T h e y T exan Vol.85, No 28________________________________ The student newspaper of The University of Texas at Austin Thursday October 10 1985 25c Afghans gGt Route of Hijacked Cruise Ship $250 million in secret aid through CIA TURKEY SYRIA Oct 8th H ijackers claim to h ave killed two h o stag es O ct 8th Cruise ship is r e f u s e d entry into S y r ia n territorial w aters - ship s c o u r s e is set w est, a w a y from S y r i a CYPRU Sm . d EGYPT O ct 7th 7 00a m C ruise ship, Achille Lauro, arrives in Alexandria • p assen g ers debark for a day trip planning to rejoin ship m Port Said Oct 7th 1 1 00a m Ship leaves Alexandria bound for Port Said to pick up p assen g ers & resum e cruise Oct 7th Ship is seized by hijackers claiming to be m em bers of the Palestinian Liberation Front • ship's course is set for Syria White House outraged by killing of American Associated Press Associated Press W A S H IN G T O N The W hite House expressed sadness and out­ rage W ednesday at what it called the* "brutal killing" of a Jewish Am erican tourist aboard a hijacked Italian cruise ship and demanded that the Egyptian government turn over the pirates for the maximum "appropriate punishm ent." "From the outset, the United States government made clear to the government of Fgypt and the gov­ ernment of Italy our opposition to negotiations with the terrorists and our expectation that the terrorists would be apprehended, prosecuted and punished," W hite House aide Larry Speakes said after confirming that passenger Leon Klinghoffer had been slain President Reagan, confronted with conflicting reports about the welfare of Am ericans aboard the ship held for two days by Palestini­ an terrorists, ^ent his Egyptian am ­ bassador to inspect the ship to determine whether one or more of the U S. citizens aboard had been killed. U.S. Am bassador to Egypt Nicho­ las Veliotes confirmed from aboard ship that the 69-year-old N ew York­ er had been killed. In a radio message monitored by Independent N ew s Network, V eli­ otes instructed his embassy to tell the Egyptian government, " W e in­ sist that they prosecute those sons of bitches." Speakes said the Cairo govern­ ment, which arranged to take the • Reactions to hostage killing, page 2 hijackers off the cruise liner earlier in the day, now bears the responsi­ bility "fo r handling the resolution of the affair." But he added, "T h e United States remains determined to see that those responsible for this heinous act be brought to justice and pun­ ished to the maximum extent. There must be no asylum for terrorists or terrorism ." In an unusual nighttime briefing at the W hite House, Speakes said the United States believes the four hijackers "rem ain in Egyptian cus­ tod y" but it does not know what the intends to do with government them. The Egyptian foreign minis­ try had announced earlier they w ould be leaving Egypt, apparently with safe passage to freedom. "W h ile we welcome the release of the passengers and crew of the Achille Lauro ," Speakes said, "w e are saddened and outraged by this brutal killing of an innocent Am eri­ can, the second such terrorist m ur­ der in three m onths." H e was referring to the murder in June of N avy diver Robert Stethem, a passenger aboard drink alcoholic ht vt rage s whilt with a parent, spouse or guardiar I he Texas drinking ige will be raised to 21 next fall, but those younger than 21 w ill be allowed to drink alcohol with a guardian. in the The proposed rule, published last federa/ Register, month m e a n s fexas still may not comply with a federal law -.etting the mini mum drinking age at 21 Clarke Bennett, director of the Federal H ighw ay Administration Office of H ighw ay Safety, -aid he had talked to an attornc v with the National H ighw ay Í raffic Safety Administration about lexas' exemp­ tion in its drinking age law " I hey (N’HTSA) definitely do not intend to allow anv exceptions, Bennett said "S o probably be considered a non-corr plying state " iexas would f he 1984 federal law requires the Federal H ighw ay Administration t withhold 5 pen ent of a state's feder­ al highway aid if that state still al­ lows p e r s o n s under 21 vear- old to buy or publicly possess alcoholic beverages after Oct. fhe law raises the penalty to 10 percent of the highway funds if the state still does not comply a vear later I, 1988. Though the f u n d s art withheld, states have up to four years to claim the money if they change their drinking age law - bv 199ft If iexas does not comply with the law, the federal government can withhold $33.4 million from the state in 1986, and $66 8 million ir 1987, said AI Tells, director of the T e x a s Highwav Department legisla­ tive information section. The Legislature raised the drink­ ing age last session to avoid the fed­ eral sanctions, but did not change a section of the alcoholic beverage code that allows m i n o r s to drink w'hile "in the visible presence of an adult parent, guardian or spouse The unchanged portion of the revised lavs also allow - an adult par­ ent, guardian or spouse to buv an alcoholic beverage for a miner, but does no! allow the n ;nor to buv the drink himself According to the Federal H igh­ the w a y A d m in is tra tio n and thos» exceptions mean NIHTSA, Ie x a s still may not comply with th e federal minimim drinking age law' unless the rul* for enforcing the law are ( hang* d But the notice publi hed bv the two agerú i* s in fh* /edernl Register indicated su< h a change is unlikeh Í h< agencies stated in the notice *hat legislative history does not suggest that ( o n g r e s s intended to permit such ar exception" and con­ sequently release funds to stat* s that allow minors to drink with their parents, spouse or guardian. th* . will not Bobbv M ver . dir* *<>r of the poli­ cy' and planning iivision of the Tex­ as Department of H ighway > and I' a Ik f ranspc.ríatic >n. s,ud the state had a,iv noticed the problem re­ cently He said he did not know if f e x a s drinking age law complied with the proposed federal regula- don, and said his agencv asked the Federal Highway Adm inistration for clarification of the ru * Tuesday But T e lls said ie x a s probably toes have a problem because of the provision allowing a person under 21 to drink w hile in the presence of a parent or guardian. 'W e do have a law like that," Fells said. " If their (the two federal agencies) interpretation of the in­ tent of Congress is correct, then that money would be at risk, you might s ay ." Officials in both federal agencies said in telephone interviews it was not immediately clear w hether Tex­ as law complies with the proposed rules for enforcing the law. W e don't really know how we're going to go on ‘ his issue," -aid K a­ thy DeMeter, a NHfTSA attorney. She said the agencv will be accept­ ing public comment on the pro­ posed rules until Oct. 28. DeM eter said the agency mav revise its interpretation if enough states oppose the rul* or can -.how that allowing minors to drink under supervision does not cause a signifi­ cant number of traffic deaths. DeMeter said the agencv mav is­ sue final rules before the end of the year. Don VNilliams, Gov. M ark W hite's legislative director, said it was too early to tell whether the state would oppose the rule, adding that he had only been told about the potential problem late M onday. V\e will be reviewing that and probably be preparing some com­ ments to their proposal, V\il;¡ams If then- is anv chance that it -aid. will be negative to the state, of course we 11 oppose." Associated Press W A S H IN G TON Congress has setretlv approved some $250 million in further ( overt military aid to reb­ els lighting the Soviet-backed re­ gime in Afghanistan, Senate sourc ­ es said Wednesday. O ne source, who with the others asked not to be identified by name, said the money will be spent to buv large quantities of ammunition, small arms, grenade launchers, and anti helicopter air defense weapons. It will enable them to replenish their stocks," he said. "It's a one­ time replenishment. There is noth­ ing being introduced that is brand It's the new or especially esoteric kind of thing e a s ily available any­ where in the* w o rld ." lie said lie could not confirm re­ ports that the weapons mav include the British-made Blowpipe portable missile system, used bv Britain dur­ ing tht* 1982 Falklands W ar with A r­ gentina. I he issues of the* long Soviet oc­ cupation of Afghanistan, and covert aid by several nations to the Afghan resistance, are \ irtually c ertain to be raised in the summit meeting in G e ­ neva next month between President Reagan and Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev There was some annoyance in Congress over the latest aid request because the Reagan administration asked for the h in d s late last month, immediately before the end of the 1985 fiscal year, the source said. And he said there was some con­ cern over the si/e of the request. " W e re reaching a position where a lot of us think there should be more debate on this program ," the source said. "There is a lot of mon­ ey in vo lved ." I he funds will be funneled to the Afghan rebels through the C entral Intelligence Agency, the source. -..lit! He said the House and Senate intelligence committees approved the last transfer of the money month from secret C IA accounts ap­ propriated for the 1985 fiscal year. By reprogramming C IA money that had been appropriated for a previous fiscal year, the Reagan ad­ ministration made the funds avail­ able for the 1986 and 1987 fiscal years. I he committee actions did not require votes by the full House and Senate because the money had already been approved by Con- gress. One source said the C IA had asked Sens. David Durenberger, R- M inn ., and Patrick Leahy, D-Vt., the chairman and ranking minority member of the Senate intelligence C ommittee, to approve the repro­ gramming on their own authority without consulting other members of the panel. "T h e y refused," the source said, adding that the decision was made by the full committee. The Soviet Union invaded A f­ ghanistan in December 1979, saying it was responding to a request for aid from the Marxist Afghan gov­ ernment in Kabul It has been engaged ever since in a bitter guerrilla w ar with anti- Marxist rebels, using bombing raids and helicopter attacks in an attempt to solidify control of the country. SPORTS Blue Jays and Dodgers win Toronto extended their lead in the AL pennant series to 2-0 with a 10-mnmg. 6-5 win over the Kansas City Royals Los Ange­ les in the first game of me NL pennant series beat the St Louis Cardinals 4-1 See stories page 11 E N T E R T A IN M E N T I like movies where folks get biowed up Arnold Schwarzenegger, the human meatball bashes heads rips apart bodies and says, Lets party1 in his new bigger-than-life film Commando See review, page 13 W EATHER Damn! Rain! — The forecast for Austin Thursday calis for cloudy skies and hu­ midity with a 30 percent chance of showers. Highs should be in the upper 80s For complete loca and national forecasts, see page 19 IN D E X Around Campus Classifieds Comics Crossword Editorials Entertainment Feature Sports State & Local University World & Nation 19 16 19 19 4 13 10 11 9 6 2 Senate OKs measure to balance the budget Associated Press W A S H IN G T O N The Senate voted 75-24 W ednesday to force the government to balance its annual budget in six years, but the vote failed to end an impasse over legis­ lation to extend the government's exhausted borrowing power. The balanced-budget am end­ ment, which drew strong bipartisan support, came as the Senate worked on a measure to extend the current debt ceiling to more than $2 trillion. H ow ever, the Senate did not fin­ ish work on the overall bill and ef­ forts to approve a short-term exten­ sion of the debt limit collapsed late W ednesday. The Treasury Department held an emergency auction at which it bor­ rowed an additional $5 billion, a sum officials said would keep the governm ent afloat for another week W ithout congressional action to cover the $5 billion, the Treasury Department w'as forced to do some fancy bookeeping — utilizing a sel­ dom-used agency, the Federal Fi­ nancing Bank, to cover the borrow­ ing. The bank w*as set up in 1973 and given $15 billion in reserve borrow­ ing power. The Senate approved and sent to the House a measure to temporarily extend the government's borrowing pow'er by just this $5 billion. But Rep. Daniel Rostenkowski, D-I1E, chairman of the Flouse W ays and Means Committee, said the Senate action was unnecessary since the Treasury' had already borrowed the money. In addition, Rostenkowski said, the Treasury could borrow up to the full $15 billion w'ith no additional congressional action, whereas the Senate legislation would have held this amount to $5 billion. The Treasury* action the pressure off Congress to deal with the debt limit extention right away, congressional leaders suggested. took The balanced budget plan, en­ dorsed by President Reagan, would dramatically alter the process bv which government funds are au­ thorized and spent, requiring that the president and Congress meet in­ creasingly stringent yearly deficit- reduction targets. G overnm ent spending would have to match receipts beginning in fiscal year 1991 and remain balanced from then on. The deficit for fiscal 1985, wrhich ended Sept. 30, was about $210 billion. Although denounced bv Demo­ cratic leaders, the plan authored bv Sens. W arren Rudman, R-N.H., Phil Gram m, R-Texas, and Ernest F. Hollings, D-S.C., ultimately picked up the support of 27 of the cham­ ber's 47 Democrats. Reacting to adoption of the bal­ anced-budget measure. W h ite H ouse aide Larrv Speakes said. " W e are of course pleased w ith the margin; we applaud the vote as a step in the right direction." The balanced budget proposal has been holding up longer-term legislation to extend the national debt ceiling to above $2 trillion. It was to the longer-term bill that the amendment to balance the budget was attached. Senators were to trv again on Thursday to complete work on the debt limit bill. The House has al­ ready voted to increase the debt lim ­ it — but without a balanced-budget amendment. The differences will ul­ timately have to be negotiated in a House-Senate conference com mit­ tee. The current national debt — the aggregate from decades of deficit spending — reached $1.824 trillion on M onday, the current statutory ceiling. is The debt ceiling extension needed for the cash-short Treasury to borrow more money to continue to operate the government. The Democrat-controlled House of Representatives, which in A u g ­ ust approved the higher borrowing ceiling, was expected to approve the temporary debt limit increase by day's end. . The heat is on Kevin Owens of Fire Station 22 hoses down a fire at a nearby fence ignited, and the fire spread to the second fourplex at 2210 Mission Hill Circle It was started when level of the apartment Firefighters put out the blaze Mohammed Zare poured gasoline on a barbecue pit A before the other three units were damaged Kelly Pace Daily Texan Staff Klinghoffer’s relatives receive death notice after celebration party Associated Press the hostages aboard N E W > O R K — R elatives o f Leon K lin g h o ffe r w ere c e le b ra tin g the re­ lease o f the A c h ille La u ro on W ed ne sd ay w hen th e y heard the firs t re p o rt that the 6 9-year-old p a rtia lly pa ralyzed man w as dead the Fhe U.S. State D e p a rtm e n t n o ti­ fied fa m ily W e d ne sd a y n ig h t that K lin g h o ffe r had d ie d , a fa m ily sp o ke sw om an said. K lin g h o ffe r, w h o w as tra ve lin g w ith his w ife , M a rily n , 58, had been c o n fin e d to a w h e e lc h a ir and could barely speak. th e ir fa th e r's death, lu s t TO m in u te s before the first re­ the p o r t s o f K lin g h o ffe r's d a u g h te rs, Lisa A rb it- tier. T4, and Ilsa K lin g h o ffe r, 28, held a new s conference to express th e ir re lie f at the end o f the ordeal. It w as a h a p p y m e e tin g , p u n ctu a te d w ith ta lk o f a big h o m e co m in g p a rty w ith "a lo t o f h u g g in g and k is c m g ." la u g h te r and ft fe e ls like a g ia n t a n v il has been lifte d o ff o u r ch e sts," Ilsa to ld re­ porters [Tut then , Ita lia n P rem ier B ettino C raxi said the Captain o f the lu x u ry lin e r to ld him the P alestinian h ija ck­ e r s had th ro w n K lin g h o ffe r in to the sea and th at he w as dead. F lours later, the State D e p a rtm e nt c o n firm e d his death to his c h ild re n , said the fa m ily spokesw om a n, L e tty S im o n , w h o id e n tifie d herself as a close frie n d . "It’s a ve ry d iffic u lt and personal tim e fo r th e m ," she to ld reporters gathered o u tsid e the K lin g h o ffe rs ' fa m ily a p a rtm e n t b u ild in g . w ill n ot he d o w n th is e v e n in g ." "T h e " I d o n 't k n o w w h y th e y singled h im o u t,” said a n e ig h b o r, M rs. Saul Berger. "F ie ce rta in ly w a sn 't a rab ble ro u ser, he's n o t the typ e to m ake speeches or in cite them — not in his c o n d itio n ." The d o o rm a n at K lin g h o ffe r's 22- s to ry co-op a p a rtm e n t b u ild in g , Is­ rael B adilla, described K lin g h o ffe r as "a m an o f w ill p o w e r" w h o d id n o t g iv e in to the d is a b ility th a t fo l­ lo w e d his stroke. W h en the couple le ft on th e ir va­ ca tio n , an eager K lin g h o ffe r "g o t o u t o f his w h e e lc h a ir and w a lke d to the c a r," B adilla said. K lin g h o ffe r, a re tire d appliance m a n u fa c tu re r, had suffered a stroke several m o n th s ago and was p a rtia l­ ly p a ra lyze d on the rig h t side. Fie also su ffe red fro m h ig h blood pressure and had take d a ily m e d ic a tio n , K lin g h o ffe r's son-in- la w , Jerry A rb ittie r, said. to " O u r greatest concern about o u r fa th e r w as th a t because o f the in ­ cre d ib le a m o u n t o f s tre s s that the y w ere all u n d e r th at he w o u ld suffer a n o th e r s tro k e ," Ilsa had said The K lin g h o ffe rs w ere am ong 5 11 people, in c lu d in g abo ut a dozen A m e rica n s, taken hostage w hen ter ro ris ts c la im in g to be from the Pales­ tin e L ib e ra tio n F ro n t to ok co n tro l of the vessel M o n d a y n ig h t. A rb ittie r said the K lin g h o ffe rs w ere p art o f a g ro u p o f 10 people, m ost fro m New- Jersey, tra v e lin g on a 16-day cruise together. Steven Modes o f 1 in c ro ft, N.J., w hose m o th e r, M ild re d Fiodes, 64, was tra v e lin g w ith the K lin g h o ffe rs and was also aboard the ship, said the g ro u p met six years ago at a c o n ­ d o m in iu m com plex in I o ng Branch, N’ .J , w here the K lin g h o ffe rs have a su m m e r home. the A fte r h e a rin g re p o rt o f K lin g h o ffe r's d e a th, M odes' w ife , A rd ith , said, " H e w a s such an in n o ­ cent v ic tim . It was a p a th e tic th in g and a cruel th in g fo r them to do th a t," M rs. H od e s said. Robert K a n to r o f Fong Branch said he had spoken bv telephone w ith his parents, N e il and June K a n to r o f M e tu ch e n ., N J , w h o w ere part o f the g ro u p and a p p a r­ e n tly una w are o f K lin g h o ffe r's death. The grass is g reen er ... Assoc ited Press A sheep stretches the adage that • side W ednesday in Arunde Marne other side ot ‘tie barnyard fence s i ways greener on the other ooked more appetizing on the New regulations will lower prices for natural gas Associated Pres W A S H IN G I O N G ovvr n? gula to " d e d ii led on W edni cheap, price-ci >ntrolled n a ti fo r res id e n tia l and sm all bu at pot ential si ild Mos t analv^ s ag re e d th a t sp u rru m actio rates i h. I he pr< try and local u tilitie s w h o d is trib u te it to resi­ d e n tia l and com m ercial users. Instead th e lo i.il d is trib u to r could Mart Ouvine lo n g -te rm su p p lie s ot gas d ire c tly to mi p ro d u ce r^ b ypassing the p ip e lin e s as end i i-nii > m the tran sactio ns but re iv in g on them to tra n s p o rt the ga" fo r a fee. P ip e lin e " w o u ld give u p th e ir tra d itio n a l r< «K a s w holesalers and become n on -g as-o w n- in g tra n "p o rte rs s im ila r to the c a rrie r" sta- t ii" o f railro a d s and barge and tru c k in g c o m ­ panies. M i gas s u p p ly , (. on sum ers for the firs t tim e w ill be able to p w ound fo r the cheapest and most re li- said R aym on d O 'C o n n o r, In tu rn , pro - d nrm un o f the co m m issio n 1 cers to r tin first tim e w ill gam access to pip* Tm capacity to m a rke t th e ir supplies d i- ■ . ■ . to consum e rs and n e w m a rk e ts ." i he i o m m issio n said a "s u b s ta n tia l nu m b e r m m e n ts, m o tio n s and p e titio n s ” from in- d u "tn a l users p ip e lin e com panies and na tu - - v er tin past three m o n th s p ro m p te d them ‘ dela v the m ost co n tro v e rsia l measure a n e w gas b illin g scheme — u n til at least July. C o m m iss io n e r C harles Stalon, the ch ie f a r­ ch itect o f the p ro p o se d "b lo c k b illin g ," re lu c­ ta n tly agreed there w ere still several q u e stio n s ne e d in g answ ers. that P ip elin es c u rre n tly average th e ir purchases o f cheap and h ig h -p ric e d gas s u p p lie s in to o ne b ill Fhe co m m issio n proposal delaved W e dn e sda y w o u ld have ended th a t practice. In ste ad , gas w o u ld be d iv id e d in to tw o blocks. So-called o ld gas from w e lls d rille d p rio r to 1978 and still u n d e r federal p rice ce il­ ings w o u ld have been designated p rim a rily fo r re s id e n tia l and com m ercial custom ers. " N e w " gas d rille d since 1978 — and averag­ in g d o u b le the price o f old gas — w o u ld have gone p rim a rily to in d u s try , w h ic h n o w co n ­ sum es about 40 perce n t o f the n a tio n 's sup- p ly . The dela y was im m e d ia te ly hailed bv n a tu ­ ral gas p roducers, w h o stood to lose betw een S4 b illio n and $5 b illio n in annual revenues, and attacked bv co nsum e r g ro up s on the o p ­ posite side. N icholas Bush, p re sid e n t o f the gas p ro ­ d u cer in d u s try 's N a tu ra l Gas S u p p ly Associa­ tio n , said the b lo c k -b illin g plan proposed las t M a y "h e ld false p ro m ise o f co n su m e r bene­ f it . " H o w e v e r, Ed R othschild o f t h e liberal C iti zen-Labor E nergy C o a litio n , said m i l l i o n s ot fam ilies w h o heat th e ir h o m e s w i t h gas, p r i­ m a rily in the N o rth e a s t and M id d le W est, have stood to gain a re d u c tio n o f S75 a year in th e ir b ills from the b illin g p roposal 'T h e b o tto m line is th a t re sid e n tia l con­ sum ers w ill get no im m e d ia te b e n e fit," R o th ­ schild said. "P rices o f gas w ill not go d o w n s u b sta n tia lly because the com m ission h as ca­ p itu la te d to p o litic a l pressure fro m m ajor o il com panies and the inte rstate p ip e lin e s ." Some g a s -d is trib u tin g u tilitie s servin g p r i­ m a rily re side ntial custom ers disagreed "T h e b ills we sent out a m o n th ago alreadv reflect a bout a 5 percent decrease from a year ago just because o f the im pact th at the p ro ­ posal has had on p ro d u c e rs ," said Craig M a tth e w s, a vice presid e n t tor B roo klyn U n ­ ion Gas Co. Puerto Rico considering mass grave in valley floor w h e re a M o n dav n d s lid c trig g e re d bv a 400 • luge d e s tro y e d / C olo n said, "T h i" is agedv ever to h it o u r is- h is to rv It fill" me w ith •vernor and as a Ponce - K’t "* ue team " w o rk in g a ro u n d the re p o rte d fin d in g th ree m ore th i M am eyes m u d : ig h t. b rin g in g the u n o fti- ’•>d’t " u n d e r • -T " • \ U!i U " m t'r r iM A tie n /a u n t there to 2s . • " d e p u t} m a yo r, A n g e l estim ated as »• bodies are still bu ried i M u • v* - But Lu is A rm s tro n g , a le p u f. d is tric t attornev in charge o f •i m p orarv m orgue at the site, "aid n te rv ie w s w ith relatives and ne igh- >rs k J h im to believe up to 100 are till m in in g C *'I M o re n o "aid fo u r U.S. A rm v <>rp" o f Engineers d e m o litio n ex­ erts w ith so u n d in g d e v ic e s a n d six logs tra in e d to locate corpses w ere to Ponce on ‘l in g flo w n directly Ved nesdav fro m A n d re w s A ir orce Base in M a ry la n d to help ló ­ ate the bodies. Police p ro b in g the w a te rs u n d e r a Isabela, collapsed b rid g e at Santa abo u t 20 m iles east o f Ponce, re p o rt­ ed "ix a u to m o b ile s and 19 bodies have been p u lle d fro m the sw o llen Paso Seco R iver. E dgardo D elga do , the so uthern reg io n 's d is tric t a tto rn e v w h o su- p e m s e s id e n tific a tio n e ffo rts, said 64 bodies had been received at the in m o rg u e at Ponce, fro m M am eyes, Santa Isabela and o th e r flo o d e d areas on the so u th coast. the m edical center in c lu d in g v ic tim s D elgado said rescue w o rk e rs have spotted at least fo u r m ore bodies u n d e r the m u d and d e bris in v a ri­ ous locations, b rin g in g the k n o w n de a th to ll to 68. O n T uesday, F le rn an de z C olon three davs o f m o u rn in g declared and a n nounced a m u lti-m illio n -d o l- lar em ergency aid p lan. Ih e g o v e rn o r also said he had talked w ith W h ite F-louse o fficia ls about o b ta in in g technical he lp and federal aid th is U.S. com ­ fo r m o n w e a lth o f 5.2 m illio n people. Dapena urged P resident Reagan to declare Ponce a federal disaster ate de ' • m udslide s Ai rn*>re a as r*o ib b in g an», frie n d " filed p the 2=i h >dits j and debris Puerto Rico National Guardsmen carry a young child’s body Wednesday. , _ . Associated Press Thousands join nationwide peace prayers in South Africa Associated Press J O H A N N ESBL f« thousand s o f N ’u tl tende d prav t r -* r . the natior al fo r black" an>und th i w o rk in drov • s - ! em ine irt trv " ta \e d hom e fro m A fte r te lephoned I rib t h r e a t s , A n g lic a n B i s h o p D esm ond and about 100 o th e r w o rsh ip e rs abandon* d th e ir p ra v i ,r" b rie fh in a d o w n to w n Johannesburg cathedral one o f h u n d re d s ut church services conducted across the co u n try. W itnesses repo rted black vou ths attacked some w o rkers as th e \ re tu rn e d hom e to black to w n sh ip s, a lth o u g h o r g a n iz e r s said thev w ere not seeking a gent ral s tn k i Tow nships that havt been lu g h t u p in 14 m o n th s of b lo o d v n o tin g that left m ore than /5 0 people dead appeared re! itiv < l\ calm d u r- fo r in g tjie n a tio n w id e displax o f s u p p o r t p i aceful change in the n a tio n a l system o f in- s titu tio n a li/e d racial separation. Fhe p ra va w a v was arran ged last m o n th by about 4)*6 ch u rch leader-, fro m 48 C hristia n le n o m in a tio n s w h o laun ched a N a tio n a l Im - tia tiv i to r R e co ncilia tion . T u tu , the 1984 N o ­ bel Peace P ri/e w in n e r, the g ro u p to endorse a w e e klo n g b o yco tt o f w o rk the church to press g ro u p decided instead on a single dav o f p raver. fo r race re fo rm ", b u t in itia lly asked A n ti-a p a rth e id g r o u p s have called protest strikes in the past, and ab o u t 800,000 w orkers jo in e d a tw o -d a y "s ta v a w a v " last N o vem b e r th a t in w id e sp re a d violence and m ore than tw o dozen deaths. resulted T h i" tim e , u n io n s and a n ti-a p a rth e id o rg a n ­ iz a tio n " m ade it clear th e y opposed a fu ll- scale w o rk b o y c o tt. Instead, thi. endorsed a peaceful p ra y e r d a y, in part " to help rem ove ign ora nce o f eve nts in S outh A fric a and pre ­ pare peo ple fo r liv in g in a changed and to ta lly non -ra cia l la n d ." E m p lo ye rs ge ne ra lly gave w orke rs tim e o ff d u rin g the day to p ra v, o r a llo w e d em ployees to leave e arly to a tte n d the church services. The ch urch g ro u p called on people to jo in services and "accept th e ir c o m p lic ity in the a p a rth e id s yste m " and " t o re p e n t fo r the na­ tio n a l sin o f a p a rth e id ” in a v o lu n ta ry show o f s o lid a rity w ith v ic tim s o f race segregation. D e sp ite the absence o f a fo rm a l w o rk b o y­ co tt, m a n y tho usan ds o f blacks stayed hom e ra th e r than risk c o n fro n ta tio n s w ith ro v in g gangs tha t som etim es c o n fro n t w o rke rs re­ tu r n in g hom e on " s ta y a w a y " davs. Bus and tra in com panies reported the n u m ­ ber o f rid e rs was dowm by 40 percent in Johannesburg, 40 to 50 percent in D urban and sm a lle r percentages in o th e r cities. In S ow eto, the huge black to w n s h ip o u t­ side Johannesburg, a rm y, troops and police fire d tear gas to break u p c ro w d s o f youth$, w itnesses said, and a bout 30 v o u th s were ar­ rested fo r a lle g e d ly se ttin g u p b u rn in g b a rri­ cades o n a m ain road and s to n in g cars anti buses. A c ro w d o f a bout 70 y o u th s arm ed w ith rub b e r w h ip s and stones chased com m uters re tu rn in g h om e fro m w o rk . O n e m iddle-aged m an was cu t by a stroke fro m a w h ip , a re­ p o rte r w h o w itnessed the in c id e n t said. A n a rm y p a tro l dispersed the vo u th s. T u tu w as p ra y in g s ile n tlv w ith about 100 o th e r people at St. M a ry 's A n g lic a n Cathedral in d o w n to w n Johannesburg w h e n police o r­ dered the b u ild in g evacuated because o f a bom b resum ed after sn iffe r dogs fo u n d n o th in g and police de­ clared the th re a t a hoax. threa t. The prayers M o s t services a ro u n d the c o u n try w ere si­ le n t, w ith o u t speeches o r serm ons. From Texan nev\ ■ % • Murdoch announces 4th TV network plan LOS A N G E L E S M edia e n ­ in ;i tre p re n e u r R upert M in I term d r , n o unced plans Wed a n e w te levisio i n e tw o rk ,1 " part of a sw e e p in g re* re.im za tio n of h i" te le visio n and ft n s tu d io h o ld in g s t I here has been w idespead specu­ la tio n tor m o n th s that tin Austra lia n -b o rn M u rd o ch n c n an A m e r i­ can citizen based in \ e w Y ork, was seeking to b u ild a new netw >rk to be nam ed the 1 ox Televisión N e t­ w o rk tin M u rd o c h said I os Angeles s tu d io and the s i\ M etrom edia sta­ tio n s w o u ld be com bined un dei a I he new com new e n tity , Eon Inc pan v's o p e ra tin g groups w o u ld be 20th C e n tu ry Fox Film C o rp i o \ S tation G ro u p and F o \ I •. -It ci-io n N o details of th* new n e tw o rk w ere a n n o u n i ed o f B ut B arry DiUt” chairm an and ( Ini, c h ie f executive I >\ appeared to In -e m e ig im ; ■ d o m i­ n a n t role, as expected M u rd o c h 's id- n h fit d him as a n n o u n ce m e n t ch a irm a n and chie f e \e u tiv e o t EC I M o ld in g s in a d d itio n t ) F ox Film E le c tric ity flo w s at TM I for first tim e since 1979 FiARRISBL R< . Pa I In- u t 1 reactor at Fhree M ilt- |s| m l i t bed \ \ * im -d i 15 percent p in v i r and began generating -1. i tric ity tor the first tim e siiua m i dear fuel m elted in a IS?1? am id< n t , t adjacent U n it 2, the p la n t s O p t m t o said 1 he u n it's tu rb in e-generator w e n t " o n lin e ' at 4:i*2 a was m ., w h e n it connected to a re>: Iona I p o w e r g rid serving P ennsvh land m ia , M a r and N e w I erst . s lear ud G IT C orp A t th a t po in . U n it I w p ro ­ d u c in g enough pt . ver fo r 51 60,000 househo Is U n it 1 was r, -a years at dav, 6 w o rst com m ercial nuclear acciden and a nuclear chain reaction wa created that att. rm m Doctor concludes Hitler not insane or drug addict el last Th the nati \ u i used I ” his fin a l dav* C H IC A G O staggering \d o lf H itte r njeptions hu num bers of d ru g p ro b a bly was n e ith e r insane no p b v icaUy addicted s.-vs th i onl s u rv iv in g p h ysicia n w h o w as in th F uehrer's b u n k e r 'H itle r was not a d ru g addi. t n "ui< t • th i the strict senst term II D r. E rnst G u n th e r *x‘h e m k used m anv d rugs, but he never be came addicted to anv one . , But fv w as p s y c h o lo g ic a lly d e p e n d e n u p o n the idea . ? dr > - magi. . • • p .. . n< - f i ­ Schenck, v - 1, : the G erm an t' ■ • • son a I medica 41) years and h, - ler was n e ith • r p h \ sicaIIv det M e dicine i •• - s j d i m i , n ~ - d- , . . . • •?• . . . . \ t r. r j w : H itle r, but it c m g d u i ' M t i i th e r u n iq ue or siav e o f somt dies pression, an m h a m i-j disease and Strawberry Fields refuge dedicated in Central Park Sch» n - s ■ i< NEW Y O R K ¡h . • 1 \ \ . • ■ en *ded me; c. non t(-ok h i- i^ark was dedic S tra w b e m - Fields flo w e rin g t r e e s , o u tc ro p p in g s o, -¡gn* «I in g m o n u m e n t t The restor iti* r teardrop-shap< : i -• • is o u r wav o f *T ;» g - m a kin g it better w id o w , 5 oko t ’r * from the B eatles M arket in Brief . -• - • • . -it? • : -. * sh . . - . - th* - • • th. I G r . - - : - ■ r ' • ■ ■ >rn »w H i lu d t N Y S E . Issues Consolidated Trading W e d n e s d s a y , Oct. 9 Volume Shares 1 1 7 ,2 4 0 ,1 2 0 Issues Traded 1 ,9 8 6 Up 855 Unchanged 509 Down 62 2 N Y S E Index 1 0 5.5 4 S&P Comp 1 8 2 .5 2 Dow Jones Ind 1 ,3 2 6 .7 2 ♦ 0.35 + 1.23 + 0 .6 5 Site of cystic fibrosis gene approximated T h e Da il y T e x a n Permanent Staff :385 paqe Associated Press location of S A I I I A K I C II Y After years of searching, scientists have found the approximate the genetic defect underlying ( vstii h brosis, one of the most common and yet most mysterious genetic disor ders, researc hers reported W ednes­ day. Doctors have become inc reasingly adept at treating the obvious symp toms of cystic fibrosis, but without having any knowledge of what causes them, said I ap-Chee Isui of the Hospital for Su k C hildren in Id ronto, leader of the team that made the discovery. " W e have no idea of what the chemical defect d o e s , " h e said " W e can only look at the symptoms, and the symptoms uin be m any steps aw ay from the basic defec t " In a presentation at a meeting of the Am erican Society of Human Isui said the discovery Genetics, could lead to new treatments for the1 disease, which afflicts 30,000 Am eri cans. O n e m 20 ( aucasians carries one c opv of the ( vstu fibrosis gene; a person must inherit a copv of the gene from eac h c airier parent before the disease will appear. Cystic fibrosis prim arily affects the respiratory and digestive sys terns O f patients diagnosed in in­ fancy, about 30 percent live until their 20s if they are carefully treat­ ed Í he researc hers have found a seg ment of human genetic material, called a gene marker, that coinci­ dentally is carried bv 85 percent of all people w ho carry the cystic fibro sis gene. e x ist Standard for techniques making artific tal gene probes, which are random pieces of genetic materi­ al that c an mate h up with and point out a marker Probes can be used in trial-and-error te s ts with genetic material from people suffering a va­ ríete’ of genetic diseases to see if a marker and a suspect gene occur to­ gether to any significant degree. CLASSES B EG INN IN G NOW INTENSIVE ENGLISH ANGLAIS IN TEN SIF INGLES INTENSIVO • N IN E LEVEL C O M PREH EN SIVE COURSE • SM ALL CLASSES, IN D IV ID U A L ATTENTION • NEW LEVEL EVERY 4 W EEKS • A U TH O RIZED UNDER FEDERAL LAW TO ENROLL N O N -IM M IG RA N T A LIEN STUDENTS (1-20 FORM) D U R H A M -N IXO N -C LA Y COLLEGE 119 W . 8th a t C o lo r a d o 478-1602 $15®° O F F with coupon On Prescription Eyewear Alpha Omega Optical 23rd & Rio Grande One hour service on most single vision eyeglass prescriptions and soft contact lenses 451-2020 Examinations by appointment Offer Expires 10/31/85 VUARNET. vWSy Ray Ban Sunglasses Issue Staff Display Advertising The Da#y Texan S u b s c rip tio n Rates 474- 1700 SOCI ETY SPECIAL “BULLETIN” t o COLLEGE GRADUATES YO U ARE PRE-APPROVED TO LEASE AN Y G E N E R A l M O TO RS CAR OR TRUCK THRO UGH G.M.A.C IF THE F O L L O W IN G C O N D IT IO N S APPLY TO YO U 1 GRADUATE SCHOOL OP UNIVERSITY GRADUATE 2 w il l GRADUATE WITHIN SIX (6) MONTHS 3. GRADUATED WITHIN lAST "W E. YE ’ 2, MO NTHS 4 HAVE A JO B OR A VEP;E,ABlE JO B COMMVx/E%~ 5 N O RECORD OF BAD OR UNSATiSFACTORv CRED T 6 D O W N PAYMENT CONSISTS OF SECUR Tv DEPOSIT EQ ü a . TQ TWO PAYMENTS, ROUNDED TO NEAREST $25 0C 7 F’RST PAYMENT DUE NINETY 9C DAYS A r_rER CON~RACT DA'E 8 TRADE-INS ACCEPTED 9 l e a s i n g Fi n a n c i n g r a ' e a t 2 - CALL US FOR DETAILS COVERT BUICK LEASING 500 W EST 5th • 476-4761 Ask for Rick Sprague in C o v e d Show room < 6 WE HAVE NEW IDEAS ABOUT DANCE AND FITNESS... I he researchers do not yet know where* on the* 23 pairs of human < hromosomes this gene marker re sides, but determ ining that is now a straightforward task, ism said I he researchers will then use a variety of standard genetic engi­ neering techniques to zero in on the cystic fibrosis gene itself, he* said. I he fact that ^ie cvstic fibrosis gene and the marker are inherited together in 85 percent of cases means they are located close togeth er on the* same c hromosome Isui said that finding the gene could still require several years of work. ( )nct* the gene is found, however, researchers might find that all of the* symptoms of < vstic fibrosis are caused by a deficiency in a single c hemical I hey already know that only one gent* is involved If they find that the* gene is failing to provide an essential chemical, they might be* able to supply that chemical and thus cure the disease, Isui said I hr discovery would also allow development of a test to identit. cystic fibrosis ( arriers I sui has collec ted genetic samples from a number of families with cvs tic fibrosis and, w ith his collaborator M anuel Buchwald, has been search mg for three years for a gene probe that would find a marker close to the cystic fibrosis gene New A s SO f i E nt*>r E n te r C o p i n g w i t h u f e s e v e r y - PAY P R O B L E M S 7WRSPAYS AT H O O r f TODAY'S TOPIC BUILDING INTIMACY IN RELATIONSHIPS Texas Union Eastwoods Room, 12-1:30 S ponsored b y Counseling, Learning a n d Career Services i s s a R ad io Fiesta presents SUPER SHOOTOUT OF ’85 LA MAFIA MAZZ Saturday, October 12, 1985 Palm er Auditorium $10.00 pre-sale KYLE Kyle G roceries J TICKET LOCATIONS SAN MARCOS Cuevas Produce Sunset Printing Rudy's Hair Design 8 to 1 Austin. Texas $12 00 at the door AUSTIN M ald o n a d o s Record Shop GET CRAZY’ TIM JONES Wed Student Discount 2 for 1 Also featuring ERIC GERARD MARK WILKS Showtimes Th 9 00 F, S 8 30, 11 00 Call for Reservations 473-2300 1415 Lavaca Shrimp Earrings and other Fine Jewelry at the best prices in Texas! 14kt Gold Small Medium Large $25.00 $30.00 $42.50 Sterling Silver Large $10.00 L a rg e sh rim p e a rrin g s show n in H ull \i: e H I M ItW ILA SV I l>> 313 South Congress • 441-9246 10-6 M o n das-Saturdav M asterCard • Visa * American Express l.avaw at for Christmas TONIGHT Chicano N ight Domestic Pitchers $2.95 Friday Riders in the Sky opening: The Lounge Lizards Saturday True Believers opening: Evan Johns A The H Bombs Spokesmanship counseling and training for all types of vocal presentations... To give you... e Release of the full voice • Clarity of speech sounds • Correct breathing to im­ prove vocal quality and eliminate stage fright • Dynamic and creative delivery • Ease in conversation • Projection of ideas e Performances video taped and recorded Call 473-8900 for FREE voice analysis. No obligation. JO f ANN WHITMIRE WATSON, Director Former Professor Radio and Television Broadcasting Umver sity of Texas Ground Floor, Cambridge Tower 1801 Lavaca at MLK, Suite 114 CDm GO PROFESSIONALLY G e n e ra l B o o k s • S e c o n d L e v e l ■ U N IV ER SITY CO-OP Phone 476-7211 2246 Guadalupe Free Parking 23rd A San Antonio w S i Purchase MasterCard 1-4891 TORTIRCIZE ROCKJAZZ BALLET Page 4 The Daily Texan Thursday. October 10. 1985 Opimons expressed in The DeRy Texan are those of the editor or the writer of the article and are not necessarily those of the University administration the Board of Regents or the Texas Student Publications Board of Operating Trustees 'YVHEWf THAT WAS CLOSE!' Regents treating divestment pressure too casually Th s the gesture too seriously, since none of the regents have given any indication they're willing ter reconsider the divestment is­ sue. the I I System Board of Regents will hear i ■ 1 m inute presentation from the Steve Biko Committee why the I T System should divest t in holdings in companies that do business with South once again noon Afrit ,i •> thing again. the regents will smile politely, act like ’n o n.ain 'feeing, and maybe even nod and say M mm-hmm" nght places And that will be it. Until the next presenta- f course at which time the regents will do the same A r e n t vou getting a little bit tired of this routine? Aren't the g« nts getting tired of it1 And vet the cycle continues, because t h e r e g e n t s are doing is trying different ways to rid them ­ e s of the pressu re to divest. h nt groups at the University have been pushing for di- " re since 1978 At f i r s t , the regents tried ignoring the I hat d id n 't work So last December, thev took up the ■ ifssure ' -tie at a board meeting. Surprise — they decided not to divest When asked w hy they made that decision, the regents cited reasons such as reluctance to use the University's economic and i l i lout to change a foreign country's wavs. In other "d s reasons that they could have cited just as easily without ■ iisvussing the issue at all. 1 hi time a ro un d, the regents aren't actually scheduled to o n ider the divestiture issue. They're just scheduled to listen ti the presentation on divestiture, then move on to other items. lo be tan. the regents did change the agenda to allow 30 m n u v s for the presentation instead of the original 15 minutes. 1 hat ma\ show some interest on their part. But it's hard to take Meanwhile, the situation in South Africa isn't getting any better The new s may not be making the front pages in the United States any more, but the violence continues. You've heard the statistics. Since Sept. 3, 1984, more than 750 blacks have died, most killed bv the South African police or the army. As the violence continues, and as apartheid continues, peo­ ple in the United States naturally start questioning w hether they w ant to have anything to do with South Africa. Columbia University became the latest university to divest Monday, when it announ ced it will sell its $39 million worth of South African stock bv October 1987. O n W ednesday, a coalition of groups at UT Arlington, the site where the regents will be meeting Thursday, sponsored an anti-apartheid rally that drew more than 4Ó0 people. There will be another rally on the UT Arlington campus Thursday, with a genuine legislator — state Rep. A1 Edwards, D-Houston — speaking about HB 47, a bill he's sponsoring that w ould require all state-sponsored colleges and universities to divest. The point is, a lot of people are upset that the UT System still has $770 million at stake in South Africa. The regents are treating the pressure like it's only being caused by a few troublemakers At best, in the words of Board Chairman Jess Hay, the regents are willing to keep up a "continuing dia­ logue." H ow long can this go on? — Ddvid Nather Roe v. Wade deserves another look The S uprem e Court is back in ses­ BRAD UPSHAW T E X A N COLUMNIST sion an d one item on its agenda h.w the National Organization for V\ men in an u proar abortion. i he Justice D epartm ent has asked the t to review the Roe v. Wade decision " that effectively legalized abortion, ■’lie Id Roe v W ade be overturned? Pas- run high on both highly polarized side" of the abortion question, a nd those "ides have focused on this one court ! ! > ’ to the exclusion of virtually all else. Many see Roe v. Wade as some kind of a decision chipped in ".i -ed legal cow -t >nt above all others a decision so |ust i i J "O explicit as to be absolute. There is h legal nirvana Apply this line of • '"trning to other Suprem e Court cases: "V \ 1 erguson, a decision legitimizing eparate but equal" doctrine, might •■H >• from segregation of blacks allow • ■ U ' f " I V d Siott v Sandford, a opinion or g black" a" I' a subordinate and r, I i"" of beings would remain the - u ■ • Hu fudicial review and the m ?ifn of 1 ni art intrinsic elements of \merican svstem of justice. The ques- \re u nb o rn children today's subor- o and interior class of beings?" is a land legitimate one. action leading to the landm ark deci­ sion concerned a Texas statute that made p un uring an abortion a crime except "by ii al advice for the purpose of saving n Justice Harry A. lift of the m other tip the court, cited f n um. writing for nie< reasons commonly advanced to ex- p! n the enactm ent and continuance of nal abortion laws. The first was de- ti discourage illicit sexual conduct." i inn!ted 1 y such i desire has no place in law: consequently, Texas did not as- nat a rgum e n t as justification. The i reason cited is that abortions were hazardous to the would-be mother's m all stages of pregnancy; this is no i‘ meet the case as abortion in early preg- Don't specify gay rights Student Senate approves gay " resolution Texan, Tuesday. • itrick ■ . wu" there a need for thi" action? I t’1 agree with Sen" Craig Albert and their statement that listing ■ ntation would be redundant, *ne tact that a general statement ■ the original statement of equality tut» covers all students. Another concern 1 have is why the sen- ate voted dow n Acott Scarborough's pro- . osed am endm ent that, although passing *h» resolution, the Senate would not en- "» homosexuality It seems to me that a m e n d m e n t proposed 1 have "atisfied both "ides of the ar- th " ■iH nt Apparently I was wrong ■ tmal peevt is against the survey ted by the Subcommittee on Lesbi- d Cav Issues The survey, I think, " ■- ■ Uh> broad The question regarding : ruination against gays did not sav if - d "Crimination i" from institutions or n hviduaJs on c a m p u s or both Also, I i ust agree with Patrick " statement that rd-core facts and not figure" were need- thi argum ents produced bv Sub- ’ ^ avid R u i/'s aggravated ro bbery tri al, b ut threatened to cite Looney w ith c o n te m p t o f c o u rt fo r repeated­ ly b a d g e rin g a w itness R uiz, a co n tro ve rsial p riso n re­ form a ctivist, is charged w ith aggra­ vated ro bb ery and aggravated sexu­ al assault in a Sept. 15, 1984, attack at a N o rth A u s tin a p artm e nt. R uiz, his n e p h e w John Ruiz and .m o th e r m an, jo e P icado, a lleged ly burst in to the a p a rtm e n t and robbed and beat the fo u r occupants. The fem ale v ic tim accused Ruiz and f ’i- ia c io o f rape. Picacio was fo u n d shot to death in southeast T ra vis C o u n ty soon after the bre ak-in . L o o n e y's request fo r a m istria l came d u rin g his cross-exam ination o f a rape and robbery v ic tim . The w o m a n , w h o has id e n tifie d Ruiz as one o f her assailants in the attack, te stifie d she had not noticed any p a rtic u la r m arks on R uiz's hands d u rin g the robbery. W hen L o o n e y asked Ruiz to tattooed stand and d is p la y his hands, prosecu tors objected, saying the action c o n s titu te d u n fa ir te sti­ m o n y fro m the d e fe n d a n t A ssistan t D is tric t A tto rn e y Brian B ishop said "a ta tto o is u n iq u e ," h i1 cause it could have been a p p lie d at an y tim e, and ju ro rs had no w av o f k n o w in g if Ruiz had the tattoo s at the tim e of the rob bery Prosecutors also w o u ld not be able to respond o r fu rth e r questio n R u i/ about the tattoos because he was not on the w itn e ss stand, B ish ­ o p said. C rim in a ! defe n d a n ts are n ot re ­ qu ire d to te stify at th e ir o w n trials Jurors are they cannot in stru cte d con sid er a d e fe n d a n t g u ilty because* he chooses n o t to te stify Loo ney requested a m istria l, say­ in g B ishop tain te d the |u ry by im p ly in g R uiz s h o u ld testify fore c o u rt the " 1 h* p ro se c u tio n arose and be th* ju ry , com m e nte d w h e re th e ju ry < o u ld hear it that th e o n ly w av D avid Ruiz to co u ld p ro ve the tattoo s on the b,i< k of his rig h t and le ft hands were* on there* Sept 15" was to te stify, I oo n e y said "S uch is te llin g the ju re that Mr I no R uiz needs to take tit* dan d, n e y said th* tree and there* isn 't any wav to tacT it back together "They've* cut d o w n C ooke said he w o u ld stu d y th* m is tria l m o tio n and nil* on it later At Laves Its Class UTclass rings at low [trices *225.1)0 ( «(Hi ■ IN*» we II y ■ you a free re tu rn tr ip in k e t base p n ce I OK Y e lk m (*»kJ • \ I H ^ HAII RKN Hop HtH Engraved mum- t H t t .•I loose d ia m o n d s at spevuil stu de nt dis< oi zSCy y m z , a \ Pecan Street T ra d itio n S irv e 19*# 2 1 M S ixth Street A u s tin 4 'H 14#»* Hum* r select k tod It 06 ( redit v epted TOOTHACHE? 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W arner Bros DON’T “PASS” UP THESE SAVINGS! KOOL 0 THE GANG EMERGENCY I I k A r i m ret m u j I ic ’iiw o \ I 8 3 a t L o o n 3f 8 ) CASSETTE OR ALBUM Com pact Disc availability subject to manufacturers’ supply. Pricing good through October 23,1985. including: What About Love including: Emergency Capitol Columbia Delite THESE THREE TITU S $7?9 Mm Cassette or Album STEVIE W O NDE R In S q u a re C ircle C H A L L S OA TES LIV E A T T H E A P O L LO including The Temptations Medley R C A i Rffir INVASION Of YOUR PRIVACY H S A L E ■ i j r p p * 1 2 ” ■ ■ S ■ In v a s io n of Y o u r P r iv a c y Intludmq L a y It D o w n — Atlantic Tamla B A K G J E E E C ■ B L f T Z ' l S p e c ia l S e le c tio n o f L P 's . $19J™ up $299 and up S p e c ia l S ele c tio n o f Cassettes. A&M Columbia EMI America G re a t V a rie ty - - Today's Top Artists! HUR R Y,..Q uantities A re Lim ited! YOU “CALL THE PLAY” WITH BASF VIDEOCASSETTES! Standard Chrome 4-Pack T-120/L-750 Reg. *27.96 SALE 519 " Single Tape, Reg. *6.99 SALE $ 0 9 9& each High Grade Chrome 4-Pack T-120/L-750 Reg. *31.96 SALE 99 s2 4 Single Tape, Reg. *7.99 SALE $ A " each O Hi-Fi High Grade 4-Pack T-120 Only Reg. *39.96 SALE 99 Single Tape, Reg. *9.99 SALE $899 each Barton Creek Square: 327-4035 Movie Dept./Movies for Sale or Rent ) M I ( ) ( ) I l i e I \ ) l o ^ l i o p & A u s t i n A c l a s s i c c o m b i n a t i o n . The! P 111m K > in \ n s t Austin's Fsvsrite Pface 7s Kies* Up BACK TO SCHOOL BONUS COUPON ONE FREE WASHER LOAD Good on top-loading washers only (Just present this coupon to the attendant on duty.) Offer expires 12 31 85 AÜONÍW1 KwikWash COIN-OPERATED DRY CLEANING 42 convenient locations, all over Austin. Check for the location nearest you. By LISA GAUMNITZ Daily Texan Staff Steve Biko Committee members braved intermittent rain W ed n es­ day to carry their message — . "d ivest n o w " — to students d ur­ ing a noon rally on the steps of the W est Mall. Darrick Eugene, Steve Biko Com m ittee president, told 130 to 200 listeners that the rally sends a message to the System Board of Regents that students overw helm ­ ingly support divestiture of Sys­ tem funds in South Africa. "H e e d the call of the world and d ivest," Eugene said. " W e can no longer contribute to the support of a government that oppresses 75 percent of its people." Eugene said he will present this message Thursday afternoon at the regents' meeting in Arlington. Regents granted the Biko C om ­ mittee 30 minutes to argue for divestm ent of the System 's $716.4 million invested in U .S. com pa­ nies in South Africa. Efforts in past years by student groups to bring about divestment of System holdings in South A fri­ ca have failed. Last year, the Black Student Alliance was granted time to speak for divestiture at the regent subcommittee meeting, but the Regents rejected divestiture in December. Barron W allace, B S A vice presi­ dent, told students, "La s t Decem­ ber, Chancellor Hans M ark said if the situation worsens in South A f­ rica, we will reconsider our deci­ sion. "Y o u tell me if 600 dead since June is not a worsening situa­ tion ," he said told W allace also students, "Y o u can either stand with us, or stand with people Jerry Falw ell, or vou can stand on the like Biko group to see Regents today Page 6/The Daily Texan/Thursday. October 10, 1985 UTPD to answer questions concerning authority, racism By JOHN WICKSON Daily Texan Staff A U niversity police officer will field questions Thursday from stu­ dents groups to educate students about the U T Police Department's authority and to answer questions on racism at the University. M ark Boyden, Off-Campus Stu­ dents' Association president, said W ednesday that representatives of two campus organizations and an O m budsm an's Office representative will form a panel to question U T po­ lice Sgt. W illiam Van H orn, "trying to clear up what U T P D can and can­ not do with respect to students." The panel will be composed of representatives from the Om buds­ man's Office, A X L E — Association of College Students for a Unified Left — and the Steve Biko Com m it­ tee and will meet at 8 p.m. in the Texas Union Quadrangle Room, Boyden said. The Off-Campus Students' Asso­ ciation will not participate in the session but is acting as a non-parti­ san organizer, Boyden said. Boyden said the Ombudsman's office was chosen to represent U I student-related problems with the U TPD . The Steve Biko Committee and A X L E were chosen because they are "progressive groups to get things going," he said. Bovden said the meeting would begin with about 30 minutes of questions from the panel members, followed by an opportunity for questions from the student audi­ ence. "It's a perfect opportunity if you the have any questions about U T P D ," Boyden said. Darrick Eugene, Steve Biko Com ­ mittee chairman, said his group was eager to participate. Eugene said he was concerned about racism in the U T PD . " In m y opinion the entire role of the University of Texas police is a racist one by definition," Eugene said. "T h is is not an attack on the individual police or the University police. I say that because their role is to observe and monitor suspi­ cious individuals on cam pus." Eugene said because of the small number of blacks on campus, black U niversity students frequently are objects of police suspicion. M arc Salomon, A X L E member, said his organization also is con­ cerned about U T police racism. "W e 'r e trying to look into a few of the racist aspects of the police," he said. Salomon said A X L E would seek input from the police "to hear their side of the story." Lauren Sandler, assistant om­ budsman, said her office is trying to formulate questions for the session and is seeking suggestions from U niversity students. Kathy Gilbert/Daily Texan Staff Department seeks cure for overcrowding Senior Joscelyn Waller, left, and sophomores Karen Armstead and Sonji Herron ignore the rain and demonstrate for divestiture in a West Mall rally Wednesday at noon. By RICK RUTLEDGE Daily Texan Staff side of Ronald Reagan and con­ structive engagem ent." W allace said Biko Committee members speaking before the Re­ gents go with "hopes high that thev (regents) w ill change posi­ tions on divestm ent." Wallace said the regents w ill change their minds "n o t because we go before them asking to do so, but they w ill change because they have a moral imperative to change posi­ tions." Eugene said he, W allace, for­ mer Students' Association Presi­ dent M itch Kreindler and John W ile y Price, a Dallas County Commissioner, will speak at the meeting. Professor John W arfield, U T Afro-American Studies chair­ man, also may speak, Eugene said. A t the UT-Arlington campus, more than 400 students staged a rally at noon W ednesday spon­ sored by the South Africa Action Group. The growing Department of Eco­ nomics hopes to avoid overcrow d­ ing by gradually increasing the number of faculty, making better use of the large-class format and moving offices into the renovated Petroleum Engineering Building, c h a irm a n V in c e G e ra c i said W ednesday. Office of Institutional Studies data show the Economics Depart­ ment has the second highest stu- dent-to-faculty ratio of the 16 Col­ lege of Liberal Arts departments. The College of Liberal Arts has the highest student-to-faculty ratio of all U niversity colleges. "It's quite clear from the data we're stretched," Geraci said. Forest H ill, professor of econom­ ics and ch ie f u n d erg ra d u ate adviser, said the number of eco­ nomics majors at the University has doubled in the last three years. As a result, classes — especially macroe­ conomics and microeconomics — have been overcrowded. "T h e department took in huge numbers of students to accommo­ date overcrowding (this fall)," Hill said. Geraci said crowded classes are to caused by the large number of stu­ dents required take macroe­ conomics and microeconomics, a surge in the number of entering freshmen, higher engineering and business school G P A requirements, and more interest in economics. Despite the state's recent budget crunch, the department still hired four faculty members this year, Geraci said. " W e must be one of the few departments in the college who got new faculty positions. " W e have first-rate mainstream people. I'm not inter­ ested in a monolithic departm ent." to recruit $6 PER HR. + SALARY-EVENINGS/WEEKENDS APPLY 4 :3 0 -6 :3 0 PM M O N-FRI T ela-S aver Services, Inc. Doble Center, G u a da lu p e St. Entrance 2nd floo r, Suite 24 469-5621 50 Immediate Telemarketing Positions Walking distance from campus For ambitious individuals with good Communication skills. Free Parking Available ADD CLASS TO YOUR CLASSES WITH EUROPEAN SKIN CARE Cost-free skin analysis * T reatm en ts for oilv and problem skin Deep pore cleaning * Eyebrow shaping * Lash and brow tinting European manicures, Pedicures * H air removal (leg, body bikini wax) Bod wax) Bodv massages. HAUNA EUROPEAN SKIN CARE 5401 t lay Avenue • Austin • (512i 4Aj $500 ?9 Vears Exper once- W a’ saw.. Par s, V ^ n ^ a N ew Yo/> Texa a i s u n JD( r is is RF.GNANCY N T HR Free Pregnancy Testing Results While You Wait • Caring Confidential Counseling • On UT Shuttle and City Bus Routes • Near Seton Hospital 24 Hour Hotline 454-2622 3810 Medical Parkway/Suite 203 GOING Book Your Ski Trip Now! To design and develop today's most technologically advanced defense products, General Dynamics requires the talents of many highly motivated Engineering and Scientific graduates. This year, nearly half of our 1,500 technical hires will be in Electrical/Electronic Engineering and Computer Science — goal-oriented, high- performance students who will graduate in the top half of their classes. If you are one of these top performers, explore the wide range of opportunities available in the following technologies: Aeronautics, Advanced Signal Processing, Radar Systems, Embedded Software, Lasers and Electro-optics, Composite Structures, VLSI, Non-linear Structural Analysis, Robotics and CAD/CAM. At General Dynamics, you will work with our innovative professionals in applying these technologies toward a wide variety of aerospace, computer systems, electronics, shipbuilding and military land vehicle programs. Plus, you can stay current in your field and make the most of your career through our corporate wide training and lifelong education programs. Don't settle for less than state of the art in your career. See your Placement Office for a campus interview with General Dynamics. 469-5656 DOBIE MALL The Ski Specialists OUR CHEF ISA RFAJ. .CUT UR ■ A Ur A r l) ' TZ3:l i . . / :v . . / { 7 X .-A r 'Sf'ítt; <= -N - ' A 1 * - I l. i ll I In I m i <>l i-.n m ii .ii 11 ik \ < i Sn-.ik H ou se is i he ( u lin .n \ 111 - |l 11 tv's I lf W ill! I. i l l ' l l 11(1 ( 111 I li. 11II , in i ii s u l i i l c w in f i t ji> ' I o b M c i. S n -.ik. S lu im p n i ( I in k i n p r e p a r e d hi o u t u n m is t a k a b le six tv I I I II (1.1// I f W ill M II It Ills .11 I l i ­ TOKYO STEAK HOUSE t . ' i l i ' h n U r s i UIm I 11.11>|>v H u m A X . iilh t t e s l H ills ( r m n I r 'II M - t 1 p i ii c i l l inks ( t i i- . H I J 5 6,079 students, facu lty a n d staff re ad The Daily Texan a t least once a w e e k . 39,2 6 8 re ad the Texan every day. S O U C C f U N IV tllS IT Y 0 7 T f XA S C O I L I G I N t W S A A W * STUDY * H O f N A S S O C IA T IS D A M A S A P f 9 M AWESOME t " — a A Q U A R IU M DEALS) HAIR LOSS HRT & Scalp Clink* call 4 7 7 -1 4 9 2 7 th Y M r In T e a m •Hn Io t a (W Oaf w nyj Mom «Ton MORE THAN 10% OF ALL AUSTIN GROCERY PURCHASES LAS1 YEAR w ere m ade by students, faculty and staff of the Univer s i t y of Texas. O U R f f U N IV E R S ITY OF TEXAS COLLEGE NEWSPAPER STUDT S f L D fN ASSOCIATES D ALLAS A P t f t 1RS4 S Ai FS A N D M A R K E T IN G M A N A G E M E N T SURVEY O 'B U Y I N G ROWER JU LY 1 9 M Texas Union board wants new east campus building By MARK HORVIT Daily Texan Staff C re a tin g a second lexas U nion B u ild in g on the east side o f cam pus is the Texas U n ion Board of D ire c­ tors' n u m b e r one goal, the board chairm an said W ednesday. M ike M ea d ow s, board chairm an, m e t W e d n e s d a y w ith R onald B row n, UT vice p re sid e n t fo r s tu ­ dent affairs, to discuss creation o f a "Texas U n io n East M e ad o w s said B row n to ld him the U n iv e rs ity a d m in is tra tio n p ro b ­ ably w o u ld not stand in the w av of the p ro je ct, b u t the U n iv e rs ity w ill not be able to p ro vid e anv fu n d in g . A lth o u g h plans for a second u n ­ ion b u ild in g are ten tative, M eadow s s a id the p roject's chances are good. W h o is g o in g to be against a b u ild ­ ing to serve the studen ts? " he said. Frank B artow , U n io n d irector, said "a tre m e n d o u s need” exists for * • D C ., S. 8 • - « h ® » - O • *" * »• p o a • ft •« f t « t T«, . » m C c - ^ • • o o n A r t * mr>d t h « C t y p f A u t t l n B 1 4 W . 4 t h B t r » # t CALL 471-5244 TO PLACE A CLASSIFIED AD SERVING THE UT COMMUNITY WITH Vote and you could win $1,500. Mark your ballot for election of credit union officers and you w ill have a chance to win one of five $1,000 certificates which w ill be drawn at the Annual Membership Meet­ ing on October 28. If you are present at the drawing you could win an additional $500 in cash. Ballots w ill be m ailed soon and must be returned by October 23. • Friendly Service* «Expert Staff • • Overnight B/W A Color Processing • • Custom Enlargements • • One Hour E-6 Slide Processing • Custom Photographic Labs At the comer o f MIX A Nueces-474-1177 Open M onday-Friday, 9 -4 ; Thursday, 9 - 7 x ____________/ __________ / x University Federal Credit Union 46th and G u ad alup e * 467-8 0 8 0 Insured b v / NCUA US OSAS In H ancock Center n e x t to Sears. 4 5 3 - 0 3 7 9 O pen Monday-Friday 11 to 11. W e e k e n d s 10 to 1 1 ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ J e a r n i n g S k il l s ( f n t e r \ / T Bevo Gets Spur Time Get to know us for 50% off* Thursdays & Sundays Delicious Food, Irresistible Price. Q u e s o F la m ea d o • Crab N a c h o s • Taquitos • S iz z lin g C h ick en & B e e f Fajitas • E n ch ila d a s E s p e c ia le s • C hile R e lle n o • Cabrito • C h im ic h a n g a s • And m o r e G e ttin g h u n g rv ' T h e n c o m e t o Las ( a v is fo r th e best in M e x ic a n fo o d A n d d in e h a lf th e re g u la r p ric e “ o n H i irs d .iy s fr o m i u n t il c lo s in g S u n d a y p r i c e s a r e 5 0 % o f f a ll d a y .* ( o m e t r \ o u r d e lic io u s h re a k fa s r d is h e s as M iga s, H u e v o s R a n c h e ro s H u t >s Yu c a t a n a n d m o re \<> c o u p o n s , n o g im m ic k s X m ip k show v o u r I I fa c u lty s ta ff o r s tu d e n t I D . f< g re a t m e a l at an u n b e a ta b le p r i c t \V< k n o w y o u 'll c o m e b a c k f o r m o re A332 Jester 471-3614 Enroll now for free classes beginning Oct. 14: Reducing Math Anxiety Reducing Test Anxiety Stop Procrastinating Learning Strategies “HI-LITES” College Reading Skills Speed Reading Conversational English Algebra Review Dissertation Support Group • now to -educe math anx¡e*y ¡n order to bund con^dence - m athem otic situations • now to -eiax and nave more seif-corfidence wne p-epanng for and taking tests • Desavío'' change *os and group support **rougf exa-"'' ^ n g individual goals and motives • • time m anagem ent concent-ation -esMaxmg fext reading f o r p h y s ' s for university classes one special sechor skills qu a n tita tive courses — e g engineering math ch e ~ 'S trv • a brief 2-week study skills class c o v e r ng text readm g notetaking time m anagement resr-taking skills to •a n approach 'extbook assignments through more efficient com prenensior of main deas details and tips for marking tests reading and studying inferences includes • • flexible reading and skimming speeds appropriate for both academ ic and leisure reading •suopiementary experience m everyday conversational vocabulary tor students whose first language is not Engitsn (8 weeks) • provides a review of algebra skills needed for M3G1 M304E M305G M403K (also helpful for Math Level I Test) (8 weeks) • provides an opportunity for thesis and dissertation students to encourage motivate advise and counsel each other as they work on their papers ENROLL: A332 Jeste- M-F 9-5 Oct 7-11 Classes are free and non-credit most last four weeks and Pegm Oct 14 unless specified otherwise * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * ♦ * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * M * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * SILVER SPURS A YEARBOOK NEVER FORGETS AND YOU WON’T EITHER N ow is the Time to Buy Your O rganization P ages in the 1986 Cactus Yearbook P ages...................................... $105 each Group Pictures....................... $20 each To reserve pages, contact the Cactus Office Texas Student Publications Building, Room 4.112, 471-9190, Today ALL PAGES MUST BE PURCHASED BY OCTOBER 16 All organizations wishing to purchase pages in the 1986 Cactus Yearbook must be registered with the Student A ctivities Office ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ♦ MG learning AND career services Page 8/The Daily Texan Thursday October 10 1985 CIS GOD RIGHT-HANDED? B le s s in g s to those on the rig h t a n d c u rs e s to those on the left (M t 25:33-4)... W it h m ig h t an d p o w e r on the rig h t h a n d < E x 15:6)... S e e a lso G e n e s is 48:14 an d R e v e la tio n 2 :1 If ( »od is rig h t h a n d e d , th en she m ust be left-b rain ed . Y et G o d is the u ltim a te in ju d g m e n t (a rig h t b ra in fu n ctio n ). Je s u s b lesses c h ild r e n w h o d o n ’t k n o w righ t from left. A n d G a la tia n s 3:28 c o n firm s th a t s o u th p a w s a re as O .K . as n o rth p a w s m ig h t be. S o d o n ’t w o r r y ab o u t w h ic h side o f the S is tin e C h a p e l is rig h t o r left. J u s t k e e p g iv in g ( io d high fives. 5undav Worship at 9:45am I utheran ( ampus Ministn 2100 San Antonio 472- >4(> I Pastor Curtis \ Johnson New faculty sick pay rule stirs controversy By SALLY CANTU Daily T exan Staff I he attorney general s office may issue ,111 opinion concerning a rider on the state's appropriations bill faculty members that prohibits without a 12 month contract from receiving Mik leave pay. Rep W ilhelm ina Deíco, D-Austin and Higher Education Committee chairwom an, requested Aug. 19 that the rider be declared invalid. She also requested faculty members be allowed to keep previously accu­ mulated sick leave pay if her request is not granted, her aide George Torres said W ednesday. " W e feel the rider is discriminat­ ing against higher education teach­ ers and could be violating certain teacher contracts/' Torres said. The request claims the rider dis­ criminates against a small number of state employees by excluding them from the sick leave benefit other state employees receive. Torres said many faculty mem­ bers are upset because state univer­ sities are confused about the bill and have misinterpreted it "Texas A & I decided no faculty member would have sick leave pav and all their accrued pay would be lost, which is not what the rider states," Torres said. months, including faculty who have nine-month contracts and work on a special basis during the summer, said Claude Hem pel, UT System personnel director. " A ll the faculty sick pay accrued since Aug. 31, 1985, will remain credited to the faculty member. They will not lose their balance/' Hempel said. Hem pel said faculty members with 12-month contracts will contin­ ue to receive eight hours of sick leave pay each month. If the sick leave time is not used, the pay ac crues over time, he s,ud. The new law, which went into ef­ fect Sept. 1, affects faculty members than 12 with contracts of less Hempel said there is little differ­ ence between the new state policy and the previously unwritten poli­ cy. Faculty members usually filled in for one another before the policy took effect, and the same procedure will be used, Hempel s.iid. individual " I am sure faculty members feel they have lost a bene­ fit, but they will experience no re­ duction in p ay ," Hempel said. Mike Ferguson, state audit mana­ ger, said the law w a s designed to get rid of red tape. H e said keeping a record of faculty members taking sick leave was difficult, and said leg­ islators working on the rider were critical of the policy because faculty members were covering for one an­ other. S O N Y 3 .5 " d is k s 1 9 . 9 9 : i O r í W A í E tU¡EXCI-ñnCE Most com pleta Inventory of MAC eoftware In Austin Rentals • S a l e s 4 7 8 - 7 1 7 1 25 1 2 G u a d a l u p e Sraxselala FUJI 3.5” SONY 3.5” BONUS 5.25' 1 9 .2 5 1 9 .9 9 17.00 TopVlew (I.B.M .) 9 5 .0 0 4 8 .0 0 M usicW orks 2 3 .0 0 Alm anac M acC over (five piece set) Easels P a p e r 250 Sheet9 (20 lb. laser cut) CurtiS (Surge Suppressor - 6 outlets) Mac Carry Bags (highest quality) 20.00 12.00 2 .9 5 22.00 66.00 2 2 9 .0 0 tired of the same old disks ? 512K Upgrades donl Toast 'eml (6 mo. warranty-include9 all parts and labor) come to SE and SA VEI •Visa-M/C accepted "Our p rices w ill blow you a w a y ” Save on casual classics at Greystone, Ltd. W here the know ledgeable sh o p p er is o u r best custom er. CAPITOL SADDLERY EQUESTRIAN HEADQUARTERS FOR AUSTIN ENGLISH WESTERN Boot 8c Shoe Repair ♦ Handtooled Belts & C haps* ♦ H and m ade Bo o ts* ♦Sterling Silver Belt B u ck les* — - 1614 LAVACA 478-9309 \W\NU kA\\V ^\\\N X V \'W ..... BICYCLES “Q u a lity & Service a re the d iffe re n c e ” NISHIKI Centurion H uge S election & B est P ric e s on All B icycle A ccessories! All 1984 M odel B icycles O n Sale! 0 m iy a x a 2404 San Gabriel 477-6846 BARGAIN BOOKS TITLES FROM A TO Z There is o Wide Selection of Bargain Books Thar Just Arrived... Hundreds to Choose from For Your Reading Enjoyment SO. 98 & Up values up to $60.00 ON SALE NOW STREET LEVEL UNIVERSITY CO-OP 2246 G uadalupe Phone 476-7211 Free Park in g 23rd & San Antonio w/$3 Purchase THE 1986 CACTUS YEARBOOK CLASS STUDIO IS NOW OPEN AND READY TO PHOTOGRAPH YOU. Graduate Students, Graduating Seniors & Seniors First Letter of Last Name Begins With Letters A-L First Letter of Last Name Begins With Letters M-Z October 1 4 ,1 5 ,1 6 October 1 7 ,1 9 ,2 1 Juniors First Letter of Last Name Begins With Letters A-L October 2 2 ,2 3 First Letter of Last Name Begins With Letters M-Z October 2 4 ,2 5 Sophomores First Letter of Last Name Begins With Letters A-L First Letter of Last Name Begins With Letters M-Z October 2 8 ,2 9 October 30 ,3 1 Freshmen First Letter of Last Name Begins With Letters A-L First Letter of Last Name Begins With Letters M-Z November 1 ,4 November 5 ,6 SITTING FEES: Graduate Students Graduating Seniors Seniors Juniors Sophomores Freshmen $3.50 3.50 2.00 2.00 2.00 2.00 The Cactus Studio is located in the TSP Building, Room 4.122 (comer of 25th Street and Whitis). Studio Hours: 8:30-11:30 a.m. and 12:30-4:00 p.m. Monday throuah Friday Greystone, Ltd. West Anderson Plaza at Anderson Ijn e & Burnet Rd Telephone: hi S3-"’ lb"7 Manufacturer Direct To You Prices ^ ^ j O- í Hours Mon Ir i 10 am to 9 pm s.it 10 am to 6 pm Sun !2 p m to 6 p m T famous maker sport shirts Button down and spread collar styles in plaids, stripes and other patterns. Choose the latest fall colors or your favorite classics. Machine washable for easy care. Sizes S,M,L,XL. Compare at $28. classic tw ill slacks l Incompromising quality and tradi­ tional styling make these slacks your perfect fall wardrobe builder. Tailoring details include a usable watch pocket and taped seams for durability. Made of imported cotton/ polyester. Choose taupe, grey or navy. Sizes 32 to 40. Compare at $35. S tate may look for alternative energy sources By M ATTHEW GEIGER trif bill in< rease for may for < thf state to >liers f( >r staff* offices, said Wednesday rate increase, to take in an additional $1.8 mg budgets for state i prepared statement >du< ‘ion of usage bv rambling to meet the motivate the state to k-a . said the rate in- raf* - :I are competi- tv suppliers need- of the state and » y jr estigate . they • rate,' C <»oksey said, if would be economi- " ab* -native sources, i d ‘we weeks ago to percent and residen- r generates its own electricity supplier to igrarns director for the -M rvices C ommission, t( >ftires' bills, said he ng Austin power. 4 i" looking into these 'the in rease) is going closf - look at the ar- >? seriously concerned >wer supplier manager for the Aus- ite raid S I3 million in Aunt says nephew confessed slaying of Gatti’s employee By LIBBY AVERYT and LISA BAKER Daily T exan Staff Murder defendant Albert C.lenn Seaton told his aunt how he killed I niversity student Roy Joseph Rivera during a Jan. 26 pi/za store robbery, Seaton's aunt testified Wednesday. Rivera's body was found in the rear cooler of the Mr. Gatti's pizza delivery outlet at 2614 S. Lamar Blvd. Almost two months later, Sea­ ton w a s arrested bv Smithville po­ lice and charged with murder. Carolyn Wright, 32, testified she saw news of the robbery and slay­ ing on television the night after the incident and confronted her neph­ ew about it, because she knew he was "planning on doing some­ thing'' that night. "I asked him if he robbed it, and 'Yeah,' he did," Wright he s85 Cactus lO N IG H T N a n c i Griffith opening D o u g A t r a n k e I r i Hi S r / i i r J 7 0 I R i o ( ¿ r o n d o 4 7 7 - 7 8 8 7 f t - in S rrp ri f r a d if io n S in c e 1929 I S ix th S lre t t Xuxfin 4^8 $130.00 24th 4 Son Antonio OptfiCvtry light UhNMjJO O p e n 11 :OOam M o n -S a t O p e n Sun 3:00pm H a p p y H ou r M on-Fri 5-7 Businessman denies payment allegations Associated Press SAN A N T O N I O — A G eo rg e­ to w n b u s in e s s m a n h as d e n ied accu­ sations that h e paid for perks re­ p orted ly star r u n n in g back C hris Pryor w h en Texas Tech w as recruiting him. form er given to in Pryor, a Ju d s o n High School s ta n d o u t claimed has 1983, C harles W h i s e n h u n t paid for a car re n te d for P ry or's u se in February 1984. Pryor said form er Texas Tech a s­ sistant coach R o d n e y Allison a r­ ran g e d for W h i s e n h u n t 's son, D a n ­ ny, to rent P ryor a car in r etu rn for signing an N C A A national letter of intent to play at Tech. "C h ris g ot n o th in g of m o n e tary value from m e ," C h a rles W h is e n ­ h u n t said T u esd a y . "I'll tell you that in a hurry. A ny m o n e y that I gave w as to D an n y , or if R o d n e y said, 'Let m e hav e $20.' " W h i s e n h u n t "If R odn ey gave him (Pryor) m o n e y , it w a s not k n o w n to m e ." said, H e said he d o e s no t c o n sid er him- Duliban Continued from page 11 self a Tech b o o ste r a n d that he could not re m e m b e r the la s t tim e lie a t te n d e d football a Red Raider gam e. D a n n y W h i s e n h u n t played foot­ ball at Tech in 1980. Pryor claims he help ed Allison recruit him a n d ju d son te a m m a te C h ip L am bert in e a r ­ ly 1984. Pryor a 1st» claim s the y o u n g e r W h i s e n h u n t u se d his fath e r's credit cards to pay for rental cars, h< C o lle g ia t e V o : e y b a t C o a c t e A s s o c v. >n P (first p la c e v o t e s in fj||renthe ;e s) 1 S t a n f o rd ( 4 1 ) 2 (tie) U C L A (3) P a c ific (1) 4 S a n J o s e Sta te 5 N e b r a s k a 6 H a w a ii 7 C a i P o l y - S c O S o u th e rn C a lifo rn ia 9. Texas 10 C o l o r a d o State 1 1 W M ic h ig a n 12 S a n Diecto State 1 3 Illinois 14 A r z o n a 15 B V U 1 6 P u r d u e 17 A r iz o n a Sta te ' 8 C a l-S a n t a B a r b a r a 19. Texas A&M 2 0 R h o d e Isln i d Mac Disks Life-Time Guarantee! (2 for 1 Replacement) D isks a s Low as (quantity purchase required) We w ill not be undersold! each 2 2 0 0 G uad alupe, S u ite 216 MacProducts 473-2604 Disks Manufactured by: Brown Disks $ 4 9 » LONDON $648 FRANKFURT $620 PARIS $859 ROME T rip f r o a A u t l i $735 SANTIAGO, RUENOS AIRES, RIO o r SAU PAULO * •■ ■ 6 T rip f r o . A n tia $802 HONG KONG *u fmrrm Kmmmtl trip trmm Am*t!m f c M a M .«rnfrr ***** t**** , 472-4931 1904 Guadalupe ON THE DRAG Free Parking The D aily T e xa n /T h u rsd a y O c to b e r 10 1985/Page 13 Commando destroys plot Schwarzenegger avenges kidnapping in Rambo' tradition By RUSSELL SCOTT Daily Texan Staff It is too easy to pass off Arnold Sch w a rzen eg g e r's success purely as a by-product of his s i / e C e r­ tainly, he is quite large He used to be Mr Universe, because he was the best person in the world at being bulky. People respect him, at least in his presence, since he looks as though he t ould chew up a hu m an skull like popcorn. He's a side of beef hu ng on a human skeleton. Though beefy, Schw arz en egg er is not represented as a total meat- head in C om m an do His charac­ ter, Col. John Matrix, has an e m o ­ tional girth appropriate to his physical imposition At least that is what director Mark Lester would have us believe. Matrix p o ssesses an inability to separate his depth of emotional from his talent for kinetic rage physical expression. W hen he gets mad, you know it. Matrix gets so mad at so m any people in such a big way, it can't be any thing but fu nny after a w'hile. The film's com ic-book sen se o f hum or also helps excuse the scores of human- rights atrocities occurring with Matrix possesses an in­ ability to separate his depth of emotional rage from his talent for kinet­ ic physical expression. When he gets mad, you know it. each passing foot of film C om m an do IS n o t n< i r k ing claimed Terminator I hough ek­ - 1 a c ­ Sch w a r / e n e c '^ e r ’s as The premise of C om m an d o is fa­ miliar. It is in th> same trad iti> >n (>* First Blood, Ramb<' and m a n . other post- Vietnam Amer c a-gets- revenge works H o u g h Matrix i- not a Vietnam vet which i- s o m e ­ thing of a d< viation from the norm of this genre, h< was in Spe ial Forces and i^ trained :n the latest killing techniqu e- And he d o 1' make extensive um of hi- trair me The reason he gets mad and stays mad is because a group of m ercenary scu m bag s kidnap M a­ Jenny, w h o b e ­ trix'^ daughf< r for a com plex c o m e - a catalyst em otional-ph v-ical al­ lowing him to vent his m eat-m an wrath. reaction, There really is very little else in the narrative' fram ew ork save the inevitable pursuit of scu m ba gs and elimination of m m or-leag ue lackeys who may stand betw een Matrix and Je nny. ( om m an d o credits T4 stunt p e o ­ ple, though Sch w a rz e n e g g e r did nearly all his ow n s tu n t- Director l.ester said the reason the big guy had to risk his own hide w a s be- cause no stunt man in the world i pass as a S c h w a rz e n e g g e r o lone Again it's the -ize issue f . er; Schwarzc-negger's n am e is a m onster, having 14 letters and four syllable's. The man is |ust too in a work k n o w r as a big to be is even shorter movu and q u ick e r off the to ng u e " F i l m " is short also, and has far too artsy a conn otation for this effort. f l i c k' a n d C om m an do, directed b y M ark s t a r r i n g A r n o l d T e s t e r S ch w a rz en eg g e r, at the A q u a riu s , Arbor, L a k e h ills and Capital P la ­ za theaters. j J Upbeat comedian on rise to top By D. EDWARD POWELL Daily Texan Staff For those at the C o m e d y W ork ­ shop Tuesday night, Tim Jones m ade com edic history wdth a rou­ tine full of g enuinely fu nny materi­ al. Having been in the b usiness only five years, Tim p o ssesses a polished delivery that one expects to find only in seasoned veterans. This cou ­ pled with his warm smile and upbeat attitude sets this young co­ median apart from the crowd of as­ piring stand-up comics. From the m o m e n t the first joke is delivered to the line, anticipation arises as you sen se that this com ed i­ an is definitely on his way to a solid e n tertainm ent career. last pu nch " I 'm on my way, somew'here to the bank. Yes, hopefully, the Bank of A m e r ic a ," Tim jested after his second visit to the workshop. This 28-year-old has a definite grip on his future T h e s e are not random e n g ag em en ts, for each one serves as a ste pping stone to an oth er level of ach iev em en t in his still y ou ng ca­ reer. Tim graduated cum laude in 1978 from Syracuse University wnth a d e ­ gree in public relations and jo urnal­ ism. Not neccessarilv a prerequisite found himself to w orking in N ew York City as a new's reporter and disc jockev b e ­ fore finally realizing that he had not fulfilled his first love. com ed y, Tim " I 'd gotten out of school and w ent back to Harlem and all mv buddies were either selling drugs or in jail for selling drugs or trying to figure ou t how they could sell drugs so they could get into )ail to be with their buddies. I saw' w hat was co m ­ ing. So I moved to California. I'd al­ ways w anted to be a com edian in the back of my m ind , so I wfent there with my five-page resum e and got a job as a tour g u id e ." This was a strategic m ove for Tim, w'ho ha^ since landed several television ap ­ pearances inclu ding guest spots on The Jefferso n s and S ig h t at the Im- thing about corned’, is that the long ­ er you wait, the better you'll be. if v'ou k eep working at it Tim 's positive attidude is infec­ te >u- He really b e lie v e s that laugh­ ter is the best therapv for life's set­ backs. This point w'as driven h om e as he watched on e of his friends, Richard Pryor, w ork through his re­ cent personal difficulties wnth new routines. " P ry o r is a geniu s. People d on't really understand w h at h a p ­ pened I watched him go up on stage at the C o m e d y Store and dare to bom b a half-hour two every night m o n th s w orking on new material as people would yell out n a m e s of past jo kes to him. And. Prvor would just say, 'I ca n 't do that, I've got to g ro w .' Pryor told m e then that an aud ien ce is like an animal — if thev s en se tear, they'll kill you to him after fire. the for Besides Pryor, Tim cites G e org e Carlin, Bill C o sb y and Eddie M u r­ phy as being responsible for the type of co m ed y he does, which in­ cludes h u m o r a bout our sexual atti­ tudes and everyday existences. Tim d oes give credit to one per son he consid ers responsible for e v ­ erything he has accom plished thus far. Me me and m e Widen 1 make it big and thev sav i discovered that s bullshit. I discovered him ', me, I am the po w er b ehind me, / an 1 attribute Bill Cosby mv people a m o n g o t h e r s for o p ening the black omedv m arket but 1 am re s p o n s i­ ble for me But. then a seriousness o v e r c o m e s Tim and he d oes n am e three influential p e r s o n s in his life grand rather and God. It s ee m s all three have aided in molding quite a stable v o ung man in a m ost unstable b usin ess. his m o ther Jones Erik Gerard and Mark VVilks will be at the C om edy W ork shop nightly through S u n d a y , Oct 13, with two show s on Friday and Saturday. Pro laughter therapist Tim Jones prov. But com ed y remains his uit¡ m ate challenge " I do e njo y [stand-up]. I d o n 't luggle, I d on't pla\ a guitar I: s |ust the audience M\ onlv me and weapon is m y pen Ik e discovered that it you w'rite your ow n stuff, it com es from your heart ' Hm c o n ­ fided. Hav ing now appeared at the m ajor laugh spots across the c o u n ­ try, Tim is focusing in on a long and productive I nlike many other com ics, he doesn't want the meteoric rise to the top. He d o e s n 't even w an t to be referred to as a comic. career. "C o m ic s sav funnv things, but c o ­ m e d i a n s say things that are funnv and I w ant to be kn o w n is a c o m e ­ dian. I w an t to sav things that have s u b s ta n c e ." W h e n questioned about those opportunities that mav come only once in a lifetime he > quick to In mv heart I add, "I 'm i n no h u m know that there's ju stice in the uni­ verse and if you give positiv e, v ou 11 get positive. S o whatever is out there for me will com e when it's mv turn to have it. I believe that The Madonna, gunfire and new fall TV By MICHAEL G. SMITH Entertainment Editor Y ou'd think being the b u rg e o n ­ ing Arts & Entertainm ent d epart­ ment of a ma|or Texas new spaper, we'd be up on every d ev elopm en t of the new television season. You'd maybe even believe we can get our hands on the inside dope, the se ­ ries not vet publicly a nno u nced , or even the o n e s round-filed silently in W est Coast offices. You'd be right. Th e following is a brief sy nopsis of the fall season, re­ plete with the promising -ind the guaranteed poopers. You decide for yourself which is which. Fast D rivin g, Cool W alk in g, and S low -M otion Gun Battles to a 4/4 Beat — h an d som e , gun-packing detectives nearly get shot to atoms every w eek, but stay on the job. Starring n am eless GQ models and about 200 gallons of hair-altering chemicals per episode. Phil Collins and M ad on na serve as full-time sound-track consu ltants. W ardrobe by MTV. Big, Bad Businessm en — evil, greedy corporate moguls are p o r­ trayed as h o n est, d ecent people w orking at dull jobs to provide for their sub urban families. Canceled during filming of the second e p i­ sode. This w eek’s topics in­ clude why Don John­ son’s holstered pistol al­ ways points straight behind him. Th e B u ck ley & Fonda Variety the conservative h ero H our — beefs up his y aw n so m e f iring I ine format with aerobics d e m o n s tra ­ tions supp lanting the audience in the foreground. Special guests G e r­ ald Ford and Richard S i m m o n s C harles in Heat a smart-aleck kid wages one-liner w arfare in a house full of other slightly unstable characters. Big yuks. Carried by all three n e tw o rk s under different ti­ tles. a Big Gun Go Boom lone sem i-police officer with a .44 Mag­ num stalks those criminals w h o ha ­ ven't been convicted yet but who we all know are guilty anyw ay. Big Gun G o B oom ess a lone sem i-police officer with a .44 M ag­ num in tight jeans and a sweater stalks those criminals w h o hav en't been convicted vet but w h o we all know are guilty anyw ay. B iggest Gun Go Boom O verhead (formerly titled Blue Airwolf) — a vengeful ACI U attorney with a com bat helicopter stalks those lone semi-police officers w h o h av en 't been convicted yet but who we all know are guilty anyw ay. Science K ids with Zits a.k .a IV, a cluster of N erd R even ge c u rly -h aire d , ju n io r-h ig h -sc h o o l anti-socials (with their dog, / i t s ) s ingle-handedly ou t-engineers C M and N A SA on a weekly basis, to bring peace and an e nd less supply of che ese bu rge rs formerly hopeless world. to a Practical B loopers Don Ric­ kies and Steve Lawrence are still employed. D ynasty: D allas — in the first episode, a black-tie party featuring the w h ole cast wearing G ive n ch y 's fall collection is interrupted by g u n ­ fire from a lone semi-police officer stalking those criminals who ha­ ven 't been convicted yet but who we all k now are guilty anvway. Sm urf W restlin g — the toy c o m ­ panies try for a com eback, pitting those lovable, deformed blue dolls against Hulk Hogan and Andre the Giant in a battle to the death. O n e episode only. St. E lm o's Elsew here — a hospi­ tal run by a Hollywood film direc­ tor is staffed by the greatest talent ever assem bled, but still d oesn 't work right. The A lley Behind W est 57th Street — a low-budget new s show hosted by c o m p u te r e n g ineers who attem pt to solve the greatest q u e s­ tions raised by man, using two C ray-7 com puters. This w eek's to p­ ics include: w hy Don Jo h n s o n 's holstered pistol points straight b e ­ hind him; w hy no one ducks w hen he turns arou n d; what happened to Fresca and Mr. Pibb; w hether heavy-m etal m usic has any value; and w here a netw ork m ight find a series creator w ho doesn t (a) steal from o th er netw orks, (b) steal from idiot m ovies or (c) write the lam est the excuses W estern world has ever know n. en tertainm ent for Arnold Schwarzenegger hunts the usual scumbags in Commando. Zelazny continues saga of conflicting universes By PARRY GETTELMAN Daily Texan Staff W hen last seen, the roval family (if Am ber had finally resolved c en­ turies of feuds, disputes and battles for the successio n. Lord Corwin re­ the balance of power be­ stored tween Am ber and the opposin g then ended his forces of C haos, first-person narrative with farewells to the m em ories of his outlandish relatives, both living and dead. Like C o r w i n , a u t h o r R oge r Z elazny appeared to have said his g o o d b v e - to the realm he first creat­ ed in N ine Princes in Am her. Since 1978, w hen the fifth Am ber novel The Courts o f C haos was published, Zelazny had turned out only a co u ­ ple of lightw eight works, am using in their wav but a disappointm ent to readers hungering further for n ew s of the one true world. At last Zelazny has seen fit to continue his fascinating saga of the L o r d s of Am ber and their inimical distant (and not so distant) relations in the C o u r t s of Chaos. Although C orwin ha- disappeared, his son Merlin, who first appeared in The H and o f O beron, has taken his place at the center of A m ber's plots and intrigues. And along with his fath er's royal blood, Merlin has in­ literary gifts. The herited his fr u m p s is v in ta g e Zelaziw. o f D oom In Trumps, Zelazny proves he is still one of the cleverest and most inventive writers in science fiction and fantasy. With Merlin's struggle to survive a mysterious would-be assassin, and find out why som eone has been trying to kill him on April 30 every year, Zelazny continu es to exam ine the perpetual struggle be­ tw een Am ber and C haos, interde­ pendent but mutually antagonistic realms. In this univ erse, C h a o s is the origin and Am ber the only reali­ ty; Earth, Avalon and all the other tra ip s e the A m b e rite s w o rld s around in are mere distorted sh ad ­ ow s conn ecting these two poles of the continuum . S o m e c r i t i c s m a i n t a i n th a t Zelazny has failed to live up to his early promise. In the '60s and early '70s, he show ed new possibilities for science fiction in works like the By KENNETH B. GILES III Daily Texan Staff In Austin, the closing of a well- is an the known club or restaurant earth-shaking experience late v e n u e 's patrons. for This m o nth's casualty: the Lazy Daisy of 2801 Guadalup e St., the best 24-hour eatery-bar on the Drag. After years as the after hours han gout for street people and students the Daisy has disappeared. alike, But this is not a retrospective epi­ taph. A new restaurant has moved in to the former Daisy premises. Its the nam e ow n e r's m other, how original), and while the Daisy was definitely not the best restaurant in town, one meal at its replacement should have you scream ing for the greasiest food the Daisv had to offer. is Marguerite's (after The m enu at the viciously rem od ­ eled place is mostly Mexican food, and as any well-versed Texan (or Mexican) will tell you, g o o d M exi­ can food is a godsend, but bad M ex­ ican food can be deadlv. And as if the food itself w asn't bad e n ou gh , reading the menu will make prospective diners sick as well. The m anag em ent has given a His writing now tends more toward the fantasy end of the spectrum, but Trumps proves that Zelazny is still a writer of substance. H u g o A w a rd -w in n in g Lord o f Light, and Nebula Award-w inning This immortal. He brought some of the human values of mainstream fiction to what was then perceived literary backwater cluttered as a with far-fetched adventure plots and futuristic gadgetry. Z e la /n y did not go on to become a giant of science fiction, despite three more Nebula and three more Hugo awards. His writing now tends more toward the fantasy end of the spectrum, but Trumps proves that Z e la /n y is still a writer of sub­ stance. As in the previous Am ber novels, Z e la /n y creates a world as fascinat­ ing as N iven's Ringworld, or Her­ bert's Dune, or even Tolkien's M id­ d le Earth. Although he only hints at a complex historical, social and lin­ guistic background, Z elazny's vi­ sion is coherent, and his philosophi­ cal notio ns are fascinating in their blithe eclecticism — he throws in everything from the Tarot to Freud to Western myth olo gy, while adher­ ing faithfully to the value system of old Bogart movies. As in all the A m ber novels, the high points are the clashes between M erlin's and C o rw in 's dangerous, charming, perpetually sarcastic rela­ together when tives. They work necessary, but are frequently at each others' throats, trusting each other only when there is no other option: a sort of mythical, malad­ justed Mafia. Z ela /n y may not be the savior of science fiction early critics foretold, but with T r u m p s , he show s himself still to be a writer of considerable wit and imaginative power. barrage of Texan and University-ori­ ente d nam es to the entrees, all of which are exceedingly banal. How's this for tacky: the UT-bone (a 16-oz. T-bone steak)? The 1.1 PaM> Special (a horrid mess of gristly chopped sirloin suffocated by a mound of tasteless chili, onions, and melted cheese)? so But after talking to the m anage­ m ent, a lot can be explained. M ar­ guerite's is Oklahom a State grad and ex-roughnecker Roy C unning­ h am 's first venture into the world of restaurant m an agem en t, it's probably going to be a while before the bugs (no real on es to speak of — the place did look quite clean) are com pletely w orked out of this project. Until then, how ever, the ship's bow that Daisy enthusiasts are so used to seeing out in front has been replaced by a nondescript patio, and the inside of the restau­ rant has been stripped of that Daisy atm osphere, and that can't be re­ placed. And yet another Tex-Mex Open season This Thursday, Friday and Saturday UT s Shanr Dance Company will open its season at the Capitol City Playhouse — known for staging contemporary and e x ­ perimental productions — showcasing work by three of Austin s vanguard choreographers. Yakov Sharir, Jose Luis Bustam ante and Sarah Brumgart will display their new ideas in choreography in th e s e premiere perfor­ m ances. The show begins at 8 p.m. 482353235323532353232353534848234823534848234823232353232323484890902348482353484823232353 2348535348535353534823482323485353484848235323485348234823232348484823232323235323482353235323 ACC hosts Film Noir series By HEATHER JOHNSON Daily Texan Staff Considered bv many critics as the expressionist movement in Am eri­ can film, film noir is at least one of the most emotionally powerful and atmospheric movements in the his­ tory of film. Deeply rooted in the Germ an ex­ pressionist films of the 1920s, the visual style of film noir creates a shadowy, half-lit world appropriate to the sinister ambiguity of film noir thematics. Usually set in an urban environment, the world of the film noir and its concerns could be in any city — any city darkly corrupt and populated by detatched, pes­ simistic individuals. Beginning in the late 1940s and continuing in popularity through the mid 1930s, the products of the film noir m ove­ ment exhibit, perhaps better than any other movies of the time, the bitter disillusionment of post-World W a r II America. Austinites will have the opportu­ nity to view some seldom-available films of this movement in the com­ ing month. Austin Com m unity C ol­ lege will sponsor a film noir series, presenting one film each Friday night for the next four weeks. This Friday's film is A n g e l Face. Released in 1953, it stars Robert M itchum as an ambulance driver obsessed with the spoiled, wealthy Jean Simmons. They eventually be­ come involved in a plot to murder her stepmother, and quickly begin their demise. A n g e l Face, directed by Otto Preminger, will be intro­ duced by Marlette Rebhorn, a histo ry instructor at Austin Com m unity College. R aw D eal will be the featured film on Oct. 18. This 1948 release has Dennis O 'Keefe as a jail-breaking gangster seeking revenge on the gang that framed him. Directed by it will be intro­ Anthony M ann, duced by Charles Nafus, chairman of the A C C Department of H um ani­ ties. O n Oct. 25, The Big C om bo will be shown. This film, released in 1955 and directed by Joseph Lewis, stars Cornel W ild e as a detective at­ tempting to bring dow n the opera­ tions of Richard Conte's evil mob boss. Louis Black, managing editor of The A u s tin C h ro n icle , will intro­ duce it. The final film, showing Nov. 1, is P ic ku p on S outh Street. This 1953 film directed by Samuel Fuller has Richard W idm ark as a pickpocket and ex-convict w h o unwittingly steals some microfilm from the mis­ tress of a Com m unist spy. George M orris film critic and film instructor at A C C , will introduce the film. The film noir series will be show n at 7 p .m . at the ACC Busi­ ness Technology C enter at 5350 Burnet. A dm ission is free and all film s will be introduced with brief lectures and follow ed with ques­ tion and answ er session s. Nasty’s Weekly Specials Monday Late Night Happy Hour 9-1:30 am & ’ s * Austin’s H o ttes t New Special + i s : J J Pitchers of Mixed Drinks JE * for only $ 6 .0 0 All Night ★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★i Tuesday S I * The Daily Texan Thursday, October 10, 1985 Thursday Night C ountry P a la ce 500 T ricycle R aces Two B it B e e r N ite Contests and Prizes $1.75 Longnecks Music By: Texas Highriders Cover $4.00 18511 B ratto n Lane 255-9622 STUDENTS at AMIGOS Thursday Nights feature the famous AMIGOS Dollar Night $1 Cover Charge $1 Selection of Drinks 8-10 pm Male Dancer—11 pm Fridays & Saturdays AMIGOS is open until 4 am for late night dancing \ i\ i ! A O ■«O; t V/ r THURSDAY NEW MUSIC NIGHT 75c Drinks 8-11 pm Fr i d a y & Sa t u r d a y ! Doubles—for—1! 6-10 pm open till 4 am W EDNESDAY CLUB IG U A N A SUNDAY & MONDAY FREE BEER 9-11 ...where the nightlife begins 35th & Guadalupe 467-7933 b y VACLAV HAVEL A COM IC TRILOGY OF A MAN'S SEARCH FOR IDENTITY ■ CAT TROP b y SAMUEL BECKETT A TRIBUTE TO PLAYWRIGHT HAVE L I A DOUBLE BILL OCT. 10-12, 17-19, 24-26 AT 8PM W INSHIP DRAMA BUILDING THEATRE ROOM 23RD AND SAN JACINTO INFORMATION. 471-1444 CHARGE-A-TICKET: 477-6060 DEPARTMENT OF DRAMA COLLEGE OF FINE ARTS THE UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS AT AUSTIN N A S T Y 606 Maiden Lane 465-9369 | ^ * > ' » r 6 '8WWn Surprise Specials All Weekend Long 4823482348235353534848234853232353534848532348484848484848234853 Wednesday S 5.50 Pitchers of M argaritas (with grain alcohol) j Hours: 6-2 am Mon-Sat Closed Sun m H i«o A JM F..e*0 9 H X V I \ a c e - o ^ e ^ a * cV* S O \ 0 OFFENSE #1 TEXAS/O.U. PARTY Join the rivalry Thursday through Sunday. OFFENSE #2 WEEKEND PARTY Celebrate the weekend Friday and Saturday with half-price drinks until 9 p.m. and a FR EE breakfast buffet from midnight on. Plus, extended dancing unti! 3 a.m. M OFFENSE #3 THE SENTENCE BEGINS AT 6532 East Northwast Hwy at Abrams Dallas, Tsxas 75231 (214) 696-3720 VEGAS NIGHT Every Sunday experience the excitementof Las Vegas In Monopoly’s Boardwalk Casino. No charge for chips to play blackjack, dice and poker while competing to WIN A TRIP TO LAS VEGAS. FR EE beer P'm’’ J.5 ? ent beer aiter 9 P-m-» and $1.25 Flamingos all night. W as MCOMI TAX H (V it - i ¡ ‘2 ¥ II i t í 1 I ReSln't •2149 South Lamar • 2407-0 So Cong • 1728 W Anderson Ln • 13547 Research Va £n i f V “sr* i U d S l \ N E W Y O R K 1 9 5 4 " The object of every man s fantasy and ?he greatest mind of the century are about to meet Vi INSIGNIFICANCE -®»IVMV tJEAK1? <% (Jgaft- yj jy Í vTWt. 1 loot fflfS HIV CAST BSfY MCMHEMH TKKM M 8M « TM? SITS * * STARTS TOMORROW! R Its ink fO R IG IN A L/U N C U T A D U L TS ONLY \ TWO MO IE f TO M B O Y (X) I j Í r t . ! SISTERS (X ) N IG H T L Y S TA R T_ U K ___ M O P I t \ CÍNIMA W est WET DREAMS I 2130 S Congrns • Open 11 a m • 442-5719 J \ b o d /Tc io u is TA TA HEUCOPTER TO TEX-00! IMPRESS your date, friends or fel­ low alums! Get an UNPORGETA- BLE view of Big D and State Fair— with MO traffic. Fly round-trip from Dallas Love Field to Cotton Bowl. Call Don Jones, Lone Star Heli­ copters, Inc., (214) 352-1033 ATTENTION! SPANISH LANGUAGE STUDENTS PELICULAS EN ESPAÑOL SPANISH LANGUAGE MOVIES 7 NIGHTS A WEEK TODOS LOS DIAS AT THE FIESTA DRIVE IN THEATRE LOCATED AT 1601 MONTOPLIS AT RIVERSIDE DRIVE FOR MOVIE TITLES CALL 3 8 5 -1 9 5 3 PRACTICE YOUR SPANISH WHEN ORDERING CONCESSIONS P R A C JiQ U E _^_yiP A N O lJ__ DISCOUNT! $ 2 .0 0 OFF WITH AD & STUDENT I.D. Billa Bob's V Fort Worth Stockyards' T.M. BILLY BOB’S TEXAS WELCOMES TEXAS FANS FOR TEXAS-OU WEEKEND FREE ADMISSION WITH COLLEGE I D. OR WITH TICKET STUB FROM TX-OU GAME FR ID A Y OCT 11 EARLTHOMAS CONLEY a n d SATURDAY OCT 12 RAY PRICE N. MAIN STREET IN FORT WORTH STOCKYARDS 18 17 1625-6491 SIGN OF THE TIME Itfs the Annual Texas-OU Weekend Party at Cardinal Puffs! JOIN US TO CELEBRATE A LONGHORN VICTORY! Doris Day & I Rock Hudson in THE THRILL ¡¡^ « F IT ALL 4 7 l I9 0 # ?r *-v’ x' A A r w _ i _ _ .....u BATTS AUD. 2.00 U.T. m 7 & 9 pm 2.50 Non U.T. znmc i T H E A T n t S $2-5° T J jW T f9 jO W S *J M T tg ^ MON U T ALL SHOWS K F O N f 6 PM 1ST SNOW ONt T SUNDAY | HO INM YS E IC l SP fC IAl ENGAGEMENTS A M E R I C A N A ' 2200 H A N C O C K OR EMERALD FO REST 05 (5:30 (u $2.50) 7:45 N O R T H C R O S S 6 454 5147 N O R T h CRO S S M A L I A N D ERS O N A BURN ET MAX1E [PCi] (2:45-5:30 (o $2.50)-7:15-9:15 TEEN WOLF gel (2:45-5:30 (a $2.50)-7:45-9:45 THE GODS MUST BE CRAZY 05! (2:30-5:00 (a $2.50)-7:15-9:30 Ski Trips v f / r o f f : iron*» rhk Austin to Brussels Ro jndrrip Holidoys L^esr Fores-Free Ticker De: ver/ Fr00 Pork r g Bet nd The Building 453-TRIP 34th and G u ad o lu p e C l u b Iguana & the UT Fashion G r o u p p re s e n t TEXAS D E S IG N E R S Cesar G alindo Rio Gutierrez Scooter Lee Msy Rogers Diane Stevens in an exc lu sive e x h ib it io n of fas T h u r s d a y . Oc t 10th at Hall's 404 ( o lo ra d o D o o rs o p e n at 7:0® p .m . S h o w at 7: ¡0 p .m . in c lud i dan. PRESIDIO THEATRES For Whatever You’re Into Costumes • Hats • Accessories New Glitter Make-up • Wigs Face Painting • Masks Colored Hairsprays Plus More! AUSTIN 6 ADVLFTNy"’EO" 521 T H O M P S O N O F F 183 1 M IL E SO . of M O N T O P O L IS P h o n e 3 8 5 - 5 3 2 8 ' “ E „ ‘ ^ OPEN 24 HOURS TOO GOOD TO BE TRUE IX ) CASINO OF LUST (X) LOWEST PRICES ADULT VIDEO SALES A RENTALS MAGAZINES VIDEO PEEPS IN 6 CHANNEL a l l MALE AUDITORIUM j L 8 Academy Awards A m a d e o s 330 625 IZTf i — r Texas Chainsaw Massacre 12:00_______ 920 S t Elm o's | ■ F ir e m i430, I a- 1 ^ A Boy And His Dog 11*5 477-1324 £ <=5 GENERAL CINEMA RYDAYI IBARGAIN MATINEES- EVERYDAY ALL SHOWS BEFORE 6PM ■ V HIGHLAND MALL H IG H L A N D M A L I B LV D 4 5 1 - 7 3 5 6 PLENTY lrJ 12:00- 2 : 30- 5 * 0 7 :30- 10:00 AGNES OF GOD Fe] 1 :2 0 3 :3 0 5 :4 0 7 :5 0 1 0 :0 0 CAPITAL PLAZA 1-35 o t C A M E R O N RO. 4 5 3 - 7 6 4 6 2 :00 - 4 :00 - 6:00 8 :0 0 - 10:00 BACK TO THE FUTURE " P G " 1 2 :5 5 3 :1 0 5 :2 5 7 :4 0 1 0 :0 0 INVASION USA 1 :1 0 3 :1 5 5 :2 0 7 :2 5 9 :3 0 56,079 students, faculty and staff read The Daily Texan at least once a week. 39,268 read the Texan every day. SOU S CI: U N tV ltS IT Y OF T f XAS C O L L IG I N fW S P A P f* STUDY, BEIOCN ASSOCIATES, DALLAS, A S t l l I9S4 srop presents GARY MULE DEER "Absurdly Bizarre" TV Appearances: Steve Martin Show Tonight Show Davtd Letterman Showtimes Tubs., Wed., Thurs., Sun.—8:30 PM Fri. ,and Sat.— 8:00 and 10:30 PM ; THURSDAY $3.00 STUDENT NITE FOR RESERVATIONS CALL 487-2333 R .® FIRST BLOOD PART II 8120 Research Blvd. (at Anderson Sq.) Today at 2 ,6 A 9:45 pai Union Thwati ■ 2.00 U.T 2.50 Non U.T, V iso /M a ste rc a rd Accepted For W ord a d s call 471-5244/For D isp la y a d s call 471-1865/8 a.m.-4:30 p.m. M o n d a y -F rid a y /T S P Bu ild in g 3.200/2500 WHitis Ave. V isa/M a ste rcard Accepted Page 16/The Daily Texan/Thursday, October 10, 1985 M E R C H A N D IS E M E R C H A N D IS E RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL 210 — Stereo-TV 340 — Misc. 3 6 0 — Furn. Apts. 360 — Furn. Apts. 360 — Furn. Apts. CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING ■ Consecutive Day Ratos 15 w ord mtntmom Eoch w ord 1 hms Eoch w ord 3 hma* Eoch w ord 5 timos Eoch w ord 10 timos Eoch w o rd 15 timos Eoch w ord 2 0 timos 1 col « 1 inch 1 timo $ 117 $ 1 9 0 $2 2 9 5 $ 2 5 0 $ 6 8 5 $ 28 $ 774 $ 1 0 0 charge to chongo copy First two w ords may bo all capítol letters 25 c For each additional word m capital letter» M astercard and Visa accepted DEADLINE SCHEDULE Fndcry Horn M o n d a y Texan M o n d a y 11am Tuesday Texan W e dn e sd ay Texan Tuesday Ham Thursday Texan W e dn e sd ay 11am Friday Texan Thursday Horn In Mm event of error* m ode In a n advertisement, notice mutt be giv en by 11 a.m. the first d ay, a s Mm publishers are re­ sponsible for on ly O N I Incor­ rect Insertion. All claims for ad- (uttment* should be m ode not later them 30 d a y s after publl- hre-potd kills receive credit slip M requested at Hi m of cancella­ tion, an d If am ount exceeds $2.00. Slip must be presented far a reorder within 90 d a y s to be valid. Credit slips are non- transferable. CLASSIFICATIONS TRANSPORTATION 10 — M isc. A u to s 20 — S p o r ts -F o r e ig n A u to s 30 — T r u c k s - V a n s 4 0 — V e h ic le s to T ra d e 50 — S e rv ic e -R e p a ir 60 — M a rts-A c c e sso rie s 7 0 — M o to rc y c le s 00 — B ic yc le s 9 0 — V e h ic le L e a s in g 100 — V e h ic le s W a n te d REAL ESTATE SALES 110 — Se rvic e s 120 — H o u s e s 130 — C o n d o s -T o w n h o u s e * 140 — M o b ile H o m e s -L o ts 150 — A e re a g e - L o ts 160 — D u p ie x e s- A p o it m e n t* 170 — W a n te d 180 — L o a n s MERCHANDISE 190 — A p p lia n c e s 20 0 — F urn iture- H o u s e h o ld 210 — Ste re o -T V 220 — C o m p u te rs- Eq u lp m en t 2 3 0 — P h o t o -C a m e r a s 240 — B o a t s 250 — M u s ic a l In stru m e n ts 260 — H o b b le s 2 7 0 — M a c h in e ry - E q u lp m e n t 280 — S p o r tin g -C a m p in g E q u ip m e n t 2 9 0 — F u rn itu re -A p p lia n c e R e n ta l 300 — O a r a g e - R u m m a g e S a le s 310 — T ra d e 320 — W a n te d to B u y o r Rent MERCHANDISE 3 3 0 - Rets 3 4 0 - M i s c . RENTAL 350 — R e n ta l Se rvic e * 36 0 — F u m . A pts. 3 7 0 - U n f . A pts. 300 — F u m . D u p le x e s 390 — U nf. D u p le x e s 4 0 0 — C o n d o s -T o w n h o u s e s 4 1 0 — F u m . H o u s e s 420 — 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 435 — C o -o p s 4 4 0 — R o o m m a te s 45 0 — M o b ile H o m e s -L o ts 46 0 — B u s in e s s R e n ta ls 4 7 0 — R e so rts 4 8 0 — S t o r a g e S p a ce 4 9 0 — W o n te d to R e n t-L e a se 5 0 0 - M i s c . AN N O U N CEM EN TS 510 — En tertain m en t-T ick ets 520 — P e r s o n a ls 530 — T r a v e l- T r a n sp o rta tion 5 4 0 — L o st A F o u n d 550 — L icen se d C h ild C a r e 560 — P ublic NoM ce 570 — M u s ic - M u s ic ia n s EDUCATIONAL 580 — M u s ic a l In struction 590 — T u to rin g 600 — In stru ctio n W a n te d 610 — M isc. In stru ction SERVICES 6 2 0 — L e g a l Se rvices 630 — C o m p u te r Se rvices 640 — E x te rm in a to rs 6 5 0 — M o v in g - H a u lin g 660 — S t o r a g e 6 7 0 — P a in t in g SERVICES 6 8 0 — O ffice 6 9 0 — Ranted E q u ip m e n t 7 0 0 — Fu rn itu re R e p a ir 7 1 0 — A p p lia n c e R e p a ir 7 2 0 — S t e ro o -T V R e p a ir 730 — H o m o R e p a ir 7 4 0 — B icycle R e p a ir 7 5 0 — T y p in g 7 6 0 — M isc. S e rv ic e s EMPLOYMENT 77 0 — E m p lo y m e n t A g e n c ie s 78 0 — E m p lo y m e n t Se rv ic e s 7 9 0 — P a r t Mm # 8 0 0 — G e n e r a l H e lp W a n te d 8 1 0 — O ffic e -C le rica l 8 2 0 — A c c o u n tln g - B o o k k e e p ln g 0 3 0 — A d m in is t r a d ve- M e n g a m a n t 0 4 0 — S a la s 8 5 0 — R e ta il 8 6 0 — E n g in e e r in g - Te chn ical 8 7 0 — M e d ic a l 8 0 0 — P r o fe s s io n a l 8 9 0 — C lu b s -R e s t a u r a n t s 9 0 0 — D o m e s t ic -H o u s e h o ld 9 1 0 — P o s it io n s W a n te d 9 2 0 — W o r k W a n te d BU SIN ESS 9 3 0 — B u s in e s s O p p o r tu n it ie s 9 4 0 — O p p o rtu n itie s W a n te d T5P Building, Room 3 2 0 0 2 5 0 0 Whitii M o n d a y through Friday 8am -4 30pm 471-5244 V C R (BETA) less than 10 months old w re less remote 105/CH cob!eready Front lo o d $ 2 4 5 9 2 8 2 2 9 2 10 10__________ 1 0 % O FF vintage clothing with this ad at The Armadillo, 2301 S C ongress 9 6 En -Sun 10-31 P IO N E E R ST E R EO receiver 3 0 wans per channel Very g o o d condition $ 6 0 Call 3 2 7 -2 8 1 5 10-14 D E N O N DIRECT drive Fully automatic turntable w/movmg magnet'C cartridge O n ginolly $ 7 0 0 now $ 2 7 5 Also Signet m oving coil cartridge w 'h e c d amp onginally $ 3 7 5 now $175 Call 44 4 3 0 6 9 10 14 ________________________ C O I O R TV, sharp 16 beady used, still in warranty, 15 months old $2 10 only 4 7 6 - 6 9 4 5 10-15______________________ 220 — Com puters- Equipm ent C O L O R C O M P U T E R -a ll you need For EE 3 4 5 K Tape recorder, Editasm, more O n ly $195 4 7 8 9 0 2 8 10-10___________ 2 SM IT H -C o ro n a cartridge typewriters with carrying cases $ 8 0 eacn, pnce negotiable 4 7 4 -8 4 7 1 10-10 M A C IN T O S H RE N TA LS For Further m- Formotion call 4 7 2 - 5 8 3 3 10-11 A N Y SIZE or cut loose diam ond W hole sale pnces.'4 0 7 0 % off 8 3 3 0 Burnet, David Kendall Diam ond Broker V is a ' M C 335-1213, anytime 10-31 IN D IA N , P A K IS T A N I & Bangladesh gro cenes, snacks pre recorded movies and son g cassettes available at M G M O n e n tal Foods, 9 2 0 0 N Lamar O p e n seven days Call 8 3 5 6 9 3 7 10-11_____________ C O L LE G E SW E A T SH IR T S and T-shirts’ A n y school in the country Sportswear manufactured by Russell and Hones $15/ each postpaid Box 317, Brookhaven M S 39601 V isa/M C Call ’ 80 0-23 1 4190.10-18 _ _ _ _ _ _ W IN D S U R F E R S Two Bic $ 4 0 0 each 1 0 0 W cor or home speakers $ 4 9 Will consider trade for motorcycle Dove 4 7 9 - 6 7 7 7 10 15___________________ ITT P H O N E machine, $50, no retriever 4 5 8 - 4 9 2 0 10-16 ______________ S O F A BED $ 3 2 5 S a n y o microwave $100 Zenith television $1 4 0 Computer table $ 5 0 Electnc typewnter $ 8 0 B ed ­ room furniture $ 4 5 4 5 8 -4 5 9 1 47 2- 4 8 0 3 10-16 230 — Photo- C a m e ra s D a r k r o o m B a r g a in ’ O m e g a B - 6 0 0 e n la rg e r with 3 n ega tive carriers, 2 lenses, 5 x 7 a n d 11x14 trays, c o lo r print drums, stainless steel film tanks a n d reels a n d M O R E , $ 1 7 5 C all Tom at 2 5 1 - 7 1 9 4 o r 4 9 9 - 2 2 6 0 10-11 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 M E R C H A N D IS E 10 — Misc. A u tos 20 — Sports-Fore ign 70 — M otorcycles 130 — C o n d o s - 240 — Bo a ts 1977 B M W blue fully dressed Excellent 4 5 K miles m echanical condition 474- M C R 75 /7 , $ 2 0 0 0 8 8 9 3 10 15___________________________ 4 7 7 - 5 5 9 8 A V O ID B U S E S and parking problems 19 79 H o n do 7 5 0 K Very reliable eco nomical Pnce negotiable Coll 343- 6136 10-15____________________________ S C O O T E R S 85 H on da A ero 80, $ 8 0 0 84 Yam aha Riva 50, $ 5 5 0 Both new 836-4517, 8 3 8 - 4 3 9 9 10-15____________ 1979 V E SP A m oped needs work 452 1816 $ 7 5 10-16_______________________ Í9 8 5 H A R L E Y - D A V ID S O N XLX-1000 Very g o o d condition W holesole-loan value $ 2 5 0 0 M ust sell M ak e offer Ask for Ed 4 7 2 -2 1 9 2 or at work 4 7 9 - 8 8 0 8 10-16__________________________________ 80 — Bicycles M E N S C U S T O M 2 7 " 10-speed M oyata Brand new Paid $ 9 0 0 will take best offer 4 5 3 - 6 3 6 0 10-11_________________ 5 SP EE D Boss Cruiser, twenty hours of use $150, negotiable 3 4 3-96 51 10-14 M E N 'S 2 7 ' 1985 Peugeot brand new never been ridden/still unassembled $ 3 0 0 or best offer Coll M o nica 47 2- 1665 10-16____________________________ L A G U N A CRUZER, one-half year old $150, black, 4 5 1 -0 9 4 3 10-16 REAL ESTATE SALES 120— H o u se s UT FIX up 2 1? B R ^BA Fireplace, w ood floors Potential' $1 45 ,0 00 Submit all offers terms Call owner/ogent, Randy Smith Huke, 263-5152, or Sidney S Smith Realtors. 4 5 9 -8 7 5 7 , nights 45 3- 2 2 2 0 10-10___________________________ WEST CAM PUS L a rg e H o u se for sale o n quiet d e a d ­ end street G o o d condition beautiful trees $ 1 6 0 , 0 0 0 Jerry B o x Real Es­ tate 4 7 4 - 4 8 3 3 T ow n h ou se s F O R SA L E O R LEASE 3-2, 17 0 0 sq ft condo M o y be |U5t what you're thinking of in the finest of student living Carport, extra parking, W/ D connections, microwove, garden notio. CA/CH, no comm on walls Minutes from UT at 2614B Jefferson Street $179 0 0 0 or $1500/m o Coll Linda Russ at 4 7 8 71 00 for appointment 11-5 140 — M o b ile H om es- Lots 1974 14x65 mobile home Located in nice Austin park 2-2. $ 7 5 0 0 Leave message, 3 8 5 - 6 6 5 8 10-15 19 80 1 2 X 60 mobile home 2BR 2 BA Call 4 4 3 - 4 3 2 0 after 5pm 10-14 200 — Furniture- H o u se h o ld SA L E O A K desk, oak chest, metol dresser with mirror; $ 3 5 each Call M ichael Lof­ ton, 4 7 7 - 0 9 9 7 4 7 8 - 2 7 9 7 2021 M a n o r Rd 10-30______________________________ BLUE D U N B A R sofa $125, 1932 M a g n a vox stereo $150, wing mirror $ 4 5 Keep colling, 4 7 6 - 8 5 8 6 10-15_______________ S IN G L E W A T E R B E D brand new $ 8 5 4 4 4 - 5 3 6 9 10-15______________________ C ARPET R E M N A N T S - r o o m size $ 4 0 $130 C a r mots, 50c Truckbed remnants $ 8 8 3 5 5 2 4 2 10-15__________________________________ Repairs-restretchmg K IN G SIZE waterbed mattress with atr baffle edge and liner $ 4 5 4 4 7 - 3 0 0 3 10-10__________________________________ W H IT E W IC K E R table and chairs $175 452-1816 10-16_______________________ BEAUTIFUL K IN G -size oak waterbed with mirrored headboard $ 2 7 5 or best offer 3 4 5 -7 7 1 8 10-16________________ M A S T E R CRAFT 1983 pow er slot, 351 Ford, 150 hours, stereo, light blue, gal vanized trailor, cover Phone 4 7 6 - 4 3 3 7 1 0 - 1 1 _____________ W IN D S U R F IN G E Q U IP M E N T boom s North raf bend $65, W indsurfing Hawaii $90; sails 47, 54 59 $120 ea 92 6 - 1834 10-16____________________________ 250 — M usical Instrum ents T H O U S A N D S O F rock and pop song b ooks Alpha Music Center 611 W 29th 4 7 7 5 0 0 9 10-14 _____________ S P R IN G S T E E N BEATLES bootlegs ond more Alien Nation used records new location 4 8 0 8 Duval 45 4 9 0 9 8 M edi aphile 4 7 3 - 8 5 9 7 10-15________________ 1984 T A D A S H I Upright piano Excellent condition. M ust sell 2 7 2 -4 5 1 0 10-15 280 — Sp o rtin g - C a m p in g Equip. SK I E Q U IP M EN T , Fischer 195s Tyrolia 28 0D s, ski-tote. soloman bog, parka bib M ak e offer James under $ 3 0 0 4 5 3 - 7 6 9 3 10-15______________________ N E W D A Y C O R regulator with Tekna pressure ond depth gauges O n ly used once Coll 4 9 9 -0 6 2 Q 10-15 ___ C A ST IR O N weights 2 5 s 10 s, 5's, 3 s. 5 0 • c a pound, sold in sets Leave mes sage Dave, 4 7 8 -3 1 3 0 10-15 300 — G a r a g e - R u m m a ge Sale s B IG G A R A G E sale Furniture, household items, lots of children s clothes and toys record albums, books, all sorts of things Sat , Oct 12, 9 5, 2 0 0 0 Forest Trail (off W indsor in Tarrytown). 10-11 340 — Misc. S O F A H ID E-a-b ed $75, reclmer $ 2 5 swivel chair, $15, table and 4 chairs, $ 5 0 4 5 3 -3 5 4 1 10-16 1 0 -2 3 210 — Stereo-TV A L M O S T N E W R C A "13 color TV Elec tronic tuning, used only 3 months $165 firm 9 2 8 - 2 2 9 2 10-10 I SEDUCE AGGIES MOMS b u m p e r$bcker B u rn t-o n -w h tte re m o v a b le v in y l, 2 ^ 4 x 15' fits m ost ve hieles S 3 0 0 e a c h in clu d e s ta xes a n d s h ip p in g — che ck o r m o n e y o r d e r p le a s e p a y a b le a n d m a ile d to BEST BUM PERS, P O B o x 2 0 0 9 8 2 , A u stin T exas 7 8 7 2 0 1 9 8 5 Best B um pers P u b lish in g C o 130 — C o n d o s-T o w n h o u se s 10-15 4 4 0 LTD K A W A S A K I creampuff condition otter after 6pm 10-11 2 8 0 0 miles $1100 or best including Bell helmet 8 9 2 1320, 0 0 0 8 N O R TH OF UT C entral A / C corn er N e w ly 3 -2 p ointed G o o d sh a p e 4 8 1 5 D u val $ 1 0 9 5 0 0 Joh n B ak er B ro k er 3 4 5 SBHOB-WDULTtS Ready for a brand new car? N e e d to establish credit in your ow n nam e* Alternative Financ ing N o poor credit history or co signer necessary N o dow n pay ment N o payment for 3 months 442-7214 1983 Lincoln C ontinental M a r k VI Sig nature Series, 3 9 ,0 0 0 miles e very a v a ila b le o ption 1985 Lincoln C onti n ental series, 2 0 0 0 miles, e very a va ila b le option 1985 C ad illac Fle e tw o o d 11000 miles excellent condition e very a v a il­ a b le option C a ll 4 7 3 -2 2 4 4 tow n car, signature 10-25 1979 M O N T E C od o 2 -door $2000, nice condition 3 2 7 9 7 7 2 10-11 W E LL F IN A N C E 1976 Vego, silver me­ tallic air 3-speed stick, 6 6 0 0 0 miles nice cor 4 6 7 7197 See at Austin RV $1895 N o interest 10-10_______________ 1974 M A L IB U Classic 2 -door PS PB au tomofic, AC, radio 2 new tires ond bat tery V 8 engine Excellent running condi hon $ 9 5 0 2 5 8 - 3 0 8 4 2 5 8 - 3 3 5 5 10 H 1976 M O N T E C o d o -60 0 0 0 mi., runs great Sunroof A M / F M cassette $100 0 46 7 -1 8 4 4 Dee 10-11 1973 V W Super Beetle Decent condition needs rebuilt engine $ 5 0 0 Call even ings. 9 2 8 -1 3 4 5 10-14 7 7 P O N T IA C Ventura Excellent running transmis condition, rebuilt engine and «o n a little dented 8 4 ,0 0 0 m Great buy at $ 9 0 0 4 7 8 - 6 0 4 5 10-11______________ ’7 7 M ID -size Ventura AT A C very d e­ pendable and healthy, g o o d tires $900, negotiable 451 4618 46 3-18 72 10-11__________________________________ 20 — Sports-Fore ign A utos 1978 32 0i 42 OOOK on factory rebuilt runs strong, 4sp, sunroof $ 5 2 5 0 neg after 5 3 0 3 2 7 5 3 9 6 10-10____________ 82 T O V O T A Célica Supra excellent shape, must sell, loaded, negotiable 46 2 -2 3 1 5 10-22 _____________ 78 28 0 Z blk/blk 9 3 K recent paint brakes removable sunroof K enw ood stereo 5sp#ed economical & reliable $ 5 0 0 0 negotiable call 48 2 -0 1 4 4 Mike 4 4 3 1644 John 10-24 '7 8 P O N T IA C G randpnx, excellent con ­ dition, low mileage, fully loaded T lop best offer 4 7 4 -5 1 3 0 4 5 1 -0 8 2 8 10 11 RARE 1969 2 0 0 2 T11 fist $ 3 4 0 0 1976 Toyota station wogon, 5 speed $1400 W onted wrecked M G B s 4 5 4 9 0 9 8 10 11 1984 B M W 318' bronze 5 speed air «unroof, custom sound system 2 0 0 0 0 miles, stiH under warranty, excellent con drtion $13 7 9 9 44 8 -2 4 7 8 , 4 7 9 9761 10-11 M U ST SELL V W Beetle in a go o d condi tion $600 441-4184 or 385 4751 io n '8 3 RABBIT 2 7 0 0 0 miles AC, A M FM cassette excellent condition $ 4 9 9 5 4 4 1-63 97 10-10 A utos 79 A U D I F0 x Beige 4-door 53 0 0 0 miles A M /F M . A C $ 2 8 0 0 neg Call 478-1132 10-11________________________ 1978 D A T S U N B 210 Great on gas, low mileoge Best offer drives it aw ay River side oreo 25 1 -5 0 9 2 10-11______________ 1978 V O L K S W A G E N van 7 person A / C stereo orange/beige, camper side w m dows $ 3 2 0 0 4 7 8 - 6 0 4 2 10-11___ 1978 A U D I Fox 2-d o or sedan Copper 4-sp Radio, cassette stereo Very go o d shape $ 2 2 0 0 James 4 4 0 7 2 7 5 10-14 1977 A U D I Fox, 5 7 ,0 0 0 miles D e a n stereo AC, $ 1 9 5 0 Days 4 7 2 -8 2 7 5 Louis, 7pm on weekends, 8 3 7 - 2 2 6 5 10 18__________________________________ m u s t s a c r i f i c e 1980 Volvo station w a go n A M / F M Excellent condition stereo cruise AC, overdrive and more Standard $ 6 9 9 5 8 3 5 6 5 6 8 10 U 1979 D A T S U N 2 8 0 Z X Red T-top 5 speed. lo u v re sA M / F M cassette 6 8 0 0 0 3 8 5 miles 6 6 5 8 10-15___________________________ Leave message $ 5 7 0 0 1965 M U S T A N G 2 6 0 V 8 M a n y parts of body and motor are new or rebuilt Clean $ 3 7 5 0 negotiable Anytime 4 4 3 - 0 3 6 5 10-15______________________ 1977 RABBIT 4 speed, FM stereo runs great but some rust $ 9 5 0 Call 4 6 9 9120--evenings 10-15 1979 V O L K S Scirocco 5-speed go o d condition. 8 3 ,0 0 0 miles A C regular ga s greo* mileoge M o vin g to Europe must sell now $2 5 0 0 neg 4 5 4 - 9 4 0 5 10-11 30 — T ru ck s-V an s 1976 D O D G E camper van Sleeps 2 refrigerator stove automatic, CB, stereo $199 5 Austin RV 5 2 0 9 Burnet Rd, 4 6 7 -7 1 9 7 10-10 81 D A T S U N 4X 4 great shape, must sell low mileage call Bill mornings 4 5 8 4 0 0 5 10-10___________________________ 70 — M otorcycles 79 H O N D A CX^O O Custom 25,000 miles G o o d condition must sell $1000 n&g 46 7 ’ 8 5 8 a h e ' 4 TOp^ ’0 1 7 1982 H O N D A shape 4 5 0 m aroon 7 5 0 0 miles windshield great deal at 8 5 8 3 10-15 ______________________ $ 8 5 0 call after 7pm 47 2 g o o d 8 5 M O P E D Suzuki Shuttle 1-year old G o o d condition 4 7 7 - 0 0 9 9 Leave message on machine 10-11 $ 3 0 0 SU ZU K I 5 5 0 -4 N ew paint, tires chain backrest fam ng Real Steal at $ 9 2 5 4 5 8 8 5 5 3 10-14 84 Y A M A H A RZ 3 5 0 Red, white 4 5 0 0 m.les $1175 cash 46 2 -1 5 0 7 10-11 H O N D A SPREE, one year old brand new need cash $ 8 5 Call 8 3 4 9216 anytime 10-15 1983 SU ZU KI G S 550E 6 5 0 0 miles Great condition Very quick $ 1600/best offer M ore 4 5 2 0 2 6 4 10-11 1981 Y A M A H A 650cc M axim 4 5 0 0 miles excellent condition Luggage roek, highway pegs $1500 2 6 3 5917 10-15 83 SU ZU K I G S 450T Black beauty g a ­ rage kept well maintained Must see1 1000 00/offer Jody 451 9 4 2 7 anytime 10-11 130 — C on d o s-T o w n h o u se s 130 — C o n d o s - T ow n h ouse s C O N D O 'S FO R sale owner finance, 5 % down, to campus Call M a n a or Bob 451 2 2 4 2 3 4 6 -6 2 0 1 10v24______________________ start at $4 4 9 5 0 Close D E C G R A D must sell 1-1 condo--2 blocks from campus $ 5 5 ,0 0 0 Bnng offer, owner/agent 4 7 6 - 0 5 6 5 10-30 C O N D O 1BR, 1 2 B A on 2 floors Fans blinds 2 blocks from UT $ 7 9 ,9 0 0 476- 3123, (713)932-6433.10-11____________ FO R SALE by owner, non qualifying a s­ sumption, pool $603/m o $ 4 9 ,5 0 0 8 3 4 9352. 8 3 4 9187 2 5 8 - 2 8 9 3 10-11 townhouse- ga rage ONELEIGH 2 4 0 9 L e o n New Condos for Sale or Lease Pre-Leasing For Fall The Stoneleigh is a newly constructed condom inium project con­ sisting of 26 spacious units. These 1-1, 2-2, and 3-3 floorplans will be available for A u gu st 1 occupancy. Besides being less than a half block from the W C Shuttle stop, the Stoneleigh provides m any outstanding am enities which include a pool, roof sundeck. elevator, security system, covered parking, decks, wonderful views of Austin and a full appliance package. Project open 8-5 w eekdays anytime by appointment For information call— 451-8249 COOK CONSTRUCTION 474-7628 RENTAL 360 — Fum . Apts. WARWICK APARTMENTS 2 9 0 7 W e st A ve. G ard en a p a r tm e n ts , fully lan d scap ed with pool and w aterfall. B ar-B -Q n e pits. Large 2 bed 2 bath and I b ed ­ room fnlly furnished. Ceiling fana In each room . 2 Bedroom $585 - electric 1 Bedroom $395 * electric 474-7426 HYDE PARK 12 O A K S APTS O n e B e d ro o m furnished/unfurnished ceiling room , E 30 1 W e st 39th, $ 3 3 0 '$ 3 1 0 4 5 2 - 7 4 5 4 fans, pool, • la u n d ry C hristm as present last h alf o f D e ce m b e r rent FREE Large, quiet, e x ce p tionally clean, c arp eted a n d nicely furnished 1 a n d 2 BR a partm ents UT shuttle bus o n corn er L a u n d ry ro o m la rge pool, a n d p atio a vaila b le G a s locations furnished a n d w a ter 2 $ 3 6 0 / m o • - E C all 4 7 6 - 7 9 5 1 10-11 Nice 1 BR $295! Convenient to campus. 477-2004. 10-11 WALK TO CAMPUS DOS RIOS 2818 GUADALUPE NEW! BR 1 B A — C o v e r e d parking, ▼ ind ivid ual w ash e r/ 4 C A / C H , ^ ^ m ic r o w a v e A d ry e r, ceiling fans, T p re le a sin g for fall ^ 1478-4271 474-0971 4 b u c h d o w n i S i l v e r a d o ! Phase II o f Silverado, A ustin’s most popular condom inium s has touched dow n! W e’re celebrating and you’re invited! Join us for our Phase II G rand O p ening. C o m e see Silverad o’s quality craftsm anship, perfect fkxirplans, great pool and spa, and luxurious clubhouse. Explore our furnished models. C heck out our close U T shuttle hoarding station. Rendevouz with our Phase* I crew o f young progressives enjoying carefree condom inium living in the shadow o f downtown Austin! Easy qualifying; ow ner financing. C o m e to Silverado, th e perfect launching pad for your future and the best real estate investm ent in town! LEASING AVAILABLE f i a d o C O N D OM INIU M S A Luxury Condominium With Everything. Including 103 Years Of History. Twenty-six exclusive condom inum residences with a prestigious w est cam pus address, heated pool, whirlpool spa and monitored security sys­ tem s. Featuring fireplace hearths which have been painstakingly crafted using bricks from The University of Texas' first Main Building. In the new Old Main Condom inium s, no detail has been overlooked. W e've even built-in a "p a s t" on which you can build a future. O L D M A I N K07 W. 25th Austin. Texas 7K7U5 (512) 4 7 2 -8 6 0 5 Available A u g u st 15, 1985. J- ■ p T 3 2 n d A T IH 3 5 A V A L O N APTS. 1 B E D R O O M — $ 3 4 5 E FFIC IEN CY— $ 3 2 5 W A L K T O C A M P U S EXTRA LARGE, W A L K -IN C LO SET S O N -S IT E L A U N D R Y 4 7 2 -4 2 4 5 Vacancy Special Discounted Rates Furnished/Unfurnished $395-$450 ALL BILLS PAID one or two bedrooms All have e central air, central heat e mmiblmds 10-15 Most have • dishwasher • ga rb a ge disposal • ceiling fans e sky light Alpine Forest Efficiencies M O V E IN TODAY! .$295 i F u r n is h e d o r I ’n f u r n is h e d i • Newly Remodeled (New curtains & carpet I • Shuttle to UT Campus • A C & Appliances • Laundry Room • Lots of Parking 4558 Ave. A (at the corner of 46th & Ave. A) 454-8903 t unf Srtt STpari 7merit 5 Available Immediately • Fully Furnished • 1 Bdrm 1 Bath • RR Shuttle • Walk to Law School • ALL BILLS PAID 478-9775 3401 Red River 108 Place Large Furn. Eff. Move In Today • D ish w a sh e rs/ D isp o sa l • Sw im m in g P oo l 1 0 -2 3 • P a tio / L o u n g e / B B Q Grill • Ind ivid u al S to ra g e • B o o ksh e lve s • ? b lo ck to IF shuttle • L a u n d ry facilities • Resident m a n a g e r Furn eff $ 3 3 5 plus E 45 2 -1 4 1 9 , 4 5 3 - 2 7 7 1 . 1 0 8 W 45 th St 10-11 H YD E PARK efficiencies, near shuttle gas and water paid $ 2 7 5 -3 0 0 / m o 3 5 9 0 10-28 45 2 360 — Furn. Apts. MOVE IN TODAY IF shuttle, month to month lease, pool, laundry room, C A /C H , one b e d ro o m $350, $2 00 deposit. 102 W est 38 th, 4 5 4 -1 2 9 2 . Leave message. 10-21 MOVE IN TODAY! Best prices in Universi­ ty area, all sizes. 477- 2004. 1 BEDROOM $ 3 4 5 Small complex in Hyde Park and on IF shuttle. All apartments have bar, large walk-in closet, ceiling fans, extra large w indows overlooking courtyard and pool 4 2 0 9 Speedway, 458-1850, 4 5 1 -6 5 3 3 C E N T R A L PROPERTIES, INC, 10-28 1 BEDROOM $ 3 2 5 Secluded, small, quiet complex in park like setting. Nicely furnished and car­ peted. 6 0 9 East 45th Street, 4 53 - 1418, 451-6533. C EN T RA L PROPERTIES, INC. PA R K PLACE A P A R T M E N T S 4 3 0 6 Ave. A 2 BR, $ 4 6 0 + E/month Covered parking, built-ins, IF shuttle, gas cooking and heating paid. Call Liz, 4 5 8 -9 8 0 9 , leave messaqe. 10-14 L A R G E 1BR 8 0 0 Sq ft 6 closets, $ 3 7 5 plus ga s electricity Southernaire Apart ments 33rd Tom Green 4 5 3 4 0 8 2 10- 15 10-28 2BR N ew ly furnished, $ 5 0 0 Covered parking, shuttle bus, laundry facilities, 3121 Sp ee d w a y 4 6 9 - 0 4 0 3 10-16 2212 San Gabriel 4 7 4 -7 7 3 2 or 4 5 2 -4 6 3 9 11-4 $285 + E W e are looking for quiet, conscien­ tious nonsmoking students interested in a large efficiency in H yde Park. CA/CH, laundry, deadbolts, no pets. 458-2488 10-11 COTTAGE CHARM Efficiencies and 1BR apartments in park setting Fully furnished, shuttle route, 2 city bus routes, laundry room Starting ot $ 2 8 0 > E K E N S IN G T O N SQ U A R E . C L O S E T O C A M P U S O N E W E E K FREE R E N T 1 For more info, call Wyatt ot 4 7 6 - 2633, after 6 p m and weekends 441- 0 3 8 5 10-14 W E ST C A M P U S Large furnished efficien­ cy Carpet, drapes, pool, and laundry $ 3 3 5 + E Call David M c N e il Company, 4 7 8 3533, or m anoger at 4 7 6 - 8 5 9 0 10-30_________________________________ W A L K T O campus. Shuttle and city bus. Large efficiency M a u n a Koi, 4 0 5 E 31st 4 7 2 -2 1 4 7 10-10__________________ 1 B L O C K west UT Large 1BR apartment, large yard, built-in bookshelves, storage closet, quiet mature individual. N o pets. 474-1212.10-16_______________________ HALE M O N T H free rent. W est campus large efficiencies All appliances, carpet and drapes, pool, laundry, and on-site m anager $ 3 3 5 Call David M c N e o l C o . 4 7 8 - 3 5 3 3 or 4 7 6 - 8 5 9 0 . 1 0 - 2 8 360 — Furn. Apts. B H I I I I M I I i m i l l l H l l t m i l l H I I M I | A CT IV | Apartments ¡¡N O Rent Due Till Nov. 1 H • 1 BR Fum. $350 + E • Near Law § N 0 Furniture Charge = Make Your Best H Offer and Be S Ready To Move In 5 ¡ j sj = = s | 3311 Red River ¡ 474-8125 • Shuttle Bus at Corner School m i H i H H i n i n m N H H m i M H H M l R T H E 305 A P T S . NO Fair Offer Refused NO 1 st Months Rent Make Your Best Offer And Be Ready To... Move In Today 459-4977 Davis & A sso cia te s NO Rent Till Nov. I NO Furniture Charge NO Hassle, Small Friendly Complex S o r r y , O n l y 4 L e ft 3818 Guadalupe ,459-166 TMBERW00D APARTMENTS N O 1st Months Rent N O Furniture Charge N O Shuttle Problems WE ARE ON TOP OF CAMPUS M O V E IN TODAY! • Large Eff. e Finest Location in U T Area • Shuttle or Walk to Campus • Fireplace B E T T E R H U R R Y ! 26th & S u Gabriel 499-8712 LEASE FOR $0 DOWN NO 1st Months Rent NO Furniture Charge NO Hassle — Just Friendly Professionals NO Reasonable Offer Rejected We Will Beat Any Offer to Qualified Prospects On Eff. — 1 or 2 Bedroom Units. « M E N * ^ T M E N T S A P A R 2124 Burton Drive Davis & Assoc. Management Co. MOVE IN TODAY! 4 4 4 - 7 8 8 0 T A L K 'S C H E A P We Listen To What You Can Pay, Then We Lease To Meet Your Pocket-Book Big Property Supervisor Says Lease or Give-A-Way “ 10” Apts. — (This Week) • No 1st Months Rent • No Charge F o r Furniture • Shuttle At Front Door • R e m e m b e r O nly “ 1 0 ” Deals ★ Willow Creek Hills Apartments M OVE IN TODAY! 1911 W illowcreek 1840 B u rto n D rive O ff R iv ersid e • T e le p h o n e (512) 4 4 8 -2 6 0 6 M od els O p e n 11 a.m . to 5 p .m . D aily Davis & Assoc. Management Co. 444-0010 444-0014 RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL EDUCATIONAL SERVICES SERVICES 360 — Furn. Apts. 370 — Unf. Apts. 370— Unf. Apts. 400 — Condos- 420- U n f . Houses 4 4 0 — R oom m ates 5 8 0 - M u s i c a l 7 5 0 — T y p in g 750 — Typing ’he'Jh / 'exar 'Thursday October 10 " 985'Pagf ‘7 H V D F PA R K b u ngalow 307 N 4 4 * 2BR IBA C A /C H * 6 0 0 — 4 /4 b86 / to n F F M A l F N O N S M ' ) ¥ ff ? a o ir y Shore -,.w fireplCtr H • re e a s F N e w ? 3 brts 451 504 $185 G R E A T O A K 1 block low «chool Spo cioui, quiet 2 2. ceiling fans, CA/CH, pool 2 9 0 0 Swisher 427 3388 472 7 0 9 7 10 16 $100 Deposit ♦ WALK TO CAMPUS RIO NUECES 600 W. 26 1 bedrooms furnished f f f ♦ ♦ Furnished Balconies Security Á 1 Shuttle Stops Plus electric Available Now * * ! ♦ f f ♦ ♦ f f ♦ Í 474-0971 474-1004 ♦ I b F f U R N I S H E D at 3 0 2 W 38 All appl7 anees, gas and w ater paid, '"} block to shuttle 4 53-4002 10-31 M U S T R E N T 3BR unit dunng Xmas v a ca tion Dec 27 Ja n 10 out of town guests Rocky Eves 444 4215 10-11 IF SHUTTLE, large one bedroom apart ments, month to month lease, laundry, C A C H , pool $ 3 5 0 plus elect $ 2 0 0 de posit 454-1292, lea ve message 10 17 1BR E F F IC IE N C Y P o o l laundry, all elec tnc $365/m onth • 476 4060, leave message St M oritz 8 0 0 W est 25th 10 4 electricity R O O M M A T E P R O B L E M S ? Rent your ow n furnished efficiency and walk to campus $250/m onth 1907 San G abri el Call 452-1387 for appointment 10 15 H YD E P A R K furnished one bedroom, gas appliances, n ea r IF shuttle, pool, $3 3 5 * E 4412 A v e A 451 3180 11-16 370— Unf. Apts. 1 I $ 3 3 5 0 0 $ 3 4 5 0 0 v au lted ceilin g a n d sky light, ceilin g fan, c a rp e te d , c o m p le te kitchen, m irro red closet, p a rq u e t en try, p riv a te la u n d ry facili ties, lo o te d on W o o d w a r d b e tw e e n IH 3 5 a n d C o n g re s s , d ire ctly across from St E d w a r d 's U n iv ers ity P le a se c a ll 4 4 7 - 7 0 7 7 o r 4 5 8 - 2 5 7 7 A p a r t m en t L o c a t o r C o - o p _____________________________________1 0 0 7 1BR and 2BR A p ts in clu d e w / d con n rectio n s, a pp h an ees, p o o l, la u n d ry room , shuttle route, a n d lo w rates C lo se to U T shut He a n d H ig h la n d M a ll C a ll n o w i 450-1812 10-31 New ly Renovated 1 & 2 Bedrooms with F ire p la c e s , Front Door Parking. Gas Utilities Paid. Just A Few Left! Call N ow ... 4 5 4 - 2 6 3 6 $FALL SPECIALS $100 * $ 1 0 0 * $ 1 0 0 * 1st month 2nd month 3rd month NEW ORLEANS SQUARE APARTMENTS large 1 and 2 bedroom apartments Immedi ate move m On shuttle route, close to shop pmg area. For more details coll 454 2537 or 4 5 4 2 5 38 1200 Broodmoor 10-29 FINALLY, AFFORDABLE housing for The school year COLONY NORTH large 1 and 2 Bedroom apartments featuring large living space, wrap around kitchen counter/bar Good sized bedrooms and 15 ft closet hang mg space Starting at $315 Call Porfi no at 452-7202 10-11 1 BEDROOM $295 Nice quiet location across the street from park and close to Lake Austin NO PETS, 700 Hearn, 476-4370, 451-6533. CENTRAL PROPERTIES, INC 10-28 FREE RENT LUXURY CONDOMINIUMS NEAR HANCOCK CENTER SHORT TERM LEASES AVAILABLE HALF A BLOCK FROM SHUTTLE. 1, AND 2 BR, FIRE­ PLACE, CEILING FAN FROM $425 OPEN HOUSE 928 EAST 40TH ARCH PROPERTIES, 467-2377 7 M O N T H 'S rent free* O n e block from RR Large I Is a va ila b le now 44 7 44 9 6 or 4 6 7 6 5 0 8 10 11 N IC E, Q U IE T efficiency, 7btks to campus Ideal for serious student $ 2 9 5 every thing incl 25 0 2 N u eres # 2 0 9 8 12om 10 10 390 — Unf. Duplexes B A R G A IN r Tn T' 2 blocks from UT 2BR 1BA duplex, will fix up 4 7 6 4851. 4 /8 6510 11 6 2-1, A C , refrigerator, near shuttle $4 75/ mo Rock Properties 335-1151 10-17 S S W t h and M a p le w o o d Clear G A R A G E A P A R T M F N r r y T o c k T o l j T large rooms and walk m closet Ceiling fons, free laundry facility $ 4 5 0 459 9 0 9 5 10 9 1 8 E D R O O M , 3 blocks to campus $540/ month ABP. AC, heat C all after 3pm 4 7 6 9 3 8 6 10-29 2411 SLA U G H T E R Lane 4 plex, 2-2, car peted, draped, fireplace, ceiling fan $42 5/lease 346 0961 10 10 Porter Properties E N F IE L D O n shuttle 1-1, $ 4 0 0 W o n d e r M 3 2 7 7557 10 11 1BR 2 5 0 0 0 C A C H 3 0 0 ' to A ngles Applr* onces, also A B P., hie hardwoods, cam pus a re a 3 6 0 0 0 453 4 9 9 0 anytime 10-14 N E A R A N D E R S O N and C A/CH, appliances, W / D connections, fenced yard kept, w ater paid no large pets $ 4 5 0 441-5902, 4 7 2 4864 10 11 6 2 5 5 A M an o r Rd 3BR 1 5 B A $450/m o 926-1340 10 16 400 — Condos- Townhouses u iit t fiim tiiiiiiiim m im im m iiig | ★ NEW ★ ¡ = N o w L e a s i n g = ¡ S ilv e ra d o ¡ ¡ Condominiums | 1840 Barton Dr. = | ~ E • On UT Shuttle 5 s • 1 Bdrm Condos 5 * 3 Sizes To Choose From E 5 » Washer, Dryer, Mi 5 5 = Off Riverside Drive •» 2 Fast of IH 35 crowave f 448-2606 f 10-18 n iiiiiiiiiM iiiiiit iiiiit iiiiiiiiitiit iifr 37500 + E l a r g e o n e b e d r o o m w ith study W e á r e lo o k in g fo r a quiet, conscientious, n o n sm o k in g in d ivid u a l o r c o u p le in fenested in a sm all co m p lex n e a r N b rth c ro s s P r iv a te p atio, fully ca rp e t ed, d ra p e d , C A / C H , la u n d ry, d e a d b olt N o pets THE A R C H W A Y Apartm ents, 2 5 0 6 M a n o r Rd to U T ), n ice (c lo s e efficiencies, $275/m o • E 4 7 8 3622 10-18_______________________________________ H YD E P A R K Small quiet complex. Large efficiencies with all appliances Carpet, drapes, pool, a n d laundry G a s and w a ter paid $315 Call David M cN e il C o m ­ pany, 4 7 8 -3533 or m anager 458- 8 8 9 3 10-30 458-2488 LA R G E EFFIC IE N C Y , 38th and A v e 8, $ 2 9 0 • E. loft efficiency, west UT com pus, $ 4 3 5 * utilities How ell Properties 4 7 7 -9925 10-24 10-31 - PARK PLACE APARTMENTS 4306 Ave A 1 BR, $460 + E/month Cov •red parking, built-ins, IF shuttle, ?as cooking and heating paid all Liz, 458-9809, leave mes­ sage 10-14 C a m p u s C o n v e n ie n c e • e fficten cy/o n e, 621 W e s t 31st • 1/1,1609 H a rtfo rd $ 3 2 5 • 1-1 3 3 0 2 A C h e e r y w o o d $ 2 9 5 .0 0 $ 3 1 5 .0 0 F S A — H a rris o n P e a rs o n 4 7 2 -6 2 0 1 10-18 N E W L Y R E M O D E L E D efficiencies, 1 and 2BR Som e with fireplaces and skylights Co nven ien t north central location N e a r IF shuttle 2 pools $ 2 9 5 455 ■ E $100 off 1st month's rent 451-4561 442- 4 0 7 6 10-21________________________________ 25 0 5 E N F IE L D , efficiency and 1BR Shut Hn no (A va ilab le now ) Pool, laundry pets 478 27 7 5 , after 4pm 10-21 360 — Furn. Apts. H YD E PA R K special $150 off 1st month's rent Large efficiencies All appliances, carpet, drapes, pool, laundry, and gas and w a ter paid. $315 Call David M c N e a l C o 4 /8 35 3 3 or 4 5 8 88 9 3 10 28 T A R R Y T O W N , EXTRA large 2 2 $5 0 0 E 2-1 A B P, $590, shuttle at door, laundry pool, 26 0 6 Enfield Rd 472 0 8 2 8 , 474-1100 10-28 B A R G A IN H U N T E R S g e lig h T 2 B R IBA~ amenities. 5 0' pool, spa. pool table, v o l­ leyball, clothing optional, security, 3blks to shutHe $ 3 5 0 monthly rent, 90 d a y lease, a va ila b le now (512)476-5875 11- 12 N E A R IF shuttle N ice 1BR apartm ent in small com plex G a s and w a ter paid Pool $ 3 2 0 t E 453-7514 442 4 0 7 6 10-21 B R O W N S T O N E ^ P A R K A p h T now lea s­ ing 1 an d 2BR $ 3 4 0 465 • E G a s and water paid 2 pools First stop in IF shut­ tle 454-3496, 442-4076 10 21 N E A R L A W S C H O O L on shutHe Large 1BR apt in small quiet complex $ 3 2 5 • E. Pool 4 7 4 1240, 442 4076. 10-21 S K A N S E N A P T S I B R I b a T $ 300/mo 42 0 5 S p e e d w a y O n e block from UT shuttle 10-31 stop 453 47 8 4 Ask for Steve A v a i l a b l e N o w ! New Luxury Condominiums Large One Bedrooms and Two Bedrooms From $375 • M ini B lin d s • M icrow ave • U.T. S h u ttle • C e ilin g F ans • Jacuzzi • Large Pool C J 1 . A d e .m k i n f / ./„/.< WOODLANDS CONDOMINIUMS 2505 Burleson é 443-5451 447-8303J 360 — Furn. Apts. Townhouses PEARLY30th St PartioHy furnished 7 2 Fireplace m icrow ave pool $8 6 5 B & G Properties 4 5 9 0156 345 1460 10 18 stacked W / D T O M G R E E N Spacious 1 t Fireplace m icrowave, decks covered parking $ 7 5 0 B 1 G Properties 4 5 9 0176 and 345 1460 10 18 C E N T R A LLY L O C A TED 2 2 Partially fur nished Fireplace m icrow ave stacked W /D , pool $ 7 5 0 B & G Properties 459 0176 and 345 1460 10 18 28R 7 BA with loft Ver/ large erashe- dryer m icrow ave ce ,|(ng fan pool hot tub, and covered parking Please rail I in d a 4 6 9 9411 10 14 LU X U R Y C O N D O M IN IU M , 2 2 N e w superior quality space for » H yd e Park 402 W 44th St $ 8 5 0 458 2 6 8 9 10 14 S P E E D W A Y C O N D O S Drastically re duced Almost n ew ? ? All appliances, m icrow ave, fireplace, ceiling fan, W / D connections O n shuttle $ 6 0 0 Sham rock Properties, 343 0881 10 73 1-1 LUX condo Micro, partytub hottub W /D . CF, mirror mirror on the wall 9 7 6 1353, 4 43 8081 10 17 UT C A M P U S condo, 1 BR large windows high ceilings place, $6 75/m o Preservation Sq u are 474 0 8 0 6 , osk for Stacey 10 31 I'y B A Fire utilities B O U L D fN A N D W est Annie, just off Bar ton Springs Rd new large 3/2's, C A / CH, ceiling fans $5 9 5 $ 6 7 5 Tony 477 78 0 0 ,4 4 1 7 8 3 7 10-31_______________ E N F IE L D S P A C IO U S 2 7 on shuttle 7 parking spaces Unfurnished $550/m o • electricity A vaila b le 11 1 4 72 2513 I0_15______ firep lace, front door 2-1 5 T IM B E R S Townhome pet considered, parking, to month A vailab le now $545 month Tammy agent, 8 9 ? 4 7 5 0 8 9 ? 4825 10-11 V ER Y LA R G E 3 2, fireplace all appli anees, pool, sauna, clubhouse near W il liam Cannon/IH-35 $565/month 346 4 3 9 2 11-5 F O R L E A SE 2-2 pool $525/m o 834 9 3 5 ? 834 9187 2 5 8 -7893 10-11 townhouse g a rag e LUXURY CO ND O 1-1. Seven blocks to campus 24-hour security, parking garage. $500/mo. 327- 1704,327-1412,469-0130 10-18 FREE RENT L U X U R Y C O N D O M I N I U M S N E A R H A N C O C K C E N T E R S H O R T T E R M L E A S E S A V A I L A B L E H A L F A B L O C K F R O M S H U T T L E . 1, A N D 2 BR, FIR E P L A C E , C E I L I N G F A N F R O M $ 4 2 5 O P E N H O U S E 9 2 8 E A S T 4 0 T H A R C H P R O P E R T IE S 4 6 7 2 3 7 7 10-18 Nice Condo O ff Oltorf and 1-35 on shuttle in­ cludes washer and dryer, ceiling fan, and fireplace, garage, more! Call now! 444-5700 10-31 420 — Unf. Houses all appliances N E A R H IG H L A N D M oll Rem odeled clean 2-1 with for individual o r couple Frost nonsmoking refrigerator, stove, washer and free dryer included Hard w o o d floors, ceil mg fan, quiet neighborhood N o pets $4 7 5 458 2 4 8 8 11-11 A V A IL A B L E n ow 1,2,3 BR houses for rent 4 5 2 -5 9 7 9 (24 hours) 11 -4 3 7 0 ? lO C K T i n 3 r C A /C H ia ^ B yard with fence. Pets O K $ 5 0 0 'month 453 8 8 8 9 10 15 vMALK TO Sweetish HtH, /) B ";* ." 1 house h a rd w o o d Boors ceiltng fans ta rg e yard pa* S / 6 0 477 ?8 3 ¡? 10 14 J fireplace go/age BEA U T IFU L 3 7 7, 'e»l*r,"ed bedrooms 477 2059. 478 3056 Call ar>ytime 4 7 6 0 8 3 ? Kitchen pri-' leges Senior citizens or students 10 24 4 3 5 — C o-ops Room m G R A D N O N S M O K E R Spring end m com fo rtab le house mer Unbelievably close 9 people 4 74 2002, 472 56 4 6 10-28 EFFIC IEN C IES 2502 Nueces, 2 blocks from UT $257 ABP including AC Call 474-2365 or 476-1957 440— Roommates R O O M M A T E B R O K E R S will help find that room m ate 910 W M LK #201 478 5 0 9 6 10-14 ideal R O O M M A T E N E E D E D to share large 1BR walk to campus 2 story apartment across from shutHe pick-up Call David 476 32 6 6 10-16__________________________ W E S T A U S T IN housemate n eeded for big 3 11C2 across from Park, W /D , $2 7 5 plus bills 4 9 9 8514 10 11 F E M A LE R O O M M A T E wan ted to share 2 2 condo w/2 other girls 29th and 3 bills 477-6044 PeaH. $250/m o ______ 10-10 F E M A L E N E E D E D to share house on shuttle Non-smoker, $2 75 ■ half bills Renee, 463-6918 441-7650 10-11 W A N T E D N O N S M O K IN G roommate n west large 3-21? apt to share campus $300/m o A B P Call 4 76 2 8 6 7 10-22 _______ F E M A LE N O N S M O K E R w a n ted " Re­ sponsible Sh o re 2-1 house D elw o o d $175 bills Donna, 4 7 6 -3 6 2 0 10 14 easy-going grad student ? N E E D A m ale room m ate share efficiency apartment, 150 a month Ask for inter national Center M a rry A n n 10-11 FE M A L E N O N S M O K E R share 2BD-2BA spacious, fireplace pools, acuzzi N E on C R $2 7 3 0 0 • 3 utilities Cathy 458-9704 10-14 UT A R E A 216?BR IB A house Fireplace no appliances $600/m o 263-5152 10-10 C H A R M IN G O L D E R 2 1 near campus Large yard, patio, huge trees $575 A v aila b le immediately 4 7 7 2 3 6 6 10-11 M A T U R E F E M A L E nonsm oker to shore luxury con d o on a month-to-month basis utilities O n Enfield shuttle, new has everything A vail N o v I 479-0278 o r 4 9 9-0089 11-1 !/? rent and CHELASU APARTMENTS I B R F u r n . I B R F u r n . $ 4 4 0 A B P $ 4 1 5 + E • BEST DEAL IN UT COUNTRY • FREE OCT RENT • FREE FURNITURE • LEASE STRUCTURED TO YOUR POCKET-BOOK Sorry, Only 4 Left Office Open Daily Mon.-Sat 8 0 0 a m -5:30 p m 4 7 7 - 3 6 1 9 1302 W. 24th St. t TANGLEWOOD NORTH APARTMENTS THIS WEEK — NO 1 st Months Rent NO Furniture Charge NO Qualified Applicant Rejected Sorry; Only 5 Apts. L eft For This Deal W e Pay All Your A/C and Heating 1020 E. 45th 4 5 2 - 0 0 6 0 P rafessio na^ M arage^ ^ avis^ ss^ ^ ^ L TANGLEWOOD WESTSIDE APARTMENTS Move In Today! Fantastic Student Special • N O 1 sf Months Renr • N O Furniture Charge • N O Hassle, Jusr Friendly Professionals To Serve You • Sorry, Only 5 Aprs. Available. 1403NorwolkLn. 472-9614 Professionally Managed By Davis & Assoc. • • Kick Off The Year With A Winning Deal On A Campus Area Apartment W e Feature: Swim m ing pool, Ceiling fans. Gas/ water paid, Laundry facilities on site, On site management/maintenance, Easy access to I-H- 35 & Mooac. $100 Discount on 1st Months Rent El Campo 305 W. 39th Street F u rn is h e d U n fu r n is h e d LaPaz 401 W. 39th St F u rn is h e d U n fu rn is h e d El Dorado 3501 Speedway Furnished Unfurnished a Bdrm 1 Ba Unf. $340-$350 Furn $365-$375 2 Bdrm IB a - Unf $450 Furn $475 472-4893 & 452-8537 Professionally m anaged by Johnston Properties, Inc. “ A GREAT DEAL!” Save Big , B ig $$$$ I Will Give You The Best Apartment Deal in U.T. Country, TH IS WEEK ONLY. ★ BOSS OUT OF TOWN 1 WEEK ONLY ★ LEASE OR GIVE-A WAY (Well Almost) 8 UNITS THIS WEEK — NO 1st Month’s Rent NO Furniture Charge, Free! Wow! NO Transportation Problems, Shuttle At Front Door A sp e n w o o d A p a rtm e n ts M OVE I f f TO D AY! 4539 Guadalupe 452-4447 In stru ctio n ea- tk- ntgh ad >enenced qualified teacher nd improvised styles 4; TAP i E S S O N S R A 8 rock, ¡a 12 F *p e r cha¡ce of m ater*aí itry Y<> instructor A n d y Builington 452 TAR i F S S O N S Bav** guitar work posing lyacs/muSK Begmner/inter 4 73 78 í i Leave message <0 : A R G k S ’-AR- Ibtk lo «hurte $180 441 6 3 6 3 7 ,: prn only /.¡-jr. 10-10 " rtlittas C< . .»• / ’> 5 1 0 — E n te rta in m e n t- T ick ets TICKETS ALL CONCERTS ALL HOME FOOTBALL GAMES CRAIG 472 7896 • k ' k - t r ' t r ' k ' k ' k ' k ' k ' k ^ r ' k If M M IS ; * IK I I IS ♦ ALL C0NrEPTS TXOU T I BEST SEATS *5 1 0 W 35Tfi 45? 8999 I * • * 4 4 * ¥ * * * * * * 590 T u to rin g M A T H T U T O R V )1 W 2 4 th S t O f f i c e* 4 7 7 - 7 0 0 3 Vfr 10 year» *»f pro WANTED TEX-OU TIX $$// pc/SS 214-828-4343 o' 7 3 965 - I H r y H A U h C O M P s c ie n c f w ^ ER M S : S304P F UT O U Ijcketx woolprl ca^k. p .; ■ 4/- 4108 10 10 Kf is ticket Te.p. Q TICKETS sale Calf today 474 4108 '0 1 o u 'Tckets p/ 7 bes* pnce CaH and eo ve message 4 78 7564 10 $ L O U PICKETS tor sole student and d ite 0- 3 best offer, call 4 6 9 0158 anytim» K E N N y ’S o G F R S w Dolly -7 T 7 Í - 8 17 For eg. er row ! / 10 Best ; Call 448 4 6 9 or 4 4 ’ 5 7 5 0 10 ’ 5 e •< O U ■ ■ N E F D E D IM M E D IA T E L Y ets Top .osk poid Coll An»kpny, 4 7 ? 6 6 8 5 10 I ! 7 i30yd ne jp p e - d e ck O U t,cke*'. sole to best o lfe ' Call 474 6 9 2 5 0-15 2 50 yardL-e O U t sets, S ’ 25 e<- best offe' Call N a ta sh a 45" 7047 a h e r 5pm 10-11 THREE O U tickets for sale decent septs11 B esto ffer C all 4 7 6 859 1 0 ” - W O 50 yard Ime O U ticke". -ow 35 ¡best offe-; call 8Y2 49 1 Afte> 3pm ask for Enc. 10 11 T EXA S O U tickets. 20 to 4 0 yd • e ,ecit> 4 78 6 4 7 8 10-11 O U D ATE tickets to sell C o l1 Car-.1/- 4 72 3619 Thurs 9 ow ?p m Best o ffe r 10 10 _________ 2 T X/O U student ticket! 30yc n« ro w Best offe- 4 5 8 5 0 3 6.10 - 5 2 0 — Personals TURN T O the Dark Side Fmd W n te Temple of Set R Q Box 76 ? / Austin. 78713 10-16 j * how D O YOU ENJOY g o o d b ooks p loys ;,n e ct* cla ssical music, (Museums 'h e m ovies -vsto-r. lectu res \azz tra v e l q u ie t times at h o m e re a d in g to e a c h o th er L jn n q lo n g d r .es, sh o p p in g tog eth m -oiler skating S u n d a y b n jn ch es w ith **!» S u n d a y p a p e r Ja m e ' S t e w c - W o o d y A llen . H u m p h re y B o a a a C a r y G r o n lU I d o to o 'm a 'e n d e r o retty 3 3 - y e a r- o ld p ro fe s s io n a l w o m a n w ith n o ch ild re - If y o u o re o 30-4 5 / e a r o ld p ro fe s s io n a l m a n fin a n c ia lly se cu re, w rite a n d tell m e a b o u t y o u rs e lf P le a s e in clu d e a - etu rnab le p h o to g r a p b R e p ly to B ox D-5 D a ily Texan Austin, TX 7 8 7 1 3 10 ’ 1 5 4 0 — Lost & Found M IS S IN G L A R G E neutered mole cat G r e y and white W est Lake Hills a re a Coll Lisa, 4 8 0 8 3 5 ? 10 15 LO ST L A R G E block G erm a n Sh epherd with brown feet Reponds to Bud Sil­ ver chain collar 469-0293 448-0711 10-16 ___________________________________ 5 6 0 — Public N otice F E M A LE W A N T E D to shore 2-1 duplex with mom an d toddler Furnished off Ben W h ite $175/mo 3 utilities Evenings 4 40-0295 10-10 • R O O M M A T E W A N T E D to share uxurv 2-2 apt W a lk to campus, $235<’mon Call 474-1511 anytim e 10-11 R O O M M A T E N E E D E D to shore 3BR house near 29th and Jefferson $ 2 3 0 mo • 1/3 bills 4 7 2 -0569 evenings 10 I I__________________________________________ F E M A LE TO share luxurious con d o O w n room 250/month • to IF Koren, 4 5 3 -4589 10 14 '*3 bills *4 mile R O O M M A T E N E E D E D to shore a 3-2 townhouse in East W illiam C an n on area Rent $225/m o *■ V? utilities Coll D ave at 4 4 0 8 6 4 4 after 6pm 10-15 F E M A L E T O share 3BR 2 B A house $2 5 0 plus V i bills $125 deposit 3 3 9 9421 10-14 FREE M O N E v grants schoL'"ihips T)e toils, S A .b c /ten Research 4 0 ' N o d h 2 0 0 W est, Le1, Utah 8 4 0 4 3 !0 '5 condo, $ 2 3 0 N E E D IM M E D IA T E L Y Fem ale to share 2 1 Fully equipped bedroom furniture Coll 441 2 9 9 0 or 4 4 ? 8 4 7 0 to lea ve message 10-17 2 bills location needs convenient - F E M A LE R O O M M A T E •-South ~2BR 2BA Fireplace b alcony Furnish your room $ 2 7 5 5 30pm, 4 6 ? 9 9 0 0 10-16 4 8 0 9016 After utilities * 5 7 0 — M usic- M usicians N E W E F F IC IE N C Y with .ft S 4 2 5 A B P Jeffer$on St, close UT. S a lK 454 8498 o r 463-0371 10-14 RENTAL 370- U n f . Apts. J V I I A J v l I G O 4505 D U V A L 454 -4 79 9 NOW LEASING FOR FALL AND SPRING • Newly Rem odeled • Pool • Gym • Recreation Room • On CR IF Shuttle • One B edroom s and Tow nhouse Units GREAT FOR ROOMMATES Call or Come By Today! r M407 M808A ? M 60 8 fA ;S34b L323 ENGLISH CHfcMISTRY . H&M301 J02 6 M > X ” -HEM6 . A 6 T.NG30e L ML d A P ' N U J 'C A ST R O N AS^ JO a A ST 30 7 T REN C H GERMAN S P A N IS H B U S IN E S S 2 AST 30" 's'. ACC326 327 A S "3 0 2 A C C 364 FIN354 PHY327K.L OATAPRO DPA310 QPA333 K eco ECQ302 £00303 EC0320K1 ECD324 Don ! put ttn* ry¥ jr> ft ar e xarr • Block to ITT •Free Parkr^j • Very eeeorutfoM rates 4tan higF acbooi course s n ttre above sub met r and SAT A ORf Revmw Me/1 ooor to Mad Dog & Beans •Lots of patience a >engu»ge you can jnOerstmnd mg*» before a too tate ♦ I B lu e b o r n e t ! P la z a i f ,)l -jLm eíf t TUTORING SERVICE F R E E FREE Welcome Package FREE Movie Rental w/1 hr. Tutoring FREE 1 hr. of Tutoring w/10 hrs. Reduced Block Rate • EXPERT TUTORING (Most Sublets, AH Uvtfs) • EXAM PREP GRE.ISAT.MCAT • TYPING (overnight) • WORD PROCESSING Laser Printing A p p le o r IB M H O U R S O M E N M -T h 7 a m - 1 2 m id Prt. S a l . S u n . 7 a m - 5 p m 1 0 a m - 1 p m 5 p m - 1 2 m id . 472-6666 S13 W. 24lh St. T H -T o w are Pro* Partdog TA L IA N t-RENd *- $ '■ 'our CaH CaH after 8pm V eron ica 10-11 tutoring telephone 441-6334 Spanish M A T H P H Y S IC S tutoring Ten years ex- p ef,ence os A! TA ava ila b le G reg , 4 5 4-9945 11-15 tutor Black rates H EM ATICS i graduate U T O R IN G by expert uden* $12 per hour L A N G U A G E TUTO R, B A M Ed omn Qtcafions sk i* specialist -writing and search e x p e n s e and experience 4' 8731,10-14 .o E S S lO N A L for c □liable PR IVA tutor now or finance CaH 346- ting /d»es SERVICES 630 — C o m p u te r S e r v ic e s . L *N 5 v ! ’ A N T W J ¡ pro- . ’ A r i f i t K A t vide Help w«*h S P S S EDIT quanhtnttve methods ed’fittrdl analysis and research m ethodology 8152 10-30 lo b e y K o o p Ph D 451 650 — M oving- H auling ABC APARTMENT M O V IN G SAovtng Austin as ow as $39 95 Student discount CALL 339-MOVE 3 7 0 — U nf. Apts. T A K E N O TE. Call About Our Student Specials • 2 Bedroom apartments available for fall semester e New carpet and designer tile e Levelor mini blinds e Redesigned kitchens and baths • Swim m ing pool • Hot tubs and redwood decks • Security system e Extensive landscaping • Covered parking The Heart of Hyde Park DUVAL V IL L A APARTMENTS 4305 Duval St . Austin, Texas 78751 45 1 -234 3 M on.-Fri. 8:30 a.m .-5:30 p.m. S at 11:00 a.m.-SKtO p.m ^ ZIVLEY’S THE COMPLETE PROFESSIONAL FULLTIME TYPING SERVICE PRINTING, BINDING : k\ Nf i ! » \ M - 1 / I V I k Y - , _ flJ) HOUSf 2707 HEMPHILL PARK At 27th & Guadalupe Plenty of Parking 472-3210 472-7677 B • VERA rEE S • D ' • H f s i M F ^ • C O V E R I H I F R S • f R F F S T O R A G E 454-1532 • " days 4 «irk V E R A I N ' W < .rd Pr • . > a P u b li< N i k i r . D * • D ,'ll V c,trs l * a l F x p i r ic r • T e rn Papers • Law Briefs • Thest s • Dissertations • < o v e r I . e r n r ' • Resumes F LH St s 12 454-1532 , « HEAT'S ON? italics • a : t r d p r c K e s s i ! • editing • data er tr\ • graphic art ( M L: 459-1120 THE INFO-PRO » 288-1930 Revjmes to Dissertati'. nr Quality W o rk At Economic Prices D is c o u n t s F o r Q u a n t i t y T Y P IN G A N D w o rq pro'esstng $' 50 pg. M o V S acco u - v $8 5 C an dr;’ » 4 ‘C 48 8 5 5 4 Cal l S ’A P B Q U A . r y A/ord d«m p ap er; of oil ki-ds equotic-- data r.die 8 r/pe fonts 4 4 4 -0 h 29 q s* rb'us. > j 7 5 0 — Typ in g *• 2807 S a n Ja c im o Austin. T X 78705 1 block N orth of U T Cam pus GENERAL WORD-PROCESSING W e work around your schedule. 476-9290 We do it a ll fo r Less! EM PLO YM ENT 8 0 0 — G e n e ra l H e lp W a n te d S h e s h u n o f f Sheshunoff & Company is signifi­ cantly expanding its Information Services Group to include a broadei base of banking related publications O f interest, over 25,000 financial in­ stitution executives are currently us­ ing one or more of our Information Services. Banking Researcher We are seeking highly qualified resear­ chers who have a background in either finance or marketing; a combination both would be preferred along with ex­ perience in statistical analysis. The ke> qualifications are, quite simply, the al Sty to think and write clearly for a demanding audience of senior execut M ajo r initial responsibilities will includi designing surveys and interpreting survey results on topics of critical concern to the banking industry. ; ; This challenging position provides an ex­ cellent salary and opportunity for long term career growth. Beginning salaries will he commensurate with experience. 1 ong term rewards will be tied to individua ■ : formance. For immediate consideration, please send your resume, including salary requirements and samples of your work, to: \lex Sheshunoff Sh eshu noff Company. Inc. P. O. Box 13203. Capitol'Static n Austin. Texa* 78.11 All resume^ will be held in strictest confidence. An Equal Opportunits Employer M F- H E M PLO YM ENT 8 80 — P ro fessio n al A V IA T IO N CAREER O P P O R TU N ITIE S Apo*y now for a permanent U S Govt Civil Service) posi­ tion as an Air Traffic Control Specialist M ore than openings nationwide Three different speoabies PreHiqe careers with medico¡ -etirement benefits plus paid vaca t'ons Entry-level applicants will star* at $17,824 per yeor and could advance to as much as $45,000 per year Av. 3 tion experience not necessary if selected you will be trained at G ovt expense Aptitude test required 3 yrs general work exp or 4 yrs college or combination Send vour name address on postcard before N o v 30 1985 to FAA, A A C -80/305 Box 26650 O klahom a City, OK 73t 26 EOE 8 9 0 — C lu b s -R e sta u ra n ts IS NOW HIRING For All Shifts Pay: $4.00*$4.50 per hour Paid vacations — 50% off on all meals. Call: Jim Wells Mon.-Fri. 9-5 p.m. 478-9258 SERVICES SERVICES SERVICES SERVICES SERVICES SERVICES EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT 750 — Typing 750 — Typing 750 — Typing 750 — Typing 750 — Typing 750 — Typing 790 — Part Time 790 — Part Time 8 9 0 -C lu b s - P a g e 1 8 /T h e D a ily T e x a n / T h u r s d a y . O c t o b e r 1 0 , 1 9 8 5 JOB W INNING RESUMES We Do ft AW E x p e rt Se rvic e s In c lu d e d L a y o u t • Ty p in g P rinting W h ite Y o u Went • J o b R es u m e s /L e tte rs /A p p lic a tio n s • M a ilin g C a m p a ig n s • S E F o rm s ! 7 ! 's • M ilitary Conversions • Business Proposals & Reports • Fre e Interview/LrFetime Updating Since 195& N ationw ide 1300 Guodoiupe #103 ??19 W B«r> Whit# # f 9513 Burnet # ? 0 3 E 499 8862 443 6344 8 3 6 9 4 7 7 Umv Sooth N o r# i COLLEGE AID Complete Typing Services Resumes Term Papers Theses 2 4 h r S e rv ic e /P ic k u p & D e liv e r y — 3 31 -5 5 00 t e r m P R O FE S S IO N A L Q U A ; c e s s in g dissertations q u a lity p rin te r N e c r ram pus -i '8 5 4 ft- 10 3 0 y w o ' -! D io " - e r e s -et«er resum es B M P p a p e r s resum es a n d r e p e ls A M E R IC A N EAGLE W O R D PROCESS IN G kinds 8 8 6 9 10 31 |obs a c c e p te d C a ¡i 1 5 P ly p ,n j Rush P R O F E S S IO N A L TYPIST Theses disserta tions p ro fe s s io n a l re p o rts le g a l G ra d u a te s c h o o l q u a lity From $ ’ 2 5 Be- ;r - TuNos, 4 5 3 5124 n -2 0 STOP! Typing All Night 4 7 2 - 6 6 6 6 In by llpm-Outby 7am Open Til Midnight • Resumes • Dissertations • Papers/P.R/s • Apple or IBM Sys. LASER PRINTING FREE DISK STORAGE D0NNA S TYPING 6 WORD PROCESSING f it Best U ttk Word Housem Texts' S p e c i a l P r i c e THESIS PR D IS S E R T A T IO N 10 31 85 7 4 6 - B W S ta s s n e v I a n p A u s t in . T e x a s 7 8 7 4 5 462-1111 M o n - T h t i r s Fri W E E K E N D S 9 - 9 9-6 12 6 * Word Processing • Resu^s Multiple Letters • * L o w B ^efs • - D is s e rta tio n • - T echnical P o p e 's * 4 7 2 - 2 6 8 4 2404 Rio Grande W o r d s P í m SPEEDWAY TYPING 3701 Speedw ay O NighrSuper Bush IF Shuttle Parking 472-4009 TYPEWRITER RENTAL • i r c w r \i i t n r \ t r x i n i ♦ it ♦ ^ TYPIN G SERVICES G u a ra n te e d results a t best rates A ll ty p in g needs 4 5 9 0 3 7 8 10-25 __________________________________ LETTER PERFECT T yping & W o r d Process­ letters, level p a p e rs ing, a ll c o lle g e resumes, la w briefs C o m p e titiv e rates 2111 R.o G ra n d e , 4 7 4 - 2 7 4 9 10 4 d m t i i i i i l l l l l t i l l l i l f i l l t l l l l l i l l l l l t l l j j f UUordUUrite | 5 5 i 5 5 S z E • i • • • § | * f T l l l l l l l M l l l l l t l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l t l l l l 339-8178 rt\a\tA a .Ann i w ^ M B A / T i RESUMES 2707 Hemphill Park Just N o rth o f 2 7th a t G u a d a lu p e 472-3210 472-7677 T Y P I N G W O R D P R O C E S S IN G Southwest Services 4 5 3 - 0 3 2 3 4311 Avsnue F Pickup/Delivery r n j / y i | | i — i / r - \ ] \ v Lower Level Dobie Mall 477-8766 O p e n M o n - F r i 9 3 0 S a t 9 3 0 4 B rin g in th is a d f o r $2.00 OFF Regular Price of Complete Styling ( S h a m p o o , C u t & B lo w d r y ) W ith C o u p o n — o n e p e r c u s to m e r H eadm asters, Etc. FRED 1 HOUR SCHEDULING PRÍVATE STYLING ROOM 1707 Nueces • Austin, Texas 78701 • (512)479-8802 es Mm s 24th & San Antonio Open Every Night Until 1:30 Open 11:00am Mon-Sat Open Sun 3:00pm Happy Hour Mon-Fri 5-7 SPECIAL ASSIGNMENTS... a special program for technically trained graduates In our Special Assignm ents Program you will have the o p po rtu n ity to work on meaningful projects in several different functional areas before a decision is made regarding assignment to a specific function W e will be interview ing at University of Texas - Austin on O cto b e r 22, 1985 ...s e e your Placem ent O ffice for details! Badische Corporation Freeport. Texas 77541 M e m b e r o f th e B A S F G ro u p An e q u a l o p p o -tu m ty e m p lo y e r m /f /h /v T h e D a i l y T e x a n WANT ADS 15 5 Words Dogs * 3 . 0 C fill CLfiSSIFieD HOTLIN6 471-5244 TO Pine. VOUR AD, SRV "CHARGE IT!" * L O O K IN G FOR artist o f Jewish w o rks to w o rk o n c o n sig n m e n t Please call 3 2 7 6 7 5 8 10 14____________________________ to w o rk w ith fo r a fte rn o o n IM M E D IA T E O P E N IN G school a g e te a c h e r c h ild re n is $ 5 4 0 /h r w ith m o re fo r e x p e rie n c e a n d c o lle g e C all 4 4 4 0 4 1 2 10 23 Base p a y PART TIME se cre ta ry S ho rth a n d , ty p in g re q u ire d W a ges, P re fe ra b ly am Pat 4 7 4 2301 m essage 10-16 hours n e g o tia b le Leave STUDENTS, IDEAL evenings shift m tele p h o n e sales $ 6 /h r a n d d a ily bonus S e ve ra l positions o p e n C all to d a y , start im m e d ia te ly M r B row n, 8 3 7 8 5 8 5 18 10 800 General Help Wanted INSTANT CASH ANDBONUS H y o u nee d cash to h elp y o u o u t w h ile a tte n d in g college, w h y n o t d o n a te b lo o d p la s ­ m a? Yo u can d o n a te tw ice in a 7 d a y p e rio d — For the 1st fo r d o n a tio n receive $ 1 0 , th e 2nd d o n a tio n th e in sam e w e e k receive $12 . Plus w ith this a d y o u 'll receive a $ 2 bon us on y o u r first visit. A lso ask a b o u t bon us p r o ­ g ra m s . So h elp oth ers w h ile h e lp in g y o u rs e lf. M ust h a v e v a lid ID a n d som e p ro o f of Au stin residence. D ra w in g h e ld once a m onth fo r tw o $ 2 5 b o n u s e s . C a ll 4 7 4 - 7 9 4 1 . Au stin Plasm a C enter 2 8 0 0 G u a d a lu p e S TAN LEY SM ITH SECURITY IN C has tull o n d p a rt tim e p ositions a v a ila b le Flex i - b le schedules A p p lic a tio n s a v a ila b le at 4 9 1 0 B urnet Rd 11-5 DEEJAYS W A N T E D H a v e a g o o d voice, k n o w 4 0 , w o r k a n d w e e ke n d s C all 4 4 2 3 0 3 3 10-10 v a r-e ty to p L IG H T IN G T E C H N IC IA N S W A N T E D W ill train, w o rk w eeke n d s C a ll 4 4 ? 3 0 3 3 10 10 W A N T E D P E R M A N E N T full tim e A m e n ca n C a b d n v e r C abs you rs a ll w e e k e n d e v e ry w e e k e n d James, 4 5 2 - 4 9 6 5 10- 28 RESIDENT A P A R TM E N T m a n a g e rs need e d fo r 6 u n it c o m p le x lo c a te d a* 170 0 H ou sto n a n d 6 u m t d u p le x p ro ie c t a t 1801 E nfield Rd Pay $ 2 0 0 o ff rent C all 3 4 6 -1 9 8 4 10 3 0 PART TIME a n d w ee ke n d fo o d server n e e d e d 2 0 2 1 A p p ly m G u a d a lu p e , D o b ie C a fe te ria 10-10 p e rs o n , GREAT O P P O R TU N ITY to e a rn $ 1 0 0 0 o r m o re w e e kly, a t hom e For in fo rm a tio n , send a s elf-addressed sta m p e d e n v e lo p e to P A Enterpnses D e p t B, P O Box 3 4 0 8 1 , H ouston, Texos, 7 7 2 3 4 408 1 10 ■k AUSTIN'S FLOWER PEOPLE * Flower sellers Full, part time w eek­ ends Cash daily 4 4 0 -8 7 7 7 10-30 Restaurants B O S T O N STEAMER h in n g w a itp « rso n s p f/fu ll tim e, lu n c h /d in n e r Benefits 616 E 6 A p p ly m p e rso n 10 15 ARBY'S R O AST B eef need s n ig h t m a n a g e r a n d c o u n te r h e lp d a y a n d n ig h t A p p ly a t 1715 G u a d a lu p e 1 0 -3 0 PART TIME line c o o k n e e d e d $ 6 /h r A p p ly m p e rso n a t W e s tw o o d C o u n try C lub. 3 8 0 8 W 3 5 th S t, 2 5 p m 10 11 RUBY TUESDAY H ig h la n d MaH line cp o k A p p ly in p e rso n 10 17 A lE T A 'S FAJITAS n o w h in n g EXPERi E N C E D kitchen h e lp A p p ly in person, 8 to 10am, o r 2 to 4 p m 1 9 0 7 G u a d a lu p e 10-11 CAFE TORTUGAS A n e w c o n c e p t in c a fe d in in g N o w h irin g e n th u s ia stic o u t g o ­ in g p e rso n s f o r a ll p o s itio n s A p ­ in p e rs o n 4 6 p.m ., 3 0 1 0 p ly W e s t A n d e rs o n L an e in C re e k sid e S q u a re E O F 10-18 a p p lic a tio n s HARPOON HENRY'S RESTAURANT N o w a c c e p tin g f o r w a itpe rso n s Earn up to $ 1 2 /h r A lso a c ce p tin g a p p lic a tio n s fo r e ven in g b arte n de rs A p p ly in person, 2 4, o f te rn o o n s EOE 6019 North IH35 10-10 W a n t a g o o d p a rt-tim e |ob? B ananas a n d 'h e Red T o m a to R estaurant are lo o k in g f o r som e g o o d p e o p le fo r d is h w a s h e rs — lu n c h / d in n e r sh ifts a v a ilo b le A fun p la ce to w o rk A p p ly in person b e tw e e n 4 3 0 -5 3 0 pm 1601 G u a d a lu p e 10-11 900 — Domestic- Household BABYSITTER FOR 4 y e a r o ld girt. 10-12 h ours pe r w e e k M u st lo v e c h ild re n , re f erences, T a rry to w n 4 5 0 -1 6 3 3 10-11 O C C A S IO N A L SITTER n e e d e d fo r lo ve a b le 2 - y e a r -o ld g id T ra n s p o rta tio n re q u ire d R eferences p re fe re d Please coll 3 4 6 - 5 4 9 7 a fte r 4 p m 10-11 C O M M IT T E D STUDENT so u g h t fo r p a rt tim e c h ild c a re M -E 1 3 0 - 5 3 0 *M ust lo ve c h ild re n References 4 5 1 -1 5 7 5 o r 9 2 8 - 3 5 3 5 10-11________________________ BABYSITTIN G H O U S E K E E P IN G N o rth w est Austin, 7 3 0 a m - 5 3 0 p m M o n -E ri T ra n s p o rta tio n , n o n -sm o ke r, a n d re fe r enees W ill co n s id e r live m C a ll Su san,4 7 9 - 5 7 5 9 days, 4 5 8 - 6 6 2 8 even mgs. 10-15 F ull-Tim e p o s itio n fo r c h iid c a re la u n d ry s h o p p in g e rra n d s c h o u ffe u n n g fo r 7 / e a r o ld g ir l o f sing le w o r k in g p a r e n t S le e p m o r o u t S le ep in ne ce ssa ry w h e n p a re n t trave ls W o r k late 2 nig h ts w e e k b u t c o m e in lo te th o se da ys C a ll 3 4 3 - 5 1 2 7 w e e k d a y s 3 2 7 5 5 7 9 m ghts o n d w e e k e n d s R efe ren ces re q u ire d 10 1 SECURITY OFFICER positions a v a il­ a b le full a nd p a rt time M a tu re , d e ­ p e n d a b le , p e o p le -o rie n te d office rs n e e d e d N o m inim um w a ge s p a id U n iform s furnished. E xcellent o p p o r ­ tunity fo r students C all Z IM C O SE­ CURITY C O N S U L T A N T S M F, 1 -5pm 3 4 3 -7 2 1 0 10-8 810 — Office- Clerical PART TIME d e n ta l re c e p tio n /s e c re ta ria l E xpe rie n ce de sire d U p to 15 2 0 hrs./ w e e k hours v a ry C a ll Sue a t 4 5 1 -7 3 5 6 10-18 Responsible m a ture in d iv id u a l n e e de d to pick up fro m S p ic e w o o d E le m en ta ­ ry S chool a n d ke ep in m y hom e 2 m ale child re n, ages 8 a n d 6, fro m 2 5 0 pm to 6 pm S a la ry a b o v e aver­ a g e References re q u ire d For in ter view s call 3 3 1 -0 4 0 6 10-16 910 — Positions Wanted WRITER W A N T S h a lf tim e p o sitio n 15 years e x p e rie n c e S ocial service PoH- ca l A rt Y a rb o ro u g h 9 2 6 5 0 6 8 . 10-10 CALL471-5244 TO PLACE A CLASSIFIED AD W e 're e x p a n d in g o u r C om m unica tton S erv.ce Business >n Austin N e e d sharp in d ivid u a ls fo r full a n d p a rt-tim e positions M ust have e * c e p tio n a l co m m u n ic a tio n skills a n d be b t-lingual, n o n sm oking a n d b o n d a b le D o w n to w n & N o rth side lo c a tio n s C all B rya n t H arris 4 5 1-7 4 4 7 $6.+ PER HR. SALARY EVENINGS-W. E. 50 Immediate Telemarketina Positions Free Parking A P P L Y 4:30-6:30 pm Monday-Friday Telo-Sover Services, Inc. D o h ie C e n te r G u o d o iu p e St E n tra n c e 2 n d f lo o r Suite 2 4 4 6 9 -5 6 2 1 PART TIME te lle r n e e d e d 8 a m -2 p m M -F E xp e rie n ce d o n ly C all Laurie o r N a n c y 4 5 3 5 5 5 4 10-14 f o r C O U N T R Y PALACE n o w a c c e p tin g a p p lic a tio n s b la c k ja c k de a le rs M ust be e x p e rie n ce d . C all Jim K im b ro , a fte r 4 p m 10-11 2 5 5 - 9 6 2 2 . 2 5 5 - 4 0 7 3 p a r t- tim e PART TIME Christm as g ift w ra p p e r M ust be n e a t a n d P h arm acy, 3 9 1 0 Far W e st Blvd 10-11 frie n d ly N o rth w e s t Hills PART TIME stock a n d d e liv e ry person n e e d e d fo r re ta il business. A p p ly in pe r son Paul's Intenors, 5 9 0 9 Burnet Rd 10 22__________________________________ C L E A N IN G C O M P A N Y needs fu ll tim e h e lp E vening shifts a v a ila b le T ranspor ta tio n a n d p h o n e a must. W ill n e g o tia te sa la ry w ith e x p e rie n c e 4 5 8 5 6 2 5 10-18 Leave m essage IN TER ESTIN G W O R K ! M a rk e tin g re search in te rv ie w e rs n e e d e d N o selling Fle xib le hours C all M -S a t, 4 9 5 - 6 4 6 5 10-11 V O LU N TEER N EE D E D to w o rk w ith d.s- a b le d p e o p le o f a ll ages C o n ta ct Y M C . A , N in a o r S andy 4 7 6 - 6 7 0 5 10-11 N EED S P A N IS H tu to r fo r a d v a n c e d high school Spanish. C a ll 4 5 4 - 5 7 5 7 8 5, o r 4 7 4 5 5 5 5 a fte r 5 10 11 N O R TH W E S T 7 lT N E S S ”~ C enter needs N a u tilu s E xp e rie n ce p re fe re d A p p ly at 812 7 M e sa Dr. 3 4 5 8 8 0 0 10 10 fo r w o m e n 's a re a in tsru cto r N EED ED SERVICE agents fo r p a rt tim e a n d w eekends. A p p ly a t D o lla r Rent-a- C a r 2 9 6 3 M a n o r Rd 10-11 PART TIME e x p e rie n c e d b o o k k e e p e r fo r la w o ffic e P refer s e n io r a c c o u n tin g m a- |o r o r e q u iv a le n t C a ll 4 5 4 - 5 7 5 7 8 -5 10-11 G R A D U A T E STUDENTS n e e d e d fo r no te ta k m g m classes esp e c ia lly in n a tu ra l sciences a n d busi­ ness For m o re 7 9 8 6 10 10 in fo rm a tio n call 4 7 2 u n d e rg ra d u a te BABYSITTER N EED ED S unday m ornings, 9 3 0 -1 2 30, nursery $ 4 /h r 4 5 1 -1 7 8 3 10-11 in U n ive rsity a re a church PR ESC H O O L TEACHER aides c h ild d e v e lo p m e n t e x p e rie n ce , M W F 8 2 3 0 , $ 4 5 0 /h r C a ll M o z e lie , 331 5 7 8 7 , 4 5 2 - 5 6 6 8 10-11 p re fe r BAKER'S HELPERS H a rd w orkers. 7am - n o o n , S u n d a y T hursday start S om e e x p e rie n c e p re fe re d 3 8 5 - 4 6 9 2 Leave nam e, n um ber, position a p p ly in g fo r, a n d tim e yo u can be re a ch e d 10-14 $ 4 -5 BAKERY CLEANER S 2 m eticulous, re li­ a b le h a rd w orkers, 5 p m -9 p m 3 8 5 - Leave n a m e n um b e r position 4 6 9 2 a p p ly m q tim e y o u can be re a c h e d 10-14 fo r a n d M A IN T E N A N C E W O R K p a rt tim e ex c h a n g e A B P G a p t n e a r cam pus plus sm all salary. H a rd w o rk e r only, please 4 5 3 4 9 9 0 10-10 PART TIME |o b m a in ta in in g in te rio r fo li­ a g e plants A p p ro x 5 h r s . / w k $ 5 / h r , must h a ve tra n s p o rta tio n 4 77-1414 10- 15 S a fe w a y Stores Inc. seeking p a rt-tim e cashiers fo r all S a fe w a y stores M u st be a v a ila b le to w o rk a n d w e eke n ds a fte rn o o n s , e ven in gs W e p ro v id e a fle x ib le w o rk schedule p lea sa nt w o rk in g e n viro n m e n t plus the o p p o rtu n ity to g a in retail e xpe n ence S a la ry ranges fro m $4 2 0 to $ 5 8 5 p e r hour, d e p e n d in g on p re vi ous re ta il e xp e rie n c e A d d itio n a l n ig h t a n d S unday pre m iu m is p a id A p re -e m p lo y m e n t test w ill be given a t the S a fe w a y E m p loym en t o ffic e on; Tuesday, O ct. 8 a t 10 0 0 am a n d 4 3 0 pm W e d n e sd a y, O c t 9 a t 10 0 0 am a nd 4 3 0 pm Thursday, O c t 10 a t 10 0 0 am a n d 4 3 0 pm N o a p p o in tm e n t is necessary A p p li­ cants must a rriv e o n tim e f o r g ro u p testing A p p lic a tio n s w ill be given at the tim e o f testmq The S a fe w a y E m p loym en t O ffic e is lo ­ ca te d at 8 6 1 0 N Lam ar tt 112, be tw e e n R u nd b erg o n d 183 For a d d i fio n a l in fo rm a tio n , yo u m ay call the e m p lo ym e n t o ffic e a t 8 3 7 4 2 2 8 10-10 Ann M B A U j * Sure, w e ty p e FRESHMAN THEMES Why Not Start Out With Good Grades? 472-3210 472-7677 T Y P IN G IN m y N o rth A ustin h o m e Term letters etc pap e rs dissertations Reo s o n a b le rates ¡BM c o rre c tin g Selectnc C all Pat, 8 3 4 0 7 7 8 10-14 PERSUASIVE RESUMES w ,th fla ir! Invest in y o u r c a re e r w ith c o n fid e n c e Protect y o u r a ch ie ve m e n ts e ffe c tiv e ly Profes sional resum e co n su lta n cy C re a tiv e Ser vices 2 4 2 0 G u a d a lu p e 4 7 8 3 6 3 3 10- 23 t e x t p r o c e s s in g IN TE LLIG E N T P R O FE S S IO N A L co m p u te n z e d E n g lis h assistance (spelling p u n c tu a tio n , g ra m ­ m ar) B ea u tifu l results g e t h ig h e r g ra d e s C re a tiv e Services, 4 7 8 3 6 3 3 12-16 2 4 2 0 G u a d a lu p e , Themes, PATTY'S W O R D Processing resumes, la w b n e fs , dis sertations pro fe s sionol re p o rts C am pus p ic k -u p a v a ila b le HI 11pm 3 4 5 4 2 6 9 12 16 TYPIN G W O R D proce ssin g by e x p e n - t u r n a r o u n d e n c e d re a s o n a b le rates L o ca te d N Austin N a n c y 2 5 5 - 7 4 2 0 11-15 t y p is t F a s t PR O FE S S IO N A L T Y P IN G w o r d process m g e q u ip m t $1 1 5 /p a g e m ost cases Cam pus pick up d e liv e ry , o v e rn ig h t ser vice 2 4 4 0 2 1 3 10 3 0 theses, dissertations P R O FESSIO N AL W O R D p rocessing Le g a l p apers, term pap e rs P ick-up a n d d e liv e ry if requested C all 2 5 8 8 9 7 2 a fte r 6 p m w e ekdays, a n ytim e w e e ke n d s 10-11 T Y P IN G /W O R D proce ssin g w ith a d iffe r ence! $ 2 /p g Extensive a c a d e m ic ty p in g 2 2 0 0 G u a d a lu p e # 2 1 7 e x p e rie n c e 4 7 2 - 2 2 0 4 10-14 RESUME SPECIAL $ 9 /p g . T yp.ng $ 2 /p g C o m p u ty p e is c o n v e n ie n tly lo c a te d a t 2 2 0 0 Suite 2 17 4 7 2 - 2 2 0 4 10 14 TY P IN G T h e s e s . E xpe rie n ce d , 192 9 10-14 FACULTY g ra d u a te m a n u s c r ip t s students p a p e r s q u a lity A fte r 6 p m 4 4 2 resumes, TY P IN G A N D w o rd p rocessing dissertations, reports sch o o l C o m p e titiv e pnces, fre e pick up a n d de live ry 3 3 1 - 5 7 6 2 1 0-22 theses, T Y P IN G O N w o r d pro cessing e q m t Rea so n a b le rates C all Pattie, 3 4 5 9 3 9 9 , lea ve m essage 10 16 760 — Misc. Services L O N D O N L O O K B eauty S cion, exclu sive b u t n o t expe nsive, 1 4 2 2 W Ben W hite, 4 4 4 3 7 4 7 , h a ir cuts $ 9 10 31 U N B A L A N C E D C H E C K B O O K S *? WiH b a la n c e y o u r ch e c k b o o k -$ 6 /s ta te m e n t Business ca ll fo r e v a lu a tio n lo r in , 4 4 4 7981 11-12 A S T R O L O G IC A L C O N S U L T A N T S natal chart, g e n e ra l re a d in g s, c o m p a tib ility - W e ste rn o r H in d u system C a ll 3 4 6 5051 10-11 SMAU LOANS From $5- $500 5134 SUANCT ROAD 454-0450 OAK HILL FA PHOTOS for PASSPORTS APPLICATIONS RESUMES 3 minute service MON-FRI 9-6 SAT 10-2 477-5555 THIRD EYE 2532 Guadalupe EMPLOYMENT 7 9 0 — Part Time B A N K P AR T T IM E P O S IT IO N S (1) C u s to m e r A c c o u n ts /B o o k k e e p in g d e ­ p a r tm e n t. — C le r ic a l d u tie s H o u rs M - F 1 3 0 6 0 0 p m e v e r y S a tu r d a y 7 3 0 a m 3 p m ¡2 ) D a ta P ro c e s s in g d e p a r t ­ m e n t F in e S o r tin g C h e c k s H o u rs ; M -F 5 p m a p p r o x 9 p m C a ll f o r o p p o in t m e n t / 9 a m - 2 p m M - F T ra v is B a n k 911 W e s t 3 8 th 4 5 4 - 9 6 1 1 A sk f o r P e rs o n n e l E O E 1 0 -1 6 O n e o f A u s tin 's fin e s t s p e c ia lty sto re s n e e d s p a r t tim e s a le s p e rs o n in m e n 's s h o e d e p a r tm e n t 1 3 8 5 / h o u r 1 C o m m is s io n A p p ly a t F ro s t B ro th e rs m e n s s h o e d e p a r tm e n t a t N o r th c r o s s M a ll o r c a ll 4 5 1 - 6 2 6 2 e x t 2 7 6 10-10 S E C U R IT Y O F F IC E R p o s itio n s a v a il­ a b le p a r t tim e M a tu r e , d e p e n d a b le , p e o p le o r ie n te d o ffic e r s n e e d e d N o m in im u m w a g e s p a id U n ifo r m s f u r ­ n is h e d E x c e lle n t o p p o r t u n it y f o r stu d e n ts C a ll Z I M C O S E C U R IT Y C O N ­ S U L T A N T S M -F , 1 - 5 p m 3 4 3 - 7 2 1 0 la b o r a t o r y W o r k w ill in v o lv e ta k in g a n ti- a r th n tic d ru g s , lis te n in g to in te n s e to n e s , a n d m a k in g lu d g e m e n ts a b o u t to n e s p re s e n te d o v e r h e a d p h o n e s M u s t w o r k fr o m 1-3 p m M F f o r fa ll a n d s p n n g se m e s te rs C a ll S ue P la tts m ie r a t 4 7 1 - 9 2 2 8 to m o k e a p ­ p o in tm e n t JQ ^ LINCOLN THEATER THREE THE NEXT PRESIDIO THEATER to b e o p e n e d th is fa ll L o c a te d a t I H 3 5 a n d H w y 2 9 0 N o w h ir in g f o r f lo o r s ta ff w ith im m e d ia te tr a in in g P le o s e a p p ly a t th e A r b o r C in e m a F o u r, 1 0 0 0 0 R e s e a rc h , M -F , a f t e r 1 10-11 Part-time help needed for commer cial/residential cleaning company Must have own car, phone, and refer­ ences. Flexible hours, starting at 15 0 0 /h o u r Call 4 6 5 -7 8 3 8 9-6 pm, 4 5 3 -0 5 3 6 after 6 0 0 pm VAW W ON needs p a rt-tim e in s ta lle r 4 - 5 hours a day, no e x p e rie n c e necessary, but must be a b le to w o rk w ith han d s S tart $ 5 .5 0 an h o u r C o m p a n y lo c a te d o ff R utland C all S p o rts m o b ile Texas, 8 3 5 - 4 4 0 9 , 7 0 0 am -10 0 0 am c L A S S I F I E D S W O R K F O R Y O U R S c A L L 4 7 1 5 2 4 4 NEED EXTRA S ? W o r k o d a y o w e e k, o r m o n th a t a If y o u h a v e 1 fu ll d o y a w eek, tim e tra n s p o rta tio n a n d a h a v e r e lia b le th e re is a |o b w a itin g h o m e p h o n e fo r yo u . W e h a ve te m p o r a r y assign m ents m a ll a re a s o f A u stin fo r the fo llo w in g • G e n e ra l C le n c o l • R ece ptio nists • S e cre ta rie s e W o r d Processors • D a to E ntry • Lt In d u s tria l W e oW er h ig h h o u r ly p a y , w e e k ly p a y c h e c k s a n d m u ch m o re C a ll to d a y 3 4 3 - 6 3 6 6 3 5 0 8 F a r W e s t B lv d . S u ite * 1 7 0 lOffke Specialistsi 840 — Sales in y o u r C A M P U S REPS w a n te d Earn spare tim e by selling p a rty fa v o rs to fr a ­ ternities a n d sororities F or fu rth e r in fo r ­ m a tio n , ca ll R egal Etchings, 1 -8 0 0 -5 4 3 1317, ext. 6 9 10-11 SELL BEAUTIFUL a ll-o c a s io n g ift baskets to fn e n d s a n d /o r lo c a l businesses O w n hours. N o investm ent, com m ission basis 4 4 5 - 0 6 2 7 10-10 IDEAL evenings shift in tele STUDENTS p h o n e soles $ 6 /h r a n d d a ily bonus S everal positions o p e n . C all to d a y , start im m e d ia te ly M r B ro w n , 8 3 7 8 5 8 5 10 18 la r a e Firm Needs Campus Sales Representative To Promote And Create An Awareness Of This Company On Campus And Solicit Business From All Sectors Of The University Community Pre­ fer Applicants To Be At Least Junior Level Business Majors Graduóte Students En couroged To Apply Enquire At Office Of Student Financial Aid FULL TIME a n d p a rt tim e positions a v a il­ a b le fo r checkers, p a c k a g e cle rk a n d g ro c e ry clerks A p p ly in person, o n ly to Tom Thum b #7 1 , 2 7 2 5 E xposition Blvd 10-15 ENERGETIC PERSON, sell s o u v e n irs/tick­ ets, Z ilke r Park R a ilro a d M ust be re ­ sponsible, re lia b le , honest F lexible hours, g o o d p e rs o n a lity must 4 4 3 - 4 9 2 6 10- 15______________________________________ je w e lry a t H ig h la n d a n d C H R IS TM A S SALESPERSON fo r sterling h eorts o n d N o rth c ro s s M ust b e n e o t a p p e a ra n c e , a n d positive attitu d e Sales e x p e rie n c e p re fe rre d 4 5 1 -5 4 6 3 10-16___________________________________ repo n sib le , hove fo r d yn a m ic THE C A D E A U has on e x c itin g o p p o rtu n i­ ty in d ivid u a ls Positions a v a ilo b le in g o u rm e t/k itc h e n , sp o rts w e a r a n d expre sso b a r A p p ly 231 6 G u a ­ d a lu p e . 10-16 Full time and part time sales + help needed. S alary commission. Call fo r a p ­ pointment, 4 7 2 -1 6 9 7 , Ron Brumble. 10-14 880 — Professional Austin Community College Full-Time Cnminal Justice Instructor Teach cnminal |ushce, advice CRJ M a- |orc, perform student assessments, serve as ex-officio member of CRJ ad­ visory committee maintain on going relations with area CRJ agencies, Re­ cruit Students BS in Criminal Justice or related field and 5 years work experi­ ence at community college level Pre­ fer TEA-approved plus instructors cer­ tificate from TCLEOSE Reference J #10 8506. A complete resume or ap­ plication must be postmarked no later than 11/22/85 and sent to Joyce Guil­ lory, Director o f Personnel Services, Austin Community College, P O Box 2285, Austin, Tx 787 6 8 Equal O pportunity and Affirmative Action Employer 10-11 850 — Retail PHONE WORK $ 5 .0 0 /h r * bonuses and in­ centives. 18 hrs./week. Call 4 4 2 -3 1 6 3 , 9 a m -5 pm. PART TIME cashier n e e d e d A p p ly a t Leon's, N o rth c ro s s M a ll 10-10 tim e E xpe rie n ce p re fe rre d Better IM M E D IA T E L Y N E E D E D cash ie r la d y's 0 2 3 4 b e tw e e n 2 -5 p m 10-11 re a d y -to w e a r store C all 4 5 2 P a rt 10-11 F A N T A S T IC O P P O R T U N IT Y ' fo r p e o p le with little or no experience. $ 5 .0 0 /h r . Call 4 4 2 - 5 9 4 2 for appointm ent. 10-11 W o n t e d m a le UT s tu d e n ts f o r h e a r in g P erfe c t fo r re s p o n s ib le student 4 7 6 - 10 2 2 P a rt-tim e p o sition, G in n y 's C o p y in g S erv ic e at D o b ie M a ll in self service d e p a rtm e n t H o u rs 5 3 0 -1 0 :3 0 pm M - F, w e e k e n d w o rk e v e ry o th e r m onth. 9171 ask fo r John o r D ia n e o r c o m e in a n d fill out a p p lic a tio n 1 0-9 AL'S F O R M A L W E A R BABYSITTER/LIGHT h o u se w o rk C o u p le m Lost C reek w ith in fo n t References, tra n s p o rta tio n n e e d e d Pay n e g o tia b le C all 4 72 3 8 9 9 fo r a p p o in tm e n t 10-15 to w a tch C O LLEG E STUDENT w a n te d th ird g ra d e g irl in o u r h o m e C im m a rro n A d d itio n , M c N e il Rd , Round Rock. M -F, 3 -5 3 0 Fee n e g o tia b le M ust h a ve o w n tra n s p o rta tio n 3 8 8 -1 7 5 7 a fte r 5 30p m . 10-16___________________________________ A PA R TM EN T M A N A G E R - responsible, outgoing couple to care fo r a well-kept, 50-u n it ap artm ent com plex. Previous ex- penence helpful, not on shuttle, no pets please A partm ent ond salary 4 7 7 - 4 6 0 9 10-2 2 ____________________________ PART TIM E accounting clerk needed for d ata entry and bo okkeeping, prefer jun­ ior or senior accounting m ajor with PC experience Ask fo r Don or David, 8 3 6 - 5 7 0 7 10-14____________________________ 10-10 NEAR C A M P U S Evenings, weekends, Tu- Th mornings. Typ«st--60 * wpm, 2 5 *■ hours p er w eek. $ 4 - 5 5 0 /h r 4 7 4 - 2 0 0 2 11-5____________________________________ receptionist--2 0 hours a PART-TIME week. $ 4 .2 5 /h r Auto body repair shop in north Austin Call fo r interview, 8 3 6 - 4 4 9 8 1 0 -2 8 ____________________________ PART TIME help w anted evenings and w eekends Ajaproxim ately 2 0 hrsYwk. Please apply in person Sunglasses Etc., Highland or Northcross M a ll N o phone applications accepted 10-17 10-11 PART-TIME credit clerk Night hours only M on., W ed ., and Fn evenings, 5 -9pm. Phone 4 7 6 -6 5 1 1 LoRay Baird, Yanng's D o w n to w n 5 0 6 Congress 11-5 CALL 471-5244 TO PLACE A CLASSIFIED AD T E X A N C L A S S I F I E D A D S W O R K 1 ’ Advertisements may be billed to individuals listed in either the uni­ p m EO E Hero's cm exciting classified selling pack­ age for readers of THE DAILY TEXAN uiho would like to turn unwonted items into cashl for only $3 — perhaps the most profltoblo $3 you over spent — the Tex­ an will run your 15-word ad for five days. (MasterCard] VISA ■i T h e Da i l y T e x a n OFF€fi 6XPIfi€S N O V E M B E R 1,1985 1985. versity directory or the Austin SUJ0 telephone directory Prepayment may be mode by cosh (in person), check, VISA or MasterCard. (Certain classifications oluuoys require advance payment.) 2 These rotes are not available to businesses, dealers or institutions and are for private-party advertising only. Rates apply to all classifi­ cations EXCEPT 110 through 180; 350 through 500; and 6 2 0 through 9 40 Value of item advertised must not exceed 1500 and price must appear in the advertising copy 3 Minimum ad is 15 words Additional uuords 4< per word per day. Although ads may be cancelled short of full run, no refund or credit con be made a t this low rate 4 All advertising placed under this offer must run BEFORE December 10, ampus 7:30 p.m Thursday in Ernest Cockrell Jr Hall 2.314 Bellw ether w ill meet at 6 p.m. Thursday in U niversity Teaching ( en­ ter 1.132. Cercle Francais w ill have Folklonc French music at 5 p.m. Thursday in Old Music Building lounge. Bahai Association w ill meet at 7:30 p.m. Thursday in the Texas Union Cactus Cafe. Longhorn Phi Theta Kappa A lu m n i will have a party for members at 9 p.m. Friday. Please call 477-6418 or 339-1199 for information Royal O rder of Pythons w ill meet in Robert A. at 7 p.m. Thursday Welch Hall 2.302. W om en and Careers Committee of the M inority Affairs Committee will meet from 6 p.m. to 7 p.m. Thursday in Texas Union 4.310. Innervisions of Blackness w ill have a rehearsal at 6:30 p.m. Thursday in University Presbyterian Church. C h ristian Science O rganization will meet at 6:30 p.m. Thursday in Sid Richardson Hall 3.106. Central Am erican Peace Initiative will meet at 7:30 p.m. Thursday at the Texas Union Patio. Campus Crusade for C hrist w ill meet at 7 p m Thursday in Geology Building 100. Off-Campus Student Association will have a student forum on " L 1 Po lice A Full Investigation" at 8 p m Thursday in the Texas Union Qua drangle Room Tor more information, call Mark at 478 (1953 U T C yclin g C lub w ill meet at 8 p .m. Thursday in ( Gregory ( ivm B3 The Learning S k ills Center is g iv ­ ing a talk on "T ip s on Studying fo r­ eign Languages" from 4 to 5 p.m Thursday in Burdine Hall 13(1 For fur ther information, c all 471-3614 Student Council for Exceptional Children will meet at 7 p m M onday in Education Building 286. The Student Health C enter is spon­ soring a "M ethod s of Contraception" class from 6 p.m. to 7:30 p m Ihurs day in Student \ lealth Center 448 Baptist Student Union is having Harambee, black student fellowship, at 5:30 p.m. Thursday at 2204 San A n ­ tonio St. Baptist Student U nion is having aerobics at 4 p.m. Thursday at 2204 San Antonio St. The Learning S k ills Center is pre- senting a talk on taking notes from to 5 4S p.m Thursday in 4 30 p m Beauford H f .r Jester Center A2I5 further information (.ill 171 361} undergraduate Pi Sigma Pi, M in o rity f ngineering Society, is offering fret- tutoring for most engineering courses and some upper dn.isior courses from 7 p rn to 10 p m e ven f hursdav in Beauford 11 luster ( enter A215A. UT Rugby Team is having selection trials from 6 p m to 7 p m Thursday at the Intramural Field* ( ill (on \1 i hel [Jesaloms ,it 454-5522 ter more 1 formation I iberal Arts ( ouncil presents "R ace and ( lass in Americ an Sc>c ie t. at 3 p.m Thursday in Old Music Building 2 118 Am erican W in g Chun Association will have a movie publicity party from noon to 5 p.m Saturday at I ibertv lu n ch The 1985 UT Department of Drama Season will lead off with Private \ ie\- and Catastrophe The plays will be presented at 8 p.m f hursdav and Sat urdav and at 10 p m Friday in the Theatre Room, 23rd and San Jacinto streets. u 3 & V C 0 o Q D < LU O 3 x E“ > CC cc < o > CD rne ;ja-y Tex-r '• • My Oc 'obRr irj 1985/P a g e 19 OKA/ MIKE, THATLITTLE EOT Tí YOUP RJGHT IS CALLEl W MOOP M ouse" 3 / c i kjkm / j you SeiECJ PlFFEREHTPPOCjPM TO MA TCH THE PROFILE '* THE OPERATOR OKA/ FtR¿ HEP IF OKAY THIS ONE'S CALXEP JSEP n¡NQ! u i ju p p r / WHO APB mem.*'ENTER o yjp NAME ANP SWITCH TO THE o fjt p r o g r a m JTJU? ¡AJE rALL THIS iSEP r:FQF GUT l/JHC) ARF /o*/really? psychologists, PROGRAM EAM'LlAP THEPAP'STS pT TRY ANOTHER cu / ip MY SCREEN g g y CT0P B / i P A FPIENPLYT FOP rue SOFT CORE MARKET I SPECIAL SALE V2 OFF OF REGULAR LOW PRICE ON SPECIAL GROUP OF BOOKS Peanuts I WENT INTO NEEPLE5 YESTERPAY ANP TALKED T0 A PSYCHIATRIST... I A sk gp him t TALKiNb TO A CACTU5 0dA5 A SiGN I uUA5 6 0 IN6 CRAZY ' n o h e S A T o n l y .P The CACTUS STA R'S ' 0 T A L K B A C K ; EASE PON ' SAY ANYT- N6 fTx by Charles VI Schulz 10% OFF ON ALL BOOKS W/THIS COUPON. (excludes specially priced books) expires Sun. 10/13/85 High Temperatures 8 0 2508 GUADALUPE 474-8992 HOURS M-F 9-9 SAT 9-7 /O to -,Mi UMilfcd FcaUt : BLOOM COUNTY JUMPIN' JFHOSAPHfíT ' STRUCK POWN WITH AMNFSCA ANP m /p o /m p 3 / HALLEY'S COMET. WHAT A FtN€ PRFPICAMENT m in... NO PAST NO FUTURE ANP NOTHIN' MUCH 70 BE POIN RKrHT THIS MOMENT IF B E L U K Z /t beom &J5H // ' HA b y B e rk e B re a th e d iOOF I W O W "HAT WASN'T KINP, m GEORGE 1$ A TOUGH 0C 60AT ANP FRANKLY TM JUST A TAP (JP5GT V - - < (j/ H iI BY J O H N N Y HART " 4 Aaco to o n I M l PPlM é? 3 Í Associated Press NATIONAL W E A T H ER S E R V IC E FO R EC A ST UNTIL 7 P M THURSDAY The Austin forecast for Thursday calls for cloudy skies and humidity, with a 30 percent chance of showers. Highs should be in the upper 80s. The National Weather Service forecasts rain from the Great Lakes region northeast to Maine. Eyebeam HfVNK, \F V O U rT H E R E ARE S 0 ^ A P P LY FOR M A N Y CHOICES! I E X IS T E N C E , C O U L D RE A WHAT D IL L /CO N EC lO U C R U N G YOU E L E C T / LIKE YOU OR A to t s E ' p y g u p p y , - m HOW LONG WOULD T LAST? OR, 1 COULD BE m INANIMATE 06IECT BUNG COMPOSED OF MATTER 8* ATOMIC COMPONENTS WOULD LAST FOREVER UPON DISINTEGRATION D BECOME A PART OF THE UNIVERSE AS A WHOLE. IF VOU T POINT taken CALl / WANT A DISTINCTIVE THAT \ EXISTENCE SOMETHING LWNG J DYNAMIC AND : ^ ENOUGH TO BE WORTHY m ME TO EXPERIENCE T by Sam Hurt ^NOw A T MX- 0BVI0U5L9 " RESTAURANT ) HAVEN’T -Y ARD AeouT THE ujAITTNG LISTS B .C . " V — / n n h ' / < _ 1 Squib TO D AY'S CRO SSW O RD PUZZLE ACROSS P R E V IO U S PU Z Z L E SO LV ED 1 Flagellate 5 Overlies 9 Speedy 14 Moslem chief 15 Fever-chill 16 Percent 17 Sad sound 18 Cat doctor 20 Weapons 21 Opp. of syn. 22 Large birds 23 Epee’s kin 25 Rome’s river 27 Aloin source 29 Approval 30 A-S laborer 34 Wiliness 36 Mexican tree 38 Willow 39 Being ritzy 42 Actress Drew 43 Artifices 44 Entity 45 Consider 46 Grouping 47 Sounded out 49 Navigation hazards 51 Dog sounds 54 Pursuer 58 Citizen: suff. 60 Minister 61 Poisonous herbs 63 Sicily city 64 Of spaces 65 Vegetable 66 Disfigure 67 Countersinks 68 Atoll 69 Sam ple s T O W M O B S R A P 1 D 1 N A N E A R E A L O U N T E s T 1 N E P E L T s S W E E P 1 N G S ■ L 1 V E R M 1 N E R S R 0 D E O W A N E T E N N 1 S O R 1 E L A N N D E E R H 0 U N D ■ h O M E C H A R G E S U P 0 R O C A R G O H E L T E Rl c L U N K T R 1 A L S A L U T E P R E S S U R E s A D O B E R 1 V A L R 1 E s | 1 R A D E A C A T N E V E R A M E R H A T s G R 1 N S H E R B DOWN 1 Actor Fernando 2 Israeli coin 3 W ar game 4 and Gretel’’ 5 Scoria 6 Middleman 7 Preventing wars 8 Poker word 9 — Tuck 10 Auld — Syne 11 And others 12 Innisfail 13 Trinkets 19 Grass stalk 24 French sculptor 26 Good things 28 Sea fowl 30 Jargon: suff 31 Sly look 32 Inert gas 33 Work units 34 Mimed 35 Regulation 37 Get along 38 “ ---- . can you see ...” 40 Pro — 41 Thrice: pref. 46 European 48 Freshest 49 Whirls 50 Strong alloy 52 Pineapples: Sp 53 Set out 54 Burn 55 Immediacy 56 Athena 57 Clobber 59 This. Sp 62 Oriental sash Capitol View The Biko dom /niTrfevV/u AoW HME 30 MINUTES 72) AbbRE SS THE RE6ENTS OH DIVESTITURE FPOf* S o u th aGRkA APARTHEID IS A morally wnpt/6 t d f a t h a t t h e U N I VEF- by DuBove and Wiesner YouR r/Mfi U P S O N CoOLOT fWISH/No T/ME 'oN Fred ajuere (X /vi N ot \ MY SYIUBLEJENE‘RE ThE Siry/^REOEf/rs. BUSY I THE hell's our) SPENO/N6 (CHRISTMAT XH NAT/qNAi Bu/LP/NS A F/RTTclMS UNIVERSITY/ DECIO1H6 iACA D f Tiic POLICY NEXTJ by Miles Mathis by Van Garrett RANSO'S. Mf- (CÉAT- y c a h / Burnt Orange Blues FfZ\ PE/I ^°°^AT£¡ 7 í-t f* k A. f t t Cv. Nj J T-i m M. Hv - . , R a m tso ' ty v—-■ ■■■ v x T % Around ( ampus is a daily column listing University-related activities sponsored by academic departments, student services and registered stu­ dent organizations. To appear in the Around ( ampus column, organiza­ tions must be registered w ith the O ff­ ice of Student Activities. Announce­ ments must be submitted on the correct form by 11 a.m. the day before publication to The Daily Texan off­ ice. No exceptions w ill be made. Alpha Fpsilon Delta w ill meet at 7 p m Thursday in Experimental Sci- en