T h e Da ttv T exan Vol. 84, No. 129 The student newspaper of The University c ? r, F' day Apn 5 1985 25C Voters to pick Austin s leadership Saturday By JEFF CROSBY Daily Texan Staff Analysis Austin voters will try to cut through a maze of television commercials and mailers to decide Saturday which candidates will serve the next two years on the C ity Coun- cil. Voters are being bombarded with appeals extolling the candidates' leadership and promising cures of the city's ills. However, much of the campaign has focused on M ayor Ron M ullen's ethics. Several questions have been raised regard­ ing M ullen's ethical values, but none have stuck. One of M ullen's five opponents, Frank ( ooksey, has not concentrated on attacking M ullen's ethics, but instead has focused on the mayor's environmental protection record. Cooksey has charged that M ullen is re- sponsible for several variances that he savs subvert the city's strict environmental o rd i­ nances. Cooksey has said variances should be allowed only in rare instances. M ullen has said the variances were al­ lowed because strict enforcement of the or dinance would wipe out the profits of some developers. He has said comprehensive en­ forcement of the ordinance would be unfair to landowners and damaging to the econo­ my. Max Nofziger has attacked Cooksey and M ullen for their support of a proposed coal- burning power plant. Nofziger believes coal plants present too many environm en­ tal risks. He advocates a shift to solar pow­ er. tes overhauling tf m. Mae Harris Me >Jice brutality. Buc ice the council v stem . Am ong the cou Pli impetition is in In Place 2, SI iv r ■aw developer said - Í )arr ha<- >a H fh middle* ground between the develi the preservers of the neigborhood environment. Smoot Carf-Mitchell, a long hr borhood and environmental ad' counting on volunteer support groups that have endorsed him. Carl-Mitchell has said he will neighborhoods' position on /.on the highest priority. three other poorly financed candidates also are in the race* Mike Poulson ad vo­ john Cutright, w ho helped ke< M ueller Municipal Airport as is, h a rey n Mark ! to prot e Aus ’roiec t r i u i counc me mb his fig rt -itk >\ H ui V a n ta g e point unity, lot have >pers not l, liberal C asas. punching bag by ace 6 race Terry J r d v in 1981, and ie attack. different tack by 'ironmental prob­ ar e a Ex-Soviet diplomat says U.S.S.R. may grant concessions By TODD PRATT Daily Texan Staff C O L L E G E S T A T IO N — The highest-ranking Soviet diplomat ever to defect to the United States said Thursday the Russians may be prepared to grant substantial con­ cessions during U.S.-Soviet arms limitations talks. But two former U.S. intelligence saying undue chiefs disagreed, haste would sabotage anv real prog­ ress in superpower relations. A rkady Shevchenko, who in 1978 became the highest-ranking Soviet diplomat to defect to the W est while serving as undersecretary general to the United Nations, said the current arms limitations talks in Geneva could turn out to be more produc­ tive than most analysts believe. "T h e Soviet Union would be, at this stage, leaning much further in making concessions than anybody in the world believes," Shevchenko said. The former p>ersonal adviser to Andrei Grom yko joined Zbigniew Br/e/inski, former national security adviser under President Carter and James Schlesinger, former secretary of defense and former C IA director at a discussion on U . S . -Soviet rela­ tions before a crowd of about 2,000 at Texas A & M University. Shevchenko, who spied for the C IA during his last y e a r s at the U N , said the great expense of the arms race finally may be taking its toll on the Soviets. M any Soviet citizens are putting great pressure on their le a d e r s to improve economic conditions in the country, he said. Shevchenko, au­ thor of the recently released book "Breaking W ith M oscow ," said that pressure, coupled with the inexperi­ ence of new Soviet leader M ikhail Gorbachev, makes him optimistic about the outcome of the arms talks, which began March 12. to "T h e y w ill he r 3dy to trade for some of these things (arms reduc­ tions reduce ex­ penses), and I think they will be ready to go much further than any­ one thinks," Shevchenko said. temporarily But Schlesinger and Brzezinski disagreed, saying the talks will not produce any substantial arms re­ ductions. "T h e issue has now become so complex, and has so many prob­ le m s to overcome, that it is unlikely in the near future a comprehensive arms control agreement will be negotiated," Br/e/inski said." Shevchenko also sau! the United states should attempt to arrange a summit meeting between President Reagan and Gorbachev. The new Soviet leader will be trying to con­ solidate his power, and so will be anxious to ease the domestic prob­ lems, Shevchenko said. "It's more important to resume a dialogue with Soviet leaders, and it's high time to do that," Shevchen­ ko said. "Especially with Gorba­ chev, who needs a summit and who is a novice in foreign r e la t io n s . " But Br/e/inski said Reagan has been "u n d u ly urgent" in his enthu­ siasm for a summit, adding Reagan should wait until tensions between the two superpowers recede. " I f the U.S. wants to cooperate with the Soviets over the long haul, they can't declare they are an evil empire one moment and then the next year say the shooting of an American major makes the presi­ dent want to meet with them even m ore," Brzezinski said. K evin W e ch te r, a b u s in e s s ju n io r, w a tc h e s as M ike M arsh of Abilene decathlon at the T exas R elays T h u rsd a y Wechter s re s p o n s ib le for C h ristia n U n ive rsity trie s to cle a r the b a r in the pole va u lt se g m e n t of the re p la cin g o r a d ju stin g the ba r a fte r each v a u lt a tte m pt Kevin Guttma, Daily Texan Staff School asbestos clean-up criticized by state officials At a G lance Today By KYLE POPE Daily Texan Staff Despite a massive asbestos clean-up opera­ tion at M artin Junior High School last month, state officials are still not satisfied the school district did enough to protect the health of the children. Representatives of the Texas Department of Health and the state A ir Control Board said asbestos was left behind after the district paid a firm $16,000 to have it removed. School district officials acknowledge the project was a "cra sh " job, caused by the need for immediate reponse to a growing problem. Because of a roof leak, small chunks of as­ bestos had been flaking off some classroom ceiling tiles since 1984. John Gargus, mainte­ nance superintendent for the district, said M onday he hired a firm in February to spray the tiles with sealant - encapsulating the as­ bestos. Gargus said the spraying 'did not go that well. .. Small pieces of asbestos were falling onto the floor, water was seeping through the asbestos tiles. This was an indication there was a problem ." W hen the roof leaks continued and the as­ bestos continued to fall on the students be­ low, Gargus said, district officials decided March 7 to have the material removed. At 8 a.m. M arch 8, five contractors arrived at the school to bid on the project and by 10:30 a.m., Gargus had hired A-l Specialties Co. of Gatesville to remove the asbestos from 10,900 square feet of ceiling. James Lanham, president of the company, said A-l enclosed the entire school in a plastic envelope and constructed a polyurethane tunnel into the from a disrobing trailer school. Admittance was restncted to compa­ ny personnel and Gargus. Because it was spring break and the stu­ dents were not in school, the company was told it had one week to complete the project, so the children could be back in school bv M onday, March 18, Lanham said. Faculty and staff at the school will not talk on the record about the asbestos problem. One staff member said, "This is evaluation time and thev are very, verv Nazi-like about us talking to the press. ' The stafl member said the Martin administration and school dis­ trict officials "h ad the attitude that we will ignore this as long as possible. That was gross negligence on the part of the school district and the adm inistration." Principal Nato Vera said Tuesday he no­ ticed asbestos on the floors and hallways of the building the day after the company was supposed to have removed the material To clean up the remaining material, Vera said school custodians and district mainte­ nance personnel stayed until 4 a.m. the da\ before classes were to begin to clean up the remaining asbestos. Vera said the all-night cleanings continued for three days before all the asbestos that had been left behind bv A-l had been cleared. One source said the children should not have been allowed to return to school on the day after the first cleanup. "The custodians didn't know what they were doing, another staff member said. W e were in danger in The staff member said asbes­ that building tos dust was "floating and lingering in the hallways and classrooms the M onday after the spring break. Steve Belvea, spokesman tor the Texas Air Control Board, said Tuesday the results of a studv conducted bv an environmental con sultant shews that asbestos was left behind after A-l did the removal. The report states "the |ob site was found somewhat dirty some asbestos plaster was seen the report "is good enough for us, just know ing that it was there." Belyea said See Asbestos, page 12 Bad news, good news — The U niversity will hold classes as scheduled Friday, but individual acuity m em ­ bers may, at their discretion, dism iss classes meeting Friday afternoon and evening. Faculty m em bers are to give excused absences to students who encouraged m iss classes to attend religious observances in the after­ noon G C harles Franklin, vice president for business affairs said Thursday that all UT staff will have a holiday Friday Skeleton crew s w orking Friday will be able to take com­ pensatory time off later. World & Nation Protests mark King s assassination anniversary - A m ericans m arked the 17th anniversary of the assasst nation of Martin Luther King Jr Thursday with protest*; i against South African racial policies highlighted by m ass rally outside the South African Em bassy in W ash­ ington. D istrict of C olum bia governm ent w orkers left their of­ fices in droves for a m idday rally led by Mayer Mar on Barry along the capital's Em bassy Bow near he South African diplom atic compound. M arches and protests were staged in various )ther cities including M em phis Term , w here the civil-rights leader was shot to death April 4 1968 as he stood on a Page 4 motel balcony W eather Index What a day — The forecast f from Nicaragua and a return to the demo­ cratic goals originally spelled out in the nation's revolution foreign elements Reagan asked tora cease-fire until June 1 ti allow his peace plan to take effect, requesting that both odes to pro­ lay down then arms tect the s e c u r it y <4 our own bor­ ders Reagan, noting the approaching Easter holiday md calling it a sea­ asked that the steps son of peace be taken to allow liberty and lie mocrai > to prevail 'The communists have turned the cold shoulder to national recon­ Reagan said of attempts ciliation now to bring the two sides together. He added: W e know that without incentives none of that w ill change " Reagan has likened the Contras to America's founding fathers, saving they are fighting tor another Demo- eratic foothold in Central America. C ritics eontend thev comprise most­ ly followers of Anastasio Somoza, longtime dictator of Nicaragua over­ thrown by the Sandinistas in 1979. Asked about a possible American invasion >4 Nicaragua Reagan said t s never been our intention" that to take militare action against Nicar­ agua W e 'v e repeated that over and over again." Asked whether he was ready to bring the troops home from H on d u ­ ra-. who ire conducting continuous maneuvers Reagan said thev are ¡n occupying force but are iot training to sen e anywhere. Urging C o n g r e s s to free up the Contra aid Reagan warned If the pro-Marxist government succeeds igainst nited States could tace i communist threat at its :'order and we tace the risk of a human tidal wave of refugees." In* rebels \sked ibcnit the incentives for to enter t a lk s , the the Sandinistas Reagan replied: bloodshed that is going on To end i ven it ( ongress does not ap­ prove the funds Reagan vowed: W e're not going to quit and walk i w av tom them (Contras) no matter what happens \s a condition for issistance to the* rebels Congress last fall re­ quired Reagan to submit a report af­ ter Feb. 28. Reagan sent that report to C o n ­ g r e s s late W ednesday Editorials Page 2/The Daily Texan'Friday April 5 1985 Viewpoint Get out and vote P art of the fun of elections is w a tc h in g c a n d i­ dates trv to say n ew thing s a b o u t old issues try to create n e w issues a n d s o m e tim e - becom e issues th e m selv e s. But elections are m ore th an that Y our vo te in this y e a r's City Council race will give you a say in how' A ustin s h o u ld deal w ith g ro w th an d h o w to k eep the citv from becom in g A u stop olis N o t th a t g ro w th is all bad It's kind of fun disc o v e r­ in g s tra n g e n e w areas of the city an d try in g to figure o u t w h y they w e r e n 't there v e ste rda v But that - w h e r e the fun e n d s, a n d you still h a v e to w o rry ab o u t traffic, utility service, tfv e n v ir o n m e n t a n d d e v e lo p e rs vs. n e ig h b o rh o o d s . O n m a n y issues, the c a n d id a te s in this y e a r's race s o u n d alike, stressing the n e e d to give d e v e lo p e rs roo m to w ork while p ro te c tin g the n e i g h b o r h o o d s a n d c o m in g o u t in favor of -trict e n v ir o n m e n ta l c ontrols on n e w c o n stru c tio n projects And most c a n d id a te s give so u n d -alik e a n s w e r s on U niv ersity issues, ag re e in g that th e city sh o u ld try to limit the U niversity - e x p a n ­ sion in to East A u stin a n d that s tu d e n ts n eed afford able h o u s in g that d o e s n 't collapse too easily. But th e re is a difference in the w a v the c a n d id a te - d iscuss these issues. E v ery o n e talks a good gam e, but only a few reallv have their h e a r t s in it. T h a t ' s the p ro b le m w ith politics — y o u Can't define w h a t m ak es a good c a n d id a te , bu t you k n o w one w'hen y o u see one. Still, it isn't too h a r d to list a few p rere q u isite s. A good c a n d id a te m u st realize th a t g ro w th has bec o m e a w av of life in A u stin, but letting th e city g ro w as if will isn't go in g to help a n y o n e . The d e v e lo p m e n t c o m m u n ity usually d o e s n 't give m u c h th o u g h t to the e n v ir o n m e n t o r the n e e d s of thi n e ig h b o r h o o d s w h e n it starts p la n n in g new' projects. Thi- is w h e r e the City C ou ncil c o m e s in, a n d a n y o n e w h o e ith e r leads or serves on the council m u s t be able to do m o re than say th ey are p r o - n e ig h b o r h o o d or p ro e n v iro n m e n t. They m u s t be p r e p a r e d to s te p in to p r e s e rv e the e n v i­ r o n m e n t a n d the n e ig h b o r h o o d s , a n d th e y m u st have a w orkable plan to go by. Every c a n d id a te realizes W illiam son Creek isn't s u p ­ p o se d to h av e raw s e w a g e in it, but a good c a n d id a te s h o u l d n 't just pay lip service to the issue. A good c a n ­ d id a te m u s t be re a d y to tackle the city's se w a g e tr e a t­ m e n t p ro b le m s w'ith all sp e e d . A lth o u g h th e O n io n C re e k se w a g e plant, w h ic h will relieve the W illiam son C reek plant, sh o u ld be ready by mid-1985, o th e r p la n ts are filling up. T h e p ro b lem s with the c i t y ’s s e w ­ age p la n ts n e e d atte n tio n , a n d th e y 'r e going to n e e d a tte n tio n for a long time. A nd , of c o u rse , a g ood c a n d id a te m u st p a y a tt e n ­ tion to U T s tu d e n ts . This m e a n s m o re than saving the right th in g s w l\en a s k e d a b o u t the n e e d for affordable s t u d e n t h o u s in g an d e x p a n d e d public tra n sp o rta tio n . S t u d e n t s m u s t k n o w that the c a n d id a te will listen to their c o m p la in ts a n d will trv to help a n d will c o n ­ tin u e to d o so after th e election. T he D aily Texan has endorsed the* c a n d id a te s w h o a p p e a r to be m o st c o m m itte d to solving the p ro blem s th ey see facing o u r city. These are also the people w h o are m o st likely to r e m e m b e r th e s tu d e n ts ’MAYOR 0 Frank Cooksey PLACE 1 [7] Mark Rose PLACE 2 [7J Smoot Carl-Mitchell PLACE 3 [7] Sally Shipman PLACE 4 [7] George Humphrey PLACE 5 0 John Trevino PLACE 6 0 Larry Jackson In a d d itio n , the Texan s u p p o r t s b o th p ro p o s itio n s on th e city election ballot. P ro p o sitio n O n e w o u ld e a r ­ m ark $54 million in b o n d s "fo r u p g ra d in g th e quality of th e d isch a rg es from the city's s e w e r tre a tm e n t p la n ts ." Prop osition T w o w o u ld set aside I 30 acres of land in W alter E. L o n g Park in East A ustin a s the new site o f the A ustin A q ua Festival. B o t h m e a su re s will help im p ro v e life in o u r city, a n d you can't ask for m u c h m ore th a n th at But no m a tte r w h a t c o m e s of the election, the city isn't g o in g to p a y m u c h a tte n tio n to s tu d e n ts it w e d o n 't vote. With th e rally o n the Capitol this week, p e o p le realized that w h e n politicians sto p listening to us, w e m ake them listen. L et's give th e m a reason to k ee p lis te n in g . Vote in S a tu r d a y 's election. D a v id N a t h e r Doonesbury DEAN HONEY TELLS ME YOU'RE GIVING THE COL- 1 LEGE AN AIR I STRIP BRENNER o í m Fs r m t . 600 YARPS. YOU WANT A JOB OUT THERE, I ? . by Garry Trudeau a jo b7 eee, I PONT KNOW ■ TMKJNPOF Devow v MYOTUPiee.. I PAY * 75,000A NIGHT FOR 0FFL0AP/NG CARGO. \ t HEY, FAIT A YEAH, BUT MINUTE. THIS ITS TOO LATE. 2 * ISNT ILLEGAL, I JUST GOT % YOU ON TAPE. A - IS IT 7 Seventies was progressive coun try music, then the art form of the early Eighties m ust be homebuilding. Where else do developer- sign their work: Isn't it time vou owned a Bill Milbum?" For obvious reason-, development has become the focus of political dis­ course in the city for several years. And, in a political season, it becomes im portant to ask just how well pre­ pared the city governm ent is to deal with these problems Each of these genuinely concerned individuals vol­ unteers to grapple part-time with problems ranging from the* adminis­ tration of the city hospital to rezoning not to mention cases to w astewater finding out why the garbageman hasn't arrived To do this, the council m em bers are given cme aide It's hard to see w hv anyone would want the job. Yet there are people w ho do Five incum bents and 23 op ponents, am ong them four students. A full-scale cam­ paign (few of them are) can cost more than $200,000, and there are the seem ­ ingly endless candidate forums, each loaded with controversial questions designed to provoke a strong answ er which could prove explosive at the next stop. More often than ever, close electoral decisions arc’ made by the people the boom brought, especially in N o rth ­ west Austin. The airport w asn't moved because the N orthw est found Firing Line Define life, Mr. Price ! have patiently answ ered the qu es­ tions again and again, but the con­ stant inquisition has forced me to re­ evaluate my life goals It seemed that the more 1 heard myself saying, "Law school, then m ucho buckos, pal," the more I realized the em ptiness of my aspirations. After all, I'm still going to have about 40 or 50 years after the "m ucho buckos" stage to kill. My point is that Price is pointing his finger at the wrong people. The doc­ tors inside the abortion clinics should be on the receiving end of Price's criti ( ism, since thev are the perpetrators of the w anton acts of dissection on the unborn. if not Later in this article, Price states that "doctors, as a rule, refuse to perform late term abortions " If this is the case, just w ho is performing late-term abor­ tions, the doctors (late-term abortions are performed as a routine here in this country legally)? H ow ev­ er, I will allow Price some latitude by assuming he meant that most doctors refuse to perform late term abortions and, I add, for a very good reason. The very fetus that all efforts are focused on to destroy may actually still be living at the end of the abortion attempt. And what occurs then, much to the chagrin of the abortion staff, i- that all efforts must be reversed in or- dei to save the same life they, only seconds before, were trying to d e ­ stroy. Thus, it is only in this perverted system in which a failure of a doctor is translated into the preservation of a life. In the concluding paragraph, Price, almost apologetically, says that "abor­ tion is bad" because of the notion that " th e fetus has a least some h u m a n i­ ty." Yet w hen does "total hum anity" occur? Perhaps w h en the baby aquires nourishment from a bottle instead of from an umbilical cord? O r maybe, with Price's implied arbitrary defini­ tion of a hum an life, we can extend the acquisition of "total hum anity" past the tune of birth, in which case an argum ent for infanticide can be made. So while Price relies on convenient­ ly vague definitions of life, the a d ­ vances in medical technology are in­ creasingly becom ing the pro-life m ovem ent's ally. The pro-abortionist group refuses to define life in any medical-scientific terms out of fear technology may make that medical them abide by their own words. Rather, they rely on the return to a medieval definition of life, birth, which was adopted then simply out of lack of knowledge concerning the pregnancy. Surely in the 20th century we d on 't have to rely on a concept that was based on medical ignorance. Peter Tirinnanzi Liberal arts graduate Apathy helps racism 1 am writing this letter in response to the letter written by C hris Abbott, entitled "Racism is Reality" (Texan, March 28). Mr. Abbott, you say racism is a real­ ity. It is clear that nothing gets past vou. For years I have been thinking racism is a giant hoax. I'm really glad you have straightened that up for me. N ow let me straighten you up. First of all, I would like to express my deepest gratitude that you were not in charge of the freeing of slaves in America in the 1800s. Let's face it, Mr. O pinions ex pressed in The Daity Texain are t b o s n of the editor or the author of the article and are not necessarily those of the U niversity adm inistration the Board of R eg ents or the T e x a s S tudent Publications B oard of O p eratin g Trustees Northwest Austin factor key to election If the Austin art form of the late but the La Mansion toast whi< h pro­ duced $140,000 funds brought with it a lot of negative pub licity. Nick Dauster Texan Columnist in Martinez like it convenient; single-member d istra t- the N orthw est was failed because These wt re afraid of "w ard politics the people w h o chose Bob Ru hardson over Russ Tidwell. The N orth w est should be the m ay­ or's strength. Perhaps no race will ever mirror the division between old and new Austin as well as the one b e­ tw een business-like Ron Mullen and the f rank laid-back, almost folksy C ooksey, especially if one adds the ir repressible Max Nofziger the e q u a tio n . The e t h i c s charges actually could help the mayor if a si/able group of voters decide- that they em anated from the Cooksey campaign, which thev haven't The other is w h e th e r a built-up anger at the incum ­ bent's failure to manage growth will hurt him. imponderable c o n tin u e d the race into in Mark Rose, in Place 1, is the q u in ­ tessential N orth w est candidate he lives there and got the Northw est a gro\vth m anagem ent plan. And Place 3's Sally Shipm an is invulnerable be­ cause of her t i r e l e s s constituent ser vice. But the N orthw est probably will make itself felt in Place 5, where John Trevino won more than 80 percent of the vote two years ago. This time Tre­ vino faces David Elliott, a pleasant man w ho offers the Northwest fiscal responsiblitv (he has said he will serve w ithout salary) and has gotten s u p ­ port from unlikely places, the Travis County Democratic Women, who are generally fed up with the council. Trevino will win, but Elliott h a s made him work harder than last time out. Place 6 is headed for a runoff be­ tw een incumbent Charles Urdy and Terry Davis, w ho lost to Urdy by 292 votes two vears ago. In that race, Dav­ is' strength was the N orthw est, while Urdv led in East Austin by a two-to- one margin Now there are more Northwest votes than ever, and Urdy also has o p po nents from his home turf - l.arrv Jackson a n d Ron Davis, not to mention stud ent Alfred Molison. the Jackson was I rdy's first-term a p ­ pointm ent to the Planning Comm is­ sion but is now feuding with the in­ cumbent. O n e of interesting things about the election will be to see just how far Ron Davis can go as a shoestring candidate with no media but energy a nd style, which has won him a couple of en dorsem ents, includ­ ing that of the Sierra Club. But the real race will be in the runoff, to see if East Austin still will have a say in w ho wins Place 6. George H u m p h re y lost to incum­ bent Mark Spaeth tw o years ago and was gearing up for a rematch w hen Spaeth withdrew. Gilbert Martinez, a charming gentlem an w ho made the developers happy as chairman of the planning commission, was drafted, The N orthw est leans to Martinez, but he hasn't been able to unify the Hispanics (although there are some neighborhood people w ho support him because they d on't trust H u m ­ phrey). Nevertheless, students Aaron Kluth and Michael Casas probably will not win e nough votes to keep Hum phrey, w h o still has a lead in name identification, from an outright win. The most interesting race, and the race with the clearest runoff situation, is Place 2. The people with the best chances to make the runoff are Shyra Darr, a former Mullen aide w ho has a long resum e in politics, and Smoot Carl-Mitchell, w ho has worked hard on environmental issues and has been president of the Austin Neighborhods Council. Darr has tried to play up her image as som eone w h o has worked with city g overnm ent and, having been a Re­ publican w ho managed Garry Mau- ro's campaign, as a coalition builder. She has tried to paint Carl-Mitchell as a one-issue candidate, but the image of a professional politician can easily backfire. The Kent TIance of the race is John Cutright, w h o has avoided the forums and is expecting his high visi­ bility in opposing the airport move to m ove him up. Most of his votes will come from Darr. D auster is a graduate student. MAY8E, IF WE FEED IT M O R E , I T I l GO AWAY. Abbott, Abraham Lincoln you're not. You obviously feel that injustices peo­ ple face today are ac knowledgeable, but not important for one such as yourself to get his "clothes dirty" in the fight for equality for all (wouldn t w ant to ruffle your Polo now, would you, Mr. Abbott?) Was it not so long ago that your (Furopean) ancestor^ were faced with increasing injustices and the violation of their ow n civil liberties? What do you suppose might have happened if your ancestors had not found people w h o sympathized with their predica­ ment, and had the guts to do some­ thing about it? One might suspect that you might not be here today, sending all of your brilliant realizations into the Daily Texan. Mr. Abbott, you say you do not a d ­ vocate racism, but your abstinence on the extraction of it from our society (and the world) says to the contrary Today women, blacks, Hispanics, Asi­ ans, and a host of others feel the cold winds of prejudice and discrimina­ tion. In short, it is not nearly enough that you acknowledge the fact that racism exists, but vou must also ac­ knowledge the fact that racism will continue to exist until the attitudes of others change first. Until you realize this fact, Mr. Abbott, I can think of nothing more repulsive than your a p ­ athy concerning the hum an r i g h t s of others. Bobby Hilliard Liberal arts/Pre-M ed Speaking of waste... Dear Sen. Gramm: Congratulations for having the courage to stand up to the military- industrial complex. I am overjoyed that you are promising to crack dow n on waste in Pentagon contracts. This is an action long overdue You have my full support on this measure While on the topic of military waste, I would like to express my sentiments the MX program Someone has on sold us a white elephant! This pro­ gram does not enhance our securitv It is not a "peacekeeper," it is a machine of war. In the words of Albert Ein­ stein, "w e cannot prepare for war and peace at the same time." If you are sincere about eliminating military waste, you will stop the MX now. O n another score, I am very d is­ tressed to hear about the military m u s­ cle-flexing that our country is doing in Honduras. This is blatant intimidation of the Sandinistas W hy cannot our decision-makers understand elem en­ tary diplomacy? The best way to get the Nicaraguans to cooperate with us is to befriend them, and the surest way to get them to befriend the Sovi­ ets is to intimidate them. O ur military policy of harassment and terrorism of the Nicaraguan peo­ ple is forcing them to seek refuge and aid from forces which are already hos­ tile to the U.S. I strongly condem n the military exercises in Honduras, or anyw here outside our national bor­ ders. This is a blatant scare tactic, and an unconscionable waste of taxpayer's money. My lifetime goals: a modest proposal Indulge me, please. Scott Durfee Texan Columnist I am about to graduate. With this elevation to a higher academ­ ic plane comes a corresponding in­ the nu m ber of questions crease in about my like, "W hat are you going to do with your degree?" "H o w much does that pay?” and "Isn't the market for Elvis imper­ sonators already in a glut?" future. Q uestions I have patiently answ ered the ques­ tions again and again, bu t the con­ stant inquisition has forced me to re­ evaluate my life goals. It seemed that the more I heard myself saying, "Law school, then m ucho buckos, pal," the more 1 realized the em ptiness of my aspirations. After all, I'm still going to have about 40 or 50 years after the "m ucho buckos" stage to kill. Careful thought w ent into my anal­ ysis. I had to set a definite schedule of priorities Taking my salam ander-han­ dling evangelical revival show on the road for a year or two after g radu a­ tion, for example, would mean that I w ou ld n't have time to edit my shock­ ing docum entary about what really goes into Cool Whip Non-Dairy W hipped Topping. So 1 m ade some hard choices and came up with the following list of things that I would have to do before 1 could ^ay, "M y life w as good. ■ I would have to move to Des Moines and farm me a stretch o' land, as the natives say. I would probably grow lettuce. to ■ I would have to star in a semi- autobiographical one-m an musical on Broadway — maybe called "Dancin' Fool." It would be about this guy named "Scott" w ho goes this school called "The University" and is a writer He ends up stealing Christie Brinkley from Billy Joel, wins a Pul­ itzer Prize for his series of shocking n ew spaper stories on the composition of Cool Whip, and saves the world from the threat ot nuclear destruction by eating the entire world's supply of plutonium. Remember — semi-autobiographi- ■ I would have to make the cover of Llarper's magazine as the subject of a story entitled, "Scott A. Durfee — So­ cial Phenom enon or Just the Fonzie of the Eighties?" ■ I would have to spend about eight hours jamming with old Chicago bluesm en with names like "M udface" and "Freight-Train" and "Ed ' We'd like "M annish Bov" and do tunes "Rockin' Chair" and "I'm a Blues Igu­ a n a ." Then w e'd look hard into the audience and make them kn o w that we m eant w hat we sang. And then w e'd sing some more. ■ I would have to invent a new hairstyle and then form a new-wave band to show it off. ■ I would have to establish an or­ ganization called Americans for De­ cency, build it into an organization with three million self-righteous m e m ­ bers, and then get caught in a hotel room with a case of quick-set gelatin, a p ou nd of feathers, a pair of edible loafers, and Vanity. O n second thought, scratch the first part. It'd take too long to get to the second part. ■ I would have to climb Mount Everest, turn to my caddy and ask tor my driver, and hit a bucket of balls into the Himalayas, marvelling at the gran d e u r ot the golt ball in flight, alone in space, rising, nsing, then fall­ ing, falling, bouncing with crazy an ­ gularity off the threatening crags, fi­ an nally Abominable Snow m an in the groin an d making him very unhappy. And upset. h a v in g hit s t o p p i n g , ■ Finally, I would have to go to a baseball game with mv son, 11 years old by then. I would turn to him and say, "You know what, son?" "W h a t's that, Pop?" he would re- plv. life." "It's been a good life, son. A good And he would say, "Does this have a nything to do with that plutonium in the car?"____________________________ Please ask yourself everv dav, "W hat am I doing to make life better for everyone on earth? Are mv deci­ sions hurting anyone?" cal. John Touchet Graduate, sociology ■ I would have to become vice pres­ ident of the United States. Durfee is a Plan II senior. SPANISH DANCE COMPANY 5 ¿DENTS HA V£ CREDIT 36,676 UT students hove a m ajor credit ccu-d 25,?44 have cards for autom ated teller machines. SOURCt UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS COLLiGE NEWSPAPER STUDY. BEIDCN ASSOCIATES. DALLAS APttL 19M endorsement response Aaron Kluth for Place 4 As a candidate for Place 4 on the Austin City C ouncil, 1 welcome this opportunity to declare and elabo­ rate my position in public forum. 1 hold that neighborhood protec­ tion is the most important issue of this campaign. In this, I have a per­ sonal interest because I have experi­ enced the disruption and disloca­ tion which attend irresponsible development, the very central fear of neighborhood organizations eve­ rywhere. f he block where once I lived in the immediate west campus area is now, in four short years, more than 80 percent rebuilt, all on stilts with ground floor parking. Our environment, which has suf- fered so much exploitation as the city grows, must now be regarded A a ro n K lu th in d o r s e m e n t Reply as a resource to be conserved. To me, this means the highest stand­ ards of sewage treatment, a clean river, and prompt attention to other problems of refuse control and waste disposal which may vet make Austin a poor neighbor to the sur­ rounding communities. Of great environmental impor­ tance but logically separate is public transportation, the very best alter­ native to the present chaos in our traffic system. Solutions like the tho­ much-discussed roughfare are expedient, at best, while displacing people in favor of East-West automobiles Another mid-town freeway holds little1 hope for pro serving the "ineffable small-town ambiance that has given Austin its personality," as the Texan endorse­ ment of George Humphrey put it. I favor accelerating the develop­ ment of light rail, more frequent, later city bus service, and develop ment of intercity rail to reduce* the demands upon Mueller Airport I ride public transportation six day- a week, every week, and am pre­ pared to represent its users to the City Council. Brackenridge Hospital, where ¡ was born, is a very special resource to the people of Austin. While* it is expensive to operate and intractable to manage, Brackenridge remains ill amone uv none ol fashion to the v timos t deserve ate me< approp owners Surely it is t focus these be tv city: a nuigh to show off; a ment whu h d< nature*; a trari bring us toget source for the* all. 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District of Columbia government workers left their offices in droves for a middav railv led by M ayor Marion Barry along the capital's Embassy Row near the South A fri­ can diplomatic compound. Marches and protects were staged in various other cities including Memphis, Tenn., where the civil r i g h t s leader was shot to death April 4, 1968 as he stood on a motel balco- ny. An estimated 4,(XX) people turned out for the city-sanctioned demon­ stration in W ashington, making it the largest rally outside the embassy since the nearly daily anti-apartheid protests began there Thanksgiving Eve. Police said they arrested 58 dem­ onstrators for protesting within 500 feet of the embassy as they walked a picket line carrying signs and chant­ ing, "Freedom yes apartheid no Barrv, w ho marched with King during civil right-' protests of the 1960s, designated Thursday as " D .C Governm ent Employee- Day against A p artheid ." " O n April 4, 1968, we received the news that Dr. Martin Luther King had been assassinated. Mere we are 17 years later, still carrying on the fight of freedom and democ­ racy here and abroad," Barry said at the protest. More than 1,700 demonstrators have been arrested at Washington embassy protests against South A f­ rica's apartheid segregationist sys­ tem. King was an outspoken critic of South Africa's white-minoritv rule and urged an international econom­ ic boycott of that nation 20 years ago " A medieval segregation is orga­ nized with 20th century efficiency and d riv e ," King said in 1965. "The dignity of human personality is de­ filed, and world opinion is arrogant­ ly defiled." In Mew York, 200 Columbia U n i­ versity students — some on a 10- day hunger strike protesting the school's South African investments — chained the door to an adm inis­ trative building and formed a human blockade outside. " W e are demanding that the C ol­ umbia U niversity Board of Trustees immediately issue an explicit policy to divest all South African-related holdings," said Adrian I.unn, a C ol­ umbia student. In Memphis, marchers retraced King's steps the C layborn from Temple to the Lorraine Motel where he was killed. 58 demonstrators were arrested for protesting within 500 feet of the South African Embassy Thursday. United Press International Budget agreement halves military spending boost U nited Press International W A S H IN G T O N — Senate Re­ publicans and W hite House aides agreed 1 hursday on a budget that cuts President Reagan's requested militare in half, spending boost curbs Social Security increases and uits S'2 billion off the projected def­ icit. The pact, which w ill face a tough fight on the Senate floor, forced Reagan s hand on h o two most con­ t e n t i o u s issues. He wanted a 6 per­ cent raise for the Pentagon next year; the accord a l l o w s a 3 percent increase. Reagan, citing a campaign pledge, had refused to tout h Social Security payments; the agreement limits next year's scheduled cost-of- living increase to a 2 percent hike. The budget agreement, as out­ lined by Senate G O P leaders, would freeze the salaries of federal em­ ployees, terminate many popular government programs like Amtrak, the Small Business Administration and federal revenue sharing, but preserve student loans and child nutrition programs. The agreement will not satisfy many Senate Republicans, to say nothing of the Democrats in both the House and Senate who have not been involved in n e g o t i a t o n s with the W hite House. But it does hit the w idely stated goal of bringing the current estimated deficit of $230 bil­ lion to $100 billion in three years. " 1 his is going to be the most diffi­ cult imaginable proposition to win in the Senate," said budget director David Stockman, "so we're going to worry about that right now and move on to the House later "satisfied Stockman said the Defense D e­ them selves" partment that they could live with the 3 per­ cent increase in funding next fiscal year, prompting Reagan to accept the lesser amount W hite House chief of staff Donald Regan said the Social Security com­ promise guarantees recipients some raise, but Rep. Claude Pepper, D- Fla., Congress's staunchest defend­ er of the elderly, accused the presi­ dent of reneging on his campaign promise not to tamper with the pro­ gram. Senate Republican leader Robert Dole of Kansas said "there is still a long w ay to go" on the budget. "Needless to say there will be areas of disagreement' when the budget comes up in the Senate, he said. The goal of the negotiations was to cut $50 to $60 billion off the esti­ mated $230 b illion deficit in Reagan's $979.7 billion 1986 spend­ ing plan. The GOP-controlled Sen­ ate Budget Committee approved a spending plan that aides say trims $57 billion in fiscal 1986. U nder the pact, the Pentagon would be allowed a 3 percent hike over the rate of inflation next fiscal year, cutting $18.5 billion off Reagan s $313.7 billion request. The 3 percent rise hits a mid-point be­ tween Reagan's request and the Budget Committee's decision only to match the level of inflation. Japan, U.S. discuss trade dispute In m em oriam U nited Press International sions. W A S H IN G T O N — The leader of a House trade panel met Thursday with a special Japanese envoy to try to defuse the rising U.S.-Japan trade dispute and Treasury Secretary James Baker warned protectionist measures would all-out trade w a r" the United Mates might not win lead to Reishi Teshima, Japan's deputy foreign minister for economic af­ fairs, was dispatched to W ashing­ ton by Prim e M inister Yasuhiro Na- kasone t<> explain the Japanese sale and seek to defuse pressure in C o n ­ legislation restrictive g r e s s against Japanese goods for Teshima declined to talk with re­ p o r t e r s following a 45-minute meet­ ing with Rep. Don Bonker, 13- W a s h , chairman of the House Demoi ratic Trade Task Force. Bonk­ er s a i d Teshirtta was trying to a s s e s s the "politu al clim ate" in Congress, and did not offer any trade conces­ Earlier during a stopover at K en ­ nedy International Airport in N ew York, Teshima said, "T h e climate is hot. I hope to explain our position and what we have already accom­ plished. The situation is very bad It shouldn't be like this W< must have a better understanding The U nited States is pressing Ja pan to make its markets as open to Am erican goods as thi- country is t( > Japanese products Current negotia tions center on telecommunications, other electronic goods, forest prod­ ucts and medical supplies Sens. John Danforth, R-M o., Lloyd Bentsen, D-Texas and I rank Lautenberg, D-N I . said they were to drafting open up the telecommunications markets in Japan and other foreign countries to U .S. goods legislation designed Under the bill, the U .S trade rep­ resentative would be required to move to restore the "balance of with Competitive opportunities' countries with which the U.S. has telei ommunications agreements. Ja ­ pan is currently the only one. The representative would be required to raise duties and restrict the approv­ al of i m p o r t s in order to achieve that balance. For other countries, the bill would give the president the authority for three years to enter into telecom­ munications trade agreements. A f­ ter two y e a r s , the president would be required to correct trade imbal­ ances bv restricting imports from countries with which no agree­ ments have been reached. Lea d er H ouse M a jo rity Jim W right of Texas said he has no plans at the moment to move for­ ward in the H ouse w ith a bill that has passed the Senate Finance C om ­ mittee directing the president to re­ strict imports from Japan unless it grants U .S. products greater access to its markets South African army to join police J O H A N N E S B U R G , South Africa — South Africa's army and railway join regular police to police will comba t that hiis claimed more than 270 lives in 13 months, a government minister said Thursday. racial violence Previously, soldiers were de­ ployed in a support role inside black townships in the riot-stricken East* ern Cape province and near Johan­ nesburg. " It is emphasized that the author­ ity of the state will be m aintained," said Adrian Vlok, deputy minister of defense and of law and order. "Radicals using revolutionary prac­ t i c e s of intimidation and even m ur­ der ... will, under all circumstances, be combatted " Vlok's announcement followed President Pieter W Botha's state­ ment to Parliament last month that he had given "instructions for ap­ propriate measures to restore and maintain law and order According to the government, 28 blacks associated with moderate black town councils have been killed this year, and at least 41 blacks have died in unrest over the past two weeks Vlok said the South African De­ fense Force, railw ay police and reg­ ular police would "combine in order that law and order can be restored and to maintain internal safety "T h e South African Defense Force and the South African Rail­ ways Police will be used to support t h e South African Police in incidents such as roadblocks, cordons, pro­ tection and escort d u t i e s and in s u c h other situations as circum­ stances may dem and," he said. The unrest continued W ednesday night and early Thursday, with black policemen, schools and local council officials the main targets of rampaging mobs of blacks, police s a i d . At Kirkwood, near Port Elizabeth, the homes of five black policemen were torched, and a warehouse was heavily damaged by fire, police said. News in Brief From Texan news services Iran denies torture despite claims L O N D O N Iran repeatedly denies it tortures politi­ cal opponents despite well-documented evidence to the the Amnesty International human rights contrary, group said Thursday. The Nobel Prize-winning organization urged Iranian officials to look into allegations of torture in their coun­ try, saying such an investigation was long overdue. Am nesty h a s been refused access to Iran since the country's 1979 revolution brought Ayatollah Ruhollah Khom eini to power and toppled the government of the late Shah M oham m ed Reza Pahlavi A 1980 investigation ordered bv Khomeini said most people w h o claimed they were tortured actually suf­ fered injuries in street riots It also Sr3id some of the injuries were the result of ner. punishm ent inflicted "according to Islamic law But A m nesty said human rights violations in Iran include executions, beatings, sexual abuse and psycho­ logical abuse in the forms of preventing v i s i t s to prison inmates by relatives and threats of executions without trial Inmates fast to feed Africans M IA M I — About 1,300 inmates of the Dade County jail, hoping to start a nationw ide trend, skipped meals Thursday and agreed to donate the money to help the starving people of Africa. At 62 cents a meal, jail officials figured the project w ould raise at least $2.400. They said employees of the criminal justice system were expected to donate more money. Jail officials said every $20 could buy 100 pounds of cereal, enough to feed 400 people for one day or 80 people for a week in Ethiopia. Russ Buckhalt, director of social services for the cor­ rectional system, said 1,297 inmates in various facilities around the county skipped breakfast, "and from the reports I'm getting there were more at lunch.' Buckhalt said the fast would continue through din­ Letter describes neo-Nazi group R O A N O K E , Va — Neo-Nazi leader David Lane, suspected of counterfeiting and an armored car rob­ b er,, was ea rn in g a handwritten letter describing a white supremacy group -, plans to raise the sword against" the federal government, officials said Thurs "T h e y (Iran) repeatedly deny allegations of human- day rightsabuse," an A m nesty spokesman said. Lane, arrested Saturday in v\ inston-Salem, N .C ., Coretta Scott King, wife of the late Rev. Dr. Martin day to place a wreath at King s tomb King was Luther King Jr., is joined by family members Thurs- assassinated on the fourth of April, 17 years ago. United Press International and being held without bond, is scheduled to appear before a federal magistrate Friday. The document attached to a search warrant unsealed in U.S. District Court in Roanoke W ednesday details the philosophy of Lane''- group k n o w n a s Bruders Schweigen or The Order. The document refers to the U.S. government as the Z O G — Zionist Occupation Government " W e have decided to raise the sword against Z O G , knowing full well the consequences and that perhaps we seal our own fate," it said Camarería murder suspect caught W A S H IN G T O N — Attorney General Edw in Meese said the man arrested in Costa Rica Thursday for the killing of a U.S. drug agent in Mexico may be extradited to the United States. Meese also said if Caro Quintero is returned to Mexi­ co, he feels assured of the commitment of Mexico to press charges. John Lawn, head of the Drug Enforcement Adm inis­ tration, said at the news conference that L S. agents plaved a significant roie in tracking down Caro Q u in ­ tero. Meese said his department will review whether to extradite Rafael Caro Quintero, the accused master­ mind in the kidnap-murder of U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration agent Enrique Salazar C amarena. "W/e're dealing with one of th< major drug traffickers in the w o rld ," Meese said at a news conference. Fie said the United States has authority under U .S. law to extradite Caro Quintero. "T h is is something that w ill be re\ievved. Fie said that while Caro Quintero mav be charged in the United States, "there are no present charges at this time Scientist sentenced for espionage B O S T O N — An East Germ an scientist was sentenced Thursdac to eight years in prison and fined $5,000 for delivering U S defense secrets to East ( .erman agents in an espionage plot carried out in Mexico City and East Berlin. Alfred Zehe, 45, w ho changed his plea to guiltv Feb. 21, received the sentence in U.S. District Court from Judge David Nelson. He had faced a maximum sentence of lite imprison­ ment and a $40,(MX) fine Zehe, a physicist at the University of Dresden, was arrested Nov. 3, 1983, wriile attending a scientific con­ ference at the Sheraton Boston Hotel and was charged with eight counts of espionage. 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Co-op This Service is provided FREE o f CHARGE UNIVERSITY CO-OP 2246 Guadalupe Majoring in Service Since 1896 Free Parking 23rd & San Antonio maSTvfvOfa phone 476-7211 Imprisoned Peruvian rebels hold hostages for demands United Press International PIM A, Peru — About 400 sus­ pected guerrillas held in prison off the coast of Peru held eight govern­ ment officials hostage Thursday to demand better jail conditions, au­ thorities said The inmates on the El Fronton is­ land prison, all accused of member­ ship in the Maoist guerrilla group Shining Path, were armed with makeshift knives Wednesday when they captured their hostages hut did not threaten to kill them, judicial of­ ficials said. The inmates demanded drinking water, food and visiting rights They also wanted reporters present. In the past, r e la t iv e s of El Fronton inmates have complained the pris­ oners are abused by police who guard the facility. The hostages included a sub-di­ rector of the Peruvian Prisons Bu­ reau and the director of El Fronton. The rebellion began Wednesday when prison officials were inspect­ ing cells and ordered a search for weapons. The inmates turned on them and seized eight hostages. Prisons Bureau officials said no one was injured. A delegation from the Prisons Bu reau sailed to El Fronton Thursday to negotiate with the inmates Reporters were not allowed to travel to the island, 12 miles off the coast. El Fronton for decades held politi cal prisoners and had a history of torture. It was closed in the 1970s by the military government then in off­ ice but reopened in 1981 by Presi­ dent Fernando Belaunde Terry to hold suspected Shining Path mem­ bers. Gas leak prompts birth concerns United Press International N F W D ELH I, India — An Indian health group Thursday urged cou­ ples affected by the leak of lethal g a s from a Union Carbide plant last December to practice birth control until the effects of inhaling the gas become krrown. Medical researchers also said they had learned the leakage of methyl isocyanate in Bhopal last Dec 3 per­ manently damaged hemoglobin in the blood of many victims, leaving them short of breath. The researchers recommended widespread use of a controversial antidote to cyanide poisoning and accused Union Carbide of not pro­ viding information on the effects of the gas involved in the leak. Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi was quoted in the London-based Finan­ cial Times newspaper as saving Un­ ion Carbide is trying to disown its responsibilities. Between 2,000 to 2,500 people died from exposure to methyl iso­ cyanate gas released from Union Carbide's pesticide plant in Bhopal. Doctors of the Medico Friends Circle, a national volunteer group concerned with health, urged cou­ ples to use contraceptives to avoid giving birth to possiblv deformed babies. Dr. Usha Lutha told the Delhi Medical Association there has been no significant difference in the rate of birth defects among children of women who inhaled the gas while pregnant. But she said women in early preg- nancv when the leak occurred were at most risk. The author of the hemoglobin study, Dr. P.S. Narayanan, said he found “ permanent alteration of the hemoglobin" in the blood of many of the 200,000 victims of the ga*- leak. The hemoglobin damage com­ bined with damage to lung tissues to leave thousands of victims weak and breathless, he said. Hemoglobin carries oxygen from the lungs through the blood stream to the tissues of the body, and takes carbon dioxide from the tissues to the lungs. “ The damage to the hemoglobin was permanent, but the blood re­ itself periodically and we news don't know yet whether this dam­ age will piggyback on something and persist in the new blood cells or will simply break down and be elim­ inated," Narayanan told United Press International. Victims have filed l a w s u i t s total­ ing billions of dollars in the United States and India. The Indian gov­ ernment also h a s hired a Minneapo­ lis law firm to represent it in the United States and is discussing an out-of-court settlement with Union Carbide. Gandhi appeared pessimistic about settlement possibilities during his Financial Times interview. “ They are trying to get away by giving very small compensation and hiding behind legalities," he said. “ It is one of the biggest disasters in the world. There is no way we can accept the compensation that they have suggested, which is too low. “ The wav they are behaving post­ incident — the compensations they are talking about the whole thing doesn't behoove a company of that size," he said. k ' k ' k ' k ' k ' k + ' k ' k ' k ' k ' k ' k ' k ' k ' k ' k i r i t ' k ' k ' k i r ' k i r ' k ' k i r i t ' k ' k Bill Miller for Place 2 "I support the immediate removal of City of Austin funds from all banks that do business with South Africa." "I support stopping all further 2.5 million dollar weekly pay­ ments to H.L .¿P., because H.L.&P. substantially breached its promise in the nuke contract. W e should aggressively push all of our law suits and not settle for anything less than our invest­ ment of $585 million in future energy." "I support citizen involvement in Austin's City Government, especially citizen review boards of police actions including alleged police brutality and neighborhood zoning councils." "W astewater treatment must exceed state standards. The w a ­ ter we return to the Colorado River must be as clean as the water we took out...and, we must protect the Edwards Aquifer." ★ Independent of Developers Control If you're interested in helping with the campaign please stop by campaign headquarters at 1615 West 6th Street or call ★ Honest, Fair & Qualified 4 7 7 - 6 0 9 4 ★ Former legal Aid Attorney ★ Peace Corps Volunteer Wilier Qj t y C o u n c il Place 2 ★ Neighborhood Leader Pol. Ad. Pd. by Bill Miller Campaign, H.K Muse, Treos, 1801 Richmond Dr., Austin, Texas 78758. fiytp i feí y , ' 5 -PIECE OUTDOOR SET ON SALE, $129 Req $195 This pure white outdoor furniture is 100% weatherproof, so it will keep its good: looks PVC-coated steel chairs with contoured seat and back; 36" round terrazzo table; seat cushions and umbrellas available in assorted bright colors. Com e to Storehouse and take five for the great outdoors1 storehouse 2402 Highland Mall, 459-3161 (Mon.-Sat. 10-9) A u s t i n ^ J rlo o s lo i fJ x illc i . S W A N I \KF. Id»,-1 , • i ' Thespft trtt uldt rtñx"production h\ >m >>f \men< n i¿n tJtrsf S pm Puesduv \pril 9 Perform ing Yrts Center Convert H ail Public Si V SKL S'1 C P C tee h< >lders dc senior citizens 1 U>tTtop price! sales |>egm Fridas Pickets at the P \ ( E r v in Center, Paramount U t March 22; imblii sales bctiin'Pheatre and ¡Listing's ( Nortlu ross). Mondav Marih 2s (Barton ( .reek and i laneoek), Strahan ( oliscum (San Man os). Fiddler’s (ireen Reel enter (Fort Hood). Information, 4‘ 1-1444 I T T M TicketCenters: Joskc’s Highland). Sears ( barge a-Picket 477-6060. B hrttntn/ tkr I'M nm/ tit if* < unwit > mmt-- mmtlt' IV rfi> rm m « C o lle tt. «I i m e \ r - . T h e 1 m vcrsirv o f I c \ j t .it S ustin M A N AC -ucks crossed ruesdai lough reports said the soldiers were defi te Nicaraguan Foreign Ministry said into Honduras Salvadoran guerrillas say they killed 262 J n i t a r j p r a c q I n f p r n a t i n n a French Socialist resigns agricultural cabinet post M ge 6 " '" e Da y Texan Fr day Apr 5 ' 9 8 5 CORRECTION fhe Terry Davis campaign ad in The D aily Texan on run M arch 28, 1985 listed, in er­ ror, The Thurgood Marshall Legal Society as endorsing the campaign information This should not have appeared within the ad. The D aily Texan regrets this error. + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + ?velojrment, De- i. Carlo- Eugenio said 71 soldiers wo and a half »ns aimed at pre- from disrupting in the two and a half month- ot >e ration- to guarantee the national ection- our soldiers -uffered 71 -ath- and 126 wounded " he -aid. But the Noti-al report said that ■mce the start of the vear, our ' - - have killed 263 and wounded Ai-o during thi- period, we have rried out 43 ambu-he- and taken the fight 1 p ri- tner- of war in tainst Duarte s governm ent/' it mtinued Neither Notisal nor the govern­ a rebel casualty toll for or* United Press International U S I fistrict C ourt of Appeals. ton case S E A T t L E A return* rh.» « Shi* argued the justices, who took the case under submission after lis- ; the state of tening to 90 minutes of arguments, ed 'deliber- a based on should revertí* a controversial rul- irsday asked mg two years ago by t i S District urt judges to •ettmg 1983 ( ourt Judge jack Tanner. 1 anner, who said he based his de- ( ision on the C iv il Rights Act of He cited concluded nated jobs 20 percent less thi dominated positions than $400 million, shing 1964, ordered the state to pay back «ought wages and salary a d ju s tm e n ts to ounds an or- I S,(K)0 women employees il law der that could cost the state more for ‘s dorm Winn Newman, representing the American Federation of State, ( ounty and Municipal Employees, to uphold justices worth m dif- urged aerallv f he union has filed a similar suit ■quire •arable in California on behalf of about tmple, 100,000 former and current work- ihould ers. Other actions are pending in nelec- New York, Illinois and Hawaii. I anner s ruling the "W e have shown deliberate sex ompa segregation and deliberate wage r find discrimination. We show a pattern e told of the practice of discrim ination," m mt Newman said about the Washing­ But (iregoire criticized the study for using "unverified subjective” methods. She said the state's com parable worth study compared jobs that were different from each other such as artists and electricians. She also said that the state has "condemned" because of been Fanner's ruling rather than receiv­ ing praise for its early efforts to treat male and female employees equally. Newman said the state practiced discrimination bv specifying gender when it advertised open positions, prompting a rebuttal from Cregoire, who said that practice was stopped "long ago." that whatever l awyers for both sides have indi­ cated the appeals ju d g e s decide, the issue eventually the Supreme is Court. to reach likely Brazilian leader fights for his life Jnited Press Internationa SAO PAULO, Brazil P ■led I am redi > Nev<‘s, sed wreathing through a tube in • «million was "critical" and "very Brito said Neves, 7\ would re- nain «edated Thursday night after indergoing an emergent y two-hour urn "spreading through hi1 ibdo ind kidney functions remained s a t - stactory, but doctors detected fluid m ild up in his lungs and said he vas not uhle to breath normally. "O u r president-elect needs a little help from ( tod," Agriculture Minis­ ter Pedro Sirhon said at the hospital. Doctors at the intensive care unit said they detected two new infec­ tions and an infiltration of liquid in the lungs, although they had not detected pneumonia. B rito said the in fe c tio n s were near the point where Neves, 75, was op­ erated on three times for an in­ flamed colon, a blocked intestine and a hemorrhage. He underwent a fourth operation Tuesday to correct a 30-year-old hernia and remove a pus ball from his left groin. A hospital cardiologist who re­ quested anonymity said the situa­ tion was "extremely grave." "The infections have gone on too long and are too widespread and 1 think the government is afraid to tell the country how serious it is," he said. Earlier Thursday, unofficial re­ ports from the Sao Paulo C linical f lospital said doctors had identified eight different bacteri.il agents caus­ ing Neves' infection Doctors said it appeared the president-elect contracted the infection in the hos­ pital. that Brito said Neves had two bouts of fever during the night, with the sec­ ond pushing his temperature to 99 9 degrees and increasing his breath­ ing rate. In the first 24 hours after Neves' operation Tuesday he re­ mained free of fever, doctors said. Neves' first operation came just hours before his scheduled March 15 swearing-in as Brazil's first civil­ ian president after 21 years of mili tary rule. He was replaced «it the ceremonies by Vice President Jose Samey. Ray-fishing age 7 Iraq, Iran continue attacking civilians □ war- ■a11 41 rtillery •s and >mbat- irch sualties at J a figure, er Ayatol- vowed to ■ t egan i n c! h q t the bout and Ker- iraqi itored ir iqi attacl t snecib Under the late afternoon sun. two New Orleans boys dip their lines nto Lake Pontchartrain !o lure fishes out of their watery abode after *err peratures soared into the upper 70s U n ite d P r e s s I n t e r n , ic o n s ' save 2 5 % - 5 0 % a n d more! only! fridayand Saturday! 2 (Jays BIGGEST SALEIS THE SEASON FOR JUNIORS AND YOUNG THESIS SPECIALISTS V • Quality copies • Low prices • Fast service k inkers ¿200 Gu*ciaJup« 476-4654 2913 H edicai A r t* 476-32 42 Dance to the Latin l e m p o T H U R . FR I & S A T B 8 : 0 0 - 2:00 4 7 3 0 7 9 8 CAPITOL SADDLERY ADOl 4RTEKS s UN NGL DH Boot Sc Shoe Repcii WESTERN 1614 L A U C A 478 9309 S to p slr»oK\ng- * t •o p J k American Heart Association <• r ; ; i'ze c í r ; _ ' - t .. - juniors 6 . 9 9 shorts Reg. $10. 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Macintosh Disks ^ $31.39 MAC’TO TES 1200 Baud Modems ,$65 $270 disk drives, paper ribbons, etc M a c P r o d u c t s Wholesale Prices for Students 473-2604 472-4613 Military can affect Duarte’s success, professors state 5 6 ,0 7 9 s tu d e n ts , fa c u lty a n d s taff re a d The D a ily T e x a n a t le a s t once a w e e k . 3 9 ,2 6 8 re a d th e T e x a n e v e r y d a y . SO U R C E U N IV E R S IT Y O F T E X A S C O LLE G E N IW S P A R E R ST U D Y B f l D f N A S S O C IA T E S D A LLA S, A P R IL 1984 You are invited to watch the votes come in on Cable Channel 6 C ity C ouncil Election Saturday, A p ril 6 Beginning at 7 p.m. and continuing u ntil thn last vot^ is counted with commentators John O’Brien former TV and radio newsman new on 'he State C o m p tro lle r’s staff and Olin M urrell KL BJ Badio talk show host Continuous televised programming from the E lection Reporting Center in Palmer Auditorium Produced by the Public information Office/Cable Office of the City of Austin with the cooperation of Austin CableVision Austin Community Television and Austin Independent School District Discover Your O w n Special Place. W est University Place is a charming new community of 17 two-bedroom condominium homes located in the heart of the west campus area of Austin. A place were brass ceiling fans, tile-hearthed fireplaces and microwave ovens make life com­ fortable. And a landscaped swim ­ ming pool and Jacuzzi spa make life fun. It's a special place, for spcn ial people -like you. West University Place. From $130,000. Hism 29th Street at Pearl • 480-8484 • ’<27-9202 M ark eted b v McIntyre Associates By BRIAN EDWARDS Daily Texan Staff Salvadoran President Jose N ap o­ leon Duarte is claiming a recent election has given his moderate Christian Democratic Party a major­ ity in the country's 60-member leg­ islative assembly. But U T professors said W ednes­ day that El Salvador's military and "right-wing death squads" can af­ fect sharply the Christian Demo­ crats' efforts to im prove conditions in the country, which has suffered five years of civil war. H istory Professor Richard Sinkin said that "th e two big open ques­ tions about how effective (Duarte and his party) will be are the role of the military and the role of the death squads." Richard Adam s, anthropology professor, agreed. "T h e military is always poised to take over if things are going against their interests and there is no reason to think their allegiance to the right has shifted,' he said. But Adams said that the military's interests can be difficult to deter­ mine. " I think the military is split, he said. "T h e younger officers seem to support negotiations with the guerrillas, but the people running the military are against it." Senior military officers have re­ belled in the past. In 1983, Lt. C ol. Sigfrido Ochoa staged a six-day mu­ tiny. Ochoa was considered one of the most successful leaders in the w ar against the guerrillas and was frequently praised for his efforts by U .S. officials. the leftist guerrillas) "D uarte's main goal will be to strengthen the democratic process and to attempt to move negotiations (with for­ w ard ," Sinkin said. "B u t that means he will face increased opposition from the right wing, and traditional­ ly that means the death squad activ­ ities increase." The Catholic church's human rights organization has estimated that in 1981 more than 10,000 civil­ ians were killed in El Salvador The group claimed death squads were responsible for 132 of these deaths, with 3,780 people killed by uniden­ tified groups. Duarte has met with rebel leaders to negotiate an end to El Salvador's 5-year-old civil war, but Sinkin said that "there are people who don't want the negotiations to come to anything. "(Defeated presidential candidate is one of Roberto) d'Aubuisson those people," Sinkin said. D 'A u ­ buisson said recently that any fur­ ther attempts by Duarte to resume negotiations with the guerrillas would "com e to nothing." Sinkin said that d'Aubuisson's statement was politically motivated. D'Aubuisson has previously labeled the Christian Democrats "the right wing of the Com m unist Pa rty." Sinkin said the election was "a re­ ferendum on the policies of the par­ ty and provides a mandate for con­ tinued negotiations." But he said that one of Duarte's goals, reform­ ing policies on private land ow ner­ ship, can go no farther " I think they've done all they can " about land reform, Sinkin said. Adams said the military attacked peasants to stop D u a rte 's first at­ tempt at land reform, and that if he tries to reinstate reform measures "it might bring the military back in ." In 1982, a t t e m p t s by then-presi- dent Alvaro Magana to give formal land ownership to peasants were frozen by the national assembly, a move Duarte called a "direct attack on the poor." Adams said that Duarte would need "v e ry strong control" in the country if he tries to reinstate land reforms. El Salvador's "disastrous" eco­ nomic situation could also affect Duarte's presidency, Adam s said. "T h e y need desperately to get something under control in the rev­ olution, because it's decimating their production," he said. This year's election, the fourth in El Salvador since 1982, was not marred by the widespread violence that has disrupted past elections. In spite of pre-election sabotage cam­ paign by guerillas that kept thou­ sands from voting last Sunday, a re­ port issued by the official U .S. observer delegation at the election concluded gave a unanimous opin­ ion that the election was fair. In 1982, a full-scale offensive by the rebels on election dav killed more than 70 people and forced clo­ sure of the polls across the country. SALE FRIDAY AND SATURDAY TH E FALCON & THE SN O W M AN The Pat Metltt*ny Group G E O R G E T H O R O G O O D M A V E K K K NO UOCS GEAR JAMMER I DRINK A! ONE ~ V WILL IE ANO THf HAN0 JIVE TUBES Love Bomb ‘m*uhna Com* A i You Ar* » 9 y PWe* • O»» Qood • Love Bomb • A X THIS IS NOT AM ER IC A D A V ID B O W I E P A T M E T H E N Y G R O U P n : , i AM ERICA 5.99 5.99 MELBA MOORE Read My Lips l*i*urtng J My Up* * I C m ‘\ 9 *flnn*r 0< My ► • Wh*n You Lew* M * Uk* Thit • I C O # » 1 5.99 * |RU»g I’ rumt MAZE Can t Stop The Love Wfcirtno tack » « n o .. 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Today, talented mezzo- th e th e Metropolitan s o p r a n o w ith O p e r a is a m o n g six o u ts ta n d in g ex - s tu d e n ts to be n a m e d D istin­ g u ish e d A lum ni bv the Fx-Stu- d e n t s ' Association in its C e n te n n i­ al year. But Sm ith, w h o n o w goes by her m arried n a m e of C o n r a d , had a controversial college career. As a 17-year-old u n d e r g r a d u a te , C o n ­ rad 's long-tim e d r e a m c a m e true w h e n sh e w a s c h o s e n to s i n g the f e m a l e a n d in A e n e a s ," a UT M usic D ep a rtm en t prod u ctio n . " D i d o le a d th a n a m o n th But T exan s w e r e n 't p r e p a re d for to g e th e r on a black a n d w h ite stage. M ore into p ro d u c tio n , the d e a n of the De­ p a r tm e n t of Fine Arts, E.W. Doty, told h er th a t U niversity officials said th e y could n ot allow h e r to sing the part. I A w h ite girl w a s b r o u g h t in to replace C o n rad . Barbara Conrad guished alumna distin- A ocording to th e ad m in istra tio n , C o n r a d 's life w a s in d a n g e r. In a sta te m e n t to th e faculty on M ay 14, 1957, m a d e about a w ee k after the storv w as picked u p bv the m edia, UT P re sid en t Logan Wil­ son said, " W e w e re faced with the fact th a t in a ro m an tic opera to be p re s e n te d to Texas a u d ie n c e s, a w h ite boy a n d a N e g ro girl w o u ld play th e roles of h ero a n d h eroine lied tier tinan But tl C o n r a d recital vv, s t a nd in g lutside By GRACE LIM D aily Texan S taff Probably e v e r y o n e has h e a r d the "F inish u p y o u r sp in a c h D o n 't you k n o w th e re are sta rv in g c hildren in Africa?" a rg u m e n t. [ hen w e go th r o u g h life, eating sp inach a n d not k n o w in g w'hat the c o n s u m p tio n of s o m e vegetable h a s to d o w ith sta rv in g p eop le o r h o w it w o u ld help them . A g r o u p of UT s t u d e n ts has a m o re practical w ay of h e lp in g starv­ ing p e o p le in T hird W orld c o u n ­ tries The s tu d e n ts are w o rk in g on a project called "Village of H o p e . ” in foreign Robin S c h u lm a n , a g r a d u a te s tu ­ la n g u a g e stu dies d e n t an d "Village of H o p e " co m m ittee s p o k e s m a n , said th e project asks univ e rsity g r o u p s to s p o n s o r an e n ­ tire village in a foreign co un try. " O u r goal is to raise $30,000 for the 1985-1986 year, w hich will s u p ­ port a village w ith 140 c h ild re n ," S ch u lm a n said. "If each o rg a n iz a ­ tion on c a m p u s co n trib u tes $200 or $300, w e s h o u ld be able to raise that m o n e v . ‘Our goal is to raise $30,000 for the 1985- 1986 year, which will support a village with 140 children.’ — Robin Schulman, graduate student "T ex as A&M U niversity raised $25,000 last y ea r a n d sp o n s o r e d a village w ith 115 c h ild r e n ," she said. S c h u lm a n said th e m o n e y raised will m e e t the village's most u rg en t nee d s. " T h e m o n e y is for a n y th in g th e village n e e d s to raise its sta n ­ d a r d of living, w h e t h e r it is in the area of food, clothing, medical care or e duc atio n -he said Brean W aters, an English ju nior a n d a m e m b e r of th e "Village of H o p e " co m m ittee , sa id the p u r p o s e of th e project is to help less for­ tu n a te people. " W e w a n t to do s o m e th in g for s o m e b o d y w e c a n n o t see a n d will p ro b ab ly never see,' W aters said. as for t un a t e as w e are ' So m e b o d y w h o is Water*, said the proj ect is not i t e m p o r a n battle against pov a n d h un ger . " This is not a one-t deal w h e r e the peopl e arc only f h a few m o n t h s , " in* said "Th a c o m m it m e n t for a nurnbei year* At least until the'village be self-sufficient. Schulm m said the Fthii>pian sis d istu rb e d m a n v peopl e, es pe ly at C h r is tm a s time. "It fears i gu t s out w h e n you are eating a d in n e r, a n d television sh the p eo p le d v in g from starvation, -aid " Sure, it is horrifving to see tl Schu! s a n d s of children die, said " B u t w h at is reallv horrit is that t h o u s a n d s will live an d i into suft from m a ln u t r i t i o n w h i c h ca us e brain d a m a g e a d u l t h o o d hav i ng Sc h u l ma n said it is unlikely t chi ldren w oul d grow u p to be tors a n d o the r professionals. "I n i!n >urished a n d u n ed u c a t e d Iren w ill most likelv e n d u p t laborers a n d peas, unskilled Hiding S h e received a a m usic d e g r e e in 1959. in N e w tu d te d In 1981, sh e i w ith the M etro p o lita n later I u r o p e *il 21, 1984, sh e r e tu r n e d iversitv to play th e lead- tl e o p e ra "Al-Ink- in special o p e ra p u t on by 'art in African lecturer A m et an S tu d ies ed at h e r h o m e in N e w irad said sf ■1 w as »n ttie bout being n a m e d a dis- d a lu m n a , ,i p r o u d m o m e n t not n e , b u t for all th e o th e rs d a b out m e a n d th e Uni- It's far re a c h in g — a like th is ," C - m rad said [ is c u rre n tly d o in g "P o r- e s s " at the M e tropolitan he opera w a s w ritte n 50 uid is b ein g p e rf o rm e d ■s' tim e ‘his s e a so n at the iis is a vear of first* tor irad said I's contra ct w ith th e Met- Starts ( )et 7 a n d -he said d definitely be in Austin i to receive th e av ird ir d, -aid t he w ho l e village will mgh it s p o n s o r s h i p , nan said the project c onc en - t r o m t he i! Iren* "Bv e d u c a t i n g t h e ch i l - vou e n a b l e t h e m to be mem* >t society, rather t h a n b u r d e n s -oeiet'. " sh e said. ilman said the p r ima ry goal tor Village of H o p e " project is to l o r e peop l e involved " P e o p l e not tee! des p ai r bec aus e thev he y c ann ot hel p all t he peo- "If e ve r yo ne just ¡bufe*, a little, t he n all the c o p ­ i o u s will ad d u p s h e said • ' Village of Hop. dea c a me Robert Kellner, a Í exas A&M *-h pr op sor. Southc rn Meth Universe*, Texas l e c h a n d mbia I niversiti h a v e all star* aeir o w n Village of H o p e \ o n e w i s h i n g to i o n a t e money 'Village of H o p e s e n d i ninrt B o x 2 7 4 niiHf*,1 it to Group seeks sponsors for starving villages Attorney urges tenant caution with pre-leases By ROGER GRAPE D aily Texan S taff 'Tis the se aso n for pre-leasing. A p a r tm e n t com plexes, an d the in v e stm e n t c o m p a n ie s that o w n them , h a v e b e g u n their advertising a n d they are looking for stu d e n ts to pre-lease for the s u m m e r in d fall But before sig ning on the d otte d line, s tu d e n ts s h o u ld be aw a re of w h a t to look for in a pre-lease agree m ent. O n c e a s tu d e n t signs an ag re e m e n t, he is com m itted. the HI Mitchell S olo m on, stu d e n ts ' atto rney, s.fid every year his office deals w ith s t u d e n t s w h o have trouble with their a p a r tm e n t leases an d pre-leases. But m o st of trouble could the hav e bee n a v o id e d if the stu d e n ts had been m ore careful a b o u t read ing a n d u n d e r s ta n d in g th e contracts before th e y signed them , he smd At this tim e of year, " s tu d e n ts h a v e the m o st b arg aining pow er, b ut th e y nee d to m ake sure that th e y 're getting th e y k n o w w h a t in to ," Solom on said. Solom on said his office h an d les 30 to 30 tenant-la nil lord cases eai h sem ester. " A n d "E v e ry y ea r peo p le com e in in the fall a n d p eople are given the w ro n g a p a r tm e n t, or they w ere never s h o w n w h a t a p a r tm e n t they will get an d they are dissatisfied with w hat they w ind u p g e ttin g ," Solomon said. the a p a r tm e n t com plexes really h a v e n 't d o n e an y th in g illegal. S tu d e n ts d o n 't take into c o n ­ that m odel a p a r tm e n ts sideration are ju st that — m ode l a p a r tm e n t s ." Solom on said s tu d e n ts should re ­ q u e s t th e a p a r tm e n t they w o u ld be leasing, a n d , it they sign a the contract pre-lease a g r e e m e n t, s h o u ld d e s ig n a te that specific a p a r t­ m e n t o n it. to see A pre-leasing a g r e e m e n t b in d s th e s t u d e n t a m ajority of th e time, S olom on said. T h e a g r e e m e n t, an a l­ o g o u s to a trial p e riod, allow s c o m ­ to d ecide plex m a n a g e rs w h e th e r they will offer a tenant i reg u la r lease. tim e A com plex m a n a g e r sh o u ld notify s tu d e n ts w h e th e r they will be ac­ cepted a m o u n t of time, Solom on said lease w ith in a certain to M any a p a r tm e n t com plexes use the Texas A p a r tm e n t A ssociation's form contract. Solomon said the com plex m a n a g e rs h a v e th e right to c h a n g e the a g re em e n t, hut said the s tu d e n t a n d com plex m a n a g e r n e e d to a p p r o v e a n v cha n g es, and both s h o u ld initial a n y cha n g es on the contract. T he s tu d e n t sho u ld always get a carbon copy or d u plic ate of the orig­ inal, a n d keep it, S olom on said. Solom on said s tu d e n ts just need to be m ore careful. " S t u d e n t s ne e d to read leases very carefully, a n d re­ alize that will be held to th e term s in th e contract," he said. " A n d ... if th e re are an y a g re e m e n ts that c o n ­ tradict the lease, they need to get it in w ritin g ." The office of the S tu d e n ts ' A ttor­ ney will offer legal advice to s tu ­ d e n ts w h o have p roblem s with their leases, b u t if m ediation b e tw e e n th e te n a n t a n d landlord is n e e d e d , th e stu d e n t will be referred to the Fravis C o u n t y M ediation Service. Abbie C rocker, a p ro p e rty m a n a ­ ger for JLD I n v estm en ts Inc., said m ost problem s occur w h e n s tu d e n ts d o n ot read their leases com pletely. "A lot of peo p le d o n 't take the time to go o ver their le ase ," she said. s t u d e n t s a d v i s e d to C ro c k e r is to be expected of k n o w w h a t th e m before th e y sign a lease. "I try to m e n tio n e v e ry th in g that will c o n ­ cern m ost p e o p le ," s h e said. "I also m a k e su r e that th e y k n o w th e c o m ­ m u n ity ru les." C rocker su g g e sts s tu d e n ts pre­ lease soon, a n d p u t d o w n a d ep o s it w ith th e a g re e m e n t, so that they can be g u a r a n te e d a n a p a r tm e n t in the fall. "T h e y (stu d en ts) nee d to p u t a d e p o s it d o w n w h e n they pre-lease, if th e y c a n ," C rock er said, "B ecause of all th e UT s tu d e n ts a r o u n d , you m a y n o t get th e a p a r tm e n t w h e r e you w a n t it," C rocker said if s tu d e n ts sign a lease, p u t d o w n a d e p o s it a n d then back o u t of th e le ase w ith o u t a good reason, th e com plex m a n a g e r can k ee p th e deposit. Feet first UT Arlington bans X-rated pictures By BRIAN SIMPSON Daily Texan Staff X-rated mov i e s for er ‘ 1 he Stor mariuelie ,r trom the 1.1 Ariington V ' . H e r m a n . N edderm an sa I hu s h o w n on c a m p u - unit's matt' educat ional progra ic - iffiiia 1 prior to stu ler " T h a t ' s not b an ni n g N e d d e r m a n said H a i n m e n t - such as " E m- O " — ha \ e V» n b a n n e d m p u s bv President We n lelt da y that \ - r a t e d movies or ual c o n t e n t " w o ul d not be the movie is u se d tor a legiti- an d screened bv an ac ad e m- X-rated movies) o u t r ig h t, " Mamie Bush pre*-idei o f t h e id b o d v , s tion l u trom ca * sti¡dent o ’ that w ould ! w o ul d th d be left up the 11 \ t • n g to n s tu d e n t ess \ oted d o w n a resol u- e b a n n e d X-rated m i n i e s it the right to < * X-rated the s t u d e n t , " Bush said, 1 h e stuile r e n d u m or e s t u d e n t s c o n g r e s s voted m Februarv to p u t a re- <( April 17 s t u d e n t election ballot isking heftier \ - r a t e d films s h o ul d bi h o w n on studi rated *rvw h ftaxp did not c o ns id er the X-rated mo vi e "a cerv big deal bec aus e the \ havt o n e or tw o times per vear a n d 1 h en at i d mg ht or one o'clock in the m o r n in g jble-cbecked " have been s h o w n for o v er 10 years *n som e studi nts are u p in a r m s a b o u t director of th e 11 Arlington Baptist -aid a petition calling for a b a n of X- >m the c a m p u s circulated bv s o m e 3$f "could have had an effect on th e I ht petition has g a r n e re d 270 ion u sed " Xrlingt moralitv on e v e r y o n e it p eo p le w h o p a\ th e av w h a t to d o with the associate pro fe sso r of with u s in g th e m ovies' ih ria for w h a t the stu- a n d PC m ov ies Baerwaldt l a v e h e r e is a small n u m b e r p r es i d e nt to ma ke a politi- v e n no pat ter n of abuse' i inti Ihgent e n o u g h to ma ke The university s h ou l d p m - p e n e n ce s for s t u d e n t s a n d it universitv has let the s t u - I \ t of S h elle y W a t a n a b e . left, counts for Sharon Harris as she exercises at Clark Field. T h e d e a f and blind track team m eets at Clark Field every hursday mernoor Louisa Brownlee Special to the Tex TSP appoints summer managing editor for Daily Texan By DEBRA MULLER D aily Texan Staff Lisa Brow n-R ichau, h um a nitie s j u n ­ ior, w as selected W e d n e s d a y n ight bv the Texas S tu d e n t Publications Board of O p e r a tin g Trustees to be The Daily lev an m a n a g in g e d ito r for s u m m e r 1985. T he board v ote d 4-3 to hire Brown- Richau o v er Paul d e la Garza, journalism senior. Mike H am ilton, journalism s e n ­ ior, also a p p lied for the position, but failed to m e e t all of the qualifications re­ q u ire d by th e TSP H an d b o o k . T he m a n a g in g e d ito r oversees th e d av-to -dav o p e ra tio n s of the n e w s p a p e r . The first th in g o n m y a g e n d a is to get tog e th er w ith Russell Scott to m a k e p la n s tor the s u m m e r p a p e r, Brown- Richau said. Scott, jou rn alism senior, w a s elected Texan e d ito r in th e March 27 c a m p u s - w id e election. H e said he is enthusiastic a b o u t w o r k i n g w ith Brown-Richau. I've k n o w n Lisa for a long tim e an d w e u n d e r s t a n d each Other s p erso n a li­ ties a n d ta le n ts," Scott said. Brow n-R ichau s h e a n d Scott said w o rk e d to g e th e r last s p rin g w h e n she w as Im ages e d ito r a n d Scott w as e n te r ­ ta in m e n t editor. She said th e y will m a ke a goo d te am . "I th ip k w e 're a go o d bal­ ance, ' s h e said. B row n-R ichau said s h e w a s excited a b o u t h e r a p p o i n tm e n t, but h a d not been co n fid e n t s h e w ould be a p p o in te d before th e b o a r d 's decision. I've w o r k e d w ith both Paul a n d Mike, a n d 1 respect their w ork, Brown- Richau said. "I h a d no idea w h o the b o a rd w o u ld c h o o s e ." B row n-R ichau beg a n w o rking at the Texan in th e fall of 1981. S h e has b ee n a n e w s rep o rter, g raph ics e ditor n e w s as­ s ig n m e n ts ed ito r a n d Im a g es editor. She* se rve d t w o s e m e ste rs as a n associate m a n a g in g e d ito r a n d is currently a n a s ­ sociate editor. Brow n-Richau aKo worked . ^ n o s o c u t e editor, w riter a n d copy e ditor tor Í tm o st m agazine. ide it f a i l s to d e n t s d o w n . ’ he said t h e n I t hink the Since D ecem ber 1983 Brown-Richau lias b ee n a a m p u s i o r r e s p o n d en t tor \e w sw e e k on ( ampu> a college onent- e d s u p p l e m e n t of V e n '•week ma gazi ne B row n-R ichau said the m ain m gred lent s h e will bring to the position o her experience. our !'ve w o rk e d on v e a r s , " B r o w n - R ic h a u e i w o rk e d in every d e p a r t m e n t b u t spurts so 1 k n o w th e paper. the Texan sa id Britt M o r g a n a UT \ r l i n g t on m a t h em a t i cs senior, said In believes that s t u d e n t s shou l d h a v e t he right to see X rated movies 1 :h- \ w a n t to. b ut said h e believes the ui r re ct decision in ¡’resident N e d d e r m a n ma dt b a n n i n g t h e m ovie s from c a m p u s . it !! be :ht be t t h i n> for the school. Mo r ga n said. ! feel he President N e d d e r m a n ) d id it for the school i*i h ipes that it w o u l d n ' t h a v e to go t h r o u g h it a ga i n . " Nt d i e rm a n aid a w o ul d not c o m m e n t o n f ut u r e d e b a t e over the ban. S t ud e nt s n tree t o e x p r e s s vi e ws on a n v i s s ue , " he ..aid A’e will i i scu ss e ve nt s as t he v o c c ur ." Page 10/The Daily Texan Friday, Apr 5 1985 Kudos Distinguished alumni announced The Texas Ex-Students' Association h a s chosen as Distinguished Alum ni Dr Ruth Hartgrave, w ho at age 85 is practicing obstetrics; Bob Inman, president and chief executive officer of Microelectronics and Com put­ er Technology Corp.; Bill Noel, chairman of the board of Rexene Corp. and El Paso Products Co.; Bill Seay, former chairman of the board and chief executive offi­ cer of Southwestern Life Insurance Co. and Joe Walter Jr., president of W alter Oil and Gas Corp. Art history fellowship awarded Anne M cCauley, assistant professor of art, will receive a $21,(XX) fellowship from the first Getty Post­ doctoral Fellowships in the History of Art and the Humanities. The W ood row W ilson National Fellow­ ship Foundation announced the new fellowship, which draws from a grant of more than $500,000 from the J. Paul G etty Trust. M cCauley's fellowship was made through Yale U n i­ versity, where she will complete a project on Parisian commercial photography from 1848-70. Editor to receive Reddick award Robert M aynard, editor and president of the Oak­ land Tribune in California, will receive the D eW itt ( | Í w as circulated. i W hite d efend ed his attem pt to keep the new s ot his I trip from the public, saying, "T h a t w as d on e for rather I obviou s reasons, and 1 do that on m any occasions. It's ju st good p o licy ." Stephen Reed, Daily Texan Staff Nina Butts of the Austin Committee Against Racism and Apartheid carries her nephew as she protests against MBank s selling of kruger­ rands Thursday. The demonstration was held at Sixth and Lavaca streets. O n M arch 23, 1983, President Reagan told a nationw id e television aud ien ce that adopting the Atar w ars" d efen se -v stem would nsure the safety o f the A m erican people T he S cien ce Park C e n te r is the largest em p loy er in B astrop C o u n ty , in Slaga said. B astrop C o u n ty S h arp 's district. i- Hermann estate suit filed by Mattox By JIM WARREN D aily Texan S taff I he state atto rn ey g en eral's office has filed a suit asking for a special m aster to oversee the beleagu ered H erm ann H ospital Estate in H ou ston. T h e board that ad m inisters the operation s ot the estate has been cited tor m ism anage­ m ent and theft in execu ting the estate left by H ouston philan th rop ist G eorge H erm ann D ave R ichards, executive assistant to A ttor­ ney G eneral Jim M attox, -aid the -u it was filed to restore public con fid en ce' and to aid the hospital in retu rning to its original goal — providing care for H ou ston indigents. H erm ann H ospital is the base for The U ni­ versity of Texas H ealth Scien ce C enter, the U n iv ersity's leading m edical research center. UT Regent Jess Hav -aid the trustees ac­ tions do n ot atfect the U niversity s Health Sci­ en ce C e n te r at H erm ann The atto rn ey gen eral's office has no crim i­ nal ju risd iction in the case, but i- seeking a special m aster to review exp en d itu res of the board ot tru stees and, if necessary, to -eek rep ay m en t from the tru stees tor anv m isap­ propriation ot fu nd s. Richards -aid R ichards said the suit will prohibit trustees of the estate from using the estate m onies for an y th in g oth er than charity. The Harris C ountv district atto rn ey 's office cond u cted an investigation into the board's w ork, and retu rned four theft indictm ents tru stees, allegedly stem m ing from a g a in s t land and stock transactions. Jo h n C o ffee, a tru stee, resigned the day b e­ fore a theft indictm ent w as returned against him . Phil W arn er, ed itor-in -ch ief of the H o u s ­ ton Chronicle and a n on -p racticin g attorney resigned becau se of a provision in th e estate b vlaw - prohibiting atto rn ey s from serv in g as trustees. H erm ann set up the estate in his 1914 will to aid needs H ou ston ian s w h o could not pas­ tor health care. R ich ard s -aid the hospital does no charitv w ork, althou gh thev list 3 percent o f their exp en d itu res a - going tow ard ch a n ty . R ichards said the 3 percen t figure rep resents patients w ho could n o t pas their hospital bills and not real ch a n ty . Joan C arroza, sp okesw om an for H erm ann H ospital, -aid the board dot1- not in terfere in the dav-to-dav op eration s of the hospital and -aid Flerm ann is "a ssrell-run hospital. Be­ sid es the m ain hospital in H ou ston there are 20 to 40 com m units hospital*- o p eratin g with tnonev from th e H erm ann estate. Richards said the attorney general w an ts to 'restru ctu re the board and get rid ot those IT said it o o u ld w h o have done m isdeeds. be -orne >t certainly d esirable the trustees to rem oví The suit w as filed W ednesday m District jud ge ioe Hart - court in Travis C ounts ind will go to court Mas 10, w hen Hart could . p point a -pecial m aster. The m aster would be sim ilar to the m aster w h o has o v erseen th e troubled T exa - D ep art­ m ent o f C o rrection s. But u n lik e the (D C m as­ ter, w ho checks TD C’s Com pliance svith n u ­ m erous court ord ers, the H erm ann case w ould m ake recom m en d ation s to the court. the m aster in T h e atto rn ey general - suit alleges that the board of tru stees did n ot op erate a charitv h osp ital, as it is required to do. T h e suit also alleg es that the tru stees m ade bad in v e st­ m en ts with hospital tu n d s, in clu ding -esferal q u estionable personal tran sactio n s. Page 12 The Daily Texan Fndav •; Out of bucks, use a TUX HHPpggi We Double Dare You! » WORMS SHOWN ACTUAL SIZE OtJRS MA ■ VARY Dos Gusanos [Two W orms] Mezcal wants to party with you The question is are you ready to take the dare? To eat two honest to goodness Agave worms9 There's nothing like authentic Mexican Mezcal to turn an evening upside down. Pass the bottle around and see who the real party warriors am But don’t forget, at the bottom lies the real treat Not one, but two Agave worms. You won’t find a prize like this in any cereal box! So c’mon! Take the dare and repeat after us. "I love my Dos Gusanos ’ DOS N““ r" Gusnnas (T W O W O R M S ) M E Z C A L 2 1 4 ■ NEW YORK CITY A Study Tour o f Wall Street Offered by Austin Community College M A Y 12 to JU N E I P rin c ip le s o f A c c o u n tin g I I A C C ' 1633. 3 Sem esters H o u rs T ra n sfe rs as A c c o u n tin g 312 F o r More In fo rm a tio n ("all C h u rc h ill W a rd 459-7175 T o u r C ost $815 P a y m e n t Due April 13 for !o| ¡o| !°1 lo* !o! ¡oj |p [458-3229 COMPUTER SUPPLIES AUSTIN'S COMPLETE SUPPLY STORE F O R M S — Continuous labels-continous letterhead & stock paper R IB B O N S — Supplies fo r the M ac IBM, C O M P A Q & many more P R IN T W H E E L S -D ia b lo , Qume, NEC, Ricoh B A S F M A G N E T IC M E D IA — Computer tape, disk data cartridges Sou th w est Ribbon Co. 5555 N. L a m a r E -l 13 „ lo i !o! [ oj 'O' ¡° I lOi !o! JPJ i i S lice and Soda $ 1.75 ITie best im incli and guzzle in town. Get a slice and a soda for just $1.75 with tfiis coupon any w eekday fro m x 1 la m —2 pm . Good a t a l l location onans £ Chicago Style APD finds no fault in suspect’s death By LIBBY AVERYT Daily Texan Staff A n A u s tin police o ffice r, w h o fa­ tally w o u n d e d a b u rg la r w h o fire d a shot at a n o th e r o ffic e r, rem ained on restricte d d u ty fh u rsd a v a w a itin g a I ra v is C o u n ty g ra n d iu r\ in ve stig a ­ tio n . lr , John K en ne th A lle n IK, of >012 Em erald Forest C ircle, was fa­ ta lly shot bv A u s tin Police D e p a rt­ m e n t O ffic e r A lle n A n d e rso n , w h o w as a n s w e rin g a b u rg la rv -in -p ro g - ress call e arly W edn esda y m o rn in g . ! he A P D e xecutive sta ff fo u n d no v io la tio n s o f d e p a rtm e n ta l p o lic y in the sh o o tin g at the Academ y S ur­ plus Store, 603 F Ben W h ite B lvd. A press a n n o u n c e m e n t released by A P D stated th e case w ill be re­ ferred to R onnie Earle, I ravis C o u n ­ ty d is tric t a tto rn e y, fo r presen ta tio n to the grand ju ry , a ro u tin e p ro ce ­ d u re . Police said p la c in g A n d e rso n on re stricted d u ty also is a ro u tin e p rocedure. O f fic e r s A n d e r s o n ( ml P > rH i- nek, John Pendergrass and Steven O ra te answ ered the b u rg la ry call at 1:22 a.m . W ednesday after an em ­ ployee across the A cadem y store th o u g h t he saw som eone e n te rin g the store. the street fro m W hen the officers a rrive d they saw a suspect ru n fro m the fro n t d o o r of the store to w a rd Ferry-O Lane. O ffic e r O rm e a tte m pte d to stop the m an by p u llin g his car in fro n t o f the suspect, police said. Lt. Jim Baker said one o f the o ffi­ cers yelled fo r the man to stop, b u t the suspect c o n tin u e d to ru n . The .43-caliber suspect h a n d g u n at O rm e fro m a p p ro x i­ m ately 20 feet, b u t m issed. fire d a then A n d e rso n fire d once at the h i s pect at a distance o f a p p ro x im a te ly 7K feet w ith his sh o tg u n . A s the sus pect raised his w ea p on again, A n ­ derson fire d a second tim e and the suspect fe ll to the g ro u n d , police said. Em ergency Medic al Services p ro ­ nounced A lle n dead at the scene at 1:32 a.m . W ednesday. A sbestos C o n tin u e d f r o m p a g e 1 Belyea has file d a cita tio n against the d is tric t and A-1 fo r fa ilin g to ad­ e quately re m ove the asbestos Ehe d is tric t, once it receives the- cita tio n, has 10 davs to e xpla in w hat h ap­ pened and h o w it plans to p re v e n t it from h a p p e n in g again. Belyea said the T A C B sh ould have been n o tifie d w h e n the re m o v­ al o pe ra tio n began, h u t was not. "T h e A IS D decided to do the job n o t k n o w in g w h a t the correct proce­ d ures w e re ," Belyea ^uid. A spokesw om an fo r A IS D Super in te n d e n t John Ellis said the d is tric t co u ld not com m ent on the cita tio n u n til it has received a copv. Bill E llio tt, spokesm an the levas D e p a rtm e n t o f H e a lth , said fo r the d e p a rtm e n t does no t have the a u th o rity to cite the d is tric t, b u t " w e w o u ld if w e cou ld . T ha t asbestos sh o u ld n o t have been th e re ." D avid D ovie, an assistant to Lan- ham at A - l, said, "T h e school sys­ tem was c o m p le te ly satisfied w ith o u r w o r k ." D o vle said the co m p a n y d id not leave the school u n til d is tric t o fficia ls a p p ro ve d job. D o yle also said he has n o t heard a b ou t the T A C B cita tio n . the Teachers and counselors at the school have co m p la ine d th a t th e y fro m decisions in ­ w ere excluded the asbestos. v o lv in g rem oval o f I hey are asking school d is tric t o ffi­ cials to note in th e ir m edical file s th a t they w orke d at the school Deep Pan O ffe r e xp ire s M a y 31, 1985 S upporters Speak Out For FRANK COOKSEY “THE BEST PLAY OF THE SEASON” — Clive Barnes, N Y. Post T T ^ — You can tell a lot about a candidate by the persons sup porting him. Frank Cooksey has received the o ve rw he lm ing m ajority of n e ig h b o rh o o d and civic group endorsem ents fo r Mayor. Here is w hat pe ople are saying about Frank: Experience and Trust "C o o k s e \ A experience as past president of the Save Barton ( leek Assoc iation, on his water distrii t board and as a m em ber of the Fle< trie I Jtilit\ Commission < learh enables him to gui<$E the city in the right d ire itio n ...A n A in needs a mayor w ho can manage the citv's growth efficie n tly, but it also needs a m ayor w ho has the full confidence and trust of the public Vote for Frank Cooksey Saturday." The D a ily Texan In d o rs e m e n t, A p r il 1 "Frank fought hard to protec t Barton Springs as a mem ber of the Edwards Aquifer Task Force, whic h w rote the strict Barton (re e k Watershed Ordinanc e. Wc* need him in the M ayor's offi< e to keep Barton Springs pure and to remedv the environm ental disaster of the Colorado River Sierra C lu b C o m m itte e o n Politic al I d u ra tio n Environmental Protection downstream from A ustin ." Neighborhood Integrity Frank has w orked hard to preserve our neigh bo ighborhoods. He w ill respect the new Comprehensive Plan and force it to manage growth effec tively. Frank w ill restore to the Counc il a w illingfless to listen to our input on neighborhood c on< urns and honor our petitions lam es A u stin P inedo Save A u stin s N e ig h b o rh o o d s a n d T n v iro n m e n t Transportation ' A ustin's transportation needs increase1 daily, so I was pleased to see I r a n k ' s strong support of ( apital M etro. As M ayor, Frank w a n t s to coordinate long-range efforts of M etro and the UT shuttle bus system R odney Sc hlnsser, P resid ent U T S tu d e n ts ' A sso cia tio n , 1984-85 Student Concerns "W h e n Frank w a s UT Students' Assoc iation President in 1959, He testified at the ( apitol ig a ifis t a tuition increase. In 1983, h i1 joined w ith the Texas Student Lobby to oppose any increase. I fin d that c ontmued < one ern a rem arkable tra it." M e g B rooks, C o -D ire c to r Texas S tu d e n t Lob b y Fair Representation "W h e n f rank started to w o rk at the Texas Attorney General's office, there were only one or tw o wom en la w y e rs in the entire office. Frank activeh recruited w om en and hired more than 10 wom en lawyers for every division and at com petitive salaries. He w ill approach the M ayor's offic e v\ ith the1 same c are and tenac ity ." G m n y A g n e w , A u s tin W o m e n 's P o litic a l ( aucus M eet Frank on the West M all between 1 1 :30 and 12:30 today. O n Saturday, let's support an experienced, involved, respected person for M ayor of our Austin. Let's vote for Frank Cooksey. DIKI < 1 1 1) IVY <,1 M s v k s APRIL 12-14 YlCKETS $ 11 —$25 12 8:00 p.m. FRIDAY SATURDAY 13 3:00 & 8:00 p.m. 14 3:00 & 7:30 p.m. SUNDAY Register for free tickets April 1-6 at both Foley's stores. Junior Department, first floor. . . . j><(, ... S()< < i i i / i ■ >\ i ii < >11 < .IK >1 ps ( >1 2o i )l< M l >|<| < 1 < INFORMATION < >11 l< )K sTl 1)1 Y I N X M M O R sill R D A 1 W O N I'KK 1 A . X t l U h l l s O I 1C III U >KI M II >\ \ 1 IN1I SI N | ) \ \ SI \ | ) \ N I S M O O p . m S I 2 *1 -M K Ip m « I M J I t “ C O pin S I2 SI I I t s 1 t t s 1 8 — ....................................................- .....— ■ DICKRAN ATAM1AN F “MIRACULOUS!” Now York Daily News W o r k s In B c c t h o \ i n , ( h o p i t i , I i^ /t M o / a r t a n d R a v e l. F R ID A Y , A P R 11 IV, 8 : 0 0 p.m . T I C K E T S $ 6 , $ 8 , $ 1 0 , ¿ $ $ 1 2 FIRS PRIZE W IN N I K XI \ \ i \ i ni R(, n \N( >c i >\in r u n >\ PR / / I R< »/*/ \ \ /< >1 A’ l i l i V I I I \ \ ' \ l \ ’l KSAKY endorsed by oustin progressive coolition X H M X C PARAMOUNT THEATRE TVA'mV.'Í'T.'V.m 1 TK.KTTN VVAII.ABI I V T A l i l F I M O I M I I ' V I Vl.l »— <*0<>0 I < > < 11 VK(.1 I K KI TS Pol. Ad. Pd. F rank Cooksey for Austin's Future, 1105 San Antonio, Austin, TX 78701 482-0815 ■ a MAYOR FOR OUR AUSTIN rhe Dai / Texan Friday April 5, 1985/Paqe 13 We Will B eat Any Shoe Prices in Town KAEPA MODEL 315 NEW BALANCE 99Ü 1 9 95 7 9 9S 7 0 2 W. 24th ( c Rio Grande next to World Cycle 4 7 7 -9 1 8 7 Easter rally held by atheist’s son Murray opposes anti-religious sentiment United Press International Evangelist W illiam M urray, the son of athei t leader M adalyn M u r­ ray O 'H air, said Ihursday his East­ er weekend “ God and country" ral­ ly was intended to divert attention from his mother's atheist conven­ tion at a nearby hotel. M urray was the plaintiff in the lawsuit filed by his 1963 federal mother that resulted in banning prayer in public schools. H e has since become a minister and a vocal opponent of O 'H air's atheist move­ ment. Calling Easter “ an extremely holy day for the faith," Murray said he came to Austin to make sure the 15th Annual National American Atheists Convention does not get “ control of the front page by de­ fault." "W e 'll be cutting their exposure in half, f his is a C hristian holiday, not an atheist holiday," M urray said. H e promised, however, that his conservative religious group would not initiate any confrontations with members of his mother's group. " The only confrontation would he if they get handed a (religious) tract, and if they don't want it they can throw it o u t," he said. “ If they want to refuse the gospel and go to hell, it's their business M urray, w ho said he has not spo­ ken to his mother since his conver­ sion to C hristianity in 1977, said God had placed him in a unique po­ sition to spread the gospel since he had “ seen the other side " M urray, whose book " M y Life W ithout G o d " detailed his atheist experience under O 'H air's tutelage, said his mother has accused him of being an an alcoholic and a drug ad­ dict since his conversion He said he wanted to tell the world the truth about his mother, whose atheist beliefs stand for 'an­ archy, prostitution, pornography, beastiality, abortion, masturbation, profanity, nudity, drug and alcohol abuse and the destruction of gov­ ernm ent." M urray said he was estranged from his mother to the degree that “ Birthday cards and Mother's Day cards have been torn up in little pieces and mailed back to me The foür-day God and country rally w ill' feature retired Lt. Gen. Daniel O. Graham, an advocate of President Reagan's space-based nu­ clear defense system know as “ star w ars" — former Texas House Speaker Bill Clayton, Justice James Brady of the Texas Court of Appeals and conservative activist George,inn Banov. Jury shows sympathy for 'guilty' protesters Create your own ice cream pie and let others taste your good taste. Pick any two ice cream flavors and we ll mix in everything from fresh fruit and crushed cookies to nuts and candy. You can always choose from five delicious Steve’s” ready-made pies, hut why not break the mold. Haven’t you been a fashion plate long enough? Steve rs A first name in ice cream.1 474-7045 next to Dobie Mall Sun-Thurs 1 1 :0 0 a m - 1 1 :3 0 pm Fri-Sat 1 1 :0 0 am-12 :3 0 pm F R E S H . F R E S H ORO DUCF AND M O P F “ This is not the end at a ll," he said. “ I am going to continue to stand for the beliefs that I believe. The three men were released on personal-recognizance bonds pend­ ing appeals. JOBS! JOBS! JOBS! In Texan Classifieds 3101 G u adalu pe 4 '% 2667 PAID FOR BY CITIZENS FOR AUSTIN AQUA FESTIVAL. GARY NELON. CAMPAIGN TREASURER United Press International H O U S T O N — A jury which found a state representative, a min­ ister and another man guilty of trespassing at a South African con­ sulate expressed sym pathy for the men's anti-apartheid stand. Rep. A1 Edwards, D-Houston, was placed on 30 day probation and fined $250 by County Court-at-Law Judge W illiam Rosch III following Edw ard's conviction W ednesday night. The Rev. Jew Don Boney and Om ówale Luthuli refused proba­ tion, and each was sentenced to 14 days in jail and fined $500. The six-member jury attached a note to the guilty verdicts support­ ing the men's positions. “ W e, the jury, strongly believe in the cause for which the three de­ fendants stand," the note read. “ W e applaud their efforts and pray for a non-violent resolution to the horrors of apartheid in South A fri­ ca." The men were arrested Dec. 7 af­ ter refusing to leave the consulate during a protest against policies of the South African government. Edw ards said the verdict and sen­ tence w ill not divert him from fur­ ther protests against apartheid. HAIR LOSS mcry be c o rre c te d with M EDICATION or other m ethods HRT 8c SCALP CLINICS for co n su lta tio n c a l l 477-1492 24 hrs TEAK “ ITS BEST. AUSTIN HEDÍA! "U.R. COOKS delivers where it really counts. The steaks are Outstanding!” AUSTIN MAGAZINE “ It is one of the best deals in town!" _ THIRD COAST "The best beef in town in incredible portions and at a reasonable price!" AMERICAN STATESMAN “ The T-bone is a w hopping 26 ounces, the filet a solid 14 ounces, and it’s all 100% real corn-fed beef. The price for this meal is $10 95 U.R, Cooks is a real w inner!" OPEN DAILY 5 30 11 PM CIALTV STEAKS I S flK IT S IN TH E EM PO R IU M 8833 R E S E A R C H 837-8085 ovrng i\q O filieissue. PARKING 1 i.1/ . . : i Playground Entrance Gate PARKING Beer Garden Admm Bidg — 'Children s Playground EXPOSITION & HERITAGE CENTER ¡ ipARKlNGl Area PROPOSED 130-ACRE PARK SITE ON LAKE WALTER E. LONG. •MORE ROOM TO ENJOY FESTIVAL. • EXPANDED PARKING FACILITIES. • PERMANENT FACILITIES AND IMPROVEMENTS FOR PUBLIC USE: AMPHITHEATERS PAVILIONS PLAYGROUNDS HIKE & BIKE TRAILS RESTROOMS IMPROVED BEACH FRONT CHAMPIONSHIP WATERSKI FACILITIES • PLANNED WITH AUSTIN PARKS & RECREATION DEPT. • NO COST TO TAXPAYERS. With voters' approval of Proposition 2. the Fest proposes to begin operation at Lake Long in 1986. The popular land and water parades will remain downtown CURRENT 27-ACRE SITE ON TOWN LAKE. • TOO SMALL TO HANDLE CROWDS. •INADEQUATE PARKING FACILITIES. •NO PERMANENT FACILITIES. KEEP AQUA FEST THE BEST FEST POSSIBLE. Vote [ifMove The Fest. U.S. economy bypassed blacks, according to symposium speakers Page 14/The Daily Texan/Friday. April 5 1985 Classicism to be discussed By MICHAEL SUTTER D aily Texan S ta ff In 1910, architect Cuvs Gilbert's d esig n tor Battle Hall b e c a m e a reali- t\ and tie river of red tile roots and orn ate lim estone fates that now in­ u n d a t e s the U ! c a m p u s began to flow. M o d e r n c l a s s i c i s m , M e d i t e r ­ found another ranean stvie, had h om e in the S o u th w es t. later, N ow , 7A years the UT School of Architecture and the C en- tei for the Stud\ of Am erican Art hi tectu re are celebrating the resur­ c l a s s i c i s m wi t h g e n c e a " A h , Mediterranean: sy m p o siu m , 7t)th-C enture Glassicism in Ameri- o f NaHonallv an d internationally, th e re 's b ee n a b r e w in g disdain for m o dern architecture, anti people are looking back to t lassit ism for in spiration, ' said L a w re n ce S p e ck , di re. tor of the center. S p e ck said the sy m p o siu m , to be held \pril 11-12 m Hogg Memorial \uditorium, will not be simply a d iscu ssion of architectural trends associated with the classicist revi val,*but a study of the m o v e m e n t's historical and philo sophical causes as well. I hat study will be i on d u cte d by a list of guest speakers, including practicing architects, authors, histo­ rians and UT faculty. A m on g the 1' I faculty speak ing at the s y m p o s i ­ um will be I fa! Box, d ean of the Schoo l of Architecture, Karl (,alin ^ky, classics professor and Brenda I’reyer, associate professor of art his t o n I he sym p o siu m i1- especially im­ portant to fex as, whit h is on e o f the most avid subscribers to the M edi­ terranean style, said Speck , who will also be a guest speaker I he s y m po sium will begin I hurs dav at 8 .30 a in., with sessions run­ ning through 730 p.m. I he sessions v\ ill be followed bv a reception in Sutton Hall the recently renovated hom e of the St hool of Architectu re, «essions April 12 will begin at 8 : 3 0 a m. and end at 11:30 a.m . is A d missio n for UT stu­ dents. faculty, and staff, and $15 for others free By PAUL KVINTA D aily Texan Staff A g ro up o f hla< k professors and educators at a sym posium W e d n e s ­ day and fh u rs d a y agreed President R e a g a n s ec o n o m ic recovery has bypassed American blacks. " I f our e c o n o m y sneezes, blacks catch the flu of either eternal sick­ ness or fatal d e m is e ," said Clyde Ashley, a Prairie View' A & M profes­ sor w h o sp ok e during the tw o-day s ym po sium I h e program w a s sponsored by the U I African and Afro-American Stu dies and Research Center. Ih e [h e sy m po sium , entitled in ( urrent Econom ic R evolution Black A m e r ic a ,” featured black econ om ists, philo sophers and so ciologists from across the country While each speaker offered differ­ ent cau ses for the econom ic prob lems of blai ks, m o st agreed blacks had been pu sh ed into an un d er­ cla ss " in American society " I h e problem e x i s t s b ecause of the lack of skills, edu cation, training and experience a m o n g b lacks,” Ashley said. He said these deficien­ cies exist not b ecause blacks are la/v or unintelligent, but because blacks are always the last to get job'' and the first to lose them. Ashley said half of Am erica's e m ­ ploym ent growth in 1975-78 took place in white-collar and craft in dustries, areas w h ere blacks are less present. During the sam e period, un em p lo y m en t dropped 38 percent for w hites, but only 6 percent for blacks he said. The 42 7 fieffew* ’ > n e m p l o v m r>r'* rate am o n g you ng black males con to stitutes bla< ks because those men have fam ­ ilies to support, Ashley said. the gravest problem David S w into n, director of the Sou thern C e n te r for Studies of Pub­ lic Policy in Atlanta, said u n e m p lo y ­ ment problem s and wage gaps b e ­ tween blacks and whites exist for all blacks, not just youth. " U p until 1970, blacks worked proportionately more than whites, but now blacks work at 85 percent the rate of white's," Sw inton said. He said white econom ists had pre­ in wages b etw een dicted parity whites and blacks by the 1980s, but he said the parity is not here. Sw inton said blacks have suffi­ cient production potential to have levels and wages lower poverty equal to whites. a n d a greed blacks m ust work within the system to increase their status and to eradi­ cate rat ism, even th ough the situa­ tion looks bleak. S w in to n A sh le y Graduate to a higher form of living. O akview . Student condominium homes with nil of the < om- forts you expect in u fine residence, plus one feature which makes it an exceptional investment its location. Nestled on an oak-covered knoll, Oakview is situated just across the street from campus, overlooking the i l l tower in an atmo­ sphere of tradition and grace. I here are fireplaces. ( eiling fans. Built-in bookshelves A swimming pool and spa. Plus, you receive all of the tax saving, equity-buUding advan­ tages o f home ownership. ( ome over today. See what makes Oakview not only the ideal place to live, but the ideal invest­ ment. And graduate to the lifestyle you deserve. O A K V I E W H CONLX TMINIUVIS-*» 2901 San lacinto A ustin, Texas M arketed by Linda Ingram and A ssociates - 476-2673 W estendarp-M iller Interests nBNdA idwa-i M /C PLACE 2 /) FOR CITY COUNCIL It Takes New Ideas and Experience to Keep Austin Special it Takes Independent Leadership to Represent the People SHYRA DARR HAS WHAT IT TAKES R o g e r D u n can is leaving the City C o u n c i l . A qualified le a d e r should take his p l a c e . W e support S h y r a Darr b e c a u s e she is an e x p e r i e n c e d and i n d e p e n d e n t le a d e r who can give Austin the e x c e l l e n t rep resen ta tion our s p e c i a l city deserv es. A vote for S h y r a Darr for P l a c e 2 on the Austin City C o u n c i l will b e a vote you proudly cast for the kind of city we all d eserv e. C a m p a ig n C o -C h a ir s : C a r o le K eeton Rylander, Ada Sim ond, Msgr. Lonnie Reyes A d a S im o n d , S h y r a Darr, C a r o le K eeton R y la n d e r Shyra Darr . . . On Experience ★ E x e c u t i v e Assistant, O f f i c e of the Mayor ★ City C o u n c i l A i d e for Four Years ★ C h a i r , City of Austin Housing Authority B oard ★ D irec to r, P e o p le for a Better Austin - C a m p a i g n for the Arts ★ C a m p a i g n M a n a g e r for C apita l Metro - Mass Transit Authority ★ Staff M e m b e r , U . S . S e n a te Shyra Darr . . . On Austin's Future " C a n d i d a t e s love to tell you what they have done. You ar e as c o n c e r n e d with what they will do. O u r city is s p e c ia l b e c a u s e of the b a l a n c e of e c o n o m i c prosperity and e n v i r o n ­ mental quality. It is not en o u g h to p r e s e r v e what is right, we must work to make Austin b e t ­ ter. T h e s e ar e a few priorities I h a v e : " ★ Im proved city mon itoring and prom otion of day c a r e serv ice s ★ Tax reform to p r o te c t long term residents ★ M a n a g e m e n t of b o n d funds to c o m p l e t e p r o je c ts on time and within b u d g e t ★ I n c r e a s e d em phasis on improved p u b lic safety; Po lice, Fire, and EMS ★ P re ve n tion of u n n e c e s s a r y regulati ons that f o r c e i n c r e a s e s in h o m e p r i c e s ★ Re p re sen ta tio n for grow in g a r e a s as well as o ld e r parts of town Red or royal blue crisped with a detachable white collar. It's our NEW image. From a Urge collection by Kathryn Conover. 4-12,64.00 to 120.00. • Anderson Lanet at Burnet Road 454-5156 M-S, 10-8 • S. Lamar at Loop 360 447-1944 M-S, 9:30-8 • 25th at Guadalupe (Free Parking) 472-0928 M-S, 10-6 Shyra Darr . . . a special leader for Austin Pol Adv paid lor by S h y r a Darr For C ity C o u n c i l , B o b Lane, T re as u re r For convenient, unhurried shopping Anderson Lane and S. Lamar OPEN SUNDAY 12-5 B u s in e s s 'he Daily Texan/Friday, Ap S e e -th ro u g h c irc u itry $ r r. r % C J Jim MfcC e * U ~ 3 - ¥ T + / v i l f # Department stores best credit bet By THANHHA LA! Special to the Texan th e C h arg e it. For th o se college s tu d e n ts w ho w a n t to m ake this declaratio n hi it d o n 't h a v e flatten**d plastii ca rd , th e ste p to o b ta in in g a d e p a rt in e n t store cred it card is ju st an a p ­ p licatio n aw ay. But for th e m ajor c red it card s, they m ight h av e a long w ait Cilenn S te p h e n s, D illard 's n a tio n ­ al cre d it-m ark etin g m a n ag e r, said m o st retail credit offices a r e seeking th e college cro w d as a m ajor m a r l e t T h e p h ilo so p h y is "if w e give th e m an o p p o rtu n ity to get started w ith us w hile th e y are still in c o l ­ lege th e y will stay loval after e n te r ­ in g th e w ork fo rc e," S te p h e n s said. "T h e y will he th e o n e s to m ake the m o st m o n e y ." This p h ilo so p h y , h o w ev e r, d o es n o t follow th ro u g h w ith the m ajor b a n k ca rd s such a^ Visa o r M aster charg e. * D ee D ean, Texas C o m m e rce b an k la r d o p era tio n officer, said th e a b ili­ ty o f d e p a rtm e n t sto re s to accept the College cro w d "h a s t o d o w ith the fact th e m ­ s e lv e s " i "A Visa c a n 't be sto p p e d as quick­ ly as d e p a rtm e n t store card s be­ ca u se a u th o riz a tio n s a r e n 't m ade on é v e rv sale since Visa is so w idely D istrib u te d ," D ean said thev can p ro te c t th a t A lso, few s tu d e n ts can m eet the basic criteria each b a n k require*'- be fore p assin g an ap p lica n t as a card h o ld er. Texas C o m m erce Bank requires a $1250 m in im u m m o n th ly incom e th e sam e place of resid e n ce an d oc­ cu p a tio n for th e p a s t tw o y ears, four references, a n d 40 percen t d eb t se r­ vices. said D ean "M o st b an k s have the same* b a sa c riteria," D ean said "T h e th ree m a­ jor b an k s (of A ustin ) - F i r s t City, Inter-F irst, a n d Texas C om m erce - try to k eep it at th e sam e level " few excep tio n s .ire m ad e, b u t it w ould h elp if a stu d e n t has a b an k ac co u n t at the bank w h e re h e is a p p ly in g for a card. Also, if th e s tu d e n t's p a re n ts have an ac co u n t w ith th e b an k a n d are w illing to co-sign, th e ch a n ce s are b etter. O n th e o th e r h a n d , retail s t o r e s to will give special co n sid e ra tio n college s tu d e n ts. M ost sto res onlv need a co m p leted ap p licatio n If it clears for b ad d eb ts, th e reta ile r will u su ally sta rt th e ap p lica n t w i t h a < re d it allo w an ce of $200 in a ttra c tin g college cu sto m e rs, m ost d e p a rtm e n t sto res are m ailing a p p lica tio n s directly th e s tu ­ d e n ts. to "T h is is an extrem ely co m p etitiv e m a rk e t for cred it h o ld e rs," S te­ p h e n s said. "C ollege s tu d e n ts h ave p ro v ed to be resp o n sib le cu sto m e rs, a goo d risk ." March car sales up 5.6 percent United Press International stic a u to m a k e rs re- >r M arch as carm ak- / ca p ita liz in g on th e in to th e sm all car s by m o st m a n u fa c- »ense of GM w h o se ell to 54 p e rc e n t last tu r n e r s took ad v a n - h rr m akes. C M d id a te M arch, w h e n it pact line to 8.8 per- irket w as 26 6 perceii* un frt ma (-) ( hrvsl e r gra!hbed 15 perct *nt w ith a Iraditii inai 12 peri *1 n t “ r 1 uts >old I v\ i!S Illf . hi " t- sell in g m o d el in nth it 46 546 u nits, ed g in g >ut •ompact ¿it 11 51 enera 1 Mntn r c ( o rp , Ford Af IV- H o n d a \ 1otor ( o rp , A m eric an *f A in eric a rep o rt ed kc w i gen n cars in th e I inited S tates for ith >ld in sa m e '56 | 64 un (j 3 A ., w hich ic tu rin g C o r p. its re Sentrai pass*engeir ca r a t ist week, said iit w o u ld n o t re­ ntil ab o irt mid- April zas he in d u s try d u reig •ed w ith 7.8 m illion in IT«4 So ave sold 2,64 mlillion cars co m- i for the first th n s m o n th s of M arch w ; d a y s in M arcfi this■ y ear co m ­ year. Umted Press International features specially de- this unique Panasonic solar- signed transparent circuits and easy-to- A sharp eye for computations can see acrylic keyboard through powered, clear calculator The JE-380U s read keys T he daily selling rate of 29,575 cars c o m p a re s w ith 28,006 in M arch 19H4 th e best since M arch 1981 IBM decision to shelve PCjr not reflection on industry By BRIAN SIMPSON Daily Texan Staff W h e n a n in d u stry g ia n t ceases to m a n u ­ factu re o n e of its p ro d u c ts, it can be an om i- n o u s reflection on th e m a rk e t's state. But a m a rk e t an a ly st says th is is n o t th e case w ith IBM 's M arch decisio n to cease p ro d u c tio n of th e PC jr p erso n a l co m p u ter. M arv M cKee, a se n io r an a ly st for F u ture C o m p u tin g , a D allas-b ased c o m p u te r m a r­ ket re se a rc h firm , said T u e sd a y sh e believes th a t IBM q u it p ro d u c tio n of th e PC jr b e ­ c a u se in te rm s o f its c o m p e titio n 's sim ilar p ro d u c ts th e p ro d u c tio n co st w as h ig h a n d IBM w as n o t m ak in g e n o u g h p rofit p er P C jr u n it. "It w as a b u sin e ss-b a se d d e c isio n ," M cKee said. " The reaso n d id n 't h av e a n y ­ th in g to d o w ith th e h ea lth of th e h o m e - c o m p u te r m a rk e t." T h e h o m e -c o m p u te r m a rk e t is ex p ected to g ro w by 32 p e rc e n t from 1984 to 1985, s h e said. T he sales are an ticip ate d to rise from $2.8 billion in 1984 to a projected 5 - 7 billion in 1985, sh e said. D an B roeckelm ann, a sales re p re s e n ta ­ tiv e for C o m p u te rc ra ft Inc., said he also be lieves th e h o m e -c o m p u te r m ark et is in fine s h a p e . "T h e h o m e -c o m p u te r m arket is g ro w in g like c ra z y ," B roeckelm ann said. "E v e ry ­ b o d y is se e in g a n e e d for it a n d th e w ay in fo rm atio n can serv e th e h o u se h o ld . It's really ta k in g o ff." A lth o u g h IBM has decid ed to cease p ro ­ d u ctio n of the PCjr, B roeckelm ann -aid its o w n e r s sh o u ld n o t be w o rried ab o u t the m a ch in e b ec o m in g o b so lete in th e n ea r fu­ ture. " I t's still a go o d m a c h in e ," h e said. "It'll still be effective in its o w n right. W h a te v er th e y com e o u t w ith (next) w o n 't replace it." Bill S eibert, a sales re p re se n ta tiv e for C o m p u te rla n d , said th e PCjr h as " p le n ty of so ftw are available b u t th e h a rd w a re a d d ­ o n s are u n k n o w n a t this p o in t." S eibert i su rprisi?, b u t n o th - Broe e k e l m a n n s aid th e PC'jr is basica lly a said t h e d et isii *ia w as ing that w o u ld ch?inge t h e cour se ot histo- m ini-oo m p u te r. It h a ‘» 128K m e m o ry , a col- or m o n ito r an d oiae ntinue to m a r k e t th e PC jr, he said 1he deciision was a n n o u n c e d p u b lic ly bei i usf a nu m b e r T he IBM spoke'«mím said , "I th in k v . e all ot om p«liters ri t h e IBM perso n al-c o m p u te r w o u ld hav e liked to s e e th e m a rk e t a little h a s b een w ell biggeir." But family. receiv ed a n d "fo r tht? m o m 'V vou can'l: buy s o n a f-a im pu tei a heft e r c o m p u te r," tie saili . s lid. det in itely kt'e p its (per- imil v alive an d well," sh e IBM w ill PCjr th e R o oster A n d rew s SauconvO ’’A M E R I C A " MEVA High-Tech Running S hoes Saucony innovation at its finest. Extended heel counters, anti* pronation device, modifi EVA midsole, and h ig h density carbon outersole Men s & women s. 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SOURCE U N IV E R S ITY O f TEXAS COLLEGE NEWSPAPER STUDY B E ID ÍN ASSOCIATES, D ALLAS A P R Il * adolupc rn U n ite d B a n k M a ll 4 7 6 -1 0 0 0 $ 5 U5 at b o o k s to r e s n o w «C O L L IE R BOOKS NOT N E C ESSA R IL Y S N IO L E T S An HBO S p e c ia l p r e m ie r in g in A p ril Be s u r e to s e e Page 16/The Daily Texan Friday, April 5, 1985 Stocks mixed in moderate trading Utilities shine on Wall Street Market analysts credit week's poor performance to economic uncertainty United Press International Dow Jones Average 30 Industrials April 4. 1985 High 1264 .2 4 Low 1 2 4 8 .3 4 Close 1 2 5 9 .0 5 0 .9 9 Up: 1300 1280 1260 1240 N F W Y O R K ih e stoek mar ket closed mixed Thursday in moderate trading, finishing out i aster week with a speedv come bai k in the final minutes of trail ing Ih e turnaround, which raised the Dow tor the first time all day followed an agreement between Senate Republicans and W hite Mouse aides on a budget that cuts $52 billion off the projected deficit Analysts blamed the generally dull week on litters about corpo rate profits, worries about the economy and the length of the trading week, shortened bv the Good Friday holiday. I he Dow jones industrial aver age, which fell 7 62 W ednesday, rose a slight I).99 to 1,250 05 after lo r losing for most of the day the four-day week, the D ow lost 7.7 3. Ih e NY's! index tell 0.06 to 103.71 and the price of an aver age share decreased 2 cents Standard & Poor's 500 stock in dex fell 0.08 to 179.03. Declines topped advances 797 685 among the 1,994 issues traded Big Board volum e totaled 86.910.000 shares, dow n from 95.480.000 traded W ednesday. I he market surprised some an I he week before I aster is alysts historically a good one, particu­ larly M au n d y Thursday, .said H a r r y Pa in e L a u b s c h e r of Webber ■ i Hill Hill II 11 13 15 18 20 22 25 27 29 1 March April U nited Press International He described the market as "skittish" and "m aking moun­ tains out of m o le h ills " m its reai tion to quarterly earnings. Because of its dependence on n e w s , " t h is is not a trader's m a r ­ k e t,” he said It has been a dull week, I aubsi her said, but brandished an oltl W all Street adage: "N e v e r sell .i dull market short." He said he still sees strength in the mar­ ket and looks for improvement in the later part of April Composite volume of N Y S I listed issues on all U.S. ex­ changes and over the counter to­ taled 108,074,590 shares, down from 111,579,970 W ednesday. Ihe American Stock Fxchange index slipped 0.22 to 226.85. The price of an average share de­ creased I cent. Declines led ad- vanc es 291-235 among the 787 is­ sues traded. Composite volume totaled 8,716,015 shares, up from 8,099,300 W ednesday. By VARTANIG G. VARTAN 1985 The New York Times N F W Y O R K lo r weeks, the broad stock-market averages have been under pressure, reflecting ba­ sil investor uncertainty over corpo­ rate earnings, interest rates and the course of the economy But electric utility s t o c k s have begun to shine again. On Tuesday, the D ow jones util« ty average finished at 154.54, its highest level since Novem ber 1965. Thursday, it closed at 153.83, down 0.30. The recent appeal in utility stoc ks stems in part from their relatively high yields. Also this is a conserva­ tive group, somewhat like the1 food issues, that tends to do relatively well when the market goes on the defensive In the past, stock-market strate gists point out, an advance in utility issues has often preceded a recov­ ery in equities generally. S . Arlene Barnes, who f o l l o w s electric utilities for the I irst Boston Corp., said in a current appraisal of the group: " W e are changing our from a market recommendation w eighting to an above-market weighting " In effect, this means a change from a neutral rating to one of greater emphasis. O n a similar note, tec hnical mar ket analysts at Smith Barney, Harris Upham & Co. stated: " W e believe portfolios should have a strong rep­ resentation in this group at this tim e." From last September through the second week of january the "elec­ trics" outperformed the overall equity market I hen, as other stock sectors began to surge in mid Janu­ ary, utility issues lagged behind ‘We believe portfolios should have a strong representation in this group (electric utilities) at this time.’ — Smith Barney, Harris Upham & Co. N ow they are showing greater rela­ tive strength again. fashion, l ooking ahead, Barnes expects electric utilities to perform in contra cyclical investors buying these stocks during periods of economic uncertainty and selling them in periods of strong economic performance "w ith The D ow Jones utilities show a yield of 9 .1 percent, based on the latest dividend payments By corn parison, the D ow Jones industrial average yields 4.9 percent Hie Dow Jones utility average ac tually contains four gas stocks and llelet tries. During the first quarter of 1 9 8 5 , the C onsolidated Natural C.as Co., a major integrated natural gas system, scored the best price gain among the 15 components by climbing 7.78 percent, according to W illiam M. LeFevre, market stateg- ist for Purcell, Graham & Co.. Ihe next three top performers, all show­ ing gains exceeding 6.7 percent, were Pacific ( .as and Electric, C leve- land Electric Illuminating and Phila­ delphia 1 lectric. Scanning their stock charts, tech­ nical analysts at Smith Barney spot some of what they call the better- looking electric utilities " These in­ clude American Electric Power; Ca­ rolina Power and Eight; Central Illinois l ight; Commonwealth Edi­ son; Consolidated Edison; Delmar va Power and Eight; Potomac Elec­ tric Power, Southern California Edison, and Wisconsin Electric Power. "A s in any other stock group, risks and rewards tend to march hand in hand and we continue to believe that the greatest rewards in electric utility stock ownership will be in those companies whose shares are perceived to carry the greatest risk," said Miss Barnes of First Bos ton. "In fact, our own analysis sug­ gests that the risk in some of these stocks may not be as great as the market is suggesting. W ithin this group we continue to recommend C leveland Electric Illum inating, Ohio Edison and Philadelphia Elec­ tric." " W e also believe that Duquesne I ight's fortunes will im prove signif icantly over the next several years," she added "O n a trading basis, w*1 like Kansas (.as and Electric." A trading basis refers to a short-term investment. The analyst said that stocks she favors for "dividend increases over the next include two m onths" rECO Energy, Northern States Power and San Diego Gas and Elec­ tric. Miss Barnes recommends a num ber of other electric utilities to fit specific investor goals, such as smaller companies that may offe r appeal to portfolio managers taking more modest positions. " In this cat­ egory," she said, "w e particularly like Boston Edison, Delmarva Po w ­ er and Eight, Com m onwealth Ener gy, and Kansas Power and Light.' O n a relative basis, many utility stocks were good market perform­ e r s in 1 9 8 4 , despite- investor disen chantment at times with companies Genenra slacks and shirts. O C s ° i Z O ’ OTT! 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Young men's slacks in an assortment of styles and colors from some of our most famous makers. 28-34. U-\ 1 O íÑ % Zeppelin tops, bottoms. r Z O OTT! Reg. $18-$50. 13.50-37.50. Select group of updated pants (28-34) in the latest fashion fabrics; oversized tops in solids, pat­ terns. Summer is here and so are all the latest summer looks... on sale now at Dillard’s! Come take your pick this Friday and Saturday... register for a fabulous Fiesta weekend.. and keep putting us on! Still afloat Despite billion-dollar setbacks, Hunt family confident that silver will rise again United Press International D A L L A S A huge man h e ro n illy pumps his 280-pound bulk up and down the stony crags of a Creek island, the hot sun splintering the blue Aegean beneath him into a flurry of silver coins. It was the third climb of the day for N el­ son Bunker Hunt, the patriarch of what was — and may still be America s wealthiest family. His frenetic labor that day left his col­ leagues agape with wonder “ It was an impossible-looking clim b,’ said Gordon McC lendon, a fellow multimil­ lionaire, yachtsman and friend. “ The islands were very hilly. You d go 50 feet in, then straight up. Bunker went right ahead with three climbs. I just sat there and had ice cream. “ It might not be surprising for Herbert (Bunker's lean younger brother, a health food freak). But it was incredible for a man the size of Bunker. “ And he did it without complaining once," said McC lendon, “ without falling apart from exhaustion, without losing his mental sharpness H is interest in the' sub­ ject fired him o n ." B u n k e r ' s interest was in ancient C.reek coins, an appropriate hobby for a man few whose collapsing silver empire a months earlier had rocked the financial world — a story that is still unfolding in fresh government accusations, litigation and rapid-fire failures in the family hold­ ings in oil, sugar and real estate. Bunker, even today, boasts one of t h e w orld's finest collections of ancient Roman and Greek c o i n s , including the’ rare silver Attic decadrachm. He also o w n s some of the w orld's top thoroughbreds; perhaps the world's largest championship stable. C o i n s and horses are his love. His hedge against inflation if there is su< h a thing offshore bank vaults, silver bullion. is secreted in a dozen “ His an* hor against the w in d /' McC len­ don puts it. In the halcyon davs prior to “ Silver March 27, 1980, the day the Thursday'' bubble burst Bunker, Herbert and brother I amar controlled about a hundred million ounces of silver bullion, half of the world's deliverable supply. Its value at the market high ($50 an ounce), coupled with other family hold­ ings, put their net worth at $13 billion — greater than the combined worth of RC A, Ford and Mobil; greater than the gross na­ tional products of Kenya, Tanzania and Zimbabwe combined. Even today, the family's bullion (much of it w a s kept despite a $1 1 billion bailout or­ chestrated by Federal Reserve Chairman Paul Volcker) is worth in excess of a billion dollars by some estimates. “ As long as we pay off the (bailout) note/' Herbert testified before a congres­ sional subcommittee, “ we're free to hang on to our silver. And nothing says we can't buy more silver if we want to.” Despite persistent creditors, the Hunts have held fast to more than 60 million ounces of silver. “ People forget about the silver," said a Dallas banker. “ But it's still there in those vaults, waiting for the day when inflation catches fire again. Bunker will then hold a news conference and tell the world T told you so.' " Bunker, according to assoc tates and ana­ lysts interviewed by U P I, is gambling that inflation will return with a fury, perhaps as early as 1988, and silver will be his salva­ tion. “ Bunker and I share a certain naivete," said M cClendon. “ He's a most ingenuous ‘People forget about the (Hunts’) silver. But it’s still there in those vaults, waiting for the day when inflation catches fire again. Bunker w ill then hold a news conference and tell the world “I told you so.” ’ — Dallas banker person, not frivolous or stupid. H e's un­ suspicious He's told me several times he will tni'st a man until something happei s that forces him to do otherwise, to w up. " O f course when he makes a mistake any mistake, it's going to be a big on* One of those costly b lu n d e rs w a s the re suit of naive trust, his associates say, trust that the brokers who control the silver fu tures market would not change tht rules or him. They did. “ They required higher and highe r mar gins and they applied the rules retroactive ly ,“ said jim Collins, former congressman and longtime family friend. “ They put tre mendous pressure on the H u n t s Brokers demanded (.ash to cover the d minishing value of the futures contracts, cash that is called for daily in commodity markets and is known as margin. W hen Bunker and Herbert could not meet t h e margin call, despite an 11th hour attempt to sell bonds on their stored silver, essentially create a private international currency, the roof fell in. “ Bunker never understood he was doing business with his enemies, men who made a profit when Bunker lost,” said McC len­ don The Daily Texan/Friday, April 5,1985 page 17 enormous land and oil-drilling interests. A few weeks ago Great Western was forced into bankruptcy by a consortium o f bankers including first National of C hica- go and Manufacturers H anover Trust Doc­ u m e n t s obtained by U P I indicate H unt In ­ ternational was in default on loans by at U ist $295 million and the com pany's total l i ab i l i t i e s w e r e $414 million compared w ith assets that have a stated some say gross­ ly overstated book value of $301 6 mil- lion W hat astounds friends and foes alike is 11 the sup* r-rich Hunt brothers, despite these prodigious setbacks, are still the super-rich Hunt brothers “ W hen you start with a huge pile of chips said Alien Coleman, a I fallas pro­ fessor of banking, “ you can lose a big pile and still have plenty of chip«- left. “ They're poker players, like their dad­ d y ," ( oleman said “ Once you get that in your blood it's hard to >hak< particularly when you've got a good trac k res ord It's a w ay of life in Texas the character of the people “ The Hunts will walk aw ay from a lot ot th«- silver c rash, the bankruptcy of and probably still remain things Great Western financially sec ure 'Besides," said ( oleman, ' only a hand­ ful of bankers — maybe not even a handful __ know where all the* assets are located. Then there's all that bullion sequestered in offshore vaults, awaiting the day of reck­ oning with inflation. “ N ever count the Hunts out,” said McClendon. “ They may be down in the short term, but they'll come back. Bunker's like m y Chinese fighting dog. H e'll bull his vs. iv back like a champion O OO Efc>er crop tops- C °mP' at $12 to $14 7 , 7 7 ( :hoose from a great assortment of .11 co ' an croo fops with the detailing juniors like >est! Grec+ shades and great shapes for the summer ahead. 3-13. “1Q OO ^a bPV Lsgs shorts. Comp, at $25 t / 7 All-cotton in crisp khaki or rhubarb f Ail-cotton in crisp khak¡ or rhubarb I / 3rgo pockets and more Juniors 3-13. O OO Palmettos shorts. Comp, at $14 7 . V 7 Spring shorts in dots or sthpes, Polyester. ootton. Designed for you to enjoy your busy summer. Sizes 3-13. 19.99 jeans from rnr Fashion jeans. Reg. $32-$38 Choose from a variety of all-cotton 'lany of o ur most famous makers. V n T to rtz i in n n w * 25 of ^ 4 4 All Generra sportswear, Reg. S23-S40 17.25-S30. Pants and knit or woven tops n neutr als and brights. O i l Cotton and p o ly e s te r/cotton. 3-13, S-L 0/1 OO Coat dress Dy et v npes .no plaids Z H n 7 7 $34 Ax* r - with shawl collar, hanky r oreast pocket snort sleeves poly cotton. Juniors 3-13. 'in3S-Reg- 25% off Tomboy separates Comp 14.99-19.99. Choose from a fashion gr t x fleet on of pants, skirts, tops and sweater: of linen-look 3mie/cot ton with the great styling Tomboy is known for 3-13, S-L. at $26-$36 REGISTER TO WIN An exciting week­ end for two, April 26-27-28 at San Antonio's FIESTA! The weekend includes transportation for two to San Antonio, double accommodations at the San Antonio Marriott Hotel on the Riverwalk, tickets to FIESTA events and spending money! No purchase necessary, winner will be notified by mail. Under 18 must be accompanied by guardian. Sports page 18The Da y Texan/Fnday ADr 5 '985 Texas women face top field By HOWARD DECKER D aily Texan S t a ff The Texa- women's track team, fresh off it- victory two week- ago at the T exas Invitational, w ill have -ome of the top athlete- among the 400 women at the 58tf lev,)- R elav- held at Memorial Stadium Friday and Saturday But because the rest of th" field mav be ju-t as outstanding, the Longhorn- will have their work cut out for them However, according to Longhorn Coach Terry C raw ford, the competition will be an asset. "I really feel like the quality of tfu* competition will help u- a lot, Crawford said. One of the meet's top e v e n t s will be the 100-meter hurdle- where W om en’s T ra c k Texas' Karen Nelson will run again-t Benita Fit/.gerald-Brown, who won a gold medal in that event during the 1984 Olympics. But, this won't be anything new for Nelson, because -he and Fitzger­ ald-Brown are already well acquain­ ted. "I've run against her for the past three years now — ever since I've been running hurdles," Nelson said ' And I train with her a lot She came here (to Austin) just after ( hristmas and we have been train­ ing together a lot ever since." Nelson said Texas should be at top form after an off week, and said See Women, page 19 Houston's Carol Lewis throw s javelin Thursday in Texas Relays. Stephen Reed. Daily Texan Staff Horns hope to hand Bears bad news * By JIM PU RC ELL Daily Texan S ta ff B aseball up at them. When the Texas Longhorns travel to Waco this weekend for a three-game series with Baylor, they'll be leaving their Easter Bunny suits at home. The only holiday figure the slumping Long­ horns may wish to impersonate is The Grinch Who Stole Christmas, as they invade Ferrell Field looking to steal some precious momentum from the red-hot Bears Texas enters Friday's 2 p.m. single game in an unfamiliar position in the Southwest Conference standing- fourth, 3»/ gaifies behind the SWC - leading Bears. "It's one of the biggest (series) we've ever had." said Bavluf coach Mickey Sullivan, whose 8-1 Bears will also meet the 3-3 Longhorns for a noon Saturday double-header (KLBJ-AM 590). in this position before We've tlwavs bet n down in the* middle looking We've never been The Bears' fast start has been surprising in more wavs than one. Offense, long a Baylor strong point, is down — the Bears are hitting just .267 as a team in S W C play- Baylor's climb to the top of the conference standings has been ac­ complished with superb pitching and good de­ fense. "Before the season, if I had to rate what I thought our strengths would be, I would have thought our hitting would be first and our de- fen-e second, with our pitching coming in third," Sullivan said. "But that's flip-flopped. W e just got off to a fast start and won a few one- run games.” The Bears are 11-1 in one-run games -o far this season, a factor attributable to the team's pitch­ ing and defensive performances. I he Baylor pitching staff has a 2.85 ERA over­ all and 1.69 in SWC play. The staff is led bv «-■* * • m junior Blaine Beatty, who is 8-1 with a 1.96 ERA (4-0, 1.05 in SW C play). . . . U L -v 1 CllL ETC : . O 1 i , , After Beatty the quality of the pitching doesn't drop off much, as the other two pitchers sched­ uled to throw against Texas (junior Kenneth Patterson and senior Alan Koonce) have com­ bined for a 6-1 record and 2.20 FRA. "They (Baylor) are just well balanced," said Texas coach Cliff Gustafson, who will counter with Greg Swindell, Daniel Pena and Bruce Ruf­ fin. "They've got good defense, and their pitch­ ing has kept them in ballgames. rhe Baylor offense ha- also shown sig n s of returning from its mid-sea-on hibernation as well. Third baseman Kyle Todd has hit safely in his last eight games to raise his average to 431 (.375 SW C ) and has tied the Bears' single-season triples mark with seven. But the driving force behind the Baylor attack is sophomore left fielder Steve Jarvie, who is hit­ ting a hefty .450 (.444 SWC). See Baseball, page 22 YO U MEAN Y O U HAVEN'T F O U N D TEJÍ ONLY BEACH IN AUSTIN Yf 17 NOW SERVING DAILY SPEC IALS, SANDW K HFS AND 5NA( KS 11AM - 12 MIDNIGHT DAILY OVER 100 IM PO RTED & DOMESTIC BRANDS OF BFFR LIVE MUSIC N IG H T L Y SOME OF THE BEST AFFORDABLE BANDS IN AUSTIN 474-0605 Beer Specials Posse East 30th Street 291 1 San |a< into Kegs Coors Miller Old Mil. ual. 16 gal 16 gal American Beer Strohs Miller Lite Michelob 6 pk. fans 6pk cans *> pk bottles Imported Beer Corona Brahma 6 pk. 6 pk. 36.95 36.95 26.95 2.99 2.99 3.09 3.99 3.99 S b U n & S a U ' SPECIAL: MEN'S ADIDAS “TOBACCO" SHOE * 1 5 . ° ° reg. $ 3 2 .,s (casual wear) See o u r o th e r in -sto re specials 2416Guadalupe THE JOCK SHOP 477-6443 Coming M ONDAY, A P R IL 8 in T V / Match ■ ▼ Meekly TV IKIVIA with GREAT PR IZ ES courtesy U N IV E R S IT Y COOP *e s A m 3 24th & Son Antonio Op«iEv«ry Night Until 1:30 Optn at 11:00 a.m. 7 days a week f J my ■i— nappy irour aovi«*rn« #•/ IMMIGRATION Permanent Resident or Temporary Employment Visas P A U L P A R S O N S p.c. A tto rn e y at L a w BOARD CERTIFIED IMMIGRATION & NATIONALITY LAW TEXAS BOARD OF LEG A L SPECIALIZATION 2200 GUADALUPE SUITE216 477-7887 Texas Relays speed-filled By MICHAEL VEGA D aily Texan S ta ff M e n ’s T ra c k Cleburne Price has been a bu-v man of late Hu* the ! * • • • men s trac k a>ach will be ev en busier when the S^th annual fexas Relays commence >,ith tie!•.! events md running prel­ iminaries f ridav at Memorial Stadi­ ! h* R e la y s conclude Saturday um jumping around here getting ready for the Relays/' said Price, the Longhorns' coach for the last 15 years. "I'm real­ ly anxious to get going 'W e've been really [his year s meet, vchich boasts a field of 67 collegiate men's teams, promises to be a showcase of -peed with Olympic double medalist Kirk Baptiste -• the University of Hous­ ton headlining the collegiate 100- meter dash. Baptiste, who was a gold medalist in th* 4ft0-meter relay and a silver medalist in the 200-meter dash at the 1984 summer games in Los An­ g e l e s , will be back to defend his lexa- Relays title* in the 100, which he won last year with a 10.23. Baptiste may have an easier time in the collegiate 100 than he would in the high school 100. "The high school 100-meter dash will be as good as or better than the university said. "There'll be some good high school talent here." class," Price I he high school 100-meter dash final is at 7:45 p m 1 ridav Both th> inv itational and collegiate 100-meter dash finals are scheduled for ap­ proximately 3 20 p m Satur lav About 83 high schools are set to compete. Rov Martin of Dallas Roosevelt, the defending state champion in the Class 5A 200, will attempt to -ecure another Outstanding Male Perform­ er award which he capture .1 la-t year after winning a wind-aided 100 (10.14) and anchoring Roosevelt’s winning 400 relav (4 * ) ind 1,6* X.) relav (3:09.09), As a result, Roosevelt was named the Texas R e la y s Outstanding Team, the first time a high -chool team had earned the honor Martin, whose 10 02 time in the 100 ranks as the best in the state, was nosed out for a spot on the < tlvmpic team at the ( )l cmpii I rial- last year. the state championship Other top high school athletes scheduled to compete in the 100 in­ clude Joe DeLoach of Bay City, who in won Cía-- 4A by running 10.0 last year, and Henry Thomas of Hawthorne, Oalif., the defending California state champion m the 100 Thomas, “Martin, and DeLoach have been ranked 1-2-3 as the top sprinters in the nation bv Trade and Field News. "I don’t think recruiting is al Price said lowed at such meet-. See Men, page 22 Chariot Stamp out rock <£ roll. The new Brooks Chariot, the state-of- the-art tec hnoloRy in high-performance running sht from rolling too far inward. RUN-TEX "The Runner's Store" 4723254 ^¡BROOKS 908 B West 12th St (at Lamar) DAN’S I I 1 6 0 0 L A V A C A 4 7 8 - 5 4 2 3 5 3 5 3 B U R N E T RD. 4 5 9 - 8 6 8 9 A L L S P E C IA L S C A S H O R C H E C K O N L Y 1 1 I CHIVAS REGAL 12 YR. HA -• >•< r WK*firy BALLANTINES 12 YR. HA Pr / V •' *■ / A \k v OLD SMUGGLER •a *warf Vo*r> /A-Ur, BALLANTINES 86 Proof Scotch WhrMy LEGACY 80 Proof Scotch Wh**ky J & B RARE He, pr, ,. :* v O*' H W h tik y CUTTY SARK iA Pwoo* Scotch 'Mvmiry VAT 69 GOLD 86 Proof Scotch Whisky RON RIO RUM 80 Proof Virgm Ivkmds Purr* BOOTHS GIN 90 Proof Gtn 80 Proof Vodka JIM BEAM 80 Proof Straight fkkxbon Wh*sfc«y ANCIENT AGE 86 Proof Straight ftovrbon Wh»sk#y OLD CROW 80 Proof S t r a t i Bourbon W W a y W.L. 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M ilwaukee led 114-111 with 3:30 left when Cummings stored his 10th point of the period and Ricky Pierce free throws to make it 118-111 and put the game awav. followed with two Paul Pressey had 20 for the Bucks, who ran their record to 56-21, in­ cluding 14 in a row at home. Kelly Tripucka led Detroit with 32 points, |ohn Long followed with 23, Isiah Thomas had 20 and Dan Roundfield 18. Alton Lister had 18 and Sidney Moncrief and Craig Hodges had 17 apiece for the Bucks, who have al­ ready wrapped up the Central D ivi­ sion title. H o d g e s had nine points for the Bucks and Roundfield eight for De troit in the third period as the Bucks took the lead 89-87 entering the final quarter Detroit shot 67 percent from the field in the first period as Tripucka had 14 points and Long 11 to give first-quarter the Pistons a 35-34 lead. Moncrief and Pressey each had nine for the Bucks in the period and M ilw aukee shot 60 percent for the quarter. Nuggets 110, Suns 103 P H O E N IX , Ariz. — Alex English scored 31 points to guide Denver past Phoenix. By w inning the N u g ­ gets raised their record to 49-27 on the season and moved just one vic­ tory shy of the club record for a sea­ son. Denver has won seven of its last nine games. Despite a 33-44 record and having lost 10 of their last 12 games, the Suns still have the inside track for the eighth and final Western Con­ ference playdff spot. The score was tied at 101 after Kvle M acy hit an 18-foot jumper with 3:24 remaining However, Cal­ Issel followed vin Natt and Dan with field goals and Denver had a lead it never relinquished English was followed by Natt with 23 points, W avn e Cooper with 16 and Lafayette Lever with 11 points and 11 assists. Alvan Adams was the offensive show for Phoenix, scoring 31 points, pulling down 11 rebounds and dishing off 11 assists for a triple double. Other Suns in double figures included Jay Hum phries and Macy With 14 points each, Charles Pittman with 13 and M ike Sanders with 12 Hawks 100, KmCks 79 N E W Y O R K Cliff I evingston combined a season-high 22 points with a game-high 13 rebounds and Dominique W ilkins added 18 points to lead Atlanta past N ew York Atlanta, locked in a battle with Cleveland for the final playoff spot in the Eastern Conference, ha-^ won six of its last 12 games. The Knicks have lost seven in a row and 24 out of their last 31 games. N ew York's 79 points was its lo w ­ est output of the season. The Knicks, who shot just 29 per­ cent for the game, suffered through a miserable first quarter as they were outscored 38-19. Detroit's 38 points tied for the most points al­ lowed by N e w York in a quarter this season. Boston and Indiana also had 38 against the Knicks. Atlanta led 53-42 at the half and 81-60 after three quarters, and took a 24-point lead on two different oc­ casions in the fourth period. Darrell W alker finished with 18 points for N e w York and Ernie Grunfeld 14. Lddie Johnson had 16 points and 11 assists for Atlanta, which shot just 36 percent. Braves nip Astros on Cerone’s drive United Press International S p rin g T ra in in g W E S T P A L M B E A C H , Fla. — The Atlanta Braves picked up their eighth consecutive victory and in­ creased their spring training record to 16-10 Thursday with a 7-6 victory over the Houston Astros. The Braves won in the bottom of the ninth when a line drive down the right field line by Rick Cerone scored Dale M urphy, w ho had led off the inning with a single and moved to second on a sacrifice bunt by pinch hitter Albert Hall. two The Braves took an early 4-0 lead innings, but Houston after came back to take a 6-5 lead in the top of the sixth. The Braves knotted the score in the bottom of the sixth, as Ken Oberkfel! led off the inning with a double to right and moved around to score on Gerald Perry's sacrifice bunt and a sacrifice fly by M urphy. innings. Bruce Sutter was the winning pitcher for the Braves, as he hurled two scoreless It was Sutter's first victory of the spring season. Sutter has a 0.00 earned run average after working in 14 innings over 10 games. He has allowed only four hits. Earlier in the day, the Braves re­ duced their roster to 26 players when they optioned infielder Randy Johnson to the Richmond Braves. The team must make one more cut before its season opener April 9 in Philadelphia. Yankees 6, Rangers 4 P O M P A N O B E A C H , Fla. Butch W ynegar's three-run dou­ ble in the first inning sparked N ew York to a victory over Texas. Juan Bonilla singled with one out in the first off losing pitcher Tommy Boggs. Don Mattingly walked and Women C o n tin u e d fro m page 18 Don Baylor was hit by a pitch, set­ ting up W ynegar's bases-clearing double. He then scored on Mike Pa- gliarulo's triple for a 4-0 lead. Three Yankee pitchers held the Rangers to eight hits. Joe Cowley, fighting for a spot on the team, got the victory with five innings of three-hit ball in relief of Phil Nierko. Don Slaught homered the ninth inning for Texas, his third this spring. in Blue Jays 6, Tigers 3 D U N E D IN , Fla. — Jesse Barfield homered to lead Toronto to a Gra­ pefruit League victory over Detroit. The victory was the Blue Jays' 18th this spring, the most ever in their nine years of spring exhibition games, and their third over the Tigers this year. The Tigers jumped to a 2-0 lead in the first on a two-run homer by M ike Laga off Blue Jay starter and winner Dennis Lamp. The Jays answered with three runs in the bottom of the first off Tiger starter and loser Dan Petry. Damaso Garcia and Ranee Mullimks singled to lead off the inning and scored on Lloyd Moseby's triple. Moseby then scored on a ground out by W illie Upshaw. Barfield hit his two-run homer off Aurelio Lope/ in the seventh in­ ning. For the Tigers, Nelson Sim ­ mons hit a solo home run in the eighth. Toronto earlier in the day sent outfielder Rick Leach to the A A A Syracuse Chiefs of the International League and designated infielder Fred Manrique for minor league as­ signment. "T h is she didn't feel much pressure be­ cause of the-competition. is my first year under she rules, American collegiate said " I haven't seen a lot of the people before, so 1 don t feel a lot of pressure." In addition to the hurdles, Nelson will run the lead leg in the Sprint medley relay and 400-meter relay. "It's going to be a full weekend, she said. Another key event for the Long­ horns will be the 100-meter dash where Juliet Cuthbert, who placed third in the indoor championships, will face indoor winner Michelle Finn of Florida State. Susan Shurr, outstanding female athlete at last year's Relays, will also run for the Longhorns. As far as other N C A A teams in­ volved, Florida State, which edged out Texas for the N C A A indoor championship earlier this year, will give the Longhorns a stern test. LSU, which finished third indoors, will also be at the meet. Crawford cited two reasons so many good people are in the Relays " A lot of people pay attention to the results at the Texas Relavs. so that makes it a prettv important m eet," she said. "A lso, I think a lot of teams are using this meet to test out the track and the facilities to prepare for the outdoor champion­ ships here in M a y ." In wom en's Relav action Thurs­ day, Houston's Carol Lewis fin­ ished what she started W ednesday by capturing the heptathlon with a Relay heptathlon record 5,716 points. Lewis' best performance of the dav was a 21-9G effort in the long jump. Laun Young of N orth­ east Louisiana was second and Le w ­ Jolanda Jones, fin­ is' teammate, ished third. The men's and wom en's competi­ tion will be interspersed, with events running from 9 a.m. to 9:25 p.-m. Friday and 10 a.m. to 5:40 p.m. Saturday. More Sports, page 22 The Da / Te^a- /Fr Jay A p r 5. 1985/Page 19 When elected officials listen to the people its amazing what can be done. It is easy to be a constant critic, like some of my opponents. It is harder to apply leadership and solve problems. Two years ago you told us what you wanted us to do. By December, 1984 we had set 216 goals to improve our city. Over half have now been met. W e have solved many problems. W e are worr ny or Uu others Au.r with an ever better future. t y rea* city ; HIGHLIGHTS: A TIME OF PROGRESS AND ACCOMPLISHMENTS Controlling Developers/Managing Growth Northwest Plan to prohibit new municipal utility districts. Adopted a new Zoning Ordinance including neighbor­ hood protection offered by Compatibility Standards. Strengthened the Lake Austin Watershed Ordinance. Created a Neighborhood Planning Office Adopted Loop 360 Development Ordinance Passed the Inner City Ordinance, the toughest ordinance protecting older residential areas. Strengthened the Edwards Aquifer Ordinance. Rejected the largest zoning request for multi-family living to come before the Council. Passed a flood plain ordinance. Established the Principal Roadway Area Ordinance con­ trolling development on all major arteries. Recycling program expanded to 17 routes serving 26,000 homes. Protected the views of the State Capitol, i Formulated a comprehensive Tree Protection Ordinance and authorized employment of the City’s first arborist to enforce it. » Implemented capital recovery fees for commercial de­ velopment and increased other capital recovery fees to assure that future development pays for itself. ► Removed the 3-to-1 setback rules for C-2 zoning category. • Set restrictions on use of reflective glass for construction. • Established policy whereby infrared sensorinq of en­ vironmentally sensitive areas may be surveyed to track impervious cover ratios, sedimentation and erosion, and to provide proper information and a data base. • Annexations added 40 square miles to corporate limits, bringing those areas zoning and land use controls, land­ scaping and sign controls, greater safety, and guards against erosion of the tax base. • Increased total dedicated parkland by about 2.000 acres. • Established a “Growth W atch" to provide statistical data to monitor growth on a quarterly basis • Created a Growth Management Department • Required that a stable supply of water be proven by the developer for the proposed density prior to subdivision approvals. • Fire code revised. Transportation and Traffic Improvements O btained $460 million in state highw ay funds to begin work on Ben White. U.S 183, IH 35 and o th e r roads As chairm an of A ustin Transit Study, M ayor M ullen re- quested the State H ighw ay C o m m issio n expedite upgrading Ben W hite Boulevard to freeway status from a 20-year plan to a 10-year plan by annou ncing the City would participate in funding. A u stin Area Rapid Transit A u th o rity (now known as Capital Metropolitan Transit Authority) prepared a service plan, appoin ted a board and developed a plan fo r the per manent Authority to begin. Voters approved it January 19. Developed the D ow ntow n s h u ttle system know n as the A rm a d illo Express. Completed the Congress Avenue Improvements Project. Provided full city funding for Ben White and U.S. 183 through the September bond election. 1 Initiated improved con outer operations to assist traffic flow. • Began negotiations to purchase railroads right-of-way from the Southern Pacific Railroad Company for potentia1 use by a m ass tra n sit system . » Expedited expansior of J o llyvilie Road to assist in reduc­ ing tra ffic on U.S. 183. Saving Your Money • Lowered electric bills. • Led the Council in successful unified efforts to pass the $955-million (dollar) City Bond issue September 8, 1984. • Authored a 7-point savings program of over S5.2 m illion including spending cuts r< efficiency plans. • Renegotiated natural gas supply contract with Valero Energy Corporation, saving consumers approximately $3 m illio n after new c o n tra ct is initiated. • Plus - One ( + 1 ) Voluntary A ssistance Program initiated to assist disadvantaged customers of utility system in payinq their bills. • Commercial Lighting Incentive Program established, pro­ viding cash rebates for installation of energy efficient lighting. • Economic Development • Developed a comprehens ve East Austin Development • Created a minority and youths summer e m p lo ym e n t pro­ gram sponsored jointly by the public and private sector. • Encouraged diversity of industry to broaden our employ • Made East Austin rental housing more affordable. • Kept Austin with one of the lowest unemployment rates in plan. ment base. the nation. Other Major Accomplishments • Hired a new city manager. • Established a satellite police station. • The crim e rate was reduced by six percent fo r the seven major Index Crimes. • Approved an ordinance increasing homestead tax exemptions for the elderly to $45,000. • Sponsored the municipal volunteer program. • Hospice program established at ürackenridge Hospital. • Held more regular Council work sessions. • Achieved a balance of women & minorities on boards & • Created 20,000 new jobs in City of Austin commissions. When Austin works together there s no end to what we can do! WE’RE WORKING ON AUSTIN’S FUTURE TODAY! Mavor Mullen Pol Adv Paid by M a y'” Mullen Commitfe»* IOS W '■ >.<••• • s ■1 u P a g e 2 0 / T h r D a ly T e x a n / F r id a y A p n i D 1 9 8 Í ROLAND CRUISER SERIES 985 page 2 S p e c i a l EVENTS & I E S H I M S * * \ ! I H I 1 1 . . . 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Regularly 13.5 100% Nvlon me . . s o le l 2 95 . . . sale 9” . . . sale 8 9 ‘ 26.0 0 LONGHORN COUNTRY Main Level G EN ERA L BCCES O N E WEEK O N L Y 3 5 % O FF NEW Y O R K TIMES BESTSELLERS H a rd b a ck & Paperback Reg. 25% OFF Publisher's Price. G reat books at great prices. S A V E 3 5 % HOME CRAFT BOOKS Spring "F ix-U p " Time ★ ★ ★ ONE WEEK ONLY S A V E 2 0 % OUR ENTIRE STOCK ★ SCIENCE FICTION ★ POETRY BOOKS ★ HEALTH & BEAUTY ★ COOKBOOKS ★ ART BOOKS N O W THRU SATURDAY! GENERAL BOOKS Second Level UNIVERSITY CO-OP MAJORING IN SERVICE SINCE 1896 M asterC ard 2 2 4 6 G u a d a l u p e 1 H o u r FRFF P a r k in g a t 2 3 r d & S a n A n t o n io w / r in y S3 p u r. h .r .t- P h o n e 4 7 6 721 1 O P E N M o n Fn 6 30 ^ S a t 9 3 0 5 :3 0 ★ I U E A V . A p r i l M h ★ ★ FREE BA LLO O N S ... 10:30 to 3:3 0 M ain Floor Concourse ★ V IV IT A R LENS D E M 0 ...1 0 -5 :3 0 M ee t our Vivitar rep and see our terrific selection of lenses at sale prices. 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April 1-6 Main Concourse UNIVERSITY CO-OP VISA' 4 6 G u a d a lu p e P a rk in g . '3 r d & San A n to m Phone 476-7211 Pen© 22 The Dsiiy Texon F ricJay. April 5. 1985 Men C o n t in u e d fr o m p a g e 18 "B u t thf re w ill be Cc>ai h e " from ,bout 60 colleges here, so I'm sure thev'H bum p into eath . >ther I think our best ch.inees w ill be Price con tin- in the "p rint m edley. tied "4 hat and our I .600 relay are Best bet -.to get into thiu finals | exas sprint consist4' of p. "h m a n lason 1 eat 1i and junior l.aing «it Kingston, transfer rela\ la r i Jam aica, in the 200 legs lohn f itter- son, a sophom ore trom A m arillo, h andles the 400 and Pablo Squella, a freshm an from Santiago, C h ile , a n ­ chors the relav_ w ith the 800. I he four Lo n g h o rn s also han d le the 1 niRt relav duties. O th e r Longhorn^ to w atch w ill be javelin th ro w e rs D ag W e n n lu n d of M a r ie s te d , S w e d e n , w h o has recorded a toss of 270-3 this season, ,m J ( ,reg Bullio n, a senior trom La k e C h arles, L a ., w h o se career VERS Sportswire From staff and wire reports !h e Longhorn tennis team blanks Rice Iexas men s tennm team skunked Rice, Mi ? Thursday at the In tram u ral C ourts. I he I ong hom s, \ overall and 2-1 in the S o u th w e s t t onference, travel to C olleg e Station to p lay Texas A & M at 1 Ml p.m . Satur- dav. Royce Deppe. recent!> promoted to the xlo I singles p o s i t i o n for Texas, top p ed the O w ls Scott M e lv ille , h-3 lorn Fontana beat D a vid Petty 6-3, 6-1 C harles Beckm an defeated M a rtin Sieckm an 6-1, 7-6, Doug Pielet beat C hu ck Bratkc 6-2, 6-4. Paul Koscielski de­ feated M a rk K riscones 7 >, 6-0, for his 15th consecutive victory and C h ip I eighton beat M a rk M ille r 6 2, 6 4. In double-, D e p p e a n d Beckm an defeated Sieckm an and P e tty 6-2, 7-5, Koscielski and Fred T hom e beat M e l­ ville and K riscones 6-4. 6-1, and I ontana and M ik e B ro w n defeated M ille r and Bratke 6-0, 6-1. Texas golfers host tournament ( om p eting this year w ill be A r k a n s a s , Bavlor, C ole rado, H ouston, H ouston Baptist, 1 amar, M issouri, \ e w M exico, N o rth Texas State, O klah o m a, O klahom a State, O ral R o b e r t s , Pan A m erican, Rice, Steph* n I A u stin , Texas A & M , T C U a n d I exas lech. T e x a s w ill start seniors M ike Board and Ronnie McDougal, and freshm en Bob I stes, Blair M anasse and Brian N elson. Tulane drops basketball program fielder. N I W O R I F A N S — Tulane, m ired in a point-shaving scandal, plans to discontinue it- men - basketball pro­ gram after accepting the resignations of three coaches w h o made cash paym ents to players, I ulane President F am o n K ellv said I hursdav. " lu l a n e 's o w n investigatio n turned up evidence that C oach N e d Fowler and tw o assistants paid players in violation of N C A A rules, " K e llv said at a new s confer­ ence. H e w o u ld not sav ho w m uch m oney changed hands B a s e b a ll___ C o n t in u e d from page 18 Jarvie, w h o hit o n lv 208 last sea­ son, got his break w hen first base­ man M ik e M a lin a k w en t d o w n early in the season. The resulting lin eu p shuffle left S u lliv a n w ith o u t a left fielder. M alin ak has since returned to the lineup and carries a 330 average him self, but ja rvie has established him self as the Bears' regular left " W e never had sw ept people tw o w eeks in a r o w ," said S u lliv a n , w h o opened S W C p la v by sw e ep in g Tex­ as Tech and TCU before taking tw o gam es from Rice last w eekend. Be­ fore the season I w a s n 't expecting to see 8-1. If I w o u ld have been 6-3, I w o u ld have been h ap p y. Else w h e re in the S W C this w e e k ­ end, H ouston travels to A rkansas, Rice is at T C U and Texas A & M v is ­ its Texas Tech. Texas m ay be m ired at the .5UU in SW C play, but several sport gaud y overall m ark Long horns statistics. 1 eft fielder D avid D e n n y has 60 R B I in just 156 at-bats despite a less than godlike .327 batting average and .455 b u g g in g percentage Second basem an Bill Bates has in on-base percentage of 503 aided bv 46 w alks in 42 games, and the >7, the 155-pounder ironically leads team w ith five hom e runs. M ike Sim o n leads a quartet of Lon g h orn s batting .360s. Sim ons is at .368, follow ed bv Rob­ bie Byers (.365), D ennis C ook ( ’>64) the in and Bud R a y (.362). Ace pitcher G reg S w in d e ll has a 5-1 record w ith a 1.57 E R A , and has just 5.6 hits and 7.1 allow ed baserunners per nine innings. So u th w est C o nferen ce Standings TEAM Baylor Houstor Arkanss Texas Texas ASM Texas Tech TCI I 2 2 1 PCT G B Conference L 1 1 833 1VS 3 ■ ' 2 V? 500 3 ' * 3 375 4’/5 333 4 222 6 167 5 V5> 4 f Overall W L PCT, 24 7 35 8 22 10 17 18 7 74 8 1 4 688 186 ast week's results Friday Rice ’ Ra/io' 4 Housw 8 -ec, „ Te F 70 — M o to rc y c le s 130 C o n d o s - T o w n h o u s e s 130 — C o n d o s - T o w n h o u s e s 1 30 — C o n d o s - T o w n h o u s e s 130 C o n d o s - T o w n h o u s e s 83 H O N D A 125 XI good condition Must see to appre'.ate’ Fvemngt 477 3008 Ht Mom 4-5 SUZUKI G N 4 0 0 1981 Includes helmet cover new reoc tt* ci and battery good commuter bik e $800 443 /069 4 12 M O PFD 1984 Rode 6 ( dream Basket Helmet $380 443 0778 4 10 lonths Pad TRAC ESC 80 — B ic y c le s SAVE M O N FY$$ Quality new bicycles' 10 speech From V 4'- Cruisers From $159 Mountain bikes From $ 739 00 Panasonic Shogun, Diamandbock, Mon goose Dak oto South Austir Bicycle 2210 South 1st 444-0805 4 5 SC H W IN N W O RLD Traveller 10 speed m goad condition Medium sized men's Frame O nly$/5cosh 474 8409 4 5 BUY ALL Campagnolo on 25' coring Frame w/sew ups w'pump and ra- k $500 John Bedolla 458 5/21 4 5 M O TO BEC A N E 10-speed For sole LtgFit weight Foam-coated handlebars $150 or oFFer Call 4/6 4229 4-8 UN IV EG A G R A N Rally 25 1 ess than 50 miles Col! 453-6396 412^ M EN 'S 23 inch Azuki 10 speed Excellent condition Recently tuned First $100 44/ 9890 4-5 C EN T U R IO N 12 speed tounng, excellent condition $180 Call 499 0186 4-9_ intermediate m F n 'S 23' LENTON 10 speed (British) good condition car rock included $/5 473-2792 4 5 U ra n g e 1ST CHOfCE-CPOIX rtely tbe best available Ab* this moft desired community ? 7 stories, large walk in closets fireplace & more Longhorn Properties k 4 / 8 6313 Texas W atts 1-800 757 3238 BEST VALUE IN AUSTIN! On U.T. Shuttle One and Tw o Bedroom Units Still Available Two Swimming Pools Priced From the Lou 40 79 6618. 346 5 82 9 X) CONNECTION T R A V I S G R E E N M S S A L E S O F F IC E O N S IT E 144-1110 RE/MAX REALTOR 451-2242 A S CHOICE C LA S S IFIED A D V E R T IS IN G Consecutive D ay Rates 15 word minimum Each word 1 tome Each word 3 times Each word 5 times Each word 10 ttmes Each word 15 times Each word '20 times 1 col «1 inch 1 time $ 76 $ n V 09 $ 77 % ? i .i $2 30 $6 IS ■fry f $1 00 charge to chang two words may be ciH capital letters ?5c for each additional word capital letters Mastercard and V accepted D EA D LIN E SC H ED ULE Monday Texan Tuesday Texan Wednesday Tex Thursday Texan Friday Texon Friday 11am Monday 11am Tuesday 11am Wednesday Ham Thursd 11 I Ion n In th e e v e n t o l e r r o r s m o d e in o n a d v e r tis e m e n t, im m e d io te n o tic e m u s t b e q iv e n a s th e p u b lis h e r s o r e re s p o n s ib le fo r o n ly O N E i n ­ c o rre c t in s e r tio n A ll c la im s fo r a d ju s tm e n ts s h o u ld b e m a d e n o t la te r th a n 30 d a y s a fte r p u b lic a tio n . P r e - p a id k ills re c e iv e cred it s lip if r e q u e s t e d a t tim e o f c a n c e lla t io n , a n d if a m o u n t e x c e e d s $2 00 S lip m u s t b e r e o r d e r p r e s e n t e d fo r a w ith in 90 d a y s t o b e v a lid C L A S S IF IC A T IO N S T R A N SP O R T A T IO N 10 M isr A u to s 20 S p o r t s - F o r e ig n A u to s 30 40 50 60 T ru c k s V a n s V e h ic le s to T r a d e S e rv ic e R e p a ir P a rts A c c e s s o r ie s , 70 M o to r c y c le s 80 B ic y c le s 90 — V e h ic le L e a s in g 100 REAL ESTATE SA LES 110 — S e rv ic e s V e h ic le s W a n te d 120 — H o u s e s 130 — C o n d o s T o w n h o u s e s 140 M o b ile H o m e s -L o ts 150 A c r e a g e - L o t s 160 D u p le x e s A p a r tm e n t s 170 W a n te d 180 L o a n s M ER C H A N D ISE A p p lia n c e s 190 F u rn itu r e H o u s e h o ld 200 210 220 S t e r e o -T V C o m p u t e r s - E q u ip m e n t 230 P h o t o - C a m e r a s 240 — B o a ts 2 5 0 - M u s ic a l In s tru m en ts 2 6 0 — H o b b ie s 2 7 0 - M o c h in e r y - E q u ip m e n t 2 8 0 — S p o r t in g - C a m p in q E q u ip m e n t F u r n it u r e - A p p lia n c e R e n ta l G a r a g e R u m m a g e 290 300 S a le s T ra d e 310 320 W a n te d to B u y o r Rent M ER C H A N D ISE 330 — Pets 340 M isr RENTAL 350 360 F u rn . A p ts R e n ta l S e rv ic e s 370 U n f A p ts 380 — F u rn . D u p le x e s 190 400 U n i D u p le x e s C o n d o s T o w n h o u s e s 4 1 0 — F u rn H o u s e s 4 2 0 — U n f H o u s e s 425 — R o o m s 430 R o o m - B o a r d 4 3 5 — C o - o p s 440 R o o m m a te s 4 50 M o b ile H o m e s Lots 4 60 B u s in e s s R e n ta ls 4 7 0 — R e s o rts 480 — S to r a g e S p a c e 4 90 — W a n te d to R e n t L e a s e 500 M isc. A N N O U N C E M E N T S 510 E n te r ta in m e n t T icke ts 520 P e rs o n a ls 5 3 0 — T r a v e l T r a n s p o r t a t io n 540 - Lo st & E o u n d 550 Lic e n s e d C h ild C o re Pub lic N o tic e 560 570 M u s ic -M u s ic ia n s ED U C A T IO N A L 5 8 0 - M u s ic a l In stru ctio n T u to rin g In stru ctio n W a n te d 5 90 600 6 10 M isc. In s tru c tio n SE R V IC ES 620 - L e g a l S e rv ic e s 63 0 — C o m p u te r S e rv ic e s 6 40 6 50 M o v in g H a u lin g E x te rm in a to r s 6 60 6 70 S to ra g e P a in tin g S E R V IC ES 6 8 0 O ffic e 690 R e n ta l E q u ip m e n t 700 7T0 720 F u r n itu r e R e p a ir A p p lia n c e R e p a ir S t e r e o - T V R e p a ir 730 H o m e R e p a ir 740 B ic y c le R e p a ir 750 T y p in g 760 M isc. S e rv ic e s E M P LO Y M E N T y/0 780 E m p l o y m e n t A q e n r i e s E m p l o y m e n t S e r v ic e - P a r t tim e 790 8 00 — G e n e r a l H e lp W a n te d 810 O ffic e C le r ic a l 8 2 0 8 3 0 A c c o u n tin g B o o k k e e p i n g A d m in is t r a t iv e M a n g e m e n t S o le s 8 40 850 — R e ta il 8 6 0 - E n g in e e r m g - T e c h n ita l 870 M e d ic a l 880 890 900 P r o fe s s io n a l C lu b s R e s ta u r a n ts D om estic H o u s e h o ld 9 1 0 P o s itio n s W a n te d 9 20 W o rk W a n te d B U S IN E S S 9 3 0 — B u s in e s s 940 O p p o r t u n it ie s O p p o r t u n i t i e s W a n te d IS P Building Room 1200 250l - W> v, Mi>ndoy through Ft lay 8or, i 10 pm T R A N S P O R T A T IO N T R A N S P O R T A T IO N T R A N S P O R T A T IO N T R A N S P O R T A T IO N 9 0 — V e h ic le s L e a s in g 70 — M o to rc y c le s ----------------------------------- 83 H O N D A M A G N A 750, excellent condition, $600 worth of extras $250Ci 445 4649 448 9545 4 5 LIKE N E W 550 Yamaha, max cost $ ? ; 03 only 5239 miles bps! offer Col! 928-0679 4-8 moving H O N D A ( M200 runs grea! iw q g o q e rack red $500 Call 448 2007 leave message 4 5 CUTF LITTLE moped lor sale 1982 Hon da Express, rear b a s k e t $2.35 negotiable Coll Rubens, 474-5322 4 8 New Motorcycles At Used Prices Two 84 Hondo Nighthawk "S " 700's. One Nighthawk 650 Both 700's under 2,000 miles $2,495 650-S1995 under 3,000 miles All m showroom condition. Call Will or Bob 345-0629 4-9 70 — M o to rc y c le s . . ............................. ...................... MUST SELL '84 Honda Arrow good con dition, low mileage, blue, runs good great fun. $4 /5 Please call 452-9825 4-5 1984 YAM AH A Rwa 50 scooter, less than 1 year old, must sell by April 1 $500 442 08/9 or 452 2264 4 8 H O N D A A R R O W 80, 5 months, excel lent condition, $680 Call 441 8091 for Ken 4-5 83 H O N D A Arrow 80 5600 miles ex ceHent condition, $550 O B O 4 78 2500, work; 442-9574, home, Holly 4 8 1984 H O N D A Aero 80 Brand new 600 mikes kept nside Great codition Betsy, 454 2057. 4-5 YA M A H A S E C , 750cc's, red shaft dnve case guards, 3700 miles Asking $2350 Call Dove 331-7694 4 5 1981 YAM AH A 400 Great condition $650 or best offer Kelly at 458-2336 Leave message 4-9 BIRD'S LEASE cars, $18 a day you fur IH- ntsh insurance, 251-2044 136U N 35 4 5 R E A L ES TATE S A L E S 120 — H o u s e s PRICED B E LO W appraisal Triplex, 308 E 32nd, at Tom Green Walk to UT. al­ ways rented G ood condition $165 000 Call Arolyn Hughes, Broker's Realty 459-5406 (W), 4/6 0682 (HI 4 5 130 — C o n d o s - T o w n h o u s e s LARGE 2-2 C O N D O on shuttle near campus Large closets, microwove, secunty gates, pool! Great pnce! Call 4/2 4805 4-9 CHELSEA WEST compus 3BA, covered parking, |ocuzzi, bus stop Excellent financing. 345 0793, 345- 7035 4 5 luxury 2BR, R E A L E S T AT E S A L E S 130 — C o n d o s - T o w n h o u s e s Priced from $39,950 Owner Financing, Easy Qualifying T\vo Level Tbwnhome Ideal for Roommates $49,950 Microwave Ovens On UT shuttle route Patios Clubhouse Washer and dryer included Pool and spa Dishwasher and disposal 3 unique floor plans Security Alarm Ceiling fans Available for immediate occupancy Com e by and see our furnished models 10 — Misc. A u to s 20 — S p o r ts - F o re ig n '80 FUTURA, runs gre-c tensen rnsse*e and equalizer, many extras Call Steve 443 8138, only $2100 4-5_____________ CHRYSLER CONVERTIBLE 8 ? lo Baron White Mark Cross interior w-th «very option $8000 499 0686 or 474-9397 ask for Randy 4-12 1974 CAPRI N EED S work $500 Call anytime 4 79 8908 4-10 rur well 1982 BUICK Century limited, charcoal groy, $6150 472 9353 evenings 4-5 loaded, excellent condition, 1978 RABBIT DELUXE diesel, AM/FM cassette, A/C one owne' excellent ron dilion, sun louvers, $1850 Nights 892 2406 4-8 1953 BUICK Special superb condition original equipment, $5000 4/8 '9 0 7 4 8 81 CHEVY M O N TE Codo AT, AC, PB, PS, power windows sunroof and sect Tilt, cruise, AM-FM cassette 5 : ,000 miles Mint condition Evenings/ weekends 331 6774 4-18 19/6 MALIBU Classic ond Impolo, great student cors, automatic excellent condi hon, $1200, 440 1467, 441 8997 4 8 20 — S p o r ts - F o re ig n A u to s 1981 H O N D A ACCO RD LX Air, cruise PS, top Ime stereo excellent condition, must sell, $5450/or best offer 447 6033 4^0 1970 VO LV O in good repair, clean inte­ rior, runs nice, no rust, 4 speed, $1195, 440-7311 4-10 HONDAS CIVICS, ACCORDS, PRELUDES Plenty in stock, Call Billy 7482. low est prices Bryont, /13/464 4-5 H O N D A S Austin's N ew est Dealership H o w d y Ho nd a N e w or Used Coll Robbie Thomas 443-4300 W h e re there is service after the sale A u to s '79 CAM ARO, MUST sell $3200 499 0787, Norm 4 >8 1977 DATSUN 280Z, 4 speed, AC AM/ FM cassette, runs grea' $2950 454- 9156 4-5 __________ ___ '71 SUPER BEETLE, original owner, main­ tenance records, Michelin radials, new clutch, excellent mechomcal condition, very clean, $1900 Paul 473 2483 4 8 1977 H O N D A civic hatchback Air $1650 negot 454 4473.4-5___________ 1984 FIERO SE, red, loaded, all electnc, booster/equolizer, garaged immacu late. 5-year worranty. Colt Cathy, 288- 0882, 441-1411. 4-16________ _____ 1978 V W CAMPER Van. Good condition Air conditioned Sleeps 5 FM radio cos sette $4500 478-1907.4 8 ___ 1983*DATSUN SENTRA red, hatchback, 5 -speed standard shift N e w Sony radio cassette, speakers; sunroof. AC, low mile­ age Excellent condition Must sell $6,00 0negotiable Call 478-9740 4 30 1970 V W Bug Runs good New tires, battery $900 firm 476-3294. 476 7170 evenings 4-8 '74 TOYOTA Corona, 6-cylmder AC, AM/EM, new transmission and brakes Reliable $995 Call 459-4014 or 244- 0215 weekend and evening*. 4-10 SHELBY CHARGER, '84 5 speed, sun roof, silver and blue, excellent tunes Mint condition, $7900 476 3121 4-10 79 DATSUN B-210 AC AM FM cos sette 61,000 miles Very clean 4 sp std $1950 Evenings/weekends 331-6774 4 8 '84 V W Sciracco Only 7000 miles Sore­ ly broken in 5-speed, AC, AM/FM cas­ sette, power windows, sunroof $8500 Owner moving to Spain Coll 477 7118 Keep trying. 4-9 30 — T ru c k s - V a n s 66 CHEVY SHORTBED pickup with 197/ straight body V-6 engine 4-speed Needs paint $500 4/4-8409 4-5 1981 DATSUN K IN G C A B 4x4. 5 speed, AC Alpine stereo, excellent condition, oskmq $5200, 477 6184, 828-6654 4 9 ____ _ ___ _ ' '59 V W von Rebuilt engine/brakes, 20,000 miles Runs well carpeted com- pleis repair records. 477-3343 4-5 70 — M o to r c y c le s 1984 S IL V E R H o n d a A e r o 80 Windshield and basket Excellent condi tion $600 Ph: 472-9373 4-5 4-8 T R A N S P O R T A T IO N 50 — S e r v ic e - R e p a ir EXHAUST SYSTEMS ARE YOU LOOKING FOR • A DISCOUNT SUPPLIER? • QUALITY PARTS9 • FAST, FRIENDLY SERVICF • CONVENIENT LOCATION? IF SO, STOP BY OR CALL: SOUTH SIDE MOTORS 2617 South 1st Street Austin. Texas (512) 444-2431 C O N D O M IN IU M S Sales Center open 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. daflv 1X40 Burton Drive • Austin Texas • i!2 44^7606 • CK $6 ■HI...«.in.. I ..... 1 0 % off with this coupon, expires April 30 1985 130 — C o n d o s - T o w n h o u s e s RESERVED for the top .072% of your class. The best company on campus comes home to St. Thomas. Located adjacent to Croix in the heart of the west campus community, St. Thomas offers unsurpassed condominium liv­ ing exclusively limited to a prestigious 36 units. Spacious one and two-bedroom floorplans fea­ ture a full range of luxury appointments. Add to that richly landscaped grounds, a courtyard fountain, heated pool and spa, secured covered parking and private balcony decks. A vailability is limited and early interest is advised. First student homes w ill be available in August, 1984. For exceptional student living in a class by itself come discover St. Thomas. th 'AS A Luxury Condom inium W ith Everything. In clud ing 103 Years O f History. Twenty-six exclusive cond om inum residences w'ith a prestigious w est cam pus address heated pool, w h irlp o o l spa and m onitored security s\ s- tem s. Featu rin g fireplace hearths v\ hich have been painstakingly crafted using bricks I rom 1 In' U n ive rsity of Texas' first M ain Build ing . In the n ew O ld M ain C on d o m iniu m s, no detail has been overlooked. W e ve even built-in a "p a s t” on w h ich you can build a future. Surpassing the tradition that began with Croix. A , 807 West 25th St. Austin, Texas 472-8605 A n o th e r tine stu d en t c o m m u n ity fro m B L F u rlm c to n .ind A sso ciates In i d e ve lo p e rs o f V rotv (. o n d o m in iu m s t.r a h a m P la n C o n d o m in u m s N u e c e s ( o rn e r i o n d o m im u m s ( en te n m a l C o n d o m in iu m s a n d L h e ls e a C n n d o m tn iu m s O L D M A I N 807 W. 25th Austin. Texas s7 iftmcefu (tf •/8 N O R T H / C E N T R A L 8 3 0 1 M o P a c N o r t h E x p r e s s w a y S u it e 3 0 5 A A u s tin , T X 7 8 7 5 9 (5 1 2 ) 3 4 6 - 3 2 6 6 A V A I L A B L E N O U J I % 1 Bedroom apartm ents furnished and un­ furnished. 2 blocks north of campus. PR€ LEASING FOB SUMMER S FBLL P rice s s ta rt a t $297/m onth 8BBNDVUJINE, DALLAS, HOUSTON and UJILSHIBC RPBRTMENTS CONTBCT PHIL 480 9358 2803 HEMPHILL PBBH #105 OB CALL 477 6 6 7 5 R E N T A L 360 — Furn. A p ts. U.T, AREA APARTMENTS ON SH U T T LE BU S RO U TE F U R N IS H E D a n d U N F U R N IS H E D 1-1 s $325 to $375 d E • P O O L • C E I L I N G F A N S • L A U N D R Y F A C I L I T I E S • H E A T A IR C O N D I T I O N I N G • W W C A R P E T • W A T E R G A S P A ID • E A S Y A C C E S S T O IH 35 A N D M O P A C • O N S IT E M A N A G E M E N T A N D M A I N T E N A N C E 3 7 0 4 SPEEDWAY EL C ID 472-4893 309 W EST 39TH EL CAMPO 452-8537 401 W E S T 39TH LA PAZ 451-4255 3501 SPEED W A Y EL DORADO 472-4893 P ro fe s s io n a lly M a n a g e d By JOHNSTON PROPERTIES INC GARDEN GATE APARTM ENTS N O W AC C E P T IN G L E A S E A P P L I C A T I O N S T O II S U M M ER & FALL o e < - c ^ A* . c J> e <4* • v> ce* L u x u r y I B R F u r n is h e d 2222 R io G ra n d e 476-4992 NOW LEASING FOR SUMMER & FALL! ► l 2, 3, 5 Bedrooms ► 2 Lighted Tennis Courts i Shuttle Bus Stop-SR » Security Service t City Transportation ► Putting Green * Outdoor Jocurzi s t Bor B-Ques & Picnic Facilities For Each Building • Poolside Restroom e Deluxe Air-Conditioned Laundry Rooms e Ceiling Eons in All Living Rooms & Bedrooms e Exercise Rooms • Cor Washing Area • Cable TV Hook Up • Two Swimming Pools • Basketball & Volleyball Open For Business Mon-Fri 8-6, Sot 9-5, Sun 12-5 CALL US ABOUT OUR 12 MONTH LEASE! 447-4130 2101 BURTON DR. Village len Se Hablo Español f c r t f ( 7 T W ir Sprechen Deutsch Nakakaintindi ng Pilipmo 447-4130 2101 BURTON DR. ORANGE TREE Condominium neo- campus, 2 rampu*. 2BR 2 B A t-.— q Hiding room «scurrF* parking krtch.n, k-tchen, 2 0 5 2 5-3 N U E C E S P LA C E 2 story Huge bedroom and batb-oom $ 7 8 5 0 0 C all Sho-on W ilkes 343 0 8 0 0 C a the d ra l __________ cnH 4 ' eeilm gi LU X U R Y 1BR condo h a rd w o o d Roc-- ceiling fans airy romantic setting, good neighborhood, w alk to UT East 3? 474 0 7 8 7 4-11 IU X U R Y C O N D O for sole by o w n e r on campus, pool spa with fireplace mony extras 4 6 9 -0 9 5 0 4-17 O RAN G E TREE S p a c io u s 1BR - side secu rity system ♦ CAMPUS CONDOS* D id you- p are n ts say lo o k fo r a g o o d c o n d o in ve stm en t? Let m e s a v e you tim e a n d a h assle N o fe e re q u ir e d o n ly p ro m p t s e rv ic e in return C a ll Rex THE CONDO CONNECTION 2 B R u n it G r e a t a s s u m p t i o n A r a t o o n 4 7 9 6 6 1 8 o r 3 4 6 - 5 3 0 6 E ffic ie n c y 3 rd le v e l w ith skylights GUADALUPE SQUARE 1BR G r e a t pncH $ 3 9 5 0 0 Wilson and Goldrick Jean Franklin 328-0022 (327-1165 nights) 4 5 C o n d o s ” fo r s a le 26 1 4 B Je ffe rs o n S tre e t This in vestm en t co u ld p a y fo r y o u r c o lle g e e d u c a tio n C h o rm in g , la r g e - o n d o in P e m b e rto n Heights, o n e o f Austi- s finest n e ig h b o rh o o d s , lust m inutes fro m ca m p u s . O v e r 17 0 0 so fe e t 3 B R , 2 B A C a r p o r t freshly p a in te d inside & out N e w c o rp e t th ro u g h o u t P r ic e r e d u c e d fro m $ 2 0 0 0 0 0 to $ 1 8 5 ,0 0 0 F o r sole b y o w n e r l e a v e m e s s a g e a t 4 8 2 9 0 2 5 4-5 8 4 0 8 E n f i e l d • P restar address rs West Austlr • Security system • ivere-i r 'tr k tr .C • parquet flo< rs tr. Is -tie:' spaces and entrys • jjh re j la ce • { ’ r'-'Wi: m o ld in g on ce il Lngs • ¡C o lo n ia l p a n e le d m t e r l- i doors throughout • C u lt u r e ! m arble vanities and lavatories • W asher dryer • Celling fan For more information contact Pamela Lee 4 7 8 - 6 4 7 3 L E N C X ” 915 W. 2 3 rd at S a n G a b r ie l Large 1 & 2 Bedroom s All a p p lia n c e * • P o o l • S p a • S a u n a • W e ig h t roo m . From $86,000 O P E N H O U S E Mon-Fri 12-5, Sat-Sun 11 -5 469-0851 THE P O IN T E Eight spa< rou, one and two bedroom condos near campus O n shut tie Security Pool financing, furniture, balconies, garages $ 6 2 0 0 0 $9! (X X ) Evelyn 2 5 8 9125 2 5 0 0 0 7 6 4-22 lo c u m Som e ow ner N E A R C A M P U S , 1BR w loft con d o side outside security ceiling fans $ 6 0 ,0 0 0 Coll 4 7 6 4 2 2 9 evenings 4 8 In loeuzzr padrino I rods of other applion- C O N D O P R IC E D to sell fast O n e block from 31 and S p e e d w a y ’ w o bedroom s and loft W ' D m icrow ove etevc'o r co vered parking Coll Jo n 469 9525, 457 9511 4-9 Orange Tree Condo 4-8 $66 000 furnished 1 BR with fireplace and 1 car garage space Excellent for 2 students Carol Xing 451-5141 or 452 9048 G e n e Spence and Associates St. David's Hospital Area Downstairs condo, Hancock Place 1-1 with fireplace, fenced patio Carol A Xing 451 5141 (452-9048) G e n e Spence and Associates Quadrangle Condo Assumption Decorator furnished 1-1 7 with prt vate upstairs MBR, all appliances in eluding W D refrigerator, microwave compactor $89,500 lo w payment loan Roger Dreessen 45’ 5141 (440 f ^ e n e S p e n c e & A s s o c i a t e s 4-12 R E ST O R E D 4 2 THIRTIES style house on 4 a c r i" nr C e d a r Creek $135,000 452 2 2 3 7 4 76 1089 4 7 8 3 0 6 9 4 29 170 — W a n t e d W E B U Y properties Houses a n d c o - Jo s Flexible terms an d prices O ffice 346 1692 L ea ve message 8 3 5 5 7 9 5 4 12 190 A p p lia n c e s 740 — B o a ts S A N Y O R E F R IG E R A T O R in new condt Hon perfect for dorm r0 0 m 2 feet taH $120 Solly 458-9501 4 5_______________ R E F R IG E R A T O R FO R sole 20 < 16 inch es 2 5 cubic feet $ 5 0 4 7 6 4 2 2 9 4-8 1982 C A T A L IN A 22' sailboat, $ 9 0 0 0 or b estoffer 837 '5 9 4 after 6pm 5 3 W IN D S U R F G R E A T beginner, intermed ate soilboord, n ew U —verse1 will give lessons Excelient condition Askmq $ 3 7 5 4 8 479 6 5 2 0 4 5 200 — F u rn ltu re - H o u s e h o ld S A IL B O A T L IX E a S u n fis h W h ite with red an d white sail Fair condition $ 3 0 0 Nicki 4 77 9615 4-9 __________ __________ 340 — M isc. 360 — Furn. Apts. G E R M A N LU G E R , 1920 commercial, with am m o $ 3 7 5 Walthe^ P38, $ 3 5 0 8mm military mauser $145 4 ; R 7481 a n d W E S T C A M P U S Smoll attroctrvely de c o m p le x s ig n e d Balconies, 'acilities $ 3 0 5 to $ 3 6 5 summer rates 451-8122 W est W o r ld Real Estate 4 30 fu r n is h e d laundry patios CHEAP GOLD! O n e b e d ro o m /o n e batb a n d ef ficiency H y d e Park a r e a fur nisbed o r unfurnished 1 be d N o w th ro u g h S a t u r d a y A p ril 6, p 1 a t <* ro o m $ 3 2 5 + E E ff ic ie n c y , emu h LA R G E S T A N D A R D size desk 3 0 ’ ? x 3 2 ’ T ), fine polished w o od , like new $120 0 8 0 4 4 2 6 7 0 8 4-5 (6 ! > x C O U C H A N D chair for sale ligh t eatfh tones $100 2 o ctagon al en d tables $100 Coll 288 51 76 after 6 p m 4-5 DR TABLF coffee table, matching chair couch, gos heater, dresser, A C , desk $ 5 0 0 negotiable 4 5 3 5410 4 9 H E A V Y C O U C H With foldout double bed ’ xcellent $150 negotiable 443 0 6 3 7 or 4 4 2 1230 after 7 30pm 4-10 ___ 210 S te re o - T V pI o N E E R S T E R E O rack 7 months old stereo turntable, tap e deck digital tuner, amplifier (2 x5 0 watts) 2 loudspeakers audio fack In excellent condition $ 5 0 0 453 4 5 8 ° 4 5 ________________ ta p e deck 3 W A Y S T E R E O speakers $ 5 0 So n y TC 5 8 0 Sh u re m icrophones $15 H ea d p h o n e $10 Phil 452 5511 4-5 $ 2 2 5 3 S T E R E O F O R sale, Y a m a h a R 700 receiv er Bose 301 speakers, Technics tumt able whole seperate 467 7771 4-8 U R G E N T ' M U ST sell B ran d new 110 watt X e n w o o d Sound System Too m any com ponents to list Cos1 $ 2 300 in Jon uary/wit! take less than half, 451 467 3 4 10________________________________________ 220 — C o m p u te rs- E q u ip m e n t TPS 8 0 ' O ID R computer 64 K, full trov Baso el k eybo ard 2 disc drives, O S 9 0 9 , dot matnx printer, extras Best offer 2 8 2 -2 9 3 6,evenings 4 5 B R A N D N E W microsoh flight simulator $25; M icrosoft Basic, $ 5 0 For IB M compatibles Call 4 6 9 95 5 2 4-5 X IM T R O N A B M 85 terminal emulates J pop ular TeleVideo plus N o va tio n C a t3 0 0 m odem to access mainframes $ 5 0 0 472 6 3 7 3 4 8 _____ _____________ IB M SE LE C T R IC II $ 4 0 0 Pica and Elite elem ent' $12.00 Like new C all 4 77 N E W C O M P U T E R S Colum b ia portables, fully IB M PC com patible, 2 5 6 X, 2 D S D drives, am ber monitor, free software $1599 1 295 44 8 2 5 2 D R A F T IN G TA BLE Hom.lton Dio< a Torque $175 Ham ilton VP 70 electric $7 75 713-864 40 2 8 , D o n ald M cD o vid. 4-18 240 — B o a ts 250 — M usical In stru m e n ts D R U M S FO R sale 5-piece Zilligan cyw bals, crash an d top hat G o o d condition Must sell $ 2 5 0 or best offer Coll Xevm 467 9 4 3 5 b etw een 4 and 7 or after 10 4 9 _____________________________ R ÍC X E N B A C H E R B A S S , excellent cond tion $ 3 0 0 Please call after 9pm 251 5 ’ 74 4-5____________________ A R IA P R O II C F-750 guitar Excellent condition C ase with Sp ectra 112 amp C R X stereo chorus Best offer 443 1440 lea ve message 4 9 F E N D E R S Q U IR E sriatocaster N e w very nice guitar with Fender case $ 2 7 5 O B O 47 2 8 8 5 9 4 II ________ D R U M M E R S ! N E W Paiste 7CX37 >1 splash cym bal $ 70, reta’’ $120 Must h e m 1 Co» 4 9 5 2708 4 11 ELEC T R IC P IA N O / o rg a n Low rey M icro G e rm . N e v e r played still rn box N e w price $1200 your pn ce $ 9 5 0 negotiable. 443-1440, le a v e message 4 -9 y o u r o rd e r fo r y o u r U T d o s s ring of th e C o o p ___ A R T C A R V E D C L A S S R I N G S IN C $50 d e p o s it re q u ire d 4-5 Do you wont to be a" credit expert * m one evening? Many strategies to meet your financial needs Write for free details including 22c stamp Lim ited time only J G G Marketing, P O Box 15461, Austin. TX 78761 4-5 R E N T A L 350 — R e n tal Services F R E E LOCATING a p a r t m e n t s a n d CONDOMINIUMS F O R L E A S E St’R IN íí S E ­ M EST ER . W EST ANI) C A M P U S N O R T H A R F A S . 476-2673 r ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ I 12 IE LOCATING SERVICE C o n d o s • A p a rtm e n ts H o u s e s • D u p le x e s L e a v e the H u n t in g to U s 482-8651 M O i - O O J I ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ A BALDWIN For sale: Baldwin baby grand piano. Call Harriet at 47 7 1198 before 7pm or 444-5860 after 7pm. H 4-n 280 — S p o r tin g - C a m p in g Equip. K ID D ER W A T E R Skis never used Med* um $ 2 7 5 n ew yours for $ !5 0 451 5 4 0 4 anytime 4 5 ______ R u m m a g e S a le s G A R A G E SA LE Bikes, telescope patio umbrella, toys April 6 9am 2 5 0 6 Bow man 4-5 G A R A G E S A L E Saturday 9 5, 1726 Giles Street Tobies, q o o d stuff N e a r ’ 8 ? an d C h erryw o o d 4 5 FREE P U P P IE S , G o ld e n retriever/Chow Call Beth at 451 636? or 471 5551, 4 9 340 — M isc. 330 — Pets 3 6 0 — Furn. Apts. 300 — G a r a g e - Ix ib t f u f bfjrift*»/ $ 2 6 5 * E. Efficiency like n e w N e w ca rp e t a n d n e w flo o r vinyl. L o c ate d in small quiet com plex on shutflr. 451 1244 o r 4 9 9 0725. 4 18 FLEUR-DE-LIS 4 0 4 East 30th Large 1 bedroom apartments avail­ able for summer Completely fur nished Less than 5 minutes walk to campus Starting at $350 electrici ty Also 2 and 3 bedrooms available Call Frank 476-2176 If no answer, call John 443 3037 after 5pm 5-1 WALK TO CAMPUS DOS RIOS 2818 GUADALUPE NEW I B R 1BA, c o v e r e d p ark in g , m i­ c r o w a v e , in d ivid u a l w a s h e r/ d ry e r, CA/CH, ceiling fans $450/mo 4 78 4271 or 474-0971 or 454-4621. 4-22 $265-285TT~ Summer Rates W e a re looking for quiet, conscientious, non smoking students in a large efficiency 2 locations H yd e Pork or n ea r campus C A /CH , laundry, d ead interested bolt, no pets. 458-2488 4-29 1 Bedroom-$330 Large apartment in Hyde Park M a ­ hogany paneling, large closet, fully carpeted and draped, built m kitchen and serving bar Nice courtyard with pool, 4200 Avenue A, 451-6966, 451-6533 Central Properties, Inc 4-29 APARTMENTS A Lifestyle designed to fit the D iscrim inating Student. ♦Fully I ijmished/Unfum ished Apartments *i levator Service/Intercom System ♦Uniformed Security/Parking Garage ♦Full Laundry Facilities ♦Maid Service Every Floor ♦Large Pool/Rooftop Sundeck ♦Six Floorplans to Choose From 801 W . 24th Austin, Texas 78705 or call 476-7636 Only 1 Bloi ks From C ampus Call or come by for your tour loday I m o n i h tree m a id s e n it if W ith i h is a d to «■ mill EFF.&l-2-3-4 BDRM. APARTMENTS PRE-LEASING FOR SUMMER AND FALL FURNISHED & UNFURNISHED STARTING AT $300.00 R IV E R S ID E A R E A , SH U TTLE BUS, PO O L, M O DERN, SP A C IO U S T R E E S & G A R D E N S 11 F L O O R PL A N S V I - " Q i M i U U t r i i > 1 011ORF POINT SOUTH APTS. BRIDGE HOLLOW APTS. 4 4 4 - 7 5 3 6 2200 WILLOW CREEK [4, ILvw.w»vwri rrrrr ViViLiTrrrrri' Yu1 4 4 4 - 6 7 5 7 1910 WILLOW CREEK CtUHtod ^ eaé W e s t C a m p u s L u x u ry P r e - L e a s in g N OW f o r S u m m e r & F all Ex tra Large Pool w ith Sundeck • S p a cio u s Flo o rp lan s • A ll N ew A p pliances • B arb eq u e A reas H o t Tub Convenient to C am pus Cam ino R eal C ondo style at a pnce you can afford. Make an appoint ment to see C am ino Real soon and find out about our special Sum m er Fall rates Available for a limited time only. M U S T S E l l ! le a v in g country 21 Sw in g Xeol sloop, four bunks new Evinrude extras, $ 4 9 0 0 or best reason ab le offer Call 327 0 9 7 0 . 4 16______________________ P A IR O F replica Sam urai swords, $125 B u n d e s w h e r W e s t G e r m a n m m y d agger $35 4 72 4 8 03, after six 4-5 ' J uT b O A R D M E R C U R Y 50 H P Low hours for its ag e, still runs great $ 4 0 0 .0 0 4 7 4 -8409 4 5 (1963) C A B B A G E PA T C H preemies looking for responsible parents for adoption C o ! Frank 467 9 4 0 2 $ 8 0 4 8 R E N T A L 370 — U nf. Apts. W O O D L A N D S - U - C O N D O M IN IU M S From $375.00 1 Bedrooms 2 Bedrooms (Lofts' Mini-Blinds, Ceiling Fans, Microwave, W D Connections, U .T . S h u ttle Route, L a rg e Bool Immediate Occupanc\ 443-5451 CJi “Reeve* ReeU Sáfate 2500 B u r le s o n H o a d 447-8303 S h o r t T e r m L e a s e s J4IAJVUG0 4 5 0 5 D U V A L 454-4799 NOW PRELEASING FOR SUMMER AND FALL • Reduced Sum m er Rates • N ew ly Remodeled • Pool • G ym • Recreation Room • On CR/IF Shuttles • EfT , One, Tw o Bedroom s and Townhouse Units Call or Come By Today! n ) . 6 f 4 i v E F F IC IE N C Y C L O S E to campus 1515 Pal mo Plaz a C A /CH , laundry facilities $2 75 . electricity and deposit. Mon-Fri 3 97-2576 4 -12 _ _ W A L X T O UT, 2BR a p h a va ila b le in M a y , Summer rates, call 4 76 52 4 9 4 26 O N E BlC < X F R O M C A M P U S ' Small IBR and large IB R - 2BR, pool, CA-C H com pletely furnished, summer and fall Call Rio Nueces, 474-0971. 4-23 All Bills Paid-$330 N ic e efficiency m Hyde Park C ontem- porory furnishings All built-in kitchen, fully carpeted and draped, large walk-in closets. 4000 Avenue A. 458- 4511, 451 6533 Central Properties inc. 4-29 ST. MORITZ APARTMENTS Now leasing 1 & 2BR for summer/fall Close to campus, pool, ceiling (an, covered parking & storage available 476-4060 or come by 800 W . 25th 10-5pm 4 9 Beautiful furnished apts Close to cam­ pus. Efficiences, 1 and 2 bedroom apts Starting $310-495, ABP except electricity Swimming pools, laundry facilities Some apts. with fireplaces, $99 move in special W in a color TV or a moped. Call 458-2990 4-5 R E N T A L 370 — U nf. A p ts. Irongate Apartments 1225 Westheim er Dr. Austin, Texas 78752 From $360 > Gas Appliance • Private Patio > Gas Heating > Dead Bolt Locks * Delayed Deposit > Cable Access »Gas Fireplace • Front Door Parking toTownhomes • Gas Paid Nancy & Paul Richburg 454-2636 PORTO ESPAÑOL APARTMENTS 5820 Berkm an • Unfurnished • Quiet atmosphere • Near CR shuttle and shopping • I bedroom. $300 4- electricity • 2 bedrooms, $395 + electricity • Gas cooking, heating and hot water Call: 453-2652 Dellwood Area Starr Property Management Beat the crowd; register early 2810 Salado 472-3816 DUVAL V ILLA In Hyde Park Pre-Leasing For Summer & Fall • Spacious Floorplans • Larg e Pool • Hot Tubs and Redwood Decks • S ecu rity ( lates • Convenient to S h u ttle • 1 and 2 bedrooms S p e c ia l S u m m er R a te s A v a ila b le A lso P re -L ea sin g For Fall Open Sat. 10-4 4305 D uval 451-2343 • N o w Leasing for Summer & Fall • Lease Now! Estrada Apartments offers the best of all worlds — Convenience — the first stop on the NR shuttle route gives you the pleasure of first in first out service Amenities — lots of extras come with every apartment, large spacious rooms, walk-in closets, dishwasher, disposal, & fireplace available* in one* and two bedroom units Ask A b out our O n e Year Special. Floorplans for every lifestyle — choose from studios, lofts, one, two, and three bedrooms This and more on a Student Budget — located across from Town Lake, we also offer jogging trails, swimming pools and sailing GET AHEAD OF THE CROWD! CALL NO W TO RESERVE YOUR APARTMENT. 442-6668 Mbi E S T R A D A 1801 S L ur r a t e s »n r lu d e 1 9 h o m e r o o k e d m e a l s a w e e k a n d u t il it ie s I re e a r t e s s t o s w i m m i n g p o o l S t o p b v 7 0 7 U 1 1 st S t fo r a n a p p l i c a n o n a n d fru ir o r r all 4 7 6 -5 6 7 8 Sin g le s $ 3 2 9 ■ D ou ble s $249 T a o s C o - o p L o o k in g fa r g r e a t h o u ' r ig * l o o s is a fr ie n d ly c o e d c o m m u n it y o c r o s » fro m c a m p u s A C , 1 9 m e a ls a w e e k full se c u rity s u n d e c k , a n d in t r a m u ra l t e a m s T o u r s a v a il a b l e a n y t im e C o m e b y a n d a p p l y 1 S u m m e r ra te s sin g le $ 3 2 9 / m o d o u b le $ 2 4 9 / m o 2 6 1 2 G u a d a l u p e 4 7 4 6 9 0 5 , 4 7 a 5 6 7 8 4 5 f r o r t Laurel H o u se C o op, for s u m mer/fall C oe d, 2 b l o c k s campus, student m a n a g e d , l o w rates include all of u t i li t i e s ( A / C ) , 19 great m eals per w e e k a n d access to p o o l a n d s u n d e c k S to p b y 1 9 0 5 N u e ce s for appli cation 4 7 8 0 4 7 0 tour 4 7 6 - 5 6 7 8 a n d 4 -5 S H A R E A H o m e n e e d s 2 8 2 - 0 3 6 4 4 - 5 Satisfy yo u r h o u sin g A N N O U N C E M E N T S 510 — Entertainment- Tickets E D D IE M U R P H Y sections 1, 2. 3 $ 5 0 - 7 0 8 3 1 ? 4 - 5 _ front floe 6 17 4 7 2 _____________ D I A N A R O S S tickets I h a v e eigh t tickets G o o d seats at g re a t price* P h o n e 4 4 7 0 8 4 1 4 1 ? ★ TICKETS ★ ALL CONCERTS 472-7896 CRAIG 4 - 1 2 R oyal C o -o p has m ale/fem ale v acan cie s for sum mer C lo se to cam pus, all bills & fo o d paid. Ve ge te rian h ou se in a quiet n e ig h b o rh o o d C o m e by for din ner at 1 8 0 5 Peari St 4 /8 0 8 8 0 5 2 0 — Personals V H S M O V I E re n tals? C o m p a r e V id e o B o b 's gre a t p n c e s e ve ry tim e1 N o de posits, n o c lub fee 8 3 6 4 5 3 3 4 -5 4 - 1 2 540 — Lost & Found W e l c o m e t o th e A r k C o o p f o r the su m m e r!! P o o l, su n d e c k , AC. F r ie n d ly c o m m u n it y c lo s e to c a m p u s parties, fu n -fille d e d u c a t io n a l activities, all m e a ls A ll bills p a ir! C o m e b y fo r a tour, 2 0 0 0 P e a r! o r col! 4 7 6 5 6 7 8 G r e a t s u m m e r ro te s! D o u b l e s $ 2 4 9 L O S T g o ld bracelet R E W A R D inches three se rp entine stran ds b ra id e d together Please call Christi, 4 9 5 - 5 6 4 5 Five 4 - 5 _ _ _________ L O S T S M A L L b lac k c at w ilb b ro w n collar R io G r a n d e a n d 2 6 t h C all Libb', 4 7 4 2 2 1 4 o r 4 5 1 -9 3 2 1 4 - 5 _ _ _ _ _ s in g le s, $ 3 2 9 4 - 5 L O S T G O L D E N retreiver fem ale p u p p y Vicinity o f A v e A / S p e e d w a y W e d n e s day, A p n l 3 8 w eek» P le a se call 4 5 3 8 3 6 3 or 4 5 9 0 6 0 3 R e w a rd 4 -1 0 M A T H T U T O R 504 W 24 th St. Office 477-7003 years of profas «upo R A D I potntment e py tor ap C O M P E N G tN S C IE N C E E M 3 0 6 « T E R M S C S 3 0 4 P T E M 311 E M 3 0 6 S C S206 E M 31 4 C S315 E M 3 1 9 C S 4 1 0 E E 3 1 6 C S4 1 0 EE411 C S328 E6318 C S336 C S345 E E 212 C S352 E E 3 2 3 E N G L I S H C S372 C H E M IST R Y E N G 6 0 3 CHEM 301 30? EN G 30? 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Y 650 — M o vin g- H au ling R E A D Y M O V I N G a n d hau lm Best p a c e s m o v e guys* 4 4 8 0 0 9 4 , 4 4 3 6 6 7 2 4 -5 specialists Smof! ©st T W O B R O T H E R S M o v i n g H om es, a p a 't ments. offices, antiques, p ia n o s Insured O p e n se ven d a y s/ w eek 4 5 0 - 0 5 3 0 4 17 750 — T yping TY P’N G S l O O / p g s io n a l, e x p e r i e m Q yietw rrter 7 Resurr c a m p u s R U S H E R S 5 4 5 6 5 -3 2 5 Profes I B M e go ! $1 ty p ist i d tyc ■ specialist N e a r UT yV F I C O M E ' 4 7 7 P E R S U A S IV E R E S U M E S with flan proct consultation, w o rd mg, Strictly highest quality to profect yo u r b e s t assets A p p o in tm e n ts Cf€KJtive Servic es 2 4 2 0 G u a d a lu p e 4 7 8 3 6 3 3 4 7 W n ssm g , WOODS TYPING & i WORD PROCESSING ! 4 7 2 - 6 3 0 2 • 2200 Guadalupe (sidej | W h e n Y o u W o n t It O o n e R /ght Z I V L E Y ’S THE COMPLETE PRO FESSIO N AL FULLTIME TYRING SERVICE PRINTING, BINDING C I V L K Y * " \\ y b V V B U t & f i > KING □ 2707 HEMPHILL PARK At 27th & Guadalup® Plenty of Parking 4 7 2 - 3 2 1 0 4 7 2 - 7 6 7 7 E X P E R IE N C E C O U N T S * Th< hons, p ro fe ssio n a l reports G ra d u a te sc h o o l quality N o rth B a rb a ra Tuios. 4 5 3 ‘ I R E N T A L 4 8 0 — S to r a g e S p ace 1 FREE M I N I S T O R A G E F O R A P R IL w M A N C H A C A R D . V a r d u s Sizes & Pr c Short o r Long Term Boats Furniture/Records s i = • * • Supplies/Inventory Se a so n a l Hems Perso- d - C o " " - ere al Storage 1 = i ~ Í § - T - X Í N = m ® < •D If y o u p a y fo r 3 m o n th s rent p lu s a $10 d e p o sit, y o u ge t a n e x tra m o n th s r°nt free. i z I H A N D Y M A N STOR N LOK M IN I ST O R A G E 1607 M atthew s Lane 444-2151 ¡ r h l l M I I I U I I l l t l l l l l t l t H l t H I M I t t H I I H t l l H M I H l t H l l l t l l l l t H t l l M I H I I M l f M H t '' 560 — Public Notice Lose Weight Without Willpower! Call 4 5 2 - 3 3 0 2 From 9 :0 0 a . m . til 3 :0 0 p.m. M o n d a y Thru Friday Y ou Will Love This! _________________________4 - c Ai I 471-5244 TO PLACE A CLASSIFIED AD RENTAL 435 — Co-ops 5 ? TUTORING SERVICE G R E P R E P Relieve a n x ie ty R ev iew a c a ­ dem ics le a r n testing tech niqu es N in e w e e k c o u rse E T S o f A ustin 4 7 4 - 2 8 0 5 5- 2 _ __________________ ____ T U T O R IN G N E E D h elp with Eng lish P a ­ pers, R e se a rc h p a p e rs o r -esum e c o m ­ p osition Techniques taught. C a ll 4 7 8 - 8 3 3 5 , M -F , 8 a m -6 p m 4 8 _______________ Q U A L IT Y E N G L IS H tutor, P h D A tutor with b ra in s really m ake s a d ifferen ce1 A n y English a ssign m e n t 4 6 7 2 3 8 2 4 2 4 M A T H , P H Y S IC S tutoring Ten y e a rs e. p e n e n c e a s TA, Al. tutor G re g , 4 5 4 9 9 4 5 , 4 5 2 3 6 1 8 b e fo re 5 0 0 4 18 t íu/nme/iM/ntif- B e a u tifu lly r e s t o r e d 6 5 y e a r o l d d u ­ p le x h o m e . 2 b e d r o o m , 1 b a t h r e fin ­ is h e d w o o d flo o rs , tall c e ilin g s, th re e 5 - 3 b r a s s c e ilin g fa n s, f a n c y s t a in e d w a i n ­ sc o tin g , b a r c o u n t e r le g tu b w ith s h o w e r , c o v e r e d p o r c h p lu s a d d i ­ 4 - 8 _______________________________________ P A R A P E T C O N D O su m m e r lease 2 2 furn ished n e a r cam pus/shutfle W a sh e r/ D r y e r ceiling fan, b a lc o n ie s 4 7 6 2 D O $ 1 4 5 / M O all bills p o id o w n b e d r o o m fully furn ished V C R . C all b e fo re 5 0 0 , Robert. 4 4 5 - 7 4 0 8 4 -8 440 — Room m ates N E E D A c o m p a tib le ro o m m a t e * S a v e time a n d etfort with p ro fe ssio n a l assist once. F o r N o rth -S o u tn , call A lison. A p a rr A p p lic a tio n m ent Selector, 4 5 1 - 2 4 9 5 E X C H A N G E R O O M M A T E a ro o m m o te a n d / o r h o u s in g * Atte nd the R O O M M A T E E X C H A N G E L e x a j U n io n B allro om , A p r il 9, 7 - 9 3 0 p m 4 9 N e e d F E M A L E U T student need» sa m e to sh o re 2 - 2 m ob ile h o m e (14 X 6 5 ) $ ’ 8 0 per m onth plus 2 bills Details, 4 5 9 -2 2 1 1 ' F E M A L E R O O M M A T f - e e d e d for 2 2 a p a rtm e n t O n C R route $ ? 3 3 / m o C all after 9pm , 4 5 4 - 3 9 0 1 4 - 5 A V A IL A B L E N O W | u N e e d n o n sm o k in g ro o m m o te fo r su m m er in nice 2 1 h o u se o n $5 bills: g o r a g e mi c ro w a v e , air, fe n ce d yard, D isc o u n t for A p ril a n d M a y 4 5 9 9 2 8 7 4 -5 IE, $ 1 6 4 * F E M A l E'(s! W A N T E D 2 B A ,w est cam pus, Su m m e r o n ly C a ll 4 7 6 4 0 2 : 4 5 28 R $ 2 6 0 / 1 3 0 m onth sh o re lo F E M A L E R O O M M A T F to sh ore d u p le x n e a r cam pus. H a r d w o o d floors, p o rc h fire p lac e a n d other am enities sw ing, Prefer $ 2 0 0 / m o n t h plus V3 utilities 4 7 8 g ra d u a t e student, n o n -sm o k e r 7 0 2 2 4 -5 ___ __________ R O O M M A T E W A N T E D for sp a c io u s 1 c o n d o iccuzzi, fireplace $ 3 5 0 Inclu des all ap p lian c e s, pool, bills Rick * 4 7 6 - 3 1 2 4 4 - 5 _____ H O U S E M A T E W A N T E D 3 B R l t o B A fur q u ie t s m o k e r s , n i s h e d , n e ig h b o r h o o d n e a r Zilker Park $ 3 0 0 / m o A B P 4 4 3 - 5 5 0 5 after 5 p m 4 8 v e r y n o R O O M M A T E F E M A L E p ro fe ss to n a 1 gra d , 3 - 2 n e a r Zilker Park, $ 2 1 0 plus T bills 4 4 3 - Q 2 7 5 4 - 5 N E E D G O O D p e rs o n for g re a t 2 B R i t o B A Furnished, sp aciou s, S R R C $ 4 5 0 total t h ro u g h June 4 4 0 - 8 4 6 0 4 8 T H R E E W O M E N lo o k in g fo r n o n -sm o k m g re sp o n sib le fe m ale h o u se m a te to lo r g e h o u se m W e s t c a m p u s a re a sh a r e Rent $ 2 0 0 plus « bills A v a ila b le n o w coll 4 7 8 1 3 4 0 4-8.______________________ T W O N O N S M O K I N G fe m a le s n e e d e d to sh a re 2 - 2 c o n d o fo r su m m er a n d / o r fall/spring W a s h e r dryer, m ic ro w a v e 4 5 9 - fire place O n IE shuttle. C y n d ie , 3 9 2 0 . 4 -17_______________________________ R E S P O N S IB L E L IB E R A L fem ale n e e d e d 3 B R / 2 B A h o u se im m ediately $ ? 4 rri + V5 utilities $ 1 5 0 d e p o se A v e C m o. c o ll 4 5 1 - 6 3 0 5 4 - 8 furn ished F E M A L E N O N S M O K E R to sh a re b e a u ti­ Excellent ful, loca tion / uhlihes O p e n M o y -e n d . 4 7 8 - 8 5 6 8 ofter 6 p m 4-12 2-1 $ 3 0 0 / m o d u p le x - R O O M A T E N E E D F D fo - su m m er Rive side (ocuzzi M a rk , 3 8 5 6 7 6 6 4 5 $ 2 2 5 m onth. Pool, to w n h o m e M A T U R E N O N S M O K E R for Sum m er to sh a r e la rg e 2BR, 2 B A o r IE shuttle $ 1 6 5 m onth 4- '9 bills Ed, 4 5 2 - 1 7 1 5 4 - 5 R O O M A T E W A N T E D to sh o re 2 in TR avis H ieghts $ 2 2 5 Util 2 6 9 5 N o to b a c c o pleas© 4 9 hou se 4 4 3 F E M A L E G R A D pre fe rre d for la rg e 2 2 ap a rtm e n t A v a ila b le n o w o r M o y ? E 4 4 2 - 1 2 3 0 4 10 S 2 1 2 5 0 Apri! C O O L F E M A L E ro o m m o te n e e d e d Su m m er a n d Foil 2-1 d u p le x h a r d w o o d floors, gre a t loca tion o n C R shuttle $ 3 0 0 / m o C a ll 4 7 6 - 7 4 7 2 . 4 -1 0 sem este rs G A Y M A L E , quiet, re sp o n sib le sh a re 2 ! 2, D e s s a u Rd $ 2 5 0 A B P S m o k e rs O X n o d ru g s 251 6 6 3 7 4 11 H U P P / N O W F O R S U M M E R F u n f e m a le r o o m m a t e n e e d e d f o r lux u r y c o n d o o n W C $ 3 0 0 m o D o n t m is s o u t — col! 7 1 3 6 8 8 - 0 6 5 5 e x t 7 0 c ollect. Julie 4-22 C E N T U R Y S Q U A R E APTS. 3401 R E D R IV E R N o w l e a s i n g f o r s u m m e r & fall: p ffi e ie n c ie s, 1 & 2 B R a p a r t m e n t s C a ll 4 7 8 9 7 7 5 b e t w e e n 9 : 3 0 & 5 3 0 , M F. L A R G E E F F IC IE N C Y se p arate living a n d be d ro o m , g a s/ w a te r paid, $ ? 9 0 , 3 0 ? East 3 4 t h 4 6 9 0 0 7 1 4 9 IF shuttle, S U B L E A S E O N E b e d ro o m apartm ent; p o o l/ A C ; n e a r U T o n d A C C c a m p u se s $ 2 4 5 > electricity M i d April to m id -sum m er (nego tiab le) 4 7 4 4 3 9 9 2 5 5 2 7 5 4 4 5 furnished L A R G E E F F IC IE N C IE S W e st 3 8 th fur nishe d o r unfu rn ish e d lo c a te d in sm all quiet c o m p le x 1 b lo c k off shuttle L aund ry facilities a v a ila b le 4 5 2 - 4 0 3 2 o r 4 9 9 - 0 7 2 5 4-11_________________ $ 2 5 0 ■ E 370 — U nf. A p ts. O S T E N T A T IO U S , L A R G E IB R . g ro u n d floor, d o u b le w alk in close*» sw im m ing poo l, A B P e x c e p t E 4 0 0 W e st 35th Se curity d e p o sit $ 1 5 0 , rent $ 2 6 0 m o till M a y 31 4 5 3 - 4 9 9 1 4 1 ? N E A R UT, 1107 W e st 22 n d . IBR, living roo m , a n d study B ig kitchen with stove a n d re frid ge ra to r N o A C , n o pets All utilities p a id O n e o c c u p a n t $ 3 9 0 plus d ep o sit 3 9 7 2 5 7 6 4 -12 Q U IE T C O M P L E X , all bilis paid, p o o l c o v e r e d p a rk in g w alk to bus 5 0 2 2 4 17 4 7 7 1 I in quaint com plex Lots of trees, pool, nice neigh b ors N o w leasing fo r sum m er $ 2 6 0 Call 4 7 8 - 3 5 1 8 5 - 3 N o Hassles! D o n 't hassle with buses or parking. Live close to cam ­ pus. 1-1, $ 2 9 5 summer rate Call Steve, 4 8 0 - 8 5 6 0 . River H o llo w Apts. Featuring EFFICIENCIES 1 & 2 B R s , st a rt in g a s l o w a s $ 2 8 5 S P E C I A L , V i o f f first m o n t h 's rent. O n sh uttle b u s o f f R iv e rs id e . L a u n d ry , p o o ls , a n d se c u rit y fe n c e . 4 4 1 - 3 0 4 2 . 2 5 1 0 E lm o n t 4 - 2 2 WATERFORD 2401 Leon Street Sub-lease Available June 1, 1 9 8 5 with new lease thru July 31 ,1 9 8 6 L u x u r y - U n f u r n is h e d U n its 9 7 0 sq ft 2 - 2 , 2 - 2 w ith loft s o m e w ith f ir e p la c e 477-3143 B row n ston e Park Apartm ents is n o w leasing efficiencies, 1 an d ? b e d ro o m s $ 3 3 5 to $ 4 6 5 1 E G a s a n d w ater paid. First stop o n IF shuttle A sk about $ 1 0 0 off first m onth's rent. 4 5 4 - 3 4 9 6 , 4 4 2 - 4 0 7 6 4 - 1 9 ENJOY DUPLEX LIVING1 2-1 & 2 -1 14? O N SH U T T L E O LTO RF & B U R L E S O N R O A D F I R E P L A C E S • f E N C E D Y A R D S • M A N Y E X T R A S * $ 4 3 0 -5 8 5 a z z s n s T & A i z s n A i z CALL CONNIE AT 447-8303 SU M M E R S E S S IO N SPECIAL 2514 Pearl 4 -1 9 N e w , 1 B R A p ts C e ilin g fans, pro fe ssio n ally de c orated , sm all c o m p le x $ 3 5 0 plus E .C a ll 4 7 7 - 0 7 0 2 4 - 5 390 — Unf. D u p le x e s N IC E 2 1 Excellent north central location de on S h o a l C re e k $ 5 0 0 m onthly posit. C a ll 4 / 2 6 1 0 0 4 5 _______ 2 B R W e st 21st, F O R R E N T , n e w ly re no vated, la rg e du ple> c a m p u s 4 - 5 $ 8 0 0 4 7 8 0 8 8 5 4 5 2 4 5 6 4 ' ? block from 3 2 0 5 G U A D A L U P E 4 r o o m s o n first floor in IB R stove re frige ra to r $ 4 9 5 d u d in g utilities M a y 1 4 5 8 - 6 5 3 7 o r 2 6 6 - 1 6 6 4 4 10 2 -1, n e w U N F U R N I S H E D D U P L E X , N o r th L o o p a p p li a n c e s , W / D n ic e connections, carport, C A / C H , c o n v e n ­ ient to UT city bus $ 4 0 0 , a v a ila b le 5-1- 8 5 4 6 7 9 2 7 6 4 17 T H E P O IN T E H u g e 2 - 2 c o n d o a c c o m o dates four O n shuttle Security Poo l la c u z n L a u n d ry M ic r o w a v e A v a ila b le summ er, fall 2 5 0 - 0 0 7 6 4 - 2 ? L U X U R Y C O N D O M I N U M 4 bloc ks w est o f UT 2 b e d ro o m s fireplace, deck, mi c ro w a ve , c eiling fan, W / D 2 5 5 -1 9 5 6 . 4 2 5 __________________________________ S U M M E R S C H O O L * L e a se n o w 2 2 lux ury c o n d o b ra n d n e w west cam pus. All $ 2 0 0 off Fall price 4 9 5 am enities _ __________ 3 5 8 7 , 4 9 5 2 9 3 1 4 11 3 2, 1 6 0 0 sq.ft. 2-sto ry c o n d o So uth club, p oo l, fa ns $ 5 9 5 f a l l . d e p o si' 4 4 5 - 8 1 9 5 , 1 - 2 3 7 4 9 6 7 after 5 4 5 S P A C I O U S 2 - 2 c o n d o fo r sum m er c o m pletely furn ished a n d all app liances. 2 8 th a n d N u e c e s Pool, lacuzri, tw o c o v e re d p a rk in g sp a c e s $ 7 0 0 Rick 4 7 6 3 1 2 4 4 5_____________________ W A N T R E S P O N S I B L E girls to sh are fur m shed 2 B R 1B A c o n d o at 2 8 1 0 N u e re » fo r su m m er Ren* $ 6 7 5 plus bills # 2 0 3 4 8 0 - 8 1 4 9 re q u ire d Security d e p o sit 3 4 5 4 8 1 7 4 5_________ F E M A L E R O O M M A T E S w a n te d fo r sum mer, 3 8 furnished. W / D , m ic ro w a v e a n d S p e e d w a y 4 6 7 7 7 7 1 4 -8 fee. 4 - 8 W a l k o n e b l o c k U T - n o r t h b y l a w s c h o o l a n d E a s t w o o d s P a rk . L a r g e r e ­ m o d e l e d 2 story , 2 b e d r o o m , 1 b a th . L a r g e r o o m s a n d c lo s e t s C o m p le t e kitche n, C A / C H , t h r e e b r a s s c e ilin g fa n s, la u n d r y facility, c o v e r e d p o r c h . 5 - 6 Beautifully rem odeled 2 b e d ­ room, 1 bath near UT Intramural Field» C A / C H , 3 brass ceiling fans, laundry facility, covered parking, p rivacy fenced yard, big rooms, com plete kitchen $ 5 5 0 4 5 9 9 0 9 5 F U R N IS H E D H Y D E P a rk O a k s c o n d o IB R M ic ro w a v e , fireplace, m im blinds b alc on y. A v a ila b le fo r 8 5 - ’8 6 sc h o o l y e a r a n d / o r su m m e r '8 5 4 7 9 - 0 3 4 0 4 8 F U R N IS H E D C O N D O , m id M a y m o ve in, 2 B R 1BA, h o ld s three, p o o l security L a w S c h o o l loca le 4 7 2 - 2 4 6 8 4 5 2 6 0 5 E N F IE L D 2B R , 1 y e a r old Five mm utes to L ake Austin, 10 m inutes to UT $ 7 2 5 4 / 2 2 2 6 7 , 4 7 8 4 2 6 5 4 -9 18th A N D L A V A C A 2 extra la rg e b e d roo m s, 1 BA, la rg e living ro o m g o o d view o f T o w e r Kitchen all app liances, d in in g are a, c o v e re d parking, partially furnished, p oo l, hot tub, a va ila b le for su m m er Ele vator $ 7 0 0 includes aH bills inclu d in g A C . 3 4 5 - 2 3 7 5 4 8 FR EE R E N T , '9 m onth L u xu ry c o n d o o n Riverside $ 4 5 0 3 3 9 9 4 9 ? . 4 5 2 0111 le ave m e ssage , K e n / C o o k ie 4 -9 C R O I X 3 B R / 3 B A c o n d o fo r le ase Sum m er o n ly L a rry R o d e n 4 7 7 -1 3 1 2 , 3 4 5 - 8 9 7 7 4 -1 0 ________________________ ____ 5 - 6 N U E C E S C O R N E R c o n d o m icrow ave, jocuzzi n e w p a in t a n d carp e t I 1 close to c a m p u s $ 4 2 5 . C a ll 4 7 7 8 6 7 8 4-17 W alk to Campus $ 5 9 5 . 4 5 9 - 9 0 9 5 . t io n a l p r i v a c y f e n c e d p o r c h w ith c a n - v a s e d a w n i n g , C A / C H , m o d e m k itc h ­ e n 1 b l o c k t o sh u ttle b u s n e a r H a n c o c k C e n t e r $ 5 9 5 4 5 9 - 9 0 9 5 . 5 - 6 400 C on dos- T ow nhouses TH E L A N T E R N L A N E N O W A C C EPT fall leases fo r furn ished 2 B R s C o ll 4 / 4 - 5 6 5 9 , A y d a m Interest 4 1 _______ 2 B IL E V E L 2B R -21-2B A, a p p lia n c e s p o o l sa u n a security, ER shuttle N e a r Lake A ustin a n d rec reatio n center A v a ila b le Ju n e 1. 4 5 4 -1 0 9 1 . 4 - 5 ____ L U X U R Y C O N D O , 3 - 2 1? o n IF shuttle W / D , m ic ro w a v e , fireplace, fireplace, ceiling fa n s G r e a t fo r ro o m m a te s M u st see so o n 45 a ( / n TYPING • RESUMES • COPIES r i r ■ ! «on i 1 - L r 1 v " i • I r.. . 1 I m 1 1 f SUN 1 J 9 0 8 W. 2 3 r d o p p o s i t e ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ J TYPING ★ RESUMES * COPYING > SATISFACTION * EXPERIENCE NOW ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS FOR SUMMER AND FALL! Y o u 're invitee th e ARK C O -O P 2000 Pearl 4 7 6 - 5 6 7 8 TAOS C O -O P >61 2 Guadalupe 4 7 4 - 6 9 0 5 LAUREL H OUSE 1 9 0 5 N u e c e s 4 7 6 - 5 6 7 8 21st C O -O P 7 0 7 W . 21st 4 7 6 >67 8 S u m m e r rdtev: D o u b le s from $ 2 4 ‘f m o S in g e s fro m S 129 m o. 19 m eals .1 week, A < all u t i l i t y paid furnished RENTAL 430 — R o o m -B o a rd L L L L l Welcome to Madison House ★ G reat Food ★ Full Maid Service ★ Full Security ★ Individualized S ervice -nxdft, W e g i v e y o u M O RE in n e r & o u t e r s p a c e • R e cre a tio n al facilities (pool, sa u n a g a m e ro o m ) • Lots o f G O O D M E A L S 19 m e als a w e e k • A c r o s s the street ‘-om c a m p u s • H o u s e k e e p in g s e r v ic e s • O f f street p a rk in g a v a ila b le • C a ll o r write fo r I N F O R M A T I O N (512) 4 7 2 -8 4 1 1 ^ M O N - T M U 7 * m - 7»m -5 . FBI 1 0 a m - 3 J S A T ▼ S U N 5 p m - M i d # ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ « S E R V IC E S 750 — T y p in g 813 W. 24th T R I - T O W E R S F R E E P A R K I N G ^ NEED YOUR RESUME FAST? Call us tor an appointm ent and w e ll type it w hile vou wait. 4546874 5417 North Lamar p Q m n V S _ 9 THESES, DISSERATIONS & P.R.'s W e guarantee our typing will meet graduate scho o l requirem ents. g i n n y S S E R V IC E S 7 6 0 — Misc. Services E M P L O Y M E N T P R E P A R A T IO N LEARN B A R T E N D I N G • 1 O r 2 W e e k C o u rs e • D a y O r E v e n in g • J o b Place m e nt A ssista n c e ... CALL N O W ! 458-6000 SPEC IA L S T U D E N ’ D ISC O U N T S! Legal Serving Age 18 yrs. old P R O F E S S IO N A L B A R T E N D E R S SC H O O L 12 OAKS I W eft 21st Littlefield Fountain UT 21st Dobie Now Leasing For Summer! Rates Starting at $725 12 weeks including meals Fall & Spring Combined Starting at $3300 CONDOMINIUMS P R E -L E A SIN G FO R SU M M ER & F A L L E ig h te e n b e au tifu lly fu rn ish ed two bedroom , two bath u n its w ill be a v a ila b le for IM M E D IA T E occupancy F e a tu r e s include: pool, jacu zzi, w ash er & d ryer, secu rity and all oth er new condom inium am en ties. C a ll today, only a few are a v a ila b le 704 West 21st street 495-9704 454-6633 T H E R E N T A L A D D R E SS FO R S U C C E S S We'll Make You Feel Like One of The Family! MADISON HOUSE 709 W. ‘22nd A u stin , T e x a s 78705 (512)478-9891 "T O U R S D A IL Y " Now Leasing For Summer! Rates Starting at $900 for 12 wks, meals included Fall & S p rin g Com bined Rates Start at $3660 inc. m eals "T O U R S D A IL Y " n C O B X E E N T E R Austin, Texas 78705 2021 Guadalupe P a g e 2 6 / T h e D a i l y T e * m F r i d i , a ¡ 1 9 8 5 SE R V IC E S S E R V IC E S E M P LO Y M E N T E M P L O Y M E N T E M P L O Y M E N T EM P L O Y M E N T E M P LO Y M EN T 750 — T yp in g 760 — Misc. Services 790 — Par» Time 7 9 0 — Part Time 800 G e n e ral Help W anted 880 — Pro fe ssio nal 890 Clubs- R estaurants CH U R C H SERV ICES C H U R C H SERVICES ÍC W A IT P E R S O N N E E D E D for charming, lunchtime restaurant in the Capitol aren A p ply before Horn or after 2 30pm ot 704 W est 13th 4 7 8 877 1 4 10 W A IT P F R S O N positions open apply af ter 7pm, Sa t through Fn ask For lorry 22 0 5 F Riversid e 4-15 N O W H IR IN G neat waitpeopl- d ay and/or mqht shift Also hostess/host, cocktail waitress/waiter A p ply ofter 2pm Orsim's, First City Center on Congress 9th St entrance 4 12 900 Domestic- H o u se h o ld E XPER IEN C FD BABYSIT T ER n eeded For 6 month old in my home I 4 M W F an d 7 5 T/TH Northwest a re a 3 4 5 768 ’ 4 '________ s' W O R K I N G M O T H E R needs com panion For children afternoons now summpt daily N e e d cor an d references 345 2 2 0 6 4-12 B U S IN E S S 930 — Bu sin e ss O pportunities L A N G U A G E T U TO RS, call Frank about exciting opportunity Experienced and non experienced. Call n ow tod ay 469 9319 4 5 C H U R C H SERV ICES FIRST ENGLISH LUTHERAN CHURCH, L.C.A. Robert J. Karfl, pastor Worship Services 8:30 and 11:00 Sunday morning Christian Education for Adnlts and Children 945 Sunday Morning 30th & Whitis 478-1933 UNIVERSITY PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH O n the corner of 22nd St. and San Antonio St behind the Co-op, seeks to serve Christ as if serves the Univer sify community O ur worship services are of 11-00am each Sunday, with Church School at 9 30om, also Thursday at 7 00pm is a Communion Service For University students, we have a supper and Bible study beginning at 6:30pm on Tuesclav evenings Call 476 5321 for more informo- tion. -53 sda Campus Ministers Frank Ya»w$ ond Dwne Diff tanhom First United Methodist Church "University students are a very im portan! port of the life and ministry of our congregation Worship Services 8 30am & 10 55am each Sunday SPFCIAl ACTIVITIES FOR UNIVFRSI TY STUDENTS: College Class 9 30am each Sunday College Fellowship (featuring Snack Supper and Pro­ gram 6 00pm each Sunday Van Ser vice from Campus to Church each Sunday morning and evening First Methodist is located at 12th & Lavaca St , 478-5685 ASSEMBLY OF GOD CHURCH OF GLAD TIDINGS 2000 JUSTIN LANE 1 Block off Burnet Rd 459-5481 An exciting spirit filled church offers Friday nlghr Bible study and Christian fellowship for C ollege and Career at various k x a lie n s in Austin <-och w e e k SUNDAY SERVICES 9:30am 11:00am 6:30pm_______ $ / / Hyde Park Baptist Church • W orship • Bible Study • W orship 8 30 9 30 11:00 ST. MARTIN’S LUTHERAN CHURCH 606 W I Sth Street Su nd ay worship 8:00 a.m . and 10:45 a.m. Su n d a y School 9:30 a.m . C onveniently lo ­ cated near campus. Pastors Jo h n A uer and C arl Schoss ST. ELIAS ORTHODOX CHURCH 408 East Eleventh Street Austin, Texas The Mother O rthodox Parish of Austin Service schedule Vesp ers Saturday 6 0 0 p m Orfhros Sund ay 9 30am . D M n e Liturgy 1 0:30 am , V e s p e r Liturgies 6 3 0 p m e v e s of all Feasts Center for Orthodox Cam pus Fellowship S E L L I T ! With a T e x a n W a n t - A d ! 471-5244 CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH OF AUSTIN 408 W, 23rd St. G O O D FR ID A Y S E R V IC E S 12:30-1:30 p.m. Di Robert Paul Professor of Ecclesiastical History and Christian Thought, Austin Presbyterian Seminary, Speaker I Ielp bring the world together 11< >st an exchange student. i Hresi International Youth Exchange, ¿---- dential Initiative for peace, brings teenagers from other countries to live for a time with American families and at tend American schools. Learn about partici­ pating as a volunteer host family. W r i t e : Y O l I I I I \ ( I I \ \ ( , l P u e b lo , 1 c lo r a d o 8 1 0 0 9 m I lie International Youth Kxc liante cy 5-3 _ .......................................... 7?\a\cAa k n n R E S U M E S 2707 Hemphill Park Just N o rtfi of ?7 H i at ju ad oiu pe 472-3210 472-7677 P R O C E S S IN G typing W O R D p age Ruthes welcofne. C c r'<‘ e 4B P S 4 12 _ $ KATHF S W O R D p ro fts t ng le g a l, fess nal theti* dtuertahon »• sonabfo rates prompt servire 282 4 19 PATTY S W O R D Processing Tefm p< professional reports dissertation* up rush service until 11 pm 345 476" V 35 T Y P IN G , IN C L U D E S rust* sp punctuation PR T H E S IS EXPERT Henderson, B A 55thl 4 9 467-0167 {Li tiling Pat M o v i n g $ 3 9 9 5 $ 1 0 9 5 , days d e n t rjir, u n t PHOTOS for PASSPORTS APPLICATIONS RESUMES 3 minute service M O N - F R I 9 - 6 SAT 10-2 477-5355 THIRD EYE MMOwdehipe v ABC Apartment Moving in for os lo* Call 339-MOVE E M P L O Y M E N T 780 E m p lo y m e n t S e r v ic e s $?8( E A R N hom e in stamped X ) w eekly working at spare time R U S H self addressed en velop e to Senco B ox 6 0 5 University, A! i4 8 6 4 A N AS (ergom S IS T A N T m an ager for retail store yrrnc chairs etc j. Experience an 4 79 9 4 7 9 required pferenees lea ve message for D r Sh ep m an 4 18 S W I M M I N G IN S T R U C T O R for summer afternoons Experienced, mature W E I synchronized Far N orthw est Austin Bar bora Denny 258 3141 4-5 ligh t housekeeping and D E P E N D A B L E PART lime help, weekends 8am to 2pm {onitorial duties A p ply m person, lost Creek Country Club 2612 lo s t Creek Blvd, betw een 9 and 3 4 5 Hers Responsible needed, flexible hours, by 9 2 0 0 N o rth Lam ar 4 12 nature good or coll ny 4 8 PART TIME individual n 8 3 4 20C C H U R "H N U R S E R Y program needs part ‘achers to work Sundays and sdays with pre school children 10 time 476- $3 75/hr plus travel /ERY PER1 IN need ed I P M M f nt Traval. 451 >591 4 15 n oon to Sally S H O P need? Nic sibtlit im m ediate help in of veek Prefer go o d stu nment vanous job re 0 0 7 2 4 5 PART TIME delivery driver Flexible hours possible student A p ply at 3 5 0 5 N orth IH 35 betw een 8 5pm 4 8 T E LEM A R K E T E R S N E E D E D to take re quest for literature written by Christian psychologist $4 50/hr Call Jen m fef from 8 5 or Tereso from 5 9 at 4 5 0 0 5 8 2 4 9 ________________________ PC W12 C B A S IC program m ing minor m aintenance on PCs, $6/hr 458 0 9 9 5 4 5 _____ _______________________ p a r t W E H A V E a im mediate opening for a p e r m a n e n t c o u n t e r rec ept»onist Must be reliable and work: well with others. If interested, please a p ply at Atlas W est (formerly Roqsdole W est) 4231 A irport Blvd 4 10 tim e G R E A T JO B for student $4 50/hr 8 1?, M o n d a y Friday must be ab le to type O n shuttlr* bus 444 1714 Sh aron or Din A T T E N D A N T W A N T E D for com op laun dry nights and weekends Call Heidi, 250-0821 4 17____________________________ H O U S E K E E P E R N E E D E D 3 4 hour* three times w eek, near campus $ 4 /hr 1907 4 8 __________ 4 78 TANT P O S T IO N S in A M I M< t son Scho ol Classroom, curriculum, and after school assistants n eeded Excellent p reparation for work: in education, psy ch olo ay philosophy Part time positions a va ila b le starting in August $4 hr 4 4 ? 3152 4 19 _________________ PART TIME pnnt shop inventory, mail cleric So m e h ea vy lifting Must h a ve de pendable car 1 5pm M o n d a y through Fn d ay $4/hr Call for address 6157 4 5 443 S O U T H P A R K Cinem a III is n ow hinng floor staff for summer W e are looking for d epend able hard workers Please ap ply m person 19?1 East Ben W h ite E O F ____ 4 24 ___ D E P E N D A B L E , R E S P O N S IB IE mature b a b y s it t e r s R e f e r e n c e s n e e d e d required 32 8 2 2 7 0 4-5 Transportation n ecessary F P P A N P R U N N E R la w firm Must h ave reliable car an d be a va ila b le for work every M E morning from 8 12 or 8 1 Call Jack S , 476 la r g e dow ntow n bin 'j*- Sure, we type FRESHMAN THEMES Why Not Start Out With Good Grades7 472*3210 472*7677 A ZT EC W O R D Processing A-ea Scho ol papers e'r C all 3 8 5 * 5 0 8 0 anytime 4 76 R .ves.d e ‘hese*, proofing M E L IN D A S P R O F E S S IO N At TYPIN i PR s m o re D is s e r ta tio n s service fo r students, profes Unlimited sionals O p e n until midnight UT oreo 4 ? 8 "104 4 ?9 th e s e s spelling, T Y P IN G - P R O O F IN G N O N P A R E IL mg, la n g u a g e . honor* p ro ve peertessness (honors) M Ed 477 36 8 4 4 79 typ sh orthan d Jo e, B F A T Y P IN G SER V IC E ports eti 11 per pai 5415, 12 years prcr 4-5 sesis, resumes, re t CoW H elen 258 ssionol expert,,..... these* resumes Fast, /k c\¡rofp T Y P IN G R E S E A R C H pc disse^aHom reasonable on e d ay ava ila b le Correct mg Selector. 441 1893 5 3 rs A N Y T H IN G TYPED South From $1 20/ pag e accurate and professional 444 59 2 8 p.m., or lea ve message anytime 4 29 IN T E L L IG E N T P R O F E S S IO N A L compu te ri z ed E n g lis h text p r o c e e d in g a s sis ta n ce (s p ellin g , p u n ctu a tio n grammer) Beautiful results, ge* higher grades C reative Services 2 4 2 0 G u a daiupe 4 78-3633 5-3 P R O F E S S IO N A L W O R D processing Type dissertations, theses, reports, etc $1 5 0 per p ag e plus 1 0 ° discount through Apnl Fast, accurate, an d celt able. 8 3 6 -7474 5-3 W O R D P R O C E S S IN G b y UT secretory A n y size project w elcom e University/ Riverside areas From $1 50/p ag e Vir gima 442 7 5 8 0 4 10 E X P E R IE N C E D TYPIST-typing/w ord pro cessing Fast and reason ab le rates to cated N orth Austin, call 2 5 5 7420, N a n JO U R N A L IS M G R A D U A T E on staff o< naHonal m agazine will type and or pro ofreadin g your manuscript Daisy w heel pnnHnq for a professional look Typing $ V p a g e Pick up a va ila b le 446 4 5 9 8 4 1 8 Q U A L IT Y W O R D P R O C E S S IN G W e us* quality software/quality h a rd w a re Lee Starr 444 0801 5-2 RESUM ES • W o t ! P r o c e v n g • P A Do Dp 'very • Free Edit copy • Disk S’oraq* • Com puter Spelling Chp* k Pfeose call for hours dunng weekends and evenings 479-8027 NETWORK ENT. 2813 Rio Grande »204 IN fO PRO S UUOftD PROCESSING (AST BfCUflP'r flffr D(P@l088Lf ST A R T IN G 01 11 P 0 G € UjlTH V O L U M F D IS C O U N T OVRIL08LC 288 1930 SOUTH UICST SCRVICCS U lO ftD P R O C E S S IN G 453-0323 F a il <■ A c c w o ie Wrt.up D elivery 't/eta. 'le e 4 t t . M t S O M X . M I V I’I K l t M r WORD PROCESSING XE R O X 860 . ST O U A G t ET ( 454-1532 W n h I s. \ m i *. * I S I 2 F . 3 * ’ 1 (O f* O u v e l) 7 D a y * A W e e k j ■ M O T H MyTypist 255-4534 More Vtenefc fepom V k pg 760 — Misc. Services Ul€ MflKC SMALL LOANS FROM $5-5290 CASH PAWN LOAN 5134 8URNCT ROAD 454 0450 OAK HILL A ll AppH oH lltS A g i b l e fr*r II 150 clrnsvinM to he h eld on A p ril 15, l»«5 r e s i d e n t m a n a g e r a s s i s t a n t Seeking grad student couple for port time m anagem ent o f mini w arehouse complex m N W Austin Required resi Hence in private unfurnished living quar tt** v o ti PART TIME •'nip 7 3 0 a m 3 3 0 p m Saturdays. Apply 901 Red River 4-9 e d ed R e a d y Ice n d a y s , 8 12pm person M E 8 5, 4)»' w a n t . A P T ’T.Y N O V , F O h T R I E ' BRT* \ K » S U M M E R .lOH-S 328-4700 <335.5 B e e < ave Road, Su ite 404 25 \ t*ar% Nationwide P R O F E S S I O N V i R E S U M E & W R I M M , S I R \ !( ! 790 — P a r t Tim e United 9a reel Service is now accept for the following ing appli cations part-time job app►ointments A M Pre loader, -415am- 9.15am maximum througki Friday Repeated M o n d a y loa»ding of package* lifting a rid weighing up lo 70 lbs required $8/ hr Benefitf$ p atk a ge included Center clerk A M hours 5 30am- 10 3 0am m axi inum P M hours. 6 45pm 11 45pm M o n d a y through Fn d ay C)uties ir.dude correction ol reroijtmg of packages addresse- g packciges for next d ay de proce*sm livery Sc required $5 50/hr Aortl 9th and 9pm BenefitI CaH 34 5-8334 or Holly Cro Clinn a I & o Ho N E E D E D M O R N I N G runner From 8*30 to 1 Must b e responsible an d h a ve ow n transportation C a ll Pam at 4 8 0 -9084 if interested 4 5 Fastest g r o w in g s o la r c o m p a n y loo k mg fo r y o u n g p e o p le fo start m c a n v as s in g c r e w Pleasant o u tside w o rk in te rv ie w in g h o m e o w n e r s M u s t b e w e ll d re ss e d & like l o m e e t p e o p le P e rfe c t fo r students $ 5 /h r plus bonus C a ll 7 5 0 5 0 7 5 , b e tw e e n 2 & 7 pm , M l 4-5 H E L L O % '! S T U D E N T S PUBLIC RELATIONS PARTIMF EV EN IN G S $5 00 HR 450-0321 APPI Y CO M M ERCE PK 5555 N. LAMAR BLDG C, SUITE 109 $ S 0 0 h o u r l y S w i m m i n g p o o l c l e a n e r . N o e x p e r i e n c e n e c e s ­ s a r y S p r i n g a n d s u m m e r h o u r s , 15 f o 2 0 h o u r s w e e k l y . P o s s ib ly ! m o r e in s u m m e r . T r a in a l $ 4 . 5 0 h o u r l y P l e a s e o p p l y in p e r s o n . H ill C o u n t r y P o o l s , 3 6 2 5 N o r t h H ills D r 1 m i le w e s t o f M o P a c . 4-9 WORK EVENINGS ON CAMPUS M o n d a y Friday 5 to 9pm. A ve ra g e $ r> to $15;hr Tele­ Call Mike at marketing. 480-0606. 4-10 GM STEAKH0USE 19 0 8 G u a d a lu p e N e e d p a rt tim e student h elp , 11-5 o r 5-10 F r e e m e a l p e r shift 10-15 hr$7 w e e k is fin e A p p ly b e tw e e n 1 & 4 N o p h o n e calls p le a s e MAC PROGRAMMERS N e e d you yo u r programs. Dennis T oprac 482 0384 MAC PROGRAMMERS R ecep tio n ist H o s p ita l Im m h r./w e e k posi 12 }0 a m M Sat & Sun ty p in g 4 0 w , ete< liv e ly v. 1 c a l term in ó lo . 2600 E. MLK Austin, Tx 78702 477-9811, ext. 157 C A M P C O U N S E L O R ? ■ Club >r da> Austin Counlr mg t, for Ji for ir f o r m a tio i m e & J u l ’ ill si d u b i e w help FOOD CHECKER & CASHIER U n iv e is ity o f T e x a s a t Austin h a s im ­ m e d ia te o p e n in g fo r p o rt tim e (2 5 hou rs w k ) fo o d c h e c k e r & c a s h ie r J o b # 7 2 ? 9 61 8 4 P ) R e q u ire s h igh s c h o o l c o m p le tio n & 6 m onths exp ert e n c e In h a n d lin g ca s h & m a k in g c h a n q e S a la r y $ 4 6 8 / m o E x ce lle n t frin g e b en efits A p p ly a n y w e e k d a y b e fo r e 1? n o o n a i Office OF Personnel Services ond Employee Relations 2613 Wichita 4'1-3656 Equal Opportunity/ Affirmative Action Employer 6 9 8 ? 4 10 N E E D A g o o d nde* to gollup a 2 year old filly Call 4 5 8 3414 e a d y or late 4 10___________________________________ BUTTE RELY C H R IS T IA N Preschool now in terview ing for foil staff Tuesday nnd Thursdoy m ornings a n d M on d n y- W e d n e s d a y Fn d ay mornings. 3 2 7 3 3 7 0 3 / 7 5902 4 1 ? _____ T W O PART time positions ovailable Re toil sales experience preferred M ak e application M o n d a y through Friday at 616 W e s t 34th 4-1?_______________________ IF W I N E interests you an d you enjoy d ealing with people, you rrnqht like to work part time in this upscale but unpre tentious liquor store W e will consider training the nght person Call Divtne Revelations, 452-1990 4-5 CLE R K H E LP with billing W ill train ER shuttle 47 7 8 6 9 4 ask for M r or Mrs Parks 4-11 PART TIME telle- IM M E D IA T E O P E N IN G Experienced preferred Afternoon 2 6 30, some Saturdays For m ore mfor matron call N a tio n a l Bank of Texas, ask for C a ro l 4 7 7 5 4 0 0 4 1 P T A F T E R N O O N positions available, wodcing w/pre school and school age children Professional atmosphere, ab o ve a ve ra g e p ay A p ply in person Creative W o d d Denton, Austin 78758, 837- 8 8 2 2 4-12 _____________ PART TIME 20 to 40 hours Interior plant m aintenance technicians preferred grow th C all Christie at 4 4 0 1601 4*8 Excellent opportunities Expenence for C H IL D C A R E workers n eeded for respite ca re p rogram expert ence w h andtcapped children preferred ob bie, 478-2581. 4-5_______________ flexible hours, A D V E R T IS IN G A G E N C Y needs part time receptionist, M W F 8 30 1 30 Phones, typing, some erran d running W age/m ile a g e M a ry Lee. 450-0921 4-11 C E N T R A L A U S T IN Child D evelopm ent Center seeks experienced pre school to worft w/3 year olds for ♦he teacher summer Jo b begins M a y 1 Hours 12:30 5 45 pm Call M rs Reid, 478 5424 4 5 PART-TIME ADVERTISING SALES W e n e e d t e n e r g e tic , e n th u s i­ astic a ggressive S a le s p e o p le part-tim e p re fe ra b ly UT adver tising m a jors It s an id ea l w ay to earn w h ile y o u lea rn w ith a natio n a l m a gazin e p u b lis h er l o set u p an a p p o in tm en t p le a se ( all I in d a R o b in s o n at Brighton Square Publishing 3 2 8 - 4 5 6 0 800 4 9 G e n e ral Help W anted C A F E T E R A IA P O S IT IO N S ava ila b le at the C.astillian Contact Arty G a g e at 478 1732 or stop by 2 3 2 3 San Antonio, 11 th floor cafeteria 4 23 DAY CARE teacher* needed immediately Morning and afternoon available Southwest location 44? 6165 4 10 University Co-op Rush 4-11 N o w accepting applications for full & part time tem porary summer rush po sitions Apply in Personnel. 9am to 1pm, 224 6 G uadalup e, 476-7211. 4-9 IM M ED IA TE O P E N IN G S CITADEL SECURITY has posi­ tions open immediately for se curity officers Shifts are during the evenmgs, late mqht hours, and weekends Some positions allow studying on the tob Pay is $4 25 5/hr. Please call 834 1813 4 9 Group Home Counselor Reliable energetic individual needed for our 3pm 11pm shift M o n d ay Fn 4-5 day, with emotionally disabled adults Responsibilities include direct supervi sion, enrichment, and guidance Household organizational skills help ful Excellent benefits Interested ap pltcant* please call 892*1711 between 9am and 5pm M o n d ay Fnday 'le d g e o 95 658 / R U N N E R N E E D E D d o w n t o w n re o l esta te offn e le rg e tn d e p e n d a b le p ro m p t d e o l a o o e o r a n c e 3 0 h ou rs ID E A L J O B S F O R S T U D E N T S C en tro vidual >kma fo r mature md« e x p e n e n c e to fill po (flexible -equ»re w orking a p rcJays a month, from fan sales Also work, delivery driving, per rehouse H o u rs 11am 5pm , M E Contact G reg 454 8601 p i z z a - H u t . DELIVERY DRIVERS $10-12 prr hour potential Pizza Hut ini is seflinq for our delivery drivers 1811 G u a d a lu p e lo ­ c a t io n . Applicants must ow n auto ond have proof of msurante Excellent earning potential and b en ­ efits Apply ,n person at: 1811 Guadalupe Between 2-5 & 7-9 476-0631 A n a a u a l o p p o rtu n ity .m p lo y a r W O R K O N 6TH STREET lh St Ic e c r e a m store n e e d s p a r t­ ite w e e k d a y & w e e k m g h t h e lp Ap- y in p et son, B ah T s D a n e C o n e s, 411 P th V I lift.*: 5 4-12 SURE FIRE PHONE WORK $4 50/HR. • BONUSES INCENTIVES 18 HOURS/WEEK CALL 442-5742 4 12 Phone Room Good phone voice needed lo set op ; ¡ ntrnents N o selling involved $ > hr to start plus bonuses to the nght p e rso n C o m e h a v e fun & m a k e m o n ­ ey with Call i md between ? & 3 p m , 9 7 9 3 7 8 0 4 9 W O RK EVENINGS O N CAMPUS for fast p a c e d g ro w in g com p an y Earn great pay. Call filen 4 8 0 0 6 0 6 4-10 CLERK Im m e d ia te p o sition a v a ila b le fo r a d a t a e n try clerk W ill w o rk o n a com p u te n z e d m en u system M S < o m p le tion is o n ly le q u u e m e n t W o r k in g hrs o r e M n d a y 9 a m 6 p m o n d W e d n e s d a y 9 a m 8 p m S a la r y $4 15/hr In te re ste d ? • orne in to s e e Ju d y at the Texas U n io n o n c a m p u s rb o m 4 124 The U n iv e rs ity o f T exa s at Austin is a n f qoal O p p o rtu n ity / A ffirm a tiv e A ctio n I m p lo y e r 4 5 EOE 4 b C re w M em bers Fastest growing solar company look ing for folks to stort in canvassing < rew Must be neatly dressed & like to meet people Perfect for students N o selling involved $5/hr plus bonuses Call between 2 & 3 30 pm 929 3780, ask for D avid or G reg 4 9 Furniture Store Cashier la r g e volume retail furniture store needs a full or part time cathier to help our customer* at our front desk Previous coshier expenence helpful, but w e ( an work with anyone w ho >s a cheerful, positive person Afternoon & evening hours available plus Satur days W e offer a competitive starting w a g e and many nice benefits Appli cations being taken at W eberg Furniture 5639 Airport Blvd. 4 $ INSTANT CASH A N D B O N U S If y o u n e e d c a sh to h e lp yo u out w h ile a tte n d in g c o lle g e w h y not d o n a te b lo o d p la s m a ? Y o u c a n d o n a t e tw ice in a 7 d a y p e rio d for the 1st d o n a tio n r e c e iv e $10, fo r the 2 n d d o n a tio n in a 7 d a y p e rio d , r e c e iv e $ ! ? Plus with this a d y o u II re c e iv e a $2 b onus o n y o u r first visit A ls o ask a b o u t b o n u s p ro g ra m s S o h e lp other* w h ile h elp in g y ou rself M ust h a v e va lid ID a n d som e p ro o f o f Aus tin r e s id e n ce D r a w in g h eld o n c e a m onth for tw o $ 2 5 Lninuses C o l! 4 / 4 7941 Auttin Plasmo C «ntar 2800 Guodolup* 4 9 5 - 5 8 2 2 G O F ER ’Austins Flow er P eo p le’ N e e d Easter vendors Start now Cash paid daily Call 440-8 7 7 7 4 5 _____________________ A P A R T M E N T M A N A G E R n eeded pos» Hon begins April 8 W ill in 1BR apartm ent in new 10 unit complex Sal ury $175 off rent P O Box 5 3 4 ? Austin, 78 7 6 3 4 8 live C R U IS E S H IP S H IR IN G , $16 5 3 0 ,0 0 0 ' for C a ra b ea n . H aw aii, W o d d Call guide directory, newsletter 1 916 944 4 4 4 4 X U T E X A U S T IN C R U IS E 4 30 A IR L IN E S H IR IN G ” $14 $ 3 9 ,0 0 0 ' Stew Reservationist' W o r ld w id e ' ardesses Call for guide, directory, newsletter 1 916-944 44 4 4 X U T E X A U S T IN A IR 4 30 4 75/hr for d epend able person to clean houses M o n d a y Friday daytime only Starting 3 to 8 hours per week Raises a va ila b le for go o d work Must have ow n transportation Call 462 2 7 6 ? for appointm ent 3-1 H ELP W A N T E D for grow ing houseclean mg and catenng service Experience preferred tram to perfect Car, referenc es, d ependability Flexible hours 478 52 8 9 4 8 D E S K C LER K posiHon W e e k e n d hours only Experience p refered but will train Highland Village 4 5 9 33 3 3 4 5 Bl U E C H IP Cookies, 6th St needs enthu siastic person to join our staff Immediate openings, part time evening or full time d ay A d van cem en t possible Contact Tom, 474 4313 4 5 R E N T A L A G E N T S an d service agents n e e d e d co m p a n y Beginning p ay S4-5/bour For morninq and evening shifts 4 7 6 3519 4 t ? le n ta l co r for L IF E G U A R D S B A L C O N E S W o o d s pool in N W Austin seeks experienced full time guards for summer tim e qualifications San ta Cruz, Austin, 7 8 7 5 9 4-10 including part S e n d S e p t '1200 to Ernest W o o d w o r k . M a y , W E E K E N d I m P L O Y M E N T now full time durmg summer Looking for depend able self starter ( on me Hilton, 9 2 6 8 9 0 5 4 S U M M E R C O M P U T E R comp teacher* a n d assistant teachers n eeded Ful* an d part time, Ju n e 3-Au g 23. Contact Sun ny G ra h a m , Kids’ Computing, 2 5 0 5573 4-11 810 Office- Clerical PART TIME secretarial work some mi croprocessm g Apply T E W ile y Co, 1506 W e s t 6th betw een 8 3 0 9 30am or 4 30-5 30pm 4-5 N E E D P E R S O N to work part time/tempo rary position Minimum 20 hours with flexible schedule Duties include filma matching P O s and gen eral office work information call 4 5 3 3913 For m ore N a sh Copus Inc 4 5 A L L IE D B A N K N orth Austin Part time tellers n eed ed E x p en en ce preferred but not necessary Please call 346 0 6 6 0 4 15___________________ ______________________ O F F IC E A S S IS T A N T n eed ed for state w id e m agazine 6 hrs/week, flexible Typing skills helpful G r e a t 477 4164 ask for H a n n o Ber k 4 8 some office experience learning opportunity Flexible, 2 0 + hr*./ N E A R C A M P U S week Typist 6 0 * wpm W P experience p refered Bookkeeper 10 key account ing hours and/or experience Runner insured 474 20 0 ? 5 3 _____________ ______ $3.50-5 50/hr reliable car 8 4 0 — Sales 1 E L E M A R K E T IN G R F P S full lime ond part hme, tw o weeks training, salar v and commission Must havn go o d phone voice Free parking 4 5 3 9613 4 10 850 — Retail T U E S D A Y S A L F S some Saturdays S a la ry • commission San ford 's Shoes, 4 7 7 8421 4-5 Thursday 1 6pm EXPERIENCED PART time sales help n eeded for better ladies rea d y to w ea r Please call for appointment C ra zy Joe's 451 27 8 3 4-5 4pm PART TIME NOW... FULLTIME IN SUMMER... CAREER LATER... The fascinating wine and spirits bu* ness awaits you A pply with Austin s leading merchant Reuban's-8311 R e ­ search Blvd S ee W e s in 12 2-4 4 9 880 — P rofessional FULL TIM E preschool teaching positions a va ila b le a b o ve o vera g e p ay scale professional environment A p ply in per son C reative W o d d , 2 0 2 0 Denton 8 37 8 8 2 2 4-29 CALL 471-5244 TO PLACE A CLASSIFIED AD Health Promotion Coordinator Professional opportunity for o dynam ic self starter to develop, coordinate and manage health promotion and wellness programs for rapidly grow ing health maintenance organization in Austin Experience and/or educa tion m the field of management of health & wellness programs pre ferred Send resume to Medical Se, vices Director, Central Texas Health Plan, 3307 Northland Dr , Austin Tx 78731. 4-5 890 Clu bs- Restaurants JU A N G O L D S T E IN S is now accepting applications for cocktail waitpersons N o experience necessary Apply 4 0 4 E 6th, no calls 4 5 J O A N N 'S S O U P S an d Sandwiches, part time M-F 5 8pm, sandwich makers, study at work Call 444 1456 4 23 B E IN G A P P lI c m To N S a c c e p te d cashiers and food preps The Uncommon M arket a n d Deli 816 Congress 495 6 4 8 0 4 5 Beans Restaurant & Bar on 6th Street is now hiring full & part time hostper sons and experienced waitpersons Apply in person after ?pm, 311 W 6th 4-16 TRES A M IG O S W E S T L A K E Now hiring part time cashiers wait assistants, & waitpeople Apply be tween 2 & 6pm daily, 1811 Capitol of Texas Hwy 4 11 BLUE M O O N CAFE The Blue M o o n C a fe is n o w hir ing ex p e rie n ce d w aiFp eop le A pplicants should be a b le to w o rk a minimum of 3 lunch shift A p p ly M o n d a y S a tu rd a y 1 4 ot 5122 W e s t B e e C a v e Rd 4-11 ★ CALENDAR'S ★ experienced N o w hiring waiters & waitresses. A p ply in person M-F 2-4, Ben W h ite & South Lamar. 4-8 GM STEAKH0USE 1908 Guadalupe N e e d part-time student help, 11-5 or 5-10. Free meal per shift 10-15 hrs7 week is fine A p p ly between 1 & 4 N o phone calls pleose 4-9 The Beach Cabaret Help wanted-waitperson & clean-up Please come by between 12 noon & 2911 San Jacinto 4-11 ALL POSITIONS AVAILABLE MORNING NOON AND NIGHT G re at benefits with an excellent work ing environment Call 4 78-2652 be tween 2-5 for an appointment HOLIDAY HOUSE EXPOSITION BLVD. 4-19 the The Case Tax-Perplexed 9ssor is the eve of April 15th. As midnight strikes. Professor Gregg G. Burnett is poring overa pile of papers, " taxes, taxes, taxes’, 'he groans, "Why do I have to pav all this money in taxes? Hme dot s evervone else manage?,\nd still put a little < xtra aside for retire nu’nt?"(jregg sighs. "It's all a mvstt ry to me." X > z n r - > in in m O > O in 3 0 70 * 1 ■n O 70 j * I in K> This flexibility plus TIAA’s current effective annual interest You can also begin receiving your income benefits at any age again, without a federal penalty tax. And you can choose from a number of lifetime income options for you and your spouse. Taking t in > sting out of t axes needn’t be a mystery. There is a simple solut ion. Supplemental Retirement Annuit ies from TlAA-(’REF. ( )r, very simply, SRAs. The flexible tax-deferred annuity plan that can reduce your rate of 11.7/)%* and ( R F L ’s federal taxes and increase your personal retirement savings with out shrinking your take-home pay. I Hidercurrent law, contribu- oroadly diversified common stock port folio make SRAs more attrac­ tive than many other tax-deferred accounts. And with assets of over $35 billion and 6i> years of experience in retirement plan investing for people in education, TIAA-CREF helps provide finan­ cial security in these uncertain times. t ions to SRAs are conveniently made i hrough your institution’s payroll system before that money shows up as taxable income. So you don’t pay taxes on it. Or on the interest and dividends it earns. You only pay ordinary income taxes when you receive your income benefits or withdraw gate the advantages of Supple- mental Retirement Annuities. cash from your SRAs. Simply mail the coupon to Í 1A A- C R EF (Tfeachers Insurance and Annuity Association College Retirement Equities Fund). Or wait until retirement to take your money out. So if you want to use part of your money before you retire* to build or buy your retire- call toll-free 800-223-1200 (in ment house or send your children N.Y., call collect [212] 490-9000) to college, you can. Without pay- and ask to speak to an Individual ing any federal penalty tax. So if you feel overtaxed like our perplexed professor, investi- Best of all, you don’t have 1 o Counselor. S R A s — S im ple. Reliable. A ccessib le. Tax-deferred an n u ities. From TIAA-CREF. *Kffective March 1,1985 through February 28, 1986 for funds credited January 1,1985 or later. This interest rate is not guaranteed after February 28,1 OHO. A 1.5% expense charge is deducted from SKA premiums. TIAA-CREF products and services are available only to staff members of colleges, universities, independent schools and certain ot her related edueat ional organizations. TfA TIAA-CREF A 730 Third Avenue New York, NY 10017 Offices in Atlanta, Boston. Dallas and San Francisco _____________ Y JLes! I’d 1 ike to reduce my taxes and increase my retirement sav­ ings. Please send me your free brochure on solving this and other mysteries of my financial future. Name of Institution Nanu Address Ci tv Slah Zip UT may host Lone Star Bowl beginning in Thp Daolice officers after being stopped for public intoxica ion The subiecl was taken to the Travis County She» ft's Office and charged with resisting arrest Aggravated assault A it.ident r-uxjrted at 56 ¡ > m Wednesday that a mar entere») the women s .hower at Be i,,‘ .rd H Jester West Dormitory The mar Placed his hand across a student s mouth and dis­ played what appeared to be a knife When the victim screamed, the man fled the area on foot Police searched the area, but no suspects were found An nvestigation is being conducted by the UT Police De nartment T he ft: A . , * ■ ! it 6 45 p rr W f'd ne' Jay the theft of her bicycle from Beauford H Jester dormitory The b« ycle was stole- oetween 5 20 p m March 1 3 and 8 00 a m T Jf day The bicycle was va jed at $100 There are no suspects A UT student reported at 12 46 a m Thursday the [heft of his bicycle from the bicycle rack at the south east corner of Moore-Hill Dormitory The theft occurred between 8 30 p m r uesday and 12 35 a m Thursday The bicycle was valued at $222 81 There are no sus ................ l l H I I I I I I I U H I I I I I I I I I I H I I I H I I H I H I I I I I I H j f I OVERWEIGHT? | I CAN’T STOP EATING? | II CAN HELP!! | | DON PETTY, M.D. | | 331-0452 1 8 0 ^ UPI W EA TH ER E O T O C A S T NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE FORECAST TO 7 P M CST 4 4 T he forecast for Austin and vicinity Friday calls for a partly cloudy afternoon with a high in the lower 80s Northerly winds will blow at 10- 15 mph. The national forecast calls for snow in portions o f the upper and middle Mississippi Valiev, upper and lower Great I akes and north At­ lantic Coast regions Rain is predicted for portions of the west and east Gulf Coast, O h io - T e n n e ^ e e Valley, upper and lower Great I ake^ and north, middle and south Atlantic Coast regions. Elsewhere, w eather will be fair. Words ACRO SS P R E V IO U S P U Z Z L E S O L V E D rL o G 7 c l A G O R A ¡S L I E Rj 1 P osit 6 P e rm its 10 Room : Sp 14 Rest 15 W illo w 16 S ty p tic 17 U n m ovirig 18 Im m ersed 19 In — : all 20 C ycle fa c to r 22 TV assem bly 23 Elis school 24 C losest 26 M ath sub) 29 S tro b ile 31 P eriod 32 High sch o o l age 34 M ore recent 38 C olum n 39 B ang in to 41 S c o ttis h 42 Reposed 45 N ova S co tia n 48 de F rance 49 Deck 50 E m place 51 R osters 55 M e sh w o rks 57 D ivers 58 F ric tio n resu lt 63 m ater 64 T une 65 Poem d ivisio n 66 M eat 67 ‘ 68 F lexible 69 Low ly A n g lo Ha' i " Saxon 70 S u b se q u e n tly 71 S langy ending. P> 1 2 3 4 5 28 ■ 14 17 26 w 32 3fl 43 DOWN 1 P recisian 2 U n a sp ira te 3 A thena 4 T ote 5 D raw out 6 R adio fan 7 Fancy case 8 D ovetail 9 E g yp tia n c o tto n 10 AH wet 11 D etached 12 In stru m e n ts 13 Lifeless 21 Agave 22 Tannin p lant 25 Fish 26 D istant 27 - S ta r S ta te 28 F o rtitu d e 30 O rda in 33 E xp la n a tio n 35 Jo u rn e y 36 Edom 37 B roken 40 Keep 43 House areas 44 The D iam ond S ta te a b b r -d o -w e ll 46 47 T re a tise 51 Thrall 52 Nat and Old King 53 Latin 54 W ife of A b ra h am 56 Rung 59 M ah -|o n g g piece 60 W ith in 61 HRE e m p e ro r 62 N egatives 64 Sw iss ra ilro a d e ngineer i- 1985 United Feature Syndicate Approval of S W C officials is not required, Johnson said, "b u t to make the bowl worthwhile we d like their s u p p o rt." He will discuss his proposal at a < onferen' < of S W C athletir directors in May to disc uss possible* conflicts of intere st that might arise with the other thre e NC AA Division I bow ls in the Cotton, Blue bonnet and Sun. !e*xas "I think he (Johnson) h a s a long, hard fight coming, Dodds said, "b e c a u s e there are- already quite a few b o w l s in Texas " Because the LSBAA h a s o n ly be e r* in existence a short time Johnson ha*- also not been able to gain fi­ nancial co m m itm e n ts from potential support organiza­ tions, since manv boards of directors have not recently held meetings. " W e fe d that the re is a lot o f hesitation on the part of Sc)me o r g a n iz atio n s," he said, but some have stipulat­ ed that if we get the (NC AA) extension, they would support the bowl. If w e ' r e able to get the 60-day exten­ sion, getting fu nds should be no problem [h e bowl, which would guarantee the schools of par ticipating teams a minimum of $4 00 ,(XK) each, would lonate profit- to < harities and the Southw est C o n fe r­ ence I he first Lone Star Bowl g am e is tentatively sc he d ­ uled f o r ja n . 4, 1986, whi< h would m ake it the last bow! g am e to be played f estivities would begin the previous Saturday with a parade. Strips Bloom County by Berke Breathed by Dubove and Bates f/A / hot lV 47i \IO .K f6 7 IL N 4 M ‘ t. 'JJ ,)/ 1//<■'/ 7 A - t />• / Collage All Rig h t , p a v e ... O M E f t T I 5 u m e 1 COULT) h a n d l e , I B u t n o w Y o u 've B re o rn e A Co l l e c t o r 1. THERE A*£ DotTNS o f THFFnfj uje Have n o pRw Acy! a n d X U)0N’L STAND FoR 1*1 ~ \ n ( i b B f BtuNT, ETH6P by Donny Jansen DEAR c T 7TH... pt-EASt S'Vr ’ THIS pOOR ORPHANED OOZE A g o o s H o m t..- * u j V '/'' 2 Eyebeam by 3 a - Hurt G eech © by Jerry Bittle Peanuts by Charles M Shultz Squib © by Miles Mathis P a g e 28/1 he D aily I exan/F ridav. April 5. 1985 Exams mean extra study UT law team wins mock trial competition case w ith a 13-0 vote case with a 13-0 vote." tion ," Ratliff said tion,' Ratliff said J By BRIAN SIMPSON Dinly Texan Staff Sortie Untversits students now are studying to take t e s t s that could determine what they are doing for the te s t of their l i v e s . 1’hev are tak- mg their graduate school exams On»' ot the most notorious of these examinations is the Medical Jon < ollege A d m issio n s I indner Pían II junior, said he has been preparing approximately two m o n t h s for the M C A T , which will b< giv* n Apri! 27. l e s t 1 started off slowly and now I ni w o rk in g up from two to four h o u r s It gets pt r night, of tough because you have to and study tor the le das - I itidnei s,ud k im iu m VK A I " I he MC \ I requires students to have a "huge store of knowledge from and have every equation chemistry and physics memorized, 1 indner said Robert Markus, /oolo­ gy junior, said he has been studying tor the M C A I and has been sacrihc mg his social life on the weekends to study. " I ’m not a monk, but I do study p lenty," M a r k u s said. Despite the work they are putting into s t u d y in g for the test, M arkus and I indner said they thought the \K A I score is less important than the applicant's grade point average m getting into medical school Another graduate entrance exam­ ination is the Graduate Record Ex­ am ination, w hich is a requirement tor all students entering graduate p rogram s other than m edical school, the business graduate pro­ g r a m s or law school. Rebecca Baltzer, associate dean of graduate stu d ie s , s.iid students can prepare tor the CRT bv being famil tar w ith the test's format Minorities and foreign students often do not do -is well a s others w ith the G R E , because the GRT "is designed tor w hite middle-class stu­ dents with the standard American education," Baltzer said. because of the disparity between scores, different schools judge the importance of the G R I sc, ores differ­ ently, Baltzer s,ud. Bv GRACE LIM By GRACE LIM Daily Texan Staff brains, not brawn, garnered the University a national championship title I he U l l aw S c h o o l 's mock trial team won the National M o k I rial ( ompetition I he team is composed ot lerry (.alo w , Bobby Lapin, both third-year law students, and Paul Heard, a second-year-law student. I wentv-two teams competed in the national competition, which w a s held in Dallas March 2 8 10 Eapin said the competition w a s set up a s much like a real court situ ation as possible I he teams were given a i riminal murder problem in "T hén we early M arch ," he said prepare both the prosecution and defense on the same case I he U l team won five out of six rounds in the nationals. In the prel iminaries, the team lost to I umber land I aw School's team, but the U I team beat the ( umberland team in the final round "Cum berland w a s champion last year," the national I apin said. In the final round, we won the A federal judge and 12 lawyers from the Am erican College of trial I awyers were the evaluators, I apin said, |ohn Ratliff, sponsor of student competitions for the law school and a professor of law, said the' UT team won because of its .íbilitv to handle different situations. "O th e r schools put more empha sis polishing the performance," Ratliff said. " W e emphasize analy­ sis and the ability to respond to un­ expected situations and litigations." " W h ile other schools had a pre­ arranged battle plan, we had guer- . hit and run/ rillalikc tactics " O u r team learned to Ratlitf said survive bv their wits. learn member (.alo w received the George A. Spiegelberg Aw ard, an award given annually for the most outstanding advocate in the trial competitions. "It i1' the most valuable player award for lawyers, given by the Na tional College of Trial 1 a w y e r s and the Texas Young Law yers Associa C.alow attributes a great deal of the team's success to |im Eubank, the team's coach and a lawyer for the C lark, Thomas, W i n t e r s & Sh a­ piro law firm. "|im taught us e ve ry th in g ," (.alo w said, " lie would get us to­ gether three nights a week for five hours a night, just g o i n g over the case again and again Eubank, a national mock trial h nalist for Baylor U niversity in 1980, said the team won because of natu ral talent and hard w oik. "T h e case is won outside the courthouse, pre­ paring for the trial, he said win was a pleasant surprise. "In the past, the U l mock trial team has been regarded as a bye, he said. " W h e n other teams see th.it they are competing with U l , they auto­ matically mark it as a win. "O u r goal this year w a s to be com petitive,” I ubank said. "W h e n we won, it was a great surprise." " I was as proud as if I won it m yself," I ubank said. PLAY T Vmi ▼ I I I V I A IN M a l i l i f r o m C O -O P C A M ER A S 11Í v'l P MAJORING IN HRVICI UNCI I f f * ; K Í a ' M ÍÍSA2UÉ Starting MONDAY April 8 in c a í R f w / Watch I ▼ Weekly Every Monday Morning in the Texan TOMORROW TH€ LAST DAY IS t o elect the condidotes uuho really core about Rustin's fu­ ture. It takes only o feuu minutes to vote for these condi­ dotes uuho uuill best serve Austin for years. H r ......... FRANK COOKSCV NlflVOR FOR AUSTIN u ifir ^ K - m f ¡0 MARK ROSC PLRCC 1 SMOOT CARL-MITCH€LL PLRCC2 SALLY SHIPMAN PLRCC 3 GCORGC HUMPHREY PLRCC 4 austin progressive coalition for a change SATURDAY Want to help? Call 478-6120. Pd Pol ttd Austin Progressive Coalition, 1 307 UUest five, Rustin, TX 78701 COM M UNICATION OF T H E FIR ST C L A S S Live the Words of Today... TEX TALK! 'Communication Week 1985' April 8-13 Sponsored by Texas Student Publications and Communication Council ¿ ^ ■v' • - t :c7:: v 1 4 Study Medicine in ISRAEL Touro College will prepare you to earn an M.D. in Israel from one of the world's great universities Technion-lsrael Institute of Technology Touro C o lle g e , through its C e n te r for B io m e d ic a l E d u c a tio n , - a n d the Techm on F a c u lty of M e d ic in e , offer an intensive p ro g ra m le a d in g to the M .D . d e g re e . If you are a qu a lifie d studen t w h o h as c o m p le te d the traditional p re -m e d requirem ents, you m ay re c e ive a s e c o n d b a c c a la u re a te d e g re e from Touro, a n d an M D from the Techm on, after a total of four yea rs p lu s one year of a d v a n c e d clin ica l rotations in Israel Initially, you'll s p e n d 18 m onths at the beautiful H untington, L o n g Islan d , N e w York ca m p u s of Touro C o lle g e . C o u rs e s in clu d e a d v a n c e d s c ie n c e s a n d inte n sive stu d y of H e b re w F o llo w in g s u c c e s s fu l co m pletion of the Touro p h a s e , you b e co m e e lig ib le for a d v a n c e d sta n d in g at the Techm on F a c u lty of M e d ic in e in Israel, w here you will satisfy the 32 m onths of stu d y at m e d ic a l s c h o o l re q u ire d for lice n su re in the U n ite d Sta tes You m ust s u c c e s s fu lly co m p le te a b rid g in g p ro g ra m , to b e a c c e p te d for clin ic a l stu d ie s, then su bm it a thesis a n d take a d v a n c e d rotations be fore re c e iv in g the M .D . d e g re e A p p lic a tio n s are n o w b e in g a c c e p te d for the third e ntering cla ss. Fo r a p p lic a tio n s a n d inform ation ca ll o r write: G / a o o i k ji a p p t / G u n t o u n u T o iro C enter for BIOMEDICAL EDUCATION Office of Admissions • TO U R O C O L L E G E 30 W est 44th Street, N e w York, N Y 10036 • (212) 575-0190 The IX Friday, April 5,1985 A video revolution By Debbie Pastor Frustrated again. I had given MTV one more chance to pres­ ent some slightlv imaginative vi­ deo, but no, there they were, the same plastic women clad in the latest bondage wear, and the same whinv, poutv men in cos­ tumes that would embarrass the Flying Wallenda Brothers. 1 turned the set off in disgust and wondered. "Is anybody else up­ set by this? Is there anybody doing anvthing about it?" Well ves, there is. Thirty-five- year-old Tim Hamblin is the cre­ ator, producer, and host of Vi- dEot's Choice," a series of half- hour shows specializing in an eclectic mix of music videos, aired weekly on cable channel 10 in Austin. They range from local and national video to short experimental art pieces, and anything else' that 1 lamblin con­ siders interesting. W e sat around for hours, slagging Nina Blackwood (arch-idiot MTV VJ), and watching tons of video. I sually, Hamblin begins each segment using the outline of his tall, slim bodv as a video effect, and he introduces each show with a different disguise. He uses wigs and p r o p s instead to create di­ of video effects v e rse characters: " I t ' s nice that p e o p le like what vou do, but I don't like being recognized Not that people recogni/e me, par ticularly." Hamblin began producing the show a « ouple of years ago, out of genuine love for the medium. "1 created \ idl ot's Choice pure­ ly by personal whim. 1 enjoy showing stuff that people would never show it's fun to and sometimes include s t u f f that's realh bad at least once!' Continued on page 16 AUTOMATION ATAN AFFORDABLE PRICE hi A / v/aA /IA/M SE-300 KOI - ih IF if- "ji -it: ■if- m FREE GRAPHIC EQUALIZER with the purchase of either Sansui system. O ffer good thru 4/8/85 00 4991 SAVE MOO00 i i b b . - - l i M j j ] i O O O '.J - ¡ B 1 COMPU-SELECTOR SYSTEMS WHENEVER PLAY OF THE DECK IS INTERRUPTED (EVEN DURING REWIND A N D FAST FORWARD), OR WHENEVER RECORD PLAY ENDS, THE TUNER AUTOMATICALLY COMES ON FOR N O N -STO P MUSIC. DA-T750 System • 50 w atts per channel • 0.4% Total H arm onic Distortion • Quartz P L L synthesizer tuner • 6 A M & 6 FM preset stations • Fu ll logic autO-teverse tape deck • Sem i-auto direct drive turntable • 70 watt. 3-way speaker system • A ud io rack with ca ste rs 59900 SAVE M0000 CENTRAL DOBIE MALL 2021 GUADALUPE 478-7421 FREE PARKING IN DOBIE GARAGE WITH VALIDATION ED DA-T500 System (BLACK ONLY) New hi-fi system featuring C o m p u S e le cto r' D esigned for good sound and first c la s s sp e c ific a tio n s 30 w atts per channel pow er output Two speed FG-Servo controUed au to m atic direct d ru e turntable 4-track, 2-channel record/play ca sse tte deck sectio n 50 w atts speaker system A u d io cabin et COMING SOON SANSUI CAR STEREO NORTH CREEKSIDE SQUARE 3010 W. ANDERSON 459-3321 CAR INSTALLATION 453-7307 S H O P A L l f O lE Y 'S STORES M O N D A Y T H R O U G H S A TU R D A Y 10 T O 9 30 iD O W N T O W N H O U S T O N M O N D A Y T H R O U G H FRID AY 9 30 TO 6 S ATUR D AY Til 5 30) ELIZABETH ARDEN... look your beautiful best with the Beauty How-To Kit...it's your gift with any Elizabeth Arden purchase of 7.50 or more, while supplies last. THE BEAUTY HOW-TO KIT A step-by-step program for beauty, neatly organized in a see- through zippered case. Cleanse with Skin Deep Mi ky Cleanser, it's non-greasy and right for every skin type. Tone with Skin Lotion to remove the last traces of cleanser and refine your skin. Moisturize with Visible Difference Refining Moisture-Creme Complex for softer, more supple skin. C olor with a creamy beige tint of Believable Color Makeup as a base. Define your eyes with Lavish Black in Lavish Lash Building Mascara to lengthen and thicken your lashes, then a d d a shine of cream y color to your lips with Arden Blush Lipcreme. AT THE HEART OF TEXAS [MLeTm •DOWNTOWN «ALMEDA «DEERBROOK -GREENSPOINT «MEMORIAL .NORTHWEST •PASADENA «SAN JACINTO .SHARPSTOWN «WEST OAKS .WILLOWBROOK AUSTIN:!BARTON CREEK SQUARE > HIGHLAND MALL 3Sr¿T«r BRYAN/COLLEGE STATION; - p a g e 4 Im a g e s Fr ¡das A p r il 5 1965 A G u ide to Dining and Entertainment AMERICAN A B E L 'S R E S T A U R A N T • B A R tion featuring chicken fned steak vegetable platter e> ceHent burgers buffalo wings queso club sandwic1- and more Happs Hour 2 for " M-F 3-7pm and 10pm lam O pen 7 days a week 11 30-2am {kitchen till 12 00) A omc -ad 24th and Rio Gronde 4 7 ?- 5 0 0 ; B A N A N A S R E S T A U R A N T A N D B A R — Fafftas Special ali day Mon. & Tues. only $4 95 HoH pnce burgers W ed mte from 5 00 G o Bananas enioy the flavor and atmosphere that mokes Austin what it is Stu­ d e n t and faculty H H 4-7 M-F with Free Tocos Student late mte H H . 10-12 M-S 1601 Guadalupe 476-7202 M C V, EX. DC B A R T O N S P R I N G S C O U N T R Y C L U B - jog O In In Tennis Togs and rola* m our light and airy atmos­ phere1 Serving continuously from 1 30am, 7 days a week. Lunch and dinne- specials doily Featunng na­ chos. faiitas fresh seafood, chicken fned steok and boiled shnmp Super Happy Hours M-F, 2 00-7 00pm plus daily dnnk specials For $1 50 Sunday brunch 11 30 4 00am Patio ope~ 306 Barton Spnngs Rd at River­ side 476-0233 V/MC/AE F A N D A N G O ' S — Come enioy the dishes tFiat have mode Texas famous Supreme SazDing Faiitas Hill Country Burgers, The Texas Top Sirloin, Chicken Fned Steok. The Big Enchiladas, Sister's Fudge Pie, ond other tasty Southwestern specialties make this local Fovonte everything good about eating m Austin Open Sun- Thurs 11-11. Fn-Sat 11-12 Anderson Lone at Burnet Rood M C A ' AE 4 5 ¡ - 7 591 U . K . C O O IC S — S p e c i a l Steok Restaurant Featuring Choice Thick Cut Beef, 26 o r T-Bone 24 oz Top Sir­ loin, 22 oz Kansas City Strip 18 o r Rib Eye 16 o r Shish Kabob 14 o r Filet Mignon Excellent Pótate Bor & Satod Bar tho* come with meal all for only 1095! Speciol Gnlle Area where you con cook your own steok or hove it cooked for you Full Bar with Superb Sprnts O pen Mon -Sun 5:30-11 pm lr the Emporium o' 8833 Research 3 4 mi east of Burnet Rdl 837-8085 M C Y .A E .D C C B Trodit>ona ’ exas CATERING R I C H A R D J O N E S PIT B B Q Style Bor-b-q, m a casuo atmosphere Come ’nr our Doily S p e c k s Monday; Chicken Plate $2 69 ‘{Tues­ day Sousoge Plate $1 89 'Wednesday: Ham Plate $2 69 {Thursday Beef Plate $2 69, {Fr Sot Sun Beef and Sausage M.xed Plate $3 79 Dmmg Room orto go Catenng anywhere in Central Texas1 Minimum o* 50 people avoliable o’ short notice 2304 S Congress 444-2272 CHINESE C H I N A G A R D E N — Lunch, Dmner & Cocktails Sp e­ cializing m authentic hunan & szechoan cuisine Chmo Garden a Sampler of Chinese Cuisine — Menu oHers qood taste of regional cookmg syfles Rated Three Star * *« by Suson Brownlee spec>ai to the Ameocar States man Luncheo' Menu Specials M-F $3 10-S3 95 Party room avoitabie The Village Shopping Center opp Northcross Mai* 2700 W Anderson lan e Sui’e 479 512) 453-0793 O pen 7 days — carry out avoi'able ITALIAN A L D O S — Dme in Italy tonight' Enic- our delicious Northern Itcnan Cuisine, Homemode pasta and des­ serts Try our 'omous Fettucine Cartellom and Lasogna as well as eggplant parmesan Scampi veol scallopine and fresh seafood, to name a few Dine inside m our romanhc atmosphere, or outsiae in our beautiful G ar den Patio All the Romance of Italy in one mea¡ Lunch r or Dinner Motor credit cards accepted Live O ak Congress — 447-4100 B R I C K O V E N — An histoncal -estauran» nea- the Capitol Outstanding fooc & old worid charm combine w the oroma of the 1890's wood-fired back oven to moke this one of Austin s finest Vea- - lasagne - steaks - stromboii - European pizza & chicken Hungry at 3 30 pm? W e m ope:, of afternoon & evening O pen 7 days o week, Sunday 4-10 30pm. 12th/Red Rrver 477-7006. AE/MC/V T H E R E D T O M A T O I T A L I A N R E S T A U R A N T - This is whe^e Austin dines Italian Serving the kind of Itoiian Food we First learn to love The affair lingers on Enioy a romantic dinner in the wine-cellar or a casual dinner with friends on the mam floor N o w open M on­ days Excellent targe specials 11-2 Northern, Southern and Amencon Italian fovontes have been served to foc- ulty, students, and staff for over 10 years Convenient & close 3 blocks south of campus 1601 Guodalupe 4 6- 7202 AE, V, MC. BC F R E E — . D O M I N O S P I Z Z A D E L I V E R S utes o r less hot delicious pizza wil oe dervered to your dairy door Eoch pizza is custom mode fresh ' 00 cheese carefully selected toppings Sp edo l Sauce and p e - e d golden crust. Limited delivery areas. C A M P U S AREA - 476-7181 HYDE PARK A REA - 458-91C RIVERSIDE AREA - 447-6681...and 8 other locations ~ P I Z Z A I N N — Featuring the 3-course-buHet All me Pizza. Spaghetti and Satad you con eat for ' low price Also offering 6 sandwich selections Phone ahead one ioin us at 2209 E Riverside 447-6611 or 3000 Duva St 477-6751 and 2 other locations SEAFOOD C A T F I S H P A R L O U R — O u r llth yeai of serving All You Can Eat Boneless Catfish Fillets, family style with lots of good tnmmings including Homemode hush poppys W e also serve shnmp. chicken and chicken fried steak. Mon -Tues IS ALL Y O U C A N EAT SH R IM P for $5.95 Cosual atmosphere, budget pneed, childrens menu car­ ry out service and catenng. O p en daily 5pm-!0pm. Sunday Ham-lOpm 2 locations N o. 11910 Research, 258-1853; So. 4705 E Ben White, 443-1698 H A R P O O N H E N R Y ' S — An exclusive drinking house, grill and oyster bar, with a unique vanety of Fresh Fish, flown in daily Featunng o Fned Shnmp Spe ciql, Sunday & M onday evenings for $6 95 O pen daily for lunch and dinner Happy Hour, "Doubles for the pnce of singles" and "2 for 1 oysters" available week days 4-7pm ond Late Nite Happy Hour 10pm-2am Sat­ urday Located at N IH-35 and 290 458-4114 V/MC/ ITALIAN DELI/LAVANDERIA AE/DC. B A R W A S H — ' Behold Barwash the wonas first yup p e lo u n d ro m at- d elicate ssen — N e w s w e e k "Barwash.. Barwash combined the odious necessity of going to the laundromat with the luxury of an upscale Italian deli great food — Texas Monthly "G ood d e a r fun.. Fortune Magazine At the Barwash, yo i en|oy our gourmet Italian deli sandwiches and salads even if your clothes are clean N o w there s Blue Bei ce Cream too1 And there's always plenty of fine wine ond cold beer G ei a table with a view of the non-stop oc- ticm m the glass enclosed lavand era Don't miss these Barvvash specials S O A P O PER A SPECIAL — Bnng in your laundry any week day between 11 30 ond 3 relax with ABC soaps and a delicious Barwash lunch — and we ll fold your clothes for free while you watch TV {Every weekday) N E W DRY C L E A N IN G SPEC IAL — Try our new one day dry cteonmg service ond get a free dish of Blue Bell Ice Cream (through M a y 1st L A U N ­ DRY PARTY — Thurs - Sat nite. make a reservation for a party of 8 or more and get a whopping discount or food ond beveroges Speciol Events2 Club Meeting2 Give us a coli. Barwash — 339-1146 Nomnwend Cen- ter N Lamar Ruttanc O pen late 7 mtes M C V LUNCH ONLY E A G L E N E S T C A F E — 2405 San Antonio, 474- 7812 Across from UT upstairs « the back of Tarings Miss home cooking? W e re serving delicious soups .pe­ cio1 entrees and delicious desserts doily a' am, plus ouf regular selection of sandwiches and salads O pen 9 30am-3pm, Mon -Fri L A K E V I E W C A F E — A Restaurant & Bar over look­ ing Lake Austin Sunday Brunch 10 30am 2 30pm N o w serving lunch all day Monday-Saturday Dinner 5- 11pm mghtfy Menu includes Raw Oyster Bar Boiled Shrimp Faptos, Salads Hamburge-s Steaks Chicken Fned Steaks & mte time Pan Fned Fish Special' Happy Hour 4-7pm Monday-Fnday O pen late after Football Games 3800 Lake Austin Blvd 476-7372 MC/V AE P E L I C A N ' S W H A R F — Located at Riverside and S 1st Austin's most unique seafood The fish here is served fresn daily Specializing in everything from Alaskan King C rac to Hawaiian Chicken with all entrees including a tnp to tne extensive satad bar The Aiaskan King Crab Special is unbeatable for $ 7 95 on Sun Mon & Tues evenings Half pnce oysters 8 dnnks Mon-Fn 4 30- 7 00 O pen every evening at 5prr. 478-5733 V /M C AE/DC SIDEWALK CAFES L E S A M I S — For 15 years the tneFfabie altare of Les Amis has drawn customers of every sort Geniuses and idiots, they've come sobe' they've come drunk, they've come high on the meaning of life O nce om ved they ve found a comfortable place to eat ond dnnk and ex­ change ideas without being blasted by loua music or Indoor and outdoor rushed by gladhanding waiters seating is available and service continues from am to 1 30 at mght seven days o week 2 4th ond San Antonio MEXICAN SUBS W A R E H O U S E S A L O O N A N D P O O L H A L L - O nly pool hall m Austin with mixed dnnks elegant at­ mosphere ana 27 Brunsw.ck gold crow- professional biliiard tab'es ladies shoot tree Mon & Tues 25c draft beer & highballs on W e d and Thurs O p en llam-2am 7 days a week 509 E Ben W hite 443-8799 ADULT ENTERTAINMENT T H E R E D R O S E — The Best Topless Entertainment South of The Rrver O p e r 7 aays a week. Mon Sot 2 pm-2om Sun 7pm-2om HAF*PY ttQ U R Doubles for the pnce of singles & 50< off the pnce of b ee' Mon Sat 2-7pm, Sun 7-IOpm PARTY NITE Sunday' Featunng - Oldies Nite. Mard. Gras or Country Western nite AM ATEUR NITE - M on 1 $175 in pnze money1 M ul­ ti-Stage entertainment Personal dances available 336 B East Ben White 443-402 T H E Y E L L O W R O S E — The Bes- "oo'ess Entertain­ ment North of The Rrver O p en 7 days a week- Mon Sal 2pm-2am. Sun 7pm-2om HAPPY HOUR, Doubles for the pnce of singles & 50c off the pnce of beer, M on -Sat., 2-7pm A M A TEU R NITE Sunday1 $175 in pnze money Multi-stage entertainment Personal danc­ es, upon request Pool tables & video games avoitabie Big screen T V for M on Nite Football fans w/'best half- time show in town' 652 8 N . Lamar Blvd 458-2106 TEXAN B E A N S R E S T A U R A N T a n d B A R . — an AU STIN tradition — "the best chicken Fned steak in TEXAS Also giant burgers. Somemode foes tacos salods ond more S U N D A Y B R U N N C H 11-3 Omelets, quiche, and M I­ G A S B L O O D Y M A R Y S 95c during B R U N C H O P E N everyday Ham - M ID N IT E 311 W 6th 477-8999 T E X A S C H IL I P A R L O R — Old Time Texas Restau rant specializing in Texas Chili, enchiladas anc fresh lime margaritas Also serving, ALL A M E R IC A N H A M ­ B U R G E R S Salods sondwhiches, nachos, & muncFwes The best stocked bar in town with over 150 difieren- brands of liquor and a dozen of your fovonte beers Rustic atmosphere - wooden floor, antique bo- and walls of collectables Kitchen until lom everyday O pen M-S 11-2 Sun. 12-2.1409 Lavaca, 472-2828 HAPPY HOUR T H E B A C K R O O M - O pen 11am to 2am — 1 days a week. Live Music 7 nights o week. Happi h oj< l ^ 7 25c draft beer 7pm-10pm — 7 nights a week. 2015 East Riverside 4 4 1 - 4 6 7 7 C H E L S E A S T R E E T P U B M onday thru Fndav Firs» dnnk regula' pnce -nd dnnk a mckle Specializing in h e Biggest Best -ancies' & Wildest Drinks in town' Live Entertainment Nightly Happy Hour 4 to 8 p m. Three grec' locations Highland Mali, Barton Creek Moll and Centennial Cente' 301 Bumet Rd T H E H I C K O R Y S T R E E T B A R - Mon-Fn 4-7 Our happy hour buFfe* is set out each weekday from 5 to with such features as batter food veggies cheezes ond chicken fix-your own tocos & potato skins & tnmmings Tap beer 75c a mug or $3 25 O pitcher Hi Balls $ 25 800 Congress Avenue (N W Com er of 8th & Congress DORM/HOME DELIVERY A U S T I N F R E S H B A K E D F I S H — Home Cook ng Delivered hot to you' door :--esh F s- ond Vegetable entrees Sandwiches Soups and N-Oceans Seafood Gumbo AL our fish is flown n -res’- daily baked in butter, h-esh garlic chopped parsley and fresh lemon W e can deliver Parties up to 15 within 2 -ours Larger pames require more nonce Office delivery also avail able O p enlO c-lQ p 7 days a w eek V M C 477 044 P I Z Z A I N N — N o w offering free Delivery *ur ¡ocal American ( ¡ancer Society to send ym a free booklet about cancer risks. Learn the facts about cancer. And make ni>i know­ ing the risks, one less risk. A M E R IC A N CAN CER f SO C IET Y " V -V IS A • M C-M asterCard • AE-American Express CB-Carte Blanche • DC-Diners' Club For In fo rm atio n con cern in g listin g s on this p a g e call 471-1865 H o w V u live may s a w lilt L EASTER SPECIAL! Oriental Easter Eggs! Folk music has m oved fro m the n ow -d efu n ct em m ajoe's nightclub to the C m t u s ( ale on Ihe U I campus. Go folk at Cac tus Acoustic music dominates University coitee shop-bar Jeweler & Graduate Gem ologist on Premises G uadalupe G 21 st S treet 2nd R o o r D obie 4 7 3 -2 0 6 8 11:00-7:00 Feature By Elaine Blodgett le a v in g It s bt en a \«. a r sin ce e m m a jo e s d o s e d , th e A u stin m usic sc e n e th a t m u c h p o o re r. H o w e v e r, c o n tra rv to w h a t p e o p le th o u g h t at th e th e d e a th o f folk m u sic in o u r city. It sim p ly m o v e d to a n e w h o m e a few b lo ck s s o u th — th e C a c tu s C afe o n th e U T c a m p u s . th a t d id n o t m e a n tim e , U n lik e o th e r folk v e n u e s a ro u n d to w n , w h ic h m a \ fe a tu re m u sic o c­ c a sio n a lly o r s u b o r d in a te it to d rin k ­ in g a n d c o n v e rs a tio n , th e C a c tu s is a m u sic lis te n in g m o m five n ig h ts a w e e k . M a n a g e r G riff L u n e b e rg sa y s so m e p e o p le call it a s a n c tu a ry in th e v a st c o n fin e s of th e U n iv e rs ity of T exas. It is th is fo c u sin g o n th e m u s ic th a t m a k e s th e C a c tu s so s p e ­ cial n o t ju s t th e m u sic itself. Like e m m a jo e s M a rtin W ig in to n , L u n e ­ to g e ttin g o n b e rg is n o t a v e rs e sta g e a n d q u ie tin g th e a u d ie n c e from tim e to tim e. W h e n y o u e n te r th e C a c tu s, it s o b v io u s th a t it w a s m e a n t to b e a c o ffe e h o u se a n d it w a s in th e late '60s a n d early '70s u n d e r th e n a m e Le P o tp o u rri. In fact, it w a s o n th e N a tio n a l C o ffee H o u s e C ircuit a n d te a tu re d ac ts fro m all o v e r th e U .S. a n d C a n a d a a s w ell as local p e r­ fo rm e rs. N ow it h a s co m e full circle th e w ith acts L o u n g e L izard s a n d n e w c o m e rs like S tir Frv a n d T h e M u llets. It's a sm all ro o m w ith a c a p a c ity o f a b o u t 80-90, b u t a lre a d y B.W . S te v e n s o n h a s d o n e a so lo sh o w th e r e a n d G ary P. is s c h e d u le d fo r th e sa m e N u n n to w a rd b ig g e r th in g . T h is like N an ci G riffith , tu r n is like s o m e th in g L u n e b e rg n a m e s w o u ld to c o n tin u e . A n d of c o u rs e , like a n y g o o d c o ffe e h o u se , th e C a c tu s in c lu d e s p o e try in its e n ­ te r ta in m e n t a s in its re c e n t e v e n in g o f h y p e rm o d e rn p o e try . T h e re is m o re to th e C a c tu s th a n its e n te r ta in m e n t, h o w e v e r. U n lik e e m m a jo e 's , it h a s a lim ited m e n u a n d a full b a r. T h e C a c tu s o p e n s at 8 a .m . d u r in g th e w e e k to s e rv e c o f­ fe e , a n d q u ic h e to th e s tu d e n ts d u rin g th e d ay - L u n e b e rg sa y s th e d a y c ro w d d iffe rs d ra m a tic a lly from th e e v e ­ n in g a u d ie n c e : "B asically it's tw o d iffe re n t c ro w d s ; o u r d a y tim e b u si- s a n d w ic h e s , p a s tr ie s U n lik e oth er folk a r o u n d v e n u e s tow n th a t m ay fe a ­ tu re m u sic occa­ sio n a lly , th e Cactus is a m usic liste n in g room fiv e n ig h ts a w eek . n e s s [co n sists) larg ely o f s tu d e n ts a n d facu lty a n d o th e r college ty p e s a n d at n ig h t o u r c ro w d [co n sists of] n o n - s tu d e n ts , m a y b e e v e n 75 p e rc e n t. " T h a t's reallv stra n g e , it's k in d of s a d to o . T h is is a g re a t place for s tu ­ d e n ts to b eco m e e x p o s e d to a c o u sti­ cal so n g w ritin g a n d a rtists. It s a s h a m e w e d o n 't g e t m o re s tu ­ d e n ts ." to w ork at L u n e b e rg c a m e th e C a c tu s in fall of 1981, b rin g in g a life­ lo n g lo v e o f folk m usic. H e grew u p in H o u s to n a n d fre q u e n te d su ch p l a c e s a s A n d e rs o n Fair a n d Libertx H all w h e re h e c o u ld h e a r th e m u sic h e lo v e d . It w a s th e p re v io u s m a n a ­ g er, C h a rla W ito sk i, w h o b ro u g h t th e m u sic back in to 1982. P rio r to h e r m a n a g e m e n t, th e c lu b w e n t th r o u g h m a n y p h a s e s , at tim e s fe a tu rin g a m ix tu re o f folk, rock, a n d ja z z o r S a tu rd a y N ig h t L ive p a rtie s a n d b rid g e , o r n o e n te r ­ ta in m e n t at all. W h en L u n e b e rg to o k o v e r in A u g u st 1983, h e c o n tin ­ u e d in h e r fo o ts te p s a n d re a liz e d his d re a m of ru n n in g th e k ind o f clu b h e liked to a tte n d . th e C a c tu s "I sa w a n o p p o rtu n ity h e re ,' L u n e b e rg say s. 1 h e re w a s n 't a p lace to p la v — th e re w as a \o i d in to w n . I fig u re d it m ig h t be e a sie r to d o it h e re a t th e C a c tu s, sin ce o th e r p la c e s w e re h a v in g a lo t o f tro u b le , so I ju st s ta rte d p ro m o tin g th e p lace m o re , p u ttin g u p c a le n d a rs, m ak in g p h o n e calls. B asically w h a t it w as, w a s g e ttin g th e w-ord o u t th a t it w a s a lis te n in g ro o m ." d o in g w ell. U n d e r A s d ifficu lt as it is to m ak e a su c ­ cess of a folk clu b , th e C a c tu s seem s to b e th e a u s p ic e s o f th e U n iv e rsity , it c o n tin ­ u e s to p ro v id e a m e e tin g place for th o s e w h o love o rig in al aco u stic m u sic in a s e d a te a tm o s p h e re as w ell as a s tu d y c e n te r co m p le te w ith It s a re f re s h m e n ts u n iq u e e s ta b lis h m e n t in o u r rap id ly B c h a n g in g city. for s tu d e n ts . At home with the Homeboys Local band's rhythm and blues defies pop-rock trends Band profile By Mindy Fagin Although many people refer to rhythm and blues in the past tenst the Homeboys continue to bring the blues to life This four-member local band goes back to the roots of rock n' roll — roots that go beyond the Beatles and I h is Preslev. The blues had a resurgence in the late '60s. Bands like the Rolling Stones, Eric Clapton and Fleetwood Mac began re-recording songs that the blues masters had performed decades before. Then came the 70s and rock n roll lost its goals. With no motivation, no more wars to fight and fewer incidents of racism, people's everyday experiences be­ came more mundane. Music be­ came more homogenized and raw energy was transformed into studio polish. Bands became more con­ cerned with imagery and style. Commercial successes began shying away from the blues. W h y , then, would an up-and- coming band try to rediscover the roots of rock n' roll? Mike kinsev. Homeboys bassist, said " I started out listening to stuff I can't stand now — Triumph, U FO , Led Zeppelin . . . and I looked at where they got their songs and I ended up in the blues. ” The Homeboys began in 1987 and still includes all four of the original members: Tom Chamberlain, vo­ cals; John Hanley, drums; Ted Pan­ ton, guitar; and Kinsey. Panton and Kinsey both of Aus­ tin, had been playing around with guitars and bass since 79 when they were sophomores in high school. Then after graduation, Panton at­ tended the University and Kinsey attended St. Edward's University They talked to friends about form­ ing a band. Hanley, who has played the d r u m s since elementary’ school, lived in the same dorm as Pan ton and somehow his name w’as men­ John came tioned. Kinsey recalls over and practiced with us one day and we liked the way he played. So he joined the band. The three practiced for a few weeks in the living room of the Kin­ sev house. It was shortl after one of these practice sessions that K in ­ sey struck a deal with Lhamberlain, who was a friend of Panton. "M ike and I were walking togeth­ er somew’here — I forget where and I said, 'H o w 's the band going7 and he said 'Great but we need a singer,’ and I said I sing . . . lying through my teeth, said Chamber- lain. The four practiced every week tor a little over a year. All of them were going to school, so there was not time for much else. They had little equipm ent. C h am b e rla in said "being not verv well-to-do, the band played with a lot of garbage for a long time . . . I sang through a stereo mike that wras connected to a bamboo stick that was kind ot propped up. ” The Homeboys, who were then called the Band from Society, prac­ ticed in the Kinsevs' living room or in the back room at the Panton house, jokingly referred to as "S tu ­ dio Four.” In late 1982, the band had their first gig at St. Edw ard's on Open Mike night. "Right before the gig they had to put a name down and Mike (K in ­ sey) said wTe were the Homeboys, Chamberlain said. "H e had just fin­ ished reading the autobiography of Malcolm X and the wvrd 'homebov' was in there. This old black man was relating his experiences to a naive country boy and the old man called him a homeboy. And that's us." Panton said regardless of the name change "w e got a good recep­ tion . . . even though w:e were a little sloppv . . . . Everyone danced and all." It is not surprising that the audi­ ence dances when the Homeboys play. The music is lively and has a good beat. The sound is tight and all oí le members play well. Thuugh each member suggests material, rhythm and blues domi­ nates the act. The members have di­ verse musical tastes, and Jimmy Reed, Albert King, B.B. King and Bo Diddley keep popping up. And the members appreciate the music to try to recapture the enough sound. Panton said Austin is not the mu­ sicians' paradise everyone thinks it is. "M a n y clubs book the same bands over and over. It is hard to get in on anvthing. Established R& B clubs like Ántone's book only the big name bands in a kind of musical hierarchy." For á new rhythm-and-blues band trying to compete in the new’ music" w'orld, the Homeboys are doing pretty well. They still practice weeklv and play the Beach with some regularity. "There's certain songs we prac­ tice a lot; we pick up new stuff and throw out the old, said Panton. " W e have a kind of Darwinian play list and when wre get tired of some­ thing, we junk it. Chamberlain added, W e also play around with old material For example, with the song Johnny Be Good,' sometimes we play it at the speed of light. Although when you do it that fast there is a problem fit­ ting all the syllables in.” About 30 percent of the band's repertoire is original material. H o w ­ ever, the original music has the same basic feel as the classics. Many of the songs have an easy familiarity though the listener may not have heard them before. Several gigs are lined up and the band seems to be getting some w’ell- recognition. They are deserved making money at most of their gigs and the cards seem to be in their favor. Chamberlain said " I'd like to see the band continue. W e re on the verge of plaving the circuit . . . we have skill and we have talent so I ■ think we can do it." T . * . Jf The Homeboys: Ted Panton, guitar; John Hanley, drums; Mike Kinsey, bass; Tom C hamberlain, vocals. . Look for the Fork in the Road l>in al P S 1I6S fey l Sieve Anderson, vot alist for Austin's Crybabies, belt Hes out a tune at a ret ent show Guitarist McGee looks on. The sound of anal music: the Crybabies' garage punk Photo by Pat Blashill Bv Rick D yer W hen you think crybaby, you think brat. You think of some snot­ nosed 7-year-old, damning the world for what he wants. Childish. Spoiled. Anal. Austin's Crybabies are a lot like that. They're a four-piece band that screams and moans about not enough beer, not enough women, too many punks and too many skateboards. Their music is bratty — even childish. The band mem­ bers are too, and thev won't deny it. "W e're all anal,' says Steve A n ­ derson, the band's 23-year-old vo­ calist. "It's butt music. W e write from the butt; we play from the butt.'' Anderson's brown eyes shift as he talks. He laughs good naturedly, sips a beer, and thinks about the band's ''butt'' aesthetic. As a psy­ chology junior at UT, he knows what if is to be anal. And without a doubt, that's what the Crybabies are. Every song smacks of it. From "Beer M onster" to their version of Deep Purple's "Sm oke on the W a ­ ter" sung with Sex Pistols lyrics, the music of the Crybabies is either sophomoric or scatological or just plain whinv Even the band's one love song seems a parody of any trulv "higher" emotions. But strangely enough, the band's most controversial piece (if not their most offensive) is their brattish "Bean Banger." It's a song that can easily be construed as anti-lesbian, and it's prevented press coverage from magazines as diverse as Maxi­ mum Rock 'n Roll and The Austin Chronicle. "Actually it's not really a lesbian song," Anderson explains. "It s a W oody Allen s"ng you know, from "M anhattan," where his wife leaves him for another woman. Most people think it's the premise for the entire band, but it's only one song." My babv lett me today Another woman took her away My baby is a bean banger now It gets worse. W hat's curious about "Bean Banger" is not that it's offensive, or primitive or even intolerant. Plenty of bands in town, especially so- called hard-core bands, encapsulate all those qualities. What's odd is the importance the song has taken in their music. "Bean Banger" has become al­ most anthemic. It's become their hit, their calling card. In the same breath, Anderson will deny the song's validity and then espouse its message. "The lesbians love us — they're are biggest fans," he'll tell you. And then, later: " I don't have just anything against think they're sick." lesbians, I It's no wonder that the song has made them enemies. That it's actu­ ally made them is what's strange. But then again, the music of the Crybabies is dirty and mean — a lot like "Bean Banger." And that's what fans like. fans The Cry-babies offend aurally as well as verbally. It's butt music rrwxed with beer, and drugs, and misogy-ny — it's unmistakably un­ derground, but it's not hard core. "It's punk music," McDonald ex­ '70s style it's garage plained. punk.” Anderson agrees. "W e emulate the Sex Pistols . . . I think Jimi Hen drix is also a big factor Iheir sound starts out with a heavy bass line bv McDonald; thev add a guitar solo courtesy Brian McGee, and screaming, wailing Johnnv Rotten style vocals. 1 he incorporate engulfing Crybabies feedback, and a no-nonsense, play- for-keeps guitar sound that sends unsuspecting listeners running for cover. And they play their music the only way it should be played: drunk. " I refuse to play unless I'm drunk," Anderson said. "(O ther­ wise) I'm too scared to get on stage." Drummer Greg Rogers agreed, as did guitarist McGee. " I never know what I'm gonna play," McGee said. "Sometimes I'm real drunk and change it all up." But anal music should be sloppy, has to be sloppy. The Crybabies aren't striving the sublime, for they're striving for the earthy and the nihlistic. And striving not from the heart, or the head, but from the gut. And they're base and gritty and mean, doing dirt-under-the-finger- nails music with less decorum than livestock. But the band has a good time — a genuinely good time — without worrving about other peo­ ple's conceptions of them. -Ai\' e • M u y 1 5 1 h Gary Moore "Victims of the Future" Mirage Atco Mv friends and I used to gi> into c o n vu ls io n s when we heard the gui tar work of Garv Moore. And we re both Eddie \ an not the only ones Halen and Alex Lifeson say that Moore is the undeniable king of heavv-metal guitar. Gary Moore h a s been playing tor almost two decades, which becomes obvious after listening to h is m u s ic He's had teachers and friends like Jimi Hendrix and Lric Clapton, but his style is different from both of these greats. This David Johannson look-alike puts emotion in his guitar playing, sounding a lot like (or even better than) Michael Schenker. And Moore takes an old Yard- birds tune that Jeff Beck made fa­ mous ("Shapes of Things") and ac­ tually’ is definitely the best guitar work done with this song, if not the best vo­ cals. But Moore's singing it while he plays —• not an easy feat. improves on it. This His lyrical content conveys a very anti-nuke, anti-war attitude. Moore apparently had adverse physical and mental reactions to his \ ietnam service. I'm not too sure if his style will go over well with the traditional folksy anti-nuke protesters, but there are enough metalheads out there with similar attitudes. Buy this record, take it home, put it on your turntable, turn it up and watch vour guitar-aficionado friends gape in amazement. — Doug Van Pelt MOONSPOONS TWO FOR THE PRICE OF ONE Nothing beats spooning at the Blue Moon, and Sunday* we II spoon up two of ony of our entrees for the price of one1 Just bring this coupon and a friend, and enjoy any of delicious dishes, including Chicken Fried Steok, Southern Fried Chicken, Fried Oysters, T-Bones, Fresh Veggie Plates, and much more. 2 D IN N ERS FO R TH E PRICE OF I!* 5122 W . Bee Caves Road. On Bee Caves Road, a half-mile East of Loop 360 327-2864 Good Food Air Conditioning Speakeasy Open Daily Sun.-Thurs. 11-10 and Fri.-Sat 11-11 Saturday and Sunday Brunch NOBODY FEEDS YOU LIKE THE BLUE MOON DO O ffer good S p.m to 10 p.m. Sundays only. Drinks and gratuity are not included. The charge for both entrees will be the price of the higher-priced entree. The Del Lords "Frontier Days" EM I America At their best (which is the majori­ ty of the time), the Del Lords make music that is not so much timeless as unabashedly ageless. "Frontier Davs," their debut, is pure, youth­ ful, spirited. American rock n roll, neatly encompassing the Byrds, Creedence, Hank Williams and most everything in between. If it doesn't put some kind of spring into your step, you're probably too close to dead to care. That's not to say that there aren't a few problems. Lou Whitney's thin production deep-sixes the rhythm The Hoodoo Gurus "Stoneage Romeos” A & M Big Time "Stoneage Romeos,” The Hoodoo Gurus hail from Australia, but don't let that form your opinion of them. As far as ref­ erence points, they actually have a lot more in common with the Re­ placements from Minneapolis than most of the other bands from down under. the band's debut, is nothing short of de­ schizoid, balancing lightfully straight, bouncy pop such as I Want You Back" with an engagingly amateurish thrash sensibility. As far as topicality, rather twisted perspective is tinted with occasionally crazed perversity (glee­ fully singing the praises of necro­ philia in the magnificently tasteless "Dig It up") and a quirky fascina- the Gurus p a g e 10/1 m a g e s Frtd av, A pril 5 . 1 9 8 5 __________________________ The Fastest W ay to Curb an Appetite. Deep Pan Pizza G o o d 'n H o t an d Sandwiches Loaded to the Brim From our Door To Your Door WE DELIVER Limited Delivers Area 603 W 29th 478-S"712 I T. Area 2018 W. Stassney 441-6 South 2438 W. Anderson 459-3221 North 1913 Riverside 442-63"’3 Fast Town lake Macbeth (Michael Slattery) and MacOuff (lason Lee) cross swords in rehearsal for Shakespeare’s 'Macbeth.' Salten --hywaaifenx. Shakespeare has a birthday But shouldn't we have a Burgess Meredith party instead? By Brian jacobsmeyer Three organizations in Austin have gotten together and have, ac­ cording to their press release, "de­ cided to give Austin the Shake­ it speare Birthday Celebration deserves.” One wonders exactly w hy Austin deserves a Shakespeare Birthday Celebration. Personally, 1 think Austin deserves a Burgess Meredith film festival. But that s be­ side the point. And ]ust who has the free time to put together such frivolity? Two theater groups — Frontline Theatre Company and Different Stages — are putting the big hash together, along with an organiza­ tion known as the Society for Cre­ ative Anachronism. Now in stock BAUSCH & LOMB, HYDROCURVE II, OCULAR SCIENCE, PERMALENS, DAILY WEAR, A N D EXTENDED WEAR SOFT CONTACT LENSES f y e exa m in ation s a v a ila b le J h o u r service o n sm qle vision eyeq lass p re sc rip tio n s ALPHA OMEGA OPTICAL 451-2020 23rd & Rio Grande in G a r d e n G a t e WHETHER EATING LITE AND LEAN OR HAVING A 7 COURSE CUISINE Meet Me at the a n t u o u c a f e t e r i a i 36th Street and G u adalupe Riverside at Darton Springs Designers made preliminary sketches of elaborate masks used in the perfor­ mances. Basically, these two groups are each performing a Shakespeare play. Frontline is tackling Mac­ beth,” and Different Stages is Front­ mounting "A s You Like It line's director Robert Osborn plans an in-the-round production of "Macbeth," with four actors playing all the roles. To quote the press re­ lease: "The powerful movements of T'ai Chi have provided a basis for much of the movement in the play, enabling the actors to embody the energy of the play's verbal patterns in 'sculptured movement.'" Don't say I didn't warn you. Different Stages is known for its successful productions of "lalking . ." and "Cloud Nine." Di­ With rector Norman Blumensaadt plans an uncut version of "A s You Like It," also staged in the round. An­ other innovation is using costumes from different eras, "from Cavalier to Georgian to Empire," to create a sense of timelessness and to better convey each character's personality. think Now here's how the Society For Creative Anachronism fits in. One might this society that watches old Steve Reeves Hercules movies and looks for the gladiator wearing a wristwatch. But no, they take this anachronism business seri­ ously. The society is a nationwide, nonprofit organization, and is rec­ ognized by the IRS as a tax-exempt corporation under section 501-j(c)(3) of the IRS Code. Society members have a keen interest in some as­ pects, or manv aspects of Middle Ages and Renaissance culture, and recreate history by engaging in nu­ merous activities - again I quote the press release: "embroidery, medi­ eval combat, brewing, costuming, gaming, Renaissance fencing, callig­ raphy, dancing, and cooking. I he list goes on and on. Ok, put me down for medieval combat and brewing. The Austin chapter is known as the Barony of Bryn Gwlad, which is Welsh for Hill Country. Everyone adopts some sort of appropriate persona, from Baron to Tovvne- Foole. The Baron of Bryn Gwlad is put­ ting on a couple of big feeds in con­ nection with the Shakespeare Cele­ bration. On April 9, the opening night of "Macbeth", the audience will follow the play with a Celtic Feast, celebrating the coronation of * > * • / / .*** Wim o ° presents Assemblage #2 Thrice to thine and thrice to mine/and thrice again to make up nine ^ -Mm ( apitol City Playhouse April 11, 12, and 13 8 pm 414 W . 4th St. Ti< kets-$6.00 general admission The Sharir (Jam e C om fw nv is supported in Part by the National Endowm ent for the Arts, Texas Commiswon on the Arts and the C ity oi Austin, Malcom You've got your meat pies, your giilled fowl, arut your sweet i,ikes in spu ed pastry It s .1 regular four-course meal, king Arthur style On April 21, another dinner will be s e r v e d , this one after that evening's performance of As 'you It s a birthday feast for Mr I ike It Shakespeare himself Middle-Age morsels inc lude páte, salmon tarts, Beete Nordlaanger, and mut h more. Not a Baskin Robbins ice- t ream hmurl in sight. I he society is planning lots of other s tu ff, too like juggling, min strels and that sort of thing. The capper to the whole hootenanny is the appearance of British actor John Studart Anderson on April 22 and 24 with his "The Shakespeare Sh o w " and "T h e Picture of Dorian Gray," two acclaimed solo perfoi manees I he schedule is still incomplete, and there's going to be so much stuff going on that you'd better call Frontline at 477-1922 to reserve tick­ ets or get more information. And hurrv — Designers Space, the thi atre where all this takes place, only has 110 seats. The First Annual Shakespeare Birthday Celebration, April 9-26, at Designers Space, 1701 S. Congress * Ave. Christopher Hart 'Bump' in the basement Club A hosts no-budget performance of Cold War play page 12/Images Frida\ Apr'! ^ i% 5 “How come our waitresses are so happy? They eat here all the tim e.” The Boss Littlelltaly Good Italian fcxxl at a price vou can live with. Open daily tor lunch and dinner. Near Mesa and Steck, in the Mesa Woods Shopping Center. Phone 3 4 5 -5 ~ 6 l T h e a te r p re v ie w By G o u ri B h at tick et, at T h e a rith m etic is sim p le. A t S35 in ro y alties p er p e rfo rm a n ce and S5 per least sev e n p eo p le h av e to atte n d th e sh o w . M in im u m . A nd that s ju st to b re ak e v en . "A n d T h in g s T h a t G o B u m p the N ig h t," a d ram a from Big S ta te P ro ­ is d o u b tless m o tiv ated d u c tio n s, less by fin an cial gain th an th eatrical c o n sc ie n ce . S till, it m ig h t be nice to p ack th e b a s e m e n t no w and again. in th e action T h e b a s e m e n t in q u e stio n is C lub A , fo rm erly V o ltaire s, situ ated u n ­ d er P ap e rb ack s P lu s, an u n likely lo o k in g b o o k sto re . Q u ite a co n v en - íen t setu p b e ca u se in " B u m p ," T e re n c e M cN a lly 's child o f the C old W ar, actu ally takes place in a b a s e m e n t. O r a fallou t sh elter. O r so m e su ita b le san ctu ary . T h e plav itse lf is v a g u e, as it is ab o u t the " s itu a tio n " th a tc o n d e m n s the c h a r­ acters to a s u b te rra n e a n , squalid e x ­ iste n c e . They7 re afraid o f som e th in g , and th e y 'v e b e e n hid in g d o w n th e re for 20 y e a rs,' said Tim M ateer, wTho p o rtray s C la re n ce , the e u ile le ss g u e st w h o in filtrate s the Aside from the frighten­ ing picture of fallout- shelter nirvana, play­ wright McNally may he making some pointed statements on the sacred American family. Why gamble with your investment in graduate school? Take your thesis, dissertation, or p.r. to Ginny's. W e 'v e helped over 11 uraduate students in the past IS years W e know w hat to do Gtnnv s guarantees it C om e in today for m ore inform ation’. ¿ 0 2 1 G uadalupe # 4 4 1 )obk* Mall • 4 (VH ! Tim M ateer and John Perkins do so m e bum ping in 'b u m p in m e x iK..«. " I am th e o u tsid e r, said M ateer, " I 'm th e reg u lar p e rso n , I'm the rest o f the w o rld ." A s su c h , he is su b ­ jected to th e p sy ch o lo g ica l to rm en t im p o sed by R u b y, th e clan s evil m atriarch , an d h e r e q u ally d a n g e r­ o u s c h ild re n , L ak m e and Sigfrid. T h e fa m ily 's o w n in te rre la tio n s are laced w ith v io le n ce , and it is a p e c u ­ liar, u n p lea sa n t tribal p asstim e to d rive u n w ittin g v isito rs th eir d ea th s. C la re n c e , for in stan ce , co l­ lides h e ad -o n w ith an electric fen ce. to ju stice is u ltim ately serv ed by plot c o n triv a n ce , but not b e fo re the p oint is m ad e. " T h e w orld h as g o t­ ten so in sa n e that th e on ly w ay to c om b at it is w ith y o u r o w n in s a n i­ t y ," said D o ttie S m ith (R u b y ), "to b e m ore in san e th an th e in san ity aro u n d you . O n e is left w o n d e rin g w h e th e r the p la y 's o b v io u s political com m entary7 (it w as w ritten at the h eig h t of the C old W ar) m ak es it a social its c h a ra c ter in tricacies bran d it a p s y ­ ch o lo g ical d ram a. S m ith d o e sn 't d en y or em b race e ith e r in te rp re ta ­ tion , but p o in ts in stead to the fact that the play is in te n d e d as a com e- sta te m e n t, or w h e th e r d y, p e rh a p s a lo n g the lin es o f "A C lo ck w o rk O ra n g e . " " I t 's ver\7 fu n n y . T h e rap b e tw e e n th e c h ild re n and th e m o th er is h ila r­ io u s. A nd th e th in g s th a t th ey do th a t are cru el are e v en fu n n ie r ," said S m ith . . M a te er b e lie v e s th e play is b a si­ th e r e are p arts . cally ab o u t fear . that are so v e ry , very7 fu n n y , he said . " A s a cast w e a tte m p t to play it as a c o m e d y . T h a t se e m s to b e the o n ly w ay you can ap p ro a ch p e o p le , lau g h . S o u by allo w in g d o n 't ap p e a r to b e p re a ch in g , but yo u kn o w th ey re g o in g to grasp [the id e a ]." th e m to A sid e from th e frig h ten in g p ic­ ture o f fa 11 o u t-s h e lte r n irv an a, play* w n g h t M cN ally m ay b e m ak in g som e p o in ted s ta te m e n ts on the sacred A m erican fam ily. " H e 's tak ­ in g the fam ily u n it w hich w e p rize and th en sh o w in g th e p ictu re of w h at w e 'v e actu ally tu rn ed it into, said M ateer. W h e n first p ro d u ced o n B ro ad ­ w ay in th e late 60s, M cN ally s b ru ­ tal v isio n of th e A m erican fam ily m et w ith acclaim and c o n tro v ersy . T h is p ro d u c tio n , how 'ever, is tak en from an e arlie r d raft o f the plav as it w as in itially p e rfo rm e d . O rig in ally sch e d u le d to ru n at the T h e a t r e , A u s t i n M e l o d r a m a " B u m p " w as m ov ed to C lu b A due to fin an cial d ifficu ltie s at the M e lo ­ d ram a. T h e m o v e m ay h av e actually b e e n a g o d sen d sin ce th e in tim acy o f a b a s e m e n t is m o re su ited to the plav th a n th e ra th e r larg e stage at the M elo d ram a T h e a tre " I t w as in to a c ircu s. E v ery th in g tu rn in g to b e h u g e to get a n y u u n g h ad a c r o s s ," said M a te er. O n the o th e r h a n d , th e m ood at C lu b A is, if a n y ­ th in g , h v p e r-rea listic. "E v e ry m o v e ­ m e n t is g o in g to carry b e ca u se w e are so clo se [to th e a u d ien ce] " A n d T h in g s T h a t G o B u m p in th e N ig h t" ; d irecte d by J»m 1 ritzier, sh o w in g at C lu b A at 4th and Lava ca S tre e ts on T h u rs d a y s and Fri­ d ays th ro u g h A p ril 14; tic k e ts are $5 ; a b e n e fit fo r P eo p le F e e d in g P eo p le and A ID S re se arch w ill be p e rfo rm e d on A p ril 17. 'New Kids' roll chicken heads Sean C u n n in g h a m pits preppies agains C ro-m agnons SuSE H ave you ever tasted raw sq u a lid ’ It's not a p retty sight. to riots W hat I'm trying to say is, it's high tim e tho se p eople loosened up and tu rn ed the the country over w hites before w e get m surance- the streets ol in salesm an Jo han n esb u rg T h ere's 79 million black people in S outh Africa an d only 27 w hite people. M ost ot em lust sit a ro u n d in their ap a rtm en ts I rivial Pursuit all day, playing That's h ow bad it's got lately. By now y o u 're probly saying, "So w hat can I do about it, Joe Boh1 H ow can 1 h elp?" t>aW xssS •W&J' W1 ''ign. N ow w rite W hat you can do about it is put up a yard this d o w n so you d o n 't forget it. Drive a w ooden stake in vour vard, paste a piece of cardb oard to it (anv thick­ ness will do, b u t m ake su re th e re 's no w riting on it like " \ a n C am p 's Pork an d Beans"), and then w rite the follow ing w ords: STUPID WHITE PEOPLE UNITE! Just w ait till one of those N egro d ictato rs drives th ro u g h Seattle. Bv now vou problv sto p p e d read ­ ing this colum n, so it you did, I'd like to p o in t o u t to th e o th e r people that I am personally m aking tun of the people that sto p p e d reading and that they are uglier th a n a pit bull­ dog that |u st got goosed bv a a u to ­ m atic law n sprinkler. joe Boh Briggs 1 his w eek I decided to be a liberal ath eist so they'll put me back in the Seattle paper. C ourse, I'm a liberal on a lot of issues, specially the ones about N egro rights (1 believe m ost N egroes sh o u ld be allow ed to v ote) an d th e necessitv for building m ore nu k e plants in Boston (the Decoy Theory). But now that I'm the m ost fam ous perso n in the eastern half of K aufm an C o untv, 1 don t shy avva) from th e to u gh issues, either. Like S outh Africa. T h ere's p eople being held in slav­ ery over th ere. H ard to believe in the 20th ce n tu ry , isn 't it? It h a p ­ p ened back in the 1700s w h en a b unch of African tribes got in a boat, w e n t over to Jersev, rounded u p a bun ch of those guvs that sci! pret/els on the street, chained ein up, and hauled em back over to \t- rica. been prisoners ever since. Thev force em to go to school. They force t m to w ork long hours in glass high rises. T h ey 're forbidden from break d an c in g or oth erw ise acting in a N egro m a n n er. A nd they force em to live in H onkv lo w n in squalid con ditions. S om etim es thev even force em to eat the sc]ualids. rhev *7/U Tfcrfúf* a J * < x % C&u 'fauuJuAt &¡¡Fai\tastic d the original Family Haircutters GRAND OPENING 5775 Airport Blvd. 459-0499 NEXT TO HIGHLAND MALL M -F 10-7 Sat 9-6 4 Other Convenient Locations 9604 N. Lamar 26165. Lamar 836-7682 443-2169 3010 Anderson In. 6705 Hwy. 290 W 451-7369 892-5566 Perm/Body Wave $20 Adult Style Cut . . $7 Child Style Cut . . $4 11 yrs. A u n d e r A b o v e Includes: • shampoo • rinse • cut • style B rin g A d • N e w S a lo n O n ly s p e d a l e x p ir e s 4 - 15-85 ¡"Wood's Honda has a BIG DEAL for you. 19841100 SABRE Reg.$4550 SALE $3595 Wood's Honda Fun Center 6509 N. Lamar Sales 459-8944 p k u T .T .T .A L COMÍDÍ WORKSHOP A p ril 1 -7 JACK MAMON 'The Com edy Sex Therapist" & STEVE EPSTEIN AN D Y H UG GINS Two S h o w s Fri. & Sat. 8:30 & 11:00pm Sa t 9:00pm 1415 L avaca ( a t is t h ) 473-2300 is, W hat the they d o n 't know Drive In A cadem y A w ards are this M onday night, and th e y 're not in­ vited 1 ver body else he at th e Bord- ertow n D rive-In in 11 Paso, lexas, at 8 p.ttt. for official cerem onies. Any actors, directors, or producers w ho are not p resent will forfeit all rights to rer eive their 1 lubbies M eantim e, we got I he New K i d s , " th e latest drive-in flic k bv the Florida m adm an, Sean C u n n in g ­ ham , w ho h a n g s around in L auder­ dale a lot an d s.iys, "H ey, baby, w anna be in mv m ovie?" The m an s a drive-in g e n i u s He started out the m ega-drive in-red-m eat w i t h cham pion "F riday the 1 Ith N u m e ro U n o ," then he ta m e back at u s with the th ree star classic "S pring Break" (four stars if y o u 're d ru n k on Mil­ ler), a n d now h e's rooting around d o w n th ere again, doing "Tuff lu rt G oes to the B oonies." "T he N ew K ids" is about these p rep p y orphan^ w ho go dow n to Florida to live in fleabag am u sem en t park called Santa s F unland with their Uncle C harlev. L ncle C harley bought S anta's F unland because tw enty m inutes aw ay " it's only from the third biggest interstate in the so u th e rn U nited State. In other w ords, C h arley 's d u m b as a box of rocks. So this little porkchop and her big b rother m ove into S anta's toolshed and start going to school, an d 1 guess w e all know w hat h a p ­ pens next. Four creepolas crawl up out of the m eatlocker and start breathing on the girl and trying to take her to the drive-in against her will, cause sh e 's the new frozen d in ­ ner in tow n. C ourse, she w on t put out, so thev have to start busting up S an ta's F unland w hen th ey 're not playing w ith their killer pit bulldog or blow ing aw ay M ason jars w ith saw ed-off sh o tg u n s or scratching up the paint job on L ncle C H arley s c a n d v -apple-red '60 C ad d y convert­ ible. Finally, the big brother gets a little p.o.ed a n d starts roughing up the rednecks, a n d pretty soon we got "S w a m p W ish" on our hands. It s the p rep p ie s against the local Cro- M agnon men, and they finally have to d u k e it out with deer rifles. I I I I I I I I I I I I I I Seven dead bodies. O n e beast (pit bulldog). Three acts of mindless dope-crazed vandalism. O n e knife rolls. O ne attack. Chicken head scene. dead-rabbi t-in -th e-sh o w er Five guys get the stuffings beat out of e m . Lighter-fluid torture. Face- e a tin g dog. Drive-In A cademy Award nom inations for Eddie Jones as U n d e Charley, for his plaid jack­ et alone; S h an n o n Presby as the big brother; Lori Loughlin, the porkchop; James S pader as the king of the maniac zombie redneck tribe; an d Vincent Grant, for playing a character n am ed Job Bob. David H. M acD onald n o m in a te d the C h u b b Fricke Memorial Aw’ard, for best perform ance by an extremely fat guv. Sean does it again. Four stars. for as Joe Bob says check it out. This preppy orphan had to be taken to the drive-in against her will. page 14 Images Friday, A p ril 5 1985 AND HIS BAND \ TH SPECIAL GUEST G RAHAM PARKER A N D T H E S H O T ■ ' * * C SOUTH PARK MEADOW S! THURSDAY APRIL 11th-8:30 PM T ( 4 A uABLf --AS' NIGS 3 0 C • • ñ RECORDS " BARTON CREEK SOU A RE MALL HiGHL AND MAIL NORTH CROSS c. GUADELUPE V a . WATERLOO RECORDS A N D THE OPERA HOUSE BOX OFFICE SUNDANCE RE CORDS IN SAN MARCUS A\ D m AST UGS BOOKS & RECORDS IN KILE EN MAÍ L IM IT E D N U M B E R O F PREFERRED SEATS A V A IL A B L E ! CHARGE BY PHONE: 443-2722 A U S™ C o n c e r t s W e s t w o m e n s a p p a r e l We'll Take You From An Afternoon Fiesta To The Formal In Style! Hours 10am-8pm Mon bat J^CnassroadsShop^ )oe Bob's Mailbag Dear "Joe Bob, First of all, let me say that I am disgusted with the format of your col’wm. Asa teacher of junior high students. 1 find it especially difficult to impose a sense of morals upon m\ students when the\ go home ever}' Friday and read vour column to see how many breasts the latest driye-in skin ñick presents. W ith all the temptations that young people have to face today, 1 think that your articles are a little too much. As an education aid, please send me one- hundred photos ot Sybil Danning and her Big, Bouncy, Bodacious Bo- lungas; however it this is not possi­ ble, just send me one and I will make photocopies. Thank vou very much. You can sleep tonight knowing that many voung people will be enlightened as to the disrespectful and immoral goings-on at drive-ins everywhere. Sincerely. Franklin A. Hanson; Arxada, Colo. Dear Frank: W ith all the temptations that young people have to face today I'm jealous. Dear Joe Bob: Sorrv7 vou missed the Thought for the Day for Feb. 12, 1985 — here it is IF YOU LOVE SOMEONE LET HIM GO. IF HE COMES BACK HE'S YOURS, IF HE DOESN'T, HUNT HIM DOWN AND KILL HIM! Disgustingly yours, Zelda from Warren. 0-HÍ-0 Dear Zelda: I love you. Dear Joe Bob: I am iust writing to tell vou how much I love you. You are the best writer in America today; maybe even vou have a gift for words. I can tell b\ the wav vou put your n ords on paper, vou’re a man. By your name too, the wav it reminds nn ot that hunk on The Waldoes. Your column is the funniest stuff I ve read since "The utterly monstrous, mind-roasting summer of O.C. and Stiggs," was published in \ational Lampoon Oct. 1982. Tiffy Orlando, Fla. Dear Tiffy: I'm much more talented than vou give me credit for. Dear Joe Bob, I have found two thoughts vou might use to bring your thought-bank into equilibrium: 1. Never eat yellow snow 2. Crowded elevators smell differ­ ent to dwarfs. Please do not use mv name 1 en­ joy vour column. SL1 So. Euclid, Ohio. Dear SH: And dwarfs smell different to huntin dogs. Joe Bob — I'm surprised at vou, Joe Bob, making a comment like "Worms are beneficial to our society. 1 hey eat a lot of dangerous stuff we don't need, like Fort Worth." (re. Joe Bob's Mailbag 3 1 85). 1 figgered \ ewd be a cowtown kind guy 'eu/ the Startlegram telP us there are lots ot people like vou over here Shame too. Just when the city fathers are trying to make a big push to attract more "Yangeez' to our fair city. L.T. 3 Fort Worth Tex Dear L.T.: I didn't sav we needed Dallas ei­ ther, now did I? Dear Joe Bob: Maybe I'm a long lost cousin, becuase I've always identified with vour writings on life. Until vou went and slandered Cow­ town in the 3-1-85 column in \ our reply to the gentleman from Kilgore about our Earthworm Invasion. Fort Worth is home to Jacksboro High­ way, the Blue Bird, the Mansfield Drive-In, and many other spots which make it the cultural oasis ot the southwest. I will be waiting to see a public apology in your col­ umn. M. Briggs, Certified Public Ac­ countant, Fort Worth Dear M.: D id I say an yth in g about jacksboro, Mansfield, or Kilgore7 1 used to luv Foat W uth till it started slicking its hair down and putting in fern bars and malls all over the lot. Dear Joe-Bob Briggs: I jes love it when vou sav "Some- thing-Fu” sos 1 wanna know jes how many fu's are their1 / know bout lesbo-fu, bimbo-fu (thas my fa- voret), elephunt-fu, an zoo-1 u, so s thats 4, but how many are their alto­ gether? Thank vou. Jim-Bill Spitz Zenith Flat, C alif. Dear Jim-Bill: 202-fu. Dear Joe Bob, 1 have been reading vour column for a while, and I don't understand what is going on. What are "gar- bonzas"? W hat does the sutfix "-fu mean? What are ''groceries? When you say, "if you know what I mean and / think you do. what do you mean? Are you communicating in some kind of code? Perhaps you should publish a glossary of terms to help those ot us who want to be included in. Maybe you could also send me a picture of Sybil Danning s garbonzas — some­ times a picture explains things bet­ ter than words do. Ever questioning, Juris Odins, Denver, Colo. Dear Juris: Okay, "garbonzas” are a type of pea grown in California. Ih e suffix " fu " refers to people who fail to take showers. " If vou know what 1 mean and 1 think you do" means "D on't tell Juris Ódins what this means." Dear Joe Bob, Well, you did it now' lust as you got me saying BIMBO every time I need to, you quit. I even got all the dictionaries out in the office and tound the true meaning of BIMBO. "Thick-headed Tramp. I had to add all the definitions together and divide bv two to get it. I guess its ok for you to quit saving it because 1 11 u se it enough for the both of us Well, gotta go; somr BIMBil wants me on the phone. Sincerely, Cleveland Mattix, Cle­ burne Dear Cleveland: Let's start having some respect for women around here W e'll caB em sluts. Dear Joe Bob, Your column is a hit with the soft­ ware folks at Citvplace in Hartford PIea<¡e send us a poster of Sybil or anyone else m possession of boda­ cious tatas. N. Scott, T. Wicks from, S. Gil­ bert, G. Foot, Aetna Life & Casual­ ty, Hartford, Conn. # Dear guys that work for the jerko- las that raise my premium ever time I total a car: Sybil's software on the way. Dear Mr. Briggs — My best friend and I have nothing but the utmost respect for you and your reviews. We Just can't get enough of you in the San Francisco Chronicle. 7 seem to recall that about a year ago The Chronicle indicated that you had some kind of autobiographical book being published on Joe Bob. It this is in fact true, could you let me and vour other fans know where we could buv a copy or two? I would be most appreciative it vou could relay this information as soon as possible. Thank vou! Sincerely, Alyson Daniels, San Francisco the Dear Alvson: " A Guide to Western Civilization, or, M y Story, by Joe Boh Briggs" will probly be banned in San Fran­ cisco when liberal eastern wimps at Dell Books finallv get the sucker out in the fall. Dear Joe Bob — Thought for the day 2-12-85. "Lhe secret of success is sincerity. Once vou can fake that, you've got it made." We would hate to see you get beamed to the vegetable garden tor permanent. Sincerely, Willie Bob, Houston Dear W illie Boh: Lately 1 been in danger of over­ loading on thoughts for the day. M y heads aireado got enough thoughts to last up to june, so hold off on em a little hit so mv brain don't turn into a nuclear physicist. Dear Mr. Briggs: At last the world has found a true movie critic! There is life after Rex Reed! The dnve-in is an American tradi­ tion, it's as American as your first piece, as Mom s apple pie, as a four- wheel drive, and I'm glad to see that the American people now have a true drive-in conesewer rating these fine pieces ot the motion pic­ ture art. I'm a true fan and supporter ot yours, vessiree, Joe Bob! I'm looking forward to seeing your own "Joe Bob goes to the drive-in on T.V., any chance ot this in the near future? Rex Reed, Siskel & Eibert watch-out! Fla. A Loval Fan: S. Brown Apopka, D earS.: W hat's American about your first piece of pie? Dear Mr. Briggs: I hope the makers of Jungle War­ riors" didn't overextend their $2^ budget. If Miss Danning wants to be queen ot the drive-in flicks, let s face it, she's got to do better. I wo ot her latest efforts "1 hey're Playing With Fire" and "Jungle Warriors' both bite the big one. Joe Bob: do something! Sybil's Disappoirtitd Fan In Flori­ da. Dear Fan: Don't worry, 1 can handle Sybil, if you know what I mean and 1 think you do. 1985 The Dallas Times Herald Waiter, there's art in my soup O'Brien's Cafe hosts the paintings of U I art students Art review Bv Anthony Dorsa and M ark Toles In an u n titled exhibit at O Brien s R estau ran t, six U niversity art stu ­ d en ts p ain tin g s are on display. Fheir overall co ncentration on tex­ ture, color, a n d them atic intent are sure to create a m u ltitu d e ot im pres­ sions and th o u g h ts in the m in d s of the observers. A lthough no single in te n ­ style d o m in ates, the artists tions seem to carry them in sim ilar directio ns. Th y ex perim ent w ith n ew w ays to cypress em otion, an d p u rsu e creativity into subjective realm s. M any of the pain tin g s b e­ com e m y sterio u s m essages to be de­ ciph ered by th e observer. irony. H e uses M ark G arriso n 's pain tin g "Love L ife," d o n e on m olded sh eets of h a n d m a d e p ap er, m ixes b eauty w ith bitter large blocks of bright turquoise, red, yel­ low an d several p u rp les to create a portrait of tw o lovers being w atched by a referee. The colors su g g ests a h ap p y social affair, but th e lovers' em brace they looks staged, as both w o u ld ra th e r be som ew here else. T he artist has placed a b urned- out cigarette in the crotch of the re­ feree, p e rh a p s to sym bolize dissi­ pated sexualitv. it G arriso n 's p ain tin g s on canvas are m ore rep resen tatio n al. C h an g ­ ing R easons" the artist s childhood m em ories of a small vil- ip n-»iy A n th e r Called relates i seem s Me Sleep In Y our D ream , m erely large w om an to depict a w alk ing d o w n a street, but the pic­ ture gro w s m ore com plex each m om ent I ho w om an is step p in g on an ascetic w eightlifter in the act ot exercising. "N ig h tw a v es," by C hris Bonno, com m unicates bleak em otion w ith the use of lim ited color, negative space, an d violently m oving lines a n d scribbles He p o rtray s w hat m ight be him self or any view er in an angry fram e com pletely filled w ith his clenched fist, tensed tace, an d teethy m outh. th e y a w a y t h r e a t e n fro m I n m a n y of th e p a in tin g s , lin e a n d c o lo r a r e so free t h a t to th e b r e a k fo r m s p o rtr a y e d . I n th e r e p r e s e n ta ti o n a l w o rk s , p e r s o n s o fte n a p p e a r a s p h a n t o m s e m e r g i n g fro m th e c o lo rfu l m e s h of p a in t. K ate K uffner's "Black Air" is an abstraction w hich conveys a sense of stability an d calm ness. Coiling bipm ofphiC (Gima Spill uOWH uOiTt 5 d ark area at the to p of the canvas, su gg estin g nightfall at the root of a rain forest. 1 ler Lure of M yth and L egen d" consists of a sw irling m ass of thick, arching h n c Both of the large oils by K uffner use sim ple scem es w ith strik in g results M ichael B ochner's w ork show s m uch diversity His untitled ink d raw in g ru n s a text telling a dream like story th ro u g h abstract designs B ochner also d oes abstract litho grap h s an d pastels characterized bv g e o m e t tn fr a g m e n t a tio n O n e unti tied lithograph depicts a n exploding black an d gray fram ew ork w ith orange, g r e e n an d blue ad d in g m ore dynam ism . B ochner's 'A dam a n d E ve" uses th e sam e geom etric style to recount th e Biblical store c o m p l e te w ith labels to assist the observer. In many of th e paintings, line and color are so free that they th rea ten to break aw ay from th e form s por frayed. rep resentational w orks, p erso n s often ap p ear as p h a n t o m s em erging from the color­ ful m esh of paint. th e In Since this is a stu d e n t exhibition an d not a purely com m ercial ven ­ ture, manv of the p aintings are m erely tacked o n to the wall w ithout fram es. look m ore prestigious w ith expensive displays, but they can stan d on their ow n. I hese w orks w ould I Tie restau ran t is o p en from 11 W a.m . to m id n ig h t, bu t the best tim e to view the w o r k s is in the after­ no o n w hen the resta u ran t is not c ro w d e d . O 'B r i e n 's R e s ta u r a n t is at 624 W est 34th St. T h e e x h ib i ti o n will ■ c o n t i n u e u n ti l A pril 13. BIKINI TIME! MEDICALLY APPRO VED ELECTROLYSIS w d l p e r m a n e n tl y re m o v e a n y u n w a n te d h a i r you h a v e m e n a n d w o m en tr e a te d \ r y BETTE PRICHETT, D.H., R.E. For free booklet or C om p lim en tary ( Consultation D A Y O R EV EN IN G CALL 452-4890 ^ AUSTIN MEDICAL * ELECTROLYSIS CLINIC 1009 E. 40th St., Suite 301 Austin M edical B uilding 474-5314 2915 Guadalupe Students Free Mon-Thurs w/ID FRI-APR1L5 PAUL BUTTERFIELD Blues Band & ANGELA STREHU BAND SAT.APRIl 6 Tribute to Muddy Water's Steady Rollin' with BOB MARGOLIN from Muddy's Last Band A ANGELA STREHU BAND MON & TUES Apr. 8 & 9 Texas Blues Guitarist BARBARA LYNN Just Back from Playboy Club Wednesdays ANGELA STREHU PAULRAYREVUE Thursday Best Blues BAnd '85 OMAR & The Hoyden University students concentrate on color, texture and thematic intent in their exhibit at O'Brien's cafe. Coming Sot. 13 BssM/tOsnA Junior Wefc M a rti Doane, Daily Texan Staff c «s c Qu a» > U Q-' « TJ X E L page 16,Images Friday, April 5, 1985 im Hamblin: Austin’s own videomaster Friday, A p ril 5, 1985 Images/page 17 From page one The show' is totally non-profit; in fact, Hamblin loses money on it. This isn't all Hamblin does, however. 1 went to see him at home, and discovered a whole pile of other impressive projects he's involved in. Devoting a small room in his house to the storage of hundreds of cassettes, he has copies of virtually all locally produced music videos. One might call him an archivist for Joe "King" Carrasco, as he has every tape Joe has ever done. This includes live performances, concept videos, commercials, and all footage shot du r­ ing foreign tours. Hamblin's company, VidEotic Productions, produces commercials, documentaries and instructional tapes, offers equipm ent rental, directing, editing, budgeting, storyboards, video installations for trade shows and parties, as w'ell as consulting for video-club design and programming. The company also promotes and distrib­ utes music videos. Rendezview on Fourth Street, the first multi-screen video show in an Austin club, was produced by Hamb­ lin at the now defunct Club Foot. He is also the director of over 20 segm ents of "N uke N ew s," a one-hour show' also aired weekly on public-access TV, and producer of "When the Wind Blows," a four-part serialization of the book by the same name by Raymond Briggs. Addi­ tionally, he co-produced six newsclips on local artists, including Joe "King” Carrasco, Charlie Sexton, Joe Ely, The Fabulous Thunderbirds, and Arthur Brown, which were sold to MTV. ' ' . . . Q - i i s w * . . One year ago, Hamblin produced a video featuring Little Charlie Sexton and the Eager Beaver Bovs entitled Come Back Baby. But Sexton's new m anaw m pnt in California felt the footage didn't fit in with the "artist's new direction. MCA, representing Sexton, dem anded the video from Hamblin, offering to reimburse him for its production cost. Hamblin reminded them that he owned the copyright: "I'll be honest — I didn't make a penny off it. All 1 got out of this was the video, and mavbe some future w ork." He sent a dub to the com pa­ ny, who show ed it to Keith Richards and Ron Wood of the Rolling Stones. They liked it, got in contact with Sexton, and the three recorded some songs together. Since they had gotten a lot of mileage off of Hamblin's tape, MCA finally reimbursed him for the dub, and there is still talk of buving the rights. Hamblin also produced and edited "The M essage,” a one-hour show' pay ing tribute to a whole spectrum of black musicians from Little Richard to G randm aster Flash, for Black Heritage Month I figured that a career in entertainm ent production was probably a longtime ambition of Hamblin's, but not so. Born in California to a military family, he was b-ought up in England. His background is basically sci­ entific; he earned a degree in food technology from a college in London. He found a job in food product de­ velopment, "creating canned meat and other horren­ dous products. "Even in the food industry things go in trends," he said. "The object is to sell a product that looks like something else — basically figuring out new wavs to sell garbage." He then went to the West Indies for a year as an advisor to the agricultural departm ent. Developing tex- tured vegetable protein (soybeans, whose developm ent was supposed to lessen hunger in Third World nations because of the low price, but backfired as prices were driven up by its popularity) eventually disillusioned him "I used to like food technology in terms of the experimental aspects, the research and the challenge of creating products, but being a lot younger then, I w asn't thinking about the sociological factors and m or­ al implications of what I was doing." Hamblin took the money he had saved and came to Judy Walgren, Daily Texan Staff Tim Hamblin's video of Poison 13 w on first prize in The Austin Chronicle music awards. So there. Photo by Pat Blashill Hamblin is forever seeking his true identity. Judy Walgren, Daily Texan Staff the U.S. to visit relatives. After traveling the country a bit he decided to settle in Austin, where he worked various jobs, including restaurant work, construction, then at Zebra Records and Recycled Records. During a vacation in Mexico, he met Joe "King," who asked him to go on the road w’ith him, w hich Hamblin did for .i year. He learned from this, and it added to his experience with booking bands. "I've always been highly interested in music. When I was younger and in the Catholic Youth Club, I became treasurer only be­ cause 1 got to buy the records — all the ones that people didn't like." W hen Hamblin was first exposed to video he w a s very impressed and amazed at the instant reproduc­ tion He got involved with AC TV, public-access televi­ T im H a m b lin , a w a rd -w in n in g crea to r of the chaotic El B.J. and Poison 1 I videos, has a regular show on A C T V channel 10. Judy Walgren, Daily Texan Staff Further notice came when a man named Jim Foratt was sifting through MTV basem ent tapes and w ent wild on viewing "Gom er Pyle is G od." He called Hamblin and asked if he could enter it in the Toronto Film Festival, along with "Fun, Fun, Fun . . .," a video co lla tm of fwn livp show s bv the Bip Bovs Both of thpsp - - - - - - - j - • - - placed high in the Austin Chronicle Music Polls. - - ‘O'- • - O ~ . His last project was a black-and-white video for Pois­ on 13, titled "O ne Step Closer to My Grave." This was shot during band practice one night, when Hamblin came by to shoot test footage. U nplanned and im­ provised, (Poison 13 not being a band suited to lip-sync a song or follow a script) the video developed as more beer was consumed and the night grew ominous, until thev eventually buried one of the members of the band. Hamblin used a strobe light and a shaky, moving camera for some of the shots, creating eerie effects. What might have ended up as a mess of home video actually turned out to be a virtual replica of a cheesy black-and-white horror flick, complete with skulls, can­ dles, a black cat and a body rising from the dead. The video ended up being voted No. 1 in the Chronicle 1965 Music Poll. This is quite a feat w hen one also considers that the piece was "m ade on no budget, not a low budget." T his calls attention to the expense of video. "Money- wise, doing video is lOtimes worse than being a musi­ cian. ItN very expensive, which is w hy it's so great to be able to work with the public-access program (i.e., to use ACTV equipment). It is an im portant factor in pro­ moting the arts com m unity." Currently, Hamblin is also working for PASE Video, Inc., w ho just completed taping the A ustin Chronicle Music Awards. Moreover, he's involved with the pro­ duction of a program of Texas Video for the Institute of Contemporary Arts (ICA) in London, and a pilot for another video music show, hoping to find sponsors to air it on a local television station. Yeah, Tim Hamblin is one heck of a nice guy, who just thinks ot himself as "som eone w ho is into Austin and is contributing slightly to part of the things that make it s o great to live here.' Hamblin has been here seven vears, and plans to stay and improve the state of com m unity video. Whew. I tool much better knowing that there are other people out there who realiy care about the future ■ of this ever-expanding medium. Poison 13 bassist Chris Gates breaks for Budweiser. Photo by Pat Blashill sion. Soon he synthesized his technical ability with his love of music, and produced several award-winning videos. "G om er Pyle is G od," a song bv the late Austin band El B.J., is a visual compilation of clips from "Gomer Pvle,” footage of the band, and artwork. "This project was done over a long period of time, and a lot of people were involved. It was a verv visual, silly song, and we were able to create a very hum orous, comical visual accom panim ent for it." This was confirmed when the video won a recognition aw ard at the 1984 Texas Music A w a r d s in Dallas and wra s selected as the eighth best video by The Dallas Morning N ew s in 1983. x x m v t r 2 4 C 2 G U A D A L U P E 47A-L351 ,é- » ss»k ^ “ F NA¿1 1S1TT V feu»* ^ \ S I ND.W 1 .. 3 - « IN 1111“ ^ COI N 1 HI IS r ON F OF BF.RTR -\M> T W t H N IFH ’S VFRV BUST Jon, I Ma-Un \ t * > " “ B F A l T l F l ’ l AND MOVING ita. ,dlient>\ V(.H VOfiK M.4I.4 Z ÍN Í \ SI NDA\ IN T H E C O U N T R Y aU IN S‘ '< K M E H s’ W it ■!• Stl ' ■ ' ' "I* M * 1 * ‘ st ■ 1 1 * ' • ' ' ' ' ' . . M sMl t ^ , NK »l«IS M IH I— «*s»t»T*ssl¡ isslks-IS l’U * T M » ' £•»■■» M t m s , T . SS * . ss s t.rs St . •—» « u siJíií^M »e<<*T> h — • » —» " ...........- ■ ■ caeui 4UM0KB -— WGMUt 3m S A r S I N : 02: 15 .4 : 1 5 ) 7 : 1 5 . 9 :1 5 MONDAY $2.75 with I 1 1 1). W E E K D A Y S : 7:15,9:15 Uf€ N€V€fi 1HST6D SO GOOD! B r e a k f a s t Luncheon Happv H our D inne r Late N ig h t S unday eggs, sausage, hash browns. Texas toast ins! $199 Mon.-Fri. 7 11. S at & Sun. 911 great atmosphere & service, daily specials (banquet room available) Mon Fri 4-7, doubles, finger snacks, piano bar Texas traditions: barbeque. chicken tried steak, seafood & more 10-midnite doubles & late night menu Texas champagne brunch 11 3, live jazz 9 p.m. midnite Plenty of free parking 1907 G uadalupe 4 7 6 - 7 5 5 5 #& > ** ° ^ 5 ^ T ^ G° ^ i t y ) ...Its 4 A.M., do you know where your car is r ONE W EE K O N L Y Hetkdav» 7:30.9:30 ■'AT SI X 2:30. 4:30 7:30,9:30 MON $2.75 withUTLD. Use Your VISA or MasterCard to charge your Texan Want-Ads! Call 471-5244 ORIGINAL UNCUT _ ADUL TS_ QNLJ_ A L E X A N D R A ( X ) J S ta r r in g : J O A N N A S T O R M ^ ^ ^ BLUE JEANS CX) O P EN N IG H T L Y S T A R T S D U S _ K _ J j ! J 2 NEW MOVIES W EEKLY VIDEO PEEPS IN 6 CHANNEL LARGE s e l e c t i o n MAGS AND TAPES TAPE SALE AND RENTAL a ll MALE AUDITORIUM DIS: C O U P L E S - S T U D E N T S - SE N IO R S m e world is beating u p o n Willie. So Willie's about to beat up on W illie Jr. Willie hasn't worked in eight months. He stays home every mqht now, watching Willie Jr. while Sally waits tables down at the corner bar and grill. TV's busted The fridge is empty The bills are piling up. And now the kid is crying his head ott at 1:30 in the morning. That sends Willie flying from his chair. Time out, Willie. Time out to cool off. Punch a pillow. Do some sit-ups. Get hold of yourself before you take hold of the kid. Sure you got problems. But he isn't one of them. So why make things worse by hurting a 6-month-old w h o s just asking for a dry diaper in the only way he knows how? Think about it, Willie. Think about it hard. For more parenting information, write « National Committee for Prevention of Child Abuse i® Box 2866, Chicago, IL 60690 $ Take time out. Don't take it out on your kid PLAY TV i v i a IN H d (< ll M o e k h GENERAL CINEMA IBARG AIN MATINEES-EYERYDAYl ALL SNOWS BEFORE 6 R M . $ 2 . 7 5 I HIGHLAND MALL HIG HLAN D M ALL BLVD. 4 5 1 -7 3 2 6 L o tt in t y America 2 00,4 00, 6:00, 8:00, 10 00 Stagger 1 Wtf« !*< ■ 1:00,5:20 Killing Field» ** 2:5 0 ,7 :1 0,9 :4 5 CAPITAL PLAZA l-3 S o tC A M IR O N R D . 4 5 2 - 7 6 4 6 Desperately j . , . , Seeking Susan 1 2 :5 0 ,3 :0 0 , 5 :1 0 ,7 :2 0 ,9 :3 0 P olice Academy II R 1 2 :5 5 ,2 :4 5 ,4 :3 5 , 6:25, 8:15, 10:00 Porky s Revenge 1 :4 5 ,3 :4 5 ,5 :4 5 ,7 :4 5 ,9 :4 5 R Friday, A p ril 5, 1985 Im ages page 19 - n •j n « n B A R G A I N P R I C E n n SHOWS 8E FORE 6 P M U U MON THRUfRi Saturday & Sunday first show only M A S K ( P G - 1 3 ) 12:45,3:00,5:15, 7:30,9:45 K L Y G D A V I D PG-13 11:30, 2:00, 4:30, 7:00, 9:30 W ITNESS K 12:00, 2:30, 5:00, 7:30, 9:55 ^ W f l K 3 l 892-2^ 46~P WESTGATE BLVD BEV ER I Y H ILLS COP 12:30, 2:45, 5:00, 7:15, 9:30 BA BY pg 13 1:30, 3:30, 5:30, 7:30, 9:30 r T H E S L L C iG E IT S W IF E 2:45, 5:00 T H E K I L L I N G F I E L D S 7:0 0 , 9 :3 0 ------------------ PG 13 Í R 1 S t o p s t r » o K i o 9 - TWI LITE shows a matinees 5 Q MOW $*' fc.1 SHOWS 8f 10R1 6 p* SUW0»t s HOIiows—ISt SHOW ONLY EXCl SPfCAl EWGÍGEWEWIS $ 2 ^ o f r o m CO-OP CAMERAS Starting MAJORING IN snmci U N C I 1896 MONDAY April 8 in TV Watch Weekly Every Monday Morning in the Texan M ' • ^ T i N G ^ O ' r VDUR J cE American Heart Association J ACADEMY AWARD WINNER BEST FOREIGN LANGUAGE FILM EUREKA The story of Jack McCann. A man richer than Getty... Stranger than Hughes... And an obsession that lasted a lifetime. The Peep'? -. Pepubrc Of Ckine '< ?>« &0LL/EN BLOSSOMS f.f-tuYt iWd * M*n. I» Intern»! F ’ F*“ Sat. 3:00 pm Hogg Aud. N o s u b t it le s M f L IT T L E VILLA &L H c ~ .n o f o r \>tVr p it+ m t. t-nJ fe*S+ « h W * of f 'jrr P Y C f v^tVi £*%U*k ) H o g g . A u d . 5 :0 0 p m F re e A d m is s io n C o - S p o n s o r e d b y C h in e s e S c h o la r s ' F r ie n d s h ip A s s o c ia ­ t io n a n d t h e T e x a s U n io n F ilm C o m m it­ te e tDMUND GWENN |ohs FORSYTHE ... ......... shirley Mac LAI NE A L F R E D H I T C H C O C K S THE TROUBLE , WITH HARRY N TRUFFAUT'S m FOR FRIDA ( 7 SATURDAY 2 & 9 :5 0 pm U n io n T h e a tre 2.00 UT 2.50 N o n UT . « * urn P G !:■. V i : Y r , ' F r id o y & S a t u r d a y a t 7 :3 0 p m S u n d a y a t 3 :0 0 & 4 :3 0 p m H o g g A u d it o r iu m 2 .0 0 U .T . 2 .5 0 N o n - U .T FRIDAY, SATURDAY, SU NDAY B u rd in e A u d . 7:30 pm 2.00 UT 2.50 N o n UT V ■ 4 i . ¿ A . » » kl: SALLY FIELD PLAC ES IN T H E H EA R T F r id a y & S a t u r d a y 4 & 7 :4 5 p m 2 .0 0 UT U n io n T h e a tre 2 .5 0 N o n UT FRIDAY & SATURDAY 6 & 11:55 pm U n io n T h e a tre 2.00 UT 2.50 N o n UT r*T 0- •; T - Th e G a n g 's A ll H e r e S u n d a y a t 2 & 7 :0 0 p m U n io n T h e a tr e 2 .0 0 UT 2 5 0 N o n UT In te r n a tio n a I A n im a tio n Festival F rid a y , S a tu rd a y , S u n d a y 9 :3 0 pm B u rd in e A d u . 2.50 N o n UT 2.00 UT woody aliens w hatstiD ir ? LATE Show 11.35 pm B u rd in e FRIDAY & SATURDAY 2.00 UT 2.50 N o n UT . Y V T I I ■ M i A If PRODUCTIONS H W fiM O H i SI HACKMAN « n i t u i i i Aulhn Premierfrtday & Saturday H o g g A u d 9 4 5 p m S u n o f 5 1 5 A 9 4 0 p m 2 50 UT 3 00 N o n UT A M E R I C A N A 1200 HANCOCK OK 453-1*41 _____________ « T U R N O F T H I J ID I TGj (2:15-5:00 $2.50)-7:45-10:30 :0„ " “J N O R T H C R O S S 6 454 5147 m o h t h c m o u h a l l a h o c k s o h a o o w h c t _________ THE SURE T H IN G P G -13 (2:30-5:00 $2.50) BEVERLY HILLS COP (1:15-5:30 $2.50)-8:00-10:15 THE LAST D RA G O N P G -1 3 $2.501-7:30-9:45 (2:45-5:00 THE BREAKFAST CLUB lk j $2.50)-7:45-9.55 (2:45-5:15 THE PURPLE ROSE OF CAIRO L£ (2:30-5:30 $2.50)-7:30-9:30 FRIDAY THE 1 3 T H V R . (2.30-5:30 $2.50)-7:30-9:30 A Q U A R I U S 4 1500 $ 9LCASANT VALLEY 444 3222 ________ THE LAST D RA G O N P G -13 $2.50)-7:45-9:55 (2 30-5:30 AMADEUS (2:30-5:45 $2.50)-9:15) RETURN OF THE JEDI ® (2:45-5:30 $2.50)-8:00-10:15 1 1 FRIDAY THE 13TH V 1 ' _ _ _ _ _ — - SO U THW O O D 2 442-2333 1423 W MNWNITE l\ ALL MOVIES Viomn SHOWS J V STARMAN ® (1:30-4:15-7:00-9:30) N IG H TM A R E O N ELM ST. [R ] 1:00-3:00-5:15-7:30-9:45 J k m ano ¿ y m c Late Shows Midnight & Beyond $1.00 o t t With K-C«rd « H - L S C H M T n sh°w*Stor1».tw^n T REVENGE OF TH I NERDS t h e WALL ^ C^ Y»A«?ONR r ^ SST0W TERm Í n ATOB PURPLE RAIN i G M T k C E M » !*** , DAWN OF THE DEAD ___________ / CHINESE KUNG FU 1 THE THREE FAMOUS c o ™ s a Sat only * s * n . H ap p y Hour Mon-Fri 6-9 12 lb Shrim p Coctails s3,c s2 Ritas rf- £ ..S K tw *:., Young Vck Kim, violin Peter Serkin,_ piano An all Mozart program! 8 pm Monday. April 22 F A C Concert H a1, Public S12. S8. S4 C E C fee ho-ders & senior c : z e ^ s ' 3 off top price1 C E C sa le s begin April 5: public sa le s begin April 8 Tickets at the PAC Erwin Center Paramount Theatre and UTTM T cketCenters Hasting s (Nortn- cross). J o sk e s Highland). Sears (Barton O e e k and Hancock Strahar Cc^seum (San Marcos) Fiddlers Greer Rec Center (Fort Hood) Informa- lion 471-1444 Charge-a-Ticket - _7-6060 Perform ing Arts Center, -;:e c ‘ ■ • 1 ‘ The Umvers tv of ^exas at Aust-r of daredevils who get up and do comedy routines using your suggestions; 11 p.m. Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday; ad­ mission is $ 1. Designer’s Space 1704 S. Congress Ave 447-7928 1st annual Shakespere’s Birth ­ day Celebration; “M acbeth” opens Tuesday with a Celtic Feast; “As You Like It” opens Wednesday; call for more infor­ mation. E sth e r’s Follies 320 E. Sixth St. 479-0054 New spring show with an East­ er celebration; Ain’t Misbehav- in’s Boyd Vance will be the cat in April; 9 and 11 p.m. Friday and Saturday. Elisabet Hey Museum 305 E. 44th St. 458-2255 “Contemporary Texas Litera­ ture”; a lecture series present­ ed by Chuck Taylor; 7.30-8:30 p.m. Sunday; call for more in­ formation B. Iden Payne Theatre UT campus 471-1444 “Sweeney Todd, The Demon Barber of Fleet Street”; music and lyrics by Stephen Son­ dheim; 8 p.m. Tuesday, Wednes­ day and Thursday; admission is $8 public. $6 UT ID and sen­ ior citizens Paperbacks Plus 407 Lavaca St. 447-5312 “And Things That Go Bump in the Night”; a horror comedy about a family so paranoid that their house they with an electric fence not knowing exactly what is out there; 8 p.m. Thursday-Friday; through April 19. surround Param ount Theatre 713 Congress Ave. 472-2901 “Texas Bodybuilding Champi­ onships”; 7:30 p.m. Saturday; tickets are $15, $12.50 and $10; for more information call Mike Graham at 478-0201 “M aria B e n ite z ”; S p an ish dance, Monday; call theatre for more information. If you have an a rts or e n te r­ ta in m e n t even t you’d lik e liste d in Im a ges, send us a post card a w eek before pub­ lica tio n . A ddress it to M in­ dy F agin , T h e D aily T e x a n , D raw er D, U n iv e rsity S ta­ tio n , 7 8 7 1 2 . A nchovies 503-A E. Sixth St. 474-6602 Fri Duck Soup Sat Duck Soup Mon-Wed Hot Cakes Thu Duck Soup Amtone’s 2915 Guadalupe St. 474-5314 Fri Paul Butterfield Sat Muddy Waters tribute with Bob Margolin and Angela Strehli Mon Super Blues Party Wed Angela Strehli and Paul Ray Thu Omar and the Howlers A u stin Opera House 200 Academy Road 443-7037 A u stin Outhouse 3510 Guadalupe St. 451-2266 Fri Rhythm Rats Sat Jum ping Jo h n n y ’s Blues Party Sun Pat Mears Mon Bob Hubach Tue Howlin’ at the Moon Wed Mark Luke Daniels Thu Michael Hamm Blues Band Back Room 2015 E. Riverside Drive 441-4677 Fri Morris Code Sat Morris Code Sun W.C. Clark Mon Loyal Cannon Tue Amazon Wed Raven and Triple XXX Thu Lou Ann Barton and Will Sexton and the Kill B ates R e cita l Hall UT campus 471-5401 B a x te r ’s 41 6 E. Sixth St. 48 2-0605 Fri-Mon Ten Yen Tue-Thu Kirk Whalem B each 2911 San Jacin to Blvd. 474 -0605 Fri Toshio Hirano, Up Peri­ scope, Technicolor Yawns and True Believers Sat Mojo. Fisher King and Tex­ as Instrum ents Sun Austin Reggae Music Soci­ ety Mon Betty McKibben, Efficient Tue Charbussy and Lettones Wed Unknown and Year Zero Thu Toshio Hirano, Still Life and Vital Signs Bozos 614 E. Sixth St. 478-0658 Fri Ezra Charles Sat Satyre Sun Satyre Tue-Thu Ricky Lynn Project Cactus Cafe Texas Union, UT campus 471-4747 Fri Billy Jo e Shaver and Mark Luke Danielsl Sat Robert Keen and some other guys Tue Heart of the Matter, vi­ sions of Sam Sheppard Wed Ruth and Gail Ensemble Thu Kurt Van Sickle C asablanca’s 309 W. Fifth St. 476-1001 Fri Skank Sat Lost Gonzo Band Mon Live Jazz Tue Eastsiders Wed Rusty Wier Thu Commandos and Bad Sign Cham eleons Coffeehouse 607 Trinity St. 473-0493 Fri Tom Shaka Sat Ruth and Gail Mon Nancy Scott Thu Open Mike C helsea S tre e t Pub and G rill Centennial Center, 7301 Bur­ net Road 459-9986 Barton Creek Mall 327-7794 Chez F re d II 9070 Research Blvd. I 451-6494 Fri Nina Katrina Sat Pork Pie Hat Sun Ken Metz Mon Monday, Me and the Blues , Tue Alex Coke and Rich Harney Wed Paul Glasse and Brad Ter­ ry Thu Jo h n Mills Quartet Comedy W orkshop 1415 Lavaca St. 473-2300 Fri-Sun Ja c k Marion, Steve Ep- stein and Andy Huggins Mon Amateur Night I C on tin en tal Club 1315 S. Congress Ave. 443-7141 Fri Bad Sign and Vanguards Sat Dino Lee and Until Decem­ ber Sun Closed for Easter Mon Battalion of Saints Tue Pool ; Wed Deca Dance Thu Dr. Know, Criminal Crew and Party Owls F ra n k E rw in C enter I UT campus 1 471-5401 ; Tue Roger Waters F U lin g Station j 801 Barton Springs Road | 477-1022 I Fri Cool Breeze 1 Sat Cool Breeze I Tue-Thu Jack ie King Trio F lyin g C ircus 1025 Barton Springs Road 478-4585 Fri Lewis and the Legends Sat Rhythm Rats Sun Rhythm Rats Mon Christine Albert Tue Open Mike with Mark Luke Daniels Wed W.C. Clarke Thu Smoky Log Blues Band Hole in th e Wall 2528 Guadalupe St. 472-5599 Fri Timbuk 3 Sat Trickle Down with Elouise Burrell Sun Mark Luke Daniels Mon Dave Schiedel Tue Diana Cantu Wed Hot to Bop H ut’s D rive-In 807 W. Sixth St. 472-0693 Sun Tex Thomas Thu Angela Strehli Soap Creek Saloon 1201 S. Congress Ave. 443-1966 Fri Supernatural Family Band Sat Tailgators Mon Open Mike with Mark Luke Daniels Tue Songwriter’s Recognition Kurt Van Sickle Wed Jo rn a Kaukonen Thu Ponty Bone and Squeezetones the Speedy’s 409 E. Sixth St. 474-5739 Fri-Thu Sing along with Adrian Titman Steamboat 403 E. Sixth St. 478-2912 Fri Extreme Heat Sat Austin All Stars Sun Benefit for Arthur from Comedy Workshop with Ponth Bone and the Squeezetones, Rusty Wier and Steven Doster Band Texas Tavern Texas Union, UT campus 471-4747 Fri Dishes Sat Killer Bees Tue Salsa Night Wed Belly dancing Thu Chicano Night Toulouse 402 E. Sixth St. 478-0744 Fri Sardines Sat Sardines Sun Texas Weather Mon Boomerang Tue SOS Wed Special Interest Thu Special Interest That’s Life 1907 Guadalupe St. 476-7555 Fri Bob Meyer Quintet Sat Bob Meyer Quintet Sun Madragora Wed Wednesday Warm-up with Mike Mordechai and Friends Thu The with Elouise Burrell Jazz Mercenaries L ib e rty L u n ch 405 W. Second St. 477-0461 Fri Killer Bees Sat Skunks Reunion with Urge, Dada Curve and Dharma Bums Mon Reggae D.J. Wed Sabia Thu Boys with Toy and Cry Wolf Maggie M ae’s L im e S tre e t Station 323 E. Sixth St. 478-8541 Fri Coupe de Ville Sat Coupe de Ville Mon Neil Davies Tue Kellye Gray Band Wed Indoor Sports Thu Trik-Trax M ichael-M ichael 2531 W. Anderson Lane 451-0947 Fri McColl and Tracey Sat Susan Gandy Thu Jo e Valentine Trio Mid-City Roadhouse 700 E. Sixth St. 473-8383 Fri Calvin Russell Band Sat Vanguards Sun Slick Clark and Daddy Cool Thu Jo n Emery Performing Arts Centerl UT campus 471-5401 Fri-Sat Salzedo Harp Centen- niel Celebration Ragtim e 311 E. Sixth St 472-9245 Fri Trik-Trax Sat Brew Sun Special Interest Mon Special Interest Tue Multiple Choice Wed KGB Thu Cul-de Sac R ltz T h eatre 32 0 E. Sixth St. 479-0054 Fri Esther’s Follies Sat Esther’s Follies Capitol City Playhouse 214 W. Fourth St. 472-2966 "Agnes of God”; drama about a young nun accused of stran ­ gling her i.ewborn child; 8 p.m. Saturday, call for reservations. “The Barber of Seville”; opera by Rossini, sung in English; 8 p.m Friday; call for reserva­ tions "Assemblage No.2” presented by the Sharir Dance Company; 8 p m Thursday, admission $6. Comedy W orkshop 1415 Lavaca St 473 2300 "Going to the Where”; a bunch A ir Gallery 912 W. 12th St. 477-8708 “Black and White and Colors”; in an all-out artists' works burst of visual art; through j April. i Amdur Gallery 307 E. Fifth St. 4 7 6-8960 A group show featuring work Ju lie by B arb a ra Brooks, page 11 Frtdd\ \p rtl S 1% ' FAT TIRE BIKE SPECIALISTS ( omplete Selection Now Available M T N B ik e s C ru isers Dwmofxl Ba k st Ra^ng Ross D ia m o a f B ak Kuwarwa C a sk Bros Cannorxiale Kuwahara Tom Ritchey la g u n a Fishet BICYCLE SPORT SHOP ’tx?3 EkvlOf ’ S.' 'S/s v ' Near ZUker Park 1512/41 T O N IG H T & SATURDAY: m o r r is c o d e SUNDAY: W.C. CLARK BLUES REVIEW MONDAY: l o y a l c a n n o n TUESDAY: AMAZON WEDNESDAY: Pace C oncerts Presents Atlantic Recording Artist RAVEN special guest TRIPLE XXX THURSDAY: LUANN BARTON . the d ebut of WILL SEXTON - THE KILL X 25c DRAFT 7-9 EVERY NIGHT *0 1 5 E. R IV E R S ID E Burnet & 183 C ro ssro ad s Sh opping Center 452-0930 38th & Jefferso n Je ffe rso n Sq u are 451-1213 M W s Sm ntm I V ()pt icaKo. vRI LENSES DUPLICATED OR YOUR DOCTOR'S PRESCRIPTION ACCURATELY FILLED A n stln ’s O rig in a l Eyew ear B o litigu e £ (U NISIA L EYEWEAR) Harper and Pavid Amdur; in varying stages of progression covered in the Central Texas area. A rts W arehouse 300 San Antonio St, 473-2505 Laotian exhibit featuring fab­ rics; through April 14 A u stin P h otogrpah ic Gal l e y 3004 Guadalupe St. 477 3841 format, color photo­ Large graphs by Steve Golding of n at­ ural places in Texas and the Southwest; through April. B o is d'Arc G allery 808 Red River Blvd “Austin Eclectic"; featuring paintings, photos, collages by B arb ara Sturgill, Malcolm Buck call. Phillip Trussell and more; through April 16 C arv er M useum I 165 Anglena St. 4 72 8954 “The Afro-American Family: Historical Strengths for the New Century" an exhibition of photographs by Austinites; through May 9 C ow girls and F lo w ers 508 Walsh St. 478-4626 Alice Hand’s handmade paper art; through April. E a g le ’s N e st 12202 San Antonio St. 453-2012 Limited edition etchings and se r io g r a p h s by G uillaum e Azoulay; bronzes and prints by Melvin Warren. A rch er M. H untin gton A rt Gallery UT campus 471-7324 “Photography in Britain: The Formative Decades" from the UT Humanities Research Cen­ ter photography collection; 138 photos tracing the evolu­ tion of modern photos in Brit­ ain from 1839-1920; through April 21. L agu n a G loria A rt M useum 3809 W 35th St. 458-8191 “Figure It Out! Exploring the Figure in Contemporary Art”; the museum’s annual thematic exhibition designed especially for children and families; also a sm all traveling exhibitiion from Chicago's Art Institute of portrait campus etchings by Jim Dine; through April 7. P a tric k G rap h ics G alle ry 1501 W. Fifth St. 472-8614 Selected prints from the Alex Rosenberg Gallery; through April 20. T e x a s M em o rial M usuem 2400 Trinity St. 471-1604 “Mastodons and Mammoths in Austin"; including fossils dis­ “Fifth Annual Rites of Spring”; with music by Van Wilks, Lloyd Cole and Commotions, Zeit­ geist, Tailgators and True Be­ lievers; noon Saturday, Audito rium Shores; adm ission is $294. “Works on Campus”; the first annual college art competition by the Texas Fine Arts Associa­ tion; the contest is open to all college students; the deadline is April 15; for more inform a­ tion call the Texas Fine Arts Association at 453-5312. “UT Authors Annual Exhibi­ tion of Books"; written by fac­ ulty and staff members of UT is on view through April 28 in the Perry Castenada Library “Stickle"; a display by famous photographer of cacti Jo rge de la Drysdale; at the Barnaud Gallery, 8720 HUlcroft Ave. Film T ex a s U n ion T h eatre “Purple Rain"; 2 and 9:50 p.m. Friday and Saturday “Places in the Heart"; 4 and 7:45 p.m Friday and Saturday “Mad Max’’; 6 and 11:55 p.m. Friday and Saturday “Far from the Madding Crowd"; 4:15 and 9 p.m. Sunday “The Gang’s All Here”; 2 and 7 p.m. Sunday “Breathless”; 2 and 7 p.m. Mon­ day “Oh! What a Lovely War", 4 and 9 p.m. Monday “Blazing Saddles’’; 11:35 p.m. Monday “The Graduate”; 2 ,6 andlO p.m. Tuesday “The Candidate”; 4 and 8 p.m. Tuesday “Blazing Saddles”; 11:55 p.m. Tuesday “The Graduate”; 2. 6 and 9:45 p.m. Wednesday “ C arm en ” ; 4 and 8 p.m. Wednesday and Thursday “Blazing Saddles". 11:40 p.m. Wednesday “Picnic at Hanging Rock”; 2, 6 and 9:45 p.m. Thursday “The Blues Brothers"; 11:45 p.m. Thursday Hogg M em o rial A u d itoriu m “Day for Night”; 7:30 p.m. Fri­ day and Saturday “A Love in Germany”; 9.45 p.m. Friday and Saturday “Day for Night", 3 and 7:30 p.m. Sunday “A Love in Germany”; 5:15 and 9:40 p.m. Sunday “Hour of the Wolf’; 5 and 9:25 p.m. Monday “Fellini Satyricon”; 7 p.m. Mon­ day “Fellini Satyricon"; 5 and 9:20 p.m. Tuesday “Masculin Feminin"; 7:15 p.m. Tuesday “ Dracula"; 5 and 7:16 p.m p.m. Wednesday "Distant Thunder”; 9:15 p.m. Wednesday “K iss Me Deadly ; 5 and < p m. Thursday “D istant Thunder”; 9 p.m. Thursday Bur din e H all au d ito riu m “The Trouble with Harry”; 7:30 p.m. Friday, Saturday and Sun day “International Animation Fes­ tival”; 9:30 p.m. Friday and Sat urday “What’s Up, Tiger Lilly?"; Fri­ day and Saturday “What’s Up, Tiger Lilly?”; 9:30 p.m Sunday Images E d ito r Rick Dyer A sso c ia te E d ito rs Lisa Baker Michael G. Smith A ssig n m e n ts E d ito r Tim McDougall L is t in g s E d ito r Mindy Fagin S ta ff W riter Brian Jacobsm eyer C on trib u tors Bill Barminski, Gouri Bhat, Elaine Blodgett, Anthony Dor- sa, David Menconi, Debbie Pas­ tor, Jo n Pearson, Doug Van Pelt, Michael Vega, Karen Wag ner, Michael Whalen Cover Logo Layne Lundstrom r Theater Guide A m eric an a, 2200 Hancock Drive, 453-6641 A q u ariu s 4. 1500 S Pleasant Valley Road. 444-3222 H ig h la n d M a lls C in em a. Highland Mall, 451 7326 L a k e h ills. 2428 Ben White Blvd., 444-0552 M ann 3 W estgate. 4608 West- gate Blvd., 892-2775 N o r th c r o ss 6. N orthcross Mall, 454-5147 Show tow n 2 Outdoor T he­ atre. Hwy 183 at Cameron Road., 836-8584 S o u th sid e 2 Outdoor T he­ atre. 410 E. Ben White Blvd., 444-2296 Southw ood 2. 1423 W. Ben White Blvd., 442-2333 V a r sity T h eatre, 2400 Gua­ dalupe St., 474-4351 V illag e 4, 2700 Anderson Lane, 451-8352. Bad art and bad wrestling Paperbacks Plus hosts words, wrestling and weirdness P R O D U C E D B Y P A C E C O N C E R T S AN EVENING WITH WELCOMES ROGER WATERS LIVE IN CONCERT ■ ■ ■ ■ Greg Gartner followed with a great reading full of gusto and verve and Liz Belile gave voice to her powerful feminist-religious work. A black-and-white short film by Lee Daniel followed this. What can anyone say about Lee's work except "Right O n !" This Lee Daniel classic, though only a mere thirty seconds or so in length, faithfully captured the life essence of Austin outlaw- hairdresser Terri Laird as she bounced ecstatically off the edge of the Studio 2C stage. I think every­ one was flipping at this point, but that cool-daddy emcee brought the kettle back to boil. The show was drawing toward its conclusion. The unruly crowd, hun­ gry for art, even Bad Art, attempted to persuade Steve Zero to read some of his stuff. But to no avail, he re­ mained hiding in the dark recesses of the dank basement. Things start­ ed being wrapped up as David Col- lendar briefly read some of his po­ ems accompanied by some of the most effective human generated sound effects I d ever heard. John Wright finished it up with an evoca­ tive evangelical piece that chroni­ cled the heart rending fall of a right­ eous preachin man in North Louisiana, makin' money, savin souls and lovin' his woman all in the name of the Big Boss Man. I had a great time at this wild hap­ pening and I think most art is shit. I highly recommend it to those who are bored on Tuesday nights. Ex­ ercise vour right to free speech. Bring Grandma and the kids. Take drugs and achieve Nirvana. I know I'll see you there next week, Dream Babies. Poetry-Bongo Light Show, every other Tuesday at 9 p.m. in the base­ ment of Paperbacks Plus, 405 Lava­ ca. A ll poets published and unpub­ lis h e d a lo n g w ith performance artists, film makers, and the general public. There is never a charge. Refreshments are information available. For more ■ telephone 474-5488. in v it e d PROS AND CONS PLUS SOME OLD PINK FLOYD STUFF A MULTI MEDIA EXTRAVAGANZA WITH QUADRAPHONIC SOUND APRIL 9 AT 8 PM $14 $12 50 & $11 Tickets on sate now at The Erwin Center and all UTTM TicketCente's H as’ings Records & Tapes iNorthcross Mall) Sears (Hancock Center & Barton Creen Square) The P e r f o r m .ng Arts Center Jo sk e s (Highland Mall) The Para m o u n t Thea re Fiddler s Green Rec Center (Fon Hood) & S W T S U Strahan Coliseum iSan Marcos) NO C A M E R A S jTTM C H A R G E A T I C K E T 512 47-6060 Convenience Charge S M ic n e t on all phone orders & 75c.tic»»et at a i U T TM TicnetCenters i$ i at S a n M arcos! ____________ THE j t t r f r r Of ’f »■**> 4» 4uS un M P W E S B I cepuen Fn 4 *K N j Tt SATURDAY: Va Price Drinks, 6-9 pm No cover until 9 pm SUNDAY: V2 Price Drinks, 6-11 pm No cover for anyone MONDAY: V2 Price Drinks, 8-11 pm No cover for anyone TUESDAY: LADIES NIGHT, 256 Drinks for Ladies, 8-11 pm No cover for anyone WEDNESDAY: Va Price Drinks, 8-11 pm No cover for anyone THURSDAY: LADIES NIGHT, 256 Drinks for Ladies, 8-11 pm No cover for anyone 7601N. Lamar ntHwyiw) 459-4565 Bad Poet wrestling is a popular pastime at the Poetry-Bongo light show. Bev Cotton, Daily Texan Stafi By jon Pearson PO ET -BO N G O L IG H T S H O W ? W hat happens is that every other Tuesday night the basement of Paperbacks Plus is thrown open to any individualistic weirdo with enough moxy to get up in front of people and express him or herself. All sorts of people show up to get in on the fun. As the suave Poet-Bongo Light Show host reminds the crowd: "The Lord has instructed us to produce Bad A rt." But what is Bad Art any­ way? In this increasingly paradoxi­ cal and confusing world chockfull of misinformation this sort of sponta­ involve­ neous, un-self-conscious ment takes on a mvthic power all its own. So there. To my misfortune I arrived a bit late at this "happening” — mid-way through the Cavemen s first rip- rocking set. Apparently live bands are not commonplace at these events, however, this night was dedicated somewhat to capturing the essence of those bygone days of the '60s. This swinging Flesh- tonesque combo appeared in con­ junction with a specially prepared I piece entitled "L iz Does Venus.' suppose some folks might have called this performance art. To me, however, it seemed more like Liz Belile singing a Shocking Blue song accompanied by a guitarist. Liz was a knockout in her outrageous leop­ ard skin outfit, however. The Cavemen continued to sup­ ply us with more of their boss tunes before the emcee announced that the time had come for the event of all events — "Bad Poet W restling. I wasn't sure if this was typical of these happenings, but the crowd around me went wild with blood lust. A mock ring was even erected as four dangerous hipsters took to the stage for a tag-team match that would not end until one side was reduced to babbling incoherency. These four eccentrics treated one another to a volley of total-death-in- jury body slams and well-timed po­ etic threats. The orgy of words and blows that followed was punctuated by cat calls like — "Slam 'em with a simile” and the cliché." W rithing in my seat, I felt I was witness to unnatural craziness. "K ick him in Following the determination of a winner and the subsequent clearing of the ring of the maimed and disil­ lusioned losers, it became apparent that now was the time for some real serious poetry reading. Things shifted gears as most of the younger crowd split while most of the seedy hepcats got ready to wail. Mark Christel got up and read first. His set was short and to the point, setting a quiet reflective mood that was soon to be broken. He was followed by a strange duo consisting of a gyrating vocalist and a bongo player. This was none other than johnny A O K and drummer jason Acid/ They blew through a rhythmic set of steaming street rap. page ‘4 Im a g e s M id a v *1 148S Mt>ndetsv DeForest: the campus comedian Letterman's Larry ‘Bud Melman to hit the college circuit Personality profile Bv Mu hael \ ega \ l \ \ y ORK I he City s skv line is a \ en tab le least for the e\ es, es­ pecially w ith the to p ot the W orld 1 rad e k e n te r as \ o u r v an tag e point O n this day, th o u g h the skyline is graced by a cr\ s tal-clear blue sky it w ould a p p e a r m ore natural over c entral le c a s Hill C ountry The th o u g h t m akes m e feel m ore at hom e an d less like a tourist and p u ts m e at ease before nw m eeting w ith I a r n Bud M elm an Snreeeeeech. W here tv’ big guv 1 the cabbii asks, pulling h is yellow car u p to the curb on 57th Street w ith an ab ru p t halt. ' 'O h yeah Rockefeller C e n te r.’ 1 sav, jostled from from m \ w ide- eved trance from staring at the 80- storv A von Building “ So, you going to u r Radio to C ity?'1' No, I’m going th e re to m eet 1 ar- r\ B ud' M elm an. 1 reply 'O h yeah , th a t little guv on the I e tterm a n show 11 he says, lau g h ­ ing. "I w atch th e show all the tim e. W hen 1 first saw him 1 th o u g h t it w as one hell of a m ean joke. H e's o ne in a nullum Actually Larrv 'Bud M elm an is not his nam e. It's C divert D eF orest. It's th e only part ot him th at isn 't real, bu t th e rest is purely auth en tic “I w a s a s k e d b y a s tu d e n t at N Y U to h elp w i t h h i s film . T h e y w a n te d o n e p e r s o n to p la y a ll t h e p arts. I fo r g e t h o w m a n y t h e r e w e r e i n t h i s m o v ie , f i t a ll o f I b u t t h e m . ” — C alvin D e F o r e st Especially his laugh. It's a robust belly laugh It e ru p ts w ith such te­ nacity from his portly 5-foot-2-inch fram e that it has th e p otential to in­ flict loss of h earin g it's that loud T he laugh, along w ith his M ilque­ toast im age, h as been D eForest s trad e m ark as Larry Bud M elm an, WE'VE MOVED. o ne ot D avid L etterm an 's am u sin g sidekicks on "1 ate N ight w ith D a­ a show I d die M ur­ vid I etterm an phy h as called " th e h ip p e st show on television. His distinctive laugh is the tirst th in g 1 hear, u p o n en terin g a bright cate at Rockefeller Plaza, the d esig ­ nated m eeting spot for o u r lu n c h ­ eon. D eForest is b etw een rehearsals lot his traveling com edy show — a ro u tin e created specifically for the (C year-old Brooklyn native. It sa il new stutt " he sav s. "1 really don t w an t to talk about it vet, because 1 d o n ’t w an t to giv e it all aw ay. to H e's pressed for tim e, since h e is leave for D aytona, sch ed u led the next dav. w here spring- Fla., the break ers will be im unveiling ot his p ro v e d " act, an act tailor-m ade tor the college circuit. W hv has he found such p opularity w ith a g en e r­ ation se p arated by light years trom his ow n? treated to new and " I t's really hard to say, D eForest p o n d ers. "I g u ess the kids need an au th o ritativ e figure. 1 they look u p to m e as sort of a father fig­ u re ." think A u th o rita tiv e 7 N o t quite, L a m B u d ." Still, it's stran g e th a t to d a y 's col­ legiate com m unity w ould hold D e­ F orest in such esteem , especially since he has been single all his life. D eForest grew up in Brookly n as an onlv child. His tat h er w as a co u s­ in to Lee D eForest, the inven to r of the A u d io n T ube, a device that help ed revolutionize th e radio in ­ d u stry . D e F o re st "M y fa th e r's side had all the sci­ sa y s. My e n tis ts , m o th er s side ot the family w as v cry th e atric al." It's easy to see he ad o p ted his m o th e r's traits, w hich has helped him w in over th e h ea rts of a guffaw - ing Late N ight America by m aking T o a s t o n a Stick" the toast of the to w n w ith his enigm atic presence on ’'Late N ight. S o m e tim e s , th o s e lau g h s h ave com e at th e expense of his o w n im age. h o w e v e r, "I d o n 't m in d it at all,' D eForest says. "It you can get the au d ien ce to laugh th en v'ou have w o n the crux of the b attle.' Staff m em b ers of Late N ight m u st h av e had a h ard tim e tighting off the lau g h s w h en th e y discovered D eF orest starrin g in a stu d e n t film at N ew York U niversity. "It wras called, 'T he King of the Z s' an d it w as a spoof on the pro ­ d ucers of those B m ovies that they u se d to m ake back in the 40s and '50s. ” D eF orest recalls. "I w as asked bv a stu d e n t at M U to help w ith his film. T hey w a n te d o ne p e rso n to play all the p arts. I forget how manv th e re w ere in th is m ovie, but I fit all of them . A nd he plays a w ide range of roles on "L a te ” N ig h t," trom an all­ counselor so o th say in g k n o w in g , (ask Larry "B u d ” ) to a m u n d a n e lit­ tle g a rd e n er w ith a m u n d a n e little 3 S K e S t r i ' V S W T S U S' ,rn i5an A A M E R A S R e tu rn in g to A u s tin 4 *4 ñ á " uwwww o r n *M 4i ao»tw< THE f l M N K B W I N f f i N I B ) Proof of Excellence. No other company has made so many rings for the number ONES! Your Class Ring is a WINNER. Your B alfour House: 811 W. 2 4th in T ri-T ow ers 469-9505 Im I Balfour. From B alfo u r w ith pride Shampoo Conditioning & Haircut $11 (2 for $19) 011 E. 41st OpenM on.-Sat You'll Like Our Sunday est. Sunday Brunch at Ruby's from $4.99 We have a hunch you'll love Ruby's Sunday brunch, with entrees I ike Eggs Benedict Eggs St. Louis and E g g s Wellington, priced from $4.99 and served wit! i potatoes and fruit. They're complimented with fresh brunch drinks for only 99c. This Sunday enjoy the best brunch value in Austin at Rub> Tuesday. Ruby's brunch is served Sunday 11:30 a.m. I I til 5:00 p.m. (regular menu also available) I f Highland Mall in Austin Calvert DeForest, better known as larry Bud' Melman, is the man behind the snack time treat Toast on a Stick job and a mundane little life (Kenny the Gardener). "Doing the show has been great, DeForest says. "The people on the show are especially nice. Including Letternian himself? "Oh, he's vour typical Midwest­ erner," DeForest says. "David has one of the warmest senses of humor that I've ever come across. DeForest is hoping to parlay his popularity with the college crowd into steady income now that he s re­ tired from his civil service job. "W e'll be going to Oklahoma Uni­ versity/' he says, "but I'm hoping to go to lexas, tcH). W e still don t have anything definite set though And what are his impressions of Texas? "It's big, big, big, big, big, big. Very big, he roars. 1 can t wait to plav the field there. It's humon- gonus " Humongonus. NIo one ever said 1 arry Bud" Melman didn't have a ■ gift tor expression. cage .is Images Fndav \p r il H l^iHS ! ] -^Ldnt'n A ^ <>< < 2 4 t h & ( ’U d ila lu p e In search of the perfect fajita Austin's got fajitas. Some of 'em are good; some ain't. lar they come only with flour tor­ tilla meat and hot sauce il vou want it, but the onions in the fajitas at the Saigon I gg Roll stand somehow put me ott The onions aren t so heavy at the I ong Beach stand and the meat ha- a nice black pepper flavor. Both stands charge $1 per fajita. But then I’m not entirely con­ vinced the two stands don't serve the exact same thing. 1 hey both raised their similar prices at the same time, even using the same sign to announce the move. And I recommend vou get vour fajitas when fresh. Sometimes you 11 get one that must have been sitting in the warmer cabinet for at least a month. they're The egg-roll stands serve an m- \ aluable purpose and do a better job of feeding L ! students than any of the official 11 cafeterias could claim Fajita Flats: \ou would think that a restaurant that dedicates itself to fajitas would get them right. Well some do and some don't. 1 ajita Flats get- most of it right. It fulfills the need for a fajita h\ when you can t afford to buy a full plate (either because of your wallet or your stomach) because the fajitas are sold individually and already prepared. However, part of the ro­ m ance ot fajitas is the si/zlin' plate Some ot the restaurants that sell individual fajitas don t offer all the condiments. Again, Fajita Flats avoids this pitfall. But you pay a lot for it. Although a plate of fajitas, which can mean as many as five fajitas, per usually costs approximately person, individual and unadorned fajitas (meat and tortilla only) cost $1.75 at the Flats. A fajita with chile con queso, cheddar cheese, sour cream lettuce, tomato, and onions costs $2.05 each. The moral to this story: it mav pay to buv in bulk. 1 ajita King: Overthrow the king Fajita King fails where I ajita Flats succeed- B\ Michael Whalen One of the reasons I'm glad I end­ ed up at the I niversitv instead of somewhere up north is a eulinarv treat that is at its best in Austin Of course I'm talking about tap tas. And what a wonder they are. I have dreams about these succulent strips ot beef brought to me sizzling on a hot iron pan and surrounded w ith tender onions Add a little pico de gallo cheddar cheese a touch of sour cream, some lettuce, a twist ot lime and wrap it in a steaming tlour tortilla . . y o u might a s v\ell be in hea\en. Since I discovered this delight I ve been on a continuous search to seek out m\ dream fajita (insert "Star Irek retrain here) at a rea­ sonable price \ot all of the fajitas sold in campus area restaurants match my idea ot perfect So here are mv biased fajita choic­ e s There are a few ground rules \ll (4 the establishments must be within walking distance ot the I ni- versitv. This rules out some of the best La Vista at the Hyatt to name one — but I'm ■'till conducting the search Look tor the final results in a bound edition or a dissertation. I like my fajitas pretty much Also as I described them above Sorr\ no guacaumole or super-duper hot sauce tor me. \buelitas: \ good bang for the buck They have a full order for two, and a half order tor one. M\ advice is to go w ith a friend to share the full plate ($9.95) so you ll get the meat brought to you on the hot pan. It you get the halt dish ($5.95), the meat comes on a plate and gets cold much more quickly The best thing about Abuelitas is the large amount of meat vou get. Even I, with the assistance of mv girlfriend, could not woof down all of the meat brought wáth one of the full orders. The pico de gallo (tomatoes, onions and peppers) included with the order is, in a word: spicy. I mean spicy enough to cause an ad­ diction to ice tea. The grilled onions are wonderful and Abuelitas also provides a bean soup. On the minus side, Abuelitas does not include cheddar cheese, one of the vital ingredients for my dream fajita. It is available on re­ quest for a little more. They do have guacamole, for lovers of the green stuff. The meat turns a little greasy when it gets colder, too. But by that time I'm usually stuffed a n v ^ y . The final verdict: a good buv. Sort of the Chevrolet of fajitas. The eggroll stands: My first fapta was from one of the eggroll stands that are scattered around the LIT campus. And since then I have de­ veloped a preference for one of the eggroll stands. I would choose the Long Beach stand over the Saigon Egg Roll stand (mind you. this is only for fajitas, not eggrolls). Both are simi­ H A P P Y H O I R: $1 M A R G A R IT A S 2-7pm M-F Rio Swim Suits 209 a off f v r t o I _ __ r u 1 <3 V . I - II I— 6- C Q N T I N Q lH lfi South Lam ar ^ Austin, Texas 78704 •i F Bring this coupon in and - , I I receive 2 p i* lC 0 off * all P lato s M exicanos |<>ood Monday thru Friday on ly • Open daily at 1 lam (512 441-9789 We feature “ K iller Margaritas O n l y the Strong Survive One Coupon per Couple Please vrrnrrnre i y i '¡TTTrTV i r IY I 'r 1 Y n r r r r r i - r r i T i DRINK SPECIALS M onday & Tuesday — Ladies N ight — Free Pool for Ladies W ednesday — 25C Draft Beer 7- 10pm Thursday— 25C Well Hi-Balls 7 -10pm F riday— $1.75 Frozen Margaritas 8 -1 1pm Saturday — Doubles at Singles Prices 7-11pm We re not only the most elegant pool hall in Austin — we re also a great place to have your favorite beer or mixed drink Find out for yourself WAREHOUSE 443-8799 509 E Ben White Across from Truck City T h e re *sn o p la cr^ k e Jt Fajitas used to be poor people's food. Now they can cost you ten bucks. Judy Walgren. Daily Texan Staff The fajitas are sold individually, but thev onlv come with a nacho- style melted cheese sauce. 1 he meat is mediocre. You can also get a plate (beans and such) and sour cream and the other condiments are extra. A single fajita taco costs $1.90. Blah. H ip Pocket: I include this so- called fajita only because it isn't. In­ stead of the flour tortilla, Hip Pocket offers pita bread. For some reason the dish doesn't work and this is the only fajita I have not been able to finish, despite an empty stomach. Hip Pocket ranks first in expense. An individual fajita cost $3.75 and includes avocado, cheddar cheese, lettuce, tomato, sour cream and onions. You can get the real thing for a lot less. Munchies: Ihese are a strange breed of fajitas, but are quite pleas­ ant. This former photo stand serves a pressing need for the University communitv — cheap fajitas that hit the spot during those midnight cravings. Thev don't even call these gems fajitas" Instead Munchies refers to them as steak tacos. W ith a gener­ ous supply of cheddar cheese, thev cost 89 cents. You can't beat that anywhere. th e thin fajita meat is grilled and has a peppery taste. Also included with the taco is lettuce and your choice of a spicy pico de gallo or a mild picante sauce. That's Life: A major disappoint­ ment. That's Life violates the first rule of fajitas. The meat must be cooked enough. The fajita meat is stringy, tough and too rare. I like my hamburgers rare, but red fajita meat will not do. That's Life does add some green pepper to their dish, with some suc­ cess, but it does not rescue it. It has cheddar cheese and the other usual condiments. But unless you like to struggle with your fajita, give up. The plate costs $5.95. The sendee was sloooooooow. Sorry, that's life. Tula: If you're color blind you'll miss half the fun of Tula. The brightlv colored walls and the open- glass architecture make this an in­ teresting place to eat. 1 ula also pro­ vides musicians to serenade you while you eat. But what of the fajitas? Like the restaurant itself, they have a unique personality. W hen they first arrive at the table, they seem normal and unassuming. But Tula has discov­ ered the exciting art of marinade. The meat has a exciting tangy fla­ vor. The grilled onions are superb. And the price, $4.50, is right. W ith such great fajita meat, Tula should give larger portions. Some­ how the meat seemed a little skim­ py. Again, n o cheddar cheese. Sigh. Uptown Enchilada Bar: 1 his used to be called jorge s Uptown Enchila­ da Bar, no relation to the Casita Jorge's chain. This restaurant has new manage­ ment, but everything else is the same. The fajita plate comes hot, delicious . . . and expensive. Expect $7.95 for the sizzlin' plate, which in­ cludes pico de gallo, cheddar cheese and fried onions. If you can afford it, I recommend it. W e impover­ ished writers will stick with the ■ cheaper fajita plates. ALL YOU CAN EAT SUNDAY, MONDAY & TUESDAY NITES $ 7 5 0 (É Ü 423-8625 1400 Barton Springs Rd. (By the Mobile station) Open 11:00 am to 10:00 pm Christopher H a r t s T C a W Now! Walk In's Welcome Open Mon.-Sat. & Evenings 3 Convenient Locations One Near You!! Reagan Square -3066 451 OoK Hill Plaza 266-1612 Riverside Plaza 444-0470 s15.00 LOUSY BUCKS GETS YOU: 1. Years of Experience 2. A New Friend 3. Great Atmosphere 4. Love Lorn Advice 5. Both Sides Match 6. Best Haircut Ever 7. Free Conditioner 8. Ego Bolstering 9. Wash & Wear Styling 10. Encouragement 11 • Validated Parking 12. Opinion on Any Subject 13. Free Beer 14. Free Shampoo 15. Good Bull M on.-Sat. 10-7 - f / a v e 4, fte a /U ' Eat less saturated fats. Wf Rt HGHIING FOP VOUPLIH Am erican Heart Association page 2H Im age'-frida\ \p ft S !%-> Santi's Pastas: a special kind of place iett lighting but without the han ness of big light tixtim s 1 day, skylights brighten the int tot features a menu and unique pasta bar lunch which hn- Ah, but Santi s is a plac» for ner 1 vening is especiallx romantu with candles and tasteful, hushed music i he wine list has over U d o­ mestic and imported labels (recom­ mended whites are Est 1 st i st: and Orxieto) Pasta ranges from a half- dozen varieties ot spaghetti to mani- cotti, lasagna fetuccini, and manx more. tortellini, Santi s has a new menu, and Ross sax s i! w ill feature lighter Italian e n ­ trees and appetizers following the general trend toward lighter foods \ look at the nexx additions is an experience in anticipation. Included are carpaccio, a cold appetizer of thinly sliced tenderloin with par- mesan cheese, mushrooms and ca­ pers vn ith light extra-virgin olive oil insulata lagu­ and lemon dressing na. another appetizer, which is fresh whole-milk mozzarella with tomato and fresh basil and tuscan olive oil; and a new assortment ol * % Tequila Joe had a lady fair, you: a señorita with coal black hair. She'd w ait for Joe when he d ma^e his runs- she didn't care what the outlaw'd done. But the lady s father was a federóle and to set her free. He called Joe out in the noonday sun, and fell to earth by Tequila's gun. ( he planned to shoot down Joe Restaurant review Bn Michael G Smith santi s is cool s santi - ¡s neat Sant kind ot place. Heno, etiquotti guidel tor p e this |t w el of d i'W lick. ecuil mg: \our linguini X' not ask for ketchup to go on • Do not bring a half-do/on idi n- ticallv clad you ng men who intend to get really drunk and be loud and obnoxious to other diners. • Do not bring Mom and Dau it the\ re Winnebago-tvpes who get a big kick out of taking random, unannounced Polaroid's Not to stress onlv the negative, • run bring a datt Please vio • max propose marriage but on \ it y o u m e a n it a n d o n l y it it is wi t h t h e d a t e y o u b r o u g h t w ith y o u . • will havt pit n\ ot cash left ox or tor the nightN entertainment. \\ hich is one of the nicest things about Santi s Pastas. 1 hough xou would have a difficult time blowing half a week's pax here, the a t m o s ­ phere is that of an expensiv e restau­ rant, the kind w here you should wear a tic Here you don t. But it the urge hit- x ou you won t feel overdrt "«sed “ My place is different from the idea manx p eo ple h. ve about res­ taurants or Sixth Street, say- Dan­ iel Ro ss, owner of Santi s. We art making a serious commitment to quality and sere ¡ce Indeed. Serious is an adjective rarelv used in connection \xith anx business on old Pecan Street. Santi s i n e s up to that description, but is hardly stuffv. The interior decor is a subdued mix ot brick and finished wood, with a touch of dignified art deco. Banks of to an illumine the dining orange glow clearer than indi- area very softlx lights dimmed a n d ano include entrees But pasta is onlv part of the story. Santi s stuffed chicken breast, grilled tenderloin, rrietv of veal plates Pi//u ¡- and table is one called Four Sea- zza, which is divided into whose respective toppings v ou guessed it — the the vear. 1 alk about specials of Santi s rt sent r s03sc Small restaurants rarely feature such a vast assortment of fine en ­ trees and pastas, but Sa n ti’s man- age's xerv well Service even under heavv weekend crowds, is consist­ ently snappx and attentive. O ne of the neatest "things happens when you order a chilled wine. 1 his little guy com es out with a shiny ice bucket on s t i l t s and puts it right next to vour table. Keeps the wine cold Neat. Do ug Layton Daily Texan St at* grilled (aHa griglia) entree s consist­ ing of Italian meats, fish, poultry and he r b s For the- i who have alwav s enjox - ed Santi's food, there is nothing to fear. All the items previously avail­ able will continue onto the new menu. 1 hi' includes the supreme combination plate ot veal and shrimp in light cream sauce over fet- tuccini —• highly recommended. Santi's also has a well-stocked and attractive bar. I nlike most busi­ nesses on Sixth Street, Santi - Pas tas is not a place to go if you intend to wind up on the floor uncon­ scious. The restaurant is never oxer- crowded but is ot such high qualitx and reasonable price that the critk worries about it becoming too popu­ just keep it between lar. So wee'll • x ou and me. OKD tequila Joes FAJITA M O USE FOOD FUN 2M&H9EB9 B re a k fa st: for the early morning outlaws from 7am. Sunrise special $1.99 L u n ch : Lunch Special $2.99 changed weekly D inner: Serve dinner late every night to midnight tor the late night desperados. Specialty: Fajita, of course! $4.95 H a p p y H o u r : Live E n tertain m en t: Kick off your shoes and . price drinks & free appetizers dance the night away with Austin's finest entertainers. 9308 N. Lamar at Rundberg 339-0339 T U E S . & W ED . A P R I L 9 th & 1 0 th ERIC JOHNSON A N D THE AVENUE plus special guest EXTREME HEAT EARLY SHOW AT 8 PM! A L L A G E S W E LC O M E $5.00 8 pm/S6.00 11 pm SAT., APRIL 13th V AN WILKS $3.50 odm. ■ — T H U R S D A Y , A P R I L 1 1 th live ktxz radio broadcast DOCTOR'S MOB • SKANK 9 SONGS • SMASH PALACE HOST: E. SKY & ED WARD STARTS 9 pm $3.00 odm. S A T ., A P R I L 1 3 th VAN WILKS $ 3 .5 0 o d m . S U N ., A P R I L 1 4 th Hard-Hocker DANY SPAN0Z plus special guest t r i p l e X X X ALL ACES SHOW ' $5 iKladm. FR1 APRIL 26thk THE BONGOS plus special guest THE0PTIMYST1CS I . .00 M WM4DTHIUTTUKIHGS M C.-KERRT AWN $4.00 odm. Into the gray area The Conspiracy File is open again Fiction Bv Michael G. Smith The sweet smell of hot barbecue sauce lured me to the patio of the Texas Union Building yesterday The dining room was full, and though threatening clouds loomed overhead, I took a table on the cor­ ner of the patio. I poured the contents of a soft drink into a cup full of ice, and was put off bv the fact that it didn't fizz. \’o bubbles, nothing. Stranger still, the ice would not float. I shook the cup, but to no avail, lust then, a rus­ tling bush behind me startled the can from my hand, and from the green emerged none other than a slightly ruffled Conspiracy Man, brushing leaves from his gray suit and looking genuinely inconspicu­ ous. "N o fizz, Agent K ? " he inquired, taking the seat across from mine. "N o . and I am not 'Agent K. This is your work, I presume?" " I l l bet the ice cubes sank, too,' he glanced side to side and squinted behind his dark glasses. "A re you aware of what transpires7" " N o ." He leaned forward to whisper to me, but was distracted by the warm french fries under his nose. He paused to wolf a few. " W e have Deterioration; Impend­ ing Doom; things are once again Breaking Down. O nly this time it s serious enough to upset physical properties. Round things wron t roll Square things will. Paper won't fold, glue won't stick, and people will say things that don't make sense at random." "Pulitzer fundamental boil unh­ inge; tomato!" shouted a nearby diner, to the confusion of himself and those around him. Illustration by Bill Barmmski "N o kidding. W hat could be so powerful as to cause such a deterio­ ration?" "That's Deterioration," he mum­ bled through another mouthful of fries, "and W e aren't sure of its source ' "A n v clues?" He gave the patio a Secret Sen ice once-over and returned his atten­ tion to m y sandwich. "Yes. W e think that the combined mental energies of the whole popu­ lace have come together and confused the natural order of things. It's a reaction to a recent event which greatlv affected us all. "The event?" "T h e cancellation of 'S ilv e r Spoons.'" aplomb. I recovered with reasonable "Thanks, Conspiracy I'd really like to finish no w ." Man, but mv lunch _ "O h , no need for that.' " W h y not?" "1 just did The plate was emplv. The Con­ spiracy Man burped into a napkin, rose, and disappeared behind me into the shrubs. It's a conspiracy ■ AMERICAN CAB COMPANY GETTING YOU THERE IS OUR BUSINESS N E W A I R C O N D I T I O N E D 1985 C A B S • H O T S H O T “ y ' L I V E R Y 2 4 H O U R S A D A Y - • 2 4 H O U R S - 7 D A Y S A D I S - R A D I O W E E K 7 D A Y S A W E E K • C H A R G E A C C O U N T S P A T C H E D S E R V I C E • S E R V I N G T H E E N T I R E A V A , L i . B i ' l c D A.uni • S E H A B L A E S P A Ñ O L A U S T I N A R E A D IS P A T C H E D BY G R E A T E R A U S T IN T R A N S P O R T A T IO N C O M P A N Y 9V0 nvowmy. AMERICAN CAB 452-9999 S T A R T IN G A P R IL 1st 4 + * ♦ * * * * * * * * * * * * * CUT-RATE COSTUMES for Eeyore’s Birthday Party zs O o ° C ^ 0< 8ccS> Find y o u r E e yo re 's Birthday Party costu m e from the G o o d w ill Industries Store at 7121 N orth Lamar Blvd. Y o u 'll find irrestible prices o n Dr. S p o c k ears, G ro u c h o M a rx glasses, face a n d hair paint a n d d o z e n s o f fully a s­ se m b le d costum es. Celebrate the birthday o f A u stin 's favorite stuffed d o n k e y Friday, A pril 26, in creative co stu m es a n d a c­ cesso rie s from Goodw ill. □ GOODWILL STORE HIGHLAND MALL 'W i MARTIN LUTHER KING, JR GOODWILL INDUSTRIES STORE 7121 N orth L a m a r B lvd . page to Images I ridas April *> l% s The Effect: emotional, traditional guitar music NOW IN DQBIE MALL! i e t | SUNGLASSES Mcste'Co?c EUrtoft C r t e i Auric S2 7 4 *M Nw ttoeroct * U l i ^•tt» 453-3264 H»«hUnc *a íJ tactic 46245*7 IVbte Austin 469 5*31 ^2 ^ r ~ Suzette Renee of The Effet t. How does she pla\ bass guitar w ith gloves? Comerging on the Au>hn music scene a little over a vear ago, The Effect has been recognized from San Francisco to \ e u N. ork. In writing the Along with the handling of lead vocals and bass, Suzette Renée also writes all the original material for the band lyrics, Renée said she expresses emotion felt from listening to eountn and bluegrass as well as the psychedelic music of the Sixties. " I write lyrics to connect with the heart and mind, sometime^ mini-psvchodramas of real life. Never just words — always emotion.' Although their first EP, "A m eri­ can Design," incorporates the syn­ thesizer sounds of Patrick Keel (The Pool), they consider themselves a traditional guitar band. Their sound is based on such bands as RF\1 and XTC. Renee explains: " W e are stick­ ing to the traditional stvle of the guitar band Wt don t want to bring in anything to take away from the raw sound With the exciting vocals and high- energ\ stage presence ot Renee, to­ gether with the raw guitar sounds of Chris Lawrence and Ronnie John­ son, Effect musk could casih bt compared to the likes of Chrissie Hvnde and the Pretenders. Since their opening gig for Joe "K in g " Carrasco and the Crowns on their West Coast tour last July, The Effect are considering their first full album and a possible European tour soon. If you're looking for a good dose of raw guitar sound blended with the exciting vocals of Suzette Renée — check out the Effect Tuesday night at Bozo's nightclub, 614 E. Sixth St. — Karen Wagner TO ALL THE WEEKDAY W O R K A H O L IC S . W E’VE GOT THE CURE AT THE ROSE! Stop b\ AustinN finest club for Gentlemen's Entertainment. 74e 'Red, 6>2K N . I amar >12 4ÁS-2106 Because after a long, hard da\ TA6 1 Ben W hite 512 441-402“ Amateur Night Sun. vou deserve a real night out! Amateur Night Mon. M on.-Sat. 2 p.m.-2 a.m. Sun. _ p.m.-2 a.m. Happv Hours 2-7 p.m. M o n .-Sat. \ ls<1, American f xpress, M a tt c K ard TO EUROPE AND MEXICO BUY TICKETS TODAY!! 453-TRIP 34th AND GUADALUPE Photo by Pat Blashill Every week, Images features the work of student photographers. If you’d like to have a picture printed, bring it by the Texan offices at the corner of 25th Street and Whitis Avenue. All photos be­ come the property of Images. King of the Pre Fab! REJECTS- Looking for humor Contest 10: help George Shultz find his lost wit Suppose vou were bound and gagged, and locked into a broom closet with a book of matches, a Slinkv, a can of Silly String, and UT-President Peter Flawn. flow do vou call attention to your plight? — From Images Contest No. 9. Why did we run such a con­ test? We're not sure. Whv did Bill C aufield enter the contest? Probably because he enjoys get­ ting laughed at. The following is his winning subm ission to Imag­ es' so-called Flawn Dilemma. He can come by Friday and pick up hiN winnings: two tickets to the Varsity Theatre. Rising painfully from a deep unconsciousness, with ringing ears, aching head and no sense of time or space, I tried to yawn, but discovered that my lips had been Super Glued together. Whoever had done this had also wrapped an entire roll of duct tape around mv mouth, so you can see that I was thorough’ gagged. Mv hands were tied be­ hind mv back as well. W hen mv eves had adjusted to the dim light, I found myself to be in a small closet; m one corner was a matchbook, a Slinkv and a can of Silh String. Slumped un­ conscious in the other corner was I T President Peter Flawn, who was also bound and gagged. He had an ugly gash across his fore­ head. You can probably imagine how I felt at this time. I had admired President Flawn for years (I cried when he announced his retire­ ment), and now that I was in the same worn with him, one on one. 1 could hardly contain my excitement. But as the minutes ticked b\ and our conversation went nowhere, this excitement quickly wore off. Fortunately. President Flawn though was still breathing t e n weakly — but I was glad to see any activity at all, since it had been vea is since I'd practiced nose-to-nose resuscitation. But the problem still remained: how to rescue mv idol from this clos­ et? Noting that there was a little Silly String hanging off at the top of the can. I surmised that this w as all that our captors had had to tie us with. This outlandish theory turned out to be true, and I quickI) broke my thin pink bonds. Mv first thought (wouldn't it have been yours?) was to burn the closet door down with the matches But there were only two matches, and since, like most broom closet doors, it was made of a titanium-steel alloy, I was only able to burn a small hole at the bottom of the dixir. 1 could get my index finger only halfway through the hole. Damn! Not big enough. I would have to get help from the out­ side. While waiting for inspriation to strike, my hand wandered over to the Slinky and I began playing with it. It reminded me of a recent physics lesson on har­ monic motion and therein I found the solution to my plight. Searching Peter's person, I found he was carrying exactly the items I needed: two wire hangers, a clothes pm and a Rolex watch (a gift from one of the regents). I straightened out one of the coat hangers and stuck it horizontally between the two sides of the doorway, about three feet off the ground. The other hanger hung from this wire. Hanging the Slinky from the hanger, I clothespinned the Sillv String can (upside down) to the other end of the Slinky. To keep the button on the can con­ stantly depressed, I wrapped President Flawn's watch around the can lengthwise. Bv sliding the second hanger along the length of the straight one, while keeping the Slinkv gently oscillating in three dimen­ sions, I was able to send a mes­ sage to the world in Sillv String from underneath the door. It said: "Please help Peter Flawn out of this miserable broom closet. He will handsomely reward his liberator by: a) giving you a shiny gold Rolex watch with the initials PF' on it, or b) creating a shuttle bus route to go anywhere vou want within a fiftv-mile radius, or c) eliminating the E 34bK re­ quirement, or d) stockpiling in his personal medicine cabinet with enough suicide pills to allow vou, your family and friends to writhe to a pa in till death instead of being in­ stantly vaporized in the event of nuclear war or final exams." O ur next c o n test? G loria Steinem , G eorge Shultz, and Jer­ ry Falwell are standing in a room, dum bfounded. They seem to have m isplaced their sen ses of humor, and are dam ned upset about it. The onlv other objects in the room are a cigarette light­ er, a hula hoop and a bust of Norm an Mailer. What could they do with these objects (or each other) to regain their lost wit? Remember: get those subm is­ sions to our office (at 25th Street and Whitis Avenue) by noon M onday The winner gets two ■ free tickets to the Varsity. Bill Barminski ACADEMY'S 46th BIRTHDAY SALE C h o o s e tra m 2(HH) p a ir o f CHEST HIGH WADERS vmv! or nylon $4.88 and up ÍV •V a d 0 Choose from 5000 [ oast Guard approved LIFE JACKETS tor adults and chiidrer $4.88 and up ( 'hoose fn >m 100Í1 x v.. TENTS including Coleman and Camel Big family size dome tent made to sell tor $100 only $66.66 ( hoose from 2000 p air o f LADIES SANDELS va lu es to $25 pair y o u r choice on ly $ 4 . 8 * 8 2 t . Choose from 10,000 pair o f JOGGING OR TENNIS SHOES $4.88 a n d u p ¡iZI I I ” i hoose from 10,000 pair of BOOTS for w ork or dress on e lot of w estern boots V a lu e s up to $60 o n ly $38.88 C hoose from 10,000 p a ir o f SUN GLASSES including Foster Grant allot p r ic e Choose from3686 ( alemán and Igloo brand ICE CHESTS OR WATER COOLERS 44 q u a rt Fiesta tee chest b y Igloo m ode to sell fo r $24 o n ly $14.88 Choose from 5000 SLEEPING BAGS including Coleman brand all at }/2 price Choose from 10,000 AIR MATTRESSES OR FLOATS vinyl, nylon & rubber $1.88 and up Choose from 2000 TENNIS R A C Q U E T S w ood or metal $4.88 and up Special purchase $100,000.00 worth of MECHANIC TOOLS re g u la r and socket w renches for trucks or autos A m erican m ade 60% off the regular retail price. ( hoose from 3000 BBQ GRILLS or HIBACHIS 55 g a llo n b arrel typ e sm oker grill m ade to sell for $?5 o n ly $49.95 Choose from 1000 MEN'S SLACKS OR JEANS men's jeans values to $25 o n ly $12*88 ( hoose from 5000 JOGGING SHORTS for adults a n d children $1.66 an d up Choose from 2000 p a ir o f BOYS SLACKS OR JEANS all at 25% off our regular low price Choose from 1000 WESTERN SHIRTS values to $15 only $8*88 Choose from 3000 INFLATABLE BOATS 1-2-4-& 6-man sizes nylon rubber or vinyl 2 man heavy duty vinyl boat only $16.66 ACADEMY 4 Big Stores to Serve You The Most Interesting Store Open All Day Siunday 10% Discount to Retired Senior Gtizens 4103 N. IH35 603 E. Bon White Blvd. 8103 Research Blvd.