Vol. 87, No. 155 2 Sectic dl7 Jent newspaper of The University of Texas at Austin Monday, June 6,1988 25C Hardesty backers rally SWTSU By JOHN COUNCIL Daily Texan Staff SAN MARCOS — About 200 supporters of Southwest Texas State University Presi­ dent Robert Hardesty gathered Saturday at the Hays County Courthouse to revel in victory after winning a court order that in­ validates Hardesty's recent firing. State District Judge Jon Wisser found in­ valid Friday the May 19 Texas State Uni­ versity System Board of Regents' 5-4 vote to fire Hardesty because the regents failed to post a detailed agenda for the meeting, violating the Texas Open Meetings Act. Also at that May 19 meeting, the board banned the prescription and distribution of contraceptives from the university health center and voted to demolish a historic campus building. "Bob Hardesty's work isn't done and neither is ours," said Hardesty supporter and SWTSU alumnus Dave Jarrett. "Just because the TRO [temporary restraining order] was granted, there is still more work to be done." San Marcos ralliers drove in a caravan to the Capitol steps in Austin, carrying a cof­ fin with the message, "H ere lies responsi­ ble government and academic freedom ." By MIKE ERICKSON Daily Texan Staff A state district judge reinstated recently fired Southwest Texas State University President Robert Hardesty to his former position Friday by declaring "null and void" a Texas State University System Board of Regents meeting. Calling the May 19 meeting a violation of the Texas Open Meetings Act, state District Judge Jon Wisser granted four SWTSU students a restraining order to prevent the regents from enforcing any actions taken at the meeting. "They [the regents] failed to give prop­ er notice of the issues to be discussed at the meeting," Wisser said. Since the order is only enforceable for 14 days, a hearing will be held June 16 to decide if the order should result in a per­ manent injunction against the May 19 meeting, Wisser said. Wisser said he expects a permanent in­ junction, but said it will not have any ef­ fect on subsequent decisions made at fu­ ture board meetings. "The regents wül probably do it again," Wisser said. Four SWTSU students — Jody Dodd, Lee Brandt, John Harris and Jeff Heam- don — filed the lawsuit Friday alleging the regents violated the Texas Open Meet­ ings Act. Jack Martin, the board's chairman, said he has been out of town since Friday and has not had time to consider Wisser's or­ der or schedule a board meeting to dis­ cuss the issue. "The first thing I'll do tomorrow [Mon­ day] is meet with the [Texas State Univer­ sity] systems counsel and the assistant at­ I understand torney general, who represented us, to get the details of what happened Friday," Martin said. The regents were represented at Fri­ day's hearing by Assistant Texas Attorney General George Warner. The coffin contained petitions to Gov. Bill Clements and the regents, asking them to reconsider Hardesty's firing. Hardesty said Sunday he will ask Jack Martin, the board's chairman, on Monday if he should come back to work. "Technically I guess you can say that 1 am still president," Hardesty said. Hardesty said any legal actions he might take against the regents will depend on the board's next meeting, in which the regents might revote on his firing, he said. Hardesty said he was impressed by SWTSU student support but that he did not consider himself an overwhelmingly popular president. "I haven't thought of myself as a presi­ dent in dem and," Hardesty said. "But 1 feel very fortunate to have the support of the students. It was a very heartwarming experience." Regents have not announced the date of their next meeting. Under the Texas Open Meetings Act, a state board is required to give 72 hours notice before holding a meet­ ing. SWTSU graduate student Jody Dodd, who initiated the legal action in support of Hardesty, warned the regents against holding another elusive meeting. "If they hold another meeting without public notice or if they hold a telephonic meeting — in other words, if they try to declare this an emergency and give two hours notice and do it by telephone, we'll slap more TROs on them ," Dodd said. Dodd said she and other students might also bring criminal charges against the re­ gents. "W hen you violate the Open Meetings Act, it holds criminal sanctions," she said. "Maybe they'll have to hold that next meeting from the Travis County Court­ house, because they may have to go to jail for six months for violating that act." Dodd said she considers the injunction a "partial victory" because the regents may repeat their decisions at the next meeting. "I don't know if it [the injunction] will get Hardesty back, but I think it will change the decision on the contraceptive issue," she said. Dodd said students will continue to sup­ port Hardesty despite his reluctance for them get involved. Hardesty has said he would rather file his own lawsuit. "President Hardesty asked us not to go through with it, but we felt that because of the contraceptive issue, we had to go through with it,” she said. "A s long as h**''' willing to fight, we'll fight for him ." Ruben Escobedo, the board's chairman when Hardesty was fired, has said the president was fired because of "philosoph­ ical differences" with the regents. Some Texas legislators have cited parti­ san politics as a reason for the firing be­ cause Republican Gov. Bill Clements ap­ pointed George Worth of San Antonio to the board. Worth was sworn in just IV: hours before the regents fired Hardesty, and Worth voted for the action. Worth is serving as an interim appointee until the 1989 meeting of the Texas Legisla­ ture. Regent appointees require confirma­ tion by the Senate. Hardesty was a close friend of President Lyndon Johnson and also wrote many speeches for Democratic Gov. Mark White's 1986 campaign. Sen. Gonzalo Barrientos, D-Austin, told San Marcos ralliers he opposed Worth's appointment to the Board of Regents. "I don't know about this ol' boy named W orth/' Barrientos said. "But he sure as hell doesn't live in my district or else he wouldn't be there." Barrientos blamed Hardesty's firing on "cold hard politics," which he said have no place in the administration of Texas univer­ sities. "It's not a Republican issue, it's not a Democratic issue — it's an education is­ su e," Barrientos said. R aiers use a coffin to display petitions supporting Hardesty during a rally at the Capitol. Alien Brook/Dailv Texan Staff New allegation leveled against Wright House speaker’s former aide says he spent federal time on book Associated Press W ASHINGTON — Rep. Jim Wright in 1984 assigned a congres­ sional aide to spend his time work­ ing on a book that has become the focus of requests for an ethics inves­ tigation into the House speaker's dealings, according to a published report. Former Wright aide Matthew Cossolotto, who worked for the Texas Democrat from 1983 until ear­ ly this year, said he spent about 200 hours working on the book project during office hours, The Washington Post reported in Monday editions. Cossolotto said his work on Wright's 117-page book, Reflections o f a Public Man, included typing pro­ posed excerpts into a computer in Wright's office. He also said he flew to Fort Worth and spent almost three weeks doing final editing on the book with Wright's publishers, the newspaper reported. Cossolotto said that at the time he If he gave some time to try to help put together a book that would demon­ strate to the public my philosophy, my basic be­ liefs, that wouldn’t be too far afield from the public business.’ — House Speaker Jim Wright was working on the book, he received no other compensation be­ sides his congressional salary of about $27,000. Cossolotto said he became "a lit­ tle uncomfortable" as the project went along, but that he was not "clearly aware" of House rules that say congressional compensation is only for official duties. Wright is publicly pressing for a quick resolution of the matter — and insisting he'll be cleared. The speaker told the newspaper that Cossolotto's work on the book was proper, and that the amount of time the aide spent on the project was "rather negligible." "If he gave some time to try to help put together a book that would demonstrate to the public my phi­ losophy, my basic beliefs, that wouldn't be too far afield from the public business," he said. A complaint filed with the House ethics committee by Rep. Newt Gin­ grich, R-Ga., cited newspaper re­ ports that Wright received unusual­ ly high royalties for the book, which was published by a Texas associate who did nearly $300,000 in business with Wright's campaign. The book is a compilation of Wright's speeches and anecdotes. It was published by Carlos Moore, who was paid more than $250,000 by the congressman's campaign committee during the same 1985-86 period in which Wright was earning royalties on the book. Gingrich's complaint, supported by 73 other House Republicans, also cited actions by Wright on behalf of Texas oilmen with whom he had a financial relationship. Common Cause, a non-partisan watchdog group, also has called for an ethics investigation, and Vice President George Bush has called for a special prosecutor to investi­ gate Wright's dealings. The ethics committee, officially called the Committee on Standards of Official Conduct, is the only pan­ el the Democratic-controlled House which is equallv divided be­ tween the two parties. in The ethics committee began delib­ erations Thursday on whether to in­ vestigate Gingrich's allegations and is to continue its discussions this week. , • ' ' ' II"? • ' Crying for freedom — Protesters were waving signs and ca^ng for me re ease of 3 political prisoners — in the streets of downtown Moscow Taking care of business — The City Council nas deen bus, of ate — mainiy trying 7 to tie up loose ends before the new counciimembers are sworn n June 15 Black gold - Van der Waai's forces g ass particles and peeling ma> not ook -xe they belong together, but m the wonderful wor‘d of petroieur- engineering tnev ca y a ® vital role NBA finds watch — Now that the Da¡ as Mavericks ana Boston Celtics are cut or tne picture the Los Angeles Lasers and Detroit Pistons c a r focus on the business at ^4 hand — winning the championship WEATHER Final drop day weather, or how to cope with that tricky dess — Planning to sleep m today7 Well. think again To- day’s the last day — the end the fma chance man s only hope — to drop tpat Science Fiction Creatures from Ooga- Booga class you thought would be the easiest Astronomy Department offering ever for at east the easiest during the summer session) So if you expect your grace to De cioser to 65 :ust >ke Mon­ day s ows. than me mid-90s like me Monday s highs drop that class for a re­ fund now Do not pass go out j o col ect your check Then again f you den t n-iod the 10-15 mph sou th ea ste r wmds b o w ­ ing away that party m oney you invested in the University wait awhile A ong whi¡e In tact blow those bucks o f Be s.des this wee* s continued c ea r skies wn maxe the assigned moonlaunch a r- tie easier to dea- with INDEX Around Campus C a s s ’ eds Comics Editor a s Science Sports State & Loca Un versity W ord & Nation Police pose as prostitutes to execute ‘undercover’ arrests Editor's note: Only first names are used this story to protect vice squad officers. By JIM GREER and KEVIN HARGIS Daily Texan Staff Fishing and the Austin Police Depart­ ment vice sting operations share much in common. Vice officers design a "Jo h n " sting to lure prostitution customers, or Johns, into a net of officers. To bait a catch, policewomen pose as prostitutes and cast out opening lines such as, "H i, how are y'all doing tonight? ... See something you like? ... I've got a van over there ... are we gonna party?" To "m ake a case," or file prostitution charges, policewomen must hear a John specify a price and a sexual act. The trans­ action is audio-taped as evidence. "If you offer or agree to sexual conduct for a fee, it's actually the same" charge as the one received by female prostitutes who solicit Johns, said Terry, a sergeant in the vice detail who helped coordinate the Sat­ urday night John sting. Each month, vice officers usually con­ duct one major sting that involves three or more policewomen who pose as prosti­ tutes, and about 20 officers who provide cover and make arrests, he said. "More often, one or two girls [from vice) i. operate [as undercover prostitutes] about once a w eek," he said. To obtain their catch, policewomen ex­ ercise patience in landing Johns — hook, line and sinker. If nibbles are scarce at one spot, the vice team might pull up anchor and try for prospects at another location. The most recent sting began at nightfall Saturday in East Austin and moved to South Congress Avenue. After a briefing on the operation at the vice squad office, the police team assem­ bled in a parking lot for some finishing touches. The final preparations included the div­ vying up of condoms among the five pol­ icewomen, who work in groups of two and three. Cindy, an officer who has worked on at least 20 such stings, said some men want to know if prostitutes carry protection. Furnishing visible proof of this protection brings the female officer a step closer to nabbing the John, she said. Looking the part of a prostitute also in­ creases chances of making an arrest. Satur­ day evening's actresses sported denim miniskirts, high heels, tennis shoes, leo­ tard tops and stirrup pants. Black feathers adorned the women's ears, while other accents included hair rib­ bons and headbands. The policewomen, who wore hidden mi- crophones, stood at an East Austin street com er while nearby officers waited in cars and on foot for the women to give the sig­ nal to move in on the Johns. The deception worked. Within the first half hour, hidden offi­ cers clad in bullet-proof vests snared two motorists at an intersection Terry said was targeted for its high prostitution traffic After receiving a policewoman's signal, officers moved in to make the arrests, at­ tracting attention from onlookers and po­ tential Johns hoping to pick up one of the "hookers" while cruising. The high visibility of each arrest required a subsequent "cooling-off" period ot about 15 minutes to allow the women to re-estab­ lish their cover, and attract new customers after other old ones had been scared from the spot. After the first two arrests, an hour of in­ quiries by other passers-by failed to materi­ alize into bona fide offers. "It's kinda slow ," one policewoman told a prospective John. "Normally it's pretty slow until 10 or 10:30 p.m. [at this location]," Terry said. In hopes that business would pick up elsewhere, the vice detail moved the sting to another area rife with solicitation — a South Congress motel. "South Congress has steady traffic,” Cindy said. See Hooked, page 13 V Vic* squad offlom angst “Johns" on charpa of peotHMIon during • Ming opsratton. Alan B m M M y Tmm SttR Page 2/THE DAILY TEXAN/Monday, June 6.1988 Convoy rallies before drive to Nicaragua Proposed radar facility could increase air safety By DEENA PERKINS Daily Texan Staff A convoy of trucks and people displaying signs such as "Feed the children, not the war" and "Viet­ to Central America" con­ nam verged on the Capitol grounds Sunday to rally for peace in Nicar­ agua and seek aid for the war- stricken country's children. The Veterans Peace Convoy, consisting of veterans and volun­ teers from places such as Califor­ nia, Minnesota and Washington, is collecting food, clothing and medicine from all parts of the United States for the children of Nicaragua. The convoy began on May 21 — Armed Forces Day — with about 50 trucks and more than 100 peo­ ple, traveling through 35 states. On June 7th, the convoy will leave Austin and travel through Mexico and Central America. The travelers hope to arrive in Mana­ gua by June 17, in time for the Sis­ ter City Conference. When the convoy arrives in Managua, there will be a rally and goods will be distributed by Nicar­ aguan social service agencies to children. Bill Distler of Bellingham, Wash., said he became involved in the project because he is a Viet­ nam veteran. "I don't like the way our gov­ ernment's treating these people, poor people in general, in this country or in Central America," Distler said. "This is an effort to show that we don't have any ene­ mies there. "The nice thing about this con­ voy is that we don't have to total­ ly, absolutely agree politically on what the political situation is in Nicaragua. It is going to people who really need help," he said. Rob Wilson of South Deerfield, Mass., said he became involved in the convoy because he "had se­ rious doubts about what the coun­ try was doing." Wilson has volunteered for TEC­ NICA, a group that sends material aid to Nicaragua, for three years. "When I heard about this con­ voy, I knew that I had to go. This is symbolic of what every group working in Central America in sol­ idarity in the U.S. is doing," he said. "This is an expression of the will of the American people. It is certainly an expression of all of the groups, of which there are many. "I went down [to Nicaragua] about a year and a half ago, and I got a chance to experience the cul­ ture and to really see what was happening. I realized that what the Reagan administration was saying was largely inaccurate — that the government needs our support — deserves our support," Wilson said. "This is an opportunity to do something other than carry a sign ALETAS ALL YOU CAN EAT! Sunday and Monday Special: Sun. alter 11 ajn ., Monday after 5 p jn . A special plate prepared by your Aleta’s Chef including Soup and Polio Esteban Only 4 exdudéng fa lta s 1907 Guadalupe 479-0940 tb s This kind of technology would help prevent disas­ ters like the Delta crash. ... I guess there’s a trade­ off between conservation and progress.’ — Tim Tandy, Corps of Engineers research planner the area, he said. lives "I guess there's a trade-off be­ tween conservation and progress. But when you consider the count­ that could be saved, less you've got to admit it's worth it." Construction would begin in 1989, Tandy said, but he did not know when the facility would be ready for use. Blackland dispute By LYDIA LUM Daily Texan Staff A Next Generation Weather Ra­ dar facility proposed by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers for Cen­ tral Texas could increase local air traffic safety if the project receives final government approval. NEXRAD would be located at Granger Lake, about 40 miles north­ east of Austin in Williamson Coun­ ty. The unm anned facility would consist of a 67-foot antenna pedestal and tower, utility lines and an equipment building to house the transmitter and receiver. free-standing NEXRAD would use a Doppler radar that makes it possible to track wind motion and vortexes that con­ ventional radar cannot. "It's like cops on the highway," said Dave Owens, a meteorologist at the National Weather Service in Austin. "With their radar they can detect people speeding without even seeing them speed." Owens said current radar can measure the intensity of rainfall. But the Doppler radar takes this fur­ ther by tracking wind motion — how fast and in which directions wind is moving, he said. "This kind of technology would help prevent disasters like the Delta crash," said Tim Tandy, a Corps of Engineers environmental research planner. In August 1985, a Delta Air jet crashed at Dallas-Fort Lines Worth Airport during a storm. The proposed site is a one-acre strip of land on the outskirts of the Sore Finger Wildlife Area. Tandy said the land is chiefly a hunting ground for quail and is only "moderate farmland." Assessments show that NEXRAD would cause no significant environmental impact on In a page one graphic Friday, the Blackland map incom ctfy included areas that are not part of the dispute. The corrected map is shown above. The Tex­ an regrets the error. T h e Da il y T e x a n Permanent Staff Editor .......................................................................................................................................... Mike Godwin Managing Editor................................................................................................................. * Associate Managing E d ito rs ................................................................................ Karen Adams, Steve Dobtans. Mike Fannin, Tanya Voss K^ in ^ ? ue News Editor Associate News E d ito rs ................................................................................ • C h ^ U iirt, Dennis McCarthy General Reporters................................................................................. John Council, Mike Enckson, Jim Greer, Garry Leavell, Greg Perliski, Junda Woo . ■ Special Pages Editor Associate E d ito rs ...................................................................................................... Mark Grayson, Tom, PhHpott - . Entertainment Editor.................................................................................... Associate Entertainment Editor General Entertainment R e p o rte r...................................................................................................... ... Joe **ms Sports E d ito r................................................................................................................................ Steve Davis ..........................Steve Crawford Rnh Walker H0~ ■ ■■ • ■ • • . Associate Sports E d ito r ...............................................................................................................J>" l £ E S £ General Sports R eporter................................................................................................................. Photo Editor....................................................................................................................................... , A " ? 11 Associate Photo Editor.................................................................................................. _ _ Associate Images E d ito rs ........................................................................................... Ben Cohen, Lee Nwhols University Editor Art D irecto r....................................................................................................................................... ..... Issue Staff Volunteers ...................................................................................................Bret Bloomqulst Imaaes Editor Comic Strip C arto o n ists.............................................................................................. ^ Susan Boren Tom King. Robert Rodriguez, Martin Wagner Joseph Abbott, Dennis Appiin, Sherri Lynn Bowers, Craig Branson, Art Carrillo. Erica Chang, John Clark, Hank Demond, Kent Dunn, Andres Eguiguren, Nancy Favour, Trevor Feagin. James Geshweiler, Paul Hahn, Paul Hammons, Kevin Hargis, Scott Henson, Jim Kennett, Will Kitts, Bryan Leake. Lydia Lum, Claire Osborn, Deena Perkins, Shaun Powers, Frances Ramirez, Denise Shannon, Debbie Simon, John Stokes, Kathy Strong, Genez W aite. Chris Ware, Janet Webb, Rob Wheeler, Jim Windoif Local Disolav .................................... Classified Display Ctas—to d Tetophon. S—v ic . Advertising Deborah Bannworth, Ann del Lano, Betty Ellis, John Fams David Hamlin, Denise Johnson, Beth Mitchell, Natalie Niesner Gina Padilla, Karen Sayre, Charles Self, Chris Wilson Les!» Kuykendall, Ricardo R Fernandez, ShameSm Patel P ,u, Leveson. The Daily Texan lUSPS 146-440), a student newspaper at The University ot Texas at Austin, is published by Texas Student Publications, 2500 Whitis, Austin, TX 78705 The Daily Texan is published Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday and Friday, except holidays, exam periods and when school is not m session. Second class P<Ñews cor® Building 2.122) or at the news laboratory (Communication Building A4.136). rrt?bis accepted by telephone (471-4591), at the editorial office (Texas Student Publications Inquiries concerning local, national and classified display advertising should be directed to 512/471-1865. Classified word advertising questions should be directed to 512/471 -5244. Entire contents copyright 1988 Texas Student Publications The Daty Texan Mel Subscription Rates One Semester (Fall or Spring) Two Semesters (FaM and Spring) Summer Session One Year (FaM. Spring and Summer) TSP Building C3.200, or call 471-5063 To charge by VISA or MasterCard, call 471-5083. Send orders and address changes to Texas Student Publications. P.O. Box D, Austin, TX 78713-7209, or , ■ • • ■ • • • ■■■ POSTMASTER: Send address changes to TSP, P.O . Box D, Austin, TX 78713-7209. eg® on „ „ ” 75 fl0 Siva Vaidhyanathan Allen Brook/Daily Texan Staff Jim Casteris of Boston gives a thumbs-up’ sign as the group leaves. [in protest]. This is a true humani­ tarian gesture," Wilson said. Bob Livesey, a 46-year-old Viet­ nam veteran, came up with the idea of the convoy. The idea began after Livesey vis­ last fall with a for ited Nicaragua group the Veterans Peace, he told The Boston Globe. from Livesey told The Globe that he was struck by the deterioration in living conditions. "The convoy is a way for Ameri­ cans to send their own foreign pol­ icy message," he said. Larry Fisher of Davis, Calif., said he has visited Nicaragua three times. "I couldn't understand what the administration was saying com­ pared to what others were saying, so I went down and I sorted it out," Fisher said. "I just want to do a people-to-people help." University Market Facts... Students of the university spend $2,377,886 monthly on food and drink at Austin restaurants. (Source The University Market," Betden Associates, 1987) AMNESTY far FOREIGN STUDENTS A U .S . federal court judge recently ordered the Immigration Service to accept w nnesty applications from students w ho worked without permission before Ja n . 1 ,1 9 8 2 . Th e dead­ line to * ) p l y for this legal residency is August 3 1 ,1 9 8 8 . torauManeacSt PAUL PARSONS p c A ttorney at Law Board Certified Immigration A Nationality Law Texas Board oí Legal Specialization 704 Rio Grande 477-7887 C ash 6 C a rry OPEN LATE TILL 8:00! Roses $8.95 dozen Casa Verde Florist 451-0691 facial 411 S t. Daly Spectate w a a r a a i FTD ■WANT TO READ N R ETY BEZUfOM (TIM ES FASTER? T IC K E T D IS M IS S A L ONLY $15.00 NEAR CAMPUS NO TESTS REGISTER BY PHONE (Don't forget to bnng it» coupon with you.) Budget Driving School 454-5077 4314 Medical Parkway es Hms 24th & San Antonio Open Every Night Until 1:30 Open 11:00am Mon-Sat Open Sun 3:00pm Happy Hour Mon-Fri 5-7 YOU CAN’T and no legitimate speed reading course can promise that you ll finish novels taster than a speeding bullet! BUT YOU CAN INCREASE YOUR READING SPEED UP TO FIVE TIMES WITHOUT S A C R IF IC IN G C O M ­ PREHENSION. 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AUSTIN 4 ^TOYOTA /Geefúy Auitt*1oyáta¿éf Satisfied fc> teta-** {I IPEN TIL 8 MON-FRI+SAT 9-6 805 WEST 5th*478-5676 T h e Da il y T ex a n W orld & Nation Monday, June 6,1988 Page 3 Train in U.S.S.R. explodes, kills 68 Blast creates crater 80 feet deep, throws cars into air ‘like feathers’ Associated Press MOSCOW — Three boxcars packed with 120 tons of explosives blew up near a train station, killing 68 people, injuring 230 others and throwing cars into the air like feath­ ers, the official media reported Sun­ day. The blast occurred Saturday in Arzamas, 240 miles east of Moscow, and carved a crater 80 feet deep and 175 feet wide and destroyed or dam­ aged more than 400 buildings, Tass and the government newspaper Jz- vestia said. The reports, some of the most de­ tailed Soviet accounts ever filed so soon after an accident, said some of the injuries were serious. They said the cause of the explosion was not known. "Hospital personnel are doing their best to save the life of every person," the Tass news agency re­ ported. "Despite the wide scope of the tragedy, the situation in the city remains calm ." More than 80 doctors were flown to Arzamas, an industrial center of more than 90,000 people Nearby residents rushed to offer blood and food for the survivors, the media said. The reports indicated that more deaths could result from the acci­ dent, the most deadly on Soviet rail­ ways this year. They said eight chil­ dren were among the dead. The area was evacuated, but the local population w’as quickly reas­ sured that tests showed an "ab ­ sence of hazardous components" in the atmosphere, Tass said. The three boxcars carried indus­ trial explosives intended for geolo­ gists, mineworkers and builders, Tass said. The diesel locomotive pulling the cars flipped over in the blast, Izvestia said. Cars and trucks halted near the track, waiting for the tram to pass, "w ere scattered about as though they were [goose] down," izvestia said. The explosion set off small fires derailed other freight cars and dam­ aged the track, the newspaper said A thorough investiga­ tion is being conducted into the causes of the ex­ plosion. I cannot yet say anything about the re­ sults.’ — Gennady Vedernikov, head of the investigating commission The fires were extinguished within a half hour, it said. Transport and municipal services also were damaged Tass said 600 families were left homeless but would get new apartments and compensation for damages It was the most senous train acci­ dent reported since August 1987, when Soviet media said scores of people were killed after a freight train collided with a passenger train in southern Russia It did not say how many people died. Accidents were never reported in such detail before Mikhail Gorba­ chev came to power in March 1985, but media stones of incidents have become more common and specific, especially since the Chernobyl nu­ clear accident in Apnl 1986. Tass and izvestia said a special government commission launched an investigation into Saturday's ac­ cident. "W e are taking measures to help all those who suffered from the acci­ dent," izvestia quoted Gennady V edernikov, head of the investigat­ ing commission, as saving. Besides V edern ikov, deputy chairman of the Council of Minis­ ters, the 14-member inquiry com­ mission includes representatives of the the Health Ministry police, Ministry of Defense, the prosecu­ tor's office and other agenoes. A thorough investigation is being conducted into the causes of Vedernikov was the explosion. quoted as saying. I cannot yet say anything about the results dead at 57 when they walked into the health club they saw him hang face dowr by the exercvcies. He had fallen unconscious. Lingiey said the dub members called for help and he arrived at the scene in about 15 seconds a-d began giving Pendleton car- diopuimonarv resuscitation A doctor who was a note! guest assisted until the paramedics arrived he saic An avid logger and swimmer he orce tauzht phvsical education at the college level arc: worked as a government recre- atior director in Washington and Baltimore being named director of the Model Cities Department in 5a" Diego in 1972 He was president of the urban league in San Diego from 1975 until 19*52 Associated Press Soviet protesters march on Gorky Street, caMng for release of political prisoners. For the first time, police made no obvious moves to stop them. Soviets demonstrate in Moscow Marchers call for release of political prisoners in first capital rally Associated Press MOSCOW — About 80 Soviets shouted "Free­ dom, freedom!" and carried banners through downtown Moscow on Sunday in an unprece­ dented march to demand the release of political prisoners. About 50 police officers courteously stopped the protesters from advancing to Red Square but allowed them to gather across from the Moscow Soviet, the white-columned headquarters of city government. The afternoon march along Gorky Street, a major thoroughfare that leads to the Kremlin, was the first in the Soviet capital in memory. Participants credited Kremlin leader Mikhail Gorbachev's campaign of "glasnost," or open­ ness on selected topics. "This protest shows how our political free­ doms are widening. Today we are making histo­ ry," declared Yuri Skubko, a member of the Democratic Union, a fledgling opposition group. Sweating in the sun, the demonstrators gath­ ered near a statue of Yuri Dolgoruky, the Rus­ sian prince who founded Moscow, and shouted in unison: "Freedom, freedom for political pris­ oners!" It was the first time that chanting protesters carrying banners marched along a Moscow street without police making obvious moves to disperse them. In recent months, Moscow police have al­ lowed some demonstrations to proceed, but they sometimes seized banners and detained partici­ pants. In December, police manhandled a dozen young people who gathered outside army head­ quarters to protest the Soviet military role in Af­ ghanistan. Sunday's protest sparked reactions ranging from anger to bewilderment from Soviets stroll­ ing down Gorky Street, one of Moscow's most fashionable shopping avenues. "A re they making a movie?" asked Dmitri Ku- "This is slander! Don't you see that?" The protesters started at 3 p.m. at the base of the monument to 19th century Russian poet Al­ exander Pushkin. Hundreds of Soviets looked on. Different groups called for freedom for Ar­ menian nationalist Paruyr Ayrikyan; for leaders of Crimean Tartars who want permission for Tartars to resettle in their Crimean homeland; and for political prisoners in the country' as a whole. "W e estimate that there are 300 to 400 of them ," said Viktor Kuzin, 35, a member of the Democratic Union's Central Coordinating Coun­ cil. "Not all of them are imprisoned under politi­ cal counts, but some have been falsely accused and convicted of committing common crim es." A young man climbed a lamppost by the bronze statue of Plishkin to lead the protesters in a chant calling for Ayrikyan's release. Uniformed police appeared to treat the pro­ chov, 12. A flushed woman shouted at the marchers: testers politely. Commission chairman Associated Press SAN DIEGO — Clarence Pendleton, chairman of the U.S. Civil Rights Commis­ sion and one of the highest-ranking black officials in government, died Sunday after collapsing while exercising, officials said. He was 57. Pendleton died about 11 a.m. at Mission Bay Hospital after efforts to revive him failed, Deputy Coroner David Lodge said. Pendleton was believed to have suffered a heart attack, Lodge said. President Reagan selected Pendleton, an opponent of affirmative action quotas and busing, to head the commission in Novem­ ber 1981 after firing Arthur Flemming. Flemming, the chairman since 1974, criti­ cized Reagan's civil rights policies as "in conflict with the Constitution." A W h ite H ou se spokesman, Bill Har­ low, said he was aware that Pendleton had died, but said the White House wouldn't have any comment until the morning. P e n d le to n s tirre d wrath by calling liberal black leaders "the new racists" whose support _________ ’endetOfl for the Democratic Party "led blacks into a political Jonestown." He described the concept of comparable worth as "the looniest idea since Looney Tunes" and said that "relieving one's poverty is not civil rights." He also called affirmative actions "divi­ sive, unpopular and immoral " Pendleton maintained that black citizens must make it on the merits of their own abilities without any special preference or the government or the apologies from white power structure. He made a practice of giving so-called "Uncivil Rights" awards to those whose ac­ tions furthered discrimination as he de­ fined it. The most recent went to Chicago Mayor Eugene Sawyer last month for de­ laying the firing of an aide w ho made anti- Semitic remarks. Pendleton lived in the affluent communi­ ty' of La Jolla, about 10 miles north of down­ town San Diego with his second wife Margnt, and their young daughter He commuted to Washington, D.C and also frequently gave speeches around the country. Pendleton was alone at the Hiltor. Beacr and Tennis Resort, riding a stationary bicy ­ said cle when he collapsed about 10 a m Gary' Linglev, director of the hotel's tennis club. Pendleton a San Diego resident was a member of the health club Lingiey said "Two members heard a small noise a ¡t scream mavbe. we don t know what was, ' Linglev said. About a minute later Israel exiles Awad on bad visa r Associated Press JERUSALEM — Israel's Supreme Court on Sunday upheld a government order to deport Arab-American Mubarak Awad, an advocate of civil disobedience against Israeli rule in the occupied territories. The court turned down Awad's appeal and said the Jerusalem-born U.S. citizen "harms the security and public order" in Israel, does not have a legal residence permit and is in Israel under an expired visa on his American passport. The ruling came a few hours before the arrival of Secretary of State George Shultz, who had protested the deportation order. The occupied lands and Arab east Jerusalem were virtually shut down for the third day of a strike called by leaders of the six-month Palestinian uprising to pro­ test Shultz's visit. Two Israelis and 201 Palestinians have perished since December as a result of the uprisings in the occupied West Bank and Gaza Strip. Sporadic violence was reported in the territories, but an army spokeswoman said there were no major inci­ dents. Shultz told reporters he mentioned the Awad case in his meeting with Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir on the American Middle East peace initiative. But an aide to Shamir said the order would not be reversed. While Shultz and Shamir dined at the prime minis­ ter's residence, about 30 Israelis outside protested the deportation order by burning copies of Israel's Declara­ tion of Independence and five cut up their identity cards. The 44-year-old Awad appeared in court in a gray suit and carried an olive branch given to him by a sup­ porter as he was escorted back to jail by four police­ men. "I am not disappointed. 1 will continue to fight for a Palestinian state wherever I am ," he said. His American-born wife, Nancy Nve, read a state­ ment from Awad. It said: "A s a Palestinian I never hated you. I don't hate you now. And I will never hate you. But as a Jerusalemite, I am telling you I'll be back." Death toll rises to 45 in mine tragedy Associated Press BORKEN, West Germany — Offi­ that rescuers cials said Sunday made radio contact with some min­ ers hours after a disastrous mine ex­ plosion but ordered them to stop sending signals so they could try to find other victims. The statement from the mine owner confirmed reports from one of six miners found alive Saturday in an air pocket 500 feet under­ ground. It fueled allegations that searchers bungled their work after Wednesday's powerful blast. One newspaper declared the inci­ dent "a scandal." The bodies of eight more miners were found Sunday, bringing the total of confirmed dead to 45. Six men were still missing, but officials said they there was little hope would be found alive. At a news conference Sunday, of­ ficials said trapped miners establish­ ed radio contact with rescue work­ ers a few hours after the explosion. They did not specify how many hours. "W e now know that there defi­ nitely was contact with miners after said Hermann the explosion," Kraemer, board president of Preus- sen Elektra, the company that owns the coal mine in this town of 15,000, 70 miles northeast of Frankfurt. In an interview with the ZDF televi­ sion network, one of the survivors, Ahmet Batkan, said the radio con­ nection occurred hours after the blast. Batkan said that when contact was made, the men were told to "avoid using the radio" so that other communications would not be disturbed. "After a while, we tried again but radio contact had been broken off for g ood /' Batkan said. Kraemer said a radio operator told the men to stop transmitting because he wanted to try to make contact with other possible survi­ vors. On the day of the explosion, offi­ cials said rescuers made radio con­ tact with a group of missing miners, but they later said the connection had been with another rescue team. Associated Press Republican senatorial candidates urge ouster of attorney general WASHINGTON — Republican Senate candidates increasingly concerned about political fallout from Ed­ win M eese's legal problems are beginning to call on the attorney general to leave President Reagan s Cabi­ net. At least four GOP candidates have urged Meese to resign and others have hinted they would like to see him go. Leading Republicans such as Vice President George Bush and White House staff chief Howard Baker Ir have conceded Meese s troubles could severely dam­ age GOF prospects this election year But the attomev general has insisted he has done nothing wrong and will remain m office until he can set the record straight. Alligator attack kills 4-year-old Florida girl ENGLEWOOD, Fla — A 10D-foot alligator lunged from a residential lake, seized a 4-year-old girl who was wading with her brother and a friend and dragged her to her death. Game officers spotted the alliga­ tor on the bank of Hidden Lake about midnight, earning the limp bodv of Erin Glover in its jaws. The reptile w*as immediately shot to death with a .357-caliber Mag­ num pistol, said Stephen Condit, Red Cross disaster services direc- ! tor. The girl's body was recovered, he said. Erin was walking along Gtovsr the lake's south shore with her brother Justin, 8, their dog, and neighbor Jason Kershanick, 9, Saturday when the gator bolted from the water and snapped up the girl in its teeth. Jackson relative charged in witness attack GREENVILLE, S.C. — Jesse Jackson's half-brother, Noah Robinson, has been charged with hiring some­ one to artack a witness to the shooting death of Robin­ son s former employee police said Sunday Robinson 45 was arrestee are Saturday night and charged with being an acces.scrv to a felony Green­ ville Police Detective Keith Morton said Sunday We think he was responsible roc tre so co ta tier. said Morton the act and took part in the arrangir g, ' Robinson is suspected of hiring the person who m December 198' slashed and stabbed a w oman witness to the Januarv 1956 shooting here of a n a n who had worked for Robinson Morton said Robinson denied the charges Sunday •Phantom of the Opera* sweeps Tooys NEW iO R k — The Phantom the O nrs swooped down on the 1958 Tonv Awards Sunday carrying oft seven Tonvs including the best música^ award wrule \{ Butter*ly Dav id Henrv Hvvang s exotic iove ston was chosen best plav Besides its best musical pnzt- Phantom caprured musical pnzes for best actor Michael Crawford; direc­ tor, Harold Prince and featured actress ludv Kaye It swept all three technical awards Mana Bjomson tor sets and costumes and Andrew Bndce for lighting it While Phantom captured the big musical prize tailed to win awards for score and book, which went to Stephen Sondheim and James Lapine, the compos­ er and author of Into the Woods a fairy tale musical. Ron Silver was named best actor for his portrayal erf a cut-rate Hollywood mogul in Speed-the-Plou'. while Joan Allen won the best actress nod for her portrait of a bereaved dancer m Bum This California lottery waiting on winners SACRAMENTO, Calif. — The numbers game turned into a waiting game Sunday as California Lot­ tery officials waited for holders of two winning tickets to claim a $51.2 million jackpot, the biggest ever in a North American lottery'. The holders of the winning tickets cannot claim their share of the prize until the start of business Monday. Each winning ticket in Saturday's Lotto 6-49 drawing is worth $25,618,116, payable over 20 years, said lottery spokesman John Schade. The winners will be announced when they present their tickets at lottery offices for verification. Page 4/THE DAILY TEXAN/Monday, June 6,1988 E ditorials M aw poM opinions expressed in Tho DmHy Toxm are those of the editor and the writer of the article They are not necessarily the opinions of the University administration, the Board of Regents or the Texas Student Publications Board of Operating Trustees Opinions expressed in Second Opinion and staff or t columns are those of the writer l U A f l i d y M ^m n H m t ' a <*Sl H- Red Plan et Joint mission is worth the risk R emember 2010: Odyssey II? In that movie, the United States, though accomplished at artificial intelligence, is unable to launch a space mission quickly and efficiently. As a result, they're forced to join forces with the Soviet Union, whose clunky but effective spacecraft can get the Americans to Jupiter, where they hope to solve the mystery of the spaceship Discovery. Though set more than two decades from now, the film is an apt commentary on 1988. The "high-tech” United States is unable to get its space program off the launching pad, yet the "technologically back­ ward" Soviet Union is having success after success in its space mis­ sions. Which is why we should pay particular attention to a recent proposal by Mikhail Gorbachev. A few days before the Moscow summit, the Soviet leader suggested that the United States and the Soviet Union "cooperate on a flight to Mars.” Reagan administration officials have responded to the proposal with some ambivalence. They're skeptical about the likelihood of long-term cooperation with the Soviets, even though the scientific and technolog­ ical benefits of such a mission are appealing. What exactly are the advantages of an unmanned flight to Mars? For one thing, it may be able to answer a lot of questions about our home planet. Millions of years ago, Mars may have been much like Earth, with more atmosphere> more available water and a warmer average climate than it has now. To the extent we can learn about events that may have destroyed a biosphere on Mars, it may teach us a lot about what can threaten Earth's. Although the United States is potentially able to fund and launch such a mission on its own, a joint U.S.-Soviet mission would be both cheaper and quicker to accomplish. Unlike the United States, says NASA adviser John McLucas, "the Soviets have the ability to put massive amounts of material into space.” The Russians are particularly adept at developing what some experts call "big, dumb boosters" — cheap but powerful kerosene rockets that outlift the space shuttle by as much as a factor of three. McLucas adds, however, that the Soviet Union is forced to rely on other countries for the high-tech components of space missions, such as computers and sensor devices. In the proposed mission, the United States would contribute a robot ground vehicle — something along the lines of the lunar "rover” used during the Apollo moon landings. 3ut unlike the Apollo vehicle, this one would be controlled by an advanced computer incorporating artificial-intelligence concepts. The potential benefits of such a mission aren't limited to scientific data. The concomitant technological research probably would benefit consumers, much as the miniaturization and computer-technology de­ velopments of the Apollo era fueled the growth of the U.S. personal- computer industry. Critics of the proposal point out that the success of such a long-term mission (10 years in the planning and execution) depends on whether Gorbachev and the next U.S. president can revive detente. From a technological standpoint, they argue, an unmanned mission to Mars in 1998 is quite feasible; from a political point of view, its likelihood for completion is much more doubtful. But in this case they're being shortsighted. The scientific and techno­ logical benefits of the mission are worth the risk. What's more, the mission may in itself help cement a stable relationship between us and the Soviets. — Mike Godwin D U K A K TS- Proposal puts police behind handlebars I f some Austin Police officers are willing to J a m es G e s h w e il e r TEXAN COLUMNIST put up with a couple of weeks' ribbing, the city could have an improved police force at 12th Street, it might be a while before you make it to Martin Luther King and 1-35). In other words, they would be on their own to catch crooks, the thing most officers like best — they'd be where the action is. decreased cost. Pedal-powered police may supply a partial answer to a series of ills facing city law enforce­ ment, especially a huge, unplanned budget deficit. A burly, 6-foot-3 officer pedaling around Sixth Street on Pee Wee Herman's bright red cruiser probably would be the laughing stock of the force — but only initially. Cops already ride in air-conditioned squad cars, on motorcycles and even on horseback. Only a health nut on the force would want to brave the Austin heat, rain and wind to go pedaling though his beat each day. But nuts would not have such a bad time. Last summer, the Seattle Police Department began the first police bicycle squad in the coun­ try. A couple of health-conscious officers want­ ed to try cycling through the city as a way of combating crime. The results were astounding. In their first month, the officers made roughly five times the Seattle average for foot-patrol arrests (over 500) and they now average about 250 arrests per month. Their tricks lie in maneuverability and acces­ sibility. Atop their mountain bikes covered with Seattle Police emblems, the officers can weave in and out of traffic, cut through con­ struction areas and, most importantly, sneak up on criminals. Unlike squad cars, motorcycles and horses, bicycles are practically silent. Two officers can ride through a neighborhood and surprise criminals — especially drug dealers who fail to suspect approaching bicyclists are police. Also people normally not inclined to ap­ proach officers appear to lose some of that fear when dealing with police on bikes. Without the siren, lights, shotguns and heavy engines, bike cops can interact more with the community, increasing their ability to solve and prevent crimes. Austin Police and Austin Park Police could each have such squads designated to cover areas such as East Austin, downtown, Zilker Park and around campus. The comedy of trading street blues for lycra shorts and bicycle helmets aside, the police of­ ficers most likely would enjoy their new as­ signment. Police spokesman C.F. Adams said other Austin officers probably would tease their bik­ ing fellows, but like Seattle officers, once duty began, ridicule would end. Because they move by their own power, bike officers would not have to write traffic tickets (catching a speeder or any car is nearly impos­ sible on a bicycle, even in 10th gear). They would not have to take calls (if you're on East Unless the city could affix some type of child's seat to the back of their bikes, they would have to wait for squad car back-up when they made arrests. But otherwise they would spend their time being cops and not traffic po­ licemen. If a rape occurred in the middle of Zilker Park, they could ride directly across the lawns to save the victim. Instead of running after flee­ ing drug dealers, they could run them down. They could be supercops, even though they might initially look like stupidcops. Austin already has seven horse patrolmen. But horses get sick, eat a lot and worse, go to the bathroom. Bikes get flats, lose chains and sometimes need to be replaced. But overall, they are more cost efficient than horses or motorcycles. Important benefits to re­ member when Austin's Police Department is facing an over $1 million budget shortfall this year. If a few of Austin's more health-oriented offi­ cers hopped on bicycles, they could improve the force, the city and the police budget. They just would have to put up with people spoking fun at them for a while. Geshwiler is a Plan II senior. Overdue approval of cervical cap: Sex and politics still a bad mix T he federal government's laborious this catatonic state was brought about by familiar health-care obstacles — lawsuits and high insurance premiums. J a n et W eb b TEXAN COLUMNIST tions and resulted in the deaths of about 21 women. approval processes have succeeded in politicizing sex. That is the only conclusion that makes sense in the case of the cervical cap's 10-year disappearance from U.S. markets. The cervical cap, a barrier contraceptive device similar to the diaphragm, was giv­ en final approval by the agency two weeks ago. Many women prefer the thimble­ shaped cap to diaphragms because it is smaller, less prone to cause infections and can be safely used for up to 72 hours at a time. Forms of the cervical cap have existed since before Victorian times. They were manufactured in the United States during the 50s and are widely used in Europe to­ day, along with other high-tech devices that are awaiting U.S. approval. But when one type of intrauterine de­ vice (IUD) fell under scrutiny in 1977, the Federal Drug Administration tightened regulations and the cap — which was nev­ er very popular in this country — was clas­ sified as a "new ” or "experimental” de- 'r ..... vice, a classification which called for a seven-year trial process and final FDA ap­ proval. To make matters worse, the Medical De­ vices Amendment of 1976 moved the bur­ den of proof of safety and effectiveness from government agencies to manufactur­ ers. In order to be approved, all devices, including birth control methods, must be "sponsored” by a corporation — with lots of money. Many women's groups perceived the whole process as FDA bureaucratic foot- dragging. They were annoyed because the cap is reported to be as safe as other ac­ cepted methods, and it is far from "experi­ mental.” Since women still carry the pri­ mary contraceptive protection, choice is often their only com­ fort. responsibility for Choice in contraception, as many wom­ 1 V ’ .. en discover, usually involves a choice be­ tween several evils — the largest evil being pregnancy. For those who can't use birth control pills, or for those who find diaphragms too messy and condoms too unromantic, contraceptive choices are pal­ try. Indeed, cases of sterilization for rea­ sons of birth control are rapidly increasing in the United States. Thus, choice is to birth control what money is to commerce: the more choice, the more freedom. When AIDS patients needed zidovudine [AZT] to prolong their lives, that drug's passage through the ap­ proval process was speeded. After wom­ en's groups convinced the agency of the cap's importance, the FDA did assist in the expensive testing needed to prove the cap's merits. "There was sympathy for the issue within the agency," said David Duarte, an FDA spokesman. Birth control has usually failed to im­ press government officials with urgency. But the government is not solely to blame for what seems to be an unofficial morato­ rium on contraceptive research. Instead, , mm In fact, during the early 1980s, $51 mil­ lion was spent worldwide per year for family-planning product development, a 25 percent reduction in spending from the previous decade, according to Newsweek. On the homefront, some women's groups accused the drug companies of lob­ bying against cervical-cap approval be­ cause one cervical cap can provide a wom­ the contraceptive an with almost all protection she needs for up to two years. Compare this one-time purchase of about $35 worth of plastic to the $155 women plop down yearly for birth control pills. The theory is convincing. On the other hand, companies simply cannot exist without money, and birth control has proved risky business in recent years. A.H. Robins Co. filed for bankrupt­ cy in 1985 after being hit with $395 million in judgments and settlements resulting from Daikon Shield IUD-related lawsuits. The Daikon Shield caused serious infec­ Given government inertia, the gun-shy private sector, and the condom craze pro­ duced by fear of AIDS, Americans may face the next century armed with the same birth control Queen Victoria could have used — whether or not she was inclined. The aggravation of many women's groups over the confused legal history of cervical caps was justifiable; while those at NASA may soon join the Russians in a joint venture to turn the red planet green, new resolving age-old "w om en's” problems like child care and birth control the "twilight zone.” totter aimlessly toward steps in Somehow these most basic aspects of living, pertinent to the entire population, are the most neglected in federal policy. If the government's place in our private lives wavers with each Supreme Court deci­ sion, the least it could do is refrain from limiting the most private of choices. Webb is a journalism and English junior. Child care meeting Quality child care at the U niver­ sity of Texas at Austin is a m ajor concern of students, faculty and staff. Each group has formed it's own organizing com m ittee to ad­ dress the issue of child care. The Staff Parents N etw ork has is seeking been established and volunteers, advice and concerns from interested staff m em bers at the University. This includes stu­ d ents w orking part-tim e or longer. O ur first organizational m eeeting is W ednesday, June 8 at noon in the Eastw oods Room of the Texas Union (brown bags w elcom e!). Sarita Brow n, of P resid ent C unningham 's recently appointed Child Care C om m ittee, will be at­ tending. Any staff m em ber co n ­ cerned about child care is encou r­ aged to attend. W e need to hear from you. Steve Stein General Libraries Dukakis pro-safety Pojman accuses Mike Dukakis of being bloodthirsty for his pro- choice beliefs that the abortion de­ cision should be left up to the indi­ vidual woman herself, and not the state. This assertion is completely absurd. The reason Dukakis supports safe, legal abortions (as opposed to unsafe, lethal ones) is because he values human life; that is, the lives of millions of women which will be endangered if abortions were to become illegal again. Contrary to Pojman's view, the amount of damage that would be done to women if an anti-choice president is elected, is phenome­ nal. This is because the Roe vs. Wade Supreme Court decision which legalized abortion, is one justice away from being overturn­ ed. Ronald Reagan has done enough damage to our reproduc­ tive freedom by packing the Court with anti-abortion judges through­ out his eight-year term. This is a response to Joe Poj- man's ludicrous letter regarding Democratic presidential candidate Mike Dukakis, and his political po­ sition on abortion. Thus, Mike Dukakis surely de­ serves our support in order to save the Supreme Court from becoming an anti-choice majority, who would strip away our most per­ sonal and intimate right to privacy regarding our own bodies. Adalyn Brugger University NOW Weiner's case flawed Greg Weiner's column, ("Minor­ ity recruitment proposal discrimi­ nates” The Daily Texan June 2) is false assumption. based on a Weiner's claim that the "former purely objective and numerical ad­ mission criteria ... were not capa­ ble of discrimination” is a very idealistic belief that numbers put all students on equal ground. Several studies have shown that the fact that minority students tra­ ditionally score lower than their Anglo counterparts is not because they are less equipped or "unpre­ pared” to handle'the University. This is partially because the tests are culturally biased toward Anglo society. Although Weiner points out that a large part of the problem lies in the discriminatory second­ ary school system, it is wrong to believe that these tests treat every student fairly. Although the University should be commended for looking be­ yond the numbers to see the true potential some minority students have at the University, President Cunningham still boasts that the University actively discriminates in favor of minorities. The University needs to go be­ yond Cunningham's supposed he­ roics and Weiner's dissatisfaction to more fairly judge the potential of all students coming into the University. James Aldrete Graduate student of speech This UT's role? Educate all is in response to Greg Weiner's column on minority re­ cruitment ("Minority recruitment proposal discriminates,’’The Daily Texan, June 2). Weiner is obviously uninformed about the situations many minorities face in education. Being Hispanic myself and teaching classes whose makeup is 95 percent to 100 percent Hispan­ ic, I feel I can provide a better in­ sight. Weiner asserts that instead of lowering the standards for minori­ ty students, the University needs to tackle the "real problem." The reason minority SAT scores are so low, he alludes, is that sec­ ondary schools have failed to pro­ vide minorities with the same edu­ cation provided to whites. This may be true in many instances. In minority dominated areas like Rio Grande Valley, where I teach high school, funding is certainly a problem. But the education is still there. It is provided. What Weiner has failed to see, is that the home life of many minori­ ty students is the real cause of poor education. Education begins in the home. The children must have role mod­ els. Some people are very good parents and role models, even though they might not have a high school or college education. Most of the parents of my stu­ dents did not go to college, few of them finished high school. At least in education, my stu­ dents do not have role models. Their fathers and mothers are not doctors, lawyers, bankers or ac­ countants. They are farm workers, laborers and minimum wage em ­ ployees. Weiner advocates continuing this trend by stopping affirmative action recruitment. This is wrong. If minorities are given a chance at higher education today, their children will not need affirmative action tomorrow. Now, countless programs could be developed to raise the SAT scores of today's minority high school student, but if the future is of concern, then the public, the University and Greg Weiner need to stop worrying about numbers (SAT scores) and need to do one thing. Educate all. Roberto Gomez Special student Ncedtotaflt DNN*qr-to*F-n « ¿ • I t e M f r & » « « • » f Former executive donates prison files to UT By DEB8IE SIMON Daily Texan Staff A former bank president who spent 21 years in prison for the armed robbery of two Texas banks has donated his documents, clippings and correspondences on prison reform to the Univer­ sity's Texas Barker History Center. Lawrence Pope, a prison reform activist from Austin, collected information on prison violence, medical care and living conditions in addition to material on the Texas and federal banking sys­ tems, said John Wheat, the center's sound ar­ chives coordinator. "People from all walks of life will find some­ thing useful in the collection," Wheat said. "It gives an excellent comparison between federal prisons and Texas prisons." Wheat's 19 90-minute taped interviews with Pope are included in the collection. The tapes are being transcribed into 1,000 typed pages, he said. Referring to the interviews, Wheat said, "I was fascinated because of the details in his sto­ ries. He has excellent recall. "The collection is important not only for its magnitude, but depth," he said. Don Carleton, the center's director, has said the Pope interviews "m ay turn out to be among the most valuable interviews we have." Sheldon Ekland-Olson, professor of sociology, emphasized the documents' educational value. "The collection will provide faculty members and students with valuable resources in years to com e," he said. Ekland-Olson and Steve Martin, a former legal counselor to the Texas Department of Correc­ tions, used selections from Pope's documents in their 1987 book Texas Prisons: And the Walls Came Tumbling Down. Pope, who was paroled in 1982, said he is pre­ paring to donate more material to the center. "I'm getting old and worn out, and it's my hope to put it where somebody will be able to use it," said Pope, who will turn 70 in July. Pope held positions in several Texas banks and in 1958, became president of the West Na­ tional Bank in West, Texas — a job he held until 1960 when he was fired for a mistake he did not make, Pope said. Pope then bought a weekly newpaper in Giddings but felt abandoned and betrayed by his banking contacts when they did not provide him with bank forms that he wanted to publish, he said. Pope said his anger led him in late 1960 to rob two Texas banks, First State Bank of Thornton and Farmers State Bank of Schulenberg, for a total gain of $2,700. Pope called his robberies "a dreadful mistake" and said he was not a skilled robber. "It wasn't the FBI that caught me, it was m yself," he said. "I wasn't a criminal — I'd been in banks all my life and didn't know how to do these things. "W hen I got to prison, the inmates told me, 'You're the dumbest sucker we ever did see. You could have gotten millions,' " Pope said. "I just got a dab of m oney." Once in prison, Pope quickly became an activ­ ist seeking reform. "I hadn't planned on writing everything down, but the prison system forced me into it," he said. 'T exas prisons are like Ger­ man concentration cam ps." Pope began filing lawsuits for himself and other inmates as "a matter of survival," he said. He was the first inmate to testify in 1978 in Ruiz vs. Estelle, a lawsuit that led U.S. District Judge William Wayne Justice to declare the Tex­ as Department of Corrections's system unconsti­ tutional and order reforms. Pope called the TDC system "corrupt." "You cannot rehabilitate prisoners by brutali­ ty, and you cannot rehabilitate drug addicts if they can get drugs in prison," he said. "Prison­ ers will commit violations if they see TDC offi­ cials commit violations themselves. "The TDC has improved some, but it still has a long way to g o," he said. "Officials know things like one inmate accepting money to kill another inmate are happening. "Taxpayers are paying billions of dollars, but what are they getting for their money? Not a damn thing." Pope feels corruption in both the prison and banking institutions are related. "Bankers have stolen more than all criminals have stolen," he said. Pope has been a life member since 1973 of Citi­ zens United for the Rehabilitation of Errants, an organization for citizens interested in prison re­ form. THE Da il y TEXAN/Monday, June 6 , 1988/Page 5 TRAFFIC TICKETS M ille r & H e rrin g L a w y e rs e Also Will Preparation • Pre-paid Legal Insurance Accepted • Licensed to Practice Before All Texas State Courts 7 0 6 W. M LK Blvd Suite 11 Austin, Texas 78701 477-3221 areas cov ered by Te*a» b o ard o f Legal Sp oo cfiwMon Na» certified KINKO'S PROFESSOR PUBLISHING SAVES MY STUDENTS TIME AND MONEY HtU CltoMA Ttm 'falMUMQ ¿ * 4 7 1 - 5 2 8 4 Let Kinkos Professor Publishing help organize your supplementary class materials this term. kinko's Great copies. Great people If this is your idea of cooking, maybe you should consider a meal plan. 2346 GUADALUPE 476-4654 2917 MEDICAL ARTS 476-3242 \|. u. You can go through the line as many times as you want; if you «at ( * k t - three dinners, that’s O.K. Dobie (.truer lion. Iron fruit, j siiad bur. j icli i**r. ¿1 kind' • homemade dc^iertv l! • -. Dolue meal pun I r im ■ : ifwrn live at D ub *. all this is included m w u r hnusmfcctmtraci jtvcragr* ind .« i> * _ • ** ¿rra’ v .- c !> ( <-:c' excellent tixxi. k-t» • ' j *: • -nt ...» 1 •* < r r ; Dobie Center offers non-resident meal plans at great prices. ruikk Tours Daüy. 10% Off First Meal Plan DOBIE C E N T E R 5L2. 472-4411 ALL-YOU-CAN-EAT BUFFET THE BEST TEXTBOOK PRICES IN TOWN!! W e guarantee the lowest prices on every new or used book! If any textbook store in town beats our prices on any book, we will refund the difference. TEXAS TEXTBOOKS Not only offers you two strategically located stores to serve you, but as of M ay 30 we are offering two other convenient services. 1. PHONE IN ORDERS You can phone your textbook ond supply orders into Texas Textbooks ot 443-1257 and pick up your order within an hour. • Please have Fee Receipt ready for Course & Unique Number. 2. FREE DELIVERY You can phone in your textbook and supplies and have them delivered straight to your door within 3 hours. (443-1257). • Please have Fee Receipt ready for Course & Unique Number. So Don't Stand In Long Lines: Let TEXAS TEXTBOOKS take care of your book and supply orders with fast and friendly service. i » — — C ou p on _ _ _ _ i FREE I ! T-Shirt ! j ¡ with J$40 urchasej Texas Textbooks, Inc. Rivertowne M all 2007A E. Riverside 2011A E. Riverside Plenty o f Free Parking M m f M Tex— Tex tb o o k s f err • New & Used Textbooks • School Supplies • Class Rings - Jostens • UT Sportswear • Reference Books e Backpocks e CKff Notes & Borrow s Notes e Engineering Supplies Texas Textbooks, Inc First Floor Castilian 2323 San Antonio How to rescue your pocketbook if dininc out is eating your lunch. On June 1. Riverside Quarters (formerly the Gon­ dolier Hotel! opens its dining room again, and we think you should try it. Riverside Quarters (RQ) is now operating as a student community, but will be offering non-resident dining at excellent prices. The good news is you don't have to be a student to get student discounts. Buy a punch card or a monthly meal contract, and your meal cost wB be between $2 and $4 a piece! We serve three scrumptious meals daily, and all are buffet-style; great if you re in a hurry. Drinks are in­ cluded in this all-you-can-eat buffet and you never have to tip! We love parries, too! Call for reservations in advance. rn m m m R I V E R S I D E Q U A R T E R S temmmr s 10 0 1 S IH-35 and Riverside Drive Ausnrv Texas 78 741 4 4 4 3 4 1 1 Monday, June 6,1988 Page 6 U n iv er sity t h e Da il y T e x a n UT ponders dorm purchase By ANDRES EGUIGUREN Daily Texan Staff The University is considering the feasibility of buying Tri-Towers, one of the largest apartment complexes in West Campus, and converting it into student housing, a UT vice president said Friday. "We are aware that it is on the market and at a favorable price ... and there are some student housing needs that have been recognized," said G. Charles Franklin, UT vice president for business affairs. Tri-Towers, which is closed for the summer, recently went up for sale after its former owner, D.B.G. Management Corp., filed for bank­ ruptcy in March. There are studies under way that could come up with "an estimate of current market value and how it would be used," Franklin said. Franklin said that there have been conversations among UT President William Cunningham, UT Vice President for Student Affairs Ronald Brown and himself on the matter, but he stressed that no deci­ sion has been reached. UT officials are not prepared to make a recommendation to the Board of Regents at this time, he said. Although the studies should be fi­ nalized soon, Franklin said that "a lot of pieces would have to fall to­ gether" for the University to consid­ er purchasing Tri-Towers. Tom Harrington, Tri-Towers' building supervisor, said the Uni­ versity is one of four parties inter­ ested in buying the building. "Whomever buys the building will have a good deal," Harrington said. Harrington said potential buyers should consider the city's economy and have the property and West Campus area surveyed to determine Tri-Tower's market value. Harrington said he believes Tri- Towers, which began as a women's dorm in 1969, is closed because it simply could not compete with newer apartments and their modem appliances and furnishings. "We don't have all that. That's why we have to close and remodel so we can compete," he said. "We're not as appealing as apart­ ment living or condo living." Harrington said another problem in keeping occupancy up was the policy of leasing out the 181 apart­ ments dorm style instead of per unit. "We didn't necessarily compete with dormitories ... our competition was apartment living," Harrington said. Austinites petition UT expansion By JUNDA WOO Daily Texan Staff Blackland residents, seeking to limit UT expansion into their East Austin neighborhood, said Satur­ day they are amassing signatures for a petition aimed at heightening awareness of the conflict and en­ couraging dialogue. "We're saying, 'Let us know what you want to develop and where, and let us have some input into the process,' " said Veon McReynolds, Blackland Neighborhood Associa­ tion president. The petition will press for negoti­ ation about the University's devel­ opment scheme in the area just east of the University. Residents of the low-income area sent UT President William Cunn­ ingham a letter Wednesday attack­ ing the University's expansion ac­ tions. Echoing the letter's tone, McRey­ nolds said, "I'm pretty much a nice guy, but I'm ready to escalate. "The University is like a blunder­ ing oaf," he said. "And we have to keep hitting him so hard and so many times before it has any ef­ fect." C unningham was out of tow n and unavailable for comment. O ne law m aker who received a copy of last w eek's letter is likely to investigate the group's allegations. Elliott N aishtat, staff counsel to Sen. Gonzalo Barrientos, D-Austin, said the senator probably will be in­ terested in m eeting with the neigh­ borhood association. O ther lawm akers, including Lt. Gov. Bill Hobby and Sen. Phil Gramm, have not seen the letter yet, aides said Friday. On a local level, City Council m em bers said they will follow a "hands-off" policy. Doug McMurray, aide to Council- m em ber George H um phrey, said, "W e have tried to facilitate discus­ sions betw een the neighborhood and UT. ... We have passed resolu­ tions in the past saying we support peaceful coexistence betw een the neighborhood and UT. "But in nothing we can do ." the large part there's Council m em bers in 1984 helped ham m er out a pact am ong the Uni­ versity, Blackland homeowners and the City of Austin that encouraged a mix of UT and residential property. Councilmember Sally Shipman, who aided in the 1984 negotiations, said the council will not intervene unless either the University or homeowners ask for help. UT officials have said they main­ tain an ongoing dialogue with resi­ dents of Blackland, where the Uni­ versity has been buying property since 1981. The University has not used the purchased land so far, but plans to eventually provide emergency, af­ fordable housing there. The neighborhood group has con­ sistently protested against UT ex­ pansion, alleging at various times that the University has violated zon­ ing ordinances and pressured resi­ dents to sell property. G. Charles Franklin, UT vice pres­ ident for business affairs, denied those charges Thursday and said the neighborhood group, which McReynolds said has about 25 members, does not represent most Blackland residents. Thirsty anyone? Lisa Folsom, a volunteer, pours a glass of Pottsville, Pa.-brewed D.G. Yuenglin & Son Porter, one of the 15 KPWG Beer Tasting at Scholz Garden. beers available for sampling at the seventh annual Allen Brook/Daily Texan Staff Residents plan to fight rent hikes By GREG PERLISKI Daily Texan Staff Members of a UT family housing activist group decided Sunday to petition the UT System Board of Re­ gents the University's planned rent increases for two fami­ ly complexes — the Colorado and Gateway apartments. fight to The University Family Housing Association held its first meeting at the Colorado housing complex, on Lake Austin Boulevard, as a reac­ tion to the support Ronald Brown, UT vice president for student af­ fairs, has given the rent increases. Geoff Sumner, UFHA secretary, said the association has decided to go over Brown's head by directly petitioning the UT System Board of Regents. The group met with Brown in March to discuss the rent hike, and Brown responded April 22 with a letter in support of the increase. Brown wrote he supported the rent hike for the Colorado and Gate­ way apartment complexes because the new rates were necessary to provide fair, quality housing. "Overhead expenses and the rou­ tine costs of maintining the Gate­ way and Colorado facilities are con­ stantly rising as these facilities grow older," Brown wrote in the letter. The regents in February approved the new monthly rates for family housing that will take effect in Sep­ tember 1988. The price of a one-bedroom Brackenridge apartment will drop from $269 to $264, while a two bed­ room will decline from $333 to $313. But rates for the Colorado and Gateway complexes will increase from $231 to $241 for a single bed­ room. A two-bedroom apartment will increase from $254 to $269. It is an increase residents said they cannnot afford. Elaine Buchanan, a resident of the Colorado complex, said the Univer­ sity is not taking into account the many single-parent families who live in family housing. Other residents say the Universi­ ty is overlooking foreign students, many of whom have limited reve­ nue sources. Lihkuei Chen, whose husband is a radio-television-film graduate stu­ dent, said she cannot work because her visa does not allow it, and her husband earns only $400 per month as a UT librarian, she said. C0N1MIMG EDUCATION Macintosh Style! ¥ Did you know that the Texas Union MicroCenter offers free Apple Macintosh computer classes to the University community? All University students, faculty, and staff with a valid U.T. ID are eligible to attend at no charge. The June / July class schedule at right, which lists the various topics covered and skill levels, may come in handy if you’re getting started or thinking about learning a new software program. Sign-up is not required. Once you have purchased a computer from the MicroCenter -- or if you already own one — you can rely on our network of support services to help you maximize the benefits of owning a personal computer. In addition to the free classes, the MicroCenter HOTLINE (471-6227) telephones are staffed Monday through Friday from 9:00 a.m. until 6:00 p.m. to answer any questions concerning hardware, software, peripherals, and any product stocking information. The MicroCenter service department, known for quick repair turnaround, can usually have your computer returned to you within 48 hours. The MicroCenter staff is deeply committed to helping you get the most out or working with personal computers. Whether you own one or use one at school or on the job, we strongly urge you to take advantage of the classes and the Hotline. T e x a s U n i o n Open Monday through Friday, 11:00 a.m. until 6:00 p.m. Macintosh Orientation: The purpose of this class is to introduce the basic commands that you will use to operate the Mac with the software. New Macintosh owners should attend this class firs t Time Date 1:30p-3:00p June 6 1:30p-3:00p June 20 1:30p-3:00p July 11 1:30p-3:00p July 25 Day Monday Monday Monday Monday Room 4.224 4.404 4.224 4.224 MS Word Part 1 This class will provide an introduction to MS Word, covering the SHORT MENUS features of Word Version 3.01. Novice Word 3.01 users should attend this class! Date June 7 June 21 July 5 July 19 Time 1:30p-3:00p 1:30p-3:00p 1:30p-3:00p 1:30p-3:00p Day Tuesday Tuesday Tuesday Tuesday Room 4.224 4.118 4.224 4.224 MS Word Part 2 This class will cover the FULL MENUS features ofWord3.01! Formatting and styles will be the main topics covered. Attending Word Part 1 before this class is highly recommended! Time Date 1:30p-3:00p June 14 1:30p-3:00p June 28 1:30p-3:00p July 12 1:30p-3:00p July 26 Day Tuesday Tuesday Tuesday Tuesday Room 4.224 4.224 4.224 4.224 PageMaker 3.0: Using PageMaker, you can combine text and graphics on a page to produce publications from documents cre­ ated with other Mac applications. This class will introduce this desktop publishing package. Date June 30 July 21 Time 1:30p-3:00p 1:30p-3:00p Day Thursday Thursday Room 4.224 4.224 Graphic Basics: The number of graphics packages continues to expand! This class will cover basic features of bit mapped (eg: MacPaint) and object oriented (eg: MacDraw) graphics products. Time Date 1:30p-3:00p June 27 Day Monday Room 4.224 HyperCard Part 1: This course will cover using HyperCard from the Browsing to the Authoring levels. Topics of concern are navigation, stack modification and stack creation. Knowledge of HyperTalk is not required. Date June 16 July 7 July 28 Time 1:30p-3:00p 1:30p-3:00p 1:30p-3:00p Day Thursday Thursday Thursday Room 4.224 4.224 4.224 HyperCard Part 2: This course will cover the basics of creating scripts in HyperCard. Familiarity with the Authoring level of Hyper­ Card is required. Dala July 14 lim a 1:30p-3:00p Day Thursday Roam 4.224 Excel Parti: Spreadsheets and charts are the topics of this class! Although we will cover the spreadsheet and chart functions of MS Excel, many of the commands also apply to Multiplan and Chart. Time Date 1:30p-3:00p June 8 1:30p-3:00p June 22 1:30p-3:00p July 6 1:30p-3:00p July 20 Day Wednesday Wednesday Wednesday Wednesday Room 4.224 4.404 4.224 4.224 Disk Management: This class will cover both floppy and hard disks management skills (back-ups, decreasing fragmentation and etc.). These skills will increase your work productivity and help prevent that ever-feared disk CRASH! Day Date Monday June 13 Monday July 18 Time 1:30p-3:00p 1:30p-3:00p Room 4.224 4.224 210 East 21st Street Call 471-6227 Note: The MicroCentefs special prices apply only to eligible stu­ dents, faculty, and staff of U. T. Austin. Excel Part 2: This class will Drovide an introduction to the and database functions of MS Excel. Dele June 15 June 29 July 13 July 27 Time 1:30p-3:00p 1:30p-3:00p 1:30p-3:00p 1:30p-3:00p Day Wednesday Wednesday Wednesday Wednesday Room 4.224 4.224 4.224 4.224 MicroCenter CLASSES ARE HELD IN THE TEXAS UNION The MicroCenter provides FREE, INTRODUCTORYclasses to the University community. Sign up is not required, however, you MUST have a UT IDI Need Help? Call the MicroCenter Hotline...471-6227 Our phones are answered Monday-Friday, 9am-6pm. We handle walk-in customers Monday-Friday,11am-6pm. MicroCenter Store Hours: Monday -Friday, 11 am-6pm Th e Daily Texan State & L ocal Monday, June 6, 1988 Page 7 Austinite dies from stab to heart By JIM GREER and KEVIN HARGIS Daily Texan Staff A 22-year-old Austin man was stabbed to death in an East Austin self-service coin laundry late Saturday night during a fight with three other men, police said Sunday. Police were called to the Kwik-Wash Coin Laundry at 1925 Gaston Place Drive at 10:50 p.m. and found Dan Canales, of 6200 Hylawn Drive, dead with one stab wound to the heart. Canales died instantly, said Dr. Robert Bayardo, Travis County medical examin­ er. "Canales and his brother were involved in an altercation with three black men," Bayardo said. Canales and his 19-year-old brother, Juan, were together at the washateria when the fight occurred, said James Por- lier, Canales' stepfather. Police have no suspects in the case, said Senior Sgt. Jim Kortan, an Austin police homicide investigator. "We don't know what the fight was over," Kortan said. "The actual assailant fled the scene." Porlier said Canales worked for Allied Services, a security and baggage service company, as a skycap for the past six months. One co-worker, who would not give his name, said Canales "smiled all the time." At the time of his death, Canales, who had lived in Austin for the past two years, lived with his mother, Eliza Porlier, and James Porlier. Porlier said Canales lived for 20 years in San Antonio — where he attended Alamo Heights and Highlands high schools — before he moved to Austin. He said homicide investigators have not finished taking statements in the case, and told him not to comment on the inci­ dent. Council permits departing members to vote on remaining policy questions Trevino, Cooksey help determine airport project manager, selection of civic center location as terms come to a close By GARRY LEAVELL Daily Texan Staff The City Council decided Thursday to tie up some loose ends before two new councilmembers take their seats June 15. The council voted 4-3 not to delay the hiring of a new airport project manager and the selection of the new civic center site, and narrowly endorsed Mayor Frank Cooksey's and Mayor Pro-Tem John Tre­ vino's participation in those decisions. The council Thursday selected Turner, Collie and Braden Inc. to manage the new airport and will probably select the civic center site soon. Not only did the council's decision ex­ pedite important decisions that had al­ ready received intensive discussion, but it avoided possible delays after Mayor-elect Lee Cooke and Councilmember-elect Rob­ ert Barnstone join the council June 15. Trevino, whom Barnstone will replace as the Place 5 representative, asked for immediate action Thursday. "I feeLI have as much of a contribution to make on this decision as anyone," Tre­ vino said, arguing that his years of experi­ ence on the issue made him at least as qualified as his replacement. I feel I have as much of a contribution to make on this decision as anyone.’ — Mayor Pro-Tem John Trevino But Councilmember Sally Shipman ar­ gued that the long-term effects of such important votes left an obligation to delay the decisions, especially with a new coun­ cil less than two weeks away. "If we had acted on this a month ago, that's one thing," Shipman said Friday. "But in light of the fact that the voters clearly spoke out last Saturday, for this council to inflict a decision on the next council is going to be difficult to deal with," she said. Councilmembers Smoot Carl-Mitchell- and Charles Urdy joined Cooksey and Trevino in opposition to Councilmember Max Nofziger's motion to delay the votes. Trevino also took a jab at Council- member George Humphrey's extensive questioning Thursday of City Aviation Di­ rector Timothy Ward about the city staff's recommendation of Turner, Collie and Braden to be the airport project manager. Humphrey, who supported another firm, lost the battle to delay the decision. "I think all of us realize the reason this is being delayed because we can all count," Trevino said Thursday, referring to his days left in office. "Every major project we've had has been questioned. It's always questioned by those who didn't get it, not by those who are being recommended," he said. Shipman said she intends to make a motion Tuesday to postpone the civic cen­ ter vote. "I am going to propose that since the decision is under review and the site we select for the civic center is going to be with us for 50 to 100 years, I feel like we ought to allow the new council to vote on it," Shipman said. But with more councilmembers having questions about the civic center vote than the airport decision — including outgoing Mayor Frank Cooksey — the alignment of the yes and no camps could be a little dif­ ferent this time. R O L E X Best Prices On New & Pre-Owned Rolex Watches, All Genuine w/warranty J. Stern Diamonds 478-4649 H Rrat RepuMc Bank Tower «ti* Congress 1 ~ L ^ D & B VIDEO SERVICE P O IO X «4654 AUSTIN. TOLAS 71741 W •--•-------------- 1---eeei nOMMMiVlQMQPB|WRp8 ® WEDDINC '• 'UAL OCCASIONS 837-9076 Student Discounts THE TEXAS DOZEN $ 2 4 * 15 roses arranged & delivered T T FIESTA FLOWERS 453-7619 3830 N. Lamar BUY, SELL, RENT, TRADE. WANT ADS...471-5244 coupon ROFFLER SCH O O L OF HAIR DESIGN SHAMPOO a _ CUT § C BLOW DRY V S # rv ic # « p e r f o r m # d by tu p « rv 1 > * d s t u d e n t * 1 5339 Burnet 458-2620 SPECIALIZED NOW IN STOCK " H a r d r o c k s " " R o c k h o p p e r s " it U ■ R o c k h o p p e r C o m p l 12404 SA N GABRIELI I 477-6846 I ilV* UNLIMITED LONG DISTANCE CALLING $49.00 Houston/Dallas $39.00 Son Antonio Coll Now 346-7680 Col or Marilyn Lemmon Flaf-tofe Communications of Texas, Ltd. P r e g n a n c y C o u n s e l i n g C A R L O S W I G O D A . M D Chi ‘nc5 .1 h-l 41. 07 J o Civ. , S .i *• U. : i - h r . 4 4 J . V ‘7 c . MacProducts Hardware Buys Personal Laser Printer Abaton ProPoint MacBottom 144 Internal Magic91 Internal Drive $1699.00 110.00 1899.00 1295.00 Dobie Mall 2021 Guadalupe Austin 469-5000 EVERY WOMAN’S CONCERN C o n f i d e n t i a l , P r o f e s s i o n a l R e p r o d u c t i v e C a r e • 1 i e » ’ P r e q i M i K v I <’s t m g • P r o b l e m P r e g n a n t v, ( i m n s r l m g ,,n, r !. II, • ( >11 ( K shuiil, II, >•>! t II',-,, ! 4 5 8 - 8 2 7 4 HHI'M lOlli DANCE’N’SHAPE SUMMER SPECIAL 17.50*/mo. M EN and W O M EN D A N C E A ER O B IC S Dane*— Classes in tap. ballet & jazz lor aN ages & levels. Classes taught by profession­ al instructors. Body Sculpt — The final touch to a perfect body. Work on tightening abe, gluts & upper boy white learning proper stretching. DNS — Aerobics and dance come together tor a high energy, fun hour ot fenees. Adv. — Advanced aerobics tor the more experi­ enced exerciser. High intensity tor men & women! THE VILLAGE Suite #509/2700 Anderson Ln •with UT ID 451-1820 y i a i i a HOT B I K E ------- HOT PRICE! * m o m uhotfrué $979* (till 6-13 only) $ 1 1 4 9 * Wanna dance? Three Matachines perform an ancient Aztec dance during a Marachi Mass at Mission San Jose in San Antonio. The Sunday Mass, performed by a small dance troop that usually dresses in Aztec costumes, was part of the San Antonio Festival Associated P^ess Short Course Schedule — SUMMER 1988 The C om putation Center, U ser S ervices D ivision The U niversity o f T exas at A ustin Registration for the Summer Short Courses begins on Monday, May 30, 1988. Summer Short Courses begin on Monday, June 6, 1988. Courses are free to faculty, staff, and students having a valid UT ID. A $10 per course hour fee is charged registrants. Registration forms and copies of the Short Course Catalog are available in: WCH 2. Registration is required and will be accepted as space is available. For more information contact the Sh Registrar at 471-3241, ext. 253. (campus mailing address: Computation Center COM 1 1 In the course identifiers below, the first 3 digits represent the course number A letter designation a or b course that is repeated during the semester. Except as noted, courses meet in COM 8. Class presentations end 15 minutes before the hour to non-UT . 8 & 9A. ort-Course . denotes a G eneral Interest Course» 100 111 112 114 115 119 Intro, to the Computation Center (2 hrs) Intro, to Graphics at UT (2 hrs) Intro, to Text Processing at UT 12 hrs1 Intro, to Database Systems (2 hrs) Intro, to Microcomputers (2 hrs) File Transfer Protocol (FTPH2 hr DEC-30 C ourses 241a 241b DEC-20 Migration Issues (2 hrs) DEC-20 Migration Issues (2 hrs > Cyber C ourses 300 303 Intro, to the Cybers (4 hrs) Intro, to EDIT (Text Editor) (4 hrs? A dvanced G raphics Lab C ourses 400 404 411 412 Tour of the Advanced Graphics Lab (1 hr)1 Image Processing (2 hrs) Device-Independent Graphics with DI-3000 (2 hrs) Surface/Solid Modeling (2 hrs) M icrocom puter C ourses 800 815 816 821 840 Intro, to Computation Ctr Micro Lab (1 hr Intro, to MS-DOS/PC-DOS (4 hrs) Intermediate MS-DOS/PC-DOS <4 hrs) Intro, to Microsoft Word for the IBM PC 14 hrs) Intro, to dBASE III PLUS (4 hrs) IBM 3001-D C ourses 500a 500b 501 503a 503b 504a 504b 505 510 513 519 520 521 522 525 530 531 532 Intro, to the IBM 3081 for New Users í 2 hrs1 Intro, to the IBM 3081 for New Users i2 hrs) U s i n g CP & CMS Commands (2 hrs) XEDIT for New Users (2 hrs) XEDIT for New Users (2 hrs' Using XEDIT Commands (2 hrs) Using XEDIT Commands12 hrs) XEDIT Techniques (2 hrs) Using Tapes on the IBM 3081-D (2 hrs SAS* Basics (6 hrs) Getting Help on the IBM 3081 -D > 2 hrs Intro, to SCRIPT VS (6 hrs' SCRIPTVS for Graduate Students 16 hrs1 Advanced SCRIPT VS iti hrs* SPSS-X* Basics 16 hrs) Intro, to NOMAD 2 (4 h rs1 Shortcuts for IBM 3081-D U sers (2 hrs1 REXX Language Basics (2 hrs' UNIX* Course# 600 601 603 615 616 619 730 Intro, to UNIX i6 hrs' Intro, to vi Text Editor (2 hrs' UNIX for Students (2 hrs> Intro, to TeX (2 hrs! Intro, to LaTeX 02 hrs) UNIX Shell Programming (4 hrs) Introduction to EMACS (2 hrs*3 VAX/VMS C ourses 700 702 706 720 730 740 Intro, to VAX VMS (4 hrs' Intro to Digital Command Language1 DCL> (2 hrs) EVE-The Extensible VAX Editor (2 hrs'3 VAXVM S Debugger 12 hrs) Intro to EMACS (2 hrs Quick Overview for Student Programmers (2 hrs*‘ 10AM to Noon 1PM to :3PM 1PM to 3PM 1PM to 3PM 3PM to 5PM 3PM to 5PM 3PM to 5PM 3PM to 5PM 3PM to 5PM 3PM to 5PM 4PM to 5PM 3PM to 5PM 3PM to 5PM 3PM to 5PM 8 AM to 9AM 1PM to 3PM 1PM to 3PM 1PM to 3PM 1PM to 3PM 5 PM to 7 PM 3PM to 5PM 5PM to 7PM 5PM to 'P M 3PM to 5PM 5PM to 7 PM 3PM to 5PM 5PM to 7PM 5PM to 7 PM 5PM to 7PM 5PM to 7PM 3PM to 5PM 3PM to 5PM 3PM to 5PM 5PM to 7PM 1PM to 3PM 5PM to 7PM 5PM to 7PM 10AM to Noon 10AM to Noon 10AM to Noon 10AM to Noon 10AM to Noon 10 AM to Noon 3PM to 5PM 3PM to 5PM 3PM to 5PM 3PM to 5PM 3PM to 5PM 3PM to 5PM 3PM to 5PM Ju n e 6 Ju n e s Ju n e 7 June 6 June 6 June 15 Julv 5 August 2 Ju n e 7. 9 Ju n e 14. 16 June 14 J une 11 Ju n e 23 June 2S June 10 June 13. 15 J ul v 11, 13 June 20 22 July 12. I + June 9 July 14 Ju n e 14 Ju n e 13 Jul> 18 June 15 July 20 Ju n e 21 J une 23 June 28 29 Ju n e 16 Ju n e 20. 2- 24 Ju n e 27. 29. Jui July 11. 13. 15 July 12. 13. 14 June 21. 23 June 27 July 26 ; Ju n e 13. 15. 17 J une 20 Ju n e 7 Ju n e 22 J une 24 Ju n e 27. 29 Ju n e 20 Ju n e 8. 10 June 13 June 15 June 17 June 20 June 7 T O N S o f IRO N a 4123 Guadalupe Next Door to Hyde Perk Gym Pennies Pound 459-4747 YAMAHA YSR50 UT System CHPC** C ourses 900 Intro, to the UT System 903 CHPC Cray X-M P‘24 Supercomputer (6 hrs* Intro, to the CFT FORTRAN Compiler 14 hr*) 10AM to Noon July 2 5 .2 7 ,2 9 10AM to Noon August 1,3 O’Leary Yamaha 7S39 Bunwt 4 5 3 - 4 9 5 5 ■ Kasaan Yamaha 1S07 S. Lamar 4 4 4 - 7 4 8 2 soysa ■ - rg—t — * - t H i a c a u r a a a a t o M f * Tuauvura# a • Umi -I U>« Mwrucutninitx Lnb U will awl u« I’lewn AcwAew* Uwilw tvu m 1 n a a n a a i A a n S a i#h w a w i It m il n u a t in T n> iw Hell m a #1111 A r fv a m S U n g á n » L a S It well i m m m S n g w w ru m Scw nc» B u ild in g raw * *- of SAS b a tiu itt. Inc UNIX a * i r i t —« r t *1 VT*T Sait SPSLX » • e aSaw r Xaf SW S. In. *C«iuw fee High Pnrtwrmnnc* Computing Monday, June 6,1988 Page 8 T h e Daily T ex a n Sports Wilander, Graf coast to Open victories 3H Graf keeps title] ‘Bulldozer’ rolls ^^ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ 1 1 ■ I J1 in 6-0, 6-0 rout to men’s crown i UT pitcher adds to list of awards Associated Press PARIS — A barrage of near-perfect serves and pinpoint passing shots carried Mats Wilander to a 7-5, 6-2, 6-1 victory over Henri Leconte Sunday for his third m en's champi­ onship at the French Open. In becoming the first man since Bjom Borg in 1980 to win the opening two legs of tennis' Grand Slam, Wilander relied on a steady baseline game and kept the Open's first French finalist in five years from attaining the serve-and volley rhythm he had used in earli­ er rounds to get the fans behind him. "He was really like a bulldozer," said Leconte, who blew a 5-4 lead on his serve in the first set and was booed by part of the Parisian crowd as he claimed the runner-up trophy. This Swedish bulldozer was a perfectly tuned machine, and the performance raised again the question of whether Wilander, ranked third, or top-ranked Ivan Lendl is the best player in the world. Wilander hit on 97 percent of his first serves and didn't miss a single first serve in the third set. Whenever Leconte tried to come to the net, Wilander would find a way to blunt the attack, usually with a knifelike back­ hand cross-court shot at which the French­ man could only blink. "This was one of the most important matches in which I didn't make any unforced errors, and my backhand started working," said Wilander, a winner here in 1982 and '85, and a finalist two other times. "I passed really well. I think that was the key to the match." The match took 1 hour, 52 minutes, and Leconte won eight games. But in a way it was as one-sided as Saturday's women's champi­ onship, when Steffi Graf retained her title with a 6-0, 6-0 victory over Natalia Zvereva of the Soviet Union. That match lasted just over a half hour and kept Graf on track, too, for the Grand Slam. Leconte, a Grand Slam tournament finalist for the first time, said he was sad he had been unable to give the home crowd a better show. "It is a very difficult crowd, but it's my crowd. I'm French," he said. "All the time, when I was coming to the net, he was passing me. He made it look like a bad match." The serve never has been Wilander's prime weapon; steadiness and stamina took care of that. But the serve, a skidding, deep shot on clay, is accurate. Against Leconte, it was deadly accurate. Wilander served 74 times in the match; only twice did he have to go to a second serve. When the figures were read to Wilan­ der, his eyes got wide and his mouth Mats Wilander celebrates a point while capturing his second Grand Slam title this year. dropped open. "I didn't want any quick points," he said. "I wanted to hit my first serves and keep him on the baseline." For years, Leconte has had a reputation as an inconsistent player prone to lapses in con­ centration and streaks of brilliant — and hor­ rible — play- But on Sunday, the old Leconte returned. Hitting winners from the baseline and com­ ing to the net often enough to keep Wilander confused, Leconte broke for a 2-1 lead. Then the roller-coaster ride started. Leconte won only three points in three games as Wilander went ahead 4-3. The Frenchman came back to tie it and broke at love for a 5-4 lead on a backhand down the line and a back­ hand winner. That was as far as he got. The Swede broke for the set on a forehand passing shot and completed a run of six straight games as he took a quick 3-0 lead in the second set. By the time Leconte broke the string by holding for 3-1, the cries of "Allez Henri" that greeted him in the early going had been re­ placed by whistles and jeers. "I don't understand," Leconte said. "They should be happy that there is a Frenchman in the final. They've always been hard on me. But they'll change when I win the French Open." Martina Navratilova, a two-time women's singles champion, gained her 50th career Grand Slam victory Sunday when she and Pam Shriver won the women's doubles from Helena Sukova of Czechoslovakia apd Clau­ dia Kohde-Kilsch of West Germany 6-2, 7-5. Associated Press Associated Press PARIS — In a blowout of historic dimen­ sion, Steffi Graf retained the women's cham­ pionship at the French Open Saturday. It was as easy as everyone else told her it would be, and much easier than she told herself. Ten days shy of her 19th birthday, Graf kept the title she won in a tense three-setter a year ago with a 6-0, 6-0 victory over Natalia Zvereva of the Soviet Union. The match lasted 32 minutes, just over half as long as the one-hour rain storm that inter­ rupted play halfway through the first set. Of­ ficially, shorter Grand Slam finals have been played, but single points have taken almost as long. The time on court might have been the quickest ever. "I'm very sorry it was so fast," Graf told the center court crowd. If she deprived them of a classic match, a replay of her victory over Martina Navratilova last year, she gave them one that will take its own place in tennis history. Only once before, in 1911, had a women's Grand Slam final ended without the loser tak­ ing a single game. Never had it happened in Paris, where the worst previous drubbing was the 6-1, 6-0 defeat administered by the to American legendary Suzanne Lenglen Mary K. Browne in 1926. Zvereva, just turned 17, came out after the rain break wearing a new shirt but facing the same old problem. Graf was on the other side of the net, and the West German's forehand was as blistering as it had been throughout the tournament. When the final point — fittingly on a fore­ hand cross-court winner — fell in, Graf jumped for joy, then ran over to the stands and hugged her father, Peter Graf. Numbers tell the dominance of Graf on a blustery day in Paris. Playing in her fifth consecutive Grand Slam final, the West German lost just 13 points, only four on her serve. She allowed Zvereva to reach game point just once, at 40-30 in the second game, and she promptly broke with a forehand winner down the line and two Zvereva errors. That forehand has become Graf's trade­ mark, and it was as dominant as ever Satur­ day. The final point was her 21st winner off the forehand, not counting a pair of forehand puta ways off short lobs into the open court. And all this on a day when Graf's serve was not particularly potent. She hit on only 54 percent of her first serves, had three aces and double-faulted twice. It was a small flaw in an otherwise overwhelming performance against an opponent who looked intimidated by the occasion. OMAHA, Neb. — Freshman pitcher Kirk Dressendorfer, who already owns several Southwest Conference awards from the re­ cently completed season, added some national honors when two All-America teams were an­ nounced Friday. Dressendorfer, the SWC play­ er and newcomer of the year, was named to the third team of the American Baseball Coaches Association All-American squad along with two teammates, and he was the only Longhorn on the first team of the Baseball America All-America squad. Pitcher Eric Stone was named to the second team and catcher Brian Johnson to the third team of Baseball America's squad. John­ son and designated hitter Mike Patrick were named to the third team of the coaches' All-America team along with Dressendorfer. John Salles, Lance Shebelut and Tom Goodwin of Fresno State headed the first-team selec­ tions on the coaches' elite squad. The three were among five first- team players to be competing in the College World Series. Mark Standiford of Wichita State at second base and outfield­ er Mike Fiore of Miami also were named to the three-team squad's first team from College World Se­ ries teams. Oklahoma State's Ro­ bin Ventura was at third base, Billy Masse of Wake Forest was named the outfield, Mike Willes of Brigham Young was the designated hitter and John Ol- erud of Washington State was picked as the first-team utility player. to Olerud, who pitches, plays first base and is a designated hitter for Washington State, also was named Baseball America's player of the year. The weekly baseball magazine named Olerud a first team All- American as both a pitcher and designated hitter. The 6-foot-4, 190-pound sophomore left-hand­ er was 15-0 with a 2.49 earned run average. He also hit .464 with 23 home runs. from The Chronicle Half price for University of Texas students, faculty and staff during the . summer semester. Only $10.36 for delivery from June 1 to August 15. (No delivery July 9-10.) Call 447-8991 or send check or money order to: Houston Chronicle, P.O. Box 19245, Austin, TX 78760. 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The Chronicle T h e Da ily T ex a n Science Monday, June 6,1988 Page 9 Rocks to riches Student researches oil recovery By SALLY STROUD Daily Texan Staff A picture of Albert Einstein overlooks the scientific apparatus built by a chemical engineering graduate student who studies the release of micron-sized particles from surfaces through a light microscope. The particles are glass and polystyrene microspheres deposited on glass and cop­ per surfaces, and held there by van der Waals' forces. These forces are the same as those that cause dust to stick to semicon­ ductor surfaces during the manufacture of silicon chips, necessitating the use of "clean" rooms. Habib Chamoun and about 129 other graduate students combined their knowl­ edge of physics, math and chemistry to model real-life conditions underground to increase the efficiency of oil recovery from rocks. "It is challenging to study chemical and physical processes, something that is abstract and yet reveals truths about the natural world," Chamoun said. "You do not know what is going on until you have nearly finished the research." Research projects in the Department of Petroleum Engineering are financially sup­ ported by a number of different sources. For example, one consortium of about 20 oil companies contributes $400,000 worth of grants to research new methods of pro­ ducing more oil out of the ground. "It is a cheap way for oil companies to get good research," said Dave Sevougian, a petroleum engineering graduate student. The Department of Energy also contrib­ utes funds to petroleum research. Representatives from oil companies come to listen to findings from research projects. Chamoun said that the meetings, which occur several times a year, give graduate students "practice to rehearse your thoughts." time He said, "If you can talk to these people about your work, you can express your ideas to the rest of the world. They act as negotiators of your ideas." Collecting^ data from his experiments took Chamoun two years with the assist­ ance of several chemical engineering u n ­ dergraduates. The goal was to measure the flow rate of water at which attached parti­ cles release from surfaces under different conditions of water chemistry. The particle diameters ranged from 10 to 40 microns. The number of particles that remained under the microscope after the fluid was pumped through was a measure of the amount of force required to move a particle from a surface. Chamoun's primary supervisor, Robert Schechter, professor of chemical and petro­ leum engineering, is particularly interested in a particle release mechanism called peel­ ing. Chamoun researches the effects of very small particles peeling away from a sur­ face, as opposed to sliding or lifting away. In his dissertation, he states that peeling is the way small particles are dislodged from a surface under hydrodynamic forces. Schechter said peeling takes less energy than sliding, for example, so fluid pressure need not be as great. The mechanism of particle release is sig­ nificant because a knowledge of the amount of force required to release a parti­ cle will help researchers determine how to stop the movement of particles, Chamoun said. For example, in oil reservoirs, if fine clay particles are restrained from movement, they will not block pores in rocks, and will therefore allow oil to travel more easily through the medium. Mukul Sharma, professor of petroleum engineering, who also advises Chamoun with his experiments, said that approxi­ mately 80 percent of the oil remains in the rocks after an oil well is produced. To in­ crease oil recovery, a fluid that will not mix with oil, such as water or polymer, can pressure the oil out of pores. However, the problem of particles sticking together de­ creases the amount of oil that can be pres­ sured out of the pores. Chamoun's research on particle move­ ment will lead to future research that will overcome the problem of pore clogging by stopping particle movement altogether, Schechter said. Schechter said he is not sure of the meth­ od that will be used to prevent particles from moving. The only way to get to these rocks is to inject a liquid containing chemi­ cals to coat particles and create a shield to prevent peeling. But Schechter said that this experiment will have a significant impact in future oil recovery from rocks. In Chamoun's experiments, certain vari­ ables must be controlled to produce a well- defined effect. The influence of controlling factors such as flow rate, particle size and material, surface roughness, concentration of ions in a solution, solution pH and ethanol concentration must be considered. for RESUMES PASSPORTS APPLICATIONS IMMIGRATION third eye 2532 GUADALUPE 477-5555 2402 OUADALUPI ■ 4 7 4 * 4 3 8 1 ■ w h i l m [ L E GRAND CHEMIN (THE GRAND HIGHWAY) I TODAY: (5:15@$3JQ) 7:20,9:30 ALAN RUDOLPH’S THE MODERNS TODAY (5:10@$3.00) 7:30,9:45 eg ---- 3:00@1J09:20@2J0 HAIRSPRAY 7:25-12:00 WIZARDS 11:45 Summer in Austin 2 1 s t and G u a d a l u p e 477 1324 CALL 471-5244 TO PLACE A CLASSIFIED AD Allen Brook/Daily Texan Staff Habib Chamoun continues to do research for his experiment of recovering oil from rocks. IER NICOLAS CAGE MOONSTRUCK 4A5@1J07:10-9:33<8130 STUDENT SPECIAL SU PIRCU TS-Style Makes the Difference Let SUPERCUTS treat you to a sp il $6 SUPERCUT™. That's $2 off our regularly $8-priced SUPERCUT™. And, as a bonus, you can get a shampoo for only $1. 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Nearly 23,000 students are still here for the summer. They’ll be at the lakes and pools, restaurants, clubs, and shopping malls — anywhere things are going on this summer. 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I n Mm o v o n t o f « r a n n d o in by 11 • p o n a M a t o r o n l y O N I I n c a r * pact in a o r lt o n . A M c la im » t a r a d - h ra tin o n t» i h o u i d b a n o d » n o t la t e r I b a n R ■ P r o - p a i d IdW» r e c o b r e c re M b eWp M r e a w o a to d a t M n M o f ca n c a W a- N o n , a n d N a m o u n t e r n a a d a I. I N p m w at b a g r a c a n ta d t o r a r a o r d a r w M M n < 0 d a y » t o b a v a lid . C r e d it »M p » a r e n o n - 2. — te c A JO— Sport»-Foreign AuPo» 2 0 — Trucks* Vw w 4 0 — V oM d oa to Trade 5 0 — tandea la g a ir _____ 70— Motorcycle» • 0 -M c y d e a 9 0 - V e M d e » 100— VaW daa W-rnmé REAL 1ST ATI SALIS 110— l an dcaa 120— Mouaoa 120— Condoa-Tow nhouaee 140— M oM ta Hom ao* Lota 150— Acreage iota 140— uph »a* 170— W anted 100— Loons MERCHANDISE 100— AppMoncao 200— Fum toure-Heuaeheld 0 - -TV 220— Com putara* 220— Photo-Cam eraa 240— •o ats 250— M w skol Instrum ents 240-H o b b ie s 270— M achinery- Igtdpm ent 280— Sporttng-Com ping i q wlpmant 290— Furniture-AppNance 200— O a rage -K w nm aga RINTAL 240— Fum . Apts. 2 1 0 — U n f . A p t a . 3 0 — P i 200— Unf. Duplex»» 400— Cowdoe-Townh owaaa 410— Fum. Houaaa 420— Unf. Houaes 425— aeiwa 420— lo o m l o w d — 450— MobMa Momao-Loto 440 — uoinaoa Rant a 470— Maa orta M O ^ S l o f O f i f p t i t t 400— Wonta d to R ant-LaaM 500— «Mac ANNOUNCEMENTS 510— I nto rtoln w ant-Tick at» 520— Peraene la 530— Travel- 540— Loot A Pound — 5 3 0 - licensed Child Core 540— PwbUc Notice 570— M u ok-M u sld an s EDUCATIONAL 540— M w okal Instruction 500— Tutoring 400— Instruction W antod 410— M la c Instruction SERVICES 420— Le ga l Son d eas 420— Com putar Sondeo» 2 1 0 * 220— W anted to Buy 450— M o v ln g-H au iin g 440-M n! 700— tr tun y i O ^ A M N M C t ^§pg|f 720— Starao T V ia p o Ir 720— H am a ftapcMr 740— B k y d e Bap air 750— T yping 740— «Mac l a n d oaa EMPLOYMENT 770 ■_ Bmptoymoftt A p t n d ti 710— Im p lo y fM n t W n H c ii T t O — ToftHm o 000— O onoral H olp W anted 810— O ffke-Clertcal •20— Accounting* Oootek— p in g 820— A mlnlal of o- •5 0 — RotaN •4 0 — In gln a o rln g- •70— M adkcd •8 0 -P r o fe ss io n a l •9 0 — Cluba-Roataurants 900— P omeatk - H ouaebold 910— PoaM ons W anted 920- W o r k W anted BUSINESS 920— Bu siness O pportunities, 940— O pportur " W anted T SF Building, R o o m 3 .2 0 0 2 5 0 0 W h, M o n d a y through Friday 8o m -4 .3 0 p m 471-5244 TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION 10— Misc. Autos 10 — Misc. Autos 20 — Sports-Foreign 80 — Bicycles * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * ENJOYABLE * DEFENSIVE * I * DRIVING I i COURSE! * • Traffic Ticket * * * D ism issa l * • W eeknight 8t * W e ekend C la sse s + * ; * * 339-4781 ; caoNCTI ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ I T AUTOMOBILES W e B u y Y o u r C o r O r T r u c k R u n n i n g O r N o t . 2 5 1 - 2 8 8 1 A ft e r 5 G O p.m.: 2 4 4 - 1 4 7 7 6 - 8 C ^ B IL L B U Y S C A R S 451-6304 í TOP i i DOLLAR { i i FOR i ; YOUR i i CAR! Wt B u y C an J Cal Tony (a J Í 4 4 5 -5 7 8 7 Í * { * " - i Í A * '81 8 U IC K Century, AT, PS/PB, A M / F M , comet»», now hret, 6 0 , 0 0 0 milet, $ 2 3 5 0 Coll 3 2 3 - 2 7 9 7 6-10____________ '8 5 P L Y M O U T H H O R I Z O N 2 6 ,0 0 0 condition. O rig in a l milet. Excellent Call 1-491-9314 6 -8 1 9 8 5 C A M A R O , A M / F M , couette. AC, s u i t e control, new rodiol tire», low rmle age, oncaBa n t condition. 8 3 7 - 3 1 4 5 6-10 19 8 4 F O R D M U S T A N G DC Dark metallic gray, low mileoge, g o o d condition. Be­ low book. C ad after 6pm. 4 4 5 - 3 3 6 0 . 6- 10______________________________________ 1 9 7 5 F O R D T O R IN O G o o d student cor High m tooga. Runt go o d. $ 5 2 5 . 4 4 7 - 9891. le a v e M attoge. 6-10_____________ 1981 O L D S O M E G A , 5 7 , 0 0 0 rmiet. ex celent condition. $2,100. 4 5 2 - 7 5 3 6 6- 10______________________________________ 6 7 M U S T A N G 6-cylinder, outomahc, now point, now engine, restored to ona - inol. $ 3 5 0 0 , negotiable. 4 7 7 - 9 4 2 0 6-10 7 9 M O N T E C A R L O AT, A C . PS, PB. A M / F M couette, cruise, excellent condition. $ 1 3 0 0 o b o 4 7 3 - 8 9 3 4 6 10____________ '8 6 R E G A L Limited Looded. Excellent •OttdMion. Unlimited mileoge W a rra n ty quotable 17,000 mdet M u tt tell 2 5 0 - 8 2 0 5 6-10 n rool, L IN C O L N T O W N C A R S leather mtenor. 1 9 8 4 - $ 7 5 0 0 ; 1 9 8 3 -S 6 7 5 0 After 6 p.m. 3 4 3 - 0 4 5 4 6-10_____________________________ signature tenet, 20 — Sports-Foreign Autos 7 9 S C IR O C C O 4-tpeed, an, low milet, Pioneer system, m o on roof, fo g light». 4 7 8 - 4 0 3 4 after 6 .6 -1 0 _________________ '6 7 B UG . G reat condition, high perform ­ ance engine, $ 9 0 0 o r b e d offer 4 4 3 - 7 8 9 5 6 10_____________________________ FO R SALE: 19 86 H o n d a CRX. excellent condition, 3 4 , 0 0 0 milet, A C , automatic couette player, $ 6 5 0 0 . Dick, 3 8 8 - 1 3 6 6 6-10___________________________________ 7 1 M G 8 GT, great condition, runt good, looks go o d. M u tt teN. $1100 O B O 2 8 2 - 7 3 5 9 6-10_____________________________ 19 7 4 C O RV E TTE O R A N G E , T-Top, auto, oir, superb condition, $6,100, b o o k val- ue, $ 5 , 9 0 0 1 -2 6 2 -2 2 0 2 (Kyle) 6-10 19 85 M A Z D A R X 7 (GSL) 2 8 , 0 0 0 mile», fuRy looded, oN leather intenor, gor- geout. $ 9 4 0 0 firm 3 8 9 - 3 0 0 1 6-10 8 6 R X 7 T IN T ED g lo u , excelle nt condi­ tion, low mileoge, $10,950. 2 4 4 - 0 7 6 0 , evenings a n d w eekend» 6-10 1 9 5 7 C H E V Y 2-door, runt great, looks d torp $ 5 , 0 0 0 negotiable 8 9 2 - 3 5 7 3 19 7 3 V O L V O runt wed, dependable, $1,500 3 2 2 - 0 3 5 8 , Jerry. 6-10_________ t ! . 7 8 M E R C U R Y C o u g a r R X 7 Pow er w in­ d o w s a n d tun r o o f 9 5 k mile* G o o d - $ 1 0 5 0 . 4 9 9 - 8 3 3 3 6-10 19 8 0 B M W 6 3 3 C S I U S m odel AH o p ­ tions. M echom coH y everything reptoced. condition cosmetically $1 0,75 0 4 8 0 - 9 5 7 8 6-1 R E D H O T borgam sl D ru g dealers' cart, boat!, piones Your A r e o Buyers G uide (1) 8 0 5 - 6 8 7 - 6 0 0 0 Ext. 5-9413. 6-10_______________________ repo'd. Surplus. 1 9 7 6 C A M A R O V 8 N e w hret, A C A M / F M ilereo, great condition B e d offer $1 90 0, caN A m y 4 7 9 - 6 9 5 8 . 6 - 1 0 19 8 3 V O L V O DL w agon. A C , A M / F M , 5- ipeed, crmte, 8 2 K miles, tinted glatt, $ 7 , 8 0 0 CoH 1 -2 8 5 - 4 2 3 8 6-10_________ 1984 S U B A R U G l W a g o n White, excel­ lent pluth interior, p ow e r w indows/ mir­ rart, new Michelim . W ill negotiate. 4 7 2 - 9911. 6 -10______________________________ Autos 1 9 7 3 V W , S Q U A R E bock, n ew lire», new le a h, runt wed. Cleon, dependable. $ 8 0 0 , 4 7 8 - 3 0 4 4 , evening» 6-17 A L F A R O M E O Spyder, 1 9 8 0 Encelen! condition $ 4 0 0 0 4 4 7 - 3 7 4 7 , o ik for Rod.____________________________________ 1 9 7 7 2 8 0Z , run* g o o d . M u tt tocrifice. B e d offer. C o m e a n d tee. 4 4 5 - 6 1 7 6 6- 10______________________________________ 1 9 7 8 RABBIT, 8 7 , 0 0 0 milet, new brake», A/C, rtereo, runt gre at $ 1 2 0 0 negoti- able. C o t 4 7 9 - 0 8 6 9 . 6 - 2 2 ______________ for G ot. 4 0 M P G . Rated Bet» b y C on torn en G u id e 1 9 8 0 V o lla w o g o n Rabbit, A ir Conditioned, 4 -d o o n , A M / FM , C o m ie, 6 8 , 0 0 0 Milet. Priced to S e l Q uickty $ 9 5 0 4 5 8 - 4 3 0 7 6-10 '8 5 T O Y O T A C oro lla G T S Twin Com. too d ed . $ 6 0 0 0 3 4 6 - 8 8 1 8 6 2 4 1 9 8 5 S U B A R U G l All power, A M / F M couette, lo w mileoge, excellent condi­ tion. C o l G oyle, 4 4 2 - 3 6 2 1 6 -6 _________ 19 8 4 V W RABBIT Convertible, low mile­ age, look» beautiful, a re al condition. $ 9 0 0 0 or betl offer. Coll 4 7 4 - 6 3 1 8 a n y ­ time. 6-13 1981 V W S C IR R O C C O S 5-»peed, oir, ttero, $ 2 3 0 0 3 8 8 - 2 6 0 3 tire», well momtoined. new 19 7 2 M G Midget. G re at condition, new broket, recent point |ob, g o o t hret, w ool teat covert. Alp ine stereo optional $ 2 2 0 0 Coll 4 7 8 - 5 0 6 3 . 6 - 1 0 ___________ 8 5 C O N V E R T IB L E M U S T A N G G T lo o d ­ ed. L ow milet. Silver bullet Sacrifice $ 1 0 ,9 0 0 4 5 0 -0 1 2 8 . 6 - 1 0 _______________ 30 — Trucks-Vans ‘8 6 D O D G E R am chorger 2 5 0 SE Royal. 4x4, immocutate, low mileoge, loaded, $ 1 2 ,9 8 8 2 8 0 -2 8 0 1 6-10_______________ SU RF/PARTY W A G O N - 7 1 Ford Potto! V o n — reek* of character--look», runt great. $1,150. 4 7 7 - 1 8 3 4 6-10___________ 1 9 8 6 S A M A R I S U Z U K I JX. toft top con vertible. C hro m e wheel», lo o d ed with extrot. After 7pm, 4 7 4 -5 6 2 T . 6 -10 70 — Motorcycles H O N D A . 459-3311 Full Selection of Motorcycles & Scooters Check on O ur '87 CI0SBOUT WOODS HONDA KAWASAKI FUN CENTER 6509 N. LARAAR ’87 MOUNTAIN twNIe they lost) B1 M M I BUCK’S BIKES 4812 Springdale 28-2810 dSA. MC. Am. tn>. DScover Welcome REAL 1STATI SALES 120 — Houses 7 -8 B E D R O O M houte, 4 both. Two blocks to low tchool with g a r a g e a pa rt­ ment. N e w rem odeled , $ 2 2 5 ,0 0 0 . 3 2 7 - 2 7 4 5 . 5 -9 130 — Condos - Townhouses R io ( ir a n d o C O N D O S F O R S A L E 17 ♦»- 7 7 f M) 2 10 1 Hit» < ir a n d c UT CONDO 2400 SPEEDWAY #204 8 blocks from campus. 2 bedroom studio. 8 5 0 square feet. $54,000. 451-6961. 6 - 2 3 BARGAIN PRICED CONDO 2-V/2 in beautiful Barton Hills. 3 decks, fireplace, pool, party- house, creek & trees, $59,000. JIMMIE A N N VAUGHN CO. 346-4524 6-6 1 '81 F O R D ESC O RT, 2-door. 4 tpeed, A J C $ 1 , 2 0 0 o r b e d offer 3 3 1 - 5 5 3 2 6-10 1 9 8 2 4 cyl Com oro, grey, A/C, A M / F M , pow er windows, p ow e r radial tires, broket, low mileoge, b e d offer 3 4 3 - 7 0 8 0 6 - 1 0 _____________________________ 1 9 7 9 C U T L A S S S U P R E M E Excellent run­ n in g condition M u d tel. B e d offer over $ 1 ,7 0 0 CoH Lyto, 32 8-5131 d ay s 6-10 19 8 3 Dattun 2 0 0 SX Hatchback G reat c e l» B » car. S G L pockoge. lo o d ed Al- pm e N eg otia b le M u d tell. 2 8 0 - 3 1 5 4 5- M U S T SELLI 8 5 M u d o n g convertible new Ore», cteon, $ 8 9 0 0 o r offer 3 3 1 -4 6 0 7 6-1 0 ___________________________________ 1 9 8 0 M E R C U R Y C A P R I 2 door, 4 -tpeed. A C A M / F M tape, 7 OK. runt g o o d $ 2 , 0 0 0 negotiable 4 7 2 9 4 8 4 . R ondy 6-10 low 19 7 9 F O R D Fairmont Runt good, A n y m lm . AT. PB, P S CoH 3 4 6 -5 0 5 1 h e e l 6 -10______________________________ C O N V ER TIB LE!!! 19 85 Renault Alkonce, 4 6 , 0 0 0 mi, red w/wfute pow er top AT, b o d e d , $ 5 5 0 0 , 3 4 6 - 5 0 9 0 6-10 7 6 G R E N A D A $ 4 5 0 negotiable 4 7 9 6 8 3 6 after 7 0 0 pm 6-10_______________ 19 8 5 L A S E R T U R B O 5 -tpeed. v ery clean, S t crude, sunroof, bra louvret 3 6 , 0 0 0 a ie ». $ 5 9 9 5 2 5 1 - 9 0 3 9 6-10 $ 1 5 0 0 19 5 7 P L Y M O U T H lo o k t G re at 0 8 0 CoH to tee Robert 4 7 7 18 5 4 6- 10 ___________ 19 77 C H E V Y M o nzo, V 8, Y d o o r . AC, Adto, M a n y new portt $ 4 5 0 CoH 4 7 3 - ___________ 2 7 2 5 6 -8 1 2 S U B A R U G l station w a go n G o o d $ 2 , 5 0 0 lo o k t brand new con d b o n C o S 2 4 7 4 2 2 8 5 31____________________ 1 7 N E W Yorker Turbo, silver/blue, lo o d ­ ed. b a it e r teat». Like new, m ud teM O n ty $11,500 3 2 8 - 2 7 5 8 6 10__________ 19 8 5 F IE R O G T 4-tpeed, low mile», A M / F M caatede, n ew Michelm», p ow er d e a n a n d b d a , w arranty $ 7 , 2 0 0 4 4 7 - 71 4 7 6 - 9 1 9 8 0 BUtCK R e gal A M / F M dereo. A/C, redialt, o ne owner, e xc el e nt condition, $2,150/offer 3 8 9 - 0 6 7 6 , 4 4 4 2 3 0 4 6 U L _____________________________________ 1 9 7 6 A M C Station W a g o n Exce le nt CP nd b o n . o n c o n d bo m n g, $ 9 7 5 4 5 2 - 8 4 5 0 o r 4 9 5 - 9 2 8 6 6-15_______________ H O N D A A C C O R D 19 85 Hatchbock M a w broket, dutch a n d lire». C a t 4 4 8 - 4 0 8 5 . 6-15____________________________ 1 8 7 0 C H E V R O LET , runt great, $ 8 0 0 . 0 8 0 C o l Derrick, 4 7 4 6318, evening» 6 - M ___________________________________ S IT True Y o u C a n Buy Jeep» for $ 4 4 j a g ugh the U.S. g o ve rnme nt* G e t the fa c a b d e y i C a f 9 0 1 3 6 - 6 312 7 4 2 1142 Ext 19 7 3 M E R C U R Y B R A G H A M FuRy lo a d rnik á » For ¿■ .^ ’“ > .1 4 67 61 50 6 2 4 loas, A M / F M caueNe, FS/F 8 Loaded. $ 6 5 0 0 2 5 9 - 2 3 6 8 , 8 3 2 54 31 6 21 1 9 7 3 M C S C U 8 Y B R A G H A M FuRy b o d - ed. «acatan! can d b o n , low m t a a g a For e w raixtarm a »»» e r f 4 6 7 - 8 1 5 0 6 - 2 4 V 1 9 7 0 C M f V a O l E T M a ib u , fo u r doer, « a » g o a l $ 8 0 0 o r b a d a S a r C o l Dar- dck 4 7 4 - 6 3 1 8 anyOm e 6-13 1 9 7 4 VW F U N - 8 U G W > 8 » a i « 2- door, »uw lo a f «to m a ) 2 5 8 - $ 9 5 0 6 3 0 6 (w a d R -8 2 3 - 9 3 5 6 6-10 74 VOLVO w e g o n $ 8 0 0 . 6 8 C e rm o n g w ^ ^ H w a g o n i M ^ottou $ 1 2 0 0 ; 6 3 M a d d a r • a g o n $ 7 0 0 . A « m g e o d c e n d b a n 371 | 19 76 A L E A R O M E O Spyder. Ivory, 1 ow ner Rebuilt e ngine N e w top, seats, battery, records. $3 ,5 0 0 . 3 3 1 -4 8 6 0 . 6-10 1 9 8 3 M A Z D A RX-7, 5-tpeed. A/C, sun- roof, great carl $ 5 9 5 0 . A uto Trends, 6 7 2 4 Burnet Rd. 4 5 0 -0 1 2 8 . 6 -1 0 N 19 83 C H E V R O L E T C A M A R O , 5-»peed, A/C, stereo 3 9 ,0 0 0 miles. 1 ow ner Auto Trends, 6 7 2 4 Burnet Rd. 4 5 0 - 0 1 2 8 6 - 1 0 N __________________________________ 19 79 H O N D A P RELU DE 5-tpeed, A/C, p ow er sunroof G re at condition $ 2 2 5 0 A uto Trends, 6 7 2 4 Burnet, 4 5 0 -0 1 2 8 . 6 -1 0 N __________________________________ 19 76 M G M ID G E T . Redl 4-tpeed, stereo, 5 8 ,0 0 0 original mile» $1950. A uto Trends, 6 7 2 4 Burnet, 4 5 0 -0 1 2 8 . 6 -1 0 N 1974 D A T S U N 2 6 0 2 , 4-speed, A /C Super deon, super condition $ 2 4 5 0 . Auto Trends, 6 7 2 4 Burnet Rd 4 5 0 -0 1 2 8 . 6 -1 0 N __________________________________ 19 85 N I S S A N S E N T R A Deluxe, red, 4- door, looded M ust tee. $ 4 8 0 0 4 4 8 - 2661 6-10____________________________ F I N A N C I N G A V A ILA B LE , 19 8 5 Renault A lk m c e 1 7L. Blue, 4-door, A C , new brakes Susan, 4 4 2 - 9 6 0 3 , 4 2 2 - 5 5 6 3 6- 10 $ 1 4 0 0 4 8 0 - 0 2 7 0 6 nge, i S 10 19 85 S C IR O C C O Kom ei XL sport asking only $ 5 7 Super mce, lood ed $ 8 0 0 0 volue, 8 3 Í - 9 0 9 8 6-10 1 9 7 8 V O L V O Leaving country, must sell G reat mechanical $ 1 9 5 0 . 4 5 8 8 0 2 9 6 - 6 Su nro o f ___________ sh ape B M W B A V A R IA gre at engine, extrot to $ 8 0 0 , new PireHi’t, needs point $ 2 2 0 0 4 5 8 - 8 0 2 9 (7 1 3 ) 5 2 0 - 0 0 5 8 6 4 R E ST O R E D C L A S S IC 19 7 8 Tnumph TR7 $ 4 0 0 0 , 0 8 0 N e w engine, suspension, electrical, interior, pom», brakes, etc 251 43 41 6 -6 ______________________________ 1 9 73 SU PERBEATLE, d ep e nd ab le trans­ portation, spirited perform ance $1150 9 2 6 - 8 9 7 7 6-10________________________ WHITESIDE MOTORS O e o n U se d M o to rcycles B u y -S o b T rade for C o n O ver 3 0 M / C 'i in Slock Free Tank of G a s w/Purchate 6 A d 5715 Burnet Rd. 458-5631 9-5 :1 5 M -F 9 - 2 Sat 6 - 8 8 SPECIAL PROPERTIES PRICED WAY BELOW MARKET e 2-2 Centonnrol 99.950 e 2-2 at C rmx e 3-2 House Hyde Pork 108,500 45,000 e 1-1 loft West Comput Call Keeth or Theresa The Parka Com pany 479-8110 6 - 2 3 C TJ's SALES & SERVICE Austin'* N ow Alternativa for: U SED WKES, PARTS, ACC. A SERVtCE H O N D A . YAM AH A, K A W A SA KI, SUZUKI SP RIN G TUNE -UP SPECIAL 1 0 % OFF W /AD Re giste re d Technic ion s 6721 N ORTH L AM AR 2 blocks south of lomor & Airport Turn on Raymond 453-6255 6 - 2 3 8 UTAREA 3 c o n d o s, 4 4 0 5 A v e . A . E a c h w ith 1 BR, 1 B A , a n d 1 LA . Price ra n g e ; $ 3 7 ,5 0 0 to $ 3 9 ,9 5 0 A ll three fo r sa le a s a g ro u p fo r $ 7 5 ,0 0 0 Call Bunnell Realty 327-4231 3 2 7 -2 0 5 8 6 - 6 SELLING YOUR MOTORCYCLE? 444-4693 A U ST IN SPO RT CYCLE 2 0 0 9 South Fu« St Buy * S e l * Trade Service * Repair A Accessories MERCHANDISE 2 0 0 — F u r n i t u r e - H o u s a h o l d 6 - 7 8 SUMMER SPECIALS! E XE C U T IV E S W IV E L C H A IR S 3 0 x 6 0 D E S K S G U E S T C H A IR S F O L D I N G TA B LE S $ 4 8 . 8 8 $ 9 0 0 0 $ 2 8 0 0 $ 3 8 . 0 0 C ox Office Products 346-1120 10938 Research, M -F 8:30- 5:30, Sot. 10-4 7 128 B U Y O R SELL g o o d uted furniture. L & E Furniture. O p e n 10om-6pm, d o te d Th un d oy» 11423 N orth Lam ar (m the C o -o p ) 8 3 6 - 6 6 4 7 6 8 N _______________ 6-10 SLEEPER S O F A , Q u e e n * z * pkud (red, leave yetaw , brow n) $ 8 0 4 5 8 -8 4 2 1 , me n a g e 6 -8 220 —> Computors- Equipnwnt ★ McComputer ★ Let us Buy or Sell Your Macintosh or XT-AT Compatible Computer 2105 hM0m In , #111 (Ju s*! Pfoxo) T u es-S at. 1 0 A M - 6 P M 4 5 9 - 9 0 0 9 6 * i 3 I C O M P U T E R G A M E S I D A D r o b p b y m g N e w low ratat. 3 0 0 / 1 2 0 0 baud, 8 fcne» 2 8 0 - 0 2 3 0 6 - 2 4 1 9 7 0 V W B U G Rebuilt engine, M *h e lm s, dented fenders. Rekoble transportation $ 1 0 0 0 4 5 1 -2 4 2 8 . 5 -4 __________________ M O V I N G ! M U S T t e l 7 7 S a r o c c o runt, tinted lo o b great 4-speed, n ew point, windows, engine B rand new brakes A M / F M $ 1 ,750 n e g o k a b b 3 2 8 19 05 6-10_________________________ tobd 8 6 S U B A R U XT A M / F M cassette, looded, beoiAful. $ 8 , 5 0 0 n e g o k a b b CaN Lou, 3 2 8 - 7 7 4 4 or 3 8 5 - 3 6 0 8 6 10__________ Moped Special New 1987 Suzuki FA50H $ 3 9 9 with copy of this od. Aus­ tin Suzuki. 44 4-952 8. South of the River; Ban White and Gillis. AM prices +TT&L. 1987 V W G T H 6 V , 7 8 0 0 milet, nuco blue, sunroof, radio, cassette 2 - 2 4 w a r­ ranty. Beautiful perform er $11,900. 4 5 3 - 0 7 0 3 6-13_____________________________ 1 9 6 6 V W converkbie, fuRy rmto n d Red m color, m a g 'i f i u l l , e x ceRent condi ko n 1 -2 95 2 0 7 5 , M o n c h o c o g ra o 6 - U 1981 T O Y O T A C ek ca k h b o c k N e w kirake», battery, Porter, clutch, prut» a n d o tg nm enl, tune-up $ 3 1 0 0 C o l 4 7 1 - 0 5 6 0 o r 451 14 5 3 6- 14______________________________________ carburetor, 19 7 6 R E D Toyota C ek ca 8 6 , 0 0 0 nub» ExceRent conaikon, A M / F M , A C $ 1 2 0 0 3 4 3 - 6 1 4 2 . 6 - 1 5 ________________________ P O R S C H E 9 4 4 A U T O M A T I C tad, fuRy tmp e n e o n looded. p ow e r pockoge. under book. N e g ok abi» Ed, 3 8 5 - W 7 1 6-14_________________________ sunroof, 19 8 4 Jetta G LI V A u b , 4-d oor, 5 speed W e i c ared far. Excelent eanabett. $ 5 8 0 0 2 5 8 2 4 4 4 6 17 19 84 S U B A R U H A T C H B A C K , 4-«peed, A C , stereo Exce le nt 7 9 , 0 0 0 nubs, n ew tags, n ew ua p e d to n $ 2 5 4 5 . 4 5 4 - 7 0 3 7 . ¿ 1 7 LEFT C A M P U S , m ud tocnfice 1 9 8 6 H o n d o E K b 8 0 Scooter. IM iita with block accent». Excefent condition $ 8 2 5 Laura, 3 2 7 - 1 6 7 2 6-13________________________ 1 9 7 8 B M W 1 0 0 0 N e w plate», m ipeckon. rear tee, battery M o gt, dual dek $ 1 8 0 0 / offer 3 2 7 7 3 6 0 6 -7 II 3 ,0 0 0 1 9 8 0 Y A M A H A 4 0 0 Special Recently m b », like new, with helmet tuned $ 8 0 0 4 5 9 - 6 1 6 9 6 - 9 ____________ 19 8 5 H O N D A 2 5 0 C uO om 7 0 0 0 mta» M u d t e l $ 4 9 5 8 3 7 8 5 8 9 or 8 3 4 0 6 1 4 b e v e m— teo». 6 - 9 H O N D A S C O O T E R 8 4 Ekto 125, red $ 1 7 0 0 m b » $ 8 9 9 3 8 9 - 0 2 8 0 80— Rkydes M U S T SELL c rawer b tcycb 3 2 7 16 7 2 6-14 -*--- VVNQfllBr** • $ 1 5 0 • b iu * rockhopper Laura M U S T S E L L lo d / t 12 tpe ed take G o a d c o n d b o n S d O 4 6 9 9 1 6 7 6 - 9 One B lock From Cam pus SPECIAL $250 • On Shuttle • Fully Furnished • Security • Pool R io N u e c e s 2 6 t h @ N u e c e s ( 6 0 0 W . 2 6 t h ) 4 7 4 - 0 9 7 1 4 5 4 -4 6 2 1 Tanglewood North We Pay A ll Your Heating & A / C P t f - L E A S ! S U M M E R / F A L L * RR Shuttle stop at Front Door * 2 Pooh & Remodeled Laundry Rooms * Ceiling Fans/Microwaves * Furnished/Unfurnished * Quality Residents Friendly Managers Who Care 4 5 2 - 0 0 6 0 1020 E. 45th Chaparosa Apartments 3110 Red River C LO SE TO U.T. — * : * — Small, quiet, quality complex 2 blocks from Law, on shuttle; attrac­ tively furnished, with pool, laundry, and all bills paid. Efficiency to 3BR 474-1902 C L A S S A C T S! BR A N D Y W IN E 2 8 0 4 WNtl» Awe — 4 7 2 -7 0 4 9 D A LLA S 2 8 0 3 H e m p h i Park — 4 7 2 -8 3 9 8 W ILSH IRE 301 W 29th — 4 7 2 -7 0 4 9 Low Summer Rates! From *195-S250 ED PADGETT CO 454-4621 J DIPLOMAT APARTMENTS Pre-Lease N ow For Sum m er & Fall * Walk to Campus* 469-0224 M a n a g s r A p t. # 2 0 2 Davis & Assoc. S m a a / P e l S P E C I A L R A T E S Furnished Efficiencies 1-1's & 2 -2 's a 3 Pools a 3 Laundry Rooms a Got ond Wotor Paid • Shuttta at Front Door a NaorGottCouraa Ideal tar Student» Beat the High Electric Batea Tanglewood Westside Apartments 1403 Noiwalk La. 472-9614 SUMMER FALL $ SPECIAL DEALS $ , ’l - M l t . .f, (, U.l 'f c M i ! ' ,i .iT in .fr N O W Call to find out how 452-3314 Villa Orleans 2 0 6 W . 3 8 t h & Villa Gardens A p t s . 3704 S peedw ay Aspenwood Apartments SPECIAL RATES FOR 1988 t S e e i ' • Woter/Gos Paid • Shuttle at Front Door a Intramural Fields Across the Street PRE-LEASE SUMMER/FALL 4 5 2 - 4 4 4 7 4539 Guadalupe PRE-LEASE SUMMER-FALL Su Roca Apartments » 1 B d r a N ic e P o o l • T e nn is C o u rts a c r o s s the street g W a lk to C o m p u s 1302W. 24th 477-3619 VILLA NORTH 1 Bedroom Apts Move In Today! Pre'easing For Summer/Fall 4520 Duval 459-9131 Davis A Assoc * 34th Straat and * Guadolufi 1-1 C e iU n g F a n s I P a t io FULLY FURNISHED $ 3 0 0 A e b a se Som m w /M I 4 3 4 - 4 4 8 1 ★ * ★ * ★ ★ ★ ★ WEST CAMPUS EFFICIENCIES 9 1 0 W . 26th St. $175-$200/m onth summer rate $ 2 50/month- Fall/Spring Barbeque grill, laundry room, Coke machine, semester parties. CALL 478-1350 6 - 3 C ★ BEAUTIFUL CHEAPEST ★ 1802 W . Ave. TIm cample» • one of the niced aporened» m W e d Compu» given b mmpentive rend. Great atmoiahere. * * k to UT. Surrounded by beautiful houtet Pool «nth fountain. Free parking. Laundry roam. N ew fumikxe. FiA ke d w i Fuiy carpeted. Go», wtoer and wider heater» poid. N o w Pre b atm g Summer/Fal tale»: Few M l. 1-1 2-2»(5*ntrance»| 3-2» (5 entrance») ...................$2 95 /$ 36 5 $4 25 /$ 56 5 $6 25 /$ 76 5 O FFICE HRS. Evening» only; 5 -8 pm, M-F or by app. 478-7519 Pool o ie o jud Rke m Barton Spring». ^ FRONTIER APTS.-$210 SUMMER RATES ALL YEAR! 4111 AVE. A: Large efficiencies. O n shuttta & city bus. Quiet com­ plax. CACH , G & W and b ask TV cable poid. 462-0930,323-5982?i ★ BARGAIN LEASES* O n e Bedroom Remodeled a Cbon, aMradhre a fom ahed or unformatted a w aft to UT orC apdol a erofor/gg» paid 1010 Wes» 23rd St. 474-4418,478-5467 6-KXr NONSMOKING DISCOUNT Cbon gmat H y d e Pork 1 bedroom, or a 1 bed­ room w/ ikykght Preieei» or m ave-m today! $ 2 5 0 - 1 3 8 5 4 1 0 0 Aue C 4 5 3 - 0 4 6 1 6 - 6 loft i 6 - 2 0 A ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ! M A R K * j * X X ★ m iA SM O SU B H tM A tl + ★ Í S P E C IA L M T U J it Baat the High Electric Rates! ★ J $ 1 Bedrooms 6 * 2 Bedroom* Available { * 459-1664 $ W it * 3 8 1 5 G u a d a l u p e Davis 8i Assoc. * it ★ HYDE PARK LUXURY MASK EMBERS AFAKTKENTS 31st & Speedway Large 1 Br'», 1 m: 2 C e ilin g Fans, M icrow avm , Slid in g O l a u Doors, Patio» and Baleóme*, Vaulted Ceiling», 2 Pools, S hadad Courtyard, Covered Parkin g, Q uiet Complax. r u L K A n s u u m v r A U 4 7 8 -6 0 0 5 CHEZ JACQUE APARTMENTS LE A SIN G SU M M ER/FALL e 1 & 2 Bedroom Apts. • Pool e Next to Tennis Courts e W alk to Cam pus • ABP except electricity 1302 W. 24th St. 477-3619 T h e A s h f o r d B e a t t i e S a m m n i T h a t ! ★ ALL BILLS PAID ★ Privacy Fenced Poof a W alking Distance to UT a Newny Remodeled a Furnished or Unfurnished a L a r g e Efficiencies, 1 -1 'a & 2 - 2 ’s e 476-8915 Pre-Leasing for Summer/Fall ONE-HALF BLOCK UT LAW SCHOOL ALL BILLS PAID Two bedroom/two bath small quiet property. Tree shaded balconies on beautiful courtyard. New carpet, ap­ pliances, ond paint. Huge bedrooms with built-in desks ond bookshelves. Large closets wifh built-in highboys. Central A/C, heat and electricity paid. Moderate prices. Now preleasing for summer/fail. 476-5631 7-12 A W A L K T O C A M P U S SH UTTLE A N D CITY B U S L A R G E E F F IC IE N C Y $180, I B E D R O O M A N D 2 B E D R O O M E F F IC IE N ­ C IE S F U R N IS H E D O R U N F U R N IS H E D M A U N A K A I 3 2 2 - 0 3 7 4 6 - 2 4 C S p a c io u s 2 B / 2 B u n its 4 b lo c k s w e st o f U T C e ilin g fans, b a l­ con ie s. c o v e re d p a rk in g, fu r­ n is h e d A w/all a m e n itie s $ 2 15/m o + E. ( 2 p e r apt ) 1 9 0 * P u l l 4 7 6 -5 6 7 8 __ ALL BILLS PAID $245 N ow preleasing for summer and fall. Large dean efficiency in Hyde Park. N e ar shuttta, carpet­ ed, draped, walk-in closet, built- in kitchen and pantry. 4 0 0 0 Ave. A., 458-4511,451-6533. CENTRAL PROPERTIES IN C 7 -1 2A EFF., 1 & 2 BEDROOMS $215-1315 Now probating for summer ond fo«. Quiot apartments in Hyde Park. Near shutfio, carpeted, draped, walk-in doset, pool, gas/water paid. 4200 Ave. A 451-6966,451-6533. CENTRAL PROPERTIES INC. 7 -1 2A EFFICIENCY $215 Now basing for summer and fa«. dean, quiet, well maintained apart­ ment. Walk or shuftfo to UT. Fully car­ peted and draped, queen tize bed and walk-in closet. Water paid. 202 E. 32nd St. 479-7125,451-6533. CENTRAL PROPERTIES INC. 7 -1 2A 1 BEDROOM $225 Now preleasing for summer and fdL Quiet apartment in Hyde Park. Built-in desk with bookshelves. Lots of closets, carpeted, draped, gas/woter paid. 4307 Ave. A 451-6966,451-6533. CENTRAL PROPERTIES INC. 7 -1 2A 1 BEDROOM $245 Now prelecting for summer and fa l Large apartment in Hyde Park on ihuttta. Carpeted, draped, ceiling fon, walk-in claiset, extra large windows that overlook courtyard ond pool 4209 Speedway. 452-0475, 451- 6533. CENTRAL PROPERTIES IN C 7 -1 2A RENTAL 360 — Fum. Apts. ENGLISH AIRE APARTMENTS Now Leasing for Summer Preleasing for Fall! Rent specials* Efficiencies 1-l’s 2-2’s Townhouses starting at $199 $229 $299 $329 (* with a 9 mo. Inane Shorter leaaea alao available.) Amenities include: Fitness Center, Racquet- ball Courts, Tennis Courts, Basketball Courts, and more! Conveniently located on the UT shuttle and city bus routes between Riverside and Oltorf. 1919 Burton Dr. 440-1331 STUDENTS WELCOME! Ig a r d b ig a t c a p t s . I Condo Quality At jlP f l Apartment Rates a Night Attendant on É B H H * Som e Units H H B h Duty a Fenced Parking area for permits only • Ceiling Fans • O n-Site Maintenance w/Firepksces Balconies Facing UT Tower Microw aves f l * Hot Tubs j Luxury 1 BR Furnished i PRE-LEASE AVAIL UNITS NOW WILL N O T LAST IO N O I j 2222 Rio Grande 476-4992 YOU AND YOUR ROOMMATE NEED A TWO-BEDROOMU & K/c Sicctuc 7ifg( • NEWLY FURNBHB) • Mini-Bltnds • Hugs One APTS. AVALARLE • Designer Color Bedrooms Aveila&le Schemes e Microwaves e Sun Deck e 2 Pools • On Shuttle e Spacious PRE-LEASE SUMMER/FALL W illo w C re e k H ills 444-0010 V . I . P . I \ ( I l l S K V : \ - 2 \ K M s \. t ’ lV . ( l< > S » ' t< I I I s | > t ' < i rt I s t i m m t r I < t ( f S K i l l . t i n ! S i 4 7 6 - 0 3 6 3 A l l BILLS P A ID 3 -2 Vi 1 3 0 0 tq It W e d C om p u t a re a W A b com put W C thu ttb Central o e 4 7 4 - 7 7 3 2 6 -1 0 A C O M F O R T A B L E A N D affordable efh iie n rie t E aty w a A to tch oo l w e d ede o f compu» Plenty o f parking, p o o l Fur- n eh ed a n d unfomeitod. 4 7 6 - 8 5 9 0 2 5 1 8 L ea n 6-1 0 it it it-k it it U it U it it it it-kit ALL BILLS PAID Summer Rates 1 BR Sm. 2 BR $ 2 9 5 $ 3 3 0 WaMt or shuMia to campus, CA/CH, ram odafaa, convaniant to avarything. 2212 San Gabriel 474-7732 PraUaairti for Fall RINTAL RENTAL RINTAL RKNTAL RINTAL RINTAL RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL 360 — Fum. Apt*. 360— Fum. Apts. 370— Unf.Apts. 370 — Unf. Apt*. 390 — Unf. Dupl«x«s 400 — Condos- Townhousns 400 — Condos- Townhous s 400 — Condos* Townhousss 400 — Condos* Townhousos TH E D A ILY TEXAN/Monday, June 6 ,1988/Page 11 2 0 0 0 W hltis . Place $425 -Fall $325 - Summer • Vs block from campus • microwaves • ceiling fans • washer/dryer • private balcony • covered parking • fully furnished 4 5 4 - 4 6 2 1 F O t t U A S M I T T O f h R T l ■ Now loosing For Fall 478-6565 2717 Rio Orand N o fe e s NORTH HILLS~ Spacious 2 - m townhome 10 min­ utes to UT and downtown Shuttle stops a* front door. Close lo shop­ ping center, library, restaurants. Quiet neighborhood. Convenient lo MoPac and 183. Well built and well insulated. N ew paint, carpet, vinyl, ceiling fans and blinds. Fire­ place and deck. W asher and dryer. $475. Available end of August. 272-5783, 272-4076. 7 1C ★ LUXURY C O N D O ★ FOR S U M M E R LEASE • 2 -2 V7 0 4 blocks to cam pus 0 All omemttes 0 private g a ra g e with gem© 0 $ 1 2 0 0 per month References a n d security deposit required (713) 5 2 6 -7 9 9 9 6-3 WEST C A M P U S Walk to campal N o parking hauler 1 Bdr condos on Rio Grande & Nueces Summer leases or Fod/Spnng leases $ 2 7 5 and up Call Bill Rouse Property Management: 443-0906 6 -9 The Cornerstone Place Condominiurm Rio Grande ot Twenty-Fourth Very Ta*toful & Very Clean • On vte monogement • Macrowave Ov#m • Dragner Interior» • Nine Foot Ceftngs • Wo$her»/Dryer» 0 Fum or Unfurn 0 Ceifcng Fon» • D»hwath«ri 1/Vt a n d 2 / 2 '% oroéab ém fo r Sum m er. F aW Sp n n g Contact Greg or Steve for on appointment 480-0065 WE ARE THE BEST IN THE WEST FOR PRELEASING ; Oíd Mam , • • Orange Tree % • Nueces Oak • Merido e Croix • Traehouse • $». Thomm • Benchmork • Preservation Square • Centennial Squore PLUS M ANY M AN Y MORE R IO G R A N D E PROPERTIES 476-7700 6-23C ★C R O IX C O N D O R Beautiful 2-2 with fireplace. Fully fun- nished, including T.V., microwave, W/ D, refrigerator with ice maker, dishes, linens, pool, jocuzzi, security gate & covered parking 8 0 6 W. 24th. O ne year lease, available June 1. $900/m o f Utilities Call Elaine, 477-4002 ----------- 6 -7 N H IT Y O U R S N O O Z E B U T T O N ! B e c a u se y o u r o n ly o n e b lo c k a w a y from U T c o m p u s in this fully fu rn ish e d 1-1 c o n d o In c lu d e s W / D , ceiling fans, m ic ro w a ve , o n d c o v e r e d p a rk in g . Fo r le a sin g info, call 3 2 2 - 9 8 8 7 6 30 LA R G E W E S T C am p u s 2-2 lo a d e d I $ 6 0 0 - $ 7 0 0 Ask for W a yn e, City P roper­ ties 4 7 8 - 6 5 6 5 , evenings, 4 6 2 - 0 6 2 5 6 - 9 N 6 - 9 A C E N T E N N IA L 1 B E D R O O M - 1 BATH, A V A IL A B L E J U N E 1ST $ 5 0 0 , 1 Y E A R L EASE C ALL PMT, 4 7 6 - 2 6 7 3 6 - 8 A Hit Your Snooze Button Because your only 1 block from the UT Campus in this fully fur­ nished 1-1. Includes washer/ dryer, microwave, ceiling fans, and covered paHcing. Call 322- 9887 for leasing information. 6-13 M O V E IN SPECIAL!! VERY LARG E T O W N H O M E CA/CH, all appliances, fireplace, pool, sauna, pets OK. 3-2, $395. 2- V/7, $345. N ear IH 35 and William Cannon. 3 4 6 -4 3 9 2 ★ S IL V E R A D O ♦ ★ Burton Drive ★ e 1-1 e controlled access • p oo l • |Ocuzzi e clubhouse • A C • ceiling fan e m icrow ave e stove • refrigerator e large closets e sunny balcony, sliding gloss d o o r e W / D e UT shuttle/Metro bus line • w alking distance shopping, dining • $ 3 3 0 • coble paid. Lease negotiable 4 6 7 -9 1 6 8 B U E N A V ISTA. $ 8 0 0 , 2 -2 ~ T lJ R N IS H E D PRELEASE C A LL PMT, 4 7 6 - 2 6 7 3 6 8 A W E S T C A M P U S 2 - 2 W / D . M l C R O W A V E , C E IL IN G F A N S $ 6 5 0 / M O CALL A G E N T Z A C H O N L Y , 4 7 6 2 6 7 3 6 -8 A ___________________________________ LARG E 2 -2 Vj. 2 S T O R Y BY THE LAKE W /D , M I C R O W A V E , $ 6 5 0 / M O N T H C A L L A G E N T Z A C H O N L Y 4 7 6 2 6 7 3 6 - 8 A ETC W A L K IN G D IS T A N C E T O C A M P U S’ T $ 6 0 0 / M O N T H W A SH ER / D R Y E R . 2, ETC C A LL A G E N T M IK E O N L Y 4 7 6 2 6 7 3 6 - 8 A ____________________________ 3 2 Vi. W A S H E R / D R Y E R , M IC R O W A V E , C E IL IN G F A N S , ETC $ 8 0 0 / M O N T H CALL A G E N T T A M M Y O N L Y 4 7 6 2 6 7 3 6 - 8 A ___________________________ 2 - 2 W / D . M l W E S T C A M P U S C R O W A V E , C E IL IN G F A N S $650 / M O N T H C A LL A G E N T Z A C H O N L Y , 4 7 6 - 2 6 7 3 6 - 8 A ______________________ 7-11L 1-1, W E S T C A M P U S W A SH ER / D R Y E R , M IC R O W A V E , ETC C ALL A G E N T T A M M Y O N LY . 4 7 6 - 2 6 7 3 6 - 8 A ____________________________ S 3 2 5 / M O THE BEST U N IT S F O R FALL ARE G O I N G FAST W E S T P LAC E 2 2, $ 6 0 0 1 YEAR LEASE F U R N IS H E D C ALL PMT 4 7 6 - 2 6 7 3 6 - 8 A W A L K T O UT G re e n w o o d Tow er A B P 11, security, pool, $ 4 0 0 . Call Betsy, 4 7 4 7 8 5 9 , 3 4 3-12 67 , evenings A-10K G orge o us, enormous, E N F IE L D 2-2 loaded1 $ 6 2 5 , ask for W ayne, City Properties, 4 7 8 - 6 5 6 5 Evenings, 4 6 2 - 0 6 2 5 6 -2 1 N ___________________________ LARG E 1 B E D R O O M near Low School. W alk to UT or take shuttle Private indi­ vidual garage , microwave, ceiling fons, p od , security system o nd guard 4 7 7 - 3198 6-21_____________________________ PARTIALLY F U R N IS H E D 1 Bedroom , cor­ ner unit Two Blocks west of cam pus Super condition Lease for fall 4 7 3 - 2 2 7 2 or collect (713) 7 8 0 -4 1 4 9 5-31 1 B E D R O O M , 1 bath Cam pus condo. Preservation Squore Ceiling fon, C A C H . Summer Special $450/m onth + utilities. Call Stacey 4 7 4 - 0 8 0 6 6 -2 4 $ 9 9 M O V E - IN speciall Beautiful 2-1V5 condo Fireplace, fons, built-in b o o k ­ cases m small com plex with jocuzzi O n RR shuttle, call Shoron, 9 2 6 - 0 8 9 8 7-lfc. C LA R K SV IL LE 1-1 $ 2 8 5 Ceiling fora, 3 3 5 - mini-blinds, new carpet, sunny 6 0 8 3 6-1QV___________________________ W E ST P LA C E C O N D O S 2-2 with fire­ place. pool, security system, summer $5 00 , foil $ 6 5 0 3 3 5 - 6 0 8 3 6-1 0V HYD E P A R K 1-1 M ic ro w a ve N e a r bus stop $ 3 2 5 Immediate o ccupancy Ow ner/Agent, 3 4 6 4 2 2 0 6 9 N O N E B E D R O O M o n Seton Ceiling fans. $ 4 5 0 month Available August 15th. 3 3 1 -7 3 2 8 6-10 ___________________ __ W H Y BE C R A M P E D ? M o v e *nto a spa cious 2 2 with m oney-saving W /D and microwave, fireplace, m iro n and fences, patio, 3 4 6 4 2 2 0 6 - 9 N 6-10 P R E S T IG IO U S L IV IN G with oh the tnmm- mgs at Vanderbilt Apartments - 912 W est 2 2 nd N e w summer and fa# rates. Call Seth for details 4 7 9 - 6 0 0 4 6 - 2 4 A GET O U T O F W EST C A M P U S 7 2 -5 S T U D IO F L O O R P L A N , 12 5 0 S O F T W / D M IC R O W A V E , C E IL IN G F A N S , ETC C A LL A G E N T M IK E O N L Y , 4 7 6 - 2 6 7 3 6-8A 2913 PEARL Si Furnished 2-2 condo, fireplace, ceiling fan, microwave, W / D Available school year ($ 7 5 0 / m o ), free rent with one year tease 3 2 8 6 1 3 7 6-13 ($ 5 0 0 / m o ), summer and C R O IX 2-2, F U R N IS H E D O R U N F U R - ETC. N 1 SH E D W/D, M IC R O W A V E , $ 5 0 0 / S U M M E R . $ 7 95 /F A LL . C A LL A G E N T M IT C H O N L Y , 4 7 6 - 2 6 7 3 6- 2 8 A ★ OWNER/AGENT ★ EXCELLENT SERVICE AFTER THE LEASE a Nueces O o la $800 + $450 t- a Oxford P la c e e Vabncn...................$800 t- • Old M a in ................ $975 + a St. Thomas................ $975 + , . $650 + • C ritennial $500 -f a Orange T re e The Parke C o m p a n y 479-8110 6-13C Free Maid Service Large 1-1, furnished. New Car­ pet, lots of windows, high ceil­ ings with fons. 2513 Seton Ave. #201. $650/mo. Lower summer rates. 12 month lease. 263-3174 261-7034 6-6 W E ST R ID G E C O N D O S 2 bedroom, 2 bath, pool, hot tub, ele­ vator, microwave, fireplace, W/D, ceiling fans, WC shuttle at front door. $700/month on 9 month lease. Great Summer Rates. Call 327-4029 or 453-5237. 6-10C IF SH UTTLE Summer rotes Small, quiet complex. Efficiencies, 1, 2, & 3 b ed ­ rooms. G a s o nd heat paid Ceiling fans 44 01 Speedw ay, 4 5 9 - 0 8 8 9 6 -6 21 0 0 S A N G A B R IE L Prelease 2-1 ''Q , fire place, microwave, ceiling fans $ 5 5 0 summer, $ 6 5 0 fall 3 2 9 - 4 2 0 3 , 3 2 7 - 5 7 6 7 6 -8 RINTAL 370 — Unf.Apts. CLOSE TO SHUTTLE STAFFORD HOUSE \ P A K I M 1 V I ' 2- I s starting at: S U M M E R F A L L Y R L E A S E $ 3 2 5 $ 3 5 0 $ 3 2 5 / S A N D S T O N E 1 & I I 2408 & 250 t Menor Rd SUMMER PAIL YR LEASE * 2* 9 $300 4260 Ctoee lo .huntri f urTMfwd .JI»1* * X 4 Qulxoom leundry t ac*tw« • Security P»trn4ed • p">' Lendeceped Hroi Uevytx: by Regency brnpertte* • MoOwn Menegei You’ll Save a Fistful of Dollar$! a fRSphomhoakrt* • r w t v e i n y c o m tc m a Mol o iia M T ÍI0 tanto courts • tjVemsti dflotúttíe 1 Br'a a Spatthgpooffl a OnUTShuMa • O lm M to & tta n U * Mr. Gtffl't, ConaiMnd PwlonMnca 4 lots moral ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ f i I i 1 ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ f ♦ ♦ ♦ * 2400 WICKERSHAM LN. * Lorn to 3 8 5 - 2 0 4 4 » ^ ^ — — ----------- M R M i AN OASIS IN THE MIDDLE OF AUSTIN EFF — 2 BR. STARTING AT « 1 9 9 0 0 ! ! • Close to UT Shuttle • FREE utility hook-up • 1 0 % discount for students 926-6664 Town Lake Circle Apartments 2409 Town Lake Circle 447-5971 1-1 $ 2 8 9 / m o n th 2 - 2 $ 3 5 0 / m o n th June, July & August: $50 off every unit! * $ 100 refundabW deposit Can be made in 4 payments of $25 each Eknont » Shuttle buvcity bus * Shopping & entertainment » Laundry room * Pool * W D connections * Special pnces on selected units $ 1 0 0 D e p o s i t PRE-LEASE SUMMER/ FALL Continental Ñpartments "Special Summer Rates " T iw ] m H u n t in g ? ” • Large 2 Bdr. • W ater/Gas Paid • Shuttle e Pool • Easy Access to Mails, 1-35. From $395 454-5934 910 E. 40th i $ 1 7 5 i A B P ! i 2 B L O C K S UT Í N K W I . V K K M O D K I . K I ) ; I D O R M S I M . K K I I K ' I K M I K S i 4 7 6 - 1 9 5 7 / 4 7 4 - 2 3 6 5 : Now pre-leasing for fall, loo! L A C A N A D A FU RNISH ED ALL BILLS PAID Pre-Lease Summer/Fall e Pool e Walk To Campus e A cross From Tennis Courts CALL TODAY 477-3619 1302 W. 24th Office At Chez Jacques PRELEASING SUMMER/FALL LARGE EFFICIENCIES/1 BR. • Dishwaiher/Diipoiol • M ic ro w a ve (optional) • Individual Storage • Pool & B BQ /P oho • Laundry Facilities e On IF Shuttle • H y d e P a r i A re a e Across from city pari e Resident Manager From $190/M on th 108 PLACE APARTMENTS 108 W. 45th Street 452-1419 if no answer 385-2211, 453-2771 6-28L Reduced Summer Rates! Walk to Campus from Itws* lorge. newly pomted 2-2'swrth e fans e W/D availability -- • gmoi furniture • microwave Must See to Appreciate! • oho preleoyog for Ml * C o l Mickey Doy» 3 2 2 -5 6 6 0 Evening» 3 22 -9449 6-8N 5 Blocks W est UT Large, quiet im m aculate one b ed ro o m efficiences. Kitchen, w alk in closets, laundry, g a s heat cooking, w a te r/ga s furnished. O w n e r m a n a ge d . Sum m er— $ 2 2 5 . Fall— $ 2 4 9 . Red O a k Apartments, 2104 S a n Gabriel. 4 7 6 -7 9 1 6 7-6 CASA DE SALADO One Bedroom Furnished Apts. • C L O S E T O C A M P U S/ SH U T T L E • Woter/gas/bosic T V cable paid • Ceilm a Fans & A C * Sw im m ing Pool • Laundry facilities 4#pd*nt monagtr # 112. 7610 Solodo Si For more mió 477 2 53 4 UNITS AVAILABLE N O W 7-1L ALL BILLS PAID $245 N ow preleasing for summer and fall. Large efficiency in Hyde Park. N ear shuttle, carpeted, draped, w ali-in d o t, built-in kitchen ond pantry. Courtyard. 4 2 0 0 Ave. A. 451-6966, 451-6533. CENTRAL PROPERTIES INC. MESQUITE TREE APARTMENTS One bedroom furnished oportments Close to campus, near shuttle. Dishwash­ er, AC, ceiling fan. Laundry facilities and hot tub Water ond basic T.V. cable paid. N o pets! Resident monoger #301, 2410 Longview St. For info. 478-2357. UNITS AVAILABLE NOW ) 7-61 26th & Red River 1 bedroom, 1 bath $265 2 bedroom, 1 bath, $295 plus electricity 40 ft. pod, gat heat, covered partang, large closets, new appKoncei, new car­ pet, tmol complex. Call for appointment, 263-5560 ________________________ 6-15C WARWICK APTS. 2 9 0 7 W e st Ave. Beautifully landscaped Pool with waterfall, borbeque pits, sundeck and laundry. All units fully furnished. Ceil- i room and miniblinds, fon in eoch room and miniblinds, mg t kitchen. G a s & water •quipped kitchen. G as & water M y Eff - $225; 1 bedroom - $260; §/2kjrge $425. 474-7426 Of 444-2750 BEST DEAL! 105 E 31sl St Efficiencies Appliances, water/gas/heot paid Start- mg $240 477-4005 after 5pm 6 8 SPECIAL LARGE CLEAN 1-1. 2 2, CA/ CH, fans, appliances, pod, sundeck 30th/Red River $350 $450 477 3388, 472 2097. 6-10C EFFICIENCY A N D I bedroom $250 Carpeted, stove, refrigerator Window AC, trees, water paid 1008 West 25th, 1009 West 25Vl. 451-6533 6-24A 1 BLOCK to campus. 1-1 freshly painted ond corpeted Small, quiet complex, ceiling fans, mini blinds Fall $285, sum mer rates available 2711 Hemphill Pori 478-1870 6-10K___________________ EFFICIENCIES - $175 One bedrooms $275 Along Speedwoy Furnished or unfurnished Call Brett Moody, 453- 0540 6-6_________________________ REDUCED! FOUR BLOCKS WEST UT large, dean efficiencies - water, gas, furnished, gat heat cooking $215 476 7916 6-7A________________________ CENTRAL ATTRACTIVE efficiency, fur mthed/unfurnithed All appliances, p od 2 weeks free 50 00 deposit $225 00 * E 459-4977 6 14________ CLEAN, CARPETED, AC, efficiency $199 50 i electricity, thude 5306 Guadalupe Others $169 50 House, $195 453 1327 6-7________________ LARGE IBR apartment m quiet Hyde Pori. $175 474 7853 469-0071. 6 108 SMALL PRIVATE cottage off polio Near UT »250/month A l Mb Pad AC 207 E 35th St 472 1282 6-8_____________ CLOSE TO UT north. Efficiencies, $165 $185 18r, $185 1225 2Br, S275- »390 404 E 31st 477 2214, 453-SS12, 452 4516 6 301___________________ SPACIOUS i NEAT! FurmUwd I bed­ room in attractive H yde P a ri neighborhood Some b ib paid! M o ri V, 3914 Avenue D 323 0740 6 3QN FURNISHED IBR apartment Central la- 4212 Duvd 450-0368 6 8 ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ SUMMER SPECIALS W e're teaung now for June-August '88. • 4105 Speedway: 1 efficiencies $195. See apt. #103 or col 451-4919 or 478-7355. • 104 E. 32nd: Efficiency $195 and up; 1 bedroom $225 and up. S|| MOQOQf opt. #103 or call 476-5940 or 478-7355. • 4100 Ave. A: Small 1 bedrooms $195. See Manager apt #103 or col 451-1084 or 478-7355. ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ______________________________7-1A ★ Two Bedroom ★ Summer Rate $330 Walk to Compus, small quiet complex, ceiling fans, pod. Cavalier Apts. 3 0 7 E. 31st 3 2 0 -8 0 2 6 4 7 4 -7 7 3 2 6-21A CHECK IT OUT Supw Low RoIm for wmmsr/UI. EffiaMcy, 1 bed­ room and 2 badroorm fumehadA rrtwd ComwMrt to UT, Soton, Honrad Cantor, Shrta and Gty Bud Al pptoncM, pod. laundry mom. Go» and wutor paid. 302 W. 38th 453-4002 ____________ 613C THE QUIET ALTERNATIVE $100 Deposit; 3 blocks from UT, 1-1, Eff from $245. Furnished, pool, on-site manager and maintenance. F O U N T A IN TERRACE A P A R T M E N T S 6 1 0 W . 3 0 th 477-8858 7-1C SANDPIPER APTS. 2810 RIO GRANDE Positively the largest a n d tastefully furnished 2 b e d -2 bath. Full kitchen with m icrow ave. M o d e m furniture, ceiling fa n s a n d intercom in eoch room . W a lk-in closets, pool, sun­ deck, b orb eq u e . pits an d covered parking. SUMMER-$450 FALL-$525 474-2542 444-2750 6 4 A 300 E. 33rd St; 3200 Tom Green; ond 906 E. 46th St. Large 1 + 2 bedrooms- fumished and unfurnished. 345-7232. 6- 22N_____________________________ BLOCK TO UT. Large 1 apartment Ceil­ fans, storage closet, built-in ing individud. bookshelves Quiet mature No pets 422-1212. 6-23C____________ QUIET RESPONSIBLE nonsmoker: Quiet efficiency Near city bus. Northeast. $198. 472- 3576. 6-10C furnished or unfurnished. W ALKING DISTANCE from compus. 2706 Salado, 2-2, dishwasher, W/D, pool, two parking spoces. 453-1514. 6- 10K______________________________ ONE HALF month free rent 1-1, 3000 Guadolupe. Ceiling fans, parking, and loundry. $275/mo. Julio, 477-6131. 6-17 370 — Unf. Apts. First M o n t h ’s B r a t ! LARGE 1 and 2 Bedrooms Apartments and Townhomes f $99 i i i $ i * lrongate f Apartments 453-53001 i 1225 Westhelmer Dr. ^ • Fireplaces • Pool e Hof Tub • On C P Shuttle PRi-LEASING FOR SUMMER AND FALL!! $ 1 0 0 Total DapoaN - i i i i Í i i Í ARE YOU BORED wwi x*p o w )r aponmanr compmxM mar qe look d m end lock dtaradar and dyW Than plaaM coma tea Ko Howa Aportmanti, o n i ah 1920s apart al A s northao# cantar of 17*i 8 Ko Grand* large pool laundry, aievotor and a raloxad conno ombionca 1-1 ovafabb 6-10 for $295 472-1238 6-29 MULTI-TIER POOLS WITH FOUNTAIN O veriooka donaoly uroodod ravine. A l G oa — Goa Paid. From $245, 2-1 $375,O nahuN lo. PROPERTIES ONE 836-0727 6-13C i $50.00 Depo$it ★ Prolapsing for summer & fad EfBoenaea ond One Bedroom. ovoBobfe near dxMle, an 37lh 8 Speedway and 35th BGuaddupe. 0 caAngfom • Mnrangpook • Inplooi • iayndry room From $200-$275/m onthl Cel Now: 495-9055; 480-0662; 453-8026 7-3N WALKING DISTANCE TO- CAMPUS Summer spedd on 1 t droom — $195. Quiet neighborhood setting. One 2 bed­ room now available. 304 E. 33rd. CaN 3204)331 BEAUTIFULLY REMODELED, hatoncal 4 plei 3006 Speedway. Large 1-1 with study: $425. Chaban and Associates, 476-5394; Chris, 451-4565 6-24 2914 BEANN A, across from Law School. 2-1. Huge trees. Appbancet, window units, cemrtg forts, faux, flroptoco, loti of 1930’s charm $600 Cindy, 328-6138 6-14_____________________________ EFFICIENCY - 2914 Beartna. Across from Law School, window unit, ceiling fan, appiionces, w ood Boors. S3 I. Cindy, 328-6138.6-14 2-i, CA/CH] CatweR, 2 blocks UT Shuttle J $295 445-4903, 479-6194 47058 large yord. 3-2, 2-STORY duplex, near Highland M ai, flreplace, vaulted ceilings, ceiling fan, carport, loundry room. $400. Cent 458-1065.6-3_____________________ O N E BEDROO M in near South Austin. Gas/water paid. $250/mo B#, 441- 7158 6-6 WALK TO UT. Both sides of charming older duplex. Available June 1st. Each unit 2-1, large rooms, CA/CH, hardwood floors, appliances, nice yard. Special summer role, $400. 2845 San Gabriel. 476-3749.6-14K___________________ DUPLEX: OFF Cameron Road, near CR shuttle. Large 3-2, fireplace, covered partang. CA/CH, gas heat, ceiling fans. $495. Carol, 444-7533, 327-9519 6- 6K_______________________________ WALK TO Hancock ond RR shuttle. 2/1, living room, ceiling fans, kitchen, gas/ water paid, $410 -f E. 327-2689 after 6pm 6-7K_________________________ M O DERN DUPLEX for rant - 4513 A Speedway, 3-3. IF ihutfle Summer rate, $600. Catherine, 328-0600, 9am-5pm. 6-14K____________________________ DANDY DUPLEX in pleasant neighbor­ hood. 2-1, ceiling fans, CA, carport, W/ D connections, well maintained. $425. 335-0197.6-10 7-1A UT AREA floors, 3411-8 21K 3-1, ceiling fans, wooden mees, $750 phis electricity. 444-7460, 442-8587 6- SUMMER LEASING SPECIAL $165 a Efficiencies • N ew ly Remodeled • AH Appliances • O n Shuttle 371-0160 7-1 BIKE TO UT. 3305 Merrie lyn Ave. Sun­ ny 2-1, screened porch, hardwood floors, large hobby room/woiishop, stove, refrigerator. $385/mo. 926-5811 6-16N ___________________________ CO NVENIENT UT, IH-35, large upstairs, 1-1-1 garage apartment. A/C, yord. 1003 1. iSHs. $300 472-2097 478- 5739.7-1C________________________ 380— Fum. Duplexes FEMALE RO O M M A TE non-sm oier needed. Furnished except for bedroom. Now or by July I for 2-2 V5 duplex, washer/dryer. C dl after 5, evenings. 385-6991; 459-3548.6-9___________ NORTHWEST OFF Far West/Pori Lone, near shuttle. 3-2-1; fireplace, C.F, $600. 6904 Thomdiff. Evergreen Properties, 331-1122. 7-1C_____________________ 390 — Unf. Duplexes T R E E S . T R E E S , T R É E S East Riverside 2-2'/2, quiet loca­ tion, microwaves, ceiling fans, W /D connections, water paid, maintained yards, $425. Call Michael at 459-3333. 6-9 NEXT TO UT Low School 1-1, hardwood floors, ceiling fans, washer/dryer. $325 summer; $395 fall. 329-4203, 327- 5767 6-8_________________________ SUPER SPECIAlS-spocious 1 to 3 rooms, fenced yard, appiionces, available now!! From $150, 462-3300 6-9______________________________ firep W ALK TO compus. 2-1, CA/CH, dryer, shuttle, $450/month -i- bills. Available 6-1-88. CoM 478-4897 6-9___________ TRIPLEX, 4517 Ave. C. Wolk to shuttle C a l Cathy, 8 30-5 30, M-F, 474-2441 _________________________ 6-10 1823 WEST 36th St. One bedroom, older house $267 345-1777 6-28_________ MOPAC. 3-2, CA/CH, fireplace, carpet $575. Carport connects A/B units. $625.327-4783. 6-8_______________ RO O M IESI GREAT 3 3. built-in shelves, walk-in closets. Only two blocks from shuttle. Ceiling fan. $750. Apartment Finders-458-1213.6-29A_____________ HOM EI SPACIOUS 2 bedroom with cov­ Lots ot ered parking. Oose to com windows, hardwood floors. $385. Apart­ ment Finders- 458-1213. 6-29A O NE BEDROO M Duplex, Neat and cozy, hasrdwood, floors, ceiling fons, garage, neat UT shuttle. $325 ABP. 453- 0638; 836 1802.6-10V_____________ 1012 E. 15th (east of IH-35) Large 2-1, hardwood floors, $285. Kirksey-Levy Realtors, 451-0072, 459-5667 7-lt 5606 JOE Sayers off North Loop. 2-1, carport, $325, Kirtoey-Levy Realtors. 451-0072 7-11 ____________________ 5403 OVERBROOK (northeast) Extra large 1-1. High on hil, carport, $225. brae 1- Kirfcsey-I . 451-0072. 7-11 y-Levy Realtors. ZILKER PARK orea. Luxury 2-1. Wood floors, vaulted ceilings, deck, firapbee, brge oak trees. $450/month. 263-9421. 6-10K____________________________ HYDE PARK, lorge privóte 1-1 duplex. Only 2 blocks to HEB and bus. Quiet neighborhood, fenced yord, bts of stor­ age ond parking. 450-0955.6-10 400 Condos- Townhouse* ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ 3000 G u a d a lu p e 1-1 /Ceiling Fans and Patio F u t iy F u m t o h e d Starling at $325 454-4621 ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ LARGE 1 bedroom. Walk or shuttle to UT Hardwood floors. $275. 3301 Duval, rear. 345-0186.6-24 PARAPET $600, 1 YR. LEASE. FUR N IS H E D PRELEASE SUMMER/FALL. CALL PMT, 476-2673. 6 -8 A RENTAL 370 — Unf. Apts. Being only a freshman, Tony was unaware of what Oak Lodge Apartments has to offer . . . fei.KxV fW i L S*K A * * { u i « n * r I f A l i n a What’s your excuse? TWO POOLS e WATER VOLLEYBALL TWO HOT TUBS • CHUNG FANS • ON SHUTTLE «FIREPLACES FREE LAUNDRY 440-0118 2317IV Mint Valley Rd. N O W P R E - L E A S IN G F O R S U M M E R S * 1 & 2 Bedroom Apts. Storting at $295 * ALL BILLS PAID * Located on UT shuttle & City Bus Lines • W alking Distance to M ajor Shopping Confer • Ided for Students CAMERON GREENS APARTMENTS 5700 Cameron Rd. 4 5 4 - 7 0 0 7 John Barkley Coapany U.T. AREA QUARTERS Unions. affordable homes, dapleses. and rp an Most with wood floors, fans, lots of windows, many trees. Historic charm, amacdvety re­ done. responsibly managed a m i apt in historic houae. 8275.00 I 7 0 * W . 8 K b : L e rp e l/ l-l/ z l upstair* bsdroasaa. wood | I floors, eery mm. 1616.00 B fld e a c y io m s j o I N ica 1/1 r a JfjrAa t n • r . » U k I m l A Bl ¡A JX K M OTBM 472-2123 .a p a r t m e n t s }1]4lwrt8n0rt«8 NOW LEASING! P R E -L E A S E FO R F A L L • FURNISHED UNITS AVAIL • Efficiencies, One Bedrooms and Two Bedrooms avail • Large Pool'Patio • Microwaves • 2 Shuttle Routes • Clubhouse 444-7880 2124 B u rto n Dr. ★ STUDENTS ★ • 1-1, 750 square feet, $260. large enough for roommate • 2-2,1025 sq. ft. $350. 1st month's rent $70 Low deposit Extra Large Apartment Prompt Maintenance, very cieon NR Shuttle Bus Swimming Pod Newly Decorated A nice unod quiet tonhnondy. BROOKHOLLOW APARTMENTS 1414 Arena Dr. 445-5655 7-1N SUMMER/FALL LARGE EFFICIENCIES/1 BR. e On IF Shuttle • Drshwosher/Drspoaol • M icrowave (optional) • Individual Storage e Pool 8 BBQ/Potb • Loundry Facilities e Hyde Pork Area • Across from city pork • Resident Manager From $190/Month 108 PLACE APARTMENTS 108 W. 45th Street 452-1419 if no answ er 385-2211,453-2771 7-lL 476-3629 459-9898 258-2176 7-11C ALL BILLS PAID $214 1 -1 .................. $260 2 -2 .................. $364 SOUTH SHUTTLE BLOWOUT CaH For O thers PROPERTIES ONE 447-7368 6-22C LOCATION LOCATION A l b is oatd downtown, near UT STUDENT APARTMENTS FOR $250! 442-2316 : T I f . f U1 , V ■ ’ WALK TO CAMPUS AVALON APTS. 32ND AT IH35 Summer Ratos: Efl-$195, 1 I (2 $295. Convent * for low/ongraoring Sudón*, low depots, colmg bn* vndk-vi dom * oneto \ 21 s V h . A Í l R A T F O R D 1 8 1 7 E. O L T O R F SAT 10 e • e s al quM awnpHu. e*a lag• • e 1-1 $199 jAI opptenoss mm caps*. J IA • 1940's 2-1 $299 Huge Mng room - •! Z\ • SebcSiLor»o«MndowxJrapat M u l l e n P i o c e A p l s . ^ n 7 W 0 IW M II4 S I r a n * e m more reason to Bve Iherof W s ¡ B i l l • 4 * 4 4 * n m resident» anywhere. C o l owner Ok ñ e e e e e e e e e e e e e e e e H I 474-4848 for a chance to eapertonce RR convenient Sving at on sdfocdable price. MCol us on weekends, too. we w * be ^ o d to help you. ■ * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * 6-16A ★ LOFT ★ 6-6A Spiral * mrco»e. nucrowove, motWed fire­ place, ceiling fans, W /D connecSora, p oo l jocuzzi. unil» rtortmg from $260. ADVANTAGE 443-3000 * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * 7-13L ZILKER AREA Efficiency, $175; 1 bed­ room $250; 2 bedroom, $275. Pool and laundry on site. 447-7525 or 440-0944 $ 2 0 0 SUMMER RATE with fall vacancies 3 clean quref com­ plexes close to compus. • 2 7 0 3 R IO G R A N D E efficiencies • 2 8 0 0 R IO G R A N D E 1-ls a 2 5 0 8 S A N G ABRIEL 1-1/pool 331-4019 EXTRA NICE EFFICIENCIES $ 3 9 5 Fd L $ 3 2 5 S ummer A l# CALLKEETH AT PARKE CO. 4 7 9 - B lK L o r 4 9 5 - 9 6 0 5 • ___________________ • • 6-M C TARRYTOW N SP A C IO U S V I garage apartrnim. Ideal (or q u rt pradueb rtudant ER shutda 478 8063 ^ 6 8 EFFICIENCY A N D 1 bedrooms Very dean. A l appliances, CA /CH WaRi to Compus $175-S239/monlh 482-8925 or 331-0117.6-6C__________ ' 2505 ENFIELD efficmncy and 1 trad room, convenient, ihutde, pool, laundrv, M opac, downtown, campus. $236- $260.478-2775.6-8_______________ SUPER SPECIALS: 1 to 3 room, furnished/ unfurnished from S I 50, an «hutde Avad- abie nowl W il prelease, 462-3300.6-9 305 Vs E. 38lh alder 1-1, A/C, appiionce s corport yord older 1-1, A/C, $260 472 2097, P T 47 8-57 39 6-20C UT, 2 BEDROO M -1 BATH, fenced yard, cen- ra tral air, $350 plus deposit N ear UT ■H oreo CaH 892 1255 6-21____________ SPA C IO U S (1600 sq. ft.) 4 bdrm aport- ment WaBung distance to campus. W U 0,-iA accommodate 5 peopb. Avodabb June I mm and September 1 258-7817; 837 5368 6-ION______________________ ■H C H D ishw aher, WtmSi Northeast Q U in N O N SM O K ER : Largs 2 1 CA / fire place, yard Some fumtluro avadabb $365 472-3576 6-IOC_____________ TROFtCANA APARTMENTS. Extra large 1M l- r . ond 2 2'i ovadabb P ool laundry, KraH ER shutde. 2606 Enfwld #6. 474-6354 or 474-1100.6-24K________________ _ HALF M O N T H 'S RENT FREEf Lam e I I m 1 * 1C W 8m smaR quiet complex near RR. Carpet, Rearing 8 p a rt Mm now $245 ♦ etac- 9 M e U o sD M M O fD O l 476-6508.6-24 B 8 A N 0 N E W aMooncy 5 h Corhood, id carport b « irfto . to Q O S * FUmmhed or nek, $295, e l 474-5262 6-7 W AUL UT, 1-1, CA/CH. freddy LARGE O N I bedroom , ^ B a p p r t n c r a , AC, couple 8018 6-8 \ UT. 478-7892, 837 b n e d w i e w w w LEASING FOR SUMMER PRE-LEASING FOR FALL 3 S S - 9 M 7 WNto tom a ctMjyoatoln •atctxng a lar Ha meen liacy Heaot \Mtera ant you t m gong to Canyon Para. Tro- gamgt . c o m o m m m m m m u m a r 2 5 0 5 L o n g v l « w T H E A D M K S S IN W IS T C A M P U S **Effid*od** • 1 Bd/1 Ea 0 2 Bd/2 Eo. M H m H m m r n m m g m m m C m m m m H y Stouty lam esajmeeu oessWppttoottoni e MaBng Campaigns V t it s e MSS3TV Convenions e (usnsm nopouS k Bspom e irse Intsi ilsnAJIsams Updoing a w w . h n i w i #> 6B4-B477 M « S B m m * # M M H o u se of 1%% T U T Q R S l V TYPING & RESUMES O P t N 7 D A T S W N IM U ti Tit M lO H lO H l 4 7 2 - 6 6 6 6 8 ! J W 2 4 rti T r l T o w e r t ROOMMATE to share 2br/lbth •out* through Sept 1st (2 2 5 a month Large Bock yard washer/dryer C o l 458-3068 6-8 LASER PRINTING from IBM format Colt Sheryl. 282-7405 evenings 9:00pm),»reek ends or leave message. 6- 6 (tiN Chicago slips past slumping Rangers Associated Press OFFICE JO BS VARIETY OF OFFICE ASSIGNMENTS AVAILABLE 6 MONTHS OFFICE EXPERIENCE REQUIRED. N O FEES TODAYS TEM PO RARY NORTH 346-1440 SOUTH 448-2223 6-168 SM ILING VOICES Ideal student hours. Full time pay. Part time work. Close to Campus. Call JD at 454-0025 NOW HIRING FORA VARIETY OF FALL SEMESTER POSITIONS The Texas Union is interviewing daily from 9 a.m. lo 11 a m in room 4.410 of the Union Building. No phone colb accepted The Texas Union is an EEO/AA employer Responsible student needed for summer care of my 2 children, ages 6,8. Excellent job to work around your studies. Will adjust hours to meet your schedule. Refer­ ences required. Salary $60/ week. 441-7978 after 6 pm. 6-10 NEED TO EARN STEADY INCOME FOR THE SUMMER? Lomas Telemarketing is looking for qualified individuals with excellent to market communication skills premium credit cards nationwide. WE GUARANTEE $6/HR. Great atmosphere! Great people! Great hours! 9-1 M-F, 1-5 M-F, or 5-9 M- Th and 9:30-1:30 Sat. Apply in person at: 300 W. 5th St. Suite 840 MBANK PLAZA 6-30L N EA R C A M PU S. Ful/Part-tim e. B O O K KEEPER (W e Train). TYPIST (45 + wpm). RU N N ER (Your C ar). O D D JO B S . Appli­ cation 9om-4pm, 4Ó8 W . 17fh Si. 6- 9C_______________________________________ H ELP N EED ED w ilh housekeeping. H alf d ay per week. C ar necessary. (4/nour. 346-1984.6-8___________________________ BABYSITTER FO R aerobics doss. M W F 8:15-9:15om and/or 9:15-10:15am. (4 / hr + free aerobics. C all Kathy 454- 2165.6-7 PART-TIME W O R K in pool store. Flexible hours. Several locations availab le. Call 835-4947.6-9 IN T ER V IEW ER S Spanish/ BILIN G U A L English telephone survey. N o sales. Sal­ a ry (5.35/nour. Send resumes to: O ffice of Survey Research, C ollege of Commu­ nications C M A 6.144. Austin, TX 78712- 1094.7-24______________________________ W H A T 'S N E W of W e n d / s t Jo bs for per­ sonality, that's w hat. Com petitive pay, flexible hours and m eal benefits. Apply at 415 W est M L K E O E . 6-10K______________ EA RN (100. O utgoing, eager workers needed for Ju ly 4 rock show concession. Colt Patrick, 834-9129.6-10_____________ 8 0 0 — G eneral Help Wanted CHALLENGMGOPPORTUMTY, COMPETITIVE PAY language doe of Eng lor verifying translated oentil Docu­ ments Need upper-divisxm or grad stu­ dents who have completed hr»- . course Adequate nese nghsh and good attention nghsh and go knowledge span necessary WordPerfect experience span necessary Won ~ ' preferfed. but not a must Flexible afternoon or evening hours FW shutdebua route Send name, phone No . and quahhcations r Ade< PO Box 27B24.AueM .TX 78756-2624. C H IC A G O — Greg W alk er's run-scoring dou­ ble capped a three-run first inning and Jerry Reuss allow ed four hits in six innings as the the Texas 6-71 W hite Sox Rangers 5-4 Sunday. defeated Reuss, 4-2, walked one and struck out three for his 202nd career victo­ ry. Bobby Thigpen, the third Chica­ go pitcher, worked 1% innings to earn his ninth save despite allowing pinch-hitter Cecil Espy's R BI single in the ninth. Thigpen got Ruben Sierra to groundout to second w ith the bases loaded to end the game. Dave Gallagher drew a walk against Paul Kilgus, 6-4, to open the first and went to third on a single by Steve Lyons. Gary Redus forced Lyons as Gallagher scored. Redus stole second and scored on a single by Ivan Calderon who stole second and scored on W alker's double. The W hite Sox added an un­ earned run in the third. Lyons reached when first baseman Pete O 'Brien's bobbled his grounder for an error, went to second on a walk to Calderon and scored on a single by Harold Baines, who drove in his first run since M ay 18. Reuss didn't allow a hit until O 'Brien beat out a single to deep short w ith two outs in the fifth and continued to second on Ozzie G uil­ len's throwing error. Steve Beuchele singled to score O 'Brien. The Rangers scored two more in the sixth. Bob Brower doubled to center, went to third on Scott Fletcher's sacrifice and scored as Sierra grounded out. Pete Incaviglia followed w ith his 13th home run. ■ Tigers 6, Indians 2 — In De­ troit, Jeff Robinson pitched a five- hitter and Luis Salazar led a 17-hit attack w ith three singles and a two- run double as the Tigers defeated Cleveland 6-2. Robinson, 6-2, allowed just three hits after giving up a pair of solo home runs in the first inning. He struck out 10 and walked one in pitching his second complete game of the season. Greg Sw indell, 10-2, lost for the first time since M ay 8 w hile attempt­ ing to become the major leagues' first 11-game winner. ■ Tw ins 4, Athletics 3 — In M in­ neapolis, Kirby Puckett's single in the sixth inning scored John Moses from second as the Twins defeated Oakland 4-3. The Athletics lost for only the sec­ ond time in 11 games and still have National League roundup, box acores, page 14. the best record in the major leagues at 38-16. Keith Atherton, 4-1, the second of three Minnesota pitchers, allowed no runs in three innings. Jeff Rear­ don pitched IV 3 innings for his 14th save. Oakland starter Bob W elch, 8-3, allowed 11 hits in 5Y3 innings and had his personal seven-game w in­ ning streak snapped. a Royals 7, M ariners 3 — In Kan­ sas C ity, George Brett hit two home runs and a single as the Royals de­ feated Seattle 7-3 and swept their four-game series. The M ariners' No. 9 hitter, sec­ ond baseman Harold Reynolds, set a club record w ith his eighth straight hit when he singled in the eighth. After tying the record held by Bruce Bochte and Ph il Bradley in the fifth, Reynolds walked in the sixth. M ark Gubicza, 7-5, allowed eight hits, struck out six and walked three in seven innings. Gene Garber fin­ ished up. ■ Yankees 9, O rioles 2 — In Balti­ more, New York scored nine runs in the first inning on five hits, four walks and an O riole error as the Yankees easily defeated Baltim ore 9-2. New York sent 13 batters to the plate. It was the second nine-run in­ ning for the Yankees this season. It was also the second time this season the Orioles had allowed nine runs in an inning. Six of the runs were unearned. Richard Dotson, 6-1, allowed six hits, walked four and struck out four in winning his 100th career game. It was Dotson's third com­ plete game. In losing two out of three games against the Yankees, Baltim ore is now 0-25-3 in its last 28 series against East Division teams. ■ Blue Jays 12, Red Sox 4 — In Boston, K elly Gruber, Fred M cG riff and Ranee M ulliniks had three hits apiece and Lloyd Moseby drove in three runs w ith a homer and a bases-loaded w alk as Toronto bombed the Red Sox 12-4 Sunday and swept their four-game series. W ith their sixth consecutive victo­ ry, the Blue Jays equaled their long­ est w inning streak of the season. It was the first time in their 12-year history that Toronto had swept a se­ ries in Boston. The Blue Jays had 19 hits, at least one by every starter. Duane W ard, 2-0, the fourth To­ ronto pitcher, worked two innings and was credited w ith the victory. $ TELEMARKETERS $ $400-$500/week New office opening — necessitates immedi­ ate |ob opportunities here in Austin. N O SElllNG-oppom lm ent setting only. Salary or commission «table + generous bonuses. Vocation m Bohomos for those who qualify! Call onylime. ask for Pete ★ 251-5556 ★ 6-23N ★ Vendors ★ • Part-time/Full-time, Days/ Nights selling hot dogs and fajitas downtown locations, e Must be clean-cut, sober and bondable. $3.50/hr. e Call 282-6721,473-2612 after 12:00 noon. 6-7V TELEMARKETER Dynamic marketing office has opening for EXPERIEN C ED tele­ marketer. Must have strong tele­ phone skills and ability to motivate people. Daytime hours. Salaried position with bonus op­ ^ portunity. Call 328-3311. Fall positions availab le for M O NTES- SO R I C LA SSR O O M A SSIST A N T S in on internationally certified, well-es­ tablished Austin school, with a dedi­ cated staff of trained professionals. Excellent opportunities for observa­ tion and experience with children age 2-6, 6-9, or 9-12 years. FoH and port- time positions available. $4.25/hr. 442-3152. 6-10N TELEM A RKETIN G North Research Blvd area. N o w hir­ ing for immediate em ploym ent with N ational Com pany. Must be able to w ork Tuesday-Friday 4pm-9pm and Saturd ay 9am-2pm. S a la ry plus bonuses. Ideal fo r students, home­ makers o r moonlighters. Earn excel­ lent incom e in short hours. 331-1473, 4pm-9pm. 7-12N UT golfer ends amateur career with 5-stroke championship win A s s o c ia te d P re s s H O USTO N — UT senior Bob Estes made his final amateur tour­ nament a w inning one Sunday, shooting a final round 73 for a 5- stroke victory in the 79th Texas Golf Association Am ateur Cham pion­ ships. Estes, from Abilene, finished the 72-hole tournament w ith a 9-under- par total of 279, five shots better than runnerup Randy Sonnier of Houston. Sonnier shot his final round in even par 72 to finish at 284, four strokes ahead of Russell Beiersdorf of Dallas, who had a 288 and was the only other golfer to shoot par for the tournament. Beiersdorf, a Southern M ethodist golfer, also had a final round 72. D efending cham pion Jim m y Adams of Beaumont shot a final round 72 and had a 289 total for the tournament, played at Lochinvar Golf Club's, par 72, 6,879-yard course. Estes, who plans to start his pro career soon, hit a wedge to six feet and sank the putt for a birdie on No. 9 Sunday. Estes went eight shots ahead of Sonnier by sinking a 40-foot pitch shot for another birdie on No. 10. Estes bogeyed Nos. 12 and 13, but shot par for the final five holes. "It's not like I was all over the course," Estes said. " I missed in the right places on some holes and stayed close on others." Estes played in the tournament three other times w ith two sixth- place ties his best finishes. Sonnier, a former W alker Cup golfer, was one over par at the turn and could never catch the charging Estes. "The young man has such an ex­ cellent short game, he's not going to let you catch him w ith that kind of d eficit," Sonnier said. Texas A& M senior N eil Hickerson of Belton shot the low round of the tournament w ith a final round 8-un- der-par 66. He finished w ith a 290. EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT EM PLO YM EN T» 840 — Sotos ACTORS, STUDENTS, Models! Zachary Scott Theatre needs telephone repre­ sentatives FUfl/Port lime fond raising. Don, 469-0044. 6-9N 890 — Clubs* Restaurants 9 0 0 — Domastk- Housahoid 8E O N TV dab. Costing Ext. TV-9413 6-10 Many ig info. needed for commmr- (1) 805-687-6000 8 8 0 — Professional JO B S Abo Cru.seih.pi OVERSEAS $15,000-(95,400/yr. Now Hiringl 320+ openings! (1) 805-687-6000 ext. OJ-9413 6-6_________________________ BE O N T.V. M any needed for commer- aob Casting into. (1)805-687-6000 Ext. TV-9413.10-27 ORGANIST FOR a smal congregation and working with 6-8 member choir. For more information caN 459-7747. 10:00-2:00 pm. 6-13_________________ CITY O F A U ST IN IN TERN A L A U D IT IN G DEPARTM ENT IN T ER N A L AUD ITO R JO B ORDER RB-3-74H WNtMUM QUAUBCATIONSt This pi we be Wed at one at the wRotwng «and CartAcalion (CPA CIA CMA) w * sub- A M s for one (1) year of Ae eqpedente re- DRIVER NEEDED for delivery service. DRIVER NEEDED tor detrvery service. Accounting Pubic Admm Must hove encelen! driving record. C ol Retd pies four (4) yean of experience in audhng am 474-8666.6-B m a lood/ionior capacity surate with qe ■ - ;• • H H I H I H I H try rale of (2 ,341/month - of which was y e . -v ' m L f . « J —• - ■-« S! ru n ic Aamimsrooon ter tssssa ———— ' THE BAZAAR has on oponing for o fol- timo salesperson. (4.50/hr, 4-day work week. Apply at The Bazaar, 2404 Guo- dafope. 6-7 EARN ( ( ( as a n a l technician. Unique new product in the Austin area. Experi­ ence helpful but not required. C a l liso 255-3443.6-10_______________________ 810 — Offffko- Ctorkal t e . I (2) yeont ' ’ audÁng! I of l?.0B3/m onA S B S W S b E^^;/6-'-] year ★THE MOONDANCE^ 706 Congrats Avo. Accepting applications for «cooks « waits * bus/dish « hosts * cos Non M on-Sat 9 am-5 pm DECA N O W accepting opptcotions for wadpeopfe. Apply in person 709 E. 6A Street, from 12-4pm. 6-10 CO-ED WANTED for port-time barten­ der. N o experience necessary .But TABC certificolion very helpful. Apply in person M-W-F 2-4. T-tH 3-5 606 Maiden Ln. _____________________________ 6-8 . W ANT TO be a bartender* Forget about A e school! 11 tram you while you make money Apply in penon at The Legends Sports Bar. 912 Red River between 2 and 4 pm. 6-10 9 0 0 — Domastk- HousahoM mee^nE SÉA4A4MA6 MaEa o n o w K K o o jn u n d a n to n d in g o f P u b lic T V . O u t­ g o in g p t m a B iv , p r e v io u s • *- p f ia n c a p r e fe r r e d . H o u n M - T H 6 - 9 p m . A p p ly 2 6 A G u o d a tu p a o r a K L R U T V P O B o x 7 1 5 8 A u aM n 7 8 7 1 3 . ECO 6-6 ROOM, BOARD, B saiory. Male studed in lieu of help with strobe patient. Rdh Holprit, 892-2125, after 3.6-6________ NANNIES WANTED for New York area famtes. Great salary, benefit», travel Must be mature, responsfote. Ccti KC • Nonny Soktiom 345-5323.6-7C AÜ PAIR needed, room ond board in en- change for chfldcoro. Several evenings eat week. Robocco 467-9010.6-8 6-8 HOUSE CLEANING by experienced re- iponsibie, thorough graduate Atdesd (8/hour. Phone Mary, 320-8994.6-10 9 10 — Positions W unfd_______ HOUSESITTING OPPORTUNITY wanted Vermont couple, mid 30's, entering M l MBA program. No children, pels. Thom- a t (802)257-9441 6-10____________ TO PLACE A T E X A N CLASSIFIED A D CALL NEEO DEPENDABLE penon to babysit S Must Have own year aid 4 7 1 - 5 2 4 4 houm good pay Cdl 9pm 451-0838 6-6 6-10 9pm. NEAR CAM PUS. FuB/Port tone. BO OK­ KEEPER (W e Train). TYPIST (45 + « RUNNER (Your Cor). OOO JO BS. • cation 9am-4pm, 406 W 17A St. cation 9am-4pm, 408 W . 9C 6-9 TELEMARKETING PO SITIO NS ovoilabte near campus evening shite only. ($- (10/hour C o l P8C Marketing. 477- 3808 6-148 ________________ 8 2 0 — Accounting* Rookkaaping EXCITING OPPORTUNITY Bndal con­ sulting conventions, fashion shows, hotels Seftng cosmetics through color analysis United openings. 345-9851. 6- NEAR CAMRUS. Ful/Rort-tm*. Gain boohhespmg enpenence TYRIST (45 + wpm) RUNNER (your cor). OOO JO BS. Ap^Arnhon 9om 4 pm 408 W . 17A St. R.o. 78767-8808. ■ « e . CMA) e preferred, eern eudltng or pse tened. m r i i — m n $• 4 en e teem te- O r C N O M R | M M piduoHeni, end «nproMsenl efleris in Ae Q ty Dsedbis for epptytng is June 10,1988. Sub- »to A eO tyef AttdA, NAMES sews quilt honoring AIDS victims T h e Da il y TEXAN/Monday, June 6 , 1988/Page 13 ACROSS PREVIOUS PUZZLE SOLVED By CLAIRE OSBORN Daily Texan Staff AIDS is ravaging the country, but the Austin Names Project Commit­ tee is ensuring that Austin AIDS victims are not forgotten. The Committee honors victims of AIDS by sewing their names onto quilt panels, said Daniel Hardy, the committee's chairman. The panels will be sent to San Francisco Aug. 15 to become part of the national NAMES project, Hardy said. The national project, a quilt which was unfolded for the first time in Washington, D.C., in Octo­ ber 1987, originally had 2,000 pan­ els. This October the quilt will be unveiled in Washington again with about 8,000 new panels, Hardy said. "The quilt will spread from the foot of the Washington Monument to the steps of the Capitol, which is about 10 football fields long," Har­ dy said. "We didn't have enough momen­ tum to get the quilt here so we de­ cided to form a committee," Hardy said. The committee wants to en­ courage people to make panels, al­ though it is not affiliated with the national project, he said. ' The committee met for the first time to start making panels Sunday afternoon. Each panel is 3 feet by 6 feet and includes the name of an AIDS victim. After a panel is finished, the pan­ el designer hands in a 1-2 page de­ scription of the victim to be includ­ ed with the quilt. Paul Clover, director of education for AIDS Services of Austin, said he saw the quilt when it was displayed in Houston at the George Brown Convention Center. "I would be smiling about some of the panels and the next minute I would be crying, sometimes over someone I didn't even know," Clo­ ver said. Warren Munzel, a St. David's Hospital nurse who works with AIDS patients, said he plans to de­ sign panels for some of the victims he has nursed. "I do embroidery and crochet, but I don't want the panel to reflect my needlework, I want it to reflect the personality of the victim," he said. to exhibit The Smithsonian Institution has agreed the national NAMES quilt after it is finished, he said. Panels for Austin AIDS victims are due July 20 at the AIDS Services of Austin at 202 W. 17th St. Administration change results in improvement Associated Press FORT WORTH — Four years ago, Texas Wesleyan College was $10 million in debt and on the brink of financial disaster. Dropping oil prices took mil­ lions from the endowments for the 1,500-student liberal arts college, enrollment was falling éfhd its president was accused of wasteful spending and financial mismangement." "gross improved But now, the school's nightmare is over. A new administration has put the school on sound financial footing, its academic reputation and rebuilt the campus. "The college went through an uncomfortable and unfortunate era," said trustee Willard Barr. "But I think we're back on track now, focusing on what we do best. I have a lot more confidence in the school." The school has paid off all but $2 million of its debt, retired $1 mil­ lion in construction bonds, tripled its endowments and balanced its $10 million budget for the first time in nearly five years. Texas Wesleyan has added about 200 students, a $10 million library and planned $25 million in other physical improvements, in­ cluding new athletic fields, dormi­ tories, a new humanities center and a remodeled school of busi­ ness. "I'll be the first to say [former college President Jon] Fleming's work at pushing this school ahead was something sorely needed," said Jerry school President Bawcom, who was appointed to the post shortly after Fleming re­ signed in April 1984. "But with the increasing debts, his era reached the point of diminishing returns." Glen Maxey works designing a panel for the NAMES project in Austin. Allen Brook/Daily Texan Staff Hooked Continued from page 1 The new spot necessitated new tactics. Instead of an attention-attracting arrest outside, stealthy arrests were made the motel rooms. inside one of Once a policewoman made a case, she told the John to follow her to the room. The John would follow her through the the room's doorway, and seconds later find himself face down on the bed, as officers hand­ cuffed him and informed him he was under arrest for prostitution. The South Congress motel sting fared better than the one in East Austin. The officers made at least eight arrests. The arrest process in the rooms was so nondescript that often, while one John was being arrested inside, a policewoman would be working on a deal with another outside. "It's liké shooting fish in a bar­ rel," said J.D ., an Austin vice offi­ cer. The Johns were held in the room — some for up to 45 minutes — while other cases were being made outside. One officer warned the arrested men to stay quiet, and said, "If any­ one of our people gets hurt because you opened your mouth, we will add other charges to those of prosti­ tution." The main concern of the sting's coordinators was the safety of their officers. The sting discourages both the Johns and the prostitutes, Terry said. "A lot of people think this is silly, but it's not. It breeds a lot of stuff. I brought last week and sent her home to her par­ en ts," he said. lb-year-old in one "A victimless crime, you know. But it's not. It breeds a lot of stuff," Terry said. "I hear there are two 15-year-olds out there, but I haven't been able to get to them y et," he said. "It's hard not to call them victims." 1 Vessel 5 Europeans 10 N.Y. city 14 Eddo 15 Conjecture 16 Wicked 17 Spirit 18 Captured 19 Small room 20 Totally 21 Storm 22 Terrifies 24 Luck symbols 26 Negotiates 27 Gold: Sp. 28 Unimportant 31 Bait 34 Musical comedy 35 Earth: pref. 36 Picture 37 Important 38 Conjunction 39 Sea predator 40 Automobile 41 Smelting residue 42 Wine 44 Beat-walker 45 NBA player 46 Absconded 50 Food store 52 Finished 53 Ally 54 Dry 55 Opposite of cation 57 Nothing 58 Military cap 59 Mother-of- pearl 60 Range 61 Italian commune 62 Go quickly 63 Yesterday DOWN 1 Energy Lily type Som e exams W as a victor Tuber Jewels Enjoy 8 Com pass pt. 9 Judicious 10 Revoke 11 Lapse 12 Distance unit 13 Letters 21 Bloody 23 Lunch spot 25 Kind of dog 26 Parlor item 28 Flower part 29 Spruce 30 Left 31 Per — : daily 32 Color 33 Draft 34 Equestrian 37 Old stagers 38 Bandage 40 Counselor 41 Vogue 43 Golf aide 44 Preserved 46 Singer Grace 47 Stage production 48 Travel costs 49 Raft 50 Winnipeg, e.g. 51 M a rs’ counterpart 52 Gaming cubes 56 Rug surface 57 Cartoon word 6-6-88 © 1988 United Feature Syndicate HI, THIS IS ANDREA FORBES. YOU KNOW, DOWN IN THE ART D E­ PARTMENT* 1 HEARD YOU WERE ALONE NOW, AND I WANTED YOU 70 KNOW I 'M AVA ILA BLE/^ _ / YEAH, UKE REAL AVAILABLE. I WANT YOU. I WANT YOU SO BAD IT ^ HURTS! U N HUH. WELL, HOLD ON FORA MINUTE, OKAY* HEY, M IKE! I THINK IT 'S FOR YOU' TAKE A MESSAGE, WILEY A* include melting wax, adding color, cutting wicks, helping participants, dipping and hanging candles up to dry. Training and materials will be provided. For more information, call 471-3065. Student Volunteer Services has volunteer opportunities for people of all ages interested in being advo­ cates for retarded citizens. If you have a couple of hours to share and are interested in being a "special" friend, call 471-3065 for more infor­ mation. information Student Volunteer Services has a for volunteer position available in entering someone interested membership into a computer to facilitate and update a mailing list. Some computer knowl­ edge or word-processing experience would be helpful but is not neces sary. For more information, call 471- 3065. V* 3 A & U C 0 0 Q Around Campus is a daily col­ umn listing University-related ac­ tivities sponsored by academic de­ partments, student services and registered student organizations. To appear in Around Campus, or­ ganizations must be registered with the Office of Student Activities. Announcements must be submitted on the correct form, available in The Daily Texan office, by 11 a.m. the day before publication. The Daily Texan reserves the right to edit submissions to conform to style rules, although no significant changes will be made. MEETINGS Overeaters Anonymous will meet at noon Monday in Burdine Hall 228. The University Group of Al­ coholics Anonymous will meet from noon to 1 p.m. Monday through Fri­ day in Burdine Hall 128. Smoke-free Alcoholics Anony­ mous meetings, sponsored by the University Group of AA and the St. Austin's Promises Group of AA are held at noon Mondays and Fridays in Paulist Hall of St. Austin's Catho­ lic Church, 2010 Guadalupe St. Stu­ dents, staff and members of the community are welcome. Tradition­ ally, Fridays feature guest speakers within a year or more of continuous sobriety. SHORT COURSES The Thompson Conference Cen­ ter and Computation Center User Services will offer a Microcomputer Teaching Facility Hands-On Work­ shop — Analysis of Variance with PC SAS — from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Friday in Thompson Confer­ ence Center 3.108. Cost is $30 with valid UT ID, $108 with government ID and $150 for others. Attendance is limited to 28. For registration in­ formation, call 471-3241. Computation Center User Ser­ vices will offer several short courses this week in Computation Center Room 8. They are: Introduction to the Computation Center, from 10 a.m. to.noon Monday; Database Systems, from 1 to 3 p.m. Monday; Microcomputers, from 3 to 5 p.m. Monday; UNIX for Students, from 10 a.m. to noon Tuesday; Text Pro­ cessing at UT, from 1 to 3 p.m. Tuesday; and the Cybers, from 3 to 5 p.m. Tuesday and Thursday. Quick Overview for VMS/VAX Stu­ dent Programmers will be held from 3 to 5 p.m. Tuesday in T.U. Taylor Hall of Engineering 101. Courses are free to anyone with a valid UT ID. Register at Will C. Hogg Build­ ing 8 (471-3241 ext 253). LECTURES AND DISCUSSIONS The Department of Philosophy will sponsor a colloquy entitled "A esthetics" at 3 p.m. Monday in Waggener Hall 316 — the David L. Miller Conference Room. Nikita Pokrovsky from the philosophy de­ partment at Moscow State Universi­ ty will speak. OTHER Student Volunteer Services has volunteer opportunities to help with candlemaking at a homestead festival Saturday and Sunday. Tasks " T # 1' I - W - - 1 ' i ** ii ................. i n Around Austin is a column ap­ pearing Mondays in The Daily Tex­ an for activities, lectures and semi­ nars going on in higher education and the community outside of the University. Please turn in submis­ sions to the Texan office, P.O. Drawer D, Austin, TX 78713. LECTURES AND DISCUSSIONS The Jung Society of Austin an­ nounces a workshop for men only entitled "What Is a Man? Part II." Using the films Slaughterhouse Five and Macaroni, and the book Step- penwolf, participants will consider the man of contemplation in search of a soul. The eight-hour workshop, led by Joseph Wakefield and Alex Hill, costs $50 and will begin at 9 a.m. Saturday at 1700 Rio Grande St. For more information, call 474- 2911. sexlife MARTIN WAGNER'S (' •/ i < z y © b £ a m SO...VACATIONING ON THE BEACH ? . THl$ 1? G&EffT THE T O E CLUB CAN m . A&flN' U til CONQUER m S T R A N G E ^ / --------- AAND. 9 * T U / Bur vie oorrr > I^Ll HAVE OUR TRKK QUEEN^ s WEAR IT, p 1 0 H ? -TMR7 RSTTUN&, SQEAKIN& SOUND? THE E N E M Y CUB IS VERY CLOSE t CAN FEEL IT OUT THERE TU0 DEGREES TQ PORT. Ué M u s ^ V E ? I T fiOW K/ THE UEftliy is SORKNf x á t e r t ? j t c A x J — MONDAY RELIEF by tom king ¿jjjTV/t'kE WiAuyJ® Áy 'SxiT A mfres! w HE i t : T w . P l a v s A T kLlTTUs ^ANb VMEN you ttrr HI A WITH L 1 % f t Page 14/THE DAILY TEXAN/Monday, June 6,1988 Mission (nearly) accomplished: Mays owner happy with season Associated Press DALLAS — John MacLeod was hired a year ago to get the Dallas Mavericks into previously unchart­ ed NBA playoff waters. The 1988 Mavs came w ithin one game of the NBA Finals. "I think we did g re a t/' Dallas ow ner Donald Carter said. “I have a proud feeling. O ur players and their talent grew during the playoffs." The Mavericks extended the de­ fending world cham pion Los Ange­ les Lakers to seven gam es before losing the W estern Conference title clash 117-102 on Saturday in The Fo­ rum. Dallas knocked off H ouston and M idwest Divison cham pion Denver to get to the Lakers. The Mavericks finished one game behind Denver during the regular season. After the Mavs had been ousted in the first round of the playoffs in 1987 by Seattle, Dick Motta quit. Carter hired MacLeod even though he had been fired the year before by Phoenix. "O ne of our goals was to go far­ ther in the playoffs than Dallas had ever been before, and we accom­ plished that," MacLeod said. "O f course, getting close to the NBA fi­ nals is not enough. But how far we have come this season is som ething to be proud of. "W hen we w ent dow n 2-0 to the Lakers, everybody w rote us off. Then we show ed just how m uch we have grow n. We show ed how com­ petitive we have become." Norm Sonju, the club's general m anager, said, "W e w ant to build on the foundation of this year. W hat is im portant is w hat w e've learned from all of this." A ssistant coach Richie Adubato said there's reason to believe the Mavericks are the heirs apparent to the Lakers in the W estern Confer­ ence. "There is a bright future ahead for u s," he said. "W hat happened in The Forum on Saturday was a big learning experience. Now we know about the pressure and how it feels. We did a good job of handling it for three quarters." Dallas won all three gam es against the Lakers in Reunion Are­ na, but lost four to them in The Fo­ rum. "It was a classic example of w hat the hom ecourt advantage is all about," center James D onaldson said. "T hat's why you w ant to play so hard during the regular 82-game season." Carter said he w asn't certain if Dallas would make any trades. "W e'll study it and see if we have any m issing ingredients," he said. "If we identify w hat we are missing, then we'll see if we can trade for it or buy it. John MacLeod deserves a lot of credit for w hat w e've done this year. A lot of credit." Clark, San Francisco roll over Astros Associated Press Kareem AbdukJabbar (33) helped end the Mavericks’ season Saturday. Associated Press SAN FRANCISCO — Will Clark had a two-run hom er and M att Williams a three- run double to lead Rick Reus- chel and the Giants to a 7-3 victory over H ouston on S un­ day. Reuschel pitched six inn­ ings, allowing one run on four hits, to run his record to 8-3 but had to leave the game with shoulder soreness. Craig Lefferts worked the final three innings for his fifth save. The Giants took a 2-0 lead in the first off Jim Deshaies, 4-3. They loaded the bases on walks to Chris Speier and Robby Thom pson and a single by Clark. C andy M aldonado's forceout grounder to short scored one run and Jeffrey Leonard's sacri­ fice fly scored another. Thom pson's leadoff double and Clark's 14th hom er, a 409-foot shot to right, gave San Francis­ co a 4-0 lead in the fifth. Reuschel, w ho won his third straight, allowed his only run in the sixth w hen Rafael Ramirez doubled and eventually scored on a sacrifice fly by Billy Hatcher. ■ Braves 3, Padres 1 — In San Diego, Ken Ob- erkfell's RBI double w ith two outs in the eighth inning broke a 1-1 tie and helped Tom Glavine to his second consecutive victory as Atlanta beat the Padres. Glavine, 3-6, and reliever Bruce Sutter com­ bined to limit San Diego to just four hits. Glavine walked only one and struck out two. ■ Dodgers 5, Reds 4 — In Los Angeles, John Shelby had two hits and extended his hitting streak to 20 gam es Sunday as the Dodgers took advantage of five Cincinnati errors, three by shortstop Barry Larkin, to beat the Reds. Larkin m ade two of his errors in the fourth, w hen the Dodgers took a 3-1 lead and another in the fifth, leading to a third unearned run. ■ Mets 11, Cubs 3 — In New York, Dwight Gooden, pitching on the first anniversary of his return from drug rehabilitation, threw seven hit- less innings and also hom ered as the M ets beat Chicago. G ooden's no-hitter was broken up by Damon Berry hill, who led off the eighth w ith a single. He allowed five hits and three runs in the final two innings after New York had taken an 11-0 lead. In running his season record to 9-1, the 23- year-old right-hander struck out four in pitching his sixth complete game of the season and the 48th in 137 career starts. Gooden puncuated the dram a w ith a tw o-run hom er in the bottom of the seventh that got him a standing ovation from the Shea Stadium sel­ lout crowd of 47,243. ■ Phillies 6, Cardinals 3 — In Philadelphia, David Palmer allowed six hits in 7xh innings, hit a hom er and a double and scored two runs as the Phillies ended St. Louis' five-game w inning streak. It was the first victory since Sept. 9 for Palmer, 1-5. He struck out six and walked four and the only run against him was unearned. In Pittsburgh, A ndres ■ Expos 3, Pirates 2 — league-leading 15th Galarraga hit his major hom e run and Hubie Brooks had a tw o-run ho­ m er as M ontreal defeated the slum ping Pirates. The loss was the fifth for Pittsburgh in their last seven games. They are now 6-7 at hom e after w inning 13 of their first 16 at Three Rivers Stadi­ um. Lakers LA faces new faces in best-of-7 finals Associated Press INGLEWOOD, Calif. — Usually at this time of year, the Los Ange­ les Lakers and Boston Celtics are going at it in the NBA finals. Such won't be the case this year, and Pat Riley admits to a little disap­ pointment about that. But Riley, the coach of the Lakers, can't be nearly as disap­ pointed as retiring Boston Coach K.C. Jones and the rest of the Celt­ ics. "I was," Riley said when asked if he was sad that the Celtics were beaten by the Detroit Pistons in the Eastern Conference finals. "Not out of lack of respect for De­ troit, but when you have someone you have gone to war with all these years ... I wanted to see them win. I saw a tattered team taking it to the limit. "I made a statement that they [the Lakers] would have to sepa­ rate themselves from the pack. We're alone at the top because Boston's not there. Our identity, our tradition, it's ours. "Detroit's going to be a formida­ ble foe. We have to gear up for them." The Lakers and Pistons meet Tuesday night at the Forum in the opener of the best-of-seven NBA finals. They'll also play at the Fo­ rum Thursday night before mov­ ing to Michigan for the third, fourth and fifth games. The Lakers, who are trying to become the first NBA team to re­ peat as champions since the Celt­ ics did so 19 years ago, are playing in the finals for the seventh time in nine years. The Pistons, on the other hand, are in the finals for the first time since 1956, when they were the Fort Wayne Pistons. The franchise moved to Detroit the following year. Several Laker players, when asked about Detroit being in and Boston being out, didn't share Riley's disappointment. "You don't be sad when you're going to the finals," said Magic Johnson, who had 24 points, 11 as­ sists and nine rebounds in Game 7 of the Western Conference finals against Dallas. "You just have to play who's in front of you, and that's the Detroit Pistons. They're a tough team. They are better than Boston right now." "Obviously we wanted to play the best team, and Detroit was [the best] this year in the East," said Byron Scott, who had 21 points Saturday. "They have tak­ en over as the team in the East. I'm not surprised or upset by it. It was Detroit's year. A champion­ ship is a championship, and we'll be ready for whoever would have been there." The Lakers, who had an NBA- best 62-20 regular-season record,, beat the Pistons in both games be­ tween the teams. Pistons Detroit says Lakers aren’t intimidating Associated Press PONTIAC, Mich. — Don't ex­ pect the boys from Motown to be intimidated by the flash of Tinsel­ town when the Detroit Pistons take on the Los Angeles Lakers for the NBA championship. The Pistons have a healthy re­ spect for the Lakers, who are the defending champs. But after final­ ly conquering the Boston Celtics in the Eastern Conference finals, De­ troit feels ready to take on the world. "Hey, it's down to the two best teams in the world," Detroit guard Isiah Thomas said Sunday. "It's no accident and it's no fluke. We're very confident. "We've got our work cut out for us, but we'll be ready," Thomas said. Thomas also will have to be ready to play against Magic John­ son, one of his best friends "I love Magic, he's my friend, but I want to win the champion­ ship," Thomas said. The feeling was mutual for Johnson, a Michigan native who still is worshiped in the state for leading Michigan State University to the NCAA title in 1978. "If Thomas is coming in, I'll have to put him on his backside," Johnson said in Inglewood, Calif., after the Lakers' victory Saturday. "I'm going for a world champion­ ship, and so is he. He's not my friend when he walks on the court." Which is exactly as Thomas would have it. "I wasn't rooting for either Dal­ las or Los Angeles," Thomas said. "But deep down, if you're going to win a championship, the two teams you want to beat are the Celtics and the Lakers. They've been the dominant teams of the '80s. "We've beaten the Celtics. Now we'll try to beat the Lakers." To do that, the Pistons will probably have to change tactics. They beat the Celtics with a pun­ ishing defense that has held oppo­ nents under 100 points in 10 of their last 12 games. Ron Rothstein, a Pistons assist­ ant coach, thinks that kind of bump and grind might not work against the Lakers. "Now we're playing a team that gets out and runs, takes you off the dribble and does a little bit of everything," Rothstein said. Montreal’s Andres Galarraga rounds third after his league-leading 15th home run Associated Press in.............. i 1111111111 .i.. Game Winning RBI None E Treadway Larkin 3. Soto, Sax, MiDavis DP — Cincin­ nati 1, Los Angeles 1 LOB Cincinnati 7, Los Angeles 8 2B Gibson ONeili Esasky 3B- Hamilton SB Shelby (6) S- Soto PPerry p Totals Chicago NSW TOf* 0 0 0 0 31 3 5 3 Totals 40 11 18 11 000 000 021— 3 000 142 40*— 11 Javier If Hubbrd 2b Weiss ss Parker ph Lanstrd 3b Totala 4 0 1 0 3 0 2 0 3 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 37 3 12 3 Bush rt Gladden If Larkin dh Harper c Newmn ss Totala 3 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 3 0 2 1 4 0 1-0 3 0 0 0 32 4 13 4 NBA Finals Tuesday June ' Thursday June 9 Sunday Jurve 1 2 Tuesday June 14 Thursday June 16 Sunday June 19 Tuesday J u n e ? ’ * H necessary Detroit at L A 8 p m Detroit at L A 8 p m L A at Detroit 2 30 p m L A at Detroit 8 p m L A at Detroit 9 p m ' Detroit at t A 2 30 p m ' Detroit at i A Lakers 8 p m ' Major Leagues A l Times COT NATIONAL LEAGUE East Division 37 31 30 27 26 21 W L Pet. GB 17 24 25 27 27 31 L 21 24 27 30 34 33 685 564 545 500 491 404 6 ’/? 7'/? 10 10V& 15 Pet. GB 588 538 509 444 370 353 2Vi> 4 7 V? 11 'n 12 W estD M e io n W 30 28 28 24 20 18 Sunday s Games New York Pittsburgh St Louis Chicdg , Montrea Phi ad»- ph.a Los Angees Hous'on San Franc . Cincinrift! Sar Diego Arlan’ a California 6. Milwaukee 5, 11 innings Monday’s Games Detroit (Morris 5-6) at Baltimore (Morgan 0 5). 6 35 p m Toronto (Flanagan 5 3) a! Cleveland (Farreb 5-3) 6 35 Boston (Hurst 6-3) at New York (Alien 2-0). 7 Minnesota (Viola 9 1) at Chicago (Davis 0-0), 7 30 O akand (Ontiveros 3 2) at Kansas City (Bannister 6 5) 7 35 California (Fraser 4-4) at Texas (Guzman 5-4) 7 35 Milwaukee (August 1 -0) at Seattle (Bankhead 0-2). 9 05 Giants 9, Astros 3 SANFRAN Speier 3b RThpsn 2b ab r h bi 4 0 1 0 2 0 1 2 4 0 0 0 D ark 1b 4 0 0 0 Midndo rf 4 0 0 0 Leonard It 4 0 1 0 Yongbid ct 2 0 0 0 Butler cf 1 0 0 0 MWiims ss 3 2 2 0 Mnwrng c 1 0 0 0 Reuschel p 1 0 1 0 Aldrete phi 0 0 0 0 letterts p 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 31 3 7 2 Totals HOUSTON GYoung ct BHatchr it Doran 2b GDavis lb Bass rf Ashby c Walling 3b PnkovtS 3b Ramirz ss Deshaies p Puhl ph Hethcck p Hndrsn ph Agosto p Totals Houston Sen Francisco ab r h bi 3 2 1 0 4 4 2 0 5 1 2 2 5 1 2 3 4 0 1 1 2 0 1 0 1 1 0 0 4 0 1 3 4 0 2 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 35 9 12 9 000 001 020— 3 200 020 32*— 9 Game Winning RBI Maldonado (4) E Ramirez DP San Francisco 1 LOB Houston 3 Sar Francisco 9 2B Manwuuny RThompson Ramirez WWiihams HR Clark (14) SB Speier (2) S Reuschel SF -Leonard BHatcner2 *> H R ER B6 SO Cincinnati Soto L 3-5 RMurphy FWilliams Los Angeies Leary W 5-4 JHowell S 5 STL OUtS Coleman It OSmith ss McGee cf Brnnsky rt Horner 1b TPena c Forsch p Ford ph Peters p Oquerid 3b Aitcea 2b ONeai p Pagnozz c Walker pr, Totals StLouM York ' 1 ‘ icago 3 Philadelphia 6 St lo w s 3 Montfeat 3 Pittsburgh 2 LOS Angeles i Cincinnati 4 San f ranctsco 9 Houston 3 A- ,j- ta s San Diego i Monday s Games HOu-.to- !k neppef 6 1 j a’ t os Angeies (Sutton 3 3) 9 35 F>* * (« Gross 5 2: a' Mo*i'ii* . 'Youmant, 1 4; 6 35 p m *. • Fen írid e / 2-5 a! St oois (MeWilliams 4-0) 7 35 - nrtat. B'Ownmy 2 j at San Diegc (Grant 1 -4). 9 05 <:■ y i,arnet v tied .e d Deshaies L 4 3 Heathcock Agosto San Francisco Reuschel W 8 3 letterts S 5 WP Letterts T 2 25 A 31 144 H RER SO 6 1 1 10 1 1 7 2-3 10 1 1 1 3 5 0 0 4 0 2 0 0 3 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 2 0 5 2 WP RMurphy BK Soto T 2 47 A 38 982 Phillies 6, Cardinals 3 PHXA ab r h bi Samuel 2b 5 2 3 0 4 0 2 1 Bradley if Bedrosn p 5 0 0 0 4 0 1 0 Hayes 1 b Parrish c 3 0 1 0 Schmdt 3b 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 CJames rf 0 0 0 0 MThmp ct Aguayo ss 0 0 0 0 4 0 1 0 Palmer p 4 0 0 0 GGross If 2 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 ab r h bi 3 1 1 1 3 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 3 0 1 1 4 t 1 1 3 0 0 0 4 0 1 0 4 0 1 0 4 1 2 1 3 2 2 1 1 0 0 0 35 3 8 1 Totals 32 6 9 6 100 000 0 0 2 -3 000 131 10»— 0 5 2 1 6 3 7 3 2 4 3 4 3 0 3 1 1 1 0 1 1 0 0 0 2 2 Game Winning RBI Aguayo (2) E Aguayo 2 LOB SlLouis 10 Philadelphia 6 2B Hayes CJames Palmer Samuei MThompson OSmith HR Aguayo (2) Palmer (2) Parrish (10) SB Coleman (25) OSmith (17) Samuel (15) Game Winning RBI E Elster Gooden, Grace DP Chicago 1 LOB— Chi­ Elster (3) cago 4 New York 10 2B Strawberry, Dunston 3B KAMiller HR G ooden(1) SB DMartmez (5) SF— Jack­ son Berryhill IP H RER BB SO Chicago Pico L,1-1 DiPino BLandum PPerry at----Vm L N9W TOrK Gooden W 9-1 4 1 2 1 9 6 3 8 1 5 4 1 6 0 3 4 1 6 0 3 3 0 1 1 1 1 2 1 0 4 Pico pitched to 3 batters in the 5th WP Gooden PPerry T 2 44 A 47 234 000 030 0 0 0 -3 201 001 00*—4 Game Winning RBI — Puckett (5) DP— Oakland 2, Minnesota 2 LOB— Oakland 9, Minne­ sota 11 2B— Moses, Hrbek, DHenderson Canseco, Stem- bach Bush, Hubbard HR— Lombardozzi (1) SB— Javier (8) Moses (3) S Newman Welch L.8-3 Cadaret Nelson Mbmaaota AAndeson Atherton W,4-1 Reardon S.14 *> H RER BB SO 5 2-3 11 1 1-3 1 2 4 2-3 10 2 3 0 1 1-3 4 0 0 3 0 0 4 0 0 3 0 0 3 1 1 1 1 0 3 0 1 2 2 0 White Sox 5, Texas 4 HBP Lombardozzi by Welch WP AAnderson. Welch T 3 21 A — 43 567 Royals 7, Mariners 3 CHICAGO ab r h bi Gailghr cl 4 1 1 0 Lyons 3b 1 0 1 1 Redus If 2 0 0 0 Caldern rf 5 0 1 1 4 1 1 1 Baines dh 3 0 0 0 GWalkr 1b 1 0 0 0 Manriq 2b Guillen ss 3 1 1 0 4 1 2 0 Karkovic c 4 0 1 1 2 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 34 4 8 4 Totala TEXAS Brower ct Espy ph Fielchr ss Sierra rt Incvglia If MStamy c Petralli c Parrish dh OBrien 1b Buechie 3D Wilkrsn 2b Browne 2b McDwl ph ToMM T a ia * Chicago ab r h bi 2 1 0 0 4 2 1 0 3 1 1 1 3 1 2 2 4 0 1 1 4 0 1 1 4 0 0 0 4 0 0 0 4 0 0 0 SEATTLE Cotto ct GWilson rl ADavis 1 b Phelps dh Brantley If Bradley c Presley 3b Quinons ss Reynlds 2b 32 5 0 5 000 012 001— 4 301 000 10*— 5 Total* a b r h M Stllwll ss 5 0 1 0 B u c kn r1b 4 0 1 0 4 0 1 1 WWilsn cf Thurmn ct 5 0 1 0 Brett dh 5 2 1 0 Trtabll rl 4 0 1 0 Seitzer 3b 4 0 1 1 4 0 2 1 Pecota ss Tabler 1b 3 1 3 0 Eisnrch If FWhite 2b Wellmn 2b Quirk c TOMM 3 12 3 a b r h M 4 1 2 0 1 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 4 2 3 3 4 0 0 0 4 1 2 0 0 0 0 0 4 1 1 0 3 1 2 2 3 1 2 1 1 0 0 0 2 0 0 1 34 7 12 7 New York Cleveland Detrort Milwaukee Boston Toronto Baltimore Oakland Minnesota Texas Kansas CAy Chicago Sean e California AMERICAN LEAGUE East Division W 35 33 31 29 25 27 12 W L 18 21 21 26 26 29 42 Pet. GB 660 611 596 527 490 482 222 2 VS 3VS 7 9 9 VS 23 VS L Pel 704 519 500 491 434 411 364 16 25 27 28 30 33 35 GB 10 11 11 Vs 14 Vs 16 18 VS W a stO M sio n 38 27 27 27 23 23 20 Sunday s Gamas Toronto 12 Boston 4 ’ lew York 9 Baltimore 2 Dei»Q>! 6 Cleveland 2 Minnesota 4 Oakland 3 Onc-agoS Te» as 4 Kansas City 7. Seafie 3 Dodgers 5, Reds 4 CMCMNATI ( PSAMBH S Larkm ss Qumons ss Sabo 3b Daniels It LDavis Cf ONeiHrf Esasky lb BDiaz c Brwnng pr McGntt c Tredwy 2b Soto p McCtnd ph FiMrphy p FWiitms p Collins ph ToMM Sax 2b * r h b i . 3 0 1 ’ 2 0 0 0 MiDavis rl 5 1 2 0 Gibson tf 4 0 2 0 Marsh! lb 4 0 2 1 Shelby cf Sciosciac 4 1 1 0 JHowell p 3 1 1 1 Hamitn 30 4 0 1 1 Andesn ss 0 0 0 0 Leary p 0 0 0 0 4 1 0 0 Dempsy c 1 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 80 4 11 4 Tot Me ab r h bi 5 1 2 0 4 0 0 0 4 1 2 1 4 1 1 0 4 1 2 0 3 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 4 1 2 1 4 0 1 0 3 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 30 6 12 2 001 001 0 2 0 -4 010 220 00»—6 StLouia ONeai L.2-3 Forsch Peters Palmer W 1 -5 Bedrosn S 4 7 2-3 6 1 1-3 2 HBP Schmidt by ONeai WP ONeai T 2 43 A 43 429 Mets 11, Cubs 3 CHICAGO DMrtnz cf Palmen ft Muphry If Sndbrg 2b Grace 1b Berryhflc Tritio 3b Ounston ss Pco p DiPino p Law ph BLandm p Jacksn ph sMgyiUAaM NEWTOVK Dykstra cf Bckmn 2b KAMItr 2b KHmdz 1b Strwbry rf McRylds If M> r h bi 3 0 1 1 4 0 0 0 4 0 0 0 4 1 1 0 4 0 1 0 3 1 1 1 4 0 0 0 Carter c 3 1 1 0 t 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Gooden p 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 Magadn 3b Eister ss H R ER BB SO 3 4 2 4 4 2 2 0 0 3 2 0 0 0 0 Game Winning RBI Redus(2) E OBrien, Guillen Sierra LOB Texas 8 Chicago 7 2B GWalker Redus Brower. OBrien, Sierra HR Incavi glia (13) SB Redus (10) Calderon 2 (2) Espy (9) S— F letcher H RER SO Tasas Kilgus L.6-4 Cecena CNcago Reuss W 4-2 Horton Thigpen S 9 T 2 59 A 16 399 6 13 1 2-3 6 1 1-3 1 2-3 a b r h M 5 2 2 0 3 1 1 0 1 1 1 1 5 2 3 2 4 1 1 0 5 1 3 3 4 0 1 1 4 1 2 0 4 0 2 2 5 2 2 2 Twins 4, Athletics 3 Gallego 3b Jenngs ph DHedsn ct Canseco rt McGwir 1b Baylor dh Stembchc M ercadoc Lmtordz 2b F*uckett ct Davidsn rf a b rh M 4 1 3 0 Moses It 1 0 0 0 5 1 1 1 4 1 1 1 4 0 0 0 Herr ph 4 0 2 1 Gagne cf 3 0 2 0 Hrbek 1b 1 0 0 0 Gaetti 3b M r k H 5 2 2 0 3 1 1 2 4 0 2 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 3 1 3 0 2 0 1 0 KanaaaCNy 010 010 0 1 0 -3 201 103 00»— 7 Brett (2) Game Winning RBI E Tartabull, Tabler DP Kansas City 2 LOB Seattle 11. Kansas City 6 2B- Stillwell. Seitzer Tabler. Eisenre- ich 3B- FWhite HR Brett 2 (10) S B Reynolds 2 (10) Eisenretch(7) SF Eisenretch, Quirk 8» H R B I BB BO ENunez L.1-3 Reed MJackson Solano Scurry GubczaW,7-5 Garber 4 3 2-3 6 3 1 1-3 4 0 1 1 1 0 1 0 0 1 4 3 0 0 0 1 4 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 3 0 6 2 Reed pitched to 3 batters m the 6th WP Solano BK-ENunez T 2 49 A— 27,601 Blue Jays 12, Red Sox 4 Sisk Femndzt R b rh M 5 1 2 0 Boggs 3b * r h M 4 1 1 0 Tibbs pitched to 4 batters m the 1st WP— Williameon PB— Kennedy T— 2 59 A— 36,665 Lee ss Moseby ct Campsn ct Mllnks dh Fielder ph GBell If McGriff 1b Gruber 3b Whitt c Barfield rl Liriano 2b Totals Toronto 0 0 0 0 4 3 2 3 0 0 0 0 3 1 3 2 10 12 6 0 1 1 5 3 3 1 6 0 3 2 5 1 1 1 5 1 1 0 5 2 2 0 Barrett 2b Romero 2b Burks cf DwEvns rt Grenwl dh Rice If Gedman c Cerone c Dodson 1b Romme rf SOwen ss 45 12 1 91 2 ToMM 2 0 3 1 4 0 5 1 1 0 2 0 2 1 1 0 1 2 1 0 1 1 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 38 4 IS 3 021 221 1 0 3 -1 2 102 100 0 0 0 - 4 Game Winning RBI — McGriff (3) DP— Toronto 4. Boston 1 LOB— Toronto 13, Boston 13 2 B — Gruber 2, McGriff 2. Barrett, Greenwell 2, Romero, Fernandez 3B— Rice HR— Moseby (7) SB— Greenwell (6), Gruber (5). Liriano (7), Moseby (16) Toronto Stieb Eichhorn Wells DWard W.2-0 Boaton Sellers Smithson L.1-2 Stanley Lamp Crouch * 3 2-3 2-3 2 2-3 2 1 2-3 3 1 1-3 2 1 H R ER IB 8 0 8 3 3 1 3 7 2 4 3 4 0 0 0 2 5 1 4 0 4 0 0 0 2 5 1 4 0 3 0 1 1 4 1 1 1 0 4 1 2 0 1 3 0 1 0 Lamp pitched to 3 batters in the 9th HBP— Greenwell by Wells WP— Stieb. DWard T— 3 53 A— 33,756 Yankees 9, Orioles 2 RHndsn It Rndiph 2b Wshgtn cf JCIark dh Cruzrt Buhner rf Pglruio 3b GWard 1b Santana ss Skinner c ToMM Now York BALTMORE Orsuiak tf Lynncf CRipkn ss Murray 1b Sheets dh Hughes rf Kennedyc Gonzals 3b BRipkn 2b a b r l t M 3 2 2 2 5 1 1 2 5 1 4 2 4 1 0 0 3 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 5 1 1 2 4 0 0 0 4 1 0 0 4 1 1 0 * r h M 5 1 3 0 4 0 0 0 3 0 0 2 4 0 1 0 3 0 1 0 3 0 0 0 4 0 0 0 4 0 1 0 2 1 0 0 37 8 • • Ti 33 2 • 2 too 000 ooo f 101 000 000-3 Game Winning RBI — Washington (3) E— CRipken Santana DP— New York 1 LOB— New York 11, Baltimore 8 2B Randolph, Orsuiak 2, Sheets. RHenderton SF— CRipken P N RER M BO 9 0 6 2 1 6 2 2 4 4 1 7 1 0 4 5 0 0 3 0 0 0 3 0 3 3 4 1 1 0 THIS WEEK'S E V E N T S The Pogues Wed., LI wty Lunch Palestine 1988 Photo exbit Pro-Jex GaKory Through June 30 BiH Carter Fri., Antone's THIS ISSUE Kerrvlfle Folk Festival Basebal In Texas Gabriel Garcia Marquez Huerican Reatan Prince Camper Van Beethoven 2 IMAÓES June 6,1988 Baseball in Texas Need a sports fix? Relax. Three professional baseball teams, two of them in the major leagues, are within easy road tripping distance. Page 3 STAFF Image' Editor Bret Bloomquist Kerrville Folk Festival From concerts to songwriting classes, the Kerrville Folk Festival has it all. Page 4 Associate Images Editors Ben Cohen Lee Nichols On the Town Local playwright/director Ken Johnson brings American Realism to the Hyde Park stage. Nobel Prize-winning author Gabriel Garcia Marquez stirs the emotions of readers once more with Love in the Time o f Cholera. Whether you’re in the mood for mainstream entertainment like Crocodile Dundee or an offbeat, low-budgct bloodbath like The Toxic Avenger, the wi variety of Austin video stores can suit your tastes. Page 5 Books Page 6 Television Page 7 Diversions Pages 8,9 ON THE COVER The old-timers are always whining about how the local live music scene is dying now that all the “cool” clubs have closed (Raul’s, The Beach, Club Foot, Armadillo World Headquarters, etc.). But look again. For every venue that closes, another one springs up to take its place. Nightclubs are still alive and well — you just have to know where to look. Page 12 Music Erasure danrw the night away, Camper Van Beethoven masters new styles and Prince gets good marks. Pages 10,11 SUCH A DEAL! Contributors Jeanne Acton Karen Adams Sharon Beynon Ashley Bogle Craig Branson Allen Brook Trevor Feagin Garry Leavell John McConnico Kevin McHargue Melissa Petrek Ren Scherr Joe Sims Patrick Spong Siva Vaidhyanathan Tanya Voss Rob Walker Chris Ware Junda Woo K . d)M M E X I C A N R E S T A U R A N T 2 for Juan Buy 1 entree Get 1 free of equal or lesser value with this ad. Valid Sun. thru Thurs. h appy h o u r EVERY DAY 3-7 Serving until 2 a.m. 408 E. 6th S t 469-9239 ExpkmJunaX, 1968 Authorized dealer • protects eyes from UV rays • 30% off regular retail price • large selection of styles • prescription Ray Bans available JUNE SPECIAL: DAILY WEAR CONTACTS PACKAGE *79 Indudes exam, contacts, ch rdng kit A follow ups COMPUTE OUSSES starting as low as *30 Appointment Only 477-4668 2200 Guadalupe Doctor's prescription required Physician on prem es University Market Facts... Within the past 30 days, students of the university spent $471.729 tor phono­ graph records, tapes and compact discs. (Source: "The Univemty Merkel." Betden Ait ocif r 1967) 15 WORDS FOR 4DAVS ONLY 00* CALL * Applies to ads in merchandise and transporta- I lion categories, pricsd at $500 and unc tr. Pri- I vote party ads 471-5244 DETAILS T€XANaBS{uN€.nD B a s e b a l l I n T e x a s Nearby towns provide quick fix for pro sports junkies June 6,1988 IMAGES 3 By Bret Bloomquist and Garry Leavell Summer is a bleak time for sports fans in Austin. The UT athletic teams are finished for the year, foot­ ball season hasn’t started and bas­ ketball and hockey have just fin­ ished. On top of that, Austin is one of the largest towns in America with­ out a professional baseball team. Even Midland has a club. Go figure. The bottom line is that if you want to see professional athletics in the summer, you have to road-trip. Fortunately, pro ball is only an hour and a half away, and major-league baseball is only three hours down the road. What’s more, there are two big league teams to choose from, at least one of whom will probably contend for a division title. So quit your whining and moaning, pack your bags antj skip that class. Baseball is less than a gas tank away. .............................1 R r H r IT *" ........ P 7 * m / 1 A Texas Rangers The Texas Rangers are enjoying a surprisingly successful season, play­ ing over .500 ball and fighting for second place the American in League West. They have a lot of young, improving players, and when their schedule starts softening in the next month, they will be in great shape to make a run at division-lead­ ing Oakland. scoreboard On top of that, Arlington Stadium has one of the biggest attractions in baseball: dot races. Between the fifth and sixth innings, the Di- (Ooooh! amondv on Ahhh!) depicts three dots (red, yel­ low and green) racing around a track. The fans pick their favorite dot, and as soon as the race begins, the entire stadium erupts. Unfor­ tunately, the fans are louder for the dot races than they are the rest of the game. Staunchly traditional fans will also be distressed to learn that the Rangers play the Cotton-Eyed Joe during the seventh-inning stretch in­ stead of the traditional Take Me Out to the Ball Game. For Tickets range from $10 for field seats (which occasionally sell out, so order in advance), to $4 for adult general admission and $5 for out­ field reserved. those in truly watching the game, seats along the first- and third-base lines provide the best view. If you just want to get drunk and yell, the left-field bleach­ ers attract the loudest fans, though the sun will be in your eyes for the first inning or two. interested Be sure to avoid right field — eve­ ry YMCA group in the Metroplex seems to find its way there. Also, the plaza seats, which cost $8, are the worst seats in the house for the price. This section is in the upper deck (as in you have to dodge air­ planes) behind home plate, making every infield popup look like a home run. Parking is three bucks — bad — and beer costs $2.25 a can. You are allowed to bring in food, but only non-glass and non-metal containers (believe it or not) are allowed for drinks. To get to Arlington Stadium from Austin, take 1-35 W through Fort Worth to 1-30. Go east on 1-30, and the stadium will be on your right. Follow the signs to the parking lots. Houston Astros A fan makes a tradeoff when he takes in a game at the Astrodome. Inevitably, there is at least one baseball purist in the grpup who voices his contempt for the glazed roof, the lime-green rug and the arc­ tic chill blowing out of the walls. In return, the patron is treated to National League baseball (the way the game was meant to be played), usually a close, tense game and a better than average chance of seeing the home team win. And, as the As­ tros like to remind us, there’s never a ra lout at the dome. With the usual lack of a great team in the N L West, the Astros should be in the pennant race through most of the summer. So for­ get art history and head south to the so-called “ eighth wonder of the world.” The best way to get there is High­ way 71 south which will take you through the sleepy hamlets of Bas­ trop and La Grange (home of the Bon Ton Bakery /Texaco, an essen­ tial pit stop for gas, food and drink). Go east when 71 meets Interstate 10 at Columbus. Take I-10 all the way to Loop 610 South in Houston and follow the Loop as it turns into 610 East. Watch for the signs pointing your way to the Dome and exit left on Kirby Drive. The Astrodome is on your right. Ticket prices range from the $4 general admission seats in the pavi­ lion (outfield) to $10 field box seats. If you wait until game time, your best bets are the $8 mezzanine or $7 loge seats. Make sure you’re not un­ der an overhang or you’ll feel like you’re watching the game through a crack in a closet door. Parking is $3, which seems ex­ travagant, but you won’t have to pack a lunch and take a cross-coun­ try hike to get to the building, a la Texas Stadium. Tickets can be purchased by cred­ it card in advance by calling Teletron at 1-800-436-3094 or at any Tele-Ticket outlet. MSStSNS I San Antonio Missions If you’re too poor or too short on time to travel to Arlington or Hous­ ton, there is pro baseball only 90 miles away in San Antonio. The San Antonio Missions, AA farm team of the Los Angeles Dodgers, offer a cheap and conven­ ient alternative to Texas’ major The. LEGENDARY& 00* CUTS $ 5 r PERMS $ 2 0 .■ Professional Consultation—ALWAYS! One of the Best Shows oftheNite! * June 10 Friday frrlPr'd(. 5PF,r‘ * L GUESTS June II David Hammond Band •Otar good «*> * * coupon on* Cut t long ha* «fta Command^ 2200 Guadalupe (lower level) Mon-Fri 10-7, Sat 10-6 322-0641 nent Neotenry 4 0 0 1 N. 1 4 0 5 * 0 1 7 7 SPECIALS (w ith C o v r ) IÓ C K T e x t s * * 1 *^ n M ^°n* N*ck Beer S 1 JO - Chopped Beef W STYLING SALONS their name league team s. T he M issions (who changed the D odgers this year) are currently in a tight battle with the El Paso Diablos for first place in the T exas League. from T ickets range in price from $3 for general adm ission, to $7 for execu­ tive patio reserved seats, which in­ clude waitress service. Parking is F R E E , and there are always plenty o f seats and spaces. And while the minors don’t have all the glitter and glamor of the big leagues, there is a certain charm to watching players who d on’t have multimillion-dollar, guaranteed con­ tracts hustling after every ball hop­ ing to catch the eye o f a m ajor league scout. There is also the outside chance that the 20-year-old on the mound could be the next Roger Clem ens, and the batter he is facing could be the next Bob Uecker. For $3, how can you m iss? T o get to M ission Stadium from A ustin, take 1-35 south to Loop 410 W est, exit Freedom Road and take a left. T urn right on the first street (Hillcrest R oad), and the stadium is about three miles down the road. The ticket office mails free sched­ ules, and can be reached at 512-434- 9311. 25 % OFF YOUR PARTY’S MEAL with this coupon Good thru June 30 Two locations to serve you m a g n o lia CAFE 2504 lake auson bhd, 4 7 8 -8 6 4 5 M AGNOLIA 'CAFE iO u TH ■Ufkltt) 1920 s congress I I Breakfast I I Lunch Dinner Late Night Fri & Sat til4am 4 IMAGES June 6,1988 > # Kerrville Folk Festival features musical communion By Jeanne Acton Alone on the stage with only his acoustic guitar, the folk singer told the story of a foreign land where ev­ erything was peaceful and happy, until one day a man found a chained box with a note attached. It read: “WAR. Please don’t open this. It hurts the children the most.” But the man did not listen. He opened the box and released the hate and pain on his country. Since that time, the box has remained open and war has continued to infect the land and the children. “Nobody wants to save the chil­ the folk singer dren anymore,” sang. For the last 17 years folk singers have been spreading their messages about love, war and politics through their original songs at the Kerrville Folk Festival. On Quiet Valley Ranch, spanning across 50 acres, Rod Kennedy, pro­ ducer and founder of the festival, has brought more than 100 featured artists and 40 emerging songwriters to perform 37 concerts ranging from children’s concerts to Folk Mass celebrations. The festival began May 26 and runs through June 12. The traditions of the festival be­ gan in 1971 when Rod Kennedy, a music producer, was asked to gather some artists to perform at an arts and crafts fair in Kerrville. “From the first year we have grown from 2,600 people to an estimated 36,000 for this year,” Kennedy said. But this year, many believed that the festival would not go on because of the $60,000 debt incurred last year when it rained 14 out of the 18 days. “We literally did not know if we would have one this year,” Ken­ nedy said. But more than 1,000 volunteers made sure that the festival would continue by raising funds for the debt. Because of the success (the debt was reduced to about $20,000) the festival was nicknamed the “miracle festival” . “We’re here; we’re in business and it is a miracle,” Kenne­ dy said. The festival includes 11 six hour evening concerts of professional art­ ists performed in the outdoor the­ ater. “Out of the 109 artists only five percent do traditional music,” Ken­ nedy said. “90 percent of the artists are songwriters and perform origi­ nal, one-of-a-kind songs. They per­ form original Latin music, blue- grass, Western swing, country, rock and pop music.” Kennedy said the festival is the most prestigious songwriting festival in the world. “The waiting list for professional songwriters to perform is huge,” he said. “It takes about four years to get to the festival un­ less you are a New Folk singer.” But the 18 day festival is more than just folk concerts. “The festival is not great litera­ ture, not great drama, but great hu­ in music and manity expressed words,” Kennedy said. Although the “traditional” folk concerts are the main attraction at the festival, many other events, like the New Folk concerts, are also quite popular. The New Folk concerts, founded in 1972 by Peter Yarrow of Peter, Paul & Mary after the group had broken up, are for new songwriters who seek a chance to perform. “Many believe that New Folk con­ certs are really the heart of the festi­ val,” Kennedy said. To perform at the festival each songwriter submits two of his or her songs then to Kennedy, who chooses 40 of the best artists. “This year we had 247 entries from 25 states and Canada,” Kenne­ dy said. “It is very important na­ tionally to be picked.” Folk Masses are also important parts of the festival, Kennedy said. “It is a celebration of holy commun­ ion with folk music. We hold the Mass in the brush harbor, a frame structure with a brush roof, every Sunday of the festival,” he said. “It is wonderful. We sing some traditional songs like Amazing Grace and Cat Steven’s Morning has Bro­ ken.” The Ballad Tree sessions on Chapel Hill add a more laid-back touch to the festival. The sessions began ten years ago when the New Folk concerts became so competi­ tive, Kennedy said. “About 20 to 40 people go to Chapel Hill to sing with the profes­ sional folk singers,” he said. “Any­ one with a guitar can get up and sing. It is way to share good music. They sing the anthem Healing Wis­ dom- and original songs that they wrote.” The festival also offers songwrit­ ing classes taught by professional songwriters. “They teach the stu­ dents how to write, co-write, edit music, television and films,” Ken­ nedy said. Each night, when all the concerts have ended, the festival “formally” ends, but the campers keep the fires burning to all hours of the morning singing songs. “It is like a summer camp for adults,” Kennedy said. “As many as 50 campers gather around camp fires and sing all night long.” Preston Ives, a campers who stays at the festival for the entire 18 days each year, said the campfire sing- alongs are a “truly unique experi­ ence. Everyone and anyone gathers around the fires to sing their songs. You see the same people on stage sitting right next to you on the ground. Sometimes you hear the most beautiful songs of the festival by the fire,” he said. Also, over 50 arts and crafts booths are lined up on the outer re­ gions of the ranch. Items range from woven baskets to face painting. Tickets are on sale at the gate ranging in price from $8 to $12 per day with discounts for three-day, five-day, eight-day, 11-day and 18- day tickets. Camping is free with tickets for three or more consecutive days. For complete listings for The Kerrville Folk Festival, see page 9. non» v j nun orooK Musicians Don Roejanca, left, of Pearland and Doug Taylor of Austin practice during the festival. The two spent the weekend in Kerrville._______ Marsha Webb of Livings* a, Mont., plays with Austinite ‘Washtub Jerry.’ Hyde Park play depicts ‘Realism’ of city life June 6, 1988 IMAGES 5 By Sharon Beynon Although in these stifling eco­ nomic times it may seem ironic to take in theater about boom-town Austin circa 1985, one can still enjoy American Realism, a new Ken John­ son play about the realities of the American dream in the ’80s. Johnson, a local playwright/direc­ tor, centers in on central Austin with references to some of the city’s greatest monuments: the Capitol, the Austin American-Statcsman, downtown and, of course, the Bro­ ken Spoke. An Austinite, or more generally, a Texan, can appreciate the play because, with a flair for specifics, incorporates Southern ideology with some good old Southern expressions. Johnson Juxtaposing the generations — their morals, ethics and marital rela­ tions — American Realism gives the playgoer a look at how things used to be, how they are and how they should be. The plot revolves around greedy, semi-well-meaning, middle- aged failures who try to force their parents, “the old people,” to sell their house in downtown Austin for $300,000 so another “empty bank” can be built and their financial prob­ lems solved. Johnson gathers interesting perso­ nas that combine to create some fun­ ny and touching situations. Phil (Mike Woods), an uptight, di­ vorced/remarried car salesman who must go to court because he won’t pay child support; Viola (Deanna Marlin), a hard, divorced, money- hungry real estate agent; Mark (Jer­ ry Oakes), a “patriotic” racist Nam vet about to lose his job at Roto- Rooter due to excessive beer guz­ zling; and Captain Hunt (Hervey Lazenby), a blunt, wheelchair- bound ex-neighbor who sold his Magnolia’s prices, hours fulfill need cue, sometimes a little real emotion convinces more than the best-acted line. Bounds, with his kind, gentle­ man’s countenence, performed com- mendably, as did Woods, Oakes and Lazenby, who was hilarious. Marlin had funny moments, but overdid her bitchiness at times. While the play contains many multi-faceted themes, it could at times get preachy against the treeless, asphalt kingdom Austin is becoming. Realism points out that people liv­ ing in a big city in the 1980s con­ front the pressures of the past and the future. Decisions must be made respecting one’s roots as well as what grows out of them. One cannot ignore the realities of the “real” world, where money is made by you and off you. Change does not neces­ sarily stifle growth, but often times incites it. However, Johnson balances criti­ cism of change with countercriticism in favor of progress. The most major fault of the play can be summed up in its title: The play is about America, but the ac­ tors’ realism is questionable. The script contains much depth that eludes the actors in parts of the play. For example, playgoers do not al­ ways see a family that has lived and grown together for years; rather, they see actors acting like a family. But overall, Realism combines humor and a serious statement, cre­ ating a pleasant evening spent ob­ serving a family to which most can relate. American Realism will show at Hyde Park Theatre, 511 Ml. 43rd St., on Fridays, Satur­ days and Sundays through June 26 at 8 p.m., with tom 2:30 p.m. Sunday matinees on June 5 and 26. The Fletcher family celebrates the Fourth of July in Austin playwright Ken Johnson’s American Realism. aims toward getting through another day’s crises. Characters like these force the viewer to see the rat race created by trying to get ahead. Mar­ garet (Martha Clift) and Sam Fletch­ er (Charles Bounds), “’30s folks,” have avoided the fast-paced life with genteel living, a happy marriage and a work ethic stronger than the steel lawn- in Sam’s non-motorized mower. Johnson uses “real” old people, not younger people with eyebrow- pencil lines on their faces and' fake white wigs. They don’t have to pre­ tend to be old — they are old. This facet of the play presents a definite plus. Although a few delivery errors can be expected on opening night, script mistakes should disappear with the polish a few more nights will add. The actors seemed com­ fortable with their roles and the script, but at times not overly in­ volved in their parts. For instance, no tears ran down Sam Fletcher’s face when he and his wife talked of the death of their first-born, nor did Jason (Ian Grayson), Mark and Hel­ en’s (Laura Grayson’s) son, cry when he found out his father had left them. Although tears are under­ standably difficult to produce on THEATER house to “progress” 10 years ago, all meet at the Fletcher lawn and dining room to argue, laugh, incite guilt and cry. While Viola aims to get the Fletcher house sold, a new cranber­ ry Mercedes in her garage and more dollars in her checking account, Phil By Siva Vaidhyanathan The southern edition of the Magnolia Cafe serves an essential function in the Austin com­ munity — providing late-night food at sub-Ker- bey Lane prices. Good late-i ght food, service and atmosphere is a rare combination in the Whataburger Wha- tawasteland of Texas, due to the scarcity of Greek restaurants and New York delis that at­ tract Yankee insomniacs. The Magnolia South’s relaxed atmosphere and cheap, diverse menu put it above all other caffeine dens in Austin. Besides, it lies just a few feet north of the Big Mamou, so it’s very convenient to indulge in the Magnolia’s pancakes after bathing in Austin’s music. The Magnolia South’s competitors all have major flaws. Katz’s is too Sixth Street-esque — and the patrons too obnoxious. Tacasita and Taco Cabana are cheap and have good food, but are too bright and loud. The location of the Kerbey Lane Cafe is too crowded. Kerbey Lane South is too an deco and the service is rude (the staff thinks nothing of mopping the floors with pungent ammonia right next to a booth filled with customers). And the northern fixture, off arctic 183, is so far north that customers are likely to waste away DINING ‘There’s nothing on the menu more than $5.’ from starvation on the trip there. And most of the other late-night places, like Trudy’s, fall short in some way — usually a premium of space and price. But the Magnolia South is comfortable. And better yet, it’s cheap. There’s nothing on the menu listed at more than $5. Chicken fajitas are the highest-priced item at $4.95. While the other Magnolia Cafe — the one at 2304 Lake Austin Blvd. — is relaxed, slow and very small, the new one is better-lit and relative­ ly expansive. In addition to those contrasts, the employees at the Magnolia South are generally faster, more attentive and more cordial than at the west Aus­ tin spot. They will refill iced tea before the glass is one-third finished. And they give customers good advice on selections. But the mam thing the two restaurants share is the menu. The best and most consistent attraction is their ommlette array. The gallery of fillings is extensive, and they are all priced low. The pancakes include optional bananas or nuts embedded inside. The restaurant has a wide variety of coffees and teas, and the coffee is generally stronger than Katz’s and fresher than Kerbey Lane s. The enchiladas verdes have an unusually tart sauce, but are still pretty good. On the down side, the bagels might not seem as fresh as at more expensive places. But of the place’s flaws, none is as great as its outside pa­ tio. The constant clinking of the backyard horshoe pit is heavily annoying. And the thou­ sands of invisible chiggers will leave an itchy reminder of the visit for the rest of the day. But considering the alternatives oí' loud crowds and $8 mods, the Magnolia South Cafe is a welcomed addition to A us on. Magnolia Cafe Swtk 1820 S. Cwgrtw Aw. 7 iJ k t i 4 a.m. Friáwy Stwrdiy 7 a.m. te 10 p.m. SimJiy Tkm rsdaj 6 IMAGES June 6,1988 Marquez sizzles with sensual story of ‘Love By Melissa Petrek Reading a Gabriel Garcia Mar­ quez novel isn’t just reading; it’s taking a trip to an exotic land where the inhabitants orbit each other in an understood code of custom, ta­ boo and unspoken feelings. Love in the Time o f Cholera, while lacking the complexity of 100 Years o f Soli­ tude, the ultimate beginner’s is guide to Marquez. Love in the Time o f Cholera is a simple and not-so-simple story of a love that goes unrequited for the du­ ration of a lifetime; a love that be­ gins in adolescence and ends in old age. It takes place in a small commu­ nity on the Caribbean coast of South America, circa mid-1800s to the 1930s, and is told in a style that stirs the senses. The smell of sea air and perpetual tropical heat form a sultry backdrop in which the ravages of the cholera epidemic lurk like a poisonous snake in paradise. In the traditional Mar­ quez style of understatement, the characters are created from an objec­ tive viewpoint — only through their actions and thoughts can they be ex­ plained. For the most part, their habits, motives and desires are limited to a specific situation that might make it difficult for the reader to empathize with them at first. However, the beauty of this is that it stirs the im­ agination; it is story-telling at its best. To read Love is to be intro­ duced to several people and watch the changes in them that come with time and experience. As in Chronicle o f a Death Fore­ told, the story unfolds with the death of a character acting as a cata­ lyst into both past and future. Juve­ nal Urbino, a highly respected phy­ sician and general patriarch about town, dies and leaves his widow, Fermina Daza, to own up to a ghost i n r h F O F i A 1 G a b r i e l G a r c i a M a r q u e z BOOKS from her past. At her husband’s funeral she is approached by Florentino Ariza, whose love she had scorned some 50 years ago. With his startling reaffir­ mation of undying love, the ball is once more set into motion and the story flashes back to chronicle the history of the love triangle between Ariza, Daza and Urbino. The courtship between the haugh­ ty, fire-and-ice Daza and Ariza, the poetic dreamer, is full of stormy first love, a love forbidden by the con­ trasting strata of society to which they belong. When Daza chooses a marriage of convenience and honor over her love for Ariza, she con­ demns them both. For the many years to follow, Ari­ za is obsessed with his loss while Daza, ignorant of what she has given up, is only vaguely content with her marriage to Urbino. It’s far too easy at times to dislike Daza for her materialistic tendencies and luke-warm feelings for her hus­ band; however, the numb dissatis­ faction she endures serves as her p u n is h m e n t until her husband’s death. Particularly heartbreaking is Ari­ za, who moves from one loveless af­ fair to another. He awaits the day of Urbino’s death, silently persecuted by watching Daza as she begins her new life with her husband in what seems to be a fairy-tale world: “What impressed him most was that she and her husband made an admirable couple, and both of them negotiated the world with so much fluidity that they seemed to float above the pitfalls of reality.” As time passes, Marquez pays close attention to details through which the characters age and mature — from the fast, furious pace of youth to the languor of old age. The strong-willed Daza mellows in the shadow of the slightly vain Urbino. Ariza, who had suffered socially by his illegitimacy, amasses his own wealth so as to someday win back his sweetheart. To complement the plot line, Marquez presents the Latin-Ameri- can lifestyle with its restrictive social codes and moral values as an inter­ esting view into an alien culture. These barriers make the undercur­ rent of emotion between the charac­ ters sizzle, especially in the youthful courtship of Ariza and Daza. Humor, although not blatant, oc­ curs within the tragedy: After Urbi­ no falls from a ladder and dies while attempting to retrieve his pet parrot from a mango tree, a well-known artist depicts the moment on canvas to honor the late doctor. The fin­ ished product is no doubt humorous in the mind’s eye, but emphasizes Terrific Haircut at PAT PAINTER’S HAIRSTYLIIVG I m CW ,SI AMFOO, CONDITIONER ¿STYLE OB HT 111 M S FMt l i t BRING A FRIEND! $5 DISCOUNT ON: • PERMANENTS • STRAIGHTENING • FROSTING $10 OFF ALL PRODUCTS INCLUDING REDKEN & GEFDEN Long hair specialists — Hair regrowth products and New Man Hairpiece products available. PAT PAINTER’S HMBSTYLIN6 WEHONOR 1011 E. 41 ST CALL TODAY 454-3676 MC. V, AMEX, DISCOVER 4 M i8 L [W5f Ralph J. Branch D.D.S. malfunctions in the joint and its in neighboring muscles result painful and tender jaw muscles, clicking and popping in the joint, locking of the joint, headaches and even earaches. More commonly diagnosed in fe­ males from the mid-20s through 40 years of age, TMJ Syndrom is believed to be caused by muscle tension, clenching of the jaw, grinding teeth, off-bite (maloc­ clusion), rheumatoid arthritis, whiplash, and trauma to the jaw. Anxiety is also suspected as a predisposing factor. Depending on the severity of the disorder, treatment may include relaxation exercises, simple splinting of the jaw, specially-de­ signed bite-plates, or surgery. TMJ DISORDERS The temporomandibular joint of TMJ, is a "hinge" that connects the lower jaw to the skull. For millions of Americans, says the American Dental Association, 2907 Duval 472-5633 rJ Emergency # 443-1861 Gabriel Garcia Marquez won the Nobel Prize for literature in 1982. the extent of the melodramatic pomp and ceremony that occurs af­ ter the death. At times Marquez seems to get bogged down with needless, lengthy descriptions of unrelated places and events, which occasionally makes it difficult for the reader to get back into the action of the story. The au­ thor also tends to jump forward and backward in time at any given moment, which is slightly confus­ ing, but these seem minor problems considering that Marquez’s lush, descriptive style makes every word relevant. As in all stories of unrequited love, there is a resolution at the end. The fragile, antique-lace quality of Love is created by the hope of Ariza and Daza’s reunion, but the sense of precious time lost creates a bit­ tersweet ache in the heart of the reader. The message is simple: “Love was always love, anytime and anyplace, but it was more solid the closer it came to death.” Love in the Time of Cholera Gabriel Garcia Marquez Alfred A. Knopf New York, 1988 $18.95 Austin video stores cater to every taste Classics, cult films add variety to ease of home movie-watching By Patrick Spong Entering his apartment at 2 a.m. after a long day of work or mental abuse at the Undergraduate Library, a typical student falls on his living- room couch. Feeling tired but men­ tally aware, he desires entertain­ ment. This the television provides only an arid wasteland of public service pro­ grams, and all conventional movie houses closed two hours ago. But this student is not lost — this stu­ dent has home videos. late at night, TELEVISION Since their introduction to the market 10 years ago, VCRs have grown enormously in popularity. The reason for this has been ex­ plained by the almost limitless avail­ ability of movies — modem, classic, musical and underground alike — that abound at the numerous video rental outlets. Yet the greatest at­ traction of VCRs is the concept of enjoying a good flick at any time. Videos break down into several categories, and I’ve found it best to distinguish between the different vi­ deo oudets along those lines, so as to know where to find the most of what you want. For the best in new movie selection, I recommend Hasting’s at 2338 Guadalupe St. “ We receive an average of two or three new videos a week,” Hastings manager Robert Singleton said. “ We sometimes have to stock 23 copies of a new release because of the large demand for new movies.” One of the best advantages of new movie video releases is that if you miss the theatrical run of a film, you need only wait a few months for it to come out on video. My favorite ex­ ample of this was Crocodile Dun­ dee, a movie my friends ordered me to see for months, but missed. I fi­ nally caught it a month before the sequel came out and was generally impressed with this humorous story of an outback, down-under redneck helping New York adjust to him. An advantage to the movie indus­ try as well as to video consumers, many a movie that fared poorly in the theatre can save face in the video market. This is fortunate because Americans have proven that the best movies are not always the most suc­ cessful. “ There have been movies that re­ ally flopped when they were released that are some of our best renters. think of going Some producers straight to video after a really bad release,” Singleton said. One of my favorite new releases, Ishtar, has earned me plenty of jeers from fellow video junkies because of its poor run at the box office. The exotic and picturesque landscapes made this movie enjoy­ able, and any movie I can see War­ ren Beatty humiliate himself in is worth the rental. Besides, at 4 a.m., you’ll do worse with cable. scenery Also popularized by the video market have been music videos. These include various short videos organized into video albums, taped concert videos that save a fleeting scene forever, and music movies in the form of modern-day operas. For the best in music videos, from Barry Manilow to Sonic Youth (not ap­ Bella Italia Serving Italian and Continental Specialties prepared fresh daily. TRY OUR FAMOUS BUFFET pizza, pasta, lasagna, soup, salad bar, fresh fruits and pizza dessert only 3.99 FEEDBJVBY 47-ÍTALY • Happy Hour Daily 4-8 pm • 50C Draft Beer • $1.00 Wine Cooler • Catering service • We accept MC, Visa, AMEX & personal checks Bella Italia 2801 Guadalupe OPEN SUN-THU*. 11 ua.-10 p.m.; Fri-Stt 11 >.m .-ll p.m. Dustin Hoffman and Warren Beatty initially flopp i in Ishtar, which finally earned respect on videocassette. pearing together), Waterloo Records at 221-A S. Lamar Blvd. has it. “ We try to stock music films that other places don’t offer because we feel obliged to our primarily music customers,” Waterloo video clerk Kassia Frost said. “ We’re constantly receiving requests for music videos we don’t have available, so this helps us decide what to order. It’s so much better deciding what bands you want to watch instead of letting MTV decide for you.” One of the most intense music vi­ deos I’ve ever rented, and have nev­ er seen anywhere but Waterloo, is the classic Cramps, Live at Napa State Hospital. The combination of the Cramps’ erratic, driving music and the inmates screaming and roll­ ing on the floor can sometimes prove too wicked for even the thickest- skinned. Definitely a late-night must-see freakout video. On a classier note, videos have also made culture available to those of us without cable. The availability of classic black-and-white movies grows constantly, as does the de­ mand. My favorite store for any old movies, classic or otherwise, is The Movie Store at 4301-A Guadalupe St. A man who loves to talk movies, Store manager Murray Messelt, said, “ A lot of people are reluctant to rent older pictures. We get stu­ dents in here who have never seen Casablanca. Once they’ve seen a re­ ally good black-and-white movie, they come back in for more.” One of the more offbeat classics is Errol Flynn’s Captain Blood. One of Flynn’s earliest movies, it was filmed on a humiliating budget and the sets show it, but the mood and the action portray the ultimate swashbuckling-pirate feeling of the black-and-white genre that blows away adventure movies of today. Yet man cannot live on classics alone. On the flip side of the coin of benefits that videos can preserve re­ sides one of my favorite aspects of the video market — cult videos. These are easy to spot in any video store because the boxes are always obnoxiously large just for holding a VHS cassette. Then there are the like Driller characteristic names Killer, Slumber Party Massacre, I Dismembered Mama and I Was a Zombie for the FBI. Most video stores are too sqeam- ish to stock choice slasher flicks like these, so I rely on National Video at 3205 Bee Cave Road. “ Some of this stuff is so bad that it. late night TV wouldn’t buy There are vaults filled with low- budget slasher movies. Sure it’s bad, but it sure beats RamboF’ National Video manager Kirk Sedberry said. Truly the epitome of the cult vi­ deo is The Toxic Avenger. This movie about the first superhero from New Jersey promises a lame plot, stereotypes in every scene, large-breasted high school teases and no fewer than 20 people killed m hu­ miliating positions. Whatever your tastes, visit as many stores as possible to find what you like. If no new releases tickle your fancy, check out one of the old­ er films you find. Sitting through the occasional tur­ key can be worth it when you find that unknown classic. So keep watching, and remember to rewind. 1¡C4 Gü*d^uPe AüsM. T' l “ (512) 429-«W IS IT TIME FOR: [7] CheckUp 0 Cleaning 0 Crown 0 Filling 0 E tc.... “YOUR DENTIST 479-6364 ON THE DRAG” Ji~ jMOOen ’• 1' \ ¡. xuC. J j ¿ .i» tuflx • ic s a r e ,~ t*. J J i *c .w *a e > /.raer.-. J D ' . j j : IMAGES June 6,1988 DIVERSIONS UVE MUSIC KERRVILLE FOLK FESTIVAL (MAY 28-JUNE 12) MON-THU K un Van Sickle, Crow Johnson, Mclis- sa Javors, Caryl P. Weiss, Jan Marra, Jon Ims, Allen Damron, Rick Beresford FRI-SUN Bill Miller, Tom Paxton, Caryl P. Weiss, Don Sanders, Anne Hills, Connie Kaldor, Jayne Voss St Hoyle Osborne Also FRI Gayle Ross, Eliza Gilkyson, Odetta, John Stewart, Beto y Los Fairlaines Also SAT Gayle Ross, Joseph BruneUe & Friends, David Hailey, Sukay, Christine Albert, Steve Earle, Murray McLauchlan, Maines Bros. Also SUN Geezinsiaw Bros., Emily Kaitz, Austin Lounge Lizards, Hal Michael Ketchum, Ponty Bone, Uncle Bonsai, Terry Allen with the Maines Bros. ACAPULCO RESTAURANTE Y CANTINA 7101 Texas 71 West, 288-5393 TUE Open mike WED Kathy Kidd THU Jeff & Jim FRI Tish Hinojosa (early), Summit SAT Tish Hinojosa (early), Francis Anne Kyle A CLUB In Paperbacks Plus, 405 Lavaca St., 474-5488 FRI Guardez Lou, EMG, Atomic Energy Commis­ sion SAT Puffy Brutha M an, M ind Splinters AMIGO’S 1523 T innin Ford Road, 441-3813 SUN , T U E Live T ejano m usic (8pm) ANCHOVIES 503-A E. Sixth S t., 474-6602 T U E -T H U H otcakes FRI-SA T X K E A NTONE’S 2915 Guadalupe St. 474-5314 M ON Super Blues Party with Lou Ann Barton T U E Rockin’ Leon & the Texas M avericks W ED Alan H avnes Blue Band THU Ben Wilis & the Cryin’ Shames FRI Bil Caner & the Blame SAT Johnny Adams, Walter “ Wolfman” Washing­ ton APOLLO’S 300 E. Sixth St., 474-7027 MON-TUE2AM FRI Texas W eather SAT Upaya SUN Solid Senders AUSTIN CREST 111 E. F irst St. FRI Marvin Crow Big Band (9pm) AUSTIN O U TH O U SE 3510 Guadalupe St., 451-2266 TUE Champ Hood Band WED Nasty Brothers THU Brompton’s Cocktail FRI Lillian Standfield Band SAT Michael Hamm Band SUN Bruce Newman BROKEN SPOKE 3101 S. Lamar Blvd., 442-6189 SAT Doug Davis & the Note Ropers CACTUS CAFE Texas Union, music starts 8-9 p.m. MON New artist open stage TUE Eileen I vers, Seamus Egan, Dave Maclsaac WED Jane Gilman THU Odetta FRI Terry Allen SAT John Stewart CAFE ORLEANS 1112 W. Sixth St., 473-2047 FRI-SAT McMillan-Parker Trio (9pm) SUN Jazz Brunch (1 lam-2pm) CAP'N TOM’S BAR-B-Q 11800 N. Lamar Blvd., 834-1858 SAT Bluegrass open mike (7pm) SUN Bluegrass jam (2pm) CAROUSEL LOUNGE 1110 E. 52nd St., 453-9091 TUE-SUN Jay Clark CHANCES 900 Red River St., 472-8273 FRI Two Nice Girls SUN 6th Anniversary Music Festival — Sisters of Swing, Susan Christian, Therapy Sisters, Lizette Esquenazi, His Boy Elroy, Lara Straughn, Bomb­ shells, Nancy Scott, Nine Worlds, Debra Dew, Jan Matney, Shartclls CHEATHAM ST R E ET WAREHOUSE 1 Cheatham, San Marcos, 1-353-9341 TUE Mental Tourist WED Motive THU Quitters FRI Van Wilks SAT Duke Jupiter SUN Public Bulletin CHELSEA ST R E ET PUB Barton Creek Square Mall, 327-7794 FRI, SAT Lame Hilboldt (9pm) CHEZ FRED 9070 Research Blvd., 451 -6494 Live jazz every night CHICAGO HOUSE 607 Trinity St., 473-2542 MON Open mike with Jim Heald WED 1st Anniversary open mike THU Mark Luke Daniels, Jubal Clark FRI Todd Samuson Farewell SAT Chromatics SUN Tito Mcnchaca & friends COLORADO ST . CAFE 705 Colorado St., 479-6346 MON Irish-Scottish jam TUE Ed Miller, Pipo Hernandez, Rich Brotherton WED Open mike with Mark Luke Daniels THU Ed Stonerock FRI John Steinman, Suzi Stern, Paul McKee SAT Therapy Sisters BACK ROOM 2015 E. Riverside Drive, 441-4677 MON Kaizy, DiGrazia, Jake Wiseman, Joy Dome & the Rhythm Slaves TUE Kings of the Sun, Band From Hell, Enigma WED Satyre, Friday, Marshall Law, Maskerade THU Gypsy Rogue, Wrath, Ice 9, Max Factor FRI Onyxx, Lance Keltner, Rockin’ Horse, ASK SAT Raging Saint, Toko Raaz, Progress, DiGrazia SUN No One Safe, i2i, Mystery Theater, I Confess BARB’S W ATERING HOLE 8619 Burnet Road, 467-9547 SAT Jerry Sires BASIN ST. W EST 1112 W. Sixth S t.,469-0552 FRI, SAT Johnny Bachman Trio (9 .15pm j BEAR CREEK SALOON 10542 Manchaca Road, 280-0267 FRI Melissa Miller, Lee Harmon St Eight-Second Ride SAT Tom Smith Band CO N TIN EN TA L CLUB 1315 S. Congress Ave., 441-2444 MON I-Tex, DJ: Jah Fred TUE Jesse Taylor & Tornado Alley WED Trout Fishing in America FRI Zydeco Ranch SAT Grey Ghost (2-6pm) D O N N ’S D EPOT 1600 W. Fifth St., 478-0330 MON Larry Boyd TUE Donn Adelman WED Loy Blanton THU Jess DeMaine FRI Donn Adelman SAT Loy Blanton DRI-DOC PUB 4919 Hudson Bend Road, 266-1044 MON Open mike with Bow Brannon THU Carlos Thompson Band FRI Chain Reaction SAT Lake Snakes SUN Summit D R ISK ILL 117 E. Seventh St., 474-5911 MON-SAT Connie Blake, Barbara Emaurald 18:30pm-12:30am) FILLIN G STA TIO N 801 Barton Springs Ruad, 477-1022 WED-SAT Alex Coke and Rich Harney GREEN MESQUITE BBQ & BEER GARDEN 1400 Barton Springs Road, 479-0485 Music 8pm TUE W.C. Clark Blues Revue WED Flaky Biscuit Boys THU Preacher Keen and the Prodigal Sons FRI Alamo Choir SAT Erik St the Offbeats, Shaw Ledbetter SUN Blues Jam with Matt Robinson GRUENE HALL 1281 Gruene, New Braunfels, 1-625-0142 TUE Paul Farrell Duo (7:30pm) W ED Roben Keen (7:30pm) THU Rob Watkins (7:30pm) FRI Bow Brannon SAT Omar dr the Howlers (8pm) SUN Jimmie D ak Gilmore (9pm) HEADLINERS EAST 406 E. Sixth St., 476-3488 FRI, SAT A n St. Hilaire HENRY’S BAR 6317 Burnet Road, 453-9594 FRI Lone Star Country HIGHLAND MALL WED Clifford Zirkel's Big Band Sound HOLE IN THE WALL 2528 Guadalupe St., 472-5599 MON Steve Reynolds TUE Teisco Del Rey & the Nutrockers WED Mike Landschoot THU Sarah Brown Band FRI Vanguards SAT Two Hoots St a Holler SUN Julie Howard FRI Inquiring M inds, Bluesprint SAT EXP J.T . MANORS 290 E. Manor Road, 272-4528 TH U Open mike with Logan Starr LAUGHING LYNX (Comedy) Embassy Suites North Hotel, 5901 N. 1-35,450-0203 TH U Ray Anderson LIBERTY LUNCH 405 W. Second St., 477-0461 W ED Pogues, Luka Brown TH U Last Roundup, Two Hoots & a Holler FR I, SAT Killer Bees W ED , TH U Texas Weather FR I, SAT Lifeseyes PEARL’S OYSTER BAR Colonnade Shopping Center, 9003 Research Blvd., 339-7444 MON Jimmy Lee H uff TU E Rockin’ Numonias W ED Solid Senders TH U Bobby Mack St Night Train FRI Mystic Knights of Amnesia SAT Paul Haake SUN Mannish Boys HU T’S SUN Tex Thomas and the Danglin’ Wranglers (noon) LITTLE WHEEL 12013 U.S. 290 W est, 288-4268 Music starts at 9 :30pm FRI Crossfire SAT Crossties HYATT REGENCY 208 Barton Springs Road, 477-1234 Bnachwater THU (6pm), FRI SAT (7pm) Mady Kaye T no FnnthiBi TH U Jamie Hilbrothe FRI, SAT Jamie Hilbrothe, Myra Spector JOE’S GENERIC BAR A BEACH CLUB 315 E. Sixth St., 480-0171 TUE Stringing Nuts WED D T h ik , Serious Fashion THU Blueaprint LIME STREET STATION 323 St 325 E. Sixth St., 478-8541 Music starts at 9:30pm MON Hot Chexx TU E,W ED TH U Michael Michael St the Max, Lifeacyes FRI Michael Michael & the Max, Ddtabk Take SAT Michael Michael & the Max, Double Take, Wa­ ter the Dog SUN Bizness « NORTON’S ALL NIGHT 407 E. Sixth St., 472-MS! RADISSON HOTEL LOBBY LOUNGE 700 San Jacinto Blvd., 476-3700 TU E Intermezzo W ED McColl St Tracey TH U Intermezzo FR I, SAT Ernie Mae M ilkr SUN Jeff Mellmer Duo RAVEN’S 603 Red River St., 482-9272 MON Buddy & John TU E Shane Decker St the Vibrotux Cowboys W ED Tony Perez TH U Inside Straight, W .C. Clark FRI Ahrin Crow SAT Butch Hancock St the Sunspots SUN Kent Finlay’s Songwriters’ Showcase RITZ THEATRE 320 E. Sixth St., 4794)054 TU E Corkscrew Night WED Poot Hoot with Michael Maye BIG MAMOU 2008 S. Congress Ave., 445-2080 TUE Hoot Nite with Mike Alvarez THU Duke Jupiter (9pm) FRI Texas Instruments, Wigglies f9pm) SAT Shallow Reign, 3 on a Hill BLACK CAT LOUNGE 313^ E. Sixth St., no phone BOARDWALK BEACH CLUB 215 E. Sixth St., 479-8601 TUE THU Rick Flower & the Change FRI Wynnd SAT Nobody’s Bid ness BRANDING IRON RESTAURANT RR 620 at Texas 71,263 2827 WED Tropical Denny THU Summit FRI Jimmy Ray Rockabilly SAT Rond Hog BREEZY’S RR 620, I M i k N . of Lakeway, 266-1979 WED Julie Howard THU Bruce Newman FRI Mickey Baasinger SCHOLZ GARDEN 1607 San Jacinto Blvd., 477- 4171 TH U Thursday Night Irregulars FRI Paul Glasse & Company SAT Ai Dressen & the Super Swing Revue SHUCK FIN N ’S 906 Congress Ave., 477-1244 TU E Bobby Mack W ED W .C. Clark Blues Revue TH U Solid Senders FRI W.C. Clark Blues Revue SAT Bobby Mack & Night Train SIXTH STREET COUNTRY CLUB 508 E. Sixth St., 469-9234 W ED Michael Michael & the Max TH U Supply & Demand, Multiple Choice FRI Daddios, Penguins SAT Penguins, Look Out SOUTHERN PALMS RESTAURANT 607 San Jacinto Blvd., 477-4538 W ED Seventh Sense FRI Stick People SAT Steel Power STEAMBOAT 403 E. Sixth St., 478-2912 MON Van Wilks TUE Joy Dome & the Rhythm Slaves, Roman Can­ dles W ED View THU Ro-Tel & the Hot Tomatoes FRI View SAT Extreme Heat SUN Latest Flame STUBB’S BAR-B-Q 4001 N. 1-35,465-9177 FRI Smokcy Joe Miller jazz jam (4:30pm), Maines Brothers SUN Sundav Jam with emcee Dee Purkevpile (6pm), David Hammond & Burn Steady SYM PHONY s q u a r e 1101 Red River St., 476-6064 W ED Bill Oliver (morning show) FRI James Polk Q uintet, Up (8:30pm) SAT Wagoneers, Jimmie Dale Gilmore (8:30pm) SUN Gabrieli Brass Quintet 'Gainst the Wall TEXAS TAVERN Texas Union, 471-9231 FRI Omar & the Howlers SAT Poi Dog Pondering, Hundredth Monkey THREADGILL’S 6416 N. Lamar Blvd., 451-5440 W ED Jimmie Dale Gilmore THUNDERCLOUD BEER GARDEN 203 E. Riverside Drive, 447-7696 Music starts at 9pm MON Michael Hamm Band FRI Fractured Soul SUN ASK OTHER CLUBS AMNIZIA 601-AE. Sixth St., 479-6318 ANN’S LITTLE BOTTLE 11940 Manchaca Road, 282-9804 ARENA CCCXIX 319 E. Sixth St. AUSTINIGHTS 9515 N. Lamar Blvd., 837-4825 BACK FORTY (O.HENRY’S) 407 Neches St.,478-0411 BAILEY’S 6519 N. Lamar Blvd., 454-1398 BIRRAPORETTI’S 905 Barton Springs Road, 480-8446 BOATHOUSE 407 Colorado St., 474-9667 R n M R f l ’C 5736 Manchaca Road, 448-2788 CAFE ST. CHARLES 333 Guadalupe St. CLUB ISLAS 217 Congress Ave., 473-0798 COMMON INTEREST 8440 Burnet Road, 453-67% HITCHING POST LOUNGE FM 1327, Creedmoor, 243-1263 LUMBERYARD 16511 Bratten Lane, 255-9622 MACEOS 304 W. Fourth St., 477-0970 PAN-AMERICAN CLUB 1800 E. Sixth St., 477-0615 SCOOT INN 1308 E. Fourth St., 472-0023 STOUFFER HOTEL LOBBY BAR 9721 Arboretum, 343-2626 THE VICTORY GRILL 1102 E. 11th St., 477-0257 WALLER CREEK PLAZA HOTEL 500 N. 1-35,474-0948 Lobby bar; Lloyd’s of Austin WEST END 727 W. 23rd St., 479-8889 VISUAL ARTS TOULOUSE 402 E. Sixth St., 478-0744 MON La Franz TUE Trik-Trax W ED Daddios THU La Franz FRI Supply & Demand SAT Woody & the Rudders WYI If 1 400 E. Sixth St., 472-3712 T H U , FRI Brew SAT Human Touch BAHAUS PICTURE FRAMING 610 E. Seventh St., 478-1239 Black and Color Drawings by Paul Russell; batiks, silk paintings and marbled works by Cosctte Russell Through Aug. 1 G.W. CARVER MUSEUM 1165 Angelina St., 472-4809 Tales o f the Orishas Stories and illustrations by Charles Bible Through June 10 NU HAIR DO Hairstyles for men and women M o n . - F r i . l O i s h t o 6 i s h S a t . l O i s h t o 4 is h 2222 Rio Grande d-106 478-8737 June 6, 1988 IMAGES 9 GALERIA SIN FRONTERAS 1211 E. Seventh St., 478-9448 Art Forms: A Survey o f Contemporary Three-Di­ mensional Works Exhibition of sculpture, construction and installation featuring Michael Amescua, Marsha Gomez, Johnny Martinez, Mike O'Brien, Max Pruneda, Cecilia Ran­ gel, Jose Luis Rivera, Carmen Samora, David San­ tos, Michael Walker and Steve Wiman Through July 29 HARRY RANSOM CENTER Austin Photography Collection Forty photos from 1903-1939 by Christina Broom Through June 30 LAGUNA GLORIA ART MUSEUM 3809 W. 35th St., 458-8191 The Texas Fine Arts Association's New American Talent 1988 Exhibition of painting, sculpture, photography, graphic art and assemblage from 61 new artists na­ tionwide. Through June 26 PRO-JEX GALLERY 109 E. Fifth St., 472-7707 Palestine 1988 Twenty-five journalistic black-and white photos se lected from Keith Dannemiller’s assignment in the Gaza Strip and West Bank. Through June 30 THEATRE , ---------- B. IDEN PAYNE TH EA TRE Merrily We Roll Along Tickets on sale June 6 June 17-18, 22-25, 29-July 2 at 8 p m CAPITOL CITY PLAYHOUSE 214 W. Fourth St., 472-1855 Billy’s l ^ s t Broadcast Randall Wheatley directs his newest comedy, follow­ ing up Bugs in the System and Along for the Ride WED-SAT at 8 p.m June 9-July 9 HYDE PARK THEATRE 511 W. 43rd St., 452-6688 American Realism FRI-SUN at 8 p.m , with SUN' matinees June 5 and 26 at 2 30 p m Through June 26 LIVE OAK THEATRE 311 Nueces St., 472-5143 77te Robber Bridegroom Musical based on Eudora Welty's critically acclaimed novel WED-SAT at 8 p m., SUN matinees at 2 p m Through June 18 * Earn While You Learn Sales trainees are now being hired for open­ ings on the Doily Texan advertising soles staff for the Summer Session. Advertising soles experience is o real plus. Future employers value this experience. Gain money, experience and the opportunity to join the Texan soles staff offer successful completion of the training. Application Deadline — Noon Thursday, June 9 Applications Available Texas Student Publications 3.210 Campus 471-1865 T h e Da il y T e x a n The University of Texas or Austin is an Equal Opportunity Affirmanve Aaron t npioyer 16 IMAGES June 6,1968 g g | MUSIC CVB retains style despite new influences But, whde Camper Van Beetho­ ven’s latest release, Our Beloved Revolutionary Sweetheart, incorpo­ rates folk, Russian, reggae and met­ al, it manages to do so only on the Campers’ terms. That is, they are manipulating the various genres in­ stead of adapting their sound to fit them. The group’s seventh album — its first on major label Virgin Records — is an innovative and enjoyable record both because these influences are used in an appealing manner and because they are so interesting on their own. The songs are, basically, a bit dark in mood and complicated in instrumentation but traditional enough to follow. The Campers re­ tain a playful, even willful, inno­ cence despite the extensive develop­ ment of their music. And, just as the Campers like to work songs to a climax in a compli­ cated, subtle fashion, so does the al­ bum crescendo, beginning at a low point with Eye o f Fatima Parts One and Two. The song merely samples ‘Camper Van Bee­ thoven is manipulat­ ing the various genres instead of adapting its sound to fit them.’ their style, with hints of the strong bassline, creative guitar lead and psychedelic violin that will be used much more effectively later on. O Death, a song reminiscent of the Rolling Stones’ Ventilator Blues, is carried both musically and thematically by Lowery’s accom­ plished lyrics and flat, but appeal­ ing, vocals. His singing has a dis­ tinct Gordon Gano-ness, but always works well into the songs, nonethe­ less. His vocals enhance the unset­ tling surrealness of the lyrics with just the right touch of nervous mania. The next two songs, She Divines Water and Devil Song aren’t any­ thing special, but are just offbeat enough to keep the album moving into the wonderful One o f These Days. With another good effort from Lowery and nice intsrumenta- tion from guitarist Greg Lisher and jack-of-all-musical-trades Jonathan Segel, it floats along very well to the clever, powerful Turquoise Jewelry. The B-side begins with the instru­ mental Waka. Carried by Victor Krummenacher’s bass line, it alter­ nates between Segel’s sweetly melo­ dic fiddle and a complete rock-out with Lisher riding right over the vi­ olin part with a crunching guitar lead. The Campers are at their most folkish in Change Your Mind, which curiously sounds a bit like the Beatles’ When I ’m Sixty-Four. My Path Belated incorporates an inter­ esting effect with Lisher’s guitar matching Lowery’s vocals in a straight-up, quick rock song. A little bit of country emerges in Never Go Back — a rather simplis­ tic, but likable song with subtle reg­ gae elements in Lisher’s guitar. Lisher also shines in The Fool as he runs over some familiar material in a stylish, haunting manner. While there’s not much chance of it reaching the top 40, the wonderful Tania may be the album’s best song. Segel’s violin creaks and whines over a beautiful melody but some­ how sounds smooth. Lisher gets in on the act with backing guitar and, at one point, the two musicians al­ ternate stanzas as drummer Chris Pedersen quickens the tempo. Intri­ cate both in its melodies and its rhythms, Tania showcases all of the Campers’ ample talents. Seemingly limitless creativity, and an uncanny ability to incorporate world music forms without a hint of condescension towards those styles, has enabled the Campers to incorpo­ rate all of these elements into their own style and make this album so very enjoyable. Camper Van Beethoven Our Beloved Revolution, ry Sweetheart Virgin By Joe Sims More often than not, when a band turns to outside musical influences for inspiration, it signals a lack of creativity within. Bands like this of­ ten end up compromising to the dif­ ferent styles and losing a bit of indi­ viduality, if not integrity. Erasure’s sound goes beyond beat been treated to in recent years. And unlike the majority of syn­ thesizer-dominated bands, Vince Clark and Andy Bell have always managed to keep focused on creat­ ing real music, not just string of catchy sounds. It seems particularly fitting that Clark should be the leader of a band that has asserted itself as masters of the dance genre, after having co-founded such innovative bands as Yazoo and Depeche Mode. But as enjoyable as his work in those groups may have been, Clark’s 1985 collaboration with Bell — who answered an ad in Melody Maker to get the job — marked the beginning of easily the most creative stage of his career thus far. Their debut album, 1986’s Wonderland, seemed a logical pro­ gression from Clark’s previous work, and Circus, released in ’87, showcased a more soulful, mature version of the Erasure sound. But The Innocents represents a com­ pletely new plateau. The highlights come quickly, as the album-opening A Little Re­ spect is not only the finest song the band has ever recorded, but easily one of the very best tunes of the year. And when that synth comes popping in over the marching beat on Phantom Bride you almost in­ stinctively look for the dance floor. Erasure The Innocents Sire By Rob Walker Ya gotta get up; ya gotta sing along; ya gotta dance. the With the release of their third album of original material, The In­ nocents, two-man English band Erasure has moved well ahead of an increasingly unoriginal pack of dance bands. Actually, The Innocents is more than just a dance album, it’s a reason to dance in itself. Characterized by pure songwrit­ ing skill and near-perfect hooks, Erasure has never relied on either gimmicky production or weedy guitars characterizing much of the “progressive” music the public has Dancing to The Innocents may result in a dazed, frazzled look — as demonstrated here by Erasure. The song exemplifies textbook hookwriting: you will know all the words to the chorus after one lis­ ten. The band throws a bit of a gos­ pel twist into Yahoo!, a song as in­ fectiously jubilant as its title im­ plies. Clark and Bell finally remove all doubt as to their mastery of this form of songwriting in Imagina­ tion, which, like most of the al­ bum, will even make you think a bit, should you bother to listen to the verses. In fact, the apparent contradic­ tions between Erasure’s upbeat musical style and bleak lyrical con­ tent paint the world as a sort of pleasantly hopeless place, where • | - V . Í children suffer and life is cruel, as “the bullets scream from gun to gun.” But all that stuff is going on “out there,” far beyond the walls surrounding the dance floor. Lgain, the consistency of The Innocents makes it hard to pick fa­ vorites; the above songs were picked almost at random. Only Sixty-five Thousand, of everything on die album, seems out of place. Basically, the song uses an unimag­ inative hip-hop beat, lifts a M/A/R/S bassline, and steals its riffs from Janet Jackson. Obviously an after­ thought, the tune has no place on an album of this quality. But all nitpicking aside, The In­ nocents should, and most likely will, be heralded as the best dance release of the year. The recent work of the Communards and De- peche Mode — probably Erasure’s closest competitors in the world of pure dance music — pales by com­ parison. In fact, the dance charts have been sorely in need of a frenetic, soulful injection like this for some time. Sandwiched between ultra- extended mixes by the latest tren- doids from Europe and three-note experimentations by American avant-industrial bands, the intelli- gendy composed songs of The In­ nocents should come as a very wel­ come breath of air. MORE MUSIC Prince’s originality still defies demands of pop June 6,1988 IMAGES 11 Prince Lovesexy Paisley Park Prince The Black Album Not commercially released By Ren Scherr I think that's the problem with the music industry today. When a person does get a hit, they try to do it again the same way ... I have the follow-up album to 1999. I could put it out and it would probably sell what 1999 did. Rolling Stone, 1986 Clashing with musical banality is no easier today than it was 200 years ago when a brash young Mozart penned The Abduction From the Seraglio. Around the World in a Day, Prince’s own Turkish opera of sorts, delved into the realm of East­ ern mysticisms and unfamiliar sounds. As a result, he failed. That is, he failed to adequately bore the pundits of pop with Mauve Rain or 1899. Prince’s ninth and tenth al­ bums, The Black Album and Lo­ vesexy, continue to send a dear mes­ sage — if you don’t like it, don’t buy the record. The latest material reaches new extremes of unbridled self-indul­ gence and shameless narcissism. While the casual listener might not be able to discern the method be­ hind the madness, Prince Rogers Nelson has never made an album suited to casual listening. The fact is, the purple ethic of scrupulous originality feeds on near solipsism. When truest to himself, he is the an­ tithesis of the premasticated and the insulting; his music is not easily ac­ cessible, any more than a patient’s neuroses are immediately accessible to a psychiatrist. Though the two new albums ar­ rived on the scene simultaneously — the unreleased Black Album via the black market — their moods and messages are shockingly different. While Lovt exy tends to focus upon the painful search for spiritual solu­ tions to emotional conflict, The poi t His Royal Badness, when he deckles to dress, looks mighty sharp in his tux. Too bad he wasn’t as well-clothed on the album cover of Lovesexy. ‘The latest material reaches new ex­ tremes of unbridled self-indulgence and shameless narcis­ sism.’ pleasurable, raw and sweaty. Although Prince consistently de­ livers a remarkable level of creativity on The Black Album, he seems par­ ticularly hell-bent on both outdoing himself and on pushing back the hordes of his imitators in no uncer­ tain terms. Bob George is a character sketch Prince created by recording his speaking voice at about one-third peed. The result is a wholly sepa­ rate entity, a brilliandy nt need cross between Satan and Fred San­ ford. If that doesn't put Terence Trent Jackson into perspective, maybe the hole that Set Yourself Free bums through your turntable will. In this new classic, Prince’s falset­ to flirts with a full range of octaves, W licking ice cream. The twisted lyrics are hilariously filthy, and a panting beat consummates the sordid sounds. “This song’s about a high- class model/In Paris, France,” and from the sound of it, she used to work for Jimmy Swaggart. Have you ever felt sorry for a rapper? In Honeymoon (Dead On It), a not-so-playful rap parody, Prince takes on the “Negroes from Brooklyn” on their own turf and ends up making Public Enemy sound like they need assertiveness training. Copping a patented Doug E. Fresh syncopation, he asserts that “The rap-pcrs pro-blems/Usu- tone-deaf.” ally stem-from/Being His dead-pan snideness makes for the coldest sarcasm ever recorded — “I got a gold tooth that costs more than your house ... and I’m badder than the Wicked Witch.” This album is not about honeyed phrases and floating tempos. If there is one song that defines the attitude of The Black Album, it’s Superfuck- ingcalifragisexy: “You take em’ to your crib then you tie em’ to a chair and you make funny faces and they get real scared then you turn on the heater/And you play with yourself ... and you turn em’ on.” It really isn't surprising that of ev- ^cmhiafcoo.thc«lbum^oolyJ^Cfl R in Love ended up on Lovesexy. This record is no safe place for a bal­ lad, particularly not a delicate one painstakingly crafted from vaguely dissonant sounds and smatterings of onomatopoeia. Conceptually, Lovesexy is the strongest album ever to come out of Paisley Park. In past albums, Prince has been inspired by the tension be­ tween love and sex, especially with regard to the expression of love within the context of perceived “dir­ tiness.” Lovesexy serves as the vehi­ cle for the crystallization of his life’s work. The word itself is symbolic of that which he conceives to be the unification of the spiritual and the carnal — God. The New Power Soul band, featuring Sheila E. on drums, Cat on vocals and Prince on “whatever,” brings to mind the complementarity of the old Revolution — multitudi­ nous voices, a rich mixture of sounds and a real sense of unity characterize their new sound. Prince launches the album with Eye No, in which he frames the con­ flict between God and “Spooky Electric,” while still managing a beat that will have even the most dance-shy atheist on the floor. Anna Stesia, an intimate atone- this album, revealing a side of the superstar usually reserved for the most obscure 12-inch flip sides. “Save me Jesus,” he pleads, “I’ve been a fool/How could I forget that You are the rule?” This marks the first time that Prince has mentioned Jesus by name and, given his subser­ vient tone, it appears he has ceased entertaining the possibility that he is somehow personally involved with the Second Coming. Still, as in the case of Morrissey, Prince’s answer to the question of “Which rules which, the mind or the body, love or sex?” must ulti­ mately be ... “I don’t know.” Anna Stesia represents spiritual conscious­ ness coupled with the ironic anguish of willing spirit and weak flesh. Welcome to the human condition. At once deified and mocked by his own sense of Nietzschian decon­ structionism, the diminutive “Superman” finds himself climbing up the cross in one song and, as in Lady Cab Driver, cursing his mediocrity at not having been bom “handsome and tall” in another. The Black Album and Lovesexy each offer rewarding journeys into the mind of a man whose self-im­ posed demands dictate that his exis­ tence be strictly limited to one of jaent f a jaat-sus.i&at thcJicaaat,tyoplaccs^heaven j ; y ' v/ v' ■ . ' A . . ________________ 1 By I b Wm The local music junkies, they’re always saying things like, “Aww, man, you should have been here when [Raul’s or Club Foot or the Armadillo World Headquarters] was open. This is nothing compared to what we had then.” And you wait for them to add, “You poor, snivel­ ing fool. Those were the days when men were men and the sun was bright and the women never said, ‘Not without a condom, you don’t.’ The whole world’s gone to hell in a handbasket ever since.” Whatta bunch of Oscar-Mayered baloney, I iquor. That’s the key. The trick is to build up a steady li­ quor clientele that doesn’t really give a damn about the mu- sic- owner of Big Steve Chaney, tnou True, the Cave Chib, Flying Circus and old Continental Club all closed in the past year, tanking even yours truly, at the sprightly age of 20, feel a little like an old-timer (as in: Welcome to the Geritol dub, pal. You’re condemned to listening to Classic Rock for the rest of your life.) But even as nightclubs close faster than you can say “minimum drink­ ing age,” new dives are opening up in their places. Witness the ump­ teenth reincarnation of the Conti­ nental Gub (in all its glowing pink glory), or the advent of the not-so- Big Mamou, which has relatively ad­ venturous bookings plus a bonus —- Cajun food in the daytime. Meanwhile, Brad First —- ex­ booking agent for Club Foot and owner of the defunct Coiffure, er, Cave Club — has yet another nightspot up his T-shirt sleeves. Now this sounds really cool: He’s going after the old Continental Qub types — that haircut crowd was “a real fickle audience,” he said. “When you spend hours and hours in front of the mirror putting mousse in your hair, putting on your finest lingerie, and then you go into a club and sweat like a pig — that’s just a real turn-off,” First said. This time First is going to book original guitar rock. More about that later. But back to the main sub­ ject, the alleged fall of the club scene (It says so right here in front of me. on the outline my editor wrote for this story: The Death of the Austin Club Scene.) “Some of the clubs have closed, but that’s just the natfoe of the busi­ ness,” said Louis Meyers, a music industry consutamt. “There are more promoters in tOWB than ever before. “I mean, bakeries dose all the time, too,” be said. “The bands th ||; are good won’t have any problems folding a place to play/’ All the ugly whkmg probably Started several years back, when the economy sneered and gave Austin die finger. The J"*" worse after the new drinking age took effect. But, hey, a decent number of ven­ ues survived. Generally, they’ve had a Ktlfoy core of older-than-21 al­ coholics who are bellied up to the bar all the time (the Hole in the Wall, Antone’s, the Back Room) and/or steady infusions of outside money (Antooe’s, the Back Rqom). “Liquor. That’s the key,” said Big Mamou owner Steve Chaney. “The trick is to build up a steady liquor clientele that doesn’t really give at t he| v- the lifeline! J Lunch, foe— B W W W I place, righi? So it’s not surprising that you heir black rumors about its fate every year. The latest threat comes from the City Council, which wants to put a convention center —| oh, sony, a “civic center” — down­ town where the Lunch is now. s m ' © «Some of the clubs have dosed, but that’s j u t the nature^ o f tfc f li — m m m s B W B B are m o i « f l W ^ m | tow nH fore. close | • ’■J Ooh, tmffic Frank, go, ¡ , The Cave Chih was another « am ­ ple of a venue foot down because it ignored the rime-honored tradition of akohoi.^G^oofofoa’t^ rfford it, lamgd , Oops. ; It also booked lots of hordooro-to- I rather dance dam ym re- druak (not lo tcirific). ' W w d ít you shoid d ^ l d ^ ^ y I coholwhen you’re ott | ' Reason No. 2 for ckw ii^A ntaa chibs keep opening up. “Peopfc.ee I lots of money in die d ab , arnismr you’re making lots of money, and I want to get into it,” Chaney said. i j icre’s no longevity. But who wants to build a fortune I 75 cons it a time? That’s why I 1 There is a good-news part to all 1 this: First has learned from his mis­ takes. His new place, which will be across the street from the Black Cat I Lounge, already has a liquor license, i It has air conditioning. And no more death danceterias. “We don’t want to find out what's coo) and what’s j I got,” he said. “We just want to play § |th ¿ fucking music.” j jjJ¡§Cut to the M $ Mamou. S g m RpChaney knows foe odds. He knows B h e ain’t gonna get rich running al I club any more than Jesse Jadwmfoj I gonna get dreadlocks. On a ^ ^ B I packed night he inakesw ia|fob^B I selling beer and wine. H But Chaney’s like some fiy that of «rifltof Raid. He |in .the till he’s remiaded^^^B club won’t be openforevmj V : V “I don’t resttv mind. ^ « 11111 for a living tt my gumbo, but linesmmc.” Chancvseid.^^^^^^8 w w Besides the imdesthH^^^BH w -.—.• ; ^ i . _ ..ofoer ivol are ■ South By SoudtWcst foe industry PR end mecha cace chat «wallowed everybody in Ausfok music for three days and then spit them ome the pavement as they gmped for air ... 300 of them marveled about foe long, strange trip and tried to sell their logbook entries, and two of them mumhlrri about how the befiy of foe bealf « |* hut and iitftn Mis. , / * f y Iéíy ' led Imb on Drops. , i f . fa c e d R L B J« o |et i» .hit «aether. Kind iz T o Z , became I nT hen there’, the Muñe Indue- I try Zone, but Meyers said that isn’t I worth a hill of used Kleenexes. “It’ll I help people with money. It means virtually nothing to 98 percent of the I people. ... IfWecan’t draw people to I Austin with what we’ve got now, a I music industry district is not going I to help,” he said- W h e n you spend hours and hours In front of the mirror üíSPíía*0 " 1011 |Ü®lttíÍBatBkea ^^Hthstsiustareal 'jpgjf j-'_. #■ rirst, lormer p™" ^ pr°P“ jC sjS ? ■ ■ m f o u m ta l G ub just hired Wayne M ^sL WU1 Seaton’s former manager, to do foe booking. I sup- K^ H t f o s is good newt, but who H » right now? It's a^ trsnsfusion of sorts and foe blood hasn't been tested. Never mind. The point of aB this upbeatnem being; Lighten up./aU . "■M í * („ m m .. . v . : IS KING wm m m m m m ■ o k Suppose you’ve read all about this holy mira­ g e called the “scene” (a damn obnoxious word, after it’s been ground into your ear at least 8,349 times) M d you want to be part of the glitter; you want to rub up against grungy musicians and lick their sweat off your lips; you want to steal pasty cheese from deli trays in the dressing room; you want to get laid. Here are a couple of dozen places to get your live-original- music jollies, broken down very roughly into types of music played: | ■ Acoustic: the Cactus Cafe, Chicago House (both with open mike Mondays), Colorado Street Cafe (open mike Wednesdays). ■ in f o or bhies-influenced music: Antone’s, the Green Mesquite BBQ & Beer Garden (rock on Fri­ days), PearlYOyster Bar, Shuck Finn’s, Stubb’s Bar- B-Q. ■ Country or country-type rock: Austin Out- ■ Various kinds o f rock: Back Room (metal-type. ! with assorted rock on Tuesdays), Big Mamou (acous­ tic on Tuesdays), Biraporetti’s, Black Cat Lounge, Continental Club, Hole in the Wall, Joe’s Generic Bar & Beach Q ub, Liberty Lunch (also a big reggae mecca), Loft (thrash), Raven’s, Ritz (metal on Tues- i days), Steamboat, Texas Tavern, Thundercloud Beer Garden. V And once in a while die Co-ops (like Taos) have shows. A strong, beginning band with a demo and press pack has a decent chance of getting booked at most of these {daces. As for audiences, it’s not expensive and not half as painful as people think to explore a live i music venue. So get on out to those clubs and drink. Those who are about to rock salute you. WflM r K f llf * v V | l i n m r i g x u i g p n c » I house, Broken Spoke. 14 IMAGES Juné 6,1988 TUNE IN Arthur HBO (Cable 42) 7 p.m. Right about now you’re asking yourself, “ What am I going to do? My lousy friends have taken off without me, and tonight’s episode of Alf is a rerun.” Don’t panic, because Dudley Moore and Liza Minnelli have jumped into the Rolls and are com­ ing to the rescue. Granted, calling any movie with either Minnelli or Moore great seems inappropriate, but you almost have to in the case of Arthur. This 1981 release comes complete with a humorous script, good acting and an overall undeniable charm. And to top it off, the sequel is due to hit first-run theaters fairly soon, so this would be a great opportunity to refresh those overworked memory cells — and have a few good laughs in the process. — Karen Adams PRIME TIME 7 :0 0 p m 0 {7 j KATE & ALLIE Kate m eets a cab driver and b e c o m e s e n v io u s of h is un structured lifestyle w hen he e x p lain s that he left a terrific lob s o he could p u rsu e h is art (R) Q © S ABC MONDAY NIGHT BASEBALL (L) Q O 3$ ALF A L F and the k id s give Kate and Willie a se c o n d h o n e ym o o n , w hen A L F fears that their m arriage is troubled (R ) Q 0 £2) A-TEAM 0 ( 3 MACNEILI LEHRER NEWSHOUR 0 B U C K SHOWCASE Featuring U Z E B 1985 0 MOVIE DIRTY DANCING (1 9 8 7 ) Jennifer G rey Patrick S w a y ze A yo u n g girl c o m e s of age during the end of su m m e r vacation in the C a tskills op e n in g her e y e s to the w a y s of the world P G 1 3 g 0 *>/> MOVIE WHERE THE BUFFALO ROAM (1980) Bill Murray. Peter Boyle An infamous lournalist trying to meet deadlines for a fictional magazine is sidetracked by his attorney s wild schemes and plans R O NASHVILLE NOW Jerry Jeff Walker Roy Bookbinder 0 RIPTIDE Arrivederci Baby O MAKE ROOM FOR DADDY Rusty s Punishment Danny benches Flusty for poor grades before an important basketball game and everyone tries to make him change his mind 0 CAGNEY AND U C E Y 0 THE NUCLEAR G U U G (1986) The horror of forced labor in the Soviet Union is revealed in this British documentary featuring film clips secretly shot in the U S S R NR 0 PERSPECTIVE Cash from the Trash A look at alternative uses for waste 0 LIVING PU N ET: PORTRAIT OF THE EARTH Attenborough becomes weightless as he joins the falcons, pollen and squirrels of the air 0 * * * * * MOVIE ARTHUR (1981) Dudley Moore Liza Minnelli A rich, irresponsible playboy must decide between a wealthy existence with a dull heiress or a life of poverty with the waitress he loves PG 0 BASEBALL NCAA World Series Game 8 from Omaha NE (L) 0 PU Y B O Y COMEDY THEATRE: WHO DARES WINS 0 * * MOVIE THE MONEY PIT (1986) Tom Hanks, Shelley Long When a young couple needs a new home in a hurry they find a beautiful mansion in the country that isn t quite the bargain it seems to be PG Q 0 S W ISS FAMILY ROBINSON The Slave Ship A slave trader stops at the island for repairs and the R o b in s o n s have to surrender a slave they ve rescued in order to save Fred 7 : 0 5 p m 0 * * * MOVIE THE LONG HOT SU M M ER (1958] Paul Newman Joanne Woodward A young man arrives m a small Southern town dominated by a wealthy landowner and changes the lives of his strong willed daughter and weakling son 7 :3 0 p m 0 ( D DESIGNING WOMEN When Charlene faces an ethical crisis, she takes a stand or, her convictions and resigns from her church (R) 0 0 THE HOGAN FAMILY David struggles to keep the house to hirnself during a hot date, while Sandy tries to avoid a blind date with an Elvis impersonator (R ) Q KVUE ■ a C B S This Morning " Good Morning America KTBC KXAN KBVO KLRU BET MAX WGN NASH USA NICK TBS ■ Today Jetsons GEO ( 05) Hbil (Cont) (Cont) Bozo Flintstones Mr. Roaers ( 35) B'wt Fat Free Movie: Dirtv • Happening Bewitched Sesame Street ( 05) Little House Lose Wght Dancing Make Cash (6:00) Cartoon Express Dr. Snuggle Today's Soc Pinwhee! 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Gnom Today’s Spc Citv of Gol Lassie Gadget Can’t on TV Dennis Keepers Duckula Can't on TV Double Dare Make Rm Mr. Ed M y 3 S o n s D Reed Laugh In Car 54 Monkees Ann Sothern Make Rm Mr. Ed D. Reed Laugh In DISNEY Dragnet Edoe Search B (Cont) Fleetwd Macl Journev. Pt3 Movie: Desk Set Donald Pvmt?° Movie: R o s si's |Vacation M v Friend You&Me Disney B Presents & z ie . Movie: Money Pit Movie: Duchess of Movie: Come Back J. Dean Idaho Pooh Willows Edisons Donald (Kids | Video Journey. Pt3 M2XSLMH¡ Heathcliff Movie Movie: Charade Movie: M y Little Pony Kino Beast Movie: Money Pit Family ■ Robinson 1 1 1 — (6:30) Diamantes Movie: Mr. R ossi Movie: Nido de Tiburones Sera Anunciada Vida Diaria En Pantalla Soltero en e 24 Horas Sera Anunciada Movie: Dos Cruces Movie: Adriana del 7 AM • 30 8 * U 36 A AM * 30 4 PM 1 30 A PM C 36 o PM 6 36 A P M * 30 r PM All Familv News 5 36 e PM ® 30 7 PM 1 30 0 PM ® 30 News Wheel Kate & Aih Desianma Newhart E & Lutz Q PM 3 30 Cagney & Lacey News Cheers Huntar 1 0 - 11 " 4 0 AM \ L ;30 8 AM J B . AM 30 1 0 l u :30 12 ™:30 PM m o PM L M 6 PM 7 PM PM 30 10 11 PM 12 AM :3D Nuclear Gulag Living Planet Movie: Arthur Baseball Comedy Thtr. Rio 8 and Mrs. Muir Movie: Salvage: Hard Prokofiev Movie: Gang's All Here Movie Bride Walks Out MacGruder and Loud Am ericas Business Movie. Ghost Cagney and Lacey Movie. Bride Walks Out Movie Ghost and Mrs. Mmr Water American Ballet Cagney and Lacey Theatre in San Francisco Flamingo Road Invest. Advisory Movie: Samurai. Part 1 Perspective Kilimüfrg I |NW Animals Wild Chron. Festivals Rendezvous L A. Now Living Isles ISA. Nat. Secret With Pincher Tanner ‘88 Tvson-Soinks At the Improv Living Planet Movie: SbortsCntr Clinton and Nadine Cycling Football Movie: Gang's All Here (:25) The Wind Playmate Playoffs E'thino Goes Sexual Arous Movie: Model Rosalía Movie: Para Servir a Fleetwd Mac! Movie: Mona Behavior Usted Lisa Movie: Going Hollywood Ozzie (First Jerry Lee Lewis (Secretaría 24 Horas (:15) When ¡Father's Olympics: Athens, 1896 Comedy Thtr. Playmate Pla Movie: Hilario Away Part 1 Duchess of O MR. ED Cold Finger The Secret Intelligence Agency Chief calls Wilbur to find a tiny secret radio that has disappeared and Ed finds the only clue 0 * * * * * MOVIE THE GHOST ANO MRS. MUIR (1947) Rex Harrison, Gene Tierney A lonely widow finds peace and material for a best selling book when she falls in love with the ghost of an old sea captain NR 0 KILAMAJARO Africa s Great Rift 0 PLAYMATE PLAYOFFS: ROUND II The action gets tougher and more spirited as gorgeous playmates demonstrate they're more than just pretty faces NR 8:00 pm 0 CD NEWHART After selling the station on an unoriginal idea of having Stephanie host a home shopping show, Michael must convince Dick to co-host the show. (R) g 0 0 MOVIE “Can You Feel Me D ancing?' NBC MONDAY NIGHT AT THE MOVIES (1986) Justine Bateman. Jason Bateman A young blind girl, who longs to be free from the constraints imposed on her by her overprotective family and boyfriend, finds refuge in dancing, g 0 0 * * * MOVIE THE STRANGER (1946) Orson Welles, Loretta Young A government agent heads a relentless manhunt for a disguised Nazi war criminal believed to be living in a small Connecticut town N R * 0 0 ADVENTURE (1988) Trek 800 miles into the heart of Borneo and encounter blood sucking leeches, snakes, quicksand, and a week-long tropical storm g 0 VIDEO SOUL Host Donnie Sim pson counts down the hottest urban contemporary music videos and interviews recording stars. 0 PRIME TIME WRESTLING 0 MY THREE SONS Other People Houses When Robbie visits Hank Ferguson's lush mansion, he envies Hank, his private room, the emaculate house and especially, Hank's own phone. 0 MOVIE SALVAGE: HARO WATER (1979) Andy Griffith. Trish Stewart A salvage company owner puts his competitors to the test when a scheme to trick him out his contract to tow an iceberg to a parched island backfires. NR 0 PROKOFIEV: SCENES FROM ROMEO AND JULIET (1984) Sir Georg Solti conducts the Bavarian Radio Orchestra in thrilling excerpts of Prokofiev's famous ballet N R' 0 ANIMALS OF THE GREAT NORTHWEST Lure of the Rockies. The magnificent mountain landscape 0 * * * * MOVIE THE GANG'S ALL HERE (1943) Alice Faye, Carmen Miranda A fun loving young man poses as a lonely soldier and consequently must choose between a rich girl and a beautiful singer NR <•{,•« < 0 ROSALIA 0 MOVIE GOING HOLLYWOOD: THE WAR YEARS (1988) Van Johnson hosts this retrospective look at the the films produced during the war years 1941 to 1945. NR 8:30 pm 0 ® EISENHOWER 8 LUTZ When Bud and Megan break up after a senseless argument, a chic older woman offers him more than consolation. But the woman s Kay's oft married mother! g O NEW COUNTRY 0 DONNA REED The Soft Touch. Jeff and Alex take a stance after both are accused of being unable to collect their debts 0 WILDLIFE CHRONICLES The Rattler Tracking the rattlesnake O EVERYTHING GOES: ARABIAN NIGHTS (1986) Zany contestants are willing to risk losing everything, even their clothes, in the pursuit of money! 0 FliETWOOO MAC IN CONCERT (1987) With new members Rick Vito and Billy Burnette, the band electrifies a packed house at S a n , Francisco s Cow Palace Son gs include Sara, Little Lies N R ’ M O pm 0 G D CAGNEY 8 LACEY g 0 0 AN OCEAN APART (1988) Epamige . bonds forged between the United States and Britain during WWII: patterns of rivalry, mutual suspicion, eventual compromise, legacy of peace g 0 * * * MOVIE TRADING PLACES (1963) Jamie Lee Curtis. Eddie Murphy. A bet between two miserly millionaires results in a rich young businessman and a penniless bum having to switch roles R ' g 0 NEWS 0 CROOK ANO CHASE 0 LAUGH IN 0 AMERICAN BALLET THEATRE IN SAN FRANCISCO (1985) American Ballet Theatre performs a program of classic and contemporary works including selections from Swan Lake. Airs and Great Galloping Gottschalk NR 0 WORLO OF FESTIVALS Oktoberfest in Munich. A festival in Bavana 0 TANNER 'V : CHILD'S PLAY (1988) Michael Murphy NR g 0 WOMEN ON SEX: SEXUAL AROUSAL 0 MOVIE PARA SERVIR A USTED Claudia Islas, Ofelia Gmlmain Algo extraño sucede en una fiesta, pues el camarero termina servido por los señores de la casa. PG • : 3 0 p m 0 VIOEOCOUNTRY 0 CAR 54 WHERE ARE YOU? Today I Am a 1 Man * 9 , * v ** * '' * i * i * ií 1 <• About L i f t Night Cinemax (Cabla 1 4 ) 1 0 4 5 p.m . OK, About Last Night has all the cinematic grace of bad Family Affair episodes. It’s still fun to watch. Rob Lowe’s performance is the best he’s ever given (which is rough­ ly equivalent to being the cross­ country skiing champion of Tulsa). Demi Moore (who has a husky, Randi Shade-like voice) is a perfect foil: whimpering, unassertive, but a great body. Of course, the director found several semi-nude scenes of both Lowe and Moore absolutely necessary to the artistic integrity — not to mention profitability — of the film. But as easy as this film is to ridi­ cule, it contains romantic truisms — the stupid fights, the arguments be­ tween Moore and Lowe over whose friends are more obnoxious, the schizophrenia about breaking up. Call up your significant other and tune this in — you’ll find it an eerily familiar experience. — Kevin McHargue PRIMETIME 7 :0 0 | 0 ( D H O U S TO N K NIGHTS An assassin in the shadows of Houston's Little Saigon district is murdering Vietnamese: the scanty clues point to a therapy group ot Vietnam veterans Q 0 ( 8 W H O 'S T H E BOSS? While the family is shocked by the sudden death of Tony s father in law, they are more unprepared for Samantha s unemotional reaction to the news (R) Q O 0 M ATLO C K Matlock defends an irate investor accused of murdering the smooth-talking owner ot a company who really promoted a sham get-rich quick scheme (R) 0 0 A -TEA M 0 M AC N EIL/ LE H R E R N EW S H O U R 0 THIS W EEK IN B LACK EN T ER T A IN M EN T 0 Mary Steenburgen Roddy McDowall. An aspiring young actress has an opportunity for a screen test at an old Victorian mansion and winds up using her skills tor survival. R Q O N A S H V ILLE NOW Michael Martin Murphey. Desert Rose, and Ryan Murphey. 0 RIPTIDE Wipeout 0 M AK E RO O M FO R D A D D Y The Scoutmaster Danny and the landlord vie for the post of Scoutmaster. Guest star Gale Gordon M OVIE D EA D O F W IN TER (1987) 1 C A G N EY AND LA C EY 0 M OVIE C A R R Y M E BACK (1983) Grant Tilley, Kelly Johnson Brothers convince their aged dad to attend a soccer match When he dies at the victory party, they must get the body back or lose their inheritance NR 0 O R P H A N S O F T H E W ILD Elephants A look at the lord of the jungle 0 A G E O F K EN N ED Y JF K 's early years with his family, during WWII and as a young politician Chet Huntley narrates and Henry Fonda reads the words written from JF K . 0 M OVIE CAPTIVE H EA R T S Pat Monta, Chris Makepeace A captured American loses his heart and nearly his life in a Japanese prison camp during World War II PG □ 0 B A S EB A LL NCAA World Series Game 10 from Omaha. NE (L) O ELEC T R IC B LU E: H O LLY W O O D VICE 0 r W V M OVIE H A R R Y A N 0 T H E H EN D ER S O N S (1987) John Lithgow. Melinda Dillon An ordinary camping trip turns into an adventure when a family discovers Bigfoot Life is never the same after they decide to take him home with them. PG Q 0 M OVIE 2 1/2 D AO S (1986) Getrge Dzundza, Lenore Kasdort Two fathers and a bachelor decide to share a house to lower the expenses, but the children involved are less than happy about the arrangement. N R 7:06 pm 0 W W ' A M O VIE V IL LA M O E S (1968) Yul Brynner. Robert Mitchum With the use ol his plane, an American gunrunner aids Villa in his fight against Mexico s revolutionary torces m 1912 R 7:90 pm 0 0 P E R F E C T S T R A N G ER S When Larry plays plumber to change a shower-head, he winds up Hoodmg the apartment; but that's only the beginning of Ins problems (R) Q 0 C H A R LIE A N 0 C O M P A N Y 0 0 1 0 Spas Strike Back Wilbur and Ed are th rH m a d by spias from wham they recovered a secret mmhum radie for Ihe Sacral W r l p m £ r ; v rr KTBC KVUE m KLRU TBS BET MAX WGN June 6 , 19 8 I M A G E S IS NASH _ J Q USA American Petroceiii 8 AM m AM :30 10 AM | m 11 A M 12 PM | :30 AM 30 CBS This ¡Morning Good Morning America Pyramid Donahue Sale Card Sharks Price Is Right Young and Restless News M i Ü M . 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DTV Wonxeys. ¡Go Home* V Tvrtr Wove 2 ' 2 Cads Wove Father 1 Fullback Olympic G r Ozz'e First Olympics Atnei > 1 596 - P a r 2 Baseba Electnc Blue Strip Off 86 IV Interviews Movie E rote Pmocchto Sexcetera No Empuien Electnc Blue 24 Horas Movie Burlesque ( 1 5) Campus Man • 8 Q PM J :30 10 11 PM | m AM .eiW 7 A M 30 1 Q AM ® 30 Q AM :30 3 1 0 - 1 ™ 1 1 2 ™ a PM ;30 ■ A PM jo A n PM 30 0 A ™ :30 4 C « * * 30 0 30 7 PM ■ f l PM 30 0 Movie Riftraft - - Movie Ten Gentlemen Movie Riffraff 30 Movie Ten Gentlemen Agency 0 W WW M O VIE T E N G E N T LE M E N FR O M W ES T POINT (1942) George Montgomery. Maureen 0 Hara. After surviving the grueling rigors instituted by a cruel commandant, a group of cadets prove themselves in battle with Tecumseh s mdians NR 0 P R O F ILES O F N A T U R E The Cougar A study of the cougar 8:00 pm 0 O D NB A B A S K ET B A LL Finals Game 1 (L) 0 0 M O O N LIG H T IN G Oavid runs the risk ol losing Maddie lor good after Sam proposes. Maddie has difficulty thinking up reasons why she shouldn t marry Mr Perfect (R) Q 0 0 M OVIE ‘ A Letter to Three Wives" NBC M O V IE O F TH E W EEK (1985) Larry Elikann. Lon. Anderson Three country club wives in a small tewn get a letter Irom a local friend graciously informing them she is eloprng with one ot then husbands NR 0 0 M O VIE C M L O O F G LA S S (19 77) Biff McGuire. Barbara Barrie A 13 yew old boy discovers he has supernatural powers and ewi communicate with the ghost of a Creole gwi who haunts hen NR 0 0 N O V A Explore the development ot a new snack food nonetheiass raquees considerable technical mpmiy.Q an inexact science that 0 VID EO 9 0 U I Host Donnie S im p s o n counts down the hottest urban contemporary music videos and interviews recording stars 0 W W V . M OVIE P O R T N O Y 'S C O M PLA IN T (1972) Richard Beniamm Karen Black An assistant commissioner ot human opportunities completely obsessed with sex, relates his frustrating experiences to his psychiatrist R 0 M Y T H R EE SO N S The Delinquent While Mike tries to build a surprise for his girlfriend she becomes increasingly ¡eaious and suspicious 0 WWW M OVIE TH E FA T H ER KNOW S BEST R EU N IO N (19 77) Robert Young Jane Wyatt When Margaret shows signs of meiancholy suffering from the empty nest syndrome Jim secretly plans a reunion of the children and grandchildren NR 0 THE A D V EN T U R ER S Grosse Zmne A difttcufl climb up the mountain 0 WWWW MOVIE N E A R T LA N O (1979) Rip Torn, Cónchala Feneli in 1910 Montana, a widow with a small daughter takes up the arduous duties ol housekeeper to a dour rancher PG 0 G R EA T A M ER IC A N STRIP O F F M R O U N D IV Chew on your favorite contender for the throne of America s best strip artist m round tow 0 R O S A LIA 0 WWV. M OVIE FA T H E R W AS A FU LLB AC K (1949) Fred MacMur-ay Maureen 0 Harj Pop tries to cope with me zany psyche of his mgn strung teenage daughter after a fun day s work coaching NR 8 :3 0 p m 0 NEW C O U N TR Y 0 D O N N A R EEO Jeff Stands Atone Jeff comes to the conclusion that his ife is over protected so he decides to run away anti make it on his own m a strange city 0 PUCCINI (1 9 8 3 ) The scandal mat shattered the me ot itjuan composer Giacomo Puccini and inspired his greatest opera is dramatized in this powerful piofiie NR 9 :0 0 p m 0 8 TH IR TY S O M ET H IN G Elliot and Nancy turn to a therapist tor help with then trouOiec mamage Michael discovers a tunny hut terrify embarrassing fact aoout Ellyn (R) Q 0 0 F R O N T LIN E Examine the impact on AIDS patwnts caught m the middle ot a battle between local governments and Washington over who will pay for AIDS treatment □ 0 w e M O N K THE M O W IN G A F T E R (19 8 8 ) Jane Fonda. Jeff Bridges A washed up wcohofcc actress awakens to find herself m bed wrth • dead man, brutally murdered m his own apartment Od «be do jt? R Q , 0 CROO K A N O CHASE 0 LA U G H IN 0 NEW A N IM A L W O RLD Ow u s ' W ’idíite The future of endangered « r o e te 0 O N LO C ATIO N W O M EN O f THE N IG H T ( 1 9 8 7 ) Eiien D eG en e fe s P a ^ a P o u n d s te n * M artin S hort hosts this raucous even uncensored co m e dy witn a d t s t m c :» toucn □ 0 P I A Y 1 0 Y IN TERVIEW S THE ACTORS p rogram features candid persona w ith S ylve ster Stallone Silty Dee W 'g ’ * t v i n e featuring tour terrific c o m e d * m es N f* r t e r v e w * a " > Pierce Brosnan and Jo h n u m g o * 0 M OVIE C R EPUS C ULO Arturo de Co< dova G loria M a n n Un hom Ore descuDre a >~ <» am ante por m edio de -n a estatua oes 'u d a la cual ella poso y >a vteia casion « u e -.e i V R .a a renacer en et P G ’ 98' Mip Qanny s speech to the UN delega! or 0 CAGNEY AND LACEY 0 Jeai Pierre i eaud Pat'.'.k Ao*'ay the poignant autobiographical account of a neglected and abused schoolboy constantly at odds w ” hie world around ■ u is a foremost freís' 1 !m NB 0 NATURE Of THINGS trie Breathing Gea Cheese , ooks a' sea ! fe arid (tie making o' cheese © VICTORY AT SEA The epic story of the herox battle ’or control of two Jima NR 0 MOVIE OIRTY DANCING (1987) Jennifer C’ey Patr-cx Gway/e A young girl comes rj! age during tf e end of summer vacation m the Cats* s opening he’ eyes to the ways of the world PG13 O 0 BASEBALL n GAA World Genes Game 11 trorn Omaha Nf ft ) 0 SEXCETERA SPECIAL RPT PROVOCATIVE PROFILES 0 BROTHERS Kobert Walden Brandon Maggah Two macho brothers attempt to deal with then younger brother s tiomosexuality with otter amusing happenings NB Q 0 EDISON TWINS P./za Poitergiest A mysterious presence trireatens ag loca; po/a shop MOVIE THE 400 BLOWS M959) 7:05 pm 0 C U S H OF THE CHAMPIONS II i ve from M 6" ’. WA s top wrestlers compete >r ridividua and fag team champio1 steps and the e/chrig B ... Hope mah.r 7 30 pm © 3 4 HEAD OF THE CLASS W’ r m u u corr petes fur ' rs! " >< spot I» the schoo orc’-es'ra arid os*-c Ct-arhe heips her realize ''•at Using y af' Ov:v> I guarantee success (h; g 0 MB ED 0 *( and n e Gmg-e Hor'se "* ie Bya’ arid Raymond Bailey born the Beverly h iipii u s g jest or Mr | d w’ifcn Carpi tries to pubi'Sf f d ’. memo.* s x » i • «. f e CBS This Morning : 7 AM 1 30 f l AM 8 Q AM * 30 » C a ;l Sharks 1 0 “ ■ , U 30 Price Is Right Young and Restless M 30 1 2 m 30 News Beautiful KVUE mm Good Morning America Boss’ Home News All My Children 4 PM 1 30 i s C M As the World Turns One Life to Live Guiding Light General Hospital x| PM Geraldo Hart to Hart Jeffersons Star Trek A m 4 30 All Familv ....... . . , . J £ c PM 8 30 7 PM 1 30 CSS K m . News Wheel Charlie Brown C O f 8 Jake & the Fatman Q PM Equalizer J f i News Cheers 1 0 "■ , u 30 11 mAdderly News M 'A ’ S ’ H G Pams Hd Class Hooperman Clap China Beach News M 'A ’ S 'H Nightlme B Miller T — C M 5 8 Movie Endless Love Rhoda Sign Off KTBC KXAN KBVO mm KLRU mm BET m MAX m WGN m NASH USA NICK Today Jet sons GEO " Fhntstones Mr. Rogers Happening Bewitched Sesame Street Pyramid Donahue Sale Pvt Beniami Mr Rogers TBS m ( 05) Hbil (:35) B'wt ( 05) Little House 005) Oollmaker, Part 1 (Cont) Fat Free (Cont) Movie Lose Wght D.O.A. Your Skin Thinner? Your Skin Lose Wght On the Line Movie: Roxanne 0 Movie: Miracles Concentrat B J /Lobo Wheel CHiPS Read Rambo 321 Contact Win. Lose Password News Days of Our Lives Another World Santa Barbara Oprah Winfrey Magnum, P I Rockford Files Quincy Movie What s New, Pussycat’ Sesame Street G£P Philosophy Philosophy Philosophy Teach Adult Made in TX Great Chefs (05) T A Woody Wild Am DuckTales Survival Wl ( 35) Brad Smurfs Mr Rogers ( 05) L A Bradv Bunch Sesame ( 05) CHiPs Video LP Bobbv Jones (05) Saskatchewa Video Soul n . Rockabilly Session V Dyke Movie Most Andy Dangerous Man Beaver ( 35) Flm ( 05) Flm Video Vibrations Ghostbuster American Movie Last Wagon BraveStarr Transformer Nashville Now C PM News News Jeopardy! 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Hitchhiker Comedy Hour m Business Business Mkt Prvw Mornma Business MarketWatch A M Business MktWtch MktWtch Wall St Countdown Wall Street Final FNN News It Figures Mom Works Nurse Attitudes Mom Day Baby Knows Wok Hllvwd Attitudes Partners in Crime - * Movie L et s Make It Legal Movie Three Came Home Movie Grasshopper Mktwtch Am Inv 7 AM 1 39. Q AM 8 30 Q AM 3 30 10 m I U 30 11 1 1 30 12 l £ 30 4 PM ....... ,,_ a L n PM £ 30 Q PM .... Í , J £ A m .... , J \ 9 c PM 8 30 C PM ___ r ..Jfi, 7 PM 0 PM ....8 J 9, Q PM 10 11 m 4 A AM l£ 30 Movie Make It Legal MacGruder and Loud America s Business ....! js.Movie Three Cagney and Lacey Movie 400 Blows Came Home Movie Watch A Fverytfi g ...... r „ .. . .a . 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MOVIE THREE CAME HOME (1950) Claudette Colbert Patrie Knowles True story of Agnes Newton Keith tier husband and son who were imprisoned by the Japanese during World War || NB O THAT WAR IN KOREA The Korean conflict is vividly recreated from the attack of South Korea with Russian guns to MacArthur s dismissal by Truman NB 0 JUNE PUVBOY VIDEO MAGAZINE 0 IT’S GARRY SHANDLING'S SHOW Garry Shandling A neurotic comic with problems getting a date deals with the important issues facing any healthy young man NB Q 0 DANGER BAY The fist; Who Walks While carrying an ancient lossil Jonah s friend Marly falls dangerously close to his death p 8:00 pm 0 7 J JAKE AND THE FATMAN A wealthy young socialite gives Jake the deni of a time when he arid McCabe investigate her kidnapping and miraculous escape (R) O 14 HOOPERMAN Prit/yer s mar. no stance towa'd wro' gdoem is put to a crucial tes' when ' * and Hoopennan go underground to foil coi ver renci: store robberies (R) □ Q 94 DAYS AND NIGHTS OF MOLLY 0000 Mo¡iy and Nir a ' ave a disastrous dinner to r.e ebrae Nu a . b.r’t.Oay when Detective Hawtfiorri arrives hi announce he s found ttie burglar Q 0 Í t ***«/» MOVIE THE PINK PANTHER (1964j David Niven Peter Sellers Priceless gem is sought by wanted jewel thief whose accomplice is the wife of a french police inspector I irst Pink Panther Hick NR O 3ft CORRIOOS! TALES OF PASSION ANO REVOLUTION (1987) Linda Honstadt, Daniel Valdez This theatrical presentation of corridos, passionate Mexican folk ballads, tells stories ot love war hie and death along the U S Mexican border □ 0 VIDEO SOUL Host Doririie Simpson counts down the hottest urban contemporary music videos and interviews recording stars • * * * MOVIE THE HUNCHBACK OF NOTRE OAME (196?) Anthony Hopkins Derek Jacobi Updated adaptation o I the classic novel by Victor Hugo about the hideously deformed Quasimodo who (ell desperately in love with a beautiful woman NB Q 0 MY THREE SONS Man in a Trench Coat On f> dark flight when Sieve and Bud are away Bobbie and his dale an; frightened hy a man in a trench coat 0 * * MOVIE THE GIRL. THE GOLO WATCH ANO EVERYTHING (1980) Robert Hayes Pam Dawber A naive young man inherits a seemingly worthless gold watch fiom his uncle and discovers it has magical powers NB 0 AMERICAN DIARY A Time to Grow Includes a look at I he Titanic 0 ROSALIA 0 * * MOVIE THIEF OF HEARTS (1964) Steven Bauer. Barbara Williams A burglar steals a beauhtul married woman s diary Obsessed with its steamy contents, be goes on to steal a great deal more H Q 0 4* * MOVIE KING CRAB (1980) Barry Newman. Julie Bovasso Two brothers vie lor their father s affection as they do battle in the New f ngland seatood business NR 8:30 pm 0 0 SLAP MAXWELL STORY Nelson beaches himself in Slap s motel room, where Judy has also taken up residence, setting off a startling chain ot events g 0 9 4 SARA (R) 0 NEW COUNTRY o DONNA REED Just a Little Wedding The Stones plan a simple wedding iri their home for Mary s girlfriend but the bnde s mother arrives and complicates the situation 0 PLAYBOYS CANDID CAMERA 0:00 pm 0 7 ) THE EQUALIZER A genetic scientist from uri fast turopean bloc country defects to the west with ttie help ot (fiends, but the KGB is working to get him back (R) 0 0 CHINA BEACH laurette gets her big break and prepares to leave Vietnam. McMurphy and Austin seek comfort in each other (Nancy Sinatra makes special appearance) Q O 0 THE i )NX ZOO Joe receives ttie shock of Ins life when a hospital error causes his wile s death weeks after she gave birth. Callahan wrestles with her conscience Q 0 0 AMERICAN PLAYHOUSE (198?) This recalls an incident that took place in 1901, when a young Mexican cowhand killed a sheriff in Texas over a misunderstanding in semantics Q 0 **•/. MOVIE ROXANNE (1967) Steve Martin, Daryl Hannah A modern day Cyrano de Bergerac secretly adores a beautiful woman, hut she s got her eye on someone else PG Q 0 CROOK AND CHASE 0 LAUGH IN 0 * * * * MOVIE JULES AND JIM (1961) Jeanne Moreau. Oskar Werner Two friends in love with the same woman tor ?0 years experience the bittersweet unpredictability ot lite through a tendei chivalrous menage a trois NR 0 SECRETS OF NATURE Our Wildcat The lifestyle ol ttie wildcat 0 WHY WE FIGHT Walter Huston This War Department him features reasons behind woild Wai II NH i i 11» i '1 , , KTBC KVUE KXAN KBVO KLRU TBS I D BET MAX I D WGN I D NASH 7 AM CBS This Good Today Je t sons GED ( 05) Hbil [Cont) (Cont) Bozo Morning Morning Mr Roaers 35) B wi ta tf- e e ... 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T Zone P 1 Mov « Across the (2 0 ) Audubon M ‘ A * S ‘ H Tomaht Show Movie News Cheers 1 0 11 m :30 1 1 a n AM 1L ;30 Chase Nightline Rhoda Sign Off Niflht Heal B Miller Letterman News Late Show 4 Badrnan Lose Wgr* Graz e and Robber) ’ o m n s t o r S Searcr Sign Oft (^ j$ Angel Forever Yng PLAY S 00) Off GALA JL. 6 00 Cofre SHOW (6 00. of the Night SpoHsCnu de Pirata F rewaixer AMC LIFE FNNBRAV jOISCOVEF - * H f f l M V f igures iabv Knows Business Business Nurse Mkt Prvw Nature Rt Morning Wild Cinema ARTS S3 The Last Sailors La Belle Epogue HBO JB L . Movie Still Tanner 88 Movie Aviator Falcon Crest MarketLine In the Wild Movie Terror Business Deaf Mosaic by Night Attitudes MarketWatch L A Now A M Pokertown Mom Day Mum Works Mid Day Market Rpt 1939 Chabot Solo Jam es at IS Movie Cactus f lower Wok Hllywd Business MktWtch Mystery Wld Gold Age Par; Outdrs GT Cafe Regis Philbm Business Governor s Creativity ESPN „ SL.. 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W U V It ''M A M O U R ’ JN 'A H A O t . ea- w«di:i .¡; age v if f J L , Euuuv cogu'-. Wiin He «pngt. mu nitw r■ u * ''*•» jma» H m 0 0 0 0 YAWS ♦0 :rJU p m ' w iga> v ¿ORA 0 0 A 0 0 r V W ’ 1 YhrggK laitK; MVinvity ntw t .'1494 UH.J hi Nninsu ■ » hn evenge uius - a . i fj u (mgiits o *un ta« Q 0 S H F ’ VOTAS 0 YOU CRN I I « SfArt 4j»nt»i"c «• 0 FA N T A SIES R H A P S 0 0 IE S 8:00 pm 0 CD NBA BA SK ETB A LL I mafs Game 2 (L) O 9 4 C H E ER S Sam and Rebecca have then hands full as amorous Annie Tortelli and Laurie E van Orake s special friend, fill in during Carla s maternity leave (R) 0 0 M OVIE SEV EN P E R CENT SOLUTION (197b) Robert Duvall. Alan Arkm Dr Watson lures Sherlock Holmes to Vienna so that Professor Sigmund fieud can cute him of persecution complex and cocaine addiction 0 (1® AUSTIN ON LINE 0 VIDEO SOUL Host Donnie Simpson counts down the hottest urban contemporary mus» videos and interviews lecordmg stars 0 THURSOAY NIGHT FIGH TS 0 M Y THREE SO N S Deadline The humdniin looking sports page of the school papei nets Mike a one shot assignment as Sports. Page fditor, and he tackles the (Ob with gusto R * * MOVIE M IN 0 OVER M U R 0 IR (1979) otah Haffin, David Ackioyd A beautiful carefree mudel and dam er suddenly and unnervmgly realizes thal sbe can sense future events and will objects lo move NR 0 DVORAK S N EW W O RLD SYM PH O N Y (NO • IN E. O P U S » ) (1977) Anlontn Dvorak s symphonic homage to the new world ot America ia the soundtiack of this evocative mus» video 0 Q tO The War of Words Down Unde* W ban of cigarette commercials 0 M OVIE AI0A (1956) Sophia Loren Lois Maxwell This is the tns! lull iO'ur turn ot Verdi s opera Aida NR 0 *'/% MOVIE OUT OF BOUNOS (1986) Anthony Michael Hall Jenny Wugnt An innocent Iowa laim boy stianded in L A finds housed dapped between the law and a vtio o s cmne ring R o COMEDY AFTER HOURS 0 RO SA LIA 0 MOVIE MOHT T RA M TO KATHMANOU (1988) Pei iHill Flobeits Muía Jo vu vcb The adventuies of an American g »! and a notee young prince from a seuet kingdom as a ambitious professor fues to uncover the kingdom s seuet NH Q 8 :3 0 pen 0 0 MOHT COURT A Christmas Eve biuzwd in New York City tones Uw court s u n to spend the holiday with a host u> oelendanis H 0 N EW COUNTRY 0 DONNA N f iO A Woman p i * * (M oated ov today s standards Donna teams that nw piac* ■ at hum* with her lanufy and not on the campaign nan 0 FRO M OMAHA TO 8V8M S T Ckmbmg Mt Everest 0 THE HOT LIST .<>■ Mas :m - »*’in.i ■ •, sui ■ i , {¡earny d-i' ' i s t t •> on are ’ be there f *\jf s the * odo zt 'he ^oi . > v^ow ” j re vie w s wnji > hzi iihz arhai • iut i « 0 0 p m 0 0 ( A LAW r, Vf.yrfv *«z Mancuwil. the» wedding date ‘ne» nahonsmp zet-mm;. » teai emooona oilw coa-sw P mr ihteWHikl »t ) i c TdO connuOi* hiiss H 0 t f M Y S T IR T ' 'flu ■ u zduimj E igljnd A ;nance ri'cuunhri eitn Oe<. jia w s ■*»" r«o i uiut o nipeisunat# im (»» o the 'em»» > ’utu iei D 0 CROOK mo CHASk » ' n IAOGM M 0 0 IVO FOO ORfLICH ‘ oo* if ñu «*■' ’se :i ziamu vo ''irgoimich NH neiepnc 0 F fT IR USTINOV W CHINA he x. ui . Juf^fvu > .eniwoius ium ingresaron» of Cftera 0 P LA Y BO Y 'S M TINNATIONAi. HAAU’ Y PAOAANt ' M (iteruanunai fUii'uU ) zi ^ayOov ,ume 'rgedw for a tpectecuue Mrauiy on ranue J H.* rooi tavcN ie oi^ inete NK 0 WOVM VIRflUO Moon, « tija .umpifen Jeeesperapanmra» m » iimiu ' reto. . »a r «nor Mi leemy hompie 0 V» MOVM H M W R A U N m I .'*ouc u , .ktuwt! I *wu .atemw miON»s T U N E IN Night Court NBC (CH. 36, Cable 4) 8:30 p.m. Although established comic Harry Anderson is the “ star” of Night Court, the true applause for this show goes to actor John Laroquette. Attorney Dan Fielding, Laro- the best quette’s character, sleazemonger T V has to offer. In fact, the only thing keeping Dan from completely screwing over ev­ eryone in court are threats from the ominous bailiff Bull. Just the same, Dan sure manages to ooze some real­ ly bad ones in now and then. is Though I don’t recommend Dan Fielding as a character reference for any of the younger viewers out there, his antics remain laughably evil. And besides, after a hour of Cosbies, you sure need it! — Pat Spong PRIME TIME 7:00 pm 0 & j 48 HOURS 0 0 * * V i MOVIE The Concorde Airport 79" ARC THURSDAY NIGHT MOVIE (1979) George Kennedy Alain Delon The Concorde, on a routine (light between Washington and Paris, is pursued by a dogged electronic missile PG 1 194 THE CO SBY SH O W Ttieo enioys locker room talk with his buddies at school, but when one ot them asks Vanessa out Ttieo becomes concerned about her reputation (R) Q 0 0 A TEAM O T t M A C N E ItI LEH R ER NEW SH O UR ) * * * > / . MOVIE LAW REN CE OF ARABIA (19b?) Peter 0 Toole Alec Guinness Sweeping classic starring Peter 0 Toole as young T f Lawrence who inspired the Arabian chieftains to rebel against the Turks G 0 NASHVILLE NOW Southern Pacific 0 RIPT ID E Who Really Watches the Sunset 0 MAKE ROOM FOR DAODY The Woman Behind the Man Kathy makes a vain attempt to prove that she is ttie woman behind the man 0 CAGNEY AND LACEY 0 MOVIE AUTOBIOGRAPHY OF A P R IN C E S S (1975) Jam es Mason. Mahdur Jaffrey As a gentleman reminisces with an exiled Indian princess a portrait emerges of a civilized land with scandal and tyranny churning below the surface NR 0 LIVING IS L E S Out of the f lames British landscapes born of lire 0 M Y FA M ILY AND OTHER A NIM ALS Talking magpies and a perfect day on ttie water are all part of ttie carefree life on Corfu 0 BA SEBA LL NCAA World Series Game 1? from Omaha. NE (L) 0 TALES OF EROTICA: HEAVENLY BO D IES 0 MOVIE HARLEQUIN ROMANCE: D R EA M S LOST. D REAM S FOUND Kathleen Quinlan. David Robb An American art gallery owner is drawn to Scotland to rediscover her heritage She purchases a cursed and haunted castle and finds romance NR 0 THE B I S T OF W ALT D ISN EY P R E S E N T S A Day in the Life of Donald Duck Donald leaves his modest home in Beverly Hills for a day of work at the studio 7:06 pm 0 * * * MOVIE FIVE CARO STUD (1968) Dean Martin. Robert Mitchum A professional gambler gets involved in a crooked poker game and is unable to prevent the other players from lynching the cheat PG' 7:30 pm 0 0 A DIFFEREN T W O RLD f verybody conspires to remove the welcome mat for Lethe Bostic, a colorful candidate tor dorm director who calls em as she sees em (R) 0 M R EO Monkey Involved m Spy Ring The Secret Intelligence Agency calls on Wilbur to discover who has been stealing papers from the SIA Naturally. Wilbur turns to Mr Id 0 * * * MOVIE A TICKET TO TOMAHAWK (1950) Dan Dailey. Anne Baxter Traveling drurnmei finds himself m the midst of a railroad franchise battle upon his arrival m Tomahawk A p r e tty » » keeps him in the fight NR 0 THE LAST OE T IM MOHICANS PART I Cora & Alice are taken to a Huron village as Hawkey* follows thee trail into Canada 18 IMAGES June 6,1988 TUNE OUT Berlin Alex ndarp rtz FNN BRAVO (Cable 29) 10 p.m. This exceedingly boring German saga made a pass through the Uni­ versity theaters several years ago. While not as bad as Dr. Franken­ stein and his monster, it rates less than the half-star rating given to Frankenstein. Inflicted on unsuspecting Ameri­ can viewers, Alexanderplatz is as disgusting as an overweight, beer- guzzlmg body. As exercise in cellu­ loid waste, it succeeds in illustrating Berlin’s plight, but collapses under­ neath its own weight. The title character, an ex-con named Alexanderplatz, wanders around depression-riddled Germany and engages in meaningless adven­ tures. He drinks a gallon of beer at one sitting, cavorts with prostitutes, kills his wife and generally possesses no redeeming values. Beer and lard fans aside, no one should watch and enjoy this garbage. Q £ KTBC KVUE A A KXAN KBVO A S ) KLRU MAX W6N USA NICK NASH r a Today Jetsons GED Flmtstones Mr Rooers Movie: Jane Eyre Bozo AM CBS This 7 Morning i f f • 0 AM 0 • Q AM Pyramid 3 39 Ca'C Sharks AM Price Is P Right AM Young and Restless PM News 10 11 12 Beautiiui 1 PM As the I ■WWorld Turns 9 PM Guiding L Light PM Geraldo * ó A PM Jeffersons All Family w Good Morning America • Donahue * Boss? 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Days of Our Quincy Lives * TBS I D (:05) Mbit ( 35) B wt (:05) Little House BET ® (Cont) Feed People Your Skin Lose Waht Sesame Street Sesame Street GED Stones Stones Stones Teach Write (05) Your Skin Mr. Rogers Read Rainbo Winner Take Lose Waht Your Skin 321 Contact All Movie: Suddenly, Last Summer On the Line ( 05) CHiPs Gospel Mag Movie: Bill (:05) Center of Time Black Ent Charlie & C Video Soul Cosby Himself * - * • - » • » * Castaways Madeleine ( 05) T & Jacoues Cou ( 35) Flin ( 05) Flin Univ. & 1 Video Vibrations DuckTales Survival Wl ( 35) Brad Smurfs Mr Rogers ( 05) L & Video LP Bradv Bunch Sesame Jeopardy! Knight Ride Street ( 35) Beav (:05) Fr K Soft Notes - NBC News Good Times 321 Contact (;35) Caro Video LP News 3 s Company Read Rainbo ( 05) Andy Urban Scene Familv Ties HaoDv Davs Bus Rot (35) Andy News Movie Going Facts Ape! W KRP Best of Bloopers A-Team ” MacNeil Lehrer Sonny Spoon Movie Boom D C Week Miami Vice * * Town - - News Toniaht Show Movie Twilite Zon * Letterman Poseidon Adventure Wall St Joseph Campbell Bodywatch Made in TX Austin City Limits Black Ent. Charlie & C Video Soul (:05) Gome ( 35) Maior League Baseball * ■ (20) Portrait News Video LP (:45) ( 20) Tracks Midnight Preppies " Love * * " - " * * * Movie Luck of the Irish Movie: Dirty Dancing - * HM GDE Movie Believers • •• Movie: Dirty Dancing • x T * Tf Of W- T p k f ' O u O r Q c n + f S l TV h« r S 6 9 1 © (6:00) Cartoon Express * Riptide * Petrocelli * That Girl 4 Money A Deal Plav % Potato Luck TicTac Jackpot Professional Golf - * Cartoon Express Wired » * " " - - - Dr Snuggle Today's S dc Pinwheel " - • Elephant Pinwheel " Belle Maoie/Koala David, Gnom Today's Spc City of Gol Lassie Gadget Can’t on TV Monkees Nick Rocks Dennts Keepers Duckula Double Dare My 3 Sons D Reed Laugh In Car 54 Ann Sothern Make Rm Mr. Ed D Reed Laugh In Airwolf Can't on TV Professional Make Rm Golf Mr Ed Smurfs RuxDtn Beaver Andv Geraldo " News " V Dyke Andv Beaver Gbostbuster BraveStarr Transformer G! Joe Jem Cheers Barnev Barney Baseball - *• * " « News T Zone Movie Fandango Be a Star Crook Video Cntrv Movie: Big Sombrero • Fandango Be a Star Crook Video American Nashville Now * Cntrv Fandango Be a Star Crook Video Nashville Now » Cntrv Crook Video American Nashville Now Friday Nite Late Show Sign Ofl ( 20) Tracks Venture Marketing (:15) Demon of Paradi Seduction Big Sombrer PRIME TIME CAT IN THE HAT .1985 The Grinch. true to his nature is jnheipfui unfriendly, and unkind when he crosses paths with the Cat ir the Hat on a beautifu summer day NR 7:00 pm (R □ e d BEAUTY AND THE BEAST When a mystenou; matte- craws. Father from his subterranean home to tne sj^ace wo*ic to* the firs* time m 30 years tie is a*rested to* murder (R; O @ PERFECT STRANGERS .ar-y alternates jeKyi a-'C Hyde personalities as he goes or anc of' a weight loss diet Bal* tries to Keep htr trun me food ne hat fiidoe: O ® THE BEST OF TV’S BLOOPERS AND PRACTICAL JOKES taun Hendier piays fib tiCKimg tricxs or Kar Michaelser anc _a-r: Jil M e* 'Gimme a B'ea» W Shone* snows hilarious nome movies (R O ® A TEAM O U n ia c n e il l e h r e r NEWSHOUR CD THIS WEEK IN BLACK ENTERTAINMENT © * ♦ * / , MOVIE THE BELIEVERS 196" Mártir Sheer -teier Shave- A mar finds himsel' m the middle o' c stnng o‘ unresolved killings whict may Of t-acec to pract'tioners of tne ancient Afnear rengion Santería R © BARNEY MILLER © NASHVILLE NOW © PROFESSIONAL GOLF Westcheste- Classic Iron Rye New York '2nc Round; (R; © MAKE ROOM FOR DADDY Teenage Thrust Danny; ettons to promote a teenage singe* seer* ur important compared tc her mothe* s desire u see ne* educatec Dues* star Brenca © CAGNEY AND LACEY © w>/> MOVIE THE GOODBYE PEOPLE jjo c Htrscr Pameia Reec Ma/ Severmar •*. a 73 yea- oíd ret're*- witt a crear* he wants to reope* * s Coney isianc r.c dog stand wtiicr toioec 22 years ago RG © NEW WILDERNESS Wild Ma- o* tne Forest Orangutar The great ape o‘ Tt»e jungle © m o v ie THE BOYS OF SUMMER 1963; Duke Snide* Re* Wee Fieese S»d Gaesa* riosts this absorbing sports documentary o' trie ule anc times o' tne Brpomy* DüOgers NR © BASEBALL NCAA WonC Genes Game 14 freer* Oniafia NE (it Necessary cotir Trying tc save riimie-* rper , peso* ‘.err* a conmar fanes msari*’ , d-'C end* up •* hie psycrio ware o' a mismanaged nospiU R Q © GOMER PYLf s Waicr a Tn.e 7:06 pnt 7:30 pm tf»>• © 34 FULL HOUSE j(jk y w T ft^‘ Utté W 4- g’J Uíjfji eC *.e --«■ tif< ¿ baoyytte* (H p © CHARLIE AND COMPANY © BASEBALL V cage Cubs a G* SirO' « © MR ED ; d w «*•' w ■«c<* © NfW WluOEHNESt .a rCd, V v . jechc ¿bou1 cness to* Who.,* t coin- c. • j -j * .* A' cecer- © Of SEUSS fHl GRINCR GRINCHfet (HE tc © MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL Atlanta Braves at nouston Astros (L) 7:35 pm 8:00 pm 0 2 MOVIE Under the Influence' CBS FRIDAY MOVIE M986i Andy Griffith Joyce Van Patter A man s refusa to acknowledge his alcoholism has a devastating effect or. his professiona ufe as well as the emotiona! wen being o* ms family Q 0 » 20/20 10TH ANNIVERSARY SPECIAL hugt Downs and Barbara Watters host this specia retrospective broadcast Q © » SONNY SPOON Sonny s life is on the une whe* he attempts to return stoier leweis to protect the thief unaware that the gems may have bee* tampered with (R; O ® * * * MOVIE BOOM TOWN '1940/ Clark Gable Spence* Tracy be John and Square Jonr strike 01 Du* their ‘nenfiship anc partnership wither ove- the girl they bom love NR O H D C WEEK RVW Q © VIDEO SOUL Host Donnie Simpson counts dowr the hottest jrba* contemporary music videos anc interviews recording stars © MY THREE SONS The Lostimg What do a ieg o* lame anc a baby gr nave m common7 not’ a*e misplaced anc tjrr up in the Douglas nouse © * • MOVIE RIGHT OF WAY <1983; Bette Davis james Gtewa** A* aging couple determined tc contro tneir ow* destinies manes a* agonizing decision regarding ufe and death NR □ © QUEST FOR HEALING Earth Healing Heaung witt natura substances © * * MOVIE THE GATE (1987; Stephen Dorff. Christa Dentor Strange and horrible even’s occur as a teenage* discovers a link oetween a note dug in rus backyard and the lyrics to an acid rock album PG13 Q © PLAYBOY S PRIVATE PARTY JOKES (1987; Rtayooy s Party jokes page comes to life in hilarious sketches anc vignettes with a cast of Playmates mode s arid grea’ comedy acfors NR © ROSALIA © MOVIE JE S S E OWENS STORY. PART 1 (1984/ Oonan Harewood Georg Stamford Brown True story o' the man who won (our gold miedais a' the 1938 bertir Olympics from his college oays to post Olympic period when shamelessly e/.ptorted NR 8:30 pm 0 1ft WALL STREET WEEK O NEW COUNTRY O DONNA REED 7ne Chinese Horse Donna become- arxompiioe to tou play wtier. sfie tnnocfc'ih, a'/et'. to buy a* item for a Strange * o r- a1 a- a' auciior 0 » * MOVIE THE BIG STEAL (1949; Robert M *''■./- *c *ecove* a stoier payro - t*,e wilds of We/.iCb NR © ELECTRIC BLUE HOLLYWOOD VICE Ja*ie Dree* A' army office* attempts 6:45 pm © COMEDY CLUB NETWORK n 98/, Tn.«, v' •*. v« com -,g '.v/v: c‘ Jtu<: -/;« r-ar-o* NR i w ! to**; cr.cwcase cpo*. gnts jp and peHormmg i* clubs 9:00 pm leading to a stampede O S MIAMI VICE Crockett and Tubbs investigate a cowboy s reported theft of irreplaceable bull semen of interested parties (R) O 3 MOYERS JOSEPH CAMPBELL ANO THE POWER OF THE MYTH Campbell tells about the powerful myths of the early hunting societies the role of ritual in the transition from child to adult and asks questions □ © MOVIE DIRTY DANCING (1987) Jennifer Grey. Patrick Swayze A young girl comes of age during the end of summer vacation in the Catskills opening her eyes to the ways of the world PG13 □ © CROOK AND CHASE © WIRED © LAUGH IN © LOUNGE LIZARDS (1982) Taped live at the Atabamahohe in Munich, it s free-for-all jazz with New York s amazing Lounge Lizards' NR © THE EXPLORERS The Last Shangri-La A dangerous climb in the Himalayas © SHORTSTORIES A faith healer takes his act on the road and a stranger gets a cool welcome NR © MOVIE LOS GAVILANES Pedro Infante Lilia Prado Dos nombres sin saber que son hijos de una misma mujer se profesan un odio mortal PG © IT S GARRY SHANDUNG'S SHOW Garry Shanúlmg A neurotic comic with problems getting a date deals with the important issues facing any healthy young man NR Q 9:30 pm © VIDEOCOUNTRY © CAR 54 WHERE ARE YOU? The Auction Captain Block has been married for 25 years As a gift, the officers want to give a chair that matches the one his wife has just sold 0 w w * MOVIE CUJO (1983) Dee Wallace. Daniel Hugh Kelly A rabid dog terrorizes a young family that has moved to Maine in search of a happier life in this Stephen King thriller R © PLAYBOY COMEDY THEATRE: TOMMY CHONG 0 BROTHERS Robert Walden. Brandon Maggart Two macho brothers attempt to deal with their younger brother s homosexuality with often amusing happenings NR Q 0 ANIMALS IN ACTION Tree Living Animals Trees are home to a variety of animals including monkeys, sloths, anteaters, and tree frogs 10:00 pm • c z ) © « e « 0 N E w s 0 © TWILIGHT ZONE O 0 600YWATCH Some eye-opening information will be offered when Bodywatch addresses 10 pressing issues in answer to viewer questions about food, health and fitness g O ROCK N ROLL PALACE 0 NIGHT FLIGHT 0 MONKEES Monkees on the Wheel The Monkees break the bank at Las Vegas but tall into the dutches of a mob 0 W W W * MOVIE ALL ABOUT EVE ( 1950) Bette Davis Anne Baxter Ari ambitious actress rises horn bemg a mousy girl in the theatre alley to ar award winner NH © wwww BERLIN ALEXANDERPLATZ III (1980) Gunter Lamprecht Hanna Schygulla 1 *anz s disillusionment causes him to dosel himself H a boardinghouse where through his window ne witnesses the everyday triumph of evil & malice NR 0 FOREST FROM THE DAWN OF TIME Rainforests ot Malaysia © LORENZO LAMAS AT THE IMPROV Lorenzo Lamas Featured actor Lorenzo Lamas and talented comediansns Dennis Blair and Larry Miller team up tor a round of laughs © HARD KNOCKS Bill Maher. Tommy Hinkley After being dismissed from the New York Police Force, a freewheeling liberal and a macho brute become unlikely partners in a detective agency NR © THE MISSING ADVENTURES OF OZZIE ANO HARRIET The Sale Ozzie buys a safe, memorizes the combination and locks it inside the safe When he can't get the open, he spreads rumors of burglars around town hoping that one of his neighbois will want to buy his safe © PORTRAIT OF AMERICA West Virginia 10:20 pm 10:30 pm 0 ( 7 ) CHEERS © ® M*A*S*H © 0 TONIGHT SHOW O © wwwv* MOVIE THE POSEIDON AOVENTURE (1972) Gene Hackman, Stella Stevens The S.S Poseidon is capsized by a tidal wave on New Year s Eve The handful of passengers who were not killed instantly struggle to survive PG © 0 MADE IN TEXAS © VIDEO LP © NEWS © AMERICAN MAGAZINE © ANN SOTHERN Johnny Moves Up Katy attempts to help Johnny the bellhop out of an embarrassing situation © REEF BUILDERS The Great Barrier Reef of Australia © SPORTSCENTER (L) © MOVIE MOTEL SWEETS (1987) Ona Zee. Shanna McCullough. A no questions asked motor lodge on the edge of town makes an ideal setting for all manner of steamy goings on. NR’ © **> A MOVIE THE BEUEVERS (1987) Martin Sheen, Helen Shaver A man finds himself In the middle of a string of unresolved killings which may be traced to practitioners of the ancient African religion, Santería R ’ © * * > * MOVIE JUPITER'S DARUNG (1954) Esther Williams, Howard Keel A Greek beauty, loved by the gods, ent:ces Hannibal into sparing Rome NR' 10:45 pm © t t MOVIE PREPPIES (1984) Lynda Weismeier, Dennis Drake It s sexy college hijinks when a rich preppy must choose between a weekend of passion and studying for his final exams R' 11:00 pm © ( £ ) * * MOVIE Back Roads" CBS LATE MOVIE (1981) Sally Field, Tommy Lee Jones. A southern hooker with a heart of gold meets and falls in love with a small time boxer as they hitchhike cross country R © 0 NIGHTUNE □ © 0 AUSTIN CITY LIMITS (1987) New Orleans legendary musical family, the Neville Brothers deliver a smoking performance of classic R & B Also featuring Rockm Sidney NR © MIDNIGHT LOVE © TWILIGHT ZONE © NASHVILLE NOW © MAKE ROOM FOR OAODY Teenage Thrush Danny s efforts to promote a leenage singer Rock 'N Rol Night Flight Monkees seem unimportant compared to her mother s desire to see her educated Guest star Brenda Lee © NEW DR. RUTH Female Sexual Response g © ANIMALS OF THE GREAT NORTHWEST Lure of the Rockies The magnificent mountain idfldSC3p6 © MOVIE THE BOYS OF SUMMER (1983) Duke Snider, Pee Wee Reese. Sid Caesar hosts this absorbing sports documentary ot the life and times of the Brooklyn Dodgers NR © PRO BEACH VOLLEYBALL Women s Competition from Manhattan Beach, CA (R) © Ml COLONIA LA ESPERANZA 11:05 pm © * * * MOVIE HEAVEN HELP US (1985) Donald Sutherland, John Heard Humorous misadventures befall pranksters at a Catholic boys' high school. Though discipline is harsh, they continue to disrupt class and Mass R' © NIGHT TRACKS: POWER PLAY DANCIN' 11:20 pm 11:30 pm © 0 BARNEY MILLER © ® LATE NIGHT WITH OAVIO LETTERMAN © t t MOVIE THE SEDUCTION (1982) Morgan Fairchild, Michael Sarrazm A crazed photographer watches a beautiful newscaster s every move, including skinny dips and love making in a jacuzzi R 9 MR. ED Ed Wins a Color Television Set Ed answers a tough question about chess on a radio quiz and wins a color TV for Wilbur. ( EYE ON HOLLYWOOD © WILDLIFE CHRONICLES The Rattler © 24 HORAS Con corresponsales en todo el mundo. 24 Horas les hace llegar desde Mexico via satélite las noticias mas actuales y acontecimientos del momento 12:00 am © 0 R H O D A © 0 SIGN OFF 0 VENTURE MARKETING 0 DONNA REED The Chinese Horse. Donna becomes accomplice to foul play when she innocently agrees to buy an item for a strange woman at an auction © INVESTMENT AOVISORY © NATURE OF THINGS The Breathing Sea/ Ch66S6 © OUTBOARD RACING International Grand Prix of Los Angeles from Los Angeles. CA (T) © PLAYBOY PRESENTS: JERRY LEE LEWIS IN CONCERT (1986) The rock 'n roll legend from Ferriday. LA performs his greatest hits at the 1986 Expo in Vancouver. British Columbia NR © PROGRAMA ESPECIAL 12:15 am © MOVIE OEMON OF PARAOISE Horrible sea creature terrorizes the guests at a lush Hawaiian resort R © NIGHT TRACKS 12:20 am 12:30 am © « WORLOVISION O ® FRIDAY NIGHT VIDEOS Series aimed al the young adult audience teatunng the best in musical videos from today s lop rock stars 0H 2J LATI SHOW © MOVIE THE BIG SOMBRERO (1949) Gene Aulry I letid Verdugo A laiich lorman toils a villain s plan to marry a señorita gel control ul her ranch and sell il lot Ins own piulil NH © LAUGH IN © * * MOVIE THE BIO STEAL 0949) Hubert June 6, 1988 IMAGES 19 island she playfully invents a story about ner landlord and the nandyman coming true' NR then it starts 3 :0 0 a m 'M a de tor Each Other Q * # * (1939) Caroe Lom bard Jam es Stewart An mterfer ng m otne' in lav* **ants to baby her r r w ec von and control her grandchad r tr s porgna"’ dra ^a o* young tove and ts c.sappomtmen's NR 3 :1 0 a m 19 8 7; a - ■ V (¡’ ey < B Qinry Danon g Swayze A you'¡g g * c o re s o* age end ot summer vacaton - " e L a 's * her eyes to the ways q ‘ " e * y d . " C 'jCk ' Q 3 :2 5 a m I B •/* 'Gom g Ape' DeVito Yoor-g ~ a- can ta*e ca'e ot three y a n Q u ta r. " e M S ~ ! 98' " v . - ; . ,’ i 3 :3 0 a m ’ 9 8 ' L ¿ - •- o j . ' i ’ v ' . iv< " a *-s a :*•* r ; r 0 'M o te Swee’ s McCuitougr or the rcqh ot ■ .* a " ar • e f o' - .• * « " , > ■ > '.. . 0 Be to ¿ " a ' - M or ’ es to ega a (O a es ¿ " a J f c ? ' d < í tv 1 . h o m ic -d a i n jrro ’ w f c M u f f / S A p r anc knocxefl of* y r i , F o o S L i , b a s " i’~ . W • . * Q ~ , - e s ' s ga ' - 0 ‘ Jesse L w e 's S t o r y 2 :0 0 a m - a ” ‘ H a ' e w o o c S e - j r g 5 ’ a ' ‘ o r d c ’ > w * the man who woe Befun Olympics ’ oof ge Outboard Racing Jerry Lee Lewis Hot Times Father a Fui 24 Horas Program a Especial - - GALA ___IB__ (6 0 0 ) N o O yes los Perr M ovie: V s Contrabandist as Movie: Elios y Ellas Sera Anunciada Vida Diaria > En Pantalla Hoaar Dulce 24 Horas Sera Anunciada Movie Chiflados Golpen M ovie El Pistolero de Dios SHOW IB M ovie: Back to the Future Donald • Movie Biggest Bundle of Tnem All Movie: Longest Night M ovie: Terms of Endearment M ovie Going Ape! P w t e ___________ M ovie 2 1/2 Dads Kaleidoscope Y o u & M e Dtsoev Presents O zzie M ovie Green Grass Dum bo Pooh W t e s a — ............. Edisons Donald Kids Elephant s Video Movie Back to the Future Dinosaurs M Th U - - Mitchum Jane Greer An army officer attempts to reeover a stolen payroll in the wilds of Mexico N R 0 **+* B E R L IN A L E X A N D E R P L A T Z IV (1980) Gunter Lam precht, Hanna Schygulla Fran z, tired of swapping girlfriends, becomes involved in seedy adventures and almost loses his life NR 0 M O V IE H O T T IM E S (19 74 ) Henry Cory. Gail Lorber A sexually starved high schooler searches for love and romance in New York City R 0 + * v > M O V IE F A T H E R M A S A F U L L B A C K (1949) Fred M acMurray, Maureen 0 Hara Pop tries to cope with the zany psyche of his high strung teenage daughter after a full day s work coaching NR 12:55 am 0 V i M O V IE D E L IV E R Y B O Y S (1985) Mario Van Peebles Delivery boys are fast on their feet, whether they re on their pizza route by day or break dancing on the streets at night R 1:00 am 0 ( Z ) N E W S 0 D IS C O V E R 0 C A R 54 W H E R E A R E Y O U ? The Auction Captain Block has been married for 25 years As a gift, the officers want to give a chair that matches the one his wife has just sold 0 IN V E S T M E N T A D V IS O R Y 0 M Y S T E R Y O F Z A N O N I The search for a wrecked ship 0 S H O R T S T O R IE S A faith healer takes his act on the road and a stranger gets a cool welcome N R 0 S P O R T S L O O K 0 P L A Y B O Y 'S P R IV A T E P A R T Y J O K E S (19 8 7) Playboy s Party Jokes page comes to life in hilarious sketches and vignettes with a cast of Playmates models and great comedy actors N R 0 R U M O R O S A M E N T E Raul Astor Un programa comico musical lleno de diversion, bellas muieres y muchas sorpresas 1:20 am 0 N IG H T T R A C K S 1:30 am 0 X 0 3 4 S IG N O F F 0 0 N E W S (B) 0 0 C N N 0 S U M F O R U F E 0 K E Y S T O S U C C E S S 0 M O N K E E S Monkees on the Wheel The Monkees break the bank at Las Vegas but tall into the clutches ot a mob 0 S P O R T S C E N T E R ( I) 0 E L E C T R IC B L U E H O L L Y W O O D V IC E 1:46 am M O V IE K E N T U C K Y F R IE O M O V IE 0 (1 9 7 / ) Donald Sutherland, Bill Bixby A collection of satirical skits spoofing TV and movies from the Kentucky I ned fheatre tn Wisconsin whose key members went on to do ' Airplane 0 WWW M O V IE Y O U W I R E M E A N T F O R M E 119 48 ; Jeanne D a m Dan Dailey After their man.age a band leudei and a working girl must weather die hardships ut the Depression NH H 1:5$ am 0 ww M O V N A P R IL F O O L S O A Y (1986) forem an Griffin 0 N e il The fun turns Debarai into homicidal honor when guests gathered tor Mutty s April I OOl S Da/ hash are slowly stalked and knocker) oil one by one R Q M OVIES 7:0 0 pm 0 * w w "The Believers” (19 8 7) Martin Sheen, Helen Shaver A man finds himself in the middle of a string of unresolved killings which m ay be traced to practitioners of the ancient African religion, Santería R O "The Boys of Sum m er" (1983) Duke Snider, Pee Wee Reese Sid Caesar hosts this absorbing sports documentary of the life and times of the Brooklyn Dodgers N R 0 >/« "Critical Condition" (19 8 7) Richard Pryor, Rachel Picotm Trying to save himself from a prison term , a conman fakes insanity and ends up in the psycho ward of a mismanaged hospital R Q 8:00 pm 0 ( 7 ) “ Under the Influence" (1986) Andy Griffith. Joyce Van Patten A man s refusal to acknowledge his alcoholism has a devastating effect on his professional life as well as the emotional well being ot his family □ 0 0 w w w “ Boom Tow n" (1940 ) Clark Gable. Spencer Tracy Big John and Square Joh n strike oil, but their friendship and partnership wither over the girl they both love N R 0 w w "Right of W ay” (1983) Bette Davis, Jam es Stewart An aging couple, determined to control their own destinies, makes an agonizing decision regarding life and death N R □ 0 w w "The Gate" (19 8 7) Stephen Dortf, Christa Denton Strange and horrible events occur as a teenager discovers a link between a hole dug in his backyard and the lyrics to an acid-rock album P G 1 3 □ 0 "Jesse Owens Story Part 1 ’’ (19 8 4) Donan Harewood, Georg Stanford Brown True story ol the man who won tour gold medals at the 1936 Berlin Olympics from his college days to post Olym pic period when shamelessly exploited NR 8:30 pm 0 w w "The Big Steal" (1949) Robert Mitchum Jane Greer An army officer attempts to recover a stolen payroll in the wilds of Mexico NR 9:00 pm 0 "Dirty Dancing" (19 8 7) Jennifer Grey Patrick Sw ayze A young girl comes ot age during the end ol summer vacation in the Catskills, opening her eyes to the ways ot the world P G 1 3 □ 0 “ Lo s Gavilanes" Pedro Infante. Lilia Piaao Dos hombres sin saber oue son hijos de una misma mutei, se piolasen un udro mortal P G 9:30 pm (1963) Dee Wallace Daniel 0 W W W ' C u | O Hugh Kelly A tabid dug tenon/es a young family that has moved to Maine in search ol a happier life in this Stephen King thfillei H 10:00 pm 0 w w w w All About (v e 0 9 5 0 ) Bette Davis Anne Baxter An ambitious actiuss, uses from being a mousy gnl in the theatie alley to an award winnei N H 10:30 pm 0 0 w w w ' / i Urn Puseidon Adventure (19 72 ) Gene Hai kman Stella Stevens The S S Poseidon is capsized by a tidal wave un New Yuai s I ve nut killed instantly stiuugle 10 survive the handful ot passeogei-. who wem (Hi Motel Sweets (I 9f l /) Qua Iec SheiUM Mcbolluugh A no questions asked molui lodge on the edge of town makes an ideal setting for all manner ot steamy goings on NR 0 w w '/ * "The Believers" (19 8 7) Martin Sheen Helen Shaver A man finds himself in the middle of a string ot unresolved killings which may be traced to practitioners of the ancient African religion, Santería R 0 w w 1/* "Jupiter s Darling" (1954) Esther Williams Howard Keel A Greek beauty the gods, entices Hannibal into sparing Rome N R loved by 1 0 :4 5 pm 0 V * “ Preppies" (1984) Lynda Weismeter Dennis Drake rich preppy must choose between a weekend o? passion and studying tor his final exams R It s sexy college hijinks when a 11:0 0 pm 0 (7) w w "Back Roads" ( 1 981 ) Sally Fieic To m m y Lee Jones A southern hooker with a heart of gold meets and falls m 'ove with a small time boxer as they hitchhike cross country R 0 "The Boys of Sum m er" (1983) Duke Smce* Pee Wee Reese Sid Caesar hosts this absorbing sports documentary of the nfe and times of the Brooklyn Dodgers NR 1 1 : 0 5 pm ii9 8 5 i Donato 0 w w w “ Heaven Help Us Sutherland John Heard Hum orous misadventures detail pranksters at a Cathonc boys high school Though discipline ts they continue to disrupt class and Mass R 1 1 : 3 0 pm 0 V i The Seduction Fairer. c Michael Sarraztn A ciazeo photographer watcne: a beautiful newscastei s every m ove nciufl g skinny flips, ano love making >n a .acuzz (1962 M u .ga R 1 2 : 1 5 a m 9 Demon ot Paiad.se Horrible >e¿ terrorizes the guests at a lush Hawa a R eat. e eso f 1 2 :3 0 a m ' > a (19491 Robe : V 0 The Big Sombrero (1949) Gene Aut ¡ Elena Verdugo A ¡ancn termer. tons a > a plan to marry a señorita get confio* of "■# and seii it lor his own piuhl NH ■ The Bn the w Os ot Mexico N * 0 H o t T i m e s A sexuaay starved high s c D v -e se a ches v . R love ano romance ’ iM s * w* 0 w w 1 * Fattier v\a> a MacMurray M a„ ec 0 Ha a P \V ' <> ’•»’ » w < ■ * p * with the id*i> psyn'!e Of h*s '' O '- st . g í NR c daughter Jile a f. ( t V . Z i H e n r y C o r y Ga< New t o •. C lorbe bacx' cay s w o v coac 1 2 :5 5 Am 0 • « Delivery Buys 2 94M N'a -c u Peebles Deuvery boys a-c '-as' »v- whetfie* they e v*n Bse« » '-::a w z » 5» c tueak oaiKing o n the sheets a: 1 45 am kentuvXy r ; e v t v *' skits syKWhng IV and h (n e d ItH atie ■ yV s. vV s weni i*i U' vKt Anpw -e 0 i t t Vou r t f e Mis Jeanne Ci«in Da- ba.m -eanc a >• a »*> x c y iia.vtsii.ps .u bir i W css v i V w i Afte f -! ' NR su 0 • « V ft*e m a u \u-rr.-- 0 New i , v 1 : » » am . D i u tt te 1 he *,*• vj M 'V v S * ' \*£' ' N . l C \ \ 20 IMAGES June 6,1988 • ■ . -V.TI i M B ■ I Ikl Cubs at St. Louis WGN (Cable 15) 7 p.m. Atlanta at Houston TBS (Cable 11) 7:30 p.m. It’s Saturday night, and you have a hankering to see some baseball ac­ tion. Well, gather the friends and brews, because: The Chicago Cubs and the St. Louis Cardinals will square off on the Cards’ home turf. The Cubbies have some new good-hitting faces and ... well, they aren’t the White Sox (soon to be St. Petersburg White Sox, snicker), which is reason enough to watch them. Of course, Whitey Herzog’s Cards are always exciting to watch. And for Houston Astros fans: “America’s Losers,” the Atlanta Braves, will be visiting the Astro­ dome. Watch the home team pound the Braves and keep pace in the Na­ tional League West pennant chase. And if you can’t decide which to watch, get two televisions. — Karen Adams 7:00 pm 0 ® HIGH MOUNTAIN RANGERS O ® PROBE Austin must clear himself of murder charges when a high-tech security elevator he created starts killing the executives it was designed to protect.(R) Q Q ® FACTS OF LIFE Natalie is upset by everyone s reaction when her relationship with Snake reaches sexual maturity. (Parental supervision is advised.) (R) Q 0 (B) FREEDOMFEST Nelson Mandela's 70th Birthday celebration, from Wembley Stadium in London, England Phil Collins, Whitney Houston, George Michael, Dire Straits, Simple Minds, Bryan Adams, the Bee Gees, the Eurythmics and Whoopi Goldberg head an all-star list of acts (Same day tape) O ® AUSTIN CITY LIMITS Roger McGumn performs his greatest hits. 0 VIDEO SOUL Host Donnie Simpson counts down the hottest urban contemporary music videos and interviews recording stars. 0 *★>/, MOVIE ROXANNE (1987) Steve Martin, Daryl Hannah. A modern-day Cyrano de Bergerac secretly adores a beautiful woman, but she s got her eye on someone else. PG g 0 BASEBALL Chicago Cubs at St. Louis Cardinals (L) 0 GRAND OLE OPRY UVE BACKSTAGE 0 MOVIE RANA: THE LEGEND OF SHADOW LAKE (1981) Karen McDiarmid, Jerry Gregoria An evil froglike creature vows to protect a sunken treasure from those who would take it 0 LAUGH IN 0 THE MYSTERIES: NATIVITY (1985) An enthralling mixture of powerful verse and ingenious staging surround the uplifting religious theme of the Messiah s birth. NR 0 ARTHUR C. CLARKE'S MYSTERIOUS WORLD UFOs. An examination of UFOs 0 THE TWENTIETH CENTURY Walter Cronkite, host. A look at the first U.S. invasion of a Japanese held Pacific island. NR' C SEX IN CINEMA: WOMEN IN EROTIC FILMS 0 MOVIE DOS ESPOSAS EN Ml CAMA Joaquin Cordero Los problemas de un hombre que se casa por segunda vez creyendo honestamente que ha enviudado, pero no es asi. G 0 *★>/« MOVIE SUMMER SCHOOL (1987) Mark Harmon, Kirstie Alley. A party-loving California high school gym coach gets stuck with a summer remedial reading class full of crazy misfits PG13 0 ANDY GRIFFITH A Girl For Goober 7:05 p m 7:30 pm 0 0 227 Calvin and Eddie will be kicked off the basketball team if they don t pass their history final: Mary thinks of an ingenious way to help them study.(R) 0 MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL Atlanta Braves at Houston Astros (L) 0 6RAND OLE OPRY UVE 0 MAKE ROOM FOR DADDY The Party Wrecker. Danny becomes angry when his landlord invites all of Danny s friends to a party and doesn t invite him. Guest star Gale Gordon 0 TOWARDS 2608 A look at science and technology 0 VIETNAM: THE TEN THOUSANO OAY WAR A day by day account of the December 1972 blitz of Hanoi hosted bv Richard Basehart. KVUE KXAN KBVO KLRU BET MAX WGN NASH NICK KTBC ■ ffi :?0 :30 Kitty Muooet 7 AM 8 AM Babies • 9 AM Pee Wee 10 AM Popeye :3? Dennis AM Teen Wolf WGalaxv :?Q Mtv Mouse Clowns Pound Pud Monster Gummi Smurfs - " Wizards ALF Real Ghostbusters Alvin Bugs F'stones Crack-Ups Health Fraggle F'stones T a n d T Tellina Wild Kingdo Movie: Man’s ■ • P I W Classic Senior TPC Golf 1 1 1 2 PM Westchester Wknd Specia Magnum, 1 PM Golf :3(l 2 PM CBS Sports W Saturday ■ 3 PM * 4 PM W 5 PM Sport Legen Out of Worl Nicklaus Wide World of Sports Special Jack :3? • * - " ■ Baseball Wk (15) NBC Baseball Game of the Week Outdrs Fish'a Texa Great Weekend Lifestyles of Rich Matt Houston Rockford Files " - Favorite Sport? Bus. File Bus. File Bus. File Gov't Surve Gov't Surve Gov’t Surve Philosphy Philosphv Society Society Society Victory Gdn Madeleine Great Chefs Hawaii 5-0 Philosphy Movie: Paint Gourmet Me a Murder Joy of Pain W. Alexande Knight Rider Mtrwk At Home Degrassi Woodwriaht FREEDOMFES Austin City • Star Trek: ABC News News Eves of TX Probe At the Movi News News Comedv Club Next G. Fact of Lif 227 Gold Girls Amen Spenser: For Hunter Hire • - ■ - * " " " 6 ■VCBS News PM News 30 Wheel 7 PM High Mtn 39 Rangers 8 PM Tour of Duty Ohara 9 PM CBS News :3Q Presents 10 PM News :30 Taxi PM Movie: Long :30 Hot News ;W " 1 1 1 2 AM :30 Summer, Part 2 TBS m (:05) Bonanza (05) Audubon (ÜW Portrait (05) Wrestling (05) Godzilla vs Monster Zero (05) Catered Affair * (:05) Andy (:35) Gome (:05) Hbil (:35) Wils (05) Wrestling ■ " ” " Limits Wild Am. Survival Wl Jacques Cousteau (:05) Andy Maior League Baseball - * Your Skin TBA Video Soul ■ ■ " * Video LP Soloflex Sports Report Pro Boxing There’s an Make Cash Cable Ktche Lose Woht Make Cash Your Skin Lose Wght Your Skin Make Cash Generat’n Keys to News Video Soul * ■ " " Sports Report Movie: Making Mr. Right * Movie: Morgan Stewart Movie: Amazing Grace and Chuck Movie: Bus Stop About Movies (:15) Mr. Mom Movie: Ishtar " ■ * - ” Movie: Roxanne - ■ Movie: Trading Places " Frm Rpt World Charlando People Min Bus Superman Gd Times Analers Soul Train " Movie: Batman * • USA L l j Financial Freedom J Kevs to Diet Skin Elephant Wizard Dennis TurkevTV Monkees Bad News Hairloss S1000 Dance Party USA Can’t on TV Nick Rocks Double Dare Gadget X T . h t r o W t F . c n I . p u o r G g n i t s i L V T e h T 8 8 9 1 © Gardener Discover Jov Gdn Cntry Week Kitchen Wish You Side bv Sid Outdoors Tee It Up Tommy Hunter Lassie Zoo Family Insider C Storv CountryClips Movie: Phase Chocky's Children ■ - Cntry Wk • ■ IV * Movie: Virgin Queen Kitchen - • Hits T&T Bust Loose Chas Choe Living Mom Fam Baseball Cartoon Express Wish You Side Outdoors Tee It Up CountryClips Airwolf Trouble Check It " Kitchen Rock N Rol Opry New Mike Hammer Movie: Rana Rated K Keeoers Monkees Dennis Wizard Star Trek Gadget Duckuia Laugh In Make Rm My 3 Sons D. Reed Mr. Ed Mad Mvs Lancelot Monkees Movie: Topper Takes a Trip ■ * " - " • * Hitchcock Bradburv Night Flight Oorv Live Tommy Hunter Kitchen Wish You Cntry Wk Oorv Live Country Clips News Twilite Zon Comrades (:15) Tracks Pro Boxing Fridav the 13th Movie: Kina Rat Telethon Co Saturday Night Live " Movie: Out of the Pas Movie: Youngblood Nature Hawke " (:15) Tracks Midnight Love (05) Gardens of Sign Off (:15) Tracks Soloflex Stone Sign Off Make Cash News Movie: None Rock N Rol But the Brave Opry 0 ARENA FOOTBALL Pittsburgh Gladiators at New England Steamrollers (L) 8:00 pm 0 ® TOUR OF DUTY Anderson pulls strings to have a hard-drinking buddy transferred to Bravo Company, but the platoon is then endangered by the man's drinking habits.(R) g O ( 9 OHARA Ohara and Shaver comb the city on Christmas Eve to track down a missing baby whose presence is deeply affecting - especially for two drug addicts. (R) g O 0 GOLDEN GIRLS Blanche poses nude for a sexy European sculptor, unaware that Dorothy and Rose are his models also: Sophia uses Dorothy as a guinea pig for jokes (R) g o