re One firm that a lre a d y re ­ ported to m e indicated th ey h ired 430 people last y e ar, and this y e a r it will be zero ” W here I ve got a p ro b lem is th at when i t ’s bad new s, people d o n ’t w ant to respond to a survey, and people a ren t responding, L indquist said The fe d era l g o v e rn m e n t, the n a tio n ’s la rg e st e m p lo y e r, planned to h ire few er people than last y e a r, a cc o rd in g to Jim E dm an, ch ief of re c ru itm e n t and job in­ fo rm atio n a t the O ffice of P erso n n el M anagem ent He said the g o v e rn m e n t planned to hire 17 p e rc e n t fe w er Ju n e g ra d u a te s in a g ric u ltu re and seven pe rce n t fe w er g ra d u a te s in p hysical sc i­ ences, m a th e m a tic s and sta tis tic s , and seven p e rc e n t fe w er g ra d u a te s in lib e r­ al a r ts life sc ie n c e s, He said th e g o v e rn m e n t would h ire as m any but not m o re g ra d u a te s in en g i­ neering and h e alth fields a s it did last Ju n e The C ollege P la c e m e n t Council of B ethlehem , P a ., su rv e y s th e colleg e job m a rk e t se v e ra l tim e s a y e a r. Its in fo r­ m ation is used by co m p a n ies and col­ leges and u n iv e rsitie s to help in c a r e e r planning In its latest survey, taken in August and Septem ber and based on inform a­ tion from m ore than 460 em ployers, the council reported that hiring increases w ere expected for graduates in the sc i­ ences and m athem atics But the research ers also reported that there would be a four percent de­ crease in openings for business m ajors and a nine percent decline for those in other nontechnical areas There will be 12 percent few er positions for engi­ neers, the research ers reported The council said 31 percent of the e m ­ ployers it surveyed “expected econom ­ ic conditions for their organizations to im prove in the last (half) of 1982,” and 54 percent expected better conditions in the first half of 1983 The council also found that em ploy­ ers w ere beginning their recruiting cau­ tiously N orm ally, fall and w inter are the heaviest recruiting periods. But a f­ ter sharply curtailing their hiring last spring, com panies seem to be taking a w ait-and-see approach At M ichigan State, the number of e m ­ ployers interview ing on cam pus declin­ ed 12.8 percent sin ce last year at this tim e, Shingleton said S h in g le t o n an d L in d q u is t of N orthw estern U niversity agreed that salary offers would average only slight­ ly m ore than last y ea r’s offers One m ajor com pany, Lindquist said, told him its salary offers would not in­ crease at all this year page 2/The Daily Texan/Monday, November 8,1982 Bunting Jacket bunting weighs h a lf as muchas wool and ts ju s t as w arm -even when w e t 1 Worn by N o rth Sea fish erm en, th is versatile fabric is popular with anyone who works outdoors. We have jackets, vests, and pants fo r men and women WHOLE LARTH PROVISION COMPANY 8 8 R e s e a r c h 2 4 1 0 S a w A w t o n i o 4 7 6 1 5 7 7 Practically wait-less Th e Daily Texan PERM W E N T S T A F F A ssistant Managing Editors E diior Managing E ditor . Lisa B eyer D a x id T e ece A ssociate M anaging Ediior iieo rg e A ondracek Mike Me kbee. Martin Torres Carmen Hill David Woodruff Lynn E asley David Lindsey Jobo Susskind Konns L oins A ssistant Editor N e w s Editor A ssociate News Editor A ssignm ents Editor News Features Editor (■raphies Editor Entertainm ent Editor Sports E ditor Associate Sports Editor Im ages E ditor Associate im ages Editor David McNabb . Suzanne Michel Ray Ydoyaga Paula Minahan . . Tom Maurstad (■eneraI Reporters Richard G oldsm ith, Jim m y McKenna h m tm M unoi. Mark Siutz Roger Stove Cam pbell. Suzanne Halliburton. Richard stubbe . 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P 0 Box D. P U B NO 146440 B uilding C3.200 UT hosting Solvay Conference of Physicists By DE’ANN WEIMER Daily Texan S ta ff For the first time in its 71-year histo­ ry, the Solvay Conference of P hysicists this week will be held outside Belgium — the conference has been moved to the University, in honor of the University’s Centennial. The conference's move from Europe is not expected to be repeated, said John Wheeler, U niversity professor of physics. In another sw itch from its traditional procedure, the conference is sponsoring ‘laym en s lectu res," open to the two public, on physics and its applications. The lectures are designed to explain de­ velopm ents in physics in term s under­ standable to the public. O ther confer­ ence events are closed to the public. The 18th Solvay Conference was moved a t the request of Ilya Prigogine, a U niversity regental professor of phvs- ics and Nobel laureate, who is also in charge of the Solvay organization. The conference, considered the most prestigious meeting of physicists in the world, is held every three years. Physi­ cists must be invited to attend. In the past, the Solvay has hosted the­ oretical debates between Albert Ein­ stein and Niels Bohr and brought to­ gether the greatest physicists of its time to thrash out the phenomena by which a world, its people and its uni­ verse operate, Wheeler said. it (discoveries ‘‘The conference focuses on ‘What does in physics) all mean rather than what is the discov­ ery, said George Sudarshan, a Uni­ versity professor of physics. The 1982 Solvay Conference is distin­ guished by its concentration on high en­ ergy physics. Also, this conference will investigate the idea that the four funda­ mental forces — gravity, radiation, electro-magnetism and nuclear attrac­ tion — are different forms of the sam e force. This idea of unification of all of the forces will influence cosmological theories, Sudarshan said. The conclusions of previous confer­ ences have contributed toward the de­ velopment of the atomic bomb and of­ fered the first evidence of the existence of black holes in space. "Nobody would be happy unless he could expect the unexpected (at the Sol­ vay Conference),’’ Wheeler added. The conference’s first public lecture will be at 4 p.m. Monday in the LBJ Auditorium. Nobel laureate Abdus Salam will speak on the "Unification of Fundamental Forces. " The second pub­ lic lecture will be on Tuesday and is also in LBJ Auditorium at 4 p.m. Leon Lederman, director of the Fermi Na­ tional Accelerator Laboratory in Illi­ nois, will speak on “High Energy Phys­ ics for Culture and P ro fit." campus police report In the period beginning 3 p.m. T hurs­ day and ending 3 p.m. Sunday, the L’ni- versity Police D e p a r t m e n t reported the following incidents: B urg laries: B e tw ee n 7 p .m Thursday and 8 a .tn F r id a y som e one broke into the R e s e a r c h and D e v elop m en t Center of the E d u c a tio n Annex Building and stole $3,500 w orth of eq u ip m e n t On Sat­ urday so m eone broke into a coin-oper­ ated m a c h in e on the fourth floor of Rob­ e rt Lee Moore Hall and stole money from the m achine’s coin box. UTPD is investigating but has no suspects in ei­ ther case Thefts: A woman s purse and a m an s w allet from the third floor of the U nder­ graduate Library and A cademic Cen­ ter; a w om an's w allet from the first floor of the U ndergraduate L ibrary and Academic C enter, a bicycle from the bike rack in the 2000 block of Je s te r C ir­ cle and a brief case and books from Welch Hall 4 132 w ere reported stolen. student told UTPD H arassing communication: A female U niversity she received a harassing phone call from an unidentified man a t her residence at the U niversity-ow ned Colorado A p a rt­ m ents A rrests: A student for public intoxica­ tion at M em orial Stadium during the Texas-Houston football gam e Saturday. YOU W O N ' T M A K E AN A THIS SEMES TER ... in Dr. D u m b r o w s k y ' s c o u r s e if yo u miss t h e f i ­ n a l it s t r a i g h t fr o m th e ho rse's f i n a l m o u t h — all e x a m sc he dules a p p e a r in t h e T e x a n on ... 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ADO-A-NUT NECKLACE m o o / m i 1(17 0 0 /M 1 E A R R IN G S ($16 00 AIL NUÍS <*c ORDER FORM (fin in quantity) me jde £>% sales tax and $' «or snipping and candling TYPE OF NUT I Sensuous Spum v W | Aiauw ig Aimonfl P u c k t n n g P t c a n assy C « 6 # » world & nation page 3 / The Daily Texan/Monday, November 8, 1982 Holiday marks thaw in Soviet-Chinese ties MOSCOW (UPI) — China’s ambassa­ dor attended the Soviet Union’s Revolu­ tion Day march for the first tim e in years Sunday and Soviet leaders om it­ ted attacks on Peking in fresh signs of thaw between the two Communist gi­ ants. Officials at the Chinese Embassy were not able to say when a Chinese ambassador last observed the military parade, but Japanese reports from Mos­ cow said it was the first time in more than two decades. Ambassador Yang Shouzheng attend­ ed a Revolution Day reception in the Kremlin last year, but did not observe the march-past of troops and military vehicles in Red Square marking the an­ niversary of the 1917 Bolshevik revolu­ tion. The latest Soviet policy line on P e­ king is that Moscow is sincere in its de­ sire to norm alize relations with the Chi­ nese but has not seen the hoped-for change of course from China Chinese celebrations in Peking S atur­ day m arking the Soviet Union s national day also w ere the friendliest since the 1960s. Chinese officials toasted the 65th anniversary of the Bolshevik Revolu­ tion in the G reat Hall of the People Within the past month, six m eetings on Sino-Soviet problems were held in Peking and China is expected to send officials to Moscow this winter to con­ tinue the talks on the border question, Afghanistan, Soviet troops in Mongolia and Soviet support for Vietnam. Diplomatic analysts say there is little chance China will return to the tight So­ viet embrace of the 1950s. when it re­ ferred to the Soviet Union as an “elder brother,” because all the issues defy a ready solution But even a limited thaw could have major strategic implications for the United States, as evidenced by Japa­ nese newspaper reports Sunday from Peking that China has retracted its sup­ port for the U.S -Japanese security treaty. The d ram atic change in C hina's view of the U.S -Japanese m ilitary allian ce w as revealed when ranking Chinese of­ ficials told a Japanese delegation, “ Chi­ na has never opposed or supported the U .S.-Japan Security Treaty The rem ark was seen as a retractio n of Chinese leader Deng X iaoping's 1978 statem en t that "strengthening Ja p a n 's defense capability and the U S -Japan Security T reaty is a natural course Soviet and Chinese officials celebrate the anniversary of the Soviet revolution in Peking. UPI Telephoto Iranian forces continue offensive, push into Iraq * 1982 The New York Times TEHRAN. Iran — Iranian infantry and arm o r have driven west into Iraq for the first tim e in m ore than three months, the T ehran governm ent dis­ closed Sunday The Baghdad radio con­ firmed the invasion which began S atu r­ day night, and said intense fighting" was under way Sunday. Iran said its forces had reached the town of Teib. in southeastern Iraq The push onto Iraqi soil was p a rt of an Iranian offensive that began last Monday night and has so far forced the Iraqis from 210 square m iles of Iranian territory The Iranian forces punched across the border from positions west of their operational headquarters at in the general area of Mu­ Ein-e-khosh sían and the Bayato, w here the border is m arked by the arid hills of the Ham- rain range All Akbar H ashem i R afsanjam , the speaker of the Iranian P arliam ent, said that at a news conference Iranian troops had "reach ed " Teib. a road ju n c ­ is also spelled as tion whose nam e Teyveb. or Tib It was not clea r w hether they had actually entered the town or sim ply surrounded it. The speaker said the Iranian drive had penetrated 10 kilom eters - 6.25 into Iraqi territo ry so far m iles — Baghdad Radio put the penetration at half that foreign journalists R afsanjam refused to discuss the ulti­ m ate aim of the new cam paign, telling th at Iranian and they would get their answ er "from the battlefield in the next few days One option would be an attem pt to cut, or at least interdict, with artillery and rocket fire, the m ore easterlv and m ore im portant of the two highways linking Baghdad, the Iraqi capital with the key oil center of B asra further south The road lies less than 30 m iles to the w est of Teib to Iranian troops advanced along an as­ phalt road constructed from Teib into Iranian territo ry by the Iraqis Foreign correspondents visiting the are a on S at­ u rday saw black-and-yellow Iraqi road signs and handm ade Iranian rep lace­ m ents that identified the road as the route to K erbala, an Iraqi town held in Ira n ’s Shia especial Moslems. reverence by The correspondents w ere given no hint of the im pending assault beyond the evident eagern ess of Iranian offi­ cers to push on. They saw no sign of troops m assing for an attack , although truck traffic in the are a w as heavy. Most d ip lo m ats h ere e x p ressed surprise that the Iranians had chosen to cross the border Since the failure of a thrust tow ard B asra earlier this sum ­ mer. in which it suffered heavy losses, Tehran has contented itself, until now, with a series of relatively sm all-scale operations designed to clea r the last Iraqis from Iranian soil. It appeared un­ til Sunday that the 25-month Gulf War might splutter along for years. One w estern envoy said this weekend, before news of the attack was received here Sunday afternoon, that the Iran i­ ans lacked the tanks and air power, to say nothing of spare parts, to hold posi­ tions in Iraq even if they gained a te m ­ porary breakthrough. thought Some observers had the heavy fighting was alm ost over, and several Iraqi officials had said the sam e thing. Asked about this Sunday, R afsanjam replied. “ The Iraqis are al­ ways telling lies, and this is just one of them. Iran 's R afsanjani th ree reiterated peace dem ands — a cease-fire, an un­ conditional Iraqi w ithdraw al from Ira ­ nian soil and "punishm ent of the ag ­ gressor " R eferring Iraqi president, Saddam Hussein, he added that "Saddam should be punished, and the to Turkish voters approve new constitution ANKARA, Turkey < UPI > — T urkey's 20 million voters overw helm ingly a p ­ proved a new constitution Sunday giv­ ing m ilitary junta leader Gen Kenan E vren the presidency for seven years and extending restrictions on political freedom With nearly 70 percent of 82.913 poll­ ing stations reporting, the country gave vote a resounding 91 5 percent "yes for the referendum , officials said Although the approval was a foregone conclusion, w estern officials said a large ballot success was needed to lend legitim acy to the right-wing m ilitary rule, which banned political opposition but restored law and order to T urkey's cities Now we can call him the Turkish president," a w estern observer said In a notable election day protest. P rim e M inister Bulent U lusu's personal bodyguard publicly declared his opposi­ tion to the m ilitary-backed constitution at the polling booth and was prom ptly detained I reject this constitution, and who­ ever loves this country will also re je c t it. Hasan Aksut shouted in the crow d­ ed polling booth as he cast his ballot. Aksut, who was not with the prim e m inister, was charged with violating election regulations, an official source said In another incident, a voice m terrupt- television program ed a in Istanbul shouting “ No, for the ju n ta's constitu­ tion." E vren. 65, in keeping with the regu la­ the compulsory balloting tions of appeared in civilian dress when he voted in Ankara soon after the polls opened No soldiers or police guarded the cap­ ital's polling places, where voters sig n i­ fied approval with a white ballot or re ­ jection with a blue one But troops of the m ilitary regim e, which seized power in a coup Sept 12, 1980. rem ained on alert throughout T u r­ key, a m em ber of the Western m ilitary alliance Voting w as made compulsory for the 20 million citizens over 21 Eligible vot­ ers who did not go to the polls w ere required to provide "good reasons" in w riting to authorities or be barred from voting for 5 years Prohibited from casting ballots, how ­ ever w ere about 100 leading political figures whose activities have been r e ­ stricted by m ilitary authorities, sources said Underground cam paigns rep o rted ­ ly w ere mounted by opponents of the regim e, including form er prim e m in is­ ters Suleym an D em irel and Bulent Ecevit. For the past 10 days E vren cam paigned extensively throughout Turkey in support of the constitution, which Junta leader Gen. Kenan Evren (I) casts his ballot. UPI Telepr.oto was proposed by the m ilitary, acknow l­ edging it restricted freedom but insist­ ing it will prevent a recu rrence of te r­ rorism and political unrest that existed under civilian rule. He denounced opponents as " t r a i­ to r s ” and “ com m unists. Under the provisions of the proposed constitution. Evren will autom atically get a seven-year term as president and his four-man m ilitary council will act for five years as a "presidential adviso­ ry board The present regim e was guaranteed another two years in power even if the referendum was defeated, to give au ­ thorities tim e to present a revised pro­ posal Congress to move between Reagan, Democrats WASHINGTON (UPI) - The new 98th Congress will seek a new identity, moving away from President Reagan’s conservative philosophy but unable to return to the old ways of the Demo­ crats It is likely to modify Reagan's eco­ nomic policies and probably will push aside once-hot social issues such as bans on abortion and school busing A dramatic reversal of Reagan's budget-cutting policy is unlikely, since Reagan still has the power of the veto and Republicans continue to control the Senate. Still, the new Congress is likely to take a new look at the third year of Reagan s 25 percent tax cut and will be more inclined to look for savings at the Pentagon than in social programs. Social Security benefit cuts are un­ likely, although the system 's problems may force adjustments such as a slight slowdown m future benefit increases and a speedup in planned future payroll tax increases. The new House will be controlled by Democrats with an infusion of moder­ ate-to-liberal cam ­ paigned on promises to protect Social Security and reverse “unfair” tax and spending policies colleagues who At the sam e tim e. Republicans in both the GOP-controlled Senate and the House — m any elected by narrow m a r­ gins. including House GOP leader Bob Michel of Illinois — received a m essage that voters are dissatisfied The new Senate was changed very lit­ tle, maintaining the sam e 54-46 Republi­ can control This offers Reagan his best hope of a bargaining tool as the adm in­ istration contends with the D em ocratic House. The House took a wide turn to the left Democrats gained 26 seats and will outnumber Republicans by m ore than 100 : 287 Democrats to 166 Republicans Two delayed elections in the A tlanta area are likely to increase that m argin The ideological swing was m ore marked than the num erical one Most new Democrats ran on moder­ ate to liberal platforms with strong sup­ port from organized labor, even in Tex­ as and many Deep South districts Many were elected despite opposition from New Right groups Only three Democratic members were defeated The question that will not be answ er­ ed for months is w hether Reagan and the D em ocrats will be able to com pro­ mise or will continue to fight th em ­ selves into stalem ate As California governor, Reagan was able to com prom ise effectively with the Dem ocratic-controlied legislature — even on a liberal abortion law and a tax increase But so far neither Reagan nor the D em ocrats has shown any sim ilar tendency now W hatever route is taken, it is clea r the policies of the past — either R ea­ gan's recent past or the D em o crats’ past dating back to F ranklin Roosevelt won’t satisfy the new Congress It is risky to predict the actions of a future Congress, especially before new lobbying groups coalitions form and to propagandize new have a chance m em bers. But here is a prelim inary' look at how the m ajo r issues will fare • Social Security This subject was too hot to handle even during the height of the conservative Reagan tide A new­ ly liberal House is unlikely to take any action even remotely resembling a ben­ efit cut But the system 's troubles are likely to force some constraints or tax increases in coming years • Taxes Faced with major continu­ ing budget deficits. Congress is likely to take another look at the third y ear of R eagan's three-year income tax cut Many D em ocrats m ade a campaign is­ sue of the "u n fairn ess" of the tax cut • Balanced budget The search for a lower deficit is likely to continue but a balanced budget constitutional amend m ent is unlikely to be approved • Social program s Congress alreadv was beginning to balk at further cuts in social program s, especially in light of a troubled economy New program s are unlikely, with the possible exception of job and housing program s, but existing program s are unlikely to be cut further to any g reat extent • Defense spending No one should expect m ajor slashes in m ilitary spend­ ing. but the rearm am en t plans are like­ ly to be stretched out and the Pentagon the probably will no search for w aste as it has so far longer escape • Abortion, school prayer and bus­ ing The New Right social agenda was unsuccessful in the 97th Congress, and there is no reason to believe it will do better in the 98th New Right groups, especially anti-abortion groups, took a drubbing in the election the least punishm ent would be for him to be overthrow n ” But the speaker stopped short of dem anding th at the en­ tire B a'athist governm ent in Baghdad be deposed. Although a num ber of peace missions have visited Tehran in an effort to bring an end to the conflict, Ayatollah Ruhoi- lah Khomeini, Ira n ’s leader, has insis’ ed that Hussein would go. P eace feelers from Swedish P rim e from Algeria, M inister Olof P alm e and from an Islam ic peace com m ittee have been re ­ buffed in turn. The Iranians are p articu larly irked that few countries in the world rallied to their defense when they w ere invad­ ed. In the Moslem world, only Libya, Syria, Algeria and South Y emen have backed Iran A governm ent official com m ented, “ The world only starte d talking about peace when we started to take back our own te rrito ry w ith our own blood." Officials: MX missile in trouble * 1982 The New York Times WASHINGTON - D efense Depari m ent and Air F orce officials say th * MX m issile project is in such deep trou­ ble th at only strenuous personal and p<. litical appeals by P resid en t R eagan and S ecretary of Defense C aspar W. Wein­ berger can save it " It will take a herculean effort by the president and the se c re ta ry of defens- to get MX through Congress, " a sen,» officer said. The officials cited the tangied histv • of the program and the close calls it had recently in Congress because of doubts about its technical feasibility and its cost of $26 billion or m ore They said support for the MX had been eroded by the movem ent for American-Soviet nuclear freeze and b the spreading opposition to nuclea weapons as expressed in statem ents by Roman Catholic. Episcopal and L uther­ an church leaders. The main issue with MX, as it has been from the beginning in the Cart- - idm im stration, is what kind of base it should have The MX which stand fot m issile ex perim ental,” has had no proposed home since Reagan canceled the C arter plan for 200 m issiles whose location would be concealed by m ovir.i them among 4,600 sh elters in Utah and Nevada Congress has given the preside; t un til Dec 1 to subm it a new basing plan, after which it has 30 days to approve or disapprove it In the m eantim e, produc­ tion of five m issiles is under wav, with the first test firing scheduled within the next three months The leading proposal for basing the MX is to place 100 m issiles close togeth­ er in silos strengthened to w ithstand nu clear blast With the MXs crowded « close together, explosions from the fir'i attacking w arheads would destroy those following Weinberger could to Reagan the clustering plan with some recently discussed Air F orce modit ¡ca­ tions. recom m end Another possible addition would in­ volve building bogus silos to throw off a Soviet attack But that would have the political draw back of looking like a step back toward a sim ilar proposal of the C arter adm inistration Still another addition would call for deploying a system of antimissile weap­ ons to protect the MX That would prob­ ably require abrogation of the 1972 trea ty with the Soviet Union that limited the num ber of antimissile m issiles It might also generate m ore opposition the A dm inistration s from critics of strategy for fighting a nuclear war news in brief From Texan news services Pope advocates global approach to unemployment BARCELONA, Spain - Pope John Paul II called Sunday for a global ap­ proach in tackling the problem of unem­ ployment. “ The roads to a just solution of this grave problem demand today a revision of the economic order in its to­ tality, he said in a speech devoted to the problems of labor before a large the capital of Catalonia. crowd Global planning of economic produc­ tion is a necessity, not only planning by sector A correct and rational organiza­ tion of work is necessary, not only on the national level but also international The solidarity of all men of work is nec­ essary ’’ in British asked to join force LONDON Britain disclosed Sunday it has been asked to join the tri-national peace-keeping force in Lebanon in a move by P resident Amin G em ayel to reinforce the A m erican, French and Italian units aready in Beirut W e're going to consider that very carefully be­ cause we have just received a request from Lebanon to do that. Defense Min­ ister Francis Pvm said in an interview on British The m ulti-na­ tional force is very im portant and we will think about it very carefully television Salvador cover-up charged SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador - A National Guard com m ander covered up a soldier A confession in the slayings of four American churchwomen to protect the National G uard's reputation court documents revealed Sunday The that com ­ court docum ents revealed m ander Dagoberto M artinez told FBI agents that National Guard Sgt Luis Antonio Colindres Aleman adm itted in­ volvement in the Dec 3, 1980 slayings of the churchwomen Russian plane hijacked ANKARA Turkey Three Soviet c it­ izens Sunday hijacked a Russian j e t ­ liner with 40 people aboard and forced it to land at a U S. Air Force base in T ur­ key where they surrendered after stab ­ bing the pilot and two passengers T urk­ ish officials said the hijackers, all born in Flast G erm any but Soviet citizens, surrendered after a 3-hour standoff at the U S Sinop Air Base in northeastern Turkey Coup hits Upper Volta PARIS Army enlisted men in the West African nation of Upper Volta overthrew the 2-year-old m ilitary re ­ gim e of Col Save Zerbo in a coup S atu r­ day night. Upper Volta radio reported Sunday There was no word on casu al­ ties It was the third coup d etat in Up­ per Volta since the West African nation of 6 5 million people — one of the world s poorest with an average annual income of less than $200 — gained its independence from F rance in 1960 Defaults said unlikely WASHINGTON — Countries may re­ negotiate as much as $20 billion in debt this year but they are unlikely to de­ fault on loans, World Bank President A.W. Clausen predicted in an interview published Monday. “ Things are serious, but there's a way out.'' Clausen told U.S. N e w s & World R e p o r t in a copy­ righted interview. “Countries are mak­ ing adjustments by tightening up on spending ” Clausen said more countries will renegotiate debt and stretch out maturities during the next two years than in the past. Fraser steps aside DETROIT — With relations between the Chrysler Corp and its auto workers growing increasingly acrim onious, Douglas A. Fraser, president of the United Auto Workers union, is stepping down temporarily from the company’s board until Chrysler signs a new labor contract. Fraser said in a letter to Lee A Iacocca, chairman of Chrysler, that he was “ temporarily suspending my at­ tendance at board meetings, and my in­ volvement in board deliberations, until our current collective bargaining disputes in Canada and the U.S. are re­ solved.” Shuttle countdown begins CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. - The countdown began Sunday for the Veter­ ans Day launch of the space shuttle Col­ umbia on its first operational voy­ age.The Columbia’s flight, its fifth, will be a trailblazing mission that will put NASA in the space trucking business. Four crewmen, twice the usual num­ ber, will launch two comm ercial com ­ munications satellites from the shut­ tle ’s cargo bay. The Colum bia’s countdown was moving along smoothly and technicians late in the day began pressurizing fuel tanks its control rocket W 4/The Daily Texan/Monday, November 8,1982 Da^y r «x*r a** -rose :s o- '"•? e*as '"•e ec : ■ **t * ' te* - ‘ ar*--cver-up. decided to do so m e­ thing about it Tucker m ade the case a project of the National Organization for Women and began circulating a petition c a ll­ ing for an investigation of the case. Public scrutiny of the case led to congressional hearings. When the hearings eventually fizzled out. Tucker turned to civil rights attorney Daniel Sheehan, and a civil suit w as filed against the Kerr-M cGee Corp Investigations by the Silkwood team led to som e surprising disclosu res of FBI activ ities When Larry Olson a FBI agent, reported plutonium possibly m issing from the plant and perhaps even shipped out of the country, he w as ordered to drop the m atter. When questioned during the congressional hearing, he stated “ The FBI will never tell you the truth They can't afford to Just forget the whole thing. G ive it up The Silkwood team also found evid en ce of illegal su rveil­ lance of anti-nuclear and union a c tiv ists by local police and the FBI in c lo se cooperation with Kerr M cG ee officials. D espite the m any unresolved questions, an Oklahoma City jury found Kerr-M cGee clearly negligent and responsible for the plutonium poisoning of Silkwood The jury awarded $10 5 m illion in dam ages to her fam ily — the largest personal inju­ ry award to date. But this does not address the questions surrounding her death Kitty Tucker will speak at 8 p m Monday in the A cadem ic Center auditorium The public has a right to know what really happened in the Silkwood case The issu es at stake here are many an unholy alliance betw een governm ent officials and industry, worker health and safety, rights to free speech and even proliferation of bomb-grade plutonium A la n W 'e sse l W e s s e l is a m e m b e r o f U n i v e r s i t y M o b i l i z a t i o n f o r S u r v i v a l * • * Candidates for vice president of the Students' Association who have not yet signed up for interview s with the T e x a n should contact us at 4714591 as soon as possible. We will provide space for a short statem en t from each of the candi­ dates for the 12 at-large positions for the Student Senate Statem ents m ust be typed, double-spaced, free of libel and no longer than 150 words S tatem en ts m ust be subm itted in per­ son to the T e x a n offices by noon Monday L i s a B e y e r Peregrinus: real monster Funny Money firing line R ecently a law school professor told me in her office. "Mr Wilder, you need to think m ore like a la w y e r." it that After three years I'm afraid I still don't know what "thinking like a law ­ yer'' m eans is a I suspect m indset which is alien to m e Finally it struck m e — what this afternoon, r e a l l y those m ean is that we law students should "think like a fox Why I hadn : caught on before now is beyond m e M aybe I really am dumb' school professors law In my naivite I thought those law school professors w ere using real peo­ ple as m odels to em ulate Now I can see where the fox analogy m akes m ore sense Let m e tell you a true story about the law school In the bowels of the law school a sm all ugly m onster is kept locked up in a cage This m onster is the law school's m ascot, a sym bol incarnate of the law school s conception of equity and jus­ tice This creature is called Peregrinus Every law school student has encoun­ tered this hideous creature in one form or another Only by ritually em bracing this c re a ­ ture does a law student com e to d iscov­ er the secrets of the field This is not a course for the atraditional student to a t­ tempt Led by hope and against the counsel of logic, only the foolish try A good-humoured crowd, law stu­ dents refer to this beast in their m idst as in regard to the transform ative ability of this dem on to take human form thing or alien This is not m etaphorical evil I speak of This presence is real and pervasive Insatiable this m onster consum es, de­ vours and ravages ali those trapped in its claw s It has been known to actually kill people But inflicting bloodshed is not really its gam e A ppearances must be kept, you can t have blood sm ears on law school walls It delights m ore in in trapping, finally in torturing snaring people It is a scourge which is e x p e ct­ ed to be borne with civility and equan­ im ity The law school will not let go of this creature Suggestions have been m ade that we exchange this creature for a fox as a m ore appropriate m ascot, but these have been to no avail P erhaps it is better that it stay in a cage at the law school Perhaps by concentrating this evil and keeping it locked up in the law school, we can spare the rest of you the pain and anguish wrought by this slim y, scaly creature of blight That s m y story I'm sorry I can't provide a fitting ending to this story You see. there is no end to it But there is a m oral, which is where equity and justice are m ade out to be a m onster, human beings lose and foxes win . books both here in Texas and e lse ­ where I am no atheistic anarchist out to destroy our society but this is ridicu­ lous May I remind you in case your zeal to prom ote the one true faith has clouded your reason that Christianity is a religion and a faith, not a fact or set of extrapolated theories Faith, n . 1. unquestioning belief that does not re­ e v id e n c e q u ir e 2 unquestioning belief in God. religious tenets, etc the state or fact of knowing, knowledge 2 system ized knowledge derived from observation, study and experim en ta­ tion carried out in order to determ ine the nature or principles of what is being studied — Webster s New World D ic­ tionary 2nd college edition William Collins and World Publishing 1978 "Science, n . 1 orig p r o o f or No in his intelligent human being right mind could exam ine the available data on the developm ent of our planet and its population and conclude that it was created from whole cloth 6,000 years ago Even those with the restric­ tive blinders of the New Right cannot ignore the existen ce of fossils, rock strata and such "insignificant" things as the relationship between frozen e x ­ tinct Siberian m am m oths m ore than 6.00C years old mind you' . and modern Asian and African elephants Yet this is what you are asking us to do. esp ecially to our children You have every right to fool yourselves, but absolutely no right to fool all of our children Should we give equal tim e to the Hin­ di belief that the world is balanced on the backs of cosm ic turtles and ele­ phants" What about the earth being flat and at the center of the u n iverse0 I seem to recall a certain well-known re­ ligion telling us that this w as the sole truth at one point, and if we said other­ w ise we were heretics Oh. I forgot, that was them heathen papists ) You have a right and a p rivilege to teach creationism in our schools which I w holeheartedly support as being one of freedom s those cherished Am erican which you are so fond of invoking, but put it in religion c la sse s w here it be­ longs If you want to teach it as " sci­ ence." go back to your cabins and go back to speaking the King Jam es E ng­ lish that w as good enough for Jesus Christ. I quote your own slogan. “ F ree­ dom f o r religion, not freedom from re­ ligion May I remind you that yours is not the only religion in the world and there are those who think differently. J E L a k e . J r P l a n II is How much the com m on man w orth0 What is w ea lth 0 How much does com m on wealth c o s t0 The concept of m oney itself is bizarre enough for me. A serious subject Many people die be­ cause others have too much of it. Still others know so much about it that they can foretell the future They can tell you how much one country s piece of paper is worth based on the value of another country's p iece of paper Y es. money is a serious subject and should never be treated lightly What is m on ey0 What are num bers on a com puter0 Money is our sym bol of wealth, power and love The B eatles w ere optim ists at the tim e M ateria! happiness, whether we choose to be­ lieve it or not. is the basis of society We go to school, not to learn for the sake of learning, but to learn a skill in order to m ake money But still the question hasn't been an­ swered. What is m on ey0 According to Roger Waters Money, it's a crim e Share it fairly but don't take a slice of my pie. Money, so they say Is the root of all evil today But if you ask for a raise It s no surprise they're giving none away Money is what we wish it to be We m ane it. we spend it. and in our minds we have m ade it very im portant It is a very serious subject Perhaps it is too serious. Why do we put form er presidents and "proud" birds and. w orst of all, "In God We Trust on our paper and our rock s0 If you were God would you want your name on the sym bol of greed, selfish ­ ness and starvation 0 Why don t we have fun with our mon­ e y 0 Instead of the father of our country, we should put M ickey Mouse, the coun­ try s favorite rodent, on the dollar bill A sm iley face or a P ac Man would be nice also Money shouldn t be green either. Green has grown much too serious over the years becuase of its involvem ent with money E xpressions such as "hand over the green have tainted the natu­ ral im age of green Let's change the uniforms m aybe it'll bring us som e luck I think rainbow colored m oney would oe pleasant to look at and to hang on the walls We would have the funniest m oney around, and the rest of the world would laugh at us We would laugh at our­ selves and at them for not having funny money The whole world would be laughing at m oney Funny money M a tt Kjeidsen R T F ... H a lt W i l d e r School of Law Not the sole religion Men of the church you demand equal tim e for creation ism in scien ce text­ G n jE S r SP E A K E R S" •M C .H A ED N | t ó K Í . (^ V y - T u ü A C m fin iTh t h a n k s tc Sa*^ hvrt Religion serves evolution of society mark leon daily texan columnist One of the greatest events in human history was the discover.- that there is only one God My ninth grade history teacher said that She believed it I w as greatly puzzled by her sta te ­ m ent Certainly it is obvious that over the last 2 000 years m ost religions of the w estern world have rejected paganism in favor of m onotheism and that is a m ajor cultural transform ation But a d iscover,-0 Who discovered the one God" How And why did it take so long to find him or her" If there really has been one om ­ nipotent condom inium owner in the sky all along why have so many pa¿an pan­ theistic religions flourA .ed over the m illenia" The answ ers com e easi!\ provided the phenom enon of religion is placed in the proper perspective R eligion is a cultural artifact, nothing m ore nor less P rim itive agricultural com m unities were w ell se r -e d by paganism Natural forces were the gods that m attered These ancient pantheists u>-re not stu ­ pid Their spiritual dim ensions were de­ fined around ancient reality which was m ore pluralistic than the centralized urban realities which cam e later The rise of m onotheism parallels the evolution of c itv nation states As old rural environm ent- gave way to orga­ nized technological nationalities r elig ­ ion necessarsh becam e m ore cen tra l­ ized H ence one God the ultim ate p resident em peror d icta to r .¿ndlord v hairman of the board to the Rom e - m onotheistic invasion o: Christianity were as futile as th> modern fundam en­ talist crusade against the scien tific truths of the evolution of man We do evolve and a- our social structures follow change our religious stave off efforts truths We are on the threshold of a new re­ naissance V> ith the know ledge )f evolu ­ tion finally established as a theorem in the m athem atics of reality the obvious corallary shocking as it seem s, is in ev­ itable We can take charge of our own evi .ution We need no longer wait p a s­ ignorantly for the next sequence sive! > of cultural-religious realities We can begin to actively program them into our future J What at first sounds like scien ce fic­ tion is not so farfetched when we stop to consider som e contem porary scien ce facts Not only have we dem onstrated the evolving state of our sp ecies, we are beginning to unravel the m echanism s of evolution G enetic engineering is a l­ ready a thing of the past R efusal to recognize the im plications of these sc i­ entific breakthroughs is refusal to a c ­ cept the responsibilities the new techno­ logies give us The old fashioned m onotheism is a philosophic dinosaur In its place we have a new paganism of scien ce The fundam entalist Christian and M oslem fanatic are like the cla ssica l Newtonian physicist who could not see the superior wisdom of Einstein s relativity While the one God m ay have been a great discovery at one tim e, it was really only the metaphy sical m an ifesta­ tion of the centralization of our sp ecies into authoritarian nation states We have at least m America, m oved be- yond the narrow confines of rigid auto­ cratic rule and what looks like a resur­ gence of fundam entalist fervor is only the predictable resistance of the old to the new Leon is a gr'aauiiU! m a t h e m a t ic s s t u d e n t Ears indicate human’s peculiarities WASHINGTON U PI All of us are aw are that the lines and wrinkles in the palm s of our hands foretell the future for good or bad U sually bad And any good cram um -reader will tell you the shape of your head reveals worlds about your ch aracter Or lack of sam e But e a r s0 Until the current issue of O m n i m agazine was published I som ewhat had never thought of ears as reflectin g the peculi­ arities of our psyches C reases m ean one thing Sm all earlobes another And dan­ gling lobes are indicative of som ething else Or so O m m reports It rem ains to be seen whether the a rticle will give birth to a new pseudoscience based on the auricle as the outer ear is called Certainly any oracle of the auricle would h a \e a tough tune com peting with phrenology palm istry and astrology which already are well established It does seem logical, how ever that the outer ear is at least as reliable a clue to our inner being as the tea leaves som e fortune-tellers use In recent years ears have fallen to a low e sta te So anything that tends to e levate their status m ust be considered a d is­ tinct plus Unlike other parts of the face. " O m n i points out the ear isn ’t groom ed Indeed, som e hair styles, effected by both m en and wom en cover the ear com pletely, hiding it from the world of day and making it im possible for passers-by to gain any psychological insights therefrom N evertheless the outer ear long has been recognized by dick west the lighter side connoisseurs as valuable equipment that is worthy of rehabili­ tation Corrugation the gooves and gullies, ruts and furrows that give our ears their shell-like appearance — plays a \ .la! role in the hearing process for exam ple S cien tists tell us these culverts and channels guide sound w aves to the m iddle ear which passes them along to the inner ear. where the hearing is done Thus as you can see. there is a great deal m ore to the outer ear than sim pls a convenient anchorage for earrings Ear-w ise, perhaps, we are less fortunate than elephants, rabbits and foxes whose ears give off body heat and help them stay cool in sum m er N evertheless, human beings are better off than crick ets, whose ears are on the side of each front leg Obviously, ears will gain new respect if they becom e recognized as m irrors of the soul As O m n i, som ew hat lyrically, points out. an ear "unfolds like a flower, freely and on its own, shaped by the energy forces that surround it \ es and if. in tim e, an ear com es to resem b le cauliflow er, that m akes it no less inform ative doonesbury by garry trudeau rjck tll B e a x m u p O N sem m ouths SOON I THINK m s TlN t u e ptCKSOA c a ip & p m m eth op ANT PSAS7 TH6PB AR£ ‘tSTHOP? a hATPO UJ1SOF P. 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A ^ G j b ) - w - u X - - A - v t h r V VEA~ VOL dcr ne SPOfUS sam-ow7 ScPC >Ct souJu pm es7 w : j u s t PUT MY LAST TFUi BUCKS ON Interviews by Lisa Beyer Photos by Brad Doherty uniMuifor student body president The Daily Texan/Monday, November 8 ,1982/page 5 highly unaware of what’s going on and it won’t be sufficient just to slap a diagram down and say, "Here, here's what you’ve got to do, go do it.” So that's my primary goal, is to m ake sure the structure is strong enough to fight for student rights not only in the next four and a half m onths, but for the next ten years. Texan: W hat do you feel is the proper relationship between the adm inistration and the S tudents’ Association? Duval: Ideally, I would like to say one of g u arded cooperation. I think that the S tudents’ A ssociation should try to work things through the adm inistration, h o w ­ ever the Students' A ssociation should not be tim id in seeking outside re­ sources for getting things done. By that I refer to the City C ouncil, the Texas state Legislature or the Board of Regents. B a ­ sically what I’m trying to say is we should try to pass a proposal through them ; if that d o e sn ’t work then we'll try so m e ­ thing else. W e’ll try to go over their heads, if we have to. H opefully we can w ork with the adm inistration. Texan: What are your feelings about the a dm inistration's push for ado ptio n of the Vick Com m ittee report, w hich would establish basic educational re q u ire ­ ments'? Duval: My personal opinion is that it is an excellent idea, it would be a great "■provem ent for the University, but that’s a personal opinion. I would like to see som e senate subcom m ittee review that and to see m ore student input put into it th a r nas been put into it. And I am w ili­ ng personally to act on any re co m m e n ­ dation the senate has. T exa n : W hat other a cadem ic issues do you think you would take up as p re si­ d ent of the Students' Association? Duval: Tnese are the aca d em ic issues I w ould see the Students' Association sook ig nto once they have researched Me issues. I thm k the adm inistration will c r' i give j s a deaf ear if we d o n ’t have the m ost professional proposal possible. These are the areas I would like to see the Students' Association investigate: higher pay for TAs and Als, greater stu ­ dent input into the tenure process. I p e r­ sonally w ould like to see m ore library hours, at least have that researched. I've heard it’s been done before but I w ould like to see a senate research. I w ould like to see m ore dead days before finals ... I’d like to see m andatory teacher e va l­ uations and have those published as well. I’d like to see m andatory syllabi. I do believe students have the right to know what th e y’re getting into and not to have the whole class structure ch a n ge in the m iddle of the semester... Texan: All of the candidates are in fa ­ vor of returning control of student fees over to the student governm ent. How sp e cifica lly w ould you go about getting that done? Duval: I th in k we need to look at it on several diffe re n t levels. The first thing I would do is have the senate draft a p ro ­ posal to the adm inistration de m a n d in g that those fu n ds be returned to the stu ­ dents. It's their m oney and they have the right to d e cid e where those m onies are spent. I think we should give the a d m in ­ istration a tim e lim it to act upon that. And we should tell the adm inistration if they do not meet our requests on this we will then go to the Board of Regents and s i­ m ultaneously go to the Texas state L e g ­ islature and lo b b y fo r t h a t ... T exan: How, sp ecifically, w ould you attack the p a rkin g problem ? Duval: I d e finitely agree parking is a problem . A nd the one solution that I see that is being looked into that we should c courage is a m ulti-level parking g a ­ rage It's som ething that is expensive, but if it is do n e cu rre ctly they can use the PUF (P erm anent U niversity Fund) and it d o e sn ’t even have to be student services fee (m oney). They could put classroom s in it, as has been suggested. A nother e x­ me University of Texas and am cu rre n tly a se co n d-ye a r law student. I've been here five years and I know a lot of the problem s that the students face ... T exan: W hat w ould be your first p rio r­ ity as president? W a rre n : As far as the constitution, you nave to set up a structure The senate wo . d ’ ave to get together and ratify the constitution. I would like to see som e am endm ents m ade to the constitution. I m nk :oo m uch discretion and authority is g .on to the office of the president, and I think som e of that should be cut bac k 'n e p re sid e n t’s autom atically put ■ a lot of boards ,. I fee! I would like to take a look at m aybe naving the senate app oint som eone to g o to those boards. n-. if had to spread my tim e be- tween all of those boards I m ight be a tt e ineffective T exan; W hat do you ‘eel is the p roper relationship between the adm inistration a' ) tne Students' Association'? feei W a rre n : Tms is one area w hich is .e ry d istinguishing between m yself and me other candidates. I’m not going to m ention any nam es but one of the an t tates feeis that the way w e’re t omg to get things done is by go in g to e . e 3 stature The other candidate -evera: tim es has m entioned going over the heads of the adm inistration to the Board of Regents I feel that if o ur only effectiveness is going to be go in g to the Board of Regents or going to the Legis- ature we re not going to be very effec- t ,e O ur prim ary concern is go in g to be w orking with the adm inistration. T exa n : W hat are your thoughts about the Vick Com m ittee report? W a rre n : I want to take a m uch closer ok at this. I was an acco u ntin g m ajor and the acco u ntin g structure is very rig- id We nave very few electives . . . As far as a core cu rricu lu m for all the schools, ¡fs ust som ething that I want to take a serious look at, because I know I went mto a ccounting because I wanted to be trained as an accountant. And I wanted to be q u a lified when I went out into the real world in acco u ntin g , and be a good one. Had I been taking m any m ore lib e r­ al arts courses, I d o n ’t feel I would have been as q u a lifie d as an a c c o u n ta n t... T exan: W hat other a cadem ic issues do you think you would take up? W a rre n : T he re ’s several aca d em ic is­ sues We sp o ke to the TAs and A ls re ­ cently, and, of course, their salaries are too low. I w o uld like to see those in ­ crease ... O ne lady told me, sh e ’s on the Faculty Senate, she said a lot of tim es student go ve rn m e nt is used against the faculty The students, som e tim es they nave an adversarial relationship with the faculty, and the Legislature picks up on tnis. They say the students d o n 't like what you're d o in g and why should we give you a raise? I’d like to get the stu ­ dents behind the fa cu lty so we can get and keep better teachers Texan: How would you go ab o ut gam ing control of student fees? W a rre n : Th s goes back to an earlier question. First, I would m ake an attem pt to cooperate with the adm inistration and see if we co u ld get som ething in a c o o p ­ erative effort with them. If that was not effective ... I w ould like to go to the L e g ­ islature. It appears that the 'aw is on our side. And if so we co u ld go to the L e g is­ lature and see what they have to say about i t . Texan: How, sp ecifically, would you attack the parking p ro b le m 9 W a rre n : The parking problem is a very bad one here, and from what I u n ­ derstand it’s always been pretty bad ... But I d o n 't feel it nas to be that way. As you know, the regents along with the a d ­ m inistration looked into the m ulti-level parking and f they're in favor of s p e n d ­ ing that m oney, it’s going to be very, very expensive If th e y're in favor of doing that, of co u rse I’m in favor of m ulti-level parking. If n o t ... I propose lots like the intram ural lots w here the shuttles run am ple is a m ass transit system of busing people in, or having those mass parking lo t s ... Texan: Each of the ca n d id ate s o p ­ poses a tuition increase. How, s p e c ifi­ cally, would you go a bout fighting a bill to increase tuition? Duval: Since the increase is go in g to be m ade at the Legislature, the o n ly fight would be at the legislative level. F or­ tunately there are quite a few legislators over there who have p ledged to fig h t the tuition increase. The S tudents’ A sso cia ­ tion needs to m ake im m ediate contact with them to try to hold them to their pledges. We have a g o vernor w ho says he opposes an increase and w o u ld veto it. We need to try to hold these p o liticians to their prom ises when they get in. I feel pretty good about the way the elections turned out Tuesday. In the Legislature the students can have an easier tim e getting things done than they w o uld have had it gone the other way T exan: W hy do you want the jo b ? Duval: I've been th inking a lot a bout that lately as I’ve been going thro u g h this cam paign stuff. It’s a lot of work and I know it's go in g to get a ot worse with the actual job. You sit on fo u r boards, you have to prepare tor the state Legislature. And I feel like there's a definite way it should be done. I fee! like the structure of the organization is the priority. I'm m ore co n ce rn e d a bout the Students' A s­ sociation in how it’s set up for the future as m uch as I arn now i'm w illing to s a c­ rifice som e sh o rt-te rm g a n s if I have to to m ake sure we have a long-term s u c ­ cessful goal And I real < feel I ke there's too m uch exaggeration about what we're going to get done. We il o r y have four m onths. It’s not on ly irresponsible, "s ly ­ ing to the students. I try to give ,hem the honest approacn. what I really think can be cone. A n d th e " Lm going to d o i t ___ D uval is a b u sin e s s se n io r. from the parking lots to the cam pus ... I’d like som ething on a m uch larger scale than that with buses running at m ore regular intervals. T exan: How. specifica lly would you go about fighting a bill to increase tu i­ tion? W a rre n : This is another area that som e of the candidates disagree on I w ould first of all like to use the existing lo b b y that we nave here at the U niversi­ It was a ty, the Texas S tudent L o b by very effective lo b b y when the last tuition increase was p roposed. It’s true that m any of the m em b e rs have gone on to other places, but som e of the very e ffe c ­ tive ones are still left here. And I w ould be in favor of b ring in g them into the fo r­ mal structure of the S tudents’ A sso cia ­ tion and let them do o u r lobbying for the Texas state Legislature against any tui­ tion increase. Texan: W hy do you want the job? W a rre n : I'm not a p o litico and I’m not on a power trip I’m a law student, i d o n 't need to pad m y resum e. This is go in g to be the only tim e I'll run, if eiected or not ... I think it’s very, very im portant that we set a firm foundation for the Students' Association this tim e "h is is going to be when student governm ent sinks or swim s. We ve got to see that the s tru c ­ ture is set up p ro p e rly, tne right a p ­ proach is taken, and m ost m portantly that we get all the students behind the S tudents’ A ssociation so that we will nave m ore c re d ib ility with the ad m in is tration. I dearly love this University and I’ve got a lot of tim e and m oney in • I’ve talked with som e close friends woo knew som e of the other candidates anc they urged m e to run and th o ug h t that I would be the m an to do the job, and that's why I’m ru n n mg. W a rre n s a s o c o n d -v -yearTaw stu- d ent. better. I’ve spoken with som e of them about this. They seem fairly am enable to the idea that the student bo d y has cha n ge d since 1971 when they took away control of our fees, and perhaps it's tim e to give those young people c o n ­ trol of their m oney again. I think that that's what we need to push with the re­ gents. Should that fail I have no qualm s about going to the press and going to the Legislature and dem a n d in g our b a ­ sic A m erican right to control our own fees. Texan: What do you feel is the proper relationship between the adm inistration and the Students' A ssociation? Begala: W hat I think would be im ­ proper would be to have a Students' A s­ sociation overly co n cilia to ry with the a d ­ m inistration, because at tim es there is a need for an adversarial relationship. C ertainly there are other tim es when we need to cooperate On the University C ouncil there are som e issues that stu ­ dents and the adm inistration agree on, I think, like the V ick Com m ittee report I’m m favor of the core cu rricu lu m But there are areas where no am ount of p e rsu a ­ sion and nc am ount of co operation is going to get the adm inistration to com e around to our p o in t of view. So we have to have the courage and the know -how to run around them and go to the L egis­ lature. Texan: W ould you elaborate on why you su p p ort the Vick Com m ittee report, which would establish basic educational requirem ents for all of the colleges? Begala: Because I believe that unless the University adopts a program sim ilar to the Vick report, w e’re going to b e ­ com e nothing m ore than a g lorified vo­ cational technical institute I think that me p /p o s e of a university is not job train ng. I think it”» education We should oe educating a person, not training an em ployee I think that everyone who graduates from nere should have som e ba ckg ro u n d n literature, and know how to write. A nd those of us who are in lib e r­ al arts need to be te ch no lo g ica lly literate. We need to at least know how tc o n a program in basic. Texan: W hat other academ ic issues do you think you would take up as p re si­ dent of the S tu d e n ts’ Association? Begala: W ell, certainly John D enson's proposal for m an d a to ry syllabus re ­ quirem ents. It cam e up at the University C o u n cil’s last m eeting and it will co m e up again, I assure you I hope the U n i­ versity C o uncil will realize that students have a right to know the basic req u ire ­ m ents of a course. Also I think it’s im portant that we p re ­ serve our right to have the opt on of ta k ­ ing credit or the grade in the cred it-b y- exam m ation system . Texan: All of the candidates agree parking is a p ro b le m that needs to be addressed by the Students A ssociation How, spe cifica lly, w ould you attack the parking p ro b le m ? Begala: Certainly, agai' oy lobby 9g the regents and talking with them They've got a co ’ sultant now who's ■ooking mto a m ulti-level parking g a rage But right away we need to push 'o r c o n ­ trol of the student parking fees them selves By law, article 54.503 of the Tex­ as Education C ode, paragraph A. defines student parking privileges as ju st another student service, like the C actu s yearbook, just like the intercollegiate a th ­ letics passes, an optional student se rvi­ ces fee, and it needs to be treated as such If we had som e input into how that parking system w orked, then I assure you we w ould not sell 3 7 stickers at ten dollars a piece for every single slot on cam pus That’s not even a decent hunt- ng license Texan. 41 of the candidates o ppose an increase in tuition How. specifically, would you go a bout fighting a bill to in ­ crease tu itio n 9 B egala: First, we r ave to oe aware c ’ the various fo rm s a tuition increase could take. For exam ple, there is a oro- posal to index tuition at 16 percent of the total cos* o* a student's education Now o-state students pay about 3 o r - oc - cent of educating them selves. Ana mat's because we’re blessed to live in a state with abundant natural resources, a state that’s not hard-pressed for cash, a state that doesn t need to increase tne spe >a tax of tuition v students. We need to be aware of me different ways it m ight com e up. A nd th e " we need to use our savvy to kill a tuition increase bill before it gets to the fioor of the House or the Senate to work through the com m ittee system and through the different legislators staffs. T exan Aside from the tn -igs w e ’ve discussed, why do you want the job? B e gala it's a once - -a- *etm e or portum ty not o n ly for mysel* personalty but for studer > as a whole. We have a brand new L( uary as a res; a brand new gains that we tone for stud* years And if ham string stu years So I th action and fo next i me 1 feel t iat set Jan- íave Like it or not, we have student g o ve rn ­ m ent back it's a "a n stru n g o rg a n iza ­ tion. And it is em barrassir g y weax T he structure is not th e n ’ But the reason w hy I ran is. basically, I c o u ld n t bear the thought of an e m b a rra ssin g ly weak p re s ­ ident of an e m b a rra ssin g ly wea* s tu d e r’ go ve rn m e nt ____ _________ Begala >s a liberai arts senior T exa n ; W hat do you think qualifies you to be president of the Students' A s ­ sociation'? D uval: Tne qualification that I feel is m ost im portant and that I feel I d o have is tne organizational skills w hich I d e ve l­ oped p a rtic . arly through being the : DordinatOf of the Texas Union Program C ju n c il. I serve on the Union board, w hich is a position the president will ’-mrve ¡ ve also served on the S tudent Services Fee Com m ittee, w hich is a n o th ­ er o rrv ttee that the president will be aske 1 1 serve on. So I have e xp erience ■ ?w serve on tne s n p u s . such as residence halls I was a re c je n t assistant for two years; I've lived there for four years. I’ve also been in other areas of i reas the president will d irectly T exa n : W hat w ould be your first p rio r­ ity as p re sident? Duvai. My first and prim ary p rio '-ty is • ,-e ,\ : d set up tne structure It's m y o p inion 'sake it or break it "sat ” ■ ot x . now ar d in the next fo u r and a • alf m onths but in me fu’ ure. We must h ive r 9 st' jc tu re that can withstand the transition that w - De com ing up in fo u r ‘ m ontns. T ne senators have to v d : oe o rg a n ize 1 the ones who will be sta y­ 's ones I've talked to are anyw av. T exa n , v at so you think qualifies , u to be p re sid e n t o ' Me Students' A s ­ sociation? W a rre n : 1 feei mat I nave several q ua - is that are gomg to be very ~ - ‘tea’ oortant fo r the position of student b ody : r-mident. One, definitely, is go in g to be ea dersnip I was the only tw o-tim e off ce • J e ' f tne history of the Texas State Youth G o v e '"m e n t program workec on that oo a rd of directors and neiped pian the structu re of how that program works, as Texas Youth eu’enant g o ve r­ nor and r exas s p e a k e r... rnxas Ar j fr am m ere ¡ was elected to the - i rr-a n tc tne national affairs - •em'-ce which brings in students *ro'- 35 states And served on the : 3r .: of : rectors mere as the Texas haim i - A n d we co ordinated that bo d y r J w ' fe s s ,v t it was very effective. :•? o s and sent them to C o n ­ Here on me university cam pus I’ve w irked with one of the program m ing nees with the un io n , the Ideas cor * nteractions Committee, fof two ye 3rs I know a lot about how the pro- jr a rr m ng structure over there works, and how m e fu n d in g works ’rr- cu rre n tly w orking with the Ex-Stu- 3er ’ A ssoc ation j am an e x-stu d e n t of T exa n : W hat do you think qualifies you to be p re sid e n t of the S tudents’ A s­ sociation ? B e g a la : First that I care. And second, perhaps m ore im portant to others, is that I've got the experience. On ca m p u s I’ve been on the S tudent Services Fee C o m ­ mittee as an elected m em ber, and there we m ade reform s in open m eetings and m p ro ce d u res, we solicited student input as never before On the University C ouncil i have been unafraid to stand up to the a d m inistration on the hard q u e s ­ tions tnat need to be asked about stu ­ dent fees M oreover, I’ve worked at the . egisiature for (Sen ; J o y d Doggett. I Know now that system works, so I think I can get th in g s done both on cam pus and at the Legislature Texan: W hat would be your first p rio r­ ity as p re sid e n t9 Begala: D efinitely it w ould be to work to gam co n tro l of student fees I think until we have som e serious control of our own fees we ca n 't be called a student gove rn m e nt at all, just a students' asso ­ ciation. Texan: H ow specifically w ould you go ab o ut reg a in in g control of student fees? Begala: First, by inform ally lo b bying with the regents, getting to know them 6/Th# Datty Texan/Monday, November 8,1982 Court to look at retirement payments WASHINGTON - Suppose that you and a co-worker are the same age, have identical jobs, receive the same salary, and pay the same amount into your employer’s pension plan over the years. Suppose, that there’s only one difference be­ tween you and the other per­ son : one of you is a man and the other is a woman. further, You retire at the same time, after working the same number of years. But the pen­ sion checks you receive every month are not the same. If you’re the woman, you get less — because women gener­ ally live longer. Is that a violation of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, which forbids employers to discriminate on the basis of an individual’s sex? Or is it therefore legal) equal (and treatm ent of the man and the woman because it is based on the best available actuarial estimate of when they are likely to die? These questions have now moved to the doorstep of the U.S. Supreme Court, which is scheduled to provide at least partial answers sometime next year. If the justices rule that the use of “gender-specific” ta­ is discriminatory and bles therefore illegal, some ex­ perts say the financial conse­ quences — in the form of back payments to retired female workers — could run as high as $20 billion and bankrupt a number of pension systems. Because the central ques­ tions have been bubbling through the courts for the last four years, interested parties on both sides — principally feminists and insurance com­ panies — are eager to have them resolved once and for all. To complicate matters fur­ ther, two federal appellate courts have reached directly opposite rulings in separate cases on the basic controver­ sy. It The first is the one the Su­ preme Court has agreed to hear. involves Nathalie Norris, a worker for the state of Arizona. As a state employ­ ee, she signed up several years ago for a voluntary re­ tirement plan funded entirely by employee contributions. From the three different options offered under the pro­ gram, she elected a “ life an­ nuity plan” which would pro­ vide her with a monthly payment from retirem ent to the end of her life. Because the plan used sex- specific m ortality tables to compute the amount of the monthly payments, Norris challenged its legality in fed­ eral court. U.S. District Judge Valde- mar Cordova agreed with Norris. He ordered the state to stop using sex-specific ta­ bles and to make all future annuity payments to women equal to the payments for similarly situated men. last month, halfway But across three the country, other judges reached the op­ posite conclusion in a similar case. This one involved Mil­ dred Peters, an employee of Wayne State University in De­ troit, who, like Norris, signed up for a voluntary plan. This one for Wayne State by the Teachers Insurance and Annuity Asso­ ciation (TIAA) and College Retirem ent Equities Fund ( CREFi adm inistered is Under the plan, if a woman chooses the option providing monthly payments for life, she gets smaller payments than a man would in the same situation. Peters challenged this practice on grounds simi­ lar to those in the Norris case. And here, too, a federal district judge agreed, on the grounds that the plan discrim­ inated against Peters as an in­ dividual. But the three-judge panel from the Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals reversed the rul­ ing, 3-0. It said that men and women were treated equally under the plan because, at age 65, mortality tables show that a woman’s life expectancy is than a four years man’s Lower monthly pay­ ments for women compensate for this difference, the court said. longer campus news in brief T H E D E A D L IN E F O R IT E M S TO S U B M IT T IN G C A M P U S N E W S IN B R IEF S 1 P.M . T H E D A Y BEFO R E P U B L IC A T IO N . NO E X C E P ­ T IO N S W IL L BE M A D E . A N N O U N C E M E N T S The C a re e r C e n te r will hold a Resum e C ritique Lab at 2 p.m. Tuesday in Jester C enter A 223 G rad u ate and U n d e rg ra d u ­ ate Social W ork Student Associations will sponsor a “ Toanks For G ivin g " food drive. D onations of non- p e rishable fo o ds m ay be left m boxes labeled with orange flyers all over c a m ­ pus. Iconoclast m agazine s u b m is­ sions are due Nov. 16 A n yo n e can su b m it a n y ­ th in g For details call Chris, 4 7 2 -1 8 5 5 o r G re tc h e n , 4 7 2 -3 3 4 9 EEE C o m p u te r Society w “ La n g-S e m '8 2 " present ianguage se m i­ co m p u te r nar. Presentations include CD F T R A N and P L/I T ue s­ d a y L IS P W ednesday, and C and A PL a n d AD A on Thursday All p re s­ entations begin at 7.30 o.m o Ernest C o c k re / Jr. Hall 1.204 R A S S L Learning Services w i/ h o d ¡ate registration for s h o rt n o n - c r e d it fre e , in te c h ­ study courses niques, reading college skills, speed reading, GRE and LSAT prep, red u cin g test anxiety and a n ti-p ro - crastination. To enroll go by Jester Center A 332 9 a.m. to 5 p.m M onday and Tuesday. Texas Union and C o u n s el­ ing, Learning and C a re e r S ervices C e n te r will s p o n ­ sor a "F o o d for T ho u g h t" w o rksho p on "T im e M a n ­ a g e m e n t" at n o o n Tuesday ■ the Eastwoods Room of the Texas Jn io n B uilding Texas Union Program m ing C o m m itte es need persons to wait tables at the M a d ri­ gal D inner Dec 1 through Dec. 5 Must be able to a t­ tend a training session on either Nov 22 at 4 p m Nov. 23 at 8 p m. or Nov, 29 at 4 p.m. Those who participate will be given free meals for University M ob ilization Survival an n ou n ce s that entries are b e in g accepted for ed . “a n d m u w e r e just VOU-11 Miss t h a s t i t \ / ’• 2 $4. *15% Off Paper Paperbacks COOP $12 70 13 Keeping Faith, Jim m y Carter IM M wen&itu — fro# 1 hr. parking w /$ 3 .0 0 purchase second level The Daily Texan/Monday, Novambar 8 ,1982/paga 7 fp¥ D ia n e A k e rs , p h o t o g r a p h e r A COLLECTION OF ELEGANCE Dana LeDuc, University of Texas Strength Coach, gives U.T. Fresh­ man, GiGi Parker, some tips on how to stay in condition. ...NOW LET DON SULLIVAN GET YOUR HAIR IN CO NDITIO N! Hair and Skin Care Products by TOUCH OF ELEGANCE Don Sullivan is kno w n w o r ld - w id e for his rem arkable ha ir and s kin care f o r m u l a t io n s , sold o n ly t h r o u g h profe ssio nal hairstylm g salons. To celebrate the in tro ­ d u c tio n of the DS C o lle ctio n of Elegance in ou r salon, w e ’re o ffe rin g a FREE hair analysis and a FREE T o u c h of Elegance A sample trip let of DS sham poo, prote in pac and fin ishin g rinse. .she: i* «IS* of fk t* ° - * TThe T o u c h of ' E le g a n c e o f f e r a ls o in clu des a valuable "BUY ONE GET O NE FREE" c o u p o n w hic h entitle s yo u to receive a FREE 8-oz size DS F i n i s h in g R in s e w h e n y o u b u y th e c o m p a n i o n DS Sham poo at regular p ric e1 P lease n ote: C a s e valu e of c o u p o n ,s ' 10c Lim it o f o n e co u p o n per p erso n . O ffe r not valid w h e re p ro h ib ite d ta x e d or o th e rw is e res tric te d by law an d m ay be w 'h d ra w n w ith o u t n o tic e 1982 D o n S u llivan , Inc CLIP AND SAVE VISIT ONE OF THESE FINE SALONS TODAY. YOUR "TOUCH OF ELEGANCE" IS W A IT IN G AUSTIN CEDAR PARK KYLE J U L IA N 'S HAIR FASHIONS 3910 N. L a m a r (512) 451-6267 LIVELY SET H w y , 183 ( 5 1 2 ) 258-4715 A CUT ABOVE THE REST 1900 E . O l t o r f ( 5 1 2 ) 441-2612 EGO HAIR ENCOUNTERS 3115 S. 1st St, ( 5 1 2 ) 443-2248 E LC ID S 1050-G S o u t h L a m a r ( 5 1 2 ) 444-17 97 FRANCES BEAUTY SALON 911 E a s t 1st St. ( 5 1 2 ) 474-2146 GREAT LENGTHS 400 W . 15th St. S u i t e 1210 ( 5 1 2 ) 472-83 48 HAIR COUNTRY 1218 S l a u g h t e r (5 1 2 ) 282-2370 HAIR SHACK 8016 M e s a D r . ( 5 1 2 ) 345-5636 HAIR S M ITH LTD. 6612 S C o n g r e s s (5 1 2 ) 44 7-6624 K&M HAIR DESIGN 300 H u n t ia n d (512) 458-5129 M ANE TAMERS 13497-C H w y 183 N Pecan C e nter (512) 258-9161 ONE STOP HAIR SHOP 4422 P a c k S a d d l e P a s s ( 5 1 2 ) 44 7-1334 TEXAS CLIPPER 503 W. 1 5 th St. ( 5 1 2 ) 474-4 444 TORRES IV 1920 E . R i v e r s i d e ( 5 1 2 ) 443-4991 TORRES V 6 9 2 5 -A M a n c h a c a R d . ( 5 1 2 ) 441-0775 TORRES VI 13928 R e s e a r c h B l v d . T r a v i s S q u a r e (5 1 2 ) 258-7381 BERTRAM BRYAN BECKY S HAIR FASHION H w y . 29 ( 5 1 2 ) 355-2341 ECLIPS HAIR DESIGN 4343 C a r t e r C r e e k S u i t e 101 (7 1 3 ) 84 6- 47 09 THE FLAIR BEAUTY 704 N R o s e m a r y ( 7 1 3 ) 779-27 92 SUE'S STYLE SALON C e d a r P a r k P l a z a S u i t e 103 ( 5 1 2 ) 258-5530 COLLEGE STATION THE OTHER ECLIPS 2551 S. T e x a s A v e . S u i t e C ( 7 1 3 ) 696-8700 THE HAIR CUT 900 N o . 5 H a r v e y R o a d ( 7 1 3 ) 764-8004 GEORGETOWN IDEAL HAIRSTYLING 1004 A u s t i n A v e . ( 5 1 2 ) 863-3281 J'LYNN BEAUTY SALON 104 W . 8th St. ( 5 1 2 ) 863-3632 SHIRLEY'S COIFFURES 2508 W i l l i a m s ( 5 1 2 ) 863-89 58 KILLEEN FRANK'S FOUNTAIN OF BEAUTY F o u n t a i n of Y o u t h L a d i e s H e a l t h C l u b 113 N . 2 0 th St. ( 8 1 7 ) 63 4-3746 FRANK'S HAIR STUDIO 1519 F l o r e n c e R o a d N o 2 ( 8 1 7 ) 526-0104 MR. G'S 1109 O l d F M 440 ( 8 1 7 ) 526-3584 ANN'S HAIR DESIGN 106 N o r t h B u r l e s o n ( 5 1 2 ) 268-6501 LEANDER CAROL'S BEAUTY SHOP 104 W i l l i s ( 5 1 2 ) 259-1471 LLANO DORAS' BEAUTY 1506 B e r r y (9 1 5 ) 247-5335 MASON HIS N HER HAIR SALON 307 B r y a n t ( 9 1 5 ) 347-54 00 VERNIE'S BEAUTY SHOP 1106 R i t t e r (9 1 5 ) 347-5254 M OODY PRECISION CUTTING H w y . 317 & C o r a L e e L a n e ( 8 1 7 ) 853-2688 NEW BRAUNFELS DAS SCHONE HAUS 531 S o u th W a l n u t (5 1 2 ) 625-3715 PFLUGERVILLE IN THE ROUND HAIR FASHIONS 3801 S. T e x a s A v e ( 7 1 3 ) 846-37 85 M A G IC M IRRO R HAIR FASHION 507 N . 4 t h ( 8 1 7 ) 634-4431 KAREN'S KUTTING KANE 14010 H y m i l l D r ( 5 1 2 ) 251-45 92 SAN M AR CO S HI STYLE COIFFURES 1428 R a n c h R o a d 12 (5 1 2 ) 392-4975 TAYLOR FAMILY HAIR WORLD 3210 N . M a i n St. (5 1 2 ) 352-5140 TEMPLE ELAN 1607 W e s t A v e . H (8 1 7 ) 773-9698 HOUSE OF STERLING 3002 S o u t h 31 st T h e M a r k e t P l a c e ( 8 1 7 ) 773-1451 LOVE'S SALON OF BEAUTY 3120 T h o r n t o n L a n e (8 1 7 ) 778-6311 TROY PRINCE BEAUTY 3 E a s t M a i n (8 1 7 ) 938-2511 HAIR DESIGNS 1508 N . V a l l e y M i l l s ( 8 1 7 ) 772-9337 MARGIE'S HAIR DESIGN 1201 L a k e A i r D r ( 8 1 7 ) 772-8631 SERENDIPITY 1412 N . V a l l e y M i l l s ( 8 1 7 ) 7 7 6 - 4 0 0 2 CROSSROADS HOUSE OF BEAUTY R t. / B o x 620 F ( 5 1 2 ) 964-3896 W ACO P * Q * • / T i n D a i l y T t x a n / M o n d a y , N o v e m b e r 8 , 1 9 8 2 Chagra jury to hear more recordings SAN ANTONIO (UPI) - More of the FBI’s secretly recorded tapes await the jury deciding the fate of three defend­ ants in the 1979 slaying of federal Judge John Wood in a trial that enters its fifth week Monday. Tapes of gambler Jim my Chagra’s prison conversations with his brother Joe and wife Elizabeth highlighted last week’s testimony, with Joe on the wit­ ness stand. On the tapes, Jimmy and Joe talked openly about having planned to kill the judge so Jim my could avoid a probable life sentence on a drug smuggling charge in Wood’s court. Jim m y and Elizabeth also rem in ­ isced about plotting the U.S. d istrict judge’s shooting death. Mrs. Chagra is charged with conspir­ acy in the judge’s death. But the prose­ cution also has tapes of the other two defendants, Charles and Jo Ann Harrel- son. Harrelson, charged with murder as the triggerman in Wood’s slaying, w as in the Harris County jail in Houston on unrelated w eapons charges when the FBI taped his conversations with his visiting wife. Windfall tax ruling may not lower gas prices By MICHAEL ALEXIEFF Daily Texan Staff A University professor says a Wyo­ ming federal judge’s ruling declaring the windfall oil profits tax unconstitu­ tional will not necessarily result in low­ er gas prices. U.S. District Court Judge Ewing Kerr ruled Friday the tax violated the Constitution exem pts because Alaskan oil and thus is not applied uni­ formly to all states. it Myron Dorfman, chairman of the University’s Department of Petroleum Engineering, predicts gas prices will go down, but not as a result of K e rr’s ru l­ ing. “ I suspect w hat w e’re going to see is stability and a possible lowering of gas three the next prices over y ears,' D orfm an said Friday. “ I don’t think this ruling is going to help drive gas prices down, thoiigh.” two to Thomas Coffman, an Austin-based in­ dependent oil producer, said the money saved if the tax is repealed would be used for fu rth er exploration. The windfall oil profits tax has been the industry of the much depriving needed capital necessary to explore for new oil fields, said Harold Wright, president of the Texas Independent P ro ­ ducers and Royalty Owners Associa­ tion. However, the ruling is not causing a great deal of excitem ent in the oil in­ dustry because m ost industry experts expect it to be appealed “ I t’ll have the Suprem e to go to C ourt,’ said Bill Abington president of Texas Mid-Continent Oil and Gas Asso­ ciation. thanks B U Y . SELL RENT T RA D E W A N T A D S . 471-5244 United w ay T H E H A IR STUDIO 1 407 West 46th of Burnet 458-3171 $10 & <7 / m is D IA M O N D S 478-4649 VOL MAY BE PAYING $1000 TOO Ml I II H>R YOUR NeXT HI V MUS'D. «I VI.ITY \T SFNS1BI I PRU I .' 50 OFF RETCIL *3 carat round...................Í825 $1200 *2 carat round $2295 1 carat round . . . . . 1*32 At ' T I N N VT I. B VS K F O W F ( \1 1 M K S T F R V F O R V P P T - € DONALD R. COUNTS, M.D., ACPM Announces the location of his office S p e c i a l i z i n g i n : General Preven tive Medicine Nutrition and Exercise Counseling T reatm ent & Counseling of Sexuali / Transm itted Diseases by Appointm ent O nly M on-Fri 9:00-4:30 REGISTER FOR FREE T ic k e ts 7 V T0 SEF * ~ J Leslie N ielsen - I R A L E V IN ’S - » DEATHTRAP P ro fe s s io n a l P e rs o n a liz e d S e rv ic e STUDENT RATES Urn, Svwiu 454-1532 S p e c ia lizin g in L eg a l W ork, ¡ T erm P a p ers, P ro fessio n a l R e p o rts , T hesis & D iss e r ta ' tion s, P etro leu m R ep o rts, i L e tte rs , C h arts, 24 hr. Service! 7 d a y s / w e e k ERE W ill BE 10 WINNERS TWO TICKETS EACH No ptjrchote ntc«*KJry You e#d not be present to w • (?1 or more cal c n d a r s v i n i i c i eiv e t R ! I- t h e < a lit o r ma (lo lclcn ( lir h Poster sh o w n P o s n r ais., available separate!\ at $ 4 . 5 0 • • ■ ■ ■ « « ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ a ! GO FO R IT! ® ■ ■ g ■ W o m e n 's < alcnd.tr Men s i aleu dar ( mil lak m s. trclt I n fo r m a t i o n k mi s $"’ 9 5 $ - > 5 i : 5(1 I RI I t Milt His a d d Cl . ® l U * ■ sal*'s '-1 ! total an ■ • \l l o w s i • w ■ .uni c i n l o s e d > i w e e k s deliver y ¡ M A IL TO: ■ WINDNSEA PRODUCTIONS. INC. ■ 7910 Ivanhoe Ave Suite 238 ■ La Jolla CA 92037 ..GETS TO YOUR THROAT QUICKER ★ FOR ENTIRE M EN U REFER TO THE STUDENT DIRECTORY I | E x p i r a s 11-11-82 Super-Bert QUARTER POUNDER On Whole Wheat" S a v e 9 9 ‘ COUPON REDEEMED IN STORE ONLY 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. Daily • 3303 N. Lamar MAUL 2021 GUADALUPE Ri dio ‘Kami ’ make contact with friends across globe By JACQUI WOOSTER Daily Texan Staff While most students communicate long distance on telephones, m em bers of the University Amateur Radio Club talk to each other and other contacts around the world from the club’s radio station on top of W.R. Woolrich Labora­ tories Building. “Amateur radio is a sophisticated hobby that has a lot of professional as­ pects to it,” said Clark Meier, president of the University Amateur Radio Club, which includes about 20 students. Amateur operators make and buy their own radios, said Meier, electrical engineering junior. Using his own transistor-like radio, Meier said, “ I talk to other ham s (am a­ teur radio users) ... it’s not an insult, we accept the title.” Unlike citizens band radio users, a m ­ ateu r radio users have to take a test to get a license The test includes sending and receiving M orse Code and a w ritten test over radio theory and operating practices of FCC rules and regulations “ T h at’s the big distinction betw een us and CB u se rs,” M eier said “ We (a m a te u r radio users) have about 10 percent of the usable radio sp ectru m ,” M eier said, “ and a little over 800,000 channels com pared to 40 channels on CB radios Using a rep eater or an autom atic re ­ lay station, am ateu r radio users can place “ telephone c alls'' from their own radios The am ateu r radio m ust have an autopatch, or a touch tone “ You c a n ’t use it for business calls it’s illegal,” M eier said, We couldn't use it to order a pizza The club recently was entered in a contest to see how many other stations across its m em bers could contact within 48 hours the world “The em phasis (of the contest was You ju st m igh t get a B etter Grade. 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T h e CIn ic o r n gallery and gifts U pper lev el • Dobie M all at 2021 Guadalupe ■ 477-0719 •J The Daily Texan/Monday, November 8 ,1982/page 9 Adviser’s voting rights considered By KYLE POPE Daily Texan Staff Two candidates for Students’ Associa­ tion president m et Friday with repre­ sentatives from University Mexican- American organizations to discuss the possibility of giving voting rights to the Hispanic adviser to the student govern­ ment president authorized by the stu­ dent constitution. Candidates Paul Begala, liberal arts senior, and J. Wray Warren, second- year law, m et with members of UT groups including the League of United Latin American Citizens, L’Amistad, National Chicano Health Organization, the Mexican-American Centennial Ac­ tion Committee and the Chicano Cultur­ al Committee in the Texas Union Chica­ no Culture Room. Presidential candidate Pat Duval, business senior, did not attend the fo­ rum. Neither Duval nor Carol Cotera, his could be reached for comment. campaign manager, The candidates addressed the possi­ bility of a constitutional am endm ent giving voting rights to the m inority ad ­ visers to the Students’ Association p re s­ ident. The constitution dictates th a t the president appoint special advisers for black and for Hispanic affairs approved by m inority student organizations. Un­ der the docum ent, advisers can propose legislation on the floor of the Student Senate, but cannot vote in the senate. Begala, calling him self “ a strong be- liever in Hispanic and minority rights,” said he believes the only people who should be allowed to vote in the Student Senate are those who are elected, which would exclude the minority advisers un­ less the constitution is amended. “ It’s not that I’m unwilling to have representation of minorities ... I’d just like to see us give what we have a shot," said Begala. He said that if he finds the p resent system isn’t giving Hispanics the action they need, “I’m willing to throw it aw ay ... to trash the whole sy stem ." Begala said as the system is now, the m inority advisers to the president, and other advisers the president m ay ap ­ point, “ have m ore to say as to w hat goes on,” than do student senators. However, W arren said he doesn’t like the way “ the m inority voice is diluted in student governm ent” and told the m i­ nority groups he would initiate efforts to obtain voting privileges the Hispanic adviser to the president. for He said a possibility would be to elect som e of the senators at-large for specif ic m inority groups, saying th at would be a “ definite way of getting people in­ volved and getting them in voting posi­ tions” . Sylvia R am irez, chairw om an of the Chicano C ultural Com m ittee, said not acquiring voting privileges the adviser would leave him o r her in a th at “ dum m y position.” adding the a power- adviser would be assum ing for less role.” Ramirez said if an issue com es up that is considered to be important to minorities, they would have no repre­ sentation, because they were “giving the system a chance to work. We may stand a lot to lose ... I ’m not willing to take that chance,” she said. Both candidates agreed that minority recruitm ent would be of “primary con­ c e rn ,” if they a re elected. W arren said the University’s low m i­ nority population — 3,899 Mexican- A m ericans and 1,311 blacks, final fall 1982 enrollm ent figures indicate — is “ very, very sad. UT has got a bad, bad stigm a with m inorities. We need to do som ething to erase this. I’m a big advo­ cate of wiping out and obliterating this stig m a.” Begala said m inority recruitment should be exam ined because the per­ centage of m inorities a t the University has not changed in 10 y ears and that “ we need to take som e serious steps toward integration.” Begala said it was “ bull” that the burden of recru itm en t should be on the students, not the adm inistration. We don’t require our football play­ ers to recru it other football players. We ve got guys th at fly all over the state We need to shift the emphasis which is on the students to the adminis­ tration, and m ake them obey the la w ,” Begala said Bad loans to Dallas man blamed for failure of Amarillo bank AMARILLO (U P I) — Bad loans m ade to a D allas video gam e operator w ere partially responsible for last w eek’s collapse of the Texas Bank of A marillo, Insurance Corp a F ed eral Deposit spokesm an said. said uncollectable Donald B. McKinley, an FDIC a tto r­ ney, declined to nam e the borrow er, but Saturday “ video loans” m ade to a businessm an who was “out of D allas” appeared to be the m ost dam aging of the bad debts held by the sm all suburban bank. The bank, which closed voluntarily F riday because of “ substantial loan losses.' was the fifth bank closing in Texas this year and the 37th in the U nit­ ed States. The failed bank's liabilities w ere a s­ sum ed by F irst Am arillo B ancorpora- tion Inc., holding company for F irs t N a­ tional Bank of Amarillo, said FDIC spokesm an Bill Olcheski A spokesm an said the closed bank would reopen Monday as F irst Bank of A m arillo and all depositors of the closed bank automatically will become depositers of the assuming ban k.” W illiam Stephen Solesbee, 32, — a D allas video gam e o perator with a home and business operation in Amaril­ lo — received $445.000 in loans, which w ere defaulted when he filed for bank­ ruptcy in investigators said. late October, Solesbee has been indicted tw ice in D allas County on counts of theft related io video gam e businesses he operated, Dallas County A ssistant D istrict A ttor­ ney Scott Wylie said. Guy Reynolds, Dally Texan Staff Clark Meier (I) and Trey Garlough in W.R. W oolrich Lab. on long d istan ce.” Meier said “ We con­ tacted roughly over 100 countries (in­ cluding A ustralia. New Zealand, P eru and some in A frica).” Oct 30 and 31, am ateur radio groups all over the world participated in the contest, which was organized by C Q M a g a z i n e an international publication for am ateu r radio users, Meier said. We set up two radios, and two m em ­ bers at a time operated the radios (al­ te r n a tin g 1 for about 40 hours.” All of the contacts w ere m ade in E ng­ lish and were short in duration Only the station s calling sign, zoning num ­ ber and signal strength were exchanged the contacts. Meier said, be­ during cause the object of the contest was to make as many contacts as possible Ml of the participating groups will send a list of th eir contacts to C. Q . , and the results of the contest will be pub­ lished in the next issue of the magazine. M eier said th at p art of the function of to provide the is the club's station m em bers with a working radio. Trey Garlough, a m em ber of the club and a sophom ore petroleum engineer­ ing student, used the radio last weekend to participate in another contest. “The object was to get as m any con­ tacts as possible using strictly Morse Code.” Garlough said. Garlough m ade over 700 contacts in 22 hours, "w hich is not really com peti­ tiv e.” he said The club has two long distance-type radios, but “ the radio is not really the essence of m aking co n tac ts,” Garlough said, “ it’s the an ten n a .” Why should you pick up the phone and call home? Because your earner pigeon car t even ive] find his way to the cafeteria and back cafei :ew moments with id fnends back on can call anyone between 11 pm nd 5 pm Sunday 10 minutes for > less, depending e you call, should you pick up me and call home'7 ,se it'll make them od And vou, too. Reach out and touch someone. Southwestern Bell to caiis diaied One-Plus withoui stance Same fate applies from ecnrv iKin; Tax not included pag« 10/Th« Daily Taxan/Monday, Novambar 8,1982 ■ monday sports ■ pumal Golfers host tournament The University men's golf team takes on a tough field in the Harvey Penick Intercollegiate Tournament at Austin’s M orris W illiam s G olf Course. Story, page 12 . No. 1 team falls again The Notre Dame Fighting Irish knocked off the top-ranked Pitt Panthers in spite of a good game by Pitt quarter­ back Dan Marino. Story, page 13. Horns hand UH worst loss in Cougar history This time freak plays ‘planned’ SuzanneJJichel Three weeks ago, I t ’s funny how the story changes when the victor happens to be the home team . sportsw riters, coaches and players decided T exas lost to SMU because of that one big play J it te r Field s when missed an intercep­ tion and SM U ’s Bob­ by Leach the football into the end zone for the touch­ down. took \ S P a ss w as ‘h i s , ’ but TD w as SMU’s so p art o f b la m e to F ie ld s belongs declared a headline in a Dallas paper. “ That freak play was the ball g am e,’’ Akers said. Against Oklahoma, Akers claim s Texas played a consistent ball gam e but was simply killed by a few m ore “freak s’’ : a couple of undeserved large gains from Marcus Dupree or Weldon Ledbetter. Sure, running backs are tough; but the 59-yard Led­ better touchdown run and 63-yard Du­ pree scam per were the deciding facto rs in the Sooners’ 28-22 humbling of Texas, Akers said. those OU “They didn't do anything con sisten t­ ly, but they hurt us because they popped the three big ones,” he said. This tim e, it was Texas on the other end of those “fre a k ” plays. It was quarterback Robert Brew er looking for that short pass, but finding Herkie Walls down along the right sideline for a 67-yard touchdown run to put Texas up 14-0 in the first quarter. Touchdown drive: 10 seconds, one play, one first down for 67 yards. This tim e, it was a bad snap from Houston center Billy Kidd to punter Lonnie Stokes on the UH 13-yard line which forced Stokes back into the end zone and gave the Longhorns a safety. Texas 16, Houston 0. This Saturday, it was a tipped pass from a Houston receiver that fell into the hands of Fields and gave Texas the go-ahead on the Houston 13. Two plays later, Texas had its third touchdown of the gam e when fullback Ervin Davis — lead blocker on the play — grabbed a pitch and ran 11 yards to give the Longhorns a 23-0 advantage with 2:11 left in the half. Touchdown drive: 13 yards, two plays, one first down, 40 seconds. Final score: Texas 50, Houston 0. But in this ball gam e, somehow it wasn't the f r e a k plays which made the ju st be­ difference. Texas didn’t win cause of a couple of big gains. Planned continued on page 12 Top 20 scoreboard NE W i O R K H ow the ' J p ' T op 20 co lle g e fo o tb a ll ■ear- , ta^ed through g am es o f S a tu rd a y. N ov 6 1 P 'tts b u rg h (7-1 > lost to N otre D am e 3 1 -1 6 ie o rg ia (9 - 0 ) defe a te d F lo rid a 44 0 3. SMU (9-0) defeated Rice 41-14. 4. Arkaneee (7-1) loet to Baylor 24-17. •ostto L o u is ia n a St 2 0 -1 0 8 U C L A (7 -1 H i ost to W a sh in g to n 10-7 9 W a sh in g to n (8-1 (d e fe a te d JC;_A 10-7 i0 ’ lo u is ia n a S t (7 -0 -1 ) d e fe a te d A la b a m a 2 0 -1 0 r o n d a St. (7 -1 ) d e fe a te d S o u th C aro lin a 5 6 -2 6 i 2 O ^ a h o m a ( 7 -2 / d e fe a te d K ansas St. 2 4 -1 0 ’ 3 N o C a ro lin a (5 - 3 i lost to C le m so n 16-13 ‘ 4 C ie m so n (6-1 -1 ) d e fe a te d N o C a ro lin a 1 6 -1 3 15 W .ch.gan (7 -2 ) d e fe a te d Illin o is 16-10 16 W est V irg in ia (7 -2 ) d e fe a te d T e m p le 2 0 -1 7 17 M a ry la n d (7 -2 ) d e fe a te d M ia m i (F la ) 18 -1 7 18 F lo rid a (5 -3 ) o st to G e o rg ia 4 4 -0 1*. Taiaa (5-2) defeated Houston 50-0. 20 N o tre D am e ¡6 ' 11 defeated P ittsb u rg h 31 - 16 Heisman Watch Herschel Walker Scored three touchdowns and ran for 219 yards in Georgia’s 44-0 victory over Florida. Walker, who played only three quarters, moved into fifth place on the NCAA all-time rushing list. He also broke an NCAA record for yards gained in a three-year period with 4,920 yards. Eric Dickerson Rushed for 102 yards on 25 carries and scored a 19-yard touchdown to help SMU over Rice, 41-14. It was the 26th tim e in his ca re e r Dickerson has rushed for over 100 yards in a game Tom Ramsey Threw a 39-yard touchdown pass for his team ’s only score as UCLA fell to Washington, 10-7 Ram sey completed 18 of 31 passes for 248 yards with two in­ terceptions John Elway Completed 22 of 33 passes for 259 yards and one touchdown, but Stanford lost to Arizona, 41-27. Elway broke the NCAA completion record and moved into third place on the NCAA all-time total offense list with 8,411 yards. By SUZANNE HALLIBURTON Daily Texan Staff line. Saturday, the fateful prophet Murphy must have looked down to M emorial Stadium, sadistically clapping his hands together in delight as he watched the Houston Cougars play out his law in precision-like perfection. as Nothing seemed to go right for the Cougars, they dumbfoundedly watched the Texas Longhorns take ad­ vantage of every situation, every turn­ over, the rolling up 50 points Cougars’ zero, en route to T e x a s’ big­ gest win since 1977 when the Longhorns beat R ice, 72-15. to F o r Houston, T e x as’ 50-point margin was only half the problem. The Cougars were shut out, but held the ball longer than Texas and built up 19 first downs This broke a 61-game scoring streak, handing Coach Bill Yeom an his worst defeat in his 20 years at Houston. The gam e also amounted to the worst loss in Cougar history. Mississippi previously- held the honors. But as Murphy dictates, if anything can go wrong, it will. And if things can get worse ... Try seven turnovers. F o r once this season, Murphy did not sit on T e x a s’ side of the field. The breaks went the Longhorns’ way as vi­ sions of two losses via the big play tem porarily van­ (SMU, Oklahoma) ished. “ It seem ed like it today, afte r SMU and Oklahom a,” said defensive tackle Ralph D arnell, who caused the first Houston turnover. Turnovers and lucky breaks doubled for the m ain plotline in this gam e story as Texas had them and for Houston, only bad luck was present. N ote: • J it te r Fields, the Longhorns' v ic­ tim of past pass deflections, finally caught a tipped ball to give T exas' sec­ ondary its first interception since the Oklahoma game. Fields returned the ball 16 yards to the Houston 13-yard tightroped • Two plays later, backup fullback Ervin Davis, m eant to be the leading blocker for Mike Luck on an option play, took quarterback Robert B rew er’s pitch and the sideline 11 yards for his first collegiate touchdown. • Herkie Walls, designated the Long­ horns' big-play specialist, caught a per­ fectly thrown 67-yard touchdown pass from Brew er. Unlike previous gam es, this play did not ju st glance off W alls' fingertips (SM U) or get called back for a holding penalty (Texas T ech). “ I t ’s like a baseball player going into a slump, we ju st broke out of i t ," said tailback D arryl Clark, who led all T ex­ as rushers with 82 yards. “ We ju st buc­ kled our chin straps, settled down and like decided to whip everybody. It's what Craig Curry (Longhorn safety) said, somebody upstairs didn’t want us to win. But what com es round, goes round What happened to us, happened to somebody e lse .” When the gam e started, though, it looked as if both team s would explode and leave the defenses on the bench The Longhorns started their first pos­ from session with a 17-yard pass Brew er to Walls to the Houston 43 Two plays later Brew er rolled and threw a screen pass to Clark who, with opening blocks from tackle Bryan Millard and receiver Brent Duhon. scam pered 36 yards for what proved to be the winning touchdown: which occurred with 13 minutes to go in the first quarter. Houston took the kickoff and for six minutes drove 66 yards to the Texas nine-yard line before the Texas defense forced Houston to a fourth-down, field- goal try. The Cougar offense ate up the yardage with runs from backs Dallas Wiggins and Dwyane Love, which was no change from Yeom an's previous gam e plans But Mike Clendenen's kick was wide and the Cougar drive went for naught. Both team s traded possessions, then T exas' uncharacteristic big-play of- % I Jk It David S pra gue Daily Texan S taff Darryl Clark (33) led all UT rushers with 82 yards and caught a 36-yard touchdown pass. fense took one play. Walls 67-yard re­ ception. and made the score 14-0. Again. Houston took the kickoff and marched up the field before the Texas defense finally adjusted to the off-tack- le runs. With a third-and-10 from the Texas 44-yard line. Cougar quarterback Lionel Wilson dropped back to pass, but was hit with such force from Darnell that Wilson fumbled, allowing T exas' John Haines to recover the football "It was just a m atter of seeing an like Houston s for a second linebacker Tonv Ed ­ offense tim e .’’ middle (H ouston1 had wards said “You ju st don’t go shutting out Houston right at first Things ju st turned around The offense did so well they to change their gam e plan There were lots of things going against us. I guess the breaks are going our way ” From there, long line of Houston m iscues The rout was begin­ ning as the Longhorns built up a 30-point lead at halftim e and with most of the first and second team ers on the bench. T exas scored 20 more points in the sec­ ond half The l/onghorns had 448 total it was a yards in a near balance between run­ ning (264 ' and pas^ng 184 The Longhorns are now 5-2 and sec­ ond in the conference with a 3-1 record Houston falls to 3-5-1 2-3 in the SWC. “ It was a grea’ lin ker room feeling,” Davis said “ We needed this win and we needed to win big Fred Akers s.iid It was our day, pe­ riod We have been asking the bounces to go our way and when it started it overflowed for Fifty points of overflow Bears stun No. 4 Razorbacks By ED C O M B S Daily Texan S ta ff WACO - The Baylor B ears tugged on Superm an's cape, spit into the wind and messed around with the Arkansas R a­ zorbacks Saturday And lived In fact, the Bears not only lived but pulled out a 24-17 win over the fourth- ranked Razorbacks The red horde of Arkansas faithful who followed the team from F a y e tte ­ ville marched into Baylor Stadium e x ­ pecting the game to be just another stop on the way to the Cotton Bowl Going into the contest, Arkansas was 7-0, first in the SWC in both total offense and to­ tal defense and had not allowed a touch­ down in four conference gam es Baylor, on the other hand was 2-5-1 and had not won a football gam e in six weeks facing an “Someone told me earlier this week that we were impossible task. B aylor coach Grant T eaff said “ But as someone else once said. ‘There ain ’t never been a horse that ain ’t been rode and there ain ’t never been a cow­ boy that ain ’t been throwed Nothing's impossible . ” The gam e started out as most people expected with Arkansas jumping out to a 14-0 lead. In the first quarter, Gary Anderson caught a 24-vard pass from Brad Taylor to cap a 50-yard drive. After a Baylor punt pinned Arkansas on its own seven-yard line, Lou Holtz’ squad put together a 93-yard drive. 45 yards coming on a diving catch by split Je ss ie Clark end Derek Holloway. scored the touchdown with a one-yard run. Baylor started its com eback on the next possession. Led by the running of tailback Alfred Anderson, fullback Al­ len R ice and quarterback Mike Bran- nan, the B ears drove 80 yards to m ake the score 14-7. The drive alm ost stalled when Baylor reached a third-and-10 on the Arkansas 35 but Brannan hit Gerald McNeil over the middle for 23 yards and a first down Anderson scored the touchdown with a one-vard run that broke the Ar­ kansas defense's streak of 17 straight quarters without allowing a touchdown Near the end of the third quarter the Razorbacks had driven to the Baylor 32- vard line and on fourth-and-one. made a first down on what T eaff called a ter rible mark It appeared as if the R a ­ zorbacks were ready to take control of the game, but on the next series of downs, the Baylor defense held on an­ other fourth-down play and the Bears took over on their own 23-yard line On the next play. M cNeil, >andwiched between two Arkansas defenders pulled down a 39-yard pass from Bran nan After a one-yard run by R ice, Brannan hit tight end Mike Lively for 19 yards Two plays later. Brannan under heavy pressure, threw a 12-yard touch­ down pass to R ice to tie the game A 33-yard field goal by M artin Smith put Arkansas back on top 17-14 On the first play from scrim m age af­ ter the kickoff. Brannan hit Anderson out of the backfield with a 59-yard bomb, the longest pass play of the year against the Razorbacks to put the ball on the Arkansas 21 “ We've been working on that all week. ” Anderson said We were trying to beat the safety We felt all week it would work, it was just a m atter of exe­ cuting ” But the drive fizzled and Baylor had to settle for a line-drive. 32-yard field goal by Ben P erry to tie the gam e with 7:13 left. Arkansas ran the kickoff back to the 18 and called a timeout. On the next play, the R azorbacks’ Mark M istier threw a pass off a reverse that was in­ tended for Thomas Brown, but B aylor’s P erry Davis stepped in front of Brown for the interception at the Arkansas 47 Baylor put the ball on the ground and kept it there. The winning drive took 10 plays, all on the ground Our gam e plan was to attack them Teaff said We ran into with the run the teeth of their defense Anderson who ran : >r 84 yards, touchdown on a scored the winning four-yard dive over left tackh- “ When I was coming down Ander­ I looked down and saw I was son said, one yard short of the goal Une Someone hit me and my momentum carried me into the end zone 1 don t even know who it was Holtz admitted he was disappointed Baylor with the outcome but added should be congratulated for playing e x ­ trem ely well “ We played hard and had our chances but couldn t put the gam e aw ay,’ Holtz said “ We ju st didn t execute, esp ecial­ ly in the second half ’ We established For Baylor, this was more than just another gam e in a disappom ing season this as our bowl game at the beginning of the w eek,” said McNeil, who caught fou^ passes for 83 yards and moved into second place on B aylor's all-tim e reception list. “We tried to give it everything, we put our hearts out there ” Brannan said This is a great win for us This team really deserved a lot better. We have a real good team , but we ve had a lot of bad breaks Brannan completed lü of 21 passes, including five of five in the second half and threw for 239 yard : against a team that had given up an average of only 225 7 yards in t o t a l offense “ Mike Brannan played a sensational game. T eaff said The biggest thing with the passing gam e was the great job our line did protecting the passer. “ This team Arkansas didn t fumble in the end zone T eaff added “ We beat them SWC roundup/p.13 Baylor held Arkansas’ Anderson to 60 yards. UPI Telephoto Houston clubbed ’82 preseason basketball favorite Coaches say 45-second clock welcome, but not significant m ajor topic for discussion during the preseason That subject has been the addition of the 45-second shot clock “ It doesn’t do you any good if your big guys are at one end and the basket­ ball is at the other end There are 94 feet between them .” body says we are improved,’’ said Lew­ is “ That doesn't make sense to me. (U PI) DALLAS - The Houston Cougars, surprise qualifiers for last season's Final Four, were made the 1962-83 SWC favorites Sunday by the league’s basketball coaches, who also said they did not think the addition of a 45-second shot clock would alter play in the SWC, for The SWC’s nine coaches gathered their annual preseason Sunday meeting and Texas Tech’s Gerald My­ ers summed up the feelings of his asso­ ciates. "Houston has to be the favorite. ’ he said. The Cougars put together a 25-8 record last season and although they finished a gam e behind Arkansas in the conference race, they defeated Alcorn State, Tulsa, Missouri and Boston Col­ lege in the NCAA tournament to make it to the national sem ifinals There, however, Houston fell to even­ tual national champion North Carolina Houston coach Guy Lewis argued against his team being made favorite, even though Clyde D rexler, Michael Young. Larry Micheaux and Akeem Olajuwon (ranging in height from 6-6 to 7-0) return “ We lose our two starting guards and our two top reserve guards and every­ Despite Lew is’ protests, his team was the cle a r choice of the coaches, surpassing both Arkansas and TCU. “ I ca n 't win the con feren ce," said TCU coach Jim Killingsworth. who has transform ed the Homed Frogs from an annual contender for last place into a post-season candidate tournament “ But my players can Actually there are a lot of team s that can win this con­ ference, I don’t think it is ju st a m atter of one or two team s ” The SWC had four players selected in the opening round of the NBA draft last season — a first for the league But it is not the loss of talent that has been the The only thing that is going to do,” said Killingsworth, “ is to keep team s from standing around stalling the ball It is not going to change the gam e It is ju st going to keep somebody else from changing it “ Last year two team s with some of the best players in basketball (Virginia and North Carolina) went out and didn't play the gam e TTie shot clock says, we are not going to do th a t.’ “ I doubt you will hear the horn (signi­ fying a 45-second violation) blow more than five tim es in the conference all y e a r.” The shot clock will be turned off for the final five minutes of the gam e, al­ lowing a coach to employ a delay tactic if he chooses “I like it being turned off in the final five m inutes.” said new Texas coach Bob W eltlich, “ because you owe it to your players to do everything it takes to win My opinion is that we are looking at a national shot clock in the future I don’t know the tim etable But I would hate to see the gam e changed dram ati­ cally because I think we have the best game in town right now ’ Myers said the only noticeable effect the shot clock might have would be to increase the use of zone defenses “ And that will mean you will have to have good outside shooters,” said the Texas Tech coach. “That is exactly the reason the pros banned the use of the zone But I still don t think it will change us much in this league We were among the top leagues in points scored last year anyway Texas 50, Houston 0 The Daily Texan/Monday, Novambar S, 1982/pega 11 M o u e t o n ........................................................... 0 0 0 0 — 0 T w m .................................................................. 14 10 0 1 4 — 00 T ex — C lark 36 pass fro m B rewer (Allegre kick) T ex — W alls 67 pass from Brewer (Allegre k ick ) T ex — S afety (p u n t sn a p fu m b le d through end zone) T ex — D avis 11 run (A lle g re k ick) T ex — B rew er 1 run (A lle g re k ick) T ex — FG A llegre 30 T ex — FG A llegre 42 Tex — W alker 6 ru n (A lle g re k ick) T ex — Davis 1 run (A lle q re k ick) A — 7 6 ,6 5 7 F irst d o w n s R u sh e s -y a rd s P assing yards R eturn yards P asses P u n t s ................. F u m b le s -io s t P en a ltie s-ya rd s 16— 168 5 4 — 264 H o u 19 77 5 T e x 22 184 16 6 — 15— 3 3 - 2 9 7 - 4 7 - 2 0 — 0 5 — 42 8 1— 0 8 - 5 2 6 - 5 5 Taxaa Individual Stats Rushing Att Yds TD Lng 30 12 15 11 10 13 Passing 82 57 47 0 2 1 AttCom Int YdaTD Sack* 0 5 0 163 2 13 2 0 0 0 7 Racalving 21 No Yd* TD Lng 67 36 12 96 36 21 1 1 0 3 1 2 Clark Davis Walker Brewer Dodge Walls Clark Mullins Pass intended for Ronnie Mullins is deflected by Houston. The Texas defensive secondary rejoices after Jitter Fields (25) intercepted a tipped pass. Travis Spradllng, Dally Texan Staff Longhorns discover air attack By RICHARD ST U B B E Daily Texan Staff Turning points are rare in a 50-0 whitewash like the one Texas poured on Houston Saturday at M em orial Stadi­ um, but when Texas passes on the first play of the gam e, the trends becom e m ore obvious. T urning Point A On Texas' first play from scrim m age. Longhorn q u a rte r­ back R obert B rew er rolls right, doesn’t hand off. doesn't pitch but com pletes a pass to flanker H erkie Walls on the right sideline for 17 yards and a first down at the Houston 40. Turning Point B Three plays later, on third-and-six from the Houston 36, B rew er drops back, then drops a little deeper, then flips a screen pass to D ar­ ryl Clark on the right side. Clark takes advantage of three downfield blocks to score the first of Texas' six touch­ downs. com pleting a four-play, 57-vard drive Turning Point C: Texas, on its third possession, has first-and-10 a t its own 33 with less than a m inute rem aining in the first q uarter. B rew er rolls right again, doesn't hand off again, doesn't pitch again, then fires a long wind-aided strik e to Walls, who gathers the pass in a t the Houston 30 and coasts to the Houston end zone. Texas 14, Houston 0. A safety and two touchdowns later, the p a rty 's over — except for the fans on their way to W urstfest. Fred Akers, Texas Captain C onservative, champion of the run, has seem ingly turned ra d i­ cally to the airw ays. When he’s not call­ ing for passes, h e ’s calling plays like the tight end around to Bobby Micho on third-and-six to gain first downs, T don t know what cam e over m e ,” a sm iling Akers said of the revised Long­ horn gam e plan "We had the big plays — the shockers — for the scores.” For the Texas players, the wide-open offense m eant fun tailback Clark said E verything was ju st perfect to d ay ,” “ The of­ Texas fense, the defense — Coach A kers' play- calling was trem endous.” R eserve fullback Ervin D avis, who had his best day ever as a Longhorn (57 touch­ yards on 11 carries and downs), agreed two “ We had som e great play-calling to­ day, Davis said. "We w ere gonna do what we had to to get on the board e a r­ ly .” Texas got on the board early, late and in betw een The scoring explosion let a l­ most all the players in on the fun. Akers even sent in his son to play quarterback on Dad's Day at Memorial Stadium. Danny Akers, fourth on the depth chart, directed T exas’ final drive of the day, a three-play, five-yarder that ended in a John Teltschik punt. junior John H errera, a from Converse Judson who ordinarily plays defensive tackle, booted T exas’ last kickoff. For the record, Herrera kicks barefoot and soccer-style. Akers, for his part, contended that the game plan w asn’t much different than usual. He has a point — Texas completed only seven of 20 passes and actually ran a slightly higher percent­ age of running plays than the season av­ erage. The attack just looked different because it worked so well. “We’ve always had some kind of screen," Akers said “We’ve had some kind of reverse. We’ve always had a draw. We’ve been doing that all year.” The only fun play Akers didn’t call was the flea-flicker, a play Texas really didn’t need to run Saturday. AUSTIN CYCLE CENTER 4 5 1 - 8 1 1 1 4 5 0 8 Burnet Rd. 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Congress In Carmen $a. 444 7242 page 12/The Daily Texan/Monday, November 8,1982 Horns’ swimmers take SWC Relays By ROBERT SMITH Daily Texan Staff The Texas men’s swim team edged SMU 112-110, to win the Southwest Con­ ference Relays in Fort Worth Friday night. The meet was the first for the Longhorns this season. Texas won six of the 14 events and finished second in five other events. In the 400-meter medley relay Rick Carey, Nick Nevid, Chris Rives and John Smith combined to beat out SMU with a time of 3:47.78. Clay Britt, Glenn McCall, Doug Elenze and Carey combined to win the 200 backstroke, while Carey, Britt and McCall teamed up to win the 300 back­ stroke. In the 300 butterfly, Rives, William Paulus and Elenz combined to beat Tex­ as A&M with a time of 2:48.20, while Paulus, Elenz, Esselstyn and Rives combined to win the 200 butterfly. Britt, Bill Stafford, Wayne Madsen and Esselstyn teamed up to win the 100 medley. The meet, held in a 25-meter short course, was designed to give all the schools in the SWC a chance to assess their progress and the other swim mers in the conference. see “ It was kind of a fun type m eet for everybody in the conference to get to­ gether and have a good tim e,” senior Eric Finical said. Finical swam in the 100 free relay, the 200 free, the 200 medley and the 400 free. “ We swam about how we expected to,” Finical said. “Everybody was real­ ly tired.” The Longhorns were hoping to get a good look at the freshmen in competi­ tion, and they were pleased with what they saw. “The freshmen did really w ell,” Fini­ cal said. “I think Coach (Eddie) Reese was happy with how it w ent.” UT’s Sterkel, Culver dominate annual intrasquad swim meet By HERB BENENSON Daily Texan Staff Senior Jill S terkel and freshm an Re­ becca Culver led the White over the Orange squad in the w om en's sw im ­ ming team 's annual intrasquad m eet Friday at the Texas Swimming Center. Sterkel and C ulver's victories in five events helped stake the White to an e a r­ ly lead and held off a strong com eback by the first five events, the White led the Orange, 31-12, but the Orange finished strong to close the tally to 63-57. the O range A fter Sterkel, still nursing a sore shoulder that she incurred two weeks ago, won three events She edged out team m ate Joan Pennington in the 50-yard free­ style 25.43 to 25.52. Sterkel also won the 200-yard individual m edley and the 100- yard freestyle. Culver, com peting in her first m eet for Texas, sw ept the individual diving com petition In both the one-m eter and three-m eter diving events, she b eat sen­ ior Lisa F ry of the O range team . “ I t ’s a beginning, but we still have a long way to go,” new head coach R ich­ ard Quick said. Since this was the first m eet of the season, the swim tim es w ere slower com pared to w hat the sw im m ers will reach in late season. Most races w ere won by larg e m a r­ gins except for the 500-yard freestyle. F reshm an Jodi Sterkel of the O range led m ost of the way. closely followed by K irsten Wengler of the O range and Ka­ tie Holland of the White. Coming into the last lap. the women w ere all within a body's length of one another. Howev­ er. Wengler finished with a strong kick and a 5:00.63. in the 200-yard O ther w inners included Holland in the (10:24.48), Carol 1.000-yard freestyle Klimpel freestyle (1:54.26) and M acie Phillips in the 100- yard butterfly (58.91). Connie Wright won the 100-yard backstroke with a 1:02.30 and Sara Guido nipped W engler to win the 100-yard breaststro k e with a 1:07.44. In the relay events, the O range de­ feated the White two to one, winning Planned /continued from page 10 Joan Pennington both the 400-yard freestyle and diving relays but losing the 200-yard m edley relay led by Pennington of the White. Pennington, a senior from F ranklin, Tenn., was com peting for the first tim e in two years The five-tim e national cham pion returned two weeks ago and is working to atta in her previous world class status. to the team The Horns SWC opener is Saturday against Texas Tech in Lubbock before they return hom e to face SMU Nov. 19. “ More than anything, it was ju st an­ other case of establishing control up front," A kers said. “ It was a heck of a defensive perform ance, especially from the second q u arter on " Running back D arryl Clark said ev­ erything the offense did against Hous­ ton was planned. All those plays we ran we had in the playbook," Clark said. We ju st decid­ ed to run them today We knew Houston had a good defense and we w anted to use som ething different from the way we usually play. “ The offense ju st really cam e into our own today We sta rte d out in a slump a t the beginning of the season, but now we re on a roll This was ju st an excellent ball g am e.'' To his credit, Houston coach Bill Yeoman didn't blam e the 50-0 em b ar­ rassm en t on W alls’ incredible speed, or Kidd s unlucky bad snap or even Fields' chance interception. “ They didn't run anything we didn't they ju st executed expect, by golly, well, Y eoman said “ If you're saying th at everything we did didn't turn out real well, then you're exactly c o rre c t.” Not a freak play then, but a poor the deciding team perform ance was facto r in this ball gam e. Y eoman said. Now that Texas is on the other end of the scoreboard, m aybe Akers and crew will learn it's not really that one missed interception or 67-yard scam per which m akes the difference between winners or losers. V 'es w e h a v e s trip s TEXAN CLASSIFIED ADS WORK BELLY DANCERS - CLOWNS BALLOONOGRAMS M á .VKKY Itl SI.M VS Our Grilled Ste aks, Chops, Chicken and so forth have dazzled Austin for quite some time. m o w . 6th 7 0 0 E. 6th V - M C a c c e p te d Confident Texas golf team tees off with top field in Penick tournament By JIM M Y CLEMETT Daily Texan Staff Texas golfers exude confidence as they tee off Monday in the Harvey Pen­ ick Intercollegiate Tournament at Aus­ tin’s Morris Williams Golf Course. It is not idle boasting by the Long­ horns; they have a few things going for them in the season-ending competition. Ranked fifth nationally, Texas has a strong team that has finished first, sec­ ond, fourth, seventh and 12th in its five outings this semester. There have also been strong individu­ al showings. Mark Brooks won the LSU National, Bill Tanner tied for first at Morton Braswell and Brandel Cham- blee came in fourth at LSU. The Longhorns’ familiarity with the home course does not breed contempt in this case because the team does not compete at Morris Williams on a regu­ they know lar basis. Nevertheless, more about the trick holes and bad bounces than the out-of-town teams. The biggest edge is that the Long­ horns think they can win, and golf is said to be a thinking-man’s game. “Texas will win,” Tanner said. “We have the home-court advantage. We know the trick bounces. We know what direction to approach the pins from and the breaks in the greens. ” Until Louisiana, Tanner was not hav­ ing a good year. “I am a nervous golfer. Coach (Jimmy) Clayton says I am the most nervous golfer that he has ever seen. I had not won in three years and did not know if I could win, but Shre­ veport helped.” Tanner tied for first, but lost a sud­ den death playoff. Clayton not only expects Brooks, Chamblee and Tanner to continue to play well but anticipates strong show­ ings from the rest of the team. “Paul Thomas has the ability to win this tour­ nament,” Clayton said. “He shot even par at LSU and can play as well as any­ one in the field. Confidence is Thomas’ only immediate concern.” Besides Texas, 20 other teams have entered the tournament. All Southwest Conference schools are participating except SMU, which no longer fields a golf team. In addition to No. 1 Houston and fourth-ranked Texas A&M, Oklaho­ ma, ranked 10th, will play. Billy Ray Brown, reigning NCAA champion, leads the Cougars. He is a first team All-American and co-winner of the SWC Fall Championship. John Slaughter, third in the NCAA, is also a first team All-American and has a sec* ond-place finish this year. Mark Fuller, who tied for third with teammate Slaughter in the NCAA, is a second team All-American and has a third- this year. Fuller also place finish teamed with Brown to win the SWC Fall Championship. Danny Briggs leads the fourth-ranked Aggies. Briggs won the SWC champion­ ship, was eighth in the NCAA and is a second team All-American Texas has won the tournament five tim es since its 1971 inauguration. It is named for the Longhorn golf coach who won 20 Southwest Conference cham­ pionships during his 33 years at UT from 1931-63 Tennis team toppled in finals By BRAD TOWNSEND Daily Texan Staff After a pair of im pressive victories in the Catherine Sample Memorial Tour­ nament in Florida, T exas’ women’s ten­ nis team was riding snugly on the wave of good fortune and piling up style points from tournament officials. final In Saturday’s round-robin match, however, the Longhorns were toppled 8-1 by the Florida Gators, bring­ ing an unexpected finale to what turned out to be a rain-shortened tournament. The tournament's eight team s had been divided into two groups for round- robin play, with the winners of each group tangling Sunday for the cham­ pionship But rain cut short many of Saturday's matches and washed out Sunday’s playoffs. Texas opened Thursday with a 6-0 win over South Florida and continued its success by taking the University of Mis­ sissippi 6-3 on Friday. Florida, which had already been beaten 5-4 by Mississippi, was thought to be a short obstacle between Texas and the championship round, but the Gators surprised the Longhorns and many of the tournament’s observers with an easy win. "Everyone involved in the tourna­ ment was shocked at the result, figur­ ing it would be 8-1 or 7-2 in our favor because they (Florida) had lost to Mis­ sissippi,” Texas coach Jeff Moore said. The Gators, however, supplied the necessary electricity, losing only in the No 2 doubles match as Texas' Gen Greiwe and Chris Harrison defeated Ju­ lie Quanne and Michelle Smiffen, 6-2, 6- 4. The No. 1 singles matchup was an in­ dication of things to come, when Flori­ da's Kathy Holton knocked off Texas' Vicki Ellis, 6-3, 6-0 Ellis had been an easy winner in her two previous tourna­ ment matches. One-by-one, Texas players fell victim to the Gators. Quannne beat Greiwe 6-3. 7-5. Kim Clingan held off Kirsten McKeen 6-3, 7-5, Martha Korbut out­ fought Jane Johansen 6-3, 3-6, 6-1, Dana Fahey defeated Tenley Stewart 6-3. 6-4. and Smiffen edged Marv Jo Giammalva 7-6, 7-5. In the doubles matches, where the Longhorns have been strongest this fall, Greiwe-Harrisons doubles win was sandwiched by Holton-Clingan s 6-4, 4-6, 6-2 win over Johansen-McKeen and Kor- but-Betty Newfield s G iam m alva-Ellis victory over “ I thought we would only need two wins in singles and th at we would take them in doubles," M oore said, “ The ef­ fort was there, but nobody played well and Florida played tough tennis, espe­ cially in key sets “ We had sta rte d off really well against South Florida and Mississippi and I guess we expected it to continue,” Moore added After blanking South Florida, Texas used a doubles sweep to beat M ississip­ pi 6-3 With the m atch tied 3-3, McKeen- Johansen defeated F ra n Spenser and B arbara Smith 6-2. 6-2 in No 1 doubles, while H am son-G reiw e took Karen Bar- biero-Patti H arrison 6-3, 6-1 and Ellis G iam m alva edged Lil W allender- Denise Barbiero 7-5 6-4 Texas had stayed even in singles with wins from Ellis, G reiw e. and Stew art. Ellis dom inated S penser 6-1. 6-4 at No. 1. while G reiw e took Smith 6-4 6-0 at No. 2 and Stew art beat W allender 6-4 6- 4 at No 5 Longhorn losses included McKeen 1- 6, 6-3, 6-3 to M ississippi's H arrison, Johansen 6-2. 6-3 to K aren Barbiero and H arrison 7-6. 6-1 to Denise Barbiero Longhorns falter in UCLA Invitational By ANGELA LIM Daily Texan Staff After a string of road games the No. 18 UT volleyball team ended a hectic week with the weekend’s UCLA Invita­ tional in Los Angeles as the Longhorns emerged with a 2-3 tournament record, beating two California teams. Friday, the Horns sluggishly took on No. 8 Arizona, No. 20 Tennesee and No. 2 Hawaii “ We had a hard time playing like a team ,” hitter Sharon Neugebauer said “ We should have beat Arizona and Tennessee, for su re.” Arizona's top hitters, Liz Ryan and Missy McLinden, pulled off 10 hits while All-American Anita Moss managed 13. Although both team s suffered an abun­ dance of errors, Arizona's hitting seemed to compensate for its mistakes, leading it to a 8-15, 10-15 win No 20 Tennessee, the tournament's Cinderella team, ended pool play with a 4-1 record. The Lady Vols beat Texas 15-6, 15-8 The Longhorns had 16 kills and 16 hitting errors that match in Hawaii came into pool play undefeat­ ed. boasting a 16-game winning streak In the first game, Texas bowed to a 0-15 defeat, then rallied, but lost 10-15 Neu­ gebauer said Hawaii was considered on par with California team s “They're as good as San Diego,'' she said No. 1 San Diego State was upset by Pacific for first place in the tournament. Saturday Texas defeated No 13 Cali- fomia-Berkeley in a 15-9, 15-5 match, then handed Califomia-Fullerton a 15-5, 19-17 loss. Hitters Fran Teeter and Sharon Neu­ gebauer had five kills each accom pa­ nied by five stuff blocks from senior Jc Beth P alm er Junior Lisa Denker ta l­ lied 13 assists and two aces A fter the Tennesee m atch, head coach Mick Haley had a talk with his team which seem ed to their a t­ The talk set us back on our titude goal. N eugebauer said spark Haley said “ We could have laid down and died a fte r the first day but we cam e back hard and fought and picked up two wins The team now has a week to train hard and p rep are for three SWC m atches next week This is what it’s all about, coming down the stretch d riv e.” to Tournam ent play ended with Pacific taking first place San Diego St.. sec­ ond; Hawaii, third and Stanford, fourth s/o a s p e n / s n q w m a s s $229! f BUY, SELL, RENT, TRADE. W A N T ADS...4 7 1 -5 2 4 4 m xzzL w BODY BUILDING £ WEIGHT LIFTING N O T H IN G M O R E . N O T H IN G LESS. FO R M E N AN D W OM EN M-F 8 a m -9 p m Sat. 8a m -4 p m Ph. 4 5 9 -9 1 7 4 NOW OPEN! at Park St. David (adjacent to S t David Hospitalj C O M PLETE P \C K A G E IN C L U D E S: * j Nig hts Deluxe Condo Lodging * D Days L ilt Tickets * Mountain Picnic * Ski Races w ith P ri/e s * Ski Jamboree P artv * Optional A ir and M otor coach Transportation OTHER 82 83 01 STIN \TIO N S Aspen * in ter Park * Breckenndge ★ Steamboat ★ Crested B utte * V ail F or m o r e in t o i m a t i o n c a ll Kirk Cockrell 4 4 1 4 1 1 ] Mark Lecey 4 9 1 -2 7 5 5 or 1 0 0 -3 2 9 -0 4 3 9 Antone's Serving Lunch & Dinner Mo n: THE COBRAS MARCIA BALL 7u«S; 2915 Guadalupe 474-5314 Public Meeting INDIAN COMMUNITIES OF CENTRAL AMERICA A STRUGGLE FOR SURVIVAL slide show presentation “ Indian Communities o! the Atlantic Coast” and Speak an Thur*. Nov. 11, 7:00 p.m. Catholic Studont Cantor CO MING NOV. 10 EARL THOMAS CONLEY j Sponsored by the Committee in Solidarity w ith the People of El Salvador (CISPES) A the Leonard Peltier Support Group, Austin. ■ gUí f M ífiMUMMMMHo EM - * - C a l i f o r n i a Sc h o o l o f P r o i l s s i o w l Ps y c h o l o g y 1 H i k m i i i • t k i w i i • I i i s \ \ < , i i i s • S w | ) n i ' Grand Opening Special Shampoo, cut and atyla — 110** with this ad Good today thru 11 -16 82 For appointm ent call 474-2818 Tickets: $4 in advanco $3 at tho door Tickal Outlets: Sheplers, Longhorn General Store, and Zebra Records on Lavaca Clinical PhD. program combining research, theory, and field experience Practitioner Faculty Institutional & External Financial Aid Three entry levels depending upon background CSPP Minority Fellowships Application Deadlines: December 15th & January 15th For information contact Central Admissions Office, D ept K CSPP 2152 Union Street San Francisco, CA 94123 or call TOLL FREE: (800) 457-1273 In C a lif (800) 457-5261 I E B A H M 9 Hear Handels Messiah Tuesday Dec. 14,8 p. m , at t he PAC Concert Hall at U.T Tickets cost $5,6,78. Call Charge-a-Ticket, 477-6060 Celebrate the holiday with the Austin Civic Chorus, Austin Symphony & U.T music faculty soloists. The $5.50 Rita Deal during Nasty Hour from 4pm - 8pm daily $5.50 best pitcher of frozen ritas 75f Hi-balls I T ID F r o m 4pm - 8pm daily M o n d a y - K n d a y 4 p m - 2 a m S a t u r d a y A S u n d a y b p m - 2 a m 3>th St Uficlc nni^ril f * N a s ty ’s 606 M a id e n Lane 458 -595 0 Mustangs crush winless Rice, 41-14 Tha Daily Taxan/Monday, Novambar 8,1982/page 18 By United Press Internstionsl HOUSTON — Tailback Craig Jam es ran for 130 yards and scored running and passing Saturday to aid the third- ranked SMU Mustangs (9-0) in their 41- 14 victory over the w inless R ice Owls. Jam es and alternating tailback Eric Dickerson, the Mustangs’ “ Pony E x­ press,” combined to rush for 232 yards but that fell short of their combined per gam e average of 245 yards. Big d efensive and sp ecial team plays got SMU rolling after a sco r eless first quarter and then the M ustangs tallied quickly for a 27-0 lead on Lance M cll- henny’s 28-yard touchdown pass to split end G ary Sm ith, on J a m e s’ one-yard scoring run, on tw o J eff H arrell field goals and on a blocked punt. R ice sophom ore quarterback Doug Johnson rallied his team , how ever, on sportswine touchdown passes of 15 and 10 yards to split end Ricky Askew. Dickerson, who was outrun by Jam es for the first tim e the season, picked up his 14th touchdown of the year on a 19- yard run early in the fourth quarter to finish Rice. The win, coupled with Notre D am e’s 31-16 defeat of No. 1 Pittsburgh, pro­ jected the Mustangs into at least the No. 2 spot. Georgia was one step ahead of SMU in the ratings last week. The Owls defense swarmed Dicker­ son, holding him to 39 yards on 10 car­ ries in the first half. Texas Tech 16, TCU 14 FORT WORTH — Ricky Gann kicked field goals of 39, 25 and a game-winning 27 yards with 32 seconds remaining to give Texas Tech a come-from-behind 16-14 victory that snapped TCU’s three- gam e home winning streak. After TCU’s Eddie Clark tossed a four-yard to Chris touchdown pass Schirmer to give TCU a 14-13 lead with 6:54 left in the gam e, Tech failed to move the ball on its next series. Tech punted from its 15 and TCU took over just inside midfield with about four minutes to go. to TCU moved the Tech 31 but Marcus Gilbert, who rushed for 161 yards on 28 carries, fumbled and the Raiders began their winning drive of 58 yards in 13 plays. TCU’s Ken Ozee attempted a 70-yard field goal with four seconds left but it was 10 yards short. TCU is now 2-4 in the Southwest Con­ ference and 3-6 overall, Texas Tech 3-3 in conference and 4-5 overall. B y U nited P r e s s In tern ation al Bryant would make change if asked BIRM IN G H A M , Ala — Alabam a Coach B ear Bryant told re p o rte rs h e 'd v a c a te his position im m ed iately if the m ove would help sa lv ag e A la b a m a ’s seaso n and future. “ I 'm going to a le r t the (university) president and anybody th a t w a n ts to know, in a heck of a hurry, that w e need to m ake som e changes, need to s t a r t a t the top ,” the coaching legend said. B ry a n t, who th is s u m m e r indicated he would like to have a hand in choosing his su c c esso r, said he would recom m end that u n iv e rsity p re sid e n t J o a b T h o m as “ ta k e inventory of w hat’s going on and do so m e th in g a b o u t it .” T h o m a s' fam ily said Sunday that he w as in Washington and u n a v ailab le for c o m m e n t and probably would be for several days. Lopez fires 71 to take Japan Classic TOKYO — N ancy Lopez of the United States shot a 1-under- p a r 71 to win the $200,000 J a p a n C lassic Golf Tournam ent by a w hopping six stro k e s. The 25-year-old pro. w ith a 54-hole aggregate of 207, will re c e iv e $30,000 for h e r v icto ry in the last leg of the 1982 U.S. L adies P ro fe ssio n a l G olf A ssociation tour. Benson, Smith up for Lombardi Award HOUSTON — The Rotary Club of Houston Saturday an­ nounced th e 12 no m in ees for the 1982 Lom bardi “ College Line­ m an of the Y e a r ’ A w ard, w hich w ill be presented at a banquet Dec. 9 in H ouston. T hose n o m in a ted for th e a w a rd include: G eorge Achica, de­ fensive n o seg u ard . B ru c e M atthew s, offen sive guard and Don M osebar, offensive ta c k le , a ll of Southern California; Charles Benson. B aylor d efen siv e end; Jim bo Covert, Pittsburgh offen­ sive tac k le; T im K ru m rie , W isconsin d efensive noseguard; W ilber M arsh all, F lo rid a defensive outside linebacker; Vernon M axw ell, A rizona S ta te defensive outside linebacker; Mike P itts , A lab am a d efen siv e end; D ave Rim ington, N ebraska of­ fensive c e n te r; B illy R ay Sm ith, Arkansas defen sive end and D a rry l T alley, W'est V irginia defensive outside linebacker. All nom iness a re se n io rs e x c e p t for M arshall, who is a jun­ ior The a w a rd is p re se n te d by th e H ouston Rotary Club in m em ­ ory of th e leg e n d ary coach Vince Lombardi. Garvey ends career with Los Angeles LOS A N G E L E S — T he Dodgers failed to reach agreem ent with Steve G arvey on a new contract, ending the first base­ m an ’s long ca reer with the Los A ngeles team . A team spokesm an said the negotiations ended at 11 p.m . CST without an agreem ent. “ The D odgers w ill not retain rights to draft him in the re­ entry d ra ft,” the spokesm an said. NFLPA rejects management proposal NEW YORK — The striking NFL P layers A ssociation found m anagem en t’s latest proposal unacceptable, with union head Ed G arvey claim ing the offer “ would rob every player now and for the next 10 years of their freed om .” The M anagem ent Council presented a 75-page proposal Sat­ urday night before private m ediator Sam K agel and Manage­ m ent Council’s chief bargainer Jack Donlan w alked out of ne­ gotiations at a m idtown hotel. The package includes a w age standard for each player based on years of service beginning at $30,000 and increasing $10,000 per year to a top lev el of $200,000; an im m ed iate bonus of $60,000 to all players who are vested upon resum ption of the 1982 season; severan ce paym ents beginning with $60,000 for a player with four years of service to $200,000 for 18 or m ore years experien ce, and a doubling of post-season benefits so that a player for a Super Bowl winner receives up to $70,000. Gervin leads San Antonio over Suns SAN ANTONIO — G eorge Gervin scored 47 points to lead the San Antonio Spurs to a 101-100 victory over the P hoenix Suns. Gervin scored 15 straight points, including the Spurs’ first 10 of the final period, to put San Antonio up 96-82. They never trailed again. Seattle overturns Milwaukee, 102-90 MILWAUKEE — Fred Brown and E rnie Shelton each scored 20 points to lead the undefeated Seattle SuperSonics to their sixth win of the season, 102-90 over the M ilwaukee Bucks. The loss dropped the Bucks to 4-2. Boston outscores New Jersey EAST RU TH ER FO RD , N .J. — Larry Bird scored 38 {Mints, 14 in the second quarter and 15 in the third, to pace the Boston C eltics to a 102-100 victory over the New Jersey N ets. N ew J e r s e y ’s Albert King scored a career-high 29 points and Darwin Cook added 20. Boston cen ter Robert P arrish had 15 points and Kevin M cH ale 11 Official Directory S t u d e n t s F a c u l t y Staff ' T**.. , ustln 1982-83 NOW I on t -& g'-nl WHILE SUPPLY LASTS! LSU s Hilliard scored one touchdown in the No. 10 Tigers’ 20-10 upset of No. 7 Alabama. U P I T e le p h o to Notre Dame downs No. 1 Pitt; Walker leads Georgia to win B y U n ited P r e s s In tern ation al P IT T S B l RGH F re sh m a n tailb a c k Mien P in k e tt ra m b led for 112 y a rd s and two fo u rth q u a r te r touchdow ns one of them a s p e c ta c u la r 76-vard s c a m p e r — S a tu rd ay to lead No 20 N o tre D am e 6- 1 - r to a 31 -16 u p se t of No 1 and p r e v i­ ously u n b eaten P ittsb u rg h U ntil th eir fo u rth -q u a rte r explosion. fhe Irish found the P a n th e r d e fen se v ir ­ tually im p e n e tra b le N o tre D am e had ju st 106 y a rd s to ta l offense through the first th e fourth q u a r te r m ost of the Irish ' to ta l \ a r d s c a m e on a flea flick er and an un­ e x p ected draw th ree q u a rte rs of play In P itts b u rg h m is ta k e s led e ith e r d ir e c t­ ly o r in d ire ctly to all of N o tre D a m e 's sc o re s M arino co m p le te d 26-OÍ-42 p a sse s with no in te rc e p tio n s for 314 y a rd s It was the first tim e in 20 g a m e s going th a t back to th e 1980 G a to r Bowl — M arino had not c o m p le te d a touchdow n pass Louisiana St. 20. Alabam a 10 BIRM IN G H A M . Ala — Alan R ish e r co m p leted 21-of-26 p a sse s for 182 y a rd s and one touchdow n as 10th-ranked L oui­ siana S ta te 7-0-11 upset se v e n th -ra n k ed A labam a 7-2) The T iger d e fen se did not allow a C rim son T ide first dow n in the first h a lf on th e ir w ay to a 20-10 victory G eorgia 44, Florida 0 JA C K SO N V IL L E F la - H e rsc h el W alker ru sh ed for 219 y a rd s and th re e touchdow ns m less than th re e q u a r te r s to lead u n b e aten , seco n d -ran k ed G e o rg ­ ia to a 44-0 rout o v er 18th-ranked F lo r i­ da (5-3 In the p ro c ess. W alker, a ju n io r who tw o-tim e A ll-A m erica, is a lre a d y a m oved into fifth p lac e on the NCAA c a ­ re e r ru sh in g list a h ead of E d M a n n a ro w ith a to ta l of 4,920 y a rd s — 1,413 of those th is y e a r Nebraska 48, Oklahom a St. 10 LINCOLN, N eb — N e b ra sk a I-back Mike R o zier sc o re d fo u r touchdow ns and c o lle cted 251 y a rd s on 33 c a r r ie s to sp a rk the No 5 C o rn h u sk e rs to a 48-10 victo ry o v e r O klahom a S ta te E rn e s t A nderson, the NCAA’s leading ru sh e r, w as held to 68 y a rd s on 15 c a r ­ ries. R o z ie r s p e rfo rm a n c e g a v e him th e N e b rask a sin g le-seaso n ru sh in g re c o rd w ith th re e re g u la r season g a m e s r e ­ m ain in g F o r th e y e a r, th e ju n io r has ru sh ed for 1,379 y a rd s Penn St. 54, North Carolina St. 0 U N IV E R SIT Y PA R K , P a - C urt touchdow ns and tw o W arn er sc o red rushed for 106 y a rd s to tie a P enn S ta te ;8-l re c o rd , and Jon W illiam s and Tony M um ford e ach a d d ed a p a ir of touchdow ns to lift the six th -ran k e d N it- tany Lions to a 54-0 rout of N orth C aro ­ lina S ta te Washington 10, U CLA 7 SE A T T L E — Ja c q u e R obinson s p r in t­ ed four y a rd s fo r a touchdow n and Chuck N elson add ed an 18-yard field goal to lea d No. 9 W ashington 8-1 > to a 10-7 v icto ry o v e r p re v io u sly u n d e fea te d and eig h th -ran k e d UCLA 17-1-1 > its only to u c h ­ down on its first p ossession and N elson kicked his 27th c o n se c u tiv e field goal to e n su re th e H u sk ies' v icto ry Florida St. 56, South Carolina 26 W ashington sc o red COLUM BIA S.C. - T ailb ac k G reg to Allen ru sh e d for fo u r lead llth -ra n k e d F lo rid a S ta te to a 56-26 rout of South C arolina touchdow ns F lo rid a St. (7-1) sc o red tw o to u ch ­ dow ns in e a c h of th e first tw o q u a r te r s , th re e in th e th ird q u a r te r and one in the final 15 m in u tes. Quarterback K elly Lownrey c o m p le t­ ed 14-of-24 p asses fo r 269 y a rd s an d tw o touchdowns, w hile backup B la ir W il­ lia m s connected on 7-of-15 fo r 168 v a rd s and one touchdow n in th e second half. Oklahoma 24, K ansas State 10 NORM AN. Okla — F re sh m a n ru n ­ ning back M arcu s D u p re e sc o red a p a ir of firs t h a lf touchdow ns to lead O klaho­ m a 17-2 to a 24-10 win o v e r K an sas State. Clem son 16, North Carolina 13 CLEM SON . S.C. — M ike E pplev th rew a five-yard touchdow n p ass and Bob P a u llin g kicked th re e field goals to give 14th-ranked C lem son (6-1 > a 16-13 v icto ry o v e r 13th-ranked N orth C aro lin a (5-3) The T ig e r d e fen se c a m e up w ith big fo u rth -q u a rte r p lay s to h a lt a N orth C a­ rolina c o m e b ac k e ffo rt th a t died on th e C lem son 15 when the T a r H eels failed to c o n v ert a fo u rth -an d -fo u r w ith 46 s e c ­ onds left to play. Michigan 16, Illinois 10 C H A M PA IG N , 111 — A nthony C a rte r cau g h t a 40-yard touchdow n p a ss in the first q u a r te r and helped se t up two of All H aji-S h eik h 's th re e field goals to give No 15 M ichigan (7-2) a 16-10 o v er Illinois. The M ichigan d e fen se stopped a late- g a m e d riv e by the Illini, holding Illinois on a fourth-and-goal situ a tio n a t th e tw o when h a lfb a ck D w ight B ev erly w as stopped sh o rt of th e goal line. Maryland 18, Miami, Fla. 17 C O L L E G E PA R K , Md - F re s h m a n Rick B ad an jek ra n for two touchdow ns and Je ff A tkinson kicked a 38-yard field goal w ith 2 14 to play a s 17th-ranked M aryland <7-2» c a m e fro m behind to nip M iam i 18-17. Arizona St. 30, Oregon St. 16 T E M P E , A riz. — L uis Z en d ejas kicked th re e field goals, one a school- re co rd 55-yarder. an d fre s h m a n D a rry l C lack sc o re d a la te touchdow n as un­ d e fe a te d A rizona S ta te (9-0) b e a t stu b ­ born O regon S ta te , 30-16. I M U I I LOOK For Our L U N C H TIME' Specials EVERY W E D N E S D A Y G eneral Books — second level OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK 24 HRS. A DAY 24 A 2801 GUADALUPE 28TH & GUADALUPE) ' w EARLY BIRD SPECIALS M O N -FRI S A.M. Till 11 A M 2 E G G S A N Y STYLE H A SH B R O W N S TO AST O R BISC U IT S C R E A M G R A V Y O N REQUEST A A P Z . Z J 2 B ISC U IT S O R TOAST JEU Y C R E A M G R A V Y COFFEE W ITH 2 PIECES O f B A C O N O R S A U S A G E CO FfEE SER V ED WITH A N Y BREAKFAST 2.50 .35 W ITH 2 PIECES B A C O N O R S A U S A G E C H O IC E OF HOT H O M E M A D E SW EET ROLL O R I B REAKFAST T A C O SER V E D W COFFEE 1.35 1.85 1.35 COFFEE SER V EO W ITH A N Y BREAKFAST .35 25CBEER M o n d a y & T u e s d a y Al l Da y , Al l S i g h t t i i n $4.50 G I A N T tíO O Z . P I T C H E R S O F M A R G A R I T A S F K O / F S OH O S I H I HOC k S S p e c i a l e v e r y T u e s d a y fr o m H -10pm LADIES ONLY - MALE DANCERS Doors open for men at 10 727 \\e>l 2 * i I S t r e e t S t a s a n d p a r t s till 2 00 University Directory of Students, Faculty & Staff on sale today at: Jester Center Store Texas Textbooks, Rivertowne Texas Textbooks, San Antonio St. SI OFF M u th o r 's O w n Largo Roast Beef, Ham or Turkey Sandwiches w ith this ad PLUS other SPECIALS WEEKLY University Coop Wallaces Bookstore Nasty Habits 6 0 0 W ML K 472- 21 55 OPEN 24 HOURS 26TH & THE DRAG (also available ai TSP Business Office) (Tax Included) page 14/The Daily Texan/Monday, November 8f 1982 T H E D U U f T f e X A N AUTOS FOR SALE AUTOS FOR SALE AUTOS FOR SALE FOR SALE FOR SALE FOR SALE CONDOS FOR LEASE M U S T S E L L 1976 F ia t 131 stationw agon. $1395. Call 474 1373 a fter 5 1980 RX7-GS AC, sunroof, 5-speed, A M / F m cassette, excellent condition. 441- 6039 73 V O L V O . 4 door sedan, a u to m a tic, good condition, $1000 or best o ffer. R e li­ able local transportation 472-4865 !97o R IV IE R A . W hite w ith red top. V e ry good condition Asking $2750, negotiable 250-9104 258-9222 L & M V O L K S W E R K S . N ew and used V W parts R ebuilt engines $629 In­ stalled exchange. W e buy VWs, any condition 251-2265 1979 M A Z D A G LC S ilv e r 4-speed, AC, stereo cassette, new tires. 33 m pg city. No dam age 45,000 m . W ell-ca re d for. M ust sell now. $3875 cash C all 258-1094 454-8250 CONDOS FOR SALE CONDOS FOR SALE LINDA INGRAM’S ANNUAL DAD’S DAY OPEN HOUSE Stop by our office & pick up info on over 2 0 0 condo units Now located at 901 W. 24th next to Tri-Towers When it comes to Condos, Linda Ingram's the NAME 1 0 % % Financing - Private garage w opener —Panoramic view of Shoal Creek —Split level hot tubs —Fireplace Microwaves C O N D O M IN IU M S 2 6 1 2 San Pedro MODEL NOW OPEN 10-6 DAILY 7 & 2 Bedrooms $67,950-$ 120,950 ONLY 6 Blocks from Campus C ondom inium s w ith the lu x u ry you ’re accustom ed to. m G A B L E S MODEL OPEN DAILY 1 1 - 6 1808 RIO GRANDE at MLK SAN FRANCISCO STYLING Uniqueness Style, Luxury & Class is built into each unit at the Gables 1, 2 & 3 Bedrooms from the 70's to the 120's ★ Spiral Staircases ★ Washer Drver ★ Security ★ 2 Car Garages Somerset Pre Construction Prices from $97,000 to $1 10,000 24 Units All 2 bedroom /2 bath -5 BLOCKS FROM U.T. CAMPUS- 3 c e ilin g fan s per u n it S ecurity ga te Landscaped C o u rty a rd O u tsid e sto ra g e fo r each u n it O n s h u ttle bus ro u te 2 4 t h 2 3 r d I U -I T D o F f F T E E I I V I l U B ■ V E S T I T I I I C orner o f W est Lynn & E n field Model open 10-6 Daily ★ S h u ttle Bus Stop ★ 2 C ar G a ra g e w O p e n e r ★ 2 B edroom s w S tu d y L u xu ry a t $ 1 3 5 ,0 0 0 O n ly 3 left R eady tor O ccup ancy B e lo w M a r k e t F in a n c in g A v a ila b le THE GAZEBO C O N D O M IN IU M S 2815 RIO GRANDE The perfect home for you and the best investment for Mom <6 Dad. In the heart of the V T area, the Gazebo is built around an inviting Hot Tub. PRICED AT $ 4 1 ,9 5 0 N P | J - T > 3 ! / I Í B . B E xcellent financing A v a ila b le ONLY 2 UNIT LEFT! Ready for Occupancy T H E \ / L D ] T V ^ l / on a wooded bluff within V L l \ L v y Y / I \ walking distance of I T Eighteen elegant condominium homes located MODEL OPEN DAILY 11-6 O ne Bedrooms & One Bee Priced in 60s & 70s rooms w ith Lofts Feature»: Pool & Hot Tub Security System Mini Blinds Washer Dryer ONLY 4 UNITS LEFT! INDIVIDUAL CONDO LISTINGS — CAMPUS AREA — 505 Bollview No 9 Approx. 991 *q. ft. studio 1 bedroom 1 Vi b a th $ 9 3 ,5 0 0 3400 Speedway Ño 109 $69 950 VILLAS ON TOWNIAKE NO. 211 A 2 12 2208 Enfield No 106 2-1 $51,000 ■ ^ — N O « T M A U S T IN - D ry G e e k C o ndo N o. 114 2 bed ro om 2 b o th $ 6 8 9 5 0 L IN D A IN G R A M & ASSOCIATES Sute*, learning dk property m anagem ent * 9 0 1 * 7 4 * ^ k u t t m TX 7 | 7 C 5 * * «0 f u - H w t f l * y 476-2673 n n S U P E R J E E P , 1973, CJ-5, V-8, fender- fla res , spoke w heels, stereo, tow -bar, 2- tops, pow erful Call 478-3418, m ust sell' 79 P L Y M O U T H C ham p Custom p ack­ age. AC, A M /F M , sunroof, FW D . good •ires, 30 mpg $3,000 327-0523 low -m il, 1979 C A M A R O Z-28. Loaded sharp, fast, g re a t condition M ust sell $5950. A fte r 6 p.m 928-3435 1978 B U IC K Regal. V6-Turbo, A T , A M - lock F M /C B . a ir, cruise, power seat, tilt. Fa nta stic w indows, w ire wheels, condition. $4350 E r ic 928-3435 1979 M A Z D A R X 7 GS, blue, 5-speed, AC, A M , F M cassette, leather, alloys, sun­ roof. 42,000 m iles - good shape 26 15 mpg $7600 or best otter 478-3721 a n y ­ tim e ; 477-9537 between 5 p m . and 10 p.m . CONDOS FOR SALE PECAN SQUARE CONDOS L u x u ry 2BR units w ith full kitchen in­ cluding r e frig e ra to r w ith ice m aker, m i­ c row ave F ire p la c e w d, patios, decxs, and pool Q uiet neighborhood, close to 2906 West Ave $750 UT and Seton month 478-9991 or 478-9212 E N F I E L D E F F IC IE N C Y U T s h u ttle new carp e t drapes Fixe d ra te fin a n c ­ ing $31 000 M a r y N unnally, R ealtor 345-2071 345-4767 M U S T S E L L one bedroom E xc e lle n t f i ­ nancing $46,500 No com m on w alls all brick. O w ner - M a r y N unnally, R ealtor 345-2071, 345-4767. A F F L U E N T N E IG H B O R H O O D . 1B R furnished, skylights, b e a u fifu 1 c o u rt­ Ia n n e li■ 474-6222, y ard . $49,500 P eter 443-7714. Pool, O N E B E D R O O M g re a t location c a m ­ security pus Capitol $49,500. 477 8568 OR AN G E T R E E E F F IC IE N C Y fo r sal*. F ire p la c e , w asher. d ry e r parking, etc E xceuent condition. Call 443-4002. acuzzi NW C O N D O a v a ila b le Lease $525 345-1166 255-1177 im m e d ia te ly lease purchase 2-2, term s E asy for M o torcycle-F or Sale 71 H O N D A . Good condition. lOOcc $350. O verhauled Ask fo r Joe 443-6872 keep try in g Motorcycle-For Sale Photography-For S a l* M O P E D FO R sale 1981 Suzuki Express, 45 mpg, runs great, low m ile a ge. Call 477 1526 1982 H O N D A M B 5 . E x c e lle n t condition, 90 m pg, ideal for fello w student P ric e leave negotiable C all M a r k 441-3713, m essage. 1980 K A W A S A K I 440. M u s t sell, divorce s ettlem ent, best offer. Call M a r k 441- 3713 leave m essage Y A M A H A M O P E D Usee! : year W ill negotiate. If interested call 477-9239 a f ­ ter 5 00 p m. 1979 S U Z U K I GS750E discs, new tire s $1900 474-2887 Clean, m ags, Rick 442-3416, FO R S A LE 1980 Honda XL125 ST Good condition fu lly street legal $600 negoti­ able Call 441-5842 a fte r 6 p.m . Ask for Brad. SACHS M O P E D for sale. Good condi­ tion Call Jam es at 479-0629. Room 108 Asking $200. H O N D A U R B A N E xpress Moped P e r­ '82 $425 negotiable 459- fect condition 45 64 P U C H M O P E D . E xc e lle n t running con­ dition re ce ntly tuned $250 or best offer C ali 472-9853 a fte r 6. S U Z U K I M O P E D O nly 1500 m iles Best offer 448-3631 B ic y d e -F o r S a le R E N T A bicycle at V a rs ity B icycle Renta s 609 W 31st, 451-9681 T E N S P E E D bikes S t . _____________ ___________________ $35 00 1104 E 1st l i k e n e w R a leig h 10-*peed. $110. C a ll 346-7105 or 443-0614 a fte r 3 p.m Stereo-For Sale H IT A C H I T U R N t a B l e h T40S f ó r ja le , like new $200 Call K im 441-2688 a fte r 6 00. A K A i S T E R E O D ig ita l tuner, electron- c a m p lifie r 50 w per channel 2 speak ers (2 way. 50 w. c a p a b ility ! S525 443- 0552 v i n t a g e G U IT A R S Buy, T e ll and •rade Open 12-6 Tuesday S aturday Ste­ ven s G u ita rs , 1204 E 12th 478 1 588 C O L U M B U S BASS g u ita r and pra ctic e a m p for sale Good condition $200 or best offer C all M ik e 447-1630 S A L E ! La rg es t selection of new and used c a m ­ eras and lenses in our history Shop e a r ­ ly and save. Com plete ren ta l and re p a ir service Q u ality film , paper and pro­ cessing Best prices in Austin P R E C IS IO N C A M E R A , IN C . 3004 G U A D A L U P E 477-3841 Homes-For Sale W A L K TO U T ! La rg e rock and tra m e 2- 2, C A /C H , w a s h e r/d ry e r, re frig e ra to r, dishwasher, stove, disposal, personality and p riva c y, beautiful neighborhood, e x ­ cellen t condition By ow ner 479-6153. $69,500 fir m 3409 Tom G reen C E N T R A L L O C A T IO N - L a rg e 2-1, 2-1 professionally rem odeled Lots of p e r­ fans, sonality, garage, decks, patio, rents $875 mosaic Leased through D ecem ber $85 000 by ow ner 1511 K irkw ood See Inside tile, hardwoods, C O N D O N O ! 1 Buy m y h o m e !1 B eau tiful 3 -2 -2•1 Lush p riva te y a r d 1 Low 60s F H A assum ption 835-1039 H Y D E P A R K • - n-of th e c e n tu ry ra fte d re s i­ W en den ce has been c a re fu lly re m o d e le d by ar n te c t Ja m e s B a r r site a te d on a .r et pecan tre e co v e re d o rn e r lo t a t 4101 A ve h 3 b e d ro o m 2 o a th 2 c a r qe ta< hed g a ra g e S eller w ill a ssist w ith fi naru ng SI42 ’-OO T o m B a r - 474 i a 4222 472-4385 O L D H O U SE L O V E R S H ardw ood floors ceiling ta rs b u ilt - tots of w m dows and *rees bookshelves g ive this q u a lity restoration an of the c h a r m of old West A u s tir 3t a ffo rd a b le prices T a rry to w n G r ee'> C ondo m ini­ um s S’ ! 500 $72 500 Call Anne Brooke 477 4984 H e a g a rty Co Pet*-For Sale F R E E 5 00 T t e n s Ca 477 8055 a fte r G arage -F o r Sale M O V IN G SA LE Sofa hi-fi bookcase c rib w a:xe r highcha ' stand m is c e lla ­ neous C ali ask 327 0062 evenings M u sica l-F o r Sale ________________ 458-3531_____________ _ CONDOS FOR SALE CONDOS FOR SALE CONDOS FOR SALE Between Guadalupe and Lavaca 1 9-6 Daily 4 7 9-6 618 W e've Done Your Homework Sales and leasing of Student Condominiums and Houses. No Fees! Call or Como by ✓ ¥ C O N D O M IN IU M S 77,500 and up IN NO RTHW EST HILLS TH R f.E BEDROOM S • TW O BATHS GAR AG E • C EILIN G FAN • FIREPLAC E • UTILITY AREA BU ILT-IN BOO KSHELVES • LOTS OF ROOM AND STORAGE 10 7/8 % A R M OPEN HOUSE Washington A l a m o ’d C on do mi niu m s 705 W 30th S a t u r d a y & S u n d a y 1-5 4 5 8 - 6 2 4 4 C a p i t a l P r o p e r t i e s N o r t h F o r k Luxury Condominiums 4401 Speed wa\ I, 1’, & -> B ed ro o m s A va ila b le in H eart o f Hy de P a rk S h u ttle a t F ro n t D oor " T Tickets-For Sale 38 S P E C IA L w /E d d ie M oney (N o v. 30), H e a rt w ith John Cougar (N o v e m b e r 17), Van H alen (N o v e m b e r 20) and Linda Ronstadt (N o v 29) tickets Best floor and aren a seats Best prices Call 447- 9891 a n y tim e Le av e message please V A N H A L E N , H e a rt and John Cougar, Linda R onstadt, 38 Special and E ddie M oney, U T hom e gam es. F ro n t row. C raig 472-7896 L IN D A R O N S T A D T and H e a rt tickets, good floor seats R easonable prices 447- 752! V A N H A L E N • H e a rt John Cougar - Lin ­ da Ronstadt - 38 Special w ith Eddie M oney Floor seats, row 2 and back G rea t arena seats Best prices Kent 258- 3293 keep try in g F R O N T RO W tic ke ts for Van Ha¡en and H e a rt Call 445-3304 We w ill beat c om ­ p arable prices M i s c e l l a n e o u s - F o r S a l e S O U T H W E S T E R N In d ian F IN E S T iew e lry plus e x c elle n t selection gifts & cards Nelson s G ifts 4502 S Congress 444-3814 (A A - SKI BOOTS. W om en's size 7N A A A ) W orn once $50 Cali 474-8147 at te r 7 p m G O IN G O U T of business S acrifice e n­ tire inventory C a m b rid g e Diet $14 50 can 454-1253 W E B B P R IN T N G press, B u” n tying m achine scales other m a il order equio m ent. (704 I 249-3200 (7041 249-6241 P E R U V IA N P A iN T 'N G S on sa e n ow 1. Scenic w atercoiors from Cuzco Call M onica 471-2492 or Luis 474-5613 L E T H E R B A L L ife nelp you m eet co; a Frances ege expenses F o r deta s if no an 385-5136 10 6 M o n d ay F rid a y swer 38 5 3787 W O M A N S 442-4899 nights, w eekends ‘0-speed bike 26 nth. $30 T Y P E W R IT E R S M IT H Corona electric H a rd ly used $165 Can 479-0038 even- ■ ngs FO R SA LE Clean aoufc-ie oed $40 Reu phe’stered cha < $20 835-039* T W IN S IZE m a ttre ss and box sprmgs fra m es 474 ye’ / $60 $70 headbo ar ds 9622 i 08 Colorado Apts R E M IN G T O N M A N U A L $40 453 173* *ypewr ter >982 X I 50QR 454-0525 rr nt cC' d tion m ust se’ i G U C C I C L U T . H p. ryes q u a lity im ite* • cos G e o rg e 837-9854 b etw e en 6-8 p m M E X IC A N D R E S S E S AT U N B E A T A B L E P R IC E S P u e b la S30 S a r a n t o r ii n o $58 Also m a k e g r e a t C h r i s t m a s p r e s e n t s C a ll 837-4572 T T T T r r P O O L AC good lo c a tio n S325 L e a ve m essage ar 44’ 5511 fo r S tevensi n 1 w ill ¡4 be in ’ ow n 1 t i l l N E W C O N D O fo r re n t V e '/ a rg e 1BR IB A a ’ 202 E 45th s h u ttle b s r o . ’ e M a n y a m m e n • es Ca 345 5088 CONDOS FOR SALS E a r l y T e x a s S t y l i n g Energy S aving F e a tu r e s Top Q u a lify C o n s tr u c tio n Brush Brass F e a tu r e s H unter ce iling fa n s in every room 1 7 cu fro s t fr e e ft r e f r i g e r a t o r w ic e m a k e r P e a c e fu l N e ig h b o r h o o d E x tr a t a r g e 2 B e d ro o m s D esigner S ele cted Interiors T o u c h T o n e M ic r o w a v e Stacked W a s h e r D ry e r m ■CT C L ] j r r / - 4 - U , f J r T r y Financing available at Low Market Kates priced from $98,500 4 5 t h U T S h u ttle S t o p ' A T 4 4 t h H E Y . H O R N S 1 DO W E H A V E A D E A L FO R Y O U ’ B eau tiful new 2-1 z 'ondos on city bus no E ac h unit includes fully equipped k tchen w asher d ry e r ceiling fans and frie n d s 9 f replace How about a p a rty r e t room w ith fenced >n poci c e n tra lly located on the property for your convenience Sound too good to be tr u e 9 F o r m ore inform ation give T e r ­ ri a call to ente rtain L ik e T E X A S P R O P E R T IE S 266 9295 835-0303 SAN P E D R O Oaks condos 2BR. 2BA unf W a lk to cam pus CA CH, an a p p li­ ances Assigned parking, pool, hot tub, controlled e n try system S tart at $550 plus E C a ll Ken M c W illia m s 477-9937 or drop by 10 a m -5 p m dally 803 W 28th C E N T R A L L Y L O C A T E D N E W L U X U ­ RY C O N D O M IN IU M S N E A R H A N ­ COCK C E N T E R 1-1, appliances C A / CH W D connections carpel, fire p la c e ceiling tan and adequate storage $325 345 9643 ___________________ W A LK TO cam pus, new 2-1, fire p la c e w asher d ry e r, m icrow ave, ceiling fan, securdy system , covered p arking $700 m onth P a rk P lace Condos 458 8745 or 327-0650 A v a d aD 'e n o w 2BR U N F U R N IS H E D condo Close to dow ntow n Austin 2 blks to Town Lake Ava able .im m ediately. $550 Call P atty 452 969? ih ) 476 2673 (w ) FURNISHED APARTMENTS ¿ M l A M I G O 4505 Duval * ALL BILLS PAID * Shuttle Bus * Exercise Room ‘ 1 & 2 Bedrooms M o v e In Today 454-4799 IVofeatnonally M anaged by M art m e Prop*rti SUCH-A-DEAL 1BR 1BA $305 -$ 3 1 5 American Real Eetate 477-1312 454-7015 4 7 2-4*93 4S I-4 255 1 BEDROO M 302 W 38th A l l a p p l i a n c e s f u r n i s h e d on s h u t t l e ro u te , pooi, g r e a t c o m ­ m u n i t y S310 u n f u r n is h e d , 453-4002 CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING Consecutive Day Rates 15 word m in im u m $ 22 E ach w ord 1 tim e $ 48 Each w ord 3 tim es $ 59 E ach w ord 5 tim es $ 97 E ach w ord 10 tim es $6 46 1 coi x 1 inch 1 tim e 1 col. x I inch 2 9 tim es $6.23 1 col x 1 inch 10 or m ore tim es $5 90 $1 00 charge to change copy F irs t two words m ay Pe a ll c ap ita l letters 25 for each additional w ord in c ap i­ tal letters M a s te rc a rd and Visa ac­ cepted . 2 0 % DISCOUNT on ai u a s s ifie d adve rtis in g placed cash or in person and prepaid check only no c re d it c a rd s ) TS P Building Room 3 200 2500 W hitis M ond ay through F rid a y 8 a m -4 30 p m DEADLINE SCHEDULE M o n d a y T e x a n F rid a y 2 p m T u e v d a y T e x a n M o n d a y 1 1 a m W o d n a v d a y T o x a n T u o td a y H o r n T h u rs d a y T e x a n W * d n * * d a y 1 1 a m Fr«day T e x a n T h u rs d a y 1 1 a m th e e v e n t o f e rro r» m o d o in a n a d ­ In im m e d ia t e n o tic e m o » f bo v e r tis e m e n t q v e n a i th e p u b b íh e r » a r e r e t p o n u b le fo r o n ly O N E in c o rre c t tn »*f»» on A ll c la im » fo r a d | u » f m e n t i la to r th a n 3 0 d o y » a f te r p u b lic a tio n A d v e r t i ­ n g p r e p a y m e n t n o n r e fu n d a b le t h a u ld be m a d e n o t FURNISHED APARTMENTS U N E X P E C T E D V A C A N C Y A c t V I I A p a r t m e n t s 4303 D u v a l F u r n i s h e d 1 b e d r o o m ne ar U T , s h u ttle A v a 'a b l e i m m e d i a t e l y S295 plus E 453-9685 s h o p p in g an d 453-0298 AM B ills Pai d E f f i c i e n c y 1BR, s m a l l 2BR S240-S390 C A CH W a i k o f s h u t t l e to U T 2212 San G a o r e ! O L D M A IN A p a rt i B R t f t l o e n c es t e poo 476 5109 ects 25th and P earl = O u r piock* U ’ shut t t e poc L A R G E 18 R a p a '-'m ..-* s'- se’ s $285 p s E M a , ease 453 8 48 0- 345 2J’ ( - \j j a re a a s d ry <-oo" wa • n IF o ><*obe' ra n t fre e fo r N i c e IB R tu r n sKed onU om m u m UT a re a Ce ng J-sb w a sh e ' 4’ 8 50C fa-'s g a -b a g e a sposa -e s e r »ed p a rx m g 459 8:75 W A , k TO C A M P U S BR BA fra s h , $245 m o n ” 2721 H e m p h pa nted 271 D $ E Ca So” - , 4 72 0649 E d D a d g e ” Co 454 462! e f f i c i e n c i e s ro o m s 442-9612 Dedroc -'s and 2 bad '900 B u rto n D r E F F I C I E N C Y ext 35 W a ’k to cam pu $275 4 /2 -7 6 C 4 nica 32"d at IH On site aundry 2 B E D R O O M 2 ba ’ n 700 sq 33st St F ro m $395 472-2147 255 '808 •• 405 E E . C O turn.sneo 1 txxjroom No 110 c shutt e qu e* spa 37th Speeow ar cious $305 p us E 454-7015 1 5 p-T- M an ager or d irect approach CONDOS FOR SALE CONDOS FOR SALE Croix Condominium For Lease One Bedroom Unit For Two $600.00 per month plus electric 478-7746 Im m ediate Occupancy ???Condo Confusion??? Simplify your search Drop in our campus office for a complete listing of all campus condominiums. For moro in fo rm a tio n contact: Ronda Landers 3 2 7 - 0 2 1 0 JBGoodwm Realtors M u lti H o u s in g D iv is io n 3 2 7 -6 3 8 0 307 W. MLK between Guadalupe & Lavaca U m v of Texas 9 % Financing C a ll for D etails 2404 Rio Grand* 477-4262 STOP IN DADS DAY W e ’ v e g o t y o u r i g h t w h e r e y o u w a n t u s . And that's right where you want ro he— in the brand- new lu \n r\ condominium community of Büena Vista! It's just (Mil block west ot the University, so you sail leave vi atr car at home— and still be on time tor class And we vi gut you covered— with plentv of covered parking, so you avoid the campus-area crunch. Blicna Vista’s new or.t anil two bedroom homes fea­ ture state-of-the art intercom security svstems to insure your safety and p m icv And thev're fully equipped with quality W hirlpool appliances— including washers and dryers! Right now, you sail get outstanding f N M A financing on vour new condominium home at Buena Vista! Stop by t h i s weekend and check out our open model at 1908 San Antonio, between l^ th and 21st Streets— or call tor more inform ation. At Buena Vista, vou’ll know vou've arrived. B u e m V is ta (512) 474-5659 or 477-6386 9 %% GPAML • Q u ie t • 1 5 M m u t# W a lk to UT To w er • N o C o m m on W a ll* • M ic ro w a v e * • Fireplace* • Wathor Dryer • Prewired Security System * Mini Blind* * Coiling Fans • Hot Tub MODEL OPEN DAILY 3011 FRUTH Go East on 30th From Guadalup* On* Block and Turn Loft on Fruth or Call 477-9713 472-4505, 3 4 5 -5 0 ** WEST CAMPUS CONDOMINIUMS LANDMARK SQUARE - • f*w writs r**aw«i 706 W. 22nd THE GEORGIAN • retente f*r SwMMr/faN 715W. 22ft DIAWN PLACE - N*v fc*r M coapktiM 1700 Enfield Rd. Enfield Rd. at Woodlawn Blvd. 1014%* * Currant F.N.M.A. Buydown ra t*. Swbf*ct t * chang*. For Inform ation on these and ether condom inium units in U.T. and control Austin calf JOHN A. GOUID CO. 473-2031 or 4(0-9723 ROOMMATES ROOM AND BOARD MISCELLANEOUS SERVICES HELP WANTED The Daily Texan/Monday, Novambar 8 ,1882/paga 15 HELP WANTED TYPING FURNISHED APARTMENTS M U ST SUBLEASE room at Tri-Towers. Furnish d, kitchen facilities, two good roommates. Please call 473-1430 TR I-TO W E R S Apartments - sublease Imm ediately or my room contract. spring. Rent discounted. Charlotte 471- 3325 or 477-6112.______________________ TR I-TO W E RS Apartments spring con­ tract for sale. 24th and Rio Grande. Good offer. Call Linda or Pam 479-6843. U N E X P E C T E D VACANCY. Small 1BR with CA/CH. Dishwasher, disposal, S259. 4105 Speedway Apt. No 103. 451-4919. N E AR UT 1BR 1BA, pool a n d w a s tT room. S285-S305 p lu s e l e c t r i c i t y 1007 W. 26th M g r N o . 207.477-2696 M U S T S U B L E A S E s p rin g c o n t r a c t a t T r i - T o w e r s . L a r g e s t 2-2 s u ite . N ic e r o o m m a t e s . C a ll P a u la 472-1376. 1B R F U L L Y fu rn is h e d * 3 5 0 /m o n t h p lu s e l e c t r i c it y . C lo se to c a m p u s . O n s h u ttle . 476-0391, S h a n ti A p ts. UNFURN. APARTMENTS the Archway U nfurnished efficiencies Recently R em odeled 4 blocks to U.T. Shuttle $190 mo. 2506 Manor Rd. 478-3622 E N F I E L D A R E A Q u ie t s m a h c o m p ie x 2 b e d r o o m s 1 b a t h AC N o p e ts S h u tt le 477-2010 a f t e r 6. E N F I E L D A R E A S m a l! c o m p le x . 1 b e d r o o m c a r p o r t no p e ts 474 8987 a f t e r 6 p m a n d w e e k e n d s 477 2010 O N E N F i E L D n f r o n t . 2-1 a y a a b ie n o w F u r n is h e d o r u n f u r n is h e d C a ll 472-2320 a f t e r 6 p m s h u t t le b u s s to p s N E A R L A W S c h o c I B R in s m a q u e t c o m o 'e x $275 p lu s E 442 4076 474 1240 on s h u tt e L a r g e I B R W A L K I N G d is t a n c e U T C A C H S335 H o w e : P r o p e r t ie s 477 9925 'B R $280 G a s a n d w a t e r p a id N e a r s h u t t le a n d U T Q u e t c o m p le x w ’ n poo C e d a r R id g e 709 L a m e r P a c e 4 53-75’ 4 r o u t e b e tw e e n H ig h la n d M a ’ 913 R IO G r a n d e 2 b lo c k s U T , n e IB R 474 t S385 p lu s 6205 478-620' s A v a a s e D e L A R G E I a n d 2 b e d r o o m a p ts a t T o w n h o u s e a n d M a n o A p ts O r s h u t t e bu s r o u te 2101 E l m o r # D r N o 107 447 1122 a y a a b e S O U T H E K r R a a - g e i a n d 2 b e d r o o m a p ts u o c a te d o r c i t y a n d s h u t t le b u s H o llo w A p t j 447 6618, o r 44 - 1122 1414 A r e n a D r N o 117 r o u t e s F ir e p ia c a 8 r o o « S U B L E A S E w a te r p a 'd O R 4440 F o r n e x t s e m e s ’ e- E F f a E N C Y $250 g a s i SR s h u t t le 443 s c ( -e e io u s 2 2 a p a r t m e n t o r RC * - N O V E M B E R S R E N ' e a s e sp a r o u t e b e f o 'e D e c e m b e r R ic h a r d 445-0500 P e a s e ca U N E X P E C T E D V A A N C Y w a s r e r o -s p o s a 1260 m o n t h 44 84 t # r . 3 R d s - cse to s h u t t e la f t e r n o o n s on y ROOMS S P A C IO U S R O O M P a * o S200 F e m a le j M t h a - g e r y 345-45’ :s e * P R ' V A T E n l R N S H E D d o r " x t c h e r p r i . e g e s C a 4 7 ’ 1579 - e a r u T - o p r - s $1 7 5 200 U N E X P E C 'E D F o r m o r e C o 474 598 - A C A N C Y a n t o r m a t l o r u t a re a R a r a - W A L K I N G D I 5 T A N C Í u t A B P S ” 5 $ 2 ,c H o w e P r o p e r 'e s 4 ” 9925 P L A Z A 25 s p r in g $ ¡5 0 s u b e a s e f t C a t S c o tt 480-9504 - • c o n tr a c t P R I V A T E T U R N S H E D d o r — k it c h e n p r , - le g e s C a 477 529 " e a r j t r o o m s s ' 75 200 71 473-2800 Start h ere... \ / R o o m m a t e K l c t w o r k / \ / You won ’t be t o r r y ^ Good f o r F a ll é S p r in g S e m e ite n 3813 R io G ra nd e No.lOC j T h a n k you A u s tin f o r o u r 3 rd y e a r W A N T E D R E S P O N S IB L E g ir l to s h a re d e lu x e fu r n is h e d c o n d o m in iu m a t 2810 N u e c e s w it h th r e e o th e r g ir ls . $250 p lu s s p lit u tilit ie s S e c u r ity d e p o s it 345-4517. F E M A L E T O s h a re n e w 2-1 c o n d o N W H ills in ch ja c u z z i. e tc $197 50 p lu s b ills 346-7105 ________________ ___ A R E Y O U a s e rio u s s tu d e n t? I h a v e a 1- 1 a p t. t h a t I n eed to s h a re w ith a m a le r o o m m a te u n d e r a d o r m - s t y le a r r a n g e ­ in a m e n t R e n t q u ie t N o r th R iv e r s id e a r e a C o n ta c t m e a t 448-1445 a f t e r 3 is $142 50 m o n th a n d I N T E L L I G E N T , re a R E S P O N S I B L E . s o n a b ly n e a t p e rs o n fo r 2 B R house $210 p lu s V j b ills N o je r k s o r n a t u r a l p eo p le P O Box D -2, A u s tin , T X 78712 s n a re F E M A L E ( N O N S M O K E R ) ro o m o f n e w 2-2 c o n d o N o r th A u s tin $175 m o n th p lu s 3 u tilit ie s 467-817) to O N E B E D R O O M in 3 B R h o u se C a r p e t e d, p r i v a t e p a r k in g , E n f ie ld R d $175 p lu s VS b i lls 478-5403 F E M A L E R O O M M A T E n e e d e d 2-2 fu r - i n is h e d R iv e r s id e c o n d o b . ■ is C a ll 443-8378 $200 p lu s N E E D A r o o m m a t e t o s h a r e y o u r p la c e t h is s p r i n g 7 O ld e r g r a d s tu d e n t a v a i l ­ a b le J a n 1 C a n 713 683-9462 e v e n m g s w e e k e n d s F E M A L E N O N S M O K IN G r o o m m a t e re e d e d *o s h a r e 2 B R 2 B A a p t w it h 2 to c a m p u s g i r l s S h u t t le b u s o r w a n i $ '0 0 d e p o s ' u t 476-2072 a f t e r 5 p m ‘ es A v a a b ie D e c 17 C a r e n t $ 45 m o n t h p lu s F E M A L E F E N C E D y a r d M n e to 7 f q u e t n e ig h b o r h o o d $200 p lu s E g a s B: s r u n lo w . 451 4696 F E M A L E N E E D E D t o s h a r e b e d r o o m r d u p le » n H y d e P a r k g - e a ’ n e ig h b o r ­ h o o d R e m o d e le d $175 4 5 1 9379 N O N S M O K IN G M A T U R E f e m a le s S h a re 3 2-2 N o r t h A u s t in 836 0039 a f t e r 5 00 p m to F E M A L E R O O M M A T E t o r o r w it h a 2-2 a p t P r e f e r g r a d .a te s tu d e n t Ca 346 2587 f e m a l e R O O M M A T E ! S w a n te d 3 t e r 6 30 p m h o u s e n H y d e P a r k C a 458-387' a t ‘ o r n f o - m a t io n fo r F E M A L E R O O M M A T E 5 to s n a r e 4 2 • 'e a r l « e r P a r k $131 25 m o n t h p lu s 4 b i l l s C a 444 9808 th r e e b e d R O O M M A T E N E E D E D f o r r c o m h o u s e on S hoa¡ C re e k $160 m o n th s C a 1 J oe a f t e r 5 00 p m 452 8482 r F E V A . £ H O U S E M A T E w a n t e d W D 2 b lo c k s f r o m C R s h u t t le P r e f e ' n o r c ig a r e t t e s m o k e r 451 3304 $200 A B P 2 F E M A L E T O s r-a re o n e b e d r o o m r s h e d s ' i t t l a poc w c e v e n in g s f u r - s u b le a s e $165 f y C a T e r e s a 447-4830 ,s h a lf e e c " s F E M A L E N O N S M O K I N G , b u d g e ' con- e a - to s h a r e cr-s a e r a 'e n e a ' 2 B R 2 B A a c ' R C s h u t ’ e $ '4 8 R C a G 0 » 3 5 c m p m 448 1111 4 42 957 P e g g y 6 9 E S h a r e H O U S F t ie s A " e r 3 00 w e e k e n d s M b e P * S 08 s p e c io u s s h u ' a te c a s Ok A r . - m e 452 5511 H O U S E T 0 s h 8 r e W e s t h * • - g r a c s t u d e r ' a rr p u s g r e a - lo c a t o r N ic e 2 B R se o n ly 5 r oc > s f r o m c a m p u s $225 C a V j " 480-8743 V E G E T A R I A N N O N S M O K I N G h o u s e m a 'e w a n te d S h a r e h o u s e F r e n c h P a e n e g h b o r h c o d R e n t $175 m o b it 's N o v S th a 478 6998 p lu s 2 R O O M M A T E S w a r ’ ed to s n a r e 3 B R • w n h C se S o u th A u s t n SR r c u te $ 33 D ills C * r 458 7331 8 5 r m 0 S MUSICAL INSTRUCTION PHOENIX M O T O R W O R K S , INC. BMW EXCLUSIVELY! • Tune-ups and maintenance • Problem diagnosis • Rebuilding, mechanical restoration and parts 1 6 0 6 F o r m e w R o a d , o n e b l o c k n o r t h o l B e n W h i t e a t C l a w s o n 4 4 2 - 1 3 6 1 FURNISHED APARTMENTS ■ FURNISHED APARTMENTS T i a r c e l o n a • Eff., 1, 2, & 3 Bedrooms • Close to Shopping • On Shuttle • Furnished or Unfurnished • F r o m $280 plus E CO-OP L IV IN G A r e yo u t i r e d of d o r m it o r y liv in g ? , o r i$ y o u r a p a r t m e n t g e ttin g too s m a ll? T r y c o o p e r a tiv e liv in g . C o lle g e H o u s e s o f ­ fe r s y o u a c h o ic e o f s in g le o r d o u b le ro o m s , 19 h o m e c o o k e d m e a ls a w e e k , e d u c a tio n a l a n d s o c ia l p r o g r a m s a n d a liv in g an d w h o le h o u se f u ll o f fr ie n d s w o r k in g to g e th e r . C o o p e rs t a k e a p a r t in th e d e m o c r a t ic ru n n in g of t h e ir hou se t a k e n to r A p p lic a tio n s a r e n o w b e in g s p rin g s e m e s te r F o r m o r e in f o r m a tio n c a ll 476-5678 C A S T I L I A N I f y o u w e r e u n a b le to r e s id e a t th e C a s t i­ lia n t h is f a l l s e m e s t e r b e c a u s e o f la c k o f s p a c e - c o n t a c t u s t o d a y so t h a t w e m a y p u t y o u r n a m e o n o u r s p r in g s e m e s t e r w a i t in g lis t S to p b y f o r a to u r P h o n e 478-9811 T h e C a s t ilia n 2323 S a n A n t o n io C A S T I L I A N H A S o n e o p e n m a le a n d o n e f e m a le s p a c e le a s e . C o n t r a c t p r ic e w i l l be a d ju s t e d to m o v e in d a te P h o n e 478-9811 T h e C a s t ilia n , 2323 S a n A n t o ­ n io . to C A S T I L I A N T W O m a le s n e e d e d to a s ­ s u m e le a s e L o v a b le r o o m m a te s M u s t s e ll R ic k 474-9758 C h r is 474 5896 N E E D M A L E to a s s u m e m y f a ll le a s e a t th e C a s t ili a n n o w o r f o r th e s p r in g se ­ m e s t e r C a ll 479-8255 o r 472 0283 k e e p t r y i n g T W O O P E N I N G S f o r s p r in g . T h e C a s t i­ lia n , c o -e d d o r m M a id s e r v ic e , in d o o r p o o l, s a u n a s , c a b le p a r k in g g a r a g e , f u l l m e a l p la n in c lu d e d $390 o r $410 m o n t h ly C o n ta c t V a le r : 474-7352. 474 7659 F e ­ m a le s o n ly ) O N E M A l E n e e d e d le a s e a t G O O D A L L W O O T E N r o o m P r i v a t e b a th s , p o r t e r s e r v ic e p lu s h T V lo u n g e C a li 478-2892 w e e k d a y e v e n in g s to a s s u m e s p r in g D O B iE D O R M M a le n e e d e d t a k e o v e r c o n t r a c t f o r s p r m g s e m e s t e r C a ll 476-0243 b e f o r e n o o n to UNFURNISHED HOUSES a v a i l a b l e N O W tw o a n d t h r e e b e d ­ r o o m o ld e r h o m e s , a p a r t m e n t s C a ll n o w f o r 24 h o u r in f o r m a t io n 452-5979 6128 W A G O N B e n e 3 8 R 2 B A F e n c e d b a c k y a r d , w a s h e r d r y e r $45C " " o n t h '7 1 3 : 759-9700 e * ‘ 3 0 ' 713) 797-6688 ‘ 'e s h N IC E 2 1 h o u s e p a m t, I F s h u t t le g o o d ne j h D o rH o o d no p e ts $415 452-9092 fe n c e d y a r d C E N T R A ~ L L O C A T I O N 3 ' w a s h e r c o n n e c t 'o n s D u v a p e ts ' e f r 'g e r a t o r s to v e b $595 : i e a - : •»• i d s w d no 479-6153 F O R R E N T 3 B R h o m e C A C H da E s c a r r in S o u -- A u s ' o Ca a a - 288-0916 a f t e r 6 30 p m a r g a r a g e L n- j B A 3-1 a n d 2-1 G a n - m e e s a p e a n c a s 932 a n d 934 E 50 th S tr e e t S375 m o " ” 443- 3401 FURNISHED HOUSES 6 B E D R O O M S P e r fe c * lo< a f io n B e a u ' t j l h o u s e G e t y o u r g r o u p to g e t h e r M u s t b e qc e t a n d s tu d ou s H o w e • es 477 9925 P r o p e - 3633 wr '2 f t 2 ' $295, ; e ‘ o o rs a p p : a n e e s 2 0 2 3 B E 1st 443-340' g s n e w n a r d w o o d f e n ce d g a r ' - ee s H O W A B O U T B u y in g t a v o r - 3 0 2 /3 0 3 D on’t put this o ff until the night before an exam . I t ’s too late then... • 2 blocks fro m c a m p y * p ly * p a rk in g • V e ry re a s o n a b le r a te * In la n g u a g e y o u ’ll u n d e rs ta n d • Lots of p a tie n c e • • Also h ig h school courses in th e a b o v e subjects UT P la c e m e n t Test P re p a ra tio n a n d SAT GRE R e v ie w Pat luceys Tutoring Service 600 W. 28th St. O ff. 103 4 5 8 -5 0 6 0 4 7 7 -7 0 0 3 G.R.E. PREP CLASSES fa r Dac. A Jan. I x a m l CLASSES B E G IN N IN G N O W Cam p la ta M o t h / V a r M K av ia w B a a ra n o b ty pricad Wendy Dietrich, M.Ed. Ú RPR* M p i d t l K i CALL M O W 4 4 3 -9 3 5 4 E N G L 'S H T U T O R : N G p r o o f r e a d in g , $10 h r Ser- * y p t g a d 23 y e a r s e x p e r i- e n c e , o i'e g e E n g lis h M a u d e C a r d w e P h . D 479-8909 'e a c h in g V A T - P H Y S iC S t u t o r r g . E g h t y e a r s e x p e r e r re as t a a i t u t o r G r e g 454- 9945 E X P E R I E N C E D M A T H t e a c h e r w T th P h y s s a n d M E d e g r e e T u t o r i n g M - 8 0 8 A V 308B. M -4 0 3 K . M -3 0 5 G C a 7459.____________________________ 837 A C C O U N T I N G s ‘ o r m o r e in f o r m a t io n r-e p 7 C a - a ’ OR n e e d p r o fe s - D S p r a d le v 443-9118 W R I T I N G S K I L L S , ju e s . E n g lis h m e c h a n ic s t e c h - T u t o r in g , p r o o f r e a d in g b y w r i t i n g p r o f e s s o n a l s - e a ’ re S e r v ic e s , 2420 G u a d a lu p e 478- r e s e a r c h f R E N C H a n d G e r m a n t u t o r in g O r ig i- a ly ‘ r o m G e r r i n v w t h 30 y e a r s e x p e e ‘ e a c h ng th e a n g u a g e a r t s $15 e h o u r C i ‘ o r a p p : ' ' m e n ' 442-5933 B A S S 'S 7 A N D o r s in g e r n e e d e d R 8 .R 3533 Or 471 5792 f o r 443-646’ o r 4 4 1 - t a n e o a 'd C a PHOTOSfor PASSPORTS APPLICATIONS RESUMES 3 minute service MON-FRI 10-6 SAT 10-2 477-5555 THE THIRD EYE 2530 GUADALUPE O R iG I N J $ L S C R : P T fo r m u » e s 1’a ,¡e o r te e v is io r w a n te d f o r S e n d 4 & V u n iv e r s i f y P O S ta f on T•X ’ 7844 o r c.t to M S C T a o e C oin m i t t e e B o x j ! 713-845-15 15 e x a s c:o lie g e . d e o p r o d N E E 5 A h o u s e s it t e r t o r s p r ng ¡ie mes- te r a n d d e m a v a 4 6 6 e v e n i n g s . w e e x e n d s b e y o n d 7 O d e r g r a d s 6i 1 C t J a n 713 94 6 2 A E R O B I C R E B O U N D I N G T ^ e f a s t e s t g r o w n g e x e r c i s e m A m e n c a . C a s s e s n o w f o r m i n g 452- I n f o r m a t i o n , 9005. ROOMS WANTED! WOMEN ONLY! Newman Hall • St. Austin Parish D ouble and S in gle Rooms A vailable for Fall. DOUBLE SINGLE 2026 Guadalupe * 1 7 5 5 p . , ™ ' 2 0 4 8 . . . .. o n 17 mea It included p . _ . 476-0669 SERVICES SERVICES TRAFFIC TICKETS ★ A f f o r d a b l e * Professional Defense for your t r a f f i c violations. ★ F i r s t Offense D W I ^ A T T O R N E Y : E D I T H L. J A M E S C A L L 477-8657 Le g a l Fees: S55 p e r c i t y ti c k e t $85 DPS 306 E a s t 11th, Suite L-7 NEED CHRISTM AS M O N E Y ? Then w e need you. Hours 8 :3 0 a m a v a ila b le betw een a n d 12 m idnight. Dependabili­ ty pay. M ust be available 11 - 2 2 thru 12-24, M onday thru Saturday. V I C T O R TEMPORARY SERVICES 445-2525 N o rth O ffic * 1 11 W. Anderson Ln. No. 328 South O ffic * 1301 S. IH -35 No. 101 EOE « Y » w n w w w w s w v s at J E N N I N G S ' M O V I N G a n d H a u lin g . D e ­ p e n d a b le p e r s o n a l la r g e o r s m a ll jo b s 7 d a y s w e e k 442-6181. s e r v ic e , F O R E V E R L A T E to w o r k , c la s s o r r e ­ h e a r s a ls d u e to o v e r s le e p in g 7 T r y m y te le p h o n e w a k e - u p s e r v ic e R e a s o n a b le r a t e s 441-2208 E L E C T R O L Y S I S ape p r o v e d p e r m a n e n t h a ir r e m o v a l C o m ­ p li m e n t a r y c o n s u lt a t io n 451-9611 4203 M a r a t h o n P r i v a t e s t u d io ( o f f L a m a r ! M E D I C A L L Y T H E R A P Y C O U N S E L I N G , p a s to r a l g u id a n c e C u r t is L S c a le s C a ll 458-1743 a n y t im e I w i l l be g la d t o m a k e r e f e r ­ r a ls T R Y A U S T I N 'S le a s t e x p e n s iv e a n s w e r - rtg s e r v ic e O n ly $15 m o n t h C a 1’ 477- 1915, 1 0 :3 0 a m -5 3 0 p m D E F E N S I V E D R I V I N G c o u rs e s - c le a r t r a f f i c r e c o r d C a ll B o b b ie B u r d e n , 472-7408 e x t. 5319. f r o m y o u r t ic k e t s S E A M S T R E S S - D E S I G N E R e x p e r ie n c e w ¡ th a ll t y p e s o f s e w in g R e a s o n a b le r a t e s S a r a h , 476-8115 R E S E A R C H L l B R A R Y d a t a f i l e . S ta lls - t ic s a n a ly s is R e c e n t a r t ic le s , b o o k a x- t o p ic a r e a s C r e a ’ iv e e r p t s O v e r 50 S e r v ic e s , 2420 G u a d a lu p e . 478-3633 E N G L I S H R I D I N G in s t r u c t io n . Q u a li- ‘ ie d e x p e r ie n c e d in s t r u c t o r L o w i n t r o ­ d u c t o r y r a t e s W m d h ill S ta b le s . R o u n d R o c k 255-0225 N E E D M U S I C f o r s p e c ia l a n d o r jo y o u s o c c a s io n 7 F i d d l e o r v io la , w e d d in g s , p a r t ie s C a ll C a r o l 926-6318 N E E D A P O B o x 7 U T a r e a N o w a it in g h s t C a li 477-1915. L O S E W E I G H T b e f o r e th e h o lid a y s ! S a t s f a c t io n g u a r a n t e e d C a ll H e id i 443- 3541 HELP WANTED F a t h e r w it h c u s t o d y o f 3 w e ll b e h a v e d c h i j r en g ri 12, b o y s 10 & 7) s lo o k in g ‘ o r a b r ig h t a r t i c u l a t e f u l l - t i m e liv e - in w o m a n b e tw e e n 25-35 to a s s is t in m o m - t o r ln g a n d c a r in g f o r s a m e H e lp w it h h o u s e h o ld d u t ie s l a u n d r y , d is h e s , lig h t c e a n n g s o m e c o o k in g , d r iv i n g , b e a b le to sw m a n d p la y in t h e p a r k M u s t h a v e a b i -y to p r o v id e e m o t io n a lly s u p p o r ­ t iv e a n a c a ' n g a t m o s p h e r e L iv e in a o v e iy f e rs , a 'g e h o m e w it h s e p a r a t e q u a r in b e a u t it „ te n n s c o u r t s , p oo: R o: n g w o o d a r e a A h o m e A L L e x ­ p e n s e s m e ' g h ‘ - n d iv id u a ! C a ll 327-3314 lo ts o f * - e e t im e p :u s s a la r y f o r 9 # m - 7 p m on W e d n e s d a y W A V E R E S T W A T E R B E D S s o o k in g ‘ o r a p a r t t i m e d e liv e r y a n d t o w o r k 21 h o u rs - - -a a t io n p e r s o n 8 a m w e e k P e rs o n m u s t e n jo y ’ p r r S a tu r d a y s w o r d in g w it h p e o p le a n d b e a b le to w o r k w :’ no • s u p e r v - s on $4 h o u r p u * b o n u s A p p , n p e r s o n b e tw e e n 3-5 p m a t 8940 R e s e a rc h B lv d 459-6531 W I L D & C R A Z Y S tu d e n t s n e e d e d f u l l or p a r t t i m e e a r n e x t r a m o n e y o v e r T h a n k s g i v i n g . S e ll i n g A g g i e Iss ue of lo c a l h u m o u r m a g a ­ z in e C a i l 480-8884 a s k f o r R .J . E L ARRO YO N o w a c c e p t i n g a p p l i c a t i o n s f o r p a r t t i m e h e l p to w o r k on w e e k e n d s b e h i n d t h e b a r . A p ­ p ly in p e r s o n on T u e s d a y f r o m 2-8 p . m . 1624 W . 5th D E S K C L E R K , m o t e l, p a r t t im e , 9 p m - ? a m e v e r y o t h e r n ig h t A p p lic a n t m u s t ce a v a ab e t h r o u g h s u m m e r a n d f a ll s e m e s te r s A p p ly in p e rs o n - m o r n in g s W e s t W in d M o te < i h - 35 a n d A ir p o r t B ! vd c h is .BBT) Now Hiring Cooks Bus Persons & Foodservers A pply in Person 1 Oam - Noon 1 pm-4pm 9 0 7 0 Research ( c o r n e r o f 18 3 A B u r n e t ) A u jt in , TX E .O .E . GREEKS PIZZERIA N e e d s s e v e r a l n e w d r iv e r s , e x p e r i­ e n c e d c o o k 8. w a it p e r s o n s . F u l l & p a r t t i m e D r iv e r s m u s t h a v e o w n c a r a n d k n o w c a m p u s a n d s u r r o u n d - n g a r e a A p p ly in p e rs o n a t G reeks P izze ria 2 8 1 4 Nueces WAITPERSONS B E A N ' S R E S T A U R A N T A N D BAR is a c c e p t i n g a p p l i c a t i o n s f o r d e p e n d a b l e e x p e r i e n c e d , in m o t i v a t e d p e op le . A p p l y p e r s o n a t 311 W . 6th b e t w e e n 2-4 p . m . O P P O R T U N I T Y F O R S H A R P , A M B I T I O U S P E O P L E g f o r s o m e th L o c r g m o r e o u t o ' l i f e 7 S e t y o u r o w n h o u r s in a p le a s a n t, d ig n i- L e d b u s in e s s E x c e lle n t e a r n in g p o te n - t i a l (6 00-7 30 p m 1471-2209 F o r a p p o m t m e n ’ . c a n I N T E L L I G E N T A T T R A C T I V E , R E S P O N S I B L E C O U P L E O R O N E A D U L T *o l iv e m n ee a p a r t m e n t B e r e s p o n s ib le ‘ o r arg e r e s id e n c e a n d d o m e s tic d u t ie s ‘ o r o w n e r a n d w if e R e n t, u t ilit ie s , fo o d ■ jr n - s h e d p lu s r e a s o n a b le s a la r y L o c a - I f to 'io n c o u p le to t i m e a v a ila b le w o r - o r a t t e n d u n v e r s if y R e fe r e n c e s r e q u ir e d . W r it e 708 C o lo r a d o S u ite 1020 A u s t in , T X 78701 t o w n a n d U n iv e r s it y , f o r o n e B r o w n B u ild in g c 'o s e o f f C H I L D C A R E D e p e n d a n e e n e r g e t ic p e rs o n w i t h r e l i ­ a b le a r e x c e lle n t d - v in g r e c o r o a n d c h i a c a r e e x p e r ie n c e d r e n f r o m s c h o o l w e e k d a y s to p ic k u p 2 c h i l ­ ta k e th e m t o a c t i v i t i e s a n d c o o k s im p le d in n e r f o r ‘ a r r u iy H o u r s 5-7 M - F e x c e p t 5-9 30 o n e n ig h t a w e e k C a ll A A c ln ro y a t 472-6387 b e t w e e n 7 30-9 p .m . S E L L A U S T I N F lo w e r P e o p le Y o u k n o w w e r e b e s t C a s h p a id d a il y 288-1102. ts f lo w e r s T h e o r ig in a l th e O U T G O I N G P E R S O N . M u s t s p e a k e x - s p e a k e r p r e ­ c e : , e n t F r e n c h , f e r r e d f o r p a r t t im e t e a c h , ig S end q u a l­ i f i c a t io n s B o x 12464, A u s t in . T e x a s 78711 to L . S .I n a t iv e P O A L A N A S IS n o w a c c e p t in g a p p lic a t io n s f o r c o c k t a : : p e rs o n a n d d is h w a s h in g po s c io n s S e n d o r b r in g w o r k h js t o 'y to 319 E 6 th S t A R E Y O U h a n d s o m e a n d s e x y 7 M o n k e y B u s in e s s n e e d s y o u to s in g a n d h a m t u p . 479-8585 A P T M A N A G E R f o r 30 u n it U n iv e r s it y c o m p 'e x t o s t a r t J a n . 1st R e p ly b y m a il to 6005 S h a d o w V a lle y C o v e , A u s t in . T X 78731 C H R I S T M A S M O N E Y p lu s a s lim m e r h e a lt h ie r y o u . C a n H e id : 443-3541 HELP WANTED STORE CLERKS Full a n d P a rt-Tim e Positions a v a il a b l e for a ll shifts. s3 75 per hour (7am -l 1pm) s4 25 per hour (1 lpm -7am) A u t o m a t i c Raisas, F u ll B o no fi ts , P a id T r a i n i n g A p p l i c a t i o n s a v a i l - a b l e a t a l l stores or a p p l y a t Di s tri c t O ff ic e 8871 Tallwood M o n d a y t h r u F r id a y E q u a l O p p o r t u n it y E m p lo y e r R O O M A V A L A B ^ E a t m e C a s * o n e t e m a •- G r e a * r o o m m a t e a p ia n in c J d e d C a k r s ' in a * gyg t q •.; to r : m e a a E X P E R E N C E D P A N O ’ ea r e ' g r e e A - - e r 5 p m 459 4082 ' A R B e g m - e - s a d » a n c e d U T de . f u r n ^ h e d R O O M 2 0 A B P S h a re » * h e n $215 $175 480 0766 k s " o n u t r . « • - e ’ a n N E E D M A L E to a s s „ • e m y e a s e a ' ’ he to r s p r m g s e m e s 'e - P' y a 'e C a s ' b a ' r a n d * ' n f - e ” e U s . d 4 '8 a 9 6 ’ 5 p ANO E xpe rien c e d q u a c a a n d 9696 E S S C N S B e g o n e ' a d v a n c e d t ;ed " e a c h e - C ass " - p r o s sec s ty es P h o n e 453- L E S S O N S S p e a k n g g tn n e rs >r a d v a - , e d C a 443 5899 G j s ta g e ' A R v o ic e puc. p e r f o r m a n c e Be L B ' d w e F A S T CASH W e lo an on m o s t a n y t h i n g of v a l u e W e bu y, sell go ld an d s i l v e r . 5134 B u ' net Rd 454-0459 892-0019 AUTOMOTIVE AUTOMOTIVE 444-2468 2201 Elmont R O B E R T ’S PES T C O N TR O L C ondo owner s, ask about o u r quantity disco u n ts. F r e e T erm ite Inspections Licensed tor T erm ite s Lawn \ O rnam en tal' G en eral Pestn Kstablished 1959 o-it yourself pest control products 18(H) South L am ar \ -'in l'e\a> 78704 5 1 2 1 4 4 4 - 0 1 3 2 UNFURN. APARTMENTS ■ UNFURN. APARTMENTS RIVER HILLS APTS I t S l i c e s — I t D i c e s And Cuts That Huge Electric Bill Out Of Your Budget The RIVER HILLS Budget Cutting, Inflation Fighting Special! S ig n a 6’ m o n th l e a s e th is m o n th a n d w e w ill tu rn on a n d p a y f o r y o u r fir s t .7 m o n th s o f e l e c t r ic it y . E ff., I, J, 3, & I B e d r o o m s a v a i l a b le f o r M ov e In T o d a y . S t a r t in g a t $360. / sw im m in g p o o ls , s a u n a , / la u n d r ie s , 3 s h u t t le b u s r o u te s , c o n v e n ie n t to s h o p ping a n d e n t e r t a in m e n t . C a b le / \ is o p tio n a l. v X ; •X < ; Semester Leases also A vailable OPEN Mon-Fri 9-6 Sat 10-5 Sun 1-5 River Hills Apartments 1601 Royal Crost 444-7707 COLLEGE SENIORS RECENT GRADS PRIOR SERVICEMEN WITH DEGREES limi ted vacancies exist in V e ry the U.S. Air Forces' highly com ­ petitive pilot and navigator pro­ gra ms. Excel lent starting sal ary and benefits, including 30 days v a­ cation with pay a y e ar .. .med i c al and dental care. .. and gra du ate ed­ ucation opportunities. But you'd better act now. De ma nd is great, and curr ent vacancies a re expect­ ed to be filled within weeks. For mor e information contact: MSgt. David Dimego 816 W. 23rd St. Austin, Texas 78705 (512) 474-7537 A g r e a t w a y o f M e ESTRADA I APARTMENTS ¡ Vacancies Available • 2 Shuttle Bus Routes • Shopping • 3 Pools • Lakoviow • Studio, 1, & 2 Bedrooms 1 8 0 1 L a k « s h o r t 4 4 2 - 6 6 6 8 P rofessionally M a n a g e d by M a rtin e Properties ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ 4 ♦ ♦ ♦ 4 V > M v U T S T U D E N T subjects for nutritio n study D onate s elive, blood, h e ir one tim e only. P a y m e n t S4 plus learning zinc and copper values. 471-4287 ext. 30 O N L Y 9am -12pm or 2pm -4pm . - s u m m e r /y e a r O V E R S E A S JOB S round. E urope, S. A m e ric a , A us tra lia , fields. S500-S1200 m onthly. Asia. A ll Sightseeing. F re e info. W rite IJC, Box S2-TX2, Corona Del M a r , CA 92625. P H O N E S A LE S - 5pm -9pm . Easy m on­ ey. Good w orking atm osphere. 473-2024. F U L L T IM E child c a re w orkers needed for evening shift. Call 258-1691 between 9:30am -2:30pm M o n d a y -F rld a y . T IM E F le x ib le P A R T hours. M u s t be 21 Good d rivin g record 20 hou rs /w e e k. C all 479-6446. opportunity. P A R T T I M E c a s h ie r n e e d e d A p p ly In p e rs o n 900 E . 30th P a r k St D a v id s g a ­ r a g e . 9 a m -2 p m M o n d a y - F r ld a y in te le c o m ” U N I Q U E O P P O R T U N I T Y m u n lc a tio n m a r k e t in g S a la r y c o m m e n ­ s u r a te w ith e x p e r ie n c e . C a ll 467-2131 P A R T T I M E t y p is t w a n te d 10-20 h o u rs / w e e k R e a l E s t a te o ffic e on 183. C a ll 836- 5004. W A N T E D f o r p a r t m o n e y p o te n tia l C a ll 345-7160. in d iv id u a l tim e d ir e c t sa le s . E x c e lle n t A G G R E S S .V É W A N T E D : F O O D c h e c k e r M o n d a y - F r i - d a y 7 a m - 3 p m . C a ll D e b b ie fo r a p p o in t­ m e n t. 476-2520 S e v e ra l p o sitio n s F O O D S E R V I C E a v a ila b le fu ll a n d p a r t t i m e B e n e fits a n d good w o r k in g c o n d itio n s A p p ly In p erso n o r c a ll D e b b ie fo r a p p o in tm e n t R L S F o o d S e rv ic e , 2021 G u a d a lu p e ( D o ­ b le M a l l ) . 476-2520. G O O D M O N E Y . W o r k a t h o m e . S end s e lf- a d d r e s s e d to W B Q , 9417 G r e a t H ills T r , N o 1077, A u s ­ t in , 78759 s t a m p e d e n v e lo p e E N E R G E T I C M A L E o r f e m a le o v e r 18 w it h a b a c k g r o u n d in h e a lt h o r n u t r i t io n n e e d e d p a r t t i m e C a ll 445-6611, a s k f o r K a s e y . TYPING Video Resumes Open Doors A corporate recruiter will receive a thousand written resumes a month. In today's job market, you need all the advantages you can get. Video Resumes will give you an edge over the com petition They show your initiative; your person­ ality; and your credentials. N o w ritte n resume can do that. Call us for a free demonstration. L Video Resumes [J C areer Contacts G Interview Training I W ritte n Resumes R ecruiter's V id eo N e tw o rk 100 N . In te rre g io n a l S uite 3000 Austin, T X 78701 512 477-3014 9 - 6 M on. th ru Fri. Evening A S aturday a p pointm ents available. Visa and M a s te rC a rd accepted. M aster T y p is t T h e c o m p u t e r i z e d TYPIN G STO R E AFFORDABLE WORD PROCESSING RESUMES $850 5fore for future u p d a tin g W e do t e rm p a pe r s , theses, PRs, di ssertations & l a w briefs WE DO RUSH WORK 472-0293 So me D a y A O n e D a y Servico Free Parking J Dobie Mall # 3 6 2021 Guadalupe j * & oK° 4 °Expert Word Processing O P E N E V E R Y D A Y 10am til Midnight 4 8 0 - 0 0 4 0 K u sh S e r v ic e A v a ila b le Professional Resumes • One Day Service • UT Seal on Resumes • Originals and Copies • Word Processor • Professional Counseling 477-3014 Recruiter’s Video Network 100 N 135 Suite 3 0 0 0 9am -6 p m Mon. thru Fri. Visa I Mastercard Accaptad " T X i . i . I n c : --------------- T yp ing Service 4 4 3 -4 4 3 3 Pickup d elivery p o in t* 50 copy resume page $ I 8** Term Paper* Theses Rush Service • O i**ertat*on* • Technical ty p in g * A t lo w a* $1 50 P °9 * 1 0 0 5 E. Sf. Elm o Rd T Y P IN G Eugenia H o w ard 327-1443 Pick u p a n d da h va ry I niversity Resume Service Hrsunir Consulting Rr'urne Planning Rr'umr Typing 472-4700 $8 $8 W M U S u ite 9 A A ustin TX 1*8 701 TYPING, PRINTING, BINDING The C om plete Professional FULL TIME TYPING SERVICE 4 7 2 - 3 2 1 0 4 7 2 - 7 6 7 7 2 7 0 7 H E M P H IU PK. Plenty of Parking Word Processing with a Difference • e x c e p tio n a l ty p in g q u a lity • re a s o n a b le ra te s • co m p u te r s p e llin g check • p e rm a n e n t c o m p u te r record D a t a D im e n s io n s Inc. ( n e x t to S w e e tis h H i ll B a k e r y ) 1 2 0 ? D W est 6 t h 4 7 8 - 6 7 2 0 C O M P U T Y P I N G U N L I M I T E D W O R D P R O C E S S I N G P L U S G R A N D O P E N I N G P R I C E S ! C H E C K W I T H U S F I R S T ! W E ' R E B E T T E R ! C A L L 4 5 3 - 1 8 7 2 M E L I N D A ' S " ” T Y P I N G SER VICE $1.35 per standard page 15 y e a rs e x p e r ie n c e S t r i c t l y p r o f e s s io n a l t y p i n g g u a r a n t e e d 479-8871 H o u r s n o o n - m id n ig h t V i c i n i t y o f IH 3 5 a n d 32n d S t. T Y P IN G E N G L I S H T U T O R I N G M a u d e C a r d w e l l , P h . D . M a n y y e a r s e x p e r ie n c e t e a c h in g c o lle g e E n g lis h a n d t y p in g E le c t r o n ic t y p e w r i t ­ e r C a m p u s p ic k u p a n d d e li v e r y $1,35 p a g e u p 479-8909 N E E D A f a s t a c c u r a t e t y p i s t 7 l h a v e a B A in E n g lis h , a c o r r e c t in g S e le c t r ic a n d 12 y e a r s s e c r e t a r ia l e x p e r ie n c e C a ll A n n a t 447-5069 8-6 W O O D S T Y P I N G S e r v ic e - w h e n y o u w a n t i t d o n e r i g h t 472-6302 220C G u a d a ­ lu p e , s id e e n t r a n c e P R O F E S S IO N A L M A N U S c W l P T T Y P ­ IN G G u a r a n t e e d A i i f i e ' d s 5 p a g e m in ­ im u m Y v o n n e 474-4863 A c c u r a t e P R O F E S S I O N A L T h e s e s , s e r v ic e , d is s e r t a t io n s , p r o f e s s io n a l r e p o r t s , e tc B a r b a r a T u llo s , 453-5124 T Y P IS T a r o u n d t u r n f a s t I N T E L L I G E N T A C C U R A T E w o r d p r o c e s s in g C u s t o m e r m is s p e llin g s c o r r e c t e d R e s u m e s w it h f l a i r R u s h s e r v ic e a v a ila b le C r e a t iv e S e rv ic e s , 2420 G u a d a lu p e , 478-3633 t y p in g L I G H T N I N G Q U I C K T Y P I N G T h e m e s , le g a l P r o o f in g d is s e r t a t io n s , t e c h n ic a l, s k ills . E n g lis h B A I I B a r b a r a 476-7991 I B M T R A N S C R I B I N G T O O ! W a lle r " C r e e k W o rd d is s e r ta t io n s , th e s e s P R 's e tc F r o m $1 25 p a g e 454- 4307 S e r v ic e s t y p e s f o r T Y P I N G F A S T a n d a c c u r a t e S l. p a g e ($1 25 t e c h n ic a l) , s p e llin g c o r r e c ­ t io n s in c lu d e d R e s u m e s c o m p ile d C a i C a n d y o r le a v e r e c o r d e d m e s s a g e , 451 - 9596 B U S IN E S S S C H O O L " S P E C I A L I S T S . A c c u r a c y a s s u re d b y s p e llin g , p u n c t u a ­ tio n . g r a m m a r a n d f o r m R u s h s e r v ic e a v a il a b le 474-4735. L I N D A 'S T Y P I N G , s o u th . F a s t, a c c u ­ r a t e in e x p e n s iv e 442 7465 a f t e r 5 p m . th e s e s , T Y P I N G R E S E A R C H p a p e r s , d is s e r t a t io n s , C o r r e c t in g S e le c t r ic - p ic a e lit e W ill p r o o f E x p e r i ­ e n c e d , r e a s o n a b le 441-1893 s t a t is t ic a l K A T H E 'S Q U I C K T y p e - d is s e r t a tio n s , th e s e s ¡e g a l a n d p r o fe s s io n a l R e f e r e n c ­ es a v a ia b le 15 y e a r s e x p e r ie n c e 282- 6139 T H E T Y P I S T P r o f e s s io n a l q u a ' ty t y p ­ in g - g u a r a n t e e d . I B M C o r r e c t in g S e 'e r t r ie w o r d p r o c e s s in g C a m p u s p ic k - u p d e liv e r y H e le n 836-3562 T Y P I N G B Y D E A N N E S p e c ia liz in g in t e r m p a p e r s , d is s e r t a t io n s th e s e s , le ­ g a I B M C o r r e c t in g S e le c t r ic R e a s o n ­ a b le r a te s 447-7284 F A S T A C C U R A T E t y p in g o v e r n ig h t L e ­ g a : s e c r e t a r y , e x p e r t p r o o f r e a d e r C o m ­ p e t it iv e r a te s C a n M e t r o t y p e 453-0731 tytuioia, j4/ui Jcv/gy sure we DO type FRESHMAN THEMES why net itort out with geed gro6«t 2 7 0 7 H e m p h ill Jv«l N orth of 27 th ot G uod o lu p o 4 7 2 3 2 ) 0 47 2 7 6 7 7 t y p i s t P R O F E S S I O N A L A C A D E M I C C a r e fu l, a c c u r a t e p r o o f in g , f o r m a t t in g r e lia b le o v e r n ig h t s e r v ic e $1 25 P a t r i ­ c ia H e n d e r s o n B A 467-0167. P R O F E S S I O N A L L Y r e s u m e s f o r a i o c c u p a f io n a o b ie c t iv e s U n iv e r s i t y R e s u m e S e r v ic e 472-4700 P R E P A R E D P A T T Y 'S W O R D P r o c e s s in g T e r m p a ­ e p o rfs . d is s e r t a t io n s p e rs , p r o fe s s io n a P ic k up, r u s h s e r v ic e t i l m id n ig h t . 345- 4269 ______________ T A M A R A 'S T Y P I N G S e r v ic e . D is s e r t a ­ t io n s . e n g in e e r in g p a p e rs , c o lle g e p a ­ p e rs . f o r m s a p p lic a t io n s 443 9570 O p e n 24 h o u r s C O M P U T E R I Z E D t y p i n g F a s t, a c ­ c u r a te , e a sy c h a n g e s r e v ie w c o p y h ig h q u a l i t y f i n a l c o p v C a ll M a r g a r e t . 837- 2440 ________________ ______________ T U T O R I N G T Y P I N G p r o o f r e a d in g . M A in E n g lis h See y o u r g r a d e s g o u p 258 2043 276-7771 E X C E L L E N T d is s e r ta t io n s , S e ie c t r t 836-072' T Y P I N G r a p o r t v r e s u m e s , e tc C o r r e c t in g - T Y P I N G F A S T p r o fe s s io n a l 10 y e a r s c o m b in e d e x p e r ie n c e in e n g in e e r n g a n d a c c o u n t in g f ie ld s S A u s t in $ ! p a g e M i l l i e 447-5906 3- C O P IE S s e lf s e r v e 5' f u l l s e r v ic e c o p ­ es w it h a n A lp h a G r a p h ic s s tu d e n t ta c u lt y d is c o u n t c a r d G e ' y o u r f r e e c a r d a t A p h a G r a p h ic s on 2000 G u a d a lu p e H o u r s 8 a m 8 p r r M F 9 a m -5 p m S a t u r d a y n o o n 5 p m S u n d a y P h o n e 473 86695_____________ A h w o r k g u a 'a n t e e d P R O F E S S I O N A L S e r v ic e s B B A S p e c ia l s t u d e n t r a t e s P ic a 9C p a g e ro u te 1 0 a m 8 p m 477-5139 S e c r e t a ' a T y p in g U T - Ors s h u t t le SI 1C p a g e E lit e P R O F E S S I O N A L A C C U R A T E t y p . n g C a m p u s p ic k - u p a n d d e liv e r y O v e r o . g h t s e r v ic e S ’ 00 p a g e m o * t c a s e s J a m e 250-1)22 N A N C Y S T Y P l N G 2 4 -h o u rs 453 8354 IN m y h o m e N o r th e a s t a , . s re a s o n a b le r a t e s no c a l s a f t e r 10 T Y P I N G t i n P m . C a n P a t 454 5924 E X P E R I E N C E D T Y P I S T M a m E n g e tc N e a r sh T e r m p a p e r s th e s e s D e e p E d d y L e t ic i a B la io c x 479-6258 WORD PROCESSING typing w e s t A u s t m 442 7693 S o u th ! Q U I C K A N O a c c u r a t e t y p in g C a A n n a ‘ 282 6 5 5 6 a n » * . m e RESUMES w i t h or w it h o u t p ic tu re s 2707 H *m p hill Park Ju st N o rth o f 2 7 th a t G u a d a lu p e 4 7 2 -3210 4 7 2 -7 6 7 7 :- :-:-:- :- :- :- :- :- :^ v - ¿ > i ¿ .v - :- :- v .v ;: Í Y Í Í Y Í Y Í Y ^ ^ C O 1VI W E N T By STEVE DAVIS The French have a word for it: “ ennui." Ennui is akin to its American cousin "boredom,” but it’s more than just a short attention span. It encompasses the ABCs of 20th century angst: weariness, dissatisfaction, restlessness and a spiritual languor that aches all over. I fear that I suffer from this mental malady; I think that I have suffered from it for a long time. I am, however, but one of the wounded. Ennui is an epidemic. Everyone I know agonizes from it, whether their affliction stems from displeasure with a job, a love life, academics, a future career or life in general. Nobody seems to be entirely satisfied — there’s always something more that would cure the ache, but (like Aesop’s sour grapes) it is just beyond grasp. I don’t think that even Jacob’s ladder extends far enough to let us touch the emotional antidote. And even if it did, there's always something else a little higher that could better the status quo. Are we the Bored Generation? Probably, but surely other generations floundered to reach some semblance of self- fulfillment. What sets us apart from our elders is that there’s more to dissatisfy us today. What ailed Jagger when he bemoaned “ I Can’t Get No" back in the Sixties isn’t half of what ails today's dissatisfied. Now more options for unhappiness exist. And although this generation has toys like video games, home computers and hot tubs to gratify its senses, it has nothing to soothe the psychic bruises. A pessimist says that the odds militate against an ennui -free existence But I am less cymca and I partly owe my cockeyed optimism to my eighth-grade English teacher. Ever anxious to expose his students to a literary education. Mr Westbrook once took our class on a field trip to see a production of Thornton Wilder’s "Our Town," the first professionally performed piay d ever seen. The revelation occurred in the play s tmrd act. when Emily Webb (who has died unexpectedly in childbirth) gets the chance to walk among the living for one day When Emily realizes during this excursion that she ignored her pleasures, she heartbreakingly asks ever realize life while they live it — every, every minute9'1 'Do any human beings fe's simple That simple message left me breathless Seize the day Then and there. I resolved always to remember that painful metonca question because it held the key to a satisfying life It was a naive presumption, but I was an uncorrupted innocent apt to believe such things. Since then, Emily’s question has blurred m my mind with a thousand other experiences and ideas i haven't lost sight of it; I’ve just forgotten its importance Ennui is a state of mind, so what better way to cure it than with a little mental positivism? Wiider's message is a good place to start the road to recovery To paraphrase Shakespeare, the fault lies not in the way of the world but in ourselves The French have a phrase for it. joie de vivre — the joy of living I resolve (again > to strive for that sensitivity. I must. 5 T A F IF Editor Paula Minahan Associate Editor Tom Maurstad Gilíes Chabannes Scott Poole Contributors Cover and Center-Spread Stephen Bonin Gilíes Chabannes Steve Davis Charley Devany Ray Donley III Craig Dykers Steven Fay Amparo Garcia-Kassens Jody Grenga Brent Grulke Marie Mahoney Scott Poole Cathy Ragland Dan Rice Paul Sorenson David Sprague Richard Steinberg Jake Taylor Jay Trachtenberg John Paul Tracy Chris Walters Tommy W itherspoon Photographers Anne Harris Dian Owen Steven Pumphrey Guy Reynolds Travis Spradling David Sprague Production Assistants David McQueen Cindy Zalesak 1 0 0 Y E A R 5 / 4 0 A By RICHARD STEINBERG As negative as this article may seem, I’m not really putting down the fraternity or Greek system; I'm merely stating the facts, Jack. This is one of those “ believe it or not" stories. In February 1915, something weird happened. Two Texas legislators wanted to abolish fraternities at the University of Texas. They felt so strongly that they even introduced a bill in the Legislature. The bill stated: "... after September 1,1915, there shall be no connection ! between the University and any Greek letter fraternities, sororities, or any other secret organization or club ... the Board of Regents shall enforce the provisions of this act by denying any student, participating in any athletic event, the band, glee club or any other leading activity, together with the privilege of graduation, where such student is a member of any fraternity or secret society. Students would also be forbidden to attend any meetings of such societies while In the University.” Hey, these guys sounded serious! The bill would have also covered honor organizations such as Phi Beta Kappa and Delta Sigma Rho and probably would have been stretched to hit the Masonic Club What this means is that only 70 percent of the student body would have been affected One of the only students who was really up in arms was E H . Lawhon, president of the Students’ Association; Lawhon considered fraternities a menace to student life. (I guess since Lawhon was a graduating senior, he wasn’t looking to get re­ elected the next year). In the Legislature, the "abolition bill," as it was referred to, was first given to the Committee on Education, which decided that it was a good idea: then, it went before the House. Rep. Fry, one of the members who introduced the bill, said that he opposed the class distinction which fraternities produce. Judge Hill and Rep. Wortham, who led the attack on the bill, thought it was unfair and pointed out all the outstanding campus activities which fraternity members participated in; 11 out of 16 men on the Longhorn football team and all but three men on the baseball team were fraternity members The pro-fraternity faction also denied any accusations of fraternity activities of being decadent; they said that life in the fraternity house was the nearest approach to home life that had been reached at the University. Then, the day of the vote carne The bill, which was predicted to wm on a two-to-one margin, lost 68 to 5Q The House also voted to postpone No comment. cofir tely .r y ~ q j r r issions on tHe b'H C A L F N D A *R .D t\1 J \ D X X 5 A T U n D A Y SOLVAY CONFERENCE IN PHYSICS D Abdus Saiam of the • terrat¡ona¡ Center 'or Theoreticial Physics in Trieste, Italy v. expla n the Unification of Fundamenta^ Forces" at 4 p,m in the Lyndon B Johnson Auditorium For more ^formation, call 471-3151 ANIMATION EXHIBIT AND SALE Cei pamt ngs from the collections of the Warner Brothers and D¡sney Studios will be on display from 9 a m to 6 p m in the Texas Union Building Gaiiery A so from 9 a m to 6 p m. Tuesday EVENINGS OF OPERA The UT Opera Theatre wil perform at 3 p.rr m the Opera L.ab Theatre. 23rd Street and East Campus Drivt Also at 8 p m Tuesday For more information call 471- 1444 CHRISTINE DELBEAU Pianist Christine Delbeau will perform at 4 15 p.m. in Bates Recital Hall, 25th Street and East Campus Drive For more information, call 471-1444 CLASSICAL GUITAR CONCERT Use and Nicolas Alphonso will perform at 8 p m in Hogg Auditorium For more information, call 458-6494 ESTHER'S FOLLIES Esther’s November show continues with new satirical musical vaudeville including "Omelettry Est," "An Officer and a Schmuck," ‘The Grand Kabuki Theatre — Esther's-style" and “ Phil Donahue Meets the Pope" at 9 p.m. at Esther's Poo , 515 E Sixth St Also at 9 and 11 p.m. Friday and at 8 p.m.. 10 p.m. and midnight Saturday For more information, can 474-9382 r s o x iVÍVÍV.Vm V ÍW Í V.V.ViV.-.V.V! m F n i D A Y NALDO POSELLA Cellist Na¡do Poselio will perform at 7 30 p r n the Recital Studio, 25th Street and East Campus Drive For more mformat on, call 471-1444 HORN ENSEMBLE The UT Horn Ensemble will perform at 8 p m n Bates Recital Ha l, 25th Street and East Campus Drive. F o r,r ore nformation. call 471-1444 \ / p n \ r <=5 d X Y SYMPHONY BAND Tne UT Symphony Band, conducted by 3 enn R chter an j Paula O ten will perform at 8 p m, in Bates Rec tal Haü. 23rd Street and East Campus Drive. For more r 'ormation, call 471-1444 LITTLE RED Tnis fa v ’.a e for adults w be performed at 9 p m at the Ritz Theatre. 320 E Sixth St Also at 9 p.m. Thursday and F day and at 8 and 11 p m Saturday F or more nformat'on, ca n 447-4268. MARY GAYLE GAUT Violinist Mary Gayle Gaut will perform at 4 15 p m m Recitai Hall, 25th Street and East Campus Drive CABARET THEATRE The Union Theatre Committee will sponsor a Cabaret Dinner Theatre in the Texas Union Santa Rita Room Dinner begins at 7;30 p.m., and performances begin at 9 p.m. A,so at 7 30 and 9 p.m. Saturday. For more information, call 47" -5651 HELOISE GOLD One of Austin's most exciting da^ce performers will presen? the premiere of "Totems the latest in a series of visionary dance at 8 p.m. at the Capitoi City Playhouse, 214 W Fourth St A so at 8 p m. Saturday. For more information, caii 478-4766 ELLY AMELING Soprano Elly Ameimg will perform at 8 p.m in the Perforr ng Arts Center Concert Hall, 23rd Street and East Campus Drive. For more information, call 471-1444 A MIDSUMMER NIGHT’S DREAM Smal Pota' jes "neatnca Company will present Shakespeare's comedy a? 9 p.m at the Dance Assoc ates Studio. 2093- E Sixth St. Also at 7 30 Saturday and Sunday For more information can 474-0661. AUSTIN COMMUNITY ORCHESTRA The Austin Community Orchestra will perform at 8 p.m. in Bates Recital Hall, 25th Street and East Campus Drive 5 U \ D A Y NEW MUSIC ENSEMBLE The New Music Ensemble will perform at 3 p m. in the Art Building, 23rd Street and San Jacinto Boulevard. FILM HARVEST FESTIVAL A presentation of new films by local filmmakers will be held at 7 30 p.m. at Esther's Pool, 515 E Sixth St. For more information, call 474-5209 or 476-5992 WOMEN'S CONCERT CHOIR The Women's Concert Choir will perform at 8 p.m. in Bates Recital Hall, 25th Street and East Campus Drive For more information, call 471-1444. r i c BRAZOS GALLERY Hand-colored photographs by Gaii Fisher, figurative sculpture by Jane Howell and ceramic vessels by Paul Uhl, are on display at the Brazos Gallery, 815 Brazos St For more information, call 472-3487. AUSTIN COMMUNITY TELEVISION Learn to make your own video programs for Public Access TV. Austin Community Television offers Basic Video Workshops Classes are small and offer hands-on training in the use of portable video cameras and recorders. For more information, call 478-8600 AUSTIN POLITICAL ISSUES An investigation of the recent University o' Texas land acquisitions in East Austin will be featured on a bi-weekly program which will be telecast on cable over C hannel 6 and 10 For more information, call 476-0958 THANKS FOR GIVING Students in the UT School of Soca* Work are sponsoring a food drive Monday through Nov 22 For more information, call 272-5772 or 471-1937 an e* p®n •e e * P e (X ' S ® 0 r e o ' e a t " a \1 - rr, " F o o o e ° Y ° e ^ d a N a b ' e ' s p a Y e ^ a o o e ^ - COOC'O Ga,aean^''\,tAeS " s&s* á s ^ f s s * cnamPe' Gomf0* ComP c °pk'n9 BoerQV & 0nment HaP'YV o WuW«»on HeaU^ * H ° ^ ' e^ ain \e n a ^ e 1 pepa" pOP\Y sta te Beal t s ,oeSs S e ducat'00 SpeCl t SpO*s Bonds ^ COOC<° o moves' o f asV^ O e p a ''" '6" N o t a le * re q u ire d .3 0 0 Tunc < hunnel numbers nn blai k baeKgrounds tu Aimtin I HK ami \ HK transmissions Tune channel num beis on w hile bac kgrounds ¡or \u*> tin i abk'V ision program m ing S U N D A Y T V NOVEMBER 1 4 ,19S2 7:00 O RAPAROUND O THE WORLD TOMORROW 0 (D THI8 IS THE UFE NEW 0 ROBERT SCHULLER 0 CD BEST OF KIDS ARE PEOPLE TOO 0 (D REX HUMBARO ® TODAY’S SPECIAL © THE LESSON 0 S3) JIMMY SWAGQART ©THREESCORE O NEWS / WEATHER / SPORTS (D 8PORTSCENTER 55 CARTOONS ® WHAT’S NU? © AUSTIN ANSWERS 0 0 ( 4 ) JIMMY SWAOGART O AT HOME WITH THE BIBLE O JAMES ROBISON @) MOVIE ★ ★ "The Great A dventure" (1976) Jack Palance, Joan Collins. 0 1■ ® PINWHEEL ® HERITAGE SINGERS G FUTBOL ITALIANO ® ROBERT SCHULLER (D) CROSSFIRE 0 0 ( £ 0 SUNDAY MORNING 8:00 i t it'/t "Rough Cut” (1980) Burt Reynolds, Lesley-Anne Down. o th e FIRST TOUCH 0 d ) SESAME 8TREET (R )g 0 REX HUMBARO 0 GD JAMES ROBISON O KENNETH COPELANO 0 S3) PTL CLUB (SPANISH) ® MOVI ® 8U N Q A Y MASS ( 0 THE WEEK IN REVIEW CD COLLEGE FOOTBALL 55 LOST IN SPACE O JAMES ROBISON 0 BREAKTHROUGH 0 (3D ROBERT SCHULLER 0 ® BAPTIST CHURCH ® CHICAGOLAND CHURCH HOUR O MOVIE A A ’A "P assion" (1954) Cornel Wilde, Yvonne De Carlo O LARRY JONES © MOVIE it it it "Father Figure" (1981) Hal Linden. Timothy Hutton 0 3D MISTER ROGERS (R) 0 ORAL ROBERTS 0 (D PEOPLE VUE (3D BEN HADEN 0 S3) EMBAJADORES DE LA MUSICA COLOMBIANA SSTARZAN (ED COOKING WITH KERR © LIGHTER SIDE OF THE NEWS Q GOOO MORNING TEXAS O JERRY FALWELL 0 ® THE WALTONS 0 ® ELECTRIC COMPANY (R) 0 JIMMY SWAGGART 0 CASTLE HILLS 0 ® ALLANDALE BAPTIST CHURCH 0 (D THE WORLD TOMORROW © LA R R Y JONES © MOVIE "E l Pequeño Robin H ood"A I Coster. Patricia Aspillaga 0 S3) ACTUALIDAD SEMANAL QT NEWSMAKER © M O V IE A A A ’/t "Shane” (1953) Alan Ladd. Jean Arthur. B 0 ® DALLAS COWBOY WEEKLY 0 ® MATINEE AT THE BUOU © JIMMY 8WAGQART 0 S3) HOY MISMO 8MOVIE A A A "TheV .I.P .s"(1963) Elizabeth Taylor, Richard Burton RAWHIDE © HEALTHWEEK G FACE THE NATION O ROBERT SCHULLER 0 © NFL WEEK IN REVIEW 0 CATHOLIC CHURCH CHRI8TOPHER CLOSEUP 0 © THIS WEEK WITH DAVID BRINKLEY f f i ® FRED AKERS 5 SCHOLASTIC SPORTS ACADEMY © NFL FOOTBALL PREVIEW 7:05 7:15 7:30 8:05 8:30 0:00 9:05 9:30 9:35 10:00 10:30 11:00 O MEET THE PRES8 Q f f i ® TOM LANDRY © YESTERYEAR.. 1942 O © NFL WEEKLY MAGAZINE 0 FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH © MOVE itiftt'/t “ True Confession” (1937) Fred MacMurray, Carole Lom ­ bard. © N EW 8IG H T © D E JA M E VIVIR ® c is c o too 0 NEW8 / WEATHER / SPORTS ®SPORT8CENTER 11:30 Q O 0 ® N F L 8 2 f f i © 0 ® WR 0 NFL TODAY V S WORKSHOP ® INTERVUE ■ ) YOU C ANT DO THAT ON TELEVISION © ATH LETES IN ACTION ® LONE RANGER dD CROSSFIRE ® ALL-STAR SPORTS CHALLENGE I S3) FUTBOL DESDE MEXICO 11:45 12:00 O 0 O O © © © ® NFL FOOTBALL 8:30 6:50 7:00 7:05 7:30 8:00 8:05 8:30 9:00 9:05 9:30 9 45 10:00 10:05 10:15 10:30 10:40 10:45 11 00 11 05 1115 CD ® WASHINGTON WEEK IN REVIEW © INSIGHT f f i ® CREATIVE CRAFTS ® AGAINST THE ODDS (H) D. JAMES KENNEDY ® SCREENING ROOM 16 MOVIE * A “ Dark Alibi sets Off on another mystery investigation i l l NEWS / WEATHER / SPORTS © CFL FOOTBALL (1946) Sidney Toler Benson Fong Charlie Chan © 9 WILD AMERICA 1/ NHL HOCKEY 18 THE ADVENTURES OF BLACK BEAUTY 21 SWISS FAMILY ROBINSON © © SIEMPRE EN DOMINGO 14 SCREENING ROOM 16 IN SEARCH OF 5 NBA TONIGHT © M O V IE * A * 1! “ Peyton Place (1957) i ana Turner. Lloyd Nolan © ® W ALL STREET WEEK © NEWSMAKERS f f i © ANDY GRIFFITH ® KIDS' WRITES © IVA ZANICCHI ® MOVIE A A '-! "The P arty" (1968) Peter Sellers, Claudine Longer © MONEYWEEK © ® SIX GREAT IDEAS © THIS WEEK WITH DAVID BRINKLEY f f i ® MOVIE * * ’'! “ Andy Hardy's Blonde Trouble” (1944) Mickey Rooney. Lewis Stone. @ ENGLISH CHANNEL ® REGGIE JACKSON'S WORLD OF SPORTS © CHILDREN'S CHRISTMAS FUND ( 0 THE WEEK IN REVIEW © STANDING ROOM ONLY © LARRY JONES © MOVIE "E l M undo De Los Aviones Capulina, Barbara Angelys ® MOVIE i t i t ' h "The Big Store (1941: Marx Brothers, Tony M artin © ® INSIDE BUSINESS TODAY © MOVIE A A "The Premature B urial” (1962) Ray Milland Hazel Court ® LIVEWIRE © JEWISH VOICE BROADCAST f f i © CACHUN, CACHUN. RA, RA, RA ( 0 CNN SPECIAL REPORT O i l l TO BE ANNOUNCED G O 2 THE BLUE AND THE GRAY O f f i 4 MOVIE A A "The Blue la g o o n Atkins 42 MOVIE * A ' > “ So Fine" (1981) Ryan O'Neal, Jack Warden © ® NATURE f f i © f f i 5 MOVIE * A A 7 "Superm an Kidder 18 LIVEWIRE \9 HOPPER'S SILENCE 14 MOVIE * * ★ “ Southern C om fort 16 WALL STREET JOURNAL REPORT 11 NEWS / WEATHER / SPORTS (5 NBA BASKETBALL (1‘>80) Brooke Shields. Christopher (1978) Christopher Reeve. M argot (1981) Keith Carradine. Powers Boothe ,23 NASHVILLE ALIVE! 2? MOVIE “ El Mexicano II Jorge Rivero, Teresa Velazquez 16 JACK ANDERSON CONFIDENTIAL O CONWAY TWITTY ON THE MISSISSIPPI © 9 ALL CREATURES GREAT AND SMALL 18 SAMSON AND DELILAH © DANCE 21 TRANSFORMED 16 FIGHT BACK i l l FREEMAN REPORTS 23 WEEK IN REVIEW 42 MOViE A * ' ? Paternity 21 IN TOUCH 16 PEOPLE TO PEOPLE O f f l 4 DOUG HENNING'S MAGIC ON BROADWAY © 9 MASTERPIECE THEATRE 22 LOS GOZOS Y LAS SOMBRAS 14 MOVIE * * * 16 NEWS U NEWS / WEATHER / SPORTS ‘The V.l P s (198 11 Burt Reynolds, Beverly D Angelo (1941) Gene Tierney. Randolph Scot! (1968) Anthony Perkins Tuesday Weld (19631 Elizabeth T aytor, Richard Burton © ® TONY BROWN’S JOURNAL © ZOLA LEVITT f f l © Ml SECRETARIA i® MOVIE * A '? “ Belle Starr Q i THE BIG STORY O MOVIE A A A 1 v "P retty Poison 0 O @ © NFL FOOTBALL O HISPANIC JOURNAL © ® GREAT PERFORMANCES © © TO BE ANNOUNCED 17 GREATEST SPORTS LEGENDS 18 THE ADVENTURES OF BLACK BEAUTY © MOVIE A A “ Operation Haylift © DIAGNOSIS f f i © VISITANDO A LAS ESTRELLAS (0 ! HEALTHWEEK 5 CFL FOOTBALL (1950) Bill Williams, Ann R utherford 23 NEWS i17 TENNIS 21 JOHN ANKERBERG 5 SPORTSCENTER f f i 3 NEWS 3:05 23 MOVIE * A V4 "Return To Peyton Place" (1961) Carol lyn le y. Jeff Chandler Q3 ® MOVIE A A A “ How To M arry A M illionaire" (1953) Lauren Bacall. M ari­ lyn Monroe O CANTO DE TEJAS 4? MOVIE a a Falling In Love Again" (1980) Elliott Gould, Susannah York. i ; GREATEST SPORTS LEGENDS 18 SPECIAL DELIVERY f f i 13 300 MILLONES 16 MOVIE A A ' n EVANS & NOVAK (1962) Pete. Bre - 'L a d A D o g eqgv Met ’ SCREENWRITFHS / WORD INTO IMAGF C I G O C * 2 f f i 4 NEWS 42 ALL-NIGHT RADIO (D > 9 HOPPER'S SILENCE 21 THE KING IS COMING 22 MOVIE Princn n De a Ciudad Treat Williams. Bob Ba than 16 SATURDAY NIGHT 11 SPORTS 23 JERRY FALWELL O 2 CBS NEWS f f i 3 BARRY FARBER O BENNY HILL G MOVIE A A 4 O g l e n CAMPBELL 4 2 MOVIE A a Ü 2 SOLID GOLD f f i 9 TO THE MANOR BORN f f i 4 MOVIE A a Knight 2i CONTACT I I INSIDE BUSINESS 5 COLLEGE FOOTBALL r axi Driver 1 1976) Robert De Ni r. ybill Shepherd True Confess,, -tv, (1981 1 Robert Do Nir< Robert Duval t nendly Persuasion ( 1975 Richard Kitey Shirley © MOVIE The Power Within o MEET THE PRESS © ® THE DESERT PEOPLE © COLLEGE FOOTBALL ® WHAT WILL THEY THINK OF NEXT? © AMERICAN CHALLENGE © DEPORTES DE GALA ( 0 NEWS / WEATHER / SPORTS O NEWS O CHRISTIAN CHILDREN'S FUND © ® THE THREAT OF NUCLEAR WAR ® THE TOMORROW PEOPLE © TELECULTURE f f i © LO BODA DE LA CHICA 14 MOVIE i t i t ' A Rough Cut 11 NEWSMAKER ( 1980) Burt Reynolds. Lesley-Anne Down © © NEWS 18 GREAT PAINTINGS GOYA S "THE NAKED MAJA O NEWS © r s NOVA © MARY TYLER MOORE f f i ® ABC NEWS 0 ( 4 MEET THE PRESS © THE TOMORROW PEOPLE 1? MOVIE A A A ' s “ Ugetsu” ( 1953) Machiko Kyo Masayuki Mon © TRAVELLER'S WORLD Q1 NEWS / WEATHER / SPORTS Q Q f f i 4 NBC NEWS 42 MOVIE a * The Great A dventure" (1976) Jack Palance. Joan Collins © ABC NEWS f f i © THE MUPPETS 18 REGGIE JACKSON'S WORLD OF SPORTS 21 AMERICAN TRAIL 16 LITTLE HOUSE ON THE PRAIRIE n INSIDE BUSINESS 23 NICE PEOPLE O O f f i 4 VOYAGERSI O Q ) © 60 MINUTES © S SNEAK PREVIEWS © f f i (3 RIPLEY'S BELIEVE IT OR NOT! © FLYING HOUSE 22 MOVIE “ La Noche Del H alcón" Andres Garcia. Rosa Maria Vazquez 0 SPORTS SUNDAY S SPORTSCENTER O CAROL BURNETT AND FRIENDS O NASHVILLE MUSIC © 9 MYSTERY 9 DANCE Jl LARRY JONES GB ’ 3 TODA UNA VIDA 16 MOVIE * a a 11 NEWS / WEATHER / SPORTS I 23 OPEN UP 14 MOVIE a a f f i GRANT TEAr F © MOVIE Reve I SPY f f i 3 >!epford W • MOVIE A A A “ C ry. TN Be 11 45 12:00 12 05 . ndly Persuasion’ (1956) Gary Coope athy McGuire : r-e Baby Makr H ershey. Sam < othy McGuire 12:06 12:30 1:00 1:30 2:00 2:30 3:00 3 30 3:45 4.00 4:30 5:00 5:30 5:35 6 00 6:05 Reynolds, Beve. ly O'Angelo. WRESTLING how sporting of Foley's to save you money on fleece activewear... run right in for the best selection! Junior activewear of soft, comfortable polyester/cotton fleece, in styles to give you the winning edge. Terrific for tennis, jogging and exercising, but they’re just as great at weekend loafing. Bright colors in sizes S, M, L. Crew neck pullover or drawstring waist jogging pants. each Á O O reg. 9.99 U i M * o cus the pullover C om fortable elastic waist pants, 14.99 "reg 19.99 R E C O R D S By THE IMAGES STAFF ‘n’ roll move. Tom Potty and the Hoartbroakora "Long After Dark” (Back­ street) Do you remember the guy at every high school party who, given the slightest opportunity, would leap atop the nearest table, scream ‘‘rock ‘n‘ roll!” and proceed to prance about? Flailing at his air guitar, pouting and posing, here was a man practiced at every rock Tom Petty is that guy Wearing his heart on his sleeve and performing without originality or innovation, he's a rock traditionalist. Petty recycles old riffs and sings songs we've all heard before. Which is fine with me — Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers do for '80s rock what Eric Carmen and the Raspberries did for rock in the '70s. With no pretense to being anything but good, hard working guys who love the music they've grown up with, this band makes music with both polish a n d passion, the way that only professional rock ‘n‘ roll fans can. Petty doesn’t create magic, he recreates it. Paradoxically, that’s what gives the best of his music a life of its own, a soul, and it's also what separates him from most of the rest of the rock mainstream. Tom Petty is forever a smalltown American teenager who loves a good time, isn't too happy about where he is and what he's doing, would like to fall m love but can’t and, most importantly, doesn't get laid enough Sounds familiar, doesn't it? Well, it should On "Long After Dark” mca-guy Petty's fifth album, co-produced again by the incredible Jimmy ovine, Petty does the same things he's already done before, o n l y better His hooks are as crisp and resonant as ever, his thin nasal voice better manipulated and the band notter than on any previous effort. As a traditionlist his yrics predictably stray toward misogyny a little more often than they should, but ne tends ' 0 undercut those sentiments through self-deprecating rony. I 'le a n , any guy who writes a song with the lyric . got lucky babe/Yeah you icky babe/W hen I found y go1 you” is not without a certain sense of, shall we say, ambiguity But the yrics really don't matter anyway They function as containers for vocal sounds as oart of the m x. L ;ten t o ' Change of Heart where ne sarcastically barks Yeah tnere's been a change of ■ e a rt' This is the way a rock v .cal snould work, and th s is when the album works t wants to do, and he does it well — something he does n ost of the time What more co jid you ask from a guy who stands on tables at parties9 - B.G it, too 3etty know3 what he \ The Cactus Showcase Presents • DAVID RODRIGUEZ • Thursday Nov. 11 $1 UT, $2.50 others Coming: Nov. 18 - L u c in d a Tuesday W ednatday Reggae Music Classical Music Friday D ardon S m ith 6. th e R am b lers G rim alkin Saturday r c A F E A N O 8 A r T J loeatad in tho Texas Union, m ain level To look terrific and feel great J call Jacki | Sorensen’s Aerobic Dancing. Here’s your chance to try the original Aerobic Dancing fitness program. It’s fun. It works. Lose inches as you firm up and find new energy as you dance. Join Jacki’s local class today. CALL NOW 454-6669 CLASSES BEGIN NOV. 9th I C1981 A erobic Dancing Inc ■fry a free introductory class at a nearby location. Classes Held All Over Town BALLOON BOUTIQUE N O W OPEN NEAR C A M P U S ! 25 12 Guadalupe Balloons • Baskets Personalized Handpainted Gifts WE DELIVER FOR IDEAS CALI MARGARET WOMACK • r BETTY ANN PRICE at 451-0047 H air S tylin g for M en & Women A n A u stin T radition Since 1970 2004 Guadalupe Austin, Texas 478-0022 2819 San Jacinto Austin, Texas 4 72 -2 7 09 GREEKS PIZZERIA HA VE Y O U H A D A PIECE TODA Y? F R E E D E L I V E R Y 16” 8 ” 12” P I Z Z A S 8 T Y P E S O F S A N D W IC H E S & C O M B I N A T I O N S DINING LOCATION 2819 N U E C E S, ON THE DRAG A d ja c e n t to M c D o n a ld ’s n e a r 29th & G u a d a l u p e DWI. THEFT. POSSESSION. Q ualified representation at reasonable rates. No charge tor initial consultation. Betty Blackwell Mac key A T T O R N E Y 411 W. 13th S rreer # 4 0 3 4 7 9 - 0 1 4 9 lic e n s e d by the rexas Suprem e Court N ot certified Cv the Texas B o a "! of uega Special zat SUNSET overlooking La ke Travis NACHOS MARGARITAS and much, much more HAPPY HOUR 4:30-6:30 DINNER 5:30 OPEN THURSDAY & FRIDAY FROM 4:30 SATURDAY & SUNDAY FROM NOON GREAT PRIVATE PARTY FACILITIES (J/ISIS im tim dd Uwv b550 Conn i m ía Tun/ Ju>lm,Tcxn> > ’730 Í5 I2 Í 2 & -2 4 4 I m ' ■; 5 A T U n D A Y • ( D SP EED BU Q Q Y 7 00 O O 6 3 4 THE F LIN T S TO N E FU NN IES O O © f f i j SU P E R FR IE N D S 17 USA PR ES EN TS 18 TO D A Y S SP EC IAL 21 C O N T A C T 22 M O V IE 16 U S F A R M REPO RT i i NE W S / W E A TH E R / SP O R TS 5 S P O R TS C E N TE R 73 R O M P E R R O O M t as C u a tro B o d a - >*■ M ar sol M a riso l Jean C laude P ascal S p h in x 11 9 8 1 i Frank Lan gella. L e sle y-A n n e D ow n 0 0 6 3 4 THE SH IR T T A LE S 0 0 2 © P A N D A M O N IU M i% M O V IE * * © O ) 3 P A C -M A N LITTLE R A S C A LS / R ICH IE RICH 17 S C H O L A S T IC S P O R TS A C A D E M Y 18 PIN W H E E L 71 M A N N A H M O V IE * * 16 THE W O R LD T O M O R R O W 11 THE BIG STOR Y (1976 S ' harías B ro n so n Ja c q u e lin e B lsse t 23 T H A T G IR L O O 6 3 4 S M U R FS 0 0 2 © G IL L IG A N S P LAN E T © 9 U N D E R S T A N D IN G H U M A N B E H A V IO R : i YO U M A G A Z IN E FOR W O M E N 21 TH E LE S S O N © 13 B U R B U JA S 16 REX H U M B A R D i i H E A LT H W EEK 5 IN S T R U C T IO N A L SERIES 23 C IV ILIS A T IO N 5 C O LLE G E F O O T B A L L PR E V IE W (R) 0 0 2 © B U G S B U N N Y / R O A D R U NN ER © 9 U N D E R S T A N D IN G H U M A N B E H A V IO R © 0 ) 3 P A C -M A N 17 ARE YO U A N Y B O D Y ? 21 W E E K E N D G A R D E N E R 16 ISSU ES U N LIM IT E D n M O N E Y W E E K S IN S T R U C T IO N A L SERIES © 9 FO C U S O N SO CIETY © 0 D 3 M O R K & M IN D Y / LA V E R N E & SH IR LEY 17 M O V IE * * K in g O f The T urf 21 M O V IE 6 4 9 B re a k o u t 22 M O V IE Las Fieras M a u ric io G arce s, Lucy G a lla rd o © 13 HO Y M IS M O 16 C H A R L A N D O i i NE W S / W E A TH E R / S P O R TS 5 V IC ’ S V A C A N T LO T ( 1939) A d o lp h e M e n jo u . R oger D aniel 1959) R ich a rd T od d, R ich a rd A tte n b o ro u g h 23 M O V IE * * * T h a x te r Jim T h o rp e All A m e rica n (1951) B u rt L a n ca ste r, Phyllis □ 0 8 3 4 TH E G A R Y C O L E M A N S H O W Q O 2 G0 BU G S BU N N Y / R O A D RU NN ER 42 B O X IN G 'S B E ST M U H A M M A D ALI © 9 FO C U S O N SO C IETY 14 M O V IE ★ * C a rb o n C o p y 16 J O B LINE n STYLE 5 PIC K TH E PR O S (R) (1981) G e o rg e Segal S usan S a in t Jam es IN C R E D IB LE H U L K / A M A Z IN G S P ID E R -M A N O O G3 4 © 9 P E R S O N A L F IN A N C E © 0 ) 3 S C O O B Y & S C R A P P Y DO O / PU PP Y g 16 S U P E R M A N i i S P O R TS C LO S E -U P 5 FU TUR E SP O R T s "F oo lin' A ro u n d " (1980) G a ry B usey A n n e tte O Too le 0 0 2 M E A T B A L L S & S P A G H E T TI 42 M O V IE © 9 P E R S O N A L F IN A N C E © M IN O R IT Y FO R U M 16 V O Y A G E TO TH E B O T T O M OF TH E SEA U N C A A PR EV IEW 5 S K I S C H O O L O C A R T O O N T IM E 0 0 2 © N C A A F O O T B A L L 0 0 3 4 T H E J E T S O N S © 9 © TO BE A N N O U N C E D QD 3 W E E K E N D S P E C IA L 17 M O V IE * * P re tty B o y F lo yd ' (1960) Jo h n E ricso n , Jo a n H arvey IT 'S E V E R Y B O D Y ’S B U S IN E S S 7 05 7 30 7:35 8 00 8:05 8:15 8:30 8 45 9:00 9:05 9:30 10:00 10:30 11:00 (1981) A lb e rt Finney. M a rtin Sheen 12:30 O F -T R O O P O W E S TE R N O U T D O O R S M A N 4 2 M O V IE A * L o o p h o le © 9 A D U L T E D U C A TIO N 0 ) J T H E M U P P E T S 0 3 4 M O V IE 6 4 6 P lease D on t Eat The D aisies N iven 18 TH E T O M O R R O W P E O P LE 22 LU C IA S O M B R A i t N E W S M A K E R S (1960) D o ris Day. D avid O B U C K R O G ERS O C O U N T D O W N FO R A M E R IC A © 9 AR T OF BE IN G H U M A N 0 ) 3 M O V IE A * * B rid e O f F ra n k e n s te in < 1935) Elsa Lan ch e ste r. B o ris K a rlo ff 17 YO U M A G A Z IN E FOR W O M E N 18 THE T O M O R R O W PE O P LE © 13 M O V IE A m e ric a Esta Es Tu C a n ció n 14 M O V IE 6 4 9 H a rpe r Valley PTA 11978) B a rb a ra Eden. R o nny C ox I t H E A LT H W EEK 5 A U S T R A L IA N R U LES F O O T B A L L O N E W S W A T C H PR ES EN TS © 9 A R T OF B E IN G H U M A N 17 AR E YO U A N Y B O D Y ? 18 LIV E W IR E 2i JU D G E ROY BE AN 16 M O V IE A * A b b o tt A n d C o s te llo M eet The K iller. B o ris K a rlo ff B o ris K a rlo ff, G a rry M o o re 11 E V A N S 4 N O V A K O G U N S M O K E o A U T O R A C IN G © 9 E V E R YD A Y C O O K IN G W IT H JA C Q U E S PEPIN 17 S C H O L A S T IC S P O R TS A C A D E M Y 21 M O V IE A A A K in g O f The B u llw h ip 11951) Lash LaR ue Tom Neal 22 D E P O R TE S DE G A L A © 13 LO M E JO R DEL M U N D IA L I I C N N S P E C IA L REPO RT 23 M O V IE A * , Tbe M ira c le O f The B e lls (1948) Fred M a c M u rra y . A iida VMM 42 B L O C K H E A D S © 9 TH IS O LD H O U S E © 0 ) 3 N C A A F O O T B A L L CD 4 LO N E S T A R S P O R T S M A N 17 G R E A T E S T S P O R T S LE G E N D S 18 YOU C A N ’ T DO T H A T ON T E LE V IS IO N 11 ST Y LE (1970) R yan O 'N eal, C h a rle s A zn a vo u r o M O V IE A A ' I The G am e s Q M O V IE 0 0 3 4 S P O R T S W O R LD O 2 © S P O R TS S A T U R D A Y © 9 V IC T O R Y G A R D E N 17 M O V IE A A B la ck L ike M e' (1964) J a m e s W h itm o re . Dan P riest 18 R E G G IE J A C K S O N ’ S W O R LD O F S P O R T S 21 W Y A T T EA RP 14 M O V IE A A V , St Ives 16 A M E R IC A ’S TO P TEN 11 TH E W E E K IN REVIEW 5 R O DEO (1976) C h a rle s B ro n so n , J a c q u e lin e Bisset 42 M O V IE ★ * '/ » S p hinx © 9 M A G IC OF O IL PA IN TIN G 21 W A G O N TR AIN ÍÍ6 S O U L TR AIN (1981) Frank Lan gella, L e sle y-A n n e D ow n © 9 W O R LD O F B O O K S 18 THE A D V E N T U R E S O F B L A C K BE A U TY 19 S IG N A T U R E 22 M O V IE Al Fin A S o las C e sar C o sta , R egina Torne ® 13 F A N T A S T IC O A N IM A L I I NE W S / W E A TH E R / S P O R TS (1949) 23 N C A A F O O T B A L L O G € D 4 S ILV E R S P O O N S 5 BO X IN G NOVEMBER 13, 1M2 16 A T TH E M O V IE S 11 S P O R TS S A T U R D A Y 5 A L L -S T A R S P O R TS C H A L L E N G E O IN S E A R C H OF O 2 TH E JE F FE R S O N S © 9 A M A Z IN G Y E A R S O F C IN E M A QD 3 H A P P Y D A Y S A G A IN 17 S P O R TS L O O K 18 TH E A D V E N T U R E S O F B L A C K BEAU TY 2 2 M O V IE El C a so De La M u je r A s e s in a d la " A lv a ro De La Iglesia 16 N B A B A S K E T B A L L 5 S P O R T S C E N T E R 23 RED M A N F O O T B A L L REPO RT 6:30 6:56 7:00 0 2 W A L T DISN EY O O CD 4 DIFF’ RENT S T R O K E S 0 42 M O V IE * * ' » The F o rm u la " ( 1980) M a rlo n B ra n d o . G e o rg e C S c o tt © 9 A U S T IN CITY LIM ITS © © 0 ) 3 T.J. H O O K E R 17 B R ID E S H E A O R E VISITED 18 LIV E W IR E 19 A M E R IC A N C H A L L E N G E 21 M O V IE * * O p e ra tio n P e ttic o a t 14 M O V IE * * * Rich And F a m o u s '1 (1981) C a n d ic e B e rge n, J a c q u e lin e Bis- se t i i N E W S / W E A T H E R / SP O R TS (1959) C a ry G ra n t. T on y C u rtis 7:05 7:30 8:00 830 9:06 9:30 10:00 10:05 10:25 10:30 10:40 10:46 10:55 11:00 O O f i D 4 G IM M E A B R E A K 0 0 7 M O V IE + '} E very W h ich W ay B u t L o o s e '' (1978) C lin t E a s tw o o d S o n d ra L o c k e © 9 M O V I E * * * * The In s p e c to r G eneral ’ (1949) D anny Kaye. Elsa L a n ­ c h e s te r © © 0 ) 3 LO V E B O A T 17 E N G L IS H C H A N N E L 18 W H A T M A K E S R A B B IT RU N? 19 M O V IE * * * ' i ' U g etsu © 13 BO X E O DE M E X IC O 11 FR E E M A N R E PO R TS ( 1953) M a c h ik o Kyo, M a sa yu k i M o n O O f f l 4 LO VE, SIDN EY 22 M O V IE Las f ie ra s ” M a u ric io G arce s, Lucy G a lla rd o 9:00 O O Í D 3 TH E D E V LIN C O N N E C TIO N 42 M O V IE * * * 21 D A L L A S C O W B O Y W E E K LY 14 M O V IE * * ’ ? "The G a m b le r' (1980) K e n n y R o g e rs Lee P u rce ll rth o s t S i t r y ’ (1981) F red A s ta ire , J o h n H o u s e m a n 16 N E W S 11 N E W S / W E A T H E R / S P O R TS 18 AR T A N D TH E M A C H IN E 21 T O M LA N D R Y (1937) G ene A u try , H o pe M a n n in g O O © © ® I S 3 4 N E W S © 9 M O V IE * * ’/ , ' The O ld C o rra l 17 N IG H T FLIG H T 19i A M E R IC A N C H A L L E N G E 21 R O C K C H U R C H P R O C L A IM S 22 M O V IE La C a sa Del P e lic a n o " E n riq u e A lva rez Felix, J a c q u e lin e A n d e re f f l 13 E S TU D IO DE LO L A B E LTR A N 16 L A U G H TR AX i i SP O R TS 5 S P O R TS C E N TE R 23 N B A B A S K E T B A L L IB H A N D M A D E IN A M E R IC A 0 O BE N N Y H ILL 7 N E W S 0 0 6 3 4 S A T U R D A Y N IG H T LIVE © A B C N E W S © M * A * S * H 0 ) 3 M O V I E * * * The T h re e M u s k e te e rs ' ( 1948) La n a T u rn e r. Van H e flin f f i 13 H O G A R , D U LC E H O G A R 11 TH E BIG STO R Y 14 M O V IE * * C a rb o n C o p y (1981) G e o rg e S egal S u san S a in t Jam es © M O V I E * * * * P a tto n (1970) G e o rg e C S c o tt. K a rl M alden 42 M O V I E * * * ? P rin ce O f The C ity (1981) Treat W illia m s . Je rry O rb a ch O S A T U R D A Y N IG H T LIVE O T W ILIG H T ZO N E O 7 A L L IN THE F A M ILY © 9 S O U N D F E S TIV A L O NE W S O LO N E S T A R S P O R T S M A N © 9 W R IT E R ’ S W O R K S H O P CD 4 W IL D K IN G D O M 18 A G A IN S T TH E O D D S 19 M IX E D BA G 16 G O O D T IM E S i i N E W S M A K E R 23 M O T O R W E E K ILLU S T R A T E D O G NE W S O W IL D K IN G D O M O 2 S A N F O R D A N D SO N © 9 M A T IN E E A T TH E B IJO U © TO BE A N N O U N C E D 03 4 C A P IT A L EYE 17 T IM E -O U T TH EATR E 18 S P R E A D YO U R W IN G S 19 B E R N STE IN C O N D U C T S BE E TH O V E N 21 A M E R IC A N T R A IL © i 3 A N T O L O G IA DE LA Z A R Z U E LA 14 M O V IE * * ' ? W here The S p ies A re U LIT T L E H O U S E O N TH E PR AIRIE n N E W S / W E A TH E R / S P O R TS 23 W R E S TLIN G i C B S NEW S 0 0 0 3 4 N B C NEW S Q Q 42 BO XIN G 18 S T U D IO SEE 21 M O V IE * * The R inger 22 LO S PA R C H IS 11 C R O S SFIR E S FU TUR E SPO R T (1980) K e n n y R ogers. Lee P u rcell (1966) D a vid N iven. F-rancoise Dor 21 TH E W E S TE R N E R S 22 LA S U C E S O R A © i 3 M O V IE "J u ve n tu d Sin Ley' i i M O V IE * * ’ ? The G a m b le r 11 NE W S / W E A TH E R / S P O R TS 5 S P O R TS C E N TE R 11:30 O R IC H A R D S IM M O N S O F LA S H G O R D O N g © 9 IT 'S E V E R Y B O D Y ’ S B U S IN E S S 3 A M E R IC A N B A N D S T A N D 0 3 4 W R E S T LIN G 18 YO U C A N ’T DO T H A T O N TE LE V IS IO N 21 W IL D B IL L H IC K O K 16 M O V IE * * * 11 TH E BIG STO R Y S N F L G A M E O F TH E W E E K (R) 'S a n d s O f Iw o Jim a 11:35 12:00 Q FO R U M O H IS P A N IC JO U R N A L © 9 PR ES EN TE 18 K ID S W R ITES . 21 M O V IE A * P a yto n (U N E W S / W E A T H E R / S P O R TS 5) M O T O C R O S S R A C IN G ( 1949) Jo h n W ayne. Jo h n Agar (1950) H e rb e rt Lorn. G re ta G ynt 23 M O V IE 4 3 * S w o rd O f L a n ce lo t ( 1963) C o rn e l W ild o Jean W a lla ce th e G re a t Jesse J a m e s R aid (1954) W illa rd P a rke r. B a rb a ra O W IL D K IN G D O M GOD 83 4 H E E H A W O © S O LID G O LD O 2 0 ) 3 NEW S 17 S P O R TS PR O BE 18 M A T T A N D JE N N Y 19) C L O U D S O F G LO R Y : TH E R IM E OF TH E A N C IE N T M A R IN E R © (13) T O D A U N A V ID A 1:00 1 30 2 0 0 2:05 2 30 3:00 3:30 4:00 4:30 4:35 5:00 5:05 5:30 6:00 2 r \ • O 0 ) I um> channel number'- on black backgrounds to Austin ! I ll ,ml \ UK Ir.msmissions Q Tunc channel ■umbers ..n white backgrounds for Aus I in i ableV i'ion progr-imming F R I D A Y T V NOVEMBER 12.1982 DAYTIME MOVIES (5J A A "Young And Dangerous" (1957) Mark Damon, Connie Stevens (IS) A A A “The Great Muppet Caper" (1981) Charles Grodin, Diana Rigg 57) BOXING 5® LIVEWIRE (31 MIXED BAG ® SUPERBOOK 5 $ MOVIE A A Vi "C h in o " ( 1973) Charles Bronson, Vincent Van Patten 53) PRIMENEWS 153 BEST OF THE NFL ® A A “Moonlight Masquerade" (1942) Dennis O’Keefe, Jane Frazee © MOVIE A VS Adventures Of Neekah" (1963) Lassie, Jed Allan © A A "IceCastles" (1979) Lynn-Holly Johnson, Robby Benson Q A A A "Sign Of The Pagan” (1955) Jeff Chandler, Jack Palance © A AV4 “Any Which Way You Can” (1980) Clint Eastwood. Sondra Lgcke (J5 A A A A “Shoe Shine" (1947) Rlnaldo Smordoni, Franco Interlenghi. 5® A A A "Captain January” ( 1936) Shirley Temple, Guy Kibbee 5 5 A A * “The Last Time I Saw Paris” (1954) Elizabeth Taylor, Van Johnson. 57) A A A "The Man Upstairs” (1959) Bernard Lee, Richard Attenborough (55 A A “The Dude Goes West” (1948) Eddie Albert, Gale Storm © A A 'A “Ode To Billy Joe” (1976) Robby Benson, Glynnis O'Connor. g j A AV4 "Thunder Over The Plains” (1953) Randolph Scott, Lex Barker (D 3 ) WALL STREET WEEK 0 0 ( D THE NEW ODD COUPLE 5 3 BERNSTEIN CONDUCTS BEETHOVEN (23 SWISS FAMILY ROBINSON f f i © CERVANTES 55 SCREENING ROOM S 3 NFL THEATRE © O CD 3 3 KNIGHT RIDER O O S 3 I D DALLAS © BOXING CD 3 3 GREAT RAILWAY JOURNEYS OF THE WORLD © ffl 33 THE GREATEST AMERICAN HERO 5® THE SEVEN DEADLY SINS (23 700 CLUB © MOVIE “ Principe De La Ciudad Treat Williams. Bob Balaban 5 5 MOVIE A A A The Last Time I Saw Paris" (1954) Elizabeth Taylor. Van Johnson. 21 BURNS AND ALLEN 22 MOVIE Cadena Perpetua' Pedro Armendariz, Angelica Chain 11 NEWSIGHT 5 TOP RANK BOXING O G € D 4 SCTV NETWORK T9) CLOUDS OF GLORY: THE RIME OF THE ANCIENT MARINER GS) JACK BENNY 16 SATURDAY NIGHT U MONEYLINE UPDATE .23 MOVIE A Vs Courage Of Black Beauty son. (1957) John C rawford Mimi G ib­ 14 MOVIE * * 9 "C atherine & C o." ( 1973) Jane Birkin, Patrick Dewaere G BARETTA © MOVIE A A A Stranger In The House © BEST OF MIDNIGHT SPECIAL © ABC NEWS NIGHTLINE 0 3 53 MOVIE A * A "D ra cu la " (1931) Bela Lugosi David Manners ¡ s I MARRIED JOAN ( B 5D INFAMIA 11) PEOPLE NOW ( 1975) Keir Dullea, Olivia Hussey 5 5 A A A "Love Me Or Leave Me” (1955) Doris Day, James Cagney © A A “Ice Castles" (1979) Lynn-Holly Johnson, Robby Benson © CLOUDS OF GLORY: THE RIME OF THE ANCIENT MARINER CB © VANESSA 5 AUTO RACING 22 MOVIE La Tia Alejandra Diana Bracho, Isabela Corona 6:00 7:00 7:30 8:00 8:05 * 0 0 10:30 11:00 12:00 12:05 12:30 2:00 3.-05 4:00 5:30 EVENING 6:00 7:05 7:30 8:00 8:30 8:35 8:45 9:00 9:30 10:00 10:25 10:30 10:50 11.00 3 1 A A “The Chinese Web” (1978) Nicholas Hammond, Robert F Simon. © NBA BASKETBALL © “Iva Zanicchi" 55 A A A A “Shoe Shine" (1947) Rinaldo Sm ordoni. Franco Interlenghi (55 A A “Young And Dangerous” (1957) Mark Damon, Connie Stevens. 5 5 A A A “The Great Muppet Caper” (1981)Charles Grodin, Diana Rigg 5® AMERICAN ART IN THE SIXTIES O O C D 4 REMINGTON STEELE G O 33 © FALCON CREST © 9 FIRING LINE © 0D 33 t h e q u e s t f f i 13 24 HORAS 16) NEWS 11 FREEMAN REPORTS 191 SIGNATURE 2t STAR TIME Q G Q C IC D C D G D G D NEWS © MOVIE AAV4 “Any Which Way You Can" (1980) Clint Eastwood, Sondra Locke. (D $ BUSINESS REPORT 0 FAMILY FEUD CD 33 LITTLE HOUSE ON THE PRAIRIE © YOU: MAGAZINE FOR WOMEN 5® YOU CANT DO THAT ON TELEVISION © MOVIE "Mexico De Mis Amores" Marga Lopez, Adalberto Martinez "Resortes." CB 13) EL DERECHO DE NACER 5® BARNEY MILLER 5D MONEYUNE S3 COLLEGE FOOTBALL PREVIEW O G O O 7 © © 03 3 ffi 4 news © 9 DICK CAVETT I7i NIGHT FLIGHT 191 MIXED BAG f f l ’ 3 MOVIE "Tres De La Cruz Roja 14 MOVIE A A A "Southern C om fort" (1981) K e ith C a rra d in e . P ow ers Boothe ^ * \A n tc U je ( ? [o tk e ó & In s a n ity n O O S a n Q n to n la 4 7 4 - 9 5 2 7 Mon . tktu Sat. //til6 11:30 11:35 11:50 12:00 12:30 12:45 1:00 1:05 1:15 1:20 1:30 1:40 2:00 2:30 3:05 3:25 3 30 © THE LAST WORD 19' SIGNATURE 21 MY LITTLE MARGIE CB 13 CHARYTIN 16 TWILIGHT ZONE O O NBC NEWS OVERNIGHT O G 3 4 WRESTLING 19 MIXED BAG 21 BACHELOR FATHER n SPORTS UPDATE 23 MOVIE A A Trog" ( 1970) Joan Crawford. M-chae! Gough 0 2 NEWS 14 MOVIE a a a "Love Me Or I eave Me (1955) Doris Day rmes ( igr y © STREETS OF SAN FRANCISCO 1 9 BERNSTEIN CONDUCTS BEETHOVEN 21 LIFE OF RILEY G0 13 CERVANTES 16 TWILIGHT ZONE 11 CROSSFIRE 5 SPORTSCENTER O G 16 NEWS f f i 4 NBC NEWS OVERNIGHT 17 NIGHT FLIGHT 21 700 CLUB 11 PRIME TIME NEWS 42 M O V IE a A a "C u tte r’s Way (1981) John Heard, Jeff Bridge © SOLID GOLD 19 CLOUDS OF GLORY THE RIME OF THE ANCIENT MARINER 22 MOVIE Prmcipe De La Ciudad Treat Williams Rnb Biliar CB 13 LO IMPERDONABLE 16 MOVIE A A A Segal 5 COLLEGE FOOTBALL PREVIEW (R) invitation To A Gunfighter >1964) Yui Hrynner George 3 00 (1974) Sinead Cusack Oenr Waterman O MOVIE a * CD 4 NEWS 5 HORSESHOW JUMPING The Eyes Have It Glasses got you d o w n ? Get rid of them ! C a n ' t w e a r contacts? Call t he specialists. T o d a y ! W e ' v e got the an sw er See (oupon supplement for extra savings! S u p p o rt y o u r lo c o l o p tic ia n b r o u g h t th e p ric e * d o w n A *k y o u r d o c to r if he * a s u p p o rte r S ilic o n V F l fo r M u lti- F o c o l • E x te n d e d w e a r D o w s N e w S ilit o f t • S o ft A s tig m a t ic Lenses *Lens p re p a re d f r o m yo ur w r itte n p re sc rip tio n . Professional fees not uded 3810 MEDICAL PARKWAY SUITE 105 451 23. NEWS G THE ROCKFORD FILES O 33 MOVIE * * "Death Car On The Freeway Shelley Hack © 9 BODY IN QUESTION © ffi 33 THE LAST WORD © CHARLIE’S ANGELS (1979) George Hamilton 14 MOVIE a * * outhern C om fort 198 11 Keith C arradi w e r-B o o th e 23 MOVIE A * The Burning Of Rome ( 1960) Brett Halsey md'H M 42 M O V IE A * 21 ROSS BAGLEY . O de To B illy J o e > 1976) R o b b y B e nson G lynn s t m in o r FOOTPRINTS p — | ~ T M— I , , y ... y , M ............. W M F ^ ; 'T y . . . .y...............Ml I 1 J / ’ ■ } K 1 * 'T (fJJ'Z W TTrfJ,/ &Z/i j t F f f j i f t 11 the news that's lo o t to y y / ^ 7 / ^ 7 T T T ■ 7 V / ; ? > ! 1 1 0 E. FOURTH ST. ■ZX 4 7 2 -4 3 4 5 AUSTIN , T E X A S THE NI6HTHAWKS: NOVEMBER 13 N o v e m b e r 13, 1 8 5 4 — S p o tte d T a il, R e d L e a f, a n d L o n g C h m a t ta c k th e w e s t b o u n d m a il w a g o n o n th e H o rs e C r e e k in S to u x t e rr ito ry . A p o c r y p h a l le g e n d s u g g e s t s t h a t it w a s a y o u n g b r a v e k n o w n a t F u n k y N ig h t H a w k w h o e n t e r t a in e d a t th e p o w w o w ju st p rio r to th e r a id - T h e N ig h t h a w k s . fo u r t a tt o o e d b lu e t N o v e m b e r 13, 1 9 8 3 r e n e g a d e s fr o m B e th e s d a . M D b e s ie g e C lu b Fo o t w it h a fe r o ­ c io u s o n s la u g h t o f b lis t e r in g r h y t h m a n d b lu e s lic k s For y e a r s th e N ig h t h a w k s h a v e b e e n t h e l a s t C o a s t 's fa v o r it e b a rr o o m b lu e s b a n d B o a s t in g a r e p e r t o ire o f re d h o t r h y t h m a n d b lu e s a n d v in t a g e ro ck a n d ro ll, th e N ig h t h a w k s n e v e r f a il to in s t ig a t e a n e v e n in g o f u n b r id le d e x c it e m e n t T h e y w e r e o r g a n iz e d in 1 9 7 2 b y h o r m o n ic a p la y e r M a r k W e n n e r a n d g u i­ t a ris t J im T h a c k e ry a n d a c o u p le y e a r s la t e r d r u m m e r P e te R a g u s a a n d b a s s p la y e r J a n Z u k o w s k i jo in e d t h e b a n d F ro m th e b e g in n in g , th e s t y le o f th e N ig h t h a w k s h a s b e e n b o th n e w e n o u g h a n d o ld e n o u g h to a p p e a l to a f u ll c ro s s -s e c tio n o f th e b lu e s a u d ie n c e . " Y e a h , I p la y e d a le t o f c lu b s w it h t h e m a ll a r o u n d D C , " s a y s b lu e s le g e n d J B. H u tto , "a n d w e r e a lly g e t it to g e t h e r T h e y 'r e a g o o d b a n d . A G O O D b a n d ” For a n e v e ­ n in g o f t ig h t , im p e c c a b ly w r o u g h t , to rr id r h y t h m a n d b lu e s d o n 't m is s th e N ig h t h a w k s in c o n c e rt a t C lu b F e e t o n S a t u r d a y , N o v e m b e r 13. "X " I* COMINO NEXT WEEN: WEDNESDAY AND THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 17 4 IS T h e m o s t e x c it in g ro c k b a n d o f th e y e o r . " R o b e rt P a lm e r — N e w Y o r k T im e s " B e s t a lb u m b y a n A m e r ic a n b a n d t h is y e a r a n d th e fin e s t A m e r ic a n p u n k a lb u m e v e r . ” D e b r a R o e C o h e n — R o llin g S to n e le s T im e s " T h e m o s t a c c la im e d n e w ro c k b a n d in A m e r ic a b u r n — L .A . T im e s R o b e rt H il- " X h a s c o m p ro m is e d n o t h in g . ” K r is tin e M c K e n n a — Los A n g e ­ X h a s b e e n t o g e t h e r s in e s O c to b e r o f ‘ 7 6 O u r in s p ir a t io n c o m e s fro m U .S . r o c k a b illy , H a n k W illia m s , C h u c k B e rry , I t t a J a m e s , J im M o r r is o n , a n d v a r io u s '6 0 s m u s ic A s f o r a s th e w a y I lo o k , w h e n I w a s 14 I s t a r t e d w e a r in g re d lip s t ic k , th e 4 9 c e n t n o - n a m e b r a n d m a r k e d r e d '. ” C x s n e D -D AY , THE LIFT, TROUBLE BO Y S: CONTINENTAL CLUB BENEFIT, N O VEM BER 8 A b u r g e o n in g lin e - u p o f A u s t in s m o s t p o p u la r m u s ic ia n s th e c o m m u n it y o f A u s t in a n d C lu b Fo o t s a lu t e th e C o n t in e n t a l C lu b w it h a b e n e fit c o n c e rt o n M o n d a y N o v e m b e r 8 D -D a y , th e Lift, a n d th e T ro u b le B o y s a re a ll s la t e d to p e rfo r m in th e co u rs e o f th e c o n c e rt A n d s e v e r a l v e ry s p e c ia l s u r p r is e g u e s ts a re e x p e c te d to |oin th e fe a t u r e d g ro u p s o n s t o g e J o in |ust a b o u t e v e r y o n e e lse in A u s t in w h o a p p r e c ia te s th e ric h n e s s a n d v a r ie t y o f o u r lo c a l m u s ic tr a d it io n s , fo r th is s p e c ia l c o n c e rt on N o v e m b e r 8, a t C lu b Foot. MINE LO VE, DEAN TORRENCE, A N D THE ENDLESS SUM M ER BEACH B A N D : N O VE M BER 9 O n th is d a t e in 19 6 1, B r ia n E p s te in firs t h e a r d th e B e a t le s d u r in g a lu n c h t im e p e r fo r m a n c e a t th e C a v e r n C lu b in L iv e rp o o l. A f e w d a y s la te r, o n th is s id e o f th e A t la n t ic , a s in g le e n t it le d A S u n d a y K in d o f L o v e " w a s r e le a s e d b y a c o u p le o f C o lif o r m a k id s n a m e d J a n a n d D e a n O n N e w Y e a r 's E v e t h a t s a m e y e a r , a g r o u p c a lle d th e B e a c h B o y s m a d e th e ir firs t p u b lic a p p e a r a n c e a s p a rt o f a ro c k a n d ro ll s h o w a t th e M u n ic ip a l A u d it o r iu m in L o n g B e a c h , C a lif o r n ia It w o u ld b e t w o m o re y e a r s b e fo r e th e A m e r ic a n p u b lic w o u ld d is c o v e r th e B e a tle s , b u t fo r th e B e a c h B o y s a n d t h e ir s u r f- m a t e s J a n a n d D e a n , m a s s p o p u la r it y w a s im m e d ia t e a n d o v e r w h e lm in g B e t w e e n 1 9 6 1 a n d 1 9 6 9 , J a n a n d D e a n a c h ie v e d to p c h a rt s t a tu s w it h t w e n t y - f iv e s o n g s — s e v e n o f th e m in th e t o p te n . T h e B e a c h B o y s firs t s in g le , 'S u r f in ' S a f a r i, ” w o n t h e m t h e ir fir s t g o ld re co rd . Fro m 1 9 6 3 to 1 9 6 6 , a lm o s t e v e r y B e a c h B o y s s in g le m a d e th e c h a rts . To t h is d a y , p o s s ib ly n o o th e r A m e r ic a n ro ck g r o u p h a s b e e n so u n a n im o u s ly e m b r a c e d b y g e n e r a t io n a f t e r g e n e r a t io n o f fu n w o r s h ip p e r s O n T u e s d a y , N o v e m b e r 9, C lu b Fo o t p r o u d ly p re s e n ts in c o n c e rt th e B e a c h B o y s le a d s in g e r a n d p r im a r y s p o k e s m a n , M ik e Love, D e a n T o rre n c e o f J a n a n d D e a n , a n d th e E n d le s s S u m m e r B e a c h B a n d S in c e th e g r o u p 's in c e p t io n , M ik e L ove , a lo n g w it h h is c o u s in B r ia n W ils o n , h a s b e e n th e fo c a l p o in t o f B e a c h B o y s p e rfo r m a n c e s . A s a u t h o r o f B e a c h B o y s h its lik e G o o d V ib r a t io n s , ” " C a lif o r n ia G i r l, ” " F u n , Fu n , F u n ,” a n d " D o It A g a i n " h e is r e s p o n ­ s ib le in la r g e m e a s u r e fo r th e g r o u p 's la s t in g su c c e ss a n d a c c la im . D e a n T o rre n c e , in c o m m e n t in g o n th e c o n t in u e d p o p u la r it y o f th e m u s ic o f J a n a n d D e a n a n d th e B e a c h B o ys, in s is ts , ‘ T h e y d o n 't a t t e n d th e c o n c e rts o u t o f n o s t a lg ia T h e y c o m e b e c a u s e th e m u s ic is g o o d ro ck a n d ro ll ... P e o p le w a n t to h e a r s u n s h in e m u s ic in s u m m e r a n d w in t e r , " h e c o n tin u e s , It is n o t a lw a y s s e a s o n a l.” C e r t a in ly n o o th e r p r o g r a m t h is w in t e r w ill g e n e r a t e a s m u c h w a r m t h a n d e x c it e m e n t o r m a k e y o u fe e l q u it e a s g o o d a s t h is c o n c e rt T h e s u r f's u p , y o u r C h e v y 's p u r r in g lik e a k it t e n , a n d th e s u n is s h in in g a ll n ig h t T u e s d a y . N o v e m b o r 9, a t C lu b Foot. THE EXPLO SIVES: N O VEM BER 12 T h e E x p lo s iv e s h a v e b e e n m a k in g a ru c k u s s in c e t h e y firs t b la s t e d th e ir w a y in t o A u s t in s c o n t e m p o r a r y m u s ic la n d s c a p e t h re e a n d a h a lf y e a r s a g o In a flu r r y o f c r itic a l c o n tro v e rs y t h e y b u rs t t r a d it io n a l s tr ic tu re s a n d n e w m u s ic s te re o t y p e s w it h th e ir p o lis h , th e ir p a n a c h e , a n d th e ir p it - v ip e r b ite U n t il re c e n tly , in o d d it io n to t h e ir o w n r e c o r d in g a n d c lu b w o r k , th e C a m K in g , W a lle r C o llie a n d F r e d d ie S t e a d y K rc E x p lo s iv e s w e r e th e h o m e t o w n b o n d b e h in d A u s t in s r e s id e n t s c re a m - e r-s e e r R o k y E ric k so n th e E x p lo s iv e s c o m m e m o r a te th e r e ­ O n F r id a y N o v e m b e r 12 le a s e o f t h e ir b r a n d n e w e ig h t - s o n g LP R e s tle s s N a t iv e s , " w it h a w ild c o n c e rt c e le b r a t io n a t C lu b Fo o t T h e a lb u m , on R e a d y G o R e c o rd s w a s p ro d u c e d b y S tu C o o k o f C r e e d e n c e C le a r w a t e r R e v iv a l o n d w a s re c o rd e d a t R u ff C e d a r S tu d io s h e re in A u s t in T h is a lb u m is th e firs t t w e lv e - in c h p ro d u c t for th e E x p lo s iv e s s in ce t h e ir c o n t r ib u tio n s to th e Fre d K rc p ro d u c e d a lb u m a n d a lr e a d y th e n e w IP is g e n e r a t in g m o re t h a n its s h o re of e n t h u s ia s m D o n t m is s th e e x c it in g trio a n d th e ir s p e c ia l g u e s ts P r iv a t e L iv e s F r id a y N o v e m b e r 12 a t C lu b Foot L iv e a t R a u ls •TTTTTTi McCLINTON: WEDNESDAY A THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 10 A 11 Lionized by musk critics and consumers alike, Delbert McClinton, after almost thirty years as a performer, is a bona fide Texas-honed legend. His white-hot rhythm and blues burn with convktion and visceral fervor. "Simply put,” says Judson Klinger in PLAYBOY magazine, ' McClinton may be the beet white R A B rock n roller in the world.” Without question, Delbert McClinton is one of the meet influential and respected artists performing today. Born in Lubbocl^ Delbert moved to Fort Worth when he was eleven and began singing three years later. His first record was a cover of a Sonny Boy Williamson tune. Two years later Delbert McQinton's harmonica playing was featured on Bruce Channel s world-wide hit "Hey Baby.” Touring in g la nd with Channel he tutored John Lennon on the art of blues harp playing. An ill-fated romance in the mid-seventies was chronkled by Delbert in a tune that became a number one country hit for Emmyiou Harris, "Two More Betties of Wine.” His tune ” B Movie Boxcar Blues” was chosen by John Belushi and Dan Ayckroyd for their Blues Brothers album. The last time he played at Club Foot, Delbert McClinton was joined on stoge by Rusty Wier and Willie Nelson. O n Wednesday and Thursday, November 10 and 11, Delbert McClinton returns to Club Foot for two nights of scorching rhythm and blues. M O N 1 1-18 D*DA Y THI LIFT TROUBLE B O Y S TU E 1 1-9 M I N E L O V E D E A N T O R R E N L E AND T H I M A C N BANS WED 11-10 DILBERT T HU 11-1 1 DILBKRT FRI 11-12 E X P LO S IV IS SAT 11-13 S U N 11-4 N IG HTH AW KS NEO-DANCE M cCl i n t o n M cCl i n t o n NIGHT PRIVATE LIVES ¿SC club pdqy F F A T 'U 'P. F A stitch in time David Spraoua |n the Spotlight David Sprague HY® Behind The Scenes David Sprague Coaching a chorus of 'The Eyes’ By DAVID SPRAGUE Election night. To most people it means missed television programs, boring return coverage and numerous anchorpersons speculating about who will be the next candidate to win this or that office. What fun. Some people would rather do something else for entertainment on an early night in November. But what about those who are either actively interested in politics or whose jobs demand them to be interested? These people are going to be where the action is on election night — at the campaign headquarters and victory parties. There isn’t a better place to celebrate a candidate’s conquest or to share in his defeat. Food and drinks are provided to stay the munchies and quench the thirst of campaign revelers as they sweat out the night with fellow supporters. People while away the interminable hours ... talking, knitting, drinking. So, to enlighten the passive political spectator, here’s a behind-the-scenes look at what the TV cameras don't show you election night. Double vision David Sprague The ABCs of waiting Bobby Mallsh T U P 5 D A Y 2. ; 7 NOVEMBER 11, 1M2 DAYTIME MOVIES i ThrfH‘ W arnofs ( 197 7 ¡ Randy Quaid Charlws White Eagle G o Pr>go '9 8 0 A n im a te d V o ices o f J o n a th a n W in te rs V in ce n t . i m d ia M a r a J o r g e I a v a t 14 * * . T h e P u r s u it O f D B C o o p e r 1981 T re a t W illia m ', R o b e rt D u v a ll 21 * * r> D e sp e ra te M e 1 9 5 1 P re s to n F o s te r V irg in ia G re y 9:00 O O f f l 4 HILL STREET BLUES © 9 SNEAK PREVIEWS © © 2 ) 3 20 / 2 0 17 NBA BASKETBALL 22 MOVIE Sor T eq uila La India M a ria J o rg e Lavat f f i 13 24 HORAS 14 MOVIE A ★ * The F ou r H o rse m e n O f The A p o c a ly p s e Lee J C o b b 11 FREEMAN REPORTS (1962) G lenn Ford, Q NEWS T5 STYLE 21 BACHELOR FATHER f f i 13 NO EMPUJEN ii SPORTS UPDATE 5 FROM THE 55-YARD LINE 21 MY LITTLE MARGIE 321 MOVIE La Flor De La Mafia Federico Luppi, Zulma Faiad f f i i 3 CHIQUILLADAS 5 NFL STORY LINE BY LINE (R) 1 \ 14 * * 4 : * * * Pnce 22 S o r T e q u ila I n e w s ’ BUSINESS REPORT O O O O 5 C D ® 42 MONEY MATTERS (D © FAMILY FEUD €0 4 LITTLE HOUSE ON THE PRAIRIE 1/ ARE YOU ANYBODY? 18 AGAINST THE ODDS © 13 EL DERECHO DE NACER 16 BARNEY MILLER 11 MONEYLINE S SPORTSFORUM 23 GOMER PYLE O O YOU ASKED FOR IT O THE MUPPETS 42 BOXING S BEST M UHAM M AD ALI o ? >6 THE JEFFERSONS © o MACNEIL / LEHRER REPORT © © P M MAGAZINE 0D 3 THREE S COMPANY 17 SPORTS LOOK 18 THE ADVENTURES OF BLACK BEAUTY 19 SIGNATURE © 13 CHIQUILLADAS n SPORTS TODAY 5 SPORTSCENTER 23 ANDY GRIFFITH 2:30 4 00 5 00 5 30 6:00 6:05 6 30 6:35 7 00 7:05 7 30 8:00 8:30 0 0 0 3 4 FAME O Q i MAGNUM. P I © 9 TEXAS WEEKLY f f i © 0D 3 JOANIE LOVES CHACHI 17 ROLLERSKATING ’ 8 LIVEWIRE 1 9 STYLE 21 I SPY 22 MOVIE En Mi C asa M a n d o Yo © 13 NO EMPUJEN 14 MOVIE ★ ★ ' i The P a rty 16 MOVIE ★ ★ ★ V i The M a g n ific e n t S even 11960) Yul B ryn n e r. Eli W allach l i PRIMENEWS S NFL STORY LINE BY LINE 1968) P e ter S e lle rs. C la u d in e L on get l u i s S a n d n n i. M a lvin a P a storío ' 1981) Fred A s ta ire Jo h n H o usem an 23 NCAA FOOTBALL 42 MOVIE ★ ★ ★ G host S to ry © 9 WILD AMERICA f f i © f f l 3 STAR OF THE FAMILY 19 TRIBUTE TO COUNT BASIE f f i 13 NOCHE DE GALA 5 TOP RANK BOXING O O f f i 4 CHEERS 0 O 2 MOVIE ★ ★ ★ '/I P riv a te B e n ja m in B renn an © 9 NATURE OF THINGS © © f f i 3 TOO CLOSE FOR COMFORT 18 MR ADLER AND THE OPERA 21 700 CLUB O O f f i 4 t a x i © © f f i 3 1 7 SPORTS PROBE © 13 VANESSA IT TAKES TWO Some of the brightest smiles in town come from the (1980) G o ld ie H aw n, Eileen C enter for G eneral D en tistry & O ral H ygiene Stop in either of the Smile Centers at 15th and Guadalupe or 2323 S. Lam ar for a fast, friendly, professional cleaning and dental check-up. ALL for ju st $28. B r i n g t h i s a d w i t h a S t u d e n t I D f o r $5 00 off 2323 South Lamar 441-3914 Ed Fom by, D D S Charles Snow, D D.S Carl Herring. D I) S. Rick Redmond. D D.S Mike D efiel. D D S 1501 Guadalupe 473-2125 Ed Fom by, D D S Charles Snow, D D S. Stevan Kopnvm k. 1) [) S Mon-Thure, 9-8, Fri 9-5 — no appointment needed Sat 10-2 & evenings by appointment 9 30 9:35 10 00 10:05 10:25 10:30 11:00 11:05 11:30 11:35 12:00 12:10 12:30 42 VIDEO JUKEBOX © 9 WORLD WAR I 19-SIGNATURE 21 STAR TIME 16 NEWS 18 BORODIN QUINTET IN D-MINOR 0 0 0 0 2 f f i © f f i 3 Q3 4 NEWS 4 2 MOVIE ★ ★ ' ? ' The F o rm u la © 9 DICK CAVETT 1 9 STYLE © 13 MOVIE U ste d Tiene O jo s De M u ie r Fatal 11 SPORTS TONIGHT 5 SPORTSCENTER 23 NEWS 18 GREAT PAINTINGS RENOIR 18 NIGHTCAP CONVERSATIONS ON THE ARTS AND LETTERS (1980: M a rlo n B ra n d o , G e o rg e C S c o tt O O f f i 4 TONIGHT O THE JEFFERSONS O 3 ALL IN THE FAMILY © 9 DOCTOR WHO © f f i 3 ABC NEWS NIGHTLINE © M *A *S *H 19- TRIBUTE TO COUNT BASIE 21 ANOTHER LIFE 2? DEPORTES DE GALA 16 CHARLIE’S ANGELS 11 CROSSFIRE Q THE ROCKFORD FILES O 2 QUINCY © 9 ODYSSEY © f f i 3 THE LAST WORD © CHARLIE'S ANGELS 21 BURNS AND ALLEN n NEWSIGHT 5 AUTO RACING 23 MOVIE ★ ★ ’ ! R ich a rd T od d The B a ttle O f T he V illa F io rita ' (1965) Maureen O'Hara, O O ® 4 LATE NIGHT WITH DAVID LETTERMAN 17 SPORTS PROBE 21 JACK BENNY 16 MOVIE ★ ★ ' j "T h e M a ca h a n s (IT MONEYLINE UPDATE (1976) J a m e s A rness, Eva M a rie S a int 14 MOVIE ★ ★ ’ ? The In tru d e r (1961) W illia m S h a tn e r, F rank M a xw e ll (1980) G ary B usey A n n e tte O 'T o o le Q BARETTA 42 MOVIE ★ ★'/? F o o lin ' A ro u n d © MISSION: IMPOSSIBLE © ABC NEWS NIGHTLINE f f i 3 ALFRED HITCHCOCK PRESENTS 17 NBA BASKETBALL 21 I MARRIED JOAN f f i 13 INFAMIA 11 PEOPLE NOW O 2 MCCLOUD O O f f i 4 NBC NEWS OVERNIGHT © THE LAST WORD 19 SIGNATURE GARNER & SMITH B O O K S T O R E " O n I h r D ra g The d e fin itive account of the Japanese attack on Pearl H arbor — a gripping and m onum ental recon­ s tru c tio n of A m e ric a 's darkest hour. "B y fa r the most exhaustive and com plete account we are like ly to have of exact­ ly what happened and who and why on December 7, 1941...In short, a com pre­ hensive epic, and a fina l accounting." — Village Voice NOW AVAILABLE N e w from Penguin Books • 9 » SMITH GARNER BÜkKSTORE b A k i V OPEN 9-9 MON-FRI. 9 6 SAT 14 MOVIE ★ ★ ’ ? The Baby M a k e r' (1972) Barbara Hershey, Sam Groom (1964) Fred M acM urray Polly 1:00 1:10 1:30 1:40 260 2:30 2:40 O O 2 0 3 4 NEWS Q CBS NEWS NIGHTWATCH 23 MOVIE ★ ★ 'Y Kisses For My President B e rge n © STREETS OF SA FRANCISCO 19i TRIBUTE TO COUNT BASIE 21 LIFE OF RILEY f f i 13 NOCHE DE GALA u CROSSFIRE 5 SPORTSCENTER 42 BOXING'S BEST: MUHAMMAD AU O 2 CBS NEWS NIGHTWATCH 21 700 CLUB 16 NEWS 11 PRIME TIME NEWS 17 PBA BOWLING f f i 13 LO IMPERDONABLE 16 TOM COTTLE: UP CLOSE S TOP RANK BOXING 42 MOVIE ★ ★ ★ Ghost S to ry" (1981) Fred Astaire. John Houseman Coming This Week! Mon Coup do Villo Tue K-Tolls Wad AHer Ego Thu Devils Fri Lewis & the Legends Sat Trouble Beys Sun W.C. Clark ■ h a w s R e v i e w *B ack R o o m 2015 E. RIVERSIDE PAT PAINTERS Family Flairstvling Centers 1011 E. 41st St. ONLY 454-3676 OPEN MON-FRI 9-6 SAT 9-5 FALL FASHION SPECIAL HAIRCUTS 1 fo r $ 1 1 2 fo r $ 1 9 $5 off on all perms, straighteners, and frosts. Good w ith coupon until 11 • 15-92 Pat Painter's "NEW M AN" 1011 E. 41 st St. Free Consultation Hair Studio 454-3676 77\ Hairpiece Service G \ / ' u 0 c v and Repair Products for hairpiace core GEFDEN 454-3474 If You Like to Smile, You’ll Love the Smile Center 2116 GUADALUPE 477-9725 V/ C D í\l C 5 D A Y T V (25 A * "Thundering Jets" (1958) Rex Reason, Dick Foran (23) MOVIE A * “ S he" (1965) Ursula Andress. John Richardson 7:00 14 MOVIE * •* A set Rich And Fam ous" (1981) Candice Bergen, Jacqueline Bis- 2 . 6 V.V.V.V.V.V.V.V NOVEMBER 10. 1062 DAYTIME MOVIES 5:30 EVENING 6:00 O O O O d X D S X D n e w s ©ALL-NIGHT RADIO (D ® HERE’S TO YOUR HEALTH © FAMILY FEUD CD CD LITTLE HOUSE ON THE PRAIRIE dZ) YOU: MAGAZINE FOR WOMEN ® YOU CANT DO THAT ON TELEVISION CB (S) EL DERECHO DE NACER dS BARNEY MILLER (ED MONEYLINE (D ALL-STAR SPORTS CHALLENGE ) GOMER PYLE 6:05 6:30 O O YOU ASKED FOR IT O THE MUPPETS ©YESTERYEAR... 1942 O ® @ t h e j e f f e r s o n s (D © MACNEIL / LEHRER REPORT © (B P.M. MAGAZINE CD © THREE’S COMPANY (2) SPORTS LOOK @ THE ADVENTURES OF BLACK BEAUTY © SIGNATURE GB O ) TRAMPA PARA UN SONADOR ( 2 SPORTS TOOAY 5 SPORTSCENTER © ANDY GRIFFITH 6:35 WDEL0AD A lth o u g h o u r C h ic a g o - style deep dish pizza could n ever be considered fast food, C o n a n s ’ delivery service s hou ld be rem em bered as the fastest w ay to curb an appe­ tite. I f y o u 're in o u r delivery area, call us. We'll hit the g ro u n d ru n n in g to deliver the gcxxls, g o o d ’n hot and loaded w ith all the best ingredients H e re ’s w h a t w e ’re d n v m g at: T o ask for a lot at C .onans, is n o t t o o m u ch to ask N o r is it to o m uch to ask us to get the load o u t and deliver it O O 0 3 ® REAL PEOPLE 0 0 7 SEVEN BRIDES FOR SEVEN BROTHERS (D 9 ART BEAT © © © I THE FALL GUY 32) PBA BOWLING i© LIVEWIRE © S T Y L E (21) I SPY © LOS GOZOS Y LAS SOMBRAS ® MOVIE A A * Three Days Of The C ondor" (1975) Robert Redford. Faye Dunaway 3® MOVIE ★ * * Breakout flí PRIMENEWS 5 AUTO RACING ( 1975) Charles Bronson, Jill Ireland 7:05 ,23 MOVIE A A A "The Three Musketeers (1974) Oliver Reed. Raquel Welch 7:30 42 MOVIE A A The Incredible Shrinking W om an" (1980) liiy Tomlm Charles Grodin. © 9 MILLER'S COURT 19 STAGES: HOUSEMAN DIRECTS LEAR 8 00 IN PERFORMANCE AT THE WHITE HOUSE 0 0 6 5 J THE FACTS OF LIFE O O D ALICE © 9 18 EXILES 21 700 CLUB 22 MOVIE Albur De A m o r" Antonio Aguilar Elsa Aguirre f f i 13 LA CARABINA DE AMBROSIO 0 0 6 5 4 FAMILY TIES Q Q 2 FILTHY RICH 39) CABARET TIMES THREE f f i 13 VANESSA © WOMEN IN JAZZ - THE VOCALISTS: SCATTING O O G 5 4 QUINCY © 0 7 TUCKER’S WITCH © MOVIE A A A ’ ? Prince Of The City © 9 GOSSIP FROM THE FOREST © © f f i GD DYNASTY 32) SPORTS PROBE 0 9 © 24 HORAS :14; MOVIE ★ A ’ z "The G am bler" ( 1980) Kenny Roqers Lee Purcell © N E W S 33) FREEMAN REPORTS (1981) Treat Williams. Jerry Orbach 8:30 8:55 9:00 9:15 9:30 9:40 10:00 10:15 10:30 (23) NEWS 52) m is l s o c c e r 18 WHAT MAKES RABBIT RUN? © SIGNATURE 2S STAR TIME © MOVIE "Iva Zanicchi 0 0 0 0 7 © © © 3 CD 4 NEWS © S T Y LE f f i 33) MOVIE "La Vida De Augustin Lara © SOAP (11 SPORTS TONIGHT 5 SPORTSCENTER @ ALL IN THE FAMILY 0 0 6 5 ( 4 TONIGHT © THE JEFFERSONS 0 7 ALL IN THE FAMILY © 9 DOCTOR WHO © C D 3 ABC NEWS NIGHTLINE © M *A *S *H © S T A G E S : HOUSEMAN DIRECTS LEAR (21) ANOTHER LIFE © CHARLIE’S ANGELS 51 CROSSFIRE 10 40 O THE ROCKFORD FILES O 2 ARCHIE BUNKER'S PLACE © 9 V ID E O '81 © f f i 3 THE LAST WORD © CHARLIE'S ANGELS 21 BURNS AND ALLEN U NEWSIGHT 5 WCT TENNIS O O 0 3 4 LATE NIGHT WITH DAVID LETTERMAN 19 CABARET TIMES THREE 21 JACK BENNY ® MOVIE A * ' ? "Three Violent People" ( 1956) Charlton Heston, Anne Baxter H MONEYLINE UPDATE O 2 M O V IE A A Somers. Happily Ever After" (1978) Bruce Boxleitner, Suzanne Any Which Way You Can” (1980) C lint Eastwood. Sondra re m a n d o Soler Alicia Caro 14 MOVIE * ; Lipstick" (1976) M argaux Hemingway, Anne Bancroft 23 MOVIE * * Kona C oa st" ( 1968) Richard Boone, Vera Miles © BARETTA 42 MOVIE * * Locke © MISSION: IMPOSSIBLE © ABC NEWS NIGHTLINE 0D 3 ALFRED HITCHCOCK PRESENTS 17 PRO FOOTBALL ARM WRESTLING 21 I MARRIED JOAN f f i ' 3 INFAMIA 11 PEOPLE NOW 0 0 6 5 4 NBC NEWS OVERNIGHT © THE LAST WORD 1/ PBA BOWLING 19 SIGNATURE 21 MY LITTLE MARGIE 22 MOVIE "L a Hija Del Engano f f i 13 TRAMPA PARA UN SONADOR © NEWS 19 STYLE 21 BACHELOR FATHER 11 SPORTS UPDATE O O 7 CD 4 NEWS © CBS NEWS NIGHTWATCH © STREETS OF SAN FRANCISCO 19 STAGES HOUSEMAN DIRECTS LEAR 21 LIFE OF RILEY H CROSSFIRE 5 SPORTSCENTER 42 ALL-NIGHT RADIO O 2 CBS N E W S N IG H T W A T C H 21 700 CLUB 22 CANDIDA f f i 13 LA C A R A B IN A DE A M B R O S IO 16 NEWS 11 P R IM E T IM E N E W S 14 M O V IE a * A Dunaway "Three Days Of The Condor (1975) Robert Redford, Faye 42 M O V IE a * | oophoie 1981) Albert Finney. M artin Sheen 17 M IS L S O C C E R l 9 C A B A R E T T IM E S T H R E E f f i 13 L O IM P E R D O N A B L E 16 T O M C O T T L E U P C L O S E 5 A U T O R A C IN G 23 MOVIE a Island Affair !96 4 )M a rk Dam Daniela Rocca 10:45 11:00 11:30 11:35 12:00 12:30 12:45 12:50 1:00 1:30 20 0 2:20 2:30 2 50 3 00 © MOVIE "La Violetera Sarita Montei Ratf Vallone 16 MOVIE A Desert Trail (193‘ ) John W iyne Mary Knrnmar NOTHING PAYS DUES LIKE STRAfT BLUES. \ \ tv Les L. C rane DDS Inc. General D e n t i s t r y A * •***■ it*** i£.r* Ask any R & B player worth his shuffle who's the top blues act in town and they 'll tell you Strait Music Fender, Gibson, Kramer electric s And Martin, Ovation and Sigma acoustics We've got em all And we ve been playin the blues in Austin for almost 20 year*, When its time for a 12-bar, 3 -chord boogie, there s only one way to play it Ray it Strait STRAIT M U S IC C O M M N Y 908 Nortf r Lamar 4 /6 692? 3800 S peed w ay 452-6405 I T S T U D E N T S & FACULTY • N itrous oxid e Analgesia Insurance assign m en t a fter first visit • D iscounts a v ailab le • P a y m e n t by P arent accep ted • Audio-Visual relaxation technique SI R G E R Y : Implants, transplants, im pacted w isd o m teeth, E v e n i n g a p p o i n t m e n t s a c c e p t e d . For an a p po in tm en t or m ore in fo rm a tio n call 102-6 Wó a n t ‘Art in Our Time’: views of a decade By RAY D ONLEY III Some perceptive soul once mused that each epoch, each culture gets the art that it deserves. No more, no less. Okay So we are left to conclude that the Renaissance, for example, must have been culturally most deserving, since it produced Leonardo da Vinci, Raphael, Michaelangelo and a host of other artistic titans whose magisterial creations have convinced many that, since 1564, when Michaelangelo breathed his Iasi, western art has irrevocably been in lamentable decline But wait. What do we really know of the cultural past? Did the Renaissance uniformly produce the Renaissance man? No. of course not, The Renaissance produced, along with the giants, scores of hacks, history has merely (and politely) edited ihem out of the cultural bank. And so it goes even today. Every epoch gets the art that it deserves, and this means that the art like the culture, contains elements both good and bad. In fact isolating the good, or the desirable, requires that there be the undesirable. These thoughts are occasioned by “ Art in Our Time: Contemporary Art from the HHK Foundation," the current exhibition at UT's Archer M. Huntington Art Gallery. This exhibit, which brings us a survey of American art of the 70s, reflects in many ways the characteristics (good and bad) of the era which produced that art The works are amusing, startling, provocative, hideous and in some cases, just plain banal, which is to say that, on the balance, the exhibit is uneven. But the show has its strong points Most of the artists in the exhibit are renowned representatives of the particular styles which characterized the art of the 70s. These styles, not quite so easily defined as those of the ’60s when Abstract E xpressiomsm and Pop Art enjoyed varying celebrity, include both abstraction and representational art. and there is in these disparate styles a recurring sense of artistic individuality, rather !' an adherence to an over-arching theoretical impulse. Photo-realism, an art form related to Pop Art, is well represented in the exhibit It is the large and stunningly detailed portrait Nancy by Chuck Close which is sure to grab •he viewer Even from across the large gallery, this mural-size !ace is striking Up close, the image blurs and assumes a -urprisingly abstract quality Close has been creating these mega-portraits since 1967 His method, shared by most photo- malists, is to work exclusively from photographs By eliminating the live model and by using an air-brush in his paint tpphcation, Close is attempting to transform “ photographic information into paint information", as against traditional By JO D Y L. G R ENG A “ X XX: Ten Women/Ten Artists,’ a mixed-media art exhibition sponsored by Women & Their Work, will be staged at the Diseño Studios Gallery in Austin through Nov. 30. The gallery, at 1203V: E First St., is open from noon to 5:30 p.m., Tuesday through Sunday The Austin women featured in the exhibit are Ann Chamberlin represented r the show by two striking monopr nts colored with oil pastels, has been exhibiting her work for three years The artist finds that her themes are derived from the mystique of Mexico, where she was educated. r he longer I’m away (from Mexico)." she muses, "the stronger these themes come back — all the little devils that appear and re-appear in my works " Carol Ivey has entered five gouache paintings m the show "Two I put m the show to add a touch of h .mor, she says and the others represent a set of water pamtmgs ' The ¡after portray the feelings and the r ythms of the tides They are rustic, unlike my former works But, hke ail my work, they are much about movement. dance and feeling Janet Engle Kastner is represented by two mixed- media paintings executed in soft but contrasting colors. Kastner typically creates highly textured ceramic pieces, whose influences are borne out in these selections. With an -impressive 15 years of exhibiting experience behind her, Carol Rabel comes to D.seno Gallery with a set of small but dazzling impasto works Her theme here is the "domestic fantasy,’ as she puts it, "concerning places lived in and places visited." This duo portrays room interiors, for example, that are cut apart, with unified borders that ‘resemble things taken apart and then reassembled,” Rabel adds Ceramic st Claudia Reese brings seven seasons of exhibiting and two works to this show ng Her cream colored clay figures are part of Reese's Cup Series," she notes "When two people sit down to exchange thoughts they usually have a cup in hand ; have taken the cup to be my symbol for empathy " Earth, air and fire are the elements incorporated in the theme of Vicki Teague- Cooper whose two oil paste¡ if d mixed-media pamtmgs / A painter who defies category is William T Wiley Relying on verbal and visual games, Wiley offers m "The Odd Bail Now and Then' one of the more engaging canvases in the exhibit It works on a variety of ¡eveis On the one hand, the viewer can appreciate the .artographicai design, the formal presentation or the )ther hand, Wiley draws m the viewer with what turns it to be a kmd of personal narrative — meditative, humorous punning and full of hidden images Jim Dine shows r s fetish for bathrobes in his four-panel work Painting Around Mount Zion " I don't know what is so comoe ng about robes but apparently Dine has it figured out f r these images hav^ been appearing in his work since ar md 1964 Dine has sa¡d that the robes allow him to deal with the h jiman figure without having to depict it" whateve' his motivation, the panels show an interesting variation on a theme. On the min js side Robert Mangold shows us the pitfalls of Minim alism This artist has built a career on works which attempt to omit or suppress any ndication of artistic express or or involvement At leas! photo-realism provides accessible visual information. Minimalism, relying on an “ idea" of negation, too often no jlges n mm ma1 thmkmg and, aooarently, minimal talent. In addition to pain?mgs, there are a number of sculptural and constr jcted works Willem deKoonmg’s 1972 bronze scu ptur# "Clamdigger. may well be an acquired taste, but the work is every bit as energized as his more well-known paintmgs The sc jlpture depicts a male figure, massive, melting and visua ly imposing DeKoonmg successfully invests the image with the kmd of raw ragged, lumpy brutality which has informed his Abstract Expressionist figurative canvases A lesser-knowr artist, Ralph Humphrey, would appear to be more interested in visual ambiguity than aesthetic excellence his mixed media work "No 9," is supposed to bewilder the viewer as to its identity as a painting or a sculpture the only bewilderment is why it is aven in the exhibit. Which brings us back from whence we began Every era gets the art that it deserves; maybe. The 70s were not so dynamic, not so restless as the preceding decade, and how the ’80s will conclude no one now knows The art of each generation, each historical period has been a reliable reflection of the society which produced it. The ancient Egyptians were content with a style of art which they continued to produce for thousands of years. Contemporary society demands innovation every year When the HHK Foundation of Contemporary Art brings us the art of the '80s, maybe we will be better able to judge the art of the '70s “ Art in Our Time: Contemporary Art from tlie HHK Foundation” ; Archer M. Huntington Art Gallery; 23rd Street and San Jacinto Boulevard; through Dec. 19. Laurie Weller in her sixth season of exhibiting, is represented by two watercolors that are scaled- ¡ up versions of earlier works. Producing ncreasingly larger works allows her to create an entity "that involves the audience more with its sheer human scale," she notes. Weller usually works on a massive scale, with some of her projects measuring 44 inches by 96 inches — incredible for watercolor Susan Whyne brings 10 years of exhibiting experience to Diseño with a duo of oil pastels, or "urban landscapes," as she refers to them. Part of a series, these pieces are a breakthrough for Whyne in their use of a developing imagery, especially in their introduction of her "phantom lovers." This marks the seventh exhibition for the Diseño Gallery, owned by artist Santa Barraza She is planning a calendar of shows for the 1982-1983 season Artists interested in obtaining more information about exhibiting at the gallery may call 477- 7005 Women & Their Work, celebrating its fifth anniversary, is a multi­ disciplinary arts organization partly funded by tne City of Austin and the National Endowment for the Arts Director Rita Starpattern emphasizes, “ We do not attempt to present a particular point of view Rather, we offer to women, who are working with a variety of media, attitudes and viewpoints, an opportunity to present their work to the community " Women & Their Work may be contacted by calling 477- 1064 Starpattern characterizes Ten Women/Ten Artists” as "a little jewel of a show ” It’s a perfect description. The thoughtfully constructed invitational exhibit significantly includes emerging women artists with those more seasoned ones. The artists' media varies as much as do their styles But one theme runs through the showing with a singular continuity. The theme is Life in this exhibit, which was limited both in the size and number of contributions from the women because of space limitations. By contrast, the exhibit itself is boundless. It surpasses the boundaries of mere mortar and brick, at least, this writer failed to encounter any boundaries "Ten Women/Ten Artists" is a muet-see. “ Nancy,” acrylic on canvas by Chuck Close portraiture, there is no interest in capturing what might be called the character or personality of the sitter His faces are alculated to have ail the drama and humanity of an ID photo Photo realist Audrey Flack matches Close in technical finesse Her colorful work entitled "Wheel of Fortune" is a reference to the vanitas" image so popular in northern Europe d u rin g the 16th and 17th centuries. Intended to make one reflect on the shortness of life, the fragility of man and the folly of vanity, these images would most often contain objects which could serve as reminders of the transience of life books, candles, skulls, timepieces, mirrors — all became part of the vocabulary of vanitas painting Flack appropriates these images, adds some new ones, mixes them together, tosses them on a table and paints the result I wo other realists deserve quick mention Ralph Goings' painting, Schoharie Diner," is a marvelous testimonial to banality, solitude, humor and quiet desperation. John De Andrea's sculpture Black Woman (with folding chair)", is disquieting in its frankness Although De Andrea’s nudes are rendered in unnatural gray tones, they are still nonetheless startling in their realism. appear in this show She utilizes these elements in scenarios that involve fear and aggression “ Sometimes,' the artist states, "the violence in my work is overt. Then again, sometimes it’s more cerebral " Teague- Cooper deals with images that serve as archetypes, such as the use of fire to represent destruction and purification Two frenzied pencil renderings by Susan Wallace, now in her second year of post-graduate showings, are culled Vom her more typical larger paintings "My ideas," she says, are derived from my experiences as a tourist, with all its inquisitiveness and not knowing what to expect." A photographer for a decade, Ellen Wallenstein has been on the exhibitor’s circuit nearly half that long. Her blurred image black-and- white prints here are consistent with her usual theme. “ I photograph my life," she admits. "That's my theme I record my dreams, and these works have something to do with my dreams Not literally, of course, but more out of context" Her photographs are concerned with time "Not real time," she points out, "but fantasy time.” “ Encounter” — watercolor by Laurie Weller ‘Ten Women’ exhibits potpourri of art works R U C O R D 5 Iw X v X v X v X v X 'l Linda Ronatadt “Get Closer” (Asylum) Linda R onstadt’s stint with “ The Pirates of Penzance” obviously did her som e good. Her attempts at rock ‘n’ soul singing are now a lot less strained, and everything on this record indicates a higher level of craft, a better notion of what to do with that rem arkable voice. G ranted, som e of the rockers here are atrocious, especially the title track and the “ Lies" remake. O nly this time the blam e falls alm ost entirely on the shoulders of Peter Asher and the turgid LA session men he hired. "I Think It's G onna W ork Out Fine" fails as well, though one presum es Linda wanted to duet with Jam es Taylor (12 years of this man has been enough, dam m it; c o u ld n ’t he give us a break by taking a decade off?). Anyway, Lin d a ’s problem rem ains a general lack of extram usical intelligence. However well she sings, there is rarely the feeling that she knows m ore than she’s letting on; her records d o n ’t resonate like those of the ce n tu ry’s greatest interpretive singers. Even the best songs on “ Get C loser” end up as im pressive, hollow dem onstrations of technique. With two exceptions: “ My Blue Tears," a shim m ering, delicate Dolly Parton ballad on which she harm onizes with Parton and Em m ylou Harris, and “ Mr. R adio." Sporting A sher’s best ballad arrangem ent — m urm uring strings at the beginning, desolate steel and acoustic guitar throughout — "M r. R adio" is a lonely lyric about poor kids in a nothing town and what the co m ing of the radio means to them , as a distraction from bleak lives and as an icon on w hich to focus their hopes. R onstadt’s reading of it is absolutely perfect. — C.W. Thelonious Monk “Thelonious Monk Memorial Album” (Milestone) With the recent death of p ia m st-co m p o se r Thelon ous M onk, the jázz world has lost one of its m ost b n lia n t and e clectic artists From his early years as a sem inal figure in the de velopm ent of bebop, through hard tim es of non- acce p ta n ce by the press and the public, to his acknow ledged status as a creative genius, M onk was, above all, a m usical individualist of the highest order. This m em orial album is a tw o -re co rd set that serves as an excellent prim er into the q u irky m usical world of Monk. C ulled from various perform ances recorded between 1952 and 1 9 6 1 when M onk was affiliated with the Prestige and Riverside jazz labels, these sessions find the pianist in a variety of m oods Fed up with being overweight? H p i t l '1 lost 99 pounds, without exercising and SSSSS |^H 11 the first week, was never hungry.”—Suarra Boqard Norwel Centers has just lowered medical weight loss prices so now everyone can lose weight quickly, safely and at low cost! We’ll get the weight off-guaranteed in writing. Then we'll help you keep it off—or you get your money back- guaranteed in writing! Lose up to 11/i> pounds perday-every day the medical way. Call now for your free consultation. Suarra now Suarra before Special discount for U.T. students, staff Save 58% to 69% (Bring your I.D.) n o rw e l AAA. AAAA CEÑTÉRS I I I T T T I THE N E W N A M E F O R m h M C I U f « n e C M M J J ! n M M T 0 7 P , M » m * c u m S m m t and settings and ih the co m p a n y of the e ra ’s top m usicians. Som e of M on k’s m ost m em orable co m p o sitio n s are nciuded here as wen r he album opens with a solo puano rendition o ‘ Monk s m ost beautiful classic, “ Round M id n ig h t" M onk was most fond of tenor sax-led quartets so it c )mes as no surpr se that is e r I the * es tenor strongm en John Coitrane, Sonny Rollins, Jo h n ny G riffin and Charlie Rouse The le a d e r is joined on other sides in cozy co m p a n y of all-stars Miles Davis. Milt Jackson and Clark T G rry. As m any of the co m p o sitio n s in c ijd e d in this set were recorded num erous tim es by M onk dow n through the years, one ca n n ot pin p o in t this co lle ctio n as a "G reatest H its” co m p ilatio n Suffice it to say that as an e ye -o p e n in g introduction or as a refresher co u rse n to the angular and obtuse visions of one Thelonious M onk, this oria! :oots Boomtown Rats “V.Deep” (Columbia) It’s b e e n quite a w hile since 1977 when the Boom tow n Rats released their self-titled d e b ut on M ercu ry R ecords. Despite the b e cu iia r m erits of their m usic, co m m e rcia l YOU W O N 'T MAKE AN 'A' THIS SEMESTER... ...in Dr D u m b ro w s k y 's course if you miss the fi n a l e x a m So get the horse s it st raight from m ou t h — a ll the fi n a l exam schedules a p p e a r in the Texan on... Wednesday, December 8 ccess has consistently /ded the band. I tn¡nk tne ecut ves at C olum bia hav< t affairs "H e a r the ah grief and g lo o m / s are bad, really bad ats latest d ing us that last year s at alb.. 0* wh >tabie he Bitter wash o* s /ith its cal P iS an sent repeated dination of natter and tat styles If tim e da n cin g aybe you and think : ,V' >r way, The ats are a u n ique 11 “ V D e e o ” is Stix Hooper “Touch The Feeling” (M CA) Send Nurse Feelgood to check out your favorite heartthrob. (or your boss during Bosses Meets l^ y i October 11-15!) 1M V 1600 Nueces 479-6501 S IN G IN G TELEGRAMS PARTY ENTERTAINMENT 4811 SuAAiet /Id A u itin /JexxU- Featuring: Omelettes, sandwiches, soups and salads...homemade desserts, freshly ground coffee and breakfast all day long. N ew hours 7 a.m . till 10 p.m. everyday. N ew dining room open I ' V T U E S D A Y ; i;,-.';.',';,'.' Vir.i •, v • 2 5 N O V E M B E R 9 19*2 DA Y TIM E M O V IE S ® 13 IR IS C H A C O N 11 0 0 he Passionate Stranger ( 1957) M argaret Leighton Ralph Richardson Beneath "he 12 Mile Reel (1953 Terry M oore Robert W agner * * Are • ou lfi The H ouse Atone7 (1978) Kathleen Beiier Biythe O O f f l 4 G A V ILA N © 9 NOVA f f i © f f i 3 T H R E F S C O M P A N Y 18 W H A T M A K E S R A B B IT R U N ? 21 700 C L U B 12:05 g, Dan Duryea 1:00 lido Smord< »m rlenght f f i f f i © 3 9 TO 5 19 D A N C F S A M P L E R 22 M O V IE ® 13 V A N E S S A l a Noche Dei Halcón' A nd res Garcia, R o sa Maria Vazquez 42 M O V IE * * * Cutter s Way ( ’981) John Heard, Jeff Bridges (1937) Raym ond M asse y C onrad Mr jrer Nan /n Neal, Jack Warden. * * * Raqgedy Ann A nd A ndy 11977) Animated r 1 M u n d o De l o s A v io n e s" Capulina Barbara Angetys. I ar¡y D ays Su Ralph Richardson * * * 5 0 0 t ove M e Or I i-ave M e (1955) D o n s Day James Cagney * * . Riot In Cel! Block 11 1954) Neville Brand Emile Meyer 1980) M ary Tyler Moore, Donald 14 M O V I E * * * Are You In Tile H ouse A m e" Danner Í 1978) Kathleen Belter Blythe O N E W S 19 Q U IZ K ID S 21 B A C H E L O R F A T H E R 2% M O V IE El Espanto S u rge De Las Tum bas Paul N aschy Em m a Cohen ii S P O R T S U P D A T E f f i A B C N E W S N IG HTLINE © 3 A LF R ED H IT C H C O C K P R E S E N T S 21 I M A R R IE D JOAN ® 13 INFAMIA ii P E O P L E N O W O 2 M C M IL L A N & W IFE i N B C N E W S O V E R N IG H T O O © 23 M O V IE * * * U n d e r T h e R e d R o h e Veldt © THE L A S T W O R D 19 S IG N A T U R E 21 M Y LIT TLE M A R G IE ® 13 C H E S P IR IT O O O 2 © 4 N E W S O C B S N E W S N IG H T W A T C H © S T R E E T S O F S A N F R A N C IS C O 19-D A N C E T W Y L A T H A R P 21 L IFE O F R IL E Y ® 13 IR IS C H A C O N H C R O S S F IR E 5 S P O R T S C E N T E R a 2 C B S N E W S N IG H T W A T C H 21 700 C L U B 16 N E W S 11 P R IM E T IM E N E W S 12:10 12:20 12 30 12 40 1 00 1 30 2 00 2 10 2:15 12 M O V IE * * Paternity 1 1981) Bur* Reynolds, Beverly D Angelo 33 M O V IE * * Dwayne Hickman How To Stu*f A W ild Bikini (1965) Annette Fumcelio i 1981) Robert De Niro, Rooert Duvall 2:20 i i M O V IE * * * Southern Com fort (1981) Keith Carradlne. Pow ers Boothe - k • k j ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ * ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ 707 W. M L R } Í * 172-7100 * * * J g * * * * * * * * * * * ^ HAIRCUTTERS PERMS, BRAIDS, F RO STI!>ÍGS, HENNAS, PRECISIO N CUTS oj j uith this ad. $2 o f f with this ad T H E ■k * * * ^ * * ^ • k - k 23 M O V I E * * ' t ' The Trap i 1959) Richard Widmark, Tina Louise. Anthony Andre Jane Ben: illy Johnson, Ice Castles 11979) Lyn: 42 M O V IE * * © 9 S A N A N T O N IO P E R S P E C T IV E f f i © © 3 H A P P Y D A Y S 17 S P O R T S P R O B E is L IV E W IR E 1® Q U IZ K ID S 21 I S P Y 22 M O V IE "E l Esp anto S u rg e D e Las T u m b a s” Paul Naschy, Em m a Cohen 14 M O V IE * * * ‘Southern Comfort " (1981) Keith Carradtne. Pow ers Boothe 16 M O V IE * * Hard Times ' (1975) C harle s Bronson, Jam es Coburn, n P R IM E N E W S 5 C O L L E G E F O O T B A L L ;! M O V IE * * * The Mountain 1956) Spencer Tracy. Robert Wagner © 9 T H E L A W M A K E R S f f i © f f i 3 LA V E R N E & S H IR L E Y i 7 N H L H O C K E Y i 9 D A N C E : T W Y L A T H A R P M ario A lm ada Ana Luisa Peluffo 14 M O V I E * * Emily (1976) Koo Stark, Victor Spinetti C I O © 4 LATE NIG H T WITH D A V ID LE T T E R M A N 17 N H L H O C K E Y 19 D A N C E S A M P L E R 21 J A C K B E N N Y 16 M O V IE * * n M O N E Y L IN E U P D A T E T he Left-Handed Gun 1958' Paul Newman, I ita Milan 0 BA R ETT A f f i M IS S IO N IM P O S S IB L E Í S o fine (1981) Ryan < o n © 4 ST F L S E W H E R E 4. M O V ir a a © 9 M Y S T E R Y © © © 3 H A R T TO H AR T i 9 N E W S T O R Y T E L L E R S ® 13 24 H O R A S 14 M O V IE a * * * Ordinary People Sutherland 16 N E W S H F R E E M A N R E P O R T S 18 A R T A N D T H E M A C H IN E 23 N E W S 19 S IG N A T U R E 21 S T A R T IM E O O O Q 2 f f i f f i © 1 © : © 9 D IC K C A V E T T 19 Q U IZ K ID S 22 D IA G N O S IS ® ' i M O V IE S o m o s D o s Fug tivov 16 S O A P n S P O R T S T O N IG H T S S P O R T S C E N T E R 21 A L L IN T H E F A M IL Y 13 H A N D M A D E IN A M E R IC A O O © 4 T O N IG H T O THE J E F F E R S O N S 12 M O V IE * * ’■; True C o n fe ssio n s" O 2 A L L IN T H E F A M IL Y © 9 D O C T O R W H O © © 3 A B C N E W S N IG H T LIN E t B M ‘ A * S * H 17 H O T S P O T S 19 D A N C E T W Y L A T H A R P 21 A N O T H E R LIFE 16 C H A R L IE ’S A N G E L S ’ 'C R O S S F IR E 0 THE R O C K F O R D F ILES 0 2 Q U IN CY © 9 S O U N D F ESTIV A L © © 3 THE LA ST W O R D © C H A R L IE ’S A N G E L S 2! B U R N S A N D ALLEN 22 M O V IE "El Valle De Los U i! N E W S IG H T 5 C O L L E G E FO O TB A LL 8:00 8 30 9:00 9:05 9 15 9:30 10:00 N E W S 10:15 10:25 10:30 10:45 11:00 11:10 11:30 12:00 E V E N IN G 6:00 ) N E W S Ü Q O U 7 © © ( D 7 B U S IN E S S R E P O R T © F A M IL Y F E U D 6 0 4 U T T L E H O U S E O N THE P R A IR IE it A R E Y O U A N Y B O D Y ? 18 S P E C IA L D E L IV E R Y 19 S IN G IN ’ III ® 3 EL D E R E C H O D E N A C E R 16 B A R N E Y M IL L E R ii M O N E Y L IN E 5 T H IS W E E K IN T H E N B A 23 G O M E R P Y L E O Q Y O U A S K E D FO R IT Q "H E M U P P E T S I t 3 16 t h e j e f f e r s o n s © 9 M A C N E IL / L E H R E R R E P O R T © © P M M A G A Z IN E 0 0 3 T H R E E ’S C O M P A N Y 17 S P O R T S L O O K 18 T H E A D V E N T U R E S O F B L A C K B E A U T Y •9 S IG N A T U R E ® 13 C H E S P IR IT O ii S P O R T S T O D A Y S S P O R T S C E N T E R 23 A N D Y G R IFFIT H O O i i F A T H E R M U R P H Y O * J 2 M O V IE The Scarlet P ii 2 30 4:00 4:30 5:30 6:05 6:30 6:36 00 7:05 7:30 u b G ift C ertificates t m m \ u s t i n 8 orig ina l hot a n d s p a re n ta l. Priv a te su ites, s h o w e r s , m usir s a u n a s a n d s p a r k l in g fre s h w h i r l p o o ls F rom n o w until Dec. 11, 1082 vo u c an get a S3.(HI d i s c o u n t o n gift certificates w ith th is ad O r d e r bv p h o n e o r c o m e bv WATER WORKS 701 East 6th 478-8122 S a l t » 10 a.m.- 5 p.m. Sun. - Self Service Fapyiiij • Self Service Typing-Binding- (Mbcr Services 471HII7I IMite Mali ... 2.4 ( P T u n c c h a n n e l n u m b e r s o n b l a c k b a c k g r o u n d s t o A u s tin I 111- a n d \ H K I r a n s m i s s m n s ( ) T u n c c h a n n e l n u m b e r s o n w h i t e b a c k g r o u n d s l o r A u s ­ tin I ' a b l e t is to n p r o g r a m m in g M O N D A Y lÜ á iÚ á á á iÁ ijiÜ iiU M M T V © “Man Of Marble" Jerzy Radziwilowicz, Krystyna Janda. AMERICAN PROFESSIONALS The Strange Love Of Martha Ivers” (1946) Barbara NOVBHBER8,1962 DAYTIME MOVIES Michael Caine © SPORTS TODAY 5 SPORTSCENTER © "Las Cuatro Bodas De Marisol'' Marisol, Jean Claude Pascal 4:30 © * ★ ★ “ I Go Pogo” (1S30) Animated. Voices of Jonathan Winters, Vincent Price. © ★ ★ "Take This Job And Shove It" (1981) Robert Hays, Barbara Hershey. (5J ★ ★ ★ % “He Walked By Night” (1948) Richard Basehart, Scott Brady 3:30 4:00 5:30 EVENING 6:00 0 8 0 0 2 8 0 ) 2 NEWS © HBO MAGAZINE 8 ® BUSINESS REPORT 8 FAMILY FEUD f f l ® LITTLE HOUSE ON THE PRAIRIE © YOU: MAGAZINE FOR WOMEN (© YOU CAN’T DO THAT ON TELEVISION © MOVIE "Iva Zanicchi” 8 © e l d e r e c h o d e n a c e r © BARNEY MILLER © MONEYLINE ® HORSE RACING WEEKLY (R) 9 QOMER PYLE 6:05 6:30 o e © I 8 © i © l © I © i (S) i ® THAT’S INCREDIBLE! i O € D 4 LITTLE HOUSE: A NEW BEGINNING i O 2 SQUARE PEGS ! MOVIE * ★ ★ "G host Story '(1981) Fred Astaire. John Houseman I ® SAN ANTONIO PERSPECTIVE I © MONDAY NIGHT MATCH-UP I LIVEWIRE ) MIXED BAG II SPY ) MOVIE El Mexicano II’ Jorge Rivero. Teresa Velazquez ) SOLID GOLD PRIMENEWS COLLEGE FOOTBALL © I (53 MOVIE * ★ ★ 1? "The Grass Is Greener 11961) Cary Grant. Jean Simmon: 0 0 2 PRIVATE BENJAMIN © ? U.S. CHRONICLE 19' MOVIE "Early Days" Sir Ralph Richardson Q O Q 3 4 GEORGE BURNS AND OTHER SEX SYMBOLS Q O 2 M *A *S *H © ? ! GREAT PERFORMANCES © © ® 3 MOVIE The First Tim e" (Premiere) Susan Anspach, Jennifer Jason Leigh ® COLLEGE FOOTBALL © THE SEVEN DEADLY SINS S3) 700 CLUB ® BEST OF MIDNIGHT SPECIAL O O YOU ASKED FOR IT 8 THE MUPPETS O d ) ® THE j e f f e r s o n s f f l K T V V ( A s t i n ) 17 USA © SIGNATURE S3) STAR TIME © MOVIE "Las Fieras" Mauricio Garces, Locy Gallardo 0 0 Q 0 2 © 8 € D ( 1 CD 4 n e w s © ® d ic k c a v e t t ® BRIDESHEAD REVISITED © MIXED BAG f f i © MOVIE "R ostros Olvidados ® SOAP 11 SPORTS TONIGHT © SPORTSCENTER © ALL IN THE FAMILY 18 WOMEN IN JAZZ - THE VOCALISTS. SCATTING 0 0 6 3 4 THE BEST OF CARSON 8 THE JEFFERSONS O 2 a l l in t h e f a m il y © 9 DOCTOR WHO f f i a ) 3 ABC NEWS NIGHTLINE © M * A * S * H 191 MOVIE "Early Days Sir Ralph Richardson S3) ANOTHER LIFE (16 C H A R I IF ’fi A N G F L S 6:35 7:00 7:05 7:30 8:00 8:30 8:45 9:00 9 15 9:30 10:00 10:15 10:25 10:30 11 CROSSFIRE 42 ON LOCATION 23j MOVIE * * * Stanwyck, Kirk Douglas 14) MOVlE ★ ★ ' 2 The Pursuit Of D B Cooper Duvall. (1981) Treat Williams, Robert Q THE ROCKFORD FILES t J 2 TRAPPER JOHN, M.D. © 9 MASTERPIECE THEATRE f f i THE LAST WORD © CHARLIE’S ANGELS a ) 3 STAR TREK 17 SPORTS LOOK 21 BURNS AND ALLEN l2j MOVIE "La Tía A lejandra" Diana Bracho, Isabela Corona i i NEWSIGHT 5 SATURDAY NIGHT AT THE FIGHTS O G 0 3 4 LATE NIGHT WITH DAVID LETTERMAN 17 COLLEGE FOOTBALL 21 JACK BENNY 16 MOVIE * * * The Picture Of D o rian G ray" (1945) Hurd Hatfield, George Sanders 11 MONEYLINE UPDATE O BARETTA f f i MISSION IMPOSSIBLE © ABC NEWS NIGHTLINE 19 SINGIN' III 21 I MARRIED JOAN GB 13 INFAMIA 11 PEOPLE NOW 42 MOVIE * * * Ghost Story (1981) Fred Astaire, John Houseman O 7 COLUMBO 0 O ED 4 NBC NEWS OVERNIGHT © THE LAST WORD 1 9 SIGNATURE 21 MY LITTLE MARGIE CD 13 MOVIE Acapulco 12 22 14 M O V I E * * . 'The Baby M aker" (197?) Barbara Hershey. Sam Groom 22 MOVIE "El Mexicano II Jorge Rivero Teresa Velazquez .23 MOVIE * * * 'The Naked Runner (1967) Frank Sinatra Peter Vaughan 8 NEWS 19 MIXED BAG 21 BACHELOR FATHER 11 SPORTS UPDATE O O 2 Q3 4 NEWS O CBS NEWS NIGHTWATCH O NEWSWATCH PRESENTS © STREETS OF SAN FRANCISCO 19 MOVIE Early Days Sir Ralph Richardson 21 LIFE OF RILEY 11 CROSSFIRE 3 SPORTSCENTER o 2 CBS NEWS NIGHTWATCH 17 COLLEGE FOOTBALL 21 700 CLUB 16 NEWS 11 PRIME TIME NEWS 10:40 10:45 10:50 11:00 11:30 12:00 12:10 12:30 12:35 12:45 1:00 1:15 1:30 2:00 2:05 2 30 4 2 MOVIE * * * Stranger In The House (197‘ I Keir Dull* . )h v i. Hu , *•> f f i 13 LO IM PERDONABIF 14 MOVIE * * * Michael Came 16 TOM COTTLE UP CLOSE 5 HORSE RACING WEEKLY (R) The Man W ho Would Be rin g 1 19 7* Sean onnery Ring Us Up - We Deliver! In the famous J J ’s Super Subs tradition of fine service and great food, we now offer hom e delivery after 5pm - 7 days a week. (See our delivery area below ) Now you can enjoy a J J ’s Super Sub (hot or cold) without ever leaving your hom e W e’re J J ’s an d w e ’re S u p er - any way you look a t us. • 2 8 V arieties • Open 11 am - 11 pm 7 days a week We Deliver 4 7 6 -4 3 9 2 J J ’s Super Subs 7 0 4 W. 2 4 th (across from Tri Towers) I f You W a n t To K n o w The Score... Check The Sports Pages D a ily in THE DAILY TEXAN With Heloise Gold Í ■Mí flk M 7 See H GOLD at Capital City Playhouse - s . - S á - h ., DaNSKINJ^. Legwarmers 20% Off For Dancers and Other P'reemovers M - S a t 1 0 - 6 3 0 7 0 6 W 2 9 t h Free Pa rk in g 4 7 4 0 9 8 0 Visa M a s t e r c a r d o Bass player Clint Conley Travis Spradllng IVI U 5 i C else’s group. Stix Hooper is from another school of music — more fusion jazz, more soul — like Earth, Wind and Fire's percussion section And not many solos. Before listening to the album, one might assume that Hooper is the featured artist. Well, remember that saying about why one should never assum e.... Hooper's mam contribution is as composer and producer, Paulinho da Costa snows a little creativity on guitar, but no one member really stands out. “ Touch the Feeling" is instrumental dance music, with reeds, horns, bones — the works as far as back-up g<>es It’s not bad, but it’s not unique and the music is not too complex. But it might make you get up and boogie. — R.S, Various artists “ Casino Lights” (Warner Bros.) Whenever you get a group of some of the finest jazz musicians together, you can just stand back and watcn the sparks start to fly. The majority of we jazz is improvisation, neither the listener nor the r the piece is going until it gets there — but you know it's gonna be good. That is the excitement of a live jazz performance. , sician knows exactly where Recorded live at the Montreaux Jazz Festival, “ Casino Lights" expertly catches the spontaneity and emotion of tne performance. The album ’s first side features A! Jarreau and Randy Crawford on vocals, backed by a score of the best jazz musicians around. “ Your Precious Love." “ W ho’s Right. Who’s W rong" and "Sure Enough," are each a refreshing blend of jazz and R&B, The second side contains all instrumentals — healthy mixtures of jazz and jazz rock. “ Monmo Jth Fight Song," performed by Yellowjacket — one of the best jazz fusion bands around — is the most energetic, brassy song on the album. But it doesn't compare to the smooth, singing saxophone of David Sanborn on “ Love is Not Enough” as he glides his instrument from one r’ rsical climax to the next with great ease. Most !mpressive however, ¡s vibraphonist Mike Maineri, whose solo on the song takes it to even greater heights. The overall production of tfns album is clear and crisp like the music itself. The - unique combinations of R&B and rock by these many talented musicians who were pulled together by that one special link — jazz — is what makes this album special. Casino Lignts is a real triumph of American music. — C.R. Mission of Burma proves no threat Burma’s sound The idea is a good one, but these guys weren't as creative as they could be with it, and it ended up sounding like nothing more than a tape recorder. The vocahsts managed to produce some nice harmonies, but even those were hidden among the searing guitars and amplification. Mission of Burma would have done well to take a few n its from oper ng act Chinanine This band displayed more confidence and a sense of unity, as they skillfully wove their ethereal sounds and rhythms around the r audience. Vocalist Kimberly Nelson was charming and captivating and the rest of the band was loose and respondant to the crowc The mdependent contributions of each member were perfectly mixed in a way that gives Chinanme's music 1 contin jity — something Mission of Burma way want to think about. By CATHY R A G L A N D In a continuing effort to expose Austn to a varied amount of music, Thursday night at Club Foot saw the highly touted new sound of Boston-based Mission of Burma along with one of Austin's newest surprises. Chinamne — all for only $3. The EP by Mission of i has been fairly well- Burr received, along with their single “ Tnat's When I Reach For My R evolver" But their show was something short of inspiring. The music remained at ear-piercing levels and their sound was abrasive. What bothered me was how they expected their audience to listen to them when vocalist/guitarist Roger Miller nad to wear earphones beca ise of to the music s high volume. Any feelings of anger or tension were lost, as the music abruptly fell short and had nowhere to go. But if the music level wasn't enough, then the irritating tape loop manipulations by the band’s illusive fourth member Martin Swope (hidden in the sound booth) was These annoymg guitars and vocals at various speeds merely added to the confusion and distortion of r v i w eekdays from 1:30 to 7 p.m . A lony with half p ru v d r i n k - C cfir* Riverside A S 1st 478-5733 w éu c r. Hunter, a once-popuiar musica< performe w^o has bee- unable to adapt his style to new trenas m música entertainment Hur *er reluctantly returns to hew York to stage a comeback r a play written by a couple of well-meaning fr ends. The popular entertainer is uncomfortably cast o r pos te a prima ballerina portrayed by Cyd Charisse. The play is directed by a highbrow director who succeeds in transforming the erstwhile "entertaining" musical into a modern version of the Faust legend. The over-financed, pretentious production, replete with carefully manufactured visions of fire and brimstone, is a financial and critical flop It isn’t until Astaire organizes all the "kids" in the chorus to make a good old-fashioned musical revue that the show succeeds — and Minnelli’s audience proudly welcom es J O M O O R E to our sta ff 1701 West Ave. gets the entertainment it expects Ultimately, MinnellTs auc enees can "have their cake and eat it too" while M nneli subtly r dicules the M’okey Rooney-Judy G ar;and "hey kids, et’s put on a big show mentality — that is, the notion that successful performances are borne of ittle more than youthful spirit and gumption — he finally implicitly supports that mythology. The best musical numbers in "The Band W agon.’ for r stance, are those for which we see no rehearsal, performances which seem to spring out of a creative void — including the vibran* and visually exciting dance Astaire performs in a penny arcade, Astaire and Chansse's romantic and seemingly spontaneous dance in the dark and me celebratory ' That’s Entertainm ent" Finally, the love and commitment necessary for the creatio* of a successful show is identified as the force that noids society itself together Minnelli ultimately frames the coupling of the ma'e and female principals in "The Band Wagon" not in terms of their devotion to each other, but n terms of meir devotion to entertainment. When Charisse finally acknowledges her love for Astaire, she does not tell him that she loves him, but that she hopes their show will last forever, "till death do us part" implies show must go on." In Minnelli's film ic world, romance — and life itself — ultimately accomodates itself to performance. the fea tu rin g m an icu res an d ped icu res by D O R O TH Y TRACY 476-2214 3 I - MEDITERRflNERN »~aggaciis m in A u stin T reat Y ou rself to the B est o f M ed iter (A rm en ian , ranean Food G reek, L eban ese, T u rkish , P ersian , M iddle E astern ). A ll our food item s are prep a red from scra tch and a re fresh daily. I ' ' SHISH KEBAB (Lamb & Beef) CHICKEN KEBAB VEGGIE COMBO ( R a fa l, H u m m u » , O liv io h . E g g p la n t, T a b u fa h S a la d . Rico a n d P ita B ro a d ) 2222 Rio Grande O p o n 7 d a y » 1 0 :3 0 o m - 10 p m P a rk in g a t 2 3 r d St lo t n o x t to T ri-T o w o r» To g o o r d o r» c a ll 4 7 4 -8 0 6 8 T hrough C hristm as, on any M onday come í Í j in and a sk for a C om plim entary B aghlava. (no pure hats necessary) i ! 1 j — ; - ? • • i r v i i f l 1 1 * i A POSITIVE SMILE V n ju JtasdjL d ia ih a d J b iA A . G E N E R A L C IN E M A T H E A TR E S MON THRU SAI AU SHOWINGS KKXTH P* HOUOATS FWST MATIMH SHOW ONIT t t . o o sr.1 iHIGHLAND MAUcT*Ei?A 4S 1 -7 3 2 6 HK3HIAND MAU BLVD. . . . . . . . ...................... ( B E S 'J L I T T L E W H O R E H O U S E I N T E X A S > O 3 Hi 10 • 50 10 OO j k MONSICNOR 100-1 1J-S 10-7 45 10 00 Vn.................................................../ CAPITAL P L A Z A CIiNnESiA 452*7646 l'35ot CAME AON RO. M Y F A V O R I T E Y E A R II \ l IO W K I.S I I I ; oo 4 oo 6 oo * 00 10 00 JINXED APPEARING TONIGHT Bill Silva Jack Maybarry Stava Epstein student d is co u n t-s i 00-Sundays COMEDy WORKSHOP 3 0 2 W 15th a t Lavaca 4 7 3 - 2 3 0 0 8:30 Wed Thurs Sun 8:30 y 11:00 Ffj fe'SOL open stage for beginner comics week nights after show ’ ‘ OO S PLEASANT downstairs 1 ¿ i m c THEATRES TtmS SHOWN FOtt TOOAY ONLY S O 0 0 mm SUNOA - AMOHOLIOAYS SHOWONl» Mtm S O oo THE N O R T H C R O S S 6 THE MISSIONARY P O L T E R G E IS T R (1:45-3:45-5:45 S2.00h7.4S-»JO P ( i i26M :3C S7.00S-7 00-W: 1S E. T . THE E X T R A -T E R R E S T R IA L ¡ P G j Ser**» 1 1 30-460 $2.001-4:30-660 Str**n 2: (3.60-5JO $2.0«>-460 O FF TH E W A L L W A L T Z A C R O S S T E X A S R 11:30 3.30-5 JO 52.001-7:30-4:15 J»G i (1:45-3:45-5:45 $2.001-7:45-4.30 r e T i m n r n r ^ O FF TH E W A L L OFFICER & A g e n t l e m a n R (460 $2 00(-745-4 30 R 5:00 5? 001-7 JO-4:45 C O N A N T H I B A R B A R I A N K 560 $2.00 >-7:30-4:45 W A L T Z A C R O S S T E X A S ¡PGj (5:45 $2.001 7.45-4:30 JLTIMATE IN SIGHT 4 SO ND | RE REC ORDF.D IN DIGITAL SrEREO (]r E x c lu s iv e ! D o lb y S te re o ! F A N T A S I A (560 $2.501-7JO-4:45 442-2333 IM It UNKHITI E H E E E E E IE t S H O O A L L M O V I E S $ 4 0 0 I E X C L U D IN G M ID N IG H T SH O W S ■ CHARIOTS OF FIRE B E A S T M A S T E R P G 7:15-4:45 7:30-4:45 P C j r 2 2 2 3 E 2 E E C B TO P L A C E A C L A S S I F I E D AD, C A L L 4 7 1 -5 2 4 4 \ \ i % u n 2402 GUADALUPE 474-4351 u p s ta ir s I N D S THUR SDAY W A S N 'T T H A T A TIM E STARRING THE WEAVERS 7 15, 9 :1 5 ENDS THUR SDA Y LA ST T A N G O IN P A R IS 7 :0 0 , 9 :3 0 C h r e e n . . . One of the year’s best!” —Jeffrey Lyons. WCBS RAD© and WPIX-TV Chosen A U S T IN 6 521 THOMPSON OFF 183 1 Ml S OF M0NT0P0LIS PHONE 385-5328 2 4 HOUR A D U L T THEATRE CO M PLEX V I D E O T A PE R E N T A L S ft SA L ES LARGEST SELECTIO N • LOW EST PRICES SEE UP TO 6 M O VIES O N SEPA R A TE S C R EEN S FOR THE PRICE OF ONE WINTER HEAT H E A LT H ,...££A, O IS C O U N ; M ltlT A R Y EXPOSED BLACK SILK STOCKINGS W A T E R POW ER ALL MALE CAS.I___ • S T U D E N T • S E N IO R S • C O U P L E S R E B E L D rb ^ n 6902 Burlason Road Radio Sound Systsm So deep my love 385-7217 Privacy of Your Auto XXX Original Uncut H O T inalUnJ / Starring JOHN HOLMES -LINDA WONG ENTERTAINMENT. *>trr*lu. ing JACKUN MORINA OPENS 6 30-STARTS 7 00 CLASSIFIED HOT LINE 4 7 1 - 5 2 4 4 D I R I M I SCItEKNS MAN HAS MADE HIS MATCH •' §á NOW IT S HIS PROBLEM M HARRISON FORD B L\D E ñ U n íic ñ L w in n e r A C A D E M Y A W A R D S BEST PICTURE BUST OKKjl>At M iW WHiMls ftf.sr OKlomt X Kf f ""PIAY LI* WYltAJfD >T (OSH ‘Mf LI* A > .VH >*f Hi i C M A R IO 'S o T T IR E \ 6 :3 0 -9 :0 0 IMVJt! INCUJWN6 I BEST ■ ACTRESS» KATHARINE 1 HEPBURN III PeT€R0 TO01£ ■ KAJHARIN6 H6 PBURN | TODAY «t 1060 p.m. 1.50 U.T. Union Thaatra ZOO Naa-U.T. IN l i o n i n I W 1NT6 R Tonight: Joan Pierre Melville's U l FliC (Dirty Moaoy) at 1:00 p.m. Batti Nall Franch w ith fubtitlms ViL TODAY at 3:50 A 7:50 p.m. Union Tlwetrt 1.50 U.T. 2.00 Hee-ILT. cafoodyL«te»«>® r c A n e a - v -" 4 , 1 My Sister My Love Cancelad dua to film distributora orror. TODAY at 2 A 6 60 p j n Uaiaa T W r a I JO U.T. 2.00 Naa-U.L a'» *ú * .*• ','y c ' u 2. 2. On view in the Art Building, 23rd and San Ja c in to JE S T E R A U D IT O R IU M 7 & 9 p .m . $ 1 5 0 "One of the best musical films ever mode — Neuu York Times V in cente M in n e lli's Band Wagon FRED A S TA IR E C Y D C H A R IS E E O s c a r L e v a n t N a n e t t e F a b r a y Songs Inclu de: “ T h a t ’s E n t e r t a i n m e n t ," “A S hine On Your S h o e s , " “ By M y s e l f , " the “ D a n cin g D a r k " & more! in <===: .; .r r T T r •’ ' TT’TT-'■ ~'.rrrr- TEXAN CLASSIFIED ADS WORK — FOR YOURS CALL 471 -5 2 4 4 JWithout Apmrbít « wive i Alain Delon Catherine Deneuve Richard Crenna in J ean -P ie rre Melville's U n Flic (Dirty M oney) (1 9 7 2 ) French w it h s u b title s TO NIGH T a t 8 :0 0 p . m . Batts Hall Aud. JEAN-LOUIS TRINTIGNANT DOMINIQUE SANDA STEPHANE AUDRAN a film by PHILIPPE LABRO based on a novel by ED McBAIN French w it h s u b title s TODAY a f 6 .0 0 p.m . Batts H all Aud. FREE ADMISSION to all films in this ad. 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Nut good w ith i f . uther .iffer O flet good w hiit iupplie* j s l • R e tail p ri “ 1199 y I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I rfi Contemporary Art from the H H K F o u n d a t io n Through D e c e m b e r 19. 1982 A rc h e r M H untington Art Gallery College of Fine Arts The U niversity of Texas at Austin C ircu la te d under the ausp ices ot the h h k Foundation tor C o nte m po rary A " Inc M ’iw aukee W isconsin No s tate a p p ro p ria te d • nds w e re used t o r • OFFER GO OD AT RIVERSIDE LOCATION ONLY iCOUPON T V Here’s ... what’s happening on late night news By STEVEN FAY W hat hath Tom S nyder and Ted T urner w ro u g h t7 TV's wholesale brass m erchants have fu n d a m e n ta lly ch a n ge d viewing fo r night owls. All three netw orks have inaugurated late-night news shows. For years this tim e slot was left to in d ivid u a l stations. Those on the air at all b roadcast ancient m ovies or "M y M other, the Car' reruns. It was S nyder and his "T o m o rro w ” show in the early 1970s that showed people w o uld listen to interviews and inform ation in the dead of night Turner began offering netw o rk-q u ality news reports to m atch a n yo n e ’s sch e d ule on his 2 4 -h o u r Cable News Network. For years news lost m on e y for the netw orks, but they swallowed the cost as the price of using p u b lic airwaves. Then CBS' "6 0 M inutes" began to dwell in the Nielsen T op 10, and ABC's "N ig h tlin e " becam e the first real co m p e titio n to Jo hnny Carson in years. C B S ’ "S u n d a y M o rn in g ” p roved so su ccessful it exp a nd e d to weekdays, evicting C aptain Kangaroo. The networks began fin d in g tim e slots to p lace news in, either replacing expensive entertainm ent show s or p io n e erin g new slots. NBC struck first this past sum m er. In the great title tradition of "T o d a y ," T on ig h t" and "T o m o rro w ,” its "O v e rn ig h t" show bowed from 12:30-1:30 a.m. CST M o n d a y-T h u rsd a y, 2 -3 a.m. Friday (Channel 36 ta p e-d e la ys F rid a y’s show to air w restling earlier.) In the fall, CBS went w hole hog. Its "N lg h tw a tc h ” runs all night, from 2 -5 a.m. M on d a y-T h u rsda y. Two weeks ago, ABC ju m pe d aboard with "The Last W o rd " from 11 p.m . to m id n ig h t T ue sd a y-F rid a y (T hough not la te late night, ABC do e sn ’t offer anything later.) How are the three h a ndlinq the job? The best so far is N BC 's "O ve rn ig h t,” not because it has been on the longest, but from a clear d iffe re n ce in approach. You m ay recall that when “ S aturday N ight L ive" began, it was pre -e m p te d once a m onth for a news m agazine called W eekend," hosted by Lloyd D obyns and Linda Ellerbee. W eekend's" spirit and a nchors are alive and well on O vernight ” H ard-new s and sports reports alternate with a good deal of features, the m ore o ff-th e -w a ll the better. Sassiness pervades. D obyns and Ellerbee do w ithout the staid disinterest of prim e -tim e news anchors. W hen som e glaring exam ple of hum an stupidity crosses their desk, they d o n 't hesitate to have fun with it. News p urists m ay con d em n their attitude But viewers at this tim e of night d o n 't want im partiality, they want som ething to set off sparks, to waken their brains "O v e rn ig h t" plays to its a u d ie nce around the w orld, co m p a rin g A m e rican reporting of events with that of other cultures M ost reports co m e from B ritain’s BBC and co m m e rcia l ITV networks, but subtitled stories from France, Italy, Japan, the N etherlands, W est and East G erm any and the Soviet U nion have a ppeared D uring the Polish riots after the dissolution of Solidarity, “ O ve rn ig h t" show ed the news as reported by P oland's state-run television — barely a piece of litter was in the streets of G dansk "O v e rn ig h t” also lets stories run longer. Evening newscasts perm it 3 0 -4 5 se co n ds of footage of a new sw orthy event "O vern ig h t" clip s run tw o -to -th re e m inutes without the reporter cutting in, gig a n tic by TV new scast standards. This forces other m ajor stones to be handled as headlines only, but it’s a start tow ard in -d e p th reporting. The show has problem s. It devotes tim e each night to som e network affiliate ca m e ra m a n ’s m ood piece, an assem blage of pretty pictures with backg ro u n d m usic and no narration Som eone o b vio u sly tho ug h t it was tim e to give TV cam eram en and tape editors a national show case for their talents. But these pretty beaches at sunset, or a d o ra b le kids, or lovely wildflow ers all m elt into each other after a few weeks Also, when a substitute appears fo r D obyns or Ellerbee, he or she is not identified until the end of a week of shows. Not only does this confuse the interm ittent viewer, but the substitute does not get the credit he or she deserves. Ellerbee, a ch ip m u n k with sex ap p ea l in her o w l-e ye glasses, has the tarter tongue. D obyns, in a crisp vest instead of a coat, presents a w o rld -w e a ry attitude T hey strive to create a fam ily atm osphere. Regular viewers will soon know a b o u t off- cam era staff m em bers and their pecca dillo s, a te ch niqu e S nyder used fo r years. Late-n ig h t view ers are b a sica lly loners, looking for a friend, even an ele ctro n ic one Again, "O ve rn ig h t" plays to its audience. "N ig h tw a tch " offers the b u tto n e d -d o w n p ro fe ssio n a lism on w hich CBS News p rides itself No less than fo u r a n ch o rp e o p le trade off do in g the h a lf-h o u rly news h eadline rea d in g s and the interviews, in no a p p are n t order. Their nam es are H arold Dow, C hristopher G lenn, Felicia Jeeter and Karen Stone, but th e y’re in te rchangeable for all the personality they show. "N ig h tw a tc h ” takes advantage of its running tim e to d o half- hour or even h o u r-lo n g segm ents with guests Stealing a lick from radio's "T h e Larry King S h o w ,” "N ig h tw a tc h " lets viewers nationw ide call in questions to guests. Well, half-nationw ide. O nly Central and Eastern tim e zone viewers can call in live; M ountain and Pacific viewers see a ta p e-d e la ye d show. O b n oxiou s viewers never m ake it on to the air and interviews A unique feature of the show is its use of new scasts from proceed with the calm politeness of a "F a c e the N ation," though less form ally Jeeter show ed no co n ce rn when a punk rock star som ehow took offense at her q uestions and w alked off She just thanked him for com ing The show d e liberately avoided trou b le (and a go o d deal of fu n ) by p re -re co rd in g an interview with a m an convicted of co lla b o ra tin g in Nazi war crim es, perm itting no calls But G lenn em phasized rather too often that you co u ld call in and talk to “ an actual incest victim ” "N ig h tw a tch " gets new sw orthy p e ople as guests, d e s p le its ate hour, along with the anonym ous experts in social p ro b le m s of the m om ent. But the anchors are ca lm in g, the sets are calm ing, the style is calm ing Your m in d can easily drift off for m inutes or even fall asleep with the help of "N ig h tw a tch " ABC d ro p p e d its reruns of "The Love Boat” and "Fantasy Island" to b ring us "The Last W o rd,” and the show is pure sltckness Phil Donahue and G regory Jackson share a n ch orin g duties, D onahue in his beloved C hicago, Jackson in New York As with A B C 's “ Evening N ew s," the show ju m p s between the two anchors, then to still other parts of the co u n try for interviews d u rin g Ja ckso n ’s segm ents A B C seem s c o n vin ce d that the m ore satellite tim e you log, the better the show All three netw orks d o their program s live to the Central and Eastern tim e zones, but only "The Last W o rd ” m akes a big thing of it. A n n o u n ce rs em phasize "L iv e !" at each co m m e rcia l break. Its su b je ct matter leans to the glossy — sex, violence, d rugs and celebrities. Donahue does a 15-m inute version of his d a ytim e show, with his usual e m pathetic posturing. Jackson tries to d o a solid journalist's jo b . but the p ro d u ce rs seem co n vin ce d the a udience c a n ’t take m ore than 10 m inutes on one subject No sooner have we established what the issues are than we b ounce off the satellite to a new segm ent. There are h a lf-n a tio n w id e ca ll-in s on a to ll-fre e line for som e of Jackson's guests, but here the p ro ce d u re is a sham O nly the second half of the 10-m m ute segm ent per su b je ct goes for call-ins. M inus co m m e rcia ls and le a d -in s, that's three m inutes at the most per guest Jackson has to keep a p o lo gizing to all the callers w ho c a n ’t get on the air. G ranting o n ly three m inutes for half the nation to call in is a c y n ic ’s way of letting viewers p articipate ! I W hat's on late at night? NBC has p uckishness, C BS calm and ABC glitz They ca n 't m atch a g o o d Bette Davis rerun, but they beat the heck out of "M y M other, the Car ’’ Dr. R ic h a rd F e h l e n b e r g e x p la in s . . . Acne is Medically Treatable. We ar e d e d ic a t e d e x c l u s i v e l y to the c on tr ol of Acn e and its d e s t r u c t i v e side effects. U t i l i z i n g the latest m e t h ­ ods ou r un iq ue m e d i c a l p r o c e d u r e and spe cia lized a t t e n t i o n e f f e c t i v e l y c o n ­ tro l Acne. B r i n g this ad w i t h you and save $50 C a ll tod a y for a FREE e v a lu a tio n . Call 349-4381 Acne Í care Richard Fehlenberg M D P A 4837 F r e d e r i c k s b u r g Road NW The first step for the rest of your LIFE. Why should you think about life insurance now, when you 're still young? Because, every year that you wait, it costs more to start you r financial planning. That's why. Let your Fidelty Union Life associate show you the college plan purchased by more seniors than any other. GRANT FOSTER & ASSOCIATES, INC GRANT FOSTER 1801 Lavaca Suite 105 477-3757 Gaynell Eppler Gary Foster Marlain Bailey Margaret Myers Rose Brooks Wendell Vibock Margaret DeBarbarie Margaret Cina Roger Noak David Buchanan Donna Gillenwaters Pat Molina Jack Box Mary Beth Vibock D I V E R S I O N S Putt-Putt on out to Peter Pan Golf By CHARLEY DEVANY Peter Pan had been staring me down for too long Each trip to Barton S prings was tarnished by his co m p la c e n t grin Nightmares of giant rabbits haunted me Tnere was only one cure: i had to play m iniature golf I was a putt-putt veteran and c o n fid e n t of rip ping the course apart. Hole-m-ones would pile up and sweat would d ro p from Ben Crenshaw's brow if he heard about the new whiz kid The $ 1 .75 I plunked down was a small p rice to up h old my manhood and get the vicious ch aracters out of m y head The first hole left me baffled I just d id n ’t have the touch If I stroked the ball too softly it rolled back landed on the 13th hole. I salvaged a five, my pride none the better for it. If I hit it too hard, it .T h e second hole was a straight shot, but the whale in the background destroyed my concentration. A two Nothing to write Mom about. I was ready for Jonah, but dropping the ball down his belly was a bit unnerving. Four strokes and my hopes for a record-breaking score was finished. Hole No. 6 was a difficult rebound shot, a par four if I've ever seen one. Seven was highlighted by the old shoe where I all those kids used to live. The story always depressed me made a three. I breezed through the next four holes, totaling 11 With a little luck I could still get under 50. I missed an easy shot on 12, which left me so disturbed I couldn’t find the next hole A little boy lead me to the bunny rabbit. I regained my composure with a pair of twos, but deadly 15 followed. The hole dropped three levels A sure bet four. I was right. Sixteen was worse, an uphill putt with three drain choices, only one of which aimed at the hole turkey drain, landing in Never-Never land. I couldn’t even make a five. With pain I marked down the maximum stroke six, the ultimate putt-putt insult. I went through a Blinded by my own disgust, I ignored the fierce alligator and shot a two on 17. There was one last chance, but 18 was the toughest hole on the course. It was a dog-leg left (not literally) that dropped at least four or five feet How could any ball be expected to stay in the cup with that much momentum? My worst fears becam e reality. I hit a perfect shot but the ball I could find no bounced out. I kid you not, it was in there solace in my next and final shot. It was difficult, but the numbers told the real story. A 26 on the front nine and 27 on the back. Peter Pan, you haven’t heard the last of me La Ronda — a beanhouse with humor By J A K E TAYLO R Som etim es the best m ethod for finding a go o d M exican *ood restaurant in Austin is to sim ply h o p in the car and drive until som e beanhouse sticks ts neon sign out at you and scream s, "Eat H e re 1 N o w 1’’ These cafes usually are the grab bag surprises of the restaurant world E ther th e y’re bursting at the seams with authentic M exican food and good drink, or they're ro d e n t-rid d e n pissholes where yo u ’ll p ro b a b ly find the same Lu cky Strike butt d angling from your fork that the "c h e f" d itch e d under the kitchen saucepan an hour before. H appily, not m any of Austin's M exican food restaurants a p p ro a ch this degree of in co m p e te n ce — m ost are m erely m ed io cre in their attem pts to b ring you fine cuisine La Ronda M exican Food, at 3701 Airport Blvd , falls into this category, at least as far as the food is co n ce rn e d The restaurant's setting, however, is another story entirely La Ronda sends off the vibes of every sw im -th e -R io - G rande b o rd e r dive that you've ever w andered into But m ake no m istake, this is stnctiy a fa m ily venue, with an a tm osphere that w o u ld n 't scare away the puniest of gr ngos Pictures — su rp r singly, not the garish black velvet type — o' M adonnas hold mg vases and yellow ing Civil War photos of great g ra n d d a d line the walls But the real attraction of La Ronda appears in person every Friday and Saturday night On these nights Louie G uerrero, de cke d out in a glitter ng urban vaquero outfit perform s O ld Latin tu n e s” on his guitar and h o m em ade rhythm m achine, p ro vid in g diners with the ultim ate in Slim W hitm an professionalism A s m entioned before, La R o n d a ’s cu isine is generally bland, although the portions are large I had the La Ronda Dir nor, consisting of guacam ote salad, taco, chili con queso, enchilada, tam ale and the e ve r-p re se n t refrieds. Two plates were needed to hold the generous helpings, b u t quantity rarely replaces quality when it com es to M exican food Prices are low, with the dinners ranging from $3 25 to a bout $7 50 O verall, a bout the only reason I can reco m m en d La R onda is because it’s a w elcom e break from the usual p a in fully sincere M exican food restaurants that s e e n to infest Austin. Take it from me. this restaurant is funny There’s only one problem with religions that have all the answers. They don’t allow questions. T h e b ig Peter Guy Reynolds THE WAY FARES CHANGE THESE DAYS, YOU NEED YOUR OWN TRAVEL EXPERT. 4 20 United Bank Tower Guadalupe at 15th Street apitbl' MAKE YOUR HOLIDAY RESERVATIONS NOW! No charge for our services. We search for the lowest fares. TODAY'S ROUND TRIP FARES Washington D.C. $299 Chicago $278 New York $280 L A or S F $260 Denver $184 We Issue Southwest Tickets Call M argaret/Rob/D ana D F W $ 5 0 Faculty & Staff Clients W elcom e All Major Credit Cards Accepted 480-8888 » H r i i ^ k i W ear Outlet" S A V E UP TO 50% A N D M O R E O N M E N 'S , W O M E N 'S & C H IL D R E N 'S S K I A P P A R E L , G L O V E S, G O G G L E S THIS WEEK'S SPECIALS!! USUALLY $21.00 to $28.00 $28.00 to $35.00 $32.00 to $38.00 OUTLET PRICE $14.84 to $19.84 $22.84 to $27.84 $21.48 to $24.48 Use Our Layaway Plan or Charge It. Save up to 50% or m ore on branded items 2700 Anderson Lane Austin, Texas 78757 (512)452-6866 Hours: M on-Sat 1 0 :0 0 -6 :0 0 oCt “ Is Christianity the only true religion?" British Author/Theologian CANON BRYAN GREEN on cam pus November 15-17th Sponsored by Canterbury Association (of Episcopal Students) 4 7 7 4 m ................................ PHONE ORD-ERS! WE DELIVER! ALVIN ORD’S MENU Fresh Baked French or Whole Wheat Bread THE SALVATION The true original. Cheddar, mozzarella and parmesan cheeses toasted into a fresh bun Stuffed with ham. salami and spiced lunch­ eon meat. Dressed with lettuce, tomatoes, onions, and then spiced just right. A whole meal! Sml. 2.15 Med. 2.75 Large 4.95 ROAST BEEF Sliced premium roast beef, complimented by three toasted cheeses and a variety of fresh vegetables and spices Sml. 2.45 Mad. 3.75 Large « 95 THE CHEESE SALVATION Extra large helping of Cheddar, mozzarella, and parmesan cheese toasted into a fresh bun Add lettuce, tomatoes, onions, and a variety of seasonings for a real taste treat. Large 4.95 Sml. 2.15 Med. 2.75 TUNA We start with light chunk tuna. We add chopped celery, hard boiled eggs, mayon­ naise. and special spices Then we pile it all on a freshly toasted Salvation bun Fully dressed, it’s a Delight from the Deep. Sml. 2.35 Med. 3.25 Large 5.95 HAM SALVATION Similar to the original Salvation (and just as good). We replace the salami and spiced luncheon meat with extra ham. Sml. 2.20 Med. 2.85 Large 5.10 CHICKEN SALAD Busting at the seams, this over stuffed sandwich deserves a prize for size .and for taste Carefully seasoned chicken, stacked high on a toasted Salvation bun Topped with lettuce, tomatoes and onions Sml. 2.35 Med. 3.25 Large 5.95 29th Street 15th Street 5 3 - H I L ooking For A Party? Look No Further! T h e r e 's Always a PARTY at Riverside a n d Congress PARTY, the o n e ot a kind ( lub that s b e e n missing t o o o o long A GREAT PLACE TO MEET SOMEONE SPECIAL. A SPECIAL PLACE TO MEET SOMEONE GREAT! Riverside at C ongress • 441 3004 psssst W a n n a know a secret? Sorry, but it's too late. Things have been getting crazy up the street at A N G L E S , since e v e r y b o d y found out about our incredible drink specials and that every T H U R S D A Y is NEW WAVE NiOHT? Featuring our f amo us midnight attack: R A D I O A C T I V E K A M I K A Z E S Remember: M O N . - T H U R S . 50C Hiballs,Beer and W in e 9-11 p.m. N O C O V E R C H A R G E 476-8732 \W II////, A ustin 's Finest Rock 'n Roll N igh t Club S A N D W I C H W S H O P S 2200 G U A D A LU PE The P erform ing A rts C enter and Texas Union C ultural E ntertainm ent C om m ittee The U niversity of Texas at Austin Elly Ameling soprano “ H e r vo ic e is pure, fre sh a n d r a v i s h i n g 1'' — New York Magazine A program of Haydn, S chubert and W olf 8 pm, Friday, November 12, PAC Concert Hall Public $8, $7, $6, $4 CEC/PAC m em bers and senior citize n s $6, $5 $4, $3 S tudent Rush! Day of p e rfo rm a n ce o n ly 1 All rem aining seats $3. T ickets at the PAC, Erwin Center, Texas Union, N o rth cro ss Ice Rink, P aram ount Theater and Sears. C harge-a-Ticket, 477-6060. Inform ation, 471-1444. No cam eras. No recorders. Texas Union Thantn Committee Domino’s Pizza Delivers.:. Lunch. Lunch need not be the same old thing. Dom ino’s Pizza offers a choice. We use only the best in g re d ie n ts- you get a no ticeably superior p iz z a 1 Dom ino’s Pizza is #1 for fast, free 30 m inute pizza delivery. Now you have a choice. Give us a c a ll1 CAMPUS AREA: 476-7181 HYDE PARK AREA: 458-9101 RIVERSIDE AREA: 447-6681 . ENFIELD AREA i s a t . & s u n o n i y i 474-7676 The P e rfo rm in g Arts C e n te r and Texas Union Cultural E n te rta in m e n t C o m m itte e The University o f Texas at A u s t i n $2.00 off any 16" two item or m o r e pizza ordered between 11:30am-4:30pm at " I II i o □tfi x ’ Professional Sound Systems Open until 4 a .m . 7 days 7113 Burnet Road l a P i i tmenacie ( ru le 1 f íi h im i D alla T ic k e ts on sa le N o v e m b e r 3 P u b lic $4. S tu d e n ts /S e n io r C itiz e n s $3 T ic k e ts at PAC, E rw in C e n te r, T e xa s U n io n a n d UTTM o u tle ts N o rth c ro s s Ic e R.nk, P a ra m o u n t T h e a te r a n d S e a rs C h a rg e -a T ic k e t, 4 7 7 -6 0 6 0 In fo rm a tio n . 4 7 1 -1 4 4 4 LESLIE NIELSEN 451-9700 *7Jte DEATHTRAP “ AN ABSOLUTE KNOCKOUT” ITnZl NOVEMBER 9 ^14 8:00pm Nov. 9-12 • 3:30 & 8:30pm Nov. 13 & 14 s 1 2 75 • s 1 0 75 • s8 75 • s6 75 Special • Student Discount • 2 TICKETS FOR TNI PRICE OF 1 With any Student ID • Good for all porformancot TICKETS AVAILABLE AT ALL UTTM OUTLETS CHARGE IT \jffm l PHONE 477-6060 &cU ! A complete meal for only $21 Offered Monday-Friday from 5-7 pm Nov. 8-72 Selected Entree, two vegetables, medium iced tea (Varsity Cafeteria, 21st & Speedway) E A T K 713 Congress Avenue • 472-2901 MADE POSSIBLE IN PART SV FUNDING FROM THE CITY OF AUSTIN ------------- u m m u p GA R AG E • 501 Br o io s ------------ lexis U nion u i o tT % ★ NEW LOCATION ★ 29 & RIO GRANDE 474-7883 NORTHCROSS MALL 2525 W. ANDERSON 451-1439 You haven’t had a Fajita until you’ve had one by z m * . THEATREC ENTER The Water Engine by David Mamet YOU W ON'T MAKE AN A' THIS SEMESTER... i n D r . D u m b r o w s k y ' s c o u r s e i f y o u m i s s t h e f i n a l e x a m S o g e t i t s t r a i g h t f r o m t h e h o r s e ' s m o u t h — a l l t h e f i n a l e x a m s c h e d u l e s a p p e a r i n t h e T e x a n o n Wednesday, December 8 NO MEN ALLOWED. Ladles of A ustin, your Rose h as dream ed up som ething special ju s t for you. Every Sunday from 7 to 9 p.m., you drink free. T hat’s F-R-E-E. All the b ar drinks, draft beer, or w ine you w ant. D uring y our spe cial tim e, m en will not be admitted. Of course we don’t w an t to be accused of dis crim ination. So we will open th e doors to the opposite sex at 9 p.m., and rew ard everybody p re se n t w ith 2 for 1 b a r drinks, draft beer, and w ine u n til m idnight. C ongratulations, ladies. See you at y our place Sunday. Free ladies drinks 7-9 on Sunday. And no men allowed. The San Antonio Rose On Great Northern, ju s t off Mopac a t A nderson Lame When you’re talking business... ...and eating lunch, the Santa Rita Restaurant has your agenda. Lavish salad bar. burgers, chicken-fried steak, hot entrees, daily specials, p riv ate tables, and com plete bar service. Come here for your business lunch. r ¿ A m q ri;\ located in the Texas Union third level, NE entrance lunch: 1 1 : 3 0 a m - 2 p m , M-F dinner: 5 -9 p m , T-Sun brunch: 1 0 : 3 0 a m - 2 p m , Sun T I-1 E A T E R Shoestring Theater: road to fame? 15 Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday November 8, 9, 10 By STEPHEN BONIN The drama department a breeding ground for fledgling playwrights? A springboard to New York? This may not be as preposterous as it sounds. Scan the latest V ariety for a blurb about Cheryl Hawkins’ play, Just Another Growing Girl,” which premiered on campus last spring and played one performance at the Players Club in New York this past weekend Or just ask Webster Smalley, head of the drama department’s playwriting program, how it feels to propel aspiring bards into the national spotlight I thought of Hawkins as I entered the Lab Theater last Thursday night. In the front corridor the towheaded mentor sat with his legs crossed, methodically puffing on a Marlboro He was probably wondenng too what his transplanted protegee, Hawkins, was doing up north. Indeed, both Hawkins and two student playwrights here were preparing to unveil new works. But Hawkins had a jump on her colleagues back home. This would be their first time to test the waters with their w o rks-m -p ro g re ss. The drama department's Shoestring Theater program was organized for just that purpose. By staging s t u d e n t s ' works under s t u d e n t s ' direction with s t u d e n t actors, theory becomes practical and realistic experience. Smalley, who has produced over 200 plays at the University of Illinois and here, said the name Shoestring derives from the extent of operating resources (or lack thereof) for the productions Props, costumes and sets are reduced to an absolute minimum. The script is the thing. As Pern Smalley, his wife, said, "The plays are not jazzed up so that the playwright can see his play as it really is." Mrs Smalley, who has seen almost every one of those 200 plays, said her husband still gets uptight. "He paces nervously in the corridor during the actual performance (within earshot, but not within viewing range). He’s seen it so many times; he gets all twitchy " He’s not the o n l y one Adams' "Passengers.” Adams watched intently from the wings Nothing to do but watch. "Once the play is ready to open, the directors and the playwrights have nothing to do with it. It’s in the hands of the stage manager. We don't do anything ... but pray a lot,” Sweet said In one dressing room Edith Pross, director of Adams' play, was giving notes to the four-member cast. "We think alike And we've compromised well," he said. In the adjacent space, he sat in the audience and wrote four pages, I ended up using only a third of it," Swee! said, hinting some compassion with the dedicated scribe And despite the two long years and 30 rough drafts his play has needed to gel, O’Neill was pleased with the actors’ performances and pleasantly surprised at the amount of laughter his play received opening night He lauded the director, even though she occasionally provoked minor mental anguish. "She's a real pro." he said O'Neill himself endured a transformation of sorts during Thursday's opening night, going from "extreme nervousness to gradual satisfaction.” During and after the routine discussion session held after every Shoestring play premiere, he muttered his replies at half volume. ■ He was drained and weary it's been a lot of hard work, and to ask people to judge a x -r) O Neill, Smalley, Adams and Pross ^ . Anne Harris E ¡zabeth Cress-Sweet, a veteran New York actress who owned a dinner theater in Minnesota and a children's theater in Kansas City before coming here to get her MFA in directing, said it happens to all of them. "It is nerve- wracking and extremely exciting The actors are doing characters that have never been done before " We headed toward the dressing area to see for ourselves. One actress was roller-skating on stage and another was practicing her mes Both were set to go on in 10 minutes in Steve Sweet’s cast and crew of "Red Brown's Navel” found "good show" gratuities —- a rambow of balloons draped around bottles of champagne - waiting with thank you notes. "The actors play a most important role, because the rewriting of a work-m- progress is inspired from hearing them speak the words on stage," she said James O'Neill, author of "Red Brown," said he yielded to director Sweet's interpretation, though that resulted in some disagreements and futile revision attempts "O ne night His voice trailed off gradually, like the final ovation given his cast. But he wasn’t alone in that fatigue scene either My mind drifted back to Hawkins What has the road been like for her? And when she starts raking in those royalties, will she remember her modest start in the Shoestring Theater program? One thing's for sure These writers, directors and actors, and especially Smalley, hope for the same success with their own creative efforts. "My play may never be performed again, but if I make it big, ! will make sure it is performed everywhere," O ’Neill said. OFF ALL ITEMS AUSTIN ARMY NAVY 412 S. Congress 478-3366 MOTHQ fn ] 1907 E R ive rsid e A j s r n 4431695 WEEKLY SPECIALS T U t S D A Y ALL FREE — N O COVER HAPPY HOUR til 1 1 pm W I O N ÍS D A Y LADIES FREE 10 o i DRAFT BIER 25 t.l 1 t pm T H U R S D A Y BEST DRESSED LADIES CONTEST $ 5 0 FIRST PRIZE $25 SECOND PRIZE UNESCORTED LADIES - 2 FREE DRINKS TIU 1 1 pm N O COVER FRIDAY A SATURDAY NO COVER TIL 9 30 P M SUNDAY 50- TEQUILA SHOTS ALL NIGHT LADIES FREE EVERY M O N D A Y IN NOVEMBER AUSTIN AU-STARS TUÍSDAY SATURDAY TERRAPLANE EVERY SUNDAY IN N O V i m f R THE CONDOMINIUMS [ he I ni ver sit v o f T exas ,it Vustin ( i >IU ge < if f ine \ r i s I )ep ir t m e n t o f M u s k P e rf o rm a n c e S chedule • ■ tiu u N o \ e m b e r X-14 , k ot 9 ■ l I K ' S , j | \ I I lorn I nsemhle I W ,ivtie Barrington, Director S pm. Bates Recital f fall n | \ \ e d n c v i a v I S\ mphonv Band I (>lenn Richter and Paula ( rider, C onductors 8 pm. Bates Rev.it il II ill 4 ■ S u n d u v I I N e w M u s k 1 n s c m h l i I ) a n \X e tc h e r , lD ir e c to r \ p m , A rvtier \1 Huntington \ r t ( i u l l e r v A r t B u i l d i n g ■ W ( mien' s ( ' an ert ( to >ir Vndre I horn,is, C (inductor K pm. Bates Rev u it I tali \ d t n i x s i o n t o these e\ e nts is free T u e s d a y C H IC A N O N IG H T W e d n e s d a y B e lly d a n c in g UT JA ZZ ENSEMBLE F re e F ilm 3 pm, 5:15 pm, 8:30 pm T h u rs d a y F rid a y SH A K E RUSSELL B A N D $ 2 .5 0 UT, $4 Public S a tu rd a y A N G ELA STREHLI B A N D u 24cb Se G m d e iu p t -n c r The li i w i i nr aí T c u e OUR n e w s p i r a l p e r m FOR LONG HAIR FROM GERMANY and NEW MINI PERM FOR MEN AND WOMEN M A N IC U R IS T SCULPTURE N A IL ARTIST 5806 W O O D R O W 454-4556 Catherine House I N T E R V I E W Transvaal House Venturi s | W i n S \ l I ()\\ I I / Sundial House Photos by Steven Pumphrey Graves Transvaal House Two UT architecture students, Gilíes Chabannes and Scott Poole, interviewed Stanley Saitowitz, an architect from San Francisco who was recently the visiting critic for advanced design at the UT School of Architecture. Stanley Saitowitz was born in Johannesburg, South Africa, grew up and studied architecture at Witwatersrand. Since 1979 he has been at the University of California, Berkeley and practices architecture in San Franciso. He is well-known for his buildings and notorious for his exquisite airbrush drawings. Poole: It seems to me that the kind of language that you use in your architecture is poetic, or perhaps romantic. Saitowitz: Poetic, I like. Poole: In a (Robert) Venturi interview, (Peter) Eisenman quotes Paul Valery describing poetry as “ That which remains once meaning is known.” Saitowitz: My favorite quote defines poetry as “ A holiday of the mind.” Poole: Doesn’t poetry presume an elitist language? Saitowitz: What I am saying about poetry is that when something is poetic it connects without any necessity for being cultured. Poetry is different from a posh theater for which you have to dress up in a bow tie and have heard Haydn in order to appreciate Debussy. Poetry, to me, is cutting through all those layers. It’s an absolute slice through the essence of things which are a part of everyone's experience. It’s like one and one is two: that’s poetry, because anywhere you go on this planet there will be agreement on that level. Poole: It’s strange to me that you start your projects with a presumption of order. What seems most important to you is poetry, yet you achieve that poetry through the manipulation of order Saitowitz: Ves, I start my projects with an idea which I think is poetry, an idea which is probably bigger than order in a way Chabannes: Is your application of order not so based on Euclid? Is it more subtle than strict geometry? Saitowitz: The native African huts are a good example of relaxed order. The original houses were of mud and white paint The white paint was bird-dropping and the mud was earth: a marriage of the ground to the sky. The villagers would take and mix the mud and the white to form a criss-cross pattern so that the resulting shelter acted similarly to jewelry It was not anything special, every inhabitant would make his own house. It’s not a self-conscious act in any way. It’s a task tied to time and its repetition. Those houses wash off every year, and the repainting is carried out as an annual ritual. It’s done every spring when all the flowers are starting to bloom. The houses are Damted when the summer rains wash them off and the whole cycle starts again. It’s really a connection to nature. It’s involved with ceremony. It’s almost a natural act. That’s what I think is important to realize about earlier building. I don’t think you would have talked about style and taste in architecture in the case of the pyramids. It would have seemed a ridiculous issue because these so-called “ monuments’’ were a necessity. They were a matter of life or death. A lot of the society’s energy was piled up into those objects I don’t know where the energy goes in our own culture. Chabannes: What about these villages and their process of building. I’m interested in the translation of that process as it relates to where we live today as white people. By GILLES CHABANNES and SCOTT POOLE MUSICAL ARRANGEMENT BY JOHN PAUL TRACY Saitowitz: In the Sundial House that's w h a t! was trying to do What is important to me about that house is its connection to a natural set of cycles. In the Sundial House the order of revolves around the sun The sun gives a pattern for the way a house works: the activity of waking up connected with the rising sun and going to sleep matched with the setting sun !e Poole: Why start with the sun as a point of departure? Saitowitz: Circumstance, in a way. The sun happened to be a common issue in architecture at the time I built it. A lot of people were working with solar energy, and it seemed to me that it was an incredibly nave approach. Instead of dealing with the idea of the sun providing comfort it was like solar machinery Instead of trying to “ find the energy” from the sun, the tendency was to produce X number of BTUs. Poole: It seems like you took an issue of the time — solar energy — and raised it to a poetic level Was that conscious9 Saitowitz: Yes, I tried to further the logical evolution of basic issues through a sort of poetic structure. My earlier work dealt very much with the earth and the moving of the sun. It sounds ridiculous, but it’s like the reality of heaven and earth. I decided that the next building I was going to do would solve another layer of order which had been ignored in my past projects — for example in a previous house — the Transvaal House. Chabannes: Was that the house with the gable9 Saitowitz: No, the Transvaal House had a round sort of roof which had to do with ground and rock and contours and the earth. Part of the idea of addressing the roof was connected with the sky, which brought in light. But it wasn't worked out in a controlled enough way, so that in summer you’d get too much sun. Because of that I decided that one could find the sun and deal with it directly. Like with the Sundial House — when I visited the site it was just a California hillside and on it there was an oak tree. This tree leaned over toward the sun, and it was the first inhabitation of the site as I saw it. So when you think about a site and continue it's evolution — which is what I think making a building is all about — it’s like the tree inhabited the site, or the sun inhabited the house. The tree became the cue. Poole: So your architecture is taking both a place and your mind set at a certain time and dealing with things you haven't yet pinpointed. Saitowitz: Every project you do allows you to start with a clean slate and I try to start without any idea. At the same time, you start with what you know and what you don’t, and it’s often difficult to break out of that. Recently my interests have moved much more toward the city. I think there is a different set of analogies that one uses in the city. Chabannes: What is the order of the city? Do we choose it? What is it? Especially in America . Saitowitz: I am lucky because I live in an exceptional American city, San Francisco. It isn't structured in the way that many cities are. It is actually a city which has a history and a very particular response to its setting. Chabannes: So how do you deal with a city that doesn't — like Houston? Saitowitz: I think in Houston one is not building a city, one is building objects in the landscape. Chabbannes: What about cities that are in the middle of the road, in the middle of nowhere ... Poole: Like Dalias Saitowitz “ he one thing about most d ie s is that they are not nowhere “ hey are always fo u 'd o r quite a special site. People choose to build on the best site in a particular area Every city has a chosen site, and building a city is a collective act that may not be that conscidus The beginning of every city is the same as the beginning of a building. T starts out with the circumstance of the site. Chabannes That makes Houston a very strange fellow, because Houston is a marshland It’s sitting on a ledge of mud Saitowitz: But the reason for Houston is that it's connected to wafer Johannesburg is another city that is built in a very strange place it is one of the only major cities in the world that is built where there is no water. It was built there because of gold. Where there was once a river there is now a river of gold thousand» of feet below the surface of the city. That’s the reason it’s there. Poole: Some Americans would argue that we have no urban tradition, that we are just translating European taste So what types do we use in the United States? Saitowitz: It depends rn which city you’re in. In San Francisco typology works. Venturi was the first one to focus on the American city in order to understand it, and his work is being forgotten I think the basis of the American city now has to be called into question. The results and the lifestyle that a city mnpiies were major causes of the revolution in the '60s; a revolution of the children of the suburbs who hated that life Poole: It seems that in Texas, getting closer to home, there is a strong resistance to developing an urban situation even in a city like Houston. Is there a denial of the idea of a "city"? Saitowitz: Houston is actually the “ Last American City” and the tragedy of it is that it doesn't learn from its failures. What’s going on in Austin seems to be a reai antithesis to all that. It seems that a lot of the energy in Austin is now being focused on downtown — the old kind of a “ city." The other parts of Austin are like outer space. But I’m not interested in why one city is better or worse than another. That's chauvinism. The difference between Austin and San Francisco is total and has to do with circumstance. C habannes: So where is the chauvinism? Saitowitz: It’s the form that regionalism started to take in the '70s It's a natural reaction to modernism. A problem we all feel about modernism is the loss of memory. It's like when a man loses his memory, the way to solve it is to go to a shrink The Freudian solution is that you go on the couch and you recount your memory to regain the sense of who you are. Modernism has stripped us of memories so that a building in Houston is the same as a building in Atlanta or anywhere. The particular nature of Houston’s harsh climate was not recognized, so that an Atlanta building did not work in Houston. Poole: What I see wrong with regionalism, particularly in Central Texas, is the confusion between memory and nostalgia. There is a strong attitude of “ us" versus another place. We’re looking back to a former period and using it as a romantic crutch instead of solving contemporary problems. Saitowitz: If you just compare that to a person undergoing psychoanalysis, the reason you lie down on the couch is to remember your childhood in order to gain some sort of understanding of your present condition, not to live it as a child again. The reason we should refer to history and the nature of each place is to act more fully in the present and not to relive the past That's the problem with history now, it’s really serious, it’s nostalgia, it’s a refusal to accept reality, it's escapism, it’s an unfortunate moment to reach when we cannot really face the present. Chabannes- A professor of materials I once read was fascinated by our preoccupation with nostalgia. He felt that a society which constantly reused their grandfather's objects and ideas to create a present was indeed an insecure culture Saitowitz: Material is an important thing to me; it’s like grabbing a wall It's real, it’s easier to do than to talk about, and it s also magic I guess material is important the way that memory is important — because it is a transparancy that lets you focus mto where you are now. What I'm saying is that rather than wanting the material to look like a Greek column, one accepts the reality of that material and uses it for its own sake. No meaning is being imposed on it. It just actually is. For instance, steel is rolled in a machine, brought in a truck, put together in pieces, and ends up as a roof As soon as you start imposing your will directly upon the material, it’s a different approach One should let the material manifest itself. Poole: In South Africa you used off-the-shelf parts with the color patterns from the huts of the Bantu tribe to create the Catherine House Didn't that seem rather romantic? Saitowitz: Not particularly. One of my major interests when I was doing the Catherine House was surrealism. I had been fascinated by Magritte and the reason Magritte had been so powerful for me was that tor the first time I experienced an art that could com m unicate really broadly When I showed one of his paintings to an African woman she was as convulsed by the image as I, yet her culture was that culture that lived in mud houses. I realized that there was a level at which one could describe reality through simple language that was not in any way elite. It had nothing to do with culture in the sense of today's architecture The only way one can appreciate something like Graves' Portland Building is to know the language of architecture. It does not have a beauty that is immediately apparent. Chabannes: Can we talk about architecture as a profession 7 Architecture isn't like these easy professions. You can become a bartender in 10 weeks of bartending school, but architecture is an old man's art. I'm serious, it takes a lot of time, it takes a lot of learning and constant practice. In our instant society where we can whip up coffee, chocolate milk and a three-layer cake in an instant, how can we come up with architecture that doesn't do that? Saitowitz: W e’ve got a traditon in architecture of value that is basic and really difficult to manifest at this time. It isn’t a great time for architecture, but I don't believe in the apocalypse I think we’re shifting and shaking. Chabannes: So how do we re-establish our tradition as architects, because there is a kind of continuous brotherhood, even though we haven’t realized it. Saitowitz I think architecture is actually immaterial and that's the amazing thing. Architecture can’t be bought or so d You can trade buildings and you can trade the product of architecture, but the architecture itself, you can't. It’s like saying you can buy and sell records but you can’t own the music Chabannes: So how would you explain to a banker what architecture is? Saitowitz: I d tell him it's what is invisible in that building WMjtn well-built boxes (form follows function) Modernism form follows fiasco Post-modernism Regionalism — the way that culture, climate and history affect local building styles. Typology - a cookbook of abstract architectural styles D I V f: ‘Tex-Mex’ fare: a consuming art By TOMMY WITHERSPOON In this life yo u 're on your own when it com es to certain things. C o n fro n tin g death. Know ing love S e cu rin g sanity. Finding ha lf-w a y d e ce nt Tex-M ex food. The answer to the last p ro b le m is su p p o se d to be easier in Texas: m erely d ro p by your nearest b a ckw o o d s legend Tex- Mex restaurant. D espicably, Austin has had no restaurant with a d ig nified claim to any such title The veteran of M exican food sold in the capital is likely to be c a rryin g with h e r/h im the aftertaste of ch ip s from a bag served with refrigerated salsa; d isintegrated h a m b u rg er passed o ff as p ic a d il l o ; or a sm ear of sour cream and d o llo p of b la ck beans that tran sfo rm e d the m enu into cu isin e “ from the interior of M e x ic o ," ca rryin g it beyond the d iscrim in a tio n of the ignorant. Stagey d e c o r seem s to be the first standard of e lig ib ility fo r m aking an Austin eatery M exican. Well, there's now a T ex-M ex restaurant in Austin w orthy of your m outh M exico Típico, 1800 E. Sixth St. Existing at its current location for only six m onths after m oving from a slightly longer tenure at 6 3 0 4 -A Porter St., M exico T ip ico does not have the lengthy p edigree — yet — that w ould ce rtify it a rightful legend. But q u ib b le s over g e n ea lo g y pale before facts: • Portions are generous and served on big, hot, oval plates • The refried beans are rich in b ouquet, light on the tongue and heavy on the stom ach. Likewise the p ica d illo and rice • You are served flour tortillas as a m atter of course. And yes, • The kitchen is the b a ck-th ird of the d in in g room . O w ner Diane Valera and her assistant co o k M arcela Vianey have m astered their craft. Flavors actu ally meld in their e n c h ila d a s Their g u a c a m o le is a d e lica te blend of p u lp and bulk that d istinguishes it instantly from the usual restaurant's a p p lica tio n of “ m ashed potato p h ilo s o p h y " to the noble a vocado A nd their sa ls a and sa ls a ra n c h e r a have exactly the right a m o u n t of sting, leaving your tongue neither reeling nor bored. Consum m ate typica lity is h a rd -w o n ; it’s a kind of perfected character M exico Típico is a b lin k aw ay from being just right. Eloquent of its character are the p e o ple you see eating around 1.3 you; the giant gas stovetop, the c h ild re n ’s h ig h -ch a irs up against the back wall; a nd the m otto on the m enu that spells out M exico T p ’co 's intent n full detail: "H o m e of the fam ily style M exican Breakfast, Lunch, and D in n e r." E loquent too are the slighty battered furniture and dust in the corners. M exico Tip ico is open 7 a.m to 3 p.m S unday through T hursday, and 7 a.m — 10 p.m . Fridays and Saturdays. Service is fast by M exican food sta n da rd s Expect to spend $4 a person. Expect to be satisfied ' B O O K S ‘Real Men’: a tasty route to machismo What d o these husky types d o m ore than sleep, vote conservative, nuke and be m anly? EAT, of course By PAUL SORENSON "R e a l M en D o n 't C o o k Q u ich e : The Real M a n 's C o o k b o o k ” ; by S c o tt R e d m a n ; e d ite d by B ru c e F e irste in ; illu s tra te d b y Lee L o re n z; P o c k e t B o o ks; $3.95. Do you vote a straight R epublican ticket and write things like "N u ke Jane F onda” on ba thro o m walls? Well then, you u n d o u b te d ly rem em ber that a while ago Mr Feirstein released a new guide for the “ real man " It has becom e a m illion c o p y bestseller since then and given egg pie a bad nam e am ong a sig n ifica n t portion of the male p o pulation. Nonetheless, that guide d id n ’t co ve r everything a nouveau real m an needs "Real Men D on't Cook Q u ich e " — a co lla b o ra tio n between form er ch e f and restaurant m anager Scott Redm an, free lance w riter Feirstein and N ew Y o rk e r m agazine illustrator Lee Lorenz — fills the gap adm irably. It’s m ore of the sam e to n g u e -in -ch e e k m acho m ysticism but includes recipes to allow o ur b u d d in g cro p of Dash R iprocks to fill those cheeks with food that is good, filling, A m e rican as apple pie and regulation m acho. Haute c u is in e is no longer safe from those who believe, as a matter of principle rather than ignorance, that woks are for oil changes. The ch a p te r entitled "A Tour T hrough A Strange Place The K itch e n ” sees to that. Its sim ple, n o n ­ threatening p ro d u c tio n to the cu linary cu b ic le is full of practical a d vice too the kitchen ad d s to the resale value of house or co n d o, so d o n 't rem ove it or " , turn it into a tw o -b a y m uffler s h o p .” Later sections fo cu s on breakfast thro u g h dessert and halftim e snacks T hey provide what appear to be tasty, easy routes to re s p e c tiv e m eals spiced, of course, with re a lm a n o b ilia For exam ple Real Man C u isin e ” tells us that in 1400, a Mrs Polo refused to co o k d in n e r and M arco went out for Chinese. In 1899, C olonel Sanders was born and in 1972 Deep T hroat” was released Com forting facts to rum inate on while w aiting for your M om ay sauce to thicken, yes? 'G reat M om ents in There’s great stuff in here too. The battle of Atlanta a p p arently sp a w ned a ch icke n recipe that would make Colonel Sanders sweat bullets Beef B o u rg uign o n is slated for service in pu rsu it of am ou r, w hile hom em ade pretzels are de sig n ed to sate the rabid fo o tb a ll fan at halftim e All this press and attention to the resurgence of m a ch o is predictable, given the cu rre n t political clim a te and social malaise. Face it, we "the p e o ple" are in trouble, and it's clear to m em b e rs of this m ovem ent that the old ways are the good ways But som e things have ch a n ge d Living in the world is n ’t as easy as it used to be U p -a n d -c o m in g males have had to endure less m oth e rin g from m om m a and g irlfrie n d s as a result of the subversive, co m m ie ERA The poor guys are likely to be left by the little w o m a n " sim ply for living o u t their genetically im p rin te d m andate to subjugate, sub lim ate and subdivide Daily life is just one battle after another with the q u ich e - eatmg m entality So M adison Avenue has d e c id e d the populace is rea d y for a blitzkrie g push cloaked in humor. All you folks who long to reclaim your m anhood, rev up your fo u r-w h e e le rs and carom over to the nearest book store This is not just a coo kb oo k, it’s part of a m anifesto Get yours today and learn the arcane art of co o ke ry from one w h o ’ll teach you the w arlike w ay and provide a sm ile or two besides It used to be that real men d id n ’t cook at all, they thawed But no longer Banned no m ore by fear and doubt, to d a y ’s Mel M acho can walk up to the stove confidently, know ing he will never again answ er a question a b o ut "c o n d im e n ts ” like R o cco Tortellm i did " I ’m Catholic. I d o n 't believe in oirth c o n tro l." 3 ^ J to r o u r compe' ® 3 pf|ce L mss. CaW n ° * - ,, miss out RIVERSIDE 1922 E. Riverside Dr. Townlake Shopping Center 4 44 -2683 99 Call now for your free salon visit! S CENTURY Century South Plaza 1-35 & William Cannon Dr. 441 -0 2 15 Good at all participating salons CAPITAL PLAZA 5435 N. Interregional Hwy. (Route 35) 452-8162